City Council Minutes - 01/12/2016 City of Tigard
Tigard City Council/LCRB Meeting Minutes
. . . January 12, 2016
STUDY SESSION
A. At 6:30 p.m. Mayor Cook read the citation for an Executive Session to be held under ORS
192.660 (2) (e) property negotiations. The Executive Session ended at 6:45 p.m.
B. Council Liaison Reports were given.
C. Metro Councilor Dirksen updated council on SW Corridor decision deadlines,Metro's convention
center hotel and a new online feature called Regional Snapshot which gives interesting facts about
the region. He brought several handouts have been added to the packet for this meeting.
1. BUSINESS MEETING
A. At 7:32 p.m. Mayor Cook called the Tigard City Council and Local Contract Review Board
to order.
B. City Recorder Krager called the roll.
Present Absent
Mayor Cook ✓
Councilor Goodhouse ✓
Councilor Henderson ✓
Council President Snider ✓
Councilor Woodard ✓
C. Mayor Cook asked everyone to stand and join him in the Pledge of Allegiance.
D. Mayor Cook asked council and staff for any non-agenda items. City Manager Wine had two
items to bring forward under Non Agenda items at the end of the meeting.
2. CITIZEN COMMUNICATION
A. Follow-up to Previous Citizen Communication—None.
TIGARD CITY COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES —January 12, 2016
City of Tigard 1 13125 SW Hall Blvd.,Tigard, OR 97223 www.tigard-or.gov Page 1 of 19
B. Tigard High School Student Envoy—Student Body President Shaina Azbari gave an update
on recent and upcoming Tigard High School activities. Over$1,200 was raised by students
for the Susan G. Komen Foundation. Team Dom is selling t-shirts and bracelets to raise
money for a mother in the community battling cancer. The National Honor Society is doing
a coin drive for the Janus Youth Program for homeless youth in the Portland area.The
winter choir concert was held. Tigard High students collected gifts to brighten the holiday
season for a few needy families. Students wrote holiday cards for patients at Doernbecher
Children's Hospital at lunchtime. A Poetry Slam is planned for January 21 and the
community is welcome.
C. Tigard Area Chamber of Commerce—CEO Debi Monahan reported that a multi-chamber
speed networking event will be held on the first Thursday in February. The Bowl-o-Rama
event is scheduled for March 5`h and she encouraged the city council to put together a team.
The Shining Stars banquet will be on April 29 and the call for nominations will go out
January 13. Nominating information is on the Chamber website. Opening day for the
Tigard Farmers Market is April 24 and they are excited about adding some new children
activities and a demo garden. The Holiday Tree Lighting event attracted the largest crowd
ever.
D. Citizen Communication—Summerfield Civic Association Liaison Robert Van Vlack, 15585
SW 109`h Avenue,Tigard,97224,brought a request before the council. When Summerfield
was constructed in the 1970s a brick wall was put up along Durham Road. In 2001 the
association took over maintenance of the wall. Over the years it has deteriorated and repairs
need to be made. The right of way along Durham Road at Summerfield is maintained by the
city and he requested that staff remove some underbrush so they can access the wall to make
the necessary repairs. He has discussed with Public Works Director Rager. He read a letter
from the Summerfield Civic Association which has been added to the packet for this
meeting.
3. CONSENT AGENDA: (Tigard City Council and Local Contract Review Board)—
A. RECEIVE AND FILE:
1. Council Calendar
2. Council Tentative Agenda for Future Meeting Topics
B. APPROVE CITY COUNCIL MINUTES:
November 24, 2015
December 8, 2015
Local Contract Review Board:
TIGARD CITY COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES —January 12, 2016
City of Tigard 1 13125 SW Hall Blvd.,Tigard, OR 97223 www.tigard-or.gov I Page 2 of 19
C. CONSIDER IGA WITH WASHINGTON COUNTY FOR ROY ROGERS ROAD
IMPROVEMENTS
D. CONSIDER AUTHORIZING THE CITY MANAGER TO SIGN THE TIGARD/
LAKE OSWEGO ENTERPRISE ZONE INTERGOVERNMENTAL AGREEMENT
Councilor Woodard moved for approval of the Consent Agenda and Council President Snider
seconded the motion. All voted in favor.
Yes No
Mayor Cook ✓
Councilor Goodhouse ✓
Councilor Henderson ✓
Council President Snider ✓
Councilor Woodard ✓
4. CONSIDER RESOLUTION APPOINTING CITY CENTER ADVISORY COMMISSION
MEMBERS
Redevelopment Project Manager Farrelly gave the staff report and read brief biographies of the
members being appointed. Councilor Henderson thanked them for their service noting that there
is a lot of work to be done in the downtown. Councilor Woodard congratulated CCAC Member
Schlatter for being a new business owner on Main Street. He said her new food operation will be
great for the city. Councilor Henderson moved for approval of Resolution No. 16-01 and Council
President Snider seconded the motion. City Recorder Krager read the number and title of the
resolution.
Resolution No. 16-01 —A RESOLUTION APPOINTING CARINE ARENDES, GINA
SCHLATTER,MARK SKORUPA,AND DAVID WALSH AS VOTING MEMBERS OF
THE CITY CENTER ADVISORY COMMISSION,AND SARA VILLANUEVA AS A
NON-VOTING ALTERNATE MEMBER
Mayor Cook conducted a vote and announced that Resolution 16-01 passed unanimously.
Yes No
Mayor Cook ✓
Councilor Goodhouse ✓
Councilor Henderson ✓
Council President Snider ✓
Councilor Woodard ✓
TIGARD CITY COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES —January 12, 2016
City of Tigard 1 13125 SW Hall Blvd.,Tigard, OR 97223 www.tigard-or.gov I Page 3 of 19
CCAC Members Gina Schlatter and Carine Arendes were present and received a city pin from
Mayor Cook.
