The 2016 Subdivision Staging Policy Public Hearing Draft
The 2016 Subdivision Staging Policy Public Hearing Draft
The 2016 Subdivision Staging Policy Public Hearing Draft
Introduction
Montgomery County is entering a new phase in its growth, and this Subdivision Staging Policy recognizes
that different approaches and ways of thinking about growth are needed. The County has long had an
innovative approach to managing growth that has focused on transportation (primarily roads) and
school capacity, in an effort ensure that this vital infrastructure is provided in an equitable and timely
way. Although this is still a key goal of the Subdivision Staging Policy, the focus needs to shift from a
one size fits all set of rules to a collection of policies and rules tailored to the disparate contexts of
communities throughout the County.
Over the past four decades, as Montgomery County repositioned itself from a bedroom community of
commuters to a regional job center, change in the County was marked by its population growth. Now,
this diverse, populous jurisdiction has settled into a mature growth stage. The County has an annual
population growth rate of around 1 percent, which is expected to slow over the next 30 years. It is
important to note, however, that 1 percent growth still equates to almost 200,000 new residents by
2045.
Additionally, there is limited unconstrained land left to accommodate new growth only approximately
15 percent of the County remains unconstrained and available for development or redevelopment,
according to a 2013 suitability study. There is also consensus that important policies such as the
sanctity of single family neighborhoods and the preservation of open space and farmland in the
Agricultural Reserve should not be revisited.
What this means is that growth and development patterns in Montgomery County must be more
efficient in how land is developed and in how transportation goals are achieved. In other words, while
accommodating the continuing growth of our population and economy, we must minimize the land and
resources consumed, be cost effective, and promote more community interaction and physical activity.
Growth is no longer about spreading out, but rather is about filling in.
This changing landscape means that it is essential for the 2016-2020 Subdivision Staging Policy to
recommend ways to revise our transportation analyses as well as our school capacity measurements,
looking at these procedures within a larger context of community character, both to understand
changing trends and to broaden our thinking about the infrastructure of community.
Overview
What is Subdivision Staging Policy?
The Subdivision Staging Policy, or SSP, is a set of policy tools that guide the timely delivery of public
facilities (schools, transportation, water, sewer, and other infrastructure) to serve existing and future
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development. These policy tools are the guidelines for the administration of the Adequate Public Facility
Ordinance, or APFO.
Although commonly referred to as a separate ordinance, the APFO is actually part of Montgomery
Countys subdivision regulations: Section 50-35 (k) of the County Code. The introductory sentence of the
APFO states, A preliminary plan of subdivision must not be approved unless the Planning Board
determines that public facilities will be adequate to support and service the area of the proposed
subdivision. How, exactly, the Planning Board makes that determination is the focus of the Subdivision
Staging Policy.
How does the Subdivision Staging Policy relate to our County master plans and the CIP?
The SSPs main focus is on the timing or staging of development and public facilities and comes into play
primarily during the regulatory process. The Countys General Plan, as amended by approved and
adopted master, sector and functional plans, determines the amount, pattern, location, and type of
development within the County. The master planning process is aspirational, creating a long term vision
for our communities. The SSP has a more focused, shorter term view. Its purpose is to evaluate
individual proposals for development, determining if our transportation network and schools have
sufficient capacity to accommodate the additional demand.
County master plans identify where growth is appropriate and at what levels or densities this growth
should occur. They provide a vision for the future of the County from the very conceptual level with
the General Plan to much more detailed recommendations with small area plans. For each master plan,
some high level analysis is done about infrastructure needed to accommodate the vision outlined in the
master plan. This analysis is different from the SSP, although it may result in recommended capital
improvements that could be implemented by either the County government or the private sector.
The Capital Improvements Program, or CIP, is the vehicle through which the County increases the
capacity of its public facilities to support existing development and future growth. One role of the SSP is
to determine how much additional growth can be supported by public facilities that are included in the
CIP. Another is to help prioritize which additional public facilities should be funded in a future CIP.
The policy tools recommended by this report will be established by a County Council resolution. The
resolution will describe the facility standards that must be met, and prescribe the contributions
necessary from the public and private sectors to ensure that infrastructure keeps pace with new
development.
Character of Change
Over the past four decades, as Montgomery County repositioned itself from a bedroom community of
commuters to a regional job center, change in the County was marked by its population growth. Now,
this diverse, populous county has settled into a mature growth stage. The County has an annual
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population growth rate of around 1 percent, which is expected to slow even further over the next 30
years. The changing character of the Countys residents is now more notable than its population growth.
Demographic trends in the number of people moving in and out of the County, the natural increase in
population (births exceeding deaths) and the inevitable aging of County residents affect the make-up of
the Countys population. Economic forces also shape demographic trends; the past decades economic
downturn altered not only the pace of demographic change, but its character as well.
The movement of people in and out of Montgomery County is instrumental in changing its residential
character. In 2014, 63,200 people moved in (including from abroad) and 56,600 residents moved out of
the County to other parts of Maryland or to another state.
In the past five years, the typical new resident moving into the County was a young adult between the
ages of 20 and 34, African American, Hispanic, or Asian, who holds a graduate degree, and lives in a
household with an income of $100,000 or more. Residents leaving Montgomery County were similar in
age, but also included college-age residents, 18 to 19 year olds. They are usually less diverse, the
majority are non-Hispanic white, are more likely to have a college degree and less likely to have
household incomes of $100,000 or more. The most significant change to neighborhoods is from
residents moving within the County. In 2014, 57 percent of those who moved (146,300 people) stayed
within the County, compared to 22 percent moving from a different state, 12 percent from abroad, and
10 percent from elsewhere in Maryland.
Residents moving into the County from abroad contributes significantly to the Countys growth and
cultural diversity, resulting in a net gain of 9,600 people per year over a span of 15 years. This increase
offsets the average net domestic loss of 5,800 residents relocating within the region or elsewhere in the
United States.
Figure 1. Population Migration 1990-2015
After dipping during the Great Recession, international movement into the County set a record net gain
of 11,000 foreign immigrants in 2015. With one-third of the Countys population foreign-born,
Montgomery County is ranked first in the Washington, D.C. region and fifteenth among counties
nationwide in this respect.
The origins of the Countys foreign-born residents are widely diverse with 38 percent arriving from Latin
America and 36 percent from Asia. With the draw of its existing large foreign-born population base,
economic opportunities, and welcoming social and political environment, Montgomery County is
expected to continue to attract international immigrants moderated by world and national politics and
regional and global economic cycles.
The natural increase in Montgomery Countys population, where births are typically more than double
the number of deaths, is another major component of growth and change in the population. Natural
increase accounted for more than half of the Countys 68,000 net population gain between 2010 and
2015; however, a comparatively smaller gain occurred during the uncertain economic time of the Great
Recession. After peaking at the onset of the recession at 13,800 in 2007, births in the County declined
by 6 percent over six years until 2014, when the first uptick to 13,200 births occurred.
In Montgomery County, as in the rest of the country, women in the millennial generation are delaying
childbirth as birthrates for local women ages 25 to 34 continue dropping to new lows. However, the
number of births are expected to gradually increase as fewer young women postpone motherhood and
the forecasted number of women of child-bearing age increases over the next 20 years.
In addition to contributing to the populations growth, births change the racial and ethnic composition
of Montgomery County. In 1990, the combined percentages of Hispanic, African-American, and Asian
births in the County totaled 40 percent and, rose to 63 percent of all births in 2014. During this period of
increasingly diverse in-migration and births, the Countys minority population (any group other than
non-Hispanic white) increased from 28 percent in 1990 to 54 percent in 2014.
The Montgomery County public school student population, the bellwether of racial and ethnic change in
the County, gained majority minority status eight years before the Countys general population did in
2010. Currently, Hispanic students are the largest racial or ethnic group in kindergarten through second
grade and, across the system, they are almost equal in number to non-Hispanic white students. In
comparison, the Countys population is 46 percent non-Hispanic white, 19 percent Hispanic or Latino, 17
percent African American and 15 percent Asian in 2014.
Continued growth in the minority population is expected, assuming sustained migration patterns and
minority birthrates. By 2040, the Maryland Department of Planning predicts 68 percent of the Countys
population will belong to a minority group. Not until 2044 will the minority population become the
majority across America according to projections by the United States Census Bureau.
The baby boom-generation, born between 1946 and 1964, is an enduring agent of change, locally and
nationally, as these Americans age through life-cycle events to the brink of retirement. The leading edge
of the boomer generation turned 65 in 2011 and by 2030, all will be 65 and older. The aging boomers
will drive growth in the Countys 65-plus population from about 120,000 residents, or 12 percent of the
population, in 2010 to 18 percent in 2030 - a 69 percentage increase over 20 years. The swelling of the
senior ranks by boomers with high home ownership rates (79 percent), making up almost half of all
homeowner households in 2010, has the potential to transform the housing market in the County.
Depending on their housing decisions and timing of boomer homeowners, the potential exists for a
significant number of houses to enter the resale market if they choose to downsize, relocate in
retirement, or if they die. Within the next 10 years, the release of housing may coincide with the likely
housing demand of young adults, known as the millennial generation, who have previously delayed
homeownership and other decisions such as getting married and starting families. Millennials fall into
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the age group most likely to move (20 to 34 years old) and correspond to the age of the typical new
resident moving into the County. Montgomery County remains competitive for this young adult and
family market, offering job opportunities, housing choices spanning from rural and suburban
neighborhoods to walkable, transit-oriented communities, all with a highly regarded public school
system, and desirable quality of life.
Alternatively, the baby boomer household may choose not to move and age in place after postponing
retirement, either by choice or financial necessity. If a significant number of seniors decide to age in
place or delay moving out, these actions may depress housing turnover in the neighborhood, stalling the
traditional housing ladder opportunity for young families to move into and revitalize the area. The
limited supply of houses reaching the market may increase the difficulty for younger buyers to find or
afford a home. The next 10 years will tell whether economic and housing market conditions will
generate competing housing needs or an ample housing market supply as aging baby boomers and
millennials debate their next life-cycle decisions.
Source: 1990 and 1995 figures, historical Round 6.1 forecasts. 2000 and 2005 figures, historical Round 7.0 forecasts. 2010 to
2045 figures, Round 9.0 Cooperative Forecast. All data tabulated by the Research & Special Projects (RSP) Division.
The pattern of this growth will be increasingly concentrated in policy areas along the Interstate-270
corridor and in Down-County urban areas, ranked 1 through 14 in Map 1. These policy areas, which
account for about 14 percent of the Countys land, will take in the largest share of the growth in jobs
and housing; they will absorb approximately 82 percent of new jobs, 76 percent of new households, and
73 percent of population growth.
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Two factors explain the concentration of forecasted growth in these policy areas: the lack of vacant,
developable land throughout the County and recent master plans calling for increased zoning capacity to
incentivize the redevelopment of areas with existing infrastructure.
