Permit pileup: Following the paper trail for Asheville’s growing food economy

Filling vacant positions has been a struggle for the city of Asheville, according to development services director Shannon Tuch, who says that economic growth has increased demand for development specialists across the state. Photo by John Coutlakis

Nicknames like “Beer City USA,” “Foodtopia” and “Paris of the South” all acknowledge Asheville’s increasing significance as a food and drink haven. But for city development officials, keeping pace with the permitting needs of a burgeoning food industry has been a hard bite to swallow.

THE RESTAURATEUR’S HOLY GRAIL

A certificate of occupancy must be obtained and displayed prominently in commercial establishments, but for some restaurateurs, the legal document also serves as a battle scar of sorts. In business settings, the CO states that a building is fit to be occupied by a certain number of customers, and this human-safety aspect makes it more troublesome to acquire than most food and alcohol licenses.

In the simplest terms, the quest for a CO consists of two phases — the planning stage and the build-out — and the approval of both can require smaller prerequisite permits and months of collaboration between city officials and a restaurateur’s team.

Although Asheville’s business development-related services were consolidated into one building years ago, departments continued to operate in functional silos. Last summer, City Manager Gary Jackson created the Development Services Department — a new one-stop shop aimed at streamlining the fragmented permitting process. Despite major strides, his efforts haven’t placated everyone just yet.

PERMITTING ROUNDTABLE: IS THE CITY KEEPING PACE?

“We had a very difficult time in the permit process during plan review,” says Hole doughnut shop co-owner Caroline Whatley. Typically, plan reviews are facilitated by a single reviewer, but in Whatley’s case, a sudden reassignment added more than 20 new items to Hole’s to-do list, tagging an extra month onto the plans-approval process.

“The process is slower than it has ever been,” says Thirsty Monk owner and general contractor Barry Bialik. He feels the consolidated approach causes a bottleneck, since many processes are initiated by the handful of employees running the permit desk. “Everyone I know calls it ‘the time warp,’” he says. “You pretty much have to budget, for the most minor thing, that you’re going to be there for 45 minutes to an hour.”

Still others are satisfied with the city’s pace. Catawba Brewing co-owner Billy Pyatt says his Biltmore Village tasting room “came together pretty quickly,” thanks to the helpful guidance of the city staff who handled his beverage permitting. And Vortex Doughnuts co-owner Ron Patton echoed those sentiments, stating that inspectors were “thorough but fair” and worked with him over a “fairly normal” term.

Still, crossing the planning hurdle is a fleeting victory for those who face more challenges during round two — on-site inspections.

Doug Parry, who recently completed the build-out for Sovereign Remedies, reports that the sheer quantity of permits per project has gotten out of hand this year. “That’s been incredibly frustrating for me and inspectors,” he says, calling the conundrum an information overload.

Sovereign Remedies owner Charlie Hodge says that permits have a domino effect on each other. For example, a ramp permit triggered sprinkler and electrical inspections, causing a major source of bewilderment during his build-out. When Hodge called in his final inspection with the fire marshal, an official advised him to get a “final final” — one more head-scratcher to conclude the process. “It was comical — almost,” he says.

Yet most restaurateurs and contractors agree that city representatives are generally as helpful as they can be. It’s the system that needs repair.

CATCHING UP TO DEMAND

Development Services Director Shannon Tuch reports that although the city process is in a period of transition, users can already notice two of Jackson’s key improvements — more managers and new permitting software.

Jackson created three DSD management roles to coordinate the moving parts for complicated projects, field difficult questions and facilitate the orderly movement of permits throughout the system. The city had no formal permit tracking system before switching to Accella software last November, but now managers can analyze the number and start dates of applications that are pending or in review.

“The main benefit that people would experience right now is that they can pull permits online,” says Tuch of Accella’s benefits to external users. Although state law mandates that the person who pulls a permit must be the one completing the relevant work, Tuch says this rule was “clogging things up” for general contractors who could not coordinate and schedule inspections for their subcontractors. “We turned that off,” she reports, explaining that it is now presumed the parties are working together.

Bialik says that improvements in one area often lead to a bottleneck elsewhere but acknowledges the city’s efforts, such as the recent hire of former restaurateur Marni Graves. “This is the first time they’ve hired someone who has been on the other side of the desk,” he says approvingly.

COMMUNICATION BREAKDOWN

Despite significant improvements to the online platform, many users aren’t privy to the upgrades.

“We found out about that when we were pretty much done,” says Brooke Souhail, former co-owner of Urban Café. Souhail and her business partners took on the permitting maze single-handedly since their downtown space was previously a fully functioning commercial kitchen, but approval of minor electrical changes took several weeks.

“As an individual coming in and trying to do it yourself, you don’t get the information upfront,” she says. “You get bits and pieces as you go along.” Urban Café recently closed for reasons unrelated to permitting.

