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City Council Packet - 03/20/2018 1111 _ 41 City of Tigard TIGARD Tigard Workshop Meeting—Agenda sa TIGARD CITY Revised 3/15/18 to add Town Center Development Agency Executive COUNCIL Session at the end of meeting MEETING DATE AND March 20,2018 - 6:30 p.m. TIME: MEETING LOCATION: City of Tigard -Town Hall- 13125 SW Hall Blvd.,Tigard, OR 97223 PUBLIC NOTICE: Times noted are estimated. Assistive Listening Devices are available for persons with impaired hearing and should be scheduled for Council meetings by noon on the Monday prior to the Council meeting. Please call 503-718-2419 (voice) or 503-684-2772 (TDD -Telecommunications Devices for the Deaf). Upon request,the City will also endeavor to arrange for the following services: • Qualified sign language interpreters for persons with speech or hearing impairments; and • Qualified bilingual interpreters. Since these services must be scheduled with outside service providers,it is important to allow as much lead time as possible. Please notify the City of your need by 5:00 p.m. on the Thursday preceding the meeting by calling: 503-639-4171, ext. 2410 (voice) or 503-684-2772 (IUD -Telecommunications Devices for the Deaf). VIEW LIVE VIDEO STREAMING ONLINE: http://live.tieard-or.gov Workshop meetings are cablecast on Tualatin Valley Community TV as follows: Replay Schedule for Tigard City Council Workshop Meetings-Channel 28 •Every Sunday at 12 a.m. •Every Monday at 1 p.m. 'Every Thursday at 12 p.m. •Every Friday at 10:30 a.m. SEE ATTACHED AGENDA illf 4 City of Tigard TIGARDTigard Workshop Meeting—Agenda TIGARD CITY Revised 3/15/18 to add Town Center Development Agency Executive COUNCIL Session at the end of meeting MEETING DATE AND March 20,2018 - 6:30 p.m. TIME: MEETING LOCATION: City of Tigard -Town Hall- 13125 SW Hall Blvd.,Tigard,OR 97223 6:30 PM 1. WORKSHOP MEETING A. Call to Order- City Council B. Roll Call C. Pledge of Allegiance D. Call to Council and Staff for Non-Agenda Items 2. SOUTHWEST CORRIDOR UPDATE AND DISCUSSION 6:35 p.m. estimated time 3. NON AGENDA ITEMS 4. EXECUTIVE SESSION: The Tigard Town Center Development Agency will go into Executive Session to discuss real property transaction negotiations,under ORS 192.660(2)(e). All discussions are confidential and those present may disclose nothing from the Session. Representatives of the news media are allowed to attend Executive Sessions,as provided by ORS 192.660(4),but must not disclose any information discussed. No Executive Session may be held for the purpose of taking any final action or making and final decision. 7:50 p.m. estimated time 5. ADJOURNMENT 8:10 p.m. estimated time 1114 City of Tigard Tigard Workshop Meeting—Agenda TIGARD TIGARD CITY COUNCIL MEETING DATE AND TIME: March 20,2018 - 6:30 p.m. MEETING LOCATION: City of Tigard -Town Hall- 13125 SW Hall Blvd.,Tigard, OR 97223 PUBLIC NOTICE: Times noted are estimated. Assistive Listening Devices are available for persons with impaired hearing and should be scheduled for Council meetings by noon on the Monday prior to the Council meeting. Please call 503-718-2419 (voice) or 503-684-2772 (IDD -Telecommunications Devices for the Deaf). Upon request,the City will also endeavor to arrange for the following services: • Qualified sign language interpreters for persons with speech or hearing impairments;and • Qualified bilingual interpreters. Since these services must be scheduled with outside service providers,it is important to allow as much lead time as possible. Please notify the City of your need by 5:00 p.m. on the Thursday preceding the meeting by calling: 503-639-4171,ext. 2410 (voice) or 503-684-2772 (1'DD -Telecommunications Devices for the Deaf). VIEW LIVE VIDEO STREAMING ONLINE: http://live.tigard-or.gov Workshop meetings are cablecast on Tualatin Valley Community TV as follows: Replay Schedule for Tigard City Council Workshop Meetings-Channel 28 •Every Sunday at 12 a.m. •Every Monday at 1 p.m. •Every Thursday at 12 p.m. •Every Friday at 10:30 a.m. SEE ATTACHED AGENDA City of Tigard Tigard Workshop Meeting—Agenda TIGARD TIGARD CITY COUNCIL MEETING DATE AND TIME: March 20,2018 - 6:30 p.m. MEETING LOCATION: City of Tigard-Town Hall- 13125 SW Hall Blvd.,Tigard,OR 97223 6:30 PM 1. WORKSHOP MEETING A. Call to Order-City Council B. Roll Call C. Pledge of Allegiance D. Call to Council and Staff for Non-Agenda Items 2. SOUTHWEST CORRIDOR UPDA1'P.AND DISCUSSION 6:35 p.m. estimated time 3. NON AGENDA ITEMS 4. EXECUTIVE SESSION: The Tigard City Council may go into Executive Session. If an Executive Session is called to order,the appropriate ORS citation will be announced identifying the applicable statute.All discussions are confidential and those present may disclose nothing from the Session. Representatives of the news media are allowed to attend Executive Sessions,as provided by ORS 192.660(4),but must not disclose any information discussed. No Executive Session may be held for the purpose of taking any final action or making any final decision. Executive Sessions are closed to the public. 5. ADJOURNMENT 7:50 p.m. estimated time AIS-3423 2. Workshop Meeting Meeting Date: 03/20/2018 Length (in minutes): 75 Minutes Agenda Title: Southwest Corridor Update and Discussion Prepared For: Kenny Asher, Community Development Submitted By: Doreen Laughlin, Community Development Item Type: Update, Discussion, Direct Staff Meeting Type: Council Workshop Mtg. Public Hearing: No Publication Date: Information ISSUE Staff will provide a comprehensive update on recent planning for the proposed Southwest Corridor light rail project. STAFF RECOMMENDATION / ACTION REQUEST No action is requested. This is an informational presentation. KEY FACTS AND INFORMATION SUMMARY Overview Project Definition: The Southwest Corridor Plan is a comprehensive regional planning effort to address the impacts of future growth by connecting Portland, Tigard and Tualatin through safe and reliable transportation options. A key part of the plan is a proposed 12-mile MAX light rail line from Downtown Portland to Downtown Tigard and Bridgeport Village. Definition of Project-Related Terms and Acronyms SWC or Southwest Corridor basically the Barbur Boulevard/Hwy 99 corridor between Portland and Sherwood including those two cities, Tigard, Tualatin, King City, Durham, and portions of unincorporated Washington County. DEIS or Draft Environmental Impact Statement: a federally required study that discloses the impacts and benefits of possible route options for light rail in the corridor. FEIS or Final Environmental Impact Statement: a study that will address the set of benefits, impacts and mitigations for those impacts for a final alignment once selected. IRP or Initial Route Proposal: An FTA-required, proposed light rail alignment, to be included in the DEIS for public comment and review. T.PA or Locally Preferred Alternative: The final light rail route, recommended by the project Steering Committee, endorsed by participating governments, and adopted by the Metro Council. LUFO or Land Use Final Orden The statutory authority granted by Metro, under Oregon statute, to TriMet, to construct the project across multiple local land use authorities. TOD or Transit Oriented Development: Development that typically follows the opening of light rail, close to stations and characterized by a mixture of uses in single buildings and lower than typical parking ratios. CAC or Citizen Advisory Committee: A Metro-appointed committee of citizens from affected jurisdictions to review project information and make recommendations to the project Steering Committee on key decisions. _VIA or Federal Transit Administration: The federal agency responsible for reviewing, rating, funding and overseeing the design, development, construction and operation of light rail projects nationwide. Project Schedule/Key Milestones May 2018: Publication of the DEIS, start of 45-day public comment period June 2018: Staff and Citizen Advisory Committee recommendations on the LPA July-September 2018: Steering Committee, Local Jurisdiction and TriMet LPA approvals; updates on project costs October 2018: Metro Council adoption of LPA and LUFO Winter 2018: Begin FEIS; Begin Project Development;Adoption of the LPA into the Regional Transportation Plan Spring 2019: Begin 30 percent design Winter 2019: Complete FEIS and all other federal environmental review 2020: Complete 30 percent design; finalize local funding, likely to include a regional funding measure in November 2021: Submit project for federal rating and apply for federal funding 2022: Execute Full Funding Grant Agreement with the FTA 2023: Begin construction 2027: Open for service Approach to this Update The SWC Project has been in the planning stages for more than six years. During that time, the project Steering Committee has made a set of decisions narrowing the geography in which transit will be built, the type of transit service envisioned (i.e. light rail), and the related investments that will accompany the transit investment. Rather than summarize this long history here, staff would refer council to the project library webpage at Metro's website which can be found at https://www.oregonmetro. ov/public-projects/southwest-corridor-plan/prof ect-library. Staff's approach to this update is to provide council with basic observations related to the state of the project today from various professional orientations: Land Use, Urban Design, Community Engagement, Economic Development, etc. These observations will be keyed to an initial route proposal, shown in Attachment 1. The initial route proposal is the distillation of hundreds, if not thousands, of small decisions informed by information collected through the DEIS process, and input from the public including business and property owners. As such, it can be thought of as the project team's current best thinking about where the project could be located to achieve as many project goals as possible. It is not, however, a decision about where the project will be located, ultimately. That decision will incorporate feedback from the public review of the DEIS, along with input gathered from examination of the initial route proposal. Because of the preliminary nature of both the initial route proposal and the DEIS, staff has kept its analysis at a fairly high level. Much can still change in this project and many of its impacts, good and bad, are not yet understood, much less studied. However, the project has ripened to a point where council should feel confident examining the information provided and asking questions that will inform its vote later this year on a Locally Preferred Alternative. It might be that such questions define part of the work program for the project between now and then. Recent Project History: DEIS and its Relationship to the IRP Early planning stages resulted in six alignment options for DEIS study in Tigard, with key objectives being adequate service in the Tigard Triangle and Downtown, and continuation of the line south to the Bridgeport area. The DEIS studied each route option for potential impacts to the surrounding environment, businesses, traffic, properties, noise, safety and more. Potential impacts found throughout the DEIS process must be avoided, minimized or mitigated (in that order). The DEIS is currently under review by the FTA and is expected to be published for public review in early May. The document contains extensive research on possible project impacts; unfortunately, many of these impacts, once studied, suggest that segments of the alignment shift to different locations. These shifted segments will require the same kind of exhaustive study and this will happen in a Final Environmental Impact Statement study. Three of these "shifted" segments are in the City of Tigard. Once the DEIS is published, it will be available for agency and public review for 45 days. During this time anyone may comment on the findings, including the initial route proposal which includes the shifted segments. The City of Tigard will be formally commenting on the DEIS (and IRP) once it is officially published and available for review. Permitting Framework and Local Land Use Policy It is important to begin with the permitting framework through which light rail in Tigard would occur. The main players in this permitting framework operate at the local, regional, state, and federal levels. In rough chronological order, the roles of these players can be summarized as follows: •At the local level, Tigard's charter requires a public vote in order to support light rail or to amend its comprehensive plan or land use regulations to accommodate light rail. In 2016,voters approved a measure that allowed the city to support the Southwest Corridor light rail project and to amend some of its land use policies and regulations in response to this project. •At the state level, the legislature passed House Bill 3202 in 2017. This legislation gave Metro the authority to issue a Land Use Final Order (LUFO) for the SWC project. Consistent with other light rail projects, the LUFO will act as the regional land use approval for the project and will include a final approved alignment, otherwise known as the Locally Preferred Alignment or LPA. The LUFO prevents local jurisdictions from blocking the project's construction by withholding local land use approvals. Also consistent with other light rail projects, the LUFO allows local jurisdictions the right to condition the approval of individual elements of the project,within reason, to be consistent with local development and design standards. •At the federal level, the project is being evaluated for compliance with the National Environmental Protection Act (NEPA) because it will be partially federally funded, and for cost effectiveness and transit competitiveness by the FTA under regulations associated with the New Starts program. •Regionally, the project is overseen by a Steering Committee comprised of all affected jurisdictions and ultimately approved by Metro through the LPA/LUFO public hearing process. Metro is also responsible for the environmental review process, and for ensuring that the results of that process are incorporated into the project through a Record of Decision that will be provided by the FTA (expected in late 2019). Once the project is approved by Metro, the city will be required to update its Comprehensive Plan and Community Development Code to be consistent with the LPA, including the location of stations, park and ride facilities, and operation and maintenance sites. During this process, staff will likely make several recommendations to Council on ways to amend the city's development procedures and standards to ensure that the city's land use review process results in regional