Land Use and Institutional Controls
Decisions about leaving contamination in place have important and measurable impacts on remediation capital costs and the long-term cost of site stewardship.
While direct costs associated
with land use and institutional controls are commonly
estimated (planning, administration, monitoring or
enforcement costs, for example), long-term indirect costs to
local governments, including loss of potential future tax
revenues due to use restrictions, are often overlooked. Land
use and institutional controls serve to limit the options
available for mixed use redevelopment. These options include
real estate product types (commercial, industrial, retail,
or residential, for example), as well as parks, greenbelts,
trails and other public access land uses. In general, the
more contamination is removed or treated, the more
unrestricted the future uses of the site.
Forward-looking,
predictive decision analysis tools and techniques for land
use and institutional controls require state-of-the-practice
cost estimating tools and techniques. Equally important,
land use and institutional control analysis must meet
multiple objectives, including those of technical site
managers, settlement negotiators, fiscal and budgetary
planners, and procurement managers. A strategy that focuses
only on technical objectives will risk creating artificial
impediments to project success by failing to meet future
financial, legal or procurement decision making needs.
Risk
Strategics employs state-of-the-practice estimating
techniques for land use and institutional control direct
costs based on
expected value cost estimates rather than traditional “best
estimate” approaches that do not explicitly account for
uncertainty. Our analysis incorporates fundamental
land use and institutional control characteristics,
including:
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Objectives
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Specific control mechanisms
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Timing of implementation and
duration
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Parties responsible for
implementing, monitoring and enforcing
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Estimated cost to each party
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Specific engineering
controls, if any, that an institutional control supports
To
facilitate robust decision making for sites with redevelopment
potential, Risk Strategics employs sophisticated, user-friendly
analytical tools to incorporate the indirect costs and long-term
fiscal impacts to local governments caused by limiting options
for mixed use redevelopment. Our holistic approach to land use
and institutional control analysis is another example of how
Risk Strategics provides clients with the tools they need for
better economic and regulatory decision making.
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Fact Sheet
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