Loading...
City Council Minutes - 03/26/2019 City of'Tigard Tigard City Council Meeting Minutes • ,� March 26, 2019 STUDY SESSION Council Present: Mayor Snider,Council President Goodhouse,Councilor Lueb,Councilor Newton and Councilor Anderson Staff Present: City Manager Wine,City Attorney Rihala and City Recorder Krager A. Metro Councilor Dirksen was unable to attend so his Metro update will be rescheduled. B. Council Liaison Reports: Councilor Lueb reported on the National League of Cities Conference she attended in Washington DC. She said she found it very worthwhile and informative. Councilor Anderson also reported on the NLC and attended a Leading through Destruction session.The Regional Water Providers Consortium distributed their annual report and also their proposed"dues shares." Councilor Newton attended the Good Neighbor Center fundraiser which raised$37,000. She said there will be a Committee for Citizen Engagement meeting on April 17. Councilor Goodhouse reported on the NLC and asked for infrastructure requests to submit to the Federal Transportation Committee he sits on. Mayor Snider summarized the Washington County Coordinating Committee meeting and said Tigard's Safe Routes to School program was recommended for MSTIP grant funding. He said Washington County is starting to discuss requiring drug manufacturers to help pay for costs associated with the drug take-back program. City Attorney Rihala asked council if they have any concerns with home rule if this goes forward. Mayor Snider said he did not as it is a public health issue. Administrative Items: Mayor Snider asked if council concurred on sending a letter to Congressional delegations supporting the US Conference of Mayors legislative agenda priorities.There was consensus to ask staff to prepare the letter. Councilor Newton expressed concern about providing enough opportunities for citizens to weigh in on the budget this year due to the budget meeting schedule change and recommended the fifth Tuesday (April 30) be used for council outreach. She said she went door to door while campaigning and got into good discussions with citizens so she thought that council could take different neighborhoods and knock on doors. A card could be printed with budget information on one side and ways to connect and weigh in on the other. She asked if there was interest in trying this method of engagement once a month. Mayor Snider said there are two meetings cancelled in April and those nights might also be good. Council President Goodhouse said he likes going into the neighborhoods and knocking on doors but also wants to hold traditional outreach events. TIGARD CITY COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES —March 26, 2019 City of Tigard 1 13125 SW Hall Blvd.,Tigard, OR 97223 www.dgard-or.gov I Page 1 of 11 Mayor Snider asked about an ice cream social. City Manager Wine mentioned that moving the ice cream cart takes a lot of staff effort. Councilor Newton said she campaigned on weeknights at times and people were okay with that. Councilor Anderson said the first ever Camas Festival would be held at Dirksen Nature Park on April 27 and he asked if there was interest in having a table with coffee or something there for a council outreach opportunity. City Manager Wine said she will talk to public works staff to see how that can be accommodated at the event. Staff will prepare maps and handout cards for Council door to door outreach on April 27- 1. BUSINESS MEETING A. At 7:30 p.m. Mayor Snider called the City Council and Local Contract Review Board to order. B. City Recorder Krager called the roll. Present Absent Councilor Newton ✓ Councilor Lueb ✓ Councilor Anderson ✓ Mayor Snider ✓ Councilor Goodhouse ✓ C. Mayor Snider asked everyone to stand and join him in the Pledge of Allegiance. D. Mayor Snider asked staff and council if they had any Non-Agenda Items.There were none. 2. CITIZEN COMMUNICATION A. Follow-up to Previous Citizen Communication— There was none. B Update from Police Chief McAlpine -Chief McAlpine updated council on February statistics and highlighted several issues including business burglaries and unauthorized use of motor vehicles.The police have noticed patterns in burglaries from construction sites, Tigard Plaza,some convenience stores and gas stations. It is a work in progress and promising leads have been received. She said vehicle thefts are rising. In February five Honda CRVs were stolen and Tigard's crime analyst identified some individuals drawn to those and at the same time Beaverton Police issued a search warrant and six CRVs were recovered. She said 63 percent of the February workload was societal-type calls such as drugs,disorderly conduct,trespass, family,mental health or intoxication. There are six vacancies on staff and the department is trying to have the least impact on patrols. Chief McAlpine shared that the department is going through Oregon Accreditation Alliance application process and all files have been reviewed.An on-site visit was conducted. We will find out in