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2008-05LAND DESICTN INNOVATIONS i„u~:~o~~~~~a CONSULTING SERVICES AGREEMENT This AGREEMENT made this ~~~ day of ;J( 2008, by and between the City of -~~~2~~ Clermont, Florida (City), a Florida municipal corporation, 685 West Montrose, Clermont, Florida, 34711 and Land Design Innovation, Inc. (Consultant), a Florida corporation, 140 North Orlando Avenue, Suite 295, Winter Park Florida, 32789. WHEREAS, City desires to have Consultant provide consulting services for preparation of Community Visioning and Comprehensive Plan update services (the Project) described in Exhibit "A'; and WHEREAS, Consultant agrees to provide the consulting services described in Exhibit "A", under the terms and conditions of this Agreement; NOW THEREFORE, the City and Consultant do hereby incorporate all terms and conditions in Exhibit "A" and mutuallyagree asfollows: 1. SCOPE OF PROJECT. Consultant agrees to provide planning services under the terms and conditions described in Exhibit "A". 2. TIME OF PERFORMANCE. The work product described in Exhibit "A" shall be complete on or before July 30, 2009. 3. REPORTS. Consultant agrees to provide to City progress reports on the Project upon request by the City and upon completion of the Project. 4. COMPENSATION. The City will pay Consultant a sum not to exceed $144,745.00, inclusive of all reasonable and necessary direct expenses as described in the cost estimate attached as Exhibit "A". The City may, from time to time, require changes in the scope of the project of Consultant to be performed hereunder. Such changes, including any increase or decrease in the amount of Consultant's compensation and changes in the terms of this Agreement which are mutually agreed upon by and between City and Consultant shall be effective when incorporated in written amendment to this Agreement. 5. METHOD OF PAYMENT. Consultant shall bill City, and City agrees to pay after approval of the City Project Manager under the terms of the Florida Prompt Payment Act F.S. 218.70. Page 1 of 4 ., 6. CONTACTS FOR RESPONSIBILITY. Pat Tyjeski, AICP, Senior Planner, will be designated as Project Director for this project by Consultant to manage and supervise the performance of this Agreement on behalf of Consultant. Associated with the Project Director will be staff members whose experience and qualifications are appropriate for this Project. The City will be represented by James K Hitt, Planning and Zoning Director, or his designee for all matters relating to this Agreement. 7. TERMINATION OF AGREEMENT. The City at its sole discretion may terminate this Agreement by giving Consultant ten (10) days' written notice of its election to do so and by specifying the effective date of such termination. The Consultant shall be paid for its services through the effective date of such termination. Further, if Consultant shall fail to fulfill any of its obligations hereunder, this Agreement shall be in default, the City may terminate the Agreement, and Consultant shall be paid only for work completed. Consultant may terminate the Agreement in the event that circumstances beyond the control of Consultant result in impossibility of performance of the Agreement, including, but not limited to, dissolution of corporate existence of Consultant. 8. NON-DISCRIMINATION. Consultant shall comply with Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, and Title I of the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 in that: No person in the United States shall on the grounds of race, creed, color, national origin, sex, age, political affiliation, beliefs, or disability be subject to discrimination under any program or activity which Consultant has agreed to undertake by and through the covenants and provisions set forth in this Agreement. There shall be no discrunination against any employee who is employed in the work covered by the Agreement, or against applicants for such employment, on said grounds. This provision shall include, but not be limited to the following: employment, upgrading, demotion, or transfer; recruitment or recruitment advertising; layoff or termination; rate of pay or other forms of compensation; and selection for training, including apprenticeship. 9. INTERESTS OF PARTIES. Consultant covenants that its officers, employees and shareholders have no interest and shall not acquire any interest, direct or indirect, which would conflict in any manner or degree with the performance of services required to be performed under this Agreement. 