HomeMy WebLinkAbout2014-0506 Council Mtg MIN j Regular City Council Meeting
j` May 6, 2014
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MINUTES FOR THE REGULAR MEETING
ASHLAND CITY COUNCIL
May 6, 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 Airport, Conservation, Firewise, Forest Lands, Historic, Public
Arts, and Tree Commissions and two vacancies for the Citizen Budget Committee.
APPROVAL OF MINUTES
The minutes of the Study Session of April 14, 2014, the Executive Session of April 15, 2014, and Business
Meeting of April 15, 2014 were approved as presented.
SPECIAL PRESENTATIONS & AWARDS
1. Presentation by the Airport Commission regarding Airport Day
Engineering Services Manager Scott Fleury and Airport Commissioner Richard Hendrickson invited everyone
to attend Airport Day Saturday May 17, 2014 from 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. at the Ashland Municipal Airport.
2. Report to the Council on crime in Ashland and use of force by the Ashland Police Department
Police Chief Terry Holderness provided a report on use of force that occurred 27 times during 2013. Of the 27
instances, 57% required the lowest of use of force. Six incidents involved a Taser. In four of the six instances,
the officer only displayed the Taser and used the Taser in the other two incidents. Of all 27 instances 68% of
the people were under the influence of alcohol or drugs.
Deputy Police Chief Tighe O'Meara addressed crime rates for 2013, crime,clearance rates, and the enhanced
law enforcement area (ELEA). Part one crime was divided into violent crimes and property crimes. Violent
crimes consisted of Homicide, Rape, Robbery, and Aggravated Assault. Property crimes involved Burglary,
Auto Theft, and Larceny. In 2013, Ashland had 697 instances of part one crime, a 7.82% increase from 2012.
There were 25 part one violent crimes in 2013 resulting in a 29% decrease from 2012 with a 40% clearance of
all part one cases and an 80% clearance rate of violent crime.
Chief Holderness explained the You Have Options campaign for sexual assault had made some impact.
However, the FBI's definition of what constituted rape was significantly limited and the majority of sexual
assaults that occurred in Ashland did not meet that definition. Another issue was late reporting of sexual
assaults that changed the statistics to the year it happened instead of the year reported.
Deputy Chief O'Meara further explained Council adopted the ELEA in August 2012. Between inception and
March 2013, there was a 19% decrease in drug and disorderly type crimes and violations in the downtown area.
In 2013, sixteen people qualified for expulsion from the downtown area. Of the 16, eleven left the area prior to
being served expulsion papers. During 2013, there were 17 violations of the ELEA filed through the municipal
court. Of the seventeen instances, three people committed 16 violations.
The Mayor's proclamations of May 12-18, 2014 as Craft Brewers Week in Ashland and May as National
Historic Preservation Month in Ashland was read aloud.
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May 6, 2014
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CONSENT AGENDA
1. Award of a professional services contract in excess of $75,000 for the Wastewater Treatment Plant
Outfall Relocation Study
2. Liquor license application for Robert Harvey dba Harvey's Place
3. Intergovernmental agreement with Jackson County Community Justice
4. Declaration and authorization to dispose of surplus property in a sealed bid auction
5. Approval of a change order to a contract allowing structural repairs to be performed as part of the
information booth reroofing project
6. Approval of a contract amendment with Cascade Research for testing of an archeological site at
Ashland Creek Park
7. Special procurement for the purchase of two aerial lift bucket trucks
8. Approval of contract specific procurement for the construction phase inspections and project
management of the Calle Guanajuato project
9. Request for approval of a special procurement for wildfire fuels reduction
Councilor Slattery pulled Consent Agenda item 97 and #9 for further discussion. Public Works Superintendent
Mike Morrison confirmed the two lift bucket trucks being replaced would go out for sealed bid auction next
year.
