The Complete Guide to Pennsylvania Planning Commission Meetings

Pennsylvania saw 9,979 land use projects decided in 2025 across 24 counties—representing significant future construction and development activity. This guide covers how planning commissions work in Pennsylvania, what decisions they make, and how to track development projects from the earliest stages.

Whether you’re a developer scouting sites, a contractor looking for leads, or an engineer tracking projects before RFP stage, understanding Pennsylvania’s planning commission process gives you a 12-24 month head start on the competition.

See also: Pennsylvania 2025 Year in Review for detailed approval and denial statistics.

Understanding Pennsylvania’s Land Use Decision Process

Planning commissions are appointed bodies that review land use applications before they go to the city council or county commission for final action. In Pennsylvania, these bodies evaluate rezonings, conditional use permits, site plans, subdivisions, and variances—the decisions that shape where and what gets built.

Planning Commission vs. City Council: The planning commission typically makes recommendations, while the city council or county commission holds final approval authority. However, many jurisdictions grant the planning commission direct approval power for site plans and subdivisions.

Meetings generally follow a regular cadence—often twice per month—and are open to the public. The meeting minutes from these sessions are the earliest public record of development projects, often appearing 12-24 months before a building permit is filed.

Pennsylvania Planning Stats (2025)

9,979
Total projects decided
99.7%
Approval rate
24
Counties with data
15
Cities tracked

Most active counties: Centre (1,417 projects), Lancaster (1,148 projects), Allegheny (1,110 projects)

Why Meeting Minutes Matter for Pennsylvania Development Intelligence

Meeting minutes capture projects at the earliest public stage—long before building permits, construction bids, or media coverage. For professionals who depend on early project intelligence, this window is critical.

Information typically found in planning commission minutes includes developer names, property addresses, lot counts, square footage, proposed zoning changes, and conditions of approval. This is the data that feeds site selection, competitive intelligence, and business development across the AEC industry.

Typical Project Timeline

Meeting minutes discussion
0 months
Planning commission vote
2–6 months
City council approval
4–8 months
Building permit filed
12–24 months
Construction begins
18–30 months

Boardwalk captures projects at the meeting minutes stage—giving you the earliest possible lead time.

Pennsylvania Planning Commission Coverage

Boardwalk tracks planning commission and city council meetings across 24 counties in Pennsylvania. The table below shows 2025 activity by county, with links to detailed breakdowns. For the full statistical view, see the Pennsylvania 2025 Year in Review.

County2025 ProjectsApproval RateDetails
Centre1,417100.0%View details
Lancaster1,148100.0%View details
Allegheny1,11099.9%View details
Butler1,06699.9%View details
Pike92799.9%View details
Wayne75399.9%View details
Luzerne44699.7%View details
Northampton43598.4%View details
Carbon42499.2%View details
Erie40099.5%View details
Lehigh36398.3%View details
Juniata309100.0%View details
Dauphin297100.0%View details
Indiana282100.0%View details
York24698.7%View details
Delaware20499.2%View details
Philadelphia59100.0%View details
Crawford51100.0%View details
Fayette27100.0%View details
Schuylkill7100.0%View details
Berks3100.0%View details
Cambria2100.0%View details
Lackawanna2100.0%View details
Bucks1100.0%View details

Reading Pennsylvania Planning Documents Like a Pro

Planning documents are dense with jargon. Here are the key terms and what to look for when reviewing Pennsylvania planning commission agendas and minutes.

Signals of Fast-Track Approval

  • + Staff recommends approval
  • + No public opposition noted
  • + Consistent with general/comprehensive plan
  • + Applicant has addressed all conditions
  • + Unanimous commission vote

Red Flags for Project Issues

  • ! Continued/tabled to future meeting
  • ! Significant public opposition
  • ! Staff recommends denial
  • ! Environmental or traffic concerns raised
  • ! Split commission vote

Common Acronyms in Planning Minutes

CUPConditional Use Permit
PUDPlanned Unit Development
DRCDesign Review Committee
EISEnvironmental Impact Statement
GPAGeneral Plan Amendment
SUPSpecial Use Permit
TIATraffic Impact Analysis
P&ZPlanning & Zoning
RFPRequest for Proposal

Automate Your Pennsylvania Development Intelligence

Boardwalk processes thousands of meeting minutes from Pennsylvania planning commissions and city councils, extracting project details, addresses, decision outcomes, and developer information automatically. Instead of reading minutes manually, you get structured, searchable data updated weekly.

How professionals use Boardwalk in Pennsylvania:

General Contractor
Tracking new commercial and multifamily projects in State College to identify bidding opportunities 12-18 months before permits are filed.
Home Builder
Monitoring competitive subdivision activity in Lancaster to understand where competitors are building and what lot counts are being approved.
Engineering Firm
Finding infrastructure and site development projects before the RFP stage—when the project is still in planning commission review.
Interactive Map
Filter to Pennsylvania and see every tracked project on a map
Weekly Email Alerts
Get notified when new projects match your criteria
Advanced Search
Search by developer, project type, size, location, and more
Source Documents
Direct links to the original meeting minutes for every project

Additional Pennsylvania Resources

See Every Planning Decision in Pennsylvania

9,979 projects tracked in 2025. Updated weekly.