Eugene Ordinance Exhibit J <br />[Lane County Ordinance Exhibit G] <br />Supply Study) provides for an adequate supply of sites as required by this Goal 9 provision. All of the <br />City's needed commercial and industrial sites are identified in the BILL As those findings show, the UGB <br />expansion adds only the industrial sites needed to meet the City's needs through 2032. <br />4. Limit uses on or near sites zoned for specific industrial and commercial uses to those <br />which are compatible with proposed uses. <br />This Goal 9 requirement is implemented through designations in the Eugene-Springfield Metropolitan <br />Area General Plan (Metro Plan) and specific policies in the EECP. Section ILG of the Metro Plan identified <br />appropriate uses in industrial and commercial designated areas of a variety of intensities. The location of <br />areas with these designations is identified in the Metro Plan Diagram (Metro Plan section II.G). These <br />designations are further implemented through the City of Eugene Code: Chapter 9 - Land Use, sections <br />9.2100, 9.2400, and 9.3000. The EECP includes the following policies in Chapter 3, which limit uses in <br />specific industrial and commercial zones: 3.17, 3.19, 3.22, and 3.23. These combined policies and codes <br />limit uses in industrial and commercial areas to those which are compatible with proposed uses. <br />OAR Chanter 660. Division 9 <br />OAR Chapter 660, Division 9 implements Statewide Planning Goal 9. OAR 660-009-0010 states that LCDC <br />will determine the effort necessary to comply with OAR 660-009-0015 through 660-009-0030 <br />"depending upon the size of the jurisdiction, the detail of previous economic development planning <br />efforts, and the extent of new information on national, state, regional, county, and local economic <br />trends. Ajurisdiction's planning effort is adequate if it uses the best available or readily collectable <br />information to respond to the requirements of this division." <br />660-009-0015 Economic Opportunities Analysis. <br />Cities and counties must review and, as necessary, amend their comprehensive plans to provide <br />economic opportunities analyses containing the information described in sections (1) to (4) of this <br />rule. This analysis will compare the demand for land for industrial and other employment uses to the <br />existing supply of such land. <br />As explained throughout these findings, the City has conducted a detailed EOA, adopted as Part II of the <br />Envision Eugene Employment Land Supply Study (an appendix to the Envision Eugene Comprehensive <br />Plan). As described below, the EOA contains the information described in (1) to (4) of 660-009-0015. <br />As required by Statewide Planning Goal 14 and its implementing rules, the City has identified the supply <br />of employment land that existed within the UGB in 2012, at the commencement of the 20-year planning <br />period. This supply is summarized in Part I of the Employment Land Supply Study. (See findings under <br />Goal 14, below). Chapter 6 of the EOA sets out the analysis comparing that 2012 employment land <br />supply with the demand for employment land that will arise through 2032. For most employment sites <br />needed, the EOA concludes that the 2012 supply is sufficient. However, the 2012 supply of land is <br />insufficient to meet the 2032 need for: 4 sites of between 10-20 acres, 2 sites of between 20-50 acres, 3 <br />23 <br />May 2017 <br />