HomeMy WebLinkAbout2012-1120 Council Mtg MIN
ASHLAND CITY COUNCIL MEETING
November 20, 2011
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MINUTES FOR THE REGULAR MEETING
ASHLAND CITY COUNCIL
November 20, 2012
Council Chambers
1175 E. Main Street
CALL TO ORDER
Mayor Stromberg called the meeting to order at 7:00 p.m. in the Civic Center Council Chambers.
ROLL CALL
Councilor Voisin, Morris, Lemhouse, Slattery, and Silbiger were present.
MAYOR'S ANNOUNCEMENTS
Mayor Stromberg announced vacancies on the Public Arts Commission, Transportation Commission,
Tree Commission, and Firewise Commission.
APPROVAL OF MINUTES
The minutes of the Study Session of November 5, 2012 and Regular Meeting of November 6, 2012 were
approved as presented.
SPECIAL PRESENTATIONS & AWARDS
Ashland Community Hospital (ACH) Board Chair Doug Gentry explained Asante proposed a merger
style affiliation where ACH would be part of the Asante system. ACH assets and liabilities would most
likely combine and there were local governance options to maintain ACH's unique organization.
Providence proposed a multi-year management agreement that would have kept ACH separate and
independent with substantial operating help but no direct relief from their debt. The board was impressed
with both proposals but chose an affiliation with Asante to ensure the long-term survival of the hospital.
Asante would go through due diligence before finalizing the term sheet and letter of intent. It would take
a minimum of 60 days for that process. A separate negotiation would occur between the City and Asante
regarding the lease. Negotiations and due diligence were covered by a mutual confidentiality and
exclusivity agreement. Once the term sheet and letter of intent were complete, ACH would come back to
Council for public comment. In the interim, Asante would establish consulting resources at ACH to help
with operational questions and issues.
Chair Gentry clarified the preference for an affiliation with Dignity Health was not a financial one. Both
original proposals from Dignity Health and Asante were similar. Asante was a two hospital organization
with almost a half billion dollars in cash reserves. What Mr. Gentry could disclose regarding local
governance involved ACH having a seat at the Asante Board, and physician privileges and bylaws.
Asante would provide ACH access to capital but had more economies of scale than Dignity Health.
Shared services would result in job loss or reassignments at ACH.
CONSENT AGENDA
1. Approval of commission, committee, and board minutes
2. Approval of a public contract for utility wood pole inspections and remedial treatment
3. Resolution authorizing military flyovers for Memorial Day and Independence Day ceremonies
Councilor Voisin pulled Consent Agenda item 43 for further discussion.
Councilor Morris/Slattery m/s to approve Consent Agenda items #1 and #2. Voice Vote: all AYES.
Motion passed.
ASHLAND CITY COUNCIL MEETING
November 20, 2012
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Councilor Voisin voiced concern on the authorization of military flyovers due to problems it might create
for veterans with PTSD (Post Traumatic Stress Disorder). She also had safety concerns regarding
flyovers and wanted additional citizen input.
Councilor Voisin m/s to table Consent Item #3 until the first meeting in January. Motion died for
lack of a second.
Jo French/300 Kent Street/Explained there was two types of flyovers, civilian and military. The City
had no control over civilian flyovers. The military did flyovers for celebrations and memorials typically
on July 4th and Memorial Day. Approximately 42,000,000 people had served in the armed forces with
over 1,250,000 deaths during service. The City was involved with this request because it owned the
cemetery. It was difficult for Mr. French to understand attaching a stigma to an aircraft that went against
the lives of the people who died, helping make this country great.
Councilor Lemhouse/Slattery m/s to approve Consent Agenda item #3. Voice Vote: Councilor
Morris, Lemhouse, Slattery and Silbiger, YES; Councilor Voisin, NO. Motion passed 4-1.
PUBLIC HEARINGS
1. Adoption of a supplemental budget and a resolution creating appropriations within the FY
2012-13 budget
Administrative Services Director Lee Tuneberg explained the request for $1,435,566 in appropriations
would go to the following funds:
A. General Fund - Police Department: $227,163 in forfeiture monies received for the Police station
remodel.
B. General Fund - Police Department: $46,800 in federal grant money to participate in the Southern
Oregon High Tech Task Force.