5. CONSIDER A RESOLUTION APPOINTING A PLANNING COMMISSION MEMBER
Assistant Community Development Director McGuire gave the staff report. This appointment
will fill the unexpired term of Planning Commission President Rogers, expiring in 2018. Proposed
member Yi-Kang Hu is also a member of the Tigard Transportation Advisory Commission and
has agreed to sit on both commissions.
Council President Snider moved to approve Resolution No. 16-02 and the motion was seconded
by Councilor Goodhouse. City Recorder Krager read the number and tide of the resolution.
Resolution No. 16-02 A RESOLUTION APPOINTING YI-KANG HU AS A VOTING
MEMBER OF THE TIGARD PLANNING COMMISSION TO FILL,FORMER
COMMISSIONER ROGERS' UNEXPIRED TERM
Mayor Cook conducted a vote. Resolution 16-02 passed unanimously.
Yes No
Mayor Cook ✓
Councilor Goodhouse ✓
Councilor Henderson ✓
Council President Snider ✓
Councilor Woodard ✓
New Planning Commission Member Yi-Kang Hu was present and received a City of Tigard pin
from Mayor Cook.
6. LEGISLATIVE PUBLIC HEARING—CONSIDERATION OF A PARK MAINTENANCE FEE
a. Open Public Hearing - Mayor Cook opened the public hearing and announced that this is a
legislative public hearing in which any person shall be given the opportunity to comment.
b. Staff Report: Finance and Information Services Director LaFrance gave the staff report.
Consultant Todd Chase was also present. Mr. LaFrance said before council was an ordinance
to establish a parks maintenance fee and a resolution to amend the master fees and charges
schedule. Council discussed this in four Budget Committee meetings and two council
workshops. It was also a topic at two Parks and Recreation Board (DRAB) meetings. He said
the proposal is closely linked with the Tigard's Strategic Plan Goal 4 which is to fund the vision
while also maintaining core services and this proposal for a park maintenance fee does exactly
that. It will allow the city to fund and expand park services by 20 percent. Parks relate not only
TIGARD CITY COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES —January 12, 2016
City of Tigard 1 13125 SW Hall Blvd.,Tigard, OR 97223 www.tigard-or.gov I Page 4 of 19
to walkability through Tigard's trails,but they provide places where people can interconnect,
take part in healthy pursuits such as sporting activities,gardening and connecting with
neighbors and community members.
In addition, this park maintenance fee proposal will allow the city to take something currently
funded by the General Fund and give it another funding source. This frees up some of the
General Fund and through Budget Committee actions this spring, the city will be able to
reinvest up to $1.7 million towards core services. As discussed in Budget Committee this does
not mean maintaining the same number of staff to provide services to a growing city,but it
means growing those services to meet the demands.
Mr.LaFrance highlighted citizen outreach that included Cityscape articles, a city park brochure
distributed months ago and a webpage dedicated to this subject. A whiteboard video has been
accessible to give people a brief summary of this proposal. Citizen input was solicited through
the webpage and those unable to attend tonight's meeting were invited to respond in writing.
Six responses were received and they were given to council and are part of the record for this
hearing. Social media was used to promote this hearing.
A PowerPoint was shown and is included in the packet for this meeting. Mr. LaFrance
described issues including the budget cuts in 2010 and 2012,population growth increases,and
workforce decreases. The city's expenses continue to grow by 4 percent while general fund
revenue only rises 3.5 percent. In addition, over the last 15 years park land grew by 66 percent
but staffing to maintain the parks has only grown 12 percent. Deferred maintenance gets more
expensive the longer it is deferred. SDCs finance capital assets but are not used for
maintenance.
Seven different level scenarios were described. Council direction from the workshop meetings
was to fund only#1 (current level of service) and #2 (deferred maintenance).The fee will be
paid by residential and non-residential customers. The annual average cost for the deferred
maintenance scenario will be used to level the fee amount. There will be annual inflation
factors and council was very interested in a program for low income fee assistance. Council was
asked what the fee should be per equivalent dwelling unit per month. They indicated in the
workshop meetings that funding park capital projects and recreation might be placed on a
property tax levy measure so people could have a vote.
C. Council questions of staff
Mayor Cook noted that the city had a $17 million park bond which leveraged to $23 million.
A percentage went to build capital items in some parks but there was no maintenance aspect
added. He said citizens are asking why city did not think of this before.
Finance and Information Services Director LaFrance said a general obligation capital bond
cannot be used on operations and maintenance. There were specific restrictions. The bond
that passed was the second attempt.The first bond measure was broader in scope but
community feedback was to focus on purchasing land while it was cheaper during the
recession. He said city staff was aware of the fact that the city would need to come up with
TIGARD CITY COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES —January 12, 2016
City of Tigard 1 13125 SW Hall Blvd.,Tigard, OR 97223 www.tigard-or.gov I Page 5 of 19
ways to fund maintenance of the land but they were unaware that the financial situation
would be what it is today. Local government has not experienced an economic recovery.
Councilor Goodhouse asked if the un-programmed$400,000 would go into the recently
created rainy day fund. Mr. LaFrance said it goes to help keep the fund balance above the
minimum requirement expenditures. There is still a structural inequity due to revenues rising
slower than expenses but it does buy some time and is sustainable for at least six years.
d. Public Testimony
Doug Vorwaller, 13267 Woodshire Lane,Tigard, OR 97223,is concerned about this
approach. He appreciated the creativity in looking at options but is seeing a lot of other
things being addressed other than park maintenance. If park maintenance is being changed
from$2.2 million to$2.3 this will not even touch the improvements that need to be made.
