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objective standards" for needed housing. None of these proposals have moved forward in <br /> the 2001 or 2003 Legislative Sessions. <br /> <br /> Recommendation: <br /> <br /> 1. Support legislative changes which clarify the requirements for determining a land <br /> use application to be complete and increase the time line for city processing of <br /> land use applications, especially when the applicant's proposal is changed <br /> substantially during the review process. <br /> <br /> 2. Support legislative changes which would allow adopted plan policies to be <br /> incorporated by reference in the Land Use Code rather than reprinted in the code <br /> and which would allow some discretion in standards for ;;needed housing." <br /> <br /> 3. Oppose legislation that would prohibit or restrict the ability of local governments <br /> to delegate land use decision-making authority to a hearings official or planning <br /> commission. <br /> <br /> 3. 20-YEAR LAND SUPPLY <br /> <br /> HB 2709, which passed in the 1995 Legislative Session and is codified as ORS 197.296, <br /> requires cities to include enough residential land within their urban growth boundaries <br /> (UGBs) to meet residential needs for the next 20 years. Intended to reduce land prices by <br /> increasing the amount of land available for housing, the bill required that projections of <br /> the 20-year need for residential land be based on the development that occurred since the <br /> last periodic review or during the last five years, whichever is greater. This ignores <br /> changes in policy and land use code provisions to facilitate more compact development. <br /> The City supports the Land Conservation and Development Commission (LCDC) <br /> requirement for a 20-year buildable lands inventory, but continues to oppose the <br /> requirement that the housing needs analysis be based only on actual past development. <br /> <br /> Since the passage of liB 2709, commercial realtors have argued for comparable <br /> legislation for commercial and industrial land. HB 3557, which passed in the 2001 <br /> Legislative Session, called for establishment of a working group to address issues related <br /> to the need for commercial and industrial land. <br /> <br /> Recommendation: <br /> <br /> 1. Support legislation to amend ORS 197.296 to allow policy and land use code <br /> amendments to be considered in the determination of housing capacity and <br /> need. <br /> <br /> 2. Oppose legislation that would establish a comparable requirement that the <br /> determination of commercial and industrial capacity and need must be based <br /> only on actual past development. <br /> <br />City of Eugene Legislative Policies, 2005 Session 30 <br /> <br /> <br />