01/15/2019 - Minutes MINUTES OF THE REDEVELOPMENT AGENCY OF SALT LAKE CITY
TUESDAY, JANUARY 15, 2019
The Board of Directors of the Redevelopment Agency (RDA) of Salt Lake
City, Utah, met on Tuesday, January 15, 2019 in Room 326, Committee Room,
City County Building, 451 South State .
In Attendance : Directors James Rogers, Erin Mendenhall, Amy Fowler,
Charlie Luke, Chris Wharton, and Andrew Johnston.
Staff in Attendance: Cindy Gust-Jenson, Council Executive Director;
Jennifer Bruno, Council Executive Deputy Director; David Litvack,
Mayor' s Deputy Chief of Staff; Danny Walz, RDA Chief Operating Officer;
Jill Wilkerson-Smith, RDA Deputy Chief Operating Officer; Margaret
Plane, City Attorney; Katherine Lewis, Senior City Attorney; Kort Utley,
RDA Senior Project Manager; Cara Lindsley, RDA Project Manager; Tammy
Hunsaker, RDA Project Manager; Corinne Piazza, RDA Project Coordinator;
Benjamin Luedtke, Council Public Policy Analyst; Melissa Jensen, Housing
and Neighborhood Development (HAND) Director; Allison Rowland, Council
Public Policy Analyst; Nicole Smedley, Assistant City Recorder; and Cindi
Mansell, City Recorder.
Guests in Attendance :
Director Fowler presided at and conducted the meeting.
The meeting was called to order at 2 : 10 p.m.
A. GENERAL COMMENTS TO THE BOARD
2:11:33 PM Paul Johnson addressed the Board on behalf of the Central
9th Community Council . He expressed support for the 900 South Streetscape
improvements, West Temple Gateway project, and particularly, the Central
9th portion. He said this had been a unique challenge and partnership for
all parties involved. He discussed the creation of form-based zoning and
its goal to create greater density towards a vibrant walkable area. He
said the density goal was happening. He said the 900 South area, where
improvements were planned was the heart of the neighborhood, but not
currently pedestrian-friendly (safety hazard/desperate for traffic-
calming measures) . He said Central 9th lacked green space, so for the
goal of form-based zoning this required correction. He said this required
support of traffic control, and ideas such as allowing and installing
meters in the area. He said this experiment would only succeed if 900
South Street improvements were made. He said this group hoped to work
with the City to achieve success of the form-based experiment.
B. PUBLIC HEARINGS
None scheduled.
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C. REDEVELOPMENT AGENCY BUSINESS
#1 . 2:13:49 PM Election of Chair and Vice Chair for Calendar Year
2019. The Board will nominate and elect members to serve as Chair and
Vice Chair of the RDA. View Chair & Vice Chair Ballots
Director Rogers moved and Director Wharton seconded to nominate
Director Fowler as RDA Chair for 2019, which motion carried, all
directors voted aye, except Director Johnston, who was absent for the
vote .
Director Fowler moved and Director Rogers seconded to nominate
Director Wharton as RDA Vice-Chair for 2019, which motion carried, all
directors voted aye, except Director Johnston, who was absent for the
vote .
#2 . 2:20:08 PM Approval of Minutes. Director Mendenhall moved and
Director Luke seconded to approve the minutes of the Redevelopment Agency
Board meetings held November 27, 2018, December 11, 2018, and December
18, 2018, which motion carried, all directors voted aye, except Director
Johnston, who was absent for the vote . View Minutes
(M 18-6)
#3 . 2:20:40 PM Potential Maintenance Funding Strategies for Public
Improvements associated with RDA Projects . The Board will be briefed
about funding strategies for ongoing maintenance of public improvements
created by the RDA, project examples, and a legal update on changes to
State law governing uses of agency funds. View Attachments
Danny Walz, Cindy Gust-Jenson, Cara Lindsley, Benjamin Luedtke, and
Kort Utley briefed the Board with attachments . Ms . Lindsley provided
background on the RDA project maintenance strategies, tools, projects
already constructed, and projects proposed. She said all included high
quality improvements with maintenance requirements outside of standard
City abilities . She said in the past when projects were completed, the
General Fund had been utilized, but pressure on City resources required
exploration of additional options . She reviewed the following potential
funding sources and discussed pros and cons of each: General Fund
Obligation; Tax Increment Obligation; Special Assessment Area; Owners'
Association; Neighborhood-Organized Maintenance Entity; Property Owner
Responsibility; and other fees such as business license or on-street pay
parking/Parking Benefit District.