We probably need$3-4 million as an annual budget to address the real concern.The utility
fee is a good option. He suggested doing the utility fee at 100 percent and then phasing out
the city budget line item over five years. City staff could review it at that time. If Tigard is
going to be the most walkable city we need to connect some of the trails and that is a new
improvement. There are city properties to make some connections but many are wetlands so
remediation must be done at additional cost.
Scott Winkels, 8366 SW Char Court,Tigard, OR 97224 said he is in favor of the park
maintenance fee. His family,including two daughters and a dog,has been active users of the
parks system. He complimented Finance and Information Services Director LaFrance for
the clear presentation. There are a number of issues with the parks. There are some
acquisitions and trails that are in desperate need of assistance. He said he believes the
funding method that council has chosen is creative and given Oregon's basket case of a
public finance system,is probably one of the few reliable options available. He said he would
hate to see the investments that this community approved continue to deteriorate. He said
he has spent a great deal of time in these parks and has seen fire fuels buildup, maintenance
and public safety issues in the Fields and Dirksen properties. There are extensive homeless
camps. He said a well-maintained and usable park and trail system will address a number of
these issues. The funding mechanism proposed will create a necessary safety valve to keep
the parks budget from having to compete with other vital city services.
Lonnie Martinez, 10540 SW Walnut Street,Tigard, OR 97223, addressed having a fee rather
than a vote and said he did not want to be forced to pay for something. He said in a
democratic world people get a chance to say what they feel is best for them. He said he
recently purchased a home here and thinks Tigard is beautiful. He is not opposed to parks
but is against being forced to pay for something without a democratic process. He
addressed walkability and said he walks from his home to take public transportation but just
crossing the street is an issue. When he walks in Tigard he fears a little more for this life than
he did when living in Portland.
Michel Didin, 12625 SW Snow Bush Court,Tigard, OR 97223 said he was troubled by the
shell game aspect of funding the parks system by taking funds from one budget and shoving
TIGARD CITY COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES —January 12, 2016
City of Tigard 1 13125 SW Hall Blvd.,Tigard, OR 97223 www.tigard-or.gov I Page 6 of 19
it back into others. His other concern is that he opposes something being done in his
absence without his vote. He proposed that this matter be put to a vote so all Tigard
citizens can express their opinion.
James Caster, 7996 SW Ashford Street,Tigard, OR 97224, said when he and his wife retired
they bought a home in Tigard and liked the neighborhood very much. Since his wife passed
away it has been harder for him to pay the mortgage. Part of the reason is that utility costs
have increased greatly. Water bills have doubled. Gas, electric,garbage,insurance and
property taxes have all gone up. Like many senior citizens he is on a fixed income and Social
Security benefits did not increase. He said in high school civics he learned that the main
purpose of government is to provide basic, necessary services for the public,paid for by the
citizens. But in the decades that have passed it seems like government's prime directive is to
take more and more taxpayer money with no limits in sight and no accountability. Over the
past several years the state government spent over$200 million on planning for a bridge that
was never built and they wasted$300 million on a health insurance website that never
worked. Locally,Tigard wasted nearly$1 million on two ugly,useless sculptures at each end
of Main Street. Parks are neither a utility nor a necessity; they are optional extras.They are a
luxury and if they are classified as a utility,as seen in the presentation tonight,the costs will
keep increasing year by year. He wants to keep his home and requested no additional taxes.
He said, "Let's not make Tigard like Portland."
Gary Nelson, 15671 SW Summerfield Lane,Tigard OR, 97224, said he agreed with the
mayor's comments on the acquisition of parkland without identifying how to pay for
maintenance. He was on the Ashland Parks Commission as well as one in Billings,MT and
also on the Regional Council of the National Parks and Recreation Association (NRPA) so
he has a background in this area. In Ashland,whenever a new subdivision was built,initially
they would give ten percent of the land to make a small park but found it to be inefficient.
It was necessary to haul maintenance equipment to each little park. He sees that Tigard
added 30 percent more parkland with virtually no identifiable way to maintain that park land.
He said the cart is before the horse right now. He said that needs to be addressed. He asked
if this money becomes available to the parks department will the parks manager have
exclusive and total control over the funds. He asked if that manager will be able to identify
where the money will be spent or would it become part of the political makeup of Tigard.
Arthur Molinari, 13209 Woodshire Lane,Tigard, OR 97223, said he moved to Tigard in
October but has lived in the area for a long time. He was surprised that his water bill was
$100 more than he expected. He looked into it and found that compared to Tualatin Valley
Water District (TVWD),Tigard has 221-110 percent higher meter costs up front and 290-
950 percent higher monthly meter costs. He asked why this is so high. He said his
fundamental issue is that the city is considering adding on a fixed cost as opposed to making
it a tax which can be written off. He added that it does not encourage conservation.
Mayor Cook replied that the water fee difference between the two water providers in Tigard
is that in the last eight years the city entered into a partnership with Lake Oswego to
construct a$254 million water plant.Tigard's water rates helped to cover that cost. It is
TIGARD CITY COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES -January 12, 2016
City of Tigard 1 13125 SW Hall Blvd.,Tigard, OR 97223 www.tigard-or.gov I Page 7 of 19
projected that TVWDs rates will increase even more. Council President Snider added that
Tigard's alternative was to keep buying water from Portland and that was even more
expensive.
Lee Coleman, 7170 SW Lola Lane,Tigard, OR 97223, said a park utility fee made about as
much sense as adding a fee for road maintenance on his electric bill every month. He said
the city could come back at any time and request more fees without much public input. This
should go to the ballot so people can vote on it.
