HomeMy WebLinkAbout2010-0817 Council Mtg MIN
ASHLAND CITY COUNCIL MEETING
August 17, 2010
Page I of9
MINUTES FOR THE REGULAR MEETING
ASHLAND CITY COUNCIL
August 17,2010
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, Navickas, Lemhouse, Jackson, Silbiger and Chapman were present.
MAYOR'S ANNOUNCEMENTS
Mayor Stromberg announced vacancies on the Planning Commission, Public Arts Commission, Housing
Commission, Conservation Commission and Tree Commission.
The last item on the agenda regarding supporting the Ocean Policy Advisory Council's (OPAC)
recommendationswas pulled per OPAC's request.
Mayor Stromberg announced the passing of City volunteer Olaf Paul. Police Chief Terry Holderness described
Mr. Paul's dedication to the Police Department as a volunteer and expressed his appreciation. Mayor
Stromberg held a moment of silence in his honor.
SHOULD THE COUNCIL APPROVE THE MINUTES OF THESE MEETINGS?
The Regular Meeting minutes of August 3, 20 I 0 were approved as presented.
SPECIAL PRESENTATIONS & AWARDS - None
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CONSENT AGENDA
1. Will Council approve the minutes of Boards, Commissions, and Committees?
2. Does Council wish to approve annual renewals on liquor licenses as requested by Oregon State
Liquor Commission? .
3. Will Council approve the donation ofa surplus ambulance to the Warner Valley First Responders
in Plush, Oregon?
4. Does Council wish to confirm the Mayor's appointment of Kerry Kencairn to the Historic
Commission with a term ending April 30, 2013?
5. Does Council approve the recommendation of the Public Art Commission to implement another
round of Reflections of Ashland: Utility Box Beautification Project?
Senator Jason Atkinson spoke regarding the donation ofthe ambulance and offered his appreciation to the City
of Ashland.
Councilor Jackson/Chapman m/s to approve Consent Agenda items. Voice Vote: all AYES. Motion
passed.
PUBLIC HEARINGS - None
PUBLIC FORUM
Peter Nemzek/307 Starflower Lane!Provided slides of the fire that occurred August 13,20 I 0 adjacent to his
property that depicted heavy growth of non-native blackberry bushes and an overgrown riparian stream that
created extreme fire danger. He requested the City clean up the area to prevent future fires.
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August 17, 2010
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Ahna Lich/307 Starflower Lane/Explained the fire made her feel frightened and not safe in her home and
wanted action taken to prevent future fires. She expressed frustration with the legal process and stated the fire
was preventable. Addressing the overgrowth' was an emergency and she wanted immediate action taken to
avoid a repeat.
,
Russ Dixon/975 Bellview A venuelIntroduced himself as the owner of Reclaim Incorporated that specialized
in blackberry removal. He was also an assessor for the Oregon State Department of Forestry for Ladder Fuel
Reduction and noted other credentials. At Mr. Nemzek's request, he surveyed the property adjacent to Mr.
Nemzek and expressed concern there was potential for a major fire hazard. He was not sure what the City
could do but urged Council to remove the overgrowth and offered his assistance.
Fire Chief John Kams explained several of the properties in question were in the weed abatement process. Fire
Marshal Margueritte Hickman confirmed the privately owned properties would complete the Weed Abatement
process August 18, 20 I 0 and were just starting the Blackberry Abatement process. The Fire Department was
starting both abatement processes for property owned by Redco Development Corporation.
Fire Marshal Hickman provided history on the Abaternent programs, the Fire Department's recent
involvement, the process and the large amount of staff time involved. The Fire Department plans to streamline
the process and address billing property owners whose failure to comply increases costs for the City.
City Attorney Richard Appicello eXplained there were provisions in the code for summary abatement issues to
expedite dangerous situations.
UNFINISHED BUSINESS
1. Will Council accept one of the two proposals received for the beneficial use of the Imperatrice
Ranch property and authorize staff to negotiate a contract with Standing Stone Brewing Co.?
