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City Council Packet - 04/16/1990 i API CITY OF TIGARD OREGON TIGARD CITY COUNCIL A G E N D A STUDY MEETING APRIL `16, 1590 6:30. PM TIGARp. CIUIG CENTIwR PUBLIC NOTICE: Anyone wishing to speak on an agenda item 13325..S1N HALL BLVd should sign on the appropriate sign-up sheet(s). If no sheet is :>;1GlRCY:.:<.±C3REGN available, ask to be recognized by the Mayor at the beginning of that agenda Item. VIItor' s sA9'enda items are asked to be two Inutes or less. Longer matters can be set for a future Agenda b contacting either the Mayor th y or the City Administrator. • STUDY SESSION 1. WORKSHOP DISCUSSION WITH METRO COUNCILOR RICHARD DEVLIN (6:30 PM) 2. WORKSHOP DISCUSSION WITH TUALATIN VALLEY ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION PRESIDENT MARY TOBIAS (7:00 PM) 3. WORKSHOP DISCUSSION WITH THE TIGARD WATER DISTRICT (7:30 PM) COUNCIL REPORTS: (Update on Boards and Committees) • Mayor Edwards C o Councilor Eadon • Councilor Johnson • Councilor Kasten • Councilor Schwartz 5. NON-AGENDA ITEMS • Council and Staff 6. EXECUTIVE SESSION: The Tigard City Council will go into Executive Session under the provisions-of ORS 192.660 (1) (d), (e), & (h) to discuss labor relations, real property transactions, current and pending litigation issues. 7. ADJOURNMENT cca416 COUNCIL AGENDA -APRIL 16, 1990 -PAGE 1 T. T I G A R D C I T Y C O U N C I L STUDY MEETING MINUTES - APRIL 16, 1990 - 6:30 PM 1. ROLL CALL: Present: Council President Valerie Johnson; Councilors Carolyn Eadon, Joe Kasten, and John Schwartz. Staff Present: Patrick Reilly, City Administrator; Ed Murphy, Community Development Director; Liz Newton, Community Relations Coordinator; Tim Ramis, City Attorney; and Catherine Wheatley, City Recorder. 2. WORKSHOP DISCUSSION WITH METRO COUNCILOR RICHARD DEVLIN Metro Councilor Richard Devlin reported on the following topics: - Solid waste rates were reviewed: "tipping fees" (refers to garbage trucks) will increase by 20%. He advised that Metro is allowed to revise fees annually on a consumer price index formula. - St. John's Landfill is scheduled to close in January 1991. - Transfer station site for Washington County is still under consideration. - Ballot Measure 1, which will appear on the May 15, 1990 ballot, would amend the State Constitution if passed. Presently local vehicle registration fees must be used for road purposes only. Measure 1 would allow local voters to decide how local fees can be used in this region (i.e., combine road improvements with light rail, public transit, and special services for the elderly and disabled). Councilor Devlin advised he thought it would be a mistake to impose this measure on a county-by-county basis. - Measure 26-1 (May 15 ballot) proposes a tax base for operations of the Metro Washington Park Zoo. Proposal is for 15 cents per $1,000 of assessed property valuation. - Measure 26-2 (May 15 ballot) proposes a 3-year serial levy to fund renovation of the Children's Zoo. Proposal is for 4 cents per $1,000 of assessed valuation. CITY COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES - APRIL 16, 1990 - PAGE 1 - Unified Sewerage Agency has requested Metro to support a ban on the sale of phosphates (in detergents) in the Metro area. Such a ban now exists for about a third of the nationwide population. A regional library system will probably not be discussed this year or even next year. He advised he has been soliciting names for nominations for Boundary Commission vacancies and acknowledged it was important for the Boundary Commission to understand the basic needs of cities. 3. WORKSHOP DISCUSSION WITH TUALATIN VALLEY ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION (TVEDC) PRESIDENT MARY TOBIAS TVEDC President Mary Tobias updated Council on the following issues: - Legal action on the Western Bypass is now at the Oregon j Supreme Court level. STOP is asking for reversal of the Court of Appeals decision which said Metro had merely made a recommendation (not a land use decision) by designating a broad corridor as a possible bypass route in their regional transportation plan. i A - TVEDC presented testimony at several ODOT Six-Year Plan i update hearings. The text of this testimony was distributed to Council for their information. - Oregon Economic Development Department toured Washington County in February. No Oregon Tourism Alliance funds were allocated to Washington County; the County had been x hopeful to receive funds to assist with upgrade of the County Fairgrounds. - TVEDC will sponsor a dialogue, on the last Monday in May, on the topic of "Growth/No Growth." Several Council members noted this is an issue of major concern right now especially with regard to school capacities. 4. WORKSHOP DISCUSSION WITH TIGARD WATER DISTRICT a. Present from the Tigard Water District: Dennis Borman, Chairman of the Water Board; Board Members: Audrey Castile, John Kvistad, and Walter Stronach. Water District Staff present: John Miller, Administrator; Randy Volk, Superintendent. CITY COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES - APRIL 16, 1990 - PAGE 2 b. The main topic of discussion was the proposed water authority as presented by the Wolf Creek and Metzger Water Districts. The Tigard Water District reported that they have not seen any technical documentation which supports the formation of the water authority. John Miller advised they have retained an engineering firm to look at their operations and long-term water supply. This report will be available within the next 30 days. In response to a question from Councilor Eadon, Mr. Miller stated he was sure the Tigard Water District could service all planned new construction through the year 2010. He reported TWD enjoys one of the lowest bond indebtedness rates in the area and pointed out they also have a new facility which is paid for. Councilor Kasten, who is also a member of the Metzger Water District Board, responded to questions and noted history of the water authority discussions. There was discussion on new testing requirements being formulated by the Environmental Protection Agency. It is difficult to estimate costs for these tests until the EPA has made their final decision on which tests will be required. 4. NON-AGENDA ITEMS: a. City Administrator noted a request by Mona Steele of the Babe Ruth organization for financial assistance for a baseball diamond. Land will be donated by the School District; however, assistance was needed for preparation of the diamond area. After Council discussion, consensus was to decline the request for a monetary donation. Staff would work with Ms. Steele to find a way to create the baseball area. Efforts would include contacting the "Friends of Tigard Parks." Also, the City may provide crews to assist in the development of the diamond area if another alternative could not be found. b. Council discussed dissemination of information on the upcoming City ballot measures; that is, the President's Parkway Development Plan and the Charter Amendment increasing the Mayor's term of office to four years. Consensus was to hold an Open House (Town Hall) Meeting on either May 9 or 10. Staff will confirm date when set. CITY COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES - APRIL 16, 1990 - PAGE 3 v 5. ADJOURNMENT: 10:10 P.M. Catherine Wheatley, City Re rder ATTESTS Gex-ald R. Edwards, Mayor Date•_ 5114/ ro ccm416 E i i 1 L CITY COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES - APRIL 16, 1990 - PAGE 4; r d TIMES PUBLISHING COMPANY Legal P.O. BOX 370 PHONE (503) 684.0360 NoticeT#7521 T BEAVERTON, OREGON 97075 Legal Notice Advertising ❑ Tearsheet Notice RECEMM ~ City of Tigard ' PO Box 23397 APR 191990 ' Tigard, Or 97223 • ❑ Duplicate Affidavit • CIR OF AFFIDAVIT OF PUBLICATION STATE OF OREGON, COUNTY OF WASHINGTON, )as' cy 1. Judith Koehler ~ being first duly sworn, depose and say that I am the Advertising Director, or his principal clerk, of the Ti9ard Tin12S 1 -4 a newspaper of general circulatic~lg as gefined in ORS 193.010 and 193.020; published at in the afore pid county and state; that the pity Council Study Meeting a printed copy of which is hereto annexed, was published in the entire issue of said newspaper for OnA successive and consecutive in the following issues: April 12, 1990 Subscribed and sworn o before me this A- -0 Apri1,1990 12th s ad, Notary Public for Oregon V My Commission Expires: 6/9/93 AFFIDAVIT The o116wing sdlected;llgenda,atiiiii i p ii: 6"'f1our infonma6n. Further; information and fullagendas may be olitameii from the Cit}+ Re- corder,'13125 S.W Hall Boulevard,rTigard, Oreg6rr.972231or by calling 639-4171 CITY COUNCIL. STuDy MEETING APRIL 16, 1990 - 6:30 PM $ TIGARD CIVIC CENTER, TOWN HALL 23125S',1/ HAIJ BOULEVARD, TIGARD, OREGON Workshop` discilssionk! • ,Metro Councilor Richard Devlin • TltalaUn'ValleyyEconomrc'zeelopmentCorpor4tion-PreiidenEMary . a v t F :Tobias • ' Tigard Water District Bodrd Executive SessioiTr , and ' thepmvisions of.. ORS ,192;660,(1)` (d), 7 (e), & (h), to discuss labor'relaGons, real property transactions and cuirCnr& pendin g, uorx,lssueS 0 ` as: r `TT7521 Publish Apra 1,1990+' ~w;s f. j`. l 1 t 9 zoo FACTS Facts about ballot measures 26-1 and 26-2 May 15,1990 MR 4w „K Aw 4M Measure 26-1 Voters in the Metropolitan Service District have funded the Metro Washington Park Zoo since a G. 1976 with serial levies. The current levy will - expire at the end of June 1990. A source of funding needs to be re-established di,, r for the continued operation of the zoo. A tax base for the zoo will guarantee permanent i trx-~ r li~Fi r`? operation of the zoo, including such important ;•Ir ; • programs as: i~i{i E(I}i r;:;.' ,i::;;;:;;.. • Protection of highly endangered species, such ; fir (E F•:;; : as the Asian elephant, Humboldt penguin, chim- P E anzee, black rhino panda, snow leopard and Siberian tiger red i't'`'''`:'`'`i` i ' • professional care and nurturing of all animals at the zoo • maintenance and operation of all exhibits and $ nds • award-winning educational and con ;r nervation N 111 programs More :g# ~'i•~''~,:~:~: people visit the zoo than any other y paid Itt~`' t # F attraction in the state. In addition to economic #1tFtliFf#t} t •iiFFE, •c~; , 4~~F , • ; benefit to the region, the zoo provides animal ~ . ' :•F•: ;:F;;,;,;;;,;,,;,,s,,;~;~~#:':?~;•:.:•: related education, recreation and cultural it ;:1, offerings i!' ! `•1# :;ii to residents of th fi,tii•,,,,.; a metropolitan area. .E• :•F•. ~t [ The z 00 . # :•F: has n0 ~j e ma '`r n ( en t tax f base ~ p or other . t•t` :t F•~:Ft 2 , f stable 44 source of fu n din $ , ~ti`~ 4 , t0 maintain is oPera- 'F. ti B•F on The tax base, proposed dedicated to the +.,,•F,Fv'.$ zoo will t<• , - provide 50 percent of the operating 4`.• We costs. The ;E,, , 4,,.\,, other 50 / ,44 4,44 will continue ti`.444 4., , percent to .F4a 4•. be •~L4%--.• 4.44 •:44`. :•~:F earned from zoo admissions and ',F,,•, i:• concession K' • K. sales. ~•F<: Ff ti •4 `4•f. The r 0 sed tax .4 . base f operations w 0 •4• ul d 4 ~~.;i[.. ii,i;;;;}viii>....t•,~:.. .;t; Ilk- 4~ti i 3 levy 15 cents per $1,000 of assessed property valuation. On a $60,000 house, this will cost about 75 cents per month or $9 per year. The expiring levy, funding operations and capital improvements, raised 17 cents per $1,000 assessed valuation, costing $10.20 per year for three years. Upon approval of a tax base the Metro Council will allocate the entire amount of the tax base to the operation of the Metro Washington Park Zoo. F. Measure 26-2 Voters in the Metropolitan Service District have funded capital improvements at the Metro Washington Park Zoo since 1976. The current levy for operations and improvement will expire at the end of June 1990. To provide necessary renovation to the 30- year-old Children's Zoo a source of funding needs to be established. The proposed three- year serial levy will allow the zoo to: • improve facilities to house and care for the animals • provide educational programs which engage youngsters and adults in learning about the animal world • double the number of animals for exhibits and educational programs in the Children's Zoo • instill in all zoo visitors an understanding and appreciation of the relationship between s: wa { 1 l animals and us. ^l . More people visit the zoo than any other paid attraction in the state. In addition to economic benefit to the region, the zoo provides animal related education, recreation and cultural iE ifj +ili offerings to residents of the metropolitan area. ` Ui"_ ; a 1# a _ The proposed 3-year serial levy will provide a ~E? ~►i;j~t itt total of $4,536,000 to fund renovation of the Children's Zoo. It would cost 4 cents per $1,000 i assessed valuation. ~~ili` !jy';'~ On a $60,000 house, it would i e• ?iji :i`jl;,'ii;i : cost $2.40 per year, or about 2 0 cents per month. The levy is outside a 6 percent limitation speci- fied ~ in the Oregon Constitution. The expiring le funding operations and capital improvements raised 17 cents per $1,000 as- sessed valuation costin .2 g $10 0 per year for three years. 4 jij}iij:a`,',~i: .;.Si;};};•; j~;;;ti7!:!;i;i•;. '::7: t0i4a'•'J•''• 4~a`aL :6ii ~f?iiii' t,~,,tj'`a `t•:•••.:L•:;•;::i::i~::c::•:~ , • ~E~ c s E`:• .tB !St` { . f . •r•. 