HomeMy WebLinkAboutMinutesMeridian City Council
November 1, 2005
Page 5 of 33
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Bird: I move that we approve FP 05-063 and FP 05-064, with staff and applicant
comments.
Rountree: Second.
Wardle: It's been moved and seconded to approve Items 8 and 9. Mr. Clerk, will you,
please, call roll.
Roll-Call: Bird, yea; Rountree, yea; Wardle, yea; Donnell, yea.
MOTION CARRIED: ALL AYES.
Item 10: AP 05-003 Request for Appeal of the Planning and Zoning Commission's
denial of Banff Subdivision Preliminary Plat by Landworks, LLC - 675
South Linder Road:
Wardle: Item No. 10 is AP 05-003, which is a request for appeal to Planning and
Zoning Commission's denial of Banff Subdivision preliminary plat. I will begin with
comments from the planning director.
Canning: Mr. President, Members of the Council, this -- the one you opened is the
appeal decision. There are two other concurrent applications. One is the Conditional
Use Permit for the planned development and the annexation and zoning. I wanted to
also, just as a note for the record, because this application was filed under the new -- or
under the old ordinance, we are treating the appeal as if it were under the old
ordinance, even though it was recently filed for. The question before the Council tonight
is whether or not they want to hear the preliminary plat, along with the annexation,
zoning, and Conditional Use Permit. Because as it is right now, you will not see the
preliminary plat, unless you grant the appeal. So, the two options, as I understand it
tonight, are that you grant the request for the appeal and, then, set a hearing date for all
three applications. You would open and continue the one for the Conditional Use
Permit and for the annexation and zoning. The earliest date that I believe we could get
that notice for is November 22nd: The other option is to deny the request for the appeal
and, then, you would just continue the annexation and zoning and Conditional Use
Permit applications until we could prepare Findings for you. So, that could be as early
as next week.
Wardle: Thank you, Anna. A procedural for question for Mr. Nary. Is this a decision in
which the Council takes any testimony or indication from the applicant or is this solely
our discretion to either hear the appeal or deny the appeal?
Nary: Mr. President, Members of the Council, you certainly can hear from the applicant
if you wish as to that is their desire to hear it. I mean the nature of these appeals -- and
you have seen a number of these over the years -- it's just because of the way our
ordinances previously had been structured. You won't have this in the future with the
Meridian City Council
November 1, 2005
Page 6 of 33
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way the UDC is now -- now formed. You won't have that type -- this type of separated
application. But you can grant the appE:al, if that is the applicant's wish -- and must be,
obviously, that's why they applied for it. You don't have to have a hearing to make that
determination. Again, you would be granting the appeal merely for the purposes of
hearing the applications together, so it's really just the nature of the form of our
ordinance, not because you're granting their appeal or approving their project or
approving the plat, but just for the purposes of a Public Hearing. If you want to confirm
on the record that that is what their intent is, you certainly can do that.
Wardle: Thank you, Mr. Nary. Council?
Rountree: Mr. President?
Wardle: Mr. Rountree.
Rountree: My preference would be -- if we are going to hear this particular application,
to have the preliminary plat along with irhe annexation request and the conditional use
request as a package. I would not be inclined to react favorably to the other two without
the preliminary plat. So, having said that, that doesn't necessarily indicate that this
would move forward beyond a future hearing, but as a complete package would be my
preference.
Wardle: Thank you. And I believe the planning director clarified that in our new code
that would be the procedure, everything would come forward together. So, this is one of
those clean-up items from our old code. Council, is there any other discussion? I would
entertain a motion. I believe we first nE;ed to act on the request for appeal and either
approve an appeal or deny that and, them, move to the next two applications.
Rountree: Mr. President, just a re-clarification from counsel. In a motion can we open
the other two hearings and hold them open until we schedule a hearing for the 3rd or
should we just act on the appeal first anti, then, act on the scheduled hearings?
Nary: Mr. President, Members of the Council, Councilmember Rountree, I don't know
that it makes much difference. I mean I think the intent -- you're going to want to open
the other two and continue those matter: to the date certain. Whether you do that first -
- it probably would be easier to continui~ your appeal and your plat matter to that date
and, then, you could open the other matl:ers and, then, continue those to the same date.
And, again, I think if your motion -- just 'to clarify your motion, if you're going to do that,
would be that you're granting the appeal simply for the purposes of hearing this project
and it's not approval or denial of the project itself.
Rountree: And another point of clarification, Mr. President. Anna, what kind of time do
you need if we were to move forward with this?
Canning: The preliminary plat needs to be re-noticed. So, the earliest it could be is
November 22nd and that's plenty of time for us.
Meridian City Council
November 1, 2005
Page 7 of 33
Rountree: Okay. Thank you.
Bird: Mr. President?
Wardle: Mr. Bird.
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Bird: Mr. Nary, I'm a little confused hE:re. We are acting upon arequest -- appeal on
the Planning and Zoning on the preliminary plat; is that right? And we haven't even
annexed it. How can we be doing that%' We haven't annexed and zoned it. That's not
until the next item. So, how do we -- Ihow do we enact upon a preliminary plat when
they are not even in our -- in our area of impact -- in our jurisdiction?
Nary: Mr. Mayor, Members of the --
Bird: Or did I miss something? I mean I could have.
Nary: No. Mr. President, Members of the Council, Councilmember Bird, what you're
acting on is a request for an appeal. `(ou're not acting on the plat. If you're going to
grant the appeal, the appeal is simply to hear the plat. You're not making a decision on
the plat. You're making a decision whether or not you choose to hear it. So, all you're
doing is setting it over to hear it and you're going to set over the other matters to hear
them on the same date. So, as I said, technically, if you want to open the other ones
now and move them to the date, you can certainly do that as well. But all you're
granting is an appeal. You're not hearing the plat itself. That's why we have to provide
notice and have a hearing on that on thE: 22nd.
Bird: But follow up, please, Mr. President.
Wardle: Sure.
Bird: But, Mr. Nary, don't we have to have it annexed and zoned before we have a
preliminary plat that we can -- whether dleny or approve?
Nary: Correct. And on the 20th --
Bird: And they are not.
Nary: But -- Mr. Bird, Members of the Council, but you're not acting on the plat, you're
acting on their appeal. They have appli~:d for you to hear it and all you're doing is you're
granting their opportunity to be heard on their plat. You're not going to hear that plat
before you take up the annexation question of whether to annex them on the 22nd. So,
tonight you aren't making any decision on their plat, all you're making is a decision to
hear it here on the 22nd.
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Meridian City Council
November 1, 2005
Page 8 of 33
Bird: But, Mr. Nary, what would be the difference of somebody out in the county coming
in and asking us to deny or approve their preliminary plat without being annexed or
zoned? Where are we legally -- and I'rn not saying we are not, I mean because I'm not
no legal eagle, but Ijust -- we have always been told that you had to be annexed and
zoned before you made decisions on preliminary plats, final plats, CUPs, and everything
like that.
Nary: But, Mr. President, Members of the Council, that hasn't changed, Mr. Bird. No
one can come and ask you to talk about their plat without it being annexed. The
problem is it's the way our ordinances ~~re currently drafted -- the older ordinance -- not
the new UDC -- was the plat gets heard separately and is a separate final decision by
the Planning and Zoning Commission, so their only opportunity for you to hear them is
by granting their appeal to just hear their request for that plat in relation to that
annexation. So, you aren't going to i~nake a decision on the plat tonight, all you're
making is a decision to hear it.
Wardle: And, Mr. Bird, if I could just clarify real quick. Discussion with the planning
director was in the old code the power of the Planning and Zoning Commission was to
hold the plat. They could hold the plat from going forward without a recommendation,
as I understand it. The other applicati~~ns come forward to the City Council in the old
code regardless.
Nary: And the reason that worked -- nnade sense -- or did make sense is if you were
dealing with property that's already annexed, then, you wouldn't have to worry -- you
wouldn't have to have your -- every sinclle plat come forward to the City Council, it could
be heard at the Planning and Zoning i~ommission. But when it's tied together, there
was no mechanism in the old code to keep them together for you to hear them all,
because, otherwise, you're stuck in the quandary that Councilmember Rountree stated,
where without the appeal you cannot hf;ar the plat, but you have to hear the annexation
and the conditional use, which would have no relationship to anything without the plat.
So, you would have to have them all together. It was just a deficiency in our old code
that occasionally would crop up like this, where we would have one piece of it not tag
along with the rest of it that you would see. But, Mr. Bird, what -- your recollection of
what you have had previously hasn't changed. You aren't deciding on whether their plat
is appropriate, is drawn properly, it has the right setbacks, it has the right lots, it has the
right anything, all you're making a deciision on is whether you will choose to hear that
with the other projects and that's it.
Bird: Okay.
Wardle: Thank you. Further clarification, Council?
Bird: No.
Donnell: Mr. President?
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Meridian City Council
November 1, 2005
Page 9 of 33
Wardle: Mrs. Donnell.
Donnell: I'd like to make a motion that we do approve the request for appeal and that
we would set that date at November 22nd, if that is appropriate for the planning
department.
Rountree: I will second that if you're done.
Wardle: Okay.
Donnell: Yes.
Wardle: It's been moved and seconded to approve the request for appeal and to hear
that appeal of the final plat on November 22nd. Mr. Clerk, roll call vote.
Roll-Call: Bird, nay; Rountree, yea; Wardle, yea; Donnell, yea.
MOTION CARRIED: THREE AYES. ONE NAY.
Item 11: Public Hearing: AZ 05-033 Request for Annexation and Zoning of 3.02
acres to R-8 zone for Banff Subdivision by Landworks, LLC - 675 South
Linder Road:
Item 12: Public Hearing: CUP 05-036 Request for a Conditional Use Permit /
Planned Development to allow reduced lot sizes, setbacks, frontage and
minimum ground floor square footage for Banff Subdivision by
Landworks, LLC - 675 South Linder Road:
Wardle: With that I will open Items No. 11 and Items No. 12, AZ 05-033 and CUP 05-
036, for the purpose of continuing these two items to be heard with the preliminary plat
on November 22nd. I will need a motion to that effect.
Donnell: Mr. President?
Wardle: Mrs. Donnell.
Donnell: I would move that we would continue the hearings on Item No. 11 and No. 10
at that same time, November 22nd.
Wardle: Item 12.
Donnell: Is it 12?
Wardle: Yes.
Donnell: 11 and 12.
Meridian Planning & Zoning
August 4, 2005
Page 56 of 57
Hopkins: Thank you. Randy Hopkins, 1390 East Mallory Lane, Meridian, Idaho.
83642. Yes, we are here excited about we have a regional restaurant that's close that
we should be able to announce in the next 30 days for this location. As your staff has
stated, it's pretty straight forward and we are happy to cooperate as we get a little more
square footage and the plans coming together to do the additional pedestrian oriented
amenity and haven't decided exactly what that is, but as this develops, then, we have
some intent to proceed with the other buildings that have been specific CUPs already,
so we are excited to be here and I think this is a good addition to the community. Thank
you. Any questions?
Zaremba: Any questions? Thank you very much. Nobody else has signed up and
there is nobody else in the audience, so I guess we don't need public testimony and a
rebuttal. Commissioners, what's your pleasure?
Newton-Huckabay: My pleasure would be not to make another motion tonight. My last
one was a big flunky.
Borup: It was perfect. We are spreading the wealth tonight. Any further discussion
needed or are we ready to close the Public Hearing?
Borup: I move we close the Public Hearing on -- see, I'm not ready for this either. CUP
05-035.
Rohm: Second.
Zaremba: We have a motion and a second. All in favor say aye. Any opposed?
Motion carries.
MOTION CARRIED: ALL AYES.
Borup: Mr. Chairman, I move we recommend approval to City Council of File No. CUP
05-035, as presented in the staff report dated August 4th and the site plan dated
December 20th, 2004, with the following conditions of approval with Exhibit B and also
include the memorandum dated August 4th, 2005.
Moe: Second.
Zaremba: We have a motion and a second. All in favor say aye. Any opposed? That
motion carries.
MOTION CARRIED: ALL AYES.
Item 15: Public Hearing: AZ 05-033 Request for Annexation and Zoning of 3. 02
acres to R-8 zone for Banff Subdivision by Landworks, LLC - 675 South
Linder Road:
Meridian Planning & Zoning
August 4, 2005
Page 57 of 57
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Item 16: Public Hearing: PP 05-032 Request for Preliminary Plat approval of 21
single-family residential building lots and 7 common area lots on 2. 91
acres in a proposed R-8 zone for Banff Subdivision by Landworks, LLC
- 675 South Linder Road:
Item 17: Public Hearing: CUP 05-036 Request for a Conditional Use Permit /
Planned Development to allow reduced lot sizes, setbacks, frontage and
minimum ground floor square footage for Banff Subdivision by
Landworks, LLC - 675 South Linder Road:
Zaremba: Thank you very much. We are shy of being the one that makes the motion to
close the hearing, because everybody expects that same person to make the other
motions. Okay. The chair will open the Public Hearing for AZ 05-003, PP 05-032, and
CUP 05-036, all relating to Banff Subdivision on South Linder Road and entertain a
motion to continue these to August 18th, '05.
