Wisconsin Code § 66.1001

Comprehensive planning
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(1) DEFINITIONS. In
this section:
(a) “Comprehensive plan” means a guide to the physical, social, and economic development of a local governmental unit that
is one of the following:
1. For a county, a development plan that is prepared or
amended under s. 59.69 (2) or (3).
2. For a city, village, or town, a master plan that is adopted or
amended under s. 62.23 (2) or (3).
3. For a regional planning commission, a master plan that is
adopted or amended under s. 66.0309 (8), (9) or (10).
(am) “Consistent with” means furthers or does not contradict
the objectives, goals, and policies contained in the comprehensive
plan.
(b) “Local governmental unit” means a city, village, town,
county or regional planning commission that may adopt, prepare
or amend a comprehensive plan.
(c) “Political subdivision” means a city, village, town, or
county that may adopt, prepare, or amend a comprehensive plan.
(2) CONTENTS OF A COMPREHENSIVE PLAN. A comprehensive plan shall contain all of the following elements:
(a) Issues and opportunities element. Background information on the local governmental unit and a statement of overall objectives, policies, goals and programs of the local governmental
unit to guide the future development and redevelopment of the local governmental unit over a 20-year planning period. Background information shall include population, household and employment forecasts that the local governmental unit uses in developing its comprehensive plan, and demographic trends, age distribution, educational levels, income levels and employment characteristics that exist within the local governmental unit.
(b) Housing element. A compilation of objectives, policies,
goals, maps and programs of the local governmental unit to provide an adequate housing supply that meets existing and forecasted housing demand in the local governmental unit. The element shall assess the age, structural, value and occupancy characteristics of the local governmental unit’s housing stock. The element shall also identify specific policies and programs that promote the development of housing for residents of the local governmental unit and provide a range of housing choices that meet
the needs of persons of all income levels and of all age groups and
persons with special needs, policies and programs that promote
the availability of land for the development or redevelopment of
low-income and moderate-income housing, and policies and programs to maintain or rehabilitate the local governmental unit’s
existing housing stock.
(c) Transportation element. A compilation of objectives,
policies, goals, maps and programs to guide the future development of the various modes of transportation, including highways,
transit, transportation systems for persons with disabilities, bicycles, electric scooters, electric personal assistive mobility devices, walking, railroads, air transportation, trucking and water
transportation. The element shall compare the local governmental unit’s objectives, policies, goals and programs to state and regional transportation plans. The element shall also identify highways within the local governmental unit by function and incorporate state, regional and other applicable transportation plans, including transportation corridor plans, county highway functional
and jurisdictional studies, urban area and rural area transportation plans, airport master plans and rail plans that apply in the local governmental unit.

