HomeMy WebLinkAboutBozeman Community Plan Presentation Slides 9.11.19CAHAB Wednesday,September 11,2019
What is Planning?
Planning is a process –
o Data collection, estimates, analysis
•Understanding of relationships
o Determination of goals and objectives
o Definition and choice of strategy
o Create plans of action
o Implementation
o Assessment of progress
What is Planning?
Planning is an physical and
intellectual end product –
An identified and specific set of
1.Goals –What you want to do
2.Desired end states –What you want to be
3.A specific set of actions to be taken –What you
are going to do to get what you want
Why Does Bozeman Do Planning?
•To protect public health, safety, and welfare
•To balance competing needs and issues that are individually considered to be “Good”
•To help rationally distribute and obtain greatest benefit from scarce public resources
The value of an ounce of
prevention rose today to
2.8 pounds of cure.
Value - Ounce of Prevention
0
0.5
1
1.5
2
2.5
3
Pound of CureMore important than ever to do things
correctly the first time.
•Transportation Master Plan –2017:
•Community Transportation Safety Plan –
2013:
•Downtown Strategic Parking
Management Plan –2016:
•Bozeman Community Transportation
Safety Plan:
•Fire and EMS Master Plan –2017:
•Gallatin County Hazard Mitigation Plan
(Draft) –2018:
•Community Wildfire Protection Plan
(Draft) –2019:
•Gallatin Triangle Planning Study –2014:
•Triangle Plan (in development)
•Midtown Action Plan –2017:
•Downtown Improvement Plan –2019:
•Housing Needs Assessment –2019 (in
development):
•Bozeman Creek Neighborhood Plan –
2005:
•Midtown Action Plan –2017:
•Integrated Water Resources Plan –
2013:
•Integrated Water Resources
Implementation Plan –2013:
•Stormwater Management Plan
(City of Bozeman and MSU) –2019:
•Stormwater Facilities Plan –2008:
•Wastewater Collection Facilities
Plan Update –2015:
•Water Facility Plan Update –2017:
•Drought Management Plan –2017:
•Parks, Recreation, Open Space,
and Trails (PROST) Plan –2007:
•Community Climate Action Plan –
2011 (currently being updated):
•Urban Forestry Management Plan –
2016:
•Cemetery Master Plan Update –
2018:
•Bozeman Creek Enhancement Plan
–2012:
Who Does the Land Use Planning?
Public Staff
Planning Board
City Commission
First Plat of Bozeman
Influences on Planning
Political Process
Natural World
Cost and Returns
Federal
Level
Local
Level
State
Level
The Big Picture –MT Constitution
Section 8.Right of participation. The
public has the right to expect governmental agencies to afford such
reasonable opportunity for citizen
participation in the operation of the
agencies prior to the final decision as may
be provided by law.
Section 9.Right to know. No person
shall be deprived of the right to examine
documents or to observe the deliberations
of all public bodies or agencies of state
government and its subdivisions, except in cases in which the demand of
individual privacy clearly exceeds the
merits of public disclosure.
Section 3.Inalienable rights.
All persons are born free and
have certain inalienable rights.
They include the right to a clean
and healthful environment and
the rights of pursuing life's
basic necessities, enjoying and
defending their lives and
liberties, acquiring, possessing
and protecting property, and
seeking their safety, health and
happiness in all lawful ways. In
enjoying these rights, all
persons recognize
corresponding responsibilities.
Growth Policy
Components
Maps
Title 76, Chapter 1, Section
601, Montana Code
Annotated
2009 Growth
Policy Contents
CHAPTER 1 –Addressing Growth and Change
CHAPTER 2 –Principles and Planning
CHAPTER 3 –Land Use
CHAPTER 4 –Community Quality
CHAPTER 5 –Historic Preservation
CHAPTER 6 –Housing
CHAPTER 7 –Arts and Culture
CHAPTER 8 –Economic Development
CHAPTER 9 –Environmental Quality and Critical Lands
CHAPTER 10 –Parks, Recreation, Opens Space and Trails
CHAPTER 11 –Transportation
CHAPTER 12 –Public Services and Facilities
CHAPTER 13 –Disaster and Emergency Prevention and
Response
CHAPTER 14 –Regional Coordination and Cooperation
CHAPTER 15 –Subdivision Review
CHAPTER 16 –Implementation
CHAPTER 17 –Review and Amendment
APPENDIX A –Background Information
APPENDIX B –Community Characteristics
APPENDIX C –Land Use, Future Needs and
Background
APPENDIX D –Community Quality
APPENDIX E –Historic Preservation
APPENDIX F –Housing
APPENDIX G –Environmental Quality and
Critical Lands
APPENDIX H –Public Services and Facilities
APPENDIX I –Implementation
APPENDIX J –History of Planning in Bozeman
APPENDIX K –Glossary
APPENDIX L –Public Outreach
APPENDIX M –Interlocal Agreements
Chapter 3 –Land
Use Themes
Goals, Objectives,
and Policies
Physical Outcomes March 2009
•Urban -Six dwellings
per net acre
3.78 square miles
•Rural -One dwelling
per 5 net acres
62.48 square miles
Difference in land used is 58.69
square miles
7,201 Homes built in Bozeman 1990-2007
Physical Outcomes
2019 Planning Area
Seven Guiding Themes
•THE SHAPE OF THE CITY
•A CITY OF NEIGHBORHOODS
•A CITY BOLSTERED BY DOWNTOWN AND
COMPLEMENTARY DISTRICTS
•A CITY INFLUENCED BY OUR NATURAL
ENVIRONMENT, PARKS, AND OPEN SPACE
•A CITY THAT PRIORITIZES ACCESSIBILITY AND
MOBILITY CHOICES
•A CITY POWERED BY ITS CREATIVE, INNOVATIVE,
AND ENTREPRENEURIAL ECONOMY
•A CITY ENGAGED IN REGIONAL COORDINATION
Why Planning?
“What is common to the greatest number has the least care bestowed upon it. Everyone thinks chiefly of his own, hardly at all of the common interest.”
Aristotle