The Apalachee Regional Planning Council (ARPC) is one of eleven regional planning councils in
Florida. The Apalachee Region is located in the Florida Panhandle and contains nine counties, (Calhoun, Franklin, Gadsden,
Gulf, Jackson, Jefferson, Leon, Liberty and Wakulla) and twenty-eight municipalities.
The ARPC is governed by a twenty-seven member Board. Elected officials comprise
two-thirds of the Board and apointees of the Governor represent the remaining one-third. The ARPC works with citizens and
local governments on a wide range of issues and programs including, but not limited to: Economic Development planning and
assistance; Hazardous Waste Generator Assessments; Hurricane Loss, Mitigation, and Evaluation Studies; and Transportation
Disadvantaged planning.
Pursuant to Section 186.507, Florida Statutes, and Rule 27E-5,
Florida Administrative Code, the ARPC is required to prepare and adopt a Strategic Regional Policy
Plan (SRPP). The SRPP contains goals and policies that will serve as a guide for physical, economic and social development
of the Apalachee Region. In addition to being used as a guide for shaping the Region's future, the SRPP will be
used by the ARPC as a framework to link planning and implementation activities of various entities; to review local comprehensive
plans and large scale developments; to facilitate the resolution of disputes in planning and growth management issues; and
as a policy document to guide all of the Council's activities.
The SRPP consists of
six areas, a regional description and five elements:
Affordable Housing;
Economic Development;
Emergency Management;
Natural Resources of Regional Significance; and
Regional Transportation.
Each element of the SRPP contains Strategic Issue Areas. Strategic is officially defined
as "proactive, future, and results oriented with a focus on important long term priorities, needs, and problems
of the region. Strategic Issue Areas are those issues that will have the most significant impact on the Region and for
which there are windows of opportunity for actions to create desirable change. These issues are generally multi-jurisdictional
and cross-programmatic in nature.
Each Strategic Issue Area contains a Trends and Conditions
Statement, which describes past and present conditions respecting the issues as well as forecasts future activities.
Each Strategic Issue Area also contains one or more goals with each goal defining a long term end toward which
programs and activities are ultimately directed. The goals are supported by policies, which are "the
ways in which programs and activities are conducted to achieve identified goals" (Rule 27E-5.002(6), F.A.C.), and each
policy is supported by an implementation strategy. The strategies are not intended to be prescriptive nor exhaustive,
rather a listing of alternative actions for enacting the policy. Finally, each goal area includes an indicator for
evaluating attainment.
To download the entire SRPP click this link.