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08/15/2023 - Work Session - Meeting MaterialsSALT LAKE CITY COUNCIL AGENDA WORK SESSION   August 15, 2023 Tuesday 2:00 PM Council meetings are held in a hybrid meeting format. Hybrid meetings allow people to join online or in person at the City & County Building. Learn more at www.slc.gov/council/agendas. Council Work Room 451 South State Street, Room 326 Salt Lake City, UT 84111 SLCCouncil.com 6:00 pm Formal Meeting & 7:00 pm Truth-in-Taxation Hearing Room 326 (See separate agendas) Welcome and public meeting rules In accordance with State Statute and City Ordinance, the meeting may be held electronically. After 5:00 p.m., please enter the City & County Building through the main east entrance. The Work Session is a discussion among Council Members and select presenters. The public is welcome to listen. Items scheduled on the Work Session or Formal Meeting may be moved and / or discussed during a different portion of the Meeting based on circumstance or availability of speakers. The Website addresses listed on the agenda may not be available after the Council votes on the item. Not all agenda items will have a webpage for additional information read associated agenda paperwork. Generated: 11:27:57 Note: Dates not identified in the project timeline are either not applicable or not yet determined. Item start times and durations are approximate and are subject to change. Work Session Items   1.Informational: Updates from the Administration ~ 2:00 p.m.  15 min. The Council will receive information from the Administration on major items or projects in progress. Topics may relate to major events or emergencies (if needed), services and resources related to people experiencing homelessness, active public engagement efforts, and projects or staffing updates from City Departments, or other items as appropriate. FYI – Project Timeline: (subject to change per Chair direction or Council discussion) Briefing - Recurring Briefing Set Public Hearing Date - n/a Hold hearing to accept public comment - n/a TENTATIVE Council Action - n/a   2.Ordinance: Zoning Map Amendment at Approximately 2350 North and Annexation at Approximately 2441 North Rose Park Lane ~ 2:15 p.m.  30 min. The Council will receive a briefing about annexation and zoning changes for properties located at approximately 2350 North Rose Park Lane. The changes include: Annexation into Salt Lake City approximately 28 acres of property generally located at approximately 2441 North Rose Park Lane. The annexation requires designating a zone for each property within the annexation area. The properties are proposed to be zoned as follows: •2440 N Rose Park Lane (City-owned) – OS, Open Space •2441 N Rose Park Lane (Hunter Stables) – R-MU, Residential/Mixed-Use •2462 N Rose Park Lane (State-owned) – OS, Open Space Zoning Map Amendment at approximately 2350 North Rose Park Lane from AG-2 – Agricultural to R-MU, Residential/Mixed Use. The property is currently within Salt Lake City boundaries. Although the petitions propose specific zones for the properties, the Council may consider other zones with similar characteristics. The properties at 2350 and 2441 North are currently used for horse boarding and outdoor equipment storage. The changes would facilitate the future development of a mixed-use, multi-family residential development with potentially 1800 dwelling units. Additional properties at 2440 North (City-owned) and 2462 North Rose Park Lane (State-owned) would be annexed into the City as part of the petition. Petition No. PLNPCM2021-01124 & PLNPCM2021-01134. FYI – Project Timeline: (subject to change per Chair direction or Council discussion) Briefing - Tuesday, August 15, 2023 Set Public Hearing Date - Tuesday, August 15, 2023 Hold hearing to accept public comment - Tuesday, September 5, 2023 at 7 p.m. TENTATIVE Council Action - Tuesday, September 19, 2023   3.Informational: Capital Asset Plan Early Check-In for Policy Guidance ~ 2:45 p.m.  30 min. The Council will receive a briefing about the process, goals, and prioritization criteria to create a Capital Asset Plan. It would prioritize projects over a five-year period to implement the City's visions from Council-adopted master plans. Prioritized projects would go through the annual open and competitive Capital Improvement Program (CIP) to receive funding. A Capital Asset Plan would help bridge the gap between 20-year master plan aspirations and the annual CIP process, such as identifying efficiencies of combining projects across departments and plans, tracking metrics for high-level