What is the name of your state? Louisiana
Before the oil business left Louisiana heading to Texas, many developers had big plans for the New Orleans and Jefferson Parish areas. Of course, the 1980's oil crash came and everyone left, but many developers had subdivision plans already approved and never did anything with them.
Today, we have a major problem. Other developers are now buying the land to finally develop and want to use the existing approved plans from over 20 years ago. Jefferson Parish is trying to find a way to expire old plans that can be considered "out of date", but it seems legal issues are coming up since the original approval of the plats become part of the official record making it somewhat impossible to do.
The reason these need to be expired is because the standards are much different today in regards to drainage, streets, lot sizes, etc. that extremely benefit the property values in the area. Today we required better drainage than 20 years ago. Also bigger lots sizes and wider streets.
My question: Is there any angle possible for Jefferson Parish to expire old plats or plans since a developer has not done anything with it after 20 years, which would be much lower standards than the current requirements for newly approved plans in place today?
Thanks for any help you can provide,
Charles Miller, III
[email protected]
Before the oil business left Louisiana heading to Texas, many developers had big plans for the New Orleans and Jefferson Parish areas. Of course, the 1980's oil crash came and everyone left, but many developers had subdivision plans already approved and never did anything with them.
Today, we have a major problem. Other developers are now buying the land to finally develop and want to use the existing approved plans from over 20 years ago. Jefferson Parish is trying to find a way to expire old plans that can be considered "out of date", but it seems legal issues are coming up since the original approval of the plats become part of the official record making it somewhat impossible to do.
The reason these need to be expired is because the standards are much different today in regards to drainage, streets, lot sizes, etc. that extremely benefit the property values in the area. Today we required better drainage than 20 years ago. Also bigger lots sizes and wider streets.
My question: Is there any angle possible for Jefferson Parish to expire old plats or plans since a developer has not done anything with it after 20 years, which would be much lower standards than the current requirements for newly approved plans in place today?
Thanks for any help you can provide,
Charles Miller, III
[email protected]