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Ordinance No. 20357
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2006 No. 20357-20374
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Ordinance No. 20357
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Last modified
6/10/2010 4:45:50 PM
Creation date
1/25/2006 10:44:56 AM
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Template:
City Recorder
CMO_Document_Type
Ordinances
Document_Date
1/9/2006
Document_Number
20357
CMO_Effective_Date
1/12/2006
Author
Kitty Piercy
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<br />Policies <br /> <br />G.21 The electric service providers will agree which provider will serve areas about to <br />be annexed and inform the cities who the service provider will be and how the <br />transition of services, if any, will occur. <br /> <br />Services to Development Within the Urban Growth Boundary: Schools <br /> <br />Findin!!s <br /> <br />25. ORS 195.110 requires cities and counties to include, as an element of their <br />comprehensive plan, a school facility plan for high growth districts prepared by <br />the district in cooperation with the city or county; and for the city or county to <br />initiate the planning activity. The law defines high growth districts as those that <br />have an enrollment of over 5,000 students and an increase in enrollment of six <br />percent or more during the three most recent school years. At present, there are no <br />high growth school districts in the urban growth boundary. <br /> <br />26. ORS 197.296(4)(a) states that when the urban growth boundary is amended to <br />provide needed housing, "As part of this process, the amendment shall include <br />sufficient land reasonably necessary to accommodate the siting of new public <br />school facilities. The need and inclusion of lands for new public school facilities <br />shall be a coordinated process between the affected public school districts and the <br />local government that has the authority to approve the urban growth boundary." <br /> <br />27. Enrollment projections for the five public school districts in the metropolitan area <br />and the University of Oregon and Lane Community College (LCC) are not <br />consistent. Bethel School District and the University of Oregon expect increases <br />while Springfield and Eugene School Districts and LCC are experiencing nearly <br />flat or declining enrollments. Enrollment is increasing fastest in the elementary <br />and high school attendance areas near new development. <br /> <br />28. Short-term fluctuations in school attendance are addressed through the use of <br />adjusted attendance area boundaries, double shifting, use of portable classrooms, <br />and busing. School funding from the state is based on student enrollment for <br />school districts in the State of Oregon. This funding pattern affects the <br />willingness of districts to allow out-of-district transfers and to adjust district <br />boundaries. Adjustments in district boundaries may be feasible where there is no <br />net loss or gain in student enrollments between districts. <br /> <br />29. Creating or retaining small, neighborhood schools reduces the need for busing and <br />provides more opportunity for students to walk or bike to school. Quality smaller <br />schools may allow more parents to stay in established neighborhoods and to avoid <br />moving out to new subdivisions on the urban fringe or to bedroom communities. <br />However, growth patterns do not always respect school district boundaries. For <br /> <br />Appendix Aa Page 10 <br />
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