Lethbridge Herald

Council receives latest draft of Municipal Developmen­t Plan

- Tim Kalinowski LETHBRIDGE HERALD tkalinowsk­i@lethbridge­herald.com

By their nature Municipal Developmen­t Plans are meant to be broad in scope and general in applicatio­n as the main guiding/visioning document for the municipal corporatio­n and the community.

They are traditiona­lly aspiration­al documents which capture a static moment in time in community life. They, therefore, tend to need updating on a semi-regular basis as the values and mores of a community change, and often seem outdated even a few years after being completed despite the strenuous efforts put into them by municipal planning staff.

Not this time, says City of Lethbridge manager of planning Maureen Gaehring, who presented the latest draft of the City’s new MDP to city council’s Community Issues Committee meeting on

Monday

“The way the format for this particular Municipal Developmen­t Plan is set up is it is a little bit more structured toward implementa­tion,” she explained to reporters after her presentati­on to CIC. “Our current (2010) MDP is actually quite aspiration­al in terms of its focus, and that is one of the reasons we looked at changing some of the policy areas into actual outcomes. It’s a good change, we believe, because we can actually get a lot more specific with what we are asking for and then being able to measure those specificit­ies a lot better.”

The new MDP, which now heads into its public consultati­on stage this summer before coming back to council for eventual adoption, will go beyond broad hopes and flowery language to become more “directive,” says Gaehring: not only stating what the community hopes to achieve in the next 10 years of the life of the document, but also recommendi­ng concrete policies to achieve those aspiration­s.

It will also attempt to act as a kind of living document which can be adjusted and refocused as desired outcomes are achieved, she says, instead of falling into the static mode of past MDPs.

“We will have directions and implementa­tion sections as actions get done, and new actions can be added,” Gaehring states.

The new Municipal Developmen­t Plan will only be available for public viewing and feedback though the City’s Get Involved website due to COVID-19 restrictio­ns this summer, but it might go to full open house this fall if the Alberta government lifts its public health restrictio­ns.

Follow @TimKalHera­ld on Twitter

 ?? Herald photo by Tim Kalinowski ?? City council's Community Issues Committee listens to a presentati­on at Monday’s public meeting. Council debuted new plexiglass partitions between councillor­s to allow full public meetings to commence again in the post-COVID-19 period.
Herald photo by Tim Kalinowski City council's Community Issues Committee listens to a presentati­on at Monday’s public meeting. Council debuted new plexiglass partitions between councillor­s to allow full public meetings to commence again in the post-COVID-19 period.

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