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HomeMy WebLinkAboutagenda.council.regular.202202081 AGENDA CITY COUNCIL REGULAR MEETING February 8, 2022 5:00 PM, City Council Chambers 427 Rio Grande Place, Aspen WEBEX www.webex.com Enter Meeting Number: 2555 583 6206 Password: 81611 Click “Join Meeting” OR Join by phone Call: 1-720-650-7664 Meeting number (access code): 2555 583 6206 I.CALL TO ORDER II.ROLL CALL III.SCHEDULED PUBLIC APPEARANCES IV.CITIZENS COMMENTS & PETITIONS (Time for any citizen to address Council on issues NOT scheduled for a public hearing. Please limit your comments to 3 minutes) V.SPECIAL ORDERS OF THE DAY a) Councilmembers' and Mayor's Comments b) Agenda Amendments c) City Manager's Comments d) Board Reports VI.CONSENT CALENDAR (These matters may be adopted together by a single motion) VI.A.Resolution #012, Series 2022 - Parks Department Fleet Replacement Contract Welch Equipment VI.B.Resolution #015, Series of 2022 - Recreation Facility Master Plan Project 1 2 VI.C.Resolution #017, Series of 2022 - Jim Gaffigan Contract VI.D.Resolution #018, Series of 2022 - Growth Management Allotment Carry-Forward Review VI.E.Draft Minutes of January 11th and January 25th VII.NOTICE OF CALL-UP VIII.FIRST READING OF ORDINANCES IX.PUBLIC HEARINGS IX.A.Ordinance #01, Series of 2022 - Amending Title 5 Of The Aspen Municipal Code, Marijuana And Alcoholic Beverages X.ACTION ITEMS X.A.2022 EOTC Workplan Amendment X.B.Affordable Housing Strategic Plan XI.ADJOURNMENT 2 MEMORANDUM TO:Mayor and City Council FROM:Steve Barr, Parks Operations Manager THROUGH:Matt Kuhn, Parks and Open Space Director MEMO DATE:January 26, 2022 MEETING DATE:February 8,2022 RE:Parks Fleet – (3) G.E.M. Electric Utility Vehicles REQUEST OF COUNCIL:The Parks Department is requesting approval of a contract with Welch Equipment. for the replacement of (3) G.E.M. Electric Utility Vehicles SUMMARY AND BACKGROUND: The replacement of this equipment is included in the 2022 Asset Management Plan. City Council approved the Asset Management Plan in the 2022 Budget. DISCUSSION: The Parks Department utilizes a variety of equipment for our parks, open space and trails maintenance programs. This contract with Welch Equipment is a scheduled fleet replacement for each item represented. Parks department G.E.M. electric utility vehicles are used by staff to perform tasks throughout the parks and trails systems. The versatility of these vehicles to operate on trail systems and roadways safely is a large benefit to the Parks Department and the performance of past models have encouraged us to continue with this model and manufacturer. It should be noted with every replacement cycle Parks Department assess the marketplace for sustainable replacement options to each piece of equipment and at this time we feel this electric option fulfills such an option. The fleet budget accounts for a five-year replacement cycle for this equipment. The contract with Welch Equipment is based on a cooperative purchase agreement price through Sourcewell. With supporting Sourcewell contracts effective until 2025. FINANCIAL IMPACTS: The contract with Welch Equipment in the amount of $88,115.88 is authorized and accounted for in 2022 fleet vehicles replacement budget. This purchase is part of the Parks and Open Space Fund budget (100 Fund) and capital project cost center of 572.81200.57520.51484. 3 ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS: Maintaining parks and trails provides for green space, safe winter pedestrian passage and alternative transportation opportunities. These vehicles use electric power and support the City of Aspen’s choice to seek out sustainable alternatives. ALTERNATIVES:Council could direct staff to postpone the replacement contract or seek alternative vehicles or contracts. RECOMMENDATIONS:Parks Staff recommends approval of the contract with Welch Equipment for the replacement of (3) G.E.M. Electric utility vehicles. PROPOSED MOTION:“I move to approve Ordinance # 012” CITY MANAGER COMMENTS: 4 RESOLUTION # 012 (Series of 2022) A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF ASPEN, COLORADO, APPROVING A CONTRACT BETWEEN THE CITY OF ASPEN AND WELCH EQUIPMENT AUTHORIZING THE CITY MANAGER TO EXECUTE SAID CONTRACT ON BEHALF OF THE CITY OF ASPEN, COLORADO. WHEREAS, there has been submitted to the City Council a contract for three (3) G.E.M. Electric Utility Vehicles between the City of Aspen and Welch Equipment, a true and accurate copy of which is attached hereto as Exhibit “A”; NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF ASPEN, COLORADO, That the City Council of the City of Aspen hereby approves that Contract for three (3) G.E.M. Electric Utility Vehicles between the City of Aspen and Welch Equipment a copy of which is annexed hereto and incorporated herein, and does hereby authorize the City Manager to execute said agreement on behalf of the City of Aspen. INTRODUCED, READ AND ADOPTED by the City Council of the City of Aspen on the 8th day of February 2022. Torre, Mayor I, Nicole Henning, duly appointed and acting City Clerk do certify that the foregoing is a true and accurate copy of that resolution adopted by the City Council of the City of Aspen, Colorado, at a meeting held, February 8, 2022. Nicole Henning, City Clerk 5 CITY OF ASPEN STANDARD FORM OF AGREEMENT SUPPLY PROCUREMENT City of Aspen Project No.: 2022-014. AGREEMENT made as of 12 day of January, in the year 2022. BETWEEN the City: Contract Amount: The City of Aspen c/o Steve Barr 427 Rio Grande Place Aspen, Colorado 81611 Phone: (970) 920-5055 And the Vendor: Welch Equipment c/o Keith Fine 2381 1/2 River Road Grand Junction, Co. 81505 970-623-3953 Kfine@welcheq.com Summary Description of Items to be Purchased: (3) G.E.M. Electric Vehicles each with a specific build characteristic for planned work functions. Exhibits appended and made a part of this Agreement: If this Agreement requires the City to pay an amount of money in excess of $50,000.00 it shall not be deemed valid until it has been approved by the City Council of the City of Aspen. City Council Approval: Date: ___________________________ Resolution No.:_#012-2022 Exhibit A: List of supplies, equipment, or materials to be purchased. Total: $88,115.88 DocuSign Envelope ID: FA236AC1-BECF-4609-9386-AD53F90E0AEEDocuSign Envelope ID: F9C8BE45-EF39-44ED-B0FA-9FE34402AC4C 6 The City and Vendor agree as set forth below. 1. Purchase. Vendor agrees to sell and City agrees to purchase the items on Exhibit A appended hereto and by this reference incorporated herein as if fully set forth here for the sum set forth hereinabove. 2. Delivery. (FOB 585 Cemetery Lane, Aspen CO 81611) [Delivery Address] 3. Contract Documents. This Agreement shall include all Contract Documents as the same are listed in the Invitation to Bid and said Contract Document are hereb y made a part of this Agreement as if fully set out at length herein. 4. Warranties. Attached 5. Successors and Assigns. This Agreement and all of the covenants hereof shall inure to the benefit of and be binding upon the City and the Vendor respectively and their agents, representatives, employee, successors, assigns and legal representatives. Neither the City nor the Vendor shall have the right to assign, transfer or sublet its interest or obligations hereunder without the written consent of the other party. 6. Third Parties. This Agreement does not and shall not be deemed or construed to confer upon or grant to any third party or parties, except to parties to whom Vendor or City may assign this Agreement in accordance with the specific written permission, any right to claim damages or to bring any suit, action or other proceeding against either the City or Vendor because of any breach hereof or because of any of the terms, covenants, agreements or conditions herein contained. 7. Waivers. No waiver of default by either party of any of the terms, covenants or conditions hereof to be performed, kept and observed by the other party shall be construed, or operate as, a waiver of any subsequent default of any of the terms, covenants or conditions herein contained, to be performed, kept and observed by the other party. 8. Agreement Made in Colorado. The parties agree that this Agreement was made in accordance with the laws of the State of Colorado and shall be so construed. Venue is agreed to be exclusively in the courts of Pitkin County, Colorado. 9. Attorney’s Fees. In the event that legal action is necessary to enforce any of the provisions of this Agreement, the prevailing party shall be entitled to its costs and reasonable attorney’s fees. 10. Waiver of Presumption. This Agreement was negotiated and reviewed through the mutual efforts of the parties hereto and the parties agree that no construction shall be made or DocuSign Envelope ID: FA236AC1-BECF-4609-9386-AD53F90E0AEEDocuSign Envelope ID: F9C8BE45-EF39-44ED-B0FA-9FE34402AC4C 7 presumption shall arise for or against either party based on any alleged unequal status of the parties in the negotiation, review or drafting of the Agreement. 11. Certification Regarding Debarment, Suspension, Ineligibility, and Voluntary Exclusion. Vendor certifies, by acceptance of this Agreement, that neither it nor its principals is presently debarred, suspended, proposed for debarment, declared ineligible or voluntarily excluded from participation in any transaction with a Federal or State department or agency. It further certifies that prior to submitting its Bid that it did include this clause without modification in all lower tier transactions, solicitations, proposals, contracts and subcontracts. In the event that Vendor or any lower tier participant was unable to certify to the statement, an explanation was attached to the Bid and was determined by the City to be satisfactory to the City. 12. Warranties Against Contingent Fees, Gratuities, Kickbacks and Conflicts of Interest. (A) Vendor warrants that no person or selling agency has been employed or retained to solicit or secure this Contract upon an agreement or understanding for a commission, percentage, brokerage, or contingent fee, excepting bona fide employees or bona fide established commercial or selling agencies maintained by the Vendor for the purpose of securing business. (B) Vendor agrees not to give any employee of the City a gratuity or any offer of employment in connection with any decision, approval, disapproval, recommendation, preparation of any part of a program requirement or a purchase request, influencing the content of any specification or procurement standard, rendering advice, investigation, auditing, or in any other advisory capacity in any proceeding or application, request for ruling, determination, claim or controversy, or other particular matter, pertaining to this Agreement, or to any solicitation or proposal therefore. (C) Vendor represents that no official, officer, employee or representative of the City during the term of this Agreement has or one (1) year thereafter shall have any interest, direct or indirect, in this Agreement or the proceeds thereof, except those that may have been disclosed at the time City Council approved the execution of this Agreement. (D) In addition to other remedies it may have for breach of the prohibitions against contingent fees, gratuities, kickbacks and conflict of interest, the City shall have the right to: 1. Cancel this Purchase Agreement without any liability by the City; 2. Debar or suspend the offending parties from being a vendor, contractor or subcontractor under City contracts; 3. Deduct from the contract price or consideration, or otherwise recover, the value of anything transferred or received by the Vendor; and 4. Recover such value from the offending parties. 13. Termination for Default or for Convenience of City. The sale contemplated by this Agreement may be canceled by the City prior to acceptance by the City whenever for any reason DocuSign Envelope ID: FA236AC1-BECF-4609-9386-AD53F90E0AEEDocuSign Envelope ID: F9C8BE45-EF39-44ED-B0FA-9FE34402AC4C 8 and in its sole discretion the City shall determine that such cancellation is in its best interests and convenience. 14. Fund Availability. Financial obligations of the City payable after the current fiscal year are contingent upon funds for that purpose being appropriated, budgeted and otherwise made available. If this Agreement contemplates the City using state or federal funds to meet its obligations herein, this Agreement shall be contingent upon the availability of those funds for payment pursuant to the terms of this Agreement. 15. City Council Approval. If this Agreement requires the City to pay an amount of money in excess of $50,000.00 it shall not be deemed valid until it has been approved by the City Council of the City of Aspen. 16. Non-Discrimination. No discrimination because of race, color, creed, sex, marital status, affectional or sexual orientation, family responsibility, national origin, ancestry, handicap, or religion shall be made in the employment of persons to perform under this Agreement. Vendor agrees to meet all of the requirements of City’s municipal code, section 13-98, pertaining to nondiscrimination in employment. Vendor further agrees to comply with the letter and the spirit of the Colorado Antidiscrimination Act of 1957, as amended and other applicable state and federal laws respecting discrimination and unfair employment practices. 17. Integration and Modification. This written Agreement along with all Contract Documents shall constitute the contract between the parties and supersedes or incorporates any prior written and oral agreements of the parties. In addition, vendor understands that no City official or employee, other than the Mayor and City Council acting as a body at a council meeting, has authority to enter into an Agreement or to modify the terms of the Agreement on behalf of the City. Any such Agreement or modification to this Agreement must be in writing and be executed by the parties hereto. 18. Authorized Representative. The undersigned representative of Vendor, as an inducement to the City to execute this Agreement, represents that he/she is an authorized representative of Vendor for the purposes of executing this Agreement and that he/she has full and complete authority to enter into this Agreement for the terms and conditions specified herein. 19. Electronic Signatures and Electronic Records This Agreement and any amendments hereto may be executed in several counterparts, each of which shall be deemed an original, and all of which together shall constitute one agreement binding on the Parties, notwithstanding the possible event that all Parties may not have signed the same counterpart. Furthermore, each Party consents to the use of electronic signatures by either Party. The Scope of Work, and any other documents requiring a signature hereunder, may be signed electronically in the manner agreed to by the Parties. The Parties agree not to deny the legal effect or enforceability of the Agreement solely because it is in electronic form or because an electronic record was used in its formation. The Parties agree not to object to the admissibility of the Agreement in the form of an electronic record, or a paper copy of an electronic documents, or a DocuSign Envelope ID: FA236AC1-BECF-4609-9386-AD53F90E0AEEDocuSign Envelope ID: F9C8BE45-EF39-44ED-B0FA-9FE34402AC4C 9 paper copy of a document bearing an electronic signature, on the ground that it is an electronic record or electronic signature or that it is not in its original form or is not an original. IN WITNESS WHEREOF, The City and the Vendor, respectively have caused this Agreement to be duly executed the day and year first herein, of which, to all intents and purposes, shall be considered as the original. FOR THE CITY OF ASPEN: By: __ _________________________ Aspen City Manager _______________________________ Date SUPPLIER: ___________________________ By:________________________________ ___________________________________ Title ___________________________________ Date Approved as to form: _______________________________ City Attorney’s Office DocuSign Envelope ID: FA236AC1-BECF-4609-9386-AD53F90E0AEE Keith Fine 1/13/2022 | 12:12:16 PM PST Territory Manager DocuSign Envelope ID: F9C8BE45-EF39-44ED-B0FA-9FE34402AC4C 1/26/2022 | 10:44:58 AM MST 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 1 MEMORANDUM TO:Mayor and City Council FROM:Cory Vander Veen, Recreation Director THROUGH:Austin Weiss, Director of Parks and Recreation Diane Foster, Assistant City Manager MEMO DATE:January 31th, 2022 MEETING DATE: February 8th, 2022 RE:Resolution #15 Series 2022 Recreation Facility Master Plan project REQUEST OF COUNCIL:Staff requests a contract award to Rowland & Broughton and Perkin & Will in the amount of $148,345 for the completion of a comprehensive facility master plan for Aspen Ice Garden (AIG) and the Aspen Recreation Center (ARC). Staff also requests the approval of a contingency budget of $16,655 to be released under the administrative authority of the City Manager. PREVIOUS COUNCIL ACTION:Aspen City Council has reviewed and approved funding for this capital project through the 2021 budget review process. BACKGROUND:On November 11, 2021, it was communicated to City Council that the Recreation Department was in the process of seeking contractors for a master plan of AIG and the ARC. The City of Aspen solicited proposals from qualified firms to perform a comprehensive master plan involving three areas: the exterior of the AIG, the interior of the AIG, and the interior of the ARC. DISCUSSION:The contractor will go through four phases for this project. The first phase is a discovery phase to include all previous recreation plans and reports. During this discovery phase, the contractor will conduct discussion sessions with key focus groups (determined by City staff) to determine the community recreational needs and wants. The contractor will look at previously planned projects like the outdoor pool that was approved and funded in 2009. This project was put on hold due to City funding concerns during this economic recession. The other project that was planned and approved was the ARC upstairs fitness center expansion (cardio equipment and gymnasium). The contractor will provide a feasibility study for both of these plans. The overarching goals for this project are: The contractor will conduct community outreach to gather community feedback regarding needs and wants o Create surveys, multiple focus group sessions, community meetings, multiple site walkthroughs 20 2 Aspen Ice Garden interior master plan and improvement plan with recommendations Aspen Ice Garden exterior master plan and improvement plan with recommendations Aspen Recreation Center interior master plan and improvement plan with recommendations o Provide a feasibility study of the current designed outdoor pool at the ARC o Provide a feasibility study of the currently designed fitness expansion at the ARC Create initial designs and provide renovation plans with estimated construction costs for the redesign of the interior and exterior of AIG and the interior of the ARC. Financial impact:  The Recreation Department has two approved capital projects to conduct these two facility masterplans from the approved 2021 capital budget of $165,000. The delay in the facilities assessment project and time constraints of multiple other capital projects in 2021 caused this master plan project to be delayed until 2022. This project is planned to start in late February and be completed before September 2022. Description of Services Total Costs Phase 1 Discovery $60,000 Phase 2 Big ideas $30,580 Phase 3 Making Decisions $45,840 Phase 4 Recommendations and final; report $7,300 Total $148,345 RECOMMENDED ACTION:Staff requests the City Council approves the contract for Rowland & Broughton, Perkin & Will in the amount of $148,345 for the completion of a comprehensive facility master plan. Additionally, staff requests the approval of a contingency budget of $16,655 to be released under the administrative authority of the City Manager. PROPOSED MOTION:I move to approve the Resolution #15 series of 2022. CITY MANAGER COMMENTS: ATTACHMENTS: A. Professional Services contract for Rowland & Broughton, Perkins & Will B. Resolution #15 Series of 2022 21 RESOLUTION # 15 (Series of 2022) A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF ASPEN, COLORADO, APPROVING A CONTRACT BETWEEN THE CITY OF ASPEN AND ROWLAND & BROUGHTON AND AUTHORIZING THE CITY MANAGER TO EXECUTE SAID CONTRACT ON BEHALF OF THE CITY OF ASPEN, COLORADO. WHEREAS, there has been submitted to the City Council a contract for the FACILITY MASTER PLAN PROJECT, between the City of Aspen and ROWLAND & BROUGHTON, a true and accurate copy of which is attached hereto as Exhibit “A”. NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF ASPEN, COLORADO, That the City Council of the City of Aspen hereby approves that Contract for facility master plan project between the City of Aspen and ROWLAND & BROUGHTON, a copy of which is annexed hereto and incorporated herein and does hereby authorize the City Manager to execute said agreement on behalf of the City of Aspen. INTRODUCED, READ AND ADOPTED by the City Council of the City of Aspen on the 8th day of February 2022. Torre, Mayor I, Nicole Henning, duly appointed and acting City Clerk do certify that the foregoing is a true and accurate copy of that resolution adopted by the City Council of the City of Aspen, Colorado, at a meeting held, February 8th, 2021. Nicole Henning, City Clerk 22 Agreement Professional Services Page 0 CITY OF ASPEN STANDARD FORM OF AGREEMENT PROFESSIONAL SERVICES City of Aspen Contract No.: 2021-158. AGREEMENT made this 2 day of December, in the year 2021. BETWEEN the City: Contract Amount: The City of Aspen c/o Cory vander Veen 427 Rio Grande Place Aspen, Colorado 81611 Phone: 970.544.4104 And the Professional: Rowland & Broughton c/o Chris Kastelic Sara Broughton 500 W Main Street Aspen Colorado 81611 Phone: 970.379.0111 For the Following Project: Facilities Master Plan Exhibits appended and made a part of this Agreement: The City and Professional agree as set forth below. If this Agreement requires the City to pay an amount of money in excess of $50,000.00 it shall not be deemed valid until it has been approved by the City Council of the City of Aspen. City Council Approval: Date: ___________________________ Resolution No.:___________________ Exhibit A: Scope of Work. Exhibit B: Fee Schedule. Total: $148,345 DocuSign Envelope ID: 1F7600FE-1509-4140-9F61-27E0ECC98E6DDocuSign Envelope ID: FFA50AAB-75C3-4B28-9330-CA3C63460FD7 23 Agreement Professional Services Page 1 1. Scope of Work. Professional shall perform in a competent and professional manner the Scope of Work as set forth at Exhibit A attached hereto and by this reference incorporated herein. 2. Completion. Professional shall commence Work immediately upon receipt of a written Notice to Proceed from the City and complete all phases of the Scope of Work as expeditiously as is consistent with professional skill and care and the orderly progress of the Work in a timely manner. The parties anticipate that all Work pursuant to this Agreement shall be completed no later than July 31, 2022. Upon request of the City, Professional shall submit, for the City's approval, a schedule for the performance of Professional's services which shall be adjusted as required as the project proceeds, and which shall include allowances for periods of time required by the City's project engineer for review and approval of submissions and for approvals of authorities having jurisdiction over the project. This schedule, when approved by the City, shall not, except for reasonable cause, be exceeded by the Professional. 3. Payment. In consideration of the work performed, City shall pay Professional on a time and expense basis for all work performed. The hourly rates for work performed by Professional shall not exceed those hourly rates set forth at Exhibit B appended hereto. Except as otherwise mutually agreed to by the parties the payments made to Professional shall not initially exceed the amount set forth above. Professional shall submit, in timely fashion, invoices for work performed. The City shall review such invoices and, if they are considered incorrect or untimely, the City shall review the matter with Professional within ten days from receipt of the Professional's bill. 4. Non-Assignability. Both parties recognize that this Agreement is one for personal services and cannot be transferred, assigned, or sublet by either party without prior written consent of the other. Sub-Contracting, if authorized, shall not relieve the Professional of any of the responsibilities or obligations under this Agreement. Professional shall be and remain solely responsible to the City for the acts, errors, omissions or neglect of any subcontractors’ officers, agents and employees, each of whom shall, for this purpose be deemed to be an agent or employee of the Professional to the extent of the subcontract. The City shall not be obligated to pay or be liable for payment of any sums due which may be due to any sub-contractor. 5. Termination of Procurement. The sale contemplated by this Agreement may be canceled by the City prior to acceptance by the City whenever for any reason and in its sole discretion the City shall determine that such cancellation is in its best interests and convenience. 6. Termination of Professional Services. The Professional or the City may terminate the Professional Services component of this Agreement, without specifying the reason therefor, by giving notice, in writing, addressed to the other party, specifying the effective date of the termination. No fees shall be earned after the effective date of the termination. Upon any termination, all finished or unfinished documents, data, studies, surveys, drawings, maps, models, photographs, reports or other material prepared by the Professional pursuant to this Agreement shall become the property of the City. Notwithstanding the above, Professional shall not be relieved of any liability to the City for damages sustained by the City by virtue of any breach of this Agreement by the Professional, and the City may withhold any payments to the Professional for the purposes of set-off until such time as the exact amount of damages due the City from the Professional may be determined. DocuSign Envelope ID: 1F7600FE-1509-4140-9F61-27E0ECC98E6DDocuSign Envelope ID: FFA50AAB-75C3-4B28-9330-CA3C63460FD7 24 Agreement Professional Services Page 2 7. Independent Contractor Status. It is expressly acknowledged and understood by the parties that nothing contained in this agreement shall result in, or be construed as establishing an employment relationship. Professional shall be, and shall perform as, an independent Contractor who agrees to use his or her best efforts to provide the said services on behalf of the City. No agent, employee, or servant of Professional shall be, or shall be deemed to be, the employee, agent or servant of the City. City is interested only in the results obtained under this contract. The manner and means of conducting the work are under the sole control of Professional. None of the benefits provided by City to its employees including, but not limited to, workers' compensation insurance and unemployment insurance, are available from City to the employees, agents or servants of Professional. Professional shall be solely and entirely responsible for its acts and for the acts of Professional's agents, employees, servants and subcontractors during the performance of this contract. Professional shall indemnify City against all liability and loss in connection with, and shall assume full responsibility for payment of all federal, state and local taxes or contributions imposed or required under unemployment insurance, social security and income tax law, with respect to Professional and/or Professional's employees engaged in the performance of the services agreed to herein. 8. Indemnification. Professional agrees to indemnify and hold harmless the City, its officers, employees, insurers, and self-insurance pool, from and against all liability, claims, and demands, on account of injury, loss, or damage, including without limitation claims arising from bodily injury, personal injury, sickness, disease, death, property loss or damage, or any other loss of any kind whatsoever, which arise out of or are in any manner connected with this contract, to the extent and for an amount represented by the degree or percentage such injury, loss, or damage is caused in whole or in part by, or is claimed to be caused in whole or in part by, the wrongful act, omission, error, professional error, mistake, negligence, or other fault of the Professional, any subcontractor of the Professional, or any officer, employee, representative, or agent of the Professional or of any subcontractor of the Professional, or which arises out of any workmen's compensation claim of any employee of the Professional or of any employee of any subcontractor of the Professional. The Professional agrees to investigate, handle, respond to, and to provide defense for and defend against, any such liability, claims or demands at the sole expense of the Professional, or at the option of the City, agrees to pay the City or reimburse the City for the defense costs incurred by the City in connection with, any such liability, claims, or demands. If it is determined by the final judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction that such injury, loss, or damage was caused in whole or in part by the act, omission, or other fault of the City, its officers, or its employees, the City shall reimburse the Professional for the portion of the judgment attributable to such act, omission, or other fault of the City, its officers, or employees. 9. Professional's Insurance. (a) Professional agrees to procure and maintain, at its own expense, a policy or policies of insurance sufficient to insure against all liability, claims, demands, and other obligations assumed by the Professional pursuant to Section 8 above. Such insurance shall be in addition to any other insurance requirements imposed by this contract or by law. The Professional shall not be relieved of any liability, claims, demands, or other obligations assumed pursuant to Section 8 above by reason of its failure to procure or maintain insurance, or by reason of its failure to procure or maintain insurance in sufficient amounts, duration, or types. DocuSign Envelope ID: 1F7600FE-1509-4140-9F61-27E0ECC98E6DDocuSign Envelope ID: FFA50AAB-75C3-4B28-9330-CA3C63460FD7 25 Agreement Professional Services Page 3 (b) Professional shall procure and maintain, and shall cause any subcontractor of the Professional to procure and maintain, the minimum insurance coverages listed below. Such coverages shall be procured and maintained with forms and insurance acceptable to the City. All coverages shall be continuously maintained to cover all liability, claims, demands, and other obligations assumed by the Professional pursuant to Section 8 above. In the case of any claims-made policy, the necessary retroactive dates and extended reporting periods shall be procured to maintain such continuous coverage. (i) Worker's Compensation insurance to cover obligations imposed by applicable laws for any employee engaged in the performance of work under this contract, and Employers' Liability insurance with minimum limits of ONE MILLION DOLLARS ($1,000,000.00) for each accident, ONE MILLION DOLLARS ($1,000,000.00) disease - policy limit, and ONE MILLION DOLLARS ($1,000,000.00) disease - each employee. Evidence of qualified self-insured status may be substituted for the Worker's Compensation requirements of this paragraph. (ii) Commercial General Liability insurance with minimum combined single limits of TWO MILLION DOLLARS ($2,000,000.00) each occurrence and THREE MILLION DOLLARS ($3,000,000.00) aggregate. The policy shall be applicable to all premises and operations. The policy shall include coverage for bodily injury, broad form property damage (including completed operations), personal injury (including coverage for contractual and employee acts), blanket contractual, independent contractors, products, and completed operations. The policy shall include coverage for explosion, collapse, and underground hazards. The policy shall contain a severability of interests provision. (iii) Comprehensive Automobile Liability insurance with minimum combined single limits for bodily injury and property damage of not less than ONE MILLION DOLLARS ($1,000,000.00) each occurrence and ONE MILLION DOLLARS ($1,000,000.00) aggregate with respect to each Professional's owned, hired and non- owned vehicles assigned to or used in performance of the Scope of Work. The policy shall contain a severability of interests provision. If the Professional has no owned automobiles, the requirements of this Section shall be met by each employee of the Professional providing services to the City under this contract. (iv) Professional Liability insurance with the minimum limits of ONE MILLION DOLLARS ($1,000,000) each claim and TWO MILLION DOLLARS ($2,000,000) aggregate. (c) The policy or policies required above shall be endorsed to include the City and the City's officers and employees as additional insureds. Every policy required above shall be primary insurance, and any insurance carried by the City, its officers or employees, or carried by or provided through any insurance pool of the City, shall be excess and not contributory insurance to that provided by Professional. No additional insured endorsement to the policy required above shall contain any exclusion for bodily injury or property DocuSign Envelope ID: 1F7600FE-1509-4140-9F61-27E0ECC98E6DDocuSign Envelope ID: FFA50AAB-75C3-4B28-9330-CA3C63460FD7 26 Agreement Professional Services Page 4 damage arising from completed operations. The Professional shall be solely responsible for any deductible losses under any policy required above. (d) The certificate of insurance provided to the City shall be completed by the Professional's insurance agent as evidence that policies providing the required coverages, conditions, and minimum limits are in full force and effect, and shall be reviewed and approved by the City prior to commencement of the contract. No other form of certificate shall be used. The certificate shall identify this contract and shall provide that the coverages afforded under the policies shall not be canceled, terminated or materially changed until at least thirty (30) days prior written notice has been given to the City. (e) Failure on the part of the Professional to procure or maintain policies providing the required coverages, conditions, and minimum limits shall constitute a material breach of contract upon which City may immediately terminate this contract, or at its discretion City may procure or renew any such policy or any extended reporting period thereto and may pay any and all premiums in connection therewith, and all monies so paid by City shall be repaid by Professional to City upon demand, or City may offset the cost of the premiums against monies due to Professional from City. (f) City reserves the right to request and receive a certified copy of any policy and any endorsement thereto. (g) The parties hereto understand and agree that City is relying on, and does not waive or intend to waive by any provision of this contract, the monetary limitations (presently $350,000.00 per person and $990,000 per occurrence) or any other rights, immunities, and protections provided by the Colorado Governmental Immunity Act, Section 24-10-101 et seq., C.R.S., as from time to time amended, or otherwise available to City, its officers, or its employees. 