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Phil Farrington <br />, Ward 1, considered the manager’s recommendations to be exceedingly modest and <br />asked the council to support and build on them. He said UGB expansion for job growth was essential. <br />He could envision a need for both land in Eugene and land in Goshen because the land in Goshen was <br />served by rail and was of a different type than that found in Eugene. <br /> <br />Clayton Walker <br />, Ward 5, supported the manager’s recommendations, particularly as they related to <br />industrial expansion. He believed code flexibility was as important as adding more land to the inventory. <br /> <br />Gary Wildish <br />, Santa Clara, supported the City Manager’s recommendations. He believed the Seven <br />Pillars had the support of the majority of Community Resource Group members. He also supported the <br />proposed housing mix as reasonable and suggested the council would be wrong no matter what it chose <br />because it could not predict the future. He supported the manager’s recommendation for commercial <br />lands and questioned where the land would come from as it would come from industrial and residential <br />lands. He reported that the Industrial Lands Committee examined every parcel of 20 acres or more and <br />found them amazingly constrained. Due to that information he was convinced the City’s few parcels <br />were inadequate for the future. <br /> <br />Laura Potter <br />, Ward 1, Eugene Area Chamber of Commerce, expressed support for the manager’s <br />recommendations. She said job growth was a chamber priority and was the foundation for a healthy <br />growing community. The recommendation addressed job needs both through expansion and by calling <br />for aggressive land redevelopment. It supported the needs of a vibrant and growing community. <br /> <br />Rob Bennett <br />, Ward 5, expressed support for the manager’s recommendations, particularly those related <br />to industrial expansion. He believed that the community would only attract employers to provide jobs by <br />providing more available land. The community had many small noncontiguous parcels and a handful of <br />parcels larger than 25 acres. Wetlands, some protected, affected every single parcel, and were cost- <br />prohibitive to mitigate. He believed companies would look to other communities that had land that did <br />not require costly mitigation. Mr. Bennett supported the modest three percent expansion proposed. <br /> <br />John Lawless <br />, Ward 3, representing the Bennett Family, supported the manager’s recommendations <br />related to commercial land and for flexibility in the implementation strategies to allow for the use of small <br />nonindustrial parcels. He recommended that language be added to allow the evaluation of those parcels. <br /> <br />Sue Prichard <br />, Ward 3, supported the manager’s recommendations. She did not think the community was <br />being visionary enough in its industrial land projections. She believed existing projections were overly <br />modest and would not result in enough choice of land for industries that would bring the highest paid jobs <br />to the community. Businesses needed options to thrive. They needed to be able to select from more than <br />one or two sites. She cited several businesses that left the community due to a lack of sites. The City had <br />176 acres and was proposing adding 475 acres for a total of 651 acres, which was just more than half of <br />the land the City used in the last 20 years. She considered the manager’s recommendation in that regard <br />conservative, although she acknowledged it was a compromise. <br /> <br />Ed MaMahon <br />, Ward 7, encouraged the council to support the manager’s recommendations and allow <br />staff to move forward with implementation. He believed they recommended a community balance that <br />allowed Eugene to move forward. He believed all Seven Pillars would be honored and stressed the <br />importance of Pillar 7, which spoke to flexible implementation. <br /> <br />Steve Goldman <br />, Ward 7, asked the council to direct staff to prepare a recommendation that did not <br />expand the UGB for residential uses. He maintained the current concept was in conflict with several of <br />the Seven Pillars and the 20-minute neighborhood concept. He thought Eugene could do better. He <br /> <br /> <br />MINUTES—Eugene City Council May 14, 2012 Page 4 <br /> Regular Meeting <br /> <br />