Or. Admin. R. 660-028-0030 - Requirements for TDR Pilot Projects
(1) At the time the local government(s)
submits an application for a proposed TDR pilot project, the proposed sending
area must be planned and zoned for forest use, may not exceed 10,000 acres, and
must contain four or fewer dwelling units per square mile.
(2) At the time the local government(s)
submits an application for a proposed TDR pilot project, the proposed receiving
area or areas may not be located within 10 miles of the Portland metropolitan
area urban growth boundary. The receiving area or areas must be only the
appropriate size necessary to accommodate the anticipated development rights
that will reasonably be generated and transferred from the sending area, with
consideration of uses and density to be authorized under the proposed
amendments to the local government comprehensive plan and land use regulations
to implement the proposed TDR pilot project if it is selected.
(3) In proposing a receiving area for a TDR
pilot project, the local government must select the area based on consideration
of the following priorities:
(a) First
priority is lands within an urban growth boundary.
(b) Second priority is lands that are
adjacent to an urban growth boundary and that are subject to an exception to
Goal 3 or Goal 4.
(c) Third
priority is lands that are:
(A) Within a
designated urban unincorporated community or rural community; or
(B) In a resort community, or a rural service
center, that contains at least 100 dwelling units at the time the pilot project
is approved.
(d) Fourth
priority is exception areas approved under ORS
197.732 that are adjacent to
urban unincorporated communities or rural communities, if the county agrees to
bring the receiving area within the boundaries of the community and to provide
the community with water and sewer service.
(4) With respect to the priority of receiving
areas described in subsection (3) of this rule, the commission may authorize a
local government to select lower priority lands over higher priority lands for
a receiving area in a TDR pilot project only if the local government has
established, to the satisfaction of the commission, that selecting higher
priority lands as the receiving area is not likely to result in the severance
and transfer of a significant proportion of the development interests in the
sending area within five years after the receiving area is
established.
(5) The minimum
residential density of development allowed in receiving areas intended for
residential development is:
(a) For second
priority lands described in subsection (3)(b) of this rule, at least five
dwelling units per net acre or 125 percent of the average residential density
allowed within the urban growth boundary when the pilot project is approved by
the commission, whichever is greater.
(b) For third priority and fourth priority
lands described in subsection (3)(c) and (d) of this rule, at least 125 percent
of the average residential density allowed on land planned for residential use
within the unincorporated community when the pilot project is approved by the
commission. If these lands are within one jurisdiction but adjacent to another
jurisdiction, the written consent of the adjacent jurisdiction is required for
designation of the receiving area.
(6) The ratio of transferable development
rights to severed residential development interests in a sending area must be
calculated to protect lands planned and zoned for forest use and to create
incentives for owners of land in the sending and receiving areas to participate
in the TDR pilot project. The maximum ratio:
(a) May not exceed one transferable
development right to one severed development interest if the receiving area is
outside of urban growth boundaries and outside unincorporated communities,
except that this maximum ratio does not apply to an exception area described in
subsection (3)(b) of this rule provided the TDR pilot project concept plan
ensures the inclusion of the receiving area within an urban growth boundary,
either under applicable requirements of Goal 14 and other laws or the
alternative provisions in section (12) of this rule. The concept plan may allow
the transfer of development rights authorized in this subsection prior to the
inclusion of the receiving area in an acknowledged urban growth boundary
provided the amended comprehensive plan and land use regulations ensure that
the transferred rights cannot be exercised at a higher ratio than specified in
this rule until the receiving area is included in the urban growth
boundary.
(b) May not exceed two
transferable development rights to one severed development interest if the
receiving area is in an unincorporated community; and
(c) Must be consistent with plans for public
facilities and services in the receiving area.
