HomeMy WebLinkAbout06042001CITY OF PORT TOWNSEND
MINUTES OF THE REGULAR SESSION OF JUNE 4, 2001
The City Council of the City of Port Townsend met in regular session this fourth day of
June, 2001, at 6:30 p.m. in the Port Townsend Council Chambers of City Hall, Mayor
Geoff Masci presiding.
ROLL CALL AND PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE
Councilmembers present at roll call were Joe Finnie, Allen Frank, Vem Garrison, Geoff
Masci, Syd Lipton, Bill Wolcott and Alan Youse. Staff members present were City
Manager David Timmons, City Attorney John Watts, City Clerk Pam Kolacy, BCD
Director Jeff Randall, and Public Works Director Ken Clow.
CHANGES TO THE AGENDA
Mr. Masci announced an additional item under New Business: Resolution 01-025
regarding the use of public rights of way for a motion picture production. The item will
be addressed prior to the other new business.
Mr. Frank also requested an addition to New Business (Item 10B) regarding projects to
be tasked to the Planning Commission.
PRESIDING OFFICER'S REPORT
Mr. Masci read a proclamation in honor of H.J. "Jack" Carroll on his 90th birthday.
He also reported on a very successful Sister City visit by representatives of Ichikawa,
Japan. He noted that he and the mayor of Ichikawa had agreed to reduce the visitor
exchanges to once every other year and to cut down on the obligatory gift giving.
CITY MANAGER'S REPORT
Mr. Timmons referred to a letter from Forrest Rambo requesting council action on
revision or elimination of the municipal code provision which prohibits recreational
vehicle occupancy for more than180 consecutive days. He added that if the council
desired, the appropriate action would be to send the issue to the Planning Commission for
review and comment.
Motion: Mr. Masci moved to refer the question of eliminating 180-day limit on R V
occupancy to the Planning Commission for review, comment and recommendation within
the next 60 days. Mr. Lipton seconded.
Public comment
City Council Business Meeting Page 1 June 4, 2001
Forrest Rambo: speaking as private citizen, not as manager of Point Hudson Resort and
Marina. Spoke in favor of eliminating the 180-day limitation; stated there is no
justification for the limit and that the Port of Port Townsend, when they assume control
of Point Hudson, should be able to make their own determination on recreational vehicle
time limits, without restriction by city zoning regulations.
Public Comment: None
Mr. Watts addressed clarification questions from council members, noting that this is a
common zoning tool for cities and that any city ordinance applies to all lands within the
city whether they are owned by the port, state, county, or school district.
Vote: The motion carried unanimously, 7-0 by voice vote.
Regarding the intergovernmental elected officials meeting scheduled for June 5, the
discussion topic to be presented by the city will be recreation issues/YMCA proposal.
Mr. Masci, Mr. Finnie, and Mr. Frank will represent the city.
Six-year Transportation Improvement Plan: consensus of the council was to set a public
hearing on the plan for the regular meeting on June 18.
Mr. Timmons stated he will forward two items to the Finance Committee on June 14 if
the council is agreeable: 1) an uptown promotional plan in preparation for the "F" Street
closures; 2) a partnership with Main Street for a FEMA funded project impact proposal.
Consensus was to docket these items for the June 14 Finance Committee meeting.
PUBLIC HEARING (Open Record)
ORDINANCE 2766
AN ORDINANCE APPROPRIATING THE SUM OF $367,924 TO THE
GENERAL FUND; $10,219 TO THE COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK
GRANT FUND; $3,635 TO THE STREET FUND; $740 TO THE WATER
FUND; $629 TO THE STORMWATER FUND; AND MAKING FINDINGS
AND DECLARING AN EMERGENCY.
Mayor Masci opened the public hearing and outlined the legislative public hearing
procedures. He asked if any council members had any interests, financial or property, to
disclose. There were none.
Mr. Timmons introduced the ordinance, noting that the vast majority of expenditures
were related to adjustments for the reconciliation of billing for county jail services. He
also stated that current reserves were sufficient to account for the expenditure and after
the adjustments for the supplemental budget items, the targeted goal for reserves (5-8%)
is still intact, at 8.3%.
City Council Business Meeting Page 2 dune 4, 2001
He noted the remainder of the items were primarily grants which have revenues offsetting
the expenditures and items called forward from the council's discretionary fund.
Mr. Masci asked if any written materials had been submitted in regard to the issue. Ms.
Kolacy stated that there were none.
The floor was then open for public comment. There was no one wishing to comment.