10. City's Insurance. The parties hereto understand that the City is a member of the Colorado Intergovernmental Risk Sharing Agency (CIRSA) and as such participates in the CIRSA Proper- ty/Casualty Pool. Copies of the CIRSA policies and manual are kept at the City of Aspen Risk Management Department and are available to Professional for inspection during normal business hours. City makes no representations whatsoever with respect to specific coverages offered by CIRSA. City shall provide Professional reasonable notice of any changes in its membership or participation in CIRSA. 11. Completeness of Agreement. It is expressly agreed that this agreement contains the entire undertaking of the parties relevant to the subject matter thereof and there are no verbal or written representations, agreements, warranties or promises pertaining to the project matter thereof not expressly incorporated in this writing. 12. Notice. Any written notices as called for herein may be hand delivered or mailed by certified mail return receipt requested to the respective persons and/or addresses listed above. 13. Non-Discrimination. No discrimination because of race, color, creed, sex, marital status, affectional or sexual orientation, family responsibility, national origin, ancestry, handicap, or religion shall be made in the employment of persons to perform services under this contract. DocuSign Envelope ID: 1F7600FE-1509-4140-9F61-27E0ECC98E6DDocuSign Envelope ID: FFA50AAB-75C3-4B28-9330-CA3C63460FD7 27 Agreement Professional Services Page 5 Professional agrees to meet all of the requirements of City's municipal code, Section 15.04.570, pertaining to non-discrimination in employment. 14. Waiver. The waiver by the City of any term, covenant, or condition hereof shall not operate as a waiver of any subsequent breach of the same or any other term. No term, covenant, or condition of this Agreement can be waived except by the written consent of the City, and forbearance or indulgence by the City in any regard whatsoever shall not constitute a waiver of any term, covenant, or condition to be performed by Professional to which the same may apply and, until complete performance by Professional of said term, covenant or condition, the City shall be entitled to invoke any remedy available to it under this Agreement or by law despite any such forbearance or indulgence. 15. Execution of Agreement by City. This Agreement shall be binding upon all parties hereto and their respective heirs, executors, administrators, successors, and assigns. Notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained herein, this Agreement shall not be binding upon the City unless duly executed by the Mayor of the City of Aspen (or a duly authorized official in his absence) following a Motion or Resolution of the Council of the City of Aspen authorizing the Mayor (or a duly authorized official in his absence) to execute the same. 16. Worker Without Authorization prohibited – CRS §8-17.5-101 & §24-76.5-101 Purpose. During the 2021 Colorado legislative session, the legislature passed House Bill 21- 1075 that amended current CRS §8-17.5-102 (1), (2)(a), (2)(b) introductory portion, and (2)(b)(III) as it relates to the employment of and contracting with a “worker without authorization” which is defined as an individual who is unable to provide evidence that the individual is authorized by the federal government to work in the United States. As amended, the current law prohibits all state agencies and political subdivisions, including the Owner, from knowingly hiring a worker without authorization to perform work under a contract, or to knowingly contract with a Consultant who knowingly hires with a worker without authorization to perform work under the contract. The law also requires that all contracts for services include certain specific language as set forth in the statutes. The following terms and conditions have been designed to comply with the requirements of this new law. Definitions. The following terms are defined by this reference are incorporated herein and in any contract for services entered into with the Owner. 1. "E-verify program" means the electronic employment verification program created in Public Law 208, 104th Congress, as amended, and expanded in Public Law 156, 108th Congress, as amended, that is jointly administered by the United States Department of Homeland Security and the social security Administration, or its successor program. 2. "Department program" means the employment verification program established pursuant to Section 8-17.5-102(5)(c). 3. "Public Contract for Services" means this Agreement. DocuSign Envelope ID: 1F7600FE-1509-4140-9F61-27E0ECC98E6DDocuSign Envelope ID: FFA50AAB-75C3-4B28-9330-CA3C63460FD7 28 Agreement Professional Services Page 6 4. "Services" means the furnishing of labor, time, or effort by a Consultant or a subconsultant not involving the delivery of a specific end product other than reports that are merely incidental to the required performance. 5. “Worker without authorization” means an individual who is unable to provide evidence that the individual is authorized by the federal government to work in the United States By signing this document, Consultant certifies and represents that at this time: 1. Consultant shall confirm the employment eligibility of all employees who are newly hired for employment to perform work under the public contract for services; and 2. Consultant has participated or attempted to participate in either the e-verify program or the department program in order to verify that new employees are not workers without authorization. Consultant hereby confirms that: 1. Consultant shall not knowingly employ or contract with a worker without authorization to perform work under the Public Contract for Services. 2. Consultant shall not enter into a contract with a subconsultant that fails to certify to the Consultant that the subconsultant shall not knowingly employ or contract with a worker without authorization to perform work under the Public Contract for Services. 3. Consultant has confirmed the employment eligibility of all employees who are newly hired for employment to perform work under the public contract for services through participation in either the e-verify program or the department program. 4. Consultant shall not use the either the e-verify program or the department program procedures to undertake pre-employment screening of job applicants while the Public Contract for Services is being performed. If Consultant obtains actual knowledge that a subconsultant performing work under the Public Contract for Services knowingly employs or contracts with a worker without authorization, Consultant shall: 1. Notify such subconsultant and the Owner within three days that Consultant has actual knowledge that the subconsultant is employing or subcontracting with a worker without authorization: and 2. Terminate the subcontract with the subconsultant if within three days of receiving the notice required pursuant to this section the subconsultant does not stop employing or contracting with the worker without authorization; except that Consultant shall not terminate the Public Contract for Services with the subconsultant if during such three days the subconsultant provides information to establish that the subconsultant has not knowingly employed or contracted with a worker without authorization. DocuSign Envelope ID: 1F7600FE-1509-4140-9F61-27E0ECC98E6DDocuSign Envelope ID: FFA50AAB-75C3-4B28-9330-CA3C63460FD7 29 Agreement Professional Services Page 7 Consultant shall comply with any reasonable request by the Colorado Department of Labor and Employment made in the course of an investigation that the Colorado Department of Labor and Employment undertakes or is undertaking pursuant to the authority established in Subsection 8- 17.5-102 (5), C.R.S. If Consultant violates any provision of the Public Contract for Services pertaining to the duties imposed by Subsection 8-17.5-102, C.R.S. the Owner may terminate this Agreement. If this Agreement is so terminated, Consultant shall be liable for actual damages to the Owner arising out of Consultant’s violation of Subsection 8-17.5-102, C.R.S. It is agreed that neither this agreement nor any of its terms, provisions, conditions, representations or covenants can be modified, changed, terminated or amended, waived, superseded or extended except by appropriate written instrument fully executed by the parties. If any of the provisions of this agreement shall be held invalid, illegal or unenforceable it shall not affect or impair the validity, legality or enforceability of any other provision. 17. Warranties Against Contingent Fees, Gratuities, Kickbacks and Conflicts of Interest. (a) Professional warrants that no person or selling agency has been employed or retained to solicit or secure this Contract upon an agreement or understanding for a commission, percentage, brokerage, or contingent fee, excepting bona fide employees or bona fide established commercial or selling agencies maintained by the Professional for the purpose of securing business. (b) Professional agrees not to give any employee of the City a gratuity or any offer of employment in connection with any decision, approval, disapproval, recommendation, preparation of any part of a program requirement or a purchase request, influencing the content of any specification or procurement standard, rendering advice, investigation, auditing, or in any other advisory capacity in any proceeding or application, request for ruling, determination, claim or controversy, or other particular matter, pertaining to this Agreement, or to any solicitation or proposal therefore. (c) Professional represents that no official, officer, employee or representative of the City during the term of this Agreement has or one (1) year thereafter shall have any interest, direct or indirect, in this Agreement or the proceeds thereof, except those that may have been disclosed at the time City Council approved the execution of this Agreement. (d) In addition to other remedies it may have for breach of the prohibitions against contingent fees, gratuities, kickbacks and conflict of interest, the City shall have the right to: 1. Cancel this Purchase Agreement without any liability by the City; 2. Debar or suspend the offending parties from being a Professional, contractor or subcontractor under City contracts; 3. Deduct from the contract price or consideration, or otherwise recover, the value of anything transferred or received by the Professional; and DocuSign Envelope ID: 1F7600FE-1509-4140-9F61-27E0ECC98E6DDocuSign Envelope ID: FFA50AAB-75C3-4B28-9330-CA3C63460FD7 30 Agreement Professional Services Page 8 4. Recover such value from the offending parties. 18. Fund Availability. Financial obligations of the City payable after the current fiscal year are contingent upon funds for that purpose being appropriated, budgeted and otherwise made available. If this Agreement contemplates the City utilizing state or federal funds to meet its obligations herein, this Agreement shall be contingent upon the availability of those funds for payment pursuant to the terms of this Agreement. 19. General Terms. (a) It is agreed that neither this Agreement nor any of its terms, provisions, conditions, representations or covenants can be modified, changed, terminated or amended, waived, superseded or extended except by appropriate written instrument fully executed by the parties. (b) If any of the provisions of this Agreement shall be held invalid, illegal or unenforceable it shall not affect or impair the validity, legality or enforceability of any other provision. (c) The parties acknowledge and understand that there are no conditions or limitations to this understanding except those as contained herein at the time of the execution hereof and that after execution no alteration, change or modification shall be made except upon a writing signed by the parties. (d) This Agreement shall be governed by the laws of the State of Colorado as from time to time in effect. Venue is agreed to be exclusively in the courts of Pitkin County, Colorado. 20. Electronic Signatures and Electronic Records This Agreement and any amendments hereto may be executed in several counterparts, each of which shall be deemed an original, and all of which together shall constitute one agreement binding on the Parties, notwithstanding the possible event that all Parties may not have signed the same counterpart. Furthermore, each Party consents to the use of electronic signatures by either Party. The Scope of Work, and any other documents requiring a signature hereunder, may be signed electronically in the manner agreed to by the Parties. The Parties agree not to deny the legal effect or enforceability of the Agreement solely because it is in electronic form or because an electronic record was used in its formation. The Parties agree not to object to the admissibility of the Agreement in the form of an electronic record, or a paper copy of an electronic documents, or a paper copy of a document bearing an electronic signature, on the grounds that it is an electronic record or electronic signature or that it is not in its original form or is not an original. 20. Successors and Assigns. This Agreement and all of the covenants hereof shall inure to the benefit of and be binding upon the City and the Professional respectively and their agents, representatives, employee, successors, assigns and legal representatives. Neither the City nor the Professional shall have the right to assign, transfer or sublet its interest or obligations hereunder without the written consent of the other party. DocuSign Envelope ID: 1F7600FE-1509-4140-9F61-27E0ECC98E6DDocuSign Envelope ID: FFA50AAB-75C3-4B28-9330-CA3C63460FD7 31 Agreement Professional Services Page 9 21. Third Parties. This Agreement does not and shall not be deemed or construed to confer upon or grant to any third party or parties, except to parties to whom Professional or City may assign this Agreement in accordance with the specific written permission, any right to claim damages or to bring any suit, action or other proceeding against either the City or Professional because of any breach hereof or because of any of the terms, covenants, agreements or conditions herein contained. 22. Attorney’s Fees. In the event that legal action is necessary to enforce any of the provisions of this Agreement, the prevailing party shall be entitled to its costs and reasonable attorney’s fees. 23. Waiver of Presumption. This Agreement was negotiated and reviewed through the mutual efforts of the parties hereto and the parties agree that no construction shall be made or presumption shall arise for or against either party based on any alleged unequal status of the parties in the negotiation, review or drafting of the Agreement. 24. Certification Regarding Debarment, Suspension, Ineligibility, and Voluntary Exclusion. Professional certifies, by acceptance of this Agreement, that neither it nor its principals is presently debarred, suspended, proposed for debarment, declared ineligible or voluntarily excluded from participation in any transaction with a Federal or State department or agency. It further certifies that prior to submitting its Bid that it did include this clause without modification in all lower tier transactions, solicitations, proposals, contracts and subcontracts. In the event that Professional or any lower tier participant was unable to certify to the statement, an explanation was attached to the Bid and was determined by the City to be satisfactory to the City. 25. Integration and Modification. This written Agreement along with all Contract Documents shall constitute the contract between the parties and supersedes or incorporates any prior written and oral agreements of the parties. In addition, Professional understands that no City official or employee, other than the Mayor and City Council acting as a body at a council meeting, has authority to enter into an Agreement or to modify the terms of the Agreement on behalf of the City. Any such Agreement or modification to this Agreement must be in writing and be executed by the parties hereto. 26. Authorized Representative. The undersigned representative of Professional, as an inducement to the City to execute this Agreement, represents that he/she is an authorized representative of Professional for the purposes of executing this Agreement and that he/she has full and complete authority to enter into this Agreement for the terms and conditions specified herein. IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties hereto have executed, or caused to be executed by their duly authorized officials, this Agreement of which shall be deemed an original on the date first written above. CITY OF ASPEN, COLORADO: PROFESSIONAL: ________________________________ ______________________________ [Signature] [Signature] DocuSign Envelope ID: 1F7600FE-1509-4140-9F61-27E0ECC98E6DDocuSign Envelope ID: FFA50AAB-75C3-4B28-9330-CA3C63460FD7 32 Agreement Professional Services Page 10 By: _____________________________ By: _____________________________ [Name] [Name] Title: ____________________________ Title: ____________________________ Date: ___________________ Date: ___________________ Approve as to Form: _____________________ City Attorney General Conditions and Special Conditions can be found on City of Aspen Website. https://www.cityofaspen.com/497/Purchasing DocuSign Envelope ID: 1F7600FE-1509-4140-9F61-27E0ECC98E6D Sarah Broughton 12/2/2021 | 2:00:44 PM PST Principal DocuSign Envelope ID: FFA50AAB-75C3-4B28-9330-CA3C63460FD7 12/10/2021 | 4:10:39 PM MST 33 Agreement Professional Services Page 11 EXHIBIT A PROFESSIONAL SERVICES AGREEMENT DocuSign Envelope ID: 1F7600FE-1509-4140-9F61-27E0ECC98E6DDocuSign Envelope ID: FFA50AAB-75C3-4B28-9330-CA3C63460FD7 34 Agreement Professional Services Page 12 DocuSign Envelope ID: 1F7600FE-1509-4140-9F61-27E0ECC98E6DDocuSign Envelope ID: FFA50AAB-75C3-4B28-9330-CA3C63460FD7 35 Agreement Professional Services Page 13 EXHIBIT B PROFESSIONAL SERVICES AGREEMENT Fee Schedule DocuSign Envelope ID: 1F7600FE-1509-4140-9F61-27E0ECC98E6DDocuSign Envelope ID: FFA50AAB-75C3-4B28-9330-CA3C63460FD7 36 MEMORANDUM TO:Mayor and City Council FROM:Lisa Rigsby Peterson, Executive Director Wheeler Opera House THROUGH:Diane Foster, Assistant City Manager MEMO DATE:February 2, 2022 MEETING DATE:February 8, 2022 RE:Resolution #017, Series of 2022 REQUEST OF COUNCIL: Staff requests approval of Resolution #017, Series of 2022, directing the City Manager to sign the contract between the City of Aspen and Chimichanga Productions, Inc. F/S/O Jim Gaffigan. SUMMARY AND BACKGROUND: The City’s procurement process requires Council approval of all contracts with a value of $50,000 or higher. The value of the contract for the services of Jim Gaffigan, who will appear at the Wheeler for two sold-out performances on February 19, 2022, is $66,850. FINANCIAL IMPACTS: The contractual fee for Jim Gaffigan’s two performances totals $60,000. In addition to this guarantee, there are additional travel buyout costs of $2,500, a lodging buyout of $3,100, a $1,000 fee for the opening comedian and two per diems totaling $250. These out the door cost total the $66,850 and do not include any additional absorbed or avoided costs that are noted in the contract details incurred by the Wheeler, such as advertising, stagehands, credit card fees, etc. Anticipated ticket sales for the two performances total $70,128 and are expected to fully offset the cost of the two performances. RECOMMENDATIONS: Staff recommends that City Council approve Resolution #017, Series of 2022. CITY MANAGER COMMENTS: 37 RESOLUTION #017 (Series of 2022) A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF ASPEN, COLORADO, APPROVING A CONTRACT BETWEEN THE CITY OF ASPEN AND CHIMICHANGA PRODUCTIONS, INC. F/S/O JIM GAFFIGAN, AUTHORIZING THE CITY MANAGER TO EXECUTE SAID CONTRACT ON BEHALF OF THE CITY OF ASPEN, COLORADO. WHEREAS, there has been submitted to the City Council a contract between the City of Aspen and Chimichanga Productions, Inc. F/S/O Jim Gaffigan, a true and accurate copy of which is attached hereto as Exhibit “A”; NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF ASPEN, COLORADO, That the City Council of the City of Aspen hereby approves that Contract for $66,850 between the City of Aspen and Chimichanga Productions, Inc. F/S/O Jim Gaffigan, a copy of which is attached hereto and incorporated herein, and does hereby authorize the City Manager to execute said agreement on behalf of the City of Aspen. INTRODUCED, READ AND ADOPTED by the City Council of the City of Aspen on the 8 th day of February 2022. Torre, Mayor I, Nicole Henning, duly appointed and acting City Clerk do certify that the foregoing is a true and accurate copy of that resolution adopted by the City Council of the City of Aspen, Colorado, at a meeting held, ___________2022. Nicole Henning, City Clerk 38 MEMORANDUM TO: Mayor Torre and City Council FROM: Amy Simon, Planning Director THRU: Phillip Supino, Community Development Director RE: Growth Management Allotment Carry-Forward Review Resolution #018, Series of 2022 DATE: February 8, 2022 __________________________________________________________________________ SUMMARY: The purpose of this memo is review of the unused growth allotments from 2021 and a Council decision on the amount to carry-forward to the 2022 development year. The Growth Management Quota System (GMQS) outlined in LUC Section 26.470 provides specific annual allotments for various development types in the City. The annual available allotment for each development type is a combination of the standard annual allotment provided in GMQS and any carry-forward allotment from the previous year. The City’s Land Use Code specifies the annual allotments in various land use categories as follows: Development Type Annual Allotment Residential — Free-Market 18 new units Commercial 33,300 additional net leasable square feet Residential — Affordable Housing No annual limit Lodging 112 additional pillows Essential public facility No annual limit BACKGROUND: Growth allotments granted in 2021 are summarized in Exhibit A. The 2021 total development allotments included no carry-forward from 2020. The allotments received or applied for in 2021 included no free-market residential allotments, no Commercial Net Leasable and four lodge pillows. Four affordable housing units and 866 square feet of Essential Public Facility space were approved, but there is no annual limit, or cap, on these categories. 2022 annual allotment + discretionary 2021 carry- forward allotment = 2022 total development allotments 39 Page 2 of 3 According to Section 26.470.120.B of the Land Use Code, “The City Council, at its first regular meeting of the growth management year, shall review the prior year’s growth summary, consider a recommendation from the Community Development Director, and shall, via adoption of a resolution, establish the number of unused and unclaimed allotments to be carried forward and added to the annual allotment. There is no limit, other than that implemented by the City Council, on the amount of potential growth that may be carried forward to the next year.” In 2022, City Council may carry-forward from 2021 up to 18 additional free-market residential allotments, 33,300 square feet of additional commercial space, and 108 additional lodging pillows. The Land Use Code provides criteria for Council to consider in determining whether to carry forward GMQS allotments. The City Council may carry forward any portion of the previous year's unused allotment in any category, including all or none. Land Use Code 26.470.120.B states: “The City Council shall consider the following criteria in determining the allotments to be carried forward: 1. The community's growth rate over the preceding five-year period. 2. The ability of the community to absorb the growth that could result from a proposed development utilizing accumulated allotments, including issues of scale, infrastructure capacity, construction impacts and community character. 3. The expected impact from approved developments that have obtained allotments, but that have not yet been built.” The specific code language, including the above criteria, can be found in Exhibit B. A summary of growth over the last decade is provided as Exhibit C. Any allotments carried forward into the 2022 development year, in addition to the annual allotments prescribed by the Land Use Code, could be used by development in each category. Considering the above criteria, and consistent with Council direction for the past 7 years, staff recommends that none of the remaining 2021 GMQS allotments be carried forward to 2021. During Council discussions in 2020 and 2021, concerns have been raised about the effectiveness of the allotments system relative to the original intent of the Growth Management Quota System. At worksessions in February and April 2021, Council indicated support for meaningful changes to the program. A summary of the direction given to staff is attached as Exhibit D. Council held additional discussions about potential Growth Management code amendments, particularly around affordable housing mitigation, in Fall 2021; and in December 2021 Council enacted a moratorium on certain types of residential development in order to improve or add regulations to achieve community goals. Taking action on the 2021 Growth Management allotments will not prevent future Council action on the GMQS regulations. RECOMMENDATION: Staff recommends City Council approve Resolution #018, Series of 2022, carrying-forward none of the unused 2021 growth management allotments. RECOMMENDED MOTION: “I move to approve Resolution #018, Series of 2022.” 40 Page 3 of 3 ATTACHMENTS: Resolution #018, Series 2022 Exhibit A – Summary of 2021 growth management allotments Exhibit B – GMQS Carry Forward Code Language and Review Criteria Exhibit C – Growth in Aspen over the past decade Exhibit D – Summary of April 2021 Council Worksession on Growth Management 41 Resolution #018, Series 2022 Page 1 of 1 RESOLUTION #018 SERIES OF 2022 A RESOLUTION OF THE ASPEN CITY COUNCIL ESTABLISHING THE “CARRY- FORWARD” GROWTH MANAGEMENT ALLOTMENT FROM 2021 TO 2022 WHEREAS, pursuant to City of Aspen Land Use Code Section 26.470.120, the City Council shall review the prior year's growth summary, consider a recommendation from the Community Development Director, and shall, via adoption of a resolution, establish the number of unused and unclaimed allotments to be carried forward and added to the annual allotment; and, WHEREAS, pursuant to said sections and considering the following criteria, the Community Development Director has provided a recommendation to carry-forward none of the unused growth management allotments from 2021: 1. The community's growth rate over the preceding five-year period. 2. The ability of the community to absorb the growth that could result from a proposed development utilizing accumulated allotments, including issues of scale, infrastructure capacity, construction impacts and community character. 3. The expected impact from approved developments that have obtained allotments, but that have not yet been built; and WHEREAS, on February 8, 2022 the City Council considered the recommendation by the Community Development Director, and the above criteria and approved Resolution #018, Series of 2022, by a ___ to ___ (__ to __) vote; and, WHEREAS, the City Council finds that the decision to carry forward none of the unused growth allotments from 2021 meets or exceeds all applicable standards and is consistent with the goals and elements of the Aspen Area Community Plan; and, WHEREAS, the City Council finds that this Resolution furthers and is necessary for the promotion of public health, safety, and welfare. NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF ASPEN, COLORADO: That the City Council carries forward none of the unused growth management allotments from 2021 to be available in 2022. RESOLVED, APPROVED, AND ADOPTED FINALLY this 8th day of February, 2022. Approved as to form: Approved as to content: _______________________________ _______________________________ James R. True, City Attorney Torre, Mayor Attest: _________________________ Nicole Henning, City Clerk 42 City of Aspen Exhibit A - 2021 Annual Allotments Growth Management Quota System - Annual Allotments 2021 Free-Market Residential Allotments Commercial (square feet net leasable) Lodge (pillows) Affordable Housing Units* Essential Public Facilities (square feet)* Ordinance/ ResolutionJan. 2021 thru Dec. 2021 Annual Allotment 18 33,300 112 N/A N/A Carry-Forward from previous year 0 0 0 N/A N/A Total Available for Year 18 33,300 112 N/A N/A LAND USE CASES 1020 E. Cooper Avenue 4 HPC Reso #15, Series 2021 100 Puppy Smith Street (ACES)866 Ordinance #16, Series 2021 355 S. Monarch (Limelight)4 P&Z Reso #5, Series 2021 Remaining Allotments 18 33,300 108 N/A N/A Source: City of Aspen Community Development Department * Note: Affordable Housing Units and Essential Public Facilities are tracked, but are not subject to code prescribed allotment caps. 43 Exhibit B Growth Management Carry Forward Criteria 26.470.120.B, Yearly Allotment Carry-Forward Procedure: “The City Council may carry forward any portion of the previous year's unused allotment, including all or none. The City Council shall consider the following criteria in determining the allotments to be carried forward:” 1. The community's growth rate over the preceding five-year period. Staff Response: The development counted against Growth Management allotments has remained fairly consistent over the past few years, though very far below the caps anticipated to generate a 2% growth rate (see Exhibit C.) With the 2015-2016 land use moratorium, there was a slight decrease in the number of applications for commercial projects. In 2017, there were a number of affordable housing projects applied for and approved. Though not subject to a cap, Essential Public Facilities have been the largest area of expansion in the past five years, including approvals for St. Mary’s Church, New City Hall, Aspen Institute, and ACEs. City Council has chosen to not roll over leftover allotments from one year to the next since 2014. Staff finds the number of yearly allotments available to be more than sufficient for the current rate of requests and approvals. In fact, staff and Council have discussed the ineffectiveness of the system in tracking growth and are engaged in revisions. 2. The ability of the community to absorb the growth that could result from a proposed development utilizing accumulated allotments, including issues of scale, infrastructure capacity, construction impacts and community character. Staff Response: Prior to the approval of growth management allotments by Council, P&Z or HPC, staff is required to review the availability of public infrastructure and scale of the development proposed. A construction management plan is created and implemented for each project that is approved. Based on current data, staff believes there is adequate infrastructure to accommodate new development within the code-prescribed limits. 3. The expected impact from approved developments that have obtained allotments, but that have not yet been built. Staff Response: The commercial net leasable space for Lift One Lodge was accounted for in 2015, and the project was amended in 2018 to include an additional free-market residential allotment, 20 lodge pillows and 1 affordable housing unit, all of which were accounted for in 2018. Given the number of projects in the pipeline, including Lift One Lodge, Gorsuch Haus, as well as Hotel Aspen, Molly Gibson, Aspen Club, and City Affordable Housing Projects, and the fact that the annual allotments are typically being 44 Exhibit B Growth Management Carry Forward Criteria underutilized, staff does not recommend rolling over any unused 2021 Growth Management allotments. 45 Exhibit C Growth over 5-10 years Year F M Residential units Commercial square feet Lodging Pillows Affordable Housing U nits Essential Public Facility s quare feet GMQS Allotments allowed per year *established in 2008 18 33,300 112 No limit No limit Utilized GMQS Allotments 2017 0 2 31 9 6 60 9,194 2018 1 4,471 20 9 13,000 2019 1 4,779 0 0 5,372 2020 2 3,056 0 7 8,319 2021 0 0 4 4 866 Total GMQS A llotments and Percentage U tilized 2017 -2021 4 of 108 3.7 % 12,537 of 199,800 6.3 % 114 of 672 17% 80 N/A 36,751 N/A Year Aspen’s Population (U.S. Census Bureau) 2010 6,658 2020 7,004 Total change 2010 -2020 +346/5.2% Average Annual Growth Rate 201 0 - 2020 +0.52% 46 1 FOLLOW-UP MEMORANDUM CITY COUNCIL WORK SESSION MEETING DATE: April 26, 2021 (continued from 2/22/21) FOLLOW-UP MEMO DATE: May 19, 2021 AGENDA TOPIC: Growth Management Quota System and Affordable Housing PRESENTED BY: Ben Anderson, Community Development COUNCIL MEMBERS PRESENT: All five members were present. _______________________________________________________________________ WORK SESSION DISCUSSION SUMMARY: Staff presented Council with information related to GMQS, particularly the allotment system and affordable housing mitigation. Staff presented the premise that aspects of the GMQS, with origins dating back to the mid-1970’s, are no longer responding to the current development trends as designed in mitigating the real and perceived impacts of growth. 1. Topic: Our current GMQS toolkit does not have the right tools to respond to the trends driving Aspen’s current and future development trends. Council majority consensus. Council agreed with this assertion. 2. Topic: Because affordable housing mitigation is so directly tied to the development types identified within the GMQS allotment system, the provision of affordable housing is not commensurate with real and perceived impacts of growth. Council majority consensus. Council agreed with this assertion. 3. Topic: What should be the appropriate staff response to these issues? Council majority consensus. Council agreed that the status quo was not an acceptable condition moving forward and gave direction to staff to study further, evaluate, and propose responses. Council also agreed that a range of responses were possible: • Targeted policy and code responses to specific development types. • Modifying the current allotment system in response to these issues. • Rethink direct tie between growth and affordable housing mitigation. • A full re-evaluation of GMQS as it relates to current and future “growth” trends. 47 2 NEXT STEPS: Council and staff agreed that this is an expansive set of topics and that it is important to prioritize and be as specific as possible in directing our efforts and proposed responses. Council offered support for additional staffing and financial resources needed to complete this work in addition to ComDev’s existing work plan and services. 