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Subject-Area Experts and Organizations: <br />Individuals, organizations or groups representing a specific interest or specialty area will be engaged in <br />the urban reserves process through meetings, phone calls, the Technical Analysis Committee, or the <br />Service Provider Working Group (see below). Examples of interest areas include: <br />Parks, Open Space, and Natural Resources <br />Climate and Hazard Resiliency <br />Agriculture, Forest Resources <br />Utilities and Infrastructure (water and electricity, transportation, wastewater, stormwater, fire <br />and police) <br />Schools <br />Housing <br />Economic Development/Jobs <br />Fiscal Analysis <br />Service Provider Working Group: <br />City and County staff, along with technical staff and boards of directors of urban reserve area service <br />providers will collaboratively develop intergovernmental agreements pertaining to the provision of land <br />use regulations, building code administration, wastewater, water, fire protection, parks, transportation <br />and stormwater. Different agreements will be needed at the time of urban reserve designation and <br />upon inclusion of part or all of the reserves within urban growth boundary. The Service <br />Provider Working Group will be developed to discuss service provision in the urban reserve area, <br />develop the IGAs, and act as liaisons to their agency leadership. A preliminary list of service providers is <br />included in the Public Involvement Plan stakeholders list. <br />Envision Eugene Technical Advisory Committee (EETAC) <br />: <br />Originally designed to specifically serve the Growth Monitoring Program, the scope of the EETAC will be <br />expanded to include City-wide growth management initiatives related to growth monitoring, including <br />Urban Reserve Planning. The EETAC will review project assumptions, technical analysis, and <br />development of options. They will provide feedback to staff on technical-related issues, maintain <br />institutional memory regarding assumptions and analysis related to long-term growth management- <br />related efforts (monitoring, urban reserves, expansion), and will review technical information used to <br />inform policy decisions. EETAC members will be asked to think about long-term community-wide growth <br />implications, and will represent their areas of interest and/or organizations around Eugene as well as <br />the interests of the community as a whole. EETAC members will be appointed by the City Manager. They <br />will represent varied voices from across the community with diverse interests and areas of expertise, <br />and will include Planning Commission, Sustainability Commission and City Council representation. <br />County representation will be encouraged. <br />Triple Bottom Line Sounding Board: <br />The Triple Bottom Line, or TBL, is a framework the City of Eugene is using to reach its sustainability <br />benefits and trade-offs of our decisions. In addition to the technical work described in this project <br />charter, there are numerous city- and county-wide policy directives that impact project-level actions. To <br />ensure consistency among the diverse directives and ensure representation of broader community <br />perspectives in the Urban Reserves project, a Triple Bottom Line Sounding Board will be convened from <br />10 | Page <br /> <br />