Edgewater Schedules Planning Meeting Without Agenda, Location | The Locally Times
A city record for the March 11, 2026, Planning & Zoning Board meeting confirms the date and time but omits the agenda and location.
## Meeting Scheduled Without Key Information The City of Edgewater has a Planning & Zoning Board meeting scheduled for 6:30 p.m. on March 11, 2026. According to the official meeting record posted by the city, the notice confirms the date and time but omits an agenda, supporting documents, and a location. Planning and zoning boards typically handle matters including land use applications, zoning changes, and development proposals that can directly impact property owners. Publicly available agendas serve as the primary tool for residents to monitor government actions, prepare for public comment, and understand the potential consequences of board decisions. The omission prevents the public from knowing what specific projects or policy changes are slated for a decision, creating a barrier to meaningful civic engagement. ## Notice Contrasts With Regional Practice The lack of detail in Edgewater’s notice contrasts with the practices of neighboring municipalities. On the same evening and at the exact same time, the Town of Montverde will also convene its Planning & Zoning Board. A notice posted on February 17, 2026, nearly a month in advance, explicitly states the location as “Town Hall.” Other public records show similar standards. Notices for the City of South Daytona’s city council meetings on March 10 and April 14, 2026, both list “City Hall” as the location. Similarly, a March 12, 2026, Code Enforcement Hearing notice from the City of Belle Isle includes a “View Details” link, indicating a pathway to additional information. The posting date for the Edgewater notice is not specified in available records, making it unclear how far in advance the limited information was provided. ## Critical Details Undisclosed The public record for the March 11 meeting does not reveal what specific proposals are on the docket, whether they involve major new developments, zoning map amendments, or minor variances. The city’s standard protocol for publishing meeting agendas and whether that procedure was followed in this instance cannot be determined from the available records. It also cannot be determined from the documents if the lack of a detailed agenda is an isolated incident or reflects a broader pattern in the city’s public notice practices. Without a published agenda and location, residents and interested parties lack the fundamental information required for public participation and oversight of community governance.