Engineering Services Manager Jim Olson presented the history and options considered for the use of the
Imperatrice property that resulted in a Request for Proposal (RFP). He explained the parameters of the RFP,
scoring criteria and the review team that participated in scoring the proposals. The Public Benefit average for
the Standing Stone Brewing Company was 9.3 and Natural Light was 13.7. The Standing Stone Brewing
Company proposal was just under $1 1,000.
Ron Roth/6950 Old Hwy S/Submitted an article into the record from the August 10, 2010 New York Times
about Portugal converting to clean energy. There were many possibilities for the Imperatrice property
including renewable energy, wind and solar, agricultural possibilities and bicycle trails. He wanted a process
where the City was not in charge but involved in a series of meetings similar to the process used for planning
North Mountain Park. It was too early to award a contract at this time. He suggested a public process to place
ponds in a specific area on the property that would cool wastewater that Council could facilitate usingIocal
experts.
Paul Kay/1234 Strawberry Lane/Read both proposals and strongly encouraged proceeding with a lease to the
Standing Stone Brewing Company. The public benefits would accrue in greater quantity and sooner. He
recommended a minimum 3-year lease with mileposts and mutual obligations to extend or shorten the term if
needed. He also spoke in favor of Natural Light's advanced water catchment and diffusion proposal and the
advantage of keeping them engaged.
Councilor Chapman/Lemhouse m/s to accept the proposal submitted by the Standing Stone Brewing
Company and authorize staff to prepare a lease agreement. DISCUSSION: Councilor Chapman thought
both proposals were not mutually exclusive in the long term. Trails would still be considered. When the lease
expired, the Standing Stone Brewing Company could move their process with little investment. He stressed the
need to look at the property for generating energy and water requirements.
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August 17, 2010
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Councilor Navickas was skeptical of the proposal process and supported a broader review that included public
participation on use of the property and developing the land. He eXplained why the two-year lease was not
realistic and expressed concern using public property for private benefit without adequate compensation to the
City. It created a sense of undercutting to other property owners and mead producers. Councilor Jackson
shared similar concerns leasing farmland for private business and noted the public process that brought the
proposal to this point. This was a reasonable first step and she supported the motion. Councilor Lemhouse
was in favor of the motion, understood the risk of undercutting and added this was another situation where
doing nothing was not beneficial.
Councilor Silbiger thought it was a good plan forthe Standing Stone Brewing Company but was not convinced
it was good for the City. The expectation from the applicant was the lease would last longer than two years.
The City purchased the land 10 years prior for $Imillion with dedicated funds and if the land ultimately was
not used for that purpose, funds should be returned. The negotiation should center on the fair market value
(FMV) for the land. If an applicant agreed to pay the FMV, a reasonable rent and there were clear intentions
the lease would last two years and required cleaning up the property when the lease terminated, there was a
possibility. He had expected proposals that would pay for the use of the property.
Councilor Voisin explained the City originally purchased the property for effluent and wastewater
management. The Standing Stone Brewing Company did not include any realistic way to incorporate this into
their plan. She expressed concern their proposal indicated possible difficulty having a suitable water source.
She also thought the City should deal with the FMV of the land.
Mayor Stromberg stated the public benefit was establishing a sustainable agricultural operation near Ashland.
He looked at FMV differently noting the Standing Stone Brewing Company proposed to pay up $11,000 to the
City and had identified certain expenses the City needed to meet. Currently a grazing operation on the property
paid approximately $12,000 a year and that was an indication of FMV. He thought the City should get a
percentage of the profit if the plan was successful. He added the City controlled the effluent and the applicants
needed to ensure they could accornmodate whatever solution the City proposed.
Staff clarified a permanent structure on a two-year lease would be a lost investment to the applicant when the
agreernent ended and the Standing Stone Brewing Company would use portable equipment. Staff went on to
clariry the RFP did not speciry use.
Councilor Navickas added the two-year lease narrowed the spectrurn of different proposals that might have
come forward had the lease been longer.
