Kenai staff proposes moving technical subdivision standards to road design manual to speed updates

Kenai Planning and Zoning Commission · December 11, 2025

Loading...

AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

City planning staff presented edits to Title 14 that would shift technical road, sidewalk and utility specifications into a separate Kenai Road Design Manual and clarify timelines for council review of vacations; commissioners asked staff to clarify stream protections and public-notice language.

Kenai planning staff told the Planning and Zoning Commission on Dec. 10 that they want to move detailed technical standards for subdivisions out of Kenai Municipal Code (Title 14) and into a new Kenai Road Design Manual they say will be easier to update as engineering practice changes.

Director Kevin Buettner said the proposed edits would replace prescriptive code language — for example, specific pavement widths and sidewalk construction details — with a reference to the draft road design manual and change the code’s wording from “shall” to “will” in many places to improve readability. He said the manual and related water/wastewater development guide will be subject to public process and council adoption and would serve as the city’s engineering standard for both residential and collector streets.

Commissioners and public commenters pressed staff on several specifics. Buettner proposed adding cross-references to Kenai Peninsula Borough code 20.65.050 to make the 30-day timeline for borough vacation actions explicit and warned that, without clear procedure, council silence can be interpreted as consent. Residents and commissioners asked staff to strengthen protections for streams connected to the Kenai River and to note state and borough environmental protections where appropriate.

On notice and outreach, Buettner said the draft removes a requirement to publish only in a newspaper and instead favors broader, multiple-media notice (including traditional newspaper, postings and online methods); commissioners urged the language be explicit about which mediums will be used so that notice remains discoverable to residents who rely on print.

Buettner said draft manuals are expected early in the new year; staff will revise the code language based on commission feedback and return with a refined packet for additional public review and possible referral to council once the manuals are complete. No ordinance or formal council action was taken at the Dec. 10 meeting on the code amendments themselves.