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o Table 1 is a summary of the amount of residential land needed for new public <br />operations and facilities inside the UGB. The acreage needed inside the UGB reduces the <br />2012 residential land supply's capacity as reflected in the Conclusion section, below. <br />Park land need determinations use the projects identified in the Parks, Recreation & Open Space <br />(PROS) Project and Priority Plan as guidance for anticipated future park need. This plan was <br />adopted as a fiscal plan related to system development charges in 2006 and identifies <br />acquisition and development priorities for a population consistent with that identified in <br />Envision Eugene.' The City's park land need is discussed in greater detail in its findings <br />documents, specifically addressing the need for an expansion to accommodate the need for two <br />new community parks. Approximately 95 acres inside the UGB will be required for park land <br />that might otherwise be used for residential or employment uses. As the City's need for park <br />land relates to the 2012 Residential Buildable Land Inventory, based on the locations of the <br />needed park land, about 90 acres will be on Low Density Residential land and 1 acre will be on <br />Medium Density Residential land (the remainder of the 95 acres will be on employment land). <br />• School land needs are based on the estimate of land need provided by the school districts. The <br />City's school land need is discussed in greater detail in its findings documents, addressing the <br />need for an expansion to accommodate the need for one new school site for the Bethel School <br />District. Neither the 4J School District nor the Bethel School District anticipates a need for a <br />new school facility inside the current UGB over the 2012 to 2032 period. The 4.1 School Board <br />has identified three sites (47.9 acres) as surplus inside the UGB: Dunn / Opportunity Center (4.5 <br />acres), Bailey Hill (5.6 acres), and Coburg Farm (28.0 acres). The District may sell, trade, or lease <br />these properties at some time in the future.10 These sites were addressed in Part I of this Study. <br />The Bethel School District does not have surplus property." <br />The need for Semi-public uses is forecast to be similar to historical needs, at about 1.3 acres per <br />1,000 people or 44 gross acres over the 20 -year period; 29 in Low Density Residential and 15 in <br />Commercial plan designations. Current trends have resulted in many semi-public uses (e.g. <br />religious organizations) accommodating their growth on their existing property rather than <br />requiring additional land. The Envision Eugene Technical Resource Group reviewed several <br />parcels with existing semi-public uses and found that many of these sites that have not yet <br />expanded appear to have room for a building expansion. Therefore, the entire need is <br />anticipated to be accommodated through redevelopment and infill and not require any <br />additional land. <br />4. Summary of Public Land Uses On Residential Land <br />' The PROS Project and Priority Plan was adopted as a fiscal plan and not as a land use plan nor as part of the local <br />comprehensive plan. However, it provides the most detailed analysis for potential future park acquisition needs, so <br />it is reasonable to estimate future acquisition needs using the PROS Project and Priority Plan list. <br />10 This information was provided by Barb Bellamy, Communications Director at 4J in an interview on August 21, <br />2012. <br />"This information was provided by Pat McGillivray, Communications Relations for the Bethel School District in an <br />interview on March 12, 2009. <br />Residential Land Supply Study I Final Part III — Page 4 <br />