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Planning commission flags need to reexamine urban service area; BOCC accepts report and requests further study

Hillsborough County Board of County Commissioners · April 17, 2026

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Summary

The county planning commission presented a letter urging a review of the urban service area metric (the adopted 80/20 metric), capacity gaps and possible policy updates. The board received the report and indicated staff and consultant work is underway for targeted areas; consultants’ work is expected to conclude late 2026 with a BOCC briefing to follow.

The county’s planning commission chair and staff briefed commissioners on a letter and analysis about how the county defines and manages its urban service area and whether the existing 80/20 metric remains appropriate.

Bradley Joseph, chair of the Hillsborough County Planning Commission, said the commission began flagging the issue in December and recommended the board consider updating policies or commissioning outside analytic support to evaluate outcomes and impacts (land valuation, infrastructure sequencing, and rural protection). He said planning commissioners and staff are ready to help but noted the study may require input from non‑planner experts (economists, real‑estate analysts and public‑utilities partners).

Melissa Zornita, executive director, described recent actions: the board directed staff to study expansions that led to Waimama and Baum area changes (adopted in May 2025); the county began consultant work in July 2025 on the Little Manatee South and I‑4 corridor studies (totaling roughly 47,000 acres) and expects consultant work to conclude by year‑end with a presentation to the board in early 2027. Commissioners discussed overlaying programmed infrastructure (water pipeline, fire stations, impact‑fee revenue) on the study areas to ensure investments align with growth expectations.

Commissioners voted to receive the planning commission’s report and continue study; several asked staff to coordinate consultant scope with county utilities and to share draft scopes with commissioners before procurement.