Columbus is extending a deadline for neighborhoods to give input on a plan to create one citywide land use map, which some of the city's 21 area commissions voiced concern over.
The Columbus Growth Strategy was originally supposed to come before Columbus City Council for a first-reading vote Monday evening, but will likely be delayed until next year. A new deadline asks the commissions to give input by the end of December.
Columbus Zone In Project Manager Luis Teba emailed area commissions on Thursday about the deadline extension.
Land use maps provide a loose framework that lays out how broad stretches of land that should support a different type of zoning. Zoning code, on the other hand, sets the required standards for what can be built in each zoned area.
Click here to view the Columbus Growth Strategy map.
Before this legislation, the 21 area commissions made their own land use maps. Some neighborhoods haven't updated their land use maps in more than a decade even though zoning law has changed over the years.
This is the next step of the city's Zone In initiative, which wants to overhaul zoning law and maps in Columbus. Zone In started with the city's main traffic corridors and will soon try to address commercial and industrial areas of the city.
Clintonville Area Commission expressed concern over the original deadline for input at the end of November.
Other area commissions like Downtown Columbus and North Linden voiced support for the plan before the original deadline.
A commissioner with the Greater South East Area Commission told WOSU he was concerned about the plan removing power from area commissions.
Kevin Kilbane, the city's Department of Development deputy director, said in a statement that when there is a conflict between the proposed citywide map and an area commission's map, the citywide map will supersede the relevant land-use components of existing area or neighborhood plans.
Most area commissions will have one more meeting before the end of the month where they could consider this proposal and hear input from the public.
Information on area commissions and when the groups meet can be found on the Columbus Area Commission's website.