Division Chief-Forest Resource Chris Chambers explained the Ashland Forest Resiliency (AFR) project had
exhausted the $6,500,000 funding from the federal stimulus program. The National'Forest Foundation (NFF)
found money to match the City's $175,000 for the AFR project. The City would send $175,000 to the NFF who
would send $350,000 to Lomakatsi Restoration Project to complete the work before the end of 2014.
Councilor Marsh pulled Consent Agenda item #5 for further discussion. Public Works Superintendent Mike
Morrison confirmed replacing the existing roof of the information kiosk and rebuilding the structure would cost
$4,000. Council decided to remove that part of the change order and have the Downtown Beautification
Committee bring back alternatives for the information kiosk.
Staff pulled Consent Agenda item #4 regarding the sealed bid auction. Administrative Services Director Lee
Tuneberg explained that staff removed item #420 a Ranger Pick-up to donate it to the Southern Oregon
University instead. Council agreed with the donation.
Councilor Slattery/Rosenthal m/s to approve of the Consent Agenda items except item #5. Voice Vote:
ALL AYES. Motion passed.
Councilor Lemhouse clarified the Downtown Beautification Committee had added Refurbish the Plaza Poster
Kiosk on a list of projects they wanted to consider.
Councilor Marsh/Slattery m/s to approve the change order to a contract allowing structural repair to be
performed as part of the information booth reroofing projects and suspend any repairs or replacement to
the roof of the kiosk until further notice. Voice Vote: ALL AYES. Motion passed.
PUBLIC HEARINGS
1. Public Hearing and first reading of two separate ordinances amending the City of Ashland
Comprehensive Plan, Comprehensive Plan Maps, Transportation System Plan, and Street Standards
to adopt the Normal Neighborhood Plan
Mayor Stromberg called the Public Hearing for two Ordinances amending the City of Ashland Comprehensive
Plan, Comprehensive Plan Maps, Transportation System Plan, and Street Standards to adopt the Normal
Neighborhood Plan to order at 7:48 p.m. and explained the rules and guidelines associated with the Public
Hearing.
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ABSENTIONS, CONFLICTS, EX PARTE CONTACTS
Councilor Voisin, Lemhouse, Slattery, and Rosenthal had no Ex Parte Contacts to declare and no observations
from a recent visit to the site.
Mayor Stromberg disclosed he had reactions to the plans, and had stated the issues publicly. He thought there
were individual issues that had little to do with the organic nature of the land and what was going on in the City.
Councilor Morris stated he was the liaison to the Planning Commission and attended several meetings regarding
the Normal Avenue Neighborhood. Councilor Marsh disclosed that during a site visit earlier in the day, she had
discussed the land with a neighbor. Mayor Stromberg, Councilor Morris, and Councilor Marsh expressed they
had not prejudged, the application and were not biased or prejudiced based on their prior contacts and
involvement or by any personal considerations and would make decisions based on the public interest and
relevant criteria in the record of the proceeding.
CHALLENGES
There were no challenges.
STAFF REPORT
Community Development Bill Molnar explained the Normal Plan consisted of 94 acres outside city limits within
the urban growth boundary (UGB). The 94 acres already had plan designations that eventually would allow it to
annex at residential densities consistent with the plan itself. The overall plan took a comprehensive look at the
entire area through a process that allowed better coordination through property owners, transportation elements,
wetlands, and natural areas. This was not a development application but a detailed guide implemented through a
variety of zoning tools. The plan contained an amendment process for changes. Currently there were no
applications to develop that area.
Residents in and adjacent to the planning area raised a number of concerns regarding the loss of quality of life of
a rural setting of the area. Staff and the Planning Commission had a series of meetings and changed the plans in
response to the testimony from residents although some remained concerned with density. The area was within
the current UGB with a current plan designation that would allow 450-500 housing units. The Normal Plan
would ultimately envision the same number of housing units.
Senior Planner and Project Manager Brandon Goldman provided a presentation and explained the Plan
Components involved the Comprehensive Plan Map, Conservation Areas, Land &Use Zoning, Transportation
Network, and Code Amendments. There were 33 individual properties owned by 26 property owners that were
largely vacant with existing developments that consisted of single-family homes on large lots and religious
institutions.
