Planning staff presented a proposed amendment to the city’s land‑use rules that would ease a current 20‑foot vegetative buffer between off‑street parking lots and parcels in the GISD (institutional service) zone for commercial uses, a change staff said would make some downtown development more feasible.
The proposal, described by Ani Clayton of the planning department, would keep the buffer where parking abuts residences, schools or cemeteries but remove it for commercial or institutionally similar uses. "It's a 20 foot buffer, so it's pretty substantial," Clayton said, and staff told the committee the requirement can be difficult to meet on tight downtown lots.
Why it matters: committee members and staff said the buffer has blocked or constrained some redevelopment proposals — examples cited included a church and a business that could not add parking because lot width prevented meeting the buffer. Staff also noted that downtown land‑use patterns have shifted toward more residential uses, changing daytime parking demand.
Members asked for specifics and local examples before endorsing any rewrite. Councilor Leonard said he had requested the planning department bring the change to the committee and that staff would proceed with recommendations if the committee signaled general support. The planning board had already suggested retaining the buffer where parking abuts residences, schools and cemeteries; the committee’s feedback will inform staff drafts.
Next steps: staff will prepare draft ordinance language and follow up with the committee; no formal vote or ordinance change occurred at the meeting.