OAR 660-018-0040
Submittal of Adopted Change


(1)

When a local government adopts a proposed change to an acknowledged comprehensive plan or a land use regulation it shall submit the decision to the department, with the appropriate notice forms provided by the department, within 20 days.

(2)

For purposes of the 20-day requirement under section (1) of this rule, the proposed change is considered submitted to the department:

(a)

On the day the applicable notice forms and other required documents are received by the department in its Salem office, if hand-delivered or submitted by electronic mail or similar electronic method, or

(b)

On the date of mailing if the local government mails the forms and documents.

(3)

The submission to the department must in a format acceptable to the department and include all of the following materials:

(a)

A copy of final decision;

(b)

The findings and the text of the change to the comprehensive plan or land use regulation;

(c)

If a comprehensive plan map or zoning map is created or altered by the proposed change:

(A)

A map showing the area changed and applicable designations; and

(B)

Electronic files containing geospatial data showing the area changed, as specified in section (5) of this rule, if applicable.

(d)

A brief narrative summary of the decision, including a summary of substantive differences from the proposed change submitted under OAR 660-018-0020 (Notice of a Proposed Change to a Comprehensive Plan or Land Use Regulation) and any supplemental information that the local government believes may be useful to inform the director or members of the public of the effect of the actual change; and

(e)

A statement by the individual transmitting the decision identifying the date of the decision and the date the submission was mailed to the department.

(4)

Where amendments or new land use regulations, including supplementary materials, exceed 100 pages, a summary of the amendment briefly describing its purpose and requirements shall be included with the submittal to the director.

(5)

For local governments that produce geospatial data describing an urban growth boundary (UGB) or urban or rural reserve that is created or altered as part of an adopted change to a comprehensive plan or land use regulation, the submission must include electronic geospatial data depicting the boundary change. Local governments that create or alter other zoning or comprehensive plan maps as geospatial data are encouraged but not required to share this data with the department. Geospatial data submitted to the department must comply with the following standards endorsed by the Oregon Geographic Information Council:

(a)

Be in an electronic format compatible with the State’s Geographic Information System software standard described in OAR 125-600-7550 (Enterprise Geographic Information System (GIS) Software Standard); and

(b)

Be accompanied by metadata that meets at least the minimum requirements of the federal Content Standard for Digital Geospatial Metadata.

(6)

Local government must notify the department of withdrawals or denials of proposals previously sent to the department under requirements of OAR 660-018-0020 (Notice of a Proposed Change to a Comprehensive Plan or Land Use Regulation).

(7)

If a local government did not submit a notice of a proposed change to a comprehensive plan or land use regulation to the department as required by OAR 660-018-0020 (Notice of a Proposed Change to a Comprehensive Plan or Land Use Regulation), the transmittal must clearly indicate which provisions of OAR 660-018-022 are applicable.
NOTE: ORS 197.610 (Submission of proposed comprehensive plan or land use regulation changes to Department of Land Conservation and Development) clearly requires all adopted plan and land use regulation amendments and new land use regulations to be submitted to the director even if they were not required to be submitted for review prior to adoption.

(8)

ORS 197.620 (Appeal of certain comprehensive plan or land use regulation decision-making) provides that a local government may cure the untimely submission of materials by either postponing the date for the final evidentiary hearing by the greater of 10 days or the number of days by which the submission was late; or by holding the evidentiary record open for an additional period of time equal to 10 days or the number of days by which the submission was late, whichever is greater. The local government shall provide notice of such postponement or record extension to the department.

Source: Rule 660-018-0040 — Submittal of Adopted Change, https://secure.­sos.­state.­or.­us/oard/view.­action?ruleNumber=660-018-0040.

Last Updated

Jun. 8, 2021

Rule 660-018-0040’s source at or​.us