BCC Minutes 01/08/2003 S (LDC Amendments)January8,2003
TRANSCRIPT OF THE MEETING OF THE
BOARD OF THE COLLIER COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
LAND DEVELOPMENT CODE AMENDMENTS
Naples, Florida, January 8, 2003
LET IT BE REMEMBERED, that the Board of Collier County
Commissioners in and for the County of Collier, having conducted
business herein, met on this date at 5:05 p.m. in SPECIAL SESSION
in Building "F" of the Government Complex, East Naples, Florida,
with the following members present:
CHAIRMAN:
JIM COLETTA
FRED COYLE
DONNA FIALA
FRANK HALAS
TOM HENNING
ALSO PRESENT: Joe Schmitt, Community Development
Services Administrator; Susan Murray, Current Planning Manager;
and Marjorie Student, Assistant County Attorney.
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COLLIER COUNTY
BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
AGENDA
January 8, 2003
5:05 p.m.
NOTICE: ALL PERSONS WISHING TO SPEAK ON ANY AGENDA ITEM
MUST REGISTER PRIOR TO SPEAKING. SPEAKERS MUST REGISTER
WITH THE COUNTY MANAGER PRIOR TO THE PRESENTATION OF THE
AGENDA ITEM TO BE ADDRESSED.
COLLIER COUNTY ORDINANCE NO. 99-22 REQUIRES THAT ALL
LOBBYISTS SHALL, BEFORE ENGAGING IN ANY LOBBYING ACTIVITIES
(INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, ADDRESSING THE BOARD OF
COUNTY COMMISSIONERS), REGISTER WITH THE CLERK TO THE
BOARD AT THE BOARD MINUTES AND RECORDS DEPARTMENT.
REQUESTS TO ADDRESS THE BOARD ON SUBJECTS WHICH ARE NOT ON
THIS AGENDA MUST BE SUBMITTED IN WRITING WITH EXPLANATION
TO THE COUNTY MANAGER AT LEAST 13 DAYS PRIOR TO THE DATE OF
THE MEETING AND WILL BE HEARD UNDER "PUBLIC PETITIONS".
ANY PERSON W HO DECIDES T O APPEAL A DECISION O F T HIS BOARD
WILL NEED A RECORD OF TIlE PROCEEDINGS PERTAINING THERETO,
AND THEREFORE MAY NEED TO ENSURE THAT A VERBATIM RECORD
OF THE PROCEEDINGS IS MADE, WHICH RECORD INCLUDES THE
TESTIMONY AND EVIDENCE UPON WHICH THE APPEAL IS TO BE BASED.
ALL REGISTERED PUBLIC SPEAKERS WILL BE LIMITED TO FIVE (5)
MINUTES UNLESS PERMISSION FOR ADDITIONAL TIME IS GRANTED BY
THE CHAIRMAN.
IF YOU ARE A PERSON WITH A DISABILITY WHO NEEDS ANY
ACCOMMODATION IN ORDER TO PARTICIPATE IN THIS PROCEEDING,
YOU ARE ENTITLED, AT NO COST TO YOU, TO THE PROVISION OF
CERTAIN ASSISTANCE. PLEASE CONTACT THE COLLIER COUNTY
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January 8, 2003
FACILITIES MANAGEMENT DEPARTMENT LOCATED AT 3301 EAST
TAMIAMI TRAIL, NAPLES, FLORIDA, 34112, (941) 774-8380; ASSISTED
LISTENING DEVICES FOR THE HEARING IMPAIRED ARE AVAILABLE IN
THE COUNTY COMMISSIONERS' OFFICE.
1. PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE
2. AGENDA
AN ORDINANCE AMENDING ORDINANCE NUMBER 91-102, AS
AMENDED, THE COLLIER COUNTY LAND DEVELOPMENT CODE,
WHICH INCLUDES THE COMPREHENSIVE REGULATIONS FOR
THE UNINCORPORATED AREA OF COLLIER COUNTY, FLORIDA.
3. ADJOURN
INQUIRIES CONCERNING CHANGES TO THE BOARD'S AGENDA SHOULD
BE MADE TO THE COUNTY MANAGER'S OFFICE AT 774-8383.
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January 8, 2003
January 8, 2003
ORDINANCE 2003-01 AMEND1NG ORDINANCE 91-102, AS
AMENDED, THE COLLIER COUNTY LAND DEVELOPMENT
CODE WHICH INCLUDES THE COMPREHENSIVE
REGULATIONS FOR THE UNINCORPORATED AREA OF
COI,I~IF, R COl INTY: FIJORIDA- ADOPTED WITH CHANGES
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Ladies and gentlemen, would you
take your seats, please. Now stand up so we can pledge allegiance to
the flag. (At which time, the Pledge of Allegiance was recited in
unison.)
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: I want to welcome our vast audience.
We're glad that you're here today.
This is -- well, this is what? What are we looking -- waiting
for? What are we missing?
COMMISSIONER HALAS: I'm here.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: I am, too.
Mr. Schmitt, are you in charge today?
MR. SCHMITT: Yes, Commissioner.
Good evening, Commissioners, and welcome to our final
hearing, our second and final hearing of the fall cycle of the land
development code process, the amendment process.
We're going to hopefully go through rather quickly some of
these, because you've seen these the first time.
I'm going to mm the microphone over to Susan and Marjorie so
we can just set the basis and the groundwork of how we're going to
proceed through these. But like last time, just for overarching
guidance, we're going to hit the major issues first so that we don't
keep people sitting here for most of the night.
My proposal will be the Vanderbilt Beach issue first. We have
an amendment that involves the school districts and the permitted
versus conditional use. And then we're going to 3.15, and then we'll
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January 8, 2003
do the rest of them in sequence. And I think that will probably clear
out the room of those who are here to speak.
And we'll go through the others, just to make sure. But I'll turn
it over to Susan for the groundwork. Susan?
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Okay. But of course I want you to
realize you don't have to leave when your agenda item is finished;
you're welcome to stay for the whole proceedings. Please continue.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Sure, we'll have a lot of takers on
that, I bet.
MS. MURRAY: Good afternoon. For the record, Susan
Murray, current planning manager.
As Joe mentioned, this is the second and final hearing of the fall
cycle 2002 LDC amendments you will be voting on tonight.
A couple of announcements for the benefit of the public: There
are sign-up sheets on this middle table here. If you wish to speak on
an item, if you'd fill it out with the agenda item -- or the section
number and hand it to myself or Joe.
Also, I wanted to announce that we had received a written
request to withdraw one of the amendments, and that was to Section
3.13.8, which is the coastal construction setback line variances, the
Lely Barefoot group, Don Pickworth. That was an independent
amendment submitted. They have requested to withdraw that. So if
there's anybody in the audience that was here to hear that, they don't
need to stay, it's been withdrawn.
Also wanted to let you know that the information you have in
front of you has just been recently completed for review by the
county attorney's office and myself, and there are some changes that
will be taking place in terms of the ordinance. And they're mostly
editing; there's no substantive changes at all.
MS. STUDENT: I can add for the record that it's mostly --
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January 8, 2003
again, Marjorie Student, assistant county attorney.
There are no substantive changes, except there will be some
changes to 3.15. But other than -- and Mr. Feder will address those.
But other than 3.15, it's just clarification and makes it a little more
clearer and so forth in the ordinance, but no real substantive changes.
One item that Ms. Murray and I have been working on was an
applicability section for the PUD procedures and to just clarify that
as to what you really mean. It talks in terms of presently
nonconforming situations.
This is a massive document, over 100 pages to begin with, and
we've been making the revisions to the ordinance itself. It's taken our
office three solid days to do it. And so -- and with work over the
holidays and so forth. But again, it's just editing and clarification,
sight checking and things like that.
MS. MURRAY: And of course any changes that you direct us
to tonight through your vote will also be made to the ordinance as
well.
I did give you one hand-out regarding Section 2.7.3. I
highlighted all the changes. Again, they were not substantive. But
this was probably one of the more important sections of this cycle
related to the PUD, and I just wanted you to be aware of some of the
changes as we had discussed them from the first meeting. So that is a
hand-out and I'll go over that with you when we get there.
But you can see, anything that's highlighted, the light highlight
has been changed. There's a darker highlight in there that I just
wanted to call your attention to, but you've already read that. You
received that exact same language in your package. So when we get
there, I'll be happy to go over that.
As Joe stated, he wanted to go ahead and start out with the
Vanderbilt Beach issue. And I'll remind you that typically we work
from the summary sheet, which are the first pages in your document.
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And the Vanderbilt Beach issue is on Page 56. And at the last
hearing, you directed a 12-month extension instead of a six-month
extension, and we've amended the document to that effect. So the
extension will be for 12 months.
MS. STUDENT: And just for clarification, there's a slight
difference in what's in your strike-through and underline. We're just
going to put in there until January 31, 2004, so that will take care of
it.
MS. MURRAY: Are there any --
MS. STUDENT: We have two registered speakers: Diane
Ketcham, followed by Suzie Swinehart.
MS. KETCHAM: I'm going to be so brief tonight, you're going
to be very impressed. But we can't have a Vanderbilt Beach thing
without having some people here from Vanderbilt Beach.
My name is Diane Ketcham and I'm representing the Vanderbilt
Beach and Bay Association and the Save Vanderbilt Beach Fund.
We are hopeful that you will pass this one-year extension to the
moratorium for several reasons: First of all, we need the extra time.
This is our future and we want to get it right. For the first time in a
long time there is hope on Vanderbilt Beach that we can preserve our
community, that working with you and the planning staff we can set
code requirements that will stop canonization (sic) and give us all in
Collier County more views of the sunset and more green space on
Vanderbilt Beach.