1 2~t pF fi i`2`. ttj, RRR , tai } ~a. h.• szq F. t t: VV`: ati •,V4 MEMO 2000 SW First Ave. i ti ;c Portland OR 97201 (503) 221-1646 . Printed on recycled PaPer, ` `'ti'p ~ ~ ; , of course .V IZE"01- ELI eceive income fro}u (tispc)sa► 1~"' within the 1 ( Four fttucts r dste facilities collected at solid w' come FunU revenues. 01W rations. district. GB:; x)18 i Ste Operations al' Rarl)ace tlispasal Close in 0 Sol( fr()►n D Landfill, (vile t j~ebt Srrfice pcintarily St Johns ,,e trans' ?.~71.80a Station- a cat These arr. the oath Capital Fund ,1).l 1991, and Metro S 1.) 91:1: ling facility • ce ter and recyc St Johns Rr er 1,751,11`) ~,tc (~pcratlon'^ ~ •1.132.185 Solid u~ ;68 Rchahilitatiolll bulanrr l5•):ll. ~ l;rcitlninr centre. Etdlancement Disp0sul frt re 1 3. Ll l,d`)2 Ly11 fee rece►i5fet• charm' 9-l().$00 Kc~ita}}a1 t!''n`hurce~ i9`);39b Con}'chic►►`'0 awo fern 131.1116 State vat}}dfi11 rs a (;2,3Rehabilitation lr Other 3U.i} 1.821 Total t4` _w } tv~ De'l)aruue}lt ( f wit Ch(' }lality luaus fur solid waste Debt Servlee 1' t to lluenl and r \tetr° ~nvironmentai Q vital dev ' 1 T1le Call{- . i A ;~°.fr~:~•-- l,nnd{dl and 1 }llnuinr• an(1 c.al Sttltion• f facili- 5 the Si. 1o11n~ well. e~l)e►lse• system 1 ' Metro Sautll .tint, 1(~ 1 }}tti ( 1 t 3 x. dttnt} t)f l)tl(1r }lllnt° e)lletlts to )t . ltnl' cl t'ttnat•y iltl )Cl )t•pµ,me The Opcr' p d eta rte to deter c for ilnl file ac t Sul}th Station was the wrre of a }}e}v )a 1~ for final n„ g o tal v'and ► ' landfill rlosw'e. t siti c an n,~~,.z•.,a~t... 1'hc • tilt John..S ' l nvirumt►cntal sUu lcs , tra►►':l firs and St' ~(rv t'uncl will V , for final close the landfill. n, anti a ,r( to the r St. Jti1'►" lte•:' how to satevy .•it'haoc latin0 - The Rehahihthe a stake ( area 1 u} to tied to enhance t he ~t itiuu was unfit' ilte closure at}tl nlaintcnanc transfer }}u'suet (u11tra .1 vias l a cump()'tinr tau°n ' the culttract for mass \~aste VOW(_ hnh,1110,t}}el}t l u►}d is u utiuti0}}. landfill. ar01u}d the ue}v landfill. ~c! to}fir} n+ { (llnieal inf0►•tllaltion al facility }vas a1= h83 `)18 117(1 etl te' prbt Service lion pru~► am` { ' t tiritir<' Wall", 1)1'Q d I. ;:1p:380 prantutiu►ile(lueuli(! u a ' Oa}pitul Fan l.l,~l2a gt Jolu}s I undfiU 2t3.1 93,18:) l,ndulgbala►t( d '3,i04 \tbuillistrI111011 ( 1•~ 9.l 13 St. Johns Ltesercc llndgc► :al fiuut}et' halu}we Operations > >b0 Gndinn )lunnitl~ 1.0;1:.:•- Rchub'►lltutioni 5,1.681 sys}etn 1 l.oau.p55 6,<138 n I, W s'rvict 1.'1)t 4Ul Hhunr and ruritu crier 1 l'; Niuterials and ' Waste red}n tit)!;e t~ 1 6wi?i,ib~ ptulittrhalant'(' lntrri'lutla`a li e 1:,ntlin~ 30.0 i 1.821 Total i HL.Tilm OF I INN-mm NIT-Im m r%MmMVuuzi ENLM r 4 Four funds receive income from disposal fees Fund revenues come collected at solid waste facilities within the Solid Waste Operations arhage disposal opcrauons• district. primarily front g due to close in c 683.918 These are the St. Johns Landfill, "garbage trans- Debt Service 1991, and Aletro South Station, a > /74 804 facility. Capital Fund fer and recyctino 12 843,704 Solid Waste Operations St. Johns Reserve g 4.132,785 1,551,119 Be&oiogbalunec 15.951,768 liluu litat4otl Disposal tee revenue 4.441.902 E Enhancement User fee revenue :3.411,092 11„ejonal transfer charges 940.800 Convenience eharges 5og.396 State landfill siting fees 431, 706 Rehabilitation fees 462,372 Other g 30.071,82] Total s Department of The Debt Service st and leans for solid waste alily oh,ts landfill and lieu' Environmental Q system planning, and capital development and The Operation of the S' Jn•imar } bud'P't expense. ' South Station Was tine existing ilt- Tile sittng of a new improvements for impru 'oments ont Environmetttnl studies nd were started si determine o l Fund pas The accumu- to close the l a Cdl. 1 Landfill closure. how . Johns A Will of it) satel}' station was undertaken. atilt a tranepo pav for pursued to take garbage to the tics and St toting St. Johns Reserve FTlte Rchali litatirin and lotion contract wasp closure and maintenance. Waste reduc clEosos utt and Feral is used to enhance tits area Mali new hmdCdh'flte contract ntiutiun se, cump°s tn4 facility was also under nez around tile, landfill, lion programs provided technical information mn pronut. I.41ucatiott activities. Debt Service S (gi.918 pEQ loons Solid waste cxlx•nacs .39-,.-,34 Capital Fund 1.340.380 dministration 93:485 St. Jot,ns l.atidill 1,434,424 Budget and finance 7 237.719 Endingbalance Operations St. Jollns Reserve 12.9,43. 04 Systcmplanning 1.032,260 Endinel)" ce tied cn~~ncrring 1.040,055 Rehab4litatiod Wastr rrdnrtion 1.1,1-13.401 Enhancement 54,681 lntrrtun,l transfers (Materials and services 1.490 438 Fading balance Ending hatance $ 30,071.1121 Total "'aft4C ~Y J bl ~tF.C'F' t'. ERAy FUND GEN , Ces AL' inch the td Cesnnnc all centraln6e,ecu bli The Denera xecutive I fund office d ; T c hese are Cou Metro. pffice of General emeut, and Ad n'inistration.. Cana" and Finance an Affairs, TON PARK 7,pp titETRQ WASHING tore than 1 million 'fhc 64-acre zoo attracte record m numherc nhhe ear, a the sP visitors last Y Africa, opened in ecetn- newest exhibit' lets lit np the xoo Cele- p S. Bank xon 7 the steamer train first time, paekY turned 27 ber for th' prated its 30th hirthdaY a°d District t } L'7 * c 3 a yletcopolitan S Ei t A`e' 2000 S a 4201-5398 tz ) ; ' a,wS pordand, OR 9 r ~ Pri d on ..cycled paper ?1~ c i4 'ff ate >r J z 'v. ,r, Money to pay for zoo operations cones from the. The convention center is funded four ways. Planning revenue cones from several sources, following sources. Approximately half the income Management and marketing is funded by a primarily from dues assessed on local governments is from property taxes and half from enterprise Multnomah County hotel/motel tax. Construction at 51 cents per capita. Transportation revenue income. of the center is funded through ponds, state lottery comes from federal, state and local grants. funds and a local improvement district (LID). Zoo Operations Fund General Planning Fuld _ Beginning balance $ 2,010.538 Management Fund Beginning fund balance 146,935 Tax levy 5,501',204 Beginning balance 1.331,738 Dues assessments 631,590 Admissions 1,816!)47 Other 78,172 Other 10(1,055 Concessions 2.227,597 Total 1;3119,910 Transportation Railroad rides 376,701 Federal grants 366.674 Donations 191,119 Capital Fund State grants 492,637 Other 335,110 Bonds/beginningbalance 51,135.013 Local grants 235,133 Total 12,459,276 Lottery proceeds 7.425.055 hnte rfund transfers 62,733 LID funds 2,180.995 Planning and Development Zoo Capital Fund Other 4,-1,16.421 Business license fees 41.580 Beginning balance •1.126,250 Total 65,187; 4&4 Urban growth boundary fees 3,380 Tax levy - transfer huerfmul transfers •179.6:5 from operations 1,987,662 Metro Exposition-Recreation LCDC grant 12,949 Donations 489.808 Commission Total $2.579,'191 Other 399,242 Dotel/lnotel tax 2,691.778 Total S 7.002,962 Other 551.724 Total $ 3,243.5112 a? Zoo Operations Fund Management Fund Planning and Development carries out all planning j Administration $ 515,103 Personal services $ 66,633 functions at 3lcte•o, except transportation planning. ~ Aninnal management ',668.297 Materials /services .53,63:3 The Transportation Department maintains high- Facilities munagement 21413,419 Interfund transfers 675,436 Education services 555,251 Ending balance 614.2118 way and transit planning for the region, shares Hunkering 302,894 Total 1,409,910 computer hardware and software with local gov- Visitor services 1,787.600 crnments, and provides socio-economic data and I InterBmd transfers 2,975,149 Capital Fund map services. Ending balance 2,241,56:3 Personal services 1702&1 Total 12,459.2 76 Materials/services 57.638 Planning and Development I Capital outlay 23.857.1114 Personal , services S 3)4,:3115 Zoo Capital Fond Interfund transfer 605,550 Material and .sea ices 58,071 Africa Phase I and 11 1;177.573 Ending balance •10.497.018 Capital outlay 69.367 Africa Phase III 468,892 Total (15,187,491 Transportation AfriCafe banquet room 95,116 Personal services 862.376 Other 99,670 Metro Exposition-Recreation Materials and ,vrvices 159.5:10 Ending balance 4,861,711 Corlulliesion Capital utlay 96.,39 Total $ 7.002,962 Personal services 111,318 General Exla•ases Materials/services 1,252,569 toter fund transfers 613.671 Interfund transfers 180.653 Ending balance 325.212 Ending balance 1,698,962 Total $ 3,243,502 Total :2..179.291 _Odom NSpORTATION S ~D DATA SERGE Moodie., 93 0.y etropolitan non's m o Llte reb and alt a tton, souring ds through p k y Apt sortation [u avisorY 01000100 r " :^"'fin Val t olicy a - c le', f oin rang b .x m tion. Long- 1 updated through "g is sz r r t Nplanuin0 Plan Tile Data ,a*r n. torts , a ortation n, Vansp to wlalto e5`^ the Reg`utlal' Resource Center Prot'laye [oreeasts and Went and laud CIA) t all center. opt:rates the tnal - t TER TI ° : OREGON GON~ENT[ON CEN SOLID a t o ten iu Sept' responsib tenter, due to I blicfI' tt it ate ante Went p n entioa ' ' g e t The coot is unlWpe for W$ tu More than Tile Solid R' l as na e • ember 1)yq' sect fundtng• innal solid w 1 bVOad-ba for reE a dicposa 4 rt and d uiuuY"local trade sila'v[oare R arbag t support which-,~nll hold ul ninj„ I and eclucatio 3q conventions an i to the facility , vents pVOntouun ,r booked tnultiple:e : a lq,gOq people iu UNDS F SOLID VAST, AND waste activities areTl'e e, in D$VELOp~1EN r tarate in VLANyING Otlter solid eats, it4 u improvcm [our $el' lianciug rovided to 1oc$i eh h al ]any - throng ca tlantting, t assistance is p management ► costs and en ` Planniu6 d functional p na a R landfill closure facilities. emeut Pland covt1in° t governments, an Plan =are aroutul solid wa, as the Solid ~`raste lt anaanag • the areas entent tuent The. . Mo , urban Growl` rough tilts departwatts rasburees plan coutv atstratuwn linated Study, adtiu regional parks h iloundary:- t owt as license prOo am- nine urUnn g Ilail(ler tonsi ►itlitie~ " ' and the, other rest) . are. - ' 1 ~ - Inter. YLCeb is crntoental Grants -10 entral s" go, rcVennc. ",.6cIr4rL~ety entI to rnn c lit", That use 3.6YJnt gevenpe for overh oth er el' tarane 7.Sc1c d 1 rretl froth~2 95f nc trailsfe the services. d revenue 3g8.1$b =t 4 2cjct GC1eval Vito 81 gU3 Rr~nnninht+otance 185.518 1 Fllnll Na LC Zito tratsfer Ater t,alance So;NGtafees Solid \Castr tran• 5$0;230 trl•8~c diA planning and {raneportatio`tia transfer ±03;110 153.61 Convention C •113,105 \lE{If transfer 1=,593 coos Interest - 31is ~ 9~r Other g 4,129;15 j . lnJet it _ lYafi~f ~ . 1'2.8 is Total Sources of funds f and staff Gcn%~ ~Suttd+ Couneil OfficeCoon stu~l4 Ic:x viers n{ the 'enev t ilrtro Exftibition s $er of the uetneu ion cover p{fice 'lanao Recreat Over lteat er 'lie tnt; $xecutiYe Go'Z jsnon fwnl n Metro; Finance and d+ltin istra or ZA„ and counc for t budget. " 12.8nr set legal services officer; xeelitive ling, persOnnrh data proc- staff and e;. oon t lions of cc. ~ entent' manag sand the ftrn' ,tructton lion d con. t service ; ~Ifairs. tc d snpij0r 5o ta wnd8a+ blidding an nce an of Public : C„nvY>(undw sura ;;1.6c1c Ilr gra 'ns Ce°,'t~;YZrlY essing, ir1 • lll'atlnn n public inf or 1Fowlexpele"' 351,610 Genera ()fGcc 215.O Z Coulleit onnsel 319,`N12 C rneral C 11anu~rwent fund E,'ecutiva' I 1,841,520 plan~l^ o Fiuarwe :1+16;259 mitllintsn'•ltiou 243,016 ptdtic e~{(airs Afrr 65?,103 ' Interfund Iran. F.ndingbaltutc 1~g 157 ~jses of {ands Total S stem (KLFS) onul Land Information u sition of With the acciate land-use The Rep tee shape „ cies began to I've and integ mat .ereJ sp, ' ll Fnt° a sneer 1 o- computers to traust ,her and endnu~t U S Bunk z° sour rce. is onJail o + of .are S A'~I~UAL ron r data from many layers of ma1 REppRT brecdino of the Steatite tleted, det s1'' than ttclal activities. more then coull for mare ~gg~ tt''~~pp Many 30th atttttversary contbineJ the record atten dance the. data will be . uLW~' Lights to n Solid cted eat the znn during ,ossible. aura' tie visited will previously { depart" wilding A train, } trout ntc,tt- t essittr. . e lddttiona} tray FtstantiaFlV F or The R goon than 1 million Peo as the 10.1 Data 1 r` c fiscal year. ~ +S standing The N' t.counl. attd year to 5° ce ?n° ' state, t J ltuyd au unntin o O system- k' Metal ace last help tts ntatn/silt wor fiina ttracttu,t in th e meats of six rist a are well rude rtetrv s conversion Maid too we a u10 the complete tut+' }tarawark, lved ht and 4 o1id waste it invo to a new cunt1 It foresig „ion . t. ta•ur sus e the Throng vat. lice rcr uy,e eta n ] • citizens of r vvuy to sot' dtdtt l u the. sS was An un nu ve ef d we am ` t on tort t clobse ,rublents tion. c full-u°te 0111- firing happy to r at real 1 fission aispusat 1 r out tit, best se ta ell to site a re''noll that 1 near. 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Vo11um A dun to e.