Claudia Ciobanu, 14180 SW 89`h Avenue,Tigard, OR 97223, said she is a huge proponent of
parks and has no problem with the park fee. She said there may be people who were not
aware of this public hearing and expressed concern about giving people an opportunity to
give input. She suggested a flyer in the water bill. She supported city leadership going
forward with this fee to protect the large investment in parks. She said the city's vision is
wonderful but she is worried that the sights are being set too short. She noted that council
has given staff direction to focus on levels #1 and#2 but the people of Tigard have spoken
loudly about their need and desire to have recreation in Tigard. The$10 monthly fee would
not cover this. Paying for levels 1-7 would be more like$16 a month and while this could be
a significant hit to some people testifying tonight, she would be happy to pay it and help
subsidize others in order to achieve the dream of having a recreation program. She was not
sure if council could go as high as $16 but suggested seeking input from those who would be
affected by this and then examine options in between $10 and$16 by adding 50 cents or one
dollar more to start funding a true recreation program in Tigard.
e. Council Questions and Discussion
Mayor Cook stated that while everyone refers to this as a water bill it does not mean
everything on it is a utility. Two-thirds of Tigard receive their water from the city so there is
a water charge. There is also a street maintenance fee and a Clean Water Services sewer
district fee that is collected for the county. Everyone in Tigard is billed for sewer and the
street maintenance fee but one-third of Tigard residents do not receive water from Tigard.
The bill is the only mechanism to reach everyone.
Mr. LaFrance noted that Section 15.2 in the proposed ordinance says as new parks are
acquired or significant developments are made, that information will come to council so they
know how this may impact the parks maintenance fee. The idea is not to let the funding
source fall behind like it has today. He responded to comments about the higher utility bill
and said it is the total cost of city services. Tigard citizens benefit from the lowest property
tax rate for any city over 10,000 population in Washington County. When information is
provided on the total cost of comparable city services including taxes, from a dollar
standpoint Tigard is in the lower half but from the affordability standpoint Tigard is in the
middle. The city puts a little more on the utility bill because it gets less from taxes and it all
evens out.
f. Mayor Cook closed the public hearing.
TIGARD CITY COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES —January 12, 2016
City of Tigard 1 13125 SW Hall Blvd.,Tigard, OR 97223 www.tigard-or.gov I Page 8 of 19
g. Council Deliberation:
Councilor Henderson said he wanted sideboards on the fee so council does not end up
doing something other than what they said they will do. He heard concerns about whether to
mandate this or put it to a vote. Parks are a core value he understands the cost and while we
need to invest in our community,it needs to be reasonable.
Council President Snider said council consists of five elected officials and this does represent
a democratic process. We make decisions and spend taxpayer money every week. He
understands that people do not want to be forced to pay for things but Tigard has the lowest
tax rate of any city in Washington County that is even close to its size. City expenses are
increasing at rates higher than property tax funding mechanisms. He said it is frustrating to
be an elected official in an organization where expenses go up faster than revenues can be
increased. He does not love increasing costs for services but sometimes council has to make
decisions and choices. He is a proponent of moving this off the utility bill and onto a
property tax levy.The city has to provide services and cannot continue to manage as it has,
with expenses rising by four percent and revenues only going up three and one-half percent.
He said people need to be able to plan for increased costs and he supported a phase-in
mechanism, even four or five years for the entire $2.7 amount,or placing it on the ballot.
Councilor Goodhouse said he wants a phase-in period and a low-income program to help
people who cannot afford the increase. He said in the future he would like to take some
things off the utility bill and combine them on the property taxes so they can be written off.
He said people in the community do not realize the city is bringing in half of the money
Beaverton residents pay in taxes and has done a great job but it is not sustainable. He said
when you let part of a community degrade it takes longer to bring it up to standard.
Councilor Woodard said during the Budget Committee hearings his main concern was
keeping the library open on Thursdays. But he is also concerned about the deferred
maintenance and the $400,000 to maintain the fund balance. He said unless there is a
designated spot for these funds it is hard to explain that to voters. He said he supports 37
percent with a phase-in. He was thinking$2.00 but that will not cover the $400,000. He said
there has to be a public process to find out if citizens want to pay out the other 63 percent.
He mentioned he would like to have a discussion at a future meeting on some ideas he has
on creative and innovative ways to raise money.
Mayor Cook said there is too much discussion on what park and what maintenance we are
going to do. It is called a park utility fee but the question is what we need in our general fund
to cover our general expenses. He said he was in favor of this coming from property taxes
and would support a local option levy. He explained that a utility fee amount is the same for
everyone. A $200,000 homeowner pays the same fee as a $2 million homeowner. But a
property tax would increase with the value of the home and is a tax write-off. He said he
was willing to support a 37 percent park maintenance fee but was not willing to ask for$10
because the unallocated money would build up to a large amount that is too large not to be
considered by voters in a local option levy. If a levy passes the fee can be repealed. He
added that he did not vote for opening the library on Thursdays because he did not want to
TIGARD CITY COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES —January 12, 2016
City of Tigard 1 13125 SW Hall Blvd.,Tigard, OR 97223 www.tigard-or.gov I Page 9 of 19
vote for something that is not funded. He said the Thursday opening is with a skeleton staff
and the city is short$100,000 annually to pay for that.
Councilor Snider said it was embarrassing that a city of Tigard's size did not have a seven-
day a week library. He said council agreed to open the library and do something like this to
fund it.
Councilor Goodhouse said his concern was that this amount is a Band-Aid approach. If
council will consider 37 percent,why not raise it slightly to 40 or 44? He said it was
ridiculous to make this move that will leave the city in the same position in a year or so.
Mayor Cook suggested$3.75 with a four-percent inflation factor.
City Manager Wine said there are code sections that need to be revised and some scrivener's
errors and council has asked for time to review the new documents. The hearing can be held
over.
Councilor Henderson said the document came from the pavement management program
and as he compared the two he noticed some inconsistencies. It refers to capital
improvements and a recreation program.
Finance and Information Services Director LaFrance said this is the minimum
recommendation and gets the city expanded park services,pays for the library, sets aside
$400,000. What it does not get to is a continuance of Goal 4. There will not be additional
reinvestment into the general fund.