Borup: So moved.
Rohm: So moved.
Zaremba: Okay. Would one of you care to make that a second?
Rohm: Second.
Zaremba: Okay. We have a motion and a second.
Newton-Huckabay: August 18th?
Zaremba: August 18th. Yes. Motion and a second. All in favor say aye. Any
opposed? That motion carries.
Canning: I did have a gentleman provide written testimony and I will hand that to the
clerk. I think he will show up on the 18th as well.
Zaremba: Distribute it before the 18th. Okay.
Newton-Huckabay: We didn't have people here for Banff earlier, did we?
Zaremba: No. Nobody left when I announced that we would not be hearing it.
Moe: Actually, there was two people.
Borup: Before the meeting.
Zaremba: We have one more motion to make.
Meridian Planning & Zoning Commission
October 6, 2005
Page 3 of 85
Zaremba: All right. We are ready to get right into the Pubic Hearing portion of our
meeting for tonight and let me start with describing our procedure for those of you who
don't come to our meetings very often. The applicant and our professional staff have
already spent quite a bit of time together going over each application and each subject
and we begin our presentation with our staff giving us an overview -- us and you an
overview of where the project is, what the project is, how it complies with the
Comprehensive Plan and the Ordinances that affect it. They are neither advocating, nor
-- they are neither for or against the project, they are just describing how it does or does
not comply with the rules that we all must follow. Following that, the applicant will be
given 15 minutes for them and their staff or any other supporting people that they need
to either answer any questions raised by the staff or describe anything else they think
we need to know about the project. Following that is when we open it up for public
testimony, all of you. We ask that you keep your remarks concise, if you would. We
end up going pretty late sometimes and, please, confine your remarks to about three
minutes. We do make an exception to that. If there is a spokesman -- and an example
would a president of a homeowners association, who has other people in the audience
for whom he or she is speaking, we do allow the spokesman ten minutes and, then, we
ask that other people just respond that they have been spoken for. We appreciate that.
Then, after all the public testimony has been given, we ask the applicant to have been
taking notes during that and come back up and respond to anything that they can help
us resolve that's been raised. And, then, theoretically, we close the Public Hearing,
discuss it, and make our recommendation to the City Council, where, again, there will
be a Public Hearing, but, theoretically, with more issues solved.
Item 4: Continued Public Hearing from August 18, 2005: AZ 05-033 Request
for Annexation and Zoning of 3.02 acres to R-8 zone for Banff
Subdivision by Landworks, LLC - 675 South Linder Road:
Item 5: Continued Public Hearing from August 18, 2005: PP 05-032 Request
for Preliminary Plat approval of 21 single-family residential building lots
and 7 common area lots on 2.91 acres in a proposed R-8 zone for Banff
Subdivision by Landworks, LLC - 675 South Linder Road:
Item 6: Continued Public Hearing from August 18, 2005: CUP 05-036
Request for a Conditional Use Permit /Planned Development to allow
reduced lot sizes, setbacks, frontage and minimum ground floor square
footage for Banff Subdivision by Landworks, LLC - 675 South Linder
Road:
Zaremba: Okay. With that being said, I will open the continued Public Hearing for AZ
05-033, PP 05-032, and CUP 05-036. All of these relate to Banff Subdivision and there
have been some revisions since we talked about this last time, so we will ask for the
staff to give us a report, please.
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Meridian Planning & Zoning Commission
October 6, 2005
Page 4 of 85
Guenther: Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Again, this subdivision is off of Linder Road, just
north of Waltman Court. The site is 3.02 acres for the annexation, which is to the
centerline of the road, 2.87 acres for the preliminary plat. The applicant has submitted
an amended plat as shown here. With this they have tried to address the connections
to the north by putting in the modified Snoopy design for the correction at the western
portion of the property, as well as there is two lots missing from this design that were
included with the previous analysis of Banff Subdivision. With that staff is still
recommending denial based on the fact that this is still too dense and does not fit into
the character of the neighborhood. The second fact of the matter is that this is not an
in-fill subdivision and doesn't qualify for this type of higher density. The narrowness of
the site also precludes a little bit of a development potential of the area. The property to
the north and south, it's going to be difficult to develop for them as well. And so,
generally, the design of the site does not adequately address a lot of the comprehensive
issues for too many houses near too low density of lots at -- at this time. If you have
any questions of staff, I'll feel free to answer them, but staff is still recommending denial
of this design.
Zaremba: Commissioners, any questions at this point? Okay. Thank you. We will
have the applicant come forward, please.
McKinnon: Thank you, Mr. Chairman, Members of the Commission. Dave McKinnon,
735 South Crosstimber. Happy to be back in front of you again tonight. Last time we
met there were basically seven items that I needed to take care of. Kind of had a
laundry list of things to take care of and just to review what those were and, then, I'll
address Joe's comments. The first thing was is we needed to figure out the boundary
survey. If you remember, Jerry Hihath, the neighbor to the south, came and testified
that there was a problem with the boundary survey and after the meeting got in contact
with Jerry, Jerry and I went out and met on the site one evening with the surveyor from
W.H. Pacific. We found out where all the pins were. We walked the site together and,
then, we walked the back of the property together and it turns out the boundary was
accurate. Mr. Hihath said that his dad and one of the Van Hess family had actually
walked that off with a 12 foot tape measure many years ago and that's where they put
the fence and that fence was within about three inches of what the opinions were, so he
thought that was kind of funny that they came that close with a 12 foot tape measure
way back when. The second thing that we needed to take care of is that when we last
met you guys felt that the project was a little bit too dense and some of the discussion
was centered on that, was taking out two more lots. As you remember, the first time we
had this design we had 21 lots, as it says on the overhead. Then, we reduced it down
to 18 and, then, we got two more taken out since the last time we met down, it's down to
16, and that's what's represented on this map in front of you tonight. We have taken
one from the north and one from the south. And during that discussion we talked a little
bit about this open space, what should happen to this open space. There was some
discussion about not reducing this open space. It was reduced by less a thousand feet,
but over 2,000 feet was added at the other end and that was just to make these wider
and to add a wider lot on the corner right here. So, that was one of the discussion
items. The third item was talking about the redevelopment of the property to the north.
Meridian Planning & Zoning Commission
October 6, 2005
Page 5 of 85
Staff had asked us to modify this hammerhead with the Snoopy. We tried to do what
staff has asked us to do, I recognize in the staff report that the staff would like to see
this modified again. We, like in the past, we have had no problem providing access to
that property to the north and we feel that the layout that we presented to you at the last
hearing, that staff has someplace still, had to give it back to the city at that time, to give
this 66 foot wide piece of property four lots in the future. That was to provide access at
this point for two lots and access down on the east end for two lots. And that was
discussed and I think there wasn't a whole lot of other ways to develop that piece of
property. We did try again to meet with those people, had the real estate agent go out
and say we'd like to purchase this property or purchase a portion of the property. They
are not interested in selling. One of the things you had asked us to do was to try to
work with them. The fourth item was you wanted to make sure that the plat reflected a
15-foot rear setback line around the perimeter. At that time when we submitted the last
plat it said ten feet and we have corrected that to now say 15 feet around the perimeter.
On the planned development you could not have a reduced perimeter setback and so
we fixed that on this plat. The fifth item was open space. Talked about that a little bit.
Did not reduce the open space. In fact, we have added more open space to this project
since we last met. There was discussion about the fire department restricting parking
on this street to have no parking and there was some discussion at that time as to what
the fire department would allow and we have modified the street section to be 29 feet
from face to face and so there would be parking allowed on one side of the street. The
seventh thing you asked us to do was to hold another neighborhood meeting, which we
did, we held another neighborhood meeting a couple weeks ago. We met with the
property owners to the north side of this -- not the immediate north, but the large home
with the cul-de-sac lot. And we met with the Hihaths again, that's the property owners
to the south, and the Laceys, the owners of this house -- or staying in this house were
there. We had a meeting at their house. Sat down and discussed this and general
consensus was/ is this layout's better than what the previous layouts have been. And
so after we had that discussion, there was a little bit more discussion with the Hihaths
as to what they want to do with their property in the future. They recognize that their
property to the south is going to redevelop in the future at some point and what happens
with this property affects them. Joe mentioned that it would be very hard to redevelop
the property to the south if there is a stub street at this location and just a differing of
opinions there. With us and staff, I guess, we felt that this location for the stub street is
appropriate, because it allows for the depth lots to be appropriate as it comes down. If
we were to put it in the middle it would basically guide their development more so than
what this is. This puts the access road down. It's a deep enough lot that they can come
in and back down it, they don't have to drag a street directly down to Waltman. A
couple other things that were of concern at that time. Joe, could you go forward on this
-- from this slide? There we go. Some of the discussion items that we also talked about
at that time -- there has been a few revisions -- that this is the only access in and out of
this property and since that time the Planning and Zoning staff has met with the City
Council to discuss an alternative access out of this property. And, basically, all these
properties to have a secondary access out. They have met with the property owner that
will provide an emergency vehicle access out of this area that would provide a
secondary emergency vehicle access and they have met with this person and he has
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Meridian Planning & Zoning Commission
October 6, 2005
Page 6 of 85
agreed to provide an emergency vehicle access with that site. And so Steve Siddoway,
under the direction of the Mayor, went out and did that. So, that's been taken care of.
So, there will be a secondary emergency vehicle access off of Linder and Linder would
not be the only way back out to Franklin and the only way out of the subdivision. Again,
these are a little bit smaller than you have got in the surrounding area, but it's the first
property to come in on this side of the road without a whole lot of density -- without a
whole huge lot and that's because there are existing county lots. This piece of property
is going to be developed in the future. The property kitty-corner from this has
redeveloped to 5,000 square foot lots. We are asking for 4,000 square foot lots and
larger. There is not a great difference in the sizes from the subdivision kitty-corner to
our subdivision. I think we have tried to address all the comments that you have made
and you asked us to work with. I'd ask if you have any questions of us at this time, see
if there is any public testimony, and, then, I can finish my comments after your
questioning, if there is anything that needs to be covered at that point. Ask for your
approval tonight. We are thankful for the opportunity we have had to work this out and
to meet with the neighbors and discuss these things: I think we have come to a point
now where the neighbors can work with this and, hopefully, the city can, too. Ask if you
have any questions at this time.
Zaremba: Commissioners, any questions of Mr. McKinnon? Okay. Thank you. We
will move on to public testimony. And, actually, nobody signed up for these issues, but
there is an opportunity, if anybody failed to sign up and has something to add, this
would be the time to do it. I see nobody moving. Okay. In that case, there is really no
notes or comment for Mr. McKinnon to make. Staff have any further comment?
Guenther: We were hoping that Steve could confirm that the emergency access has
been taken care of, but we haven't -- we don't have that information confirmed. We
know that he has been addressing the issue.
Zaremba: You're referring to Steve Siddoway?
Guenther: Steve Siddoway on the emergency access.
Zaremba: Okay. Thank you. Commissioners, any question or discussion?
Commissioner Newton-Huckabay.
Newton-Huckabay: If he hasn't confirmed that emergency access, that doesn't prevent
us from making a recommendation on this, does it?
Guenther: No.
Newton-Huckabay: Okay.
Zaremba: My opinion on that would be that the emergency access they are working on
needs to go forward whether this project happens or not. It doesn't just affect this
Meridian Planning & Zoning Commission
October 6, 2005
Page 7 of 85
project, it affects the whole neighborhood, which is currently a cul-de-sac south of
Franklin.
Newton-Huckabay: Right.
Baird: Mr. Chair?
Zaremba: Mr. Baird.
Baird: Mr. Chair, Members of the Commission, I have been actually working with Steve
on that. We are in the process getting a legal description and working with the property
owner to get the easement. So, it's in process. It's not necessarily a done deal, but it
looks like we are moving forward. One thing you might want to consider, if you are
going to recommend approval on this, is you could make that a condition, that it's,
unfortunately, out of the hands of this developer, but if it's a requirement that you're
going to impose, you can certainly consider that.
Zaremba: Thank you. All right. Well, I'm willing to venture the first comments and,
then, we will see what discussion we can raise. Would you put the aerial view back on
the other picture? Thank you. Even though at our last hearing our direction to the staff
was to come back with conditions for approval, I am very noticeable that their continued
recommendation is that this is premature and that there needs to be a much bigger
picture of what's going to happen in this whole area and I mentioned it last time and at
the risk of repeating myself, I will repeat myself. At the time that both Meridian and the
valley around us continue to develop, we will see Linder, even though now it's a very
quiet cul-de-sac kind of an area, Linder will at some time be five lanes. There will be a
crossing across the interstate on Linder and that brings up the point that Linder is a
major north -- and will be a major north and south thoroughfare. At the moment it's the
only other crossing of the river to north of us that has a road through Meridian. At some
day we are hoping Highway 16 will, but that's a long way off as well. Going south, once
it does make the cross over the interstate, it goes directly into the center of Kuna, which
has just begun it's growth spurt and is nowhere near built out. Linder is not going to be
the quiet little street that we see it being now. That being the case, it being a major
arterial at some point, I am very concerned of having any accesses directly to Linder.
