HomeMy WebLinkAboutminutes.council.19980309Aspen City Council Regular Meeting March 9, 1998
Mayor Bennett called the meeting to order at 5:10 p.m. with Councilmembers
Richards, Paulson and Markalunas present.
CITIZEN COMMENTS
There were none.
COUNCILMEMBER COMMENTS
1. Councilman Markalunas alerted everyone to drive cautiously because of the
snow and slick roads.
2. City Manager Margerum told Council Resolution #17, Morgridge annexation,
should be continued at the applicant’s request.
Councilwoman Richards moved to continue Resolution #17, Series of 1998, to
March 23; seconded by Councilman Markalunas. All in favor, motion carried.
3. Councilwoman Richards announced the Aspen Area Community Plan update
community kick off meeting this Thursday, March 12 from 5 to 8 p.m. at the Given
Institute.
CONSENT AGENDA
Mayor Bennett requested the Tipple Inn allocation resolution be taken off and
moved to the end of the agenda.
Councilman Markalunas moved to adopt the consent calendar as amended;
seconded by Councilwoman Richards. The consent calendar is:
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Aspen City Council Regular Meeting March 9, 1998
·
Minutes - February 23, 1998
·
Resolution #15, 1998 - RFTA IGA Board Members
·
Request for Funds - Animal Shelter Planning
·
Request for Funds - Grand Traverse Ski Race
·
Snow Removal on Pedestrian Corridors
All in favor, motion carried.
ORDINANCE #4, SERIES OF 1998
- Grand Aspen Extension
Amy Margerum, city manager, reminded Council this property is part of the Aspen
Mountain Lodge PUD. This approval for this PUD included demolition of the
Grand Aspen hotel in 1995. In 1995 Savanah Limited Partnership requested an
extension of that demolition from October 1, 1995, to October 1, 1998, in order to
keep available housing for MAA students. At that time, there was some concern
from small lodge owners about competition from the Grand Aspen remaining. City
Council formed a citizen group of small lodge owners, the MAA, city and owners of
the Grand Aspen. The group came to a consensus to allow the extension with a list
of conditions, which were enumerated in Ordinance 33, 1995.
Savanah Limited Partnership has asked for another extension from October 1998 to
October 1999. Staff contacted the persons attending the citizen group and
interested citizens to review this extension request. This group was not able to
come to a consensus; however, the majority opinion is to extend the deadline to
October 1999 with the same conditions as before. Ms. Margerum told Council the
MAA has been working on replacing this student housing but even if they had land
and started the process now, the housing would probably not be available for the
1999 summer season.
Edward Sweeney, MAA, told Council they house about 180 students at the Grand
Aspen, which is about 20 percent of their student attendees. John Sarpa,
representing Savanah, told Council they have worked out an arrangement where, if
they happen to get through the approval and permit process faster than anticipated,
they can give the MAA notice no later than January 15, 1999, that they will
demolish that summer. Sarpa noted one of the conditions states that “38 rooms
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Aspen City Council Regular Meeting March 9, 1998
have to be used for Savanah employees”. Sarpa said the Grand Aspen has been
used for Sheraton employees as well as SLP employees. Sarpa requested flexibility
to be able to rent these to Sheraton employees or other employees. Council agreed
that makes sense.
Mayor Bennett opened the public hearing. There were no comments. Mayor
Bennett closed the public hearing.
Councilwoman Richards said since this issue first came up in 1995, the city has
offered relief to small lodges with the lottery and conversion, as well as rezoning the
underlying property. Councilwoman Richards said this extension benefits the entire
community, MAA as well as other non-profits who use that property.
Councilwoman Richards moved to adopt Ordinance #4, Series of 1998, on second
reading with the modification on page 3 of the ordinance that “38 rooms rented for
employees” in the winter of 1998 - 1999; seconded by Councilman Markalunas.
Roll call vote; Councilmembers Paulson, yes; Markalunas, yes; Richards, yes;
Mayor Bennett, yes. Motion carried.
ORDINANCE #2, SERIES OF 1998
- Code Amendment RMF Zone
Amy Guthrie, community development department, reminded Council this
amendment would allow two detached dwelling units where a duplex is currently
allowed. At the last meeting, Council indicated they wanted a sideyard setback of 5
feet, to eliminate the combined sideyard setback requirement, and to allow reduced
setbacks between the two buildings on site. Ms. Guthrie said this ordinance
requires a minimum 5 yard setback and that the minimum distance between
buildings can be reduced to 6 feet by special review of P & Z. Ms. Guthrie noted
the combined sideyard setback of 15 feet only exists in R-6 and RMF and staff will
draft a code amendment to eliminate this.