10. INDEMNIFICATION AND INSURANCE. Consultant agrees to protect, defend, indenuufy and hold the City and its officers, employees and agents free and harmless from and against any and Page 2 of 4 all losses, penalties, damages, settlements, costs, charges, professional fees or other expenses or liabilities of every kind and character arising out of or due to any negligent act or omission of Consultant or its employees in connection with or arising directly or indirectly out of this Agreement and/or the performance hereof. Without limiting its liability under this Agreement, Consultant shall procure and maintain during the life of this Agreement professional liabilityinsurarrce. This provision shall survive the termination of this Agreement. 11. PROPRIETARY MATERIALS; ACCESS TO RECORDS; RIGHTS TO DATA AND COPYRIGHT. Upon termination of this Agreement, Consultant shall transfer, assign and make available to City or its representatives all property and materials in Consultant's possession belonging to or paid bythe City. The City, the Department of State, Division of I~istorical Resources, or any of their duly authorized representatives shall have access to any books, documents, papers, and records of Contractor which are directly pertinent to the Agreement, for the purpose of making audit, examination, excerpts, and transcription. Consultant shall maintain all required records for five years following the later of final payment by City or closure of all pending matters. When publications, films, or similar materials are developed, directly or indirectly, from the Project, any copyright resulting therefrom shall be held by the Florida Department of State, Division of Historical Resources. Consutant may arrange for copyright of such materials only after approval from the Department. Any copyright arranged for by Consultant shall include acknowledgement of grant assistance. As a condition of grant assistance, City has agreed to and has awarded to the Department and, if applicable, to the United States Government and to its officers, agents, and employees acting within the scope of their official duties, a royaltyfree, nonexclusive, and irrevocable license throughout the world for official purposes, to publish, translate, reproduce, and use all subject data or copyrightable material based on such data covered bythe copyright. 12. REMEDIES, OTHER THAN TERMINATION OF AGREEMENT, FOR BREACH; ATTORNEYS' FEES AND JURISDICTION. In the event of breach of this Agreement by either parry, the other patty shall have such aclrnuiistrative, contractual, or legal remedies as provided by this Agreement, the Code of Ordinances of the City of Clermont, and the laws of the State of Florida. In the event that either party seeks to enforce this Agreement through attorneys at law, then the parties agree that each party shall bear its own attorneys' fees and costs, and that jurisdiction for any court action filed regarding this Agreement shall be in a court of competent jurisdiction in Lake County, Florida. Page 3 of 4 13. GOVERNING LAW. This Agreement shall be governed by and construed in accordance with the laws of the State of Florida. IN WITNESS WHEREOF, City and Consultant have executed this Agreement on the date first above written. CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA V s ,/ Haro . Turville, Jr., Mayor Attest f r City: ,~~ :' City Clerk LAND DESIGN INNOVATIONS, INC. Y~ Tracy L. Cr ~ e, r ident Attest for LDI: ,f '~ ; . fitness (Corporate Seal Page 4 of 4 EXHIBIT ~~A" SCOPE OF SERVICES FOR THE CITY OF CLERMONT Comprehensive Plan Update February 15, 2008 The City of Clermont is experiencing a growth surge that can be an asset and a contribution to the quality of life in the City if the growth is well managed. The City is currently relying on its Comprehensive Plan, written in 1991 and outdated, to deal with the type of growth occurring today. Likewise, before much more growth occurs, it is important for the City to develop a consensus on a vision for how growth should occur in the short and long term planning horizons, including an annexation plan and how services will be provided. Additionally, the State has required that the growth management regulations be updated based on the size of the land parcels requesting annexation into the City, to evaluate the impacts of these developments on the Cites objectives. The purpose for this scope of services is to identify the necessary steps associated with updating the Cites Comprehensive Plan to accommodate new State regulatory requirements. PROTECT' APPROACH The following sections identify LDI's approach to the project, which includes: conducting a community vision workshop; Clermont's Comprehensive Plan update, including review of the Cites proposed Public School