And staff didn't go this far, but my feeling is that this whole section needs to come in
with a comprehensive plan that actually shows only an access to Waltman. Some day
Waltman will go -- connect somewhere east and somewhere -- there will be another
connection here. But my biggest concern is 15, 20 years from now Linder could very
well be as heavily traveled as Eagle is today and we will be wanting to limit access to
Linder. My feeling is it is premature to consider -- unfortunately, when you consider a
small property by itself, there are constraints and I think Mr. McKinnon has done an
excellent job of viewing just this property and dealing with those constraints, but I don't
feel it's in the best interest of the city to view only this property and my feeling is we
need to see this whole group come in as one plan and only have access to Waltman.
That's my statement. Any comments?
i ~-
Meridian Planning & Zoning Commission
October 6, 2005
Page 8 of 85
Rohm: That would probably -- Mr. Chairman?
Zaremba: Commissioner Rohm.
Rohm: That would probably be preferential, but it's my feeling that this parcel cannot be
held in -- and I don't mean this to sound derogatory -- but hostage to the adjacent
properties and they have contacted them and tried in good faith to move forward and
include those properties in development and the neighbors have chosen, for whatever
reason -- and they have the right to deny at this time to develop, but it's my feeling that
this parcel, if, in fact, they are ready to move forward, shouldn't be denied based upon
their neighbor's lack of interest. That's my position.
Zaremba: Thank you.
Borup: Mr. Chairman?
Zaremba: Commissioner Borup.
Borup: I feel the lot sizes probably are smaller than maybe would be desirable there.
This is in the Comp Plan designated as medium density, three to eight units. They are
five and a half. I mean so far as that aspect, it's right in there, which would be expected.
But to me probably the biggest thing -- maybe we should have said something at the
last meeting, rather than saying you need to do this, this, this and this when they come
here and comply with it all and, then, we say, well, sorry, even though you did
everything we asked you to do.
Zaremba: I did make a similar statement at the last meeting.
Borup: Right. Okay. And I -- yeah, I'm concerned about the long term. I mean Linder
is not going to be the traffic that Eagle is. I mean unless we get interstate access and
that's not in the plan. It's certainly going to be heavily traveled, but more so than now.
But I don't know if it's quite in the same category. I mean it would be nice that --
Zaremba: It will at least be an arterial and we generally try to limit access to arterials.
Borup: Right. I understand. But still in my thinking, maybe something should have
been said last time, if there were additional things that should have been on their list to
work on.
Moe: Mr. Chairman?
Zaremba: Commissioner Moe.
Moe: I would probably mirror somewhat of Commissioner Borup's comments in regards
to -- the lot sizes and whatnot, I know the last meeting when we had discussed this, we
did ask for some increases in sizes and such and, yes, the applicant has done pretty
Meridian Planning & Zoning Commission
October 6, 2005
Page 9 of 85
much what we had discussed in our last meeting. I would like to have seen some lots
just a little bit larger than they are at the present time. But, at the same point, when we
discuss access points and whatnot, I'm not so sure that I'm opposed at all to having an
access point off Linder at this point. If, in fact, that entire area does develop, I would
anticipate it would be good to have two access points, one to Linder and one to
Waltman, and basically this is the -- basically the center point of that and he is
somewhat noting access to both of the other lots through that. So, if anything, I think he
has come forward and taken care of pretty much everything we had discussed in our
last meeting, other than I still feel I would have liked to have seen some of his lots sizes
a little larger, because of the fact it is in the R-8 zone. But other than that I have no
problem with this project.
Borup: Just an additional comment on that lot size. Yeah, I'd like to see them larger,
too. I think the widths are a proper size for what they are planning in there. It's the
depth, in my mind, that's the problem and this site really doesn't accommodate deeper
lots.
Moe: Yeah. That's true.
Borup: Unless the street went down one side, then, they would be really deep.
Moe: Yeah.
Newton-Huckabay: I guess it's my turn.
Zaremba: Commissioner Newton-Huckabay.
Newton-Huckabay: Do we think -- is it because of these lots down here -- I mean,
obviously, these ones around it, but are those likely to redevelop at some point -- so that
these lots here and these lots here that are what -- so concern us about the area around
it? As far as the density.
Guenther: Commissioner Newton-Huckabay, typically with a planned development we
see a transitional nature of lots and this site just is not large enough to be
accommodating a planned development. That's, essentially, what staffs -- one of staffs
concerns with this site is. Yes, the lot sizes in here are approaching 10,000 square feet.
These are approaching 10,000 square feet and above. These are similar size. And
there is the one portion down off of the interstate that is 5,000 square foot lots. All of
the subdivision in here is one acre or better lots. And the general nature of the
neighborhood is roughly the three to three and a half dwelling units to the acre. The
5,000 square foot lots down here were done under a planned development and they
were also given many amenities for additional open space and the things that are
accompanying a planned development for reduction of lot size, lot widths, and building
size. So, that is one of the other concerns that we brought out in the staff report.
Newton-Huckabay: Was the lack of amenities? The lack of amenities?
Meridian Planning & Zoning Commission
October 6, 2005
Page 10 of 85
Guenther: No. The lack of transitional nature between these 4,000 square foot lots and
lots that are approximately twice the size of those.
Newton-Huckabay: Okay. I don't really have anything of substance to add to the
comments that have already been made.
Zaremba: I will ask of staff -- I guess this sort of puts you on the spot -- it appears that
I'm going to be outvoted on this and that the Commission, as a group, essentially, is
going to recommend approval to the City Council. Are there conditions that should be
added that were not -- staff continued to recommend that this be denied and did you
include conditions for approval?
Guenther: We do not have conditions of approval, so we would -- if the board -- if the
Commission's recommendation is for approval, we would need to be directed in order to
provide conditions of approval. Public Works has not made comment on this at all and
they need to have the opportunity to review this site for their concerns. With that, the
motion that was made at the last hearing was not to provide conditions of approval, but
to see the revised design as per your comments of the last meeting. So, conditions of
approval were not prepared for this meeting, because we weren't directed to provide
conditions of approval.
Newton-Huckabay: Mr. Chair?
Zaremba: Commissioner Newton-Huckabay.
Newton-Huckabay: I intend to go with the staffs recommendation of denial on this.
think this is a really complicated planning problem here and I don't feel comfortable
moving it on myself. So, if there is a question of whether or not you're going to be out
voted --
Zaremba: As much as I'm happy to hear, we are at this point anticipating a two to three
vote, which would pass it, so we still need to -- unless we have other discussion.
Newton-Huckabay: I didn't get the feeling that Commissioner Moe was in favor of it.
Moe: Mr. Chairman, question of staff. Public Works has not reviewed this project?
Guenther: Public Works has been -- has received a transmittal for this project, but they
have not given planning staff any conditions of approval to incorporate into the staff
report.
Zaremba: The Public Hearing is still open and Mr. McKinnon appears to want to
respond.
Meridian Planning & Zoning Commission
October 6, 2005
Page 11 of 85
McKinnon: Mr. Chairman, Members of the Commission, we have had this for a long
time and we've had numerous discussions, we have sat down with Public Works and we
sat down with P&Z. These aren't new issues. They have been discussed. The issues
with Public Works. There are some comments from Public Works, obviously, no
conditions of approval, because it was a recommendation for denial, and they would
have to work some up for that. But we have had numerous discussions about the lift
station that's up there and how that would work, the depth of the sewer and there is
some things that we have discussed. It's been in the city's hands and we -- you know, it
was a month and a half ago, two months ago, that we met last to discuss this and so
there should have been adequate time to be able to take a look at it. A couple things to
keep in mind with this project that Joe mentioned. One of them is that this is too small
for a planned development and, obviously, we agree with that. The only way to make
things work under the old ordinance was to do a planned development for a project like
this and that was one of the masons you guys adopted the new Unified Development
Code was to quit having to do a planned development on every single project. To put
this in perspective, if we were to withdraw this application, bring it back to you with
paired housing, we would not have to ask for a planned development on this project.
Four thousand square foot lots are the minimum lot size in the R-8 zone. Fifty feet of
frontage or 40 feet of frontage if you do a paired housing. This could come back to you
with paired housing, meet the minimum standards for all the requirements and would
not have to come back as a planned development to you. We felt -- and we discussed
this last time -- was that a paired product is not as nice as a detached product. A
detached product was more agreeable to the neighbors. They felt that that was better
than having duplexes or attached housing on this site. But this would meet all the
requirements for the R-8 zone under the new Unified Development Code. And so this
was not -- this would meet all the side setbacks, front and rear setbacks of the new
Unified Development Code for the R-8 zone, which would comply with the medium
density designation on the Comp Plan which is three to eight units per acre. This falls
right in the middle of that. Your comments about having a single solitary access on
Waltman would create some additional concerns. You would be creating another cul-
de-sac situation with only one access out. You would have to provide emergency
vehicle access out onto the Linder Road area, plus there is an existing house there.
There is a number of existing houses that front onto that. Ada County Highway District
cannot remove those access points and so there will be one access point to the existing
house that would remain there forever in perpetude. However, we have included on the
site plan a driveway that would come around the backside of that house and so you're
still limiting it to one access point. We provided the one access point to the south with a
stub street, which would be able to provide those together. As you have worked in the
City of Meridian -- if we could start over with a blank slate in the City of Meridian and
have somebody come in and master plan the entire community, it would look vastly
different than it does today. One of the problems that you run into in planning a project
is you can only work with those things that you're given. You can't say I'm going to take
all these additional pieces of property and we are going to hold onto them until we can
assemble everything. It doesn't always work that way. We have worked with the
property owner to the south. The property owners to the north don't want to work with
us. We have tried as best as we can to provide access for them in the future to be able
Meridian Planning & Zoning Commission •
October 6, 2005
Page 12 of 85
to redevelop that piece of property. To the south ACHD required us to put a stub street
in for increased connectivity. City staff did not want a stub street to the south. They
don't want that to be interconnected. If you remember there was a lot of discussion at
the last hearing that the city staff did not want these two parcels interconnected, they'd
rather have it end and not have it connect. We met with ACHD and ACHD said, yes,
you will interconnect these two pieces of property and we picked the best spot for
redevelopment for the property to the south in the future. We have worked with that
property owner. He recognizes that in the future they will be redeveloping this piece of
property. Another thing to keep in mind is the transitional nature of this property.
Transition was talked an awful lot about by staff. We are not bumping up against this
subdivision or this subdivision or transitioning to this subdivision or this subdivision. We
have got two pieces of property that are residential in nature right now that we are
transitioning to and we have one that's a school site. A school site does not have a
requirement for a transition. To the north you have residential property, which will be
one neighbor, which would be the existing house, you will have a driveway that comes
in behind it. And on the south you have a large piece of property that will develop in the
future at a density that will be much higher that it is right now. So, we have done the
best we can with this piece of property, with the design that we have. We can't comp
plan the entire thing, because we don't have access to those people and have access to
a street, unless we wait for that property to come in. We'd ask that you approve this
project. It will allow the interconnectivity in the future. We believe that the lot sizes
meet and exceed the requirements of the current code. When this was submitted the
Unified Development Code was not -- was not applicable, because it had not been
adopted by you or the City Council at that time, so we had to go the planned
development route. We are not asking for anything that's not allowable under the
existing code, other than we would like to have detached housing, rather than paired
housing to accommodate the neighbors. With that I'd ask if you have any additional
questions and I can sit down.
Zaremba: Commissioners? Thank you.
Rohm: Mr. Chairman?
Zaremba: Commissioner Rohm?
Rohm: My question is of staff. If Public Works hasn't submitted comments or direction
associated with this proposal, how can we move forward .with a recommendation of
approval if we don't even know what their comments might be?
Guenther: Commissioner Rohm, prior to Mr. McKinnon standing up, my second portion
to that comment was that if you wanted to recommend approval, we could have
conditions of approval for you at the next hearing.
Rohm: Thank you. I don't see how we can act on it either direction without comments
from Public Works. I think if Public Works comes back and says, you know what, this
just won't work, then, that adds substance to existing staff report. But if Public Works
Meridian Planning & Zoning Commission •
October 6, 2005
Page 13 of 85
comes back and says this is the way this will work with the development as proposed,
then, at least we have something we can get -- go yea or nay on, but my --
Borup: We can go yea or nay right now.
Rohm: -- personal opinion is that from the last time that this was heard, that we would
have had Public Works comments as part of the staff report tonight and I would hope
that we could get that next time.
Borup: Or maybe tonight?
Rohm: If we can table this and give Public Works an opportunity to kick it around and,
then, provide additional testimony after you -- I don't like to put you on the spot, quite
honestly.
Cole: Commissioner Rohm?
