Or. Admin. Code § 660-009-0025 - Designation of Lands for Industrial and Other Employment Uses
Cities and counties must adopt measures adequate to implement policies adopted pursuant to OAR 660-009-0020. Appropriate implementing measures include amendments to plan and zone map designations, land use regulations, public facility plans, and transportation system plans.
(1) Identification of Needed Sites. The plan
must identify the approximate number, acreage and site characteristics of sites
needed to accommodate industrial and other employment uses to implement plan
policies. Cities and counties may also designate mixed-use zones to meet
multiple needs in a given location.
(a) Plans
relying on safe harbor employment growth forecasts do not need to provide a
different type of site for each industrial or other employment use. Compatible
uses with similar site characteristics may be combined into broad site
categories. Several broad site categories will provide for industrial and other
employment uses likely to occur in most planning areas.
(b) Plans may include sites for one or more
target industries. Associated target industries with similar site needs may be
combined for site identification. Target industry site needs must be typical of
industry site characteristics. Plans including target industry site needs
should demonstrate consistency with Oregon Business Development Department
(OBDD) guidance or other industry standards regarding typical site
characteristics. Examples of sources include but are not limited to industry
reports, citation of existing developments, or OBDD publications. Sites
identified through the target industries approach may not be planned for retail
development other than as allowed under OAR 660-009-0025(9)(a)(C).
(2) Total Land Supply. Plans must
designate serviceable land suitable to meet the site needs identified in
section (1) of this rule. Except as provided for in section (5) of this rule,
the total acreage of land designated must at least equal the total projected
land needs for each industrial or other employment use category identified in
the plan during the 20-year planning period.
(3) Short-Term Supply of Land. Plans for
cities and counties within a Metropolitan Planning Organization or cities and
counties that adopt policies relating to the short-term supply of land must
designate suitable land to respond to economic development opportunities as
they arise. Cities and counties may maintain the short-term supply of land
according to the strategies adopted pursuant to OAR 660-009-0020(2).
(a) Except as provided for in subsections (b)
and (c), cities and counties subject to this section must provide at least 25
percent of the total land supply within the urban growth boundary designated
for industrial and other employment uses as short-term supply.
(b) Affected cities and counties that are
unable to achieve the target in subsection (a) above may set an alternative
target based on their economic opportunities analysis.
(c) A planning area with 10 percent or more
of the total land supply enrolled in Oregon's industrial site certification
program pursuant to ORS 284.565 satisfies the requirements of this
section.
(4) If cities
and counties are required to prepare a public facility plan or transportation
system plan by OAR chapter 660, division 11 or division 12, the city or county
must complete subsections (a) to (c) of this section at the time of periodic
review. Requirements of this rule apply only to city and county decisions made
at the time of periodic review. Subsequent implementation of or amendments to
the comprehensive plan or the public facility plan that change the supply of
serviceable land are not subject to the requirements of this section. Cities
and counties must:
(a) Identify serviceable
industrial and other employment sites. The affected city or county in
consultation with the local service provider, if applicable, must make
decisions about whether a site is serviceable. Cities and counties are
encouraged to develop specific criteria for deciding whether or not a site is
serviceable. Cities and counties are strongly encouraged to also consider
whether or not extension of facilities is reasonably likely to occur
considering the size and type of uses likely to occur and the cost or distance
of facility extension;
(b) Estimate
the amount of serviceable industrial and other employment land likely to be
needed during the planning period for the public facilities plan. Appropriate
techniques for estimating land needs include but are not limited to the
following:
(A) Projections or forecasts based
on development trends in the area over previous years; and
(B) Deriving a proportionate share of the
anticipated 20-year need specified in the comprehensive plan.
(c) Review and, if necessary,
amend the comprehensive plan and the public facilities plan to maintain a
short-term supply of land. Amendments to implement this requirement include but
are not limited to the following:
(A) Changes
to the public facilities plan to add or reschedule projects to make more land
serviceable;
(B) Amendments to the
comprehensive plan that redesignate additional serviceable land for industrial
or other employment use; and
(C)
Reconsideration of the planning area's economic development objectives and
amendment of plan objectives and policies based on public facility
limitations.