April if we are awarded accreditation. TIGARD CITY COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES—March 26, 2019 City of Tigard 1 13125 SW Hall Blvd.,Tigard, OR 97223 www.tigard-or.gov I Page 2 of 11 Councilor Newton mentioned she was on a police ride along Monday night. She said calls were slow but most were of a societal nature which are very time consuming. She said she was impressed with the officer's ability to read the situation and figure out how to help these individuals. Mayor Snider mentioned that the Metropolitan Mayor's Consortium is pushing quite hard on legislation to address the uptick on auto theft which is due in part to a court ruling that was not favorable towards prosecuting these crimes. He asked Chief McAlpine if she was tracking what is happening with this in the Oregon Senate and House and whether she might consider testifying. Chief McAlpine said their OACP representative is monitoring this. Mayor Snider said this is a top priority with mayors. Councilor Lueb said she also went on a police ride along and found staff to be incredibly gracious with their time and patience with explaining what was going on and the challenges they face. The Chief thanked both councilors for taking the time to learn about the police and what they do. C. Tigard Area Chamber of Commerce—CEO Mollihan gave an update. Leadership Tigard learned about non-profits and boards.The Chamber's Government Affairs Policy Committee is in full swing and one thing they did was send a letter to the legislature regarding a paid family leave bill that would be very costly. She encouraged everyone to save the date for the Shining Stars Community Award Gala on May 3.The Tigard Downtown Alliance hired a new artwork coordinator and the Art Walk is scheduled for May 31 through June 2.Tigard Farmers Market will open May 5.A new website was launched for downtown Tigard. City Manager Wine added that the City Council will host Good Morning Tigard at City Hall on May 30. D. Citizen Communication—Sign-up Sheet. Jerry Hoffman, 10950 SW 89`h Avenue Tigard,OR 97223,spoke regarding the Thornwood development and said his house sits lowest on the block from any house in any direction of Thorn and 89 h Avenue. He has lived there for 40 years and dealt with water problems. He referred to comments that the water problems created from building the new homes and asked Council if enough had been done. He said there is a retaining wall but was unsure if there was a retention pond. He described an area where a drainage pipe dead ends right at his property. He said builder Steve White admitted he could not mitigate for all the water. He asked if the city could reopen the case or give drainage more consideration because more houses are coming in. Mayor Snider asked if he has spoken to city staff. City Manager Wine suggested that engineering staff could look at the situation. She said if the runoff is worse the city could look into it but may not be able to reopen the case. Mr. Hoffman invited Council to drive to his property on a rainy day, stand and watch the water. He said he would like to see a ditch and retention facility. City Manager Wine said she will ask staff to contact him. John Mentesana,8835 SW Thorn Street,Tigard,OR 97223, said he has spoken previously about the road on his property line where there are no sidewalks and several blind spots. He said he has returned to discuss water issues. He said at the Commission meeting on Feb 27 TIGARD CITY COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES —March 26, 2019 City of Tigard 1 13125 SW Hall Blvd.,Tigard,OR 97223 www.tigard-or.gov I Page 3 of 11 they said full water retention was not achieved by what was done with the ditch. This will be worse for Mr. Hoffman and other neighbors. The meeting states it was not achieved. He asked when it would be scheduled for a study session discussion. Mayor Snider replied that the city has provided a robust review and response and he had read a public statement in response to his previous questions. He noted that the water detention questions were the only new items heard tonight and the City Manager is prepared to respond. Mayor Snider said there will not be anything placed on a future agenda because there is no rationale to do so.But if there are more water questions and he has factual questions like Mr. Hoffman had, staff can respond to them,but there is no legal rationale to require a developer to do something different after the project is built. Mr. Mentesana said his son was almost hit by a car on the road on his property line and he is confused at council's response to not pursue this further. Mayor Snider said Council and staff have heard his concerns, evaluated them and he has found,along with other members of the Council that both staff and Council have done robust due diligence on the concerns Mr. Mentesana raised. Councilor Anderson noted that Mr. Mentesana referred to "commissioners"in his testimony and said that would probably be the Planning Commission for a land use hearing,not