Contact Us
Categories
- Judgment creditors
- Fractional Investment
- Section 1031 transactions
- Investment
- U.S. Supreme Court
- Closing
- Closing Disclosure
- Good Faith Estimate
- HUD-1 Settlement Statement
- Kentucky minimum wage
- Lenders
- Minimum wage
- Truth in Lending Act
- “Know Before You Owe”
- Arbitration
- Breach
- Condemnation
- Home Equity Conversion Mortgages (HECMs)
- Reverse mortgages
- Zoning Regulations
- Affordable Housing
- Commercial Real Estate
- Dodd-Frank Act
- Economic Development
- Land Use Law
- Landlord
- Lease
- Mortgage
- Planning and Zoning
- Purchase Contract
- Real Estate Law
- Rescission
- Tenant
- URLTA
- Deed
- Drones
- Homeowners Association
- Land Surveys
- National Association of Realtors (NAR)
- plat
- Property Lines
- Property Survey
- Property Titling
- Real Estate Agents
- Same-Sex Couples
- Agritourism
- Commercial Lease
- Condominium
- Deeds
- Emergency Preparedness
- Exclusive Use Clause
- Horizontal Property Law
- Insurance Companies
- Insured
- Kentucky Condominium Act
- KRS 383.500
- LBAR
- Loans
- Natural Disasters
- Overlay Zoning
- Rural Areas
- Steenrod v. Louisville Yacht Club Association
- Title Insurance Policies
- Trulia
- Uncategorized
- Zillow
- "Right-of-Way Agents"
- Benningfield v. Zinmeister
- Bluegrass Pipeline
- Boards of Adjustment
- Boilerplate Language
- Building Inspection
- Co-Signing
- Code Enforcement
- Conditional uses
- Conservation Easement
- Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (“CFPB”)
- Credit Report
- Credit Score
- Dog owners
- Easement
- Eminent Domain
- Emotional Support Animals
- ESIGN
- Federal Housing Administration (FHA)
- FICO
- General Forms
- Homebuyers
- Inspection
- Kentucky landowners
- KRS §258.235(4)
- KRS §383.580
- Multi-unit properties
- Occupancy Fraud
- Power of Attorney ("POA")
- Screening
- Security Deposit
- Servicers
- The Loan Estimate form
- Truth in Lending Statement
- U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development
- Variances
- Zoning Ordinance Text Amendment
Showing 1 post tagged Comprehensive Plan.
I Love It When a Comprehensive Plan Comes Together
It’s that time again – Lexington has been and remains busy assembling its 2018 Comprehensive Plan, titled “Imagine Lexington,” which will provide guidance on how the city will regulate land use over the next five years. This is a complex process that takes place in two phases. The recently concluded Phase I has already set out the goals and objectives of the plan, which we’ll examine in this blog post. The next phase, Elements and Implementation, may take the remainder of 2018 to hash out, although the Planning Commission suggests it will draft it through the summer. This plan is not just mandated by law; it helps mold a vision for the community of how it handles growth and expansion, which will shape the city for decades to come. More >