C C F M C, M: Ounty Ouncil OR Ontgomery Ounty Aryland
C C F M C, M: Ounty Ouncil OR Ontgomery Ounty Aryland
COUNTY COUNCIL
FOR MONTGOMERY COUNTY, MARYLAND
Background
1. County Code §33A-15 requires that no later than November 15 of each odd-numbered year, the
County Council must adopt a Growth Policy to be effective until November 15 of the next odd-
numbered year, to provide policy guidance to the agencies of government and the general public
on matters concerning land use development, growth management and related environmental,
economic and social issues.
2. On December 12, 2006, the County Council adopted Resolution 16-17, directing the Planning
Board to prepare growth policy recommendations by May 21, 2007.
3. On May 21, 2007, as required by Resolution 16-17 and in accordance with §33A-15, the Planning
Board transmitted to the County Council its recommendations on the 2007-2009 Growth Policy.
The Final Draft Growth Policy as submitted by the Planning Board contained supporting and
explanatory materials.
4. On June 19 and June 26, 2007, the County Council held public hearings on the Growth Policy and
related items.
5. On October 1, 8, 15, 16, and 22, 2007, the Council's Planning, Housing, and Economic
Development Committee conducted worksessions on the recommended Growth Policy.
6. On October 23 and 30, and November 6, 2007, the Council conducted worksessions on the Growth
Policy, at which careful consideration was given to the public hearing testimony, updated
information, recommended revisions and comments of the County Executive and Planning Board,
and the comments and concerns of other interested parties.
Resolution No.: 16-376
Action
The County Council for Montgomery County, Maryland, approves the following Resolution:
Applicability; transition
AP1 Effective dates
This resolution takes effect on November 15, 2007 and applies to any application for a preliminary plan
of subdivision filed on or after that date. In accordance with County Code §50-35B, any preliminary
plan of subdivision for which a completed application was filed on or after January 1, 2007 and which
the Planning Board did not approve before November 13, 2007,is subject to this resolution.
This resolution does not apply to any amendment or extension of a preliminary plan of subdivision in
the Clarksburg policy area that was approved before this resolution took effect if the amendment or
extension does not increase the amount of housing units or non-residential development previously
approved.
County Code Section 50-35(k) ("the Adequate Public Facilities Ordinance or APFO") directs the
Montgomery County Planning Board to approve preliminary plans of subdivision only after finding that
public facilities will be adequate to serve the subdivision. This involves predicting future demand from
private development and comparing it to the capacity of existing and programmed public facilities. The
following guidelines describe the methods and criteria that the Planning Board and its staff must use in
determining the adequacy of public facilities. These guidelines supersede all previous ones adopted by
the County Council.
The Council accepts the definitions of terms and the assignment of values to key measurement variables
that were used by the Planning Board and its staff in developing the recommended Growth Policy. The
Council delegates to the Planning Board and its staff all other necessary administrative decisions not
covered by the guidelines outlined below. In its administration of the APFO, the Planning Board must
consider the recommendations of the County Executive and other agencies in determining the adequacy
of public facilities.
The findings and directives described in this Growth Policy are based primarily on the public facilities in
the amended FY 2007-12 Capital Improvements Program (CIP) and the Maryland Department of
Transportation FY 2007-12 Consolidated Transportation Program (CTP). The Council also reviewed
related County and State funding decisions, master plan guidance and zoning where relevant, and related
legislative actions. These findings and directives and their supporting planning and measurement
process have been the subject of a public hearing and review during worksessions by the County
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Council. Approval of the findings and directives reflects a legislative judgment that, all things
considered, these findings and procedures constitute a reasonable, appropriate, and desirable set of
growth limits, which properly relate to the ability of the County to program and construct facilities
necessary to accommodate growth. These growth limits will substantially advance County land use
objectives by providing for coordinated and orderly development.
These guidelines are not intended to be used as a means for government to avoid its responsibility to
provide adequate public facilities. Biennial review and oversight allows the Council to identify
problems and initiate solutions that will serve to avoid or limit the duration of any moratorium on new
subdivision approvals in a specific policy area. Further, alternatives may be available for developers
who wish to proceed in advance of the adopted public facilities program, through the provision of
additional public facility capacity beyond that contained in the approved Capital Improvements
Program, or through other measures that accomplish an equivalent effect.
The administration of the Adequate Public Facilities Ordinance must at all times be consistent with
adopted master plans and sector plans. Where development staging guidelines in adopted master plans
or sector plans are more restrictive than Growth Policy guidelines, the guidelines in the adopted master
plan or sector plan must be used to the extent that they are more restrictive. The Growth Policy does not
require the Planning Board to base its analysis and recommendations for any new or revised master or
sector plan on the public facility adequacy standards in this resolution.
TP Policy Areas
For the purposes of transportation analysis, the County has been divided into 313 areas called traffic
zones. Based upon their transportation characteristics, these areas are grouped into transportation policy
areas, as shown on Map 1. In many cases, transportation policy areas have the same boundaries as
planning areas, sector plan areas, or master plan analysis (or special study) areas. The policy areas in
effect for 2007-2009 are: Aspen Hill, Bethesda CBD, Bethesda-Chevy Chase, Clarksburg, Cloverly,
Damascus, Derwood, Fairland/White Oak, Friendship Heights, Gaithersburg City, Germantown East,
Germantown Town Center, Germantown West, Glenmont, Grosvenor, Kensington/Wheaton,
Montgomery Village/Airpark, North Bethesda, North Potomac, Olney, Potomac, R&D Village,
Rockville City, Rockville Town Center, Rural East, Rural West, Shady Grove, Silver Spring CBD,
Silver Spring/Takoma Park, Twinbrook, Wheaton CBD, and White Flint. The following are Metro
Station Policy Areas: Bethesda CBD, Friendship Heights, Glenmont, Grosvenor, Rockville Town
Center, Shady Grove, Silver Spring CBD, Twinbrook, Wheaton CBD, and White Flint. Boundaries of
the policy areas are shown on maps 3-34.