When looking at County land outside the cities of Rockville and Gaithersburg, about 299,400 acres, only
three percent (or 10,031 acres) of that land is vacant and developable. Of this vacant land, 2,576 acres,
or 26 percent, is already in the pipeline of approved development projects. The vacant land remaining is
fragmented and scattered. Many of these parcels measure a third of an acre or less and some have
environmental restrictions, such as steep slopes, that make their development potentially unfeasible.
The forecasted growth in the County outside of Rockville and Gaithersburg cannot be accommodated on
the small amount of vacant developable land remaining. A more efficient development pattern is
needed to accommodate new residents and businesses. Using average densities approved for new
construction since 1996, it is estimated that about 1,470 acres will be required to support the new
commercial development needed to accommodate expected job growth from 2010 to 2045. However,
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some of this development pressure could be alleviated by using vacant office space outside of Rockville
and Gaithersburg. As of the first quarter of 2016, this equaled approximately 8.3 million sq. ft.,
potentially reducing the estimated need for additional office space by about 136 acres. Using average lot
sizes for existing homes by type and area of the County, forecasted single-family household growth will
require about 9,980 acres, and multifamily growth will require almost 1,920 acres by 2045. This total
demand for commercial and residential land (about 13,370 acres) surpasses the total amount of
developable vacant land by more than 3,340 acres (see Figure 4).
Figure 4. Estimate of Land Needed for Forecasted Growth (2010 to 2045)
Note: All figures pertain for County areas outside Rockville and Gaithersburg.
Source: Maryland State Department of Assessments and Taxation (SDAT), 2016. All data tabulated and mapped by the
Research & Special Projects (RSP) Division.
For the next 20 years, and certainly beyond, more efficient use of land is essential. Our master planning
efforts reflect this reality and have taken advantage of real opportunities for economic development,
environmental mitigation, and healthier lifestyles that this future presents. Plans like the Westbard and
White Flint sector plans can be a catalyst for redeveloping older structures and large parking lots into
high-quality, mixed-use communities that take full advantage of their close-in or Metro accessible
locations.
Future growth will also need to be accompanied by the need to preserve the environmental resources
and health benefits valuable of the open space. Saving important resources and enhancing those
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degraded by past development practices promise a greener, healthier future for our County. Both the
park acquisitions recommended in our master plans and the Forest Conservation Program continue to
provide the green areas that serve our communities. Expanded efforts to integrate green areas in our
more urban master and sector plans are essential to ensuring livable neighborhoods.
How we grow affects the costs of such growth for both County and household budgets. Growth patterns
also have cost implications for our natural environment and human health. The Countys pattern of
dispersed single-family home development has led to large public expenditures on infrastructure
requiring ongoing maintenance costs. Compact, transit-accessible, walkable, mixed-use redevelopment
in our urban centers allows cost-effective reuse of existing infrastructure. For example, with 50 percent
of our large water mains in need of replacement, redevelopment presents a real opportunity to upgrade
the existing system as part of the redevelopment process. Adding new residents to an already served
area increases revenue that can be used to offset the cost of repairs, as opposed to the cost of adding
new water and sewer pipes in greenfield areas. Furthermore, redevelopment decreases per capita
energy use in buildings and brings down total vehicle miles travelled by giving residents greater multimodal options for accessing employment, retail, and cultural activities.
Household budgets also feel the impact of dispersed development. When examining the costs of a
mortgage or rent costs combined with commuting expenses, it is clear that density and transit access
can keep affordability at manageable levels. Data on Montgomery County from the Chicago-based
Center for Neighborhood Technology shows that households in urban centers near transit tend to spend
less than 45 percent of their incomes on combined housing and transportation costs, while other
households spend a higher percentage.
Higher densities and mixed uses also mean more efficient growth in tax revenues. On average, the
County reaps more than three times the tax yield per acre from a townhouse than from a single-family
detached house. The revenue per acre of office and multifamily buildings of five or more stories dwarfs
that of other land uses. Mixed uses bring even higher revenue per acreeven with buildings of less than
five stories. A mixed-use high rise averages more than twice the tax revenue per acre than an office high
rise and 50 percent more than a multifamily high rise.
Quality of place also adds value. Buildings near parks and open space can be valued as much as 20
percent higher than others. Quality urban parks and open space can provide community gardens, play
and gathering spaces, as well as programmed spaces for events and farmers markets. These
opportunities create a more vibrant community as well as an environmentally sound way to distribute
food while spurring the local economy.
The Countys current development pattern places a burden on our natural resources. The costs of the
clean air and water we enjoy are often internalized by government entities that must restore streams
and wetlands, replace bridges and repair deteriorating building and/or paving materials. These costs
could be reduced by encouraging development patterns that enhance environmental conditions.
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The Countys plan for growth through redevelopment can help reduce pollution by incorporating
stormwater controls where there were none before. Turning parking lots and low density commercial
areas into mixed-use buildings with underground parking and integrated green spaces can improve
water quality, especially in areas that were previously developed with inadequate green space and
stormwater management. Redevelopment can help improve air quality by reducing the use of
automobiles and providing more energy-efficient communities, streets, and buildings. Redevelopment
will play an important role not only in improving the County as a place to live, but also in achieving local
and regional air and water quality standards.
An environmental approach to redevelopment involves urban design that incorporates innovative and
creative community design. It considers enhanced and networked urban green space and tree canopy,
Environmental Site Design (ESD), and greener building design to achieve multiple objectives. Enhanced
urban green spaces can improve human health and quality of place in concert with local parks, as well as
through networks of urban greenways linked to other communities and to the Countys wealth of
natural green areas and abundant parklands.
Development patterns focused on a single mode of transportation and single land use often decrease
walking or biking, create the need for a car in order to get anywhere, and add more emissions to the air
and Earths atmosphere. Our future growth must provide multi-modal transportation options and make
active transportationhuman-powered modes like walking and bikinga viable way to access goods
and services and improve our health at the same time.
We cannot build enough roads to allow room for the majority of County residents to drive in singleoccupant vehicles for all of their daily needs. The Countys proposed bus rapid transit (BRT) network will
increase accessibility and mobility for many residents without requiring them to drive. Investments in
complete, multi-modal streets and safer pedestrian and bike accessibility around transit stops will
increase mode share in non-auto modes of travel and will play a role in curbing vehicle emissions and
trimming our waistlines. The BRT network may also provide connections to future mixed-use centers.
Preservation of and access to parks, open space and the beauty of the natural world contributes to the
health of both the environment and residents. A recent change to our forest conservation laws now
allows some of the mitigation money provided by developers to be used to meet urban tree canopy
goals, such leafy shade will improve the quality of place, air, and health in the urban areas where we
wish to concentrate growth. Trees increase the energy efficiency of buildings, reduce heat island effect,
and create wildlife habitat, making our urbanizing centers more attractive, pleasant, and livable.
Additionally, park planning has become increasingly integral to the master plan and sector plan process
as traditional centers are redeveloped. Greener pedestrian and bike trails that connect to natural
resources outside urban areas, as well as internal recreational loops like those proposed in White Flint
and the Great Seneca Science Corridor, give residents greater opportunities and incentives for a healthy
and active lifestyle, with parks, recreation centers, and other public facilities accessible by active
transportation.
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Infrastructure Conditions
Planning for the future requires the use of more sophisticated tools to meet changing conditions and
opportunities than the simplistic approach of allowing or withholding development approvals based on
the capacity of the infrastructure. Our focus has shifted to addressing the needs of the system in
advance of development, employing the help of those who wish to build. This section summarizes how
the current SSP manages growth with respect to transportation, schools, water and sewer, and
environmental conditions.
Transportation
Inherent in the SSP is the consideration of appropriate tools and resulting measurements for assessing
current and future travel conditions in terms of adequacy and; - by extension, the approach used to
assess land use and transportation balance in master plans.1 Several issues need to be taken into
account when evaluating different tools and metrics, as they are currently applied or might be applied in
the future.
Do the tools and resulting metrics measure what is important to the community?
This question has been at the center of discussions about SSP since the last review of the policy in 2012.
While there appears to be a general acknowledgement that the County has a technically sound and
relatively well documented and time-tested approach, some stakeholders are concerned that select
tools and metrics lack transparency and relevancy, especially in terms of alignment with master plan
goals and other policy guidance. The discussion more often than not is focused on the two main
components of determining the adequacy of the transportation network under SSP the local area test
and the policy area test.2
Local Area Transportation Review (LATR)
Local Area Transportation Review (LATR) is the local test used to evaluate the capacity of
intersections affected by proposed development. Currently, a primary tool used for determining
adequacy with respect to LATR is estimating Critical Lane Volume the maximum traffic volume
per lane at roadway intersections. The CLV estimates are determined through conventional
1
For the purposes of this discussion, tools consist of travel forecast models, GIS applications, real time data
collection, automatic passenger counters, Synchro traffic software, etc. that produce metrics or measurements
of performance like forecast traffic volumes and speeds, transit ridership, and measurements of delay usually
expressed against some recognized standard.
2
It is important to note that different metrics can be and most often are used in different contexts. Some
metrics may be limited to monitoring while others may be used in assessing different land use scenarios in master
plans. Others may be used only in a regulatory context. Additional discussion related to this topic is presented later
in this report.
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Traffic Impact Studies that take into account existing traffic volumes, traffic derived from new
surrounding approved development, and programmed improvements to the transportation
network. Level of Service (LOS) is a traffic engineering term that describes the relative operating
conditions and congestion levels on a segment of roadway or an intersection. There are six
levels ranging from free flowing (Level of Service A) to very heavy traffic, extremely unstable
flows and long delays (Level of Service F).
Critics note that in their purest form, LOS and CLV metrics, as currently used, measure adequacy
in terms of how well an intersection accommodates autos (only) and that intersections are for
the most part, analyzed in isolation with little or no consideration given to the overall
transportation network. The typical fix dictated by this approach is to provide additional
through or turn lanes at the expense of pedestrian and bike level of service and safety.
Proponents of the tools note that the CLV metric has served as a reasonable and valuable
screening tool for identifying traffic impacts at specific intersections especially in more autocentric areas of the County, and that the policy area thresholds vary to reflect different settings.
Transportation Policy Area Review (TPAR)
The current area-wide test for travel by auto is based on a level of service threshold for arterial
roadway segments (as opposed to intersections) within any specific policy area. The key metric
is the percentage of free flow speed attainable in the peak travel direction during the evening
peak period with the results weighted by vehicle miles of travel to reflect the effect on the
overall network. The tool that produces the metric is the Planning Departments Regional Travel
Demand Model. The model itself is a source of concern to some stakeholders as being too
opaque, dependent on changing land use forecasts, and providing a snapshot of a condition that
is too often dependent on land use and transportation facilities outside of the policy area in
question. However, one of the most common views in favor of the metric is that the
measurement is a close approximation of what drivers care the most about - travel speed - now
and in the future.
