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City Council Minutes - 09/23/2014 Citv of Tigard Tigard City Council Meeting Minutes . . . September 23, 2014 TIGARD CITY COUNCIL AND LOCAL CONTRACT REVIEW BOARD 6:30 PM STUDY SESSION Council present: Council President Henderson,Councilor Snider, Councilor Woodard,Mayor Cook Staff present: City Manager Wine,Assistant City Manager Newton,Library Director Barnes, HR Director Bennett, Finance Director LaFrance, Public Contracts Manager Barrett, City Attorney Ramis and City Recorder Krager 1. Discussion on Upcoming Contracts Public Contracts Manager Barrett gave background information on a contract for an automated materials handling (AMH) system for the library. He said Tigard's library has the fourth highest circulation,in amount of materials,among Washington County's Cooperative Library Service member libraries. The library currently circulates over 1,325,000 items annually and this is projected to increase. An RFP was issued in July and staff is recommending a contract award to Lyngsoe Systems, Inc. for the Library's AMH system. The grading system for the RFP was discussed in response to a question from Mayor Cook. Mr. Barrett said staff can bring the proposal analysis to the October 28, 2014,meeting when this contract will be considered by the LCRB. Library Director Barnes said the AMH system capitalizes on the RFID chips. The Beaverton and Hillsboro libraries also use this technology. Mayor Cook noted that holes will need to be cut in the walls for the conveyor. Library Director Barnes said an "up and over" conveyor will be used which is less disruptive to work room functions. She said this will maximize the Library's efficiency and return items to the shelves more quickly. Finance and Information Services Director LaFrance said there is $300,000 budgeted for this one-time purchase.A transfer of$25,000 is required from the general fund contingency. $20,000 is the ongoing maintenance cost,which is not uncommon, and the first year's maintenance was included in the bid. City Manager Wine clarified that the bid award is what is coming before council on October 28, 2014, and the appropriation will be a separate action. Councilor Snider requested that staff demonstrate value to the taxpayers in the form of metrics about material cycle time, etc. Council had no further questions on the contract. TIGARD CITY COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES—SEPTEMBER 23,2014 City of Tigard 113125 SW Hall Blvd.,Tigard,OR 972231503-63941711 www.tigard-or.gov I Page 1 of 15 A Boy Scout and his father were present at the Study Session and commented that they patronize the libraries at both Tigard and Beaverton.Beaverton's circulation process is much faster because they have an AMH system. • EXECUTIVE SESSION: The Tigard City Council entered into Executive Session to discuss labor negotiations, and litigation or litigation likely to be filed,under ORS 192.660(2)(d) and (h). The Executive Sessions ended at 7:20 p.m. • ADMINISTRATIVE ITEMS: o Assistant City Manager Newton updated council on the Washington County Vehicle Registration Fee. If passed,Tigard will need to identify projects to pay for with their share of the collected fees. 2. BUSINESS MEETING—September 23,2014 A. 10 At 7:33 p.m. Mayor Cook called to order the City Council and Local Contract Review Board meeting. B. City Recorder Krager called the roll: Present Absent Council President Henderson ✓ Councilor Snider ✓ Councilor Woodard ✓ Mayor Cook ✓ Councilor Buehner ✓ C. Mayor Cook asked everyone to stand and join him in the Pledge of Allegiance. D. Council Communications &Liaison Reports —None. E. Call to Council and Staff for Non-Agenda Items—Mayor Cook had an item to bring forward at the end of the meeting. 3. CITIZEN COMMUNICATION A. Follow-up to Previous Citizen Communication—None. B. Citizen Communication—Sign Up Sheet 19 Kirk Nelson of 9350 SW Tigard Street,in Tigard is the Facilities Manager for Kadel's Auto Body. He spoke about an issue with a sign they would like to construct on 10925 SW Greenburg Road. He said their drawings were approved on December 23, 2013 and the city issued Kadel's a permit for$378. Because of this approval a non-refundable deposit was made TIGARD CITY COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES—SEPTEMBER 23,2014 City of Tigard 113125 SW Hall Blvd.,Tigard,OR 97223 1 503-639-4171 1 www.tigard-or.gov I Page 2 of 15 on a time/temperature display sign costing$4,200. One week later they received a call from the city that an electronic message sign is not allowed in their zone. The unit they ordered is strictly a time and temperature display and cannot be used for any kind of messaging. They had invested 100 hours into this along with substantial money. He said this matter is subject to interpretation of the code. Mr. Nelson noted that Kadel's has been in the process of upgrading the appearance of their business,including painting the building and trimming their landscaping.Their current sign has aged and is in disrepair. They looked forward to enhancing the curb appeal of their business. They request to be allowed to proceed using the approved permit. Mayor Cook commented that he could think of instances where exceptions were allowed in the past. He asked staff to look into this and City Manager Wine said she or Assistant City Manager Newton will follow up and then contact Mr. Nelson. Councilor Snider asked to be informed of about how this issue is resolved. 