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Box 9�A '� 6 <br />2. Adequate and safe traffic circulation and parking. <br />3. Adequate facilities and services such as utilities, drainage, <br />solid waste, and emergency services access. <br />4. Protection of the natural environment (e.g. no protected trees <br />are allowed to be removed to accommodate temporary uses). <br />5. Site suitability. <br />6. As short a duration of the use as practicable. <br />7. Protection of the public health (e.g. inspection of food <br />service operations by the Environmental Health Department). <br />Conditions may be added to permits to ensure that these general <br />standards are met. In addition to these general standards, <br />specific standards are provided in Chapter 972 for model homes, <br />temporary construction and watchman's quarters trailers, temporary <br />real estate offices, transient merchants (Christmas tree, <br />fireworks, and satellite seafood sales operations), and special <br />vehicle and boat sales events. An example of such a specific <br />standard is the limitation that model homes be open only between <br />the hours of 8:00 a.m. and 7:00 p.m. <br />All temporary use permit applications are processed by planning <br />staff and are reviewed by other departments as necessary, depending <br />upon the proposed use or event and its location. Also, all <br />applications are reviewed and approved or denied by the community <br />development director. <br />*Mobile Pet Vaccination Temporary Uses <br />Within the last few years, county planning staff has received <br />several temporary use permit applications to allow special events <br />for temporary outdoor pet vaccination clinics. The requests <br />initially involved setting -up the clinics on portions of parking <br />lots of pet center stores. Later requests proposed such uses in <br />parking lots of site planned shopping centers. In each case, the <br />proposals were for a 1 or 2 day weekend clinic, and all facilities <br />were proposed only within site -planned projects where more parking <br />spaces were available than required by the off-street parking <br />ordinance. <br />Within the last year, 2 mobile vaccination clinic events have been <br />approved via the temporary use permit process in the unincorporated <br />area of the county. Both permits were issued to Pet Vaccine <br />Services, Inc. for 2 separate clinics in a portion of the Ryanwood <br />Shopping Center parking lot. One event was approved for Sunday, <br />July 9, 1995, while the other was approved for Sunday, August 6, <br />1995. Each permit contained a "condition" which stated that the <br />applicant was responsible for conducting the clinic. in accordance <br />with Florida Statutes and the rules and regulations of the Florida <br />Board of Veterinarian Services (FBVS). A copy of each permit was <br />sent to the FBVS and county animal control, and a copy of the <br />permit 4or the August 6th event was also sent to the environmental <br />health department. <br />.Planning staff's application of the TUP provisions is to allow <br />mobile pet vaccination clinics when accessory to a pet center or <br />veterinarian service use, or where such uses are allowed by zoning <br />such as in zoning districts where existing shopping center projects <br />are allowed. In staff's opinion, such an allowance for very short <br />term vaccination clinics is similar, in regards to zoning matters, <br />JANUARY 9, 1996 <br />18 <br />0 <br />