policy goals, and aligning funding sources with eligible uses. FYI – Project Timeline: (subject to change per Chair direction or Council discussion) Briefing - Tuesday, August 15, 2023 Set Public Hearing Date - n/a Hold hearing to accept public comment - n/a TENTATIVE Council Action - n/a   4.Ordinance: Budget Amendment No.1 for Fiscal Year 2023- 24 ~ 3:15 p.m.  30 min. The Council will receive a briefing about Budget Amendment No.1 for the Fiscal Year 2023-24 Budget. Budget amendments happen several times each year to reflect adjustments to the City’s budgets, including proposed project additions and modifications. The proposed amendment includes additional funding for downtown open streets events this coming fall, local matching funds for Bipartisan Infrastructure Law grants to rebuild bridges over the Jordan River, and funding expanded elements of the 2100 South reconstruction project through the Sugar House Business District, among other items. The proposed amendment also includes an ordinance to amend the Salt Lake City Consolidated Fee Schedule to address lane closures and sidewalk closures separately. For more information on this item visit tinyurl.com/SLCFY24. FYI – Project Timeline: (subject to change per Chair direction or Council discussion) Briefing - Tuesday, August 15, 2023 Set Public Hearing Date - Tuesday, August 15, 2023 Hold hearing to accept public comment - Tuesday, September 5, 2023 at 7 p.m. TENTATIVE Council Action - Tuesday, September 19, 2023   5.Tentative Break ~ 3:45 p.m.  20 min. FYI – Project Timeline: (subject to change per Chair direction or Council discussion) Briefing - n/a Set Public Hearing Date - n/a Hold hearing to accept public comment - n/a TENTATIVE Council Action - n/a   6.Resolution: Ivory University House Public Benefits Analysis ~ 4:05 p.m.  30 min. The Council will receive a briefing about the Administration’s public benefit analysis for a project that would provide new student housing at the University of Utah. The public benefit analysis was performed to potentially justify impact and permit fee waivers and refunds paid by the Ivory University House, L3C, a low-profit limited liability company. In return, over a period of ten years, Ivory University House would pledge need-based scholarships for Salt Lake City residents valued at the same amount as the fee waivers and refunds. FYI – Project Timeline: (subject to change per Chair direction or Council discussion) Briefing - Tuesday, August 15, 2023 Set Public Hearing Date - Tuesday, August 8, 2023 Hold hearing to accept public comment - Tuesday, September 5, 2023 at 7 p.m. TENTATIVE Council Action - Tuesday, September 19, 2023   7.Informational: Unallocated Housing Program Income Funds Follow-up ~ 4:35 p.m.  45 min. The Council will receive a follow-up briefing on unallocated U.S. Housing and Urban Development (HUD) program income funds from the Community Development Block Grant or CDBG and Home Investment Partnership programs, among others. The briefing will include an overview of projects and programs based on the Council's earlier policy guidance, the next steps for use of the funds, and areas needing further Council policy feedback. FYI – Project Timeline: (subject to change per Chair direction or Council discussion) Briefing - Tuesday, August 15, 2023 Set Public Hearing Date - n/a Hold hearing to accept public comment - n/a TENTATIVE Council Action - n/a   8.Board Appointment: Police Civilian Review Board: Elizabeth Hanna ~ 5:20 p.m.  5 min The Council will interview Elizabeth Hanna prior to considering appointment to the Police Civilian Review Board for a term ending September 7, 2026. FYI – Project Timeline: (subject to change per Chair direction or Council discussion) Briefing - Tuesday, August 15, 2023 Set Public Hearing Date - n/a Hold hearing to accept public comment - n/a TENTATIVE Council Action - Tuesday, August 15, 2023   Standing Items   9.Report of the Chair and Vice Chair   Report of Chair and Vice Chair.    10.Report and Announcements from the Executive Director -  - Report of the Executive Director, including a review of Council information items and announcements. The Council may give feedback or staff direction on any item related to City Council business, including but not limited to scheduling items.    