HomeMy WebLinkAboutSchool Board Comments (5.19.05)**PRELIMINARY**
SCHOOL IMPACT REVIEW ANALYSIS
May 19, 2005
FOR INFORMATIONAL PURPOSES ONLY; THE REQUIREMENTS UNDER THE
INTERLOCAL AGREEMENT FOR SCHOOL FACILITY PLANNING ARE NOT
TRIGGERED SINCE SCHOOLS THAT WOULD SERVE THE PROPOSED
DEVELOPMENT ARE UNDER THE 115% THRESHOLD CAPACITY,
APPLICATION: Nirvana
REQUEST: Large Scale Development (LSD June 7, 2005)
EXISTING
ZONING:
C-1 Restricted Commercial which allows 150 DU/acre and R-3
Medium Density Multifamily which allows 65 DU/acre
ACRES: C-1 contains 0.74 net acres and R-3 contains 10.8 net acres
Combined Zoning Districts 11.54 net acres
LOCATION: 680 NE 64th Street, Miami.
NUMBER OF ®o
UNITS: 113 units
(Zoning District R-3 / 10.8 net acres x 65 DU/acre = 702 max. units
allowed — existing density 375 units / available density 327 units)
MSA/
MULTIPLIER: 4.1 / 0.32
ESTIMATED
STUDENT
POPULATION: 36 students*
ELEMENTARY: 17
MIDDLE: 9
SENIOR: 10
SCHOOLS SERVING AREA OF APPLICATION:
ELEMENTARY: Morningside Elem. — 6620 NE 5th Avenue
MIDDLE: Miami Edison Middle - 6101 NW 2nd Avenue
SENIOR: Miami Edison Senior High — 6161 NW 5 Ct.
All schools are located in Region IV.
*Based on Census 2000 information provided by Miami -Dade County Department of
Planning and Zoning.
The following population and facility capacity data are as reported by the Office of
information Technology, as of October 2004:
STUDENT FISH DESIGN % UTILIZATION NUMBER % UTILIZATION CUMULATIVE
POPULATION CAPACITY FISH DESIGN OF FISH DESIGN STUDENTS'"
PERMANENT CAPACITY PORTABLE CAPACITY
PERMANENT STUDENT PERMANENT
STATIONS AND
RELOCATABLE
Morningside Elementary 529/ 641 83%/ 112 70%/
546* 85%* 73%*
Miami Edison Middle 868/ 1,180 74%/ 0 74%/
877* 74%* 74%*
Miami Edison Senior High 1,477/ 1,673 88%/ 184 80%/
1,487* 89%* 80%*
increased student population as a result of the proposed development
** Estimated # of students (cumulative) based on zoning/land use log (2001-
present) and assuming all approved developments are built; also assumes none
of the prior cumulative students are figured in current population
Notes:
1) Figures above reflect the impact of the class size amendment.
2) Pursuant to the Interlocal Agreement, none of the schools meet the review
threshold. ~o
PLANNED RELIEF SCHOOLS IN THE AREA
(Information included in proposed 5-Year Capital Plan, 2005-2009, dated January 2005)
Projects in Planning, Design or Construction
School Status Occupancy Date
N/A
Proposed Relief Schools
School
N/A
Funding Year
OPERATING COSTS: According to Financial Affairs, the average cost for K-12 grade
students amounts to $6,549 per student. The total annual operating cost for additional
students residing in this development, if approved, would total $235,764.
CAPITAL COSTS: Based on the State's June 2005 student station cost factors*, capital
costs for the estimated additional students to be generated by the proposed
development are:
ELEMENTARY 17 x $ 13,559 = $230,503
MIDDLE 9 x $ 15,546 = $139,914
SENIOR 10 x $ 20,572 = $205,720
Total Potential Capital Cost $576,137
* Based on Information provided by the Florida Department of Education, Office of
Educational Facilities Budgeting. Cost per student station does not include land cost.
750
944
1,576