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Billings staff outline Billings 2045 land-use plan required by new state law and urge council input on housing-incentive choices

Billings City Council · February 17, 2026

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Summary

Planning staff presented the Billings 2045 draft framework under the Montana Land Use Planning Act, said the city must adopt at least five state-listed housing-incentive measures, and described a projected need for about 16,000 new housing units by 2045; staff requested council feedback on the interim planning commission’s recommendations and on a future land-use map.

Planning staff briefed the Billings City Council on the Billings 2045 land-use plan work required by the Montana Land Use Planning Act (2023), outlined public engagement to date, and sought council guidance on implementing the law’s housing-incentive options.

Staff said the city must demonstrate capacity and policy measures to accommodate projected growth — staff cited a compounded annual growth estimate that equates to roughly 30,000 additional residents, about 16,000 housing units and nearly 22,000 jobs by 2045 — and explained that the new state framework front-loads public participation and requires a future land-use map to guide administrative approvals.

Under the state law the city must pick at least five of 14 listed housing-incentive actions (items range from allowing duplexes/triplexes as permitted uses where single-family units are allowed to reducing parking or impact fees for ADUs). Staff noted many of the options are already in Billings’ code (for example, duplexes allowed where single-family is permitted and ADUs in place) and recommended studying overlay areas near transit and employment nodes, parking minimum reductions consistent with recent legislation, and possible incentives for infill.

Council members raised process questions: several asked for more time and suggested additional council work sessions (including daytime or lunch meetings) to review the future land-use map and proposed choices in more detail. Staff said neighborhood plans for the West End and The Heights are being folded into the citywide map and promised more targeted work sessions before any adoption. Staff also cautioned that adopting too few of the statutorily allowed incentives could invite further state action.

Staff requested council feedback on the interim planning commission’s recommendations and said they expect to continue public engagement through April and aim to finalize documents for adoption this summer, mindful of state reporting timelines.