Motion: Mr. Frank moved to suspend council rules and that the first reading be
considered the second, and the third by title only. Mr. Wolcott seconded
Vote: The motion carried unanimously, 7-0 by voice vote.
Motion: Mr. Frank moved to adopt Ordinance 2 766. Mr. Garrison seconded.
In response to a question posed bY Mr. Finnie, Mr. Timmons stated that more significant
increases were expected for county services next year and that the process of negotiation
would begin in July.
Vote: The motion carried unanimously, 7-0 by roll call vote.
CONSENT AGENDA
Motion: Mr. Frank moved to approve the following items on the consent agenda. Mr.
Garrison seconded
Approval of Bills, Claims and Warrants
Vouchers 87234 through 76402 and 76416 in the amount of $284,704.88
Bo
Approval of Minutes
Workshop Session of May 14
Business Meeting of May 14
C°
Authorize the City Manager to execute a property purchase contract (Anthony
DeLeo property - tax parcel 948-300-203)
Do
Authorize the City Manager to call for and award bids for water and wastewater
treatment chemicals
mo
Authorize the City Manager to execute a professional services agreement with
Shannon & Wilson to perform geotechnical studies on Monroe Street settlement
and the City Hall Annex site.
Authorize the City Manager to execute professional services agreement with Gray
& Osborne for engineering and consulting services on various water related
projects
City Council Business Meeting Page 3 June 4, 2001
Go
Authorize the City Manager to contract with the State Office of
Procurement to bid a street sweeper
Mr. Lipton asked for correction of a typographical error and requested that staff include
estimated costs within the water contract.
Vote: The motion carried unanimously, 7-0 by voice vote.
UNFINISHED BUSINESS
ORDINANCE 2767
AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY OF PORT TOWNSEND, WASHINGTON TO ADD
SECTION 10.04.192 ESTABLISHING EIGHT- HOUR PARKING ON CALHOUN
STREET BETWEEN WATER AND FRONT STREETS ON THE SOUTHWEST SIDE
OF THE STREET, AMEND SECTION 10.04.190 ADDING CALHOUN STREET
BETWEEN WATER AND FRONT STREETS ON THE NORTHEAST SIDE OF THE
STREET TO THE TWO HOUR PARKING LOCATIONS IN THE CITY, AND
AMEND SECTION 10.04.202 ADDING A NO PARKING ZONE ON SR20 FROM
THE FERRY TERMINAL TO KEARNEY STREET
Public Works Director Ken Clow presented the ordinance. He explained that in reaching
this recommendation, staff had considered five issues brought forward by and to the
council: line of sight issues in that section of SR 20; ferry traffic management; bicycle
safety concern; parking for the Bayview Restaurant; concerns of the Bay Vista I and II
condominium residents. He added that the alternatives considered included leaving
everything as is, eliminating parking on SR 20, eliminating parking at specific times, and
improving the line of sight by decreasing the parking zone.
The recommendation before council calls for conversion of six of nine public parking
spaces in the Calhous Street right of way between the two condominium buildings from
two hour parking to eight hour parking and eliminating all parking on SR 20.
Public Comments
Lee Wilson: speaking as a concerned homeowner, resident of Bay Vista. He urged the
council to keep the two-hour parking as is on Calhoun Street, noting it is the only place
for daytime guests of the residents to park as well as for service people who are visiting
the buildings. He also expressed concern about the danger when exiting from the parking
lot onto SR 20.
Shirley Browning: asked why the beach path sidewalk can't be used for bicycle traffic;
stated that the Bayview needs the loading zone; stated the large number of Bayview
employees take up a great deal of the parking allotted for the restaurant.
Michael Pruitt after the last meeting, felt the safety of bicycle riders was being held
hostage to a business which makes good waffles and needs five parking spaces. He has
City Council Business Meeting Page 4 dune 4, 2001
since had occasion to observe the conditions for bicycle riders on that stretch of road. He
stated that the situation is dangerous, and urged the council to deal with it the best they
can but get parking off the street and make it safe for bicycles.
Jon Muellner: very much in favor of staff recommendation, as an avid cyclist believes it
is a good compromise to address both economic issues and safety issues.
David McCulloch: noted that safety of cyclists and pedestrians is an issue that must be
taken seriously and ultimately these concerns outweigh parking concerns. The issue has
had much review and meets the standards of all city planning documents as well as Dept.
of Transportation policies. He added that the police chief's recommendation to eliminate
parking to save staff time is also a compelling argument. He urged approval of the
ordinance.
