Lompoc launches multi‑year general‑plan update, consultants urge focused scope
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Summary
City planners and consultants launched Phase 2 of Lompoc’s general‑plan update, outlining a schedule to finish by October 2028, an engagement strategy of in‑person workshops and online tools, and a focus on infill and annexation to accommodate anticipated housing growth to 2050.
The City of Lompoc opened a multi‑year update to its general plan on Feb. 3, with contract planner Lori Tamora and consultants describing a phased process, outreach plan and topics for review.
Consultant Jim Harnish told council that Phase 2 will address remaining required elements — land use, conservation/open space and noise — and several optional elements such as parks, economic development and urban design if the city elects to retain them. He said the team plans an engagement program centered on a project website, three in‑person workshops with online alternatives, and regular council and planning commission check‑ins. "Less is more," the consultant said during the presentation, summarizing council direction to avoid an overly prescriptive, bloated plan.
The consultants and staff proposed completing the plan by October 2028, with an initial set of outreach activities and a schedule that anticipates coordinating the EIR and potential sphere‑of‑influence (SOI) annexation work with LAFCO and SBCAG. Harnish emphasized the need to anticipate the region’s RHNA (regional housing needs allocation) through 2050 and to analyze options including infill, increased density in suitable areas and targeted annexations.
Council members pressed on capacity and growth assumptions. One councilor asked whether the city should identify a realistic capacity ceiling — "what if Lompoc can only hold 55,000 people" — rather than reflexively adopting SBCAG population projections. Consultants said they would analyze occupancy, unit yields and annexation scenarios and present alternatives, including a hybrid approach that blends infill with strategic annexations.
Public commenters who had followed Lompoc planning for decades warned the council to guard against policy changes that could hamper annexation and to ensure the city can legally justify its housing sites against state challenges. Consultants said they noted those concerns and will refine exhibits to identify federally owned land and other areas that are not available for development.
Next steps: staff and consultants will return with a trends and existing‑conditions report and a council study session in April; the consultant team asked the council to identify priorities they want emphasized in the triage of optional elements.

