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ORD 2008-116 2006-2008
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ORD 2008-116 2006-2008
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Last modified
8/14/2009 8:24:00 AM
Creation date
9/18/2008 3:36:01 PM
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Template:
Ordinances
Ordinances - Type
ORD
Ordinances - Council Term
2006-2008
Year
2008
Ordinance
116
Effective Date
9/10/2008
Document Relationships
BIL 318 Draft 04 2006-2008
(Related)
Path:
\Council Records\Bills\2006-2008
COM 1300.067 2006-2008
(Related)
Path:
\Council Records\Communications\2006-2008
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PUNA COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT PLAN <br />September 2008 <br />• Because Puna's subdivisions are so lazge and have few arterial streets, evacuation of <br />residents on short notice in the event a lava flow, earthquake, tsunami or hurricane is <br />a significant problem with serious consequences to public safety. The potential <br />problem worsens as subdivision lots continue to develop and no infrastructure <br />improvements are made. <br />•As more lots are developed, an increasing number of residents expect improved <br />infrastructure. The cumulative impact of widespread use of cesspools on the quality <br />of the aquifer and coastal waters is undetermined. Retrofitting infrastructure <br />improvements is expensive, and not all residents aze willing to either beaz the cost or <br />accept the transition from a "rural" setting to one that is more suburban. <br />• (Because subdivision lots were sold in their undeveloped state rather than with <br />dwellings, development has occurred in an uneven, "leap-frog" pattern, which makes <br />i[ even more difficult to develop infrastructure and provide services to the population. <br />Residents often must make long trips to employment, schools, shopping and other <br />destinations to meet daily needs. , <br />• While most of these subdivisions are on agricultural-zoned lands, the actual use of <br />developed lots is predominantly residential. As in-fill residential development <br />continues, it will be more difficult for existing small-lot agricultural uses to remain <br />viable due to complaints from neighbors about nuisance effects of agricultural <br />operations and potential increases in crop theft or vandalism. <br />• Lot development adversely impacts the native forest in an obvious way when an <br />entue lot is cleared of vegetative cover to make way for buildings and yards. But <br />clear-cutting and pin-to-pin grading and grubbing of lots has subtler impacts, as well, <br />'such as: <br />'', Openings in the forest promote the spread invasive, non-native species. Non- <br />native plants affect the forests by changing the soil chemistry and increasing <br />Ij shade, making it hazd for native plants to compete and survive. <br />Fragmenting the forest creates "edge" habitat that further accelerates the decline <br />of native organisms. <br />r Fragmentation also changes the microclimate of adjacent forest (i.e., increased <br />temperature and sunlight and decreased moisture in the understory), altering <br />growing regimes for plants and the suitability of nesting sites. <br />- Grading creates boggy areas devoid of vegetation, providing breeding habitat for <br />mosquitoes, a vector for avian malaria, which further threatens the native bird <br />population. <br />- Re-contouring of lots through grading and filling alters local drainage patterns <br />and affect adjacent properties or rights-of-way. <br />', <br />~ Lot grading can lead to the collapse of an underlying lava tube, which in turn may <br />expose a unique cave ecosystem or an ancient burial site or aztifact. <br />1-5 <br />
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