Zaremba: My opinion on that would be that there are probably engineering drawings
that he needs to sit in his office and look at and I'm not sure that --
Borup: Mr. Chairman?
Zaremba: Mike.
Cole: Thank you. Since this staff report was a recommendation for denial, there have
been no conditions placed on it by Public Works, Fire Department, Parks, Sanitation.
To place conditions of approval on a project that has been recommended for denial is
not the standard. I think that Joe could explain this better as the planner. This is pretty
standard practice on projects that are recommended for denial not to have conditions of
approval placed on them by the agencies. With that being said, Public Works has sat
down with the applicant, we have discussed issues, we have reviewed the project, we
don't have our conditions for approval here tonight. I see no outstanding issues with
this as we have reviewed it, we just do not have something formalized, wordified, and
typed and in place at this time.
Zaremba: And my assessment of your statement is continuing this until the end of this
evening would not solve that problem.
Cole: No, sir.
Zaremba: Okay. Thank you.
Rohm: Mr. Chairman?
Zaremba: Commissioner Rohm.
Meridian Planning & Zoning Commiss
October 6, 2005
Page 14 of 85
Rohm: I don't think that it would be fair to this development to deny it without having
seen the balance of input from staff, including the Public Works, and I think that we
gave Mr. McKinnon a laundry list last time they came before us, of which they have
addressed all the issues and, ultimately, that doesn't necessarily guarantee approval,
but I think that they have gone a long way to meet us halfway and I would like to
recommend that we continue this one more meeting and get comments from the
balance of staff and other departments, so we can have a complete report to act upon
at the next meeting. I think that's the right thing to do.
Zaremba: Just for the sake of discussion, considering the way I'm pretty sure I'm going
to vote, I think it would just be stringing the applicant along. So, we will take a vote. If a
motion is made to continue this -- my preference would be to close the Public Hearing
and move for denial. I am not going to make a motion, however, as the chairman. And
I will entertain the first motion that comes to the microphone.
Rohm: Mr. Chairman?
Zaremba: Commissioner Rohm.
Rohm: I move that we close the Public Hearing --
Zaremba: If you want to continue it -- closing it would mean we are going to vote to
deny it tonight.
Rohm: Okay. Mr. Chairman, I move that we continue public hearings AZ 05-033, PP
04-032, and CUP 05-036.
Zaremba: To October 20th?
Rohm: To the next scheduled -- regularly scheduled meeting of the Planning and
Zoning Commission.
Zaremba: As part of that motion, do you wish to direct staff to prepare conditions for
approval?
Rohm: Absolutely.
Zaremba: Okay. We have a motion and second.
Moe: Second.
Zaremba: Thank you for the second. Now we have a motion and a second. All in favor
please say aye. Opposed? Nay. We have two in favor and three against continuing.
That motion does not carry.
MOTION FAILED: TWO AYES. THREE NAYS.
Meridian Planning & Zoning Commission •
October 6, 2005
Page 15 of 85
Zaremba: The chair would entertain a substitute or alternate motion.
Newton-Huckabay: Mr. Chair?
Zaremba: Commissioner Newton-Huckabay.
Newton-Huckabay: I move to recommend denial to the City Council of file number PP
05-032, AZ 05-033 for Banff Subdivision, as presented in the staff report dated
September 27th, 2005, with the site plan dated June 14th, 2005, and preliminary plat
dated September 15th, 2005.
Zaremba: One comment, discussion on the motion before we hear a second. In fact, if
we are moving to deny, the preliminary plat is something that we deny outright, not a
recommendation to the city. The other two would be a recommendation.
Guenther: Mr. Chairman? If you're going to make a motion, you need to close the
Public Hearing.
Zaremba: That's true. Okay.
Newton-Huckabay: Mr. Chair, I recommend we close the Public Hearing on PP 05-032
and AZ 05-033.
Borup: Second.
Zaremba: Motion to close the three public hearings. All in favor say aye. Any
opposed?
Newton-Huckabay: Do I need to repeat my motion for denial?
Zaremba: Wait just a minute. Let's confirm. I believe we had three ayes and two nays;
is that correct?
Moe: That's correct.
Zaremba: Okay. So, the public hearings are closed. Mr. Baird, you appear to -- okay.
You looked anxious to say something.
Baird: Well, actually, just --
Zaremba: You're just listening closely.
Baird: No. I just wanted to confirm for the record that the chair and the people who
were making the vote on this interpreted the motion to include all three public hearings.
Meridian Planning & Zoning Commis
October 6, 2005
Page 16 of 85
Zaremba: Yes. To close.
Baird: Okay.
Newton-Huckabay: My mistake. Sorry about that.
Zaremba: Okay. I believe I would do them one at a time.
Newton-Huckabay: Recommend denial one at a time?
Zaremba: Yes. And on the preliminary plat it's not a recommendation, it's an actual
motion.
Newton-Huckabay: Okay.
Zaremba: One moment. We have a question from the clerk. No? Okay. Sorry.
Newton-Huckabay: I move to recommend denial to the City Council -- oh. I move to
deny -- and this is the PP; right? The preliminary plat? PP 05-032.
Borup: Second.
Zaremba: We have a motion to deny PP 05-032 and a second. All in favor say aye.
Any opposed? It appears that that vote was also three to two in favor. Three in favor,
two against, so that motion carries.
MOTION CARRIED: THREE AYES. TWO NAYS.
Newton-Huckabay: I move to recommend denial to the City Council of file number AZ
05-033 for Banff Subdivision, as presented in the report, dated September 27th, 2005,
with the site plan dated June 14th, 2005, and preliminary plat dated September 16th,
2005.
Borup: Second.
Zaremba: We have a motion and a second. All in favor say aye. Any opposed? It
appears we have three in favor and two opposed. That motion carries.
MOTION CARRIED: THREE AYES. TWO NAYS:
Newton-Huckabay: I move to recommend denial to the City Council of file number CUP
05-036, for Banff Subdivision as presented in the staff report, dated September 27th,
with the site plan dated June 14th, 2005, and Preliminary plat dated September 16th,
2005. End of motion.
Borup: Second.
Meridian Planning & Zoning Commission
October 6, 2005
Page 17 of 85
Zaremba: We have a motion and a second. All in favor please say aye. Any opposed?
We have three in favor and two opposed. That motion carries as well.
MOTION CARRIED: THREE AYES. TWO NAYS.
Item 7: Continue Public Hearing from September 15, 2005: AZ 05-038
Request for Annexation and Zoning of 38.5 acres from RUT to R-8 zone
for Irvine Subdivision by Dyver Development, LLC -southeast corner of
Ten Mile Road and Chinden Boulevard:
Item 8: Continue Public Hearing from September 15, 2005: PP 05-037
Request for Preliminary Plat approval of 200 building lots and 21 common
lots on 38.5 acres in a proposed R-8 zone for Irvine Subdivision by
Dyver Development, LLC -southeast corner of Ten Mile Road and
Chinden Boulevard:
Item 9: Continue Public Hearing from September 15, 2005: CUP 05-039
Request for Conditional Use Permit for a Planned Development for single
family detached residential units and single family attached residential
units in a proposed R-8 zone for Irvine Subdivision by Dyver
Development, LLC -southeast corner of Ten Mile Road and Chinden
Boulevard:
Zaremba: All right. Thank you all very much. The next items on the agenda I will open
the public hearings for AZ 05-038, PP 05-037, and CUP 05-039, all relating to Irvine
Subdivision and entertain a motion to continue those to October 20th, '05.
Moe: Mr. Chairman?
Zaremba: Commissioner Moe.
Moe: Let's see. I move the public hearings on AZ 05-038, PP 05-037, and CUP 05-
039, be continued to the regularly scheduled meeting of the Planning and Zoning to
October 20th? Is that correct?
Zaremba: Yes.
Moe: End of motion.
Rohm: Second.
Zaremba: We have a motion and a second. All in favor say aye. Any opposed?
Motion carries. All ayes.
MOTION CARRIED: ALL AYES.
Meridian Planning & Zoning ~ •
August 18, 2005
Page 13 of 98
supporting staff that they may have of engineers or architects or whatever, will have a
total of 15 minutes to clarify anything that was unclear from the staff, respond to things,
tell us a little bit more about the project. Following that we open it to the public
testimony and did I mention that the applicant has 15 minutes to do that. We, then,
open it to public testimony and whether you're for or against, we ask that you come
forward and, please, come to the microphone and begin by stating your name and
address and, then, make any remarks that you think we need to know about for the
record. We do ask that you limit your testimony to three minutes, so that we get through
these meetings without going to 1:00 o'clock, hopefully. And if you find that some
previous speaker has said what you had to say, we always appreciate if you would just
say I agree with Joe who spoke a few minutes ago, we know what you mean. We do
have a provision that if there is somebody who is a spokesman -- and the example of
that would be the president of a homeowners association that's neighboring a project
that we are talking about. If that person identifies themself as speaking on behalf of a
group of people, we do allow them ten minutes to speak and, then, we ask that the
other people that they are speaking for do not make further comment, unless they have
something that we totally left out. Then, at the conclusion of that portion of the evening,
the applicant gets a final opportunity to come back up and respond to any issues that
have been raised and we ask that that be ten minutes, including any supporting staff
that they have. We have a handy light system here. When the green light is on you
have time to speak. It will go to yellow and you should begin to conclude and when the
red light is on we ask that you do conclude or turn your remarks over to somebody else.
Then, the Commission will deliberate and we may ask further questions, either of the
applicant or public or staff, and the end result is intended to be a recommendation that
we will make to the City Council where there will be another very similar hearing. And
the City Council does not always come out with the same results that we do, so if you
came to this hearing, I recommend that you go to that one as well.
Item 8: Continued Public Hearing from August 4, 2005: AZ 05-033 Request
for Annexation and Zoning of 3.02 acres to R-8 zone for Banff
Subdivision by Landworks, LLC - 675 South Linder Road
Item 9: Continued Public Hearing from August 4, 2005: PP 05-032 Request
for Preliminary Plat approval of 21 single-family residential building lots
and 7 common area lots on 2.91 acres in a proposed R-8 zone for Banff
Subdivision by Landworks, LLC - 675 South Linder Road:
Item 10: Continued Public Hearing from August 4, 2005: CUP 05-036 Request
for a Conditional Use Permit /Planned Development to allow reduced lot
sizes, setbacks, frontage and minimum ground floor square footage for
Banff Subdivision by Landworks, LLC - 675 South Linder Road:
Zaremba: And that being said, we are ready to open the public -- continued Public
Hearing for AZ 05-003, PP 05-032, and CUP 05-036. All of these relating to Banff
Subdivision at 675 South Linder Road and we will begin with the staff report.
Meridian Planning & Zoning • f
August 18, 2005
Page 14 of 98
Guenther: Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Banff Subdivision is a 3.02-acre annexation, with
a 2.91-acre subdivision for an amended 17 single-family residential lots. The original
request was for 21 building lots and seven common lots and it was amended to 17. As
stated, the subdivision is on South Linder Road, just north of Waltman Court Lane and
there is several other R-4 subdivisions in the near vicinity, as well there is the -- I
believe it's a middle school or an elementary that's to the -- it's an elementary
immediately to the west of the site. The site is currently asingle-family residential lot for
one existing home with several out buildings. The back portion is vacant. It is fairly flat
ground. The proposal that is in front of you is for a planned development with this
application. There is several issues that needed to be raised that are detailed in the
staff report. The first being that planned develops do not allow for perimeter setbacks to
be amended. The applicant has requested ten-foot rear setbacks. However, 15 foot is
what the ordinance says and that is what -- they are not eligible in order to ask for the --
I'm losing my words here.
Zaremba: Setback.
Guenther: They can't ask the setback to be amended on the perimeter of their lots,
essentially, is what it amounts to. The second standard is that the flag lots that are in,
essentially, the northwest corner of the property have been designed with afive-foot
common drive style lot design. The standards that are listed in the Meridian city
ordinance are designed so that homes that are two homes, which is what is in the
northwest corner, need to have 15 foot of flag lots on road frontage and with that they
have added two other five foot common lots to provide for future access to the property
north of the site, as well as an easement in this location across their common lot for
future development of the one acre site. This one-acre site is a county property and it is
not located in the City of Meridian's annexed area at this time. As well as the property
to the south, which even though this is a small parcel and is bordered by the City of
Meridian, is not considered by our ordinance to be an in-fill parcel. This is a -- this does
not meet that classification and the allowances that go along with an in-fill parcel do not
apply to this site. The second, I guess, key issue to look at is the roadway is proposed
to be 29 feet back of curb to back of curb. The Meridian city fire has a policy that they
measure roadway that need to be 29 feet front of curb to front of curb. So, even if this
subdivision was approved, it would have to have an amended street section that that
would be wider in order to accommodate the Meridian city fire concerns. Currently, with
the 28-foot roadway, the Meridian city fire has said that there will be no parking on this
street. So, the entire roadway would be designated no parking. The other major
concern is that most of the subdivisions in the area have developed at between three
and 3.2 dwelling units to the acre, where this subdivision is proposed at a little bit over
six dwelling units to the acre, even with the larger sized lot for the existing single family
residence. With that I will try and keep this short. I'm sure you have questions, which I
will answer. The issues that I have just detailed for you are the reasons that staff is
recommending denial on this subdivision. It just does not qualify for several of the
issues that are key for this type of a neighborhood. The neighborhood is predominantly
very large lots and county lots. The properties to the -- about 200 yards to the south of
this site are all low density residential, as well as across Linder. The avenue lot size is
Meridian Planning & Zoning • •
August 18, 2005
Page 15 of 98
greater than 10,000 square feet. With the lot sizes that were originally proposed, they
were over half of what the R-8 standards are, which is 6,500 square foot lots and they
originally brought in roughly at 3,100 square feet per lot. With that staff felt that this is
just asking too much of the planned development standards, which are usually brought
in for a type of a mixed use and not just an alleviation of the box standards as set forth
in the Meridian city ordinance. And I'll stand for questions at this time.
