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Radcliff council discusses medical marijuana, trains, and zoning

The Radcliff City Council met for a work session Tuesday.

The council discussed a zoning map amendment that would convert 155 Morgan Street from R-7 to Planned Unit Development Zone. Because of the use of a PUD zone, the council will also consider the property’s preliminary site plan and preliminary plats. The plan would convert the former Morgawood Mobile Home Park to 19 single-family units. City Attorney Mike Pike said the plan seems to be a good use for the 1.29 acre site.

“The PUD zone is really the only zone they could utilize to make this type of development happen because of the small size of the homes and whatnot,” Pike said. “It looks like a creative use of the property. It does appear to fit the comp. plan. The Planning Commission was all on board.”

Radcliff Mayor JJ Duvall said a citizen is requesting the city explore implementing a quiet zone train ordinance. That ordinance would bar trains from using their horns when operating in the city during overnight hours. Duvall said the city will explore the possibility of applying for federal funding because more than $500,000 would likely be needed in order to make a quiet zone possible.

“The railway would have to be updated,” Duvall said. “The railroad crossing would have to be updated, from my understanding, and really, if you implement these quiet zones, you obviously have to implement those crossings to meet the standard, to meet the quiet zone regulations.”

Members of the council expressed their support for the city to draft an ordinance that would permit and regulate medical marijuana facilities that would operate in the city after the state medical marijuana law goes into effect. Pike said it is important for local communities to get regulations on the books so that the city has a say.

“You can’t restrict those people’s usage, but what you can do is restrict time, manner, place in terms of all these various cannabis operations, so if you do nothing, then what that means is you’re allowing it,” Pike said.

Some council members had reservations as they still had questions, while others said if use is going to be permitted by the state the city might as well set itself up for potential revenue benefits as well as regulatory control. Duvall said the city will look at potential draft ordinances.

The Radcliff City Council will next meet June 18.

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