Alice Davis, representing the applicant, said they feel strongly that the 6 feet
between buildings on site is critical and should be allowed by right. Ms. Davis said
the more flexibility in design there is, the more likely this type of design will occur.
Ms. Davis said there is not a lot of risk in allowing this by right.
Mayor Bennett opened the public hearing. There were no comments. Mayor
Bennett closed the public hearing.
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Aspen City Council Regular Meeting March 9, 1998
Mayor Bennett said for the last several years one of Council’s priorities has been
simplification so he would argue against special review. Mayor Bennett pointed out
P & Z voted 5 to 1 in favor and HPC voted unanimously for this code amendment.
Councilwoman Richards agreed and noted the staff and P & Z case load is already
very heavy. Councilwoman Richards said the neighbors are protected by retaining
the 5 foot setbacks on the external sides.
Councilwoman Richards moved to adopt Ordinance #2, Series of 1998, on second
reading with the language clarification on item 8 to determine the 6 foot setback is
internal to the 2 buildings, that the internal setback be by right and delete the
reference to “by special review”; seconded by Councilman Paulson. Roll call vote;
Councilmembers Paulson, yes; Markalunas, yes; Richards, yes; Mayor Bennett, yes.
Motion carried.
ORDINANCE #5, SERIES OF 1998
- Amending Model Traffic Code;
Reorganization of Section
John Worcester, city attorney, told Council this ordinance reorganizes the sections
in the Model Traffic Code. Worcester told Council cities adopt the Model Traffic
Code and then make amendments to tailor it to their communities. The city has
made such amendments and this ordinance reorganizes them for ease of use for
staff.
Mayor Bennett opened the public hearing. There were no comments. Mayor
Bennett closed the public hearing.
Councilwoman Richards moved to adopt Ordinance #5, Series of 1998, on second
reading; seconded by Councilman Paulson. Roll call vote; Councilmembers
Richards, yes; Paulson, yes; Markalunas, yes; Mayor Bennett, yes. Motion carried.
RESOLUTION #18, SERIES OF 1998
- Isis Theatre Cash-in-Lieu Open Space
Payment
Amy Guthrie, community development department, reminded Council they adopted
a code amendment two years ago to allow a payment schedule for the open space
cash-in-lieu fee required in the commercial core. That code amendment allowed this
payment to be amortized over 5 years without interest. Ms. Guthrie said this is a
refinement of that. There are 3 options outlined; staff recommends allowing the five
$50,000 payments to begin in year 5 rather than in year 1. Another option would be
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Aspen City Council Regular Meeting March 9, 1998
to allow the applicant to begin making $30,000 payments in years 3 and spread
these over 8 years with a residual payment in year 9. The third option is related to
sales tax generation; however, there is not sales tax on movie tickets. Ms. Guthrie
said a condition of approval is that this is tied specifically to the renovation of the
building as theatres, which staff, city boards and Council feel is important to the
community.
Stan Clauson, community development director, told Council he explored the sales
tax option with the city finance department. It was determined that the concession
stand will not produce enough tax revenue to make it a significant benefit to the city
or the project.
Councilwoman Richards moved to adopt Resolution #18, Series of 1998, with the
five $50,000 year payments to being on the 5th anniversary of the date of issuance
of a building permit; seconded by Councilman Paulson. All in favor, motion carried.
COZY POINT RANCH PROPOSAL
Amy Margerum, city manager, reminded Council staff was working on the capital
assets of the property and with the county on the land use restrictions on the
property to include these in a request for proposal. The RFP was to be issued to see
if anyone in the community wanted to purchase Cozy Point Ranch and keep the
property in open space, equestrian facility and some affordable housing. Ms.
Margerum said selling Cozy Point would have to go to public vote.
Since this Council direction, the city and county have purchased the Aspen Mass
property. There have been two design charettes on the Aspen Mass property, which
resulted in the idea of trying to plan Aspen Mass and Cozy Point together. Stan
Clauson, community development director, said out of the charette were ideas for
housing, for exchange of land with the forest service, and transit development area.
There was a second charette working on schemes to meld the Aspen Mass property
with CDOT property for an intermodal center. Clauson said there are many
possibilities that a third charette was planned. This is scheduled for March 26. At
the second charette is became clear that Cozy Point should be included in this
comprehensive planning look. Clauson recommended delay on this Cozy Point
decision. The operation at Cozy Point is self-sustaining.