The boundaries of the Gaithersburg City and Rockville City policy areas reflect existing municipal
boundaries, except where County-regulated land is surrounded by city-regulated land. The boundaries
of these municipal policy areas do not automatically reflect any change in municipal boundaries; any
change in a policy area boundary requires affirmative Council action.
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There are two components to Policy Area Mobility Review: Relative Arterial Mobility and Relative
Transit Mobility for each policy area.
Relative Arterial Mobility is a measure of congestion on the County’s arterial roadway network. It is
based on the urban street delay level of service in the 2000 Highway Capacity Manual, published by the
Transportation Research Board. This concept measures congestion by comparing modeled (congested)
speeds to free-flow speeds on arterial roadways. It then assigns letter grades to the various levels of
roadway congestion, with letter A assigned to the best levels of service and letter F assigned to the worst
levels of service. For a trip along an urban street that has a free-flow speed (generally akin to posted
speed) of 40 MPH, LOS A conditions exist when the actual travel speed is at least 34 MPH, including
delays experienced at traffic signals. At the other end of the spectrum, LOS F conditions exist when the
actual travel speed is below 10 MPH.
Any policy area with an actual urban street travel speed equal to or less than 40 percent of the highway
speed must be considered acceptable with full mitigation for transportation.
The PAMR evaluates conditions only on the arterial roadway network. Freeway level of service is not
directly measured because County development contributes a relatively modest proportion of freeway
travel, and because the County has limited influence over the design and operations of the freeway
system. However, because arterial travel is a substitute for some freeway travel, PAMR indirectly
measures freeway congestion to the extent that travelers choose local roadways over congested
freeways.
Relative transit mobility is based on the Transit/Auto Travel Time level of service concept in the 2003
Transit Capacity and Quality of Service Manual published by the Transportation Research Board. It is
defined as the relative speed by which journey to work trips can be made by transit, as opposed to by
auto. This concept assigns letter grades to various levels of transit service, so that LOS A conditions
exist for transit when a trip can be made more quickly by transit (including walk-access/drive-access and
wait times) than by single-occupant auto. This LOS A condition exists in the Washington region for
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certain rail transit trips with short walk times at both ends of the trip and some bus trips in HOV
corridors. LOS F conditions exist when a trip takes more than an hour longer to make by transit than by
single-occupant auto.
This ratio between auto and transit travel times can also be expressed in an inverse relationship, defined
by modal speed. If a trip can be made in less time by transit than by auto, the effective transit speed is
greater than the effective auto speed. Based on the typical roadway network speed during the AM peak
period, the Planning Board established the following relationship between auto and transit trips:
Any policy area with an effective transit speed equal to or less than 42.5 percent of the highway speed
must be considered acceptable with full mitigation for transportation.
TP2.1.3 Relationship Between Relative Arterial Mobility and Relative Transit Mobility
The PAMR Arterial LOS and the PAMR Transit LOS standards are inversely related, reflecting the
County’s long-standing policy to encourage concentrations of development near high-quality transit. To
accomplish this policy, greater levels of roadway congestion should be tolerated in areas where high-
quality transit options are available. The PAMR uses the following equivalency:
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If the forecasted PAMR Transit LOS is The minimum acceptable PAMR Arterial LOS standard is
A D
B D
C D
D C
E B
F A
This chart reflects a policy decision that the PAMR Arterial LOS standard should not fall below LOS D,
even when the PAMR Transit LOS standard is A.
In conducting Policy Area Mobility Reviews, each Metro station policy area is included in its larger
parent policy area, so that:
the Bethesda CBD, Friendship Heights, and Bethesda-Chevy Chase policy areas are treated as a
single policy area;
the Grosvenor, White Flint, Twinbrook, and North Bethesda policy areas are treated as a single
policy area;
the Rockville Town Center and Rockville City policy areas are treated as a single policy area;
the Shady Grove and Derwood policy areas are treated as a single policy area;
the Silver Spring CBD and Silver Spring-Takoma Park policy areas are treated as a single policy
area; and
the Wheaton CBD, Glenmont, and Kensington-Wheaton policy areas are treated as a single
policy area.
The Rural East policy area consists of all area east of I-270 that is not located in another planning area.
The Rural West policy area consists of all area west of I-270 that is not located in another planning area.
Using a transportation planning model, the Planning staff has computed the relationship between a
programmed set of transportation facilities and the geographic pattern of existing and approved jobs and
housing units. The traffic model tests this future land use pattern for its traffic impact, comparing the
resulting traffic volume and distribution to the arterial level of service standard for each policy area.
This analysis results in a finding of acceptable with full mitigation for a policy area if:
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(a) the level of service on local roads in the policy area is expected to exceed the arterial level of
service standard, or
(b) the magnitude of the hypothetical future land use patterns in that policy area will cause the
level of service on local roads in any other policy area to exceed the arterial level of service
standard for that policy area.
If this annual analysis results in a finding of acceptable with full mitigation for a policy area for a fiscal
year, the Planning Board must not approve any more subdivisions in that policy area in that fiscal year,
except as provided below. For FY2008, the Planning Board must consider the Germantown Eastand
Gaithersburg City Policy Areas to be acceptable with full mitigation for transportation.
When this annual analysis results in a finding of acceptable with partial mitigation for a policy area for a
fiscal year, the Planning Board must not approve any more subdivisions in that policy area in that fiscal
year except under certain special circumstances outlined below. For FY2008, the Planning Board must
consider the following policy areas to be acceptable with partial mitigation for transportation at the
policy area level:
An applicant for a preliminary plan of subdivision need not take any action under TP Policy Area
Mobility Review if the proposed development will generate 3 or fewer peak-hour trips.