11.Tentative Closed Session -  - The Council will consider a motion to enter into Closed Session. A closed meeting described under Section 52-4-205 may be held for specific purposes including, but not limited to: a. discussion of the character, professional competence, or physical or mental health of an individual; b. strategy sessions to discuss collective bargaining; c. strategy sessions to discuss pending or reasonably imminent litigation; d. strategy sessions to discuss the purchase, exchange, or lease of real property, including any form of a water right or water shares, if public discussion of the transaction would: (i) disclose the appraisal or estimated value of the property under consideration; or (ii) prevent the public body from completing the transaction on the best possible terms; e. strategy sessions to discuss the sale of real property, including any form of a water right or water shares, if: (i) public discussion of the transaction would: (A) disclose the appraisal or estimated value of the property under consideration; or (B) prevent the public body from completing the transaction on the best possible terms; (ii) the public body previously gave public notice that the property would be offered for sale; and (iii) the terms of the sale are publicly disclosed before the public body approves the sale; f. discussion regarding deployment of security personnel, devices, or systems; and g. investigative proceedings regarding allegations of criminal misconduct. A closed meeting may also be held for attorney-client matters that are privileged pursuant to Utah Code § 78B-1-137, and for other lawful purposes that satisfy the pertinent requirements of the Utah Open and Public Meetings Act.    CERTIFICATE OF POSTING On or before 2:00 p.m. on Friday, August 11, 2023, the undersigned, duly appointed City Recorder, does hereby certify that the above notice and agenda was (1) posted on the Utah Public Notice Website created under Utah Code Section 63F-1-701, and (2) a copy of the foregoing provided to The Salt Lake Tribune and/or the Deseret News and to a local media correspondent and any others who have indicated interest. CINDY LOU TRISHMAN SALT LAKE CITY RECORDER Final action may be taken in relation to any topic listed on the agenda, including but not limited to adoption, rejection, amendment, addition of conditions and variations of options discussed. The City & County Building is an accessible facility. People with disabilities may make requests for reasonable accommodation, which may include alternate formats, interpreters, and other auxiliary aids and services. Please make requests at least two business days in advance. To make a request, please contact the City Council Office at council.comments@slcgov.com, 801-535-7600, or relay service 711. Administrative Updates August 15, 2023 www.slc.gov/feedback/ Regularly updated with highlighted ways to engage with the City. Community Engagement Highlights Community & Neighborhoods slc.gov/canTransportationslc.gov/transportation/ www.slc.gov/feedback/ •Capitol Hill Traffic Calming (D3) •Construction start date August 21, expected completion Mid-October •1000 West Intersection Improvement and Traffic Calming (D1/2) •Take the survey! •600/700 North Reconstruction (D1) •www.600northSLC.org Redevelopment Agency slcrda.com •City Creek Daylighting at Folsom Trail (D2) •Give your feedback online! Community & Neighborhoods slc.gov/canBallpark NEXT / RDA Ballparknext.com Planning slc.gov/planning Thriving in PlaceMayor’s Office Location Date Time Roots Coffee Aug. 15 10:30am – 12:30pm Northwest Rec Center Aug. 15 2pm – 4:30pm Sugar House Rocks Aug. 18 6pm – 9pm Kensington Street Festival Aug. 19 2pm – 8pm August Community Office Hours Community & Neighborhoods slc.gov/canAugust Events These events are a collection of City Sponsored, ACE, and publicly permitted events. Event Date Location Partners in the Park 8/15 Northwest Rec Center Jordan River BioBlitz (Love Your Block, Public Lands)8/16 Poplar Grove Park Mayor's Bike to Work Day 8/17 Jordan Park Jayhawks Block Party 8/17 Sugar House Rocks Concert Series 8/18 Monument Plaza in Sugar House West View Media Issue Launch Celebrations 8/19 Sugar Space Art Warehouse Downtown Farmers Market 8/19 Pioneer Park Kensington Street Festival 8/19 Kensington Ave. (Main Street – Major Street) Project Rainbow Summer BarBQ 8/26 Sugar Space Event Center Break Bread Barber Co Mural / Love Your Block 8/27 Break Bread Barber Co. Art in the Heart of Fairpark – Community Party 8/28 All Chay (1264 W 500 N) Homeless Resource Center Utilization •August 7th-11th HRCs:98.7% Rapid Intervention/ EIM •No EIM •37 HEART-tracked camps •RIT locations: o VOA Outreach Engagement: 7 o RIT Site Rehabilitations: 6 (+16) Resource Fair: •Aug 11- Library Square Odyssey House, SLCo Health, Food Justice Coalition, D4 City Council Kayak Court -Friday August 18th- Jordan River N Temple to Cornell