At the time, Mayor Alan Webber told SFR the city would need to “check our legal options and we’ll see what we make of it.” SFPD evacuates downtown over possible bomb hoax While city officials had testified against the plan to incorporate portions of land into Agua Fría village, they did not attend the final county meeting last month at which commissioners approved the compromise plan. Homewise, which has a planned development for the area, had also filed a legal notice of administrative appeal in May, but then came up with the map compromise solution the county commission approved. A citizen petition lobbying for portions of the area to be incorporated into the village rather than the city sparked multiple public meetings, as well as a legal challenge from the city. Mayor Alan Webber, city councilors and county commissioners reinitiated the process in 2021 with a joint resolution aimed at negotiating a deal. The area was identified in a settlement agreement as territory the city would annex, but it sat in limbo after the city failed to complete the process by 2018 as the agreement stipulated. That map represented a compromise regarding an area of the county designated as 1B and allowed a few hundred homeowners into the village, while leaving other portions available for annexation by the city. The City of Santa Fe on Wednesday filed notice in the First Judicial District Court of its plans to appeal Santa Fe County’s approval last month of a map expanding the historic village of Agua Fría. City to appeal county’s Agua Fría decision
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