The Dell Rapids City Council held the first reading for Ordinance 816, Rezone Request for 608 E 6th St, during their regular meeting on Monday, February 2nd. The request is to have the property owned by Paul Roemen to be rezoned from an R2 Two Family Attached Residential to a B2 General Business District. The request was made with the intent for Roemen to sell the property to an interest party with the intended use for a contractor shop. The property is an empty lot located next to Romen’s old Napa building.
“That property probably isn’t really good for residential because of the quartzite and the sewer. There is no sewer there. The only way you can probably get sewer there is to blast rock to get it in there properly. It’s a good piece of property and adjacent to what’s there now would make it a better piece of property for somebody who wants to expand. That’s what we would have did if we would have stayed there,” said Roemen.
The request was met by opposition from concerned residents.
One resident said, “One nice thing about that neighborhood is that it’s an established neighborhood….I understand that you have good intentions for that commercial lot, but if in 10 years if you were to sell that, you can’t guarantee what that person is going to use that lot for, and I don’t want to lose that part of the neighborhood.”
Another resident mentioned, “I don’t want to make waves, but I know the city is pushing with the planning people that do all the building and property, and we have two industrial parks the city is really pushing on…one being on Garfield and Centennial and the other out by the interstate. I don’t know why we need to push commercial deeper into residential when we have two communities that the city is legitimately trying to push exactly what you’d like to do out there.”
Despite the opposition from some of the residents that live around the property, Councilman Gary Haak said, “If you look at Beach Ave and 6th St, that is another property kind of identical to what this is where there is rock where you can’t really build a home or anything like that. That is a commercial business and is in residential and is a brand new building going up there. It’s another business, it’s a commercial business, and it’s right in the middle of residential that we approved a couple of weeks ago. And I see this property being the same. This is closer to the truck route, it’s closer to the other businesses, and he’s adding on to it. I see no reason why it can’t be a building.”
Haak also made the motion to accept the rezone request. Councilman Mark Crisp seconded the motion.
Councilman Chad Andrews said, “I want to point out that we are working this land down south. Perfect opportunity here to work with a purchaser…light industrial, not even a conditional use – permitted use, contractor shop slash storage. We spent a million dollars putting sewer in, and now we have a buyer that’s looking to buy land. Yeah, it’s got a building on it, but I think we could do something south of town a little better. I feel that pushing into the residential area, like they said, where do you stop?…..basically we’ve turned it into a miniature business district with a bunch of houses in the middle.”
Andrews asked for a roll call vote. The motion to approve the first reading passed by a 4-2 vote with Andrews and Councilman David Sommerfeld voting no. Councilmen Craig Lauritzen and Paul Miles were absent.