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Ordinance No. 20585
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2017 No. 20572 - 20587
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Ordinance No. 20585 w/Exhibits
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Ordinance No. 20585
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11/15/2017 9:05:08 AM
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11/15/2017 8:57:17 AM
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Council Ordinances
CMO_Document_Number
20585
Document_Title
Ordinance Establishing the Sufficiency of the Urban Growth Boundary for Residential Land
Adopted_Date
7/17/2017
Approved Date
7/24/2017
Signer
Piercy
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Eugene Ordinance Exhibit B <br />[Lane County Ordinance Exhibit B] <br />Consistent with the above, this data is included in detail in the City's Housing Needs Analysis (Part II of <br />the Residential Land Supply Study) at Sections 3.2.1 (national trends), 3.3.1 (State trends), 3.1 and 3.3.2 <br />(local and regional). <br />(D) Economic trends and cycles; and <br />Consistent with the above, this data is included in detail in the City's Housing Needs Analysis (Part II of <br />the Residential Land Supply Study) at sections 3.2.1 (national trends), 3.3.1 (State trends), and 3.4 <br />through 3.5.2 (local trends including housing affordability). <br />(E) The number, density and average mix of housing types that have occurred on the buildable <br />lands described in subsection (4)(a) of this section. <br />The City's analysis includes the housing that has occurred on buildable land between 2001 and 20012. <br />The City's Housing Needs Analysis (Part II of the Residential Land Supply Study) at Tables 4 through 8 <br />shows the number, density and mix of housing types that occurred on vacant land. These averages are <br />assumed to have been similar for partially vacant land since that land is similar to vacant with the <br />exception of existing development. Step 4 in the Part I of the Residential Land Supply Study discusses <br />the amount of housing seen during the same period on redevelopment and mixed use land. <br />(6) If the housing need determined pursuant to subsection (3)(b) of this section is greater than the <br />housing capacity determined pursuant to subsection (3)(a) of this section, the local government <br />shall take one or more of the following actions to accommodate the additional housing need: *** <br />The 20 -year (2012-2032) housing need determined in the HNA (Part II of the Residential Land Supply <br />Study) was, for specific types of housing, determined to be greater than the housing capacity of the <br />residential land supply at the commencement of the planning period (2012) for those specific types of <br />housing. As documented in the conclusion of Part III of the Residential Land Supply Study, the Eugene <br />UGB had a deficit of about 133 acres of Low Density Residential land for single-family detached housing. <br />There was also a deficit projected of about 91 acres of High Density Residential land for housing types of <br />five or more units and single-family attached housing. The detailed allocation of housing types by <br />comprehensive plan designation is provided in detail in the HNA Table 31. Based on these conclusions, <br />the City took the actions described in (6)(b), as explained, below. <br />(b) Amend its comprehensive plan, regional framework plan, functional plan or land use <br />regulations to include new measures that demonstrably increase the likelihood that residential <br />development will occur at densities sufficient to accommodate housing needs for the next 20 years <br />without expansion of the urban growth boundary. A local government or metropolitan service <br />district that takes this action shall monitor and record the level of development activity and <br />development density by housing type following the date of the adoption of the new measures; *** <br />To address the need for about 133 more acres of Low Density Residential land and about 91 acres of <br />High Density Residential land, the City took several actions. Those actions are described in Part IV of the <br />Residential Land Supply Study. The Residential Land Supply Study is adopted, by this action, as an <br />Appendix to the Eugene Comprehensive Plan. Part IV of the Study is entitled "Measures to Increase <br />Residential Development." See findings under (9), below, regarding the effect these measures are likely <br />to have. <br />12 Final <br />
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