Zaremba: Commissioners, any questions?
Moe: Not at the present.
Zaremba: All right. Thank you very much. In that case, we are ready to have the
applicant, please.
McKinnon: Mr. Chairman, Members of the Commission, Dave McKinnon, 735 South
Crosstimber. You guys have before you a 22-page staff report and you just heard Joe's
staff report as well. Not exactly a ringing endorsement for this product tonight and so I
think we need to talk a little bit about the design and there is a few other slides I think
Joe probably has. Do you have the elevations as well, Joe, and the slides for a couple
others. The product type you're looking at is more of a cottage product type, more the
smaller house on a smaller lot. And there is another one. You can scroll through those
real quick.
Guenther: That's the last one.
McKinnon: Is that the last one? Okay. You're looking at a product type that's small.
Right now, as many of you know, the housing market in Meridian is going through the
roof and not everybody can enter the market right now with a 200 to 300 thousand-
dollar house. Your Comprehensive Plan says to encourage the type of housing that will
allow people to have home ownership and one way to do that is to provide smaller lots.
One of the reasons for the rising house prices in the City of Meridian is not necessarily
the cost of construction, but also the value of land. In the last six to seven months the
value of land in Meridian has almost doubled, if you're trying to purchase land for
development. So, that automatically equates into higher prices for selling homes and so
one of the things we are trying to do with this site is provide a nice product that would be
viable in this area and be affordable to people that complies with the Comprehensive
Plan-and-joe, if you can go back to the overall site plan. It was the first slide. Keep on
going. There we are. That's great. When we first dealt with this piece of property, we
looked at this piece of property and the property to the north. Both of these properties
were on the market and they were being marketed together by a real estate agent. We
went and looked at the properties, made an offer on both properties and the property
owner to the north decided they did not want to sell. They decided we would try to work
with the property owner to the south, the Banff property you see in front of you. It's a
long narrow piece of property and they'd like to do something with this piece of property,
we'd like to develop this piece of property, but as you can see, there are some
constraints with this. It's 197 feet wide and 600 -- I mean almost, that's just over 90 feet
Meridian Planning & Zoning • •
August 18, 2005
Page 16 of 98
in length. Long and narrow. The property to the north is 66 feet wide. Almost one acre
in size and it also runs the full length and we are trying to decide whether to make those
work with this piece of property and how do we develop this piece of property, as well
as provide for some sort of access to this piece of property to the north. We met with
your staff, had apre-application meeting and we discussed a number of different issues
that Joe brought up tonight. In fact, after we had the pre-application meeting we
modified our design a little bit. Joe, can you go to the first design we submitted? There
we go. The first design we submitted did not provide any access to the north in this
location. It provided access through an easement to the property owners to the north,
because staff and ACHD said in the future the homeowners to the north will not have
access to Linder. They have asked us to provide access to this property owner on the
north and so we provided across-access easement at this location, which puts it behind
the garage so they can come in on this property and, then, access back to get off of
Linder. They won't have access to Linder, it's a narrow piece of property, and they don't
want them to have access right next to our access. After meeting with ACRD and the
City of Meridian, they said we are to provide access to the north. City staff also
requests we have this stub street to the south. A couple weeks ago this was supposed
to be heard in front of you and staff called us up, as Joe pointed out, and you pointed
out, Commissioner Zaremba or Chairman Zaremba. We worked closely with staff. Staff
called us in and said we have some changes we want you to make and let's talk about
those before it goes to the Commission and, then, if we can make those changes, we
can probably go to the Commission with some sort of agreement in hand. Joe, can you
go to the application we have got now? The meeting with Joe, Joe said it's too dense,
let's take some of those out. One of the reasons for taking those out is to make these
lots bigger. All the lots. If you remember from the first slide that we were just looking at,
these houses will all turn north-south, just like this area. We have turned them east-
west. They have gained in length. And we have also got a little more width. These lots
are a little bit bigger in size. We also provided two common lots that would be deeded
to the property to the north in the future, so that they would have public street frontage,
because as of right now the house that's located on this site, there is no way to gain
access to this rear part of the property, because they can't take access off of Linder.
But if they do take access off of Linder to get to this house, they would have to pour a
driveway all the way to this point in order to develop back here. So, city staff said,
please, make a connection here. We have provided a key connection there. We felt
the reason -- the best way to do that is to provide them public street frontage with a five
foot wide common lot, which is what you can do for a flag lot where there is four or more
-- three or four coming off of a flag lot. So, that's the reason for that. Work at the school
district and their staff, they supported us having a pathway through here. In working
with this site we wanted to keep this house in the location that it's at, so in order to keep
that house together, they would bring the road in and jog it around and put an open
space area right here. Joe, do you have the landscape plan? If you can flip back down.
Putting in a landscape target, they would pull into this subdivision, the first thing you see
is not houses, but you, actually, see a landscaped area. There was also provided a
picnic area, a covered area in this area. It's now shown on this plan. But a covered
picnic area so when you pull into the subdivision this is what you see, you don't
automatically see houses. We thought that would be a nice design feature for
Meridian Planning & Zoning
August 18, 2005
Page 17 of 98
something a little bit smaller. As far as the design of the road goes, Joe talked about
that a little bit. We have worked with ACHD and they have worked with Joe Silva at the
fire department. Joe Guenther is absolutely correct when he points out that the fire
department wants a 29-foot street section that's flat, doesn't include curb, we can
accommodate that. I have met with Joe and I have also met with ACRD. The 29-foot
street section and the 42-foot right of way, you end up with a foot and a half of right of
way behind the sidewalk. If you widen that roadway of 29 feet flat, before face of curb
and face of curb, you end up with one foot behind sidewalk right of way. ACHD is
happy with that. We are happy to make that accommodation as well. With that, we had
-- and after working with Joe Silva on this, we asked that we could have parking on one
side of the street, which meets the fire department's guidelines and it meets the
requirements for the city. The reason why we went with the 29-foot street section is
because this is a very small subdivision, we felt that bringing a 36 or 33 foot road
system for something that's very small and services a very few number of lots would be
overkill. We had a smaller subdivision, it creates more of a small neighborhood feel,
which is what this is, it's more of a cottage product than a standard housing product.
Joe, if you can go back to the current. Another thing we discussed with your staff, with
Joe, before we resubmitted this was -- we talked about the standards for attached
housing. Under the R-8 zone in the new zoning ordinance, 4,000 square feet is all you
need for attached housing. In talking with staff we felt that detached housing was more
appropriate than attached housing and that the lot sizes would be similar. We have
provided elevations that can work on these smaller lots -- on these smaller lots and still
be detached, rather than providing duplexes on this lot. Individual homeownership
without having an attached wall was thought to be preferable by both us and staff, so
that's the reason why we still got the smaller lots, but they would come very close to
meeting the standard for that. This is, obviously, a planned development, so we are
asking for some reduction in the lot sizes and lot frontage. Joe pointed out correctly that
on the Comprehensive Plan -- on the plat we have asked for a ten percent -- a ten-foot
rear lot line. However, if you see this little note right here, it says a 15-foot rear setback
is typical. We are more than happy to accommodate a 15-foot rear on the perimeter of
the subdivision. That was our intent in the first place and we had discussions with our
engineer about having aten-foot setback on the rear at one point, he didn't take it off,
but we are not requesting aten-foot setback. A 15-foot setback still works with our
elevations and that's what we have actually shown on this submitted preliminary plat.
We are going to need some help from you tonight. We have tried to work with staff.
Staff asked us to make the changes. We have made those changes. We were hoping
to come to you guys tonight with a recommendation from staff for approval after they
asked us to make those changes. We made those changes and we are still at
loggerheads with them. We think we have got a product that works with the city. The
Comprehensive Plan calls for this property to be R-8. In order to get eight units per
acre on -- or even six units to the acre you have to go to a smaller lot size. On the
Comp Plan it says three to eight units per acre. We fall within that. The property to the
north -- Brad, can you turn the overhead on? I gave Brad an overhead -- just a real
quick layout. That's not it. That's Justin's house. Thanks, Brad. We decided to see
what it would look like if we went ahead in the future and the rest of the redevelopment
for the property to the north. In the staff report there was some discussion that we are
Meridian Planning & Zoning ~ •
August 18, 2005
Page 18 of 98
not providing access to the north. In the future the existing residence would be able to
take access off of this location, the easement we provided back to this house. We have
been able to show that this could redevelop into four lots. Remember that these lots are
only 66 feet deep. There is no more width to them. So, we had them coming off of
what is an existing drive. We can't provide for that. That existing drive is not part of our
project. We can't provide access off of that, but in the future they could redevelop that
way. And Lots 1 and 2 could redevelop, coming off of the flag lots from our subdivision.
They have no other way to access that in back, unless they were to bring the driveway
through here or driveway down and, then, reduce those lots from 66 feet wide to even a
narrower section, almost making it impossible to build. So, we feel that it actually allows
for the north area to redevelop, provides a stub street to the south that ACRD wanted us
to have. In meeting with city staff, one of their comments from a couple weeks ago was
to remove that. ACHD would have nothing of that. They wanted to have the stub street
for interconnectivity. So, we ask for some help from you tonight as to what you think is
appropriate here. It is a narrow piece of property. It's long and narrow. The property
owner to the north does not want to sell the property and the owner to the south does
not want to sell. We don't want to be left hostage to requiring them to come in with us
and we don't want them to feel hostage to us that they have to come in and develop
with us at the same time. We think this is a product a little bit different and different is
sometimes scary, but we think that this product is, actually, something that would sell
very well in Meridian. It's directed towards not all the -- the smaller families, but towards
professional couples and to people downsizing. We don't see a large number of people
with children in this area and for the professionals that don't want to have to come home
and take care of a large yard. A high amenity product without having to have a huge
yard to take care of and a lot of house to take care of. With that I'd ask for any
questions that you have and I'd also ask for any suggestions that you might have to help
us to get through this tonight and see what we can do to make this piece of property
work for the development that would be a benefit for the City of Meridian.
Zaremba: Commissioners, any questions?
Rohm: I think that was a good presentation. I don't have any questions at this time.
Moe: I just want to verify a couple things. You said that as far as a 15-foot setback, you
will comply to that?
McKinnon: Absolutely.
Moe: As well as the 25 foot road section?
McKinnon: The 29 foot flat road section face-to-face.
Moe: Face-to-face. You can do that. I'm a little bit -- the five foot common drive with
the flag lots, with the road through there, can you kind of go through that one more time.
Meridian Planning & Zoning
August 18, 2005
Page 19 of 98
C~
J
Guenther: Sure. Commissioner Moe. We had one recently that only had four homes
accessing the common drive. The minimum paved surface of the common drive is 24
feet. They are proposing 20 feet, each flag lot being five feet. So, even so, it would not
meet the standards of the ordinance and there is specific roadway standards for
common drives that are called out in our ordinance, which must be met.
Moe: Okay.
McKinnon: Mr. Chairman, Members of the Commission, we have the depth on those
two lots. Those are the longest lots -- the lots up on the west end, those are the longest
lots, and we can abide by that 24 foot driveway surface for that. We just need to drag it
out into this area a little bit further west and we have the width to accommodate that.
We are more than happy to agree to that.
Moe: That would be a 24-foot?
Guenther: They would have to meet the standards of the ordinance for the minimum
road frontage on a common lot with a minimum of a 24-foot paved surface. And that
would also have to be approved by the fire department and it's such a long common lot
that the police department would also need to review that.
Zaremba: Help me understand. There were two elements, though, weren't there? The
paving needs to be 24 feet wide, but does a flag have to be ten feet wide, which means
if there is four flags in here, it needs to be 40 feet wide?
Guenther: Correct. But this is only two flags. There is only two lots actually using
those access points, which --
Zaremba: And those two lots are the ones that would develop on the next property, not
this property.
Guenther: That's correct. And for a two lot flag lot it needs 15 feet of road frontage.
Zaremba: Okay.