% a black rhttt+t.._. w 4teu tit otlr 1 s t r i PRESIDENT'S REPORT by Mary Tobias January 16 - February 15, 1990 This last month was extraordinarily busy with work on the Western Beltway and two regional strategic planning/ networking events. TVEDC was asked to assist the Oregon Department of Economic Development with a Washington County based program and tour for the state Economic Development Commission. In addition, Carol Clark, Executive Director of the Washington County Visitor's Association, asked for our assistance during an Oregon Tourism Alliance familiarization tour of Hillsboro, Wilsonville and Sherwood. This in addition to work on membership recruitment, the January newsletter and the worker's compensation Tualatin Valley Dialogue kept the staff in high gear. REGIONAL PLANNING The Oregon Economic Development Commission held their January meeting in Washington County. TVEDC staff assisted OEDD with the preparations for the meeting. Mary Weber spent quite a bit of time contacting selected companies for information to go into the EDC briefing packets. In addition, she provided demographic information used as background information for the meeting. I spent the entire day with the commission and had the opportunity to sit with OEDD Director Bob Buchanan during the bus tour of Washington County. During the 2+ hours of the tour we were able to exchange a great deal of information on our respective organizations and the issues we face. Several board members were also involved in the day's events: Bonnie Hays, Dick Porn, Bert Gredvig, David Lawrence and David Bennett. The Oregon Tourism Alliance and WCVA held a familiarization tour of three Washington County cities - Hillsboro, Sherwood and Wilsonville - followed by a five hour workshop on tourism. Selected business leaders and chamber of commerce members were asked to participate. During the orientation, I was asked by Bob Herb, Executive Director of the Hillsboro Chamber of Commerce,to fill in as a tour guide. Paoa - 1 There were three city briefings this month: Hillsboro, Tigard and Beaverton. In addition, I made a presentation before the County Board of Commissioners to bring them up to date on TVEDC programs and projects. Once again, the councils and commission were very appreciative of the information in the briefing packets and the update. Other important meetings within the region this month included an update session with METRO executive Rena Cusma. I participated in two Portland Development Commission meetings this month both of which are directed at marketing the metropolitan area. PDC is working with the regional economic development agencies, the Port of Portland, OEDD, the Portland Oregon Visitors Association and others to create an image campaign for more effective marketing of Portland. I have been appointed to a task force to review educational service delivery to Washington County by Portland State University. Dr. Roger Edgington the Interim President of the university made the appointment last month. In preparation for the work ahead, I met with Earl Mackey, PSU Vice President, and with Dr. Robert Duvall, President of Pacific University, to discuss higher education needs in the county. Mary Weber continues to participate in METRO's urban growth management study. This issue appears to be escalating in importance. During a Washington County Business Association Executives Network meeting this month, there was concensus that the chamber and economic development association executives need a workshop on this issue. TVEDC will convene a session in early March to develop a strategy for handling the growth/no growth controversy. ISSUES MANAGEMENT Western Beltway: There were three opportunities to speak on this issue in public forums this month (see attached meeting summary). In addition, I have spent quite a bit of time working on strategies for the upcoming ODOT/OTC 6-year Highway Improvement Plan hearings. STOP is getting a lot of mileage out of the Business Journal public opinion poll done by Moore Information. Following discussions at the Western Beltway Coalition meeting this month, TVEDC is pursuing funding for a public opinion survey commissioned by the Coalition. The Western Beltway Coalition members also agreed to appoint a subcommittee that would be charged with developing the main points to be used during the upcoming ODOT 6-year plan update hearings. Members of the Coalition will testify at as many of the hearings as possible with emphasis on the meetings in Yamhill, Washington, Lincoln, Clatsop and Columbia counties. Pan. _ 7 I met with several people during the month to raise money for the beltway project. As a result, AGC has pledged $2500 (and has renewed their TVEDC membership) and Fred Meyer is considering a contribution or a membership. Worker's Compensation Reform: TVEDC held the January Dialogue on this topic and attracted about 20 people. Representatives of the state, the legal profession and the insurance industry briefed attendees for the first hour of the Dialogue. The briefing was followed by a very lively question and answer period. Some of the people attending brought specific case questions which focused the discussion for everyone. I have received several compliments on the quality of the program from members who attended. This program continues to gain momentum and is one about which the staff is very enthusiastic. Growth/No Growth: This issue continues to appear below the surface in several different areas - transportation planning, water quality issues, UGB adjustment issues and education planning. Because of the attention that is being focused on this issue, TVEDC and the other economic development associations plan to host a focus group on the issue. The Washington County chambers of commerce will join us in the worksession. The goal of the session will be to define the issues and then to develop a positive message for the business community. We will ask members of METRO and PDC to join us in this effort. MEMBER/PUBLIC EDUCATION Staff completed the work on the January 1990 issue of the newsletter and mailed over 650 copies to the members and interested parties. The newsletter continues to undergo some refinement in the messages we are trying to get to the membership. Mary Weber writes the material for each issue and the rest of the staff assists her with the editing. The next issue is scheduled for production in April. This year we will get four issues out for the first time in two years. We have begun a concentrated effort to stay in closer contact with the membership. Renewed members are being sent copies of the monthly agendas of all three of our standing committees. This is accompanied with a call for participation. In January we experienced increased participation on the Issues/Research Committee and the Transportation Committee. Participation on the Membership/ Programs Committee remains low and with the level of work this committee is taking on, we need to attract some new participants. We produced another article for Times Publications newspapers this month. According to their business editor Kurt Holland, the readers really enjoy this feature of the business section - in fact, no complaints to date. i ADMINISTRATION Nawzad Othman (OTAK) hosted a business briefing breakfast this month that was attended by 16 business executives, Bonnie Hays, Mayor Alice Schlenker (Lake ' Oswego), Mayor Steve Stolze (Tualatin), David Bennett, Bert Gredvig and myself. The turnout for this event exceeded our expectations. Interest in this program is high and the requests to host meetings is running ahead of available dates. We now need to concentrate on making sure we have good, enthusiastic follow-up after each event. Board help with the follow-up is essential. Finances continue to be a problem. Renewals are coming in more slowly than anticipated. By the end of February, we will need to take a good look at the cash flow for the upcoming months. The Corporate Contributions Task Force is continuing to pursue new corporate underwriting. There are several plans being considered and the committee will keep the board advised. Finally, we are now getting ready to put together the budget for fiscal year 1990/91. Any suggestions for program direction or changes in programs should be brought to my attention as soon as possible. The new draft of the budget will be ready in time for the board retreat. We are sending out requests to the cities and the county in late February for funding renewals for 90/91. n_ OUTSIDE MEETINGS: In the report period, TVEDC was represented at the following outside meetings or events: Presentations: Hillsboro City Council Quarterly Update Tigard City Council Quarterly Update Beaverton City Council Quarterly Update Beaverton Area Chamber of Commerce Speaker/Western Beltway Issac Walton League Board of Directors Debate/ Western Beltway ODOT/Citizen's Advisory Committee Speaker/Western Beltway Coalition Washington County Board of Commissioners Quarterly Update Regional Meetings: METRO/JPACT January and February monthly meetings PDC Coordinating Council January meeting PDC Ambassadors Special meeting City/County Managers Meeting January meeting Business/Education Compact of Washington County January meeting Business/Education Compact of Washington County Higher Education Committee I-5 Forum Breakfast/Dick Reiten, Speaker February meeting Tigard Area Chamber of Commerce/Senator Hatfield, Speaker February meeting (Mary Weber represented TVEDC) Business Association Executives Network Quarterly meeting METRO Urban Growth Management Technical Advisory Committee meeting (Mary Weber represents all the Portland area economic development associations) Washington County Transportation Coordinating Committee Monthly meeting Special Events: Oregon Economic Development Commission Washington County Worksession and Tour Oregon Tourism Alliance/WCVA Familiarization tour and worksession Tualatin Valley Mental Health Center Corporate Gallery fundraiser American Electronics Association Monthly meeting TVEDC Sponsored Events: Western Beltway Coalition Strategy meeting for ODOT hearings Tualatin Valley Dialogue January meeting Washington County Business Briefing Breakfast Nawzad Othman/OTAK host TVEDC Newsletter January issue Times Publications Newspaper column on vision Individual Contacts: Rena Cusma/METRO Update and Beltway Ann Mulroney/Beaverton Update Earl Mackey/PSU Task Force on PSU services in Washington County Bob Duvall/Pacific University Update and PSU services Doug Browning/Hillsboro Argus Update Linda Gainer/GTE Northwest TVEDC briefing (arranged by Debbie McCabe/GTE) Bernie Bottomly/Congressman AuCoin's office Update Cheryl Perrin/Fred Meyer Beltway fundraising, TVEDC membership Jack Kalinoski/AGC Beltway fundraising, TVEDC membership Peter Fry/Consultant Urban growth/farmland (Mary Weber) Joan Biggs/Joan Biggs & Associates Gala Alan Steiger/A-dec TVEDC briefing, membership recruitment (David Bennett) Bill Loumeau/McDonald, Jacobs, Biskar & Company TVEDC briefing, membership TVEDC Committee Staffing: The following TVEDC committees met during the report period and were attended by staff: Board of Directors Executive Committee Issues/Research Committee Transportation Committee Membership/Programs Committee Western Beltway Coalition Subcommittee on ODOT 6- year plan update DATE: January 16, 1990 TO: Board of Directors FROM: Mary L. Tobias RE: President's Report December 16, 1989 - January 15, 1990 The period between December 16 and January 15 was taken up with an odd mix of business as usual, vacation, holidays and moving. With the help of our significant others and our intern, Mark Grover, we moved from the H-3 location to the new offices at 10200 SW Nimbus G-3 in time to meet the December 18 deadline. Suprisingly, the move went very smoothly and we were relocated and settled within one work day. There are still a few things we can't find, but we know they are here. The new location works very well for committee and board meetings, so it has been even more convenient for staff. PROGRAMS Regional Planning: The Resources Committee completed its work on the report to be submitted to the steering committee of the County's Economic Development Task Force. I am very pleased with the final document and I believe that it reflects the current status of economic development factors in the county. As TVEDC staff and board begin the budget/program planning efforts for the 1990/91 fiscal year, I think we should seriously examine ways in which we can take a more significant role in the next stages of the Task Force's efforts. In my opinion, with the restructuring we have done in the past year, we are now in a position to offer the County our active support. METRO held its long planned urban growth management conference this month. The conference presented a lot of challenges for the business and economic development communities. The audience consisted primarily of planners and special interest groups like 1000 Friends of Oregon. My sense of the preliminary outcome was that transportation and planning for urban services were high on the attendees list of concerns. However, the'results of a straw poll taken at the end of the conference indicated almost no support for highway improvements and overwhelming support for transit system expansions - especially for light rail. The other thing that surfaced during the conference was a tendency toward the no growth or very limited growth feeling that seems to be occuring