Council President Snider suggested the low income program follow the water concept for a
50 percent discount for 12 months. A person could apply once a year.
Mayor Cook said the public hearing is closed and deliberation will scheduled for a future
council meeting.
7. LEGISLATIVE PUBLIC HEARING—CONSIDER COMPREHENSIVE PLAN AMENDMENTS
AND ZONING CHANGES TO PRESERVE MEDIUM DENSITY(R-12)RESIDENTIAL LAND
a. Mayor Cook opened the public hearing and announced that it is a legislative public hearing
in which any person shall be given the opportunity to comment.
b. Staff Report: Associate Planner Pagenstecher gave the staff report. He said the city is
initiating this Comprehensive Plan and Zoning Amendment to facilitate preservation of R-
12 zoned land and to make sure it is applied in a location that supports residential use. Staff
supports the change in response to two development applications for two sites involving R-
12 zoning. The owners and representatives of owners are present tonight. In the pre-
application meeting for Site A, the owner showed interest in rezoning from CP to R-12. The
Toppings had earlier annexed the property and rezoned it to CP in order to establish a day
care use in 2008 which they have not moved forward on. Site B is owned by the Tigard-
TIGARD CITY COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES —January 12, 2016
City of Tigard 1 13125 SW Hall Blvd.,Tigard, OR 97223 www.tigard-or.gov I Page 10 of 19
Tualatin School District and they applied for a rezone from R-12 to CG. It has been
identified as surplus property by TTSD and they want to sell it to the highest bidder.The
zone change and site development review on Site B has been withdrawn recently in favor of
the city's proposed zone change. Staff was aware that both sites had development interest
and saw an opportunity to organize a swap that will gain the city a slight net increase in R-12
zoning. This is important according to the city's Housing Goal, "to provide a variety of
housing types to meet the diverse housing needs of current and future cityresidents."
Preservation of R-12 zone lands is warranted because it allows a full range of housing types,
with a minimum lot size of 33,350,provides flexibility for both attached and detached
ownership and multi-family,rental-type housing which supports affordable housing options
in the city. Attached single-family residential or detached single family housing on small lots
are an important component of the city's strategy to provide for a range of housing types
and a range of affordability.
Associate Planner Pagenstecher said Site A is at Spruce and 72nd Avenue and fronts on a
local residential street. It is bordered by R-4.5 and low-density housing,unincorporated
Washington County to the north and CG and R 4.5 to the south.The adjacent lower class
streets and lower density residential use make the property more suitable for medium
residential use. It would form a transition between lower density and commercial zoned
properties. Site A is located behind Fred Meyer.
Site B fronts on Pacific Highway,classified as a primary arterial and is flanked by property
zoned CG. Residential property adjacent to Pacific Highway is rare as it is primarily
associated with private and public school ownership and use which is allowed conditionally
in residential zones.Topographically constrained land between Canterbury Lane and Bull
Mountain Road also has R-12 zoned land along Pacific Highway.
This swap would result in a .17-acre net increase in R-12 zoned land. The Planning
Commission voted 6-1 in favor, supporting the city's initiative to preserve R-12 capacity and
to further owner and property developer interests in both Site A and B.
The Metzger neighborhood is here also as they were present at the Planning Commission to
alert council to their concerns:increased water runoff,increased traffic,inadequate parking,
and loss of open space associated with future development.
Mr. Pagenstecher concluded by saying these proposed amendments comply with applicable
state planning goals, applicable regional planning regulations,Tigard Comprehensive Plan,
and applicable provisions of the city's implementing ordinances.
C. Council questions of staff:
Councilor Woodard asked if there was a reason to choose a legislative hearing process rather
than quasi-judicial. Associate Planner Pagenstecher said yes,given other deliberations in the
city going on about the value of R-12 zoned land at the time the quasi-judicial proposal
would be coming to the Planning Commission or Council; staff would most likely have not
TIGARD CITY COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES —January 12, 2016
City of Tigard 1 13125 SW Hall Blvd.,Tigard, OR 97223 www.tigard-or.gov I Page 11 of 19
supported it. This was because it would have created a loss of R-12 zoning. But if done
legislatively with inclusion of this other property it could be supported because it would not
create a net loss of R-12 zoning. There was also interest in getting the school property
developed soon.
Councilor Goodhouse asked why the city did not do a zoning swap with the Heritage
Crossing property. Council President Snider said they did not offer a swap and the sum of
the density would have been lower. Associate Planner Pagenstecher said swap opportunities
are rare.
d. Public Testimony
Richard and Katie Topping 19765 Derby Street,West Linn, OR 97068 Katie Topping gave
their history with the property. They bought it in 2008 and their goal was to develop a
preschool. They wanted to make an amazing preschool but she needed to first get her
Master's degree. They both continued to be teachers and wanted to sell the property but the
recession hit. Finally,last year they received an offer from someone who wanted to build
storage units. They decided that was not quite the right fit. Later, someone wanted to build
a trampoline warehouse. They spoke to Stafford Development and felt that the housing
situation was a good compromise. They wanted to do a zone change that was beneficial and
also get some return on their savings. Richard Topping said he understood that there may be
some resistance from people in the neighborhood. The current tenants strive to keep kids
off the property but there are a lot of dogs and drug use going on the property and it is a
constant battle to keep it maintained. He said developing it into nice houses would be a
benefit to the community.
Levi Levasa, Stafford Development Company, 485 South State Street,Lake Oswego,OR
97034, said they approached the Toppings last year after noticing the property was prime
residential area yet is was zoned commercial. It is surrounded by residential and there is
currently residential use on the property. They expressed support for the zone swap and
hoped council find the Planning Commission's decision and staff report to be accurate.
