Spokane County planning staff told the Planning Commission on Jan. 15 that work on an Environmental Impact Statement for parks and resource lands is underway and on a compressed schedule.
"We have to wrap up our work by December," Scott Chesney said, outlining a timeline that would assemble a draft plan by July, have a first full-draft of the comprehensive plan in mid-to-late July, and aim to complete public hearings in October and November with potential Board action Dec. 15. Chesney said study-area maps have been delivered to consultants and that traffic modeling — the first major technical task — is expected back by the end of January or the first week of February.
When the draft is published, Chesney said it will be followed by a 45-day comment period for the public and agencies. "That will give us a 45 day comment period from public and agencies," he said. Staff plans to post materials and an advanced tentative agenda on the comprehensive-plan update web page for public access.
The presentation emphasized that resource lands — agricultural, forest and mineral lands protected under the Growth Management Act (GMA) — require careful mapping and policy work because "once they're gone, they're gone," Chesney said. Staff reported the policy audit and a technical-advisory-committee draft are complete and that the TAC will help translate technical findings into a new vision for the county's agricultural economy.
Chesney also said the county sent soils and study-area maps to consultants to support traffic and other technical analyses and that the county expects to receive draft outputs in the coming weeks to support EIS assembly.
Next steps: staff will post consultant deliverables and the tentative advanced agenda to the planning update web page, return to the commission for chapter-by-chapter workshops through midyear, and assemble the draft plan for public review later this year.