1. Summer 2021 • Proposed changes to single family and duplex redevelopment AH mitigation requirements. • Proposed changes to inclusion of subgrade areas for residential AH mitigation requirements. • Continued policy discussion related to Multi-family Replacement requirements in the GMQS. Staff requests a Work Session with Council in July 2021 to provide an update on staff findings related to Single Family residential mitigation and multi-family replacement policies. 2. Early Fall 2021 • Evaluation of opportunities within Part 700 (Zone Districts) of the LUC for AH opportunities and in pursuit of other community goals. • Discussions with Council about desire to update AACP in 2022 and the role of the AACP in shaping GMQS response. • Evaluation of short-term rentals in relationship to GMQS concerns and AH mitigation requirements. • Continued evaluation of AH Credits program in relationship to overall GMQS/AH mitigation conversation – and for opportunities for continued improvements to the program. • Following discussions with interested stakeholders and further staff evaluation, proposed policy response strategies to GMQS issues discussed above. 48 1 REGULAR MEETING ASPEN CITY COUNCIL JANUARY 11, 2022 At 5:00 p.m. Mayor Torre called the regular meeting to order with Councilors Doyle, Hauenstein, Richards, and Mesirow in attendance via WebEx. SCHEDULED PUBLIC APPEARANCES: Mayor Torre introduced the swearing in of officer Sarah Freihon. Police Chief Bill Linn introduced Ms. Freihon and said she is from southern California originally and started as an intern for the Aspen Police Department in 2019 and has now joined our ranks as a police officer. Mayor Torre proceeded to swear her in. PUBLIC COMMENT: None. COUNCIL COMMENTS: Councilor Doyle said an article in the New York Times talked about 2021 being Earth’s 5 th hottest year on record. He is pleased to be a part of this council that can help educate our general public that there are things we can do. Councilor Richards wished everyone a happy new year. She spoke about Omnicron and is hoping the surge will come and go quickly. Get boosted as it prevents the severity of the disease. There are continuing to be economic struggles for members of our community because of the pandemic. The Food Banks are accepting donations. She is hoping for the best in 2022. Councilor Hauenstein is hoping that 2022 is the year we can drive the wooden stake through COVID 19. He spoke about the ideals of the Community Plan and wishes all wellbeing and good health. In the words of Hill Street Blues, “Be careful out there”. Councilor Mesirow wished everyone a happy new year. He said 2021 has been very challenging and scary in many ways. He revealed where our biggest opportunities are. We are rising up to the challenge and excited for 2022. Mayor Torre wished everyone a happy new year. Welcome back. He would like to nod towards mental health awareness in the community. He mentioned Aspen Strong, Mind Springs, the crisis hotline Hope Center 925-5858. It’s ok to not feel ok. Reach out. The 75th anniversary is today for the Aspen Skiing Company. There will be a ski parade with a small ceremony. He read a proclamation and made some additional comments regarding sustainability. Congrats to ski co and all of Aspen. This Friday at the Wheeler is Aspen History 101 put on by the Aspen Historical Society. It’s a wonderful show. Last thing is that he received his booster shot today. CITY MANAGER COMMENTS: City Manager, Sarah Ott, mentioned an amendment to an emergency order. She asked that they don’t get caught up in the language. We are taking a look at programming at the Wheeler for the remainder of the month to make smart decisions. We are looking at going to a vaccination requirement or testing requirement to use the golf simulator. Council had asked that staff move forward with a mental health care campaign for launch during the winter high season. We are in final stages of preparation and there is about $10,000 to purchase ad space and she would like to charge this to council’s budget. 49 2 REGULAR MEETING ASPEN CITY COUNCIL JANUARY 11, 2022 Councilor Richards asked at what point would the 10,000 inhibit council’s travel for CML, etc. Ms. Ott said council’s budget has a discretionary line item for things like this. She has asked Shannon to do a recap of council’s 2021 travel budget and she will find out if this will require a supplemental. Ms. Richards said she supports using the funds to move the mental health initiative forward. Ms. Ott said Aspen Strong is trying to keep a calendar of events. The long-range calendar is full for council. The affordable housing strategic update will be moved to February 8th. Ms. Ott also noted that staff would be putting some work session items on the council agenda’s under action items so the meetings are more evenly distributed. BOARD REPORTS: Councilor Richards said the housing board had its first meeting last week and they are continuing to work through issues on seller’s standards and pilot programs. Mayor Torre had CASTand spoke about modular construction in Colorado. He has the Board of Health coming up and wants to get some opinions first. He has the Wheeler board also coming up. CONSENT CALENDAR: Councilor Hauenstein said he wants to comment on Resolution #003. It’s fantastic work by Tara Nelson. And on #007, the tank needs to be drained every year and he’s curious if the water can be used to make snow for the high school track. Mayor Torre pulled #001. Resolution #007, Series of 2022 – Highlands Water Tank Inspection, Design, Build, and Maintenance Services. Tyler Christoff and Justin Foreman said the timing of the draining of the tank does not coincide with Nordic skiing. We typically address this in the summertime. Resolution #003, Series of 2022 – 2022 Regional State and Federal Policy Agenda. Councilor Hauenstein said this is a wonderful work product and he wants to draw the public’s attention to this. It is available on the city’s website. Councilor Mesirow asked Tara Nelson to screen share and show the document to the public. Councilor Mesirow said this work is seen and it’s appreciated and really cool. Councilor Richards motioned to approve the consent calendar. Mayor Torre said thank you to Ms. Nelson, really great job. Resolution #001, Series of 2022 – Designating the Public Place for Posting Notices of Public Meetings. Mayor Torre said a member of the public has been asking about posting procedures. On this resolution the website is the only requirement. Should we think about utilizing the newspapers again? We used to post there. He wants to post a sheet of paper on the 3rd floor. Councilor Richardssupports posting it in a physical location. She wants more information about publishing in the newspaper. She said there is a question of which paper are you favoring and there are cost issues. City Attorney, James R. True, said there are two issues. This resolution covers the legal requirements. You can adopt as is and council can direct the clerk and other bodies to post physically at a location at city hall through a window or other device. It’s up to council to do that. As for posting in the newspaper, there were issues with costs and timing of being able to get it in there on time for publication. 50 3 REGULAR MEETING ASPEN CITY COUNCIL JANUARY 11, 2022 Councilor Hauenstein said he is fine to post at the clerk’s office. Councilor Richards motioned to approve the consent calendar as presented; Councilor Mesirow seconded. Roll call vote: Doyle, yes; Hauenstein, yes; Mesirow, yes; Richards, yes; Torre, yes. 5-0, motion carried. ACTION ITEMS: Update to Emergency Administrative Order 01-21 – Lisa Rigsby Peterson – She said they will now require a same day negative test or a vaccination card, and we do have the mask requirement. The cost for same day testing is $25.00 a person. They can also limit how many people they let in for each performance. With these changes, we can continue to stay open. It’s good for the community. Councilor Richards thanked Lisa. She supports the requests, and she would like to see us be a vaccination only entry. More and more places are doing this. Ms. Ott said there is draft motion language in the memo. Mayor Torre motioned to update the safety measures at the Wheeler to require a proof of vaccination or negative covid test; Councilor Doyle seconded. Councilor Mesirow is supportive of this but is concerned about the cost of a same day test. If those aren’t available, what happens and is that fair. Councilor Mesirow requested a five-minute break and they reconvened at 6:20 p.m. Moratorium – Council Goals and Priorities – Phillip Supino and Ben Anderson presented. Council continued to have a robust conversation in order to arrive at an agreement on problem statements, identification of goals and priorities and consensus on what will define a successful outcome to Ordinance #27, Series of 2021. Councilor Richards motioned to adjourn; Councilor Mesirow seconded. Roll call vote: Doyle, yes; Hauenstein, yes; Mesirow, yes; Richards, yes; Torre, yes. 5-0, motion carried. ______________________________ City Clerk, Nicole Henning 51 1 REGULAR MEETING ASPEN CITY COUNCIL JANUARY 25, 2022 At 5:00 p.m. Mayor Torre called the regular meeting to order with Councilors Doyle, Hauenstein Mesirow and Richards joining via WebEx. CITIZEN COMMENTS: Robert Fryklund – Mr. Fryklund said he lives at 795 Cemetery Lane and that he needs guidance regarding equal protection to taxpayers to access city facilities and more specifically, the golf course. He’s been a member of this community since the late 90’s. This year, the qualifications and rules have changed for the golf course because he doesn’t have a CO drivers license. He would like suggestions on how he can be put on the “locals list” and gain equal status and rights as a taxpayer. Mayor Torre asked him to send an email with his information and they will take it from there. Andrea Bryan – Ms. Bryan said her comments are directed to the Board of Health and Pitkin County, but she is speaking tonight at council because they are leaders of our community. She wants a return to normal. She noted that people are shoulder to shoulder in packed bars and restaurants, but their children are stuck 2020 still masked non-stop. The restrictions on the kids don’t make sense anymore. Morgan Warth – Ms. Warth said she’s a mental health therapist in the valley. She said the Hope Center reported a 130% increase in crisis evaluations for kids eleven and under. This is pretty severe. There has been a 64% increase for adolescents 12-18, and a 28% increase for adults. These are staggering statistics, and our families are in crisis. There are speech delays in kids due to masks. She’s suggesting a risk benefit analysis be done. Anna Zane – Ms. Zane thanked city council for this public forum. She said she’s a mom and she’s calling for these mask restrictions to end for their children. We must now deescalate the fear culture. Day in and out our children are the ones who bear the burden of these restrictions. The children are depressed and scared and continuing to be expected to be resilient. Our children are not ok, and we need a return to normal. She gave some personal anecdotes. We need your help and feel like we have no where else to turn. Jill Edinger – Ms. Edinger said she now lives in Garfield County, and she is here because many other parents are too scared to speak out. She has a lot of grit and stamina, but she is at her breaking point as a parent. She’s falling apart at the seams because of the pressure of all the COVID policies. She constantly has a child home since October because of constant quarantines. The kids feel the stress and she is feeling despair. This isn’t sustainable and we are going to have a huge mental health crisis so please consider reasonable policy changes. Summer Berg – Ms. Berg is also a parent and echoes what other people have said. Government needs to start being more flexible now. It’s time for the tables to turn and let families make the best decisions for themselves. It is affecting all of our kids. She’s asking that they start to back off the stringent policies and put the matters back into families’ hands. Julia Russo – Ms. Russo is a parent and back in August, she wrote a petition asking for the mask mandate be amended to be optional for children. Now she’s taking her child down valley for daycare because he doesn’t have to wear a mask. She said it’s best to let the parents decide what is best for their children at this point. 52 2 REGULAR MEETING ASPEN CITY COUNCIL JANUARY 25, 2022 Alyssa Schmitz – Ms. Schmitz is a mom of three kids. Her kids have been in and out of school due to COVID restrictions that don’t seem to follow logic. She said she knows that council is doing all they can to protect the community. She said to consider the impacts that the continued restrictions are having on children and on the parents. It’s time to get back to normal. Allison Mengelsen – Ms. Mengelsen said she is a mother of four and a resident of Pitkin County. Now that we are coming down from the new variant, the masks are unnecessary in the preschool and elementary classrooms. Our kids are damaged from not seeing smiles or emotions from their friends or teachers. There are a lot of kids testing for speech errors and are having trouble producing sounds and letters which also affects their reading development. Kristen Strope – Ms. Strope said she’s in favor of removing the masks in the schools. She has two kids, and they live in Eagle County. Her kid got COVID from her. He’s taught in school that he needs to wear this mask because he’s spreading this deadly disease. The vaccine isn’t helping, and we need to stop the fear tactic. Anna Mari – Ms. Mari lives in Aspen, and she’s known as Auntie Anna. She has seen that kids are acting out and behaving badly and biting teachers. The teachers have become enforcers and they do not want to be punishing these kids for not wearing masks. They are having to be the police. She has seen changes for the worse with these kids since the pandemic started. The kids are having anxiety at school now and it didn’t used to be that way. We, as adults, shouldn’t be playing or having fun if we are still enforcing the rules with our kids. Julia DeBacker –Ms. DeBacker said she is a mother of six in Aspen. It’s been beyond tough. She just wants them to remember their first time in Aspen and the wow, the beauty. For her kids, it’s not Aspen anymore. Her kids aren’t happy. The kids just want to get back to their Aspen and have fun like they used to. There’s been many studies of facial recognition in children and children who don’t have this, have many more problems. She knows that city council can’t change these rules, but she knows their voice is louder than hers. Sean Sunkel – Mr. Sunkel said he appreciates council’s influence. He said he’s confused by people being able to walk into a restaurant and take their mask off once seated, but their children not being able to walk into their classroom and remove their mask. He works for a doctor who said these masks are a joke. Kelly McNicholas Kury – Ms. Kury said it has been a really hard couple of works. She has two kids and there has been a lot of stress with having even stricter measures recently. She’s not here to advocate for any mask relief in the schools because she believes the masks have been an effective tool. There is another voice out there. She understands the burden that has been put on families and there’s so much more we could be doing together to support families to reduce the stress. Mike Jenkins – He lives in El Jebel and had a senior at Basalt High School this past year. He said the cloth masks are not effective and that was a fact put out by the CDC. The omicron variant is like a cold for most people. Many other cities are dropping their health orders and consider the science on both sides of the argument. He said he no longer comes up to Aspen because of the mask mandates. Anna Mari noted that Felicia Aldrich is very much against this also, but is having trouble unmuting herself. 53 3 REGULAR MEETING ASPEN CITY COUNCIL JANUARY 25, 2022 Carrie Downs – Ms. Downs said she lives in Carbondale, and she has had a lot of anxiety as a mom. She’s considering home school next year. She knows the administration at schools is working very hard. She has a three-year-old who has been masked for 90% of her schooling. Her own research is showing these masks are not that beneficial. The kids need to see and speak to each other. She’s not an anti-vaxxer, but she doesn’t feel this is the childhood her children deserve. It’s gotten to a point that is not sustainable. Councilor Richards said takes these concerns and issues very seriously. She appreciates the opportunity to hear this, but she’s concerned about how this meeting was set up. She is wondering if the school board was invited to this meeting. Our agenda doesn’t say that city council is having a hearing on this subject. She doesn’t like a one-sided hearing. She said we aren’t hearing from parents who have immune compromised issues, etc. It doesn’t seem right that the school board wasn’t invited to this, but she doesn’t have balancing information from anyone who has a stake in this argument. Mayor Torre said this is public comment, not a hearing. Councilor Mesirow thanked everyone for coming and speaking. He is of the age that most of his friends have small kids, and he finds this tremendously valuable. He’s never had to leave public comment before because he is crying. This whole council is committed to understanding this fully and it’s time for us to be human again. COUNCIL MEMBER COMMENTS: Councilor Doyle said he doesn’t have any bad news about the environment currently. Councilor Hauenstein said he shares sentiments with everyone who spoke. He said he wishes we could all vote here right now to end the pandemic. We don’t have control over the public health orders. He sympathizes and empathizes with all. You do the best you can with the information you have. We’re all over it, but it’s not done with us. He said he has seen several pedestrians that have gotten hit on the streets recently. Be careful out there. Mayor Torre said Ward was referring to a member of our community who was hit skiing and is currently waiting for surgery but can’t schedule it due to COVID patients. Our thoughts and prayers go out to her. Councilor Richards said she was on the CML caucus call today. We should keep an eye on a measure being introduced to reduce the number of members of the state transportation commission by one and realign with congressional districts, which means the rural areas of Colorado would only get one commissioner. She also agrees with Skippy and Ward that the concerns for public safety run the full 360 gamut. It’s not been easy, and we’ve had to make hard decisions. She has sympathy for all of the parents and the challenges they are facing. We all need a little more empathy with people because we are all still in the same boat. Percentages are deceptive. Councilor Doyle said he has a child in the public school system, and she has to wear a mask at school and while doing activity. It is a difficult situation, but it’s about everyone’s children. He was in a popular place of business, and he noticed one person in his area who wasn’t wearing a mask and was chatting up the help and he asked why they didn’t say anything and said they’ve been asked not to. Their employer doesn’t have their back on the issue. We are all tired of masks, but unfortunately, we don’t have that power. 54 4 REGULAR MEETING ASPEN CITY COUNCIL JANUARY 25, 2022 Councilor Hauenstein said chicken pox parties were one thing, but COVID parties are another and people are dying. Councilor Mesirow said that situations change and when they change, requirements change. It’s appropriate now to look at the impacts of our interventions. It’s been really tough for everyone. Mayor Torre said he represents us and utilizes council as a team. We recently had our hockey teams asking us for the same considerations and the recommendation was to not to do any mask removals at this time, but if vaccinated, they can demask on ice. This is a Board of Health topic so he will be having conversations with council about how they would like to be represented. If we want to meet again with the Board of Health at a work session, he is happy to facilitate that. AGENDA AMENDMENTS: Councilor Richards requested adding an action item to discuss the request she had made to make a small donation to the emergency fire relief in Boulder / Superior area. CITY MANAGER COMMENTS: Ms. Foster said that City staff will be back to a normal schedule on January 31st. She thanked the staff who have worked over the past month to keep offices open and available to the public. She mentioned that the February 1st meeting will be fully virtual. Staff is working towards having the February 7th and 8th meeting in Council chambers. CONSENT CALENDAR: Resolution #009 and Resolution #013, Series of 2022 –Red Mountain Waterline Improvements Construction Contract. Councilor Richards motioned to approve the consent calendar; Councilor Hauenstein seconded. Roll call vote: Doyle, yes; Hauenstein, yes; Mesirow, yes; Richards, yes; Torre, yes. 5-0, motion carried. FIRST READINGS OF ORDINANCES: Ordinance #001, Series of 2022 – Liquor & Marijuana Code Amendments Councilor Richards motioned for first reading of the Ordinance. Councilor Hauenstein seconded. Roll Call vote: Doyle, yes; Hauenstein, yes; Mesirow, yes; Richards, yes; Torre, yes. 5-0, motion carried. The Deputy City Clerk read the Ordinance. Mr. True said the changes recommended in Ordinance #001 are the result of recommendation of the Local Licensing Authority pursuant to their Resolution #1. Their primary concern is related to the limitations on who can apply to the Licensing Authority reflected in section 1 of the Ordinance. Section 2 & 3 address inconsistencies between provisions that address marijuana licensing and alcohol licensing. He said he talked with a local attorney regarding some issues she had with language, including differences in the terms used to describe the length of alcohol licensing and marijuana licensing. Section 4 & 5 address other inconsistencies. Councilor Hauenstein asked if a renewal of a license is an administrative with an appeal to the LLA. Mr. True said there is not an appeal to the LLA. He said they are trying to make the review of renewals 55 5 REGULAR MEETING ASPEN CITY COUNCIL JANUARY 25, 2022 consistent between alcohol and marijuana renewals. Councilor Hauenstein asked if a license follows a business in a specific location. Mr. True said the license follows the business, but if there is a change in ownership or a change in location it must be approved by the LLA. Councilor Hauenstein said that this is the type of feedback and involvement that they are looking for from commissions and boards. Councilor Doyle said these seem like some commonsense fixes. Councilor Richards motioned to approve Ordinance #001 on First Reading. Councilor Doyle seconded. Roll call vote: Doyle, yes; Hauenstein, yes; Mesirow, yes; Richards, yes; Torre, yes. 5-0, motion carried. ACTION ITEMS: Resolution #014, Series of 2022 – Aspen Mini Storage Annexation Petition Ben Anderson, Planner with Community Development Mr. Anderson said what is before council is an initial step in the entitlement process for the Lumberyard project. He said there will be three additional meeting with city council as we move toward the annexation and zoning of the Aspen Mini Storage property. He then described the four steps in the amendment process, including two steps that will provide the public the ability to make comments. This process is identical to the process followed 11 or 12 years ago when the city annexed the Lumberyard property itself. He stated that Resolution #014 mostly goes to show compliance with Colorado statute requirements. It also a authorizes the initiation of the Land Use processes to annex and zone the property. Councilor Richards asked if annexation is subject to referendum. Mr. True said that that was a relatively controversial question. He said he has had some conversations with other City attorneys, and they generally believe that it is. Councilor Hauenstein moved to adopt Resolution #014. Councilor Mesirow seconded. Roll call vote: Doyle, yes; Hauenstein, yes; Mesirow, yes; Richards, yes; Torre, yes. 5-0. Motion carried. Emergency Fire Relief Funding Discussion Councilor Richards referenced the magnitude of the fire in Louisville and Superior earlier this month. She talked about other examples of mutual aid that occurred between municipalities during specific disasters. She thought that a token, like a $3000 contribution to the relief funds would be a good human gesture from the City. Councilor Mesirow thanked Councilor Richards for bringing this idea to Council. He wants to support Council in this. He said he first questioned if they were only doing this because it was a similar community, but after hearing her examples of Weld and Granby he said it was really about neighborliness, regardless of political beliefs or wealth. Councilor Hauenstein did not know if $3000 would not do anything and thought maybe some type of art or sculpture could be commissioned to commemorate it. 56 6 REGULAR MEETING ASPEN CITY COUNCIL JANUARY 25, 2022 Councilor Doyle thought this was an awesome opportunity. He thought the amount could be a bit bigger and suggested $5000. In regard to Councilor Hauenstein’s idea of art, he thought that it should be up to the community to decide how the money is spent. Mayor Torre believed in this situation, every penny counts. He wanted to get the word out that the City of Aspen is looking to do this and see if there were any other members of the community that would like to participate. He said he was still wondering about the “where” and was interested in the distribution of different funds that have been created. Councilor Mesirow suggested that after it was determined where the best place to donate the money, to potentially create a Go Fund Me page to combine the City’s donation with community member donations. Mayor Torre again thanked Councilor Richards for bringing this up and said that it speaks volumes to where their heart is. Councilor Mesirow motioned to adjourn; Councilor Richards seconded. Roll call vote: Doyle, yes; Hauenstein, yes; Mesirow, yes; Richards, yes; Torre, yes. 5-0, motion carried. ____________________ Mike Sear, Deputy City Clerk 57 MEMORANDUM TO:MAYOR and COUNCIL MEMBERS FROM:JAMES R. TRUE MEETING DATE:February 8, 2022 RE:Ordinance #1 (Series of 2022)/Liquor and Marijuana Code Amendments ════════════════════════════════════════════════════════ REQUEST OF COUNCIL: The Local Licensing Authority (LLA), pursuant to Resolution #1 (Series of 2021), has recommended that Council adopt certain amendments to Title 5 of the Aspen Municipal Code regarding Alcoholic Beverages and Marijuana. DISCUSSION: This item is before Council to consider the adoption on second reading Ordinance #1 (Series of 2022), which Ordinance would amend various provision of the Aspen Municipal Code regarding Alcoholic Beverages and Marijuana. Based on comments made at 1st reading and comments from the public, there are some minor revisions to the Ordinance. Those revisions are set forth below in red. The revisions are included in the attached Ordinance. The first change is simply to make the alcohol and marijuana provisions of the length of a license read the same. One said one year the other said twelve months. They now both read twelve months. The other change appears more substantive, changing “shall” to “may”. However, the “shall” was carried over from the previous language and is actually inconsistent with the discretion given to the Clerk and the LLA in following paragraphs. Since the following paragraphs express the intent of the LLA, I believe that this is an appropriate change at this time, without the need to consider this further. As noted at 1st reading, based on discussions and positions expressed by various members of the LLA over the years, staff prepared a resolution to submit to City Council recommending that it consider certain code amendments to Title 5, of the Aspen Municipal Code. Resolution #1 (Series of 2021) is attached. The specific Code changes are outlined below, addressing the sections of the Ordinance. 58 2 Section 1: Amendment regarding qualification for the LLA: Although the LLA is currently fully constituted, with five regular members and one alternate, there have been times in which it has been difficult to find applicants. It has been expressed that part of the difficulty has been disqualification of individuals who work in the industry but are not part of ownership of any licensed entity. This proposed amendment allows for the appointment of an individual in the industry, if theindividual does not have an ownership interest in the business. The recommended amendment to Section 5.04.040(a)(3) of the City of Aspen Liquor code is the addition of the following at the end such paragraph: “Financial interest” as used in this paragraph (a)(3) shall not include employees of any licensed restaurant, bar, or marijuana facility, if the employee has no ownership interest in the business. Notwithstanding this definition, such appointed member of the Authority shall be disqualified from consideration of any action regarding his or her employer. Sections 2 and 3: Amendments regarding term, inordinate closures, loss of possession and renewals: LLA members expressed concerns regarding a number of these issues. For instance, questions arose regarding a circumstance in which a Licensee lost possession of premises but the License itself remained valid. The LLA also considered circumstances in which there have been lengthy closures of businesses, with the license remaining valid. In addition, questions were raised regarding the LLA’s authority to consider and deny a renewal of alcohol licenses. The proposed language addresses loss of possession and inordinate closures and gives the LLA the ability to deny the renewal of an alcohol license “for good cause,” which is consistent with the language within the marijuana code. The LLA considered these issues, which are addressed in different sections of the code for alcohol and marijuana and recommended the amendments set forth below. Chapter 5.04 addresses alcohol, which Chapter 5.16 addresses marijuana. The proposed amendments are as follows: Sec. 5.04.080. - Term and renewal of licenses, is amended to read as follows: (a) The term of the City license issued under this Chapter is twelve (12) months from the date of issuance. (b) Applicants for State and City license renewal shall apply to the City Clerk on or before the forty-fifth day prior to the date of expiration of the license. (c) Upon receipt of a completed application for a license renewal, the City Clerk shall refer the application to the following City departments: Environmental Health Department, City Utility Department, City Police Department and the Aspen Fire Protection District. If the referral comments received by the City Clerk do not adversely reflect upon the applicant's license, the City Clerk may shall approve the renewal application forthwith. The City Clerk shall notify the authority of all such applications for renewals on the first of each month. 59 3 (d) If for any reason the City Clerk decides not to approve a renewal application, he or she shall place the matter on the agenda of the next regularly scheduled meeting of the Aspen Local Licensing Authority at which time the authority shall grant the renewal, order further staff investigation or order a hearing in accordance with state law. The Local Licensing Authority may refuse to renew a license for good cause. (e) Notwithstanding the provisions of subparagraph (a), above, a licensee must maintain possession of leased premises at all times that a license is active. If the Licensee loses possession of leased premises prior to the end of the license term, whether through termination, abandonment or any other reason, the license shall be deemed immediately suspended and all operations of the Licensee pursuant to the license shall immediately cease. The Licensee may request that the suspension be lifted pursuant to an application for change of location, pursuant to Section 5.04.120, or transfer of ownership, pursuant to Section 5.04.130, below. The application to lift the suspension for a change of location or transfer of ownership may be submitted at any time during the remainder of the License term. The Licensee may also apply to lift the suspension upon a showing that the Licensee has regained possession of the premises. (f) The license of any Licensee who has ceased operations for a period of in excess of six (6) months shall be suspended. Such suspension may be lifted by the LLA for good cause shown to the LLA pursuant to an application for relief. Good cause shall include any closure pursuant to a general public health order. However, a closure of a business for violation of a duly issued public health order shall not be deemed good cause. In the event that a Licensee is aware of an upcoming closure for longer than six months for construction, remodeling, maintenance or other purpose, the Licensee may provide the LLA with notice of such closure with a statement of anticipated reopening date. If closure is based on activity that requires the receipt of a Certificate of Occupancy (CO) prior to reopening, then no suspension will occur if the business is open within thirty (30) days of issuance of the CO. For any other reason of closure, no suspension will occur pursuant to this Section if the business is reopened within thirty (30) days of the anticipated reopening date, unless such time is extended by the LLA. If any business is closed for a period of three months immediately prior to the renewal date of such license, such license renewal shall be reviewed by the LLA, pursuant to subparagraph (d), above. Sec. 5.16.090. - Term and renewal of licenses. is amended to read as follows: a) Each license issued pursuant to this Chapter shall be valid for twelve (12) months one (1) year from the date of issuance, and may be renewed as provided in the applicable code, the applicable administrative regulations, and this Chapter, provided, however, that a license shall not be renewed if the Local Licensing Authority determines that the licensed premises have been inactive, without good cause, for at least six (6) consecutive months. (b) Upon receipt of a completed application for a license renewal, the City Clerk shall refer the application to the following City departments: Environmental Health Department, City Utility Department, City Police Department and the Aspen Fire Protection District. If the referral comments received by the City Clerk do not 60 4 adversely reflect upon the applicant's license, the City Clerk may shall approve the renewal application forthwith. The City Clerk shall notify the authority of all applications for renewals on the first of each month. (c) The Local Licensing Authority may refuse to renew a license for good cause. (d) No license shall be renewed by the Local Licensing Authority until the licensee provides verification that the license has been renewed by the State Licensing Authority. (e) Notwithstanding anything contained in this Chapter to the contrary, a licensee has no vested right to the renewal of a license, and no property right in the renewal of a license. (f) Notwithstanding the provisions of subparagraph (a), above, a licensee must maintain possession of leased premises at all times that a license is active. If the Licensee loses possession of leased premises prior to the end of the license term, whether through termination, abandonment or any other reason, the license shall be deemed immediately suspended and all operations of the Licensee pursuant to the license shall immediately cease. The Licensee may request that the suspension be lifted pursuant to an application for change of location, pursuant to Section 5.16.100, or transfer of ownership, pursuant to Section 5.16.120, below. The application to lift the suspension for a change of location or transfer of ownership may be submitted at any time during the remainder of the License term. The Licensee may also apply to lift the suspension upon a showing that the Licensee has regained possession of the premises. (g)The license of any Licensee who has ceased operations for a period of in excess of six (6) months shall be suspended. Such suspension may be lifted by the LLA for good cause shown to the LLA pursuant to an application for relief. Good cause shall include any closure pursuant to a general public health order. However, a closure of a business for violation of a duly issued public health order shall not be deemed good cause. In the event that a Licensee is aware of an upcoming closure for longer than six months for construction, remodeling, maintenance or other purpose, the Licensee may provide the LLA with notice of such closure with a statement of anticipated reopening date. If closure is based on activity that requires the receipt of a Certificate of Occupancy (CO) prior to reopening, then the no suspension will occur if the business is open within thirty (30) days of issuance of the CO. For any other reason for closure, no suspension will occur pursuant to this Section if the business is reopened within thirty (30) days of the anticipated reopening date, unless such time is extended by the LLA. If any business is closed for a period of three months immediately prior to the renewal date of such license, such license renewal shall be reviewed by the LLA. Sections 4 and 5. Procedural amendments Although these amendments are not addressed in Resolution #1, staff felt that two non-substantive changes should be adopted pursuant to Ordinance #1. The first is simply an update of the heading for Chapter 5.04 which currently reads “Chapter 5.04 - Beer and Wine Licensing.” This is proposed to be amended to read “Chapter 5.04 - Alcoholic Beverages.” 