Councilor NavickaslVoisin m/s to amend the motion to eliminate any use from having permanent
structures on the property within their proposal. DISCUSSION: Councilor Chapman explained the
Standing Stone Brewing Cornpany had not proposed using permanent structures and fully understood the le.ase
was short-term. Roll Call Vote: Councilor Voisin, Navickas and Silbiger, YES; Councilor Chapman,
Jackson and Lemhouse, NO; Mayor Stromberg broke the tie with a NO vote. Motion failed 4-3.
Continued discussion on main motion: Councilor Chapman noted four years prior, he had wanted to have
this discussion and the Standing Stone Brewing Company brought forth a proposal that will start the process.
There were many options for the land.
Council and staff discussed assessing the property's reasonable market rate and including that information in
the lease negotiations.
Councilor Silbiger/Jackson m/s to direct staffto assess Fair Market Value for leasing the property prior
to final negotiations for the RFP. DISCUSSION: Councilor Jackson wanted to ensure the City would incur
a return similar to private property owners who leased their land to private businesses. The information might
ASHLAND CITY COUNCIL MEETING
August 17. 2010
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not be appropriate for a two-year lease but Council should have it regardless. Councilor Chapman assumed
staffwould perform due diligence and find the property's worth and added the land would most likely not lease
for much. Roll Call Vote: Councilor Chapman, Voisin, Navickas, Jackson, Lemhouse and Silbiger, YES.
Motion passed.
Continued discussion on amended motion: Councilor Navickas would support the motion in the interest of
supporting sustainable agriculture close to the City and reiterated this was public land and the broader interest
of the public should have higher priority.
Roll Call Vote on amended motion: Councilor Chapman, Voisin, Navickas, Jackson, Lemhouse and
Silbiger, YES. Motion passed.
NEW AND MISCELLANEOUS BUSINESS
1. Does Council wish to refund a portion ofthe Community Development and Engineering Services
Fees associated with the Housing Authority of Jackson County affordable housing project on Clay
Street?
Senior Planner Brandon Goldrnan explained the $14,748 refund related to an original annexation of the Clay
Street property for a 107-unit development. Part of the annexation criteria planning actions require a
percentage of the development be affordable so 17 of the 107 units were affordable. The project never
happened and in Decernber 2008, the City and Housing Authority of Jackson County (HAJC) entered into an
Intergovernmental Agreement (IGA) to jointly purchase the property and pursue a planning action approval to
amend the prior plan and divide the property into an area owned by the City and an area owned by HAJC.
HAJC at that tirne received approval for a 60-unit affordable housing development and staff took the position
those 60 units met the requirements ofthe annexation ordinance in full with the 17 required affordable units as
part of it. Resolution 2006-13 provided a waiver of Systems Developrnent Charges (SDCs) on all 60 units but
only a waiver of Community Development and Engineering fees for voluntarily provided affordable units. The
17 units required to be affordable were obligated to pay the Community Development and Engineering fees
totaling $33,518. HAJC was requesting a $14,748 refund and the City should take proportional allocation of
seven units. The Housing Commission reviewed the HAJC request for a refund and recommended Council
provide a full refund of$33,518.85.
The remaining 1.5 acres of City owned land could accornmodate approximately 15 units with seven affordable
housing units at 60% the Area Median Income (AMI). SDC's fund the units with a 60-year affordability
requirement that are forgiven if they remain affordable for 30 years. Staff was confident they would remain
affordable for the full 30-year period.
Jason EIzy/2251 Table Rock Road, MedfordlIntroduced himself as part of the Housing Authority of Jackson
County (HAJC) represented the owner of Snowberry Brook LLC and stated the Housing Cornmission' s
recommendation to waive the full fee would greatly benefit the project. The Community Development
Corporation (CDC) and Engineering fees created a financial burden for the project. The original estimate of the
building permits and SDC fees was $55,000. Current fees assessed to the project were $107,000 creating a gap
in the budget of over $50,000: At minimum HAJC was requesting $14,748 as a fair and equitable split of the
CDC and Engineering fees based on the density of the Snowberry Brook project.
At the time of the site plan application, the Housing Authority was not aware of the ordinance that required
affordable housing or that HAJC would be paying additional CDC and Engineering fees. HAJC relied on
estimates City staff provided and that estimate did not indicate HAJC paying CDC and Engineering fees for 17
units.
