The Crestwood Board of Aldermen postponed an ordinance introducing restrictions on commercial vehicles March 8 after discussing parts of the old city code. The proposed ordinance put restrictions on large.
An ordinance in Crestwood which could help address stormwater concerns was tabled March 22 by the Board of Aldermen. Mayor Grant Mabie was absent, so the ordinance was postponed to allow him to provide input at a future meeting. The ordinance changes the city’s definition of impervious cover to anything manmade including, but not limited.
The Crestwood Board of Aldermen voted to increase pay for itself, the city’s municipal judge and mayor at its March 8 meeting. The increase is the first in 22 years. The ordinance increases Municipal Judge Jason Denney’s annual pay from $12,000 to $13,500; the mayor’s from $8,400 to $10,200 starting at the next mayoral term.
Microbreweries and wineries are now allowed in Crestwood industrial zones after the Board of Aldermen voted 6-1 Jan. 25 to allow the change to city code. The businesses were allowed in commercial areas, but potential business owners raised concerns to city staff about the dimensions of commercial buildings not being large enough. There are four.
After years of uncertainty surrounding the future development of the former Crestwood mall site, Dierbergs and McBride Homes announced Wednesday they had closed on the purchase of the mall property. Crestwood aldermen approved the rezoning of the 47-acre property in November for a mixed-used development dubbed “Crestwood Crossing” at the corner of Watson Road and.