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of the neighborhood. He stated that it had made a "big difference already." He appreciated the responses <br />to all of the emails the neighbors had sent. He stressed that if there was any doubt the patrols were <br />necessary, they should have been dismissed after the recent murder attempt by the river was thwarted by <br />bicycle patrol officers. <br /> <br />Mark Rabinowitz, PO Box 51222, wished to call attention to the multi-hazard mitigation report on the <br />City Web site. He felt it was well-done but he had three areas of concern: 1) fireworks should not be sold <br />to children during fire season; 2) several dams upstream from Eugene were not designed for the Cascadia <br />subduction earthquake which made it important to make available a map of potential inundation areas; and <br />3) climate change and peak oil. He underscored that the world was at peak oil production. He <br />recommended that subsidies for "big box" stores be stopped and that plans for new freeways be ended. <br />He also recommended supporting local business instead of corporations such as Whole Foods and Triad <br />Corporation, which were both based in Texas. He averred that the large sum of money investors proposed <br />to spend for a power facility to be constructed near Coburg would be better spent on building solar panel <br />factories, because that would guarantee some renewable energy when the oil was gone. He suggested that <br />plans for parking garages next to transit facilities be cancelled. He predicted that the country would have <br />to deal with economic crises that would precede the energy and food crises of peak oil. He did not think <br />the rhetoric of sustainability would help make things work when the nation was in chaos. <br /> <br />Elizabeth Twombly, 5015 Nectar Way, submitted her testimony in writing. She thanked the councilors <br />for the work they had done on behalf of the East Fork Amazon Headwaters property. She wished to <br />remind councilors that support for the purchase of land in the area went far beyond the immediate <br />neighbors. She stated that the East Fork Amazon preservation group had over 150 people on its email list <br />and had been endorsed by some neighborhood groups in Eugene as well as the Native Plant Society, the <br />Audubon Society, and Citizens for Public Accountability. <br /> <br />Ms. Twombly believed that the developers' plan to build over 100 houses on the property was unrealistic. <br />She reminded those present that developer Joe Green had bought the property in 2004 for $325,000 and <br />now wanted $600,000 from the City for it. Because the appraisal of the property indicated it was only <br />worth $435,000, the City was unable to purchase it at that price. She said the appraisal was based on an <br />expectation that only seven houses could actually be constructed on the property because of the terrain. <br />She urged councilors and staff to continue working toward creating a plan to acquire the property at a <br />reasonable price. <br /> <br />Lisa Warnes, 5020 Nectar Way, thanked the council and staff for the work they had been doing on the <br />proposed acquisition of the East Fork Amazon Headwaters. She felt it unfortunate that time had run out in <br />the work session of the previous week and that a motion had not been voted on. She believed she could <br />work with Councilor Taylor to draft a motion that would be acceptable to most of the council. She <br />thought the planned unit development (PUD) process would likely "change many things and open up new <br />options." She opined that developer Joe Green did not have a "basis in reality" because he still thought he <br />could build 100 homes on that site. She said after the work session it seemed there was a renewed energy <br />for acquiring the stream corridor, a ten-acre property. She was curious as to what the reasoning was <br />behind giving $150,000 for a piece of property that would be protected anyway. She had observed, when <br />looking at plans in a meeting with Joe Green, that the plans included 50-foot setbacks from the stream <br />corridor. <br /> <br />Jessica Tennat, 1131 Monroe Street, explained that she was the owner of the Monroe Street Caf~ and had <br />owned it for 16 months. She wished to respond to neighbors who testified at the previous meeting. She <br /> <br />MINUTES--Eugene City Council June 13, 2005 Page 2 <br /> Regular Session <br /> <br /> <br />