4. CONSENT AGENDA: 10 Mayor Cook announced the items on the Consent Agenda. A. APPROVE CITY COUNCIL MINUTES • July 8,2014 • August 12,2014 B. ADOPT RIVER TERRACE STORMWATER MASTER PLAN RESOLUTION NO. 14-42—A RESOLUTION TO ACCEPT THE RIVER TERRACE STORMWATER MASTER PLAN C. AUTHORIZE THE CITY MANAGER TO SIGN A WASHINGTON COUNTY CONSOLIDATED COMMUNICATIONS AGENCY (WCCCA) INTERGOVERNMENTAL AGREEMENT (IGA)AMENDMENT Councilor Woodard moved and Councilor Snider seconded the motion to approve the Consent Agenda. The motion passed by a unanimous vote of those present. Yes No Council President Henderson ✓ Councilor Snider ✓ Councilor Woodard ✓ Mayor Cook ✓ Councilor Buehner (Absent) TIGARD CITY COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES—SEPTEMBER 23,2014 City of Tigard 113125 SW Hall Blvd.,Tigard,OR 972231503-639-41711 www.tigard-or.gov I Page 3 of 15 5. CONSIDER A HERITAGE TREE NOMINATION HAssociate Planner Kowacz gave the staff report. The council would be considering the designation of a black walnut tree,located at 10525 SW Tigard Street,as a heritage tree. She said the tree has an interesting history and grew from a seed gathered from the battlefield in Gettysburg in 1933. The tree is approximately 75 years old. As required by the city code it was inspected by an arborist.Arborist Todd Prager's report is included in the council packet for this agenda item.The nomination was received on May 1,2012 and reviewed by the Park and Recreation Board (DRAB) on May 12,2014. PRAB found that it complies with Heritage Tree requirements and recommends council approval of the nomination. She said if the tree is nominated it is eligible for incentives including a plaque,maintenance and funding. She said the City of Tigard spends about$1,000- $2,000 per year on tree maintenance for the other four heritage trees. Council President Henderson said he was in attendance at the PRAB meeting and was impressed that there is a tree in the community from Gettysburg. Mayor Cook asked if there were issues with heritage trees as there are with historical buildings including nearby construction limitations. Ms. Kowacz replied that she did not see any but it could be removed from designation if the owner goes through the process to remove. Council President Henderson suggested that construction might be required to stay outside the drip line, for example. Mayor Cook noted that the request from the tree owners first came to the city on May 1,2012,and the matter did not go before the PRAB until May 12,2014. He asked why it took city staff so long to respond when approached by the tree owners. Council President Henderson said there was a change when the PRAB took the oversight of trees from the defunct tree Committee. City Manager Wine said there was a combination of situations including completion of the Urban Forestry Code revisions,transition of the city's arborist and consolidation of the Tree Committee with the PRAB. Mayor Cook said he does not want to see two years between requests and the city taking action. Council President Henderson made a motion to add this tree as a Heritage Tree. Councilor Woodard seconded the motion and it passed unanimously. Yes No Council President Henderson ✓ Councilor Snider ✓ Councilor Woodard ✓ Mayor Cook ✓ Councilor Buehner (Absent) TIGARD CITY COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES—SEPTEMBER 23,2014 City of Tigard 113125 SW Hall Blvd.,Tigard,OR 97223 1503-639-41711 www.tigard-or.gov I Page 4 of 15 6. RECEIVE UPDATE ON RIVER TERRACE DRAFT FUNDING STRATEGY PLAN 10 Finance and Information Services Director LaFrance said staff and FCS Group Consultant Todd Chase will update council on the draft funding strategy for River Terrace. He said many people deserve credit for this document but Consultant Chase and Senior Planner and River Terrace Project Manager Shanks have done most of the "heavy lifting." He said Ms. Shanks will provide background on the development of the strategies and communication with others, the process and next steps. Consultant Chase will walk council through the recommendations. His slide presentation is part of the packet for this meeting. Council was encouraged to ask questions. CJ Senior Planner Shanks said work on five master plans was completed in the past year and three have been adopted. In those master plans were lists of projects and costs identified with each. Staff and the consultants and other agencies looked at each project, figuring out what should be