The existing Comprehensive Plan Map was adopted in 1981 and identified 50% of the plan area as single family
and 50% as suburban residential typically developed as town homes. It also identified conservation areas that
correlated with flood mapping for Cemetery Creek and Clay Creek. The newly proposed Comprehensive Plan
designated the 94 acres as Normal Neighborhood Plan and modified the conservation areas. Wetlands were
identified in 2007 on the local wetland inventory.
Mr. Goldman clarified adopting the master plan was not the City annexing the land for development. Any
future annexation was developer driven. A property owner would have to request an annexation from the City.
Mr. Molnar added annexation criteria for annexation of residential property required showing a lack of a 5-year
supply of that type of land within the city limits. The area was zoned single family. To annex land showing
single-family the applicant had to prove the city did not have a five-year supply. Currently Ashland had more
than a five-year supply of single-family zoned property within city limits. Other requirements included
extending public services, adjacency being contiguous to city limits, and the property was consistent with the
plan designation or official maps that might guide that area. Multi family was the only category that met the
five-year lack of supply.
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Mr. Goldman explained the Water Resource Protection Ordinance defined wetland and riparian buffers that
were included in the conservation areas for Normal Neighborhood. Additionally areas that precluded
development was the Federal Emergency Management Agreement (FEMA) 100-year floodplain and the City's
floodplain designation that was broader than FEMA's. Combined they became the conservation areas.
Land uses proposed included:
• NN-01 Single Family Residential (Single family homes, cottage housings, ARUs)
• NN-02 Mixed housing types (pocket neighborhoods -clusters units, townhomes, duplexes)
• NN-03 Multiple dwelling residential (Multifamily, condos, apartments)
• NN-03C Multiple dwellings and Neighborhood Serving Commercial
Existing Transportation System Plan
• Normal Avenue (R 19)
• Creek Drive Extension (R20)
• Railroad Crossing (X3)
• Planned Bike Paths
• East Main Street
Transportation System Plan Amendments included:
• Normal Avenue location and reclassification
• Eat Main Street added to Planned Roadway Projects
• Adopt Normal Plan Street Network into Street dedication Map
• Adopt Multi Use paths into Planned Bikeway Network Map
• Adopt Standards for Shared Streets
Normal Neighborhood District Chapter 18 Code Amendments
• Implements the Normal Neighborhood Plan
• Establishes allowable uses
• Establishes general site development and design standards
• Provides for preservation of water quality, site hydrology, and natural areas
Mr. Molnar clarified the City could use a portion of the System Development Charges (SDC) from building
permits to contribute to the cost of East Main or the Railroad Crossing if it was determined the benefit of
having those facilities was not based on the impact of the development but contributed to the broader
transportation network of the City.
• Minor amendment process included relocation of street, alley or path by more than 50-feet and a change
in boundaries or location of Conservation Areas to correspond with wetland buffer boundary
• Major amendment process included a zone change, the elimination of a street alley or path and the
reduction in area, or elimination of a designated Conservation Area
• Land Uses
• Dimensional standards
• Site and Building Design
Councilor Voisin/Slattery m/s to move the Public Hearings regarding Utility rates and Miscellaneous Fees
to May 20, 2014. Voice Vote: ALL AYES. Motion passed.
PLANNING COMMISSION REPORT
Moved to the May 20, 2014 meeting.
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THOSE WISHING TO PROVIDE TESTIMONY
Betsy Bishop/280 Normal Avenue/Lived on Normal Avenue for 15 years and supported a well-designed
development of the property. Her family adjusted to the change and embraced the new neighbors. Now
neighbors seemed to oppose the change. Ashland was losing young families, diversity, and schools closed. The
community should fear becoming a city of wealthy retirees wanting to retain a homogeneous look to their
neighborhood. Everyone who moved to Normal Avenue was aware it was an urban growth area destined for
development.