TPAR also includes a transit test that includes three metrics service frequency, service
coverage, and hours or span of service. The transit test was specifically noted in the last SSP
review as needing modification. The variables do not readily transfer from a Capital
Improvements Program or a Long Range Plan and are therefore difficult to forecast. In the case
of the Countywide BRT network it is unclear how the network and resulting impact would be
evaluated using the current metrics of service frequency, coverage, and hours or span of service.
In summary, the issue is not so much one of not being able to measure relative service levels
among policy areas using the transit test as it is the open-ended nature of assumptions that
would have to be made regarding the three variables since they cannot be predicted.
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School Capacity
The SSP defines adequacy for school capacity by establishing thresholds for school use. These thresholds
are used in the annual school test to determine whether residential development within a particular
area will be subject to an assessment (School Facility Payment) or a moratorium on residential
construction.
The adequate school capacity calculation compares projected enrollment numbers with existing and
planned facility capacity. The current SSP school test uses a definition of facility capacity based on
Montgomery County Public School (MCPS) program capacity. Program capacity is the number of
students planned per classroom per school level (elementary, middle or high school) based on
curriculum standards. In other words, a typical high school classroom can hold up to 25 students;
however, if it is used for ESOL instruction, it can only hold a maximum of 15 students.
Since 2007, there has been a marked increase in school system enrollmentespecially at the
elementary school level. One factor in this growth was the state mandate for public schools to provide
full-day kindergarten programs.
The enrollment factors are, in some years, difficult to predict. One unexpected consequence of the
recession was an unprecedented surge in enrollment that began in 2008. This sudden change in the
enrollment trend was particularly pronounced in Down-County elementary schools (Bethesda-Chevy
Chase, Walter Johnson, and Richard Montgomery clusters), communities that have seen little new
housing construction. Catching up to these rapid increases in enrollment is challenging, and may take
several years as school capacity projects are planned and funds requested through the Countys Capital
Improvements Program (CIP).
The Annual School Test evaluates school utilization levels in the Countys 25 school cluster areas at the
elementary, middle, and high school levels (referred to in the SSP Resolution as grade levels). Each year,
MCPS prepares the data on school cluster utilizations for the Annual School Test; the Planning Board
adopts the results to become effective starting on July 1 and the standards apply to the following fiscal
year. These results indicate whether a School Facility Payment is required or if a certain school level
within a cluster will be in moratorium.
suppression and a potable water supply, along with treatment of sewerage before it is discharged to our
rivers and the Chesapeake Bay. WSSC also strives to prevent stream erosion and adverse water quality
impacts that result from water and sewer line breaks.
One important concern in the upkeep of this infrastructure is the monitoring and eventual replacement
of large, high pressure water mains. These mains distribute water to all parts of the system and help
maintain adequate service and pressure. Unfortunately, some of the materials in these pipes are
beginning to fail and can cause catastrophic consequences from explosions and flooding if the potential
for failure is not caught in time. While these pipes are closely monitored and WSSC has allocated
substantial funds to repair and replace them, it is difficult to take them out of service and still maintain
proper water distribution and pressure. More than 88 miles of these pipes extend through Montgomery
County.
Map 2: Water Pipe Infrastructure
Accommodating the Countys future growth through redevelopment of traditional centers presents
excellent opportunities for improving and funding water supply and wastewater treatment
infrastructure without extending water and sewer service beyond the current service area.
Redevelopment and infill adds revenue and users to the existing infrastructure, allowing more funds to
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be used for system repairs and replacement. However, a determination of whether the existing
infrastructure in these centers is sufficient to handle the projected increase in development is
necessary.
Environment
Montgomery County is an integral part of the Washington, DC metropolitan area and its decisions affect
the overall health and sustainability of the region. Meeting and maintaining increasingly stringent
environmental standards remain an ongoing challenge, especially in light of continued growth. This is
true for both water and air quality standards.
Although there are as yet no Adequate Public Facility Ordinance-like tests for environmental quality, as
the County continues to develop, environmental health is becoming an increasingly important factor in
deciding how we grow. Currently, environmental issues associated with growth and development are
being handled through existing planning and regulatory processes. With continued growth, however,
clean water and air will continue to increase in importance as vital components of achieving overall
sustainability.
As a result, ways of optimizing the environmental values of redevelopment and infill development are
being pursued in master plan updates and development review processes. In the future,
environmentally-related issues may become more prominent in Subdivision Staging Policy updates, with
some aspects, such as the adequacy of urban parks, potentially being included in APFO considerations.
Water Quality
Decreased natural land cover and continuing losses, increased impervious surfaces and associated
stormwater runoff are reflected in the steady decline of water quality in the Countys streams. A
general pattern of declining stream health follows the pattern of development (see Map 3). The worst
conditions are in areas developed before strict requirements were in place to reduce pollution and the
amount of runoff. Degraded water quality has led to new state and federal government regulations to
improve degraded streams to meet water quality standards. These requirements are known as total
maximum daily loads (TMDLs)the maximum amount of a pollutant that a water body can receive and
still meet water quality standards (see Map 4).
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For jurisdictions throughout the Chesapeake Bay watershed, reducing pollutants to meet these
requirements and continuing to meet them while the population and employment base continue to
grow, will require a significant commitment and investment. The County is in the process of
determining how to reduce pollutant loads to meet and maintain water quality standards.
To help reduce the costs of meeting TMDLs and increase the range of implementation options available
to local jurisdictions, the state is looking at how pollutant trading and growth offset programs might
work to counterbalance increased pollution contributed from new development, especially in greenfield
areas. The County, in turn, is considering how it might use these programs to achieve its pollutant
control and growth goals.
Since potential for greenfield development in the County is limited, expected growth is planned to be
accommodated mostly through redevelopment and infill. This infill will allow most of the expected
increases in population to occur within existing developed areas that already have transportation and
water and sewer infrastructure. Redevelopment affords the potential not only for socio-economic
enhancements, but also environmental improvements over existing conditions. It offers opportunities
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to improve stormwater management, tree canopy and other green spaces in older developed areas that
are environmentally-impaired.
Air Quality
As with water quality, the Countys air quality has been negatively affected as the County has continued
to grow. Air quality standards exist and ongoing monitoring tracks the Countys and the regions
compliance with those standards. Both the County and the region continue to show non-attainment of
ground-level ozone air quality standards.
In 2009, the County adopted a Climate Protection Plan that specified a number of goals and
recommendations. Achieving these goals is turning out to be even more challenging than expected. As
a result, it is becoming increasingly important to seek new ways to enhance air quality in growth-related
decisions.
As with water quality, redevelopment provides opportunities to increase local and regional air quality,
not only through improving transit options, decreasing vehicle use, increasing walkability and bikeability,
and creating more energy-efficient buildings, but also through incorporating green spaces and green
buildings as integral parts of communities.
Forest and Urban Tree Canopy
In both local design and networked green spaces, forest and tree canopy are essential elements of
quality of place and livability. Trees increase energy efficiency, reduce heat island effect, improve air
quality, extend pavement life, enhance pedestrian-vehicular safety, boost real estate values, make retail
areas more attractive, absorb water pollution and carbon emissions, and slow stormwater runoff and
erosion.
Recent analysis shows forest cover has stabilized at around 30 percent of the Countys land area. Much
of that cover is situated in our parks and rural areas. In addition, approximately 20 percent of the
County is shaded by street trees, individual trees and small groves in local parks and on private property.
While our combined forest and tree canopy of almost 50 percent is commendable, our urban centers
are often a sea of buildings, roads and parking lots with very little tree cover to shade hot pavement,
filter air and water, and provide relief to those who live and work in these areas. Redevelopment in
traditional centers is an opportunity to improve urban tree canopy, air and water quality, and our
quality of life. Map 5 shows the Silver Spring, CBD as an example of a highly urbanized area.
22
Parks
With the scarcity of developable land and the increase in density in urban areas, park planning in area
master plans has become more critical to creating livable and healthy communities. The trend in real
estate development is to replace lower density residential development with higher density residential
and mixed-use buildings. The significant increase in density makes parks and open space areas the
outdoor living rooms for many of these new communities. Without space for large private backyards,
public parks and trails play an increasingly important role in improving public health and promoting
social interaction and equity. Access to urban parks is a critical and necessary element of achieving one
of the primary County goals, to promote community welfare and quality of life.
With the increased competition for land, a mix of uses and an integration of infrastructure should occur
within the same site. One example would be to build rain gardens to manage stormwater run-off and
also serve as landscape features. Integrating parks and recreation areas with other services can reduce
costs by providing local amenities within walking distance, reducing impervious surfaces and recharging
groundwater supply, and removing pollutants from water.
Sustainability requires integration of efforts and preventive measures to avoid waste of resources. This
approach is especially critical in urban areas where high density puts a strain on older infrastructure. A
23
level of coordination among different County agencies, including alignment of objectives, development
schedules, and dedicated funds will be required.
The heightened focus on parks in our most populated areas has resulted in many urban park
recommendations in area master plans. The greatest challenge for implementing these new urban
parks is land acquisition. Existing acquisition tools are insufficient to create all the parks that are needed.
While we can expect some new urban parkland to be created by the traditional tool of dedication
through the regulatory review process, many properties are too small to fit both development and
adequate open space. Typically, building footprints and infrastructure require the majority of the site,
leaving only small fragments of open space.
Even with current and newly proposed zoning to encourage dedication, some new urban parks will need
to be directly purchased with public funds. Urban parkland acquisition can be very challenging as
property owners often wish to pursue development to maximize their investment, rather than sell at the
current market value, resulting in very few willing sellers in urban areas.
New zoning tools have been proposed to make dedication of public parkland easier in urban areas. For
instance, the Bethesda Downtown Sector Plan draft proposes a density-transfer mechanism that creates
incentives to transfer density from proposed park sites to locations where development is desired. The
Parks Department would then acquire the sites, from which the density was transferred with no
development potential, at a much-reduced price.
There is no guarantee that the public sector will be able to acquire all the urban parks recommended in
area master plans, even with the tools that are existing or under consideration. The SSP is one of
several potential tools for this potential acquisition that needs more study.
24
Recommendations
Transportation
The Subdivision Staging Policy (SSP) transportation elements serve a single purpose: ensuring that new
development provides adequate public facilities in an appropriate manner and to an appropriate extent.
The SSP is the process by which the County defines the term adequacy and by which it defines the
nexus between development and transportation adequacy. In particular, the SSP defines the processes
for assessing how the travel demand generated by new development contributes to the need for, and
the provision of, transportation facilities and services that are explicitly defined in master plans or
consistent with those plans.
Key objectives of the SSP transportation element include:
Recognizing that the Countys communities span a variety of land use environments with a
continuum of place-types across urban, suburban and rural areas, and the Countys area master
plans, zoning and other supporting policies reflect the varied expectations in each environment
for convenience of travel by car, transit, bike or on foot.
