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Photos from Save Lexington SC's post 06/01/2026

πŸ“’ Town Council Meeting
πŸ—“ Monday, June 1, 2026
πŸ“ Council Chambers, 111 Maiden Lane
πŸ•Ÿ 4:30 PM - Executive Session
πŸ•Ÿ 6:00 PM - Work Session

Executive Session Agenda:
1. Discuss pending litigation

Old Business - Public Hearing & Final Reading:
1. Mid-Year Fiscal Year 2026 Budget Adjustment Ordinance
2. Adopt the Fiscal Year '26-'27 Budget Ordinance (pages 25-151 at the link below for more info)
3. Fiscal Year '26-'27 Tax Levy Ordinance
4. Development Impact Fee Updates, Phase 2 Ordinance (pages 154-176 at the link below for more info)
5. Property Transfer Authorization for Lands End HOA Ordinance, foe utilities (pages 177-191 at the link below for more info)

New Business:
1. Approve road resurfacing project change order - Council previously approved $4 million for the project; the awarded contract totaled $3.4 million. Council is considering adding $150,000 to resurface additional roadways and allocating $60,000 in county C-Funds for targeted concrete repairs.

2. SCDOT Signal maintenance agreement modification - Town has an agreement with SCDOT for maintenance, construction, and inspection of traffic signals. (pages 194-202 at the link below for the modification agreement and intersections)

3. Consideration of services agreement with Off Duty Management, Inc - This is the police department's off-duty employment program. (pages 203-211 at the link below for more info)

4. Accomodations Tax applicants - $213k is available, the Lexington Chamber and Visitors Center is designated to receive $98k. (See image for information on who will be awarded how much money)

5. Facility Fee Ordinance for Icehouse Amphitheatre - $2 fee per ticket sold for maintenance

Stream on town's YouTube

Meeting materials:
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1pQ4IM6HGR-TIFgT1YNDfWnqOxNJiI3Hp/view?usp=drivesdk

05/25/2026

πŸ‘€ Check out the chart, or read the post for the information. πŸ”½

πŸ“Š LEXINGTON COUNTY COUNCIL VOTING RECORDS REFLECT RESIDENTIAL ZONING CHANGES AND INFRASTRUCTURE SUPPORT

πŸ“’ Lexington County Council records show June Primary incumbent candidates Beth Carrigg,
Larry Brigham, and Glen Conwell, along with Darrell Hudson, Charli Wessinger, and former councilmembers Scott Whetstone and Bimbo Jones (who were unseated in June 2024), worked together to pass some of the BIGGEST ZONING AND GROWTH MANAGEMENT REFORMS Lexington County has seen in DECADES.

Incumbent Candidate Voting Records are important for voters to review ahead of the June 9 primary.

Please see the VOTING RECORD chart provided with this post by clicking on it and zooming in to read the information.

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πŸ“‹ KEY ZONING & GROWTH POLICY CHANGES THEY MADE SINCE 2020 INCLUDE:

βœ… 🏑 Decreased Allowable Residential Density in Developments:

β€’ Single-family homes: changed from up to 12 homes per acre ➜ to maximum of 4 homes per acre while some street classifications only allow 3, 2 ,or even 1 homes per acre

β€’ Townhomes/duplexes/patio homes : changed from 12 homes per acre ➜ to maximum of 6 homes per acre and only allowed on certain street classifications to handle the car traffic for higher densities

β€’ Apartments: changed from 20 per acre ➜ to maximum of 12 per acre and only allowed on 4 lane roads to handle the car traffic for higher densities with complex spacing of 3 miles between complexes and a cap of 250 units per complex

βœ… Concurrency requirements to ensure adequate levels of services for EMS, fire, law enforcement, waste management, and schools are available before new developments can be permitted

βœ… Increased setbacks to space houses farther apart and from the road and established minimum lot sizes

βœ… Lake Murray/Saluda River Watershed and agricultural protections such as increased buffers and lower density

βœ… Trophy tree protection and tree inventory requirements to save 25 percent of trophy trees, limits clear cutting

βœ… Updated Comprehensive Plan

βœ… Stormwater regulation updates

βœ… Countywide Traffic Improvement Plan (TIP) funding with shovel ready projects being studied now and can also be used to require developers to help with nearby road improvements

βœ… Coordination with SCDOT and COG on road projects

βœ… Funding increases for law enforcement and emergency services

βœ… Upgraded fire trucks and EMS units.

βœ… Added a new West Region Service Center in District 2 (Larry Brigham) area providing fire, EMS, and sheriff services, as well as a new fire department on N. Lake Dr./Hwy 6 near the Lake Murray Dam in District 7 (Beth Carrigg) area.

βœ… Votes for ONE millage increase in the past 8 years for first responder pay due to Covid.

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⚠️ IF THESE ZONING CHANGES WERE PASSED, WHY AREN’T WE SEEING THESE CHANGES IN EVERY DEVELOPMENT BEING BUILT TODAY?

Many subdivisions and residential developments recently and currently being built today were approved under older zoning rules before these zoning changes took effect. Because some development projects were already in the pipeline when the zoning changes were passed, they are allowed to be grandfathered in under prior regulations.

The state allows developers up to 5 years from the date of permitting to break ground with a possible two year extension.

As time goes on we will begin to see these zoning changes reflected in the residential developments being built more consistently moving forward.

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🚦 ROADS AND JURISDICTION CONTEXT

β€’ SCDOT maintains ~1,500 miles of state roads in Lexington County

β€’ The county maintains ~600 miles of paved roads many of them being subdivision roads and ~600 miles of dirt roads

Most of the roads citizens drive on are state-maintained, while the county is responsible primarily for local and subdivision roads.

So, the county council does not have justification/control over most of our roads and traffic issues due to those roads falling within the state/SCDOT jurisdiction and NOT County Council.

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πŸ“Š PUBLIC RECORDS

A review of council voting records of incumbent candidates for the June Primary reflects:

⭐ Beth Carrigg
⭐ Larry Brigham
⭐ Glen Conwell

Consistently have supported these residential development zoning changes, infrastructure funding, and public safety-related actions since 2020.

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πŸ—³ ELECTION INFORMATION

County Council District races for Council Districts 2, 7, and 8 will be decided in the June 9 primary as the winner of the primary will advance and be the only name listed on the Nov ballot. Early voting is May 26–June 5.

Voters are encouraged to review public voting records and candidate information as part of their decision-making process.

Stay informed and share this information so others are aware.

Together, we can and do make a difference for the communities of Lexington County! πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ

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Lexington, SC
29072