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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
considering lower density plans City
representatives are responding to residents' fears that Sisters will lose
its character and quality of life due to city plans to allow for higher
density.
City staff met in a workshop
Thursday, October 23, to consider amending the Sisters Development Code
to allow fewer houses per gross acre.
The new Sisters sewer system
has allowed for more development in and around the city limits. Planners
and city officials have differing opinions on how much housing density
is appropriate to accommodate Sisters' accelerating population growth.
City Planning Director Neil
Thompson recommended adding about 90 acres of land to the city's urban
growth boundary (UGB), as well as beginning to develop a city with minimum
densities of five to eight units per gross acre.
The Sisters Development Code
was originally approved on June 28, 2001, with a required density of six
to seven units per gross acre for residential housing, and 10 to 24 units
for multi-family housing.
Thompson said developers sometimes
avoid higher-density developments because they find them less profitable.
He said a five- to eight-unit density will spur the creation of more multi-unit
and affordable housing complexes.
"We have people who cannot
afford two to seven houses per lot," Thompson said. "We have to provide
houses for them. We do not just have to worry about putting money in the
pocket of developers. There are other concerns."
Thompson's recommendation
is favored by the Department of Land Conservation and Development which
is funding part of the creation of the code. Many residents and councilors,
however, are pushing for a two-to-seven-unit per acre density.
"We're in a rural town," said
Councilor Lon Kellstrom. "The same laws that apply to Bend and Redmond
do not necessarily apply to Sisters. I don't think the citizens are interested
in having five to eight units per gross acre and that's what we found
out at the citizens' committee."
A citizens' committee met
in early October to make recommendations for density plans.
Most of the committee members
preferred two to seven units per gross acre, said Bill Merrill, a member
of the citizens' committee and chairman of the Sisters Urban Area Planning
Commission.
Thompson told The Nugget his
recommendation to amend the code to allow for five to eight houses per
acre in residential areas will still allow some units to have only two
houses, as long as the entire development averages to be five to eight
units per acre. |
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