61 5 The other amendment concerns the reorganization of state code adopted in 2018. The Colorado Liquor Code was part Title 12 of the Colorado Revised Statute for many years, including during the time that the City created a separate licensing authority. Section 5.04.010 expresses the legislative intent of our code to adopt and follow state codes and Sections 5.04.020 and 5.04.030, incorporate C.R.S. Title 12, as amended, into our local code. Since Title 12 was amended and incorporated into C.R.S. Title 44, for clarity staff recommends that all references in our code to Title 12 be deemed references to Title 44. FINANCIAL/BUDGET IMPACTS: None ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS: None RECOMMENDATION: The LLA and staff recommend adoption of Ordinance #1 (Series of 2022), as amended. 62 ORDINANCE NO. 1 (Series of 2022) AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF ASPEN, COLORADO, AMENDING TITLE 5 OF THE ASPEN MUNICIPAL CODE, MARIJUANA AND ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES. WHEREAS,Title 5, of the Aspen Municipal Code sets forth the City’s regulations of Marijuana and Alcoholic Beverages as authorized pursuant to the State of Colorado Codes, formerly Title 12, C.R.S., currently Title 44, C.R.S.; and WHEREAS, the Local Licensing Authority reviews the local and state laws in order to accomplish the directions and authority provide to it pursuant to those laws; and WHEREAS, pursuant to Resolution #1, Series of 2021, the Local Licensing Authori- ty determined that it would be in the best interest of the City of Aspen, if certain laws un- der which it works would be amended to address issues that the Local Licensing Authority has faced in recent years; therefore, it is recommending that the Council adopt the lan- guage set forth in Sections 1 through 3, below; and, WHEREAS,given the proposed amendments to Title 5 pursuant to Resolution #1, staff recommends two changes to the code to provide additional clarity given updates to the Colorado Revised Statutes in 2018, as set forth in Sections 4 and 5, below. WHEREAS,the City Council finds that this Ordinance furthers and is necessary for the promotion of public health, safety, and welfare. NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT ORDAINED BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF ASPEN, COLORADO, THAT: Section 1. Section 5.04.040(a)(3) of the City of Aspen Liquor code is hereby amended by adding the following at the end such paragraph: “Financial interest” as used in this paragraph (a)(3) shall not include em- ployees of any licensed restaurant, bar, or marijuana facility, if the employ- ee has no ownership interest in the business. Notwithstanding this defini- tion, such appointed member of the Authority shall be disqualified from consideration of any action regarding his or her employer. Section 2. Sec. 5.04.080. - Term and renewal of licenses, is amended to read as follows: 63 (a) The term of the City license issued under this Chapter is twelve (12) months from the date of issuance. (b) Applicants for State and City license renewal shall apply to the City Clerk on or before the forty-fifth day prior to the date of expiration of the license. (c) Upon receipt of a completed application for a license renewal, the City Clerk shall refer the application to the following City departments: Environmental Health Department, City Utility Department, City Police Department and the Aspen Fire Protection District. If the referral comments received by the City Clerk do not adversely reflect upon the applicant's license, the City Clerk may approve the renewal application forthwith. The City Clerk shall notify the authority of all such applications for renewals on the first of each month. (d) If for any reason the City Clerk decides not to approve a renewal appli- cation, he or she shall place the matter on the agenda of the next regularly scheduled meeting of the Aspen Local Licensing Authority at which time the authority shall grant the renewal, order further staff investigation or or- der a hearing in accordance with state law. The Local Licensing Authority may refuse to renew a license for good cause. (e) Notwithstanding the provisions of subparagraph (a), above, a licensee must maintain possession of leased premises at all times that a license is ac- tive. If the Licensee loses possession of leased premises prior to the end of the license term, whether through termination, abandonment or any other reason, the license shall be deemed immediately suspended and all opera- tions of the Licensee pursuant to the license shall immediately cease. The Licensee may request that the suspension be lifted pursuant to an applica- tion for change of location, pursuant to Section 5.04.120, or transfer of ownership, pursuant to Section 5.04.130, below. The application to lift the suspension for a change of location or transfer of ownership may be submit- ted at any time during the remainder of the License term. The Licensee may also apply to lift the suspension upon a showing that the Licensee has regained possession of the premises. (f) The license of any Licensee who has ceased operations for a period of in excess of six (6) months shall be suspended. Such suspension may be lifted by the LLA for good cause shown to the LLA pursuant to an application for relief. Good cause shall include any closure pursuant to a general public health order. However, a closure of a business for violation of a duly is- sued public health order shall not be deemed good cause. In the event that a Licensee is aware of an upcoming closure for longer than six months for construction, remodeling, maintenance or other purpose, the Licensee may provide the LLA with notice of such closure with a statement of anticipated reopening date. If closure is based on activity that requires the receipt of a Certificate of Occupancy (CO) prior to reopening, then no suspension will occur if the business is open within thirty (30) days of issuance of the CO. For any other reason of closure, no suspension will occur pursuant to this Section if the business is reopened within thirty (30) days of the anticipated 64 reopening date, unless such time is extended by the LLA. If any business is closed for a period of three months immediately prior to the renewal date of such license, such license renewal shall be reviewed by the LLA, pursuant to subparagraph (d), above. Section 3. Sec. 5.16.090. - Term and renewal of licenses. is amended to read as follows: a) Each license issued pursuant to this Chapter shall be valid for twelve (12) months from the date of issuance and may be renewed as provided in the applicable code, the applicable administrative regulations, and this Chapter, provided, however, that a license shall not be renewed if the Local Licens- ing Authority determines that the licensed premises have been inactive, without good cause, for at least six (6) consecutive months. (b) Upon receipt of a completed application for a license renewal, the City Clerk shall refer the application to the following City departments: Environmental Health Department, City Utility Department, City Police Department and the Aspen Fire Protection District. If the referral comments received by the City Clerk do not adversely reflect upon the applicant's license, the City Clerk may approve the renewal application forthwith. The City Clerk shall notify the authority of all applications for renewals on the first of each month. (c) The Local Licensing Authority may refuse to renew a license for good cause. (d) No license shall be renewed by the Local Licensing Authority until the licensee provides verification that the license has been renewed by the State Licensing Authority. (e) Notwithstanding anything contained in this Chapter to the contrary, a li- censee has no vested right to the renewal of a license, and no property right in the renewal of a license. (f) Notwithstanding the provisions of subparagraph (a), above, a licensee must maintain possession of leased premises at all times that a license is ac- tive. If the Licensee loses possession of leased premises prior to the end of the license term, whether through termination, abandonment or any other reason, the license shall be deemed immediately suspended and all opera- tions of the Licensee pursuant to the license shall immediately cease. The Licensee may request that the suspension be lifted pursuant to an applica- tion for change of location, pursuant to Section 5.16.100, or transfer of ownership, pursuant to Section 5.16.120, below. The application to lift the suspension for a change of location or transfer of ownership may be submit- ted at any time during the remainder of the License term. The Licensee may also apply to lift the suspension upon a showing that the Licensee has regained possession of the premises. (g)The license of any Licensee who has ceased operations for a period of in excess of six (6) months shall be suspended. Such suspension may be lifted 65 by the LLA for good cause shown to the LLA pursuant to an application for relief. Good cause shall include any closure pursuant to a general public health order. However, a closure of a business for violation of a duly is- sued public health order shall not be deemed good cause. In the event that a Licensee is aware of an upcoming closure for longer than six months for construction, remodeling, maintenance or other purpose, the Licensee may provide the LLA with notice of such closure with a statement of anticipated reopening date. If closure is based on activity that requires the receipt of a Certificate of Occupancy (CO) prior to reopening, then the no suspension will occur if the business is open within thirty (30) days of issuance of the CO. For any other reason for closure, no suspension will occur pursuant to this Section if the business is reopened within thirty (30) days of the antici- pated reopening date, unless such time is extended by the LLA. If any business is closed for a period of three months immediately prior to the re- newal date of such license, such license renewal shall be reviewed by the LLA. Section 4: The heading of Chapter 5.04 which currently reads “Chapter 5.04 - Beer and Wine Licens- ing” is hereby amended to read “Chapter 5.04 - Alcoholic Beverages.” Section 5: Any and all references to “C.R.S. Title 12” throughout Title 5 of the Aspen Munic- ipal Code are hereby deemed to refer to C.R.S. Title 44 and specific references within Title 5 of the Aspen Municipal Code to state code sections within C.R.S. Title 12 shall be deemed to refer to a corresponding code sections in C.R.S. Title 44. Section 6: Severability. If any section, subsection, sentence, clause, phrase or portion of this ordinance is for any reason held invalid or unconstitutional in a court of competent jurisdiction, such portion shall be deemed a separate, distinct and independent provision and shall not affect the validity of the remaining portions thereof. Section 7.Existing Litigation. This ordinance shall not have any effect on existing litigation and shall not operate as an abatement of any action or proceeding now pending under or by virtue of the ordinances amended as herein provided, and the same shall be construed and concluded under such prior ordinances. 66 Section 8. Effective Date. This ordinance shall be effective thirty days after final adoption. A public hearing on the ordinance shall be held on the 8th day of February 2022, in the City Council Chambers, 427 Rio Grande Place, Aspen, Colorado and/or via Webex. INTRODUCED, READ AND ORDERED PUBLISHED as provided by law by City Council of the City of Aspen on the 25th day of January 2022. _________________________ Torre, Mayor ATTEST: ___________________________ Nicole Henning, City Clerk FINALLY adopted, passed and approved this ___ day of February 2022. _________________________ Torre, Mayor ATTEST: ___________________________ Nicole Henning, City Clerk Approved as to form: _____________________ James R True, City Attorney 67 CITY OF ASPEN, COLORADO LOCAL LICENSING AUTHORITY RESOLUTION # 01 (Series of 2021) A RESOLUTION OF THE LOCAL LICENSING AUTHORITY OF THE CITY OF ASPEN, COLORADO, RECOMENDING TO THE ASPEN CITY COUNCIL CERTAIN AMENDMENTS TO THE ASPEN MUNICIPAL CODE. WHEREAS, the Local Licensing Authority is an authority duly established pursuant to the Aspen Municipal Charter, Title 5 of the Aspen Municipal Code and C.R.S., Title 44; and WHEREAS, the Local Licensing Authority reviews the local and state laws in order to accomplish the directions and authority provide to it pursuant to those laws; and WHEREAS, the Local Licensing Authority has determined that it would be in the best interest of the City of Aspen, if certain laws under which it works would be amended to address issues that the Local Licensing Authority has faced in recent years. NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE LOCAL LICENSING AUTHORITY OF THE CITY OF ASPEN, COLORADO, That the following code amendments be adopted by City Council: Section 1. Section 5.04.040(a)(3) of the City of Aspen Liquor code is hereby amended by adding the following at the end such paragraph: “Financial interest” as used in this paragraph (a)(3) shall not include employees of any licensed restaurant, bar, or marijuana facility, if the employee has no ownership interest in the business. Notwithstanding this definition, such appointed member of the Authority shall be disqualified from consideration of any action regarding his or her employer. Section 2. Sec. 5.04.080. -Term and renewal of licenses, is amended to read as follows, with changes outlined in red: (a) The term of the City license issued under this Chapter is twelve (12) months from the date of issuance. (b) Applicants for State and City license renewal shall apply to the City Clerk on or before the forty-fifth day prior to the date of expiration of the license. (c) Upon receipt of a completed application for a license renewal, the City Clerk shall refer the application to the following City departments: Environmental Health 68 Department, City Utility Department, City Police Department and the Aspen Fire Protection District. If the referral comments received by the City Clerk do not adversely reflect upon the applicant's license, the City Clerk shall approve the renewal application forthwith. The City Clerk shall notify the authority of all such applications for renewals on the first of each month. (d) If for any reason the City Clerk decides not to approve a renewal application, he or she shall place the matter on the agenda of the next regularly scheduled meeting of the Aspen Local Licensing Authority at which time the authority shall grant the renewal, order further staff investigation or order a hearing in accordance with state law. The Local Licensing Authority may refuse to renew a license for good cause. (e) Notwithstanding the provisions of subparagraph (a), above, a licensee must maintain possession of leased premises at all times that a license is active. If the Licensee loses possession of leased premises prior to the end of the license term, whether through termination, abandonment or any other reason, the license shall be deemed immediately suspended and all operations of the Licensee pursuant to the license shall immediately cease. The Licensee may request that the suspension be lifted pursuant to an application for change of location, pursuant to Section 5.04.120, or transfer of ownership, pursuant to Section 5.04.130, below. The application to lift the suspension for a change of location or transfer of ownership may be submitted at any time during the remainder of the License term. The Licensee may also apply to lift the suspension upon a showing that the Licensee has regained possession of the premises. (f) The license of any Licensee who has ceased operations for a period of in excess of six (6) months shall be suspended. Such suspension may be lifted by the LLA for good cause shown to the LLA pursuant to an application for relief. Good cause shall include any closure pursuant to a general public health order. However, a closure of a business for violation of a duly issued public health order shall not be deemed good cause. In the event that a Licensee is aware of an upcoming closure for longer than six months for construction, remodeling, maintenance or other purpose, the Licensee may provide the LLA with notice of such closure with a statement of anticipated reopening date. If closure is based on activity that requires the receipt of a Certificate of Occupancy (CO) prior to reopening, then no suspension will occur if the business is open within thirty (30) days of issuance of the CO. For any other reason of closure, no suspension will occur pursuant to this Section if the business is reopened within thirty (30) days of the anticipated reopening date, unless such time is extended by the LLA. If any business is closed for a period of three months immediately prior to the renewal date of such license, such license renewal shall be reviewed by the LLA, pursuant to subparagraph (d), above. Section 3. Sec. 5.16.090. -Term and renewal of licenses. is amended to read as follows, with changes outlined in red: 69 a) Each license issued pursuant to this Chapter shall be valid for one (1) year from the date of issuance, and may be renewed as provided in the applicable code, the applicable administrative regulations, and this Chapter, provided, however, that a license shall not be renewed if the Local Licensing Authority determines that the licensed premises have been inactive, without good cause, for at least six (6) consecutive months. (b) Upon receipt of a completed application for a license renewal, the City Clerk shall refer the application to the following City departments: Environmental Health Department, City Utility Department, City Police Department and the Aspen Fire Protection District. If the referral comments received by the City Clerk do not adversely reflect upon the applicant's license, the City Clerk shall approve the renewal application forthwith. The City Clerk shall notify the authority of all applications for renewals on the first of each month. (c) The Local Licensing Authority may refuse to renew a license for good cause. (d) No license shall be renewed by the Local Licensing Authority until the licensee provides verification that the license has been renewed by the State Licensing Authority. (e) Notwithstanding anything contained in this Chapter to the contrary, a licensee has no vested right to the renewal of a license, and no property right in the renewal of a license. (f) Notwithstanding the provisions of subparagraph (a), above, a licensee must maintain possession of leased premises at all times that a license is active. If the Licensee loses possession of leased premises prior to the end of the license term, whether through termination, abandonment or any other reason, the license shall be deemed immediately suspended and all operations of the Licensee pursuant to the license shall immediately cease. The Licensee may request that the suspension be lifted pursuant to an application for change of location, pursuant to Section 5.16.100, or transfer of ownership, pursuant to Section 5.16.120, below. The application to lift the suspension for a change of location or transfer of ownership may be submitted at any time during the remainder of the License term. The Licensee may also apply to lift the suspension upon a showing that the Licensee has regained possession of the premises. (g)The license of any Licensee who has ceased operations for a period of in excess of six (6) months shall be suspended. Such suspension may be lifted by the LLA for good cause shown to the LLA pursuant to an application for relief. Good cause shall include any closure pursuant to a general public health order. However, a closure of a business for violation of a duly issued public health order shall not be deemed good cause. In the event that a Licensee is aware of an upcoming closure for longer than six months for construction, remodeling, maintenance or other purpose, the Licensee may provide the LLA with notice of such closure with a statement of anticipated reopening date. If closure is based on activity that requires the receipt of a Certificate of Occupancy (CO) prior to reopening, then the no suspension will occur if the business is open within thirty (30) days of issuance of the CO. For any other reason for closure, no suspension will occur pursuant to this Section if the business is reopened within thirty (30) 70 days of the anticipated reopening date, unless such time is extended by the LLA. If any business is closed for a period of three months immediately prior to the renewal date of such license, such license renewal shall be reviewed by the LLA. INTRODUCED, READ AND ADOPTED by the Local Licensing Authority of the City of Aspen on the 7 th day of December 2021. Bill Murphy, Chairman I, Nicole Henning, duly appointed and acting City Clerk do certify that the foregoing is a true and accurate copy of that resolution adopted by the Local Licensing Authority of the City of Aspen, Colorado, at a meeting held on December 7, 2021. Nicole Henning, City Clerk 71 AGENDA ITEM SUMMARY COUNCIL MEETING DATE: February 8, 2022 AGENDA ITEM TITLE: EOTC 2022 Work Plan – Amendment 1 STAFF RESPONSIBLE: David Pesnichak, Transportation Administrator ISSUE STATEMENT: Attached for review and approval is a proposed group of amendments to the 2022 EOTC Work Plan originally approved October 28, 2021. The proposed amendments to the 2022 Work Plan are a result of new information regarding the renovations of the Brush Creek Park and Ride (FLAP Grant improvements). The purpose of the Work Plan is to provide transparency in the work efforts proposed to advance the 2020 EOTC Strategic Plan and 2020 EOTC Comprehensive Valley Transportation Plan (CVTP). BACKGROUND: The EOTC has many work items that need to be addressed in the coming years. In order to ensure we are all moving in an agreed upon direction and that resources are best utilized, the EOTC approved the 2022 Work Plan in October 2021. The creation of an annual Work Plan is a requirement of the EOTC Strategic Plan. This Plan is not intended to be all-inclusive and is anticipated to be updated as needed. As previously noted, this group of amendments is proposed as a result of new information and staff changes that have occurred since the adoption of the 2022 EOTC Work Plan in October 2021. A redline of the proposed changes to the 2022 EOTC Work Plan is attached. As an overview and to provide some background and description, the proposed amendments are as follows: Project Proposed Amendment Description Pursue EOTC Budget Mitigation Remove from 2022 Work Plan This effort has been completed and is recommended to be removed from the 2022 Work Plan. In November and December 2021, RFTA committed to assuming the full cost of the No-Fare Aspen Snowmass Woody Creek transit service beginning January 1, 2022. In addition, both EOTC and RFTA staff have signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) documenting the events and rationale for RFTA assuming the cost of the No-Fare service. Brush Creek Park and Ride: FLAP Improvements – Construction Move from 2022 to 2023 Due to untenably high construction bids received in December 2021 (RFP process led by Federal Highway Administration, or FHWA), this project is to be advertised again in late summer or early fall 2022 for construction in 2023. Please see the attached letter from John Knowles, Project Manager with the FHWA, Attachment 1. 1 72 As the Committee members may recall, the construction estimate for this project was about $5.6 million ($6.9 million total project estimate with construction and design). Two bids were received for summer 2022 construction as a result of the construction advertisement led by FHWA which closed on December 7, 2021. The two construction bids received came in at about $12 million and $15 million. As a result of these untenable bids, FHWA has decided to cancel the two received bids and readvertise the project in late summer or early fall of 2022 for summer 2023 construction. This will result in a one-year construction delay. The cause of these excessively high bids are believed to be a combination of a shortage of labor, a shortage of materials and equipment, a high demand for construction contractors, and FHWA advertisement requirements that may be able to be removed when this project is readvertised. As the Committee members may recall, the EOTC financial match for this project is identified in 2022 within the currently adopted EOTC budget. Staff proposes to leave the budget as is for now with any carry forward occurring as a part of the regular EOTC budget process for 2023. Brush Creek Park and Ride: Recommendation on Long-Term Parking Plan (Parking over 24 hours) Move from 2022 to 2023 Due to delays in the FLAP Grant Improvements construction from 2022 to 2023, this effort is proposed to be moved from 2022 to 2023. It was originally planned that a long term parking plan would be developed in 2022 and implemented in 2023 following construction of the FLAP Grant Improvements. Since the FLAP Grant Improvements are now delayed until 2023, the earliest implementation of a long term parking plan can occur is 2024. In order to take advantage of the additional time afforded by the FLAP construction delay, staff recommends postponing the staff recommendation on the Long Term Parking Plan to help smooth demands on staff as resources are constrained in 2022. Staff preliminarily anticipates that it may be necessary to budget to hire a subject matter expert to assist with this project in 2023. Any funding for this project will be presented and reviewed in late 2022 as a part of the 2023 regular EOTC budget development process. 2021 EOTC Near Term Transit Improvement Program: Truscott to Owl Creek Trail Clarify Report Out Timeframe Following development of the Scope of Work for this project, it is now clear that the soonest a report out for this project can come to the EOTC is Spring 2023. This amendment is to clarify that timeframe. 2 73 2021 EOTC Near Term Transit Improvement Program: Buttermilk Bike / Pedestrian Underpass and Transit Signal Bypasses Clarify Report Out Timeframe Following development of the Scope of Work for this project, it is now clear that the soonest a report out for this project can come to the EOTC is Spring 2023. This amendment is to clarify that timeframe. Regarding the one year food truck / farm stand experiment that is currently permitted by Pitkin County to take place in 2023 (originally anticipated to be the year following the FLAP grant construction), staff is recommending that this remain as a 2023 Work Plan item for now. Due to the short timeframe to: 1) amend the current County Location and Extent Permit from 2023 to 2022, 2) obtain new CDOT approval for 2022, 3) transparently advertise for and select a vendor(s) through Pitkin County Procurement, and 4) have the selected vendor sign a lease with CDOT (CDOT is currently facing staff shortages, so processing times have increased notably), it is currently anticipated that the earliest a vendor could be onsite in 2022 would be mid to late summer. This late arrival of a vendor onsite significantly reduces the ability to obtain reliable data on whether the food truck would support transit ridership and could thereby hinder the likelihood of obtaining a long-term food truck / farm stand permit through the County, should it be desired. In addition, the current County permit limits a food truck/farm stand for one season with any additional seasons requiring additional County permitting. Staff will adjust the 2023 EOTC Work Plan related to the food truck / farm stand experiment as necessary as the FLAP construction timeframe continues to unfold through 2022 and amend the necessary County and CDOT approvals as appropriate. As an update for ongoing EOTC Work Plan efforts, below is a list and a status description for each of the ongoing EOTC efforts as identified in the EOTC Work Plan for 2022. EOTC Retreat / Long-Term Planning Discussion Staff is currently working to develop the agenda for the EOTC Retreat / Long-Range Planning Discussion on April 28. The Retreat is currently planned to be a hybrid in-person / virtual event hosted from the City of Aspen new City Hall. A facilitator has been identified for this discussion. A Pre-Retreat packet is also in development and will be disseminated in advance of the retreat. Brush Creek P&R: Develop Partnership with HCE for EV Charger Install EOTC staff is working with Holy Cross Energy, the City of Aspen, and CDOT to develop a partnership to install EV chargers at the Brush Creek Park and Ride following redevelopment of the facility. In order to allow Holy Cross Energy to install and manage EV chargers at the Park and Ride facility, which is owned by CDOT, a lease agreement between the relevant parties needs to be created and executed. CDOT is currently developing a draft lease agreement for local staff review. Due to staff capacity issues at CDOT, development of the lease is taking longer than expected. Bike / Ped Connection to Rio Grande / AABC – Feasibility Study This is a partnership project between Pitkin County Open Space and Trails Department and the 3 74 City of Aspen Parks and Open Space Department. The Feasibility Study is currently in development. As identified in the 2022 EOTC Work Plan, the updated Feasibility Study for the trail connection between the Brush Creek P&R and the Rio Grande Trail / AABC / City of Aspen will be coming to the EOTC at the March meeting. This study will be reviewed by the Pitkin County Open Space and Trails Board and the City of Aspen Parks and Open Space Board in advance of the March EOTC meeting. This timeframe will allow the EOTC to hear the comments and concerns from each of these boards along with the results from the Feasibility Study. 2021 EOTC Near Term Transit Improvement Program: Truscott to Owl Creek Trail EOTC staff have developed a Scope of Work for this project and Pitkin County Procurement has advertised the RFP. Staff will review the responses from this RFP to identify a consulting team to move forward with the design of this facility. Buttermilk Bike / Pedestrian Underpass and Transit Signal Bypasses EOTC staff have developed a Scope of Work for this project and Pitkin County Procurement has advertised the RFP. Staff will review the responses from this RFP to identify a consulting team to move forward with the initial design of this facility. HOV Lane Enforcement Analysis EOTC Staff is currently conducting research and gathering information for this effort. This is currently projected to be reported out to the EOTC at the May meeting. Analysis of Up Valley and Down Valley BRT Direct Service to Snowmass EOTC staff have developed a Scope of Work for this project and Pitkin County Procurement has advertised the RFP. Staff will review the responses from this RFP to identify a consulting team to move forward with this study. Additional Permanent Automated Vehicle Counters EOTC staff have developed a Scope of Work for this project and Pitkin County Procurement has advertised the RFP. Staff will review the responses from this RFP to identify a consulting team to move forward with the design and implementation of this project. BUDGETARY IMPACT: None. RECOMMENDED ACTION: - Adopt staff recommended amendments to the 2022 EOTC Work Plan (Motion, Second, and Roll Call Vote by Jurisdiction) Adoption of the annual EOTC Work Plan and amendments thereto requires resolutions of approval from the City of Aspen, Town of Snowmass Village, and Pitkin County. Draft resolutions are attached to this memo. An affirmative vote by each jurisdiction is required for adoption and signature on the resolutions of approval. 4 75 ATTACHMENTS: 1. Letter from the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) dated January 19, 2022 2. 2022 redline of Amended EOTC Work Plan 3. 