Providence map showing canopy and impervious surface.
Providence Department of Planning and Development

Contentious Zoning Issues to Dominate Providence City Planning in Early 2025

Early next year, the Providence City Plan Commission will begin discussing some of its more divisive zoning ordinances related to the new comprehensive plan – the city’s official vision for how Providence’s built environment should look over the next decade

Early next year, the Providence City Plan Commission will begin discussing some of its more divisive zoning ordinances related to the new comprehensive plan – the city’s official vision for how Providence’s built environment should look over the next decade

1 min read
Share
Providence map showing canopy and impervious surface.
Providence Department of Planning and Development
Contentious Zoning Issues to Dominate Providence City Planning in Early 2025
Copy

In the new year, the Providence City Plan Commission is set to discuss possible changes related to: the rules requiring developers to add off-street parking to some new residential buildings, regulations guiding the development of polluting industries in the Port of Providence area, and whether to add rules that dictate how new developments must look.

At an Oct. 21 city council meeting where the comprehensive plan was discussed, Deputy City Planner Bob Azar told The Public’s Radio that this process could take months.

“Ideally, within the next three to six months, I’d like to say that we’ve made great progress in getting new regulations approved,” he said.

Most of the contentious issues the commission will discuss in 2025 are due to open-ended language in the comprehensive plan document – which serves as an outline and vision for projects, while the zoning ordinances provide specific laws for enacting that vision. For example, the language related to parking minimums says the city should “prioritize the elimination of parking minimums wherever feasible.”

A spokesperson for the Providence City Council said that this language leaves it open to discussion, depending on what the commission determines feasible.

This story was reported by The Public’s Radio. You can read the entire story here.

Can you name five women artists? That’s the question posed by Erin L. McCutcheon, as part of a course she teaches as assistant professor of Arts of the Americas at the University of Rhode Island
The hospital filed a lawsuit in March
The investigation previously covered activities at the Warren Alpert Medical School and is now expanded to the entire university from the period of Oct. 7, 2023 to the present
After years of debate, Rhode Island lawmakers unveil competing bottle bills aiming to boost recycling and cut litter — but retailers remain wary and questions linger over logistics
Mayor Smiley unveils an ambitious roadmap to reclaim Providence schools from state control, but state education officials say the plan lacks clarity and collaboration
Backed by youth advocacy groups, a new bill would mandate ethnic studies in all public RI high schools by 2026, aiming to reflect the diverse histories of the state’s student population
The news comes a few days after the Rhode Island School of Design announced the State Department had revoked one of its international student’s visas
The Rhode Island nonprofit is determined to keep going despite the funding crisis caused by the dismantling of USAID