John Statler/1120 Niantic, Medford/Explained he was Chair of the Housing Authority of Jackson County
Board of Commissioners and was proud to serve as a Commissioner and proud of the staff. HAJC was a
model across the Northwest region of how Housing Authority's should operate. He asked Council to support
ASHLAND CITY COUNCIL MEETING
August /7, 2010
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the Housing Authority of Jackson County and the great work they do.
Councilor Navickas m/s to approve the Housing Authority refund request and proportionally allocate
the original required 17 low-income affordable housing units between the Housing Authority and the
City. Motion died due to lack of a second. )
Councilor Chapman/Silbiger m/s to deny the Housing Authority refund request and assess all
Community Development and Engineering fees for the required 17 units. DISCUSSION: Councilor
Chapman thought it was clear from the beginning that if needed the City could sell the land at market rate in
order to recover funds spent. It did not make sense to retain an encumbrance on the land if 60 affordable
housing units were being built. Councilor Navickas thought Council should continue in the interest of
providing affordable housing even if it meant encumbering the property. It was fair and reasonable to split the
affordable housing costs with HAJC.
Councilor Silbiger noted the City so far had waived $467,000 in fees, contributed $160,000 in land costs and
allocated $510,000 for CDBG funds for a total of $1,137,336. He explained how the $llmillion from the
State provided a monthly subsidy of $800 per unit. The loss of property taxes increased that subsidy to
approximately $1 ,000 per unit, each month. Council had never discussed encumbering the property in any way
and .this was not an appropriate time to put a condition like that on a piece of property. Staff time alone
exceeded the amount HAJC was asking and he thought the City had done more than its fair share for the
project.
Councilor Voisin noted affordable housing was a Council goal and a community need. To her, the $600,000
was a bargain. The project will bring $12million into the community to build these structures, provide jobs,
families and shopping revenue. HAJC had done its work, were told the fee were $55,000 and the bill was
$107,000. She thought Council needed to be fair, would not support the motion and suggested Council
consider Option 4 to waive all fees.
Councilor Jackson was present when the City appointed the property and noted the long negotiations among
staff, HAJC and Council. She was not under the impression the City was going to put affordable units on the
remaining 1.25 acres and thought the rules were being interpreted differently. Councilor Navickas stated the
City was possibly violating the law, annexing property themselves, not encumbering it with the requirements
placed on all developers and thought it was inappropriate. It placed a burden on HAJC who had done so much
for the.community. Roll Call Vote: Councilor Lemhouse, Jackson, Silbiger and Chapman, YES;
Councilor Voisin and Navickas, NO. Motion passed 4-2.
2. Shall Council formally approve the Ashland Fiber Network Strategic Business Plan?
Information Technology (IT) Director Rob Lloyd and AFN Operations Manager Michael Ainsworth provided a
presentation on the AFN Strategic Business Plan that included:
. AFN 2010 - Who We Are
. AFN 2010 - Where We Are At
. AFN 2010 - Key Plan Elements
. AFN 2012 - Key Plan Elements
. AFN Graphic of existing services and how they will be sourced
Mr. Lloyd explained how eventually Internet Protocol television (IPTV) would transmit to AFN be
retransmitted via the internet and local network rather than individual downloading that reduced bandwidth.
The market was not quite there yet but was where AFN needed to go.
. AFN 2012 - Council Feedback
. AFN 2012 - Stakeholder Feedback
ASHLAND CITY COUNCIL MEETING
August 17, 2010
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. AFN 2012 - Post-Draft Changes
. AFN 2012 - Other Considerations
. AFN 2012 - Final Considerations
Alan Oppenheimer/ll0 S Laurel Street/Expressed his appreciation for the proposed plan. Internet access
would be treated similar to a uti)itywith customers having the opportunity to acquire access when activating
water and electricity. Once they signed up for basic access, customers could purchase a cable modem, and
have immediate access to the local internet or build on basic access with one of the ISP partners. This level of
service was doable within a year. The service could expand to include energy management, computer phones,
and smart home and apply to everyone in Ashland. The vision was there and he was looking forward to
helping staff achieve it.
