Public services and facilities are a key component of any specific
plan. A primary goal of the Downtown Encinitas Specific Plan is to
insure adequate capital facilities (sewers, storm drains, water, gas
and electric utilities) and public services (schools, fire and police
services, and other government services) based on the level of development
which the land use component of the Plan calls for.
Utilities have been surveyed to determine the need for improvements,
based both on age and need for additional capacity. The results of
this survey are favorable: aside from relatively minor "spot" improvements,
utility system capacities are adequate for build-out. The major improvement
based on age, for the area's sewer lines, can likely be resolved through
the installation of sleeve inserts rather than wholesale line replacement,
precluding the need for extensive excavation and costs.
Another infrastructure objective is to underground overhead
utilities, including electric, telephone and cable TV lines. An important
opportunity exists to coordinate line undergrounding with street and
alley improvements to save significant dollars. Funding sources also
are planned to be combined for additional savings.
Public services are provided to the planning area and the rest
of the City by the City and County governments and other public agencies.
Service levels are planned based on population and intensity of land
uses. Planned police and fire services will not be affected by adoption
of the proposed specific plan. This includes the system of existing
fire hydrants, which are judged adequate in terms of location, capacity
and pressure. The elementary and secondary school districts will experience
some impact as a result of the proposed specific plan land use.
An existing fire station (Station No. 1, on Second Street) and
an elementary school (Pacific View Elementary School) in the planning
area are planned to be maintained. The existing community branch public
library on Cornish Drive also will be maintained, and there is an
opportunity to expand it or replace it with a larger facility on the
same site through combined long-range civic center planning.
Perhaps the greatest challenge for public services and facilities
is providing funding for needed improvements. Beyond the capital facilities
noted above, substantial capital costs will be involved in needed
street, alley, pedestrian sidewalk/path, bicycle facilities, and streetscape
improvements. The specific plan provides preliminary cost estimates
for all capital improvements and surveys all potential funding sources
to enable subsequent detailed capital facility programming to choose
and carry out the best options, as discussed in Section 11.1.