Skip to content

Whitman County Watch

Menu
  • Mission
  • How to Help
  • Civic calendar
  • News tips/Contact
  • Citizen Guides
    • Obtaining public records
    • Voters Guide — Fall 2021
      • Francis A. Benjamin, Pullman City Council (Ward 1 – Challenger)
      • Al (Alan) Sorensen, Pullman City Council (Ward 1 – Incumbent)
      • Megan Guido, Pullman City Council (Ward 3 – Open/Uncontested)
      • Tricia Grantham, Pullman Regional Hospital Board (Pos. 4 – Incumbent)
      • Reid West, Pullman Regional Hospital Board (Pos. 4 – Challenger)
      • Jeff Elbracht, Pullman Regional Hospital Board (Pos. 7 – Uncontested)
      • Hillary Hoffman, Colfax City Council (Pos. 2 – Open seat)
      • Martin J. Marler, Whitman Hospital Board (Pos. 5 – Incumbent)
      • Brad Pearce, Palouse City Council (Pos. 1 – Open seat)
      • Tracy Stewart, Palouse City Council (Pos. 3 – Challenger)
      • Ron Weller, Palouse City Council (Pos. 7 – Open seat)
    • Voters Guide — Fall 2020
      • Art Swannack, County Commissioner (Dist. 1, incumbent/uncontested)
      • Tom Handy, County Commissioner (Dist. 2, challenger)
      • Dean Kinzer, County Commissioner (Dist. 2, incumbent)
    • Voters Guide – Fall 2019
      • Francis A. Benjamin, Pullman City Council (At-large – Challenger)
      • Eileen ‘Mac’ Macoll, Pullman City Council (At-large – Incumbent)
      • Chris Johnson, Pullman City Council (Ward 1 – Challenger)
      • Ann Parks, Pullman City Council (Ward 1 – Incumbent)
      • Nathan Weller, Pullman City Council (Ward 2 – Uncontested)
      • Pat Wright, Pullman City Council (Ward 3 – Uncontested)
      • Jim Kackman, Colfax City Council (Pos. 6 – incumbent)
      • Dominic Villareal, Colfax City Council (Pos. 6 – challenger)
      • Mark Mackleit, Colfax City Council (Pos. 4 – incumbent)
      • Colleen Cross, Malden Town Council (Pos. 1 – challenger)
      • Robert Ward, Rosalia Town Council (Pos. 4 – incumbent)
      • Bethany Fletcher, Tekoa City Council (Pos. 3 – incumbent)
      • Jonathan Musson, Uniontown Town Council (Pos. 4 – challenger)
      • Michael Shore, Uniontown Town Council (Pos. 1 – challenger)
      • Beth Ficklin, Pullman School Board (Dist. 1, challenger)
      • Susan S. Weed, Pullman School Board (Dist. 1, incumbent)
      • Allison Munch-Rotolo, Pullman School Board (Dist. 2, uncontested)
    • Voters Guide – Fall 2018
  • Subscribe
Menu

Colfax officials set to rezone downtown Tuesday night to expand ‘business’ areas

Posted on February 18, 2019February 18, 2019 by Jacob Jones

Colfax City Council members will consider rezoning much of the city’s downtown core Tuesday night to expand business zones into previously designated commercial and manufacturing areas as part of a longterm “clean-up” effort.

Councilman Jim Kackman, acting as mayor pro tempore at the Feb. 4 meeting, said the rezoning would make permitted uses along Main, Sumner and Clay streets more consistent. Previous consolidations of multiple zones had left some operations out of the existing designations.

“This is largely a clean-up measure,” Kackman said, adding, “There were businesses operating in zones that were non-conforming and it just didn’t make sense.”

The proposed changes would convert about two dozen parcels from commercial zones to business zones, plus at least one parcel from manufacturing to a business zone. See the city’s map of proposed changes here or check out our gif below:

The council will consider an ordinance reclassifying those parcels to accommodate business uses ranging from bowling alleys to veterinarian hospitals along Main Street.

You can read the larger zoning code here.

Interim City Administrator Chris Mathis said the city’s Planning Commission had been reviewing the changes for more than a year.

“We’re just looking at the zoning and trying to make it more user-friendly,” she said.

The council is also scheduled to consider an interlocal agreement adopting the Whitman County Solid Waste Management Plan. The council meets at 7 p.m. at City Hall. Read the entire agenda here.

Local news lights the way
This is a journalistic experiment in public transparency — intended to expand access to information on government policies and practices through the use of reporting, records and community dialogue. Stories will be limited going forward as I focus on a new full-time investigative position at Crosscut. You can reach me there.

News tips & questions:

whitmancowatch@gmail.com

©2025 Whitman County Watch | Design: Newspaperly WordPress Theme