2022 clean copy of Amended EOTC Work Plan 4. Town of Snowmass Village Draft Resolution of Approval 5. City of Aspen Draft Resolution of Approval 6. Pitkin County Draft Resolution of Approval 5 76 Central Federal Lands Highway Division 12300 W. Dakota Avenue Suite 390 Lakewood, CO 80228-2583 January 19, 2022 Office: 720-963-3415 Fax: 720-963-3596 John.Knowles@dot.gov In Reply Refer To: HFPM 3-25 David Pesnichak, AICP Regional Transportation Administrator Pitkin County – Elected Officials Transportation Committee 530 E Main St., Suite 302 Aspen, CO 81611 Dear Mr. Pesnichak: This letter is to inform you that Central Federal Lands Highway Division (CFLHD) is in the process of canceling the current solicitation for bids of the CO FLAP PIT 82(1) Brush Creek Parking Area project. On October 25, 2021, CFLHD advertised the subject project as a total small business set-aside with the intent of awarding the contract to construct the Brush Creek Parking Area and Restroom during the 2022 construction season. On December 7, 2021, CFLHD received two bids that were approximately 119% and 174% over the engineer’s estimate. Due to the high bids and the lack of adequate funds, we have determined that it would be unreasonable to award the contract at this time. The plan will be to resolicit bids via full and open competition in the Fall of 2022, with construction beginning in the 2023 construction season. We plan to work with you and your staff to make any adjustments to ensure a successful procurement. Sincerely, John Knowles Project Manager JOHN P KNOWLES Digitally signed by JOHN P KNOWLES Date: 2022.01.19 15:19:12 -07'00' Attachment 1 6 77 EOTC Work Plan and Meeting Schedule – Amended February 2022 2022 Action Responsible Party Timeline Expected Outcome Link to Strategic Plan and CVTP Pursue EOTC Budget Mitigation ETOC Staff in Collaboration with RFTA All Year Determine if Transfer of Cost of No-Fare Service to RFTA is Feasible Option to Mitigate the Effects of Sales and Use Tax Collection Changes. EOTC Administration EOTC Retreat / Long-Term Planning Discussion EOTC Staff April EOTC Mtg Understanding of future transportation trends and available options for mitigation EOTC Administration Brush Creek P&R: FLAP Improvements – Construction Develop Partnership with HCE for EV Charger Install Bike / Ped Connection to Rio Grande / AABC – Feasibility Study – Phase 2 Recommendation on Long-Term Parking Plan EOTC Staff in Collaboration with RFTA, CDOT, FHWA, COA, and TOSV EOTC Staff EOTC Staff in Collaboration with PitCo and COA Open Space and Trails EOTC Staff All Year All Year March EOTC Mtg Review May EOTC Mtg Review Complete Construction of Approved FLAP Improvements. Develop Partnership for Installation of EV Chargers following Completion of FLAP Improvements. Identification of Technically Feasible Alternatives for Connecting BC P&R to Rio Grande / AABC for Public Outreach Consideration in 2022. Staff Recommendation on how Long-Term Parking (over 24 hours) could be Accommodated and Managed Guiding Principles: Environmental Sustainability, Economic Sustainability, Social Sustainability Key Strategies: Multi-Modal Network that Encourages Mode Shift, Regionalism and Cross-Sector Approach, Communication and Inter-Governmental Engagement CVTP Regional Priorities: Park and Ride Improvements; First and Last Mile Solutions; Transit Speed, Accessibility, Reliability, and Efficiency Enhancements; Technologies and Innovation to Encourage Mode Shift CVTP Upper Valley Priorities: Bike and Pedestrian Connections to Transit Stops and BC P&R; Multi-Modal Solution to Entrance to Aspen; Electrification of Transit System Attachment 2 7 78 2021 EOTC Near Term Transit Improvement Program: Truscott to Owl Creek Trail Buttermilk Bike / Pedestrian Underpass and Transit Signal Bypasses HOV Lane Enforcement Analysis Analysis of Up Valley and Down Valley BRT Direct Service to Snowmass Additional Permanent Automated Vehicle Counters EOTC Staff EOTC Staff EOTC Staff EOTC Staff EOTC Staff All Year – Report Out Spring 2023 All Year – Report Out Spring 2023 May EOTC Mtg Review All Year – Report Out Spring 2023 All Year Planning, Stakeholder Outreach, Design, and Partnership and Funding Identification. Planning, Stakeholder Outreach, Initial Design, and Partnership and Funding Identification. Analysis of Manual and Automated Enforcement Methods. Snowmass transit connection analysis to evaluate transit effectiveness and efficiency, and determine cost, frequency, and expected utilization of increased / enhanced service levels. Plan, Design, Permit, Construct Additional Vehicle Counters in Key Locations within Upper Valley Guiding Principles: Environmental Sustainability, Economic Sustainability, Social Sustainability Key Strategies: Multi-Modal Network that Encourages Mode Shift, Regionalism and Cross-Sector Approach, Communication and Inter-Governmental Engagement CVTP Regional Priorities: Park and Ride Lot Improvements; First and Last Mile Solutions; Transit Speed, Accessibility, Reliability, and Efficiency Enhancements; Congestion Mitigation Measures; Technologies and Innovation to Encourage Mode Shift CVTP Upper Valley Priorities: Bike and Pedestrian Connections to Transit Stops and BC P&R; Multi-Modal Solution to Entrance to Aspen; Snowmass Village to Brush Creek Park and Ride Service Commensurate with Highway 82 Corridor Transit Service Participate in Snowmass Transit Center, Airport, and Regional Transportation Planning / Visioning Staff and EOTC, as Appropriate All Year Participate in Transportation Related Planning and Visioning, as Appropriate. Dependent on Project / Initiative Attachment 2 8 79 2023 Action Responsible Party Timeline Expected Outcome Link to Strategic Plan and CVTP Continue Progress on Implementation of 2021 EOTC Transit Improvement Program EOTC Staff All Year Continued Implementation of 2021 EOTC Transit Improvement Program Guiding Principles: Environmental Sustainability, Economic Sustainability, Social Sustainability Key Strategies: Multi-Modal Network that Encourages Mode Shift, Regionalism and Cross-Sector Approach, Communication and Inter-Governmental Engagement CVTP Regional Priorities: First and Last Mile Solutions; Transit Speed, Accessibility, Reliability, and Efficiency Enhancements; Congestion Mitigation Measures; Technologies and Innovation to Encourage Mode Shift CVTP Upper Valley Priorities: Bike and Pedestrian Connections to Transit Stops and BC P&R; Multi-Modal Solution to Entrance to Aspen; Airport / AABC Multi-Modal transit Hub and transit Circulation Enhancements Attachment 2 9 80 Brush Creek P&R: FLAP Improvements – Construction Recommendation on Long-Term Parking Plan Food Truck / Farm Stand – Experiment EOTC Staff in Collaboration with RFTA, CDOT, FHWA, COA, and TOSV EOTC Staff EOTC Staff All Year All Year All Year Complete Construction of Approved FLAP Improvements. Staff Recommendation on how Long-Term Parking (over 24 hours) could be Accommodated and Managed Manage and Execute Food Truck / Farm Stand Experiment if Permitted. Guiding Principles: Environmental Sustainability, Economic Sustainability, Social Sustainability Key Strategies: Multi-Modal Network that Encourages Mode Shift, Regionalism and Cross-Sector Approach, Communication and Inter-Governmental Engagement CVTP Regional Priorities: Park and Ride Improvements; First and Last Mile Solutions; Transit Speed, Accessibility, Reliability, and Efficiency Enhancements; Congestion Mitigation Measures; Technologies and Innovation to Encourage Mode Shift CVTP Upper Valley Priorities: Bike and Pedestrian Connections to Transit Stops and BC P&R; Multi-Modal Solution to Entrance to Aspen; Snowmass Village to Brush Creek Park and Ride Service Commensurate with Highway 82 Corridor Transit Service Participate in Snowmass Transit Center, Brush Creek P&R Development, Airport, and regional transportation planning / visioning Staff and EOTC, as Appropriate All Year Participate in Transportation Related Planning and Visioning, as Appropriate. Dependent on Project / Initiative Attachment 2 10 81 2022 EOTC Scheduled Meeting Dates Date Location Time Estimate Anticipated Topic March 24, 2022 (Thursday) Pitkin County 4pm to 6pm Brush Creek Park and Ride to AABC Trail Connection Review EOTC Retreat / Long-Term Planning Prep – April 28 April 28, 2022 (Thursday) TBD 3pm to 6pm EOTC Retreat/Long-Term Planning Discussion May 26, 2022 (Thursday) Town of Snowmass Village 4pm to 6pm HOV Lane Enforcement Analysis Review Brush Creek Park and Ride - Long-Term Parking Plan Review (parking over 24 hours) October 27, 2022 (Thursday) City of Aspen 4pm to 6pm 2023 Budget and Work Plan Note: Additional meeting may be necessary in order to complete necessary tasks identified within this Plan. Attachment 2 11 82 EOTC Work Plan and Meeting Schedule – Amended February 2022 2022 Action Responsible Party Timeline Expected Outcome Link to Strategic Plan and CVTP EOTC Retreat / Long-Term Planning Discussion EOTC Staff April EOTC Mtg Understanding of future transportation trends and available options for mitigation EOTC Administration Brush Creek P&R: Develop Partnership with HCE for EV Charger Install Bike / Ped Connection to Rio Grande / AABC – Feasibility Study – Phase 2 EOTC Staff EOTC Staff in Collaboration with PitCo and COA Open Space and Trails All Year March EOTC Mtg Review Develop Partnership for Installation of EV Chargers following Completion of FLAP Improvements. Identification of Technically Feasible Alternatives for Connecting BC P&R to Rio Grande / AABC for Public Outreach Consideration in 2022. Guiding Principles: Environmental Sustainability, Economic Sustainability, Social Sustainability Key Strategies: Multi-Modal Network that Encourages Mode Shift, Regionalism and Cross-Sector Approach, Communication and Inter-Governmental Engagement CVTP Regional Priorities: Park and Ride Improvements; First and Last Mile Solutions; Transit Speed, Accessibility, Reliability, and Efficiency Enhancements; Technologies and Innovation to Encourage Mode Shift CVTP Upper Valley Priorities: Bike and Pedestrian Connections to Transit Stops and BC P&R; Multi-Modal Solution to Entrance to Aspen; Electrification of Transit System Attachment 3 12 83 2021 EOTC Near Term Transit Improvement Program: Truscott to Owl Creek Trail Buttermilk Bike / Pedestrian Underpass and Transit Signal Bypasses HOV Lane Enforcement Analysis Analysis of Up Valley and Down Valley BRT Direct Service to Snowmass Additional Permanent Automated Vehicle Counters EOTC Staff EOTC Staff EOTC Staff EOTC Staff EOTC Staff All Year – Report Out Spring 2023 All Year – Report Out Spring 2023 May EOTC Mtg Review All Year – Report Out Spring 2023 All Year Planning, Stakeholder Outreach, Design, and Partnership and Funding Identification. Planning, Stakeholder Outreach, Initial Design, and Partnership and Funding Identification. Analysis of Manual and Automated Enforcement Methods. Snowmass transit connection analysis to evaluate transit effectiveness and efficiency, and determine cost, frequency, and expected utilization of increased / enhanced service levels. Plan, Design, Permit, Construct Additional Vehicle Counters in Key Locations within Upper Valley Guiding Principles: Environmental Sustainability, Economic Sustainability, Social Sustainability Key Strategies: Multi-Modal Network that Encourages Mode Shift, Regionalism and Cross-Sector Approach, Communication and Inter-Governmental Engagement CVTP Regional Priorities: Park and Ride Lot Improvements; First and Last Mile Solutions; Transit Speed, Accessibility, Reliability, and Efficiency Enhancements; Congestion Mitigation Measures; Technologies and Innovation to Encourage Mode Shift CVTP Upper Valley Priorities: Bike and Pedestrian Connections to Transit Stops and BC P&R; Multi-Modal Solution to Entrance to Aspen; Snowmass Village to Brush Creek Park and Ride Service Commensurate with Highway 82 Corridor Transit Service Participate in Snowmass Transit Center, Airport, and Regional Transportation Planning / Visioning Staff and EOTC, as Appropriate All Year Participate in Transportation Related Planning and Visioning, as Appropriate. Dependent on Project / Initiative Attachment 3 13 84 2023 Action Responsible Party Timeline Expected Outcome Link to Strategic Plan and CVTP Continue Progress on Implementation of 2021 EOTC Transit Improvement Program EOTC Staff All Year Continued Implementation of 2021 EOTC Transit Improvement Program Guiding Principles: Environmental Sustainability, Economic Sustainability, Social Sustainability Key Strategies: Multi-Modal Network that Encourages Mode Shift, Regionalism and Cross-Sector Approach, Communication and Inter-Governmental Engagement CVTP Regional Priorities: First and Last Mile Solutions; Transit Speed, Accessibility, Reliability, and Efficiency Enhancements; Congestion Mitigation Measures; Technologies and Innovation to Encourage Mode Shift CVTP Upper Valley Priorities: Bike and Pedestrian Connections to Transit Stops and BC P&R; Multi-Modal Solution to Entrance to Aspen; Airport / AABC Multi-Modal transit Hub and transit Circulation Enhancements Attachment 3 14 85 Brush Creek P&R: FLAP Improvements – Construction Recommendation on Long-Term Parking Plan Food Truck / Farm Stand – Experiment EOTC Staff in Collaboration with RFTA, CDOT, FHWA, COA, and TOSV EOTC Staff EOTC Staff All Year All Year All Year Complete Construction of Approved FLAP Improvements. Staff Recommendation on how Long-Term Parking (over 24 hours) could be Accommodated and Managed Manage and Execute Food Truck / Farm Stand Experiment if Permitted. Guiding Principles: Environmental Sustainability, Economic Sustainability, Social Sustainability Key Strategies: Multi-Modal Network that Encourages Mode Shift, Regionalism and Cross-Sector Approach, Communication and Inter-Governmental Engagement CVTP Regional Priorities: Park and Ride Improvements; First and Last Mile Solutions; Transit Speed, Accessibility, Reliability, and Efficiency Enhancements; Congestion Mitigation Measures; Technologies and Innovation to Encourage Mode Shift CVTP Upper Valley Priorities: Bike and Pedestrian Connections to Transit Stops and BC P&R; Multi-Modal Solution to Entrance to Aspen; Snowmass Village to Brush Creek Park and Ride Service Commensurate with Highway 82 Corridor Transit Service Participate in Snowmass Transit Center, Brush Creek P&R Development, Airport, and regional transportation planning / visioning Staff and EOTC, as Appropriate All Year Participate in Transportation Related Planning and Visioning, as Appropriate. Dependent on Project / Initiative Attachment 3 15 86 2022 EOTC Scheduled Meeting Dates Date Location Time Estimate Anticipated Topic March 24, 2022 (Thursday) Pitkin County 4pm to 6pm Brush Creek Park and Ride to AABC Trail Connection Review EOTC Retreat / Long-Term Planning Prep – April 28 April 28, 2022 (Thursday) TBD 3pm to 6pm EOTC Retreat/Long-Term Planning Discussion May 26, 2022 (Thursday) Town of Snowmass Village 4pm to 6pm HOV Lane Enforcement Analysis Review October 27, 2022 (Thursday) City of Aspen 4pm to 6pm 2023 Budget and Work Plan Note: Additional meeting may be necessary in order to complete necessary tasks identified within this Plan. Attachment 3 16 87 TOWN OF SNOWMASS VILLAGE RESOLUTION NO. SERIES OF 2022 A RESOLUTION OF THE TOWN COUNCIL OF THE TOWN OF SNOWMASS VILLAGE, COLORADO, APPROVING THE FIRST AMENDMENT TO THE 2022 WORK PLAN FOR THE ELECTED OFFICIALS TRANSPORTATION COMMITTEE (EOTC) WHEREAS, the Town Council of Snowmass Village, the Aspen City Council and the Pitkin County Board of County Commissioners (the "Parties") have previously identified general elements of their Comprehensive Valley Transportation Plan (the "Plan") which are eligible for funding from the Pitkin County one-half cent transit sales and use tax; and WHEREAS, the Parties entered into an Intergovernmental Agreement (IGA) dated May 3rd, 2021 which identifies the method and process by which the Parties are to implement the Plan; and WHEREAS, at the EOTC meeting held on October 28, 2021, the Parties considered and approved the attached 2022 work plan for the Pitkin County one-half cent transit sales and use tax; and WHEREAS, at the Town of Snowmass Village Council held on ____, 2022, Council considered and approved the attached first amendment to the 2022 work plan for the Pitkin County one-half cent transit sales and use tax. NOW THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED by the Town Council of the Town of Snowmass Village, Colorado, that the first amended 2022 work plan for the one-half cent transit sales and use tax is hereby approved. READ, APPROVED, AND ADOPTED by the Town Council of the Town of Snowmass Village, Colorado on the __ of ______, 2022, upon a motion made by Council Member __________, the second of Council Member __________, and upon a vote of _ in favor and _ opposed. TOWN OF SNOWMASS VILLAGE _________________________ Bill Madsen, Mayor Attachment 4 17 88 APPROVED AS TO FORM ________________________ John Dresser, Town Attorney ATTEST: _________________________ Megan Boucher, Town Clerk Attachment 4 18 89 RESOLUTION NO. ____ SERIES OF 2022 A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF ASPEN, COLORADO, APPROVING THE FIRST AMENDMENT TO THE 2022 WORK PLAN FOR THE ELECTED OFFICIALS TRANSPORTATION COMMITTEE (EOTC) WHEREAS, the Aspen City Council, the Pitkin County Board of County Commissioners and the Town Council of Snowmass Village (the "Parties") have previously identified general elements of their Comprehensive Valley Transportation Plan (the "Plan") which are eligible for funding from the Pitkin County one-half cent transit sales and use tax; and WHEREAS, the Parties entered into an Intergovernmental Agreement (IGA) dated May 3rd, 2021 which identifies the method and process by which the Parties are to implement the Plan; and WHEREAS, at the EOTC meeting held on October 28, 2021, the Parties considered and approved the attached 2022 work plan for the Pitkin County one-half cent transit sales and use tax; and WHEREAS, at the Aspen City Council meeting held on ____, 2022, Council considered and approved the attached first amendment to the 2022 work plan for the Pitkin County one-half cent transit sales and use tax. NOW THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED by the City Council of the City of Aspen, Colorado, that the attached first amendment to the 2022 work plan for the one-half cent transit sales and use tax is hereby approved. RESOLVED, APPROVED, AND ADOPTED this __ day of _____, 2022, by the City Council for the City of Aspen, Colorado. _________________________ Torre, Mayor I, Nicole Henning, duly appointed and acting City Clerk, do certify that the foregoing is a true and accurate copy of that resolution adopted by the City Council of the City of Aspen, Colorado, at a meeting held _____, 2022. _________________________ Nicole Henning, City Clerk Attachment 5 19 90 1 RESOLUTION OF THE BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS (“BOCC”) OF PITKIN COUNTY, COLORADO AMENDING RESOLUTION NO. 001-2021 ADOPTING THE FIRST AMENDMENT TO THE 2022 ELECTED OFFICIALS TRANSPORTATION COMMITTEE (“EOTC”) WORK PLAN RESOLUTION NO. ______, 2022 RECITALS WHEREAS, Pursuant to Section 2.8.3 (Actions) of the Pitkin County Home Rule Charter (“HRC”) official action by formal resolution shall be required for all actions of the Board not requiring ordinance power on matters of significant importance affecting citizens, and; WHEREAS, the Town Council of Snowmass Village, the Aspen City Council and the Pitkin County Board of County Commissioners (the "Parties") have previously identified general elements of their Comprehensive Valley Transportation Plan (the "Plan") which are eligible for funding from the Pitkin County one-half cent transit sales and use tax; and WHEREAS, pursuant to Resolution No. 033-2021 the Board of County Commissioners entered into an amended Intergovernmental Agreement (IGA) dated May 3rd, 2021 with other Parties, which identifies the method and process by which the Parties are to implement the Plan; and WHEREAS, at the EOTC meeting held on October 28, 2021, and after consideration and approval by all Parties, the Board of County Commissioners approved Resolution No. 001- 2021 approving the attached 2022 work plan for the Pitkin County one-half cent transit sales and use tax; and WHEREAS, at the Pitkin County Board of County Commissioners meeting held on ____, 2022, the Board considered and approved the first amendment to the 2022 work plan for the Pitkin County one-half cent transit sales and use tax attached hereto as Exhibit “A”; and WHEREAS, the BOCC finds that it is in the best interests of the citizens of Pitkin County to approve this Resolution. NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED by the Board of County Commissioners of Pitkin County, Colorado that it hereby adopts a Resolution of the Board of County Commissioners (“BOCC”) of Pitkin County, Colorado amending Resolution No. 001-2021 adopting the first amendment to the 2022 EOTC work plan and authorizes the Chair to sign the Resolution and upon the satisfaction of the County Attorney as to form, execute any other associated documents necessary to complete this matter. Attachment 6 20 91 2 INTRODUCED AND FIRST READ ON THE _______ DAY OF_______________, 2022 AND SET FOR SECOND READING AND PUBLIC HEARING ON THE ______DAY OF _______________ 2022. NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING AND TITLE AND SHORT SUMMARY OF THE ORDINANCE PUBLISHED IN THE ASPEN TIMES WEEKLY ON THE _______ DAY OF _____________, 2022. NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING AND THE FULL TEXT OF THE ORDINANCE POSTED ON THE OFFICIAL PITKIN COUNTY WEBSITE (www.pitkincounty.com ) ON THE ______DAY OF _______________ 2022. ADOPTED AFTER FINAL READING AND PUBLIC HEARING ON THE ______ DAY OF _______________ 2022. POSTED BY TITLE AND SHORT SUMMARY ON THE OFFICIAL PITKIN COUNTY WEBSITE (www.pitkincounty.com ) ON THE ______DAY OF_______________, 2022. PUBLISHED BY TITLE AND SHORT SUMMARY, AFTER ADOPTION, IN THE ASPEN TIMES WEEKLY ON THE _____ DAY OF ____________, 2022. ATTEST: BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS By _________________________ By: _____________________________ Jeanette Jones Patti Clapper, Chair Deputy County Clerk Date: ______________ APPROVED AS TO FORM: MANAGER APPROVAL ___________________________ _________________________________ John Ely, County Attorney Jon Peacock, County Manager Attachment 6 21 92 MEMORANDUM TO:Mayor and City Council FROM:Diane Foster, Assistant City Manager THROUGH:Sara Ott, City Manager MEMO DATE:February 2, 2022 MEETING DATE:February 8, 2022 RE:Affordable Housing Strategic Plan REQUEST OF COUNCIL: Due to the large volume and/or time needed for other agenda items this winter/spring, staff has placed this this is a work session item on this Regular Meeting agenda. No formal action is requested at this time. Staff will return to City Council at a later date to ask City Council to adopt the Affordable Housing Strategic Plan by resolution. At the February 8 City Council meeting, staff is requesting consensus feedback on this Affordable Housing Strategic Plan. SUMMARY AND BACKGROUND: While the City of Aspen and Pitkin County have been working on affordable housing independently and collaboratively since the 1970s, the Affordable Housing Strategic Plan is a forward-looking plan primarily focused on the next five years At the July 2021 City Council Retreat, the City Council identified three Priority Goals; affordable housing was one of those goals. In August 2021 City Council adopted a Goal Resolution that included language that specified actions to be taken to support the realization of that goal: The City's Council will continue to evaluate, identify opportunities, plan, partner, facilitate, and leverage existing and new resources to invest in the development and maintenance of affordable housing. This will be accomplished through: a. Convening a City Housing Retreat; b. Creating an affordable housing strategic plan; c. Completing Council directed affordable housing development projects; d. Continuing to seek additional affordable housing development opportunities. e. Leveraging and amending regulations and policies in support of affordable housing; and f. Supporting continuous improvement with the APCHA program, including ensuring adequate resources 93 The December 2021 City Council Housing Retreat was focused specifically on the affordable housing needs of the Aspen area, its workforce and community. City Council’s ideas and direction from that Housing Retreat led to the creation of this Affordable Housing Strategic Plan. A significant portion of the content of this plan was developed and/or clarified during the Housing Retreat. Thanks to the following individuals for their contributions to this plan the many hours spent discussing various elements and, of course, editing:(in alphabetical order) Ben Anderson Chris Everson Diane Foster Matthew Gillen Ron LeBlanc Scott Miller Sara Ott Pete Strecker Phillip Supino DISCUSSION: This is the draft of the Affordable Housing Strategic Plan. Because it is a 33 page plan plus appendices, staff recommends the following approach to avoid a lengthy group micro-editing process during a City Council meeting: 1.1st Pass: Read the whole document through without making edits, comments or notes. This will help you to get familiar with the document very quickly. 2.2nd Pass: High Level Review - Take notes on a. With which items do you agree and/or don’t need significant changes? b. With which items do you disagree or which items need may need substantive changes? c. What is missing? 3.3rd Pass:Focus on specific areas: a.For Whom is Affordable Housing Intended & Where Will New Units be Located?:Do you generally agree with this? b.Where have we been successful? & Where can we do better in the future?: Do you generally agree with this? c.SWOT Analysis - Reminder – SWOT Analysis is not an exhaustive list. Focus is on high level, major items: i. Are there major items that should be removed? ii. Are there major items that should be added d. Action items i. Are there any that are included that should be removed? ii. Are there any that are not included that should be added? e.Decision Matrix: This was a first draft by staff. Staff does expect City Council to edit/reprioritize these items as a last step in this review process. 4.Mirco-editing (OPTIONAL):We will not discuss micro-edits at the February 8 City Council Meeting. If you have micro-edits, please use the guidelines below and feel free to email micro-edits to Diane Foster. Also – please do not send major changes when you send micro-edits, those cannot be made without review from the whole City Counccil : 94 a.Typos: Please feel free to identify any typos that need to be corrected, although please do not feel that you need to do this. Multiple staff members have reviewed this document several times – AND undoubtedly, we missed something. b.Grammar corrections: Same as typos; please email those to Diane. c.Syntax errors: Please identify those as well if you see them; same as typos and grammar, please notify Diane if you find those. d.Fact corrections:If you find an item that is factually incorrect, please note that and, if you have the correct information, please include that when you send it to Diane. e. Word choice & phrasing: These two are a little trickier. If you think we have chosen the wrong word or the phrasing is misleading, please let Diane know. If you simply prefer a different word or different phrasing, please consider not suggesting a change, as five people changing word choice and phrasing will be difficult. Making edits to the electronic document:Just in case you haven’t made comments before in Adobe Acrobat, here is a tutorial with a short video. https://helpx.adobe.com/acrobat/using/commenting-pdfs.html Making edits on paper: If you prefer old school style, you can make handwritten edits. Please write carefully so Diane can read the edits. APPENDIX 2022 – 2026 Affordable Housing Strategic Plan 95 AFFORDABLE HOUSING STRATEGIC PLAN CITY OF ASPEN 2022-2026 96 COMPREHENSIVE STRATEGIC PLAN OF ACTION TO GENERATE & SUSTAIN AFFORDABLE HOUSING UNITS POLICY • APCHA Compliance Actions • APCHA Policy Actions to improve sustainability of existing affordable housing NEW DEVELOPMENT • Complete Burlingame Phase 3 Project • Complete Lumberyard Project • Partnerships • Regional Collaboration • Land Banking DEVELOPMENT NEUTRAL HOUSING SUSTAINABILITY & COMPLIANCE 3,200 CURRENT UNITS IN THE APCHA HOUSING PROGRAM • Replace Expiring Deed Restrictions with Permanent Deed Restrictions • Incentivize voluntary downsizing • Other future development neutral items • Community Development Policy Actions • Affordable Housing Certificates Program • Develop Financial Resources for Construction, Expiring Deed Restrictions & Land Banking • APCHA Policy Actions to increase numbers of available units 97 CITY OF ASPEN 2022-2026 — Affordable Housing Strategic Plan 3 INTRODUCTION With approximately 3,200 deed restricted affordable homes in the Aspen/Pitkin County area, our affordable housing programs are the envy of every ski town in the US. The forethought of elected officials to begin investing in affordable housing in the 1970s and their tenacious commitment to it since that time has resulted in a vibrant, lived-in community. Interspersed throughout the community, these 3,200 homes have helped the Aspen community fight the adverse effects of a historic rise in housing costs, yet we are struggling to now keep up with the market shift in utilization of many homes from residential to commercial in the form of short term rentals. The historic and current day support for affordable housing by Aspenites of all economic strata remains strong. This high level of community support is evidenced by voter-supported funding of the affordable housing program and the fierceness with which the community defends this valuable and essential asset. Compared to our peer ski town communities, we are fortunate to have this legacy of success with the development of affordable housing. Yet, in the present context, several intersecting factors have created a scenario that leaves the community challenged in sustaining important aspects of our economic and social fabric, In August of 2021, the Aspen City Council established three Priority Goals, with Affordable Housing being one of those. The adopted Goal Resolution language set out five steps to accomplish this goal, with the first being the December 2021 Aspen City Council Housing Retreat and the second being this output of that retreat, the Affordable Housing Strategic Plan. The City Council made clear their intent for this Affordable Housing Strategic Plan to be more than an aspirational document; they wanted a plan that is actionable. Accordingly, this plan prioritizes a series of actions to happen in the next five years that can have a significant and positive impact on the quantity of units and overall sustainability of our community’s affordable housing program. The Aspen City Council has and will continue to be committed to addressing the need for more affordable housing – and, as they have stated clearly, “We can’t do it alone.” To solve this challenge, we will need every tool available to us and we’ll need every partner to do their part. Thanks to the team who came together to develop this plan (in alphabetical order): Ben Anderson Chris Everson Diane Foster Matthew Gillen Ron LeBlanc Scott Miller Sara Ott Pete Strecker Phillip Supino ASPEN CITY COUNCIL’S DIRECTION & IDEAS ARE MEMORIALIZED IN THIS PLAN: Mayor Torre — Rachel Richards — Ward Hauenstein — Skippy Mesirow — John Doyle 98 CITY OF ASPEN 2022-2026 — Affordable Housing Strategic Plan 4 City Of Aspen Affordable Housing Strategic Plan _____________________________________________________________________5 What Is The Housing Strategic Plan Goal? .......................................................................................................................5 How Will The Goals Of The Plan Be Achieved? ..............................................................................................................5 A Focus On Action ......................................................................................................................................................................6 Pillars Of The Strategic Plan ...................................................................................................................................................7 Strategic Focus Areas ................................................................................................................................................................7 For Whom Is Affordable Housing Intended? ....................................................................................................................8 Where Will New Units Be Located? .....................................................................................................................................8 Livability Standards For Affordable Housing ....................................................................................................................8 Aspen Area Community Plan: Housing Policies & Policy Categories ___________________________________________9 Looking Back, Moving Forward: Where Have We Been Successful ___________________________________________10 Looking Back, Moving Forward: What Can We Do Better In The Future ____________________________________11 Council’s Support Of Outcomes ...........................................................................................................................................11 Assessing The Need For Affordable Housing In Our Community ______________________________________________12 Summary Of Already-Completed Assessments .............................................................................................................12 Addition Of Updated Data That Informs The Needs ...................................................................................................12 Community Support Of The Need For Affordable Housing .....................................................................................13 Readiness Assessment ___________________________________________________________________________________________________________14 Staffing ............................................................................................................................................................................................14 Financial Capacity on Requested Timeline ......................................................................................................................15 Swot Analysis __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________16 Action Plan Decision Matrix _____________________________________________________________________________________________________17 Actions ___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________18 Replace Expiring Deed Restrictions With Permanent Deed Restrictions ...........................................................18 Complete Lumberyard Project ..............................................................................................................................................19 Complete Burlingame Phase 3 Project ............................................................................................................................20 Community Development Policy Actions ..........................................................................................................................21 Certificates Of Affordable Housing Program Enhancements .................................................................................22 Develop Financial Resources For Construction, Expiring