From June 1-July 15, King County residents have a once-a-decade opportunity to offer their input and make significant changes to the updates proposed for the Comprehensive Plan, a document that guides where people live, work, and play in unincorporated communities outside of city limits.
To provide input, visit publicinput.com/y8200.
The Comprehensive Plan drives county decisions and planning for services in unincorporated areas, such as where homes, offices, or stores can be built; how roads, buildings, and trees contribute to the look and feel of neighborhoods; investments in transit, sewers, and parks; protection of working farms and forests; and access to clean water, clean air, and a healthy environment.
“The comprehensive plan is our chance to join together and chart our course to a better future," County Executive Dow Constantine said. “Here is the opportunity to provide County officials input on how our region should manage growth, increase affordable housing, tackle climate change, advance racial and social justice, and provide a robust transportation network. I encourage everyone to participate during the open comment period.”
Since January 2022, when the initial scoping began, King County staff have received a record 10,000 comments from the public weighing in on their priorities for their neighborhoods. These priorities have been incorporated into the public review draft, which is now available for further input.
The Comprehensive Plan draft update contains a number of options King County is considering to build affordable housing, tackle climate change, and ensure social equity in our region:
Affordable housing
Middle housing: Encouraging and streamlining the development of more naturally affordable housing such as duplexes, triplexes, and fourplexes.
Inclusionary housing: Creating an incentive program that would increase the supply of affordable housing by offering developers cost-saving measures if they voluntarily include some affordable units in the building.
Climate change
Cleaner energy and wildfire safeguards: Encouraging a reduction in fossil fuel use in buildings, utilities, and transportation, and promoting the use of renewable resources. Collaborating and planning with community partners to improve forest health and reduce the impacts of wildfires.
Stormwater improvements: Working with other jurisdictions on a regional stormwater system that will make the water cleaner, add more green space for people to enjoy, and protect against erosion from stronger storms and flooding.
Social equity
Racially disparate impacts report: Analyzing how past land use regulations, such as development decisions and neighborhood investments, have impacted Black, Indigenous, and People of Color households and identifying actions to repair these past harms.
Housing stability: Supporting projects, strategies, and investments that promote housing stability and prevent people from having to leave their homes due to rising costs
Climate Equity: Supporting climate solutions that distribute benefits equitably, particularly to frontline communities most impacted by climate-related harm.
General planning proposals
Transportation investments: Investing in safe, equitable, and accessible transportation for people walking, biking, driving, using wheelchairs, or transit -- with a focus on communities most in need
Rural development: Protecting the unique character of rural communities by limiting the impacts of resorts, materials processing sites, mining operations, and mixed-use developments in rural areas.
In addition to providing feedback via a survey and email, there will be two opportunities to talk to King County staff to learn more about these proposals and offer feedback:
Thursday, June 8: Virtual Townhall, 6:30-8 p.m.
Thursday, June 22: Open House, Southgate Roller Rink, 4-8 p.m.