Sandra Stowe: in support of ordinance. Supports removal of parking, but not quite
comfortable with dedicating public parking to a single business for employee parking;
would like to see flexibility in ability to change back to two-hour parking if necessary.
She stated that incentives for employees to use non-motorized forms of transportation
should be encouraged; added that the waterside sidewalk is not a useful sidewalk as it
currently exists.
Motion: Mr. Frank moved to approve Ordinance 2767. Mr. Garrison seconded
Mr. Finnie noted that the change to eight hour parking is clearly an accommodation to the
business; he proposed the consequences be surveyed with the results brought back to
council within the next six months.
Mr. Youse noted he would vote against adoption because he believes it is premature to
address this area before letting the Transportation Committee address the parking needs
of the whole downtown area.
Vote: The motion carried 6-1, by roll call vote, with Mr. Youse opposed
ORDINANCE 2768
AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY OF PORT TOWNSEND AMENDING CHAPTER
13.03, SYSTEM DEVELOPMENT CHARGES FOR WATER AND SEWER
CONNECTIONS, BY ELIMINATING INTEREST CHARGES IN SECTION 13.03.110,
SYSTEM DEVELOPMENT CHARGE, ON DEFERRALS FOR LOW-INCOME
HOUSING
City Attorney John Watts presented the ordinance. He noted that no low-income deferral
applications have been received because the cost of interest is prohibitive; it is apparently
cheaper to borrow the money to pay system development charges up front. Under the
proposed ordinance, interest charges would be eliminated but the applicant would be
required to submit annual proof of qualification; if the applicant no longer met the
qualification, then the system development charge would have to be repaid within three
City Council Business Meeting Page 5 June 4, 2001
years, drawing interest until paid. The ordinance eliminates the interest charge only, not
the requirement to pay the deferred SDC.
Public Comments
Phil Watness: Noted he is on the Board of Directors for Habitat for Humanity, but is not
speaking on their behalf. He favored passage of the ordinance, and added that if the
council really wants to provide low income housing, there must be some mechanism to
get developers to provide land with infrastructure to organizations like Habitat. Example:
a credit to a builder who provides one out of ten lots to low income housing.
Michael Pruitt: spoke in support of adoption. Noted that the income level really
describes "poverty" as opposed to "low income." Asked council to consider seting a
"low income" level which would give a break to individuals who may actually have the
economic means to build a house.
Freida Fenn: Asked if it would be possible to extend deferrals to people who could
qualify for affordable housing. Referred to Countywide Planning Policies (6.1)
definition. Asked for consideration of any mechanism which would make deferrals
available for a greater pool of individuals.
Kees Kolff: Stated that affordable housing is a significant problem; supports adoption of
ordinance as a good step.
In answer to Mr. Garrison's question, Mr. Watts clarified that the state constitution
prohibits gifts of public funds except to the "poor and infirm" which are not specifically
defined. He stated he would report back to the council after researching the "gift of
public funds" issue.
Mr. Youse stated he does not want the city to set a precedent for gifting public funds.
Motion: Mr. Finnie moved to suspend council rules, and that the first reading be the
second and the third by title only. Mr. Garrison seconded The motion carried
unanimously, 7-0 by voice vote.
Motion: Mr. Finnie moved for approval of Ordinance 2768. Mr. Frank seconded
Mr. Wolcott stated that the Community Development Committee can follow up on the
idea of expanding SDC deferrals. Mr. Watts will present his research at the June 26
Committee meeting.
Vote: The motion carried, 6-1, with Mr. Youse opposed
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ORDINANCE 2769
AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY OF PORT TOWNSEND
REPEALING CHAPTER 2.68, ARTS COMMISSION,
OF THE PORT TOWNSEND MUNICIPAL CODE
City Attomey John Watts presented the ordinance, noting that the Arts Commission was
tasked by the council to discuss their status and has stated their desire to remain a citizen
advisory committee rather than a private non-profit organization. As with other citizen
advisory committees, the staff is presenting an ordinance repealing the Arts Commission
from the municipal code and re-establishing it by resolution.
Public Comments
None
Motion: Mr. Frank moved to approve Ordinance 2769. Mr. Garrison seconded The
motion carried unanimously, 7-0 by roll call vote.
RESOLUTION 01-024
A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF
PORT TOWNSEND, WASHINGTON, ESTABLISHING THE
ARTS COMMISSION AS A CITIZEN ADVISORY BOARD
Motion: Mr. Frank moved to approve Resolution 01-024, and approve the slate of
candidates presented at the May 14 meeting. Mr. Garrison seconded. The motion
carried unanimously, 7-0 by voice vote.
