San Marcos City Council considers North City sign program appeal, subdivision map, fee increases
The San Marcos City Council met June 23 to consider appeals of two Planning Commission decisions — a master sign program for the University District (North City) and a tentative subdivision map for a 19.83-acre site — along with proposed increases in development impact fees and other business. Because the meeting minutes have not yet been published, the outcomes of these items are not known.
Appeals heard on North City sign program and subdivision
The council held public hearings on an appeal of the Planning Commission’s decision regarding a master sign program for the University District in North City. A second appeal concerned a tentative subdivision map that would create three lots on a 19.83-acre parcel. No additional details on the nature of the appeals were available from the agenda.
Fee increases and contracts considered
The council was scheduled to vote on adopting indexed increases for three categories of fees: development impact fees, inclusionary housing in-lieu fees, and user fees. The exact percentages were not specified in the agenda summary, but indexed increases are typically tied to inflation or cost indices.
Other items on the agenda included:
- Awarding a contract for Carlsbad Watershed monitoring in the amount of $677,742.
- Awarding a contract for Safety Center HVAC replacement to Jackson & Blanc.
- Awarding contracts for City Hall restroom renovations (amount not listed).
- Approving a salary adjustment for council members.
- Withdrawing from a self-insurance pool.
All items were listed for consideration; final votes are not yet recorded. The watershed monitoring contract would support regional water quality efforts, and the HVAC replacement addresses equipment at the city’s safety center. The salary adjustment for council members and withdrawal from the self-insurance pool could affect city finances and governance.
Coming up
No upcoming meetings are listed in the town’s publicly available schedule for the next two weeks. Residents are encouraged to check the city’s website for updates.
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.