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<br />council seemed very different from a refinement plan. He could think of no plan other the Whiteaker Plan <br />that rese-'lubled the proposal. He questioned whether the City was more or less likely to achieve its GMS <br />policies related to mixed-use development if this process and outcome repeated itself for other neighbor- <br />hoods. Mr. Lowe did not know ifhe could make a blanket statement about the issue or draw any <br />conclusions. He noted the policy issues raised by staff in May 2005. Staff still believed those issues <br />needed to be addressed to implement the GMS policies related to maintenance of the existing character of <br />neighborhoods. He said the community had expressed its intention, through the Eugene-Springfield <br />Metropolitan Area General Plan (Metro Plan), to change the character of the neighborhood from one thing <br />to another. That was where the con1lict arose, and where the big policy questions lie. <br /> <br />Ms. Bettman said she also wondered whether the staff and neighborhood addressed the issue of opportu- <br />nity siting. She recalled that in 1999, a group comprised of representatives of the Friends of Eugene, <br />Eugene Area Chamber of Commerce, Neighborhood Leaders Council, and the Lane County Homebuilders <br />Association worked to redesign the Chambers Node and recommended downzoning on the residential <br />sites and recommended that density be achieved by using underused industrial sites to create mixed-use <br />development that included housing. She hoped neighborhood representatives would speak to that issue <br />during the public hearing. Ms. Bettman would have liked to have seen the process culminate in the <br />identification of opportunities to create that density. <br /> <br />Ms. BettlTh'tn noted the analysis resulted in an inventory of what was available in the neighborhood, which <br />was also known as asset mapping. That generally preceded opportunity siting. <br /> <br />Ms. Bettman spoke to the issue of the potential application of the standards citywide, saying the process <br />went well for this neighborhood but other neighborhoods might be at a disadvantage due to the expertise <br />that had been available to the neighborhood and its ability to participate. She was concerned about <br />making the project a prototype. She sugge..<;ted that in the future, there would be pressure on the City to <br />provide more education and tools to neighborhoods to allow them to participate at an equal level. <br /> <br />Ms. BeHman asked about the Ballot Measure 37 implications of the project. Mr. Lowe said staff did not <br />do a fair market analysis so he could not answer the question. City Attorney Emily Jerome agreed. She <br />said she perceived nothing in the proposal that implied a BaUot Measure 37 claim. She said she had not <br />reviewed the proposal to see if anything in it added value to a property. <br /> <br />Ms. Bettman asked how staff fl)resaw the issue of commercial development being addressed. Mr. Lowe <br />reminded the council that the process was very much citizen~driven. Staffhad gone to the neighborhood <br />with the visual preference survey to elicit specific concerns about compatibility. Almost all the issues <br />raised by area residents related to infiH and redevelopment in the R-2 zone. Residents offered very little <br />comment 011 the issue of commercial development. For that reason, there were limited provisions related <br />to commercial development in the proposal. They were generally related to compatibility issues raised by <br />the neighbors. Many other issues had been len on the table, and there were no further plans to address <br />them at this time. <br /> <br />Mr. Poling solicited a second round of comments and questions. <br /> <br />M1'. Kelly noted that much national research indicated the problem with density was its appearance. He <br />asked if staff believed a design review approach was preferable to a process quantified by hard numbers. <br />Mr. Lowe said a design review approach could be useful. He noted that a consultant reconunended a <br />design review process, but that recommendation was not brought forward by the Planning Commission. <br />Mr. Kelly asked the council to consider further discussion on the topic of a design review process with the <br /> <br />MINUTES-Eugene City Council <br />Work Session <br /> <br />October 12,2005 <br /> <br />Page 3 <br />