Monet Ragsdale, 1521 Oxbow Drive,Montrose, CO, spoke in support of the zone change,
especially on the property owned by the school district. That property is surrounded by
commercial property and commercial uses and the zone change would allow private
development to come in, creating jobs and adding to the tax base.
Will Ramusen,Miller Nash Graham Dunn, 111 SW Fifth Avenue, Portland, OR 97204,
spoke on behalf of the Tigard-Tualatin School District, the owner of Site B. This
application is a win-win-win. It will help the property owner. It helps the city's housing
supply situation and it helps the school district fix a problem that they have had for a
long, long time. The district has held this property since the 1940s at least. In 2005 it was
officially designated as surplus property. It is zoned residential but on Pacific Highway so
they have received little interest from buyers since listing it in 2006. Only a few inquiries
were received, all interested in commercial. They have spoken with the city a few times
about changing the zoning but the cost of a quasi-judicial rezone that reduces the inventory
TIGARD CITY COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES -January 12, 2016
City of Tigard 1 13125 SW Hall Blvd.,Tigard, OR 97223 www.tigard-or.gov I Page 12 of 19
of housing,in light of regional and state policies,led the district to say no. He said this is an
appropriate and creative approach and appreciates staff's leadership and the city for thinking
outside the box to solve multiple problems. He noted some comments have come from
people liking the sites and wanting them to remain open space. He said he hoped the city
does not develop a policy that maintains open space through miss-zoned properties.
Noreen Gibbons, 10730 SW 72nd Avenue,Tigard, OR 97223, said she lives directly across
from Site A. She referred to the previous speaker and said this would actually be win-win-
lose for her neighborhood. She said when she purchased her property there were three
houses across the street. When the Toppings bought the site and wanted to put in a
preschool she was supportive of that use. That would have been fine with her and the
quality of the neighborhood. But having 18-20 two-story houses built on the site will have
negative effects on the character of the neighborhood. She said she had spoken to council
before about traffic issues and there have been motorcycle officers in her driveway recently
ticketing people for running the stop sign. She asked what the traffic will be like when there
are six driveways across the street. She asked why the zoning had to be R-12 and suggested
it be lower density.
Gay Wakeland signed up to speak but left the meeting earlier.
Ivan Vanek, 7290 SW Pine Street,Tigard, OR 97223 said he bought his home in 1995 with
the understanding that the adjacent property would be developed with low density. He said
that putting in two-story houses will be an eyesore and he does not agree with the plan.
Jim Long, 10730 SW 72nd Avenue,Tigard, OR, 97223, distributed copies of his testimony
and this has been added to the record. He said he is the chair of CP04M, serving east
Tigard,Metzger and Durham and will be speaking as chair and as a private citizen. He said
the CP04M unanimously voted to endorse retaining the Commercial General zoning for
Site A. After reading the pre-application materials he found huge errors. If the city goes
forward or approves this application he will appeal and the city will lose. He referred to
Councilor Woodard's question about holding a legislative hearing and commented that
holding this as a legislative public hearing process and not a quasi-judicial one minimizes
public input and is highly irregular. According to Tigard Community Development Code
18.390.050, zoning map and text amendments should be quasi-judicial proceedings. He said
the city is trying to change the statutes for review for the citizens to the detriment of citizen
involvement and Goal 1 land use law. He said, "To put it another way, maybe you are not
neutral."
Mr. Long said citizens have not been involved in every phase of the planning process. All
public notices and signs had the wrong date and time for this hearing. The public notices
were not sent to all of the neighbors. The public notice of November 9 states that all
documents are available for inspection and copies are available at least seven days prior to
the hearing. On November 30 he came to review the documents and talked with Planners
Floyd and Pagenstecher who told him there were no documents to review. (Code CDC
18.390.050.C.2.a) On December7 he tried the published number of 503-718-2432 and left
two messages. No one responded. He had to drive to the city with his questions. The city
TIGARD CITY COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES —January 12, 2016
City of Tigard 1 13125 SW Hall Blvd.,Tigard, OR 97223 www.dgard-or.gov Page 13 of 19
put up flimsy signs at both sites that were unreadable by the first week of December. He
showed photographs of the signs. Planning Commission Vice President Fitzgerald
commented that maybe some sturdier signs could be put up which was not done.
The public notice was not published on the city's website from December 3-December 6.
Some neighbors just heard about this zone change and did not have time to prepare
comments. At Site B there is a for sale sign listing"commercial"but the property is not
commercial. CDC 193.90 there has been no readable effective public notice at either Site A
or Site B since one week before the Planning Commission meeting last month. In the four
weeks since and even though the Planning Commission was notified with photos and a
commissioner suggested public notice signs be changed. This is a violation of due process
and now,January 12,2016 there has been no public notice for over four weeks, This is a
violation of due process 197.763 so this hearing has no effect. Because the other sign is four
times larger and says commercial, the average citizen would probably think it was already
zoned commercial.
Mr. Long said the commercial sign at Site B is in violation of city code chapter 18.780.130.B,
besides it is not zoned commercial. He said the file title"Residential Preservation"is a
misnomer and is misleading to citizens. Preservation hides the nature of the application
which is to change zoning. The file title should be understandable to citizens and residents.
He asked why the city is doing this zone swap as the city does not have enough commercial
property according to an Cogan Owens Cogan report. Do not take Site A out of
commercial zoning. There is also a deficiency of R-12 residential zoning shown in the
Angelo report. He said it was very important to note that there is no loss because school
property was not included in that inventory of properties zoned residential. Yes,making Site
B would place that property back on the tax rolls.