on a list of near-term projects based on what is known about each system and future development patterns. Senior Planner Shanks presented a color-keyed map to illustrate future development locations in River Terrace. The colors signify potential timing of property development. ■ Blue properties are owned by Arbor West Hills and are expected to develop in the near term. ■ Green properties have owners that are actively interested in selling or have made arrangements with developers. ■ The yellow property is owned by Polygon and is expected to develop in the near term. ■ At least one of two red properties owned by Metropolitan Land Group is also expected to develop in the near term. ■ Hashed lines indicate properties that are not expected to develop for a long time. ■ Gray property owners have stated they are not developing. ■ White means unknown status. This information was used to develop the near-term list. In response to a question from Council President Henderson, Ms. Shanks said sticky notes denote access to infrastructure and utilities. Developers were invited to a funding strategy workshop and the notes highlight proximity of particular infrastructure systems to their properties. Senior Planner Shanks said the purpose of the funding strategy is to prepare a viable funding plan for near-term and long-term projects, all of which have been identified in the master plans. FCS Group has been working with staff for several months to develop different funding package evaluation criteria to assist council in deciding the best funding scenario for Tigard and for each system. This work will also help the community to understand and weigh in on the funding strategy and scenarios for each system. Senior Planner Shanks said the online survey Consider.IT posed questions and the majority of community respondents said growth should pay for growth. The minority opinion was against adding new taxes and fees. The Stakeholder Working Group (SWG) survey said the number one thing for them was to have equity,with costs distributed equally among future residents, developers, current residents and the city. A slight majority said River Terrace projects should be prioritized over other city projects. Councilor Snider observed that it was not surprising that the River Terrace TIGARD CITY COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES—SEPTEMBER 23, 2014 City of Tigard 113125 SW Hall Blvd.,Tigard,OR 97223 1503-63941711 www.tigard-or.gov I Page 5 of 15 SWG thought River Terrace projects should be prioritized over other projects in the city and said that their majority opinion of splitting costs equally is in stark contrast to the opinion of the others. Senior Planner Shanks said there will be combined SWG/community meetings in October to gain additional feedback which will help refine the final draft funding strategy to be presented to council in December. 0 FCS Consultant Chase said planning long-term for hundreds of acres requires looking out 20- 25 years. He said it is akin to a carpenter who uses a micrometer to measure a board, marks it with chalk and cuts with an ax—he's not going to get what he planned on up front. He said, "We used a micrometer for the master plan updates. The chalk represents estimating what near-term projects are needed to get the project off the ground over the next six years." This should establish enough momentum to build the master plan out as planned. He said there is also an opportunity to update funding techniques and resources that the city will use to build each system. FCS Consultant Chase said council input is sought on the evaluation criteria,whether or not it should be weighted,the appropriateness of the funding strategies and if any others should be considered. He said there was some sensitivity in the community regarding who pays and when, and this was taken into account. Basically four groups can pay: ■ General Fund—This is available but there is a risk to the city's general fund in terms of how resources are allocated for future parks or other investments.The team is recommending some general fund seed money for reimbursement districts. ■ City-wide residents could pay through utility rate increases. ■ Sub district or special districts could pay for local improvements such as strategies for stormwater management. ■ Developers and property owners could pay through impact fees and charges. Evaluation Criteria: ■ The team examined each funding bundle to determine which were distributing the costs more equally. Another evaluation factor was the reliability of the funding. Would it generate a predictable income stream the city could use to finance or get loans through advance funding? o SDCs do not tend to be reliable. o Utility rates are reliable. ■ Does it facilitate development? This can be tricky because it is desirable to generate up front funding for projects but if fees are too high it can be counterproductive to development. ■ Is it easy to implement and to administer? o Will it