improvements that respects the city's land use vision, reflects its local character, and implements the city's strategic vision as much as possible within the constraints of LUFO. The stated purpose and need of the SWC project is grounded not just in transportation objectives, but in land use as well. It is to "connect Tualatin, downtown Tigard, Southwest Portland, and the region'.r central city with light rail... to improve mobility and create the conditions that will allow communities in the corridor to achieve their land use vision" It cannot be stated enough: The city's land use policies and regulations must be applied to this light rail proposal. In fact, two comprehensive plan policies specific to Downtown Tigard are included in the evaluation criteria that Metro must apply when making their LUFO decision. These two policies are as follows: •Downtown Tigard shall be the city's primary transit center for rail and bus transit service. •The City, in conjunction with TriMet, shall plan for and manage transit user parking to ensure that Downtown Tigard is not dominated by park-and-ride activity. Other key city policies that have guided staff in its evaluation of project options include those related to focusing employment growth and high-density housing in the Tigard Triangle, Downtown Tigard, Washington Square, and along Pacific Highway;promoting the creation of a vibrant and active urban village in Downtown Tigard that is pedestrian-oriented and accessible by many modes of transportation; and promoting the efficient utilization of employment and industrial lands. These policies help explain why staff has maintained that: •Two stations are necessary to serve the Triangle given its size and poor walkability; •A station in Downtown Tigard is necessary for the city to achieve its longstanding land use vision for downtown; •The alignment along the existing railroad tracks south of downtown is preferred over the I-5 alternative. Land Use Evaluation The IRP proposes two stations in the Triangle. Exact station locations differ from those in the DEIS, but two stations are consistent with the city's land use policies and aspirations and the new proposed locations better serve households and businesses north of Pacific Highway. The northern station is located on the Triangle's northern edge, near Highway 99W and where 70th Ave would be (if it existed), and the second Triangle station is sited near a future 70th Ave and Elmhurst St. Neither of these locations have been adequately studied yet for impacts, but they make sense from both a land use and transportation point of view. Additionally, development of light rail along 70th Ave and Elmhurst St will likely benefit the Triangle in two ways. It will improve circulation in the Triangle for all modes of travel by completing or facilitating the completion of these two streets, both of which are unimproved or lack full right-of-way width along their lengths. It will also provide access to a number of unimproved properties, most notable of which is the 8-acre Oregon Education Association's property that spans Red Rock Creek. As the project progresses, staff will work closely with TriMet designers to ensure that the cross sections developed for these streets are safe, comfortable, and attractive for pedestrians and that the project provides the city with all needed right-of-way, or the means to obtain all needed right-of-way, if the project does not build the full street. The IRP proposes one station to the southeast of Downtown in the Hunziker Core Industrial Area. The IRP alignment and station locations were developed out of necessity due to high costs, slow travel times, and significant residential impacts associated with all the studied DEIS alignments and station locations. That being said, the downtown station location raises several local and regional land use concerns. The main one is its location outside of Downtown Tigard, which is a designated Metro 2040 Regional Town Center. Both Tigard and Metro have policy positions to support growth in the Town Center. As transit facilities are moved out of the downtown proper, it will be more difficult for the city to achieve its land use vision and effectively implement the Metro 2040 Growth Concept. Staff is considering an assortment of land use-related issues arising from the downtown station location. Council might also consider that the station location, as currently imagined, contravenes the city's core downtown policies and LUFO evaluation criteria. This location raises questions about the future of downtown generally and transit access and connectivity specifically. How will the removal of transit center activity from Main Street impact downtown? How can the barriers represented by Hall Blvd and the existing railroad tracks be overcome? How will WES riders connect to the larger transit system? Most importantly, how does this location support the city's goals to develop Downtown Tigard into a vibrant and active urban village at the heart of the community and connect it to the Tigard Triangle? More directly, the placement of the downtown station in the Hunziker Core Industrial Area impacts industrial (employment) lands, of which the city has an extremely limited supply. Any change to the city's policies to accommodate a station at this location will require a community planning process to potentially enlarge the downtown vision to include this area (thereby reducing the city's industrial land inventory) or reimagine this area as an employment-focused station area. TriMet has consultants at work now on these very questions. Staff will be reviewing that work in the coming months, and can share results with the council prior to its decision on the LPA. The IRP includes stations near the existing railroad tracks south of downtown near Bonita and Upper Boones. These locations were studied in the DEIS alignments and are consistent with the city's land use policies and aspirations. They serve a larger residential area and have fewer industrial impacts than the I-5 alignment. The IRP alignment may also provide location options for a new Tigard Public Works facility either through co-location at the TriMet Operations and Maintenance (0 & M) facility proposed in the Hunziker Core Industrial Area or through redevelopment of remnant parcels impacted by the project in this area. Both of these O&M facilities, TriMet's and potentially the city's, are potential assets to the city, if properly sized and sited. Urban Design Issues Urban design issues for the SWC generally concern station location, the design treatment of structures and reconstructed streets, and associated redevelopment potentials and impacts. City staff has spent considerable effort in the past year analyzing the possible station areas in the Triangle, along a future imagined 70th Avenue from Baylor to Beveland, and Downtown for the area around Ash Avenue and Commercial. As impacts have shifted, these route segments, new stations and park and ride (P&R) locations have appeared in the IRP at Pacific Hwy/68th Pkwy and Elmhurst/72nd. Although these two Triangle stations appear to serve a greater area with complementary walksheds, they have not otherwise received any urban design analysis. The IRP-proposed Downtown station location east of Hall, between Hunziker and the railroad, and adjacent to a proposed TriMet Operations and Maintenance yard, is a problematic urban design challenge. Transit Oriented Design (TOD) principles value multi-modal access, a mix of uses, and dense development to prioritize the pedestrian experience. This location suffers from lack of connectivity, separation from the mixed-use downtown zone, and marginal redevelopment potential. Although a station area east of Hall would be possible, it would require major re-thinking of adopted plan districts, zoning, and transportation to be successful. The location and design of P&R structures, design of grade-separated facilities such as bridge and retaining wall structures, design of trackways in urbanizing areas, and landscaping all have impacts and offer opportunities for good urban design. For example, a successful P&R facility downtown could be located adjacent to Hall to limit traffic impacts within the district, be incorporated within a larger mixed-use development plan to reduce its visual impacts on the public realm, and be programmed and incentivized to support transit ridership and patronage of downtown businesses. The design of SW 70th Avenue in the Triangle remains an important opportunity for the district. Staff envision a complete street, including light rail, that builds on the bookend proximity of two planned station areas. The street design should prioritize multi-modal access and linkages to regional bike and pedestrian trails. Additionally, staff is seeking new bike/ped access on structures over Hwy 217 and and Red Rock Creek;both should be expected to greatly contribute to the Triangle's design identity. As addressed above under the land use section, the city has some good general policies that support urban design principles for transit in Tigard. However, our existing regulatory tools to achieve good urban design are more or less limited to standards developed for the urbanizing mixed-use plan districts over the past 20 years and are not transit-specific. Once the LPA is selected, the design of these facilities will warrant significant attention to ensure they contribute positively to the public realm in support of pedestrian access, improved mobility and transit-oriented redevelopment. New policies and standards will be necessary to ensure these outcomes. Equity and Housing The SW Corridor project has the potential to disproportionally impact residents who are currently living in "naturally occurring affordable housing," i.e. market-rate housing that, because of age and relative lack of amenities, rents at lower than average rates. The siting of a light rail station near this type of housing often results in significantly higher rents and the displacement of residents —a market condition that has already let loose on Tigard and most of the Portland region both in station area communities and across cities at large. The construction of light rail facilities could also physically displace some residents. Tigard staff has been working to address these impacts through two Metro grant-funded projects. One project, in partnership with the City of Portland, is to develop a comprehensive SW Corridor Equitable Housing Strategy. This report,which is currently in discussion draft form, has recommendations with three goals: 1. Commit public resources to address near-term housing crisis and long-term needs 2. Prevent residential and cultural displacement 3. Increase choices for new homes for all household types and incomes One major strategy that Tigard has had success on moving forward is to encourage TriMet to make remnant parcels from the light rail project available for new affordable housing development. This would be accomplished through a Memorandum of Understanding between TriMet and several partnering jurisdictions, to clearly define housing goals and joint development opportunities that could take advantage of project-induced partnerships and/or redevelopment opportunities in connection with light rail construction. The other Tigard-specific equitable housing grant project includes working with Unite Oregon, a community based organization, to engage and inform existing Tigard affordable housing residents about the SW Corridor project. In addition to canvassing residents of downtown apartments, Unite Oregon has held two community meetings, with two additional meetings scheduled. The second part of the project will undertake predevelopment work on a possible new affordable housing site near a Tigard light rail station, however this work has been put on hold until the alignment and station locations are more precisely determined. The initial route proposal is a mixed bag when it comes to equity and housing. Fewer residents are at risk of being physically displaced from their homes as a result of not building the alignment directly into downtown on the Ash alignment (as was studied in the DEIS). However, the city had been working to identify remnant parcels with TriMet from an Ash alignment that could have been redeveloped as protected affordable housing, and the initial route proposal—by avoiding downtown— strands most of these opportunities. The concept of repurposing remnant parcels remains viable; the city and TriMet will work to identify locations, however they won't be in downtown (an attractive district for equitable development because of the availability of services), nor are they likely to be on multiple sites in close proximity to one another. The lack of a centrally located downtown light rail station could slow the development of new residential units,which works against the goal of new affordable housing. Business Outreach and Impacts The City held an informational meeting in May 2017 and invited all business owners within a 1/4 mile radius of all proposed line options. The event was well attended and since then, city staff(along with TriMet and Metro) have met with multiple business and property owners. These meetings afforded project staff the opportunity to share planning documents and drawings to show potential impacts, and to explain the Uniform Relocation Act, which TriMet will comply with when the time comes to purchase property for the project. The City has directly spoken to, or repeatedly sought to meet with, property and business owners who appeared to be potentially impacted by any the six DEIS alignment options. Strong opposition was registered by business owners on Beveland Street in the Tigard Triangle, as well as from the "Coalition for SW Max Railroad Option," which includes 12 members doing business adjacent to I-5. Other business who have voiced concern include: Summit Properties, TVT Die Casting (Tigard business for over 40 years), Woodcraft of Portland, The Ballroom Dance Company, Empire Batteries, and others. A list of some letters presented to the Steering Committee from Tigard business owners is included for Council reference as Attachment 2. A meeting for businesses and properties on all potential mitigation routes has been scheduled for March 22nd. A mailing was sent out on March 12th (the date the IRP was released) inviting those potentially impacted by the shifted segments to learn more about the process. Dates and times have been set aside to schedule one-on-one or group meetings. This process is set to begin presently as the IRP introduces new business impacts that are not yet well understood. A preliminary review of the IRP in the Hunziker Industrial Core alone shows a possible relocation of