Laserfiche WebLink
MINUTES <br /> <br /> Eugene City Council <br /> Regular Session <br /> City Council Chamber-City Ha11-777 Pearl Street <br /> <br /> March 11, 2002 <br /> 8p.m. <br /> <br />COUNCILORS PRESENT: Bonny Bettman, David Kelly, Scott Meisner, Gary Rayor, Gary <br /> PapS. <br /> <br />COUNCILORS ABSENT: Pat Farr, Nancy Nathanson, Betty Taylor. <br /> <br />Mayor James D. Torrey called the regular session of the City Council to order at 8 p.m. <br /> <br />I.PUBLIC FORUM <br /> <br />Roxie Cuellar spoke representing the HomeBuilder's Association. She raised concern that the <br />Natural Resource Study was being seriously underfunded. She said that projects that could be <br />eliminated from the study were not, and opined that this was keeping costs high. As an example <br />she cited Taney Waterway which scored 17 out of a possible 96 and had not been eliminated from <br />the study. She also urged the council to allow more public involvement in the process. <br /> <br />Debby Jefferies, 3800 North Delta Highway, requested that Item D be pulled from the Consent <br />Calendar until the Metropolitan Planning Committee had a chance to deliberate on the question. <br />She said the current methodology created a potential for litigation. <br /> <br />Terry Connolly, 1401 Willamette Street, spoke representing the Eugene Chamber of Commerce. <br />He said the chamber was against Resolution 4711 (listed as Consent Calendar Item E), because <br />it perpetuated an inappropriate method of funding the Toxics Right-to-Know Program. He <br />suggested that the City should fund the program out of the General Fund instead of funding it in a <br />manner that, he opined, was deeply resented by the participating businesses. <br /> <br />Clyde Carson, 618 D Street, Springfield, said there was a pervasive perception that the Eugene <br />government was anti-business. He urged taking decisive action to prove that this was not the <br />case. He stressed that decisions by the council that increased the costs of doing business could <br />not be passed on to the customer. He said the public should be paying for the Toxics Right-to- <br />Know program since the program was providing a benefit to the public. <br /> <br />Dave Hauser, 1401 Willamette Street, spoke representing the Eugene Chamber of Commerce. <br />He urged the council not to appeal the Land Use Board of Appeals decision to remand the <br />recently passed Land Use Code Update back to the City. He said a better solution would be to <br />produce a land use code that worked and to spend money on that rather than on costly litigation. <br /> <br />MINUTES--Eugene City Council March 11, 2002 Page 1 <br /> Regular Session <br /> <br /> <br />