Bryce Anderson/2092 Creek Drive/Explained he was the Chair of a committee representing three home
owners associations directly affected by the Normal Avenue Plan. Their primary concern was the development
of the Baptist Church property, configuration, and density. The suggested timeframe for various improvements
to the 94 acres was 25 years indicating residents would have to deal with issues for years before mitigations and
amenities took place. The problem was the addition of up to 130 residential units in 10 acres including
commercial development all fronting on East Main. Major concerns were traffic, pedestrians, bicycles,
automobiles, public transit, sewer, and water and storm drainage. The focus was the Planning Commission's
proposal to incorporate high density, commercial development including three story buildings. The committee
wanted that section eliminated.
Dale Swire/233 Clay Street/Lived in a two-story townhouse in the proposed area and wanted to retain what
little open space he had. A year ago, there was an agreement with the Planning Commission not to exceed the
current 35-foot height requirement. At the last meeting, they reneged on that promise and put it in as a minor
amendment to satisfy a contractor. He questioned who was making the decisions, the City, or the contractors.
Lorraine Anderson/2092 Creek Drive/Addressed the Baptist Church development between Creek Drive and
East Main Street. She noted a steady increase in traffic on East Main Street and the area between Walker and
Clay Streets, the conditions were hazardous for pedestrians and bicyclists. It was also hazardous to make left
turns onto East Main Street from Clay Street. The increased residential density without improvements to East
Main Street would only make the problems worse. She urged Council not to approve any plan that included
high-density housing or commercial development in the area.
Jim Amberg/353 Meadow Drive/Expressed concern the high-density development on East Main Street would
have on existing sewer lines. The City's sewage department frequently worked on issues along Creek Drive.
The pump used for pumping sewage uphill often had problems. The sewer system was inadequate even for
current uses. The residents of-Meadowbrook Park Estates also experienced water pressure issues and repeatedly
replaced pressure reduction valves. Drainage on Creek Drive was also a problem. Further development would
compound these issues. The City must address these concerns and should not allow high-density or commercial
units on the Baptist Church property.
Amy Miller/244 Meadow Drive/Strongly urged Council to change the high density NN-03 zone to an NN-02
or lower density. She noted the area already had condominiums and apartments and felt like this was becoming
a dumping ground for high density.
Alissa Lukara/248 Meadow Drive/Agreed with the previous speakers on the Baptist Church property and
limiting the area to the at least NN-02 and NN-01 structures. She questioned why the City was making the
exception to this rural area to allow three story buildings while other residential areas were limited to 2.5 stories.
She expressed concern for the displaced wildlife as well.
Paula Skuratowicz/2124 Creek Drive/Explained she was the President of Ashland Meadows Home Owners
Association and felt betrayed by the Planning Commission. The most contentious issue was allowing three-
story housing on Clay Street, Creek Drive, and East Main Street. The Planning Commission made a concession
to eliminate the three-story option and abide by 2.5 story limits but at the last meeting, the Planning Commission
reinstated the three-story option. Notification cards for the meeting were delivered the same day of the meeting.
She could not understand why the developer took precedence over the voters or how it would preserve the
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distinctive character of the neighborhoods.
Sugar Mejia/18 Crocker/Introduced herself as the assistant to the Board of Chautauqua Trace Home Owners
Association and represented the board of directors and members. She agreed with the water and water pressure
issues, Chautauqua Place residents had to replace water system valves several times. She was concerned with
the high-density development on the Baptist Church property, primarily traffic issues. The streets were very
narrow and increased traffic would create problems. Chautauqua Place had 89 units and she was surprised to
learn they were medium density housing and the idea of adding 450-500 units close by was concerning based on
current resources.
Barry Viteon/316 Meadow Drive/Agreed with the previous speakers. No one was against the development.
