IOW considers horse zoning changes
Published 8:56 am Wednesday, August 11, 2010
ISLE OF WIGHT—When Isle of Wight horse owner Pinky Hipp started her farm a few years ago, she opted to use at least a 20-foot buffer between her pasture and her neighbors.
“I fenced my property in a way that my horses would never bother my neighbors,” Hipp said.
But not all county horse owners have, and as a result, the county has heard complaints from residents about the number of horses per acre and issues with smells.
Now the county is considering changing its zoning ordinance to prevent complaints in the future. Meetings to solicit public input on the proposed changes are planned for Tuesday, Aug. 17. The first meeting begins at 3 p.m. and the second at 6.
The county formed an Equine Task Force in 2007 to serve in an advisory capacity to county staff in response to complaints and confusion about what was or wasn’t allowed under zoning ordinances.
The result is a number of proposed changes to the county ordinance, which would require new horse owners to work with Soil and Water Conservation District officials to formulate a waste management plan, adjusting the number of horses allowed per acre and requiring a 35-foot buffer zone between the owner’s property line and where the horses will be pastured.
If approved, the proposed changes would not be retroactive, and “previously appropriately permitted operations” would be “grandfathered,” or considered legal non-conforming uses, said Rachel Chieppa, the county’s rural economic development manager.
Chieppa said the process of developing the proposed changes was “definitely long thought out, debated and discussed.”
“We spent about 18 months to two years working on the various components of it,” she said.
Hipp, a task force member, said some county horse owners have voiced concern over the proposed regulations, but they’re actually meant to protect the horse community.
“Nobody’s going to make you go out into your pasture and pick up the poop,” she said. “These were all things to protect the horses and the homeowners in the future as the county grows,” she said.
Chieppa agreed that the proposed changes would protect against “nuisance complaints.”
“Right now, I don’t think (horse owners) see it that way,” she said. “They see it as another government regulation, which is unfortunate.”
Hipp said the proposed changes could persuade “knowledgeable” horse owners to come to Isle of Wight.
“We’re trying to promote the horse industry…we don’t want so much regulation that they go ‘oh my gosh,’ but we want them protected,” she said, adding the changes aren’t “cast in stone at this point.”