He said he asked to see the 2006 staff report on annexation of the three properties (Site A)
into the city but it was missing pages 3-11. The language in the 2006 annexation ordinance
Justified the importance of Site A to be commercial. A comprehensive plan amendment is
not a periodic review but periodic review has occurred and the zoning has remained the
same. He listed reasons why Site B should remain residential due to its location adjacent to
Charles F. Tigard Elementary. Students could walk safely to school and residents and
visitors could easily hop on public transit along Pacific Highway. The city staff report
incorrectly states the description of Site A saying the current zone does not allow residential
use. There are currently two houses and there were three prior that have been lived in for
decades. He said the citizens do not support residential use there,particularly R-12, three-
story buildings. Since there is a deficit of commercial property the city should not take Site
A out of commercial zoning. He suggested rezoning the excess R-7 property the city has,
per the Angelo housing study. He asked why the city does not simply convert Site B from
residential to commercial. He said it appears that the city concocted this zone swap
forgetting earlier findings and evidence. The city had reasons for keeping in commercial
professional during annexation and periodic reviews. He asked that the city deny the request
for a comprehensive plan amendment and zone change.
TIGARD CITY COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES —January 12, 2016
City of Tigard 1 13125 SW Hall Blvd.,Tigard, OR 97223 www.tigard-or.gov Page 14 of 19
(Heidi Rechteger and others gave their testimony time to Jim Long.)
Leslie Gray, 10650 SW 75`"Avenue,Tigard, OR 97223, said they bought their home in 1999
and moved from Portland in search of space. Living on one acre in Metzger they love the
livability of the area. She said having 19 houses spring up behind your house is a shock. She
said she is not against affordable housing but it impacts livability in the neighborhood and
the schools. She noted the impact higher density developments have had on Metzger
Elementary.At almost 600 students they are at capacity at the moment.These 19 homes as
well as the proposed homes on Spruce and on Ash Street in the wetlands will become a
problem for families that want their children to go to local schools. If a teacher is over
capacity, children may have to be bussed to another school. This will affect our families and
the education of our students.
Nathan Murdock. 7415 SW Spruce Street,Tigard, OR, said he lived in three different
locations on the street for over 23 years. One reason he likes the street is that the houses
have big lots. His property of one quarter- acre,gives an opportunity for kids to grow and be
off of the streets. He has been involved in putting speed humps and stop signs put in. The
new homes at the end of 74"'Avenue park on Spruce because there is not enough parking.
It is the same problem at Tigard Woods. To build row houses or any other tight-fitting
homes will only create more problems. He commented that ODOT said they have no
problem and the development should not cause any problems but he has seen many traffic
problems as the area becomes denser. When 99W backs up cars use Spruce,Pine and Oak
Streets in their neighborhood. It would be nice to have a business on the property that is
daytime only with cars that clear out at the end of the day or a guarantee that only 6-7 homes
with quarter-acre lots would be built.
Nancy Tracy, 7310 SW Pine Street,Tigard, OR 97223, said she supports the CPO's
unanimous vote to maintain Site A as commercial,professional one-story zoning. She said
she is very disturbed at what the city is doing. Changing a zone is not a frivolous thing. We
are talking as if the zone has already been changed. She felt the city's action to effect a quick
rezoning on Spruce Street and R-12 rezoning is just a little short of a hostile takeover. This
1.35 acre area annexed to Tigard in 2006 sits within the Metzger community but Metzger has
been kept in the dark. There is so much traffic on Spruce Street that parents fear for their
children's safety when boarding the school bus because there is so much commuter traffic.
This land will never exist again to provide a park. South of Spruce Street Tigard has a lot of
land that will be redeveloped for more intense housing. That will leave people without a
space to call their own. A park would allow a lot of release. Children and adults need space
to run, climb or jog. Once this area is buried under tons of concrete or asphalt,it will be
gone forever. It is a miracle that it has survived to this point. It has more potential that just
for putting a development on it. She said she hope more consideration will be give this
because there is no lack of developable land.
C. Council Questions and Discussion
TIGARD CITY COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES —January 12, 2016
City of Tigard 1 13125 SW Hall Blvd.,Tigard, OR 97223 www.tigard-or.gov I Page 15 of 19
Mayor Cook asked about the public notices that had the wrong date and time for this hearing. The
hearing notice for this meeting listed the date as Tuesday,January 12,2015. He apologized for
putting in the wrong year. Otherwise the notice was correct.
Council President Snider asked about the other process issues.Associate Planner Pagenstecher
responded that he cannot vouch for some of that but he knew that Mr. Long submitted a records
request that was filled and all items asked for were delivered. He referred to testimony that
holding a legislative public hearing rather than a quasi-judicial hearing abridged their rights in some
way but the process is the same. They both get hearings at Planning Commission and Council.
Mayor Cook asked about the records request missing pages and asked if all items were delivered.
Associate Planner Pagenstecher said if it was missing he certainly could have asked. He had not
heard previously from Mr. Long about that yet he made particular effort to reach Mr.Long and be
available for any questions but he did not take advantage of that. Council President Snider asked
about the 2432 telephone number. Mr. Pagenstecher read his copy of the public notice and said
the telephone number is 2434 which is his number.
The sturdiness of the public notice signs was questioned by Councilor Woodard. Associate
Planner Pagenstecher said in this case the signs were a casualty of the weather. He said the
material used and methods of posting have been in use at the city for ten years. He said to his
knowledge this is the first time it has been cited as a problem.
Councilor Goodhouse mentioned that the sign the city put up at the proposed Heritage Crossing
site was also down and asked staff to look into that.
Mayor Cook proposed that due to the time,items remaining on the agenda, and possible missed
postings or records request pages, the public hearing be left open to a date certain,with the
continuation re-noticed and weather-resistant signs at the site reported with this information. He
asked council to ask staff any questions that they want answered at the continued public hearing.
Council.President Snider suggested Assistant Community Development Director McGuire
validate and address the process issues raised tonight. He said residents say they will appeal the
legislative decision and he had questions for the city attorney on that. He asked staff if this
property (Site A) has ever been considered for park property in any park master plan or rating
process for park acquisition.