approximately 29 firms employing hundreds of workers. Freight access to existing firms along the alignment would also likely be impacted and needs significant study. An additional seven firms in the Tigard Triangle could also potentially be relocated by the IRP. Business impacts along the railroad south of Downtown Tigard are still under study. Additionally, the IRP could also result in the loss of industrial land, significantly reducing the city's already severely constrained industrial land supply. On the other hand, the City could consider creating an Employment-TOD district to make up for the loss of land with an increase in employment density. The reduction of industrial land in this area would cause the city to shelve the Hunziker Core Infrastructure Project, a City-led effort to encourage private sector development, business growth and increased employment in the Hunziker Industrial Core,which is just seeing its first success — the Wall Street extension project and Trammell Crowe industrial development. Total taxable assessed value of industrial property along the IRP exceeds $16 million. Loss of this land would reduce the City's property tax base, requiring the city to strategize ways to leverage light rail service to compensate for, or even improve, the effect of the project's fiscal impact. Transit Service and Access Staff have enlisted the help of a local transit planning firm Garrett Walker + Associates, or JWA) to evaluate possible changes to the existing local transit network, including changes to light rail and bus service, and how different station locations would affect Tigard residents' ability to access the rest of the region by transit. Equally important are questions of how effectively Tigard businesses will be able to attract employees, customers and visitors from around the region. Transit access measures how much of our region people can get to in a given amount of time. The IRP places the downtown station southeast of Hall, though exactly where is not known. As a rule, an 800 foot distance adds about three minutes of walking time. ,l1 j 111 Three minutes is not much time.However,when Metro attempted to forecast ridership for this project,a difference of just 4 minutes in travel time on light rail was believed to change total ridership by more than 1,000.Small amounts of time do, theoretically,have an impact on travel,which add up when applied to large numbers of people. Nothing about the IRP station location would prevent TriMet from bringing bus stops close to a future light rail platform in the industrial area as there is enough space to stop local buses in a new transit center. However, in considering the exact location of future bus stops, Tigard should consider that bus stops are most preferable when on the street, yet still very close to light rail platforms. For example, high-ridership bus lines run north of Tigard on Greenburg Road and south of Tigard on Hall Blvd could conceivably stop in a safe place near the intersection of Hall & Commercial without deviating into and out of a transit center. This matters because deviations cost riders time, lengthen bus routes, cost more to operate, and require extra driveway and turn-around space. The IRP also ensures that people transferring between light rail and WES will have a lengthy walk. It might also increase the pressure on TriMet and the City of Tigard to deviate bus lines in order to get close to both the WES platform and the new light rail station. This would contribute to slower travel by bus, and higher bus operating costs. Tigard should keep in mind, as future light rail stations are planned, that if buses cannot easily stop on the street, or make turns both into and out of station driveways on Hall Blvd., transit trips will be longer (as people ride a bus in circles); and it will cost TriMet time, and therefore operating budget, that could otherwise be spent on higher frequencies or other improvements. At first glance, the IRP could require deviations of bus lines, though with good design and engineering that might not be necessary. If connections among local buses and light rail are quick and easy near future light rail station locations, the major difference in transit access to consider will be the additional walking time required to reach the station. Traffic, Transportation and Infrastructure Led by PW/Engineering, a team of Tigard staff have reviewed the multiple (possible) traffic, transportation and infrastructure impacts related to the SWC project. Interestingly, although the project will travel through Tigard for several miles, almost none of it is planned to make use of existing city rights-of-way. This peculiarity results in traffic impacts that are somewhat smaller, and more difficult to assess early, than in a similar project or project segment (like the SWC through Portland which makes extensive use the public right-of-way). Infrastructure impacts (and possible improvements) to the city's sewer, water and stormwater systems are minimally covered in this briefing. It should be noted that technical traffic analysis has only been done for the DEIS alignment. However traffic and transportation (especially active transportation) observations, especially related to the initial route proposal, are as follows: •Northern Triangle Station area (at Highway 99 east of 68th Parkway with 400-space Park & Ride) •Initial traffic analysis does not indicate traffic issues due to the capacity of Highway 99 at this location. •The station will serve a pedestrian population north of Highway 99. •The rail line will be elevated is it goes south over 68th Parkway—no traffic impacts to 68th Parkway and Highway 99 intersection. • 70th Avenue •As the rail moves southerly along the 70th Avenue alignment it will cross over Red Rock Creek and environmental impacts will need to be addressed. The structure may span the creek, but could impact the vegetated corridor with structural supports. This is an opportunity for upgrading and enhancing the vegetated corridor. •There are opportunities along 70th Avenue to create a bike route through the Triangle that connects with the trail from Lake Oswego. •Staff has spent time with our project partners discussing what type of street the future 70th Avenue should be (e.g. one-way, festival, pedestrian and bike only). These discussions have not advanced beyond brainstorming stage. Staff has continued to push to ensure that 70th Avenue is developed as a "complete street" not just a rail route. •The rail line will be elevated as it crosses Dartmouth Street and staff has continued to champion an elevated, safe pedestrian crossing at this location, which could include bikes. •Southern Triangle Station area (Elmhurst east of 70th Avenue) •This station provides good coverage of the Triangle in concert with the Highway 99 station. •This station provides an opportunity to improve Elmhurst Street, which is currently partially improved. •SW 72nd Avenue Crossing •The rail line will cross 72nd Avenue at grade. •This signalized crossing may have impacts on the other intersections north and south of this crossing (Dartmouth/72nd and Beveland/72nd). The signals at these intersections will need to be upgraded and synchronized with the rail crossing. •Highway 217 Crossing •The current proposal for the elevated crossing of Highway 217 includes rail only. •Staff continues to see this crossing as an important bike and pedestrian connection between the Triangle and Downtown. •Staff also considers this crossing an opportunity for some creative design, making the crossing a feature in Tigard. •The crossing will impact the wetlands adjacent to Highway 217. The magnitude of impact will depend on the type and length of structure to be constructed. Again, staff sees this an opportunity for upgrading and enhancing this natural area. •Downtown Stations •The analysis of the initial route proposal and the downtown station options do not include the Ash Avenue crossing. The Ash Avenue crossing would be a Tigard project, funded by Tigard. •Downtown Station (east of Hall Boulevard in the Hunziker Industrial Area) •The rail line will cross Hunziker at grade and there may be traffic impacts to the Hall Boulevard/Hunziker intersection affecting signal timing. •An OMF (Operations & Maintenance Facility) is proposed at this location (south of Hunziker). The OMF will generate additional workforce trips into and out of the site. •The bus terminal and park& ride structure would be located at this site. Traffic impacts are not yet known. •A new Commercial Street extension and pedestrian connections would be necessary to make this site function with the WES line. This is a lengthy walk for people connecting on foot between WES and MAX. •A thoughtful intersection design of Hall/Commercial will need to make the crossing safe and attractive for pedestrians. •The IRP does not seem to necessitate the realignment of the Scoffins/Hall/Hunziiker intersection, which, if completed, would eliminate one signal and improve traffic flow on Hall. •As the station would be located on the east side of Hall Boulevard, there is no light rail crossing of Hall Boulevard. •This station location would also include a relocated transit center and 350-space park & ride parking garage. •Rail Corridor •The SWC rail would parallel the existing WES and PWRR lines leaving downtown heading towards Tualatin. •The rail corridor crosses Bonita Road, 72nd Avenue and Upper Boones Ferry Road (see more discussion below) •Bonita Road Station (elevated) •The crossing (following the rail corridor) and station are elevated, so there will be limited or no traffic impacts. •There may be a small surface parking lot. •Impacts to the adjacent vegetated corridor will need to be studied and enhanced as part of the project. •Pedestrian connections may be needed to west of the station to serve the residential community. •The modeling indicates this station attracts riders from Lake Oswego east of the Interstate 5. •The rail crosses 72nd at grade. No major traffic issues are expected due to excess capacity in the system at this location. •Upper Boones Ferry Road Station and At-Grade Crossing •Tigard and Washington County staff are examining the assumptions and results of the traffic modeling in this area and believe more refinement is needed. The modeling currently assumes five-lane widening of Upper Boones Ferry Road, which is in the TSP, but a funding source has not been identified. •Mitigation measures such as creating a grade-separated crossing of Upper Boones may be needed. •The station will have a small surface parking lot and will serve the professional business park and other employers in the area, as well as Lake Oswego residents on the east side of Carmen Drive. •Bridgeport Station •While most of this station is south of the Tigard city limits, the access is in Tigard. •Staff will be working with Metro on modeling the impacts to the Durham/72nd intersection. The intersection may require signal upgrades. •Pedestrian connections from the station to Bridgeport Village will need to be enhanced as pedestrians attempt to cross 72nd Avenue. Community Engagement The community engagement team has been regularly meeting with business, property owners, underserved communities, and additional stakeholders since the Tigard vote passed in November 2016. This work will continue, and even intensify, in 2018. A project kick-off event in February 2017 attracted roughly 50 people in attendance. Since then, the city has worked with Metro and TriMet to produce newsletters, public comment maps, events and other outreach opportunities for members of the public—many of whom are not directly impacted by proposed alignments. Staff has received and reviewed comments from a Metro-sponsored online public comment tool, and from the Community Advisory Committee (CAC). In both venues, the community spoke strongly in favor of through-service using the Ash Avenue downtown station location and continuing south adjacent along the railroad to Bridgeport. The CAC chose this option while asking for mitigation to avoid Beveland businesses. As previously described, both the Beveland business impacts and the Ash Avenue residential impacts are partially to explain why the IRP shows segments of the alignment shifting away from these areas. Community engagement workshops have been scheduled for various community groups and stakeholders this spring. These events will focus on how to read, remark and be persuasive when commenting on the Draft Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS). Workshops are scheduled for Tigard residents, business and property owners who might be impacted, as well as portions of Tigard's underserved community including St. Anthony's Church. The community engagement team is also the lead on business and property owner outreach, and works as a partner on affordable housing programs. OTHER ALTERNATIVES N/, COUNCIL GOALS, POLICIES, APPROVED MASTER PLANS 9/1/17 City Council Goal Update #4. Pursue Development of Light Rail Along the Southwest Corridor. •Advocate for Light Rail to come to Downtown Tigard •Support request to the State Legislature for $150M in state lottery funding for the Southwest Corridor Project. •Support legislation to grant the Metro Council authority to consolidate multijurisdictional land use actions involving the SW Corridor into a single decision and expedited land use appeal process. •Adopt a Locally Preferred Alternative (LPA) in 201 8 that advances Tigard's land use and transportation priorities: •Direct service to downtown Tigard •Vehicle and pedestrian crossing at Ash Avenue •Development of three light rail stations including 1 downtown and 2 in the Tigard Triangle •Structured parking facilities in downtown, the Triangle, or both districts, to be made available for short-term public parking (non-commuters) •Implementation of Shared Investment Strategy projects that enhance the walkability and connectivity of the community near transit stations •Construction of affordable housing in the Triangle and downtown near transit stations, including replacement housing for "at risk" units due to SWC light rail construction concurrent with, or prior to, light rail construction •Mitigation and enhancement of sensitive lands, congested intersections, and other community assets due to light rail construction and operation. •Adoption of design standards and guidelines in TMC Title 18 to ensure that the quality of light rail components meet a high standard of urban design. •Effective outreach and communication with impacted neighborhoods. Environmental justice for low-income or non-English speaking residents for whom impacts are most disruptive. •Effective outreach and communication with impacted businesses. Economic development support for displaced or impacted Tigard businesses. •Execution of an intergovernmental agreement with TriMet for Services Related to Design Review, Permitting, Shared Parking and Facilitation of Affordable Housing o Participation on a Sustainable City Year Program multi-jurisdictional team to support City of Tigard goals in the SWC. DATES OF PREVIOUS COUNCIL CONSIDERATION 07/19/11: High-Capacity Transit Land Use Plan Update 12/13/11: Update on the Tigard High Capacity Transit Land Use Plan 12/20/11: Briefing on SW Corridor Plan Public Involvement and Messaging 11/20/12: SW Corridor Plan Update 02/19/13: SW Corridor Plan Update 05/21/13: SW Corridor Plan Update 06/25/13: Recommendation to SW Corridor Plan Steering Committee 10/08/13: Resolution Endorsing the SW Corridor Plan and Shared Investment Strategy 02/18/14: SW Corridor Plan Public Input Update 02/10/15: Metro IGA for Planning and Public Involvement Work - SW Corridor Plan 07/21/15: Presentation on SW Corridor Planning Progress 09/01/15: SW Corridor/Downtown Zoom-In 06/28/16: Consideration of a Resolution Approving Ballot Title language for a November SW Corridor Ballot Measure 02/14/17: Discuss SW Corridor Land Use Final Order Attachments Attachment 1.Initial Route Proposal Attachment 2. Public input Attachment 3. SWC Timeline PowerPoint e March 2018 MARQUA:_ HILL/OHSU • on Barbur ) HILLSDALE ' • ;./ A N Z 40/ on Barbur •••• 3ARBUR TRANSIT CENTER wims Proposed route 0 1 Aadjacent to 1-5 Modification I : 217 •••• SYLVANIA (south side) DEIS option DOWNTOWF • Station TIGARD 70 on th avoid ..... .. 