Durham's planning board presented a package of land-use updates on June 13 that the town meeting adopted in three parts. The changes bundle administrative clarifications, minor policy updates and codification corrections developed over more than a year of planning-board review.
Planning board chair Brian Lana summarized the principal changes. Part 1 (approved as article 15) streamlines approvals for single back lots and private ways, clarifies expansion rules for nonconforming structures, gives planning-board discretion to require vegetative buffers where subdivision roads abut existing homes, clarifies fire-protection and water-supply options for subdivisions (favoring ponds or residential sprinklers over complex storage systems), and tightens definitions and restrictions for cannabis cultivation facilities.
Part 2 (article 16) updates subdivision and driveway design standards, assigns planning-board authority to interpret zoning-boundary issues, and revises application submission requirements (including proof of tax payment). Part 3 (article 17) formalized cross-references and corrected typographical and codification errors identified in a third-party review.
The planning board emphasized that many edits are clarifying and aimed at speeding permitting and reducing duplication with state review while ensuring public-safety and neighborhood protections. All three parts received voter approval at the June 13 meeting.
What to watch: The changes alter procedural duties (for example, what requires planning-board review vs. appeals-board review) and will affect development reviews going forward; the planning board said the updates align local standards with state requirements for manufactured housing and accessory apartments.