Ensuring that both private sector development and public sector infrastructure proceed in a
coordinated fashion toward the end state envisioned in master plans.
Incentivizing development attributes that improve the efficiency of the planned transportation
infrastructure through the management of travel demand and parking.
There are four means by which the development approval process affects the provision of
transportation capacity, described below from the broadest to the narrowest focus:
The Transportation Impact Tax assesses the degree to which all development contributes to
funding the provision of significant master-planned transportation projects that the County is
responsible for constructing. The impact tax, governed by Section 52 of the County Code, is not
technically part of the SSP, but it is integral to the consideration of transportation impacts. The
Working Draft recommends changes to the impact tax that would be implemented concurrently
with the SSP revisions.
The policy area review process, currently called Transportation Policy Area Review (TPAR),
assesses the degree to which conditions in the development sites Policy Area are adequate
from an aggregate perspective.
The Local Area Transportation Review (LATR) process assesses the degree to which conditions in
the immediate vicinity of the development site are adequate, where the vicinity of the site is
determined by the size of the project.
Finally, many site development approval conditions related to transportation are derived from
other elements of the regulatory process, notably site design, access and circulation, based on
design standards that are independent of the SSP.
25
Using existing Policy Area geographies, the Policy Areas were categorized (as depicted in the figure
below) by: (1) observed Non-Auto Driver Mode Share (NADAMS) for work trips; (2) observed land use
density and (3) land use density forecasts. The resulting new Policy Area grouping is better aligned with
the 1993 General Plan, area master/sector plans and Road Code guidance regarding place types.
Figure 5: Comparing Existing and Future Density with Current HBW NADMS by Policy Area
180
160
140
120
100
80
70.0%
60.0%
50.0%
40.0%
30.0%
60
20.0%
40
10.0%
Policy Area
Olney
Damascus
Clarksburg
Germantown East
Fairland/Colesville
Rural East
North Potomac
Germantown West
Cloverly
Potomac
Rural West
Gaithersburg City
Montgomery Village/Airpark
Aspen Hill
White Oak
Derwood
Glenmont
R&D Village
Rockville City
North Bethesda
Kensington/Wheaton
White Flint
Bethesda/Chevy Chase
Wheaton CBD
Twinbrook
Grosvenor
Bethesda CBD
Friendship Heights
20
0.0%
Recommendation: Organize the County Policy Areas into four (4) key categories
described as follows and depicted in the map below:
Core: Down County Central Business Districts and Metro Station Policy Areas
characterized by high-density development and the availability of premium transit
service (i.e., Metrorail/MARC).
Corridor: Emerging Transit-Oriented Development (TOD) areas where premium
transit service (i.e., Corridor Cities Transitway, Purple Line/Bus Rapid Transit) is
planned.
27
Wedge
Rural
Corridor
Corridor
One of the challenges inherent in grouping the Policy Areas is the need to acknowledge the goal and
intent for change over the near and intermediate term the four to 10-year window on which the SSP
analytics are focused. Clarksburg Town Center presents an example of that challenge. It is a place that in
the near term will be much closer in context to the original vision of a walkable, mixed-use activity
center, but is unlikely, in that same time period, to be served by high quality transit.
Nevertheless, the determination of what might be considered adequate in terms of the transportation
network within the Town Center itself would be best served by acknowledging the longer term goals. As
a result, the recommendation is to establish a new Town Center Policy Area to reinforce the original
vision and eventual extension of the Corridor Cities Transitway to Clarksburg.
Three additional Policy Areas are recommended for the Corridor group in response to the fact that
construction funds are now programmed for the Purple Line (scheduled to begin revenue service in
28
2022) and the Council has adopted three related master plans along the corridor since the last SSP
review Chevy Chase Lake (October 2013), Long Branch (November 2013) and the Montgomery County
part of the Takoma/Langley Crossroads Sector Plan (June 2012).
Recommendation: Establish four new Policy Areas: a Clarksburg Town Center Policy Area
categorized as a Corridor Policy Area in recognition of the original vision for the Town
Center and the planned high-quality transit service to be provided by the Corridor Cities
Transitway, and three additional Policy Areas also categorized as Corridor Policy Areas
due to the programming of construction funds for the Purple Line - Chevy Chase Lake,
Long Branch and Takoma/Langley Crossroads (within Montgomery County).
Planned BRT service in the County is not currently reflected in the CLRP.
29
Regulatory horizon (year 2025) transit accessibility with improvements included in the state
Consolidated Transportation Program (CTP) and County Capital Improvements Program (CIP).
Notably, the Purple Line is fully funded for construction by 2025 in the current state CTP, but the
Corridor Cities Transitway is not funded for construction at all by the state or County.
These conditions were evaluated in the context of an analysis reflecting the following land
use/transportation scenarios:
Scenario I: Year 2015 transportation network in combination with year 2015 land use (Current
conditions)
Scenario II: Year 2025 transportation network excluding the Corridor Cities Transitway (CCT) in
combination with year 2025 land use
Scenario III: Scenario II described above including the CCT
Scenario IV: 2040 Constrained Long Range Plan (CLRP) network in combination with year 2040
land use
A general conceptualization of these scenarios and the relevant policy area transit accessibility results
are summarized and depicted in Figure 6 and Figure 7, respectively.
The 10-year regulatory horizon (from 2015 to 2025) is 40 percent as long as the 25-year planning
horizon (from 2015 to 2040). Areas that have at least 40 percent of their planned 2015-2040 transit
accessibility by 2025 are, therefore, considered to be on pace with respect to reaching a key indicator
of future non-auto travel options and are therefore considered adequate. The remaining areas are
behind pace and are considered to have inadequate transit accessibility. The recommendation is that
these areas should pay a 25 percent surcharge on their transportation impact taxes to help fund transit
capital projects or transit-access capital projects.
This new Policy Area test addresses concerns that the current process is too auto-centric. It elegantly
combines a robust and context-sensitive measure of accessibility with a simple objective of tracking
whether or not each Policy Area is on pace to achieve long range objectives for better transit services.
The transit accessibility metric is sensitive to the introduction of high-quality transit service such as bus
rapid transit (BRT) and to changes in land use density and mix. In addition, the proposed transit
accessibility metric can be used to forecast future conditions. The proposed metric is consistent with the
transit accessibility metric included in the states Open Transportation Investment Decision Act, which
became law in April 2016.
The recommended new approach for determining Policy Area adequacy does not mean the TPAR metric
of the forecasted percent of free flow speed over major roadway segments within a Policy Area would
be entirely abandoned. Staff recognizes that our current TPAR methodology continues to have utility in
the planning process and should be retained for use in assessing proposed master plan
recommendations, evaluating capital programming needs and supporting travel monitoring efforts. The
recommended focus on making transit accessibility the key metric in a regulatory context as part of the
30
Subdivision Staging Policy is an acknowledgment that there will continue to be a limited number of
locations where we will want to widen existing roads or build new roads. As a result, the more practical
approach is for the policy to reflect the fact that providing infrastructure improvements that encourage
modes of travel other than the single occupant auto, although challenging, is the best way to achieve
and maintain adequacy both in the near and long term.
31
32
Recommendation: Do not apply the Policy Area transit accessibility test in Core or
Rural areas.
Two other metrics considered for application as a Policy Area transportation test were non-auto driver
mode share (NADMS) - defined as the percentage of journey-to-work trips by travel modes other than
single-occupant auto within each Policy Area - and vehicle miles of travel (VMT) - defined as average
trip length by auto drivers from households within each Policy Area. Staffs evaluation of these metrics
determined that their utility is best suited in other planning applications, as briefly described below.
NADMS - This metric is well suited as a performance goal to be achieved as set forth in master
plan or sector plan recommendations. In addition, this metric was also found to have utility for
grouping Policy Areas as described in the Policy Area Characteristics section of this report.
VMT This metric is found to have great utility in the context of developing factors that can be
used to adjust Institute of Transportation Engineers (ITE)-set trip generation rates and
transportation impact tax rates so that the length of vehicle trips is explicitly reflected in travel
demand estimation and the travel mitigation fee payment structure.
A more detailed discussion of the evaluation of each of these three metrics (i.e., transit accessibility,
NADMS and VMT) will be provided an Appendix to this report.
33
intersection operating at or beyond 1600 CLV, a Highway Capacity Manual (HCM) analysis that
incorporates queuing and delay may be used to determine the extent of traffic impacts.
The 2016 Subdivision Staging Policy proposes significant changes to both of the primary components of
LATR. The first recommended change involves vehicle trip generation rates. Following the 2012 SSP, the
County Council directed Planning staff to update the vehicle trip generation rates used in support of
transportation impact studies. Currently, vehicle trip generation rates are identified in the 2013
LATR/TPAR Guidelines and reflect a combination of vehicle trips rates specified in the Institute of
Transportation Engineers (ITE) Trip Generation Manual and vehicle trip rates derived from a
Montgomery County-focused trip generation study performed in 1989.
Recommendation: Adopt new vehicle trip generation rates based on updated land use
and travel behavior data.
A proposed set of new ITE-adjusted vehicle trip generation rates have been calculated based on current
land use data and travel mode choice. The adjustment factors applied to ITE vehicle trip generation
rates are reported in Table 1.
34
In addition to updating vehicle trip rates, Planning staff believes there is value in moving from a traffic
study screening tool based solely on vehicle trips to one that looks at the person trips associated with
new development. Person trips, broken down into the proportion of trips made using the various
transportation modes vehicle, transit, pedestrian, provide a more complete snapshot of the relative
impact a development is likely to have on the nearby transportation network. Moving away from a
solely auto-focused metric, staff recommends replacing the current 30 peak hour vehicle trip threshold
for an LATR study with new person-trip thresholds.
Applicants may propose methods to shift vehicle trips to other modes to manage travel demand and
reduce traffic impacts by one of two methods. First, they may propose reduced on-site parking below
35
the minimum amounts with specific complementary travel demand management actions as specified in
the zoning code.
Research suggests that there is a correlation between parking supply and vehicle trip generation,
particularly when applied in a supportive parking-pricing environment with alternative transportation
options. The 2016 SSP identifies person trip generation rates that allow the use of vehicle trip
generation rates up to 40 percent lower than ITE vehicle trip generation rates based on the location and
type of development.
In addition, applicants may further reduce trip generation rates if, per Section 59.6.2.4 of the County
Code, they propose parking ratios lower than the baseline minimums that include specific supportive
actions identified to reduce parking demand. For residential uses, each 2 percent reduction in parking
below the minimum number of spaces yields a 1 percent reduction in vehicle trip generation rates for
that use. For office uses, each 3 percent reduction in parking below the minimum number of spaces
yields a 1 percent reduction in vehicle trip generation rates for that use.
Secondly and alternatively, an applicant may develop a customized TDM program and enter into a
Traffic Mitigation Agreement to monitor program success.