The Planning Board may adopt Policy Area Mobility Review guidelines and other technical materials to
further specify standards and procedures for its adoption of findings of policy area adequacy or
inadequacy or of acceptable with full or partial mitigation.
The transportation planning model considers all existing and approved development and all eligible
programmed transportation CIP projects. For these purposes, "approved development" includes all
approved preliminary plans of subdivision and is also known as the “pipeline of approved
development.” "Eligible programmed transportation CIP projects" include all County CIP, State
Transportation Program, and City of Rockville or Gaithersburg projects for which 100 percent of the
expenditures for construction are estimated to occur in the first 4 years of the applicable program.
Because of the unique nature of the Purple Line, the Corridor Cities Transitway, and the North Bethesda
Transitway compared to other transportation systems which are normally used in calculating
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development capacity, it is prudent to approach the additional capacity from these systems
conservatively, particularly with respect to the timing of capacity and the amount of the capacity
recognized. Therefore, the capacity from any operable segment of any of these transit systems must not
be counted until that segment is fully funded in the first 4 years of the County or State capital
improvements program.
To discourage sprawl development, no capacity for new development may be counted outside the
boundary of the Town of Brookeville as of March 9, 1999, as a result of relocating MD 97 around
Brookeville.
Planning staff must keep a record of all previously approved preliminary plans and other data about the
status of development projects, and must continuously update the pipeline number of approved
preliminary plans. The updated pipeline must be the basis for the annual PAMR.
The Planning Board, after considering any recommendation of the County Executive, may approve a
preliminary plan application in a policy area found by Policy Area Mobility Review to be acceptable
with full mitigation or acceptable with partial mitigation, as provided in this section. In approving plans
in acceptable with full mitigation policy areas, the Board should ensure that the average level of service
for the relevant policy area is not adversely affected. Except as otherwise expressly stated in TP4, the
same level of service criteria must be used in evaluating an application under this section.
The following options to mitigate the traffic impacts of development approved in a preliminary plan
may be used, individually or in combination:
Trip Mitigation. An applicant may sign a binding Trip Mitigation Agreement under which up to
100% of the projected peak hour vehicle trips would be removed from the roadway by using
Transportation Demand Management techniques to reduce trips generated by the applicant’s
development or by other sites, so that an applicant could still generate a certain number of trips if
the mitigation program removes an equal number of trips from other sites in the same policy
area.
Trip Reduction by Providing Non-Auto Facilities. An applicant may mitigate a limited number
of trips by providing non-auto facilities that would make alternative modes of transit, walking,
and bicycling safer and more attractive. The Planning Board must specify in its LATR
Guidelines the allowable actions and number of trips associated with them, as well as the
maximum number of trip credits allowable for each action, which will partly depend on the
congestion standards for the policy area where the proposed development is located.
Adding Roadway Capacity. An applicant may mitigate trips by building link-based roadway
network capacity. The conversion rate between vehicle trips and lane miles of roadway is shown
in Table 2. The values in that table are derived from regional estimates of vehicle trip length by
trip purposes and uniform per-lane capacities for roadway functional classes that should be
applied countywide. Several conditions apply:
o The number of lane miles in Table 2 reflects total capacity provided, so that if an
applicant widens a roadway by one lane in each direction, the total minimum project
length would be half the length listed in the table.
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o The roadway construction or widening must have logical termini, for instance connecting
two intersections.
o The roadway construction must occur in the same Policy Area as the proposed
development.
o The roadway construction must be recommended in a master plan.
Adding Transit Capacity. An applicant may mitigate inadequate PAMR conditions by buying
40-foot long hybrid electric fleet vehicles for the Ride-On system, and guaranteeing 12 years of
operations funding, at the rate of 30 peak hour vehicle-trips per fleet vehicle. To qualify as
mitigation under this provision, a bus must add to the Ride-On fleet and not replace a bus taken
out of service.
Payment instead of construction. The Planning Board may accept payment to the County of a
fee commensurate with the cost of a required improvement if the applicant has made a good faith
effort to implement an acceptable improvement and the Board finds that a desirable
improvement cannot feasibly be implemented by the applicant, but the same improvement or an
acceptable alternative can be implemented by a public agency within 4 years after the
subdivision is approved.
In general, each mitigation measure or combination of measures must be scheduled for completion or
otherwise be operational at the same time or before the proposed development is scheduled to be
completed. The nature, design, and scale of any additional facility or program must receive prior
approval from any government agency that would construct or maintain the facility or program, and the
applicant and the public agency must execute an appropriate public works agreement before the Board
approves a record plat. The application must also be approved under TL Local Area Transportation
Review.
Both the subdivision plan and all necessary mitigation measures must be consistent with an adopted
master plan or other relevant land use policy statement. For the Planning Board to accept a roadway
capacity improvement as a mitigation measure, the applicant must show that alternative non-auto
mitigation measures are not feasible or desirable. In evaluating mitigation measures proposed by an
applicant, the Board must place a high priority on design excellence to create a safe, comfortable, and
attractive public realm for all users, with particular focus on high-quality pedestrian and transit access to
schools, libraries, recreation centers, and other neighborhood facilities.
Under Chapter 14 of the County Code, the County Council may create development districts as a
funding mechanism for needed infrastructure in areas of the County where substantial development is
expected or encouraged. The Planning Board may approve subdivision plans in accordance with the
terms of the development district's provisional adequate public facilities approval (PAPF).
One or more property owners in the proposed district may submit to the Planning Board an application
for provisional adequate public facilities approval for the entire district. In addition to explaining how
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each development located in the district will comply with all applicable zoning and subdivision
requirements, this application must:
show the number and type of housing units and square footage and type of the non-residential
space to be developed, as well as a schedule of proposed buildout in five-year increments;
identify any infrastructure improvements necessary to satisfy the adequate public facilities
requirements for development districts; and
estimate the cost to provide these improvements.