St Homelessness Update Additional System Information: Salt Lake Valley Coalition to End Homelessness (SLVCEH) endutahhomelessness.org/ salt-lake-valley Utah Office of Homeless Services (OHS) jobs.utah.gov/homelessness/ index.html Winter Services Plan •600+ beds 24/7 operations •175 HRC Flex beds •(65 St. Vincent DePaul 7pm-7am) •October- April •3 cities- Emergency Shelter Beds •MVP- Sandy •VOA Detox Expansion •Code Blue Emergency Options •Below 15 degrees F •Working on Providers + Funding Homelessness Update Winter Services Plan- approved by Utah Homelessness Council August 10th CITY COUNCIL OF SALT LAKE CITY 451 SOUTH STATE STREET, ROOM 304 P.O. BOX 145476, SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH 84114-5476 COUNCIL.SLCGOV.COM TEL 801-535-7600 FAX 801-535-7651 COUNCIL STAFF REPORT CITY COUNCIL of SALT LAKE CITY TO:City Council Members FROM: Nick Tarbet DATE:August 15, 2023 RE: North Rose Park Lane Annexation and Zoning Map Amendments Petitions PLNPCM2021-01124/01134 PROJECT TIMELINE: Briefing 1: August 15, 2023 Set Date: August 15, 2023 Public Hearing: September 5, 2023 Potential Action: TBD ISSUE AT-A-GLANCE The Council will receive a briefing about annexation and zoning changes for properties located at approximately 2350 North Rose Park Lane (see map page 2). The changes include: 1. Annexation into Salt Lake City about 28 acres of property generally located at approximately 2441 North Rose Park Lane. The annexation requires designating a zone for each property within the annexation area. The properties are proposed to be zoned as follows: •2440 N Rose Park Lane (City-owned) – OS, Open Space •2441 N Rose Park Lane (Hunter Stables) – R-MU, Residential/Mixed-Use •2462 N Rose Park Lane (State-owned) – OS, Open Space 2. Zoning Map Amendment at approximately 2350 North Rose Park Lane from AG-2 – Agricultural to R-MU, Residential/Mixed Use. The property is currently within Salt Lake City boundaries. Although the petitions propose specific zones for the properties, the Council may consider other zones with similar characteristics. The properties at 2350 and 2441 North are currently used for horse boarding and outdoor equipment storage. The changes would facilitate the future development of a mixed-use, multi-family residential development with potentially 1800 dwelling units. Additional properties at 2440 North (City-owned) and 2462 North Rose Park Lane (State-owned) would be annexed into the City as part of the petition. The zoning of properties annexed into the city receive their zoning designation during that process. They do not go through the traditional rezone process. However, the annexation process includes substantial public outreach all along the way. Page | 2 This annexation and zoning amendments are not related to the Northpoint Small Area plan, a separate petition that the Council is also considering at this time. That petition is for an area north/west of I-215. Vicinity Map Page 4 Planning Commission Staff Report Proposed Project Description The applicant’s project overview is found in Attachment C of the Planning Commission staff report. (It is also pulled out in this memo as Attachment A) It includes drawings of the draft site plan. They state the proposed plan would include the following: ▪11 buildings (5 stories – less than 75’ in height); ▪164 units per building (500 sq. ft. minimum); ▪Total density of 1,804 units; ▪Building coverage of 29%; ▪Parking Provided: Podium (2 levels each building) (1,760 parking spaces), and Surface ▪(775 parking spaces) (total of 2,535 parking spaces); Page | 3 Policy Questions ▪If the Council chooses to move forward with the annexation and zoning amendments, does the Council support including the eleven conditions outlined in the staff report in the final ordinance? ▪The Council may wish to ask the applicant if any of the housing units will be designated affordable or if they would be willing to consider including deed restricted affordable units in the development. ▪The Council may wish to ask if this project would be eligible for funds from the Westside Community Initiative. If yes, has the applicant talked with the Administration to see if that funding could help include public benefits into this development. ▪The Council may wish to ask the Administration how the City could more consistently inform developers of opportunity to participate in the Westside Community Initiative affordable housing program ▪The Planning Transmittal notes the North Access Road, which would provide circulation to Redwood Road, is planned by the City/State. • The Council may wish to ask the