throughout the region. The Oregon Economic Development Department is planning a meeting of the Economic Development Commission in Washington County in mid- January. Brad Fletcher (OEDD Regional Director) has asked TVEDC to assist the department with the information packets and the bus tour for the commissioners. The agenda will include a briefing on economic development in Washington County and in-depth briefings on transportation issues and higher education. TVEDC board members Dick Porn and Bonnie TVEDC President's Report December 16, 1989 - January 15, 1990 Page 2 Hays have been asked to take part in the briefings. Board member Bert Gredvig and the OGC Science Park will be hosting the reception following the commissioner's tour. The only city council briefing held this month was in Sherwood. Staff has developed a format for briefing packets that we plan to use for all of the council meetings in 1990. The packet will include news articles, the president's report and copies of any position papers or testimony that TVEDC produces in the quarter. The material will be placed in TVEDC labeled files for the council members' convenience and easy reference. The Sherwood council received the first of the new packets and seemed pleased with the format. Issues Management: The Western Beltway issue received the most staff attention during the month. I met with Mike Hereford (Northwest Strategies) on several occasions to work on the fundraising strategies. We are continuing to work on the list of target businesses to prioritize the meetings that will begin next month. The Oregon Court of Appeals heard oral arguments in the STOP vs. METRO case. Because of the order in which the notice of intent to appeal reached the court, the Western Beltway Coalition became the petitioners on the appeal rather than respondents as we were at LUBA. A decision on the appeal is not expected until mid-March. In the meantime, the coalition steering committee met and reviewed some strategies for implementation in early 1990. A Beltway Coalition has been scheduled for February 8 to review these plans. A further complication on the Beltway has been the recent machinations at JPACT, the legislative Joint Interim Committee on Land Use and the Oregon Department of Transportation. ODOT has indicated that staff plans to recommend against including any funding reserves for right-of- way acquisition in the upcoming 6-year plan update. As I understand it, the inclusion of ROW funding is more the norm than the execption for projects once they are included in the state's transportation improvement plan. If these funds are not included on this project, that will create a "special case" category of sorts for this highway. It would seem unwise for ODOT to begin to deal with state highway projects in this manner. In my opinion, it makes all current and future projects for which there is any opposition vulnerable to attack. Water Quality: With the adoption of the interim permanent facilities for storm water runoff rules last month, TVEDC has not been only peripherally involved in Tualatin River issues this month. Jack Schwab had been our representative on the citizens committee to work on the surface water management plan. With Jack's decision to lighten his citizen involvement load, I have taken over his position on that committee. However, the project is nearing completion with the plan draft to be reviewed and finalized before submission to the DEQ for review. TVEDC President's Report December 16, 1989 - January 15, 1990 Page 3 Urban Growth Management: This issue continues to become the focus of editorials, regional meetings and conferences. The "come, don't stay" attitude of the 1970s appears to be having a resurrection among several'segments of the regional population. There appears to be a loosely knit, sub-surface organization of special interest groups that are fostering this attitude with concern for the environment, livability and transportation issues. This is one issue that will probably require a great deal of diligence and public relations expertise to enable us to avoid being positioned as an anti quality of life organization. Member/Public Education: Because of the holidays, not much project activity took place in this program. We did produce an article for the Times Publications early in January. This is another in a series of articles being written by the local chambers of commerce and EDCs which address topics of interest to the business community. We are continuing to work on membership renewals for 1990. Staff has sent out a second dues billing and we are awaiting the results of that effort. In addition., we are undertaking several new projects to communicate better with our membership and to encourage their active participation in the activities of the corporation. Mary Weber and I have been working on the January newsletter and we expect it to be ready late that month. Mary is also in the process of putting together the January Tualatin Valley Dialogue which will address workers' compensation reform in Oregon. The panel is very representative of the interests directly involved in reform - the state, the insurance industry and the legal profession. The program should be very interesting to our membership. Advocacy: We provided testimony to the Joint Interim Committee on Land Use in early January. The agenda for the committee indicated a briefing on the DLCD/ODOT workplan for developing state policy on land use/ transportation planning. However, the meeting quickly focused on the Western Beltway and until our testimony was never brought back to the broader - and significantly more important - issues of statewide policy. Senator Jeannette Hamby introduced me to the committee and assisted me with information in addition to the testimony. Judging from the tone and tenor of the testimony and questions that preceded my testimony, the committee is locked into the controversy over the Beltway and is not applying the issues to all state highway planning. Meeky Blizzard (STOP) and Keith Bartholomew (1000 Friends) provided testimony and Meeky x. r brought a series of slides of farm land that she indicated would all be k' subjected to paving if the beltway is allowed to be built. All in all a- l it was a fascinating 41- hours. t:. ~z s" i i TVEDC President's Report December 16, 1989 - January 15, 1990 Page 4 Administration: A great deal of time was put in on finances this month. Staff has been working with J. Herrle & Associates to handle our workers' compensation insurance change from SAIF to the Assigned Risk Pool. Our corporation was one of the Oregon companies dropped by SAIF effective 12/31/89. We are also one of those whose only recourse is the assigned risk pool and our rates will be substantially higher in 1990 than 1989. We have also been working on our membership recruitment/renewal/ involvement programs this month. To encourage member involvement, we have written to all renewing and new members with an invitation to participate on one or all of our standing committees. These invitations were accompanied by the agendas of each of the meetings scheduled for this month. Our hope is that we will bolster the attendace at the committee work sessions and bring some new ideas for programs. In addition, we are planning a business briefing breakfast at OTAK, Inc. on January 24. We have invited approximately 20 business leaders to meet with Bonnie Hays (Chairman, Washington County Commission) Alice Schlenker (Mayor, Lake Oswego) and Steve Stoltze :(Mayor, Tualatin) for an update on issues and developments in the Tualatin Valley and the role TVEDC is playing in the region today. This is the second . meeting of this kind. The first was very successful and our hope is that this one will be as well received. The Corporate. Contributions Task Force is continuing to pursue major contributors to underwrite the programs of TVEDC. It is hoped that by the end of the fiscal year we will have between 10 and 12 corporate contributions to even out the revenue portion of our budget. OUTSIDE MEETINGS In the report period, I represented TVEDC at the following outside meetings or events: Tigard Chamber of Commerce - Monthly meeting Oregonian Business Forecast Breakfast Sherwood City Council - Quarterly briefing METRO Urban Growth Management Conference (Mary Weber participated in the planning of the conference and acted as a facilitator) Hillsboro Chamber of Commerce - Governor's State of the State Address Oregon Court of Appeals - Oral arguments Sherwood Chamber of Commerce - Speech on the Beltway Business/Education Compact of Washington County - Workforce 2000 Joint Interim Committee on Land Use - Testimony Washington County Historical Society - J. Smith Tualatin City Council Member Update - B. Gleason Washington County Chairman Update - B. Hays Times Publications article - Transportation systems TVEDC President's Report December 16, .1989 - January 15, 1990 Page 5 TVEDC COMMITTEE STAFFING The following TVEDC committees met during the report period and were attended by staff: Board of Directors Beltway Coalition Steering Committee TUALATIN VALLEY ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION July 1 through December 31, BUDGET OUTLINE - PROGRAM ALLOCATIONS TOTAL BUDGET REGIONAL ISSUES MEMBER/PUBLIC INFORMATION ADVOCACY ADMINISTRATION TO-DATE 89/90 PLANNING MANAGEMENT EDUCATION SERVICES I N C O M E DUES $24,250.00 $62,000.00 $24,250.00 GRANTS-PRIVATE $0.00 - $0.00 GRANTS-PUBLIC $34,765.00 $38,567.00 $34,765.00 DEDICATED FUNDS $2,505.25 $62,000.00 $2,505.25 , CONTRACTS $30000.00 $36,250.00 $3,000.00 IN-KIND $7,353.20 $32,500.00 $7,353.20 INTEREST $118.03 $100.00 $118.03 MISCELLANEOUS $17,955.26 $20,500.00 $17,955.26 Subtotal $89,946:74 $251,917.00 $0.00 $2,505.25 $0.00' $3,000.00 $0.00 584,441.49 ALLOCATED SUPPORT $7,379.45 $11,434.27 $23,727.25 $3,856.60 $172.83 ($46,570.40) TOTAL $89.946.74 $251,917.00 $7,379.45 $13,939.52 $23,727.25 $6,856.60 $172.83 $37.871.09 E X P E N S E S SALARIES b WAGES $40,656.05 $85,628.00 $6,673.22 $9.673.74 $7,725.11 $2,814.52 $164.53 $13,604.93 PAYROLL TAXES & BENEFITS $2.074.57 $17,012.00 $358.90 $506.82 $343.55 $124.68 $8.30 $732.32 CONTRACT SERVICES $6,476.20 $56,750.00 $500.00 $2,000.00 $3,776.20 $200.00 DIRECT PROGRAM COSTS $9,628.84 $34,300.00 $406.72 $9,209.12 $13.00 $1,377.50 POSTAGE $1,377.50 $6,900.00 PRINPING E PUBLICATIONS $2,704.77 $9,200.00 $78.08 $41.40 $1,193.21 $128.20 $1,263.88 TRAVEL d ENTERTAINMENT $1,276.80 $3,550.00 $199.25 $55.00 $1,022.55 MISCELLANEOUS/CONTINGENCY $5,334.15 $5,327.00 $89.20 $3.013.76 $2,251.19 OFFICE EXPENSES $1,174.57 $8,000.00 $1.174.57 RENT $6,517.20 $13,500.00 $6,517.20 EQUIPMENT RENTAL 3 MAINT. $1,844.63 $7,000.00 $242.50 1 602.13 INSURANCE $1,019.00 $300.00 $1,019.00 CONFERENCE A TRAINING $208.00 $250.00 $70.00 $138.00 UTILITIES 3 PHONE $2,372.42 $4,200.00 $2.372.42 PROFESSIONAL FEES $2,666.64 $2,666.64 DEPRECIATION $0.00 INTEREST EXPENSE $51.88 $51.88 TOTAL $85,383.22 $251,917.00 $7.379.45 $13,939.52 $23,727.25 $6.856.60 $172.83 $33,327.57 ` TUALATIN VALLEY ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION R E S O L U T I O N WHERE AS: the Tualatin Valley Economic Development Corporation's stated objective is to provide private sector leadership and representation on major regional issues affecting economic development in the Tualatin Valley. WHERE AS: the Board of Directors of the Tualatin Valley Economic Development Corporation believes that affordable housing is an important component in encouraging the development of a diversified/available workforce to meet the needs of business and industry in the Tualatin Valley. WHERE AS: the Board of Directors believes that our area's ability to meet the housing needs of the local workforce will have an impact on industry's effort to recruit new workers to the Tualatin Valley WHERE AS: the Board of Directors further notes that the current and projected need for affordable housing and the number of affordable housing units presently available in Washington County is unknown. THEREFORE: the Board of Directors urge Washington County to conduct a housing inventory and needs assessment which are essential information tools in the creation of a responsible public policy directed at addressing the long term housing needs of the workforce in Washington County. February-28, 1990 10200 S.Nt: Nitnhus Axenue • Suite G-3 • Tigard. Oregon 97223 • (503) 620-1142 - TUALATIN VALLEY ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION R E S O L U T I O N WHERE AS: the Tualatin Valley Economic Development Corporation's stated objective is to provide private sector leadership and representation on major regional issues affecting economic development in the Tualatin Valley. WHERE AS: the Board of Directors of the Tualatin Valley Economic Development Corporation believes that a county wide cooperative library system is an essential community service. WHERE AS: the Board of Directors believes it is important that we equip our library system with up-to-date resources to meet the growing needs of business, the workforce and the student population in the Tualatin Valley. WHERE AS: the Board of Directors further notes that the current level