HomeMy WebLinkAbout2016-0119 Council Mtg MIN
City Council Business Meeting
January 19, 2016
Page 1 of 8
MINUTES FOR THE REGULAR MEETING
ASHLAND CITY COUNCIL
January 19, 2016
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, Seffinger, Rosenthal, and Marsh were present.
MAYOR'S ANNOUNCEMENTS
Mayor Stromberg explained the Study Session would follow the Regular meeting. He went on to
announce the City was accepting applications for annual appointments to the various Commissions,
Committees, and Boards. The deadline for applications was March 18, 2016.
APPROVAL OF MINUTES
The minutes of the Study Session of January 4, 2016, Executive Session of January 4, 2016 and Business
Meeting of January 5, 2016 were approved as presented.
SPECIAL PRESENTATIONS & AWARDS
Police Chief Tighe O'Meara, Public Works Director Mike Faught, and Fire Chief John Karns described
flood event responses for each of their departments. The Public Works Department had excavators at key
locations where previous flooding had occurred. The GIS Department had prepared maps and there were
agreements with various contractors to respond at specific locations. Crews would split into 12-hour shifts
for any event that happened. Chief Karns had located shelters if needed. The Police Department would
activate all police personnel in the event of a flood and use the 12-hour shifts currently in place. The Fire
Department would increase staff and deploy one medical and one fire resource on the other side of the
inundation zone. Also in place was a file of historic flood zones for the reverse 911 system. The Fire
Department would access the citizen alert system to provide status. They went on to answer questions
regarding flood areas, Ashland Creek, Reeder Reservoir, and the plan to manage spillover and overtopping.
PUBLIC FORUM
Susan Rust/42 N Wightman Street/Requested information and expressed concern regarding the Southern
Oregon University (SOU) co-generation plant. Mayor Stromberg explained the City Administrator could
answer Ms. Rust's questions. Another area of concern was Roca Creek at East Main Street and North
Wightman Street where debris had piled up more than once. She had written letters to staff over the years
without response. Eventually the City did some dredging that tore up the banks. It was upsetting the City
had never responded to any of her correspondence over the years.
Mayor Stromberg requested the City Administrator and Public Works Director to contact Ms. Rust
regarding her concerns.
Huelz Gutcheon/2259 Hwy 99/Buying real estate was a safe and secure way to make money. A person
could build several cheap rentals before carbon taxes, environmental impact payments, or retroactive
charges went into effect. First, they had to get permission from the City controllers. That could be difficult
unless the individual had inside information. That could happen if someone showed up at all the meetings,
was charming, learned what the controllers wanted and designed construction accordingly.
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January 19, 2016
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Paul Rostykus/436 Grandview Drive/Addressed a recently installed guardrail at 345 Grandview Drive,
thought it violated the Ashland Municipal Code (AMC) 13.02.050 Encroachment Permits and shared
concerns regarding safety. City staff had explained the guardrail was exempt from the Encroachment
Permit because it was a guardrail and handrail. This guardrail was 350 feet long. The driveway was steep,
had numerous variances and it was difficult to see cars. He disagreed with the minor impact statement.
City staff informed him the installation met City guidelines that referred to Oregon Department of
Transportation (ODOT) specifications. Without a plan, application, permit, and inspection, he questioned
how the installation was safe. The guardrail also narrowed Grandview Drive 2-6 feet creating safety issues
for pedestrians.
Mayor Stromberg requested the City Administrator to contact Mr. Rostykus and update Council on the
issue.
Tara Light/2234 Siskiyou Boulevard/Read from a document submitted into the record regarding solutions
to behavioral issues in the downtown area.
CONSENT AGENDA
1. Minutes of boards, commissions, and committees
2. Liquor license application for Bonnie Chirrick dba Cafe 116
3. Appointment of Max Reinhardt to the Public Art Commission
4. Appointment of Sue Newberry to the Transportation Commission
5. Approval of 2016 Council liaisons to boards, commissions, and committees
6. Authorization to amend a contract for municipal audit services with Pauly, Rogers & Co. P.C.,
extending the contract for one year
7. Authorization to amend a contract with Diamond Parking Services extending parking
enforcement services up to two years
8. Approval of a public contract exceeding $100,000 for cardiac monitor defibrillators and
automated external defibrillators
9. Contract addendum with Evergreen Job & Safety Training, Inc.
10. Adoption of findings for Planning Action PL-2013-01858, relating to three separate approved
ordinances which amended the City of Ashland Comprehensive Plan, Comprehensive Plan Maps,
Transportation System Plan, and Land Use Ordinance (Chapter 18) adopting the Normal
Neighborhood Plan
Councilor Voisin pulled Consent Agenda items 47 and 49 for discussion. Administrative Services Director
Lee Tuneberg explained revenue from parking tickets, fees, and charges funded parking enforcement,
improvements, studies, and operations. The Hargadine parking structure paid debt service, operation,
maintenance, and care of the building.