Deed Restrictions & Land Banking .................23 Incentivize Voluntary Downsizing ........................................................................................................................................24 Partnerships .................................................................................................................................................................................25 Apcha Compliance Actions....................................................................................................................................................26 Apcha Policy Actions To Increase Number Of Available Units ...............................................................................27 Apcha Policy Actions To Improve The Sustainability Housing Inventory ............................................................28 Additional Development Neutral Program Elements..................................................................................................29 Land Banking ..............................................................................................................................................................................30 Regional Collaboration .............................................................................................................................................................31 Actions Not Currently Prioritized __________________________________________________________________________________________32 Review Process _____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________33 Appendix _______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________34 Appendix A: Housing Chapter Of Aspen Area Community Plan ..........................................................................35 Appendix B: Community Afordable Housing And Livability .....................................................................................41 TABLE OF CONTENTS 99 CITY OF ASPEN 2022-2026 — Affordable Housing Strategic Plan 5  The City Council will continue to evaluate, identify opportunities, plan, partner, facilitate, and leverage existing and new resources to invest in the development and maintenance of affordable housing. This will be accomplished through: (City Council Goal Resolution August 2021) CITY OF ASPEN HOUSING STRATEGIC PLAN WHAT IS THE HOUSING STRATEGIC PLAN GOAL? To provide an action plan to support the continued availability of affordable housing that is high quality, sustain- able, and results in a lived-in community and a healthy workforce. HOW WILL THE GOALS OF THE PLAN BE ACHIEVED? POLICY PROGRAMS PARTNERSHIPS Aspen Area Community Plan & Land Use Code encourage, support & require the creation of affordable housing within the urban growth boundary. City Council’s policy direction regarding land acquisition is to consider any and all acquisitions, including partnerships. The Affordable Housing Certificates Program has been in place since 2010 – with the first project completed in 2012. This program encourages developers to build affordable housing by providing a credit for each affordable housing unit built. That credit can then be sold to another developer who can use it to fulfill employee mitigation requirements on a separate project. The program has included new projects, conversions of freemarket units to deed-restricted, and historically designated properties. The Aspen Pitkin County Housing Authority manages the sales, rental, management & sustainability of deed restricted affordable housing. Development of affordable housing through private and public partnerships has and will continue to provide an alternative to the City-as-Developer approach. With reduced availability of freemarket housing in the Roaring Fork Valley, the need for regional affordable housing partnerships increases. Supporting continuous improvement with the APCHA program, including ensuring adequate resources Convening a City Housing Retreat Creating an affordable housing strategic plan Completing Council directed affordable housing development projects Continuing to seek additional affordable housing development opportunities Leveraging and amending regulations and policies in support of affordable housing 100 CITY OF ASPEN 2022-2026 — Affordable Housing Strategic Plan 6 Every member of the Aspen City Council – both before and during the December 2021 City Council Housing Retreat – identified the importance of a specific Action Plan within the Affordable Housing Strategic Plan. Staff has reviewed input received from City Council during the Housing Retreat and over the past few years to develop this prioritization. Please see page 17 to see how these items were prioritized. Further detail on each action item can be found starting on page 18. PRIORITY • APCHA Compliance Actions • APCHA Policy Actions to Increase Number Of Available Units • APCHA Policy Actions to Improve The Sustainability Housing Inventory • Additional Development Neutral Program Elements • Land Banking • Regional Collaboration HIGHEST PRIORITY • Replace Expiring Deed Restrictions with Permanent Deed Restrictions • Complete Lumberyard Project • Complete Burlingame Phase 3 Project TOP PRIORITY • Community Development Policy Actions • Certificates of Affordable Housing Program Enhancements • Develop Financial Resources for Construction, Expiring Deed Restrictions & Land Banking • Incentivize voluntary downsizing • Partnerships A FOCUS ON ACTION Marolt 101 CITY OF ASPEN 2022-2026 — Affordable Housing Strategic Plan 7 PILLARS OF THE STRATEGIC PLAN Increase the quantity of affordable housing Increase quality of new & existing affordable housing Preserve affordability Provide community housing Ensure the sustainability of the program Support the policies identified in the Aspen Area Community Plan 1 2 3 4 5 6 STRATEGIC FOCUS AREAS SAFE & LIVED-IN COMMUNITY OF CHOICE: Ensure Aspen is an attractive, diverse and safe city to live, work and visit year-round. This includes opportunities to access childcare, healthcare, housing, transit, parks, recreation and technological connectivity. COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT: Ensure a trusted dialogue and relationship in the community that encourages participation, consensus building, and meaningful engagement. PROTECT OUR ENVIRONMENT: Ensure that policy decisions, programs and projects manage impacts to the environment, climate, and public health and well- being. SMART CUSTOMER FOCUSED GOVERNMENT: Provide value to the community by continuously improving services and processes based on feedback, data, best practices, and innovation. FISCAL HEALTH & ECONOMIC VITALITY: Promote economic sustainability of the Aspen community by advancing a healthy, diverse local economy while responsibly managing revenue streams, community investments, and financial reserves. 102 CITY OF ASPEN 2022-2026 — Affordable Housing Strategic Plan 8 LIVABILITY STANDARDS FOR AFFORDABLE HOUSING •environmental sustainability •accessibility •quality of construction •parking & storage •unit size •open space & trails •natural light •public transportation WHERE WILL NEW UNITS BE LOCATED? Third Priority: Outside of City limits (This is a change from prior policy) >> To allow for closer proximity to major medical centers >> Partnerships with Pitkin County >> Other regional partnerships FOR WHOM IS AFFORDABLE HOUSING INTENDED? Affordable Housing in the Aspen area is both workforce housing and community housing. The Housing Vision statement in the Aspen Area Community Plan (AACP) makes this clear: We believe that a strong and diverse year-round community and a viable and healthy local workforce are fundamental cornerstones for the sustainability of the Aspen Area community. The AACP cites the benefits of affordable housing to the Aspen community; it “helps to ensure a vital, demographically diverse year-round community” made up of “a healthy mix of people, including singles, families and seniors.” While affordable housing supports the community’s workforce, according to the Mission Statement in the Aspen Pitkin County Housing Authority’s Regulations, affordable housing is also intended for retirees and people with disabilities who have been actively employed within Pitkin County prior to retirement and/or disability. 1 2 3 Top Priority: Within the roundabout, including in the Core Second Priority: Within the Urban Growth Boundary Housing developments should endeavor to balance the principles of community, livability and quality against impacts such as unreasonable levels of cost and construction activity intrusion. Housing structures should utilize land as efficiently as possible and should seek construction efficiencies to levels that do not sacrifice livability beyond levels that are not consistent with these goals. Architecture should be sensitive to neighborhood context to the extent possible while achieving these goals. A myriad of design elements all combine to make a development livable. As discussed further in Appendix B, these elements include, but are not limited to: 103 CITY OF ASPEN 2022-2026 — Affordable Housing Strategic Plan 9 ASPEN AREA COMMUNITY PLAN (AACP): Housing Policies & Policy Categories The policies outlined in the Housing chapter and related housing mitigation policies in the Managing Growth for Community & Economic Sustainability chapter are intended to meet these challenges as the community continues to provide affordable housing. A full copy of the Housing section of the Aspen Area Community Plan, pages 38-42, can be found in Appendix A. At the same time, the 2012 AACP calls for further research on the physical limits to development in the form of ultimate build-out, projected future impacts related to job generation, demographic trends, the conversion of local free market homes and other factors. This kind of statistical analysis will help inform future decision-making and goal-setting in a more meaningful way. This plan emphasizes the need to spread accountability and responsibility for providing affordable housing units beyond the City and County governmental structures, and continuing to pursue affordable housing projects on available public land through a transparent and accountable public process. While past plans have supported "buy-down" alternatives, there has been little comprehensive effort in this regard. A "buy-down" program may be an expensive proposition, but this plan calls for exploring it more thoroughly. The idea is to finally determine if the community is willing to pay the price for providing long-term affordable housing by converting existing free market homes, and/or affordable housing, rather than building new homes. Little Ajax (Source: 2012 Aspen Area Community Plan) 104 CITY OF ASPEN 2022-2026 — Affordable Housing Strategic Plan 10 LOOKING BACK, MOVING FORWARD: Where have we been successful? With a total of approximately 3,200 deed restricted units within the Aspen/Pitkin County area, 72% (2,303) of which are located within Aspen City limits, this area is home to what is likely the largest affordable housing program in the nation on a per capita basis. In the early 1970s, responding to a loss of free-market employee housing, Pitkin County and the City of Aspen started separate housing programs. Early recognition of the problem and immediate action and sustained investment has created a housing program that is not only the envy of every ski town, it has been the key to maintaining the soul of the community. In 1982 Aspen and Pitkin County joined together to form the Aspen Pitkin County Housing Authority. The City and County jointly fund this program that is now operating under the Sixth Amended and Restated Intergovernmental Agreement, signed in May 2019. Importantly, and unlike some other western ski resort communities, the Aspen community has consistently supported affordable housing through both the 1% Housing Real Estate Transfer Tax and 45% of the .45% Housing and Day Care Sales Tax. These funds have supported the City in the role of developer — although private sector companies are hired to build the units— and have also allowed the City to join with private sector developers to build new affordable housing units. The aforementioned housing policies implemented through the Land Use Code, such as the Affordable Housing Credits Program and the Growth Management Quota System, have also resulted in new affordable housing unit generation. COMPLETED PUBLIC PROJECTS: 2000 - 2021 YEAR FACILITY UNITS OWN/RENT 2000 Snyder 15 Own 2001 7th and Main 12 Own 2002 Truscott II 87 Rent 2005 Annie Mitchell 39 Own 2006 Little Ajax 14 Own 2007 Burlingame Ranch I 91 Own 2015 Burlingame Ranch II 86 Own 2020 802 West Main 10 Rent 2020 517 Park Circle 11 Rent 2021 488 Castle Creek 24 Rent TOTAL COMPLETED 389 257 Own/ 132 Rent TOTAL FTEs 840 FTEs: Number of full time employees housed GENERAL RESIDENTIAL DATA (WITHIN THE CITY OF ASPEN) YEAR 2000 2010 2020 TOTAL HOUSEHOLDS 4,354 5,929 6,197 % CHANGE 2000-2010 // 36.2% 2010-2020 // 4.5% OCCUPIED HOUSEHOLDS 2,903 3,516 3,540 % CHANGE 2000-2010 // 21.1%% 2010-2020 // 0.7% VACANT HOUSEHOLDS 1,451 2,413 2,657 % CHANGE 2000-2010 // 66.4% 2010-2020 // 10.1% % OF VACANT UNITS (free market and affordable combined)33%41%43% Source: Colorado State Demographer’s Office compiled decennial US Census Data from 2000-2020; and APCHA data derived from HomeTrek. Deed Restricted APCHA Units in COA (Source: APCHA)Total: 2,303 Free-Market Units Total from Census less APCHA units Total: 3,894 % of Vacant Free-Market Units (assuming 100% of APCHA units are occupied)68% 105 CITY OF ASPEN 2022-2026 — Affordable Housing Strategic Plan 11 LOOKING BACK, MOVING FORWARD: What can we do better in the future At its December 2021 City Council Housing Retreat, the Council identified what has been done well and what could be done better in the future: YEAR FACILITY UNITS OWN/RENT *2022 Burlingame Ranch III 79 Own **2024-2035 Lumberyard 310 2/3 Rent, 1/3 Own TOTAL In Process 389 177 Own, 212 Rent TOTAL FTEs 780 * Currently under construction ** Currently in planning, subject to change COUNCIL’S SUPPORT OF OUTCOMES When the City is the developer in an affordable housing project, the City Council has a significant role in the design and development of that project. During the December 2021 City of Aspen Housing Retreat, the City Council put forward the following statements in support of successful project outcomes: PUBLIC PROJECTS CURRENTLY IN PROGRESS Maintain the quality of the community through sustainability and have the courage and political will to preserve the community Ensure community understanding of why certain actions are being taken and help the community to understand the 20-year outcomes. Better organize and articulate priorities Make improvements to existing programs, including better use of existing housing stock and utilizing unused bedrooms already built Preservation and restoration of existing housing Adding housing without construction when possible Developing voluntary programming around retirees and seniors still in housing by creating a better situation for them; provide incentives to downsize Staff will be supported with the resources when they are needed City Council will take full ownership if we don’t succeed City Council will not change direction Council members commit to expressing concerns to staff ahead of time Trust and have patience with staff Lead with a public service heart Burlingame 106 CITY OF ASPEN 2022-2026 — Affordable Housing Strategic Plan 12 ASSESSING THE NEED FOR AFFORDABLE HOUSING IN OUR COMMUNITY SUMMARY OF ALREADY-COMPLETED ASSESSMENTS 2012 NEEDS ASSESSMENT: In 2012, staff prepared a strategic review of affordable housing document for a joint City/County housing work session which occurred in September of 2012. The 2012 strategic review hypothesized that from 2012 to 2022, over 650 new housing units would be needed to overcome the forces of job growth, gentrification, and retirement. 2019 NEEDS ASSESSMENT: The 2019 Greater Roaring Fork Regional Housing Study suggested that the need for affordable housing units in the Aspen-Snowmass area was greater than previously anticipated and growing. A copy of that report can be found at: apcha.org/ DocumentCenter/View/1197/Final-ReportGreater-Roaring-Fork- Regional-Housing-Study20190417?bidId= 2019 GREATER ROARING FORK REGIONAL HOUSING STUDY UNITS NEEDED 2017 2027 < 60% AMI 483 481 61-80% AMI 1401 2101 81-100% AMI 766 1204 101-120% AMI 663 861 121-140% AMI 420 245 141-160% AMI 227 327 >160% AMI 0 0 TOTAL NEED 3,960 5,219 ADDITION OF UPDATED DATA THAT INFORMS THE NEED To prepare for the City’s Lumberyard affordable housing development, in 2021 the City of Aspen commissioned the Lumberyard Demographic and Market Assessment which found that the Roaring Fork Valley is losing households in APCHA income categories 1 (up to 50% AMI) and 2 (51-85% AMI) and that most of the job growth in Aspen and Pitkin County is in APCHA income categories 2 (51-85% AMI) and 3 (86-130% AMI). The 2021 Lumberyard Demographic and Market Assessment goes on to suggest that rental units should be created primarily in APCHA income category 2 (38%), followed closely by category 3 (33%) and then category 1 (22%), and with a few rental units in category 4 (7%). The 2021 study also suggests that ownership units should be created primarily in APCHA income category 3 (34%), followed by categories 4 (26%) and 2 (23%) while providing some units in category 5 (17%). A similar income mix should be considered for the 79 units at Burlingame Ranch Phase III which will be available for sale in in the Fall of 2022. 107 CITY OF ASPEN 2022-2026 — Affordable Housing Strategic Plan 13 COMMUNITY SUPPORT OF THE NEED FOR AFFORDABLE HOUSING One needs only to read one of the two daily newspapers or listen to the local NPR broadcast to understand the need for additional affordable housing in our community, as well as for its preservation. These observations are well supported by longitudinal empirical data. The recently published results of the 2021 Pitkin County Community Survey also highlighted the community interest in affordable housing: “Respondents were asked to identify County services and initiatives provided by the County that they thought should receive the most emphasis, from County leaders, over the next two years. Forty-nine percent (49.4%) of respondents selected the County’s efforts to address affordable housing, including quality and quantity, as one of the most important services for the County to provide.” >>> https://civicclerk.blob.core.windows.net/stream/PITKINCOCO/ca4b2f6d-8481-4c26-98a4-b27638d5d0bc. pdf?sv=2015-12-11&sr=b&sig=gCFmloI5R0e4y3Q2O0MoRhm3W%2FvCIJKeV1r1Iqx2mfY%3D&st=2022-01- 17T20%3A25%3A08Z&se=2023-01-17T20%3A30%3A08Z&sp=r&rscc=no-cache&rsct=application%2Fpdf The 2018 City of Aspen Resident Survey cited “Ensuring the availability of adequate workforce housing at a reasonable cost to rent/purchase” as an essential area for the City government to take action, falling just behind protecting the quality and quantity of water in the Roaring Fork River. >>> https://www.cityofaspen.com/ArchiveCenter/ViewFile/Item/500 Similar results are seen in the 2016 Resident Survey, where “Ensuring the availability of adequate workforce housing at a reasonable cost to rent/purchase” again fell just behind Roaring Fork River water quality and quantity concerns, but tied with “Managing traffic in town more effectively” for third place. >>> https://www.cityofaspen.com/ArchiveCenter/ViewFile/Item/53 The 2015 Resident Survey did not include a Roaring Fork River question. In this survey, “Ensuring the availability of adequate workforce housing at a reasonable cost to rent/purchase.” was the top response. >>> https://www.cityofaspen.com/ArchiveCenter/ViewFile/Item/52 Burlingame Ranch 2021 Pitkin County Community Survey 2018 City of Aspen Resident Survey 2016 Resident Survey 2015 Resident Survey 108 CITY OF ASPEN 2022-2026 — Affordable Housing Strategic Plan 14 READINESS ASSESSMENT STAFFING Department & City’s Affordable Housing Development Fund Currently, the City of Aspen has one full time employee in the Capital Asset Department dedicated to the planning process for new affordable housing developments. Other full-time staff members from the Capital Asset Department provide construction management support during City-developed projects. Collaboration with staff from other departments is often leveraged during the planning process and may include staff from the City Manager’s and City Attorney’s offices, Finance, Community Development, Engineering, Building, Transportation, Parks, Utilities, Environmental Health and the Aspen Pitkin County Housing Authority. Funds from the City’s Affordable Housing Development Fund are otherwise typically used to staff projects as needed with third party professional and/or technical consultants on a project-by-project basis. Community Development Community Development has several staff members who focus on the development, implementation, and refinement of policies that support affordable housing development. During the 2022 Moratorium, Community Development staff will be working directly on new policies to support City Council’s affordable housing goals. As part of this work, significant analysis will be conducted that will support improvements to affordable housing efforts beyond the period of the Moratorium. APCHA Compliance: APCHA has two primary staff members who work part time on compliance, namely the Compliance, Policy & Systems Manager and APCHA’s outside attorney. APCHA’s Executive Director and Deputy Director also participate in compliance efforts. Qualifications: Two Qualification Specialists at APCHA ensure that the people who rent or purchase APCHA deed restricted property meet the requirements as defined in APCHA Regulations. APCHA Housing Sustainability: General upkeep of rental and ownership properties. • Rental housing sustainability for city-owned properties (Truscott, Aspen County Inn and Marolt), is managed by APCHA’s two-member Property Management Team and four-member Maintenance Team. • Housing sustainability for individual ownership units is a topic the APCHA Board began to address in April 2021, supported by the Assistant City Manager, APCHA Executive Director, Deputy Director and the Compliance, Systems and Policy Manager. • Housing sustainability by Home Owners Associations of condominium and other multi-family developments is a topic the APCHA Board would like to address in the future. APCHA staff will propose hiring a HOA Specialist in the future to support this effort as well as to help HOAs of APCHA deed restricted properties with capital reserve planning. City Manager’s Office The City Manager’s Office will be hiring a full time Housing Policy Analyst in the spring of 2022. Additionally, the City’s Assistant City Manager works part-time on housing topics. 109 CITY OF ASPEN 2022-2026 — Affordable Housing Strategic Plan 15 FINANCIAL CAPACITY ON REQUESTED TIMELINE Since 2000, over $240 million in dedicated revenues has been invested into the ongoing operation and expansion of the Aspen Pitkin County Housing Authority affordable housing inventory. This includes the development of the completed projects listed above as well as funds invested in upkeep and operation of existing City-owned facilities. Funds from this revenue stream are also budgeted annually toward the operation of the Aspen Pitkin County Housing Authority (APCHA), and those funds are also matched by Pitkin County. (The table to the right does not include such Pitkin County funds.) Funds have also been invested in land banking opportunities for future housing developments. Year Housing Fund Revenues 2000 $5,302,335 2001 $4,845,133 2002 $4,751,964 2003 $8,543,109 2004 $8,090,180 2005 $12,773,154 2006 $14,000,177 2007 $14,075,761 2008 $12,001,447 2009 $8,373,748 2010 $8,321,575 2011 $9,752,953 2012 $8,986,581 2013 $9,584,101 2014 $11,590,103 2015 $13,039,396 2016 $10,084,871 2017 $13,422,231 2018 $13,042,701 2019 $13,784,319 2020 $21,009,309 2021 EST $38,147,667 2000-2021 $243,808,166 Truscott 110 CITY OF ASPEN 2022-2026 — Affordable Housing Strategic Plan 16 A SWOT Analysis tool helps an organization to identify, at a high level, major internal and external Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities and Threats. •Strengths and Weaknesses are focused internally: What do we do well and where could we improve? What resources do we have and what resources do we need. •Opportunities and Threats are externally focused: Outside of our organization, what opportunities exist? What threats could harm our efforts? What is happening in the market that could help or hurt us? STRENGTHS • Community Support • City Council Commitment • Financial Resources • Knowledgeable Staff • 3,200 Affordable Housing Units • Pitkin County Partnership • Ability to hire outside private-sector resources WEAKNESSES • Maintenance Costs • Ability to access financial resources quickly • Development Neutral solutions alone can’t solve the problem • Staff workload limits ability to take on new projects • Buying down existing free-market residential and converting to affordable housing is prohibitively expensive • Highly dependent on outside resources OPPORTUNITIES • Land Acquisitions • Partnerships with private & public entities • Pitkin County potential for county-wide tax • Regional partnerships THREATS • Scarcity of land • Cost of Construction • Increased housing costs in entire Roaring Fork Valley • Deferred maintenance and escalating cost of capital repairs in privately-owned affordable housing HOAs • Inability of affordable housing residents to move into free market units in the future HELPFUL SWOT ANALYSIS HARMFUL EXTERNALINTERNAL111 CITY OF ASPEN 2022-2026 — Affordable Housing Strategic Plan 17 ACTION PLAN DECISION MATRIX Ajax Apartments Weight on a scale from 1 to 5, where 5 is high 5 3 4 4 5 Category Action Item Development Neutral Replace Expiring Deed Restrictions with Permanent Deed Restrictions 4 5 4 5 5 23 96 1 New Development Complete Lumberyard Project 5 4 3 4 3 19 80 2 New Development Complete Burlingame Phase 3 Project 4 3 2 4 5 18 78 3 Policy Community Development Policy Actions 3 4 5 5 2 19 77 4 Policy Certificates of Affordable Housing Program Enhancements 3 4 5 5 2 19 77 5 Policy Develop Financial Resources for Construction, Expiring Deed Restrictions & Land Banking 3 4 5 5 2 19 77 6 Development Neutral Incentivize voluntary downsizing 3 5 4 5 2 19 76 7 New Development Partnerships 2 4 2 5 3 16 65 8 Compliance & Sustainability APCHA Compliance Actions 1 4 5 5 1 16 62 9 Policy APCHA Policy Actions to increase number of available units 1 4 5 5 1 16 62 10 Compliance & Sustainability APCHA Policy Actions to improve the sustainability housing inventory 1 4 5 5 1 16 62 11 Development Neutral Additional Development Neutral Program Elements 3 4 1 5 2 15 61 12 New Development Land Banking 5 2 1 5 1 14 60 13 New Development Regional Collaboration 2 1 3 4 2 12 51 14Quantity of Affordable Housing UnitsProximity to Services Lower Cost: Most efficient use of land & dollarsSupports AACPHow quickly AF units will be realizedRaw ScoreWeighted Score Rank112 CITY OF ASPEN 2022-2026 — Affordable Housing Strategic Plan 18 ACTION: Replace Expiring Deed Restrictions with Permanent Deed Restrictions ACTION ITEM OWNERS Scott Miller, Chris Everson, Pete Strecker, Matthew Gillen OVERVIEW There are hundreds of deed restrictions with a sunset clause based on some triggering event in the future. When those deed restrictions expire, they will be gone forever. The goal should be to preserve the deed restriction permanently and provide for the preservation of the integrity of the housing unit associated with that deed restriction. After identifying all known expiring deed restrictions, several tools for preservation of those deed restrictions should be identified and the pros and cons of each one explored. Those tools include: • Purchase the deed restriction and re-write the terms. • Negotiate a trade with the owner of that deed restriction for something of value. • Enforce existing land use code, requiring replacement of some deed restrictions. • Legislate new land use code, requiring replacement of some or all deed restrictions. • Council and staff then need to actively pursue a strategy for implementing these tools on an as-needed basis as opportunities present themselves. ESTIMATED TIMELINE Spring 2022: Update the inventory expiring deed restrictions. Summer 2022: Council worksession to discuss recent attempts to preserve deed restrictions & explore the list of possible tools. Summer 2022: Include the identified tools into the Housing Strategic Plan. Fall/Winter 2022: Land Use Code (LUC) updates, in coordination with other potential amendments to the LUC. There is a high likelihood that other actions will be necessary beyond changes to LUC. HOW THIS ACTION INCREASES THE NUMBER By preserving existing deed-restriction now, no ground will be lost. We will not need to replace these units with new units simply to get back to the status quo. CONNECTION TO AACP The AACP states that “The provision of affordable housing remains important” but, “we cannot build our way out of this challenge.” Preserving existing deed-restricted housing stock eliminates the need for entitling and building new deed-restricted housing on a one-to-one ratio. To the extent that this can be accomplished, this saves the community development dollars and the environmental impacts of construction. Development Neutral 113 CITY OF ASPEN 2022-2026 — Affordable Housing Strategic Plan 19 ACTION: Complete Lumberyard Project ACTION ITEM OWNERS Scott Miller & Chris Everson OVERVIEW The City of Aspen’s Lumberyard affordable housing project site is located just south of the Aspen airport business center on the east side of Colorado state highway 82. The City anticipated the development of affordable housing in the area of the current project site and purchased part of the site in 2007. Later in 2020, the City purchased the 3-acre Aspen Mini Storage property, bringing the total project site area to about 10.5 acres. In 2019, Aspen City Council directed the start of a community outreach and conceptual design process which included a process of community engagement and feedback to help inform the design process. The 2019 outreach and conceptual design effort helped to establish that the City should provide a variety of unit types, serving a mix of demographics, and that the site is appropriate for larger buildings and potentially higher density than may be appropriate elsewhere. Since parking is challenging at the airport business center, there was a sentiment that the development should be careful not to make the parking challenge worse by under-parking any development at the Lumberyard site. It was also decided that childcare is needed in the community and may be appropriate at this site The conceptual design effort studied unit counts ranging from 140 units up to 500+ units, and given the affordable housing crisis in Aspen, City Council set their aim at 310 units of affordable housing to be designed for the site. In order to accommodate the higher-than-usual density for the site, and to mitigate the impacts of the development to create a livable neighborhood, it was necessary to explore the use of underground parking and 4-story building massing. In late 2020, the project team presented a conceptual master plan with 310 units and 100% underground parking. Prior to beginning a schematic design process, Aspen City Council had concerns about impacts of 100% underground parking, building spacing, height, orientation and highway and airport noise. These concerns and much more are currently being reviewed through a process of community engagement and City Council feedback, with Aspen City Council weighing in on the evaluation of four potential site arrangements. The project aims to create 200+ rental units and 100+ ownership units for the purpose of housing local community workforce, qualified based on the Aspen Pitkin County Housing Authority regulations. To be successful, the project effort will bring together necessary funding to begin construction of access and infrastructure at the project site in 2024, with phases of housing development to follow thereafter. With the continued schematic design process ongoing, a development application is anticipated in mid-2022 and the land use approval process will be pursued at that time. ESTIMATED TIMELINE 2022: Complete Schematic Design, Submit Development Application for Approval Process 2023: PD Recording, Construction Documents, Building Permit Application Process 2024: Target for Access & Infrastructure Construction Start 2025: Target for First Phase of Housing Construction to Start 2027: Target for Occupancy of First Phase of Affordable Housing 2028+: Remaining Phases of Housing Construction and Occupancy TBD HOW THIS ACTION INCREASES THE NUMBER The Lumberyard Project is anticipated to yield approximately 310 affordable housing units CONNECTION TO AACP The creation of affordable housing in the Aspen area reduces pressures on the valley-wide transportation system by providing housing opportunities for local workforce nearer to where they work and reduces the amount of time spent commuting for workforce, significantly improving quality of life. This effort similarly reduces air quality impacts associated by reducing total commuter miles. New Development 114 CITY OF ASPEN 2022-2026 — Affordable Housing Strategic Plan 20 ACTION: Complete Burlingame Phase 3 ACTION ITEM OWNERS Scott Miller & Chris Everson OVERVIEW Two prior phases have been completed, with a total of 177 affordable units at Burlingame Ranch. This thriving neighborhood is home to a diverse working population including many families and children. The third phase of building is currently in process as of March 2021. The current construction effort will create 79 additional affordable condominium units in 8 buildings, along with associated landscape and infrastructure. There are also two remaining single-family units to be constructed before the subdivision is complete. The current construction effort utilizes factory-built modular building construction to shorten the construction timeline and to minimize on-site construction impacts to the surrounding neighborhood. Foundations are constructed on the site, and modular buildings are trucked in, lifted and carefully placed, and assembled to completion on the site. Site retaining, roadway infrastructure, and landscape work is also part of the effort. The Burlingame Ranch Phase 3 project effort will deliver 79 new affordable ownership condominiums to Aspen and Pitkin County’s inventory of affordable housing, and sales are expected to begin September 2022. The architectural character, unit sizes and interior configurations are consistent with the previous phase Phase 3 includes carport structures which allow each unit to have one assigned, covered carport parking space with attached storage closet. There will also be an equal number of uncovered surface parking spaces to reach an overall parking capacity of 2 parking spaces per unit. Terms of use for all parking spaces is expected to be governed by the new phase 3 condominium homeowner’s association, which will be set up in the same manner as the two existing condominium associations