HomeMy WebLinkAbout2014-0204 Council Mtg MIN Regular City Council Meeting
February 4, 2014
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MINUTES FOR THE REGULAR MEETING
ASHLAND CITY COUNCIL
February 4, 2014
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, Rosenthal, and Marsh were present
MAYOR'S ANNOUNCEMENTS
Mayor Stromberg announced vacancies on the Tree, Public Arts, and Firewise Commissions, and the
Band Board. The City was conducting a parking survey and the Mayor encouraged all citizens to
participate.
APPROVAL OF MINUTES
The minutes of the Business Meeting of January 21, 2014 were approved as presented.
SPECIAL PRESENTATIONS & AWARDS - None
CONSENT AGENDA
1. Acceptance of commission minutes
2. Appointment of Keith Whitman to the Forest Lands Commission
3. Appointment of Lynn Thompson to the Planning Commission
4. Report on City of Ashland's Sweatfree Purchasing Policy, program, and participation in the
Sweatfree Purchasing Consortium
5. Approval of a liquor license application for Ryan Bottano dba Granit Taphouse, LLC
6. System Development Charge Review Committee appointments
Mayor Stromberg pulled Consent Agenda item #3 for further discussion.
Lynn Thompson/125 North Main Street/Due to her potential appointment to the Planning Commission,
Ms. Thompson felt obliged to provide information on a land use matter regarding building a carport cover
on her property.
Councilor Lemhouse/Slattery m/s to appoint Lynn Thompson to the Planning Commission.
DISCUSSION: Councilor Lemhouse and Slattery appreciated Ms. Thompson coming forward and
thanked her for her service. Councilor Marsh thought this was the kind of experience people had and it
was valuable when someone was in that decision making mode to understand how the City communicated
what the requirements were and how they are able to meet those requirements.
Voice Vote: all AYES. Motion passed.
Councilor Voisin/Morris m/s to approve remaining Consent Agenda items. Voice Vote: all AYES.
Motion passed.
City Recorder Barbara Christensen and Council discussed noticing the current vacancy on the Budget
Committee. Council consensus directed Ms. Christensen to advertise the position and bring applications
for appointment to the second meeting in March or the first meeting in April.
PUBLIC HEARINGS - None
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February 4, 2014
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PUBLIC FORUM
Jonny Boulton/165 East Main Street/] ntroduced a new public concern group Citizens for a Really Safe
Ashland that represented over 30 Ashland residents. The group drafted a public safety ordinance that
would not address any genuine or legitimate issues and served to promote a divisive and partisan agenda.
The proposed ordinance would regulate the public visibility of and seek to punish those that allowed
minors access to the following potentially dangerous and scary items, knives, chainsaws, power tools,
hammers, ladders, bathtubs, car keys, alcohol, prescription and non-prescription medication. He hoped
Council appreciated the genuine concerns that Citizens for a Really Safe Ashland brought before them
and reminded Council they were bound primarily to uphold the constitutions.
Bill Skillman/635 Oak Knoll Drive/The proposed gun ordinances were a first step in stricter gun
control. His understanding of the proposed ordinance would prohibit him from carrying ammunition for
his weapon. The ordinance would penalize law-abiding citizens and their ability to protect themselves
when they were in public or possibly protect others around them. He strongly urged Council to vote
against more regulation than what was already established.
UNFINISHED BUSINESS - None
NEW AND MISCELLANEOUS BUSINESS
1. Second Quarter Financial Report for year one of the 2013-2015 Biennium
Administrative Services Director Lee Tuneberg explained they received notification from the
Government Finance Officers Association that the biennium budget document submitted by the City met
the standards.
Councilor Rosenthal/Slattery m/s to accept the Second Quarter Financial Report for Fiscal Year
2013-2014. Voice Vote: all AYES. Motion passed.
2. Presentation regarding drought preparedness
Public Works Director Mike Faught explained there was sufficient water supply with 3,600,000 gallons
coming through the east and west forks of Ashland Creek into Reeder Reservoir and a demand of
1,300,000 gallons. The concern was the future and lack of snowpack. May 1, 2014 would determine
further steps. The City had Ashland Municipal Code 14.06 Water Curtailment and the Water Master Plan
that identified projects and steps to increase water supply during drought situations.
Snowpack levels needed to be 60 inches by May 1, 2014 to avoid water shortage issues. Staff would
check snowpack and the flow from the east and west forks of Ashland Creek to determine if it was
meeting the demand on Reeder Reservoir.