The Planning Board must then review all developments within the proposed development district as if
they are a single development for compliance with the Adequate Public Facilities Ordinance. The
Planning Board must identify the public facilities needed to support the buildout of the development
district after considering the results of the following tests for facility adequacy:
Transportation tests for development districts are identical to those for Local Area
Transportation Review. Planning Department staff must prepare a list of transportation
infrastructure needed to maintain public facility adequacy.
The PAPF application must be referred to Montgomery County Public Schools staff for
recommendations for each stage of development in the proposed district. MCPS staff must
calculate the extent to which the development district will add to MCPS's current enrollment
projections. MCPS staff must apply the existing school adequacy test to the projections with
the additional enrollment and prepare a list of public school infrastructure needed to maintain
public facility adequacy.
The PAPF application must be referred to the Washington Suburban Sanitary Commission for
recommendations for each stage of development in the proposed district. Wastewater
conveyance and water transmission facilities must be considered adequate if existing or
programmed (fully-funded within the first 5 years of the approved WSSC capital
improvements program) facilities can accommodate (as defined by WSSC) all existing
authorizations plus the growth in the development district. Adequacy of water and wastewater
treatment facilities must be evaluated using the intermediate or "most probable" forecasts of
future growth plus development district growth, but only to the extent that development district
growth exceeds the forecast for any time period. If a test is not met, WSSC must prepare a list
of water and sewer system infrastructure needed to maintain public facility adequacy.
The PAPF application must be referred to the County Executive for recommendations for each
stage of development in the proposed district regarding police, fire, and health facilities.
Adequacy of police, fire, and health facilities must be evaluated using the intermediate or most
probable forecasts of future growth plus development district growth, but only to the extent
that development district growth exceeds the forecast for any time period. Any facility
capacity that remains is available to be used by the development district. If any facility
capacity deficits exist, the County Executive must prepare a list of infrastructure needed to
maintain public facility adequacy.
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The Board may conditionally approve the PAPF application if it will meet all of the requirements of the
APFO and Growth Policy. The Board may condition its approval on, among other things, the creation
and funding of the district and the building of no more than the maximum number of housing units and
the maximum nonresidential space listed in the petition.
For an application to be approved, the applicants must commit to produce the infrastructure
improvements needed to meet APF requirements in the proposed district as well as any added
requirements specified by the Planning Board. The Planning Board must list these required
infrastructure improvements in its approval. The infrastructure improvements may be funded through
the development district or otherwise. The development district's PAPF must be prepared in the
following manner:
The Planning Board must not approve a PAPF application unless public facilities adequacy is
maintained throughout the life of the plan. The timing of infrastructure delivery may be accomplished
by withholding the release of building permits until needed public facilities are available to be
"counted," or by another similar mechanism.
Infrastructure may be counted for public facilities adequacy, for infrastructure provided by the district,
when construction has begun on the facility and funds have been identified and committed to its
completion, and, for infrastructure provided by the public sector, when:
for Local Area Transportation Review, the project is fully-funded within the first 4 years of the
approved County, state, or municipal capital improvements program;
for water and sewer facilities, the project is fully-funded within the first 5 years of the
approved WSSC capital improvements program;
for public school facilities, the project is fully-funded within the first 5 years of the approved
Montgomery County Public Schools capital improvements program; and
for police, fire, and health facilities, the project is fully-funded within the first 6 years of the
relevant approved capital improvements program.
The County Executive and Planning Board may also recommend to the County Council additional
facilities to be provided by the development district or by the public sector to support development
within the district. These facilities may include, but are not limited to libraries, health centers, local
parks, social services, greenways, and major recreation facilities.
As provided in Chapter 14 of the County Code, once the development district is created and the
financing of all required infrastructure is arranged, the development in the district is considered to have
satisfied all APF requirements, any additional requirements that apply to development districts in the
Growth Policy, and any other requirement to provide infrastructure which the County adopts within 12
years after the district is created.
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To achieve an approximately equivalent transportation level of service in all areas of the County, greater
congestion is permitted in policy areas with greater transit accessibility and usage. Table 1 shows the
intersection level of service standards by policy area. Local Area Transportation Review must at all
times be consistent with the standards and staging mechanisms of adopted master and sector plans.
Local area transportation review must be completed for any subdivision that would generate 30 or more
peak-hour automobile trips. For any subdivision that would generate 30-49 peak-hour automobile trips,
the Planning Board after receiving a traffic study must require that either:
all LATR requirements are met; or
the applicant must make an additional payment to the County equal to 50% of the applicable
transportation impact tax before it receives any building permit in the subdivision.
In administering Local Area Transportation Review, the Planning Board must not approve a subdivision
if it finds that an unacceptable peak hour level of service will result after considering existing roads,
programmed roads, available or programmed mass transportation, and improvements to be provided by
the applicant. If the subdivision will affect an intersection or roadway link for which congestion is
already unacceptable, then the subdivision may only be approved if the applicant agrees to mitigate
either:
a sufficient number of trips to bring the intersection or link to acceptable levels of congestion, or
a number of trips equal to 150 percent of the CLV impact attributable to the development.
The nature of the LATR test is such that a traffic study is necessary if local congestion is likely to occur.
The Planning Board and staff must examine the applicant's traffic study to determine whether
adjustments are necessary to assure that the traffic study is a reasonable and appropriate reflection of the
traffic impact of the proposed subdivision after considering all approved development and programmed
transportation projects.
If use and occupancy permits for at least 75% of the originally approved development were issued more
than 12 years before the LATR study scope request, the number of signalized intersections in the study
must be based on the increased number of peak hour trips rather than the total number of peak hour trips.
In these cases, LATR is not required for any expansion that generates 5 or fewer additional peak hour
trips.
