January 6, 2021 By Jessica Mathews / news@whmi.com
A developer looking to open up a marijuana establishment in the Village of Pinckney has cleared a preliminary hurdle â although it doesnât mean the project has been given final approval.
At a virtual meeting held Monday night, the Planning Commission granted a conditional rezoning of property at 935 West Main Street from High Density Residential to RTO or Research-Technology-Office; which is the Villageâs version of industrial. The property houses the old, vacant Pinckney Elementary School but Howell Developer Chris Bonk is seeking to repurpose the existing building on site for potential Marijuana establishments. A proposed rendering is pictured. He has to rezone the property first in order to pursue any type of marijuana-related license through the Village. Since it is a conditional rezoning, if the project doesnât come to fruition or a license isnât obtained from the st
Forksdale development before council | Merritt Herald
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St Helena home once used as squalid farmworker housing will be torn down, replaced
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WINCHESTER â The cityâs Planning Commission has recommended approval of a new bed and breakfast on Amherst Street, but only after dialing back the prospective ownerâs goal of hosting up to 125 outdoor events on the property every year.
Following a public hearing on Tuesday that highlighted concerns from neighbors about the proposed business, the commission voted 6-0-1 to recommend that City Council approve a conditional-use permit (CUP) allowing the bed and breakfast to operate in a Residential Office (RO-1) zoning district with a Historic Winchester District overlay.
The abstention came from Commissioner Leesa Mayfield, who lives adjacent to the 148-year-old Selma Mansion at 514 Amherst St. An ownership group headed by developer Bill McIntosh wants to convert the home into a seven-room bed and breakfast.