If there was a water shortage, the City Administrator could enact the water curtailment plan with Council
approval. The first step was adding TID (Talent Irrigation District) water. If TID was not sufficient to
keep up with demand, the next step was voluntary curtailment. If voluntary curtailment was not enough
the City Administrator could add a water waste prohibition that prohibited water running into the streets,
washing sidewalks, walkways, cars and restaurants serving water only if requested by the customer. At
each stage, staff would look at the demand and drawdown curve.
If Ashland exceeded demand, the City could implement Stage 1 of the Ashland Municipal Code
Chapter 14.06 Water Curtailment and reduce residential allocations to 3,600 cubic feet or 26,930
gallons. Stage 2 dropped to 2,500 cubic feet or 18,000 gallons, Stage 3 was 1,800 cubic feet at 13,000
gallons and Stage 4, 900 cubic feet at 6,700 gallons. Stages 1-3 had a special rate for water used above
the allotment where the City would charge four times the current rate. For Stage 4 usage above the
allocation, the City would charge 10 times the current rate.
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In addition to the curtailment code, the TAP line (Talent Ashland Phoenix) is currently scheduled for
2015 construction. Because it was in a biennial budget, the City could move forward and build that
sooner. Staff would come to the next Council meeting to ask for an emergency procurement approval to
hire engineers to move forward on design with possible installation August or September. Staff was also
working with the Medford Water Commission on contracts for the system development charges and
anticipated a proposal for Council at the March 4, 2014 meeting.
Conservation Specialist Julie Smitherman reiterated there was no current crisis regarding water supply.
Going into the summer months, she suggested people avoid watering too early in the season. Residents
could test their soil with a moisture meter to see if it needed any water. The City offered an Irrigation
Evaluation program for customers that would provide them with a customized watering schedule and
reduce water usage from 20%-50%. In addition, the City had a water wise landscaping website and
provided water moisture meters for interested customers.
ORDINANCES, RESOLUTIONS AND CONTRACTS
1. Second Reading by title only of an ordinance titled, "An ordinance amending AMC Chapter
6.04, Business Licenses"
Councilor Lemhouse/Morris m/s to approve Ordinance #3091. DISCUSSION: Councilor Lemhouse
thought it was appropriate to have but wanted to separate it from medical marijuana dispensaries. The
change occurred because it conflicted with how the City did business.
Roll Call Vote: Councilor Rosenthal, Voisin, Marsh, Slattery, Lemhouse, and Morris, YES. Motion
passed.
2. First Reading by title only of an ordinance titled, "An ordinance amending AMC Chapter 6.36,
Film and Television Productions"
Management Analyst Ann Seltzer explained the revised ordinance was modeled partially on the Oregon
Governors office on Film and Television. It expanded definitions to include charitable films, news media,
classes, and studio filming. The permit submittal requirement would change from 5 days prior to
production to 10 days. If the production triggered the need for a special event permit, the application
needed to be submitted four weeks in advance or pay a rush fee. The ordinance would add a new
paragraph that clarified additional fees for other services as required. Liability insurance would increase
to $2,000,000 and include Workers Compensation insurance and indemnification. Filming regulation had
new language that covered a range of the City's expectations and requirements including clean up,
sanitation, traffic control and others.
Additional suggestions from staff included changing Section 6.36.040 Permit Requirements (C) Permit
Exemptions (2) Family Video to Personal Video and Section 6.36.040 Permit Requirements (D) Fee
Exemptions (3) would require a permit for filming on private property with no fee charged to manage
code restrictions in residential neighborhoods. City Attorney Dave Lohman explained the noise
ordinance also required permits and violation could entail a fine. Filming could cause a lot of disruption
without a lot of noise. The provision was not prohibitive.
Ms. Seltzer clarified the ordinance would not pertain to filming at Southern Oregon University (SOU) and
suggested adding language that specified the exemption. Under Section 6.36.080 Liability Issues
Liability Insurance and the $2,000,000 requirement, Mr. Lohman suggested possibly editing the
language to require the applicant show proof of insurance coverage in an amount to be determined by the
City Administrator.
Council had issues with Section 6.36.090 Filming Regulations (B) Clean Up regarding clean up of
private property as well as potential permit issues for multiple students filming for a class. Staff could
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change the requirement and have the leader of a class project obtain the permits instead. Council
suggested having various thresholds drive permits and wanted staff to look into the Special Permit
process to see what might apply to the proposed ordinance.
