Amendment
Bill No. CS/HB 7129
Amendment No. 463239
CHAMBER ACTION
Senate House
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1Representative Workman offered the following:
2
3     Amendment
4     Remove lines 1022-1100 and insert:
5     (d)  The comprehensive plan shall identify procedures for
6monitoring, evaluating, and appraising implementation of the
7plan.
8     (e)  When a federal, state, or regional agency has
9implemented a regulatory program, a local government is not
10required to duplicate or exceed that regulatory program in its
11local comprehensive plan.
12     (f)  All mandatory and optional elements of the
13comprehensive plan and plan amendments shall be based upon
14relevant and appropriate data and an analysis by the local
15government that may include, but not be limited to, surveys,
16studies, community goals and vision, and other data available at
17the time of adoption of the comprehensive plan or plan
18amendment. To be based on data means to react to it in an
19appropriate way and to the extent necessary indicated by the
20data available on that particular subject at the time of
21adoption of the plan or plan amendment at issue.
22     1.  Surveys, studies, and data utilized in the preparation
23of the comprehensive plan may not be deemed a part of the
24comprehensive plan unless adopted as a part of it. Copies of
25such studies, surveys, data, and supporting documents for
26proposed plans and plan amendments shall be made available for
27public inspection, and copies of such plans shall be made
28available to the public upon payment of reasonable charges for
29reproduction. Support data or summaries are not subject to the
30compliance review process, but the comprehensive plan must be
31clearly based on appropriate data. Support data or summaries may
32be used to aid in the determination of compliance and
33consistency.
34     2.  Data must be taken from professionally accepted
35sources. The application of a methodology utilized in data
36collection or whether a particular methodology is professionally
37accepted may be evaluated. However, the evaluation may not
38include whether one accepted methodology is better than another.
39Original data collection by local governments is not required.
40However, local governments may use original data so long as
41methodologies are professionally accepted.
42     3.  The comprehensive plan shall be based upon resident and
43seasonal population estimates and projections, which shall
44either be those provided by the University of Florida's Bureau
45of Economic and Business Research or generated by the local
46government based upon a professionally acceptable methodology.
47The plan must be based on at least the minimum amount of land
48required to accommodate the medium projections of the University
49of Florida's Bureau of Economic and Business Research for at
50least a 10-year planning period unless otherwise limited under
51s. 380.05, including related rules of the Administration
52Commission.
53     (2)  Coordination of the several elements of the local
54comprehensive plan shall be a major objective of the planning
55process. The several elements of the comprehensive plan shall be
56consistent. Where data is relevant to several elements,
57consistent data shall be used, including population estimates
58and projections unless alternative data can be justified for a
59plan amendment through new supporting data and analysis. Each
60map depicting future conditions must reflect the principles,
61guidelines, and standards within all elements and each such map
62must be contained within the comprehensive plan, and the
63comprehensive plan shall be financially feasible. Financial
64feasibility shall be determined using professionally accepted
65methodologies and applies to the 5-year planning period, except
66in the case of a long-term transportation or school concurrency
67management system, in which case a 10-year or 15-year period
68applies.
69     (3)(a)  The comprehensive plan shall contain a capital
70improvements element designed to consider the need for and the
71location of public facilities in order to encourage the
72efficient use of such facilities and set forth:
73     1.  A component that outlines principles for construction,
74extension, or increase in capacity of public facilities, as well
75as a component that outlines principles for correcting existing
76public facility deficiencies, which are necessary to implement
77the comprehensive plan. The components shall cover at least a 5-
78year period.
79     2.  Estimated public facility costs, including a
80delineation of when facilities will be needed, the general
81location of the facilities, and projected revenue sources to
82fund the facilities.
83     3.  Standards to ensure the availability of public
84facilities and the adequacy of those facilities to meet
85established including acceptable levels of service.
86


CODING: Words stricken are deletions; words underlined are additions.