Superintendent Mike Morrison addressed Consent Agenda item 99 and explained staff budgeted job and
safety training every year. This request extended the original agreement an additional two years.
Councilor Voisin/Rosenthal m/s to approve Consent Agenda items. Voice Vote: all AYES. Motion
passed.
Joseph Kauth/1 Corral/Spoke on Consent Agenda item #10 regarding the Normal Neighborhood Plan.
Three years ago the Mayor had an arborist indicate a tree next to his house was a fire hazard enacting the
Ashland Forest Resiliency (AFR) cut because it was deemed a fire hazard by a handful of national
organizations really not involved with the area. When questioned by Mayor Stromberg, Mr. Kauth further
explained he had overheard a conversation the Mayor had regarding a tree in his yard that was a fire hazard.
Ever since that time, the Mayor had been suggesting that fire was a huge problem and the AFR cut was in
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its third year. Councilor Marsh raised a point of order noting that Mr. Kauth might not realize he was
speaking on the Normal Neighborhood Plan. Mr. Kauth responded his testimony was context and
continued, equating weather patterns and drought experienced in California to the AFR cut. Mr. Kauth
friended Mayor Stromberg on social media and began suggesting the slash piles of thousands of green
material were acting as a lightning rod. This created a rush to cut green trees creating thousands and
thousands of lightning rods. Developing 500 houses on one of Ashland's last wetlands was impetuous,
unwarranted, greedy and worthy of investigation.
PUBLIC HEARINGS (None)
UNFINISHED BUSINESS
1. Request to extend City water service outside of City limits
John Chmelir/West Jackson Properties/Continued with his presentation to request the City extend water
service to his facility. He provided statistics on the increase of Alzheimer's disease, the need for beds for
these patients, and the necessity of a fire sprinkler system. The letter from the City's consultant suggested
the request to connect to city water was a complicated engineering issue and it was not. The City's Talent
Ashland Phoenix (TAP) line had a capacity of 4.25 million gallons per day (mgd). The pump station would
put out 3 mgd when upsized to its final size. There was no way their connection would reduce the capacity
of the line. The fire hydrant line they wanted to connect to was below the pump station and not affected by
the pump station. West Jackson Properties wanted to connect to the line that connected to the fire hydrant
line. In the event of afire, the Fire Department would connect to that line anyway.
The ordinance was not clear that all conditions had to be satisfied simultaneously. The request met approval
criteria for No Detriment and In Ashland's Best Interest. Mr. Chmelir listed the things West Jackson
Properties had done for the City that ranged from moving businesses out of the floodway to approving an
easement for the City to have a temporary pump station. He did not think the approval criteria to obtain a
failure letter from the county and the infeasible determination criteria were possible or feasible.
Without the extension to TAP, the state, Fire District 5, and the Public Works Department would require a
storage tank that held 40,000-45,000 gallons of water. He had experience sizing and building water storage
systems, confirmed the City paid them for the easement and thought he got close to a fair price for the
easement.
He went on to address the seven conditions recommended by staff in the Council Communication. The
second condition requiring the applicant to construct a distribution line within the city to his property was
not workable. They complied with the majority of conditions stated. However, there was a conflict in the
code between siting of buildings and parking and development in a flood plain. If the Council denied the
request for extension, they would continue to build the project. The project was for profit. Connecting to
the TAP line would save the applicant money, was safer for the residents, safer for the firefighters, and a
reasonable accommodation considering all the things they had done for the City.
City Administrator Dave Kanner explained the staff recommendation remained the same. He confirmed it
was possible to connect a fire suppression system to the TAP line. The question was whether the City
should. From an infrastructure planning, land use, and legal standpoint, Council should deny the request.
Public Works Director Mike Faught introduced RH2 Regional Manager Jeff Ballard who reviewed the
information provided by Mr. Chmelir and his engineering consultants as well as the questions submitted by
Mr. Chmelir at the last Council meeting. Mr. Ballard agreed with their calculations of capacity. The line
was more than capable in size and volume to supply the proposed facility. The City had the ability to serve
that property. That said, he did not recommend allowing the connection. The City spent millions of dollars
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to supply an emergency connection to Ashland. They hired him to design, assist with construction, and
coordinate with Mr. Chmelir to get the facility operating. The City had not evaluated how it benefited the
city or determined use over the next 5-20 years. TAP was a large investment and provided a significant
benefit to the city. From a technical standpoint, be would never recommend making a quick decision on a
request that could affect the flexibility of the City's long-term use of an investment that size. The City
installed the fire hydrant at Mr. Chmelir's request. Allowing the extension would tie the City to that
connection in perpetuity. If Council wanted to serve that facility, the City should evaluate it as a system
improvement in that area and service area and verify whether it affected long-term use.