For Local Area Transportation Review purposes, the programmed transportation projects to be
considered are those fully funded for construction in the first 4 years of the current approved Capital
Improvements Program, the state's Consolidated Transportation Program, or any municipal capital
improvements program. For these purposes, any road required under Section 302 of the County Charter
to be authorized by law is not programmed until the time for petition to referendum has expired without
a valid petition or the authorizing law has been approved by referendum.
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Any traffic study required for Local Area Transportation Review must be submitted by a registered
Professional Engineer, certified Professional Traffic Operations Engineer, or certified Professional
Transportation Planner.
Each traffic study must examine, at a minimum, the number of signalized intersections in the following
table, unless the Planning Board affirmatively finds that special circumstances warrant a more limited
study.
At the Planning Board’s discretion, each traffic mitigation program must be required to operate for at
least 12 years but no longer than 15 years. The Planning Board may select either trip reduction
measures or road improvements, or a combination of both, as the required means of traffic mitigation.
The Planning Board has adopted guidelines to administer Local Area Transportation Review. To the
extent that they are consistent with this Policy, the Planning Board guidelines may continue to apply or
may be amended as the Planning Board finds necessary.
After consulting the Council, the Planning Board may adopt administrative guidelines that allow use of a
"delay" or queuing analysis, different critical lane volume standards, or other methodologies, to
determine the level of congestion in any area the Planning Board finds appropriate.
In administering Local Area Transportation Review, the Planning Board must carefully consider the
recommendations of the County Executive concerning the applicant's traffic study and proposed
improvements or any other aspect of the review.
To achieve safe and convenient pedestrian travel, the Planning Board may adopt administrative
guidelines requiring construction of off-site sidewalk improvements consistent with County Code §50-
25. To support creating facilities that encourage transit use, walking, and bicycling, to maintain an
approximately equivalent level of service at the local level for both auto and non-auto modes, the Board
may allow the applicant to use peak hour vehicle trip credits for providing non-auto facilities. Before
approving credits for non-auto facilities to reduce Local Area Transportation Review impacts, the Board
should first consider the applicability and desirability of traffic mitigation agreement measures. The
Board’s LATR Guidelines must identify applicable facilities in terms of actions that can be given trip
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credits and the maximum number of trips that can be credited. If the Board approves any credits, it must
specify mechanisms to monitor the construction of any required facility. During each biennial Growth
Policy the Board must report on the number of credits issued and confirm the construction of any
required facility.
In general, any mitigation measure or combination of mitigation measures must be scheduled for
completion or otherwise operational either before or at the same time as the proposed development is
scheduled to be completed. The nature, design, and scale of any additional facility or program must
receive prior approval from any government agency that would construct or maintain the facility or
program, and the applicant and the public agency must execute an appropriate public works agreement
before the Planning Board approves a record plat.
Both the subdivision plan and the necessary mitigation measures must be consistent with an adopted
master plan or other relevant land use policy statement. For the Planning Board to accept a intersection
improvement as a mitigation measure, the applicant must show that alternative non-auto mitigation
measures are not feasible or desirable. In evaluating mitigation measures proposed by an applicant, the
Board must place a high priority on design excellence to create a safe, comfortable, and attractive public
realm for all users, with particular focus on high-quality pedestrian and transit access to schools,
libraries, recreation centers, and other neighborhood facilities.
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In each Metro Station Policy Area, the Planning Board, in consultation with the Department of Public
Works and Transportation, must prepare performance evaluation criteria for its Local Area
Transportation Review. These criteria must be used to accomplish: (a) safety for pedestrians and
vehicles; (b) access to buildings and sites; and (c) traffic flow within the vicinity, at levels which are
tolerable in an urban situation. The County Executive also must publish a Silver Spring Traffic
Management Program after receiving public comment and a recommendation from the Planning Board.
This program must list those actions to be taken by government to maintain traffic flow at tolerable
levels in the Silver Spring CBD and protect the surrounding residential area.
In the Potomac Policy Area, only the areas contributing traffic to the following intersections must be
subject to Local Area Transportation Review: (a) Montrose Road at Seven Locks Road; (b) Democracy
Boulevard at Seven Locks Road; (c) Tuckerman Lane at Seven Locks Road; (d) Democracy Boulevard
at Westlake Drive; (e) Westlake Drive at Westlake Terrace; (f) Westlake Drive at Tuckerman Lane; (g)
Bradley Boulevard at Seven Locks Road; (h) River Road at Bradley Boulevard; (i) River Road at Piney
Meetinghouse Road; and (j) River Road at Seven Locks Road.
The Local Area Review for the Silver Spring CBD policy area must use the following assumptions and
guidelines:
Each traffic limit is derived from the heaviest traffic demand period in Silver Spring's case, the
p.m. peak hour outbound traffic.
When tested during a comprehensive circulation analysis, the critical lane volumes for
intersections in the surrounding Silver Spring/Takoma Park policy area must not be worse than
the adopted level of service standards shown in Table 1 unless the Planning Board finds that
the impact of improving the intersection is more burdensome than the increased congestion.
The Planning Board and the Department of Public Works and Transportation must implement
Transportation Systems Management for the Silver Spring CBD. The goal of this program
must be to achieve the commuting goals for transit use and auto occupancy rates set out below.
The County Government, through the Silver Spring Parking Lot District, must constrain the
amount of public and private long term parking spaces.
The parking constraints and commuting goals needed to achieve satisfactory traffic conditions with
these staging ceilings are:
Parking constraint: A maximum of 17,500 public and private long-term spaces when all
nonresidential development is built; this maximum assumes a peak accumulation factor of 0.9,
which requires verification in Silver Spring and may be subject to revision. Interim long-term
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parking constraints must be imposed in accordance with the amount of interim development.
