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Item 2A: Approval of City Council Minutes
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Item 2A: Approval of City Council Minutes
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10/8/2007
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the West Broadway Redevelopment Project. She indicated that it was anticipated the loan would be repaid <br />primarily from downtown urban renewal funds and it was also possible that proceeds from the sale of the <br />properties to the developers could be a source of repayment depending on the final details of the agreements <br />between the City and the developers. She said HUD required that the City’s Community Development <br />Block Grant (CDBG) funds be placed as security for the borrowing, but it was not anticipated that those <br />funds would be used because the City’s downtown urban renewal district had sufficient financial capacity to <br />repay it. She noted that the next agenda item would allow the urban renewal district to make the payments <br />on the HUD loan. <br /> <br />Councilor Bettman asked if the BEDI grant and HUD Section 108 loan money could be used to address <br />other issues, such as “the crisis… brewing in the Trainsong neighborhood.” Ms. Cutsogeorge replied that <br />the money was area specific and could not be used outside of the downtown district. <br /> <br />In response to a follow-up question from Councilor Bettman, Mr. Braud explained that the BEDI applica- <br />tion was submitted in May 2005, based on certain criteria. Councilor Bettman interjected that she recalled <br />being told in the Council Committee on Intergovernmental Relations (CCIGR) that there were a lot of <br />options for spending the money. Mr. Braud responded that the application could have been for a number of <br />projects but the direction given was to move forward for the BEDI application within the two urban renewal <br />districts. <br /> <br />Councilor Bettman recalled that an action had been taken but she had felt it was premature and would <br />authorize application of the funds “before we have any information of what that does.” Ms. Cutsogeorge <br />replied that she believed Councilor Bettman was referring to the ordinance that set up the HUD Section 108 <br />revenue bonds. <br /> <br />Councilor Bettman asked what specific action had tied it to the downtown district. Mr. Braud recounted <br />that the CCIGR directed staff to move forward with the grant application and they submitted a concept of <br />utilizing the grant application for the two downtown urban renewal districts. He underscored that this was <br />the direction staff received. <br /> <br />Councilor Bettman asked if Mr. Braud was indicating that staff received direction from the CCIGR to <br />submit the application for downtown. Mr. Braud reiterated that he was “confident” that they had gone <br />before the CCIGR with the concept and had received direction to proceed. <br /> <br />Councilor Bettman said she wanted to see documentation. She believed that the CCIGR had been informed <br />that the decisions had not been made as to how the money would be spent. <br /> <br />Councilor Bettman noted that one of the people who testified during the Public Forum alleged that there was <br />an issue with the premise on which the application had been based. She did not believe that the application <br />stated that the jobs would be given to individuals with a low income. She said because the 30 percent <br />threshold for poverty had not been reached, the application did not actually qualify. Mr. Braud called this <br />an important clarification. He clarified that traditionally the national objective of the low-income job benefit <br />was that it had to be demonstrated that 51 percent of the jobs generated were filled by people with low or <br />moderate incomes. He said there were some exceptions. He explained that if a census tract met the 30 <br />percent threshold, then all of the jobs created by the project could be presumed to be filled by persons of low <br />or moderate income and therefore it would not be required that everyone’s income be documented in the jobs <br />that were created. Otherwise, he said, the City would have to document that the 51 percent low income <br />benefit test. He stated that the majority of the 200-plus economic development projects in the business <br />development fund had been required to provide such documentation. He reiterated that the City did not <br /> <br /> <br />MINUTES—Eugene City Council July 23, 2007 Page 5 <br /> Regular Meeting <br /> <br />
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