EXHIBITS Page 24 <br />4. Comprehensive plans identify and establish the plan-zoning consistency concept and <br />recognize the importance of timing concerning implementation techniques. <br />Implementation techniques, including zoning, shall generally be consistent with the <br />precepts established in the Metro Plan, which is the broad policy document for the <br />metropolitan area and in the applicable city-specific comprehensive plan. The <br />consistency test shall continuously be applied to implementation measures and public <br />actions taken to rectify inconsistencies when the general direction provided by the Metro <br />Plan or the city-specific comprehensive plan is modified. A variety of potential solutions <br />to consistency problems exist, including modification to the Metro Plan, the city-specific <br />comprehensive plan or °'rto the implementation techniques themselves. <br />The zoning process shall be monitored and adjusted to meet current urban land use <br />demands through the planning period for all land use categories. <br />6. The Metro Plan is based on the premise that Eugene and Springfield, the two existing <br />cities, are the logical providers of services accommodating urban levels of development <br />within the UGB. <br />7. The Metro Plan was developed to meet the supporting facilities and services necessary to <br />I serve a population of 286,000 within the metropolitan UGB by the year 2015. <br />Laurel Ridge Record (Z 15-5) Page 587 <br />