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Agenda 01/28/2020 Item # 9A (RLSA/Rivergrass Village SRA)01/28/2020 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY This item requires that ex parte disclosure be provided by Commission members. Should a hearing be held on this item, all participants are required to be sworn in. Recommendation to approve with conditions a Resolution designating 997.53 acres within the Rural Lands Stewardship Area Zoning Overlay District as a Stewardship Receiving Area, to be known as the Rivergrass Village Stewardship Receiving Area, which will allow development of a maximum of 2,500 residential dwelling units, of which a minimum of 250 will be multi-family units; a maximum of 80,000 square feet of neighborhood commercial in the village center and a minimum of 62,500 square feet of neighborhood commercial in the village center; a minimum of 25,000 square feet of civic , governmental and institutional uses; senior housing including adult living facilities and continuing care retirement communities subject to a floor area ratio of 0.45 in place of a maximum square footage; and an 18 hole golf course; all subject to a maximum PM peak hour trip cap; and approving the Stewardship Receiving Area credit agreement for Rivergrass Village Stewardship Receiving Area and establishing that 6198.08 stewardship credits are being utilized by the designation of the Rivergrass Village Stewardship Receiving Area. The subject property is located south of 45th Avenue NE and north of 26th Avenue NE, all east of Desoto Boulevard in Sections 10, 14, 15, 22, 23, and 27, Township 48 South, Range 28 East, Collier County, Florida. [PL20190000044] OBJECTIVE: To have the Board of County Commissioners (Board) review staff’s findings and recommendations along with the recommendations of the Collier County Planning Commission (CCPC) regarding the above referenced petition and render a decision regarding the petition; and ensure the project is in harmony with all the applicable codes and regulations in order to ensure that the community's interests are maintained. CONSIDERATIONS: The Rural Lands Stewardship Area Overlay District (RLSA) was developed in order to protect natural resource areas and agricultural lands. The RLSA encourages property owners to voluntarily protect environmentally valuable land as a public benefit. The mechanism to achieve the protection of environmentally valuable land is the designation of Stewardship Sending Area (SSA) in exchange for Stewardship Credits, which are used to entitle Stewardship Receiving Area (SRA). One of the components of the SRA designation application is the Natural Resource Index Assessment, which documents the relative natural resource values of land within an SRA. The Natural Resource Index Assessment documents the existing conditions and Natural Resource Index (NRI) scores within the proposed SRA for Rivergrass Village SRA. It should be noted that the NRI scores demonstrate that Rivergrass Village SRA meets the Suitability Criteria contained in the Collier County Land Development Code (LDC). Please see the Environmental Review Section of this Staff Report for further information. The Rivergrass Village SRA is one of four SRAs that have either been submitted to Collier County or have had pre-application meetings for an SRA designation. The other three SRA Villages located within the vicinity of Rivergrass Village SRA along the future Big Cypres s Parkway are Hyde Park Village (PL20180000622), Longwater Village (PL20190001836), and Belmar Village (PL20190001837) which are currently under review. The Rivergrass Village SRA consists of two context zones, which are required per the SRA Overlay regulations: Neighborhood General and mixed-use Village Center. Approximately 46% of the Village acreage is located north of Oil Well Road, and the remaining 54% is located south of Oil Well Road. A long perimeter lake system runs along the eastern boundary of the Village, both north and south of Oil 9.A Packet Pg. 21 01/28/2020 Well Road. The lake system serves as part of the Village stormwater system and acts as a deterrent to wildlife. The proposed Big Cypress Parkway is located along the western boundary of the Village. This SRA application for Rivergrass Village SRA will include approximately: - 2,500 residential dwelling units with an SRA density calculation of 3.1 units per acre; - a minimum of 250 multi-family dwelling units; - a maximum of 80,000 square feet of neighborhood commercial; - a minimum of 60,000 square feet of neighborhood commercial; - a minimum of 25,000 square feet of civic, governmental and institutional uses; and - senior housing, including adult living facilities and continuing care retirement communities limited to 300 units. The Village will also have other uses such as a Golf Club and Amenity Center, an 18 -hole golf course, a park, and a community green space. The required minimum of 35% open space is 349.14 acres, and 57.3% open space or 571.91 acres has been provided. The Attachment-BCC Staff Report provides specific staff analysis and recommendations including but not limited to Growth Management Plan, Environmental and Transportation review. For further information, see Attachment-Proposed SRA Resolution. FISCAL IMPACT: The Stewardship Receiving Area (SRA) by and of itself will have no fiscal impact on Collier County. There is no guarantee that the project, at build-out, will maximize its authorized level of development. However, if the SRA is approved, a portion of the land could be developed, and the new development will result in an impact on Collier County public facilities. The County collects impact fees prior to the issuance of a Certificate of Occupancy to help offset the impacts of each new development on public facilities. These impact fees are used to fund projects identified in the Capital Improvement Element of the Growth Management Plan as needed to maintain the adopted Level of Service (LOS) for public facilities. Additionally, in order to meet the requirements of concurrency management, the developer of every local development order approved by Collier County is required to pay a portion of the estimated Transportation Impact Fees associated with the project in accordance with Chapter 74 of the Collier County Code of Laws and Ordinances. Other fees collected prior to issuance of a building permit include building permit review fees. Please note that impact fees and taxes collected were not included in the criteria used by staff and the Planning Commission to analyze this petition. GROWTH MANAGEMENT PLAN (GMP) IMPACT: Comprehensive Planning staff has reviewed the proposed SRA and has found it consistent with the Future Land Use Element (FLUE) of the GMP. See Attachment C-FLUE Consistency Review. COLLIER COUNTY PLANNING COMMISSION (CCPC) RECOMMENDATION: The CCPC heard and continued Petition SRA-PL20190000044, Rivergrass Village SRA from September 19, 2019, to October 3, 2019, to October 17, 2019, hearings and to November 7, 2019, hearing. The CCPC voted 4-1 to deny this petition for the following reasons: - Failure to move from greater, urban density to lesser, more rural density; - Lack of vehicular connectivity: - The presence of 18-20 cul-de-sacs; - Lack of vehicular connectivity to adjacent Village lands as was provided for in the previous Rural Lands West petition; 9.A Packet Pg. 22 01/28/2020 - Poor accessibility; - Failure to be walkable; - Failure to be innovative; - Housing diversity is insufficient: - 90% of housing is single-family, and 10% of housing is multi-family; - Lack of affordable housing; - Failure of the agent to provide the CCPC requested Fiscal Neutrality document: and - Failure to provide a complete Big Cypress Parkway land reservation. For further information, please see Attachment-Reasons for Vote of Planning Commissioner Edwin S. Fryer against Rivergrass Village SRA Application, which is provided at the request of Planning Commissioner Fryer. The agent has revised the SRA Document to comply with some of the changes that were discussed at the CCPC hearing. Those revisions include the following: - Limit the number of Senior/Group Housing units to 300 units; - Reduce the maximum square footage of a clubhouse from 50,000 square feet to 30,000 square feet in Deviation; - Remove Clubhouse and Amenity Centers as an accessory use; - Increase the front yard setbacks for Clubhouses and Amenity Centers to 12 feet to avoid utility easement conflicts; - Provide a unit mix of commercial; - Remove the Floor Area Ratio (FAR) for Adult Living Facility (ALF) and Continuing Care Retirement Center (CCRC) units; - For clarity, add the words “as defined by the LDC” after “shopping center;” - Locate 125 multi-family units north of Oil Well Road and 125 multi-family units south of Oil Well Road and within ½ mile of the Village Center; - Remove statement related to the timing of Parking Analysis submittal and add a Deviation for Parking Analysis submittal time; and - Remove the panther fence from Big Cypress Parkway. The following revision was not requested but made by the agent and staff is in agreement: - Removal of 2-acre, 10,000 square-foot Neighborhood recreation areas from the Neighborhood General Principal Uses list. The CCPC also requested the following revisions which have not been made by the agent and have become part of the Conditions of Approval: - Add “as depicted on Master Plan” after the Clubhouse and Amenities reference in Section 5.1.1. A. 6); - Increase the front yard setbacks for all land uses to 12 feet to avoid utility easement conflicts; - Make the lake symbol on the Master Plan one color, not two colors; - Add the words “at least” to Note 2 on Page 3 of the Master Plan; - Change the minimum width of the Right-of-Way Cross Section from 48 feet to 50 feet. LEGAL CONSIDERATIONS: This petition requests the creation of the Rivergrass Village SRA. A Village is described in LDC Section 4.08.07.C.2 as: Villages are primarily residential communities with a diversity of housing types and mix of uses appropriate to the scale and character of the particular village. Villages 9.A Packet Pg. 23 01/28/2020 shall be not less than 100 acres or more than 1,000 acres. Villages are comprised of residential neighborhoods and shall include a mixed-use village center to serve as the focal point for the community's support services and facilities. Villages shall be designed to encourage pedestrian and bicycle circulation by including an interconnected sidewalk and pathway system serving all residential neighborhoods. Villages shall have parks or public green spaces within neighborhoods. Villages shall include neighborhood scaled retail and office uses, in a ratio as provided in Section 4.08.07 J.1. Villages are an appropriate location for a full range of schools. To the extent possible, schools and parks shall be located adjacent to each other to allow for the sharing of recreational facilities. The Village form of rural land development is permitted within the ACSC subject to the limitations of Section 4.08.07 A.2. In addition to meeting the above Village requirements and being consistent with the Growth Management Plan, the applicant must prove that the proposal is consistent with all of the criteria set forth below. The burden then shifts to the Board of County Commissioners, should it consider denial, that such denial is not arbitrary, discriminatory or unreasonable. This would be accomplished by finding that the amendment does not meet one or more of the listed criteria. Criteria for creation of SRA 1. Consider: Compatibility with adjacent land uses. 2. Consider: An SRA must contain sufficient suitable land to accommodate the planned development. 3. Consider: Residential, commercial, manufacturing/light industrial, group housing, and transient housing, institutional, civic, and community service uses within an SRA shall not be sited on lands that receive a Natural Resource Index value of greater than 1.2. 4. Consider: Conditional use essential services and governmental essential services, with the exception of those necessary to serve permitted uses and for public safety, shall not be sited on land that receives a Natural Resource Index value of greater than 1.2, regardless of the size of the land or parcel. 5. Consider: Lands or parcels that are greater than one acre and have an Index Value greater than 1.2 shall be retained as open space and maintained in a predominantly natural vegetated state. 6. Consider: Open space shall also comprise a minimum of thirty-five percent of the gross acreage of an individual SRA Town, Village, or those CRDs excee ding 100 acres. Gross acreage includes only that area of development within the SRA that requires the consumption of Stewardship Credits. 7. Consider: As an incentive to encourage open space, open space on lands within an SRA located outside of the ACSC that exceeds the required thirty-five percent retained open space shall not be required to consume Stewardship Credits. 8. Consider: An SRA may be contiguous to an FSA or HSA, but shall not encroach into such areas, and shall buffer such areas as described in LDC Section 4.08.07 J.6. An SRA may be contiguous to or encompass a WRA. 9. Consider: The SRA must have either direct access to a County collector or arterial road or indirect access via a road provided by the developer that has adequate capacity to accommodate the proposed development in accordance with accepted transportation planning standards. 10. Consider: Conformity of the proposed SRA with the goals, objectives, and policies of the GMP. 11. Consider: Suitability criteria described in Items 2 through 9 above [LDC Section 4.08.07 A.1.] and other standards of LDC Section 4.08.07. 12. Consider: SRA master plan compliance with all applicable policies of the RLSA District Regulations, and demonstration that incompatible land uses are directed away from FSAs, HSAs, WRAs, and Conservation Lands. 13. Consider: Assurance that applicant has acquired or will acquire sufficient Stewardship Credits 9.A Packet Pg. 24 01/28/2020 to implement SRA uses. 14. Consider: Impacts, including environmental and public infrastructure impacts. The Board must base its decision upon the competent, substantial evidence presented by the written materials supplied to it, including but not limited to the Staff Report, Executive Summary, maps, studies, letters from interested persons and the oral testimony presented at the BCC hearing as these items relate to these criteria. This item has been approved as to form and legality and requires a majority vote for Board approval. Should there be a dispute as to any of the deviations to the Code requested b y the applicant, a vote of four is required. (HFAC) RECOMMENDATION: Staff recommends approval of Petition SRA-PL20190000044, Rivergrass Village SRA, to the Board of County Commissioners subject to the following Conditions of Approval: 1. The companion Landowner Contribution Agreement pertaining to transportation facilities is required to be approved with this SRA request. 2. Interconnections shall be addressed in the companion Landowner Contribution Agreement. 3. Prior to issuance of the first SDP and/or PPL, a Listed Species Management Plan must be provided for review, with approval from FWCC and/or USFWS for management of the Florida panther and all other listed species. 4. The negotiated Interlocal Agreement between Collier County Water -Sewer District and the Big Cypress Stewardship District must be adopted concurrently with the SRA Resolution. 5. The following CCPC requested revisions shall be incorporated into the SRA Document: - Add “as depicted on Master Plan” after the Clubhouse and Amenities reference in Section 5.1.1. A. 6); - Increase the front yard setbacks for all land uses to 12 feet to avoid utility easement conflicts; - Make the lake symbol on the Master Plan one color, not two colors; - Add the words “at least” to Note 2 on Page 3 of the Master Plan; - Change the minimum width of the Right-of-Way Cross Section from 48 feet to 50 feet. Prepared by: Nancy Gundlach, AICP, PLA, Principal Planner, Zoning Division ATTACHMENT(S) 1. Final Staff Report -Rivergrass Village SRA -1-22-20 (PDF) 2. Attachment B-FLUE Consistency Review 11-19-19 (PDF) 3. Resolution 12-30-19 (PDF) 4. Attachment C-Peer Review -final.pdf 11-20-19 (PDF) 5. Attachment D-Public Facilities Impact Assessment (PDF) 6. Attachment E-NIM Summary (6-10-2019)rjm (PDF) 7. [Linked] Attachment G-Application for 12-10-2019 BCC (PDF) 8. Attachment F-Letters of Objection (flat) 11-8-19 (PDF) 9. Reasons for Vote of Planning Commissioner Edwin S. Fryer against Rivergrass Application (PDF) 10. 10-RLSA Villages Map-092419 (PDF) 11. [Linked] 10.3.19 CCPC minutes - approved (PDF) 12. 10.17.19 CCPC minutes - approved (PDF) 13. 11.7.19 CCPC Minutes - draft (PDF) 14. REFERENCE COPY ONLY-OUTDATED CCPC Staff Report.docx 12-2-19 (PDF) 9.A Packet Pg. 25 01/28/2020 15. Rivergrass SRA NRI Assessment Report (rev. Oct 2019).pdf 10-28-19 (PDF) 16. Conservancy CCPC Presentation - Rivergrass - CCPC - 10-17-19 (PDF) 17. Affidavit of Sign Posting and Photos of Signs (11-19-2019) (PDF) 18. Legal Ad - Agenda ID 10935 (PDF) 19. Legal Ad - Agenda ID 11090 (PDF) 20. Rivergrass Team Presentation - Item 10935 - Jan 28 2020 - R9 - FINAL (PPTX) 9.A Packet Pg. 26 01/28/2020 COLLIER COUNTY Board of County Commissioners Item Number: 9.A Doc ID: 11090 Item Summary: ***This item to be heard at 10:00 a.m.***This item has been continued from the December 10, 2019 BCC meeting.*** This item requires that ex parte disclosure be provided by Commission members. Should a hearing be held on this item, all participants are required to be sworn in. Recommendation to approve with conditions a Resolution designating 997.53 acres within the Rural Lands Stewardship Area Zoning Overlay District as a Stewardshi p Receiving Area, to be known as the Rivergrass Village Stewardship Receiving Area, which will allow development of a maximum of 2,500 residential dwelling units, of which a minimum of 250 will be multi-family units; a maximum of 80,000 square feet of neighborhood commercial in the village center and a minimum of 62,500 square feet of neighborhood commercial in the village center; a minimum of 25,000 square feet of civic, governmental and institutional uses; senior housing including adult living facilities and continuing care retirement communities subject to a floor area ratio of 0.45 in place of a maximum square footage; and an 18 hole golf course; all subject to a maximum PM peak hour trip cap; and approving the Stewardship Receiving Area credit agreement for Rivergrass Village Stewardship Receiving Area and establishing that 6198.08 stewardship credits are being utilized by the designation of the Rivergrass Village Stewardship Receiving Area. The subject property is located south of 45th Avenue NE and north of 26th Avenue NE, all east of Desoto Boulevard in Sections 10, 14, 15, 22, 23, and 27, Township 48 South, Range 28 East, Collier County, Florida. (This is a companion to Agenda Item 9.B, 11.B and 11.C) [PL20190000044] Meeting Date: 01/28/2020 Prepared by: Title: Planner, Principal – Zoning Name: Nancy Gundlach 01/08/2020 3:44 PM Submitted by: Title: Manager - Planning – Zoning Name: Ray Bellows 01/08/2020 3:44 PM Approved By: Review: Growth Management Department Judy Puig Level 1 Reviewer Completed 01/08/2020 3:57 PM Zoning Ray Bellows Additional Reviewer Completed 01/08/2020 4:19 PM Growth Management Department James C French Deputy Department Head Review Completed 01/10/2020 10:45 AM Growth Management Department Jeanne Marcella Department Head Review Completed 01/10/2020 11:03 AM County Attorney's Office Heidi Ashton-Cicko Level 2 Attorney of Record Review Completed 01/10/2020 5:04 PM County Attorney's Office Jeffrey A. Klatzkow Level 3 County Attorney's Office Review Completed 01/15/2020 11:55 AM Office of Management and Budget Laura Zautcke Additional Reviewer Completed 01/16/2020 2:59 PM 9.A Packet Pg. 27 01/28/2020 Grants Valerie Fleming Level 3 OMB Gatekeeper Review Completed 01/17/2020 1:54 PM County Manager's Office Leo E. Ochs Level 4 County Manager Review Completed 01/22/2020 1:31 PM Board of County Commissioners MaryJo Brock Meeting Pending 01/28/2020 9:00 AM 9.A Packet Pg. 28 9.A.1Packet Pg. 29Attachment: Final Staff Report -Rivergrass Village SRA -1-22-20 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.1Packet Pg. 30Attachment: Final Staff Report -Rivergrass Village SRA -1-22-20 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.1Packet Pg. 31Attachment: Final Staff Report -Rivergrass Village SRA -1-22-20 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.1Packet Pg. 32Attachment: Final Staff Report -Rivergrass Village SRA -1-22-20 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.1Packet Pg. 33Attachment: Final Staff Report -Rivergrass Village SRA -1-22-20 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.1Packet Pg. 34Attachment: Final Staff Report -Rivergrass Village SRA -1-22-20 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.1Packet Pg. 35Attachment: Final Staff Report -Rivergrass Village SRA -1-22-20 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.1Packet Pg. 36Attachment: Final Staff Report -Rivergrass Village SRA -1-22-20 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.1Packet Pg. 37Attachment: Final Staff Report -Rivergrass Village SRA -1-22-20 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.1Packet Pg. 38Attachment: Final Staff Report -Rivergrass Village SRA -1-22-20 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.1Packet Pg. 39Attachment: Final Staff Report -Rivergrass Village SRA -1-22-20 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.1Packet Pg. 40Attachment: Final Staff Report -Rivergrass Village SRA -1-22-20 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.1Packet Pg. 41Attachment: Final Staff Report -Rivergrass Village SRA -1-22-20 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.1Packet Pg. 42Attachment: Final Staff Report -Rivergrass Village SRA -1-22-20 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.1Packet Pg. 43Attachment: Final Staff Report -Rivergrass Village SRA -1-22-20 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.1Packet Pg. 44Attachment: Final Staff Report -Rivergrass Village SRA -1-22-20 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.1Packet Pg. 45Attachment: Final Staff Report -Rivergrass Village SRA -1-22-20 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.1Packet Pg. 46Attachment: Final Staff Report -Rivergrass Village SRA -1-22-20 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.1Packet Pg. 47Attachment: Final Staff Report -Rivergrass Village SRA -1-22-20 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.1Packet Pg. 48Attachment: Final Staff Report -Rivergrass Village SRA -1-22-20 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.1Packet Pg. 49Attachment: Final Staff Report -Rivergrass Village SRA -1-22-20 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.1Packet Pg. 50Attachment: Final Staff Report -Rivergrass Village SRA -1-22-20 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.1Packet Pg. 51Attachment: Final Staff Report -Rivergrass Village SRA -1-22-20 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.1Packet Pg. 52Attachment: Final Staff Report -Rivergrass Village SRA -1-22-20 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.1Packet Pg. 53Attachment: Final Staff Report -Rivergrass Village SRA -1-22-20 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.1Packet Pg. 54Attachment: Final Staff Report -Rivergrass Village SRA -1-22-20 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.1Packet Pg. 55Attachment: Final Staff Report -Rivergrass Village SRA -1-22-20 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.1Packet Pg. 56Attachment: Final Staff Report -Rivergrass Village SRA -1-22-20 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.1Packet Pg. 57Attachment: Final Staff Report -Rivergrass Village SRA -1-22-20 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.1Packet Pg. 58Attachment: Final Staff Report -Rivergrass Village SRA -1-22-20 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.1Packet Pg. 59Attachment: Final Staff Report -Rivergrass Village SRA -1-22-20 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.1Packet Pg. 60Attachment: Final Staff Report -Rivergrass Village SRA -1-22-20 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.1Packet Pg. 61Attachment: Final Staff Report -Rivergrass Village SRA -1-22-20 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.1Packet Pg. 62Attachment: Final Staff Report -Rivergrass Village SRA -1-22-20 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.1Packet Pg. 63Attachment: Final Staff Report -Rivergrass Village SRA -1-22-20 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.1Packet Pg. 64Attachment: Final Staff Report -Rivergrass Village SRA -1-22-20 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) ‒ 1 ‒ PL20190000044, Rivergrass SRA Growth Management Department Zoning Division C O N S I S T E N C Y R E V I E W M E M O R A N D U M To:Nancy Gundlach, AICP, Principal Planner, Zoning Services Section From:Corby Schmidt, AICP, Principal Planner, and David Weeks, AICP, Growth Management Manager, Comprehensive Planning Section Date:November 19, 2019 Subject:Future Land Use Element Consistency Review of Proposed Stewardship Receiving Area PETITION NUMBER: SRA PL20190000044 PETITION NAME: Rivergrass Village [REV: 3, updated post-CCPC] REQUEST: This petition seeks to establish a Stewardship Receiving Area (SRA) known as Rivergrass Village on a ±997.5-acre site in accordance with provisions of the Rural Lands Stewardship Area Overlay of Collier County, as contained in the Collier County Growth Management Plan’s Future Land Use Element and the Collier County Land Development Code. The proposed SRA entails a maximum of 2,250 single-family and up to 250 multi-family dwelling units (2,500 DUs total), up to 80,000 square feet of retail/office uses, and 25,000 square feet of civic, government and institutional uses. No areas are designated for public benefit use. LOCATION: The property is located east of DeSoto Boulevard, extending north from Oil Well Road (CR 858) to 56th Avenue NE and south from Oil Well Road to 18th Avenue NE; and lies within Sections 1, 2, 3, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 26, 27, 34 and 35, Township 48 South, Range 28 East. Golden Gate Estates is adjacent to the west; the proposed Hyde Park Village SRA is also immediately adjacent to the west, on the north side of Oil Well Road. COMPREHENSIVE PLANNING COMMENTS: The subject property is designated Agricultural/Rural (Agricultural/Rural Mixed Use District) and is within the Rural Lands Stewardship Area Overlay (RLSAO) as depicted on the Future Land Use Map (FLUM) and in the Future Land Use Element (FLUE) of the Growth Management Plan (GMP). Owners of property within this FLUM designation may develop their property under the baseline conditions - agriculture and related uses, essential services, residential at a maximum density of 1 dwelling unit per 5 acres, parks and open space, earth mining, etc. – or choose to participate in the Stewardship Program. The Stewardship Program provides for the protection of valuable habitats by designation as a Stewardship Sending Area (SSA) where land use layers are removed, which generates Stewardship Credits that can be used to entitle mixed use developments known as Stewardship Receiving Areas (SRAs) on lands appropriate for development. SRAs may vary in size and must contain a mixture of uses, as provided for in the RLSAO policies contained in the FLUE. Details of the RLSAO are provided in the RLSAO Policies and RLSAO Attachment C, Stewardship Receiving Area Characteristics, in the FLUE as well as the 9.A.2 Packet Pg. 65 Attachment: Attachment B-FLUE Consistency Review 11-19-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) ‒ 2 ‒ PL20190000044, Rivergrass SRA implementing RLSAO zoning overlay in the LDC, Land Development Code - also referred to as the LDC Stewardship District. RURAL LANDS STEWARDSHIP AREA POLICIES AND PROVISIONS AND GENERAL OBSERVATIONS: The GMP together with LDC are used in determining the consistency of the request. To determine consistency with the more-general Policies and provisions of the FLUE’s RLSAO, the specific policies and provisions of the RLSA zoning overlay found in the LDC are taken into consideration. Within the RLSAO, the conversion of rural and agricultural lands to urban villages, new towns and satellite communities is based on area-based allocations, clustering and open space provisions, mixed- use development, and other planning strategies and techniques, while protecting environmentally sensitive areas, maintaining the economic viability of agricultural and other predominantly rural land uses, and providing for the cost-efficient delivery of public facilities and services. Specifically, the RLSAO allows development in the form of towns, villages, hamlets, and compact rural developments (CRD), subject to certain criteria and development parameters, as a Stewardship Receiving Area, and allows “public benefit uses” such as public schools and public or private post- secondary institutions, including ancillary uses; community parks exceeding the minimum acreages required, municipal golf courses; regional parks; and governmental facilities. This application proposes the Rivergrass development using the Rural Land Stewardship Credit System, as provided for under Policy 1.4 of the RLSAO. The SRA application further proposes that Stewardship Credits, enabling this SRA to be developed as a Village, will be obtained from permanent restrictions on the use of environmentally sensitive land (from approved SSAs). The SRA procedures and standards are outlined in Section 4.08.07 of the LDC. Specifically, the SSAs to be used to enable the project to proceed as an SRA are subject to County review and approval at the SRA submittal stage. The SSA documents submitted for review include the Stewardship Receiving Area (SRA) Credit Use and Reconciliation Application (revised to 8/08/2019) for SSA no. 15 , and the Stewardship Receiving Area Credit Agreement (revised to 8/08/2019); these documents have been reconciled and updated, and may found internally consistent with other proposed SRA materials. All SSAs must be approved and Stewardship Credits submitted before or concurrent with this SRA. This SRA must meet the Collier County RSLA Overlay Stewardship Receiving Area Characteristics as identified for Villages in the table below. The table lists characteristic land uses and threshold requirements from the RLSA Overlay, [FLUE] Attachment C, followed by staff comments/analysis [in italics]. Underlined uses in the table are not required uses. Size (Gross Acres) 100 ‒ 1,000 acres; [The SRA is ±997.5 acres total.] Residential Units (DUs) per gross acre base density 1 ‒ 4 DUs per gross acre; [2,500 DU/ ±997.5 acres = ±2.50 DU/ac. proposed in the SRA.] Residential Housing Styles Diversity of single-family and multi-family housing types, styles, lot sizes; [The SRA includes up to 2,250 single-family and up to 250 multi-family dwelling units (2,500 DUs total). Housing types include at least four single-family styles and multi-family residential buildings. However, staff would prefer to see a more meaningful mix between single family and multi-family housing; the proposed 9.A.2 Packet Pg. 66 Attachment: Attachment B-FLUE Consistency Review 11-19-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) ‒ 3 ‒ PL20190000044, Rivergrass SRA ratio is 90% single family and 10% multi-family as compared to the County as a whole with a ratio of approximately 50% single family to 45% multi-family.* (reference RLSA Policy 4.7.2, below) *Note: remainder is mobile home and other unit types.] Maximum Floor Area Ratio or Intensity Retail and Office ‒ 0.5; [These uses are provided for in the mixed- use “Village Center”. FAR figures as shown.] Civic/Governmental/Institution ‒ 0.6; [These uses are provided for in the mixed-use “Village Center”. FAR figures as shown.] Group Housing ‒ 0.45; ]not required – ALFs (Adult Living Facility) and CCRCs (Continuing Care Retirement Community) proposed (with equivalency ratio). FAR is provided.] Transient Lodging ‒ 26 units/ac. net; [not required – not proposed.] Goods and Services Village Center with Neighborhood Goods and Services in Village Centers ‒ Minimum 25 sq. ft. gross building area per DU; [(2,500 DUs x 25 sq. ft./DU) = 62,500 sq. ft. required. The SRA includes 62,500 to 80,000 sq. ft. of neighborhood commercial uses.] Water and Wastewater Centralized or decentralized community treatment system; [Served by centralized County facilities.] Interim Well and Septic; [not required – not proposed.] Recreation and Open Spaces Parks and Public Green Spaces within Neighborhoods (minimum 1% of gross acres); [9.975 acres are required (997.5 acres x 1%), and 9.98 acres are provided.] Active Recreation/Golf Courses; [not required – 156.66 acres are provided.] Lakes; [provided, covering more than 218 acres.] Open Space – minimum 35% of SRA; [350 acres of Recreation and Open Spaces required ‒ 615.27 acres provided.] Civic, Governmental and Institutional Services Moderate Range of Services ‒ minimum 10 sq. ft./DU; [25,000 sq. ft. required (2,500 DUs x 10 sq. ft./DU); 25,000 sq. ft. proposed.] Full Range of Schools; [not required – not proposed.] Transportation Auto-interconnected system of collector and local roads; required connection to collector or arterial; [An interconnected road system is provided; the SRA connects to Oil Well Road (CR 858), a minor arterial road as classified in the Transportation Element, and the future north-south thoroughfare of Big Cypress Parkway; additional potential future interconnections are provided, (crossing the future north-south thoroughfare of Big Cypress Parkway), to connect with 43rd Avenue NE and Randall Blvd]. Interconnected sidewalk and pathway system; [provided.] Equestrian Trails; [not required – not proposed.] County Transit Access; [not required – transit stop proposed.] 9.A.2 Packet Pg. 67 Attachment: Attachment B-FLUE Consistency Review 11-19-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) ‒ 4 ‒ PL20190000044, Rivergrass SRA The relevant RLSAO Policies (Group 4 Policies) are listed below, followed by staff comments/analysis [in italics]. Group 4 ‒ Policies to enable conversion of rural lands to other uses in appropriate locations, while discouraging urban sprawl, and encouraging development that utilizes creative land use planning techniques by the establishment of Stewardship Receiving Areas. Policy 4.1: Collier County will encourage and facilitate uses that enable economic prosperity and diversification of the economic base of the RLSA. Collier County will also encourage development that utilizes creative land use planning techniques and facilitates a compact form of development to accommodate population growth by the establishment of Stewardship Receiving Areas (SRAs). Incentives to encourage and support the diversification and vitality of the rural economy such as flexible development regulations, expedited permitting review, and targeted capital improvements shall be incorporated into the LDC Stewardship District. [The subject petition is for an SRA.] Policy 4.2: All privately owned lands within the RLSA which meet the criteria set forth herein are eligible for designation as a SRA, except land delineated as a FSA, HSA, WRA or land that has been designated as a Stewardship Sending Area. Land proposed for SRA designation shall meet the suitability criteria and other standards described in Group 4 Policies. Due to the long-term vision of the RLSA Overlay… and in accordance with the guidelines [previously] established in Chapter 163.3177(11) F.S. [now: 163.3248] the specific location, size and composition of each SRA cannot and need not be predetermined in the GMP. In the RLSA Overlay, lands that are eligible to be designated as SRAs generally have similar physical attributes as they consist predominately of agriculture lands which have been cleared or otherwise altered for this purpose. Lands shown on the Overlay Map as eligible for SRA designation include approximately 74,500 acres outside of the ACSC (and 18,300 acres within the ACSC). Approximately 2% of these lands achieve an Index score greater than 1.2. Because the Overlay requires SRAs to be compact, mixed-use and self-sufficient in the provision of services, facilities and infrastructure, traditional locational standards normally applied to determine development suitability are not relevant or applicable to SRAs. Therefore the process for designating a SRA follows the principles of the Rural Lands Stewardship Act as further described herein. [Land proposed for the SRA designation meets the suitability criteria and other standards described in RLSA Overlay Group 4 Policies. The subject site is designated on the RLSA Overlay Map as eligible for SRA designation (Open”).] Policy 4.3: Land becomes designated as a SRA upon petition by a property owner to Collier County seeking such designation and the adoption of a resolution by the BCC granting the designation. The petition shall include a SRA master plan as described in Policy 4.5. The basis for approval shall be a finding of consistency with the policies of the Overlay, including required suitability criteria set forth herein, consistency with the intent of RLSA provisions in the LDC Stewardship District, and assurance that the applicant has acquired or will acquire sufficient Stewardship Credits to implement the SRA uses. The County has adopted LDC amendments to establish the procedures and submittal requirements for 9.A.2 Packet Pg. 68 Attachment: Attachment B-FLUE Consistency Review 11-19-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) ‒ 5 ‒ PL20190000044, Rivergrass SRA designation as a SRA, providing for consideration of impacts, including environmental and public infrastructure impacts, and for public notice of and the opportunity for public participation in any consideration by the BCC of such a designation. [The petitioner has submitted the required SRA application along with an SRA Master Plan as described in Policy 4.5. The total Stewardship Credits available are those to be transferred from SSA no. 15 (6,198.08). These Stewardship credits derive from ‘Base’ and ‘Early Entry Bonus’ credits. Consistency with the intent of RLSA provisions in the “LDC Stewardship District” (RLSA zoning overlay) is addressed later herein.] Policy 4.4 is not directed toward individual applications. Policy 4.5: To address the specifics of each SRA, a master plan of each SRA will be prepared and submitted to Collier County as a part of the petition for designation as a SRA. The master plan will demonstrate that the SRA complies with all applicable policies of the Overlay and the LDC Stewardship District and is designed so that incompatible land uses are directed away from wetlands and critical habitat identified as FSAs and HSAs on the Overlay Map. [The applicant has submitted a master plan with their petition intended to demonstrate the SRA complies with the applicable policies of the Overlay and the LDC Stewardship District. Matters of compliance or noncompliance with applicable policies of the Overlay are addressed throughout this memo. Compliance with applicable policies of the LDC is reviewed and determined by the Zoning Services Section, Comprehensive Planning Section, and other sections and divisions of the Growth Management Department. Matters of noncompliance with the LDC Stewardship District may also be matters of noncompliance with this Overlay.] Policy 4.6 is not directed toward individual applications. Policy 4.7: There are four specific forms of SRA permitted within the Overlay. These are Towns, Villages, Hamlets, and Compact Rural Development (CRD). The Characteristics of Towns, Villages, Hamlets, and CRD are set forth in [FLUE] Attachment C and are generally described in Policies 4.7.1, 4.7.2, 4.7.3 and 4.7.4. Collier County shall establish more specific regulations, guidelines and standards within the LDC Stewardship District to guide the design and development of SRAs to include innovative planning and development strategies as set forth [previously] in Chapter 163.3177 (11), F.S. [now: 163.3248] and 9J- 5.006(5)(l). The size and base density of each form shall be consistent with the standards set forth on [FLUE] Attachment C. The maximum base residential density as set forth in [FLUE] Attachment C may only be exceeded through the density blending process as set forth in density and intensity blending provision of the Immokalee Area Master Plan or through the affordable housing density bonus as referenced in the Density Rating System of the Future Land Use Element. The base residential density is calculated by dividing the total number of residential units in a SRA by the overall area therein. The base residential density does not restrict net residential density of parcels within a SRA. The location, size and density of each SRA will be determined on an individual basis during the SRA designation review and approval process. [The SRA size, density, and uses are consistent with those set forth on [FLUE] Attachment C, Stewardship Receiving Area Characteristics, for a Village.] 9.A.2 Packet Pg. 69 Attachment: Attachment B-FLUE Consistency Review 11-19-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) ‒ 6 ‒ PL20190000044, Rivergrass SRA Policy 4.7.1 does not apply to this application. Policy 4.7.2: Villages are primarily residential communities with a diversity of housing types and mix of uses appropriate to the scale and character of the particular village. Villages shall be not less than 100 acres or more than 1,000 acres. Villages are comprised of residential neighborhoods and shall include a mixed-use village center to serve as the focal point for the community’s support services and facilities. Villages shall be designed to encourage pedestrian and bicycle circulation by including an interconnected sidewalk and pathway system serving all residential neighborhoods. Villages shall have parks or public green spaces within neighborhoods. Villages shall include neighborhood scaled retail and office uses, in a ratio as provided in Policy 4.15. Villages are an appropriate location for a full range of schools. To the extent possible, schools and parks shall be located adjacent to each other to allow for the sharing of recreational facilities. Design criteria for Villages shall be included in the LDC Stewardship District. [This SRA is primarily a residential development and allows multiple DU types. A mix of uses are provided – residential, recreational, civic/institutional, and commercial. The site comprises +997.5 acres. Open space is provided throughout the SRA. The Village Center allows a mix of uses – multi-family dwelling units; a variety of commercial uses (minimum of 62,500 s.f. required); and, civic, institutional and governmental uses (minimum of 25,000 s.f. required). Due to its location and orientation (at the corner of Oil Well Road and future Big Cypress Parkway, oriented to Oil Well Road), it is questionable whether the Village Center serves as a focal point for the community. From the direction (Policy 4.15.1 and) this Policy provides, one would expect smaller Villages (nearer 100 acres) to represent the lower end of the scale for diversity of housing types styles, [and] lot sizes, and mix of uses; while larger Villages (nearer 1,000 acres) would be expected to provide the greatest diversity of housing types styles, [and] lot sizes, and fullest range of uses – much in the same way the store with more floor area would provide a bigger variety of merchandise. The single family to multifamily ratio proposed is 90%/10% as compared to the countywide ratio of 50%/45% (remaining DUs are mobile homes, etc.); staff would prefer to see a more meaningful mix.] Policies 4.7.3 and 4.7.4 do not apply to this application. Policy 4.8: An SRA may be contiguous to a FSA or HSA, but shall not encroach into such areas, and shall buffer such areas as described in Policy 4.13. A SRA may be contiguous to and served by a WRA without requiring the WRA to be designated as a SRA in accordance with Policy 3.12 and 3.13. [The SRA is not contiguous to lands designated FSA or HAS but is contiguous to lands designated WRA.] Policy 4.9: A SRA must contain sufficient suitable land to accommodate the planned development in an environmentally acceptable manner. The primary means of directing development away from wetlands and critical habitat is the prohibition of locating SRAs in FSAs, HSAs, and WRAs. To further direct development away from wetlands and critical habitat, residential, commercial, manufacturing/light industrial, group housing, and transient housing, institutional, civic and community service uses within a SRA shall not be sited on lands that receive a Natural Resource Index value of greater than 1.2. In addition, conditional use essential services and governmental essential services, with the exception of 9.A.2 Packet Pg. 70 Attachment: Attachment B-FLUE Consistency Review 11-19-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) ‒ 7 ‒ PL20190000044, Rivergrass SRA those necessary to serve permitted uses and for public safety, shall not be sited on lands that receive a Natural Resource Index value of greater than 1.2. The Index value of greater than 1.2 represents those areas that have a high natural resource value as measured pursuant to Policy 1.8. Less than 2% of potential SRA land achieves an Index score of greater than 1.2. [Staff defers review and comment pertaining to the Natural Resource Index value within the SRA to specialists of the Environmental Planning Section of the County’s Development Review Division. That staff has determined all lands within the SRA have an NRI score of <1.2.] Policy 4.10: Within the RLSA Overlay, open space, which by definition shall include public and private conservation lands, underdeveloped areas of designated SSAs, agriculture, water retention and management areas and recreation uses, will continue to be the dominant land use. Therefore, open space adequate to serve the forecasted population and uses within the SRA is provided. To ensure that SRA residents have such [open space] areas proximate to their homes, open space shall also comprise a minimum of thirty- five percent of the gross acreage of an individual SRA Town, Village, or those CRDs exceeding 100 acres. Lands within a SRA greater than one acre with Index values of greater than 1.2 shall be retained as open space. As an incentive to encourage open space, such uses within a SRA, located outside of the ACSC, exceeding the required thirty-five percent shall not be required to consume Stewardship Credits. [Open space exceeds the minimum of thirty-five percent of the gross acreage. Approximately 349 acres are required (±997.5 acres x 35%), and additional acres are provided. A 5-acre utility site on acreage exceeding the minimum acreage requirements is proposed for “public benefit use” and, no lands are reported to have Index values of greater than 1.2.] Policy 4.11: The perimeter of each SRA shall be designed to provide a transition from higher density and intensity uses within the SRA to lower density and intensity uses on adjoining property. The edges of SRAs shall be well defined and designed to be compatible with the character of adjoining property. Techniques such as, but not limited to setbacks, landscape buffers, and recreation/open space placement may be used for this purpose. Where existing agricultural activity adjoins a SRA, the design of the SRA must take this activity into account to allow for the continuation of the agricultural activity and to minimize any conflict between agriculture and SRA uses. [All perimeter lands not abutting Oil Well Road or future Big Cypress Parkway are planned to contain lakes or perimeter buffers. Comprehensive Planning staff defers the determination of compatibility with surrounding land uses to Zoning Services Section reviewers based on the totality of the project.] Policy 4.12: Where a SRA adjoins a FSA, HSA, WRA or existing public or private conservation land delineated on the Overlay Map, best management and planning practices shall be applied to minimize adverse impacts to such lands. SRA design shall demonstrate that ground water table draw down or diversion will not adversely impact the adjacent FSA, HSA, WRA or conservation land. Detention and control elevations shall be established to protect such natural areas and be consistent with surrounding land and project control elevations and water tables. 9.A.2 Packet Pg. 71 Attachment: Attachment B-FLUE Consistency Review 11-19-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) ‒ 8 ‒ PL20190000044, Rivergrass SRA [The SRA does not abut FSAs, HSAs or conservation lands but does abut WRA lands. Staff defers review and comment pertaining to these aspects of the SRA to specialists of the Environmental Planning Section of the County’s Development Review Division.] Policy 4.13: Open space within or contiguous to a SRA shall be used to provide a buffer between the SRA and any adjoining FSA, HSA, or existing public or private conservation land delineated on the Overlay Map. Open space contiguous to or within 300 feet of the boundary of a FSA, HSA, or existing public or private conservation land may include: natural preserves, lakes, golf courses provided no fairways or other turf areas are allowed within the first 200 feet, passive recreational areas and parks, required yard and set- back areas, and other natural or man-made open space. Along the west boundary of the FSAs and HSAs that comprise Camp Keais Strand, i.e., the area south of Immokalee Road, this open space buffer shall be 500 feet wide and shall preclude golf course fairways and other turf areas within the first 300 feet. [The SRA does not abut FSAs, HSAs or conservation lands. The subject site is located within land designated as “open” on the RLSA Stewardship Map. Lakes and perimeter buffers are located along the SRA perimeter except where abutting Oil Well Road and future Big Cypress Parkway.] Policy 4.14: The SRA must have either direct access to a County collector or arterial road or indirect access via a road provided by the developer that has adequate capacity to accommodate the proposed development in accordance with accepted transportation planning standards. No SRA shall be approved unless the capacity of County collector or arterial road(s) serving the SRA is demonstrated to be adequate in accordance with the Collier County Concurrency Management System in effect at the time of SRA designation. A transportation impact assessment meeting the requirements of Section 2.7.3 of the LDC, or its successor regulation shall be prepared for each proposed SRA to provide the necessary data and analysis. [Access is to Oil Well Road, a minor arterial road as classified in the Transportation Element, and future Big Cypress Parkway. Capacity analysis is deferred to Transportation Planning Section staff. Concurrency is determined at the time of subsequent development orders.] Policy 4.15.1: SRAs are intended to be mixed use and shall be allowed the full range of uses permitted by the Urban Designation of the FLUE, as modified by Policies 4.7, 4.7.1, 4.7.2, 4.7.3, 4.7.4 and [FLUE] Attachment C. An appropriate mix of retail, office, recreational, civic, governmental, and institutional uses will be available to serve the daily needs and community wide needs of residents of the RLSA. Depending on the size, scale, and character of a SRA, such uses may be provided either within the specific SRA, within other SRAs in the RLSA or within the Immokalee Urban Area. By example, each Village or CRD shall provide for neighborhood retail/office uses to serve its population as well as appropriate civic and institutional uses, however, the combined population of several Villages and Hamlets may be required to support community scaled retail or office uses in a nearby CRD. Standards for the minimum amount of non-residential uses in each category are set forth in [FLUE] Attachment C, and shall be also included in the Stewardship LDC District. 9.A.2 Packet Pg. 72 Attachment: Attachment B-FLUE Consistency Review 11-19-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) ‒ 9 ‒ PL20190000044, Rivergrass SRA [This SRA includes mixed uses – residential, civic/institutional, recreational, and commercial uses similar to those in the LDC’s C-3, Commercial Intermediate, zoning district. Application materials address some of the above issues and requirements within their Statement of Compliance, Rivergrass Village Master Plan, and its component Village Center and Neighborhood General context zones. Specific requirements are contained in other Policies, and staff analysis is provided there.] Policy 4.15.2: The Board of County Commissioners (BCC) may, as a condition of approval and adoption of an SRA development, require that suitable areas for parks, schools and other public facilities be set aside, improved, and/or dedicated for public use. When the BCC requires such a set aside for one or more public facilities, the set aside shall be subject to the same provisions of the LDC as are applicable to public facility dedications required as a condition for PUD rezoning. [A 5-acre utility site on acreage exceeding the minimum acreage requirements is proposed for “public benefit use”. A school site is not proposed nor identified as a need by the Collier County Public Schools. A park is provided and total open space is provided in excess of that required.] Policy 4.15.3: Applicants for SRA designation shall coordinate with Collier County School Board staff to allow planning to occur to accommodate any impacts to the public schools as a result of the SRA. As part of the SRA application, the following information shall be provided: 1. Number of residential units by type; 2. An estimate of the number of school-aged children for each type of school impacted (elementary, middle, high school); and, 3. The potential for locating a public educational facility or facilities within the SRA, and the size of any sites that may be dedicated, or otherwise made available for a public educational facility. [Project development is planned in a single phase. School sites are not set aside, improved, and/or dedicated for public use in the development. The School Impact Analysis projects 600 new students to be generated from the 2,500 residences [4,269 permanent / 5,123 seasonal residents]. This overall student figure, however, is not allocated to the number of school-aged children for each type of school impacted (elementary, middle, high school. Staff defers review and comment on the adequacy and accuracy of data submitted with this application to School District personnel – which did not identify a need for a school site in this SRA.] Policy 4.16: A SRA shall have adequate infrastructure available to serve the proposed development, or such infrastructure must be provided concurrently with the demand. The level of infrastructure provided will depend on the form of SRA development, accepted civil engineering practices, and LDC requirements. The capacity of infrastructure necessary to serve the SRA at build-out must be demonstrated during the SRA designation process. Infrastructure to be analyzed includes transportation, potable water, wastewater, irrigation water, stormwater management, and solid waste. Transportation infrastructure is discussed in Policy 4.14. Centralized or decentralized community water and wastewater utilities are required in Towns, Villages, and those CRDs exceeding one hundred (100) acres in size, and may be required in CRDs that are one hundred (100) acres or less in size, depending upon the permitted uses 9.A.2 Packet Pg. 73 Attachment: Attachment B-FLUE Consistency Review 11-19-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) ‒ 10 ‒ PL20190000044, Rivergrass SRA approved within the CRD. Centralized or decentralized community water and wastewater utilities shall be constructed, owned, operated and maintained by a private utility service, the developer, a Community Development District, the Immokalee Water Sewer Service District, Collier County, or other governmental entity. Innovative alternative water and wastewater treatment systems such as decentralized community treatment systems shall not be prohibited by this Policy provided that they meet all applicable regulatory criteria. Individual potable water supply wells and septic systems, limited to a maximum of 100 acres of any Town, Village or CRD of 100 acres are permitted on an interim basis until services from a centralized/decentralized community system are available. Individual potable water supply wells and septic systems are permitted in Hamlets and may be permitted in CRDs of 100 acres or less in size. [The demand for potable water will be approximately 1.03 million gallons per day (average) and 1.33 million gallons per day (3-day maximum). Sanitary sewers must be designed to accommodate approximately 0.78 million gallons per day (average) and 1.16 million gallons per day (3-day maximum). Adequate infrastructure to develop the project is planned with centralized water supply facilities and wastewater collection and treatment services provided by Collier County. As an alternative, the developer proposes that on-site treatment facilities will be constructed (including formation of an independent utility company). Golf course and landscape areas do not use the same waters. The project requires irrigation of the golf course and landscape areas for approximately 1.4 million gallons per day (annual average-based) and 2.1 million gallons per day (monthly maximum-based). A privately-owned and maintained system will withdraw irrigation water from the SRA’s own lake system. The lake system will be replenished by recharge wells that tap into the Lower Tamiami Aquifer. Collier County expanded its jurisdictional Water-Sewer District service area boundary in September 2018, encompassing this area (FKA Big Cypress). The Capital Improvements Element of the Growth Management Plan identifies phased construction of a new regional water treatment plant ($82.5M) and a new water reclamation facility ($106M) at the Northeast Utility Facilities (NEUF) site to support this (and other) development. Staff also defers to other departments, agencies and public vetting of this project.] Policy 4.17: The BCC will review and approve SRA designation applications in accordance with the provisions of Policy 1.1.2 [now Policy 1.2] of the Capital Improvement Element (CIE) of the GMP for Category A public facilities. Final local development orders will be approved within a SRA designated by the BCC in accordance with the Concurrency Management System of the GMP and LDC in effect at the time of local development order approval. [This project does not create a significant impact on countywide population as defined in Policy 1.1.2 of the CIE. Staff defers to the departments and agencies identified above involved directly with Concurrency Management – for which review occurs at time of subsequent development order.] Policy 4.18: The SRA will be planned and designed to be fiscally neutral or positive to Collier County at the horizon year based on a public facilities impact assessment, as identified in LDC 4.08.07.K. The BCC may grant 9.A.2 Packet Pg. 74 Attachment: Attachment B-FLUE Consistency Review 11-19-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) ‒ 11 ‒ PL20190000044, Rivergrass SRA exceptions to this Policy to accommodate affordable housing, as it deems appropriate. Techniques that may promote fiscal neutrality such as Community Development Districts, and other special districts, shall be encouraged. At a minimum, the assessment shall consider the following public facilities and services: transportation, potable water, wastewater, irrigation water, stormwater management, solid waste, parks, law enforcement, and schools. Development phasing, developer contributions and mitigation, and other public/private partnerships shall address any potential adverse impacts to adopted levels of service standards. [The applicant asserts the development will be fiscally neutral or positive to Collier County in the analysis provided in the Economic Assessment Report. Staff defers to the other County staff involved in the review of the Economic Assessment Report.] Policy 4.19: Eight (8) credits shall be required for each acre of land included in a SRA, except for open space in excess of the required thirty-five percent as described in Policy 4.10 or for land that is designated for a public benefit use described in Policy 4.19. In order to promote compact, mixed use development and provide the necessary support facilities and services to residents of rural areas, the SRA designation entitles a full range of uses, accessory uses and associated uses that provide a mix of services to and are supportive to the residential population of a SRA, as provided for in [FLUE] Policies 4.7, 4.15 and [FLUE] Attachment C. Such uses shall be identified, located and quantified in the SRA master plan. [The proposed SRA comprises ±997.5 acres; of those, ±775 acres require ±6,198 credits, and this 1:8 ratio is met. Sufficient Stewardship Credits are available from approved SSAs to enable development of the project (see Policy 4.3 comments).] Policy 4.20: The acreage of a public benefit use shall not count toward the maximum acreage limits described in Policy 4.7. For the purpose of this Policy, public benefit uses include: public schools (preK-12) and public or private post-secondary institutions, including ancillary uses; community parks exceeding the minimum acreage requirements of [FLUE] Attachment C, municipal golf courses; regional parks; and governmental facilities excluding essential services as defined in the LDC. The location of public schools shall be coordinated with the Collier County School Board, based on the interlocal agreement, 163.3177 F.S. and in a manner consistent with 235.193 F.S. Schools and related ancillary uses shall be encouraged to locate in or proximate to Towns, Villages, and Hamlets subject to applicable zoning and permitting requirements. [A 5-acre utility site on acreage exceeding the minimum acreage requirements is proposed for “public benefit use”.] Policy 4.21 does not apply, as this site is not within the ACSC, Area of Critical State Concern. Review of select FLUE Policies (followed by staff analysis in [italics]): Policy 5.6 requires new development to be compatible with, and complementary to, surrounding land uses, as set forth in the Land Development Code. [Comprehensive Planning leaves this determination to the Zoning Services staff as part of their review of the petition in its entirety, giving special consideration 9.A.2 Packet Pg. 75 Attachment: Attachment B-FLUE Consistency Review 11-19-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) ‒ 12 ‒ PL20190000044, Rivergrass SRA to the specific policies and provisions of the Rural Lands Stewardship Area Overlay District (also referred to as the LDC Stewardship District) found in the LDC. The compatibility analysis is encouraged to be comprehensive and include reviews of both the subject property and surrounding or nearby properties regarding allowed use intensities and densities, development standards (building heights, setbacks, landscape buffers, etc.), building mass, building location and orientation, architectural features, amount and type of open space and location, traffic generation/attraction, etc. Like the subject property, surrounding or nearby properties are under review for SRAs or eligible for future SRAs; these may be viewed as an interrelated set of projects, each of which affects the others.] The County recognizes Smart Growth policies and practices in its consideration of future land use arrangements and choice-making options. FLUE Objective 7 and Policies 7.1 through 7.4 promote Smart Growth policies for new development and redevelopment projects pertaining to access, interconnections, open space, and walkable communities. Objective 7: Promote smart growth policies, reduce greenhouse gas emissions, and adhere to the existing development character of the Collier County, where applicable, and as follows: Policy 7.1: The County shall encourage developers and property owners to connect their properties to fronting collector and arterial roads, except where no such connection can be made without violating intersection spacing requirements of the Land Development Code. [This property fronts Oil Well Road (CR 858), classified as a minor arterial road in the Transportation Element. Connections to Oil Well Road are made at access points from the northerly and southerly portions of the project. This property also fronts the future N‒S Big Cypress Parkway, classified as a future collector road in the Transportation Element. Connections to the future Big Cypress Parkway are made at access points from the northerly and southerly portions of the project. Policy 7.2: The County shall encourage internal accesses or loop roads in an effort to help reduce vehicle congestion on nearby collector and arterial roads and minimize the need for traffic signals. [Internal accesses are provided for the proposed development, including direct accesses into the northerly and southerly residential areas from Oil Well Road, and indirect access into the southerly residential area through the “village center” tract. The project is proposed as a “Village”. Design parameters for villages differ [from this Policy], and this project must meet the RSLA Overlay, Group 4 Policies specific to Stewardship Receiving Areas.] Policy 7.3: All new and existing developments shall be encouraged to connect their local streets and/or interconnection points with adjoining neighborhoods or other developments regardless of land use type. The interconnection of local streets between developments is also addressed in Policy 9.3 of the Transportation Element. [This property fronts the future N‒S Big Cypress Parkway, classified as a future collector road in the Transportation Element. The proposed Hyde Park SRA is located across the future Parkway, west of [the northerly portion of] this site. “Potential future interconnection” points appear 9.A.2 Packet Pg. 76 Attachment: Attachment B-FLUE Consistency Review 11-19-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) ‒ 13 ‒ PL20190000044, Rivergrass SRA along Big Cypress Parkway to interconnect to the Hyde Park SRA and other existing roadways to the west. Once Big Cypress Parkway is constructed in the future, any such interconnection will become a street connection (intersection). No interconnection is provided to the “Open” areas to the north or east. Staff recommends both be provided.] Policy 7.4: The County shall encourage new developments to provide walkable communities with a blend of densities, common open spaces, civic facilities and a range of housing prices and types. [This SRA provides for different dwelling unit types and sizes, significant open space, and civic/institutional/government facilities. Sidewalks are provided throughout. However, if the project were designed in a more compact manner, placing more residential development closer to the Village Center and Amenity Centers, then walkability could be significantly increased.] CONCLUSION: 1. The Rivergrass Village Stewardship Receiving Area (SRA) Credit Use and Reconciliation Application (revised to 8/08/2019) for SSA no. 15, and the Stewardship Receiving Area Credit Agreement (revised to 8/08/2019), have been reconciled and updated and may be found internally consistent with other proposed SRA materials. 2. The Rivergrass Village SRA Development Document (revised to 10/30/2019) is consistent with the FLUE in that it complies with the objective requirements of the RLSAO (SRA size, permitted uses, mix of uses, residential density, minimum amount of open space and non-residential uses, etc.). 3. The Rivergrass Village SRA does not fully meet the intent of the policies in the RLSAO pertaining to innovative design, compactness, housing diversity, walkability, mix of uses, use density/intensity continuum or gradient, interconnectedness, etc. In staff’s view, this SRA is, with some exceptions, a suburban development plan typical of that in the coastal urban area placed in the RLSA and is contrary to what is intended in the RLSA. This is greenfield development - the site is former agricultural fields; there are no known natural resource (or other) constraints that preclude a more compact form of development with majority of dwelling units proximate to the Village Center, the Village Center located in the interior rather than on the edge, commitment to provide some number of residential units in the Village Center, a grid street system, greater number of multi-family dwelling units, commitment to provide some amount of affordable housing, interconnections to future nearby developments to the north/east/south, etc. cc: Ray Bellows, Zoning Manager, Zoning Services Section G:\STEWARDSHIP RECEIVING AREAS\ Rivergrass Village SRA\SRA-2019-44 Con Rvws \\bcc.colliergov.net\data\GMD-LDS\CDES Planning Services\Consistency Reviews\2019\SRA-SRAA\PL19-44 Rivergrass Vlg ConRev memo for BCC1.docx 9.A.2 Packet Pg. 77 Attachment: Attachment B-FLUE Consistency Review 11-19-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.3 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Attachment: Resolution 12-30-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) JACOBS COLLIERCTY RIVERGRASS PEER REVIEW FINAL 1 M E M O R A N D U M Collier County GMD – Peer Review of Rivergrass Village Economic Assessment for Financial Neutrality PREPARED FOR: Amy Patterson, Collier County Trinity Scott, Collier County Nancy Gundlach, Collier County Ray Bellows, Collier County James French, Collier County Kenneth Kovensky, Collier County COPY TO: Bill Gramer, Jacobs PREPARED BY: Dave Green, Jacobs Darren Betts, Jacobs Dennis Jackson, Jacobs DATE: November 20, 2019 Introduction Collier County, Florida (the County) Growth Management Division (GMD) engaged CH2M-HILL (hereinafter referred to as Jacobs) to conduct a peer review of the “Rivergrass Village Economic Assessment” (Report) prepared by Development Planning & Financing Group (DPFG) on behalf of Collier Enterprises Management, Inc. (the Applicant), revised July 24, 2019. The purpose of the peer review was to assess: • The reasonableness of the assumptions in the assessment. • The consistency of the assessment with the underlying assumptions. • The reasonableness of the anticipated future revenue from ad valorem taxes, impact fees, and other sources for the appropriate forecast period; and reasonableness of expenditures (capital and operating) for the appropriate forecast period. • The consistency of the recommendations and findings with generally-accepted governmental accounting and finance conventions, financial forecasting, impact-fee-setting practices, balanced development concepts (growth pays for growth), and/or applicable County policies (such as the Collier County Land Development Code). Our procedures in reviewing the Report included sample verification of significant calculations, testing of consistency among underlying assumptions, data and calculation methods, and reviewing the consistency of results with the County’s current plans and forecasts. Jacobs did not replicate or develop an independent Fiscal Impact Analysis Model (FIAM), but reviewed DPFG’s alternative fiscal impact model and tested significant and sensitive variables. A record of our verification of sources and assumptions is provided in Appendix A. In preparing this peer review Jacobs relied, in whole or in part, on data and information provided by the County and third parties, which has not been independently verified by Jacobs and which Jacobs has 9.A.4 Packet Pg. 179 Attachment: Attachment C-Peer Review -final.pdf 11-20-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) COLLIER COUNTY GMD – PEER REVIEW OF RIVERGRASS VILLAGE ECONOMIC ASSESSMENT FOR FINANCIAL NEUTRALITY 2 JACOBS COLLIERCTY RIVERGRASS PEER REVIEW FINAL assumed to be accurate, complete, reliable, and current. Therefore, while Jacobs has utilized its best efforts in preparing the peer review and providing comments and recommendations to the County, Jacobs does not warrant or guarantee the conclusions set forth herein or in the DPFG Report or its fiscal impact model, which are dependent and/or based upon data, information, or statements supplied by the County or third parties. Qualifications and Consultant Team Jacobs is one of the largest and most diverse providers of technical, professional and construction services, including all aspects of architecture, engineering and construction, operations and maintenance, as well as specialty and strategic consulting. Our 80,000+ employees in 400+ locations around the world serve a broad range of companies and organizations, including industrial, commercial, and government clients across multiple markets and geographies. Jacobs’ economics consulting group provides planning and financial consulting services for a range of public sector clients around the globe. Guided by strategic thinking and an interactive process, we help clients achieve their goals and objectives and prepare for future change. Our experience is comprehensive and diverse, with involvement in various aspects of planning – from the conceptual stages, to the technical, operational and financial elements. We rely on a relationship-based approach and value strong partnerships within the team. Relevant fiscal impact analysis work for key municipal and local government clients has included: • Palm Beach County, Florida – Comprehensive planning focused on the economics and land use elements of the County's comprehensive plan. The project required analysis of trends in population, employment, and land use patterns, to project land use needs by type of use for the next 25 years. The fiscal impact analysis required modeling county government revenues and expenditures to provide projections of the effect different economic growth scenarios would have on the County's budget. Jacobs also evaluated a proposed traffic performance standard to determine the impact the proposed standard would have on the County's economy. • City of Phoenix, Arizona – Impact fees peer review for water and wastewater infrastructure improvements and development impact fee calculations following passage of Senate Bill 1525 (SB 1525) amending the impact fee section of the Arizona Revised Statutes (ARS §9-463.05), which tightened the standards for demonstrating compliance with the State’s impact fee law. • Broward County, Florida – Peer reviewer for the preparation of a fiscal impact analysis related to the construction of a new Florida Power and Light (FPL) Sunrise Energy Center. • Various Municipal and Local Government Clients – Providing peer review and preparation of fiscal impact analyses related to economic development options, impact fee studies, master planning, and infrastructure project development for utilities and general government services. The Jacobs consultants responsible for this peer review are: • Bill Gramer, PE – Client Liaison • Dave Green – Economist, and Project Manager • Dennis Jackson, PE – QA/QC Reviewer 9.A.4 Packet Pg. 180 Attachment: Attachment C-Peer Review -final.pdf 11-20-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) COLLIER COUNTY GMD – PEER REVIEW OF RIVERGRASS VILLAGE ECONOMIC ASSESSMENT FOR FINANCIAL NEUTRALITY JACOBS COLLIERCTY RIVERGRASS PEER REVIEW FINAL 3 • Darren Betts, MBA – Financial Analyst Legal Basis Collier County’s Rural Lands Stewardship Area (RLSA) program “was established under the Future Land Use Element (FLUE) of the Growth Management Plan (GMP). Its objective is the creation of an incentive- based land use overlay system based on the principles of rural land stewardship found in Florida Statutes, Section 163.3177(11), including environmental preservation, agricultural preservation and smart growth development. Through the RLSA program, Stewardship Sending Areas (SSAs) can be approved for preservation purposes, creating credits to entitle Stewardship Receiving Areas (SRAs), typically towns, villages, hamlets and compact rural developments (CRDs). The credit system is designed to incentivize preservation of the most important environmental lands, including large, connected wetland systems and significant habitat for listed species, by awarding higher credit values for high value preservation areas.”1 Pursuant to the GMP RLSA, Policy 4.18 states “the SRA will be planned and designed to be fiscally neutral or positive to Collier County at the horizon year [emphasis added] based on a cost/benefit fiscal impact analysis model acceptable to or as may be adopted by the County. The [Board of County Commissioners] BCC may grant exceptions to this policy to accommodate affordable-workforce housing, as it deems appropriate. Techniques that may promote fiscal neutrality such as Community Development Districts, and other special districts, shall be encouraged. At a minimum, the analysis shall consider the following public facilities and services: transportation, potable water, wastewater, irrigation water, stormwater management, solid waste, parks, law enforcement, and schools. Development phasing, developer contributions and mitigation, and other public/private partnerships shall address any potential adverse impacts to adopted levels of service standards.” Further, the Collier County Land Development Code (LDC), Section 4.08.07 defines the requirements for SRA Designation, which “is intended to encourage and facilitate uses that enable economic prosperity and diversification of the economic base of the RLSA District….]. One of several preconditions for the SRA designation is an economic assessment, per Section 4.08.07 L. of the LDC, as follows: L. SRA Economic Assessment. An Economic Assessment meeting the requirements of this Section shall be prepared and submitted as part of the SRA Designation Application Package. At a minimum, the analysis shall consider the following public facilities and services: transportation, potable water, wastewater, irrigation water, stormwater management, solid waste, parks, law enforcement, emergency medical services, fire, and schools. Development phasing and funding mechanisms shall address any adverse impacts to adopted minimum levels of service pursuant to Chapter 6 of the LDC. 1. Demonstration of Fiscal Neutrality. Each SRA must demonstrate that its development, as a whole, [emphasis added] will be fiscally neutral or positive to the Collier County tax base. This demonstration will be made for each unit of government responsible for the services listed above, using one of the following methodologies: 1 https://www.colliercountyfl.gov/your-government/divisions-a-e/comprehensive-planning/rural-land-stewardship-area-rlsa-overlay-program 9.A.4 Packet Pg. 181 Attachment: Attachment C-Peer Review -final.pdf 11-20-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) COLLIER COUNTY GMD – PEER REVIEW OF RIVERGRASS VILLAGE ECONOMIC ASSESSMENT FOR FINANCIAL NEUTRALITY 4 JACOBS COLLIERCTY RIVERGRASS PEER REVIEW FINAL a. Collier County Fiscal Impact Model. The fiscal impact model officially adopted and maintained by Collier County. b. Alternative Fiscal Impact Model. If Collier County has not adopted a fiscal impact model as indicated above, the applicant may develop an alternative fiscal impact model using a methodology approved by Collier County. The BCC may grant exceptions to this policy of fiscal neutrality to accommodate affordable or workforce housing. DPFG was retained to prepare an economic assessment for Rivergrass Village (Rivergrass) to demonstrate fiscal neutrality using an Alternative Fiscal Impact Model, as defined by the LDC Section 4.08.07 L.1.b. Although the fiscal impact requirements are specified in the LDC, there remains a considerable amount of flexibility in both the interpretation and application of the law. DPFG measured fiscal neutrality “at the project’s horizon year (buildout 2031)” after a 10-year buildout period (from 2022 to 2031). The overall assessment is underpinned by this fundamental assumption, and DPFG’s analysis is consistent with this assumption throughout the assessment. It is important to recognize that fiscal impact analysis is not a cash flow analysis, and therefore does not include a year-by-year examination of the County’s sources and uses of funds. New development may or may not achieve fiscal neutrality in the early stages of new development. The County must make initial investments to accommodate growth – prior to a compensatory public revenue stream from a new development to fund the necessary infrastructure and services. This lag effect is inherent in any new development plan, but its annualized impacts are beyond the scope of this peer review and are beyond the County’s requirements for fiscal neutrality. There are also inherent limitations of fiscal impact modeling. While we determined that DPFG’s analysis largely fulfills the fiscal impact analysis requirement, the following caveats and shortcomings are noted: • Fiscal impact modeling is static and not dynamic. It is a snapshot in time, and therefore known variables (e.g., the costs of construction, the state of the US economy, the pace and mix of the development plan, etc.) are assumed constant. As such, substantial changes to these variables could render the analysis obsolete. • The cost of future financing is not included in the analysis.2 This factor can add substantially to the overall costs of infrastructure development and thereby could negatively affect any findings of positive or neutral fiscal impacts should financing be employed by the County, the Fire Rescue District, or School District. The County or Districts may employ various funding and financing options to construct such facilities, which are unknown at this time. • Fiscal impact analysis assumes an average and/or marginal cost basis. Compensatory revenues whether in the form of impact fees or ad valorem, sales, or other taxes may over recover (subject to economies of scale) or under recover (subject to dis-economies of scale) actual costs for any given development. • While fiscal impact analysis is intended to measure project-specific revenue and cost drivers, certain obligations are subject to the analyst’s discretion. 2 We note that the cost of financing is included in the County’s impact fees for schools and correctional facilities. 9.A.4 Packet Pg. 182 Attachment: Attachment C-Peer Review -final.pdf 11-20-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) COLLIER COUNTY GMD – PEER REVIEW OF RIVERGRASS VILLAGE ECONOMIC ASSESSMENT FOR FINANCIAL NEUTRALITY JACOBS COLLIERCTY RIVERGRASS PEER REVIEW FINAL 5 The County recognizes and has acknowledged that there is a possibility that the Rivergrass development plan will change, which introduces factors beyond the County’s control, and beyond the constraints of fiscal impact analysis, generally. DPFG’s methodology and assumptions are described in detail in the following sections. Methodology DPFG’s approach to “the fiscal impact analysis of Rivergrass uses a marginal/average cost hybrid methodology to determine the project’s impact on capital and operating costs,”3 which is customary for fiscal analyses. A marginal approach is used to estimate ad valorem tax revenues. To estimate certain marginal costs, DPFG applied the case study approach for the capital analyses of the: • Sheriff Department • Emergency Medical Services (EMS) Department • North Collier Fire & Rescue District • School District The case study approach is based on the analyst’s determination that other standard approaches have material limitations, and as such a case study approach is a more appropriate application for the particular use. DPFG’s approach also included an analysis of the fiscal impacts to the Unincorporated Area General Fund Municipal Service Taxing Unit (MSTU). Overall, Jacobs agrees with the marginal/average cost hybrid approach taken in this analysis, and the case study approach applied to the referenced departments and districts. Key Assumptions Jacobs was provided with DPFG’s Report and their corresponding fiscal analysis Microsoft Excel model (filename: Rivergrass EA 2019.05.31 LOCKED.xlsx). DPFG also spent a significant amount of time answering Jacobs’ questions, providing source documentation, and facilitating our understanding of their methodology and assumptions. Inflation All costs (whether historical or future) were adjusted to reflect year 2018 dollars, unless otherwise noted. Inflation is typically excluded from fiscal neutrality analysis (constant dollar approach), which enables comparisons across years and across projects. 3 DPFG Report, page 8 9.A.4 Packet Pg. 183 Attachment: Attachment C-Peer Review -final.pdf 11-20-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) COLLIER COUNTY GMD – PEER REVIEW OF RIVERGRASS VILLAGE ECONOMIC ASSESSMENT FOR FINANCIAL NEUTRALITY 6 JACOBS COLLIERCTY RIVERGRASS PEER REVIEW FINAL Impact Fees Impact fee calculations utilized the County’s Residential Impact Fee Schedule, effective February 8, 2018 and Commercial Impact Fee Schedule, effective July 24, 2017.4 Taxable Real Estate Values To estimate potential tax revenues, DPFG based taxable values for residential (per unit) and non- residential (per sq. ft.) land uses. Taxable values for residential units were applied as provided by the Applicant. Eligible homestead exemptions were applied based on County averages. Taxable values for non-residential uses were based on R.S. Means construction cost data and/or comparable properties from the County appraiser’s database. Land and Improvement Conversion Factor To calculate the market value per square foot for retail development, the applicable 2019 square foot costs from R.S. Means were multiplied by a construction cost index of 84% to arrive at adjusted square foot costs, which was then divided by a land and improvement conversion factor of 85%. Unlike residential real estate, there is no rule-of-thumb for commercial properties. DPFG indicates this percentage has been applied in other economic assessment models they have prepared. Population “2018 population estimates were used in the EA. The population estimates in the 2017 Annual Update and Inventory Report on Public Facilities (AUIR) were used for consistency with the Hyde Park Village EA as the 2018 AUIR report was not available for that study.”5 Annual Absorption by Use Not applicable. Millage Rates DPFG utilized fiscal year 2018 millage (mil) rates as follows to determine annual ad valorem (property) tax revenues over the forecast period: • 3.5645 County General Fund • 0.8069 MSTD General Fund • 0.0293 Water Pollution Control Mil rates were held constant (i.e., flat). Per capita estimates for various state and other local revenues sources are also based on the County’s 2018 General Fund budget. Direct Full Time Equivalent Jobs (FTEs) DPFG applied a 0.8897602 FTE Conversion Factor to Collier Countywide employment to derive countywide FTEs, based on its 2017 IMPLAN conversion assumptions. The purpose of this calculation is to convert total jobs to FTEs. Per DPFG Principal Lucy Gallo, a difference, if any, using 2018 source data would be immaterial. DPFG provided the industry detail in the Excel file “Collier County IMPLAN Conversion.xls” to support this assumption. 4 Golf Course Bundled impact fees were applied in the economic assessment model. Bundled refers to communities where the golf club membership is included with the home purchase. As such, the bundled impact fees used in the economic assessment are appreciably lower than non-bundled impact fees and are a conservative revenue assumption. 5 DPFG Email Rivergrass Village Economic Assessment Peer Review, dated July 12, 2019. 9.A.4 Packet Pg. 184 Attachment: Attachment C-Peer Review -final.pdf 11-20-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) COLLIER COUNTY GMD – PEER REVIEW OF RIVERGRASS VILLAGE ECONOMIC ASSESSMENT FOR FINANCIAL NEUTRALITY JACOBS COLLIERCTY RIVERGRASS PEER REVIEW FINAL 7 Employment generation for commercial space factors apply per square foot of employment guidelines, realizing that actual employment density may vary by specific project details. • Retail: 400 square feet per employee The Rivergrass employment coefficient was based on the square foot per employee assumptions in the 2016 Collier County EMS Impact Fee study, which was the most recent study available when the DPFG Report was prepared. Home-based employment was not specifically addressed. Rivergrass Population Growth Forecasts DPFG used residents per housing unit data published in the Collier County Emergency Medical Services Impact Fee Update Study, dated October 10, 2016 to estimate residential seasonal population growth due to Rivergrass. The population per unit assumptions utilized were: • Condo, Duplex, or Single-Family Attached: 1.26 • Single Family Detached: 2.65 Vacancy Rates Vacancy rates for determining occupied housing and commercial space assume a stabilized occupancy, consistent with best practices.6 Overall, Jacobs agrees with DPFG’s key assumptions described above. Structure of Funds For the purposes of fiscal impact analysis, three taxing authorities were evaluated: Collier County (through its General Fund), the North Collier Fire & Rescue District, and the Collier County School District (“School District”). Each has separate taxing authority and the Collier County School Board levies its own taxes and receives part of its funding from the State of Florida. The DPFG Report tests the project’s fiscal neutrality for County operating impacts, County capital impacts, Fire operating impacts, Fire capital impacts, Schools operating impacts, and Schools capital impacts. General Fund The General Fund pays for those services benefiting residents and visitors of Collier County. These services include maintenance and operation of the various regional recreational facilities; governmental facilities; social services; animal services; libraries; transportation system and general administrative services. The largest source of revenue for the General Fund is Ad Valorem – or property tax revenue. Municipal Service Taxing Units exist in various locations and are intended to provide extra-ordinary services within a specific district funded by a separate ad valorem property tax. North Collier Fire & Rescue District “Most of the North Collier District’s revenue is generated by property taxes. Each year, the Collier County Property Appraiser establishes the taxable value for property located within the District. The Board of Fire Commissioners establishes the millage (or taxing) rate which, according to the District’s Enabling Act, can be no higher than 1 mil, or $1.00 for every $1,000 of taxable value in the North Naples 6 Planners Estimating Guide: Projecting Land Use and Facility Needs by Arthur C. Nelson, FAICP, Planners Press, American Planning Association, 2004 9.A.4 Packet Pg. 185 Attachment: Attachment C-Peer Review -final.pdf 11-20-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) COLLIER COUNTY GMD – PEER REVIEW OF RIVERGRASS VILLAGE ECONOMIC ASSESSMENT FOR FINANCIAL NEUTRALITY 8 JACOBS COLLIERCTY RIVERGRASS PEER REVIEW FINAL Service Delivery Area or no higher than 3.75, or $3.75 for every $1,000 of taxable value in the Big Corkscrew Island Service Delivery Area. As fire and rescue are labor intensive services, the majority of the District’s expenses are personnel related. In order to sufficiently protect and serve the District’s residents and the billions of dollars of property located within the District, it must maintain highly trained professional firefighters and paramedics and the necessary equipment to handle a myriad of emergency situations.”7 Collier County School District School districts in Florida utilize a State mandated accounting method which separates revenues and expenses into specific funds. Each fund is earmarked for a specified purpose or activity and carries specific requirements, restrictions, or limitations. Accordingly, the School District maintains and reports the following segregated major funds: general, debt service, capital projects, special revenue, and internal service. The General Fund covers the day-to-day operations of the School District and accounts for the majority of operational expenses that are incurred. The Florida Education Finance Program (FEFP) provides equalized per student funding for school districts. This concept guarantees that the availability of educational programs and services will be substantially equal for all students, regardless of geography and/or local economic factors. Funding for the FEFP includes required local effort property taxes that districts must levy, state taxes, and some local discretionary tax mills recommended by the State. For fiscal year 2018, federal sources provided 8.98% of the School District’s total revenue, state sources provided 14.75%, and local sources provided 76.27% of the School District’s total revenue.8 Enterprise Funds Collier County maintains two different types of proprietary funds: enterprise and internal service. Enterprise funds report, with more detail, the same functions presented as business-type activities in the government-wide financial statements for water and sewer, solid waste disposal, emergency medical services, transit, and the airport authority. The Collier County Water and Sewer District Fund, the Solid Waste Disposal Fund, and the Emergency Medical Services Fund are tracked individually as major funds. The County also maintains two other (non-major) enterprise funds: Airport Authority Fund and the Collier Area Transit Fund. “Table 8 and Appendix Table 16 reflect the impact of the annual general fund contributions to Fund 426 CAT Mass Transit and Fund 427 Transportation Disadvantaged, which are enterprise funds. There are no other impacts to consider with respect to transit enterprise funds in the Economic Assessment.”9 Internal service funds are primarily maintained to allocate and accumulate costs internally for Collier County. The County uses internal service funds to account for health insurance, workers compensation insurance, property and casualty insurance, fleet operations, and information technology. Fiscal impacts on County enterprise funds were excluded from DPFG’s analysis. Enterprise funds are inherently fiscally neutral because they are created for a specific purpose and intended to be self- supporting through user rates and fees. 7 https://www.northcollierfire.com/finance/ 8 https://www.collierschools.com/cms/lib/FL01903251/Centricity/domain/86/budget%20dept%20main%20page/Budget%20Summary%20Final% 20FY%2018.pdf 9 DPFG Email Rivergrass Peer Review Response, dated August 6, 2019. 9.A.4 Packet Pg. 186 Attachment: Attachment C-Peer Review -final.pdf 11-20-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) COLLIER COUNTY GMD – PEER REVIEW OF RIVERGRASS VILLAGE ECONOMIC ASSESSMENT FOR FINANCIAL NEUTRALITY JACOBS COLLIERCTY RIVERGRASS PEER REVIEW FINAL 9 Jacobs finds DPFG’s exclusion of enterprise funds to be an acceptable and reasonable approach. Fiscal Impacts Recall that the fiscal impact analysis, at a minimum, “shall consider the following public facilities and services: transportation, potable water, wastewater, irrigation water, stormwater management, solid waste, parks, law enforcement, emergency medical services, fire, and schools,” each of which is reviewed in the following sections. This peer review is presented in order of services listed in the LDC. County Operating Impacts Operating impacts are reflected in DPFG’s analyses of both the General Fund and MSTU General Fund groupings. These analyses cover transportation, parks, law enforcement, EMS, correctional facilities, government buildings, and libraries. Based on the analysis, at buildout, Rivergrass’ annual total general fund operating expenditures are projected at approximately $2,909,000 against revenues of approximately $3,707,000, resulting in a fiscal surplus of $798,000. Rivergrass’ annual total MSTU operating expenditures are projected at approximately $448,000 against revenues of approximately $694,000, resulting in a fiscal surplus of $246,000. Transportation (Roads) Operating Impacts Transportation Services is a special revenue fund within the County’s budget. This fund was established for the maintenance of roads and bridges countywide. The principal funding source for Transportation Services is a subsidy from the General Fund (for fiscal year 2018 the transfer from the General Fund amounted to $21.7 million of Transportation Services’ total funding of $26.0 million). Capital Impacts The County imposes road impact fees on new development to fund the construction of growth-related improvements. Consistent with impact fee statutory requirements, these fees place a fair share of the cost burden on new development for transportation-related expansions and improvements which are necessitated by such development. DPFG treats road impacts from a perspective that the Developer will pay road impact fees according to the number of units (residential) or square footage (non-residential) in the development plan and the corresponding fee schedule established by the County. Using DPFG’s approach, Rivergrass will generate approximately $17.1 million in Road Impact Fee revenues to the County, based on the development parameters and current road impact fee rate table. Transportation capital impacts are based on a Traffic Impact Statement (TIS) associated with the zoning application for the development, in addition to a Fair-Share Mitigation Report prepared by Trebilcock Consulting Solutions, PA. Based on the TIS, the following improvements may be necessary to maintain acceptable LOS: • Oil Well Rd and DeSoto Blvd intersection: add WB left-turn lane median directional; restrict DeSoto Blvd connection into Oil Well Rd to a right-in/right out only access • Oil Well Rd and Immokalee Rd intersection: add NB right-turn lane 9.A.4 Packet Pg. 187 Attachment: Attachment C-Peer Review -final.pdf 11-20-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) COLLIER COUNTY GMD – PEER REVIEW OF RIVERGRASS VILLAGE ECONOMIC ASSESSMENT FOR FINANCIAL NEUTRALITY 10 JACOBS COLLIERCTY RIVERGRASS PEER REVIEW FINAL • Immokalee Rd and Randall Blvd intersection – at grade improvements as illustrated in the FDOT District One, Project Development and Environment (PD&E) study of the intersection of Immokalee Rd at Randall Blvd – Financial Project ID 435368-1-22-01 – Phase 1 • Immokalee Rd and Wilson Blvd intersection – add WB left-turn lane; add NB left-turn lane and restripe to provide a dual left-turn lane and a shared through and right-turn lane; reconfigure SB approach to provide dedicated left-turn lane and a shared through and right-turn lane. Per the Fair-Share Mitigation Report, the Immokalee Rd and Randall Blvd intersection improvements are approved to be funded from the Collier One-Cent Sales Tax revenue and are not included in the fair- share mitigation cost evaluation. Therefore, Rivergrass will make a $440,000 fair-share mitigation contribution to the County, in addition to the Transportation impact fees. Comparing the calculated Road Impact Fee Revenues to the calculated Proportionate Fair Share costs of the project at buildout indicates that Rivergrass’ fair share costs towards area-wide transportation improvements will be fully funded via its road impact fees and fair-share mitigation contribution.10 Jacobs finds DPFG’s determination of fiscal neutrality for transportation (road) impacts to be reasonable, subject to the approval of the companion Developer Agreement. Potable Water and Wastewater Potable water and wastewater services for Rivergrass will be provided by the Collier County Water and Sewer District from existing and planned facilities per a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) that outlines commitments from Collier Land Holdings LTD., CDC Land Investments, LLC, and the Big Cypress Stewardship District. Fiscal impacts on the County, if any, would be on the County Water and Sewer District Fund. Enterprise funds are inherently fiscally neutral because they are created for a specific purpose and intended to be self-supporting through user rates and fees. Recall that enterprise funds were excluded from DPFG’s analysis. It should be noted that there are nuances in the fiscal neutrality determination for water and wastewater. For example, if existing pipe sizes are inadequate and need to be replaced, the extent of such rework could render the development fiscally deficient. However, Jacobs’ review is not intended to analyze to that level of detail. Per Collier County Principal Project Manager – Utilities Expansion, Craig Pajer, Rivergrass’ utilities service will not trigger above-average service delivery costs. “The infrastructure being installed to serve the Rivergrass development and several other potential developments is no different than what has been done in the past to serve an expanding service area. The current construction project is the first phase of establishing regional treatment facilities in the northeast region of the County. When complete, these facilities will serve Rivergrass as well as growing areas currently being served by the North County Regional Water Treatment Plant and the North County Water Reclamation Facility. The northeast treatment facilities will increase the reliability of the existing systems as the population expands. As an additional comment, all user rates are consistent throughout the CCWSD.”11 10 From the Collier County Transportation Impact Fee Update Study – note that the trip length used for the single-family land use (5.88 miles) is based on local studies conducted in 1999. More recent studies conducted in Collier County suggested an average of 7.28 miles, with a range of 3.05 miles to 11.29 miles. 11 Collier County Email RE: Rivergrass Follow Up Items, dated August 19, 2019. 9.A.4 Packet Pg. 188 Attachment: Attachment C-Peer Review -final.pdf 11-20-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) COLLIER COUNTY GMD – PEER REVIEW OF RIVERGRASS VILLAGE ECONOMIC ASSESSMENT FOR FINANCIAL NEUTRALITY JACOBS COLLIERCTY RIVERGRASS PEER REVIEW FINAL 11 Jacobs finds DPFG’s determination of fiscal neutrality for potable water and wastewater public facilities and services to be reasonable, subject to the negotiation of an interlocal agreement between the parties.12 Irrigation Water Residential and Commercial irrigation water services for Rivergrass will be provided by the Collier County Water and Sewer District from existing and planned facilities per an MOU that outlines commitments from Collier Land Holdings LTD., CDC Land Investments, LLC, and the Big Cypress Stewardship District. The proposed change in land use, as a result of the development, will result in a net reduction of irrigation water usage of 75% on a maximum monthly basis and 58% on an average annual basis. As part of their development of water resources to meet both irrigation and potable demands throughout the County service area, the Collier County Water and Sewer District may seek use of some of the residual water supply, available after conversion of agricultural land uses in the Rivergrass Village service area to residential use, for other purposes. Collier County will bear no responsibility for or cost associated with the Rivergrass irrigation system, therefore the fiscal impact to the County is neutral. Impacts associated with the Rivergrass irrigation system should be self-contained within the County Water and Sewer District Enterprise, as described in this review. Jacobs finds DPFG’s determination of irrigation water as fiscally neutral to be reasonable, subject to the negotiation of an interlocal agreement between the parties.13 Stormwater Management Collier County will bear no responsibility for or cost associated with the Rivergrass water management system. “The project’s stormwater management system has received a Conceptual Approval permit from the South Florida Water Management District (#11-03949-P). The criteria used in the preparation of this plan were based on the predevelopment agricultural stormwater management system currently in place. Stormwater discharges from the lands in question are equal or less pre versus post on both a peak rate and total volume perspective. As such, the discharges mimic that of undeveloped lands. Therefore, in the event of a change to the agreement between the County and the Big Cypress Basin concerning the lands to the south of I-75, no impact on any downstream system above and beyond that of undeveloped land would be realized and thus there is no impact on County stormwater facilities caused by the development of this property above and beyond undeveloped land. The County currently maintains no onsite stormwater infrastructure and will not in the future.”14 Jacobs reviewed Environmental Resource Permit (ERP) No. #11-03949-P, which was originally issued for the Rural Lands West development on April 3, 2018. Per Valerie Pike, Project Manager at Collier 12 The MOU “commits the parties to negotiate an interlocal agreement, providing for the timely initiation of water and wastewater services by CCWSD to all of the lands and property within the political boundaries of the District…” 13 The MOU “commits the parties to negotiate an interlocal agreement, providing for the timely initiation of water and wastewater services by CCWSD to all of the lands and property within the political boundaries of the District…” 14 DPFG Report, page 27 9.A.4 Packet Pg. 189 Attachment: Attachment C-Peer Review -final.pdf 11-20-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) COLLIER COUNTY GMD – PEER REVIEW OF RIVERGRASS VILLAGE ECONOMIC ASSESSMENT FOR FINANCIAL NEUTRALITY 12 JACOBS COLLIERCTY RIVERGRASS PEER REVIEW FINAL Enterprises, this conceptual ERP is applicable to Rivergrass as well, as Rivergrass is a subset of the larger parcel. Valerie Pike also indicated that Collier Enterprises is currently preparing a Construct and Operate Permit Application.15 Jacobs finds DPFG’s determination of fiscal neutrality for stormwater management public facilities and services to be reasonable. Solid Waste Solid waste capital and operational costs are accounted for in the County’s Solid Waste Fund, a self- supporting enterprise fund. Enterprise funds are inherently fiscally neutral because they are created for a specific purpose and intended to be self-supporting through user rates and fees. Again, enterprise funds were excluded from DPFG’s analysis. Jacobs finds DPFG’s determination of fiscal neutrality for solid waste facilities and services to be reasonable. Parks Per the County’s 2018 AUIR, the current level of service (LOS) for all county-owned and maintained community and regional parks is a combined 3.15 acres per 1,000 residents. The County’s LOS (per 1,000 residents) by type is compared to DPFG’s assumptions, as follows: • Community parks: achieved 1.47 acres • Community Parks: adopted 1.20 acres • Regional Parks: achieved 1.68 acres • Regional Parks: adopted 2.70 acres It is noted that the DPFG value for Regional Parks achieved of 1.68 acres is based on application of 2018 Peak Seasonal Population to the 2015 adjusted achieved level of service. This compares to an achieved value of 1.82 acres that would be calculated assuming the 2015 Peak Seasonal Population to the 2015 adjusted achieved level of service. Adjusting the achieved level of service for regional parks to reflect 2015 Peak Seasonal Population affects the required number of acres for Regional Parks to 9.32 acres. Capital Impacts The County imposes separate impact fees for community and regional parks. Impact fee revenues of community parks were calculated at $1,817,000 (plus other capital revenues of $29,000) and regional parks were $5,144,000 (plus other capital revenues of $270,000 for a total of $5,414,000). The cost of estimated acreage ($282,573 per acre) required to achieve the County LOS for community parks forms the basis for capital impacts – estimated at $1,737,000. The cost of estimated acreage ($590,288 per acre) required to achieve the County LOS for regional parks forms the basis for capital impacts, which DPFG estimated at $5,089,000. With the proposed adjustment to reflect the 2015 Peak Seasonal Population, the cost of the additional acreage for Regional Parks would amount to $5,503,000. This is in excess of the estimated impact fee and other capital revenues of $5,414,000 by $89,000. 15 DPFG Email FW: Rivergrass Economic Assessment Peer Review, dated July 12, 2019. 9.A.4 Packet Pg. 190 Attachment: Attachment C-Peer Review -final.pdf 11-20-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) COLLIER COUNTY GMD – PEER REVIEW OF RIVERGRASS VILLAGE ECONOMIC ASSESSMENT FOR FINANCIAL NEUTRALITY JACOBS COLLIERCTY RIVERGRASS PEER REVIEW FINAL 13 The 2018 parks cost per acre used in the economic assessment is the same as the 2017 cost per acre used in the Hyde Park Village Economic Assessment. “Both reports reflect the most recent Indexed Impact Fee Costs which are considered representative. Based on recent discussions with Amy Patterson (Impact Fee Director), only minor changes are expected from the Parks Impact Fee study which is currently underway.”16 DPFG’s assumption that regional park acreage costs will reflect average costs is a conservative assumption that increases the cost of inland acreage. If inland acreage costs less, on average, than the blended County average, then capital fiscal surplus for parks would be higher than DPFG’s calculations. Based on conversations with the County, it is understood that developer contribution agreements will ultimately form the basis for balancing between developer dedications, County regional planning requirements, and payment of impact fees. In addition, a portion of the proceeds of a One-Cent Infrastructure Surtax is slated for use to fund the Big Corkscrew Island Regional Park. Based on the adjustment to the 2015 Seasonal Population discussed above, Jacobs finds that the parks will be fiscally neutral, as opposed to DPFG’s determination of parks as fiscally positive. Law Enforcement (Sheriff Department) Per the County’s 2018 AUIR, the County’s current achieved LOS for law enforcement is 1.77 officers per 1,000 peak population, and the adopted LOS is 1.84. Capital Impacts The capital needs for law enforcement were established using the case study approach. The law enforcement impact fee is intended to recover the cost of capital construction and expansion of law enforcement related facilities and assets. DPFG estimated impact fee revenue at $1,219,000 and other capital revenues at $221,000. Based on discussions with Lucy Gallo, law enforcement officials indicated that there is less need for physical stations because patrol vehicles have become mobile offices in which officers can write reports, so there is less of a need to travel to a central station for routine operations. As such, no satellite office is needed to service Rivergrass, at this time. The County currently has a deficiency between the adopted versus achieved LOS for law enforcement infrastructure. This deficiency is not due to the proposed Rivergrass Development and cannot be resolved by this development. Capital costs are included to equip the required number of officers, amounting to a total of $961,000. The estimated revenues exceed the forecasted direct capital costs and result in a fiscal surplus in the amount of $479,000. This surplus will likely be expended on indirect capital costs and future law enforcement infrastructure needs. Therefore, the impact is neutral. Jacobs finds DPFG’s determination of law enforcement as fiscally neutral to be reasonable. Emergency Medical Services Capital Impacts The capital needs for EMS were established using the case study approach. DPFG projects total capital revenues of $296,000. According to EMS management, these capital revenues will be used to partially 16 DPFG Email Rivergrass Village Economic Assessment Peer Review, dated July 12, 2019. 9.A.4 Packet Pg. 191 Attachment: Attachment C-Peer Review -final.pdf 11-20-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) COLLIER COUNTY GMD – PEER REVIEW OF RIVERGRASS VILLAGE ECONOMIC ASSESSMENT FOR FINANCIAL NEUTRALITY 14 JACOBS COLLIERCTY RIVERGRASS PEER REVIEW FINAL fund a new EMS facility planned that would likely serve Rivergrass. The new station will also be funded from the County’s One-Cent Infrastructure surtax, approved in November 2018. The cost of the new facility is $2,117,634, which was obtained from the 2018 AUIR. Rivergrass’ allocated share of the new facility is $264,000, which is less than the capital revenues the project will generate. The remainder will likely be applied to the direct capital costs. Therefore, the impact is neutral. Jacobs finds DPFG’s determination of emergency medical services as fiscally neutral to be reasonable. Fire & Rescue Operating Impacts “Because the current operating millage of the Big Corkscrew Island SDA is geared to much lower density development, Rivergrass is currently projected to generate significant operating surpluses.”17 The millage rate and the projected tax base of Rivergrass results in annual ad valorem revenues of $2,637,000. The annual operating expenses to serve Rivergrass’ population, based on an average of the fire district’s existing stations and population served, are $899,000. Thus, there is a projected operating fiscal surplus. Capital Impacts The capital needs for fire & rescue were established using the case study approach. Rivergrass will generate total capital revenues of $1,400,000 for the North Collier Fire & Rescue District, with matching levels of capital costs. “Based on discussions with Fire & Rescue District personnel, Rivergrass is within 1.6 miles of a planned fire and EMS facility which is already owned by the North Collier Fire Control and Rescue District.”18 “The narrative should have stated that land for the planned facility is already owned by the NCFR District. The facility is yet to be constructed. Table 29 reflects Rivergrass’ proportionate cost of the new facility.”19 Jacobs finds DPFG’s determination of fire & rescue as fiscally neutral to be reasonable. Schools The analysis uses student generation rates (SGRs) as follows: • Condo, Duplex, or Single-Family Attached: 0.11 • Single Family Detached: 0.34 The blended rate over these residential unit types is 0.225, which is comparable to similar blended or weighted SGRs used for other recent Florida developments. Operating Impacts Based on projections of school enrollment by type, as well as the operating revenue and costs impacts, the calculations estimating the fiscal impacts on the County School District indicate that Rivergrass is fiscally neutral. DPFG estimates ad valorem local millage revenues at buildout of $2,803,000, with matching levels of operating expenditures. 17 DPFG Report, page 32 18 DPFG Report, page 31 19 DPFG Email Rivergrass Peer Review Response, dated August 6, 2019. 9.A.4 Packet Pg. 192 Attachment: Attachment C-Peer Review -final.pdf 11-20-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) COLLIER COUNTY GMD – PEER REVIEW OF RIVERGRASS VILLAGE ECONOMIC ASSESSMENT FOR FINANCIAL NEUTRALITY JACOBS COLLIERCTY RIVERGRASS PEER REVIEW FINAL 15 Capital Impacts The capital needs for schools were established using the case study approach. The analysis uses the current impact fee structure defined in the Collier County School Impact Fee Update Study, Final Report, dated July 23, 2015 to determine the appropriate application of the fees, and the revenues derived from fees. The fees are being phased-in in stages per Section 74-307 of the school impact fee ordinance. There are no impact fees levied on non-residential units, as these units do not contribute students to the school system. DPFG uses adopted residential impact fees as of February 8, 2018 as follows: • Condo, Duplex, or Single-Family Attached: $2,844.19 • Single Family Detached: $8,789.54 Revenues to pay for growth related capital expenditures are derived not only from impact fees on residential-only units, but also a capital outlay millage of 1.48 mills on both residential and non- residential units. As a result, the mix of residential and non-residential development will affect the determination of fiscal neutrality. In this case, the revenue from the Rivergrass development program results in a fiscal capital surplus. The Report uses the 2018 Collier County Public Schools Capital Improvement Plan (CIP) to estimate the available school seats in 2022-23. Jacobs reviewed the 2019 Collier County Public Schools CIP. Based on the 2019 CIP, the available elementary seats are not sufficient for Rivergrass. “During the meeting with Collier County Schools on January 17, 2019, they indicated that between available capacity, redistricting opportunities, and existing/planned sites, that there were no additional needs for Rivergrass. They indicated the School District has been very successful in their long-range planning and capital funding strategy. The FY 2020 – FY 2039 CIP confirms this conclusion.”20 Jacobs finds DPFG’s determination of schools as fiscally neutral to be reasonable. Additional Public Services The following additional public services were evaluated by DPFG for fiscal neutrality: correctional facilities, government buildings, and libraries. Jacobs categorizes these service types as additional services because they are not required by the minimum requirements defined in the Collier County LDC. While these additional public services are not required elements of the economic assessment, DPFG did include them in their analysis. Correctional Facilities Capital Impacts The correctional facilities impact fee is intended to recover the cost of capital construction for jail facilities (both land and building) and related equipment. Impact fees are charged based on units for residential and square footage for non-residential. The County’s current LOS was used to calculate the capital costs for correctional facilities. DPFG applied the impact fee study coefficients for population and employment to calculate functional population. This methodology considers demand from commercial land uses. Based on the analysis, there is an estimated fiscal neutrality. DPFG estimates capital revenues of $1,100,000, with matching levels of indirect capital costs. 20 DPFG Email Rivergrass Village Economic Assessment Peer Review, dated July 12, 2019. 9.A.4 Packet Pg. 193 Attachment: Attachment C-Peer Review -final.pdf 11-20-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) COLLIER COUNTY GMD – PEER REVIEW OF RIVERGRASS VILLAGE ECONOMIC ASSESSMENT FOR FINANCIAL NEUTRALITY 16 JACOBS COLLIERCTY RIVERGRASS PEER REVIEW FINAL Government Buildings Capital Impacts The government buildings impact fee is intended to recover the cost of remaining non-enterprise County land, buildings, information technology assets, and vehicles. The impact fees are charged based on units for residential and square footage for non-residential. The County’s current LOS was used to calculate the capital costs for government buildings. DPFG applied the impact fee study coefficients for population and employment to calculate functional population. This methodology considers demand from commercial land uses. Based on the analysis, there is an estimated fiscal neutrality. DPFG estimates capital revenues of $1,972,000 against indirect capital costs of $1,974,000. Libraries Capital Impacts The libraries impact fee is intended to recover the cost of land, buildings, furnishings, and collection materials to serve the entire County. The impact fees are charged based on units for residential and square footage for non-residential. The County’s adopted LOS, per the 2018 AUIR, was used to calculate the capital costs for libraries. Based on the analysis, there is an estimated fiscal surplus of approximately $136,000. Jacobs finds DPFG’s determination of additional public services as fiscally neutral to be reasonable. Conclusions and Recommendations Through this independent analysis and peer review, Jacobs confirms the reasonableness of DPFG’s analysis and in the project’s fiscal neutrality, as defined, but with the noted exceptions. It is our opinion that the Applicant fulfilled the intent of the fiscal neutrality requirement and that the proposed Rivergrass development is fiscally neutral, as defined, for Rivergrass SRA for Collier County, the North Collier Fire & Rescue District, and the Collier County School District. It is important to recognize that fiscal neutrality relies on accurate projections – often 20 years or more into the future. A significant deviation from the development plan will require an adjustment or new analysis to capture changes to this fiscal neutrality determination, which may involve, for example, adjusting the mix of uses or other mechanisms that will impact the future revenue and expense streams. In addition, fiscal impact analysis is only one step in the development program and the County- Developer relationship framework. This fiscal impact analysis will be supplemented and augmented by several developer contribution agreements (DCAs) and/or interlocal agreements. Careful negotiation, execution, and administration of DCAs and/or interlocal agreements is required to ensure that the County continues to achieve its fiscal neutrality objectives. Based upon DPFG’s analysis and this peer review of that analysis, Jacobs concurs that Rivergrass qualifies as fiscally neutral, as defined, with respect to County capital and operating impacts, with the noted exceptions. Pending these changes, the DPFG analysis, which in Jacobs’ opinion is professionally prepared and thorough in its treatment of revenues and expenses, is accurate in its determination that the Rivergrass development would meet the County’s requirements for fiscal neutrality. 9.A.4 Packet Pg. 194 Attachment: Attachment C-Peer Review -final.pdf 11-20-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) APPENDIX A Sources and Assumptions 9.A.4 Packet Pg. 195 Attachment: Attachment C-Peer Review -final.pdf 11-20-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) Assumption/Calculation Source Model Tab Comment Collier County millage rates Collier County County Inputs Checked Road developer contribution requirement cost Trebilcock Consulting Solutions Executive Summary Checked Water, wastewater, and irrigation water services Memorandum of Understanding N/A Checked Stormwater management permit #11-03949-P SFWMD N/A Checked Golf value per square foot Collier County Property Appraiser Golf Checked Fire impact fees Fire Impact Fee Schedule Fire Impact Fee Rev Checked Big Corkscrew Island SDA millage rate Fire Resolution 18-024 Fire Operating Checked Collier fire total expenditures North Collier Fire Budget Fire Operating Checked Functional population Fire Impact Fee Schedule Functional Population Checked Functional population coefficient Fire Impact Fee Study Functional Population Checked School impact fees Collier County Impact Fee Summary Checked School operating millage Collier County School District Budget SCHOOL INPUTS Checked School enrollment 2019 Collier County School District Budget SCHOOL INPUTS Checked Eligible homestead percentage Shimberg Center for Housing Studies County Inputs Checked Collier County impact fee schedule Collier County Impact Fee Schedule Checked School capital improvement millage rate Collier County School District Budget School Capital Rev Checked State revenue sharing Florida Department of Revenue General Fund Rev Demand Units Checked Half cent sales tax revenue Collier County Government Budget General Fund Rev Demand Units Checked Construction cost index RSMeans RS Means Checked Construction costs per square foot RSMeans RS Means Checked Collier county permanent population Collier County AUIR County Inputs Checked Collier countywide employment EMS Impact Fee Study County Inputs Checked FTE conversion IMPLAN County Inputs Checked Collier County peak tourist population Collier County CVB March 2018 County Inputs Checked Collier unincorporated county permanent population Collier County AUIR County Inputs Checked Collier unincorporated county peak population Collier County AUIR County Inputs Checked Unincorporated general fund expenditures Collier County Government Budget General Fund Grouping Matrix Checked County operating budget Collier County Government Budget Operating Budget Recap Checked Peak seasonal persons per unit EMS Impact Fee Study Persons per Unit Checked Employment coefficient EMS Impact Fee Study Development Program Checked Student generation rate (SGR)School Impact Fee Study SCHOOL INPUTS Checked General fund transfers Collier County Government Budget 001 General Fund Transfers Checked CIP sources/uses Collier County Government Budget CIP Capital Outlay Checked Law enforcement level of service Law Enforcement Impact Fee Study Prop Share Law Enforce Capital Checked Law enforcement land and building cost Law Enforcement Impact Fee Study LAW Impact Cost per Res Checked Law enforcement equipment total cost Law Enforcement Impact Fee Study LAW Inventory Checked Law enforcement impact cost Law Enforcement Impact Fee Study LAW Net Impact Cost per FuncRes Checked Correctional facility level of service Correctional Facilities Impact Fee Study CF Impact Cost per Res Checked Correctional facility cost Correctional Facilities Impact Fee Study CF Asset Inventory Checked Correctional facility impact cost Correctional Facilities Impact Fee Study CF Net Impact Cost per Func Res Checked EMS net impact cost EMS Impact Fee Study EMS Net Impact Cost per Res Checked EMS capital costs Collier County AUIR Prop Share EMS Capital Checked Number of owned stations Collier County AUIR EMS Current LOS Checked Library level of service Library Impact Fee Study LIB Current LOS Checked Library cost per square foot Library Impact Fee Study LIB Impact Cost per Res Checked Library unit cost per capita Library Impact Fee Study LIB Impact Cost per Res Checked Library net impact cost Library Impact Fee Study LIB Net Impact Cost Checked Parks cost per acre Parks and Recreation Impact Fee Study Parks Impact per Res Checked Government buildings capital cost Collier County AUIR GOV Impact Cost per Res Checked Government buildings level of service Government Building Impact Fee Study GOV Impact Cost per Res Checked Government buildings net impact cost Government Building Impact Fee Study GOV Net Impact Cost Checked Fire net impact cost Fire Impact Fee Study Fire Impact Fee Rev Checked Fire operating costs North Collier Fire Budget Fire Operating Checked Percentage of students per school type School Impact Fee Study Enrollment by School Type Checked School capacity School Capital Improvement Plan School Inventory Checked School cost per student station School Impact Fee Study Cost per Station Checked School transportation/ancillary cost per student School Impact Fee Study Cost per Station Checked Net impact cost per student School Impact Fee Study Net Cost per Student Checked 9.A.4 Packet Pg. 196 Attachment: Attachment C-Peer Review -final.pdf 11-20-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) Page 1 of 8 /var/folders/8x/7ht745wj4mq7v65k_4dsjczw0000gn/T/com.microsoft.Outlook/Outlook Temp/Public Facilities Report 2019_08-09 - Rivergrass[3].docx RIVERGRASS SRA PUBLIC FACILITIES IMPACT ASSESSMENT 8-9-2019 Solid Waste A solid waste assessment shall be prepared by the applicant as a component of an Impact Assessment Report that is submitted as part of an SRA Designation Application package. The assessment shall identify the means and methods for handling, transporting and disposal of all solid waste generated including but not limited to the collection, handling and disposal of recyclables and horticultural waste products. The applicant shall identify the location and remaining disposal capacity available at the disposal site. Collier County’s contractor hauler, Waste Management Inc. of Florida, will collect solid waste generated within Rivergrass. Recycled materials will be collected from curbside recycling containers through contract haulers. Residential recyclables and horticultural waste will be collected at the curb on a weekly basis. Construction debris will be collected and processed by a local business specializing in the recycling of construction products. Commercial and institutional facilities will utilize dumpster containers for the storage of garbage and rubbish. Recycling containers will be used to store recyclables in the commercial and institutional areas. Solid waste collected within Rivergrass will be hauled to the Immokalee Solid Waste Transfer Station and from there transported to Waste Management’s Okeechobee Landfill. According to Waste Management the Okeechobee Landfill has adequate capacity for the next 25 years. TIF for any reason it is necessary, the Collier County Naples landfill is available and according to the Collier County 2018 Annual Update and Inventory Report, there is also capacity at this facility. Stormwater Management A stormwater management impact assessment shall be prepared by the applicant as a component of an Impact Assessment Report that is submitted as a part of an SRA Designation Application Package. The stormwater management impact assessment shall, at a minimum, provide the following information: a. An exhibit showing the boundary of the proposed SRA including the following information: (1) The location of any WRA delineated within the SRA; No WRA areas are included within the village SRA area. (2) A generalized representation of the existing stormwater flow patterns across the site including the location(s) of discharge from the site to the downstream receiving waters. 9.A.5 Packet Pg. 197 Attachment: Attachment D-Public Facilities Impact Assessment (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) Page 2 of 8 /var/folders/8x/7ht745wj4mq7v65k_4dsjczw0000gn/T/com.microsoft.Outlook/Outlook Temp/Public Facilities Report 2019_08-09 - Rivergrass[3].docx The project’s stormwater management system has received a Conceptual Approval permit from the SFWMD (#11-03949-P). The criteria used in the preparation of this plan was based on the predevelopment agricultural stormwater management system currently in place. Stormwater discharges from the lands in question are equal or less pre versus post on both a peak rate and total volume perspective. As such, the discharges mimic that of undeveloped lands. Therefore, in the event of a change to the agreement between Collier County and the Big Cypress Basin concerning the lands to the south of I-75, no impact on any downstream system above and beyond that of undeveloped land would be realized and thus there is no impact on County stormwater facilities caused by the development of this property above and beyond undeveloped land. Collier County currently maintains no onsite stormwater infrastructure and will not in the future. (3) The land uses of adjoining properties and, if applicable, the locations of stormwater discharge into the site of the proposed SRA from the adjoining properties. No adjacent properties drain through this site. b. A narrative component to the report including the following information: (1) The name of the receiving water or, if applicable, FSA or WRA to which the stormwater discharge from the site will ultimately outfall; The receiving water of the stormwater discharges from Rivergrass is the existing agricultural water management system aka Water Retention Area (WRA), which ultimately discharges to the Merrit Canal via Camp Keais Strand. (2) The peak allowable discharge rate (in cfs/acre) allowed for the SRA per Collier County Ordinance 90-10 or its successor regulation; The peak allowable discharge rate in Collier County applicable to this project based on ord. 90-10 is 0.15 cfs/acre. The proposed surface water management system will be based on the permitted agricultural system currently in place and operational. The peak discharge rate of 0.03 cfs/ac will be used to match that of the agricultural system in an effort to maintain the hydrological regime that has existed for many years on this site. The evaluation of offsite discharge rate shall be made at the outfalls of the agricultural system in accordance with the Conceptual Approval permit (11- 03949-P) issued by SFWMD for this and its surrounding applicant owned property. (3) If applicable, a description of the provisions to be made to accept stormwater flows from surrounding properties into, around, or through the constructed surface water management system of the proposed development; The flowways within this project are natural wetland systems. The capacity that exists prior to development will exist after development and will not be increased nor decreased. No surrounding properties currently flow through the SRA area of this project. The same predevelopment drainage basin boundaries will be maintained by the proposed design. 9.A.5 Packet Pg. 198 Attachment: Attachment D-Public Facilities Impact Assessment (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) Page 3 of 8 /var/folders/8x/7ht745wj4mq7v65k_4dsjczw0000gn/T/com.microsoft.Outlook/Outlook Temp/Public Facilities Report 2019_08-09 - Rivergrass[3].docx (4) The types of stormwater detention areas to be constructed as part of the surface water management system of the proposed development and water quality treatment to be provided prior to discharge of the runoff from the site; and Stormwater water quality treatment within this SRA will be predominantly accomplished by wet detention (lakes) located within the SRA and overlapping into the WRA areas as permitted by SFWMD. Commercial areas will also utilize dry detention pretreatment areas in accordance with SFWMD requirements. Discharges from the SRA water management system to natural WRA areas will occur only after water quality volumes have been achieved and will be by permitted control structures and facilities. Initial phases of development may pump stormwater after treatment consistent with the pre-development drainage of the land. The provided water quality treatment volume of this SRA will be in accordance with the approved SFWMD ERP, inclusive of an additional 50% of water quality to be provided in excess of the calculated base water quality volume for compliance with the interim watershed management plan. Water quantity treatment will occur in both the SRA sited lake system and the WRA areas in concert. (5) If a WRA has been incorporated into the stormwater management system of an SRA, the report shall demonstrate compliance with provisions of Section 4.08.04A.4.b. Several alterations to the WRA areas adjacent to the Village were proposed and approved by SFWMD with the Conceptual Approval Permit. Stormwater management/buffer lakes and their associated containment berms have been permitted in select locations in the existing WRA’s. These modifications were confined to areas of the WRA that exhibited heavy exotic infestation and had little to no habitat function. All of these alterations have mitigation identified in the permit which will be made upon implementation of the impact. The water management concept for Rivergrass involves the use of the existing agricultural water management system. The proposed system design will use permitted control elevations, discharge rates and discharge locations. The plan as proposed has received a Conceptual Approval Permit issued by SFWMD. All discharges to the WRA (wetland) areas from development will be made only after water quality volumes have been provided in the development area. Areas of the WRA will be excavated to form parts of the internal buffer lake system. Areas to be excavated are low quality exotic impacted areas and will be mitigated for through the SFWMD process. The only fill areas within WRA’s will be berms associated with the surface water management system. which will be mitigated through the SFWMD process. No impacts are proposed to Camp Keais Strand by this project. Potable Water A potable water assessment shall be prepared by the applicant as a component of an Impact assessment Report that is submitted as part of an SRA Designation Application package. The assessment shall illustrate how the applicant will conform to either Florida Administrative Code for private and limited use water systems, or for Public Water Systems. In addition to the standard requirements of the analyses required above, the potable water assessment shall specifically consider, to the extent applicable, the disposal of waste products, if any, generated 9.A.5 Packet Pg. 199 Attachment: Attachment D-Public Facilities Impact Assessment (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) Page 4 of 8 /var/folders/8x/7ht745wj4mq7v65k_4dsjczw0000gn/T/com.microsoft.Outlook/Outlook Temp/Public Facilities Report 2019_08-09 - Rivergrass[3].docx by the proposed treatment process. The applicant shall identify the sources of water proposed for potable water supply. The following table is a calculation of the Rivergrass potable water demands and wastewater generation with all factors and assumptions: Rivergrass Water and Wastewater Demands Wastewater Potable Water Wastewater to water conversion = 1.4 Residential 2,500 DU @ 250 gpd = 625,000 gpd 2,500 DU @ 350 gpd = 875,000 gpd Commercial 105,000 sf @ 0.15 gpd = 15,750 gpd 105,000 sf @ 0.21 gpd = 22,050 gpd Golf 536 members @ 25 gpd = 13,400 gpd 536 members @ 35 gpd = 18,760 gpd 42 employees @ 15 gpd = 630 gpd 42 employees @ 21 gpd = 882 gpd 669,030 gpd 936,642 gpd 654,780 gpd = 0.66 mgd ADF 916,692 gpd = 0.92 mgd ADF M3D Factor = 1.5 M3D Factor = 1.3 M3D Flow = 0.98 mgd M3D Flow = 1.19 mgd Potable water services for the Rivergrass project will be provided by the Collier County Water and Sewer District from existing and planned facilities per a Memorandum of Understanding that outlines commitments from Collier Land Holdings, Ltd. and CDC Land Investments, LLC and the Big Cypress Stewardship District. The estimated potable water demand for residential development at the project is based on 350 gpd per D.U. (residential), and 2,500 residences. Potable water demand for commercial development is based on 21 gpd per 100 feet square or 0.21 gpd/sf. Potable water demand for golf is based on 35 gpd per member and an additional 21 gpd per employee. Using these assumptions, potable water demand for the Rivergrass development at buildout is projected to be approximately 0.92 MGD average daily demand and 1.19 MGD maximum 3-day demand. 9.A.5 Packet Pg. 200 Attachment: Attachment D-Public Facilities Impact Assessment (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) Page 5 of 8 /var/folders/8x/7ht745wj4mq7v65k_4dsjczw0000gn/T/com.microsoft.Outlook/Outlook Temp/Public Facilities Report 2019_08-09 - Rivergrass[3].docx Irrigation Water Residential and Commercial irrigation water services for the Rivergrass project will be provided by the Collier County Water and Sewer District from existing and planned facilities per a Memorandum of Understanding that outlines commitments from Collier Land Holdings, Ltd. and CDC Land Investments, LLC and the Big Cypress Stewardship District. This is shown in the following table: Land Use Acreage % Irrigated Irrigated Acreage % Total Category Onsite Source Neighborhood 421 40 168 45 Residential ROW 111 25 28 7 Residential Golf Course 148 95 141 38 Commercial X Golf Club 6 40 2 1 Commercial X Lakes 219 0 0 0 N/A Open Space 62 40 25 7 Commercial Village Center 19 25 5 1 Commercial Buffers 13 25 3 1 Residential 999 372 Rivergrass will require irrigation for approximately 372 acres. The golf course will be irrigated from onsite sources. The projected irrigation demands for the Rivergrass project are 0.8 MGD for golf and 1.3 MGD for other on a maximum monthly basis and 0.5 MGD for golf and 0.9 MGD for other on an annual average basis. The project site has a long history of permitted agricultural withdrawals from the Lower Tamiami Aquifers that has not resulted in adverse impacts to natural environments. The agricultural water use allocations currently permitted and used within the Rivergrass area that will be absorbed through the transition from agriculture to residential and commercial land use are approximately 8.8 MGD on a maximum monthly basis and 3.3 MGD on an annual average basis. Therefore, the proposed change in land use will result in a net reduction of irrigation water usage of 75% on a maximum monthly basis and 58% on an average annual basis. As part of their development of water resources to meet both irrigation and potable demands throughout the County service area, the Collier County Water and Sewer District may seek use of some of the residual water supply that may remain on the Rivergrass parcels upon conversion of agricultural land uses. Wastewater A wastewater assessment shall be prepared by the applicant as a component of an Impact Assessment Report that is submitted as part of an SRA Designation Application package. The assessment shall illustrate how the applicant will conform to either Standards for Onsite Sewage Treatment and Disposal Systems, contained in Florida Administrative Code for systems having a capacity not exceeding 10,000 gallons per day or for wastewater treatment systems having a capacity greater than 10,000 gallons per day. In addition to the standard requirements of the 9.A.5 Packet Pg. 201 Attachment: Attachment D-Public Facilities Impact Assessment (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) Page 6 of 8 /var/folders/8x/7ht745wj4mq7v65k_4dsjczw0000gn/T/com.microsoft.Outlook/Outlook Temp/Public Facilities Report 2019_08-09 - Rivergrass[3].docx analyses required above, the wastewater assessment shall specifically consider, to the extent applicable, the disposal of waste products generated by the proposed treatment process. Wastewater services for the Rivergrass project will be provided by the Collier County Water and Sewer District from existing and planned facilities per a Memorandum of Understanding that outlines commitments from Collier Land Holdings, Ltd. and CDC Land Investments, LLC and the Big Cypress Stewardship District. Anticipated wastewater generated by the development is based on a per capita daily volume of 250 gpd per D.U. for 2,500 residences. Wastewater demand for amenities is based on 25 gpd per member and an additional 15 gpd per employee. Wastewater demand for golf is based on 25 gpd per member and an additional 15 gpd per employee. This results in build out wastewater flows of 0.66 MGD on an average daily basis and 0.98 MGD on a maximum 3-day basis. School Concurrency The adopted level of service for schools is based upon permanent FISH capacity: 100% for high school Concurrency Service Areas (CSAs); 95% for elementary CSAs; and 95% for middle school CSAs. The subject site is within the E10 North Central Area CSA for elementary schools, the M3 North Central Area CSA for middle schools, and the H3 North Central Area CSA for high schools. The FISH capacity and enrollment data below is per the Collier County Public Schools Capital Improvement Plan, for fiscal years 2019 through 2038. The E10 CSA includes two elementary schools, Corkscrew and Estates. They have a combined FISH capacity of 1,499 students, a 2017/2018 peak enrollment of 1,220 students, and a projected 2022/2023 enrollment of 1,195 students (80% capacity). The M3 CSA includes three middle schools, Corkscrew, Golden Gate, and Cypress Palm. They have a combined FISH capacity of 3,219 students, a 2017/2018 peak enrollment of 2,606 students, and a projected 2022/2023 enrollment of 2,537 students (79% capacity). The H3 CSA includes two high schools, Golden Gate and Palmetto Ridge. They have a combined FISH capacity of 3,995 students, a 2017/2018 peak enrollment of 3,822 students, and a projected 2022/2023 enrollment of 3,995 (100% capacity). According to the Collier County Public Schools CIP, enrollment at Golden Gate and Palmetto Ridge is being monitored. The proposed development consists of up to 2,500 dwelling units, broken down by type in the table below, in accordance with Collier County Impact Fee Ordinance(s) methodology and terminology and applying the student generation rates established in the 2015 Collier County School Impact Fee Study, the project is anticipated to generate 600 new students at build out. 9.A.5 Packet Pg. 202 Attachment: Attachment D-Public Facilities Impact Assessment (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) Page 7 of 8 /var/folders/8x/7ht745wj4mq7v65k_4dsjczw0000gn/T/com.microsoft.Outlook/Outlook Temp/Public Facilities Report 2019_08-09 - Rivergrass[3].docx As the total projected number of students will be distributed between the E10, M3, and H3 CSAs, the proposed development will not generate enough students to cause a substantial change in the level of service. The proposed SRA will result in a permanent population of approximately 4,269 people. We have contacted the Collier County School District staff (Amy Lockhart and Tom Eastman) and received an email (dated May 14, 2019 and attached to his Report) from Tom Eastman indicating the following: “At this time, there is existing or planned capacity within the next 5 years for the purposed development at the elementary, middle and high school levels. Therefore, there are no requirements from the applicant. At the time of site plan or plat, the development would be reviewed to ensure there is capacity either within the concurrency service area the development is located within or adjacent concurrency service areas.” Fire and EMS The subject site is located within the North Collier Fire Control and Rescue District. Fire station # 10 (with Collier County EMS) is located at 13240 Immokalee Road, approximately 6.2 miles west of the property. Additionally, based on discussions with North Collier Fire Control and Rescue District personnel, Rivergrass is within 1.6 miles of a planned fire and EMS facility which is already owned by the North Collier Fire Control and Rescue District. The location of this planned fire and EMS facility, as described in the Economic Assessment, was discussed in live meetings with the North Collier Fire Control and Rescue District on January 16, 2019 and April 8, 2019, and in a conference call on March 20, 2019. Chief Ricardo’s approval of the fiscal analysis and related narrative, which has been included in the resubmittal of the Economic Assessment, is shown below. 9.A.5 Packet Pg. 203 Attachment: Attachment D-Public Facilities Impact Assessment (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) Page 8 of 8 /var/folders/8x/7ht745wj4mq7v65k_4dsjczw0000gn/T/com.microsoft.Outlook/Outlook Temp/Public Facilities Report 2019_08-09 - Rivergrass[3].docx No three- or four-story condominium buildings will be constructed in Rivergrass unless and until the North Collier Fire Control and Rescue District agrees in writing to allow structures greater than two stories. Additionally, please see requested maps depicting the subject site and existing North Collier Fire Control and Rescue District and Collier County EMS stations, which illustrates travel routes from those locations to the subject site. Response time data, requested by staff, has been provided by North Collier Fire Control and Rescue District, and is included with this Report. Transportation Impacts See attached the attached Traffic Analysis for transportation impacts. 