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<br />2 1703284000400 While identified as right of way This site is partially located in <br />Near Commons (proposed roadway), the site is used by FEMA Flood Hazard Zone X5¹ <br />Drive & S. EWEB. There are no structures or utility <br />Garden Way services on site. <br />3 1703283001600 This site is listed under joint ownership This site is located in FEMA <br /> is EWEB & City and identified for Flood Hazard Zone X5¹ and <br />2 <br />Water Pipeline Use. No structures exist AE And, some areas have 20’ <br />on the site, but it is heavily covered with and 40’ protected water quality <br />overhead electric lines. setbacks requirements. <br />4 1704253000200 This site was purchased for $1,221,925 This site is not identified as a <br />111 N. Garfield in 2002. The master plan for PW DEQ Clean-up Site, but <br />Maintenance identifies this area for several properties around it are <br />future Fleet Facilities The site was identified. <br />previously improved as a Mobile Home <br />Park with 33 spaces. Following Also, the site has 3000 sq.ft. <br />acquisition, the city spent $75,000 leased for cell tower use. <br />clearing and preparing the site for the <br />future maintenance expansion. The on- <br />site utility services were also removed. <br />It is currently fenced and being used as <br />storage, overflow parking, and training <br />purposes. <br />5 1704364210400 This site was purchased in 1946 for This site is identified as a DEQ <br />th <br />13 Ave. & $25,000. The Envision Eugene Clean-up site and requires <br />Chambers St. recommendation includes re-designating additional investigation <br />this site to multi-family housing for a <br />future affordable housing development. <br />1 <br /> Areas of 500-year flood, areas of 100-year flood with average depths of less than 1 foot or with drainage areas less than 1 <br />square mile, and areas protected by levees from 100-year flood. <br />2 <br /> Areas of 100-year flood, base flood elevations determined. <br />II. Potential Risks & Liability <br />A question was asked about the City’s potential liability for temporary transitional housing shelters <br />operated on City property. While specifics regarding potential City liability will depend on the <br />particulars of a site and the nature of the shelter operations, the question of potential liability can be <br />broken down into three different categories; before shelter establishment, during shelter operations, <br />and after shelter disbandment. <br />Before the shelter is established, if land use actions are taken to establish the shelter, the City’s <br />actions could be appealed to the Land Use Board of Appeals; the liability to the City would be the <br />cost to defend its actions. Even if land use actions are unnecessary for shelter establishment, <br />someone could challenge the City’s action of establishing the shelter through a circuit court action, <br />creating a similar liability to the City of defense costs. <br />During shelter operations, the City is potentially liable for code violations (such as building code or <br />fire code violations), behaviors at the shelter that result in personal injuries or property damage, and <br />damages or costs related to violations of state statutes such as state environmental laws (for <br />example, if someone undertakes car repair and spills or dumps car oil into the environment). While <br />the extent of the City’s potential liability will depend on the nature of the claim, in order to protect <br />the City against this legal risk, the City could require the operator of the shelter to obtain an <br /> <br />Potential Sites for Temporary Transitional Housing SheltersPage 2 <br />