Webster enacted a commercial development moratorium. Here's what it does.
Webster Local Law No. 2 of 2026, enacted June 4, pauses commercial development approvals across every commercial zone in town. This explainer covers what's frozen, what's exempt, and which projects are already affected.
The Webster Town Board enacted a six-month moratorium on commercial development approvals on June 4, 2026, covering every one of the town's commercial districts. The law takes effect upon filing with the New York State Department of State. Here is what the law covers, what it exempts, and which projects are already affected.
What is it?
The moratorium is Local Law No. 2 of 2026, formally titled "A moratorium on certain permits and approvals for certain development projects." The Town Board held a public hearing on April 2. On April 16, it voted unanimously (5-0) to refer the proposed law to Monroe County for a mandatory inter-governmental review, a procedural step required under state law before any local zoning measure can be enacted. The board voted unanimously, 5-0, on June 4 to enact the law. It takes effect upon filing with the New York State Department of State.
The stated reason: Webster's Comprehensive Plan has not been updated since 2008. As the law's own legislative intent section puts it, "The current comprehensive plan and zoning and planning laws are inadequate to protect and preserve the Town of Webster's unique character and attributes while accommodating appropriate growth." The Town Board wants to update the plan before approving additional development, and expects a draft within six to seven months (roughly October to November 2026).
No organized opposition was recorded at the April 2 hearing.
Which zones are covered?
All six of Webster's commercial districts are covered: High Intensity Commercial (HC), Medium Intensity Commercial (MC), Low Intensity Commercial (LC-1 and LC-2), Commercial Outdoor Storage (CO), and Office Park North (O-P).
What kinds of approvals are paused?
The moratorium targets siting processes the Town says its 2008 plan no longer adequately governs, including solar farms and data centers, as well as large subdivisions in commercial zones. Specifically, within those zones, the law puts a hold on:
- Subdivisions of land into more than four parcels
- Large-scale solar projects (the town's moratorium covers solar siting approvals in commercial zones; the law's legislative intent section cites Webster's 2008 Comprehensive Plan as inadequate 'to accommodate appropriate growth')
- Data centers
- Site plan approvals, special permits, and rezoning applications generally
What is NOT affected?
The moratorium exempts a significant range of everyday activity:
- Routine home improvements, renovations, and repairs
- Single-family building permits on existing lots
- Interior improvements
- Redevelopment or rehabilitation of existing structures
- Any application that had already received Preliminary Site Plan or Special Permit approval before the effective date
That last exemption is the most consequential for pending projects.
What does this mean for projects already in the pipeline?
Two applications before the June 2 Planning Board meeting illustrate the split.
The Dinks and Links recreational complex proposed for Five Mile Line Road was tabled at the June 2 Planning Board meeting without receiving preliminary site plan approval. During the June 4 Town Board meeting, as the board considered the moratorium vote, a board member raised the application as an example of a project that had appeared before the Planning Board multiple times without receiving preliminary approval, and asked whether it could proceed. Town attorney Kyle Taylor confirmed that the project is subject to the moratorium because no preliminary approval was granted before the effective date. Taylor also confirmed that the hardship relief process is available, but cautioned the board that granting an exception would set a precedent worth careful consideration. For more on the June 2 hearing, see the full Planning Board recap.
By contrast, 7 Brew Coffee's drive-through on Hard Road received preliminary site plan approval at the June 2 Planning Board meeting, before the moratorium took effect. That application appears protected under the exemption for projects with pre-effective-date preliminary approval.
How can someone seek relief?
The law includes a hardship process. An applicant may apply to the Town Board for limited relief. The requirements: a written application, a $150 filing fee, and clear and convincing evidence, including what the law describes as "dollars and cents proof," that the moratorium causes irreparable injury and that it would be unjust not to grant relief.
How long does this last?
The law runs six months from its effective date, expiring around December 4, 2026. The Town Board may extend it for up to two additional three-month periods, for a maximum total duration of twelve months.
A Comprehensive Plan draft is expected in October or November 2026. If the plan is adopted and new zoning is in place before the moratorium expires, the pause could end earlier.
AI tools were used in drafting and research.