the City Council. He guessed that would be where Clean Water Services and others weighed in on water capacity. Mr. Mentesana asked about the item removed from the Study Session agenda. City Manager Wine clarified that the item from the Study Session to be rescheduled was Metro Councilor Dirksen's update as he was unable to attend tonight. She added that a citizen communication period is offered at business meetings but not workshops. Jamie Stasny, 17933 NW Evergreen Parkway#300,Beaverton, OR 97006 spoke about Council Goal 2. She said her firm has been working hard with staff and submitted a grant application to Metro and have started meeting with staff on the scope of the project for River Terrace South. Ms. Stasny said she wanted to clarify one point in Goal 2 as the language has changed a bit.The third bullet point talks about cost. The city wants the cost of this project to be borne by development,partners or grants obtained. What is not clarified is that these should be River Terrace planning project-related costs and they should be reasonable. She said conversations have just begun and she was optimistic about future conversations but it would be helpful to have clarification that these should be reasonable costs and specifically related to River Terrace. She requested this clarification be made either verbally or in the goal language itself. She noted that they want to break the project approach into phases. 3. CONSENT AGENDA (Tigard City Council and Local Contract Review Board) Mayor Snider read a description of typical Consent Agenda items and the list of items being considered tonight. A. APPROVE CITY COUNCIL MINUTES • January 29,2019 • February 5,2019 B. CONSIDER CONTRACT AWARD FOR AGENT OF RECORD SERVICES TIGARD CITY COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES —March 26, 2019 City of Tigard 1 13125 SW Hall Blvd.,Tigard,OR 97223 www.tigard-or.gov Page 4 of 11 C. CONSIDER CONTRACT AWARD FOR RIGHT-OF-WAY MOWING SERVICES D. CONSIDER CONTRACT AWARD FOR A BOOM/BUCKET TRUCK E. CONSIDER CONTRACT AWARD FOR SEWER AND STORMLINE REHABILITATION SERVICES F. CONSIDER CONTRACT AWARD FOR ON-CALL UTILITY BUSINESS AND RATES PLANNING SERVICES Councilor Lueb moved to approve the Consent Agenda as presented and Councilor Newton seconded the motion. Mayor Snider conducted a vote and the motion passed unanimously. Yes No Councilor Newton ✓ Councilor Lueb ✓ Councilor Anderson ✓ Mayor Snider ✓ Council President Goodhouse ✓ 4. CONSIDER A RESOLUTION GRANTING EXEMPTION FROM PROPERTY TAXES UNDER TMC 3.50 FOR NON-PROFIT LOW-INCOME PROPERTIES Finance and Information Services Director LaFrance and Confidential Executive Assistant Lutz presented this item. This action would approve exempting city property taxes on four low-income properties owned and operated by Community Partners for Affordable Housing and one property operated by Resident Resources. Tigard Municipal Code Chapter 3.5 allows organizations providing low-income housing that meet particular criteria to apply for property tax exemption on an annual basis. The properties completed their applications by March 1 as required. Staff recommends approval of the resolution. Council President Goodhouse moved to approve Resolution No. 19-09 and Councilor Newton seconded the motion. City Recorder Krager read the number and title of the resolution. Mayor Snider conducted a vote and the motion passed unanimously. Resolution No.19-09—A RESOLUTION GRANTING AN EXEMPTION FROM PROPERTY TAXES UNDER TIGARD MUNICIPAL CODE SECTION 3.50 FOR FIVE NON-PROFIT LOW-INCOME HOUSING PROJECTS OWNED AND OPERATED BY COMMUNITY PARTNERS FOR AFFORDABLE HOUSING (CPAH)AND RESIDENT RESOURCES OREGON Yes No Councilor Newton ✓ Councilor Lueb ✓ Councilor Anderson ✓ Mayor Snider ✓ Council President Goodhouse ✓ TIGARD CITY COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES—March 26, 2019 City of Tigard 1 13125 SW Hall Blvd.,Tigard, OR 97223 www.tigard-or.gov I Page 5 of 11 5. CONSIDER RESOLUTION OF SUPPORT FOR METRO REGIONAL TRAVEL OPTIONS (RTO) GRANT FOR SAFE ROUTES TO SCHOOLS PROGRAM Senior Transportation Planner Roth presented this item and said this resolution will authorize staff to submit a Metro Regional Travel Options (RTO) grant application to continue Tigard's successful Safe Routes to School program through the 2019-22 budget years. If awarded,this grant would enable Tigard staff to continue the program and expand to high schools,better partner with Tigard- Tualatin School District and include busing as well as walking and biking. Councilor Newton asked if the in-kind staff time is for the school coordinator. Senior Transportation Planner Roth said the total program cost over three years is $315,000 which includes $60,000 of in-kind match which is consistent with how the program has been run over the last several years. Councilor Anderson moved to approve Resolution No. 19-10. Councilor Lueb seconded the motion. City Recorder Krager read the number and title of the resolution and Mayor Snider conducted a vote. The motion passed