My WebLink
|
Help
|
About
|
Sign Out
Home
Browse
Search
Item 2A - Minutes Approval
COE
>
City of Eugene
>
Council Agendas 2005
>
CC Agenda - 01/24/05 Mtg
>
Item 2A - Minutes Approval
Metadata
Thumbnails
Annotations
Entry Properties
Last modified
6/9/2010 12:23:40 PM
Creation date
1/19/2005 4:40:33 PM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
City Council
City_Council_Document_Type
Agenda Item Summary
CMO_Meeting_Date
1/24/2005
There are no annotations on this page.
Document management portal powered by Laserfiche WebLink 9 © 1998-2015
Laserfiche.
All rights reserved.
/
46
PDF
View images
View plain text
property purchase had the utility fully participated in the downtown visioning and courthouse planning <br />processes. He regretted that, because it would have been an opportunity for the community to address <br />some of the questions that had come up in the current process. <br /> <br />Mr. Meisner anticipated that he would support the supplemental budget request. <br /> <br />Ms. Taylor expressed appreciation to EWEB Commissioner Dorothy Anderson for her concern about the <br />impact of the sale on EWEB's ratepayers, who were also City taxpayers. She said that while McKenzie- <br />Willamette Medical Center was taking a risk, the council was also taking a risk with taxpayer money. <br /> <br />Ms. Taylor questioned why Eugene had to buy the riparian area, suggesting that the City could instead <br />protect it through regulation. Mr. Schoening said that purchasing the property gave the City the <br />opportunity to enhance it through a partnership with a party such as the Army Corps of Engineers. City <br />Manager Taylor added that ownership would facilitate the City's ability to do such things as the <br />realignment of the bicycle-pedestrian path and improved access to the riverfront. He thought the City <br />would be the best steward of the area. <br /> <br />Ms. Taylor did not think EWEB should be located on the Willamette River banks but she was unsure if a <br />hospital would be a better use. She did not think the City should assume the property would be sold until <br />EWEB made a final decision. She determined from City Manager Taylor that McKenzie-Willamette <br />Medical Center was willing to take the risk involved in providing the funding at this time without knowing <br />whether the project would come to fruition. City Manager Taylor said that much work had been done to <br />bring the process to this point, and he believed that the involved parties could make the relocation of the <br />hospital work. As work progressed, the final costs of EWEB's relocation would become clearer. <br /> <br />Responding to a question from Mr. Pap6, City Manager Taylor said the source of funding for acquisition <br />of the riparian area was yet to be determined. He anticipated storm water revenues or park systems <br />development charge revenues could be used, and reminded Mr. Pap6 of the $500,000 in General Fund <br />money that was set aside but not allocated to any particular element of the hospital relocation. <br /> <br />Mr. Pap6 indicated his support for the proposal. <br /> <br />Responding to a question from Mr. Pap6, City Manager Taylor said the first real estate transaction would <br />be the City's purchase of the riparian area; McKenzie-Willamette Medical Center would purchase the <br />remainder of the site. He hoped the transactions and costs needed to be budgeted in fiscal year 2006 <br />would be identified in time to be included in the budget the Budget Committee would consider in spring <br />2005. <br /> <br />Mr. Pap6 indicated his support for the proposal and thanked the EWEB commissioners for moving it <br />forward. He also expressed appreciation for the good work done by staff, suggesting that it "flowed" from <br />the "great" council work done in identifying a downtown hospital as its number one goal. He hoped the <br />council found another goal that all could agree upon. <br /> <br /> Mayor Torrey noted that the transportation improvements would be paid for by the tax increment dollars <br /> generated by McKenzie-Willamette Medical Center. A public sector entity would pay not taxes and thus <br /> could not support the needed transportation improvements. <br /> <br /> Mayor Torrey said that he had heard members of the community suggest there were plenty of people <br /> willing to pay more for the EWEB site. He pointed out that EWEB's interest in selling the property and <br /> moving was not a secret. Those interested in acquiring the property could have approached EWEB. To <br /> <br /> MINUTES--Eugene City Council December 6, 2004 Page 5 <br /> Work Session <br /> <br /> <br />
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.
Print
Pages to print
Enter page numbers and/or page ranges separated by commas. For example, 1,3,5-12.
After downloading, print the document using a PDF reader (e.g. Adobe Reader).