Laserfiche WebLink
<br />M I N U T E S <br /> <br /> <br />Eugene City Council <br />Regular Meeting <br />Council Chamber—Eugene City Hall <br /> <br /> February 11, 2008 <br /> 7:30 p.m. <br /> <br /> <br />COUNCILORS PRESENT: Andrea Ortiz, Chris Pryor, Betty Taylor, Bonny Bettman, George Poling, <br />Jennifer Solomon, Alan Zelenka. <br /> <br />COUNCILORS ABSENT: Mike Clark. <br /> <br /> <br />Her Honor Mayor Kitty Piercy called the regular meeting of the Eugene City Council to order. She asked <br />for a moment of silence in honor of the tragic killings of two city councilors and the mayor of Kirkwood, <br />Missouri. <br /> <br /> <br />1. PUBLIC FORUM <br /> <br />Mayor Piercy reviewed the rules of the Public Forum. <br /> <br />Mark Rabinowitz <br />, PO Box 51222, Eugene reiterated the concerns he expressed in the past regarding <br />climate change. He asked what the City of Eugene and Lane County were willing to give up to reduce <br />energy consumption. He noted that a federal comment period was underway regarding the Interstate 5 <br />construction in Glenwood “even though in coming years oil availability” would be reduced. He recalled that <br />Mayor Piercy had voted for the Regional Transportation Plan (RTP) in November. He felt that if the City <br />was truly concerned about climate change it would not support more transportation planning. He criticized <br />the University of Oregon’s plans to build a new arena. He remarked that while the City was waiting for <br />“intelligent urban design” it continued to “rubber stamp” big box stores in west Eugene. He said that it was <br />legal according to Oregon law to bar such development. He alleged that athletes who went to the Olympics <br />in China would be banned from saying anything about human rights or air pollution. He said if Eugene was <br />going to be the human rights city, it should not subsidize a “communist Chinese dictatorship” and its <br />“massive human rights abuses.” <br /> <br />Mary Jo Davis <br />, 30519 Overholser Road, Cottage Grove, said she had lived in the woods west of Cottage <br />Grove for 35 years. She related that during this time she had been personally affected by logging. She <br />wished to register her opposition to the Western Oregon Plan Revision (WOPR), which would reopen <br />Bureau of Land Management (BLM) land for logging. She submitted a petition signed by over 300 people <br />to the City Council. She averred that the BLM had given three alternatives, all three of which would create <br />more problems. She said the number one reason to oppose the WOPR would be the impact to drinking <br />water that allowing cutting more closely to the river banks would create. She predicted that this would <br />increase the silt in water, decrease retention of water, kill fish, and potentially increase herbicide levels in <br />drinking water. She also predicted this would generate numerous lawsuits. She pointed out that the <br />preferred plan would increase cutting by 700 percent, though there were “so little of these trees left.” She <br /> <br /> <br />MINUTES—Eugene City Council February 11, 2008 Page 1 <br /> Regular Meeting <br /> <br />