9.A.5 Packet Pg. 204 Attachment: Attachment D-Public Facilities Impact Assessment (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) Page 1 of 2 C:\Users\BobMulhere\AppData\Local\Microsoft\Windows\INetCache\Content.Outlook\5EG8Z8W1\NIM Summary (6-10-2019)rjm.docx NIM SUMMARY Rivergrass Village SRA (PL-20190000044) Thursday, June 6, 2019 at 5:30 p.m. Collier County UF/IFAS Extension 14700 Immokalee Road, Multi-Purpose Room, Naples, FL 34120 The NIM was held for the above referenced petition. The petition is described as follows: 1) To establish a Stewardship Receiving Area (SRA) in the form of a Village consisting of 999.969± acres of land located in eastern Collier County, in Sections 10, 14, 15, 22, 23, and 27, Township 48 South, and Range 25 East. The SRA is to be known as Rivergrass Village. Rivergrass Village is proposed to allow up to 2,500 dwelling units, of which a maximum of 250 dwelling units will be multi-family; a minimum of 62,500 square feet and a maximum of 80,000 square feet of neighborhood scaled retail and office use; and a minimum of 25,000 square feet of civic, government, and institutional uses; and, one 18-hole golf course. Note: This is a summary of the NIM. An audio recording is also provided. A video recording can also be provided upon request. Attendees: On behalf of Applicants: Patrick Utter, Vice President, Collier Enterprises Management, Inc. Valerie Pike, Project Manager, Collier Enterprises Management, Inc. Robert Mulhere, FAICP, VP Planning, Hole Montes, Inc. Richard Yovanovich, Esq., Coleman, Yovanovich & Koester, P.A. County Staff: Nancy Gundlach, AICP, RLA, Principal Planner, Zoning Services Section Approximately 15 members of the public attended. Mr. Mulhere started the presentation by introducing himself, the other consultants, and County Staff. He explained the NIM process, the process for approval, provided a brief history of the Rural Lands Stewardship Area (RLSA) program, and an overview of the project. Following Mr. Mulhere’s presentation, there was approximately twenty minutes of questions from the public in attendance. The members of the public who attended identified themselves (primarily) as residents of the Estates. April Olson, a Senior Environmental Planning Specialist from the Conservancy of Southwest Florida, also attended. The following issues were raised: Timing Questions were asked regarding the timing of the project. Mr. Mulhere explained that once County Staff finds the application sufficient, the project will need to go through the public hearing process. Mr. Mulhere estimated that the process will be complete by the end of the year. Mr. Utter explained that there is still environmental permitting required and estimated construction may begin in a year. Mrs. Olson asked if the proposed development was a phase of a larger plan for the area. The applicant is considering additional phases for the area, but there is no additional information at this time. 9.A.6 Packet Pg. 205 Attachment: Attachment E-NIM Summary (6-10-2019)rjm (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) Page 2 of 2 C:\Users\BobMulhere\AppData\Local\Microsoft\Windows\INetCache\Content.Outlook\5EG8Z8W1\NIM Summary (6-10-2019)rjm.docx Environmental Questions were raised regarding panther habitat. This will be analyzed during the permitting process and applicable mitigation, if any, will be determined. Additional questions were asked regarding wetlands. There will be a mitigation plan for wetlands within the project, as they are impacted with exotics. Wetlands and significant habitat area will be also preserved offsite via Sending Lands, per RLSA requirements. The meeting concluded at approximately 6:00 PM. 9.A.6 Packet Pg. 206 Attachment: Attachment E-NIM Summary (6-10-2019)rjm (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.8 Packet Pg. 207 Attachment: Attachment F-Letters of Objection (flat) 11-8-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.8 Packet Pg. 208 Attachment: Attachment F-Letters of Objection (flat) 11-8-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.8 Packet Pg. 209 Attachment: Attachment F-Letters of Objection (flat) 11-8-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.8 Packet Pg. 210 Attachment: Attachment F-Letters of Objection (flat) 11-8-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.8 Packet Pg. 211 Attachment: Attachment F-Letters of Objection (flat) 11-8-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.8 Packet Pg. 212 Attachment: Attachment F-Letters of Objection (flat) 11-8-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.8 Packet Pg. 213 Attachment: Attachment F-Letters of Objection (flat) 11-8-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.8 Packet Pg. 214 Attachment: Attachment F-Letters of Objection (flat) 11-8-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.8 Packet Pg. 215 Attachment: Attachment F-Letters of Objection (flat) 11-8-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.8 Packet Pg. 216 Attachment: Attachment F-Letters of Objection (flat) 11-8-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.8 Packet Pg. 217 Attachment: Attachment F-Letters of Objection (flat) 11-8-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.8 Packet Pg. 218 Attachment: Attachment F-Letters of Objection (flat) 11-8-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.8 Packet Pg. 219 Attachment: Attachment F-Letters of Objection (flat) 11-8-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.8 Packet Pg. 220 Attachment: Attachment F-Letters of Objection (flat) 11-8-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.8 Packet Pg. 221 Attachment: Attachment F-Letters of Objection (flat) 11-8-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.8 Packet Pg. 222 Attachment: Attachment F-Letters of Objection (flat) 11-8-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.8 Packet Pg. 223 Attachment: Attachment F-Letters of Objection (flat) 11-8-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.8 Packet Pg. 224 Attachment: Attachment F-Letters of Objection (flat) 11-8-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.8 Packet Pg. 225 Attachment: Attachment F-Letters of Objection (flat) 11-8-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.8 Packet Pg. 226 Attachment: Attachment F-Letters of Objection (flat) 11-8-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.8 Packet Pg. 227 Attachment: Attachment F-Letters of Objection (flat) 11-8-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.8 Packet Pg. 228 Attachment: Attachment F-Letters of Objection (flat) 11-8-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.8 Packet Pg. 229 Attachment: Attachment F-Letters of Objection (flat) 11-8-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.8 Packet Pg. 230 Attachment: Attachment F-Letters of Objection (flat) 11-8-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.8 Packet Pg. 231 Attachment: Attachment F-Letters of Objection (flat) 11-8-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.8 Packet Pg. 232 Attachment: Attachment F-Letters of Objection (flat) 11-8-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.8 Packet Pg. 233 Attachment: Attachment F-Letters of Objection (flat) 11-8-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.8 Packet Pg. 234 Attachment: Attachment F-Letters of Objection (flat) 11-8-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.8 Packet Pg. 235 Attachment: Attachment F-Letters of Objection (flat) 11-8-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) Project No. 05CEM1481 RIVERGRASS SRA NATURAL RESOURCE INDEX ASSESSMENT May October 2019 Prepared For: Collier Enterprises Management, Inc. 2550 Goodlette Road North, Suite 100 Naples, Florida 34103 (239) 261-4455 Prepared By: Passarella &Associates,Inc. 13620 Metropolis Avenue, Suite 200 Fort Myers, Florida 33912 (239) 274-0067 9.A.8 Packet Pg. 236 Attachment: Attachment F-Letters of Objection (flat) 11-8-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) i TABLE OF CONTENTS Page 1.0 Introduction .....................................................................................................................1 2.0 WRA Delineation............................................................................................................1 3.0 Verification of NRI Values .............................................................................................2 9.A.8 Packet Pg. 237 Attachment: Attachment F-Letters of Objection (flat) 11-8-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) ii LIST OF EXHIBITS Page Exhibit 1.Project Location Map........................................................................................E-1 Exhibit 2.Aerial with Boundary........................................................................................E-2 Exhibit 3.Aerial with Stewardship Overlay ......................................................................E-3 Exhibit 4.Aerial with FLUCFCS and Wetlands Map .......................................................E-4 Exhibit 5.Documented Listed Species Locations (2007-20098,2014-2016,and 2019 Surveys)...................................................E-5 Exhibit 6.Soils Map ..........................................................................................................E-6 Exhibit 7.NRI Assessment ................................................................................................E-7 Exhibit 8.SRA Natural Resource Index Values ................................................................E-8 9.A.8 Packet Pg. 238 Attachment: Attachment F-Letters of Objection (flat) 11-8-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 1 1.0 INTRODUCTION This Natural Resource Index (NRI)Assessment Report (Assessment) documents the environmental conditions and NRI scores within Rivergrass and demonstrates that Rivergrass meets the Suitability Criteria contained in Section 4.08.07.A.1 of the adopted Collier County Land Development Code (LDC) amendments. This Assessment is submitted in support of the Rural Lands Stewardship Area (RLSA)Overlay District-Stewardship Receiving Area (SRA) Designation Application on behalf of Collier Enterprises Management, Inc. This Assessment is consistent with the requirements of the RLSA Zoning Overlay District, LDC, Section 4.08.00. This NRI Assessment includes the following: A summary analysis and verification of the NRI scores. Refined and updated land cover mapping of the SRA along with listed species survey data. Identification of the acreage of lands, by type, within the SRA that have an NRI value greater than 1.2. Identification of the acreage of lands, by type, included within the SRA. Demonstrates compliance with the Suitability Criteria contained in Section 4.08.07.A.1. This SRA Designation Application involves the designation of 999.97.5±acres as Rivergrass located in Sections 10,14,15, 22, 23,and 27;Township 48 South;Range 28 East;Collier County (Exhibit 1). The location and extent of Rivergrass is indicated on Exhibit 2. Rivergrass is located within lands designated as “Open” on the adopted RLSA Stewardship Map and does not encroach into any Flow-way Stewardship Area (FSA), Habitat Stewardship Area (HSA) lands, or Water Retention Area (WRA) as illustrated in Exhibit 3.Rivergrass is not within the Area of Critical State Concern (ACSC). The subject property is currently dedicated to agricultural activities (i.e., row crops and improved pasture) and includes widely scattered lands comprised of exotic vegetation (i.e., Brazilian pepper (Schinus terebinthifolia),non-forested wetlands, non-forested uplands, and forested wetlands),all of which exhibit a high degree of disturbance. There are few undisturbed native vegetation areas present within Rivergrass. Listed species data from state and federal wildlife agencies indicate occurrences of panther telemetry points, wading bird rookeries, or other listed species occurrences within the SRA. 2.0 WRA DELINEATION WRA boundaries taken from the Collier County Stewardship Overlay Map were produced from digitizing South Florida Water Management District (SFWMD)permit boundaries on aerial photography base at scales suitable for comprehensive planning. Detailed analysis of these areas was conducted on the ground, using actual surveyed wetland and permit boundaries.The 9.A.8 Packet Pg. 239 Attachment: Attachment F-Letters of Objection (flat) 11-8-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 2 Stewardship Overlay digitized WRA boundaries were refined with the actual groundtruthed data. The Rivergrass SRA boundary was created so that no WRA areas were included. Exhibit 3 illustrates the refined Stewardship Overlay within the SRA boundary. 3.0 VERIFICATION OF NRI VALUES This NRI Assessment includes documentation that refines the NRI values that were assigned during the original Collier County RLSA Assessment Study. Of the six NRI Factors on the Stewardship Credit Worksheet,only two factors (i.e.,Land Use-Land Cover and Listed Species Habitat)are prone to change over time or require mapping refinements. Both NRI factors have been updated for this application. While the Land Use-Land Cover mapping from the Stage 1 Report was generally accurate at the regional/planning scale, groundtruthing by Passarella &Associates,Inc.(PAI)in 2015 revealed some positional and classification errors which are rectified in this application. The updated Florida Land Use, Cover and Forms Classification System (FLUCFCS)mapping for the Rivergrass SRA is presented in Exhibit 4. This application also updates the Listed Species Habitat Index mapping for the SRA.Listed species surveys were conducted by PAI in 2007 through 2008,2014 through 2016,and 2019; and the current listed species occurrence data and Florida panther (Puma concolor coryi) telemetry were obtained from the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission website. A map of the updated listed species occurrences, listed species records,and Florida panther telemetry points is provided as Exhibit 5. A 2018 aerial of the SRA is provided as Exhibit 2.The U.S.Department of Agriculture-Natural Resources Conservation Services (USDA-NRCS) soils map for Rivergrass is provided in Exhibit 6. The NRI Assessment scores are presented graphically in Exhibit 7 and Exhibit 8 is a table format of the SRA values.The assessment demonstrates that no lands within the Rivergrass SRA carry a NRI value greater than 1.2. 9.A.8 Packet Pg. 240 Attachment: Attachment F-Letters of Objection (flat) 11-8-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) EXHIBIT 1 PROJECT LOCATION MAP 9.A.8 Packet Pg. 241 Attachment: Attachment F-Letters of Objection (flat) 11-8-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) EXHIBIT 2 AERIAL WITH BOUNDARY 9.A.8 Packet Pg. 242 Attachment: Attachment F-Letters of Objection (flat) 11-8-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) EXHIBIT 3 AERIAL WITH STEWARDSHIP OVERLAY 9.A.8 Packet Pg. 243 Attachment: Attachment F-Letters of Objection (flat) 11-8-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) EXHIBIT 4 AERIAL WITH FLUCFCS AND WETLANDS MAP 9.A.8 Packet Pg. 244 Attachment: Attachment F-Letters of Objection (flat) 11-8-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) EXHIBIT 5 DOCUMENTED LISTED SPECIES LOCATIONS (2007-20098,2014-2016,and 2019 SURVEYS) 9.A.8 Packet Pg. 245 Attachment: Attachment F-Letters of Objection (flat) 11-8-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) EXHIBIT 6 SOILS MAP 9.A.8 Packet Pg. 246 Attachment: Attachment F-Letters of Objection (flat) 11-8-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) EXHIBIT 7 NRI ASSESSMENT 9.A.8 Packet Pg. 247 Attachment: Attachment F-Letters of Objection (flat) 11-8-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) EXHIBIT 8 SRA NATURAL RESOURCE INDEX VALUES 9.A.8 Packet Pg. 248 Attachment: Attachment F-Letters of Objection (flat) 11-8-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.9Packet Pg. 249Attachment: Reasons for Vote of Planning Commissioner Edwin S. Fryer against Rivergrass Application (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass 9.A.9Packet Pg. 250Attachment: Reasons for Vote of Planning Commissioner Edwin S. Fryer against Rivergrass Application (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass CR 858 EVERGLADES BLVDIMMOKALEE RDIMMOKALEE RD E GOLDEN GATE BLVD W 0 6,0003,000 Feet - RLSA Villages Location Map Legend Immokalee Road Rural Village HYDE PARK SRA BELLMAR LONGWATER RIVERGRASS 9.A.10 Packet Pg. 251 Attachment: 10-RLSA Villages Map-092419 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.12Packet Pg. 252Attachment: 10.17.19 CCPC minutes - approved (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.12Packet Pg. 253Attachment: 10.17.19 CCPC minutes - approved (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.12Packet Pg. 254Attachment: 10.17.19 CCPC minutes - approved (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.12Packet Pg. 255Attachment: 10.17.19 CCPC minutes - approved (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.12Packet Pg. 256Attachment: 10.17.19 CCPC minutes - approved (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.12Packet Pg. 257Attachment: 10.17.19 CCPC minutes - approved (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.12Packet Pg. 258Attachment: 10.17.19 CCPC minutes - 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approved (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.12Packet Pg. 358Attachment: 10.17.19 CCPC minutes - approved (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.12Packet Pg. 359Attachment: 10.17.19 CCPC minutes - approved (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.12Packet Pg. 360Attachment: 10.17.19 CCPC minutes - approved (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.12Packet Pg. 361Attachment: 10.17.19 CCPC minutes - approved (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.12Packet Pg. 362Attachment: 10.17.19 CCPC minutes - approved (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) November 7, 2019 Page 1 of 55 TRANSCRIPT OF THE MEETING OF THE COLLIER COUNTY PLANNING COMMISSION Naples, Florida, November 7, 2019 LET IT BE REMEMBERED, that the Collier County Planning Commission, in and for the County of Collier, having conducted business herein, met on this date at 9:00 a.m., in REGULAR SESSION in Building "F" of the Government Complex, East Naples, Florida, with the following members present: Mark Strain, Chairman Karen Homiak, Vice Chair Edwin Fryer, Secretary Patrick Dearborn Karl Fry Stan Chrzanowski, Environmental Tom Eastman, Collier County School Board ABSENT: Joe Schmitt, Environmental ALSO PRESENT: Raymond V. Bellows, Zoning Manager Nancy Gundlach, Principal Planner Jeremy Frantz, LDC Manager Jeffrey Klatzkow, County Attorney Heidi Ashton-Cicko, Managing Assistant County Attorney 3.B.1 Packet Pg. 88 Attachment: 11-7-2019 CCPC Minutes (10959 : November 7, 2019 CCPC minutes)9.A.13 Packet Pg. 363 Attachment: 11.7.19 CCPC Minutes - draft (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) November 7, 2019 Page 2 of 55 P R O C E E D I N G S CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Good morning, everyone. Welcome to the November 7th of the Collier County Planning Commission. If everybody will please rise for Pledge of Allegiance. (The Pledge of Allegiance was recited in unison.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Will the secretary please do the roll call. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Yes, sir. Mr. Eastman? MR. EASTMAN: Here. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Mr. Chrzanowski? COMMISSIONER CHRZANOWSKI: Here. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Mr. Fry? COMMISSIONER FRY: Here. COMMISSIONER FRYER: I'm here. Chairman Strain? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Here. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Vice Chair Homiak? COMMISSIONER HOMIAK: Here. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Mr. Schmitt? (No response.) COMMISSIONER FRYER: Mr. Dearborn? COMMISSIONER DEARBORN: Present. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Mr. Chairman, we have a quorum of six. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Mr. Schmitt notified us he had an excused absence today for another commitment. Addenda to the agenda. We have four items on today's agenda, but two of them have been requested to be continued. So I'll ask for a motion to continue the following two. It's 9A2, and I'll read it. It's PL20170002897/CPSS-2018-3. It's the Oil Well Road community facilities subdistrict, and the second one that was being continued, both of them to the December 5th date, is PL20180002368, and it's a parking exemption located on the east side of Tamiami Trail North south of River Court. So with those two, is there a motion to continue those to December 5th? COMMISSIONER DEARBORN: So moved. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Seconded. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: By Patrick, seconded by Ned. Discussion? (No response.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: All in favor, signify by saying aye. COMMISSIONER CHRZANOWSKI: Aye. COMMISSIONER FRY: Aye. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Aye. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Aye. COMMISSIONER HOMIAK: Aye. COMMISSIONER DEARBORN: Aye. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Anybody opposed? (No response.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Motion carries 6-0. That takes us to Planning Commission absences. The next meeting is on November 21st, and unless we don't finish something today, November 21st, I think, has one regular item and several LDC amendments. That may change, but that's the best I can recall right now. 3.B.1 Packet Pg. 89 Attachment: 11-7-2019 CCPC Minutes (10959 : November 7, 2019 CCPC minutes)9.A.13 Packet Pg. 364 Attachment: 11.7.19 CCPC Minutes - draft (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) November 7, 2019 Page 3 of 55 So, anyways, does anybody know if they're not going to be here on November 21st? Okay. We'll have a quorum. We're good for that day. Approval of minutes on October 17th. Is there a motion to either -- is there -- anybody have any changes to the minutes? If not, is there a motion to approve? COMMISSIONER DEARBORN: So moved. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Second. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Made by Patrick, seconded by Ned. All in favor, signify by saying aye. COMMISSIONER CHRZANOWSKI: Aye. COMMISSIONER FRY: Aye. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Aye. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Aye. COMMISSIONER HOMIAK: Aye. COMMISSIONER DEARBORN: Aye. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Anybody opposed? (No response.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Motion carries 6-0. Ray, BCC reports. MR. BELLOWS: There has not been a Board of County Commissioners meeting since last Thursday. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. That's quick. I have no chairman's report. There's no consent-agenda items. We'll move right into the first public hearing. ***It's a continuation. It's 9A1. It's PL20190000044. It's the Rivergrass Village Stewardship Receiving Area. It's been continued from September 19th, October 3rd, and October 17th to today. All those wishing to testify on behalf of this item, please rise to be sworn in by the court reporter. (The speakers were duly sworn and indicated in the affirmative.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Disclosures since the last time, or if it's just the same as last time, that's fine, too. Tom. MR. EASTMAN: Same as last time. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Stan? COMMISSIONER CHRZANOWSKI: Kind of a comment. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Sure. COMMISSIONER CHRZANOWSKI: When I worked at the county, we had a process called an insubstantial change. And if they sent one change sheet out of 30, and I got all 30 sheets, I felt obliged to read all 30 sheets to look if anybody had changed anything that wasn't shown on that. When I get a -- I have 3,000-something pages to look at today. I'm not going to do that, okay? Yeah, you laugh. It's not funny. I would prefer just to receive the changed sheets from now on; is that possible? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Stan, like you, I can't keep rereading all those pages, so I'm still working off the first set of documents that was sent out. And I expect as we walk through those documents, we'll be told of any corrections -- questions we raise. So that's been working for a while. I don't know how to do what you're asking and still give us all the information that we need to have because some of us may want to see it in context and not just the changes. Is that -- so you're just asking -- COMMISSIONER CHRZANOWSKI: You have the original that you got. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, then you've got to open up two documents on your screen and compare them page by page and walk through. That will actually take longer than probably rereading the whole document, honestly, at least it would from -- COMMISSIONER CHRZANOWSKI: Okay. I don't care. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Do you have any disclosures? COMMISSIONER CHRZANOWSKI: Only the usual correspondence that I got through staff. COMMISSIONER FRY: Since the last meeting, a conversation with Mr. Yovanovich, a meeting with two members of the applicant team, and Mr. Mulhere and additional emails from various groups filtered through staff. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Ned? 3.B.1 Packet Pg. 90 Attachment: 11-7-2019 CCPC Minutes (10959 : November 7, 2019 CCPC minutes)9.A.13 Packet Pg. 365 Attachment: 11.7.19 CCPC Minutes - draft (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) November 7, 2019 Page 4 of 55 COMMISSIONER FRYER: Nothing since last time. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I had the same ones last time. I did receive some correspondence from the Conservancy; I think everybody did. I talked to the -- Meredith with Wildlife Federation, we had actually a correspondence, and then that's -- I think that's about all. I can't remember any others. Go ahead, Karen. COMMISSIONER HOMIAK: Nothing, whatever we received in email. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Patrick. COMMISSIONER DEARBORN: Nothing since last time. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. With that, the way we had approached this, we laid out an order of review for the various documents. And from the best I can recall, we reviewed -- we had the applicant's presentation, the traffic report discussion, the economic report discussion, the environmental report discussion, and at the request last time we moved public comment up to the end of those, and we had public comment at that last meeting. So what we haven't done -- and these are probably smaller sections and segments to deal with, but we haven't walked through the SRA document to ask questions we may have from that. We haven't walked through the staff reports to ask questions we still have -- may have from those, and I compared some of the LDC and GMP languages, and there's probably still a few of those I need some clarification from staff on. After that, we would get into the applicant's rebuttal, and then the CCPC would discuss and have a recommendation. So if it's okay with the rest of you, we'll just move on through like we were supposed to and pick up with the SRA document. And, basically, it will be us asking questions of either staff or the applicant from the language in that document. And so I'll turn to the Planning Commission. Does anybody have any questions first from the SRA document? Go ahead, Ned. COMMISSIONER FRYER: I just want to be sure that I understand where the -- what certain numbers have evolved to. And, in particular, is it a minimum of 62,5- square feet of scaled retail and office uses? The number 62,5- is not 60,000, correct? MS. GUNDLACH: It's 62,5. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Okay. And, second, in earlier evolutions of this, it said a maximum of 250 dwelling units. And I think we mean a minimum, correct, single-family? MR. YOVANOVICH: No, multifamily. I'm sorry. For the record, Rich Yovanovich. It was a minimum of 250 multifamily. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Yes, yes. Okay. MR. YOVANOVICH: Minimum. COMMISSIONER FRYER: But it's minimum, not a maximum. MR. YOVANOVICH: Not max. It's a minimum. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Okay. Thank you. Those are the questions I had. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Anybody else? (No response.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I have a question from staff. It's on Page 3 of the staff report, and it's a Roman Numeral II, Item 9. And it's a question I brought up before, and I don't remember getting a clear answer for it. And I'll read the language that I think is a problem with that section. Let me find another document that has that language in it. So hold on a second. And in the LDC, and it's Section 4.8 something J under design criteria, it says, the size and base density of each form of SRA shall be consistent with the standards set forth below. A couple sentences after that it says, the base residential density is calculated by dividing the total number of residential units in an SRA by the acreage therein that is entitled through stewardship credits. Now, the division that I've seen so far is simple 1,000 acres divided -- 2,500 units divided by 1,000 acres. And it's easy. It comes out to 2.5. But if you follow that direction in the LDC, it comes out to 3.23 development units per acre. So I don't know which one is the correct one for -- it seems to me the LDC is designed -- that's the criteria that 3.B.1 Packet Pg. 91 Attachment: 11-7-2019 CCPC Minutes (10959 : November 7, 2019 CCPC minutes)9.A.13 Packet Pg. 366 Attachment: 11.7.19 CCPC Minutes - draft (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) November 7, 2019 Page 5 of 55 would be the correct one for the LDC on Page 3 -- or, I mean, for the SRA on Page 3. But I keep -- I've asked this now privately with staff in the pre-meeting, I've asked it at the last public meeting, and I've never gotten an answer. I just need to know what you guys want to do with this so we get the right number down here. MS. GUNDLACH: Okay. Well, the calculation, when you subtract out the excess open-space acreage per the LDC, ends up being 3.099 dwelling units per acre. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Oh, I had a different number than that, but then I had the old acreage. Maybe I erred in that, but -- MR. YOVANOVICH: Mr. Strain, I'm sorry. Can you give me the -- quote the section of the LDC again so I can read along? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Yeah. You know how -- MR. YOVANOVICH: Is it under villages? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, the problem -- no, our table -- our LDC has got these huge sections, and you've got to scroll pages and pages back. So let me go back to the beginning and see what page we started with or what -- and it's 4.08.07, SRA designation, and then you've got to scroll all the way down to Section J, which I believe -- MR. YOVANOVICH: Design criteria. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Right. And then if you see design criteria, if you go down about two-thirds of the way, you'll see a sentence that says the base and then it's bolded, residential density is calculated by dividing the total number. That's the piece I'm trying to understand, because that is the acreage that needs stewardship credits, not the gross acreage of the town, of which about a quarter to a third is noncredit acreage. So I'm -- I just need to make sure we use the right divider and multiplier. That's all. MR. YOVANOVICH: Can I ask you -- can we pull the visualizer up. Is this the provision you're referring from? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: No. I'm referring to Section J. MR. YOVANOVICH: That's under J, and that's the table that pertains to the villages. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I know, but that's not what I'm asking about. I'm asking about the language in that sentence I read under J. You don't have that section. MR. YOVANOVICH: I do, but I'm looking specifically at the village tables, and you'll see under the village tables it says it's one to four DU's per gross acre. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Right. But it doesn't say that's how you calculate the density for the way -- necessarily, for the way we have to state it in the SRA. And since this is the design-criteria section of the RLSA, I thought that sentence must mean something. Where would you put it if you didn't use it there? MR. YOVANOVICH: Sure. MR. MULHERE: Bob Mulhere for the record. To further confuse things, there's two terms used there. One says base density. The other says gross density. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: No, it says residential density. Does it say gross? Where's the gross? MR. MULHERE: Well, I'm saying the table that Rich just put up there. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Oh, okay. MR. MULHERE: So you have two different, you know, ways to calculate them. We can calculate them both ways if that helps. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I'm just trying to figure out where you defined where your base residential density is. If it isn't in the SRA document, why are we asking the question if it's never used? So somewhere that was intended to be used, and I don't know what it's supposed to be used for. It is a different multiplier, and it may have impacts on other documents because of the way things multiply, and I'm just trying to get to the bottom of it. And I've brought it up at the other meetings, but I've never gotten an answer. I thought staff would research it before today, but I guess that didn't happen. MR. YOVANOVICH: Well, it does matter, and here's why I think it matters. You don't want to discourage developers of towns and villages, et cetera, to provide excess open space and shrink the footprint, because -- and if you do that the way you're talking about calculating it, if you provide more open space than you're required to 3.B.1 Packet Pg. 92 Attachment: 11-7-2019 CCPC Minutes (10959 : November 7, 2019 CCPC minutes)9.A.13 Packet Pg. 367 Attachment: 11.7.19 CCPC Minutes - draft (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) November 7, 2019 Page 6 of 55 do, you don't have to use credits for the excess open space. So you could, inadvertently, trip yourself and be 4.01 because you went with a smaller footprint by providing more open space. That doesn't make any sense to me that you would punish somebody for providing more open space in a more compact footprint in a village or a town. I would think you would look at them more specific, which is the village criteria that speaks in gross density, gross acreage. So I think that the calculation that we have of 2.5 is the correct way of measuring it, and that's my two cents and I think the way the document should be reflected, but I don't think you want to go with a net acreage, if you will, because you would be discouraging the provision of additional open space. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, I don't think it's net, because it's only excepting out those areas that aren't entitled to stewardship credits, and that would still include all the commercial and the other areas that aren't residential. So you've still got more than just the net residential parcels involved because you've got everything that isn't stewardship credits. MR. YOVANOVICH: Well, if I said "net residential parcels" -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I thought you said "net." MR. YOVANOVICH: I said "net acreage," I thought, which would mean any of the open space that exceeded would not count towards your calculation. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And, Richard, if this was written in a manner that you wanted to use it, I'm sure the argument would be, well, it's put there for a reason; therefore, we get to use it. I need to know what the intent of that section was because if that multiplier changes from 2.5 to 3.23, there may be impacts on others documents and agreements that are in play here. I just don't know. And I've asked -- like I said, it's not -- this didn't come up today. It's come up well over a month or six weeks ago, and I still have not got an answer from either Comprehensive Planning or Zoning on this matter. MR. KLATZKOW: Well, let's get the answer. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: How do we do that? MR. KLATZKOW: Easy. David? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, David's not zoning. This is an LDC -- MR. KLATZKOW: I understand that, but I want to know, how do you calculate it by -- pursuant to the GMP, which is the controlling document? MR. WEEKS: David Weeks for the Comprehensive Planning section. I'm looking it up right now. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Let's move on to other things, and we'll get past this one, then. MR. WEEKS: Mr. Chairman, I'm going to look to see what the Future Land Use Elements says, but sometimes the Land Development Code can be different. It could be more -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Specific. MR. WEEKS: -- specific or limiting. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And you do recall I did ask this before. MR. WEEKS: Yes. MR. KLATZKOW: It could be more restrictive? MR. WEEKS: Yes. MR. KLATZKOW: Yes, but if you get more density under the Land Development Code than contemplated by the GMP, that would be inconsistent with the GMP. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, it's not the question of more density or less. It's more the calculate -- the density's going to be -- the amount's going to be the same. MR. KLATZKOW: I understand. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: It's just going to be -- it's going to have a different multiplier, and that involves all kinds of documents, you know, so that's why I'm trying to get to the bottom of it. MR. YOVANOVICH: And perhaps you can have a base residential density that exceeds four in a village, but the measuring criteria for consistency with the LDC is on a gross number. So you're looking at the gross acreage for determining how many units you can have, and perhaps the Board wanted to know how does that translate into a -- I'll use the word "net." May not be the best word, but a net based upon the amount of credits. They would 3.B.1 Packet Pg. 93 Attachment: 11-7-2019 CCPC Minutes (10959 : November 7, 2019 CCPC minutes)9.A.13 Packet Pg. 368 Attachment: 11.7.19 CCPC Minutes - draft (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) November 7, 2019 Page 7 of 55 be consistent interpretations. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Or -- yes, and maybe they wanted that to be something that helped them understand how we reached fiscal neutrality, too. So it has a lot of other impacts. And I just want to make sure we look at all of them, whether it's a DCA or anything else that's involved. But I'll move on, and we'll come back to that before -- before we end up today. In your permitted -- this is on Page 5 under the context zones of the SRA document, 5.1.1.A, permitted uses and structures. This is No. 3. Senior group housing including, but not limited to, ALFs and CCRCs subject to Florida Statutes and applicable LDC provisions. There's no cap. I mean, so, basically, you could make the entire 1,000 acres all senior group housing if you wanted to. Is that what you're intending? Because I'm not sure how that's going to factor into other issues either, because you could have -- I mean, I don't even know how many units we're talking about. There's nothing here to define it. MR. YOVANOVICH: So, Mr. Strain, at the risk of getting off on a good start of agreeing with you, I agree that, theoretically, the entire village could be senior housing under the neighborhood general, which is basically everything but the village center. That is clearly not our intent. If you will give us some time to figure out a maximum number of units, or we can do acres -- because don't forget it's still a floor area ratio. But I know that is a big square-footage number, and I understand what your question is. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Yeah. Just come up with some number, and we'll use that as a basis for that. MR. YOVANOVICH: We'll either come up with a number of acres, which will translate to a number of floor-area-ratio square feet, or we'll come up with a number of units. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Number 6, clubhouse and amenity centers for residents and guests. My issue here is, you're asking for those in the neighborhood general context zone, which is the bulk of the project, but those are going to be subject to the locations on the master plan, as shown on the master plan, right? MR. YOVANOVICH: I apologize. I was listening to a comment. What was -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. On the same section of the SRA. MR. YOVANOVICH: Right. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Number 6, clubhouses and amenity centers for residents and guests. I know you want to do those, but because you're putting them in the context zone, they have to coincide with the locations on the master plan. MR. YOVANOVICH: Come up here, Bob. MR. MULHERE: Yes. Those -- I mean, we can put a reference to -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Master plan. MR. MULHERE: -- as depicted on the master plan. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Yeah, that's all. Your master plan is conceptual. You've got to be generally in that area, and that's all I'm trying to get to. MR. MULHERE: Yes. Because if you look at No. 7, that's the smaller recreational facilities that we don't know where they might be located within particular neighborhoods. So, yes, No. 6 could reference the locations depicted on the master plan. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MR. MULHERE: Got it. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. If we go down to accessory uses and structures, you also have clubhouses and amenity centers and residents and guest under accessory uses and structures, and you also have them under permitted uses and structures. Why do you have them in both sections? I mean, if they're accessory, you've got to have a single-family or multifamily unit on the same parcel in the context zone to qualify. MR. MULHERE: Yeah. Well, good question. You know, my opinion is that the -- No. 3, the clubhouse and amenity centers for residents and guests would not be accessory, because it's a, you know, permitted principal use, but No. 4 would be accessory, and -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I didn't -- I was questioning 3 right now. So let's -- so 3 you would take out -- you could strike out of that section. 3.B.1 Packet Pg. 94 Attachment: 11-7-2019 CCPC Minutes (10959 : November 7, 2019 CCPC minutes)9.A.13 Packet Pg. 369 Attachment: 11.7.19 CCPC Minutes - draft (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) November 7, 2019 Page 8 of 55 MR. MULHERE: Yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. By the way, I'm reading off the most recent version that Heidi distributed, I think, earlier this week or last week, because it's the easiest one. There's so many. I figured that's the best one, so I reread that, and that's where my questions are coming -- MR. YOVANOVICH: I'm reading from the document attached to the resolution. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: That's the one I am, too, right. MR. YOVANOVICH: I just wanted to make sure you and I are reading from the same. MR. MULHERE: So I understand. And, Mr. Chairman, my thought was along the same lines that No. 7 under permitted principal uses could be taken out since it's listed under accessory uses. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Yes, that would work. And, Bob, when you plat this context zone, the intent would be to subdivide it into fee-simple lots, but then you'd plat wherever you're deciding to put these neighborhood recreation centers or clubhouse as common areas or something like that. You'd plat those separately. That's how you would end up doing that? MR. MULHERE: Yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MR. YOVANOVICH: When it's a project that would require platting. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Right. You could have an SDP. I understand. But I'm just -- I want to make sure you're not going to take R tracts and try to plop these on them. It wouldn't be what I intended. You're going to actually separate the tract out, whatever lot it is. MR. YOVANOVICH: I just want to make sure we were not lumping everything into being a single-family project, because we have to do multifamily as well. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: On your general development design standards table, it's on Page 6, a couple small questions. Your minimum front yard for clubhouses and amenity centers, that's the only one I have a question of. You say 10 feet. You do know that 10 feet will still have your overhangs going into the utility PUEs that are alongside all your roadways? So if your front is fronting a roadway, and you've got your utilities alongside it, we don't allow overhangs to go there. So usually we look at those at a minimum of 12 feet now. We've been trying to correct that as we've gone forward. MR. MULHERE: That's not a problem. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Under the footnotes, the No. 4 and No. 5, they both have a word that I'm -- I mean, I know what the word means, but I'm trying to figure out how we judge it. Number 4, zero lot line and townhouse development means three or more attached units typically one or more stories in height. Then it says, other multifamily means three or more units other than zero lot line or townhome development typically more than two stories in height. "Typically" doesn't give us anything. So you could have multiple heights but they -- because of the word "typically" wouldn't you -- how do we -- how do we judge -- how do we set a standard with "typically"? MR. YOVANOVICH: Well, I'll tell you what. I would strike through the reference to height in both and just leave it as zero lot line townhome developments means three or more attached units, period. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MR. MULHERE: Other multifamily means three or more units other than zero lot line or townhome development, period. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. That works. MR. MULHERE: We just wanted to be sure we defined -- use the zoning definition for those. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Your permitted uses in the next section, it's the allowable uses in the village center context zones, Number 7. One of the criteria for an SRA that's different than a PUD is you're supposed to show that you've got some convenient shopping or necessary facilities, both commercial and retail so that the residents don't have to drive into the urban area every time they need something. MR. MULHERE: Yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: You've got a whole mix here, but I don't see a standard that says you're going to 3.B.1 Packet Pg. 95 Attachment: 11-7-2019 CCPC Minutes (10959 : November 7, 2019 CCPC minutes)9.A.13 Packet Pg. 370 Attachment: 11.7.19 CCPC Minutes - draft (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) November 7, 2019 Page 9 of 55 have -- you're going to at least have X, like a grocery store or a gas station or something like that. I don't see any detailed planning of how this village center is really going to serve the community that it's supposed to serve. MR. MULHERE: Well, we have a minimum required amount of neighborhood commercial -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Right. MR. MULHERE: -- square footage, and we have a list of uses. And depending on the market -- I mean, obviously, our optimal design would include a shopping -- would include a shopping center with a grocery store. And, you know -- and to be a shopping center, you have to have eight or more separate retail establishments or, you know, personal space. But in this case it's limited to neighborhood commercial. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. But, Bob, look at No. 22. Now, right there, you could blow 80,000 square feet in just a couple of acres, and there's your whole -- I mean, there's your whole section. So I know you don't intend that, but we need -- I think from a planning perspective, we need some commitments on some of the uses that are going to be there to service the village so that we know the village isn't going to put an abnormal amount of traffic on the road system. MR. YOVANOVICH: Commissioner Strain, I don't think -- and I know there have been different definitions of group care, but I don't think in any definition I've ever seen from the county a "qualified as retail." CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, why do you have it under there? MR. YOVANOVICH: Because that's an allowed use within the village center. I still have to do, in the village center, at least 62,500 square feet of retail and office neighborhood goods and services. It doesn't mean I can't also do with that 62,500 square feet multifamily because, in fact, village centers are required to be mixed use. So it's not -- I still have to meet the 62,500 square feet of retail and office requirements. I still have to meet my civic requirements. So I would agree with Bob that the lists of retail and office uses are the types of uses that will serve our residents, and I'm obligated to do at least 62,500 square feet of those. I'm not obligated as part of the initial approval of the SRA to identify which from those uses I guarantee you I will deliver. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: No, but my concern is that you could pick any one of those, and some of them more reasonable than others, and say the bulk of your 62,500 square feet is going to be that item, and that item may not service the needs as completely as a multiple of items with limitations on square footages for each under a planning perspective. MR. MULHERE: Just give me one. I might have a -- MR. YOVANOVICH: I understand the concept. Would that be something we can -- (Simultaneous crosstalk.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Yeah. We'll just talk -- before the meeting's over, let's get back to it. MR. YOVANOVICH: That will be on the list like assisted living. So you're asking -- you basically say -- and I know this is what they teach us to do in law school. Go to the ridiculous. You don't want me to do 62,500 square feet barbershops. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: No, or retail nurseries. MR. YOVANOVICH: Right. But you want us to -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: -- or retail services. You need to tell us -- MR. YOVANOVICH: Or you want us to say the grocery store can be, who cares, because Publix has all kinds of different kinds of prototypes. You're saying the others you want to say "not to exceed X." CHAIRMAN STRAIN: If you're going to have a grocer, that's great. If you're going to have a gas station or something so people can service themselves out there, that's fabulous, but we need to have some kind of commitment of the sizing so we don't have all of -- too much of one thing. MR. YOVANOVICH: I understand. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Ned? COMMISSIONER FRYER: Following up on that, the same -- sort of coming at the same concern. In earlier iterations of the description of the proposed ordinance, the words "neighborhood retail" or "neighborhood scaled retail" appeared in that -- in those iterations. And then the word "retail" dropped out and "commercial" came in in its place. I just want to be sure that we're still talking about a minimum of 62,5- and a maximum of 80,000 3.B.1 Packet Pg. 96 Attachment: 11-7-2019 CCPC Minutes (10959 : November 7, 2019 CCPC minutes)9.A.13 Packet Pg. 371 Attachment: 11.7.19 CCPC Minutes - draft (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) November 7, 2019 Page 10 of 55 square feet neighborhood scaled retail and office uses. Is that the language? MR. YOVANOVICH: Yes. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Okay, good. All right. And so now what we're concerned about is tightening up to some degree, if possible, the concept of diversity of mixed uses. It's things that are geared to keeping people from having to drive to urban areas, like -- MR. YOVANOVICH: Reducing the times that they would need to do that. Because for us to say somebody's never leaving this village to go -- COMMISSIONER FRYER: No, no, no. That's not what I'm saying. MR. YOVANOVICH: I understand. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I think, Ned, that's what we're trying to get to. MR. YOVANOVICH: I understand. We've got it. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: If we go to the next -- Page 9, and this is the village center development standards. And, Bob, if you look at the second column, ALF, CCRC, and multifamily buildings only. I recall -- and Richard may not remember this project, but it was one about a hotel in Bayshore that had a demand that they -- because the table said 700 square feet per unit, that all the units had to be 700 square feet. You're not telling me you're going to do a CCRC with every unit at 700 square feet, are you? MR. YOVANOVICH: I remember that very well. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I figure you would, but then maybe we ought to correct this so that it reads -- I don't think this should be -- I don't think you're intending to do all those senior living facilities at that size? MR. MULHERE: No. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Maybe you need to asterisk and reference the multifamily. MR. MULHERE: That's what I'm making a note, to put an asterisk and say, does not apply to CC -- to the ALF or CCRC units. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. It wouldn't be good to have a dispute on this one when we just got out of the last one. MR. YOVANOVICH: I think we should -- lessons learned. I think we both agree that as we get older we get smarter, or we reserve the right to get smarter. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Is that a compliment? Thank you. MR. YOVANOVICH: But I'm aging with you. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: But you're a lot younger. Let's look at front yards. Same issue with overhangs on front yards, Bob. It says zero or 10 feet. How are you going to deal with any utility easements that are there? You can't do zero because then you'd be in the utility easement. So what was your thoughts there? MR. MULHERE: Well, I'll be honest with you, I wasn't really considering the conflict -- if there's a conflict with the utility easement, then it obviously has to be whatever -- it has to be outside of that conflict. I think we're okay to put 12 feet there for front yard. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. If you go down to buildings, height, actual, you're looking at 60 feet, and I think -- well, I think you just answered it. Yes. Okay. Never mind. I got -- that tied into the front yard. MR. MULHERE: And that's consistent with what the requirements are in the RLSA. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Could you explain Footnote No. 1. MR. MULHERE: So let me just read through. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I'm trying to picture how that applies. MR. MULHERE: I think it came from discussions with Landscape Review, but let me look at it for a minute. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: That would be Mark Templeton. MR. MULHERE: Yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I don't know if -- yeah, he's not here. No. Well, maybe you could get back with us on that after you have time to think. I'm not trying to rush you with an answer that might not be accurate. I just need to know -- I can't figure out how it applies. MR. MULHERE: Well, I think the first sentence is pretty self-explanatory. You -- I mean, maybe it would 3.B.1 Packet Pg. 97 Attachment: 11-7-2019 CCPC Minutes (10959 : November 7, 2019 CCPC minutes)9.A.13 Packet Pg. 372 Attachment: 11.7.19 CCPC Minutes - draft (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) November 7, 2019 Page 11 of 55 have been easier to say, shall -- because it's measured from the property line if you have a separate -- well, not necessarily if you have a separate platted -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Tract, it's measured to the tract line. MR. MULHERE: Tract line. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Right. So you'd have tracts abutting the minimum required 25-foot landscape buffer which in itself would be a tract -- MR. MULHERE: Yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: -- located in a separate platted tract adjacent to Oil Well Road shall provide a front-yard setback measured from the landscape buffer. That's where your zero and 10 would apply, right, or zero and 12. MR. MULHERE: Now 12. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Depending if it's a PUE or not. Tracts abutting the project entrance road shall provide a front-yard setback measured from the 10-foot landscape buffer tract adjacent to the entry road. MR. MULHERE: Correct. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: So Oil Well -- you mean, like, a driveway entrance, not a road? MR. MULHERE: That's correct, within the project -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, it wouldn't be -- would it be a public road or private road? MR. MULHERE: Private road. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MR. MULHERE: And that did come from discussions with Mark Templeton. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, then, if you look at the end of No. 2, except as described in Footnote No. 1 above, front yards for parcels abutting a street or internal driveway shall be measured from the back of curb or edge of pavement. This excludes public roads. MR. MULHERE: Yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: So that means none of your internal roads, then, would be public if you're going to use that measurement. MR. MULHERE: Correct. MR. YOVANOVICH: No, no, no. MR. MULHERE: Well, no. If it's a public road, then the setback will always be measured from the property line. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Right-of-way line. MR. MULHERE: Right-of-way -- well, that's the same as the property line. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Then the PUE issue kicks in for the overhang. MR. MULHERE: Yeah. That's why we're going to change it to 12 feet. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. The lake setback up on the table says 20 feet, but you've got this little Footnote 3 after the word "setback," and down below it says the required 25-foot lake maintenance easement shall be provided in a separate platted tract, and the setback for both principal and accessory structures may be reduced to zero feet. Why say 20 if your intention is zero? Because you'll never -- you're never going to use the 20. MR. MULHERE: Well -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: You're going to plat your LMEs, aren't you? MR. MULHERE: Well, I mean, this is really a standard that we've applied most recently. As long as you have a separate tract that provides the 20-foot landscape maintenance easement around the lake -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: You're -- MR. YOVANOVICH: What if we change "shall" to "may"? If we do decide to provide a separate tract and you can't go to zero -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: That will work. MR. YOVANOVICH: -- if it's on -- if it's an easement, then we've got to meet the 20. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MR. YOVANOVICH: I think that's what you were saying. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And, Bob, I know we've done these things in the past before, but this one land-use 3.B.1 Packet Pg. 98 Attachment: 11-7-2019 CCPC Minutes (10959 : November 7, 2019 CCPC minutes)9.A.13 Packet Pg. 373 Attachment: 11.7.19 CCPC Minutes - draft (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) November 7, 2019 Page 12 of 55 attorney used to say we reserve the right to get smarter. MR. MULHERE: I got it. Okay. MR. YOVANOVICH: Believe me, I regret saying that. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I use it a lot. MR. YOVANOVICH: I know. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Under 5.2.3, village center required parking, you have a second paragraph that's a whole bunch of language. MR. MULHERE: Yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Is that a deviation? Is that what you're trying to get? And if it's not a deviation, then why is it there? Or if it is a deviation, it should be in the deviations section. If it's not a deviation and it just says you're going to abide by the LDC, then why do we have that paragraph there? And the same thing falls under VI, excavations. What are these two -- what is this in there for? MR. MULHERE: Well, it's a question of timing. And I had this discussion -- although he's not here anymore, this was inserted after a discussion with Mike Bosi. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: You know, the last guy leaving always gets blamed, till the next guy leaves. MR. MULHERE: I know. It's okay. I mean, the point here, Mr. Strain, was that if you think about it for a minute, how do you do a multimodal split determined parking analysis? I believe the intent of this was that you maybe don't need all of the parking that the LDC requires. So if you do this -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Right. MR. MULHERE: If you do this comprehensive study, you could come in and ask for less. It's asking for that up front. We don't even know the mix of uses. How could we possibly do it? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: But even if you didn't ask for up front, when you determined your mix of uses and the LDC allowed you to apply for that, why -- you would just be able to. Why would you need -- see, I hate seeing us repeat the LDC in the documents all over and over again, because it screws things up. MR. MULHERE: No. The difference is the timing. The LDC requires it now. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Meaning with -- MR. MULHERE: Right now -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: -- with this application? MR. MULHERE: -- with this application. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Then wouldn't you need a deviation from the LDC to clarify that issue? MR. MULHERE: I don't think so. It's not a dimensional standard, so we're asking for different timing. So at least according to the discussions I had with Bosi, it was put it in the SRA document. MR. YOVANOVICH: To the extent, if Heidi and Jeff now decide we need to add a deviation for that, we don't have an objection to adding it to the list of deviations. It didn't come up. But if we need to do one, we'll add it as a deviation. Nobody thought we needed to call it out as a deviation. But if we need to, I don't think it's -- we can do that as part of the review. MR. MULHERE: It was just timing. You got to know the mix of uses to be able to do the -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: But, see, why wouldn't we be doing this, then, for every PUD? Why does it seem to be unique then for an SRA? MR. MULHERE: No. Because this study is only in the SRA section of the code. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: So the SRA section, which was written by the property owners out there through their engineers at the time or experts -- MR. MULHERE: Yeah. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: -- put that language in there to apply to a certain time as they move forward, and the timing was now one that you've decided isn't the right timing? MR. MULHERE: Well, I mean, to me it's -- I'm not saying -- I don't know that everything was done right 17, 18 years ago. The timing of this just doesn't make sense. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. And I don't disagree with you. I think there's other things, though, that don't make sense either that we keep telling -- we're now saying we've got to live by. So I think it's a quid pro quo. 3.B.1 Packet Pg. 99 Attachment: 11-7-2019 CCPC Minutes (10959 : November 7, 2019 CCPC minutes)9.A.13 Packet Pg. 374 Attachment: 11.7.19 CCPC Minutes - draft (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) November 7, 2019 Page 13 of 55 We've both got to go back and forth a little bit. MR. KLATZKOW: If it doesn't make sense, we're not going to insist on it. I mean, Ray, does the provision make sense? MR. BELLOWS: No, it doesn't. MR. KLATZKOW: Okay. So -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Before you jump that it doesn't make sense, if the intent of the village context zone or village zone was to show that it's providing some self-sufficiency for the village that's being produced and that this would have happened at that time based on those uses that you're going to put there, it would have answered the question I started earlier when I said we need some limitation in knowing what you're going to put on a size basis. So I think the intent was probably correct. It puts it on the table earlier so we have a balance in what the village commercial and residential needs are to one another. We don't have that now. So they're saying because we don't have it now, we're still supposed to approve it on the faith we're going to get it, but on the second -- we want this exempted until we do figure out what we're going to do. But we want you to give us the faith and approve it without it. MS. ASHTON-CICKO: My recollection of this issue was, in prior versions of the SRA, they wanted to be able to count alternative types of modes of transportation that might occur in the future that might be more in use or -- in other areas, and so they wanted a little bit of flexibility to bring in other types of transportation that -- I don't know, Nancy. That was my recollection. They wanted -- you know, there were some other things. I don't know if mopeds were included, but it had -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Are you bringing in -- MS. ASHTON-CICKO: Electric bicycles. I mean, I don't know. I remember there was golf carts. MR. YOVANOVICH: Here's my preference. We recognized -- we amended, basically, the Land Development Code several years ago recognizing that there would -- you were only allowed to bring deviations originally as part of the very first SRA document. You couldn't even do it through the amendment process. So we corrected the Land Development Code to allow for deviations to be asked later on in the process, recognizing that the one-size-fit-all criteria may not work and deviations would be appropriate. I would prefer that we just add a deviation for this to say we're asking for a deviation to be allowed to do this at SDP instead of at the SRA because it takes makes more sense in the village to do that when you know the mix of uses and whether or not you need a -- whether or not you're going to want an alternative parking calculation. I think that's more consistent with how other deviations are being processed right now, recognizing this is the first village to go through. I think, consistent with what the Chairman is saying, perhaps we just should list it as a deviation instead of a provision, and we'll add a deviation. I don't think anybody's objecting to the provision. We'll just call it out as an additional deviation in the -- are we in the village center section right now? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: We're in -- MR. YOVANOVICH: Yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: -- on Page 10, 5.2.3 under village center required parking. MR. YOVANOVICH: So we'll just add it as a village center deviation, if that's -- if that's okay with the Planning Commission. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Yeah. I've just got one question. Deviations to be added as PDIs or, in this case, an SRA-I, if that's what we would call it, have become rather common because they're a way to clean up some things like this that may not have the right applicability at the time. What would -- you don't even know if you're going to need this yet. You're putting it here just in case you might. MR. YOVANOVICH: Yeah. But if you're -- and I know you used to work on the development side. Certainty and time are two critical elements to the development process. So to then come back and do an amendment process to say I'd like this deviation, best-case scenario is six-month process, and why would we add another six months to add a deviation that everybody's saying right now it makes sense? Let's add it up front and say, we'll deal with this later at the SDP. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, we're going to have to walk through all the deviations, and we'll get into that 3.B.1 Packet Pg. 100 Attachment: 11-7-2019 CCPC Minutes (10959 : November 7, 2019 CCPC minutes)9.A.13 Packet Pg. 375 Attachment: 11.7.19 CCPC Minutes - draft (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) November 7, 2019 Page 14 of 55 discussion, then, and see if we need to add this one as whatever number. MR. YOVANOVICH: Okay. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I just -- I don't -- if it's inconsistent -- any of the language in here is inconsistent with the LDC, it's supposed to be called out as a deviation; that's all I'm getting at. MR. YOVANOVICH: I understand. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: What about excavations? Why do we need that language there? I think I know what you're trying to do. You don't want to be called a commercial excavation because you're crossing a road. Like Orange Blossom Ranch has got one on both sides, and they have to cross Oil Well, and I think they got an exemption from commercial excavation to cross Oil Well, didn't they? MR. BELLOWS: That's my recollection as well. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: So I don't know how they went through that. Do you, Ray? MR. BELLOWS: There was a PUD amendment where that was part of that process. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: As a deviation to the PUD amendment? MR. BELLOWS: Yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, then that's what I'm getting at. MR. YOVANOVICH: This was -- this is actually a codification of -- and Mr. McLean's not here, I don't think. We met with him way back when this was even part of the original town application; that he agreed that this was the correct interpretation of the LDC. So it's not a deviation. It's just putting of record the interpretation as part of the SRA document. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: If I'm not mistaken, Matt McLean isn't authorized to provide interpretations to the LDC. Only Mr. Bellows is. MR. YOVANOVICH: The correct application, and he does apply the code. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I understand he applies the code, but I think the interpretation is what Zoning department does; is that not correct? MR. BELLOWS: Well, there has not been a request to officially interpret this provision. I don't know if Matt has -- and it sounds like he may have been applying it this way. But my recollection is when -- Orange Blossom Ranch, that was part of the PUD discussion. But I'd have to double-check if it was listed as a deviation. MR. YOVANOVICH: This is one of those instances, Mr. Strain, when some of us are no longer here to say, when you're going through this process, what was supposed to be the rules of the game. We wanted this in the document so everybody understood the rules of the game. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And all I'm trying to do is make sure it's consistent with the way we're supposed to do it. MR. YOVANOVICH: I understand. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I'm not saying it's a good or a bad thing. I just want to make sure the consistency's there, because whatever happens to this first village is probably what we're going to be seeing repeatedly in some of the other villages in regards to how they operate. So I want to make sure we're right. MR. YOVANOVICH: I don't think we will. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: We will? Yeah, see. That's -- MR. YOVANOVICH: I said I don't think that you will. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. I thought you said we will. MR. YOVANOVICH: No, no. I don't think that we will. I'm trying -- you know, I'm familiar with what's coming in and one that's already in, and I don't remember that being in any of those documents. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: The deviations are the next item. And I asked Nancy to write up her summary of the deviations, because so many have either changed, been withdrawn, or modified, and she did. The problem is, don't match the document that Heidi produced, and they don't match the notes -- or the markup that I saw on the other documents that we've had, what, five or six copies of. So I'm afraid I don't know what deviations are good or bad. I don't know what modifications are good or bad. I don't know how to say this is a deviation or not. I don't know where to start on this, Bob. I know you walked through it last time, but then I've got now two different more -- two new different versions. MR. YOVANOVICH: Could we just hear what Nancy says is inconsistent with what Heidi wrote? 3.B.1 Packet Pg. 101 Attachment: 11-7-2019 CCPC Minutes (10959 : November 7, 2019 CCPC minutes)9.A.13 Packet Pg. 376 Attachment: 11.7.19 CCPC Minutes - draft (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) November 7, 2019 Page 15 of 55 CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I don't know if Nancy checked them. I did, because I read Nancy's, then I read this, and I said, wait a minute, these aren't the same. MS. GUNDLACH: I've checked them, Mark. So I can help you if you need. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Let's start -- well -- MR. YOVANOVICH: I need help, because I thought we were right. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, let's start with No. 1 and make sure everybody's on the same page, and we can -- we'll have to walk through them all and just get it done. And I don't mind if you move fast, Nancy, just so we know -- I don't want to spend time on ones that have been withdrawn. I just need to know which ones are withdrawn and which ones have been modified. MR. KLATZKOW: And could you put them on the overhead so everybody can see. MS. GUNDLACH: Okay. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: How many of them are there now? MR. KLATZKOW: A lot. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Yeah. MR. MULHERE: Hold on. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And I would like to work off of Heidi's resolution attachment. MR. MULHERE: Fifteen I think. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Fifteen? Because we started at 19. So you've withdrawn some. Okay. And the way this one's written, instead of 1 through 19 or 1 through 15, it's written as 7.1.1 or 7.1.2; whereas, Nancy had some that are 7.1.13 and 7.1.14, and those are the kind of things that I found I couldn't match up, and I need -- that's where we're coming from today. So let's start with the first -- on Page 10. Okay. There we are, right there. So No. 1 is struck, is withdrawn? MR. YOVANOVICH: Correct. MS. GUNDLACH: Correct. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. And No. 2, the only change you want on that, which will now become No. 1, is what's in red. And I have a question: When you support a shopping center that includes a grocery store, shopping center would need to be bolded. I believe it's a defined term in the LDC. And the reason that's important is is because your TIS defined shopping center differently than the LDC does, and I want to make sure they're all on the same page. MR. MULHERE: I'm unaware of any bolding in any PUDs. I know the LDC uses bolding or any SRA document. I'm unaware of that. If you want us to bold it, we can. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: No. But say shopping center as defined in the LDC. MR. MULHERE: That's fine. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. I just don't want us getting mixed up between the TIS which uses a different standard. MS. ASHTON-CICKO: I think Corby had some changes to the No. 1. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MS. GUNDLACH: Mark, staff has a comment from Corby Schmidt. MR. MULHERE: I got that, as defined in the LDC. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: By the way, is Cormac Giblin here? MR. MULHERE: He's out there. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: At some point today we've got housing questions. We'll need him to respond to those. Corby? MR. SCHMIDT: Good morning, Commissioners. For the record, Corby Schmidt, principal planner with your Comprehensive Planning section. In order to resolve some of the issues with definitions or uses of terms, staff has come up with a better way to address this listing and the one that follows it to the LDC section, the one below it. I'll read through it. It's J.3.d.ii.q. They read somewhat similarly and had the same reference for the exception to front-yard parking. 3.B.1 Packet Pg. 102 Attachment: 11-7-2019 CCPC Minutes (10959 : November 7, 2019 CCPC minutes)9.A.13 Packet Pg. 377 Attachment: 11.7.19 CCPC Minutes - draft (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) November 7, 2019 Page 16 of 55 And in order to remove the shopping center reference but yet have the same result, staff recommends the phraseology that parking is prohibited in front of buildings, then replace it with "except when such parking is within the same block perimeter as and is in support of a grocery store." And for the following -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Now, that particular one applies because of the reference, 4.08.07.J.3.d.ii.p)ii), that applies to No. 1. Is that the one -- the first one? MR. SCHMIDT: It is. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: But that's the one they've withdrawn. You're saying leave it in but change the language. MR. SCHMIDT: It's the new 1. The one which is numbered 1 to you -- MR. KLATZKOW: Why are we doing this? Honest to God. Can't we get these god damn documents just straight? It's like every -- everybody -- time somebody looks at it, they've got to say, I've got to make a change. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Jeff, I don't know what we're voting on. (Simultaneous crosstalk.) MR. KLATZKOW: I have no idea. Honest to God, I've been asking for, I don't know how long, could we get a box with a bow to go to the Planning Commission so everything's set. You guys get to read the documents once. You comment on the documents. We get some changes. It goes to the Board of County Commissioners. This is like the never-ending story here with changes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I'm not sure what you expect us to do because -- MR. KLATZKOW: No. I'm just -- why are we doing this? MR. SCHMIDT: You've asked to make reference to the resolution version. That's what we're looking at now. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Yes. Right. MR. SCHMIDT: I'm working off of the resolution version, so there should be no confusion for you. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Are we working off the top paragraph on this page that's in front of us or the bottom? MR. SCHMIDT: The top. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. The top paragraph, look at your reference, 4.08.07.J.3 whatever. That's the reference that they're now saying they've withdrawn as a deviation. That's No. 1. MR. SCHMIDT: It's not in your resolution. There's no withdrawn No. 1. The resolution that's already withdrawn with -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I just got the -- this is the document Heidi gave us just -- just sent it out last week. MR. KLATZKOW: Hold on. Hold on. Let's go -- Mark, let's go back to the document that was originally on the overview, okay. All right. So we got rid -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: That's not -- MR. KLATZKOW: We got rid of 1. Now we're on 2. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: No. MR. KLATZKOW: Yes, because -- you're on 2, because -- old 2 is now 1. MR. YOVANOVICH: Heidi's version that you're reading from is the Old 2, No. 1. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MR. YOVANOVICH: Corby is now trying to modify what Heidi provided to you-all right now for the first time for anybody to see it. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MR. YOVANOVICH: County Attorney and us, because we had gone through all of these, and I believe Heidi has accurately reflected in -- and she said she was going to do that for everybody. That you were going to have the resolution, and that's what we're going to review from. MR. KLATZKOW: You know, unless -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: That's what I'm trying to do, yeah. MR. KLATZKOW: Unless -- staff, unless you've got something that's material, I mean, this is nonsense. I mean, we're not changing them on the fly here. I mean, Corby, you're in the same building as Heidi's in. You know, you guys have got to sit down with us and just say, look, this is the reason why we want to have it changed. Honest to God, it's not like you live in a silo without a door. 3.B.1 Packet Pg. 103 Attachment: 11-7-2019 CCPC Minutes (10959 : November 7, 2019 CCPC minutes)9.A.13 Packet Pg. 378 Attachment: 11.7.19 CCPC Minutes - draft (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) November 7, 2019 Page 17 of 55 But, no, I don't understand the change. I think the change is worse than what you have. And I would just go with the way, you know, Heidi has it here. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, the only exception I have then is that we define shopping center -- MR. KLATZKOW: As defined in the LDC. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Corby, can you put your language up so we can just make sure we get an agreement. MR. YOVANOVICH: I don't want Corby's language. I want Heidi's language. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: You've got to use the mic. MR. YOVANOVICH: I don't want Corby's language. I want Heidi's language. And we'll reference the LDC, as you just talked about. MS. ASHTON-CICKO: The language that, you know, I provided to you is the version that you saw before as modified. So these are new changes that I'm seeing this morning for the first time, and so is Nancy, so -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MS. ASHTON-CICKO: -- you know, I can't comment on it. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Anybody on the Planning Commission have any concerns one way or the other? (No response.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. COMMISSIONER FRYER: I think we need to know what we're voting on. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, I think we're going to be voting on Heidi's version that she used from the other meetings, and I was real pleased she put this together, because it's a complete package that we're hopefully working off of. Unless somebody's telling me it's the wrong package to work off, we've gotten I don't know how many versions of this over the last month and a half. It's ridiculous. MS. ASHTON-CICKO: Whatever you decide to do is -- you know, you're the board who has to make -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Recommend. MS. ASHTON-CICKO: -- decisions. I was just trying to put something together so we were all on the same page. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MR. WEEKS: Mr. Chairman, David Weeks of the Comprehensive Planning section. We're going to withdraw Corby's edits and, if need be, we'll address that in front of the Board because we don't want to cross -- obviously, we're contributing to confusion. That's not our intent. So, again, we'll just withdraw, and we don't believe they're substantial, but regardless, we'll withdraw. We'll address at the Board. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Then let's move into the next one that we should be working off of. If we go back to the most recent resolution language sent to us, which is the one we're referring to as Heidi's, we'd be looking at 7.1.2, was the one we just corrected in that document, but where do we go from here? Because the next paragraph, 7.2, and I believe you had 7.1.3 and 7.1.4, Nancy. Did you not? Go ahead, David. MR. WEEKS: Yes. Mr. Chairman, would you mind if we take maybe a five- or 10-minute break? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I think it would be a great idea. So let's come back at 10 minutes after 10 and try to figure out what document we want to use. MR. WEEKS: Thank you. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Thank you. (A brief recess was had from 9:54 a.m. to 10:04 a.m.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay, everybody. It looks like the discussion that needed to happen for 10 minutes or so has occurred, so we are going to try to figure out how to move through with this. And I am one of the people who has had multiple documents of the -- basically of this -- of different changes, and all I'm trying to do is figure out which one we're supposed to be voting on. Staff, I believe, now, has got some clarity. Nancy's going to walk through -- and you can do it quickly. Just tell us which ones are in or out and which ones have changes and what staff's position are on them, and we'll be good. MS. GUNDLACH: Great. Good morning, Commissioners -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: We're using Heidi's SRA version. MS. GUNDLACH: Yes. 3.B.1 Packet Pg. 104 Attachment: 11-7-2019 CCPC Minutes (10959 : November 7, 2019 CCPC minutes)9.A.13 Packet Pg. 379 Attachment: 11.7.19 CCPC Minutes - draft (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) November 7, 2019 Page 18 of 55 MR. YOVANOVICH: Resolution version. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Right. The resolution version. MR. KLATZKOW: The one you're voting on. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: That's why I wanted to make sure I understand it, because it's -- MR. KLATZKOW: Work off the one we're voting on. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. And the one we're voting on already has No. 7.1.1 withdrawn, right? MS. GUNDLACH: Yes. Yes, we do. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: All right. 7.1.2 is changed as the language indicates, but they're going to add a reference to it's the LDC definition for grocery store -- or shopping center. MR. YOVANOVICH: Shopping center. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Shopping center. Okay. Where is the next one, Nancy? MS. GUNDLACH: Next page. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Give us a number. There we go. MR. MULHERE: There's another deviation on the other page. MR. YOVANOVICH: Does staff agree with Heidi's version? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I don't know. That's why we're walking through it, to find out. MS. GUNDLACH: Can you hear me? Yes. Okay. Zoning staff and legal staff are in agreement with the document in front of you. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Whoa, whoa. MS. GUNDLACH: It is the SRA document dated 10/30. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: No. Your agreement with the document in front of you on the overhead, because the document that we have in front of us doesn't have No. 1 crossed out. MR. YOVANOVICH: Because it's not in there at all. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Oh, okay. That's going to be fun to follow this. MR. KLATZKOW: I'll tell you what. Let's make this even easier. Can we put on the -- I don't know, the resolution that we're voting on rather than what you have? MS. GUNDLACH: Okay. We can do that. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: There we go. That's what we've got in front of us. MR. KLATZKOW: So the first one's fine except with the reference to the LDC in the shopping center. MR. YOVANOVICH: Correct. Second one, same thing. MR. MULHERE: Same thing. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. 7.1.1 -- okay. Except for the reference to the shopping center and the language to make it a definition as found in the LDC; is that correct? MR. YOVANOVICH: Correct. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: So 7.1.1 in Heidi's document is not withdrawn. 7.12 in Heidi's document is the one below. What's the status on that one? That also references the shopping center, so that would also need the same language. MR. YOVANOVICH: Correct. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And anything else, Nancy, on that one? MS. GUNDLACH: Staff recommends approval. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Do you have any changes to that one? MS. GUNDLACH: No. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Let's go to 7.2.1, on the second page. COMMISSIONER DEARBORN: Can you scroll down. MR. YOVANOVICH: Sorry. Operator error. COMMISSIONER DEARBORN: Thank you. MS. GUNDLACH: 7.2.1, staff recommends approval. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Any changes? 3.B.1 Packet Pg. 105 Attachment: 11-7-2019 CCPC Minutes (10959 : November 7, 2019 CCPC minutes)9.A.13 Packet Pg. 380 Attachment: 11.7.19 CCPC Minutes - draft (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) November 7, 2019 Page 19 of 55 MS. GUNDLACH: No changes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. 7.2.2? MS. GUNDLACH: 7.2.2, staff recommends approval and no changes. 7.2.3, staff recommends approval, and there's no changes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Good. MS. GUNDLACH: Okay. Moving along to 7.3 -- do you want me to go through each individual one or -- MR. KLATZKOW: Do you have any changes to any of those? MS. GUNDLACH: Okay. There's no changes to any of them. MR. KLATZKOW: Staff is okay with all of those? MS. GUNDLACH: Yes, we are. MR. KLATZKOW: So it's whether or not the Planning Commission has any comments on any of those. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Right. That's where I'm trying to find out. Okay. So staff's okay. There are no changes. That's the language we've got in front of us? MS. GUNDLACH: Correct. Moving along to Section 7.4, sign standards. Staff is recommending approval of 7.4.1 and 2. And moving along to 7.5, landscape standards, staff is recommending approval of Deviation No. 1. And regarding the other deviation, 7.6.1, 2, and 3 and 4, staff is recommending approval of all of them as well. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. So what basically remains, with the exception of changing on the very first one or two, staff's approving all of those? MS. GUNDLACH: Correct. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. That's what I needed to find out. I think that's only thing -- I don't have any questions right now on those. We may come back to them later, but right now it's fine. Anybody else have any questions on the deviation? Ned? COMMISSIONER FRY: I don't have any problem with the deviations. I have other problems. COMMISSIONER DEARBORN: Second. MR. YOVANOVICH: I have that in my rebuttal. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: We are in the SRA document. If you have any questions about the SRA document, great timing right now. Okay. MR. YOVANOVICH: Mr. Strain, when would you like us to clarify the two items that you asked us to -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: As soon as you have time to figure them out. MR. YOVANOVICH: We're ready, but I didn't want to -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, let's bounce back up. I'm going to be going to number -- Page 14, that's the last page of the document, next. Why don't we finish that and we'll go back to your next two items. MR. YOVANOVICH: I just wanted to know when was appropriate. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: C, it's under transportation, 8.3.C, no more than 1,750 dwelling units will be issued COs until a minimum of 30,000 square feet of neighborhood retail and office uses have been developed and issued COs. So that's one, two, three, four, five, six, seven years into the project. So for seven years the capture rate and internal pass -- and pass-by rate on the TIS wouldn't apply. How are we looking at that from a transportation perspective? And I don't mean you to answer that as much as I need our staff. Since this was -- I don't -- I imagine this was reviewed by transportation staff and signed off? You can't have a capture rate if the commercial isn't there. And I'm trying to figure out how that was allocated in. MS. SCOTT: For the record, Trinity Scott, Transportation Planning manager. We realized that as the project takes off, that their internal capture will get greater as the project progresses throughout; that they will need the rooftops to be able to support the commercial retail uses. So this language had come in, and staff didn't have a problem with it. Our bigger fear would be that they would build out all the residential and not build any commercial at all, and so 3.B.1 Packet Pg. 106 Attachment: 11-7-2019 CCPC Minutes (10959 : November 7, 2019 CCPC minutes)9.A.13 Packet Pg. 381 Attachment: 11.7.19 CCPC Minutes - draft (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) November 7, 2019 Page 20 of 55 this gives a little bit of protection as far as getting some of that. And so, yes, we are fine with that language. We understand that the internal capture will come as the project matures. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: But the internal capture won't come until the commercial's there. Are you on the same page as me on that thought? MS. SCOTT: Yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. So it's not going to come as the project matures. It's not going to come until the project has gone on for seven years with a capture rate that is not real hitting our road system because there is no capture rate for the first seven years. So how we factored (sic) that in? MS. SCOTT: So as they come in for their individual Site Development Plans or plats for these projects, they will not be able to apply in internal capture if there's nothing to -- for that, and that internal capture gets applied for the commercial side, not on the residential side. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. But in the meantime, the folks that would drive to these commercial facilities will be driving into the -- elsewhere. Orangetree, the urban area, somewhere else. MS. SCOTT: Ave Maria, other areas around Immokalee. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MS. SCOTT: All around. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. And you took that into consideration in their traffic analysis for the local road system for the first seven years? MS. SCOTT: They don't break it down into that manner. We're looking at the project overall at buildout and what it will look like on the roadway system. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And at buildout you're taking in full impact of the capture rate and pass-by rate. MS. SCOTT: Yes, but it will be as they come in for their individual projects. It will be reevaluated at that time. And they have a trip cap that would be their base -- or their maximum that they can go to. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: That's a good point. So if they have a trip cap, does the trip cap get exceeded by -- say without commercial but with 1,750 residential dwelling units? MS. SCOTT: No. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Then that means we're covered because you based everything on the trip cap. MS. SCOTT: Yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Right. If you said that at the beginning, I probably would have understood it better. Thank you. Richard, on the parks and recreation, 8.4.A, the SRA shall include a minimum of one children's playground that conforms to yada, yada, yada at 2,500 square feet in size. The playground shall be located in the amenity center tract on the SRA. There's only one of those, though, isn't there? So you're either going to have a playground on the north side or the south side. You're not going to have two of them, because you've really got a separated village. MR. YOVANOVICH: We have an amenity center tract on the north side. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Right. So what are you going to do with the children on the south side? Oh, they don't count? COMMISSIONER FRYER: They get to cross the street. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I mean, real -- Rich, I mean, if you're going to -- if you got communities -- the kids have got to have probably two tracts. MR. YOVANOVICH: First of all, providing a playground is not a requirement of the SRA in the first place. Staff asked us to do at least one, which we've agreed to do. We may have more. So we've committed to the one. Someone, I forget who it was, asked us, where is it going to be? Because they wanted to identify it, I guess, because of the concern of having one on the south side that might actually be within somebody's subdivision and you'd have kids playing and it somehow would create a problem. But I think we've addressed that now in the development standards that exist. We can have more. We have to have a minimum of one, and the minimum of one will be in the amenity center. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. 3.B.1 Packet Pg. 107 Attachment: 11-7-2019 CCPC Minutes (10959 : November 7, 2019 CCPC minutes)9.A.13 Packet Pg. 382 Attachment: 11.7.19 CCPC Minutes - draft (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) November 7, 2019 Page 21 of 55 MR. YOVANOVICH: We can have more. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: It just makes it -- but, see, it just accentuates the awkwardness of a village split by a six-lane road. And -- because you're going to have kids using -- if the kids want to use the playground, they've got to go to the north side of your development, and they've got to cross that road to get there. MR. YOVANOVICH: And if we have an issue where kids want to use playgrounds, my guess is the builders who are going to develop are going to provide playgrounds for the people who are buying their homes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: 8.5 is other. Is "A" a deviation? MR. MULHERE: No. No. That was a request from staff to put that in there. I reviewed the -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: But why would they put it there if it's required by the LDC? Maybe Nancy can answer that. I mean, if it's required by the LDC, it doesn't need to be there. If it's there, that means it's not required or it's different than the LDC, and we would either need it as a deviation or whatever. You're -- explain. MR. MULHERE: It is not a deviation. Street trees are required in the village center as specified in 4.08.07. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Right. MR. MULHERE: You know, I can't really remember what the basis of the staff request was to put that in there, but it's not a deviation because they're required as is written there. We can take it out. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I'm just suggesting, why put it there if the LDC already requires it? That's all I'm getting at. It says so in the first sentence. MS. GUNDLACH: The LDC doesn't specifically address it, so they're just providing it for clarity. MR. MULHERE: It does require street trees. I think it doesn't deal with, you know, what -- the dimension of on center and so on. MS. GUNDLACH: Yeah, the spacing. The tighter spacing. So they're actually doing something -- they're clarifying it. Giving us an equal amount of tree canopy, but just spacing it tighter so that they have an equal amount of canopy. That's not addressed in the LDC specifically. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. COMMISSIONER FRYER: It sounds like it's more of a developer commitment than a deviation. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I would think, yeah. If it's there and that's what we're going to get and it's better than the LDC, that's an improvement. MS. GUNDLACH: That's good. MR. YOVANOVICH: Well, it's in the developer commitment section. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: That's fine. I'm fine with it. MR. YOVANOVICH: I'm just saying, in response to the comment, it's not in the deviation section; it's in the developer commitment section. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. And the two clarifications you had you wanted to bring up that we talked about earlier you found out about? MR. YOVANOVICH: I did. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. What are those? MR. YOVANOVICH: So let's -- could we go back to the sections so I make sure -- Mr. Strain, what page was that in the SRA that you brought up? Let's talk about the CCRC. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: It's on Page 9. It's on your development -- your Table 5.2.2. MR. YOVANOVICH: So we would cap the number of -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Oh, no. That's the table. You're -- that's the square footage. You -- you're talking about the total amount of -- MR. YOVANOVICH: Wherever -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: -- acreage for ALFs. MR. YOVANOVICH: Wherever appropriate -- and I think we were in the neighborhood general section when the comment came up, Mr. Strain. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: It's Page 5. MR. YOVANOVICH: We would cap the number of -- the CCRC, ALF, independent numbers at 300 units. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. 3.B.1 Packet Pg. 108 Attachment: 11-7-2019 CCPC Minutes (10959 : November 7, 2019 CCPC minutes)9.A.13 Packet Pg. 383 Attachment: 11.7.19 CCPC Minutes - draft (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) November 7, 2019 Page 22 of 55 MR. YOVANOVICH: And then on the comment on 5.2.1.A, permitted uses, how do you know you're going to get a diversity of these type of uses? We would commit to a minimum of eight of the retail and office uses identified in 5.2.1.A being developed within the village center. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Does that include a grocery store? MR. YOVANOVICH: We would have eight of them. If we had a grocery store, we'd have seven of the other. If we didn't get a grocery store, we would have eight from this list. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Yeah. MR. YOVANOVICH: That would give you the diversity. I think you were concerned that we would just have one big whatever and not -- and not -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: You're close to other developments. For example, if they have a grocery store and the rooftops and yours can't support standalone, obviously then it wouldn't be good to put another grocery store side by side, or it may not work right. So I'm not -- as long as there's some kind of mix that we're assured of -- and I think by having at least eight retail and office, we get that mix, and you also qualify, I think -- MR. YOVANOVICH: That would meet the definition -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: -- for shopping center. MR. YOVANOVICH: -- of shopping center. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Yeah. Okay. That answers those two questions. And let me make sure I've got all mine on the SRA part of it. And I don't know if any of you have anything left. Oh, we've got to go to the master plan. The master plan is following the 14 pages of text. I mentioned this before. I can't remember if it got solidified. We are going to be removing the references to the panther fence on the north and south ends of the Big Cypress Parkway right-of-way area. Do you see where the word "panther fence" is up on top and on the bottom? It's on all the master plans. And I don't think it's appropriate, because we'd have to end up changing the master plan to have that -- to extend that road. It doesn't make sense. MR. YOVANOVICH: I see it. Do you want the entirety of the panther fence, or do you want the panther fence not -- you're right, it does look like it crosses over Big Cypress Parkway. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: That's all I'm trying to say. Let's not show it there. MR. YOVANOVICH: Okay. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Because if we go to extend that, someone's got to amend the master plan. MR. YOVANOVICH: I got it. I see what you're saying. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. And all of them have the same reference at the same location. MR. YOVANOVICH: Okay. So it will stop on the east side of Big Cypress Parkway. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Yes. MR. YOVANOVICH: Did I get the direction right? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Yep, you got that right. Under your disclaimer, Bob, the master plan is conceptual, internal roadway alignments, golf course routing, light siting and configurations of development areas are subject to modification within the RLSA guidelines at the time of final development order. Your -- that is indicating then that they be insubstantial, because if you get -- you can't do anything that's going to need a public process. MR. MULHERE: That's correct. If they rise to the level of substantial, we have to go through an amendment process or a public process, yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. On your next master plan -- it's the one that is black and white. On the table to the right, you say Rivergrass Village SRA land-use summary. You go down, you have a lake ME and open spaces in a shaded gray. Where is that? And you also have lake tracts, LME, which I'm thinking you're only going to put an LME where the squigglies go north and south instead of east and west, but I don't think that's true either. That's it? MR. YOVANOVICH: Yeah. Judging by the light gray color, yeah, it's up here. MR. MULHERE: Yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: But all the -- okay. Because you've got a lot of lakes. I just don't know why those are the only ones that you're calling lake ME and open space. Sixty-five acres, that's not just that. But the color 3.B.1 Packet Pg. 109 Attachment: 11-7-2019 CCPC Minutes (10959 : November 7, 2019 CCPC minutes)9.A.13 Packet Pg. 384 Attachment: 11.7.19 CCPC Minutes - draft (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) November 7, 2019 Page 23 of 55 coding doesn't match the diagram is what I'm trying to say, so I couldn't follow it. MR. MULHERE: I understand. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And you look at the table below where it says WRA land-use summary, see those little squiggly things going north -- they're up and down? I see where that is, so that makes sense. But next to it there's a little gray patch to the left of that symbol. And, again, I don't know where that occurs on this map. And then you've got -- MR. MULHERE: Here. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: -- the little squigglies that -- I keep referring to them as that -- they look like a water area. See your ones that go east and west, Bob, down in the core of your development? What symbolism is that referring to? Because it can't be the club site and amenity center because that's on the south side of Oil Well. Those aren't matching up. MR. YOVANOVICH: Mr. Strain, I think what -- the right thing to do, get rid of that little gray and just make sure that's all just the squigglies. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: You like that word? MR. YOVANOVICH: I do. If I didn't like it, I would have changed it. I didn't know what to change it to. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I don't either. MR. YOVANOVICH: But squigglies, I think that light gray should come out of that rectangle so it's just the squigglies. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I would think so, too, because you don't intend that to be an LME that -- I don't see it there at least. Do you see -- if you look at the lakes in between your two roads going north and south, you notice the squigglies are going east/west. MR. MULHERE: Yes, right -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: What symbol do they fit under? MR. MULHERE: So they fit under -- well, there's two symbols under lakes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: It says lakes include aqua range at 14.3. MR. MULHERE: So these are -- obviously, you can see that those are not north and south. They're east and west. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. So those are all the lakes and including the aqua range to the south. MR. YOVANOVICH: Which is on the south side -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. That helps. MR. YOVANOVICH: Yes, sir. I think, though -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Let me move down. If we go down to the next master plan, this is Page 3 of the master plans. Under your notes -- MR. MULHERE: Yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: -- all roads -- all road right-of-ways shall be 50 feet unless otherwise noted. They're going to be -- MR. MULHERE: There are a couple -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: They'll be at least 50 feet unless otherwise noted, right? Because you don't have anything below 50 feet, do you? MR. MULHERE: That's correct. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. You're not going to make a smaller road than 50 feet, because you're not -- MR. MULHERE: That's correct. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Under 3, project sidewalks will connect to future pedestrian facilities installed during Oil Well Road expansion. Okay. What expansion are we talking about? Two lanes? Four lanes? Six lanes? MR. MULHERE: It's already two. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: It's already two. But, I mean, when it goes to four? It is going to go to six? So what -- what time are they putting the sidewalks in? I guess that's going to answer it. And then those -- wherever they are, you'll connect to them. 3.B.1 Packet Pg. 110 Attachment: 11-7-2019 CCPC Minutes (10959 : November 7, 2019 CCPC minutes)9.A.13 Packet Pg. 385 Attachment: 11.7.19 CCPC Minutes - draft (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) November 7, 2019 Page 24 of 55 MS. SCOTT: Once again, for the record, Trinity Scott. The roadway is designed and permitted to be built to six lanes. We may build four within a six-lane footprint. We'll make that decision when we program the construction of the project. But in either event, the sidewalks will be built whether it's a four-lane or a six-lane. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And will they be required by that sentence to connect at either point, whether it's four- or six-lane? Because they'd be connecting twice, then. Because if you go to four lanes, then expand to six -- or would you build a sidewalk out to the six-lane configuration? MS. SCOTT: When we build a four-lane and a six-lane footprint, we build the outside lanes and then later widen to the median. So we would build the sidewalks in their ultimate configuration, sorry. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. That's what I needed to know. Thank you. Number 4, at the developer's discretion, a 10-foot-wide pathway may be located within perimeter landscape buffers 25 feet or greater in width provided the required plantings are located between the property line and the pathway; however, in such cases, the buffer width shall be increased in a width by five feet. So you take 25 feet, you drop it down to 15, but you add five more feet giving you a 20-foot buffer if you put a pathway in it. Is that what that's saying? MR. MULHERE: Yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. And the next one, a 10-foot-wide pathway may also be located within the perimeter buffers that are less than 25 feet in width; however, in no such cases the buffer width shall be increased in a width by 10 feet above the minimum required width. MR. MULHERE: However, in such case, the buffer width shall be increased -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Yeah. Can you explain how that -- so you've got a 10-foot pathway, and you've got a buffer width of 15 feet, let's say. I mean, I'm not sure what buffer widths you're talking about. MR. MULHERE: So the buffers that are less than 25 feet in width. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. How -- say, a 10-foot buffer. MR. MULHERE: Or a 20-foot buffer. 10 -- let's go with 10. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Ten-foot buffer you put a 10-foot pathway. MR. MULHERE: You'd have zero, so now you have to increase that by 10. So you're losing nothing on those smaller ones. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: That's what I needed to understand, okay. And that may, thankfully -- oh. On your -- I don't know what page it's on, a few more pages down, you have what's called an SRA local street right-of-way section. MR. MULHERE: Yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: What was the intent of putting that in here? MR. MULHERE: Well, Mr. Chairman, I'm going to take a stab, and if I need to bring Dominic up, I will. But there were issues -- apparently, this SRA program really never contemplated Public Utilities serving these CRAs. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Rotate that 90 degrees, please. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Oh, I liked it better like that. MR. MULHERE: So we worked with the Utilities Department to come up with a cross-section that was supported by utilities, and this represents that. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: That isn't a cross-section of the streets you're putting it. You just said 50 feet. This is 48. MR. AMICO: For the record, Dom Amico, Agnoli, Barber & Brundage. Forty-eight feet is the minimum cross-section for a local road in the SRA standards out of the LDC. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I know, but they're putting in a 50-foot street. MR. AMICO: We've got two more feet. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: So you're adding something to the 48 standard that you're not using because you're asking for a deviation or you're asking for -- you're going to be putting in 50-feet roads, right -- 50-foot roads? MR. AMICO: Yeah. That extra two feet doesn't really change the situation that we had. The situation was the interface between the street trees and the utilities. That's the entire purpose for this cross-section is for the utility 3.B.1 Packet Pg. 111 Attachment: 11-7-2019 CCPC Minutes (10959 : November 7, 2019 CCPC minutes)9.A.13 Packet Pg. 386 Attachment: 11.7.19 CCPC Minutes - draft (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) November 7, 2019 Page 25 of 55 issue. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: But -- MR. MULHERE: Change to 50. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Yes. You're going to attach this to your PUD or SRA as you call it. Staff's going to look at it when your plans come in. They're going to see 48 feet, and that's what's going to happen. MR. AMICO: We can change the 48 to 50. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Yes. That's all you need to do. MR. AMICO: The sole purpose of this was utility driven. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. That's -- I don't have a problem with -- I understand your purpose. I just saw the road was the wrong configuration. MR. MULHERE: Good catch. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Let's see. I think that's the last thing I have on the SRA document. MR. KLATZKOW: Can I ask a question about the master plan? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Yes, sir. MR. KLATZKOW: If we can put it back on the overhead, the color version. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MR. KLATZKOW: I just want to get clarity on the record, because the Board of County Commissioners just recently went through a hearing where initially it was supposed to be one PUD, it got separated into two PUDs, both of them gets gated. And the issue here is, are we sure that we're not really creating two separate gated communities here? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, I think they said these are going to be gated. MR. YOVANOVICH: Within, for instance, Pelican Bay or the Vineyards, they have multiple gated communities. MR. KLATZKOW: Right. But you've got an activity center on the north, all right. So how -- if you got two gated communities here, for example, the community that's now on the south, how are they getting to your activity center? MR. YOVANOVICH: You mean the amenity center? MR. KLATZKOW: Yeah, amenity center. MR. YOVANOVICH: I'm sorry. I just want to make sure we're talking the same language. Well, what they will do is they will -- the communities interconnect in multiple locations, but right here, they would simply cross over Oil Well Road to get -- I can't tell from my reading glasses. Is that the amenity center? Thank you. So you could -- there's the ability to cross multiple locations to go from north to south. MR. KLATZKOW: I'm just saying, is there a prohibition on where the gates go? MR. YOVANOVICH: No. They would have access to get there. MR. KLATZKOW: Until there's a gate. When you have two separate communities with two separate HOAs -- and I've just gone through a hearing with the Board of County Commissioners on this. MR. YOVANOVICH: And I watched it from the cheap seat, so -- MR. KLATZKOW: Yeah. So you understand the issue I'm raising. How can we ensure that the people who live on the south portion of this village actually have access to the north portion are not gated out? MR. MULHERE: Well, there's an amenity center on the south portion, too. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, that's a golf club, right? MR. MULHERE: But it's also an amenity center. MR. KLATZKOW: All right. So what you're saying now is you're contemplating two separate things. What I'm saying is, can we get clarity that the residents in the southern portion will have -- will have access at least to the amenity center to the north? MR. YOVANOVICH: I misunderstood what you were saying. Okay. Step back. The amenity center on the north is for the residents on the north. MR. KLATZKOW: Not for the residents on the south? 3.B.1 Packet Pg. 112 Attachment: 11-7-2019 CCPC Minutes (10959 : November 7, 2019 CCPC minutes)9.A.13 Packet Pg. 387 Attachment: 11.7.19 CCPC Minutes - draft (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) November 7, 2019 Page 26 of 55 MR. YOVANOVICH: No -- there's no commitment today that the residents on the south will have access to the amenity center on the north. MR. KLATZKOW: All right. So for clarity, we're not talking about an integrated village. For clarity, we're talking about two separate gated communities here. MR. YOVANOVICH: No, that's not true. MR. KLATZKOW: It is true, because you just said that you're not going to make a commitment that the residents on the south will have access to the amenities on the north. MR. YOVANOVICH: Just like I'm not going to commit that people who are not members or playing at the golf course will have access to the golf course either. That doesn't mean they're separate communities. We have projects throughout the county where access to amenities are limited. Not every resident has access to an amenity. MR. KLATZKOW: This isn't a criticism. I'm just trying to get clarity. So what we are creating here, Richard, are two separate communities that will be gated, all right. So when we're talking about amenities to the north, that does not mean that the people on the south will get them, and the same thing vice versa. So if the Planning Commission's fine with that, you know, that's fine, but that's what we're creating here. We are creating two separate gated communities, not one integrated village. And unless there's a prohibition on gates here or where gates can go, that's what's going to happen here. MR. YOVANOVICH: Okay. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Go ahead, Karl. COMMISSIONER FRY: Jeff, are you saying that what we're really creating here is two villages? MR. KLATZKOW: No. Not -- you're not creating any village. What you're creating here are two separate gated communities. (Simultaneous crosstalk.) MR. KLATZKOW: Yes. MR. YOVANOVICH: Frankly, I just -- I've got to respond to that. The testimony from your staff is that we are, in fact, creating a village. Within that village there will be gated communities. I just want the record clear. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I hear what you're saying, but we're going to get to the staff report in a minute, which those issues will all be requested -- (Simultaneous crosstalk.) MR. YOVANOVICH: I understand. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: So anybody else? Go ahead, Ned. COMMISSIONER FRYER: I have a couple of questions. One came up in the material that we got from the Conservancy recently, and that has to do with the number of stewardship credits to be assigned to SSA 15. Would you care to explain what is going on with respect to that process? MR. YOVANOVICH: Well, SSA 15 is an approved SSA that is being held in escrow, and it gets released from escrow when this SRA document and all of the required state and federal permits are issued. It already has an identified number of credits. And I don't have the number right off the top of my head. Bob will look for it while we're talking. We are in to amend that SS -- and we meet -- that SSA as held in escrow by my law firm has enough credits already assigned to it to allow for this village to go forward. It has enough credits. We are doing some amendments to that to further reduce the types of activities that can happen in the SSA that will generate more credits. We're going through that amendment process right now. Those amendments are not necessary for the approval of this Rivergrass SRA. COMMISSIONER FRYER: But the consequence of this, I believe, is going to be that the owners of the SSA 15 will be able to provide lots more credits to other receiving units. MR. YOVANOVICH: And that's exactly how the program was intended to be developed. You were to create SSAs, get credits, reduce the amount of activity that can happen in the SSA, i.e., doing a better good for the 3.B.1 Packet Pg. 113 Attachment: 11-7-2019 CCPC Minutes (10959 : November 7, 2019 CCPC minutes)9.A.13 Packet Pg. 388 Attachment: 11.7.19 CCPC Minutes - draft (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) November 7, 2019 Page 27 of 55 environment and, in exchange for that, open lands that we went through the very first day, would be allowed to be developed. The process is working exactly like it's supposed to work. There's no consequence. It's the intended consequence. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And out of fairness to the applicant, the SSAs aren't something reviewed by the Planning Commission. The application in front of us today is for an SRA. We really need to confirm that they have the right amount of credits for the SRA, which was acknowledged by staff. The program's issues with abundance of credits from SSAs really needs to be addressed during the review of the RLSA, to be honest with you. I don't know how we'd bring that into play here today. I read the Conservancy's document closely. I saw there's potential problems today, but I don't know how they would enter in today's discussion, because they base the village on credits they already had, and we don't review SSAs. So unless you've got another idea, Ned, I don't know how to bring that in. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Well, I just wanted to remove the blinders for a moment so I could see what the bigger picture was, and I think I see it. My next question is that -- am I correct that buildout is planned for 2032? MR. YOVANOVICH: Yeah, I believe that's correct. For some reason I have 2030 in my head, but I might be confusing it with another project. COMMISSIONER FRYER: So really the achievement of neutrality, of cost neutrality to the county, won't be measured until 2032 and conceivably could result in additional costs -- undoubtedly will result in additional costs to the county between now and then. MR. YOVANOVICH: Well, the program is set up to measure neutrality at project buildout. That's when you measure it. Those are the rules of the game. That's when we measure it. That's what all the documentation is there for. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Again -- MR. YOVANOVICH: That's the program. MR. KLATZKOW: Fiscal neutrality, forget it. What you have to ensure is that the impact fees will pay for the growth. Because when you get to 2030 and you start calculating it, what are you going to do? Are you going to give them -- are you going to ask the developer -- you know, you're $5 million short. It's not going to happen. So I think what the county really needs to do is ensure that the impact fees are properly set so that hopefully growth pays for growth. That's the only neutrality you're going to get. COMMISSIONER FRYER: So it could be a rather long time before the project is off the dole, so to speak, in relation to the county. MR. KLATZKOW: The project's not going to be on the dole, though. It's -- the school board has the opportunity to ask for land if they need land for the schools. I don't know if they have or not, but that's an opportunity that they have, and the county has the opportunity to either ask or acquire land for, you know, its government needs, and then we have the exact impacts fees that pay for it, at least a portion of this, and that's how this is set up. And truth be told, it's no different than any other PUD. Essentially, that's what we're approving here is a glorified PUD. COMMISSIONER FRYER: That's all I have. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Karl? COMMISSIONER FRY: Rich, one of the policies refers to a progressive urban-to-rural continuum. So the multifamily is a part of that equation. I wanted to just review the commitments regarding the multifamily and make sure that I understand them, and it's out on the table. MR. YOVANOVICH: Okay. COMMISSIONER FRY: I believe the commitment is a minimum of 250 multifamily units. MR. YOVANOVICH: Correct. COMMISSIONER FRY: Within a half-mile of the village center -- MR. YOVANOVICH: Correct. COMMISSIONER FRY: -- at this point. The original -- 3.B.1 Packet Pg. 114 Attachment: 11-7-2019 CCPC Minutes (10959 : November 7, 2019 CCPC minutes)9.A.13 Packet Pg. 389 Attachment: 11.7.19 CCPC Minutes - draft (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) November 7, 2019 Page 28 of 55 COMMISSIONER FRYER: No. It's 250 single-family. MR. YOVANOVICH: No, no, no. We talked about this earlier. The minimum of 250 multifamily. Minimum of 250 multifamily. COMMISSIONER FRYER: You're right; you're right. COMMISSIONER FRY: Around the village center within a half-mile. MR. YOVANOVICH: Within a half a mile of the village center. COMMISSIONER FRY: The initial policy or the rule was written that it was maximum four-acre parcels for these multifamily projects, but you've asked for a change to 25 acres. MR. YOVANOVICH: Yeah, not to exceed 25 acres. So you can have the multifamily products that you're familiar with seeing: Apartment complexes, condominium developments. COMMISSIONER FRY: Is there -- I guess my question is -- it's similar to the question about the commercial uses that go in the village center. And you've clarified. You've, more or less, made commitments to do eight commercial uses within the village center. Are there further commitments in terms of where these multifamily projects would go? I mean, I guess my concern is that are we opening ourselves up for the possibility of one multifamily development on 25 acres, which is two-and-a-half percent of this overall thousand acres, that's 2.5 percent, where all the multifamily is concentrated, or is there a commitment to spread that around the village center and to define what types of multifamily projects there are? I mean, are you committing to condos? Apartments? Villas? Townhomes? I just -- I'm looking just to understand the commitment to make sure that we have this -- we achieve this progressive urban-to-rural continuum. MS. ASHTON-CICKO: And for clarity, you're referring to the half-mile distance to the village center related to a deviation. If they comply with the LDC and do the four-acre projects, I don't believe that there is a limitation -- Nancy, do you know -- as to the distance that multifamily needs to be from the village center? It could be anywhere. MS. GUNDLACH: There is nothing in the LDC. MS. ASHTON-CICKO: That's only if they elect to do the deviation that that applies. MR. YOVANOVICH: No, no, no. That's not -- if that's how it's being interpreted, that's not what was intended. This came up with a question of how do we show that you're getting more dense to less dense as you got further away from the village center, and we committed that our multifamily will be within a half a mile of the village center regardless of the size of the acreage. MS. ASHTON-CICKO: So we'll place that outside the deviation section? MR. YOVANOVICH: Yeah. So make sure we get that right. MS. ASHTON-CICKO: Okay. MR. YOVANOVICH: Second, I don't know the exact mix right now, but we will commit that we have multifamily on both the north and south side of the project, if that will help. I don't think I can commit to you today the type and the exact location. I think the half mile helps. But I think to give you -- to show you that we're spreading it out, if you will, we'll put it on both the north and the south. I don't know the exact split right now, but we do plan on splitting that minimum of 250 to both the north side and the south side. We might be able to get you a better -- UNIDENTIFIED SPEAKER: I can get you exact numbers by -- MR. YOVANOVICH: By when? How about we'll try to see if I can get you that exact number today, but if I can't, I can definitely commit to it at the -- COMMISSIONER FRY: Exact number of what? MR. YOVANOVICH: Of the split on the north and south side. I can definitely commit to that as part of the final SRA document that the County Commission hears. But if you want to -- what we talked about, I guess, at the last hearing is condition your approval upon there being a split between the north and south side if I can't get the exact split before we conclude business today. COMMISSIONER FRY: Would there be any commitment as to a mix of the types of units that would be put in? 3.B.1 Packet Pg. 115 Attachment: 11-7-2019 CCPC Minutes (10959 : November 7, 2019 CCPC minutes)9.A.13 Packet Pg. 390 Attachment: 11.7.19 CCPC Minutes - draft (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) November 7, 2019 Page 29 of 55 I mean, would you commit to at least there would be some mix of townhomes, condos, attached villas, that type of thing, so we have a diversity of housing types as is called for? MR. YOVANOVICH: We do, and we're already required to do that. But I cannot commit to you to X percentage of townhomes, Y percentage of, you know, flat -- you know, I can't commit to that today. COMMISSIONER FRY: Okay. Thank you. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Cormac Giblin is here, and during the discussion in the staff report, there's a portion of it about housing. I was going to ask him to talk about the issue of diversified housing in this location as well. So you'll hear some more at that point, so... Okay. Anybody else have any questions from the SRA document? (No response.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. We've got that far through it. Let's move on to the staff reports. There are two staff reports. One is the FLUE, and one is the staff report that Zoning Department did. I think we'll just go through the Zoning Department's staff report, and then there are portions of that pertaining to the Comprehensive Planning staff, and we'll ask for clarification to for those items that work. Is that okay with everybody? (No response.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. So, Nancy, I'm afraid to ask this next question: What version -- the staff report that I'm working off of, September 19th, 2019, is that the right one? MS. GUNDLACH: There's only one staff report, and that is the right one. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Then we have an issue, because that staff report still has your recommendations that you've previously pulled the plug on. Okay. And so does the -- we don't have a Comprehensive Planning staff report from either you or Zoning that says you no longer have these recommendations. We have it on record, but our writing in our document still put all that stuff as part of the review. So we're going to have to review it. Now, I know you stopped reviewing it last time because you changed your mind, but I'm going to need to know why you changed your mind on each one of the things you previously felt so strong about you had to put it in writing. So I guess we'll start there. We'll work our way through the staff report done by Zoning first. And does anybody want to ask any questions before I start? (No response.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Nancy, on Page 5 of the staff report, back to the question I've asked repeatedly, first bullet point, 2,500 residential units with a density of 2.5 units per acre. Again, we have a different -- did anybody check that to see if they've gotten a resolution to that? MS. GUNDLACH: Yes, I've checked it. And there's two different definitions. There's one in the GMP, so there's a density you arrive at per the Growth Management Plan, and there's density that you arrive at per the Land Development Code. And the Land Development Code SRA section has an interesting definition for density in that it's not -- it doesn't include the excess open-space acreage. So if you take the number of SRA acres, total number, which is 997.53, and you subtract that excess open acreage, which is 222.77 acres, you arrive at 774.76 acres divided by the 2,500 units, and you arrive at 3.099 dwelling units per acre or, if you want to round it off, 3.1 dwelling units per acre. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Is the SRA document an amendment to the GMP or the LDC, or is it a change to the LDC or to the GMP? Richard, I'm asking staff. MS. GUNDLACH: I think I know the answer, but, Ray, I think it's the LDC -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: It's a resolution. I know it's not an ordinance. But does it -- is it pursuant -- is it a document that's under the LDC or GMP? MR. BELLOWS: For the record, Ray Bellows. The SRA document is a designation process covered by the Land Development Code, and it needs to be found consistent with the Growth Management Plan. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. So the calculations, definitions, and references in the zoning staff report are 3.B.1 Packet Pg. 116 Attachment: 11-7-2019 CCPC Minutes (10959 : November 7, 2019 CCPC minutes)9.A.13 Packet Pg. 391 Attachment: 11.7.19 CCPC Minutes - draft (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) November 7, 2019 Page 30 of 55 those relevant to the LDC; is that correct? Because if it is, then we would be looking at a density of 3.1 rounded to this number. MR. BELLOWS: Yes, correct. We are reviewing this to be consistent with the LDC requirements. And if there's a consistency problem with the GMP, that would be part of the staff report as well, if there was one. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: No. The GMP, apparently, has a different way to measure it. But this document, if it's -- and David's coming up, so maybe he can help us with that. MR. WEEKS: David Weeks of the Comprehensive Planning staff. I concur with what Nancy has stated. The difference in the Future Land Use Element RLSA overlay is it provides for no exception. It simply says, take the gross acreage of the SRA and divide that into the total number of dwelling units to get your density. The net result is, through the Future Land Use Element calculation, you're going to end up with a lower density. Because, as Nancy's explained, the LDC provides that for the open excess open-space acreage, two things go hand in hand. First of all, you don't require stewardship credits to be consumed for the excess open-space acreage and, secondly, you don't calculate that -- use that acreage in calculating density. So because you have fewer acres divided into the number of units, your actual density, then, is higher than you would get under the Future Land Use Element. I would point out that this is not unique. We actually have a different circumstance. It's totally irrelevant to what we're discussing here, but it's a parallel, and that's within the Future Land Use Element's density rating system for how density is calculated. If you have wetland acreage, that would still be included in the Future Land Use Element calculation of acreage -- excuse me -- a specific type of wetland, tidally influenced or marine wetlands. The Land Development Code definition of density, residential, would exclude those marina wetland acres. So we have a parallel circumstance where the Future Land Use Element density would be using a larger acreage; therefore, we're resulting in a lower density, and then the Land Development Code's requirements would have a lesser acreage and resulting at a greater density. It's a direct parallel, in my mind, to what we're seeing here. Different reasons, perhaps, but it's -- this is -- my point is, this is not unique that there is a difference between the two documents. MR. KLATZKOW: David, is the proposed density of this development consistent with the GMP? MR. WEEKS: Yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And is the proposed density, Nancy, of this project consistent with the LDC, which is 1 through 4? So they don't have excess of 4, but they have 3.1, and from the GMP they got 2.5. At some point those multipliers get to be used in other documents. I just want to make sure we know what the multipliers are and they're used in the correct documents to come to the correct calculations. That's the whole question. That's where all this was coming from. MR. WEEKS: Understood. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: So I appreciate your clarification, David. Thank you. In the conditions of approval under -- in conclusions and conditions of approval under the Comprehensive Planning section of the Zoning Department's staff report -- so I'm not sure if Nancy wrote this or if Nancy copied this or Corby wrote this or David wrote this. Conclusions: Where the proposed R -- SRA lacks consistency with the intent of the RLSA provisions of the LDC, it may not be considered consistent with the FLUE. Where the proposed SRA does not conform to the fundamental village design characteristics as identified in the standard review findings above, it is not supported by a recommendation for approval. And based upon the above analysis, this proposed SRA may not be deemed consistent with the FLUE; however, the application may be deemed consistent if and when the conditions of approval below are met. One, all formal SSAs have been approved and concurrent -- or -- before or concurrent with the SRA. Those deviations, development standards, SRA statements, and suitability criteria, et cetera, listed under consistency review findings above are removed or revised as discussed above. The ratio of multifamily to single-family dwelling units is increased to a meaningful level. 3.B.1 Packet Pg. 117 Attachment: 11-7-2019 CCPC Minutes (10959 : November 7, 2019 CCPC minutes)9.A.13 Packet Pg. 392 Attachment: 11.7.19 CCPC Minutes - draft (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) November 7, 2019 Page 31 of 55 Now, that's in this staff report. Are you going to issue a new report to the Board of County Commissioners, and if you are, is it going to say that or not? MR. WEEKS: We, I think, need to revise the memo. Here's the bottom line. Comprehensive Planning staff is recommending to the Planning Commission that they find this petition consistent with the Future Land Use Element. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: But, David -- MR. WEEKS: Yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: -- this project, in some manner or form, has been going on for a long time. You-all wouldn't have written this without putting some thought into it before you did. MR. WEEKS: Yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And then after you wrote it you changed your mind. Then I asked you about it, you changed your mind back. We came to the meeting a week ago, and you changed your mind back again. I need to know what drove you to originally conclude the conclusion I just read into the record, I mean, and why did you change it? What made you change it? These -- you normally don't do things lightly. MR. WEEKS: No. Here is what happened: There are objective standards in the Future Land Use Element. There's the same table of SRA requirements, number of acres, density, number of acres of certain types of uses using a metric of X square feet per dwelling unit of commercial, X square feet per dwelling unit of I think it's civic uses, open-space requirements, and so forth. Those are objective, black or white. They either meet it or they don't. And that's what we've always said they're consistent with. The more subjective standards are those that pertain to innovative design, compact development, things of that nature, things that are not defined. They're -- they are subjective. And that is where staff was initially saying this petition is -- we're not finding it consistent. The deviations undo some of those subjective conditions. You know, is it compact? Well, maybe it could be, but with certain deviations, you have certain things about the way they've designed the project, we're saying they're not. And so we were including that in our finding of saying this is not consistent. The change that staff has made is to be, I'll say, consistent with what we have done on other projects looking at the other portions of the Future Land Use Element. Let me explain that. There are policies under Objective 7 in the Future Land Use Element pertaining to smart growth principles such as interconnections, walkability. When staff reviews a rezone petition under those policies, if we find that the policies are not being complied with, because the language in those policies says encourage, encourage walkability, encourage interconnections, if they don't comply with those, the staff position is going to be to point that out to you as the Planning Commission and the Board, recommend that they do certain things but, nonetheless, if they meet -- if they don't do those things, we would not recommend that they be found inconsistent with the plan; whereas, for example, the density rating system is a more black-and-white calculation, you either meet it or you don't. And so if a project didn't meet the density rating system, we would be recommending that the project be found inconsistent. The parallel here is that those objective standards, those black-and-white in that table, if all of those are met, then staff is recommending that the petition be found consistent with the Future Land Use Element under those other subjective terms such as compactness and innovative design. If we disagree there, we point that out to you, tell you we think they could do better, but we don't use that as a basis for finding them inconsistent. And as I stated at the last meeting, as far as the design goes here, staff does not like their design. We don't think it's compact, or certainly it's not as compact as it could be. It's not an innovative design. This is just taking what we do over here in the suburban Naples area and plopping it down out in the Rural Lands Stewardship Area, and we don't think that was the intent. But we're not saying it's inconsistent with the plan because we don't have a black-and-white definition or requirement for what that means. Let me give you one example regarding compactness, which I think I might have said at the last meeting. At the very high-level view, any SRA within the RLSA is compact development because it's taking that plus-or-minus 195,000 acres and changing from the checkerboard pattern of one dwelling unit per five acres and instead 3.B.1 Packet Pg. 118 Attachment: 11-7-2019 CCPC Minutes (10959 : November 7, 2019 CCPC minutes)9.A.13 Packet Pg. 393 Attachment: 11.7.19 CCPC Minutes - draft (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) November 7, 2019 Page 32 of 55 concentrating the development into these Stewardship Receiving Areas. So at that high-level review, any SRA is a compact development. But looking at the site-specific petition in front of us on a case-by-case basis, compactness to staff means looking at language in the FLUE policies and in the LDC that speak to a compact core, speaks to a continuum, of a density hierarchy, whether it uses that word or not, where we start with a core of intense development and then have gradients going outward to the edges of the SRA. In this project, we don't see that much of a gradient. They do have a -- I say a town core. I mean village core. They do have a village core, a village center, which is where the commercial, the higher intensity uses are at. They do have multifamily proximate to that, and then they go to single-family. So there is some gradient, but their gradient goes out all the way to the very edges at the same -- appears to be the same density. They've designed it with lakes throughout the entire community with residential around it. So, yes, everyone gets to enjoy a lakefront view, but here we have this low density spread throughout. If they were to -- this is just an example. If they were to take a lot of these lakes and push them out to the edges of the village, pull the residential units in closer towards the village center, that would be one way of achieving a more compact development. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Thank you, David. I appreciate it. Now, Ned. COMMISSIONER FRYER: I confess to being somewhat surprised and disappointed that staff has come to the place where it has, particularly in view of all the things that have been written in the beginning that I supported and applauded staff for being able to stand up and take these positions, all be they perhaps unpopular in the developer community, in the interest of making a better Eastern Collier County. And so I'm just -- I'm quite disappointed in that. And, first and foremost, the problem that I have with this proposal is its total lack of connectivity, and I mean within the proposed village, and I'm focusing specifically on Oil Well Road and the numerous are they 15 or 18 cul-de-sacs which to me are just dead-ends. And those dead-ends and that potential six-lane highway running through this so-called village, together, in my judgment, it is completely antithetical to what my understanding, after hours and hours of reading of what led up to the RLSA, what was intended by the planners, by your colleagues, by the Board of County Commissioners, and by our predecessors. So I just -- I can't see how you're able to come to that conclusion which is so diametrically opposed to some of the things particularly that Corby wrote early on and how you can square your recommendations at this point with Section 163.3177 of the Florida Statutes that calls upon these types of developments to avoid resulting in poor accessibility among linked or related land uses. This development fails, quote, to provide -- to promote walkable and connected communities, and it fails to provide, quote, an innovative development that in any manner addresses these obvious flaws. Section 163.3248, Florida Statutes, calls for the use of innovative planning and development strategies and creative land-use planning techniques. To me, this proposal is nothing more than a garden-variety urban or suburban PUD. Objective 7 of the FLUE in Policy 7.2 through 7.4 call for the use of smart-growth policies and practices in the RLSA as well as to use, quote, internal accesses or loop roads to help reduce vehicle congestion on nearby roads and minimize the need for traffic signals and to provide walkable communities. Objective 4, and Policies 4.1 through 4.7, call for creative land-use planning techniques in the Stewardship Receiving Area and pedestrian and bicycle circulation by including an interconnected sidewalk and pathway system serving all residential neighborhoods. 4.08.07 of the Land Development Code, which requires villages to be designed in a, quote, compact pedestrian-friendly form, to encourage pedestrian and bicycle circulation by including all -- excuse me -- and interconnected sidewalk and pathways systems serving all residential neighborhoods and for a high level of mobility for all residents through a design that respects the pedestrian. I just don't see how you get to where you have gotten. And I'm going to continue here while I'm -- while I'm reviewing what I consider to be a transformation on the part of staff. 3.B.1 Packet Pg. 119 Attachment: 11-7-2019 CCPC Minutes (10959 : November 7, 2019 CCPC minutes)9.A.13 Packet Pg. 394 Attachment: 11.7.19 CCPC Minutes - draft (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) November 7, 2019 Page 33 of 55 Promotion of urban sprawl is obviously intended in the -- in the RLSA by the creators and the people whose ideals were put to writing. To me, the geographical out-boundaries of this proposal -- it's got a long neck, it's got a long tail. We've asked and we haven't received any indication as to how far people would have to walk or bicycle from the remotest points, not to mention crossing Oil Well, but how far they would have to walk -- how many -- what percentage of the occupants would have to walk or would be able to get to the amenity center and get to the commercial area within a quarter of a mile? What percentage a half mile? What percentage three-quarters? What percentage a mile? What about a mile and a quarter? I'm not saying that everybody has to be able to be within walking distance, but it seems to me it should be skewed, and there should be promises made to us that is it skewed in a way that most of the residents of the development will be able to achieve walkability to these important places that they want to go. And, again, those two statutes I mentioned, I think, call for the discouragement of urban sprawl, and FLUE Objective 4 also calls for the discouragement of urban sprawl. Lack of diversity in housing. Now, I grant that there is no requirement of affordable; however, that's the most obvious way, it seems to me, to achieve diversity, and absent that what you have is 90 percent of the housing is going to be single-family and 10 percent is going to be multifamily. To me, without affordable housing, I don't see how you can get to the requirement of diversity. Failure to move from greater to lesser density, as Commissioner Fry mentioned, I don't believe that that has been represented to us in a fashion that coincidences with the requirements that I find in these various statutes and regulations and, for those reasons, I am headed down a path almost certainly voting against this project. MR. WEEKS: May I respond? COMMISSIONER FRYER: Of course. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Yes. MR. WEEKS: Okay. First of all, because this is an SRA, staff did not review this under Chapter 163 of Florida Statutes. If it were a Comprehensive Plan amendment, then we would have. But in this case we are implementing the county's Rural Lands Stewardship Area program adopted in our county regulations, our GMP and our Land Development Code. Secondly, I think you've helped to make my earlier point about the more subjective provisions of the Future Land Use Element and the LDC regarding the design of the project. I thought I said it clearly a moment ago; I'll repeat it. Staff does not think this is a good design, period, but that is not, in our view, a basis for finding it inconsistent with the Comprehensive Plan because it complies with the objective standards in the Comprehensive Plan, specifically the Future Land Use Element RLSA policies. But those FLUE policies that you've referenced about walkability, 7.1 through 7.4 and various ones within the RLSA overlay, staff agrees with at least some, if not all, of the points that you've raised. It's up to this body and the Board of County Commissioners ultimately as to how you react and ultimately recommend or act on those more subjective provisions of the Comprehensive Plan and the Land Development Code. And, finally, I would just make a general comment that staff must acknowledge that there are certain geographic constraints to this property. You know, looking at the shape of it, particularly looking on the north side where it's long and linear, because they're bound by WRA and then SSAs further to the east. So they have some constraints as to just what the shape of their property can be and, therefore, that does affect their development pattern. Staff acknowledges that. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Mr. Chairman, in my belief, now is the last clear chance for us and, more importantly, for the Board of County Commissioners to get this right for Eastern Collier County, and whatever we do will set norms and the expectations for future developments. I think it would be a serious injustice worked upon the county if we, with this very first project, allowed it to go forward based upon the application in its present terms. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Karl? COMMISSIONER FRY: David, what I took away from what you said is really your definition of where you feel the boundary is of staff's scope in the level of review that you can provide, which is on the objective side, and that -- and I guess I would ask for clarification from our County Attorneys in terms of our latitude today. 3.B.1 Packet Pg. 120 Attachment: 11-7-2019 CCPC Minutes (10959 : November 7, 2019 CCPC minutes)9.A.13 Packet Pg. 395 Attachment: 11.7.19 CCPC Minutes - draft (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) November 7, 2019 Page 34 of 55 We're here -- I interpret your statement by saying you handled the objective. The subjective is up to us and the County Commission; is that accurate? MR. KLATZKOW: Staff's role is -- they're administrators. They get an application, and they just check off boxes. They don't make policy, all right. Your role as our Planning Commission is to recommend policy to the Board of County Commissioners. Your role is to review the Comp Plan, make change to the Comp Plan, or at least propose changes to the Comp Plan; same with the LDC. You're our local planning agency so that your role is different from staff's role. Staff gets an application, they say, does it comply with the LDC, yes or no? If it complies, they check off the boxes and make the recommendation. Your role is far greater than that. Your role is to look at something and say, wait a second, this isn't what we meant or this isn't, in my opinion, what this project ought to be. You're here to do the actual planning. COMMISSIONER FRY: So applying this to the points that Mr. Fryer -- Commissioner Fryer made, it's within our latitude to look at the objectives of the RLSA and evaluate this application based on those objectives. MR. KLATZKOW: Yes. At the end of the day, your primary responsibility is the Comprehensive Plan under the statute. I mean, you look at the Comprehensive Plan, you know, you interpret the Comp Plan, and you then make recommendations to the Board of County Commissioners accordingly. And if you don't think this application is consistent with the Comprehensive Plan, then you'll make your recommendation accordingly. COMMISSIONER FRY: I would echo that I find this to be an extremely important occasion in that this is the first of four villages to come before us. I see it's impossible to escape some precedential impacts from our decision today on those remaining three villages as they come before us. So I just -- I believe we should all be weighing all of these factors in consideration. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Anybody else? (No response.