of funding falls below the per capita level recommended by the Oregon Library Association and the level that is provided in other comparable communities. WHERE AS: within the cooperative there is a huge disparity in the level of service provided by the system's libraries and this levy would increase the level of service in those facilities that rely solely on WCCLS funds. THEREFORE: the Board of Directors supports a three-year fixed rate levy to upgrade the services provided by the Washington County Cooperative Library Service. February 28, 1990 10200 S.W. Nimbus A%-enue • Suite G-3 • Tigard, Oregon 97223 • (503) 620-1142 Page 28 • THE TIMES • Nkek of March 29 - April 4 ,1990 Agriculture, forestry key in local economy One of the Tualatin' Valley's In the Tualatin Valley, the con- Lion A enc 's (1978a) back strongest assets is its diverse B Y ground which define an urban system. This diversify buffers the Ajft~l tinued growth and vitality of paper on agriculture stresses that Agriculture and forestry provide economy. area from economic ity bu lions i specialty agriculture and other rcla- aside from food and fiber production benefits to our communities beyond any one in econo it's Your lively land-use-intensive crops are agricultural lands play an important those that are immediately obvious. Vii., tied to the use of two important environmental role. The EPA notes The Greater Hillsboro Area Cham- Washington County, in the hear Business ~ ` , . resources-. labor and water. that farmland contributes to water- ~ of commerce is working to in- of the Tualatin Valley, is home to a ~y... Constraints affecting the price or shed Protection, reduces pollution crease our awareness of these im- major manufacturing and distribu- Mary Tobias 4 availability of these resources could by trapping such compounds as portant industries. The chamber's lion industry and to 90 percent of all threaten growth in forestry and ozone and sulfur dioxide, facilitates Agriculture Committee is soliciting electronics firms in the state. The agriculture. Potential management the disposal of sludge, acts as a support for a research study of Tualatin Valley is also one of the as an industry is relatively stable constraints as a result of mandated buffer between expanding cities and Washington County agriculture and most productive farming areas in the compared to other sectors of the water quality regulations for the provides other quality of life fea- forestry industries and how the dol- world. economy. Economic changes in this Tualatin River Basin could slow the tures. lars generated by these industries Agriculture and forestry combine industry tend to offset fluctuations growth of agricultural production flow through our regional economy. significantly to the local economy. in other sectors. Hence, agriculture's which is water (use) intensive. Near- Agricultural and forest lands also Support of their efforts is good busi- Between 1980 and 1988, total economic performance tends to im- ly all vegetable crops, about 73 per- have other functional roles by ness for all of us in the Tualatin Val. agricultural and forestry sales in prove overall stability in the area's cent of nursery crops and about 75 providing a variety of services to ley. For further information contact Washington County increased in real economy. Agriculture and forestry percent of berries (not including nearby communities. Not only does the Hillsboro Chamber of Com- value by 31 percent. This is due to also represent a source of new in- grapes) arc irrigated. the farm and forest land provide ex- merce or TVEDC. the growth in forest harvests and to come to the region via sales outside Changes in immigration laws cellent recreational values, but it increased intensity of farm land use. the area and exports of food and may limit the number of available also acts as a source of important Locally, agricultural sales are agricultural products produced in workers. Agriculture and forestry al- physical resources for urban resi- Mary Tobiar is president of dominated by the production of the region. This new income turns ready compete with other industries dents. Water reservoirs, sand and Tualatin Valley Economic Develop. specialty crops, including nursery over inside the local economy for employees. As the labor market gravel operations and utility and ment Corp. Next week's "It's Your and greenhouse crops. generating additional jobs, business becomes more competitive, they transportation corridors are vital to Business" column will be written by According to a 1983 Oregon income and added value to the may not be able to compete. the growth and development of in. a representative of the Beaverton State University report, agriculture products. The U.S. Environmental Protcc- dividual cities and the linkages Area Chamber of Commerce. i. r_ IN! rianniniy priorities need ® . ciear vision for future The Portland Metropolitan region there was no growth. We saw other is having difficulty looking beyond areas of the country recovering while what is urgent to what is important. the state was experiencing an out- Absorbed in the struggle to manage migration of Oregonians looking for the urgency of regional issues, we It fs Your jobs. have relegated what is important - a Part of our vision for the future vision for the region - to the back Business - should include a diversified. and i~ . burner. It is time to go beyond this. maturing local and state economy that y \ struggle with the urgent and to address Mary Tobias i' . can weather these economic the future by examining what is im- downturns anti changes. Growth is an portant. We need to take time today Do we want multiple centers of ac- important factor in this diversification and develop a vision which will guide tivity? Do we want mixed land uses so and maturing process. We must be (11 our choices when confronted with the that jobs and housing and commercial careful not to be led into believing that urgent issues of tomorrow. services are clustered together creating "no growth" will be an appropriate In January, the Metropolitan Ser- a density to support transit? Do we response to current problems or that it ` vice District held a growth conference build another school when a com- will provide a sound economic footing designed to bring the community into munity's schools are filled or does that for our region's future. 1 the process of creating a regional community close its doors to more We have become absorbed in day- growth management plan. This plan, citizens? Do we want to provide an today local issues and have lost touch when completed, will reflect our environment for business to expand with the need to plan for the future - vision of the `future for the and mature? to create an image of how we want our 1 metropolitan Portland region: Our response to these important region to look in the 21st century. We U Washington, Clackamas and questions should be directed by a need leadership from the business 1 Multnomah counties. vision, not crisis management. We are community to help formulate a realis- S J • For more than six hours planners, struggling just to begin thinking about tic vision that can accommodate a 1 environmentalists, economic develop- the important. wide range of our communities needs. ment professionals, private citizens The Metropolitan Service District's This vision must offer all sectors of and elected officials worked together growth management planning process our economy the ability to expand and on building consensus about regional comes at a time of strong economic mature. tissues. Instead-of developiig an image growth. and unsurpassed, developrment;_; It,is,timejo get.excited about plan-, l.' of • our region, participants found activity throughout the region. ning for the future. You can be in- themselves struggling to rnd answers . BecauSe.Qf•this liming it is crucial volyed in developing the vision for to the urgent: an inadequate transpor- that we are farsighted and think about our region through the activities of tation system, water quality, school the important; that we realistically your local chambers of commerce, by finance and school overcrowding. evaluate the image we want for our. participating in your local govern- The issue identified by the par- region in the future. We must not be ment's planning process and by ad- ticipants in the conference as most seduced into responding only to the dressing the future with a clear under- serious was transportation - what urgent: growth pressures. standing of the important, not tile ur- kind, where to build it and how to History has shown us that the gent. fund it. The transportation options we growth our region is experiencing will choose will impact how effectively not last. Many of us were in Oregon in Mary Tobias is president of the our communities operate and what the early- to mid-'80s and remember Tualatin Valley Economic Develop- they look like. the economic downturn; a time when ment Corp. C_ WIN W., County needs multi-modal transportation system A multi-modal transportation sys- by an efficient street system has occur. tem. What's muld-modal? created a critical mass of people who We have come to the time in That's planner jargon which can utilize a transit system easily and Oregon's history that land-use plan- describes multiple methods for efficiently. The streets are laid out like ning and transportation planning need moving people, goods and services t$ Your a grid with major streets running both to be coordinated and blended. Our within our communities. In the 20th < ass; east to west and north to south. Neigh- transportation and land use choices 4 century this means automobiles, truck Business - borhoods arc located within those cor • must reflect a realistic vision of our Q s, rail (heavy railArains and light ridors. community's future. Macy Tobias rail/MAX), buses and bicycles. In contrast suburban communities We must keep our transportation There has been a lot of talk of laic are the home of the cul-tde-sac and options open and examine and weigh about the many available transporta- can't solve Washington County's traf- winding streets with few major all alternatives. In the best possible tion options and how the choices we . fie problems by just investing in light arterials. Housing is not located ad- world we would have multiple modes make for the future will affect our rail and bus service. How will we jacent to where people work. In outly- transit, rail and highways. communities and the surrounding cn- move goods and services? In our ing areas of the county we also face blary Tobias is president of the vironment. county, which is made up of 12 small the problem of narrow farm to market Tualatin Palley Economic Develop- ment. Vocal advocates of light rail and cities (instead of a central city with roads which now serve both farm traf- Corp. Next week's "ti's Your improved bus service promote these well identified neighborhoods), can fie and increased commuter traffic." „ we take the bus to shopping, schools Members of one of Washington Court- Business" column will be written by a inotlcs as the answer to Washington representative of the Beaverton Area OQ County's traffic nightmare. Efficiency doctors acid banks without spending ty's important industries - agricul- ChamberojConimerce. CQUJ and environmental impact are cited as inordinate amounts of time accessing ture - are finding it increasingly dif- the reasons for investing public these services? ficult to access their fields and move monies in these solutions. These advo- No single type of transportation their harvested crops to market or calcs also oppose construction of new facility will meet our region's diverse processors. highways outside the urban growth needs. We need a multi-modal Opponents of a north-south high- boundary. They maintain the position transportation system. We need streets way in Washington County express that new highways reinforce our love and highways for auto and truck traf- concern that a now road would open affair with the automobile. In addition, fie, light rail for commuting to the protected farm land to urban develop- they arc concerned about the impact a central city and buses for travel from ment. Historically, transportation sys- new highway would have on cn- neighborhoods to places of employ- tems do contribute to the location couraging development on farm land. ment. decisions of development. However, Mass transit advocates are right In much of downtown Portland and in Oregon we have land-use laws that when they say light rail should be ex- the cast side of the city the develop- guide and direct development, as well tended to Washington County and bus ment of well identified neighborhoods as protect land uses. It is not a given service must be improve!. But we with homes and businesses connected that development would be allowed to 4 i . f HillsboxQ Argus April 3, 1990 STU' P to press action- against bypass plan A Washington County citizen's broad corridor as a possible bypass group, aided by 1000 Friends of route. Oregon, will continue legal action Much of the corridor includes land against the proposed Western designated exclusive farm use, Bypass. which under statewide land use If built, the road would connect the planning goals generally must be Sunset Highway at Cornelius Pass protected for future natural Road with Interstate 5 near resource use. { Wilsonville. STOP contends that Metro has to Sensible Transportation Options demonstrate either that the bypass for People (STOP) opposes the road, is consistent with the goals or that it saying that it will cost hundreds of could qualify for an exception to millions of dollars but provide no them. significant relief from traffic The state Land Use Board of congestion. Appeals (LUBA) agreed in part with It began the fight last year by that argument, but the decision questioning the legal validity of the pleased neither STOP nor Metro and Metropolitan Service District's both appealed it. regional transportation plan (RTP) In February, the court of appeals update. said Metro had merely made a recommendation, not a final land Under state and federal taw, use decision, and thus LUBA had no Metro is the lead agency for tran- jurisdiction in the dispute. sportation planning in the STOP now is asking the Oregon metropolitan region. Supreme Court to reverse the court Its RTP update designated a of appeals. 