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Developers
weigh in on code changes Sisters citizens
have been up in arms recently over changes to their neighborhoods. They
want the Sisters Development Code changed, density reduced and multi-unit
developments kept out of existing neighborhoods.
Developers Jim Bell and Bruce
Forbes think the code is just fine the way it is; in fact, they think
the code has already improved Sisters neighborhoods.
The developers weighed in
on the code debate at the Sisters City Council meeting on Thursday, February
27.
Jim Bell, who has built several
duplexes along Cascade Avenue, believes the code promotes affordable housing.
"The majority of homes that
I've build over there start at $149,900," he said.
Bell said an increase in lot
sizes and restrictions on multi-unit development would force his projects
into the $200,000 range.
Bell owns 14 lots along Timber
Creek Drive east of Sisters Elementary School.
Bruce Forbes doesn't think
dissatisfaction with the code runs as wide and deep as council members
might think.
"The ones who are satisfied
with the code don't call the city and say 'You've done a great job, please
don't change the code,'" Forbes said. "You just don't hear from those
people."
Forbes believes changes to
neighborhoods such as Edge of the Pines, where controversy over density
erupted, are for the better.
"The people who are making
the changes are making the neighborhood look a lot better," he said.
Forbes also argued that the
city is rushing to fix a code that it took many months of study to create.
"I really think that an intensive
study needs to be done to see what the city is giving up," he said.
Forbes believes the City of
Sisters stands to lose many potential new lots and significant revenue
from lost service fees and taxes.
City Planner Neil Thompson
has proposed changes to the Sisters Development Code to address concerns
about changing the character of neighborhoods.
These include restricting
multiplexes to their own zone and increasing some minimum lot sizes.
A public hearing on the proposed
changes will be held at the city council meeting on Thursday, March 27.
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