Council follows Mayor's recommendations for property tax rates
The new tax rates will raise revenue by 4% from last year for the General Fund and Urban Services Fund.
The GGP Committee voted not to allow rural solar panel projects to be built in Fayette County.
Last Tuesday, the General Government and Planning (GGP) Committee voted to approve a zoning ordinance text amendment (ZOTA) that establishes new regulations for solar panel installations in Lexington.
While District 5 Councilmember Liz Sheehan and District 10 Councilmember Dave Sevigny sponsored several proposed changes to the ZOTA — including allowing ground-mounted solar panels on rural farmland — those amendments were voted down. Instead, the Committee approved the original version of the ZOTA, which had been passed by the Planning Commission last September.
You can read more about the original ZOTA here.
Sheehan and Sevigny’s amendments would have made a number of changes to the original ordinance, the most controversial of which would have permitted solar panel installations on farmland in rural Fayette County. You can read more about the amendments here.
Councilmember Sevigny made two main arguments in favor of allowing rural solar:
Most GGP Committee members voted against the amendments, citing several concerns:
After the motion to approve the amended ZOTA failed, the Committee voted to adopt the original ZOTA passed by the Planning Commission with one small change: language was added to support Lexington’s application for a SolSmart designation—a national program that helps local governments become more solar-friendly. You can learn more about SolSmart here.
At Thursday’s Council meeting, Councilmember Sheehan announced that she and Sevigny plan to form a community work group to develop recommendations for how/if to regulate rural solar installations. District 12 Councilmember Hil Boone, who does not serve on the GGP Committee, voiced support for this idea during the committee meeting.
Members of the workgroup will be selected over the summer. The work group will likely begin meeting this Fall.