City Council Minutes - 09/18/2018 ■ City ofTigard
Tigard Workshop Meeting Minutes
• 0 September 18, 2018
1. WORKSHOP MEETING-
A. Mayor Cook called the meeting to order at 6:32 p.m.
B. Deputy City Recorder Burgoyne called the roll.
Name Present Absent
Mayor Cook
Councilor Goodhouse
Council President Snider
Councilor Woodard
Councilor Anderson
C. Mayor Cook asked everyone to stand and join him in the Pledge of Allegiance.
D. Call to Council and Staff for Non Agenda Items—There was none.
2. REPORT FROM WASHINGTON COUNTY SHERIFF ON SERVICES
Assistant City Manager Zimmerman presented this item and Washington County Sheriff Pat Garrett
and Undersheriff Jeff Mori provided council with an update and gave a PowerPoint presentation.
Sheriff Garrett talked about the sheriff's office,their mission statement and strategic goals,and
explained statutory duties. He highlighted the expectations from the community,employment
trends and mental health response team's calls.
Undersheriff Mori provided information about the county jail and jail statistics. He said there has
been an increase of 144 more inmates being booked into the jail every month,which puts them back
to 2008 levels. He walked council through the life cycle from when someone is brought into jail
through being logged into the system. He said they are passing out more GED's than any other
entity,and explained how they help with finding employment,transition planning and violence
prevention programs for inmates who are returning to society. He talked about security upgrades
that have recently been done to the facility.
Sheriff Garrett discussed the civil department and issuing concealed handgun licenses.
Councilor Goodhouse asked what the maximum amount of time someone could be held in the
county jail. Undersheriff Mori replied up to one-year.
TIGARD CITY COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES— September 18, 2018
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Councilor Anderson asked when they anticipate having a new building. Undersheriff Mori said they
are currently discussing that and as part of that discussion,they are looking at what their future
needs for a facility will be as far out as twenty years. He said the county will most likely need to go
out for a Bond for funding the new facility as soon as 2023.
Councilor Woodard asked if they have exceeded bed space,and what they do when that happens.
Undersheriff Mori said they have not,but have come close. He said that if this were to happen, they
would do a force release of inmates,which is based on a priority matrix. As of September of this
year,the county has force released approximately 1,631 inmates.
3. ADA SELF-EVALUATION AND TRANSITIONAL PLAN UPDATE
Central Services Director Robinson and City Engineer Faha presented this item.
Ms. Robinson explained what the American with Disabilities Act(ADA) is and when Tigard created
their first ADA Plan. She said the city has continued to take steps towards being ADA compliant,
but said we need to do more. She said the plan requires a self-evaluation to identify barriers people
with disabilities encounter,and said it requires a transition plan to look at the barriers and provide a
schedule for completing that. She talked about the areas being evaluated,buildings that have been
assessed and what they are looking for.
Ms. Faha talked about parks,pathways,parking lots and accessibility. She said some examples
include,looking at paved trails that provide a pathway within the parks, slopes of trails and how
smooth and flat the surface is,surface level changes,accessible picnic tables,accessible restroom
facilities and play structures. She explained that unpaved paths look at other things. She said they
also look at storm drain grates and if the openings are too wide,talked about city-owned rights-of-
ways and what their evaluation include and discussed sidewalks.
Ms. Robinson discussed the next steps,and how staff will approach those,putting together the
criteria and then putting the information out to the pubic with a transition plan,and then staff
would bring that back to council for review. She said once it is completed,it would serve as a
twenty-year plan.
Mayor Cook asked about the city's first assessment and if the city had a twenty-year plan back then.
Ms. Robinson replied they do,and they have used that plan to apply for grant money,but the city
has not had a good one in place. In order to make improvements the city should be looking at the
plan every three years.
Mayor Cook asked why the city is doing this now. Ms. Faha replied it is the law,and said the city
has been doing a lot already,but it may not be the most priority items and that ADA standards
change over time. She said current development have been following the current ADA standards.
She explained the city now has a parks major maintenance program that allows the city to pay for
some park needs that could include ADA updates. She said staff will prioritize the projects,which
will be a long list and that not everything identified will be included in the twenty-year plan; they are
only required to prioritize and to work on things year by year,and do not have to tackle every single
item.
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Councilor Woodard asked how many ADA complaints the city gets. Ms. Robinson said the majority
have been around program accessibility and the city has been able to accommodate those. She said
they have had around a dozen or so complaints over the last year.
