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Palm Bay, FL -- The City of Palm Bay holds its second Land Development Code feedback workshop Tuesday, March 17, at 4:00 PM at City Hall. The topic is Infrastructure and Environmental. That covers the rules that decide how new development connects to roads, water, sewer, and stormwater systems, and how the city protects land that shouldn’t be paved over in the first place.
This is the second of four workshops running through April. If you’ve ever watched a new subdivision go up on your street and wondered why the roads didn’t get wider, why your yard started flooding, or why the city still hasn’t run sewer to your neighborhood, this session is the one to attend.
What the LDC Update Is and Why It Matters
Phase 1 of the LDC update was a full rewrite of the code, adopted in September 2024 under Ordinance 2024-33, to align the city’s development rules with the Vision 2045 Comprehensive Plan. The rewrite was necessary. The old code was a decades-old patchwork that didn’t reflect how Palm Bay actually grows.
Phase 2 is a targeted cleanup. Six months of applying the new code revealed scrivener’s errors, gaps, and two state law mandates that need to be incorporated. The workshop series is the public’s chance to flag what’s still broken before the city locks in the revisions. Four sessions, four topic areas, and the window closes after April.
What Workshop 2 Will Cover
Three issues dominate the Infrastructure and Environmental session, and all three hit residents in the wallet or the yard.
Traffic and concurrency. The LDC includes a Concurrency Management System designed to ensure roads, water, and sewer can handle the impact of new development before permits are issued. The city is supposed to verify that infrastructure capacity exists before it approves growth. Residents have been saying for years that road widenings and intersection improvements are not keeping pace with the housing. This workshop is the place to say that on the record, in a formal public input process.
Stormwater and flooding. The code requires new developments to submit drainage plans and use low-impact development techniques. That requirement exists on paper. What residents have watched in practice is new construction raising the grade of neighboring lots with fill dirt and sending water onto older, lower-elevation properties. The Phase 2 update includes a revised definition of “fill” that came out of a council debate over organic versus inorganic materials. The new language defines fill as “the placement of any soil or other solid material, either organic or inorganic, on a natural ground surface or an excavation in an effort to raise the existing grade.” If your yard floods every time it rains because the lot next door got built up, this workshop is directly relevant to you. Show up and say so.
The Indian River Lagoon and septic-to-sewer conversion. The Florida Department of Environmental Protection has mandated that cities along the lagoon convert thousands of aging septic systems to central sewer. That is a major infrastructure cost for both the city and property owners, and the timeline is not optional. How the LDC handles development in areas where sewer service doesn’t yet exist affects who pays, how fast it happens, and whether growth keeps outrunning the infrastructure supporting it. That’s worth a public comment.
What Happened at Workshop 1
The first workshop, held March 3, covered Neighborhood Compatibility. Three issues drew the most attention: the 500-foot notification radius for development projects (residents think it’s too narrow), Citizen Participation Plan enforcement (the current code lets developers dismiss neighbor concerns with a written justification, which is a low bar), and whether multi-family design standards should apply to buildings under five units.
Five formal written concerns went into the public record before that session, submitted to Assistant Growth Management Director Deborah Flynn. The city’s consulting firm, Inspire Placemaking, is facilitating the series. The record is accumulating. The more residents show up and put concerns in writing, the harder it is for the final code revisions to ignore them.
Two More After This
Workshop 3 is April 8 and covers Community Development. That includes planned unit developments, mixed-use zoning, and the city’s push to attract commercial and industrial tax base to balance the residential growth that currently dominates.
Workshop 4 is April 21 and covers Processes and Transparency. This is the one that addresses how state laws are shrinking local control. HB 381 moved subdivision plat approvals from public council votes to administrative staff review. The Live Local Act lets developers bypass local zoning entirely if a project includes affordable housing. Those preemptions are permanent unless the Legislature reverses them. That makes every remaining public input opportunity, including these workshops, worth taking seriously.
The Online Survey Is Still Open
Residents who can’t attend in person can submit feedback through the city’s online survey at https://ow.ly/5b1b50YicpK. The current survey covers Neighborhood Compatibility topics from Workshop 1. The city has indicated additional surveys may follow as the workshop series continues.
The survey is not a substitute for showing up. Written public comments carry more weight and create a cleaner record. But it’s better than nothing if you can’t make it Tuesday.
If You Go
LDC Phase 2 Workshop 2: Infrastructure & Environmental Tuesday, March 17, 2026 4:00 PM Palm Bay City Hall 120 Malabar Road SE, Palm Bay, FL 32907
More information: https://www.palmbayfl.gov/government/city-departments-f-to-z/growth-management/land-development-planning
Sources
City of Palm Bay LDC Phase 2 workshop schedule announcement, February 20, 2026
LDC Phase 2 Research Notes
Workshop 1 meeting notes, March 3, 2026