Mark Decker/621 Oak Knoll Drive!Explained he was an AFN customer with a background in
telecommunications and product marketing. He was excited about the proposed plan and thought it could
reinvigorate AFN, help overcome its bad image and fulfill some of the original vision. AFN was stuck in the
rut of trying to run like Charter or EarthLink and it was a losing game because that was a commodity business
and AFN was citizen owned. He liked that the plan focused on delivering value directly to the citizenry for a
product they owned. The low cost option would not affect existing revenue because it was low speed intemet.
It might take some customers from Charter and Qwest but mostly gave people the option to support local
comrnunity and save money. AFN should provide rnore services directly to the public. He recognized the
biggest problem for AFN was the image problem with people focusing on the debt that he thought was the
consequence of past mistakes. Ifthe community had the chance to support AFN, it would increase the market
share and be successful. He supported the plan and thought concerned ISP's were smart and resilient enough
to determine the new ground rules and continue being successful.
Councilor Silbiger/Chapman m/s to accept the AFN Business Plan as the strategic guidelines for the
future. DISCUSSION: Councilor Silbiger supported the plan and deferred to Mr. Lloyd and his team to
rnake the best possible decisions. The debt exists and the City will have to pay for it whether AFN does well
or closes. The operating margin of20% gross profit for the debt was good and indicated this was not a failing
business. The plan takes steps to improve bandwidth and feasible levels for customers to move up in speed. It
was important the relationship with the ISP' s was two way with both sides working together on marketing and
sharing information. Councilor Lemhouse preferred the City divest itself of AFN along with the debt and
ultimately hoped a private cornpany would purchase AFN, relieve the City of the debt and have AFN compete
in the market place. However, the debt was a real burden and the City needed to rnake the best of the situation.
He did not think it could function as a utility since customers could easily purchase another service and shared
concerns about the City owning something that competed in the marketplace. He had faith in staff and the plan
and felt strongly they would come up with the best direction. Councilor Voisin would support the motion but
had concerns on what staff would use to measure success. Mr. Lloyd noted where measurements and "Plan B"
were in the plan. Councilor Navickas thought the City should step in as an ISP and direct competition ifthere
were no revenue increases on a quarterly basis. Roll Call Vote: Councilor Silbiger, Navickas, Chapman,
Voisin, Jackson and Lemhouse, YES. Motion passed.
3. Does Council wish to provide a requested Letter of Commitment in support of a Community
Challenge Planning Grant application being prepared by the Rogue Valley Council of Governments
(RVCOG) entitled, "Institutionalizing Livability, Sustainability, and Affordability in Southern
Oregon through Comprehensive Planning" in association with the Greater Bear Creek Valley
Regional Problem Solving (RPS) Plan?
Community Development Director Bill Molnar explained the Rogue Valley Council of Governments
(RVCOG) was preparing a grant for money available through the Federal Department of Housing and Urban
Development and was requesting letters of support from the Cities in the region. The grant was for
approximately $2million and would build on the Regional Problem Solving Plan (RPS) on areas Ashland
deemed important. The grant would focus on ways to accommodate a greater percentage of future growth in
ASHLAND CITY COUNCIL MEETING
August 17. 2010
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the valley and major transportation corridor. Staff was supportive of grant. The grant project asked Associate
Planner Derek Severson to incorporate some of the visions Ashland had for a nodal project and alternate
transportation solutions the City had done in the Transportation System Plan (TSP). The TSP alone would be
Ashland's contribution towards the grant project.
Mayor Stromberg added the week before, he, Mr. Severson, Mr. Molnar and Public Works Director Mike
Faught appeared before the Jackson County Planning Commissioners to present Resolution 201 0-21 RPS Issue
Resolution Recornmendations and thought the process had been positive. The RVCOG grant would
complement what the existing RPS Plan lacked in the transportation and housing areas and strengthen those
parts.
Councilor Navickas would not support the letter but would have had the RPS Plan addressed annexing more
land within city lirnits in the initial plan. Now it appeared to be an effort to "green wash" a bad plan and make
it palatable to those who had opposed it through out the process.
