HomeMy WebLinkAbout2014-0303 Study Session MIN Minutes for the City Council Study Session
March 3, 2014
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MINUTES FOR THE STUDY SESSION
ASHLAND CITY COUNCIL
Monday, March 3, 2014
Siskiyou Room, 51 Winburn Way
Council Chair Dennis Slattery called the meeting to order at 5:30 p.m. in the Siskiyou Room.
Councilor Voisin, Rosenthal, Morris, and Marsh were present. Mayor Stromberg and Councilor
Lemhouse were absent.
1. Look Ahead review
City Administrator Dave Kanner reviewed items on the Look Ahead. Council discussed using time
allocated for the Study Session March 17, 2014 for a site visit to the Normal Avenue neighborhood
instead.
2. Discussion of seismic structural improvements to existing buildings
Building Official Michael Grubbs proposed seismic upgrade requirements for new commercial buildings
and reconstruction on existing buildings. The Cities of Medford, Portland, and Seattle all had seismic
ordinances in place.
He shared an earthquake history timeline that indicated the last 9.0 regional earthquake occurred in the
early 1700s and described the impact from the Oregon coast inland. The Cascadia subduction zone was a
fault line that ran from Vancouver, BC to northern California and separated the Juan de Fuca and North
America plates. When the next large earthquake happened, it would affect all of Oregon and Washington.
In Portland, 20% of rebuilds had seismic upgrades and Medford had twelve buildings upgrade over the
past three years. The minimal upgrade requirement for buildings was the ability to exit the building
safely to a full upgrade where the building would incur some damage and restore to occupancy in a
shorter period. The proposed ordinance should meet the minimal upgrade requirement for buildings. Full
seismic upgrades should be the building owners' decision. The City of Portland mandated different
thresholds for different requirements. Staff suggested an incremental approach to upgrades and
eventually include residential.
Portland was looking into grants and loans to bring costs down and provide incentives for seismic
upgrades. Currently Portland had a phased plan over 7-10 years and reduced or waived permit fees
depending on the upgrade. Both Medford and Portland had historic clauses in their ordinances. Staff
would check with FEMA and California seismic laws for incentives in terms of zoning, non-confirming
elements of building, and density bonuses. Staff would also research a reduction in transfer tax when an
owner sold their home, a retrofit prioritization list, insurance information, and the possibility of revolving
loans to fund upgrades. Council and staff discussed fire damage from earthquakes and possibly requiring
a change from gas to electric for full retrofit upgrades.
Staff suggested using the City website, City Source, and email messaging for public outreach. Staff
would also develop an inventory of vulnerable commercial buildings in town.
3. Discussion of electric vehicle pilot program, home charging stations
Building Official Michael Grubbs explained the Oregon Building Codes Division (BCD) created an
Electric Vehicle Pilot Program that required new single residential and duplexes with garages or a major
remodel to a carport or garage add infrastructure for electric vehicle charging. The program would be in
place for three years and was part of Governor Kitzhaber's 10-year energy plan the prompted the
Minutes for the City Council Study Session
March 3, 2014
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reformation of the Energize Oregon Coalition. Transportation accounted for more than a thid of green
house emissions. The state had a target of reducing gases 30% by 2020 and doubling electric vehicle use.
One way to achieve that goal was a Pilot Residential Code Program called PEV (Plug-in Electric Vehicle
Readiness) for new construction. Jackson County was fourth in the state per capita for electric vehicles
and Ashland would be the third jurisdiction to adopt the program.
Council was not comfortable mandating the requirement and discussed using incentives instead. Staff
presented a non-mandated program initially to BCD and they encouraged the City to make it mandatory
for at least three years. Council was interested in the Conservation Commission's input regarding the
increase in electricity usage. Community Development Director Bill Molnar talked to Mark Holden the
director of Electric/IT who confirmed an increase in electric vehicles would get to Tier 2 power rates
quicker but the rates were blended.
Council directed staff to look into an incentive-based program and wanted the Conservation
Commission's input as well.
4. Review and discussion of agenda for March 8`h Council goal-setting
City Administrator Dave Kanner and Council discussed meeting space, the agenda, and allowing public
input. Council supported allocating 15 minutes at the end of the session for public comment.
Meeting adjourned at 6:34 p.m.
Respectfully submitted,
Dana Smith
Assistant to the City Recorder