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Thank you, David. Nancy, if we move on with your staff report, under the section for Transportation, there are two conditions of approval, and I need to know if Transportation's still on board with those or they've changed their mind, because they're part of Nancy's overall recommendations which I think have been pulled. Conditions of approval, 4, the companion developer agreement is required to be approved with the SRA request and, 5, to provide for potential interconnections north, east, and south on the master plan. In addition, it's not in here. We have heard discussion concerning itself about the ability to acquire what properties we could in some manner of a commitment for Big Cypress Parkway. So I need to understand how those three things now fit into your position on this project, because we're coming to the end, and we've got to get a conclusion on it, and I need to know where you-all stand, so... MR. SCOTT: The quick answer is is that Transportation Planning has not modified their recommendations. We are still recommending that interconnections be shown, we are still requiring that the companion developer agreement be approved along with the SRA, and we are requesting the right-of-way reservation north and south of Rivergrass based on the Big Cypress Stewardship District in the discussions that occurred as part of that and what would have been the required interlocal services delivery agreement. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: The part about Big Cypress Parkway, why wasn't that included in your conditions of approval in the staff report? MS. SCOTT: It actually is in the discussion, and if you notice in the companion developer agreement, we did not have the acreage for the roadway that would be provided, so that would have been contemplated in that. That acreage was changing up in -- our right-of-way widths were requiring the changes of the master plan up until the last hearing, I believe. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And what kind of a document are you looking for, or what kind of statement are you looking for to assure that when and if the time is ripe for acquisition of those additional lands north and south you have -- the county has the ability to actually look at that or consider acquiring them? How does that -- MS. SCOTT: We are okay with the reservation of right-of-way north and south, so that way it delineates where the future right-of-way is and, currently, in a majority of the locations -- I'm not going to say in all of the 3.B.1 Packet Pg. 121 Attachment: 11-7-2019 CCPC Minutes (10959 : November 7, 2019 CCPC minutes)9.A.13 Packet Pg. 396 Attachment: 11.7.19 CCPC Minutes - draft (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) November 7, 2019 Page 35 of 55 locations, because I know that there's been some property sales on the north -- the present landowner still owns that land. And so we want that delineated so if the property is sold in the future that the people who would buy it are aware that this roadway is planned and is necessary for the overall network to support the development. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: The Rural Lands West project, did you review that when it came through previously multiple times? MS. SCOTT: Yes. The Rural Lands West, yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: That was what the -- that's the town that will be there. MS. SCOTT: Uh-huh. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: The interconnections that were shown on the Rural Lands West project, were those adequate for your department? Because you're asking for interconnections now in other villages that used to be part of that town, and those interconnections, if they were -- MS. SCOTT: We were okay with those interconnections, yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. If you don't get a commitment on right-of-way or some kind of deal to go north and south further than this project for the Big Cypress Parkway, what does that mean in regards to potential traffic elsewhere and road systems, potential failures elsewhere? How will that impact the overall network program? MS. SCOTT: Without Big Cypress Parkway as it was delineated and we put on the record previously with our alternative two-plus through our Randall/Oil Well Road corridor study, the traffic that would have utilized Big Cypress Parkway will divert to the roadway network within the Golden Gate Estates. So DeSoto Boulevard, Randall Boulevard would see an increase in traffic, Everglades Boulevard. The parallel roadways and the adjacent roadways would see an increase in traffic. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Traffic trying to go east on I-75 would have to go where if Big Cypress eventually wasn't all the way acquired and connected to I-75? MS. SCOTT: Well, the interchange is still an unknown at this point, but all the traffic would find its way to Golden Gate Boulevard, Vanderbilt Beach Road extension, Immokalee Road, or it would go the other direction and go to State Road 29 and get on the interstate at that location. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Or they'd pile up on 951 to go to that interchange, which would be where you could go east and west, 951 and I-75; is that fair? MS. SCOTT: Yes. I mean, in this particular area, depending on which way you're going. If you're going to Miami, you're going to go probably to State Road 29 and hop on there. If you're trying to go the other direction, Collier Boulevard, Immokalee Road, Pine Ridge, depending on the route. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. That's the only questions I had left on that part of the section of the staff report. Anybody else have any? (No response.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. We'll move on, Trinity. I'm going to go to a different section; hopefully not yours. The Environmental Planning staff had a recommendation, a condition of approval. I'm assuming it still stands. Have you heard anything on that, Nancy? MS. GUNDLACH: Yes, that's Condition of Approval No. 6, and there is a slight revision. Prior to the -- it says, prior to the issuance of the first development order, strike through "development order" and replace with "Site Development Plan or plans and plat." CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MS. GUNDLACH: The rest remains the same. COMMISSIONER DEARBORN: Could we have it on the overhead? MS. GUNDLACH: Oh, sure. COMMISSIONER DEARBORN: Thanks, Nancy. Just for everybody to see it. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Number 6, right? MS. GUNDLACH: Yes. COMMISSIONER FRYER: A little too far. COMMISSIONER DEARBORN: I can see it, but I can't read it. 3.B.1 Packet Pg. 122 Attachment: 11-7-2019 CCPC Minutes (10959 : November 7, 2019 CCPC minutes)9.A.13 Packet Pg. 397 Attachment: 11.7.19 CCPC Minutes - draft (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) November 7, 2019 Page 36 of 55 CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. If we go down to the Public Utilities review, they had four recommendations. Is Utilities here? Somebody's pointing to somebody. MS. GUNDLACH: It would be Eric Fey. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Oh, Eric Fey's here. Okay. Eric, you had Recommendations 7 through 10 in the staff report. I need you to tell us where you stand on those four, please. MR. FEY: Yes. For the record, Eric Fey, principal project manager with Public Utilities Engineering and Project Management. All four -- well, the first three of my conditions have been satisfied. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Meaning they no longer need to be conditions? MR. FEY: Correct. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MR. FEY: The last condition, I believe, should be part of any recommendation to approve. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MR. FEY: That is the interlocal agreement. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And, Nancy, based on the discussions that we're having, you will be able to amend your recommendations for this panel? MS. GUNDLACH: Correct. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. So you would drop No. 7, 8, and 9, and incorporate 10 still? MR. FEY: Correct, and that's simply because it's concurrent with the SRA resolution. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Anybody have any questions? (No response.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Nope. Let's see -- okay. Thank you. That's all I've got on that matter, and next is the housing issue, so... MR. FEY: Thank you. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And I know Cormac's here, and I've also -- so I'd like him to address us in their position, because they have a requirement or a request for a housing need analysis. I need to know where the Housing Department stands on that. MR. GIBLIN: Good morning, Commissioners. Cormac Giblin, your Housing and Development Grant Manager, for the record. My review and recommendation for this application has not changed since the very first submittal. So that would -- that recommendation still stands. There was really nothing that I had to go on in order to perform my review in terms of housing affordability. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. And can you tell us what determines your ability to require a housing needs analysis? Where did you -- how did you come into the thought that this was something that should be required and, unless it is, you can't sign off on it? MR. GIBLIN: I think that will -- it's not required that housing sign off on it; let me start with that. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. But we do look to you with your experience to -- MR. GIBLIN: Correct. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: -- weigh in on this stuff. And if I'm not mistaken, there's a diversity requirement that we've heard different arguments about, so I need your position on that. MR. GIBLIN: Correct. You've heard that. As David, I think, adequately and very well summarized earlier, there are objective criteria and subjective criteria. The housing affordability criteria, I think, would fall into the subjective side of the house. I think that the policy that a village be primarily residential community with a diversity of housing type and mixed uses appropriate to scale and character of that particular village, that FLUE 4.7.2, when you -- it would be a subjective call on how one defines a diversity of housing types. In my review, I review that as meaning different price points, different styles, different makeup of units, that sort of thing. The applicant's economic assessment does go a little bit further into describing the different unit types 3.B.1 Packet Pg. 123 Attachment: 11-7-2019 CCPC Minutes (10959 : November 7, 2019 CCPC minutes)9.A.13 Packet Pg. 398 Attachment: 11.7.19 CCPC Minutes - draft (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) November 7, 2019 Page 37 of 55 and price points that they propose. It says that they're going to do about 1,086 residential condo/duplex or single-family attached product and 1,414 single-family detached. The multifamily condo/duplex they say will have a sales value of 270- -- an average sales value of $272,000 a unit, and the single-family detached would have an average sales value of $394,000 a unit. Their economic assessment further states that the average assessed value for Rivergrass Village single-family home is $370,000, which is 41 percent higher than the county's median value. In reviewing the FLUE policy and, also, I also reviewed this against the housing element of the Comprehensive Plan which has certain goals, objectives, and policies dealing with housing affordability, the analysis had not been completed to let me know how the village would comply with that. And, in fact, the data that I was able to find through their economic analysis seemed to point us in the wrong direction. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Were you -- I know you were with the county, and you left for private sector for a while and now you're back. Were you here with the county when the RLSA came through for its initial setup back in the early 2000s? MR. GIBLIN: I certainly was. I was a part of the team putting together the RLSA. When I separated with the county, I actually went to the company that then invented the Rural Lands Stewardship, and I worked in the department that implemented it in the private sector, and now I've come back here to the county again. One of the reasons that there are certain things in this, when we deal about housing affordability, I think, and why there is no specific objective criteria in our Comprehensive Plan or Land Development Code is that at the time these fell under the Development of Regional Impact state statute that required that same exact housing needs analysis that I'm recommending now. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: The villages wouldn't have been under a -- they wouldn't have been big enough to call for a DRI evaluation, would they? I mean, I know that Town of Ave Maria was, but usually you've got to have a substantial impact regionally or show some kind of regional impact. Villages would be too small. So I'm not sure they would have fit. And the reason I'm asking you this, I was here like you were back then. I sat on this panel reviewing the RLSA. I think I'm the only one on this panel that is still here. And I know that we -- at the same time, we have the RFMUD coming through. The RFMUD, we actually required affordable housing as a component, and I can't remember why we wouldn't have followed that same trend with the RLSA unless the language was intended to include that. And I'm trying to figure out how all that -- I can't remember that. It's been 20 years. I just can't remember back that far. Maybe David -- he's young. He's got a better memory. MR. WEEKS: David Weeks, again, Comprehensive Planning section. Commissioners, I believe that the county was relying upon the DRI requirements for affordable housing. And the villages could fall under two scenarios. They could be small enough that they would be below the DRI threshold, or they might be above that threshold, because remember the density ranges up to four units per acre, so that could be 4,000 dwelling units. And if they opted for the density bonuses, the affordable housing density bonus could be even higher. So not with -- the threshold -- the old threshold for DRIs was 2,000 dwelling units; however, if you had a mixed-use project, the threshold then elevated higher. But I think that at that maximum density of 4,000 dwelling units, even in a mixed-use scenario, would have crossed the threshold. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: So the mindset from the Housing Department and yours, most likely, was if they're going to do a DRI, they're going to have to address the affordable housing issue, so it's covered. MR. GIBLIN: Exactly, I think, and that covers many other reviewers' subject matter had that same mindset. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Good point. Thank you. Anybody else have any questions? Karl. COMMISSIONER FRY: Cormac, you mentioned numbers of multifamily versus single-family in the economic analysis. Are those commitments? Because the only commitment I know of is a minimum of 250 multifamily in the SRA document, so could you please clarify that. MR. GIBLIN: You're correct, these do not read as commitments. These are estimates in their economic assessment. 3.B.1 Packet Pg. 124 Attachment: 11-7-2019 CCPC Minutes (10959 : November 7, 2019 CCPC minutes)9.A.13 Packet Pg. 399 Attachment: 11.7.19 CCPC Minutes - draft (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) November 7, 2019 Page 38 of 55 COMMISSIONER FRY: Thank you. MS. ASHTON-CICKO: In Design Criteria 3.A.4 of the village, it does require a range of housing types and price levels to accommodate diverse ages and incomes. That's your affordability language. COMMISSIONER FRY: Thank you. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. I don't have any other questions of Housing, and appreciate your time, Cormac. Thank you. MR. GIBLIN: Thank you. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Nancy, on Page 26 of the staff report, it's under the section titled "Collier County Public Schools fiscal neutrality." Maybe that's Tom Eastman. The last three paragraphs, I'm trying to understand, it says, the village center is located along the northern edge of the southern half of the SRA along Oil Well Road, a major arterial road and freight route. The village center is disconnected from the northern half of the SRA village by Oil Well Road resulting in a less walkable community. Why did these -- why was -- why is that located under the Collier County Public Schools fiscal neutrality section of your report? I think it is. MS. GUNDLACH: Actually, in the staff report it's located under the Zoning Services review. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Oh. I'm going by the bold titles. You're going by the -- okay. Then let's go back. Then it isn't Tom. It's under an italicized title instead of a bold title, so fine. Let's go to that italicized title. Can you tell me what -- you added that because it must bother you from a zoning perspective. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Chairman, what page are you on? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I'm on Page 26 of the staff report, bottom three paragraphs. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Thank you. MS. GUNDLACH: Well, the intention was to be walkable, and it's difficult to walk across six-lane road. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MS. GUNDLACH: It just segregates the community. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And I just needed your synopsis on that. Second paragraph of that section says some of the deviations contained in the Rivergrass Village SRA development document, town, decrease walkability of their SRA village. The result is a compact suburban-style development similar to many Planned Unit Developments located in the urban area of Collier County. So you're saying this is more like a PUD than what you expected as an SRA? MS. GUNDLACH: Correct. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Based on your understanding of the LDC? MS. GUNDLACH: Correct. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Next paragraph: Staff believes that five of the proposed deviations are not consistent with the development standards of the RLSA zoning overlay regulations contained in the LSD -- LSD -- LDC as previously stated in the GMP consistency review. So you're on board with their previous position as the zoning reviewer? MS. GUNDLACH: Yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Does that mean you're still making recommendations on those items? While they may be subjective in the GMP, are they more nonsubjective in the LDC, meaning are they more regulated? Are they more required? MS. GUNDLACH: They're more regulated in the LDC, correct. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: The LDC prohibition of no parking lots in front of buildings, a key element of a walkable community has been eliminated. The "LDC prescribes maximum lot sizes of four acres" has also been eliminated, creating the potential for super blocks areas which destroy vehicular and pedestrian connectivity. Is that your writing? MS. GUNDLACH: That's my writing. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Now, in your previous, kind of, lightening up on your position on your recommendations, are those not your recommendations now? Are you still concerned about those things or not? MR. BELLOWS: For the record, Ray Bellows. In regard to the four-acre that's in the LDC -- and I believe that's part of a deviation now. 3.B.1 Packet Pg. 125 Attachment: 11-7-2019 CCPC Minutes (10959 : November 7, 2019 CCPC minutes)9.A.13 Packet Pg. 400 Attachment: 11.7.19 CCPC Minutes - draft (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) November 7, 2019 Page 39 of 55 CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Right. Didn't you guys just say -- (Simultaneous crosstalk.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: -- one of the ones that you approved? And I'm trying to wonder how that approval corresponds with the statement I just read that you wrote. MR. BELLOWS: Well, when I was reviewing this, my opinion is that a developer can combine these four-acre parcels into larger parcels. So I didn't see that there was a practical benefit to holding onto that position. So that was my call. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. So the reviewer didn't like it, but as her superior you're okay with it. MR. BELLOWS: Yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And the same with the no parking lots in front of buildings, because now we're reversed, and that one is one that you're now saying you don't -- you're approving, but it wasn't. MR. BELLOWS: That's correct. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. I'm just checking to make sure I got all my questions from the -- that's all the questions I have from the staff reports. And, you know, I don't know -- we'll probably -- we're going to -- I'm going to make every attempt possible to wrap this up today. I'm going to need your help a little bit by telling us what recommendations on your staff report will remain when it goes to the Board of County Commissioners. And then we will go from there -- MS. GUNDLACH: Okay. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: -- during our debate and discussion up here, and that will help us out a lot if you could do that. And that -- anybody else have any questions from the staff reports? (No response.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: That takes us to LDC/GMP questions. Anybody have any specific questions on those documents and your reading? I know, Ned, you've already expressed your concerns. If you have more, now's a good time to bring them up. It's up to you. If not, then we will move on to other things that I may have or anybody else. COMMISSIONER FRYER: The only thing that I would say further is at the end of the staff report there is a section called County Attorney's Office review, which I thought was very helpful in identifying the scope of our review of this and examination of it, and so thank you for that. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And I'm looking through the questions I have. Anybody else have any other? If not, I'll just quickly go through what I've got and see if there's anything here that hasn't been discussed. And I don't have anything. So we've -- in the GMP we're thoroughly -- I can talk to staff about that. In the GMP -- I'm going to move through those real quick. I had questions on the ALF, but that was about the fact that they needed to give us a size on it, because from the LDC it seemed necessary. And now we've got that; that cures that problem. The density one, we seem to have concluded that, so I don't have anything else on that. And I think that takes us to the end of it. I don't have anything left on the two. They were resolved with the discussions we've had, so I can pass on any more discussion on that. I have a question of the applicant. Rich, I took a look at the Rural Lands West town proposed. I took a look at a development to the west called Hyde Park. Hyde Park is at the corner of Oil Well and at the edge of the Estates from DeSoto over to that point. Your project has a corner right up against them separated by the future extension of Big Cypress Parkway and Oil Well to the south, and then to the south you have your commercial center in that northeast corner. In fact, I think I put it on a little drawing to better understand it. Ray, could you put this on the overhead? You need to zoom out a little bit to get all those squares in. Rich, what I was trying to do is figure out how could you make a more cohesive village, and I took the fact that you could have developed the town on the areas you previously were coming through for, I'm assuming you could have, and I tried to approximate by the time you take out the excess open space and the preserve areas and all that, what you'd end up with for a couple of villages. Because you've got the villages to the left, which is the Hyde 3.B.1 Packet Pg. 126 Attachment: 11-7-2019 CCPC Minutes (10959 : November 7, 2019 CCPC minutes)9.A.13 Packet Pg. 401 Attachment: 11.7.19 CCPC Minutes - draft (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) November 7, 2019 Page 40 of 55 Park village that's proposed, and the red of each one of these could indicate potential commercial. And I'm just wondering why didn't you do villages in a manner where you've got one to the north of Oil Well and one to the south? Because Oil Well Road is a big divider. And I'm looking at the developability of the one to the north, and the fact that you could have had some really nice housing with the amenity of that preserve or WRA in the center as a view amenity or something would have been a good asset. Likewise, on the south, you could have had a championship golf course across from the preserve areas and working down there. I'm just curious, why did you divide the village -- why was the decision made to divide the village in half; do you know? MR. YOVANOVICH: Mr. Strain -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I mean, I'm not trying to do you're planning. I'm just suggesting, here's a couple scenarios. I just don't know why it was look at like it is. MR. YOVANOVICH: And you know what, we've evaluated many scenarios and arrived at the scenario that was -- made sense and is consistent with the Growth Management Plan. And let me know when I'm allowed to go beyond that response, or do I hold the rest of my comments to -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: No, no. MR. YOVANOVICH: -- to my rebuttal and close because -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I'm going to go to the Planning Commission next. I don't think -- anybody have any more questions on anything at this point? (No response.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: You're more than welcome to have a discussion, and you can go into rebuttal after that. I'm not trying to hold you up on time. I'm just -- this thing has gotten -- MR. YOVANOVICH: I'm not worried about time. I'm worried about subject matter, because your question leads me to a comment that I think's appropriate here. You'll tell me to stop if not. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: No. Go ahead, Rich. Get it all on the table. MR. YOVANOVICH: The Rural Land Stewardship program is a voluntary program for landowners to put into SSAs for the benefit of the environment and the benefit of agricultural lands in return for being able to develop open lands. The option and permutations of how to divide up those open lands is probably hundreds of different options that can occur. You may have an idea like that plan right there that you think's a great plan. It's consistent with the program. You don't have to like our plan, but our plan is consistent with the program, and the program has multiple aspects to it. And what I've heard people say is we don't like your design. That's not one of the review criteria, whether you like the design or not. And I feel like when exhibits like this get put up and it's not -- and I know you had good intentions of talking about it. And when we start talking about Rural Lands West -- and I could show you the countless comments from your Transportation and Planning staff saying why they hated Rural Lands West, including where we had decided to put the two million square feet of office and retail and business park and all the reasons why they didn't like that. But they come up here and they show you that and say, hey, this is what they were originally proposing. What they didn't tell you is that they were originally throwing up all over it and didn't like it. So I find it a little bit -- I'm trying -- I'm looking for a different synonym for disingenuous, but I can't think of one right now, to get up there and put that exhibit up there and say this is what we want when I can show you hundreds of pages -- (Simultaneous crosstalk.) MR. YOVANOVICH: That's what Transportation staff is saying. This is what they want, interconnectivity. They want all these things, but they didn't tell you -- they didn't tell you they were recommending denial of that town. So don't -- it's wrong what they're doing, and it's wrong to say there are other options, and that's why you should deny the project, because there are options. I'm going to tell you there are options. There are many options that are consistent with your Growth Management Plan. 3.B.1 Packet Pg. 127 Attachment: 11-7-2019 CCPC Minutes (10959 : November 7, 2019 CCPC minutes)9.A.13 Packet Pg. 402 Attachment: 11.7.19 CCPC Minutes - draft (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) November 7, 2019 Page 41 of 55 And I'll stop on that topic right now, because I think that's really what you were talking about, and I'll go into other things later. But there are other options. You may like other options, but that's not the measuring sticker are "are there other options." CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And I wasn't trying to say they were. As you had pointed out earlier, I was on the development side of the table for a while, and I saw some assets there that would have been valuable to maybe consider. And I just was wondering why you thought the best avenue was to split that village like it is -- MR. YOVANOVICH: And all of those -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: -- when it may not have had to be. That's all. MR. YOVANOVICH: Well, you know, there are other factors to be considered, and they were all considered as to, what's the market? What do people want? What's the best location for the village center? How many rooftops can, in fact, support a village center before you start dividing this up? And, you know, those -- all of those factors were, in fact, considered in arriving at this configuration of this village as well as the other villages, and including Hyde Park's village. It's not -- it's not like you have a perfect square for a section and you have a blank canvas. This whole program recognizes that there's flowway areas, there's habitat areas, there's WRAs. So you have some physical constraints on how to make the program work, which one of the most important parts of the program was the preservation of Habitat Stewardship Areas and other sending areas, Flowway Stewardship Areas. All of that was part of the program. And as David pointed out, there are constraints in how to make it work, and that all was factored in. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Thank you. Is there -- now, as far as Planning Commission goes, do you have anything -- do you want to ask anybody before we go into -- first we'll do Rich's rebuttal, and then we'll decide where to go. Do you have any more rebuttal you want to -- MR. YOVANOVICH: A little bit. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Pardon me? MR. YOVANOVICH: A little bit. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Why don't you go forward. MR. YOVANOVICH: Let me answer one question first before I get into rebuttal. I told Mr. Fry that we -- it turned out that we actually have committed to splitting a minimum of 125 multifamily both on the north and south side. It doesn't mean we won't do more, but we have an absolute commitment to 125 multifamily north, 125 multifamily south. I want to go through a couple of -- and Jeff and I go round and round on this, so I would appreciate if you'd just let me say what I'm going to say and try not to rebut me too early into the process. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Have I ever rebutted you? MR. YOVANOVICH: No. I said Jeff. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Oh, okay. MR. YOVANOVICH: Because I have a different legal opinion as to what your Growth Management Plan does and what your Land Development Code does and what it can't do, and one of the things it can't do is it can't be ambiguous; you have to have laws that have objective and measurable standards. I fundamentally disagree with the concept that your Growth Management Plan is subjective; it's not. You have measurable objective standards that have to be met for villages. We showed you the checklist, and I'll show you that again when I finish my rebuttal. You're also here in a role -- we're in a quasi-judicial process. Quasi-judicial process means you're the judge. You leave your personal biases out and you listen to the evidence that's presented as to whether or not we meet the criteria in the Growth Management Plan and the Land Development Code. You may dislike this project in its entirety. Some of you have said some pretty strong statements about it. You're not to apply your personal opinions. You're to look at the code and whether or not we meet the objective standards. And you're to look at the code based upon the evidence that's presented to you. What is the evidence that's been presented to you? The evidence as presented to you has been our professional staff, or our consultants, that have 3.B.1 Packet Pg. 128 Attachment: 11-7-2019 CCPC Minutes (10959 : November 7, 2019 CCPC minutes)9.A.13 Packet Pg. 403 Attachment: 11.7.19 CCPC Minutes - draft (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) November 7, 2019 Page 42 of 55 prepared documents, TIS, the environmental report, Mr. Mulhere's analysis. That's evidence that's into the record. Your staff is evidence that's in the record. It's got to be competent substantial evidence. I think I pointed this out in my opening, but that was so long ago that -- it was. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: It was. No, you're right. MR. YOVANOVICH: It was so long ago that perhaps it was forgotten over time. But in order to submit a master plan, which is up on the -- well, it went away. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Yeah. Put theirs up so we know as he speaks what to look at. There we go. Thank you. Can you zoom out just a little bit so we can get the top and bottom. You don't know how to do that either, huh. I don't know either, so... MR. YOVANOVICH: Anyway, that's fine for purposes of where I am and what I want to say. But I'll wait. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: The only reason -- MR. YOVANOVICH: Actually, that's sufficient enough for the point I want to make. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Ray, that will work. That's good. MR. YOVANOVICH: The point I wanted to make was your Land Development Code requires that the plan be prepared by an urban planner who possesses an AICP certification together with at least one of the following: One is a professional engineer licensed in Florida or a qualified environmental consultant per Chapter 10 of the LDC, or a practicing architecture. So your Land Development Code recognizes that you have to have a specialty in order to prepare the master plan and testify to the criteria of whether or not you meet the Land Development Code requirements through the -- through this design of the master plan. Mr. Mulhere is even further qualified because he's a fellow -- do I have that right, Bob? That's even a more limited set of people who have the AICP required credentials. So you've had testimony from an AICP planner who prepared this plan together with Mr. Amico who is a professional engineer in the state of Florida, and they've all testified that we meet the Growth Management Plan provisions and the Land Development Code provisions. You haven't received any testimony from the public that we don't meet those criteria from people who have the right credentials, and those credentials are they have to be an AICP planner or any of the others. You didn't have a professional engineer get up here, you didn't have a qualified environmental consultant pursuant to Chapter 10 get up here, or a practicing architect get up here and provide any testimony that our master plan is not consistent with your Land Development Code and your Growth Management Plan. That's competent substantial evidence, and that's the standard. Your own research, your own feelings is not competent substantial evidence. It's what's in the record before you over these last three days. And I submit to you that the record before you proves that we meet all of the required criteria. You've heard Mr. Passarella testify to all the environmental requirements and the types of lands that can be qualified. Heather also testified to that. They all have the required credentials. They've applied the rules. Your environmental staff applied the rules. You've heard testimony from some groups that had previously supported the adoption of this program. I showed you the quotes. I don't back down from those quotes. They said this was a great program. It was a compromise. They don't like the program anymore, and all they did was provide you testimony as to what should be changed in the program. That's one of your roles -- and you'll be going through that role -- what changes need to be made to this program, in your opinion, and through recommendations to the Board of County Commissioners after you have public testimony on that issue. But under the rules that are adopted today, we meet all the environmental rules. And you've seen that testimony both through your staff and our expert testimony. Transportation, Mr. Trebilcock testified to -- that we satisfied all of your requirements. I've asked Trinity, and I'm assuming -- because she hasn't provided a provision as to how they can require interconnectivity of some future villages through SSA lands, where that exists in the Land Development Code. She hasn't provided it to me. I can't find it. I've word-searched it, you know. I don't think it exists. And if you remember, David Weeks even said there's nothing in the Growth Management Plan that requires interconnectivity of villages. He got up there and he showed you the provision, and I'll show you again. It 3.B.1 Packet Pg. 129 Attachment: 11-7-2019 CCPC Minutes (10959 : November 7, 2019 CCPC minutes)9.A.13 Packet Pg. 404 Attachment: 11.7.19 CCPC Minutes - draft (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) November 7, 2019 Page 43 of 55 defers interconnectivity to the Land Development Code. When it's appropriate is in the Land Development Code. And it talks about it with PUDs. It doesn't talk about interconnectivity with regard to SRAs. It doesn't exist. There's no requirement. You can't impose requirements that don't exist just because you'd like to do it. That's not how Land Development Codes work. You can't require us to give you the entirety -- or set aside the entirety of the Big Cypress Parkway when we have no relationship to the need for the Big Cypress Parkway, and we've given you that testimony. You don't need -- this project doesn't need Big Cypress Parkway for it to meet any of your criteria. We have said to you on more than one occasion, and we've committed to you that for the length of the Rivergrass Village, we will set aside that right-of-way. And then when we come in with the two other villages that we've shown you, we will set aside the right-of-way for Big Cypress Parkway for those villages as well. We've never said we're going to get in your way on Big Cypress Parkway. In fact, I think Trinity said Big Cypress Parkway's not coming any time soon. The county has a lot of powers to get Big Cypress Parkway if for some reason we decide to not go forward with the next two villages or those villages are denied. It's like every other project that Collier County has for road right-of-way. If they need to, they can use their eminent domain powers to get Big Cypress Parkway. We know it's a public purpose and a public benefit. We can't fight the eminent domain. We just talked about how much does it cost the county to buy it at that point. So to characterize us as being unwilling participants in the ultimate provision of Big Cypress Parkway is not accurate. I personally like Cormac a lot, and I wouldn't want Cormac's job for anything because having to try to get affordable housing from property owners is a difficult task. It's even way more difficult when there's no legal basis to ask for it. And he's really trying hard to say, do a housing needs analysis even though I've got nothing to hang my hat on to require a housing analysis. And that was the one thing that was resolved. I don't know if you understand the process. We submit. We get a round of comments. Then we get all the reviewers in a room, and we go through all the comments, and we chip away at which comments are valid, which comments are not valid. And in that very first meeting where everybody was there -- I think even Mr. Cohen was there at that very first go-round -- it was clearly stated on the record by Cormac and others, I can't make you do a housing needs analysis. There's nothing I can hang my hat on it, yet I get a recommendation that I need to do a housing needs analysis. And we meet the diversity requirement. The word "diversity" means multiple types. Single-family, multifamily, check the box. We meet diversity. We meet the diversity requirements. Nobody's saying we don't. They'd like to -- they'd like to come up with a new requirement that somehow affordability needs to be factored in. If they were relying on the DRI statutes for villages, that's not what the Growth Management Plan says because, as you know, we all know, you don't have to trigger a DRI for a village. So perhaps the way they really intended to deal with it was if a DRI comes in, that's when we're going to make you deal with affordable housing. If you come in at something less than a DRI, we don't -- we're not going to make that a requirement. So I think you could take -- we're not a DRI, we don't trip any of the thresholds to be a DRI, and the fact that DRIs are basically gone anyway doesn't matter. This project was never intended under anything you have in your code to require affordable housing. In fact, your code gives bonuses above the 4, however you calculate it, if you decide to do affordable housing. It doesn't require it as part of your base. We meet those criteria. There are three founding principles in that final order that became part of your Growth Management Plan and Land Development Code: To protect prime agricultural areas; that's being done through the RLSA program and, in fact, we've assured that by selling some lands that were formerly in the town to an agricultural company. Check the box. Directing incompatible uses away from upland habitat in order to protect water quality and quantity and maintain the natural water regiment -- or regime, I'm sorry, as well as to protect listed animal and plant species and their habitats. I showed you the code and Comp Plan provisions that say you do that through the SSA process and 3.B.1 Packet Pg. 130 Attachment: 11-7-2019 CCPC Minutes (10959 : November 7, 2019 CCPC minutes)9.A.13 Packet Pg. 405 Attachment: 11.7.19 CCPC Minutes - draft (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) November 7, 2019 Page 44 of 55 through the SRA process by prohibiting development on anything that scores greater than a 1.2. Check the box. We meet the requirements. And then assess the growth potential of the areas by assessing the potential conversion of rural lands to other uses in appropriate locations while discouraging urban sprawl. I showed you the provisions in the Growth Management Plan that said that this RLSA program is not urban sprawl, and the governor and cabinet and the Department of Community Affairs, now the Department of Economic Opportunity, agreed that the Growth Management Plan provisions that I showed you the very first day we were going through this do not -- they are not urban sprawl. So whoever keeps saying we're doing urban sprawl, go back and read the order and read the provisions. We're not urban sprawl. As I do this longer and longer and as I get older and older, I have fonder memories of law school than I did as I was experiencing it. And one of the things that we had in law school -- and, frankly, the bar exam, it's a pass/fail. I had some classes in law school I just had to pass. There was no A, B, C, D. It was a P or an F. That's what the RLSA program is. It's a pass/fail analysis. And I pass; I get approved. These are the requirements that are in your Growth Management Plan and in your LDC, and we meet them all. You may like us to meet them a different way, and you may just say you get a P. I really wish you got an A, but you got a P. And that's all I have to get is a pass, and we've passed them all. Mr. Weeks got up here two weeks -- was it two weeks ago, whenever we did it the last time, and he got up there and said, it's a grading scale. Same analogy, pass/fail. We passed. According to your staff, we passed all of your criteria. I stood up here the first day and I said, the only issue that I'm aware of that there was a disagreement on was the interconnectivity of the villages and when we needed to give you Big Cypress Parkway or set it aside. And one thing that wasn't mentioned was we got the staff report, and we sat down with staff and addressed all of those recommendations. And when I left that meeting with your staff, they said, we're in agreement. You meet diversity of housing, you meet the requirements of the Growth Management Plan, you meet the requirements of the Land Development Code based upon the changes we made, which included maximum size of 25 acres now for multifamily. That's when Mr. Bellows said, you know what, I can live with it. Before it was -- it could have been 100 acres. He didn't like that. He liked the 25 acres. He liked the fact that we agreed to the half-a-mile requirement for where multifamily would be to show the grade of more dense to less dense. Mr. Weeks was in that meeting, and so was Mr. Cohen. We had that meeting, and that's why there was a change in their recommendation. David's already said -- he's told us that, you know, if he had a different -- if he had the ability, the wherewithal, the financial -- the ability to do it, he might lay it out differently, but we meet the criteria. That's all that matters is, do we meet the criteria? And if we meet the criteria, we're entitled to a recommendation of approval. We meet every one of the criteria. That's the testimony from your staff, that we meet the criteria. There's only one criteria that -- and I don't know where it is, because Trinity hasn't provided it to me, the interconnectivity, and she hasn't provided me anything in your code that says you could make me set aside road right-of-way beyond my project when my project doesn't even cause the need for that road right-of-way, and I'm willing to give you the road right-of-way through the Developer Contribution Agreement or, I'm sorry, the Landowner Contribution Agreement along the entire boundary of this project. There are people who clearly are not happy with the current rules and regulations. There's a process for that to change, and you're starting that process. That's -- if you see flaws in the current code, deal with it in the process. You can't deal with those flaws because you want to change the rules at this time. So my rebuttal is over. We've met the criteria that are established today, and we're entitled to a recommendation of approval from the Planning Commission. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. And with that, it's noontime, and I think we've got a lot to think about. I'd rather we take a break for lunch now, come back, have our discussion, any comments and questions we have of Mr. Yovanovich or follow-up with staff that we may need, and then go into final discussion and vote. So with that, we'll come back at 1:00 and resume the meeting on Rivergrass at that time. 3.B.1 Packet Pg. 131 Attachment: 11-7-2019 CCPC Minutes (10959 : November 7, 2019 CCPC minutes)9.A.13 Packet Pg. 406 Attachment: 11.7.19 CCPC Minutes - draft (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) November 7, 2019 Page 45 of 55 (A luncheon recess was had from 12:00 p.m. to 1:00 p.m., and Commissioner Dearborn is absent for the remainder of the meeting.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay, everyone. Welcome back from the lunch break. We're going to resume the meeting. The first announcement is Patrick Dearborn had to leave for a meeting that he got called away to, so he won't be here for the rest of the afternoon. That means the rest of us will deal with the remainder of the time on the -- we've got Rivergrass and finish up today's agenda. We left off with discussions -- with the rebuttal by the applicant. And I want to know if the Planning Commission has any questions they have of anybody else before we close the public hearing and go into our own discussion. Do any of you have any questions of anyone? (No response.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: The only thing I'd like to ask, is Trinity here? Poor Trinity. She knew she might be called. Hi, Trinity. MS. SCOTT: Hi. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: There was some discussion about the need for -- the ability for you to ask for the Big Cypress Parkway. How did you fit that condition into your responsibilities? MS. SCOTT: As noted within the staff report -- and I didn't bring my staff report up here with me, sorry -- we looked at the commitment based on the Big Cypress Stewardship District when that was going forward within the Board in 2003 and 2004, and the commitment for an interlocal services delivery agreement, which was never executed. And so that is -- as shown in our staff report, that was -- thank you -- that was why we were requesting the right-of-way within the entire Big Cypress Stewardship District. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. And remember when they -- that exhibit where it showed the stewardship district lined out in greens, and then the potential location of Big Cypress. It was Exhibit H. I think it was one of those exhibits that showed it connecting to I-75. Do you remember that one? We talked about it last time. MS. SCOTT: Yes, we did talk about it last time. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: How did that originate? Did you -- you might have said it before, and I just can't remember. MS. SCOTT: That -- where I actually found that exhibit was as part of the I-75 interchange justification report. It was an attachment with the memorandum of understanding. That particular exhibit was produced by Collier Enterprises, I believe, and then it was -- the snippet we had was taken from, it looked like, a Naples Daily News article. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Thank you. I don't have anything else. Ned? COMMISSIONER FRYER: Mr. Chairman, I'd like to ask a representative of the Conservancy if she might come up and perhaps reply to statements that had been made by counsel for the applicant concerning the original planning for this effort, if they care to. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: At the request of a Planning Commissioner, that's appropriate. MS. OLSON: Which one? COMMISSIONER FRYER: Whichever one you want. Since you were referred to earlier today, I thought, in fairness, we ought to hear from you, if you have a different recollection of history. MS. OLSON: For the record, April Olson with the Conservancy of Southwest Florida. Just two points to make regarding Mr. Yovanovich's statements about, first of all, the Conservancy's support for the RLSA program. We did support the program at the time it was being created when the public was told that only 16,800 acres could be built, but then we found out five years later that it was a whole different program, and we no longer support -- we support the fundamental goals, but we feel there are a lot of fundamental flaws within the program. So I just wanted to clarify that. The other statement that Mr. Yovanovich said was that because the program is set up to basically direct development away from the SSAs or the WRAs, HSAs, FSAs, that that means that the program automatically 3.B.1 Packet Pg. 132 Attachment: 11-7-2019 CCPC Minutes (10959 : November 7, 2019 CCPC minutes)9.A.13 Packet Pg. 407 Attachment: 11.7.19 CCPC Minutes - draft (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) November 7, 2019 Page 46 of 55 creates compact communities, and DCA had actually stated that. DCA was in agreement. But I have a quote here from DCA that they wrote during -- at the same time of the five-year review that they also reversed their opinion that -- and they believe that the 93,000 acres worth of open space is actually sprawl. And I can put this quote on the prompter if you'd like to see it. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Sure. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MS. OLSON: Okay. It's right in here. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Nancy, would you orientate that properly. Everybody misses that. MS. OLSON: Okay. It says that the large 93,000 acres eligible for designation of receiving areas which also allows the conversion of land uses to the underlying low density uses is the exact opposite of a plan to direct growth to the most suitable areas. This may lead to fragmentation of natural areas, wildlife habitat, and agricultural areas. The overall rural character of the area is under threat from the potentially large amount of urban development. And here is the citation right there from the DCA 2007 December RLSA annual report to the legislature is where that comes from. So they did reverse their position on that, okay? COMMISSIONER FRYER: Thank you very much. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Thank you, April. MS. OLSON: Okay. Thank you. MR. YOVANOVICH: I get to rebut the public. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: You get to rebut the rebuttal of the rebuttal? I mean, you opened door for this activity, so what is it -- MR. YOVANOVICH: I understand. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: So let's not take another 20 minutes. MR. YOVANOVICH: I don't need 20 minutes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MR. YOVANOVICH: But I do want -- a couple things for the record. First of all, she showed you the Conservancy's analysis of what the DCA did. That was not the DCA's full report. It was a footnote of what they picked that they thought was important to include in their memorandum; "they" being the Conservancy. Those are the Conservancy's actual words when this program was adopted. You can -- COMMISSIONER FRYER: Could you move it in. MR. YOVANOVICH: I don't know how to do any of that, so... Those are the Conservancy's actual words. It doesn't say anything that Ms. Olson just said on the record. It says, we think it's a great program and we think it's a compromise. And I'm not quoting verbatim, but not everybody gets what they want. You have to compromise. The program it going through a review process, and the review process will change the program. Until the program is changed, you have to apply the standards that exist. You don't get to simply say we don't like it now, apply a different standard. You have to change the standard. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Anybody else have any questions of anybody at this point? Go ahead, Karen. COMMISSIONER HOMIAK: I'd like to ask Trinity again. MR. YOVANOVICH: Oh, I have one more thing about that. Thank you. MS. SCOTT: I'm getting my steps in today. COMMISSIONER HOMIAK: Do you or did you have locations for interconnections from Rivergrass to Longwater or any other communities? MS. SCOTT: Yes. I have ideas of where they could be. COMMISSIONER HOMIAK: The connection roadways? MS. SCOTT: Yes. COMMISSIONER HOMIAK: Do you have them? MS. SCOTT: And I'm actually going to pull up Mr. Yovanovich's prior presentation, because I think it 3.B.1 Packet Pg. 133 Attachment: 11-7-2019 CCPC Minutes (10959 : November 7, 2019 CCPC minutes)9.A.13 Packet Pg. 408 Attachment: 11.7.19 CCPC Minutes - draft (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) November 7, 2019 Page 47 of 55 shows -- well, maybe I will. There it goes. So this was the exhibit that Mr. Yovanovich showed that showed open stewardship area. Oh, it's coming up. Let's see if I did it right. Yes. Of the pink areas that were open stewardship area that could be developed in the future, this -- on the north side of the property, I understand this is a large WRA area, and interconnection could occur here. An interconnection could occur in this location. And in prior submittals -- and I understand that they were that of the town -- there was another interconnection shown in this location as well. Those were the three interconnections that I was referring to. COMMISSIONER HOMIAK: That was discussed in the -- MS. SCOTT: In the staff report we were asking for potential interconnections in the north, the east, and the south. COMMISSIONER HOMIAK: And that will alleviate a lot of the traffic impacts in the future 10, 20, 30 years from now if that were to happen. MS. SCOTT: In my original presentation we talked about the Master Mobility Plan and that the Master Mobility Plan specifically did a subarea model with regard to these interconnections and that based on that subarea model, that there would be a reduction in vehicle miles traveled. COMMISSIONER HOMIAK: Thank you. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Anybody else? (No response.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Nancy? Did you summarize the remaining recommendations of staff? MS. GUNDLACH: Yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Could you -- MS. GUNDLACH: Happy to do so. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: -- tell us which ones. I think there were -- let's see. There were 11. Which ones of the 11 are we still staying with from your view? MS. GUNDLACH: Okay. Do you want me to go through them one by one, or I can just generally -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Tell us the numbers. I think that's all we need to know. MS. GUNDLACH: We're going to be keeping No. 1, 4, 5, 10, and 11, and we are just -- are going to be revising No. 6 to state SDP and PPL. Those are the ones we're keeping. All the others we are removing. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. So the ones that you're removing are -- MS. GUNDLACH: Okay. We're removing. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: -- 2 and 3. Two is about the SRA statement of suitability criteria. Three is the ratio of multifamily to single-family that was brought up by -- originally by Comp Planning. MS. GUNDLACH: Four and 5 remain. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Six. MS. GUNDLACH: Six has been revised. Seven has been removed; 7, 8, and 9 have been removed. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MS. GUNDLACH: Ten and 11 remain. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MS. GUNDLACH: And that's it. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Thank you. That's the summary I was looking for. As far as the deviations go, I know we walked through all those, so I think we're comfortable. You've got a list. You know which ones -- you've got that all organized now. So, wherever -- if this gets recommended, those deviations will be concise when they go to the Board. Accurate. MS. GUNDLACH: Correct. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. And let's -- yeah, I knew you were going to say correct. No, they're not going to be. That takes us to the end, I think, of any questions. Anybody else have any questions of anybody before we close the public hearing? (No response.) 3.B.1 Packet Pg. 134 Attachment: 11-7-2019 CCPC Minutes (10959 : November 7, 2019 CCPC minutes)9.A.13 Packet Pg. 409 Attachment: 11.7.19 CCPC Minutes - draft (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) November 7, 2019 Page 48 of 55 CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. We'll close the public hearing on this matter, and we'll go into discussions from the Planning Commission. Do you guys have anything you've got to say? Ned, go ahead. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Thank you. I have the utmost respect for Rich Yovanovich. He's a great lawyer. He's an advocate, and he's doing a great job as an advocate, and I always listen carefully to what he has to say; however, our lawyers are the County Attorney's Office, and they come to us not to advocate but to explain to us what the law is. And we were favored with 14 points of consideration that we were -- that was explained to us that we could utilize when we apply whatever it is we apply to this process before we vote. And No. 10 said, consider conformity of the proposed SRA with the goals, objectives, and policies of the Growth Management Plan. And No. 12 said, consider the SRA master plan compliance with all applicable laws of the RLSA district regulations. So what I take away from that is the sense that our responsibility is not a totally objective or pass/fail check-the-box kind of endeavor. If it were, I don't think we would need a planning commission but, rather, I think we have to bring to bear a number of skill sets, if you will, or points of considerations, including what I would call our own common sense to the analysis. And when I apply my common sense in relation to the many thousands of words that have been put before us on behalf of the advocate on the issue of connectivity, my common sense tells me that the standard of connectivity has not been reached, and with Oil Well Road in there and with 15 dead ends, I don't see how you can responsibly get to a conclusion of connectivity. Thank you. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Anybody else? Karl, then Stan. COMMISSIONER FRY: Do you want to go first, Stan? (No response.) COMMISSIONER FRY: So I'm just happy that I waited to speak after Ned today, as he always elucidates things so well. I guess in the question that we posed to Jeff earlier, I would agree it does appear we have latitude and I think even responsibility to look at the objectives of the RLSA and see if this project as a village supports those objectives. So as of now I'm -- I guess I'm -- my great question is, we have four villages ahead of us. I definitely view this whole process of the RLSA only working if it's a partnership between the applicants, the developers, landowners, and the county in working together to come up with a solution that not only gives them a profitable -- a viable project, but one that also supports the objectives of the RLSA to create something different in the east, seize the opportunity to focus the development, preserve natural areas, preserve key agriculture, protect natural resources, but create a different dynamic where we don't have the same thing we have in the west where we have gated communities and everybody is forced to travel only main roads in most cases to get where they want to go. So there are a few objectives of the RLSA that I do think are key. I lament the fact that although we know Rural Lands West is not before us now, that a lot of the vision of the RLSA I felt was encompassed very well in the master plan that I saw for Rural Lands West, which was there was interconnectivity. There were public roads through the middle of what are now becoming villages with interconnections between what are now the villages and outside of the villages. There were pathways. There was a large commercial section that was a destination, which I think was one of the objectives, and maybe not formally. I don't know if Ned would know better than I if it was formally part of it, but the idea being so that the people in the eastern RLSA did not have to travel back far to the west to get essential goods and services. I'm not sure how I see a Publix and a couple of outparcels in 60- or 80,000 square feet as keeping people from having to make the long trip to the essential services. I note that there are some PUDs in our -- in the western side that do have public roads through them that seem to offer alternate routes to travelers but not at the detriment of the development. The Vineyards being one, Lely being another. I look at this application -- and I have great respect -- Rich is a great attorney. Far better arguer of his points of view than I ever will be, so I always feel a little outgunned if I'm even attempting to express a different sentiment than, perhaps, you're stating up there. But I really would like to see these four village as they come through, and 3.B.1 Packet Pg. 135 Attachment: 11-7-2019 CCPC Minutes (10959 : November 7, 2019 CCPC minutes)9.A.13 Packet Pg. 410 Attachment: 11.7.19 CCPC Minutes - draft (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) November 7, 2019 Page 49 of 55 this one being the starting one -- and I think it has no less responsibility than the others to support a success for the RLSA program. And my opinion is more could have been done on this village to support the goals of the RLSA. Definitely, the great win here, which I think is inherent to the RLSA program, is that we're preserving over 5,000 acres to develop a thousand acres. That's a wonderful win, and I think that's kind of the foundation of the RLSA program. Some agricultural land was sold after the town was withdrawn, thereby preserving some key agricultural, so preventing the premature conversion from agricultural to developed lands. But when I look at some of the tenets of the RLSA, creative land planning techniques, I don't find that -- the mere fact that we're using credits and preserving land in order to focus a thousand acres of development, I don't find that in itself to be an example of creative land planning techniques. I'm not able to see a lot of creativity in this plan. To me, this plan looks as if it's a gated PUD -- actually, two gated PUDs that are very similar to what would be in the western part outside of the RLSA that have simply been moved east and added to it a little bit of commercial as a requirement of the village. I actually see this -- I don't know why this is not two villages. This is, to me -- it's hard for me to -- while I'm willing -- if there were other components that were present in order to satisfy the -- what I think are the objectives of the RLSA, I would be okay with the village center being south of Oil Well Road and really not easily pedestrian friendly or bikeable for the people to the north. Is -- crossing a two-, four-, or six-lane road to get to what is supposed to be a village center to provide internal capture, is that really bike and pedestrian friendly? Is that really an integrated single village with an integrated village center that serves all the people equally? Certainly, it favors the people to the south side, and it becomes a little bit of a challenge for the people on the north to get to. So I really don't see the creative. When it comes to bike and pedestrian friendly, I guess that -- this is on the subjective side, as we discussed. I -- the position seems to be taken that we have neighborhoods with roads and driveways and that you can walk the sidewalks, you can bike down the roads, you can bike down the sidewalks. And that, in itself, is bike and pedestrian friendly. I guess I have a different vision of that; speaks to what Ned would say maybe is common sense. Personally, I think you could -- it's a hard case to say that it's really a friendly biking environment to ride through 100 driveways and have cars backing out, pedestrians, kids playing. You know, who-all has golf carts, perhaps, in this case going down the street? Bike and pedestrian friendly to me means you walk and you're really not at risk of being hit by a car, you're not at risk of being hit by other types of activities. A bike path -- separated bike path or walking trail is bike and pedestrian friendly. I don't see why there couldn't be some accommodation for that in the thousand acres where there's a trail around the perimeter or through the center of it that is not competing with automotive traffic to get where you want to go. So I don't see that as bike and pedestrian friendly. Diversity of housing types with a progressive urban-to-rural continuum as you move from the village center outward. I appreciate the commitments to split the multifamily between the north and south halves. I noticed in the economic plan there are over a thousand multifamily units that are predicted and proposed, but only 250 being committed to and only -- and no committed mix of whether they are apartments, condos, villas, townhomes, this type of thing. I think that in order to build the case that is -- meets that criteria, there should be more definition about where these -- where these areas go and what the mix of diverse housing types might be in there. That is only two-and-a-half percent. Twenty-five acres is two-and-a-half percent of a thousand-acre proposal. And if we're supposed to have a propensity of the density toward the center, I don't see how you really meet that objective with that undefined footprint. The increase from four-acre parcels to 25 acres, which has been requested, I don't have an issue with that on its own, but it does raise the possibility of one multifamily development that's in one small corner, one small area of this thousand-acre development. And by that, the whole requirement for this progressive urban-to-rural density 3.B.1 Packet Pg. 136 Attachment: 11-7-2019 CCPC Minutes (10959 : November 7, 2019 CCPC minutes)9.A.13 Packet Pg. 411 Attachment: 11.7.19 CCPC Minutes - draft (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) November 7, 2019 Page 50 of 55 continuum is met. I don't feel it does meet that criteria. And I think -- and this, I do not believe, is an official requirement, but to the extent that the RLSA is intended to create destination-type commercial areas where there really is -- there are enough services where people don't have to make a long trip somewhere, I'm not sure how we get there with the collection of villages with a minimal commercial footprint that really only provide a grocery store. There are many other reasons you have to travel other than a grocery store, although that is definitely a main one. So I really -- I see this as almost two villages rather than one. I sure wish we were talking about a town here. I was excited at the prospect of being part of the group that gets to preview the next RLSA development for a town. I think it's really important in terms of being a precedent for future developments, and I just find myself -- and I believe the applicant spent millions of dollars to develop the town. So I just find it unfortunate that we're here talking about a village. And I believe the reaction, understandably, is that the town, for whatever reasons, was economically not feasibly. And so let's draw back and let's go for what we think we can get through. I believe we need to meet further in the middle to achieve the objectives of the RLSA. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Stan. COMMISSIONER CHRZANOWSKI: Yeah, thanks, Mark. One of the first things I do when I get a project like this, or most projects, is I ask for a LiDAR of the site because I can tell a lot from the flow of the water and the elevation of the ground. And I looked at this, and then I looked at the historic aerials. And I'm looking at the shape of the parcel. I heard comments that nobody -- people don't like the idea of developing south of Oil Well Road. You could do the whole thing north of Oil Well Road. That's going to make an even worse situation than what you two guys are describing if you moved everything up to the north side. Just be more people. Well -- COMMISSIONER FRYER: I didn't say that. COMMISSIONER CHRZANOWSKI: Okay. It's the impression I got. But, okay. Anyway, I've looked at the shape of the parcel, and what could you do with it? The north parcel has a very bad shape for development. You know, too many thin areas. The south one is a little nicer. It's probably more easily developed into something that might look like one of the towns you guys are talking about. But as I look at the plan they prepared, to me it looks like a logical alternative to -- a logical solution to what they're stuck with. They're pressed up against Golden Gate Estates. They're pressed up against an excavation -- you can see the -- on the LiDAR you can see the holes there -- that, eventually, I'm told, is going to become a PUD of some kind. They're probably going to fill in all the excavations, and that's difficult to do properly, but, okay, I believe it. And the other side you have an area that's natural, part of a slough that starts up at Lake Trafford that is never going to be developed. So it's kind of isolated in there, and looking at what I see, I thought they did a pretty good job, and I'm not sure what else they could do. Yeah, it would be nice to have a bike path, and it would be nice to have a pedestrian overpass so people could go from one side to the other, but I'm not sure that would accomplish that much. So I'm probably going to vote yes on this. COMMISSIONER FRY: May I just clarify. If I mistakenly gave the impression that I only thought the development should be to the north of Oil Well Road, it really wasn't my intention. It was more that -- I even -- with the village center south of Oil Well Road, I think, considering this parcel, which is all farmland, it looks like a very good place -- it makes sense for development overall. I would even be able to look past the Oil Well Road cutting in in the middle if some of those other criteria were met to meet the objectives of the RLSA. COMMISSIONER CHRZANOWSKI: Yeah. You never said no development south, but what you said was -- there were other people that said no development south of Oil Well Road. And what you said was you wanted all these amenities, and if you take everything that you want to do south of Oil Well Road, don't develop that and move everything north of Oil Well Road, your amenities are going to be a lot less, and your density's going to be greater, and your design is going to be a lot harder than if you spread the thing out north and south. It's a difficult parcel to design to. 3.B.1 Packet Pg. 137 Attachment: 11-7-2019 CCPC Minutes (10959 : November 7, 2019 CCPC minutes)9.A.13 Packet Pg. 412 Attachment: 11.7.19 CCPC Minutes - draft (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) November 7, 2019 Page 51 of 55 You know, if you really want to kill it, I guess, not a problem, but... CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Karen, did you have anything you wanted to say? COMMISSIONER HOMIAK: No. I think they've pretty much said it all. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. I have just a few comments. You know, there's been a -- we have a program that's going to come through for a restudy, and there's some things that should be addressed there. One of them that I understand is going to be addressed, it's something that was raised by one of the environmental groups about not having the original documents to understand how the NRI values became to be initiated, base issue apparently with the RLSA, and that's the piece that has disturbed me with this. I asked for a working document for the fiscal neutrality, fiscal impact analysis, and I was told no. That helps me understand how you got to where you needed to be. When you can go in and see when the multipliers change, if they have an impact, that sure raises questions, which may be why it was not given to me. But if you don't have an impact, it settles questions. So I'm really disappointed that that document couldn't have been provided. I did it not out of a concern to find something wrong but to understand how the neutrality was proven. Without that document, I certainly have no faith in the analysis for fiscal neutrality, and I certainly don't know how the consultants we hired, if they didn't have that document, could have done the same thing. So that's a big issue with me, and it's one that I'm very disturbed over. The second one is, I think the village interconnections can be made. They were part of the Rural Lands West submittal. There's no excuse not to make them. They were there, they can be made, and it's an opportunity to take some traffic off the road and keep interconnectivity among those villages, especially when that golf course is probably going to have members of a village nearby that maybe want to join it. The diversity for the housing was insufficient. Yes, they're going to -- they say, well, we're going to 250 (sic) and we're going to have a mix of single-family. Well, that really isn't telling us how diverse it is. I think there could have been a better opportunity to show adequate diversity by the types of mixes, the types of units that they're going to have and provide what was referred to as a gradient density that would flow through the town. Even Comprehensive Planning says that was something that they had expected to see, and it's not there. The issue of Big Cypress Parkway, I firmly believe the county has a right to ask for some reservation of that land. It was part and parcel to the basis for the approval of the Big Cypress Stewardship District, and it should have been -- the county's remiss, just maybe as the developer is. It should have been addressed decades ago or years ago, whenever it was. It wasn't -- it's not bad to ask for it now. We're not saying we're not going to pay for it or we're not going to work out provisions, but it would be nice to know we can count on planning a road system that that system's going to be part of rather than say, well, we're not sure where it's going to go, but it's going to impact a lot of other areas if it doesn't go north and south. And that part bothers me. We can't have enough of a commitment to count on it on a long-term planning basis. The village center not being centralized because it's split by Oil Well Road. I mean, it's center, but it's split by a six-lane freight road, soon to be six-lane. That will do exactly what was referred to is probably end up with two separate gated communities. That's no different than all the PUDs we have in the urban area. And if -- I was the only one on this panel sitting here when the RLSA came through. It was supposed to be the new town concept, more of the Ave Maria style for what they came through and were asked to be. Walkable communities. We were supposed to have a certain density, a certain quantity of everything. None of that seems to be sticking like it was when it was first presented. And this does not give us anything more than the PUDs we have in the urban area. I was expecting more out of that eastern area. The deviations. I think it's interesting that we're stuck to the language in the code as not being a requirement in something that they have -- they're entitled to, but yet they have, at one time, up to 19 deviations. Now it's down to a different number. I think it's 14 or 15. So they don't have to stick to the language, but we're supposed to. So for those reasons, I cannot go along with this plan, but at the same time, I'm not saying they don't have a right to develop. I just don't think this is the right plan for the way they've approached it. And I can't support it. So with that, if anybody has any other comments or questions. Karl? COMMISSIONER FRY: A question for you, Mark. When you mentioned the interconnection between the villages, that would also mean that the road -- at least one road through the village is a public road, correct? An 3.B.1 Packet Pg. 138 Attachment: 11-7-2019 CCPC Minutes (10959 : November 7, 2019 CCPC minutes)9.A.13 Packet Pg. 413 Attachment: 11.7.19 CCPC Minutes - draft (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) November 7, 2019 Page 52 of 55 interconnection to a private gated community, is that really an interconnection, or does that meet your criteria? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: No. What I -- their original town plan on the south side showed two interconnections between the east and west portions. Those interconnections were there. We know they can be made. They should still be there. They should connect those villages. Now, how they operate them to let people through and use them and converse, that's something that would come out during further review once we know we had them. But they would have to be open to the residents in some manner or form, kind of like -- we've got a similar problem going on with the -- I think it's the Orchards and some other place up in the north end of the Vineyards, and another problem going up like that in Heritage Bay that's potential. So those things don't need to happen. We can fix them now. And I think that's part of what we're supposed to do for better planning for Collier County. So, anyway, I hope that -- COMMISSIONER FRY: It does. I guess I wonder -- I wonder what the future of the RLSA is since we had a town that was very dynamically designed that did not survive, and now we have four independent villages coming, don't know what would come after that. It seems to me -- I was reading through the RLSA restudy white paper, and it seemed like that -- this reality might have been the reason for an item that is to create an aggregation rule for villages if adjacent and under common or related ownership or control and judged to be part of a uniform plan of development, town standards should apply if aggregate size exceeds maximum village acreage. So by coming through with all these one-thousand-acre maximum size villages but just slightly underneath the town requirement, all the advantages of the town with the larger commercial areas, the interconnections, the -- you know, just the more diverse housing, all those benefits of the RLSA go out the window, and I'm very concerned about that. COMMISSIONER HOMIAK: I agree with you. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Well, enough said. Then is there a motion by anybody? COMMISSIONER FRYER: I'll move to deny the application. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Based on the discussions that we've just had? COMMISSIONER FRYER: Yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Is there a second? COMMISSIONER HOMIAK: Second. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Second by Karen. Any further discussion? (No response.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: All in favor for the motion of denial, signify by saying aye. COMMISSIONER FRY: Aye. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Aye. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Aye. COMMISSIONER HOMIAK: Aye. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Anybody opposed? COMMISSIONER CHRZANOWSKI: Aye. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Motion carries 4-1 for denial. Thank you, all, for the three days' worth of effort and the 3,000 pages we received. ***And that will take us to the next remaining item on our agenda, which is 9.3. It's PL20180002741, 3600 Radio Road CPUD located just east of the intersection of Airport-Pulling Road and Radio Road. All those wishing to testify on behalf of this item, please rise to be sworn in by the court reporter. (The speakers were duly sworn and indicated in the affirmative.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Disclosures on the part of the Planning Commission. Tom? MR. EASTMAN: No disclosures other than what's in the public record. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Stan? 3.B.1 Packet Pg. 139 Attachment: 11-7-2019 CCPC Minutes (10959 : November 7, 2019 CCPC minutes)9.A.13 Packet Pg. 414 Attachment: 11.7.19 CCPC Minutes - draft (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.14 Packet Pg. 415 Attachment: REFERENCE COPY ONLY-OUTDATED CCPC Staff Report.docx 12-2-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) RIVERGRASS VILLAGE SRA,SRA-PL20190000044 September 10,2019 Page 1 of 40 STAFF REPORT TO:COLLIER COUNTY PLANNING COMMISSION FROM:ZONING DIVISION ZONING SERVICES SECTION GROWTH MANAGEMENT DEPARTMENT HEARING DATE:SEPTEMBER 19, 2019 SUBJECT: SRA-PL20190000044, RIVERGRASS VILLAGE STEWARDSHIP RECEIVING AREA (SRA) _______________________________________________________________________________ APPLICANT/PROPERTY OWNERS/AGENTS: Applicant: Mr. Patrick L. Utter, Vice President Collier Enterprises Management,Inc. 2550 Goodlette Road North, Suite 100 Naples, FL 34103 Property Owners: Collier Land Holdings, Ltd. and CDC Land Investments, LLC 2550 Goodlette Road North, Suite 100 Naples, FL 34103 Agents: Robert J. Mulhere,FAICP Richard D. Yovanovich, Esquire Hole Montes, Inc.Coleman, Yovanovich & Koester, P.A. 950 Encore Way 4001 Tamiami Trail North, Suite 300 Naples, FL 34110 Naples, FL 34103 9.A.14 Packet Pg. 416 Attachment: REFERENCE COPY ONLY-OUTDATED CCPC Staff Report.docx 12-2-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) RIVERGRASS VILLAGE SRA,SRA-PL20190000044 September 10,2019 Page 2 of 40 9.A.14 Packet Pg. 417 Attachment: REFERENCE COPY ONLY-OUTDATED CCPC Staff Report.docx 12-2-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) RIVERGRASS VILLAGE SRA,SRA-PL20190000044 September 10,2019 Page 3 of 40 9.A.14 Packet Pg. 418 Attachment: REFERENCE COPY ONLY-OUTDATED CCPC Staff Report.docx 12-2-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) RIVERGRASS VILLAGE SRA,SRA-PL20190000044 September 10,2019 Page 4 of 40 REQUESTED ACTION: The petitioner requests that the Collier County Planning Commission (CCPC)consider a Resolution of the Collier County Board of County Commissioners designating 999.96 acres within the Rural Lands Stewardship Area Zoning Overlay District as a Stewardship Receiving Area,to be known as the Rivergrass Village Stewardship Receiving Area (SRA), which will allow development of a maximum of 2,500 residential dwelling units; a maximum of 80,000 square feet of neighborhood commercial in the village center and a minimum of 60,000 square feet of neighborhood commercial in the village center;a minimum of 25,000 square feet of civic, governmental and institutional uses;senior housing including adult living facilities and continuing care retirement communities subject to a floor area ratio of 0.45 in place of a maximum square footage; and an 18 hole golf course; all subject to a maximum PM peak hour trip cap;and approving the Stewardship Receiving Area credit agreement for Rivergrass Village SRA and establishing that 5877.44 stewardship credits are being utilized by the designation of the Rivergrass Village Stewardship Receiving Area. GEOGRAPHIC LOCATION: The subject property, consisting of 999.96 acres, is located south of 45th Avenue NE and north of 26th Avenue NE, all east of Desoto Boulevard in Sections 10, 14, 15, 22, 23, and 27, Township 48 South, Range 28 East, Collier County, Florida. (See the Location Map on page 2 of this Staff Report.) PURPOSE/DESCRIPTION OF PROJECT: The Rural Lands Stewardship Area Overlay District (R LSA) was developed in order to protect natural resource areas and agricultural lands. The RLSA encourages property owners to voluntarily protect environmentally valuable land as a public benefit. The mechanism to achieve the protection of environmentally valuable land is the designation of Stewardship Sending Area (SSA) in exchange for Stewardship Credits,which are used to entitle Stewardship Receiving Area (SRA). One of the components of the SRA designation application is the Natural Resource Index Assessment,which documents the relative natural resource values of land within an SRA. The Natural Resource Index Assessment documents the existing conditions and Natural Resource Index (NRI) scores within the proposed SRA for Rivergrass Village SRA. It should be noted that the NRI scores demonstrate that Rivergrass Village SRA meets the Suitability Criteria contained in the Collier County Land Development Code (LDC). Please see the Environmental Review Section of this Staff Report for further information. The Rivergrass Village SRA is one of four SRAs that have either been submitted to Collier County or have had pre-application meetings for an SRA designation. The other three SRA Villages located within the vicinity of Rivergrass Village SRA along the future Big C ypress Parkway are Hyde Park Village (PL20180000622)which is currently under review and Longwater Village (PL20190001836) and Belmar Village (PL20190001837) both of which held pre-application meetings in August 2019. 9.A.14 Packet Pg. 419 Attachment: REFERENCE COPY ONLY-OUTDATED CCPC Staff Report.docx 12-2-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) RIVERGRASS VILLAGE SRA,SRA-PL20190000044 September 10,2019 Page 5 of 40 The Rivergrass Village SRA consists of two context zones which are required per the SRA Overlay regulations: Neighborhood General and mixed-use Village Center. Approximately 45% of the Village acreage is located north of Oil Well Road,and the remaining 55% is located south of Oil Well Road. A long perimeter lake system runs along the eastern boundary of the Village, both north and south of Oil Well Road. The lake system serves as part of the Village stormwater system and acts as a deterrent to wildlife. The proposed Big Cypress Parkway is located along the western boundary of the Village. This SRA application for Rivergrass Village SRA will include approximately: 2,500 residential dwelling units with a density of 2.5 units per acre; a minimum of 250 multi-family dwelling units; a maximum of 80,000 square feet of neighborhood commercial; a minimum of 60,000 square feet of neighborhood commercial; a minimum of 25,000 square feet of civic, governmental and institutional uses;and senior housing,including adult living facilities and continuing care retirement communities subject to a floor area ratio (FAR) of 0.45 in place of a maximum square footage area. The Village will also have other uses such as a Golf Club and Amenity Center, an 18-hole golf course,and park and community green space. The required minimum of 35% open space is 349.99 acres, and 65% open space or 615.27 acres has been provided. For further information, please see Attachment A-Proposed SRA Resolution. SURROUNDING LAND USE AND ZONING: North:Undeveloped land and farmland with a zoning designation of Agriculture-Mobile Home Overlay-Rural Lands Stewardship Area Overlay (A-MHO-RLSAO) and a zoning designation of Agriculture-Mobile Home Overlay-Rural Lands Stewardship Area Overlay (A-MHO-RLSAO) East:Undeveloped land and farmland with a zoning designation of Agriculture-Mobile Home Overlay-Rural Lands Stewardship Are a Overlay (A-MHO-RLSAO)and a zoning designation of Agriculture-Mobile Home Overlay-Rural Lands Stewardship Area Overlay (A-MHO-RLSAO) South:Undeveloped land with a zoning designation of Agriculture-Mobile Home Overlay-Rural Lands Stewardship Area Overlay Collier Land Holdings and Collier Development Corporation (A-MHO-RLSAO) West:Undeveloped land and developed residential land with a zoning designation of Estates (E), and developed land with excavation ponds with a zoning designation of Agriculture-Mobile Home Overlay-Rural Lands Stewardship Area Overlay (A-MHO-RLSAO) 9.A.14 Packet Pg. 420 Attachment: REFERENCE COPY ONLY-OUTDATED CCPC Staff Report.docx 12-2-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) RIVERGRASS VILLAGE SRA,SRA-PL20190000044 September 10,2019 Page 6 of 40 AERIAL PHOTO GROWTH MANAGEMENT PLAN (GMP) CONSISTENCY: Comprehensive Planning staff has reviewed the proposed SRA. Please see Attachment C-FLUE Consistency Review along with the Findings, Conclusions,and Conditions of Approval below: Consistency Review Findings: 1. The St ewardship Receiving Area (SRA) Credit Use and Reconciliation Application (revised to 8/08/2019, from 6/07/2016) for SSA number 15 [originally prepared for SSA number 17 (and 9.A.14 Packet Pg. 421 Attachment: REFERENCE COPY ONLY-OUTDATED CCPC Staff Report.docx 12-2-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) RIVERGRASS VILLAGE SRA,SRA-PL20190000044 September 10,2019 Page 7 of 40 others) and the now-defunct Rural Lands West SRA application]; and, the St ewardship Receiving Area Credit Agreement (revised to 8/08/2019, from 6/04/2016)have been reconciled and updated, and may be found internally consistent with other proposed SRA materials. The Applicant has elected to consume credits for public benefit use areas and count the acreage toward the maximum acreage limits of the SRA. 2. The Rivergrass Village SRA Development Document (revised to 8/15/2019, from 8/09/2019) proposes Deviations and departures from Development Standards for this SRA project that do not conform to fundamental Village design characteristics required by the LDC, and are not consistent with the intent of the RLSA provisions in the LDC Stewardship District, as follows: Section VII, DEVIATIONS: Proposed SRA document, Deviations, Subsection 7.1. 1., Vi llage Center Standards, requests deviation from LDC Section 4.08.07.J.3.a.v), re: Village Center design, resulting in a project that does not serve the daily needs and community-wide needs. [distances to goods and services are too great given its location.] Proposed SRA d ocument, Deviations, Subsection 7.1. 2., Vi llage Center Standards, requests deviation from LDC Section 4.08.07.J.3.d.ii.p)ii), re: parking locations, resulting in a project that allows for off-street parking arrangements discouraged in Villages. Proposed SRA document,Deviations, Subsection 7.1. 3., Vi llage Center Standards, requests deviation from LDC Section 4.08.07.J.3.d.ii.q), re: parking locations, same as above. Proposed SRA document, Deviations, Subsection 7.1. 4., Vi llage Center Standards, requests deviation from LDC Section 4.08.07.J.3.d.iii, re: parking structure requirements, NO COMMENT. Proposed SRA document, Deviations, Subsection 7.1. 5., Vi llage Center Standards, requests deviation from LDC Section 4.08.07.J.3.d.iii, re: multi-family residential lot sizes, resulting with a project that allows for exceedingly large lot sizes discouraged in Villages, Proposed SRA document, Deviations, Subsection 7.2. 1., Neighborhood General Standards, requests deviation from LDC Section 4.08.07.J.2.d.iii.a), re: the mix of uses in Neighborhood General areas, resulting in a project that does not serve the daily needs and community-wide needs. Proposed SRA document, Deviations, Subsection 7.2.2., Neighborhood General Standards, requests deviation from LDC Section 4.08.07.J.2.d.iii.f)iv), re: non-residential use building sizes, NO COMMENT. Proposed SRA document, Deviations, Subsection 7.2. 3., Neighborhood General Standards, requests deviation from LDC Section 4.08.07.J.2.d.iii.e)ii), re: multi-family residential yard setbacks, NO COMMENT. Proposed SRA document, Deviations, Subsection 7.2. 4., Neighborhood General Standards, requests deviation from LDC Section 4.08.07.J.2.d.iii.e)i), re: multi-family residential lot sizes, resulting with a project that allows for exceedingly large lot sizes discouraged in Vi llages. Proposed SRA document, Deviations, Subsection 7.3. 1., Transportation Standards, requests deviation from [multiple] LDC Section 4.08.07.J.1.b. cross-section figures, re: sidewalk designs along collector streets and local streets in Neighborhood General areas, 9.A.14 Packet Pg. 422 Attachment: REFERENCE COPY ONLY-OUTDATED CCPC Staff Report.docx 12-2-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) RIVERGRASS VILLAGE SRA,SRA-PL20190000044 September 10,2019 Page 8 of 40 may result with an interrupted sidewalk system; this Deviation will benefit from additional language statin owed where a fully interconnected sidewalk and pathway system is maintained. (No further remarks regarding additional proposed Deviations) 3. Other proposed departures from Development Standards can be determined to be uncharacteristic o ,as follows: Section V, CONTEXT ZONES: Proposed SRA document, Context Zones, Subsection 5.1.1.A., Neighborhood General Permitted Uses and Structures: list incomplete, as it does not allow the mix of uses in Neighborhood General areas; Proposed SRA document, Context Zones, Subsection 5.1.2.A., Neighborhood General Development and Design Standards,Required Minimum Ya rds & Maximum Building Heights, including table and footnotes:front setbacks too shallow; most measures reflect conventional standards, not Village design;list too exclusive, omitting the allowed mix of uses in Neighborhood General areas; Proposed SRA document, Context Zones, Subsection 5.2.1.A. and B., Vi llage Center Permitted Uses and Accessory Uses:list that includes uses listing directs determinations back to a standard LDC reference, when additional direction to consider Vi llage characteristics of being compact, mixed-use and self-sufficient (and other aspects) would make this listing internally consistent within the SRA; Proposed SRA document, Context Zones, Subsection 5.2.2.A., Vi llage Center Development and Design Standards, Required Minimum Ya rds (Setbacks) & Maximum Building Heights, including table and footnotes:lot width too wide; distance between structures is unnecessary; most measures reflect conventional standards, not Village design; Supportable Deviations and Development Standards from the LDC are those where: a.The Deviation or Development Standard is consistent with the RLSA Overlay (or where mitigation practices are pursued to reach consistency);and b.It can be demonstrated that the proposed Deviation or Development Standard further enhances the tools, techniques,and strategies based on principles of innovative planning and development strategies, as outlined in RLSA provisions in the LDC Stewardship District. Collier County RLSA regulations are based on the principles of innovative planning and development strategies in Florida Statute. 4.Review the SRA materials throughout, to find related entries requiring related and similar changes, including, in particular, the proposed SRA Document, SRA Statement of Suitability Criteria per LDC. 9.A.14 Packet Pg. 423 Attachment: REFERENCE COPY ONLY-OUTDATED CCPC Staff Report.docx 12-2-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) RIVERGRASS VILLAGE SRA,SRA-PL20190000044 September 10,2019 Page 9 of 40 Substantive Review Findings: The requisite credits are sufficient number from approved or pending SSAs to enable the development of the SRA.The approved Stewardship Credits must be submitted before or concurrent with this SRA. The proposed density and uses may be deemed consistent with the Future Land Use Element, Rural Lands Stewardship Area Overlay. However,a number of other design and development characteristics for the project may not be deemed consistent with the Future Land Use Element, Rural Lands Stewardship Area Overlay,as follows: This essentially thousand-acre project is not proposed with a meaningful mix between single- family and multi-family residential dwelling units as the ratio is 90% single-family and 10% multi-family residential dwelling units. By comparison, the County as a whole has a ratio of approximately 50% single-family to multi-family. (reference RLSA Policy 4.7.2, in the attached Exhibit B-FLUE Consistency Review). A significant number of Deviations from the LDC are requested,the preponderance of which remove the proposed project from consistency with the RLS A Overlay. The relevant Deviations and departures from Development Standards proposed for this SRA project do not conform to fundamental Village design characteristics required by the LDC and are not consistent with the intent of RLSA provisions in the LDC Stewardship District. Collier County RLSA regulations are based on the principals established to enhance the tools, techniques,and strategies based on principles of innovative planning and development strategies. Conclusions: Where the proposed SRA lacks consistency with the intent of RLSA provisions in the LDC, it may not be considered consistent with the FLUE. Where the proposed SRA does not conform to fundamental Vi llage design characteristics as identified in the Substantive Review Findings above, it is not supported by a recommendation for approval. Based upon the above analysis, this proposed SRA may not be deemed consistent with the FLUE. However, the application may be deemed consistent if and when the Conditions of Approval below are met. Conditions of Approval: 1. All formal SSAs have been approved and Stewardship Credits submitted before or concurrent with this SRA. 2. Those Deviations,Development Standards,SRA Statement of Suitability Criteria, etc.,listed under Consistency Review Findings,above, are removed or revised as discussed above. 3.The ratio of multi-family to single-family dwelling units is increased to a meaningful level. 9.A.14 Packet Pg. 424 Attachment: REFERENCE COPY ONLY-OUTDATED CCPC Staff Report.docx 12-2-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) RIVERGRASS VILLAGE SRA,SRA-PL20190000044 September 10,2019 Page 10 of 40 For further information, please see Attachment C-FLUE Consistency Review. Transportation Element: Transportation Planning staff has reviewed the petition and recommends the following: Policy 3.3 of the Transportation Element of the GMP: The County shall acquire a sufficient amount of right-of-way to facilitate arterial and collector roads as appropriate to meet the needs of the Long Range Transportation Plan or other adopted transportation studies, plan or programs, appropriate turn lanes, medians, bicycle and pedestrian features, drainage canals, a shoulder sufficient for pull offs, and landscaping areas. Exceptions to the right-of-way standard may be considered when it can demonstrated, through a traffic capacity analysis, that the maximum number of lanes at build-out will be less than the standard. Staff finding: On October 28, 2003, the Board of County Commissioners (BCC)approved a Resolution related to the creation of the Big Cyp ress Stewardship District. A requirement of the Resolution and the enabling legislation for the District required the District and Collier County to enter into an Interlocal Service Delivery Agreement. The Agreement provided a fair share capital construction funding contribution for the long-range traffic capacity improvements of county arterial and collector roads,within and proximate to the District,within 90 days of the Act taking effect. At the October 26, 2004, BCC meeting, Agenda Item 10C, the Board entertained the approval of the Interlocal Service Delivery Agreement with the Big Cypress Stewardship District. In this specific agenda item, County staff pursued a right-of-way reservatio Oil Well Road to Randall Boulevard among other right-of-way reservations. It was acknowledged during the meeting by both the County and representatives of Collier Enterprises, that there was disagreement as it related to the During the meeting, Tom Conrecode, representing We understand the constraints at Oil Well and Immokalee Road. We ap ill have plenty of opportunities to do that in the futu ot doing anything with the land but farming it today. At some point in the future when we come back with a zoning action before this county commission, staff will have the opportunity again to go after that road and many, many more to serve the needs of the are r. Conrecode went Randall and Oil Well Road. Th .If we take the time and agree to work together, work on a solution that solves to come up with a better solution that serves all the transportation public in Collier Co Mr. ange requested of the county.The count he county and talk with the county on that and many other corridors that the county puts into its long-range pl dentified man The ;however, the District did not act on it. Ultimately, the District did enter in a Land Donation Agreement with the County as it pertains to Oil Well Road, but not the remaining items. 9.A.14 Packet Pg. 425 Attachment: REFERENCE COPY ONLY-OUTDATED CCPC Staff Report.docx 12-2-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) RIVERGRASS VILLAGE SRA,SRA-PL20190000044 September 10,2019 Page 11 of 40 In 2016, Collier County began the Randall Boulevard and Oil Well Road Corridor Study. This study evaluated several corridor alternatives to enhance traffic operations and safety conditions based on current and future travel demands. While the County was studying the corridor, the Collier Metropolitan Planning Organization adopted an amendment (May 25, 2018) to the 2040 Long Range Transportation Plan that added a new needed roadway that became known as Big Cypress Parkway between Golden Gate Boulevard and Immokalee Road. The County continued forward with the Randall Boulevard and Oil Well Road Corridor Study,which included coordination with Collier Enterprises as it related to their SRA development at the time (Rural Lands West SRA). In May 2019, the Board adopted Viable Alternative 2+, which included the following improvements: Randall Boulevard (8th Street NE to Everglades Boulevard 6 lanes) Randall Boulevard (Everglades Boulevard to Big Cypress Parkway 4 lanes) Oil Well Road (Everglades Boulevard to Oil Well Grade Road 6 lanes) Everglades Boulevard (Randall Boulevard to Oil Well Road 4 lanes) Additional regional roadway needs to enhance access, safety,and mobility: Vanderbilt Beach Road (16th Street NE to Big C ypress Parkway) Everglades Boulevard (Vanderbilt Beach Road Ext. to Randall Boulevard) Big Cyp ress Parkway (Golden Gate Boulevard to Immokalee Road) Consistent with the commitments previously made by Collier Enterprises for the Stewardship District, staff is requiring a right-of-way reservation for Big Cypress Parkway within the limits of the Stewardship District. The companion Developer Agreement contains the rights-of-way necessary to accommodate the right-of-way for Big Cypress Parkway within the Stewardship District. This reservation is consistent with the Long Range Transportation Plan, Randall Boulevard and Oil Well Road Corridor Study final alignment network,and the commitments made to address the regional roadway network at the time of rezoning. Collier Enterprises, Inc., has not fulfilled the commitments made at the time of support of the redistricting, specifically, the requirement to donate 100-feet of right-of-way for Immokalee Road and the necessary stormwater management for the said roadway. This donation should be completed immediately, without regard to this petition. However, it has been included in the companion Developer Agreement. Condition of approval: The companion Developer Agreement is required to be approved with this SRA request. Policy 5.1 of the Transportation Element of the GMP states: designation applications, conditional use petitions, and proposed amendments to the Future Land Use Element (FLUE) affecting the overall countywide density or intensity of permissible development, with consideration of their impact on the overall County transportation system, and shall not approve any petition or application that would directly access a deficient roadway segment as identified in the current AUIR or if it impacts an adjacent roadway segment that is deficient as identified in the current AUIR, or which significantly impacts a roadway segment or adjacent roadway segment that is currently operating and/or is projected to 9.A.14 Packet Pg. 426 Attachment: REFERENCE COPY ONLY-OUTDATED CCPC Staff Report.docx 12-2-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) RIVERGRASS VILLAGE SRA,SRA-PL20190000044 September 10,2019 Page 12 of 40 operate below an adopted Level of Service Standard within the five year AUIR planning period, unless specific mitigating stipulations are also approved.A petition or application has significant impacts if the traffic impact statement reveals that any of the following occur: a. For links (roadway segments) directly accessed by the project where project traffic is equal to or exceeds 2% of the adopted LOS standard service volume; b. For links adjacent to links directly accessed by the project where project traffic is equal to or exceeds 2% of the adopted LOS standard service volume; and c. For all other links,the project traffic is considered to be significant up to the point where it is equal to or exceeds 3% of the adopted LOS standard service volume. Mitigating stipulations shall be based upon a mitigation plan prepared by the applicant and submitted as part of the traffic impa significant impacts on all Staff finding: In evaluating the Rivergrass Village SRA, staff reviewed the applicant s Traffic Impact Statement (TIS ) dated August 5, 2019,for consistency using the applicable 2018 Annual Update and Inventory Reports (AUIR). According to the SRA document and noted above,the applicant is requesting a maximum of 2,250 single-family residential dwelling units and up to 250 multi-family residential dwelling units, up to 80,000 square feet of retail/office uses, and 25,000 square feet of civic, governmental and institutional uses. The TIS provided with the petition outlines a potential development scenario for 1,414 single-family residential dwelling units, 1,086 multi-family dwelling units, up to 25,000 square feet of governmental and institutional uses, 80,000 square feet of retail/office uses,and an 18-hole golf course. Staff has evaluated the TIS and has found that the scenario presents an accurate trip generation calculation, reasonable trip distribution on the surrounding network,and reflects a reasonable development potential with the proposed SRA. The SRA document establishes the total trip cap commitment in Section VIII Developer Commitments, 8.3.A. Transportation. According to the TIS, the project impacts the following County roadways: Existing Roadway Conditions: Link #Roadway Link Location 2018 AUIR Existing LOS P.M. Peak Hour Peak Direction Service Volume/Peak Direction 2018 AUIR Remaining Capacity Projected P.M. Peak Hour/Peak Direction Project Traffic1 121.2 Oil Well Road Oil Well Grade to Ave Maria Blvd B 2,000/West 1,464 186 121.1 Oil Well Road Desoto Blvd to Oil Well Grade B 1,1002/West 564 655 9.A.14 Packet Pg. 427 Attachment: REFERENCE COPY ONLY-OUTDATED CCPC Staff Report.docx 12-2-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) RIVERGRASS VILLAGE SRA,SRA-PL20190000044 September 10,2019 Page 13 of 40 120.0 Oil Well Road Everglades Blvd to Desoto Blvd B 1,1002/West 541 530 119.0 Oil Well Road Immokalee Road to Everglades Blvd C 2,000/East 863 633 136.0 Everglades Blvd Oil Well Road to Immokalee Road C 800/North 350 39 135 Everglades Blvd Golden Gate Blvd to Oil Well Road B 800/North 445 133 118.0 Wilson Blvd Immokalee Road to Golden Gate Blvd B 900/South 560 103 133.0 Randal Blvd Everglades Blvd to Desoto Blvd C 900/East 261 60 132.0 Randal Blvd Immokalee Road to Everglades Blvd E 9003/East 40 60 112.0 Vanderbilt Beach Rd Logan Blvd to Collier Blvd C 3,000/East 1,052 106 111.2 Vanderbilt Beach Rd Livingston Rd to Logan Blvd C 3,000/East 859 53 17.0 Golden Gate Blvd Collier Blvd to Wilson Blvd C 2,300/East 590 106 123.0 Golden Gate Blvd Wilson Blvd to 18th Street NE/SE B 2,300/East 1,095 166 123.1 Golden Gate Blvd 18th Street NE/SE to Everglades Blvd B 2,300/East 1,105 166 124.0 Golden Gate Blvd Everglades Blvd to Desoto Blvd B 1,010/East 783 113 46.0 Immokalee Road Oil Well Road to SR 29 C 900/East 322 14 45.0 Immokalee Road Wilson Blvd to Oil Well Road C 3,300/East 891 606 44.0 Immokalee Road Collier Blvd to Wilson Blvd D 3,300/East 681 386 9.A.14 Packet Pg. 428 Attachment: REFERENCE COPY ONLY-OUTDATED CCPC Staff Report.docx 12-2-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) RIVERGRASS VILLAGE SRA,SRA-PL20190000044 September 10,2019 Page 14 of 40 43.2 Immokalee Road Logan Blvd to Collier Blvd D 3,200/East 188 265 43.1 Immokalee Road I-75 to Logan Blvd D 3,500/East 530 159 42.2 Immokalee Road Livingston Road to I-75 D 3,500/East 871 53 30.1 Collier Blvd Immokalee Road to Vanderbilt Beach Road C 3,000/North 773 53 30.2 Collier Blvd Vanderbilt Beach Road to Golden Gate Blvd B 3,000/South 1,662 32 31.1 Collier Blvd Golden Gate Blvd to Pine Ridge Road C 3,000/North 1,142 106 31.2 Collier Blvd Pine Ridge Road to Green Blvd C 3,000/North 1,160 53 50.0 Logan Blvd Immokalee Road to Vanderbilt Beach Road C 1,000/North 371 53 1.Source for P.M. Peak Hour/Peak Direction Project Traffic is August 5, 2019;Traffic Impact Statement provided by the petitioner. 2.P.M. Peak Hour Peak Direction Service Volume does not consider a committed improvement (subject to an approved developer agreement). The committed project will increase the service volume to 2,000. 3.A portion of this link is committed for widening;Immokalee Road to 8th Street; P.M. Peak Hour Peak Direction service volume will increas service volume will remain unchanged. The companion Developer Agreement fulfills the mitigation necessary to comply with the Growth Management Plan Transportation Element Policy 5.1. Condition of approval: The companion Developer Agreement is required to be approved with this SRA request. Policy 7.1 of the Transportation Element of the GMP states: ia of the Access Management Policy as adopted by Resolution and as may be amended to ensure the protection of the arterial Staff finding: The Rivergrass Village SRA is proposing several access points on Oil Well Road and the future Big Cypress Parkway. Staff recommends approval of the proposed access points shown on the master plan for this petition, nothing in this development order will vest the developer to anything more than a right in/right out at the locations. Directional and full median openings may be contemplated at the time of Site Development Plan or Plat and Plan. To be 9.A.14 Packet Pg. 429 Attachment: REFERENCE COPY ONLY-OUTDATED CCPC Staff Report.docx 12-2-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) RIVERGRASS VILLAGE SRA,SRA-PL20190000044 September 10,2019 Page 15 of 40 explicit regarding a future signalized intersection, a provision of the companion Developer Agreement includes a commitment from the developer that they will not seek a traffic signal along Big Cyp ress Parkway within one-half mile of the intersections of Randall Boulevard or Oil Well Road. Condition of approval: The companion Developer Agreement is required to be approved with this SRA request. Policy 9.3 of the Transportation Element of the GMP states: developments to facilitate convenient movement throughout the road network. The LDC shall identify the circumstances and conditions that would require the interconnection of neighboring developments and shall also develop standards and criteria for the safe interconne Staff finding: The proposed Rivergrass Village SRA s Master Plan shows potential-future interconnections to adjacent roadways along the future Big Cypress Parkway. The Collier County Master Mobility Plan tested sub-area road connectivity (Section 4) specific to the RLSA area,and noted benefits of interconnected roadways such as reduction of vehicle miles traveled,and vehicle hours traveled within the sub-area. Therefore, staff recommends the establishment of potential interconnections (north, east,and south) with the knowledge that other Stewardship Receiving s)are anticipated. Condition of approval: The companion Developer Agreement is required to be approved with this SRA request. Staff Recommendation: Tr ansportation Planning staff finds this petition consistent with the GMP subject to the following Conditions of Approval below. Conditions of Approval: 4.The companion Developer Agreement is required to be approved with this SRA request. 5. Provide for potential interconnections (north, east,and south) on the Master Plan. Conservation and Coastal Management Element (CCME)and FLUE related to Environmental Planning: Environmental Planning staff have found this project to be consistent with the CCME and FLUE. Pursuant to the Growth Management Plan Future Land Use Element, preservation of listed species habitat and other native areas in the Rural Lands Stewardship Area is addressed by the creation of the required Stewardship Sending Areas (SSA). SSA 15 has been approved for the petitioner to obtain credits for the development of the SRA. STAFF ANALYSIS: Staff completed a comprehensive evaluation of this SRA petition and the criteria upon which a recommendation must be based. The listed criteria are noted explicitly in the LDC and require staff evaluation and comment, and shall be used as the basis for a recommendation of approval or 9.A.14 Packet Pg. 430 Attachment: REFERENCE COPY ONLY-OUTDATED CCPC Staff Report.docx 12-2-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) RIVERGRASS VILLAGE SRA,SRA-PL20190000044 September 10,2019 Page 16 of 40 denial by the Collier County Planning Commission (CCPC) to the Board of Collier County Commissioners (BCC). Notwithstanding the above, staff reviewed the determinants for adequate findings to support the proposed SRA application as follows: Environmental Review: Environmental Planning staff has reviewed this petition and recommends approval subject to the condition of approval below. Site Description: The subject property consists of 999.96 acres of predominately intensive agriculture acreage. Land use consists of row crops, improved,and unimproved pasture and other agriculture-related uses with a small area of native vegetation. A FLUCFCS map detailing land use is contained in Listed Species Survey (Appendix B). The natural area is 0.13 acres, which is classified as disturbed Hydric Pine.This area is impacted by exotic vegetation and would not meet the LDC definition of native vegetation for preservation purposes. The property contains 1.30 acres of disturbed wetlands;wetland mitigation for impacts to these areas are addressed through South Florida Water Management District (SFWMD)Conceptual Environmental Resource Permit (ERP) 11-03949-P. Listed Species: The Rivergrass Village SRA project is located within the boundary of previously proposed Rural Lands West SRA. Protected Species surveys have been conducted throughout the area in various years between 2007 and 2017.The surveys were conducted for wildlife species listed by the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWCC)and the United States Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS)as endangered, threatened or species of special concern and plants listed by Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services (FDACS)and USFWS as endangered, threatened or commercially exploited.Eagles and their nests were also included as part of wildlife survey observations.Surveys conducted between 2007 and 2009 and 2014 through 2017 indicate the following species have been present in the boundary for the Rivergrass SRA: American alligator (Alligator mississippiensis), little blue heron (Egretta caerulea),tri-colored heron (Egretta tricolor), wood stork (Mycteria americana), Florida sandhill crane (Grus canadensis pratensis), Crested caracara (Caracara cheriway),Bald eagle (Haliaeetu leucocephalus),Florida bonneted bat (Eumops floridanus), Florida panther (Puma concolor coryi) and Florida black bear (Ursus americanus floridanus).The current wildlife survey conducted in 2019 revealed the following species were observed onsite: wood stork (Mycteria americana), little blue heron (Egretta caerulea), tri-colored heron (Egretta tricolor), and American alligator (Alligator mississippiensis; see Appendix H). There are five protected plants listed in LDC P that may occur on the project site: butterfly orchid (Encyclia tampensis), giant wild pine air plant (Tillandsia utriclata), inflated wild pine air plant (Tillandsia balbisiana),stiff-leaved wild pine air plant (Tillandsia fasciculata), and twisted air plant (Tillandsia flexuosa). Additionally, there are five protected plants listed in the LDC as Plants -site, including:Cowhorn orchid (Cyrtopodium punctatum), Ghost orchid (Polyrrhiza lindenii),Cu milkweed (Asclepias curtissii), clamshell orchid (Encyclia cochleate)and West Coast prickly- apple (Harrisia gracilis). Environmental Planning staff also reviewed this petition per LDC section 4.08.07.A.1.d.,which requires Stewardship Receiving Areas (SRA)with lands greater than one acre and a Natural 9.A.14 Packet Pg. 431 Attachment: REFERENCE COPY ONLY-OUTDATED CCPC Staff Report.docx 12-2-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) RIVERGRASS VILLAGE SRA,SRA-PL20190000044 September 10,2019 Page 17 of 40 Resource Index (NRI)value greater than 1.2 shall be retained as open space and maintained in a predominantly natural vegetated state.There are no areas within the proposed SRA that contain acreages with an NRI score above 1.2. The majority of the Rivergrass Village SRA has been historically agricultural and cleared for crops. Pursuant to the Growth Management Plan Future Land Use Element, preservation of listed species habitat and other native areas in the Rural Lands Stewardship Area is addressed by the creation of the required Stewardship Sending Areas (SSA). SSA 15 has been approved for the petitioner to obtain credits for the development of the SRA. Evaluation of Suitability criteria in LDC section 4.08.07. A: Residential,commercial, manufacturing/light industrial, group housing, and transient housing, institutional, civic and community service uses within an SRA shall not be sited on lands that receive an NRI value of greater than 1.2 (LDC section 4.08.07.A.1.b).There are no areas having an NRI value greater than 1.2; therefore, residential, commercial, manufacturing/light industrial, group housing, and transient housing, institutional, civic and community service uses may be sited on such lands. Conditional use essential services and governmental essential services, with the exception of those necessary to serve permitted uses and for public safety, shall not be sited on land that receives an NRI value of greater than 1.2, regardless of the size of the land or parcel (LDC section 4.08.07.A.1.c).There are no areas having NRI value greater than 1.2; therefore, conditional use essential services, with the exception of those necessary to serve permitted uses and for public safety, and governmental essential services may be sited on such lands. Lands or parcels that are greater than one acre and have an Index Value greater than 1.2 shall be retained as open space and maintained in a predominantly natural vegetated state (LDC section 4.08.07.A.1.d). There are no areas having NRI value greater than 1.2. An SRA may be contiguous to an FSA or HSA, but shall not encroach into such areas, and shall buffer such areas as described in Section 4.08.07 J.6. An SRA may be contiguous to or encompass,a WRA (LDC section 4.08.07.A.1.g). The project does not encroach into an FSA or HSA;it provides the required buffers as indicated on the SRA Master Plan. SSA credits required for SRA designation: Environmental Planning staff reviewed this petition in conjunction with GIS staff who provided the following information regarding the generation of stewardship credits: The Stewardship Credits for Rivergrass Village SRA are created from SSA 15 located on properties within and adjoining the Camp Keais Strand, a major flow way system connecting Corkscrew Marsh at its northern end and adjoining the Okaloacoochee Slough. The credit calculation is based on the total acreage of Rivergrass, which is 999.96 acres. The minimum open space requirement is 349.99 acres; the applicant has proposed 615.27 acres of open space. Therefore, the total acreage that consumes credits is 734.68 acres. In addition, approximately 104.81 acres are being reserved for future County Arterial Road Rights-of-Way for the expansion of Oil Well Road. The petitioner has elected to consume credits for the benefit use areas and count the acreage toward the maximum acreage limits of the SRA. Therefore, Rivergrass Village requires 5,877.44 Stewardship credits. 9.A.14 Packet Pg. 432 Attachment: REFERENCE COPY ONLY-OUTDATED CCPC Staff Report.docx 12-2-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) RIVERGRASS VILLAGE SRA,SRA-PL20190000044 September 10,2019 Page 18 of 40 Of the six Natural Resources Index Factors on the Stewardship Credit Worksheet, only Land Use Land Cover (FLUCCS) and Listed Species Habitat are prone to change over time. In this SRA application, minor changes to the Land Use Land Cover Classifications have not occurred as a result of detailed onsite FLUCFCS mapping conducted in May 2015. No changes have occurred to the Listed Species Habitat factor that affects index scoring for the SRA. A comparison of the detailed 2015 FLUCFCS map with the pr 2019 FLUCFCS map revealed the total acreage under agriculture did not change; some conversion between different agricultural uses did occur. The remaining acreage, comprised of previously disturbed vegetated areas,required minor changes to FLUCCS classifications. These changes reflected the more detailed onsite FLUCFCS mapping recently performed for state permitting efforts, as opposed to the comprehensive planning level of the Study FLUCCS mapping. These minor classification changes do not produce any significant overall changes to the SRA Natural Resources Index (NRI) Value scores. Rivergrass Village SRA credits are generated from Stewardship Sending Area 15 which has 7,261.8 total available credits. Environmental Planning staff recommends the following Condition of Approval: 6.Prior to issuance of the first development order,a listed species management plan must be provided for review, with approval from FWCC and/or USFWS for management of the Florida panther and all other listed species. Public Utilities Review:The Rivergrass Village SRA lies within the regional potable water and northeast wastewater service areas of the Collier County Water-Sewer District (CCWSD). Water, wastewater, and irrigation quality (I.Q.) water services will be extended to the project from the Northeast Utility Facilities (NEUF) site located at 825 39th Avenue NE (adjacent to the Collier County fairgrounds). The CCWSD will extend transmission mains to a point of connection at the northeast corner of the adjacent Hyde Park Village SRA (pending approval, PL20180000622). The pipelines will be designed to provide a minimum service pressure of 60 PSI at the point of connection. Additionally, the CCWSD will construct an interim 1.5 MGD wastewater treatment facility at the NEUF site to serve the project. Utility services are scheduled to be provided by September 30, 2020,pending Board approval of the interlocal agreement that accompanies this petition. The developer will be responsible for design, permitting, construction, and conveyance of utility system infrastructure internal to the SRA pursuant to the Collier County Utilities Standards and Procedures Ordinance (Ordinance Number 2004-31, as amended).Residents and businesses will receive individually metered irrigation services and will pay standard I.Q. rates. Per the interlocal agreement, the golf course may be irrigated from onsite water sources. Additionally, the developer has agreed to reserve a 5-acre utility site in support of future developments anticipated south of Rivergrass Village. The site will revert back to the developer if the site is deemed unnecessary. The Public Utilities Department supports this petition subject to the following conditions of approval: 9.A.14 Packet Pg. 433 Attachment: REFERENCE COPY ONLY-OUTDATED CCPC Staff Report.docx 12-2-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) RIVERGRASS VILLAGE SRA,SRA-PL20190000044 September 10,2019 Page 19 of 40 7.The SRA document identifies a minimum of 62,500 to a maximum of 80,000 square feet of neighborhood-scale commercial and office uses and a minimum of 25,000 square feet of civic, governmental, and institutional uses for a total of 105,000 square feet of non- residential uses. Yet, the demand tables provided in the Public Facilities Impact Assessment and in the Economic Assessment report 200,000 square feet of commercial floor space. The text and table in each document should be revised for consistency with the allowable uses. 8.The SRA Local Street R.O.W. Section shall be revised to properly show minimum setbacks and separation distances, which should be designated by "MIN." rather than "+/-," which would imply the actual measurement could be less than that shown.The detail shows the HDPE force main 4.6 feet from the edge-of-pavement/gutter. This is less than the minimum 5-foot setback required by the Design Criteria (CCWSD Utilities Standards Manual, Section 1), and no reduction of this setback has been approved by utility d eviation. The detail should also show the 5-foot minimum setback distance between pressure mains and street trees. Lastly,a footnote identifying standards reduced via the utility deviation approved on 6/25/2019 should be added for documentation and to avoid confusion at the development permit application stage. Staff reviewed and approved a revised detail sent via email by the engineer on 8/26/2019. 9.The SRA document should incorporate the following deviation language to avoid a conflict between the interlocal agreement and the LDC: A Deviation from separate potable water and r at no cost to Collier County for all subdivisions and developments and Reuse water lines, pumps, and other appurtenances will not be maintained by Collier County,s and/or appurtenances to be conveyed to and maintained by Collier County. 10.The negotiated interlocal agreement between Collier County Water-Sewer District and the Big C ypress Stewardship District must be adopted concurrently with the SRA ordinance. Collier County Public Schools (CCPS) District Review: CCPS staff has reviewed the petition and has determined there is existing or planned capacity within the next five years at the elementary, middle,and high school levels. Therefore, there are no requirements for the applicant. At the time of Site Development Plan or Plat,the development will be reviewed to ensure there is capacity either within the concurrency service area the development is located in or in adjacent concurrency service areas. Architectural Review: Architectural staff has reviewed this petition and recommends approval. Archeology and Historic Preservation Review:Archeology and Historic Preservation Review staff has reviewed this petition and recommends approval. Landscape Review:Landscape staff has reviewed this petition and recommends approval. Fire Review:Fire staff has reviewed this petition and recommends approval. Community and Human Services Review (Housing)Review: Housing staff has reviewed this petition and has found that the proposed SRA does not address housing affordability. 9.A.14 Packet Pg. 434 Attachment: REFERENCE COPY ONLY-OUTDATED CCPC Staff Report.docx 12-2-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) RIVERGRASS VILLAGE SRA,SRA-PL20190000044 September 10,2019 Page 20 of 40 The first submittal of the Rivergrass Village SRA proposes to comply with FLUE Policy 4.7.2 that villages be marily residential communities with a diversity of housing types and mix of uses appropriate to the scale and character of the particular village,by stating that, allows for up to 2,500 dwelling units, a minimum of 62,500square feet and a maximum of 80,000 square feet of neighborhood-scaled retail and office uses,and a minimum of 25,000 square feet of civic, government, and institutional use The Economic Assessment provided with the submission offers some details as to the types and proposed sales pricing of the housing units: The assessment states:verage assessed value for Rivergrass single-family homes is $370,000,which is 41% higher t value. The assessment also states that of the 2500 residential units, 1086 units duplex, or single-family attached,with an average sales value of $272,000 per unit. The balance of the 1414 residential units is planned as single-family detached with an average sales value of $394,000 per unit. The Rivergrass Village SRA submission offers no details as to how many residential units will meet the C affordability standards for various income levels. It also offers no detail on the number of affordable units or price points that will be included to accommodate the need for affordable units created by the Village. 9.A.14 Packet Pg. 435 Attachment: REFERENCE COPY ONLY-OUTDATED CCPC Staff Report.docx 12-2-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) RIVERGRASS VILLAGE SRA,SRA-PL20190000044 September 10,2019 Page 21 of 40 Without such details, it is not possible to evaluate the submittal to determine if it meets Goal #1 of the Housing Element:TE SUPPLY OF DECENT, SAFE, SANITARY,AND AFFORDABLE HOUSING FOR ALL RESIDENTS OF COLLIER COUNTY. Furthermore, no details are given as to how the submittal will comply with Objective 1 of the Housing Element to:rovide new affordable housing units in order to meet the current and future housing needs of legal residents with very-low, low, moderate and affordable workforce incomes, including households with special needs such as rural and farmworker housing in rural Collier Cou The documentation provided indicates the residential units proposed will exceed the Count , offering no accommodation for affordability to Very-low, Low, Moderate,or Gap income residents. Housing staff recommends the following Condition of Approval: 11.A Housing Needs Analysis be performed to estimate the affordable housing demand and to create a plan to address the supply of affordable housing units for the Rivergrass Village SRA. Economic Assessment Review: Section 4.08.07 (L) of the Collier County Land Development Code (LDC) provides the requirements for the preparation and submittal of the Economic Assessment for a Stewardship Receiving Area (SRA).The Economic Assessment, at a minimum, is required to demonstrate fiscal neutrality for the development, as a whole, for the following units of government: transportation, potable water, wastewater, irrigation water, stormwater management, solid waste, parks, law enforcement, emergency medical services, fire,and school. In the event the Assessment identifies a negative fiscal impact of the project, several options are identified to address the funding shortfalls, including impositions of special assessments, use of community development districts (CDD), Municipal Service Benefit Units (MSBU), Municipal Service Taxing Units (MSTU), etc. As detailed in the information above, the petitioner is requesting consideration for designating 999.96 acres within the Rural Lands Stewardship Area Zoning Overlay District as an SRA, to be known as the Rivergrass Village SRA (Rivergrass), allowing for the development of residential, commercial, civic, governmental, institutional and senior housing land use components. Rivergrass submitted an Economic Assessment, prepared by Development Planning and Financial Group, Inc, (DPFG)in accordance with the requirements of the LDC, which allows the use of an alternative fiscal impact model, approved by Collier County. DPFG measured the fiscal neutrality at the horizon year (2042 buildout) using a to dete Co ates to estimate the demand and impact fee contributions related to the project. The assessment model is static and does not include the cost of future infrastructure financing, which cannot be determined at this time,or provide for positive or negative adjustments in costs, fees, tax rates, etc. but does assume a constant rate of development for the project. 9.A.14 Packet Pg. 436 Attachment: REFERENCE COPY ONLY-OUTDATED CCPC Staff Report.docx 12-2-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) RIVERGRASS VILLAGE SRA,SRA-PL20190000044 September 10,2019 Page 22 of 40 DPFG conducted meetings with representatives from the various public facilities to capture information on both capital needs as well as operating impacts related to the proposed project. As part of this process, the need for new facility s ites and other capital items, specifically related to the proposed project were also analyzed. An outside peer review was conducted by Jacobs (formerly CH2M-Hill) to provide an independent, evaluation of the report. See Attachment E: Peer Review. The Jacobs report concluded that the analysis is reasonable and confirms the ,as defined.It is our opinion that the Applicant fulfilled the intent of the fiscal neutrality requirement and that the proposed Rivergrass development is fiscally neutral, as defined, for Rivergrass Village SRA for Collier County, the North Collier Fire & Rescue District, and the Collier County School District.Jacobs noted that the companion Developer Agreements for the project are important elements in the overall fiscal neutrality objectives. The following is a brief overview of the analysis by facility. Several of the categories were also reviewed individually and are included with the review comments for their respective facility. This is noted below. The project impact fee revenue assumed for this assessment is based on the current, adopted rates,and as previously stated,does not include any projections for impact fee increases or decreases. Any staff comments that affect the anticipated impact fee revenue is provided below, otherwise,the assumptions are considered acceptable for the proposed types of residential and commercial land uses and square footages, for the purpose of this analysis. The same approach, to note any comments or observations that may affect the anticipated revenue, was used for the information related to millage rates and other governmental revenue sources used for the purpose of this analysis. Transportation Fiscally Neutral. See Transportation Review Section of this Staff Report and Attachment E-Public Facilities Impact Assessment, to be read in combination with the following: scal analysis and public facilities impact assessment should be updated to reflect the latest traffic impact statement, intersection analysis,and fair share mitigation reports as provided by the applicant on August 5, 2019,and August 19, 2019, respectively. Traffic Impact Statement, intersection analysis,and fair share mitigation reports, the projected deficiencies exist both without and with the project.The adopted level of service standard for roadway capacity would be exceeded by the existing, committed and vested trips, plus additional project background trips from sources other than the development project under review. The project is not causing the deficiency,nor can the projected deficiency be cured by the development.The applicant will be paying impact fees for the proposed land uses to off-set their growth-related demand for infrastructure. In addition, the applicant has analyzed multiple intersections within the area of significant impact and will be paying a proportionate share toward operational improvements necessary to accommodate the development. This proportionate share is included in the companion developer agreement. Law Enforcement Fiscally Neutral. DPFG worked directly w ith Collier County Sher Office representatives regarding any specific needs (land, etc.) that would be created by the 9.A.14 Packet Pg. 437 Attachment: REFERENCE COPY ONLY-OUTDATED CCPC Staff Report.docx 12-2-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) RIVERGRASS VILLAGE SRA,SRA-PL20190000044 September 10,2019 Page 23 of 40 proposed development. At this time,there is not a need for a specific land site within the proposed development.However, a substation may be required in the future to serve this and other proposed developments in the area. As such, impact fees and other capital funding may be available to fund a portion of a substation and/or other capital items, as necessitated by growth in the future. This infrastructure category currently has an identified deficiency between the adopted and achieved level of service. However, the project is not causing the deficiency, nor can the calculated deficiency be cured by the development.As stated above,the applicant will be paying impact fees for the proposed land uses to off-set their growth-related demand for infrastructure. Emergency Medical Services (EMS) Fiscally Neutral. See Attachment E-Public Facilities Impact Assessment,to be read in combination with the following: DPFG worked directly with Collier County Collier County Emergency Medical Services representatives regarding any specific needs (land, etc.) that would be created specifically by the proposed development. EMS provided locations in the area that will service the proposed development, with additional planned,co-located facilities in the area. Therefore, currently, there is not a need for a specific land site within this proposed development. This infrastructure category currently has an identified deficiency between the adopted and achieved level of service. However, the project is not causing the deficiency, nor can the calculated deficiency b e cured by the development.The applicant will be paying impact fees for the proposed land uses to off-set their growth-related demand for infrastructure. Additionally, proceeds from the One-Cent Infrastructure Surtax were identified to provide funding for certain EMS capital construction needs. Regional Parks Fiscally Neutral.The DPFG analysis for Regional Parks utilizes an adjusted achieved level of service, consistent with the methodology provided in the current, adopted Impact Fee Stud y.This calculation is provided to ensure that new development is not required to pay impact fees based on the inclusion of one-time or specialty facilities (Naples Zoo, Sports Tourism Park, etc.) and eliminates the likelihood of over-charging new development. This method is generally acceptable with the following condition: The analysis uses the 2018 Peak season population combined with the inventory for the 2015 adjusted achieved level of service.This method generates a calculated level of service that is lower than any used for the Impact Fee Study or Annual Update and Inventory Report. The population year and the inventory year should be the same. Therefore, based on the 2015 Impact Fee Study (current) the adjusted achieved level of service should be 1.82 acres per 1,000 population verses the 1.68 acres per 1,000 population which then, based on the Rivergrass proposed population, requires 9.32 acres of Regional Parks attributable to the proposed development. At the current full cost per acre, there is a calculated negative fiscal impact of $89,763 based on the estimated impact fees and other capital revenues anticipated to be generated by the project. Staff concludes that the project can still be considered fiscally neutral based on the minimal estimated revenue shortfall, as it is primarily based on 2015 rates, which may increase in the future, especially as this area develops and land prices in Eastern Collier County continue to 9.A.14 Packet Pg. 438 Attachment: REFERENCE COPY ONLY-OUTDATED CCPC Staff Report.docx 12-2-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) RIVERGRASS VILLAGE SRA,SRA-PL20190000044 September 10,2019 Page 24 of 40 increase; the shortfall in acres is less than 1 acre (0.7) and the future Regional Parks Impact Fees paid related to this development will likely contribute to funding the construction of the Big Corkscrew Island Regional Park which is located in close proximity to the proposed project. Additionally, proceeds from the One-Cent Infrastructure Surtax were identified to provide funding for the Big Corkscrew Island Regional Park. Community Parks Fiscally Neutral. There are no sites identified for a Community Park within the boundaries of the proposed development. However, the estimated impact fees and other capital funding anticipated, related to the project, are reasonable and adequate to establish fiscal neutrality related to Community Parks. Public Utilities (Water,Wastewater, Irrigation Water and Solid Waste) Fiscally Neutral. See Public Utilities Review Section of this Staff Report and Attachment E-Public Facilities Impact Assessment,to be read in combination with the following: DPFG worked directly with Collier County Collier County Public Utilities representatives regarding the future needs of the project.As provided by the representatives: Utilities service will not trigger above-to serve the Rivergrass Village SRA development and several other potential developments is no different than what has been done in the past to serve an expanding service area. The current construction project is the first phase of establishing regional treatment facilities in the northeast region of the County. When complete,these facilities will serve Rivergrass Village SRA as well as growing areas currently being served by the North County Regional Water Treatment Plant and the North County Water Reclamation Facility. The northeast treatment facilities will increase the reliability of the existing systems as the population expands. As an additional comment, all user rates are consistent The proposed development will be required to pay User Fees, Impact Fees and Special Assessments (Solid Waste) which will provide funding for both capital and operating costs attributable to the project. With respect to Irrigation Water, there is no responsibility or cost to Collier County. Stormwater Management Fiscally Neutral. See Attachment E-Public Facilities Impact Assessment, to be read in combination with the following: Collier County does not assess impact fees or other special assessments to fund the Stormwater Management Capital and Maintenance Programs. Funding for these areas is typically provided by a combination of funding appropriations from the General Fund (001)and the Unincorporated Area General Fund (111). The Big Cypress Stewardship District, which includes the Rivergrass Village SRA,is responsible for the management of all designated flowways, which are also governed by the provisions of the Rural Lands Stewardship Area (RLSA). The project water management system will be fully permitted through the South Florida Water Management District and Collier County. Collier County will have no responsibility for the capital construction or maintenance of the Rivergrass water management system. Therefore, the determination of fiscal neutrality is reasonable. 9.A.14 Packet Pg. 439 Attachment: REFERENCE COPY ONLY-OUTDATED CCPC Staff Report.docx 12-2-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) RIVERGRASS VILLAGE SRA,SRA-PL20190000044 September 10,2019 Page 25 of 40 North Collier Fire & Rescue District Fiscally Neutral. See Fire Review Section of this Staff Report and Attachment E-Public Facilities Impact Assessment, to be read in combination with the following: DPFG worked directly with North Collier Fire & Rescue District representatives regarding any specific needs (land,capital equipment, etc.) that would be created specifically by the proposed development. As provided by North Collier, there are locations in the area that will service the proposed development, with an additional planned,co-located facility with EMS in the area. Therefore, currently, there is not a need for a specific land site within this proposed development. The applicant will be paying impact fees for the proposed land uses to off-set their growth-related demand for infrastructure. The current operating millage for the fire district is estimated to adequately address the potential operational needs. Collier County Public Schools Fiscally Neutral. See Collier County Public Schools District Review Section of this Staff Report and Attachment E-Public Facilities Impact Assessment, to be read in combination with the following: DPFG worked directly with Collier County Public Schools representatives regarding any specific needs (school sites,etc.) that would be created specifically by the proposed development. As provided by School representatives, the new students from Rivergrass are not expected to trigger level of service issues given existing and planned schools. School capital costs are provided by a combination of funding sources including impact fees and a capital millage. The estimated revenue generated by th e project through these funding sources provides adequate funding for the future capital needs, attributable to growth, generated by the proposed development. The analysis also concludes that adequate revenue will be generated by the proposed project, through millage, to fund the attributable increase in operating costs attributable to the development. At this time, the total student population is unknown. However, a portion of the proposed project is anticipated to generate a very-low student per household number. Therefore, the assumptions used are conservative and support the determination of fiscal neutrality. The DPFG report also provided analysis related to Correctional Facilities, Government Buildings, and Libraries. While these are not required elements of the Economic Assessment or the Public Facilities Im pact Assessment, the same framework was used as that for the required facilities, the analysis is fairly consistent with the impact fee methodology,and thus the determination of fiscal neutrality is reasonable. As stated above, the Economic Assessment provides a fiscal snapshot that is projected to buildout. Based on these assumptions and making no predictions on changes, positive or negative, that may affect project revenue, the conclusion of fiscal neutrality is supported by the analysis. The analysis concludes adequate funding will be generated by the project to fund the capital and operating needs of the specified public facilities. Further, the specified public facilities do not have projected deficiencies as a result of the demand created by the proposed development. Therefore, overall, the intent of the fiscal neutrality requirement has been satisfied. 9.A.14 Packet Pg. 440 Attachment: REFERENCE COPY ONLY-OUTDATED CCPC Staff Report.docx 12-2-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) RIVERGRASS VILLAGE SRA,SRA-PL20190000044 September 10,2019 Page 26 of 40 Zoning Services Review:The Rivergrass Village SRA Development Document sets forth the design standards for the Village. According to LDC Section 4.08.07C.2., Villages are primarily residential communities with a diversity of housing types and mix of uses appropriate to the scale and character of the particular village Villages are comprised of residential neighborhoods and shall include a mixed-use village center to serve as the focal point for the community s support services and facilities. Villages shall be designed to encourage pedestrian circulation by including an interconnected sidewalk and pathway system serving all residential neighborhoods As previously stated, the Village consists of two context zones, Neighborhood General and Village Center. The Neighborhood General context zone is approximately 979.18 acres and allows for residential development consisting of single-family and multi-family residential dwelling units. Senior/group housing including but not limited to Adult Living Facilities (ALF)and Continuing Care Retirement Communities (CCRC) are permissible. A 5-acre Utility pump/tank station for water and sewer is also allowed in the Neighborhood General context zone. The maximum zoned and actual building heights are 50 and 62 feet. The Village Center context zone is approximately 20.78 acres and is mixed-use, allowing for multi-family development, commercial,office, civic,governmental,and institutional uses. As previously stated, a minimum of 60,000 square feet and a maximum of 80,000 square feet of neighborhood commercial uses, and a minimum of 25,000 square feet of civic, governmental,and institutional uses will be provided. The maximum zoned and actual building heights are 50 and 60 feet. The Village Center is located along the northern edge of the southern half of the SRA along Oil Well Road, a minor arterial road and freight route. The Village Center is disconnected from the northern half of the SRA Village by Oil Well Road resulting in a less walkable community. Some of the deviations contained in the Rivergrass Village SRA Development Document Town decrease walkability of the SRA Village.The result is a compact suburban-style development similar to many of the Planned Unit Developments (PUDs)located in the Urban Area of Collier County. Staff believes that five of the proposed deviations are not consistent with the development standards of the RLSA Zoning Overlay R egulations contained in the LDC. As previously stated in the GMP Consistency Review, Where proposed SRA lacks conformity with the LDC .it may not be considered consistent with the FLUE. The LDC prohibition of g Lots in Front of Buildings,a ke y element of a walkable community, has been eliminated. The LDC prescribed maximum lot size of 4 acres has also been eliminated, creating the pot superblocks areas which destroy vehicular and pedestrian connectivity. For further information, please see the Deviation Discussion section of this Staff Report below. 