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Comprehensive Plan Capital Improvements Element <br />For SIS/Florida Intrastate Highway System roadways, level of service `B" is adopted <br />for rural areas, and level of service "C" is adopted for urban areas. <br />➢ Transit <br />• One-hour headways shall be maintained on all fixed transit routes <br />Level -of -service standards are discussed in further detail in each individual Comprehensive Plan <br />Element. <br />Capital Improvements Program <br />A capital improvements program (CIP) is a program for capital expenditures to be incurred each year <br />over a fixed period of years to meet anticipated capital needs. In Indian River County, the CIP <br />identifies the projects that the county plans to undertake in the next five years and presents an <br />estimate of the costs and the resources needed to finance the projects. Revenue sources within the <br />first year of the CIP reflect current fund balances as well as anticipated annual revenue collection. <br />Within the first three years of the CIP, projects are funded entirely with "committed" revenue <br />sources. "Committed" revenue sources are revenue sources that currently exist. Projects in years <br />four and five of the CIP are funded partially through "planned" revenue sources. "Planned" revenue <br />sources are sources available to the County that have not been utilized. In this case, the one planned <br />revenue source programmed in the CIP is the imposition of an additional six cents of local option gas <br />tax. <br />The Capital Improvements Element (CIE) itself consolidates the capital improvements needs of all <br />elements of the Comprehensive Plan into an overall five-year Capital Improvements Schedule. The <br />overall program lists the needs, costs, timeframes, priorities, and the necessary financial resources to <br />implement the identified capital improvement projects in the various elements of the plan in the next <br />five years. <br />Impact Fees/Capacity Charles <br />Impact fees are charges to developers for off-site improvements that must be provided by the local <br />government to serve new development. This financing technique is one strategy that the county uses <br />for implementing the CIE. Currently, the county has nine impact fees in place; these are traffic <br />impact fees, which became effective in 1986, and eight additional impact fees which became effective <br />in June of 2005. Those eight impact fees are assessed for the following service delivery categories: <br />solid waste, public schools, fire/ems, parks and recreation, correctional facilities, law enforcement, <br />libraries, and public buildings. <br />In October 1999, the county's water and sewer impact fees were reclassified as capacity charges. A <br />capacity charge is a fee charged to the direct beneficiaries of water and sewer improvements in order <br />Community Development Department Indian River County <br />Adopted November 2, 2010, Ordinance 2010-024 <br />26 <br />