McKinnon: Chairman Zaremba, Members of the Commission, we can't design for that
and, then, not provide them access. If the city is asking us to help give them access,
we have to provide a way to do that and we will try to do that within the ordinance. We
can accommodate the 24-foot wide asphalt. You're asking us to provide it, but, then, at
the same time saying you can't provide it, because, then, you won't meet the ordinance
and so we are in a Catch 22 there.
Zaremba: Okay. Any further questions at this time? All right. Thank you. I believe we
will move on to the public testimony.
McKinnon: Thank you.
Meridian Planning & Zoning
August 18, 2005
Page 20 of 98
Zaremba: Thank you. Signed up we have Jerry Hiatt or Hinath. Please come forward.
Hiatt: Thank you, Mr. Chairman and Members of the Commission. I'm Jerry Hiatt. I
represent my mother at 755 South Linder, the five just south of this three acres. In the
audience I have my wife and my brother, who I am also speaking for at this. I don't
know whether this is Banff or Baniff. I think it should be Banitt. You talked about EI
Gato a little earlier. I think it ought to be called EI Ghetto. We are putting an R-4 in the
midst of R-1 and R-4. It's an R-8 request. We have R-4 and R-1 all the way around.
It's -- I don't think we should be building no Garden City slum in the middle of Meridian.
Mrs. Brown talked earlier about being number 74 on her sheet from Money Magazine, I
believe it was. This will put you down about three million in 74 for developments like
this. So, I'm definitely opposed to it in every aspect of it. And I have got some other
reasons in here and I would just like to read it to you. I have got copies here if you want
to read along. Or we can give it to the planner and you can get it later. It's your choice.
Zaremba: If you have enough to --
Hiatt: I have amended that.
Zaremba: If you could give one to the clerk, please.
Hiatt: I will get my spectacles on so I can read. I oppose the development on the
grounds that as an adjacent neighbor the survey markers have never been identified to
us. Are they developing their property or are they encroaching upon and developing
what is our property? Surveyors have been all over Mrs. Hiatt's property, on the five
acres. Another developer had given her or her representative, which is myself, the
courtesy of identifying where the property lines are at. Several stakes have been
placed from the recent survey about 12 feet north of the existing fence line and 3.02
acres that are there should be developed on what is theirs and that fence should be put
in there prior to any development. He talks about the size of the lot and setbacks, so is
that -- the size of the lots based on where the fence line is or is it based on the plat?
Because the -- out front on the property line, the drive into the back has been platted
and staked. The actual property line between 755 South Linder and 675 South Linder
has not -- the pins have not been put in the ground. Out through the pasture out back
there was three stakes out there and those three stakes have been removed. So, when
we went to the Public Hearing meeting -- the local community meeting that they had, my
brother was there, he asked them what the deal was on the property lines, and the
comment was that, well, we do have some concern in area and the other comment was
we don't know what's going on. So, we would like that clarified before anything is
planned and approved.
Zaremba: Can I interrupt you for just a second, sir? Sorry.
Hiatt: Sure.
Meridian Planning & Zoning
August 18, 2005
Page 21 of 98
Zaremba: You mentioned that you were speaking for the other -- are you acting as a
spokesman and they are not going to speak?
Hiatt: The next two people on the -- yes.
Zaremba: Okay. In that case we will give you a total of ten minutes, only three of which
have elapsed.
Hiatt: Thank you. The issue of who replaces the fence. The fence ought to be put in
prior to any development. There is also the problem with irrigation rights. This is the
fourth time we have had to deal with a developer in this area and this is the last side
that's open for development. Each time we have lost irrigation and had to fight for the
irrigation on this five acres. It needs to be retained as provided by the Nampa-Meridian
Irrigation District. The next comment, of course, I have already made concerning R-8
versus R-4 and R-1. And my last comment on this is concerning the number of houses.
The allowance of reduced lot sizes, reduced setbacks, frontages and minimum floor
space should be kept out of this neighborhood. Although affordable housing should be
made available, this is not the way -- or the subdivision to do it in. The gentleman used
the word cottage. That's a nice term. You know, it's a good marketing term, but I just
don't think it dwells in this area. I agree that there should be affordable housing, but
just don't think this is the place to put it. There are much larger lots and homes
surrounding this development. The integrity of the neighborhood should be maintained
by maintaining similar lot sizes and square footage of lots and dwellings that are in
existence in the surrounding neighborhood. The main -- we need to maintain the
property values of the existing houses. We need to attract buyers in that area of the
same economic level. The tax base for the future of Meridian would be jeopardized.
The property values would not accelerate in that area and the existing neighborhoods at
the same rate as they would if it was a similar housing put in in this three acres as what
is around it. So, I have no qualms with them developing the three acres, but it should
be reduced to an R-4 at least. There is also the problem with the fire department on
means of egress in this area. They are already -- South Linder is the main arterial in
that area. There is already 700 houses down in there. There is no other exit out of
there or entrance into that. And those issues need to be resolved before more housing
is put down in there. So, I understand talking to the planner today that in the future
there is going to be an egress out to Ten Mile Road down Waltman and until that's
done, though, I think everything should be tabled because of safety issues. Any
questions?
Zaremba: Thank you. Commissioners, questions?
Borup: Mr. Chairman. I do have one question on the fence. You said that the survey
markers are 12 feet north of your fence -- your mother's fence?
Hiatt: When we seen -- when they were first put out in the pasture we seen three
markers out there with flags on them. They have been taken down and it was
approximately 12 feet north of that -- of the fence.
Meridian Planning & Zoning
August 18, 2005
Page 22 of 98
Borup: So, you're not sure if that was their property line or not, then?
Hiatt: Not sure, but that was where the flags were.
Borup: Okay. Thank you.
Zaremba: Thank you, sir.
Hiatt: Thank you.
Zaremba: That covers everybody who was signed up and anybody who was not signed
up care to add anything that has not been discussed? Commissioners, do we wish to
have some discussion or are we ready for the applicant to respond?
Moe: Probably the applicant. I will have a couple questions for him as well, so --
Zaremba: Okay. If you care to return.
McKinnon: Thank you, Mr. Chairman, Members of the Commission. It looks like there
are a few things to talk about. It's a nice opportunity, I'm glad the neighbors were here
tonight to bring up some of those issues. Let's start directly with the survey. When we
had our neighborhood meeting the survey was not complete. We had a site design that
we worked through at our office and we presented that at the neighborhood meeting.
The surveys weren't complete at that time and so at the neighborhood meeting we didn't
have an answer for where the surveys were. As you well know, I'm not a professional
land surveyor, but we have had a professional land surveyor go out there and survey
this property. The plat that you have in front of you tonight is representative of the
property lines as determined by a professional licensed surveyor. So, as far as the
property line, I have to rely on the professional that we have hired to do that. They are
licensed by the state and that's the best we can do to answer that question is, yes, this
does comply with the boundary lines. As far as where locations of fences are, as many
of you are well aware, fence lines do not necessarily depict property lines and if there is
any discrepancy there, I do have to rely on the professional opinion of a professional
land surveyor. What you see in front of you tonight is representative of that.
Borup: Question on the fence line, then. The survey line that's -- you believe is correct
is north of the fence line that is there?
McKinnon: What you have in front of you tonight -- I can't speak to --
Borup: I'm talking about where the fence is in relation to this.
McKinnon: I'm not sure where the fence is in relation to that. I wasn't out there when
they did the survey, as far as where pins were placed and where the flag is done for the
property, I'm not sure. What I do know for sure is that the plat that you see is
Meridian Planning & Zoning
August 18, 2005
Page 23 of 98
representative of this and that the boundary and -- when the topography map was
created for this, the house and all of the buildings were within the property line and
that's what you see represented on this map in front of you tonight. And so that's what
the plat is based on as well. One of the other comments that he had was the fence.
We are more than happy to have the fence put up prior to development. That's typically
a standard of the City of Meridian to require a fencing program prior to, so that
construction debris and construction workers lunch material doesn't fly across the
fences. That's usually a problem and the city has addressed that by the fence code by
requiring that. We are more than happy to abide by that as well by having the fence up
prior to construction. The idea that we would block the irrigation on this property -- there
is irrigation rights in the state of Idaho. We are required to provide irrigation to pass to
and -- to and through our property. I understand that very well. We will endeavor to
make sure that nothing happens. We have been working with Nampa-Meridian
irrigation about this situation already. We have had a meeting with John Anderson and
we have also discussed the pressurized irrigation system working off a loop system with
the elementary school, so -- rather than require a new pressurized irrigation pump
station for this area. We could improve the lift -- the pump station that the school is
using and, then, hook off of that to come around. Their pressurized irrigation system -- I
see Commissioner Moe looking at me a little bit. Their system loops around the
outside. They'd provide a stub to us if we upgrade where they are dragging their water
from. So, we have had some discussions with Nampa-Meridian. We understand the
irrigation issues in this area. The R-8 versus R-4 -- could you show a -- go back one
more -- there we go. Perfect. There is an R-4 subdivision right here. The average lot
size in this subdivision is just under 6,000 square feet. It's an R-4 subdivision. I have
got amap -- I didn't -- don't actually have it with me, but it's not a well detailed map.
These lots right here are 5,000 square feet. Actually, 5,009 square feet. Some are
5,008 square feet. Those are substandard for the R-8 zone. The discussion is that this
entire area is predominately larger lots. Kiddy-corner from this property the majority of
these lots in the subdivision are substandard R-8 lots in an R-4 zone. It was handled as
a planned development. It was Blue Marlin. Several of you were on the commission
when that came through. It's a W.H. Moore project. These are very small lots. On
these very small lots they also had reductions in the amount of home sizes. A lot of lots
within here were designated as having 1,100 square feet, some 1,200 square foot,
some 1,300 square foot minimums. They were all different colors, if you remember that.
These are small lots in this area. Another thing to point out -- Linder in the future -- and
you can see in the design of this subdivision it's widened out at this location. Linder is
going to be a thoroughfare, there will be an overpass at this location. Just, like the
overpass that's going to be under construction soon at Locust Grove. In the future
Linder will be widened and it will be expanded to include this overpass. The large lots
are not easily as marketable next to a large thoroughfare. The smaller lots, people
recognize that you will have some of that. We have provided a buffer. The existing
house, plus a long drive in with landscaping to buffer those people in the future in
having to listen to the traffic as this widens. ACHD does not include this small portion of
land from here to here in their 20 year work program. However, this portion of Linder is
in the 20 year work program and this portion of Linder is in the 20 year work program.
ACHD typically will only purchase right of way if it's in their 20 year CIP. They stepped
Meridian Planning & Zoning
August 18, 2005
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forward and said we recognize that that may have been a problem. We will pay you for
the right of way there. We do want to include that as part of our 20 year CIP. So, they
have stepped forward in the staff report you have in front of you tonight saying, yes, we
would like to purchase the full 48 feet from centerline. Right now it's atwo-lane road. In
the future this will be a 96 foot right of way and they want to purchase this right of way
now, even though it's not part of their CIP, they haven't exactly detailed what the
funding will come from, but I do realize that they'd like to purchase that at this time,
rather than wait into the future and take care of this. This is going to be a wider road.
It's going to be a bigger project. It's not different from here. The lot sizes within the
subdivision towards the rear are larger than the lots within the .subdivision that's already
been approved by the City of Meridian. Now, as you know, I worked for the city of
Garden City for four and a half years. This is not Garden City. The project and the
product type here is something very different. We are not talking about a lower amenity
product type. People are getting more and more discriminatory in their purchasing of
homes. You recognize that the people that are purchasing newer homes are not
purchasing lower quality homes in Meridian and Boise area, they have moved out to the
Nampa area or Caldwell areas and the Kuna areas where the price of land is lower and
the price of land, just for these lots, will push up the value of these homes. They are
going to be nice smaller homes. I can't guarantee you they are going to be large
homes, because they are on small lots, but they will be nice homes and they will be
representative of those drawings and elevations that we submitted to you tonight. We
know that there may be some issues that you have and we want your help on this. If
you have some suggestions for us, some things that might make it more tenable for you
and for the city, we are open to those. We tried working with staff, we have worked with
ACHD and we have worked with the fire department. We have had discussions about
the one way in, one way out with your staff at Linder Road -- has only one way in and
one way out right now and we understand that and in the future it may not be the best
idea to put a public school on a one way in, one way out. We don't believe that a three
lot -- I mean a three acre subdivision will add the extra pressure. I believe we are on
the brink right now that no extra development can happen in this area until Waltman is
extended in the future. With that I'd ask if you have any questions. We ask for your
support tonight and your suggestions that we can move forward to City Council with this
project.
Moe: Mr. Chairman?
Zaremba: Thank you. Commissioner Moe.