(d) Utilities and community facilities element. A compilation
of objectives, policies, goals, maps and programs to guide the future development of utilities and community facilities in the local
governmental unit such as sanitary sewer service, storm water
management, water supply, solid waste disposal, on-site wastewater treatment technologies, recycling facilities, parks, telecommunications facilities, power-generating plants and transmission
lines, cemeteries, health care facilities, child care facilities and
other public facilities, such as police, fire and rescue facilities, libraries, schools and other governmental facilities. The element
shall describe the location, use and capacity of existing public
utilities and community facilities that serve the local governmental unit, shall include an approximate timetable that forecasts the
need in the local governmental unit to expand or rehabilitate existing utilities and facilities or to create new utilities and facilities
and shall assess future needs for government services in the local
governmental unit that are related to such utilities and facilities.
(e) Agricultural, natural and cultural resources element. A
compilation of objectives, policies, goals, maps and programs for
the conservation, and promotion of the effective management, of
natural resources such as groundwater, forests, productive agricultural areas, environmentally sensitive areas, threatened and
endangered species, stream corridors, surface water, floodplains,
wetlands, wildlife habitat, metallic and nonmetallic mineral resources consistent with zoning limitations under s. 295.20 (2) ,
parks, open spaces, historical and cultural resources, community
design, recreational resources and other natural resources.
(f) Economic development element. A compilation of objectives, policies, goals, maps and programs to promote the stabilization, retention or expansion, of the economic base and quality
employment opportunities in the local governmental unit, including an analysis of the labor force and economic base of the local
governmental unit. The element shall assess categories or particular types of new businesses and industries that are desired by the
local governmental unit. The element shall assess the local governmental unit’s strengths and weaknesses with respect to attracting and retaining businesses and industries, and shall designate
an adequate number of sites for such businesses and industries.
The element shall also evaluate and promote the use of environmentally contaminated sites for commercial or industrial uses.
The element shall also identify county, regional and state economic development programs that apply to the local governmental unit.
(g) Intergovernmental cooperation element. A compilation of
objectives, policies, goals, maps, and programs for joint planning
and decision making with other jurisdictions, including school
districts, drainage districts, and adjacent local governmental
units, for siting and building public facilities and sharing public
services. The element shall analyze the relationship of the local
governmental unit to school districts, drainage districts, and adjacent local governmental units, and to the region, the state and
other governmental units. The element shall consider, to the
greatest extent possible, the maps and plans of any military base
or installation, with at least 200 assigned military personnel or
that contains at least 2,000 acres, with which the local governmental unit shares common territory. The element shall incorporate any plans or agreements to which the local governmental unit
is a party under s. 66.0301, 66.0307 or 66.0309. The element
shall identify existing or potential conflicts between the local
governmental unit and other governmental units that are specified
in this paragraph and describe processes to resolve such conflicts.
(h) Land-use element. A compilation of objectives, policies,
goals, maps and programs to guide the future development and
redevelopment of public and private property. The element shall
contain a listing of the amount, type, intensity and net density of
existing uses of land in the local governmental unit, such as agricultural, residential, commercial, industrial and other public and
private uses. The element shall analyze trends in the supply, demand and price of land, opportunities for redevelopment and existing and potential land-use conflicts. The element shall contain
projections, based on the background information specified in
par. (a), for 20 years, in 5-year increments, of future residential,
agricultural, commercial and industrial land uses including the
assumptions of net densities or other spatial assumptions upon
which the projections are based. The element shall also include a
series of maps that shows current land uses and future land uses
that indicate productive agricultural soils, natural limitations for
building site development, floodplains, wetlands and other environmentally sensitive lands, the boundaries of areas to which services of public utilities and community facilities, as those terms
are used in par. (d), will be provided in the future, consistent with
the timetable described in par. (d), and the general location of future land uses by net density or other classifications.
(i) Implementation element. A compilation of programs and
specific actions to be completed in a stated sequence, including
proposed changes to any applicable zoning ordinances, official
maps, or subdivision ordinances, to implement the objectives,
policies, plans and programs contained in pars. (a) to (h). The element shall describe how each of the elements of the comprehensive plan will be integrated and made consistent with the other elements of the comprehensive plan, and shall include a mechanism to measure the local governmental unit’s progress toward
achieving all aspects of the comprehensive plan. The element
shall include a process for updating the comprehensive plan. A
comprehensive plan under this subsection shall be updated no
less than once every 10 years.
(2m) EFFECT OF ENACTMENT OF A COMPREHENSIVE PLAN,
CONSISTENCY REQUIREMENTS. (a) The enactment of a comprehensive plan by ordinance does not make the comprehensive plan
by itself a regulation.
(b) A conditional use permit that may be issued by a political
subdivision does not need to be consistent with the political subdivision’s comprehensive plan.
(3) ORDINANCES THAT MUST BE CONSISTENT WITH COMPREHENSIVE PLANS. Except as provided in sub. (3m), beginning on
January 1, 2010, if a local governmental unit enacts or amends
any of the following ordinances, the ordinance shall be consistent
with that local governmental unit’s comprehensive plan:
(g) Official mapping ordinances enacted or amended under s.
62.23 (6).
(h) Local subdivision ordinances enacted or amended under s.
236.45 or 236.46.
(j) County zoning ordinances enacted or amended under s.
59.69.
(k) City or village zoning ordinances enacted or amended under s. 62.23 (7).
(L) Town zoning ordinances enacted or amended under s.
60.61 or 60.62.
(q) Shorelands or wetlands in shorelands zoning ordinances
enacted or amended under s. 59.692, 61.351, 61.353, 62.231, or
62.233.
(3m) DELAY OF CONSISTENCY REQUIREMENT. (a) If a local
governmental unit has not adopted a comprehensive plan before
January 1, 2010, the local governmental unit is exempt from the
requirement under sub. (3) if any of the following applies:
1. The local governmental unit has applied for but has not received a comprehensive planning grant under s. 16.965 (2), and
the local governmental unit adopts a resolution stating that the local governmental unit will adopt a comprehensive plan that will
take effect no later than January 1, 2012.

