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MINUTES <br /> <br /> Eugene City Council <br /> Regular Meeting <br /> Council Chamber--City Hall <br /> <br /> November 22, 2004 <br /> 7:30 p.m. <br /> <br />COUNCILORS PRESENT: Bonny Bettman, George Poling, Nancy Nathanson, Scott Meisner, Betty <br /> Taylor, David Kelly, Gary Papd, Jennifer Solomon. <br /> <br />Mayor James D. Torrey called the meeting of the City Council to order. <br /> <br />1. PUBLIC FORUM <br /> <br />Mayor Torrey reviewed the rules of the Public Forum. <br /> <br />Patti Duncan, 4270 Hyacinth Street, spoke on behalf of the Santa Clara Committee for Sensible Parks and <br />Open Space (SCCSPOS). She reiterated the neighborhood's concerns regarding the McDougal Brothers' <br />proposal for a land swap. She related that the neighborhood was not opposed to parks, but it objected to the <br />addition of 1,000 homes in the area. She said schools were already overcrowded and a substantial <br />population increase would exacerbate already dense traffic. She added that she had taken her son out of <br />Irving Elementary School because she considered his classroom to be too crowded to provide her son <br />adequate attention. She conveyed the neighborhood's intention to remain a presence before the Planning <br />Commission and the City Council in their continued opposition to the land swap. <br /> <br />Zachary Vishanoff, Patterson Street, asserted that the Prisoner of War/Missing In Action (POW/MIA) flag <br />should fly atop Skinner's Butte on a year-round basis. <br /> <br />Mr. Vishanoff reiterated concerns he had about riverfront redevelopment and nanotechnology research. He <br />urged the council to hold public hearings on it. He felt this development had ramifications for all of the <br />population of Eugene that would be felt into the future. <br /> <br />In closing, Mr. Vishanoff conveyed his objections to the new playground being installed at Skinner Butte <br />Park. He called it a %ookie-cutter" park, similar to others built in other states. <br /> <br />Ray Wolfe, 1473 Luella Street, asserted the City Council majority would unfairly transfer wealth from the <br />poor to the wealthy citizens of Eugene should it grant a ten-year property tax exemption to the 13th Avenue <br />and Olive Street condominium projects. He said some property tax assessment costs were identified in tax <br />bills and others were not and those tax exemptions were not among the identified elements. He averred that <br />one-third of the Lane County taxpayers were financially marginal, at, or below the poverty line income level. <br />He stated that 74 properties were declared delinquent in the previous year and given a one-year notice prior <br />to condemnation proceedings. He felt the proposal to grant the Multi-Unit Property Tax Exemption <br />(MUPTE) to the condominium project was tantamount to ~reverse Robin Hoodism." He questioned the <br /> <br />MINUTES--Eugene City Council November 22, 2004 Page 1 <br /> Regular Meeting <br /> <br /> <br />