HomeMy WebLinkAbout2006-1205 Council MIN
ASHLAND CiTY COUNCiL MEETING
DECEMBER 5, 2006
PAGE I of7
MINUTES FOR THE REGULAR MEETING
ASHLAND CITY COUNCIL
December 5, 2006
Civic Center Council Chambers
1175 E. Main Street
CALL TO ORDER
Mayor Morrison called the meeting to order at 7: 10 p.m. in the Civic Center Council Chambers.
ROLL CALL
Councilors Hardesty, Amarotico, Hartzell, Jackson, Silbiger and Chapman were present.
APPROVAL OF MINUTES
The Executive Session minutes of November 21,2006 and the Regular Council minutes of November 21,
2006 were approved as presented.
SPECIAL PRESENTATIONS & AWARDS (None)
CONSENT AGENDA
1. Minutes of Boards, Commissions, and Committees.
Councilor Jackson/ Amarotico m/s to approve Consent Agenda. Voice Vote: all AYES. Motion passed.
PUBLIC HEARINGS
1. An appeal of Planning Action 2006-01294 - Request for a Conditional Use Permit to convert
thirty existing apartments to thirty condominiums units for the property location at 719 Park
Street.
Mayor Morrison read aloud the procedure for Land Use Hearings.
Public Hearin2 Opened: 7:15 p.m.
Ex Parte Contact
Councilor Hartzell stated she was present for a portion of the June Housing Commission meeting; however,
this will not influence her judgment.
Councilor Hardesty stated she participated at the June Housing Commission meeting; however, this will not
influence her decision.
Assistant City Attorney Richard Appicello noted the minutes of the June Housing Commission meeting are
included in the planning record. The statement of impartially was read aloud and both Councilor Hardesty
and Hartzell stated they agreed.
Staff Report
Interim Community Development Director Bill Molnar presented the staff report. He explained this
application involves a request for a conditional use permit to convert 30 existing apartments into
condominium units and noted the relevant approval criteria for the conditional use is listed in AMC 18.104.
Mr. Molnar provided a description of the property and stated it is located off Park Street and is approximately
1.5 acres in size. It is served by a flag drive and there are four separate buildings on the site. All of the units are
two bedrooms and are just under 1,000 sq. ft. in size.
ASHLAND CITY COUNCIL MEETING
DECEMBER 5, 2006
PAGE 2 of7
Mr. Molnar stated this application was initially approved administratively by staff. A request for a hearing to
the Planning Commission was subsequently filed and the Planning Commission reviewed the action and
approved the request by a vote of 5-4. Mr. Molnar noted the affordable housing requirement and stated 8 of
the 30 units would available for individuals at the 80% median income level. He added that it is staffs
understanding from talking with the applicant that the 8 units will remain as rentals.
Mr. Molnar explained the Planning Commission's decision was appealed and the appeal letter addressed
concern that this conversion would impact livability; however it did not specifically identify what adverse
material effects the conditional use permit would have on the surrounding area. Mr. Molnar commented on the
approval criteria regarding bulk, scale, and coverage; impacts on public facilities; architectural compatibility;
noise/glare; and impacts of adjacent properties. He stated it was difficult to determine the conditional use
permit would have any impact at all because it is already a 30-unit complex and there are no physical changes
being proposed. He stated that staff did not expect any changes to the amount of traffic generated by
converting to allow for purchase of the units, no change on impact of public services, no change in the design
of the building that would affect architectural compatibility, and no change to any site amenities that might
impact noise or glare. Staffs recommendation is for the Council to uphold the Planning Commission decision
to approve the conditional use permit.
Councilor Hartzell commented on approval criteria 18.104.050(C)(7) and questioned if the City's Housing
Needs Analysis was considered. Mr. Molnar stated criteria 18.104.050(A) is more applicable in terms of
what impact this development might have relative to housing in Ashland. He noted criteria (A) references
"...conformance with relevant Comprehensive Plan policies that are not implemented by any City, State, or
Federal law..." Councilor Hartzell commented on the potential loss of rental housing and questioned if it was
appropriate to consider possible impacts aside from physical impacts. She also questioned if approval could
set precedence.