111 10 THE OREGONIAN, Friday, March. 30., 1990 Bypass ruling appealed A citizens ,group,.has„askedithe Oregon Supreme:.Court',to:; -rule- against the proposed ,westside. bypass, a highway that would con- nect Interstate 5 and the Sunset Highway. Seiisible 't'ransportation Options for People wants tiie Supreme Court to rule against the $200 million High- way by reversing a lower court deci- sion. The Oregon Court of Appeals recently ruled that-the Metropolitan Service District had not violated state land-use laws by including the bypass in its regional transportation plan. Tlie group contends the opposite - that the presence of the bypass in Metro's plan '.violates state laws pro- tecting rural lands from urban sprawl. As proposed, the bypass would run in a northwesterly arc from 1-5 north of Wilsonville, crossing the Six Corners intersection north of Sherwood and Southwest Tualatin Valley Highway at Southwest 219th Avenue to Sunset 1-ligliway at Cor- nelius Pass Road. 'Tor TUALATIN VALLEY ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION TESTIMONY BEFORE THE OREGON TRANSPORTATION COMMISSION STATE HIGHWAY PLAN - SIR YEAR UPDATE St. Helens, Oregon 3/8/90 Members of the Commission: The Access Oregon Highway (AOH) program was designed to establish a logical and effective system of highways linking major economic and geographic activity centers with each other. The goal of the AOH system is to provide for economic growth in Oregon by moving through traffic safely and efficiently between geographic areas within the state, between Oregon and adjacent states, and to and through major metropolitan areas. The criteria developed to define the AOH projects state that each corridor should: be a major state highway provide access to and/or connect Oregon urbanized areas, larger population centers or urban growth centers carry significant vehicle or truck traffic support "Oregon Comeback" regional strategies begin and end in an urbanized area, at a port or a state border 10200 SAVE: Nimbus Avenue • Suite G-3 • Tigard, Oregon 97223 • (503) 620-1142 Page - 1 T provide access to and/or service a major tourist or recreational area ,jolumbia County's US 30 improvements from Portland to Astoria and the Western Bypass in Washington County are both part of the commission' s, Access Oregon system. Although the two highways are not physically linked at this time, it is clear there are policy linkages that have been made by putting the proposed transportation improvements within the state's six-year highway improvement plan. Even more to the point it is clear that if access to Columbia and Clatsop counties from the Willamette Valley, southern Oregon and California markets is to be improved, these two important highways will need to be joined between Highways 26 and 30 somewhere to the west of Portland at sometime in the future. At the moment, the only way in which we can move people, goods and services north and west from the east or south is to route traffic through Portland or onto Highway 217. Both routes are congested with local traffic and are unacceptable. Our ability to implement the AOH plans for these and other road improvements outside urban growth boundaries has been jeopardized. 1000 Friends of Oregon and Sensible Transportation Options for People have stalled the process that the commission began in the 1988 plan. Through their use of the courts to attack the Western Bypass and to set aside decisions made in the last six-year update these two organizations have exerted undue pressure on policy makers. Paac _ 7 As a result there is now widespread concern that we are beginning to compromise the way in which we plan for future highway system improvements within our state. The issues raised in the arguments against the Western Bypass do not address the transportation needs identified in the corridors within the AOH system. Opponents are derailing the transportation planning process by arguing the timing issue of land use and transportation planning. In our opinion, the statutes are clear that the application of land use goals and objectives is meant to be addressed at the local level by the counties and cities not by the state's transportation and land use planning agencies. If we continue to allow the process to be needlessly challenged, the future for transportation planning is clear. When we plan to build or improve roads outside urban growth boundaries they will be subjected to the same challenges, delays and added extraneous costs that are currently directed at the Western Bypass. Whenever someone does not like the location of the road, or an activist wants to grab a headline, the same obstacles will be thrown in the way of the project. The decisions made by this body during this plan update i will have far reaching consequences. These decisions will determine how the northwestern corner of the state develops which of its economies will grow, which will shrink, how. or if diversification can occur. Paoa - The Tualatin Valley Economic Development Corporation and the members of the Western Beltway Coalition urge you to consider the important ramifications of the proposed decision to back away from your earlier planning decisions by removing the $17 million right-of-way acquisition dollars for the Western Bypass. The decision to include those funds in the current plan was sound in 1988. It is equally sound today. TUALATIN VALLEY ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION TESTIMONY BEFORE THE OREGON TRANSPORTATION COMMISSION STATE HIGHWAY PLAN - SIX YEAR UPDATE 3/1/90 Members of the Commission: The Tualatin Valley Economic Development Corporation (TVEDC) represents diverse business interests from throughout the western portion of the Portland metropolitan area. TVEDC recognizes the importance of addressing the many issues that impact Oregon's ability to compete for quality business expansion and development while protecting the quality of life appreciated by our citizens. TVEDC, the local governments, chambers of commerce and regional economic development organizations concurred in 1985 that a major north/south highway to the west of Portland was needed to serve the future transportation needs of the Portland metropolitan area. At the time we considered these regional needs, attention was given to a multi-modal transportation system. The improvements considered included improving existing roads, expanding Tri- Met bus service and extending light rail to other parts of k: the metropolitan area. An essential component of this transportation network is the Western Bypass. e r.. 10200 SAX: Nimbus A%-enuc - Suite G-3 • TiWard. Oregon 97223 • (503) 620-1142 Pao' This regional consensus was verified in 1987 by the findings of the Metropolitan Service District's Southwest Corridor Study. It was confirmed by the Transportation Commission's decision to include funding for preliminary engineering, a draft environmental impact statement and right-of-way acquisition for the Western Beltway in the 1988 6-year plan update. The importance of the Bypass to the state was further validated and then given a high priority through the inclusion of the highway as an Access Oregon project. In 1988 the Transportation Commission allocated 17 million right-of-way acquisition dollars for this project. This decision was based on the previous findings of METRO, Washington County and ODOT. The current plan update removes that allocation of right-of-way dollars. It is our understanding that the ROW funds have been removed from the update because they might be construed as a decision to build the highway and therefore be subject to challenge by opponents of the project. However, two weeks ago the Oregon Court of Appeals ruled that until final land use decisions are made, METRO's Southwest Corridor Study and the Regional Transportation Plan Update are valid as adopted. No final land use decisions have been made. Fiscal decisions are not land use decisions, nor is a financial planning allocation a decision to build a highway. The inclusion of right-of-way acquisition funds in the 6-year plan constitutes a financial planning decision in Paso 7 . anticipation of future highway construction within the region. The decision to include these funds in the current plan is consistent with the fiscal planning that ODOT traditionally undertakes for other projects in the highway improvement program. This decision is the implementation of a sound planning process which provides for continuity in the state's highway improvement program. For these reasons, TVEDC urges the Transportation Commission to include the 17 million dollar right-of-way allocation in the current plan update. The Western Bypass is part of an integrated regional transportation system. Two years ago when the 1989-94 plan update was underway, there was agreement that the Western Bypass was important to the economic vitality of the northwestern corner of the state. Nothing has occurred to alter that consensus. TUALATIN VALLEY ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION TESTIMONY BEFORE THE OREGON TRANSPORTATION COMMITTEE STATE HIGHWAY PLAN - SIX YEAR UPDATE 2/'7/90 Members of the Commission: Historically, transportation has been the key to the economic vitality of a region. Trade and commerce flourish in those parts of the world where civilizations have built efficient transportation networks for the movement of goods and services. Regions where access has been limited or C' severely restricted by geography, economic wealth, or political choice have traditionally suffered from stagnant economies, poverty and isolation. It is mankind's utilization of waterways, building of roads and development of air transport that has increased the standard of living for most of the world's population. Because a well developed transportation network is crucial to a region's economic prosperity, the work of the Oregon Transportation Commission assumes tremendous significance for the state and for this region. The decisions made by this body will have far reaching consequences; they will determine how this part of the state develops; which of its economies will grow, which will shrink, how or if diversification can occur. 