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<br />WEWP. The fundamental program developed for Goal 5 compliance essentially remains <br />unchanged. The policies and criteria of the WEWP operate as a tool to further Goal 5 <br />compliance by assisting in determining the significance of wetland resources, the conflicts and <br />the economic, social, environmental and energy values involved in protecting the resource. That <br />analysis approaches the wetlands of West Eugene as part of an interconnected natural system <br />rather than as separate, discrete sites. The focus remains inside the West Eugene Wetlands <br />Special Study Area, keeping in mind that the larger system of which these wetlands are a part <br />extends beyond this and other political boundaries. <br /> <br />As detailed in Exhibit C, the amendments are consistent with the applicable policies of the Metro <br />Plan and the West Eugene Wetlands Plan. Those are the same policies previously acknowledged <br />as being in compliance with statewide planning goals; and, in the case of the West Eugene <br />Wetlands Plan policies, deemed to be in compliance with applicable statewide goals by DSL <br />approval of the WEWP as a wetlands conservation plan. The inventory and significance <br />determinations for individual sites meet the DSL requirements, and the plan amendments comply <br />with ORS 196.681 to 196.684 and OAR 141-120. For those reasons, these amendments to the <br />West Eugene Wetlands Plan comply with Statewide Planning Goal 5. <br /> <br />Methodology for Goal 9 and 10 Analyses <br /> <br />To address consistency with Statewide Planning Goals 9 and 10, the amendments were analyzed <br />to document additions or reductions to the supply of industrial, commercial, and residential lands <br />within the Metro area, due to these amendments to the Plan. This analysis is based on existing <br />inventory, supply and demand data provided in three source documents: the Metropolitan <br />Industrial Lands Special Study, the Eugene Commercial Lands Study, and the "Supply and <br />Demand Analysis in Acres" table included in the Metropolitan Area General Plan, as amended by <br />Ordinance No. 20159 on July 12,2000. The analysis also relies on site information not included <br />in these existing land use inventory studies. <br /> <br />The tables include areas that involve a change in designation from "protect" or "restore" status to <br />development (an increase in supply), and areas that involve a change from "development" or <br />"undesignated" status to "protection" or "restoration" (a decrease in supply). Designation <br />changes that allow development, but do not affect the inventory of available land are also shown <br />in the accompanying tables. The affected areas were identified, their square footage was <br />calculated, and this was in turn translated into approximate acreage. In some cases, the acreage <br />figures were estimated using manual calculation methods, while most often computer mapping <br />analysis was used. This information has further been categorized by land use type and Metro <br />Plan designation (see Tables 1-3 below). This information was used to summarize the potential <br />impacts that these refinement plan amendments would have on the existing supply of industrial, <br />commercial and residential lands in the Metro area. Narrative summaries of the results of this <br />analysis are included under each of the applicable Statewide Planning Goals below. The tables <br />that are attached following the end of this narrative show the acreage figures for each site and <br />category . <br /> <br />Speedway Site Ordinance, Exhibit B (Statewide Planning Goal Findings) <br /> <br />Page 5 <br />