Ms . Gust-Jenson said the General Fund was the current default. She
said there had been issues and the Council made a policy decision years
ago to facilitate situations wherein abutting property owners paid for
enhanced improvements/maintenance. She said the first was North Temple
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improvements and due to variety of issues, the ability to create a
Special Assessment Area (SAA) failed (as did Sugarhouse along the transit
line because it was not planned ahead) . She said it was not that people
formally rejected this type of funding source, rather steps that did not
work out. She said the City Council/RDA had talked about improvements
that created additional expense that should entail property owner
partnership. She said many improvements could be made without assessment
costs, and there was desire to change from the General Fund default.
Director Wharton inquired whether there was a model for SAA' s . Ms .
Lindsley said the Central Business District was an SAA that included
marketing and economic promotion activities yet no successful model for
maintenance (not included in this particular SAA scope of work) . Mr.
Luedtke said Staff had requested inventory of all existing SAA' s and
improvement districts in the City with intent to review and provide
information to the Board. Director Fowler said there was need for policy
discussions around these areas and how to maintain them; and moving
forward, policy on how to structure future projects so that a funding
mechanism was included.
Mr. Luedtke said last year was the first year the Council approved
the Capital Improvement Projects (CIP) funding log to include maintenance
for every approved project. Director Luke said the RDA needed to follow
that same model, as it would impact decisions .
Director Rogers requested definition of the difference between a
Property Owner' s Association and a Neighborhood-Organized Maintenance
Entity. Ms . Lindsley discussed the Owner' s Association as an area defined
by recording Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions (CC&R' s) against
the property. She said this approach worked on Marmalade Block where the
RDA owned the majority of property. She said maintenance could be
provided by the City or a private contractor and was administrated by a
Board of Directors for the Property Owner' s Association.
Director Rogers discussed streetscape on 300 West and money put
into beautification currently being maintained by the Public Services
Department via the General Fund. He suggested a program or business
willing to adopt a streetscape or parkway, etc.
Discussion continued for RDA project maintenance strategies . Ms .
Lindsley reviewed Neighborhood-Organized Maintenance Entity pros and
cons as an idea put together by Staff. She said Staff could look at
examples where this had been done but such had not been implemented in
Salt Lake City. She further reviewed property owner responsibility,
enhanced business license fees, and pay parking/Parking Benefit District
strategy ideas . She provided an overview of project examples from other
cities, and highlighted takeaways and recommendations .
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Mr. Luedtke said it might be helpful to contextualize tools with
specific City examples . He provided an overview of the Staff memo and
four recent examples of significant RDA projects requiring funding:
Sugarhouse Monument Plaza, Regent Street CBD, Streetscape improvements
on 900 south in the Central Business District (funded but not yet built)
and Station Center. He said these three groups (already built, in
process, or future/still a few years out) all had significant funding
needs . Director Mendenhall said she wanted Staff to piece together
funding tools for Sugarhouse Plaza and Regent Street . Mr. Luedtke said
Staff could also provide understanding of differences in State Law (SAA
or local improvement districts) as well as important differences between
these options . He said it would be helpful to understand the relationship
between tax bases, what tax increase would be needed to cover the
maintenance, or whether that threshold would be too much in an area.
Director Fowler discussed the need to most likely consider a guiding
maintenance policy for future projects as well as current projects .
Director Luke said there could be grandiose ideas to do amazing things
without thinking everything through and he wanted to see the Board have
not only options, but also a plan included for ongoing project/site
maintenance . He said items were built and there was need to figure out
how to maintain while continuing to build new things . He suggested for
any future RDA areas or projects, to include scalable RDA Staff
recommendations and that Staff work differently with property owners
gauging interest, long-term involvement, and how committed they were to
raising money through tax increment or another method. Discussion
followed regarding commitments to residents and partners, understanding
what happened to an RDA amenity once it was completed, concern with
pulling additional funding from the General Fund to deal with more
grandiose maintenance while having a difficult time cutting lawns, parks,
watering (basic functions) , and ultimately having resources to build and
maintain projects .
The Board discussed the 9th Central maintenance funding coming up
on a future agenda and encouraged Staff to come up with a recipe to fund
and move forward on that project . Discussion followed regarding the
future long-term question of creating that maintenance piece with each
of the project areas or improvements being done within an improvement
area. It was determined a longer conversation was needed, along with
consideration of project areas with immediate need.
