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Proposed. Objective 18 revised to remove the corresponding policies that called for the County to, <br /> "adopt land development regulations that establish the TND,Traditional Neighborhood Design <br /> zoning district." <br /> TND regulations and criteria were adopted as Section 915.21 (Ordinance 2012-021,July 10,2012) <br /> of the Indian River County Code of Ordinance. <br /> Staff recommends revising Objective 18 as follows:The County shall maintain and update TND <br /> (Traditional Neighborhood Design)district regulations as appropriate. By 2045.Between January 1, <br /> five(5)percent of new residential development(dwelling units) <br /> occurring in unincorporated Indian River County will be Located in Traditional Neighborhood Design <br /> projects. <br /> Sanitary Sewer Sub-Element <br /> Paragraph) correct Last sentence, ...WSewer sub-element. <br /> Proposed. Policy 1.1: New development within the municipalities of <br /> Indian River County shall be approved only when capacity is available,either on-site or off-site,to <br /> provide needed sanitary sewer service. <br /> Staff recommends revising as follows: Reject revisions and add the below statement. <br /> Note:The County and the City of Sebastian adopted an Interlocal Agreement(ILA) Providing for the <br /> Transfer of the City of Sebastian Water and Wastewater System (September 20, 1995),and the <br /> County acknowledges it will provide sanitary sewer service within the corporate limits of the City of <br /> Sebastian consistent with provisions of the ILA. <br /> Proposed. Objective 2 was revised with an updated timeline from 2025 to 2045 and established a <br /> long-range goal for 60%of all users to be connected to the County's sanitary sewer system,versus <br /> at least 60%of all existing units will be connected. <br /> With the 2030 mandate concerning connecting to sanitary sewer when available or replacing <br /> conventional septic systems with an Enhanced Nutrient Reducing Onsite Sewage Treatment and <br /> Disposal System this may be unattainable but retaining the goal is important. <br /> It is preliminarily estimated the public investment could near$500 million to$1 billion and the <br /> private investment$500 million to expand plant capacity, build a new plant, extend sanitary lines, <br /> and then the private costs to connect to the system or replace their conventional septic systems. <br /> The County is in the middle of completing its Integrated Water Master Plan which include an <br /> analysis and recommendations concerning sanitary sewer. <br /> Staff Recommends: Retain policy revision. <br /> 295 <br />