Similar Articles

NEW FOR THURSDAY: Process Behind School Delay Decisions Detailed

NEWARK -- With a continued pattern of thick, early morning fog this we...READ MORE

NEW FOR WEDNESDAY: Beach Bikini Parade Proposed For North OC

OCEAN CITY – Thousands of visitors in bikinis could be marching ...READ MORE

NEW FOR TUESDAY: Decatur Principal To Leave School, Accept Board Post

NEWARK -- At today’s Worcester County Board of Education meeting...READ MORE

NEW FOR TUESDAY: Group Outlines Downtown Plans Including More Weekly Concerts

OCEAN CITY – The Ocean City Development Corporation (OCDC) has b...READ MORE

NEW FOR MONDAY: Missing Man Found In Assawoman Bay

OCEAN CITY -- The body of an Ocean City man, who went missing after ca...READ MORE

NEW FOR FRIDAY: Kathy Mathias Chemo Bill Nears Passage

OCEAN CITY -- The Kathleen A. Mathias Chemotherapy Parity Act of 2012 ...READ MORE

Schools Super Seeks Raises For All County Employees

SNOW HILL -- In anticipation of a difficult budget season, Superintend...READ MORE

Wallops Launching Five Rockets In Five Minutes Tonight

WALLOPS -- Residents and visitors could see a rare spectacle across th...READ MORE

Change In Fireworks Provider Splits City Council

OCEAN CITY – This summer’s 4th of July fireworks displays ...READ MORE

Salisbury News In Brief

SALISBURY – The City Council’s agenda this week was brief ...READ MORE

Berlin B&B Wants To Host Events

3/16/2012 | By Staff Writer, Travis Brown

BERLIN -- Bed and Breakfasts in Berlin might become a lot more than a place to sleep and grab an omelet if a proposal that received a favorable recommendation from the Planning Commission this week eventually becomes law.

Representing the new Waystead Inn, located on Harrison Avenue, attorney Mark Cropper put forth an application to expand the activities that would be acceptable. As the code currently stands, the only allowed uses for a Bed and Breakfast are for sleeping and serving a morning meal.

According to Cropper, existing Bed and Breakfast regulations in Berlin are “very limited and very restricted in what you can and cannot do.”

Under Cropper’s proposal, Bed and Breakfasts with more than an acre of land would be able to request permission from the Board of Zoning Appeals (BZA) to host events like weddings, birthday parties, wine tastings, and other activities not normally permitted.

“It would be judged on a case-by-case basis,” said Cropper. “We just want to give them that flexibility is all.”

Planning Commission Chair Newt Chandler seemed surprised by the stringency of the current regulations.

“All Bed and Breakfasts can do right now is have them spend the night and then feed them breakfast?” he asked Cropper.

Cropper confirmed that was the case and reiterated that “as it is right now, we can’t even make [an activities] request to the BZA.”

Commissioner Ron Cascio expressed concerns over the one-acre minimum lot size in the application.
“I think that there could be viable properties under an acre,” he said.
Cropper explained that he had no objection if the commission wished to lower the limit.
“I like the size limit myself,” said Chandler.

Chandler pointed out that a lot of the activities that this would open up would probably not be a good fit for smaller Bed and Breakfasts without enough land to sufficiently separate them from their neighbors.

Planning and Zoning Director Chuck Ward pointed out that, if the commission gives a favorable rating to Cropper’s application, it still has to go through the Mayor and Council. And even after that, approval for special events will have to be granted by the BZA.

“For the application, it’s basically a three-step process anyway,” he said.
The commission voted unanimously to give the proposal a favorable recommendation.

There are no comments.

Leave a comment

Please complete all required fields.
Name*
Email
Comment*

Submit