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Board meetings and strategic plans from Eddie Bines's organization
The Board of Zoning Appeals-Zoning meeting addressed several applications requiring special exceptions or variances. Key items included a request for a special exception to extend a nonconforming setback for a rear addition at 5 Kyle Pl., and a request for a special exception to build a detached single-family home on a lot of insufficient size at 824 Burger St. Other agenda items involved requests for special exceptions concerning a church expansion at 2051 George L Griffith Blvd., variances for second-story additions impacting height limitations at 43 Fenwick Dr., and variances related to ground-floor use requirements for a multi-family development at 975 & 989 Morrison Dr. The board also considered variances for front setback requirements at 25 Lord Calvert Dr., parking space provisions at 102 President St., and setback and lot coverage compliance for a porch addition at 57 Ashe St. Additionally, the board handled deferred and subsequent variance requests for accessory dwelling units (ADUs) at 3 Alberta Ave. and 1551 Mulberry St., and variances regarding parking and height for a recreation center at 3550 Maybank Hwy. Finally, requests for a special exception to vertically extend a setback and a variance for fence height were reviewed for 78 Cypress St.
The meeting focused primarily on several rezoning requests across various districts, including requests to rezone from Single Family Residential (SR-2) to Job Center (JC), Diverse Residential (DR-1F) to Limited Business (GB), and several large tracts from existing zones (UP, DR-2, GB) to Mixed-Use/Workforce Housing (MU-3/WH). All eight rezoning requests were deferred. The commission also considered amendments to Article 2-Land Use Regulations regarding Design Review District authority, ultimately voting against the proposed amendment, stating a need for better contextual definitions for civic buildings and public input inclusion. Several zoning requests were considered, with approvals granted for zoning applications on Adele Street parcels, Joy Avenue, and properties on S Edgewater Drive to Residential Office (RO), Single & Two Family Residential (STR), and Single Family Residential (SR-1), respectively.
The meeting agenda included a Flood Status Update and a Resilience Update presented by the Director of Resilience, featuring input from the Charleston County Resilience and Sustainability Manager regarding the Charleston Resilience Collaborative. The Stormwater Director provided an overview of 2026 Capital projects, maintenance activities, and budget information. The Mayor provided an update, followed by a period reserved for Committee Member Discussion/Q&A and a Public Comment Period.
The primary agenda item involved the presentation, discussion, and subsequent unanimous approval of the 2025-2026 Charleston Area Convention and Visitors Bureau Spending Plan for State Accommodations Tax. Discussion centered on Explore Charleston's strategy, which focuses on historical significance, advertising across major print and digital media, expanding nonstop flights to Charleston, and leveraging annual events like the Food and Wine Festival. Concerns were raised regarding the impact of short-term rentals on housing and tax collection, and the committee expressed interest in preserving and advertising local small businesses. Additionally, the committee discussed the new electronic process for reviewing accommodations tax applications and the potential for implementing a hospitality job training program for individuals with disabilities.
The meeting addressed updates on numerous Charleston County Transportation Projects, covering projects recently completed, those under construction, and those advertised. Key completed projects included signal upgrades at Courtenay Drive and Doughty Street, and sidewalk installation on East Bay Street. Projects under construction involved capacity improvements, drainage enhancements, and traffic signal installations across various roads like Main Road and US 17. Advertised projects focused heavily on pedestrian safety, including the installation of pedestrian signals, curb bulb-outs, and multi-use paths. Significant discussion centered on the regulation of e-bikes on City sidewalks and shared-use paths, where the committee aimed to implement clear, enforceable restrictions, potentially including an age restriction while considering the administrative burden of registration. The committee also unanimously approved a Road Transfer Request from City Stormwater Management concerning Culbertson Drive.
Extracted from official board minutes, strategic plans, and video transcripts.
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