County and the City of Springfield for Metropolitan Plan <br />consistency review on May 19, 1989. <br />3. The PRP as drafted functions as an inventory of <br />recreation needs and opportunities in the Eugene area. This <br />inventory is based on the research and data described in the plan <br />and its background documents and the. public wants and desires <br />articulated in the community meetings and public hearings noted <br />above. This inventory forms the basis for the plan's policies <br />and can be used in future land use comprehensive planning <br />processes (e.g., updates of Goal 5, 8 and 15 inventories). It <br />does not commit the City to begin any Goal 5 qualitative <br />analysis. <br />4. Development of the PRP has been coordinated with other <br />affected governments through the referral processes, staff <br />consultations, and consideration of the plans of other <br />jurisdictions as set forth on page one of the draft PRP. <br />5. Implementation of the policies and proposed actions set <br />out in the draft PRP, t. with operation of privately owned <br />facilities and the programs of other governments, will satisfy <br />the recreational needs of the residents of the Eugene area in <br />adequate proportions and in such quantity, quality and location <br />as is consistent with the availability of the resources to meet <br />those needs. Adoption of the PRP is consistent with the <br />provisions of Statewide Planning Goal 8. <br />6. The draft PRP is consistent with applicable policies of <br />the Metropolitan Plan which regulate government policymaking, <br />including, but not limited to: Environmental Resources Element <br />Policies 7 (community gardens), 18 (hillside development <br />management), 25 (open space protection), and 27 (need for plant <br />and wildlife studies); Willamette Greenway Element Policy 3 <br />(water - related parks); Environmental Design Element Policy 1 <br />(encouragement of broad variety of land uses); and, Parks and <br />Recreation Element Policies 1 and 2 (parks facilities plan and <br />local recreation planning). <br />7. The draft PRP provides further policy refinement and <br />implementation of and is consistent with Metropolitan Plan <br />policies which regulate land use decisions or processes, <br />including, but not limited to: Environmental Design Element <br />Policies 2 (preservation of natural vegetation and water <br />features), 4 (preservation of local neighborhood identity), and 5 <br />(visual diversity of developed sitar_); Parks and Recreation <br />Element Policy 5 (continued citizen involvement in parks <br />planning); and Citizen Involvement Element Policies 2 and 3 <br />(citizen involvement mechanisms). <br />RESOLUTION - 2 <br />J <br />