take much staff time to administer? o Does it require a public vote? ■ Ability to address near- and long-term needs. The team created bundles of funding techniques and scored them by looking at weights. A list of potential funding sources in urbanizing areas was discussed which all involve different timing, risks, rewards, and burdens on different parties. TIGARD CITY COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES—SEPTEMBER 23,2014 City of Tigard 113125 SW Hall Blvd.,Tigard,OR 97223 1503-63941711 www.tigard-or.gov I Page 6 of 15 ■ Water—There are needs with and without River Terrace. Existing rates and planned utility increases should be adequate to address these near-term needs. o Scenario A would use utility fees (water) and SDCs will address near-term needs. ■ Sanitary Sewer—Clean Water Services (CWS) will address big projects with their capital fund. They are moving ahead with the design of the north pump station and then in 4-5 years will consider design of a south pump station if development demands exist. The city is currently working on Barrows Road trunk upsizing and Scholls Ferry Road trunk extensions. Developers will fund laterals to sewer mains. o City utility fees, SDCs and CWS capital funds should be enough to handle near-term and even long-term sewer projects needed in River Terrace. ■ Parks—It is more challenging to put in all parks and improve them to the degree the city desires without new funding sources. But in the near-term,existing funding sources would be adequate for land acquisition and working with developers to acquire easements and land for future parks. This will happen as development occurs. The city will need to be proactive to acquire larger parcels using the parks fund balance. Scenario B is preferred. o Existing parks SDCs will generate revenue for parks but this may not be enough to maintain them. o It is recommended that the city explore a parks utility fee for city-wide customers. Mayor Cook asked for clarification that the parks fund balance referred to is from the general fund parks balance and not from the$17 million park bond. Finance and Information Services Director LaFrance said there are limited and unprogrammed bond proceeds and existing parks SDC funds available. Council could reconsider where fund balances are programmed for the future. Mayor Cook asked for a detailed analysis of park bond spending. Mr.La France said staff is working on that currently. Councilor Woodard asked if the recommended parks utility fee is for maintenance only.Mr. Chase replied that it could be used exclusively for maintenance or based on a revenue requirement that could include one project every five years,for example. Councilor Woodard said he is concerned about maintaining all of the parks bond land acquisitions. He would like to consider the utility fee and is pleased that there could be flexibility. Mr. Chase said it doesn't need to be voter-approved but could be. In response to a question from Councilor Woodard about a typical rate,Mr. Chase said it could run from$1 to$10 per month. He said the city could also ask for a general obligation bond for park improvements. A$10 million general obligation bond would cost$47.00 annually. He said grants will always be pursued by staff but they forecast conservatively for that. 10 Councilor Snider said this is first time he has heard a discussion about the balance between SDCs for River Terrace and what might be passed on to all Tigard citizens. He said it appears that the parks SDC does not change and there is no premium for River Terrace. Mr. Chase said all SDCs are in the process of being reviewed and updated. He said this discussion will come back to council in January with recommendations for SDCs for parks, transportation and stormwater. These are the current rates and he imagines there will be options for council to consider in January-February. Councilor Snider said equity does not seem like a 20 percent share among five different groups;the general burden should be carried by the people causing the burden. TIGARD CITY COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES—SEPTEMBER 23,2014 City of Tigard 113125 SW Hall Blvd.,Tigard,OR 97223 1503-639-41711 www.tigard-or.gov I Page 7 of 15 Mayor Cook asked if the bond was city-wide. Mr. Chase it may be higher and would be city- wide so it could be spent on any parks within the city. He said the park standards are not higher in River Terrace than those in other parts of the city so it is hard to justify a higher impact fee or disproportionate rate. Councilor Snider said he disagreed and Mr. Chase replied that the parks would be open to all residents. He agreed with Councilor Snider that there may be some types of facilities such as neighborhood pocket parks that would be more focused on a sub-area. Senior Planner Shanks pointed out that for water and sewer the funding status quo was recommended because it works. There was only one scenario. For parks, transportation and