And I'd like to add, this is not a fight between the people of
Vanderbilt Beach and all developers. It was quality developers who
made Naples the beautiful place it is, and we look forward to
working with them in any future redevelopment on our beach.
What we will oppose and what we have opposed are developers
who want to build as high and as dense as they can, then take their
profits and leave. This is not our vision for Vanderbilt Beach, and I
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January 8, 2003
know it's not yours.
We have stood here so many times and asked so many things of
you, because we were the last beachfront frontier in Collier County.
Well, you are listening to us, and now to the other groups to the north
of us, and we are grateful for that.
We hope to come forward to you next year with a new overlay
district for Gulf Shore Drive that will make the residents say this was
all worth it, the lawsuits, the endless meetings. So please, pass this
extended moratorium today. Thank you.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Thank you.
Next speaker?
MS. MURRAY: Suzie Swinehart.
MS. SWINEHART: Hello. My name is Suzie Swinehart and I
live at -- on Bayview Avenue. And I am also a board member of the
Vanderbilt Beach and Bay Association. And I would just like to say
that I strongly support the extension of the moratorium. Thank you.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Thank you.
MS. MURRAY: There's no more registered speakers.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Okay, that concludes the public
hearing --
MS. MURRAY: Do you have any questions of us?
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: -- the public portion of the hearing.
So at this point in time is there any questions from the commissioners
for staff?.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: I move that we approve this part
of the land development code.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Second.
Marjorie, you want to make sure you give the
MR. SCHMITT:
ground rules.
MS. STUDENT:
Yes. I know in the past sometimes we've
taken straw votes and such, but at the final hearing I think that we
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January8,2003
should have one motion for the entire land development code
amendments.
And with that motion, we will need a finding of consistency
with the growth management plan. And this will be a little bit
different because division 3.15 has supporting amendments to the
comp. plan that we haven't received. They've been adopted but we
haven't received our compliance notification from DCA yet, so
they're not effective.
So we've looked into this, and that part of it, the motion would
be in compliance with the proposed -- or excuse me, Ordinance No.
02-60 adopted November 19th, 2002. So I'll restate that again when
the time comes.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Let me -- so you want us to hold off
on a motion?
MS. STUDENT: Yes.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: In order to be able to take the
suspense away from the audience who's waiting to find out how we
feel about this, what --
COMMISSIONER HALAS: We could possibly be here all
night that way.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Well, we could.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Let's just not tell them.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: We could do that, then they will
stay.
But I think that by nods of the heads we're pretty much in
agreement with this.
MS. STUDENT: You can take a straw vote that way and --
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Okay, let's proceed forward with the
next item.
Thank you very much for coming, you did a wonderful job.
MS. MURRAY: The next item would be on Page 2, and this is
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January8,2003
related to the regulation of public schools. And if you remember
from the last meeting, the proposal was to allow public schools as a
permitted use in the agricultural and estates zoning district, which
you did not take issue with. But there was also some discussion
about including in a limited fashion to allow them by right in the
RSF zoning districts for a limited time frame.
So if you look starting on Page 3 and on to Page 4, you'll see
that in the RSF zoning districts for the RSF-3 and RSF-5 zoning
districts only, public schools are a permitted use through January
30th, 2004, and a conditional use in the RSF-1, 2 and 4 zoning
districts through January 30th, 2004. Whereas, previously they were
all conditional uses in RSF-1 through RSF-5.
MR. SCHMITT: Commissioner, just to clarify, this solves the
problem that we were at an impasse with the time to get the
application before you for a permitted use for the two intermediate
centers out in Golden Gate City. This solves the problem for the
school district and for the board so they can retain and maintain the
aggressive schedule that they have for constructing new schools and
meet the requirements within the county.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: But we're still heading towards that
ultimate goal of having--
MR. SCHMITT: Absolutely.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: -- them comply and have the public
meeting so that the neighbors can all weigh in on it in the future,
correct?
MR. SCHMITT: This will be a permitted use for a period of
one year, and they have to still go through that process.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: It gives them that little bit of--
MR. SCHMITT: Yes.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: -- time to be able to --
MR. SCHMITT: And it also gives them the time to initiate
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January 8, 2003
action to begin construction as well.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Commissioner Henning?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: There is some other schools in
the works that I know of, and I'm not sure if there's more. I know
there's one high school off of Collier Boulevard that is planned for, I
believe, '04, and somewhere in '03, probably take a year and a half to
construct.
Maybe we ought to hear from Mr. Simms, tell us some of the
hurdles that they have to jump through.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Can I ask one question before?
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: You certainly may, Commissioner
Halas.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Is this also a tie-in with the -- so
that the school board and the Board of Commissioners have an
understanding of what -- how development's going to be and we can
help direct development in that area also, in areas?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: A joint planning.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: A joint planning? Or is this --
MR. SCHMITT: We are aggressively engaged with the school
district and the board in the planning effort. Unfortunately, and Mr.
Simms can allude to that, oftentimes the schools are forced to
locations based on the land that they can acquire. It may in some
times in some instances not be the best place, but it's just a matter of
what they can acquire through -- without having to condemn
property. And I can refer to Jim to highlight on that.
But be that as it may, we are -- there are schools even going --
looking out in the estates where we're trying to aggressively work
with the school board so that we can provide the infrastructure
needed and jointly plan to meet those requirements.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Yes, that's -- okay.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Mr. Simms?
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January8,2003
MR. SIMMS: Thank you, Commissioners. For the record, I'm
Jim Simms, the associate superintendent for operations for Collier
County Public Schools.
Mr. Schmitt is absolutely correct, we are working very closely
together. We'll be the first to admit that the whole process needs to
be tightened up. And that's what you're trying to do and that's what
your staff is trying to do. We agree with that, and we support that.
And we'll work as diligently as we can to fulfill what we believe is
the common objective, growth in the right places, schools at the right
time.
The high school that you mentioned, sir, Golden Gate High
School, as I recall is in-- is zoned in the estates area, so we have no
problem there with respect to any conditional uses that might be
applied in the residential areas. Our concern, as you are aware, was
our ability to proceed with the two intermediate centers in the Golden
Gate City area, and the proposed amendments will allow us to do that
and we appreciate that.
We do have some concerns over the potential long-term impacts
of having schools as conditional uses in the residential areas. Our
consultants and in fact members of the public have cautioned us that
there may be some delays and costs associated with that. So we have
some concerns there.
But nevertheless, as I said before, we need to work together and
we need to support you in your efforts to control matters, and we'll
do that. We would only ask that if we run into difficulties as a result
of the conditional use designations, that we have the opportunity --
and I'm sure you'll grant us that -- to bring it back and address the
issues with you should they occur and when they occur.
So we want to express our thanks to Mr. Mudd, Mr. Schmitt and
the entire staff, and to you for your support to the school districts as
we endeavor to keep pace with the rapid growth that we're all
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experiencing here in the county.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Thank you, Mr. Simms.
MR. SIMMS: Thank you, sir.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Commissioner Henning?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Just a little tidbit, a little
knowledge that I gained over the past few weeks. The Naples
Birthing Center, the month of November, 2002, there were almost
300 babies born at that facility. So if you take three months, that's
one elementary school.
MR. SIMMS: It sure is.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: That's right.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Now, I think that was
precedent setting, but I think that we need to work a little smarter and
figure out where all these kids are going to live and where they're
going to go to school.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Have we found out what's causing
this?
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Water.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Well, we might ask Commissioner
Henning that question again, because he just contributed one of the
new babies out there.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: That was in the month of
December. That was down a little bit.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Well, we won't worry about it then.
Any other questions? Are we all in agreement to move this one
forward? Nods of the heads?
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Yes.
MR. SIMMS: Thank you, Commissioners.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Thank you very much, Mr. Simms.
MS. MURRAY: Okay, the next item would be 3.15, and I
believe you received that under separate cover. And Stan Litsinger
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will be covering that with you.
MR. LITSINGER: Good evening, Commissioners. For the
record, Stan Litsinger, comprehensive planning.
This evening on division 3.15, what I will do is since your
hearing on December the 11 th, I will go through the changes, note
those very quickly to you from what you received in your first
hearing and what you received by separate cover for this hearing.
Very quickly, on Page 6, under 3.15.3.18, we've added for
clarification the final development order definition for this division
of the land development code shall be a final approved subdivision
plat, final approved site development plan or building permit.
On Page 7, the very bottom of your page under level of service
standards for water facilities, we've clarified the level of service
standards for independent districts and private systems as identified
in your potable water sub-element, in Rule 10(D)(6) of the Florida
Administrative Code.
On Page 10, top of the page under level of service again for
private sanitary systems and independent districts, here again for
clarification, the reference to the sewer sub-element and Rule
10(D)(6) of the Florida Administrative Code for those levels of
service standards.
On Page 17, under actions relative to your AUIR process, which
you just completed last month, we've added also for clarification
under establishment, number three, establishment of interim
development controls. Under D and E, remedies would include
private development improvements guaranteed at enforceable
development agreements.
And for capital roads, the designation for constrained roadway
segments.
Page 19, under the boundaries for ASI, we have just added for
clarification as proposed to you by the transportation administrator.
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on?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Can I ask a question before we go
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Yes, go ahead, Commissioner Coyle.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Stan, can we go back to Page 17
under paragraph 3(E)? What is a capital road facility?
MR. LITSINGER: Capital road facility would be an
improvement in capacity as a result of additional lane miles or
improvements relative to improving the flow and carrying capacity
of a particular segment, intersection improvements.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Is that an official designation of
some kind of capital road facility, or--
MR. LITSINGER: A capital road facility would be any type of
a capital improvement to your roadway network that increases
capacity, carrying capacity.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay.
