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sage by the City Council and approval by the Mayor, retention by the Mayor for more than ten days, <br />or re-adoption over a mayoral veto by two-thirds of all members of the City Council.” <br /> <br />Councilor Clark asked if this amendment would be characterized as an emergency clause. Ms. Jerome confirmed <br />this. She stated that it would require a council majority vote of six to pass. <br /> <br />Councilor Clark ascertained from Ms. Jerome that if the council did nothing, the parking ordinance would come back <br />automatically as a part of the ICS work that would be coming before the council. <br /> <br />Councilor Zelenka encouraged his colleagues to vote for the amendment. He averred that if it did not go into effect <br />immediately, it would leave the neighborhood unprotected while they were working out the details regarding building <br />heights. <br /> <br />Councilor Ortiz asked Ms. Jerome to clarify the motion before the council. Ms. Jerome explained that the motion <br />only affected the height provisions. She stated that the ordinance had findings that addressed the issues that had been <br />raised in the appeal that had gone before the Land Use Board of Appeals (LUBA). She said the amended motion <br />would make it go into effect immediately and, without the amendment, the provision would only go into effect after <br />another appeal had occurred, should there be one. <br /> <br />Councilor Ortiz had thought that what was coming before the council was a height limit that had been negotiated <br />between the South University Neighborhood and the Homebuilders Association. Ms. Jerome clarified that this was <br />not part of the motion; what Councilor Ortiz referred to was part of what was forthcoming from the ICS Committee. <br />She said the expectation would be that the ICS proposal, if passed by the council, would take the place of the <br />provisions that were before them at the present meeting. <br /> <br />Councilor Ortiz asked Councilor Zelenka to explain “what the hurry” was. Councilor Zelenka responded that his <br />concern was that if the ordinance was adopted without his amendment, it could take months for the height limit to go <br />into effect. He said his amendment would provide the neighborhood the protection he believed they were seeking <br />until the ICS ordinance came before the council. When that ordinance passed, it would become the language that <br />everyone agreed to in the ICS process. He believed that without the amended language, there could be “zero <br />protections” for the neighborhood should someone want to develop a tall building there. <br /> <br />Councilor Pryor understood that the limits would be adopted either way. He surmised that the question before the <br />council was whether they wanted to pursue the standard process for adoption or did they want to declare an <br />emergency and have it in effect in anticipation that there might be an appeal. He asked staff if there was any <br />indication that anyone was inclined to file an appeal. Senior Planner Alissa Hansen responded that the testimony <br />given at the public hearing had been pretty divided, but most of it had centered on the parking issue. <br /> <br />Councilor Pryor had not heard anyone indicating intent to appeal. He asked how long the standard adoption would <br />take and what would be in effect. <br /> <br />Ms. Jerome wished to clarify that the only people who could appeal the issue were those who had participated in the <br />original LUBA appeal. She said as the ordinance was currently drafted, the minor code amendment provisions would <br />not go back into place until they were acknowledged. She explained that if no one appealed, it would take 30 days <br />according to charter, but if it was appealed it would not go into effect until they received a ruling from the appellate <br />body. <br /> <br />In response to a follow-up question from Councilor Pryor, Ms. Jerome stated that what would be in effect during the <br />appeal period would be current code. <br /> <br />MINUTES—Eugene City Council October 12, 2009 Page 6 <br /> Regular Meeting <br />