stormwater, there were different scenarios and if the recommended funding package does not seem like the right fit, the team may need to reevaluate the criteria or weighting and review other funding packages. ■ J FCS Consultant Chase said stormwater at River Terrace will be unique to each sub- basin that will be developed. Regional facilities would benefit more than one tax lot. The city has two options. One option is let the development community try to figure this out on their own based on the impervious surfaces and the run-off they create. The other option is recommended and that is to create enough revenue to seed a few reimbursement districts every six years to pay for regional facilities. This would be advance financed with a mix from many sources (utility fee, River Terrace surcharge and development charges) to give the city a stable revenue source to bond or borrow against to create reimbursement districts. These could be paid back to the city through builders as they develop. Mayor Cook asked about the pros and cons of individual vs. regional stormwater facilities. Senior Planner Shanks said regional facilities are what are recommended in the storm water master plan. Regional facilities are easier for the city to maintain and they are also an opportunity to develop community amenities. ■ Transportation is a challenge and the recommended Scenario is C. Mr. Chase said they added up $139 million in projects in projects within,adjacent or to be considered as part of other city impacts along with River Terrace. Input was received from Washington County and developers that will be considered along with council feedback. Near-term projects look manageable. These include a signal with intersection access on Roy Rogers Road and Scholls Ferry Road and the first few segments of River Terrace Boulevard. Other near-term improvements include local traffic calming in adjacent neighborhoods. o First Scenario: Creation of a new citywide SDC that assumes $6,000 per dwelling unit on top of the Transportation Development Tax (TDT) that Washington County has calculated the city collects. There would also be an urban renewal district in River Terrace with a 15-20 year sunset,creating funds through property taxes for transportation improvements. There is precedence for this in Oregon. It can also be used not only for roads,but for fire or police stations TIGARD CITY COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES—SEPTEMBER 23, 2014 City of Tigard 113125 SW Hall Blvd.,Tigard,OR 97223 1503-63941711 www.tigard-or.gov I Page 8 of 15 Mayor Cook said his concerns about an urban renewal district are that Tigard already has one,there has to be a full vote of the city,and he thinks the next urban renewal area should be the Tigard Triangle or somewhere where there is a commercial aspect. He said to get an urban renewal district requires buy-off from the school district and fire district, agencies that will have their needs increased by the very same development. He said the development will occur there anyway. Councilor Snider agreed. Mr. Chase said the taxes can be shared now,where it used to be all or nothing. It could also sunset earlier. Council President Henderson said Tigard has already has a hard time implementing its current urban renewal district. Mayor Cook asked about a street fee that was used in Bethany, specifically paid by people that moved into that area. He said Scenario C does not have a street fee but a surcharge could be added to the street fee just for the River Terrace area. Mr. Chase said North Bethany has a county service district which is a property tax. This cannot be done in River Terrace because it is incorporated. There could be a special stormwater district. He said this could alleviate some need for Local Improvement Districts or General Fund transfers. Mr. Chase said he would take this to heart and modify the scenario. Councilor Woodard said he preferred Scenario D. He said he was less favorable to an urban renewal district but liked the addition of street maintenance fees SCJ Mayor Cook said input he heard from Citizen Advisory Committee meetings indicates concern about the boulevard and its cost. He asked if there should be a discussion on the funding requirement prior to the one on how to raise the funds. Councilor Woodard said it has a lot to do with the scope and while expenditures for the south side are farther off in the future,the main collector road cannot just stop; it has to be completely built out. He asked what the figure was for near-term projects. Council President Henderson said Page 22 in the draft report shows the near-term amount for transportation is$13 million and long-term is$126 million so the answer is between those figures. Mr. Chase commented that there is an even larger project list showing 300 projects for$2 billion that is not being shown tonight. He said it is a matter of scope and timing. He said there may be a way to phase some segments of River Terrace Boulevard