10200 S.NV Nimbus Avenue • Suite G•3 • Tigard. Oregon 9-223 • (503) 620.1142 f i In examining the transportation systems currently i~ serving this region, one thing becomes immediately clear. C Access to Tillamook and Clatsop counties is next to E t impossible. All of our existing highways take people frov. e l Oregon's major north/south transportation corridor (Interstate 5) or our major east/west corridor (Interstate } 84) and routes them onto an inadequate system of state highways and essentially rural roads that present t t significant barriers to the effective movement of goods and services. It is immediately obvious that extensive i improvements to the highway system are required. It is t conceivable, indeed even probable, that new highways will be R E necessary to provide access to the heart of the region. E. E Currently access is limited to long, circuitous routes that discourage rather than encourage visitors. sr Therefore when looking at future economic development c opportunities for these cities and towns, what can we reasonably expect? It is likely that they will continue to experience economic stagnation. Diversification will be hindered without improved access. New business and industry will look elsewhere, existing business will experience slow t or no growth, and some will leave to be closer to the E marketplace. Two years ago when the highway plan update was underway, there was regional consensus that the Western Papa - Bypass, an Access Oregon project, was important to the economic vitality of the northwestern corner of the state. This consensus was validated by METRO's Southwest Corridor Study, part of the MSD Regional Transportation Plan. It was also substantiated by two previous studies of regional transportation needs which indicated that a north/south highway to the west of Portland would be required to enhance the region's transportation system. Nothing has happened to invalidate these earlier findings of the Oregon Department of Transportation, Washington County or METRO. To further demonstrate the importance of this road to the regional system, the current six-year highway improvement plan s' includes a $17 million dollar allocation for right-of-way acquisition for the Western Bypass. The plan update that is before us today removes that $17 million dollar allocation. What has occurred? T 1000 Friends of Oregon and Sensible Transportation Options for People have reversed the process that the commission began in the 1988 plan. Through the machinations of these two organizations and their use of the courts to attack the highway, policy makers are already beginning to compromise the way in which we plan for future highway system improvements. Although these two activist organizations have focused the attention of the state of one road - the Western Bypass - this is an issue that affects the way we will address Pao0 ? transportation planning throughout the state of Oregon in the future. ODOT has begun another full-fledged study of need for the highway. This is being done despite the fact that just two years ago ODOT's planners, the Transportation Commission, Tri-Met, the cities in the Oregon Tourism Alliance and the counties in the region all agreed that the Western Bypass is an important component of the region's transportation system. The state has been forced to allocate $1.8 million dollars, 2 1/2 years and untold man-hour resources [ into the study of a road improvement that has been studied three times before. Litigation has cost the Western Beltway Coalition more than $15,000 to support the previous efforts of the Transportation Commission, METRO and the local governments. Our ability to implement the state's plans for road improvements outside urban growth boundaries has been crippled and thus our ability to encourage economic vitality has been diminished. The future of transportation planning is clear. When s we are planning to build or improve roads outside urban i growth boundaries they will be subjected. to the same C challenges, delays and added, extraneous costs that are currently directed at the Western Bypass. Whenever someone D t. s F does not like the location of the road, or an activist wants r to grab a headline, the same obstacles will be thrown in the J way of the project. The Tualatin Valley Economic Development Corporation and the members of the Western Beltway Coalition urge you to consider the important ramifications of the proposed decision to back away from responsible planning by removing E the $17 million right-of-way acquisition dollars for the Western Bypass. The decision to include those funds in the i current plan was sound in 1988. It is equally sound today. Let us not limit a region's ability to mature and diversify economically by a political decision. Pa.QP - 5 The Oregonian February 21, 1990 JONATHAN ~ ' NICHOLAS Wanted: prescription for growing pains The cry rings from every corner of As Iran cue, one of America's most our citadel. endangered species came to Portland last The Californians are comingl week -a thinker. The Californians are coming! Brendan Gill is not a pundit, a wag, a It's uttered with glee by greedy West commentator, an expert, a consultant or a Hills mansionites hoping to hawk their guru. He's a thinker, a breed in increas- family estates. ingly short supply. It's proclaimed with delight by tasteless In a remarkable 54-year career with housing contractors littering Washington The New Yorker, Gill has penned profiles, County with faux French chateaux. poetry, essays and criticism. In recent years, under the title "The he Skyline," he And it's declaimed with terror by has revived the column once penned by everyone else. his mentor, Lewis Mumford. This gives Contrary to popular opinion, however, him the opportunity to write Pbout the it is not Californians per se Oregonians do relationship between man and the urban not like. environment. The Beaver brigade has no fear of hen he visited Portland last sprout-nibbling, crystal-healed, equity week to deliver the fourth this bloated, tummy-tucked hot tubbers with Year' s Portland Arts ti Lectures year-round tans. series, Gill reminded us that cities, "complex mysteries:" are much more re The trouble with Californians is simply than the sum of their parts. that they are people. And the core quality of those that tune- And the problem with people is that tion as healthy organisms. Gill cautioned, there are too many of them for their own is "a human scale." And that is the quali• good. ty obliterated in so many cities by the And so, as Portland begins to debate arch disease of the 1980s, what Gill calls anew the question of Just how big it wants . "feverish urban bloat." to be in the 21st century, the accusations In places such as Seattle and Dallas, again are flying thick and fast. Gill's words can serve only as epitaphs to Those urging caution, those appalled livability's grave. Portland Is far more for- by the horror wrought upon Seattle, those t The disease threatens, but is not well taught by the lesson of Dallas - the teermin rminal. Yet quintessence of a user-unfriendly city - The decisions we face In the 1990s will are being accused of Tom McCallitis. be tough ones, because it has become com• Oregonians, it's being said, are anti- monplace in our culture to think that growth. growth is good, that more is better, that most is best of all. Time and time again we It's time then- once again-to are peddled the notion that real estate remind ourselves that McCall never did development is the lifeblood of our urban say "Visit, but please don't stay." economies. What McCall said was visit but This, Gill reminds us, is poppycock. please don't stay unless you are Real estate development, he says, is the prepared to stick to the rules of lifeblood of real estate developers intent the game we play here. on becoming very very rich. Those rules are tough because the As for the notion that throwing up game we play here is hardball. Oregon- high-rise towers to add to the tax rolls, tans are down-to-earth about protecting enhances the life of the average citize, it something ethereal- livability. is an idea far more often peddled than Again, McCall: proved. "Oregon has been wary of smokestacks The challenge facing Portland as it and suspicious of rattle and bang. Oregon rushes pellmell toward the 21st century, has not camped, cup in hand, at anyone's is not only what kind of growth does It affluent doorstep. Oregon has wanted want, but whether it wants to grow at all. industry only when that industry was fast year, more than 25,000 Californians willing to want what Oregon is." ' came north to a new life. Were they What Oregon is, aye now there's the drawn by what we have to offer? Or were rub. And as the debate rages over how they fleeing the dreadful legacy they had much, and at what pace, Oregon changes, wrought on the promised land? it's time to pause, to reflect, to learn. It's time, then, for a word from the wise. ;lz 1~; t e t 1~ sQt1 at It s 0 2 e _ 1111 ~~'1~,t' ~I ,1 I 1 11` -j • ~ • '1~ ` ,11 III I11I r 174470' 020°5 Now- r r BACK TO THE FUTURE No-growth attitudes remain a minority, but Oregonians I are becoming choosy about growth as newcomers pour in. If taxes rise and gridlock develops, watch out. a . 3tp7c BY CRAIG BROWN t was the 1970s when Oregon last flour- 1? \ ' lshed-the days of the first bottle bill, the first statewide land use planning, and Gov. Tom McCall, whose most-re- membered remark exhorted outsiders to visit Oregon, but don't stay. Groups like - the James G. Blaine Society and the Soci- ety of Native Oregon Born (SNOB) took a -tom not-entirely-in-jest attitude toward discour- aging newcomers. w - It's 1990, and we're coming back to the ,s - - future. ll~- r Throughout Oregon, more and more - citizens are concerned about growth. In - ' Eugene, citizens oppose a research park (see story, page 67) and a downtown office building. In Corvallis, they oppose expan- sion of a glass fiber plant. In Astoria, they oppose two hotels. In Lake Oswego and Portland, they oppose housing develop- ments. The grounds for objection varied SPROUTING SUBURBS: Portland's suburbs are growing fast as new subdivisions from perceived environmental damage to appear. This is the Waterhouse South subdivision in the Sunset Corridor. overwhelmed schools. Photography by Dan Poush Only a few people say we've returned to the 1910s "visit, don't stay" attitude. But transportation web without levying unaf- Banker real estate firm. planners and economists warn we could fordable taxes, and absorbing 500,000 or Rising prices have a down side, too. see a resurgence of the attitude soon if we more newcomers without spoiling the life- Already The Sunday Oregonian reports don't prepare for growth now. style that triggered growth in the first place. bidding wars are erupting forchoice homes, "The rest of the country has packed its Examples of how not to do it dot the west and native Oregonians risk being priced out bags and is on the way out to join us," said coast. Cal ifomia refugees move here daily, of the market. And skyrocketing values can Paul Sommers, research director of the filled with horror stories of San Francisco quickly lead to a taxpayer revolt in a high Northwest Policy Center at the University housing prices and Los Angeles freeways. property tax state such as Oregon. of Washington's Graduate School of Pub- To the north, Puget Sound governments and People are worried about where things lic Affairs. Statistics bear him out-Ore- citizens ignored growth pressures for 20 seem to be going," said Ethan Seltzer, land gon and Washington are among the 10 years, and today face a crisis. use coordinator for the Metropolitan Serv- fastest-growing states. For homeowners, growth can bring the ice District, the government agency in charge For the past two years, immigration to benefit of appreciating property values. The of regional planning for the Portland metro- Oregon on a percentage population basis Portland area posted the 13th fastest rise in politan area. Metro planners recently held a has been the same as what California has housing prices last year. The average sale series of meetings around the metro area to experienced over the past 10 years, accord- price of homes rose 10.8% in the third survey public attitudes toward growth. ing to William Conerly, an economist with quarter last yearto $71,800, the first signifi- Pat Lee, metro's regional planning su- First Interstate Bank of Oregon. cant increase in more than five years. Single- pervisor, said surprisingly few people had a Oregon's challenge will be to manage family home prices will increase another "don't stay" attitude. "The recession is still the growth-building homes without sprawl- 10% this year, while luxury home prices fresh in people's minds, so they don't want ing across open space, creating a better will rise 20%, according to the Coldwell to slow down the economy," Lee said. Yet OREGON BUSINESSTEBRUARY 1990 21 t choosy about new industry. "Our economic development future doesn't call for new 100,000-square-foot plants," he said. "Mis j valley, with its air and water limitations, needs a diversity of small businesses." In Portland, "There's a lot of pressure going to be brought to bear on controlling - - growth," said Portland Chamber of Com- merce President Donald S. McClave. "You can just pick the organization almost." ! Last spring, developer Philip J. Mor- - ford's plans to raze old homes in northwest Portland and replace them with luxury row ` / houses became a major public cause. Monford's development fit well with the city's plans, but opponents held protests, made threats, and, once construction began, burned the half-finished houses. "ne controversy became a cause," said Morford. At the controversy's roots: A desire HOTELIER HOPEFUL: Fenton Stokeld of Astoria wants to develop a waterfront hotel, to save open space, old houses, and low- but instead has spent $130,000 fighting neighbors who don't want their view blocked. income housing, but mostly a reaction to Phofogrephy by Kent Ken change. "Portland is changing to a more urban and cosmopolitan place. What some- they're getting selective about growth. Partly due to a land use planning lawsuit, one has not seen they are fearful of. little developable private land is available "Ten years ago or even five years ago we Choosy About Change in the county. Good lots are scarce; those would take down houses and the neighbors available sell for $100,000 or more. More would applaud," Morford said. But Port- That selective feeling appears to be a than 30 new children enrolled in school in land was maturing slower then, and "the general trend in Oregon's growth regions. Brookings in the first week of January. people were not intimidated by change." Even the state Economic Development McVay said much of the anti-growth Morford has solved his problem-at least Department is getting choosy about what pressure comes from outside groups