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Planning commission directs staff to prepare resolution adopting Lee's Summit 2027'2031 Capital Improvement Plan

Lee's Summit Planning Commission · April 24, 2026

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Summary

After a presentation from City Engineer George Binger explaining funding, project priorities and sequencing, the commission voted to direct staff to prepare a resolution adopting the 2027'2031 Capital Improvement Plan as an amendment to the Ignite comprehensive plan and approved the resolution by roll call.

The Lee's Summit Planning Commission on April 23 directed staff to prepare a resolution to adopt the city's proposed 2027'2031 Capital Improvement Plan (CIP) and then approved that resolution by roll call.

City Engineer George Binger presented the five-year CIP, describing it as a planning and fiscally constrained budget document that identifies projects greater than $75,000 and ties each project to funding sources. He said the plan covers facilities, water, sewer, stormwater, airport and roadway work, and emphasized that grants and the recently added use tax increased available funding beyond earlier projections.

Binger noted examples of projects shaped by earlier public input, including the Southeast Douglas stormwater and sidewalk work, the 291/50 interchange seed investment ($6,000,000 local match) and airport hangar improvements supported largely by federal and state grants. He told the commission the first year of the CIP (FY27) will be authorized through the annual budget and that the plan is presented for adoption as an amendment to the Ignite comprehensive plan.

Commissioners asked technical questions about outstanding MoDOT partnership projects, typical signal costs and the process for adding emergent needs to the CIP. Binger said MoDOT-managed projects remain on the state's program or unfunded needs list, that recent new signals in the city started near $500,000 each before geometric work, and that signal installation requires a warrant analysis to avoid exposing the city to liability.

On a procedural motion, the commission voted by roll call to direct staff to prepare the formal resolution adopting the CIP and then approved the resolution itself. The roll-call record in the hearing shows affirmative votes recorded from multiple commissioners, enabling staff to present the resolution to the City Council as the next procedural step.

The resolution will now proceed to the city council; the commission's action was to forward the adopted CIP as an amendment to the comprehensive plan and to approve the location, extent and character of public improvements described in the 2027'2031 CIP.