0 Station with •.•0, ---.••••• impacts park and ride on Ash \ avoid impacts on Beveland KRUSE WAY 0 adjacent to railroad 0 BRIDGEPORT VILLAGP 0 DOWNTOWN TUALATIN L JAMES L. SHOOK, CPA P.C. CPACertified Public Accountants i is Principals: James L.Shook,CPA •Jeremy L.Shook,CPA www.jameslshookcpa.com May 1,2017 Chris Ford,Investment Areas Project Manager !' 600 NE Grand Ave Portland,OR 97232-2736 Phone: (503)797-1633 Cc: Tigard Mayor John Cook Eryn Kehe,Communications Specialist(503)797-1881 Dear Members of the Steering Committee for the SW Corridor Light Rail Project: This letter represents the feelings of all of the small businesses located on SW Beveland Street between SW 72"d Street and Hwy 217 who oppose the plan of running MAX through SW Beveland Street to gain access to downtown Tigard. We urge you to consider the alternate route which would leave our street intact. Ten years ago,we formed Triangle Properties of Tigard,LLC in order to make a substantial investment in a property in the Tigard Triangle to be the permanent location for our real estate holdings and our CPA firm for generations to come. We are a multi-generation business. In the ten years since we have been here,we have grown substantially,paid our taxes and employed twelve people. We worked closely with the City of Tigard to be in compliance with all applicable ordinances and variances in order to locate our professional office building here. This involved substantial investments of our time and resources. Today Beveland Street is dotted with professional offices and practices that depend on the quiet location, off-street parking, and convenient access. If the street is widened to make room for MAX, it will take up our off-street parking, destroy the driveways and parking lots that are essential to our small businesses, and make access difficult for our elderly and disable clients and customers. The road.closure and construction noise would render our buildings unusable for our clients and the patients and clients of the other professionals located here. We do not own thetypes of businesses that would benefit in any way by having light rail on our door steps. Please don't turn our professional small business-friendly street into a train corridor with no off-street parking and pedestrian access. We took a chance on Tigard by developing our property and Beveland Street into the thriving small business-friendly location that it is today. Please don't turn your back on us now that we have improved the street,generated jobs and drawn other professional business to your city. Please consider leaving our street out of your plans for the SW Corridor Light Rail Project. Sincerely, JAMES L. SHOOK,CPA P.C.• ,Wil•. Ce '•led Public Accountant 7410 S.W.Beveland Rd. C PA) Telephone(503)670-9863 Tigard,OR 97223 America Counts on CPAs Fax(503)620-7453 Wealth Strategy Partners A private wealth advisory practice of Ameriprise Financial Services,Inc. { 7450 SW Beveland St. Suite 100 Wealth Strategy Partners Portland,OR 97223-8678 Tel:503.808.1515 Fax:503.808.1521 wealthstrategypartners.com Bill Terrill CFP®,APMA® Private Wealth Advisor May 7th,2017 CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNERmil practitioner william.d.terrill@ampf.com Chris Ford,Investment Areas Project Manager williamdterrill.com • 600 NE Grand Ave. CA Insurance#0L29297 Portland,OR 97232-2736 William Fussell CRPC®,CDFATM Financial Advisor Cc: Tigard Mayor John Cook Chartered Retirement Planning Eryn Kehe,Communications Specialist(503)797-1881 Counselor sM wil I iam.j.fussell@ampf.com ameripriseadvisors.com/william.j.fussell Dear Members of the Steering Committee for the SW Corridor Light Rail Project, Kayla Van Horn CFP® I am a small business owner on SW Beveland St.and I oppose the plan of building CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNER TM light rail through SW Beveland St.to gain access to downtown Tigard. I practitioner encourage you to consider an alternative route and leave our street intact. kayla.vanhomn@ampf.com ameripriseadvisors.com/kayla.vanhom Our street is comprised of a diverse group of small business owners,from accountants,to attorneys,to mediators,to therapist,to architects. Each of us has poured our lives into our small businesses and collectively employee countless people. In the shadow of big businesses such as Lowes and Wal-Mart, we have found a little corner of Tigard that provides us a quiet location where small business can thrive. This is a community;where many of us know each other by first name and our street holds annual summer BBQs. This community is exactly why we have decided to stay in Tigard and not move our business to downtown Portland or Kruse Way. A light rail line through Beveland St.will disrupt our livelihoods and erode the neighborly experience we have fostered. I personally employee 6 people and our office specialize in personal retirement planning and divorce mediation. A light rail line coming down our street every 10 minutes,as estimated by the project details, will absolutely disrupt our ability to have meaningful,intimate conversations with our clients. When I attended the"Tigard Triangle Urban Renewal Plan"meeting on November 3`d,2016 the project identified "Small business support"as a key component. Pushing a light rail line through our street will not support our small business, it will impede it. Please consider leaving Beveland St. out of your plans for the SW Cooridor Light Rail Project. Sincerely, r � Bill Terrill,CFP®,APMA® Private Wealth Advisor An Ameriprise Financial franchise. Ameriprise Products from RiverSourcee and Columbia Threadneedle Investments are offered by affiliates of Ameriprise Financial Services,Inc. Financial J( Investment advisory products and services are made available through Ameriprise Financial Services,Inc.,a registered investment adviser. Ameriprise Financial Services,Inc.Member FINRA and SIPC. Bob Davidson Subject: FW: Light Rail Discussion From: Minuteman Press of Tigard Sent: Monday,June 05, 2017 5:43 PM To: Minuteman Press of Tigard <orders@mmptig.com> Subject: FW: Light Rail Discussion To all decision makers regarding Light Rail in Tigard: I have heard the slogan: Avoid, Minimize & Mitigate in discussions regarding the selection of the Light Rail Route. I have further heard extensive discussion of"Transit Times,speed, number of trains required, etc. as these affect the overall, long-term operating cost which will have a greater impact than the short-term construction cost. The current, likely proposed route down Beveland Street in Tigard,fails the first two tests of Avoid and Minimize,which in turn increases your Mitigate costs. It is also our opinion,that a route on Beveland, especially at rush hour, will be a regretted decision on the part of all parties,especially Tri-Met,who has to operate the route. Since first becoming aware of the plans in late April, we Beveland business owners have attended several meetings and held a number of our own, read hundreds of pages and spoken to dozens of people from Tri-Met, Metro, City and others. We are dismayed to find that the plans that most directly affect us, are much further along than any of us realized. In one month we have gone from generalize arrows, to a fairly detailed illustration, to engineered drawings. All of this without the involvement of those most affected and impacted, Beveland Street business owners. We have also found that there is still differences of opinions amongst the planners as to which route, number of stops, etc., is best. Our proposed alternative is this: 70`h Street to Elmhurst,then turn West to cross 217. This proposed route best achieves all of your primary goals. AVOID: 1). Avoids Beveland Street and the destruction of 15 to 20 businesses there. 2). Avoids heavy traffic on the Beveland/72nd intersection during rush hour, which would be made worse by the inclusion of frequent Max trains. 3). Avoids a highly congested grade crossing at 72nd, frequently backed up for multiple traffic signal cycles due to the close proximity of two (2)freeway entrances,two(2) nearby intersections and four(4 ) nearby,currently unsynchronized traffic signals. 4). There is no provision in the current improvements to widen 72nd, improve freeway ramps, reconstruct the 72nd/217 overpass to 4 lanes or re-align the very short interval traffic lights at Hunziker and the Southbound Hwy. 217 exit to 72nd. MINIMIZE: Elmhurst alternative does the following: (Marked in Bi OF on your map) 1). Delays due to traffic congestion nearer the 72nd freeway overpass. 2). Minimizes adverse impact or destruction of existing businesses on Beveland. 3). Minimizes crossing delays. 4). Minimizes adverse building acquisitions and most of the land on the Elmhurst alignment is vacant. 5). Minimizes stations and stops to one CENTRALLY located station that is within parameters of accessibility for the entire Triangle which also improves transit time. 6). Vacant land is available for both a station and Part& Ride structures. MITIGATE: 1). Far fewer structure, persons and business to be displace,thereby savings in cost. 2). Which also enhances all of the above. Thank You, Bob Davidson Minuteman Press of Tigard 114) p 503-620-5203 i. 503-620-5503 7555 SW Hermoso Way,Tigard OR 97223 e orders@mmptig.com > http://tigard.minutemanpress.com We Are Open Monday Thru Friday 8:00AM to 5:30PM G Let us know how we're doing,we'd love to hear from you! 2 0PORTLAND•TIGARD•TUALATIN Corridor___ Light Rail Project Public Input July through August 2017 September 1, 2017 The following pages document public input received since the last Steering Committee on July 10, 2017. Content includes copies of letters and emails received,plus a log of additional emails and summary of public events attended by staff. Personal information such as email addresses and phone numbers have been removed to protect the privacy of participants. 000003 Tigard Townhomes, Inc. 12375 SW Hall Blvd. Tigard, Oregon 97223 Lauren Scott Community Engagement Coordinator City of Tigard Community Development 13125 SW Hall Blvd. Portland, Oregon 97223 Dear Lauren, Enclosed are reasons why I feel Ash Street Max Route for the Light Rail would be the least favorable choice. I hope you will carefully read the information and share it with those who are responsible for making the final decision. On a personal note I think placing a Light Rail, walking path and bicycle lane within the Tigard area would be beneficial for most pedestrians. Because I am a property owner and it means the Light Rail would take a large portion of my building I find it DEVASTATING. I depend on this property entirely for my livelihood and retirement, including supporting my mother totally. Taking this property also means an incredible inconvenience to my tenants; some have lived there as long as 38 years. Thank you for your consideration. Charlotte Hodges, President/ J PO Box 2907 Poulsbo, WA 98370 PORTLAND•TIGARD•TUALATIN Light Rail Project Public Input September 1 through October 10, 2017 October 10, 2017 The following pages document public input received since the last Steering Committee on September 11,2017. Content includes copies of letters,emails and comment forms received,plus a log of public events attended by staff.Personal information such as email addresses and phone numbers have been removed to protect the privacy of participants. • t/r C 0 • EST.1900 ORIENTAL RUGS • CARPETING www.ativehbros.c'ofn October 5, 2017 Our 117th Year Members of the SW Corridor Steering Committee: My name is David Atiyeh,the 3rd generation family owner of Atiyeh Bros. Inc. Rugs& Carpeting.Over the past 117 years, our company has focused on its customers and has never expressed any public opinion on government issues or decisions. We are departing from that long tradition to let you know that Atiyeh Bros.opposes the SW Corridor"1-5 alignment" light rail route south of Tigard.Atiyeh's is a member of the Coalition for SW MAX Railroad Options which supports the unique advantages of a "Railroad alignment" route which include better access for Tigard's low income residents, lower project costs and shorter travel time. Both routes offer comparable daily ridership. Our Tigard retail store and corporate offices (located at Bonita Rd. & 1-5) were developed in 2001, and required several million dollars of capital investment. We hoped to make this our home for the next 100 years.The 1-5 alignment would close numerous businesses (which pay city and county property taxes) in the area, including our neighbors Paul Schatz Furniture and 3 other companies,and eliminate hundreds of family wage jobs.The MAX station and parking lot proposed adjacent to our property would severely limit Atiyeh's ability to continue operations by restricting delivery truck access and greatly damage property value. The I-5 alignment goes through fully developed business areas.These locations are irreplaceable because of their freeway visibility and proximity to Tigard, Lake Oswego, Tualatin, and all SW Portland neighborhoods. Thousands of customers would lose convenient health care, retail and hospitality services.All the factors which have made this Tigard area a vital employment and economic force will be