C. Airport Fund - Public Works, Materials & Services: $19,000 Equipment Fund loan to trim trees
around the runway as required by the Federal Aviation Administration.
D. Debt Service Fund: $280,397 prepayment from the Oregon Shakespeare Festival to pay off the
state loan for the parking structure construction.
E. Debt Service Fund: $364,795 interfund loan from the Central Service Fund, ending fund balance,
to pay off the City's portion of the state loan used to construct the Hargadine parking structure.
F. Central Service Fund - Ending Fund Balance: $364,795 appropriations through a loan to
accomplish item D.
G. Equipment Fund - Public Works, Purchasing: $113,616 grant monies for firefighter equipment
budgeted and replaced in;the fund. The match will come from money paid into the sinking fund
by the Fire Department.
H. Equipment Fund - Interfund Loan: $19,000 appropriations through a loan to fund tree trimming
at the airport.
Public Hearing Open: 7:37 p.m.
Public Hearing Closed: 7:37 p.m.
Councilor Voisin/Slattery m/s to approve Resolution #2012-33. Voice Vote: all AYES. Motion
passed.
2. Public hearing to consider raising electric rates
Administrative Services Director Lee Tuneberg recommended a 5.3% rate increase effective January 1,
2013. Bonneville Power Administration (BPA) was anticipating a 7%-8% increase in wholesale power
and 12%-13% for transmissions resulting in a possible 9% increase just to purchase power. Purchase
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November 20, 2012
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power and transmission costs made up approximately 50% of annual costs that could increase rates 5%-
6% in 2014. Staff also recommended a rate study that would coincide with the new 10-year Master Plan.
Councilor Lemhouse expressed concern regarding water and electric rate increases and the lack of budget
preparation for these utilities. He agreed with the rate study but wanted action from study results.
Director of Electric Utility and Information Technology Mark Holden was in the process of developing a
scope of work for the rate study with a target completion for the end of spring 2013 for the study and the
new l0-year Master Plan.
Mr. Tuneberg could not guarantee the rate study would offset annual rate increases due to BPA increases.
The rate study and system plan would provide efficiency gains, show how to maintain load and demand,
and look at options for what the City pays BPA. Mr. Holden added another aspect of the rate study would
ensure parity against the different rate tiers.
City Administrator Dave Kanner explained the City chose not to increase electric rates in fiscal years
2009 and 2011. In fiscal year 2012, the amount of debt doubled for the electric utility due to the Ashland
Fiber Network (AFN). Rates were not sufficiently raised enough to cover the increased transfer to the
AFN debt and attributed to the current problem the City was experiencing. AFN also created issues for
other funds as well. Balancing the Electric Fund budget required raising rates. Selling the AFN system
would not help because the City would retain the debt.
Mr. Tuneberg noted Southern Oregon University (SOU) was considering a cogeneration plant in the next
few years that could create spikes and dips in the power they purchased from the City and result in
significant impacts to the rates the City pays BPA. Mr. Holden recently met with BPA who currently
projected the City would go over the high water mark 2015.
Councilor Voisin wanted conservation efforts factored into the rates with financial rewards for customers
who conserved.
Mr. Tuneberg clarified if SOU went off line, it would change the high water mark and Tier 2 ceiling for
the City. BPA would reset both based on demand. Alternately, if SOU came back on line, it could force
a spike and create higher rates for a period. Mr. Holden added the generation SOU was anticipating
would not handle their entire load.
Public Hearing Open: 8:02 p.m.
Public Hearing Closed: 8:02 p.m.
Councilor Lemhouse/Slattery m/s to approve Resolution #2012-34 and direct staff to issue requests
for proposals to do an electric rate study. DISCUSSION: Councilor Lemhouse thought Council
should make a goal to address utility rate issues. The rate study would determine where the City stood
regarding rates and possible changes to the tier structure. Mr. Tuneberg explained adhering to Option 4
and increasing rates 2.62% would not meet existing costs and result in even higher rate increases in the
future. BPA indicated changes in wholesale power and transmission charges every two years.
Voice Vote: all AYES. Motion passed.
PUBLIC FORUM
Kyle Coroneos/583 Prim Street/Explained Saturday December 8, 2012 local musicians were celebrating
the 901h birthday of Don Maddox who was the last surviving member of The Maddox Brothers and Rose,
one of the most influential bands in the history of American music. He provided background on Mr.