Moe: Well, you pretty much answered all the questions that I was going to ask you, but,
then, that just brings up a couple more in your comment of suggestions and I really do
have a real problem with the amount of lots that you have got in here and the size of
these lots. I mean you have made the point that the R-4 caddy-corner there was small
lots, even for an R-8, but we are down into 35 and 36 hundred square foot in this
development here, when minimums, you know, for an R-8 are 6,500. Now, you have
got a couple, you know, over there on the west side that are getting close, but I think
when staff discussed trying to reduce some lots to make this a little bit more appealing
Meridian Planning & Zoning
August 18, 2005
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to an R-8 zone, I think it was more than four lots that they were looking for reductions on
and that's a big concern of mine in this thing as far as what you have already discussed
making the changes and whatnot, I'm glad to see that, but for an R-8 in these such
small lots, I think we are -- I think we are going to crowd everything in here and I realize
that it's zoned for the R-8 right now, but have you guys looked at all to reduce any of
these lot sizes again?
McKinnon: Joe, can you go ahead and flip back to the site plan that we have got right
now? We have talked about that and taken a look at it and I don't know if I did a great
job of explaining myself in the discussion we had with staff. Under the new
development code, the Unified Development Code, that has recently been discussed by
you and approved by you and recommended to City Council to approve, under the
development code --
Moe: Keep in mind it has not been approved.
McKinnon: It has not been approved. But this is the discussion that we had with staff.
Was that under that code -- and the old code was very similarly written. This part didn't
change a great deal. For attached housing you could have 4,000 square feet and 4,000
square feet and that would meet code for the R-8 zone without a planned development.
We both felt that it would be more appropriate and a better product if it was detached
from each other and we felt that if we were to push those lots closer to that 4,000
square foot in size, that it would be better to have detached, which is a better product
typically, it's a better ownership product, people would rather purchase a detached
home than an attached home. So, we said let's move these closer to that 4,000 square
foot number. If we removed this lot, we could widen each one of these lots out, it would
exceed 4,000 square feet in size. We could reduce the open space here. Drag these
lots over. We would lose one net lot -- one lot, essentially, in the net. These could be
moved over. These could be expanded to, essentially, 4,000 square feet. I haven't
done the math on the north side. On the south side we definitely have done the math.
It's a lot easier down there to make it work. By losing one lot these would all be pushed
to be 4,000 square foot lots, which would match for attached housing. We were asking
detached housing on the same lots and having reduced setback between the two on the
non-habitable side.
Moe: But as far as a PD, are you anticipating the open lot as part of the amenities in
the PD?
McKinnon: Under the PD ordinance there is a number of different amenities that can be
required. One's a pathway to public open space, which is a park, which is right here.
This area is included as an amenity with the picnic area. It can be -- it will have to be
squished a little bit. The requirement for a PD is if you want to count your open space
as an amenity, it's a ten percent open space requirement. This piece of property is not
asking for the ten percent open space requirement amenity. In fact, on a three lot
subdivision there is no --
space. Only subdivisions
a three acre subdivision there is no requirement for open
in the City of Meridian that require open space are those
Meridian Planning & Zoning
August 18, 2005
Page 26 of 98
i
subdivisions that are five acres in size or larger. This is smaller than that and so
providing open space, it's not the ten percent area, that's why we have got the picnic
shelter in this area. So, it would be squished a little bit further. We don't want to squish
it too much, but you could take 20 feet here, incorporate that between each one -- see if
I can do some quick math here. These are about 76 feet deep. Is that right, Scott?
Seventy-eight feet deep. If we take an additional ten -- 20 feet here, that's 78, 1,400
feet, one, two, three -- it would probably be in the neighborhood 15 feet we would have
to squeeze that in order to get those lots all to 4,000 square feet. So, It would reduce
that, but we can draw that up and see how that works.
Moe: Or take another lot off to the north side.
McKinnon: We could possibly do that as well. We can redraw that and come back to
you with those drawings. We just feel that a detached product is a better product than
an attached product for ownership and marketing as well.
Moe: I have no more questions.
Zaremba: I will have to say there are elements of it that I like, but I will give you the
couple of things that I struggle with and some of them are brought up by staff and also
by the neighbor. Can you go to a larger area view? Like that. Yeah. Thank you. The
logic to me, if it were possible to develop -- it's difficult to deal with these small parcels
and I realize it gives you a tough challenge and it gives us an awful lot to chew on. One
of the struggles is isolating this little property just north of you and you have made some
accommodations for that. Logic would be that in the far future when Linder actually is
being used as an arterial and crosses the freeway and stuff like that, that it would make
more sense for all of these three properties -- my light is not working very strongly, but
the three properties that are neighboring each other -- actually, to access off of this
street, as opposed to off of Linder -- it seems a little premature to try and shoehorn this
subdivision into a spot that could develop much more favorably not only for the future
residents, but also for the current residents, if the whole picture were looked at. And
that also brings me to the subject --and I'll ask Commissioner Borup to comment on this
as well. My recollection is that when we were discussing this subdivision, which is Blue
something. Blue Haven or --
McKinnon: Blue Marlin.
Zaremba: Blue Marlin. I thought Blue Marlin was the commercial on Eagle and Ustick.
McKinnon: Yeah. That's the marketing name.
Borup: Blue Horizon.
Zaremba: This is Blue Horizon.
Borup: Yeah.
Meridian Planning & Zoning
August 18, 2005
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C~
Zaremba: We had the discussion about there only being one way in and one way out
until now and, as I recall, we went ahead and recommended approval of Blue Horizon,
based on that it was imminent to have a second connection somewhere, either to the
east off of -- I think there is a stub street under this compass mark, but also one here.
Or to the west connecting -- I forget what the name of that street is, but -- or that within
a couple of years, since they were setting aside space -- and I think they even
contributed to it, to get this intersection going. And I will ask Commissioner Borup
whether he agrees with me on that. I think the instinct of the Commission at the time
was to say -- we were kind of holding our breath to approve Blue Horizon, with the
thought that we would not really discuss any further growth in this area until there was a
second way out. Was it that firm or did we go that far?
Borup: I don't remember going that far, but I think we anticipated there would be --
Zaremba: By now.
Borup: Well, I thought to the east was what we thought was most likely in the shorter
term.
Zaremba: Yeah. Well -- and where I'm going is my discomfort with even adding one or
two houses more, when I feel we are way beyond -- typically -- I mean this is a cul-de-
sac and the rules usually are 50 dwelling units on a cul-de-sac and we are -- I'll take the
word for it that we are up to 700 at the moment. It may sound minuscule to say we are
not adding that many more, it's a small percentage, but it's getting a little scary to isolate
that many people with only one two lane entrance and until those improvements are
made, I, for one, am very uncomfortable discussing further development in this area. I
don't know if I'm the only one that feels that way, but -- you know, if we do take the
responsibility to make sure that public safety is available to anybody who is likely to
move in here and the end result to me is that I kind of think it's premature to even annex
this at the moment.
McKinnon: Mr. Chairman, help me through this process in my head, if you would. I
understand a little bit about emergency services and, obviously, you have a better grip
on it than I would. I'm trying to think of what type of catastrophe that could happen that
would block Linder that would be -- that would -- you say that you're uneasy right now
as to adding more to that. What type of catastrophe is it that would concern you in the
future? For instance, is it a traffic accident that would block people from getting in and
out of their homes or is it a life safety issue of people having to exit if there was a
massive fire in the south end of this heading north. I'm trying to understand the reason
for that. I have looked at the fire department's comments. I don't believe there were
any comments from the police department to this. I notice it was more Planning and
Zoning. But help me out with it. I'm trying to understand the --
Zaremba: Afire in the area where the word Linder is would be a very difficult
proposition. I'm also well aware that even though they don't happen very often, this is
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Meridian Planning & Zoning
August 18, 2005
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an earthquake area and I have seen the surprise devastation that they can cause. And,
hopefully, that will not happen. They are very scary when they do. But I think it's kind of
our responsibility to be prepared for them.
McKinnon: Joe, can. you go to the aerial really quick? The thought just occurred to me.
Oh, it doesn't quite show it. The school site in the back of that -- just over. There we
go. I'm a little bit familiar with Whitestone Estates Subdivision up here, with the access
further to the north in this location. There is this -- it looks like a stub. It's actually not a
stub, it's a sewer connection to the school. This was a sewer easement that runs
through here. It's bollarded off. And when it extends with the sewer easement -- if you
remember, sewer easements -- and, Mike, you may want to jump in on this and help me
out -- the sewer easements are built so that you can drive a vehicle over those. There
is a secondary access back around the school site. The school area is paved around.
Vehicles can drive and park on that pavement in that area. There would be a
secondary access to this location for emergency vehicles. And so if something were to
happen at this location, there is a secondary road -- or secondary means of emergency
access to get to this location and to this location, if something were to happen south of
this access point. And so I remember we were dropping my kid off -- I have one child
that went to Peregrine and we used to drop off here, rather than rotate all the way
around. I have a friend that lives in Whitestone Subdivision and we'd stop by, but there
is secondary emergency -- and, Mike, help me out with that. Your sewer easements are
typically built with gravel over the top or asphalt so they can support a vehicle?
Cole: Are you asking, Mr. Chairman?
Zaremba: Yes.
Cole: Typically, yes. If a sewer main is run through an easement, we will have a gravel
access road for maintenance of the sewer main. This particular easement here, I'm not
aware of what the status is. I'm not familiar with each and every easement in the city.
But, general, yes, there are access roads over that for maintenance of the sewer line.
Zaremba: Okay. Thank you. Let me ask staff a question, if I may. It's been mentioned
that -- is this road that's along here, is that Waltman, as well as --
Guenther: Yes. That's Waltman Court.
Zaremba: Portions of it.
Guenther: But this over here is where the mixed-use development for the Ten Mile
interchange occurs. It's immediately west of the large lots, Connie Subdivision, in the
southwest area of this site.
Zaremba: So, where I was going with that, if there is discussion of punching that road
through to Ten Mile, is there any thought of a time frame? Would it wait until the
interchange is done, which is several years off to --
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August 18, 2005
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Guenther: That would come in a part of that mixed-use development for all of that
undeveloped agricultural ground at that time and a connection through to Waltman
Court would be a long-term solution. The most immediate would be Commercial in the
location at the stub here, which would be the one coming across north of the Waltman
Court -- I think it's Waltman Court Subdivision, which was approved last fall.
Zaremba: Okay.
McKinnon: Mr. Chairman, Members of the Commission, it sounds like there is a few
things that we still probably ought to work out with staff. I have got your comments,
Commissioner Moe, about reducing the density. I think that I saw some nods of some
heads as you were making those comments from the Commission.
Borup: Maybe you could remove two lots, one on the north, one on the south.
McKinnon: We can absolutely draw something up to see if that works and we will do
that and we'd like to come back to you and have a little more discussion about -- and
have some timing discussions with Mike and with Joe and with ACHD concerning when
the -- a secondary access to this area comes in and have a better answer for you. So, I
guess we would ask at this time for a continuance to be able to draw some different
designs up, come back to you, and make a few changes. We will make the change to
the property to the north, make that 24 feet wide, and make the road section 24 -- and
the 29-foot face-to-face, other than back-to-back. And we currently show that the -- we
will make sure that the plat's corrected to show a 15 foot rear setback instead of the
request for a ten. We will make those changes and have a chance to meet with your
staff. If we could have a couple weeks to do that. As far as the changes to the plat,
those are pretty quick drawings to make. It's moving some lines. And we can try to
make that work and that's, actually, going to help us with our elevations, if it was a wider
lot to work with, and we will probably have some additional elevations that will fit on
some wider lots, to ask for a continuance at this time, so we can continue to work with
staff and make some changes that you suggested at this time.
Zaremba: I certainly think that's reasonable. Let me throw one question into the mix,
then. If you are able to consider and perhaps accomplish the suggestions that
Commissioner Moe made -- let's see, can we actually go to a site plan? That's fine.
Would it not, then, make more sense -- and, again, I'm thinking way off into the future
and property that's not actually your property, but not only this narrow one right to your
north, but the two that are north of that, I'm sure ACHD would like them to lose their
access to Linder at sometime, too, and where I'm going with that is what if instead of --
my light's dying. Here it goes. Instead of this being a 24 foot driveway, could it be a 29
T intersection, so that it -- you actually have a stub south and a stub north and a T
intersection there, instead of a driveway. You're losing another five feet off of what you
have already agreed to shuffle, but --
Meridian Planning & Zoning
August 18, 2005
Page 30 of 98
•
McKinnon: If we are losing a property to the north, it would give us some more to play
with on the north side. So, there may be some possibility of widening it there. The
bigger concern I have with that -- if you can flip back to the aerial. Okay. Great. This
property owner at the neighborhood meeting had to put in an emergency vehicle
turnaround on his property. He wasn't really happy about it when he was annexed into
the city and he was very adamant about, you know, this is -- I'm trying to see how this is
going to develop in the future. ACHD granted this access point here. It accesses this
property and this property. ACHD's major concern with this driveway was the location
of the driveway that we are proposing. They have to have an offset. This piece of --
this driveway meets the offset requirements when compared to this driveway. So, the
little piece in the middle --
Zaremba: It is far enough away?
McKinnon: It is.
Zaremba: Okay. Okay.
