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Comprehensive Plan Capital Improvements Element <br />requirements, these regulations define the details of the concurrency management system and <br />establish its administrative requirements. <br />The major purpose of the concurrency management system is to detail the specifics of implementing <br />the county's level -of -service standards. For that reason, the concurrency management system must <br />apply to all development activity in the county. The system must then identify the applicable <br />standards for each facility, the geographic scope of each facility, and the method of monitoring <br />facility capacity changes. Most importantly, this system must specify when facilities are considered <br />available. <br />Project Applicability <br />All development orders issued by the county must comply with the concurrency management plan <br />and meet level -of -service standards. Development orders are county approvals for construction <br />and/or land development activity. Specifically, development orders consist of the following: <br />comprehensive plan amendments, rezonings, site plan approvals, preliminary plat approvals, <br />development of regional impact (DRI) approvals, planned development preliminary approvals, and <br />building permit approvals for single-family homes located in subdivisions which were approved after <br />February 13, 1990, the original adoption date of the county's comprehensive plan. <br />According to Section 163.3180(6), F.S., the impact from the construction of a single family home on <br />an existing lot may constitute a de minimus impact on public facilities. State law allows such de <br />minimus projects to be exempt from the concurrency requirement. Indian River County applies the <br />single family de minimus allowance to single family building permits in subdivisions platted before <br />February 13, 1990. <br />Service Standards <br />Level -of -service standards for concurrency related facilities are established in this plan for the <br />following facilities: sanitary sewer, potable water, solid waste, stormwater management, recreation, <br />public schools, and transportation. These are explained in detail in the applicable comprehensive <br />plan elements. <br />For each facility, level -of -service is a measure of the relationship between demand for the service and <br />the capacity of the facility. Capacity, however, is measured differently for each type of facility. <br />Table 6.18 identifies both the capacity and demand measures for each public facility. These measures <br />are addressed in detail, and existing capacities are identified in the applicable Comprehensive Plan <br />Elements. <br />Community Development Department Indian River County <br />Adopted November 2, 2010, Ordinance 2010-024 <br />43 <br />