permanently damaged.The 1-5 alignment will literally tear the heart out of one of the absolute commercial gems in the metro area, which includes well-known names such as Gerber, United Rentals, Curtiss-Wright, Umpqua Bank, Portland Clinic, Home Depot, Marriott, Burgerville and Holiday Inn Express, plus 2 of the oldest family companies in Oregon-Atiyeh Bros. and Paul Schatz. As we have commented in prior Steering and Community Advisory Committee meetings,information on the 1-5 alignment has been less than timely and forthcoming. Not only did this come as a shock to the many companies who could lose property and have to terminate hundreds of employees, but it has significantly limited participation in your planning process. At this time we urge the Committee to support Railroad alignment options C2 or C4 for the reasons stated above. I planned to deliver my comments in person on October 9 but this Committee meeting was canceled which is unfortunate due to the limited opportunity we and others have had to weigh in on the route alternatives. I can be contacted at 503-924-1905 or email davidPatiyehbros.com. • Thank you, r, UN/4A L'AtVA‘ David Atiyeh cc:Steven Pfeiffer,Attorney Perkins Cole WA sus ID aov o1574o EXPERIENCE THE ATIYEH DIFFERENCE OR ccu Lic#3390 RETAIL STORE EUGENE CLEANING FACILITY 6750 SW Bonita Road • Tigard,Oregon 97224 PORTLAND CLEANING FACILITY 564 East 13th•Eugene,Oregon 97401 1516 SE Division Street•Portland,Oregon 97202 Phone:(541)342-3678 Phone: (503)639-8642 phone:(503)234-5495 Fax:(541)342.1038 Fax:(503)639-8688 Fax:(503)231.3680 PORTLAND•TIGARD•TUALATIN Light Rail Project Public Input October 11 through November 2, 2017 November 2, 2017 The following pages document public input received since the last report released October 10, 2017. Content includes copies of letters,emails,relevant Facebook comments and comment forms received,plus a log of public events attended by staff.Personal information such as email addresses and phone numbers have been removed to protect the privacy of participants. COALITION4ORSW MAX The Coalition for SW MAX Railroad Options(C2/C4)represents 13 established businesses and property owners in Tigard that are at risk RAICR— 346 :tIO t15 of displacement in four of the six proposed alternatives outlined in the 'e.40tK .Ca: From: David Atiyeh To: Southwest Corridor Plan Cc: Subject: Low income ridership-Bonita Rd.station options Date: Monday,October 16,2017 3:06:42 PM As the recent attached article describes, ridership has dropped in the Tri-Met system due higher housing costs, incomes and related factors. Lower income riders are not being served as well. http://www.oregonlive.com/commuting/index.ssf/2017/09/trimet_report_rising_housing_c.html The Decision Briefing Book- "Along the Railroad or 1-5 in Tigard?", dated May 18, 2017, on page 4 covers information about the 2 Bonita Rd. station location options. Per this section, the 1-5 route might better serve the rich people ("employment and multi-family housing east of 1-5") on the pricy Lake Oswego side of the freeway, while the Railroad route would "better serve the multi-family housing west of the railroad tracks in Tigard". What is obscured by this verbiage, and what needs to be clearly and publicly stated, is that this housing along the Railroad route is low income and serves many Hispanic residents.These are specifically the citizens who will use and need public transportation like MAX; read the attached article again. In the end, of all criteria, isn't public transportation about serving people who benefit most from it?This is one of the primary reasons why our company and other members of the Coalition for SW MAX Railroad Options support the "Railroad alignment" route south of Tigard.Just watch as ethnic kids come off the school bus in the afternoon on the west side of the tracks, or compare the rent and home prices between these 2 areas which are less than 1/2 mile apart. It is a completely different world. [Note: This information was also submitted by email on October 12 to Eryn Kehe, Metro Councilors Stacey and Dirksen, Leah Robins with Tri-Met, and Chris Ford with Metro. We want this to be part of the SW Corridor public record, including for the Community Advisory and Steering Committees, and therefore have submitted our comments through this site as well] David Atiyeh JiTh5h j3ro MOO O10l:14TA1,Rt't,S • CACtI'i:T1M, Sales:Oriental Rugs I American Orientals Rugs I Wall-to-Wall Carpeting I Custom Area Rugs I Padding I Stair Runners&Rods Services:Rug Cleaning I Residential&Commercial Carpet Cleaning I Furniture Cleaning I Rug&Carpet Repair I Rug Appraisals From: rvn Kehe To: Southwest Corridor Plan Subject: Fwd: RE:Max line Date: Wednesday,Octbber 18,2017 11:03:35 AM From:John Cook Sent:Wednesday, October 18, 2017 10:29 AM To: 'Kevin Settelmeyer' Cc: Lucy Folau Subject: RE: Max line Thank you Kevin, I appreciate hearing from you. I'll copy your message to Metro to share with the rest of the Southwest Corridor Steering Committee members. I appreciate the time you took to share your thoughts and hope you will continue to follow the project. Metro's website is a great place to track the project's overall progress — check out http://www.oregonmetro.gov/public-projects/southwest- corridor-plan to learn more. Have a good day, John L. Cook, Mayor City of Tigard Original Message From: Kevin Settelmeyer Sent: Wednesday, October 11, 2017 4:58 PM To:John Cook <MayorCook@tigard-or.gov> Subject: Max line Hello Mayor Cook. I just wanted to send you a quick email to implore you to do all you can to avoid the Max line coming through Tigard. Particularly, the area that the WES currently utilizes. Make no mistake, if the Max line comes through Tigard, the Fanno Creek trail will become a tent city for the homeless. I've already had to contact the police about illegal campers in the Fanno Creek wetlands. One of the Tigard police officers stated that if the Max line comes through here, "It will change everything". Once the ball get rolling, it will be near impossible to stop and the Fanno Creek Trail and downtown Tigard/Burnham will become an eyesore. Thank you. Paul ScEI4EZ -dome Furnishings 6600 SW Bonita Rd Tigard, OR 97224 503-620-6600 www.paulschatzfurniture.com Members of the SW Corridor Community Advisory Committee October 18, 2017 My name is Paul Schatz Ip and I represent Paul Schatz Home Furnishings.We have been in the Portland Oregon area since 1919 when my grandfather started our company. Our company is a member of the Coalition for SW MAX Railroad Options which supports the compelling advantages of using existing railroad right of way in the "Railroad alignments" being proposed. We strongly oppose the"1-5 alignments'that are also being considered as it would harm existing developed companies such as ours which would result in loss of jobs, loss of revenues for Tigard and surrounding areas. Over the years our company has been located all over the Portland area, my grandfather built his first new store in the Hollywood district in 1939, at the time that area of Portland was where most of our customer base was located. As the years went on, a large percentage of our customer base moved to the west side and it became apparent that we were no longer convenient to our customers,so in 1973 we opened a store out in Tualatin where Cabela's is now located, on a land leased property owned by the Nyberg's. In 1985 we moved out of the Hollywood store and relocated in Delta Park on land leased property owned by Tom Moyer. The moral to this story is that we never owned our locations. So in 1997 we had the opportunity to purchase a permanent location that we could build on for our family's future and that is where we are located now,just south of Bonita Road next to 1-5. We specially targeted our location to be adjacent to other retailers in the home furnishings area. It was known at that time that the Ethan Allen store had been, consistently, the number one Ethan Allen store in the country. Similarly Norwalk furnishings (which was located where currently Trader Joes is) was also consistently number one in the nation. After closing both of our old locations and moving to our current Bonita/ I-5 location, we did more volume in that single store than we did in both old stores combined in the first year. This area, between Bonita Road and Carmen Drive/Upper Boones Ferry is magical. Most likely Trader Joes and Home Depot stores rate very high in their company's performance metrics. The Railroad alignments provide shorter travel times, have roughly the same ridership, provide for significant additional economic development opportunities without disrupting the existing 1-5 business development, brings additional jobs to the area and provides the best access for lower income populations that depend on access to transit. The 1-5 alignments would put a station and park & ride where we exist today. The thought of losing this location is devastating to our family, and to all the other businesses that have moved to this location for similar reasons.These properties are irreplaceable. I hope the decision makers recognize the value that all of our businesses bring to the community and specifically the Tigard,Tualatin communities.We understand that the rail option has its own set of issues, but it would be the feast disruptive route and I can't help but feel it would be far less costly. Please stand with us choosing the Railroad alignments and saving these established businesses on the 1-5 route. Sincerely, b,.., " ., ., .400H ,,'-. _. Paul Schatz III The Portland Oct. 23, 2017 ci Clinic Dear SW Corridor Steering Committee members: The Portland Clinic is a locally owned medical provider that has served the local region with quality health care for nearly 100 years. We have had one of our six branch offices along I-5 between Bonita Road and Carmen Drive since 1991. DOWNTOWN According to the four of the six proposed alignments, our three-story building with 800 5'21 t3Eh twenue. Portland,OR 97205 40,000 square feet would be demolished to make way for the Southwest Corridor Ph 503 221 0161 Light Rail line. BEAVERTON s y Mimh}an w7, Because of that potential, The Portland Clinic has joined with 13 other businesses 9.,,= along 1-5 that would be adversely affected to form the Coalition for SW MAX Railroad Options. SOUTH 6640SW RE'Wc„i- .=. We respectively ask you to choose the Light Rail alignments C2 and C4 along the Portland.OR 97224 Ph50362Q7393 railway lines. TIGARD The Portland Clinic believes removing our medical offices along 1-5 would have g25 i ga StdHall `i23consequences q Tigard Tigard.ORn7721.3 unintended negative cse uences on the health and wellness of the Ti and and Ph5O32T;O161 Tualatin area. COLUMBIA 5847 NE 122nd Avenne. Currently, we serve 6,000 east Washington County patients from our medical office Portiand.OR47230 along I-5. Many of the most vulnerable patients are senior citizens from nearby Ph 503 256 3401 Summerfield and King City. EAST 547NE:mil Avenue,`''--'', If forced to move,The Portland Clinic would have no guarantees finding an Portland OR 9"1232 Ph503233694n affordable and suitable replacement in the area. Our patients would have to find their health care elsewhere in a time when primary care is at premium because of ALBERTY SURGICAL CENT EP physician shortages. 9100 SW 0164011 Road, Tigard.OR 97223 Ph503',459066 There would be ripple effects on other Tigard area health care providers for cancer care and imaging that are part of our referral network. APPOINTMENTS Ph 503 221 2 Our branch closure would also affect about 80 health care professionals at this VANCOUVER DIRECT DIAL branch, many of whom live in the surrounding area and support the community through taxes and volunteerism. The Portland Clinic is a solid corporate citizen of Tigard and Tualatin. We have offered financial support to the Good Neighbor Shelter for the homeless. We are active members of the Tigard Chamber of Commerce. And we are starting to offer free medical care through Project Access Now and Compassion Clinics held this year at Tigard High School. theportlanciclinic.com Where relationships matter. We feel Tri-Met and Metro have a viable alternative with the railroad alignment,which would not disrupt the area's health care and a group of strong businesses along I-5. Thank you for your consideration. 1 Sincerely, i Clark, CEO The Portland Clinic Date: 10/24/2017 From: Landmark Lane LLC. 2480 NE Century Blvd. Hillsboro, Or., 97124 To: SW Corridor Steering Committee Re: SW Corridor Light Rail Project As a representative of the partners of Landmark Lane LLC I am writing to you to register our strong opposition to the "I-5 alignment"as a route for your light rail project, and our support for the"Railroac Alignment" route which we believe to be a much better option. Overall project cost,disruption to businesses,and loss of jobs in the area caused from businesses being relocated out of the 1-5, Hwy 217 triangle. Our 92,000 sq. ft. building on a five acre lot is located at the west end of Landmark Lane, and houses a tenant who has been in operation in the building for 17 plus years. The I-5 alignment takes the light rail track directly through the center of our building as it leaves the current rail corridor, and proceeds east to the 1-5 alignment before turning south. Conversely the Railroad alignment seems not to cause any disruption to their operation, nor cause them to incur any cost for business relocation. Similar relocation costs, and or disruptions are imposed on at least fourteen other businesses in the area as a result of the I-5 alignment. In addition,jobs, commerce, and resulting revenue will be lost in the area as a result of the relocation of companies currently in the path of the I-5 option. Conversely there would be minimum disruption,and job migration resulting from continuing the light rail along the existing railroad line. For these reasons we strongly recommend to the Committee that you support options C2, or C4 (Railroad Alignment)as your choice for the new light rail path. It simply makes common sense from all angles! Regard Vi 4 Ora"r idor Glenn Hayter, Part er Landmark Lane LLC PORTLAND•TIGARD•TUALATIN ñdo[__ Light Rail Project Public Input November 2, 2017 through January 10, 2018 January 10, 2018 The following pages document public input received since the last report released November,2017. Content includes copies of letters,emails,relevant Facebook comments and comment forms received,plus a log of public events attended by staff.Personal information such as email addresses and phone numbers have been removed to protect the privacy of participants. DD Vuna�t/vrcc. 109 W. 17th Street ( Vancouver, WA 98660 1360.694.1521 I burgerville.com December 29, 2017 Dear SW Corridor Steering Committee