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Waukee continues work on comprehensive plan

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.bodytext {float: left; } .floatimg-left-hort { float:left; margin-top:10px; margin-right: 10px; width:300px; clear:left;} .floatimg-left-caption-hort { float:left; margin-bottom:10px; width:300px; margin-right:10px; clear:left;} .floatimg-left-vert { float:left; margin-top:10px; margin-right:15px; width:200px;} .floatimg-left-caption-vert { float:left; margin-right:10px; margin-bottom:10px; font-size: 10px; width:200px;} .floatimg-right-hort { float:right; margin-top:10px; margin-left:10px; margin-bottom:10px; width: 300px;} .floatimg-right-caption-hort { float:left; margin-right:10px; margin-bottom:10px; width: 300px; font-size: 10px; } .floatimg-right-vert { float:right; margin-top:10px; margin-left:10px; margin-bottom:10px; width: 200px;} .floatimg-right-caption-vert { float:left; margin-right:10px; margin-bottom:10px; width: 200px; font-size: 10px; } .floatimgright-sidebar { float:right; margin-top:10px; margin-left:10px; margin-bottom:10px; width: 200px; border-top-style: double; border-top-color: black; border-bottom-style: double; border-bottom-color: black;} .floatimgright-sidebar p { line-height: 115%; text-indent: 10px; } .floatimgright-sidebar h4 { font-variant:small-caps; } .pullquote { float:right; margin-top:10px; margin-left:10px; margin-bottom:10px; width: 150px; background: url(http://www.dmbusinessdaily.com/DAILY/editorial/extras/closequote.gif) no-repeat bottom right !important ; line-height: 150%; font-size: 125%; border-top: 1px solid; border-bottom: 1px solid;} .floatvidleft { float:left; margin-bottom:10px; width:325px; margin-right:10px; clear:left;} .floatvidright { float:right; margin-bottom:10px; width:325px; margin-right:10px; clear:left;} A draft of Waukee’s comprehensive development plan has been completed and is ready to go before the city’s 15-member advisory committee.

Brad Deets, Waukee’s planning director, said the plan will still undergo revisions before it is presented to the public early next month. After that public hearing, a revised plan will go to the Planning and Zoning Commission and City Council.

“We’re very excited to be nearly atthe end of this process,” Deets said.

The plan will become a long-term blueprint for how the city will grow, Deets said, including designating where commercial development will go, what types of businesses should be lured to the city and what types should not.

One of the ways the plan helps steer growth is through the creation of special corridors, such as a civic corridor down University Avenue where school and government buildings will be located, and a “futures” corridor on the proposed Alice’s Road extension that will “hopefully focus on research-and-development-type businesses,” Deets said.

The existing plan was done in 2002 and did not get implemented very successfully, Deets said. So last October, the city decided to begin the process of drafting an entirely new plan.