City Attorney Mike Franell clarified evidence would need to be presented that indicates that a conversion
from an apartment structure to a condominium structure would impact the availability of a particular type of
housing that the City desires. If the applicant or the appellant presented this type of evidence, the Council
could make a finding that approval would impact the availability of that type of housing and this sort of
finding could set precedence on future applications. Mr. Franell also clarified in order to approve this
conditional use permit, the Council would have to make findings on criteria (A), (B), and (C); and in this
respect, the Council would need to determine that the application is consistent with the Comprehensive Plan.
Assistant City Attorney Mr. Appicello added the Comprehensive Plan indicates a diversity of housing types,
but it does not specifically addresses rental vs. owner-occupied units.
Applicant
Mark DiRienzo/Urban Development Services LLC/Stated this request involves 30 units and 8 of the units
would be brought into the City's affordable housing program. He commented on the shortage of affordable
"for sale" units in Ashland and stated the 22 units would represent some of the lowest cost housing available.
Mr. DiRienzo stated that 15% of current renters typically purchase units when they are converted to for sale
units and stated a large percentage of converted unit buyers are first time homebuyers and entry-level
homebuyers. He stated the conditional use permit meets the criteria in the Municipal Code and feels they are
providing an opportunity for people with this condominium conversion.
Chris Hearn/Davis, Hearn, Saladoff, Bridges & VisserINoted that this conversion would increase the
number of affordable units in Ashland for 2006 by 47%. Mr. Hearn reviewed the application time line and
commented on the need to have clear and objective standards for applicants. He noted the relevant criteria
listed in AMC 18.24, and stated 18.24.030(1) allows for condominium conversions if the application meets
the affordable housing standards. He stated this application meets the criteria listed in Resolution 2006-13,
which was adopted the day before this application was filed; however, it does not meet some potential future
ASHLAND CITY COUNCIL MEETING
DECEMBER 5, 2006
PAGE 3 of7
resolution. He added if there were to be additional criteria applied to this application, it should have been
included in the resolution because that is what the applicant was relying on when they filed the application.
Mr. Hearn commented on the criteria listed in AMC 18.104 and stated the context of 1-6 focus on physical
attributes and stated there is nothing about a preferred mix of housing uses. Mr. Hearn stated that the basis for
the appeal was specifically listed as subsection (C), "livability".
[Mr. Hearn's presentation was submitted into the public record.]
Questions of Applicant
Councilor Hardesty commented on the Housing Commission's recommendations for the affordable units to be
dispersed through the complex and for the affordable units to be at 60% of area median income, and asked if
the applicant would comply.
Mr. DiRienzo commented on the challenges of making the units available at the 60% median income level
and added this would create a financial burden and weaken the ability for improvements to be made to the
property. In regards to dispersing the affordable units, he explained that their research has indicated the
probability of filling the units with qualified individuals is much higher if they are placed in a block.
Opponents
Philip Lang/758 B StreetlRequested that the record be kept open for 7 days. Mr. Lang clarified the appeal is
based on criteria (A) as well as criteria C(7) and stated the appeal is based on livability. He commented on
what can happen when apartments are converted to condominiums and stated the current tenants are often
displaced and the units are purchased by those who want to "flip" the property. Mr. Lang stated the endless
conditional use permits issued on a case-by-case basis result in defeating the target use of the zone and stated
the Planning Department has a responsibility to monitor the extent of the CUPs and establish a point beyond
which they are excessive. He stated the proposed development violates AMC 18.104.050(C) in that it has
great adverse material affects, including but not limited to physical affects. Mr. Lang stated that condominium
conversions actively reduce affordable housing and submitted a copy of Ordinance 2035 into the public
record.
