08/14/2018 - Work Session - Minutes MINUTES OF THE SALT LAKE CITY COUNCIL WORK SESSION MEETING
TUESDAY, AUGUST 14 , 2018
The City Council met in Work Session on Tuesday, August 14, 2018,
in Room 326, Committee Room, City County Building, 451 South State
Street.
In Attendance: Council Members Andrew Johnston, Chris Wharton,
Derek Kitchen, Erin Mendenhall, Charlie Luke, James Rogers, and
Amy Fowler.
Staff in Attendance: Cindy Gust-Jenson, Council Executive
Director; Jennifer Bruno, Council Executive Deputy Director; David
Litvack, Mayor' s Deputy Chief of Staff; Simone Butler, Mayor' s
Executive Assistant; Lynn Pace, Mayor' s Senior Advisor; Nick
Tarbet, Council Senior Policy Analyst; Corey Rushton, Public
Services Communication & Administrative Manager; Margaret Plane,
City Attorney; Russell Weeks, Council Senior Advisor; Kira Luke,
Council Policy Analyst; Lehua Weaver, Council Associate Deputy
Director; Elizabeth Buehler, Community and Neighborhoods Civic
Engagement Manager; Nick Norris, Planning Director; Casey Stewart,
Senior Planner; Lauren Parisi, Principal Planner; Molly Robinson,
Planning Manager; Kelsey Lindquist, Principal Planner; Melissa
Jensen, Director of Housing and Neighborhood Development; Orion
Goff, Building Services Director; Ben Kolendar, Economic
Development Deputy Director; Roberta Reichgelt, Economic
Development Manager; Lara Fritts, Director of Economic
Development; Danny Walz, Redevelopment Agency Chief Operating
Officer; Bill Wyatt, Executive Director of Airports; Ryan Tesch,
Airport Director of Finance and Accounting; Mike Williams, Airport
Terminal Redevelopment Program Director; Boyd Ferguson, Senior
City Attorney; Cindy Mansell, City Recorder; and DeeDee Robinson,
Deputy City Recorder.
Others in Attendance: Ashley Patterson, Wasatch Community Gardens
Executive Director; Patrick Mullen, Salt Lake County Regional
Economic Development Manager; Joseph Hatch, Petitioner' s Attorney
(Item 2) ; Scott Riding, Y2 Analytics; Kelly Patterson, Y2
Analytics; Lindsey Ferrari, Wilkinson Ferrari Company; Siobahn
Locke, The Langdon Group Senior Project Manager; and Blake Wade,
GillmoreBell Bond Counsel .
Councilmember Mendenhall presided at and conducted the
meeting.
The meeting was called to order at 2 : 15 p.m.
AGENDA ITEMS
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#1 . 2:15:30PM BRIEFING REGARDING AN ORDINANCE THAT WOULD REZONE
THE PROPERTY LOCATED AT APPROXIMATELY 569 EAST 2ND AVENUE FROM
SPECIAL DEVELOPMENT PATTERN RESIDENTIAL (SR-1A) TO SMALL
NEIGHBORHOOD BUSINESS (SNB) . The applicant was requesting the
rezone in order to make the parcel zoning uniform for future
development purposes. View Attachments
Casey Stewart, Nick Tarbet, and Joseph Hatch briefed the
Council with attachments . Mr. Stewart discussed the history of the
property and said it was previously used as non-conforming
commercial but now housed a design studio. Mr. Stewart said an
agreement was made with the petitioner' s attorney (Joseph Hatch)
to change the zoning to SNB. He said the property went through a
Planned Development process and was approved for two principal
structures on one lot.
Councilmember Mendenhall inquired about the
chronology/timeline of the project; how long this request had been
in process; and if there was public feedback at the public hearing.
Mr. Stewart said only a handful of people attended and there were
concerned neighbors with regards to continued upkeep of the
property, any future uses that would occupy the structures, as
well as proponents of the zoning change. Councilmember Mendenhall
said it was important to know the public feedback, and for future
projects it would be helpful to see public feedback in the Staff
report.
