If land is categorized as ‘occupied,’ does that mean it is protected from future development?

For technical analysis purposes, land identified as ‘occupied’ was assumed to have no development capacity and therefore was not included in the amount of land where future homes and jobs could be built. The occupied and natural resource and natural hazard categories are used only for our analysis and do not place or change any additional restrictions on land.

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1. How was the Urban Reserves Study Area determined?
2. What is the Land Supply Model?
3. What types of land are considered ‘natural resource and natural hazard’ and ‘occupied’?
4. If land is categorized as ‘occupied,’ does that mean it is protected from future development?
5. What do the priority categories in the Study Area mean?
6. Did you consider things like existing road conditions and future traffic in your analysis?
7. What else was considered in the suitability analysis?
8. Return to Urban Reserves Web Page