MR. LITSINGER: On Page 21, we clarify under 3.15.6.56,
dissolution of area of significant influence in that it would be
dissolved in the same manner that it was established, which would be
by action of this board that a public hearing could dissolve an area of
significant influence.
On Page 27, I would point out to you in the traffic impact
vesting affirmation process that will take place over the six months
following the adoption of this ordinance, we had clarified on Page
26, under 3.15.7.312 that the county will conduct a traffic impact
vesting review during the six months following the adoption of this
ordinance, where developments vested for concurrency prior to the
effective date, which would include developments that have
previously received a certificate of adequate public facilities have
entered into an approved development agreement with vesting
provisions for transportation for which were statutorily vested prior
to the effective day of this ordinance will be reviewed during this
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traffic affirmation vesting program over the next six months.
And on Page 27, in the second paragraph, we had noted before
this meeting that we would need to add after previously vested
development, i.e. development with certificates, we need to add in
there DCA's development contribution of agreement with vesting
provisions and also statutorily vested projects, to be clear there on
what we are intending to do with this vesting review. So we would
add that language on the top paragraph there on Page 27.
Also on Page 27 under 3.15.7.312, here we've clarified a
mid-year monitoring report that we would propose to do on all
developments that's previously approved which is not at least 90
percent built out, so that we can establish background traffic and
know the rate of build-out of the various development approvals that
have been issued by the county.
A clarification also on Page 27 under 3.15.7.313, relative to the
applicability of this ordinance, which would be to subdivision plats
and site development plans approved prior to the effective date of the
original applicable ordinance, which was in November of'93.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: In other words, they're
grandfathered in from that point on; is that what you're saying?
From '93?
MR. LITSINGER: Before.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Before. On or about.
MR. LITSINGER: On page -- beginning on Page 28 -- on Page
29, we have a detailed explanation of the traffic impact vesting
process which can take place over a three-year period as a result of
the initial payment of 50 percent of your roads impact fees and
ultimately the payment of 100 percent of your impact fees within
three years will result in vesting for transportation concurrency in
perpetuity for the particular project. It goes on to explain that those
-- that traffic impact vesting may be transferred within the project
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described on the certificate of adequate facilities for transportation,
and the monies deposited or paid into the impact fee funds may be
transferred within the district or the adjoining district.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Question I have on this. Suppose
somebody comes in and wants to have this -- a PUD and then decides
to pull out, do they get their money back or does that money stay
there?
MR. FEDER: Commissioner, if I could, Norman Feder for the
record. If someone has paid their 50 percent, that is nonrefundable.
And again, it wouldn't be a PUD, it would be a final development
order, final plot or plan. Because they paid the 50 percent, it's
nonrefundable, they--
COMMISSIONER HALAS: And they pull out, they don't get
their money back.
MR. FEDER: They do not get their money back. But what this
does provide for is if they then surrender that certificate of adequate
public facility for the rest of their project, they can't -- it stays with
the land, runs with the land, the vesting. They though can use those
impact fees they paid. While they can't get it back, they could use it
on another project within that district or adjacent district, they paid
those fees, so they're not going to create the impact, they've got the
ability to use those fees within the district. But they cannot get --
move the vesting away from their project, nor can they get their
money back.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Now, you're saying in the district.
Does that mean the whole county, or is that --
MR. FEDER: The impact fee district, which there's seven in the
county. That district or the adjacent district. Much like we can
utilize the fees within the district or an adjacent district. It would
allow them to move those fees on another project within that district
or adjacent district.
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January8,2003
COMMISSIONER HALAS: I'm not trying to be devil's
advocate here--
MR. FEDER: Please.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: -- but suppose that somebody has
a development and decides that I'm not going to develop it at this
point in time but I can go over to another area and we might find that
there's constraints because of traffic. But he's -- can this developer
come in and say well, wait a minute, I've already paid my
development, I can go to this other district?
MR. FEDER: Very good question. Let me make sure the
record is extremely clear.
No, they cannot. That's why I said the vesting runs with the
property itself. They could use the impact fees over there if in fact
they could get a concurrency determination for that new project that
they wanted to work on.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Okay. Thank you.
MR. LITSINGER: And that is the extent of the substantive
changes since your first draft of the ordinance that we presented to
you on December the 11 th.
I would note that you that at the December 11 th meeting there
was a hand-out by the development industry. Mr. Zucella (phonetic)
handed out a proposal relative to a phasing and an early commitment
for concurrency in the application process. We have reviewed that
and worked with the industry, and in light of the fact that this is an
interim concurrency management system, pending your checkbook
concurrency system, we believe we have agreement with the industry
that the process that we've outlined here over the next 12-month
period is workable.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Do we have any speakers on this
item?
MR. SCHMITT: We have two registered speakers: Michael
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January 8, 2003
Fernandez and David Ellis.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Good evening, sir.
MR. FERNANDEZ: Good evening, Commissioners. Just two
quick questions, and perhaps it's just a matter of clarification.
There's an issue about cancellation of certificates. Currently
there's a 30-day provision where you can-- once you're notified that
your certificate's available for pickup, you have 30 calendar days to
come pick that up. There was a change that was proposed to reduce
that number from 30 calendar days to five business days. I don't
know what the concern is, but that seems that, just from a procedure
standpoint, from the time I get a fax notification that the COA is
available for me to pick up, to go to the bank, get the money, the
client and so forth may be out of town, or whatever, five days just
seems a little short.
And we're wondering if we can -- we don't know what the
genesis or the reason is, but 10 days would be maybe sufficient, if
there is an issue with -- relative to that. That's the first one.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Where was this in the -- I didn't
remember reading that. I thought it was all 30 days, from what
material I have.
MR. FEDER: I'm going to need the cite, and I have Stan
looking at it right now.
Please understand, the intent was to establish that actually at 90
days. At 90 days, not at five days or 30. The provision being that on
initial determination of certificate of adequate public facility, that
then that could be picked up day one or up to 90 days. If it's not
picked up within 90 days, it goes away. But the day that it's picked
up, that half of the transportation impact fees are to be paid. And
they then become nonrefundable and the process goes in.
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, that's on Page 28, paragraph
5.15.7.3.1.5. Joe, you've got to get these things renumbered.
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January8,2003
MR. SCHMITT:
MR. FEDER:
MR. MUDD:
MR. FEDER:
Hey, we're working on it.
What page are you on?
Page 28.
28. I can tell you on 34, if I call your attention
there, it says what I just said, which was the 90 days. Let me go back
to 28 and see if we have just --
COMMISSIONER HALAS: There was something I read in
here for 30 days. After you're notified or something, 30 days. MR. MUDD: Page 28, middle paragraph?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: But I didn't see the five days either.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Not less -- not later than 90 days.
MR. SCHMITT: Again, I'm on Page 28, Norman, the middle
paragraph that says 90 days. And --
MR. FEDER: It says 90 days further down.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Yeah, I didn't see anything on five
days. I wish we--
MR. FEDER: That's an old one. It is 90 days. And I guess I
had an old draft that Michael was stuck with.
MR. FERNANDEZ: That's the latest that's on the Internet right
now.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Oh, I see.
MR. FERNANDEZ: But apparently that was catched (sic).
The other item that I have regarding this is that there's a
provision in here where you can secure a COA by development
agreement for large developments up to -- or 500 units or 150-unit
phase, or 100,000 square feet of commercial. If you're not-- if you
don't meet those standards, you can only get a COA for three years.
And I'm wondering if there's -- what's the rationale behind
giving a larger development that luxury, as opposed to allowing all
developments to have five years, or all developments to have three.
And I'm not so much worried about the three versus five for
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January8,2003
development as much as putting two developers that perhaps are
competitors on equal footing that are located one adjacent to the
other.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Thank you.
Mr. Ellis? Good evening.
MR. ELLIS: Thank you. My name is David Ellis, I'm with the
Collier Building Industry Association.
Thank you very much. I just wanted to briefly say, this has
been certainly a -- taken a lot of time to pull together a lot of these
details. And certainly I wouldn't even purport to you that it's perfect,
but I think your staff's done a very positive and proactive job in
taking a very difficult thing and working with the understanding of
trying to see it through to working in a day-to-day environment. And
certainly this is an interim move on behalf of the county. And we're
pleased so far.
I think next year is actually going to be a very challenging year
in terms of pulling together the information we're going to need to
make our final decisions about this process.
And I will commend your staff, I think they've got a significant
task ahead of them. We look forward to participating in that process,
too, as we generate the details and information that are going to be
necessary to pull this together.
But I will compliment them, this has been -- I'm excited to be
able to come here tonight and have to bring up even small little
things about this. I think it's a workable document, something we're
going to be able to rely on. And I'm quite confident there's going to
be something in here that's not going to work, but knowing that we're
going to be working with the staff in bringing together a final work
product in the next year, year and a half, whenever that happens,
that's going to bring this to fruition.
I think it's something to be very proud of and proud of your
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January 8, 2003
staff, how they've engaged and worked with the private sector on this
to make sure that it not only accomplishes that task of creating good
concurrent systems, but also works within the world of-- the
day-to-day of the people that do these jobs.
It's been tedious, to say the least, but I think it's also going to be
a good work product, something you should be very proud of. Thank
you.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Thank you, Mr. Ellis.
Well, that closes the public portion of this particular item. Is
there any questions on the part of Commissioners? Do I see any
agreement to move -- Commissioner Henning?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: I think on this item we go
ahead and take a vote on it with the proper language?
MS. STUDENT: Yes, you could go ahead and vote on this one
and make the finding of consistency.
Just let me turn to my notes here. Be with the comp. plan
amendment, which was Ordinance 02-60, adopted November 19th,
2002. And that is not yet effective because we don't have our finding
of compliance yet from DCA, plus the 21 days. And the effective
date of the ordinance is so worded to reflect that.