Maddox and the band's induction into Nashville's Country Music Hall of Fame. The band had also made
Ashland their home for many years. He hoped the Mayor would declare December 8, 2012 Don Maddox
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November 20, 2012
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Day and invited the Mayor and Council to attend the party at the Ashland Community Center Hall
December 8, 2012 from 2:00 p.m.-6:00 p.m.
UNFINISHED BUSINESS
1. Special procurement for the purchase of Badger Water Meters
Public Works Director Mike Faught explained the Comparison of the Net Present Values of the Current
Meter Reading Program document served as the cost benefit analysis. Councilor Slattery thought the
document should have included maintenance issues and meter reading costs. Mr. Faught noted the new
meters would reduce a month long process to one week.
Water Distribution Supervisor Steve Walker explained the new meters would emit or "bubble up" a signal
every 9 seconds. Electric meters bubbled up data every 20 seconds. He was not sure there were meters
that remained dormant until read.
Mr. Faught explained labor costs were one of the larger percentages of the budget. Changing the type of
meters would reduce labor and the cost of the product.
Councilor Silbiger/Morris m/s the Council, acting at the local contract review board, move to
approve the contract-specific special procurement for Badger water meters with Itron radio
frequency reads. Voice vote: all AYES. Motion passed.
NEW AND MISCELLANEOUS BUSINESS
1. Council acceptance of Fiscal Year 2011-2012 Comprehensive Annual Financial Report
Councilor Silbiger noted Council had not appointed the Council Liaison or the Budget Committee
member to the Audit Committee this year. Additionally, the October 22, 2012 Audit Committee meeting
did not have enough members present for a quorum. Councilor Slattery was absent, Guy Nutter, Roberta
Stebbins, and City Recorder Barbara Christensen were present, but the City Recorder was not a voting
member.
City Recorder Barbara Christensen explained the Audit Committee was comprised of four voting
members and one non-voting member. There had been a vacancy on the Committee for a voting member
for two years. At the October 22, 2012 meeting, Councilor Slattery was absent and the remaining three
members proceeded unintentionally creating a quorum issue. Since the role of the Audit Committee was
making recommendations, Council could accept the CAFR (Comprehensive Annual Financial Report) or
postpone the item, allow the Audit Committee to meet as a quorum, make another motion, and schedule
the CAFR to a future Council meeting.
Council decided to pull the item and place it on the agenda for the next meeting.
2. Procedure on selection of Council Position #6
City Recorder Barbara Christensen provided updates on two of the candidates. Colin Swales withdrew his
application and Ms. Christensen was unable to confirm whether Kevin Bemadt was registered to vote in
Oregon and lived within city limits. Council could pre-select applications, determine interviews, there
were no set rules on process other than Council needed to make a decision by December 26, 2012.
Council discussed interview options and decided to vote for a candidate during the meeting instead of
having an interview process. Ms. Christensen explained the voting process and distributed ballots.
Council unanimously voted for Pam Marsh.
Councilor Voisin/Slattery m/s the election selection of Pam Marsh to position 6 of the City Council.
Voice Vote: all AYES.
ASHLAND CITY COUNCIL MEETING
November 20, 2012
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ORDINANCES, RESOLUTIONS AND CONTRACTS
1. Second reading, by title only, of an ordinance titled, "An ordinance amending AMC Chapter
3.08, General Personnel Policies, and Employee Responsibilities"
Councilor Silbiger/Voisin m/s to approve Ordinance #3078.
Roll Call Vote: Councilor Silbiger, Voisin, Slattery, Morris, and Lemhouse, YES. Motion passed.
OTHER BUSINESS FROM COUNCIL MEMBERS/REPORTS FROM COUNCIL LIAISONS
Councilor Morris provided a brief update on the Homelessness Steering Committee (HSC). The
homeless shelter added a second night on Wednesdays with training for volunteers November 27, 2012.
The HSC split the Chair position between Sara Hopkins Powell and Rich Rhode. HSC tried to bring a
Veterans Court to Jackson County unsuccessfully but if there were support from Ashland, they would try
again, although a Veteran's Court might be more applicable to the County because of the number of
people it could serve.
ADJOURNMENT
Meeting adjourned at 8:49 p.m.
Barbara Christensen, City Recorder Jon Stromberg, Mayor