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<br />ECC <br />UGENE ITY OUNCIL <br />AIS <br />GENDA TEM UMMARY <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />Action: Street Design Standards for Crest Drive Area <br /> <br /> <br />Meeting Date: October 22, 2007 Agenda Item Number: 3 <br />Department: Public Works Engineering Staff Contact: Mark Schoening <br />www.eugene-or.gov Contact Telephone Number: 682-5243 <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />ISSUE STATEMENT <br /> <br />The City Council is requested to either confirm that the street design standards in the Design Standards <br />and Guidelines for Eugene Streets, Sidewalks, Bikeways and Accessways are appropriate for the Crest <br />Drive Area or adopt Resolution 4919 (Attachment A) amending the City’s Design Standards and <br />Guidelines for Eugene Streets, Sidewalks, Bikeways and Accessways, the Eugene Arterial and Collector <br />Street and the Eugene Local Street Plan to allow a minimum travel lane width of nine feet on streets in <br />the area identified as the Crest Drive Area on the Eugene Street Classification Map. <br /> <br /> <br />BACKGROUND <br /> <br />City Council Action History <br />The City Council adopted the November 1999 Eugene Street Classification Map with the adoption of <br />Ordinance Number 20181 on November 22, 1999. The streets in the Crest Drive Area were left <br />unclassified pending a study to determine the appropriate classifications and design standards for the area. <br /> <br />The City Council adopted Design Standards and Guidelines for Eugene Streets, Sidewalks, Bikeways and <br />Accessways (Arterial and Collector Street Plan and Local Street Plan) with the adoption of Resolution <br />Number 4608 on November 22, 1999. The minimum travel lane width allowed under the design <br />standards for local streets and neighborhood collector streets is ten feet. <br /> <br />The City Council directed the City Manager to implement the Crest Drive Neighborhood context sensitive <br />solutions (CSS) process on May 8, 2006. A General Fund appropriation of $240,000 was approved as <br />part of the FY07 budget to fund the CSS process. The definition of CSS follows: <br /> <br />Context Sensitive Solutions is a collaborative, interdisciplinary project development approach <br />that involves all stakeholders to develop a transportation facility that fits its physical setting while <br />maintaining safety and mobility for all users, and reflecting community needs. The goal of CSS is <br />to create early, open, honest, and continuous communication and sharing of information and <br />knowledge throughout the design process. <br /> <br />The City Council appropriated an additional $58,000 as part of Supplemental Budget #1 of FY07 to <br />expand the scope of the CSS process to include Middle Crest. <br /> <br />A council work session was held on September 19, 2007, and continued to October 8, 2007, to provide <br />information on the City’s Design Standards and Guidelines for Eugene Streets, Sidewalks, Bikeways and <br /> F:\CMO\2007 Council Agendas\M071022\S0710223.doc <br /> <br />