Administration about the status of the planning and funding for that proposed road. Planning Commission Recommendation The Planning Commission forwarded a negative recommendation by a vote of 6 to 4. The Commission’s motion to recommend denial was based on the following: (Pages 2-3, Transmittal Letter) 1. The zoning map amendment, for the reason that it does not comply with the stated zoning goals of the small area master plan (Rose Park Small Area Plan). ▪the Commission’s motion refers to the Rose Park Small Area Plan (2001) which has policies that call for the Open Space or Agricultural zoning in the future for the rezone and associated annexation property. The requested R-MU zone does not align with those specific zones. 2. The annexation, based on Plan Salt Lake and the access to open space are not met. And the 2016 Salt Lake Housing Policy points of emphasizing the value of transit-oriented developments and the livability of neighborhoods. ▪A Plan Salt Lake policy encourages access to parks and recreational spaces within a half mile of all residents. In its discussion, the Commission noted that despite the property being adjacent to the Regional Athletic Complex (RAC), use of the RAC is generally restricted to organized groups, such as leagues, and future residents of the conceptual 1,800 dwelling unit development wouldn’t be able to freely use the facility. ▪Council “Housing Policy Statements” from 2016 that emphasize transit-oriented development and livability of neighborhoods, emphasize the value of transit-oriented development, transit accessibility, and proximity to services and address the livability of neighborhoods and concentrations of aging adults, and plan and implement strategies that will allow residents to Age in Place. The Planning commission did not offer any concerns about the proposed zoning designation for the state and City owned properties involved in the annexation. Planning Staff Recommendation Page | 4 Planning staff’s analysis found the application generally met applicable standards and recommended the Planning Commission forward a favorable recommendation with eleven conditions. Those conditions are outlined below. See pages 2-3 of the Planning Commission for the detailed list. 1.Traffic Impact Study Improvements – improvements noted in the traffic impact study are completed prior to any certificate of occupancy being issued 2.Rose Park Lane Improvement - The developer shall make all public right of way improvements for Rose Park Lane adjacent to the development, including but not limited to road widening, paving, curb, gutter, sidewalk, utilities, and park strip landscaping. 3.Sidewalk Improvements – sidewalk shall be installed adjacent to the site and offsite to provide a complete pedestrian connection from each phase of the development to the Regional Athletic Complex 4.Public Utility Improvements – comply with all public utility requirements 5.City Drain Usage – if development plans require discharge to city drains an offsite lift station may be required as determined by the Public Utilities Director 6.City Drain (canal) Setback – a 50’ setback from the city drain and no buildings or parking allowed within the setback 7.R-MU setback conflicts – Maximum front setback provisions of the R-MU do not apply where a greater setback is required along the city drain, or the freeway scenic landscape setback 8.Parking Requirement – must comply with the General Context minimum parking requirements in Table 21A.44.040-A of the Salt Lake City Zoning Ordinance 9.Sound Attenuation – residential uses be built with at least 30 dBs of sound attenuation in sleeping areas and 25 dBs in other areas due to proximity to the freeway 10.State Park Adjacent Landscaping - The landscaped setback requirements of the “Freeway Scenic Landscape Setback” applied along the east property line where it is directly across the street from the Jordan River OHV State Recreation Area (2462 N Rose Park Lane). The requirement shall apply where new development occurs within 100' of that portion of the east property line. 11.State Park Noise Disclosure – provide a disclosure to future residents, tenants and owners regarding the potential for high levels of noise from the Jordan River OHS recreation area 12.HVAC Filters: That air filters with a minimum rating of MERV 13, or equivalent, shall be used in all HVAC equipment. This applies to any replacement filters. (This is intended to reduce freeway pollution in resident's homes) 13.Construction Impacts: City Staff develop a condition to mitigate impacts on adjacent properties from construction