For the purpose of this chapter, the following words and phrases are defined and explained:
"Alternative transportation modes (ATM)"means any mode of travel that serves as an alternative to the single-occupant vehicle. This can include all forms of ride sharing such as carpooling or van pooling, public transit, bicycling, walking, or alternative methods such as telecommuting.
"Alternative work schedule (AWS)"means a method to reduce trips to the site by causing a full-time employee to commute to the work site less than 10 times during a 14-day period. (Example: 10/40 or 9/80 work weeks.)
"Applicable development"means any new development that is determined to meet or exceed the 50-employee threshold or any existing development that applies to increase its floor areas by 25,000 gross square feet. Applicable developments include complexes exceeding the 50-employee threshold and residential developments with 25 or more units. To determine the number of employees, the chart below is used.
For purposes of determining whether a new or expanding employer is subject to this chapter, the total employment figure will be determined by the jurisdiction as follows:
(a) Employment projections developed by the project applicant, subject to approval by the TRO program manager; or
(b) Employment projections provided to sewer and water agencies in connection with the new or expanded use; or
(c) The following employee generation factors by type of use:
Table 16.70.070 |
|---|
Land Use Category | Number of Employees |
|---|
Commercial (Regional, Community or Neighborhood) | 1/500 gross square feet |
Office/Professional | 1/250 gross square feet |
Industrial | 1/525 gross square feet |
Hotel/Motel | 0.8 per room |
Mixed Use | Sum of individual figures for each use |
Restaurant | 1 per 10 seats |
Hospital/Other Medical | 1 per 4 beds |
"Average vehicle ridership (AVR)"means the figure derived by dividing the number of employees (including those telecommuting) at a regulated work site who commute to and from work between 6:00 a.m. to 10:00 a.m. Monday through Friday, by the number of vehicles driven by these employees between home and the work site over that five-day period. The methodology for calculating AVR is contained in PGMC §
16.70.110.
"Buspool"means ridership on a heavy duty vehicle occupied by at least 16 passengers and the routing/scheduling for which is arranged between employer(s) and transit operators.
"Carpool"means ridership on a light duty motor vehicle occupied by at least two but not more than six employees traveling together.
"Complex"means any business park, shopping center, or mixed-use development in separate or common ownership.
"Congestion management program (CMP)"is the county-wide program developed in accordance with California Government Code Section
65088 et seq., requiring local jurisdictions and congestion management agencies to adopt and implement a trip reduction and travel demand element. The CMP law also requires designation of a CMP principal arterial network, a transit network, a land use impact analysis program, a deficiency plan and level of service monitoring system, and a seven-year capital improvement program.
"Developer"means the individual or company who is responsible for the planning, design, and/or construction of an applicable development project. The developer is the individual who signs all permit applications on behalf of the property owner.
"Facility(ies)"means the total of all buildings, structures and grounds that encompass a development site, at either single or multiple locations, that comprise or are associated with an applicable development project.
"Mixed-use development"means any development project that combines residential with any one of these land uses: daycare, office, commercial, light industrial, retail, and business park.
"Park-and-ride lot"means a parking lot located near residential communities or along highways which is served by a transit route or can be used by commuters as a staging area for carpool formation or for catching a bus. (A park-and-ride lot may also be used by visitors as a staging area for tourist shuttle buses.) Parking is free for commuters or visitors using a park-and-ride lot.
"Parking cash-out program"means an employer funded, tax deductible program where employers provide a cash allowance to an employee equivalent to the parking subsidy the employer would otherwise provide. Cities and counties are required to grant appropriate parking requirement reductions for developments that implement parking cash-out programs.
"Parking management"means comprehensive management of the location, cost and availability of parking to effect changes in travel behavior, trips generated, and mode used. Parking management can involve charging for employee parking, providing an employee transportation monetary allowance for use in paying for a bus pass or other alternative commute mode, or charging for a parking space. Parking management can also mean offering preferential, priority or reserved free parking for those employees who use alternative modes. Parking management can also involve changing time limits for parking lot or street parking to reduce employee parkers.
"Peak period"means the hours from 6:00 a.m. to 9:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m. inclusive, Monday through Friday.
"Residential developer"shall mean an individual, group or designee responsible for the development of single-family or multiple-family housing units in which 25 or more housing units will be constructed as a part of a single application.
"Site development plan/permit"means a precise plan of development that may be subject to public hearing before the planning commission, or that may or may not be subject to a discretionary permit.
"Special event"means a seasonal, recurring activity or a singular event which attracts both residents and nonresidents to a facility for recreational or other activities.
"Telecommuting"means a method of conducting work without leaving one's residence and thereby eliminating the commute round trip.
"Transportation demand management (TDM)"means the implementation of programs, plans, pricing, or policies designed to encourage changes in individual travel behavior. TDM can include pricing to effect travel mode change; an emphasis on alternative travel modes to the single-occupant vehicle (SOV) such as carpools, vanpools and transit; reduction or elimination of vehicle trips, or shifts in the time of vehicle commutes to other than the peak period. A listing of TDM techniques is included at PGMC §
16.70.100.
"Trip reduction"means reducing the number of trips made in single occupant vehicles.
"Vanpool"means seven or more persons traveling to work in one vehicle.
"Vehicle trip"means a point-to-point journey or trip in one direction utilizing a motorized vehicle. For example, an employed mother driving a car and dropping off two children at two daycare facilities and then going to an instant cash facility on the way to her job, makes a total of four vehicle trips.
"Worksite"means the place of employment, base of operation, or predominant work location of an employee.
(Ord. 1925 N.S. § 1, 1994)