He was concerned the planning process was incomplete and urged Council to send it back to the Planning
Commission. The recent proposal made by the Planning Commission was surprising and he felt devalued. He
wanted Council to refer it back to the Planning Commission for continued responsible development. Citizens
were ready to play a more active role in the process.
Randall Jones/815 Alder Creek Drive/Medford, OR/Represented 9 of the properties in the plan. He worked
with staff and the Planning Commission and wanted to be part of the solution. He agreed with the neighbors on
the points they made. The City did not conduct scientific studies to determine wetland delineations so his group
paid to have a scientific study. Wetland 4 Cemetery Creek showed 3.86 acres with a 50' foot buffers. There
was actually 1.2 acres of wetland predominantly caused from the City's storm drain systems. The entire
Cemetery Creek drainage was within city limits, leaking water, and when the irrigation was not running, leaking
chlorinated water. The center wetland was 1.2 acres with creek drainage. Wetland 12 showed 1.6 acres linear
on the City's report. The scientific study revealed two wetlands less than a one third of an acre. He submitted
the reports into the record.
David Harloff/343 Meadow Drive/Addressed the unilateral change in building heights in the high-density area.
One of Ashland's finest attributes was the visual quality of the town. He thought it was wrong to raise the
height limits. He also questioned why the definition of affordable and low-income was always how many
people they could stuff into a small area.
Howard Miller/160 Normal Avenue/Explained dividing 500 living units by 94 acres resulted in 5.5 units per
acre. It was a tenfold increase over what was already there. There was no bus transportation for that area and
none forecast. Density generally fit the middle of the town and Normal Avenue was at the periphery. It affected
living space, open space, and the wetlands. It was concerning the latest maps on open space and wetland
showed them as an overlay. The current plan was too dense. He asked Council to consider the people who
lived in the area.
Deborah Miller/160 Normal Avenue/Declared she was a member of the Planning Commission but spoke on
her behalf regarding the issue. Planning was a good tool but the housing component in the plan seemed to have
won over all other values. She felt the project ignored long time residents and rewarded short-term residents
with financial interests with 450 units to build and sell. She had concerns regarding water. Some contractors
were filling in state protected wetlands. Building high density on the south side of the street could harm
Exclusive Farm Use land (EFU), their wells, and access to ground water. Another concern was the impact 450
units would have on water curtailment. Connectivity was an issue. The Transportation Commission met three
times and never agreed where to site streets. She noted the projected improvement costs for East Main Street
was $8,000,000, improvements to the Railroad was $3,000,000 and questioned who was paying. Several
homeowners had no intention of annexing.
Julie Matthews/2090 Creek Drive/Referred to the Baptist Church and two adjacent properties towards Normal
Avenue because they appeared to be in a collaborative development and questioned the density. She read the
first paragraph of the Declaration of Independence. Birds, bees, flowers, and trees pursued happiness according
to their nature. Humans encroached on their environment pursuing happiness more than life and liberty at the
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expense and exploitation of others. She wanted Ashland to be a city of vision, uphold values, and be a model
for future generations. There were a lot of animals and fowl, in the area and some that traveled through in their
cycles.
Brett Lutz/1700 East Main Street/Described where he lived and was not interested in annexing to the city
primarily because of roads and wetlands. They would lose TID (Talent Irrigation District) water and wetlands
water. He referred to Wetland W-9 and explained developers wanted to put a road right through it. He was a
scientist and worked on drought. Currently the area was in a severe drought and this was not the time to assess
wetlands. He wanted someone not vested in the development to conduct the study. Additionally the middle
school bus turnaround alleviated traffic problems on Walker Avenue. A through street would create safety
issues for schoolchildren and buses.
Councilor Voisin/Marsh m/s to continue the Public Hearing to the May 20, 2014 meeting. Voice Vote:
ALL AYES. Motion passed.
2. Public Hearing and approval of five resolutions proposing utility rate increases and repealing prior
resolutions
Item moved to the May 20, 2014 meeting.