Mayor Cook said he has heard of people who are in wheelchairs say that while they are able to use
the wheelchair button on both of the doors coming into city hall,they are unable to get into town
hall because there is no button at those doors. He said the city has some areas that are good,while
there are other areas that need addressing.
Councilor Goodhouse asked about cracked and raised sidewalk liability issues and what separates an
ADA injury from a regular injury. Ms. Faha replied that there could be liability with both. She
explained ADA related injuries are limited to accessibility,while regular related injuries would be
anyone tripping on a sidewalk. She said the responsibility lies with the adjacent property owner;
however,it is important for the city to be aware of when an issue or concern exists so that staff can
address it in some manner. Whether it is informing the property owner that they need to fix the
problem or the city fixing it.
4. DISCUSS UPCOMING CLEAN WATER SERVICES SEWER CONSTRUCTION COOK
PARK
City Engineer Faha presented this item,and Clean Water Services Project Manager Wade Denny and
Engineer Services Division Manager Andy Braun were present and briefed council about the
upcoming construction.
Mr. Denny said this is a major project for the district,and outlined why they are doing the project,
what they will be doing,affects to Tigard,and mitigation efforts. He said they are upgrading the
sanitary sewer infrastructure due to growth,and building an 11,000 linear foot pipeline in two
phases. He talked about the timeline for each phase. Phase II is primarily in Tigard and will begin
in October 2018 and go through December 2019. Potential impacts identified included:
construction through Cook Park,influences to the sports fields,parking, trails and public events in
Cook Park. He said they are trying to limit the impact to these areas and will be doing construction
when these types of events are not running. He talked about mitigation efforts,public outreach,and
post construction benefits.
Mayor Cook thanked Mr.Denny and Mr. Braun for their time and coming to explain the project to
council.
5. REVIEW OF CREDIT CARD FEES
Finance and Information Services Director LaFrance presented this item. He said staff is looking
for recommendations from council. He explained how credit card fees are calculated,what they
generally cost the city and explained what the city has paid in credit card fees in the last two years
and what departments generate the most credit card fees. Mr. LaFrance provided an overview of
the utility billing department generated credit card fees,and said staff is not looking to get these fees
back from residents who use their debit or credit card to pay their bill. He explained how credit
card fees are calculated in regards to utility billing payments and that with Visa's current calculations,
those who have smaller utility bills would pay a higher credit card fee. He also said that not taking
visa payments is not a viable option either and staff does not recommend this. They have heard that
TIGARD CITY COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES— September 18, 2018
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Visa may be looking to modify their fees structure for utility billing, so in the meantime they could
leave utility billing payments as they currently are and modify this later once Visa has changed their
rules. Mr. LaFrance explained that Visa calculates fees differently for payments made with a debit or
credit card for permits. Because of this, staff looked at permit transactions made in the permit
center and staff recommends charging a service fee for payments in the permit center that are made
with debit or credit cards. He said roughly forty-five percent of online debit or credit card payments
made online were associated with SDC fees,and staff takes in fees for other jurisdictional partners
when people pay their SDC fees and that credit card fees eat into that allotment. He stated it would
take approximately four to six months to implement a service fee in the permit center.
Councilor Goodhouse asked what the fee would be on the utility billing portion. Mr. LaFrance
replied that it could be in the three to six dollar range for each account.
Councilor Goodhouse suggested they try to steer people into writing more checks by charging a flax
fee of three to five dollars for using credit cards to pay their utility bill. He said the increase in credit
card fees is too much for the city to absorb and suggested they also add fees for credit card
payments of SDC charges. Mr. LaFrance said that in the last year,approximately twenty-four
million dollars has been spent in permitting transactions and the majority of that amount has been in
the form of a check. Though there is a large amount that is done through visa transactions,it is not
as high in permitting as it is for the utility billing department.
Councilor Goodhouse said that even if a flat fee does not cover the entire credit card fees that
taking a smaller loss is better than nothing.
Councilor Woodard said he agrees with staff regarding utility billing,as he does not want to be less
progressive,but said charging fees in the permit center would be a good way to recoup some of the
credit card fees. He asked when staff think's Visa will be changing their rules. Mr. LaFrance said he
believes it to be in a year.
Council President Snider said this is not necessarily about saving the city money,but more about
cost shifting.
Goodhouse explained ACH fees vs credit card fees and asked what the cost is for ACH. Mr.
LaFrance replied that with each ACH done online,the current charge is approximately half a
percent. However,it is much less if they place a check in the envelope and mail it.