like for now-by meeting with neighborhood companies it recruits. "We'll be careful to the 1000 Friends of Oregon and the state associations, explaining his plans, and asking pick that kind of industry that does best for Land Conservation and Development for suggestions before beginning projects. Oregon." says department spokeswoman Commission (LCDC). But many locals Development controversy erupted in Lake _ Kathy Dimond. She says the department is haven't actively supported growth, either, Oswego last summer too. A group called "like the Marines-we want a few good he added. Citizens for Responsible Growth came companies." "If I could, I'd say let's go back to 1958," forward and asked for a moratorium on Even communities which suffered the housing development until more schools most from the recession are selective. In could be built. Astoria, at least two developers-Shilo Inns "There is indeed a "we were having overcrowding in our and local restaurateur Fenton Stokeld- great schools," said Erin O'Rourke-Meadors, a have proposed waterfront hotels. So far, price to be paid for rapid California emigrant who helped found the neither has been approved. group. At the same time, "People felt they "People say we want to keep our water- g rowth says a Lake were coaxed out in property taxes, and there's front the way it is. But it's a bunch of old, "It's a growing sentiment that new development unused canneries," said Stokeld, who has Oswego newcomer. should pay more of the cost." proposed a 115-unit luxury hotel and ma- very easy for Oregon to The group's efforts to stop housing rina. Although the main opponents have development have been largely unsuccess- been "selfish" neighbors who don't want become another ful so far, but it remains active. "It goes their river view obstructed, Stokeld said the beyond the school issue;' O'Rourke-Meadors battle has added at least $130,000 to his California." said. "It's very easy for Oregon to become planning costs. "I'm just a small restaurant another California." owner trying to get bigger," Stokeld said. said McVay, a fifth-generation Curry County Paul Benoit, the city of Astoria's com- resident. "But that's not the way it is. People Costs Of Growth munity development director, character- have found us." izes Stokeld's fight as a not-in-my-back- To the east, Jackson County struggles "There is indeed a great price to be paid yard situation, and not anti-growth. Yet, with the issue of growth. "It's a real schizo- for rapid growth," O'Rourke-Meadors said, "Any time we see development on the phrenic time. We have a very split commu- and Oregonians "don't seem to realize how i riverside, it's going to be controversial," nity about growth," said County Commis- quickly they can lose the quality of life they Benoit acknowledged. sioner Jeff Golden, whose wife, Cathy, is have enjoyed here for so long." The anti-growth attitude is stronger in mayor of Ashland. How do Oregonians gauge their quality Southwestern Oregon. "I think through the "I would say the pro-growth element in of life? "Housing prices and traffic are the land use planning activities it's back to the Medford and most of the county prevails," two ways people are likely to perceive old Tom McCall days," said Curry County Golden said. "I think it's pretty much of a growth," said Carl Abbott, chairman of the Commissioner Rocky McVay. Brookings standoff in Ashland." department of urban studies and planning at and other Curry County towns have been Until recently, the no-growther label "used Portland State University (PSU). overwhelmed by newcomers, some retired to be a curse and an obscenity." No more. "As long as the family is earning money, and some seeking jobs at the new Pelican "There's a lot of people who make no apolo- they don't perceive the unemployment rate," Bay prison, 16 miles south of Brookings gies about a no-growth attitude," he said. Abbott said. across the California line. Even pro-growth people like Golden are So far, Abbott doesn't see Portland swing- 22 OREGON BUSINESS/FEBRUARY 1990 PORTLAND POPULATION PROJECTIONS OREGON POPULATION FORECASTS Area 1987 2010 % Change 2000(000s) low medium med high high Downtown 8,992 11,581 28.7% 2,840.7 3,091.1 3,245.0 3,551 E. Mult. 473,137 522,400 10.4% E. Clack. 183,679 252,614 37.5% 2010 (OOOs) West side 428,922 649,766 51.5% low medium med high high 2,963.3 3,437.6 3,731.3 4,208 Clark Co. 208,697 353,067 69.1% Region 1,303,427 1,789,428 37.3% Oregon's 1987 population was about 2,690,000 Source: Metropolitan Sem" District Source: U.S. Bank aW Nonhwest Pokey Center ing to a no-growth attitude. "We're cer- despi:c Oregon's urban growth bounda,es, gon's unique land use planning system. tainly not in the position of Seattle yet," he Portland is sprawling at the same rate as tl:e Can the system cope? said. "I don't see that Portland has major rest of the United States. Portland hab "I think we've got a remarkable success growth-related problems right now." sprawled for decades. It was last studied record" said LCDC spokesman Mitch Rohse. Abbott believes Portland has avoided using 1980 census data. A 1990 update is "I think it's a benefit." said Bob Straub, problems because growth has been slower planned, but Dueker expects the pattern is, Oregon governor from 1975 to 1979. and more balanced around the metropoli- continuing despite efforts to stop it. Not everyone agrees. "I think people in tan area. "We're not creating overwhelm- "Suburbanization forces have over- business think we have a planning system ing volumes of growth in any one spot," he whelmed our intentions," Dueker said, and that simply does not work," says Dale Riddle, said. The challenges for the 1990s, he added, it is likely to continue. Its advantages: dis- a Eugene attorney specializing in land use will be managed expansion of the down- persed traffic and easy parking, "but it's issues. "I think land use lawyers think it's a town core, and easing Washington County's leading to a severe problem of suburban broken system. I wouldn't say it's worse overburdened transportation system. Pro- congestion that's difficult to deal with." than every state, but it's probably in the top posed light rail extension and highway As more automobile-dependent newcom- three." improvements should "do a lot" to solve ers arrive, "it will be more congested, but Riddle and other critics, such as Curry the problem. the way decentralization is occurring there County's McVay, say the state land use His colleague, Ken Dueker, is less opti- may be more opportunities for shopping, planning system is too inflexible, allows for mistic. Light rail expansion is "not going to working, and recreating within one's proxi- too many appeals, and is indecisive. have a significant impact" on traffic, be- mate area." The planning law covers virtually every cause it tends to take people off buses but acre of private land in the state. Under the not out of private cars, said Dueker, direc- Does Planning Work? Fystem, most growth is supposed to happen for of PSU's Center For Urban Studies. in: ide urban growth boundaries (UGBs) Dueker said the center's studies show The coming growth will challenge Ore- around each city. UGBs are supposed to contain enough land for the community's housing, industrial, and commercial needs for the next 20 years. Land outside the UGBs is supposed to be left for activities like farm and forestry. McVay says the planning law has failed Curry County. "Our hands are tied to prog- ress because of land use restrictions. Prac- tically everything inside the urban growth boundaries has filled up. We have a tremen- dous amount of pressure for developable land. We don't have the mechanism to do it. "There's more land base under water in _ Curry County than in developable lots," the tyee \ti ee\ n : l . Native commissioner said. for the eat Kin Chuck Nordstrom. Curry County's plan- American name gr g ning director, said planners can't predict en- Salmon. 2. Northwest Indian word where, when, how UGBs might be rts larged, because e LCDC continually thwarts for chief or the best. 3. legendary local plans. "It's becoming almost like a crisis situation down here," Nordstrom said. Northwest film and video production "We can't give people a straight answer. In the meantime, people keep coming to the company. county every week, every day saying 'Gee, this is a nice place to live."' Their opinions are not shared by other land use planners, however. Although not perfect, the law generally has served Ore- gon well, says Jan Childs, planning director for the city of Eugene and president of the Oregon chapter of the American Planning i +F - Association. "The kind of sprawl that is going on in the Puget Sound area is the kind that was beginning to happen in the Port- 3)2,31-1641 PRO CTI r land area before statewide land use plan- 1815 " ning," Childs said. 24 OREGON' BUSINESS/FEBRUARY 1990 "We have a land use planning program tudes, the city continues to receive national the Pacific Rim and because of demograph- that's relatively successful," said Metro's attention as the nation's most liveable. ics. Ethan Seltzer. But there are some common Thousands will move there this year in "Business cycles don't go up forever. misconceptions, he added, particularly about search of the good life. There's another downturn out there some- areas inside urban growth boundaries. Ed Whitelaw, a University of Oregon place," Mitchell said. But, "I firmly believe "Tbe land use planning program is pretty economics professor, said the same thing the 1990s is our region's time in the sun." silent about what happens in urban areas; could happen here, even if 1970s anti-growth But sunshine casts a shadow. The size of he said. "Providing parks and open space is attitudes return with a vengeance. the shadow will depend on whether Ore- something communities have to do." "The whole debate to me is idle," he gon's leaders can anticipate and solve the If the law is silent inside cities, how easy said. "We've got demand down south and problems of growth before, or as, it hap- is it to site a new factory? "Easy is in the eye supply up north. It's going to be very diffi- pens. The good news: there's still time. of the beholder," said Childs. In Eugene, at cult for Oregon not to grow." "I would suspect we've got some time, I least, "I think we are still in a situation Economist John W. Mitchell, senior vice Mitchell said. Seltzer agrees: "Our backs where public involvement is needed to president of U.S. Bancorp in Portland, said aren't quite up against the wall." If the right facilitate siting." Oregon will grow because of its position on choices are made, they won't be. ■ Attorney Riddle said opponents have too many ways to delay projects with ap- peals. But he suspects the public still sup- ports the system on the mistaken notion it will protect Oregon from California-style development and allow the state to grow without losing its quality of life. "I don't think we'll be able to do it with the land use planning system we have now;" Riddle predicted. "It's too inflexible." Fighting Farmettes " One of the biggest land use debates is y%=.~~► over development of homes on rural sites outside urban growth boundaries. Demand is increasing for homes on lots of less than 10 acres in the woods or overlooking farm land, despite LCDC's efforts to keep it - - = s,-, intact. C The debate pits 1000 Friends of Oregon, a land use watchdog group, with Oregoni- ans InAction (OIA), a newly-formed group 1 arguing in favor of looser restrictions, par- ticularly on rural land not well suited for agriculture or timber production. "Oregon is in a straightjacket caused by the land use regulatory system," contends Bill Moshofsky, OIA's legal counsel. "There's nearly a prohibition on dwellings outside the city limits." Moshofsky believes land owners should be allowed to develop their land for its YOUR HOME SHOULD FIT highest possible use. "Is it in the public interest to preserve it in its low valued LIKE A PAIR OF FINE GLovEs... state?" he asked. Moshofsky said houses would not nec- essarily conflict with farm and forest uses, Whether you need room for an active, particularly if new homeowners agreed not growing family, a secure base for a life of to object to fertilizer smells or other typical farm and forest practices. travel, a showplace for entertaining, or a On the other hand, 1000 Friends wants retreat from the world - Cronin & Caplan to make sure farmhouses belong to farm- specializes in finding homes that fit your ers, said Keith Bartholomew, staff attorney. Bartholomew said the state's land use lifestyle like a glove. planning system works well. "Because we have a land use planning program, people are not afraid of having growth occur," he said. "I don't see major changes are needed." ~1 p Only 15 years ago, billboards in Puget roan&Ca plans Sound bemoaned "Will the last person to leave Seattle turn out the lights?" Now, INC. REALTORS' residents have passed anti-growth initia- Corporate Offices, Pacific Northwest tives in Seattle and Bellevue, and a local 503 / 222-9701 newspaper columnist leads the charge to discourage newcomers. Despite those atti- OREGON BUSINESS/FEBRUARY 1990 25