City council approves multiple zoning, permits and maintenance resolutions; nuisance abatement ordered
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At its Oct. 21 meeting the Enterprise City Council approved three rezoning ordinances, multiple permits, two subdivision street acceptances, a nuisance abatement resolution and a severe‑weather sales tax holiday resolution; the council also approved an ABC license and various consent‑agenda items.
The Enterprise City Council on Oct. 21, 2025, approved a package of routine and land‑use actions including three rezoning ordinances, two street‑acceptance resolutions, a nuisance abatement order, an ABC license, and a severe‑weather preparedness sales tax holiday.
Summary of formal actions (motions passed) - Ordinance O‑9‑16‑25: Rezoned 0.6 acres owned by M & S Development LLC from R‑1 (low‑density single‑family) to B‑2 (central business) at 524 E. Lee St. Motion to adopt passed by voice vote. - Ordinance O‑9‑16‑25A: Rezoned 2.35 acres owned by M & S Development LLC from R‑1/B‑1 to B‑2 at 522 E. Lee St. (Passed by voice vote.) - Ordinance O‑9‑16‑25B: Rezoned 1.13 acres owned by Billy Carter Construction Inc. from RT (townhouse) to PRD (planned residential) near W. Lee St. and Reed St.; staff and Planning Commission recommended approval and council adopted the ordinance by voice vote. - ABC license (Sizzling Claw LLC / Shaolin Zhu): Council approved a retail beer and wine on/off premises license at 627 Bow Weevil Circle; applicant said the location previously sold beer and wine before the COVID pandemic. - Permit approvals: The council approved a permit for the Sweat4Vet (ruck march) fundraiser (applicant Travis Parker) and a permit for Pinedale Elementary School’s Red Ribbon Parade (applicant Dom Knoll). Both were approved by motion and voice vote after staff told the council the police chief had reviewed routing and safety details. - Resolution 10‑21‑25 (nuisance abatement): Council declared property at 1022 Bow Weevil Circle a nuisance (overgrown weeds, brush) and authorized city staff to abate if the owner does not remediate; costs may be assessed to the property owner. - Resolution 10‑21‑25A and 10‑21‑25B (street acceptances): Council accepted streets and public easements for maintenance for Azalea Commons Phase 2 subdivision and Hickory Oaks subdivision following staff inspections and completion of punch lists. - Resolution 10‑21‑25C (severe weather preparedness sales tax holiday): Council adopted the state‑authorized holiday for Feb. 20–22, 2026, covering qualifying batteries, tarps, plywood, and radios priced at $60 or less.
Procedure and context Planning staff and the city engineer told the council each rezoning came with a Planning Commission recommendation (unanimous where noted) and complied with the city’s long‑range plan or was a PRD application with site plans for review. The nuisance abatement item included published and posted notice; no written objections were reported to staff at the hearing.
Votes and recordkeeping Most motions were approved by voice vote; the meeting minutes reflect that motions were moved and seconded and the council unanimously voted “aye” unless an opposition was recorded. No roll‑call tallies with member‑level yes/no were taken in these items at this meeting.
Ending Council members closed the regular session after the consent agenda and the approved actions. Several items (rezones and street acceptances) follow normal development review procedures and will lead to routine implementation steps such as filing final plats and city maintenance of accepted streets.