activity on the 2350 and 2441 properties. (This was to help address a concern that construction activity would negatively impact a few residents toward the north end of Rose Park Lane and other users of the road - fugitive dust was one impact that we heard a lot about from residents with recent construction on 2200 West.) Key Concepts Identified in the Plan Page | 5 The zoning of a property can outlast the life of a building(s); therefore, any rezoning application should be considered on the merits of changing the zoning of that property, not simply based on a potential project. Even though there are draft plans pertaining to this project, it is not within the scope of the Council’s responsibility to review the plans. However, the plans for a proposed project can help the Council weigh options as they consider the annexation and zoning amendments. The Planning Commission staff report includes summaries for each of the zoning districts being considered: OS, AG and R-MU. They are included in this memo as Attachment B. Pages 7-13 of the Planning Commission staff report outline five key considerations that were evaluated by Planning staff. A short summary of each is provided below. Please see the Planning Commission staff report for full analysis. 1. Plan Considerations for Zoning Designation/Zoning Amendment a.Planning staff found the proposed rezones to OS and AG are consistent with the Rose Park Small Area Plan. They also found the proposed rezone to R-MU Residential and low- intensity commercial uses are compatible with recreational uses like the Regional Athletic Complex. They also found other City plans support the proposed zoning amendments. See Attachment C for full analysis of compatibility with City plans. 2. Traffic Impact Study and Recommended Improvements a. The petitioner provided a traffic study that propose the following mitigation and improvements be made: i. Installation of I-215 interchange traffic lights and striping modifications (needed to support existing traffic prior to development coming in 2025) 1. This would support 200 units on the site. ii. Southbound left turn lane addition to the Rose Park Lane/I-215 access road intersection 1. This would support up to 500 units. iii. Installation of the North Access Road (provides circulation to Redwood Road and is planned by the City/State) 1. This would support the remainder of the units. b. Planning staff also recommends the following improvements be built to ensure the roadway can support the proposed development i. Widening of and improvements to Rose Park Lane that would be required for a subdivision, including curb, gutter, paving, striping, and utilities. The current roadway next to the property is roughly paved with asphalt and has no curb, gutter, or striping. ii. A pedestrian connection from the site to the existing sidewalk network at the RAC across the street. This will require a crosswalk across Rose Park Lane and sidewalk paving on the east side of Rose Park Lane and some along the development site. 3. R-MU Zone and Proposed Modification Conditions a. Planning Staff recommends the following be included as a conditions of approval: i. R-MU has no parking requirement. Staff proposes a parking requirement as a condition due to the current lack of transit accessibility. 1. “General Context” requirements would apply, same as most RMF zones ii. R-MU has a maximum front setback, conflicting with a proposed canal setback 1. Public Utilities is recommending a setback from the canal (City Drain) Page | 6 2. Staff proposes waiving the maximum front setback where it conflicts with canal 4. Freeway Proximity, Noise, and Pollution a. Planning Staff recommends the following be included as a condition of approval: i. A condition requiring noise attenuation improvements for any new buildings is being recommended due to the proximity to the freeway. ii. Special freeway landscaping will be required which can help mitigate pollution impacts of the freeway. iii. A requirement for a notice to residents/tenants/owners about potential noise from the OHV State Park is also recommended. iv. The freeway landscaping requirement is also proposed adjacent to the OHV State Park to reduce the potential for fugitive dust impacts to residents. 