Council agreed to makes sense to plan this parcel with Aspen Mass. Councilwoman
Richards suggested also looking at funding schemes if Council decides they want to
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Aspen City Council Regular Meeting March 9, 1998
keep Cozy Point. Mayor Bennett said the city bought Cozy Point for affordable
housing, open space and recreation. The affordable housing would be better on the
Aspen Mass property; open space can be accomplished with deed restrictions; there
may be ways to guarantee recreational uses of Cozy Point through the RFP. Mayor
Bennett said he does not think the city can afford to keep Cozy Point just for an
equestrian recreation facility.
Ms. Margerum said staff has not received a clear direction from Council on Cozy
Point; prospective purchasers for equestrian and open space are not the same as
those who would want to develop affordable housing. There is uncertainty whether
affordable housing would be approved by the County Commissioners. If there is a
clear direction on the use of the property, staff could do an RFP as well as be able to
tell Council what it would take to keep the property. What it would take to keep the
property differs depending on what it will be used for. Clauson noted an advantage
of the charette process is that the county staff will have a better idea of what they
will permit on Cozy Point.
Councilman Markalunas said he hopes the Town of Snowmass is included in the
charettes. Councilman Paulson said he favors keeping this property. There is not a
lot of open space left. Council agreed with waiting until after the third design
charette.
RESOLUTION #19, 1998
- North Forty Water Service
John Worcester, city attorney, reminded Council this resolution of approval and
compliance is a step an applicant must take for water service outside the city limits.
Worcester noted this resolution makes reference to a 1969 contract for contribution
towards water main construction. In 1969, the city contracted with John McBride,
Airport Business Center, to provide water to the AABC. Worcester said there is
dispute whether this contract requires the city to provide water to adjacent
properties. This resolution states that by approving it, the city is not agreeing to the
applicant’s reading of the contract. By signing the water service agreement, the
applicant is not waiving any rights pursuant to that 1969 contract.
Chuck Brandt, representing the applicant, requested a change to the resolution in
paragraphs 2 and 3. Those state that if the project is approved as presented by the
county, that the water service agreement goes into effect. Brandt told Council in
this application, all the North Forty would become zoned AH. Brandt reminded
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Aspen City Council Regular Meeting March 9, 1998
Council that the commercial component has been pulled out of the North Forty area.
The applicant has said if they want to do a commercial project, there will be a new
application. This, too, would have to come back to the city for approval of water
service. Brandt said the applicant may want to do an affordable housing project on
the remaining area. Brandt requested if an affordable housing project is proposed,
that this not have to come back to the city for further approval on water service.
Brandt said an affordable housing project would be consistent with the AACP.
Councilman Markalunas said it is important to have reliable service in this area.
Councilman Markalunas requested the applicant cooperate as much as possible with
the city to insure this reliability. Phil Overeynder, water department director, said
there is the issue of whether it is appropriate for Council to approve something they
have not looked at in detail. Overeynder said he is not prepared to address a water
service agreement until he has a sense of what the project will be.
Councilwoman Richards moved to adopt Resolution #19, Series of 1998, as
submitted in the packet; seconded by Councilman Paulson. All in favor, motion
carried.
RESOLUTION #16, SERIES OF 1998
- Tippler Townhomes Residential GMQS
Scoring and Allotment
Mayor Bennett said he has never seen a GMQS application with only 50 percent
unit mix and 33 percent bedrooms of affordable housing. Mayor Bennett said the
city has not received a regular GMQS application in the last 7 years. Mayor
Bennett said he is not sure this is consistent with the AACP.
Stan Clauson, community development director, told Council this application is for
4 affordable and 4 free market units. Clauson said most of the applications before
Council have been AH projects. Clauson said instead of evaluating projects one
against another in a growth management competition, projects have been evaluated
against the code and against the goal of housing 60 percent of the employees
upvalley.
Dave Tolen, housing director, said the housing office has seen no growth
management applications since the AACP was passed. Tolen told Council the way
this project was calculated is consistent with past policy and with the discussions
with the applicant. Tolen said this application does not meet the requirement in the
AACP that 60 percent of subdivisions house employee population. Tolen said this
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Aspen City Council Regular Meeting March 9, 1998
is not in the code. There is a long standing practice of calculating affordable
housing requirement as some proportion of the free market residences, which was
done in this case.