3. Public Hearing and approval of a resolution titled, "A resolution adopting a Miscellaneous Fees and
Charges document and repealing prior fee resolution 2013-17"
Item moved to the May 20, 2014 meeting.
PUBLIC FORUM None
UNFINISHED BUSINESS
1. Second reading of a ordinance titled, "An ordinance amending AMC Chapter 2: Rules of City
Council; Uniform Policies and Operating Procedures for Advisory Commissions and Boards; Recreation
Commission; Conservation Commission; and Certain Administrative and Operating Departments"
Councilor Marsh/Morris m/s to place the second reading of the ordinance regarding plastic bags on the
agenda before the Council and Commission Rules ordinance. Voice Vote: Councilor Voisin, Morris,
Slattery, Rosenthal, and Marsh, YES; Councilor Lemhouse, NO. Motion passed 5-1.
NEW AND MISCELLANEOUS BUSINESS None
ORDINANCES. RESOLUTIONS AND CONTRACTS
1. Second reading by title only of an ordinance titled, "An ordinance adopting a prohibition on the
distribution of single use plastic bags"
Management Analyst Adam Hanks explained the ordinance would prohibit single use plastic bags, require
single use paper bags have 40% minimal recycled content, contain exemptions, and a six month delayed
implementation to exhaust current supplies of plastic bags. Staff had changed the paper bag fee from 25-cents
to 10=cents per Council.
Conservation Commissioner Mark Weir explained economic reports from Ireland, Australia, San Francisco, and
Los Angeles that instituted plastic bag bans showed no adverse affects on low-income individuals as a result.
He went on to address the Conservation Commission recommendation of the 25-cent paper bag fee. Statistics
showed that 16% percent of plastic bag users shifted to paper bag use regardless of the 10-cent paper bag fee.
Creating paper bags took more water and electricity and produced significant amounts of carbon dioxide. He
encouraged Council to adopt the 25-cent fee. It would produce a larger change in behavior and the environment.
He clarified the paper bag fee in San Francisco and Los Angeles was 10-cents per bag. Both cities found that
low-income people moved quickly to reusable bags and adapted better than people who were not as affected by
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the fee. Ireland started out with a 21-cent paper bag fee that resulted in an 81% reduction of plastic bag use.
Over time, the plastic bag use grew and they increased the fee to 30-cents for a 40% drop in plastic bag use.
Currently they had a 2% plastic bag use and did not use paper bags. They are looking at establishing a 44-cent
levy 2015. Studies showed incentive programs did not work for ecological moves, specifically banning plastic
bags.
Councilor SlatteryNoisin m/s approval of Second Reading and adoption of an ordinance prohibiting the
distribution of single use plastic bags as modified and direct staff to begin appropriate education and
outreach efforts to both the business community and residents and reinstall the 25-cent fee.
DISCUSSION: Councilor Slattery understood and supported the idea to move people from plastic bags first,
paper bags next and eventually use with reusable bags. Councilor Voisin supported the 25-cent fee on paper
bags. Earth Day started 25 years ago and a primary goal was moving away from plastic bags, it took years to
institute a ban. The ban would lesson damage to the environment. Ashland was a leader in sustainability and
the City needed to ensure the ban worked.
Councilor Marsh/Lemhouse m/s to split the motion as stated, passage of the plastic bag ban ordinance as
one motion and the revision of the fee from 10-cents to 25-cents as a second motion. Roll Call Vote:
Councilor Lemhouse, Marsh, and Morris, YES; Councilor Rosenthal, Voisin, and Slattery, NO. Mayor
Stromberg broke the tie with a YES vote. Motion passed 4-3.
