Wisconsin Downtowns

A photo on Flickr
A photo on Flickr
A photo on Flickr
A photo on Flickr

1000 Friends of Wisconsin
16 N. Carroll Street
Suite 810
Madison WI 53703
608-259-1000

General Email

Comprehensive Plans Interactive Map

The University of Wisconsin-Applied Population Lab maintains an interactive map that includes features that showcase completed comprehensive plans. The municipalities and counties indicated on the maps have submitted final, adopted comprehensive plans to the Department of Adminstration

Weblinks are available for most of the plans.  Maps were last updated with plan submittal information from February 26, 2009.  In order to verify that a plan displayed is current, please directly contact the respective local government.

INTERACTIVE MAP DIRECTIONS

  • On the Applied Population Laboratory map webpage, under “Select Local Characteristic,” scroll through the “Other Variables” and select “Submitted Comprehensive Plans to DOA.”
  • Then select which level of geography: “Counties” or “Municipalities” and click “Update Map.”
  • Then counties/municipalities that have submitted plans are depicted in green and those that have not are indicated in yellow.
  • By selecting the identification tool, located in the map’s upper left corner and indicated with an “i,” a desired county or municipality can be selected on the map.  If a hyperlink to a plan exists, it will appear in a pop-up window upon selecting the respective local government.

Wisconsin's Comprehensive Planning Legislation

In October 1999, the State of Wisconsin enacted the most ambitious land use legislation in a generation. Wisconsin’s Comprehensive Planning Legislation ensures that by 2010, every city, village, county and most towns in the state will be guided by a comprehensive plan as defined by state statute. The law came about in response to four major problems:

    Smart land use preserves our heritage.
  1. As of 1998, only 29% of all Wisconsin communities had any kind of land use plan in place at all.
  2. These plans varied widely in their content, quality and age. Some communities had detailed plans covering a wide range of issues that were frequently updated. Other communities had poorly conceived or old plans.
  3. Even those communities with good plans often did not invest the time and resources to implement those plans when actual land use decisions were being made.
  4. The state offered little guidance on how to improve this situation.

The new law was passed to ensure responsible planning, create a framework such that the planning is implemented, rein in sprawl and enhance the health of our urban and rural communities.

1000 Friends of Wisconsin was a lead player in writing  Wisconsin’s Comprehensive Planning Legislation and therefore hopes to provide citizens and policy makers throughout the state with the tools necessary to develop responsible land use plans. Throughout this section of our website, you will find information that will not only help you better understand the intent and letter of the law, but also how it can be implemented to rein in sprawl and contribute to healthy communities.

Wisconsin’s Comprehensive Planning Legislation creates an opportunity – in some ways unique in the nation and certainly historic in Wisconsin – to creatively combat sprawl and its harmful consequences for our environment and our quality of life. However, the opportunities created by this law will surely be squandered if we are not diligent and aggressive in our land use and transportation campaigns as Wisconsin citizens planning for the future of our communities.

There is a great deal at stake – we hope that as citizens we look at this law as an opportunity to plan for the healthy future of our homes and the long-term protection of our natural, cultural and economic resources – for ourselves, our families, and future generations.


Website Content