Facilities Element preparation of a Water Supply Plan; and preparation of the Evaluation and Appraisal Report (EAR). The proposed fee schedule and timeline for the re-write of the Plan and preparation of the EAR follow the approach. TASK I. COMMUNITY VISIONING LDI will conduct facilitate acommunity workshop, to gather public input as described below. Task I-1-Data Gathering The first step in the process is for LDI staff to become familiar with the physical characteristics of the City and with its existing adopted studies and regulations. Sub- tasks include: • Kick off meeting with staff (discuss key planning issues, expectations, purpose, history of development trends, staff's perception, etc.). • Field visits with staff. • Meetings/calls with key stakeholders (property owners, residents, and organizations, if any, identified by staff). ~~1ND ~ESIGN jNNC)VAT'I(}NS Page 1 of 8 I~c~;rpor,tc<I • Review of current comprehensive plan and recent drafts, along with other relevant studies, regulations and documents. • Gathering of data from other jurisdictions (County and adjacent cities) and agencies (MPO, FDOT, WMD, etc). Task I-2 -Community Profile LDI will prepare a brief report outlining the existing conditions in the City, covering in general terms the following topics: • Land Use (existing land use, future land use categories, zoning designations, vacant land analysis) • Applicable Plans and Regulations (City, County, State or regional agencies} • Ecological Overview (wetlands, floodplains, habitats, topography, soils, groundwater, coastal construction restrictions) • Physical Conditions of the Building Stock • Urban Form (site layout, building orientation, height, massing, colors, materials, fenestration, utilities, streetscape, signs) • Employment Centers and Major Activity Centers (CRAB, shopping/employment districts, airport, etc.) • Circulation and Parking • Landscaping • Utilities/Service Areas • History • Development Trends • Economic Development Initiatives • Socio-Economic Characteristics and Trends Task I-3 -Public Workshop Once the inventory has been prepared, aworkshop/charrette will be scheduled to obtain public input. LDI recommends an evening or Saturday morning workshop and suggests that the City invite, in addition to the general public, stake holder groups such as neighborhood associations, community organizations, businesses, housing and development interests, and environmental organizations active in the area. LDI will prepare base maps and a PowerPoint Presentation. The workshop will consist of three parts: 1. Education/Issues. LDI will give a short PowerPoint presentation describing a general suinmaryof the physical and socio-economic characteristics of the City-- what we have learned through the inventory exercise. The presentation will then LAND DESIGN INNOVATIONS Page 2 of 8 1=..nrpn~ae~xl outline the focus areas to be discussed during the public input session. The topics to be addressed at the workshop include: • Future growth in the area based on population forecasts from the Bureau of Economic and Business Research; • General information on development rights based on land use and zoning designations; • Preservation of open space, environmentally sensitive lands, and agricultural lands; • Appropriate locations and design standards for various types of development; • Appropriate locations and standards for economic development opportunities and employment centers; • Provisions for affordable/workforce housing; • An efficient, interconnected multimodal transportation system; and • Opportunities to create land use patterns that accommodate the issues listed above. 2. Public Input. The second part of the workshop will consist of a hands-on activity. LDI will have base maps of the City available for the participants to provide comments, ideas and suggestions. The audience will be divided into small groups (10 persons maximum) to gather around a base map and provide graphic and text comments. Each table of 10 or less would be facilitated by an LDI staff person as group moderator (not to impose ideas but rather to assist the public on expressing their ideas). 