McKinnon: In addition to that, Commissioner Zaremba, I -- Joe, flip back real quick. I
think it would actually go right to that house, if it was stubbed right there at that location
it would go right through that house. But I guess we could move the stub in a little bit
different location connected with the cul-de-sac. But we can play with the design of
that. I think there is an area that we can design off of to see how that would go.
Zaremba: Okay. Let's see. If we continue this for applicant and staff to work together a
little bit more, is there anything that staff would want to add right now?
Guenther: Well, clear direction of what we are looking --
Zaremba: Say again.
Geunther: Staff would like the Commission to give us some clear direction as to what
you guys would like to see at this site and what you would feel comfortable approving
prior to going with that direction.
Zaremba: Yeah.
Moe: So, I guess my --
Zaremba: Commissioner Moe put a number of things in order
Moe: I would anticipate pretty much your concerns about the road width. The flag lot
road section through there be taken care of. The perimeter or the setback to the 15
feet. I'm looking for possibly at least -- at least a minimum of one lot per side of that
road to go away. I want to get some larger lots in there. I would really rather not lose
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Meridian Planning & Zoning
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any of the open space, if at all possible, in that north side. That's where I want to take
the one lot out. Is there anything else?
Guenther: Commissioner Moe, when staff did have discussions with the applicant there
was several other things that were brought up that Mr. McKinnon did say. We did look
at the option -- and staff had recommended that they make all of their lots a minimum of
4,000 square feet, as that is the minimum tot size that is called out in the city code. As
well as we had made a recommendation that they either stub to the north or provide
also a connection of a minimum 20 feet in this area for future roadway connections. We
understand that there is an existing garage there where the potential connection for the
roadway would happen, but staff would still feel more comfortable with having a public
road service to this site, rather than having the flag lots in the first place. What staffs
recommendation to the applicant was that the -- at the last time we met after the original
recommendation, was to provide either a large hammerhead type of a structure there
with a very narrow common lot that would be for future access to that site or something
along that method, which we never had the discussion about this type of a design. This
is not something staff had commented on with this -- with this applicant.
Moe: Before you go farther, in regard to the Chairman Zaremba's point in regards to
Ting the road there at the end, would that be accepted to staff as well?
Guenther: That was staffs recommendation to the applicant almost to a T.
Moe: All right. Well, if it was to a T, then, I would anticipate that that's what I would like
to see.
McKinnon: Commissioner Zaremba, Members of the Commission, ACHD had a
problem with the T, where is it going to, it's going to a 66 foot wide lot. They want the
access to the south. The city didn't want the access to the south. We were stuck
between a rock and a hard place. The city staff report says we don't recommend the
stub street to the south. ACHD required that. What we did on the north side with the --
this -- I guess the quasi-stub there, the common lots, was try to provide frontage for
those lots without having to provide a full street to that property. It's 66 feet wide. It's
not a huge property to develop and if you have a full 29-foot street section running back
into it, there is not a great benefit to ACHD or to the city, for that matter, to provide a
larger street section back there. We have discussed that option with ACHD and they
felt this was a good compromise for that.
Borup: Yeah. It's not a real practical property to develop. It's not something you're
going to run a roadway down, obviously, from Linder and -- and I -- it looked to me like,
you know, the proposed development sketch is probably the only practical way to even
try to do anything with that. But, you know, it's going to depend on the property owner if
that's something they even want to do.
McKinnon: Well --
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Meridian Planning & Zoning
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Borup: Has there been any discussion with the property owner to the north? Is that
something they would be looking at long term?
McKinnon: You know, I don't believe they came to our neighborhood meeting. We
have asked the real estate agent that was representing both the sellers at that time to,
again, approach them to say we would like to purchase that and we have asked her to
approach them and the answer was, no, they did not want to sell at this time. In some
of the discussions we have had, the property owner to the north that had that cul-de-
sac, the turnaround, there was some discussion that maybe he was wanting to
purchase the back half of that property.
Borup: That looks more practical.
McKinnon: That would be something that, you know, we would be fine with as well, but,
like I said, it's a 66 foot wide piece of property to drive the driveway the full length this
way, even if it's a ten foot wide driveway, then, you have a 55-foot deep lot. Take a 20
foot front setback and, then, you take a 15 foot rear setback, which you can't reduce, as
we discussed tonight. All of a sudden we have got a 20 wide building lot and that's not
much to build on. And so we think that that one alternative we put up there probably
provides the best alternative. There is, obviously, other alternatives, but we think that
that's probably one of the best alternatives to redeveloping the property to the north.
Guenther: Mr. Chairman?
Zaremba: Yes.
Guenther: As staff we don't make recommendations on how off-site parcels are brought
into this city or what their width is or anything along that line. Our main concern is
leaving that out, because there is no way that ACHD is going to give that property
access to Linder and this is our one shot at redeveloping that property. If it doesn't
redevelop it will probably stay a once acre tiny parcel, with a driveway access to Linder
for who knows how long. And that is -- that was the purpose that staff was looking for
either some sort of stub connection to Linder -- regardless of how wide it was, that's -- I
mean, obviously, that's the purchase that we are looking for.
Borup: But that's also why you're purposing two access points.
Guenther: No. They are proposing to put an easement here. Staffs recommendation
was to either provide a jog in the road and bring it up here and redesign some of the
portion back here, so that they can provide lots in the rear of that, or something along
that line.
Borup: That's what I was saying, you're proposing two access points.
Guenther: No. This could go away as far as we are concerned, because this driveway
cut actually cuts into their open space. So, in the future this lot -- this home here is
Meridian Planning & Zoning
August 18, 2005
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going to have a driveway across what is the amenity for the rest of homes in this
subdivision.
Borup: So, you're saying if there is access at the rear, then, the easement in the front
can go away?
Guenther: If that's what the applicant chooses. Like I said, we are not --
Borup: As far as staff is concerned it could.
Guenther: It could. As long as they come together with some sort understanding of
how that parcel is going to have public street frontage for redevelopment that's not on
Linder
Zaremba: But that's part of my struggle. Should we even accept this problem without
some coordination or an area plan, really, for these three properties? Is it in the best
interest to annex -- best interest of the City of Meridian to annex this problem at this
time without seeing a plan for those whole three properties?
Borup: Well, every time we annex something we do. We don't look at the adjoining
properties. And there is also -- you know, this is always an issue. Really, this is a little
more difficult because of the size and the location of the existing buildings, but there is
always the adjoining properties and always the stub streets that's -- that's included in.
It's the same issue, only this is just a lot different.
Rohm: Mr. Chairman?
Zaremba: Commissioner Rohm.
Rohm: From my perspective it seems that if the applicant were to make the changes
that Commissioner Moe brought up, that really addresses the primary issues of this
development as a whole, if they get the 4,000 square foot lot minimum, reduce the lots
on both north and south of the roadway by one, the back lot line setback be 15 feet, and
29 foot roadway and a 24 foot roadway to the back portion of the one acre lot, that
seems to me to address all of the issues that are --
Borup: In the staff report.
Rohm: -- are within the staff report and the parcel that is one to the north -- north of this
66 foot wide, they just developed that and I don't personally think that that parcel will
redevelop yet again in the near future. So, it seems logical that to provide access to the
back half without having a fully developed roadway is the most appropriate. That's --
Zaremba: Okay.
Rohm: -- my position on this.
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Meridian Planning & Zoning
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Zaremba: It sounds like consensus is --
Borup: I agree with that. I agree with Commissioner Rohm.
Zaremba: -- to continue this to a future meeting for the purpose of applicant and staff
working out those details and staff providing a report with conditions for approval. Is
that what we are --
Rohm: That's what I would support.
Zaremba: Okay. Do you want to pick a day?
Guenther: Mr. Chairman, it would have to be a minimum of a month, because we do
need to take this to comments meeting for at least -- and I'm not sure when the next one
is. We only had one last week and they are only once a month.
Zaremba: And it needs the ten days to go out to staff again, there would be -- I'd call
these changes --
Guenther: Yeah. And we would need to send this -- we would need to transmit this to
ACHD, obviously.
Nary: Mr. Chairman, this is just more of a cautionary I guess comment. It is within the
purview of this Commission to make some suggestions based upon the staff's report.
On this particular project, although it's a fairly small project, I mean one of the
requirements is -- because there is a conditional use requirement, is that there is
compatibility with the neighbors. As long as in your next hearing you're going to hear all
public testimony all over again and all from the neighbors -- because in redesigning this
project up here you have changed it significantly from the neighbors' comments, but yet
you haven't made any findings that it's compatible and I think this is the danger and
that's why I'm saying a cautionary statement. It's the danger of this Commission
designing the projects for the applicant as how to get them approved when you have to
make a finding that it's compatible with the neighbors who have already -- the only
neighbor that testified says it's not compatible with the neighborhood. So, I would just
caution you on this project, as well as others, in, essentially, putting yourself in the place
of the applicant. You can certainly say we agree with the staff report. We would
suggest that we are not in favor of this based on it. If you want more time, as Mr.
McKinnon asked in his early comments, to go back and redesign and come back to you,
that's fine. I just would be cautious on this one and others to redesign the project to this
degree again and make sure that you're going to take the neighbors' comments again
and that we are going to have a full hearing a second time. But in other ones -- I didn't
find a spot to interject, but the level of redesign is probably not in your best interest as
Commissioners to make objective decisions later as to whether this is an appropriate
project in the best interest of the city, because at this juncture, from Mr. McKinnon's
standpoint, if he meets all of our criteria, potentially indicated your pre-approval without
Meridian Planning & Zoning
August 18, 2005
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seeing it. So, I would not recommend that you -- to design them to this degree, merely
give recommendations, allow them the opportunity to redesign if they wish, or make a
decision based on what you have in front of you. But if you want to set this over, I'd just
make sure it's clear for the neighbors you're going to have afull-blown hearing, you're
still going to have to make findings on whether they are compatible and you're going to
hear whatever they want to say in regards to this project.
Zaremba: Yes. I appreciate that and I was even considering whether we would insist
that there be another neighborhood meeting. There is enough redesigning going on
and we have asked that in the past. And (certainly -- certainly at the Public Hearing
would expect to hear from everybody again and I'll leave it up to the other
Commissioners whether we would want to ask for another neighborhood meeting once
they have gotten together with staff and come up with a different agreement.
Moe: Mr. Chairman?
Zaremba: Commissioner Moe.
Moe: Like I say, I do appreciate Mr. Nary's comments. They are very much
appreciated. I, for one, am not a designer, so, therefore, I wasn't designing, but what --
I did want to make sure what everybody understands is -- is that this area is zoned R-8
and the whole point is to try and get within the R-8 zone requirements and as far as I'm
concerned, he's not near that at the present time, in my opinion. So, therefore, number
one, I would like to have you guys have another meeting, neighborhood meeting, if, in
fact, you're going to redesign and, yes, I would hope that the public that did speak
tonight and others would come back forward and speak again on this once they see the
redesign and, hopefully, in the neighborhood meeting they will be happy with what is
presented and, hopefully, this project can go forward. So, therefore --
Zaremba: Let's discuss timing. The choices would be September 15th, which is --
Moe: I would anticipate the 6th of October.
Zaremba: Or the 6th of October.
Moe: Yeah. I think that would probably be the way to go. What do you think?
Borup: Well, either the 15th or the 6th. Does the 15th meet the time criteria?
Zaremba: It's less than a month from now.
Borup: Right.
Guenther: I would request a little bit more time than a month.
Borup: That leaves the 6th, then.
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Meridian Planning & Zoning
August 18, 2005
Page 36 of 98
Moe: Okay.
Borup: I mean -- yeah. The 6th.
Zaremba: So, if we continue -- the question was if we continue it we don't need to
renotice; right? Even if the changes are significant, it's still the same application, the
same Public Hearing?
Borup: The street's not going to move, is it?
McKinnon: We are reducing lots, it shouldn't have to be renoticed.
Zaremba: Okay.
Nary: Mr. Chairman, Members of the Commission, since the recommendation is to
reduce lots, not increase them, and because this was the open hearing an opportunity
to come here, you can continue it without having to renotice. If, certainly, the
Commission believes there is a need to, you can certainly recommend that or direct that
as well to renotice it, too, so that's within your discretion.
Moe: Okay. Mr. Chairman?
Zaremba: Commissioner Moe.
Moe: I move we -- what do I move to do here? I'm figuring that out here. I'm just trying
to figure out where I was here. Move the Public Hearing on AZ 05-033, PP 05-032, and
CUP 05-036 be continued to the regularly scheduled Planning and Zoning meeting of
October 6th, 2005, and I would also request a renotice of all three hearings.
Borup: Even though that's not necessary?
Moe: Yes, I do.
Zaremba: And did you want to include in your motion suggesting another neighborhood
meeting?
Moe: Yes. And I would also like to have another neighborhood meeting required prior
to our hearing date.
Rohm: Second.
Zaremba: We have a motion and a second. All in favor say aye. Any opposed? That
motion carries.
MOTION CARRIED: FOUR AYES. ONE ABSENT.