Adam,
One of the problems here is that you are reading
into rather than reading - the regulations.
I am not an attorney - and therefor cannot give you legal advice - I am however an expert in various building and life safety codes - and also have represented a number of clients in zoning efforts.
One of the reasons I am successful in these endevors is that i do not interpert anything - i simply read the written word.
Rod - doesn't it seem that these various ordinances contradict each other?
Not in the least.
What the heck is an "entrance" to a home occupation? Consider this scenario:
Say I have a studio outbuilding. Say there's also a mixing room in my residential house - takes up 10% of the house floor space (which is in fact something I'm planning to set-up). Say I do all the business accounting in the residence, make phone calls, do scheduling, rough mixing, meet & greet potential clients, even write songs for my own releases... that sort of thing. But then... live tracking & full band work is done in the studio outbuilding. Seems to me like I'm perfectly following the ordinance, no?
No you are not.
The entrance to the space devoted to the home occupation shall be from within the dwelling.
What part of that is unclear to you? You are talking about space devoted to tracking a band - as a part of your home occupation - and they require the entrance to that
"shall be within the dwelling". How does the outbuilding meet the requirement?
Allowed outbuildings are required to be incidental to and accessory to the
main use:
from the regulations:
C. Permitted Accessory Uses:
1. Accessory uses and structures customarily incidental to and subordinate to the permitted principle use, including home occupations, roadside stands, agricultural buildings and structures, and private stables.
Everything here begins with the main use.
Thus - a detached gararge would be incidental to and accessory to a residence - as would a storage shed - as would a poolhouse for the equipment for a swimming pool - but an airplane hanger would not - nor would a resturant - nor would a recording studio.
It specifically allows home occupations - but it also defines home occupations in the beginning of the regulations.
That's the thing about the regs - you have to take them in their entirety, read them exactly the way they are written - here is their definition of a home occupation:
Home Occupation: Any use customarily conducted entirely within a dwelling which is clearly incidental and secondary to the residential use of the lot; does not change the character of the dwelling, and meets all applicable provisions of this Ordinance.
Read the above - the intent is clear..... and by the definition - a studio (which is a use that is NOT customarily conducted entirely within a dwelling) is not an allowed home occupation.
Then there's the 20% rule. It's weird, but it only applies to the principal residence... and as I quoted earlier, accessory buildings for home occupations are clearly allowed. It's very contradictory. Consider a farmer - he's allowed a ton of outbuildings (this is a farmer-friendly area - there are many farms in my area). NONE of the farming business takes place in his residence. Where's the entrance to the farmer's 'home occupation'?
There is no entrance to the farmers home occupation - because the farmer does not have a home occupation.
Once again - read the reulations:
B. Permitted Principal Uses:
1. Commercial agriculture, excluding the slaughtering of farm animals for commercial food production.
2. Public or private conservation areas, game refuges, and similar uses, but excluding campgrounds.
3. Public or private outdoor recreation, limited to golf courses and country clubs, play fields, playgrounds, and similar recreation facilities of an open space and low intensity character.
4. Commercial stables.
5. Single family dwellings.
6. Day care, family home.
7. Foster care facility, family home; provided it is not located within one thousand five hundred (1,500) feet of another such facility.
The farm is the principal use - the farmers house would be a secondary accessory use which is incidental to the primary use.
See the difference?
One of your mistakes is trying to read into the regs....... you state:
"and as I quoted earlier, accessory buildings for home occupations are clearly allowed"
They most certainly are not allowed - clearly or otherwise........ you have to read it again:
Accessory uses and structures customarily incidental to and subordinate to the permitted principle use
That does not say that structures incidental to an accessory use is permitted - it says that structures incidental to a
PRINCIPAL use is permitted. You mistake the fact that they allow home occupations (which they require to be in the home) with the allowance of structures for a purpose which is NOT incidental to or accessory to - the principal use.
In my understanding of the written word - you cannot make it from A to B here.
So you can have your garage - and storage shed - the farmer can have his silo and home - the golf course can have it's clubhouse - etc., etc.
But it doesn't say that you can have a farm if your primary use is residential.
And there is nothing confusing about the entrance requirement or the 20%
You can take up to 20% of your primary residence and use it for your home business - you cannot perform your home business out of a detached building - period - it is not compliant with the regulations.
I don't know what else to say...........
Rod
Ignore the man behind the curtain........