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Community planning board ready to wrap up
By Rodika Tollefson
KP News
After about two years of meetings,
discussions and debates, the Key Peninsula Community
Planning Board is ready to wrap up its work on a draft
plan that will impact development on the Key Peninsula
for the next 20 years.
The board is expected to discuss
the last portion of the plan, commercial design
standards, either in January or February. Pierce County
hired the architectural firm BCRA to come up with
proposed solutions based on input from the community.
Only about two dozen community members turned out for
the six-hour “design charrette” meeting sponsored by the
county in December —a lower than expected turnout.

Andrea Pope, owner
of M&A Pizza, presents the ideas her
group came up with during the design charrette
hosted by
Pierce County Planning and Land Services at the
Vaughn
Civic Center as part of the Key Peninsula
Community
Planning Board’s land-use planning discussions.
Photo by Rodika Tollefson |
Participants were divided into
three groups, which discussed various ideas about what
Key Peninsula’s commercial centers should — or should
not — look like. Some of the recurring ideas included
pedestrian-friendly amenities (such as common areas),
use of natural materials, maintaining individual
identities for each commercial area, and central
signage.
BCRA will include the ideas into an
“existing and desired conditions report,” according to
Mike Krueger, county planner who has been overseeing the
development of the Key Peninsula Community Plan. “The
report will recommend design solutions including polices
and regulatory strategies for implementation that will
be considered by the CPB when we meet again,” he said.
The next meeting is scheduled for
Jan. 17, but due to the holidays the exact agenda will
not be determined until closer to the meeting and will
depend on how much progress BCRA makes by that time.
In addition to the report examining
current and proposed standards, the consultant will
prepare a feasibility analysis of the proposed
standards, and it will be up to the community planning
board to determine how the recommendations should be
implemented, and whether they should be mandatory or
voluntary.
The Key Peninsula Community Plan
includes sections discussing environmental, land-use,
economic development, transportation and community
character policies. The community board has been meeting
since September 2004, although some representatives, who
were appointed by the Pierce County executive, have not
attended meetings regularly. The completed draft plan
will be forwarded to the Pierce County Planning
Commission, which in turn will send its recommendations
to the county council for final approval. A community
open house and several public hearings will be scheduled
before the plan is adopted.
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