Sunny Vann, representing the applicants, said there is some confusion about the 60
percent requirement. Vann noted neither the land use code nor the AACP provide
guidelines or standards as to the number of employees to be housed in a residential
growth management application. Vann said there are 2 references to the 60 percent
number in the AACP. The housing action plan establishes a goal of housing 60
percent “of the work force up valley of Aspen Village mobile home park”. The
growth action plan in the AACP talks about updating the residential growth
management to require “new residential subdivisions which compete in the GMP
process provide a minimum of 60 percent affordable housing. At the time, the
affordable housing requirements in the residential growth management process was
35 percent.
Vann said the current GMQS regulations adopted January 1995 did not incorporate
that recommendation but adopted general language about sustaining the permanent
community. Early in 1996, while staff was updating the newly adopted growth
management regulations, they prepared memos and met with P & Z and Council to
talk about growth management regulations. There had been no residential growth
management applications. Staff addressed whether to amend the code to require 60
percent affordable housing. There was discussion about the inequitableness of this
in small projects. Vann said there are two statements on housing 60 percent of the
work force up valley and that the growth management competition process should
be amended to require 60 percent affordable housing. That was not done and the
land use code was not amended.
Vann told Council in preparing this application he asked staff how much affordable
housing has to be provided in order to score a 3 under growth management. Vann
said this is a subjective scoring by the P & Z. Vann said without any code or
adopted guidelines, he researched previous projects which has been approved and
made sure this project met the same levels. Vann said what staff has done is
compare the affordable housing population to the theoretically free market
population to arrive at a 67 percent calculation.
Vann said this project provides 4 three-bedroom units and 4 deed restricted
affordable housing units. The housing units are 2 one-bedroom units deed restricted
to low income category and 2 two-bedrooms units deed restricted to lower category
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Aspen City Council Regular Meeting March 9, 1998
3. The housing staff complimented this proposal and said these units exceed the
minimum requirements. Staff recommended a maximum score to P & Z in this
category. Vann reiterated there is no definition of what the 60 percent figures
means, whether it is dwelling units or people.
Amy Margerum, city manager, told Council the staff feels this project met the 60
percent figure depending on the way it is calculated. Staff calculated this by
assigning a number to the free market bedrooms and applying a percentage to that
and in this project, the employee housing is 67 percent.
Councilwoman Richards suggested, separately from this project, that Council have
the staff clarify the guidelines and change the land use code. Mayor Bennett said
this application is 66 percent free market bedrooms and 33 percent affordable
bedrooms. Ms. Margerum said the reason for this calculation is that the housing
office applies a factor, there are more people per bedroom in affordable housing
than in free market housing. These factors came from a survey done in conjunction
with the AACP. These factors are in the housing guidelines, which are adopted
annually.
Mayor Bennett said staff, the housing office, and Council all have different ideas of
what the 60 percent meant and how it was calculated. Mayor Bennett said he would
like to direct staff to clarify the intent of the AACP and the code to include the
calculation formula.
Councilman Markalunas moved to adopt Resolution #16, Series of 1998; seconded
by Councilwoman Richards. All in favor, motion carried.
Councilwoman Richards moved to continue the meeting to Tuesday March 10 at
noon; seconded by Councilman Markalunas.
Kathryn S. Koch, City Clerk
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Aspen City Council Regular Meeting March 9, 1998
CITIZEN COMMENTS ................................ ................................ .......................... 1
COUNCILMEMBER COMMENTS ................................ ................................ ....... 1
CONSENT AGENDA ................................ ................................ ............................. 1
Minutes - February 23, 1998 ................................ ................................ ................ 2
Resolution #15, 1998 - RFTA IGA Board Members ................................ ............ 2
Request for Funds - Animal Shelter Planning ................................ ....................... 2
Request for Funds - Grand Traverse Ski Race ................................ ..................... 2
Snow Removal on Pedestrian Corridors ................................ ............................... 2
ORDINANCE #4, SERIES OF 1998 - Grand Aspen Extension ............................... 2
ORDINANCE #2, SERIES OF 1998 - Code Amendment RMF Zone ..................... 3
ORDINANCE #5, SERIES OF 1998 - Amending Model Traffic Code;
Reorganization of Section ................................ ................................ ........................ 4
RESOLUTION #18, SERIES OF 1998 - Isis Theatre Cash-in-Lieu Open Space
Payment ................................ ................................ ................................ .................. 4
COZY POINT RANCH PROPOSAL ................................ ................................ ...... 5
RESOLUTION #19, 1998 - North Forty Water Service ................................ ........... 6
RESOLUTION #16, SERIES OF 1998 - Tippler Townhomes Residential GMQS
Scoring and Allotment ................................ ................................ ............................. 7
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