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Comprehensive Plan Public School Facilities Element <br />Financial Feasibility <br />School concurrency requires the School Board to adopt a financially feasible five-year <br />capital facilities plan. The Five -Year Capital Facilities Plan, which is affnua4y-updated <br />and adopted each year, details the capital improvements needed and funding revenues <br />available to maintain the adopted level of service. <br />As structured, the SY 2007-2011 School District's Five -Year Capital Facilities Plan <br />i4e s -reflects four fundamental goals which have been adopted by the School District <br />to ensure a consistent strategy for addressing facility improvements and long-range <br />capacity needs. The first goal is to build new capacity as needed to meet student growth. <br />The second goal addresses to updatgi*g schools on a systematic schedule to meet <br />educational needs. The next goal is to provide funding for maintenance and system <br />renovation to ensure that facilities function safely. The fourth goal is to develop a long- <br />range financially feasible plan. <br />School concurrency also requires that the School District annually update and adopt a <br />Plan that contains capacity to meet the anticipated demand for student stations, ensuring <br />that no schools exceed their adopted level of service for the five year period. This <br />requirement is met through the School District's Five -Year Capital Facilities Plan. The <br />School District's Plan identifies how each project meets school capacity needs and when <br />that capacity will be available. <br />The Five -Year Capital Facilities Plan provides the foundation of an annual planning <br />process that allows the School District to effectively address changing enrollment <br />patterns, development and growth, and the facility requirements of high quality <br />educational programs. The summary of capital improvements shown in Table 12.134 <br />details the School District's planned expenditures over the five-year planning period. <br />While this summary must be adopted into the Capital Improvements Element of the <br />County's Comprehensive Plan, the school district's capital improvements program does <br />not require county or city funding. <br />Table 12.134 shows the estimated cost of projects to address existing facility deficiencies <br />and future facility needs for the five-year planning period, and the long range planning <br />period, in order to meet the adopted level of service standard. <br />The revenue for capital expenditures will continue to be derived from local and state <br />sources. Impact fee revenues, PECO and CO&DS revenues, and revenues from the 2 <br />mills ad valorem tax, assessment with funds from the sale of certificates of <br />participation (COPs); if the School District chooses to issue them, will comprise the bulk <br />of the revenue stream. According to the School District's Capital Outlay Five Year <br />Revenue Forecast, the 2 mills tax will generate $135185 million over the next five years, <br />27-.3% of which will be used to fund capital expansion projects. The Five -Year Capital <br />Facilities Plan Summary of Estimated Revenue, shown in Table 12.145, details the <br />School District's projections for its revenue sources over the next five years and the long- <br />range planning period. A comparison of Tables 12.134 and 12.145 shows that the School <br />Community Development Department <br />32 <br />