Mr. Faught added staff did not recommend the connection either. As the City moved forward to update the
Water Master Plan there were some portions of that system they would have the consultant review. The
City paid Mr. Chmelir $161,000 for the property and the easement. Mr. Faught worked with Mr. Chmelir
and Jackson County on the right of way and secured an easement from the County before Mr. Chmelir took
back ownership. The City also worked with Mr. Chmelir on facility design. The Public Works Department
did not recommend an isolated connection like the one proposed.
Mr. Ballard addressed the difference between a fire hydrant and a fire suppression system. The fire hydrant
would function independent of anything else. If the fire connection were allowed, Jackson County would
not require Mr. Chmelir to build a facility that supported his site against fire. If Council denied the
connection, the County would still require him to build those facilities to ensure the building had adequate
fire suppression. If the City supplied fire suppression to that building, they would have that responsibility
and liability forever. It was a different level of responsibility and liability commitment than a fire hydrant.
Water systems in general had two types of pipes, transmission, and distribution. Distribution lines supplied
water to customer connections, lines to the fire hydrants and delivered water from storage to the customers.
Transmission lines moved water from a source to a distribution system.
The TAP line was a high-pressured pipeline that moved water from other towns to Ashland. Minimizing
connections to that line helped maintain flexibility for the future use of that facility. Currently, the TAP
system could supply 2.13 mgd to Ashland. The City of Talent supplied that water from their pump station
to Ashland. If the City ran that pump station at 1,740 gallons per minute, Talent may not have the capability
to supply the fire suppression at that moment to that site. Talent did have storage capacity and the City of
Ashland would have to make a commitment based on that storage to supply water to the fire connection.
Growth areas and future developments were planned, coordinated, engineering evaluated, and
recommendations made. The current request bypassed the planning and evaluation process to determine
the best use. Mr. Faught added the City would most likely build a separate distribution system in the north
end as land incorporated within city Iimits. It would not be a transmission line. Staff had not planned or
reviewed any of that as of yet nor had they looked at future growth in that area to consider water sources
and those were concerns. The Water Master Plan update would look at the proposal to increase TAP from
2.13 mgd to 3 mgd. That would affect multiple systems. Staff would also review the recently adopted
Normal Neighborhood Master Plan and distribution systems for the entire north end instead of one isolated
fire connection.
Mr. Kanner clarified the fire hydrant was not required by any government agency. It was a negotiation
point in the purchase and sale agreement in the easement with Mr. Chmelir.
City Attorney Dave Lohman explained the City would have additional liability and provided examples.
Staff could write an ordinance that provided for a class of users if it was in the City's best interest. This
would not apply to a single request. Mr. Faught addressed annexation and explained the developer paid for
the infrastructure. The City would only participate in the project through System Development Charges
(SDC). The developer would provide the engineering and the City would review the plans to make sure it
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January 19, 2016
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would work with the city systems.
Mr. Kanner added historically Ashland had taken strong measures to discourage urban style development
outside city limits. This was not a request for an exception to the ordinance to allow urban style
development outside city limits. It was a request for Council to ignore the ordinance to allow this
development outside city limits. If Council wanted to extend the line, staff could bring an amendment to
the current ordinance and then reconsider the matter.
Fire Chief John Karns explained the occupancy type for the facility would require a fire sprinkler system
per state law. The Fire Department would consider the center a target hazard and would have a preplan
developed.
Council comments were interested in finding a way to provide water, questioned the reduction in use one
connection might make, and how annexation would make the process easier. Opposing comments did not
want to jeopardize the $8,000,000 investment the City made in TAP, noted potential liability issues, and
how the request set precedence.
Councilor Marsh/Seffinger m/s to deny the request from West Jackson Properties, LLC, for a
connection to the City water system outside the city limits. DISCUSSION: Councilor Marsh noted the
project was compelling but after reviewing the facts, she saw no reason to grant the request. It set a
dangerous precedent and threatened potential management of an $8,000,000 investment. Approving the
request would jeopardize a significant City infrastructure for people who did not live in the city or paid city
taxes and were not part of the group of people the City invested in TAP. It would undermine future decision
making for a single user outside city limits. Mr. Chmelir could move forward with the project with an
investment of $150,000 for the tank. It also opened the door for future applications. The liability concerns
of feeding a single user off a transmission line when there was no guarantee of redundancy was
discomforting. Councilor Seffinger agreed with Councilor Marsh. The project was worthwhile and she
supported it but it would set a precedence that would make it difficult to deny other applicants.
