
Frame from "Urban Design Commission - March 11, 2026 - 2026-03-11 18:30:00" · Source
Urban Design Commission votes to recommend its own dissolution
The Anchorage Urban Design Commission voted 5-1 Tuesday night to recommend the Anchorage Assembly dissolve the commission and transfer its duties to the Planning and Zoning Commission.
The commission heard seven cases in 2025 and canceled six of its 12 scheduled meetings because there was not enough business. Planning staff estimated the change would save the municipality $28,000 in annual staff time and 50 volunteer hours.
Planning staff told commissioners the ordinance would sunset the commission and move its reviews to the Planning and Zoning Commission for efficiency. The commission has not met many times in recent years. The transfer would not change review requirements or criteria for cases.
"We've had several vacancies on our boards and commissions, and this would help us make sure that we can maintain full capacity of our boards and commissions," a planning staff member said.
Commissioners expressed sadness about the recommendation but agreed consolidation made sense given the vacancy issues and thin caseload.
"I will be supporting the motion, and that is not something that's come lightly," one commissioner said. "It's something that makes me kind of sad because it's been such a great commission to serve on. But based on the summary here from staff and also some of the discussions we've had, the move to consolidate UDC and PZC makes a lot of sense."
Another commissioner said the consolidation would help the municipality serve the community faster and more economically, even though the dollar savings are small. The commissioner noted that cases without public opposition sometimes seem like they should receive automatic approval rather than require a commission hearing.
Chair Edith McKee said the commission gives careful consideration to cases that come before it, including smaller variance requests that matter to the people seeking them. She said she believes the Planning and Zoning Commission will give the same level of consideration.
"Planning and Zoning, I believe, will give the same level of consideration, and like it's been mentioned here, having that consolidated will be efficient, and not only for staff but also for the boards and for the public who come before the commissions," McKee said.
Peter Briggs, a past commissioner, testified in support of the recommendation. He thanked current and former commissioners for their work shaping Anchorage.
"I try to avoid being nostalgic, but it's a little with a heavy heart that the Urban Design Commission might sunset, but it's understandable with the conditions that we see today," Briggs said.
The Planning and Zoning Commission meets twice per month. The Urban Design Commission meets once per month. Planning staff said the change could give applicants more opportunities to have their cases heard and reduce delays caused by canceled meetings.
This article was drafted with AI assistance and reviewed by editors before publishing. Every claim can be verified against the original transcript. If you spot an error, let us know.
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