so that it meets the plan goals. Councilor Snider said the current council may have to leave funding for the later projects to a future council because of the difficulty to predict what will happen in 20 years. Mayor Cook said he wanted to return to the comments he heard from around the room at the CAC meeting. The majority were asking why the cost of the $40 million boulevard cannot be lowered to$20 million. Councilor Snider asked if$40 million is an accurate estimate for River Terrace Boulevard. Senior Planner Shanks confirmed that is the estimate for the trail,collector street and landscaped median. Senior Planner Shanks said the$139 million figure is large and in some ways misleading because it includes items that River Terrace is not paying for completely including widening Roy Rogers to five lanes. The TSP list is grouped by streets that TIGARD CITY COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES-SEPTEMBER 23,2014 City of Tigard 113125 SW Hall Blvd.,Tigard,OR 97223 1503-639-41711 www.tigard-or.gov I Page 9 of 15 are completely within River Terrace, streets that are adjacent but county facilities, offsite improvements related to existing neighborhood connections, or portion of improvements based on River Terrace impact to a 99W intersection. She said this is a laundry list including everything and is typical of a TSP. She addressed Mayor Cook's comments about the CAC group's cost concerns and said, "We all have that concern. Transportation is the most challenging thing to fund. Even putting River Terrace Boulevard aside,it is the most expensive and difficult thing to fund." She said they are looking for a third source to go with the TDT and a River Terrace or citywide SDC. Councilor Snider said he cannot make decisions on what the River Terrace funding strategy should look like for transportation when he is looking at a bigger pie. Senior Planner Shanks said that information was helpful to her. She added that staff would be in conversation soon with the county about how MSTIP fits into any of urbanizing area funding strategies. Mayor Cook said he agreed with Councilor Snider and suggested first figuring out what can be paid by Washington Country or by a Metro grant,look at what is River Terrace specific, and then find out if the number can be pared down before ranking funding strategy options. Consultant Chase said he understands from council that the approach should be a combination of things: fine tuning the list, carving out projects not directly caused by River Terrace, and then sharpening the funding strategy on projects that are focused on the city. Projects must be prioritized because some may not happen in the 20- year window. He added that the list should be kept simple and have easily implementable projects that are more realistic in the near-term. He said they will return with a revised Scenario D. Mayor Cook said this topic is not scheduled again until December and asked whether council should see things sooner. He said it was his understanding that this phase of planning would be complete in December but he is hearing tonight that SDCs will not be discussed until January. Finance Director LaFrance responded that there are two separate issues. 1. The funding strategy document before council tonight is what will be adopted in December along with components of the River Terrace Community Plan. The financing strategy is not binding and does not tie the hands of future councils. It provides a road map to council and staff and identifies what needs to be worked on first to get things in place by July 1, 2015. 2. Implementation strategies include SDCs and these will be discussed in January. Work has already begun on SDC development. Finance and Information Services Director LaFrance suggested that prior to the December meeting staff prepare an updated draft financing strategy plan for council to review and comment on, distributed in a Thursday packet. This could provide an interim step between this meeting and the decisions in December. He added that if council desires to attempt to fit in another meeting before December that could also be done. TIGARD CITY COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES—SEPTEMBER 23,2014 City of Tigard 113125 SW Hall Blvd.,Tigard,OR 97223 1503-6394171 1 www.tigard-or.gov I Page 10 of 15 Mayor Cook said this would be helpful. He suggested that the timing of the overall plan discussion be rearranged so that the most challenging one—transportation -be discussed first and water last. He asked if council had to wait until February to have the discussion on the projects in the transportation system plan. Councilor Woodard expressed concern about the project getting backed up and said it is concerning to him that it took 18 months to get to this point. He said a commitment was made to the project three years ago. It was his understanding that council would have enough information to "close the deal" in December. He said a delay would be concerning to