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Importantly, any changes in the formula used to distribute state funds for operations and maintenance <br /> will require legislative action. <br /> System Protection Policy.- <br /> Protect <br /> olicy.Protect public investment in acquisition and development by assuring that every <br /> component in the system is able to fully carry out its designated role as long as a <br /> need for it can be demonstrated. <br /> The Council has in place several mechanisms that protect the integrity of the Regional Parks System <br /> and of individual parts of the system: <br /> • Master plans: The master plan defines acceptable activities within a system unit. The regional <br /> park implementing agencies must receive Council approval before proceeding with any activities <br /> inconsistent with the existing Council-approved master plan. <br /> • Restrictive covenants: Regional park implementing agencies are required to record restrictive <br /> covenants on lands purchased with regional funds, to ensure that the land remains in regional <br /> recreation open space use unless the Council agrees to a change. <br /> • Land Planning Act: Proposed plans of local governments that have a substantial effect on or <br /> represent a substantial departure from the 2040 Regional Parks Policy Plan may be subject to a <br /> required modification by the Council to ensure that the system is protected. <br /> • Metropolitan significance: Proposed development projects that have a substantial effect on or <br /> represent a substantial departure from the 2040 Regional Parks Policy Plan may be required to <br /> undergo a review for metropolitan significance, with up to a one year delay in development if the <br /> project is found to adversely affect the system. <br /> These standards in the metropolitan significance rules and in the plan amendment guidelines are <br /> currently used to determine an effect on or a substantial departure from the Regional Parks System: <br /> • Impacts on the use of Regional Parks System facilities include, but are not limited to traffic, <br /> safety, noise, visual obstructions (for example, to scenic overlooks), impaired use of the facilities <br /> or interference with the operation or maintenance of the facilities. <br /> • Impacts on natural resources include, but are not limited to, the impact on the level, flow or <br /> quality of a facility's water resources (lakes, streams, wetlands, groundwater) and impact on a <br /> facility's wildlife populations or habitats (migration routes, breeding sites, plant communities). <br /> • A proposed project is considered to have an impact on the system if it may preclude or <br /> substantially limit the future acquisition of land in an area identified in the system plan of the <br /> Council's Regional Parks Policy Plan. <br />