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2003 Display
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City
mulls adding more land for growth The
City of Sisters may need more land to accommodate its rapidly growing population.
City officials met in a workshop on Thursday, August 28, to discuss which
110 acres of land outside the city limits might best be acquired for expansion
of the Urban Growth Boundary.
Meanwhile, residents are holding to the city's existing 1,124 acres of
roomy terrain with clenched fists.
The Urban Growth Boundary is currently the same as the city limits.
With population growth predicted to quadruple to 4,167 in 2020 from
its current 1,080, the city has identified a need for an extra 91 acres
zoned for residential uses. (Note: The 91 acres are for houses and the
rest of the 110 total acres are for streets.)
A citizens' committee weighed in on the UGB expansion.
"Our committee looked at the density and where the city is headed and
the density is changing the city from where we like it," said Curt Kallberg
at the city council meeting on Thursday.
Kallberg, a builder and partner in the McKinney Butte development on
the west side of Sisters, lives just outside the city limits near the
high school.
He sat on a committee of about 12 residents who documented their concerns
about population impacts in a report to the city this summer.
"The city is still based on jamming people together," Kallberg said.
"I didn't come here, I didn't bring my family here to see the direction
this town is going. We're jamming three to four houses into existing communities."
Kallberg told The Nugget the city needs to look at more than 110 acres,
of which only 91 are buildable for housing.
"We agree they need more land," Kallberg said. "But they're not even
close. They need about 200 acres more. They're aiming for six houses per
gross acre.
"We don't want them to use farmland either, but we also don't want them
to ruin our existing living situation.
"If we follow state regulations, we'll look like Portland," Kallberg
said.
"We don't want Sisters to look like Portland."
After comparing multiple land options in a detailed chart, City Planner
Neil Thompson recommended three zones he regards as prime for building
single and multi-family dwellings and some commercial sites.
"We want 10 percent of the developed land to be commercial because more
residential development means we need more commercial," Thompson said.
"We like the idea of mixed-use areas."
The recommended areas are:
City staff presented a one-to-three scaled chart which rates about 450 acres of undeveloped land surrounding and touching the city limits. Ratings are based on a variety of land-use factors including access to water and sewer services, state regulations, traffic impacts, environmental concerns, agricultural and forest preservation and access to schools and commercial areas. A 36-acre lot in the northeast section rated the highest among the 18 charted lots. The lot is located across from Conklin's Guest House. The 40 acres of Pine Meadow Ranch rated just below that lot. City Council gave Thompson a thumbs-up for his work on the rating chart. Thompson said his next step is to send his proposal to the Department of Land Conservation and Development (DLCD). A public hearing on plans will take place about 45 days after the DLCD receives the chart. |
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