HomeMy WebLinkAboutminutes.council.20040323Continued Meetin~ Aspen City Council March 23, 2004
Mayor Klanderud called the continued meeting to order at 7:15 p.m. with
Councilmembers Richards, Semrau, Torre, Paulson and Mayor Klanderud
present.
RESOLUTION #23~ SERIES OF 2004 - Bar/X Ranch Soldner Access
Road Agreement
John Worcester, city attorney, presented the proposed agreement between
the Bar/X ranch, the Soldners and the city for the western alignment access
road. Worcester gave Council a map indicating where the road will go.
Worcester said the Soldners will grant to the city parcel B in order to
accommodate the western alignment for the road. The city will grant to the
Soldners a triangUlar parcel carved out by the road and the ranch. Worcester
noted the original deal was that Bar/X would grant to the Soldners a parcel
of land along their boundary equal in size to the land that the Soldners were
giving up and this has changed.
Worcester said Bar/X was going to grant to the city a 37-foot wide utility
easement running the entire length of the property line. There will also be a
60-foot temporary construction easement for 24 months. There are two
small slivers of land; one which the city will quit claim deed to the Soldners
and the other sliver will be worked out. Worcester said it is represented the
Soldners and Bar/X are in agreement with this.
Worcester said beside the 37-foot wide utilitv easement and the temporary
construction easement, Bar/X will also grant to the city a 15,000 square foot
staging area for the contractor. The city will mitigate the environmental and
aesthetic disturbance caused by the construction of the western access road.
This may include berms and vision and sound dampening methods. This has
not been defined. If there is a dispute, it will be taken to arbitration. The
method of arbitration will be selected at that time and if that is not agreed
on, the state statutes will be followed. Worcester said the city does not want
to build walls and the Soldners feel walls may be necessary. So reasonable
sound dampening methods has not been determined.
The city has agreed to correct the annexation map after this deal is
completed. The city and Bar/X will enter into a 4th amended pre-annexation
agreement to incorporate compensation from Bar/X to the city including
$25,000 from the initial sales of the free market lots up to a total of
$300,000. Another condition was to compensate for the loss of sagebrush
Continued Meetin~ Aspen City Council March 23, 2004
with a payment of $25,000 to a local environmental organization from the
initial sale of the free market unit. For a period of 50 years on the resale of
these, there will be an additional $10,000 payment to the city and 1/3 of the
$10,000 going to the Soldners for compensation. Worcester told Council
Bar/X will incorporate these commitments into covenants on the titles for
sales of free market lots. Bar/X will construct a temporary ditch to relocate
the permanent ditch and then move the ditch back.
Worcester pointed out the agreement states if Bar/X develops a cultural use
center, the traffic generated by that center will use the westerly road. The
anticipated traffic is an average of 88 trips/day. Worcester said the Soldners
have asked for two water hookups from city service up to a maximum of 4
ECUs/hookup, total of 8 ECUs, at any time in the future. Worcester told
Council the use all 8 ECUs, is an approximate value of $64,000. The
Soldners also want to continue to use the wells on their property. The city
asks that people grant the water rights to the city and then enter into a raw
water agreement to lease back the water. This is an issue of being able to
control the use of raw water and regulate it.
Fred Peirce, representing the Soldners, said this agreement is acceptable to
them. Worcester told Council he has talked to the Zolines' attorney and this
is acceptable to them also. Councilwoman Richards said she thought the
additional payment on the free market lots was to help offset the higher cost
of the westerly road as well as the potential mitigations. Councilwoman
Richards said the city is agreeing to go to arbitration if the mitigation
methods are not enough while at the same time the funding source is being
depleted. Peirce said there are two provisions and the one Bar/X is paying
for compensating additional engineering and staff costs remains, which is
the $25,000 per lot to a total of $300,000. Peirce said the $25,000 was going
to an environmental organization and the Soldners requested 1/3 of that be
given to whatever non-profit organization is operating the Soldner ranch.
Councilman Torre said he was hoping that money would go to purchase
open space because by agreeing to this alignment, more sagebrush habitat is
being damaged. These funds would be used to preserve that type of habitat
throughout the valley.
Ed Sadler, assistant city-manager, said the directions given to the engineer
were to spend no more than $300,000 on the realignment. Sadler told
Council that berms and walls were not included in the costs of re-
Continued Meetin~ Aspen City Council March 23, 2004
engineering. This will probably also require new drainage. Councilman
Torre asked if the grade on this .alignment allows for a usable trail. Sadler
said the maximum grade would be 6% and it will be usable. Councilman
Semrau asked if the Soldners have defined "noise mitigation". Stephanie
Soldner said they have not had a lot of time to work on this. Peirce said they
are aware the noise level will not be the same as it is today; they understand
there will be impacts and want these impacts reasonably mitigated.