Recommendation: Replace the 30 peak hour vehicle trip threshold for an LATR study with
a 75 person trips per hour threshold in Metro Station Policy Areas and a 50 person trips
per hour threshold in other areas of the County, where LATR remains applicable.
If a proposed development exceeds the 75/50 person trip threshold, an auto-mode transportation study
will be required. If the development will also produce more than 50 transit trips, a transit-mode analysis
will be required. And, if the development produces more than 100 pedestrian trips, a pedestrian-mode
analysis will be required. If the proposed new development is below the 75/50 person trip threshold, no
transportation studies will be required.
The new person trip thresholds may result in slightly fewer LATR studies as they are generally equivalent
to about 30 to 45 vehicle trips depending on the specific type of use and Policy Area. Updating vehicle
trip rates and moving to person trips will reflect lower vehicle trip generation rates calculated for smart
growth locations (addressing a common critique of the ITE data), define new thresholds for quantitative
study (including off-site impacts for non-motorized and transit facilities) and provide a baseline nonauto driver mode share for the assessment of TDM programs where applicable.
The scoping of an LATR study under the recommended approach would be a multi-step process and
include the following:
36
1.
2.
3.
4.
The second main component of LATR is the transportation study. Once screening has established the
need for, and type of, quantitative analysis (there will always be an auto analysis and may be transit and
pedestrian analyses), the number and locations of intersections required to be studied is defined by the
current LATR guidelines based on number of auto trips generated.
Currently, most projects requiring an LATR study look at critical lane volume, or CLV, as the measure of
adequacy. CLV provides a snapshot of intersection performance at a particular place and time. Due to
its simplistic nature, CLV has been the focus of considerable criticism under the current SSP. Its primary
advantage is that it is a very simple and economical way to quickly gauge whether an individual
intersection is operating near its design capacity. Its noted disadvantages are that it does not reflect
travel time or delay, is insensitive to operational improvements like signal timing and does not reflect
upstream or downstream conditions. Basically, CLV levels may not correspond to the experience of
drivers in many of our communities.
Two other transportation analyses can address the limitations of CLV: an analysis of intersection
operations and an analysis of network operations. The tools used for the intersection and network
analysis provide measurements and in some cases, simulations, that are more readily identifiable as
representing current conditions by more of the general public. There is still merit in retaining CLV as
simply a screening tool that is not directly used in the traffic analyses. Another aspect of the
recommended changes to the current process in that the threshold needed to trigger the more robust
analysis should be set lower than the current 1600 CLV to account for the many different settings that
can be created by the variables in play (intersection spacing, special generators, network configuration,
etc.).
37
Required for:
Features
Complexity
Addresses
Delay
Addresses
Adjacent
Intersections
Low
No
No
Moderate
Yes
No
Or a Network Operations
Analysis
High
Yes
Yes
38
This new system for evaluating local area transportation conditions sets a lower threshold for triggering
a more robust analysis. The rationale for using a 1350 CLV baseline is consistent with the lowest CLV
Policy Area standard currently employed (i.e., in Rural East and Rural West). If the traffic impact of a
proposed development is less than 1350 + 10 CLV, no mitigation is required.
Lastly, the most robust tier 3 network operations analysis (e.g., Synchro, CORSIM, etc.) is triggered at
1600 CLV or if the intersection in question is located on an identified congested arterial roadway list
per available traffic monitoring reports (e.g., MWCOG Congestion Monitoring Report, MDSHA Maryland
State Highway Mobility Report and Montgomery County Mobility Assessment Report).
The local area test would not be applied in the Core areas, as the focus in those areas would be on
enhancing accessibility through improvements to the pedestrian and bike networks, not improvements
to intersections to increase vehicle capacity or reduce delay. Likewise, White Flint and White Oak should
not be subject to an LATR test due to the recognition of White Flint as a Special Taxing District, and
White Oak as a recently established pro rata share district.
Recommendation: Exempt the White Flint Metro Station Policy Area from the local area
test in recognition of the Special Tax District process in that area. Similarly, retain the
elimination of LATR in the White Oak Policy Area in favor of the recently established pro
rata share district process in that area.
Mitigation
The consideration of land use context in defining appropriate transportation solutions extends beyond
the Policy Area geography. For example, the implementation of transportation facilities is governed by
Section 49 of the County Code, also known as the Road Code. As with Policy Areas, the Road Code
also defines portions of the County as urban, suburban or rural, and these definitions are also adopted
by County resolution (while being more finely-grained than the Policy Area definitions).
The Road Code urban areas, such as the Olney Town Center or Damascus Town Center, reflect nuances
within a Policy Area where the land use is expected to generate a higher proportion of walking and
bicycling. Accordingly, there should be slower speed limits, wider sidewalks and similar design elements
associated with a walkable town center. These Road Code urban areas are places where the right-ofways are busiest; not only due to the concentration of pedestrian activity, but also due to smaller
parcels with multiple connections to utility lines, more closely spaced driveways and intersections, and
more overlapping activities for capital improvements and maintenance within both public and private
realms.
39
The identification and implementation of transportation solutions in these areas therefore tend to be
the most complex. It is more efficient in these areas for the public sector to implement transportation
solutions in a coordinated fashion. Therefore, in Road Code urban areas where an applicant needs to
mitigate an LATR impact, the applicant should make a payment in lieu of construction as the first course
of action rather than a measure of last resort.
40
Core
Corridor
Residential
None required.
Public sector
monitoring
replaces private
sector studies.
None required.
Public sector
monitoring
replaces private
sector studies.
Rural
When a proposed development increases the intersection demand by 10 CLV and total
future CLV is greater than 1350
Mitigation:
What determines the type of
mitigation required:
Mitigation
payment not
required.
Core
Corridor
Residential
Rural
Required, retain
for funding transit
accessibility
improvement
within the Policy
Area
Required
Required
Required
41
Core
Corridor
Residential
Rural
Applies
Applies
N/A
The 10-year staging horizon (from 2015 to 2025) is 40 percent as long as the 25-year
planning horizon (from 2015 to 2040). Areas that have at least 40 percent of their
planned 2015-2040 transit accessibility by 2025 are, therefore, considered to be on
pace with respect to reaching a key indicator of future non-auto travel options and are
therefore considered adequate.
Mitigation:
When is a mitigation
payment required:
N/A
When a Policy Area is below 40% in 2025 they are behind pace and have inadequate
transit accessibility. The recommendation is that these areas should pay a 25 percent
surcharge on their transportation impact taxes to help fund transit capital projects or
transit-access capital projects.
Impact Tax:
Core
Corridor
Residential
Rural
Required
Required
Required
Scoping:
Where does the policy
area test apply:
Testing:
What determines policy
area adequacy:
42
An open dialogue with these entities regarding proposed changes to the Countys LATR process is
essential in order to avoid or minimize issues associated with transportation impact studies that may
overlap jurisdictional boundaries and/or impact access requirements on roadways maintained by the
state. Staff recognizes the need to work closely with these entities so that they are aware of the LATRrelated recommendation proposed in the SSP Working Draft.
Other recommendations as a result of modifications to the policy area test and LATR
approaches) so that trip making associated with new residential and commercial growth can be
adequately accommodated.
The Code contains policy guidance that provides context for any review of the tax. Examples include the
following:
The amount and rate of growth in certain Policy Areas will place significant demands on the
County for provision of major highways to support and accommodate that growth.
Imposing a tax that requires new development to pay its pro-rata share of the costs of the
improvements necessitated by that development in conjunction with other public funds is a
reasonable method of raising funds.
The County retains the power to determine the impact transportation improvements to be
funded by development impact taxes, to estimate the cost of such improvements, to establish
the proper timing of the construction of the improvements to meet Adequate Public Facilities
Ordinance (APFO) standards in areas where they apply, and to determine when changes to the
Capital Improvement Program (CIP) are necessary.
In summary, the tax is needed to contribute to the funding of improvements to accommodate new
development with the understanding that the amount of the tax and the programming of the funds
generated by the tax are set by County policy and can change over time. There is also an
acknowledgement that other public funds will likely be necessary to fund the improvements and that
some of the improvements are likely to be needed for reasons other than just the accommodation of
new development (e.g., mitigate existing conditions).5
The Transportation Impact Tax is collected by the Department of Permitting Services within 6 months of
filing for a building permit or when filing for a Use & Occupancy permit, whichever comes first. The tax
varies by District and the type of land use. The current rates by District are shown below in Table 5.
44
Metro Station
Clarksburg
General
$6,984
$20,948
$13,966
$5,714
$17,141
$11,427
$4,443
$13,330
$8,886
$3,174
$9,522
$6,347
$1,269
$3,808
$2,539
$6.35
$15.30
$12.75
$3.20
$7.60
$6.35
$0
$0
$0
$5.70
$13.70
$11.40
$0.35
$0.90
$0.65
$0.50
$1.35
$1.05
$0
$0
$0
$0
$0
$0
$3.20
$7.60
$6.35
The FY20152020 Capital Improvement Program (CIP) for the County reflects an assumption that the tax
will provide about 4 percent of the total amount of funds (about $1.1 billion) dedicated for all
transportation improvements, including State and Federal funds (see below) over that six-year period.
45
$40,423,000
$45,329,000
Transportation Impact Tax (4%)
$79,953,000
$30,563,000
$56,978,000
$67,045,000
$567,881,000
State Aid (3%)
White Flint Special Tax District (7%)
Other (7%)
Since the tax is intended to support projects that increase network capacity, it is useful to review
assumptions related to that aspect of the funding profile. The specific types of improvements the tax is
to be used for are noted in Section 52-58 of the Code:
New road, widening of an existing road, or total reconstruction of all or part of an existing road
required as part of a widening of an existing road that add highway or intersection capacity or
improves bicycle commuting
New or expanded transit center or park and ride lot
Bus added to the Ride On fleet, but not a replacement bus
New bus shelter, but not a replacement bus shelter
Hiker-biker trail used primarily for transportation
Bicycle locker that holds at least 8 bicycles
Bike-sharing station (including bicycles approved by the Department of Transportation)
Sidewalk connector to a major activity center or along an arterial or major highway
The operating expenses of any transit or trip reduction program.
The tax receipts (estimated at $40.4 million over the CIP period as noted above) represent about 9
percent of the total local funds allocated for system or network capacity expansion as shown in the
chart below.6
The total of the local funds shown in the pie chart is approximately $470 million. The exclusion of the White Flint
Special Tax District (the $82.1 million piece of the pie) reduces the total to about $388 million and the percentage
the impact tax represents of total local funds dedicated to system expansion increases to a little more than 10
percent.
46
Figure 9 Allocation of Local Funds in The CIP for System Capacity Expansion
$25,982,000
$82,144,000
$54,623,000
$7,627,000
Mass Transit
CIP - Roads
$87,653,000
CIP - Pedestrian Facilities and Bikeways
$212,094,000
An important aspect of the current funding profile is the extent to which the total transportation impact
tax collections can vary by year. A number of factors contribute to the variation. The overall economic
environment is a primary reason for the variance and is clearly evident in the graph below where
collections during the Great Recession were well below other years.
