by ECM | September 1, 2013 6:14 am

By Miriam Raftery
August 27, 2013 (San Diego’s East County ) – A proposed tiered equine ordinance aimed at making it easier for backcountry property owners to stable horses will be on the agenda for Supervisors to consider on Wednesday, September 11.
“When it comes to allowing stables, we need to take a more sensible, tiered approach so more people can take part in equine activities,” Supervisor Dianne Jacob, who represents East County, has said. “As a former horse owner and long-time rider, I think these changes will also strengthen the economic vitality of our rural areas.”
Property owners had objected to Major Use Permit costs of $60,000 or so to stable horses, among other issues.
The measure, which has been recommended by the County Planning Commission, would do the following:
The new tiered ordinance has been in the works since 2011 and has gone through environmental review with public comments earlier this year.
The measure has drawn some opposition. Robert Davis is one of two members of a stakeholder group who does not own horses.
“Most property owners have not learned the details of the Tiered Equine Ordinance and that, if enacted, it lacks important safeguards to prevent lowering neighbors’ property values and denying them quiet enjoyment of their homes,” he wrote in an editorial published August 21 in the Valley Roadrunner. “It allows people to put a horse boarding stable in a residential area with no input from neighbors. They will be allowed to run a commercial horse boarding business, give riding lessons, and as long as they comply with minimum sanitary requirements, neighbors will have no right to object…I doubt many existing owners would want up to 50 horses next door with riding lessons and all the associated noise and increased traffic.”
Davis said he asked planners to require approval by neighbors and that costs of increased road maintenance be paid by stable owners, but his proposals were rejected.
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