Councilor Rosenthal wanted to support the connection. It seemed simple and straightforward. Staff and the
City's consultant did not recommend the connection. He thought a step was missing, could not identify it,
and wondered if there was a way it could happen anyway. Councilor Lemhouse looked at the request
differently and wanted to continue to work on it with staff to see if the City should explore annexation.
Council should be willing to look beyond the boundaries for things that add to the community. He would
not support the motion and wanted to see further discussion and exploration. Councilor Morris would also
vote against the motion. There had to be a way to make it work. Eventually the area would annex into the
city and the water tank demolished and redone.
Councilor Voisin explained the holding tank would still need water after it emptied. The hook up was
already there and questioned why the applicant could not connect to the line. The reduction in flexibility
regarding TAP was vague and she thought an exception could be made. That the request would set
precedence was also an unknown and she did not think the liability was a strong issue. She was considering
voting against the motion.
Mayor Stromberg noted turning down the request would not stop the project. The state did not have
standards on having a water tank for a sprinkler system that ran out of water during a fire. If they revised
the ordinance and set up new standards Mr. Chmelir's facility could meet, anyone who met those standards
would have a right to connect to the system. Liability issues were complicated by the fact that the City
would serve the facility in a way not standard or typical of how the water system was engineered.
Councilor Marsh added this was a specific application to hook up to the TAP line. If Council did not think
that was a good idea they should pass the motion and have staff continue to explore options.
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Roll Call Vote: Councilor Rosenthal, Marsh, and Seffinger, YES; Councilor Lemhouse, Voisin, and
Morris, NO. Mayor Stromberg broke the tie with a YES vote. Motion passed 4-3.
2. Second reading by title only of an ordinance titled, "An ordinance amending chapters 18.2.2,
18.2.3, 18.2.5, 18.3.2, 18.3.3, 18.3.5 and 18.6.1 of the Ashland Land Use Ordinance relating to the
homegrown marijuana cultivation and marijuana-related businesses including production,
processing, retail sales, testing, and wholesale and declaring and emergency"
Planning Manager Maria Harris read the title in full then read the changes made to the ordinances aloud.
City Administrator Dave Kanner explained staff was discussing the power used for industrial grows. It
might be possible to amend the electric rate ordinance to allow the electric utility to negotiate specific power
purchase agreements with large energy customers to provide an incentive for them to use electricity during
off peak hours. It would minimize the impact on the system and the risk of getting into Tier 2 rates. In
Ashland, a commercial indoor grow was limited to 5,000 square feet. Staff discussed the possibility of
requiring LED lights but preferred to see state standards to that effect. The City could not use their
Bonneville Power Administration (BPA) money to provide incentives for marijuana growers. It was
preferable to have the statewide coalition of utilities currently working on this issue develop something the
legislature voted into statewide building codes.
Manufacturing equipment for processing marijuana had to meet building codes for mechanical and required
the owner to have the appropriate permits. The state law originally prohibited the production of oils and
extracts in a residential situation but amended that prohibition with the latest house bill. People could do a
limited amount of extraction in a residence.
Councilor Voisin/Seffinger m/s to approve Ordinance #3120 and to adopt the ordinance and
declaring an emergency and to adopt the ordinance as an emergency enactment.
DISCUSSION: Councilor Lemhouse would not support the motion. Allowing large commercial grows
within city limits would be problematic for the same reasons Denver CO was experiencing and would take
up available commercial space. Alternately, the federal government could change enforcement and that
would have ramifications for large commercial grows. Another concern was not preserving R-I zones and
allowing marijuana grows. This was an attractive nuisance.
Roll Call Vote: Councilor Rosenthal, Voisin, Seffinger, Marsh, Morris and YES; Councilor
Lemhouse, NO. Motion passed 5-1.
NEW AND MISCELLANEOUS BUSINESS
Mayor Stromberg moved the Ashland Water Advisory Committee Member appointments to #l with
Council consent.
1. Ashland Water Advisory Committee Member appointments
Public Works Director Mike Faught contacted the original Water Advisory Committee members and
everyone was available with the exception of one whose workload would not permit participation. Mr.
Faught was also recommending two more members, Rich Miller and Joe Graf.
Councilor Rosenthal/Marsh m/s to approve the AWAC members as recommended by staff. Voice
Vote: all AYES. Motion passed.