Annual Revenue
$20,000,000
$15,000,000
$10,000,000
$5,000,000
$0
2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015
FY
Source: Montgomery County Finance Department
47
Other factors that contribute to the variation include geographical areas and/or types of development
that are either exempt from the tax or pay a reduced rate. Examples include:
Moderately priced dwelling units (MPDUs) built under Chapter 25A (exempt)
Any development located in a current or former Enterprise Zone (exempt)7
Any building located within one-half mile of a MARC station (payment reduced to 85 percent of
rate)
Impact tax credits are also available to property owners who provide additional network capacity in the
form of an improvement that the tax is intended to fund (see list above).
Finally, it should be noted that the graph above includes revenue collected within the Cities of
Gaithersburg and Rockville. Funds collected within Gaithersburg and Rockville are designated for
projects within those jurisdictions.
Transportation Impact Tax Rate Update
The tax in its current form was first levied during the last half of FY 2004. The rates were raised
significantly (70 percent across the board) on December 1, 2007 after analysis done as part of the 2007
Growth Policy. While the rate increase resulted in an increase in overall collections for FY 2007, it was
introduced at the beginning of the recession. The total revenue collected did not reach FY2007 levels
again until FY2013. The rate increases introduced in 2007 are shown below in Table 6.
State-designated Enterprise Zones include Burtonsville, Glenmont, Long Branch, Wheaton and Olde Town in the
City of Gaithersburg.
48
General District
Pre-
2007 Rates
2007 Rates
Clarksburg District
Pre-
Pre-
2007
2007 Rates
Rates
2007 Rates
2007 Rates
Single-Family Detached
$6,264
$10,649
$3,132
$5,325
$9,396
$15,973
Single-Family Attached
$5,125
$8,713
$2,563
$4,357
$7,688
$13,070
Garden Apartments
$3,986
$6,776
$1,993
$3,388
$5,979
$10,164
High-Rise Apartments
$2,847
$4,840
$1,424
$2,420
$4,271
$7,261
Multi-Family Senior
$1,139
$1,936
$569
$968
$1,708
$2,904
Old Rates
New Rates
Old Rates
New Rates
Old Rates
New Rates
Office
$5.70
$9.69
$2.85
$4.85
$6.85
$11.65
Industrial
$2.85
$4.85
$1.40
$2.43
$3.40
$5.78
Bioscience
$0.00
$0.00
$0.00
$0.00
$0.00
$0.00
Retail
$5.10
$8.67
$2.60
$4.34
$6.15
$10.46
Place of Worship
$0.30
$0.51
$0.15
$0.26
$0.40
$0.68
Private School
$0.45
$0.77
$0.20
$0.39
$0.60
$1.02
Hospital
$0.00
$0.00
$0.00
$0.00
$0.00
$0.00
N/A
$0.00
N/A
$0.00
N/A
$0.00
Other Non-Residential
$2.85
$4.85
$1.40
$2.43
$3.40
$5.78
As previously noted, the last time the rate was examined was during the review of the 2007 Growth
Policy. The methodology used in support of the analysis at that time is summarized in Table 7 below and
involved the following steps (referencing the respective rows in Table 7):
Row A the capital funding requirements (local funds) contained in the CIP and regional
Constrained Long Range Plan (CLRP) for projects adding network capacity
Rows B, C, and D - the forecast growth in County households (single family and multi-family) and
jobs (office, retail, industrial, or other) from the Regional Cooperative Land Use Forecast
49
Rows E and F - the estimate of the new daily trips generated by the new growth
Row G the cost attributable to that specific land use based upon the proportion of trips
Estimate Tax Rate (last row) the computed rate by land use based on the allocated costs (Row
G) divided by the number of units (Row C) or square feet (Row D) as applicable
Table 7 Arriving at an Initial General Rate for the Transportation Impact Tax
A
Residential Units
Retail Jobs
Industrial Jobs
Other Jobs
Single-Family
Multi-Family
Office SF
Retail SF
Industrial SF
Other SF
Trip Rate
Trip Rate
Trip Rate
Trip Rate
Trip Rate
Trip Rate
New Daily
Trips
New Daily
Trips
New Daily
Trips
New Daily
Trips
New Daily
Trips
New Daily
Trips
Cost (A)
Allocated by
Trips (F)
Cost (A)
Allocated by
Trips (F)
Cost (A)
Allocated by
Trips (F)
Cost (A)
Allocated by
Trips (F)
Cost (A)
Allocated by
Trips (F)
Cost (A)
Allocated by
Trips (F)
G/C
G/C
G/D
G/D
G/D
G/D
The next series of tables provide a comparison of 2007 and the present using essentially the same
methodology used in the review of the Transportation Impact Tax in 2007.8 A summary of the variables
and resultant unit rates (for broad land use categories) for 2016 is shown in Table 8.
While staff has not conducted a comprehensive review of the methodology used in other jurisdictions, the
approach of considering the capital costs of projects programmed or planned, the growth in households and
commercial building space, the application of trip rates and the eventual calculation of a rate at least in part
related to the type of land use is relatively common.
50
SF
Residential
MF
Residential
Office
Retail
Industrial
Other
Commercial
Forecast
Growth 201520409
11,218 DU
71,419 DU
128,822 Jobs
30,697 Jobs
12,180 Jobs
11,418 Jobs
32,205,500
12,278,800
5,481,000
5,709,000
SF of
Commercial10
Vehicle Trip
Gen Rate11
9.52 per DU
6.65 per DU
21.47 per
KGSF
Daily Vehicle
Trip Ends
106,795
474,936
427,689
263,626
33,739
31,628
% of Total Trip
Ends
8.0%
35.5%
32.0%
19.7%
2.5%
2.4%
Proportional
Allocation of
$1.6 Billion12
$129M
$574M
$517M
$318M
$41M
$38M
Resultant Unit
Impact Tax
Rates
$11,499 per
DU
$8,032 per
DU
$16.04 per
GSF
$25.93 per
GSF
A comparison of how the calculated rates in Table 8 compare with the rates calculated in 2007 using the
same methodology is shown in Table 9 below.
Round 8.3 Regional Cooperative Land Use Forecast Montgomery County Growth Only
Estimate arrived at by applying SF factor by job type (250 SF/job for Office, 400 SF/job for Retail, 450 SF/job for
Industrial, and 500 SF/job for Other Commercial.
11
ITE Trip Generation Manual, 9th Edition
12
$1.6 Billion estimate is arrived at by dividing the $388 million total shown in Table 2 by the number of years in
the CIP (6) and multiplying that annual number by 25 the number of years the forecast growth is based upon.
10
51
SF
Residential
MF
Residential
Office
Retail
Industrial
Other
Commercial
Resultant Unit
Impact Tax
Rates 20152040
$11,499 per
DU
$8,032 per
DU
$16.04 per
GSF
$25.93 per
GSF
Resultant Unit
Impact Tax
Rates 2005203013
$8,380 per
DU
$5,884 per
DU
$11.56 per
GSF
$18.80 per
GSF
CurrentGeneral
$13,966 per
DU
$8,886 per
DU
$12.75 per
SF GFA
$11.40 per SF
GFA
$6.35 per SF
GFA
$6.35 per SF
GFA
CurrentMetro Station
$6,984 per
DU
$4,443 per
DU
$6.35 per SF
GFA
$5.70 per SF
GFA
$3.20 per SF
GFA
$3.20 per SF
GFA
Current Clarksburg
$20,948 per
DU
$13,330 per
DU
$15.30 per
SF GFA
$13.70 per SF
GFA
$7.60 per SF
GFA
$7.60 per SF
GFA
A look at comparative percent increases of key variables is useful in attempting to arrive at any
conclusion with respect to what might be a reasonable rate. In doing so, staff focused on two primary
questions:
How does the difference between the two calculated rates (2007, and 2016 using 2015 data)
compare with the difference in the actual rate over the same period of time?
Does the current rate meet the fair-share or pro-rata objective of the County Code?
In its simplest form, the first question can be addressed by comparing the rates for single family dwelling
units:
The calculated rate resulted in the single family dwelling unit rate increasing from $8,380 per
unit in 2007 to $11,499 per unit now, an increase of 37% over 8 years or an average of 4.6% per
year.
The current rate for a single family dwelling unit has actually increased from $10,649 per unit in
2007 to $13,966 per unit in 2015, an increase of 31% over 8 years or an average of 3.9% per
year.
13
The eventual adopted rates were not the same as the calculated rates arrived at during the review of 2007
Subdivision Staging (Growth) Policy. See Table 6 for the actual adopted rates.
52
The rate of the increase between the calculated rate compared to the current rate for a single family
residence is relatively close and all other things being equal, one could therefore conclude that there
may be a basis for an increase of around percent (but not much more) as the increase in the current
rate trails the increase in the calculated rate by a small amount.
The second or pro-rata question might be addressed by comparing the growth forecast with the
percentage of expansion projects funded by the Transportation Impact Tax.
The Round 8.3 Regional Cooperative Forecast for Montgomery County households estimates an
increase form 377,500 in 2015 to 460,200 in 2040, an increase of 22 percent or 0.90 percent per
year. Over a six year CIP period, this would amount to a total increase of 5.4 percent.
The same forecast for employment for Montgomery County estimates an increase from 532,000
in 2015 to 715,000 in 2040, an increase of 34 percent or an average of 1.4 percent per year.
Over a six year CIP period, this would amount to a total increase of 8.4 percent.
As previously noted (see Figure 9), the Transportation Impact Tax is estimated to provide $40,423,000 in
funds over the six- year life of the current CIP. Excluding the White Flint Special Tax District projects, this
amount of revenue represents 10.4 percent of the total $388 million in local funds used over the sixyear period.
In terms of the percent of local funds supporting transportation projects that expand network capacity,
one could conclude the current level of the Transportation Impact Tax (based on the estimates in the
current CIP) is contributing slightly above its pro-rata share by somewhere between 2 and 5 percent
when compared to the overall growth forecast (comparing the 10.4 percent portion of the CIP with the
5.4 or 8.4 percent increase for households and employment, respectively).
The comparison of the increase in the calculated rates (2007 vs 2016) therefore suggests an increase of
about percent may be in order; however, comparing the percent of local funds the tax provides given
the growth forecast suggests the tax is covering (or exceeding) that share by a margin of between 2 to
5 percent. Given the potential variances in the growth forecast, construction costs and timing, and
other factors, there does not appear to be a strong argument for recommending any significant
change in the rates at this time other than the annual adjustments to account for inflation related to
construction costs14.
In summary, it appears the Transportation Impact Tax is at a reasonable level, i.e., the current level is
estimated to provide funding reasonably consistent on a historical percentage basis - with anticipated
growth and programmed capital costs for system expansion met through local funding sources.