unanimously. Resolution No. 19-10—A RESOLUTION AUTHORIZING A REGIONAL TRAVEL OPTIONS GRANT TO CONTINUE TIGARD'S SAFE ROUTES TO SCHOOL PROGRAM Yes No Councilor Newton ✓ Councilor Lueb ✓ Councilor Anderson ✓ Mayor Snider ✓ Council President Goodhouse ✓ 6. APPROVE AN IGA WITH WASHINGTON COUNTY TO ACCEPT MSTIP OPPORTUNITY FUNDS TO SUPPORT SAFE ROUTES TO SCHOOL PROGRAM Senior Transportation Planner Roth presented this agenda item and said this IGA with Washington County allows the city to receive and account for$40,000 in MSTIP Opportunity Funds to pay for the match required by the Metro Regional Transit Options grant for the current Safe Routes to School program. Mayor Snider expressed appreciation to staff for working so hard on this program. Councilor Lueb moved for approval of the IGA with Washington County as presented. Council President Goodhouse seconded the motion. Mayor Snider conducted a vote and the motion passed unanimously. Yes No Councilor Newton ✓ Councilor Lueb ✓ Councilor Anderson ✓ Mayor Snider ✓ Council President Goodhouse ✓ TIGARD CITY COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES —March 26, 2019 City of Tigard 1 13125 SW Hall Blvd.,Tigard,OR 97223 www.tigard-or.gov I Page 6 of 11 7. CONSIDER ADOPTION OF CITY COUNCIL GOALS 2019-2021 City Manager Wine presented this agenda item. She said at the goal setting session on February 12 Council came up with five goal statements for the two-year timeframe of 2019-2021. She read them and said further discussion at the March 5 Council meeting led to some refined language to clarify the strategic initiatives. An updated draft was included in the packet for this meeting. Council President Goodhouse referred to earlier testimony from Jamie Stasny during Citizen Communication and asked if other councilors felt the language addresses her concerns. City Manager Wine said the conversation has just begun on what the project details will be and if the city is to meet the Council goal to not have the urban growth boundary expansion planning supplant or disrupt existing work,it will need to backfill existing staffing. She was not averse to adding the words reasonable and project related. Councilor Newton said it seemed clear to her and she understands it to be specific to making that development happen. Councilor Lueb agreed that it is already specific to the project and did not think anything needed to be added to the bullet point. Councilor Anderson said the point is that Ms. Stasny did not want overreach into any other projects and he said he was giving verbal agreement to that. Mayor Snider asked if there were any staff questions on Ms. Stasny's comments on phasing. City Manager Wine said staff has begun discussions on what those phases might look like from their perspective and understand the concept of breaking the project into phases. Councilor Newton said under Goal 1 -Strategy 1.1, she is already working with the Committee for Citizen Engagement on Strategy 1.1 and plans to bring something to Council in the next month or so that would reflect that goal. Mayor Snider summarized that the goals have been vetted robustly and in the last week he has received positive feedback from a variety of community leaders and former council members and he appreciated them providing that input. He said he feels confident that these goals put the City on the right future path. Councilor Anderson moved to approve the 2019-2021 Council Goals as presented and Council President Goodhouse seconded the motion. Mayor Snider conducted a vote and announced that the motion passed unanimously. Yes No Councilor Newton ✓ Councilor Lueb ✓ Councilor Anderson ✓ Mayor Snider ✓ Council President Goodhouse ✓ Mayor Snider thanked the Council,City Manager Wine and the community for putting forth effort towards setting Tigard's course for the next two years. TIGARD CITY COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES —March 26, 2019 City of Tigard 1 13125 SW Hall Blvd.,Tigard,OR 97223 www.tigard-or.gov I Page 7 of 11 8. INITIAL DISCUSSION OF POTENTIAL LOCAL OPTION LEVY AND/OR BOND City Manager Wine presented this agenda item which is an initial discussion on whether to seek a local option levy and/or a bond measure. She said during goal setting Council identified this as a goal for the 2020 timeframe. The goal setting session did not allow time for a lengthy discussion on how this would be defined and she did not hear consensus on what it should be or the timeframe. She said the Leadership Team was present,including Finance and Information Services Director LaFrance and Communications Manager Wyatt who are available for questions. She said staff is interested in what Council needs to know to develop a decision path. She said one thing talked about after the unsuccessful levy last year was that if there is a focus on police and public safety,we may want to consider adding a police facility bond. Ms.Wine noted that staff provided a draft work plan and a draft communications plan in the agenda packet. Staff believes that there are