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APPENDIX Aa <br /> PROPOSED CHANGES TO THE METRO PLAN <br /> (Current version of the Metro Plan) <br /> <br />G. Public Facilities and Services Element <br /> <br />This Public Facilities and Services Element provides direction for the future provision of <br />urban facilities and services to planned land uses within the Metro Plan Plan Boundary <br />(Plan Boundary). <br /> <br />The availability of public facilities and services is a key factor influencing the location <br />and density of future development. The public's investment in, and scheduling of, public <br />facilities and services are a major means of implementing the Metro Plan. As the <br />population of the Eugene-Springfield area increases and land development patterns <br />change over time, the demand for urban services also increases and changes. These <br />changes require that service providers, both public and private, plan for the provision of <br />services in a coordinated manner, using consistent assumptions and projections for <br />population and land use. <br /> <br />The policies in this element complement Metro Plan Chapter II-A, Fundamental <br />Principles, and Chapter II-C, Growth Management. Consistent with the principle of <br />compact urban growth prescribed in Chapter II, the policies in this element call for future <br />urban water and wastewater services to be provided exclusively within the urban growth <br />boundary. This policy direction is consistent with Statewide Planning Goal 11: Public <br />Facilities and Services, "To plan and develop a timely, orderly and efficient arrangement <br />of public facilities and services to serve as a framework for urban and rural <br />development." On urban lands, new development must be served by at least the <br />minimum level of key urban services and facilities at the time development is completed <br />and, ultimately, by a full range of key urban services and facilities. On rural lands within <br />the Plan Boundary, development must be served by rural levels of service. Users of <br />facilities and services in rural areas are spread out geographically, resulting in a higher <br />per-user cost for some services and, often, in an inadequate revenue base to support a <br />higher level of service in the future. Some urban facilities may be located or managed <br />outside the urban growth boundary, as allowed by state law, but only to serve <br />development within the urban growth boundary. <br /> <br />Urban facilities and services within the urban growth boundary are provided by the City <br />of Eugene, the City of Springfield, Lane County, Eugene Water & Electric Board <br />(EWEB), the Springfield Utility Board (SUB), the Metropolitan Wastewater <br />Management Commission (MWMC), electric cooperatives, and special service districts. <br />Special service districts provide schools and bus service, and, in some areas outside the <br />cities, they provide water, electric, fire service or parks and recreation service. This <br />element provides guidelines for special service districts in line with the compact urban <br />development fundamental principle of the Metro Plan. <br /> <br /> Appendix Aa Page 1 <br /> <br /> <br />