14
It should be noted that the calculated resultant rates are generally below the corresponding existing residential
rates and above the corresponding existing commercial rates. The final rates set in 2007 established this pattern
(when compared to the calculated rates at that time - see Table 6 and the second row of Table 9).
53
SF
Residential
MF
Residential
Office
Retail
Industrial
Other
Commercial
General
1.0
1.0
1.0
1.0
1.0
1.0
Metro
Station
0.5
0.5
0.5
0.5
0.5
0.5
Clarksburg
1.5
1.5
1.2
1.2
1.2
1.2
District
The extent to which the rates in Metro Station areas and Clarksburg vary from the rest of the County has
been a point of discussion over the years and as a result, it is worthwhile to consider whether other
metrics are available to consider if the variance should remain the same or change.
Staff recommends consideration of current estimated Vehicle Miles of Travel (VMT) for trips to work15
as a readily available and relevant measurement to use in establishing Policy Area specific rates for
residential development. A similar and complementary metric for commercial development is the nonauto driver mode share for trips to work. A potential stratification of the adjustment factor for new
residential and commercial development is depicted in the table below.
15
Trips to work are referred to as Home Based Work (HBW) trips because they have home at one end of the trip
and work at the other.
54
Table 11 Recommended New Adjustment Factors to Transportation Impact Tax Base Rates
Comparing Existing Rates with New Rates Derived from New Adjustment Factors
As noted previously there appears to be no basis for an absolute increase in the rate other than an
adjustment for inflation related to construction costs. Staff is however recommending consideration of a
modification to how the rate varies by Policy Area or District (the current descriptor in the Code for the
three areas - General, Metro Station Policy Areas, and Clarksburg) based upon the rationale and
resulting adjustment factors noted above (see Table 11). A comparison of how the potential new rates
(unadjusted for inflation to simplify the comparison at this point) for the four new Policy Area groups
relates to the current set of rates is presented in the table below.
55
Table 12 Comparison of New Rates by Policy Area Groups with Existing Rates and Districts
Policy Area
Group or Tax
District
SF
Residential
MF
Residential
Office
Retail
Industrial
Other
Commercial
Core
$3,492 per
DU
$2,222 per
DU
$9.56 per SF
GFA
$8.55 per SF
GFA
$4.76 per SF
GFA
$4.76 per SF
GFA
Corridor
$10,475 per
DU
$6,665 per
DU
$12.75 per
SF GFA
$11.40 per SF
GFA
$6.35 per SF
GFA
$6.35 per SF
GFA
Residential
$17,478 per
DU
$11,108 per
DU
$15.94 per
SF GFA
$14.25 per SF
GFA
$7.94 per SF
GFA
$7.94 per SF
GFA
Rural
$27,932 per
DU
$17,772 per
DU
$15.94 per
SF GFA
$14.25 per SF
GFA
$7.94 per SF
GFA
$7.94 per SF
GFA
CurrentGeneral
$13,966 per
DU
$8,886 per
DU
$12.75 per
SF GFA
$11.40 per SF
GFA
$6.35 per SF
GFA
$6.35 per SF
GFA
CurrentMetro Station
$6,984 per
DU
$4,443 per
DU
$6.35 per SF
GFA
$5.70 per SF
GFA
$3.20 per SF
GFA
$3.20 per SF
GFA
Current Clarksburg
$20,948 per
DU
$13,330 per
DU
$15.30 per
SF GFA
$13.70 per SF
GFA
$7.60 per SF
GFA
$7.60 per SF
GFA
Residential
Office
Retail
Other
Residential
Office
Retail
Other
Residential
Office
Retail
Other
3X
3X
3X
3X
2X
2X
2X
2X
56
This approach would further incentive development to minimize parking capacity especially in areas
where options may exist for access by modes other than auto.
Schools
Student Generation Rates
A student generation rate identifies the number of students yielded by a particular type of housing in a
specific geographic area. These generation rates are used to project future enrollment, estimate the
impact of new residential development on school enrollment and calculate the financial burden placed
by new development on the County to build new school facilities.
When the Subdivision Staging Policy was last updated in 2012, student generation rates were estimated
by using data from the Countys triennial Census Update Survey conducted in 2008. The County no
longer conducts the survey, but the Planning Department has worked with Montgomery County Public
Schools (MCPS) to develop a more accurate method of calculating student generation rates. MCPS data
containing student addresses and grade-level information (stripped of any confidential information) are
combined with Planning Department parcel data that contain information on the type of residential
structure associated with every address in the County. The results are generation rates that reflect the
actual location and housing structure of virtually every MCPS student.
The generation rates were first calculated using this new methodology in 2013. Due to the extensive
amount of work associated with these calculations, the generation rates will be updated on a biennial
basis for use in estimating the impact of new development on schools. The most recent calculations
were conducted using data from the start of the 2015-16 school year. Planning staff were able to match
96.1 percent of the Countys public school students to a parcel and a type of residential unit. As a result,
these generation rates are much more accurate than those previously calculated using the Census
Update Survey data.
The availability of such accurate and comprehensive data makes it possible to analyze generation rates
for various parcel and neighborhood characteristics. Over time, these data will help the County to
better understand the variables that impact school enrollment and improve the accuracy of MCPSs
enrollment projections.
With respect to the Subdivision Staging Policy, county-wide student generation rates are used to
calculate School Facility Payments for four types of residential units: single-family detached, singlefamily attached, multi-family low to mid rise, and multi-family high rise. They are similarly used to
calculate the School Impact Tax for each of these four types of units.
57
Recommendation: Calculate School Facility Payments and the School Impact Tax using
student generation rates associated with residential structures built over the prior 10
years.
Since the School Facility Payments and School Impact Tax are intended to mitigate the school
construction costs associated with new development, it makes logical sense to use generation rates that
only capture the enrollment impact of relatively new housing. The table below identifies the
recommended student generation rates:
Table 14: Student Generation Rates, 2015
Unit Type
Single-Family Detached
Single-Family Attached
Multi-Family Low to Mid Rise
Multi-Family High Rise
These rates are similar to the rates calculated using 2013 enrollment data with the exception of the
rates for multifamily housing. These new multifamily rates are approximately half the rates used from
the 2013 data. In large part, this is due to the fact that the multifamily housing rates in 2013 included
multifamily units of any age.
58
that year. Planned program capacity includes the impact of any capital project included in any year of
the six-year CIP. The program capacity of a facility is determined by the space requirements of the
educational programs in the facility and student-to-classroom ratios.18
The enrollment projections used in the annual school tests are calculated by the MCPS Division of Long
Range Planning using a model that considers the following factors:
Birth rate
Aging of the school-age population
Migration of residents into and out of Montgomery County
New home construction and sales
The tests are conducted at a cluster level, meaning that enrollment and capacity are summed across all
schools in a cluster for a particular school level (elementary, middle and high). Tests are not currently
conducted at an individual school level. The assumption is that if capacity is adequate across a cluster,
but not for an individual school, MCPS could redraw service area boundaries to alleviate any
inadequacies that might exist. For a variety of reasons, including the cost of conducting boundary
studies, such actions are not easy to implement, and therefore not frequently used to address capacity
issues at individual schools.
Due to the large variation in the size of schools (for instance, the built capacity of middle schools in the
county currently ranges from 468 to 1,289), MCPS does not use percentage utilization thresholds to
identify schools with inadequate capacity. Instead, MCPS uses a seat-capacity deficit to determine when
an individual school should be considered for an addition:
An elementary school is considered for an addition when forecasted enrollment in the sixth year
of the CIP exceeds capacity by four classrooms, or 92 students.
A middle school is considered for an addition when forecasted enrollment in the sixth year of
the CIP exceeds capacity by six classrooms, or 150 students.
A high school is considered for an addition when forecasted enrollment in the sixth year of the
CIP exceeds capacity by eight classrooms, or 200 students.
The point behind these capacity deficit thresholds is that the number of 92 students is 92 students
whether they are at a school with capacity of 400 or a school with a capacity of 700. When these MCPS
thresholds are met, feasibility studies are conducted to determine the viability of adding capacity to the
school in question.
There are two potential outcomes from a feasibility study:
The identification of multiple alternatives for adding capacity on the schools property.
18
Program capacity should not be confused with staffing ratios, which are determined through the annual
operating budget process, or state rated capacity, which uses different student-to-classroom ratios (in particular
treats special education differently). Staffing ratios generally produce higher capacities than program capacity
calculations.
59
The determination that the schools property cannot accommodate additional school capacity,
and therefore capacity must be sought elsewhere (i.e., alleviating the enrollment burden at the
school by shifting students to another school with capacity or where adding capacity is feasible).
A feasibility study typically takes one year and involves MCPS staff, a contracted architect and numerous
meetings with community stakeholders. The average cost of a feasibility study is about $50,000.
The current cluster level tests conducted through the SSP mask the problems that exist at individual
schools. This situation is particularly true at the elementary school level, where a cluster could have an
individual school that is grossly over-enrolled, but five or six other elementary schools with adequate
capacity. The cluster level test also ignores the costs incurred by MCPS to conduct a feasibility study
and/or boundary study when an individual school meets the MCPS capacity deficit threshold.
60
Test
Change
from
Current
Policy
Elementary
Middle
High
Action
Cluster
Utilization
Test
105% utilization
projected in the
sixth year of the
CIP, across all
elementary
schools in the
cluster
105% utilization
projected in the
sixth year of the
CIP, across all
middle schools
in the cluster
105% utilization
projected in the
sixth year of the
CIP for the
clusters high
school
No
change
Cluster
Utilization
Test
120% utilization
projected in the
sixth year of the
CIP, across all
elementary
schools in the
cluster
120% utilization
projected in the
sixth year of the
CIP, across all
middle schools
in the cluster
120% utilization
projected in the
sixth year of the
CIP for the
clusters high
school
No
change
Individual
School
Capacity
Deficit Test
92-seat capacity
deficit at any
individual
elementary
school
150-seat
capacity deficit
at any
individual
middle school
N/A19
New
Element
Individual
School
Capacity
Deficit Test
120% utilization
and 110-seat
capacity deficit
projected in the
sixth year of the
CIP
120% utilization
and 180-seat
capacity deficit
projected in the
sixth year of the
CIP
N/A
New
Element
19
An individual test at the high school level is not necessary as there is only one high school per school cluster.
When a capacity project at one school is intended to relieve enrollment burdens at another, the Annual School
Test will continue to show a capacity deficit at the burdened school until MCPS approves a service area boundary
change, shortly before construction of the additional capacity is complete.