3. Summary Report. After the small group discussion, table representative will present their ideas and issues. LDI will write the main topics on a large notepad for everybody to see. When done with the small group comments, LDI will ask the participants to rank the topics based on priorities. This way, LDI will get a better idea of the major issues facing the community. Considering that not everybody likes to speak in front of groups, LDI will also have a "comments box" available at the workshop for the public to provide written comments. LDI will provide the comment forms, which can be completed at the workshop or mailed to LDI at a later date. Initially, LDI proposes a single public workshop. However, if attendance at this workshop is less than ten (10) participants, the workshop will be cancelled and the City will re-advertise the workshop for another date. In the event the workshop is postponed to another date, the City will not incur additional costs from LDI. TASK II. COMPREHENSIVE PLAN UPDATE The purpose of updating the City's Comprehensive Plan is to address outdated information, changes in land area and population, as well as changes in development trends, since the latest plan adoption. AND ~ESIGN ~I~`NC~VATIONS Page 3 of 8 1-e;:orpu; ~~te<I LDI's approach to updating Comprehensive Plans ensures the quality of the product, timeliness and consistency throughout the document. We have several Project Managers who are qualified to manage the preparation or updates of Plan Elements. However, we assign one overall Project Director to ensure that all elements receive a quality control inspection from the same individual. This is necessary to ensure that all the elements are consistent on a project of this magnitude. The following scope of services will be undertaken by Land Design Innovations, Inc. to prepare the Cites Comprehensive Plan update. Task II-1-Data and Analysis Update the data and analysis pursuant to the requirements of Rule 9J-5, Florida Administrative Code, for each required plan element including, but not limited to, the following: • Prepare population projections. • Evaluate the availability of facilities and services to serve existing land uses. • Evaluate characteristics of vacant or undeveloped lands and determine suitability for use and where growth can occur. • Update and streamline the Future Land Use Map (FLUl~~ to appropriately assign future land use categories within the City. Appendix C will be incorporated into the Future Land Use Element. • Address changes that occurred in the State and Regional Plans that impact Clermont's Comprehensive Plan. • Address the financial feasibility of providing needed infrastructure to achieve and maintain adopted levels of service standards and sustain concurrency through capital improvements. The final product will be a completely new set of GIS maps, including the Future Land Use Map, and new data and tables for each of the elements formatted in Microsoft Word. The data and analysis changes are anticipated to be so extensive that the product will not be provided in strike throughlunderline format. The formatting, maps and table layouts will be consistent throughout the elements. Task II-2 -Goals, Objectives and Policies Prepare updated goals, objectives and policies (GOPs) for the 20-year planning horizon that: • Address stakeholder and general public participation comments. • Address, at a minimum, affordable housing, transportation, annexations, and land use. • Meet the requirements of the State's Growth Management law, Chapter 163 Florida Statutes, as amended in Senate Bill 360. • Address Senate Bill 360 regarding schools, water supply, transportation, and capital improvements. LAND ~ESIGN jNNOti'ATIt~NS Page 4 of 8 Task II-3 -Update of Public School Facilities Element The City of Clermont is preparing a Public School Facilities Element (PSFE) for inclusion in the City's Comprehensive Plan per the requirements of Section 163.3180, Florida Statutes, as amended. LDI will review and update the PSFE, if necessary, prior to its required submittal date of December 2008. LDI will review the PSFE to verify that it reflects amendments that have been made to the Comprehensive Plan and that it includes the following: • Review of the School Board facilityplan; • Inventory of existing facilities and current service capacity; • Mapping the locations of the schools within the City and, if available from the school board, include the general service areas; • Analyze and project future capacity and facilities needed to accommodate growth; • Draft policies necessary to execute identified goals and objectives; Task II-4 -Water Supply Plan LDI shall prepare a ten (10)year water supply plan that identifies alternative water sources recommended by the Water Management District. The Water Supply Plan will be prepared simultaneously with the Potable Water Element Update. LDI will work closely with the City's Public Works staff to prepare a financially feasible ten (10)year capital improvements schedule for public water resources. Task II-5 -Meet with DCA Prior to Submittal of Amendment Package LDI will meet with the Department of Community Affairs (DCA) one time