COMMISSIONER HENN1NG: So let me try this: Motion to
approve the amendments to the Land Development Code 3.15 for the
future amended growth management plan or comprehensive plan that
is -- will be coming up in 2003. And the ordinance number was
02-60?
MS. STUDENT: Yes. It would be finding of consistency with
that ordinance.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: And finding that it is consistent
with the future growth management plan/comprehensive plan
amendment.
MS. STUDENT: It would be the amendment to become
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January 8, 2003
effective but -- already adopted but yet to become effective
amendment.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: You two attorneys are going to kill
me yet.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: I include that in my motion.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: All right, that's better.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Second.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: We have a motion by Commissioner
Henning, a second by Commissioner Fiala. Any discussion?
Hearing none, all those in favor, indicate by saying aye.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Aye.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Aye.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Aye.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Aye.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Aye.
Opposed?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: The ayes have it 5-0. Thank you.
MS. MURRAY: Mr. Chairman, now we could just go through
the selected items in order, and I will just call the section and page
number. I'll stop when you had a discussion about the item last time
and tell you what we did. And if you want to stop me on any of the
other items, you could stop me, if that's acceptable. And then we'll
stop also when we have some public speakers.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Just one question. Do we have any
speakers on any of these items? MS. MURRAY: Yes.
MR. SCHMITT: Commissioner, we have one public speaker
for four separate items. And they're pretty much almost sequentially
as we go through the process. Mike Fernandez has registered for
four different items.
Page 21
January 8, 2003
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: All right. When we come to that
item, possibly at that point in time we should pause to allow the
speaker, okay?
MS. MURRAY: Super, okay. The first item would be Section
1.9.1 on Page 1. At the last meeting you reviewed that without
comment.
The next item on Page 2 we covered, Section 2.2.2.
The next item on Page 5, Section 2.2.3.4.3, you reviewed last
time without comment.
The next item is Section 2.2.12 on Page 7. You did have a
question. I think Commissioner Henning had a question relative to
outdoor storage in C-4 and C-5. We met with him separately and
discussed his question and it had no impact on the land development
code amendments before you, so there had been no change relative to
that. And that is one item that we do have a public speaker on, Mr.
Chairman.
MR. SCHMITT: Mike, you're registered for 2. -- is that the one
you wanted to speak on?
MS. MURRAY: 2.2.127
MR. FERNANDEZ: . 1.
MR. SCHMITT: 12.1. Okay, that's the next one then.
MS. MURRAY: I'm sorry.
Next item, 2.12.1, you did have a question about the office
provision, and we discussed and resolved that in the meeting.
And then this is the item Mike Fernandez wishes to speak on.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: What page is that?
MS. MURRAY: That's on Page 7.
MR.
MR.
particular
by square
SCHMITT: A large No. 7 on the bottom of the page.
FERNANDEZ: Again, Commissioners, in regard to this
item, there are several of the permitted uses that are limited
footage. For instance, video stores, 1,800 square feet.
Page 22
January 8, 2003
Anything above that requires a conditional use.
Staff sought to address the problematic issue with this by
coming up with a provision that said if it was part of a shopping
center, it does not have to go through a conditional use. But that
means that any project that is less than 20,000 square feet and has
less than eight tenants, different tenants, would have to get a
conditional use approval just to put a new tenant in place, which
seems a little much.
It also seems that -- too much to ask for a small 1,800 or 1,900
square foot video store to come in and go through a fairly extensive
conditional use process, but a shopping center that has 200,000
square feet would not. So again, it's just problematic, the limitation
of square footage. And maybe there's another way that something
like this can be handled.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Commissioner Fiala?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Yes, this question is actually for
Susan with regard to your concerns.
In something like this, is that kind of like being able to
guarantee what type of facility would be renting there? In other
words, you're speaking of a video store, and so now a new one is
going to come in, but this just happens to be one that I would classify
as undesirable in my neighborhood. This would allow us then to
address that more closely and possibly decide we don't want that in
the neighborhood, is that--
MR. FERNANDEZ: I don't know what the purpose is. But see,
if it's part of a shopping center, you have no purview. But if it's part
of a strip center that's less than 20,000 square feet or has less than
eight tenants, which is the requirement we classified as a shopping
center, they have to go through a conditional use process.
In the meantime, the owner of that strip center has no tenant.
And by the same token, if you're doing a brand new development
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January8,2003
and, you know, you're coming in for a little video store, it seems like
an awful lot to ask for somebody to come in just to do a little video
store to go through a conditional use. But if you're a big shopping
center with a lot of impacts, that doesn't -- it doesfft apply.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: I just thought maybe there were
some safeguards in here for us, and so I just wanted clarification on
that.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Could staff give us clarification on
that? I bet that's what it is.
MS. MURRAY: Sure. As you recall, last year we amended all
the purpose and intent of each of the districts to further clarify them.
And the purpose and intents were amended and then we subsequently
came back with LDC amendments and placed square foot limitations
on some of the types of uses.
The reason for that was to -- how can I explain it? It goes to
intensity. So for example, C-1 is your least intense commercial
zoning district, and so the uses that would be allowed by right in
there you want to have consistent with the purpose and intent which
is generally to -- I mean, it's all written in here, but it's generally to
allow office types and to allow uses that are compatible with nearby
residential neighborhoods. And so we took the intensity level for
each district and we tried to apply the uses as applicable, depending
on the purpose and intent of the district. As you get more intense,
you tend to be located farther away from residential, you tend to be
located near other commercial areas. So C-4 and C-5 -- after C-3, we
took out the limitation of square footage, and C-4 and C-5 allow your
most intense commercial districts.
We did add the provision for the shopping center, because
previously even if you were in a shopping center, you had to do a
conditional use if you were one of these uses. And there's certain
facets of a shopping center that are -- that have an intensity level of
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January8,2003
their own that I don't think a conditional use process would have
been really beneficial to anybody. I just think it was excessive. And
we found that people were coming in wanting to go into shopping
centers, and to make them go through a conditional use when they
were surrounded by commercial development already of a similar
intensity seemed to mitigate out a little bit the impact of that use. I
don't know if that makes sense but --
COMMISSIONER FIALA: So this does give us a safeguard.
MS. MURRAY: Yes.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: This allows us to have some say as
to what's happening in these strip malls, especially if they're an older
strip mall and, you know, they've been rented out. But we at least
are allowed then to take a look at for who or what they're renting to.
MS. MURRAY: Correct.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Right? So I like that safeguard in
place, quite frankly. I'm delighted that it's there and I want to keep it
there.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Commissioner Henning?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: I think this is fitting for the
community character plan also, trying to get that C-1 and C-2, you
know, those neighborhood uses to those mom and pop -- MS. MURRAY: Exactly.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: -- type operations.
MS. MURRAY: You're exactly right.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: How would this affect
overlays, though, where we want to encourage redevelopment?
MS. MURRAY: That's a pretty broad question. It depends on
what the overlay says. And the overlay can write different --
COMMISSIONER HENNING: You can give me a broad
answer.
MS. MURRAY: The overlay can write different regulations
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January 8, 2003
than what the underlining zoning district -- supplemental regulations
to the underlining zoning district.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: So if they come in with like a
PUD or something like that, it wouldn't be affected by limitations of
a square foot?
MS. MURRAY: Depends on what the overlay says.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Okay.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Thank you. Is there any other
questions on behalf of the commission?
With that, I guess we're more or less in agreement with it?
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Yes.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Okay, we'll move on. This is one we
can approve at the end, correct? MS. MURRAY: Yes.
Okay, now we're moving on to Page 2 of your summary sheet,
at the top of the page, Section 2.2.20, and that's on Page 33 of your
hand-out.
And I need to state for the record that in the RT PUD that we
need to add group homes and group care facilities -- and Marjorie, if
I'm leaving something out, will you help me out, to -- the list of
permitted uses. That was omitted and we discovered that after the
hand-out had gone out. And that needs to be added.
MS. STUDENT: And I'll explain the reason for that. Because
in the table there's a reference to residential development, and where
that's found under the Federal Fair Housing Act amendments, we
have to treat homes for disabled folks the same way as we would
treat any other type of residents. It's the number of people and the
size of residence, not the fact that they have a disability.
So because there's the general reference to residential
development there, to clarify that, we're going to put in the reference
that we have in our code and other zoning districts to the group care,
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January 8, 2003
the care unit and the family care facility.
MS. MURRAY: And we also have a registered speaker on this.
And we're working from Page 33. And that's Michael Fernandez.
MR. FERNANDEZ: Commissioners, this is a significant
change --
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: For the record one more time.
MR. FERNANDEZ: Michael Fernandez, of planning
development.
This is a significant change to the PUD requirements and the
PUD formats. And what I'm going to suggest to you is that what
we're doing really is creating all these new districts that have -- that
are being endowed with the old standards of the existing zoning
districts. We are removing our ability really to have a unique PUD.
And I think that -- I would suggest to you that what we actually
should do is create yet another district that allows for flexibility for
someone to come in with something that is truly unique, as opposed
to just living on the existing standards. 99 percent of the PUD's that
you probably do review nowadays are significant upgrades already
from the existing standards that are in the current standard zoning
districts for commercial or residential. And I think we're actually
lowering the standards here.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Really?
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Any comments?
MS. MURRAY: Did you wish comment from staff?.
If I understood the concern correctly, I guess I would
respectfully disagree. I think the purpose of classifying these is
basically to identify a relationship between a proposed PUD and
other zoning districts within the LDC. And that relationship exists
by statute in the LDC already. So this is just basically clarifying
that.
