Who is CMAP?

    The Chicago Metropolitan Agency for Planning (CMAP) is the regional planning agency for northeastern Illinois. CMAP serves seven counties, 284 municipalities, and over 1,200 units of government—the third largest metropolitan region in the United States. The agency was established in 2005 with the mission to plan comprehensively for economic prosperity and quality of life.

    Most recently, CMAP and its partners developed and are now implementing ON TO 2050, a new long-range plan to help the seven counties and 284 communities of northeastern Illinois implement strategies that address transportation, housing, economic development, open space, the environment, and other quality-of-life issues. To learn more about CMAP, visit www.cmap.llinois.gov.

    What is the Local Technical Assistance (LTA) Program?

    With funding from a Sustainable Communities Regional Planning grant by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), CMAP initiated the Local Technical Assistance (LTA) program in 2010. The program involves providing assistance to communities across the Chicago metropolitan region to undertake planning projects that advance the principles of ON TO 2050. CMAP has issued RFPs annually since 2011 (except 2016). To date, approximately 200 projects have been initiated, more than 150 projects completed, and 20 additional projects are underway.

    The LTA program is currently funded by the Federal Highway Administration, Federal Transit Administration, HUD, Economic Development Administration, Illinois Department of Transportation, Illinois Attorney General, Illinois Environmental Protection Agency, Illinois Department of Natural Resources, and Chicago Community Trust. See videos of an overview of the LTA program and "Planning Locally for Livability." Select implementation highlights are also available in a GO TO 2040 case studies library.

    What is a Unified Development Ordinance?

    A Unified Development Ordinance (UDO) is a document in which traditional zoning and subdivision regulations are combined with other desired city regulations such as design guidelines. UDOs:

    • Help implement Comprehensive Plan
    • Regulate land development and redevelopment,
    • Include zoning, subdivisions, signs
    • Fully integrate regulations
    • Provide opportunities for further community engagement

    What is zoning and why is it necessary?

    Zoning regulations control how a piece of land may be developed or redeveloped in the future. It sets standards for a building’s location on a lot and the uses allowed as well as parking, signage, and landscaping. The update of Oswego's Zoning Ordinance will refine these standards and modernize the regulations to make them easier for property owners to use.  

    The purpose of zoning is to allow local authorities to regulate and control land and property markets to ensure complementary uses. Zoning can also provide the opportunity to stimulate or slow down development in specific areas. 


    When will the UDO be completed?

    The project is scheduled to be complete by May 2022. Please see the full project timeline below!