Councilmember Wharton inquired about increased parking needs
and if it was a concern raised by residents . Mr. Stewart said it
was a concern raised by Staff and residents .
Mr. Hatch discussed the non-conforming historic use of the
property, the current parking situation, the installation of bike
racks, and concerns raised by the Community Council about a retail
food establishment residing at this property.
#2 . 2:34:32PM BRIEFING REGARDING AN ORDINANCE THAT WOULD AMEND
SECTIONS OF TITLE 21A (ZONING) OF THE SALT LAKE CITY CODE TO
CLARIFY REGULATIONS FOR NONCONFORMING SIGNS. The proposed changes
would support the retention, restoration, and reuse of non-
conforming signs that help create the distinct character of Salt
Lake City's neighborhoods, business districts, and corridors,
through the following changes to the ordinance:
1 . Create additional clarity about the maintenance options
available for nonconforming signs.
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2. Establish a process for property owners to nominate
potential vintage signs for designation and
modification.
3. Produce criteria to ensure that designated signs have
characteristics that make them worthy of additional
flexibility
4. Provide a framework of options that will support
property owners in retaining these signs.
This petition was initiated by the City Council in June 2016. View
Attachments
Nick Norris and Nick Tarbet briefed the Council with
attachments . Mr. Norris provided background on vintage signs in
Salt Lake City, criteria/review process for designation of a
vintage sign, and provisions for flexibility of vintage signs .
Councilmember Johnston inquired about vintage signs becoming
public art. Mr. Norris said the vintage signs installed as art
would be limited to the proposed allowed zoning districts . He said
they could be moved to a non-contiguous zoning district and would
need to be reviewed on a case-by-case basis .
Councilmember Kitchen said he wanted to see more flexibility
in the proposed ordinance to accommodate growth.
Councilmember Fowler inquired about replica signs, the
definition of replica, and how the criteria would be determined.
Mr. Norris said the Planning Commission recommended replica
criteria to be considered; however, he said the selection process
could prove to be difficult.
Councilmember Fowler said she wanted to propose a straw poll
to leave the suggestion/wording "replica/re-created" out of the
proposed ordinance. Councilmember Luke said he would not be in
favor of removing that language because the broader issue was
policies/enforcement of newly installed signs and the prohibition
of future character-defining signage.
Councilmember Wharton inquired about adding the language
"historic re-creation" . Mr. Norris said determining what was
historic and what was not would prove to be difficult.
Straw Poll : (Passed) Support to use Planning Department added
language for moving existing signs : "be relocated and installed on
the business' new site, should the business with which it is
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associated move, provided that the business' new location is within
the same contiguous zoning district as the original location" . All
Council Members were in favor.
#3. 3:14:02PM BRIEFING REGARDING AN ORDINANCE THAT WOULD MAKE
THE FOLLOWING AMENDMENTS FOR THE PROPERTIES LOCATED AT 629 EAST
800 SOUTH AND 633 EAST 800 SOUTH:
1 . REZONE THE PROPERTY FROM RMF-30 (LOW DENSITY MULTI-
FAMILY RESIDENTIAL) TO THE R- MU-35 (RESIDENTIAL MIXED-
USE) ; AND,
2 . AMEND THE FUTURE LAND USE DESIGNATION IN THE CENTRAL
COMMUNITY MASTER PLAN FROM LOW DENSITY RESIDENTIAL (1-
15 DWELLING UNITS/ACRE) TO MEDIUM RESIDENTIAL/MIXED USE
(10-50 DWELLINGS UNITS/ACRE)
These amendments would allow the property owner, Wasatch Community
Gardens (WCG) to use the two single-family homes (both of which
are contributing structures in the Central City Local Historic
District) on the property as administrative offices. The current
zone does not allow office use. View Attachments
Ashley Patterson, Nick Tarbet, Molly Robinson, Lauren Parisi,
and Melissa Jensen briefed the Council with attachments .