#4 . 3:32:07 PM Overview of Housing Allocations and Projects. The
Board will receive a follow-up briefing about the roles and
interdepartmental coordination between the RDA and Housing and
Neighborhood Development (HAND) . The briefing includes an overview of
RDA housing allocations since Fiscal Year 2010-11 . View Attachments
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Danny Walz, Melissa Jensen, and Tammy Hunsaker briefed the Board
with attachments . Ms . Hunsaker said this was follow-up to a series of
discussions and referenced three spreadsheets breaking out those funding
allocations .
Director Luke thanked Staff for the detailed and helpful spreadsheet
layout. He inquired as to what kind of measurable or outcomes could Staff
report back based on the $5 . 5 million for the Housing Trust Fund. Ms .
Hunsaker said there were reports submitted to the RDA, but she would
look into going through those reports and tallying up information to
finish that process . Ms . Jensen said there was just over $5 . 5 million
producing a total of 1, 085 units/700 affordable . Discussion followed
regarding how affordability compared to other specific projects, and Ms .
Hunsaker provided information relative to Area Median Income (AMI) . She
said the previous practice (not formal policy) was to put funding into
the Housing Trust Fund. She said the amount varied from year to year and
had not been a standardized formula, but was based on project priorities
and fund balances . She said for the RDA, there were a total of 3, 075
units/1, 025 affordable .
The Board considered the spreadsheet being used as a model across
the City. Discussion followed regarding the Board wanting something to
consider as a broad policy to consider how to continue with affordable
housing, as well as RDA and HAND relations . The Board suggested the
spreadsheet could indicate what was being done with sales tax/policy and
function as a guiding tool . Staff indicated they would return with a
draft policy for Board feedback.
#5 . 3:44:55 PM Utah Open Meetings Law Training and Government
Records Access and Management Act (GRAMA) Training. The Board will
receive a briefing from the City Attorney's Office about the Utah Open
Meetings Law, and from the Recorder 's Office about the Government Records
Access and Management Act (GRAMA) . This briefing will serve as the annual
trainings for both the City Council and the Board of Directors of the
Redevelopment Agency. View Attachments
Katherine Lewis and Margaret Plane briefed the Council with
attachments . Ms . Lewis said the Utah Open Meetings Law Training was
required and conducted annually, and this took place either in the City
Council or the RDA meetings (not required in both/same body) .
Margaret Plane, Nicole Smedley, and Cindi Mansell briefed the
Council on GRAMA with attachments .
#6. 4:10:26 PM Block 67 Project Update. The Board will receive a
verbal update on recent changes to the proposed large-scale mixed-use
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development on Block 67, a City block bounded by 100 South, 200 South,
200 West and 300 West.
Danny Walz, Allison Rowland, Jill Wilkerson-Smith, and Corinne
Piazza briefed the Council . Mr. Walz said Staff thought it helpful to
return and brief the Council on development issues . He discussed
significant challenges and issues associated with pulling this out of
the Central Business District Improvement Area (CBIA) to establish a
Community Reinvestment Area (CRA) . He said there were currently bonds
secured by tax increment from the CBIA and Staff was risk adverse to
complications . He said the developer was now proposing a new development
on the north side of the block that would essentially put those
properties crossing property lines . He said Staff was conducting fact
finding as to whether those lines delineate collection of increment or
not. He further discussed progress towards the $15 million interlocal
agreement in conjunction with Salt Lake County and said that agreement
would return to the Board. He said in regards to the facilitation
process, Staff had the first stakeholder group meeting scheduled. He
said there had been a great deal of interest (City, County, developer,
Japanese community representatives) . He said the goal was to determine
the Request for Proposal (RFP) process to reach out and hire a consultant
to spend the $100, 000 allocated towards the visioning process, project
scope and how the stakeholder group would be incorporated, stakeholder
group representation, and stakeholder group oversight .
#7 . 4:20:13 PM Report and Announcements from the Executive Director.
Report of the Executive Director, including a review information items,
announcements, and scheduling items. The Board of Directors may give
feedback or policy input.
Danny Walz provided updates on a variety of projects .
#8. Report and Announcements from RDA Staff. The Board may review
Board information and announcements. The Board may give feedback on any
item related to City business, including but not limited to scheduling
items .
Item not held.
The meeting adjourned at 4 : 26 p.m.
Redevelopment Agency Chair
Secretary
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This document is not intended to serve as a full transcript as
additional discussion may have been held; please refer to the audio or
video for entire content pursuant to Utah Code §52-4-203 (2) (b) .
This document along with the digital recording constitute the
official minutes of the Salt Lake City Redevelopment Agency meeting held
January 15, 2019 .
clm
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