Councilor Lemhouse/Jackson m/s to approve and sign the Letter of Commitment in support of the
Rogue Valley Council of Governments' Community Challenge Grant application. DISCUSSION:
Councilor Lemhouse stated it was a good thing to do and that Council should sign the letter. Councilor
Chapman agreed with Councilor Navickas and thought this was another way for RPS to gei more rnoney.
Councilor Jackson supported the letter and suggested.the grant was being confused with the land use action the
County took to adopt the regional plan. The grant proposal would provide funding to study how existing cities
throughout the valley could irnplement transportation. Councilor Voisin noted Ashland had no urban reserves
and the City would benefit only minimally. Mayor Stromberg explained RVCOG was adding the component
Council voted unanimously they should add. Councilor Voisin suggested Council wait until they had received
a response from the County Planning Commissioner regarding Resolution 20 I 0-21. City Administrator Martha
Bennett explained RVCOG needed a commitment by August 20,2010.
Roll Call Vote: Councilor Jackson, Silbiger and Lemhouse, YES; Councilor Chapman, Navickas and
Voisin NO; Mayor Stromberg broke the tie with a YES vote. Motion passed 4-3.
ORDINANCES. RESOLUTIONS AND CONTRACTS
1. Will Council approve Second Reading of an ordinance titled, "An Ordinance Creating Chapter
11.34 Relating to Storage of Personal and Recreational Vehicles and Amending AMC 11.24.020"
and move the ordinance on to Second Reading?
City Attorney Richard Appicello read the ordinance title aloud.
Councilor Lemhouse/Silbiger m/sto approve Ordinance #3032.
DISCUSSION: Councilor Navickas had numerous citizens approach him regarding large trucks idling in
front of their places while making deliveries and wanted to bring it forward at some point. Roll Call Vote:
Councilor Silbiger, Voisin, Chapman, Navickas, Lemhouse and Jackson, YES. Motion passed.
2. Will Council approve First Reading of ordinance titled, "An Ordinance Relating to Adoption ofthe
Oregon Fire Code and Amending AMC Chapter 15.28"?
Fire Marshal Margueritte Hickman explained the Fire Code was on a three-year cycle and while it already
applied to the State of Oregon, would allow the City to adopt amendments. Two changes included an
organizational change in AMC 15.28.070 titled Amendments to the Oregon Fire Code. The second would
create a rule in AMC 15.28.060 that allowed the Fire Department to apply seasonal type restrictions.
City Attorney Richard Appicello read the ordinance title aloud.
Councilor Jackson/Silbiger m/s to approve First Reading of ordinance and set Second Reading for the
next Council meeting. Roll Call Vote: Councilor Lemhouse, Chapman, Jackson, Silbiger, Voisin and
Navickas, YES. Motion passed.
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August 17,2010
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3. Will the City Council approve the second reading of the ordinances adopting Chapter 18.53
Croman Mill and related ordinance, Ashland Comprehensive Plan, and Comprehensive Plan and
Zoning map amendments, and the findings of fact to accompany the amendments?
Abstentions. Conflicts. Exparte Contact
Councilor Silbiger declared a conflict of interest and requested Council to recuse him from the discussion.
Councilor Jackson/Chapman m/s to recuse Councilor Silbiger. V oice Vote: all A YES. Motion passed.
Councilor Silbiger left the meeting at 9:55 p.m.
The remaining Council and Mayor had no other conflicts of interest or Exparte contacts to declare.
City Attorney Richard Appicello read the ordinance title and changes aloud.
Councilor Lemhouse/Navickas m/s approval and adoption of Ordinance #3030 amending City of
Ashland Comprehensive Plan to add a new Croman Mill District designation to Chapter IT, to add
Croman Mill plan designation on the adopted Land Use map legend and adopt the Croman Mill site
redevelopment plan and economic opportunities analysis as support documents to the Comprehensive
Plan as amended. Roll Call Vote: Councilor Navickas, Lemhouse and Jackson, YES; Councilor
Chapman and Voisin, NO. Motion passed 3-2.
City Attorney Richard Appicello read the ordinance title and changes aloud.