(7) Within one year after the commission has
approved a proposed concept plan, the local governments having land use
jurisdiction over the affected sending and receiving areas must adopt overlay
zone provisions and corresponding amendments to the comprehensive plan and land
use regulations to implement the concept plan and to identify and authorize the
additional residential development allowed through participation in the pilot
project. The local governments must submit and the commission must review the
comprehensive plan and land use regulation amendments in the manner of periodic
review under ORS 197.628 to
197.650. Transfer of development
interests may not occur prior to the commission's acknowledgment of the
comprehensive plan and land use regulation amendments.
(8) The comprehensive plan and land use
regulation amendments required by section (7) of this rule must specify the
type and density of the additional development to be transferred and allowed in
a receiving area through participation in a TDR pilot project, in accordance
with the concept plan approved by the commission and other applicable
requirements of this rule.
(9) In
addition to the requirements of section (7) of this rule, before any
development rights may be exercised in the receiving area, the participating
owners of land in a sending area must grant a conservation easement pursuant to
ORS 271.715 to
271.795 or otherwise ensure on a
permanent basis that additional residential development does not occur in the
sending area.
(10) If the
receiving area for a TDR pilot project is intended for residential development
and is within an urban growth boundary expansion area approved under section
(12) of this rule, or is in an exception area described in subsection (3)(b)
and section (11) of this rule, the amended comprehensive plan and land use
regulations required by section (7) of this rule must authorize a residential
density of:
(a) For second priority lands
described in subsection (3)(b), at least five dwelling units per net acre or
125 percent of the average residential density allowed within the urban growth
boundary when the pilot project is approved by the commission, whichever is
greater.
(b) For third priority
and fourth priority lands described in subsections (3)(c) and (d), at least 125
percent of the average residential density allowed on land planned for
residential use within the unincorporated community when the pilot project is
approved by the commission.
(11) Notwithstanding contrary provisions of
statewide land use planning Goals 11 and 14 and related rules, and
notwithstanding ORS 215.700 to
215.780, if the commission
approves a TDR pilot project, a local government may amend its comprehensive
plan and land use regulations to allow transferred rights under an approved TDR
pilot project to develop as urban level development, with urban levels of
public facilities and services, including transportation, in a receiving area
that consists of land adjacent to an urban growth boundary or unincorporated
community boundary and subject to an exception to Goal 3 or Goal 4, consistent
with subsections (3)(b), (c) and (d) and section 10 of this rule. The concept
plan described under OAR 660-028-0020(2)(b) must indicate whether a local
government intends to change comprehensive plan and land use regulations to
allow urban level of development and urban levels of public facilities and
services in the receiving area and, where intended for residential development,
must include an agreement to rezone the receiving area to authorize a
residential density as provided in section (10) of this rule.
(12) Notwithstanding ORS
197.296 and
197.298, statewide land use
planning Goal 14 and its implementing rules (OAR chapter 660, division 24), a
local government may amend its urban growth boundary or unincorporated
community boundary to include land that is in a receiving area of a selected
TDR pilot project and that is adjacent to an urban growth boundary and subject
to an exception to Goal 3 or Goal 4. The proposed concept plan described under
OAR 660-028-0020(2)(c) must indicate whether a local government intends to
include adjacent exception lands in a receiving area approved as a pilot
project under this program, and, where intended for residential development,
must include an agreement to rezone the receiving area to authorize a
residential density as provided in section (10) of this rule.
(13) Local governments or other entities may
establish a development rights bank or other system to facilitate the transfer
of development rights.
(14) When
development rights transfers authorized by the pilot project under Oregon Laws
2009, chapter 636, sections 6 to 8, result in the transfer of development
rights from the jurisdiction of one local government to another local
government and cause a potential shift of ad valorem tax revenues between
jurisdictions, the local governments may enter into an intergovernmental
agreement under ORS 190.003 to
190.130 that provides for
sharing between the local governments of the prospective ad valorem tax
revenues derived from new development in the receiving
area.
Notes
Stat. Auth.: ORS 197.040
Stats. Implemented: 2009 OL Ch 636, ¦ 6
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