I don't -- I'm not sure that it diminishes any type of development
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January8,2003
standards or the ability to have a unique PUD, it merely references
some of the zoning districts so that that relationship can be
established.
For example, where there's -- where you have a residential PUD,
you're going to identify it as such. Where you have a mixed use
PUD, you're going to identify it as such, you know, a mixture of
commercial and industrial or a mixture of commercial and
residential. And then you are going to be able to reference the
applicable zoning districts to do a comparison of the standards
between the two and establish that relationship.
I think what you can anticipate is we may come back before you
actually expanding these districts out a little bit more in a tabular
format. And -- but I do disagree with the speaker, that's really the
intent is to further clarify.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: I think on Page 34 you basically
hit the nail on the head. It's a desirable environment and visual
harmony is what you're trying to convey in here. Am I right?
MS. MURRAY: Yes. Yeah, we didn't change any of the
purpose and intent of the PUD district--
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Right.
MS. MURRAY: -- standard itself.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: All it is, is just to make sure that it
environmentally addresses the issues at hand so that it basically
conforms with the surrounding area.
MS. MURRAY: Correct. And a PUD is not absolved from
complying with applicable provisions of the LDC. There's a
relationship that's established there, and it's defined in the LDC. And
this is just further clarifying that.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Commissioner Coyle?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Susan, I thought we had identified
a mixed use PUD in these provisions. At least it seems to me that the
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January 8, 2003
last draft I saw indicated that was the case. But on Page 45 and 46, I
don't see a mixed use PUD. Am I looking in the wrong place?
MS. MURRAY: Yes. If you go to 48, it gets -- unfortunately it
gets a little lost in there, because there's some special requirements
for industrial PUD's, and that goes on. You go to 48, about the
middle of the page, you'll see 2.2.20.4.6, a mixed use PUD.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay. Follow-up question: There
are instances where a commercial and industrial PUD might be
appropriate. Is it possible to do that under this category, or should
we think about adding another mixed use commercial industrial unit?
MS. MURRAY: It's possible to do it under the way it's drafted.
You may want to consider that. And I guess what I would let you
know is because these are fairly substantive changes, I would
forewarn you that will probably be coming back before you in the
near future after we've implemented the regulations to see if they're
effective. And if they're not or where they're not, we'll be making
some more changes as well, to see if they've accomplished the
objective you set --
COMMISSIONER COYLE: But there's nothing here that
would preclude someone from wanting -- MS. MURRAY: No.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: -- to integrate industrial and
commercial components in a single PUD? MS. MURRAY: No. No.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Is there any speakers on this one?
MS. MURRAY: That was your last speaker.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: That was the last speaker, fine.
And any other questions on behalf of staff?. We agree to move
forward on this?
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Yes.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Please proceed.
Page 29
January8,2003
MS. MURRAY: The next item was Vanderbilt Beach. We
already talked about that.
I'm on Page 3 of your summary sheet. At the top of the page,
Section 2.6.9 through 9.2, you reviewed last time with no comment.
The next item, 2.6.15 was withdrawn.
The next item, 2.6.30 you reviewed without comment.
Section 2.7.2.3.5 you reviewed without comment.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Wait a minute, I have --
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Hold on.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: That's one that -- the new
hand-out, right?
MS. MURRAY: No, that is the next one.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: I'm sorry.
MS. MURRAY: The next one.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: That one I have a question on.
MS. MURRAY: Okay. The next item is at the top of Page 4,
2.7.3.1, and that is the hand-out. If you'll refer to that. And
beginning on Page 5 of the hand-out, you'll see some highlights. All
of these highlights through Page 11 was text added after you received
your packet. Basically it's clarification language.
For example, on Page 5 we talked about deviations to sections
of the code, and I just clarified to make sure that they understood
where you didn't have to spell a deviation out to the code. And we'll
have a standard format for the yards and the setbacks and the
building height and all that, and they'll have to plug their numbers
into that format. But it's not necessary to call the very specific
section of the code that you're deviating from in that case.
The next item that was changed was -- if you go to Page 10 at
the bottom, this is the description of the Board of County
Commissioners' action pursuant to PUD's which have sunsetted. Or
-- the words "or at status" were added there for clarification purposes,
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January 8, 2003
mainly.
But when I went through this after I had submitted to you, the
text didn't flow very well, and what it did was it went into discussing
an option that wasn't really clarified at the beginning that you had.
And specifically it gave you the option to extend the current PUD to
approve or deny an application for a PUD amendment, or to require
the owner to submit an amended PUD. And if you see that paragraph
three that's highlighted there, I went ahead and added that. And the
original language was leading into that, but there was just no link
between the top two and that language, so I went ahead and added
that for clarification that would allow you to require an owner to
submit an amended PUD.
Also, we have added language -- no, I think we discussed that
last time, I'm sorry.
Below that, I wanted to call to your attention Section 2.7.3.4.6,
all the darker highlighted. We had discussed some of this last time,
and basically that section was expanded. And the expansion talked
about the extension of a PUD and the circumstances under which you
would grant an extension, the maximum extensions allowed, and the
process by which we would go to evaluate and recommend to you
whether or not an extension should be granted. So all of that was
expanded, and I wanted to call your attention to that.
The last correction was -- or addition, I guess, was on Page 16 at
the bottom. Marjorie and I had discussed this last time with you. She
was uncomfortable with the language, and the purpose of this
language was to make these regulations retroactive to all PUD's that
were already in existence, so we discussed and changed this, and
basically that's what that language does. So that's different than what
you had in your packet.
MS. STUDENT: That is in 2739?
MS. MURRAY: 2739.
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January 8, 2003
MS. STUDENT: And Susan, while I was coming here tonight, I
thought of a bit of a further clarification, and I'll just throw it out
there and correct me if I'm wrong, but something to the effect that all
future PUD's and PUD amendments shall comply with these
procedures except that the sunsetting procedures are applicable to all
PUD's. So if-- does that meet the --
MS. MURRAY: That meets the intent of--
MS. STUDENT: -- I think that clarifies it a bit further.
MS. MURRAY: Yes.
MS. STUDENT: So if we can have that changed, I'd appreciate
that.
MS. MURRAY: And that was all I really wanted to call your
attention to on that. There is a speaker, registered speaker.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Before we go to the speaker,
Commissioner Henning?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Can we identify Page 13, what
is insubstantial changes? Would that be like landscaping?
MS. MURRAY: This section is a little --
COMMISSIONER FIALA: What page are we?
MS. MURRAY: We're on Page 13.
The way the code is structured, it -- what it does is it defines
what a substantial change is, rather than an insubstantial. So it lists
out -- under this paragraph you'll see numbers one through 10, 11. It
says a substantial change is deemed to exist where -- and then if any
of these items are tripped, based on what you're proposing to change,
then it's called a substantial change. If you don't trip any of these
items, then your change is insubstantial.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Okay.
MS. MURRAY: And the insubstantial change goes to the
planning commission for approval. If it's substantial, it goes to the
board.
Page 32
January 8, 2003
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Substantial change, right, that's
what I was reading. Applicant-- insubstantial change, I guess that's
on the next page, 2.7.3.5.4 would be required to go to the planning
commission.
MS. MURRAY: Correct.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: What -- would that take an
advertised public hearing?
MS. MURRAY: Yes.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: So it would take posting of the
property?
MS. MURRAY: Yes.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: So what would be an
insubstantial change?
MS. MURRAY: Well, let me see if I can provide a real-life
example for you.
For example, if somebody wanted to, let's say, relocate a
recreation area -- I'm not sure if that's the best example, but let me
just go through here.
MR. SCHMITT:
MS. MURRAY:
MR. SCHMITT:
Internal street design.
Internal street design, that might be better.
Internal street design, like a cul-de-sac. If
we're going to change the location, let's say, of the clubhouse within
a PUD or identified area, again, we would determine are there
impacts affecting other neighborhoods, and if there are not -- so it
becomes a decision made by the current planning manager, and it can
be trumped up to the planning services director for a determination, if
in fact it is a substantial or insubstantial change.
Certainly if it's ruled an insubstantial change, it becomes more
beneficial to the applicant because it -- it's not a -- as long of a
process.
MS. MURRAY: If somebody wanted to, for example, increase
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January8,2003
their conservation or preserve area and they have their PUD master
plan with the various bubble diagrams showing the different land
areas, they could do that, nine times out of 10 through the
insubstantial change process, provided--
MR. SCHMITT: Water retention requirements may have
dictated a change in some kind of modification in the road network.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Would that be better -- that's a
great parallel, conservation change, you want to increase it. We
should applaud them, shouldn't we? MR. SCHMITT: Absolutely.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: We shouldn't give them a stick
by having advertising to the planning commission. Shouldn't that be
something that the staff should be able to handle?
MS. MURRAY: There are some minor changes that the
director has the ability to approve administratively. And again, it
gets to be a case-by-case basis. And you can see these categories are
fairly broad. There are some that are pretty specific. But there is
some changes that the director can do administratively without an
advertised public hearing.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Let me ask another question
then. Let's say than an applicant comes in with a PUD and it was
approved. 'Now he has to go through the Corps of Engineers for his
permits because he has wetlands on it. So we're having the -- pretty
much the site development plan, the commissioners are reviewing
this now, and that's because the commissioners are asking for it. The
Corps of Engineers, you know, wants to change the whole
conservation or the flowway or the wetlands and stuff like that, so
does that applicant have to come back to the planning commission
MS. MURRAY: Possibly, depending on the extent and
magnitude of the changes. Because you'll see if there's a significant
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January 8, 2003
change that might affect an adjacent land use or there's a significant
change that might otherwise increase stormwater discharge or might
relocate stormwater discharge, that could possibly affect--
MR. SCHMITT: And the reason for that is if it triggers that
kind of significant change, you have to allow the adjacent property
owners, in this case the adjacent PUD's, an opportunity to at least
have a say as to whether or not the visual or any other type of impact
is going to impact them. And of course the discretion lies in the
Board of the County Commissioners and not in the staff. And that
could be a discretionary decision that would have to be made by an
elected official level and not the staff level.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Mr. Schmitt, I think we're
talking about insubstantial changes. I don't think we're talking about
substantial changes.