9.A.14 Packet Pg. 441 Attachment: REFERENCE COPY ONLY-OUTDATED CCPC Staff Report.docx 12-2-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) RIVERGRASS VILLAGE SRA,SRA-PL20190000044 September 10,2019 Page 27 of 40 DEVIATION DISCUSSION: The petitioner is seeking 19 deviations from the requirements of the LDC. The deviations are directly extracted from SRA Document Section VII. Deviations. and staff analysis/recommendation are outlined below. SRA Document Section 7.1.Village Center Standards: Deviation # 1 (SRA Document Section 7.1.1): A Deviation from LDC Section 4.08.07.J.3.a.v.: Village Design Criteria,which requires that the Village Center be developed in a progressive rural to urban continuum with the greatest density, intensity and diversity occurring within the Village Center, to the least density intensity and diversity occurring within the Neighborhood General, to instead allow the Village Center to be located as depicted on the SRA Master Plan. Petition ication: The petitioner states the following in support of the deviation: The Village Center is located in the southeast corner of Oil Well and future Big Cypress Parkway. This is more or less in the center of the Village, with about half of the Village located north of Oil Well Road and half located south.Locating the Village Center at the intersection of Oil Well Road is the only location that makes sense to ensure a viable market condition for these uses. Easy access for nearby residents from the surrounding neighborhood and for pass- by traffic on Oil Well Road is critical. Moreover, this is the best location for maximizing use of transit. Staff Analysis and Recommendation:Review staff recommends DENIAL,finding that the deviation results in a project that does not serve the daily needs and community-wide needs as the distance to goods and services are too great given the location of the Village Center. The deviation is not in compliance with LDC Section 4.08.07.J.8(a), and the petitioner has not deviations are consistent with the RLSA Overla and LDC Section 4.08.07.J.8(b), the petitioner has not demonstrated that the deviation(s)r enhances the tools, techniques,and strategies based on principles of innovative planning and development strategies, as set forth in §§ 163.3177 (11), F.S. Deviation # 2 (SRA Document Section 7.1.2): A deviation from LDC Section 4.08.07.J.3.d.ii.p)ii)General Parking Criteria,which states,The majority of parking spaces shall be provided off-street in the rear of buildings or along the side secondary streets. Parking is prohibited in front of buildings,to instead allow parking in front of buildings in the Village Center. A Type D buffer per LDC at time of permitting will be required when parking is adjacent to or abutting a road. Justification: The petitioner states the following in support of the deviation: The Village Center fronts on Oil Well Road and is separated from Oil Well by a 25-foot wide Type D Buffer. To be viable in the market place,the Village Center commercial uses need to be both accessible and convenient to motorists from Oil Well Road. This may warrant parking in 9.A.14 Packet Pg. 442 Attachment: REFERENCE COPY ONLY-OUTDATED CCPC Staff Report.docx 12-2-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) RIVERGRASS VILLAGE SRA,SRA-PL20190000044 September 10,2019 Page 28 of 40 what may be determined to be a front yard: however, with a 25-foot wide Type D buffer along Oil Well Road, such parking will be adequately screened from view. Without direct access (and exposure) to and from Oil Well Road,the commercial enterprises will not be viable in the market place. The request is to eliminate the restriction on the amount of parking that may be located within any yard. Staff Analysis and Recommendation:Review staff recommends DENIAL,finding that the deviation encourages an off-street parking arrangement discouraged in Villages. Furthermore, staff is constrained from approving a prohibition such as this. The deviation is not in compliance with LDC Section 4.08.07.J.8(a), and the petitioner has not deviations are consistent wi and LDC Section 4.08.07.J.8(b), the petitioner has not demonstrated that the deviation(s)rther enhances the tools, techniques,and strategies based on principles of innovative planning and development strategies, as set forth in §§ 163.3177 (11), F.S. Deviation # 3 (SRA Document Section 7.1.3): A deviation from LDC Section 4.08.07.J.3.d.ii.q), which requires that the majority of parking be located in the rear of buildings and prohibits parking in the front of buildings except on-street parking within the right-of-way to instead allow parking in the front, side and rear yards. A Type D buffer per LDC at time of permitting will be required when parking is adjacent to or abutting a road. s Justification: The petitioner states the following in support of the deviation: This deviation is requested to allow parking in front, side or rear yards in the Village Center in order provide for maximum design flexibility for what will be a relatively small amount of commercial uses providing neighborhood goods and services. Also see Justification for #2, above. Convenience and easy access are critical for achieving market viability for the nonresidential uses in the Village center, particularly for the pass by traffic,which is absolutely necessary for the viability of the commercial elements. Design flexibility is also necessary. Staff Analysis and Recommendation:Review staff recommends DENIAL,finding that the deviation encourages an off-street parking arrangement discouraged in Villages. The deviation is not in compliance with LDC Section 4.08.07.J.8(a), and the petitioner has not demonstrated that deviations are consistent wi and LDC Section 4.08.07.J.8(b), the petitioner has not demonstrated that the deviation(s)her enhances the tools, techniques,and strategies based on principles of innovative planning and development strategies, as set forth in §§ 163.3177 (11), F.S. Deviation # 4 (SRA Document Section 7.1.4): A deviation from LDC Section 4.08.07.J.3.d.ii.q), which requires that parking structures fronting on a primary street shall include ground-floor retail to instead require ground-floor retail in parking structures supporting non-residential or mixed-use development only,and not in the case of parking structures supporting only residential development. 9.A.14 Packet Pg. 443 Attachment: REFERENCE COPY ONLY-OUTDATED CCPC Staff Report.docx 12-2-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) RIVERGRASS VILLAGE SRA,SRA-PL20190000044 September 10,2019 Page 29 of 40 on: The petitioner states the following in support of the deviation: The SRA provisions allow multi-family dwellings in the mixed-use Village Center Contact Zone. Within the Village Center Context Zone, such dwellings may be located in a structure that is mixed-use (i.e., retail on the ground floor and residential above) or may be located in a structure that is all residential. Such residential-only buildings may have accessory parking structures which may not be suited or located to support retail type uses on the ground floor. While this makes sense in the case of parking structures supporting commercial only or mixed- use buildings, it does not make sense in the case of a parking structure supporting residential only. Staff Analysis and Recommendation:Zoning and Development Review staff recommends APPROVAL of this deviation, finding that in compliance with LDC Section 4.08.07.J.8(a), the petitioner has demonstrated that deviations are consistent wi and LDC Section 4.08.07.J.8(b), the petitioner has demonstrated that the deviation(s)her enhances the tools, techniques,and strategies based on principles of innovative planning and development strategies, as set forth in §§ 163.3177 (11), F.S. Deviation # 5 (SRA Document Section 7.1.5): A deviation from LDC Section 4.08.07.J.2.d.iii.e).i) and LDC Section 4.08.07.J.3.d.iii, Maximum Multi-family lot size,which requires that multi-family residential lots be limited to a maximum of 4 acres, to instead allow lot sizes for multi-family to exceed 4 acres. tification: The petitioner states the following in support of the deviation: Limiting a multi-family lot size in the Village Center is not based on any recognizable beneficial outcome. Presumably,it is applied scale. However, a larger lot can ale by use of multiple buildings (on larger parcel), and through design. For example, a 300 unit multi-family development consisting of multiple buildings may exceed 4 acres in the Village Center but would still be required to meet all other applicable development and design standards and would provide an excellent buffer between the surrounding lower density Neighborhood General development to the south and east. Staff Analysis and Recommendation: Review staff recommends DENIAL,finding that the deviation encourages exceedingly large lot sizes discouraged in Villages. The deviation is not in compliance with LDC Section 4.08.07.J.8(a), and the petitioner has not demonstrated that deviations are consistent wi and LDC Section 4.08.07.J.8(b), the petitioner has not demonstrated that the deviation(s)her enhances the tools, techniques,and strategies based on principles of innovative planning and development strategies, as set forth in §§ 163.3177 (11), F.S. SRA Document Section 7.2. Neighborhood General Standards: Note:LDC Section 4.08.07.J.3.d.iii requires that Neighborhood General design standards in a Village be the same as those required in a Town for a Neighborhood General Context Zone. 9.A.14 Packet Pg. 444 Attachment: REFERENCE COPY ONLY-OUTDATED CCPC Staff Report.docx 12-2-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) RIVERGRASS VILLAGE SRA,SRA-PL20190000044 September 10,2019 Page 30 of 40 Therefore,the following deviations are requested from Section 4.08.07.J.2.d.iii.a) through i) on the basis of how such standards apply to Neighborhood Center in a Village. Deviation # 6 (SRA Document Section 7.2.1): A deviation from LDC Section 4.08.07.J.2.d.iii.a) Neighborhood General Context Zone, which requires the inclusion of residential, neighborhood-scale goods and services, civic, institutional, parks, schools and accessory uses within the Neighborhood General Context Zone,to instead not require neighborhood-scale goods and services or schools as permitted uses within the Neighborhood General Context Zone. Petit The petitioner states the following in support of the deviation: The Village does not have sufficient size or density to generate demand for additional neighborhood goods and service beyond what is proposed for the Village Center. It makes no sense to move any of the required neighborhood goods,and services use from the Village Center Context Zone. Schools are not needed based upon student population projection s. Staff Analysis and Recommendation:Review staff recommends DENIAL,finding that the deviation results in a project that does not serve the daily needs and community-wide needs as the distance to goods and services are too great given the location of the Village Center. The deviation is not in compliance with LDC Section 4.08.07.J.8(a), and the petitioner has not demonstrated deviations are consistent with the RLSA Overla and LDC Section 4.08.07.J.8(b), the petitioner has not demonstrated that the deviation(s)ces the tools, techniques,and strategies based on principles of innovative planning and development strategies, as set forth in §§ 163.3177 (11),F.S. Deviation # 7 (SRA Document Section 7.2.2): A deviation from LDC Section 4.08.07.J.2.d.iii.f)iv), Non-residential uses,which states the maximum square footage per [non-residential] use shall be 3,000 square feet and per location shall be 15,000 square feet,to instead allow the Golf Club and Amenity Center sites and related uses to be a maximum of 50,000 square feet each. Pet The petitioner states the following in support of the deviation: Community Centers, both north and south of Oil Well Road will provide multiple amenities and uses for Village residents (and guests). This effectively reduces external trips. This also requires flexibility in size in order to be sufficient to meet market demands. Staff Analysis and Recommendation:Zoning and Development Review staff recommends APPROVAL of this deviation, finding that in compliance with LDC Section 4.08.07.J.8(a), the deviations are consistent with the RLS and LDC Section 4.08.07.J.8(b), the petitioner has demonstrated that the deviation(s)ances the tools, techniques,and strategies based on principles of innovative planning and development strategies, as set forth in §§ 163.3177 (11), F.S. 9.A.14 Packet Pg. 445 Attachment: REFERENCE COPY ONLY-OUTDATED CCPC Staff Report.docx 12-2-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) RIVERGRASS VILLAGE SRA,SRA-PL20190000044 September 10,2019 Page 31 of 40 Deviation #8 (SRA Document Section 7.2.3): A Deviation from LDC Section 4.08.07J.d.iii.e)ii), which states that in the case of Multi-Family residential, side yard setbacks shall be a minimum of 10 feet and rear yard setbacks shall be a minimum of 20 feet for the primary to instead allow for a side yard setback of 0 or 5 feet and a rear yard setback of 10 feet for zero lot line and townhome development, as set forth in Table 1: Neighborhood General -Required Minimum Yards and Maximum Building Height. P The petitioner states the following in support of the deviation: The RLSA encourages a diversity of housing types. Allowing for Townhome and Villa type development in the Neighborhood General Context Zone promotes such diversity. To build such units effectively and efficiently,they must be consistent with design used in other similar developments where the market has responded favorably. There are many approved P UDs that allow for such setbacks for villas and townhomes.We have maintained the required minimum 10-foot side and 20-foot rear yard setbacks for traditional multi-family product,and this deviation is limited to the Villa Townhome product. Staff Analysis and Recommendation:Zoning and Development Review staff recommends APPROVAL of this deviation, finding that in compliance with LDC Section 4.08.07.J.8(a), the petitioner has dem deviations are consistent wi and LDC Section 4.08.07.J.8(b), the petitioner has demonstrated that the deviation(s)es the tools, techniques,and strategies based on principles of innovative planning and development strategies, as set forth in §§ 163.3177 (11), F.S. Deviation # 9 (SRA Document Section 7.2.4): A deviation from LDC Section 4.08.07.J.2.d.iii.e)i) and LDC Section 4.08.07.J.3.d.iii, Maximum Multi-family lot size,which requires that multi-family residential lots be limited to a maximum of 4 acres, to instead allow lot sizes for multi-family to exceed 4 acres. Petition s Justification: The petitioner states the following in support of the deviation: Limiting a multi-family lot size in the Neighborhood General is not based on any recognizable beneficial outcome. Presumably,it is applied to mai scale. However, a larger lot can also of multiple buildings (on larger parcel), and through design. There is no discernible benefit to limiting Zero Lot Line or Townhome style development to parcels of 4 acres or less. For that matter, more traditional multi-family buildings may also be feasible on parcel greater than 4 acres in Neighborhood General adjacent to or near the Village Center. There is no reason to arbitrarily limit the maximum parcel size to 4 acres, as all of these types of housing styles are consistent with the Village definition,which is as follows: Villages are a form of S RA and are primarily residential communities with a diversity of housing types and mix of uses appropriate to the scale and character of the particular village. Villages are comprised of residential neighborhoods and shall include a mixed- use village center to serve as the focal point for the community's support services and facilities. 9.A.14 Packet Pg. 446 Attachment: REFERENCE COPY ONLY-OUTDATED CCPC Staff Report.docx 12-2-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) RIVERGRASS VILLAGE SRA,SRA-PL20190000044 September 10,2019 Page 32 of 40 Staff Analysis and Recommendation: Review staff recommends DENIAL,finding that the deviation encourages exceedingly large lot sizes discouraged in Villages. The deviation is not in compliance with LDC Section 4.08.07.J.8(a), and the petitioner has not dem the deviations are consistent wi and LDC Section 4.08.07.J.8(b), the petitioner has not demonstrated that the deviation(s)r enhances the tools, techniques,and strategies based on principles of innovative planning and development strategies, as set forth in §§ 163.3177 (11), F.S. SRA Document Section 7.3. Transportation Standards: Deviation #10 (SRA Document Section 7.3.1): A deviation from LDC Section: 6.06.01.J, Street System Requirements,which states that Cul-de- sacs in excess of 1,000 feet shall not be permitted unless existing topographical conditions or other natural features preclude a street layout to avoid longer cul-de-sacs,to instead allow the maximum permanent cul-de-sac length to be 1,200 feet as measured along the centerline of the right-of-way from the intersecting right-of-way centerline to the end of the cul-de-sac right-of-way. Pe tification: The petitioner states the following in support of the deviation: The Master Plan design has minimized the occurrence and maximum length of cul-de-sacs. The longest cul-de-sac depicted on the SRA Master Plan is now 1,050±feet. However, this deviation (to allow cul-de-sacs up to 1200 feet) is to allow for design flexibility. This deviation has been approved and utilized throughout Collier County (including in other SRAs). Staff Analysis and Recommendation:Zoning and Development Review staff recommends APPROVAL of this deviation, finding that in compliance with LDC Section 4.08.07.J.8(a), the petitioner has demonstrated that he deviations are consistent wi and LDC Section 4.08.07.J.8(b), the petitioner has demonstrated that the deviation(s) tools, techniques,and strategies based on principles of innovative planning and development strategies, as set forth in §§ 163.3177 (11), F.S. Deviation # 11 (SRA Document Section 7.3.2): A deviation from LDC Section 4.08.07.J.1.b. Figure(s) 5, 6, and 7, Local Street |Neighborhood General for cross-sections requiring 5-foot-wide sidewalks on both sides of a local street, to instead allow for a 10-foot-wide sidewalk or multi-use pathway on only one side of such street only where residential development is located on only one side of the street. Petition ustification: The petitioner states the following in support of the deviation: This option of allowing a 10-foot-wide pathway rather than 5 or 6-foot sidewalks on both sides of a street provides for flexibility without reducing pedestrian mobility. This will only occur where residential development is located on only one side of the street. Staff Analysis and Recommendation:Zoning and Development Review staff recommends APPROVAL of this deviation, finding that in compliance with LDC Section 4.08.07.J.8(a), the petitioner has deviations are consistent with the RLSA Overl and LDC 9.A.14 Packet Pg. 447 Attachment: REFERENCE COPY ONLY-OUTDATED CCPC Staff Report.docx 12-2-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) RIVERGRASS VILLAGE SRA,SRA-PL20190000044 September 10,2019 Page 33 of 40 Section 4.08.07.J.8(b), the petitioner has demonstrated that the deviation(s) tools, techniques,and strategies based on principles of innovative planning and development strategies, as set forth in §§ 163.3177 (11), F.S. Deviation # 12 (SRA Document Section 7.3.3): A deviation from LDC Section 4.08.07.J.1.b(6), Figures 5, 6, and 7, Local Street Neighborhood General,which requires a 6-foot-wide planting area between the travel lane and the sidewalk, to instead allow for a 5-foot-wide planting area in the same location for local roads within the project in Neighborhood General.In such cases, either a root barrier or structural soil shall be utilized.If the option of structural soil is utilized, a minimum of 2 c.f. of structural soil per square feet of mature tree crown projection shall be provided. The petitioner states the following in support of the deviation: This is a minimal reduction and is required to ensure the necessary (LDC required) 23 feet, measured from the back of the sidewalk to the garage, to allow room to park a vehicle on the driveway without parking over the sidewalk. Staff Analysis and Recommendation:Zoning and Development Review staff recommends APPROVAL of this deviation, finding that in compliance with LDC Section 4.08.07.J.8(a), the deviations are consistent with the RLSA Overla and LDC Section 4.08.07.J.8(b), the petitioner has demonstrated that the deviation(s)r enhances the tools, techniques,and strategies based on principles of innovative planning and development strategies, as set forth in §§ 163.3177 (11),F.S. SRA Document Section 7.4. Sign Standards: Deviation # 13 (SRA Document Section 7.4.1): A deviation from LDC Section 5.06.02.B.5.a, On-premises directional signs within residential districts,which requires on-premise directional signs to be set back a minimum of 10 feet from the edge of the roadway, paved surface or back of the curb, to instead allow a minimum setback of 5 feet from the edge of the roadway, paved surface or back of the curb, limited to signs internal to the SRA only. This excludes signage along County owned roadways. The petitioner states the following in support of the deviation: This deviation will allow more flexibility for directional signage internal to the project. A unified design theme will be utilized for all signage throughout the community. All roads and drives will be privately owned and maintained. This deviation is typical of master-planned residential developments in Collier County. Staff Analysis and Recommendation:Zoning and Development Review staff recommends APPROVAL of this deviation, finding that in compliance with LDC Section 4.08.07.J.8(a), the petitioner has demonstrat deviations are consistent wi and LDC Section 4.08.07.J.8(b), the petitioner has demonstrated that the deviation(s) tools, techniques,and strategies based on principles of innovative planning and development strategies, as set forth in §§ 163.3177 (11), F.S. 9.A.14 Packet Pg. 448 Attachment: REFERENCE COPY ONLY-OUTDATED CCPC Staff Report.docx 12-2-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) RIVERGRASS VILLAGE SRA,SRA-PL20190000044 September 10,2019 Page 34 of 40 Deviation # 14 (SRA Document Section 7.4.2): A deviation from LDC Section 5.06.02.B.6, On-premises signs within residential districts,which allows two ground signs with a maximum height of 8 feet at each entrance to a multi-family or single- family development,to instead allow a maximum height of 12 feet for such signs,limited to the two primary project entrances from Oil Well Road (not including access points to the Village Center Tract). Justification: The petitioner states the following in support of the deviation: The increased height of signage at the project entries will allow the project to feature a more pronounced, grand entrance, and will result in a recognizable entry for pedestrians and motorists. Staff Analysis and Recommendation:Zoning and Development Review staff recommends APPROVAL of this deviation, finding that in compliance with LDC Section 4.08.07.J.8(a),the petitioner has demonstrated that deviations are consistent wi and LDC Section 4.08.07.J.8(b),the petitioner has demonstrated that the deviation(s)urther enhances the tools, techniques,and strategies based on principles of innovative planning and development strategies, as set forth in §§ 163.3177 (11), F.S. SRA Document Section 7.5. Landscape Standards: Deviation # 15 (SRA Document Section 7.5.1): A deviation from LDC Section 4.06.02.C., Buffer Requirements, Types of buffers,Table 2.4 Information, Footnote (3)which requires Buffer areas between commercial outparcels located within a shopping center, Business Park, or similar commercial development may have a shared buffer 15 feet wide with each abutting property contributing 7.5 feet,to instead allow a shared buffer 10 feet wide with each abutting property contributing 5 feet. Pe tification: The petitioner states the following in support of the deviation: The combined 10-foot shared buffer will provide for sufficient separation and parking areas within the Village Center. Staff Analysis and Recommendation:Zoning and Development Review staff recommends APPROVAL of this deviation, finding that in compliance with LDC Section 4.08.07.J.8(a), the petitioner has demonstrated th deviations are consistent wi and LDC Section 4.08.07.J.8(b), the petitioner has demonstrated that the deviation(s) tools, techniques,and strategies based on principles of innovative planning and development strategies, as set forth in §§ 163.3177 (11), F.S. SRA Document Section 7.6. Other Deviations: Deviation # 16 (SRA Document Section 7.6.1): A deviation from LDC Section 4.05.04.G, Parking Space Requirements,which requires 1 parking space per 100 square feet for recreation facilities (indoor) sports, exercise, fitness, a erobics, or health 9.A.14 Packet Pg. 449 Attachment: REFERENCE COPY ONLY-OUTDATED CCPC Staff Report.docx 12-2-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) RIVERGRASS VILLAGE SRA,SRA-PL20190000044 September 10,2019 Page 35 of 40 clubs to instead allow for parking for the Golf Club and Amenity Center sites to be calculated at 1 space per 200 square feet of indoor square footage, excluding kitchen or storage space. The petitioner states the following in support of the deviation: The project will have a complete system of interconnected sidewalks, pathways, and bike lanes throughout, allowing residents to travel to the amenity center without using a car. Additionally, the centrally located Golf and Amenity Centers (both north and south) are restricted for use by only Village residents and guests and are not open to the general public. The one space per 100 square feet for Staff Analysis and Recommendation:Zoning and Development Review staff recommends APPROVAL of this deviation, finding that in compliance with LDC Section 4.08.07.J.8(a), the petitioner has demonstrated that deviations are consistent wi and LDC Section 4.08.07.J.8(b),the petitioner has demonstrated that the deviation(s) tools, techniques,and strategies based on principles of innovative planning and development strategies, as set forth in §§ 163.3177 (11), F.S. Deviation # 17 (SRA Document Section 7.6.2): A deviation from LDC Section 3.05.10.A.2. Location Criteria,which requires that LSPA [littoral shelf planting areas] shall be concentrated in one location of the lake(s), preferably adjacent to a preserve area,to instead allow for required littoral shelf planting areas to be aggregated in certain specific development lakes, including the development lake and WRA system that runs along the eastern perimeter of the SRA. The petitioner states the following in support of the deviation: These areas will be designed to create,enhance,or restore wading bird/waterfowl habitat and foraging areas. They will be designed to recreate wetland function, maximize its habitat value and minimize maintenance efforts. They will enhance survivability of the littoral area plant species, as there is a lower survivability rate in littoral planting areas along larger lakes subject to more variable water levels and wind and wave action,which negatively affects these littoral planting areas. Staff Analysis and Recommendation:Environmental Planning staff has reviewed the deviation and has found the concentration of littoral plantings in lakes and waters along the eastern edge of the proposed project will meet the intent of the littoral planting requirement, which is to improve water quality and provide habitat for a variety of aquatic species and birds. Therefore, it is reasonable to allow for some flexibility in the design and locations of the required littoral planting areas. Environmental Planning staff recommends APPROVAL of this deviation, finding that in compliance with LDC Section 4.08.07.J.8(a), the petitioner has d e deviations are consistent wi and LDC Section 4.08.07.J.8(b), the petitioner has demonstrated that the deviation(s),and strategies based on principles of innovative planning and development strategies, as set forth in §§ 163.3177 (11), F.S. 9.A.14 Packet Pg. 450 Attachment: REFERENCE COPY ONLY-OUTDATED CCPC Staff Report.docx 12-2-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) RIVERGRASS VILLAGE SRA,SRA-PL20190000044 September 10,2019 Page 36 of 40 Deviation # 18 (SRA Document Section 7.6.3): A deviation from LDC ing hich states that fences or walls in commercial or industrial areas are limited to a maximum height of 8 feet, to instead allow a maximum height of 10 feet. Petitione Justification: The petitioner states the following in support of the deviation: The requested additional fence/wall height allows for better screening between residential and commercial uses. Staff Analysis and Recommendation:Zoning and Development Review staff recommends APPROVAL of this deviation, finding that in compliance with LDC Section 4.08.07.J.8(a), the petitioner has demonstra deviations are consistent with the RLSA Overl and LDC Section 4.08.07.J.8(b), the petitioner has demonstrated that the deviation(s) tools, techniques,and strategies based on principles of innovative planning and development strategies, as set forth in §§ 163.3177 (11), F.S. Note: Deviation below has not been added to 8-15-19 SRA Resolution and will be added to a future revised SRA Resolution: Deviation # 19 (SRA Document Section 7.6.4): A Deviation from LDC Section 4.03.08.C, Potable Water System,which states separate potable water and reuse waterline shall be provide the applicant at no cost to Collier County for all subdivisions and developments and Reuse water lines, pumps, and other appurtenances will not be maintained by Collier County, to instead allow for such facilities and/or appurtenances to be conveye d to and maintained by Collier County. P on: The petitioner states the following in support of the deviation: This Deviation was requested to be included in the SRA by Collier County Utilities in order to allow flexibility in terms of the provision and/or maintenance of such facilities and/or appurtenances (i.e.,the provision and/or maintenance by Collier County). The Deviation is support by Utilities staff. Staff Analysis and Recommendation:Zoning and Development Review staff recommends APPROVAL of this deviation, finding that in compliance with LDC Section 4.08.07.J.8(a), the petitioner has demonstrated that deviations are consistent with the RLSA Over and LDC Section 4.08.07.J.8(b),the petitioner has demonstrated that the deviation(s) tools, techniques,and strategies based on principles of innovative planning and development strategies, as set forth in §§ 163.3177 (11), F.S. NEIGHBORHOOD INFORMATION MEETING (NIM): The agent/applicant duly noticed and held the required NIM on June 6, 20189 at 5:30 p.m.at Collier County UF/IFAS Extension, 14700 Immokalee Road, Naples, Florida.For further information, please see Attachment D: NIM Summary. 9.A.14 Packet Pg. 451 Attachment: REFERENCE COPY ONLY-OUTDATED CCPC Staff Report.docx 12-2-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) RIVERGRASS VILLAGE SRA,SRA-PL20190000044 September 10,2019 Page 37 of 40 COUNTY ATTORNEY OFFICE REVIEW: The County A , Rivergrass Village SRA on September 9, 2019.The following criteria applies to the creation of an SRA: 1. Consider:Compatibility with adjacent land uses. 2. Consider:An SRA must contain sufficient suitable land to accommodate the planned development. 3. Consider:Residential, commercial, manufacturing/light industrial, group housing, and transient housing, institutional, civic and community service uses within an SRA shall not be sited on lands that receive a natural Resource Index value of greater than 1.2. 4. Consider:Conditional use essential services and governmental essential services, with the exception of those necessary to serve permitted uses and for public safety, shall not be sited on land that receives a Natural Resource Index value of greater than 1.2, regardless of the size of the land or parcel. 5. Consider:Lands or parcels that are greater than one acre and have an Index Value greater than 1.2 shall be retained as open space and maintained in a predominantly natural vegetated state. 6. Consider:Open space shall also comprise a minimum of thirty-five percent of the gross acreage of an individual SRA Town, Village, or those CRDs exceeding 100 acres. Gross acreage includes only that area of development within the SRA that requires the consumption of Stewardship Credits. 7. Consider:As an incentive to encourage open space, open space on lands within an SRA located outside of the ACSC that exceeds the required thirty-five percent retained open space shall not be required to consume Stewardship Credits. 8. Consider:An SRA may be contiguous to an FSA or HSA, but shall not encroach into such areas, and shall buffer such areas as described in LDC Section 4.08.07 J.6.An SRA may be contiguous to, or encompass a WRA. 9. Consider:The SRA must have either direct access to a County collector or arterial road or indirect access via a road provided by the developer that has adequate capacity to accommodate the proposed development in accordance with accepted transportation planning standards. 10. Consider: Conformity of the proposed SRA with the goals, objectives, and policies of the GMP. 9.A.14 Packet Pg. 452 Attachment: REFERENCE COPY ONLY-OUTDATED CCPC Staff Report.docx 12-2-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) RIVERGRASS VILLAGE SRA,SRA-PL20190000044 September 10,2019 Page 38 of 40 11. Consider:Suitability criteria described in Items 2 through 9 above [LDC Section 4.08.07 A.1.] and other standards of LDC Section 4.08.07. 12. Consider:SRA master plan compliance with all applicable policies of the RLSA District Regulations, and demonstration that incompatible land uses are directed away from FSAs, HSAs, WRAs, and Conservation Lands. 13. Consider:Assurance that applicant has acquired or will acquire sufficient Stewardship Credits to implement SRA uses. 14. Consider:Im pacts, including environmental and public infrastructure impacts. RECOMMENDATION: Staff is constrained from recommending that the Collier County Planning Commission,acting as the local planning agency and the Environmental Advisory Council, forward Petition SRA- PL20190000044, Rivergrass Village SRA, to the Board of County Commissioners with a recommendation of approval. However, staff could recommend approval subject to the following Conditions of Approval: 1. All formal SSAs have been approved and Stewardship Credits submitted before or concurrent with this SRA. 2. Those Deviations,Development Standards,SRA Statement of Suitability Criteria, etc., listed under Consistency Review Findings,above, are removed or revised as discussed above. 3.The ratio of multi-family to single-family dwelling units is increased to a meaningful level. 4.The companion Developer Agreement is required to be approved with this SRA request. 5. Provide for potential interconnections (north, east,and south) on the master plan. 6. Prior to issuance of the first development order,a listed species management plan must be provided for review, with approval from FWCC and/or USFWS for management of the Florida panther and all other listed species. 7. The SRA document identifies 62,500 (min.) to 80,000 (max.) SF of neighborhood-scale commercial and office uses and a minimum of 25,000 SF of civic, governmental, and institutional uses for a total of 105,000 SF of non-residential uses. Yet, the demand tables provided in the Public Facilities Impact Assessment and in the Economic Assessment report 200,000 SF of commercial floor space. The text and table in each document should be revised for consistency with the allowable uses. 8.The SRA Local Street R.O.W. section should be revised to properly show minimum setbacks and separation distances, which should be designated by "MIN." rather than "+/-," which would imply the actual measurement could be less than that shown.The detail shows the HDPE force main 4.6 feet from the edge-of-pavement/gutter. This is less than the minimum 5' setback required by the Design Criteria (CCWSD Utilities Standards Manual, Section 1), and no reduction of this setback has been approved by utility d eviation. The detail should also show the 5' min. setback distance between pressure mains and street trees. Lastly, a footnote identifying standards reduced via the utility deviation approved on 9.A.14 Packet Pg. 453 Attachment: REFERENCE COPY ONLY-OUTDATED CCPC Staff Report.docx 12-2-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) RIVERGRASS VILLAGE SRA,SRA-PL20190000044 September 10,2019 Page 39 of 40 6/25/2019 should be added for documentation and to avoid confusion at the development permit application stage. Staff reviewed and approved a revised detail sent via email by the engineer on 8/26/2019. 9.The SRA document should incorporate the following deviation language to avoid a conflict between the interlocal agreement and the LDC: A Deviation from LDC h states water and reuse waterli the applicant at no cost to Collier County for all subdivisions and de n euse water lines, pumps, and other appurtenances will not be maintained by Collier County facilities and/or appurtenances to be conveyed to and maintained by Collier County. 10.The negotiated interlocal agreement between Collier County Water-Sewer District and the Big C ypress Stewardship District must be adopted concurrently with the SRA ordinance. 11. A Housing Needs Analysis be performed to estimate the affordable housing demand and to create a plan to address the supply of affordable housing units for the Rivergrass Village SRA. Attachments: Attachment A: Proposed SRA Resolution Attachemnt B: SRA Credit Use and Reconcilliation Application Attachment C: FLUE Consistency Review Attachment C-1: DRAFT Developer Agreement Attachment D: NIM Summary Attachment D-1: Peer Review Attachment E: Public Facilities Impact Assessment Attachment F: Letters of Objection/Support Attachment G: Application 9.A.14 Packet Pg. 454 Attachment: REFERENCE COPY ONLY-OUTDATED CCPC Staff Report.docx 12-2-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.14 Packet Pg. 455 Attachment: REFERENCE COPY ONLY-OUTDATED CCPC Staff Report.docx 12-2-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) Project No. 05CEM1481 RIVERGRASS SRA NATURAL RESOURCE INDEX ASSESSMENT Revised October 2019 Prepared For: Collier Enterprises Management, Inc. 2550 Goodlette Road North, Suite 100 Naples, Florida 34103 (239) 261-4455 Prepared By: Passarella & Associates, Inc. 13620 Metropolis Avenue, Suite 200 Fort Myers, Florida 33912 (239) 274-0067 9.A.15 Packet Pg. 456 Attachment: Rivergrass SRA NRI Assessment Report (rev. Oct 2019).pdf 10-28-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) i TABLE OF CONTENTS Page 1.0 Introduction .....................................................................................................................1 2.0 WRA Delineation............................................................................................................1 3.0 Verification of NRI Values .............................................................................................2 9.A.15 Packet Pg. 457 Attachment: Rivergrass SRA NRI Assessment Report (rev. Oct 2019).pdf 10-28-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) ii LIST OF EXHIBITS Page Exhibit 1. Project Location Map ........................................................................................ E-1 Exhibit 2. Aerial with Boundary ........................................................................................ E-2 Exhibit 3. Aerial with Stewardship Overlay ...................................................................... E-3 Exhibit 4. Aerial with FLUCFCS and Wetlands Map ....................................................... E-4 Exhibit 5. Documented Listed Species Locations (2007-2009, 2014-2016, and 2019 Surveys)..................................................... E-5 Exhibit 6. Soils Map .......................................................................................................... E-6 Exhibit 7. NRI Assessment ................................................................................................ E-7 Exhibit 8. SRA Natural Resource Index Values ................................................................ E-8 9.A.15 Packet Pg. 458 Attachment: Rivergrass SRA NRI Assessment Report (rev. Oct 2019).pdf 10-28-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 1 1.0 INTRODUCTION This Natural Resource Index (NRI) Assessment Report (Assessment) documents the environmental conditions and NRI scores within Rivergrass and demonstrates that Rivergrass meets the Suitability Criteria contained in Section 4.08.07.A.1 of the adopted Collier County Land Development Code (LDC) amendments. This Assessment is submitted in support of the Rural Lands Stewardship Area (RLSA) Overlay District-Stewardship Receiving Area (SRA) Designation Application on behalf of Collier Enterprises Management, Inc. This Assessment is consistent with the requirements of the RLSA Zoning Overlay District, LDC, Section 4.08.00. This NRI Assessment includes the following: • A summary analysis and verification of the NRI scores. • Refined and updated land cover mapping of the SRA along with listed species survey data. • Identification of the acreage of lands, by type, within the SRA that have an NRI value greater than 1.2. • Identification of the acreage of lands, by type, included within the SRA. • Demonstrates compliance with the Suitability Criteria contained in Section 4.08.07.A.1. This SRA Designation Application involves the designation of 997.5± acres as Rivergrass located in Sections 10, 14, 15, 22, 23, and 27; Township 48 South; Range 28 East; Collier County (Exhibit 1). The location and extent of Rivergrass is indicated on Exhibit 2. Rivergrass is located within lands designated as “Open” on the adopted RLSA Stewardship Map and does not encroach into any Flow-way Stewardship Area (FSA), Habitat Stewardship Area (HSA) lands, or Water Retention Area (WRA) as illustrated in Exhibit 3. Rivergrass is not within the Area of Critical State Concern (ACSC). The subject property is currently dedicated to agricultural activities (i.e., row crops and improved pasture) and includes widely scattered lands comprised of exotic vegetation (i.e., Brazilian pepper (Schinus terebinthifolia), non-forested wetlands, non-forested uplands, and forested wetlands), all of which exhibit a high degree of disturbance. There are few undisturbed native vegetation areas present within Rivergrass. Listed species data from state and federal wildlife agencies indicate occurrences of panther telemetry points, wading bird rookeries, or other listed species occurrences within the SRA. 2.0 WRA DELINEATION WRA boundaries taken from the Collier County Stewardship Overlay Map were produced from digitizing South Florida Water Management District (SFWMD) permit boundaries on aerial photography base at scales suitable for comprehensive planning. Detailed analysis of these areas was conducted on the ground, using actual surveyed wetland and permit boundaries. The 9.A.15 Packet Pg. 459 Attachment: Rivergrass SRA NRI Assessment Report (rev. Oct 2019).pdf 10-28-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 2 Stewardship Overlay digitized WRA boundaries were refined with the actual groundtruthed data. The Rivergrass SRA boundary was created so that no WRA areas were included. Exhibit 3 illustrates the refined Stewardship Overlay within the SRA boundary. 3.0 VERIFICATION OF NRI VALUES This NRI Assessment includes documentation that refines the NRI values that were assigned during the original Collier County RLSA Assessment Study. Of the six NRI Factors on the Stewardship Credit Worksheet, only two factors (i.e., Land Use-Land Cover and Listed Species Habitat) are prone to change over time or require mapping refinements. Both NRI factors have been updated for this application. While the Land Use-Land Cover mapping from the Stage 1 Report was generally accurate at the regional/planning scale, groundtruthing by Passarella & Associates, Inc. (PAI) in 2015 revealed some positional and classification errors which are rectified in this application. The updated Florida Land Use, Cover and Forms Classification System (FLUCFCS) mapping for the Rivergrass SRA is presented in Exhibit 4. This application also updates the Listed Species Habitat Index mapping for the SRA. Listed species surveys were conducted by PAI in 2007 through 2009, 2014 through 2016, and 2019; and the current listed species occurrence data and Florida panther (Puma concolor coryi) telemetry were obtained from the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission website. A map of the updated listed species occurrences, listed species records, and Florida panther telemetry points is provided as Exhibit 5. A 2018 aerial of the SRA is provided as Exhibit 2. The U.S. Department of Agriculture-Natural Resources Conservation Services (USDA-NRCS) soils map for Rivergrass is provided in Exhibit 6. The NRI Assessment scores are presented graphically in Exhibit 7 and Exhibit 8 is a table format of the SRA values. The assessment demonstrates that no lands within the Rivergrass SRA carry a NRI value greater than 1.2. 9.A.15 Packet Pg. 460 Attachment: Rivergrass SRA NRI Assessment Report (rev. Oct 2019).pdf 10-28-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) EXHIBIT 1 PROJECT LOCATION MAP 9.A.15 Packet Pg. 461 Attachment: Rivergrass SRA NRI Assessment Report (rev. Oct 2019).pdf 10-28-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) REVIEWED BY DRAWN BY REVISED DATE DATE DATE TERRYTERRYSTST N EW N EW M A R K E T R D M A R K E T R D BECKBECKBLVDBLVD GREENGREENBLVDBLVDOAKSOAKSBLVDBLVDLIV INGSTON RDLIV INGSTON RDLOGAN BLVDLOGAN BLVDSANTA BARBARA BLVDSANTA BARBARA BLVDRADIO RDRADIO RD VANDERBILTVANDERBILTBEACH RDBEACH RD PINE RIDGE RDPINE RIDGE RD GOLDENGOLDEN GATE PKW Y GATE PKW Y OI L W E L L G R A D E R D O I L W E L L G R A D E R D CAMP KEAIS RDCAMP KEAIS RDAIRPORT-PULLING RDAIRPORT-PULLING RDGOLDEN GATE BLVDGOLDEN GATE BLVD OIL WELL RDOIL WELL RD EVERGLADES BLVDEVERGLADES BLVD¿À850 ¿À849 ¿À846 ¿À29 ¿À951 ¿À846 §¨¦75COLLIERCOLLIERLEELEE;3EXIT116 ;3EXIT101 ;3EXIT105 ;3EXIT111 ;3EXIT107 Gulf of Mexico COLLIERCOLLIER LEELEE HENDRYHENDRY §¨¦75 (/41 ¿À29 ¿À846 ¿À839 ¿À951 ¿À833 ¿À82 ¿À837 ¿À850 ¿À858 ¿À892 ¿À94 ¿À839CORKSCRE W R D BIRDON RDVANDERBILT DR^^^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^^ ^ ^^ ^ ^ MIAMI TAMPA NAPLES ORLANDO KEY WEST SARASOTA PENSACOLA FORT MYERS VERO BEACH LAKE PLACID PANAMA CITY GAINESVILLE TALLAHASSEE JACKSONVILLE DAYTONA BEACH FORT LAUDERDALE¶ PROJECT LOCATIONSEC 10, 14, 15, 22, 23, 27TWP 48 S, RNG 28 E EXHIBIT 1. PROJECT LOCATION MAP H.H. C.G.R. 6/18/15 6/18/15RIVERGRASS F.L.10/15/19 9.A.15 Packet Pg. 462 Attachment: Rivergrass SRA NRI Assessment Report (rev. Oct 2019).pdf 10-28-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) EXHIBIT 2 AERIAL WITH BOUNDARY 9.A.15 Packet Pg. 463 Attachment: Rivergrass SRA NRI Assessment Report (rev. Oct 2019).pdf 10-28-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) REVIEWED BY DRAWN BY REVISED DATE DATE DATE 4433RRDD AAVVEE NNEE 4455TTHH AAVVEE NNEE 4477TTHH AAVVEE NNEE 3311SSTT AAVVEE NNEE 3333RRDD AAVVEE NNEE 2277TTHH AAVVEE NNEE 2299TTHH AAVVEE NNEE RANDALL BLVDRANDALL BLVD DESOTO BLVD NDESOTO BLVD NO I L W E L L G R A D E R DOI L W E L L G R A D E R D OIL WELL RDOIL WELL RD 0 2,000 4,000Feet LEGEND  EXHIBIT 2. AERIAL WITH BOUNDARY F.L. K.C.P. 10/15/19 10/15/19RIVERGRASS PROJECT LOCATION         ¶ 9.A.15 Packet Pg. 464 Attachment: Rivergrass SRA NRI Assessment Report (rev. Oct 2019).pdf 10-28-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) EXHIBIT 3 AERIAL WITH STEWARDSHIP OVERLAY 9.A.15 Packet Pg. 465 Attachment: Rivergrass SRA NRI Assessment Report (rev. Oct 2019).pdf 10-28-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 42ND ST NE42ND ST NE44TH ST NE44TH ST NE46TH ST NE46TH ST NE2244TTHH AAVVEE NNEE 2222NNDD AAVVEE NNEE 5544TTHH AAVVEE NNEE 4433RRDD AAVVEE NNEE 4455TTHH AAVVEE NNEE 4477TTHH AAVVEE NNEE 3311SSTT AAVVEE NNEE 1166TTHH AAVVEE NNEE 3333RRDD AAVVEE NNEE 2277TTHH AAVVEE NNEE 2299TTHH AAVVEE NNEE RANDALL BLVDRANDALL BLVD 1188TTHH AAVVEE NNEE 1144TTHH AAVVEE NNEE 2200TTHH AAVVEE NNEE DESOTO BLVD NDESOTO BLVD NOI L W E L L G R A D E R D O I L W E L L G R A D E R D OIL WELL RDOIL WELL RD REVIEWED BY DRAWN BY REVISED DATE DATE DATE EXHIBIT 3. AERIAL WITH STEWARDSHIP OVERLAY F.L. K.C.P. 10/15/19 10/15/19RIVERGRASS 0 2,000 4,000Feet ¶LEGEND    RIVERGRASS 9.A.15 Packet Pg. 466 Attachment: Rivergrass SRA NRI Assessment Report (rev. Oct 2019).pdf 10-28-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) EXHIBIT 4 AERIAL WITH FLUCFCS AND WETLANDS MAP 9.A.15 Packet Pg. 467 Attachment: Rivergrass SRA NRI Assessment Report (rev. Oct 2019).pdf 10-28-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 422 (5.88 Ac.±) 260 (2.42 Ac.±) 210 (152.20 Ac.±) 214 (295.33 Ac.±) 155 (3.53 Ac.±)100 (2.48 Ac.±) 100 (2.27 Ac.±) 6259E4 (0.13 Ac.±)8146 (0.29 Ac.±) 214 (528.15 Ac.±) 422 (0.35 Ac.±) 4221 (0.86 Ac.±) 7401 (0.35 Ac.±) 422 (0.21 Ac.±) 740 (1.26 Ac.±) 260 (1.55 Ac.±) 740 (0.14 Ac.±) ~OIL WELL ROAD~ 525 (0.13 Ac.±)J:\2005\05cem1481\00_Rivergrass\2019\NRI Assessment\Ex 4 Aerial with FLUCFCS and Wetland Map 101519.dwg Tab: 8X11-C TB Oct 15, 2019 - 12:33pm Plotted by: HoldenHSCALE: 1" = 1,600' DRAWN BY REVIEWED BY REVISED H.H. K.C.P. 12/18/18 DATE DATE 12/18/18 DATE EXHIBIT 4. AERIAL WITH FLUCFCS AND WETLANDS MAP RIVERGRASS NOTES: AERIAL PHOTOGRAPHS WERE ACQUIRED THROUGH THE COLLIER COUNTY PROPERTY APPRAISER'S OFFICE WITH A FLIGHT DATE OF DECEMBER 2018. PROPERTY BOUNDARY PER AGNOLI, BARBER, & BRUNDAGE, INC. DRAWING No. 12088SRA23-101119.dwg DATED OCTOBER 11, 2019. WETLAND LINES PER ABB, INC. DRAWING No.JDL-N-WORKSHEET TO KP15JUN07.dwg DATED JUNE 15, 2007. FLUCFCS LINES ESTIMATED FROM 1"=200' AERIAL PHOTOGRAPHS AND LOCATIONS APPROXIMATED. FLUCFCS PER FLORIDA LAND USE, COVER AND FORMS CLASSIFICATION SYSTEM (FLUCFCS) (FDOT 1999). H.H.10/15/19 LEGEND: SFWMD WETLANDS (1.34 Ac.±) SFWMD "OTHER SURFACE WATERS" (0.13 Ac.±) SURVEYED WETLAND LINE 9.A.15 Packet Pg. 468 Attachment: Rivergrass SRA NRI Assessment Report (rev. Oct 2019).pdf 10-28-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) EXHIBIT 5 DOCUMENTED LISTED SPECIES LOCATIONS (2007-2009, 2014-2016, and 2019 SURVEYS) 9.A.15 Packet Pg. 469 Attachment: Rivergrass SRA NRI Assessment Report (rev. Oct 2019).pdf 10-28-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) REVIEWED BY DRAWN BY REVISED DATE DATE DATE !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !(!(!( !(!(!( !( !( !( !( !( !( ") #* !( !( #*#* !( !( !( #* #* WOSTWOST 4433RRDD AAVVEE NNEE 4455TTHH AAVVEE NNEE 4477TTHH AAVVEE NNEE 3311SSTT AAVVEE NNEE 3333RRDD AAVVEE NNEE 2277TTHH AAVVEE NNEE 2299TTHH AAVVEE NNEE RANDALL BLVDRANDALL BLVD O I L W E L L G R A D E R DOI L W E L L G R A D E R D DESOTO BLVD NDESOTO BLVD NOIL WELL RDOIL WELL RD TCHETCHE TCHETCHE TCHETCHE SHCRSHCR SHCRSHCR LBHELBHE LBHELBHE LBHELBHE LBHELBHE LBHELBHE LBHELBHE LBHELBHE LBHELBHE LBHELBHE LBHELBHEFPSFPS FPSFPS BEBE AAAA AAAA AAAA AAAA TCHETCHE LBHELBHE AAAA AAAA WOSTWOST LBHELBHE TCHETCHE EXHIBIT 5. DOCUMENTED LISTED SPECIES LOCATIONS (2007 - 2009, 2014 - 2016, AND 2019 SURVEYS)H.H. K.C.P. 12/18/18 12/18/18RIVERGRASS PROJECT LOCATION F.L.10/15/19 LEGEND  #*  !( !( !( !( !( !( !(  ")  #* !( !( !( 0 1,000 2,000Feet         ¶ 9.A.15 Packet Pg. 470 Attachment: Rivergrass SRA NRI Assessment Report (rev. Oct 2019).pdf 10-28-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) EXHIBIT 6 SOILS MAP 9.A.15 Packet Pg. 471 Attachment: Rivergrass SRA NRI Assessment Report (rev. Oct 2019).pdf 10-28-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) REVIEWED BY DRAWN BY REVISED DATE DATE DATE 2244TTHH AAVVEE NNEE 4433RRDD AAVVEE NNEE 4455TTHH AAVVEE NNEE 4477TTHH AAVVEE NNEE 3311SSTT AAVVEE NNEE 3333RRDD AAVVEE NNEE 2277TTHH AAVVEE NNEE 2299TTHH AAVVEE NNEE RANDALL BLVDRANDALL BLVD DESOTO BLVD NDESOTO BLVD NO I L W E L L G R A D E R DOI L W E L L G R A D E R D OIL WELL RDOIL WELL RD 1717 1717 1717 2525 2525 2525 2525 2525 2525 2525 77 77 1717 1717 1717 1717 1717 1717 1717 2323 1717 1717 ¶¶ 0 1,000 2,000Feet LEGEND  EXHIBIT 6. SOILS MAP H.H. K.C.P. 12/18/18 12/18/18RIVERGRASS PROJECT LOCATION          F.L.10/15/19 SOIL UNIT NAME NSLP CLASSIFICATION7 IMMOKALEE FINE SAND FLATWOOD SOILS17 BASINGER FINE SAND FLATS (TRANSITIONAL) SOILS23 HOLOPAW AND OKEELANTA SOILS, DEPRESSIONAL SAND DEPRESSION25 BOCA, RIVIERA, LIMESTONE SUBSTRATUM AND COPELAND FS, DEPRESSIONAL SAND DEPRESSION 9.A.15 Packet Pg. 472 Attachment: Rivergrass SRA NRI Assessment Report (rev. Oct 2019).pdf 10-28-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) EXHIBIT 7 NRI ASSESSMENT 9.A.15 Packet Pg. 473 Attachment: Rivergrass SRA NRI Assessment Report (rev. Oct 2019).pdf 10-28-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) REVIEWED BY DRAWN BY REVISED DATE DATE DATE 4433RRDD AAVVEE NNEE 4455TTHH AAVVEE NNEE 4477TTHH AAVVEE NNEE 3311SSTT AAVVEE NNEE 3333RRDD AAVVEE NNEE 2277TTHH AAVVEE NNEE 2299TTHH AAVVEE NNEE RANDALL BLVDRANDALL BLVD DESOTO BLVD NDESOTO BLVD NOI L W E L L G R A D E R D O I L W E L L G R A D E R D OIL WELL RDOIL WELL RD EXHIBIT 7. NRI ASSESSMENT F.L. K.C.P. 10/15/19 10/15/19RIVERGRASS PROJECT LOCATION LEGEND      0 1,500 3,000Feet         ¶ 9.A.15 Packet Pg. 474 Attachment: Rivergrass SRA NRI Assessment Report (rev. Oct 2019).pdf 10-28-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) REVIEWED BY DRAWN BY REVISED DATE DATE DATE 4433RRDD AAVVEE NNEE 4455TTHH AAVVEE NNEE 4477TTHH AAVVEE NNEE 3311SSTT AAVVEE NNEE 3333RRDD AAVVEE NNEE 2277TTHH AAVVEE NNEE 2299TTHH AAVVEE NNEE RANDALL BLVDRANDALL BLVD DESOTO BLVD NDESOTO BLVD NOI L W E L L G R A D E R D O I L W E L L G R A D E R D OIL WELL RDOIL WELL RD EXHIBIT 7A. NRI ASSESSMENT - PROXIMITY F.L. K.C.P. 10/15/19 10/15/19RIVERGRASS PROJECT LOCATION LEGEND   0 1,500 3,000Feet        ¶ 9.A.15 Packet Pg. 475 Attachment: Rivergrass SRA NRI Assessment Report (rev. Oct 2019).pdf 10-28-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) REVIEWED BY DRAWN BY REVISED DATE DATE DATE 4433RRDD AAVVEE NNEE 4455TTHH AAVVEE NNEE 4477TTHH AAVVEE NNEE 3311SSTT AAVVEE NNEE 3333RRDD AAVVEE NNEE 2277TTHH AAVVEE NNEE 2299TTHH AAVVEE NNEE RANDALL BLVDRANDALL BLVD DESOTO BLVD NDESOTO BLVD NOI L W E L L G R A D E R D O I L W E L L G R A D E R D OIL WELL RDOIL WELL RD EXHIBIT 7B. NRI ASSESSMENT - STEWARDSHIP OVERLAY F.L. K.C.P. 10/15/19 10/15/19RIVERGRASS PROJECT LOCATION LEGEND   0 1,500 3,000Feet        ¶ 9.A.15 Packet Pg. 476 Attachment: Rivergrass SRA NRI Assessment Report (rev. Oct 2019).pdf 10-28-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) REVIEWED BY DRAWN BY REVISED DATE DATE DATE 4433RRDD AAVVEE NNEE 4455TTHH AAVVEE NNEE 4477TTHH AAVVEE NNEE 3311SSTT AAVVEE NNEE 3333RRDD AAVVEE NNEE 2277TTHH AAVVEE NNEE 2299TTHH AAVVEE NNEE RANDALL BLVDRANDALL BLVD DESOTO BLVD NDESOTO BLVD NOI L W E L L G R A D E R D O I L W E L L G R A D E R D OIL WELL RDOIL WELL RD EXHIBIT 7C. NRI ASSESSMENT - LAND USE LAND COVER F.L. K.C.P. 10/15/19 10/15/19RIVERGRASS PROJECT LOCATION LEGEND    0 1,500 3,000Feet         ¶ 9.A.15 Packet Pg. 477 Attachment: Rivergrass SRA NRI Assessment Report (rev. Oct 2019).pdf 10-28-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) REVIEWED BY DRAWN BY REVISED DATE DATE DATE 4433RRDD AAVVEE NNEE 4455TTHH AAVVEE NNEE 4477TTHH AAVVEE NNEE 3311SSTT AAVVEE NNEE 3333RRDD AAVVEE NNEE 2277TTHH AAVVEE NNEE 2299TTHH AAVVEE NNEE RANDALL BLVDRANDALL BLVD DESOTO BLVD NDESOTO BLVD NOI L W E L L G R A D E R D O I L W E L L G R A D E R D OIL WELL RDOIL WELL RD EXHIBIT 7D. NRI ASSESSMENT - SOILS/SURFACE WATER F.L. K.C.P. 10/15/19 10/15/19RIVERGRASS PROJECT LOCATION LEGEND     0 1,500 3,000Feet         ¶ 9.A.15 Packet Pg. 478 Attachment: Rivergrass SRA NRI Assessment Report (rev. Oct 2019).pdf 10-28-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) REVIEWED BY DRAWN BY REVISED DATE DATE DATE 4433RRDD AAVVEE NNEE 4455TTHH AAVVEE NNEE 4477TTHH AAVVEE NNEE 3311SSTT AAVVEE NNEE 3333RRDD AAVVEE NNEE 2277TTHH AAVVEE NNEE 2299TTHH AAVVEE NNEE RANDALL BLVDRANDALL BLVD DESOTO BLVD NDESOTO BLVD NOI L W E L L G R A D E R D O I L W E L L G R A D E R D OIL WELL RDOIL WELL RD EXHIBIT 7E. NRI ASSESSMENT - LISTED SPECIES HABITAT F.L. K.C.P. 10/15/19 10/15/19RIVERGRASS PROJECT LOCATION LEGEND    0 1,500 3,000Feet         ¶ 9.A.15 Packet Pg. 479 Attachment: Rivergrass SRA NRI Assessment Report (rev. Oct 2019).pdf 10-28-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) EXHIBIT 8 SRA NATURAL RESOURCE INDEX VALUES 9.A.15 Packet Pg. 480 Attachment: Rivergrass SRA NRI Assessment Report (rev. Oct 2019).pdf 10-28-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) E8-1 Exhibit 8. Rivergrass SRA Natural Resource Index Values NRI Value Percent of Total SRA Acreage Open Total Acres Total SRA Acres 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.1 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.2 58.70 585.5 585.5 0.3 0.00 0.0 0.0 0.4 26.00 259.4 259.4 0.5 0.20 2.0 2.0 0.6 15.10 150.6 150.6 0.7 0.00 0.0 0.0 0.8 0.00 0.0 0.0 0.9 0.00 0.0 0.0 1.0 0.00 0.0 0.0 1.1 0.00 0.0 0.0 1.2 0.00 0.0 0.0 1.3 0.00 0.0 0.0 1.4 0.00 0.0 0.0 1.5 0.00 0.0 0.0 Totals 100.0 997.5 997.5 Totals NRI ˃1.2 0.0 0.0 0.0 9.A.15 Packet Pg. 481 Attachment: Rivergrass SRA NRI Assessment Report (rev. Oct 2019).pdf 10-28-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) CONSERVANCY OF SOUTHWEST FLORIDA Protecting Southwest Florida’s unique natural environment and quality of life…now and forever. Facebook.com/ConservancySWF Twitter.com/ConservancySWFL 1495 Smith Preserve Way Naples, FL 34102 239.262.0304 www.conservancy.org 9.A.16 Packet Pg. 482 Attachment: Conservancy CCPC Presentation - Rivergrass - CCPC - 10-17-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Introductory comments: Conservancy’s position on the RLSA 9.A.16 Packet Pg. 483 Attachment: Conservancy CCPC Presentation - Rivergrass - CCPC - 10-17-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Report and Recommendations of the Collier County Rural Lands Assessment Area Oversight Committee for the Immokalee Area Study page 40. Created by WilsonMiller. 2002. “Only 16,805 acres would need to be set aside for the buildout density in compact rural development…” Conservancy supported the original intent of the RLSA as presented to the Oversight Committee and Commission 9.A.16 Packet Pg. 484 Attachment: Conservancy CCPC Presentation - Rivergrass - CCPC - 10-17-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 “the incentive-based stewardship program fulfills all Final Order objectives…..Approximately 16,800 acres are required fro compact rural development.” 9.A.16 Packet Pg. 485 Attachment: Conservancy CCPC Presentation - Rivergrass - CCPC - 10-17-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Collier County Board of County Commission Adoption Hearing Executive Summary page 3. October 22, 2002. “Although there are 115,300+/- acres of potential SRAs (Private lands less FSAs and HSAs), it is estimated that the ‘8 credit requirement’ will set aside approximately 16,800 acres, or 9% of the Study Area, for clustered development.” 9.A.16 Packet Pg. 486 Attachment: Conservancy CCPC Presentation - Rivergrass - CCPC - 10-17-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Collier County Board of County Commission Transmittal Hearing Executive Summary page 5. June 12, 2002. 9.A.16 Packet Pg. 487 Attachment: Conservancy CCPC Presentation - Rivergrass - CCPC - 10-17-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Proposed Rivergrass Village 1. Rivergrass is inconsistent with the RLSA ,due to its proposed unacceptable impacts to listed species habitat, and the NRI scoring is inaccurate because it is not based on best available science; 2. Rivergrass is inconsistent with the RLSA due to its proposed design characteristics; 3. Rivergrass is inconsistent with the RLSA, as many of the requested deviations directly violate the County LDC policy requiring SRA deviations to be consistent with the RLSA. The Conservancy requests the Collier County Planning Commission recommend denial of Rivergrass SRA Outline of Presentation: 9.A.16 Packet Pg. 488 Attachment: Conservancy CCPC Presentation - Rivergrass - CCPC - 10-17-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 RLSA and its requirement to protect listed species and their habitat RLSA Group 3 Goal: “protect water quality and quantity and maintain the natural water regime, as well as listed animal and plant species and their habitats by directing incompatible uses away from wetlands and upland habitat….” [emphasis added] 9.A.16 Packet Pg. 489 Attachment: Conservancy CCPC Presentation - Rivergrass - CCPC - 10-17-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Why this is important to the Conservancy 9.A.16 Packet Pg. 490 Attachment: Conservancy CCPC Presentation - Rivergrass - CCPC - 10-17-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 NRI Index Factors: County Formula for Identifying Environmental Value 9.A.16 Packet Pg. 491 Attachment: Conservancy CCPC Presentation - Rivergrass - CCPC - 10-17-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 What this looks like for the County Source: Collier County https://www.colliercountyfl.gov/home/showdocument?i d=76739 9.A.16 Packet Pg. 492 Attachment: Conservancy CCPC Presentation - Rivergrass - CCPC - 10-17-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 What’s in a NRI Score? NRI Score 9.A.16 Packet Pg. 493 Attachment: Conservancy CCPC Presentation - Rivergrass - CCPC - 10-17-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Verification of NRI Scores Required for SRA Application 4.08.07.D.3.b. Verify that the Index Value scores assigned during the RLSA Study are still valid through recent aerial photography or satellite imagery or agency-approved mapping, or other documentation, as verified by field inspections To verify the score, the sum total of the 6 index layers, the applicant and the County must have the original scores assigned when the program was created. Those original scores should then be modified based on the best available survey and science information. The final score should be a representation of current conditions compared to conditions from the program as the NRI was created. 9.A.16 Packet Pg. 494 Attachment: Conservancy CCPC Presentation - Rivergrass - CCPC - 10-17-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Source: Collier Enterprises Rivergrass SRA NRI Assessment. Prepared by Passarella & Associates, Inc. CCPC 10-3-19 Applicant’s Proposed NRI Values 9.A.16 Packet Pg. 495 Attachment: Conservancy CCPC Presentation - Rivergrass - CCPC - 10-17-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Timeline of NRI Score Verification August 21, 2019 – Conservancy met with County staff – raised question of how NRI score were being reviewed if only composite data was provided No answer provided September 10, 2019 – County staff report completed September 12, 2019 – County staff report sent out as part of CCPC packet County staff states review complete based on LDC requirements September 16, 2019 – Conservancy submitted report from Natural Resources Service, Inc. questioning how County staff could review and verify NRI scores without the math that makes up the composite scores No response from County staff September 17, 2019 – Email from County staff, flagged ‘High Importance’, sent to applicant requesting the updated GIS files for Rivergrass’ NRI score calculation 9.A.16 Packet Pg. 496 Attachment: Conservancy CCPC Presentation - Rivergrass - CCPC - 10-17-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 September 17, 2019 – Applicant’s consultants submit the data to the County September 19, 2019 – First public hearing before CCPC – continued – CCPC did not get to this item October 3, 2019 –CCPC Public hearing begins – County environmental staff acknowledges they have, and have reviewed and verified, the underlying data for the updated/verified NRI values First time the Conservancy heard this data was received/existed How was Collier County able to review, verify and include information received on Sept. 17th within their Sept. 10th staff report? Timeline Continued 9.A.16 Packet Pg. 497 Attachment: Conservancy CCPC Presentation - Rivergrass - CCPC - 10-17-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 LDC 4.08.01.Q “Listed Species Habitat Indices. One of the indices comprising the Natural Resource Index Value, with values assigned based upon the habitat value of the land for listed species. Index values are based on documentation of occupied habitat as established by the intersect of documented and verifiable observations of listed species with land cover identified as preferred or tolerated habitat for that species. Land mapped, using FLUCFCS, as 310, 321, 411, 425, 428, 434, 617, 6172, 621, 6218, 6219, 624, and 630 is deemed to be preferred or tolerated habitat for panthers for the purpose of assigning a value for these indices. An intersection of at least one data point establishing the presence of a listed species within a geographic information system (GIS) polygon of preferred or tolerated habitat for that species shall result in the entire polygon being scored as occupied habitat.” [emphasis added] What should be included in verification? 9.A.16 Packet Pg. 498 Attachment: Conservancy CCPC Presentation - Rivergrass - CCPC - 10-17-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Can best available panther science be applied to the RLSA or was the intent to keep the RLSA static in the year 2000 science? The RLSA foundational study acknowledged: “The analyses involving panther habitat for the Study will be complemented by ongoing computer modeling of potential habitat and development of an updated panther recovery plan by interagency committees led by the US Fish and Wildlife Service.” [emphasis added] Immokalee Study Area Stage 1 Report. 2000. WilsonMiller. P. 14. Immokalee Study Area Stage 1 Report. Created by WilsonMiller. 2000. Appendix E. 9.A.16 Packet Pg. 499 Attachment: Conservancy CCPC Presentation - Rivergrass - CCPC - 10-17-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Can the County ignore best available panther science? County outside legal counsel provided a memo regarding updating the RLSA through the amendment process, stating, “Data relied upon must be the best available data. If a more recent analysis or study is available, then that must be considered.” Memo to Collier County Board of County Commissioners. From Darrin F. Taylor, AICP, Nancy G. Linnan Carlton Fields. March 1, 2010. Re: Analysis of Dta Analysis requirements to support RLSA Review Committee recommended comprehensive plan amendments. Page 3. Just because this amendment has not occurred, this should not preclude the County from utilizing best available science. 9.A.16 Packet Pg. 500 Attachment: Conservancy CCPC Presentation - Rivergrass - CCPC - 10-17-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Al Reynolds of Stantec, one of the primary authors of the RLSA, states in a communication with County staff in 2011, “One of the basic principles of the RLSA is that there will always be more recent and more site specific data available as the program is implemented, and this is best addressed at the time a property owner and the county evaluate a specific application for SSA or SRA, or when a property owner uses their baselines uses.” Email from Al Reynolds, Stantec to Michele Mosca, Collier County. Friday, December 02, 2011, 3:37PM. Subject: FW: Data & Analysis Requirements for the RLSA 5-Year In further support of using panther best available science 9.A.16 Packet Pg. 501 Attachment: Conservancy CCPC Presentation - Rivergrass - CCPC - 10-17-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Panther Best Available Science 9.A.16 Packet Pg. 502 Attachment: Conservancy CCPC Presentation - Rivergrass - CCPC - 10-17-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Figure: 5: USFWS states Importance of Primary Zone Panther Habitat Source: USFWS Florida Panther Recovery Plan, 3rd Revision. p. 89) 9.A.16 Packet Pg. 503 Attachment: Conservancy CCPC Presentation - Rivergrass - CCPC - 10-17-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Conservancy Map 71% of Village proposed in Primary Zone habitat 34.5% of Village proposed in Adult Breeding habitat 9.A.16 Packet Pg. 504 Attachment: Conservancy CCPC Presentation - Rivergrass - CCPC - 10-17-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 On October 4 and 8, the Conservancy received GIS files that allowed us to review the County’s shapefiles for Rivergrass. We were unable to recreate the outcome NRI values based on the files provided due to an inconsistency betwenn the Collier County GIS layers and the Applicant’s GIS layers. Collier County then forwarded the Applicant’s GIS files for us to review. We applied what we believe should be the NRI index values and came up with results differing from the Applicant and Collier County. Proximity Index Conservancy Applies the Data 9.A.16 Packet Pg. 505 Attachment: Conservancy CCPC Presentation - Rivergrass - CCPC - 10-17-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Listed Species Index Conservancy map created from data points provided to the County by the applicant 9.A.16 Packet Pg. 506 Attachment: Conservancy CCPC Presentation - Rivergrass - CCPC - 10-17-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 Conservancy Composite Map Applicant Composite Map 9.A.16 Packet Pg. 507 Attachment: Conservancy CCPC Presentation - Rivergrass - CCPC - 10-17-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 More data continues to come in Additional GIS files submitted to the County Oct. 15 Conservancy maps created from data points provided to the County by the applicant 9.A.16 Packet Pg. 508 Attachment: Conservancy CCPC Presentation - Rivergrass - CCPC - 10-17-19 (11090 : PL20190000044 9.A.17Packet Pg. 509Attachment: Affidavit of Sign Posting and Photos of Signs (11-19-2019) (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.17 Packet Pg. 510 Attachment: Affidavit of Sign Posting and Photos of Signs (11-19-2019) (11090 : PL20190000044 9.A.17 Packet Pg. 511 Attachment: Affidavit of Sign Posting and Photos of Signs (11-19-2019) (11090 : PL20190000044 9.A.17 Packet Pg. 512 Attachment: Affidavit of Sign Posting and Photos of Signs (11-19-2019) (11090 : PL20190000044 9.A.17 Packet Pg. 513 Attachment: Affidavit of Sign Posting and Photos of Signs (11-19-2019) (11090 : PL20190000044 9.A.17 Packet Pg. 514 Attachment: Affidavit of Sign Posting and Photos of Signs (11-19-2019) (11090 : PL20190000044 9.A.17 Packet Pg. 515 Attachment: Affidavit of Sign Posting and Photos of Signs (11-19-2019) (11090 : PL20190000044 9.A.17 Packet Pg. 516 Attachment: Affidavit of Sign Posting and Photos of Signs (11-19-2019) (11090 : PL20190000044 9.A.17 Packet Pg. 517 Attachment: Affidavit of Sign Posting and Photos of Signs (11-19-2019) (11090 : PL20190000044 9.A.18 Packet Pg. 518 Attachment: Legal Ad - Agenda ID 10935 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) 9.A.19 Packet Pg. 519 Attachment: Legal Ad - Agenda ID 11090 (11090 : PL20190000044 Rivergrass Village SRA) RIVERGRASS VILLAGE SRA January 28, 2020 9.A.20 Packet Pg. 520 Attachment: Rivergrass Team Presentation - Item 10935 - Jan 28 2020 - R9 - FINAL (11090 : Over view 2 The Planning and Zoning Division has collaborated with the various Departments, Divisions, and Sections contributing to this Rivergrass Te am Presentation. The multiple components involved will be presented in the following order: •Comprehensive Planning •Tr ansportation Planning •Environmental Review •Community and Human Services •Public Utilities •Staff Conditions of Approval A separate presentation by Transportation Planning addressing the Rivergrass Landowner Agreement will follow. 9.A.20 Packet Pg. 521 Attachment: Rivergrass Team Presentation - Item 10935 - Jan 28 2020 - R9 - FINAL (11090 : Rivergrass Village SRA -PL20190000044 Collier County Review Team: §Planning and Zoning -Ray Bellows, Manager and Nancy Gundlach, AICP, PLA, Principal Planner §Comprehensive Planning -David Weeks, AICP, Manager and Corby Schmidt, AICP, Principal Planner §Tr ansportation -Tr inity Scott, Planning Manager §Environmental -Jaime Cook, M.S., Principal Environmental Specialist §Community and Human Services -Cormac Giblin, AICP, Housing, Grant Development and Operations Manager §Public Utilities -Eric Fey, P.E., Principal Project Manager §Fiscal Analysis -Amy Patterson, Division Director 3 9.A.20 Packet Pg. 522 Attachment: Rivergrass Team Presentation - Item 10935 - Jan 28 2020 - R9 - FINAL (11090 : Comprehensive Planning 4 9.A.20 Packet Pg. 523 Attachment: Rivergrass Team Presentation - Item 10935 - Jan 28 2020 - R9 - FINAL (11090 : Rivergrass Village SRA §Is consistent with the FLUE -complies with RLSAO objective requirements: size, permitted uses, density, open space, non-residential uses §However, does not fully meet the intent of the RLSAO policies pertaining to: innovative design, compactness, housing diversity, walkability, mix of uses, use density/intensity continuum or gradient, interconnectedness, etc. §Is, with some exceptions, a typical suburban development plan placed in the RLSA, contrary to RLSAO intent. §This is greenfield development -there are no known natural resource (or other) constraints that preclude: •A more compact development with majority of DUs proximate to the Village Center •Village Center located in the interior rather than on the edge •Commitment to provide some DUs in the Village Center •A grid street system •Greater number of multi-family DUs •Commitment to provide some affordable housing 5Rivergrass SRA Mobility & Interconnectivity Plan 9.A.20 Packet Pg. 524 Attachment: Rivergrass Team Presentation - Item 10935 - Jan 28 2020 - R9 - FINAL (11090 : Environmenta l Planning Fo r RLSA Development 6 9.A.20 Packet Pg. 525 Attachment: Rivergrass Team Presentation - Item 10935 - Jan 28 2020 - R9 - FINAL (11090 : §Protect agricultural land and prevent premature conversion of agricultural land to non-agricultural uses §Direct incompatible uses away from wetland and upland habitats (FSAs, HSAs, WRAs) §Enable the conversion of rural land to other uses in appropriate locations §Established Stewardship Sending Areas (SSA) §Established Stewardship Receiving Areas (SRA) to develop areas 7 RLSA Environment -Fundamentals 9.A.20 Packet Pg. 526 Attachment: Rivergrass Team Presentation - Item 10935 - Jan 28 2020 - R9 - FINAL (11090 : Natural Resource Index Assessment: Rivergrass Example 8 §NRI Factors: •Stewardship Designation •Proximity •Listed Species Habitat •Soils / Surface Water •Restoration Potential •Land Use / Land Cover 9.A.20 Packet Pg. 527 Attachment: Rivergrass Team Presentation - Item 10935 - Jan 28 2020 - R9 - FINAL (11090 : Community and Human Ser vices Housing Affo rd ability Review 9 9.A.20 Packet Pg. 528 Attachment: Rivergrass Team Presentation - Item 10935 - Jan 28 2020 - R9 - FINAL (11090 : §Housing Element of the Comprehensive Growth Management Plan •Goal 1: To create an adequate supply of decent, safe, sanitary, and Affordable Housing for all residents of Collier County. •Objective 1: Provide new affordable housing units in order to meet the current and future housing needs of legal residents with very-low, low, moderate and affordable workforce incomes, including households with special needs such as rural and farmworker housing in rural Collier County. •Objective 2: Increase the number of affordable housing units, by the methods contained in Objective 1 and subsequent Policies, for very-low, low, moderate and affordable workforce income residents with the assistance of for-profit and not-for-profit providers of affordable housing, within the County and its municipalities. •Policy 2.2: Partnerships shall be encouraged between private developers, non-profit entities, local governments and other interested parties to ensure the development of housing that meets the needs of the County’s very-low, low, moderate and affordable workforce income residents. §Future Land Use Element of the Comprehensive Growth Management Plan •Policy 4.7.2: Villages are primarily residential communities with a diversity of housing types and mix of uses appropriate to the scale and character of the particular village………Design criteria for Villages shall be included in the LDC Stewardship District. §Land Development Code •4.08.07 -SRA Designation J. Design Criteria. 3. Village Design Criteria. a. General criteria. iv. Offer a range of housing types and price levels to accommodate diverse ages and incomes.Accessory dwelling units shall not count towards the maximum allowed density. Standard of Review (applicable sections of GMP and LDC): Policy Review Housing Affo rdability Review 10 9.A.20 Packet Pg. 529 Attachment: Rivergrass Team Presentation - Item 10935 - Jan 28 2020 - R9 - FINAL (11090 : §In order to determine if the proposal offers a “range of housing types and price levels to accommodate diverse ages and incomes”, staff has continued to recommend that a Housing Needs Analysis be performed to estimate affordable housing demand, and to create a plan to address the supply of affordable housing units for the Rivergrass Village SRA o The applicant has not undertaken such an analysis o Instead the applicant’s Economic Assessment states: Housing Affo rdability Review (continued) 11 9.A.20 Packet Pg. 530 Attachment: Rivergrass Team Presentation - Item 10935 - Jan 28 2020 - R9 - FINAL (11090 : §The Applicant ’s Economic Assessment states: “The average assessed value for Rivergrass single-family homes is $370,000, which is 41% higher than the County’s median value” §The Rivergrass Village SRA submission offers no details as to how many residential units will meet the County ’s affordability standards for various income levels o It also offers no detail on the number of affordable units, or price points that will be included to accommodate the additional need for affordable units that is created as a result of the Village §While a Housing Needs Analysis itself is not a requirement of the Code, it would have provided the needed data with which to review this application for compliance with the applicable Codes §If approved as submitted, Rivergrass Village would be the first development of its scale to be approved in Collier County without addressing Housing Affordability in at least the past 20-years §It is up to the Board to determine if the above breakdown of housing types and estimated price points, along with other statements and commitments that have been put into the record, meet the RLSA’s intent of offering a “range of housing types and price levels to accommodate diverse ages and incomes”. Housing Affo rdability Review (continued) 12 9.A.20 Packet Pg. 531 Attachment: Rivergrass Team Presentation - Item 10935 - Jan 28 2020 - R9 - FINAL (11090 : Northeast Service Area (NESA) Utility Extension Project 13 9.A.20 Packet Pg. 532 Attachment: Rivergrass Team Presentation - Item 10935 - Jan 28 2020 - R9 - FINAL (11090 : Proposed NE Developments and Pipe Corridors 14 (Borders are approximate) Immokalee Road Rural Village NESA October 2019 Northeast Utility Facilities Hyde Park Village Rivergrass Village Longwater Village Bellmar Village Hogan Island Village 9.A.20 Packet Pg. 533 Attachment: Rivergrass Team Presentation - Item 10935 - Jan 28 2020 - R9 - FINAL (11090 : Staff Conditions of Approval 1.The companion Landowner Contribution Agreement pertaining to transportation facilities is required to be approved with this SRA request. 2.Interconnections shall be addressed in the companion Landowner Contribution Agreement. 3.Prior to issuance of the first SDP and/or PPL, a Listed Species Management Plan must be provided for review, with approval from FWCC and/or USFWS for management of the Florida panther and all other listed species. 4.The negotiated Interlocal Agreement between Collier County Water-Sewer District and the Big Cypress Stewardship District must be adopted concurrently with the SRA Resolution. 5.The following CCPC requested revisions shall be incorporated into the SRA Document: •Add “as depicted on Master Plan” after the Clubhouse and Amenities reference in Section 5.1.1. A. 6) •Increase the front yard setbacks for all land uses to 12 feet to avoid utility easement conflicts •Make the lake symbol on the Master Plan one color, not two colors •Add the words “at least ” to Note 2 on Page 3 of the Master Plan •Change the minimum width of the Right-of-Way Cross Section from 48 feet to 50 feet 15 9.A.20 Packet Pg. 534 Attachment: Rivergrass Team Presentation - Item 10935 - Jan 28 2020 - R9 - FINAL (11090 : 16 A separate presentation by Transportation Planning will now address the Rivergrass Landowner Contribution Agreement. Next 9.A.20 Packet Pg. 535 Attachment: Rivergrass Team Presentation - Item 10935 - Jan 28 2020 - R9 - FINAL (11090 : The Following Slides are Fo r Reference Only 17 9.A.20 Packet Pg. 536 Attachment: Rivergrass Team Presentation - Item 10935 - Jan 28 2020 - R9 - FINAL (11090 : Po licy 9.3 of the Tra nsportation Element of the Growth Management Plan Staff Recommendation: §Amend the Master Plan to show the planned interconnections to the adjacent villages and incorporate the construction into each development order as it proceeds forward. 18 9.A.20 Packet Pg. 537 Attachment: Rivergrass Team Presentation - Item 10935 - Jan 28 2020 - R9 - FINAL (11090 : Rivergrass = 0 Rivergrass = 0 Rivergrass = 0 Va ries Va ries Va ries Stewardship Credit Worksheet: 19 9.A.20 Packet Pg. 538 Attachment: Rivergrass Team Presentation - Item 10935 - Jan 28 2020 - R9 - FINAL (11090 : §Preferred and Tolerated Pa nther Habitats (LDC 4.08.01.Q): •FLUCFCS Codes: 310, 321, 411, 425, 428, 434, 617, 6172, 621, 6218, 6219, 624, 630 Listed Species Habitat Indices Panther occupied habitat (preferred and tolerated) plus other listed species 0.8 Panther occupied habitat (preferred and tolerated)0.5 Other documented listed species habitat 0.4 None of the above 0.0 Stewardship Credit Worksheet: Listed Species 20 9.A.20 Packet Pg. 539 Attachment: Rivergrass Team Presentation - Item 10935 - Jan 28 2020 - R9 - FINAL (11090 : Stewardship Credit Worksheet: Soils/Surface Wa te r Soil Types (LDC 4.08.01.GG): Classification NSLP Category Open Water / Muck Depression Soils NSLP 1 and NSLP 5 Sand Depression Soils NSLP 6 Flats (Transitional) Soils NSLP 7 Non-Hydric Soils NSLP 8, NSLP 9, NSLP 11 Soils/Surface Water Indices Open Water and Muck Depression soils 0.4 Sand Depression soils 0.3 Flats (Transitional) soils 0.2 Non-hydric soils 0.0 21 9.A.20 Packet Pg. 540 Attachment: Rivergrass Team Presentation - Item 10935 - Jan 28 2020 - R9 - FINAL (11090 : Map Source: USDA NRCS Table Source: SFWMD Soils Classification Technical Report 22 9.A.20 Packet Pg. 541 Attachment: Rivergrass Team Presentation - Item 10935 - Jan 28 2020 - R9 - FINAL (11090 : Stewardship Credit Worksheet: Land Use / Cover FLUCFCS Codes Vegetation Groups (LDC 4.08.01.N): Land Use –Land Cover Indices FLUCCS Code Group 1 0.4 FLUCCS Code Group 2 0.3 FLUCCS Code Group 3 0.2 FLUCCS Code Group 4 0.0 Group 1 617, 6172, 621, 6218, 6219, 624, 630, 641, 643 Group 2 321, 411, 4119, 425, 434, 439, 428 Group 3 211, 212, 213, 214, 221, 222, 241, 242, 243, 250, 260, 261, 310, 329, 330, 422, 510, 521, 523, 533, 534 Group 4 All Other Codes 23 9.A.20 Packet Pg. 542 Attachment: Rivergrass Team Presentation - Item 10935 - Jan 28 2020 - R9 - FINAL (11090 : Index Factor Subject Acre Va lue Assigned Stewardship Designation No Designation 0.0 Proximity Index None 0.0 Listed Species Habitat Other Documented Listed Species Habitat (Sandhill Crane) 0.4 Soils / Surface Wa ter Index Flatwood Soil (Immokalee Fine Sand) 0.0 Restoration Potential None 0.0 Land Use / Land Cover FLUCFCS 210 (Group 3) (Cropland and Pasture Land) 0.2 To tal NRI Score 0.6 Scale: 1 acre 24 9.A.20 Packet Pg. 543 Attachment: Rivergrass Team Presentation - Item 10935 - Jan 28 2020 - R9 - FINAL (11090 : Index Factor Subject Acre Va lue Assigned Stewardship Designation No Designation 0.0 Proximity Index None 0.0 Listed Species Habitat None 0.0 Soils / Surface Water Index Sand Depression (Holopaw & Okeelanta Depression) 0.3 Restoration Potential None 0.0 Land Use / Land Cover FLUCFCS 4221 (Group 3) (Brazilian Pepper, Hydric) 0.2 To tal NRI Score 0.5 Scale: 1 acre 25 9.A.20 Packet Pg. 544 Attachment: Rivergrass Team Presentation - Item 10935 - Jan 28 2020 - R9 - FINAL (11090 : Purpose and Intent of RLSA Program §Protect agricultural and prevent premature conversion of agricultural land to non- agricultural uses §Direct incompatible uses away from wetland and upland habitats §Enable the conversion of rural land to other uses in appropriate locations §Led to creation of SSA’s (areas to protect) and SRA’s (areas to develop) 26 9.A.20 Packet Pg. 545 Attachment: Rivergrass Team Presentation - Item 10935 - Jan 28 2020 - R9 - FINAL (11090 : Natural Resource Index (NRI) Assessment §Original RLSA Study and current LDC define all Index Values for the entire RLSA §Quantifies the number of acres by Index Values (4.08.07.D.3) •All lands within proposed SRA with an Index Value • 1.2 •Any lands within SRA with an Index Value > 1.2 must be retained as open space •If the Index Values are no longer valid, document the current Index Value §GIS Data is analyzed in 1-acre polygons to obtain NRI score §Applicant submits a summary of NRI Values and total acreage for each Value 27 9.A.20 Packet Pg. 546 Attachment: Rivergrass Team Presentation - Item 10935 - Jan 28 2020 - R9 - FINAL (11090 : Aerial photograph delineating the SRA boundary Natural Resource Index Map of the SRA FLUCFCS (Vegetation) Map of the SRA Listed Species Map of the SRA Soils Map of the SRA Documentation to support a change in NRI Values, if appropriate NRI Supporting Documentation 28 9.A.20 Packet Pg. 547 Attachment: Rivergrass Team Presentation - Item 10935 - Jan 28 2020 - R9 - FINAL (11090 : Environmental Reviews •Document Review: •Listed Species Survey •FLUCFCS (Vegetation) Map •Soils Map •On-site Verification: •Field verification of specific locations 29 9.A.20 Packet Pg. 548 Attachment: Rivergrass Team Presentation - Item 10935 - Jan 28 2020 - R9 - FINAL (11090 : NESA Pro ject -5 Segments 30 9.A.20 Packet Pg. 549 Attachment: Rivergrass Team Presentation - Item 10935 - Jan 28 2020 - R9 - FINAL (11090 : Rivergrass Village Utilities NESA Segment/Area NESA Plan Completion Developer ’s Schedule Segment 1: 39th Avenue NE Fairgrounds 1/26/2020 90% Complete Fire Service and Full Service by 9/30/2020 per Integration Agreement Regional systems capable of handling initial projected flows Segment 2: Big Corkscrew Island Regional Park site 9/28/2019 Complete Segment 3 Pipes: NE Utility Facilities site 9/20/2020 50% Complete Segment 4: 41st Avenue GG Canal to Rivergrass 8/30/2020 1/6/2020 Start Segment 3 Plants: NE Utility Facilities site 6/1/2021 6/2/2020 Start (1) Interim Plants online to handle increased flows (1)Assumes receipt of ACOE permit by 6/2/20 31 9.A.20 Packet Pg. 550 Attachment: Rivergrass Team Presentation - Item 10935 - Jan 28 2020 - R9 - FINAL (11090 : October 3, 2019 TRANSCRIPT OF THE MEETING OF THE COLLIER COUNTY PLANNING COMMISSION Naples, Florida, October 3, 2019 LET IT BE REMEMBERED, that the Collier County Planning Commission, in and for the County of Collier, having conducted business herein, met on this date at 9:00 a.m., in REGULAR SESSION in Building "F" of the Government Complex, East Naples, Florida, with the following members present: CHAIRMAN: Mark Strain Stan Chrzanowski Patrick Dearborn Karl Fry Edwin Fryer Karen Homiak ABSENT: Joe Schmitt ALSO PRESENT: Raymond V. Bellows, Zoning Manager Nancy Gundlach, Principal Planner Jeffrey Klatzkow, County Attorney Heidi Ashton-Cicko, Managing Assistant County Attorney Tom Eastman, School District Representative Page 1 of 89 October 3, 2019 PROCEEDINGS CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Good morning, everyone. Welcome to the Ja -- yeah, January. COMMISSIONER FRYER: You wish. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: -- October 3rd meeting of the Collier County Planning Commission. If everybody will please rise for Pledge of Allegiance. (The Pledge of Allegiance was recited in unison.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Will the secretary please do the roll call. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Yes, sir. Mr. Eastman? MR. EASTMAN: Here. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Mr. Chrzanowski? COMMISSIONER CHRZANOWSKI: Here. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Mr. Fry? (No response.) COMMISSIONER FRYER: I'm here. Chairman Strain? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Here. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Vice Chair Homiak? COMMISSIONERHOMIAK: Here. COMMISSIONER FRY: Mr. Schmitt? (No response.) COMMISSIONER FRYER: Mr. Dearborn? COMMISSIONER DEARBORN: Present. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Chair, we have a quorum of five. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Mr. Schmitt has an excused absence, and Mr. Fry is -- I think he's hung up with the people downstairs. We'll fmd out when he gets here. Anyway, that's the -- addenda to the agenda. I carefully want to go over the proposed agenda today and for the rest of October, because we need to make some changes, and I have come up with some ideas that I need the rest of you to weigh in on and see if you agree and see if we have a quorum. I've got to remind everybody, a quorum is four people. So as long as we've got four, we can move forward on some of these. So someone has duties that they have committed to, then so be it. I wish Karl was here to hear this because I'm going to need his input. COMMISSIONER DEARBORN: Mr. Chairman, he should be here momentarily. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I know. Sometimes, momentarily, if you're trying to bring things through the door you shouldn't be bringing, could take a while. COMMISSIONER FRYER: An AR15 will stop you every time. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: That's not Karl. He's got screwdrivers, I guess, or something they found. So, anyway. So let's start out with what we've got today. We had four items on today's agenda and -- there he is. Karl, do you have a screwdriver we could use to fix something up here? COMMISSIONER FRY: I'm fresh out. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Karl, what we're doing is we're starting to talk about the agenda for the rest of October. , We have three items on -- four items on today's agenda. First item up and the commitment that was made that Rivergrass would be the first item today to start the meeting, and they will be. The second item up, Hammock Park GMPA. Normally we put items that are continued fust. The applicant for Hammock Park agreed to come after Rivergrass. Well, Rivergrass isn't probably -- well, it isn't going to get done today that I can see. It may not get done on the 17th, and it may end up going to the 3rd. So Hammock Park may have to fall into a different slot. Page 2 of 89 October 3, 2019 The Logan/Immokalee CPDD, I made a commitment to the applicant they will be heard at 1 o'clock today. That is only a one -word change or actually one number change on a PUD, and that hopefully will go fast with this board, then we'll assume Rivergrass after that. The AUIR is something we don't need to discuss at the meeting today. There's a little bit more time involved. It actually needs to be discussed this month, though. I checked with staff, and in the past we've had AUIR meetings over at Development Services in the Room 609/610. Part of that's because that document is -- if there are questions, staff is heavily involved, and that's -- a lot of staff is right there. So I suggested doing an evening meeting starting around 5:00 in that building, in that big conference room. And I wanted to see if -- and I would suggest for planning purposes we avoid Wednesdays because that's before our Thursday meetings. For the most part, Friday's obviously -- Thursday, if we've got a meeting, we're going to be pretty booked to get through that. The weekend's not going to count, so we're really looking at Monday and Tuesday. Since it's in that room, we're not going to have a conflict with the BCC using this room. So if the Monday or Tuesday works for you guys, I need to first see if Mondays and Tuesdays are okay, and then we'll start looking at the dates of the Monday and Tuesday. Is there any Monday and Tuesdays you all know that you can't be available for the AUIR? COMMISSIONER FRY: Are we talking an evening meeting? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Yes, starting at 5:00. Okay. COMMISSIONER DEARBORN: What month are we talking about, Mr: Chairman? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: October only. COMMISSIONER DEARBORN: I coach youth sports, and it's an obligation. I'm the head coach, and I cannot miss, and we practice Monday, Tuesdays, evenings, 5:00 to 7:30, 7:45. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: That's about the time we'd be meeting. So, yeah, you will not be able to make that one but, then again -- COMMISSIONER DEARBORN: Sony about that. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: No problem. We have -- yes, sir. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Yes, sir. I would not be available on October 14 as a result of a commitment that I have the second Monday of every month. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. And I have, it looks like, almost every meeting -- I mean Monday and Tuesday open. So, with that, so you can't do it on the 14th, and Patrick won't be here no matter which day it is. The only Monday we have to work around is the 14th, but we can also do any of the Mondays or Tuesdays in between. So here's what I'll do. And does anybody -- I'll assume, then, we have a consensus on that issue and that at least four people will attend whatever meeting date we set up for one of those Mondays or Tuesdays. And I don't know who in staff is organizing the AUIR meeting, but whoever is, they need to come back and pick the Monday or Tuesday that works best for the majority of the staff, the directors, or anybody else that would be at that meeting for the Planning Commission to discuss one item; that's the AUIR. We'll open and finish with it that night, then move it on to the Board. So I'll leave that in staffs hands from this point, and they'll notify everybody by email once we pick a date. So now that takes us to the October 17th meeting. We've received a total of 1,527 pages just for the SRA that we're discussing today. And I've also tried to lay it out on the agenda a schedule similar to what we drafted last time we talked. The order's a little different because in talking with the applicant, they needed some -- they needed to make sure their traffic guy got in in the morning. And I talked to staff about -- they've got a specialist coming in to talk about traffic and economics. So I put those two first, and then the environment, and then moved into the SRA document. I don't see how we're going to get through the traffic, economic, and environmental today. We'll Page 3 of 89 October 3, 2019 certainly give it the best shot we can. We'll move as fast as we can, but seeing that, that means October 17th may take a while to get through Rivergrass again. And now, remember, we're not going to hear public comments till after we get done. So I expect there might being some public comments on this based on some of the correspondence we received. With that in mind, we could even go to November with finishing up Rivergrass. So what I did is took a look at our calendar. And rather than tell the public we're going to hear the five or six items -- I think it's six now -- that are scheduled for October 17th in addition to the continuance of Rivergrass, I'm going to suggest that we take Hammock Park and those five or six items that are scheduled for October 16th -- October 17th other than Rivergrass and move all those to a special meeting on October 31st just for those items, not Rivergrass. So what we'll do is we'll clean up all the items that are being delayed because of the time it takes to hear Rivergrass and hear our Hammock Park fust on that date and all the rest of them that are in line behind it, and we'll clean up as many on that date as we can, and that will bring our schedule up to par by the end of this month, and we can start November afresh. And part of it, from discussions with the County Attorney's Office and the fact we're putting items on the agenda that we know we can't hear because of the time frames and, you know, the public could show up, and we'll never get to it. And it's out of deference to making sure the public is accurately told about dates. I'm suggesting this board to do what I just suggested: Move all those outstanding items that are going to be outstanding through October 17th to the 31 st, and we have a special meeting on the 31 st in this room at this regular time. Stan? COMMISSIONER CHRZANOWSKI: My memory ain't what it used to be, but I kind of remember sometime within the last two weeks I got some kind of email wanting to set something up for October 31 st because I remember its Halloween, and I made a joke about, yeah, that's fitting. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Staff at the county Development Services celebrates Halloween rather emphatically. They do a lot of decorating and stuff. There was an email going around about the theme for this year's -- I don't know -- I don't participate in it, but I know that was one email -- that's the only email I saw about the 31st. COMMISSIONER CHRZANOWSKI: Okay. As long as they're not saying there's some kind of meeting on the 31 st, I'm good. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And Ray was supposed to check by today -- or somebody was. Maybe it was somebody else. Ray, did you guys -- MR. BELLOWS: I have been coordinating with Judy Puig. We're looking at the availability of the room today. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: For the 31 st? MR. BELLOWS: Yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: There's no calendar that somebody can see if it's available or not? MR. BELLOWS: We're looking at it. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. When will you think you'll have an answer? MR. BELLOWS: Maybe she'll email me during the meeting. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Your mic's not picking you up too clearly. MR. BELLOWS: We'll see if we can get a response before the meeting's over. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Well, as we take breaks or come back from lunch, or as soon as you find out, let us know. On the 31st, if we move forward with that as a date as we've just described, does anyone know if they can't make it? Now, that's a Thursday. It's the fifth Thursday of the month, so generally things aren't scheduled for the fifth Thursdays of the months because they rotate. So I was assuming that would be a clear day. Does anybody know if they can't make it on the 31st? Page 4 of 89 October 3, 2019 (No response.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Well, then, tentatively, working with staffs confirmation of that date, we'll proceed as we've just discussed in moving all those items. And on the agenda for the 17th, we will leave Rivergrass, and all the rest will have a notice they're all being moved to the 31st of October, assuming we get confirmation on that. And what I'll do is once we have confirmation today, I'll go back to the agenda and ask the Commission to acknowledge all these as continued items to that date so that we can have the agenda properly noticed so the public isn't sitting somewhere waiting for something that isn't going to happen. So that takes us past the agenda issues. As far as the Planning Commission absences, the next regular meeting is October 17th. Does anybody have any -- know if they're going to be here on October 17th or know if they're not going to be here? (No response.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. And that takes us to approval of the minutes for September 5th. They were all sent electronically. Does anybody have any changes to those minutes? COMMISSIONER FRYER: Move their approval. COMMISSIONER DEARBORN: Second. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Motion made by Ned. Seconded by Patrick. Discussion? (No response.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: All in favor, signify by saying aye. COMMISSIONER CHRZANOWSKI: Aye. COMMISSIONERFRY: Aye. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Aye. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Aye. COMMISSIONER HOMIAK: Aye. COMMISSIONER DEARBORN: Aye. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Anybody opposed? (No response.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Motion carries -- 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 to 0 -- or is it 6? Yeah, we've got six of us, including me. Okay. BCC report and recaps. Ray? MR. BELLOWS: Yes. On September 24th, the Board of County Commissioners heard the Allura PUD rezone and the companion Growth Management Plan, and that was approved 5-0; the Livingston Road Growth Management Plan amendment was approved 5-0; and on the summary agenda the Siena Lakes Orange Blossom PUD amendment was approved. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Thank you, Ray. That takes us to the chairman's report, and I have a couple -- actually one item. Terri and I communicated about things to make her job move easier and the record to be clearer. We're going into some long meetings for the next month or two, so I need you all to please remember the following items: Number one, please wait to be acknowledged to speak. Number 2, please speak into your mics. Some of us are sitting back like Ray was just doing, and if you could speak into your mic, it can be picked up by not only Terri, but I forgot, there's a person that -- and I don't know what Terri called it, but they actually type it in as the meeting's being portrayed. What's it called? COURT REPORTER: Closed captioning. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Closed caption. Thank you. So we need to make sure that we handle all this so that the closed captioning can be accommodated. So the third one, do not talk over one another and over other speakers. That's been happening a lot because we get anxious, but we're going to have to slow it down and not do that. And then the last Page 5 of 89 October 3, 2019 thing, speaking about slowing down -- and Tem said I'm okay, but everybody else, do not speak fast. Slow everything to a very reasonable pace so she can type it as fast as we speak. So with that in mind, that would be helpful to have. And I also wanted to mention today's item up that we're going to be on most of the day is the Rivergrass Stewardship Receiving Area. I don't know of -- other than myself and Joe when he was administrator -- nobody else on this board had been involved with an SRA before, and the only one we were involved with is the Ave Maria town SRA. This is the first village SRA, first of -- I think there's four total, maybe five, in some kind of process at the county that's coming through. So it's imperative that we handle this one carefully and all the questions that you guys have, especially since we haven't been through it before, don't hesitate to ask your questions when we get to the items. I've tried to lay this out in a manner more for the presentation by staff and the applicant to address the issues in an orderly manner, and you'll see that on the agenda. That doesn't mean we're limited to asking questions about traffic only when we talk about -- only when the traffic presentations are done, because throughout the day, or the two days, whatever it takes, you all may come up with other questions. There's a catch-all. CCPC will be able to ask questions on any matter as we go through the whole thing. I was just trying to compartmentalize the agenda a bit so we could kind of count on when the specialists have to be here, the presentation people have to be here, and things like that, and that's for all parties involved. Then the public comments are going to be after ours and after the LDC staff report and all that stuff. And then through the public comment we may have more questions of anyone of the previous areas, and that's fine. I don't want you ever to think we're not going to go back and revisit things if we have more questions; that's the intent of looking at it thoroughly is to go back and ask everything. And the applicant is also -- I talked to Bob Mulhere, and he said he included in his presentations some of the history and uniqueness of the SRA, and the RLSA area. So rather than me get into those, we'll listen to Bob's presentation as a way to introduce ourselves to it. And the last caution is this is not as much of a zoning effort because the zoning is already in place. This is more of a placement of an SRA within an already approved overlay. And a lot of it, I don't know portions of it, but I know that its a simple majority vote for a resolution instead of a supermajority vote on whatever parts would apply to a resolution basis at the Board of County Commissioners. So that is a different twist. Uniquely different than a PUD, so... COMMISSIONER FRYER: I assume it's quasi-judicial in nature? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Yes, sir. We're going to go through all of the -- COMMISSIONER FRYER: Swearing in. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: -- swearing in, and then all of the disclosures in a minute. So with that, does anybody else have anything they want to add at this time? (No response.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. There's no items for consent. We'll move right into our first public hearing. ***It's 9A1, and it's the -- it was continued from September 19th. It's the Rivergrass Village Stewardship Receiving Area, and it's out in the RLSA overlay. All those wishing to testify on behalf of this item, please rise to be sworn in by the court reporter. If you're going to talk about the RLSA, please stand up and be sworn in. (The speakers were duly sworn and indicated in the affirmative.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Now, for the members of the public that's stood up, I appreciate you standing up in case we get to the public comment. I don't think we'll get to it today, but we're -- you're here -- you'll at least have the history of it so that when you do get up and speak you'll have been through the day or two that it takes to get there. So, with that, disclosures from the Planning Commission. We'll start with Tom on my right. Page 6 of 89 October 3, 2019 MR. EASTMAN: I had meetings and telephone calls with the applicant, and I also had a telephone call with county staff regarding this project. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Stan? COMMISSIONER CHRZANOWSKI: Just emails through the county. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Karl? COMMISSIONER FRY: Emails through the county; telephone conversation with Rich Yovanovich. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Ned? COMMISSIONER FRYER: Same disclosure. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I had a meeting with the applicant's team, I had a meeting -- several meetings with staff, I've had conversations with several of the Board of County Commissioners, I have also received correspondence that I've -- any of it I forwarded to the staff, I've had a meeting with the Conservancy, and I had a meeting with the Wildlife Federation. There have been periodic comments that I might have answered questions, I don't remember all the people, but nothing specific to what we're actually getting into today. COMMISSIONER FRY: Mr. Chairman, I neglected one disclosure. I had a telephone conversation with Commissioner Saunders. COMMISSIONER CHRZANOWSKI: And, Mr. Chairman, I neglected. I had a telephone conversation with Mr. Yovanovich. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. With that, Karen? COMMISSIONER HOMIAK: I spoke to Mr. Yovanovich and emails through the county. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Patrick? COMMISSIONER DEARBORN: Just the normal emails. Nothing neglected. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Sorry. I neglected to disclose a conversation I had with a county commissioner. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. That is for disclosure, and then we'll move right into the presentation by the applicant. And I don't know how you're going to start off, but it's all yours. MR. YOVANOVICH: Thank you. Good morning. For the record, Rich Yovanovich on behalf of the applicant. I want to introduce our team and our experts and our representatives. From Collier Enterprises Management is Patrick Utter. He's the senior vice president for real estate; Christian Spilker is the senior vice president for land management, and Valerie Pike is the project manager for this particular project. The consulting team is, as you know, Mr. Mulhere; myself; Jake Cremer from Stearns, Weaver, and Miller. He's cocounseling with me on some of the issues mainly pertaining to transportation -related issues; Dominick Amico is our engineer for the project; Lucy Gallo has done the economic analysis; Kirk Martin is our water, science, and water expert; Ken Passarella and Heather from Passarella & Associates are our environmental consultants; and Mr. Trebilcock and Mr. Malaescu are our transportation experts for this particular project. The outline for today is as follows: I will -- I've already done the team, but I will take you through the history of the Rural Land Stewardship program, how it works, and then turn it over to Bob to get into the specifics of how our particular application meets the requirements of both the Growth Management Plan and the Land Development Code. We will address the deviations we've requested and address the staff report and recommendations. I will tell you we've had several meetings with Collier County staff since the staff report was written, and I will be honest with you, I think we're down to just one issue, and that one issue is how much of the Big Cypress right-of-way we will be providing to the county as part of the Rivergrass Village SRA application. All of the other staff recommendations or deviations were, at the time of the writing of the report, there might have been some disagreements; we've reached an agreement, and we'll discuss that with you Page 7 of 89 October 3, 2019 as we do our presentation. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And, Rich, when we get into the reports, just to give you a heads -up, I received three different staff reports. So if you could tell us the dates of the reports you're working off of so we are all on the same page, I'd appreciate that. MR. YOVANOVICH: Okay. Well, I've only received one, and that's the one that staff and our team has been working off of, and that was the initial staff report. Now, you may have received some additional documents that deal with some acreage modifications due to finalizing the footprint for the Big Cypress right-of-way. And as you recall I mentioned that at the last meeting that there were some -- ifs roughly -- and it's in my presentations. It's a little over 2.4 acres of a reduction in our overall village size as a result of the -- reaching resolution on the right-of-way. That's -- I don't know of any other staff reports, but I do know there have been additional documentation related to that issue truing up the acreage. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And just so you know, I only pulled them from the 1,500 pages we received. So that's the only source I had. So if you'd gotten those 1,500 pages, you'll find that in there there are three staff reports each with a different date, and that's the only thing I was trying to focus on. MR. YOVANOVICH: That's fine. Well, we historically focus on the staff report that's in the front of the package that goes to you -all. If there's -- there's some backup attachments, yes, we've received them and, yes, we've addressed those issues with your staff. Up to the screen is the -- bear with me -- is the location of the proposed Rivergrass Village SRA. As you can see, its on the very western edge of the Rural Land Stewardship Area overlay basically immediately adjacent to Golden Gate Estates and immediately adjacent to what is the Hyde Park SRA. Their project now is 997.53 acres now that we resolved the acreage for Big Cypress Parkway. The number of units has remained the same at 2,500. The commercial that we're providing ranges from a minimum of 62,500 square feet to a maximum 80,000 square feet. The civic uses that we're providing is a minimum of 25,000 square feet. As Bob will show you, those are the required square footages pursuant to the Growth Management Plan and the LDC. The changes -- we just wanted to show you what the changes were. The yellow was the original boundary of the original submittal that was originally on your agenda. The right-of-way for Big Cypress -- MR. MULHERE: Do you want to show them? MR. YOVANOVICH: Yeah. What do I use as the pointer? Bob? It doesn't matter. Just show me what to use. There we go. Right here is what is Big Cypress Parkway. Big Cypress Parkway got a little wider from what it was originally proposed to be. As a result of it getting a little wider, we've made up some but not all of the lost acreage due to that on that little triangular piece that's being added to the PUD -- I'm sorry, it's SRA. As you can see, even I sometimes slip into the wrong terminology. This is not a rezone, as the Chairman has pointed out. This is an overlay where we're simply designating lands to be designated as an SRA. We're not rezoning the property. The property is already zoned for what we are requesting. As part of the SRA designation process, we are required to obtain credits. Those credits come from SSAs, stewardship sending areas, that are areas that are basically put aside for conservation purposes as part of this overall Rural Lands Stewardship program. We will be obtaining our credits from SSA -15, which is approved and is being held in escrow, and it consists of 5,259 acres. The way the credit system works is you -- for each acre in your SRA, you are required to obtain eight credits. Now, if you do more -- if you do more open space than is required in the program, you don't have to use credits for that additional area. But the bottom line is, we will be using 6,205.36 credits to entitle this SRA. That is roughly five times the acreage in conservation for the acreage of the village. So the intent of the program has always been to provide incentives for property owners to preserve land and entitle other land for development. Page 8 of 89 October 3, 2019 The history of the program is in 1999 it was a very contentious time in Collier County. There were several environmental groups that didn't think the Comprehensive Plan went far enough in protecting environmentally sensitive lands. There was a challenge to the county's Comprehensive Plan amendments that were going through the process at the time. Ultimately, the governor and cabinet issued a final order requiring the property owners to work together in a collaborative process to come up with a program to address several important issues. And that collaborative process basically started in 1999 and finished in 2002. But as this slide will indicate, the Rural Lands Stewardship Area is approximately 195,000 acres and 300 square miles. That's the program you're dealing with today. As Bob pointed out at our last meeting when we were talking about a Comprehensive Plan amendment in the Rural Fringe Mixed Use District, that also was subject to the final order that Bob mentioned to you at that time. So the process was broken down into two separate areas. Rural Fringe Mixed Use District, which is to the west of this property; and the Rural Lands Stewardship Area program. The governor's final order basically required that we deal with several issues at the same time, and it required that it be a collaborative community-based effort with broad-based public participation. The goals of that was to protect prime agricultural areas, direct incompatible uses away from wetlands and upland habitat in order to protect water quality and listed species habitat, and to assess the growth potential and the conversion of rural lands for development. And public participation was the hallmark of this planning effort, and public participation did, in fact, occur. There were -- a citizen committee was made up of landowners as well as staff, as well as environmental groups, and there were many, many meetings and a few years of hashing out what was ultimately the program in front of you today. In 2002 there were -- the recommendation of the Rural Lands Stewardship program was made to the Board of County Commissioners. The Department of Community Affairs was the state agency that was in effect at the time that had to review and bless this program. They, in fact, did review and bless this program and determined that it was consistent with the final order, and it was supported by all of the stakeholders for approval by the Board of County Commissioners. So I want -- and I'll show you some of those groups in a second. But 1 wanted to make it very clear that the Growth Management Plan amendments that you'll be looking at today and the Land Development Code provisions that you'll be looking at today are, in fact, consistent with the original final order that the governor and cabinet handed down to the Board of County Commissioners. Anybody who tells you that this program is not consistent with that final order is not factually correct. The groups that were involved and supported this program was Nancy Payton -- I don't know if any of you have worked with her. I know Mr. Strain and Mr. Chrzanowski have. I think she may have been retired since then. I think Ms. Homiak probably has seen her in public presentations. She and Brad Cornell and the Conservancy spearheaded the environmental aspects of this program and participated in this program. I just want -- Nancy Payton, at the adoption hearing of the Board of County Commissioners for the Growth Management Plan amendment, said, we appreciate the willingness and the responsiveness of county representatives and the Eastern Collier property owners to address our concerns. She goes on further to say, and I want to express again my appreciation personally and on behalf of my organization of each one of you, and I urge you to adopt this plan, move it on so we can get busy writing the Land Development Code and implementing this landmark plan. So Florida Wildlife Federation, big supporter of this program when it was adopted in 2002. Brad Cornell with Collier Audubon at the time says, we are very supportive of the Rural Lands Stewardship Area overlay amendments that you have before you. He goes on to say, you know, everybody has their say, everybody has their chips on the table, and we come to terms that are agreeable Page 9 of 89 October 3, 2019 to everyone. No one wins everything they want and, unfortunately, we have to recognize that. But we're very supportive of this -- these results, and we recommend adoption. And they weren't alone. The Conservancy of Southwest Florida, Gary Davis got up there and said, I can't let my colleagues be the only ones to support this. He goes on to say, no, I'll be brief because I did meet with a couple of you last week and shared some concerns that we still had, and I wanted to make it clear that these concerns have been worked out, and we now feel that we can fully support the plan as it's come to you today. And as Brad said, not everybody got what they wanted, but I think we're in good support of this plan as it is coming forward, and we urge you to adopt it today. In reliance upon the process and the Growth Management Plan amendments and ultimately the Land Development Code amendments to implement the Rural Land Stewardship program, the property owners worked with the environmental groups, Collier County staff to come up with a program that's an incentive -based program to put, in this particular case, five acres into preservation in exchange for one acre of development area. And that program has been in effect for 19, 17 years. A long time that this program has been in effect. From a history standpoint, there's only been one approved SRA, and that's the town of Ave Maria. I believe it required close to 17,000 acres of SSAs to have it work. The Big Cypress Stewardship District, which the Rivergrass Village property is in, was formed to further implement the Rural Land Stewardship program. 2006, Ave Maria starts construction. In 2007 and T, ave Maria is opened and more SSAs are approved as part of this overall goal to preserve lands out east in the Rural Land Stewardship Area. The five-year review process began. It's still underway. And then we all know the great recession hits, and development stops out east as well as it stopped in the urban area. This map is a very important and instructive map. The light pink area is the open stewardship area. What does that mean? That's the least environmentally sensitive lands, and that is where SRAs are supposed to be developed. You can see on the visualizer the outline of Rivergrass Village. We're in the open area where development is supposed to occur. The blue area, the darker blue area are Flowway Stewardship Areas. Thafs areas that are supposed to become SSAs and become preserved and credits taken to develop in the pink. The green areas are habitat stewardship areas. Those are the areas where you're supposed to do SSAs, take credits, and put it into preserve for the pink area. And then you have the lighter blue area where it says VRA, water retention areas. Those are areas where you are not to develop and you're to get credits to support development in the pink area. And that's what you have today; that's the critical map, that's the overlay, and that is the measurement of what we're here to do today. And what we're here to do today is to designate a portion of the pink area for a village. That's what we're here to do. And we'll take you through a pretty detailed process to show how we meet every one of the criteria in the Growth Management Plan as well as the LDC. I just want to show you one more map that highlights the Stewardship Sending Areas that are in place today. Bob, is this thing still on? As you can see in the -- I think that's pink is our proposed village. You can see these through here, these SSAs that are already adopted being held in escrow to further protect the environment. SSA -17, right here, is not yet adopted but going through the process to be approved by the County Commission. The Planning Commission doesn't see the SSAs. So what you could see, as this program is intended, there is a tremendous amount of Stewardship Sending Areas approved as part of this program to further the goal of protecting the environment. You asked us for a map of what's kind of going on out in the rural area. You asked us to provide you a map of villages that are currently being reviewed and some that might be coming forward in the Page 10 of 89 October 3, 2019 near future, and I want to just kind of briefly take you through those. In the pink is Hyde Park. That is -- that's going through the process. You should hear that sometime early next year, 2020. You obviously have Rivergrass, which you're hearing today. South of Rivergrass is Longwater, and south of that is Belhnar. Those are two villages that we've had pre -application meetings for and intend to submit in the near future for those villages -- well, those four villages that I spoke of within the Rural Lands Stewardship Area. The Immokalee Road Village is not within the Rural Lands Stewardship Area. That's within the Rural Fringe Mixed Use District that you learned about from Bob a few weeks ago. But that's the current state of applications as we know it. I think Bob and I are involved in all of those and are familiar with them. But that's the -- that's where we are today as far as pending applications is Rivergrass, Hyde Park, and Immokalee Road Village, and then Longwater and Bellmar should be coming in soon. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: The only one I don't see on here, it came in for a pre -application and hasn't done anything else that I can find, but it's the Hogan Island. MR. YOVANOVICH: Okay. And that's not been submitted at this point. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, it was submitted as a pre -app but not submitted as a plan. MR. YOVANOVICH: Right. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Chairman, may we ask for these slides, assuming that this matter gets carried over from today? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, I was going to ask that, after today's hearing, all this be sent to us so we have time to review it again before the next meeting. MR. YOVANOVICH: Absolutely, absolutely. So how does the program work? The program works through two overlays that exist. One is in the Growth Management Plan, and one is in the Land Development Code. The Growth Management Plan Overlay is within your agricultural area of your Future Land Use Element, and this overlay was intended to create an incentive -based land -use overlay system. It's based on the principles of Rural Land Stewardship as defined in Section 163.3177(11) of the Florida Statutes. And your Comprehensive Plan is broken into four groups of policies that are applicable to the Rural Lands Stewardship Area. The fust set of policies deals with the overall organization and structure, overall land stewardship program, which I'm going over right now; the Group 2 policies relate to agriculture; the Group 3 policies relate to natural resource protection. That's the stewardship sending area provisions. The Group 4 policies relate to converting land to other uses; that's what we're going through today with the SRA process. And the Group 5 policies deal with the baseline provisions if a property owner elects not to participate in this program. You have to choose to go into the program. You're not forced to go into this program. That's the Growth Management Plan. And I've got some of the provisions I want to highlight for you. And then in the Land Development Code, you're dealing with Section 4.08 of the Land Development Code. And I want to just highlight two of those. Section 4.08.02 is the actual establishment of the overlay that zones the property that allow -- that identifies the uses for the property, identifies the characteristics for the different types of SRAs that are allowed. And then 4.07 are the specific provisions as to how you qualify for each of those four different types of SRAs and what the designation process is. So you'll note in your staff report you have a very different review analysis for an SRA than you would have with your typical rezone to PUD or rezone to straight zoning. You note that you don't have the same findings and areas of review that you would have on a rezone because those decisions have already been made by adopting the overlay. The function of today at the Planning Commission and ultimately the Board of County Commission is to determine whether this land should be designated as an SRA, Stewardship Receiving Page 11 of 89 October 3, 2019 Area, based upon the criteria in 4.08.07. You'll be focusing on suitability. That's, are we open lands? Which we are. And are we not impacting any lands that score greater than a 1.2 on the environmental scale? Ken Passarella will take you through that today to show you we meet those criteria. You will make sure that our master plan is consistent with the requirements of the Land Development Code. You'll make sure that the public facilities will be available to serve the project. You'll make sure that we are fiscally neutral at the horizon year, and horizon year is at buildout. Lucy Gallo will take you through that process. And you'll make sure that we have the necessary SSA credits available to develop this land. You'll also review our SRA development document to make sure it complies with the Land Development Code. Your staff has done that analysis and has determined, based upon further discussions, that we meet all of the requirements of the 4.08.07 of the LDC and, therefore, we're entitled to have this land designated as an SRA village. I've already covered some of this in my presentation, but the program works based upon obtaining credits. That's the currency to develop SRA lands. We create SSAs to develop those credits. That SSA review goes through a very detailed review. Ken Passarella has formed several of the SSAs and can explain that process if you deem it necessary as part of this review process. But we go through an evaluation to determine the credits. Then we take those credits and we use them to establish stewardship receiving areas. We do another review of the environmental aspects of the SRA lands because, again, the way the program works is you have to make sure you're developing on open areas that score less than a 1.2 on the rating scale. And I've already shown you slides that we meet the requirement. We have enough credits in place to entitle all the land. Some of the Growth Management Plan policies I want to focus on is the Group 4 policies, and the purpose of those policies is to enable the conversion of rural lands to other uses in appropriate locations while discouraging urban sprawl. The SRA program itself, by definition, discourages urban sprawl. It was designed and adopted to dictate where development is allowed to occur and, by definition, it is not urban sprawl to develop in the Rural Lands Stewardship Area. So if someone were to say to you, they're developing out east, this is urban sprawl, that is not correct. One of the goals and policies we had to deal with with a final order was to make sure we weren't creating urban sprawl. This program assures that we're not having urban sprawl. Policy 4.6 says the SRA characteristics shall be developed upon innovative planning and development strategies referenced in 163.3168(2), Florida Statutes. These planning strategies and techniques include: Urban villages, new towns, and then it goes on, and mixed-use development that allow the conversion of rural and agricultural lands to other uses while protecting environmentally sensitive areas, maintaining the economic viability of agriculture and other predominantly rural land uses, and providing the cost effective -- I'm sorry -- cost-efficient delivery of public facilities and services. Such development strategies are recognized as methods of discouraging urban sprawl. What we're doing today is not urban sprawl. Policy 4.7 identifies the four types of SRAs, and those are towns, villages, hamlets, and compact rural development. The characteristics of each of those types of SRA are in Attachment C to your Growth Management Plan. Bob will take you through those, and then the specific policies for villages, 4.7.2. 4.7.2 clearly identifies villages as primarily residential communities with a diversity of housing types and a mix of uses appropriate to the scale and character of that particular village. That's what we're doing. We have a diversity of housing types, and we have retail uses and services that meet the needs of our residents. They also meet the needs of Golden Gate Estates, which was another important aspect of the Rural Land Stewardship Program in the first place. Page 12 of 89 October 3, 2019 Policy 4.9, I want to highlight some of that. It says, the primary means of directing development away from wetlands and critical habitat is the prohibition of locating SRAs in FSAs, Flowway Stewardship Areas; HSA, Habitat Stewardship Areas; and WRAs, to further direct development away from wetlands and critical habitat, residential, commercial, manufacturing, etcetera, shall not be sited on lands that receive a Natural Resource Index value of greater than 1.2. Then you'll see the conditional uses also are prohibited on lands that score greater than a 1.2. So how are the environmental aspects addressed in this program? You have the Group 3 policies that deal with SSAs; you have the Group 4 policies that tell you you can't have an SRA in a Habitat Stewardship Area, a Flowway Stewardship Area, or a wetland -- or a Water Retention Area, and any open lands that score greater than 1.2, you can't develop that land. The program is the program. It was blessed by the environmental groups. Those environmental groups recognized that the open lands are where you develop, but you can't develop anything that scores better than a 1.2. So if anybody tells you that we're not meeting the Growth Management Plan requirements for habitat protection, they're wrong. The program's the program. If you don't like the program, you go through the legislative process to change the program. But we are 100 percent consistent with the program as it was developed through extensive community involvement and 100 percent consistent with the program that was recommended for adoption by Florida Wildlife, Collier Audubon, and the Conservancy. You're going to hear some comments about a Water Retention Area and how they work and what they can be used for and what they can't be used for, and you even are going to hear something about what kind of credits you should be able to get in an SSA for impacting Water Retention Areas. Not relevant to today's discussion. We're not hereto talk about SSA -17. We're hereto talk about the Rivergrass Village SRA. Water Retention Areas, I showed them to you on the map, can be used to support the development of an SRA. Policy 4.8 says an SRA may be contiguous to and served by a WRA without requiring the WRA to be designated as an SRA in accordance with Policy 3.12 and 3.13. We don't have to bring the adjacent WRAs, which are going to be utilized as part of water management but also panther -- as basically a -- they're water bodies to protect panthers from coming into the project. Perfectly allowed under the Growth Management Plan. And under the LDC it says, during the permitting to serve -- during permitting to serve new uses within an SRA, additions and modifications to WRAs may be required including, but not limited to, changes to control elevations, discharge rate, stormwater pretreatment, grading, excavation, or fill. Such additions and modifications shall be allowed subject to review and approval of the South Florida Water Management District in accordance with best -management practices. Bottom line is, if anybody tells you we can't impact those WRAs as part of this process, they're wrong. We can, and we go through Water Management District permitting. That's the process. Not today. It's the Water Management District permitting process to address those impacts. I'm going to tum it over to Bob to get into the specifics about this project, but I just want to make sure I leave off with this program was established based upon tremendous community involvement. It was a cooperative effort by landowners who own lands out there. Many of those lands, when you look at that, they agreed to put into Stewardship Sending Areas in return for being able to move forward with development in these open areas. We're honoring that commitment that was made. We are 100 percent consistent with the program as has been agreed to by the property owners. And we -- at the end of our presentation, you will see that we are entitled to have this Rivergrass Village property designated as an SRA for the uses that we're requesting, and we're going to request that the Planning Commission make a recommendation to the Board of County Commissioners for approval of the SRA village. If you'll bear with us, I think we'll answer a lot of your questions, or hopefully answer a lot of Page 13 of 89 October 3, 2019 your questions through our presentations, and we'd like to keep all questions to the end but, of course, you all have the discretion to ask questions whenever you want. So with that, that's the overview of how the program works. Bob will get into the specifics unless you have any questions. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Does anybody have anything that can't wait until they finish the next part of their presentation? (No response.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay, thank you. MR. MULHERE: Thank you. For the record, Bob Mulhere here on behalf of Collier Enterprises. So this is a fairly busy exhibit. I'll go over it for you. This is Attachment C, which is in the Growth Management Plan part of the RLSA program. It's also reflected in the LDC. I have additional slides, so don't strain your eyes, because we'll go over this again with a little more clarity. I just wanted to point out this slide which lists on the heading "typical characteristics," and moving down it has various typical characteristics such as size and residential units that are allowed, housing styles, maximum floor area ratios or intensities that apply to some uses, goods and services, and so forth. And then as you go across that top heading, it lists the four types of SRAs which Rich already discussed; one being a town, Rivergrass being a village, there's also a hamlet, and a compact rural development. Outlined in green are those standards that apply to village. This will be a little bit easier, I think, for you to see. Again, these typical characteristics are listed for a village now, specifically. Some of those are required and some of those are optional. So a village can be between 100 and 1,000 acres. We are just under 1,000 acres. A village may allow up -- between one and four dwelling units per gross acre, and our density is 2.5 dwelling units per gross acre. There is a diversity of single-family and multifamily housing styles required, and we are providing that. There are floor area ratios that are both required and optional. So for retail and office, there's a maximum floor area ratio of .5. For group housing, that's an optional use. But if you choose to do group housing, you would have the county's standard floor area ratio of .45. You are required to provide a certain level of civic, governmental, institutional uses, and they are limited to a floor area ratio of .6. Transient lodging is allowed up to 26 units per acre. It's not required. What is required? Well, you have to provide neighborhood goods and services using the formula that's provided herein of 25 square feet per gross building area per DUE, per dwelling unit, which translates to the minimum numbers that Rich went over of 62,500. That's the minimum. And then, of course, we've allowed up to 80,000 square feet. There has to be a centralized -- or decentralized community treatment system. In this case, Collier County's providing, basically, sewer and water services to this community. There are various requirements for parks and open space which we meet. Lakes. You must provide a minimum of 35 percent open space. We exceed that. I'll go over that in greater detail. You have to have an interconnected system of collector and local roads with connection to a collector or arterial. We connect to an existing arterial and a future proposed arterial. So I wanted to just show you the surrounding zoning and general location, which I know you're all familiar with. But the lands that are included within the Rivergrass and the lands surrounding Rivergrass to the east are zoned A/MHO/RLSAO. That's agricultural zoning with a Mobile Home Overlay, and a Rural Lands Stewardship Overlay. To the west there is -- the square that you see that reads "Hyde Park proposed SRA," that is part of the RLSA. It's just a section of land that sort of sticks out there but was included in the RLSA, and the other lands to the west are zoned Golden Gate Estates, "E" estates. There will be a separation between Rivergrass and all of those lands to the west which will be created by future Big Cypress Parkway. Page 14 of 89 October 3, 2019 I think Rich went over this, but I'll just do it again briefly. The existing -- or master plan that you received originally is on the left. The changes that you can see highlighted in red are on the right, the little triangle up towards the top on right. It took a fair amount of time to negotiate with the county on the actual and very detailed widths for Big Cypress -- cross-section for Big Cypress right-of-way, which we have now agreed to. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Bob, I had asked Rich to tell us what dated documents he's using. I don't recognize either -- I recognize the one on the left, but the one on the right I don't know what -- where's that -- where -- when did you provide that to us, or when did staff provide that to us? COMMISSIONER FRYER: It hasn't. MR. MULHERE: I don't know that staff has provided this to you. MS. GUNDLACH: We've provided it. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Tell me what page it's on. Honestly, I need to know what you -- I haven't seen that one. MR. MULHERE: I'll clarify. I don't believe that that has been provided. A very similar one was provided. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MR. MULHERE: Let me tell you, we were ready. We provided you with the most recent, and staff provided you with the most recent master plan, but within the last two days there were some very minor changes to Big Cypress -- there were 1.15 additional acres needed to be included in the right-of-way beyond what you have in your package. There's nothing substantial in this change, though. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I'm not saying there is. I just -- I'm trying to match it up to what was reviewed. That's all I'm tying to do. I'm not being critical. I'm not saying it's wrong. I'm just trying to match it up. MS. ASHTON-CICKO: Bob, so you're saying that the master plan that you provided to Nancy that she provided under cover with the memo -- MR. MULHERE: Yes. MS. ASHTON-CICKO: -- is not the master plan you're using? MR. MULHERE: It's changed. It's reduced by 1.15 acres. MS. ASHTON-CICKO: Okay. I haven't seen anything. MR. MULHERE: Right. And we understand that we have to provide all of that. We wanted to show you the most recent master plan that the county required us to change because of changing Big Cypress. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Bob, all I ask is that you clarify those kind of points when you -- MR. MULHERE: Yeah. I'm sorry. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: When I see something and I don't recognize it, I just have to ask the question, so... MR. MULHERE: And I can state on the record there's nothing -- we didn't change any uses. It's not substantial. There are minor acreage changes which we will -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I didn't think you would have. That's not the point. I just want to make sure I understand what document we're using. MS. ASHTON-CICKO: Well, I can't read this document that's on your display, and I can tell you that there were a lot of changes in the master plan that weren't specified in the package that went to Nancy. So I'm a little uncomfortable, but I guess we'll have time to review this before you approve it. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, we will, because I've asked them to provide this presentation to us. They're going to. We have at least two weeks, if not more, before we need to refine all this stuff and go for a vote. It might even be longer than that. So we'll have plenty of time to get the right one down -- nailed down. MR. MULHERE: And we also assumed that there would probably be some additional changes. So rather than submit a fourth revision after you make your recommendations, we thought, these are very Page 15 of 89 October 3, 2019 minor. Let's change it only one more time based on your recommendations. MS. ASHTON-CICKO: But it's not minor, Bob, because all the numbers change, the open space, access changes. MR. MULHERE: Yes, they do change. MS. ASHTON-CICKO: You know, so every time we have to recalculate. MR. MULHERE: They do change. MS. ASHTON-CICKO: And we're getting things piecemeal. MR. YOVANOVICH: Here's the problem, if I may. It wasn't until Monday afternoon that right-of-way finally told us their minimum necessary width of right-of-way which caused us to make another 1.15 -acre reduction to the project. We understand that there will need to be a lot of changes made to the original 9.9 -- nine hundred and ninety-nine point whatever acres it was originally because that's now down to 997. Heidi's been great. Staffs been great. We'll make sure that all the ripple effect of those changes are properly accounted for in all of the documents. What we're just showing you today is the yellow area got a little bit wider than what was previously there. The red triangle is identical to what you -- the updated document, but the yellow area got a little bit wider, which reduced our overall village by another 1.15 acres. It's a process. I apologize for the process, but we've been working for months on trying to finalize the right-of-way requirements, and it required us to shrink the village by 1.15 acres. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. And, Rich, what I'm trying to do as we build up to the vote, which could occur on the 17th or the 3rd of November, whatever date we hit. Prior to the vote I'd like to have a clean set of documents after all the discussion's occurred to whatever you guys settle on and what we've expected so we don't have this happen. I want to make sure that whatever's voted on is the right document, and that's the only reason I'm pointing these things out. MR. YOVANOVICH: And I appreciate that. And we will resubmit to your staff the documents that need to be revised based upon the reduced acreage in the village to make sure that everything matches. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. And I'll be looking, staff, both Comprehensive Planning and Zoning to make sure at that time that the document that's finally produced has been -- is reviewed by both of you to the extent you need to review it, so... MR. MULHERE: And I always submit both a redline and clean version so that it's easy to track. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And that's appreciated. Thank you. MR. MULHERE: So this has just some general information. You've already -- this 997.53 -acre size is the current size. You can see the exhibit over there which shows the outline of Rivergrass RLSA as well as shows the future Big Cypress Parkway. I just want to point out there are no, zero, acres within the proposed Rivergrass SRA, Village SRA, that score a Natural Resource Index greater than 1.2. There are zero acres included in the village which fall within the Area of Critical State Concern Overlay. There are zero acres in the SRA that are designated as a WRA. There are -- COMMISSIONER FRYER: Bob, excuse me. On this slide that you have -- and I'd had discussions with Mr. Yovanovich about to the extent, if any, to which this right-of-way was going to replace DeSoto or be next to DeSoto. Where is DeSoto on this map? MR. MULHERE: So DeSoto is just a little bit west. Give me a second and I'll sort of show you the general location here. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Okay. MR. MULHERE: Right here. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Okay. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: No, he's over to the right. He's got to get a little bit closer. MR. MULHERE: A little bit to the east. Page 16 of 89 October 3, 2019 CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Between the square and the rectangle green. Half an inch to the right. COMMISSIONER FRYER: So it's that road that goes through Hyde Park? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: It dead ends at Hyde Park. MR. MULHERE: It dead ends at Oil Well heading north. COMMISSIONER FRYER: So if one extended the road that one sees in Hyde Park south, that would tell you the displacement to the west of DeSoto from the -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: What road -- COMMISSIONER FRYER: --Big Cypress? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: -- in Hyde Park? There's no road in Hyde Park. COMMISSIONER FRYER: What'sthis? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: That's part of the excavation left in the ground. There's no roads in there. MR. MULHERE: Yeah. There are no roads in there. COMMISSIONER FRYER: But that line is where the road would be? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: No. MR. MULHERE: There won't -- this will not -- excuse me. DeSoto will not extend north. It will continue to tee at Oil Well. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Got it, okay. MR. MULHERE: Lands to the northeast and south are all, as I mentioned, previously zoned agricultural. You can see on the exhibit the WRA designation along here. So thafs -- while it's zoned agriculture, there is a designated WRA. I have another exhibit that will show you that more clearly, but I just want to point it out to you. To the west, again, we'll directly abut the future Big Cypress Parkway; further to the west, Golden Gate Estates. And if you look at the exhibit there, the aerial, you'll see that all of the lands that are included in the SRA are in or have been in active agricultural production for many years. Let me clear that. A little bit of specifics on the village and the requirements. You are required to, in a village, have a minimum of two context zones, and the LDC provides specific requirements and information on those context zones. At a minimum you must have a village center as well as neighborhood general. Those are the two context zones that are required. You have -- and as you probably have already figured out, but the village center is right there. Villages are primarily residential communities. I already discussed the maximum dwelling units that we are requesting of 2,500. Villages are allowed to request a density of between I and 4. We are at 2.5. We will -- we have agreed to provide a minimum of 250 multifamily units. We are requiring -- we are providing -- and a variety of housing types is required, including specifically both single and multifamily. This village center is centrally located. It's required to be the focal point of the community's goods and services and, as I said before, it will have a minimum of 62,500 square feet and a maximum of 80,000 square feet of those types of uses. We are required to provide 25,000 square feet of civic, governmental, and institutional uses, and as the project further evolves through the process, we will figure out what those institutional, governmental, or civic uses will be. I mentioned that the master utilities will be served by the Collier County Water and Sewer District. We have worked with Collier County Utility Department -- Public Utilities Department. They have plans for -- and specifically plans that relate to all of the villages that you saw that are proposed and serving those villages with significant enhancements and improvements and upgrades. We are including one golf course. You can see it on the master plan. And -- just in here. That, at Page 17 of 89 October 3, 2019 this point, is intended to be open to the public. It may not be forever open to the public, but we realize that will make the golf course trip subject to our trip cap if it is open to the public. As I mentioned, we are exceeding the minimum requirement of 35 percent open space. The minimum requirement's 349.16. That's 35 percent of the overall acreage of the village. We're providing 571.91 acres, which is driven by the lakes and by the golf course. Because of that open -space requirement -- and typically in the urban area you have a lesser open -space requirement of 25 percent or less, depending on the size of the project. Because of that open -space requirement, as you provide that 35 percent or more, that creates a more compact development. The development area is compacted by the open space. We are required to provide a minimum of 9.97 acres of parks. We will exceed that number. We'll meet or exceed that number. Presumably we'll exceed it. That number's been adjusted based on the slightly smaller size of the village as we discussed. So along the eastern perimeter is the WRA, and you can see that as it runs along here. And that has a dual purpose. It is, in part, serving a stormwater purpose for the project and for the larger area, but I'm going to let Dominick speak to the specifics of that. But it also has been designed to provide a wildlife deterrent, and that has been coordinated and, of course, Ken Passarella can speak to those issues. But that has been coordinated with the agencies. We do have a trip cap as all projects now are required to have in Collier County, and ours is 1,978 p.m. peak hour net external two-way trips. Norm has a presentation, so I don't want to spend a lot of time on their stuff. I think this is important. Both the county and a third -parry neutral consultant has reviewed our fiscal analysis and found that the project is fiscally neutral, and that's required. You have to demonstrate that. And Lucy Gallo will speak specifically to those issues. We talk about connectivity. This village has been designed to encourage pedestrian and bicycle circulation with an interconnected system of streets and sidewalks, mostly local streets. Obviously, the main entry roads will be larger. We do provide direct access to Oil Well, which is classified as an arterial in the locations depicted on the maps shown. I do want to clarify. This could be a little bit confusing, so I want to clarify something for you here. We have a -- reserved a small parcel right there that may be -- may be utilized by Collier County for various utility facilities, pump station, something like that; I'm certainly not the expert on what they may require that for. But in discussions with them, we've reserved a small parcel there. