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MINUTES <br /> <br /> Eugene City Council <br /> Regular Session <br /> Council Chamber--City Hall <br /> <br /> March 7, 2005 <br /> T30 p.m. <br /> <br /> COUNCILORS PRESENT~ George Poling, David Kelly, Betty Taylor, Jennifer Solomon, Chris Pryor, <br /> Andrea Ortiz, Bonny Bettman, Gary Pap6. <br /> <br />Mayor Kitty Piercy called the meeting of the Eugene City Council to order and welcomed all those present. <br /> <br />1. PUBLIC FORUM <br /> <br />Mayor Piercy noted that 23 people had signed up for the Public Forum and asked them to be prepared to <br />speak for only two minutes due to time constraints. She reviewed the rules of the Public Forum. <br /> <br />George Victor Stathakis, 935 West 8th Avenue, asked the council to take time in considering the low- <br />income housing project planned for the site adjacent to the WOW Hall. He advocated for allowing local <br />talent to take over the Ridenour Building. He alleged that otherwise, out-of-town developers would receive <br />local tax dollars to build the housing project. <br /> <br />Charles Biggs, 540 Antelope Way, cited three projects that the draft Capital Improvement Program (CIP) <br />listed in two places, along with proposed budget allocations. He hoped the money had not been allocated <br />twice. He also commented that $29 million seemed a high projection for a new City Hall. <br /> <br />Mr. Biggs said he lived in a node and enjoyed the ability to bicycle and shop where he needed. He hoped all <br />future nodes would also provide ready access to shopping and easy access to services by bicycle. <br /> <br />Terry Froemming, 2886 Bailey Lane, representing the Harlow Neighbors Association (HNA), stated that <br />the HNA provided a packet of information for the councilors. He noted that it included a colored map of a <br />proposed future node. He explained that an area, printed in red, delineated the proposed Chase Village <br />Medical Park, consisting of two buildings totaling 110,000 square feet and 600 parking spaces. He opposed <br />the proposal because it would not be compatible with residential uses. He predicted that it would become a <br />traffic area to be avoided by day and a lifeless dead zone by night. He asked the council to help the <br />neighborhood by opposing the medical park. <br /> <br />Marian Spath, 533 Covey Lane, stated that she lived in the Chase Gardens node. She related that she had <br />lived in a node in Seattle in which she could easily walk to the post office, grocery store, and more. She said <br />that one of the reasons she had purchased her home in 2003 was that the neighborhood had been promised a <br />grocery store. Now, she explained, the land originally planned for such a store was to become a large <br />medical complex with parking. She urged the council to consider the neighborhood's plea for a grocery <br />outlet. <br /> <br />MINUTES--Eugene City Council March 7, 2005 Page 1 <br /> Regular Session <br /> <br /> <br />