The City of Lake Jackson planning commission directed staff to research alternatives to the city’s current parking requirements and to form a review subcommittee to gather comparative data and recommend whether to retain requirements or adopt guidelines.
Staff presented background: some larger cities have shifted from fixed parking minimums to guideline approaches to encourage density and flexibility; downtown areas were noted as an exception because they are largely grandfathered. Commissioners discussed pros and cons: guidelines may encourage development and better use of underused parking, while removing firm requirements could allow developers to under‑park sites and reduce oversight over special cases.
Commissioners asked staff to focus comparative research on Texas cities and municipalities with populations of roughly 100,000 or fewer so the comparisons are relevant to local driving patterns and development dynamics. Several commissioners volunteered to serve on a short review subcommittee to meet with staff, pull data and return recommendations (names and roles discussed on the record); staff said the subcommittee work could meet in the late afternoon before regular meetings or at other convenient times and aimed to assemble data within about a month.
No ordinance change was adopted at this meeting; the action was a direction to staff and formation of a staff‑assisted review group to return with findings and a recommendation to the commission.