Or. Admin. Code § 660-024-0067 - Evaluation of Land in the Study Area for Inclusion in the UGB; Priorities
(1) A city
considering a UGB amendment must decide which land to add to the UGB by
evaluating all land in the study area determined under OAR
660-024-0065, as follows
(a) Beginning with the highest priority
category of land described in section (2), the city must apply section (5) to
determine which land in that priority category is suitable to satisfy the need
deficiency determined under OAR
660-024-0050 and select for
inclusion in the UGB as much of the land as necessary to satisfy the need.
(b) If the amount of suitable land
in the first priority category is not sufficient to satisfy all the identified
need deficiency, the city must apply section (5) to determine which land in the
next priority is suitable and select for inclusion in the UGB as much of the
suitable land in that priority as necessary to satisfy the need. The city must
proceed in this manner until all the land need is satisfied, except as provided
in OAR 660-024-0065(9).
(c) If the amount of suitable land
in a particular priority category in section (2) exceeds the amount necessary
to satisfy the need deficiency, the city must choose which land in that
priority to include in the UGB by applying the criteria in section (7) of this
rule.
(d) In evaluating the
sufficiency of land to satisfy a need under this section, the city may use the
factors identified in sections (5) and (6) of this rule to reduce the forecast
development capacity of the land to meet the need.
(e) Land that is determined to not be
suitable under section (5) of this rule to satisfy the need deficiency
determined under OAR 660-024-0050 is not required to
be selected for inclusion in the UGB unless its inclusion is necessary to serve
other higher priority lands.
(2) Priority of Land for inclusion in a UGB:
(a) First Priority is urban reserve,
exception land, and nonresource land. Lands in the study area that meet the
description in paragraphs (A) through (C) of this subsection are of equal
(first) priority:
(A) Land designated as an
urban reserve under OAR chapter 660, division 21, in an acknowledged
comprehensive plan;
(B) Land that
is subject to an acknowledged exception under ORS
197.732; and
(C) Land that is nonresource land.
(b) Second Priority is marginal
land: land within the study area that is designated as marginal land under ORS
197.247 (1991 Edition) in the
acknowledged comprehensive plan.
(c) Third Priority is forest or farm land
that is not predominantly high-value farm land: land within the study area that
is designated for forest or agriculture uses in the acknowledged comprehensive
plan and that is not predominantly high-value farmland as defined in ORS
195.300, or that does not
consist predominantly of prime or unique soils, as determined by the United
States Department of Agriculture Natural Resources Conservation Service (USDA
NRCS). In selecting which lands to include to satisfy the need, the city must
use the agricultural land capability classification system or the cubic foot
site class system, as appropriate for the acknowledged comprehensive plan
designation, to select lower capability or cubic foot site class lands first.
(d) Fourth Priority is
agricultural land that is predominantly high-value farmland: land within the
study area that is designated as agricultural land in an acknowledged
comprehensive plan and is predominantly high-value farmland as defined in ORS
195.300. A city may not select
land that is predominantly made up of prime or unique farm soils, as defined by
the USDA NRCS, unless there is an insufficient amount of other land to satisfy
its land need. In selecting which lands to include to satisfy the need, the
city must use the agricultural land capability classification system to select
lower capability lands first.
(3) Notwithstanding section (2)(c) or (d) of
this rule, land that would otherwise be excluded from a UGB may be included if:
(a) The land contains a small amount of third
or fourth priority land that is not important to the commercial agricultural
enterprise in the area and the land must be included in the UGB to connect a
nearby and significantly larger area of land of higher priority for inclusion
within the UGB; or
(b) The land
contains a small amount of third or fourth priority land that is not
predominantly high-value farmland or predominantly made up of prime or unique
farm soils and the land is completely surrounded by land of higher priority for
inclusion into the UGB.
(4) For purposes of categorizing and
evaluating land pursuant to subsections (2)(c) and (d) and section (3) of this
rule,
(a) Areas of land not larger than 100
acres may be grouped together and studied as a single unit of land;
(b) Areas of land larger than 100 acres that
are similarly situated and have similar soils may be grouped together provided
soils of lower agricultural or forest capability may not be grouped with soils
of higher capability in a manner inconsistent with the intent of section (2) of
this rule, which requires that higher capability resource lands shall be the
last priority for inclusion in a UGB;
(c) Notwithstanding subsection (4)(a), if a
city initiated the evaluation or amendment of its UGB prior to January 1, 2016,
and if the analysis involves more than one lot or parcel or area within a
particular priority category for which circumstances are reasonably similar,
these lots, parcels and areas may be considered and evaluated as a single
group;
(d) When determining
whether the land is predominantly high-value farmland, or predominantly prime
or unique, "predominantly" means more than 50 percent.