prior to transmittal of the amendment package. At this meeting, we will present the DCA reviewer(s) a summary of the changes proposed to the FLUM and other elements of the Comprehensive Plan and solicit suggestions/comments from DCA. Task II-6 - Assist in Drafting Comprehensive Plan Amendment Ordinance LDI will assist the City in drafting the Comprehensive Plan Amendment Ordinance; LDI does not have legal representation on staff; therefore, the City Attorney must review and approve the ordinance as to legal sufficiency and content. TASK III. EVALUATION AND APPRAISAL REPORT The purpose of the Evaluation and Appraisal Report is to identify the successes and/or shortcomings the City has had in implementing its Comprehensive Plan. The format and requirements of the EAR is established by the Department of Community Affairs and legislated by Section 163.3191. The following tasks will be completed to assist the City with the preparation of the 2009 Evaluation and Appraisal Report. LAND ~ESICN INNOVATIONS Page 5 of 8 In;;~rporem-A Task III-1-Major Issues During the visioning workshop for the Comprehensive Plan, LDI will also develop the major issues facing the City based on citizen input. These major issues will be consolidated to limit the focus to at most one or two major issues for review during the 2009 evaluation of the Plan. Task III-2 -Scoping Meeting LDI will facilitate the Scoping meeting with the reviewing agencies on behalf of the City. The City will be responsible for the invitations to the meeting and the meeting facility. Task III-3 - Letter of Understanding LDI will draft the Letter of Understanding for signature by the Cityafter the scoping meeting. Task III-4 -Preparation of the EAR The fees for the EAR were based upon the following assumptions: 1. The EAR will be submitted immediately after approval of the Comprehensive Plan, so the data is recent. 2. The State will not require that the EAR analyze the currently adopted plan, but will accept the data just approved in conjunction with the completely revised Comprehensive Plan. 3. The State will not require an analysis of the impacts to the Plan related changes to Rule 9J-5, FAC or Chapter 163, F.S., since the Plan will have just been completely updated and determined to meet all current requirements of statutes and codes. 4. The State will allow the analysis of each element to simply state that it was just updated and no changes are needed to the element for it to either meet State Statutes and Codes or to further the major issues identified. Task III-5 -EAR Ordinance LDI will assist the City in drafting the EAR Ordinance. LDI does not have legal representation on staff; therefore, the City Attorney must review and approve the ordinance as to legal sufficiencyand content. TASK IV. RESPONSE TO THE OBJECTIONS, RECOMMENDATIONS AND COMMENTS REPORTS (ORC) LDI is prepared to respond to the ORC reports prepared by the Department of Community Affairs for the Comprehensive Plan Update and/or the EAR; however, the fee will be negotiated after receipt of the ORC reports. The fee will be based on the issues addressed in the specific ORC reports, which will allow an estimate of the extent of detail and additional data and analysis or maps that will be required to prepare the responses. LAND DESIGN INNOVATIONS Page 6 of 8 City of Clermont Comprehensive Plan Complete Re-write Fee Breakdown AND ~ESIGN jIvNOVt~TIONS Page 7 of S City of Clermont Comprehensive Plan Complete Re-write Project Schedule LAND ~ESIGN INNOVATIONS Page 8 of 8 ta.;c,rpuracrn • r ~ ~.. ~ _......... 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G r C- n % Q J a V (~ .-] L (=7 '..Q C: .:1 (= '.W W i ~ U ~ ~c. f~ y ( MEMORANDUM City of Clermont Planning & Zoning Department TO: City Council Wayne Saunders, City Manager FROM: James K. Hitt, Planning Director DATE: February 26, 2008 RE: Comprehensive Plan Update -Contractor Selection and Agreement The Comprehensive Plan is scheduled for an update this year as part of the approved budget. An RFQ was sent out, and the ranking was approved by City Council on January 8, 2008. Land Design Innovation was the top choice in the ranking and by City staff. This agreement includes both the full Comprehensive Plan Update for the Data & Analysis, Goals & Objectives, and maps. This portion is scheduled for transmittal to DCA in January 2009. The agreement also includes the state required Evaluation and Appraisal (EAR), which will be required by August 2009. City staff recommends approval of the attached Consulting Services Agreement with Land Design Innovations. L:\JHitt\Budget\2007-08 budget\Comp Plan re-write\MEMO CC2-26-08 LDI Agreement.doc