5. Alternative Zones and Uses for the Site a. The applicant originally proposed RMF-75. Planning staff was concerned about the lack of walkable services with a single use zone, R-MU requires commercial/retail on the first floor. Staff also considered the impacts of commercial or light industrial zones and found they would have a negative impact on the Regional Athletic Complex. Public Process Attachment H of the Planning Commission staff report outlines the public process and public comments received during the process. (It is included as Attachment D of this memo.) •May 16, 2022: The Westpointe Community Council was sent the required 45-day notice for recognized community organizations. The notice asked for input from the organization and whether the organization would like the applicant to present at one of their meetings. • May 16, 2022: An online open house webpage was posted to provide additional information on the requests. A link as provided to the Westpointe Community Council and included in mailed notifications to nearby property owners. •May 17, 2022: Mailed early notifications were sent out to nearby property owners within 300 feet of the properties. •Notice of the Planning Commission public hearing for the proposal included: o February 8, 2023 ▪Public hearing notice signs posted on the properties. o February 8, 2023 ▪Public hearing notice mailed. ▪Public notice posted on City and State websites and Planning Division listserv. North Rose Park Lane Annexation & Rezone February 22, 2023 ATTACHMENT C: Applicant’s Narrative and Concept Plan 22 4842-6277-7292 EXHIBIT A SUBMITTAL REQUIREMENTS PROJECT DESCRIPTION 1.PURPOSE FOR THE AMENDMENT IN QUESTION: •Acreage: 4.93 acres •Address: 2350 N. Rose Park Ln., Salt Lake City, Utah 84116 (the “Property”) •Current Zoning: Agricultural 2 Acre Minimum (AG-2) •Proposed Zoning: High Density Multi-Family Residential District (RMF-75) 2.A DESCRIPTION OF THE PROPOSED USE OF THE PROPERTY BEING REZONED: The Property is currently in Salt Lake City. The intention is to annex in adjoining land from unincorporated Salt Lake County (the “Annexation Property”)1 and have a single, integrated multifamily project located on the combined land. The requested rezone will facilitate the development of this project, and will tie in infrastructure improvements intended for the area to facilitate development. The conceptual site plan, attached hereto as Exhibit B, contemplates, among other things for both the Property and Annexation Property: •11 buildings (5 stories – less than 75’ in height); •164 units per building (500 sq. ft. minimum); •Total density of 1,804 units; •Building coverage of 29%; •Parking Provided: Podium (2 levels each building) (1,760 parking spaces), and Surface (775 parking spaces) (total of 2,535 parking spaces); •Parking coverage of 30%; and •Landscaping coverage of 41%. 3.REASONS WHY THE PRESENT ZONING MAY NOT BE APPROPRIATE FOR THE AREA: •The Property is adjoined by the following zoning districts: •North: N/A Unincorporated [Annexation Property (High Density Multi-Family Residential District (RMF-75)) upon completion of annexation and rezone)] •East: Open Space (OS) •South: Single Family Residential (R-1-7000) separated by I-215 and Frontage Rd. •West: Business Park (BP) separated by I-215 •The Property is located within an agricultural area of the Rose Park Small Area Plan (adopted 2001), and other details therein are very limited. The Property is generally located within the Northwest Jordan River/Airport Master Plan (adopted 1992) but the exact location of the Property is not discussed within such Master Plan. The Northwest Jordan River/Airport Master Plan highlights the importance of eliminating use conflicts between adjacent properties. Multi-family residential housing does not conflict with the surrounding uses detailed above. Further, we intend to preserve open space and existing 1 The Annexation Property adjoins the Property to the north (2441 N. Rose Park Ln., Salt Lake City, Utah 84116). The Annexation Property is approximately 17.21 acres. Applicant is simultaneously seeking to annex the Annexation Property into Salt Lake City with requested zoning of RMF -75. 23 4842-6277-7292 trees on the Property and the Annexation Property in accordance with the Salt Lake City Urban Forestry. •A rezone of the Property would support business park uses in the area, if they develop in accordance with current zoning. The existing Salt Lake City Regional Athletic Complex (RAC) to the east provides an adjacent, complimentary use. Multi-family residential housing will involve efficient use of the Property and Annexation Property and coordinate well with existing and planned public infrastructure. •A rezone of the Property and the Annexation Property will support nearby developments, including, without limitation, the RAC, and will provide infrastructure improvements for the area to facilitate development. We have been in contact with the Utah Department of Transportation, Salt Lake City Public Utilities, and others with respect to constructing and/or contributing to: (i) Sports Park Boulevard, (ii) the upgrade of the intersection of Sports Park Boulevard and Redwood Road, (iii) new water and sewer lines through Sports Park Boulevard, and (iv) a Salt Lake City drain bridge on or near the Property. The installation of Sports Park Boulevard and the upgrade of the aforementioned intersection will reduce traffic congestion on Rose Park Lane after RAC sporting events. The construction of new water and sewer lines and the drain bridge will facilitate development in the area generally. 