Skip to Content, Navigation, or Footer.
A spirit that is not afraid

Auburn City Council discusses diverse agenda at second October meeting

On Tuesday, Oct. 17, the Auburn City Council held its biweekly meeting.

A wide variety of topics were on the agenda. Two that stood out were the approval of alcoholic beverage licenses for three businesses and the rezoning of three pieces of land.

The three businesses attempting to obtain alcoholic beverage licenses were Corner Office, Tiger on the Green and Tiger Den.

Corner Office, a cafe located at 320 W. Samford Ave., was seeking approval for a Special Events Retail ABC license.

Tiger on the Green, a mixture of a restaurant, bar and mini golf experience, is set to open on Oct. 23 at 2601 E. University Drive. This new business was in search of retail beer and table wine ABC licenses for on and off premises use.

Tiger Den, a convenience store located at 1791 Shug Jordan Parkway, was seeking retail beer and table wine ABC licenses for off-premises use only.

The rezoning ordinances involved Miracle Road and Sarah Lane, Reeves Property and the Moores Mill Planned Development District (PDD) Amendment.

The Miracle Road and Sarah Lane rezoning involved approximately one acre of property at 1758 Miracle Road from rural to development district housing.

The Reeves Property rezoning involved approximately 11.20 acres from rural to development district housing.

The Moores Mill PDD Amendment involved 348 acres zoned as development district housing and limited development district. The subject property is located south of Moores Mill Road and west of Ogletree Road. The discussion was postponed from the Sept. 19 meeting.

Some of the other business discussed at the meeting included board vacancy announcements, contracts and agreements regarding equipment and vehicles needed for projects and some ordinances and resolutions.

The next Auburn City Council meeting will take place on Tuesday, Nov. 7 at 6 p.m. City Council meetings are held at  141 N. Ross St.


Daniel Locke | Community Editor

Daniel Locke, junior in journalism, is the community editor for The Auburn Plainsman.

Twitter: @danieljlocke


Share and discuss “Auburn City Council discusses diverse agenda at second October meeting” on social media.