nine-twelve months of work to determine what should be in a levy. Some community members said that the 2018 levy proposal was not well defined enough and it was not clear what the community would get from that proposal so we are trying to address that. Staff would like to hear what kind of communication and refinement through community engagement Council would like to have.Another point of learning from the 2018 levy is that after it is filed staff and materials created by staff must remain neutral and factual. The more time pre-referral we have,the more we can say to the community about what this measure could deliver. Council President Goodhouse said he wants to see a public safety levy and a bond for a new police facility and he would like to come to a decision soon using the data we have and then spend more time going out into the community doing outreach. He requested a couple of options for levy amounts and what a bond would provide. Councilor Anderson agreed with the public safety focus on police and said a police station is badly needed. It needs more than a renovation;it needs a scrape off and an entirely new building. He wants staff to provide ballpark options and said the more specific,such as the number of officers needed,the better because people want to know what they are voting on. Councilor Lueb said she has heard concerns recently regarding streets and sidewalks and asked if the focus on safety would include any sidewalk backlog improvements. Council President Goodhouse agreed with the safety factor and said he asked for a sidewalk gap program when he first came onto council. But when sidewalks were added to the recent levy try and it muddied the message. He suggested looking at police and safety and then asking in a year or two for a sidewalk gap bond that would take care of Safe Routes to Schools, trails and sidewalks. Mayor Snider said when staff did the gap analysis referred to by Council President Goodhouse;the cost came to roughly$100 million. Councilor Lueb responded that she was aware of the costs and did not think it needed to be done at one time,but she has heard the concerns and was interested in some options,especially with the City's walkability goal and upcoming ADA expansion. She asked how these needs would be addressed for all community members. Councilor Newton said she supported options based on police department services and a new building. She said we need to start tomorrow and shop options with citizens. At the same time we need to talk to them about what it costs and ask,"Do we fund part of it and what does that look TIGARD CITY COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES —March 26, 2019 City of Tigard 1 13125 SW Hall Blvd.,Tigard,OR 97223 www.tigard-or.gov I Page 8 of 11 like?" People need options and choices. There will also be questions about what we do with the money we already receive. We need to be able to talk about park maintenance or library service levels because if we are going to shift to police on our current general fund,we can't cover these other things reasonably. Mayor Snider asked if she was willing to include street and sidewalk ideas and Councilor Newton replied that could be an option but what she heard from talking to people is that the more specific we can be (response time,number of officers),the better. Council President Goodhouse recommended to keep with police and a police station. One option could be sidewalks but more focus could be on police. City Manager Wine said when the city went out for a levy in 2018 we asked for$1.18 and that size of a levy would bring in roughly$8 million. She said in terms of scoping there was no intention to go out for a levy that would entirely fund the police department but would be about enhancing or ensuring that patrol districts are fully staffed, for example. She said we also learned in 2018 that it is confusing to talk about having a levy fund something we are already doing. She said staff will bring back options for services that complement,enhance or ensure services are at an adequate level in the police department. She added that$1.18 was more than some voters were willing to vote for. Councilor Newton said if there is concern about maintaining financial support for other functions we need to be prepared to address that. Councilor Anderson asked about the upcoming ADA number coming up in the budget. Finance and Information Services Director LaFrance said a standard Council set in their goals for the next two years is that at least 10 percent of the transportation Capital Improvement Plan goes towards pedestrian or bike facilities,sidewalks,bike lanes and trails. Councilor Anderson said,"With that said,we should keep chipping away at it as we are,and focus more on a police levy and facility." Mayor Snider said he was hearing more consensus for a police levy and facility. City Manager Wine said staff will bring back options for public safety facility and operations. She said the second question was the timeframe. Staff agrees that the sooner,more clearly