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Introduction to Concurrency Management

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Title: Introduction to Concurrency Management


1
Introduction to Concurrency Management
2
What is Concurrency?
  • Chapter 163.3177, F.S. requires Comprehensive
    Plans to adopt a concurrency management system,
    including goals, objectives and policies that
    define the necessary standards for ensuring the
    availability of required public facilities to
    serve permitted development.
  • Rule 9J-5, F.A.C. establishes the minimum
    criteria for the standards necessary to ensure
    the availability of public services and
    facilities concurrent with the impact of
    development
  • If adopted level of service standards cannot be
    met, development cannot be permitted!

3
What Public Services and Facilities are Subject
to Concurrency?
  • Potable Water
  • Sanitary Sewer/Wastewater Treatment
  • Solid Waste Disposal
  • Recreation and Open Space
  • Drainage
  • Mass transit
  • Transportation
  • (new requirement ) Public Schools

4
Key Components of Concurrency
  • The Capital Improvements Element of the
    Comprehensive Plan must be financially feasible
    and capital projects should maintain adopted
    level of service standards
  • The local Comprehensive Plan must include a
    system for ensuring adherence to the adopted
    level of service standards and for monitoring
    concurrency status.
  • The concurrency program should contain guidelines
    for how and when to review development against
    adopted level of service standards during the
    development review process.
  • The local government must adopt land development
    regulations that implement the concurrency
    management system and ensure that development
    permits do not result in a reduction in the
    levels of service below adopted level of service
    standards.

5
So What Does All This Really Mean?
  • It means you need to adopt any necessary capital
    projects in your Capital Improvements Element and
    your Capital Improvements Program to maintain
    adopted level of service standards
  • It means you need to have adopted in your
    comprehensive plan, and in your development
    regulations, a method for assessing and
    monitoring compliance with the adopted level of
    service standards.
  • And it means your development review process
    needs to include making a binding determination
    that adequate capacity for each of the 7 public
    services and facilities is, or is not, available
    to meet the needs of the project.

6
How do you develop appropriate level of service
standards?
  • First you need to determine whether you have
    control over all, some, or none of the referenced
    public services and facilities
  • For those services and facilities for which you
    do not have control, you should adopt the
    standard adopted by the agency or government with
    responsibility.
  • If your local government has direct
    responsibility for the provision of any of the
    required services and facilities, you need to
    work with your respective technical professionals
    to establish a meaningful standard that you can
    subsequently use to compare development proposals
    against.

7
An example
  • Pinellas County government
  • Concurrency
  • Management System

8
Assessing level of Service Conditions
  • Each calculation is basically a matter of looking
    at capacity and planned improvements, and
    dividing by existing and projected demand
  • If the adopted standard can still be maintained
    after adding in anticipated impacts, then level
    of service conditions are met, capacity is
    available, and development can be permitted

9
Pinellas County Level of Service Standards
10
Concurrency Management System (CMS) Process
  • Pinellas County developed their CMS back in 1990,
    following adoption of the original comp plan.
  • It is designed around an annual snapshot of
    conditions that snapshot is adopted annually
    as an ordinance which assesses the operating
    conditions for each of the 7 services and
    facilities.
  • Basically, it represents our annual concurrency
    test.

11
  • For the next year, our Development Review staff
    uses the Ordinance, as the basis for deciding if
    development can be approved.

12
  • Since the assessment is a snapshot of conditions,
    we build in a safety net by also taking a look
    at future conditions
  • That is, we also look at the effect of an extra
    years growth on the operating conditions for
    each service and facility.
  • If we can still meet, or exceed the adopted
    standards, then level of service conditions are
    acceptable.

13
  • Thanks to good planning, and a strong capital
    improvements program, the County has never
    encountered an inability to meet adopted
    standards with the exception of transportation.
  • Good capital planning is the KEY COMPONENT of
    your Concurrency Management System!

14
Good Capital Planning includes
  • In the Countys case, participation in the
    regional water authority, effective conservation
    programs, and ongoing funding of transmission,
    distribution, and treatment infrastructure, and
    ongoing maintenance.

15
  • Funding major upgrades and maintenance to the
    regional wastewater treatment facilities, the
    collection system and the water reclamation
    distribution system

16
  • Land acquisition, park development and
    maintenance to meet recreation and open space
    requirements

17
Stormwater projects to address drainage
deficiencies
18
Solid Waste and Resource Recovery
  • Improvements at the resource recovery plant and
    in recycling operations to extend the life of the
    landfill and waste-to-energy plant

19
All of these funding commitments are required
to make sure the County can
  • Meet its adopted level of service standards,
  • Permit development,
  • And meet the needs of citizens, businesses and
    visitors, and its retail and wholesale
    commitments, today and into the future.

20
  • Concurrency approvals are not indefinite
  • If no progress is made on the development,
    concurrency approval can be revoked, making any
    future submittal for development approval subject
    to a new concurrency test statement and a new
    assessment of level of service conditions.

21
What does the future hold for concurrency?
  • The County will be evaluating its adopted level
    of service standards during the course of the
    upcoming year
  • The overall concurrency process will be evaluated
    to see how it fits with the new school
    concurrency requirements AND
  • We will see what happens with the Penny for
    Pinellas the main means of funding capital
    improvements needed to meet concurrency

22
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