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<br />City of Gem Lake Comprehensive Plan GEMLK 140643 <br />Page 99 <br />14 Implementation <br />14.1 Background <br />Implementation of Gem Lake’s comprehensive plan will occur on a number of fronts, <br />ranging from encouraging private investment to ownership and construction of public <br />improvements. After formally adopting the plan, the city can insure it orderly <br />implementation in a number of ways: <br />* Policies (land use types and locations) <br />• Regulations <br />• Public Investments <br />• Public Incentives <br />• Public Services <br />The comprehensive plan provides a rational basis for guiding development, making <br />public investments, encouraging private investments and establishing the policies and <br />regulations necessary to implement the plan. For the City of Gem Lake, plan <br />implementation means weaving together the needs of citizens and investors with public <br />policies, public investments and city regulations. <br />The comprehensive plan establishes the background and policies for the orderly <br />development and reinvestment in the City. Implementation strategies link plans to actions <br />and resources. Public investments serve development objectives and allocation of <br />available resources. Regulations can be a natural extension of the planning process <br />translating agreed upon ideas into practical application, with the assistance of clear and <br />publicly administer guidelines. <br />The first implementation step is the formal adoption of the comprehensive plan. Plan <br />adoption procedures are prescribed by state law. These procedures involve a report and <br />recommendation by the planning commission after public notice and public hearing. This <br />is followed by a 4/5 vote of the City Council. <br />The significant elements of Gem Lake’s comprehensive plan revision include: <br />• An inventory of the physical and natural resources that impact public and private <br />development <br />• Identifying county, state, school district, watershed district and water <br />management organization and neighboring communities plans and policies <br />• Identifying, and coordinating with, Met Council system plans and plan review <br />policies <br />• Identifying current and future community values, needs, opportunities and <br />objectives <br />• Projecting population and land use trends <br />• Developing a comprehensive set of policies by which all other plan elements are <br />evaluated <br />• Identifying economic development strategies and policies <br />• Evaluating available vacant land <br />• Determining a logical distribution of land uses within the environmental and <br />natural resources protection framework