MR. SCHMITT: But when we were talking about the Corps of
Engineers, if that triggered a substantial change, then we would have
to come back to you.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Or if it's an insubstantial
change, then it would have to come back to the planning commission.
MR. SCHMITT: That's correct.
MS. MURRAY: Correct.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: And an insubstantial change
would, I think the example was, increase in a conservation area, or
density reduction.
MR. SCHMITT: But that could be a substantial change as well.
MS. MURRAY: It could be. It really is a case-by-case basis.
If you see here number eight, the change will bring about a
relationship to an abutting land use that would be incompatible with
an adjacent land use, that's fairly broad. That's an evaluation we
have to do based on the circumstances of the application at the time
they apply, or normally it's at the time of a preapplication meeting.
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January 8, 2003
Normally we discuss that before they even apply to try to figure out
if it's substantial or insubstantial.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: So this person could be in
government for a long time. I guess I made my point.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: A long, long, long time.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: We'll see. If we may, let's go to
Commissioner Halas, then Commissioner Coyle, then we'll go to the
public speaker.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: I think what the idea was of this is
to put the responsibility back under the developer to make sure that
he did his homework when he come up with -- when he designed the
PUD, so that we knew exactly what was going to go in there ahead of
time. I think that's what the whole -- this whole idea was.
But the point that Commissioner Henning brought up I think is a
good point. I think if we go ahead and pass this, we can always
come back and tweak this, if there's a particular area that we need to
address. But I think overall, what this is to do here is to put the
responsibility back to the developer to make sure -- am I -- is this the
way that I read this, that we're trying to put the responsibility to the
developer to make sure that when he sets up a PUD, that we know
exactly how that PUD is going to be and how it's -- and if he makes
any changes, then of course it's -- they got all these 10 triggers here
that are going to set it off; if he tries to make any changes that may
involve serious problems with adjacent property owners.
MS. MURRAY: Right. And that's --
COMMISSIONER HALAS: That's how I read this.
MS. MURRAY: If you're looking on Page 13, again, we're not
changing anything. That's the existing process. You'll see there's --
and I apologize if this gets confusing. There's no underlines here or
any strike-outs, so whatever is not underlined or struck out, that
means it's existing text.
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But Commissioner Halas, you picked up on a really good point,
is yes, part of the changes that are going through here are to put the
burden more on the developer to tell us, you know, the details of the
PUD in more detail, to put the -- make sure they're responsible when
a PUD sunsets for applying for an extension or applying for a PUD
amendment, and the burden's not so much on the county.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: County or the staff, exactly.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Commissioner Coyle?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: This is really sort of convoluted. I
just want to make sure that on page -- sub-paragraph three on Page
13, it will be considered a substantial change if a proposed decrease
in preservation does not exceed five percent. By implication that
appears to say that if the decrease in preservation is greater than five
percent, it is insubstantial. I know that's not what you intended to
say. But you might want to figure out a better way to say that, right?
MS. MURRAY: Honestly, this whole section -- and again,
we're not changing it this time, but the whole section is very
confusing. You almost have to go to three different sections to figure
out -- or to ensure that the change is not substantial.
And I also wanted to call your attention, Michael Fernandez
brought it to my attention and I was discussing it with you earlier on
Page 15, at the top of the page, there's -- and again, we're not
changing this either, but just to let you know, the planning services
director shall also be authorized to allow minor changes, like I
described to you. And if you see one, two, three and four, that is the
description of the changes that the planning services director is
allowed to authorize administratively, so they would not have to even
come through a public hearing process if they were doing that.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Oh, okay.
MS. MURRAY: But I appreciate your comments, because this
section has really been difficult for staff at times and the planning
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commission as well. So we'll certainly look into that.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: I think we all understand what the
intent is. So if you can sort that out -- MS. MURRAY: Okay.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: -- it would just be a lot easier.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Any other questions?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Yes, just a statement.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Go ahead, Commissioner Henning.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: If we're going back to changing
that, in my opinion our staff is the expert in some of this, and I hope
that maybe we give them some kind of latitude to make some
changes.
MR. SCHMITT: I would support that. Even in fact maybe --
and that would be something we'd have to ensure we have the legal
backing to do that so that some of those things could just be handled
at the planning commission level even, without having to come to the
board.
And the fact that the planning commission is in a public
meeting, if there are people who want to object or make those kind of
public statements in opposition or in support, without burdening your
docket. So we'll look at that. That would be something we'd
certainly I think from a staff perspective we'd be delighted to look at.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Shall we move on? Okay.
MR. SCHMITT: We have one public -- we have one speaker.
MR. FERNANDEZ: Michael Fernandez, for the record.
I'm delighted with the direction the changes are going, but I
don't believe in the one provision that's requesting footprints of
buildings, you start to look at items that are fairly down the road, let's
say, when you have a larger project, commercial or industrial project,
where you have a master developer who won't know the footprints of
the future buildings on a project that may have a built-out period of
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January 8, 2003
10 or 15 years.
What I would suggest to you is to provide an alternative in the
code that would allow somebody to go through a second stage
process. The City of Naples, for instance, has what they call a
general development site plan review that goes to their planning
commission, and only in a case of disagreement between the
commissioners and the staff would it go to the board.
But it would allow that kind of detail to be looked at when the
project is ripe for that information. In other words, you establish the
zoning, you establish the setbacks, landscape parameters. But the
visual aspects of the building, the footprints of the building, those are
being done as the individual parcels develop. If there's a provision,
and I don't say that we necessarily have to change everything that
staffs done, but at least there's an option for a developer who has a
larger project to come in here and do it in that fashion, in a second
tier fashion. I think that would be beneficial. Otherwise, I'm afraid
you're probably going to have to assume that people are going to
come in here and dream up artificial footprints, and you're not going
to see the real deal.
If you allow it to come in as a second tier development review, I
think that's where you're really trying to get at.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Any additional comments? Go
ahead, Commissioner Coyle.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: I would say that the GDSP
process works pretty well in the City of Naples.
The problem, as I see it in this respect, is that if you do have a
very large PUD that's going to be developed over a period of years, it
is almost impossible for someone to forecast the exact footprint of
the buildings. And then if you require that they then periodically
come back before the county commission every time a footprint
changes, it becomes expensive for them and for us.
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The question is how do we determine who should have to go
through this process and who should not? Do we set it up as a
specific size of PUD would come in and be relatively specific? For
example, the Goodlette Comers PUD, we required that to get fairly
specific. It was a small PUD.
Larger ones are -- some that were approved 10, 15 years ago,
are still developing and still coming in and asking for changes.
There is some logic to say that if the changes don't violate the intent
of the PUD, let the planning commission take a look at it. And if it's
consistent with their land development code and growth management
plan and it's consistent with the original PUD, why bring it to the
commission?
What's your reaction to that? What kind of complexities does
that create for you?
MS. MURRAY: Well, I think there's two ways you could
handle that: One would be to clearly define something like that as an
insubstantial change in the code, or -- and then that would go to the
planning commission. Or to give staff the authority to evaluate
whether or not it's -- it can be administratively approved or it's an
insubstantial change.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: What I wouldn't want to do is put
the staff in the position of having a situation like the Manatee Resort.
Okay?
MS. MURRAY: I understand.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Where the square footage
becomes an insubstantial change because the height of the building
didn't change.
MS. MURRAY: Right. Thanks.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: So I don't want to put you in that
kind of a position. But I do understand how it's almost impossible to
come up with a realistic site plan for something that won't develop
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January 8, 2003
for another 15 years. And I'm just looking for a way that staff and
the commissioners could administer something like that in a way that
makes sense so you don't have to keep bringing these things back
before us all the time for relatively inconsequential issues.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: If I may comment on it, I agree with
you, staffs time is very valuable and planning commission serves a
vital function to this commission. I'm very appreciative of it.
I am a little bit leery about signing off some of our
responsibilities too soon. This is something that's going to be coming
back for review in the distant furore.
I hear you very much and I agree with you, that we have to find
some way to streamline the process and make it work better and give
everybody their value for the dollar they spend, but I think we're
going to have to keep a very close eye on the fact that we're the
ultimate responsible person, party, and that there has to be some sort
of failsafe in there so that we're acting accordingly. Like you
mentioned the Manatee, who would ever dreamed that that particular
scenario of events would have unfolded the way it did? But then
again too, we came back and we said the staff overstepped their
bounds and made the determination over and above what the
commission was allowing.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: That's why I suggested that it be
brought to the planning commission for any of those kinds of
changes.
But the only issue here -- I understand we can change this, but I
don't think we need to put something down that we understand is not
capable of being administered effectively.
And Marjorie, you had your hand up. I'd like to hear what you
have to say about that.
MS. STUDENT: Yes, thank you.
I just wanted to state the caveat that if there is a text change to
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the ordinance, the PUD ordinance, that would need to come to the
board, because the board has the authority to amend the ordinance
and what it says. So just with that caveat.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: But what would happen if we
required a detailed site development plan at the time of PUD
submittal and then someone says well, I want to change this footprint
of the building. Not the size of the building but the footprint itself,
perhaps even the shape of the building. What would happen under
those circumstances?
