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©
2002 Display
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contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
City
weighs changes to code City officials
are trying to quell the public outcry over changes to neighborhoods allowed
by the Sisters Development Code.
In a workshop on Wednesday,
February 12, City Planner Neil Thompson proposed changes to the development
code, all addressing issues that residents have raised over density and
the changing character of Sisters.
“It went as well as I could
have expected," said Thompson after the meeting, which was held at the
Sisters Fire Hall.
A public hearing on the proposed
changes will be held at the city council meeting on Thursday, March 27.
It is likely that these changes will be adopted in that same meeting.
Thompson and members of the
council said that they are open to public input and discussion on the
matter prior to the public hearing in March. It is their goal that the
citizens' demand for a swift process in changing the development code
is met.
Thompson proposes that single-family
attached townhomes, duplexes and triplexes be allowed only in the Multi-Family
Residential subdistrict.
When asked later if the blending
of duplexes and single-family homes in new neighborhoods went against
the desires of local residents, Thompson said, “No, I think a mixture
of housing types is healthy for a community."
Thompson proposed an increase
in minimum lot sizes for duplexes from 6,000 to 7,500 square feet and
for townhomes from 3,000 to 3,750 square feet.
Thompson also proposed to
make the 25 percent affordable housing credit less intrusive by implementing
a practice already used in the Development Code called lot-size averaging.
“This is intended to clarify
that a density bonus is not a reduction in the minimum lot size... but
a 25 percent bonus or increase in the number of unit [sic] allowed," Thompson
stated in his proposal.
Within the current framework
of the Development Code, a 9,000-square-foot lot could be partitioned
into two 4,500 square foot lots using the affordable housing credit. Under
Thompson's proposal partitions for affordable housing would be limited
to creating an average of 8.75 units per gross acre.
Thompson hopes that with this
method, the character of existing neighborhoods will be maintained while
allowing affordable housing to exist in the city.
Commissioner Bill Merrill
expressed some concern that the citizens are not being properly represented.
He proposed that a task force be constructed of community members to review
the entire development code and determine a common vision for the City
of Sisters.
Mayor Dave Elliott argued
that the city must solve the existing problem before reexamining the entire
code.
“Right now we are hemorrhaging,"
said Elliott, “We need to apply a bandage to the problem." |
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