developers. lC 1 Community Development Director Asher addressed Councilor Woodard's concern and said he wanted to reassure all River Terrace stakeholders,including developers. He said "Our development group is anxious to build. We are going as fast as we can possibly go. There is risk to the city if we go too fast." He noted that the schedule is to get the Community Plan adopted by the end of the year,which was identified as a council goal. He said there will still be some unanswered questions such as what the SDC will be and what are the projects on each list. All of the implementation decisions cannot be made by the end of 2014 but there is a commitment to make them by the end of the fiscal year. He said that the city cannot accept land use applications yet but it can work with developers on their land use plans to make sure their applications are complete and technical advice is offered. Development can be facilitated prior to the implementation of the SDCs to ensure that dirt can be moved in the summer of 2015. Councilor Snider asked Community Development Director Asher based on his experience with this prior projects in other areas, how fast this is traveling. Community Development Director Asher replied, "70 miles an hour, every week since we started this project. We are the community development department; not the community planning department...We want to get to building permits and development,just like our stakeholders." He said however the law, the state and the region have requirements that the city must follow. He said the project is complicated and there are hard decisions that council must now make. The burden is shifting to the council which will need to decide how fast or slow to go and how much deliberation time it wants to take. He commented that the recent development in North Bethany took 7-8 times longer,maybe going,"20 miles an hour." Senior Planner Shanks expressed agreement with Mr. Asher's comments. Mayor Cook said he did not mean to imply that staff was not moving fast enough or that there is stalling. He said what is being proposed tonight possibly adds another year to the building season. Community Development Director Asher said he did not see how things could move any faster. He said, "When the council made the goal and said 18 months, the council probably did not have a full sense of what this entire scope of this project and process entailed. I know I didn't,because this kind of thing is complex." He said everyone has the same goal and their job is to make sure the council has the best information possible when they make their decisions. Councilor Snider said this is the perfect example of TIGARD CITY COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES—SEPTEMBER 23,2014 City of Tigard 113125 SW Hall Blvd.,Tigard,OR 97223 1503-6394171 1 www.tigard-or.gov I Page 11 of 15 considering projects from a good, fast or cheap perspective and you can always get two of the three. He said if we want it to be good and fast,it will probably not be cheap. Community Development Director Asher said Metro is paying for the planning. There is infrastructure that must be in place, such as the pump station, before permits are issued. Council President Henderson said he would like to see a timeline for the project. Community Development Director Asher said staff is preparing one that is nearing publication. He said a discussion was held with the City Attorney today regarding land use notices, etc. Council President Henderson requested one additional Workshop session. Councilor Woodard referred to Mr. Asher's comment on moving dirt this summer and asked if he was referring to sewer and storm systems or if he meant permits could be issued for site prep on private land for development. Community Development Director Asher said public facility permits could be issued this summer which allow for site grading,road beds and site preparation for development on private land. He said an implementation packet would need council approval by June 30 at the latest so things can get started on July 1. Mayor Cook said some developers want to know what it is going to cost them to build before they can decide to plat. Councilor Woodard complimented the team on doing a great,professional job and moving so quickly. Finance and Information Services Director LaFrance said the last PowerPoint slide is on policy considerations but council already brought up every one. Councilor Snider commented that council is expressing a desire to not be a barrier. Community Development Director Asher said a lot of the staff's work is finished and there is now a transition into decision making, for the planning commission in November and the city council in December. He said staff will follow soon after with SDC and financing updates. He offered assurance that staff and the consultants will do everything possible to make sure council is prepared to make their decisions. 7. 