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Honorable Leningrad Elarionoff, Chair <br /> and Members of the Committee on Planning <br /> HAWA[[ COUNTY COUNCIL <br /> Page 6 <br /> .lone 14, 2004 <br /> Draft 2 removes this statement, and some of the language may create some confusion, <br /> particularly language about the General Plan maps becoming more general and being <br /> supplemented by more specific community development plan (CDP) maps. <br /> The language on p. 340 of Draft 1 is important and should be retained. <br /> Although it would be a good idea for the County to move toward more specific CDP's, <br /> we cannot abandon the legally binding nature of the LUPAG maps before formulating the <br /> CDP's. The City and County of Honolulu, for example, has a very short and broad <br /> General Plan, with non-specific maps, but it also has District Development Plans with <br /> much more specific maps. Rezoning in Honolulu must conform to those Development <br /> Plan maps. <br /> We also have to be realistic about our ability to prepare and enact CDP's. The County <br /> has not enacted a CDP by ordinance since 1979, and only three plans have been enacted <br /> by resolution since 1987 (Kailua, Keahole to Kailua, and Hawaiian Paradise Park). All <br /> <br /> ~ plans require hard choices, and so will become points of contention. (If the plan ducks <br /> the choices in a haze of generalities and ambiguities, it is worthless.) So the CDP's will <br /> take time to adopt. <br /> The statement in the "Introduction" to Draft 2 that the General Plan "is not intended to be <br /> regulatory" needs some explanation. The General Plan is not itself a regulation in Nle <br /> sense that, for example, the zoning code is a regulation. So a parcel that is zoned for <br /> residential use may be used for residential, even if the property is "Open" in the LUPAG <br /> map, and a building permit cannot be denied based upon the LUPAG map alone. But the <br /> General Plan and LUPAG maps do have the force and effect of ]aw, and discretionary <br /> decisions such as rezonings and SMA permits have to follow the General Plan and <br /> LUPAG map. <br /> LUPAG map consistency does not mean that the boundaries in the LUPAG maps are <br /> precise. The 1989 LUPAG map is on a scale of roughly 1"=11,000'. It was meant to <br /> indicate the general location of various land uses, not to be precisely scaled- (Except for <br /> map amendments that were adopted by spccific metes and bounds.) <br /> <br />