City of Callaway - Wakulla County, Florida
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Transcript City of Callaway - Wakulla County, Florida
Wakulla County
Concurrency Management
System
October 6, 2011
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Current Concurrency Management
System
Tracks Level of Service (LOS) on roadways
for five or ten year period
Outlines requirements for traffic studies
Application fees offset staff costs
Provides the basis for proportionate fair-share
mitigation
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CMS Roadways
MAP
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CMS Roadways
US 319/Crawfordville Highway
US 98
SR 363/Woodville Highway
SR 267/Bloxham Cutoff
Lower Bridge Road
Spring Creek Highway
East Ivan Road
Wakulla Arran Road
Rehwinkle Road
Shadeville Road/CR 61
Springhill Road
Trice Lane
Arran Road
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Recommendations
Long-Term CMS (10 years) with ShortTerm and Long-Term Improvements
– Enables collection of Proportionate Fair-Share
and development to continue
Short-Term Improvements
– Intersection Improvements
Locations:
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US
US
US
US
319
319
319
319
Provide
at
at
at
at
E. Ivan Road (2008)
SR 267 (2011)
Wakulla Arran Rd. (2013)
Lower Bridge Road (2015)
approximate capacity increase of 650 trips in
peak hour peak direction
Cost: Approximately $4.5 million each
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Recommendations (con’t)
Additional
Short-Term Improvement
– Turning Lane Improvements
Requires
Operational Analysis to determine
location, amount of improvements
Coordination with FDOT and CRTPA
Long-Term
Improvements:
– Four-lane US 319 from Leon County
Line to Lower Bridge Rd.
Cost:
$153 Million
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Additional Recommendations
Update Comprehensive Plan
Support mixed use and clustering of residential
and commercial uses
Establish Transportation Concurrency Exception
Area
Examine options for transit service
Coordination with Leon County, City of
Tallahassee, CRTPA, and FDOT
Establish intersection improvements along US
319 using Proportionate Fair-Share Funding
Transportation CMS Study provides needed
update for Land Development Code, Comp Plan,
and Traffic Studies
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Recommendations (con’t)
Consider alternative roadways for US 319
Proposed Gulf Coast Parkway
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Infrastructure CMS Study
Systems Covered
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Sanitary Sewer
Solid Waste
Stormwater/Drainage
Parks and Recreation
Potable Water
Overall capacity, planned improvements,
and future needs analyzed.
Needed language to maintain CMS within
Land development Code provided
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Infrastructure CMS Study Findings
Services often provided on ad-hoc basis.
Inventories and master plans have not
been completed
Currently sufficient capacity for sanitary
sewer and solid waste
County-wide stormwater needs difficult to
examine, only provided sub-division by
sub-division
New potable water source needed within
next five years
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Infrastructure CMS:
Primary Recommendations
Create GIS-based inventory systems
Complete master plans
Use consistent population forecasts
Establish regulatory control of water
systems
Establish LOS standards based on usage
per unit, not per capita
Examine adjusting LOS standards to
reflect average usage
Establish timeframe to identify and secure
additional needed potable water supply
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Funding Considerations
FDOT
Work Program
State Infrastructure Bank (SIB)
Concurrency
CRA
Sales Tax Option
Public-Private partnerships
Grants
Mobility fees based on corridor
improvements and mobility plan
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