“Maybe they are working on things, but the communication is not the greatest,” says Bialik, who also remained unaware of online functionality despite years of experience working with the city and several current residential construction projects. “If it was, maybe there wouldn’t be some of these frustrations.”

Bialik’s latest struggle stems from scheduling inspections, though. According to the contractor, a new policy requires officials to perform multiple inspections per trip to a job site.  However, Bialik’s ability to continue scheduling single inspections muddles the rule and leads to no-show appointments. He says the policy has not been communicated and is haphazardly enforced, with no notice of cancellations.

RESTAURATEUR’S RESPONSIBILITIES

“They’ve got a hard job, and they do it pretty well,” says Elm Construction and Design owner Trey Greer, assessing the city’s performance. Greer isn’t fazed by the city’s transition and chalks the “horror stories” up to the inherent intricacies of restaurant building. “Building a restaurant is literally one of the most complicated construction projects that you can walk into,” he says. “If you don’t have qualified experience — contractors, architects, engineers — involved, there is a lot of opportunity for things to go wrong.”

Korean House general manager Jayson Im experienced this firsthand. “We hired the wrong people,” he says, recalling a multimonth struggle to gain approval for a new grill concept. Now that his team includes an experienced electrician and engineer, the restaurant is back on track to install the grills this month. Im notes more responsiveness and proactivity from city officials in recent months.

PLANNING FOR CONTINUED GROWTH

According to Tuch, city officials are transitioning as best they can with limited resources. “We’re still working out some kinks with how the system works,” she says, explaining that some of the most complicated aspects are internal changes. “It’s getting better and better, and I think in the next six months it will be working really well.”

Tuch says the DSD has been understaffed from the start and struggles to find qualified individuals to fill vacancies due to high demand for development employees nationwide. Plus, the volume of permit applications is staggering.

“We’ve had a real uptick in activity,” she says. “At any given time, we have 1,000 or more applications in process.”

Once the city’s resources catch up with demand, Tuch hopes to work with Asheville Independent Restaurants to create a guide for restaurant development steps, but “right now, we’ve just got to keep up with permit volume,” she says.

SHARE

Thanks for reading through to the end…

We share your inclination to get the whole story. For the past 25 years, Xpress has been committed to in-depth, balanced reporting about the greater Asheville area. We want everyone to have access to our stories. That’s a big part of why we've never charged for the paper or put up a paywall.

We’re pretty sure that you know journalism faces big challenges these days. Advertising no longer pays the whole cost. Media outlets around the country are asking their readers to chip in. Xpress needs help, too. We hope you’ll consider signing up to be a member of Xpress. For as little as $5 a month — the cost of a craft beer or kombucha — you can help keep local journalism strong. It only takes a moment.

About Kat McReynolds
Kat studied entrepreneurship and music business at the University of Miami and earned her MBA at Appalachian State University. Follow me @katmAVL

Before you comment

The comments section is here to provide a platform for civil dialogue on the issues we face together as a local community. Xpress is committed to offering this platform for all voices, but when the tone of the discussion gets nasty or strays off topic, we believe many people choose not to participate. Xpress editors are determined to moderate comments to ensure a constructive interchange is maintained. All comments judged not to be in keeping with the spirit of civil discourse will be removed and repeat violators will be banned. See here for our terms of service. Thank you for being part of this effort to promote respectful discussion.

7 thoughts on “Permit pileup: Following the paper trail for Asheville’s growing food economy

  1. “city officials are transitioning as best they can with limited resources”

    What is the total cost to the city projected to be for the water lawsuit?

    • andrewdahm

      Thanks so much! Since you’re Mr Moffitt’s spokesman, I’m gratified to learn that he will be reimbursing the City for legal costs associated with his attempt to steal the City’s water system!

    • andrewdahm

      As soon as Buncombe and the other subsidiary water systems pay the debts they avoided by declaring bankruptcy in the 20s. Asheville was the only borrower associated with the water system that actually paid off debt incurred to build the thing. Everybody else welched. It’s like trying to steal your neighbor’s car after yours has been repo’ed. The $114 million thing is a canard, by the way, completely untrue. Rep McGrady of all people has called you out on this lie.

  2. No. It’s true. McGrady was just playing “bad cop, good cop.” Also, the City of Asheville does not own the water system. Soon, it will not operate it.

  3. John Galt

    How did this elicit water system comments?

    How about the permitting department hire a Lean Process group and get rid of all the unnecessary steps, consolidate or eliminate some permits and provide a true flow chart for the permitting system.

  4. Lan Sluder

    Pros and cons of the article and issues aside, I’ve always thought “Paris of the South” is the most absurd slogan anyone ever attempted to misapply to Asheville.

    Paris and Asheville have as much in common as the moon and green cheese.

Leave a Reply

To leave a reply you may Login with your Mountain Xpress account, connect socially or enter your name and e-mail. Your e-mail address will not be published. All fields are required.