Art Bullock/791 Glendower/Requested the Council deny the application and stated that workforce housing
affordability and working family displacement are both livability factors under AMC 18.1 04.050(C)(7) and
both of these provide grounds for denying the application. He stated that ORS 458.705(2) and (5) require the
City to meet the needs of working families for affordable housing and stated the main issue is the definition of
"livability". Mr. Bullock stated the Council is permitted to consider other factors they find to be relevant, not
just the factors listed in C( 1 )-C( 6). He commented on the definition of "livability" contained in Webster's
Dictionary and stated under Oregon law, if the word is not defined within the law that the common use
definition is applied. Mr. Bullock stated ORS requires the community to provide livability and defines
livability to mean, "the needs of working families for housing ... that are affordable and accessible. " He
stated that based on this definition, the Council should deny the application. He stated there is no limitation,
from either case law or statutory law that would limit the Council's interpretation ofthe word livability and
asked the Council to be clear that anything that would drive someone away from living in Ashland is a
livability factor. Mr. Bullock claimed the following major problems with the application: 1) The application
does not satisfy "livability" as workforce housing affordability, 2) The application does not satisfy "livability"
because working individuals will not be able to live there due to mortgage requirements, 3) Granting this
conditional use permit morphs it into a "Conditional Right to Use Later Permit", and 4) The application shuts
down workforce housing.
[Mr. Bullock's written testimony was submitted into the public record.]
Questions of Appellant
Comment was made questioning if the appellant had evidence or numbers to submit into the record. Mr.
Bullock stated the numbers are in the application. He stated all 30 units would be converted to condominiums
ASHLAND CiTY COUNCiL MEETiNG
DECEMBER 5, 2006
PAGE 4017
and there in nothing in the application that states some will remain as rentals.
Comment was made that this is in a multi-family zone and questioned how the conditional use permit would
defeat the intent of this zone. Mr. Lang stated that piece by piece, the Planning Department has been approving
variances and conditional uses and that eventually this can undermine what the basic zone is. He stated that a
single-family condominium is not multi-family affordable rental housing, and stated that condominium
conversions destroy affordable housing in Ashland.
Those Wishine to Provide Testimonv
Devian Aguirre/570 Clover Lane/Stated that she has been involved in affordable housing for most of her
career in real estate and stated that the issue of affordability appears to be dictated on a project to project basis,
when it should be a policy issue. Ms. Aguirre commented on the spectrum of needs and stated this is weighted
on the rental side, however there is a point where the rental and for sale sides mix. She suggested there be a
discussion of Ashland's for sale and rental needs and stated there needs to be a balance of both types of
housing.
Staff Response
Mr. Molnar commented on Mr. Lang's statement that conditional uses and variances violate the intent ofthe
zone. He stated that requests are evaluated with the Land Use Ordinance and the Comprehensive Plan and
noted that the Land Use Ordinance allows for a wide range of housing types.
Mr. Molnar commented on the Planning Commission's split vote and noted that the Housing Commission and
the Planning Commission had been in the process of developing a condominium conversion ordinance. He
stated there might have been some frustration on the part of the Commission that they did not have the tool in
place to adequately evaluate a project of this size.
Mr. Molnar clarified that home ownership rates have remained unchanged for the last decade; however, there
has been an increase in single-family development for higher end housing, and noted the need to provide
affordable ownership opportunities as well. Mr. Molnar stated that no new rental housing complexes of any
sizable scale are being built in Ashland. He stated this is a real problem and questioned how the City could
stimulate the private market to build rental units.
Assistant City Attorney Richard Appicello stated that because new facts about the history and the Planning
Commission may not have been in the record, the opponents should be given the opportunity to rebut any new
facts.
Art Bullock/Stated that when the Planning Commission voted 5/4 the issue was livability and they were
struggling with this definition. He asked that the video tape of the Planning Commission's meeting be
included in the record and stated that it was a forced vote. He noted their request to leave the record open for 7
days and stated they would introduce additional evidence that the City is losing ground in terms of meeting the
housing needs.
Applicant's Rebuttal
Mark DiRienzo/Clarified the applicant is intending to convert the units to condominiums and the goal is not
to flip the units and sell them right away. In regards to the Planning Commission decision, he encouraged the
Council to watch the video and let it speak for itself. Mr. DiRienzo stated that there is no definition of
workforce housing, however most have an idea of what this means. He stated these low cost units would be
half the price of the median house in Ashland and stated he cannot see how a working family in Ashland could
afford anything but a condo conversion unit. He stated that these are multi-family units, with shared yards and
no garages and are not the same as single-family attached units. He added that it is unfortunate that apartment
buildings are not being built and related this to the lack of incentive to do so.
