| 1 | Representative Workman offered the following: |
| 2 |
|
| 3 | Amendment |
| 4 | Remove lines 1022-1100 and insert: |
| 5 | (d) The comprehensive plan shall identify procedures for |
| 6 | monitoring, evaluating, and appraising implementation of the |
| 7 | plan. |
| 8 | (e) When a federal, state, or regional agency has |
| 9 | implemented a regulatory program, a local government is not |
| 10 | required to duplicate or exceed that regulatory program in its |
| 11 | local comprehensive plan. |
| 12 | (f) All mandatory and optional elements of the |
| 13 | comprehensive plan and plan amendments shall be based upon |
| 14 | relevant and appropriate data and an analysis by the local |
| 15 | government that may include, but not be limited to, surveys, |
| 16 | studies, community goals and vision, and other data available at |
| 17 | the time of adoption of the comprehensive plan or plan |
| 18 | amendment. To be based on data means to react to it in an |
| 19 | appropriate way and to the extent necessary indicated by the |
| 20 | data available on that particular subject at the time of |
| 21 | adoption of the plan or plan amendment at issue. |
| 22 | 1. Surveys, studies, and data utilized in the preparation |
| 23 | of the comprehensive plan may not be deemed a part of the |
| 24 | comprehensive plan unless adopted as a part of it. Copies of |
| 25 | such studies, surveys, data, and supporting documents for |
| 26 | proposed plans and plan amendments shall be made available for |
| 27 | public inspection, and copies of such plans shall be made |
| 28 | available to the public upon payment of reasonable charges for |
| 29 | reproduction. Support data or summaries are not subject to the |
| 30 | compliance review process, but the comprehensive plan must be |
| 31 | clearly based on appropriate data. Support data or summaries may |
| 32 | be used to aid in the determination of compliance and |
| 33 | consistency. |
| 34 | 2. Data must be taken from professionally accepted |
| 35 | sources. The application of a methodology utilized in data |
| 36 | collection or whether a particular methodology is professionally |
| 37 | accepted may be evaluated. However, the evaluation may not |
| 38 | include whether one accepted methodology is better than another. |
| 39 | Original data collection by local governments is not required. |
| 40 | However, local governments may use original data so long as |
| 41 | methodologies are professionally accepted. |
| 42 | 3. The comprehensive plan shall be based upon resident and |
| 43 | seasonal population estimates and projections, which shall |
| 44 | either be those provided by the University of Florida's Bureau |
| 45 | of Economic and Business Research or generated by the local |
| 46 | government based upon a professionally acceptable methodology. |
| 47 | The plan must be based on at least the minimum amount of land |
| 48 | required to accommodate the medium projections of the University |
| 49 | of Florida's Bureau of Economic and Business Research for at |
| 50 | least a 10-year planning period unless otherwise limited under |
| 51 | s. 380.05, including related rules of the Administration |
| 52 | Commission. |
| 53 | (2) Coordination of the several elements of the local |
| 54 | comprehensive plan shall be a major objective of the planning |
| 55 | process. The several elements of the comprehensive plan shall be |
| 56 | consistent. Where data is relevant to several elements, |
| 57 | consistent data shall be used, including population estimates |
| 58 | and projections unless alternative data can be justified for a |
| 59 | plan amendment through new supporting data and analysis. Each |
| 60 | map depicting future conditions must reflect the principles, |
| 61 | guidelines, and standards within all elements and each such map |
| 62 | must be contained within the comprehensive plan, and the |
| 63 | comprehensive plan shall be financially feasible. Financial |
| 64 | feasibility shall be determined using professionally accepted |
| 65 | methodologies and applies to the 5-year planning period, except |
| 66 | in the case of a long-term transportation or school concurrency |
| 67 | management system, in which case a 10-year or 15-year period |
| 68 | applies. |
| 69 | (3)(a) The comprehensive plan shall contain a capital |
| 70 | improvements element designed to consider the need for and the |
| 71 | location of public facilities in order to encourage the |
| 72 | efficient use of such facilities and set forth: |
| 73 | 1. A component that outlines principles for construction, |
| 74 | extension, or increase in capacity of public facilities, as well |
| 75 | as a component that outlines principles for correcting existing |
| 76 | public facility deficiencies, which are necessary to implement |
| 77 | the comprehensive plan. The components shall cover at least a 5- |
| 78 | year period. |
| 79 | 2. Estimated public facility costs, including a |
| 80 | delineation of when facilities will be needed, the general |
| 81 | location of the facilities, and projected revenue sources to |
| 82 | fund the facilities. |
| 83 | 3. Standards to ensure the availability of public |
| 84 | facilities and the adequacy of those facilities to meet |
| 85 | established including acceptable levels of service. |
| 86 |
|