Council President Snider asked what the impact to staff would be if they stopped taking credit card
payments. Mr. LaFrance said they did not know,but it would be a factor and there would be an
impact.
Council President Snider said he is comfortable with staff's recommendation.
Councilor Anderson asked if Visa allows you to set a flat fee in regards to utility billing payments.
Mr. LaFrance replied yes and said the city could pursue that without recovering the entire cost.
Councilor Woodard liked this option.
Council President Snider asked how much money would be spent doing this.
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Mayor Cook suggested moving forward with staffs recommendation,and wait a year and see if Visa
will change their rules.
Mr. LaFrance asked for confirmation on how to move forward. Council agreed with staff's
recommendation regarding utility billing. In addition,they asked staff to add an option on the
permitting website for online submittal,and then allow people to submit payment in person or
through the mail with a check.
6. PHOTO ENFORCEMENT IMPLEMENTATION BRIEFING
Court Operations Supervisor Annis,Lieutenant Eskew and Assistant City Manager Zimmerman
presented this item.
Mr. Zimmerman updated council on the new technology available that will help monitor some of
the city's dangerous intersections. He said council is the first step of the public campaign with the
expectation for answering any questions council may have.
Lieutenant Eskew discussed how photo red light works,played a video and showed snap shots of
what officers will receive when pictures are taken during an offense,he talked about the case for
photo enforcement,and summarized with statistics that had been reported by Beaverton,Portland,
Sherwood and Tualatin since they have been using photo red light. He talked about the placement
locations for consideration the city received from ODOT,and talked about what types of areas to
avoid for placement.
Ms.Annis talked about what the defendant will receive in the mail,defendant options,projected
caseload increase to court and the number of additional personnel to accommodate that increase.
Mr. Zimmerman discussed the facility changes needed to accommodate the additional court
personnel,moving utility billing to the current court area and moving court to where utility billing
currently is,additionally utilizing a current meeting space for additional staff.
Ms.Annis explained the remodel plan,and talked about how staff will limit interruptions to
customers during construction.
Mr. Zimmerman talked about public outreach and including the community in rolling out the plan.
He talked about the next steps,timeline, discussed staff's recommendation and talked about the
additional personnel needs for court,and how they plan to bring those people onboard.
Council President Snider said he is glad to see this come to fruition from a safety perspective and
appreciates the suggested locations. He asked if staff has an estimate on how much time it would
take officers to review the video. Lieutenant Eskew said it would take approximately two minutes to
review each video for red light infractions only,which would be approximately ninety-seven staff
hours per month. He said this could be higher when and if they choose to include the speed portion
of the photo red light program.
Council President Snider asked who they will have reviewing the videos. Lieutenant Eskew said they
would have several different officers reviewing videos and it would be something officers on light
duty could perform.
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Council President Snider asked about the cost estimate for the remodel for moving court staff from
where they are currently located to where utility billing staff is located. Mr. Zimmerman replied that
the remodel is budgeted at$350,000.
Councilor Anderson asked if there would be any signage prior to each location of the phot red light.
Lieutenant Eskew replied yes,and said they ae required to have it posted twice and should be
located as people are entering the city.
Mayor Cook said the city will be paying a flat fee to the vendor and asked staff to explain the
difference between flat fee vs a percentage based fee. Mr. Zimmerman explained that because the
city will be paying a flat rate to the vendor,our cost would be the same whether one ticket is issued
or multiple tickets are issued.
Council President Snider asked if the statute allows police to charge offenders with a crime
Lieutenant Eskew explained they could charge someone with a Class B misdemeanor,but only if
they could investigate it. He said they have not really thought about that.
Councilor Goodhouse asked if they could use this information for other things like amber alerts and
for insurance companies. Lieutenant Eskew said the city owns the data;however, the city attorney
would need to weigh in on this. Mr. Zimmerman said there would need to be an overwhelming
reason for someone to request the information,but if there is an overwhelming need,and the police
chief makes the call,the capability exists.
7. NON AGENDA ITEMS—None.
8. EXECUTIVE SESSION—None.
9. ADJOURNMENT
At 9:09 p.m. Councilor Goodhouse moved to adjourn the meeting and Councilor Woodard
seconded the motion. Motion Passed by a unanimous vote.
Name Yes No
Mayor Cook
Councilor Goodhouse
Council President Snider
Councilor Woodard
Councilor Anderson
TIGARD CITY COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES — September 18, 2018
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Kelly Burgoyne, eputy City Recor er
A t:
John . Cook,Mayor
Date: i G/l 6PIl'?
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