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Goal 10 - Housing: To provide for the housing needs of the citizens of the state. <br /> <br /> The land affected by these amendments was not included in the area's documented <br /> supply of"buildable land" that is available for residential development. The <br /> methodology used to develop the acknowledged 1999 Residential Lands Study excluded <br /> vacant land owned by a public agency and not intended for residential development from <br /> consideration as "buildable land". Publicly owned land is generally not considered <br /> available for residential use. The State Board of Higher Education owns 113 of the 122 <br /> parcels located within the affected area. Nine parcels remain in private ownership. Of <br /> the nine privately-owned parcels, four parcels are in the area proposed for re-designation <br /> to another land use classification. The four parcels total .51 acres in size. <br /> <br /> Goal 10 requires that communities plan for and maintain an inventory ofbuildable <br /> residential land for needed housing units. The Metropolitan Area General Plan - <br /> Residential Land and Housing Element implements Goal 10 by providing background <br /> data and analysis, findings and policies related to the provision of residential lands inside <br /> the urban growth boundary. With the adoption of the 1999 Residential Lands Study, the <br /> following finding was incorporated into the Metro Plan: <br /> <br /> "There is sufficient buildable residential land within the existing urban growth <br /> boundary to meet the future housing needs of the projected population. In fact, the <br /> 1992 residential buildable land supply exceeds the 1992-2015 residential land <br /> demand in all residential categories. Assuming land is consumed evenly over the <br /> period, by 1999, there will be at least a 20 year supply of residential land <br /> remaining inside the urban growth boundary" <br /> <br /> The proposal would change the Metro Plan designation on two parcels from High <br /> Density Residential to Government and Education. Those parcels (17-03-32-44-02100 <br /> and 02101) total. 13 acres in size. The 1999 Residential Lands Study indicates that, <br /> within the category of High Density Residential, there are 60 acres of land in excess of <br /> projected demand. <br /> <br /> The proposal would change the Metro Plan designation on one parcel from Medium <br /> Density Residential to Government and Education. That parcel (17-03-32-44-03400) <br /> totals. 18 acres in size. The 1999 Residential Lands Study indicates that, within the <br /> category of Medium Density Residential, there are 239 acres of land in excess of <br /> projected demand. <br /> <br /> The proposal would change the Metro Plan designation on one parcel from Low Density <br /> Residential to Government and Education. That parcel (18-03-04-22-06000) totals .20 <br /> acres in size. The 1999 Residential Lands Study indicates that, within the category of <br /> Low Density Residential, there are 940 acres of land in excess of projected demand <br /> <br /> Even if this land was included in the region's inventory ofbuildable residential land, the <br /> <br /> City Council Agenda page 239 <br /> <br /> <br />