Springfield City Council debated an amendment to Council Bill 2025‑260 that would have broadened appeal rights so property owners could appeal driveway and access decisions to the Planning and Zoning Commission in more cases.
Council member Lee moved the amendment, saying it would give small businesses and unique sites an opportunity to be heard without changing technical criteria. "The only thing this does is allow a board to consider all of those issues along with a unique site and say, hey, we need this driveway for this reason," Lee said.
Chad Zickafoo, the city traffic engineer, told council the original staff text limits appeals on high‑volume arterials and expressways because those decisions should remain engineering‑based to protect corridor safety and performance and align with Vision Zero objectives. Zickafoo said the new land development code and the access management language had been vetted with professional organizations, planners and engineers.
Council member Jensen and others argued the amendment would broaden discretionary, nontechnical decision‑making for high‑impact roadways and cited Federal Highway Administration guidance and the city’s comprehensive plan that emphasize reducing access point density to improve safety. Council members voted on the amendment only; it failed. Council subsequently voted on the original council bill and the unamended text passed.
What happens next: The city will implement the access management provisions as adopted in the unamended bill; staff and planning will continue to apply engineering review criteria for arterials and high‑impact intersections.
Attributions: Motion and debate are drawn from council member remarks and staff testimony during the meeting.