0 LEGISLATIVE PUBLIC HEARING—CONSIDER AN ORDINANCE TAXING THE SALE OF MARIJUANA AND MARIJUANA-INFUSED ITEMS a. IR Mayor Cook opened the public hearing at 9:24 p.m. b. Hearing Procedures — City Attorney said this is a legislative proceeding and anyone may testify. C. Staff Report: Finance and Information Services Director LaFrance said this is the second discussion council has had regarding a tax on the sale of recreational marijuana and marijuana-infused products. He said there is a measure on the November ballot that would legalize the sale of recreational marijuana in Oregon While there is nothing in current law that prohibits cities from taxing marijuana, the initiative most likely to be considered by voters contains language that the State has exclusive rights to tax marijuana. TIGARD CITY COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES—SEPTEMBER 23, 2014 City of Tigard 113125 SW Hall Blvd.,Tigard,OR 97223 1503-63941711 www.tigard-or.gov I Page 12 of 15 Mr. La France said the ordinance under consideration would give the city,if the ballot measure is approved, the ability to tax recreational marijuana. Oregon cities currently have the authority to tax the sale of marijuana and marijuana-infused products. If council wants to impose a tax on marijuana,it would need to be on the books 30 days before the election. Discussion was held on administering the tax. Finance Director LaFrance said staff and the city attorney removed an item from a proposed version of the ordinance that would have allowed retail outlets to retain 5 percent of their taxes to cover accounting costs;and two clauses were added for a $500 privilege tax on any establishment that allows marijuana consumption, and a $1,000 annual privilege tax for marijuana grow sites existing in Tigard d. Public Testimony—No one signed up to speak. - Proponents Opponents e. Staff Recommendation—Finance and Information Services Director LaFrance said staff recommends approval of the ordinance. f. Close Public Hearing—Mayor Cook closed the public hearing. 8 Councilor Snider said there will be legal questions if the measure passes. Councilor Woodard said there should be some form of tax that helps cover police services made necessary by the existence of the dispensaries. He said the implications and costs to the community if marijuana is legalized are unknown. Councilor Snider asked if there should be a statement in the ordinance that if any of it is found not to be legal, the rest of it stands. City Attorney Ramis said this is provided for in Section 2 in a severability clause. Mayor Cook said these may not be the right numbers but over time the city will figure out what those are and having this ordinance on the books allows them to be changed. g. Council Discussion and Consideration of Ordinance 14-12 Councilor Snider moved for approval of Ordinance No. 14-12. Councilor Woodard seconded the motion. City Recorder Krager read the number of title of the ordinance. ORDINANCE NO. 14-12—AN ORDINANCE ESTABLISHING A TAX ON THE SALE OF MARIJUANA AND MARIJUANA-INFUSED PRODUCTS IN THE CITY OF TIGARD TIGARD CITY COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES—SEPTEMBER 23, 2014 City of Tigard 113125 SW Hall Blvd.,Tigard,OR 97223 1503-63941711 www.tigard-or.gov I Page 13 of 15 A roll call vote was conducted. Yes No Council President Henderson ✓ Councilor Snider ✓ Councilor Woodard ✓ Mayor Cook ✓ Councilor Buehner (Absent) Mayor Cook announced that the ordinance was adopted by a unanimous vote of those present. 8. APPOINT NORMA ALLEY AS DEPUTY CITY RECORDER City Manager Wine introduced this agenda item. Appointing a deputy city recorder to serve in the absence or unavailability of the city recorder is provided for in the City of Tigard Charter. Council President Henderson moved for approval of Resolution No. 14-43. Councilor Snider seconded the motion. City Recorder Krager read the number and title of the resolution. RESOLUTION NO. 14-43 A RESOLUTION OF THE TIGARD CITY COUNCIL APPOINTING NORMA ALLEY AS DEPUTY CITY RECORDER Yes No Council President Henderson ✓ Councilor Snider ✓ Councilor Woodard ✓ Mayor Cook ✓ Councilor Buehner (Absent) Mayor Cook gave Deputy Recorder Alley a City of Tigard pin and welcomed her as a staff member. 9. COUNCIL LIAISON REPORTS None. 10. NON AGENDA ITEMS None. 11. EXECUTIVE SESSION None. TIGARD CITY COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES—SEPTEMBER 23,2014 City of Tigard 113125 SW Hall Blvd.,Tigard,OR 972231503-63941711 www.tigard-or.gov I Page 14 of 15 12.ADJOURNMENT At 9:34 p.m. Councilor Snider moved for adjournment. Councilor Woodard seconded the motion and all voted in favor. Yes No Council President Henderson ✓ Councilor Snider ✓ Councilor Woodard ✓ Mayor Cook ✓ Councilor Buehner (Absent) zfazi Carol A. Krager, City Recorder Attest: Mayor, 1Y Y'fov.ofTPigard ^� t /Dater �� d/7 TIGARD CITY COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES—SEPTEMBER 23,2014 City of Tigard 113125 SW Hall Blvd.,Tigard,OR 972231503-639-41711 www.tigard-or.gov I Page 15 of 15