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David Ederer, Sea Hawk Lane, thought the concurrency risk should be at the developer's <br />level. He wanted the "pending Ordinance" to be lifted or Chapter 910 to be put in place (as staff <br />recommended) and without the rationing <br />ChairmanWheeler and Commissioner Davis both wanted the "soft landing with few <br />casualties". Chairman Wheeler commented that if the Board went with staffs total <br />recommendation (with nothing at the end) then it would not benefit the small builder. <br />Richard Bialoski urged the Board to have a workshop for US1. He wanted staff to find a <br />way to give the Board a "soft landing" and not kill proportionate share. He told the Board that they <br />needed to control quantity by controlling quality. <br />Jean Lacerte informed the Board that he had a project north of Antilles that was six weeks <br />from final plat approval. He emphasized that he was not vested and expected a "soft landing". <br />Beverly O'Neill from Sebastian, said Fellsmere Medical Center had Federal funds to build <br />a health clinic but they could not get a permit because of concurrency. She urged the Board to <br />make the necessary provisions to get affordable health care. <br />The Chairman called a recess at 12:06 p.m. and he reconvened the meeting at 12:21 p.m. <br />with all members present. <br />Joseph Paladin referred to the 25% balance of trips which Mr. Barkett spoke of, and <br />explained that the last 25% of remaining capacity could be vested without a building permit. <br />Commissioner O'Bryan said they needed to get away from "diminish and return" and go <br />with a hard number, using it in five -trip increments. <br />January 5, 2007 8 <br />CHAPTER 910 <br />