Discussion was held regarding City Master Plans, zoning
compatibility with adjacent properties, replacement of housing
units on the site, and a comparison of the RMF-30, R-MU-35, and CN
zoning districts .
Councilmember Kitchen said he supported this amendment;
however, he wanted an update to the Housing Loss Mitigation Policy
and wanted clarification on the proposal' s time-line, or a
development agreement before making any decisions . Ms . Jensen said
they were in the final stages of updating the ordinance and it
would be available soon.
Councilmember Wharton inquired about WCG' s response if the
Council required a development agreement, and what impact it would
have on the proposed project. Ms . Parisi said WCG would be open to
a development agreement and discussing the terms with the Council,
however it would delay the proposal to convert the existing homes
into offices .
Ms . Patterson discussed four goals for the project:
replacement of housing (up to six units) , historic preservation,
maximizing the green-space, and utilizing the existing structures
for office space.
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#4 . 3:32:17 PM BRIEFING REGARDING AN ORDINANCE AMENDING SALT LAKE
CITY CODE RELATING TO ENFORCEMENT OF ZONING VIOLATIONS AND PROPERTY
CLEARING AND WEED CONTROL (AMENDING CHAPTER 21A.20-ENFORCEMENT AND
CHAPTER 9.16, ARTICLE I, RENUMBERING SECTION 9.16.110 AND SECTION
9.16.120, AND REPEALING CHAPTER 9.16, ARTICLE II) . The changes include
clarifying language about the noticing of the City's intent to
abate violations, collection of the costs of abatement, the appeals
process, and the duties and roles of the Fines Hearing. View
Attachments
Nick Tarbet provided a summary of the proposal . No
questions/objections were raised by the Council .
#5. BRIEFING REGARDING AN ORDINANCE THAT WOULD CLOSE A
PORTION OF UNUSED STREET ON 500 SOUTH FROM 700 WEST TO THE ADJACENT
INTERSTATE-15 ON-RAMP. The change would allow the adjacent
property owner, FFKR Architects, to facilitate maintenance and
site improvements at their headquarters offices. Under the
proposal, FFKR would purchase the property at fair market value.
View Attachments
Item pulled from the agenda.
#6. 3:34:32 PM BRIEFING REGARDING AN INTERLOCAL AGREEMENT TO
RECEIVE $1,086,500 IN SALT LAKE COUNTY GRANT MONEY AWARDED TO THE
CITY IN 2017 . The funding would be used for capital repairs at the
Sorenson Campus, which includes the Sorenson Multicultural Center,
Sorenson Unity Center and Steiner West Pool . The proposed transfer
of this amount, drawn from Tourist, Recreation, Cultural and
Convention (TRCC) funds, follows the March 2018 Council approval
of a broader Interlocal agreement between the City and Salt Lake
County for management, programming, repairs and maintenance at the
Sorenson Campus. View Attachments
Corey Rushton briefed the Council with attachments .
Discussion was held regarding history of the proposal, funding for
tourism, recreation, culture and convention, maintenance and
building needs for the Sorensen Campus, and collaborating with the
County for audits, requirements, and reporting.
#7 . 3:39:05PM BRIEFING REGARDING THE FEDERAL OPPORTUNITY ZONES
PROGRAM, WHICH WAS ESTABLISHED BY CONGRESS IN 2017 TO SPUR LONG-
TERM PRIVATE SECTOR INVESTMENTS IN LOW-INCOME COMMUNITIES
NATIONWIDE. Under the program, state governors nominated certain
areas of low-income/high-poverty as Opportunity Zones and
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investors are given incentives to put their capital to work
rebuilding these economically distressed communities. View
Attachments
Ben Kolendar, Roberta Reichgelt, and Patrick Mullen briefed
the Council with attachments . Discussion was held regarding
currently designated Opportunity Zones (46 tracts in Utah, 15 in
Salt Lake County, and seven in Salt Lake City) , three major
components of the Opportunity Zones (investments, funds created
with capital gains, and zones) , assets that were eligible for
investment, time-line for roll-out of Opportunity Zone investments
(2019) , awaiting guidance from the Treasury and IRS, working with
the County to promote Opportunity Zones, and the coupling of other
incentive programs to further incentivize investment in those
areas .