defined and the fewer changes,the better. She said staff proposed engaging the Bond and Levy Task Force to advise Council on what the levy and bond package should look like and asked if there were others Council wanted to engage. In response to a question from Council President Goodhouse, City Manager Wine said staff heard two lines of thinking at the goal setting session. Councilor Newton suggested listening to the public between March and July to get input on options.Then in July,seek public feedback on a proposal which would get refined through September. Council President Goodhouse said it seemed to him that a decision needed to be reached sooner so more time can be spent talking to the public. He said it was not a complex bond and levy. Mayor Snider added that there has already been more direction provided than for the 2018 levy. He said the city wouldn't be asking if public safety is the right thing;people would be asked if traffic enforcement is more important than school officers, for example. Councilor Newton suggested approaching people with the question,"These are the services we are talking about, what do you think?" She said there may be a lot of support indicated prior to July and we may be comfortable moving ahead sooner. TIGARD CITY COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES—March 26, 2019 City of Tigard 1 13125 SW Hall Blvd.,Tigard,OR 97223 www.tigard-or.gov I Page 9 of 11 Councilor Anderson agreed with activating the Bond and Levy Task Force,noting that they would have more narrow parameters this time. Finance and Information Services Director LaFrance said staff will bring options to the Council meeting of April 23 to help narrow down the services and estimate the size. Council President Goodhouse suggested reaching out in the next week or so to former task force members to see who is interested and available. He said a roundtable outreach session could be scheduled for a workshop and seek a variety of business owners and community leaders. Councilor Newton agreed it is a good idea to integrate the Bond and I evy Task Force. She said a community in Georgia gathered citizens interested in being on a committee by going door to door and asking if people want to get involved. She said this will also be a topic of conversation at the Committee for Citizen Engagement meeting on April 17. Mayor Snider agreed with reforming the Bond and Levy Task Force but suggested that Tigard has some gifted and experienced community leaders and elected officials that have run campaigns and he wanted to add these experienced people to the task force or have a separate group. Councilor Anderson said as far as selling the bond goes,there is nothing more convincing than offering open house tours of the police station. He also suggested having police leadership attend events and outreach. Council President Goodhouse said he and Councilor Lueb attended a facilitated conversation on equity in the Triangle that was overseen by a moderator. He suggested the same format including tables and a moderator at each table for a community meeting held at the high school or the library. Mayor Snider agreed and said the Bond and Levy Task Force could be included. Councilor Newton supported having one or two meetings with the previous task force to get their input. Councilor Lueb said she likes the idea of the task force and supports diversifying it because only good things can come from that. She recommended designating a certain amount of messaging to the task force and then each of them could take control of communications,designating a certain amount of messaging and then taking control of communication at different kinds of meetings to meet people where they are. She said there needs to be a central group that can put together a cohesive message. Councilor Newton added that the CCE could be included in that group. City Manager Wine said she was not hearing major timeline changes from the council. Communications Manager Wyatt will incorporate Council's suggestions into the communication plan and bring back a refined plan for consideration. Council President Goodhouse reiterated that there needs to be an education campaign and the city should respond to questions in a timely manner and post the responses. 9. NON-AGENDA ITEMS There were none. 10. EXECUTIVE SESSION None was held. TIGARD CITY COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES —March 26, 2019 City of Tigard 1 13125 SW Hall Blvd.,Tigard,OR 97223 www.tigard-or.gov I Page 10 of 11 11. ADJOURNMENT At 8:54 p.m. Councilor Anderson moved for adjournment. Council President Goodhouse seconded the motion. Mayor Snider conducted a vote and the motion passed unanimously. Yes No Councilor Newton ✓ Councilor Lueb ✓ Councilor Anderson ✓ Mayor Snider ✓ Council President Goodhouse ✓ Carol A. Krager, City Recorder Atte J n B. Snider,Mayor Date TIGARD CITY COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES — March 26, 2019 City of Tigard 1 13125 SW Hall Blvd.,Tigard, OR 97223 www.dgard-or.gov I Page 11 of 11