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Could you point to it again. MR. MULHERE: Yes. It is -- let me just clear that. It is right -- this little parcel right there; right on the corner. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: On the colored master plan, that's labeled as a utility. MR. MULHERE: Yes, it is; yes. It's just on the corner -- would be the northeast corner of Oil Well and future Big Cypress. COMMISSIONER FRYER: I see it. Thank you. MR. MULHERE: The reason I point that out to you is that this arrow that shows -- this one-way arrow here. It looks like there's two access points very close to each other, but one is only for that utility site and only if that is likely -- is needed in the future. You can see that there's an interconnection right here to Hyde Park, future Hyde Park, assuming it gets approved, and they will have a village center. There will be an interconnection so folks can get to that. And then the rest -- and there's interconnection in various other locations along the future Big Cypress here and here and here that line up with Estates streets, and then also to Oil Well into the village center and into the development, and there is an interconnection from the development here into the village center. Both pedestrian, vehicular, bicycle. All three. COMMISSIONER FRY: Bob? Page 18 of 89 October 3, 2019 MR. MULHERE: Yes. COMMISSIONER FRY: To the far right, that interconnection appears only to be to the north of Oil Well Road. No interconnection to the south? MR. MULHERE: That's correct. So this -- I think maybe Rich went over this. If I was listening closely, I think he did. So we're just repeating that the village is entitled with environmental stewardship credits. You can see SSA -15, which is where we are achieving those credits. That has a total of 7,261 credits, and we are -- by the current calculations, we'd be required to provide 6,205.36, and that will be part of what we go over with that slight acreage change. So the SSA -15 totals 5,209 acres. You can see by looking at the exhibit that about five times -- over five times of sending lands are being protected in exchange for designating the village as an SRA. So this is -- comes from that exhibit, that Attachment C, and it's just a quick checklist. You look at the village requirements on the left column, and the center column is Rivergrass, and then whether or not we meet those columns -- you'll see they're all checked because we do meet them all: Size, the density, the diversity of single and multifamily housing types. The -- our SRA document does establish a floor area ratio for both retail and civic and governmental consistent with what's required. We are providing the neighborhood goods and services. We are being providing -- we are -- Collier County's providing water and wastewater. We will provide parks and public green space to meet or exceed the 1 percent requirement. The project has over 200 acres of lakes. We exceed the open space. We'll meet the requirement for what's referenced as a moderate range of services; 10 square feet per dwelling unit of civic, governmental, and institutional uses. And as I just demonstrated to you, we do have an interconnected system of collector and local roads with connections to the arterial roadway system. I won't spend much time on this, but I just wanted to insert this slide so that you could see the land -use summary, the neighborhood general, which includes the 156 -and -change acres of golf courses, 538 acres. There's 105 acres -and -change of road right-of-way. There's the golf club amenities site, your lakes, other open space, and the perimeter buffers. The village center is just under 21 acres in size. That totals 997.53. There is a table that is provided on the SRA master plan that provides the calculation for our open space so that staff can review exactly how we calculated our open space. This is the proposed Big Cypress Parkway right-of-way exhibit. At this point including the changes that were made as of Monday, late Monday -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Now, that's not orientated north/south. MR. MULHERE: No. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: All the rest were. Okay. MR. MULHERE: Yeah. I think it's because of the length of the exhibit and the aerial. To show it all, it was hard to turn it up the other way. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I'm trying to make sure everybody -- MR. MULHERE: And I can't do it, but -- here. North is -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: North is left to right, or to the right. Right, yeah. MR. MULHERE: So -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: No, that s south. MR. MULHERE: Clear. Sorry. There's Oil Well -- here's Oil Well. Okay, so -- no, I did have it right. COMMISSIONER FRYER: The two of them are different. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Oh, the one to the top, north to the right. The one to the bottom is -- the north is to the left. MR. MULHERE: Okay. So let's do it this way. Here's Oil Well here, here's Oil Well there, and Page 19 of 89 October 3, 2019 here is Hyde Park, which is right here. Right? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: It's between Oil Well Road and Golden Gate Estates on the top one, north of the Rivergrass double lotted -- dotted line. Where it says Hyde Park, right? MR. MULHERE: I'm looking for it. Right here. Okay. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Middle of the page. MR. MULHERE: Sothis is just the alignment. It just shows you that the proposed Rivergrass abuts, and we are providing acreage -- exceeding 45 acres? -- exceeding 45 acres for that right-of-way adjacent to the proposed Rivergrass. Sorry about that. I was confused, too. COMMISSIONER CHRZANOWSKI: Bob? MR. MULHERE: Yes. COMMISSIONER CHRZANOWSKI: Chairman? \ CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Yes, sir. COMMISSIONER CHRZANOWSKI: Can I ask you a question? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Absolutely. COMMISSIONER CHRZANOWSKI: How many of those Golden Gate Estates roads are eventually going to tie to that Big Cypress? MR. MULHERE: Okay. COMMISSIONER CHRZANOWSKI: All of them or just -- MR. MULHERE: I'd rather go back to it. Slide 33. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: They're on the master plan, I believe, aren't they? MR. MULHERE: It is a little bit hard to read. So 43rd -- how many was the question, rather than me -- COMMISSIONER CHRZANOWSKI: Why not all of them? MR. MULHERE: Well, no, I don't think all of them. I think there are two that will connect, and then you also have the extension of Vanderbilt Beach Road which ultimately will connect. And, what, Golden Gate Parkway? And Randall. COMMISSIONER CHRZANOWSKI: It seems you're running past all of them almost right up to the edge of the road. It seems like it would be easy to connect them all. MR. MULHERE: Well, that will be up to the county. They -- you know, that will be up to the county whether they connect them or don't connect them. We know that some are connecting, and we do know that Randall is connecting. Vanderbilt Beach is connecting. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Stan, one thing you may want to consider, the more connections you make on a road we're trying to have -- streamline more or less for traffic, the slower it's going to make the traffic and more disruptive to the neighborhoods. And I can tell you Vanderbilt Beach Road ran into that just recently when they were trying to connect multiple roads going out to the Estates. It brings a lot of traffic into the local neighborhoods that most of the people don't want. Anyway, I'm hoping what you're suggesting will never happen. MR. MULHERE: So at this point, I have a little bit more to go over after the other experts that are with us here present their presentations. They're not extremely long, these other presentations, but I didn't know if you wanted to take a break now. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I was going to tell you we're going to break at 10:30, but we'll break -- if you're at a break point now, we'll just as soon break now, and it's 10 -- we'll come back in 15 minutes. We'll come back at 10:40. MR. MULHERE: Okay. Great, thank you. (A recess was had from 10:24 a.m. to 10:40 p.m.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay, everybody. Welcome back from the break. And before we go into the continuation of the Rivergrass presentation, we're going to confirm some dates for future hearings for this board. Ray was nice enough to be able to iron it all out. And the AUIR will be heard on the 21 st, Page 20 of 89 October 3, 2019 that's a Monday in the evening, and it's at the Growth Management building at Horseshoe Drive. It will be Room 609/610. It's the big conference room there. It will not be televised. It will be transcribed and audio. So all of us will meet in that room on the 21st at 5:00, and the staff will be available to walk through the AUIR. COMMISSIONER FRY: What room? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: 609/610. It's the big conference room at Developmental Services. And then on the 31 st Ray was able to confirm this room is open to us all day long. So we'll start at our regular time. The agenda will come out, and the staff reports will come out as necessary for that date. But on the 31 st we're going to hear all of the items that were previously scheduled for October 17th, and it will lead off with the Hammock Bay that's been continued from a couple other meetings, or will be by that time. So what I'd like from this board by motion is to accept those dates as continued dates for the items in question, and that way Judy Puig, when she writes up the agenda, can put all -- the little italicized sentence above the item that it's being continued to the 31 st or whatever date it is. COMMISSIONER FRY: So moved. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Second. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Moved and seconded. Discussion? Yes, Karl COMMISSIONER FRY: Can we assume that we'll receive a packet in advance of the 3 I st meeting with all the agenda items up to date for that meeting? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, actually, you'll receive a packet in advance of the 17th, because that's when it was originally scheduled for. So just hold that packet. And your Hammock Park packet was already issued to you. So unless there's a supplement, hold that packet. And that will be the first thing up on the 31 st along with the following item from the 17th that we're moving there. COMMISSIONER FRY: The reason I ask is that when we're in this meeting and want to refer to a certain page number from the packet, if we have two or three different packets, its very difficult to all find the same spot. MR. BELLOWS: Yeah. I understand what. But when we have superceded documents, we're going to repeal the other ones or take them out of the pile so you don't have current documents and those that have been repealed. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: But for the 31st we should have two packets. We have issued already for Hammock Park or Hammock Commerce Park, whatever the name of that is. That's Packet 1, and that will be only used for that item. Packet 2 would be all the items that we originally have scheduled for the 17th that are now being moved to the 31 st. And that shouldn't be too cumbersome just to have two different ones. Okay. With that, then, Norm is here to entertain us for a while. MR. TREBELCOCK: Good morning, CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Oh, I didn't ask for the vote. We made a motion. We had discussion. Is there a vote to allocate as noted as the motion for these new items? COMMISSIONER CHRZANOWSKI: Aye. COMMISSIONER FRY: Aye. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Aye. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Aye. COMMISSIONER HOMIAK: Aye. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Anybody opposed? (No response.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Motion carries 5-0. Thank you. COMMISSIONER DEARBORN: Aye. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: 6-0. Page 21 of 89 October 3, 2019 Okay, Norm. MR. TREBILCOCK: Thank you. Good morning. For the record, my name is Norman Trebilcock, professional engineer/certified planner with over 29 years of experience here locally. Also with me is Ciprian Malaescu who helped prepare the traffic studies for the project as well. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Now, just -- and I'm sorry. I just thought of something. We were going to take these in order, and now I guess then -- are you just making this presentation as part of the beginning discussion for traffic? Because if you are, I want to make sure we don't have any questions from the presenter on the issues that you just presented. We just got done with Bob and Rich presenting a series of issues. I want to make sure we are -- MR. YOVANOVICH: We are going to touch on -- you're going to hear from the following three professionals as part of our overall presentation. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MR. YOVANOVICH: Norm. Then you'll hear from Ken Passarella, and you'll hear from Lucy Gallo. Bob will get back up for a couple of more issues. Then we'll be done with our presentation. We envision -- once we're complete with all of our presentations, I know you wanted to go back and deal with transportation specifically, environmental, and the economic analysis today and anything else. But we wanted to do this as part of our overall presentation first and then reserve specific -- we'll do it any way you want. We prefer that -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: No. MR. YOVANOVICH: We prefer that you do the specific questions to experts after our complete presentation is done. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, here's what I was looking for. If this is the traffic presentation by you and you'll finish out with the economic and possibly environmental, if we even get time to get into that today, but let's say those three as part of today's presentation by you -all, I've got -- county staff has people they -- outside consultants they brought down for this meeting. And we will then proceed into the traffic consultant from the county, unless Norm has more to say prior to that, and we'll get into the meat of the traffic issues. Then the next one up would be the economic one in which the county has someone here for economics, too. They'll present their side of their argument as staff, and you guys will jump in. And if you have more presentation to make at that time, you're more than welcome to, and then we'll get into questions and economics, and we'll do the same thing through environmental. MR. YOVANOVICH: I don't envision that when Norm goes through his slides right now -- we would prefer to then move on to our next presenter and then our next presenter, finish our entire presentation -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: That's what -- I'm anticipating the same thing. MR. YOVANOVICH: And then you can call back up Norm, Ken, and Lucy as to those specific topics when we're complete. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And what we'll probably do is after you get done, I'll fust call back the traffic consultant for the county, or the county's traffic people. They can make their presentations and comments, and at that time I would suggest the Planning Commission, after they've heard both input, then start discussing traffic. We'll finish up traffic to the extent we can today on what we know today, and then we'll move into the next one, which is economic. That's how I was anticipating it. MR. YOVANOVICH: Environmental. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: No. Economic's second, environment's third. MR. YOVANOVICH: We thought it was traffic, environmental, economic. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: But you asked if I could make sure the traffic was heard this morning, so I switched the agenda around at your request, and at the same time I looked at the -- I talked to staff. They have someone from an economic perspective here that they need to get on, just like you did, so we were going to go economic second. Is there a reason you can't? Page 22 of 89 October 3, 2019 MR. YOVANOVICH: Is there a reason why I can't? Because Mr. Passarella, I believe, has an issue with the following meeting, the 17th. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Oh. MR. YOVANOVICH: Since Lucy doesn't have an issue with coming back on the 17th, we'd like to wind her up today. Mr. Strain, I don't think the county has much of a presentation on those three topics, because I think we have agreement on them. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: How do you -- there was a bunch of recommendations in the two staff reports, both comprehensive and zoning that seemed to have a lot of recommendations that weren't resolved. MR. YOVANOVICH: The ultimate -- when you see when we get to the end of the story, the end of the book, you'll see that we have resolved -- the only -- the only outstanding issue, as I opened up today -- based upon the staff report to the Planning Commission, the only outstanding issue that I'm aware of is not are we going to give the county Big Cypress Parkway right-of-way, it's when are we going to do it. We envision doing it in increments. As each village comes along, we would give the right-of-way. Staff is asking for all of it as part of this Rivergrass Village. The rest of the issues with regard to the staff recommendations at the end -- at the end of your report, we have met with staff and those have been resolved, and we're going to present that to you through Bob -- through Bob. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. The only part I'm a little concerned about is the agenda was posted with the reorder to accommodate you and to accommodate our people. I'll just have to see. During lunch break, I'll ask whoever is doing the economics from our side and the environmental just to catch with me quickly after lunch or just before lunch starts, and I need to get a read on how that's going to work for everybody. MR. YOVANOVICH: That's fine. I mean, it would be a total shock to me if there's -- I mean, your independent reviewer found us to be fiscally neutral, and your environmental staff has found us to be consistent with the Land Development Code and Growth Management Plan. I don't know how long of a presentation that will take, but maybe somebody knows something I don't know. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, environmental does have a PowerPoint -- MR. YOVANOVICH: I understand. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: -- that they're going to present, and I'm not sure what the other side -- what the other economic one is. Okay. Thank you. Norm, sorry to interrupt. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Chairman, do I understand, then, that other than the economic person who can't come back on the next meeting, that everybody else is available -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: It's the environmental person. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Environmental person. Everybody else from both sides, I mean, the applicant and the county, the experts are able to be in attendance subsequently for the next two or three meetings if necessary? MR. YOVANOVICH: My experts? I will -- we would prefer -- the answer to your question is Heather will be here on the 17th, if necessary, to answer environmental concerns -- environmental questions you may have, and Chip will be here on the 17th. Norm is the main presenter, and Ken Passarella are the main presenters on the traffic and environmental topics. If we have to address concerns, we'll be able to do that. But we would like to -- those to be hold -over issues that may come up as a result of maybe public comment, not as a result of questions from the Planning Commission. COMMISSIONER FRYER: So am I correct that no one needs to be heard from beginning to end today? Page 23 of 89 October 3, 2019 CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well -- MR. YOVANOVICH: You're going to hear from us beginning to end today. COMMISSIONER FRYER: From all of your experts? MR. YOVANOVICH: During my presentation in chief, yes. To the extent that you have questions when we're done with our presentation, they will be here. If you're quitting at 4, we'll be here till 4. If you're quitting at 6, we'll be here till 6. COMMISSIONER FRYER: We're quitting at 4. So what about subsequent days? Are there any constraints? MR. YOVANOVICH: We'll be prepared. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MR. YOVANOVICH: We will be prepared. COMMISSIONER FRYER: And the county's the same -- same situation with county's experts? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: The county has experts they brought in -- or consultants. I don't know -- and their schedules, I'm not sure they'll be as flexible, but we'll find out as we go through the day. Whatever it is, it is. We'll just work with it. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Thank you. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Norm, go ahead. MR. TREBILCOCK: Thank you. I'll just review the -- give you an overview of our traffic analysis. You -all have the more detailed reports that we prepared, but I'll cover the -- excuse me -- the standards that we followed, the trip generation, distribution assignment, level -of -service impacts, intersection analysis we did, looking at the future planning for the future, and then review the conclusions of the studies. We did do our Traffic Impact Statement per county standards. The trip distribution, land -use codes, internal capture, pass -by rates were coordinated and agreed upon with staff as part of our methodology meeting coordination that we do. We are using the current 2018 AUIR criteria regarding the transportation planning issues for the project. The ITE, or Institute of Transportation Engineers', Trip Generation Manual latest edition is used in the studies as well. Background traffic is based on the 2018 AUK Annual Update and Inventory Report, using the county, Collier County data. Background traffic is grown per staff guidance of 2 percent minimum or historical rate of growth or trip bank, whichever is greater. Existing road network is based on the 2018 AUIR level of services. And then when we look at the future commitments where you're looking at the five-year work program, also because we are looking at a 10 -year planning horizon for this, we're looking at a snapshot of the 2040 cost -feasible plan but the improvements that are identified to be completed between 2021 and 2030 are considered committed, and then also some of the committed improvements from the one -cent sales tax as well. Impacts to the roadway links and intersections are evaluated based on applying our proposed project traffic onto the individual roadway links or segments of roadways as well on the background traffic. In terms of our proposed trip analysis, the proposed development program, we are looking at the single-family. Under multifamily, what that includes is the attached villas from a traffic perspective: Apartments, townhomes, and condominiums. Then we also run the governmental and commercial uses as well, and Bob had mentioned about the golf course, too. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Norm. MR. TREBILCOCK: Yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I know we weren't supposed to ask questions, but I just want to make sure. This is different numbers than you have in your proposal, the master -- or the SRA -- you have 250 multifamily. You're showing 1,086 here. Is there -- MR. TREBILCOCK: Correct. So what I explained is that also includes attached villas. So from a zoning standpoint, they can be looked at as single-family; however, from a trip -- traffic analysis, the Page 24 of 89 October 3, 2019 attached villas are looked at as a multifamily product for trip generation purposes as a standard in the county. So that's why you have -- that's why I'll tend to present those different numbers and give you that footnote. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I just -- yeah. There's -- yeah -- MR. TREBILCOCK: Yes, sir. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I appreciate it. There's been so much data, I want to make sure I understand it. MR. TREBILCOCK: Yes, sir. Uh-huh. Then the trip generation buildout, again, it takes into account internal capture, pass -by rates, and it gives us that net external traffic in the lower right-hand corner of the 1,978 p.m. peak -hour trips. That becomes a trip cap for the project. We had an agreed-upon trip distribution. We looked at the percentages of splitting the traffic for the development. We also had a sub -split for the commercial with the understanding that some of the commercial may distribute a little differently than some of the residential because you're attracting some of the surrounding residential folks as well. So we identify that. And then that translates into actual -- the p.m. peak -hour trips. Those percentages get applied as well, and that's what we used for the analysis that we performed. In looking at the site access for the project -- so on Oil Well Road along here, we'd have three accesses for the project, and then Big Cypress Parkway. Along here we'd have four accesses. All of our access would be consistent with the access management resolution Collier County has, and we would adhere to those spacing standards for any of the access points on the project. In our intersection operational analysis, we were required by county staff to look at five intersections. And in that analysis what we did is looked at different conditions, existing conditions, and then 2030 conditions without project, with project, with improvements, and then with additional improvements needed caused by the project, and that's what we did. And so looking at 2030 without the project, just a couple of key intersections. This is Randall and Immokalee intersection. That's -- and at -grade improvements are currently under review for a PD&E, but those improvements would be committed and made, including the four-laning of Randall Boulevard to the east to at least Eighth Street. And there would be triple lefts, westbound lefts on Randall Boulevard. So that would improve that intersection. On Oil Well and DeSoto the four-laning widening that is committed to occur would include a westbound left -turn lane, eastbound right -turn lanes that would help in that area. And then we did identify an impacted intersection at Wilson -- at Immokalee and Wilson to add an additional westbound left improvement there. With the project in place and needed improvements would be at Oil Well and Immokalee and then also at hnmokalee and Wilson. And we identified there that there'd be an additional northbound right -turn lane on Immokalee Road. You'd have dual rights, and then also additional through capacity at the intersection of homokalee and Wilson. The conclusion is those analyzed intersections will operate at acceptable standards with the committed improvements and the project fair -share mitigation, us providing improvements as part of our fair -share mitigation as well. This is just to illustrate the improvement at Immokalee and Randall, the concept plan that's been proposed where you'd have a divided Randall Boulevard that currently is just a two-lane undivided road be divided, and then also you'd have the improvements at grade. The future improvements at this would be a grade -separated flyover. But that's -- these at -grade improvements will handle things for us on the project here. Another important planning tool to look at is in May of this year the Board of County Commissioners recommended the -- in the Randall Boulevard/Oil Well Road corridor study this Page 25 of 89 October 3, 2019 improvement plan, that's the two -plus future network plan. And what you can see is Randall Boulevard -- is some important improvements to Randall that would head out east, and also Oil Well Road and Everglades Boulevard. But kind of pinning along the side that's really important is future Big Cypress Parkway and how that kind of ties the network together when Vanderbilt Beach Road gets extended over, and it kind of creates an excellent network system for the county as well. So in planning for the future, that's really a key component of our project that I see from a transportation standpoint is providing that right-of-way and the stormwater management treatment for Big Cypress Parkway. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: You're going to make sure we get sent a copy of this with the other presentations? MR. TREBILCOCK: Yes, sir. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Everything shown today? MR. TREBILCOCK: Yes, sir. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Thank you. MR. TREBILCOCK: So in conclusion, none of the roadways are forecasted to become deficient as a result of our additional project traffic. Collier County has planned funding of $117 million for Vanderbilt Beach Road extension, Oil Well Road widening, and Randall Boulevard widening intersection improvements that will help improve capacity but also will help in the overall circulation and relief of the roadways in the area as well. A detailed evaluation of our actual project access points will occur during site improvement process, turn lanes and signalization, and that occurs during the permitting, the platting process for the project. And the trip cap has been established for the project and agreed upon the 1,978 two-way p.m. peak -hour trips. The proposed intersection improvements, we identified would be subject to fair -share mitigation that we've agreed to. And then the right-of-way and stormwater management for future Big Cypress Parkway along our project's west boundary being an important collector arterial roadway. We've also agreed -- already provided, actually, right-of-way and water management for Oil Well Road at no cost to the county. And also per the landowner contribution agreement, the pending one, they're committed to providing right-of-way and water management for Immokalee Road at no cost to the county as well. Additional mitigation of the impact: Payment of roadway impact fees for the project as building permits are issued, and it's -- $17 million is estimated in road impact fees for the project. With that, I'll turn things over to Ken Passarella with Passarella to talk about the environmental. MR. MULHERE: I just need to pull up that presentation for him. MR. PASSARELLA: That isn't it. MR. MULHERE: What do you mean that isn't it? I just had it up. Let's try it again. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Make sure you use the mic, Bob, even for the comments. MR. MULHERE: I'm just getting the -- I see. Here it is right here. I'm sorry. I am so sorry. It's coming up now. MR. PASSARELLA: For the record, Ken Passarella with Passarella & Associates. I'm president and principal ecologist with Passarella & Associates, and I have Heather from my office here in support as well. And I'm going to be providing an overview of the NRI Assessment for the project. The NRI Assessment is the Natural Resource Index Assessment. And one of the things I want to touch upon is Rich had gone over some of this in his presentation, but I also wanted to reiterate this in my presentation as well, is you're going to hear a lot of acronyms as I go through my presentation, so I wanted you to be aware of what all those acronyms stand for, because they start getting confusing after a while because Page 26 of 89 October 3, 2019 there's so many of them. Again, I'm going to be talking about the NRI Assessment, and NRI stands Natural Resource Index. And within the Rural Lands Stewardship Area, which we refer to as the RLSA, there's various areas that have been designated. Rich went over this. These are the Flowway Stewardship Area or FSA. The Flowway Stewardship Area are areas of high natural resource value that were identified during the development of the RLSA area. In particular, the Flowway Stewardship Areas are related to wetland areas. In particular, those are the Camp Keais Strand and the Okaloacoochee Slough that you see on the map here. The Camp Keais Strand located on the left-hand side, the blue areas, and the Okaloacoochee Slough, the blue areas located on the right-hand side there. Habitat Stewardship Areas, or HSA, are native habitat areas or areas that may contribute to habitat for listed species in the area and are designated with a high natural resource value. Those are shown on this map in the areas in green. So those areas are adjacent to or contiguous to the FSAs. They build upon larger areas of natural habitat within the RLSA. As I mentioned, they may be natural or Native Habitat Areas such as pine flats, but they may also be strategic farm fields that are located within an FSA area or adjacent to an FSA that, if restored, would create significant habitat for listed species and wildlife in the area. We also have Water Retention Areas, or WRAs. As Rich mentioned, those WRAs are permitted agricultural reservoirs located within the RLSA. So those areas are typically bermed and diked off from the surrounding farm fields and used for water storage as part of the agricultural operations. Now, WRAs could have natural wetlands, and many of them do. So those areas are identified on the map as well. Most of the areas we're talking about are the pink areas, which are the open lands on that previous map that Rich had. They're shown in kind of a light yellow here. Those are where the Stewardship Receiving Areas, or SRAs, would be located, and Steward Sending Areas, or SSAs, are the areas from which you draw the credits, as Rich had previously explained. So what I'm going to be doing is going over the Natural Resource Index Assessment that was done for the Rivergrass SRA, and this Natural Resource Index Assessment includes documentations that refines the NRI values that were assigned during the original Collier County RLSA Assessment Study. As Rich had mentioned in his presentation, back in 2000 and 2002 there were studies that were done which came up with the development of the RLSA and the RLSA program, and that's also the same time when the Natural Resource Index Assessment was developed at that time as well. This assessment is a GIS analysis where resource values are calculated for every acre in the study area using a Raster model. So this is a model. It's a GIS model, Geographical Information System model, that is done to create these scores. This model was previously developed as part of the program back in 2002. We did not create this model, Passarella & Associates. We're simply implementing the model and running the model on this particular project for Rivergrass SRA. The Raster model uses one -acre grid cells that receive a score value based on the six Natural Resource Indices. So in this graphic you see here in front of you, this is an overlay showing the grid pattern that develops these one -acre cells. So each one of these one -acre cells will be scored for each one of these six indices. So on this map, if you were to count them, this site being 998 acres, there would be 998 cells there. And as I go through this presentation, I'm also going to address some of the comments that were received, I believe, from Mr. Frankenberger for the Natural Resources Service, Inc., had provided some comments to the county regarding the NRI Assessment. So I will try to address some of those comments as I go through my presentation. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Just so you know, some of us may have questions involving all that. Page 27 of 89 October 3, 2019 We've had a lot of different documentation come in. I'm going to -- at least from my part, and I'll ask the others. You'll finish your presentation. We'll reserve our comments and questions about those hopefully till after we get back into the full environmental discussion. MR. PASSARELLA: Okay. The reason I brought that up was from the Natural Resource Services, Inc., one of the comments they had addressed was that we didn't provide a scoring sheet for this in paper format, and I'm going to explain to this (sic) why we would not do that, because we would simply be adding an additional 998 pages of information into that large package that I believe was mentioned was already 1,500 pages. So in order to reduce the amount of paperwork, we provided this in all electronic format to the county staff for the review so we didn't generate another 998 pages of paper that somebody has to look at. So for SRAs, lands greater than one acre with an NRI score greater than 1.2 shall be retained in a natural state. And I'll go through how we scored each one of these grids. As I mentioned, this NRI methodology's already been used to establish Stewardship Receiving Areas such as Ave Maria and also 16 SSAs that are already in place. So this scoring is nothing -- is not anything new. It's simply being applied now to the Rivergrass SRA. So this is the stewardship credit worksheet that is part of the Comp Plan. This was originally developed back in 2002. It was part of the report and recommendations of the Collier County Rural Lands Assessment Area Oversight Committee. It was dated 2002. This worksheet was carried over and made part of the Comp Plan, from my understanding. So this is the worksheet that applies to both SRAs and SSAs. What you see over here on the -- this part you see right here, that is the Natural Resource Index scoring. The other portions of this document, here, this is related to the SSA calculation of credits and removing land -use layers. So what we're going to focus on is this part here today, which is used to determine the NRI value within the SRA. Now, again, I mentioned about the number of sheets of pages. So this left-hand side here, the NRI scoring thing, this is done electronically in the model. So instead of printing out for every one of those cell grades this worksheet, that's all contained within the model itself electronically. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: So you have this worksheet -- you do have the worksheet. You just have it electronically. MR. PASSARELLA: Yes. It's in the model. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: When you send us the presentations, can you send us the electronic? It will be readable by us? MR. PASSARELLA: No. It's a GIS model. So if you had GIS, you go ahead go in there -- if you have that software, you could go in there and open it up and run the model and see the information. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Could you save it as a PDF? Because, I mean, the public should have a right to have it as well as us. MR. PASSARELLA: Well, again, we'd have to -- if you want this in paper format -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: No, electronic. MR. PASSARELLA: Okay. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: You can't convert that to PDF? MR. PASSARELLA: No, no. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Thank you. I'll explore that more with staff, see what we can get. COMMISSIONER CHRZANOWSKI: Could I ask? Ken, how did you get that on that page right there? Isn't that a printout from something that you did? MR. PASSARELLA: Yes. COMMISSIONER CHRZANOWSKI: Can you do one electronically for each page? MR. PASSARELLA: We could generate one of those -- that right there, we could generate one of those for every one of those cells, and that would be 998 pages. COMMISSIONER CHRZANOWSKI: But without printing it out, can you do it electronically as Page 28 of 89 a PDF? October 3, 2019 CHAIRMAN STRAIN: That was my question. MR. PASSARELLA: Well, no. That -- we'd have to create 998 of these and then scan them, and give you the PDF. COMMISSIONER CHRZANOWSKI: Okay. MR. PASSARELLA: Okay. Because it's in the model. It's in the GIS model. The model has shade files and creates these. And as I go through this, I'll show you how it's done, so... Maybe after I've finished my presentation, you'll -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Yeah, I'm sorry. I just was -- I'm trying to make sure that anything you guys have that we -- might help us understand, that we get a copy of it. That's why I asked for it. But if we can't get it, we'll have to see what the next alternative is. Thank you. MR. PASSARELLA: So starting with the first indices, the first indices is the stewardship overlay designation. That's the one at the top there. And then for the Rivergrass Village, Rivergrass SRA, the data source we used for this overlay is the Collier County stewardship areas, and those -- that is information that we attained from the county. So you can see on the right-hand side there where the SRA boundary is. We're not within an W -- we're not within an FSA. We're not within a HSA. We're not within a WRA, and we're not within an area of critical concern. So as such, if we were to show -- this is the model output. So this is what the model would output if you were looking in GIS. If you look at the model output for this particular indice (sic), you'll see that it's all scored in a zero. So, again, we're not in a.7. We're not in a.6. We're not in a.6 for WRA. We're not in an area of critical state concern. So this whole area scores a zero. And I did a sample grid cell. So right here, this is a grid cell right here. That's a one -acre grid cell. And as we go through this whole calculation, I'll keep referring to that one grid cell. And at the time we're done, we'll add up the score for that grid cell and show how you get your total NRI value for that grid cell. Okay? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Gotcha. Thank you. MR. PASSARELLA: Yep. So next indices, there's a total of six indices. The second indice is the proximity indice. And the proximity indice, again, we use the Collier County's data for stewardship areas, and the scoring is based on if you're enclosed by an FSA, HSA, or WRA. If you're within 300 feet of an FSA or HSA, or you're within 300 feet of public or provide --'or private preserve land or none of the above, you would score a zero. So it says, so additional value shall be added under the proximity indices or lands that is within an FSA, HSA, WRA, or public -- or public or private preserve. So for this project, for the Rivergrass SRA -- and I'll go back to this map. You can see we're not enclosed by an FSA; those are the blue areas. We're not enclosed by an HSA; those are the green areas. And we're not enclosed by a WRA, which are the brown areas. We're not within 300 feet of an FSA or HSA, and we're not within 300 feet of public or private preserve lands. So in the model, the output is a zero for that indices score and, again, going back to our particular grid cell, you can see that grid cell would then score a zero for that particular indice. The next indice is the listed species habitat indices. And for Rivergrass Village, the data source that we used for that is our FLUCFCS mapping that we had prepared for the project. Listed species surveys that we have done for the project that had been reviewed by the county and the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. This also includes the available information from the Florida Fish and Wildlife Service and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service on documented occurrences of listed species. So we had a lot of data that we used to look at potential listed species on this particular project. One of the comments that the county received, I believe, from Mr. Frankenberger was related to -- that Page 29 of 89 October 3, 2019 the survey was not sufficient. It was only done at one point in the year. While we did do a listed species survey as part of the SRA submittal to the county, that was done at one time -- point in the year; however, the data that we provided was from numerous listed species surveys that we've done over the years on this particular project. So we've done listed species surveys out here on this project in March through July of 2007, we did October 2007, we did November 2007, we did May through June of 2014, we did a June in 2015 through October 2015, we did November 2016, and we've now recently done one in March 2019. And all these listed species data that we collected during these surveys all went into this NRI Assessment. So even though we're required by code to do a listed species survey for the SRA application, we did that species survey, but we went back and included all the listed species data that we've done on all these surveys we've done over the years on this site. This is very comprehensive as far as listed species data for a particular site. In addition to that, we've done species -- specific listed species surveys out there as well. We've done crested caracara surveys in 2007, 2009, and 2016. We've done RCW surveys in 2007 and 2014. We've done a burrowing owl survey in 2008. We've done a southeastern American Kestrel survey in 2017, a Big Cypress fox squirrel in 2007/2008, and an Everglades mink survey in 2017. So you can see we've done more surveys on this site probably than any other site in Collier County. And all that information went into this listed species habitat index for the county as part of this NRI Assessment. So we have that listed species data. All this data's been reviewed by the agencies, and that went into the model to generate the scoring for the -- for the Rivergrass SRA. Now, scoring is -- panther occupied habitat plus other listed species is a. 8; panther -occupied habitat, a .5; occupied habitat by other listed species, a .4; and none of the above is a zero. Now, what's to keep in mind here is that panther -occupied habitat is a very specific definition in the Land Development Code. And when we're scoring, we've got to follow that particular definition. So index values are based on documentation of occupied habitat as established by the intersect of documented and verifiable observations of listed species with land cover identified as preferred or tolerated habitat for that species. So over on the right-hand side here you can see various points and documents. You can see -- thank you, Bob. You can see that there's various species from different times of years and different dates where we have documented those species on site. For instance, you'll see some blue dots. There's a blue dot here. That's actually Florida panther observations that we made on site while doing surveys over the years. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Karl has a question for you. COMMISSIONER FRY: Quick question. You have a blue shaded area in the top half, light blue shaded area in the bottom half What does the overall shading mean? MR. PASSARELLA: On the next slide -- there's two slides from now I'm explain that to you. COMMISSIONER FRY: Thank you. MR. PASSARELLA: Okay. Yep. So I'll go ahead and explain it. The light blue area to the bottom is a FLUCFCS code. So when you're doing a listed species indices, you've got to look at two things. You've got to look at the FLUCFCS code, the habitat, and then you've got to look at whether there's species documented in that FLUCFCS code or that habitat. COMMISSIONER FRYER: What's a FLUCFCS code? MR. PASSARELLA: And a FLUCFCS code is a Florida Land Use Cover and Forms Classification System code. So its a land -use code. So the light blue down here is a 214 FLUCFCS code, which is row crop, and then the kind of purple or dark blue up top is a 210 FLUCFCS code, which is cropland or pasture land FLUCFCS code. So slightly different. Page 30 of 89 October 3, 2019 COMMISSIONER FRY: Thank you. MR. PASSARELLA: And that's important when we're doing this scoring, and I'll get into it. Because you've got -- again, you've got to have habitat, and then you've got to have the species location under the score. Okay. So one of the issues that had been raised was about Florida panther primary zone and secondary zone and why we did not address that. Well, in the NRI Assessment and in the Land Development Code, it's very specific about how you address panther habitat and scoring under this indices. So the LDC says that land mapped using FLUCFCS at 310, 321, 411, 425, 428, 438, 617, and I won't name the rest of them, is deemed to be preferred or tolerated habitat for panthers for the purposes of assigning a value for these indices. So what those FLUCFCS codes are, those are native habitats. Those are native wetlands habitats such as cypress or marsh or native -- native forested habitats for uplands such as, you know, pine flatwoods or even areas like palmetto prairies. So those are native habitats. So for -- in other words to be -- when we do the scoring, to be panther -occupied habitat plus other listed species, you have to have a FLUCFCS code that is a native upland FLUCFCS code or a forested wetland FLUCFCS code plus a panther telemetry to score a .8. So this is the output of the model. You can see we have zero down below, and we have .4 up above. So going through the scoring, if it's panther -occupied habitat plus other listed species it's a .8. The whole site being row crop and being agricultural land, by definition in the Land Development Code, it is not panther -preferred or tolerated habitat. So it doesn't score -- even though we had a panther telemetry point there, you've got to have the intersection of both. You've got to have the panther telemetry point plus the habitat to score a.8. So, again, panther -occupied habitat, simply those habitats that are preferred or tolerated. We don't have those there. Occupied habitat by other listed species, well, we do have that in this particular location, and that's this grid designated right here. This is this darker purple area. That is cropland and pasture land, and we had sandhill cranes in that area. So that is a habitat that sandhill cranes would use. You may expect to find them in pasture land as far as something that they would utilize. And, as such, we have a listed species documented out there from our surveys, being a sandhill crane, plus a habitat that they would use and so, therefore, it scored a.4. And then the rest would score a.0. Moving on. There was also mention -- hang on a second, Bob. There was also mentioned some comments about -- that the natural resource service -- that the indices didn't reference wood stork colonies and foraging areas as well as the snail kite consultation area. All of that is relative information for federal and state permitting, but it doesn't apply to the Land Development Code when you're doing an NRI Assessment. So it doesn't apply to the NRI Assessment score, so -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Can you explain why while we're on that? MR. PASSARELLA: Yeah. Again, the scoring is very specific for listed species. So you've got to have, you know, the preferred or tolerated habitat, which is defined in the code, and you've got to have the intersection of one of those species. So a simple zone identified by one of the federal agencies is not in the Land Development Code specifically identified as to be used to score these areas. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Just so I know when to reserve my questions, were you -- did you do any of the work on the original RLSA overlay for anybody? Not today, back in 2000, 2002, around that time. MR. PASSARELLA: No. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Thank you. MR. PASSARELLA: So the next indices is the soils and service -water indices, and these are very straightforward. These are soils mapping data that's obtained from the Natural Resource Conservation Service, the NRCS. And the scoring is -- you know, open water and muck depression soil is a .4, sand depression soil is a .3, flats transitional soil's a .2, and non -hydric soil's score a zero. So in our particular -- at Rivergrass SRA, we had flatwoods, transitional soils, and flatwood soils Page 31 of 89 October 3, 2019 non -hydric. So in our scoring, all these score differently. So we had areas that scored a zero because we had non -hydric soils, we had areas that scored a .2 because those are flats or transitional soils, and we had areas that scored a .3 because that's sand depression soils. And that's showing graphically over here on the right-hand side by the different colors of the output of the model. The next item is the restoration potential indice. And for a scoring for an SRA, the restoration potential indice is not applicable. The restoration potential index is assigned during the SSA designations process if appropriate, and credit adjustments are made at that time. So as part of the SSA scoring, the NRI Assessment for doing SSA credits. So it doesn't apply to the SRA. The next indices is the land -use and land -cover indices. And I already had quite a bit of discussion about FLUCFCS mapping and FLUCFCS, but this is the FLUCFCS data so -- that we prepared for the project. When we did the FLUCFCS mapping, this FLUCFCS mapping has been presented to the county staff. It is also presented to the South Florida Water Management District staff as well as the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers staff, and they have all agreed with our FLUCFCS mapping on the project site. So for FLUCFCS mapping, how you score it under the NRI Assessment is there's Group 1 FLUCFCS mapping, which is a.4. And down below in the text you can see Group 1 is FLUCFCS code 617, 621, 624. And I know those numbers probably don't mean anything to you -all, but those are basically native wetland habitats. Group 2 scores a.3, and down below the Group 2 codes are listed out: 321, 411, 425. Those are all native upland habitats, and they score a .3. Group 3 are a whole series of FLUCFCS codes in the 200s. Primarily, those are agricultural FLUCFCS codes, which is what we have on this particular project. And then Group 4 is other. Other is disturbed lands, you know, residential areas, stuff like that. They score a zero. So for our particular project, you can see we had FLUCFCS codes. This darker blue, as I mentioned before, cropland, pasture land. The lighter blue is row crops. So for the scoring, since these are all agricultural land -use codes, these are all 200 series, they all score a .2 for the NRI Assessment. So there was some comments about should it be scored a -- you know, a 212 or a 510? But if you look at those codes, all those codes are within the agricultural group code class. So whether it's a 210 or it's a 510, those are all agricultural codes and, therefore, they all fall within the .2, and there is no bearing on the NRI Assessment because those are basically the same scores. And some areas, you know, comments about, well, ifs not row crop. It's another type of crop. Again, those are all agricultural codes that fall under this Group 3 or .2 in the NRI Assessment. So in our example cell here we had -- if I were to go back through all of those slides we went through, the NRI score is determined by summing all of these scores assigned for each of the index factors. And so the outcome of the final Raster model shows overall weighted sum. And what you see here is the output of the final Raster model. So our particular cell that we were looking at here, if you look at the numbers, we had a zero, a zero, a .4, for NRI Assessment, a zero, and a .2, which comes up with a total .6. So you see that on the color here over here on the output. So you see scores ranging from .2 to .6 on the output over here. So the final NRI score map for the overall project you can see ranges from .2 to .6 on this output. And, again, that would make sense since the majority of the site is agriculture, and there's not any native habitats. You would particularly expect to see a scoring of a 1.2 or higher if you had some sort of native habitat on the project site. So that would be some remnant cypress areas or remnant pine flatwoods or something within the site. That's when you would get scoring that would go above the 1.2, and that's what it was meant to do was even though these areas are designated as open lands, if there were any native habitats remaining Page 32 of 89 October 3, 2019 within those areas designated as open lands, that those native habitats would be preserved or protected as part of this process. On this site, you have all agricultural lands, all row crop, areas that have been in production for ag for numerous years, and we don't have any of these native remnant natural areas that would possibly score higher than a 1.2 and would be preserved as part of this project. So basically what you have is this is a summary of the output. Again, you can see the scoring across the site. You can see .2. We had total acres of 586 acres of .2. We had 260 acres .4. We had 2 acres of .5 and 149 acres .6. We had -- none of those got above the 1.2 required for preservation of the area. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: That's because none of them intersect all three sensitive areas. MR. PASSARELLA: That's correct. Well, that and it's -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I mean, you don't have one acre that has .2, .4, and .6, because if you did, it would be 1.2. MR. PASSARELLA: Yep. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Thank you. COMhIISSIONER FRYER: I have a question before you leave. MR. PASSARELLA: Yes. COMMISSIONER FRYER: It gets back to the documentation that could be available to us. First of all, what format -- you put up about 40 slides here that I know were generated from GIS. What format are they in now? MR. MULHERE: PowerPoint. MR. PASSARELLA: In a PowerPoint. COMNIISSIONER FRYER: Okay. So it's a PowerPoint. Any reason why you couldn't provide an electronic copy of that PowerPoint as part of the official record so that we could have it between now -- MR. PASSARELLA: We provided our NRI study that provides those documents. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: You're giving us a copy of this PowerPoint. They're giving us a copy. COMMISSIONER FRYER: They are giving or have given? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: No, they will give it to us. MR. YOVANOVICH: When we're done. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Okay. MR. PASSARELLA: But I also want to explain. It's in the document. You have some of this information already in the documents you have. The output -- COMNIISSIONER FRYER: I just want to be sure that we have access to all of it. MR. PASSARELLA: Yeah. This NRI score map and NRI Assessment, you have this map. You have the output map for each one of the individual indices for the overall site. So that's in our report that was submitted to the county. So you should have those maps already. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Let's say that these are 40 slides; we're going to have all 40 of them, aren't we? MR. PASSARELLA: Yes. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Okay. Thank you. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Thank you. COMMISSIONER FRY: Mr. Chairman? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Yes. COMMISSIONER FRY: So what comprises a survey? You have 998 Raster Mgrid acres, I guess you call them. How do you go out and survey -- do you survey each one for all these criteria? MR. PASSARELLA: We walk the entire site, and when we survey the entire site, we would identify where a listed species is. And what happens in this -- in this NRI Assessment -- and maybe I'll go back to this. I'll get back there for you. Page 33 of 89 October 3, 2019 So when we survey the site, we go out and we -- sir, we walk the site, and we walk transects across the site. We may not cover every square inch, but we cover the majority of it. And what happens in the scoring here is even though we don't cover every square inch, since we found listed species, and within this purple area, this area here, this 210 -- so even though we found a sandhill crane, we only documented the sandhill crane here and here. Those are two sandhill cranes we documented within two particular spots. But when you score it, the sandhill crane applies to this entire FLUCFCS code. So even though we only identified a listed species in one spot, it doesn't just apply to that one -acre square grid. It applies to that entire FLUCFCS code. So it's assumed that the sandhill crane could use any of this entire area and, therefore, that applies to that entire FLUCFCS code in the model, so... COMMISSIONER FRY: So you're assuming that because that upper FLUCFCS code is all the same type of land -- MR. PASSARELLA: Yeah. COMMISSIONER FRY: --that species you find there would naturally go anywhere within that type of land -- MR. PASSARELLA: Correct. COMMISSIONER FRY: -- but not necessarily into the different type of land to the south of it, which was the row crop fields? MR. PASSARELLA: Right. The row crop is a different category for the sandhill crane and considered different. But we observed them up here in this code (sic). We would anticipate to see sandhill cranes in pasture areas; therefore, it scored a higher in that area. COMMISSIONER FRY: So is a survey a single point in time? Is it -- I mean, I know it takes a long time, I'm sure, to walk all this -- transect all these areas? MR. PASSARELLA: We may spend four days in March of 2019 when we did this survey, four days out there walking and covering the entire property. But as I mentioned, we've done numerous surveys over the years on this particular property, and we've covered it many times. So if you see, like, for instance, all these species here we documented, those weren't documented in 2019. Those were all documented during surveys in 2007 and 2009. COMMISSIONER FRY: But you're still counting them in the results? MR. PASSARELLA: Still counting them in this, because we've documented them out there. COMMISSIONER FRY: Just previewing or thinking about what possible objection there might be or concerns. You did a survey in March of 2019, then the one previous to that was 2016, I believe you said. MR. PASSARELLA: Yes. COMMISSIONER FRY: What are the chances that on the four days that you walked through in March there were species that would be there other times of the year that were not there that day that we might have missed something of critical habitat concern? MR. PASSARELLA: Well, what we did was -- again, if I can go back through the list of the dates we surveyed out here -- and bear in mind, you're only required by county code to go out there and do a listed species survey per county standards, which we did and provided. But we've gone above and beyond that as well. We've provided survey information from other surveys we've done at previous times. So, for instance, in 2007, we were out there in March through July. So covered the end of the spring, the summer. We were out there in October and November, so we covered the fall. In 2015, we were out there in May through June, again in the summer. November, fall. So those are, you know, different time periods, different years out there doing surveys. So this is a result of hundreds of hours of surveys out there, man-hours out there surveying the property. So, you know, we've covered what we did and we've documented what we found out there. Page 34 of 89 October 3, 2019 COMMISSIONER FRY: I only ask the question because, you know, it occurs to me we've had a lot of development within the county, and the species had to migrate around in order to respond to that development. We know bears are in areas where they weren't previously. So I was just trying to preview it if there are any potential issues with species that, you know, might not have been there in March of 2019 or in the previous studies but would be there now or moving forward naturally. MR. PASSARELLA: Well -- and bear in mind, when the original RLSA program was developed, all these species were considered, and that's why they developed the SSAs and the FSAs and the HSAs. So those were areas where they identified these species were most likely to occur and those areas that would be essential for these species to continue. So the designation of those areas as SSAs and being preserved are helping to address all the listed -species issues. That's why the farm fields were designated as open area, which were designated for development, because they had the least value as habitat for listed species while setting aside the areas that had the highest value for listed species. COMMISSIONER FRY: So one final question: Somewhere in an earlier exhibit it said, I believe, that only 2 percent of the total land mass of the RLSA was a 1.2 or above. Is that accurate? MR. YOVANOVICH: No. That was -- there was less than -- sorry. Less than 2 percent of the open area. COMMISSIONER FRY: Of the open area. MR. YOVANOVICH: Of the open area would have scored greater than a 1.2, not only 2 percent of the entire 195,000 acres; 2 percent of the open area. COMMISSIONER FRY: Which would be the areas that --the SSAs would all be open area? MR. YOVANOVICH: The open area is where you do development. That was the pink that I showed you early on. Less than 2 percent of that pink area was going to score greater than a 1.2. COMMISSIONER FRY: Oh, I see. MR. YOVANOVICH: All the other areas that Ken talked about, habitat stewardship, that's where you would expect to score well above -- 1.2 or well above. COMMISSIONER FRY: Okay. So the areas that we can develop -- MR. YOVANOVICH: Less than 2 percent was anticipated to score better than 1.2. COMMISSIONER FRY: Thank you for the clarifications. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And just so you know, I'm sure the rest of us have environmental questions, too, but we're trying to get to the presentation provided by our staff as well, so some of those could be answered, and then we'll get through faster. MR. YOVANOVICH: We're good. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: So I'm going to hold off on mine. I think most of others will at this point. Where you going next, Bob, or Richard? MR. YOVANOVICH: We're going to have Dom come up quick, and Lucy. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Here's -- I want to break close to noon. MR. YOVANOVICH: I think we can definitely get through the next two before noon. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. But I also need to have staff -- the managers of the departments who are going to have a presentation just come up for a quick minute. I want to know what your time frames are. Matt, or whoever's going to -- environmental; economic; roads; are any of you people here? MR. YOVANOVICH: They're all right there. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Would one of you who could represent the time frames you're going to need -- so I can try to figure out how the rest of the day's going to flow. And I'm -- it's going to be in conjunction with yours. MR. YOVANOVICH: Sure. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: When we set this up, you had asked to have your traffic guy first because Norm is so popular he may not be able to be here all day. Is he going to be able to be here in the afternoon? Page 35 of 89 October 3, 2019 MR. YOVANOVICH: He will be here all day. We made him less popular. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, he's becoming as popular as you are, so... MR. YOVANOVICH: You know, that's not fair to say that. Norm's a much nicer guy. CHAII2MAN STRAIN: Who, Norm or you? MR. YOVANOVICH: Matt, can you tell me how long your personnel are going to need for their presentations approximately? MR. McLEAN: Malt McLean, director of Development Review. For the environmental portion, staff has about 10 minutes of presentation, and then we'll be available for any questions afterwards either today or any of the future meetings as well. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. What about Transportation? MS. SCOTT: For the record, Trinity Scott, Transportation Planning manager. Rich asked for two minutes, but I'll need more than that. Probably about 20 or 25. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Good. We want a thorough understanding of that, because that is an issue that we're all well aware of in the road system. MS. SCOTT: Yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. And then, I guess, Amy. MS. SCOTT: Also, our consultants for the transportation consultants are available for the 17th as well if we need to bring them back. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: We're going to get transportation done today, and we're going to try to get economic; that's what I wanted to ask Amy about. Are your economic people here today? MS. PATTERSON: They are here today. They can be here again if needed. And we don't have a formal presentation, but we're here to answer questions after Lucy makes her presentation or -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Thank you. MS. PATTERSON: Welcome. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: That's what I needed to know. We've got about 45 minutes of staff presentations. And after lunch at one o'clock time -certain we're going to start with the -- we're going to quickly get through the Logan's Landing, and then we'll go right into the staff presentations, and then we'll start going into the questions. So with that... MR. YOVANOVICH: I don't know that we'll -- we're going to finish. I think Lucy and Dom could be done by noon. Then Bob's got a few more minutes. And then I would imagine we'll go to lunch, you'll hear your Logan's Landing, then Bob would probably finish it up. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: That sounds fine. MR. YOVANOVICH: That's fair. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: As long as we can hit that time frame. Okay. Let's go. Dominick? MR. AMICO: Hi. Dom Amico, Agnoli, Barber & Brundage representing Collier Enterprises. Water management, I've got a slide prepared with what I thought would be important to the Commission. The first bullet point, as you've already heard from Ken, all the land that comprises Rivergrass is currently agricultural. It's an existing operational agricultural water management system. There are preexisting permits over all the agricultural land. They've been in compliance with their permits for years. This agricultural development has been there for years. In 2018 South Florida Water Management District issued a conceptual ERP for the RLW Town, of which Rivergrass is a piece of. Rivergrass is consistent and covered by that permit. It's essentially two basins of the RLW conceptual approval. There are no proposed or existing discharges of stonnwater to Golden Gate Estates. All the stormwater flows into the WRA areas and exits the property at the south end of the Big Cypress stewardship district. Rivergrass -- a key element of Rivergrass is to maintain existing drainage patterns. We use the WRAs for storage, thereby hydrating them, which was an important requirement from the water Page 36 of 89 October 3, 2019 management permit agencies. We've increased water -quality treatment within the project. Currently, the agricultural development doesn't provide water -quality treatment before it discharges into the WRAs. The WRAs are primarily wetlands. We achieve complete water -quality treatment before any discharges into the WRAs. The project, through the Water Management District review process, received considerable scrutiny with regards to our impact or lack thereof on the comprehensive Everglades restoration project locally known as the Picayune Strand project. We were deemed to be consistent with that design. We will not impact the Picayune Strand restoration effort. And from a water -use perspective, the project, as proposed, will considerably reduce water use once the land -use change has been made from agricultural. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Is that all? MR. AMICO: That's all I've got. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. One question I have. You're addressing us now for water management, which wasn't -- I don't know where you -all thought it fit on the agenda items that we had. I1 isn't traffic. Is it because it's under -- you're coming under environmental? Is that what you're responding to? And the only reason is, we're not going to get a chance to talk to you, then, if we don't ask questions now; is that what it -- MR. AMICO: I'll be here. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. That's what I wanted to make sure. Can you tell me one thing about the map you just had up? The pink line -- well, the purple/pink line, the big long one, that, if I'm not mistaken, is the 21,700 -and -some -odd acres for the stewardship receiving -- for the stewardship district; is that correct? MR. AMICO: That's correct. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And it goes all the way down to the Ford test track. MR. AMIGO: That's correct. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And that notch going into it is an extension of the Ford test track up and around the boundaries of the test track, but it doesn't include the land outside the boundaries of that test track; is that the way it appears here? MR. AMICO: That's correct. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. So the applicant owns land almost all the way down to I-75? MR. AMICO: Yes. The area that doesn't get us to I-75 is the test track and the area owned by the federal government. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I understand. COMMISSIONER FRYER: I have a related question, Mr. Chairman. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Go ahead. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Collier Enterprises, does it own directly or indirectly the Rural Village, Bellmar, and Longwater or any of those? MR. AMICO: Well, I don't believe Collier Enterprises, per se, owns anything. There are several subsidiary - COMMISSIONER FRYER: Directly or indirectly? MR. AMICO: Indirectly, yes. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Okay. All three of those? MR. AMICO: Correct. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Thank you. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: That's it, Dominick, for now. But thank you. We'll know you'll be around if we need you, right? MR. AMICO: Yep. MR. YOVANOVICH: He'll be here. MS. GALLO: Good morning. My name is Lucy Gallo. I'm a principal with Development Page 37 of 89 October 3, 2019 Planning and Financing Group. We're a national real estate economic consulting firm with nine offices across the country. I prepare fiscal and economic impact analyses for large-scale development and redevelopment projects across the country. My office is based in Orlando. It's a pleasure to be here for the Collier Planning County Commission. There are two requirements that govern the economic assessment that was prepared for Rivergrass. One rests in the Growth Management Plan, which as this slide indicates, the requirement is that the analysis is prepared at the horizon year, which would -- another tern we would call that is the buildout year. The Land Development Code also includes requirement for the economic assessment, and under B you'll see that one of the requirements is if the county does not have a fiscal impact model, that the applicant may submit an alternative model which is approved with a methodology approved and advanced by the county. And the Rivergrass economic assessment was prepared under B because the county does not have a model. The approach from our firm's standpoint to fiscal impact analysis is of utmost importance. Our primary theme is that our analysis is both collaborative and transparent. That has been the approach from kickoff of the project all the way through working with staff and the third -party peer reviewers and their review. Again, we have been using a county -approved methodology and, thirdly, the county did have the analysis undergo a rigorous third -party peer review. The conclusion of the economic assessments indicate on all of the required categories that Rivergrass was either fiscally neutral or fiscally positive as required, and the projected -- this is just a schedule of the projected impact fee revenue that Rivergrass is projected to pay over the course of the buildout period. So that concludes my presentation. Just an overview. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I just have a process question. MS. GALLO: Yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: In previous applications that we received where we had a fiscal analysis, we received the sheets that told us how the cells were generated; formulas. I didn't get any of that. Do you have a spreadsheet like in Excel or some format that I can go in and look at the cell and see what variables you use to calculate the cell? MS. GALLO: Absolutely. In fact, staffs review and the county's third -party peer reviewers, they have our complete Excel workbook, so they could look behind every number, have all of our supporting documentation. So that's been submitted. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. And what staff has is now what we have. So could somehow we get a copy of your active spreadsheets so we can look at the cells and understand what variable multipliers you used to get to the numbers you got to? MS. GALLO: Sure. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I don't care how it gets here. But before we have the next meeting, it would be nice if we had that. MS. GALLO: Absolutely. The county already has them, so... CHAIRMAN STRAIN: It was hard for me to understand how you got to your numbers, and I'd rather not have to ask you how you formulated each cell. MS. GALLO: Understood. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. I appreciate it. Thank you. MR. YOVANOVICH: Mr. Strain? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Yes. MR. YOVANOVICH: This, I think, would be a good stopping point. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I agree with you. Write that down. It's the first time. MR. YOVANOVICH: If Terri wouldn't mind transcribing that before the lunch hour. Page 38 of 89 October 3, 2019 CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Yeah. She will, and you'll use it every time. MR. YOVANOVICH: I will. I will. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Let's break now. We'll come back at 1:00. The time -certain for 1:00 is hopefully a rather short discussion on another application to get it through today's meeting. Thank you all, and see you at 1:00. (A luncheon recess was had from 11:55 a.m. to 1:00 p.m., and Commissioner Chraanowski is absent for the remainder of the meeting.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay, everyone. If you'll take your seats, we'll resume the meeting. We're going a little bit out of the last order, as we talked about earlier. We had a time -certain today, and this is for Item 9. -- I'm getting there. 9A3. ***9A3 is for the Logan/Immokalee Planned Unit Development, and it's at the southeast corner of Immokalee Road and Logan Boulevard. All those wishing to testify on behalf of this item, please rise to be sworn in by the court reporter. (The speakers were duly sworn and indicated in the affirmative.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Tom? MR. EASTMAN: No disclosures. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Karl? COMMISSIONER FRY: No disclosures. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Spoken with Mr. Hancock, or communicated with him. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And I had called Tim Hancock up a couple days ago suggesting he consider being here for this so that we can at least get one thing besides the Rivergrass heard today. COMMISSIONER HOMIAK: I spoke to Mr. Hancock. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Patrick? COMMISSIONERDEARBORN: None. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. That's it. Tim -- oh, yeah, you were already sworn in. The presentation's all yours. I want to -- canyou provide about an hour on a one -word change? MR. HANCOCK: Mr. Chair, the first time in 30 years, I have nothing to add to the application before you. I'll be happy to answer any questions you may have. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I'd be disappointed if there was anything you could possibly add. Anybody have any questions of that fine presentation? (No response.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Hearing none, is there a staff report? Thank you, Tim. MS. GUNDLACH: Yes, there is a staff report. We recommend approval. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. So you didn't belabor the point either. With that in mind, is there any member of the public here who would like to speak on this item? (No response.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Hearing none, we'll close the public hearing. Is there a motion to recommend approval to the Board of County Commissioners? COMMISSIONER DEARBORN: So moved. COMMISSIONERHOMIAK: Second. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Second. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Made by Patrick. Seconded by Ned. Discussion? (No response.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: All in favor, signify by saying aye. COMMISSIONER FRY: Aye. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Aye. Page 39 of 89 October 3, 2019 CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Aye. COMMISSIONER HOMIAK: Aye. COMMISSIONER DEARBORN: Aye. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Anybody opposed? (No response.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Motion carries, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 of us now to zero. Thank you. Tim, that was the quickest you've ever done. MR. HANCOCK: I make no promises for the other ones. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: ***Now we'll go back in and we'll resume where we left off on the Rivergrass project. And we had finished up the presentation of the applicant. MR. YOVANOVICH: No, we didn't. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Oh, we didn't. That's right. Bob was going to have closing comments for the presentation, and then we'll go back to staff for their presentations. Bob. MR. MULHERE: Thank you. So the last few things we want to talk about are the deviations and the juxtaposition of those deviations with respect to the staff position and also the conditions that were attached to your staff report, of which there were 11. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Now, these are part of the SRA document? MR. MULHERE: Yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. And we have a separate time frame for that document to be discussed. So I'm going to withhold my questions to that, but I appreciate the briefing, because between now and that time it will give us a better understanding of it. MR. MULHERE: Maybe I'll just focus on -- we've been meeting with staff over the last, I'd say, three weeks. We've probably had three or four meetings to discuss where we were separated on some of these issues and clarify them. So under your -- under our SRA document, there are -- the deviations are listed by sort of topical area. Under village center standards, we had asked for a deviation that related to the location of the village center; however, after further reviewing the document and meeting with staff, they concur that the location is not a problem. It is consistent with the LDC. So we will withdraw that, so -- COMMISSIONER FRYER: This Deviation No. 1? MR. MULHERE: Yes. So we'll just withdraw that one. Deviations 2 and 3 are related, and they're in two separate sections under parking criteria. The LDC, if you look under village, it refers you back to the standards in a town center and town core. The section just refers you back up there. When you go back up to that section, that language appears, the majority of parking spaces shall be provided off street in the rear of buildings or along the side secondary streets. Parking is prohibited in front of buildings. We'd ask for a deviation to allow that. Both of those deviations are very similar, 2 and 3. So these are Google Earth photos from Ave Maria. Number 1 is the Arthrex building, which you can clearly see has -- now, the terminology is in front of the building. It doesn't say the front yard. It says, no parking in front of the building. And there is parking right there in front of the building. The other photo is the Publix in Ave Maria. And, again, here you have the front of the building right here and, as you can see, there is a fairly substantial bay of parking in front of the building. This perspective down here under the No. 2 right here is a pedestrian perspective from this comer right here looking into the Publix, and the front access points are here and here. So we had a discussion with staff, I think it was day before yesterday, and -- Mr. Bellows, Nancy, and we've come up with an agreeable condition that staff could support this deviation that we are requesting, and that would be that the staff could support parking in front of the building for a retail Page 40 of 89 October 3, 2019 commercial development that includes a grocery anchor. And we're okay with that. CHA R] AN STRAIN: Now -- MR. MULHERE: Shopping center with a grocery store. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I was just to say, because if you say a retail shopping center with grocery anchor, that theoretically means the whole shopping center. MR. MULHERE: Yeah. No, we assumed there would be other, you know, retail outlets or maybe a restaurant or something, but it would -- we anticipate having a grocery store. So getting to neighborhood general standards. Number 1, we're withdrawing that. You know, there actually is no requirement to provide neighborhood goods and services. They're allowed uses. They're not required in the neighborhood general. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: What number are you on? MR. MULHERE: I'm on 7.21. I'm sorry. Right here. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Back up on Number 1 then. Didn't you -- isn't that the one you're withdrawing? MR. MULHERE: We were withdrawing -- hold on. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: You're withdrawing Deviation No. 1. You just explained Deviation 2 and 3. I thought you were going to go to 4. MR. MULHERE: Oh, I missed one. I probably missed one. You're right. Thank you. You're right. Appreciate it. I went one slide too far. There we go. Correct? MR, YOVANOVICH: Yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I don't know. MR. MULHERE: Village Center 7.14. This deals with parking structures. We're going to withdraw that. I mean, just to clarify, the issue was if you built a multifamily -only residential structure, which is allowed, you know, there would be no reason, really, for you to have to put retail on that multifamily -only structure. And you had parking underneath that. It doesn't matter. We're not prepared -- we're not planning on doing that, so we're going to withdraw that deviation. Number 5, this is a significant deviation that is important to us. No one was really certain exactly what the genesis of this four -acre minimum was other than some general concept that it might create smaller buildings in a village. And it also applies in towns, however. You know, the RLSA regulations have block limitations, and they have floor area ratio limitations, and those are the limitations that reduce the mass of buildings and the mass of a grouping of buildings. This particular limitation presents a problem when you are wanting to do something such as tri -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: But No. 5 is withdrawn it says, right? MR. MULHERE: I'm sorry. That's withdrawn, but the same standard is in the neighborhood general. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Yeah. If they're withdrawn, you don't need to explain them to us. MR. MULHERE: All right. No problem. Let's see. I already discussed No. 1. That's being withdrawn. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Should be No. 6. Let's go to 6. MR. YOVANOVICH: Four. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Four was what we just -- MR. YOVANOVICH: No, no. There's a difference between neighborhood general and village center. MR. MULHERE: So we're in Neighborhood General Standards 7.21. Do you have it? COMMISSIONER FRYER: It would be helpful if we could go by the number of the deviation. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Yeah. Can you tell us what deviation you're going to talk about now? MR. MULHERE: Okay. Number 6. Page 41 of 89 October 3, 2019 CHAIRMAN STRAIN: What happened to No. 4? MR. MULHERE: Let me get my SRA document. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Are you guys confused yet? COMMISSIONER FRYER: Yeah. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I think we're all confused, so I think we need to recoup. MR. MULHERE: I see where the confusion is. I actually number them in the SRA document this way. That's why -- as you see on the visualizer, that's why I used those numbers. But in the staff report there are different numbers. So I will use -- I will refer to the staff report number, okay? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. So can you tell us the ones that we've resolved so far, at least we heard your explanation so far? MR. MULHERE: Yes, I can. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Where that stands. MR. YOVANOVICH: Based on staffs number or SRA? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: The document in front of us. Oh, this isn't the deviations that are in the staff report? MR. MULHERE: I'm going to use the staff report, okay? Is that okay? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Yeah. Somehow we've got to tie it back. MR. MULHERE: So if you look at -- the numbers are cross-referenced here. If you look at Deviation No. 1 in the staff report which references -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Can you put that on the overhead if that's what we're going to use, please. Because No. 1 on here might be different than what you're talking about. COMMISSIONER FRYER: These are withdrawn. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: No, I don't think so. He's withdrawn this Number 1, but I don't know if he's withdrawn the No. 1 he's now going to talk about. MR. MULHERE: Hold on. It's not that complicated. It's just that the staff report used a different numbering system than we did in the SRA document, and I didn't pick up on that. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: You're telling us it's Nancy's fault? MR. MULHERE: No, no. She cross-references them. MS. GUNDLACH: Yeah. MR. MULHERE: So Deviation No. 1, which is cross-referenced to Section 7.11, which is what I show on the -- is withdrawn. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: What about 2 and 3? MR. MULHERE: Two and 3, we have an agreement as I referenced with respect to a shopping center that has a grocery anchor. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: You're still asking for a deviation, but you're just -- MR. MULHERE: Yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: -- phrasing it differently. MR. MULHERE: Yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: For both 2 and 3? MR. MULHERE: Yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And you're going to give us the refinement of this before next meeting so we can focus on the issues you are going to do next meeting? MR. MULHERE: Yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. That would be great. MR. MULHERE: Okay. So we're on -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Four. MR. MULHERE: Deviation 4 is -- MR. YOVANOVICH: Slide it up, Bob. MR. MULHERE: Sorry. Page 42 of 89 October 3, 2019 MR. YOVANOVICH: Withdrawn. MR. MULHERE: Is withdrawn, yeah. Hold on. Deviation 5, is that still in the 7.1.? That's withdrawn, yep. Now we go into neighborhood general standards. And so 7.2 -- MR. YOVANOVICH: Gone. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: It's Deviation 6. MR. MULHERE: Deviation 6, 7.21 in the SRA document -- MR. YOVANOVICH: Withdrawn. MR. MULHERE: -- is withdrawn. Deviation 7 is supported by staff, and we -- so we're going to -- obviously, we feel like we don't really have to discuss that one. It's pretty self-explanatory. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, I don't know if all of us understand it. So even though you and staff come to an agreement, at some point down the road you might want to explain it to us. It doesn't have to be now, but I thought that's what you were going to do during your presentation. MR. MULHERE: I can do that. I have to look at my presentation. MR. BELLOWS: Do you want us to flip back? MR. MULHERE: No, that's all right. I've got it right here. Hold on. I'm looking for it right now. Neighborhood general. Okay. So deviation -- Deviation 7 is the deviation to allow a larger square footage for the village amenity center, and staff supports that. And we have a golf course, and we just need more square footage than 3,000 square feet or 15,000 square feet. It shouldn't be a problem, we don't think. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, when we get to our questions it might -- MR. MULHERE: Yeah. No, I got it. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: -- it might have more answered, so... MR. MIJLHERE: Anything less than that would probably require us to have more, you know, amenity spaces instead of a centralized location compact. Deviation 8 is a deviation from a required 10 -foot minimum side and rear yard setback to allow for a combined setback of either zero or five feet on each side yard in the case of multifamily, and staff was supporting that deviation. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Doesn't that apply exclusively to townhomes, though? MR. MULHERE: It applies to that type of multifamily product. Townhome, maybe villas, yes. Yep. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Okay. Deviation 9. Okay. So this is one we were talking about just a little while ago. This is the maximum multifamily lot size which the LDC limits to four acres. And again, this presents a bit of a problem in the same type of development that you just referenced, which would be townhomes or, you know, attached product or even four-plexes, six-plexes or eight-plexes. Because if you have to create four -acre lots to accommodate, say, a 24 -unit or a 34 -unit, you know, development, you now are inserting artificially additional side yards that otherwise wouldn't be required if the lot size was simply, you know, not restricted to four acres. So you're consuming more land, whereas in anywhere else you would not have to do that, and it doesn't really make any sense. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Do you have a graphic or something that -- I'm trying to picture what you're trying to say. MR. MULHERE: What I'm trying to say is if you have to build a four -acre maximum lot and you were intending to do, let's say, 16 acres, you would now have three -- four; four four -acre lots. And on those side lot lines, you would have to provide side yard setbacks. You would not have to do that if you simply came in for a Site Development Plan on the whole 16 acres. It doesn't change what the product is. It doesn't change the massing of the product. It only requires extra side -yard setbacks and buffers; buffers, landscape buffers. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, when we get -- yeah. Page 43 of 89 October 3, 2019 MR. MULHERE: So, I mean, I can prepare a drawing for you to bring to the next meeting. It just seems -- it seems unwarranted, and staff agreed but with one condition, and what they agreed was that that relaxation could be up to 25 acres within a half mile of the village center. Because that's where the multifamily or the more intense residential development will occur. So you're supposed to go from the town center out to a more intense product, and on the edges would be the least intense. And so if you look at the site plan -- I've just got to get to it. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: You're going to have to go back a ways. Does anybody else understand what he's saying? COMMISSIONER FRYER: I think I do. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Could you explain it in laymen's terms? COMMISSIONER FRYER: Doesn't it have to do with buffers and setbacks? MR. MULHERE: Yes. MR. YOVANOVICH: If we were to do a standard multifamily project, which would include apartments, you couldn't have an -- no apartment complex is going to be four acres. So staff told us they wanted us to provide a diversity of housing. We agreed to do a minimum of 250 multifamily units, which is the typical three or more in a complex. So if you wanted to have a condominium complex, you would have -- if you had to divide it into four -acre parcels, you would -- they would be four standalone acres. So you'd have side -yard setbacks, the buffers. So you would no longer have a condominium, multifamily project, or an apartment complex because you can't build those on four -acre parcels, was the concept. So we wanted to be able to provide that type of multifamily development within the village. Staff said, what you had asked for was unlimited. Would you agree to cap the maximum size of a development? We said, how about 25 acres? They said fine. They also said we wanted to be in closer proximity to the village center so we're at a half a mile within the village center. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: So, basically, you want to do one multifamily parcel of 25 acres for 250 units, which is 10 units per acre, and you want to put it all on one location on the property; is that what you're -- MR. YOVANOVICH: We want to have that option. It could be 125 units. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. I just wanted to understand how it can apply. MR. YOVANOVICH: Yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Did anybody go back to consider that the RLSA and what it may have meant for this? Because you're coming from a series of buildings that would be smaller in stature to a massing. That may be why the four acres was limited against the 25. MR. YOVANOVICH: That's the exact discussion we had with staff, and staff says they did not believe the intent was to prohibit apartment complexes from being built in a village. So they said that made sense to them. That's why they no longer opposed the deviation we had requested. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: All right. Well -- MR. MULHERE: I just want to also restate, there are a number of provisions that deal with massing. Remember, there are maximum block lengths. So you can't have huge blocks. They're limited by the SRA; we're consistent with those. There are other limitations that address the massing of either a group of structures or structures. I mean, this is a very rudimentary drawing, but what I was trying to show -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: That's an understatement. MR. MULHERE: I know. I know. What I was trying to show you, if each of these is -- I know they don't look like it, but they were equal size at four acres, you would then -- and you had a lot line here, you would then have to provide buffers on each side of those lot lines as well as setbacks. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: But if those lines were gone, what could you do? MR. MULHERE: You do not have internal buffers if they're gone. You build your buildings, Page 44 of 89 October 3, 2019 and you only have a separation between structures. You don't have, you know, the standard setbacks. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, the structure, though, could be four lots wide. All four lots. You could start out with the left end and go all the way to the right end. MR. MULHERE: Attached. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Yeah. MR. MULHERE: Yes, yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. That's the piece I was wondering about. MR. MULHERE: Yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MR. MULHERE: Okay. I'm glad I can provide some comic relief as well as, you know -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: You're -- MR. YOVANOVICH: Did you want to ask him which way was north? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: No, not again. MR. MULHERE: So besides, I found this bolt and screw under my chair. I wonder if someone's been -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Karl brought his -- yeah, it's Karl again with his tools. He got something through downstairs. COMMISSIONER FRY: Retaliation. MR. MULHERE: All right. Let me get back to -- I'm way down this way. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Should be on No. 10, I think. MR. MULHERE: Okay. I'm getting there. I have to use both presentations, Mr. Strain, because I need to know what -- we're close. Okay. No. 10 is transportation. That is a -- that has been coordinated with the fire district as well as the transportation staff. It is to allow cul-de-sacs up to 1,200 feet in length. That's the maximum that could be supported by the fire district, and so that's -- we reduced our request to 1,200, so that was supported. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: That's the typical of what we do in the urban area too now, right? MR. MULHERE: Yes. You could do longer, but you have to provide a turnaround. We just chose to go with the shorter cul-de-sac. Number 11, which is 732 in the SRA document, is a deviation from the typical cross-section provided in the SRA. There was a local street cross-section. We asked for a deviation, which reduced the planting area adjacent -- between the sidewalk and the travel lanes from six feet to five feet. We had a condition from the landscape reviewer to install root barriers for the larger trees if we plant larger trees in the -- street trees in that five feet. We agreed to that, and so that one is approved by staff. The travel lanes in our cross-section are I 1 feet versus 10 feet. That's the only difference. But the width is 48 feet. And I have an example of that cross-section. Do you want me to show you the cross-section? I see Mark thinking. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I'm just -- you -- this is going a little bit out of the sequence I expected, so I'm trying to figure out when is the best time for this board to ask you questions about these deviations. MR. MULHERE: I only have a few more to go -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I was waiting for the SRA document. We're not even going to get to that today. So that's the only reason I'm perplexed. MR. YOVANOVICH: I just have a couple more, and then we'll go over the staff recommendations. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, for our -- for the board members here, if you guys have specific questions about these deviations, since we're getting into such a detailed discussion, then we might as well jump in and ask Bob any questions you may have. I know, Karl, you don't want -- you like to go out of sequence, but you're more than welcome to. Page 45 of 89 October 3, 2019 I have a lot of questions. I'm probably going to save them up like we had planned to, but you -all can do what you want. I didn't expect this much detail on this part of it, today on this issue, so... MR. YOVANOVICH: Here's what I'd like to do. The rest of the deviations, if I ran ahead, staffs recommending approval on. So if we can hold off on detailed questions that the commission may have regarding the deviations, let's just do that. The last thing we would like to just finish our presentation was to go over the various staff recommendations where we agree or disagree or we've reached agreement over the last few weeks. Then we'll be done with our presentation. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Then we'll go to staff presentations. MR. YOVANOVICH: Then we can go to staff reports and then do the sequence we had previously agreed to, which was traffic, environment, Lucy. And then if we're not -- if there's more time left, which if I'm a betting man, there won't be, we'll get into the questions you may have on the SRA document next time. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I would expect that, yeah. That's what I thought this would -- MR. YOVANOVICH: We don't have a specific presentation on the SRA document because it's basically the LDC requirements, unless there's a deviation. So that's probably where the deviation discussion will be combined, Mr. Strain. Does that make sense? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: It does. That's why -- I didn't know you were going to go this far with these, but that's fine. I think you should continue. So this will give us a better understanding, and when we read it over the next couple of weeks, we'll know what we're reading. MR. YOVANOVICH: Right. And what has been resolved or hasn't been resolved from the staff report. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And just so you know, it doesn't -- MR. YOVANOVICH: I understand. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: If staff agrees with something, it doesn't mean we're not going to have questions. MR. YOVANOVICH: I understand that. I'm just talking about from a staff perspective we resolved. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And then when you talk about the staff recommendations, make sure you talk about both comprehensive and zoning, please, if you're going to go that route. MR. MULHERE: Yep. That's where we're going now. So as Rich said, the rest of the deviations -- MR. YOVANOVICH: I've got to ask first. The staff report -- let me read you the date so I understand what you just said. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: You better not walk away from that mic and talk. MR. YOVANOVICH: I know, I know. Sorry, Terri. I apologize. I listened to the rules earlier. I just ignored it. There's a staff report dated September 19th, 2019. That's the staff report we're addressing. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: What's the date? MR. YOVANOVICH: September 19th, 2019. It was the staff report that you guys received. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: No. I'll tell you what we received. Calm down a minute. Let me -- we received -- MR. YOVANOVICH: My bad. My bad. I read you the hearing date. My mistake. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MR. YOVANOVICH: It is September 10th, 2019, is the date of the report. I read you the hearing date, which was originally -- it was prepared for the September 19th, 2019. That's the staff report that we -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: But, Rich -- MR. YOVANOVICH: -- were responding to. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I'm going to tell you the three that I read. You just listen to me for a Page 46 of 89 October 3, 2019 minute. You can tell me which one you want me to use. MR. YOVANOVICH: Okay. I will. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: 8/19/19. MR. YOVANOVICH: I don't want you to use that. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: That's the one I received in the first staff report. The one after that, or before that, was 6/4/19 and another one was 9/15/19. So I've got three staff reports, and none of them match up with what you've got. MR. YOVANOVICH: The only one that I'm aware of is the, quote, final staff report for this project, is dated September 10th, 2019. MS. GUNDLACH: Mark, are you referring to SRA documents? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Yeah. MS. GUNDLACH: Okay. Not staff report. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Oh, I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm referring -- yeah, the SRA documents dated differently than staff report. MS. GUNDLACH: Yes, they are, because we have to -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MR. YOVANOVICH: I just want to make sure we're talking the same language, because sometimes we don't. The recommendations that we're talking about would be found -- now, this is where I'm sure we'll all get confused is Page 38 of 40 and Page 39 of 40 of that September 10th report. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MR. YOVANOVICH: Those are the recommendations we're going to go through, which I understand is a consolidation of all of the staff analysis that was done, and we're down to these 11 recommendations. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MR. YOVANOVICH: That's what we plan on going through. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And at some point between now and next -- the end of today, can you -all figure out which staff report we're supposed to be reading -- not staff report -- SRA document, since there are three of them in our packet. I'm not sure which one you're going to be using when you walk through and explain things, so... MR. YOVANOVICH: We will -- we will do that, Mr. Strain, so we're all reading from the same SRA document. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Next meeting I'll come prepared to talk from the right document. MR. YOVANOVICH: Nothing really changed except acreage between the different versions. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MR. YOVANOVICH: So are we good? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Yeah. MR. YOVANOVICH: Okay. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, I understand where you're coming from now, yeah. MR. MULHERE: Okay. So, again, we just want to go over the -- I think there was 11 recommendations attached to the staff report. The first was all formal SSAs have been approved and stewardship credits submitted before or current with the SRA. We have no problem with that. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Bob, weren't you going to finish up the deviations first? MR. MULHERE: Oh, I thought we did. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: You left off at No. 12. MR. MULHERE: Well, the rest of them all staff report (sic), so we'll just wait until you -all go over them and if you have your own questions. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. So the deviations from 12 on have been withdrawn. MR. MULHERE: No. They've been recommended for approval by staff. Page 47 of 89 October 3, 2019 CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. You don't want to explain those to us, though? MR. YOVANOVICH: Mr. Strain, I thought you would prefer to have that discussion when we're in the SRA document itself. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, when you got back up, I thought you said we're going to finish describing the deviations and then we're going to go into the staff report recommendations. MR. YOVANOVICH: I actually said we're going to not talk about them anymore. We'll just deal with them as part of the SRA document. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MR. YOVANOVICH: Is that okay? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Yeah, that's fine. We're going to get to them one way or another. Just trying to make sure I understand when. MR. MULHERE: Okay. Condition No. 2, the deviations, development standards, SRA statement of suitability listed under the consistency review findings above, this would be a Comprehensive Plan issue or comment, are removed or revised as discussed. We have met with staff, and based on those meetings, which was September 16th, Collier Enterprises and staff agree the development standards, the land uses, and the deviations meet the LDC requirements with the exception of a discussion that still remains to be had with a couple of the deviations where staff was still recommending denial, and I believe there's only really one of those, maybe two. There were just two issues where staff was still recommending denial where we didn't have concurrence, and I'm going to go over those in a little more detail. Three is the ratio of multifamily to single-family dwelling units has increased to a meaningful level. Again, we met with staff and asked what -- there is no requirement in the LDC. There is no definition of what is a meaningful level. This is also a Comprehensive Planning comment, I believe. And so -- and David Weeks was in the meeting that we had, so he's certainly free to, you know, just chime in on any of these things, obviously. But it was our understanding after that meeting that it was agreed that there is no definition of meaningful level. There has to be a mixture. We're providing a mixture. We have a minimum. And staff is in agreement with that. The companion developer agreement is required to be approved with this SRA request. It is largely completed. I think there is still a little bit of refinement that has to occur within that document. But we did include the latest revision. The County Attorney had some revisions to that, and we provided a few edits back. So we are very close, and hopefully we'll have that finalized for your final review. Just to summarize, at no cost to the county, we agreed to provide 100 -foot of right-of-way for Oil Well Road widening and 100 foot of right-of-way for Immokalee Road plus the water management for both of those. So that's 45 acres of right-of-way adjacent to Rivergrass for Big Cypress Parkway and 170,000 for mitigation for the two intersections that are impacted by this project. So there is one issue that is outstanding, and the county has requested right-of-way extending beyond the adjacency of Big Cypress Parkway to Rivergrass, and we do not agree to provide that right-of-way at this point in time. And it's really, I suppose, a legal discussion, so if you want some further comments, there's a few lawyers here that can speak to that, but that's our position. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: We're going to be talking about traffic as soon as you get done. So we'll get into it with the traffic issue. I want to see what staffs position is on it. MR. MULHERE: This is the other -- I mentioned there was a couple of points of disagreement. This maybe is another one. And 1 believe this is primarily coming from the transportation review. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Chairman, I'm going to ask if we can go back to the previous subject just to be sure -- MR. MULHERE: Sure. Page 48 of 89 October 3, 2019 COMMISSIONER FRYER: This has to do with the right-of-way. It's the applicant's position that they would be willing to provide the right-of-way to the extent that it is adjacent to Rivergrass. MR. MULHERE: Yeah. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Okay. Now, the right-of-way would be 100 feet; is that right? MR. YOVANOVICH: It's actually wider than that, and that's why the acreage in the -- COMMISSIONER FRYER: Went down. MR. YOVANOVICH: -- village went down, because you needed more width. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Got it. But 100 -- MR. YOVANOVICH: It's an average of 148 feet. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Is this going to be contributed -- donated to the county or sold to the county? MR. YOVANOVICH: It will be -- the county will either give us impact fee credits or pay us cash depending on the timing of when this occurs based on two appraisals. (Simultaneous crosstalk.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I'm sorry, Jeff? MR. KLATZKOW: The expectation is impact fee credits. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MR. YOVANOVICH: And it will be based on two independent appraisers coming up with the proper value for the right-of-way. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Thank you. MR. MULHERE: So I'm getting back to this question of interconnection. We -- I had discussed the interconnection previously and showed you all of the locations where we had internal interconnection and external interconnection either, you know, to Oil Well Road or to the proposed Big Cypress Parkway connecting to those Estates streets that we mentioned. This request is to provide interconnection to the north, east, and south. And as we discussed with you, and you can see on the exhibit on the right here, there are Water Retention Areas. See if I can -- right along here all the way around. And there is also a proposed SRA -- MR. YOVANOVICH: SSA. MR. MULHERE: Excuse me -- SSA, thank you, in this region abutting that. So we don't really think it makes any sense to extend the roadway through those Water Retention Areas that also have habitat protection values, and through a -- potentially through an SRA -- SSA. Excuse me. So our position is that it really doesn't make any sense. There's really no significant benefit to that. You will have, ultimately, an extension of Big Cypress Parkway that will extend north and south. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, you just said you weren't going to provide this. MR. MULHERE: Not as part of this project, but ultimately that will occur. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: But if something disagrees in the future and we don't build it, how will that work? Say you -- we don't -- something -- the deal doesn't work. Say we -- neither parties come to a conclusion. MR. MULHERE: Well, there's -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I mean, you control the stewardship area. Why wouldn't we just solve it all now? MR. YOVANOVICH: Two different issues. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. What are they? MR. YOVANOVICH: There's interconnection other than Big Cypress Parkway, which the staff is saying they want -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: What do you mean there's interconnection? MR. YOVANOVICH: They're asking us -- Page 49 of 89 this. October 3, 2019 CHAIRMAN STRAIN: You've got to use the mic, please. MR. YOVANOVICH: Give me a different color. Give me yellow. They're asking us to connect CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Ah. MR. YOVANOVICH: And connect this way. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Gotcha. MR. YOVANOVICH: Okay. And connect this way. And we're -- what we're saying is: The real connection happens this way, which is Big Cypress Parkway, and we're fine with that. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MR. YOVANOVICH: It's the interconnecting through WRAs to other farmlands that we're saying, why would we go through those environmentally sensitive lands to make that happen when this piece can just simply connect there to Oil Well Road? That's -- thafs that issue. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. That clears it up. Thank you. MR. YOVANOVICH: You're welcome. MR. MULHERE: So No. 6 is a condition that says prior to issuance of the first DO, a Listed Species Management Plan must be provided for review, and in response, those are covered by the federal and state agencies. We have to comply with that. We will have management plans as required when we go through that process, and we will provide those to the county. Number 7, this has already been corrected. This was, I guess, an older comment. We did correct the table to reflect the 105,000 square feet versus the original report. Both the economic assessment and the public facilities report had reflected 200,000. Those have been corrected. We've addressed this issue, and staff agrees. Okay. So this gets to the cross-section that I mentioned before. I'm just reading the comments to make sure. I think there's some -- these are just some minor corrections to this cross-section which staff has blessed, and we can make those minor changes. As I said, the width of the cross-section right here is 48 feet. Travel lanes are 11; here and here. You have -- I think the original cross-section did not anticipate SRAs being served by county utilities. And there are separation requirements between various types of utility lines. So this cross-section addresses those issues and, again, has 11 -foot travel lanes rather than 12 -foot. So we've addressed those issues. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: There are various figures in the LDC relating to street cross-sections. Which one of those are you suggesting to modify? MR. MULHERE: This is the local cross-section. I think it's No. 7 under neighborhood general with a 46 -foot right-of-way cross-section total width. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. So you're actually increasing it to 48? MR. MULHERE: Correct. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Karl? COMMISSIONER FRY: Bob, are these standards for the roadways inside the SRA? Is that what you're showing? MR. MULHERE: These are. This is for local -- only local roads. The only deviation -- COMMISSIONER FRY: Inside the village? MR. MULHERE: Yes, correct. This is just -- No. 9 is just some language that needs to be slightly corrected. I think we've already addressed this, but we will make sure that if we haven't we certainly will. I believe we did already address that issue. So because the LDC prohibits separate potable water and reuse water lines, we are asking for a deviation to allow reuse water lines, pumps, and other appurtenances to not necessarily be maintained by Collier County. And, actually, it was the county utilities that asked us to put this deviation in because that language exists. So we've done that. Page 50 of 89 October 3, 2019 Number 10 is -- it references the negotiated interlocal agreement between the Collier County Water and Sewer District and Big Cypress Stewardship District, which has to be adopted along with the SRA ordinance, and we understand that. And No. 11, this appeared -- this is a staff comment that indicates -- or it conditions us to do a housing needs analysis -- whoops. I'm sorry. I don't know why that went off. It's on silent -- a housing needs analysis to estimate -- all right. I don't know whafs going on with that. I'm sorry. MS. GUNDLACH: You want me to take it? MR. MULHERE: Can anything else happen? It's on silent. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I think you're triggering Siri to respond to something. MR. MULHERE: Aye, yai, yai. So let me get back to what I was doing here. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Maybe she could do the presentation. MR. MULHERE: Maybe better, huh? A housing needs analysis be -- the recommendation is that a housing needs analysis be performed to estimate the affordable housing demand and to create a plan to address that supply of affordable housing units for Rivergrass. There is no requirement to do that. There's no requirement to provide affordable housing in an SRA. There's no requirement to do an affordable housing study. So we met with staff, and they concur. There is no requirement. Now, staff is certainly free to recommend something, but it should not be a condition of approval since it isn't a requirement. We met with David Weeks and Ray Bellows and Nancy, and David concurred that staff should not be conditioning approval based on this requirement. COMMISSIONER FRYER: You do have a diversity responsibility. MR. MULHERE: We do have a requirement to have a diverse -- yes -- MR. YOVANOVICH: We meet that. MR. MULHERE: -- and we meet that. COMMISSIONER FRYER: And you have an obligation to be innovative in reaching solutions to problems? MR. MULHERE: Yes. And -- MR. YOVANOVICH: But we don't have an obligation to provide affordable housing, and the code is clear. The only time we have to do affordable housing is if we try to do a density bonus above four units per acre. COMMISSIONER FRYER: I understand. I understand. MR. YOVANOVICH: I just wanted to -- COMMISSIONER FRYER: I'm just pointing that out. MR. YOVANOVICH: We have no issue with the diversity, and staff has determined that we do meet the diversity requirement based upon what we're providing, and staff also acknowledges they can't condition a recommendation of approval upon our doing a housing needs analysis and addressing affordable housing. CHAIRMANSTRAIN: And just so you're --and I don't know if you recall or not, Ave Maria did provide affordable housing. In fact, quite a bit. Both --at least a couple different forms of mitigation. But I'm trying to think. I think that was because of the way they did their economic feasibility. MR. YOVANOVICH: No. What happened was Ave Maria used to be a DRI, and when it was a DRI -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Ah, you're right. MR. YOVANOVICH: -- you have a different review under DRI. And if you remember, we've abandoned -- Ave Maria abandoned the DRI, and the affordable housing requirement went away. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Tbey did use the affordable housing segment, though, in their FIAM to justify some of their financial impact. MR. YOVANOVICH: They may have, but it was also because it was a DRI, it went through a different review process. And as you know, SRAs are no longer subject to a DRI review. So the tie was Page 51 of 89 October 3, 2019 through the DRI process, not through the LDC. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And, Terri, please don't transcribe this. You're right again. MR. YOVANOVICH: Twice today. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Twice. COMMISSIONER DEARBORN: Mr. Chairman, I couldn't hear that again (sic). Could you repeat that? MR. MULBERE: So I did just want to comment on the innovation. The final order called for innovative planning techniques. Rich went over those. He talked about various -- including, but not limited to, various types of things. And subsequent to the Comp Plan being amended to adopt the RLSA program, the LDC amendments were amended -- were adopted. So the way it works is the LDC implements the Comp Plan, and that's it. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. So that wraps up your presentation -- MR. MULHERE: Yep. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: -- on all the subjects so far. And we're going to have some of this repeated when we get into the individual section that we're going to be talking about. MR. YOVANOVICH: And I understand that, Mr. Strain. And, you know, just to quickly summarize, you know, the review process is different because we're an SRA for designation, and it's a very -- it's a more limited review based upon the Growth Management Plan and the LDC between the submittal documents and our presentation, and I'm sure future questions -- we believe -- actually, we don't believe. We know we meet all the requirements in the Growth Management Plan and the LDC and, again, we'll request that you recommend approval of the SRA document as reviewed and presented with the modifications that we've talked about today. MR. KLATZKOW: And just for the record, I'm not entirely sure that I agree with the issue being raised with affordable housing. It does require diversity. The Board of County Commissioners could very easily rule that diversity means different types of housing, including affordable, not just, well, single-family, multifamily type of housing. So that -- ultimately, that will be an issue for the Board of County Commissioners whether or not it's required to put in affordable housing. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Thank you. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And just so -- the part that I suggested he was right on was the fact it was done under the DRI originally. So certainly that's where I was limiting my correction. With that, we'll move to -- unless anybody has any questions of the applicant at this time. Anybody? (No response.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Let's go next to -- since we're going to start with the traffic, before we ask the applicant our traffic questions, I'd like to get staff to provide the information that they have prepared, and that will at least answer some of our questions, so -- or either create more. We'll see where it goes. And members of the Planning Commission, at this point, from here forward, as each presenter's presenting or finishes, whatever they prefer, let's start asking our questions, because we've got the bulk of it, and we're ready to go into it, if you want to, so -- including you, Karl. COMMISSIONER FRY: Thank you for inviting me into the conversation. I decline. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Trinity? MS. SCOTT: Good afternoon. Once again, for the record, Trinity Scott, Transportation Planning manager. And I want to start by saying thank you to Mr. Mulhere for giving me a little informational session on how to use the visualizer up here, so hopefully I won't muck it up and I'll know where north is. Let me start by -- by the way, don't take directions from him, obviously. Page 52 of 89 October 3, 2019 Let me start by introducing the team that I have with me today. I have Mike Sawyer from our Capital Project Planning team; you see him frequently. Greg Root from AIM Engineering; he was responsible for reviewing the Traffic Impact Statement. And I also have Bill Grainer from Jacobs Engineering who worked very closely with staff with regard to the Big Cypress Parkway right-of-way. So I'm going to take the items out of sequence from our staff report, but -- so I could go into the landowner contribution agreement and stay within that. So I'm going to touch on the interconnection first and foremost, and then we'll dive into the landowner contribution agreement. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And you're going to be talking to us about the relevant routing and traffic impacts on the potential new roads and that kind of stuff, too? MS. SCOTT: I'm going to be going through that, yes. I'll be talking about Randall Boulevard, some studies that we've done as well. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Thank you. MS. SCOTT: So Policy 9.3 of the Transportation Element encourages us or requires us to look for interconnections. Within the Master Mobility Plan that the county undertook probably about five or six years ago, there was a specific section within the Master Mobility Plan, Section 4, where there was sub -area modeling that was completed by Tindale Oliver, who was the consultant who completed that study, to look at the RLSA and if it would be beneficial to have interconnections within that area. And so this was a specific sub -area transportation model, and the results of that model so that there would be a decrease in vehicle miles traveled and vehicle hours traveled if we provided interconnections between the villages and the towns. These interconnections are invaluable to us. And once the environment's built, we can't get them back. If you look at Immokalee Road, you look at Airport Road, any of our major arterials here in the urban area, we have communities right next to each other. And if they want to go to the commercial that's next door, they're forced out onto that main arterial roadway, even for those very short localized trips. So that's why we're asking for the interconnections. So this is -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Before you -- did you -- would you prefer to get through your presentation or if we have questions along the way, what would you like? MS. SCOTT: Maybe we could do it by sections, because I have a little bit more to talk about -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. We'll stop when you get to a section, and we'll see if we have questions. I don't want to miss anything. MS. SCOTT: So this is the Big Cypress Stewardship District area in red. You've seen this as part of the applicant's presentation. But I also want to bring up the prior plan that was provided to us, which is Rural Lands West. Rural Lands West was definitely a town, but it had an interconnection, you'll notice, in this area as well as to the south. And as was shown by the applicant earlier this morning, this is Rivergrass, the next village, and the next village, and these are exhibits that they've provided to us through various meetings. So if I put these side by side, we were able to traverse this area as part of the town. It was still going to be the WRA and all of that but -- so we feel that there's still the value there. And if you zoom into the aerial, it looks like there's maybe an old farm road that's there, so it's disturbed within that area as well as it looks like as well here in the aerials. So we think that those are valuable to be able to allow the folks that are in the adjacent town or, I'm sorry, the adjacent villages to be able to get to the commercial that's within this area and vice versa, because there'll be commercial there. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Which one was that? Was that Bellmar or -- Bellmar. MS. SCOTT: Bellmar. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Okay. Is the same thing true in the case of Longwater? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Longwater is the northern one. MS. SCOTT: I'm sorry. This one's Longwater. So it would be Longwater. Page 53 of 89 October 3, 2019 COMMISSIONER FRYER: Okay. MS. SCOTT: Bellmar, I think, is a bit more difficult, but we will move through that with the next village as it comes in. COMMISSIONER FRYER: So, in other words, for our purposes of considering this project, we can assume that Longwater, that's the north one, and Rivergass are going to be interconnected at least on the south side of Oil Well? MS. SCOTT: That's what staff is seeking is that there be an interconnection. COMMISSIONER FRYER: To me that's fundamental. Just an observation. I'm sorry. Go ahead. MS. SCOTT: And that completes the discussion on the interconnection section. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MS. SCOTT: And then I get into the next item is the land contribution agreement. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Let's make sure -- any other questions on the interconnection? Ned, did you have, do you say? COMMISSIONER FRYER: I do. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Go right ahead, sir. COMMISSIONER FRYER: One of the things that is most troublesome for me about what is being proposed is the lack of interconnection as compared to what we would have in the case of a full-fledged town. And as has been said previously, what we do or don't do with respect to this project -- I don't necessarily call it precedent, but in a sense informally it will be relied upon and looked to by subsequent developers, some of whom are the very same commercial interests that are before us now. And I find it very troubling that the integration, the interconnectivity, the walkability, the bikeability that would have been available in the case of a town, with these unconnected -- potentially unconnected villages, you lose that, and that is a fundamental concern that I have with this position. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Yes, sir. MR. YOVANOVICH: Mr. Strain, I know this is kind of a little bit different process, so I'm -- should we stay -- can we address topic by topic? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Yes. I was going to suggest -- in fact, I was going to suggest one of you get at each mic so if we have questions better answered by the applicant, so be it, and we can also get input from staff. And I think it's important we -- that will move faster then. COMMISSIONER FRYER: I'm going to finish my question -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. COMMISSIONER FRYER: -- if I may. MR. YOVANOVICH: Yeah. I just want to be able to respond on topic. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Understood. The 400 -pound gorilla in this application is called Oil Well Road. And it's now, I think, two lanes. It's going to become four lanes, possibly six lanes at some point in the future. The speed limit on that road is 55 miles an hour, and the traffic that goes up and down that road is industrial tractor -trailer -type traffic proceeding at a very high rate of speed. And to me the issue of interconnectivity is -- I just don't see any possible solution with Oil Well Road right in the middle unless you were to do an underpass of some kind, because you do not have interconnectivity with Oil Well, period. MR. YOVANOVICH: So can you put the town back up there? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: That's the town. MR. YOVANOVICH: I understand. Is it appropriate now for me to respond? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I don't -- Ned, who are you directing your -- do you have a specific need to -- or just anybody -- MR. YOVANOVICH: I just thought it was more of a comment that I -- Page 54 of 89 October 3, 2019 CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Go ahead. COMMISSIONER FRYER: I'd like to hear from the applicant, yeah. MR. YOVANOVICH: Thank you. A couple of important things: There is no town before you. The town project was a very different project which included in the area that Ms. Scott was directing you to for the need for interconnection of two million square feet of retail, office, businesses park uses that are not before you in the Rivergrass Village. In Rivergrass Village what you have before you is a 21 -acre village center. Totally different projects. Totally different on an economic scale. The interconnectivity nearest Oil Well Road was a pedestrian interconnection, not a vehicular interconnection to get to two million square feet of retail, office, business park uses; different economies of scale for providing that interconnection. The need to keep traffic off the road to get to a 21 -acre village center is totally different than what the town was, and the town is not before you and will not be before you. The other villages will be evaluated on a stand-alone basis. They will be required to provide their own retail goods and services for that village. But there is absolutely no reason to interconnect those villages to try to get through an environmentally sensitive area for cars to go to a 21 -acre village center when the other villages will have their own village centers to address those needs, when you can very easily interconnect up and down Big Cypress Parkway to go from village to village if those other villages go through the process and ultimately get approved. I think it's fundamentally improper to assume anything on what's going to happen on the two other villages. MR. KLATZKOW: I just find this remarkable. This is a Planning Commission. By your very nature you're here to plan, all right. So if they want to balkanize this process by chopping this up into little PUDs, because that's essentially what we're doing here, that's fine, all right. They've got their rights under the LDC to put together a village if they want to. But at the end of the day, this is a Planning Commission. And if you guys are going to be planning for misery here because we're not putting together the appropriate road system, then 20 years from now people should come down here and just say, shame on you people, all right. And shame on, you know, anybody who, you know, would be planning for misery here, all right. The county's not doing this because, you know, we believe that we're going to punish the developer or because we don't think it's really necessary but it would be nice. The county is asking for these interconnections and these roads because at the end of the day we're not about the developer here. We're about the people who are going to have to live there 20, 30 years from now, and you may be talking 20,000 people out there, all right. So if you get 20,000 people out there and you don't have a road system for them, we are planning for misery. And this is the first and best chance, maybe the last chance we have of putting together a decent road system, period. And if you want to say that that's unlawful, you can't do that, that's fine. We can argue that in a courtroom for the next couple of years. Okay by me. But, you know, don't balkanize this and just say you guys can't talk about it. This is a Planning Commission. MR. YOVANOVICH: And I believe -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And we will bring up the subjects that we feel necessary to bring up as it goes along. And I'm not saying you told us -- I'm just telling you. MR. YOVANOVICH: I understand. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: We're going to continue bringing up the subjects, so we just need the best answers we can get. MR. YOVANOVICH: And I fully -- I didn't mean to talk over you, especially -- I agree with that. What we're telling you is it's bad planning. There is no legitimate planning reason to require us to Page 55 of 89 October 3, 2019 build a road through environmentally sensitive lands to claim that you're how going to generate a lot of traffic to a 21 -acre village center. Our traffic analysis -- and I'm sure that Mr. Trebilcock and Ms. Scott and all our experts will show you we analyzed the full traffic impacts to Oil Well Road and every other road related to Rivergrass. We've done that, and we're saying there's no legitimate planning reason to force a roadway connection through sensitive lands. We can all agree to disagree. That's our position, and I don't think it's bad planning to say you don't put a road through a sensitive area. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: But just to cut to the quick: Your position is you're not willing to do the interconnection? MR. YOVANOVICH: Not to the east where they're asking us to do that, because we don't think it's a legitimate request. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Let's move on to the next question. COMMISSIONER FRYER: I'm going to ask if I may respond to Mr. Yovanovich. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Of course, you can. COMMISSIONER FRYER: And when it comes to the legality, if you will, of what is being proposed, the standards that have been set in the Land Development Code, particularly 4.08.07, there's a litany here of provisions that I don't think your client has come close to, and I'm going to read them. MR. YOVANOVICH: Fine. COMMISSIONER FRYER: 4.08.07.J.3.A.2, villages shall be designed in a compact pedestrian -friendlier form. You've got Oil Well Road. .07.C.2, villages shall be designed to encourage pedestrian and bicycle circulation by including an interconnected sidewalk and pathways system serving all residential neighborhoods. Continuing. The transportation network shall provide for a high level of mobility for all residents through a design that respects the pedestrian and accommodates the automobile. Villages shall be designed to encourage pedestrian and bicycle circulation by including an interconnected sidewalk and pathway system serving all residential neighborhoods. The goal of the Transportation Element, as stated in that element, is to plan for, develop, and operate a safe, efficient, and cost-effective transportation system that provides for both the motorized and nonmotorized movement of people and goods throughout Collier County. Objective 10 of the Transportation Element: Encourage safe and efficient mobility for the rural public that remains consistent with the character of the rural areas of Collier County. Objective 7, encourage safe and convenient on-site traffic circulation through the development process. RLSA Overlay 1, the perimeter of each SRA shall be designed to provide a transition from a higher density and intensity of uses within the SRA to lower density and intensity of uses on adjoining property. The problem I have with this is when you do balkanize it or carve it into village pieces, what really, in the view of many planners, is contrary to what would be in the best interest of the county, and that would be to have fewer number of towns rather than lots and lots of villages. The problem is is that you're going to have, in effect, urban sprawl, and you're going to have developments that are going to require people to leave their subdivisions, leave their villages in order to satisfy their needs for basic goods and services because they're not provided within walking distance or biking distance. And, to me, there's a lot that I could say positively about that proposal, and I hope I'll have time to as this goes on. But right now I'm focusing on what I see is the biggest problem, and that big problem is Oil Well Road. And there's nothing that is being proposed that is innovative that solves that problem such as an underpass of some kind and, by splitting these off into villages that are adjoining or abutting one another, you lose the connectivity that you would have with a town. Page 56 of 89 October 3, 2019 MR, YOVANOVICH: So let me take several of those. I don't -- I couldn't write as fast as you could speak, but I think I got a lot of them. Big picture: Let's start with the basic premise of the RLSA that was established by the Board of County Commissioners, and it's an incentive -based program and it's a voluntary program. And the Board of County Commissioners says there's four options for an SRA: Town is one, village is another, hamlet's another, and compact rural development is the fourth. There is nothing in the Land Development Code that requires anybody to develop a town. So my client has every right to come in and ask for a village. That's what they're doing. You may prefer a town, but that's not your choice. And I don't mean it adversarial. I mean, you, the global group. We're allowed to ask for a village, and if we meet the requirements for a village, you consider each application individually. We meet the requirements of a village. Hang on a second. MR. KLATZKOW: But there has to be interconnectivity. MR. YOVANOVICH: You didn't let me finish. As much as you may want a town and you may think that's the best interest of Collier County, you can't force a property owner to do a town. Next -- COMMISSIONER FRYER: I just read the ordinances. MR. YOVANOVICH: I did, too. And it doesn't --you show me where -- COMMISSIONER FRYER: I just did. MR. YOVANOVICH: --in the Growth Management Plan it requires us to build a town. It doesn't. So let me go to the next issue: Interconnectivity as far as sidewalks. Your Land Development Code has cross-sections for neighborhood general roads. It requires a sidewalk on both sides of the street. We provide sidewalks on both sides of the street. Your Land Development Code addresses how pedestrians are to be kept safe, and they are. There's sidewalks on both sides of every street. So your pedestrian traffic is taken care of through your own Land Development Code mandated cross-sections that we are agreeing to. We did not ask for a deviation from providing sidewalks except where we put a 10 -foot pathway when there was no houses on that side of the street. So we meet your Land Development Code mandated pedestrian interconnectivity. Your Land Development Code prescribes cross-sections for roads. It does not require separate bicycle paths. We meet your code requirements for neighborhood general. Neighborhood general is a context zone not only in villages. It's also a context zone in towns. Now, there is nothing in this code that requires for a village or a town for that effect that people walk to the town center or that houses have to be within so many feet or miles or whatever distance from the village center for a village or the town center for a town or the town core for a town. People can walk if they want to on the sidewalks that we're providing, but there's no distance requirement for us to meet that. We are consistent with the code regarding your cross-section with your block size. All of those develop standards that are in your Land Development Code that, by definition, if we meet those standards, we're consistent with your Growth Management Plan. There is nothing in your Land Development Code or your Growth Management Plan that says villages shall be interconnected through sensitive environmental lands. It doesn't exist. It's not there. In fact, what Trinity put up on the screen says you'll encourage interconnection, and you defer to the Land Development Code where that interconnection will be mandated. Now, subject to being corrected -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: You are going to be corrected, so -- 9.3 does not say what that element says. I mean, it actually says the county shall require, whenever feasible, the interconnection of local streets between developments to facilitate convenient movement throughout the network. So it doesn't -- that's not quite encouraging. That's saying "shall require." Page 57 of 89 October 3, 2019 And I kind of want to -- it really falls back on Ned asking a question that probably should have been caught by Comprehensive Planning if it's a GMP issue. So I guess, Trinity, the question should be is -- does -- did you run this by David Weeks or Corby or anybody from Comp Planning to talk about the application of 9.3 in the way that Ned is suggesting it so we can get to the resolution or bottom interpretation of this issue? MS. SCOTT: Mr. Weeks is coming up but, yes, we have talked about the interconnection. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Well, then -- because I don't believe this was one of the -- I didn't -- it may have been in your Comprehensive Planning item, but we haven't got to that yet, so... MR. WEEKS: David Weeks of the Comprehensive Planning section, the Growth Management manager. We didn't -- Trinity and I and, I think, Michael Sawyer did talk about interconnections in addition to Policy 9.3 that's on the screen from the transportation element. You might recall that there's also a policy under Objective 7 in the Future Land Use Element. That object -- that policy within the Future Land Use Element is where it states it encourages interconnections. So I agree with Mr. Yovanovich, it is not a requirement, but it's something encouraged. So to me that's where professional planners and, ultimately, hearing bodies can make a judgment decision as to whether or not we believe an interconnection should or should not be provided. And staff agrees that it's appropriate to provide the interconnections as Trinity was saying earlier. If we look to the land to the north, it's designated open on the Future Land Use Map, the area closest to the future of Big Cypress Parkway. And so we believe that it's reasonable to assume that some day in the future there may be an SRA there having an interconnection would be beneficial. Similarly, to the south, there's open lands further to the south. We believe that at some point in the future there may be an SRA there. And to the east, through the environmentally sensitive areas, that's a little bit more tricky, but if -- most particularly if there's already a disturbed area there -- I think Trinity mentioned that there appeared to be an old farm road there. If that's true, if there is some disturbance there, that especially, in my opinion, leads some credence to providing an interconnection. But Trinity has already indicated to you the benefits, I think, of the interconnections, and that's to keep traffic off of Big Cypress Parkway just like we have here, as she's already told you. Along 41, Airport Road, we have lots of developments that don't have interconnections. And so all of the traffic is forced out onto the major roadway. Whether that is to go to a commercial center close by or recreational area or to visit your neighbor that lives in the next development over there, we believe there's benefit to having interconnections. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Now, David, I've got a couple follow-up. 9.3 is in front of us, and you referred to Objective 7, which "encourages." 9.3 says "shall require." Which one is the most applicable? I mean, they seem to be conflicting. If one requires and the other encourages, that's different language. MR. WEEKS: I don't think they're in conflict. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MR. WEEKS: Encouraging is just that. And if some other policy takes that to the level of requirement, I don't see that as conflict. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. So what you're saying is that the requirement is there even though the objective says encourage? MR. WEEKS: In the two different elements, yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MR. WEEKS: I just want to mention, that's probably what Rich is going to tell you. But the language does say "require where feasible." CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Right. MR. WEEKS: So it's not an absolute in all circumstances. Page 58 of 89 October 3, 2019 And then, secondly, it does make some reference to the Land Development Code to include the specific details. But even if the Land Development Code narrows it down to specific circumstances, I would turn right around and go back to the Future Land Use Element policy that encourages the interconnections. I still think there is the decision for land -use planning to occur on a case-by-case basis that may be beyond the scope of the specific provisions in the Land Development Code. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And we have provisions in the GMP for the RLSA. Do any of those specifically require interconnection? MR. WEEKS: Require, no. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. COMMISSIONER FRYER: I have a question, if I may follow up. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Then I'll get back to Jeff here eventually. Go ahead. COMMISSIONER FRYER: The presence of Oil Well Road, how do you see that affecting the concept of interconnectivity? MR. WEEKS: I guess I'll state the obvious: It bisects the SRA, and so it -- in the sense of the interconnectivity, it functions as two separate developments in that sense. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Absolutely. And two separate developments with one commercial center that is accessible internally only from the south side, correct? MR. WEEKS: That's all that's identified on the master plan, yes. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Okay. Thank you. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Now, Jeff, did you have something you wanted to bring up? We've got an opening here. MR. KLATZKOW: No. I'm just saying that we need to get the road system right now because once these developments start getting in, you'll never be able to change it later. It's just gets too sensitive, and it just doesn't happen. So, you know, you put the skeleton on the body before you start worrying about the bones (sic) and everything anything else, and the transportation is the skeleton. And, you know, once you've got the muscles and everything else in there, you just can't stick a skeleton in there. MR. YOVANOVICH: Can I -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Go ahead, Richard. MR. YOVANOVICH: David brought up a couple of my points, but I want to -- I want to -- two things: The disturbed area that he was referring to was the Gargulio farm operations, and then -- that's to the east. It's not up there right now, but that was where we had the pedestrian interconnect when we had a town. There are no disturbed areas to the south where staff is asking us to now impact environmentally sensitive lands. There is not a requirement for interconnection in the Growth Management Plan. It says "wherever feasible," and then it defers to the Land Development Code. And what I was starting to say, subject to being corrected, I was referring to about what I was going to say in the Land Development Code. The Land Development Code does not require interconnection for Rural Lands Stewardship Area lands. It does require interconnection for PVDs. We're not a PUD. And it does require interconnection for commercial and adjacent residential in the urban area, activity centers. There's no language -- in referral -- in reference to activity centers. The two times that I'm aware of that requires interconnection, it deals with PUDs and commercial, and it talks about activity centers interconnecting residential neighborhoods, and the PT Ds are required to provide interconnection for adjacent neighbors. MR. KLATZKOW: So are we saying that villages shouldn't be connected? MR. YOVANOVICH: I am saying in this particular case where you have environmental sensitive lands, you cannot require interconnection. MR. KLATZKOW: I've lived all over the entire United States. I've never heard in my entire life two villages not being connected. I think -- for you to say that we can require it for a PUD but not a Page 59 of 89 October 3, 2019 village, I think, is just remarkable. MR. YOVANOVICH: Well, fust of all, I didn't write the code. And I don't know where you lived and whether or not there was environmentally sensitive land between the two that would have required an interconnection. There is an interconnection, and it's called Big Cypress Parkway. That's how a lot of towns and villages are connected by U.S. 41 and others where you have towns next to each other, cities next to each other. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. But what it boils down to is you're not going to consider the interconnection that was brought up by Ned. We'll defer that to the discussion of stipulations as we go forward with the resolutions of this recommendation to the Board. We need to move on. We've got a lot to go over, and if every issue on this project's going to take this long, we're going to be here for weeks, not days. So go ahead. Trinity, before you leave, I do have the -- I think David answered, there is no specific interconnection language in the GMP for the RLSA. You're just going to the general language in the GMP transportation section. MS. SCOTT: Correct. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MS. SCOTT: I think I'm going to move on now to the -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Before you go, do you know if this village is supposed to be gated or not? Is that something you took into consideration or you observed or knew? And, Richard, since you're participating, is this going to be a gated village? MR. YOVANOVICH: Yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: It's going to be a gated village. So from security perspectives, we probably need to know that to understand how the interconnections would function and work if they were to have to be required. You need to use the mic. You know that. MR. YOVANOVICH: Yes, it is gated. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. And you were asking another question, though. MR. YOVANOVICH: I was? What was the other -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I don't know. You started -- MR. YOVANOVICH: I asked you if you guys could hear me on the record, and that's when you -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: It doesn't matter. We've got to have the mic. MR. YOVANOVICH: That's why I got up. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: We resolved it. Thank you. So they are going to be gated communities. And, Trinity, I don't know if you guys took that into consideration in your review, but you need to consider it for the next time we come back. MS. SCOTT: Will do. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Go ahead. MS. SCOTT: So I'm going on to the land contribution agreement, and I'm going to kind of go back and provide some history, because some of the business points that I get to later on are because of some discussions in front of the Board of County Commissioners. So this particular area is the subject of the Big Cypress Stewardship District. In October of 2003, Collier Enterprises came before the Board of County Commissioners seeking a resolution to support the creation of the Big Cypress Stewardship District. One of the requirements in that resolution was that within 90 days of the approval of the act, that the Collier Enterprises would -- and the staff would come before the Board of County Commissioners with an interlocal service delivery agreement. That interlocal service delivery agreement was to discuss the transportation needs of the district. In October of 2004 the Board of County Commissioners approved an interlocal service delivery agreement which set aside right-of-way for Oil Well Road, brought it to, I believe, 200 feet, as well as the water management. Page 60 of 89 October 3, 2019 It also requested the right-of-way for Immokalee Road along the frontage of the district, as well as the water management, as well as Randall Boulevard extension, and we'll get into that a little bit later, but the Randall Boulevard extension was to be transferred -- funded by transportation impact fee credits. So the Oil Well Road and Immokalee were donations, and Randall Boulevard extension was to be transportation impact fees. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Trinity, just before you go too far, I just want to make sure. So I'm trying to understand, your two dates there, are they correct? Instead of 90 days, it was almost a year apart. MS. SCOTT: Well, what happened was they came in for the resolution, and then it had to go through the legislature and get approved. So it was approved, and then once the act was approved by the legislature, then they came back -- they had 90 days after that approval to come back in front of the board. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Great, thank you. MS. SCOTT: So that agreement was never executed. The Board -- and you have -- within your staff report, I think I quoted large sections of the minutes of that. So that agreement was never executed. However, in 2009, Collier Enterprises and the Board of County Commissioners entered into agreement, and the Oil Well Road right-of-way was donated. So, once again, this is the Big Cypress Stewardship District area. That was the subject of the resolution in front of the Board. So our Business Point No. 1 is that the landowner must donate the land adjacent to Immokalee Road to provide that 200 -foot -wide corridor -- it's about 100 feet that they would have to donate -- as well as provide sufficient stormwater management for the roadway segment. That was the initial commitment with the district back in 2004. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And they've agreed to do that right now. They've already done it, or they're in the process of doing it, right? MS. SCOTT: This is part of the develop -- or the land contribution agreement, yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: When these issues -- when these points are resolved, kind of add that in and let us know. MS. SCOTT: Yep. And this is -- unless Mr. Yovanovich jumps up, this is not a point of contention. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Good. Thank you. MS. SCOTT: Business Point No. 2, and I'll tell you, of all these, I believe the only one is the additional right-of-way for Big Cypress Parkway, but we'll get to that. COMMISSIONER FRYER: The only one what? Oh, it's open. MS. SCOTT: Business Point No. 2 is that the landowner or designee, so presumably if someone else assumes the property, they shall permit, construct, and install at their sole cost and expense a traffic signal on Oil Well Road at their primary residential access point within one year of request from Collier County. We will request that. Our request will be contingent upon it meeting signal warrants. The next item is that the landowner, designee, or their successors will not seek a traffic signal along Big Cypress Parkway within half -- one-half mile of the intersection of Randall Boulevard or Oil Well Road. This is -- I think the Planning Commission has kind of been brought into some of these conversations with Heritage Bay recently, and so we just want to be explicit that we do not want traffic signals along -- an abundance of traffic signals along Big Cypress Parkway. We really want to use that to move people. And then I actually have a typo here on my third bullet point; that they shall pay, it's actually $170,000, which are proportionate share operational payments, improvements as identified in their Traffic Impact Statement, and Mr. Trebilcock went over those in his presentation. And all three of these the applicant has agreed to. So Big Cypress Parkway, this is Business Point No. 3. Before we get started, the applicant has agreed to provide the right-of-way adjacent to Rivergrass as well as the water management associated Page 61 of 89 October 3, 2019 with that roadway width. The point of contention is north of Rivergrass as well as south of Rivergrass, so I'll go through that. So as part of that Big Cypress Stewardship District, I talked to you about -- that the Board of County Commissioners had approved this interlocal services delivery agreement. And the Board approved that with what we called Randall Boulevard extension at the time. And when I get a little bit further, I'll show you where Randall Boulevard extension was. But it was apparent in reviewing the minutes of the meeting -- and I wasn't here at the time, but during the discussion, the disagreement really stemmed around Randall Boulevard, and that there was a study in place that really showed where that roadway should be. And I think it's probably a fair statement that, you know, Collier Enterprises were like, you know, you're just trying to set aside right-of-way, and we really don't know where it is or what it's going to connect to. So during that discussion, the representatives at that time, which was in 2004, said that the county should request it at the time of zoning action, which, I guess, the irony is is -- the contention is the zoning was done, I think, before this but -- and that they can't agree because no one had studied it, and that we should take the time and agree to work together to work on a solution that solves the interconnection and come up with a better solution that serves all the transportation public in Collier County. And they were willing to work with the county and talk with the county on that and many other corridors that the county puts into the Long Range Transportation Plan. And those comments, I believe, were all made by Mr. Conrecode, Tom Conrecode, who at the time was representing Collier Enterprises. So in 2016 Collier County began the Randall Boulevard/Oil Well Road corridor study. And this is the corridor area. It goes from Eighth Street on Randall Boulevard north to Oil Well Road all the way out Oil Well. And I'm going to try to use this thing now. We'll see how I do. Let's see. This right here -- oh, let me get a different color. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: You've got to hit clear to clear what you started, so... MS. SCOTT: Let's try this. Previously, the Randall Boulevard extension was -- it probably wasn't as straight as that. It was probably more of a loop kind of thing there. But, essentially previously, the original discussions were trying to secure right-of-way for Randall Boulevard, and it went and connected up Oil Well Road. And this was a lot of conversations when we were discussing the town was we were essentially bifurcating the town and all of that. So the county started this study. And I'm going to get into some of the particulars of that study as well. So we -- the county started the study, and then in 2018 the Metropolitan Planning Organization went through an amendment process to their 2040 Long Range Transportation Plan. And that plan -- the result of that was -- first of all, the reason that the plan was done was when we do long range transportation planning for the county's Long Range Transportation Plan, we look at a horizon year that's 20 years out. So our horizon year currently is 2040. And we utilize median BEBR numbers, Bureau of Economic Research numbers for our population. So we look at base year, which for the 2040 was 2010, and we look at the population that's here at that time. And then we add on what PUDs have been approved. And we build those out within a reasonable buildout schedule, and then we have population that's left. And then we go and we looked at the Growth Management Plan and see where do we anticipate future growth to be. And the future growth is anticipated to be in this area, largely. However, the development was very spread out in that area. And so it was not within the traffic analysis zones, which is what we get into; not to get into the weeds here. And so there was a desire to conglomerate that and put that where the development was going to occur, where we anticipated it would occur. So there was an amendment that was done. And so they redid the traffic model when they did that, and what was the result of that is that Big Cypress Parkway, which is shaded in the purple, was identified as a need, a new roadway; that was identified as a need within that plan. Page 62 of 89 October 3, 2019 Now, in the Long Range Transportation Plan, we have a needs plan, what we need to do versus what -- a cost -feasible plan, which is what we can afford to do. So the project was not deemed to be cost feasible, so we would not anticipate that it would be built within -- by 2040; however, we did identify it as a need. And when I say "we," that's the Metropolitan Planning Organization which the Board is made up of all five commissioners, two City Council people from Naples, one from Marco Island, and one from Everglades City. So in 2019, my staff took the Randall Boulevard/Oil Well Road corridor study to the Board of County Commissioners. That was approximately a $670,000 study that we undertook because we wanted to finalize that alignment. The BCC unanimously adopted the staffs recommendation, which is what we called Viable Alternative No. 2, which was not limited to one roadway improvement but a network that would distribute traffic in the area, and I'm going to go through so you guys understand what we did from a long range transportation planning perspective. So we were looking at the Randall Boulevard/Oil Well corridor, and at that time we were utilizing -- this is excerpts from the presentation that went in front of the Board. But the 2018 AUIR showed that Randall Boulevard was a Level of Service E and projected to be deficient by 2021. And in our study we looked at through 2045 if we did nothing in the area. We would have Level of Service F on Randall Boulevard, on a large section of Randall Boulevard out to Everglades, and D beyond, F along Oil Well Road, and then F at the intersection at Immokalee Road. And so, certainly, no build wasn't an option for us. So we came up with some viable alternatives, and Viable Alternative 1 was an S connector. This provided a new roadway segment. Just west of Everglades Boulevard around the Valencia Golf and Country Club, and six -lane improvements on Randall Boulevard, and four -- to Everglades Boulevard, and four -lane beyond, as well as our six-laning of Oil Well Road. And when we ran the model for that, it worked. We had Level of Service C through 2045 based on our growth projections; however, we had a huge bottleneck at Immokalee Road and Wilson Boulevard. So we looked at a second viable alternative, which was just to widen Everglades Boulevard to four lanes. And while that worked for Randall Boulevard, it didn't work for Oil Well Road. It did not pull the traffic off of Oil Well Road. And so the section of Oil Well Road that's constrained to four lanes through 2045 was expected to operate at a Level of Service F, and we still had the bottleneck at Immokalee and Wilson. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Isn't this the one, though, you said the Board adopted? MS. SCOTT: No. They actually adopted what's called Viable Alternative 2 Plus. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Oh. I should have known. Okay. MS. SCOTT: So when we go through and we do a transportation study, it's not just about how well we move traffic. It's also about, you know, are we enhancing mobility, improving safety, our right-of-way impacts, our environmental impacts, our impacts to the neighborhoods, things of that nature. So we looked at what else could we come up with that would serve the population in the area and also accommodate the growth. So we came up with the Viable Alternative 2 Plus which includes the six-laning of Randall Boulevard out to Everglades Boulevard, four-laning of Everglades Boulevard, and also the six-laning of Oil Well Road, and four-laning of Randall Boulevard beyond Everglades. But it also includes Everglades Boulevard, extending Vanderbilt Beach Road extension, as well as the Big Cypress Parkway. One of the reasons that we made this recommendation is that on much of the roads out in the Estates, the major roads out in the Estates which is with the exception of Oil Well Road, these roadways are single-family homes. And in sections of Randall Boulevard, we were dealing with 2-, 300 driveway connections. So to have 2- or 300 driveway connections along a six -lane facility is quite difficult and Page 63 of 89 October 3, 2019 certainly reduces our capacity. And so looking at a new corridor, we can have more -- we can move more traffic without having the friction from those driveway connections. So the county completed its study. We did what we said we were going to do. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And I need a break point for you so the court reporter can have some time. It's been over an hour and a half, and usually we give her a break every hour and a half. So whenever you get there, let me know. MS. SCOTT: We can stop now and pick back up. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Let's come back at 2:45 and resume. It's about 11 minutes from now. Thank you. (A brief recess was had from 2:34 p.m. to 2:45 p.m., and Commissioner Dearborn and Tom Eastman are absent for the remainder of the meeting.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Everybody, if you will please take your seats. We're back from break, and we'll resume the meeting. And we left off interrupting Trinity's presentation where we'll now go back into further -- Trinity, when you get a break for this piece, we'll do our questions. But get to that point and let us know when it's there. MS. SCOTT: Yep. This is all about the Big Cypress Parkway right-of-way. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Great. Thank you. MS. SCOTT: So Policy 3.3 of the Transportation Element says the county shall acquire a sufficient amount of right-of-way to facilitate arterial and collector roads as appropriate to meet the needs of the Long Range Transportation Plan or other adopted transportation studies, plan, or programs. Exceptions to the right-of-way standard may be considered when it can be demonstrated through a traffic capacity analysis that the maximum number of lanes at buildout will be less. So county staff is requesting the following rights-of-way consistent with Policy 3.3 of the Transportation Element of the GMP and the prior commitments made by Collier Enterprises during the approval of the Big Cypress Stewardship District of working with the county on roadways that are identified within the Long Range Transportation Plan. And I've broken it up into Segment 1, Segment 2, and Segment 3. The landowner would receive impact fee credits for the value of the property. The value of the land would be determined by two accredited appraisers who are mutually agreed upon by the parties. The purchase price shall be based on the market value of the land as set aside just prior to the SRA action and shall be equal to the average of the two appraisals. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Can you tell us where each one of these segments is? MS. SCOTT: Yes. I'm going to go through a map. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Thank you. MS. SCOTT: So Segment 1 is north of Oil Well Road, and north is up. Just north -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: How did you know to do that? Bob didn't. MR. MULHERE: I didn't prepare that. MS. SCOTT: This is just north of where Rivergrass stops right now. So this would go further north up and connect to Immokalee Road. The segment's approximately 3.6 miles. Segment 2 is along the property boundary of Rivergrass. It's delineated in green there. And Segment 3 is south of -- roughly Randall Boulevard south to the southern boundary of the stewardship district. It's approximately 11 miles. Once again, this was the original Big Cypress Stewardship District, one of the exhibits that was proposed. And I know it shows a town. That's not on the table now. But I show this because in the Long Range Transportation Plan, there is a discussion of a needed interchange along I-75 somewhere in the vicinity of Everglades Boulevard. And I say that because there's a process that has to be gone through in order to be able to determine where an interchange would go if it would go -- if it's needed, et cetera. COMMISSIONER FRYER: How many miles east of Exit 101 is that, or approximately, Page 64 of 89 October 3, 2019 Everglades? MS. SCOTT: I would have to measure it. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Like, 10 miles. MS. SCOTT: Let me think. Wilson's five and Everglades is 10 -- COMMISSIONER FRYER: Okay. MS. SCOTT: -- I think is typically those -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: This would be out past DeSoto, thought, right? Well, theoretically. MS. SCOTT: Potentially, yes. So if -- there's a whole federal process that we would go through on where an interchange could -- would be, could be in the future. But in the past there was some discussion that potentially this would be a connection in the future. And, like I said, that would still have to all go through a very public process to go through. My right-of-way acreages right now are approximates because we were -- and I should say, in fairness to the applicant, we were going back and forth with design standards. The Florida Department of Transportation has recently come out with new Florida Green Book design standards, and we wanted to make sure that the roadway could comply with all of them. And they were more than accommodating to work with us through that process, and it was a lot of back and forth over, you know, a half -acre here and, you know, a couple inches, a couple feet there. So they worked with us. So these right-of-way acreages are approximate, and we'll tighten that up before we fmalize. So grand total is over 400 acres for the Big Cypress Parkway right-of-way. And just to put that in context, the stewardship district's about 22,000 acres. So while it does seem like a lot, it's a little less than 2 percent of their total acreages. So I want to go back to the conversation that the Board of County Commissioners had. So during that discussion of the interlocal services delivery agreement, it was stated that the county should study the area. We did that. We went before the Board of County Commissioners with a unanimous approval of staff s recommendation. They couldn't agree because no one had studied it. We did. That we needed to take the time and agree to work on a -- together work on a solution that solves the interconnection and come up with a better solution that serves all the transportation public. We worked closely with the applicant throughout this process, through our process with the roadway study. We knew that they didn't like us taking Randall Boulevard and, essentially, bifurcating that development even further, and it certainly didn't -- wasn't the most capacity -adding project that we could do. And so we worked together to try to come up with a design that was least impactful to them, certainly in acreage, I believe, I understand that, but we really didn't want to have to have another arterial roadway through the middle of their town. And also they said that they were willing to work with the county and talk with the county on that and many other corridors that the county puts into the long-range plan. And so the roadway is in the long-range plan, is in the long-range plan, I believe, down the Golden Gate Boulevard. We are asking for it -- for the remainder. The commitment was made to work with us back in 2004, and our concern is is that property changes hands -- right now we're under common ownership. Having that right-of-way set aside is beneficial to us so we can bring roadway projects online as we need to. So that's the end of that business point. As I said, the applicant has agreed with everything including the value for Segment 2, but they have not agreed on Segment 1 and Segment 3. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. So let's get our questions past this business point and get on to the next one. Anybody have any questions? Ned? COMMISSIONER FRYER: From a review of the materials I found on at this City Scape (sic) about how this project was evolving before it was really ready for prime time, I noticed some rather explicit language to the effect that the county was asking that the full right-of-way be contributed, be donated by Collier Enterprises, and now we've come to a point where they're going to get credits for it, Page 65 of 89 October 3, 2019 impact fee credits. Could you describe for me the discussions that took place and why that concession was made? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Before you do, where'd you pull this from? You said City Scape or something like that? COMMISSIONERFRYER: Yeah. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: What's that? COMMISSIONER FRYER: Do I have the wrong name? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Oh, CityView. COMMISSIONER FRYER: CityView. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Oh, I thought it was some blog or something. I was trying to figure out where you pulled the information from. COMMISSIONER FRYER: My bad. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: No, no problem. I got it. MS. SCOTT: When we go through any of these developer agreements, it's a negotiation. MR. KLATZKOW: That's from me, okay. I don't believe in exactions. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Okay. That's A. Say no more. MR. KLATZKOW: It's as simple as that. Staff starts out with the exaction. Then I say you can't do that, and we wind up in a good place. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Fair enough. Got it. Thank you. My next question has to do with section -- Segment, rather, 121.1, which is Oil Well from DeSoto to Oil Well grade. And I've got the 2019 AUIR. Thank you for sending it to me. And I realize it hasn't been approved yet. But I think the chances are slim to none that the Board of County Commissioners is going to change the numbers in these cells. So I find it instructive to see that the traffic on that segment has gotten worse since 2018 and that the remaining capacity is 558 peak p.m. trips. Does that sound right to you? MS. SCOTT: I'll take your word for it. I don't have it in front of me. I do have it at my space. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Okay. And I'm going to ask Norm to give his side of this, of course, when he stands up. But in the meantime, from the material that Norm prepared -- and I'm sure you've seen the -- that shows the distribution of the traffic coming off of the development. And in this Segment 121.1, eastbound traffic is calculated, at peak p.m., 82 plus 744, so it's 800 and something. Westbound is 85 plus 445. And so getting back to the capacity of 558, could you comment upon how this project is going to have an impact upon that segment? MS. SCOTT: I can. Because if you would go to Attachment D, I believe, within the AUK we have that section of Oil Well Road as a committed project. We have a developer agreement with Ave Maria that once we receive, I believe it's $20 million of impact fees from their development and within a mile around, that we would proceed forward with Oil Well Road. That does not negate the fact that the county is still pursuing other outside grants to be able to bring that project in sooner. But that is deemed a committed project for the widening based on the developer agreement with the adjacent property. So that additional capacity is not figured into the AUIR. We don't do that until we get closer to the actual construction. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Okay. But the widening of Oil Well is, shall we say, a done deal? MS. SCOTT: Yes. COMMISSIONER FRYER: It is. Fully funded? MS. SCOTT: No. It is funded based on a developer agreement. So once we get to within that $20 million, we have to build that road, or sooner if the county elects to do so sooner. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Okay. But is there a time frame related to that, or is it once we get Page 66 of 89 October 3, 2019 to that point? Is that the only way of measuring the time frame? MS. SCOTT: At this time it's once we get to that point or sooner if the county chooses to move forward sooner. The project is fully designed and fully permitted with this segment as well as we're working with Hyde Park to secure the last portion of the right-of-way. I'm sorry. This project we already have the right-of-way. Hyde Park we're working with them to secure the last section of right-of-way necessary for the roadway. So we have a designed, permitted, and we'll soon have all of the right-of-way in hand. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Okay. So when I just say sort of emotionally, if you will, that I get worried about approving projects based upon assumptions, future plans that may or may not occur, you have a sufficiently high level of confidence that Oil Well will be able to manage -- that segment of Oil Well will be able to manage the increased traffic coming from this project? MS. SCOTT: I do, because not only do we have a commitment that we have to abide by with regard to the Ave Maria developer agreement, but also by approving this development, those -- all of those units and all of that commercial's not going to come on the next day. It's going to take time to build up. I believe that their absorption rate was 250 units per year. And then we also have stopgap within the PUD in the developer commitment language that they can have, I believe it's 1,200 units before they have to have some level of commercial before they can proceed further so we can start seeing that internal capture. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Okay. MR. KLATZKOW: And keep in mind, this whole area's already zoned. I mean, the county knows what was going out there. We've known what's going out there for, gosh, it's going on 15, 20 years. So if the county doesn't get the road system, that's on us. It's not on the developer. They've got the right to develop it, and it's going to get developed. And, you know, Trinity will work hard. Ultimately, the Board of County Commissioners will have to fund it. And we'll move on. But that's why I'm saying you need to get the right-of-way now. COMMISSIONER FRYER: I'm curious, Jeff. The -- I've seen -- maybe for Trinity. I've seen references to widening to four lane and widening to six lane. Which -- MS. SCOTT: With regard to Oil Well Road? Our plans show it being widened to six. Our permit is for six lanes. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Okay. MS. SCOTT: With that being said, we could widen to four lanes if that's all that was necessary at that time when we go to start the construction. But it is designed and permitted to six lanes. MR. KLATZKOW: And you've got the right-of-way footprint for the six lanes? MS. SCOTT: Yes. All of the right-of-way that we've set aside with this developer as well as what we're working with Hyde Park is all to accommodate the six -lane roadway. MR. KLATZKOW: And keep in mind when we talk about right-of-way, it's more than just roads. It's also to get the pipes in, you know, and -- so you need sufficient right-of-way so that you're not putting mains underneath asphalt, which works for a good 20, 30 years, but eventually, you know, you've got to replace them, and it's not good for the road. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Got it. That's all I have, Chairman. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Karl, I saw you pull your mic. Did you have something you wanted to say? (No response.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Anybody else? (No response.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. I have one question. And we have the planning aspect of the Rural Lands Stewardship Area as well as the Rural Fringe Mixed Use District, and the expansions in Orangetree and everywhere else. And so do you, because you're Transportation Planning. So that means Page 67 of 89 October 3, 2019 you're supposed to look beyond the moment. And I want to know if you've considered the following changes in that area and how they fit with the plans you just told us about. Ave Maria was approved for 11,000 units. They don't have nearly that amount yet out there; Rivergrass is asking for 2,500; Longwater is asking for 2,600. These are all in process; Belhnar is asking for 2,750; Hyde Park is asking for 1,800; Hogan Island came in for a pre -app for 2,300, but they haven't submitted anything yet, and that was about a year ago; and Immokalee Rural Village is asking for 4,000 now, but I heard that they're going to be changing that and be looking at a different density. That totals 26,950 units. And if you take the most recent census population, persons per household, they specifically -- nationally it's 2.63, but in Collier County it's 2.55. That's 68,723 individuals in just those towns and villages that I just mentioned. How is your road system geared to handle all of that? Because it's all going to happen, if you look at the absorption rates they're talking about, and these others hit even close to those absorption rates, they're going to be well before some horizon year. They're going to be within 10 or 12 years. So how are you prepared to address that in a bigger global picture for those particular issues? And David's got something he's running up to say, so... MR. WEEKS: Just -- David Weeks, again, for the record. Just -- it sounds like you're assuming 100 percent occupancy in the math that you just mentioned. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I'm assuming that we're going to have 26,950 units if all the build -outs build out to what they're asking for, and if you multiply the persons per household the census has provided you're looking at a substantial number of bodies. Some of those are -- or a certain percentage are going to be driving cars. And I just want to know from Trinity's department how they see the road system fitting those percentages as we go forward. MR. WEEKS: All right. I was just -- my comment really is we would need to back off the numbers some, because using census data, we have almost a -- one-third of our dwelling units are classified as vacant, and the majority of those of which are seasonally occupied. So the permanent population, the occupancy rate is about 67 percent, about two-thirds. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And that's including the rural area where there's -- we don't have the amenities of the beach and things like that? MR. WEEKS: That's just the countywide. The countywide occupancy rate, countywide persons per household figures. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, then, why would the census have a different number if we don't have -- if we don't have such a -- if we don't occupy the units? MR. WEEKS: The definition of a household is an occupied dwelling unit. And so if they build 2,500 dwelling units, using the countywide average, only about two-thirds of those are going to be permanently occupied. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: So we've got a bunch of empty inventory in Collier County? MR. WEEKS: The majority of that so-called vacant is seasonally occupied. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Don't those people drive cars when they come here? Like especially out east if you're driving to the beach and if you're driving to a -- you need a commercial center, you're not going to find it out east. So we don't -- we don't count these people because they're only here four months of the year instead of more? MR. WEEKS: I'll let Trinity address that specifically, but I know that there's a -- we don't design for that worst-case scenario. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I'm not saying design for it, but we've got to know it's going to be there, which, if you really want to get into the issue, the CIGM has an interesting statistic. They have 291,000 households by the year 2040 but only 534,000 people. That's 1.8 PPH. Why would we use that when we know the census says 2.55? MR. WEEKS: I don't know factually. My guess would be because when we look at different Page 68 of 89 October 3, 2019 parts of the county, the occupancy rates and the persons per household rates can be drastically different. So there may be evidence that shows that the more rural areas have a lower occupancy rate and/or person per household. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: But see, now that kind of goes contrary to what the rural area services, which is mostly working families, because that's where your least -- most affordability is, where in the urban area you can have a $6 million high-rise that a guy goes down -- family goes down and visits once a month -- one month a year. So I would argue just the opposite, that your working families are going to be more stationary because they can't afford to have two homes. So I'm not sure how the statistics are working in your department, but I don't see a practical application the way you've just described it, but -- MR. WEEKS: That's why I said "maybe." I don't know factually. And I would agree with you that -- again, just going with the census data, the areas east of 951 -- you know, the coastal areas have the lowest occupancy rates as a rule and the lowest persons per household. Conversely, the more rural areas, the Immokalee Community, Golden Gate Estates, those areas do tend to have a much higher occupancy rate and persons per household. The unknown, I think, is what's going to happen in the villages and towns within the -- within these SRAs and, likewise, in the Rural Fringe Mixed Use District. Are those developments going to be more comparable to the coastal area, to the rural area, or somewhere in between? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, David, I would first guess that the coastal area's going to be a higher price. People with a lot more money can afford two homes. A lot of the working people aren't going to. Second of all, if you're in the rural area, you're more likely to have to get in your car to drive somewhere to get services, to get amenities, to get at whatever you want. And for those two reasons alone, we ought to consider what the persons per household application is for volume on the traffic on the road system. And if there's a percentage reduction, it certainly is probably not going to be the same as the urban area, and that's kind of where I'm leading. That's where I want Trinity to respond. How is her department looking at this? COMMISSIONER FRYER: Chairman, before she does, would you repeat what -- the persons per household numbers that you mentioned. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, if you go to the census site for Collier County, it says the 2017 was 2.55, nationally it was 2.63. BEBR the latest I've seen on BEBR was 2015. They're at 2.47. So you can -- but that's -- you know, the most recent is the census. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Thank you. MS. SCOTT: So what I can tell you within the traffic model for the Long Range Transportation -- the 2040 Long Range Transportation Plan, Ave Maria is considered. I will have to go back and dig into the actual traffic analysis zones to see about Hogan Island and Immokalee Rural Village. But I do know that based on the recent amendment, the town was included. So we're looking at --I think the town was 10,000 units and a couple million square feet of commercial. So that was in there as far as the latest -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: The town being. MS. SCOTT: The Town of Rural Lands West. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: The former town. I thought you're saying Ave Maria, because it's 11,000 units. MS. SCOTT: No, no. The former town. So that was how that was modeled. So those are within, I believe, four traffic analysis zones which are all relatively in that area. So I'm confident that the three villages per -- the one before us today and the two additional are contemplated with probably a little bit larger scale. But I'd have to go back and look at Hogan Island and the Immokalee Road Rural Village to see if that's in there or not. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And would it be reasonable to think that most of these new rural areas, including probably a chunk of Orangetree, would start using the Big Cypress Parkway as an access way to Page 69 of 89 October 3, 2019 go south, especially if you're out past that, if you're in the village areas or Ave Maria? And if you can only go south to the southernmost point of the SRA and we weren't sure we would have it beyond there, the only way out, then, is to startjamming up Golden Gate Estates cast/west. MS. SCOTT: That's why we have Big Cypress Parkway on the map. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Oh, yeah. And that's more reason why that -- and I remember from the time Big Cypress was initiated as a stewardship district and we got into the first phase of that. The applicant actually produced a map showing the interconnection they were proposing to get us down to 1-75 out in that direction. And I still think that's a direction we ought to be headed. In fact, I believe that the basis of those -- of the 90 -day argument to have this developer's agreement in place after the award of the stewardship district, approval of that by our board, was one of the conditions; was it not? MS. SCOTT: To have the interlocal services delivery agreement in place, yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Addressing these issues? MS. SCOTT: Yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: But it never happened. MS. SCOTT: It did not. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MR. YOVANOVICH: Is it the appropriate time? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Sure, Rich. You want to jump in, go right ahead. MR. YOVANOVICH: Yeah. I think we have to put it in context. As far as I can remember, subject to me being proven wrong, in 2004 there was no Big Cypress Parkway being contemplated. What was being discussed at that time was Immokalee Road and Oil Well Road. That's what the agreement was to address, and then there was a discussion about Randall and that Randall was not that -- that alignment was not agreed to. It was agreed to be studied and -- but there was no discussion about a connector road from Immokalee Road all the way down to I-75. That was not a precondition or a consideration for the Big Cypress Stewardship District. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Do you remember the document that was produced by the -- MR. KLATZKOW: I was part of that way back then. Big Cypress was not contemplated. We were -- the discussions were Oil Well Road and Immokalee Road. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Then at the same time, though, do you remember the document that was produced by the Big Cypress applicant at the time showing the connection to 1-75 that was along their route system all the way down? MR. KLATZKOW: There were a lot of documents shown, yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I thought you had it. That's not it. MS. SCOTT: Yeah, that's -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: No, that's not it. You don't have it on anything you've showed us yet if that's what you're looking at. MS. SCOTT: Yeah. I didn't think that -- I had the one that showed the potential interchange with the roadways on there. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I'll see if I can find -- our -- I know it was somewhere in the old files over at Development Services. I can dig it up, and I can bring it to the next meeting. I just want it for conversation's sake to show why we need this road segment, and it's something that we've discussed for years. Maybe it wasn't part of the formation of the stewardship district, but it sure came shortly thereafter in the review of the original Big Cypress program. So I'll find the data on it. We'll take a look at it. I'll bring it with me -- I'll try to find it by next time. It's just -- back then we did paper, and there's these big volumes. MR. KLATZKOW: Yeah. That couldn't have been a condition because it would have -- it requires FDOT. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: No, it was something -- we hadn't gone that far yet. Page 70 of 89 October 3, 2019 (Simultaneous crosstalk.) MR. KLATZKOW: No, no. It was a possibility, yes. We've been thinking about another access point on I-75 forever in this county. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Anyway, it's something that I think needs to be carefully considered, because that was an important access way to I-75. Now, maybe some kind of commitment needs to be put on paper to make sure we have it. Maybe the actual transfer of it can occur in the future, however it works out. But I think that's something the applicant should really consider making viable through this process here, so that's my comment on that. Trinity, you want to go on with -- I don't have any other questions on this segment. I'll have more later on. MS. SCOTT: Two other items. So Business Point No. 4 is that the landowner will design, permit, and construct the water management system to accept the runoff from Segment No. 2. MR. YOVANOVICH: Mr. Strain, when do we get to talk about -- sorry. When do you want us to give our input on the timing of the Big Cypress? Do you want to wait until -- (Simultaneous crosstalk.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I'd rather this thing -- we're all working together to get the solutions as they rise up. I'd rather not wait till the end and try to figure it out. MR. YOVANOVICH: Well, I'm not sure I'm going to propose a solution, but I am going to propose our position -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MR. YOVANOVICH: -- on Big Cypress Parkway. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: That's great. MR. YOVANOVICH: And I'm going to look to Jake on that. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Chairman? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Yes, sir. COMMISSIONER FRYER: I found a reference. I thought I'd seen the same thing that you had, and I have a note here that the October 26th, 2004, BCC meeting, I think it was Agenda Item 10C, the Board entertained the approval of the interlocal service delivery agreement with the Big Cypress Stewardship District. In the specific item, county staff pursued a right-of-way reservation for a bypass road, is what it was called, between Oil Well Road and Randall. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Oh, no. That's not it. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Is that what -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I doubt if that would be it. I'd have to go -- I'm going to go -- if I can find those books, I'll go through the county record and see what I can find. I'll bring it to everybody for the next meeting just to talk about. Go ahead. Please identify yourself for the record. MR. CREMER: If. Sure. Good afternoon. My name is Jake Cremer with the law firm Steams, Weaver, Miller. I'm representing -- co -counseling this case with the applicant. I'm working on just --really just the narrow issue of the request to dedicate Big Cypress outside of the adjacency. So I believe that was Segment 1 to the north, Segment 3 to the south. And I think as you'll hear from some of my comments, and you've heard earlier, these are -- this is really -- this is a timing issue for the applicant. This is not the applicant saying we're not willing to work with the county over time. It's an issue of we're saying now is not the time legally to dedicate all of Big Cypress Parkway. Let me give you a little bit about my background. I'm a land -use and property -rights attorney based in Tampa. I work on issues all across the state working with other land -use attorneys. I have worked on property -rights cases in just about every level you can think of all the way up to the U.S. Supreme Court. I've been involved in cases there. Page 71 of 89 October 3, 2019 The request for 17 -- roughly 17.1 miles of right-of-way, when we're only adjacent to approximately two -and -a -half miles of Big Cypress, I would submit is not only unreasonable, it's not legal. It's illegal. And I don't use that word lightly. I don't use it as a scare tactic. That's simply what the request is. MR. KLATZKOW: Yeah, and that's fine. And I'd be glad to litigate that with you over the next five years if it's the route you guys want to go, okay. At the end of the day, the Board of County Commissioners was promised 15 years ago that the Big Cypress District would do all this stuff, all of it without any taxpayer money. That hasn't happened, all right. We're here now to try to do some transportation planning -- long-range transportation planning which, at the end of the day, benefits your client more than anybody else here, and you're going to come in here and threaten us, in essence, with litigation? That's fine, okay. My position is we can ask for it, and we can condition it. And if you want to say no, you can't, that's fine. I'm happy to spend the next five years with you in court over this. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And just so you know, I think that we're about October or so of 2007 is when I believe the original discussion on the connection down to the interchange at I-75 occurred. I can't remember the extent of the commitment other than it was a visual graphic that this is something they were going to do to help with their project's impacts. I'll go back, and I'll try to research that by the next meeting if I get time. But it would be something to consider. And all I'm asking is your applicant to consider how far they're willing to go to make some kind of real strong commitment as to what we can do about this right-of-way. We've got to know if we can count on it or not. If we can't count on it, it's sure going to change the ability for us to consider what we're asking -- being done here today. And that's where I'm trying to go with this. So if you're going to not do that, then it's going to change the road pattern dramatically. And I know you didn't say you wouldn't, but we don't have anything securing saying that you're going to. Does that help your discussion at all? And I'm sorry to interrupt you, so... MR. CREMER: That does. I mean, I think it may become clearer if I could just have a few minutes to present. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Go right ahead. MR. CREMER: And, you know, to my esteemed colleague, I'm not here to threaten. I'm just here to state what the law is and to explain that the request that's on the table now is not legal. COMMISSIONER FRYER: You're here to advocate. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: What request do you see on the table? I'm just asking what you're going to do about the extension to Big Cypress down to 1-75. And I don't have any answer. And I'm just saying, so what is it -- that's not a legitimate question for understanding how this project will impact our road system if we don't have that access to I-75? MR. CREMER: It is not a legitimate request to make of the applicant at this time because of the limited nature of the application you're reviewing. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, then how do we evaluate this application's exit onto our system? You're assuming, then, we have to accept it for the traffic its going to put on the local roads or the few east/west roads that it's going to connect to; is that what you're saying? MR. CREMER: I'd like to get our traffic consultant to explain that point. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Well, do you want to finish your point before he does, or do you want him to go first? MR. CREMER: I'm just going to have him address your question now. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Thank you. MR. TREBILCOCK: So the question was whether or not we rely on a connection to I-75 for this project. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: No, not whether you rely on it. I just was worried about the amount of traffic that would end up going through not only the buildout of your project, but the others that would Page 72 of 89 October 3, 2019 connect to pieces of Big Cypress Parkway that wouldn't be completed to I-75. Because without any knowledge that it might be completed or there's a reality of it, then the fact that we're going to have all that traffic having to go cast/west to get to 951 or Wilson or whatever is something that we need to consider in the planning stage. MR. TREBILCOCK: Right. So if we look at -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I mean, Norm, there's a huge amount of density being added out there. Not theirs. Just a little bit of everybody. So somewhere those people are going to have to find a way to get to where they want to go. And I want to know where the ultimate buildout of that -- where they want to go is going to be. MR. TREBILCOCK: Sure. And -- but, certainly, I think within the perspective of what we're looking at, I think in the alternatives -- in the 2 Plus alternative that was -- is being sought now that the Board had approved, what they looked at is really looking at the amount of development that were beyond what we're proposing with the project here. And so this -- in the whole scheme of things, we're really helping to implement that key part, the portion from Oil Well to Randall Boulevard which is a key element. MR. KLATZKOW: Do we not have other developments in the pipeline here? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Pardon me? MR. KLATZKOW: Do we not have other developments in the pipeline here? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I just read them off. MR. KLATZKOW: I mean, wouldn't we be better off if we just, I don't know, maybe just did them all at once? I mean, if we're going to have this argument, we're going to do piecemeal one at a time. I mean, we could hear them all at once. I mean, if the developer -- this was supposed to be a unified development once upon a time. Now it's been balkanized into multiple developments. That's fine. We could hear them all at the same time and then get the road situation done that way. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: What I'm trying to get to is if Norm has a way to show us that the full amount of the density out there that might use those east/west roads, he's going to function acceptable without connecting south, and all these cast/west people are going to be able to pick up their further direction by going down to 951 to get to I-75 or wherever, that's fine. I just want to know that's how -- that it's been looked at. That it's a planning tool. MR. YOVANOVICH: You know, I'm not a transportation engineer. Sometimes I play one on TV. You have a Long Range Transportation Plan that does exactly what you just said, and it talks about a needs plan and it talks about a financially feasible plan. And Trinity herself even says that Big Cypress Parkway ends at Golden Gate Boulevard on the plan. It doesn't go any further south than that. You have a plan in place that you're trying to implement. And what we're saying is, we've done every analysis required under your law, which is the TIS we've done, and we've showed no negative impact to the roadway system for our project. We are not required to and we're not going to wait until the other villages come in and get considered at the same time. We have a petition before you, which is Rivergrass Village. We have met the legal standard under your Transportation Impact Statement rules and procedures to be considered. You haven't heard a single person say that Norm's analysis is incorrect. In fact, you have a landowner contribution agreement in front of you that says these are the impacts that we want to address and how we're going to deal with these transportation issues. The only issue we're disagreeing with is when Big Cypress Parkway gets conveyed to the county, not if. If the other villages are approved, the other two that are south, it makes sense to incrementally add to Big Cypress Parkway. Why would you put the burden of the full Big Cypress Parkway on Rivergrass Village that doesn't need it for its transportation impacts? That's the answer short and simple. You've done the study, you've analyzed it, and your staff has agreed we don't negatively impact the roads. Page 73 of 89 October 3, 2019 CHAIRMAN STRAIN: You know, Richard, I've known you for a long time, and I know when you get a little hot under the collar. This is not an issue that you need to. I was simply trying to -- you're going way beyond what I was trying to get to. I'm trying to find out is: How have we looked at this transportation system, then, if we do not get the roadway to the south on a comprehensive long-range planning process? Now, you referenced the MPO, and I believe the MPO shows this connection going down to the south. MR. YOVANOVICH: To Golden Gate Parkway. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: You're going to -- obviously, from what you just said, I think you said you're going to use it to negotiate the other two villages. MR. YOVANOVICH: No. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: If the other two villages get approved, then you might provide it. MR. YOVANOVICH: That's when -- that's when it is appropriate to address those issues, and that's when the traffic impact to the potential Big Cypress Parkway occurs. It doesn't occur now at Rivergrass. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: No. But, Richard, I think this Planning Commission's direction needs to know what we can count on for the long-term play out there. And I haven't heard anything that says we can count on the extension of Big Cypress Parkway unless we -- you already get, like, a predetermined approval for the other two projects. And so far that's not where I'm heading. I just want to understand how those 26,950 units are going to function if we don't get Big Cypress Parkway to the south. That's what I'm trying to fmd out. MR. YOVANOVICH: But, Mr. Strain, you're going to get Big Cypress Parkway to the south. You're going to get the segment from Oil Well Road to the northern portion of Rivergrass and to the southern portion of Rivergrass -- no, the southern portion of Rivergrass right now during this phase. We're going to work out the price through appraisals. If we don't -- if we decide not to go forward with any other village, it's already in your plan. You come to the property owner and say, let's negotiate a price, or you condemn it. Those are your options, like every other roadway segment in Collier County. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: When you say we negotiate a price, what piece are you talking about? The one -- the remaining piece south to the I-75 or as close to I-75 as -- MR. YOVANOVICH: I-75, its not on your plan. I'm not in a position to discuss today anything south. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: It's on the MPO plan. You just referenced that. MR. YOVANOVICH: It does not. It goes to Golden Gate Boulevard. That's where it stops, correct? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: On the long-range MPO plan? MR. YOVANOVICH: Yep. It stops at Golden Gate Boulevard. So any discussion south of that -- I mean, I don't mean to interrupt, Jake -- is totally inappropriate. It's not on any plan. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, no. From a planning perspective it's not. You may not agree legally it's from -- it's an exaction thing. I wasn't suggesting to exact. I wanted to know -- understand how we could get it. MR. YOVANOVICH: You can't get it until you show a plan that you actually need it, and you haven't gotten that far yet to where you -- you don't even know -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: No, because her -- you interrupted her presentation. MR. YOVANOVICH: No. She's already told you she stops at Golden Gate Boulevard. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I hadn't finished asking her questions, Rich. Well, who wants to come up next? You've got four of you standing there, so -- I'm just trying to get to an answer about the parkway. I think you're telling me there's nothing on the table about the parkway other than what shows on this presentation; is that right? MR. YOVANOVICH: Correct. Page 74 of 89 October 3, 2019 CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Then we don't need to have a discussion on it at this point unless you want to put more on record. You're more than welcome to. I thought there was something more succinct we could get out of it that would help the situation, but if it's just going to stay like it is, we'll weigh it like it is. MR. YOVANOVICH: Can we -- two things, Jake. I would like to get Jake's written legal opinion on the record. We'll provide it. It's already been provided to the County Attorney's Office. It's been provided to staff. We'll provide it to you. I also want to get on the record that my client doesn't own the area for right-of-way north of Rivergrass. They don't own the property. So to ask them to give you property -- give you right-of-way over land they don't own is an impossibility and not a proper request. So I just want that on the record. Anything else, Jake, that you want to get on the record? MR. CREMER: Jake Creme, again, for the record. No. You'll see in my letter what I would have presented, and I think patience is probably waning. So I just --I would encourage you to read that, and, you know, we have not received any formal response to my letter, so thank you. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And my patience isn't waning. I was just surprised at the reaction to an explanation I was looking for. But be that as it may, we'll just move on. Thank you. MR. CREMER: Thank you. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Trinity, I would like you to at some point tell us what the Transportation Department would need for some kind of insurance that there is some hope to extend Big Cypress to whatever directions you need it in. And if there is not, then we need to know that, too. MS. SCOTT: Okay. Will do. For Business Point No. 4, all of which the applicant has agreed to, the landowner will design, permit, and construct water management system to accept runoff from Segment No. 2. They would receive impact fee credits for the value of the property, which we had discussed. They'll provide drainage and maintenance easements for the water management system to allow us to get in and maintain if necessary. The landowner and successors will be responsible for the perpetual maintenance of the shared water management system, and the landowner or its successors shall perform an inspection every five years after the roadway is constructed to assess the condition of the stormwater system. Just allows us to know that the ongoing maintenance is continuing and that the system's functioning properly. Any questions on that? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: These are all in agreement, right? MS. SCOTT: Yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Anybody have any questions? (No response.) MS. SCOTT: And Business Point No. 5 is the landowner and its successor and assigns will provide a separate written notice to tenants and buyers, both residential and commercial, of the planned roadway improvements with a statement that the county will not construct any sound wall or other barrier of any kind to reduce the impact of noise, et cetera. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And that's also in agreement? MS. SCOTT: Yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. So where are we now? MS. SCOTT: That concludes my presentation. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. So let's go to transportation questions that we may want to ask of Trinity and, of course, the applicant's, I assume, ready to answer questions to those that apply to him. Does anybody have any other transportation questions? COMMISSIONER FRY: With your permission, I do have a couple. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I just said that. COMMISSIONER FRY: Trinity, there was an earlier exhibit that showed interconnections Page 75 of 89 October 3, 2019 mostly within the Rivergrass development. There was -- there were several to the east to Big Cypress Parkway. There were a couple off of Oil Well Road to the north and south, but the far right one, the farthest east one was only to the north, and I wondered what the county's position was. And I don't know if that exhibit is readily available. There have been quite a few. Whereas most of the interconnects span Oil Well or Big Cypress, this one does not. It only interconnects to the north, and I just wondered, is it an issue of contention to the county that it does not cross Oil Well Road and allow an interconnection north and south. The far -- yes, the far -- MS. SCOTT: No, that is not a point of contention for the county. The county is fine with that. That would be another full median opening out on Oil Well Road, which we would not be in favor of. So that's why you're not seeing that traverse both sides, because when this is ultimately a six -lane facility, which it's planned for in the future, that would mean another traffic signal, so we would not be in favor of that going north and south. And the applicant has worked very closely with us on those access management provisions. COMMISSIONER FRY: Gotcha. Thank you. We've talked about how, between the GMP and the LDC, we either have a recommendation or requirement for interconnectivity. And you've mentioned -- we've mentioned in general it would be nice to interconnect, or it would be strategic to interconnect to the north, to the south, to the east, and to the west. We have the east covered pretty well in this development. Along the water boundary that goes along the full eastern boundary of the project, the applicant has stated hesitation to bridge across or to provide interconnects across environmentally sensitive lands, presumably the waterways and the lands that are on the other side of it. So in the staffs opinion, what are the issues? To what extent is that concern shared by staff in terms of bridging across? And how environmentally sensitive are those lands across the water boundary? Is there -- is that a legitimate concern and hesitation on the applicant's part? MS. SCOTT: Well, I can't speak to the environmental sensitivity of the land, and I would defer to the applicant and our environmental staff with regard to that, and I'm sure we're going to be getting into that with regard to the environmental in the future. From a pure transportation standpoint, what we're trying to do is not replicate what we've done in the urban area where, yes, I understand this is a small -- a small area of a village center that's going to offer different things than what the next village center is going to do or the one to the south, et cetera. And so it gives people the opportunity, instead of having to go out on Oil Well Road, go make a U-turn, people who are in the next development presumably may not have a traffic signal, go make a U-turn and come back and put those localized trips on the arterial network, and that if there's a way to be able to accomplish those on a more localized network, that would certainly be beneficial to the overall transportation network. COMMISSIONER FRY: Do you have specific interconnection targets that you would like to see to support the future network going to the south or the east or the north of this development? MS. SCOTT: I -- honestly, when I looked at this, I looked at that we have been presented with two other villages, so it would -- at least the village that kind of wraps around them, it would certainly be nice to be able to interconnect with that village. They have discussed a gated community, so I'm going to go back and look within our documentation to see if that was -- if we were aware of that throughout the process or not. COMMISSIONER FRY: Okay. Thank you. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Go ahead, Ned. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Trinity, I have a walkability/bikeability question for you. Is it fair to assume that this present proposal, this present application, for all intents and purposes, precludes anyone on the north side of Oil Well from walking or biking to the commercial center on the south side, particularly once the street has been widened to six lanes? MS. SCOTT: It depends -- will it preclude it in perpetuity? I don't believe so. At some point in Page 76 of 89 October 3, 2019 the future there will be a traffic signal in that area, whether it be at Big Cypress Parkway when Big Cypress Parkway opens or along the residential when it meets traffic signal warrants. So it would certainly give an opportunity for folks to be able to cross the road. Is it the most comfortable? Perhaps not. But we do have this within our urban area pretty commonly. COMMISSIONER FRYER: So at least in the near term, perhaps the intermediate term, someone living on the north side who wants to go to the commercial center on the south will have to use an automobile and drive along the Big Cypress Parkway or along Oil Well to get there, correct? MS. SCOTT: Crossing the roadway without the roadway being widened and without a traffic signal would certainly be more difficult than what the future would hold. COMMISSIONER FRYER: So they'd need the automobile on the public street? MS. SCOTT: Mr. Yovanovich is saying it's a two-lane road. I understand that it's a two-lane road with no stop control out there. So to have someone have a mid -block crossing or a crosswalk, they would be crossing on their own. COMMISSIONER FRYER: It would be quite dangerous, wouldn't it? MS. SCOTT: People do it. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Well, I understand. MS. SCOTT: Yeah. But it would not be marked crosswalk they would be crossing on. COMMISSIONER FRYER: You wouldn't call the juxtaposition of the north and south sides or campuses of this village as encouraging of walkability or bikeability, would you? MS. SCOTT: I would say that in the future there will be some amount of connection, and the way they've planned their development, they have an arterial roadway that runs through the middle. So it's -- they have to deal with that. COMMISSIONER FRYER: So they would need an automobile on one of the county roads? MS. SCOTT: I would say that most folks will probably choose that. They will have the option, as I said, once the roadway's widened and there's a traffic signal there, to be able to cross at a signalized intersection. COMMISSIONER FRYER: You're not supporting, though, a traffic signal, are you? Didn't I hear you say that you don't think that's a good idea? MS. SCOTT: No. What I said was, is that when there's signal warrants at the residential, that they would be required to build it, and we would most likely anticipate another traffic signal at Big Cypress Parkway since it would be the intersection of two major arterial roadways. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Thankyou. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Anything else? COMMISSIONERFRYER: No. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: So following up with Ned's issue, then, so you're going to have a light at Big Cypress Parkway and Oil Well, and then maybe two more lights before it finishes out? Or does each circle represent a light? MS. SCOTT: No. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: No what? MS. SCOTT: No, that does not represent a traffic signal. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. How many traffic signals would you have through the village on Oil Well? MS. SCOTT: I anticipate one at Big Cypress Parkway in the future and one -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: At the main intersection there that -- yeah, that's what I thought you were going to say. MS. SCOTT: When and if it meets warrants in the future. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And how does the interconnection with Randall in this case work? Because it looks like it's going down a residential street to wind up through the project and weave its way up to where you just put that yellow dot. Page 77 of 89 October 3, 2019 Is that what -- how effective is that going to be for Randall? It really doesn't enter into your plans anymore, does it? MS. SCOTT: Correct. When the Board adopted Viable Alternative 2 -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: They took that out. MS. SCOTT: Right -- we relinquished this Randall extension and went with the connection between Randall and Oil Well being via Big Cypress Parkway. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. What other connections will there be to the Estates properties from Big Cypress? Say Big Cypress only had that piece, that was the only piece we had, and the properties to the east would be coming down Oil Well Road, dispersing who knows where. What other connections would you think you need to go through Golden Gate Estates? We currently have Randall and Vanderbilt Beach Road extension, I think, is going there, too. Isn't that -- isn't -- does this touch that? MS. SCOTT: It does not. It only goes as south as Randall Boulevard. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: So we've only got Randall and Oil Well going east. Would there be others that you'd have to pick up? MS. SCOTT: What I would say is I would not commit to any connection to the more local Estates roads without going through the public process. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Oh, I understand that. I'm just saying, but would you need more connections to get the traffic, the volume that -- let's say this village gets built, and the rest of them do. Well, say the ones to the south -- for some reason we don't get the parkway to the south. How will that affect the traffic flows coming from the east across this property and, yeah, westward? MS. SCOTT: Folks will most likely go down and hit Randall Boulevard, they'll go south, and they'll go Randall Boulevard which -- it's part of our Viable Alternative 2 -- showed improvement. Depending on how far out Vanderbilt Beach Road extension gets, they'll get over to Everglades Boulevard, go south, and most likely get on Vanderbilt Beach Road extension and head into town. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: The concerns about the F situation that you showed, did those concerns occur with or without the further connection of Big Cypress to the south? MS. SCOTT: The F -- the deficiency along Oil Well Road and Randall when we modeled it with Big Cypress Parkway, as well as the Vanderbilt Beach Road extension going all the way out as well as improving Everglades Boulevard, those all, then, operated at an acceptable level of service. CHAHUV AN STRAIN: That's with it going to the south? MS. SCOTT: Going to the south. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Have you modeled it without it going to the south? Could you by the next meeting? MS. SCOTT: I will go back and check and see if we have modeled it. We may already have modeled it without Big Cypress Parkway in there. I can check with the MPO because there were iterations that were done. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. And then the other piece is the -- Oil Well is one of our -- I think there's maybe two, maybe I'm -- maybe more than that, but I know at least -- I thought there was a couple east/west freight lines, and this is one of the most important freight lines in the county. What does the impact of this split village have on the freight lines and how you meander through this six -lane portion of -- when it's six-laned. I mean, we're going to increase the lanes, so let's just look at the buildout. What -- do you see this changing those freight lines at all? MS. SCOTT: I will tell you we do not anticipate reducing the speed limit within this area as you might see in other -- if you have towns and things like that where they'll reduce the speed limit through a town. We plan on having that function as a major arterial roadway through the middle of the village. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: What is the speed limit? MS. SCOTT: I believe it's 50. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: So the freight trucks would move at 50 miles an hour through this Page 78 of 89 October 3, 2019 village? COMMISSIONER FRY: Fifty-five miles per hour was stated earlier. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Yes. MS. SCOTT: I believe -- well, when we go to an urban cross-section, typically we post the speed limits at 45 miles an hour; however, in some of the more rural roadways, the more rural areas, we have posted them at 50 miles an hour. So once we get the curb and gutter, 45 typically is the maximum; however, on Immokalee Road we have increased that to 50 miles an hour. It may be 55 out there now because it's an uncurbed section of roadway. MR. TREBILCOCK: Current posting is 55. MS. SCOTT: Mr. Trebilcock just advised that the current posting is 55, but it's because it's a two-lane roadway with no curbing. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And when you increase to six -lane, it's going to reduce the speed? MS. SCOTT: The speed limit, yes, based on the design. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: That's kind of odd that you go to -- narrower road is higher speed than a bigger road, but that's your guys -- you and Norm, you guys are wizards at this stuff. MS. SCOTT: I'll get a hat next time. Do we get to dress up for the Halloween meeting? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: You can if you want, but it's not something I would do. I already wear a beard. That's enough, so... I have some questions of Norm, but some may hit on you, so could you stay near by? MS. SCOTT: Yep. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Norm, would you mind helping me with a couple of your TIS issues. Ned just asked me if we're going to 4. We usually go to 4. I'd like to tryto go a little longer, especially if we can try to finish up most of our transportation questions. So that would help -- I know you're limited. You're going on vacation or something, I understand, Norm. The TIS. MR. TREBILCOCK: Yes, sir. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: How did you treat the golf course trips? I mean, I've read it. I just don't remember. So why don't you tell me, did you base it on a public golf course, a shared golf course, a membership golf course, or how did you look at that? MR. TREBILCOCK: Totally a private golf course, it would be passive incidental to the community so it wouldn't be a public golf course. If it -- as Bob had mentioned, if it becomes a public golf course or public membership, then we would just live by the trip cap accordingly, you know, so... CHAIRMAN STRAIN: So if it changes to public, they'd have to come in with an SDP showing its new change but the cap -- the trip cap couldn't change? MR. TREBILCOCK: Yes, sir. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MR. TREBILCOCK: So it just limits some other use is really what it does. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And so you've got a 2,500 -unit village, half of which is above the road or some portion, and the other below, you've got units facing the golf course, and you're going to have a -- you want a deviation for up to 50,000 square feet for the clubhouse, but you've only got a handful of people facing the golf course. So where are you getting that kind of membership from if it's from the public? I mean, that's a big golf course -- golf club. I mean, usually you're looking at a substantial amount of members. I'm just wondering how --were you thinking you're going to --how do you --how do people become members of that golf club; do you know? Is it going to be limited -- what did your Transportation Impact Statement limit the golf course members to? MR. TREBILCOCK: The Traffic Impact Statement wouldn't get into membership of golf courses and stuff. That's not really how we -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Well, then how do you derive the traffic count for golf courses? MR. TREBILCOCK: Okay. Golf courses are based on per hole is how we do it. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: So the amount of play per hole? Page 79 of 89 October 3, 2019 MR. TREBILCOCK: No. In other words, the impact fees in Collier County, which is also based on the ITE trip generation, is per hole. So if you have an 18 -hole golf course, your trips are based on 18 holes. If you have a 36 -hole golf course, the trips adjust accordingly. So that's how it's done. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And how many people does it take to generate those trips according to the play on the golf course? I mean, the ITE would have to -- they'd have to be known, because that's someone -- that number had to come from somewhere. MR. TREBILCOCK: Yeah. Well -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Could you find that out by the next time we meet? I don't want to -- I don't mean to put you on the spot. MR. TREBILCOCK: Well, I can explain to you how the trip generation would work is -- what we do is you put -- on the golf course it would be based on the number of holes, and you do a trip generation at the driveway based on it. It's not based on a particular membership or anything. And so that's how you would get the trip generation for the golf course. It's very similar to residential. You know, you put tubes down, and you get your trips based on the residential. It isn't necessarily on the size of the house or anything like that or whether it's rental, non -rental, that type of thing. It's really just --and so you translate it into a per -hole basis. That's how it's done. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: So a golf course -- MR. TREBILCOCK: It's not based on the size of the clubhouse or anything like that, no, sir. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: So a golf course with 350 members will have the same traffic as a golf course with a 1,250 members? MR. TREBILCOCK: If it is an 18 -hole golf course, its an 18 -hole golf course. You know, typically, you may expect having more holes. Because, you know, you can only take so many folks playing on an 18 -hole golf course. And so, you know, again, that's the basis of it. It's based on the holes. If you have a 36 -hole golf course, you're going to have more folks, typically, than you're going to have on an 18 -hole golf course, and you would typically think you may have more members as well. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, this is an 18 -hole golf course; is it not? MR. TREBILCOCK: Yes, sir. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. So an 18 -hole golf course, it doesn't matter how many members you have. You could have 10 or a thousand. It's still going to have the same amount of trips? MR. TREBILCOCK: As far as -- again, it's considered private passive incidental to the community. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. To the community. So that means the membership's going to be limited to this community? I mean, that's an important consideration for our understanding of how this is to operate. MR. YOVANOVICH: No. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: No what? MR. YOVANOVICH: We have said, if the golf course is open to the public, we'll use the ITE manual for public golf courses for purposes of traffic calculations, and we'll have to either reduce some of the residential we could otherwise build or some of the retail and office square footage that we can otherwise build to stay within the trip cap that we've -- that we've analyzed it as if it's private, but if it becomes public, we recognize that we have a trip cap, so we may have to do some less residential or some less retail square footage. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Would the public that you would sell the memberships to be the other villages that are part of the former town, the Longwater and Bellmar? MR. YOVANOVICH: We don't know. It's public. If it becomes public, you know -- the answer is maybe yes. I don't think we'd be prohibited from doing that. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, it plays into the interconnection need. If you're going to be selling memberships to the other two villages across the preserve area, the argument for the interconnection Page 80 of 89 October 3, 2019 might carry some more weight, and I'm just trying to figure out if that's what you're going to do. MR. YOVANOVICH: We're suggesting that the public drive up Big Cypress Parkway to get to the golf course. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. That's what I wanted to understand. Norm, you had in your TIS 1,414 single-family and 1,086 multifamily. MR. TREBILCOCK: Yes, sir. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Which produces a greater trip count, multifamily or single-family? MR. TREBILCOCK: Single-family. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. So if your TIS calls the single-family operations multifamily because they're connected fee simple, then what's the practical trip count going to be if they're really single-family? Because they're not multifamily because they're fee simple. MR. TREBILCOCK: Well, again, your staff recognizes and understands and the operating practice is when you have a -- you have an attached villa, it functions more like a multifamily unit. That's been the practice. That's how we do traffic studies in the county, how traffic is analyzed. So that's what we've done here. You know, it's just being consistent, because they tend to function more like a condo -type unit is really what happens, because you have, you know, multiple services and stuff like that that get provided for across the common good. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: So the method of sale didn't matter? MR. TREBILCOCK: Not from a trip analysis standpoint. When it's an attached villa, it's recognized by professionals in the area to recognize it as a multifamily trip analysis from a --just strictly from the ITE, yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. And I also notice that there's going to be -- takes -- three-fifths of the project will be sold before you, I believe, start your commercial. So that means your capture rate's not going to apply until you get to the sixth year; is that fair? MR. TREBILCOCK: Further -- further down the road you'll get that capture. And we have a relatively low capture rate with the community. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, how does the capture rate affect the dwelling unit, not count, but dwelling unit multiplier? Say you have 500 single-family and 500 multifamily, and you -- that's 1,000 units, and they generate X amount of traffic. You get a discount on the total amount of traffic off that because of the capture rate for the commercial; is that how it works? MR. TREBILCOCK: Yeah. What happens is is your internal capture is occurring between the residential and the commercial uses on the project, you know. So what we're looking at in the p.m. peak hour at buildout, you know, is 184 peak -hour trips would be internally captured. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And what dwelling -unit count did you base that 184 peak -hour capture rate? MR. TREBILCOCK: Yeah. So that would have been based on the blended -- the mix that we're showing: 1,414 single-family and 1,086 multifamily units. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: So in your traffic statement -- MR. TREBILCOCK: Yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: -- all of those residential units to the north which are greater, it looks on the map, than the ones to the south, would benefit in the same capture rate even though the commercial is across the six -lane arterial road? MR. TREBILCOCK: Yes. So they would -- as was indicated to you, there's a single crossing movement. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Wouldn't more people take cars to go cross that road from the project? Its not going to be walkable very much. I mean, it's going to have a crosswalk, but it's a major freight road with traffic going at 50 miles an hour. So you didn't take into consideration the fact that some people in the north side may not want to walk from wherever they are across that road system to the commercial area for capture, or how did you Page 81 of 89 October 3, 2019 look at capture? MR. TREBILCOCK: Well, again, they would just cross that singular road. You're not, you know, on the link taking capacity out of the link of the roadway. So it's just a simple crossing movement that, then, you can be internally captured into the community because then there is internal movement to get you right in that area, you know, so -- you know, you have that. It's based on vehicular. I mean, the assumptions here are based on vehicular uses. You know, they're -- and this would be anticipated as a signalized location, especially of the number of rooftops. We would tend to warrant a signal, and it would make sense for this community, you know, just as other, you know, communities that have bisected them. And you go west on Oil Well Road to Orangetree. ThaYs bisected by Oil Well Road as well. And you would have a signal for the communities to be able to get across, you know, because you have the commercial on the south side there as well, that PUD. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Do most of the -- MR. TREBILCOCK: This is not. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: So the capture rate doesn't really matter where the -- how the village is split up? It would be the same. MR. TREBILCOCK: Well, it would be my opinion that you're still getting a capture for those vehicle uses because they're going to utilize those internally, and they're not going to go off miles away on the network and utilize capacity on the network. And, again, we don't have an extremely high internal capture rate on this project either as a result because, you know, staff recognized that, too, that it's not a huge amount of commercial versus the, you know, prior looks and stuff like that. So everything, I think, is kept in perspective here. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Does it make any difference to your analysis if the villages are gated? I mean, it's obviously more than one village because you're going to have to have one to the -- I mean, let's say subdivisions. If you have separate gated areas, is that going to make a difference to your traffic and your capture rate? MR. TREBILCOCK: No. No, as long as you were able to allow the folks to come through like that, which they would, so yep. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. I think that's all the -- right now that's all the traffic questions I have, Norm. Thank you for your time. MR. TREBILCOCK: Yes, sir. Anything else from any of the other commission members? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Anybody? (No response.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MR. TREBILCOCK: Thank you. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: No, I think we've got -- we're there. So thank you very much. MR. TREBILCOCK: Yes, sir. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: That takes us to a little bit before 4, and I think the choice now is I don't know how long this board wants to go. We usually stop at 4. We are at a point, Rich, I think your -- we could start a new subject, but I don't think we'll get too far with it before we would want to break before 5. I don't know what the four of us would want to do. MR. YOVANOVICH: The only question is, are there a lot of questions regarding the environmental analysis that Passarella & Associates did? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, there's -- we'd have to have the environmental staff for the county provide -- maybe that's what we ought to do is get the environmental -- the county's environmental presentation on the table and see what they -- MR. YOVANOVICH: I think they said they only needed about 10 minutes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Right. So we'll get that done, and that way we can have that document with all the other documents you're going to provide, because staff needs to give us their presentations as well, and we might -- with that information and what Passarella already provided, maybe we can reduce Page 82 of 89 October 3, 2019 the amount of questions we'd have on the environmental. I don't know until I get -- sit down with it. MR. YOVANOVICH: I understand. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: So does that sound like a workable solution? MR. YOVANOVICH: I'd like to get as much on the record as we can, so -- and that would be great, and I don't think -- I think Amy said they didn't have a report for the -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Economic. MR. YOVANOVICH: -- fiscal analysis. So at that -- you wanted to see the spreadsheet with the cells. So I think if we can knock that out, probably take us a few minutes after 4. If we can get that done and then come back on the 17th and hopefully finish up on the 17th. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Give it our best shot. So with that, as far as the county environmental folks, if you guys will come up, and I know you've got something prepared. And I know that some of it will be redundant from what we saw in Passarella's but we'd still like your input on it independently. So don't think you've got to cut things out because we've only seen some of it once. Having seen it two or three times will be even better, but we'll take what we can get. MS. COOK: Good afternoon. For the record, my name is Jamie Cook. I am a principal environmental specialist with Development Review. So the purpose and the intent of the RLSA program is kind of threefold: To protect agricultural and prevent premature conversion of agricultural lands to nonagricultural uses; to direct incompatible uses away from wetland and upland habitats; and to enable the conversion of rural land to other uses in appropriate locations. Through this purpose and these intents, this led to the creation of the Stewardship Sending Areas, which are designated areas to be protected, and the Stewardship Receiving Areas, which are the areas for development. Okay. For each application, a Natural Resource Index Assessment must be submitted. The original RLSA study conducted back in -- or the early 2000s, and the current LDC defined the baseline index values for each acre of land within the RLSA. The NRI scoring is an attempt to reflect the relative environmental values of the landscape. There has not been any concrete research or -- to assign these exact values. So it's done as best professional judgment to rank the different attributes and values. The NRI scoring should reflect a combination of conservation science, natural resources, and the existing land uses. So the ultimate goal of the NRI scores is to prioritize and incentive the protection of the most valuable resources, not solely for protected species. So within their application the applicant must quantify the number of acres by the index values. All lands within the proposed SRA are -- should have an index value of less than 1.2. Any lands within the boundary that have an index value greater than 1.2 are required to be retained as open space. And then if the index values are no longer valid from that original RLSA study, the applicant needs to document the changes and the current index values. So when they submit their application, the applicant provided the NRI data in -- electronically, and each factor must be able to be mapped in GIS and verified by the county staff. The GIS data is analyzed in one -acre polygons to determine the NRI score for that one acre of land. For Rivergrass, the GIS analysis was submitted to county staff, and it was verified by Beth Yang in the Growth Management Department GIS section. In addition to -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Beth verified the -- each one of the little squares the Passarella were talking about that would have 999 pages? Page 83 of 89 October 3, 2019 MS. COOK: Correct. It was all electronic, but yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Well, I know Beth, and she does an excellent job. And if she verified it, that goes a long way to being solid. So thank you. MS. COOK: You're welcome. In addition to the GIS data, they also submit a summary page of the NRI values and the total acreages for each of those values. Okay. So along with their NRI Assessment, the applicant also submits some supporting documentation, including an aerial photograph delineating the boundary, a FLUCFCS or vegetation map of the boundary, listed species map of the SRA, soils map of the SRA, and then staff verifies that the vegetation map, the listed species survey, and the soils map are used to develop their Natural Resource Index map, which is submitted as well. Okay. So to calculate the credits for the entire SRA boundary, the six factors are reviewed using the stewardship credit worksheet that you guys all saw earlier. So when environmental staff and GIS staff reviewed this, we used this same spreadsheet. So to kind of briefly go over each of the designations, I'm going to start with the stewardship overlay designation. This designation is used -- acres will receive point values if the land is located within a Flowway Stewardship Area, which is a wetland area; a Habitat Stewardship Area, which is habitat for listed species; a Water Retention Area, which is used for surface water quality and in agricultural operations; or in the Area of Critical State Concern. For the entire boundary of Rivergrass, there are no land that are designated as FSA, HSA, WRA, or the ACSC, so the entire boundary of the Rivergrass SRA would receive a zero for this value. For the proximity indices, the values are scored by either -- whether it's enclosed within an FSA, HSA, or WRA, if it's within 300 feet of an FSA or an HSA, or if it's within 300 feet or public or private preserve land. Now, public and private preserve land is defined in the LDC as conservation lands that may be delineated as an FSA, HSA, or WRA, but they are not eligible for designation as an SSA or an SRA. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: So does that mean that if SSA -17 becomes an SSA, because I guess it was then it wasn't, or maybe it is and it isn't; I don't know any more. MR. YOVANOVICH: It's not. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: That, at one point, was on the sheets that we read, and then it was taken out. But would that change the indice for the third one down? Because they would then be within possibly a private preserve land if that's what a WRA is considered. How would you look at that? Would it change anything? MS. COOK: No. If the WRA is within the SSA, then it is not considered a public or private preserve land. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. And you base that on some definition in the code you can -- MS. COOK: That's in a definition in the code. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MS. COOK: So for the Rivergrass SRA, all of the lands within the boundary for this indice also scored a zero. I'm going to skip down to restoration potential, and this is assigned during the SSA designation process if it is appropriate. Because Rivergrass is not an SSA, it would also receive a zero value for this indice for the entire project boundary. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Do you have something in the code that says the restoration potential indice does not apply to SRA lands or something of that effect? MS. COOK: The exact wording is that the restoration potential index value is assigned during the SSA designation process. And I can give you the code reference if you're ready. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Ready is another -- that's a really arbitrary term, but let's give it a try. MS. COOK: 4.08.06. Page 84 of 89 October 3, 2019 CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MS. COOK: B, as in boy, 3B. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Thank you. MS. COOK: You're welcome. So then the three factors that are likely to change or differ throughout the boundary are the listed species habitat indice, the soil surface water indice, and the land -use land cover indice. So I'm going to go over those in a little more depth. For the listed species habitat value, these are assigned based on the habitat value for listed species. Index values are based on the documentation of occupied habitat and verifiable observation of listed species with the land cover identified as preferred or tolerated for that species. So the LDC specifically defines preferred and tolerated panther habitats in 4.08.0l.Q. These vegetation codes include the palmetto prairie, pine flatwoods, hardwoods, and most of the wetlands codes. None of these FLUCFCS codes, vegetation codes, were found within the SRA boundary, so the only applicable ones would either be other documented listed species habitat or none of the above. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And I'm trying to figure out -- I don't know if it's best to interrupt you and ask questions. What would you prefer? MS. COOK: Go ahead. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Did you want to ask first, Ned? Go right ahead. COMMISSIONER FRYER: We received a lot of material from the Conservancy who have very strong feelings about this area and that it is not appropriate for development, I think, primarily with respect to the panther habitat. This is not an area that I have much -- any expertise in. What is your position on the position of the Conservancy? Do you disagree with their conclusion? MS. COOK: Our review is done based solely on the LDC. So we have to review it based on what is in the Land Development Code currently, and what's in the Land Development Code currently is these FLUCFCS codes. So if it doesn't meet -- if it doesn't have those codes within the boundary, then it's not considered preferred or tolerated panther habitat. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Okay. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Were you herein about 2009? You weren't, were you? MS. COOK: Lived here, yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Were you --back then we had what was called a --I don't know -- for lack of a better word, rewrite of the RLSA was proposed, a five-year review. And the panther issue got a lot of discussion. In fact, we had a gentleman come down who wrote a big panther report, and I forgot his last name. But I think he was flown in. And he made an issue about the strength of the secondary panther habitat which was within 300 feet of primary habitat. And the issue there was it was thus moving into the farm fields. Panther actually found the farm fields viable habitat for running down game or whatever they do in those things, so much so that it kind of -- the whole program got kind of stalled for numbers of reasons. I'm not sure that was the only one. But the -- there was another study done. That study hit about the time the recession hit, so everything kind of dissipated. My question is, none of these show up, yet if you were to look at that study, the area within 300 feet of the WRA would probably qualify as secondary panther habitat because it's active farm fields but it's within that primary habitat fringe. Does that come into consideration at all in your review? MS. COOK: No, because we are only looking at what is within the SRA boundary and the vegetation code within that boundary. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And these codes were written at the initial time of the RLSA program? MS. COOK: Yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And you don't know why these were the ones that were limited, do you? MS. COOK: I do not know, no. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And I was here then. I don't remember either. These codes wouldn't be something I would have sat down and understood anyway. But I was -- I'm surprised that the question Page 85 of 89 October 3, 2019 was never brought up as to whether these codes were sufficient enough to cover what some of the studies said were secondary, primary, and all the other stuff. Maybe it covers all the primary. I don't know if it does the secondary. And that was kind of my question. And I'll wait till you finish, unless something else pops up between now and then. MS. COOK: Okay. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Thank you. MS. COOK: So the second factor that varies throughout the SRA boundary is these soil surface water index. These values are based upon soil types. So the LDC defines four categories: Open water and muck depression soils, which is the natural soils landscape positions, Categories 1 and 5, and I'll explain all of that in a minute and how it relates to the soils map; sand depression soils, which is the NSLP6; the flats transitional soils, which is NSLP7; and the non -hydric soils, which is 8, 9 and 11. So in their application, the -- a soils map for the area was submitted. This soils map is correlated and actually done by the USDA NRCS. Soon the left side of the screen what you're looking at is the -- NRCS's soils map for the Rivergrass area. It is identical to the one that Passarella submitted with their environmental documentation. So in the red box in the middle of the boundary it was identified as Soil Unit No. 7, which is Immokalee fine sand. That correlates to those NSLP values that I was talking about on the other -- on the previous screen on the right-hand side. The NSLP categories were defined by the South Florida Water Management District as soil classifications, and if you look at that chart on the right-hand side, you will see for Category No. 8, flatwood soils, that h amokalee fine sand -- Immokalee sands fall within that category. Therefore, if you go back to the previous screen for the areas that are identified as Immokalee fine sand with the NSLP value of 8, they are all considered non -hydric soils and would receive a value of zero. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Thank you. That's a good way to bring it -- explain it. MS. COOK: You're welcome. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Appreciate it. MS. COOK: And, finally, the last one that varies throughout the SRA boundary and can change over time is the land -use land cover or the vegetation groups. The Group 1 vegetations are the wetland hardwood, cypress, freshwater marshes, wet prairies. Group 2 are the palmetto prairies, flatwoods, and hard woods. In any other type of development, the Group 1 and Group 2 vegetations are the things that we would want to be put into preserve. Group 5 is pasture land, agricultural, fallow cropland, and waterways that are associated with ag fields. And then Group 4, so disturbed land, urban areas, residential development, industrial, all of those fall into Group 4. Okay. So to help you understand how these scores were calculated -- and, again, this was all done by GIS, and then environmental staff also verified it. So if you look at the square on the top right, that is an example of a one -acre square in the northern portion of the SRA boundary. As I mentioned before, for stewardship designation proximity index and restoration potential, everything within the entire boundary scored a value of zero. So we only really need to look at the listed species habitat, the soils, and the land cover. So for this particular acre, the soil surface water was hamokalee fine sand, which would receive a value of zero because it is a non -hydric soil. The land -use land cover vegetation was identified as cropland and pasture land, so it would receive -- it is a Group 3 classification and would receive a value of 0.2. And then in this area, because it is cropland and pasture land, it is suitable preferred and tolerated habitat for the sandhill crane, which was identified as a listed species on their listed species survey in this area. That is considered other documented listed species habitat and receives a value of 0.4. Therefore, for this one -acre parcel, the total NRI score would be 0.6. Page 86 of 89 October 3, 2019 In this particular second area, which is near the village center, again, the stewardship designation proximity index and restoration potential are all zero. There was no listed species found in this area, because it is all Brazilian pepper. Brazilian pepper is a Group 3 vegetation and also, again, receives a value of 0.2. The soil is a sand depression, which is a 0.3. So for this one -acre parcel, the total NRI score is 0.5. When the environmental staff conducts our reviews, we do do a document review of what is submitted by the applicant. We review the listed species survey, the vegetation map, the soils map, and the Natural Resource Index Map to make sure that they are consistent with the data that is submitted, and we can verify that in the field. We also conduct on-site verification, field verification throughout the SRA boundary. The most recent field visit was done in September with the new boundary changes that were added to the northern portion of the SRA. In conclusion, we found that the application was consistent with the NRI scores that were submitted, and we are in agreement that all of the acres within this boundary have NRI values of less than 1.2. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Questions from the Planning Commission? Anybody have any questions of our environmental staff? Go ahead, Ned. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Right now only that --to be sure that when this comes back the next meeting, presumably the Conservancy representatives will have opportunity to speak, would you be available to answer questions at that time? MS. COOK: Yes, sir. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Thank you. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, I have some questions in the meantime. There were some species that -- I'm trying to understand what Passarella did in this regard. They said that some of the species were because of another agency, and they didn't consider them in their review, or they did but they didn't have to. Do we not look at all the species that are -- I'm trying to figure out what they were getting at by that. Do you recall the conversation? MS. COOK: Either Ken or Heather may need to come answer that. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Sure, that's fine if they'll come up. I'm just trying to get to the -- he said it, and I didn't want to interrupt his presentation, and now we're in the environmental, and the only chance I've got to ask it is that. So do you remember the -- and it started -- I think you were talking about sandhill cranes for a minute, then you went on to another bird or something that -- and I'm not good at birds and bees. But there was another bird that was protected by one agency but not necessarily something you considered. MR. PAS SARELLA: Yeah. There was a -- some of the comments that were provided to the county by another party was related to wood stork colonies and also -- I forget what the other one was. But foraging areas around wood stork colonies, and that these foraging areas overlapped the project boundary. And as just was explained by county staff, those are boundaries established by another agency, but they're not in the Land Development Code to be considered as part of this analysis. So even though another agency may have established a forging area around a wood stork colony that may overlap these farm fields, that's not one of the assessment items that go into the scoring or the indices. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Why not? I mean, why wouldn't it be important if an agency thought it was? I mean, is the agency wrong or isn't it -- MR. PASSARELLA: No, the agency's not wrong. It's a totally different review process. It's a -- those boundaries were established for something totally different as far as the state environmental permitting and the federal environmental permitting for endangered species. That does not apply under Page 87 of 89 October 3, 2019 this -- under the Land Development Code to this NRI Assessment. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: But that's just because it doesn't apply because of the Land Development Code? Whether it's practical or not isn't the question. It just doesn't apply because of the Land Development Code. MR. PASSARELLA: Correct. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Mr. Chairman? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Yes, go ahead, sir. COMMISSIONER FRY: I apologize, but I must -- I have a commitment. I must go. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, then we're going to go. We don't like to be here without you, Karl, because you bring the screwdrivers and the hammers and the nails and stuff that keep the people downstairs busy when you go through that -- COMMISSIONER FRY: I try to do my part. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And Karl does -- if he has to go, we lose a quorum. So we will be departing. We will pick this up where we left off, and we will do that on the 17th first thing up, and we will -- I would hope we can get through it on the 17th, including public speakers. We'll go as far as we can. If we can prepare to be a little bit later to finish up, I would suggest all of us consider that. And thank you all for your time and patience today. We will make this -- get this done one way or another. And that takes us to new business. There is none. Old business. There is none. Is there any public comment other than the item we're on -- the scheduled agenda items? (No response.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Motion to adjourn by Karl. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Second. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: By Ned. All in favor, signify by saying aye. COMMISSIONER FRY: Aye. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Aye. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Aye. COMMISSIONER HOMIAK: Aye. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Anybody opposed? (No response.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: We're out of here. Thank you. There being no further business for the good of the County, the meeting was adjourned by order of the Chair at 4:17 p.m. COLLIER COUNTY PLANNING COMMISSION VV MARK TRAIN, CHAIRMAN f�Lei�•i•�.5�•k7 October 3, 2019 These minutes approved by the Board on as presented or as corrected TRANSCRIPT PREPARED ON BEHALF OF U.S. LEGAL SUPPORT, INC., BY TERRI LEWIS, COURT REPORTER AND NOTARY PUBLIC. Page 89 of 89 October 3, 2019 TRANSCRIPT OF THE MEETING OF THE COLLIER COUNTY PLANNING COMMISSION Naples, Florida, October 3, 2019 LET IT BE REMEMBERED, that the Collier County Planning Commission, in and for the County of Collier, having conducted business herein, met on this date at 9:00 a.m., in REGULAR SESSION in Building "F" of the Government Complex, East Naples, Florida, with the following members present: CHAIRMAN: Mark Strain Stan Chrzanowski Patrick Dearborn Karl Fry Edwin Fryer Karen Homiak ABSENT: Joe Schmitt ALSO PRESENT: Raymond V. Bellows, Zoning Manager Nancy Gundlach, Principal Planner Jeffrey Klatzkow, County Attorney Heidi Ashton-Cicko, Managing Assistant County Attorney Tom Eastman, School District Representative Page 1 of 89 October 3, 2019 PROCEEDINGS CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Good morning, everyone. Welcome to the Ja -- yeah, January. COMMISSIONER FRYER: You wish. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: -- October 3rd meeting of the Collier County Planning Commission. If everybody will please rise for Pledge of Allegiance. (The Pledge of Allegiance was recited in unison.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Will the secretary please do the roll call. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Yes, sir. Mr. Eastman? MR. EASTMAN: Here. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Mr. Chrzanowski? COMMISSIONER CHRZANOWSKI: Here. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Mr. Fry? (No response.) COMMISSIONER FRYER: I'm here. Chairman Strain? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Here. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Vice Chair Homiak? COMMISSIONERHOMIAK: Here. COMMISSIONER FRY: Mr. Schmitt? (No response.) COMMISSIONER FRYER: Mr. Dearborn? COMMISSIONER DEARBORN: Present. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Chair, we have a quorum of five. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Mr. Schmitt has an excused absence, and Mr. Fry is -- I think he's hung up with the people downstairs. We'll fmd out when he gets here. Anyway, that's the -- addenda to the agenda. I carefully want to go over the proposed agenda today and for the rest of October, because we need to make some changes, and I have come up with some ideas that I need the rest of you to weigh in on and see if you agree and see if we have a quorum. I've got to remind everybody, a quorum is four people. So as long as we've got four, we can move forward on some of these. So someone has duties that they have committed to, then so be it. I wish Karl was here to hear this because I'm going to need his input. COMMISSIONER DEARBORN: Mr. Chairman, he should be here momentarily. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I know. Sometimes, momentarily, if you're trying to bring things through the door you shouldn't be bringing, could take a while. COMMISSIONER FRYER: An AR15 will stop you every time. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: That's not Karl. He's got screwdrivers, I guess, or something they found. So, anyway. So let's start out with what we've got today. We had four items on today's agenda and -- there he is. Karl, do you have a screwdriver we could use to fix something up here? COMMISSIONER FRY: I'm fresh out. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Karl, what we're doing is we're starting to talk about the agenda for the rest of October. , We have three items on -- four items on today's agenda. First item up and the commitment that was made that Rivergrass would be the first item today to start the meeting, and they will be. The second item up, Hammock Park GMPA. Normally we put items that are continued fust. The applicant for Hammock Park agreed to come after Rivergrass. Well, Rivergrass isn't probably -- well, it isn't going to get done today that I can see. It may not get done on the 17th, and it may end up going to the 3rd. So Hammock Park may have to fall into a different slot. Page 2 of 89 October 3, 2019 The Logan/Immokalee CPDD, I made a commitment to the applicant they will be heard at 1 o'clock today. That is only a one -word change or actually one number change on a PUD, and that hopefully will go fast with this board, then we'll assume Rivergrass after that. The AUIR is something we don't need to discuss at the meeting today. There's a little bit more time involved. It actually needs to be discussed this month, though. I checked with staff, and in the past we've had AUIR meetings over at Development Services in the Room 609/610. Part of that's because that document is -- if there are questions, staff is heavily involved, and that's -- a lot of staff is right there. So I suggested doing an evening meeting starting around 5:00 in that building, in that big conference room. And I wanted to see if -- and I would suggest for planning purposes we avoid Wednesdays because that's before our Thursday meetings. For the most part, Friday's obviously -- Thursday, if we've got a meeting, we're going to be pretty booked to get through that. The weekend's not going to count, so we're really looking at Monday and Tuesday. Since it's in that room, we're not going to have a conflict with the BCC using this room. So if the Monday or Tuesday works for you guys, I need to first see if Mondays and Tuesdays are okay, and then we'll start looking at the dates of the Monday and Tuesday. Is there any Monday and Tuesdays you all know that you can't be available for the AUIR? COMMISSIONER FRY: Are we talking an evening meeting? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Yes, starting at 5:00. Okay. COMMISSIONER DEARBORN: What month are we talking about, Mr: Chairman? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: October only. COMMISSIONER DEARBORN: I coach youth sports, and it's an obligation. I'm the head coach, and I cannot miss, and we practice Monday, Tuesdays, evenings, 5:00 to 7:30, 7:45. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: That's about the time we'd be meeting. So, yeah, you will not be able to make that one but, then again -- COMMISSIONER DEARBORN: Sony about that. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: No problem. We have -- yes, sir. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Yes, sir. I would not be available on October 14 as a result of a commitment that I have the second Monday of every month. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. And I have, it looks like, almost every meeting -- I mean Monday and Tuesday open. So, with that, so you can't do it on the 14th, and Patrick won't be here no matter which day it is. The only Monday we have to work around is the 14th, but we can also do any of the Mondays or Tuesdays in between. So here's what I'll do. And does anybody -- I'll assume, then, we have a consensus on that issue and that at least four people will attend whatever meeting date we set up for one of those Mondays or Tuesdays. And I don't know who in staff is organizing the AUIR meeting, but whoever is, they need to come back and pick the Monday or Tuesday that works best for the majority of the staff, the directors, or anybody else that would be at that meeting for the Planning Commission to discuss one item; that's the AUIR. We'll open and finish with it that night, then move it on to the Board. So I'll leave that in staffs hands from this point, and they'll notify everybody by email once we pick a date. So now that takes us to the October 17th meeting. We've received a total of 1,527 pages just for the SRA that we're discussing today. And I've also tried to lay it out on the agenda a schedule similar to what we drafted last time we talked. The order's a little different because in talking with the applicant, they needed some -- they needed to make sure their traffic guy got in in the morning. And I talked to staff about -- they've got a specialist coming in to talk about traffic and economics. So I put those two first, and then the environment, and then moved into the SRA document. I don't see how we're going to get through the traffic, economic, and environmental today. We'll Page 3 of 89 October 3, 2019 certainly give it the best shot we can. We'll move as fast as we can, but seeing that, that means October 17th may take a while to get through Rivergrass again. And now, remember, we're not going to hear public comments till after we get done. So I expect there might being some public comments on this based on some of the correspondence we received. With that in mind, we could even go to November with finishing up Rivergrass. So what I did is took a look at our calendar. And rather than tell the public we're going to hear the five or six items -- I think it's six now -- that are scheduled for October 17th in addition to the continuance of Rivergrass, I'm going to suggest that we take Hammock Park and those five or six items that are scheduled for October 16th -- October 17th other than Rivergrass and move all those to a special meeting on October 31st just for those items, not Rivergrass. So what we'll do is we'll clean up all the items that are being delayed because of the time it takes to hear Rivergrass and hear our Hammock Park fust on that date and all the rest of them that are in line behind it, and we'll clean up as many on that date as we can, and that will bring our schedule up to par by the end of this month, and we can start November afresh. And part of it, from discussions with the County Attorney's Office and the fact we're putting items on the agenda that we know we can't hear because of the time frames and, you know, the public could show up, and we'll never get to it. And it's out of deference to making sure the public is accurately told about dates. I'm suggesting this board to do what I just suggested: Move all those outstanding items that are going to be outstanding through October 17th to the 31 st, and we have a special meeting on the 31 st in this room at this regular time. Stan? COMMISSIONER CHRZANOWSKI: My memory ain't what it used to be, but I kind of remember sometime within the last two weeks I got some kind of email wanting to set something up for October 31 st because I remember its Halloween, and I made a joke about, yeah, that's fitting. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Staff at the county Development Services celebrates Halloween rather emphatically. They do a lot of decorating and stuff. There was an email going around about the theme for this year's -- I don't know -- I don't participate in it, but I know that was one email -- that's the only email I saw about the 31st. COMMISSIONER CHRZANOWSKI: Okay. As long as they're not saying there's some kind of meeting on the 31 st, I'm good. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And Ray was supposed to check by today -- or somebody was. Maybe it was somebody else. Ray, did you guys -- MR. BELLOWS: I have been coordinating with Judy Puig. We're looking at the availability of the room today. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: For the 31 st? MR. BELLOWS: Yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: There's no calendar that somebody can see if it's available or not? MR. BELLOWS: We're looking at it. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. When will you think you'll have an answer? MR. BELLOWS: Maybe she'll email me during the meeting. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Your mic's not picking you up too clearly. MR. BELLOWS: We'll see if we can get a response before the meeting's over. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Well, as we take breaks or come back from lunch, or as soon as you find out, let us know. On the 31st, if we move forward with that as a date as we've just described, does anyone know if they can't make it? Now, that's a Thursday. It's the fifth Thursday of the month, so generally things aren't scheduled for the fifth Thursdays of the months because they rotate. So I was assuming that would be a clear day. Does anybody know if they can't make it on the 31st? Page 4 of 89 October 3, 2019 (No response.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Well, then, tentatively, working with staffs confirmation of that date, we'll proceed as we've just discussed in moving all those items. And on the agenda for the 17th, we will leave Rivergrass, and all the rest will have a notice they're all being moved to the 31st of October, assuming we get confirmation on that. And what I'll do is once we have confirmation today, I'll go back to the agenda and ask the Commission to acknowledge all these as continued items to that date so that we can have the agenda properly noticed so the public isn't sitting somewhere waiting for something that isn't going to happen. So that takes us past the agenda issues. As far as the Planning Commission absences, the next regular meeting is October 17th. Does anybody have any -- know if they're going to be here on October 17th or know if they're not going to be here? (No response.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. And that takes us to approval of the minutes for September 5th. They were all sent electronically. Does anybody have any changes to those minutes? COMMISSIONER FRYER: Move their approval. COMMISSIONER DEARBORN: Second. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Motion made by Ned. Seconded by Patrick. Discussion? (No response.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: All in favor, signify by saying aye. COMMISSIONER CHRZANOWSKI: Aye. COMMISSIONERFRY: Aye. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Aye. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Aye. COMMISSIONER HOMIAK: Aye. COMMISSIONER DEARBORN: Aye. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Anybody opposed? (No response.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Motion carries -- 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 to 0 -- or is it 6? Yeah, we've got six of us, including me. Okay. BCC report and recaps. Ray? MR. BELLOWS: Yes. On September 24th, the Board of County Commissioners heard the Allura PUD rezone and the companion Growth Management Plan, and that was approved 5-0; the Livingston Road Growth Management Plan amendment was approved 5-0; and on the summary agenda the Siena Lakes Orange Blossom PUD amendment was approved. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Thank you, Ray. That takes us to the chairman's report, and I have a couple -- actually one item. Terri and I communicated about things to make her job move easier and the record to be clearer. We're going into some long meetings for the next month or two, so I need you all to please remember the following items: Number one, please wait to be acknowledged to speak. Number 2, please speak into your mics. Some of us are sitting back like Ray was just doing, and if you could speak into your mic, it can be picked up by not only Terri, but I forgot, there's a person that -- and I don't know what Terri called it, but they actually type it in as the meeting's being portrayed. What's it called? COURT REPORTER: Closed captioning. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Closed caption. Thank you. So we need to make sure that we handle all this so that the closed captioning can be accommodated. So the third one, do not talk over one another and over other speakers. That's been happening a lot because we get anxious, but we're going to have to slow it down and not do that. And then the last Page 5 of 89 October 3, 2019 thing, speaking about slowing down -- and Tem said I'm okay, but everybody else, do not speak fast. Slow everything to a very reasonable pace so she can type it as fast as we speak. So with that in mind, that would be helpful to have. And I also wanted to mention today's item up that we're going to be on most of the day is the Rivergrass Stewardship Receiving Area. I don't know of -- other than myself and Joe when he was administrator -- nobody else on this board had been involved with an SRA before, and the only one we were involved with is the Ave Maria town SRA. This is the first village SRA, first of -- I think there's four total, maybe five, in some kind of process at the county that's coming through. So it's imperative that we handle this one carefully and all the questions that you guys have, especially since we haven't been through it before, don't hesitate to ask your questions when we get to the items. I've tried to lay this out in a manner more for the presentation by staff and the applicant to address the issues in an orderly manner, and you'll see that on the agenda. That doesn't mean we're limited to asking questions about traffic only when we talk about -- only when the traffic presentations are done, because throughout the day, or the two days, whatever it takes, you all may come up with other questions. There's a catch-all. CCPC will be able to ask questions on any matter as we go through the whole thing. I was just trying to compartmentalize the agenda a bit so we could kind of count on when the specialists have to be here, the presentation people have to be here, and things like that, and that's for all parties involved. Then the public comments are going to be after ours and after the LDC staff report and all that stuff. And then through the public comment we may have more questions of anyone of the previous areas, and that's fine. I don't want you ever to think we're not going to go back and revisit things if we have more questions; that's the intent of looking at it thoroughly is to go back and ask everything. And the applicant is also -- I talked to Bob Mulhere, and he said he included in his presentations some of the history and uniqueness of the SRA, and the RLSA area. So rather than me get into those, we'll listen to Bob's presentation as a way to introduce ourselves to it. And the last caution is this is not as much of a zoning effort because the zoning is already in place. This is more of a placement of an SRA within an already approved overlay. And a lot of it, I don't know portions of it, but I know that its a simple majority vote for a resolution instead of a supermajority vote on whatever parts would apply to a resolution basis at the Board of County Commissioners. So that is a different twist. Uniquely different than a PUD, so... COMMISSIONER FRYER: I assume it's quasi-judicial in nature? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Yes, sir. We're going to go through all of the -- COMMISSIONER FRYER: Swearing in. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: -- swearing in, and then all of the disclosures in a minute. So with that, does anybody else have anything they want to add at this time? (No response.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. There's no items for consent. We'll move right into our first public hearing. ***It's 9A1, and it's the -- it was continued from September 19th. It's the Rivergrass Village Stewardship Receiving Area, and it's out in the RLSA overlay. All those wishing to testify on behalf of this item, please rise to be sworn in by the court reporter. If you're going to talk about the RLSA, please stand up and be sworn in. (The speakers were duly sworn and indicated in the affirmative.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Now, for the members of the public that's stood up, I appreciate you standing up in case we get to the public comment. I don't think we'll get to it today, but we're -- you're here -- you'll at least have the history of it so that when you do get up and speak you'll have been through the day or two that it takes to get there. So, with that, disclosures from the Planning Commission. We'll start with Tom on my right. Page 6 of 89 October 3, 2019 MR. EASTMAN: I had meetings and telephone calls with the applicant, and I also had a telephone call with county staff regarding this project. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Stan? COMMISSIONER CHRZANOWSKI: Just emails through the county. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Karl? COMMISSIONER FRY: Emails through the county; telephone conversation with Rich Yovanovich. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Ned? COMMISSIONER FRYER: Same disclosure. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I had a meeting with the applicant's team, I had a meeting -- several meetings with staff, I've had conversations with several of the Board of County Commissioners, I have also received correspondence that I've -- any of it I forwarded to the staff, I've had a meeting with the Conservancy, and I had a meeting with the Wildlife Federation. There have been periodic comments that I might have answered questions, I don't remember all the people, but nothing specific to what we're actually getting into today. COMMISSIONER FRY: Mr. Chairman, I neglected one disclosure. I had a telephone conversation with Commissioner Saunders. COMMISSIONER CHRZANOWSKI: And, Mr. Chairman, I neglected. I had a telephone conversation with Mr. Yovanovich. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. With that, Karen? COMMISSIONER HOMIAK: I spoke to Mr. Yovanovich and emails through the county. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Patrick? COMMISSIONER DEARBORN: Just the normal emails. Nothing neglected. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Sorry. I neglected to disclose a conversation I had with a county commissioner. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. That is for disclosure, and then we'll move right into the presentation by the applicant. And I don't know how you're going to start off, but it's all yours. MR. YOVANOVICH: Thank you. Good morning. For the record, Rich Yovanovich on behalf of the applicant. I want to introduce our team and our experts and our representatives. From Collier Enterprises Management is Patrick Utter. He's the senior vice president for real estate; Christian Spilker is the senior vice president for land management, and Valerie Pike is the project manager for this particular project. The consulting team is, as you know, Mr. Mulhere; myself; Jake Cremer from Stearns, Weaver, and Miller. He's cocounseling with me on some of the issues mainly pertaining to transportation -related issues; Dominick Amico is our engineer for the project; Lucy Gallo has done the economic analysis; Kirk Martin is our water, science, and water expert; Ken Passarella and Heather from Passarella & Associates are our environmental consultants; and Mr. Trebilcock and Mr. Malaescu are our transportation experts for this particular project. The outline for today is as follows: I will -- I've already done the team, but I will take you through the history of the Rural Land Stewardship program, how it works, and then turn it over to Bob to get into the specifics of how our particular application meets the requirements of both the Growth Management Plan and the Land Development Code. We will address the deviations we've requested and address the staff report and recommendations. I will tell you we've had several meetings with Collier County staff since the staff report was written, and I will be honest with you, I think we're down to just one issue, and that one issue is how much of the Big Cypress right-of-way we will be providing to the county as part of the Rivergrass Village SRA application. All of the other staff recommendations or deviations were, at the time of the writing of the report, there might have been some disagreements; we've reached an agreement, and we'll discuss that with you Page 7 of 89 October 3, 2019 as we do our presentation. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And, Rich, when we get into the reports, just to give you a heads -up, I received three different staff reports. So if you could tell us the dates of the reports you're working off of so we are all on the same page, I'd appreciate that. MR. YOVANOVICH: Okay. Well, I've only received one, and that's the one that staff and our team has been working off of, and that was the initial staff report. Now, you may have received some additional documents that deal with some acreage modifications due to finalizing the footprint for the Big Cypress right-of-way. And as you recall I mentioned that at the last meeting that there were some -- ifs roughly -- and it's in my presentations. It's a little over 2.4 acres of a reduction in our overall village size as a result of the -- reaching resolution on the right-of-way. That's -- I don't know of any other staff reports, but I do know there have been additional documentation related to that issue truing up the acreage. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And just so you know, I only pulled them from the 1,500 pages we received. So that's the only source I had. So if you'd gotten those 1,500 pages, you'll find that in there there are three staff reports each with a different date, and that's the only thing I was trying to focus on. MR. YOVANOVICH: That's fine. Well, we historically focus on the staff report that's in the front of the package that goes to you -all. If there's -- there's some backup attachments, yes, we've received them and, yes, we've addressed those issues with your staff. Up to the screen is the -- bear with me -- is the location of the proposed Rivergrass Village SRA. As you can see, its on the very western edge of the Rural Land Stewardship Area overlay basically immediately adjacent to Golden Gate Estates and immediately adjacent to what is the Hyde Park SRA. Their project now is 997.53 acres now that we resolved the acreage for Big Cypress Parkway. The number of units has remained the same at 2,500. The commercial that we're providing ranges from a minimum of 62,500 square feet to a maximum 80,000 square feet. The civic uses that we're providing is a minimum of 25,000 square feet. As Bob will show you, those are the required square footages pursuant to the Growth Management Plan and the LDC. The changes -- we just wanted to show you what the changes were. The yellow was the original boundary of the original submittal that was originally on your agenda. The right-of-way for Big Cypress -- MR. MULHERE: Do you want to show them? MR. YOVANOVICH: Yeah. What do I use as the pointer? Bob? It doesn't matter. Just show me what to use. There we go. Right here is what is Big Cypress Parkway. Big Cypress Parkway got a little wider from what it was originally proposed to be. As a result of it getting a little wider, we've made up some but not all of the lost acreage due to that on that little triangular piece that's being added to the PUD -- I'm sorry, it's SRA. As you can see, even I sometimes slip into the wrong terminology. This is not a rezone, as the Chairman has pointed out. This is an overlay where we're simply designating lands to be designated as an SRA. We're not rezoning the property. The property is already zoned for what we are requesting. As part of the SRA designation process, we are required to obtain credits. Those credits come from SSAs, stewardship sending areas, that are areas that are basically put aside for conservation purposes as part of this overall Rural Lands Stewardship program. We will be obtaining our credits from SSA -15, which is approved and is being held in escrow, and it consists of 5,259 acres. The way the credit system works is you -- for each acre in your SRA, you are required to obtain eight credits. Now, if you do more -- if you do more open space than is required in the program, you don't have to use credits for that additional area. But the bottom line is, we will be using 6,205.36 credits to entitle this SRA. That is roughly five times the acreage in conservation for the acreage of the village. So the intent of the program has always been to provide incentives for property owners to preserve land and entitle other land for development. Page 8 of 89 October 3, 2019 The history of the program is in 1999 it was a very contentious time in Collier County. There were several environmental groups that didn't think the Comprehensive Plan went far enough in protecting environmentally sensitive lands. There was a challenge to the county's Comprehensive Plan amendments that were going through the process at the time. Ultimately, the governor and cabinet issued a final order requiring the property owners to work together in a collaborative process to come up with a program to address several important issues. And that collaborative process basically started in 1999 and finished in 2002. But as this slide will indicate, the Rural Lands Stewardship Area is approximately 195,000 acres and 300 square miles. That's the program you're dealing with today. As Bob pointed out at our last meeting when we were talking about a Comprehensive Plan amendment in the Rural Fringe Mixed Use District, that also was subject to the final order that Bob mentioned to you at that time. So the process was broken down into two separate areas. Rural Fringe Mixed Use District, which is to the west of this property; and the Rural Lands Stewardship Area program. The governor's final order basically required that we deal with several issues at the same time, and it required that it be a collaborative community-based effort with broad-based public participation. The goals of that was to protect prime agricultural areas, direct incompatible uses away from wetlands and upland habitat in order to protect water quality and listed species habitat, and to assess the growth potential and the conversion of rural lands for development. And public participation was the hallmark of this planning effort, and public participation did, in fact, occur. There were -- a citizen committee was made up of landowners as well as staff, as well as environmental groups, and there were many, many meetings and a few years of hashing out what was ultimately the program in front of you today. In 2002 there were -- the recommendation of the Rural Lands Stewardship program was made to the Board of County Commissioners. The Department of Community Affairs was the state agency that was in effect at the time that had to review and bless this program. They, in fact, did review and bless this program and determined that it was consistent with the final order, and it was supported by all of the stakeholders for approval by the Board of County Commissioners. So I want -- and I'll show you some of those groups in a second. But 1 wanted to make it very clear that the Growth Management Plan amendments that you'll be looking at today and the Land Development Code provisions that you'll be looking at today are, in fact, consistent with the original final order that the governor and cabinet handed down to the Board of County Commissioners. Anybody who tells you that this program is not consistent with that final order is not factually correct. The groups that were involved and supported this program was Nancy Payton -- I don't know if any of you have worked with her. I know Mr. Strain and Mr. Chrzanowski have. I think she may have been retired since then. I think Ms. Homiak probably has seen her in public presentations. She and Brad Cornell and the Conservancy spearheaded the environmental aspects of this program and participated in this program. I just want -- Nancy Payton, at the adoption hearing of the Board of County Commissioners for the Growth Management Plan amendment, said, we appreciate the willingness and the responsiveness of county representatives and the Eastern Collier property owners to address our concerns. She goes on further to say, and I want to express again my appreciation personally and on behalf of my organization of each one of you, and I urge you to adopt this plan, move it on so we can get busy writing the Land Development Code and implementing this landmark plan. So Florida Wildlife Federation, big supporter of this program when it was adopted in 2002. Brad Cornell with Collier Audubon at the time says, we are very supportive of the Rural Lands Stewardship Area overlay amendments that you have before you. He goes on to say, you know, everybody has their say, everybody has their chips on the table, and we come to terms that are agreeable Page 9 of 89 October 3, 2019 to everyone. No one wins everything they want and, unfortunately, we have to recognize that. But we're very supportive of this -- these results, and we recommend adoption. And they weren't alone. The Conservancy of Southwest Florida, Gary Davis got up there and said, I can't let my colleagues be the only ones to support this. He goes on to say, no, I'll be brief because I did meet with a couple of you last week and shared some concerns that we still had, and I wanted to make it clear that these concerns have been worked out, and we now feel that we can fully support the plan as it's come to you today. And as Brad said, not everybody got what they wanted, but I think we're in good support of this plan as it is coming forward, and we urge you to adopt it today. In reliance upon the process and the Growth Management Plan amendments and ultimately the Land Development Code amendments to implement the Rural Land Stewardship program, the property owners worked with the environmental groups, Collier County staff to come up with a program that's an incentive -based program to put, in this particular case, five acres into preservation in exchange for one acre of development area. And that program has been in effect for 19, 17 years. A long time that this program has been in effect. From a history standpoint, there's only been one approved SRA, and that's the town of Ave Maria. I believe it required close to 17,000 acres of SSAs to have it work. The Big Cypress Stewardship District, which the Rivergrass Village property is in, was formed to further implement the Rural Land Stewardship program. 