ASHLAND CITY COUNCIL MEETING
DECEMBER 5, 2006
PAGE 5 of7
Chris Hearn/Stated this project as it stands today would increase the number of affordable units in Ashland
by almost half. He stated the condominium conversion ordinance is a different issue and there will be
opportunity for the appropriate public discourse.
Public Hearine: Closed: 9:00 p.m.
Mr. Appicello noted the request to keep the record open for 7 days, which means no decision can be made
tonight. He commented on the request to include the Planning Commission tapes in the record and clarified
the appropriate way to include this in the record.
Mayor Morrison asked that they incorporate into the record any and all video or audio tape recordings of the
Planning Commission's hearing and deliberations on this subject and Council agreed. He announced that the
record will be left open for 7 days and will close on December 13,2006 at 5 p.m. The applicant stated they
agreed to this and stated they would like the opportunity to submit final written argument. Mayor Morrison
announced the deliberations would be continued to the January 2, 2007 Council Meeting.
2. Continuation of an Appeal of Planning Action 2006-00078 - Request for an Outline Plan approval
under the Performance Standards Option Chapter 18.88 for an 18-unit single-family residential
subdivision for the property located at 247 Otis St. An Exception to the Street Standards is
requested to allow curbside sidewalk in sections of the Otis and Randy Street frontages to preserve
trees, wetlands and the residence at 247 Otis St.
Mayor Morrison noted that the Council has reached the point of deliberation on this matter.
Ex Parte Contact
Councilor Amarotico reminded the Council of his potential conflict on interest; he has a family member who
lives near the project site, however this would not impact his decision.
Council Deliberation
City Attorney Richard Appicello commented on the alleged errors raised by the appellants and noted the
Council has the right to consult with their legal counsel on interpretive issues. Mr. Appicello stated there were
several allegations made in the appeal document that focused on language; however, these were not actual
errors and were simply disagreements over the language used. He provided an explanation of the suggested
language that was submitted by the Legal Department and stated the two main issues are: 1) what the existing,
significant, and natural features are, and 2) traffic mitigation.
Mr. Appicello continued his explanation of the suggested language submitted to the Council. He suggested
that the pool is a man-made feature built around a natural feature; and it is the spring that should be preserved.
He also commented on the two conditions previously proposed by the appellants in regards to traffic
mitigation. He stated this land use application is not the appropriate place to charge the Council with the
development of a local improvement district policy. He also commented on non-remonstrance agreements
and stated the provision in AMC Chapter 13 makes the provision in Chapterl8 constitutional. He
acknowledged that the Chapter 13 provision could be better; but stated the appropriate place to discuss this is
during a legislative hearing. Mr. Appicello also noted that the suggested language states there will be a
determination of the impact on this development in relation to any requested offsite improvements and that
this will be imposed at time of final.
Mayor Morrison noted he had just received a Speaker Request Form from Mr. Bullock and he wished to
address the Council in regards to ex parte contact. Mr. Appicello clarified the Council would need to re-open
the hearing to hear the challenge. He noted the appellant had previously raised this concern and has failed to
enter evidence into the record to this effect. He added that it was very late in the process for the appellant to be
ASHLAND CiTY COUNCIL MEETING
DECEMBER 5, 2006
PAGE 6 of7
making such a challenge and questioned ifhe had sufficient evidence. Mr. Appicello clarified that based on
what has previously been disclosed, there is no actual conflict on interest.
Mayor Morrison stated he is not inclined to re-open the hearing and requested Mr. Bullock write down his
challenge so that they could determine if re-opening the hearing is necessary.
Council agreed to continue with the remaining Agenda items to allow Mr. Bullock time to prepare his written
challenge.
PUBLIC FORUM
Ambuja Rosen/Commented on the proposed tethering ordinance. Ms. Rosen stated the two-hour tethering
limit would be workable and noted other cities who have testified that it is enforceable. She voiced her
disappointment that an 8-hour limit was being considered instead. Ms. Rosen also commented on the ISO sq.
ft. minimum space requirement for dogs and cats and asked that this be included in the ordinance.
Council Deliberation ofPA 2006-00078 (Cont.)
City Attorney Mike Franell clarified the Council cannot deliberate on this matter until this conflict of interest
issue has been resolved.
Councilor HartzelllAmarotico m/s to extend meeting to 10:30 p.m.