MS. STUDENT: I think it would be possible to delegate that
authority to the planning commission or to the staff with sufficient
criteria that would be part of the delegation, so long as it would not
affect an actual text change to the document. COMMISSIONER COYLE: Yeah.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: May I make a suggestion? This may
be something we'd want to bring back for discussion during a
workshop. It's not something we're going to be able to change at this
point in time where we can really get into it and advertise it as a
public meeting so we can get an input from everyone.
Just a suggestion, of course. And of course you're all welcome
for your input now.
Let's go to Commissioner Halas and then we'll come back to
you, Commissioner Coyle.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: I'm going to direct this question to
Mr. Schmitt. And I don't mean to put you on the spot. But I think
where we're going here is basically the same scenario that you and I
addressed with a particular problem this week. That I think was a
good example of where somebody had come up with a site plan that
was 10 years old and then all of a sudden this developer decided he
was going to change the site plan on the PUD and it was substantially
larger, took up a lot more area than was originally placed on the
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January8,2003
PUD. Now how would you address that?
MR. SCHMITT: Well, again, I haven't gone through and
reviewed the particulars behind that since our discussion. We have a
meeting on Friday to review kind of how that whole thing transpired.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: But just come off the cuff.
MR. SCHMITT: But our current process now of course is you
empowered the staff to review SDP's. We don't bring SDP's to the
board. In fact, we don't even bring them to the planning commission.
You make zoning decisions and authorize in a PUD the density and
the zoning and intensity of land use and those kind of things are
empowered. Those are the authorities that are empowered and are
vested in your position.
You then define for us the land development code, and that's
how staff makes their decision, based on the land development code.
That situation that you and I discussed, the decisions, at least my
initial review, were firmly founded on provisions of the land
development code. Now, that's where we may have a disagreement
that -- which is why we amend the LDC, because there's a provision
in the LDC that gave staff that authority, and now the board wants to
pull that authority back. And in this case it was a review of a
substantial modification to a site development plan.
But the zoning was what had already been approved by a PUD
many, many years ago. This was just a changing of a footprint.
And just so you understand how we got to where we are in this
LDC amendment, because the board has asked for more specificity
and -- we have asked the developers for this, because we say when
you come and present a petition to the board, whether it's a PUD,
PUD to PUD or a rezoning or whatever, the public wants to know
what is going to be built. And as Michael alluded to, oftentimes the
PUD, we still don't know whether it's going to be a medical office
building or a storage facility, because the PUD has to get the
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January 8, 2003
rezoning done first to commercial, and then of course then they
market the product and then a builder will come in and build. And
certainly that's -- they'll build to what the community des-- or at least
what they can sell.
And what I'm hearing is kind of we want to move both ways.
We're trying to get specificity so that when the petitioner comes to
you, they can at least give an indication of what they think's going to
be there. But this is a great example of what Mr. Fernandez referred
to and what Commissioner Coyle is alluding to as well is a
10-year-old PUD, a good example, White Lake, you may not know
what's going to go in on the last platted portion of White Lake PUD.
And to come in now and say gee, I think 10 years from now I might
have a warehouse there, I think what we're looking for is something
to give the staff at least the, lack of a better term, the authority, but
the responsibility of making those kind of administrative changes
without burdening the board.
And when I hear you talking about this, what we need to do is
look at this whole process and we'll come back to you with a
proposal to at least see where you want to go with what authority
versus what authority you want to hold or withdraw back from the
staff as far as those kind of decision processes. Susan?
MS. MURRAY: I think I can kind of cut to the chase here. The
code already gives the planning services director the authority to
allow minor changes to the PUD master plan. And number two on
your list says relocation of building envelopes when there is no
encroachment upon required conservation or preservation areas.
If that's acceptable to you, that's what the code allows now, we
could retain that.
The other provision in this proposed amendment is to also show
proposed building height. There's nothing in here that talks about a
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January 8, 2003
change in building height. If somebody wants to come in and change
whatever building height they put on their master plan, it probably
would be an insubstantial change and would have to go to the
planning commission. I just need to call that to your attention. But
right now the --
MR. FERNANDEZ: Maybe as a caveat to this -- and I agree
with you, Commissioner Coletta, I think it's something that we can
workshop and maybe get to the next round. But the idea perhaps
would be if a project is big enough that it's coming in for a
subdivision of property, then it doesn't have to go to that level of
detail at that time, and then that information can be done in that
subsequent submittal. Because you're looking at a subdivision as
opposed to the actual development of an individual parcel. And I
think that's the scale maybe that we're looking for.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Yeah, this is for future changes to
what we have before us, not for today. MS. MURRAY: Correct.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: I think we're belaboring this for quite
a long time for another -- I think we've got enough direction to staff
so they know what we're looking for, but Commissioner Coyle, we'll
go to you and hopefully be able to move on.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: I don't have anywhere else to go
tonight. Let's do it till we get it right.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: I do. I'd like to go to the Rose
Garden.
MR. FERNANDEZ: I'm just concerned about our ability to
actually submit a PUD if we don't have footprints, if all we have is a
subdivision.
MS. MURRAY: You'll have to show it on the PUD submittal is
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Well, as I read --
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January8,2003
MS. MURRAY: -- the way it's --
COMMISSIONER COYLE: -- what you already have here on
Page 13, 2.7.3.5.1, when we're talking about a substantial change, it
doesn't say here that a change in the footprint is a substantial change,
does it?
MS. MURRAY: No.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: So it appears to me that as you go
through this to refine some of these definitions, you can do exactly
what we've been talking about. If somebody comes in with
something that's going to change the permitted height of the PUD,
the density or intensity, the number of dwelling units, that's
something that's coming to us.
But if it's something else, and you guys can best determine that,
I believe, as you go through and revise these things, or clarify them,
actually, because I think you probably have it right here on Page 13.
MS. MURRAY: Except for height, I believe you're correct.
And I think we're still going to be put in the position of evaluating
the specifics of the request, regardless. And there'll be the
opportunity for the planning services director to do an administrative
thing under the provisions that already exist, or there'll be the
opportunity for the planning commission to hear it, depending on
what the change is, or the board to hear it, depending on what the
change is.
If you're telling us building height is one you absolutely want to
see, I think I need to clarify that in what we're proposing, because it's
not clear to me.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: I think building height is
something I'd like to see.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: What do you think about building
heights, Commissioner Halas?
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Yes.
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January8,2003
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Are you sure you want to do this
sometime in the near future?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: He wants to limit it to 10 feet.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Right.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Well, that's the rest of the county.
Vanderbilt Beach is going to be six feet, right?
MR. SCHMITT: I mean, as you well know, when the public
engages in this, their interest is what size is the building going to be,
what is the -- at least the anticipated potential use, and the traffic
pattern, what will be the ingress and egress. Those are the kind of
things that you ask of the petitioner when they come to you for a
rezoning. So now we're asking the petitioner, at least be prepared to
address those.
Does that law come into that? In some instances, and we'll go
back and look at this language, there are at least -- we want to live
within the intent of what they told you but still give them some
flexibility, so when it comes back for the SDP review that either I or
the transportation director can make those kind of changes at the staff
level, as Commissioner Henning referred to a while ago, where the
expertise is and where the planners and engineers are to make those
decisions, but still live within the parameters as defined and
presented before the board.
And we'll go back and look at all this so we can come back in
the spring and clarify what we've just talked about here.
MS. MURRAY: I'm sorry for one more thing. I do need to
correct the record. I was corrected by Kay, and I appreciate that.
Building height is listed in here as a substantial change. And I
apologize for that incorrect --
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Yeah, there is.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Number two.
MS. MURRAY: I don't use the section much, and I wasn't
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prepared to discuss it too much tonight, and I apologize for that.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Thank you very much.
Before we go on to the next item, we're going to take a short
break. You're ready for one, I take it? (Brief recess.)
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Where are we at?
MS. MURRAY: We're on the summary sheet, Page 4. And
we're on Section 2.7.3.4, which was combined with the previous
section, so now we're on Section 2.7.5, which you reviewed without
comment.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: I have a question.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Go ahead, Commissioner Henning.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: On Page 85, 2.7.5.6, the
findings, gives the planning commission findings. And I think one of
them is -- turn the page -- will grant a variance to be consistent with
the growth management plan.
Now, in the growth management plan, if I remember right, it
deals with comparable and compatible with neighboring adjoining
uses in the findings? I mean, this is part of the things that you guys
do in the findings one through eight, and also with the consistency of
the growth management plan.
MS. MURRAY: Correct.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: And in there, isn't there
something about comparable and compatible to neighboring uses?
MS. MURRAY: No. 6, will granting the variance be in
harmony with the intent and purposes of this zoning code. And the
zoning code speaks to compatibility, and the zoning code standards
are designed to hopefully ensure compatibility. And then following
that, and not be injurious to the neighborhood or otherwise
detrimental to the public welfare would speak to compatibility.
Also, on number seven, are there natural conditions or
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physically induced conditions that ameliorate the goals and
objectives of the regulations such as a natural preserve, lake or golf
course would also speak a little bit to compatibility, where that would
mitigate any -- or attempt to offset any detrimental impacts of a
variance.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Because most of the variances
-- and I know we're not changing anything on this, but most of the
variances that we're seeing and will be seeing in the future is height.
And I know that, you know, you're going to have some of them, one
with a restaurant right next door to a proposed 80-story building.
MS. MURRAY: Compatibility is a fairly subjective thing that
can be mitigated by a lot of different factors such as large setbacks,
buffering through landscaping or separation or otherwise. It's fairly
subjective and also can be mitigated by requiring other things of the
offending -- of the development itself in order to ensure
compatibility. So I'm talking -- like I said, I'm talking about
separation distance, buffering, rules on operation of uses.