(d) If a
city or county is unable to meet the requirements of this section, it must
identify the specific steps needed to provide expanded public facilities at the
earliest possible time.
(5) Institutional Uses. Cities and counties
are not required to designate institutional uses on privately owned land when
implementing section (2) of this rule. Cities and counties may designate land
in an industrial or other employment land category to compensate for any
institutional land demand that is not designated under this section.
(6) Compatibility. Cities and counties are
strongly encouraged to manage encroachment and intrusion of uses incompatible
with industrial and other employment uses. Strategies for managing encroachment
and intrusion of incompatible uses include, but are not limited to, transition
areas around uses having negative impacts on surrounding areas, design
criteria, district designation, and limiting non-essential uses within
districts.
(7) Availability. Cities
and counties may consider land availability when designating the short-term
supply of land. Available land is vacant or developed land likely to be on the
market for sale or lease at prices consistent with the local real estate
market. Methods for determining lack of availability include, but are not
limited to:
(a) Bona fide offers for purchase
or purchase options in excess of real market value have been rejected in the
last 24 months;
(b) A site is
listed for sale at more than 150 percent of real market values;
(c) An owner has not made timely response to
inquiries from local or state economic development officials; or
(d) Sites in an industrial or other
employment land category lack diversity of ownership within a planning area
when a single owner or entity controls more than 51 percent of those
sites.
(8) Uses with
Special Siting Characteristics. Cities and counties that adopt objectives or
policies providing for uses with special site needs must adopt policies and
land use regulations providing for those special site needs. Special site needs
include, but are not limited to large acreage sites, special site
configurations, direct access to transportation facilities, prime industrial
lands, sensitivity to adjacent land uses, or coastal shoreland sites designated
as suited for water-dependent use under Goal 17. Policies and land use
regulations for these uses must:
(a) Identify
sites suitable for the proposed use;
(b) Protect sites suitable for the proposed
use by limiting land divisions and permissible uses and activities that
interfere with development of the site for the intended use; and
(c) Where necessary, protect a site for the
intended use by including measures that either prevent or appropriately
restrict incompatible uses on adjacent and nearby lands.
(9) Target Industries. Local governments that
estimate land demand using site requirements of target industries in an
economic opportunities analysis must adopt land use regulations that:
(a) Designate and preserve specific sites for
use by target industries by zoning ordinance or local measure.
(A) Sites designated for target industries
may be developed for unanticipated employment uses based upon adopted findings
in a legislative or quasi-judicial land use decision that the proposed use
offers the community equal or higher local:
(i) economic benefit; and
(ii) community benefit.
(B) Unless a local government adopts a
post-acknowledgment plan amendment consisting of an updated economic
opportunities analysis to rezone target industry sites:
(i) Sites designated for target industries
that do not develop with the anticipated industrial use may not be rezoned for
commercial or residential use.
(ii)
Target industry sites zoned for other employment uses may not be rezoned for
retail commercial or residential use.
(C) Local land use regulations establishing
sites for target industries may include provisions for non-industrial
development that is subordinate to and supportive of the primary industrial
development.
(b) Protect
designated target industry sites by limiting land divisions and permissible
uses and activities that interfere with development of the site for the
intended use;
(c) Protect, where
necessary, a site for the intended use by including measures that either
prevent or appropriately restrict incompatible uses on adjacent
lands.
(10) Sites
designated for target industry use under OAR 660-009-0025(1)(b) that are
subsequently developed, occupied, and vacated by target industries or locally
approved unanticipated employment uses allowed by paragraph (9)(a)(A) may be
redeveloped for or occupied by any economic sector.
Notes
Statutory/Other Authority: ORS 197.040
Statutes/Other Implemented: ORS 197.712
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