(5) With respect to section (1), a city must
assume that vacant or partially vacant land in a particular priority category
is "suitable" to satisfy a need deficiency identified in OAR
660-024-0050(4)
unless it demonstrates that the land cannot
satisfy the specified need based on one or more of the conditions described in
subsections (a) through (g) of this section: Existing parcelization, lot sizes
or development patterns of rural residential land make that land unsuitable for
an identified employment need; as follows:
(A) Parcelization: the land consists
primarily of parcels 2-acres or less in size, or
(B) Existing development patterns: the land
cannot be reasonably redeveloped or infilled within the planning period due to
the location of existing structures and infrastructure."
(b) The land would qualify for exclusion from
the preliminary study area under the factors in OAR
660-024-0065(4)
but the city declined to exclude it pending more detailed analysis.
(c) The land is, or will be upon inclusion in
the UGB, subject to natural resources protections under Statewide Planning Goal
5 such that that no development capacity should be forecast on that land to
meet the land need deficiency.
(d)
With respect to needed industrial uses only, the land is over 10 percent slope,
or is an existing lot or parcel that is smaller than 5 acres in size, or both.
Slope shall be measured as the increase in elevation divided by the horizontal
distance at maximum ten-foot contour intervals.
(e) With respect to a particular industrial
use or particular public facility use described in OAR
660-024-0065(3),
the land does not have, and cannot be improved to provide, one or more of the
required specific site characteristics.
(f) The land is subject to a conservation
easement described in ORS
271.715 that prohibits urban
development.
(g) The land is
committed to a use described in this subsection and the use is unlikely to be
discontinued during the planning period:
(A)
Public park, church, school, or cemetery, or
(B) Land within the boundary of an airport
designated for airport uses, but not including land designated or zoned for
residential, commercial or industrial uses in an acknowledged comprehensive
plan.
(6) For vacant or partially vacant lands
added to the UGB to provide for residential uses:
(a) Existing lots or parcels one acre or less
may be assumed to have a development capacity of one dwelling unit per lot or
parcel. Existing lots or parcels greater than one acre but less than two acres
shall be assumed to have an aggregate development capacity of two dwelling
units per acre.
(b) In any
subsequent review of a UGB pursuant to this division, the city may use a
development assumption for land described in subsection (a) of this section for
a period of up to 14 years from the date the lands were added to the UGB.
(7) Pursuant to
subsection (1)(c), if the amount of suitable land in a particular priority
category under section (2) exceeds the amount necessary to satisfy the need
deficiency, the city must choose which land in that priority to include in the
UGB by first applying the boundary location factors of Goal 14 and then
applying applicable criteria in the acknowledged comprehensive plan and land
use regulations acknowledged prior to initiation of the UGB evaluation or
amendment. The city may not apply local comprehensive plan criteria that
contradict the requirements of the boundary location factors of Goal 14. The
boundary location factors are not independent criteria; when the factors are
applied to compare alternative boundary locations and to determine the UGB
location the city must show that it considered and balanced all the factors.
The criteria in this section may not be used to select lands designated for
agriculture or forest use that have higher land capability or cubic foot site
class, as applicable, ahead of lands that have lower capability or cubic foot
site class.
(8) The city must
apply the boundary location factors of Goal 14 in coordination with service
providers and state agencies, including the Oregon Department of Transportation
(ODOT) with respect to Factor 2 regarding impacts on the state transportation
system, and the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife (ODFW) and the
Department of State Lands (DSL) with respect to Factor 3 regarding
environmental consequences. "Coordination" includes timely notice to agencies
and service providers and consideration of any recommended evaluation
methodologies.
(9) In applying
Goal 14 Boundary Location Factor 2 to evaluate alternative locations under
section (7), the city must compare relative costs, advantages and disadvantages
of alternative UGB expansion areas with respect to the provision of public
facilities and services needed to urbanize alternative boundary locations. For
purposes of this section, the term "public facilities and services" means
water, sanitary sewer, storm water management, and transportation facilities.
The evaluation and comparison under Boundary Location Factor 2 must consider:
(a) The impacts to existing water, sanitary
sewer, storm water and transportation facilities that serve nearby areas
already inside the UGB;
(b) The
capacity of existing public facilities and services to serve areas already
inside the UGB as well as areas proposed for addition to the UGB; and
(c) The need for new
transportation facilities, such as highways and other roadways, interchanges,
arterials and collectors, additional travel lanes, other major improvements on
existing roadways and, for urban areas of 25,000 or more, the provision of
public transit service.
(10) The adopted findings for UGB amendment
must describe or map all of the alternative areas evaluated in the boundary
location alternatives analysis.
Notes
Stat. Auth.: ORS 197.040, 197A.305, 197A.320 & 197.235, Statewide Planning Goal 14
Stats. Implemented: ORS 195.036, 197.015, 197.295 - 197.314, 197.610 - 197.650, 197.764, 197A.300 - 197A.325
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