ALERT – North Carolina General Statutes Update


North Carolina General Statutes & Development Code Have Changed!

Development Code & Statutes in North Carolina

Are You Ready?
The new Chapter 160D local planning and development regulations of the North Carolina General Statutes combines current land use regulations (Chapters 153A and 160A) into one, consolidated chapter that more coherently organizes the statutes. While there are not major policy or scope shifts, cities and counties must incorporate these changes into their local development regulations by July 1, 2021 (based on North Carolina General Statutes Commission bill S720).

All cities and counties in North Carolina must comply.

What Cities and Counties in North Carolina Need to Know

These planning and development regulation updates affect the following components:

  • Terminology and citation alignment
  • Geographic jurisdiction requirements
  • Board requirements and guidelines, including planning boards and boards of adjustment
  • Land use administration guidelines, including enforcement guidelines
  • Substantive zoning and other development ordinances
  • Requirement for a comprehensive plan
  • Compliance and appeal guidelines for legislative, quasi-judicial and administrative decisions
  • Vested rights and permit choice requirements
  • Judicial review guidelines

The bottom line is that every local government in North Carolina has work to do.

Carving out time to draft, collaborate and edit zoning and land development regulations is a challenge at any time. Remote work situations, shutdowns, and other delays in the wake of COVID-19 have only compounded that issue.

Kendig Keast Collaborative (KKC) and enCodePlus can help.

Let us show you how to seamlessly update your ordinances and publish them on a user-friendly, interactive website that offers developers and the public easy access to all the information they need.

Who is Kendig Keast Collaborative?

Kendig Keast Collaborative is an urban planning consultancy with 38 years’ experience drafting and updating plans and development ordinances for jurisdictions across the United States. They have served more than 175 cities and counties in 42 states, including current NC clients Marvin and Harrisburg.

KKC’s skilled team of expert planners can either manage a project from start to completion or provide consulting assistance to local planners who manage their projects in-house on the enCodePlus web-based content management platform, while engaging KKC support for drafting and editing updates.

 

North Carolina General Statutes Have Changed | enCodePlusBlog

Why KKC and enCodePlus

Experience with Chapter 160D Local Planning and Development Regulations

New planning and development regulations identified in Chapter 160D of the North Carolina general statutes include substantive zoning and other development ordinance changes. KKC has current and direct experience in drafting and updating ordinances to comply with these new requirements.

Full Service or On-Call Support

Every jurisdiction is unique, and their needs vary. KKC can scale service as needed to provide full-service project management or simple drafting and editing assistance. They can support local planners who handle their projects in-house with the enCodePlus intuitive, 24/7 cloud-based collaboration tool.

KKC Expertise

KKC’s AICP certified planning staff has combined experience of more than 120 years in local government and consulting service. Their practice has served both small and large communities in a variety of settings and across a multitude of planning environments.

“… brilliance, imagination, skill and deep experience… a crackerjack consultant…”
The Herald Democrat
Sherman, TX

“… a fantastic job of making sense of the information and answering questions!”
Councilmember
Centennial, CO

“The City Manager believes that a well written unified development code that is executed can work, as he quoted, “It will be a design that we believe creates flexibility in land use, allows better land development scenarios to be embodied into a redevelopment project to mitigate the conflicts of use.” If you create more flexibility of land use then you have to create the ability for the adjacent property owner to be buffered from that more conflicting use and you can do that with good site design.”
City Manager
Florence, SC

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