members: Burgerville is a chain of 42 restaurants and 1500 employees, located in the Pacific Northwest, built on a tradition of serving fresh food made with local ingredients. Our business relies on partnerships with neighboring farms and businesses that share our commitment to quality food and thriving communities. We, support public transportation that benefits our community partners, employees, and the guests we serve. The Burgerville located on Carman Drive is our highest performing restaurant serving over 1,000 guests per day and employing 60 people. If the I-5 alignment option is pursued for the new Light Rail, it will force this Burgerville to permanently close. This possibility represents a significant loss to our employees, guests, the community at large, and our supply chain partners, in particular given that another comparable site that will accommodate a Burgerville restaurant is unlikely to be found in the area. As an active member of the Coalition for SW MAX Railroad Options, we support Railroad Options C2 or C4 (using the existing railroad alignment) which will allow our restaurant as well as neighboring businesses to continue to serve this community. We look forward to continuing to work with the Coalition to advocate for the viable alternative to the 1-5 alignment so that the area and the region continues to grow and thrive. Sincerely, J11 4 • ,f6„.._ Jill Taylor, CEO SERVE WITH LOVE . nno BONITA PIONEER PACKAGING PRODUCTS November 21, 2017 To: SW Corridor Steering Committee Re: SW Corridor Light Rail Project I am writing this letter to voice a strong opposition to the "1-5 alignment" as a possible route for the light rail project. I am also voicing my strong support for the much more feasible option of the "railroad alignment" route! (C2 or C4) One of our 2 buildings in this area would be totally eliminated if the "1-5" route is chosen. It is at 7400 SW Landmark Lane. Our second building in the area is located at 7333 SW Bonita Rd. The two buildings we currently house need to be in close proximity of one another, as we shuttle product between the two. If one of the buildings were to be eliminated, it would leave us no alternative but to find another area to either have both facilities under one roof, or find two building close together. We have conducted our business in the City of Tigard / Washington County community for over 28 years. We employ over 112 people between the two buildings, not mention the tax revenue from our 20 plus million dollar revenue from the manufactured products we sell. The relocation costs and business interruption would create un-repairable damage to our business if the "1-5 alignment" is chosen instead of the "railroad alignment "option. This is not to mention the dozens of other businesses that would be affected as well. We believe over 10 properties would be eliminated or rendered unusable with Eminent Domain along I- 5 compared to 2 properties along the Railroad It's hard for me to believe that the 1-5 alignment option is even being considered with the overwhelming additional cost to the tax payers! The Railroad routes (C2 and C4) make the most sense as they: are less costly, provide similar ridership, are faster, provide superior access to underserved populations, and provide an opportunity for additional economic development, jobs, and tax revenues; while preserving the current investments, development and jobs along 1-5. For these reasons, the Railroad routes (C2 or C4) are our choices for the proposed Light Rail SW MAX line. Sincerely, Ken Karalus VP/GENERAL MANAGER FCD Bonita Pioneer Packaging Products 7400 SW Landmark Lane Tigard OR 97224 503.684-6542 • FAX 1.800-323-6027 • 1-800-677-7725 • 7333 S.W. Bonita Rd. • Portland, OR 97224 • www.bonitapioneer.com Or ;1 _ r 59. OREGON L1:(:lst-VERT ASSE NIBIN Metro Councilor Craig Dirksen, Bob Stacey Co-Chairs SW Corridor Steering Committee 600 NE Grand Avenue Portland, Oregon 97232 November 20, 2017 Dear Councilor Dirksen & Councilor Stacey, From its inception, and prior to our service in the Oregon Legislature, we have been strong advocates for and supporters of the Southwest Corridor Light Rail Project. Our enthusiastic support remains steadfast, and we look forward to continuing to support this vital transportation solution for our region and the entire State of Oregon. Over the past few weeks, we have heard significant concern from business owners who are concerned about the implications to their businesses if the SW Corridor Steering Committee adopts an I-S alignment route. Given the investment that many of these businesses have made in our community and the economic impact their continued operation has on our region, we share their concern regarding the adoption of an I-S alignment. Many of these businesses continue to be pillars of our local economy in Tigard with a long history of serving our community. In reviewing all of the proposed alignments and after hearing concerns from constituents about the impacts of an 1-5 alignment, we strongly urge the steering committee to move forward with one of the Railroad alignments. As strong advocates for the SW Corridor Light Rail Project, we immensely appreciate all of the work that the steering committee, staff and many other leaders have put into this project. We thank you in advance for your consideration of our request regarding the I-5 alignment, and we hope that you will not hesitate to reach out to us if you have questions or if we can be of assistance. Best regards, oritoirb t)t4vAtt, Margaret Doherty Ginny Burdick State Representative State Senate Majority Leader House District 35 (Tigard, SW Portland) Senate District 18 Tigard Townhomes, Inc. 12375 SW Hall Blvd. Tigard, Oregon 97223 Eryn Deeming Kahe Aug. 22, 2017 Senior Communications Specialist Metro 800 NE Grand Ave. Portland, Oregon 97232-2736 Dear Eryn, Enclosed are reasons why { feel Ash Street Max Route for the Light Rail would be the least favorable choice. I hope you will carefully read the information and share it with those who are responsible for making the final decision. On a personal note ( think placing a Light Rail, walking path and bicycle lane within the Tigard area would be beneficial for most pedestrians. Because I am a property owner and it means the Light Rail would take a large portion of my building I find it DEVASTATING. I depend on this property entirely for my livelihood and retirement, including supporting my mother totally. Taking this property also means an incredible inconvenience to my tenants; some have lived there as long as 38 years. Please send a copy to the Projects Community Advisory Committee and The Steering Committee. Thank you for your consideration. Charlotte Hodges, President PO Box 2907 Poulsbo, WA 98370 Hoak*hm aExpress' November 6,2017 Members of the SW Corridor Steering Committee: My name is Jatin Patel and my family has owned and operated the Holiday Inn Express located at 15700 SW Upper Boones Ferry Rd.Tigard,OR 97035 for over 12 years.We are a member of the Coalition for SW MAX Railroad Options. Of the two options of the Light Rail traveling through Tigard we would like to urge your Committee to select the railroad right of way. Our site and property is located where the large 650 space park and ride facility for the Upper Boones Ferry MAX station is proposed to be built.We are not a manufacturing type of business that can be easily relocated as we provide transient lodging. Customers choose a hotel due its location. Our location serves customers that are located in the PacTrust corporate parks that are adjacent to our hotel as well as other numerous businesses located within the 3-5 mile radius of our location. If our hotel is moved away from our location, then we will not able to serve these customers. Beyond this, there is no similar property available along 1-5 to relocate to. The 1-5 route would eliminate both hotels that are located on our entire exit to serve customers. The City of Tigard would also have a financial loss to their General Budget of the transient lodging tax both hotels collect. I estimate that amount of loss to be about$200,000.00 annually. I am not sure if the City is aware of this loss of revenue they may have budgeted for. The magnitude of the number of jobs lost from our business, along with the other members of the Coalition is staggering.There would be a ripple effect within associated business services that depend on us and other Coalition members that have made a long-term commitment to Tigard with their investments and community support. We believe over 10 properties would be eliminated or rendered unusable with Eminent Domain along 1-5 compared to 2 properties along the Railroad. The Railroad routes (C2 and C4) make the most sense as they: are less costly, provide similar ridership, are faster, provide superior access to underserved populations,and provide an opportunity for additional economic development,jobs, and tax revenues; while preserving the current investments, development and jobs along 1-5. Regards, Jatin Patel Member BHGAH Tigard, LLC PORTLAND•TIGARD•TUALATIN 11111/Mr; I IMP" Light Rail Project Public Input January 11, 2018 through January 31, 2018 January 31, 2018 The following pages document public input received since the last report released January, 2017. Content includes copies of letters,emails,relevant Facebook comments and comment forms received,plus a log of public events attended by staff.Personal information such as email addresses and phone numbers have been removed in some cases to protect the privacy of participants. EMPIRE P.O. Box 23962 Tigard, OR 97281-3962 BATTERIES INC. (503) 639-5515 SINCE 1969 FAX: (503) 624-9289 January 17,2018 Southwest Corridor Steering Committee c/o Chris Ford, Southwest Corridor Project Manager Metro 600 NE Grand Avenue Portland,OR 97323 Re: Southwest Corridor Light Rail Route Selection Dear Ladies and Gentlemen of the Southwest Corridor Steering Committee: I am writing you on behalf of Empire Batteries to ask that you consider the effect that the route and Park&Ride options for the proposed Southwest Corridor light rail Railroad alignment will have on our business,our employees,and the community that we serve. Empire Batteries is a family owned and operated business that was started by my parents, Gary and Judy Shoepe, and has been serving the needs of Oregon and Southwest Washington for almost 50 years. Founded in 1969,Empire Batteries has been in business in Tigard since 1972 and has operated out of its location on Southwest Bonita Road near SW 74th Avenue since 1986. If the proposed Railroad alignment for the Southwest Corridor light rail is selected,the construction of a Park&Ride facility will require a total taking of our property,and our business,employees, and the community that we serve will be irreparably injured. We offer a unique service to the Portland metro area by providing wholesale distribution of high quality batteries. As Portland's economy has grown and changed over the years,we have been fortunate to cultivate a committed customer base,many of whom have been our customers for decades. To our knowledge,we do not have any locally owned competitors, and our customers would be forced to scramble to find a substitute supplier that meets their needs if our business were to close. If our property is condemned, it is very unlikely that we will be able to locate a suitable replacement property in the metro area. Industrial property that is properly zoned and well-suited for commercial storage and sale of batteries is very hard to come by. Additionally, we are not a wealthy business that has the resources to stay afloat and weather the transition from one location to another,particularly if we are forced to move from our convenient location off of 1-5 to a sequestered industrial park. Our long tenure at our property on Southwest Bonita Road is a hallmark of our business, and the loss of this location will almost certainly mean the permanent shuttering of our doors in the Portland metro area. INDUSTRIAL 0 DIESEL . AUTO • MARINE Southwest Corridor Steering Committee January 17,2018 Page 2 Our location on Southwest Bonita Road currently employs seven people, all of whom are full-time. The jobs provided by Empire Batteries are of a kind that seems to be becoming scarcer in our region: family-wage,blue-collar jobs with benefits. If our property is condemned and we are fortunate enough to find a suitable replacement property,we anticipate that many of those employees will be forced to look for other work regardless because they do not have the flexibility or resources to travel to a more remote location for work. Our staff is a strong community that we would be sorry to see disrupted,and we are concerned that many of our employees,who depend on their job with Empire Batteries to support their families, may struggle to obtain another position. Although Portland is a hub of entrepreneurial activity,there are not many businesses that can say that they have been operating here for as long as we have. Empire Batteries has grown with Tigard and Portland over the last half-century,and there is no denying that our business has weathered and adapted to changes in the economy and lifestyle of the community we serve. We do not support the Southwest Corridor light rail at the cost of our business,employees,and community. I ask that you please choose the proposed I-5 alignment for the light rail line so that the new Park &Ride facility will not uproot our family business from its home on Southwest Bonita Road. Thank you for your time and consideration of my request. Best regards, Timothy A. Shoepe,President copy: Eryn Kehe, Senior Communication Specialist,Metro,600 NE Grand Avenue,Portland, OR 97323 000179/00009/8632807v2 From: David Atiyeh Sent: Wednesday, January 17, 2018 2:52 PM To: Eryn Kehe Subject: FW: SW Corridor light rail- Atiyeh Bros. comments to Tigard City Council Eryn- Could you please submit this correspondence information, previously sent to the Tigard City Council in December, to both the Steering and Community Advisory Committees. As always, thank you for your assistance! David Atiyeh From: David Atiyeh [ Sent: Friday, December 15, 2017 4:40 PM To: 'councilmail@tigard-or.gov'< Cc: Mark McGirr-Atiyeh Bros. < >; 'Debra Dunn'< >; Kevin Atiyeh< >; Carrie Atiyeh < >; 'Armitage, Ree (Wyden)' >; 'Jake Oken-Berg' < >; 'Jagjit Nagra'< >; 'Horvath, Kelli'< >; 'sen.ginnyburdick@oregonlegislature.gov' < >; 'Rep Doherty' <> Subject:SW Corridor light rail-Atiyeh Bros. comments to Tigard Council Mayor Cook, Council President Snider, Councilors Anderson, Goodhouse and Woodard- Attached first is a public comment letter dated December 15 from our company Atiyeh Bros. on the SW Corridor light rail alignment options