Pitkin County planners tout Vision 2050 draft, flag water adequacy and code changes as next steps
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Summary
Planning staff presented the Vision 2050 comprehensive-plan draft to the Board of County Commissioners, emphasizing water‑adequacy rules, reduced rural development intensity, housing pathways, and that code and zoning changes will be the next phase following public hearings in March.
Planning staff presented the draft of Pitkin County’s Vision 2050 comprehensive plan at the Board’s Feb. 10 work session, outlining policy priorities and the next steps toward adoption.
Suzanne Wolf and Hannah Hunt summarized a multi‑phase process that led to a draft posted Jan. 29 and described four major policy chapters: natural environment, built environment, community and economic health, and a new regional approach chapter. The plan is grounded in community values adopted by the community growth advisory committee and affirmed by the board, staff said.
Key policy directions: staff emphasized stronger water adequacy and conservation requirements for both new and existing development; protections for migration corridors and scenic resources; wildfire‑resilient policies; and built‑environment measures to reduce rural development intensity, incentivize smaller homes, and reform the county’s transferable development rights program. Staff said there is policy direction to prioritize community housing within urban growth boundaries and, in narrowly defined cases, allow limited community housing outside the UGB where infrastructure and water are sufficient.
Code and zoning follow-up: Planners said the comprehensive plan provides policy pathways but does not itself change zoning. Implementation will require code updates and, in some cases, rezonings that would be subject to separate public processes. Staff noted state preemption limits on groundwater/well permitting, which will constrain some county actions on water, and said water‑related code updates would likely be the highest near‑term priority.
Public process and timing: the draft will go to Planning & Zoning Commission public hearings starting March 3; after P&Z action the board will consider adoption. Commissioners raised questions about balancing multiple goals — e.g., climate action and rural preservation — and whether future boards should consider comprehensive rezoning to align existing AR‑10 and other district rules with the new policy direction.
Next steps: staff will continue public outreach, coordinate with caucus master plans and adjacent jurisdictions, and propose code amendments and timeline options for board consideration before formal adoption hearings.

