Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutminutes.council.20180730Special Meeting Aspen City Council July 30, 2018 1 At 6:40 p.m. Mayor Skadron called the special meeting to order with Councilmembers Mullins, Hauenstein, Frisch and Myrin present. Mayor Skadron said execution of this contract terminates the original one. We are approving the entry based on entry of this draft. Mr. True said an executive session would be appropriate. Councilman Frisch said this contract will lay out legal terms, incorporate specific things into the contract, price can be laid out by staff. Resolution #111 – entry into amended and restated contract. Councilman Frisch said there are two buckets. Ann and Ward’s first choice is D where the Mayor’s is A. Some’s second choices may fall in to this. What might be spent now on a path forward to get to A or D, keeping C open now. Mayor Skadron said that is really a question for us. An option that fails to include keeping the armory as the historic seat for government is one that I can’t support. Steve Barwick, city manager, said can we ask you to define that. Councilwoman Mullins said thinking about that and a way to work with this building for some dedicated community space with a way to keep council chambers and some office space. I was thinking they would be working mostly on C. Jack Wheeler, asset, said one of the sticking points for B is what is the real number for the armory and what is the subsidy going forward. The number in the D plan is a 3 million number but that is just for maintenance. Councilwoman Mullins said then you should have a number for any space you are abandoning. Mr. Wheeler replied that is a good example. There is 3 million in the budget for turning the power house over to public use. We have not done that for Mountain Rescue and the Rio Grand. It is hard for us to come up with the numbers until we know the use. Councilwoman Mullins said I don’t want that to skew the numbers. In option C the Rio Grande and ACRA stay in and there are no funds going to those buildings. Councilman Myrin said what Ann raised is valid for the ongoing costs. It costs money to keep things going. That has to be a decision if we turn this over to the community. Councilman Hauenstein said what I thought I heard Steve say was can we retain part of the armory as civic offices and retain the other part for the community. Mr. Wheeler said we can but part of what we are up against is security. Every time we add a secondary use we run into a security issue. It is not a real efficient way to program these buildings. Councilman Hauenstein said Bert, are you in the same opinion as Steve that this should be the center of civic government for Aspen, the armory. Councilman Myrin said I’ll do whatever is needed to get 517 and 204 moved forward. Mayor Skadron asked would you be open to a discussion of affordable housing on the Galena site. Councilman Myrin said he would be open to anything to get this going. Councilman Frisch said last time we met we were talking about buying a building and now we are buying another space and there is a possible deal to have someone remodel this space. I don’t think it has anything to do with Mark but any developer who would reach out to us. I think we have the legal ability to not bid it out. One of the things is cost overruns. Usually the client ends up paying. This is especially true where there are 3 deals going on. We have to make sure when we get into cost overruns how they are handled and where there is clarity. How are we going to manage quality control. It is different when we are overseeing a project. Here we are outsourcing that responsibility. What are the guarantees that any developer will still be around to finish the project. Mark has a lot of balls in the air and his business model up till now has been high end retail. How do we make sure we don’t get into bait and switches on LLCs. If something goes wrong, how do we make sure we are protected and the community gets the project we expect to be built. Financing, on the upside all these options appear to be getting closer but the price keeps getting higher. Mr. Wheeler said part of the due diligence over the next 30 days is coming up with the collateral to address all those things. Generally, we estimate things within 10 %. As we get closer to construction Special Meeting Aspen City Council July 30, 2018 2 documents we can get that way down. Cost overruns are handled the same way. We do not stick it to the contractor. Security and guarantee are the same on every project. We have never called a bond. What we do is manage the pay outs. We don’t pay the pay outs that aren’t complete. The guarantee is if we write the check we have what we pay for and it is already in place or in the warehouse. Councilman Frisch said all that is great. I’m worried if all of a sudden the contractor doesn’t show up for work. Mr. Wheeler replied we have had contractors fail. We make sure the funds are there to finish the project. It does happen. We manage things proactively. Councilman Hauenstein said when I made my comments about entering into an agreement with the largest commercial land owner it was not singling out Mark Hunt, it was the same with the art museum. There is a squirm factor and it has nothing to do with this particular person. Mr. Wheeler said he brings an economy of scale to the project as well. It is a unique situation. Councilman Frisch asked is the price set. Is this the max price until you negotiate. Mr. Wheeler said we are focused on terms. We negotiated down from 25 million to 23 and 100 dollars per sq ft. In the 204 space we negotiated to the 9.5 number and that includes all the finishes. We will be identifying all those things within the schedule. Councilman Myrin move to approve Resolution #111, Series of 2018; seconded by Councilwoman Mullins. Roll call vote. Councilmembers Frisch, yes; Mullins, yes; Myrin, yes; Hauenstein, yes; Mayor Skadron, yes. Motion carried. At 7:20 p.m. Councilwoman Mullins moved to adjourn; seconded by Councilman Hauenstein. All in favor, motion carried. Linda Manning City Clerk