City Administrator Dave Kanner suggested changing Section 6.36.040 Permit Requirements (C)
Permit Exemptions (2) to read Personal or Student Produced Educational Video for Private or Non-
Profit Use. He also suggested moving Section 6.36.040 Permit Requirements (D) Fee Exemptions (2)
to Permit Exemptions and add "classes in audio visual related work including student non-
commercial or teaching productions when such works occurs on public or private primary,
secondary or college property," as well as adding a separate section to 6.36.040 Permit Requirements
that addressed filming on private property.
Anne Lundgren/325 Ravenwood Place/Explained she was a filmmaker and business owner in Ashland.
She suggested having the four-hour cleanup requirement occur after wrap time when the permit was over.
Additionally, the 10-day permit requirement would work with large productions but not as well for
smaller productions. She also suggested making the definitions broader with a distinction between public
and private property.
Erik Palmer/111 Willamette Boulevard, Medford OR/Introduced himself as a professor at Southern
Oregon University (SOU), and the Academic Coordinator for Southern Oregon Digital Media Center but
spoke unofficially. Even with a fee waiver, student and public access producers having to apply for
permits 10 days ahead and the increase in insurance presented a burden for small productions. He hoped
they could work together with the City on a set of revisions that preserved the flexibility for small non-
profit educational public access productions. He suggested a cap on crew size and considering academic
and public access productions more like the journalism exceptions written into the existing regulation and
less like the commercial productions.
Gary Kout/425 Clinton Street/Explained he was the executive director and founder of the Southern
Oregon Film and Television (SOFAT). He agreed with earlier testimony regarding permits and liability.
He noted Santa Monica CA had stringent permit requirements with the exception that productions entirely
on private property did not require a permit. He addressed educational films and thought it unlikely that
filming activity would pose any potential problems in the public sector. The increase in insurance was
substantial.
Councilor Lemhouse/Marsh m/s that the ordinance amending AMC Chapter 6.36 Film and
Television Productions apply to commercial film and television productions that take place on
public or city property. DISCUSSION: Councilor Lemhouse was concerned regarding private property
rights and making the ordinance unable to enforce. Adding language that stated although non-
commercial filming was not held to the ordinance they were held to the municipal code would help the
I0-day permit requirement.
Councilor Marsh noted her concern about the inclusion of charitable and student films in the permit
requirement. The ordinance should focus on larger productions that had a greater impact on the
community. She suggested adding criteria to the ordinance that would trigger the requirement of a permit
and used crew size, street closures, amplified music, or sound systems as examples. The ordinance could
read these productions are not required to get a permit unless they met one of the following criteria.
Councilor Rosenthal supported the distinction of public and private property. He suggested staff do
additional work on the ordinance and it bring back to Council at a future meeting. Councilor Slattery
agreed with Councilor Rosenthal that the ordinance required further work and wanted SOU film crews
covered. Councilor Morris also agreed with Councilor Rosenthal. The City was trying to regulate
technology using the old system. The other issue was the ordinance might be too complex. Councilor
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Voisin also agreed the ordinance needed further work. Councilor Lemhouse supported Council and
reiterated the concern of over regulating the ordinance. Roll Call Vote: Councilor Lemhouse, YES;
Councilor Voisin, Marsh, Rosenthal, Slattery, and Morris, NO. Motion denied 1-5.
Council directed staff to revise the ordinance and bring it back to a future meeting. Suggestions and
changes included private property, commercial activity, liability insurance, over defining non-commercial
activities, students, small productions, scaled commercial, and the broadness of the inclusion of charitable
and students. Other suggestions wanted 3-5 distinctive types of productions defined with specific rules
and regulations. Additionally, Council wanted staff to address whether to include stilled photography
productions.
Mr. Lohman noted the proposed ordinance was similar to other cities and the changes requested could
take considerable staff time. He clarified the $2,000,000 for liability insurance was standard, staff could
add some flexibility, but insurance could have a significant impact on the taxpayers.
OTHER BUSINESS FROM COUNCIL MEMBERSIREPORTS FROM COUNCIL LIAISONS
Councilor Voisin invited everyone to the opening of the Ashland Community Resource Center at 570
Clover Lane Thursday February 6, 2014. Councilor Marsh added they would also demonstrate the new
shower trailer as well.
ADJOURNMENT
Meeting adjourned at 9:09 p.m.
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Barbara Christensen, City Recorder J)Rh)a Stro berg, Mayor