Long-term public parking spaces must be priced to reflect the market value of constrained
parking spaces.
Commuting goals: For employers with 25 or more employees, attain 25 percent mass transit
use and auto occupancy rates of 1.3 persons per vehicle during the peak periods, or attain any
combination of employee mode choice that results in at least 46% non-drivers during the peak
periods. For new nonresidential development, attain 30 percent mass transit use and auto
occupancy rates of 1.3 persons per vehicle during the peak periods, or attain any combination
of employee mode choice that results in at least 50% non-drivers during the peak periods.
Progress towards achieving these goals should be measured annually by scientific, statistically valid
surveys.
To achieve these goals it will be necessary to require developers of new development in Silver Spring to
enter into traffic mitigation agreements and the employers and certain owners to submit transportation
mitigation plans under County Code Chapter 42A.
In accordance with the amendment to the Silver Spring Sector Plan, subdivision applications for
nonresidential standard method projects throughout the CBD may be approved for development or
additions of not more than 5,000 square feet of gross floor area. However, if, for a particular use the
addition of 5 peak hour trips yields a floor area greater than 5,000 square feet, that additional area may
be approved for that particular use.
In the North Bethesda Transportation Management District, the goal is 39 percent non-driver mode
share for workers in the peak hour. In the Bethesda Transportation Management District, the goal is 37
percent non-driver mode share for workers. In the Friendship Heights Transportation Management
District, the goal is 39 percent non-driver mode share for workers.
An applicant for a subdivision which will be built completely within a Metro station policy area need
not take any action under TP Policy Area Mobility Review or TL Local Area Transportation Review
if the applicant agrees in a contract with the Planning Board and the County Department of Public
Works and Transportation to:
submit an application containing all information, including a traffic study, that would normally
be required for Local Area Transportation Review;
meet trip reduction goals set by the Planning Board as a condition of approving that
subdivision, which must require the applicant to reduce at least 50% of the number of trips
attributable to the subdivision, either by reducing trips from the subdivision itself or from other
occupants of that policy area;
participate in programs operated by, and take actions specified by, a transportation
management organization (TMO) to be established by County law for that policy area (or a
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Resolution No.: 16-376
group of policy areas including that policy area) to meet the mode share goals established
under the preceding paragraph;
pay an ongoing annual contribution or tax to fund the TMO's operating expenses, including
minor capital items such as busses, as established by County law; and
pay 75% of the applicable General District development impact tax without claiming any
credits for transportation improvements.
Annual Growth Policy resolutions in effect between 1995 and 2001 contained Alternative Review
Procedures that required any development approved under those procedures to receive each building
permit no later than 4 years after the Planning Board approved the preliminary plan of subdivision for
that development. Any outstanding development project approved under an Alternative Review
Procedure is subject to the expiration dates in effect when that development project was approved, with
the following 2 exceptions.
A multi-phased project located in the R&D or Life Sciences Center zone may receive some of its
building permits later than 4 years after its preliminary plan of subdivision is approved if:
when the Planning Board approves or amends a site plan for the development, it also approves
a phasing schedule that allows an extended validity period, but not longer than 12 years after
the preliminary plan of subdivision was approved; and
the applicant receives the first building permit for a building in the development no later than 4
years after the Planning Board approves the preliminary plan of subdivision for the
development.
Similarly, if the development is located in the I-3 zone, and a previously approved subdivision plan and
site plan contains more than 900,000 square feet of office space and at least 40% of that space has been
constructed by November 1, 2001, the Planning Board may approve an amendment to its site plan which
allows an extended validity period, but not longer than 12 years after the preliminary plan of subdivision
was approved.
An applicant for a planned unit development in the Fairland-White Oak policy area that includes a golf
course or other major amenity which is developed on a public/private partnership basis need not take
any action under TL Local Area Transportation Review if the applicant pays to the County a
Development Approval Payment, established by County law, before the building permit is issued.
However, the applicant must include in its application for preliminary plan approval all information that
would have been necessary if the requirements for Local Area Transportation Review applied.
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Resolution No.: 16-376
not more than 100 units, in addition to Moderately Priced Dwelling Units (MPDUs), are built
in the first fiscal year after construction of the development begins, and
not more than 100 units, in addition to MPDUs and the unbuilt remaining portion of all prior
years’ approved units, are built in any later fiscal year.
Any applicant for a subdivision under TA3 must agree, as part of the application, that it will build the
same number of MPDUs among the first 100 units that it would be required to construct at that location
if the subdivision consisted of only 100 units, or a pro rata lower number of MPDUs if the subdivision
will include fewer than 100 units.
Any applicant for a subdivision approval under TA3 must agree, as part of the application, that it will
not begin to construct any residential unit approved in the application later than 3 years after the plat is
recorded or the site plan is approved (whichever occurs later).
TA4.1 LATR
An applicant for a preliminary plan of subdivision need not take any action under Local Area
Transportation Review if the applicant meets the following conditions:
TA4.1.1 Jobs/Location
The applicant must have employed an average of at least 500 employees in the County for the 2 years
before the application was filed, and the applicant must seek to build or expand a corporate headquarters
located in the North Bethesda Policy Area.
TA4.1.2 Size/Use
Any new or expanded building approved under this Procedure must not exceed 900,000 square feet, and
must be intended primarily for use by the applicant and the applicant's affiliates or business partners.
Each application must include all information that would be necessary if the requirements for Local
Area Transportation Review applied.
Each applicant must commit to make its best efforts to meet mode share goals set by the Planning Board
as a condition of approving the subdivision.
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Resolution No.: 16-376
Each applicant must participate in programs operated by, and take actions specified by, the
transportation management organization (TMO), if any, established by County law for that policy area
to meet the mode share goals set by the Planning Board.
If an applicant is located in a transportation management district, the applicant must pay an annual
contribution or tax, set by County law, to fund the TMO’s operating expenses, including minor capital
items such as busses.