2006, Ave Maria starts construction. In 2007 and T, ave Maria is opened and more SSAs are approved as part of this overall goal to preserve lands out east in the Rural Land Stewardship Area. The five-year review process began. It's still underway. And then we all know the great recession hits, and development stops out east as well as it stopped in the urban area. This map is a very important and instructive map. The light pink area is the open stewardship area. What does that mean? That's the least environmentally sensitive lands, and that is where SRAs are supposed to be developed. You can see on the visualizer the outline of Rivergrass Village. We're in the open area where development is supposed to occur. The blue area, the darker blue area are Flowway Stewardship Areas. Thafs areas that are supposed to become SSAs and become preserved and credits taken to develop in the pink. The green areas are habitat stewardship areas. Those are the areas where you're supposed to do SSAs, take credits, and put it into preserve for the pink area. And then you have the lighter blue area where it says VRA, water retention areas. Those are areas where you are not to develop and you're to get credits to support development in the pink area. And that's what you have today; that's the critical map, that's the overlay, and that is the measurement of what we're here to do today. And what we're here to do today is to designate a portion of the pink area for a village. That's what we're here to do. And we'll take you through a pretty detailed process to show how we meet every one of the criteria in the Growth Management Plan as well as the LDC. I just want to show you one more map that highlights the Stewardship Sending Areas that are in place today. Bob, is this thing still on? As you can see in the -- I think that's pink is our proposed village. You can see these through here, these SSAs that are already adopted being held in escrow to further protect the environment. SSA -17, right here, is not yet adopted but going through the process to be approved by the County Commission. The Planning Commission doesn't see the SSAs. So what you could see, as this program is intended, there is a tremendous amount of Stewardship Sending Areas approved as part of this program to further the goal of protecting the environment. You asked us for a map of what's kind of going on out in the rural area. You asked us to provide you a map of villages that are currently being reviewed and some that might be coming forward in the Page 10 of 89 October 3, 2019 near future, and I want to just kind of briefly take you through those. In the pink is Hyde Park. That is -- that's going through the process. You should hear that sometime early next year, 2020. You obviously have Rivergrass, which you're hearing today. South of Rivergrass is Longwater, and south of that is Belhnar. Those are two villages that we've had pre -application meetings for and intend to submit in the near future for those villages -- well, those four villages that I spoke of within the Rural Lands Stewardship Area. The Immokalee Road Village is not within the Rural Lands Stewardship Area. That's within the Rural Fringe Mixed Use District that you learned about from Bob a few weeks ago. But that's the current state of applications as we know it. I think Bob and I are involved in all of those and are familiar with them. But that's the -- that's where we are today as far as pending applications is Rivergrass, Hyde Park, and Immokalee Road Village, and then Longwater and Bellmar should be coming in soon. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: The only one I don't see on here, it came in for a pre -application and hasn't done anything else that I can find, but it's the Hogan Island. MR. YOVANOVICH: Okay. And that's not been submitted at this point. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, it was submitted as a pre -app but not submitted as a plan. MR. YOVANOVICH: Right. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Chairman, may we ask for these slides, assuming that this matter gets carried over from today? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, I was going to ask that, after today's hearing, all this be sent to us so we have time to review it again before the next meeting. MR. YOVANOVICH: Absolutely, absolutely. So how does the program work? The program works through two overlays that exist. One is in the Growth Management Plan, and one is in the Land Development Code. The Growth Management Plan Overlay is within your agricultural area of your Future Land Use Element, and this overlay was intended to create an incentive -based land -use overlay system. It's based on the principles of Rural Land Stewardship as defined in Section 163.3177(11) of the Florida Statutes. And your Comprehensive Plan is broken into four groups of policies that are applicable to the Rural Lands Stewardship Area. The fust set of policies deals with the overall organization and structure, overall land stewardship program, which I'm going over right now; the Group 2 policies relate to agriculture; the Group 3 policies relate to natural resource protection. That's the stewardship sending area provisions. The Group 4 policies relate to converting land to other uses; that's what we're going through today with the SRA process. And the Group 5 policies deal with the baseline provisions if a property owner elects not to participate in this program. You have to choose to go into the program. You're not forced to go into this program. That's the Growth Management Plan. And I've got some of the provisions I want to highlight for you. And then in the Land Development Code, you're dealing with Section 4.08 of the Land Development Code. And I want to just highlight two of those. Section 4.08.02 is the actual establishment of the overlay that zones the property that allow -- that identifies the uses for the property, identifies the characteristics for the different types of SRAs that are allowed. And then 4.07 are the specific provisions as to how you qualify for each of those four different types of SRAs and what the designation process is. So you'll note in your staff report you have a very different review analysis for an SRA than you would have with your typical rezone to PUD or rezone to straight zoning. You note that you don't have the same findings and areas of review that you would have on a rezone because those decisions have already been made by adopting the overlay. The function of today at the Planning Commission and ultimately the Board of County Commission is to determine whether this land should be designated as an SRA, Stewardship Receiving Page 11 of 89 October 3, 2019 Area, based upon the criteria in 4.08.07. You'll be focusing on suitability. That's, are we open lands? Which we are. And are we not impacting any lands that score greater than a 1.2 on the environmental scale? Ken Passarella will take you through that today to show you we meet those criteria. You will make sure that our master plan is consistent with the requirements of the Land Development Code. You'll make sure that the public facilities will be available to serve the project. You'll make sure that we are fiscally neutral at the horizon year, and horizon year is at buildout. Lucy Gallo will take you through that process. And you'll make sure that we have the necessary SSA credits available to develop this land. You'll also review our SRA development document to make sure it complies with the Land Development Code. Your staff has done that analysis and has determined, based upon further discussions, that we meet all of the requirements of the 4.08.07 of the LDC and, therefore, we're entitled to have this land designated as an SRA village. I've already covered some of this in my presentation, but the program works based upon obtaining credits. That's the currency to develop SRA lands. We create SSAs to develop those credits. That SSA review goes through a very detailed review. Ken Passarella has formed several of the SSAs and can explain that process if you deem it necessary as part of this review process. But we go through an evaluation to determine the credits. Then we take those credits and we use them to establish stewardship receiving areas. We do another review of the environmental aspects of the SRA lands because, again, the way the program works is you have to make sure you're developing on open areas that score less than a 1.2 on the rating scale. And I've already shown you slides that we meet the requirement. We have enough credits in place to entitle all the land. Some of the Growth Management Plan policies I want to focus on is the Group 4 policies, and the purpose of those policies is to enable the conversion of rural lands to other uses in appropriate locations while discouraging urban sprawl. The SRA program itself, by definition, discourages urban sprawl. It was designed and adopted to dictate where development is allowed to occur and, by definition, it is not urban sprawl to develop in the Rural Lands Stewardship Area. So if someone were to say to you, they're developing out east, this is urban sprawl, that is not correct. One of the goals and policies we had to deal with with a final order was to make sure we weren't creating urban sprawl. This program assures that we're not having urban sprawl. Policy 4.6 says the SRA characteristics shall be developed upon innovative planning and development strategies referenced in 163.3168(2), Florida Statutes. These planning strategies and techniques include: Urban villages, new towns, and then it goes on, and mixed-use development that allow the conversion of rural and agricultural lands to other uses while protecting environmentally sensitive areas, maintaining the economic viability of agriculture and other predominantly rural land uses, and providing the cost effective -- I'm sorry -- cost-efficient delivery of public facilities and services. Such development strategies are recognized as methods of discouraging urban sprawl. What we're doing today is not urban sprawl. Policy 4.7 identifies the four types of SRAs, and those are towns, villages, hamlets, and compact rural development. The characteristics of each of those types of SRA are in Attachment C to your Growth Management Plan. Bob will take you through those, and then the specific policies for villages, 4.7.2. 4.7.2 clearly identifies villages as primarily residential communities with a diversity of housing types and a mix of uses appropriate to the scale and character of that particular village. That's what we're doing. We have a diversity of housing types, and we have retail uses and services that meet the needs of our residents. They also meet the needs of Golden Gate Estates, which was another important aspect of the Rural Land Stewardship Program in the first place. Page 12 of 89 October 3, 2019 Policy 4.9, I want to highlight some of that. It says, the primary means of directing development away from wetlands and critical habitat is the prohibition of locating SRAs in FSAs, Flowway Stewardship Areas; HSA, Habitat Stewardship Areas; and WRAs, to further direct development away from wetlands and critical habitat, residential, commercial, manufacturing, etcetera, shall not be sited on lands that receive a Natural Resource Index value of greater than 1.2. Then you'll see the conditional uses also are prohibited on lands that score greater than a 1.2. So how are the environmental aspects addressed in this program? You have the Group 3 policies that deal with SSAs; you have the Group 4 policies that tell you you can't have an SRA in a Habitat Stewardship Area, a Flowway Stewardship Area, or a wetland -- or a Water Retention Area, and any open lands that score greater than 1.2, you can't develop that land. The program is the program. It was blessed by the environmental groups. Those environmental groups recognized that the open lands are where you develop, but you can't develop anything that scores better than a 1.2. So if anybody tells you that we're not meeting the Growth Management Plan requirements for habitat protection, they're wrong. The program's the program. If you don't like the program, you go through the legislative process to change the program. But we are 100 percent consistent with the program as it was developed through extensive community involvement and 100 percent consistent with the program that was recommended for adoption by Florida Wildlife, Collier Audubon, and the Conservancy. You're going to hear some comments about a Water Retention Area and how they work and what they can be used for and what they can't be used for, and you even are going to hear something about what kind of credits you should be able to get in an SSA for impacting Water Retention Areas. Not relevant to today's discussion. We're not hereto talk about SSA -17. We're hereto talk about the Rivergrass Village SRA. Water Retention Areas, I showed them to you on the map, can be used to support the development of an SRA. Policy 4.8 says an SRA may be contiguous to and served by a WRA without requiring the WRA to be designated as an SRA in accordance with Policy 3.12 and 3.13. We don't have to bring the adjacent WRAs, which are going to be utilized as part of water management but also panther -- as basically a -- they're water bodies to protect panthers from coming into the project. Perfectly allowed under the Growth Management Plan. And under the LDC it says, during the permitting to serve -- during permitting to serve new uses within an SRA, additions and modifications to WRAs may be required including, but not limited to, changes to control elevations, discharge rate, stormwater pretreatment, grading, excavation, or fill. Such additions and modifications shall be allowed subject to review and approval of the South Florida Water Management District in accordance with best -management practices. Bottom line is, if anybody tells you we can't impact those WRAs as part of this process, they're wrong. We can, and we go through Water Management District permitting. That's the process. Not today. It's the Water Management District permitting process to address those impacts. I'm going to tum it over to Bob to get into the specifics about this project, but I just want to make sure I leave off with this program was established based upon tremendous community involvement. It was a cooperative effort by landowners who own lands out there. Many of those lands, when you look at that, they agreed to put into Stewardship Sending Areas in return for being able to move forward with development in these open areas. We're honoring that commitment that was made. We are 100 percent consistent with the program as has been agreed to by the property owners. And we -- at the end of our presentation, you will see that we are entitled to have this Rivergrass Village property designated as an SRA for the uses that we're requesting, and we're going to request that the Planning Commission make a recommendation to the Board of County Commissioners for approval of the SRA village. If you'll bear with us, I think we'll answer a lot of your questions, or hopefully answer a lot of Page 13 of 89 October 3, 2019 your questions through our presentations, and we'd like to keep all questions to the end but, of course, you all have the discretion to ask questions whenever you want. So with that, that's the overview of how the program works. Bob will get into the specifics unless you have any questions. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Does anybody have anything that can't wait until they finish the next part of their presentation? (No response.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay, thank you. MR. MULHERE: Thank you. For the record, Bob Mulhere here on behalf of Collier Enterprises. So this is a fairly busy exhibit. I'll go over it for you. This is Attachment C, which is in the Growth Management Plan part of the RLSA program. It's also reflected in the LDC. I have additional slides, so don't strain your eyes, because we'll go over this again with a little more clarity. I just wanted to point out this slide which lists on the heading "typical characteristics," and moving down it has various typical characteristics such as size and residential units that are allowed, housing styles, maximum floor area ratios or intensities that apply to some uses, goods and services, and so forth. And then as you go across that top heading, it lists the four types of SRAs which Rich already discussed; one being a town, Rivergrass being a village, there's also a hamlet, and a compact rural development. Outlined in green are those standards that apply to village. This will be a little bit easier, I think, for you to see. Again, these typical characteristics are listed for a village now, specifically. Some of those are required and some of those are optional. So a village can be between 100 and 1,000 acres. We are just under 1,000 acres. A village may allow up -- between one and four dwelling units per gross acre, and our density is 2.5 dwelling units per gross acre. There is a diversity of single-family and multifamily housing styles required, and we are providing that. There are floor area ratios that are both required and optional. So for retail and office, there's a maximum floor area ratio of .5. For group housing, that's an optional use. But if you choose to do group housing, you would have the county's standard floor area ratio of .45. You are required to provide a certain level of civic, governmental, institutional uses, and they are limited to a floor area ratio of .6. Transient lodging is allowed up to 26 units per acre. It's not required. What is required? Well, you have to provide neighborhood goods and services using the formula that's provided herein of 25 square feet per gross building area per DUE, per dwelling unit, which translates to the minimum numbers that Rich went over of 62,500. That's the minimum. And then, of course, we've allowed up to 80,000 square feet. There has to be a centralized -- or decentralized community treatment system. In this case, Collier County's providing, basically, sewer and water services to this community. There are various requirements for parks and open space which we meet. Lakes. You must provide a minimum of 35 percent open space. We exceed that. I'll go over that in greater detail. You have to have an interconnected system of collector and local roads with connection to a collector or arterial. We connect to an existing arterial and a future proposed arterial. So I wanted to just show you the surrounding zoning and general location, which I know you're all familiar with. But the lands that are included within the Rivergrass and the lands surrounding Rivergrass to the east are zoned A/MHO/RLSAO. That's agricultural zoning with a Mobile Home Overlay, and a Rural Lands Stewardship Overlay. To the west there is -- the square that you see that reads "Hyde Park proposed SRA," that is part of the RLSA. It's just a section of land that sort of sticks out there but was included in the RLSA, and the other lands to the west are zoned Golden Gate Estates, "E" estates. There will be a separation between Rivergrass and all of those lands to the west which will be created by future Big Cypress Parkway. Page 14 of 89 October 3, 2019 I think Rich went over this, but I'll just do it again briefly. The existing -- or master plan that you received originally is on the left. The changes that you can see highlighted in red are on the right, the little triangle up towards the top on right. It took a fair amount of time to negotiate with the county on the actual and very detailed widths for Big Cypress -- cross-section for Big Cypress right-of-way, which we have now agreed to. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Bob, I had asked Rich to tell us what dated documents he's using. I don't recognize either -- I recognize the one on the left, but the one on the right I don't know what -- where's that -- where -- when did you provide that to us, or when did staff provide that to us? COMMISSIONER FRYER: It hasn't. MR. MULHERE: I don't know that staff has provided this to you. MS. GUNDLACH: We've provided it. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Tell me what page it's on. Honestly, I need to know what you -- I haven't seen that one. MR. MULHERE: I'll clarify. I don't believe that that has been provided. A very similar one was provided. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MR. MULHERE: Let me tell you, we were ready. We provided you with the most recent, and staff provided you with the most recent master plan, but within the last two days there were some very minor changes to Big Cypress -- there were 1.15 additional acres needed to be included in the right-of-way beyond what you have in your package. There's nothing substantial in this change, though. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I'm not saying there is. I just -- I'm trying to match it up to what was reviewed. That's all I'm tying to do. I'm not being critical. I'm not saying it's wrong. I'm just trying to match it up. MS. ASHTON-CICKO: Bob, so you're saying that the master plan that you provided to Nancy that she provided under cover with the memo -- MR. MULHERE: Yes. MS. ASHTON-CICKO: -- is not the master plan you're using? MR. MULHERE: It's changed. It's reduced by 1.15 acres. MS. ASHTON-CICKO: Okay. I haven't seen anything. MR. MULHERE: Right. And we understand that we have to provide all of that. We wanted to show you the most recent master plan that the county required us to change because of changing Big Cypress. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Bob, all I ask is that you clarify those kind of points when you -- MR. MULHERE: Yeah. I'm sorry. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: When I see something and I don't recognize it, I just have to ask the question, so... MR. MULHERE: And I can state on the record there's nothing -- we didn't change any uses. It's not substantial. There are minor acreage changes which we will -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I didn't think you would have. That's not the point. I just want to make sure I understand what document we're using. MS. ASHTON-CICKO: Well, I can't read this document that's on your display, and I can tell you that there were a lot of changes in the master plan that weren't specified in the package that went to Nancy. So I'm a little uncomfortable, but I guess we'll have time to review this before you approve it. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, we will, because I've asked them to provide this presentation to us. They're going to. We have at least two weeks, if not more, before we need to refine all this stuff and go for a vote. It might even be longer than that. So we'll have plenty of time to get the right one down -- nailed down. MR. MULHERE: And we also assumed that there would probably be some additional changes. So rather than submit a fourth revision after you make your recommendations, we thought, these are very Page 15 of 89 October 3, 2019 minor. Let's change it only one more time based on your recommendations. MS. ASHTON-CICKO: But it's not minor, Bob, because all the numbers change, the open space, access changes. MR. MULHERE: Yes, they do change. MS. ASHTON-CICKO: You know, so every time we have to recalculate. MR. MULHERE: They do change. MS. ASHTON-CICKO: And we're getting things piecemeal. MR. YOVANOVICH: Here's the problem, if I may. It wasn't until Monday afternoon that right-of-way finally told us their minimum necessary width of right-of-way which caused us to make another 1.15 -acre reduction to the project. We understand that there will need to be a lot of changes made to the original 9.9 -- nine hundred and ninety-nine point whatever acres it was originally because that's now down to 997. Heidi's been great. Staffs been great. We'll make sure that all the ripple effect of those changes are properly accounted for in all of the documents. What we're just showing you today is the yellow area got a little bit wider than what was previously there. The red triangle is identical to what you -- the updated document, but the yellow area got a little bit wider, which reduced our overall village by another 1.15 acres. It's a process. I apologize for the process, but we've been working for months on trying to finalize the right-of-way requirements, and it required us to shrink the village by 1.15 acres. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. And, Rich, what I'm trying to do as we build up to the vote, which could occur on the 17th or the 3rd of November, whatever date we hit. Prior to the vote I'd like to have a clean set of documents after all the discussion's occurred to whatever you guys settle on and what we've expected so we don't have this happen. I want to make sure that whatever's voted on is the right document, and that's the only reason I'm pointing these things out. MR. YOVANOVICH: And I appreciate that. And we will resubmit to your staff the documents that need to be revised based upon the reduced acreage in the village to make sure that everything matches. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. And I'll be looking, staff, both Comprehensive Planning and Zoning to make sure at that time that the document that's finally produced has been -- is reviewed by both of you to the extent you need to review it, so... MR. MULHERE: And I always submit both a redline and clean version so that it's easy to track. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And that's appreciated. Thank you. MR. MULHERE: So this has just some general information. You've already -- this 997.53 -acre size is the current size. You can see the exhibit over there which shows the outline of Rivergrass RLSA as well as shows the future Big Cypress Parkway. I just want to point out there are no, zero, acres within the proposed Rivergrass SRA, Village SRA, that score a Natural Resource Index greater than 1.2. There are zero acres included in the village which fall within the Area of Critical State Concern Overlay. There are zero acres in the SRA that are designated as a WRA. There are -- COMMISSIONER FRYER: Bob, excuse me. On this slide that you have -- and I'd had discussions with Mr. Yovanovich about to the extent, if any, to which this right-of-way was going to replace DeSoto or be next to DeSoto. Where is DeSoto on this map? MR. MULHERE: So DeSoto is just a little bit west. Give me a second and I'll sort of show you the general location here. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Okay. MR. MULHERE: Right here. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Okay. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: No, he's over to the right. He's got to get a little bit closer. MR. MULHERE: A little bit to the east. Page 16 of 89 October 3, 2019 CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Between the square and the rectangle green. Half an inch to the right. COMMISSIONER FRYER: So it's that road that goes through Hyde Park? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: It dead ends at Hyde Park. MR. MULHERE: It dead ends at Oil Well heading north. COMMISSIONER FRYER: So if one extended the road that one sees in Hyde Park south, that would tell you the displacement to the west of DeSoto from the -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: What road -- COMMISSIONER FRYER: --Big Cypress? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: -- in Hyde Park? There's no road in Hyde Park. COMMISSIONER FRYER: What'sthis? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: That's part of the excavation left in the ground. There's no roads in there. MR. MULHERE: Yeah. There are no roads in there. COMMISSIONER FRYER: But that line is where the road would be? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: No. MR. MULHERE: There won't -- this will not -- excuse me. DeSoto will not extend north. It will continue to tee at Oil Well. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Got it, okay. MR. MULHERE: Lands to the northeast and south are all, as I mentioned, previously zoned agricultural. You can see on the exhibit the WRA designation along here. So thafs -- while it's zoned agriculture, there is a designated WRA. I have another exhibit that will show you that more clearly, but I just want to point it out to you. To the west, again, we'll directly abut the future Big Cypress Parkway; further to the west, Golden Gate Estates. And if you look at the exhibit there, the aerial, you'll see that all of the lands that are included in the SRA are in or have been in active agricultural production for many years. Let me clear that. A little bit of specifics on the village and the requirements. You are required to, in a village, have a minimum of two context zones, and the LDC provides specific requirements and information on those context zones. At a minimum you must have a village center as well as neighborhood general. Those are the two context zones that are required. You have -- and as you probably have already figured out, but the village center is right there. Villages are primarily residential communities. I already discussed the maximum dwelling units that we are requesting of 2,500. Villages are allowed to request a density of between I and 4. We are at 2.5. We will -- we have agreed to provide a minimum of 250 multifamily units. We are requiring -- we are providing -- and a variety of housing types is required, including specifically both single and multifamily. This village center is centrally located. It's required to be the focal point of the community's goods and services and, as I said before, it will have a minimum of 62,500 square feet and a maximum of 80,000 square feet of those types of uses. We are required to provide 25,000 square feet of civic, governmental, and institutional uses, and as the project further evolves through the process, we will figure out what those institutional, governmental, or civic uses will be. I mentioned that the master utilities will be served by the Collier County Water and Sewer District. We have worked with Collier County Utility Department -- Public Utilities Department. They have plans for -- and specifically plans that relate to all of the villages that you saw that are proposed and serving those villages with significant enhancements and improvements and upgrades. We are including one golf course. You can see it on the master plan. And -- just in here. That, at Page 17 of 89 October 3, 2019 this point, is intended to be open to the public. It may not be forever open to the public, but we realize that will make the golf course trip subject to our trip cap if it is open to the public. As I mentioned, we are exceeding the minimum requirement of 35 percent open space. The minimum requirement's 349.16. That's 35 percent of the overall acreage of the village. We're providing 571.91 acres, which is driven by the lakes and by the golf course. Because of that open -space requirement -- and typically in the urban area you have a lesser open -space requirement of 25 percent or less, depending on the size of the project. Because of that open -space requirement, as you provide that 35 percent or more, that creates a more compact development. The development area is compacted by the open space. We are required to provide a minimum of 9.97 acres of parks. We will exceed that number. We'll meet or exceed that number. Presumably we'll exceed it. That number's been adjusted based on the slightly smaller size of the village as we discussed. So along the eastern perimeter is the WRA, and you can see that as it runs along here. And that has a dual purpose. It is, in part, serving a stormwater purpose for the project and for the larger area, but I'm going to let Dominick speak to the specifics of that. But it also has been designed to provide a wildlife deterrent, and that has been coordinated and, of course, Ken Passarella can speak to those issues. But that has been coordinated with the agencies. We do have a trip cap as all projects now are required to have in Collier County, and ours is 1,978 p.m. peak hour net external two-way trips. Norm has a presentation, so I don't want to spend a lot of time on their stuff. I think this is important. Both the county and a third -parry neutral consultant has reviewed our fiscal analysis and found that the project is fiscally neutral, and that's required. You have to demonstrate that. And Lucy Gallo will speak specifically to those issues. We talk about connectivity. This village has been designed to encourage pedestrian and bicycle circulation with an interconnected system of streets and sidewalks, mostly local streets. Obviously, the main entry roads will be larger. We do provide direct access to Oil Well, which is classified as an arterial in the locations depicted on the maps shown. I do want to clarify. This could be a little bit confusing, so I want to clarify something for you here. We have a -- reserved a small parcel right there that may be -- may be utilized by Collier County for various utility facilities, pump station, something like that; I'm certainly not the expert on what they may require that for. But in discussions with them, we've reserved a small parcel there. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Could you point to it again. MR. MULHERE: Yes. It is -- let me just clear that. It is right -- this little parcel right there; right on the corner. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: On the colored master plan, that's labeled as a utility. MR. MULHERE: Yes, it is; yes. It's just on the corner -- would be the northeast corner of Oil Well and future Big Cypress. COMMISSIONER FRYER: I see it. Thank you. MR. MULHERE: The reason I point that out to you is that this arrow that shows -- this one-way arrow here. It looks like there's two access points very close to each other, but one is only for that utility site and only if that is likely -- is needed in the future. You can see that there's an interconnection right here to Hyde Park, future Hyde Park, assuming it gets approved, and they will have a village center. There will be an interconnection so folks can get to that. And then the rest -- and there's interconnection in various other locations along the future Big Cypress here and here and here that line up with Estates streets, and then also to Oil Well into the village center and into the development, and there is an interconnection from the development here into the village center. Both pedestrian, vehicular, bicycle. All three. COMMISSIONER FRY: Bob? Page 18 of 89 October 3, 2019 MR. MULHERE: Yes. COMMISSIONER FRY: To the far right, that interconnection appears only to be to the north of Oil Well Road. No interconnection to the south? MR. MULHERE: That's correct. So this -- I think maybe Rich went over this. If I was listening closely, I think he did. So we're just repeating that the village is entitled with environmental stewardship credits. You can see SSA -15, which is where we are achieving those credits. That has a total of 7,261 credits, and we are -- by the current calculations, we'd be required to provide 6,205.36, and that will be part of what we go over with that slight acreage change. So the SSA -15 totals 5,209 acres. You can see by looking at the exhibit that about five times -- over five times of sending lands are being protected in exchange for designating the village as an SRA. So this is -- comes from that exhibit, that Attachment C, and it's just a quick checklist. You look at the village requirements on the left column, and the center column is Rivergrass, and then whether or not we meet those columns -- you'll see they're all checked because we do meet them all: Size, the density, the diversity of single and multifamily housing types. The -- our SRA document does establish a floor area ratio for both retail and civic and governmental consistent with what's required. We are providing the neighborhood goods and services. We are being providing -- we are -- Collier County's providing water and wastewater. We will provide parks and public green space to meet or exceed the 1 percent requirement. The project has over 200 acres of lakes. We exceed the open space. We'll meet the requirement for what's referenced as a moderate range of services; 10 square feet per dwelling unit of civic, governmental, and institutional uses. And as I just demonstrated to you, we do have an interconnected system of collector and local roads with connections to the arterial roadway system. I won't spend much time on this, but I just wanted to insert this slide so that you could see the land -use summary, the neighborhood general, which includes the 156 -and -change acres of golf courses, 538 acres. There's 105 acres -and -change of road right-of-way. There's the golf club amenities site, your lakes, other open space, and the perimeter buffers. The village center is just under 21 acres in size. That totals 997.53. There is a table that is provided on the SRA master plan that provides the calculation for our open space so that staff can review exactly how we calculated our open space. This is the proposed Big Cypress Parkway right-of-way exhibit. At this point including the changes that were made as of Monday, late Monday -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Now, that's not orientated north/south. MR. MULHERE: No. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: All the rest were. Okay. MR. MULHERE: Yeah. I think it's because of the length of the exhibit and the aerial. To show it all, it was hard to turn it up the other way. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I'm trying to make sure everybody -- MR. MULHERE: And I can't do it, but -- here. North is -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: North is left to right, or to the right. Right, yeah. MR. MULHERE: So -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: No, that s south. MR. MULHERE: Clear. Sorry. There's Oil Well -- here's Oil Well. Okay, so -- no, I did have it right. COMMISSIONER FRYER: The two of them are different. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Oh, the one to the top, north to the right. The one to the bottom is -- the north is to the left. MR. MULHERE: Okay. So let's do it this way. Here's Oil Well here, here's Oil Well there, and Page 19 of 89 October 3, 2019 here is Hyde Park, which is right here. Right? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: It's between Oil Well Road and Golden Gate Estates on the top one, north of the Rivergrass double lotted -- dotted line. Where it says Hyde Park, right? MR. MULHERE: I'm looking for it. Right here. Okay. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Middle of the page. MR. MULHERE: Sothis is just the alignment. It just shows you that the proposed Rivergrass abuts, and we are providing acreage -- exceeding 45 acres? -- exceeding 45 acres for that right-of-way adjacent to the proposed Rivergrass. Sorry about that. I was confused, too. COMMISSIONER CHRZANOWSKI: Bob? MR. MULHERE: Yes. COMMISSIONER CHRZANOWSKI: Chairman? \ CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Yes, sir. COMMISSIONER CHRZANOWSKI: Can I ask you a question? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Absolutely. COMMISSIONER CHRZANOWSKI: How many of those Golden Gate Estates roads are eventually going to tie to that Big Cypress? MR. MULHERE: Okay. COMMISSIONER CHRZANOWSKI: All of them or just -- MR. MULHERE: I'd rather go back to it. Slide 33. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: They're on the master plan, I believe, aren't they? MR. MULHERE: It is a little bit hard to read. So 43rd -- how many was the question, rather than me -- COMMISSIONER CHRZANOWSKI: Why not all of them? MR. MULHERE: Well, no, I don't think all of them. I think there are two that will connect, and then you also have the extension of Vanderbilt Beach Road which ultimately will connect. And, what, Golden Gate Parkway? And Randall. COMMISSIONER CHRZANOWSKI: It seems you're running past all of them almost right up to the edge of the road. It seems like it would be easy to connect them all. MR. MULHERE: Well, that will be up to the county. They -- you know, that will be up to the county whether they connect them or don't connect them. We know that some are connecting, and we do know that Randall is connecting. Vanderbilt Beach is connecting. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Stan, one thing you may want to consider, the more connections you make on a road we're trying to have -- streamline more or less for traffic, the slower it's going to make the traffic and more disruptive to the neighborhoods. And I can tell you Vanderbilt Beach Road ran into that just recently when they were trying to connect multiple roads going out to the Estates. It brings a lot of traffic into the local neighborhoods that most of the people don't want. Anyway, I'm hoping what you're suggesting will never happen. MR. MULHERE: So at this point, I have a little bit more to go over after the other experts that are with us here present their presentations. They're not extremely long, these other presentations, but I didn't know if you wanted to take a break now. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I was going to tell you we're going to break at 10:30, but we'll break -- if you're at a break point now, we'll just as soon break now, and it's 10 -- we'll come back in 15 minutes. We'll come back at 10:40. MR. MULHERE: Okay. Great, thank you. (A recess was had from 10:24 a.m. to 10:40 p.m.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay, everybody. Welcome back from the break. And before we go into the continuation of the Rivergrass presentation, we're going to confirm some dates for future hearings for this board. Ray was nice enough to be able to iron it all out. And the AUIR will be heard on the 21 st, Page 20 of 89 October 3, 2019 that's a Monday in the evening, and it's at the Growth Management building at Horseshoe Drive. It will be Room 609/610. It's the big conference room there. It will not be televised. It will be transcribed and audio. So all of us will meet in that room on the 21st at 5:00, and the staff will be available to walk through the AUIR. COMMISSIONER FRY: What room? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: 609/610. It's the big conference room at Developmental Services. And then on the 31 st Ray was able to confirm this room is open to us all day long. So we'll start at our regular time. The agenda will come out, and the staff reports will come out as necessary for that date. But on the 31 st we're going to hear all of the items that were previously scheduled for October 17th, and it will lead off with the Hammock Bay that's been continued from a couple other meetings, or will be by that time. So what I'd like from this board by motion is to accept those dates as continued dates for the items in question, and that way Judy Puig, when she writes up the agenda, can put all -- the little italicized sentence above the item that it's being continued to the 31 st or whatever date it is. COMMISSIONER FRY: So moved. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Second. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Moved and seconded. Discussion? Yes, Karl COMMISSIONER FRY: Can we assume that we'll receive a packet in advance of the 3 I st meeting with all the agenda items up to date for that meeting? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, actually, you'll receive a packet in advance of the 17th, because that's when it was originally scheduled for. So just hold that packet. And your Hammock Park packet was already issued to you. So unless there's a supplement, hold that packet. And that will be the first thing up on the 31 st along with the following item from the 17th that we're moving there. COMMISSIONER FRY: The reason I ask is that when we're in this meeting and want to refer to a certain page number from the packet, if we have two or three different packets, its very difficult to all find the same spot. MR. BELLOWS: Yeah. I understand what. But when we have superceded documents, we're going to repeal the other ones or take them out of the pile so you don't have current documents and those that have been repealed. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: But for the 31st we should have two packets. We have issued already for Hammock Park or Hammock Commerce Park, whatever the name of that is. That's Packet 1, and that will be only used for that item. Packet 2 would be all the items that we originally have scheduled for the 17th that are now being moved to the 31 st. And that shouldn't be too cumbersome just to have two different ones. Okay. With that, then, Norm is here to entertain us for a while. MR. TREBELCOCK: Good morning, CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Oh, I didn't ask for the vote. We made a motion. We had discussion. Is there a vote to allocate as noted as the motion for these new items? COMMISSIONER CHRZANOWSKI: Aye. COMMISSIONER FRY: Aye. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Aye. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Aye. COMMISSIONER HOMIAK: Aye. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Anybody opposed? (No response.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Motion carries 5-0. Thank you. COMMISSIONER DEARBORN: Aye. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: 6-0. Page 21 of 89 October 3, 2019 Okay, Norm. MR. TREBILCOCK: Thank you. Good morning. For the record, my name is Norman Trebilcock, professional engineer/certified planner with over 29 years of experience here locally. Also with me is Ciprian Malaescu who helped prepare the traffic studies for the project as well. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Now, just -- and I'm sorry. I just thought of something. We were going to take these in order, and now I guess then -- are you just making this presentation as part of the beginning discussion for traffic? Because if you are, I want to make sure we don't have any questions from the presenter on the issues that you just presented. We just got done with Bob and Rich presenting a series of issues. I want to make sure we are -- MR. YOVANOVICH: We are going to touch on -- you're going to hear from the following three professionals as part of our overall presentation. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MR. YOVANOVICH: Norm. Then you'll hear from Ken Passarella, and you'll hear from Lucy Gallo. Bob will get back up for a couple of more issues. Then we'll be done with our presentation. We envision -- once we're complete with all of our presentations, I know you wanted to go back and deal with transportation specifically, environmental, and the economic analysis today and anything else. But we wanted to do this as part of our overall presentation first and then reserve specific -- we'll do it any way you want. We prefer that -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: No. MR. YOVANOVICH: We prefer that you do the specific questions to experts after our complete presentation is done. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, here's what I was looking for. If this is the traffic presentation by you and you'll finish out with the economic and possibly environmental, if we even get time to get into that today, but let's say those three as part of today's presentation by you -all, I've got -- county staff has people they -- outside consultants they brought down for this meeting. And we will then proceed into the traffic consultant from the county, unless Norm has more to say prior to that, and we'll get into the meat of the traffic issues. Then the next one up would be the economic one in which the county has someone here for economics, too. They'll present their side of their argument as staff, and you guys will jump in. And if you have more presentation to make at that time, you're more than welcome to, and then we'll get into questions and economics, and we'll do the same thing through environmental. MR. YOVANOVICH: I don't envision that when Norm goes through his slides right now -- we would prefer to then move on to our next presenter and then our next presenter, finish our entire presentation -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: That's what -- I'm anticipating the same thing. MR. YOVANOVICH: And then you can call back up Norm, Ken, and Lucy as to those specific topics when we're complete. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And what we'll probably do is after you get done, I'll fust call back the traffic consultant for the county, or the county's traffic people. They can make their presentations and comments, and at that time I would suggest the Planning Commission, after they've heard both input, then start discussing traffic. We'll finish up traffic to the extent we can today on what we know today, and then we'll move into the next one, which is economic. That's how I was anticipating it. MR. YOVANOVICH: Environmental. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: No. Economic's second, environment's third. MR. YOVANOVICH: We thought it was traffic, environmental, economic. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: But you asked if I could make sure the traffic was heard this morning, so I switched the agenda around at your request, and at the same time I looked at the -- I talked to staff. They have someone from an economic perspective here that they need to get on, just like you did, so we were going to go economic second. Is there a reason you can't? Page 22 of 89 October 3, 2019 MR. YOVANOVICH: Is there a reason why I can't? Because Mr. Passarella, I believe, has an issue with the following meeting, the 17th. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Oh. MR. YOVANOVICH: Since Lucy doesn't have an issue with coming back on the 17th, we'd like to wind her up today. Mr. Strain, I don't think the county has much of a presentation on those three topics, because I think we have agreement on them. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: How do you -- there was a bunch of recommendations in the two staff reports, both comprehensive and zoning that seemed to have a lot of recommendations that weren't resolved. MR. YOVANOVICH: The ultimate -- when you see when we get to the end of the story, the end of the book, you'll see that we have resolved -- the only -- the only outstanding issue, as I opened up today -- based upon the staff report to the Planning Commission, the only outstanding issue that I'm aware of is not are we going to give the county Big Cypress Parkway right-of-way, it's when are we going to do it. We envision doing it in increments. As each village comes along, we would give the right-of-way. Staff is asking for all of it as part of this Rivergrass Village. The rest of the issues with regard to the staff recommendations at the end -- at the end of your report, we have met with staff and those have been resolved, and we're going to present that to you through Bob -- through Bob. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. The only part I'm a little concerned about is the agenda was posted with the reorder to accommodate you and to accommodate our people. I'll just have to see. During lunch break, I'll ask whoever is doing the economics from our side and the environmental just to catch with me quickly after lunch or just before lunch starts, and I need to get a read on how that's going to work for everybody. MR. YOVANOVICH: That's fine. I mean, it would be a total shock to me if there's -- I mean, your independent reviewer found us to be fiscally neutral, and your environmental staff has found us to be consistent with the Land Development Code and Growth Management Plan. I don't know how long of a presentation that will take, but maybe somebody knows something I don't know. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, environmental does have a PowerPoint -- MR. YOVANOVICH: I understand. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: -- that they're going to present, and I'm not sure what the other side -- what the other economic one is. Okay. Thank you. Norm, sorry to interrupt. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Chairman, do I understand, then, that other than the economic person who can't come back on the next meeting, that everybody else is available -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: It's the environmental person. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Environmental person. Everybody else from both sides, I mean, the applicant and the county, the experts are able to be in attendance subsequently for the next two or three meetings if necessary? MR. YOVANOVICH: My experts? I will -- we would prefer -- the answer to your question is Heather will be here on the 17th, if necessary, to answer environmental concerns -- environmental questions you may have, and Chip will be here on the 17th. Norm is the main presenter, and Ken Passarella are the main presenters on the traffic and environmental topics. If we have to address concerns, we'll be able to do that. But we would like to -- those to be hold -over issues that may come up as a result of maybe public comment, not as a result of questions from the Planning Commission. COMMISSIONER FRYER: So am I correct that no one needs to be heard from beginning to end today? Page 23 of 89 October 3, 2019 CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well -- MR. YOVANOVICH: You're going to hear from us beginning to end today. COMMISSIONER FRYER: From all of your experts? MR. YOVANOVICH: During my presentation in chief, yes. To the extent that you have questions when we're done with our presentation, they will be here. If you're quitting at 4, we'll be here till 4. If you're quitting at 6, we'll be here till 6. COMMISSIONER FRYER: We're quitting at 4. So what about subsequent days? Are there any constraints? MR. YOVANOVICH: We'll be prepared. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MR. YOVANOVICH: We will be prepared. COMMISSIONER FRYER: And the county's the same -- same situation with county's experts? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: The county has experts they brought in -- or consultants. I don't know -- and their schedules, I'm not sure they'll be as flexible, but we'll find out as we go through the day. Whatever it is, it is. We'll just work with it. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Thank you. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Norm, go ahead. MR. TREBILCOCK: Thank you. I'll just review the -- give you an overview of our traffic analysis. You -all have the more detailed reports that we prepared, but I'll cover the -- excuse me -- the standards that we followed, the trip generation, distribution assignment, level -of -service impacts, intersection analysis we did, looking at the future planning for the future, and then review the conclusions of the studies. We did do our Traffic Impact Statement per county standards. The trip distribution, land -use codes, internal capture, pass -by rates were coordinated and agreed upon with staff as part of our methodology meeting coordination that we do. We are using the current 2018 AUIR criteria regarding the transportation planning issues for the project. The ITE, or Institute of Transportation Engineers', Trip Generation Manual latest edition is used in the studies as well. Background traffic is based on the 2018 AUK Annual Update and Inventory Report, using the county, Collier County data. Background traffic is grown per staff guidance of 2 percent minimum or historical rate of growth or trip bank, whichever is greater. Existing road network is based on the 2018 AUIR level of services. And then when we look at the future commitments where you're looking at the five-year work program, also because we are looking at a 10 -year planning horizon for this, we're looking at a snapshot of the 2040 cost -feasible plan but the improvements that are identified to be completed between 2021 and 2030 are considered committed, and then also some of the committed improvements from the one -cent sales tax as well. Impacts to the roadway links and intersections are evaluated based on applying our proposed project traffic onto the individual roadway links or segments of roadways as well on the background traffic. In terms of our proposed trip analysis, the proposed development program, we are looking at the single-family. Under multifamily, what that includes is the attached villas from a traffic perspective: Apartments, townhomes, and condominiums. Then we also run the governmental and commercial uses as well, and Bob had mentioned about the golf course, too. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Norm. MR. TREBILCOCK: Yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I know we weren't supposed to ask questions, but I just want to make sure. This is different numbers than you have in your proposal, the master -- or the SRA -- you have 250 multifamily. You're showing 1,086 here. Is there -- MR. TREBILCOCK: Correct. So what I explained is that also includes attached villas. So from a zoning standpoint, they can be looked at as single-family; however, from a trip -- traffic analysis, the Page 24 of 89 October 3, 2019 attached villas are looked at as a multifamily product for trip generation purposes as a standard in the county. So that's why you have -- that's why I'll tend to present those different numbers and give you that footnote. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I just -- yeah. There's -- yeah -- MR. TREBILCOCK: Yes, sir. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I appreciate it. There's been so much data, I want to make sure I understand it. MR. TREBILCOCK: Yes, sir. Uh-huh. Then the trip generation buildout, again, it takes into account internal capture, pass -by rates, and it gives us that net external traffic in the lower right-hand corner of the 1,978 p.m. peak -hour trips. That becomes a trip cap for the project. We had an agreed-upon trip distribution. We looked at the percentages of splitting the traffic for the development. We also had a sub -split for the commercial with the understanding that some of the commercial may distribute a little differently than some of the residential because you're attracting some of the surrounding residential folks as well. So we identify that. And then that translates into actual -- the p.m. peak -hour trips. Those percentages get applied as well, and that's what we used for the analysis that we performed. In looking at the site access for the project -- so on Oil Well Road along here, we'd have three accesses for the project, and then Big Cypress Parkway. Along here we'd have four accesses. All of our access would be consistent with the access management resolution Collier County has, and we would adhere to those spacing standards for any of the access points on the project. In our intersection operational analysis, we were required by county staff to look at five intersections. And in that analysis what we did is looked at different conditions, existing conditions, and then 2030 conditions without project, with project, with improvements, and then with additional improvements needed caused by the project, and that's what we did. And so looking at 2030 without the project, just a couple of key intersections. This is Randall and Immokalee intersection. That's -- and at -grade improvements are currently under review for a PD&E, but those improvements would be committed and made, including the four-laning of Randall Boulevard to the east to at least Eighth Street. And there would be triple lefts, westbound lefts on Randall Boulevard. So that would improve that intersection. On Oil Well and DeSoto the four-laning widening that is committed to occur would include a westbound left -turn lane, eastbound right -turn lanes that would help in that area. And then we did identify an impacted intersection at Wilson -- at Immokalee and Wilson to add an additional westbound left improvement there. With the project in place and needed improvements would be at Oil Well and Immokalee and then also at hnmokalee and Wilson. And we identified there that there'd be an additional northbound right -turn lane on Immokalee Road. You'd have dual rights, and then also additional through capacity at the intersection of homokalee and Wilson. The conclusion is those analyzed intersections will operate at acceptable standards with the committed improvements and the project fair -share mitigation, us providing improvements as part of our fair -share mitigation as well. This is just to illustrate the improvement at Immokalee and Randall, the concept plan that's been proposed where you'd have a divided Randall Boulevard that currently is just a two-lane undivided road be divided, and then also you'd have the improvements at grade. The future improvements at this would be a grade -separated flyover. But that's -- these at -grade improvements will handle things for us on the project here. Another important planning tool to look at is in May of this year the Board of County Commissioners recommended the -- in the Randall Boulevard/Oil Well Road corridor study this Page 25 of 89 October 3, 2019 improvement plan, that's the two -plus future network plan. And what you can see is Randall Boulevard -- is some important improvements to Randall that would head out east, and also Oil Well Road and Everglades Boulevard. But kind of pinning along the side that's really important is future Big Cypress Parkway and how that kind of ties the network together when Vanderbilt Beach Road gets extended over, and it kind of creates an excellent network system for the county as well. So in planning for the future, that's really a key component of our project that I see from a transportation standpoint is providing that right-of-way and the stormwater management treatment for Big Cypress Parkway. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: You're going to make sure we get sent a copy of this with the other presentations? MR. TREBILCOCK: Yes, sir. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Everything shown today? MR. TREBILCOCK: Yes, sir. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Thank you. MR. TREBILCOCK: So in conclusion, none of the roadways are forecasted to become deficient as a result of our additional project traffic. Collier County has planned funding of $117 million for Vanderbilt Beach Road extension, Oil Well Road widening, and Randall Boulevard widening intersection improvements that will help improve capacity but also will help in the overall circulation and relief of the roadways in the area as well. A detailed evaluation of our actual project access points will occur during site improvement process, turn lanes and signalization, and that occurs during the permitting, the platting process for the project. And the trip cap has been established for the project and agreed upon the 1,978 two-way p.m. peak -hour trips. The proposed intersection improvements, we identified would be subject to fair -share mitigation that we've agreed to. And then the right-of-way and stormwater management for future Big Cypress Parkway along our project's west boundary being an important collector arterial roadway. We've also agreed -- already provided, actually, right-of-way and water management for Oil Well Road at no cost to the county. And also per the landowner contribution agreement, the pending one, they're committed to providing right-of-way and water management for Immokalee Road at no cost to the county as well. Additional mitigation of the impact: Payment of roadway impact fees for the project as building permits are issued, and it's -- $17 million is estimated in road impact fees for the project. With that, I'll turn things over to Ken Passarella with Passarella to talk about the environmental. MR. MULHERE: I just need to pull up that presentation for him. MR. PASSARELLA: That isn't it. MR. MULHERE: What do you mean that isn't it? I just had it up. Let's try it again. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Make sure you use the mic, Bob, even for the comments. MR. MULHERE: I'm just getting the -- I see. Here it is right here. I'm sorry. I am so sorry. It's coming up now. MR. PASSARELLA: For the record, Ken Passarella with Passarella & Associates. I'm president and principal ecologist with Passarella & Associates, and I have Heather from my office here in support as well. And I'm going to be providing an overview of the NRI Assessment for the project. The NRI Assessment is the Natural Resource Index Assessment. And one of the things I want to touch upon is Rich had gone over some of this in his presentation, but I also wanted to reiterate this in my presentation as well, is you're going to hear a lot of acronyms as I go through my presentation, so I wanted you to be aware of what all those acronyms stand for, because they start getting confusing after a while because Page 26 of 89 October 3, 2019 there's so many of them. Again, I'm going to be talking about the NRI Assessment, and NRI stands Natural Resource Index. And within the Rural Lands Stewardship Area, which we refer to as the RLSA, there's various areas that have been designated. Rich went over this. These are the Flowway Stewardship Area or FSA. The Flowway Stewardship Area are areas of high natural resource value that were identified during the development of the RLSA area. In particular, the Flowway Stewardship Areas are related to wetland areas. In particular, those are the Camp Keais Strand and the Okaloacoochee Slough that you see on the map here. The Camp Keais Strand located on the left-hand side, the blue areas, and the Okaloacoochee Slough, the blue areas located on the right-hand side there. Habitat Stewardship Areas, or HSA, are native habitat areas or areas that may contribute to habitat for listed species in the area and are designated with a high natural resource value. Those are shown on this map in the areas in green. So those areas are adjacent to or contiguous to the FSAs. They build upon larger areas of natural habitat within the RLSA. As I mentioned, they may be natural or Native Habitat Areas such as pine flats, but they may also be strategic farm fields that are located within an FSA area or adjacent to an FSA that, if restored, would create significant habitat for listed species and wildlife in the area. We also have Water Retention Areas, or WRAs. As Rich mentioned, those WRAs are permitted agricultural reservoirs located within the RLSA. So those areas are typically bermed and diked off from the surrounding farm fields and used for water storage as part of the agricultural operations. Now, WRAs could have natural wetlands, and many of them do. So those areas are identified on the map as well. Most of the areas we're talking about are the pink areas, which are the open lands on that previous map that Rich had. They're shown in kind of a light yellow here. Those are where the Stewardship Receiving Areas, or SRAs, would be located, and Steward Sending Areas, or SSAs, are the areas from which you draw the credits, as Rich had previously explained. So what I'm going to be doing is going over the Natural Resource Index Assessment that was done for the Rivergrass SRA, and this Natural Resource Index Assessment includes documentations that refines the NRI values that were assigned during the original Collier County RLSA Assessment Study. As Rich had mentioned in his presentation, back in 2000 and 2002 there were studies that were done which came up with the development of the RLSA and the RLSA program, and that's also the same time when the Natural Resource Index Assessment was developed at that time as well. This assessment is a GIS analysis where resource values are calculated for every acre in the study area using a Raster model. So this is a model. It's a GIS model, Geographical Information System model, that is done to create these scores. This model was previously developed as part of the program back in 2002. We did not create this model, Passarella & Associates. We're simply implementing the model and running the model on this particular project for Rivergrass SRA. The Raster model uses one -acre grid cells that receive a score value based on the six Natural Resource Indices. So in this graphic you see here in front of you, this is an overlay showing the grid pattern that develops these one -acre cells. So each one of these one -acre cells will be scored for each one of these six indices. So on this map, if you were to count them, this site being 998 acres, there would be 998 cells there. And as I go through this presentation, I'm also going to address some of the comments that were received, I believe, from Mr. Frankenberger for the Natural Resources Service, Inc., had provided some comments to the county regarding the NRI Assessment. So I will try to address some of those comments as I go through my presentation. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Just so you know, some of us may have questions involving all that. Page 27 of 89 October 3, 2019 We've had a lot of different documentation come in. I'm going to -- at least from my part, and I'll ask the others. You'll finish your presentation. We'll reserve our comments and questions about those hopefully till after we get back into the full environmental discussion. MR. PASSARELLA: Okay. The reason I brought that up was from the Natural Resource Services, Inc., one of the comments they had addressed was that we didn't provide a scoring sheet for this in paper format, and I'm going to explain to this (sic) why we would not do that, because we would simply be adding an additional 998 pages of information into that large package that I believe was mentioned was already 1,500 pages. So in order to reduce the amount of paperwork, we provided this in all electronic format to the county staff for the review so we didn't generate another 998 pages of paper that somebody has to look at. So for SRAs, lands greater than one acre with an NRI score greater than 1.2 shall be retained in a natural state. And I'll go through how we scored each one of these grids. As I mentioned, this NRI methodology's already been used to establish Stewardship Receiving Areas such as Ave Maria and also 16 SSAs that are already in place. So this scoring is nothing -- is not anything new. It's simply being applied now to the Rivergrass SRA. So this is the stewardship credit worksheet that is part of the Comp Plan. This was originally developed back in 2002. It was part of the report and recommendations of the Collier County Rural Lands Assessment Area Oversight Committee. It was dated 2002. This worksheet was carried over and made part of the Comp Plan, from my understanding. So this is the worksheet that applies to both SRAs and SSAs. What you see over here on the -- this part you see right here, that is the Natural Resource Index scoring. The other portions of this document, here, this is related to the SSA calculation of credits and removing land -use layers. So what we're going to focus on is this part here today, which is used to determine the NRI value within the SRA. Now, again, I mentioned about the number of sheets of pages. So this left-hand side here, the NRI scoring thing, this is done electronically in the model. So instead of printing out for every one of those cell grades this worksheet, that's all contained within the model itself electronically. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: So you have this worksheet -- you do have the worksheet. You just have it electronically. MR. PASSARELLA: Yes. It's in the model. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: When you send us the presentations, can you send us the electronic? It will be readable by us? MR. PASSARELLA: No. It's a GIS model. So if you had GIS, you go ahead go in there -- if you have that software, you could go in there and open it up and run the model and see the information. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Could you save it as a PDF? Because, I mean, the public should have a right to have it as well as us. MR. PASSARELLA: Well, again, we'd have to -- if you want this in paper format -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: No, electronic. MR. PASSARELLA: Okay. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: You can't convert that to PDF? MR. PASSARELLA: No, no. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Thank you. I'll explore that more with staff, see what we can get. COMMISSIONER CHRZANOWSKI: Could I ask? Ken, how did you get that on that page right there? Isn't that a printout from something that you did? MR. PASSARELLA: Yes. COMMISSIONER CHRZANOWSKI: Can you do one electronically for each page? MR. PASSARELLA: We could generate one of those -- that right there, we could generate one of those for every one of those cells, and that would be 998 pages. COMMISSIONER CHRZANOWSKI: But without printing it out, can you do it electronically as Page 28 of 89 a PDF? October 3, 2019 CHAIRMAN STRAIN: That was my question. MR. PASSARELLA: Well, no. That -- we'd have to create 998 of these and then scan them, and give you the PDF. COMMISSIONER CHRZANOWSKI: Okay. MR. PASSARELLA: Okay. Because it's in the model. It's in the GIS model. The model has shade files and creates these. And as I go through this, I'll show you how it's done, so... Maybe after I've finished my presentation, you'll -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Yeah, I'm sorry. I just was -- I'm trying to make sure that anything you guys have that we -- might help us understand, that we get a copy of it. That's why I asked for it. But if we can't get it, we'll have to see what the next alternative is. Thank you. MR. PASSARELLA: So starting with the first indices, the first indices is the stewardship overlay designation. That's the one at the top there. And then for the Rivergrass Village, Rivergrass SRA, the data source we used for this overlay is the Collier County stewardship areas, and those -- that is information that we attained from the county. So you can see on the right-hand side there where the SRA boundary is. We're not within an W -- we're not within an FSA. We're not within a HSA. We're not within a WRA, and we're not within an area of critical concern. So as such, if we were to show -- this is the model output. So this is what the model would output if you were looking in GIS. If you look at the model output for this particular indice (sic), you'll see that it's all scored in a zero. So, again, we're not in a.7. We're not in a.6. We're not in a.6 for WRA. We're not in an area of critical state concern. So this whole area scores a zero. And I did a sample grid cell. So right here, this is a grid cell right here. That's a one -acre grid cell. And as we go through this whole calculation, I'll keep referring to that one grid cell. And at the time we're done, we'll add up the score for that grid cell and show how you get your total NRI value for that grid cell. Okay? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Gotcha. Thank you. MR. PASSARELLA: Yep. So next indices, there's a total of six indices. The second indice is the proximity indice. And the proximity indice, again, we use the Collier County's data for stewardship areas, and the scoring is based on if you're enclosed by an FSA, HSA, or WRA. If you're within 300 feet of an FSA or HSA, or you're within 300 feet of public or provide --'or private preserve land or none of the above, you would score a zero. So it says, so additional value shall be added under the proximity indices or lands that is within an FSA, HSA, WRA, or public -- or public or private preserve. So for this project, for the Rivergrass SRA -- and I'll go back to this map. You can see we're not enclosed by an FSA; those are the blue areas. We're not enclosed by an HSA; those are the green areas. And we're not enclosed by a WRA, which are the brown areas. We're not within 300 feet of an FSA or HSA, and we're not within 300 feet of public or private preserve lands. So in the model, the output is a zero for that indices score and, again, going back to our particular grid cell, you can see that grid cell would then score a zero for that particular indice. The next indice is the listed species habitat indices. And for Rivergrass Village, the data source that we used for that is our FLUCFCS mapping that we had prepared for the project. Listed species surveys that we have done for the project that had been reviewed by the county and the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. This also includes the available information from the Florida Fish and Wildlife Service and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service on documented occurrences of listed species. So we had a lot of data that we used to look at potential listed species on this particular project. One of the comments that the county received, I believe, from Mr. Frankenberger was related to -- that Page 29 of 89 October 3, 2019 the survey was not sufficient. It was only done at one point in the year. While we did do a listed species survey as part of the SRA submittal to the county, that was done at one time -- point in the year; however, the data that we provided was from numerous listed species surveys that we've done over the years on this particular project. So we've done listed species surveys out here on this project in March through July of 2007, we did October 2007, we did November 2007, we did May through June of 2014, we did a June in 2015 through October 2015, we did November 2016, and we've now recently done one in March 2019. And all these listed species data that we collected during these surveys all went into this NRI Assessment. So even though we're required by code to do a listed species survey for the SRA application, we did that species survey, but we went back and included all the listed species data that we've done on all these surveys we've done over the years on this site. This is very comprehensive as far as listed species data for a particular site. In addition to that, we've done species -- specific listed species surveys out there as well. We've done crested caracara surveys in 2007, 2009, and 2016. We've done RCW surveys in 2007 and 2014. We've done a burrowing owl survey in 2008. We've done a southeastern American Kestrel survey in 2017, a Big Cypress fox squirrel in 2007/2008, and an Everglades mink survey in 2017. So you can see we've done more surveys on this site probably than any other site in Collier County. And all that information went into this listed species habitat index for the county as part of this NRI Assessment. So we have that listed species data. All this data's been reviewed by the agencies, and that went into the model to generate the scoring for the -- for the Rivergrass SRA. Now, scoring is -- panther occupied habitat plus other listed species is a. 8; panther -occupied habitat, a .5; occupied habitat by other listed species, a .4; and none of the above is a zero. Now, what's to keep in mind here is that panther -occupied habitat is a very specific definition in the Land Development Code. And when we're scoring, we've got to follow that particular definition. So index values are based on documentation of occupied habitat as established by the intersect of documented and verifiable observations of listed species with land cover identified as preferred or tolerated habitat for that species. So over on the right-hand side here you can see various points and documents. You can see -- thank you, Bob. You can see that there's various species from different times of years and different dates where we have documented those species on site. For instance, you'll see some blue dots. There's a blue dot here. That's actually Florida panther observations that we made on site while doing surveys over the years. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Karl has a question for you. COMMISSIONER FRY: Quick question. You have a blue shaded area in the top half, light blue shaded area in the bottom half What does the overall shading mean? MR. PASSARELLA: On the next slide -- there's two slides from now I'm explain that to you. COMMISSIONER FRY: Thank you. MR. PASSARELLA: Okay. Yep. So I'll go ahead and explain it. The light blue area to the bottom is a FLUCFCS code. So when you're doing a listed species indices, you've got to look at two things. You've got to look at the FLUCFCS code, the habitat, and then you've got to look at whether there's species documented in that FLUCFCS code or that habitat. COMMISSIONER FRYER: What's a FLUCFCS code? MR. PASSARELLA: And a FLUCFCS code is a Florida Land Use Cover and Forms Classification System code. So its a land -use code. So the light blue down here is a 214 FLUCFCS code, which is row crop, and then the kind of purple or dark blue up top is a 210 FLUCFCS code, which is cropland or pasture land FLUCFCS code. So slightly different. Page 30 of 89 October 3, 2019 COMMISSIONER FRY: Thank you. MR. PASSARELLA: And that's important when we're doing this scoring, and I'll get into it. Because you've got -- again, you've got to have habitat, and then you've got to have the species location under the score. Okay. So one of the issues that had been raised was about Florida panther primary zone and secondary zone and why we did not address that. Well, in the NRI Assessment and in the Land Development Code, it's very specific about how you address panther habitat and scoring under this indices. So the LDC says that land mapped using FLUCFCS at 310, 321, 411, 425, 428, 438, 617, and I won't name the rest of them, is deemed to be preferred or tolerated habitat for panthers for the purposes of assigning a value for these indices. So what those FLUCFCS codes are, those are native habitats. Those are native wetlands habitats such as cypress or marsh or native -- native forested habitats for uplands such as, you know, pine flatwoods or even areas like palmetto prairies. So those are native habitats. So for -- in other words to be -- when we do the scoring, to be panther -occupied habitat plus other listed species, you have to have a FLUCFCS code that is a native upland FLUCFCS code or a forested wetland FLUCFCS code plus a panther telemetry to score a .8. So this is the output of the model. You can see we have zero down below, and we have .4 up above. So going through the scoring, if it's panther -occupied habitat plus other listed species it's a .8. The whole site being row crop and being agricultural land, by definition in the Land Development Code, it is not panther -preferred or tolerated habitat. So it doesn't score -- even though we had a panther telemetry point there, you've got to have the intersection of both. You've got to have the panther telemetry point plus the habitat to score a.8. So, again, panther -occupied habitat, simply those habitats that are preferred or tolerated. We don't have those there. Occupied habitat by other listed species, well, we do have that in this particular location, and that's this grid designated right here. This is this darker purple area. That is cropland and pasture land, and we had sandhill cranes in that area. So that is a habitat that sandhill cranes would use. You may expect to find them in pasture land as far as something that they would utilize. And, as such, we have a listed species documented out there from our surveys, being a sandhill crane, plus a habitat that they would use and so, therefore, it scored a.4. And then the rest would score a.0. Moving on. There was also mention -- hang on a second, Bob. There was also mentioned some comments about -- that the natural resource service -- that the indices didn't reference wood stork colonies and foraging areas as well as the snail kite consultation area. All of that is relative information for federal and state permitting, but it doesn't apply to the Land Development Code when you're doing an NRI Assessment. So it doesn't apply to the NRI Assessment score, so -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Can you explain why while we're on that? MR. PASSARELLA: Yeah. Again, the scoring is very specific for listed species. So you've got to have, you know, the preferred or tolerated habitat, which is defined in the code, and you've got to have the intersection of one of those species. So a simple zone identified by one of the federal agencies is not in the Land Development Code specifically identified as to be used to score these areas. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Just so I know when to reserve my questions, were you -- did you do any of the work on the original RLSA overlay for anybody? Not today, back in 2000, 2002, around that time. MR. PASSARELLA: No. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Thank you. MR. PASSARELLA: So the next indices is the soils and service -water indices, and these are very straightforward. These are soils mapping data that's obtained from the Natural Resource Conservation Service, the NRCS. And the scoring is -- you know, open water and muck depression soil is a .4, sand depression soil is a .3, flats transitional soil's a .2, and non -hydric soil's score a zero. So in our particular -- at Rivergrass SRA, we had flatwoods, transitional soils, and flatwood soils Page 31 of 89 October 3, 2019 non -hydric. So in our scoring, all these score differently. So we had areas that scored a zero because we had non -hydric soils, we had areas that scored a .2 because those are flats or transitional soils, and we had areas that scored a .3 because that's sand depression soils. And that's showing graphically over here on the right-hand side by the different colors of the output of the model. The next item is the restoration potential indice. And for a scoring for an SRA, the restoration potential indice is not applicable. The restoration potential index is assigned during the SSA designations process if appropriate, and credit adjustments are made at that time. So as part of the SSA scoring, the NRI Assessment for doing SSA credits. So it doesn't apply to the SRA. The next indices is the land -use and land -cover indices. And I already had quite a bit of discussion about FLUCFCS mapping and FLUCFCS, but this is the FLUCFCS data so -- that we prepared for the project. When we did the FLUCFCS mapping, this FLUCFCS mapping has been presented to the county staff. It is also presented to the South Florida Water Management District staff as well as the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers staff, and they have all agreed with our FLUCFCS mapping on the project site. So for FLUCFCS mapping, how you score it under the NRI Assessment is there's Group 1 FLUCFCS mapping, which is a.4. And down below in the text you can see Group 1 is FLUCFCS code 617, 621, 624. And I know those numbers probably don't mean anything to you -all, but those are basically native wetland habitats. Group 2 scores a.3, and down below the Group 2 codes are listed out: 321, 411, 425. Those are all native upland habitats, and they score a .3. Group 3 are a whole series of FLUCFCS codes in the 200s. Primarily, those are agricultural FLUCFCS codes, which is what we have on this particular project. And then Group 4 is other. Other is disturbed lands, you know, residential areas, stuff like that. They score a zero. So for our particular project, you can see we had FLUCFCS codes. This darker blue, as I mentioned before, cropland, pasture land. The lighter blue is row crops. So for the scoring, since these are all agricultural land -use codes, these are all 200 series, they all score a .2 for the NRI Assessment. So there was some comments about should it be scored a -- you know, a 212 or a 510? But if you look at those codes, all those codes are within the agricultural group code class. So whether it's a 210 or it's a 510, those are all agricultural codes and, therefore, they all fall within the .2, and there is no bearing on the NRI Assessment because those are basically the same scores. And some areas, you know, comments about, well, ifs not row crop. It's another type of crop. Again, those are all agricultural codes that fall under this Group 3 or .2 in the NRI Assessment. So in our example cell here we had -- if I were to go back through all of those slides we went through, the NRI score is determined by summing all of these scores assigned for each of the index factors. And so the outcome of the final Raster model shows overall weighted sum. And what you see here is the output of the final Raster model. So our particular cell that we were looking at here, if you look at the numbers, we had a zero, a zero, a .4, for NRI Assessment, a zero, and a .2, which comes up with a total .6. So you see that on the color here over here on the output. So you see scores ranging from .2 to .6 on the output over here. So the final NRI score map for the overall project you can see ranges from .2 to .6 on this output. And, again, that would make sense since the majority of the site is agriculture, and there's not any native habitats. You would particularly expect to see a scoring of a 1.2 or higher if you had some sort of native habitat on the project site. So that would be some remnant cypress areas or remnant pine flatwoods or something within the site. That's when you would get scoring that would go above the 1.2, and that's what it was meant to do was even though these areas are designated as open lands, if there were any native habitats remaining Page 32 of 89 October 3, 2019 within those areas designated as open lands, that those native habitats would be preserved or protected as part of this process. On this site, you have all agricultural lands, all row crop, areas that have been in production for ag for numerous years, and we don't have any of these native remnant natural areas that would possibly score higher than a 1.2 and would be preserved as part of this project. So basically what you have is this is a summary of the output. Again, you can see the scoring across the site. You can see .2. We had total acres of 586 acres of .2. We had 260 acres .4. We had 2 acres of .5 and 149 acres .6. We had -- none of those got above the 1.2 required for preservation of the area. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: That's because none of them intersect all three sensitive areas. MR. PASSARELLA: That's correct. Well, that and it's -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I mean, you don't have one acre that has .2, .4, and .6, because if you did, it would be 1.2. MR. PASSARELLA: Yep. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Thank you. COMhIISSIONER FRYER: I have a question before you leave. MR. PASSARELLA: Yes. COMMISSIONER FRYER: It gets back to the documentation that could be available to us. First of all, what format -- you put up about 40 slides here that I know were generated from GIS. What format are they in now? MR. MULHERE: PowerPoint. MR. PASSARELLA: In a PowerPoint. COMNIISSIONER FRYER: Okay. So it's a PowerPoint. Any reason why you couldn't provide an electronic copy of that PowerPoint as part of the official record so that we could have it between now -- MR. PASSARELLA: We provided our NRI study that provides those documents. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: You're giving us a copy of this PowerPoint. They're giving us a copy. COMMISSIONER FRYER: They are giving or have given? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: No, they will give it to us. MR. YOVANOVICH: When we're done. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Okay. MR. PASSARELLA: But I also want to explain. It's in the document. You have some of this information already in the documents you have. The output -- COMNIISSIONER FRYER: I just want to be sure that we have access to all of it. MR. PASSARELLA: Yeah. This NRI score map and NRI Assessment, you have this map. You have the output map for each one of the individual indices for the overall site. So that's in our report that was submitted to the county. So you should have those maps already. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Let's say that these are 40 slides; we're going to have all 40 of them, aren't we? MR. PASSARELLA: Yes. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Okay. Thank you. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Thank you. COMMISSIONER FRY: Mr. Chairman? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Yes. COMMISSIONER FRY: So what comprises a survey? You have 998 Raster Mgrid acres, I guess you call them. How do you go out and survey -- do you survey each one for all these criteria? MR. PASSARELLA: We walk the entire site, and when we survey the entire site, we would identify where a listed species is. And what happens in this -- in this NRI Assessment -- and maybe I'll go back to this. I'll get back there for you. Page 33 of 89 October 3, 2019 So when we survey the site, we go out and we -- sir, we walk the site, and we walk transects across the site. We may not cover every square inch, but we cover the majority of it. And what happens in the scoring here is even though we don't cover every square inch, since we found listed species, and within this purple area, this area here, this 210 -- so even though we found a sandhill crane, we only documented the sandhill crane here and here. Those are two sandhill cranes we documented within two particular spots. But when you score it, the sandhill crane applies to this entire FLUCFCS code. So even though we only identified a listed species in one spot, it doesn't just apply to that one -acre square grid. It applies to that entire FLUCFCS code. So it's assumed that the sandhill crane could use any of this entire area and, therefore, that applies to that entire FLUCFCS code in the model, so... COMMISSIONER FRY: So you're assuming that because that upper FLUCFCS code is all the same type of land -- MR. PASSARELLA: Yeah. COMMISSIONER FRY: --that species you find there would naturally go anywhere within that type of land -- MR. PASSARELLA: Correct. COMMISSIONER FRY: -- but not necessarily into the different type of land to the south of it, which was the row crop fields? MR. PASSARELLA: Right. The row crop is a different category for the sandhill crane and considered different. But we observed them up here in this code (sic). We would anticipate to see sandhill cranes in pasture areas; therefore, it scored a higher in that area. COMMISSIONER FRY: So is a survey a single point in time? Is it -- I mean, I know it takes a long time, I'm sure, to walk all this -- transect all these areas? MR. PASSARELLA: We may spend four days in March of 2019 when we did this survey, four days out there walking and covering the entire property. But as I mentioned, we've done numerous surveys over the years on this particular property, and we've covered it many times. So if you see, like, for instance, all these species here we documented, those weren't documented in 2019. Those were all documented during surveys in 2007 and 2009. COMMISSIONER FRY: But you're still counting them in the results? MR. PASSARELLA: Still counting them in this, because we've documented them out there. COMMISSIONER FRY: Just previewing or thinking about what possible objection there might be or concerns. You did a survey in March of 2019, then the one previous to that was 2016, I believe you said. MR. PASSARELLA: Yes. COMMISSIONER FRY: What are the chances that on the four days that you walked through in March there were species that would be there other times of the year that were not there that day that we might have missed something of critical habitat concern? MR. PASSARELLA: Well, what we did was -- again, if I can go back through the list of the dates we surveyed out here -- and bear in mind, you're only required by county code to go out there and do a listed species survey per county standards, which we did and provided. But we've gone above and beyond that as well. We've provided survey information from other surveys we've done at previous times. So, for instance, in 2007, we were out there in March through July. So covered the end of the spring, the summer. We were out there in October and November, so we covered the fall. In 2015, we were out there in May through June, again in the summer. November, fall. So those are, you know, different time periods, different years out there doing surveys. So this is a result of hundreds of hours of surveys out there, man-hours out there surveying the property. So, you know, we've covered what we did and we've documented what we found out there. Page 34 of 89 October 3, 2019 COMMISSIONER FRY: I only ask the question because, you know, it occurs to me we've had a lot of development within the county, and the species had to migrate around in order to respond to that development. We know bears are in areas where they weren't previously. So I was just trying to preview it if there are any potential issues with species that, you know, might not have been there in March of 2019 or in the previous studies but would be there now or moving forward naturally. MR. PASSARELLA: Well -- and bear in mind, when the original RLSA program was developed, all these species were considered, and that's why they developed the SSAs and the FSAs and the HSAs. So those were areas where they identified these species were most likely to occur and those areas that would be essential for these species to continue. So the designation of those areas as SSAs and being preserved are helping to address all the listed -species issues. That's why the farm fields were designated as open area, which were designated for development, because they had the least value as habitat for listed species while setting aside the areas that had the highest value for listed species. COMMISSIONER FRY: So one final question: Somewhere in an earlier exhibit it said, I believe, that only 2 percent of the total land mass of the RLSA was a 1.2 or above. Is that accurate? MR. YOVANOVICH: No. That was -- there was less than -- sorry. Less than 2 percent of the open area. COMMISSIONER FRY: Of the open area. MR. YOVANOVICH: Of the open area would have scored greater than a 1.2, not only 2 percent of the entire 195,000 acres; 2 percent of the open area. COMMISSIONER FRY: Which would be the areas that --the SSAs would all be open area? MR. YOVANOVICH: The open area is where you do development. That was the pink that I showed you early on. Less than 2 percent of that pink area was going to score greater than a 1.2. COMMISSIONER FRY: Oh, I see. MR. YOVANOVICH: All the other areas that Ken talked about, habitat stewardship, that's where you would expect to score well above -- 1.2 or well above. COMMISSIONER FRY: Okay. So the areas that we can develop -- MR. YOVANOVICH: Less than 2 percent was anticipated to score better than 1.2. COMMISSIONER FRY: Thank you for the clarifications. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And just so you know, I'm sure the rest of us have environmental questions, too, but we're trying to get to the presentation provided by our staff as well, so some of those could be answered, and then we'll get through faster. MR. YOVANOVICH: We're good. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: So I'm going to hold off on mine. I think most of others will at this point. Where you going next, Bob, or Richard? MR. YOVANOVICH: We're going to have Dom come up quick, and Lucy. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Here's -- I want to break close to noon. MR. YOVANOVICH: I think we can definitely get through the next two before noon. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. But I also need to have staff -- the managers of the departments who are going to have a presentation just come up for a quick minute. I want to know what your time frames are. Matt, or whoever's going to -- environmental; economic; roads; are any of you people here? MR. YOVANOVICH: They're all right there. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Would one of you who could represent the time frames you're going to need -- so I can try to figure out how the rest of the day's going to flow. And I'm -- it's going to be in conjunction with yours. MR. YOVANOVICH: Sure. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: When we set this up, you had asked to have your traffic guy first because Norm is so popular he may not be able to be here all day. Is he going to be able to be here in the afternoon? Page 35 of 89 October 3, 2019 MR. YOVANOVICH: He will be here all day. We made him less popular. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, he's becoming as popular as you are, so... MR. YOVANOVICH: You know, that's not fair to say that. Norm's a much nicer guy. CHAII2MAN STRAIN: Who, Norm or you? MR. YOVANOVICH: Matt, can you tell me how long your personnel are going to need for their presentations approximately? MR. McLEAN: Malt McLean, director of Development Review. For the environmental portion, staff has about 10 minutes of presentation, and then we'll be available for any questions afterwards either today or any of the future meetings as well. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. What about Transportation? MS. SCOTT: For the record, Trinity Scott, Transportation Planning manager. Rich asked for two minutes, but I'll need more than that. Probably about 20 or 25. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Good. We want a thorough understanding of that, because that is an issue that we're all well aware of in the road system. MS. SCOTT: Yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. And then, I guess, Amy. MS. SCOTT: Also, our consultants for the transportation consultants are available for the 17th as well if we need to bring them back. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: We're going to get transportation done today, and we're going to try to get economic; that's what I wanted to ask Amy about. Are your economic people here today? MS. PATTERSON: They are here today. They can be here again if needed. And we don't have a formal presentation, but we're here to answer questions after Lucy makes her presentation or -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Thank you. MS. PATTERSON: Welcome. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: That's what I needed to know. We've got about 45 minutes of staff presentations. And after lunch at one o'clock time -certain we're going to start with the -- we're going to quickly get through the Logan's Landing, and then we'll go right into the staff presentations, and then we'll start going into the questions. So with that... MR. YOVANOVICH: I don't know that we'll -- we're going to finish. I think Lucy and Dom could be done by noon. Then Bob's got a few more minutes. And then I would imagine we'll go to lunch, you'll hear your Logan's Landing, then Bob would probably finish it up. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: That sounds fine. MR. YOVANOVICH: That's fair. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: As long as we can hit that time frame. Okay. Let's go. Dominick? MR. AMICO: Hi. Dom Amico, Agnoli, Barber & Brundage representing Collier Enterprises. Water management, I've got a slide prepared with what I thought would be important to the Commission. The first bullet point, as you've already heard from Ken, all the land that comprises Rivergrass is currently agricultural. It's an existing operational agricultural water management system. There are preexisting permits over all the agricultural land. They've been in compliance with their permits for years. This agricultural development has been there for years. In 2018 South Florida Water Management District issued a conceptual ERP for the RLW Town, of which Rivergrass is a piece of. Rivergrass is consistent and covered by that permit. It's essentially two basins of the RLW conceptual approval. There are no proposed or existing discharges of stonnwater to Golden Gate Estates. All the stormwater flows into the WRA areas and exits the property at the south end of the Big Cypress stewardship district. Rivergrass -- a key element of Rivergrass is to maintain existing drainage patterns. We use the WRAs for storage, thereby hydrating them, which was an important requirement from the water Page 36 of 89 October 3, 2019 management permit agencies. We've increased water -quality treatment within the project. Currently, the agricultural development doesn't provide water -quality treatment before it discharges into the WRAs. The WRAs are primarily wetlands. We achieve complete water -quality treatment before any discharges into the WRAs. The project, through the Water Management District review process, received considerable scrutiny with regards to our impact or lack thereof on the comprehensive Everglades restoration project locally known as the Picayune Strand project. We were deemed to be consistent with that design. We will not impact the Picayune Strand restoration effort. And from a water -use perspective, the project, as proposed, will considerably reduce water use once the land -use change has been made from agricultural. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Is that all? MR. AMICO: That's all I've got. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. One question I have. You're addressing us now for water management, which wasn't -- I don't know where you -all thought it fit on the agenda items that we had. I1 isn't traffic. Is it because it's under -- you're coming under environmental? Is that what you're responding to? And the only reason is, we're not going to get a chance to talk to you, then, if we don't ask questions now; is that what it -- MR. AMICO: I'll be here. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. That's what I wanted to make sure. Can you tell me one thing about the map you just had up? The pink line -- well, the purple/pink line, the big long one, that, if I'm not mistaken, is the 21,700 -and -some -odd acres for the stewardship receiving -- for the stewardship district; is that correct? MR. AMICO: That's correct. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And it goes all the way down to the Ford test track. MR. AMIGO: That's correct. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And that notch going into it is an extension of the Ford test track up and around the boundaries of the test track, but it doesn't include the land outside the boundaries of that test track; is that the way it appears here? MR. AMICO: That's correct. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. So the applicant owns land almost all the way down to I-75? MR. AMICO: Yes. The area that doesn't get us to I-75 is the test track and the area owned by the federal government. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I understand. COMMISSIONER FRYER: I have a related question, Mr. Chairman. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Go ahead. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Collier Enterprises, does it own directly or indirectly the Rural Village, Bellmar, and Longwater or any of those? MR. AMICO: Well, I don't believe Collier Enterprises, per se, owns anything. There are several subsidiary - COMMISSIONER FRYER: Directly or indirectly? MR. AMICO: Indirectly, yes. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Okay. All three of those? MR. AMICO: Correct. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Thank you. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: That's it, Dominick, for now. But thank you. We'll know you'll be around if we need you, right? MR. AMICO: Yep. MR. YOVANOVICH: He'll be here. MS. GALLO: Good morning. My name is Lucy Gallo. I'm a principal with Development Page 37 of 89 October 3, 2019 Planning and Financing Group. We're a national real estate economic consulting firm with nine offices across the country. I prepare fiscal and economic impact analyses for large-scale development and redevelopment projects across the country. My office is based in Orlando. It's a pleasure to be here for the Collier Planning County Commission. There are two requirements that govern the economic assessment that was prepared for Rivergrass. One rests in the Growth Management Plan, which as this slide indicates, the requirement is that the analysis is prepared at the horizon year, which would -- another tern we would call that is the buildout year. The Land Development Code also includes requirement for the economic assessment, and under B you'll see that one of the requirements is if the county does not have a fiscal impact model, that the applicant may submit an alternative model which is approved with a methodology approved and advanced by the county. And the Rivergrass economic assessment was prepared under B because the county does not have a model. The approach from our firm's standpoint to fiscal impact analysis is of utmost importance. Our primary theme is that our analysis is both collaborative and transparent. That has been the approach from kickoff of the project all the way through working with staff and the third -party peer reviewers and their review. Again, we have been using a county -approved methodology and, thirdly, the county did have the analysis undergo a rigorous third -party peer review. The conclusion of the economic assessments indicate on all of the required categories that Rivergrass was either fiscally neutral or fiscally positive as required, and the projected -- this is just a schedule of the projected impact fee revenue that Rivergrass is projected to pay over the course of the buildout period. So that concludes my presentation. Just an overview. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I just have a process question. MS. GALLO: Yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: In previous applications that we received where we had a fiscal analysis, we received the sheets that told us how the cells were generated; formulas. I didn't get any of that. Do you have a spreadsheet like in Excel or some format that I can go in and look at the cell and see what variables you use to calculate the cell? MS. GALLO: Absolutely. In fact, staffs review and the county's third -party peer reviewers, they have our complete Excel workbook, so they could look behind every number, have all of our supporting documentation. So that's been submitted. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. And what staff has is now what we have. So could somehow we get a copy of your active spreadsheets so we can look at the cells and understand what variable multipliers you used to get to the numbers you got to? MS. GALLO: Sure. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I don't care how it gets here. But before we have the next meeting, it would be nice if we had that. MS. GALLO: Absolutely. The county already has them, so... CHAIRMAN STRAIN: It was hard for me to understand how you got to your numbers, and I'd rather not have to ask you how you formulated each cell. MS. GALLO: Understood. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. I appreciate it. Thank you. MR. YOVANOVICH: Mr. Strain? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Yes. MR. YOVANOVICH: This, I think, would be a good stopping point. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I agree with you. Write that down. It's the first time. MR. YOVANOVICH: If Terri wouldn't mind transcribing that before the lunch hour. Page 38 of 89 October 3, 2019 CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Yeah. She will, and you'll use it every time. MR. YOVANOVICH: I will. I will. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Let's break now. We'll come back at 1:00. The time -certain for 1:00 is hopefully a rather short discussion on another application to get it through today's meeting. Thank you all, and see you at 1:00. (A luncheon recess was had from 11:55 a.m. to 1:00 p.m., and Commissioner Chraanowski is absent for the remainder of the meeting.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay, everyone. If you'll take your seats, we'll resume the meeting. We're going a little bit out of the last order, as we talked about earlier. We had a time -certain today, and this is for Item 9. -- I'm getting there. 9A3. ***9A3 is for the Logan/Immokalee Planned Unit Development, and it's at the southeast corner of Immokalee Road and Logan Boulevard. All those wishing to testify on behalf of this item, please rise to be sworn in by the court reporter. (The speakers were duly sworn and indicated in the affirmative.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Tom? MR. EASTMAN: No disclosures. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Karl? COMMISSIONER FRY: No disclosures. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Spoken with Mr. Hancock, or communicated with him. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And I had called Tim Hancock up a couple days ago suggesting he consider being here for this so that we can at least get one thing besides the Rivergrass heard today. COMMISSIONER HOMIAK: I spoke to Mr. Hancock. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Patrick? COMMISSIONERDEARBORN: None. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. That's it. Tim -- oh, yeah, you were already sworn in. The presentation's all yours. I want to -- canyou provide about an hour on a one -word change? MR. HANCOCK: Mr. Chair, the first time in 30 years, I have nothing to add to the application before you. I'll be happy to answer any questions you may have. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I'd be disappointed if there was anything you could possibly add. Anybody have any questions of that fine presentation? (No response.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Hearing none, is there a staff report? Thank you, Tim. MS. GUNDLACH: Yes, there is a staff report. We recommend approval. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. So you didn't belabor the point either. With that in mind, is there any member of the public here who would like to speak on this item? (No response.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Hearing none, we'll close the public hearing. Is there a motion to recommend approval to the Board of County Commissioners? COMMISSIONER DEARBORN: So moved. COMMISSIONERHOMIAK: Second. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Second. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Made by Patrick. Seconded by Ned. Discussion? (No response.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: All in favor, signify by saying aye. COMMISSIONER FRY: Aye. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Aye. Page 39 of 89 October 3, 2019 CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Aye. COMMISSIONER HOMIAK: Aye. COMMISSIONER DEARBORN: Aye. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Anybody opposed? (No response.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Motion carries, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 of us now to zero. Thank you. Tim, that was the quickest you've ever done. MR. HANCOCK: I make no promises for the other ones. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: ***Now we'll go back in and we'll resume where we left off on the Rivergrass project. And we had finished up the presentation of the applicant. MR. YOVANOVICH: No, we didn't. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Oh, we didn't. That's right. Bob was going to have closing comments for the presentation, and then we'll go back to staff for their presentations. Bob. MR. MULHERE: Thank you. So the last few things we want to talk about are the deviations and the juxtaposition of those deviations with respect to the staff position and also the conditions that were attached to your staff report, of which there were 11. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Now, these are part of the SRA document? MR. MULHERE: Yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. And we have a separate time frame for that document to be discussed. So I'm going to withhold my questions to that, but I appreciate the briefing, because between now and that time it will give us a better understanding of it. MR. MULHERE: Maybe I'll just focus on -- we've been meeting with staff over the last, I'd say, three weeks. We've probably had three or four meetings to discuss where we were separated on some of these issues and clarify them. So under your -- under our SRA document, there are -- the deviations are listed by sort of topical area. Under village center standards, we had asked for a deviation that related to the location of the village center; however, after further reviewing the document and meeting with staff, they concur that the location is not a problem. It is consistent with the LDC. So we will withdraw that, so -- COMMISSIONER FRYER: This Deviation No. 1? MR. MULHERE: Yes. So we'll just withdraw that one. Deviations 2 and 3 are related, and they're in two separate sections under parking criteria. The LDC, if you look under village, it refers you back to the standards in a town center and town core. The section just refers you back up there. When you go back up to that section, that language appears, the majority of parking spaces shall be provided off street in the rear of buildings or along the side secondary streets. Parking is prohibited in front of buildings. We'd ask for a deviation to allow that. Both of those deviations are very similar, 2 and 3. So these are Google Earth photos from Ave Maria. Number 1 is the Arthrex building, which you can clearly see has -- now, the terminology is in front of the building. It doesn't say the front yard. It says, no parking in front of the building. And there is parking right there in front of the building. The other photo is the Publix in Ave Maria. And, again, here you have the front of the building right here and, as you can see, there is a fairly substantial bay of parking in front of the building. This perspective down here under the No. 2 right here is a pedestrian perspective from this comer right here looking into the Publix, and the front access points are here and here. So we had a discussion with staff, I think it was day before yesterday, and -- Mr. Bellows, Nancy, and we've come up with an agreeable condition that staff could support this deviation that we are requesting, and that would be that the staff could support parking in front of the building for a retail Page 40 of 89 October 3, 2019 commercial development that includes a grocery anchor. And we're okay with that. CHA R] AN STRAIN: Now -- MR. MULHERE: Shopping center with a grocery store. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I was just to say, because if you say a retail shopping center with grocery anchor, that theoretically means the whole shopping center. MR. MULHERE: Yeah. No, we assumed there would be other, you know, retail outlets or maybe a restaurant or something, but it would -- we anticipate having a grocery store. So getting to neighborhood general standards. Number 1, we're withdrawing that. You know, there actually is no requirement to provide neighborhood goods and services. They're allowed uses. They're not required in the neighborhood general. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: What number are you on? MR. MULHERE: I'm on 7.21. I'm sorry. Right here. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Back up on Number 1 then. Didn't you -- isn't that the one you're withdrawing? MR. MULHERE: We were withdrawing -- hold on. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: You're withdrawing Deviation No. 1. You just explained Deviation 2 and 3. I thought you were going to go to 4. MR. MULHERE: Oh, I missed one. I probably missed one. You're right. Thank you. You're right. Appreciate it. I went one slide too far. There we go. Correct? MR, YOVANOVICH: Yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I don't know. MR. MULHERE: Village Center 7.14. This deals with parking structures. We're going to withdraw that. I mean, just to clarify, the issue was if you built a multifamily -only residential structure, which is allowed, you know, there would be no reason, really, for you to have to put retail on that multifamily -only structure. And you had parking underneath that. It doesn't matter. We're not prepared -- we're not planning on doing that, so we're going to withdraw that deviation. Number 5, this is a significant deviation that is important to us. No one was really certain exactly what the genesis of this four -acre minimum was other than some general concept that it might create smaller buildings in a village. And it also applies in towns, however. You know, the RLSA regulations have block limitations, and they have floor area ratio limitations, and those are the limitations that reduce the mass of buildings and the mass of a grouping of buildings. This particular limitation presents a problem when you are wanting to do something such as tri -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: But No. 5 is withdrawn it says, right? MR. MULHERE: I'm sorry. That's withdrawn, but the same standard is in the neighborhood general. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Yeah. If they're withdrawn, you don't need to explain them to us. MR. MULHERE: All right. No problem. Let's see. I already discussed No. 1. That's being withdrawn. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Should be No. 6. Let's go to 6. MR. YOVANOVICH: Four. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Four was what we just -- MR. YOVANOVICH: No, no. There's a difference between neighborhood general and village center. MR. MULHERE: So we're in Neighborhood General Standards 7.21. Do you have it? COMMISSIONER FRYER: It would be helpful if we could go by the number of the deviation. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Yeah. Can you tell us what deviation you're going to talk about now? MR. MULHERE: Okay. Number 6. Page 41 of 89 October 3, 2019 CHAIRMAN STRAIN: What happened to No. 4? MR. MULHERE: Let me get my SRA document. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Are you guys confused yet? COMMISSIONER FRYER: Yeah. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I think we're all confused, so I think we need to recoup. MR. MULHERE: I see where the confusion is. I actually number them in the SRA document this way. That's why -- as you see on the visualizer, that's why I used those numbers. But in the staff report there are different numbers. So I will use -- I will refer to the staff report number, okay? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. So can you tell us the ones that we've resolved so far, at least we heard your explanation so far? MR. MULHERE: Yes, I can. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Where that stands. MR. YOVANOVICH: Based on staffs number or SRA? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: The document in front of us. Oh, this isn't the deviations that are in the staff report? MR. MULHERE: I'm going to use the staff report, okay? Is that okay? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Yeah. Somehow we've got to tie it back. MR. MULHERE: So if you look at -- the numbers are cross-referenced here. If you look at Deviation No. 1 in the staff report which references -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Can you put that on the overhead if that's what we're going to use, please. Because No. 1 on here might be different than what you're talking about. COMMISSIONER FRYER: These are withdrawn. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: No, I don't think so. He's withdrawn this Number 1, but I don't know if he's withdrawn the No. 1 he's now going to talk about. MR. MULHERE: Hold on. It's not that complicated. It's just that the staff report used a different numbering system than we did in the SRA document, and I didn't pick up on that. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: You're telling us it's Nancy's fault? MR. MULHERE: No, no. She cross-references them. MS. GUNDLACH: Yeah. MR. MULHERE: So Deviation No. 1, which is cross-referenced to Section 7.11, which is what I show on the -- is withdrawn. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: What about 2 and 3? MR. MULHERE: Two and 3, we have an agreement as I referenced with respect to a shopping center that has a grocery anchor. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: You're still asking for a deviation, but you're just -- MR. MULHERE: Yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: -- phrasing it differently. MR. MULHERE: Yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: For both 2 and 3? MR. MULHERE: Yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And you're going to give us the refinement of this before next meeting so we can focus on the issues you are going to do next meeting? MR. MULHERE: Yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. That would be great. MR. MULHERE: Okay. So we're on -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Four. MR. MULHERE: Deviation 4 is -- MR. YOVANOVICH: Slide it up, Bob. MR. MULHERE: Sorry. Page 42 of 89 October 3, 2019 MR. YOVANOVICH: Withdrawn. MR. MULHERE: Is withdrawn, yeah. Hold on. Deviation 5, is that still in the 7.1.? That's withdrawn, yep. Now we go into neighborhood general standards. And so 7.2 -- MR. YOVANOVICH: Gone. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: It's Deviation 6. MR. MULHERE: Deviation 6, 7.21 in the SRA document -- MR. YOVANOVICH: Withdrawn. MR. MULHERE: -- is withdrawn. Deviation 7 is supported by staff, and we -- so we're going to -- obviously, we feel like we don't really have to discuss that one. It's pretty self-explanatory. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, I don't know if all of us understand it. So even though you and staff come to an agreement, at some point down the road you might want to explain it to us. It doesn't have to be now, but I thought that's what you were going to do during your presentation. MR. MULHERE: I can do that. I have to look at my presentation. MR. BELLOWS: Do you want us to flip back? MR. MULHERE: No, that's all right. I've got it right here. Hold on. I'm looking for it right now. Neighborhood general. Okay. So deviation -- Deviation 7 is the deviation to allow a larger square footage for the village amenity center, and staff supports that. And we have a golf course, and we just need more square footage than 3,000 square feet or 15,000 square feet. It shouldn't be a problem, we don't think. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, when we get to our questions it might -- MR. MULHERE: Yeah. No, I got it. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: -- it might have more answered, so... MR. MIJLHERE: Anything less than that would probably require us to have more, you know, amenity spaces instead of a centralized location compact. Deviation 8 is a deviation from a required 10 -foot minimum side and rear yard setback to allow for a combined setback of either zero or five feet on each side yard in the case of multifamily, and staff was supporting that deviation. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Doesn't that apply exclusively to townhomes, though? MR. MULHERE: It applies to that type of multifamily product. Townhome, maybe villas, yes. Yep. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Okay. Deviation 9. Okay. So this is one we were talking about just a little while ago. This is the maximum multifamily lot size which the LDC limits to four acres. And again, this presents a bit of a problem in the same type of development that you just referenced, which would be townhomes or, you know, attached product or even four-plexes, six-plexes or eight-plexes. Because if you have to create four -acre lots to accommodate, say, a 24 -unit or a 34 -unit, you know, development, you now are inserting artificially additional side yards that otherwise wouldn't be required if the lot size was simply, you know, not restricted to four acres. So you're consuming more land, whereas in anywhere else you would not have to do that, and it doesn't really make any sense. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Do you have a graphic or something that -- I'm trying to picture what you're trying to say. MR. MULHERE: What I'm trying to say is if you have to build a four -acre maximum lot and you were intending to do, let's say, 16 acres, you would now have three -- four; four four -acre lots. And on those side lot lines, you would have to provide side yard setbacks. You would not have to do that if you simply came in for a Site Development Plan on the whole 16 acres. It doesn't change what the product is. It doesn't change the massing of the product. It only requires extra side -yard setbacks and buffers; buffers, landscape buffers. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, when we get -- yeah. Page 43 of 89 October 3, 2019 MR. MULHERE: So, I mean, I can prepare a drawing for you to bring to the next meeting. It just seems -- it seems unwarranted, and staff agreed but with one condition, and what they agreed was that that relaxation could be up to 25 acres within a half mile of the village center. Because that's where the multifamily or the more intense residential development will occur. So you're supposed to go from the town center out to a more intense product, and on the edges would be the least intense. And so if you look at the site plan -- I've just got to get to it. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: You're going to have to go back a ways. Does anybody else understand what he's saying? COMMISSIONER FRYER: I think I do. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Could you explain it in laymen's terms? COMMISSIONER FRYER: Doesn't it have to do with buffers and setbacks? MR. MULHERE: Yes. MR. YOVANOVICH: If we were to do a standard multifamily project, which would include apartments, you couldn't have an -- no apartment complex is going to be four acres. So staff told us they wanted us to provide a diversity of housing. We agreed to do a minimum of 250 multifamily units, which is the typical three or more in a complex. So if you wanted to have a condominium complex, you would have -- if you had to divide it into four -acre parcels, you would -- they would be four standalone acres. So you'd have side -yard setbacks, the buffers. So you would no longer have a condominium, multifamily project, or an apartment complex because you can't build those on four -acre parcels, was the concept. So we wanted to be able to provide that type of multifamily development within the village. Staff said, what you had asked for was unlimited. Would you agree to cap the maximum size of a development? We said, how about 25 acres? They said fine. They also said we wanted to be in closer proximity to the village center so we're at a half a mile within the village center. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: So, basically, you want to do one multifamily parcel of 25 acres for 250 units, which is 10 units per acre, and you want to put it all on one location on the property; is that what you're -- MR. YOVANOVICH: We want to have that option. It could be 125 units. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. I just wanted to understand how it can apply. MR. YOVANOVICH: Yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Did anybody go back to consider that the RLSA and what it may have meant for this? Because you're coming from a series of buildings that would be smaller in stature to a massing. That may be why the four acres was limited against the 25. MR. YOVANOVICH: That's the exact discussion we had with staff, and staff says they did not believe the intent was to prohibit apartment complexes from being built in a village. So they said that made sense to them. That's why they no longer opposed the deviation we had requested. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: All right. Well -- MR. MULHERE: I just want to also restate, there are a number of provisions that deal with massing. Remember, there are maximum block lengths. So you can't have huge blocks. They're limited by the SRA; we're consistent with those. There are other limitations that address the massing of either a group of structures or structures. I mean, this is a very rudimentary drawing, but what I was trying to show -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: That's an understatement. MR. MULHERE: I know. I know. What I was trying to show you, if each of these is -- I know they don't look like it, but they were equal size at four acres, you would then -- and you had a lot line here, you would then have to provide buffers on each side of those lot lines as well as setbacks. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: But if those lines were gone, what could you do? MR. MULHERE: You do not have internal buffers if they're gone. You build your buildings, Page 44 of 89 October 3, 2019 and you only have a separation between structures. You don't have, you know, the standard setbacks. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, the structure, though, could be four lots wide. All four lots. You could start out with the left end and go all the way to the right end. MR. MULHERE: Attached. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Yeah. MR. MULHERE: Yes, yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. That's the piece I was wondering about. MR. MULHERE: Yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MR. MULHERE: Okay. I'm glad I can provide some comic relief as well as, you know -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: You're -- MR. YOVANOVICH: Did you want to ask him which way was north? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: No, not again. MR. MULHERE: So besides, I found this bolt and screw under my chair. I wonder if someone's been -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Karl brought his -- yeah, it's Karl again with his tools. He got something through downstairs. COMMISSIONER FRY: Retaliation. MR. MULHERE: All right. Let me get back to -- I'm way down this way. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Should be on No. 10, I think. MR. MULHERE: Okay. I'm getting there. I have to use both presentations, Mr. Strain, because I need to know what -- we're close. Okay. No. 10 is transportation. That is a -- that has been coordinated with the fire district as well as the transportation staff. It is to allow cul-de-sacs up to 1,200 feet in length. That's the maximum that could be supported by the fire district, and so that's -- we reduced our request to 1,200, so that was supported. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: That's the typical of what we do in the urban area too now, right? MR. MULHERE: Yes. You could do longer, but you have to provide a turnaround. We just chose to go with the shorter cul-de-sac. Number 11, which is 732 in the SRA document, is a deviation from the typical cross-section provided in the SRA. There was a local street cross-section. We asked for a deviation, which reduced the planting area adjacent -- between the sidewalk and the travel lanes from six feet to five feet. We had a condition from the landscape reviewer to install root barriers for the larger trees if we plant larger trees in the -- street trees in that five feet. We agreed to that, and so that one is approved by staff. The travel lanes in our cross-section are I 1 feet versus 10 feet. That's the only difference. But the width is 48 feet. And I have an example of that cross-section. Do you want me to show you the cross-section? I see Mark thinking. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I'm just -- you -- this is going a little bit out of the sequence I expected, so I'm trying to figure out when is the best time for this board to ask you questions about these deviations. MR. MULHERE: I only have a few more to go -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I was waiting for the SRA document. We're not even going to get to that today. So that's the only reason I'm perplexed. MR. YOVANOVICH: I just have a couple more, and then we'll go over the staff recommendations. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, for our -- for the board members here, if you guys have specific questions about these deviations, since we're getting into such a detailed discussion, then we might as well jump in and ask Bob any questions you may have. I know, Karl, you don't want -- you like to go out of sequence, but you're more than welcome to. Page 45 of 89 October 3, 2019 I have a lot of questions. I'm probably going to save them up like we had planned to, but you -all can do what you want. I didn't expect this much detail on this part of it, today on this issue, so... MR. YOVANOVICH: Here's what I'd like to do. The rest of the deviations, if I ran ahead, staffs recommending approval on. So if we can hold off on detailed questions that the commission may have regarding the deviations, let's just do that. The last thing we would like to just finish our presentation was to go over the various staff recommendations where we agree or disagree or we've reached agreement over the last few weeks. Then we'll be done with our presentation. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Then we'll go to staff presentations. MR. YOVANOVICH: Then we can go to staff reports and then do the sequence we had previously agreed to, which was traffic, environment, Lucy. And then if we're not -- if there's more time left, which if I'm a betting man, there won't be, we'll get into the questions you may have on the SRA document next time. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I would expect that, yeah. That's what I thought this would -- MR. YOVANOVICH: We don't have a specific presentation on the SRA document because it's basically the LDC requirements, unless there's a deviation. So that's probably where the deviation discussion will be combined, Mr. Strain. Does that make sense? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: It does. That's why -- I didn't know you were going to go this far with these, but that's fine. I think you should continue. So this will give us a better understanding, and when we read it over the next couple of weeks, we'll know what we're reading. MR. YOVANOVICH: Right. And what has been resolved or hasn't been resolved from the staff report. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And just so you know, it doesn't -- MR. YOVANOVICH: I understand. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: If staff agrees with something, it doesn't mean we're not going to have questions. MR. YOVANOVICH: I understand that. I'm just talking about from a staff perspective we resolved. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And then when you talk about the staff recommendations, make sure you talk about both comprehensive and zoning, please, if you're going to go that route. MR. MULHERE: Yep. That's where we're going now. So as Rich said, the rest of the deviations -- MR. YOVANOVICH: I've got to ask first. The staff report -- let me read you the date so I understand what you just said. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: You better not walk away from that mic and talk. MR. YOVANOVICH: I know, I know. Sorry, Terri. I apologize. I listened to the rules earlier. I just ignored it. There's a staff report dated September 19th, 2019. That's the staff report we're addressing. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: What's the date? MR. YOVANOVICH: September 19th, 2019. It was the staff report that you guys received. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: No. I'll tell you what we received. Calm down a minute. Let me -- we received -- MR. YOVANOVICH: My bad. My bad. I read you the hearing date. My mistake. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MR. YOVANOVICH: It is September 10th, 2019, is the date of the report. I read you the hearing date, which was originally -- it was prepared for the September 19th, 2019. That's the staff report that we -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: But, Rich -- MR. YOVANOVICH: -- were responding to. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I'm going to tell you the three that I read. You just listen to me for a Page 46 of 89 October 3, 2019 minute. You can tell me which one you want me to use. MR. YOVANOVICH: Okay. I will. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: 8/19/19. MR. YOVANOVICH: I don't want you to use that. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: That's the one I received in the first staff report. The one after that, or before that, was 6/4/19 and another one was 9/15/19. So I've got three staff reports, and none of them match up with what you've got. MR. YOVANOVICH: The only one that I'm aware of is the, quote, final staff report for this project, is dated September 10th, 2019. MS. GUNDLACH: Mark, are you referring to SRA documents? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Yeah. MS. GUNDLACH: Okay. Not staff report. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Oh, I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm referring -- yeah, the SRA documents dated differently than staff report. MS. GUNDLACH: Yes, they are, because we have to -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MR. YOVANOVICH: I just want to make sure we're talking the same language, because sometimes we don't. The recommendations that we're talking about would be found -- now, this is where I'm sure we'll all get confused is Page 38 of 40 and Page 39 of 40 of that September 10th report. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MR. YOVANOVICH: Those are the recommendations we're going to go through, which I understand is a consolidation of all of the staff analysis that was done, and we're down to these 11 recommendations. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MR. YOVANOVICH: That's what we plan on going through. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And at some point between now and next -- the end of today, can you -all figure out which staff report we're supposed to be reading -- not staff report -- SRA document, since there are three of them in our packet. I'm not sure which one you're going to be using when you walk through and explain things, so... MR. YOVANOVICH: We will -- we will do that, Mr. Strain, so we're all reading from the same SRA document. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Next meeting I'll come prepared to talk from the right document. MR. YOVANOVICH: Nothing really changed except acreage between the different versions. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MR. YOVANOVICH: So are we good? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Yeah. MR. YOVANOVICH: Okay. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, I understand where you're coming from now, yeah. MR. MULHERE: Okay. So, again, we just want to go over the -- I think there was 11 recommendations attached to the staff report. The first was all formal SSAs have been approved and stewardship credits submitted before or current with the SRA. We have no problem with that. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Bob, weren't you going to finish up the deviations first? MR. MULHERE: Oh, I thought we did. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: You left off at No. 12. MR. MULHERE: Well, the rest of them all staff report (sic), so we'll just wait until you -all go over them and if you have your own questions. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. So the deviations from 12 on have been withdrawn. MR. MULHERE: No. They've been recommended for approval by staff. Page 47 of 89 October 3, 2019 CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. You don't want to explain those to us, though? MR. YOVANOVICH: Mr. Strain, I thought you would prefer to have that discussion when we're in the SRA document itself. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, when you got back up, I thought you said we're going to finish describing the deviations and then we're going to go into the staff report recommendations. MR. YOVANOVICH: I actually said we're going to not talk about them anymore. We'll just deal with them as part of the SRA document. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MR. YOVANOVICH: Is that okay? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Yeah, that's fine. We're going to get to them one way or another. Just trying to make sure I understand when. MR. MULHERE: Okay. Condition No. 2, the deviations, development standards, SRA statement of suitability listed under the consistency review findings above, this would be a Comprehensive Plan issue or comment, are removed or revised as discussed. We have met with staff, and based on those meetings, which was September 16th, Collier Enterprises and staff agree the development standards, the land uses, and the deviations meet the LDC requirements with the exception of a discussion that still remains to be had with a couple of the deviations where staff was still recommending denial, and I believe there's only really one of those, maybe two. There were just two issues where staff was still recommending denial where we didn't have concurrence, and I'm going to go over those in a little more detail. Three is the ratio of multifamily to single-family dwelling units has increased to a meaningful level. Again, we met with staff and asked what -- there is no requirement in the LDC. There is no definition of what is a meaningful level. This is also a Comprehensive Planning comment, I believe. And so -- and David Weeks was in the meeting that we had, so he's certainly free to, you know, just chime in on any of these things, obviously. But it was our understanding after that meeting that it was agreed that there is no definition of meaningful level. There has to be a mixture. We're providing a mixture. We have a minimum. And staff is in agreement with that. The companion developer agreement is required to be approved with this SRA request. It is largely completed. I think there is still a little bit of refinement that has to occur within that document. But we did include the latest revision. The County Attorney had some revisions to that, and we provided a few edits back. So we are very close, and hopefully we'll have that finalized for your final review. Just to summarize, at no cost to the county, we agreed to provide 100 -foot of right-of-way for Oil Well Road widening and 100 foot of right-of-way for Immokalee Road plus the water management for both of those. So that's 45 acres of right-of-way adjacent to Rivergrass for Big Cypress Parkway and 170,000 for mitigation for the two intersections that are impacted by this project. So there is one issue that is outstanding, and the county has requested right-of-way extending beyond the adjacency of Big Cypress Parkway to Rivergrass, and we do not agree to provide that right-of-way at this point in time. And it's really, I suppose, a legal discussion, so if you want some further comments, there's a few lawyers here that can speak to that, but that's our position. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: We're going to be talking about traffic as soon as you get done. So we'll get into it with the traffic issue. I want to see what staffs position is on it. MR. MULHERE: This is the other -- I mentioned there was a couple of points of disagreement. This maybe is another one. And 1 believe this is primarily coming from the transportation review. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Chairman, I'm going to ask if we can go back to the previous subject just to be sure -- MR. MULHERE: Sure. Page 48 of 89 October 3, 2019 COMMISSIONER FRYER: This has to do with the right-of-way. It's the applicant's position that they would be willing to provide the right-of-way to the extent that it is adjacent to Rivergrass. MR. MULHERE: Yeah. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Okay. Now, the right-of-way would be 100 feet; is that right? MR. YOVANOVICH: It's actually wider than that, and that's why the acreage in the -- COMMISSIONER FRYER: Went down. MR. YOVANOVICH: -- village went down, because you needed more width. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Got it. But 100 -- MR. YOVANOVICH: It's an average of 148 feet. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Is this going to be contributed -- donated to the county or sold to the county? MR. YOVANOVICH: It will be -- the county will either give us impact fee credits or pay us cash depending on the timing of when this occurs based on two appraisals. (Simultaneous crosstalk.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I'm sorry, Jeff? MR. KLATZKOW: The expectation is impact fee credits. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MR. YOVANOVICH: And it will be based on two independent appraisers coming up with the proper value for the right-of-way. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Thank you. MR. MULHERE: So I'm getting back to this question of interconnection. We -- I had discussed the interconnection previously and showed you all of the locations where we had internal interconnection and external interconnection either, you know, to Oil Well Road or to the proposed Big Cypress Parkway connecting to those Estates streets that we mentioned. This request is to provide interconnection to the north, east, and south. And as we discussed with you, and you can see on the exhibit on the right here, there are Water Retention Areas. See if I can -- right along here all the way around. And there is also a proposed SRA -- MR. YOVANOVICH: SSA. MR. MULHERE: Excuse me -- SSA, thank you, in this region abutting that. So we don't really think it makes any sense to extend the roadway through those Water Retention Areas that also have habitat protection values, and through a -- potentially through an SRA -- SSA. Excuse me. So our position is that it really doesn't make any sense. There's really no significant benefit to that. You will have, ultimately, an extension of Big Cypress Parkway that will extend north and south. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, you just said you weren't going to provide this. MR. MULHERE: Not as part of this project, but ultimately that will occur. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: But if something disagrees in the future and we don't build it, how will that work? Say you -- we don't -- something -- the deal doesn't work. Say we -- neither parties come to a conclusion. MR. MULHERE: Well, there's -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I mean, you control the stewardship area. Why wouldn't we just solve it all now? MR. YOVANOVICH: Two different issues. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. What are they? MR. YOVANOVICH: There's interconnection other than Big Cypress Parkway, which the staff is saying they want -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: What do you mean there's interconnection? MR. YOVANOVICH: They're asking us -- Page 49 of 89 this. October 3, 2019 CHAIRMAN STRAIN: You've got to use the mic, please. MR. YOVANOVICH: Give me a different color. Give me yellow. They're asking us to connect CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Ah. MR. YOVANOVICH: And connect this way. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Gotcha. MR. YOVANOVICH: Okay. And connect this way. And we're -- what we're saying is: The real connection happens this way, which is Big Cypress Parkway, and we're fine with that. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MR. YOVANOVICH: It's the interconnecting through WRAs to other farmlands that we're saying, why would we go through those environmentally sensitive lands to make that happen when this piece can just simply connect there to Oil Well Road? That's -- thafs that issue. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. That clears it up. Thank you. MR. YOVANOVICH: You're welcome. MR. MULHERE: So No. 6 is a condition that says prior to issuance of the first DO, a Listed Species Management Plan must be provided for review, and in response, those are covered by the federal and state agencies. We have to comply with that. We will have management plans as required when we go through that process, and we will provide those to the county. Number 7, this has already been corrected. This was, I guess, an older comment. We did correct the table to reflect the 105,000 square feet versus the original report. Both the economic assessment and the public facilities report had reflected 200,000. Those have been corrected. We've addressed this issue, and staff agrees. Okay. So this gets to the cross-section that I mentioned before. I'm just reading the comments to make sure. I think there's some -- these are just some minor corrections to this cross-section which staff has blessed, and we can make those minor changes. As I said, the width of the cross-section right here is 48 feet. Travel lanes are 11; here and here. You have -- I think the original cross-section did not anticipate SRAs being served by county utilities. And there are separation requirements between various types of utility lines. So this cross-section addresses those issues and, again, has 11 -foot travel lanes rather than 12 -foot. So we've addressed those issues. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: There are various figures in the LDC relating to street cross-sections. Which one of those are you suggesting to modify? MR. MULHERE: This is the local cross-section. I think it's No. 7 under neighborhood general with a 46 -foot right-of-way cross-section total width. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. So you're actually increasing it to 48? MR. MULHERE: Correct. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Karl? COMMISSIONER FRY: Bob, are these standards for the roadways inside the SRA? Is that what you're showing? MR. MULHERE: These are. This is for local -- only local roads. The only deviation -- COMMISSIONER FRY: Inside the village? MR. MULHERE: Yes, correct. This is just -- No. 9 is just some language that needs to be slightly corrected. I think we've already addressed this, but we will make sure that if we haven't we certainly will. I believe we did already address that issue. So because the LDC prohibits separate potable water and reuse water lines, we are asking for a deviation to allow reuse water lines, pumps, and other appurtenances to not necessarily be maintained by Collier County. And, actually, it was the county utilities that asked us to put this deviation in because that language exists. So we've done that. Page 50 of 89 October 3, 2019 Number 10 is -- it references the negotiated interlocal agreement between the Collier County Water and Sewer District and Big Cypress Stewardship District, which has to be adopted along with the SRA ordinance, and we understand that. And No. 11, this appeared -- this is a staff comment that indicates -- or it conditions us to do a housing needs analysis -- whoops. I'm sorry. I don't know why that went off. It's on silent -- a housing needs analysis to estimate -- all right. I don't know whafs going on with that. I'm sorry. MS. GUNDLACH: You want me to take it? MR. MULHERE: Can anything else happen? It's on silent. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I think you're triggering Siri to respond to something. MR. MULHERE: Aye, yai, yai. So let me get back to what I was doing here. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Maybe she could do the presentation. MR. MULHERE: Maybe better, huh? A housing needs analysis be -- the recommendation is that a housing needs analysis be performed to estimate the affordable housing demand and to create a plan to address that supply of affordable housing units for Rivergrass. There is no requirement to do that. There's no requirement to provide affordable housing in an SRA. There's no requirement to do an affordable housing study. So we met with staff, and they concur. There is no requirement. Now, staff is certainly free to recommend something, but it should not be a condition of approval since it isn't a requirement. We met with David Weeks and Ray Bellows and Nancy, and David concurred that staff should not be conditioning approval based on this requirement. COMMISSIONER FRYER: You do have a diversity responsibility. MR. MULHERE: We do have a requirement to have a diverse -- yes -- MR. YOVANOVICH: We meet that. MR. MULHERE: -- and we meet that. COMMISSIONER FRYER: And you have an obligation to be innovative in reaching solutions to problems? MR. MULHERE: Yes. And -- MR. YOVANOVICH: But we don't have an obligation to provide affordable housing, and the code is clear. The only time we have to do affordable housing is if we try to do a density bonus above four units per acre. COMMISSIONER FRYER: I understand. I understand. MR. YOVANOVICH: I just wanted to -- COMMISSIONER FRYER: I'm just pointing that out. MR. YOVANOVICH: We have no issue with the diversity, and staff has determined that we do meet the diversity requirement based upon what we're providing, and staff also acknowledges they can't condition a recommendation of approval upon our doing a housing needs analysis and addressing affordable housing. CHAIRMANSTRAIN: And just so you're --and I don't know if you recall or not, Ave Maria did provide affordable housing. In fact, quite a bit. Both --at least a couple different forms of mitigation. But I'm trying to think. I think that was because of the way they did their economic feasibility. MR. YOVANOVICH: No. What happened was Ave Maria used to be a DRI, and when it was a DRI -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Ah, you're right. MR. YOVANOVICH: -- you have a different review under DRI. And if you remember, we've abandoned -- Ave Maria abandoned the DRI, and the affordable housing requirement went away. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Tbey did use the affordable housing segment, though, in their FIAM to justify some of their financial impact. MR. YOVANOVICH: They may have, but it was also because it was a DRI, it went through a different review process. And as you know, SRAs are no longer subject to a DRI review. So the tie was Page 51 of 89 October 3, 2019 through the DRI process, not through the LDC. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And, Terri, please don't transcribe this. You're right again. MR. YOVANOVICH: Twice today. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Twice. COMMISSIONER DEARBORN: Mr. Chairman, I couldn't hear that again (sic). Could you repeat that? MR. MULBERE: So I did just want to comment on the innovation. The final order called for innovative planning techniques. Rich went over those. He talked about various -- including, but not limited to, various types of things. And subsequent to the Comp Plan being amended to adopt the RLSA program, the LDC amendments were amended -- were adopted. So the way it works is the LDC implements the Comp Plan, and that's it. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. So that wraps up your presentation -- MR. MULHERE: Yep. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: -- on all the subjects so far. And we're going to have some of this repeated when we get into the individual section that we're going to be talking about. MR. YOVANOVICH: And I understand that, Mr. Strain. And, you know, just to quickly summarize, you know, the review process is different because we're an SRA for designation, and it's a very -- it's a more limited review based upon the Growth Management Plan and the LDC between the submittal documents and our presentation, and I'm sure future questions -- we believe -- actually, we don't believe. We know we meet all the requirements in the Growth Management Plan and the LDC and, again, we'll request that you recommend approval of the SRA document as reviewed and presented with the modifications that we've talked about today. MR. KLATZKOW: And just for the record, I'm not entirely sure that I agree with the issue being raised with affordable housing. It does require diversity. The Board of County Commissioners could very easily rule that diversity means different types of housing, including affordable, not just, well, single-family, multifamily type of housing. So that -- ultimately, that will be an issue for the Board of County Commissioners whether or not it's required to put in affordable housing. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Thank you. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And just so -- the part that I suggested he was right on was the fact it was done under the DRI originally. So certainly that's where I was limiting my correction. With that, we'll move to -- unless anybody has any questions of the applicant at this time. Anybody? (No response.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Let's go next to -- since we're going to start with the traffic, before we ask the applicant our traffic questions, I'd like to get staff to provide the information that they have prepared, and that will at least answer some of our questions, so -- or either create more. We'll see where it goes. And members of the Planning Commission, at this point, from here forward, as each presenter's presenting or finishes, whatever they prefer, let's start asking our questions, because we've got the bulk of it, and we're ready to go into it, if you want to, so -- including you, Karl. COMMISSIONER FRY: Thank you for inviting me into the conversation. I decline. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Trinity? MS. SCOTT: Good afternoon. Once again, for the record, Trinity Scott, Transportation Planning manager. And I want to start by saying thank you to Mr. Mulhere for giving me a little informational session on how to use the visualizer up here, so hopefully I won't muck it up and I'll know where north is. Let me start by -- by the way, don't take directions from him, obviously. Page 52 of 89 October 3, 2019 Let me start by introducing the team that I have with me today. I have Mike Sawyer from our Capital Project Planning team; you see him frequently. Greg Root from AIM Engineering; he was responsible for reviewing the Traffic Impact Statement. And I also have Bill Grainer from Jacobs Engineering who worked very closely with staff with regard to the Big Cypress Parkway right-of-way. So I'm going to take the items out of sequence from our staff report, but -- so I could go into the landowner contribution agreement and stay within that. So I'm going to touch on the interconnection first and foremost, and then we'll dive into the landowner contribution agreement. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And you're going to be talking to us about the relevant routing and traffic impacts on the potential new roads and that kind of stuff, too? MS. SCOTT: I'm going to be going through that, yes. I'll be talking about Randall Boulevard, some studies that we've done as well. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Thank you. MS. SCOTT: So Policy 9.3 of the Transportation Element encourages us or requires us to look for interconnections. Within the Master Mobility Plan that the county undertook probably about five or six years ago, there was a specific section within the Master Mobility Plan, Section 4, where there was sub -area modeling that was completed by Tindale Oliver, who was the consultant who completed that study, to look at the RLSA and if it would be beneficial to have interconnections within that area. And so this was a specific sub -area transportation model, and the results of that model so that there would be a decrease in vehicle miles traveled and vehicle hours traveled if we provided interconnections between the villages and the towns. These interconnections are invaluable to us. And once the environment's built, we can't get them back. If you look at Immokalee Road, you look at Airport Road, any of our major arterials here in the urban area, we have communities right next to each other. And if they want to go to the commercial that's next door, they're forced out onto that main arterial roadway, even for those very short localized trips. So that's why we're asking for the interconnections. So this is -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Before you -- did you -- would you prefer to get through your presentation or if we have questions along the way, what would you like? MS. SCOTT: Maybe we could do it by sections, because I have a little bit more to talk about -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. We'll stop when you get to a section, and we'll see if we have questions. I don't want to miss anything. MS. SCOTT: So this is the Big Cypress Stewardship District area in red. You've seen this as part of the applicant's presentation. But I also want to bring up the prior plan that was provided to us, which is Rural Lands West. Rural Lands West was definitely a town, but it had an interconnection, you'll notice, in this area as well as to the south. And as was shown by the applicant earlier this morning, this is Rivergrass, the next village, and the next village, and these are exhibits that they've provided to us through various meetings. So if I put these side by side, we were able to traverse this area as part of the town. It was still going to be the WRA and all of that but -- so we feel that there's still the value there. And if you zoom into the aerial, it looks like there's maybe an old farm road that's there, so it's disturbed within that area as well as it looks like as well here in the aerials. So we think that those are valuable to be able to allow the folks that are in the adjacent town or, I'm sorry, the adjacent villages to be able to get to the commercial that's within this area and vice versa, because there'll be commercial there. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Which one was that? Was that Bellmar or -- Bellmar. MS. SCOTT: Bellmar. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Okay. Is the same thing true in the case of Longwater? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Longwater is the northern one. MS. SCOTT: I'm sorry. This one's Longwater. So it would be Longwater. Page 53 of 89 October 3, 2019 COMMISSIONER FRYER: Okay. MS. SCOTT: Bellmar, I think, is a bit more difficult, but we will move through that with the next village as it comes in. COMMISSIONER FRYER: So, in other words, for our purposes of considering this project, we can assume that Longwater, that's the north one, and Rivergass are going to be interconnected at least on the south side of Oil Well? MS. SCOTT: That's what staff is seeking is that there be an interconnection. COMMISSIONER FRYER: To me that's fundamental. Just an observation. I'm sorry. Go ahead. MS. SCOTT: And that completes the discussion on the interconnection section. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MS. SCOTT: And then I get into the next item is the land contribution agreement. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Let's make sure -- any other questions on the interconnection? Ned, did you have, do you say? COMMISSIONER FRYER: I do. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Go right ahead, sir. COMMISSIONER FRYER: One of the things that is most troublesome for me about what is being proposed is the lack of interconnection as compared to what we would have in the case of a full-fledged town. And as has been said previously, what we do or don't do with respect to this project -- I don't necessarily call it precedent, but in a sense informally it will be relied upon and looked to by subsequent developers, some of whom are the very same commercial interests that are before us now. And I find it very troubling that the integration, the interconnectivity, the walkability, the bikeability that would have been available in the case of a town, with these unconnected -- potentially unconnected villages, you lose that, and that is a fundamental concern that I have with this position. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Yes, sir. MR. YOVANOVICH: Mr. Strain, I know this is kind of a little bit different process, so I'm -- should we stay -- can we address topic by topic? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Yes. I was going to suggest -- in fact, I was going to suggest one of you get at each mic so if we have questions better answered by the applicant, so be it, and we can also get input from staff. And I think it's important we -- that will move faster then. COMMISSIONER FRYER: I'm going to finish my question -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. COMMISSIONER FRYER: -- if I may. MR. YOVANOVICH: Yeah. I just want to be able to respond on topic. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Understood. The 400 -pound gorilla in this application is called Oil Well Road. And it's now, I think, two lanes. It's going to become four lanes, possibly six lanes at some point in the future. The speed limit on that road is 55 miles an hour, and the traffic that goes up and down that road is industrial tractor -trailer -type traffic proceeding at a very high rate of speed. And to me the issue of interconnectivity is -- I just don't see any possible solution with Oil Well Road right in the middle unless you were to do an underpass of some kind, because you do not have interconnectivity with Oil Well, period. MR. YOVANOVICH: So can you put the town back up there? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: That's the town. MR. YOVANOVICH: I understand. Is it appropriate now for me to respond? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I don't -- Ned, who are you directing your -- do you have a specific need to -- or just anybody -- MR. YOVANOVICH: I just thought it was more of a comment that I -- Page 54 of 89 October 3, 2019 CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Go ahead. COMMISSIONER FRYER: I'd like to hear from the applicant, yeah. MR. YOVANOVICH: Thank you. A couple of important things: There is no town before you. The town project was a very different project which included in the area that Ms. Scott was directing you to for the need for interconnection of two million square feet of retail, office, businesses park uses that are not before you in the Rivergrass Village. In Rivergrass Village what you have before you is a 21 -acre village center. Totally different projects. Totally different on an economic scale. The interconnectivity nearest Oil Well Road was a pedestrian interconnection, not a vehicular interconnection to get to two million square feet of retail, office, business park uses; different economies of scale for providing that interconnection. The need to keep traffic off the road to get to a 21 -acre village center is totally different than what the town was, and the town is not before you and will not be before you. The other villages will be evaluated on a stand-alone basis. They will be required to provide their own retail goods and services for that village. But there is absolutely no reason to interconnect those villages to try to get through an environmentally sensitive area for cars to go to a 21 -acre village center when the other villages will have their own village centers to address those needs, when you can very easily interconnect up and down Big Cypress Parkway to go from village to village if those other villages go through the process and ultimately get approved. I think it's fundamentally improper to assume anything on what's going to happen on the two other villages. MR. KLATZKOW: I just find this remarkable. This is a Planning Commission. By your very nature you're here to plan, all right. So if they want to balkanize this process by chopping this up into little PUDs, because that's essentially what we're doing here, that's fine, all right. They've got their rights under the LDC to put together a village if they want to. But at the end of the day, this is a Planning Commission. And if you guys are going to be planning for misery here because we're not putting together the appropriate road system, then 20 years from now people should come down here and just say, shame on you people, all right. And shame on, you know, anybody who, you know, would be planning for misery here, all right. The county's not doing this because, you know, we believe that we're going to punish the developer or because we don't think it's really necessary but it would be nice. The county is asking for these interconnections and these roads because at the end of the day we're not about the developer here. We're about the people who are going to have to live there 20, 30 years from now, and you may be talking 20,000 people out there, all right. So if you get 20,000 people out there and you don't have a road system for them, we are planning for misery. And this is the first and best chance, maybe the last chance we have of putting together a decent road system, period. And if you want to say that that's unlawful, you can't do that, that's fine. We can argue that in a courtroom for the next couple of years. Okay by me. But, you know, don't balkanize this and just say you guys can't talk about it. This is a Planning Commission. MR. YOVANOVICH: And I believe -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And we will bring up the subjects that we feel necessary to bring up as it goes along. And I'm not saying you told us -- I'm just telling you. MR. YOVANOVICH: I understand. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: We're going to continue bringing up the subjects, so we just need the best answers we can get. MR. YOVANOVICH: And I fully -- I didn't mean to talk over you, especially -- I agree with that. What we're telling you is it's bad planning. There is no legitimate planning reason to require us to Page 55 of 89 October 3, 2019 build a road through environmentally sensitive lands to claim that you're how going to generate a lot of traffic to a 21 -acre village center. Our traffic analysis -- and I'm sure that Mr. Trebilcock and Ms. Scott and all our experts will show you we analyzed the full traffic impacts to Oil Well Road and every other road related to Rivergrass. We've done that, and we're saying there's no legitimate planning reason to force a roadway connection through sensitive lands. We can all agree to disagree. That's our position, and I don't think it's bad planning to say you don't put a road through a sensitive area. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: But just to cut to the quick: Your position is you're not willing to do the interconnection? MR. YOVANOVICH: Not to the east where they're asking us to do that, because we don't think it's a legitimate request. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Let's move on to the next question. COMMISSIONER FRYER: I'm going to ask if I may respond to Mr. Yovanovich. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Of course, you can. COMMISSIONER FRYER: And when it comes to the legality, if you will, of what is being proposed, the standards that have been set in the Land Development Code, particularly 4.08.07, there's a litany here of provisions that I don't think your client has come close to, and I'm going to read them. MR. YOVANOVICH: Fine. COMMISSIONER FRYER: 4.08.07.J.3.A.2, villages shall be designed in a compact pedestrian -friendlier form. You've got Oil Well Road. .07.C.2, villages shall be designed to encourage pedestrian and bicycle circulation by including an interconnected sidewalk and pathways system serving all residential neighborhoods. Continuing. The transportation network shall provide for a high level of mobility for all residents through a design that respects the pedestrian and accommodates the automobile. Villages shall be designed to encourage pedestrian and bicycle circulation by including an interconnected sidewalk and pathway system serving all residential neighborhoods. The goal of the Transportation Element, as stated in that element, is to plan for, develop, and operate a safe, efficient, and cost-effective transportation system that provides for both the motorized and nonmotorized movement of people and goods throughout Collier County. Objective 10 of the Transportation Element: Encourage safe and efficient mobility for the rural public that remains consistent with the character of the rural areas of Collier County. Objective 7, encourage safe and convenient on-site traffic circulation through the development process. RLSA Overlay 1, the perimeter of each SRA shall be designed to provide a transition from a higher density and intensity of uses within the SRA to lower density and intensity of uses on adjoining property. The problem I have with this is when you do balkanize it or carve it into village pieces, what really, in the view of many planners, is contrary to what would be in the best interest of the county, and that would be to have fewer number of towns rather than lots and lots of villages. The problem is is that you're going to have, in effect, urban sprawl, and you're going to have developments that are going to require people to leave their subdivisions, leave their villages in order to satisfy their needs for basic goods and services because they're not provided within walking distance or biking distance. And, to me, there's a lot that I could say positively about that proposal, and I hope I'll have time to as this goes on. But right now I'm focusing on what I see is the biggest problem, and that big problem is Oil Well Road. And there's nothing that is being proposed that is innovative that solves that problem such as an underpass of some kind and, by splitting these off into villages that are adjoining or abutting one another, you lose the connectivity that you would have with a town. Page 56 of 89 October 3, 2019 MR, YOVANOVICH: So let me take several of those. I don't -- I couldn't write as fast as you could speak, but I think I got a lot of them. Big picture: Let's start with the basic premise of the RLSA that was established by the Board of County Commissioners, and it's an incentive -based program and it's a voluntary program. And the Board of County Commissioners says there's four options for an SRA: Town is one, village is another, hamlet's another, and compact rural development is the fourth. There is nothing in the Land Development Code that requires anybody to develop a town. So my client has every right to come in and ask for a village. That's what they're doing. You may prefer a town, but that's not your choice. And I don't mean it adversarial. I mean, you, the global group. We're allowed to ask for a village, and if we meet the requirements for a village, you consider each application individually. We meet the requirements of a village. Hang on a second. MR. KLATZKOW: But there has to be interconnectivity. MR. YOVANOVICH: You didn't let me finish. As much as you may want a town and you may think that's the best interest of Collier County, you can't force a property owner to do a town. Next -- COMMISSIONER FRYER: I just read the ordinances. MR. YOVANOVICH: I did, too. And it doesn't --you show me where -- COMMISSIONER FRYER: I just did. MR. YOVANOVICH: --in the Growth Management Plan it requires us to build a town. It doesn't. So let me go to the next issue: Interconnectivity as far as sidewalks. Your Land Development Code has cross-sections for neighborhood general roads. It requires a sidewalk on both sides of the street. We provide sidewalks on both sides of the street. Your Land Development Code addresses how pedestrians are to be kept safe, and they are. There's sidewalks on both sides of every street. So your pedestrian traffic is taken care of through your own Land Development Code mandated cross-sections that we are agreeing to. We did not ask for a deviation from providing sidewalks except where we put a 10 -foot pathway when there was no houses on that side of the street. So we meet your Land Development Code mandated pedestrian interconnectivity. Your Land Development Code prescribes cross-sections for roads. It does not require separate bicycle paths. We meet your code requirements for neighborhood general. Neighborhood general is a context zone not only in villages. It's also a context zone in towns. Now, there is nothing in this code that requires for a village or a town for that effect that people walk to the town center or that houses have to be within so many feet or miles or whatever distance from the village center for a village or the town center for a town or the town core for a town. People can walk if they want to on the sidewalks that we're providing, but there's no distance requirement for us to meet that. We are consistent with the code regarding your cross-section with your block size. All of those develop standards that are in your Land Development Code that, by definition, if we meet those standards, we're consistent with your Growth Management Plan. There is nothing in your Land Development Code or your Growth Management Plan that says villages shall be interconnected through sensitive environmental lands. It doesn't exist. It's not there. In fact, what Trinity put up on the screen says you'll encourage interconnection, and you defer to the Land Development Code where that interconnection will be mandated. Now, subject to being corrected -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: You are going to be corrected, so -- 9.3 does not say what that element says. I mean, it actually says the county shall require, whenever feasible, the interconnection of local streets between developments to facilitate convenient movement throughout the network. So it doesn't -- that's not quite encouraging. That's saying "shall require." Page 57 of 89 October 3, 2019 And I kind of want to -- it really falls back on Ned asking a question that probably should have been caught by Comprehensive Planning if it's a GMP issue. So I guess, Trinity, the question should be is -- does -- did you run this by David Weeks or Corby or anybody from Comp Planning to talk about the application of 9.3 in the way that Ned is suggesting it so we can get to the resolution or bottom interpretation of this issue? MS. SCOTT: Mr. Weeks is coming up but, yes, we have talked about the interconnection. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Well, then -- because I don't believe this was one of the -- I didn't -- it may have been in your Comprehensive Planning item, but we haven't got to that yet, so... MR. WEEKS: David Weeks of the Comprehensive Planning section, the Growth Management manager. We didn't -- Trinity and I and, I think, Michael Sawyer did talk about interconnections in addition to Policy 9.3 that's on the screen from the transportation element. You might recall that there's also a policy under Objective 7 in the Future Land Use Element. That object -- that policy within the Future Land Use Element is where it states it encourages interconnections. So I agree with Mr. Yovanovich, it is not a requirement, but it's something encouraged. So to me that's where professional planners and, ultimately, hearing bodies can make a judgment decision as to whether or not we believe an interconnection should or should not be provided. And staff agrees that it's appropriate to provide the interconnections as Trinity was saying earlier. If we look to the land to the north, it's designated open on the Future Land Use Map, the area closest to the future of Big Cypress Parkway. And so we believe that it's reasonable to assume that some day in the future there may be an SRA there having an interconnection would be beneficial. Similarly, to the south, there's open lands further to the south. We believe that at some point in the future there may be an SRA there. And to the east, through the environmentally sensitive areas, that's a little bit more tricky, but if -- most particularly if there's already a disturbed area there -- I think Trinity mentioned that there appeared to be an old farm road there. If that's true, if there is some disturbance there, that especially, in my opinion, leads some credence to providing an interconnection. But Trinity has already indicated to you the benefits, I think, of the interconnections, and that's to keep traffic off of Big Cypress Parkway just like we have here, as she's already told you. Along 41, Airport Road, we have lots of developments that don't have interconnections. And so all of the traffic is forced out onto the major roadway. Whether that is to go to a commercial center close by or recreational area or to visit your neighbor that lives in the next development over there, we believe there's benefit to having interconnections. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Now, David, I've got a couple follow-up. 9.3 is in front of us, and you referred to Objective 7, which "encourages." 9.3 says "shall require." Which one is the most applicable? I mean, they seem to be conflicting. If one requires and the other encourages, that's different language. MR. WEEKS: I don't think they're in conflict. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MR. WEEKS: Encouraging is just that. And if some other policy takes that to the level of requirement, I don't see that as conflict. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. So what you're saying is that the requirement is there even though the objective says encourage? MR. WEEKS: In the two different elements, yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MR. WEEKS: I just want to mention, that's probably what Rich is going to tell you. But the language does say "require where feasible." CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Right. MR. WEEKS: So it's not an absolute in all circumstances. Page 58 of 89 October 3, 2019 And then, secondly, it does make some reference to the Land Development Code to include the specific details. But even if the Land Development Code narrows it down to specific circumstances, I would turn right around and go back to the Future Land Use Element policy that encourages the interconnections. I still think there is the decision for land -use planning to occur on a case-by-case basis that may be beyond the scope of the specific provisions in the Land Development Code. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And we have provisions in the GMP for the RLSA. Do any of those specifically require interconnection? MR. WEEKS: Require, no. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. COMMISSIONER FRYER: I have a question, if I may follow up. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Then I'll get back to Jeff here eventually. Go ahead. COMMISSIONER FRYER: The presence of Oil Well Road, how do you see that affecting the concept of interconnectivity? MR. WEEKS: I guess I'll state the obvious: It bisects the SRA, and so it -- in the sense of the interconnectivity, it functions as two separate developments in that sense. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Absolutely. And two separate developments with one commercial center that is accessible internally only from the south side, correct? MR. WEEKS: That's all that's identified on the master plan, yes. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Okay. Thank you. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Now, Jeff, did you have something you wanted to bring up? We've got an opening here. MR. KLATZKOW: No. I'm just saying that we need to get the road system right now because once these developments start getting in, you'll never be able to change it later. It's just gets too sensitive, and it just doesn't happen. So, you know, you put the skeleton on the body before you start worrying about the bones (sic) and everything anything else, and the transportation is the skeleton. And, you know, once you've got the muscles and everything else in there, you just can't stick a skeleton in there. MR. YOVANOVICH: Can I -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Go ahead, Richard. MR. YOVANOVICH: David brought up a couple of my points, but I want to -- I want to -- two things: The disturbed area that he was referring to was the Gargulio farm operations, and then -- that's to the east. It's not up there right now, but that was where we had the pedestrian interconnect when we had a town. There are no disturbed areas to the south where staff is asking us to now impact environmentally sensitive lands. There is not a requirement for interconnection in the Growth Management Plan. It says "wherever feasible," and then it defers to the Land Development Code. And what I was starting to say, subject to being corrected, I was referring to about what I was going to say in the Land Development Code. The Land Development Code does not require interconnection for Rural Lands Stewardship Area lands. It does require interconnection for PVDs. We're not a PUD. And it does require interconnection for commercial and adjacent residential in the urban area, activity centers. There's no language -- in referral -- in reference to activity centers. The two times that I'm aware of that requires interconnection, it deals with PUDs and commercial, and it talks about activity centers interconnecting residential neighborhoods, and the PT Ds are required to provide interconnection for adjacent neighbors. MR. KLATZKOW: So are we saying that villages shouldn't be connected? MR. YOVANOVICH: I am saying in this particular case where you have environmental sensitive lands, you cannot require interconnection. MR. KLATZKOW: I've lived all over the entire United States. I've never heard in my entire life two villages not being connected. I think -- for you to say that we can require it for a PUD but not a Page 59 of 89 October 3, 2019 village, I think, is just remarkable. MR. YOVANOVICH: Well, fust of all, I didn't write the code. And I don't know where you lived and whether or not there was environmentally sensitive land between the two that would have required an interconnection. There is an interconnection, and it's called Big Cypress Parkway. That's how a lot of towns and villages are connected by U.S. 41 and others where you have towns next to each other, cities next to each other. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. But what it boils down to is you're not going to consider the interconnection that was brought up by Ned. We'll defer that to the discussion of stipulations as we go forward with the resolutions of this recommendation to the Board. We need to move on. We've got a lot to go over, and if every issue on this project's going to take this long, we're going to be here for weeks, not days. So go ahead. Trinity, before you leave, I do have the -- I think David answered, there is no specific interconnection language in the GMP for the RLSA. You're just going to the general language in the GMP transportation section. MS. SCOTT: Correct. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MS. SCOTT: I think I'm going to move on now to the -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Before you go, do you know if this village is supposed to be gated or not? Is that something you took into consideration or you observed or knew? And, Richard, since you're participating, is this going to be a gated village? MR. YOVANOVICH: Yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: It's going to be a gated village. So from security perspectives, we probably need to know that to understand how the interconnections would function and work if they were to have to be required. You need to use the mic. You know that. MR. YOVANOVICH: Yes, it is gated. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. And you were asking another question, though. MR. YOVANOVICH: I was? What was the other -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I don't know. You started -- MR. YOVANOVICH: I asked you if you guys could hear me on the record, and that's when you -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: It doesn't matter. We've got to have the mic. MR. YOVANOVICH: That's why I got up. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: We resolved it. Thank you. So they are going to be gated communities. And, Trinity, I don't know if you guys took that into consideration in your review, but you need to consider it for the next time we come back. MS. SCOTT: Will do. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Go ahead. MS. SCOTT: So I'm going on to the land contribution agreement, and I'm going to kind of go back and provide some history, because some of the business points that I get to later on are because of some discussions in front of the Board of County Commissioners. So this particular area is the subject of the Big Cypress Stewardship District. In October of 2003, Collier Enterprises came before the Board of County Commissioners seeking a resolution to support the creation of the Big Cypress Stewardship District. One of the requirements in that resolution was that within 90 days of the approval of the act, that the Collier Enterprises would -- and the staff would come before the Board of County Commissioners with an interlocal service delivery agreement. That interlocal service delivery agreement was to discuss the transportation needs of the district. In October of 2004 the Board of County Commissioners approved an interlocal service delivery agreement which set aside right-of-way for Oil Well Road, brought it to, I believe, 200 feet, as well as the water management. Page 60 of 89 October 3, 2019 It also requested the right-of-way for Immokalee Road along the frontage of the district, as well as the water management, as well as Randall Boulevard extension, and we'll get into that a little bit later, but the Randall Boulevard extension was to be transferred -- funded by transportation impact fee credits. So the Oil Well Road and Immokalee were donations, and Randall Boulevard extension was to be transportation impact fees. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Trinity, just before you go too far, I just want to make sure. So I'm trying to understand, your two dates there, are they correct? Instead of 90 days, it was almost a year apart. MS. SCOTT: Well, what happened was they came in for the resolution, and then it had to go through the legislature and get approved. So it was approved, and then once the act was approved by the legislature, then they came back -- they had 90 days after that approval to come back in front of the board. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Great, thank you. MS. SCOTT: So that agreement was never executed. The Board -- and you have -- within your staff report, I think I quoted large sections of the minutes of that. So that agreement was never executed. However, in 2009, Collier Enterprises and the Board of County Commissioners entered into agreement, and the Oil Well Road right-of-way was donated. So, once again, this is the Big Cypress Stewardship District area. That was the subject of the resolution in front of the Board. So our Business Point No. 1 is that the landowner must donate the land adjacent to Immokalee Road to provide that 200 -foot -wide corridor -- it's about 100 feet that they would have to donate -- as well as provide sufficient stormwater management for the roadway segment. That was the initial commitment with the district back in 2004. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And they've agreed to do that right now. They've already done it, or they're in the process of doing it, right? MS. SCOTT: This is part of the develop -- or the land contribution agreement, yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: When these issues -- when these points are resolved, kind of add that in and let us know. MS. SCOTT: Yep. And this is -- unless Mr. Yovanovich jumps up, this is not a point of contention. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Good. Thank you. MS. SCOTT: Business Point No. 2, and I'll tell you, of all these, I believe the only one is the additional right-of-way for Big Cypress Parkway, but we'll get to that. COMMISSIONER FRYER: The only one what? Oh, it's open. MS. SCOTT: Business Point No. 2 is that the landowner or designee, so presumably if someone else assumes the property, they shall permit, construct, and install at their sole cost and expense a traffic signal on Oil Well Road at their primary residential access point within one year of request from Collier County. We will request that. Our request will be contingent upon it meeting signal warrants. The next item is that the landowner, designee, or their successors will not seek a traffic signal along Big Cypress Parkway within half -- one-half mile of the intersection of Randall Boulevard or Oil Well Road. This is -- I think the Planning Commission has kind of been brought into some of these conversations with Heritage Bay recently, and so we just want to be explicit that we do not want traffic signals along -- an abundance of traffic signals along Big Cypress Parkway. We really want to use that to move people. And then I actually have a typo here on my third bullet point; that they shall pay, it's actually $170,000, which are proportionate share operational payments, improvements as identified in their Traffic Impact Statement, and Mr. Trebilcock went over those in his presentation. And all three of these the applicant has agreed to. So Big Cypress Parkway, this is Business Point No. 3. Before we get started, the applicant has agreed to provide the right-of-way adjacent to Rivergrass as well as the water management associated Page 61 of 89 October 3, 2019 with that roadway width. The point of contention is north of Rivergrass as well as south of Rivergrass, so I'll go through that. So as part of that Big Cypress Stewardship District, I talked to you about -- that the Board of County Commissioners had approved this interlocal services delivery agreement. And the Board approved that with what we called Randall Boulevard extension at the time. And when I get a little bit further, I'll show you where Randall Boulevard extension was. But it was apparent in reviewing the minutes of the meeting -- and I wasn't here at the time, but during the discussion, the disagreement really stemmed around Randall Boulevard, and that there was a study in place that really showed where that roadway should be. And I think it's probably a fair statement that, you know, Collier Enterprises were like, you know, you're just trying to set aside right-of-way, and we really don't know where it is or what it's going to connect to. So during that discussion, the representatives at that time, which was in 2004, said that the county should request it at the time of zoning action, which, I guess, the irony is is -- the contention is the zoning was done, I think, before this but -- and that they can't agree because no one had studied it, and that we should take the time and agree to work together to work on a solution that solves the interconnection and come up with a better solution that serves all the transportation public in Collier County. And they were willing to work with the county and talk with the county on that and many other corridors that the county puts into the Long Range Transportation Plan. And those comments, I believe, were all made by Mr. Conrecode, Tom Conrecode, who at the time was representing Collier Enterprises. So in 2016 Collier County began the Randall Boulevard/Oil Well Road corridor study. And this is the corridor area. It goes from Eighth Street on Randall Boulevard north to Oil Well Road all the way out Oil Well. And I'm going to try to use this thing now. We'll see how I do. Let's see. This right here -- oh, let me get a different color. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: You've got to hit clear to clear what you started, so... MS. SCOTT: Let's try this. Previously, the Randall Boulevard extension was -- it probably wasn't as straight as that. It was probably more of a loop kind of thing there. But, essentially previously, the original discussions were trying to secure right-of-way for Randall Boulevard, and it went and connected up Oil Well Road. And this was a lot of conversations when we were discussing the town was we were essentially bifurcating the town and all of that. So the county started this study. And I'm going to get into some of the particulars of that study as well. So we -- the county started the study, and then in 2018 the Metropolitan Planning Organization went through an amendment process to their 2040 Long Range Transportation Plan. And that plan -- the result of that was -- first of all, the reason that the plan was done was when we do long range transportation planning for the county's Long Range Transportation Plan, we look at a horizon year that's 20 years out. So our horizon year currently is 2040. And we utilize median BEBR numbers, Bureau of Economic Research numbers for our population. So we look at base year, which for the 2040 was 2010, and we look at the population that's here at that time. And then we add on what PUDs have been approved. And we build those out within a reasonable buildout schedule, and then we have population that's left. And then we go and we looked at the Growth Management Plan and see where do we anticipate future growth to be. And the future growth is anticipated to be in this area, largely. However, the development was very spread out in that area. And so it was not within the traffic analysis zones, which is what we get into; not to get into the weeds here. And so there was a desire to conglomerate that and put that where the development was going to occur, where we anticipated it would occur. So there was an amendment that was done. And so they redid the traffic model when they did that, and what was the result of that is that Big Cypress Parkway, which is shaded in the purple, was identified as a need, a new roadway; that was identified as a need within that plan. Page 62 of 89 October 3, 2019 Now, in the Long Range Transportation Plan, we have a needs plan, what we need to do versus what -- a cost -feasible plan, which is what we can afford to do. So the project was not deemed to be cost feasible, so we would not anticipate that it would be built within -- by 2040; however, we did identify it as a need. And when I say "we," that's the Metropolitan Planning Organization which the Board is made up of all five commissioners, two City Council people from Naples, one from Marco Island, and one from Everglades City. So in 2019, my staff took the Randall Boulevard/Oil Well Road corridor study to the Board of County Commissioners. That was approximately a $670,000 study that we undertook because we wanted to finalize that alignment. The BCC unanimously adopted the staffs recommendation, which is what we called Viable Alternative No. 2, which was not limited to one roadway improvement but a network that would distribute traffic in the area, and I'm going to go through so you guys understand what we did from a long range transportation planning perspective. So we were looking at the Randall Boulevard/Oil Well corridor, and at that time we were utilizing -- this is excerpts from the presentation that went in front of the Board. But the 2018 AUIR showed that Randall Boulevard was a Level of Service E and projected to be deficient by 2021. And in our study we looked at through 2045 if we did nothing in the area. We would have Level of Service F on Randall Boulevard, on a large section of Randall Boulevard out to Everglades, and D beyond, F along Oil Well Road, and then F at the intersection at Immokalee Road. And so, certainly, no build wasn't an option for us. So we came up with some viable alternatives, and Viable Alternative 1 was an S connector. This provided a new roadway segment. Just west of Everglades Boulevard around the Valencia Golf and Country Club, and six -lane improvements on Randall Boulevard, and four -- to Everglades Boulevard, and four -lane beyond, as well as our six-laning of Oil Well Road. And when we ran the model for that, it worked. We had Level of Service C through 2045 based on our growth projections; however, we had a huge bottleneck at Immokalee Road and Wilson Boulevard. So we looked at a second viable alternative, which was just to widen Everglades Boulevard to four lanes. And while that worked for Randall Boulevard, it didn't work for Oil Well Road. It did not pull the traffic off of Oil Well Road. And so the section of Oil Well Road that's constrained to four lanes through 2045 was expected to operate at a Level of Service F, and we still had the bottleneck at Immokalee and Wilson. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Isn't this the one, though, you said the Board adopted? MS. SCOTT: No. They actually adopted what's called Viable Alternative 2 Plus. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Oh. I should have known. Okay. MS. SCOTT: So when we go through and we do a transportation study, it's not just about how well we move traffic. It's also about, you know, are we enhancing mobility, improving safety, our right-of-way impacts, our environmental impacts, our impacts to the neighborhoods, things of that nature. So we looked at what else could we come up with that would serve the population in the area and also accommodate the growth. So we came up with the Viable Alternative 2 Plus which includes the six-laning of Randall Boulevard out to Everglades Boulevard, four-laning of Everglades Boulevard, and also the six-laning of Oil Well Road, and four-laning of Randall Boulevard beyond Everglades. But it also includes Everglades Boulevard, extending Vanderbilt Beach Road extension, as well as the Big Cypress Parkway. One of the reasons that we made this recommendation is that on much of the roads out in the Estates, the major roads out in the Estates which is with the exception of Oil Well Road, these roadways are single-family homes. And in sections of Randall Boulevard, we were dealing with 2-, 300 driveway connections. So to have 2- or 300 driveway connections along a six -lane facility is quite difficult and Page 63 of 89 October 3, 2019 certainly reduces our capacity. And so looking at a new corridor, we can have more -- we can move more traffic without having the friction from those driveway connections. So the county completed its study. We did what we said we were going to do. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And I need a break point for you so the court reporter can have some time. It's been over an hour and a half, and usually we give her a break every hour and a half. So whenever you get there, let me know. MS. SCOTT: We can stop now and pick back up. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Let's come back at 2:45 and resume. It's about 11 minutes from now. Thank you. (A brief recess was had from 2:34 p.m. to 2:45 p.m., and Commissioner Dearborn and Tom Eastman are absent for the remainder of the meeting.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Everybody, if you will please take your seats. We're back from break, and we'll resume the meeting. And we left off interrupting Trinity's presentation where we'll now go back into further -- Trinity, when you get a break for this piece, we'll do our questions. But get to that point and let us know when it's there. MS. SCOTT: Yep. This is all about the Big Cypress Parkway right-of-way. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Great. Thank you. MS. SCOTT: So Policy 3.3 of the Transportation Element says the county shall acquire a sufficient amount of right-of-way to facilitate arterial and collector roads as appropriate to meet the needs of the Long Range Transportation Plan or other adopted transportation studies, plan, or programs. Exceptions to the right-of-way standard may be considered when it can be demonstrated through a traffic capacity analysis that the maximum number of lanes at buildout will be less. So county staff is requesting the following rights-of-way consistent with Policy 3.3 of the Transportation Element of the GMP and the prior commitments made by Collier Enterprises during the approval of the Big Cypress Stewardship District of working with the county on roadways that are identified within the Long Range Transportation Plan. And I've broken it up into Segment 1, Segment 2, and Segment 3. The landowner would receive impact fee credits for the value of the property. The value of the land would be determined by two accredited appraisers who are mutually agreed upon by the parties. The purchase price shall be based on the market value of the land as set aside just prior to the SRA action and shall be equal to the average of the two appraisals. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Can you tell us where each one of these segments is? MS. SCOTT: Yes. I'm going to go through a map. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Thank you. MS. SCOTT: So Segment 1 is north of Oil Well Road, and north is up. Just north -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: How did you know to do that? Bob didn't. MR. MULHERE: I didn't prepare that. MS. SCOTT: This is just north of where Rivergrass stops right now. So this would go further north up and connect to Immokalee Road. The segment's approximately 3.6 miles. Segment 2 is along the property boundary of Rivergrass. It's delineated in green there. And Segment 3 is south of -- roughly Randall Boulevard south to the southern boundary of the stewardship district. It's approximately 11 miles. Once again, this was the original Big Cypress Stewardship District, one of the exhibits that was proposed. And I know it shows a town. That's not on the table now. But I show this because in the Long Range Transportation Plan, there is a discussion of a needed interchange along I-75 somewhere in the vicinity of Everglades Boulevard. And I say that because there's a process that has to be gone through in order to be able to determine where an interchange would go if it would go -- if it's needed, et cetera. COMMISSIONER FRYER: How many miles east of Exit 101 is that, or approximately, Page 64 of 89 October 3, 2019 Everglades? MS. SCOTT: I would have to measure it. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Like, 10 miles. MS. SCOTT: Let me think. Wilson's five and Everglades is 10 -- COMMISSIONER FRYER: Okay. MS. SCOTT: -- I think is typically those -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: This would be out past DeSoto, thought, right? Well, theoretically. MS. SCOTT: Potentially, yes. So if -- there's a whole federal process that we would go through on where an interchange could -- would be, could be in the future. But in the past there was some discussion that potentially this would be a connection in the future. And, like I said, that would still have to all go through a very public process to go through. My right-of-way acreages right now are approximates because we were -- and I should say, in fairness to the applicant, we were going back and forth with design standards. The Florida Department of Transportation has recently come out with new Florida Green Book design standards, and we wanted to make sure that the roadway could comply with all of them. And they were more than accommodating to work with us through that process, and it was a lot of back and forth over, you know, a half -acre here and, you know, a couple inches, a couple feet there. So they worked with us. So these right-of-way acreages are approximate, and we'll tighten that up before we fmalize. So grand total is over 400 acres for the Big Cypress Parkway right-of-way. And just to put that in context, the stewardship district's about 22,000 acres. So while it does seem like a lot, it's a little less than 2 percent of their total acreages. So I want to go back to the conversation that the Board of County Commissioners had. So during that discussion of the interlocal services delivery agreement, it was stated that the county should study the area. We did that. We went before the Board of County Commissioners with a unanimous approval of staff s recommendation. They couldn't agree because no one had studied it. We did. That we needed to take the time and agree to work on a -- together work on a solution that solves the interconnection and come up with a better solution that serves all the transportation public. We worked closely with the applicant throughout this process, through our process with the roadway study. We knew that they didn't like us taking Randall Boulevard and, essentially, bifurcating that development even further, and it certainly didn't -- wasn't the most capacity -adding project that we could do. And so we worked together to try to come up with a design that was least impactful to them, certainly in acreage, I believe, I understand that, but we really didn't want to have to have another arterial roadway through the middle of their town. And also they said that they were willing to work with the county and talk with the county on that and many other corridors that the county puts into the long-range plan. And so the roadway is in the long-range plan, is in the long-range plan, I believe, down the Golden Gate Boulevard. We are asking for it -- for the remainder. The commitment was made to work with us back in 2004, and our concern is is that property changes hands -- right now we're under common ownership. Having that right-of-way set aside is beneficial to us so we can bring roadway projects online as we need to. So that's the end of that business point. As I said, the applicant has agreed with everything including the value for Segment 2, but they have not agreed on Segment 1 and Segment 3. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. So let's get our questions past this business point and get on to the next one. Anybody have any questions? Ned? COMMISSIONER FRYER: From a review of the materials I found on at this City Scape (sic) about how this project was evolving before it was really ready for prime time, I noticed some rather explicit language to the effect that the county was asking that the full right-of-way be contributed, be donated by Collier Enterprises, and now we've come to a point where they're going to get credits for it, Page 65 of 89 October 3, 2019 impact fee credits. Could you describe for me the discussions that took place and why that concession was made? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Before you do, where'd you pull this from? You said City Scape or something like that? COMMISSIONERFRYER: Yeah. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: What's that? COMMISSIONER FRYER: Do I have the wrong name? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Oh, CityView. COMMISSIONER FRYER: CityView. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Oh, I thought it was some blog or something. I was trying to figure out where you pulled the information from. COMMISSIONER FRYER: My bad. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: No, no problem. I got it. MS. SCOTT: When we go through any of these developer agreements, it's a negotiation. MR. KLATZKOW: That's from me, okay. I don't believe in exactions. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Okay. That's A. Say no more. MR. KLATZKOW: It's as simple as that. Staff starts out with the exaction. Then I say you can't do that, and we wind up in a good place. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Fair enough. Got it. Thank you. My next question has to do with section -- Segment, rather, 121.1, which is Oil Well from DeSoto to Oil Well grade. And I've got the 2019 AUIR. Thank you for sending it to me. And I realize it hasn't been approved yet. But I think the chances are slim to none that the Board of County Commissioners is going to change the numbers in these cells. So I find it instructive to see that the traffic on that segment has gotten worse since 2018 and that the remaining capacity is 558 peak p.m. trips. Does that sound right to you? MS. SCOTT: I'll take your word for it. I don't have it in front of me. I do have it at my space. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Okay. And I'm going to ask Norm to give his side of this, of course, when he stands up. But in the meantime, from the material that Norm prepared -- and I'm sure you've seen the -- that shows the distribution of the traffic coming off of the development. And in this Segment 121.1, eastbound traffic is calculated, at peak p.m., 82 plus 744, so it's 800 and something. Westbound is 85 plus 445. And so getting back to the capacity of 558, could you comment upon how this project is going to have an impact upon that segment? MS. SCOTT: I can. Because if you would go to Attachment D, I believe, within the AUK we have that section of Oil Well Road as a committed project. We have a developer agreement with Ave Maria that once we receive, I believe it's $20 million of impact fees from their development and within a mile around, that we would proceed forward with Oil Well Road. That does not negate the fact that the county is still pursuing other outside grants to be able to bring that project in sooner. But that is deemed a committed project for the widening based on the developer agreement with the adjacent property. So that additional capacity is not figured into the AUIR. We don't do that until we get closer to the actual construction. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Okay. But the widening of Oil Well is, shall we say, a done deal? MS. SCOTT: Yes. COMMISSIONER FRYER: It is. Fully funded? MS. SCOTT: No. It is funded based on a developer agreement. So once we get to within that $20 million, we have to build that road, or sooner if the county elects to do so sooner. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Okay. But is there a time frame related to that, or is it once we get Page 66 of 89 October 3, 2019 to that point? Is that the only way of measuring the time frame? MS. SCOTT: At this time it's once we get to that point or sooner if the county chooses to move forward sooner. The project is fully designed and fully permitted with this segment as well as we're working with Hyde Park to secure the last portion of the right-of-way. I'm sorry. This project we already have the right-of-way. Hyde Park we're working with them to secure the last section of right-of-way necessary for the roadway. So we have a designed, permitted, and we'll soon have all of the right-of-way in hand. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Okay. So when I just say sort of emotionally, if you will, that I get worried about approving projects based upon assumptions, future plans that may or may not occur, you have a sufficiently high level of confidence that Oil Well will be able to manage -- that segment of Oil Well will be able to manage the increased traffic coming from this project? MS. SCOTT: I do, because not only do we have a commitment that we have to abide by with regard to the Ave Maria developer agreement, but also by approving this development, those -- all of those units and all of that commercial's not going to come on the next day. It's going to take time to build up. I believe that their absorption rate was 250 units per year. And then we also have stopgap within the PUD in the developer commitment language that they can have, I believe it's 1,200 units before they have to have some level of commercial before they can proceed further so we can start seeing that internal capture. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Okay. MR. KLATZKOW: And keep in mind, this whole area's already zoned. I mean, the county knows what was going out there. We've known what's going out there for, gosh, it's going on 15, 20 years. So if the county doesn't get the road system, that's on us. It's not on the developer. They've got the right to develop it, and it's going to get developed. And, you know, Trinity will work hard. Ultimately, the Board of County Commissioners will have to fund it. And we'll move on. But that's why I'm saying you need to get the right-of-way now. COMMISSIONER FRYER: I'm curious, Jeff. The -- I've seen -- maybe for Trinity. I've seen references to widening to four lane and widening to six lane. Which -- MS. SCOTT: With regard to Oil Well Road? Our plans show it being widened to six. Our permit is for six lanes. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Okay. MS. SCOTT: With that being said, we could widen to four lanes if that's all that was necessary at that time when we go to start the construction. But it is designed and permitted to six lanes. MR. KLATZKOW: And you've got the right-of-way footprint for the six lanes? MS. SCOTT: Yes. All of the right-of-way that we've set aside with this developer as well as what we're working with Hyde Park is all to accommodate the six -lane roadway. MR. KLATZKOW: And keep in mind when we talk about right-of-way, it's more than just roads. It's also to get the pipes in, you know, and -- so you need sufficient right-of-way so that you're not putting mains underneath asphalt, which works for a good 20, 30 years, but eventually, you know, you've got to replace them, and it's not good for the road. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Got it. That's all I have, Chairman. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Karl, I saw you pull your mic. Did you have something you wanted to say? (No response.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Anybody else? (No response.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. I have one question. And we have the planning aspect of the Rural Lands Stewardship Area as well as the Rural Fringe Mixed Use District, and the expansions in Orangetree and everywhere else. And so do you, because you're Transportation Planning. So that means Page 67 of 89 October 3, 2019 you're supposed to look beyond the moment. And I want to know if you've considered the following changes in that area and how they fit with the plans you just told us about. Ave Maria was approved for 11,000 units. They don't have nearly that amount yet out there; Rivergrass is asking for 2,500; Longwater is asking for 2,600. These are all in process; Belhnar is asking for 2,750; Hyde Park is asking for 1,800; Hogan Island came in for a pre -app for 2,300, but they haven't submitted anything yet, and that was about a year ago; and Immokalee Rural Village is asking for 4,000 now, but I heard that they're going to be changing that and be looking at a different density. That totals 26,950 units. And if you take the most recent census population, persons per household, they specifically -- nationally it's 2.63, but in Collier County it's 2.55. That's 68,723 individuals in just those towns and villages that I just mentioned. How is your road system geared to handle all of that? Because it's all going to happen, if you look at the absorption rates they're talking about, and these others hit even close to those absorption rates, they're going to be well before some horizon year. They're going to be within 10 or 12 years. So how are you prepared to address that in a bigger global picture for those particular issues? And David's got something he's running up to say, so... MR. WEEKS: Just -- David Weeks, again, for the record. Just -- it sounds like you're assuming 100 percent occupancy in the math that you just mentioned. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I'm assuming that we're going to have 26,950 units if all the build -outs build out to what they're asking for, and if you multiply the persons per household the census has provided you're looking at a substantial number of bodies. Some of those are -- or a certain percentage are going to be driving cars. And I just want to know from Trinity's department how they see the road system fitting those percentages as we go forward. MR. WEEKS: All right. I was just -- my comment really is we would need to back off the numbers some, because using census data, we have almost a -- one-third of our dwelling units are classified as vacant, and the majority of those of which are seasonally occupied. So the permanent population, the occupancy rate is about 67 percent, about two-thirds. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And that's including the rural area where there's -- we don't have the amenities of the beach and things like that? MR. WEEKS: That's just the countywide. The countywide occupancy rate, countywide persons per household figures. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, then, why would the census have a different number if we don't have -- if we don't have such a -- if we don't occupy the units? MR. WEEKS: The definition of a household is an occupied dwelling unit. And so if they build 2,500 dwelling units, using the countywide average, only about two-thirds of those are going to be permanently occupied. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: So we've got a bunch of empty inventory in Collier County? MR. WEEKS: The majority of that so-called vacant is seasonally occupied. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Don't those people drive cars when they come here? Like especially out east if you're driving to the beach and if you're driving to a -- you need a commercial center, you're not going to find it out east. So we don't -- we don't count these people because they're only here four months of the year instead of more? MR. WEEKS: I'll let Trinity address that specifically, but I know that there's a -- we don't design for that worst-case scenario. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I'm not saying design for it, but we've got to know it's going to be there, which, if you really want to get into the issue, the CIGM has an interesting statistic. They have 291,000 households by the year 2040 but only 534,000 people. That's 1.8 PPH. Why would we use that when we know the census says 2.55? MR. WEEKS: I don't know factually. My guess would be because when we look at different Page 68 of 89 October 3, 2019 parts of the county, the occupancy rates and the persons per household rates can be drastically different. So there may be evidence that shows that the more rural areas have a lower occupancy rate and/or person per household. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: But see, now that kind of goes contrary to what the rural area services, which is mostly working families, because that's where your least -- most affordability is, where in the urban area you can have a $6 million high-rise that a guy goes down -- family goes down and visits once a month -- one month a year. So I would argue just the opposite, that your working families are going to be more stationary because they can't afford to have two homes. So I'm not sure how the statistics are working in your department, but I don't see a practical application the way you've just described it, but -- MR. WEEKS: That's why I said "maybe." I don't know factually. And I would agree with you that -- again, just going with the census data, the areas east of 951 -- you know, the coastal areas have the lowest occupancy rates as a rule and the lowest persons per household. Conversely, the more rural areas, the Immokalee Community, Golden Gate Estates, those areas do tend to have a much higher occupancy rate and persons per household. The unknown, I think, is what's going to happen in the villages and towns within the -- within these SRAs and, likewise, in the Rural Fringe Mixed Use District. Are those developments going to be more comparable to the coastal area, to the rural area, or somewhere in between? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, David, I would first guess that the coastal area's going to be a higher price. People with a lot more money can afford two homes. A lot of the working people aren't going to. Second of all, if you're in the rural area, you're more likely to have to get in your car to drive somewhere to get services, to get amenities, to get at whatever you want. And for those two reasons alone, we ought to consider what the persons per household application is for volume on the traffic on the road system. And if there's a percentage reduction, it certainly is probably not going to be the same as the urban area, and that's kind of where I'm leading. That's where I want Trinity to respond. How is her department looking at this? COMMISSIONER FRYER: Chairman, before she does, would you repeat what -- the persons per household numbers that you mentioned. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, if you go to the census site for Collier County, it says the 2017 was 2.55, nationally it was 2.63. BEBR the latest I've seen on BEBR was 2015. They're at 2.47. So you can -- but that's -- you know, the most recent is the census. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Thank you. MS. SCOTT: So what I can tell you within the traffic model for the Long Range Transportation -- the 2040 Long Range Transportation Plan, Ave Maria is considered. I will have to go back and dig into the actual traffic analysis zones to see about Hogan Island and Immokalee Rural Village. But I do know that based on the recent amendment, the town was included. So we're looking at --I think the town was 10,000 units and a couple million square feet of commercial. So that was in there as far as the latest -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: The town being. MS. SCOTT: The Town of Rural Lands West. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: The former town. I thought you're saying Ave Maria, because it's 11,000 units. MS. SCOTT: No, no. The former town. So that was how that was modeled. So those are within, I believe, four traffic analysis zones which are all relatively in that area. So I'm confident that the three villages per -- the one before us today and the two additional are contemplated with probably a little bit larger scale. But I'd have to go back and look at Hogan Island and the Immokalee Road Rural Village to see if that's in there or not. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And would it be reasonable to think that most of these new rural areas, including probably a chunk of Orangetree, would start using the Big Cypress Parkway as an access way to Page 69 of 89 October 3, 2019 go south, especially if you're out past that, if you're in the village areas or Ave Maria? And if you can only go south to the southernmost point of the SRA and we weren't sure we would have it beyond there, the only way out, then, is to startjamming up Golden Gate Estates cast/west. MS. SCOTT: That's why we have Big Cypress Parkway on the map. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Oh, yeah. And that's more reason why that -- and I remember from the time Big Cypress was initiated as a stewardship district and we got into the first phase of that. The applicant actually produced a map showing the interconnection they were proposing to get us down to 1-75 out in that direction. And I still think that's a direction we ought to be headed. In fact, I believe that the basis of those -- of the 90 -day argument to have this developer's agreement in place after the award of the stewardship district, approval of that by our board, was one of the conditions; was it not? MS. SCOTT: To have the interlocal services delivery agreement in place, yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Addressing these issues? MS. SCOTT: Yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: But it never happened. MS. SCOTT: It did not. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MR. YOVANOVICH: Is it the appropriate time? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Sure, Rich. You want to jump in, go right ahead. MR. YOVANOVICH: Yeah. I think we have to put it in context. As far as I can remember, subject to me being proven wrong, in 2004 there was no Big Cypress Parkway being contemplated. What was being discussed at that time was Immokalee Road and Oil Well Road. That's what the agreement was to address, and then there was a discussion about Randall and that Randall was not that -- that alignment was not agreed to. It was agreed to be studied and -- but there was no discussion about a connector road from Immokalee Road all the way down to I-75. That was not a precondition or a consideration for the Big Cypress Stewardship District. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Do you remember the document that was produced by the -- MR. KLATZKOW: I was part of that way back then. Big Cypress was not contemplated. We were -- the discussions were Oil Well Road and Immokalee Road. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Then at the same time, though, do you remember the document that was produced by the Big Cypress applicant at the time showing the connection to 1-75 that was along their route system all the way down? MR. KLATZKOW: There were a lot of documents shown, yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I thought you had it. That's not it. MS. SCOTT: Yeah, that's -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: No, that's not it. You don't have it on anything you've showed us yet if that's what you're looking at. MS. SCOTT: Yeah. I didn't think that -- I had the one that showed the potential interchange with the roadways on there. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I'll see if I can find -- our -- I know it was somewhere in the old files over at Development Services. I can dig it up, and I can bring it to the next meeting. I just want it for conversation's sake to show why we need this road segment, and it's something that we've discussed for years. Maybe it wasn't part of the formation of the stewardship district, but it sure came shortly thereafter in the review of the original Big Cypress program. So I'll find the data on it. We'll take a look at it. I'll bring it with me -- I'll try to find it by next time. It's just -- back then we did paper, and there's these big volumes. MR. KLATZKOW: Yeah. That couldn't have been a condition because it would have -- it requires FDOT. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: No, it was something -- we hadn't gone that far yet. Page 70 of 89 October 3, 2019 (Simultaneous crosstalk.) MR. KLATZKOW: No, no. It was a possibility, yes. We've been thinking about another access point on I-75 forever in this county. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Anyway, it's something that I think needs to be carefully considered, because that was an important access way to I-75. Now, maybe some kind of commitment needs to be put on paper to make sure we have it. Maybe the actual transfer of it can occur in the future, however it works out. But I think that's something the applicant should really consider making viable through this process here, so that's my comment on that. Trinity, you want to go on with -- I don't have any other questions on this segment. I'll have more later on. MS. SCOTT: Two other items. So Business Point No. 4 is that the landowner will design, permit, and construct the water management system to accept the runoff from Segment No. 2. MR. YOVANOVICH: Mr. Strain, when do we get to talk about -- sorry. When do you want us to give our input on the timing of the Big Cypress? Do you want to wait until -- (Simultaneous crosstalk.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I'd rather this thing -- we're all working together to get the solutions as they rise up. I'd rather not wait till the end and try to figure it out. MR. YOVANOVICH: Well, I'm not sure I'm going to propose a solution, but I am going to propose our position -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MR. YOVANOVICH: -- on Big Cypress Parkway. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: That's great. MR. YOVANOVICH: And I'm going to look to Jake on that. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Chairman? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Yes, sir. COMMISSIONER FRYER: I found a reference. I thought I'd seen the same thing that you had, and I have a note here that the October 26th, 2004, BCC meeting, I think it was Agenda Item 10C, the Board entertained the approval of the interlocal service delivery agreement with the Big Cypress Stewardship District. In the specific item, county staff pursued a right-of-way reservation for a bypass road, is what it was called, between Oil Well Road and Randall. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Oh, no. That's not it. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Is that what -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I doubt if that would be it. I'd have to go -- I'm going to go -- if I can find those books, I'll go through the county record and see what I can find. I'll bring it to everybody for the next meeting just to talk about. Go ahead. Please identify yourself for the record. MR. CREMER: If. Sure. Good afternoon. My name is Jake Cremer with the law firm Steams, Weaver, Miller. I'm representing -- co -counseling this case with the applicant. I'm working on just --really just the narrow issue of the request to dedicate Big Cypress outside of the adjacency. So I believe that was Segment 1 to the north, Segment 3 to the south. And I think as you'll hear from some of my comments, and you've heard earlier, these are -- this is really -- this is a timing issue for the applicant. This is not the applicant saying we're not willing to work with the county over time. It's an issue of we're saying now is not the time legally to dedicate all of Big Cypress Parkway. Let me give you a little bit about my background. I'm a land -use and property -rights attorney based in Tampa. I work on issues all across the state working with other land -use attorneys. I have worked on property -rights cases in just about every level you can think of all the way up to the U.S. Supreme Court. I've been involved in cases there. Page 71 of 89 October 3, 2019 The request for 17 -- roughly 17.1 miles of right-of-way, when we're only adjacent to approximately two -and -a -half miles of Big Cypress, I would submit is not only unreasonable, it's not legal. It's illegal. And I don't use that word lightly. I don't use it as a scare tactic. That's simply what the request is. MR. KLATZKOW: Yeah, and that's fine. And I'd be glad to litigate that with you over the next five years if it's the route you guys want to go, okay. At the end of the day, the Board of County Commissioners was promised 15 years ago that the Big Cypress District would do all this stuff, all of it without any taxpayer money. That hasn't happened, all right. We're here now to try to do some transportation planning -- long-range transportation planning which, at the end of the day, benefits your client more than anybody else here, and you're going to come in here and threaten us, in essence, with litigation? That's fine, okay. My position is we can ask for it, and we can condition it. And if you want to say no, you can't, that's fine. I'm happy to spend the next five years with you in court over this. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And just so you know, I think that we're about October or so of 2007 is when I believe the original discussion on the connection down to the interchange at I-75 occurred. I can't remember the extent of the commitment other than it was a visual graphic that this is something they were going to do to help with their project's impacts. I'll go back, and I'll try to research that by the next meeting if I get time. But it would be something to consider. And all I'm asking is your applicant to consider how far they're willing to go to make some kind of real strong commitment as to what we can do about this right-of-way. We've got to know if we can count on it or not. If we can't count on it, it's sure going to change the ability for us to consider what we're asking -- being done here today. And that's where I'm trying to go with this. So if you're going to not do that, then it's going to change the road pattern dramatically. And I know you didn't say you wouldn't, but we don't have anything securing saying that you're going to. Does that help your discussion at all? And I'm sorry to interrupt you, so... MR. CREMER: That does. I mean, I think it may become clearer if I could just have a few minutes to present. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Go right ahead. MR. CREMER: And, you know, to my esteemed colleague, I'm not here to threaten. I'm just here to state what the law is and to explain that the request that's on the table now is not legal. COMMISSIONER FRYER: You're here to advocate. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: What request do you see on the table? I'm just asking what you're going to do about the extension to Big Cypress down to 1-75. And I don't have any answer. And I'm just saying, so what is it -- that's not a legitimate question for understanding how this project will impact our road system if we don't have that access to I-75? MR. CREMER: It is not a legitimate request to make of the applicant at this time because of the limited nature of the application you're reviewing. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, then how do we evaluate this application's exit onto our system? You're assuming, then, we have to accept it for the traffic its going to put on the local roads or the few east/west roads that it's going to connect to; is that what you're saying? MR. CREMER: I'd like to get our traffic consultant to explain that point. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Well, do you want to finish your point before he does, or do you want him to go first? MR. CREMER: I'm just going to have him address your question now. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Thank you. MR. TREBILCOCK: So the question was whether or not we rely on a connection to I-75 for this project. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: No, not whether you rely on it. I just was worried about the amount of traffic that would end up going through not only the buildout of your project, but the others that would Page 72 of 89 October 3, 2019 connect to pieces of Big Cypress Parkway that wouldn't be completed to I-75. Because without any knowledge that it might be completed or there's a reality of it, then the fact that we're going to have all that traffic having to go cast/west to get to 951 or Wilson or whatever is something that we need to consider in the planning stage. MR. TREBILCOCK: Right. So if we look at -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I mean, Norm, there's a huge amount of density being added out there. Not theirs. Just a little bit of everybody. So somewhere those people are going to have to find a way to get to where they want to go. And I want to know where the ultimate buildout of that -- where they want to go is going to be. MR. TREBILCOCK: Sure. And -- but, certainly, I think within the perspective of what we're looking at, I think in the alternatives -- in the 2 Plus alternative that was -- is being sought now that the Board had approved, what they looked at is really looking at the amount of development that were beyond what we're proposing with the project here. And so this -- in the whole scheme of things, we're really helping to implement that key part, the portion from Oil Well to Randall Boulevard which is a key element. MR. KLATZKOW: Do we not have other developments in the pipeline here? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Pardon me? MR. KLATZKOW: Do we not have other developments in the pipeline here? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I just read them off. MR. KLATZKOW: I mean, wouldn't we be better off if we just, I don't know, maybe just did them all at once? I mean, if we're going to have this argument, we're going to do piecemeal one at a time. I mean, we could hear them all at once. I mean, if the developer -- this was supposed to be a unified development once upon a time. Now it's been balkanized into multiple developments. That's fine. We could hear them all at the same time and then get the road situation done that way. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: What I'm trying to get to is if Norm has a way to show us that the full amount of the density out there that might use those east/west roads, he's going to function acceptable without connecting south, and all these cast/west people are going to be able to pick up their further direction by going down to 951 to get to I-75 or wherever, that's fine. I just want to know that's how -- that it's been looked at. That it's a planning tool. MR. YOVANOVICH: You know, I'm not a transportation engineer. Sometimes I play one on TV. You have a Long Range Transportation Plan that does exactly what you just said, and it talks about a needs plan and it talks about a financially feasible plan. And Trinity herself even says that Big Cypress Parkway ends at Golden Gate Boulevard on the plan. It doesn't go any further south than that. You have a plan in place that you're trying to implement. And what we're saying is, we've done every analysis required under your law, which is the TIS we've done, and we've showed no negative impact to the roadway system for our project. We are not required to and we're not going to wait until the other villages come in and get considered at the same time. We have a petition before you, which is Rivergrass Village. We have met the legal standard under your Transportation Impact Statement rules and procedures to be considered. You haven't heard a single person say that Norm's analysis is incorrect. In fact, you have a landowner contribution agreement in front of you that says these are the impacts that we want to address and how we're going to deal with these transportation issues. The only issue we're disagreeing with is when Big Cypress Parkway gets conveyed to the county, not if. If the other villages are approved, the other two that are south, it makes sense to incrementally add to Big Cypress Parkway. Why would you put the burden of the full Big Cypress Parkway on Rivergrass Village that doesn't need it for its transportation impacts? That's the answer short and simple. You've done the study, you've analyzed it, and your staff has agreed we don't negatively impact the roads. Page 73 of 89 October 3, 2019 CHAIRMAN STRAIN: You know, Richard, I've known you for a long time, and I know when you get a little hot under the collar. This is not an issue that you need to. I was simply trying to -- you're going way beyond what I was trying to get to. I'm trying to find out is: How have we looked at this transportation system, then, if we do not get the roadway to the south on a comprehensive long-range planning process? Now, you referenced the MPO, and I believe the MPO shows this connection going down to the south. MR. YOVANOVICH: To Golden Gate Parkway. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: You're going to -- obviously, from what you just said, I think you said you're going to use it to negotiate the other two villages. MR. YOVANOVICH: No. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: If the other two villages get approved, then you might provide it. MR. YOVANOVICH: That's when -- that's when it is appropriate to address those issues, and that's when the traffic impact to the potential Big Cypress Parkway occurs. It doesn't occur now at Rivergrass. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: No. But, Richard, I think this Planning Commission's direction needs to know what we can count on for the long-term play out there. And I haven't heard anything that says we can count on the extension of Big Cypress Parkway unless we -- you already get, like, a predetermined approval for the other two projects. And so far that's not where I'm heading. I just want to understand how those 26,950 units are going to function if we don't get Big Cypress Parkway to the south. That's what I'm trying to fmd out. MR. YOVANOVICH: But, Mr. Strain, you're going to get Big Cypress Parkway to the south. You're going to get the segment from Oil Well Road to the northern portion of Rivergrass and to the southern portion of Rivergrass -- no, the southern portion of Rivergrass right now during this phase. We're going to work out the price through appraisals. If we don't -- if we decide not to go forward with any other village, it's already in your plan. You come to the property owner and say, let's negotiate a price, or you condemn it. Those are your options, like every other roadway segment in Collier County. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: When you say we negotiate a price, what piece are you talking about? The one -- the remaining piece south to the I-75 or as close to I-75 as -- MR. YOVANOVICH: I-75, its not on your plan. I'm not in a position to discuss today anything south. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: It's on the MPO plan. You just referenced that. MR. YOVANOVICH: It does not. It goes to Golden Gate Boulevard. That's where it stops, correct? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: On the long-range MPO plan? MR. YOVANOVICH: Yep. It stops at Golden Gate Boulevard. So any discussion south of that -- I mean, I don't mean to interrupt, Jake -- is totally inappropriate. It's not on any plan. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, no. From a planning perspective it's not. You may not agree legally it's from -- it's an exaction thing. I wasn't suggesting to exact. I wanted to know -- understand how we could get it. MR. YOVANOVICH: You can't get it until you show a plan that you actually need it, and you haven't gotten that far yet to where you -- you don't even know -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: No, because her -- you interrupted her presentation. MR. YOVANOVICH: No. She's already told you she stops at Golden Gate Boulevard. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I hadn't finished asking her questions, Rich. Well, who wants to come up next? You've got four of you standing there, so -- I'm just trying to get to an answer about the parkway. I think you're telling me there's nothing on the table about the parkway other than what shows on this presentation; is that right? MR. YOVANOVICH: Correct. Page 74 of 89 October 3, 2019 CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Then we don't need to have a discussion on it at this point unless you want to put more on record. You're more than welcome to. I thought there was something more succinct we could get out of it that would help the situation, but if it's just going to stay like it is, we'll weigh it like it is. MR. YOVANOVICH: Can we -- two things, Jake. I would like to get Jake's written legal opinion on the record. We'll provide it. It's already been provided to the County Attorney's Office. It's been provided to staff. We'll provide it to you. I also want to get on the record that my client doesn't own the area for right-of-way north of Rivergrass. They don't own the property. So to ask them to give you property -- give you right-of-way over land they don't own is an impossibility and not a proper request. So I just want that on the record. Anything else, Jake, that you want to get on the record? MR. CREMER: Jake Creme, again, for the record. No. You'll see in my letter what I would have presented, and I think patience is probably waning. So I just --I would encourage you to read that, and, you know, we have not received any formal response to my letter, so thank you. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And my patience isn't waning. I was just surprised at the reaction to an explanation I was looking for. But be that as it may, we'll just move on. Thank you. MR. CREMER: Thank you. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Trinity, I would like you to at some point tell us what the Transportation Department would need for some kind of insurance that there is some hope to extend Big Cypress to whatever directions you need it in. And if there is not, then we need to know that, too. MS. SCOTT: Okay. Will do. For Business Point No. 4, all of which the applicant has agreed to, the landowner will design, permit, and construct water management system to accept runoff from Segment No. 2. They would receive impact fee credits for the value of the property, which we had discussed. They'll provide drainage and maintenance easements for the water management system to allow us to get in and maintain if necessary. The landowner and successors will be responsible for the perpetual maintenance of the shared water management system, and the landowner or its successors shall perform an inspection every five years after the roadway is constructed to assess the condition of the stormwater system. Just allows us to know that the ongoing maintenance is continuing and that the system's functioning properly. Any questions on that? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: These are all in agreement, right? MS. SCOTT: Yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Anybody have any questions? (No response.) MS. SCOTT: And Business Point No. 5 is the landowner and its successor and assigns will provide a separate written notice to tenants and buyers, both residential and commercial, of the planned roadway improvements with a statement that the county will not construct any sound wall or other barrier of any kind to reduce the impact of noise, et cetera. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And that's also in agreement? MS. SCOTT: Yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. So where are we now? MS. SCOTT: That concludes my presentation. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. So let's go to transportation questions that we may want to ask of Trinity and, of course, the applicant's, I assume, ready to answer questions to those that apply to him. Does anybody have any other transportation questions? COMMISSIONER FRY: With your permission, I do have a couple. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: I just said that. COMMISSIONER FRY: Trinity, there was an earlier exhibit that showed interconnections Page 75 of 89 October 3, 2019 mostly within the Rivergrass development. There was -- there were several to the east to Big Cypress Parkway. There were a couple off of Oil Well Road to the north and south, but the far right one, the farthest east one was only to the north, and I wondered what the county's position was. And I don't know if that exhibit is readily available. There have been quite a few. Whereas most of the interconnects span Oil Well or Big Cypress, this one does not. It only interconnects to the north, and I just wondered, is it an issue of contention to the county that it does not cross Oil Well Road and allow an interconnection north and south. The far -- yes, the far -- MS. SCOTT: No, that is not a point of contention for the county. The county is fine with that. That would be another full median opening out on Oil Well Road, which we would not be in favor of. So that's why you're not seeing that traverse both sides, because when this is ultimately a six -lane facility, which it's planned for in the future, that would mean another traffic signal, so we would not be in favor of that going north and south. And the applicant has worked very closely with us on those access management provisions. COMMISSIONER FRY: Gotcha. Thank you. We've talked about how, between the GMP and the LDC, we either have a recommendation or requirement for interconnectivity. And you've mentioned -- we've mentioned in general it would be nice to interconnect, or it would be strategic to interconnect to the north, to the south, to the east, and to the west. We have the east covered pretty well in this development. Along the water boundary that goes along the full eastern boundary of the project, the applicant has stated hesitation to bridge across or to provide interconnects across environmentally sensitive lands, presumably the waterways and the lands that are on the other side of it. So in the staffs opinion, what are the issues? To what extent is that concern shared by staff in terms of bridging across? And how environmentally sensitive are those lands across the water boundary? Is there -- is that a legitimate concern and hesitation on the applicant's part? MS. SCOTT: Well, I can't speak to the environmental sensitivity of the land, and I would defer to the applicant and our environmental staff with regard to that, and I'm sure we're going to be getting into that with regard to the environmental in the future. From a pure transportation standpoint, what we're trying to do is not replicate what we've done in the urban area where, yes, I understand this is a small -- a small area of a village center that's going to offer different things than what the next village center is going to do or the one to the south, et cetera. And so it gives people the opportunity, instead of having to go out on Oil Well Road, go make a U-turn, people who are in the next development presumably may not have a traffic signal, go make a U-turn and come back and put those localized trips on the arterial network, and that if there's a way to be able to accomplish those on a more localized network, that would certainly be beneficial to the overall transportation network. COMMISSIONER FRY: Do you have specific interconnection targets that you would like to see to support the future network going to the south or the east or the north of this development? MS. SCOTT: I -- honestly, when I looked at this, I looked at that we have been presented with two other villages, so it would -- at least the village that kind of wraps around them, it would certainly be nice to be able to interconnect with that village. They have discussed a gated community, so I'm going to go back and look within our documentation to see if that was -- if we were aware of that throughout the process or not. COMMISSIONER FRY: Okay. Thank you. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Go ahead, Ned. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Trinity, I have a walkability/bikeability question for you. Is it fair to assume that this present proposal, this present application, for all intents and purposes, precludes anyone on the north side of Oil Well from walking or biking to the commercial center on the south side, particularly once the street has been widened to six lanes? MS. SCOTT: It depends -- will it preclude it in perpetuity? I don't believe so. At some point in Page 76 of 89 October 3, 2019 the future there will be a traffic signal in that area, whether it be at Big Cypress Parkway when Big Cypress Parkway opens or along the residential when it meets traffic signal warrants. So it would certainly give an opportunity for folks to be able to cross the road. Is it the most comfortable? Perhaps not. But we do have this within our urban area pretty commonly. COMMISSIONER FRYER: So at least in the near term, perhaps the intermediate term, someone living on the north side who wants to go to the commercial center on the south will have to use an automobile and drive along the Big Cypress Parkway or along Oil Well to get there, correct? MS. SCOTT: Crossing the roadway without the roadway being widened and without a traffic signal would certainly be more difficult than what the future would hold. COMMISSIONER FRYER: So they'd need the automobile on the public street? MS. SCOTT: Mr. Yovanovich is saying it's a two-lane road. I understand that it's a two-lane road with no stop control out there. So to have someone have a mid -block crossing or a crosswalk, they would be crossing on their own. COMMISSIONER FRYER: It would be quite dangerous, wouldn't it? MS. SCOTT: People do it. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Well, I understand. MS. SCOTT: Yeah. But it would not be marked crosswalk they would be crossing on. COMMISSIONER FRYER: You wouldn't call the juxtaposition of the north and south sides or campuses of this village as encouraging of walkability or bikeability, would you? MS. SCOTT: I would say that in the future there will be some amount of connection, and the way they've planned their development, they have an arterial roadway that runs through the middle. So it's -- they have to deal with that. COMMISSIONER FRYER: So they would need an automobile on one of the county roads? MS. SCOTT: I would say that most folks will probably choose that. They will have the option, as I said, once the roadway's widened and there's a traffic signal there, to be able to cross at a signalized intersection. COMMISSIONER FRYER: You're not supporting, though, a traffic signal, are you? Didn't I hear you say that you don't think that's a good idea? MS. SCOTT: No. What I said was, is that when there's signal warrants at the residential, that they would be required to build it, and we would most likely anticipate another traffic signal at Big Cypress Parkway since it would be the intersection of two major arterial roadways. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Thankyou. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Anything else? COMMISSIONERFRYER: No. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: So following up with Ned's issue, then, so you're going to have a light at Big Cypress Parkway and Oil Well, and then maybe two more lights before it finishes out? Or does each circle represent a light? MS. SCOTT: No. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: No what? MS. SCOTT: No, that does not represent a traffic signal. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. How many traffic signals would you have through the village on Oil Well? MS. SCOTT: I anticipate one at Big Cypress Parkway in the future and one -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: At the main intersection there that -- yeah, that's what I thought you were going to say. MS. SCOTT: When and if it meets warrants in the future. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And how does the interconnection with Randall in this case work? Because it looks like it's going down a residential street to wind up through the project and weave its way up to where you just put that yellow dot. Page 77 of 89 October 3, 2019 Is that what -- how effective is that going to be for Randall? It really doesn't enter into your plans anymore, does it? MS. SCOTT: Correct. When the Board adopted Viable Alternative 2 -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: They took that out. MS. SCOTT: Right -- we relinquished this Randall extension and went with the connection between Randall and Oil Well being via Big Cypress Parkway. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. What other connections will there be to the Estates properties from Big Cypress? Say Big Cypress only had that piece, that was the only piece we had, and the properties to the east would be coming down Oil Well Road, dispersing who knows where. What other connections would you think you need to go through Golden Gate Estates? We currently have Randall and Vanderbilt Beach Road extension, I think, is going there, too. Isn't that -- isn't -- does this touch that? MS. SCOTT: It does not. It only goes as south as Randall Boulevard. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: So we've only got Randall and Oil Well going east. Would there be others that you'd have to pick up? MS. SCOTT: What I would say is I would not commit to any connection to the more local Estates roads without going through the public process. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Oh, I understand that. I'm just saying, but would you need more connections to get the traffic, the volume that -- let's say this village gets built, and the rest of them do. Well, say the ones to the south -- for some reason we don't get the parkway to the south. How will that affect the traffic flows coming from the east across this property and, yeah, westward? MS. SCOTT: Folks will most likely go down and hit Randall Boulevard, they'll go south, and they'll go Randall Boulevard which -- it's part of our Viable Alternative 2 -- showed improvement. Depending on how far out Vanderbilt Beach Road extension gets, they'll get over to Everglades Boulevard, go south, and most likely get on Vanderbilt Beach Road extension and head into town. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: The concerns about the F situation that you showed, did those concerns occur with or without the further connection of Big Cypress to the south? MS. SCOTT: The F -- the deficiency along Oil Well Road and Randall when we modeled it with Big Cypress Parkway, as well as the Vanderbilt Beach Road extension going all the way out as well as improving Everglades Boulevard, those all, then, operated at an acceptable level of service. CHAHUV AN STRAIN: That's with it going to the south? MS. SCOTT: Going to the south. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Have you modeled it without it going to the south? Could you by the next meeting? MS. SCOTT: I will go back and check and see if we have modeled it. We may already have modeled it without Big Cypress Parkway in there. I can check with the MPO because there were iterations that were done. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. And then the other piece is the -- Oil Well is one of our -- I think there's maybe two, maybe I'm -- maybe more than that, but I know at least -- I thought there was a couple east/west freight lines, and this is one of the most important freight lines in the county. What does the impact of this split village have on the freight lines and how you meander through this six -lane portion of -- when it's six-laned. I mean, we're going to increase the lanes, so let's just look at the buildout. What -- do you see this changing those freight lines at all? MS. SCOTT: I will tell you we do not anticipate reducing the speed limit within this area as you might see in other -- if you have towns and things like that where they'll reduce the speed limit through a town. We plan on having that function as a major arterial roadway through the middle of the village. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: What is the speed limit? MS. SCOTT: I believe it's 50. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: So the freight trucks would move at 50 miles an hour through this Page 78 of 89 October 3, 2019 village? COMMISSIONER FRY: Fifty-five miles per hour was stated earlier. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Yes. MS. SCOTT: I believe -- well, when we go to an urban cross-section, typically we post the speed limits at 45 miles an hour; however, in some of the more rural roadways, the more rural areas, we have posted them at 50 miles an hour. So once we get the curb and gutter, 45 typically is the maximum; however, on Immokalee Road we have increased that to 50 miles an hour. It may be 55 out there now because it's an uncurbed section of roadway. MR. TREBILCOCK: Current posting is 55. MS. SCOTT: Mr. Trebilcock just advised that the current posting is 55, but it's because it's a two-lane roadway with no curbing. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And when you increase to six -lane, it's going to reduce the speed? MS. SCOTT: The speed limit, yes, based on the design. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: That's kind of odd that you go to -- narrower road is higher speed than a bigger road, but that's your guys -- you and Norm, you guys are wizards at this stuff. MS. SCOTT: I'll get a hat next time. Do we get to dress up for the Halloween meeting? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: You can if you want, but it's not something I would do. I already wear a beard. That's enough, so... I have some questions of Norm, but some may hit on you, so could you stay near by? MS. SCOTT: Yep. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Norm, would you mind helping me with a couple of your TIS issues. Ned just asked me if we're going to 4. We usually go to 4. I'd like to tryto go a little longer, especially if we can try to finish up most of our transportation questions. So that would help -- I know you're limited. You're going on vacation or something, I understand, Norm. The TIS. MR. TREBILCOCK: Yes, sir. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: How did you treat the golf course trips? I mean, I've read it. I just don't remember. So why don't you tell me, did you base it on a public golf course, a shared golf course, a membership golf course, or how did you look at that? MR. TREBILCOCK: Totally a private golf course, it would be passive incidental to the community so it wouldn't be a public golf course. If it -- as Bob had mentioned, if it becomes a public golf course or public membership, then we would just live by the trip cap accordingly, you know, so... CHAIRMAN STRAIN: So if it changes to public, they'd have to come in with an SDP showing its new change but the cap -- the trip cap couldn't change? MR. TREBILCOCK: Yes, sir. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MR. TREBILCOCK: So it just limits some other use is really what it does. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And so you've got a 2,500 -unit village, half of which is above the road or some portion, and the other below, you've got units facing the golf course, and you're going to have a -- you want a deviation for up to 50,000 square feet for the clubhouse, but you've only got a handful of people facing the golf course. So where are you getting that kind of membership from if it's from the public? I mean, that's a big golf course -- golf club. I mean, usually you're looking at a substantial amount of members. I'm just wondering how --were you thinking you're going to --how do you --how do people become members of that golf club; do you know? Is it going to be limited -- what did your Transportation Impact Statement limit the golf course members to? MR. TREBILCOCK: The Traffic Impact Statement wouldn't get into membership of golf courses and stuff. That's not really how we -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Well, then how do you derive the traffic count for golf courses? MR. TREBILCOCK: Okay. Golf courses are based on per hole is how we do it. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: So the amount of play per hole? Page 79 of 89 October 3, 2019 MR. TREBILCOCK: No. In other words, the impact fees in Collier County, which is also based on the ITE trip generation, is per hole. So if you have an 18 -hole golf course, your trips are based on 18 holes. If you have a 36 -hole golf course, the trips adjust accordingly. So that's how it's done. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And how many people does it take to generate those trips according to the play on the golf course? I mean, the ITE would have to -- they'd have to be known, because that's someone -- that number had to come from somewhere. MR. TREBILCOCK: Yeah. Well -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Could you find that out by the next time we meet? I don't want to -- I don't mean to put you on the spot. MR. TREBILCOCK: Well, I can explain to you how the trip generation would work is -- what we do is you put -- on the golf course it would be based on the number of holes, and you do a trip generation at the driveway based on it. It's not based on a particular membership or anything. And so that's how you would get the trip generation for the golf course. It's very similar to residential. You know, you put tubes down, and you get your trips based on the residential. It isn't necessarily on the size of the house or anything like that or whether it's rental, non -rental, that type of thing. It's really just --and so you translate it into a per -hole basis. That's how it's done. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: So a golf course -- MR. TREBILCOCK: It's not based on the size of the clubhouse or anything like that, no, sir. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: So a golf course with 350 members will have the same traffic as a golf course with a 1,250 members? MR. TREBILCOCK: If it is an 18 -hole golf course, its an 18 -hole golf course. You know, typically, you may expect having more holes. Because, you know, you can only take so many folks playing on an 18 -hole golf course. And so, you know, again, that's the basis of it. It's based on the holes. If you have a 36 -hole golf course, you're going to have more folks, typically, than you're going to have on an 18 -hole golf course, and you would typically think you may have more members as well. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, this is an 18 -hole golf course; is it not? MR. TREBILCOCK: Yes, sir. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. So an 18 -hole golf course, it doesn't matter how many members you have. You could have 10 or a thousand. It's still going to have the same amount of trips? MR. TREBILCOCK: As far as -- again, it's considered private passive incidental to the community. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. To the community. So that means the membership's going to be limited to this community? I mean, that's an important consideration for our understanding of how this is to operate. MR. YOVANOVICH: No. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: No what? MR. YOVANOVICH: We have said, if the golf course is open to the public, we'll use the ITE manual for public golf courses for purposes of traffic calculations, and we'll have to either reduce some of the residential we could otherwise build or some of the retail and office square footage that we can otherwise build to stay within the trip cap that we've -- that we've analyzed it as if it's private, but if it becomes public, we recognize that we have a trip cap, so we may have to do some less residential or some less retail square footage. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Would the public that you would sell the memberships to be the other villages that are part of the former town, the Longwater and Bellmar? MR. YOVANOVICH: We don't know. It's public. If it becomes public, you know -- the answer is maybe yes. I don't think we'd be prohibited from doing that. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, it plays into the interconnection need. If you're going to be selling memberships to the other two villages across the preserve area, the argument for the interconnection Page 80 of 89 October 3, 2019 might carry some more weight, and I'm just trying to figure out if that's what you're going to do. MR. YOVANOVICH: We're suggesting that the public drive up Big Cypress Parkway to get to the golf course. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. That's what I wanted to understand. Norm, you had in your TIS 1,414 single-family and 1,086 multifamily. MR. TREBILCOCK: Yes, sir. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Which produces a greater trip count, multifamily or single-family? MR. TREBILCOCK: Single-family. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. So if your TIS calls the single-family operations multifamily because they're connected fee simple, then what's the practical trip count going to be if they're really single-family? Because they're not multifamily because they're fee simple. MR. TREBILCOCK: Well, again, your staff recognizes and understands and the operating practice is when you have a -- you have an attached villa, it functions more like a multifamily unit. That's been the practice. That's how we do traffic studies in the county, how traffic is analyzed. So that's what we've done here. You know, it's just being consistent, because they tend to function more like a condo -type unit is really what happens, because you have, you know, multiple services and stuff like that that get provided for across the common good. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: So the method of sale didn't matter? MR. TREBILCOCK: Not from a trip analysis standpoint. When it's an attached villa, it's recognized by professionals in the area to recognize it as a multifamily trip analysis from a --just strictly from the ITE, yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. And I also notice that there's going to be -- takes -- three-fifths of the project will be sold before you, I believe, start your commercial. So that means your capture rate's not going to apply until you get to the sixth year; is that fair? MR. TREBILCOCK: Further -- further down the road you'll get that capture. And we have a relatively low capture rate with the community. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, how does the capture rate affect the dwelling unit, not count, but dwelling unit multiplier? Say you have 500 single-family and 500 multifamily, and you -- that's 1,000 units, and they generate X amount of traffic. You get a discount on the total amount of traffic off that because of the capture rate for the commercial; is that how it works? MR. TREBILCOCK: Yeah. What happens is is your internal capture is occurring between the residential and the commercial uses on the project, you know. So what we're looking at in the p.m. peak hour at buildout, you know, is 184 peak -hour trips would be internally captured. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And what dwelling -unit count did you base that 184 peak -hour capture rate? MR. TREBILCOCK: Yeah. So that would have been based on the blended -- the mix that we're showing: 1,414 single-family and 1,086 multifamily units. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: So in your traffic statement -- MR. TREBILCOCK: Yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: -- all of those residential units to the north which are greater, it looks on the map, than the ones to the south, would benefit in the same capture rate even though the commercial is across the six -lane arterial road? MR. TREBILCOCK: Yes. So they would -- as was indicated to you, there's a single crossing movement. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Wouldn't more people take cars to go cross that road from the project? Its not going to be walkable very much. I mean, it's going to have a crosswalk, but it's a major freight road with traffic going at 50 miles an hour. So you didn't take into consideration the fact that some people in the north side may not want to walk from wherever they are across that road system to the commercial area for capture, or how did you Page 81 of 89 October 3, 2019 look at capture? MR. TREBILCOCK: Well, again, they would just cross that singular road. You're not, you know, on the link taking capacity out of the link of the roadway. So it's just a simple crossing movement that, then, you can be internally captured into the community because then there is internal movement to get you right in that area, you know, so -- you know, you have that. It's based on vehicular. I mean, the assumptions here are based on vehicular uses. You know, they're -- and this would be anticipated as a signalized location, especially of the number of rooftops. We would tend to warrant a signal, and it would make sense for this community, you know, just as other, you know, communities that have bisected them. And you go west on Oil Well Road to Orangetree. ThaYs bisected by Oil Well Road as well. And you would have a signal for the communities to be able to get across, you know, because you have the commercial on the south side there as well, that PUD. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Do most of the -- MR. TREBILCOCK: This is not. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: So the capture rate doesn't really matter where the -- how the village is split up? It would be the same. MR. TREBILCOCK: Well, it would be my opinion that you're still getting a capture for those vehicle uses because they're going to utilize those internally, and they're not going to go off miles away on the network and utilize capacity on the network. And, again, we don't have an extremely high internal capture rate on this project either as a result because, you know, staff recognized that, too, that it's not a huge amount of commercial versus the, you know, prior looks and stuff like that. So everything, I think, is kept in perspective here. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Does it make any difference to your analysis if the villages are gated? I mean, it's obviously more than one village because you're going to have to have one to the -- I mean, let's say subdivisions. If you have separate gated areas, is that going to make a difference to your traffic and your capture rate? MR. TREBILCOCK: No. No, as long as you were able to allow the folks to come through like that, which they would, so yep. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. I think that's all the -- right now that's all the traffic questions I have, Norm. Thank you for your time. MR. TREBILCOCK: Yes, sir. Anything else from any of the other commission members? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Anybody? (No response.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MR. TREBILCOCK: Thank you. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: No, I think we've got -- we're there. So thank you very much. MR. TREBILCOCK: Yes, sir. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: That takes us to a little bit before 4, and I think the choice now is I don't know how long this board wants to go. We usually stop at 4. We are at a point, Rich, I think your -- we could start a new subject, but I don't think we'll get too far with it before we would want to break before 5. I don't know what the four of us would want to do. MR. YOVANOVICH: The only question is, are there a lot of questions regarding the environmental analysis that Passarella & Associates did? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, there's -- we'd have to have the environmental staff for the county provide -- maybe that's what we ought to do is get the environmental -- the county's environmental presentation on the table and see what they -- MR. YOVANOVICH: I think they said they only needed about 10 minutes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Right. So we'll get that done, and that way we can have that document with all the other documents you're going to provide, because staff needs to give us their presentations as well, and we might -- with that information and what Passarella already provided, maybe we can reduce Page 82 of 89 October 3, 2019 the amount of questions we'd have on the environmental. I don't know until I get -- sit down with it. MR. YOVANOVICH: I understand. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: So does that sound like a workable solution? MR. YOVANOVICH: I'd like to get as much on the record as we can, so -- and that would be great, and I don't think -- I think Amy said they didn't have a report for the -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Economic. MR. YOVANOVICH: -- fiscal analysis. So at that -- you wanted to see the spreadsheet with the cells. So I think if we can knock that out, probably take us a few minutes after 4. If we can get that done and then come back on the 17th and hopefully finish up on the 17th. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Give it our best shot. So with that, as far as the county environmental folks, if you guys will come up, and I know you've got something prepared. And I know that some of it will be redundant from what we saw in Passarella's but we'd still like your input on it independently. So don't think you've got to cut things out because we've only seen some of it once. Having seen it two or three times will be even better, but we'll take what we can get. MS. COOK: Good afternoon. For the record, my name is Jamie Cook. I am a principal environmental specialist with Development Review. So the purpose and the intent of the RLSA program is kind of threefold: To protect agricultural and prevent premature conversion of agricultural lands to nonagricultural uses; to direct incompatible uses away from wetland and upland habitats; and to enable the conversion of rural land to other uses in appropriate locations. Through this purpose and these intents, this led to the creation of the Stewardship Sending Areas, which are designated areas to be protected, and the Stewardship Receiving Areas, which are the areas for development. Okay. For each application, a Natural Resource Index Assessment must be submitted. The original RLSA study conducted back in -- or the early 2000s, and the current LDC defined the baseline index values for each acre of land within the RLSA. The NRI scoring is an attempt to reflect the relative environmental values of the landscape. There has not been any concrete research or -- to assign these exact values. So it's done as best professional judgment to rank the different attributes and values. The NRI scoring should reflect a combination of conservation science, natural resources, and the existing land uses. So the ultimate goal of the NRI scores is to prioritize and incentive the protection of the most valuable resources, not solely for protected species. So within their application the applicant must quantify the number of acres by the index values. All lands within the proposed SRA are -- should have an index value of less than 1.2. Any lands within the boundary that have an index value greater than 1.2 are required to be retained as open space. And then if the index values are no longer valid from that original RLSA study, the applicant needs to document the changes and the current index values. So when they submit their application, the applicant provided the NRI data in -- electronically, and each factor must be able to be mapped in GIS and verified by the county staff. The GIS data is analyzed in one -acre polygons to determine the NRI score for that one acre of land. For Rivergrass, the GIS analysis was submitted to county staff, and it was verified by Beth Yang in the Growth Management Department GIS section. In addition to -- CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Beth verified the -- each one of the little squares the Passarella were talking about that would have 999 pages? Page 83 of 89 October 3, 2019 MS. COOK: Correct. It was all electronic, but yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Well, I know Beth, and she does an excellent job. And if she verified it, that goes a long way to being solid. So thank you. MS. COOK: You're welcome. In addition to the GIS data, they also submit a summary page of the NRI values and the total acreages for each of those values. Okay. So along with their NRI Assessment, the applicant also submits some supporting documentation, including an aerial photograph delineating the boundary, a FLUCFCS or vegetation map of the boundary, listed species map of the SRA, soils map of the SRA, and then staff verifies that the vegetation map, the listed species survey, and the soils map are used to develop their Natural Resource Index map, which is submitted as well. Okay. So to calculate the credits for the entire SRA boundary, the six factors are reviewed using the stewardship credit worksheet that you guys all saw earlier. So when environmental staff and GIS staff reviewed this, we used this same spreadsheet. So to kind of briefly go over each of the designations, I'm going to start with the stewardship overlay designation. This designation is used -- acres will receive point values if the land is located within a Flowway Stewardship Area, which is a wetland area; a Habitat Stewardship Area, which is habitat for listed species; a Water Retention Area, which is used for surface water quality and in agricultural operations; or in the Area of Critical State Concern. For the entire boundary of Rivergrass, there are no land that are designated as FSA, HSA, WRA, or the ACSC, so the entire boundary of the Rivergrass SRA would receive a zero for this value. For the proximity indices, the values are scored by either -- whether it's enclosed within an FSA, HSA, or WRA, if it's within 300 feet of an FSA or an HSA, or if it's within 300 feet or public or private preserve land. Now, public and private preserve land is defined in the LDC as conservation lands that may be delineated as an FSA, HSA, or WRA, but they are not eligible for designation as an SSA or an SRA. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: So does that mean that if SSA -17 becomes an SSA, because I guess it was then it wasn't, or maybe it is and it isn't; I don't know any more. MR. YOVANOVICH: It's not. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: That, at one point, was on the sheets that we read, and then it was taken out. But would that change the indice for the third one down? Because they would then be within possibly a private preserve land if that's what a WRA is considered. How would you look at that? Would it change anything? MS. COOK: No. If the WRA is within the SSA, then it is not considered a public or private preserve land. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. And you base that on some definition in the code you can -- MS. COOK: That's in a definition in the code. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MS. COOK: So for the Rivergrass SRA, all of the lands within the boundary for this indice also scored a zero. I'm going to skip down to restoration potential, and this is assigned during the SSA designation process if it is appropriate. Because Rivergrass is not an SSA, it would also receive a zero value for this indice for the entire project boundary. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Do you have something in the code that says the restoration potential indice does not apply to SRA lands or something of that effect? MS. COOK: The exact wording is that the restoration potential index value is assigned during the SSA designation process. And I can give you the code reference if you're ready. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Ready is another -- that's a really arbitrary term, but let's give it a try. MS. COOK: 4.08.06. Page 84 of 89 October 3, 2019 CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. MS. COOK: B, as in boy, 3B. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Thank you. MS. COOK: You're welcome. So then the three factors that are likely to change or differ throughout the boundary are the listed species habitat indice, the soil surface water indice, and the land -use land cover indice. So I'm going to go over those in a little more depth. For the listed species habitat value, these are assigned based on the habitat value for listed species. Index values are based on the documentation of occupied habitat and verifiable observation of listed species with the land cover identified as preferred or tolerated for that species. So the LDC specifically defines preferred and tolerated panther habitats in 4.08.0l.Q. These vegetation codes include the palmetto prairie, pine flatwoods, hardwoods, and most of the wetlands codes. None of these FLUCFCS codes, vegetation codes, were found within the SRA boundary, so the only applicable ones would either be other documented listed species habitat or none of the above. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And I'm trying to figure out -- I don't know if it's best to interrupt you and ask questions. What would you prefer? MS. COOK: Go ahead. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Did you want to ask first, Ned? Go right ahead. COMMISSIONER FRYER: We received a lot of material from the Conservancy who have very strong feelings about this area and that it is not appropriate for development, I think, primarily with respect to the panther habitat. This is not an area that I have much -- any expertise in. What is your position on the position of the Conservancy? Do you disagree with their conclusion? MS. COOK: Our review is done based solely on the LDC. So we have to review it based on what is in the Land Development Code currently, and what's in the Land Development Code currently is these FLUCFCS codes. So if it doesn't meet -- if it doesn't have those codes within the boundary, then it's not considered preferred or tolerated panther habitat. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Okay. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Were you herein about 2009? You weren't, were you? MS. COOK: Lived here, yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Were you --back then we had what was called a --I don't know -- for lack of a better word, rewrite of the RLSA was proposed, a five-year review. And the panther issue got a lot of discussion. In fact, we had a gentleman come down who wrote a big panther report, and I forgot his last name. But I think he was flown in. And he made an issue about the strength of the secondary panther habitat which was within 300 feet of primary habitat. And the issue there was it was thus moving into the farm fields. Panther actually found the farm fields viable habitat for running down game or whatever they do in those things, so much so that it kind of -- the whole program got kind of stalled for numbers of reasons. I'm not sure that was the only one. But the -- there was another study done. That study hit about the time the recession hit, so everything kind of dissipated. My question is, none of these show up, yet if you were to look at that study, the area within 300 feet of the WRA would probably qualify as secondary panther habitat because it's active farm fields but it's within that primary habitat fringe. Does that come into consideration at all in your review? MS. COOK: No, because we are only looking at what is within the SRA boundary and the vegetation code within that boundary. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And these codes were written at the initial time of the RLSA program? MS. COOK: Yes. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And you don't know why these were the ones that were limited, do you? MS. COOK: I do not know, no. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And I was here then. I don't remember either. These codes wouldn't be something I would have sat down and understood anyway. But I was -- I'm surprised that the question Page 85 of 89 October 3, 2019 was never brought up as to whether these codes were sufficient enough to cover what some of the studies said were secondary, primary, and all the other stuff. Maybe it covers all the primary. I don't know if it does the secondary. And that was kind of my question. And I'll wait till you finish, unless something else pops up between now and then. MS. COOK: Okay. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Thank you. MS. COOK: So the second factor that varies throughout the SRA boundary is these soil surface water index. These values are based upon soil types. So the LDC defines four categories: Open water and muck depression soils, which is the natural soils landscape positions, Categories 1 and 5, and I'll explain all of that in a minute and how it relates to the soils map; sand depression soils, which is the NSLP6; the flats transitional soils, which is NSLP7; and the non -hydric soils, which is 8, 9 and 11. So in their application, the -- a soils map for the area was submitted. This soils map is correlated and actually done by the USDA NRCS. Soon the left side of the screen what you're looking at is the -- NRCS's soils map for the Rivergrass area. It is identical to the one that Passarella submitted with their environmental documentation. So in the red box in the middle of the boundary it was identified as Soil Unit No. 7, which is Immokalee fine sand. That correlates to those NSLP values that I was talking about on the other -- on the previous screen on the right-hand side. The NSLP categories were defined by the South Florida Water Management District as soil classifications, and if you look at that chart on the right-hand side, you will see for Category No. 8, flatwood soils, that h amokalee fine sand -- Immokalee sands fall within that category. Therefore, if you go back to the previous screen for the areas that are identified as Immokalee fine sand with the NSLP value of 8, they are all considered non -hydric soils and would receive a value of zero. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Thank you. That's a good way to bring it -- explain it. MS. COOK: You're welcome. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Appreciate it. MS. COOK: And, finally, the last one that varies throughout the SRA boundary and can change over time is the land -use land cover or the vegetation groups. The Group 1 vegetations are the wetland hardwood, cypress, freshwater marshes, wet prairies. Group 2 are the palmetto prairies, flatwoods, and hard woods. In any other type of development, the Group 1 and Group 2 vegetations are the things that we would want to be put into preserve. Group 5 is pasture land, agricultural, fallow cropland, and waterways that are associated with ag fields. And then Group 4, so disturbed land, urban areas, residential development, industrial, all of those fall into Group 4. Okay. So to help you understand how these scores were calculated -- and, again, this was all done by GIS, and then environmental staff also verified it. So if you look at the square on the top right, that is an example of a one -acre square in the northern portion of the SRA boundary. As I mentioned before, for stewardship designation proximity index and restoration potential, everything within the entire boundary scored a value of zero. So we only really need to look at the listed species habitat, the soils, and the land cover. So for this particular acre, the soil surface water was hamokalee fine sand, which would receive a value of zero because it is a non -hydric soil. The land -use land cover vegetation was identified as cropland and pasture land, so it would receive -- it is a Group 3 classification and would receive a value of 0.2. And then in this area, because it is cropland and pasture land, it is suitable preferred and tolerated habitat for the sandhill crane, which was identified as a listed species on their listed species survey in this area. That is considered other documented listed species habitat and receives a value of 0.4. Therefore, for this one -acre parcel, the total NRI score would be 0.6. Page 86 of 89 October 3, 2019 In this particular second area, which is near the village center, again, the stewardship designation proximity index and restoration potential are all zero. There was no listed species found in this area, because it is all Brazilian pepper. Brazilian pepper is a Group 3 vegetation and also, again, receives a value of 0.2. The soil is a sand depression, which is a 0.3. So for this one -acre parcel, the total NRI score is 0.5. When the environmental staff conducts our reviews, we do do a document review of what is submitted by the applicant. We review the listed species survey, the vegetation map, the soils map, and the Natural Resource Index Map to make sure that they are consistent with the data that is submitted, and we can verify that in the field. We also conduct on-site verification, field verification throughout the SRA boundary. The most recent field visit was done in September with the new boundary changes that were added to the northern portion of the SRA. In conclusion, we found that the application was consistent with the NRI scores that were submitted, and we are in agreement that all of the acres within this boundary have NRI values of less than 1.2. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Questions from the Planning Commission? Anybody have any questions of our environmental staff? Go ahead, Ned. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Right now only that --to be sure that when this comes back the next meeting, presumably the Conservancy representatives will have opportunity to speak, would you be available to answer questions at that time? MS. COOK: Yes, sir. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Thank you. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, I have some questions in the meantime. There were some species that -- I'm trying to understand what Passarella did in this regard. They said that some of the species were because of another agency, and they didn't consider them in their review, or they did but they didn't have to. Do we not look at all the species that are -- I'm trying to figure out what they were getting at by that. Do you recall the conversation? MS. COOK: Either Ken or Heather may need to come answer that. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Sure, that's fine if they'll come up. I'm just trying to get to the -- he said it, and I didn't want to interrupt his presentation, and now we're in the environmental, and the only chance I've got to ask it is that. So do you remember the -- and it started -- I think you were talking about sandhill cranes for a minute, then you went on to another bird or something that -- and I'm not good at birds and bees. But there was another bird that was protected by one agency but not necessarily something you considered. MR. PAS SARELLA: Yeah. There was a -- some of the comments that were provided to the county by another party was related to wood stork colonies and also -- I forget what the other one was. But foraging areas around wood stork colonies, and that these foraging areas overlapped the project boundary. And as just was explained by county staff, those are boundaries established by another agency, but they're not in the Land Development Code to be considered as part of this analysis. So even though another agency may have established a forging area around a wood stork colony that may overlap these farm fields, that's not one of the assessment items that go into the scoring or the indices. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Why not? I mean, why wouldn't it be important if an agency thought it was? I mean, is the agency wrong or isn't it -- MR. PASSARELLA: No, the agency's not wrong. It's a totally different review process. It's a -- those boundaries were established for something totally different as far as the state environmental permitting and the federal environmental permitting for endangered species. That does not apply under Page 87 of 89 October 3, 2019 this -- under the Land Development Code to this NRI Assessment. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: But that's just because it doesn't apply because of the Land Development Code? Whether it's practical or not isn't the question. It just doesn't apply because of the Land Development Code. MR. PASSARELLA: Correct. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Mr. Chairman? CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Yes, go ahead, sir. COMMISSIONER FRY: I apologize, but I must -- I have a commitment. I must go. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Well, then we're going to go. We don't like to be here without you, Karl, because you bring the screwdrivers and the hammers and the nails and stuff that keep the people downstairs busy when you go through that -- COMMISSIONER FRY: I try to do my part. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: And Karl does -- if he has to go, we lose a quorum. So we will be departing. We will pick this up where we left off, and we will do that on the 17th first thing up, and we will -- I would hope we can get through it on the 17th, including public speakers. We'll go as far as we can. If we can prepare to be a little bit later to finish up, I would suggest all of us consider that. And thank you all for your time and patience today. We will make this -- get this done one way or another. And that takes us to new business. There is none. Old business. There is none. Is there any public comment other than the item we're on -- the scheduled agenda items? (No response.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Okay. Motion to adjourn by Karl. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Second. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: By Ned. All in favor, signify by saying aye. COMMISSIONER FRY: Aye. COMMISSIONER FRYER: Aye. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Aye. COMMISSIONER HOMIAK: Aye. CHAIRMAN STRAIN: Anybody opposed? (No response.) CHAIRMAN STRAIN: We're out of here. Thank you. There being no further business for the good of the County, the meeting was adjourned by order of the Chair at 4:17 p.m. COLLIER COUNTY PLANNING COMMISSION VV MARK TRAIN, CHAIRMAN f�Lei�•i•�.5�•k7 October 3, 2019 These minutes approved by the Board on as presented or as corrected TRANSCRIPT PREPARED ON BEHALF OF U.S. LEGAL SUPPORT, INC., BY TERRI LEWIS, COURT REPORTER AND NOTARY PUBLIC. Page 89 of 89