impacting the Tigard community. The additional attached documents are referred to within my letter. Carol Krager of the City told me in a phone call on December 12 that the Council is not taking public comment on the light rail project at its upcoming Dec. 19 Workshop meeting when I was hoping to present this in person. Since the next Council meeting is not until January 2, and given the urgency of this alignment matter and the upcoming routing recommendation in the DEIS early 2018, we thought it best to submit these comments for the Council's further consideration now. Thank you. David Atiyeh 503-924-1905 I email: david@atiyehbros.com I atiyehbros.com Itidri o101:NTAI. Int'US • cAI rrTIsCu • TES 1900 ORIENTAL DUGS • CARPETING www ati yehbros.corn December 15, 2017 Our 117th Year Members of Tigard City Council: Hello. My name is David Atiyeh, 3rd generation owner of Atiyeh Bros. Inc. Rugs & Carpeting. Our company is part of a Coalition of Tigard businesses actively involved with the SW Corridor light rail alignment options. We held a most helpful meeting with Mayor Cook and Kenny Asher on October 23 to further our understanding of this project's specific impacts on the Tigard community. Coalition members have had dozens of meetings and calls with Metro and Tri-Met officials and key staff; federal, state and local legislators; and ODOT to learn about the decision making process, make comments and ask questions. We and most other Coalition members have submitted letters to the SW Corridor Steering committee, Mark McGirr our company President provided comment at your November 7 Council meeting, and we have made available our Coalition's Position Statement in support of the Railroad alignment options. We appreciate and draw encouragement from the City of Tigard's October 5, 2016 Environmental Impact Scoping Comments letter to Metro Planning which states (page 3) "Tigard does not want to lose existing businesses that have economic value, provide jobs, destinations, goods and convenience to our community in exchange for parking that simply generates vehicle trips on our streets. In particular, a Park & Ride on Bonita Road along the I- 5 alignment is one of those locations where the displacement of existing business do not justify a Park & Ride facility. A station being considered on Bonita along the I-5 corridor ... where there is no exit does not make sense to us." State Senator Burdick's and Rep. Doherty's joint letter to the SW Corridor Steering committee on November 20 concludes "Given the investment that many of these businesses have made in our community and the economic impact their continued operation has on our region, we share their concern regarding an 1-5 alignment. In reviewing all of the proposed alignments, we strongly urge the Steering committee to move forward with one of the Railroad alignments." At this point we believe the Tigard City Council and City managers share our fundamental concerns and question why an 1-5 alignment option with a MAX station and park & ride lot remains under consideration compared to the clear and compelling reasons under all criteria for a Railroad alignment. And if so, we welcome and offer to support and join you in your efforts to remove this I-5 route option from those being considered, sooner than later. WA BUS 11)4U)m5740 EXPERIENCE THE ATIYEH DIFFERENCE, UK LLB Lie ffi5Y11 RETAIL STORE EUGENE CLEANING FACILITY 6750 SW Bonita Road • Tigard,Oregon 97224 PORTLANU CLEAN[NC:FACILITY 564 East 13th•Eugene,Oregon 97401 1516 SE Division Street•Portland,Oregon 97202 Phone:(541)342-3678 Phone: (503) 639-8642 Phone:(503)234-5495 rax:(541)342-1038 Fax:(503)639-8688 rax:(3031231-3680 Metro completed an on-line survey November 30 for voters to choose their favorite light rail alignment options, including comparing the 1-5 alignment to the Railroad alignment in Tigard. We are very interested in the survey's results planned to be released by Metro to the public in January. We LOVE having our corporate headquarters and retail store in Tigard. We are the most recent to build, in 2001, along the 1-5 route. However, 10 businesses are now in jeopardy of closure with an 1-5 alignment and 3 would have substantial property taken severely limiting continued operations vs. 2 identified properties closed along Railroad route options. An "1-5 alignment" in Tigard achieves no benefits and results in the loss of established companies, hundreds of family wage jobs, services to the public, and reduced property tax revenue to support Tigard schools/community. And nothing would replace all this because there is no further opportunity for development along this 1-5 alignment. Neither is there a place to relocate these business activities in Tigard. Demolition of the 40,000 sq. ft. Portland Clinic alone would affect 80 health care professionals and service to 6,000 patients, many vulnerable senior citizens. The preferred "Railroad alignment" has unique advantages and benefits in the form of substantially lower cost to acquire property, less employment displacement, better station access for low income residents in need of transit, fewer traffic impacts, faster transit time, and is more likely to enhance meaningful redevelopment including more affordable housing. We have been told by SWC Steering committee Co-chairs Stacey and Dirksen that NOW is the critical time to influence the light rail route alignment decision in the upcoming DEIS. Our Coalition is asking the Tigard City Council to reinforce to the Steering committee, Tri-Met Board and Metro Council the preferences cited in the City's October 2016 letter noted above. Please support the Railroad alignment option for its positive and obvious benefits to the entire Tigard community. 1 can be contacted at 503-924-1905 or email david@atiyehbros.com. Thank you. C t (Av;?l�1 David Atiyeh SUMMIT February 1,2018 VIA EMAIL AND REGULAR MAIL Southwest Corridor LRT Steering Committee do Eryn Deeming Kehe Metro 600 NE Grand Ave Portland, OR 97232 Re: Southwest Corridor LRT • Dear Members of the Committee: Summit Properties, Inc. ("Summit")is the owner of two properties located in the City of Tigard. They are located at 7330 SW Landmark Lane and 7555 SW Tech Center Drive. The purpose of this letter is to provide comment and input to the Steering Committee as it chooses alignment selections for the Southwest Corridor Rail Project. The properties are located south of downtown Tigard and are located along one or more of the alignments designated as alternatives being considered for review in the DEIS. Generally, these alternatives are characterized in the decision briefing book as the"C Through"alignments. Those alignments include Cl,C2, C3 and C4. Both industrial buildings have longstanding tenants providing economic vitality to Tigard and employment for its citizens. The Cl and C3 alignments take an easterly departure from the existing railroad lines to reach 1-5 to the east. Alignment C2 and C4 generally continue along the existing railroad lines to the south. The decision making matrix for these alignments asks the question of whether the alignment should be"along the railroad or I-5 in Tigard." In other words, alignments C2 and C4 are along the railroad and Cl and C3 are along I-5. Summit Properties respectfully requests that the alignment chosen be C2 or C4 along the railroad. Of course, Summit Properties would not wish to have its properties condemned for purposes of the light rail system. The I-5 alignment in alternatives Cl and C3 would require at least one building and its business to be 100% lost. The railroad alignments make far more sense. The merits of the C2 and C4 alignments emerge quickly when looking at the advantages of the C2 and C4 alignments as opposed to the Cl and C3 alignments: 95656130.1 0025844-00001 DRAT 1 1130/2018 1235P 4380 SW Macadam Avenue Suite 330 Portland, Oregon 97239 503.227.5663 -- Fax 503.227.5660 Southwest Corridor LRT Steering Committee February 1, 2018 Page 2 Advantages of C2 and C4 (Railroad Alignments) 1. Preferred by 61%of commuters. 2. Lower Cost to Build. 3. Fewer impacts on private property and business owners. 4. Serves more people. 5. Faster travel times. 6. Uses existing right-of-way. 7. More redevelopment opportunities. 8. Avoids difficult crossing at 72nd. 9. Is compatible with the Operations and Maintenance facility on SW Hunziker Street. Disadvantages of Cl and C3 (I-5) 1. Close proximity to freeway -- not a walkable environment and a lack of developable adjacent land. Conclusion Summit will be participating in the DEIS process. The issues presented by the alignment selection are critical to Summit and its tenants. Very truly yours, SUMMIT PROPERTIES, INC. Yoshio Kurosaki President 95656130.1 0025844-00001 DRAFT: 1/30/2018 12:36PM Southwest Corridor light rail schedule 11/27/17 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2026 2027., Environmental Review Draft Final : Public and Advanced Design & Engineering agency review Funding Preferred alternative Regional Construction selected funding vote Federal funding Opening Schedule is subject to change. agreement CITY OF TIGARD Respect and Care I Do the Right Thing I Get it Done w TIGARD Southwest Corridor Project Tigard Team Update Presented to City Council I March 20, 2018 CITY OF TIGARD The purpose of the Southwest Corridor light rail project is to directly connect Tualatin, downtown Tigard, Southwest Portland, and the region's central city with light rail, high quality transit and appropriate community investments in a congested corridor to improve mobility and create the conditions that will allow communities in the corridor to achieve their land use vision CITY OF TIGRDA • SWC or Southwest Corridor: basically the Barbur • LPA or Locally Preferred Alternative: The final Boulevard/Hwy 99 corridor between Portland and light rail route, recommended by the project Sherwood including those two cities, Tigard, Steering Committee, endorsed by participating Tualatin, King City, Durham, and portions of governments, and adopted by the Metro Council. unincorporated Washington County. • LUFO or Land Use Final Order: The statutory • DEIS or Draft Environmental Impact Statement: a authority granted by Metro, under Oregon federally required study that discloses the statute, to TriMet, to construct the project across impacts and benefits of possible route options for multiple local land use authorities. light rail in the corridor. • TOD or Transit Oriented Development: • FEIS or Final Environmental Impact Statement: a Development that typically follows the opening of study that will address the set of benefits, light rail, close to stations and characterized by a impacts and mitigations for those impacts for a mixture of uses in single buildings and lower than final alignment once selected. typical parking ratios. • IRP or Initial Route Proposal: An FTA-required, • CAC or Citizen Advisory Committee: A Metro- proposed light rail alignment, to be included in appointed committee of citizens from affected the DEIS for public comment and review. jurisdictions to review project information and make recommendations to the project Steering Committee on key decisions. • FTA or Federal Transit Administration: The federal agency responsible for reviewing, rating, funding and overseeing the design, development, construction and operation of light rail projects nationwide. CITY OF TIGARD Southwest Corridor light rail schedule 11/27/17 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2026 2027 Environmental Review Draft Final Public and Advanced Design & Engineering agency review Funding Preferred alternative e al Construction Regcon selected funi al vote Federal funding Opening Schedule is subject to change. agreement CITY OF TIG 1 RD March 2018 shorten 1-5 / Initial Route crossings .. 1 r ri Proposal (IRP) 1 20=riii) DOWNTOWN • TIGAFI, avoid impacts :,,0 ••••: on Ash m avoid impacts on Beveland I• ` N oe' KRUSE $ WAY �...�. Q adjacent \ D rrrp,xa route G� adjacent to r-s Mo,incnOon to railroad _J (south Ode) ....• cols opts • tutor Q .M1O� ~� • st3sOn Win Proposed route ti..j Park.0 Ode avoM lmpa cts \ on..,.eand Modification \ BRID EPOI- LAGS \\\ s K"""E VILLAGE Q DEIS option 0 ad/Kent • to L4road Station M W Q Station with park and ride DOWNTOWN TUALATIN CITY OF TIGARD PERMITTING FRAMEWORK LI • Tigard (local land use authority) O • Washington County Regiona I • TriMet Metro (regional land use authority) State • Oregon Legislature • Land Conservation and Development Commission Fe d ra I • Federal Transit Administration e • National Environmental Protection Act ( I '1' '' O I '1I G \ R 1) LOCAL LAND USE POLICY FRAMEWORK "maintain ,, Downtown as the "promote omote the C°� Cefficient uti anoncity's primary transit �� rMei� � n � center" f"our a,, of employment and Y'..7,41 .:-": " 1 :�: C I I' Y 0 F "I' I G A R D LAND USE Promising Direction ... ► Provides improved circulation and access in Triangle Minimizes park & ride impacts in Triangle ► Minimizes industrial impacts south of downtown CITY OF TIGARD LAND USE Questions & Concerns... 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' - tF •.c,,, Wall Street Infrastructure : Proposed Roadsa,n.. `�' ""rpt 'a . ° Road S 3.803,0(X1 l Prepare e..rorr.n r aW«r Water$ (:50.000 + .,..� Ill,,5tarm$ 757,825 St N� _ ` "; i ,Kon 1 Sewer$ 29I,9SD �h; at•ase^x—T^+..,re. --.... • iiii .ar✓,r)♦ d"a 1 TOTAL SS.S mtIllon ,‘ � ..,._..._,.__,..,.......� __._ > FI.Yr Property Sle Spccnc�lnMalbY[t e } y ♦• .. ny m.OrgoP es ti% �-i CITY OF TIG ARD URBAN DESIGN COMPONENTS OF TRANSIT ORIENTED DEVELOPMENT -Walkable design-pedestrian as the highest priority -Train station as prominent feature of town center -Public square fronting train station -A regional node containing a mixture of uses -High density, walkable district within 10-minute walk -Collector support transit systems including buses, etc -Designed to include the easy use of bicycles/scooters ► -Reduced and managed parking inside 10-minute walk 1 -Specialized retail at stations serving commuters CITY OF TIGARD URBAN DESIGN Preferred Design of Rail Station Site For Maximum Ridership and Pedestrian Connections CONVENTIONAL LAYOUT PREFERRED LAYOUT 411111 Mild mia simitais .---4 1111 NM 11111 IIII IIII ims ism Pedestru. Flow Bus Loop 441) lit 4, At 47. I II Oil -4—, II * II sivic - aza . 