20
61
2007
2009
2012
2016
Elementary School
$32,525
$35,135
$32,399
$37,192
Middle School
$42,352
$46,000
$35,417
$39,600
High School
$47,502
$40,625
$50,000
$46,875
62
School Facility Payments are relatively new. Initially implemented with the 2003 Growth Policy, these
payments have generated just under $4.2 million in school capital funding since FY2011. When a School
Facility Payment is administered, the funds collected are dedicated for use in the cluster and at the
school level that generated the payment. The table below summarizes the School Facility Payments that
have been collected, by cluster, since FY2011:
Table 17: School Facility Payments Collected
2011
Whitman
Walter
Johnson
Wootton
Rockville
Northwood
Northwest
Gaithersburg
Clarksburg
Fiscal
Year
BethesdaChevy Chase
Cluster
$6,244
2012 $163,918
Total
$6,244
$163,918
2013
$15,250
2014
$24,794
$58,171
2015
$952,402
$15,250
$2,008,371
$577,684
$1,967,790
$4,161,573
$375,920 $64,544
63
Current (2012)
School Facility Payments
Updated (2016)
School Facility Payments
Proposed (2016)
School Facility Payments
ES
MS
HS
ES
MS
HS
ES
MS
HS
Single-family
detached
$ 6,940
$ 3,251
$ 4,631
$ 7,989
$ 3,825
$ 4,725
$6,657
$3,188
$3,938
Single-family
attached
$ 4,160
$ 1,743
$ 2,754
$ 4,485
$ 1,925
$ 2,672
$3,738
$1,604
$2,227
Multi-family
low to mid rise
$ 2,838
$ 1,169
$ 1,877
$ 1,495
$ 570
$ 1,041
$1,246
$475
$867
Multi-family
high rise
$ 1,166
$ 531
$ 804
$ 803
$ 309
$ 394
$669
$257
$328
Type of Unit
Column B of Table 18 shows the effect of updating the current School Facility Payment calculations using
the latest construction costs and generation rates. The decrease seen in the School Facility Payments
for multi-family units is largely due to the decrease (discussed earlier) in the generation rates used to
calculate the payments.
Recommendation: Modify the calculation of the School Facility Payments to apply a 0.5
multiplier instead of the current 0.6 multiplier.
In conjunction with the later recommendation to remove the 0.9 multiplier currently used to calculate
the School Impact Tax, adjusting the multiplier used to calculate the School Facility Payments from 0.6
to 0.5 will ensure that new units in school services areas with inadequate facilities will pay no more than
the current 150 percent of the units calculated school construction cost impact (100 percent + 50
percent as opposed to the current 90 percent + 60 percent).
Placeholder Projects
When a clusters service area is placed in moratorium and capital funding for the areas schools is most
in need, School Facility Payments are not being levied because no new development is being approved.
Placeholder projects have been the County Councils way of taking quick action to reserve funds for
needed school capacity, while also ensuring a clusters service area does not fall into moratorium.
Placeholders allow development to move forward and for School Facility Payments to continue to be
collected. Lacking a thorough capacity study, the placeholder project simply adds enough capacity to
pull the cluster out of moratorium, and serve as a reminder that capital programming should be
forthcoming.
One criticism of this practice is that the cost associated with a placeholder project, which is assumed to
add capacity to the sixth year of the approved CIP, does not equal the ultimate cost of the capacity
project that is required. Another concern is that the placeholder project undermines the intent of the
Subdivision Staging Policy, which is to ensure that adequate public facilities exist prior to approving new
development. The placeholder prevents a moratorium from being imposed, allowing new development
to be approved, despite not having a full-funded capital project required to ensure adequate school
facilities are programmed.
Some members of the community have expressed concern that some placeholder projects never
materialize into real capital projects. A review of all the placeholders that have been used to prevent a
moratorium shows this lack of realization, in general, not to be the case. There have been 11
placeholders added to the CIP, all since FY2011:
One resulted in a capital project that was built a year earlier than the placeholder would have
suggested.
One was removed the year after it was approved by the Council and replaced with a
moratorium. That moratorium was removed the following year by a capital project that remains
in the current recommended CIP. The projects completion date was three years later than the
original placeholder would have suggested.
Another was removed the year after it was approved and not replaced with any capital project
(nor did the cluster qualify for a moratorium).
Three were removed the year after being approved by the Council and were replaced by capital
projects in the CIP. Of these:
o One has a timeline consistent with the original placeholder.
o One has a completion date one year later than the original placeholder.
o One has a completion date two years later than the original placeholder.
Five have remained as placeholders for a second consecutive year (four of these were initially
included in the FY2016 school test and will continue as placeholders according to the Draft
FY2017 school test).
65
Level
ES
ES
ES
MS
HS
MS
HS
ES
MS
HS
HS
2010-11
FY11
PL 2015
2011-12
FY12
MOR
PL 2016
PL 2016
PL 2016
2015-16
FY16
CP 2018
CP OPEN
CP 2018
CP 2017
CP 2018
PL 2020
PL 2020
PL 2020
PL 2020
PL 2020
PL 2020
2016-17
FY1721
CP 2018
CP 2018
CP 2017
CP 2018
CP 2020
PL 2021
PL 2021
PL 2021
PL 2021
KEY
PL 2015: Placeholder for capacity in 2015-16 school year
CP 2017: Capital project scheduled to open in 2017-18 school year
MOR: Cluster placed in moratorium
CP OPEN: Capital project open
Red text: Change in timeframe from previous year
Recommendation: Placeholder capacity for a particular cluster level or school can only
be counted as capacity in the annual school test for two years.
After two years, the placeholder must be either replaced in the CIP with a capital project, removed
because the cluster or school would no longer qualify for a moratorium, or be replaced with the
appropriate moratorium. Prior to FY2017, only one placeholder had not been replaced within one year
by either a capital project or a moratorium. However, large capital budget shortfalls in recent years
have resulted in many capital projects being delayed, regardless of whether the project was preceded by
a placeholder.
21
Based on preliminary drafts of the FY2017-2022 CIP and FY17 Annual School Test.
66
not unusual to consider an update to the calculations as part of the Subdivision Staging Policy review
process in order to update the student generation rates used in the calculation.
The impact tax represents 90 percent of the cost of a student seat generated at all levels (elementary,
middle and high) by a new residential unit and is calculated as follows:
0.9 x (per student construction cost) x (countywide student generation rate for type of unit)
The School Impact Tax makes a significant contribution to the funding of school construction projects.
In FY2015, the MCPS capital budget was about $250 million and the impact tax collected nearly $32.7
million. Unlike School Facility Payments, the School Impact Tax funds capital projects throughout the
County. The collected funds are not restricted for use in the cluster within which they are collected
because they are not tied to adequacy. The table below summarizes the School Impact Tax collections
since FY2004:
Table 20: School Impact Tax Collections 2004-2015
Fiscal Year
2004
$434,713
2005
$7,695,345
2006
$6,960,032
2007
$9,562,889
2008
$6,766,534
2009
$7,925,495
2010
$11,473,071
2011
$14,480,846
2012
$16,462,394
2013
$27,901,753
2014
$45,837,273
2015
$32,676,773
Current (2007)
Impact Tax per Unit
Updated (2016)
Impact Tax per Unit
Proposed (2016)
Impact Tax per Unit
$26,827
$24,809
$27,565
$20,198
$13,623
$15,136
$12,765
$4,659
$5,177
Multi-Family High-Rise
$5,412
$2,259
$2,510
Unit Type
Recommendation: Remove the 0.9 multiplier in the School Impact Tax, so as to capture
the full cost of school construction associated with a new residential unit.
The 0.9 multiplier was applied to the calculation when the impact tax was significantly revised in 2007.
Prior to 2007, the school impact tax represented less than 50 percent of the cost of a student seat.
There has been criticism from some in the community that the impact tax does not do enough to
capture the true school capital cost associated with new construction.
Column C of Table 21 identifies the proposed new impact tax amounts by unit type. These figures
reflect the use of the latest construction costs and generation rates, as well as the removal of the 0.9
multiplier in the School Impact Tax calculation.
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development more affordable. The 2007 Growth Policy proposed significant increases in the
Transportation Impact Tax and School Facility Payment; it also added the School Impact Tax.
Recognizing that the Silver Spring Central Business District had recently had its designation as an
Enterprise Zone expire and was only beginning to experience redevelopment, the Planning Board and
County Council extended the school impact tax and payment exemptions to Downtown Silver Spring as a
former Enterprise Zone. Now that 10 years have passed since the expiration of Silver Spring CBDs
Enterprise Zone designation, there is little rationale for maintaining this exemption.
Recommendation: Reintroduce the School Impact Tax and School Facility Payments in
former Enterprise Zones through a phased approach.
For the first three years following the expiration of the Enterprise Zone designation, the standard School
Impact Tax and School Facility Payments (if applicable) are discounted by 50 percent. After three years,
the tax and payments will increase to the full level. Upon adoption of this policy, all former Enterprise
Zones currently exempt from the School Impact Tax and School Facility Payments would enter into the
three-year discount phase, regardless of the length of time since the Enterprise Zone designation
expired.
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Future Approaches
County Sustainability Efforts
In 2014, the County Council created the Office of Sustainability within the Department of Environmental
Protection. The goal of the Office is to promote sustainability in Montgomery County in collaboration
with residents, businesses and community-based organizations through activities related to energy
efficiency and renewable energy, green business development, trees and forests, environmental
education and outreach, and other environmental programs.
The Office also coordinates and reports on progress toward implementing the County Climate
Protection Plan, benchmarking the County against others with regard to energy efficiency and other
sustainability-related policies and programs, and is currently evaluating a broader Countywide
sustainability reporting framework. The most recent Office of Sustainability Annual Report details
progress made in these areas, and introduces a comprehensive sustainability reporting framework (Star
Communities http://www.starcommunities.org/) for achieving the Countys sustainability goals and
objectives. The Report also includes tables and graphics that show where the County stands relative to
sustainability metrics related to a wide variety of issues including transportation, energy, solid waste
and the environment. The 2015 Annual Sustainability Report is available at
https://www.montgomerycountymd.gov/DEP/Resources/Files/ReportsandPublications/Sustainability/2
016-Office-of-Sustainability-Report-Final.pdf.
The Subdivision Staging Policy is based on the need to ensure sustainability as the County grows,
particularly with respect to transportation and schools. As the County continues to explore and track
the full range of sustainability issues, the results of those efforts may be useful in considering future
revisions of the Subdivision Staging Policy.
guidance for such an offset program is not yet available, but should be considered in developing the
2020-2024 Subdivision Staging Policy.
Establish mechanisms and tools to design, program and operate parks and recreational facilities
once a school project gets finalized. Partnerships with NGOs are encouraged as a way to have a
dedicated and committed ally to review specific projects.
Develop an evaluation matrix to evaluate facilities performance and adaptation to emergent
technologies and sustainable practices. This matrix serves as a tool to evaluate the need for
updates in the ordinance.
The process needs to consider a clear path for developers and land owners to understand where their
payments are being applied, and whether the requirements are equitable and fair. Government should
be able to assess and promote how well new parks contribute direct and indirect health, social and
environmental benefits to park users, developers and the public via the tax base.
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