The Lexington City Planning Commission voted on March 26 to adopt the Lexington Preservation and Growth Management Program (LP GMP) as an addendum to the 2023 comprehensive plan (Imagine Lexington 2045), formalizing a data‑driven process to review potential modifications to the urban service area.
Hal Bailey presented the ordinance and described a five‑step framework centered on a five‑year growth trends report, a residential‑need calculation for vacant land, policy recommendations to better use land within the urban service area and a special economic development pathway that requires super‑majority council review. "This framework really falls into a five‑step process," Bailey told commissioners, emphasizing that the program codifies long‑standing practice and adds transparency through the Lexington Analytic Research Center.
Commissioners pressed staff on how the formula calculates residential need and who makes final decisions. Bailey and staff stated that the planning commission begins the process with the growth trends report and makes location and land‑use recommendations, while the Urban County Council determines the quantity of expansion and makes the final decision on whether to expand the urban service area.
Several commissioners voiced concern that the ordinance's formula relies on historical data and could entrench past patterns rather than advance future planning goals. Commissioner Mickler strongly cautioned that a data formula rooted in past development patterns can create long‑term harms — pointing to prior parking‑minimum policies as an example. "If this formula is left on the books for a long time, it will cause us to drift further from our goals," he said.
Other commissioners, including Commissioner Nickel, supported a data‑driven, transparent approach and argued the program provides a structured, public process for periodic review. Commissioner Nickel then moved to adopt the resolution adding the LP GMP to the comprehensive plan; the motion was seconded and carried with one negative vote recorded in the transcript.
What happens next: the LP GMP will be an addendum to the comprehensive plan and will guide the preparation of periodic growth trends reports, policy recommendations and possible master‑planning activities if the growth analysis identifies a residential need. Additional work sessions and commission input on the analytic approach were suggested by commissioners who asked staff to refine data inputs and engage the commission in future work sessions.