Title: Introduction to Concurrency Management
1Introduction to Concurrency Management
2What 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!
3What 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
4Key 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.
5So 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.
6How 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.
7An example
- Pinellas County government
- Concurrency
- Management System
8Assessing 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
9Pinellas County Level of Service Standards
10Concurrency 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!
14Good 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
17Stormwater projects to address drainage
deficiencies
18Solid 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
19All 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.
21What 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 Questions?