SAN DIEGO - More than halfway through a 90-day period granted to the Astros and Nationals by Palm Beach County Commissioners to find a site for a shared spring training complex, the clubs know where they want to go - the same place they wanted to be all along.

The Haverhill site, at Haverhill Road and 45th Street in West Palm Beach, Fla., remains the teams' desired location, Astros general counsel Giles Kibbe said Friday.

On Tuesday, there is a Palm Beach County commissioners meeting - a public meeting - and an agenda item addressing the spring training site is on the docket, Kibbe said.

Ultimately, that agenda item won't determine whether the Astros move to that site, but if it passes, it would help the teams' cause.

There are a lot of moving parts.

The Haverhill land is owned by the city of West Palm Beach. There's a competing development group that made an offer on the site in October - right around the time the Nationals and Astros secured funding for their project.

What Tuesday's agenda item addresses is a swap of land between the city and county, Kibbe said. Kibbe said the city would be more interested in a baseball stadium on the Haverhill site if the city could take ownership of a small parcel of land - roughly 1.8 acres - in downtown West Palm Beach the county owns.

Both groups are expected to present pitches to the West Palm Beach city government in mid-January, Kibbe said.

If the city decides not to go the baseball developers' way, the Astros and Nationals have several options.

Moving to Arizona isn't the likeliest option, but it is always possible.

More likely would be remaining in Florida, perhaps in a county yet to be explored. The Astros' lease at Osceola County Stadium expires after 2016.