My WebLink
|
Help
|
About
|
Sign Out
Home
Browse
Search
2010-252A (13)
CBCC
>
Official Documents
>
2010's
>
2010
>
2010-252A (13)
Metadata
Thumbnails
Annotations
Entry Properties
Last modified
5/10/2022 2:16:50 PM
Creation date
10/5/2015 10:02:02 AM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
Official Documents
Official Document Type
Report
Approved Date
10/12/2010
Control Number
2010-252A (13)
Agenda Item Number
10.A.3
Entity Name
Comprehensive Plan 2030
Subject
EAR based Amendments Comprehensive Plan 2030
Chapter 12 Public School Facilities Element
Supplemental fields
SmeadsoftID
13465
There are no annotations on this page.
Document management portal powered by Laserfiche WebLink 9 © 1998-2015
Laserfiche.
All rights reserved.
/
45
PDF
Print
Pages to print
Enter page numbers and/or page ranges separated by commas. For example, 1,3,5-12.
After downloading, print the document using a PDF reader (e.g. Adobe Reader).
View images
View plain text
Comprehensive Plan Public School Facilities Element <br />School Level of Service <br />Essentially, level of service (LOS) is the relationship between supply and demand. For <br />schools, LOS is expressed as a ratio of enrollment to capacity, with capacity being <br />number of student stations. <br />To establish an acceptable level of service, the school district and the local governments <br />must project future demand, identify needed capacity, and determine the level of financial <br />resources available to construct additional capacity. These factors are then used as a <br />basis to establish a school LOS standard. The level of service standard controls the <br />maximum utilization of schools. <br />Florida law requires that the public school facilities element of a local government <br />comprehensive plan address how the level of service standards will be achieved and <br />maintained. The ability to achieve and maintain the adopted level of service must be <br />based on a financially feasible Five -Year Capital Facilities Plan. Furthermore, the law <br />requires that the public school level of service standards be adopted into the local <br />government capital improvements element, and must apply to all schools of the same <br />type (elementary, middle, and high). <br />Prior to establishing a level of service standard, the School District must determine the <br />maximum capacity of the public schools. Tables 12.7-12.10 identify the capacity of all <br />public schools and their enrollment and utilization through school year 2014/15. The <br />current enrollment and capacity for each school are critical components in developing a <br />school concurrency system, because public school concurrency must ensure that the <br />capacity of schools is sufficient to support current enrollment and the projected students <br />from future residential development. Current enrollment and school capacity data <br />provide a baseline for developing a financially feasible level of service standard for <br />public schools. <br />As adopted, the public school level of service standard should maximize the efficiency of <br />each school facility for educating students. Based on this ideal, the preferred level of <br />service standard in Indian River County is 100% of permanent FISH capacity. <br />Needs Assessment <br />To determine the capacity for each school, the School District uses FISH capacity. The <br />FISH capacity is the number of students that may be housed in a facility (school) at any <br />given time based on a utilization percentage of the number of existing satisfactory student <br />stations. FISH capacity is a product of the number of classrooms at a school and the <br />student stations assigned to each room type. No capacity is assigned to small <br />instructional spaces or specialized classrooms such as art, music, lab, and other similar <br />rooms. <br />Since the number of student stations at a school is used to calculate the school's capacity, <br />the data detailed in Tables 12.7 — 12.10 are presented at the student station level. A <br />Community Development Department Indian River County <br />23 <br />
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.