The applicant must pay the applicable Development Approval Payment (DAP) as provided in County
Code §8-37 through 8-42, but not more than the DAP in effect on July 1, 2001.
TA4.1.8 Eligibility
An applicant may use this Procedure only if it met the criteria in TA4.1.1 for number of employees and
site location on November 1, 2003.
An applicant for a preliminary plan of subdivision need not take any action under TL Local Area
Transportation Review if all of the following conditions are met.
TA5.2 Designation
The County Council has approved the County Executive's designation of the development as a strategic
economic development project under procedures adopted by law or Council resolution.
S1 Geographic Areas
For the purposes of public school analysis and local area review of school facilities at time of
subdivision, the County has been divided into 25 areas called high school clusters. These areas coincide
with the cluster boundaries used by the Montgomery County Public School system.
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Resolution No.: 16-376
The groupings used are only to administer the Adequate Public Facilities Ordinance and do not require
any action by the Board of Education in exercising its power to designate school service boundaries.
S2 Grade Levels
Each cluster must be assessed separately at each of the 3 grade levels -- elementary,
intermediate/middle, and high school.
S3 Determination of Adequacy
Each year, not later than July 1, the Planning Board must evaluate available capacity in each high school
cluster and compare enrollment projected by Montgomery County Public Schools for each fiscal year
with projected school capacity in 5 years.
In considering whether a moratorium on residential subdivisions must be imposed, the Planning Board
must use 120% of Montgomery County Public Schools program capacity as its measure of adequate
school capacity. This capacity measure must not count relocatable classrooms in computing a school's
permanent capacity. If projected enrollment at any grade level in that cluster will exceed 120% of
capacity, the Board must not approve any residential subdivision in that cluster during the next fiscal
year.
Table 3 shows the result of this test for November 15, 2007, to July 1, 2008. Table 3 also shows the
remaining capacity, in students, at each grade level in each cluster. Using average student generation
rates developed from the most recent Census Update Survey, the Planning Board must limit residential
subdivision approvals in any cluster during the fiscal year so that the students generated by the housing
units approved do not exceed the remaining capacity for students at any grade level in that cluster.
In considering whether a School Facilities Payment must be imposed on a residential subdivision, the
Planning Board must use 105% of Montgomery County Public Schools’ program capacity as its measure
of adequate school capacity. This capacity measure must not count relocatable classrooms in computing
a school's permanent capacity. If projected enrollment at any grade level in that cluster will exceed
105% of capacity but not exceed 120%, the Board may approve a residential subdivision in that cluster
during the next fiscal year if the applicant commits to pay a School Facilities Payment as provided in
County law before receiving a building permit for any building in that subdivision.
Table 4 shows the result of this test for November 15, 2007, to July 1, 2008. Table 4 also shows the
remaining capacity, in students, at each grade level in each cluster. Using average student generation
rates developed from the most recent Census Update Survey, the Planning Board must limit residential
subdivision approvals in any cluster during the fiscal year so that the students generated by the housing
units approved do not exceed the remaining capacity for students at any grade level in that cluster.
S6 Senior Housing
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Resolution No.: 16-376
If public school capacity in inadequate in any cluster, the Planning Board may nevertheless approve a
subdivision in that cluster if the subdivision consists solely of multifamily housing and related facilities
for elderly or handicapped persons or multifamily housing units located in the age-restricted section of a
planned retirement community.
S7 De Minimis Development
If public school capacity in inadequate in any cluster, the Planning Board may nevertheless approve a
subdivision in that cluster if the subdivision consists of no more than 3 housing units and the applicant
commits to pay a School Facilities Payment as otherwise required before receiving a building permit for
any building in that subdivision.
The Planning Board may require any development district for which it approves a provisional adequate
public facilities approval (PAPF) to produce or contribute to infrastructure improvements needed to
address inadequate school capacity.
The Planning Board must allocate available staging ceiling capacity in a high school cluster based on the
queue date of an application for preliminary plan of subdivision approval.
The Planning Board must determine whether adequate staging ceiling capacity is available for a project
by subtracting the capacity required by projects with earlier queue dates from the remaining capacity on
Table 3 as updated periodically. Based on this calculation, the Planning Board may:
approve a project for which there is sufficient capacity;
approve part of a project for which there is sufficient capacity, leaving the remainder of the
project in the queue until additional capacity becomes available;
deny an application for a project for which there is insufficient capacity; or
defer approval of a project and leave the project in the queue until sufficient capacity becomes
available for all or part of the project. If insufficient capacity is available, the Board must not
schedule a hearing on the application unless the applicant requests one.
If sufficient capacity is available for a project based on the queue date, the Planning Board must not
deny an application based on pipeline (but not staging ceiling) changes while the queue date is in effect.
The Planning Board must determine whether a project is required to pay a School Facilities Payment by
subtracting the capacity required by projects with earlier queue dates from the remaining capacity on
Table 4 as updated periodically. Based on this calculation, the Planning Board may:
approve a project for which there is sufficient capacity;
approve part of a project for which there is sufficient capacity, requiring the remainder of the
project to pay the applicable School Facilities Payment until additional capacity becomes
available; or
defer approval of a project and leave the project in the queue until sufficient capacity becomes
available for all or part of the project. If insufficient capacity is available, the Board must not
schedule a hearing on the application unless the applicant requests one.
If a project must pay a School Facilities Payment, the Planning Board must not deny an application
based on pipeline (but not staging ceiling) changes while the Payment requirement is in effect.
A queue date for an application for preliminary plan of subdivision approval expires:
6 months after the queue date if sufficient staging ceiling capacity was available for the entire
project on the queue date and the Planning Board has not approved the application or granted an
extension of the queue date; or
6 months after sufficient capacity becomes available for the entire project.
