The Mooresville Town Planning Commission on Nov. 13 voted to send no recommendation to the Town Council on a rezoning request for a property on East High Street that the applicant wants reclassified to permit a drive‑through window.
Applicant Hannah (speaker 10) asked the commission to rezone a property currently operating under a residential variance to a B‑3 commercial classification to allow a drive‑through. Planning staff explained that a rezone “runs with the land,” meaning that if the parcel is rezoned to B‑3, all uses permitted in that district would be allowed by right on the property unless the town council attaches specific commitments or conditions at the time of rezoning.
Multiple neighbors urged limits on future uses and operating hours. A neighborhood representative told the commission she and neighbors would oppose uses that could attract vermin or late‑night activity, such as bars, microbreweries or storage units, and suggested prohibiting any use open past 8 p.m. The applicant said she intends to operate small, community‑oriented hours (breakfast service only and closing by about 10:30 a.m.) and said she was willing to prepare a list of uses she would not pursue.
Commissioner discussion focused on tradeoffs between zoning the land and protecting neighborhood character. A planning consultant in the audience, who identified themselves as representing CodeCrafters and said they had written the town’s UDO, described how commitments or conditions can be structured under state law and the UDO but noted those mechanisms differ from a map rezone itself.
Commissioner (speaker 3) moved to forward a favorable recommendation with the applicant’s offered stipulations; that motion failed on a 3–2 vote. Commissioner (speaker 7) then moved to send no recommendation to the Town Council so the council could review the applicant’s proposals and any conditions; that motion passed. The item will appear on the Town Council docket for final action.
What it means: A 'no recommendation' from the Planning Commission places the ultimate decision with the Town Council, which may accept, deny or attach commitments when it considers the rezoning request.