Councilmember Rogers inquired about the impact the
Opportunity Zones would have in Salt Lake City and what the
expectations were. Ms . Reichgelt said the areas were strategically
placed where they wanted to see investment and expected thriving
business communities that could benefit from the investments .
Councilmember Rogers inquired if the County was aware of how much
money was expected to go into the Opportunity Zones . Mr. Mullen
said it was hard to quantify at this time, however they were
hopeful that Opportunity Zones would qualify alongside Community
Reinvestment Area (CRA) dollars .
Councilmember Mendenhall inquired how to anticipate if the
Opportunity Zones funding stream would be compatible with
development agreements already in place, and if the Opportunity
Zone dollars would be applied to infrastructure investments where
there were none. Mr. Kolendar said the CRA and Opportunity Zones
would be stackable incentives, and developers could now use capital
gains and defer them in the Opportunity Zones to drastically
accelerate investments . Mr. Mullen said there was a unique
opportunity with new developments to find investors that were
aligned for the long haul and the County would view qualifying
Opportunity Zone projects as favorable criteria to their community
development policy and participate to the fullest extent possible.
Councilmember Mendenhall asked for an update from Economic
Development.
#8 . 4:34:08PM BRIEFING REGARDING A RESOLUTION AUTHORIZING THE
SALE OF THE SECOND OF THREE ANTICIPATED AIRPORT REVENUE BOND ISSUES
TO FINANCE CONSTRUCTION OF THE NEW SALT LAKE CITY INTERNATIONAL
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AIRPORT. The resolution would involve the sale of up to $1 .25
billion in limited obligation bonds that would be repaid solely by
revenue generated at the Salt Lake City International Airport. A
significant part of the estimated $3. 85 billion Airport project is
scheduled to open in late summer of 2020 and be fully complete in
2024. View Attachments
Bill Wyatt, Russell Weeks, Ryan Tesch, and Mike Williams
briefed the Council with attachments . Discussion was held
regarding Airport Revenue Bonds Series 2018A & 2018B: total capital
costs of program, additional funding sources, estimated sources
and uses of funds, estimated debt service, and financing schedule.
Mr. Tesch said construction was in high gear and discussed the
estimated principal amount, estimated project fund deposit, and
the assumed bond yield.
Mr. Williams detailed the phasing of the Salt Lake City
Airport Redevelopment Program, to include: landside arrival and
departure, level 2 parking deck, pedestrian walkway portal, level
3 ticketing, "Meeter Greet" area, security checkpoint, "the
plaza", north concourse mini plaza, Phase I
construction/demolition, and over-all project statistics .
Councilmember Rogers inquired if any other airlines might
offer international flights through the new airport . Mr. Wyatt
said there was not enough space to house new international
providers, however they might discuss options for the future, and
the airport was currently set up to facilitate the larger
international planes as well as substantial service improvements .
#9. 5:24:15PM BRIEFING REGARDING A POSSIBLE GENERAL OBLIGATION
BOND (GO BOND) FOR STREET RECONSTRUCTION. As part of the "Funding
Our Future" initiative, the City is considering issuing a GO bond
of up to $87 million dollars to pay for street reconstruction.
(This would be in addition to the recently adopted sales tax
increase, a portion of which will pay for increased street
maintenance. ) The Council may receive a briefing on the engagement
that has taken place, and next steps if the bond is placed on the
ballot for voters to consider. The Council is scheduled to vote on
this during the 7:00 p.m. Formal Meeting. View Attachments
Kira Luke, Scott Riding, Kelly Patterson, Elizabeth Buehler,
Lindsey Ferrari, Boyd Ferguson, and Siobahn Locke briefed the
Council with attachments . Mr . Riding discussed a survey for
registered voters (sampling, mode, and margin of error) , bond
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ballot tests (initial support & informed ballot) , ballot language
(exact question wording) , bond ballot simulation, bond support
(largely driven by road conditions) , bond opposition (pointed to
debt/cost) , early ballot vs . informed ballot, and over-all low
cost as the most determinative rationale.