DISCUSSION on the paper bag fees: Councilor Rosenthal suggested a time limit of a 25-cent paper bag fee
for a year and determine its effectiveness then. Councilor Marsh had a similar suggestion, implement a 10-cent
fee, and determine success a year later. Councilor Morris preferred not instituting a fee and using incentives and
education instead. He would support a 10-cent fee. Councilor Lemhouse thought it was disturbing that Council
was considering using disincentives to change behavior. It was preposterous to assume studies from other
countries would work here. The studies showing disincentives worked were short-term. Long-term behavioral
change occurred through strong leadership, incentives, inspiration, and encouragement. The City had not tried
.any educational outreach or incentives at this point and was opting for disincentives first. It the community
really wanted a paper bag fee it should go on the ballot for the November 2014 elections.
Councilor Voisin commented that many people supported the ban and the direction the ordinance was heading.
She did not think low-income people would be the group not changing to cloth bags. The assumption they need
protecting meant they would not change when they would most likely be the first group to change. Council
purposely chose disincentives with the Enhanced Law Enforcement Area (ELEA). The 25-cent fee went to the
business and not the City. Councilor Slattery added the fee was more an avoidance tactic than it was a
disincentive. He dealt with many people below the poverty line as students and the university student
population supported the ban 100%. The paper bag fee would help people change behavior that was destructive
to the environment. The 10-cent fee was not as strong as 25-cents. Councilor Lemhouse did not intend to make
it a class issue. He felt the ban was moving too quickly, that it overlooked a section of the population, and
would not achieve the desired lasting impact.
Mayor Stromberg agreed with Councilor Marsh and suggested starting out with a 10-cent fee for a designated
period with outreach and education. If the shift did not occur, increase the fee to 25-cents. Councilor Slattery
noted the focus should be on what was not being paid and which amount would have the better chance on not
being paid, I0-cents, or 25-cents.
Roll Call Vote on the 25-cent paper bag fee: Councilor Rosenthal, Voisin, and Slattery, YES; Councilor
Lemhouse, Marsh, and Morris, NO. Mayor Stromberg broke tie with a No vote. Motion failed 3-4.
Councilor Marsh/Lemhouse m/s to amend the main motion to re-evaluate the .10 cent fee January 2016.
DISCUSSION: Councilor Marsh thought it was a reasonable place to start and use the fee as a motivation for
the community. Councilor Lemhouse would support the motion for one-year review and did not support the fee.
Councilor Rosenthal noted the six-month effective date and suggested the fee review occur January 2016 to
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allow a year. Council agreed. Roll Call Vote: Councilor Voisin, Marsh, Lemhouse, Morris, Rosenthal, and
Slattery, YES. Motion passed.
Mr. Hanks explained the education component encompassed working with the Conservation Commission, the
Bring Your Own Bag (BYOB) Subcommittee, and using portions of the Eugene Outreach Plan.
Councilor Slattery/Voisin m/s to approve Ordinance #3094 prohibiting the distribution of single use
plastic bags as modified and direct staff to begin appropriate education and outreach efforts to both the
business community and residents as amended and re-evaluate the 10-cent paper bag fee January 2016.
DISCUSSION: Councilor Lemhouse supported the plastic bag ban and reiterated he opposed the paper bag fee.
Roll Call Vote: Councilor Voisin, Marsh, Morris, Rosenthal, and Slattery, YES; Councilor Lemhouse,
NO. Motion passed 5-1..
OTHER BUSINESS FROM COUNCIL MEMBERS/REPORTS FROM COUNCIL LIAISONS
Councilor Lemhouse explained the Downtown Beautification Committee were meeting twice a month and
recently did a walk through downtown and updated projects on the list. They will start the process of what to
forward to Council for completion.
Councilor Voisin and Marsh invited everyone to attend the Bowl Celebration at Peace House Friday, May 9,
2014 from 4:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. The event benefited Uncle Foods Diner, Ashland Emergency Food Bank,
ACCESS, and Food Angels.
Councilor Marsh wanted to add a six-month report from the Resource Center to a future agenda with Council
consent.
ADJOURNMENT
Meeting adjourned at 10::27 p.m.
D5na Smith, Assistant to the City Recorder Jon tromb rg, Mayor