Councilor Woodard asked if the new homes on 74th Avenue are R-12 or a lower density. He asked
for a plotting or other visual information on what the different residential zoning areas mean and
if lower density had been considered. He expressed concern that he hears there is not enough
parking in the neighborhood. He said he supported the zoning change on Site B but has questions
on the use of the quasi-judicial process for two properties.
Councilor Henderson advised that the commercial property sign be taken down at Site A until it is
zoned correctly. Mayor Cook agreed but said the city does not have an officer that drives around
and checks signage unless there is a complaint. Council President Snider asked if real estate signs
are controlled by the code and Associate Planner Pagenstecher replied that they do not have to go
through the sign permit process.
TIGARD CITY COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES —January 12, 2016
City of Tigard 1 13125 SW Hall Blvd.,Tigard, OR 97223 www.tigard-or.gov Page 16 of 19
Councilor Woodard verified that Metzger Elementary is the school in that neighborhood and that
any development would impact the school. Mayor Cook said that is not the city's issue;it would
be up to the school district to handle.
City Manager Wine noted that council is looking at a potential business meeting combined with
the CCDA meeting of February 2 and the next available meeting would be March 8. Mayor Cook
asked staff what the noticing requirement is and Mr. Pagenstecher said a public hearing is
continued to a date certain and no additional notice is required. Councilor Goodhouse said he and
Councilor Woodard would be absent on March 8.
Councilor Goodhouse mentioned he liked to keep the zoning the same as the surrounding
neighborhood. Council President Snider pointed out that R-25,R-4.5, CG and CP surround Site A
and asked which one he considered the neighborhood zone.
Councilor Woodard moved to continue the public hearing to a date certain of February 2 and
Council President Snider seconded the motion. Mayor Cook reiterated that the record would be
kept open. He conducted a vote and the motion passed unanimously.
Yes No
Mayor Cook ✓
Councilor Goodhouse ✓
Councilor Henderson ✓
Council President Snider ✓
Councilor Woodard ✓
8. CONSIDER AMENDMENT TO CITY MANAGER EMPLOYMENT CONTRACT
Human Resources Director Bennett gave the staff report for this item. She said following their
annual evaluation of the city manager,council recommended an employment contract
amendment.
Councilor Henderson moved for approval of Contract Amendment No. 6 to the city manager's
employment contract. Councilor Goodhouse seconded the motion and Mayor Cook conducted a
vote. The motion passed unanimously.
Yes No
Mayor Cook ✓
Councilor Goodhouse ✓
Councilor Henderson ✓
Council President Snider ✓
Councilor Woodard ✓
TIGARD CITY COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES —January 12, 2016
City of Tigard 1 13125 SW Hall Blvd.,Tigard, OR 97223 www.tigard-or.gov I Page 17 of 19
9. LOCAL CONTRACT REVIEW BOARD: CONSIDERATION OF A CONTRACT AWARD
TO MURRAY, SMITH AND ASSOCIATES FOR HUNZIKER PROJECT
Public Contracts Manager Barrett,City Engineer Faha, Economic Development Manager Purdy
and Engineer Newbury were present for any questions on this item. Public Contracts Manager
Barrett said this was discussed at the December 15 council workshop meeting and there is not
much new information that was not covered then. More refined numbers were received for Phases
2 and 3 but those phases would receive further refinement and would come back for council
consideration. This contract is for engineering services for Phase 1 of the Hunziker infrastructure
project. Since the city was going to contract separately with Murray, Smith and Associates for the
Red Rock Creek water line project staff proposes rolling that into this contract in order to alleviate
administrative costs.
LCRB Member Snider moved for approval of the contract with Murray, Smith and Associates for
the Hunziker project and LCRB Member Goodhouse seconded the motion. Chair Cook
conducted a vote and announced that the motion passed unanimously.
Yes No
LCRB Chair Cook ✓
LCRB Member Goodhouse ✓
LCRB Member Henderson ✓
LCRB Member Snider ✓
LCRB Member Woodard ✓
10. DISCUSS PROPOSED FY 2017 CITY COUNCIL BUDGET
Due to the time council agreed to discuss this at the next business meeting.Assistant City Manager
Newton handed out to council a copy of their budget with recent changes circled including adding
money for a reception and including$10,000 for TYAC support. A copy has been added to the
packet for this meeting.
11. EXECUTIVE SESSION. None scheduled.
12. NON-AGENDA ITEM—City Manager Wine said there will be a council outreach event at the
Summerfield Clubhouse on January 28, 2016. She reminded council to wear their name badges.
She noted that following the Community Attitude Survey staff also contracted with the vendor to
put two focus groups together. Topics are what the barriers are for walking in Tigard and citizen
willingness to pay for services and how they want to pay for them. Council may observe the focus
groups Tuesday,January 19 at 5:30 and 7:30 p.m. in the Public Works Building. Council's
Thursday packet will have all the details.
TIGARD CITY COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES —January 12, 2016
City of Tigard 1 13125 SW Hall Blvd.,Tigard, OR 97223 www.tiprd-or.gov I Page 18 of 19
13. ADJOURNMENT
At 10:31 p.m. Council President Snider moved for adjournment. Councilor Goodhouse seconded
the motion. Mayor Cook conducted a vote and the motion passed unanimously.
Yes No
Mayor Cook ✓
Councilor Goodhouse ✓
Councilor Henderson ✓
Council President Snider ✓
Councilor Woodard ✓
�
e
Carol A. Krager,City Reco er
Attest:
John ok, Ma or
Date
TIGARD CITY COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES —January 12, 2016
City of Tigard 1 13125 SW Hall Blvd.,Tigard, OR 97223 www.tigard-or.gov I Page 19 of 19