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Last modified
2/18/2025 2:30:15 PM
Creation date
12/4/2020 1:43:22 PM
Metadata
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Ordinances
Ordinance Number
2020-018
Adopted Date
12/01/2020
Agenda Item Number
10.A.1.
Ordinance Type
Amendment
State Filed Date
12\03\2020
Entity Name
2030 Comprehensive Plan Amendment
Capital Improvements Element
Subject
Amending the text of the Capital Improvements Element
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Comprehensive Plan Capital Improvements Element <br />Demand <br />Demand is an important component of the concurrency management system. Essentially, demand is a <br />measure of facility use. When compared to facility capacity, demand can indicate the level -of -service <br />for the facility. <br />As depicted in Table 6.16, demand can be measured quantitatively for each public facility category. <br />While the demand function for each facility consists of applying a rate to the number of facility users, <br />estimation of total demand is more complex. For concurrency management purposes, demand can be <br />divided into three types: existing, committed, and projected. Each must be considered separately for <br />purposes of concurrency management. <br />ExistinL, Demand <br />Existing demand is simply the current level of use for a facility. For a roadway, it is the number of <br />peak hour/peak season/peak direction trips; for a school, it is the number of full-time enrolled <br />students; for water and wastewater treatment plants, it is the existing flow volume measured in <br />gallons per day. Those figures are included within applicable plan elements. <br />Existing demand then reflects the use of a facility by the current population. When compared to <br />capacity, existing demand can show if the facility has unused capacity or if it is functioning over <br />capacity. <br />Existing demand, however, is not static. As population increases and dwelling units come on-line, <br />existing demand increases. Those increases in existing demand can be identified through facility use <br />measurements. For example, regular traffic counts done on roads or treatment plant flow records are <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 />Community Development Department Indian River County <br />Adopted December l' 2020, Ordinance 2020-018 41 <br />
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