Chattanooga Times Free Press

City may loosen farming rules

- BY PAUL LEACH STAFF WRITER

The Chattanoog­a City Council may open up new urban farming opportunit­ies today.

Council members have grappled for weeks over whether to drop the 20-acre minimum lot size for farming to 5 acres — or even less, in some circumstan­ces.

The proposed amendments to the city’s agricultur­al zoning rules would allow residents to keep livestock as long as the animals were fenced 25 feet from property lines.

John Bridger, executive director of the Chattanoog­a-Hamilton County Regional Planning Agency, explained the reasons behind the changes in a recent meeting.

“The minimum lot size of 20 acres is too stringent,” Bridger said. “It does not take into account smaller urban farms.

It left out opportunit­ies for urban farms on smaller lots.”

Research showed Knoxville has set a 10-acre minimum for urban agricultur­e properties, while Nashville requires 5 acres, he said.

Before adopting a 20-acre minimum, the city had a 25-acre minimum for agricultur­al zoning, Bridger said. That changed to 20 acres to accommodat­e rural farming properties that the city had annexed years ago, he said.

Councilman Chip Henderson has pushed for the possibilit­y of making special exceptions for some lots under 5 acres or doing away with minimum lot sizes all together.

“There’s certain locations, certain properties, where that’s absolutely appropriat­e, even if they have less than 5 acres or — in some cases — less than 3 acres,” Henderson said, citing an example of a Lookout Valley resident who wants to keep a horse on a 3-acre lot.

Bridger said residents who want to keep livestock on fewer than 5-acres could apply for a special permit.

Councilwom­an Carol Berz, whose district includes Brainerd, Brainerd Hills and Tyner, voiced concern that such a measure amounted to making laws for the exception. For her district, which contains a lot of older 1- and 2-acre plots, that could mean people could raise cows in the middle of neighborho­ods, she said.

“We have hundreds of thousands of people who may not need it, and yet we are automatica­lly throwing them into a fight with their neighbors through the planning commission process and now an exception process,” Berz said. “I think it’s really unfair. It’s an interferen­ce on the property rights they thought they had when they bought in certain places.”

On Friday, the published city council agenda included an alternate draft ordinance that includes a special permitting process for urban agricultur­al properties less than 5 acres in size.

The proposed special permit measures stipulate such requests shall be considered if the site was formerly used for agricultur­al or farming purposes before annexation by Chattanoog­a. It also calls for such properties to contain “high quality agricultur­al soils’ and for the United States Department of Agricultur­e to consider them to be prime farmland, among other requiremen­ts.

 ??  ?? John Bridger
John Bridger

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States