Councilman Semrau noted there is a decibel sound in the code that is
considered reasonable. Worcester suggested language that this noise will
not exceed the city's noise ordinance. Peirce agreed using the city's noise
ordinance as a starting point would be reasonable.
Sadler said the road to the cultural center will have to be considered with the
city's developer so these two roads can mesh. Worcester said he will add
that to the agreement. Peirce pointed out the traffic figures for the cultural
center come from the plan of having 13 units out there for students and
teachers. Councilwoman Richards said she would like to make sure that
agreeing to this does not bind future Council when they are reviewing an
application for the cultural center. If Council agrees this road is for access,
there will be no way to go cost sharing because the city is building the road
to the cultural center and is taking the westerly alignment, which is what the
Zolines wanted. Worcester said Council could condition the'cultural center
upon reimbursing the city. Worcester said all this agreement says is if a
Council agrees to the cultural center and if it is built, all the traffic has to go
on this road.
Councilman Torre asked if the new access road serves free market
component of the Bar/X ranch. Worcester said he will have to look into this;
the free market component by definition may include the cultural center
area. Councilman Torre said he would rather the payments go to purchase
of open space than a non-profit environmental group and that 1/3 goes
toward maintenance of the Soldner property. Peirce said the Soldners are
trying to preserve a feeling of the property that they grew up with; when the
road is built, it will be a different property. Peirce pointed out as a result of
this, the Soldners made a request to the Zolines for a contribution to an
endowment to help preserve the property as it is now. The Zolines
suggested the payment come out of the monies going to the city as a
compromise. Stephanie Soldner said they want to be assured that the
property will be taken care of and help will be needed with the maintenance.
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Continued Meeting Aspen City Council March 23~ 2004
Ms. Soldner said the donations from the sale of the free market units at
Bar/X are a small amount to pay to maintain this land.
Councilwoman Richards suggested language that if the cultural center never
occurs on this property, that the money is returned to the city.
Councilwoman Ri'chards asked if a percentage of this maintenance money
could be earmarked for mitigation in the case the Soldners and city cannot
agree on what is "reasonable" mitigation. Ms. Soldner said at this point she
would hesitate to link the two. Councilman Semrau noted the city is
protected by arbitration. Worcester agreed the city would be protected from
unreasonable requests; however, the decision would be up to the arbitrator.
Worcester said he asked for the arbitration clause as it does give the city
some protection from a dispute that the parties do not know how to resolve.
Councilman Semrau said this agreement is acceptable in trying to help the
Soldners as much as possible. Mayor Klanderud said she does not favor the
road along the westerly boundary. Mayor Klanderud said she has concerns
about the visual problems with the westerly site; the site will never look the
same. Mayor Klanderud noted that all the impacts from the cultural center
will fall on the affordable housing sites. Councilman Paulson said he feels
this is being rushed through without giving thought to the decibel levels and
the visual impacts. Councilman Paulson said he feels there may be
unexpected costs to the city by pushing this through without knowing the
final outcome.
Councilwoman Richards said she originally supported the easterly
alignment; however, she is supporting this alignment to try and mitigate the
impacts to the neighbors. Councilwoman Richards agreed there are
positives to moving this road. Councilwoman Richards said the cultural
center impacts could be positive for Burlingame residents; this could be the
beginning of a new campus like the Meadows/Music tent. Mayor Klanderud
said she has agreed to make Burlingame the best possible project and this
road alignment does not fit into that scenario. Mayor Klanderud said she has
impacts on the affordable housing with traffic impacts on this proposed road.
Councilman Semrau moved to approve Resolution #23, Series of 2004;
seconded by Councilwoman Richards. Councilwoman Richards requested
Worcester review the points brought up by Council.
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Continued Meetin~ Aspen City Council March 23, 2004
Councilman Torre said the environment is valuable to this ~community. Also
valuable are the people that made the community special and respecting
these people is a hard trade off. Councilman Torre said he is willing to
accept that trade off for the Soldners in this agreement. Councilman Torre
said anything built at Burlingame is damage. Councilman Paulson said it
seems like housing is put above everything else in this community.
All in favor, with the exception of Councilman Paulson and Mayor
Klanderud. Motion carried.
Councilman Semrau moved to adjourn at 8:00 p.m.; seconded by
Councilwoman Richards. All in favor, motion carded.