Exhibit E <br />inventory (BLI) was developed, the capacity of the Vacant and Partially Vacant land supply for new <br />employment development was based on historical employment densities of existing development. The <br />historical development trends that the employment density was based on consisted of buildings of <br />varying heights in sample sites throughout the city. This BLI employment capacity is not directly derived <br />from the square footage of a building, but the capacity for a number of jobs per acre. Setbacks and <br />height limitations do not necessarily limit the employee capacity on a site. A small amount of additional <br />jobs capacity was also assumed city-wide, through redevelopment of Developed BLI land, which also <br />considered a variety of building forms. The Employment Land Supply Study also assumed that existing <br />buildings would accommodate a portion of the new jobs without any change to the building footprint. <br />In the C-2 zone, the list of uses is very broad and even allows residential -only structures. The City does <br />not know how any particular property is going to develop, some properties will develop at maximum <br />capacity and some below, so there is not an assumption that all buildable land will develop to its <br />maximum capacity. Therefore, when determining BLI employment capacity, the City took this into <br />account by generally assuming future land capacity based on average levels of development. For these <br />reasons, the proposed height limit and setback requirements will not impact the supply or availability of <br />employment lands included in the City's adopted BLI. <br />Additionally, these amendments do not prevent adequate opportunities for a variety of economic <br />activities. The proposed prohibited uses are a narrow subset of economic uses, a variety of uses are still <br />allowed. Based on these findings, the Code Amendments are consistent with Statewide Planning Goal 9. <br />Statewide Planning Goal 10 — Housing. To provide for the housing needs of citizens of the state. <br />Goal 10 requires cities to provide an adequate supply of buildable land to accommodate their estimated <br />housing needs for a 20-year planning period. When the City approved Eugene's UGB in 2017, the City <br />adopted, and received State acknowledgement of a 20-year inventory of buildable lands for residential <br />use. The Envision Eugene Residential Land Supply Study (2012-2032) was adopted by the City of Eugene <br />in 2017 as a refinement of the Envision Eugene Comprehensive Plan and complies with the requirements <br />of Goal 10 and Chapter 660, Division 008 of the Oregon Administrative Rules. <br />The Envision Eugene Residential Land Supply Study includes an inventory of buildable lands for <br />residential use. According to the Residential Land Supply Study, there is sufficient buildable residential <br />land within Eugene's acknowledged urban growth boundary to meet the identified land need. These <br />Code Amendments do not impact the supply of residential buildable land within Eugene's UGB. No land <br />is being re -designated from a residential use to a non-residential use, and the amendments do not <br />otherwise diminish the amount of land available for residential use. <br />Goal 10 also requires local governments to conduct a Housing Needs Analysis (HNA) to assess whether <br />their estimated housing needs for a 20-year planning period can be satisfied. The Envision Eugene <br />Residential Land Supply Study (2017) includes an HNA. These amendments do not impact the supply of <br />residential buildable lands or affect the estimated housing needs within Eugene's UGB to accommodate <br />growth. <br />While the actions taken by these amendments do not impact the City's supply or demand for residential <br />buildable land, the Code Amendments do make changes to the R-1 Low Density Residential zone and C-2 <br />