which exist at Burlingame Ranch already. Adjacent to public parks and Open Space, the landscape for phase 3 will be integrated with the prior phases and includes numerous open lawn areas, hundreds of trees and shrubs, and walkway connections to create a highly accessible community. Those internal walkway connections are also integrated into the larger trail connection plan, and the facility will utilize an irrigation system equipped with a raw water source to avoid the use of potable water for the purpose of watering. The phase 3 residential program consists of approximately 84,000 square feet of livable area within a total of 79 condominium units. The condominium units are a mix of flats and multi-level townhomes with (25) 1-bedroom flat units, (12) 2-bedroom flat units, (5) 2-bedroom townhome units, (23) 3-bedroom flat units, and (14) 3-bedroom townhome units. Unit sales for these 79 new affordable homeownership units beginning September 2022 are anticipated to be facilitated by the Aspen / Pitkin County Housing Authority (APCHA) and are expected to be done via a lottery process. The income levels to be served by these units is expected to be APCHA income categories 2 through 5, although the specific details of the number of units in each category and further details of the sales process will be more closely defined throughout the remainder of 2021 and in the coming months. ESTIMATED TIMELINE Burlingame Phase 3 units scheduled for sale fall 2022. HOW THIS ACTION INCREASES THE NUMBER Burlingame Phase 3 will result in 79 new ownership units. CONNECTION TO AACP The first phase of Burlingame Ranch affordable housing was built in 2006. While land banking is not specifically called out in the AACP as a strategy, the primary outcome of the 2007 Housing Summit was to encourage additional “land banking,” which ultimately resulted in the purchase of the BMC West property, a parcel at 488 Castle Creek Road and others. The 2008 Affordable Housing Plan evaluated 15 potential sites for affordable housing units, identifying a range of up to 685 possible housing units.” New Development 115 CITY OF ASPEN 2022-2026 — Affordable Housing Strategic Plan 21 Community Development works continually to better coordinate the AACP and the LUC in the creation of affordable housing development opportunities. During the 2022 Moratorium, staff will work directly on several affordable housing- related improvements to the LUC. The overview below identifies potential policy changes to be evaluated and proposed during the Moratorium and beyond. Additionally, Community Development and APCHA will work collaboratively on a number of these items. OVERVIEW • The Land Use Code (LUC) is the mechanism for exacting housing mitigation (units, fees, credits) from residential, lodge, and commercial development activities. In the GMQS standards, the creation of FTEs from development activities is the basis for the system of private sector affordable housing (AH) development. • There are numerous tools available to ComDev to alter the regulatory, development, and finance landscape to deliver additional affordable housing to the community, including: • Alter zoning standards to permit more density, intensity, and available land for AH development within the City Limits. • Create an AH overlay zone over appropriate zone districts that allows for AH development where applied and with specific standards. • Increase employee generation and mitigation amounts to require more AH from private development. • Require or incentivize on-site AH development for certain project and use types. • Restructure the GMQS to decouple AH FTE generation, unit creation, and fee extraction from development. Assess a fee or tax or certain uses to generate revenue for AH development, buy-down programs, land acquisition, and AH development subsidies. • Alter development review processes to streamline AH development reviews that meet specific standards. • Revise development fees to lower costs to AH development. • Create an impact fee for certain uses or development types which creates a revenue stream to offer financial subsidies for private sector AH development. • Affordable Housing by Right in Every Zone • In addition to the LUC, the AACP is another key tool for encouraging more AH development over time. The next AACP update could include the following to ensure more AH is developed: • Identify, annex (as necessary), and zone specific lands within the UGB for AH development. • Tie utilities extension policies outside the City Limits and existing service area to AH development standards. • Create policies for the UGB which preclude development of lands within the UGB for uses other than or prioritizing AH. • Create policies tying transit MMLOS and transportation network service extensions to AH development standards. • Create policies identifying lands in the UGB for AH-focused TOD developments. • Adopt clearly articulated land banking policies targeting specific properties in the UGB appropriate for acquisition and AH development. ACTION: Summary of Community Development Policy Recommendations ACTION ITEM OWNERS Phillip Supino & Ben Anderson ESTIMATED TIMELINE Once work on the moratorium is complete, Community Development staff will revisit this Action Item to provide a more robust plan. HOW THIS ACTION INCREASES THE NUMBER By ensuring the City’s regulations, policies, and development and impact fees extract AH units and revenue commensurate with the employment generation and community housing impacts. Further, by leveraging regulatory processes and police powers to ensure the community gets the development needed to achieve adopted City policy. CONNECTION TO AACP The following AACP statements (among others) support this action item. I.1. Achieve sustainable growth practices to ensure the long-term viability and stability of our community and diverse visitor-based economy. VII.1. Study and quantify all impacts that are directly related to all types of development. VII.2. Ensure that all new development and redevelopment mitigates all reasonable, directly related impacts. VIII.1. Restore public confidence in the development process. VIII.2. Create certainty in zoning and the land use process. II.5. Redefine and improve our buy-down policy of re-using existing housing inventory. III.2. Promote broader support and involvement in the creation of non-mitigation Affordable housing, including public-private partnerships. IV.2. All affordable housing must be located within the Urban Growth Boundary. IV.3. On-site housing mitigation is preferred. IV.5. The design of new affordable housing should optimize density while demonstrating compatibility with the massing, scale, and character of the neighborhood. Policy 116 CITY OF ASPEN 2022-2026 — Affordable Housing Strategic Plan 22 OVERVIEW The AH Certificates program is more than a decade old. The program has included new projects, conversions of freemarket units to deed-restricted, and the use of historically designated properties – all completed by developers in the private sector. Other than the land use reviews, the City of Aspen did not have to expend any resources in the development of these units. The FTEs generated by a project are typically determined by the number of bedrooms in each unit in the project. Categories of the units are assigned in the deed-restrictions. For the completed projects, all have been created in Categories 2, 3, and 4. There have been 109 FTEs generated by completed projects to date, with another 43 – either with Land Use approval or in Land Use Review. A number of program enhancements have been identified as necessary to improve program effectiveness, respond to market dynamics, ease program administration, and ensure the maximization of the benefits to the community and developers provided by the program. Those program enhancements include: • permitting program participants to leverage outside tax benefits and financing to develop AH units for credits; • aligning the value of a credit with the real-world occupancy of an AH unit; • ensuring alignment between the value of a credit and the cost to build an AH unit; • offering City financial incentives to credits developers to lower barriers to credits projects; • improved tracking of credit market dynamics including sale price and supply and demand. More detailed program analysis is needed to determine the full list of possible program enhancements which could include queue priority for building permit reviews as the potential for developer assistance or partnering. As it is included in the Land Use Code, the normal LUC amendment process is required to alter the program. Since its inception, the AH Certificates program has succeeded in motivating private sector development of non- mitigation AH units. The credits created by those developments has provided flexibility to private sector development to meet its mitigation requirements through the extinguishment of those credits. This symbiotic relationship has provided benefits to both sides of the credits equation. However, analysis is needed to determine if the credits program has resulted in more AH units that would have been required of the same private sector development activities over the same period of time. ACTION: Certificates of Affordable Housing Program Enhancements ACTION ITEM OWNERS Phillip Supino & Ben Anderson ESTIMATED TIMELINE 2022-2023: program analysis, stakeholder outreach, ordinance development, Council action HOW THIS ACTION INCREASES THE NUMBER Maximizing the effectiveness of the program will incentivize private sector AH developers to build new units, or convert free-market into deed- restricted affordable units. CONNECTION TO AACP The following AACP statements (among others) support this action item. I.1. Achieve sustainable growth practices to ensure the long-term viability and stability of our community and diverse visitor-based economy. I.5. Through good land use planning and sound decision-making, ensure that the ultimate population density of the Aspen Area does not degrade the quality of life for residents and the enjoyment of visitors. V.2. Facilitate the sustainability of essential businesses that provide basic community needs. VII.2. Ensure that all new development and redevelopment mitigates all reasonable, directly related impacts. II.1. The housing inventory should bolster our socioeconomic diversity. II.2. Affordable housing should be prepared for the growing number of retiring Aspenites. III.2. Promote broader support and involvement in the creation of non-mitigation Affordable housing, including public-private partnerships TABLE 7. AH CERTIFICATES PROJECTS SINCE 2012 Completed Projects FTEs Generated 301 W. Hyman 14 313/317 AABC 24 210 W. Main 18 518 W. Main 29.66 834 W. Hallam 18.75 815 Vine 3 829 W. Bleeker 1.25 TOTAL 109 FTEs Projects with approval or in review FTEs Proposed 611 W. Main 15.9 1020 E. Cooper 14.1 1235 E. Cooper 12.7 TOTAL 42.7 FTEs Policy 117 CITY OF ASPEN 2022-2026 — Affordable Housing Strategic Plan 23 OVERVIEW Taxes • Current tax collections dedicated to affordable housing (1.0% RETT and 45% of 0.45% sales tax) sunset 12/31/2040 (Resolution #81, 2008). • Sales tax collections have been relatively stable, with annual escalation of about 4-5% per year. RETT collections are extremely volatile & after the recent two years of record transaction and price appreciation, it is anticipated that there will be softness in the coming year(s) that will affect collections.   Debt Obligation Types of debt issuances possible depend on project: • General Obligation debt – full faith and credit of the City would back this issuance, but then would require voter approval. Will ensure best borrowing rate possible. This could allow for an ownership type product to be produced and sold, and would allow for some immediate payback into the fund when units are sold. • Tax Revenue Bonds – This would again require voter approval and would be limited in the size of the issuance to the pledged resources (tax collections generated by the sales or RETT taxes) to meet annual repayment terms. Best leveraged in conjunction with extension of existing taxes noted above, to maximize the duration for the payback term. • Certificates of Participation (COPs) can be issued if willing to pledge a city- owned asset of equal value (either can be the project itself or another asset(s)) – if it were the project, it would then mean the project would be rental units. This would likely yield a borrowing rate that is one notch below the best rate the City could achieve under a General Obligation type issuance. • Does not create new resources but rather just changes the availability of resources to achieve goals sooner (pledges future resources today and therefore not available in the future) • Debt is best for creating or acquiring new assets. It is not as good an option for preservation of deed restrictions (but is possible).   Establishment of New Sources • Exploration of new fees to supplement existing tax revenues and other affordable housing mitigation collections (also under review). • Collaborate with other jurisdictions to further a regional tax to support greater housing preservation and development. ACTION: Develop Financial Resources for New Construction, Expiring Deed Restrictions & Land Banking ACTION ITEM OWNER Pete Strecker ESTIMATED TIMELINE HOW THIS ACTION INCREASES THE NUMBER Specifics around any projects are needed to best match debt issuance options for the desired outcomes and to maximize the City’s credit rating wherever possible. Until this is developed, any debt issuance discussion is premature. New fee creation will be explored during the current land use moratorium period and options will be brought forward to Council for consideration. CONNECTION TO AACP Financing is a required component of any new affordable housing acquisition or development. Tax extensions and voter approval for debt issuance authority are subject to regular election cycles and would need to be coordinated with that in mind, plus any voter outreach effort prior to those voting periods. Fees can be adopted at any time, via the City ordinance process. This will require two readings and public review period. Policy 118 CITY OF ASPEN 2022-2026 — Affordable Housing Strategic Plan 24 ACTION: Incentivize voluntary downsizing to recapture & utilize unused bedrooms in the existing inventory ACTION ITEM OWNERS Chris Everson & Matthew Gillen OVERVIEW There are potentially 400+ underutilized bedrooms within the existing inventory. Subsidies for the creation of each new bedroom can be some $150,000+ per bedroom for new development. If incentives can be provided for owners/tenants with unused bedrooms to move to a smaller unit and free up the unused bedrooms so that they may be utilized to house people, and if this can be done at a lower cost than developing new bedrooms, then this can save resources such as development dollars, staff time and the environmental impact of construction. Actions/tools needed may include: • Incentive calculation which multiplies the fee in lieu at the category of the bedroom being traded in by the number of FTE slots being freed up and adjusting for depreciation. The amount of the incentive should be less than the subsidy of developing a new bedroom. • The household which is downsizing may apply their incentive, which is provided from the 150 Fund, to the purchase or rental of an existing or new unit, when available, and will receive lottery priority to do so. • Research and inventory specific units with vacant bedrooms and communicate incentive to owners/tenants Draft policy for implementation may include: • Allow priority in lottery for re-location of target households, target households should be able to use their priority to move to an existing or new smaller unit as those come available. • Implement policy with approval from APCHA board and City Council (for use of 150 funds) • Prepare incentive offers and agreements, target specific households for solicitation of incentive • Possibly of offering the downsizing household the ability to qualify using their original category or current category, whichever is lower • Evaluate the potential use of the Affordable Housing Certificates program ESTIMATED TIMELINE Spring/Summer 2022: Research and inventory specific units with unutilized bedrooms Spring/Summer 2022: Draft policy for implementation - Include incentive calculation methodology and priority in lottery for re-sales and available rentals for re-location of target households, target households should be able to utilize their downsizing incentive for a move to an available existing (smaller) unit or a newly developed (smaller) unit as those come available Summer/Fall 2022: Discussions with APCHA Board & Aspen City Council Winter 2022/2023: Implement policy with approval from APCHA board and City Council (for use of 150 funds) Winter/Spring 2023: Prepare incentive offers and target those specific households for solicitation of incentive HOW THIS ACTION INCREASES THE NUMBER By incentivizing downsizing to recapture and utilize unused bedrooms in the existing inventory, we can maximize the utilization of the existing housing stock. CONNECTION TO AACP The AACP states, “Deed-restricted housing units should be utilized to the maximum degree possible.” For every unused bedroom that can be recaptured and utilized, this saves the community development dollars, staff time and the environmental impact of construction. Development Neutral 119 CITY OF ASPEN 2022-2026 — Affordable Housing Strategic Plan 25 ACTION: Partnerships ACTION ITEM OWNERS Chris Everson & Scott Miller ESTIMATED TIMELINE HOW THIS ACTION INCREASES THE NUMBER Under the right conditions, partnerships can increase the pace of affordable housing development or redevelopment. CONNECTION TO AACP 012 AACP appendix III.2 Promote broader support and involvement in the creation of non-mitigation Affordable housing, including public-private partnerships. (Collaborative Initiative, Incentive Program) II.2.a Establish a working group of people who represent the City, County, public agencies, and the private sector to implement the policy. Explore models of producing affordable housing units, including quasi-public housing development corporations. (I - APCHA, Housing Frontiers, City and County Managers, private sector, taxing districts) II.2.b Explore the creation of a program where the City or County would provide a tax benefit, payment or life-estate planning or other financial incentive to a free-market homeowner to include their property in the City/County’s land banking for future affordable housing. (I - City Manager, County Manager) II.2.c Explore creating a program for deed restrictions for a defined duration. (I - APCHA) II.2.d Explore the benefits of expediting specific affordable housing projects through the development and construction phase. OVERVIEW Partnerships for Affordable Housing typically fall into three categories, (1) between one or more governmental jurisdictions, (2) between a government and a non-profit, and (3) between a government and private sector organizations. The most common type of partnerships between one or more governmental jurisdictions involves a city partnering with other cities to create an entity similar to a housing authority. Some housing authorities have taxing authority, others do not (APCHA). Local governments frequently form partnerships with non-profit organizations to operate a housing program or manage a public housing project. Sometimes the non-profit organization is eligible for grants that a governmental jurisdiction is not. Non-profits also appeal to philanthropic organizations and individuals who can claim tax deductions for making contributions. Public–private partnerships (P3s or PPPs) often involve agreements among one or more government entities and one or more private sector companies to design, build, finance, operate, and/or maintain projects, facilities or operations which may be funded and operated through a partnership of government and one or more private sector companies. PPPs can be effective, but also bring challenges such as land cost, funding, connections to the free market, expiring deed restrictions, and misalignment of values. Agreements to design, build, operate and maintain can be complex and can be effort- intense to put in place and may incur significant legal fees due to the need to hire attorneys to write complex, binding legal agreements which include arrangements and terms that require certain obligations and guarantee and secure the cash flows and involve outside funding mechanisms as well as management terms. But PPPs can bring some benefits to the development process. Project risks can be transferred to private partners, and greater price and schedule certainty can be achieved. There can be opportunity for innovative design and construction techniques, and public funds can be freed up for other projects or purposes. These potential benefits come with limitations such as increased financing costs, limited flexibility and often few bidders to partner with on such projects. The amount of effort and/or risk taken on by a government or quasi-government entity may be modified by including more or less of a role in the service or facility being created. A PPP may be created so that the government or private sector partners take on more or less of the work to create the service or facility sought. Risks and/or activities transferred in PPP Agreements may include design, construction, financing, operations, maintenance and may even include reversionary rights. Financing risks may include financing costs, inflation, design/construction risks, unforeseen project site conditions, permitting, and more. Operation and maintenance risks may include facility maintenance and operations, future unforeseen conditions, underutilization of assets, rent risks, and more. In considering where to place itself on the spectrum, public agencies need to consider questions about benefits of private sector innovation, benefits to accessing private financing, private-sector performance incentives, and other private-sector tools which public agencies may have difficulty managing. New Development No specific timeline can be established for partnerships at this point. 120 CITY OF ASPEN 2022-2026 — Affordable Housing Strategic Plan 26 OVERVIEW APCHA has a compliance program to ensure affordable housing units are housing people who qualify with APCHA’s rules and regulations, as created by APCHA’s Board of Director. Concurrently, APCHA fully supports keeping qualified people in their units. APCHA’s compliance process starts with qualifications. APCHA is continually seeking to improve performance to ensure that qualified buyers and renters receive all due consideration during the qualification process, and that unqualified applicants do not proceed in the process and are clearly and transparently informed. Similarly, APCHA residents must comply with APCHA regulations, including but not limited to, residency and work qualifications. It is APCHA’s responsibility to the Aspen community to resolve noncompliance fairly and swiftly. • Automated identification of violations: APCHA cross references the list of all APCHA property with the City’s short term rental database. • Voluntary reporting of violations: “Report a Concern” is a button on APCHA’s website homepage. This allows members of the community to notify APCHA of violations. Importantly, it can be difficult for APCHA to investigate some compliance cases if the reporting individual is anonymous. • Hearing Officer: APCHA has hired and outside hearing officer to resolve compliance cases where needed. • Outreach and Communication: The best way to maintain compliance is education. APCHA is revamping its communication and outreach strategies with an emphasis on interactive, accessible forums and education. ACTION: APCHA Compliance Actions ACTION ITEM OWNER Matthew Gillen ESTIMATED TIMELINE HOW THIS ACTION INCREASES THE NUMBER Compliance actions are important because they ensure that affordable housing units are being occupied by individuals who meet the qualifications as outlined in the APCHA Regulations. Because Compliance is a handled on a case by case basis and it time intensive, it does not result in a significant increase in available units. CONNECTION TO AACP The plan says, “all deed-restricted housing units should be utilized to the maximum degree possible”, which includes ensuring that units are used by qualified residents. This is an ongoing effort. Compliance & Sustainability 121 CITY OF ASPEN 2022-2026 — Affordable Housing Strategic Plan 27 OVERVIEW APCHA has a responsibility to maximize value to the community and efficiency and impact of APCHA housing. A simple measure of that impact is ensuring that APCHA houses the maximum number of individuals possible in the available housing units. Such a simple measure however, does not take into account the wishes, goals and needs of APCHA residents, for whose benefit APCHA properties were constructed. People’s needs and desires change over the years, thus APCHA must seek voluntary, flexible, incentivized programs to maximize occupancy in APCHA units. • Maximum age of Dependent: In November 2021 APCHA lowered the maximum age of a dependent from 24 to 19 in the employee housing regulations, to free up space previously used by adult dependents. • Monitoring “Excess” Units: Through the new HomeTrek system APCHA can now better monitor and assess unit usage. • “Buy Down/Right Sizing”: The APCHA board will examine possible programs to incentivize people, voluntarily, to move to small units, after, for example retirement. • In Complex Bidding: Currently bidders in the same housing complex have a priority over outside bidders. This policy is an effort to sustain community ties. ACTION: Potential APCHA Policy Actions to increase number of available units ACTION ITEM OWNER Matthew Gillen ESTIMATED TIMELINE HOW THIS ACTION INCREASES THE NUMBER By providing residents who have outgrown their properties an incentive – and importantly no disincentives -- those residents may voluntarily want to move to another unit. CONNECTION TO AACP The plan clearly says: “All deed-restricted housing units should be utilized to the maximum degree possible.” These are ongoing policy actions, some of which have recently been implemented – such as the Dependent Age – and others are still under development or under consideration by the APCHA Board. Policy 122 CITY OF ASPEN 2022-2026 — Affordable Housing Strategic Plan 28 OVERVIEW With affordable housing in the Aspen area in such short supply, APCHA has a responsibility to obtain maximum impact and value from existing APCHA housing stock, while also protecting residents’ rights and benefit under APCHA regulations. Part of this effort is maintaining the sustainability and lifespan of APCHA housing stock. Each APCHA housing unit that has lifespan extended reduces the need for a new unit. Owners of APCHA deed-restricted housing units are responsible for upkeep and maintenance of their homes, but, unlike the free-market housing cannot recoup the full value (generally restricted to 10 percent), of home improvements upon sale. Coupled with the fact that, due to the scarcity of housing in the Valley, sellers find buyers willing to buy less than adequately maintained homes, there are disincentives for APCHA deed-restricted homeowners to invest and maintain their homes. Further, some APCHA units, such as mobile homes have a limited lifespan, and must be periodically replaced. Actions: • Home Inspection Program prior to Resale: APCHA has difficult role while facilitating the sale of APCHA deed-restricted units, representing both the seller (and preserving equity gained during the home’s ownership period), and the buyer (ensuring the home is in acceptable or good condition to buy). In January 2022, APCHA fully implemented a home inspection program to improve transparency as buyers and sellers negotiate. • Mobile Home Pilot Program: APCHA is exploring a pilot program to assist owners of mobile homes in replacing their homes. • Sellers Standards/Capital Repairs: APCHA will continue to monitor and seek ways to maintain the standard of units sold by APCHA owners, balanced with the equity of the seller. • Ten Percent Capital Improvement Cap: The APCHA Board is currently considering offering to homeowner who update their deed restriction an addition ten percent capital improvement allowance to support the maintenance of homes. This updated deed restriction also allows for capital improvements above the ten percent cap for approved energy and water efficiency and life/safety improvements. • Encourage HOAs to Prepare Capital Reserve Studies: Homeowner associations should be aware of their potential needs for capital improvement. APCHA will be looking at the issue of HOA Capital Reserves in the future. • Hire Contract Grant Writer: APCHA has funding and will hire a grant writer for funding sources to support individuals who want to make repairs to their APCHA Deed Restricted Property ACTION: APCHA Policy Actions to improve the sustainability of the APCHA deed restricted housing ACTION ITEM OWNERS Matthew Gillen & Diane Foster ESTIMATED TIMELINE HOW THIS ACTION INCREASES THE NUMBER Maintaining existing housing units is minimizes the need to replace or perform extensive repairs on units. CONNECTION TO AACP The Aspen Area Community plan calls for deed-restricted housing units to “be used and maintained for as long as possible, while considering functionality and obsolescence.” These are ongoing policy actions, some of which have recently been implemented – such as the Home Inspection Program – and others are still under development or under consideration by the APCHA Board. Compliance & Sustainability 123 CITY OF ASPEN 2022-2026 — Affordable Housing Strategic Plan 29 OVERVIEW This program has not yet been fully fleshed out. Staff from multiple departments, including and importantly, Community Development, will need to work on this post moratorium. The development neutral program will pursue two different paths. First, policies and investments will be explored that would lead to the conversion of existing free-market units into deed-restricted affordable units. Second, the potential of new streams of revenue form currently unmitigated economic activities and the high value of real estate will be evaluated. The revenue would mitigate impacts to the community from real estate speculation, development, and resulting demands for services. The development neutral program supports of number of complimentary policies, including promoting appropriate residential density, re-using and sustaining existing buildings, mixing free-market and AH units within neighborhoods, and requiring development to mitigate for its impacts. Specifically on the topic of “buydowns”/ purchase of free market property for the purpose of converting to affordable housing: While past plans have supported “buy-down” alternatives, there has been little comprehensive effort in this regard. A “buy-down” program may be an expensive proposition, but this plan calls for exploring it more thoroughly. The idea is to finally determine if the community is willing to pay the price for providing long-term affordable housing by converting existing free market homes, and or affordable housing, rather than building new homes. This type of program has two significant cost-related challenges: 1. Purchase of free market residential property is typically 1.5X the cost of developing new residential property, and 2. Converting purchased free market residential property to practical, usable affordable housing will add additional cost to this effort and could cause the purchase/conversion process to cost 3X to 4X that of developing new affordable housing. It is unlikely that this could be accomplished at any meaningful scale without a 3- to 5-fold increase to the current affordable housing tax revenues. ACTION: Additional Development Neutral Program Elements ACTION ITEM OWNERS Phillip Supino & Pete Strecker HOW THIS ACTION INCREASES THE NUMBER By exacting taxes to generate new revenue, the City will increase funds available to purchase free market units to bring into the AH system. CONNECTION TO AACP The following AACP statements (among others) support this action item. I.1. Achieve sustainable growth practices to ensure the long-term viability and stability of our community and diverse visitor-based economy. I.5. Through good land use planning and sound decision-making, ensure that the ultimate population density of the Aspen Area does not degrade the quality of life for residents and the enjoyment of visitors. II.1. The housing inventory should bolster our socioeconomic diversity. II.5. Redefine and improve our buy-down policy of re- using existing housing inventory. III.2. Promote broader support and involvement in the creation of non-mitigation Affordable housing, including public-private partnerships. IV.2. All affordable housing must be located within the Urban Growth Boundary. IV.3. On-site housing mitigation is preferred. IV.5. The design of new affordable housing should optimize density while demonstrating compatibility with the massing, scale, and character of the neighborhood. The current buy-down policy permits development with an AH mitigation requirement to fulfill that requirement through the purchase and deed-restriction of a free- market housing unit, adding it to the APCHA system. In the years since the creation of this policy, free market housing has increased exponentially in value. Therefore, individual buy-down units are a far less financially viable option for development with a mitigation requirement versus the purchase of AH credits or paying cash-in-lieu. Simultaneously, the community has seen a significant decrease in commercial development and, therefore, the creation of new FTEs requiring housing units as mitigation. This and other trends have reduced the prevalence of the development of on-site AH units. These dynamics have combined to decrease the number of AH units brought into the system by the private sector, relying instead on AH credits and City-built projects to deliver the bulk of new AH units in recent years. It has also increased the rate of population decline in residential neighborhoods, undermining city policies related to a healthy lived-in community, a diversity of housing types and occupants in neighborhoods, and the maximum utilization of residential housing units in town. ESTIMATED TIMELINE 2022: economic analysis, case studies and legal analysis, legislative development 2023: legislative process, TABOR vote Ongoing: program development and management Development Neutral 124 CITY OF ASPEN 2022-2026 — Affordable Housing Strategic Plan 30 OVERVIEW By definition, land banking is the process of acquiring and holding land for future development, re-development, or land trade. Success requires cohesive partnerships among a variety of stakeholders and all levels of government, as well as confidentially. As land is a finite resource, acquiring sites for future use as affordable housing preserves future opportunities for the City to act typically in partnership with a private contractor. The investment in the land can serve as a way to secure more financing options and at more favorable terms. Land banking positions the City to take advantage of favorable market conditions. Due to the nature of property acquisition in the public sector, specific properties cannot be mentioned. Infill development alone cannot address mounting affordable housing demands. City Council’s policy direction regarding land acquisition is to consider any and all acquisitions, including partnerships. Actions: 1. Continue to seek appropriate land for land-banking. 