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Mr. Braud explained that the jobs typically created in the program were entry-level production jobs and <br />for such a job, $30,000 to $33,000 annually was an excellent wage. Councilor Taylor responded that the <br />City had "plenty of entry-level jobs already" and did not need to subsidize jobs to increase the number. <br /> <br />Councilor Bettman surmised that the council could "sit down with the County and establish criteria." She <br />wondered if there would be no criteria, should the County not agree with the City when it voted on June <br />29. Mr. Braud affirmed this to be so. <br /> <br />Councilor Bettman said the council had given the City Manager direction on this item three months earlier <br />and now, three days before the zone would be approved or denied by the State, there was still uncertainty <br />regarding the criteria. She declared that the council had agreed to an Enterprise Zone but only if standards <br />were in place. She thought there would be no standards in place should the County not be in agreement <br />with the City. She averred that staff had three months to make sure the standards had been placed in front <br />of the City and the County in "a timely way" so the council policy could be fulfilled. She remarked that <br />she did not have a problem with the County, but rather had a problem with the follow-up from City staff <br />"on very explicit direction on a very controversial issue." <br /> <br />Councilor Bettman asked if the application for the Enterprise Zone could be withdrawn at this point. Mr. <br />Braud replied that the City would have the opportunity to request withdrawal of its application before July <br />1. After July 1, he explained, it would have to be undertaken in the context of a zone termination. <br /> <br />Councilor Bettman ascertained from Mr. Braud that the County Commissioners would take action at <br />approximately 10:30 a.m. on June 29. She asked Mayor Piercy if she would be amenable to providing 15 <br />minutes on the schedule during the council work session scheduled for Wednesday, June 29, to get an <br />update from staff on the County's disposition of the Enterprise Zone so that the council could take the <br />opportunity to withdraw the application if it deemed it necessary. She thought an application from a <br />manufacturer could be processed without any community standards should the Board of Commissioners <br />disagree with the City's standards and this would be inconsistent with council direction. <br /> <br />Mayor Piercy said it was a possibility. She hoped that the Board of County Commissioners would <br />recognize that the City Council had worked hard to reach this agreement. <br /> <br />City Manager Taylor related that he had great expectations because throughout the process, City staff and <br />County staff had been communicating about the conditioned application, the conditioned zone, and the <br />process for interim standards while the City engaged in a more rigorous exploration of what the standards <br />should be. He anticipated that the commissioners would adopt the interim standards in the same spirit that <br />the City had pursued them and the two would move forward with the public process for making a <br />recommendation to the two govermnent bodies. He noted that when the first application had been <br />submitted, it had seemed like a long shot, but now it seemed very likely that the City would be granted the <br />Enterprise Zone. <br /> <br />Councilor Kelly observed that the council had worked well together to come to a level of near consensus <br />on the Enterprise Zone. He felt optimistic that this sense of cooperation would pervade at the Board of <br />County Commissioners. He agreed, however, that 15 minutes should be set aside at the coming work <br />session. <br /> <br />MINUTES--Eugene City Council June 27, 2005 Page 8 <br /> Regular Session <br /> <br /> <br />