2. Recommendation of the ad hoc Committee on the City Recorder Position
Councilor Seffinger explained an ad hoc committee was formed to review the City Recorder's position and
make a recommendation whether the position should remain elected or become an appointed position.
The committee met four times. After the second meeting, City Recorder Barbara Christensen decided to
leave the committee but agreed to offer assistance as needed. The Committee determined unanimously that
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January 19, 2016
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the position be appointed as it was throughout Oregon with the exception of two cities. Appointing the
City Recorder would ensure the City had a qualified person filling the position. The City Recorder was an
administrative position that made decisions and provided essential services to the City based on knowledge,
skills, education, and experience. The Committee thought an appointed person that went through a rigorous
selection process would possess skills critical to the position.
Minutes from the third committee meeting prompted Ms. Christensen to contact ad hoc Committee Chair
Seffinger and resulted in a fourth meeting January 7, 2016. During that meeting, Ms. Christensen explained
if appointed, the City Recorder position should have the same selection and supervision status as the City
Attorney position. She questioned if the position would be at a department head level and if it would retain
a full time assistant as it did now.
This input, the potential of updates to both the City Charter and Ashland Municipal Code (AMC), possibly
moving some of the Recorder's duties to other departments, legal questions on specifying hours and
qualifications in the City Charter and AMC along with procedures for removal of office, led Councilor
Seffinger to recommend postponing the decision. This would give the Mayor and City Attorney time to
review and respond and Council would be able to make a well informed vote on the matter. These changes
would not go into effect until the current City Recorder retired. Alternately, it was unlikely the public
would change the position from elected to appointed if the Council was not unanimous in their vote. The
recent newspaper article written by Councilor Rosenthal made it clear the vote would not be unanimous.
Councilor Seffinger/Marsh m/s to postpone the Vote on this item until after the November election of
2016 for further study and to be placed on the January 2017 Council agenda.
DISCUSSION: Councilor Marsh did not think it was reasonable to move forward on a Charter amendment
that did not have full Council support. This would give them time to hear public input, gather more
information and research. Councilor Seffinger clarified during the postponement of the item, the Mayor
and City Attorney would continue working on adding minimum requirements to the City Charter and AMC,
and establish a process for removal if an individual failed to meet the requirements. They would also
determine what duties should remain with the position and what duties could be assigned to other
departments. The ad hoc Committee recommended making the position appointed and not elected. She
further clarified tasks not written in the City Charter could be reviewed and possibly moved to other areas
within the City.
Councilor Voisin thought staff needed clear direction regarding the issue and asked Councilor Seffinger to
write out a detailed indication of what she wanted staff to do. The directions to staff were too vague.
Councilor Seffinger did not think she was as vague as Councilor Voisin indicated. Mayor Stromberg
explained they could talk to the City Recorder and make sure they had all her issues and points included in
the review.
Councilor Lemhouse/Rosenthal m/s to amend the motion that the Mayor, Councilor Seffinger, and
Councilor Rosenthal work with the City Attorney to look at recommendations made by the
commission and examine the recommended changes to consider that Councilor Seffinger brought
forward. DISCUSSION: Councilor Lemhouse thought it would be beneficial to have Councilor Rosenthal
as a counter to the Committee's pro on appointing the position. It was also appropriate since Councilor
Rosenthal was Council Chair. Councilor Rosenthal added the object was spending more time to come up
with something that would get more support on the Council while addressing the legitimate concerns staff
and the ad hoc Committee identified. Councilor Voisin confirmed Council could send questions and
concerns to the City Administrator. Roll Call Vote: Councilor Voisin, Morris, Lemhouse, Seffinger,
Rosenthal, and Marsh, YES. Motion passed.
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Councilor Seffinger thanked the ad hoc Committee members for their efforts and contributions regarding
the issue. Their work would help resolve the issue in a positive way. Councilor Lemhouse supported in
general what the Committee put forward but recognized the issues Ms. Christensen brought up as well. His
concern was having the best system in place and supported the idea of an appointed position if crafted
correctly. Roll Call Vote on main amended motion: Councilor Voisin, Morris, Lemhouse, Seffinger,
Rosenthal, and Marsh, YES. Motion passed.
ORDINANCES, RESOLUTIONS AND CONTRACTS (None)
OTHER BUSINESS FROM COUNCIL MEMBERS/REPORTS FROM COUNCIL LIAISONS
ADJOURNMENT OF BUSINESS MEETING
Meeting adjourned at 9:47 p.m.
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Barbara Christensen, City Recorder Jolyh Stromberg, Mayor