General plan

A general plan is a broad planning guideline to a city's or county's future development goals and provides policy statements to achieve those development goals. [1] Each city and county adopts and updates their General Plan to guide the growth and land development of their community, for both the current period and the long term.[2] The General Plan is the foundation for establishing goals, purposes, zoning and activities allowed on each land parcel to provide compatibility and continuity to the entire region as well as each individual neighborhood.[3]

In California the General Plan (also known as a comprehensive plan in other states) is a document providing a long-range plan for a city’s physical development.[4] Local jurisdictions have freedom as to what their general plans include, however there are certain requirements under California state law that each general plan must meet; failure to do so could result in suspension of future development.[4] Each general plan must include the vision, goals, and objectives of the city or county in terms of planning and development within eight different “elements” defined by the state as: land use, housing, circulation, conservation, noise, safety, open space, and environmental justice (added as an official element in 2016).[5][6]

Green General Plans

Local governments are continually implementing green measures[7] into their general plans to promote community-wide sustainable practices. Introducing green elements and environmental resource elements[8] can help local governments reach goals by lowering greenhouse gas emissions, reducing waste, improving energy and water efficiency and complying with state and nationwide standards such as California’s Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006.

See also

References

  1. Fulton, William; Shigley, Paul (September 2012). Guide to California Planning (Fourth ed.). Solano Press Books.
  2. San Diego General Plan Update adopted March 10 2008
  3. New General Plan a balanced blueprint
  4. 1 2 Fulton, William; Shigley, Paul (September 2012). Guide to California Planning (Fourth ed.). Solano Press Books.
  5. "Senate Bill No. 1000". California Legislative Information. State of California. Retrieved 25 May 2017.
  6. "State of California: General Plan Guidelines" (PDF). The Governor's Office of Planning and Research. State of California. Retrieved 25 May 2017.
  7. California Sustainability Alliance Green General Plan Toolkit, Received June 16th, 2010
  8. Ontario, California General Plan. Received June 6th, 2010, from http://www.ontarioplan.org/index.cfm/26954
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