Mr. Appicello commented that there have been several opportunities to enter into the record facts that
constitute a conflict on interest and stated he believed it was reasonable to request the appellant to write down
the facts so that they could determine if it is necessary to re-open the hearing. Interim Community
Development Director Bill Molnar clarified the 120-day time frame expires on December 28, 2006.
Mr. Bullock submitted his written statement. Mr. Appicello read the statement aloud and stated it did not
contain any facts, only a procedural objection. Mr. Appicello explained that under the law, Councilor
Amarotico has a potential conflict of interest, and there has been no factual evidence presented to suggest
otherwise. He stated he does not believe the Council is required to provide a special opportunity to consider
this objection and does not believe there is anything that would require Councilor Amarotico to not participate
in the vote.
Mayor Morrison stated they have provided an opportunity for the appellant to provide evidence and suggested
that they move ahead with deliberations.
Councilor Chapman/Jackson m/s to approve the application for Outline Plan under the Performance
Standards Option Chapter 18.88 for an 18-units single-family residential subdivision and for an
Exception to the Street Standards to allow curbside sidewalk in sections of the Otis and Randy Street
frontages to preserve trees, wetlands and the residence at 247 Otis Street is P A 2006-00078 with the
conditions of approval attached by the Planning Commission as stated in the Findings and Orders
dated July 11,2006 with the language clarifications presented tonight by the Legal Staff, excluding the
underlined phrase on Page 1 and the alternate phrase on Page 2. DISCUSSION: Councilor Chapman
clarified his intention was to acknowledge the spring as the significant natural feature, not the pool. He also
clarified this motion would incorporate the entire document submitted by Mr. Appicello with the exception of
the underline phrase on Page 1 and the last alternate clause listed on Page 2. Mr. Appicello clarified this
motion would find that the spring within the pool is not significant. Councilor Hartzell voiced her interest in
protecting the water. Councilor Chapman stated that his understanding is that the water is protected by the
wellhead. Mr. Appicello clarified that the main decision for the Council to make is whether the spring inside
the pool is a significant feature and therefore required to be placed in a common area. If the Council does not
ASHLAND CiTY COUNCiL MEETING
DECEMBER 5, 2006
PAGE 70f7
believe the spring within the pool is significant, they could go with the Planning Commission's findings,
which basically state that what is really important is the water and the water being pumped into the pool from
the wellhead. Councilor Hartzell voiced her concern that paragraph two of the suggested language appears to
be an "if/then" statement. She also voiced concern with including findings as part of the motion. Mr. Appicello
clarified the language from the findings came from the documents that had previously been submitted to the
Council and clarified the only new material is the wording "Prior to signature of the final survey plat... "
Councilor Hartzell motioned to amend motion to remove paragraph two and paragraph four. Motion
died due to lack of second.
DISCUSSION (Cont.):
Mr. Appicello clarified his suggested wording in paragraph two and four and noted that the final findings
would come back to Council for approval.
Roll Call Vote on Original Motion: Councilor Hardesty, Amarotico, Jackson, Silbiger and Chapman,
YES. Councilor Hartzell, NO. Motion passed 5-1.
UNFINISHED BUSINESS
1. Discussion of City Charter.
Delayed due to time constraints. City Administrator Martha Bennett requested that the Council review the
tenth page of the staff report regarding the water provision language and provide feedback to staff as to
whether these were the right concepts. She also noted Ms. Vavra's language for Instant Run-Off Voting
would be included in the packet materials when this item comes back to Council.
NEW AND MISCELLANEOUS BUSINESS (None)
ORDINANCES. RESOLUTIONS AND CONTRACTS
1. First Reading by title only of an Ordinance Titled "An Ordinance Amending AMC 3.08.020 to
Apply Ethics Provisions to Employees, Appointed Officials and Elected Officials."
Delayed due to time constraints.
OTHER BUSINESS FROM COUNCIL MEMBERS/REPORTS FROM COUNCIL LIAISONS
1. Discussion of2006 Council Goals.
Delayed due to time constraints.
ADJOURNMENT
Meeting adjourned at 10:30 p.m.
\ A-~ ~CVO--U
April Lucas, Assistant to City Recorder