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many such preservation projects while some of the other jurisdictions did not. He said the issue the MPC <br />would consider was whether it was a good regional policy to put a greater percentage of STP-U funds into <br />pavement preservation. <br /> <br />Ms. Bettman acknowledged the complexity of the issues involved. She did not think the councilors could <br />"all come up to speed" on the MPC process at one work session. <br /> <br />Mr. Pryor interpreted the motion to mean the City was asking rather than telling the MPC to modify its <br />allocation process in order to achieve some of Eugene's policy goals. He said that it was possible the <br />MPC would say no, or it could say yes, but the City might not see a dollar more of the money. The money <br />could go instead to regional preservation projects. <br /> <br />Ms. Taylor believed that Eugene should be able to fund its preservation priorities and would be able to do <br />so better if Ms. Bettman's motion passed. <br /> <br />Mr. Pap6 suggested that the word "maintenance" be removed from the motion since maintenance projects <br />were not eligible for the STP-U funding. Ms. Bettman accepted the friendly amendment. <br /> <br />Ms. Bettman shared the application used by jurisdictions for projects competing for the funds, noting that <br />the formula used weighed the components of the projects for evaluation. She thought it was merely a <br />matter of changing the weighting system to allow Eugene to compete successfully with preservation <br />projects. She questioned staff's assertions that operations could not be funded by the federal dollars <br />available, as it was her opinion that allocations for planning were for operations. <br /> <br />Mr. Schwetz said the MPC set targets for modernization, preservation, planning, and TDM. To accom- <br />plish what Ms. Bettman desired, the City would have to work with the MPC to change the percentage <br />allocation for the funding targets so that more money was spent on preservation in the future. Mr. <br />Schoening interpreted the motion as asking the MPC to mix all the available funding so that Springfield's <br />modernization projects could compete against Eugene's preservation project using a weighted scoring <br />system. <br /> <br />City Attorney Glenn Klein interpreted the motion as directing the manager and the City's MPC represen- <br />tatives to determine how Eugene could obtain more federal funds for preservation, and to go to the MPC <br />and advocate for that. <br /> <br />Ms. Solomon asked if the passage of the motion would be at the expense of modernization and TDM. Ms. <br />Bettman believed the answer to that question depended on one's perception. She believed the motion <br />merely allowed the City to achieve its stated priorities. City Manger Taylor clarified that if the motion <br />passed and the City was successful in getting the change, a greater proportion of STP-U funds would be <br />available for preservation projects. <br /> <br /> The motion passed unanimously, 8:0. <br /> <br />Mr. Klein asked the council to confirm that no one objected to the vote as the final vote on the main <br />motion. There was no objection. <br /> <br /> Ms. Bettman, seconded by Ms. Taylor, moved to direct the City Manager, <br /> <br />MINUTES--Eugene City Council January 24, 2005 Page 13 <br /> Work Session <br /> <br /> <br />