Appointees to the Arts Commission are:
1. Eligius Wolodkewitsch 6. Barbara McLean
2. Miriam Lansdon 7. Nancy Stevenson
3. Sy Kahn 8. Patricia Spaeth
4. Sheila Smith 9. Don White
5. Arthur Reitsch
NEW BUSINESS
RESOLUTION 01-025
RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF PORT TOWNSEND
APPROVING LICENSE TO USE PUBLIC RIGHTS OF WAY INCLUDING CITY
DOCK AND UNION WHARF, AND AUTHORIZING CITY MANAGER TO
EXECUTE NECESSARY AGREEMENTS FOR PURPOSES OF FILMING A
PORTION OF THE "ENOUGH!" FILM IN PORT TOWNSEND
City Council Business Meeting Page 7 June 4, 2001
Mr. Watts announced that the film crew will be in town June 12-16 for the film project.
He added that a town public meeting held last month was well attended. Traffic will be
held up for no more than five minutes at a time and the motion picture company will
reimburse the city fully for potential income lost from public facilities.
Motion: Mr. Wolcott moved for adoption of Resolution 01-025. Mr. Garrison
seconded The motion carried unanimously, 7-0, by voice vote.
COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT COMMITTEE RECOMMENDATIONS
BCD Direct Jeff Randall referred to the memo included in the council packet, noting that
the Community Development Committee had asked staff to address three tasks:
summarize Port Townsend's current affordable housing strategy; suggest techniques
which could be implemented in the next 3-6 months to promote affordable housing which
are consistent with community values and the Comprehensive Plan, and determine the
most significant issues that affect affordable housing but probably would require
amendments to the Comprehensive Plan prior to implementation. He noted that he has
addressed these questions in the memo and noted that if council desires to pursue any of
the suggestions, the first step will be to refer them to the Planning Commission.
Public Comment
Freida Fenn: stated that none of the measure will be useful to encourage affordable
housing unless "carrots" are embedded for encouragement; example: greater density
bonuses for more units; incentives to developers oftownhouses to make some available
for low income housing. Stated that SEPA category exemptions wouldn't apply at all to
encouragement of affordable housing. She added that whatever incentives are in place,
the low income housing stock must remain low income when property changes hands.
Referred to Seattle Times Website article regarding East side affordable housing in King
County. Also cited benefits to be derived from city/county cooperation and funding
renovation of older buildings to encourage second and third story residential units in
downtown buildings.
Kees Kolff: applauded efforts of the Community Development Committee to look for
creative ways to solve these issues; encouraged council to pursue others as well.
Motion: Mr. Frank moved that issues of cottage housing, building setbacks for
townhouses and rowhouses, and increasing SEPA categorical exemption for dwellings
from 4 to 9 be forwarded to the Planning Commission for review. Mr. Finnie seconded
The motions carried unanimously, 7-0, by voice vote.
TASKING ISSUE TO PLANNING COMMISSION
Motion: Mr. Frank moved to task the Planning Commission to develop an infill plan for
areas with pre-existing infrastructure and in identifying the primary infill area, Planning
City Council Business Meeting Page 8 dune 4, 2001
Commission should be sure to emphasize existing parks and non-motorized areas as well
as utility and other infrastructure issues. The final work product should include:
O detailed inventory ofbuildable lots in the designated infill areas; 2) possible incentives
to encourage infill in the designated area; and 3) possible consequences for not
participating in infill. He also requested that Planning Commission bring forward any
other affordability concepts. Mr. Youse seconded
Public comments
Freida Fenn: Stated the Capital Improvement Plan targets projects and priorities for
allocation of public funds; also these issues are related to the concurrency plan required
under the Growth Management Act.
Kees Kolff: Considers this an excellent concept and encourages support by the council.
Mr. Randall noted that a definition of"buildable lots" must be established.
Mr. Lipton, Mr. Wolcott and Mr. Finnie expressed concern about the implications of
establishing punitive measures rather than incentives.
Vote: The motion carried 4-3 by voice vote, with Messrs Wolcott, Lipton and Finnie
opposed
EXECUTIVE SESSION
Mr. Masci announced that the council would adjourn to executive session to discuss
personnel matters and litigation. He stated that he expected the session to last 30 minutes
and that no action was anticipated following the session. The council went into executive
session at 9:37 p.m.
RECONVENE
The meeting reconvened at 10:15 p.m.
ADJOURN
There being no further items for discussion, the meeting adjourned at 10:17 p.m.
Attest:
City Clerk
City Council Business Meeting Page 9 dune 4, 2001