1 - - - — - r rl I '2,*r-i r I 11- 4 ii... 15: t I um . Rail Station 1 I1111 - k_ , I III Pedestrian F-,,w 11 11 ____ i CITY OF TIGARD URBAN DESIGN Promising Direction ... Placemaking opportunities in the Triangle on new 70th Avenue and with introduction of new, prominent structures CITY OF TIG ARD URBAN DESIGN Questions & Concerns... Design treatment/budget for all structures (e.g. parking structures, retaining walls, bridges, O&M facilities, new transit center, support buildings) ► Station area development near the downtown station Transit "experience" for people considering downtown as a future residence or business location CITY OF TIG \ R D EQUITY AND HOUSING Promising Direction ... Initial route proposal without station in downtown core would result in fewer residents physically displaced SW Corridor Equitable Housing Strategy has recommendations to address market displacement of residents of "naturally occurring affordable housing" CITY OF TIGARD EQUITY AND HOUSING Questions & Concerns... Initial route proposal would not create opportunity for developing protected affordable housing on TriMet owned remnant parcels in the downtown core Station outside of downtown core could result in less transit oriented housing development where city wants it Station outside of downtown core could make transit less convenient for transit dependent residents CITY OF TIGARD BUSINESS IMPACTS Promising Direction ... ► Potential for increased employment density through redevelopment of underutilized industrial land (Employment Transit-Oriented Development district). CITY OF TIGARD o' BUSINESS IMPACTS o ...1• PCC SYLVANIA DOWNT; Questions & Concerns... r • Tigard Triangle 7., 7 firms / Loss of firms / employment Hunziker Core / Loss of industrial land 5 KRWAY AY 29 firms , / Tax base reduction o / Termination of Hunziker Core \i)4___ Railroad Infrastructure Project Being studied BRIDGEPOL VILLAGE Q 5 DOWNTOWN TUALATIN Parch 2018 a Do•-w. COPi; in t shorten 1-5 / 1 '1/4y •-• crossings • I.,...,..:_ I�III • o : CO:aj) 217 t9 I"I • DOWNTOWN on • 70th avoid .•'" .- impacts ;.per 14ra on Ash avoid impacts on Beveland • _ I,III U:inrl N • KRUSE / 5WAY shorten 1-5 • crossings 0 adjacent to railroad O � Frnpct ,pi .1- O p p adjacent to 1-S rtoanwtlx' �e 0 (south side) OF1',00�n Proposed routetato °C '' on 70th Modification �, p $nonwah avoid .�� ..J r-erl nd nds t3RID,2-; Impacts ,p VILLA tit DEIS option on Ash " avoid impacts on Beveland • Station S Q Station with p park and ride adjacent DOWNTOWN to railroad TUALATIN S CITY OF TIGARD TRAFFIC, TRANSPORTATION & INFRASTRUCTURE Promising Direction ... ► Possible Station adjacent to 99W and 68th Parkway provides opportunity to connect with more riders Opportunity to partner with TriMet to find location for new Tigard Public Works facility Downtown station development provides opportunity to mitigate traffic impacts by fixing Hall/Scoffins/Hunziker intersections CITY OF TIGARD TRAFFIC, TRANSPORTATION & INFRASTRUCTURE Questions & Concerns... Hwy 217 cross-over should include at least bike and pedestrian facilities Downtown Tigard station needs to mitigate traffic and safety impacts on Hall Blvd . Upper Boones Ferry Road crossing traffic impacts need mitigation and determine who pays CITY OF TIG ARD COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT N \ 1 iOutreach Activity in Tigard i, 2017O £fi t;".y 4,3,x§:'^ . Y / February - SW Corridor Kick-Off Event / Spring - Mailer to those along the alignment ' R .° ° ' and mail-route � May - Business Outreach and Presentation i' wc0400A4t4 Breakfast ist .‘ a ' c ) May-September - Tabling at local events , / 1. lit 1:!.1. tib. .�-` 2018 k- - -' 1 February - Underserved and minority ILI., , ,4t outreach at St. Anthony's CITY OF TIG ARD COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT • o• • Upcoming Timeline of Events: • / March - Business Outreach and Presentation Breakfast (possible mitigations) a''op •••�s 1 Spring - Mailer to those along the alignment and mail-route / April - Underserved and minority outreach at St. Anthony's / May 29* : Southwest Corridor Workshop (DEIS) June 21: Southwest Corridor Workshop (DEIS) 0 BRIDGEPOr VILLAGI Q Ongoing Outreach: One-on-one and group meetings with property owners and businesses DOWNTOWN TUALATIN C I T i 0 F T I G A R D .... -#.11", _...........:„......r. 40, . . -, .1 _ , ......,,,,,....., . , t, t , „... .. ... I., . . f . .:,-- .... .. ... ft , , . , !, , 4 , 1 ,.. ,..., tr.,/, .401. ., op -, .i , ..w,,--, ..-,..i.:, .., .... , ,i ,, r -;-, :,,,,y;:, ., „ 4:::,,, P i ° f Vlt :::;,i,.. -:_i==t4. •, I, , It' , . 4110.. - ..-Tr'47:101"..- 4 i i fe.,, '..-..;.;...-...-,:„--:-;-c-4-,',31'-.: r, i )•.' t, ..,0•7 ,,-*--.-..1.,--••-•':V 44.'-:.•'.it: .,.. 1,.t :, , ...,...___ , . -.,,s--...',;;,,.-.-..,,,i,, I Y...,0,1: '',' sk,!-• • 14 i' • ,47, ' lat-..% ••rt.4. ” amonallr ,... , r gii t „ .ii , x MAX .,„ ot ivig.46. g v r”17 . -- -- - ......._ . . -- , _ _.,....... --- e, K SUPPLEMENTAL PACKETr 0%8 �. FOR 3 2° CPATE �F MEETING) CITY OF TIGARD Respect and Care Do the Right Thing Get it Done Southwest Corridor Project Tigard Team Update Presented to City Council I March 20,2018 (: I l Y () I C I (, .A R I) The purpose of the Southwest Corridor light rail project is to directly connect Tualatin, downtown Tigard, Southwest Portland, and the region's central city with light rail, high quality transit and appropriate community investments in a congested corridor to improve mobility and create the conditions that will allow communities in the corridor to achieve their land use vision. 1 3/20/2018 I I 'i f3 r 1. i (, A R l) • SWC or Southwest Corridor:basically the Barbur • LPA or Locally Preferred Alternative:The final Boulevard/Hwy 99 corridor between Portland and light rail route,recommended by the project Sherwood including those two cities,Tigard, Steering Committee,endorsed by participating Tualatin,King City,Durham,and portions of governments,and adopted by the Metro Council. unincorporated Washington County. • LUFO or Land Use Final Order:The statutory • DEIS or Draft Environmental Impact Statement:a authority granted by Metro,under Oregon federally required study that discloses the statute,to TriMet,to construct the project across impacts and benefits of possible route options for multiple local land use authorities. light rail in the corridor. • TOD or Transit Oriented Development: • FEIS or Final Environmental Impact Statement:a Development that typically follows the opening of study that will address the set of benefits, light rail,close to stations and characterized by a impacts and mitigations for those impacts for a mixture of uses in single buildings and lower than final alignment once selected. typical parking ratios. • IRP or Initial Route Proposal: An FTA-required, • CAC or Citizen Advisory Committee:A Metro- proposed light rail alignment,to be included in appointed committee of citizens from affected the DEIS for public comment and review. jurisdictions to review project information and make recommendations to the project Steering Committee on key decisions. • FTA or Federal Transit Administration:The federal agency responsible for reviewing,rating, funding and overseeing the design,development, construction and operation of light rail projects nationwide. I i i I I l: l Southwest Corridor light rail schedule 1 11/27/17 ..2017 2018 2019 2020 1011 2022 202, 2020 2015 ?026 Environmental Review Public and Advanced Design 1 Engineering agency review Funding Preferred alternative Regional selected funding vote Federal funding Opening Scbev*ae a 5object to charge agreement 2 3/20/2018 Shorten i-$ Initial Route crossings •` Proposal (IRP) I m . =a-r on 70th j avoid on Asn ... avoidimpacts on Beveland r \ `` I adjacent U to railroad O ... I r_ Proposed route Momncawn • Sown ) • SUton Wsth park ora rde (; I T l i i I, I' I (; \ It I) PERMITTING FRAMEWORK Loca I • Tigard (local land use authority) • Washington County Regional • Metro et • Metro (regional land use authority) State • Oregon Legislature • Land Conservation and Development Commission Federal • Federal Transit Administration • National Environmental Protection Act 3 3/20/2018 (: i '1 \ O r r > ( _v R n LOCAL LAND USE POLICY FRAMEWORK "maintain "focus 40* Downtown as the �"},��� Gumptc�en employment city's primary transit growth and high- center" - density housing in the Triangle and Downtown" "ensure that \t \\ Downtown is not " ,r •'' '' dominated by park- � and-ride activity." !" 111 "promote the efficient utilization of employment and industrial lands" yLAND USE BUSINESS IMPACTS _y\ URBAN DESIGN EQUITY AND HOUSING TRAFFIC, TRANSPORTATION & INFRASTRUCTURE COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT 4 3/20/2018 ( 1 I G LAND USE Promising Direction... / Provides improved circulation and access in Triangle / Minimizes park & ride impacts in Triangle / Minimizes industrial impacts south of downtown LAND USE Questions & Concerns... / How will the downtown station support the city's land use vision and the Metro 2040 Growth Concept? / Will the downtown station and other light rail improvements help "unlock" the employment potential of the industrial lands in this area or will a different land use vision be needed? 5 3/20/2018 ( 1 I ), () F I I (, \ R i) ,..0 .... .. I ....•iii. s, , .., . au oi • , .., ,- .• (PD • • • 4 R-45 N r - • ; R 71F 14( R 7 • •• ( I I 1 () I 1 I C, \ R I) _•..• at.--""" P. I I I ; I ; I ....''or: . •• _. ..,, ;,...., • • :...;,.,- • • • • . • • 11 6 3/20/2018 . , 1 1 11-• . , ....,-; lir Iwi,1111,1144*if:• i:440: 4.' 4'.', 11:44.0.41-11::1 -; ""., ''''‘.:4.',`,71,,r.,,,.%;. ii. , At, '',Zili. T. ' II gal -T--T-----, , ...7-1.0, 4110,. lt4. „, "14go. ..1 v 47- 41111,1'r,i--,I it- oitt 7: 4;,' -: .ftelf 2 ' - hi • gal 1 ' '''--k 71 ACIIN Wow. • ;,.51,- III al" 4,510 41P1 rle,.... -4.1r. , • ,,,,- i 1 Fos , \-yi:-.:7_,•,..,L* --W. • i 1 L?: I .,--;.,..'----q ,s, irldismir ALLA 16 1114.0.7 1120:411iVPI i'' (: I -1. ) () I 1 G \ R 1) Hunziker Industrial Core: tr'•-- • •-,,l ---:iA.,- 4::: „,:, ,•- Infrastructure for Employment Lands °, ti-,. .;,...{.... , it-vt- - ; 1,tik 1:1* ' -11 a1-..- `*-.4. \ I::-"-111, — II-'a , , . ... - • J .. --- .. ........._ . . ._ -- ..., , ..... ,,.‘ „.... ,.,„„ _ —...........7........,',,.....7.:---,-.-le.* — r7;--.77-Ff..24 ' --," 7 3/20/2018 (; I 1' l O I II G .A R I) BUSINESS IMPACTS Promising Direction... ► Potential for increased employment density through redevelopment of underutilized land (Employment Transit-Oriented Development district). (I I I l ( I I I I (F A R ll BUSINESS IMPACTS o f Questions and Concerns... (ji TigardTr,a„gle 7 firms Loss of firms/ employees 1 Loss of industrial land 1 Tax base reduction / Jeopardizes Hunziker Core Infrastructure Strategy -)" 8 3/20/2018 I r O I 1 I (, _A R 1) TRANSIT ACCESS • Light rail • Time spent alignment walking, waiting, and riding • Station locations • Directness of travel on rail, buses • Changes to bus lines • Ease of transfers (: I '1' V• O I 1 I (, _1 1Z I) TRANSIT ACCESS Promising Direction... �•` / No branching ► Downtown service 0 ai rtt to to railroad Proposed rou. Motltkatoon 0 .«vv DFK opt., • Static., Q Statonvatfi Pak and nde 9 3/20/2018 II ( ) I I i (, A R I) TRANSIT ACCESS Questions & Concerns... Downtown station location / Bus routes? eT s4 ► Walking time? s,�L / Ease of transfers? Tlg,d ( I I \ ( , 1 I I (; 1 R I) URBAN DESIGN COMPONENTS OF TRANSIT ORIENTED DEVELOPMENT 1 -Walkable design-pedestrian as the highest priority -Train station as prominent feature of town center / -Public square fronting train station ► -A regional node containing a mixture of uses ► -High density, walkable district within 10-minute walk / -Collector support transit systems including buses, etc / -Designed to include the easy use of bicycles/scooters ► -Reduced and managed parking inside 10-minute walk ► -Specialized retail at stations serving commuters 10 3/20/2018 URBAN DESIGN Preferred Design of Rail Station Site For Maximum Ridership and Pedestrian Connections Iv CONVENTIONAL LAYOUT PREFERRED LAYOUT I I - ® Is flow I-11-1 till- IN . .1 . ... _ 1 PedII II .,,- -- -7r.----- P‘'-, ' (: I "I 1 O I I I ( \ R I) URBAN DESIGN Promising Direction... Placemaking opportunities in the Triangle on new 70th Avenue and with introduction of new, prominent structures 11 3/20/2018 (: [ l V O I 1 I (; \ R I) URBAN DESIGN Questions & Concerns... ► Design treatment/budget for all structures (e.g. parking structures, retaining walls, bridges, O&M facilities, new transit center, support buildings) ► Station area development near the downtown station ► Transit "experience" for people considering downtown as a future residence or business location (I I I \ O I I I ( \ R 1) EQUITY AND HOUSING Promising Direction... ► Initial route proposal without station in downtown core would result in fewer residents physically displaced / SW Corridor Equitable Housing Strategy has recommendations to address market displacement of residents of"naturally occurring affordable housing" 12 3/20/2018 (: 1 I l ( , 1 I I (. _v r I) EQUITY AND HOUSING Questions & Concerns... ► Initial route proposal would not create opportunity for developing protected affordable housing on TriMet owned remnant parcels in the downtown core Station outside of downtown core could result in less transit oriented housing development where city wants it / Downtown's many transit dependent residents, could have less convenient service (: I T 't O 1' 1. I (; \ IZ I) TRAFFIC, TRANSPORTATION & INFRASTRUCTURE A Mt on 70th s \ Sl ' ,,e,, t� 'Iii :::4.0.,l y 3 w,r e .., 4 i adjacent 41�bG$�~'�4 ,�y Nr, .. ' fdR u`. to Iairoad ®j % Trgar o p 0 % O" S. 13 3/20/2018 (: I I l () I I I .\ R I) TRAFFIC, TRANSPORTATION & INFRASTRUCTURE Promising Direction... ► Possible Station adjacent to 99W and 68th Parkway provides opportunity to connect with more riders / Opportunity to partner with TriMet to find location for new Tigard Public Works facility ( (; A R I) TRAFFIC,TRANSPORTATION & INFRASTRUCTURE Questions & Concerns... / Hwy 217 cross-over should include at least bike and pedestrian facilities ► Downtown Tigard station needs to mitigate traffic and safety impacts on Hall Blvd. ► Upper Boones Ferry Road crossing traffic impacts need mitigation and determine who pays 14 3/20/2018 C 1 1 l O I. I I (, -A It I) COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT Outreach Activity in Tigard ,4.- 2017 1 FeSWailerO ' �,t 1 Spring-bruary M- to Corridor those Kick-along ff theEvent alignment ' and mail-route * V I. May-Business Outreach and Presentation h ' Breakfast May-September-Tabling at local events i . 1 , 2018 4 ► February-Underserved and minority i outreach at St.Anthony's til" ' O I 116 -A {t 1) COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT �•I Upcoming Timeline of Events: .1 1 March-Business Outreach and Presentation Breakfast(possible or"mt"f mitigations) 1 Spring- Mailer to those along the alignment and mail-route ► April- Underserved and minority outreach at St.Anthony's o May 29*: Southwest Corridor Workshop BRIDGEPORT (DEIS) VILLAGE / June 6: Southwest Corridor Workshop 5 (DEIS) DOWNTOWN TUAIATIN 15 3/20/2018 (. I "1 1 O I I I G .1 R I) .' ;.r s#, r, x r , I... O MAX ) .1 j =; 16