MR. SCHMITT: Reduction in intensity of use, going from
commercial to residential.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Okay.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: I'd like to know what that one is.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: What's that?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: The restaurant.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Speak right in the --
COMMISSIONER FIALA: I was just wondering. That's all
right.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Okay.
MS. MURRAY: And variances are -- I mean, we apply
variances in a dimensional aspect. Our code doesn't allow for use
variances, for example. But through a PUD rezoning, certainly you
would evaluate the uses that are proposed and the building heights
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and the building separation and everything to ensure that they're
compatible with adjoining uses or uses within the same development.
Marjorie?
MS. STUDENT: I just wanted to state that under the common
law of Florida, use variances are prohibited throughout the state.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Say that one more time?
MS. STUDENT: Under the common law, which means the case
law for the State of Florida, use variances are prohibited and they're
prohibited throughout the State of Florida.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Can you elaborate?
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Yeah, give us an example.
MS. STUDENT: That would be use. Not a dimensional
standard, but a use.
In other words, the variance of the zoning district does not allow
a grocery store, then you get a use variance for that district to allow a
grocery store. The way you do that is to amend the zoning district
either by PUD amendment or by amendment to the land development
code.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: So in simple terms, are we doing it
right?
MS. STUDENT: Absolutely.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Thank you.
MS. STUDENT: And the section that Susan referenced in the
code is in line with the common law of the State of Florida.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Okay, thanks. That's the only
question I have on that section.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Let's move ahead.
MS. MURRAY: Marjorie, do I have to read each section into
the record? Because there's several pages here that they reviewed
without comment, and I could just reference the page and -- MS. STUDENT: I think that would be fine.
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January 8, 2003
MS. MURRAY:
MS. STUDENT:
MS. MURRAY:
acceptable?
MS. STUDENT:
MS. MURRAY:
-- that's acceptable?
Any interested--
And the board could stop me, if that's
-- yes, I think that would be fine.
We've finishing up on Page 4, Section 3.2.4.8.
And then I'm now going to Page 5 on the summary sheet. If there's
any sections on here that you all wanted to stop us, we I don't think
have any registered speakers on that one.
MR. SCHMITT: I have one registered speaker. And I don't see
Michael here, but he's registered for 3.3.7.1.
MS. MURRAY: I think he left.
MR. MUDD: No, I think he's here.
MS. MURRAY: Oh, is he? Okay.
MR. SCHMITT: While we're waiting for Michael, any other
issues on Page 5? Those were all reviewed with no comment in the
previous section.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: I don't have any comments on
any of those.
MS. MURRAY: On Page 6 --
MR. MUDD: He waives, Joe.
MR. SCHMITT: He waives? Okay.
MS. MURRAY: On Page 6, I would just call your attention to
Section 3.3.8.4 was withdrawn, and we put that on the record at the
last amendment, so that's not under consideration for this evening.
You had the remainder with no comment.
On Page 7, Section 3.3.10 and 2.7.2.15 on Page 105, I need to
read one correction into the record. And the correction was made
because there was an inconsistency within the paragraph here. If
you're looking at the bottom of Page 106 under Section 2.7.2.15,
about a third of the way through the paragraph, if no development,
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January 8, 2003
i.e. actual construction, has commenced within two years, measured
from the date of approval, and then strike out, the required
preconstruction conference. And that makes it consistent with the --
a paragraph that was written and changed previously.
The remainder on that page you had no comment.
Page 8, I believe all these were reviewed without comment.
Page 9, reviewed without comment.
On Page 10, section 3.13.8 was withdrawn by the petitioner. I
mentioned that earlier today.
3.15 you already approved today.
And the remainder you reviewed without comment at the last
meeting.
Page 11, all of these were reviewed without comment.
Page 12, reviewed with no comment.
And the last page, 13, was reviewed without comment.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: You recommend adjournment?
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Hearing no -- Commissioner
Henning?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Just one question before the
motion. Is any of this applicable to applicants that are already in the
stream?
MS. MURRAY:
office.
MS. STUDENT:
I'd have to defer to the county attorney's
I'm sorry, I didn't hear the --
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Did any of the changes that we
made tonight, if somebody has submitted a site development plan or
a PUD amendment or a variance, does this apply, this new language
apply, or is it from this date forward?
MS. STUDENT: The enhanced requirements would apply from
this day forward. And generally our rule of thumb has been that if a
submittal has been, I believe the term is sufficient, or complete and
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January 8, 2003
sufficient, then we may wish to add that language, Susan, to clarify it
for those changes. But if an application's sufficient and complete,
then they go under the old. If not, they go under the new.
MS. MURRAY: The only exception to that tonight would be
the PUD Section 2.7.3 where we put in that the changes we were
making would be applicable retroactive to existing --
MS. STUDENT: Right.
MS. MURRAY: -- PUD's.
MS. STUDENT: So we can certainly put those in there for
those enhanced procedures.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Okay, I just -- for everybody's
information who, you know, is in the process, okay.
I'll make a motion to approve, and the findings of January 8th,
2003 land development code amendments are consistent with the
growth management plan, or as Marjorie Student calls it, the
comprehensive plan.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: I second it.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: So we have a very detailed motion
from Commissioner Henning, I'm proud of you. We have a second
from Commissioner Halas, who won't repeat the motion back again.
Any other comments? Hearing none, all those in favor, indicate
by saying aye.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Aye.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Aye.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Aye.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Aye.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Aye.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: And does that conclude our business
here today?
MS. MURRAY: I have one more request, and I hope this isn't
inappropriate, but I was questioning whether or not the board would
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January 8, 2003
be interested in reviewing a land development code amendment
possibly in the next cycle to implement some regulations pertaining
to developments along 1-75. We're getting a lot of requests in
through rezonings, or what have you, with folks that are putting
berms and fences and walls and landscaping. And that's all well and
good, because the code requires that, but there are some that are
becoming extremely elaborate, and I don't think the code addresses a
lot of that in specifics. And, you know, 1-75 is our corridor or entry
into Collier County from Lee County and from the east.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Commissioner Henning has a
comment he'd like to make.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: I would hope that we'd do it for
the whole county. And I think what you're talking about is the
aesthetics of walls and the height of walls.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Or berms.
MS. MURRAY: Or berms, correct, yes.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: And they can be softened with
landscaping. And I think that needs to be addressed throughout --
MS. MURRAY: I think some of the regulations, the way
they're structured, makes maintenance very difficult, and so they tend
to look unsightly. And then if you start getting a number of projects
that have short frontage on 1-75, it would be nice to have some sort of
uniformity so you aren't getting very tall berms and very short berms
and a mishmash of fences and landscaping.
I don't know if there's an interest, but we were discussing it
today and I just thought I'd take the opportunity to ask.
MR. MUDD: Commissioners, this is a great opportunity. I
mean, I know Commissioner Halas has about four things that he
wants to talk about at the next board meeting that you might want to
entertain at a workshop. This would be another nice item to have at a
workshop.
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January8,2003
So you've got the general specifics, and it isn't catching you
short right now, because you don't know what it says. We can
address that and then get your direction and go right into that -- get
into that cycle. And depending on what you tell us you want us to do,
based on Commissioner Halas's request at the board meeting that he
wants to talk about, we can add those particular items to that and then
get it all in one place and get us pushing in one direction.
But I'd like everybody to at least see, we've got a visual,
Commissioner Henning, from what you've just described, and we get
the specifics about what's vacant -- what doesn't exist in our code and
what should be there, and we can give you some suggestions and
recommendations at that workshop and we can get that scheduled
pretty close after Tuesday's board meeting. Because there's some
significant things he would like to talk about in addressing the land
development code. And I think you -- they were kidding about
heights, but I think that's one of the things that you'd like to talk
about.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Commissioner Halas?
COMMISSIONER HALAS: If-- on these berms, if we find
something that's out of compliance, are these people grandfathered
in, or can we make them-- if we decide to come up with some type
of adjustments in the berms or in landscaping, can -- will we have the
ability to make sure that people are in compliance, or will they be
grandfathered in as of what they've got now?
MS. MURRAY: Marjorie? I think the ability exists to ensure
compliance over a period of time, but I'm not sure of the legal
background on that.
MS. STUDENT: Yeah, for things that are already developed
where a berm or something might already be --
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Or a wooden fence that's unsightly
Page 55
January8,2003
MS. STUDENT: Or a wooden fence.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: -- because there's some --
MS. STUDENT: That would be deemed a nonconforming use
and would be governed by Division 1-8 in the code. And there are
provisions there that if it's destroyed, for example, by an amount in
excess of I think it's 50 percent or above, they have to replace it in
accordance with the code. If they do a voluntary replacement, that's
different. They do have to follow the code in that instance. And so
there are provisions in 1-8 that govern that.
To go back, and for example, with the fence and have
everybody redo their fence, that may be problematic, aside from if
they voluntarily come in to do something new or also in light of the
nonconforming provisions of the code.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Anything else to add? That pretty
well cover it now?
Is there any closing comments from any of the commissioners?
Hearing none --
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Motion to adjourn.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Well, no, that's my turn.
Motion to adjourn. Second. Go.
Page 56
January 8, 2003
There being no further business for the good of the County, the
meeting was adjourned by order of the Chair at 7'00 p.m.
BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
BOARD OF ZONING APPEALS/EX
OFFICIO GOVERNING BOARD(S) OF
SPECIAL DISTRICTS UNDER ITS CONTROL
/filM COI~ETTA, Chairman
K, CLE~
approved by the Board on /- Z B- o J
as presented ,// or as corrected
TRANSCRIPT PREPARED ON BEHALF OF GREGORY COURT
REPORTING SERVICE, INC. BY CHERIE R. NOTTINGHAM
Page 57