The Montgomery County Planning Board and the Montgomery County Planning Department have released their June 2026 calendar, setting out a month of public meetings, neighborhood outreach, and a Juneteenth closure. The schedule begins June 2 and runs through June 19, with events in Wheaton, Silver Spring, Chevy Chase, and online.
The first item on the june 2026 calendar is a Development Review Committee meeting on June 2 from 9:30 a.m. to 12 noon. It can be attended in person at M-NCPPC Wheaton Headquarters in Wheaton, Maryland, or watched through a live video stream. Montgomery Planning staff will then move into a string of public-facing events: a Planners in the Park meet-up on June 3 from 5 to 7 p.m. at the Hastings Neighborhood Conservation Area gathering spot in Silver Spring to discuss the Eastern Silver Spring Communities Plan, followed by a Planning Board meeting on June 4 that will be held in person and online.
The outreach continues on June 6, when staff will return to Silver Spring for another Planners in the Park meet-up at the Oakview Trailhead gathering spot. Staff will be available from 9 to 9:30 a.m. before a guided hike along the Northwest Branch Trail begins at 9:30 a.m. The following day, June 7, Montgomery Planning staff will be at Taste of Wheaton from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. at Marian Fryer Town Plaza in Wheaton to talk with residents about The Wheaton Plan: A Georgia Avenue Community Plan.
Two more meetings are set for the middle of the month. The Friendship Heights Sector Plan team will hold an in-person meeting on June 9 at 6:30 p.m. at the Wisconsin Place Community Recreation Center in Chevy Chase. The Historic Preservation Commission will meet June 10 at 7 p.m. in person at M-NCPPC Wheaton Headquarters, with a virtual option available.
The month closes with a one-day break in observance of Juneteenth, when Montgomery Planning and Planning Board offices will be closed on June 19. That closure is the clearest sign of how the calendar is built: the agency is not just holding meetings, but pushing plans into the community and giving residents several ways to watch, listen, testify, or submit comments while the agendas are posted ahead of time, usually 10 days before each meeting starts.
For anyone following county planning decisions, the next step is not a mystery. The June calendar lays out where the discussion will happen, who can attend, and when residents will have their next chance to weigh in before the meetings begin.