2. The local governmental unit has received a comprehensive
planning grant under s. 16.965 (2) and has been granted an extension of time under s. 16.965 (5) to complete comprehensive
planning.
(b) The exemption under par. (a) shall continue until the following dates:
1. For a local governmental unit exempt under par. (a) 1.,
January 1, 2012.
2. For a local governmental unit exempt under par. (a) 2., the
date on which the extension of time granted under s. 16.965 (5)
expires.
(4) PROCEDURES FOR ADOPTING COMPREHENSIVE PLANS. A
local governmental unit shall comply with all of the following before its comprehensive plan may take effect:
(a) The governing body of a local governmental unit shall
adopt written procedures that are designed to foster public participation, including open discussion, communication programs, information services, and public meetings for which advance notice
has been provided, in every stage of the preparation of a comprehensive plan. The written procedures shall provide for wide distribution of proposed, alternative, or amended elements of a comprehensive plan and shall provide an opportunity for written comments on the plan to be submitted by members of the public to
the governing body and for the governing body to respond to such
written comments. The written procedures shall describe the
methods the governing body of a local governmental unit will use
to distribute proposed, alternative, or amended elements of a
comprehensive plan to owners of property, or to persons who
have a leasehold interest in property pursuant to which the persons may extract nonmetallic mineral resources in or on property,
in which the allowable use or intensity of use of the property is
changed by the comprehensive plan.
(b) The plan commission or other body of a local governmental unit that is authorized to prepare or amend a comprehensive
plan may recommend the adoption or amendment of a comprehensive plan only by adopting a resolution by a majority vote of
the entire commission. The vote shall be recorded in the official
minutes of the plan commission or other body. The resolution
shall refer to maps and other descriptive materials that relate to
one or more elements of a comprehensive plan. One copy of an
adopted comprehensive plan, or of an amendment to such a plan,
shall be sent to all of the following:
1. Every governmental body that is located in whole or in
part within the boundaries of the local governmental unit.
2. The clerk of every local governmental unit that is adjacent
to the local governmental unit that is the subject of the plan that is
adopted or amended as described in par. (b) (intro.).
4. After September 1, 2005, the department of
administration.
5. The regional planning commission in which the local governmental unit is located.
6. The public library that serves the area in which the local
governmental unit is located.
(c) No comprehensive plan that is recommended for adoption
or amendment under par. (b) may take effect until the political
subdivision enacts an ordinance or the regional planning commission adopts a resolution that adopts the plan or amendment.
The political subdivision may not enact an ordinance or the regional planning commission may not adopt a resolution under
this paragraph unless the comprehensive plan contains all of the
elements specified in sub. (2). An ordinance may be enacted or a
resolution may be adopted under this paragraph only by a majority vote of the members-elect, as defined in s. 59.001 (2m), of the
governing body. One copy of a comprehensive plan enacted or
adopted under this paragraph shall be sent to all of the entities
specified under par. (b).
(d) No political subdivision may enact an ordinance or no regional planning commission may adopt a resolution under par. (c)
unless the political subdivision or regional planning commission
holds at least one public hearing at which the proposed ordinance
or resolution is discussed. That hearing must be preceded by a
class 1 notice under ch. 985 that is published at least 30 days before the hearing is held. The political subdivision or regional
planning commission may also provide notice of the hearing by
any other means it considers appropriate. The class 1 notice shall
contain at least the following information:
1. The date, time and place of the hearing.
2. A summary, which may include a map, of the proposed
comprehensive plan or amendment to such a plan.
3. The name of an individual employed by the local governmental unit who may provide additional information regarding
the proposed ordinance.
4. Information relating to where and when the proposed
comprehensive plan or amendment to such a plan may be inspected before the hearing, and how a copy of the plan or amendment may be obtained.
(e) At least 30 days before the hearing described in par. (d) is
held, a local governmental unit shall provide written notice to all
of the following:
1. An operator who has obtained, or made application for, a
permit that is described under s. 295.12 (3) (d).
2. A person who has registered a marketable nonmetallic
mineral deposit under s. 295.20.
3. Any other property owner or leaseholder who has an interest in property pursuant to which the person may extract nonmetallic mineral resources, if the property owner or leaseholder
requests in writing that the local governmental unit provide the
property owner or leaseholder notice of the hearing described in
par. (d).
(f) A political subdivision shall maintain a list of persons who
submit a written or electronic request to receive notice of any proposed ordinance, described under par. (c), that affects the allowable use of the property owned by the person. Annually, the political subdivision shall inform residents of the political subdivision that they may add their names to the list. The political subdivision may satisfy this requirement to provide such information
by any of the following means: publishing a 1st class notice under
ch. 985; publishing on the political subdivision’s Internet site; 1st
class mail; or including the information in a mailing that is sent to
all property owners. At least 30 days before the hearing described in par. (d) is held a political subdivision shall provide
written notice, including a copy or summary of the proposed ordinance, to all such persons whose property, the allowable use of
which, may be affected by the proposed ordinance. The notice
shall be by mail or in any reasonable form that is agreed to by the
person and the political subdivision, including electronic mail,
voice mail, or text message. The political subdivision may charge
each person on the list who receives a notice by 1st class mail a
fee that does not exceed the approximate cost of providing the notice to the person.
(5) APPLICABILITY OF A REGIONAL PLANNING COMMISSION’S
PLAN. A regional planning commission’s comprehensive plan is
only advisory in its applicability to a political subdivision and a
political subdivision’s comprehensive plan.
(6) COMPREHENSIVE PLAN MAY TAKE EFFECT. Notwithstanding sub. (4), a comprehensive plan, or an amendment of a comprehensive plan, may take effect even if a local governmental unit
fails to provide the notice that is required under sub. (4) (e) or (f),

unless the local governmental unit intentionally fails to provide
the notice.

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