Norwalk City Council continued a public hearing and approved the first reading of an amendment to the zoning code that defines "security gate" and adds rules for gates and barriers. The measure treats security gates akin to fences, allows them in commercial and industrial districts and certain nonresidential uses in residential zones (such as schools), and requires compliance with International Fire Code sections cited by staff.
Luke (city staff) said the ordinance adds pedestrian access requirements, corrosion-resistant material standards, and illumination or reflectorization so gates are visible at night. The amendment differentiates between permanently restrictive gates (for industrial or secured sites) and temporary/closing-hour gates used by businesses to secure parking areas off-hours; both categories require sufficient on-site queuing so fire apparatus and traffic do not back up into public rights-of-way.
Council members raised concerns about the proliferation of gates in public-facing corridors and discussed private-property rights, fees and whether residential lone-property owners should be able to erect gates. Staff confirmed nonconforming or unsafe gates would be handled through the administrative permit process and require fire-department review when apparatus access is implicated.
Council closed the public hearing and approved the first reading by roll call vote. The matter will return for subsequent readings as required by city code.