Ashland City Council considers electric bike rules, stormwater mapping; Planning Commission reviews sign, zoning items
The Ashland City Council on July 2 considered a proposed ordinance to regulate electric bicycles, scooters, and motorcycles, and was scheduled to vote on authorizing a stormwater GIS mapping project costing up to $54,800, according to the meeting agenda. The council also reviewed consent agenda items including engineering invoices totaling about $29,087. Separately, the Planning Commission on June 25 discussed a conditional use permit for signs, a rezoning request, and a potential reduction in vehicle stacking requirements. Minutes for both meetings have not yet been published, so final outcomes are not available.
City Council – July 2
The council’s agenda included a vote on Ordinance 1262, which would regulate electric bicycles, electric scooters, and electric motorcycles within the city. The ordinance was up for discussion and possible adoption.
Also on the agenda was a resolution to authorize an agreement with JEO Consulting for the Ashland Stormwater GIS Mapping Project, related to the Iron Horse SID, with a cost not to exceed $54,800.
The consent agenda listed:
- Approval of pay requests to JEO for general engineering and various project improvements totaling approximately $29,087.
- Approval of the second half of June 2026 claims.
- Approval of minutes from the June 9, 17, 18, and 23 meetings.
Planning Commission – June 25
The commission’s agenda included:
- **Conditional Use Permit #26-092** for sign installation at **1342 Silver Street** and **111 N 14th Street**.
- **Zoning Change #26-093** to rezone parcel #003224000 from TA (Transitional Agricultural) to RE (Residential Estate).
- A review of potential reductions to vehicle stacking requirements at **Icehouse Ridge I Addition**.
All items were listed as proposals; commission votes are not yet recorded in published minutes.
Coming up
No Ashland government meetings are scheduled for the next 14 days, based on available agendas. Residents should check the city’s official website for any late-added meetings.
Generated from official meeting agendas and minutes — every underlying document is linked from the city page. Read the primary source before you rely on a detail.