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Puyallup Comprehensive Plan

The City of Puyallup has spent the last two years actively working with the community through workshops, pop-up events, surveys, and other outreach to get your thoughts and priorities for the future of Puyallup. Your concerns, ideas, and recommendations have been used to shape this plan. As we move closer to the required adoption date at the end of the year, we need your help again. This time we need your feedback on the draft plan, the goals, and policies that is the roadmap for our decision makers for the next 20 years.

Puyallup Comprehensive Plan Draft

We want to hear your thoughts on our Draft Comprehensive Plan!

What is a Comprehensive Plan?

A Comprehensive Plan is a long-term policy document that guides how the city will grow and develop, covering key areas like land use, housing, transportation, parks, transportation and economic development. This plan sets a vision for the next 20 years, ensuring that Puyallup evolves in a way that reflects the needs and values of its residents and visitors alike.

By providing comments on the Draft Plan, you have the opportunity to share your feedback on the elements that make up the plan before they are finalized and adopted.

The comment period is open until December 11th. The Planning Commission is expected to hold a Public Hearing on December 11, 2024, and deliberate on December 18, 2024. The final adoption process with City Council is anticipated to occur in early 2025. Visit the project website at https://compplan-puyallup.hub.arcgis.com to learn more. 
(Note: The initial draft plan was updated on December 5th to reflect corrections and other revisions. The comments on the initial draft can be found here.) 

How to Provide Comments on the Revised Draft Plan: To navigate the different chapters of Puyallup's Comprehensive Plan, use the drop down feature located above the green bar at the top of the document. This feature will allow you to move between the 13 different chapters. You can review each chapter individually by clicking through at your own pace. As you read, feel free to provide your comments and feedback directly within the document. Please be advised that any comments you submit will be publicly visible.

 

Chapter Overview:

  • Foundations
  • Natural Environment
  • Land Use
  • Housing
  • Community Character
  • Economic Development 
  • Transportation
  • Utilities
  • Capital Facilities
  • Parks, Recreation, and Open Space
  • Downtown Neighborhood Plan
  • South Hill Neighborhood Plan
  • River Road Corridor Plan
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in reply to Anonymous's comment
Suggestion
I completely agree - I moved from a city which was systematically removing stop lights in favor of more efficient roundabouts. I just did a Google search and learned that roundabouts are superior for traffic flow versus stop lights.
Concern
I hope the City got a refund from the contractor for the absolutely unacceptable job they did on Shaw from 23rd Ave SE to Manorwood Dr. Also that the City learned a lesson and will never hire that company again or use similar permeable material on any major street project. That entire project is a compete disaster.
Suggestion
Project 26 should be a roundabout. It works fine at 15th Ave and 3rd St. If you could just get drivers to signal when they are going to exit it would work even better.