Commission members and staff spent an extended portion of the meeting discussing how county zoning decisions interact with Leonardtown’s PUD (planned unit development) designations and municipal zoning. Participants noted that PUD maps (originally from 1973, with a 1984 revision cited in the discussion) assign subzones such as commercial highway, commercial office, townhouses and single-family uses, and that changing a PUD designation typically requires demonstrating a mistake or showing contiguous comparable zoning under established processes.
Commissioners expressed concern that county approvals—when properties outside the town are adjacent to Leonardtown’s development district—could allow highway-commercial uses such as convenience stores to appear near residential neighborhoods, producing abrupt land‑use transitions. The group discussed the board-of-appeals route for special exceptions, the 11 criteria such appeals must satisfy, and the potential for different decisionmakers at the county level to produce inconsistent edges where town and county zoning meet. One participant suggested using the term “development district” rather than “high density” to better reflect the range of permitted subzones within the PUD.
No formal recommendations or votes on policy changes were recorded; the exchange focused on intergovernmental coordination, the limits of the town’s jurisdiction outside its corporate boundaries, and the desire to increase collaboration with county planning staff as membership on the county board changes.