2. Consider an incentive program for sellers ??? Dedicate housing to family name, other family incentives of value? Consider a tongue in cheek “cash for homes” marketing effort, which would probably make national news. 3. Consider creating or enabling fast-track for Council approval of potential contract to buy when needed. For example, 1.22 acres at 688 Spruce Street was purchased by a private buyer before staff could bring it to Council’s attention. Land purchase price was in range of other City projects, ended up a missed opportunity for potentially around 20 new units. 4. Consider purchase of parcels discussed with Council in executive session. Consider a means of public discussion for potential conversion of other City assets. 5. AACP Appendix III.2.b Explore the creation of a program where the City or County would provide a tax benefit, payment or life-estate planning or other financial incentive to a free-market homeowner to include their property in the City/County’s land banking for future affordable housing. (I - City Manager, County Manager) ACTION: Land Banking ACTION ITEM OWNERS Scott Miller & Chris Everson ESTIMATED TIMELINE HOW THIS ACTION INCREASES THE NUMBER The availability of additional land creates more housing opportunities, quantifying the number is very difficult. The increase of AH units is dependent on several factors: zoning, mass and scale, NIMBYism, the useful amenities available to the community, good design, incorporation of smart growth principles. CONNECTION TO AACP The AACP provides guidance with respect to: • Continuation of the Aspen Idea • Environmental Stewardship • Sustainable development • Emphasis on quality and livability • Addresses Housing and Daycare needs Ongoing New Development 125 CITY OF ASPEN 2022-2026 — Affordable Housing Strategic Plan 31 OVERVIEW At the direction of the City Manager, city and APCHA staff have been active participants in the Roaring Fork Valley Roadmap process, facilitated by Pitkin County. The group has embraced the concept of collaboratively address the topic of workforce sustainability. In October approximated fifty stakeholders participated in a series of focus groups that included representatives from Roaring Fork Valley nonprofits, local governments and agencies and the private sector. This group recommended a specific focus on a regional affordable housing project, there was also strong support for addressing issues related to diversity, equity and inclusion as well as mental wellness. While this project is still in its early stages, there has been active and consistent participation from all of the Roaring Fork Valley local government staff, along with DOLA staff. The collective and overwhelming consensus of stakeholders that more affordable housing is needed in the Valley aligns well with City Council’s critical goal of increasing the number of affordable housing units. Concurrently, the Roaring Fork Roadmap team has been in discussions with a Housing Coalition group that initiated discussions about forming some type of more formal regional housing group. While that group had a temporary hiatus during the early part of the pandemic, the group has been meeting again to develop a plan for better regional collaboration around affordable housing. Recently these two groups have discussed how working together and in collaboration with DOLA could yield results. Staff will keep Council updated as this project moves forward. Unrelated to the item above, during the December 2021 City Council Housing Retreat, the City Council expressed support for Pitkin County considering a county- wide tax to support affordable housing. The City Council has not taken, nor have they been asked for a formal position on this topic. ACTION: Regional Collaboration ACTION ITEM OWNER Diane Foster ESTIMATED TIMELINE HOW THIS ACTION INCREASES THE NUMBER Affordable housing is an issue facing all communities in the Roaring Fork Valley and beyond. Where state and federal funding for affordable housing will likely be available, a regional effort is more likely to be successful than individual localities seeking funding. CONNECTION TO AACP While the AACP encourages partnerships, the AACP is generally silent on regional collaboration Staff will provide City Council an update on progress later in 2022 New Development 126 CITY OF ASPEN 2022-2026 — Affordable Housing Strategic Plan 32 In any strategic plan that contains action items, it is also important to identify what action will not be pursued. Below is a list of action we will not undertake at this point due to one or more of the following reasons • Council asked staff NOT to pursue this strategy; and/or • Lower chance of success than other strategies These items could be pursued at a later date should Council’s policy direction change or is market conditions change. • Encourage new free market development in order to receive required affordable housing mitigation results • Vail InDeed Model – Not pursing this model because • It creates additional RO units; not the Category of units we need the most • No rental caps • No appreciation cap • Buy Downs: Buying down existing free-market residential and converting to affordable housing is prohibitively expensive, given available resources and compared to the actions which have herein been prioritized. ACTIONS NOT CURRENTLY PRIORITIZED 127 CITY OF ASPEN 2022-2026 — Affordable Housing Strategic Plan 33 An outcome of the July 2021 City Council Retreat, City Council adopted three Critical Goals in August 2021. The Housing Critical Goal reads as follows: Increase number of Affordable Housing Units: In order to deliver an affordable housing system that is high quality, sustainable, and results in a lived-in community, Council will continue to evaluate, identify opportunities, plan, partner, facilitate, and leverage existing and new resources to invest in the development and maintenance of affordable housing. This will be accomplished through: • Convening a City Housing Retreat; • Creating an affordable housing strategic plan; • Completing Council directed affordable housing development projects; • Continuing to seek additional affordable housing development opportunities; • Leveraging and amending regulations and policies in support of affordable housing; and • Supporting continuous improvement with the APCHA program, including ensuring adequate resources. Since August 2021 Council has been presented with updates to the Housing Critical Goal and specific actions to further that goal on a regular basis at Regular Meetings where Council has approved policy, Work Sessions to provide staff direction on various affordable housing projects and program and through Information Only Memos. The three departments primarily responsible for delivering on the Housing Critical Goal – the Capital Asset Department, Community Development and Housing/APCHA – have all already scheduled appearances before City Council and Information Only Memos for the entire 2022 calendar year. Rather than a wholesale review of this Housing Strategic Plan, this Plan is a living document whose contents will be updated throughout the year. That being said, staff does plan to do an annual review of overall progress and make whatever modifications are necessary to the plan at that time. REVIEW PROCESS 128 CITY OF ASPEN 2022-2026 — Affordable Housing Strategic Plan 34 APPENDIX A: HOUSING CHAPTER OF ASPEN AREA COMMUNITY PLAN 129 CITY OF ASPEN 2022-2026 — Affordable Housing Strategic Plan 35 38 2012 Aspen Area Community Plan HousingHousing Vision We believe that a strong and diverse year-round community and a viable and healthy local workforce are fundamental cornerstones for the sustainability of the Aspen Area community. Philosophy We are committed to providing affordable housing because it supports: • A stable community that is invested in the present and future of the Aspen Area. • A reliable workforce, also resulting in greater economic sustainability. • Opportunities for people to live in close proximity to where they work. • A reduction in adverse transportation impacts. • Improved environmental sustainability. • A reduction in downvalley growth pressures. • Increased citizen participation in civic affairs, non-profit activities and recreation programs. • A better visitor experience, including an appreciation of our genuine, lights-on community. • A healthy mix of people, including singles, families and seniors. Many of the philosophical statements in the 2000 AACP still ring true today: “We believe it is important for Aspen to maintain a sense of opportunity and hope (not a guarantee) for our workforce to become vested members of the community. ... (We seek) to preserve and enhance those qualities that has made Aspen a special place by investing in our most valuable asset – people.” “Our housing policy should bolster our economic and social diversity, reinforce variety, and enhance our sense of community by integrating affordable housing into the fabric of our town. A healthy social balance includes all income ranges and types of people. Each project should endeavor to further that mix and to avoid segregation of economic and social classes ...” Living in affordable housing is not a right or a guarantee, but a privilege, carrying with it responsibilities to future generations, such as long-term maintenance and regulatory compliance. The creation of affordable housing is the responsibility of our entire community, not just government. We should continue to explore methods that spread accountability and responsibility to the private sector, local taxing districts and others. We continue to support the following statements from the 1993 and 2000 AACP: “Housing should be compatible with the scale and character of the community and should emphasize quality construction and design even if that emphasis increases [initial] costs and lessens production, [within reason].” At the same time, new construction should emphasize the use of durable and renewable materials in order to improve our environmental stewardship. We should demonstrate our commitment to future generations by providing educational outreach regarding long-term maintenance and regulatory compliance by adopting a strategic plan for long-term maintenance of publicly-owned rental properties, and for handling “unique” properties, such as those with a sunset on deed restrictions. 130 CITY OF ASPEN 2022-2026 — Affordable Housing Strategic Plan 36 39 2012 Aspen Area Community Plan Housing At the same time, we need a new focus on the issues surrounding retirement in affordable housing, as we are on the brink of a rising retiree demographic. In addition, we should continue to provide housing that accommodates the needs of people with disabilities. The provision of affordable housing remains important due to several factors, including the continued conversion of locally-owned homes to second homes, a trend of a more costly down-valley housing market and the upcoming trend towards retirement in affordable housing. With limited vacant land in the Aspen Area and limited public funds, we cannot build our way out of this challenge. Our affordable housing program is continually encountering new crossroads that demand creative thinking, understanding and thoughtful action. What’s Changed Since 2000 Since the adoption of the 2000 AACP, a total of 652 new affordable housing units have been constructed, with another 181 approved but not yet built. By any measure, these are impressive accomplishments, but various relevant trends have continued to challenge the goal of establishing and maintaining a “critical mass” of working residents, as stated in the 2000 AACP. While the ratio of local workers living in affordable housing units increased from 25% to 32% from 2000 to 2008, the ratio of local workers living in free market homes dropped from 22% to 13%, the result of continued conversion of locally-owned free market homes to second homes. At the same time, the economic boom period of 2004 to 2007 saw a dramatic increase in the cost of downvalley land and homes, reducing opportunities for Aspen workers to find free market ownership options in the valley. While the recession has rolled back prices, this plan must assume that the economy will experience another period of prosperity during the life of the plan. In addition, the number of retirees in deed- restricted housing is estimated to jump from approximately 310 today to more than 800 in 2021. The 2007 Housing Summit considered all these factors and more. The primary outcome of the Summit was to encourage additional “land- banking,” which ultimately resulted in the purchase of the BMC West property, a parcel at 488 Castle Creek Road and others. The 2008 Affordable Housing Plan evaluated 15 potential sites for affordable housing units, identifying a range of up to 685 possible housing units. Aspen Area Housing History In the early 1970’s free- market housing that had primarily housed local employees was being demolished and redeveloped as second homes. By 1974, the City and County began addressing this trend by establishing separate affordable housing programs and 14 years later formed the joint Aspen/Pitkin County Housing Authority (APCHA). APCHA is currently funded through a City of Aspen sales tax and a Real Estate Transfer Tax (RETT). The State enacted legislation in 2001 granting Housing Authorities across the state specific powers to raise revenue through sales taxes, use taxes, an ad valorem (property) tax, and/or a development impact fee. To date, APCHA has not pursued these revenue sources. The City of Aspen has a housing sales tax, and both the City of Aspen and Pitkin County have Housing Mitigation fees. APCHA operates under the 4th Amended Intergovernmental Agreement between the City of Aspen and Pitkin County. This agreement has eliminated APCHA’s role as an active developer of workforce housing; that role has been assumed by the City of Aspen. Currently, APCHA is principally involved in the qualification, sales, and enforcement of the housing program and is involved in the oversight of over 2,800 units of deed- restricted housing. The APCHA Board of Directors alone, or in concert with other entities, suggests new policy, programmatic changes, and legislation, or makes recommendations, as required by the City, County or State. 131 CITY OF ASPEN 2022-2026 — Affordable Housing Strategic Plan 37 40 2012 Aspen Area Community Plan Housing What’s New in the 2012 AACP Linkages The creation of Affordable housing can help reduce pressures on the valley-wide transportation system by providing housing opportunities for our local workforce in the Aspen Area, while reducing air quality impacts associated with a commuting workforce. Affordable housing is also critical to a viable economy, and helps to ensure a vital, demographically diverse year-round community. At the same time, limited opportunities and funds mean we cannot build our way out of the housing problem, and we recognize that new affordable housing includes infrastructure costs ranging from transportation to government services, schools and other basic needs. Controlling growth and job generation can reduce the pressure to provide affordable housing. Housing Growth & Economy Transportation Community Character The re-use of philosophical language from past community plans is due largely to the long-term support in the Aspen Area for affordable housing as a critical tool to maintain a strong year-round community. Some shifts in policy direction for the 2012 AACP can be attributed to the long-term growth and maturation of the housing program, bringing greater awareness of the need for long-term capital reserves and maintenance for individually-owned and rental properties, as well as publicly-owned rental properties. Another difference in the 2012 AACP is the decision not to establish a specific number of housing units to be developed during the 10-year life of the plan. This should not be perceived as a wavering of support for affordable housing units. The plan calls for exploring the potential of a new housing unit goal, but specific research on this topic was not conducted as part of this plan. This plan focuses on the ongoing challenges of establishing and maintaining a “critical mass” of working residents. The policies outlined in the Housing chapter and related housing mitigation policies in the Managing Growth for Community & Economic Sustainability chapter are intended to meet these challenges as the community continues to provide affordable housing. At the same time, the 2012 AACP calls for further research on the physical limits to development in the form of ultimate build-out, projected future impacts related to job generation, demographic trends, the conversion of local free market homes and other factors. This kind of statistical analysis will help inform future decision-making and goal-setting in a more meaningful way. Instead, this plan emphasizes the need to spread accountability and responsibility for providing affordable housing units beyond the City and County governmental structures, and continuing to pursue affordable housing projects on available public land through a transparent and accountable public process. While past plans have supported “buy-down” alternatives, there has been little comprehensive effort in this regard. A “buy-down” program may be an expensive proposition, but this plan calls for exploring it more thoroughly. The idea is to finally determine if the community is willing to pay the price for providing long-term affordable housing by converting existing free market homes, and or affordable housing, rather than building new homes. On the Horizon As the community continues to provide affordable housing, it is important to recognize and understand future challenges. We must continue to track changes to the Colorado Common Interest Ownership Act (CCIOA) and update our housing policies on a timely basis. APCHA should vigorously promote adoption of CCIOA by existing associations, and require new associations to adopt CCIOA. Lending practices are changing, resulting in new and potentially difficult financing. 132 CITY OF ASPEN 2022-2026 — Affordable Housing Strategic Plan 38 41 2012 Aspen Area Community Plan Housing Policy Categories Collaborative Initiative Collaborative Initiative, Work Program for APCHA Collaborative Initiative, Work Program for APCHA Collaborative Initiative Incentive Program, Proposed Code Amendment Housing Policies I. SUSTAINABILITY AND MAINTENANCE I.1. Affordable housing should have adequate capital reserves for major repairs and significant capital projects. I.2. Deed-restricted housing units should be utilized to the maximum degree possible. I.3. Deed-restricted housing units should be used and maintained for as long as possible, while considering functionality and obsolescence. I.4. Provide educational opportunities to potential and current homeowners regarding the rights, obligations and responsibilities of home ownership. I.5. Emphasize the use of durable and environmentally responsible materials, while recognizing the realistic lifecycle of the buildings. II. PROGRAM IMPROVEMENTS II.1. The housing inventory should bolster our socioeconomic diversity. II.2. Affordable housing should be prepared for the growing number of retiring Aspenites. II.3. Employers should participate in the creation of seasonal rental housing. II.4. Employers who provide housing for their workers through publicly-owned seasonal rental housing should assume proportionate responsibility for the maintenance and management of the facility. II.5. Redefine and improve our buy-down policy of re-using existing housing inventory. II.6. Eliminate the Accessory Dwelling Unit (ADU) program, unless mandatory occupancy is required. III. FISCAL RESPONSIBILITY III.1. Ensure fiscal responsibility regarding the development of publicly-funded housing. III.2. Promote broader support and involvement in the creation of non- mitigation Affordable housing, including public-private partnerships. Community Goal Community Goal, Work Program for APCHA Collaborative Initiative, Incentive Program Collaborative Initiative, Incentive Program Work Program for APCHA Proposed Code Amendment Collaborative Initiative Collaborative Initiative, Incentive Program 133 CITY OF ASPEN 2022-2026 — Affordable Housing Strategic Plan 39 42 2012 Aspen Area Community Plan Housing Policy Categories Housing Policies IV. LAND USE & ZONING IV.1. Affordable housing should be designed for the highest practical energy efficiency and livability. IV.2. All affordable housing must be located within the Urban Growth Boundary. IV.3. On-site housing mitigation is preferred. IV.4. Track trends in housing inventory and job generation to better inform public policy discussions. IV.5. The design of new affordable housing should optimize density while demonstrating compatibility with the massing, scale and character of the neighborhood. IV.6. The residents of affordable housing and free-market housing in the same neighborhood should be treated fairly, equally and consistently with regard to any restrictions or conditions on development such as parking, pet ownership, etc. V. HOUSING RULES AND REGULATIONS V.1. The rules, regulations and penalties of affordable housing should be clear, understandable and enforceable. V.2. Ensure effective management of affordable housing assets. Incentive Program, Proposed Code Amendment Proposed Code Amendment Work Program for Planning Department & APCHA, Proposed Amendment Data Needs Proposed Code Amendment Proposed Code Amendment Work Program for APCHA Work Program for APCHA 134 CITY OF ASPEN 2022-2026 — Affordable Housing Strategic Plan 40 APPENDIX B: COMMUNITY AFFORDABLE HOUSING AND LIVABILITY 135 CITY OF ASPEN 2022-2026 — Affordable Housing Strategic Plan 41 CONNECTION TO AACP Within the introduction of the 2012 Aspen Area Community Plan, two of the stated central themes are “Emphasize the quality and livability of affordable housing.” and “Provide for a critical mass of year-round residents.” Within the housing implementation portion of the appendix of the AACP is an implementation step that, in part, states, “Amend the Housing Guidelines to establish livability standards that promote pride of living in affordable housing.” And although the AACP also encourages area employers to participate in the creation and maintenance of seasonal rental housing, the sections shown above, along with many other such statements in the AACP, support the Housing Philosophy stated within the AACP, which aims to nurture a stable, year-round community, with a reliable workforce with an opportunity to live near where they work, and with a healthy mix of people, including singles, families and seniors. LIVABILITY AND COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT For public affordable housing developments, the City of Aspen performs typically performs rigorous community engagement, seeking input from the community at large and neighborhood stakeholder groups. A significant portion of such community engagement is typically devoted to affordable housing elements related to livability. At each stage of the design development process, input received from the community engagement process is typically filtered through Aspen City Council. This often results in a careful balance of various priorities such as livability, quality, neighborhood impacts and project cost. And there are many more detailed project elements that require balancing as well, such as environmental sustainability, accessibility, total cost of ownership or tenancy, constructability and more. These topics are interconnected with the meaning of livability among the Aspen affordable housing community. LIVABILITY – GENERAL PRINCIPLES Goals: Housing developments should endeavor to balance the principles of community, livability and quality against impacts such as unreasonable levels of cost and construction activity intrusion. Housing structures should utilize land as efficiently as possible and should seek construction efficiencies to levels that do not sacrifice livability beyond levels that are not consistent with these goals. Architecture should be sensitive to neighborhood context to the extent possible while achieving these goals. Density: Density should be considered as more than just a number and should consider neighborhood context, available open space, amenities and other considerations related to community character. Successful housing developments have been created in Aspen with density ranging from around 7 units per acre up to nearly 80 units per acre. Quality: Quality construction should be employed to mitigate sound and vibration transmission and to promote energy efficiency. It is important to people not to feel as densely housed as they actually are, and it is possible to invest in construction quality, up to a point short of diminishing returns, to make a densely populated facility feel as livable as possible given available resources. Environmental Sustainability: Environmental sustainability standards which are consistent with community goals should be integral to the construction quality program. Investments in sustainability measures should be carefully prioritized to be consistent with housing development goals. Housing Unit Sizes: Housing for a diverse population of income levels should not discriminate livable space based on incomes. Creating equitably sized housing units of standardized sizes can create construction efficiencies and increases flexibility to transfer units among households of different income levels. The Colorado Division of Housing has established “indicators of modest but decent housing” with suggested sizes of 500 square feet for studio or efficiency units, 700 square feet for one-bedroom units, 900 square feet for two-bedroom units and 1,200 square feet for three-bedroom units. necessary and where a high level of livability is otherwise demonstrated, with reduction criteria such as significant storage space, above average natural light, efficient/flexible unit layout, site amenities including parks and open space, and above ground unit versus below ground units. 136 CITY OF ASPEN 2022-2026 — Affordable Housing Strategic Plan 42 The APCHA Affordable Housing Development Policy includes the following Minimum Unit Sizes and defines an “occupancy standard” based on 400 square feet per “employee”. Unit Minimum Net Sq Ft Occupancy Standard Studio 500 1.25 1-Bedroom 700 1.75 2-Bedroom 900 2.25 3-Bedroom 1,200 3.00 In practice, the occupancy standard is less of an actual counting mechanism for occupancy and more of a conversion tool and general benchmark related to the 400 square feet per “employee” standard. The APCHA Affordable Housing Development Policy allows for the reduction of unit sizes by up to 20% in cases where both necessary and where a high level of livability is otherwise demonstrated, with reduction criteria such as significant storage space, above average natural light, efficient/flexible unit layout, site amenities including parks and open space, and above ground unit versus below ground units. Accessibility: Affordable housing facilities should be accessible above and beyond code requirements where possible. Varying levels of accessible dwelling units include Type A Full Accessibility, Type B Adaptable and Type C Visitable. Type A Full Accessibility units should be included at or above code minimums, and all other unit should be Type B Adaptable where possible. Townhome units or units which otherwise include a stairway internal to the unit should be Type C Visitable, and Universal Design should be used in common area facilities. Noise and Air Quality: Locations for affordable housing should be sought which have favorable noise and air quality characteristics. For locations where noise and air quality characteristics are not without flaws, mitigation techniques should be implemented to reduce adverse impacts to reasonable levels. Pedestrian Safety and Automobile Circulation: Whenever possible, housing developments should prioritize pedestrian movement over automobile movement and pedestrian safety over automobile circulation. Community Open Space: Community open space should be created to maximize the use of available land and should be landscaped to facilitate peaceful, playful and socially interactive enjoyment with turf or low-grow grasses as well as strategically placed shrubs and trees to facilitate demarcation of areas and/or privacy where needed. A mix of non-programmed and lightly programmed areas are encouraged. Parks and Trails: Parks and trails provide community benefits and should be connected to housing developments where possible. The use of boulder retaining walls can create material cost efficiencies and can be a contextually sensitive means of retaining earth as opposed to engineered alternatives. Parking and Storage: Parking and storage are key attributes that relate to day-to-day interaction with a housing facility. Local workers may not use their cars every day, but they have a right like everyone else to keep a car in their possession, particularly because Aspen is a remotely located City. Affordable housing units do not generally afford the amount of space that suburban living in America generally affords so convenient access to a reasonable amount of storage space is a key attribute to any housing unit. Parking and storage should be located within reasonable distance to one’s housing. The use of carport structures can be an equitable means of providing covered parking without a high level of expense and can be used where needed to retain earth or serve as sound barriers from nearby sources of noise. Total Cost of Ownership: Total cost of ownership or total rent should be considered in affordable housing designs. The use of durable assemblies and materials as well as low-maintenance mechanical systems along with operational efficiency considerations such as ease of snow removal and landscaping can help keep long-term costs down. Thoughtful design for management of snow, ice, moisture and freeze/thaw conditions can eliminate the need for gutters and downspouts and can help keep maintenance costs down. Wildlife: Sensitivity to wildlife and surrounding open areas is extremely important. Trash, recycling and compost staging 137 CITY OF ASPEN 2022-2026 — Affordable Housing Strategic Plan 43 facilities should meet local codes and guidelines related to “wildlife-proof” requirements and recommendations and should otherwise be consistent with wildlife management practices. Mail and transit stop facilities should attempt to keep people separated from areas which could potentially attract bears or other wildlife. Site Lighting & Facilities: Site lighting should provide safety while remaining contextually sensitive and where possible should employ the use of timers and/or sensors to be as energy efficient as possible. Guide-on principles can be equally safe and less intrusive than flooding large areas with light. External availability of water and electrical sources are amenities that tenants and/or homeowners highly appreciate. “Dark skies” and other code-related requirements and recommendations should be rigorously met. Public Transportation: Access to public transportation is a must. Reduction of daily automobile trips should be encouraged through availability of convenient, multi-modal transportation alternatives. LIVABILITY – CHECKLIST The outline below is a useful inventory of decision points for considering characteristics which affect livability. Density, Environmental Sustainability, Accessibility Family oriented vs. non-family oriented Working vs. retirement orientation Flats versus multi-level townhomes & accessibility On-grade access, stairs to get to unit, below-grade, partial below grade units Ceiling heights greater than 8 feet, 8’-6” to 9’-0 where possible Minimum bedroom size, 10 feet Storage ƒInternal to the unit, Kitchen cabinets, Laundry, Foyer/mud – front and rear, linen closets, oversize bedroom closets (upper shelves for seasonal storage), Additional unfinished areas, storage closets under stairways ƒLockable external storage, enclosed preferred to cages, proximity to unit, outdoor gear storage, bikes, kayaks, skis, snowboards, fishing, etc. Trash/recycling/compost & mail facilities ƒProximity to units, aesthetics, durability, parcel boxes, wildlife-proofing, separating trash from mail due to wildlife safety, lighting Outdoor living ƒPrivate outdoor space is preferred by most people, grill, patio, enlarged covered balconies, avoid drip through, snow barriers/trellis Parking ƒLocation on site and relationship to pedestrians, streets/alleys ƒQuantity per unit, per bedroom ƒAbove grade uncovered, above grade covered, lots, street, head-in, parallel, angle, on-site, offsite ƒGuest / visitor / service usage, loading zone ƒAccessible parking ƒProximity to unit ƒDimensions of spaces / access, geometry of getting in and out ƒIntegrated storage with parking ƒSnow removal, snow storage, haul-off, street clearing, secondary clearing Public space/recreation ƒLocation, trail, pedestrian access, on-site open site areas, landscape ƒFlexible use spaces, fencing, demarcation, open ƒChild safety, dog parks, community gardens, programmed spaces Access to public transportation ƒSecure, covered bike storage at transportation nodes 138 CITY OF ASPEN 2022-2026 — Affordable Housing Strategic Plan 44 Noise ƒUnit-to-unit transmission, wall/wall, floor/ceiling, STC, IIC ƒOutdoor noise, mitigation, berms, trees, façade Lighting ƒNatural light ƒIndoor lighting ƒExterior lighting Ventilation / heating / cooling Low voltage & electric - controls, network outlets, electric outlets, cable/satellite, utility usage, lighting, etc. Laundry in unit versus common, size & fit, maintenance, availability Heating – type ƒHeat pumps (cooling?), mini splits, ducted, radiant, baseboard, cove ƒ100% electric where possible ƒCommon vs. in-unit Hot water heating – common versus in-unit, tank, tankless, efficiency, accessible location, floor drain Solar and PV accessibility/orientation, roof space for p/v, rooftop decks Pets, service animals, emotional support animals, cleanup, bags, dna testing Landscaping ƒTurf, native grasses, low-grow, low water ƒUpkeep, Irrigation ƒHose bibs ƒCommunity gardens ƒStormwater, raingardens Kitchen ƒSingle, double sinks ƒElectric appliances, refrigerator, dishwasher, disposal, range type, microwave, range hood externally vented ƒSolid countertops, island or space for dining table ƒTrash, recycling, compost ƒStorage, cabinets, soffits, natural light/windows Bathrooms ƒQuantity per unit ƒLighting ƒTubs, showers, toilets ƒStorage ƒVentilation ƒFinishes, durability, aesthetics ƒSinks, single vs. double, fixture counts, types Maintenance ƒAccess to HVAC equipment, accessible filter locations, spare filters ƒAppliances, Floor coverings 139 www.aspen.gov // 427 Rio Grande Place, Aspen, CO 81611 140