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Comprehensive Plan Capital Improvements Element <br />examples of facility use measurements indicating existing demand levels. As existing demand levels <br />for facilities are updated, committed demand levels must be reduced if projects representing <br />committed demand have come on-line. <br />Committed Demand <br />Committed demand is a measure of the impact that approved development projects with reserved <br />capacity will have on facilities. When added to existing demand for a facility, the committed demand <br />for that facility will produce a more accurate estimate of unused capacity. That estimate of unused <br />capacity represents the amount of capacity that can realistically be allocated to new projects. <br />Committed demand must be determined by identifying all projects for which capacity has been <br />reserved through issuance of initial concurrency certificates which are still valid. Then the specific <br />facilities that will be impacted by those projects with reserved capacities must be determined; those <br />facilities will be roadways and the landfill, and they may be treatment plants, drainage conveyances, <br />and recreation facilities. Finally, the total demand on each facility attributable to committed demand <br />will be determined. <br />Applicable elements of the plan identify the rates to be applied to each project to determine facility <br />demand. Traffic volumes, for example, can be derived by applying a trip rate to the size of the <br />project. Sanitary sewer and potable water both have rates of 250 gallons per day per equivalent <br />residential unit. Other public facility rates are discussed fully in their applicable Comprehensive Plan <br />Element. <br />Like existing demand, committed demand must be determined on a facility by facility basis. For <br />example, both existing demand and committed demand must be determined for each major roadway, <br />each school, each treatment plant, each major drainage conveyance, and the active cell in the landfill. <br />Also, like existing demand, committed demand estimates must be modified as projects are <br />completed; committed demand estimates must also be modified as new development orders are <br />approved and old development orders are terminated. <br />Projected Demand <br />The third type of demand is projected demand. This consists of two types. One is non- <br />committed/non-reserved, single-family lot demand for all subdivisions, , <br />1990, while the other is new project demand. <br />Non-committed/non-reserved single-family lot projected demand relates to the facility impacts <br />associated with construction on individual single-family lots in platted subdivisions platted-aftef <br />February 13, 1990 and construction on legally established individual single-family unplatted lots and <br />Community Development Department Indian River County <br />Adopted , 2019, Ordinance 2019- 4) 43 <br />Appendix A - CIE Amendment <br />