Councilor Jackson/Chapman m/s to approve Ordinance #3034 amending Ashland Land Use and
creating Chapter 18.53 Croman Mill as amended. Roll Call Vote: Councilor Navickas, Lemhouse and
Jackson, YES; Councilor Chapman and Voisin, NO. Motion passed 3-2
City Attorney Richard Appicello read the ordinance title aloud.
Planning Manager Maria Harris explained the staff recommendation that would ensure the required right-of-
way on the Central Boulevard matched the actual street width when built was in response to Council's
suggestion to remove on-street parking but retain the width. The additional width could not be used for
building or site development and was in addition to the 2-10 foot building setback requirement. The actual
street width included a 3-1ane cross section with a turn lane in the rniddle, two travel lanes, sidewalks and a
separated bike lane. Moving the bike lane to the street would require two additional feet to accommodate a 6-
foot bike lane.
Mr. Appicello read the ordinance changes aloud.
Councilor Navickas/Lemhouse m/s approval and adoption of Ordinance #3031 amending AMC
18.72.080 creating new Site Design and Use Standards for.Croman Mill District as amended.
DISCUSSION: Councilor Voisin asked for clarification on what would prevent a developer from building up
to the sidewalk without the right-of-way. Ms. Harris explained the required 2-10 foot building setback would
prevent developers from building that close to the sidewalk. Councilor Jackson further explained the reason
Council was narrowing the right-of-way at staffs suggestion was Council's earlier decision to remove on-street
parking. Councilor Navickas added one option for retaining the right-of-way might be light rail in the future
otherwise there would be a 16-foot sidewalk that would work for commercial frontage but not for this type of
development. Roll Call Vote: Councilor Jackson, Navickas and Lemhouse, YES; Councilor Voisin and
Chapman, NO. Motion passed 3-2.
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August 17, 2010
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City Attorney Richard Appicello read the ordinance title and changes aloud.
Councilor Jackson/Lemhouse m/s approval and adoption of Ordinance #3036 amending chapters in
AMC and Land Use for consistency with new chapter 18.53 Croman Mill as amended.
DISCUSSION: Councilor Navickas suggested using Floor Area Ratios for future development discussions.
Roll Call Vote: Councilor Navickas, Jackson and Lemhouse, YES; Councilor Chapman and Voisin,
NO. Motion passed 3-2.
City Attorney Richard Appicello read the ordinance title and changes aloud and noted changes to the maps
were rnade in accordance to Council direction.
Councilor Lemhouse/Jackson m/s approval and adoption of Ordinance #3033 amending Ashland
Comprehensive Plan to change Land Use map designation for newly created Croman Mill Plan and
amending City of Ashland zoning and Land Use control maps.
Roll Call Vote: Councilor Jackson, Navickas and Lemhouse, YES; Councilor Voisin and Chapman,
NO. Motion passed 3-2.
City Attorney Richard Appicello read the ordinance title aloud.
Councilor Navickas/Lemhouse m/s approval and adoption of Ordinance #3035 amending AMC
Chapter 15 to create LEED certified building priority.
DISC;USSION: Councilor Jackson noted the ordinance applied citywide for building permit-processing
priority and was not specific to Crornan Mill. Roll Call Vote: Councilor Navickas, Jackson, Voisin and
Lemhouse, YES; Councilor Chapman NO. Motion passed 4-1.
Councilor LemhouselNavickas m/s to approve the second reading with proposed amendments as noted
after each ordinance and to approve the Findings of Fact that accompany ordinances.
Roll Call Vote: Councilor Navickas, Lemhouse and Jackson, YES; Voisin and Chapman, NO. Motion
passed 3-2..
OTHER BUSINESS FROM COUNCIL MEMBERS/REPORTS FROM COUNCIL LIAISONS
1. Will Council consider placing on a . future agenda a resolution supporting OP AC's
recommendations on ocean-marine reserves?
Item pulled for future agenda.
Council and staff discussed adding idling trucks to a future agenda.
ADJOURNMENT
Meeting was adjourned at 10:26 p.m.
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Barbara Christensen, City Recorder