The Planning Board may grant one or more 6-month extensions of a queue date if the applicant
demonstrates that a queue date expired or will expire because of governmental delay beyond the
applicant's control.
In accordance with the Adequate Public Facilities Ordinance, applications must be considered
adequately served by water and sewerage if the subdivision is located in an area in which water and
sewer service is presently available, is under construction, is designated by the County Council for
extension of service within the first two years of a current approved Comprehensive Water Supply and
Sewerage Systems Plan (i.e., categories I, II, and III), or if the applicant either provides a community
water and/or sewerage system or meets Department of Permitting Services requirements for septic
and/or well systems, as outlined in the Adequate Public Facilities Ordinance. These requirements are
determined either by reference to the Water and Sewerage Plan, adopted by the Council, or by obtaining
a satisfactory percolation test from the Department of Permitting Services.
Applications must only be accepted for further Planning staff and Board consideration if they present
evidence of meeting the appropriate requirements.
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Resolution No.: 16-376
The Planning Board and staff must consider the programmed services to be adequate for facilities such
as police stations, firehouses, and health clinics unless there is evidence that a local area problem will be
generated. Such a problem is one which cannot be overcome within the context of the approved Capital
Improvements Program and operating budgets of the relevant agencies. Where such evidence exists,
either through agency response to the Subdivision Review committee clearinghouse, or through public
commentary or Planning staff consideration, a Local Area Review must be undertaken. The Board must
seek a written opinion from the relevant agency, and require, if necessary, additional data from the
applicant, to facilitate the completion of the Planning staff recommendation within the statutory time
frame for Planning Board action. In performing this Local Area Review, the facility capacity at the end
of the sixth year of the approved CIP must be compared to the demand generated by the "most probable"
forecast for the same year prepared by the Planning Department.
An application to amend a previously approved preliminary plan of subdivision does not require a new
test for adequacy of public facilities if:
Revisions to a preliminary plan have not been recorded, the preliminary plan has not expired,
and the number of trips which will be produced by the revised plan is not greater than the
number of trips produced by the original plan.
Resubdivision of a recorded lot involves the sale or exchange of parcels of land (not to exceed a
total of 2,000 square feet or one percent of the combined area, whichever is greater) between
owners of adjoining properties to make small adjustments in boundaries.
Resubdivision of a recorded lot involves more than 2,000 square feet or one percent of the lot
area and the number of trips which will be produced by the revised plan is not greater than the
number of trips produced by the original plan.
Timely Adequate Public Facilities Determination and Local Area Transportation Review under
Chapter 8.
APF1 General.
Except as otherwise provided by law, an adequate public facilities determination or local area
transportation review conducted under Article IV of Chapter 8 must use the standards and criteria
applicable under this Resolution when evaluating the adequacy of public facilities to serve the proposed
development.
Any proposed development that is subject to requirements for a traffic mitigation agreement under
Article IV of Chapter 8 and §42A-9A of the County Code must meet the traffic mitigation goals
specified in paragraphs (1) or (4), as appropriate.
- 23 -
Resolution No.: 16-376
(1) Subject to paragraph (2), the portion of peak-period nondriver trips by employees of a
proposed development must be at least the following percentage greater than the prevailing
nondriver mode share of comparable nearby land use:
LATR CLV standards for each policy area are shown on Table 1.
(2) The portion of peak-period nondriver trips by employees calculated under paragraph (1) must
not be less than 15% nor higher than 55%.
(3) The applicant for a proposed development in a policy area specified under paragraph (1) is
responsible for reviewing existing studies of nondriver mode share; conducting new studies,
as necessary, of nondriver mode share; and identifying the prevailing base nondriver mode
share of comparable land uses within the area identified for the traffic study. Comparable
land uses are improved sites within the area identified for the traffic study for the proposed
development that have similar existing land use and trip generation characteristics. As with
other aspects of the traffic study required by Article IV of Chapter 8, selection of the
comparable studies and land uses to be analyzed and determination of the prevailing base
nondriver mode share are subject to review by the Planning Department and approval by the
Department of Public Works and Transportation.
(4) Proposed development in the Silver Spring CBD must meet the commuting goals specified
under TL4.
(5) In accordance with County Code §42A-9A, the applicant must enter into an agreement with
the Director of the Department of Public Works and Transportation before a building permit
is issued. The agreement may include a schedule for full compliance with the traffic
mitigation goals. It must provide appropriate enforcement mechanisms for compliance.
(6) As provided by law, these goals supersede traffic mitigation goals established under §42A-
9A(a)(4).
Scheduling of items by the Planning Board under this Section may be reviewed and modified at the
Board's regular work program meetings with the County Council.
- 24 -
Resolution No.: 16-376
- 25 -
Resolution No.: 16-376
regarding the point or points in the development process when an agreement between an
applicant and a public agency is required for an additional facility or program which would be a
condition of development approval.
- 26 -
Resolution No.: 16-376
________________________ _
Linda M. Lauer, Clerk of the Council
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121
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109
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121
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109
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118
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124
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119
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112
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190
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189
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A
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T O N P KW Y
Shady Grove Policy Area
with Traffic Zones
A
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CR
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A
S
B
BR
RE
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198
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W
322
197 AY
FR
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Silver Spring CBD Policy Area
with Traffic Zones
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Silver Spring/Takoma Park Policy Area
with Traffic Zones
586
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193
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193
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97
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193
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323
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324
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AV
325
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195
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BR
327
Twinbrook Policy Area
K
with Traffic Zones
B RO O
T W IN
355
175
RO
173 122
CK
VI
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Wheaton CBD Policy Area
with Traffic Zones
A RCO LA A V E
83
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84
IV
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W
81
82
G EO
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White Flint Policy Area
with Traffic Zones
RO
CK
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RA N D O LP
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137
RD
136
N
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54
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