Ms . Ferrari discussed public outreach including bond
education through post cards and media relations/stories . Ms .
Locke discussed public outreach through "coffee conversations" and
open houses & public hearings . Ms . Buehler discussed on-line
outreach through surveys, emails, and social media posts, as well
as providing the public with criteria from the Roadway Selection
Committee used to select which roads were in most need to be
repaired/reconstructed.
Councilmember Wharton inquired if the Parks, Bike & Trails
Master Plans were being considered along with upgrades/repairs to
roads . Ms . Buehler said there were questions from constituents
regarding the Parks, Bike, and Trails Master Plans . She said the
response given to those constituents was that there had been many
years of engagement and planning, and City roads were deemed to be
in the most need through the Pavement Condition Study.
Mr. Ferguson advised the Council they were prohibited from
utilizing public funds/City property to advocate for or against
the ballot proposition (should they vote to approve the bond on
the upcoming ballot) until after the election.
#10 . 6:05:30PM BRIEFING FROM THE ADMINISTRATION REGARDING THE
TIMELINE AND PROPOSED AMENDMENTS FOR UPDATING THE CITY' S INLAND
PORT ZONING ORDINANCE. House Bill 2001 requires the City to update
its zoning ordinance to support inland port uses before December
31, 2018. View Attachments
Nick Norris briefed the Council with attachments . Discussion
was held regarding impacts to zoning/overlay districts, key issues
the Planning Department was facing, approach to planning and
constraints, primary concepts, what had been completed thus far,
departments/agencies/property owners involved, and the timeline
for completion.
STANDING ITEMS
#11 . 6:27:15 PM REPORT AND ANNOUNCEMENTS FROM THE EXECUTIVE
DIRECTOR
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See File M 18-5 for announcements .
#10 . REPORT OF THE CHAIR AND VICE CHAIR
Councilmember Mendenhall indicated a special Redevelopment
Agency meeting had been noticed to conduct a Closed Executive
Session. She said the Council would also be included in this joint
meeting.
#11 . 6:27:41PM CONSIDER A MOTION TO ENTER INTO CLOSED SESSION,
IN KEEPING WITH UTAH CODE §52-4-205 FOR ANY ALLOWED PURPOSE.
Councilmember Luke moved and Councilmember Wharton seconded
to enter into Closed Session to discuss the purchase, exchange, or
lease of real property pursuant to Utah Code §52-4-205 (1) (d) , Utah
Open and Public Meetings Law and for Attorney-Client matters that
are privileged pursuant to Utah Code §78B-1-137 . A roll call vote
was taken. Council Members Johnston, Kitchen, Luke, Mendenhall,
Wharton, and Rogers voted aye . Councilmember Fowler was absent for
the vote but attended the meeting. See File M 18-1 for Sworn
Statement.
In Attendance: Council Members Mendenhall, Johnston, Kitchen,
Luke, Wharton, Fowler, and Rogers .
Others in Attendance: Cindy-Gust Jenson, Margaret Plane, Jennifer
Bruno, Patrick Leary, David Litvack, Lynn Pace, Lara Fritts, Danny
Walz, and Cindi Mansell .
The Closed Session adjourned at 7 : 22 p.m.
The work session adjourned at 7 : 22 p.m.
COUNCIL CHAIR
CITY RECORDER
This document is not intended to serve as a full transcript
as other items may have been discussed; please refer to the audio
or video for entire content pursuant to Utah Code §52-4-203 (2) (b) .
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This document along with the digital recording constitute the
official minutes of the City Council Work Session meeting held
August 14, 2018 .
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