4.PARCEL NUMBERS TO BE CHANGED: •Property: Parcel Id. No. 08153010030000; AG-2 to RMF-75 •Annexation Property: Parcel Id. No. 08151000240000; Unincorporated to RMF-75 24 4842-6277-7292 EXHIBIT B SITE PLAN [See Attached] 25 20 21 23 54 13 65 48 68 18 46 12 2 5 44 95 45 56 22 42 11 3 13 5 44 DW N 10 % DW N 10 % DW N 10 % DW N 10 % DW N 10 % DW N 10 % DW N 10 % DW N 10 % DW N 10 % DW N 10 % PARKING ( T Y P ) 25 ' 25 ' 25 ' 25 ' 40'Rose P a r k L a n e C o u n t y Utah State Parks Jordan River OHV Park I-215 Sa l t L a k e C i t y Club House PLAYGROUND PERIMETER TRAIL GATHERING AREA FENCED DOG AREA PERIMETER TRAIL LAWN SALT LAKE DRAIN Pool HUNTER STABLES APARTMENTS CONCEPTUAL SITE PLAN 12 MAY 2021SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH Scale: 1" = 100'-0" 0 50' 100'200' Plotted: 5/12/21 at 9:42am By: dans P:\Projects\19-103 Hunter Stables HD\02-Working\01-Drawings\01-SD\19-103 Site Plan MColor 210512.dwgFile Path: SLC RAC TRAIL CONNECTING TO JORDAN RIVER AND LEGACY PARKWAY TRAIL ROAD CONNECTING TO N REDWOOD RD 26 23 13 65 48 68 18 46 12 2 5 44 95 45 56 22 42 11 3 13 5 44 DWN 10% DWN 10% DWN 10% DWN 10% DWN 10% DWN 10% DWN DWN 10% PA R K I N G ( T Y P ) 25' 40 ' Ro s e P a r k L a n e County U t a h S t a t e P a r k s Jo r d a n R i v e r O H V P a r k Salt Lake City N R E D W O O D R D JO R D A N R I V E R SPOTS PARK BOULEVARD Cl u b Ho u s e JORDAN RIVER AND LEGACY PARKWAY TRAIL P L A Y G R O U N D S A L T L A K E D R A I N Po o l HUNTER STABLES APARTMENTS CONCEPTUAL SITE PLAN 13 APRIL 2120SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH Scale: 1" = 100'-0" 0 50' 100'200' Plotted: 4/13/21 at 2:37pm By: tylerr P:\Projects\19-103 Hunter Stables HD\02-Working\01-Drawings\01-SD\19-2013 Site Plan MColor.dwgFile Path: SLC RAC TRAIL CONNECTING TO JORDAN RIVER AND LEGACY PARKWAY TRAIL ROAD CONNECTING TO N REDWOOD RD 27 28 20 21 23 54 13 65 48 68 18 46 12 2 5 44 95 45 56 22 42 11 3 13 5 44 DW N 10 % DW N 10 % DW N 10 % DW N 10 % DW N 10 % DW N 10 % DW N 10 % DW N 10 % DW N 10 % DW N 10 % PARKING ( T Y P ) 25 ' 25 ' 25 ' 25 ' 40'Rose P a r k L a n e C o u n t y Utah State Parks Jordan River OHV Park I-215 Sa l t L a k e C i t y Club House PLAYGROUND PERIMETER TRAIL GATHERING AREA FENCED DOG AREA PERIMETER TRAIL LAWN SALT LAKE DRAIN Pool HUNTER STABLES APARTMENTS CONCEPTUAL SITE PLAN 12 MAY 2021SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH Scale: 1" = 100'-0" 0 50' 100'200' Plotted: 5/12/21 at 9:42am By: dans P:\Projects\19-103 Hunter Stables HD\02-Working\01-Drawings\01-SD\19-103 Site Plan MColor 210512.dwgFile Path: SLC RAC TRAIL CONNECTING TO JORDAN RIVER AND LEGACY PARKWAY TRAIL ROAD CONNECTING TO N REDWOOD RD 29 23 13 65 48 68 18 46 12 2 5 44 95 45 56 22 42 11 3 13 5 44 DWN 10% DWN 10% DWN 10% DWN 10% DWN 10% DWN 10% DWN DWN 10% PA R K I N G ( T Y P ) 25' 40 ' Ro s e P a r k L a n e County U t a h S t a t e P a r k s Jo r d a n R i v e r O H V P a r k Salt Lake City N R E D W O O D R D JO R D A N R I V E R SPOTS PARK BOULEVARD Cl u b Ho u s e JORDAN RIVER AND LEGACY PARKWAY TRAIL P L A Y G R O U N D S A L T L A K E D R A I N Po o l HUNTER STABLES APARTMENTS CONCEPTUAL SITE PLAN 13 APRIL 2120SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH Scale: 1" = 100'-0" 0 50' 100'200' Plotted: 4/13/21 at 2:37pm By: tylerr P:\Projects\19-103 Hunter Stables HD\02-Working\01-Drawings\01-SD\19-2013 Site Plan MColor.dwgFile Path: SLC RAC TRAIL CONNECTING TO JORDAN RIVER AND LEGACY PARKWAY TRAIL ROAD CONNECTING TO N REDWOOD RD 30 31 North Rose Park Lane Annexation & Rezone February 22, 2023 ATTACHMENT F: Zoning District Information This attachment includes information sheets for the zone currently applied to the property within the City (2350 N) and the proposed zones for all of the properties. 1. AG-2, Agricultural Zoning District 2. OS, Open Space Zoning District 3. R-MU, Residential/Mixed Use Zoning District 4. Special Purpose Land Use Tables Showing Allowed OS and AG-2 Uses 5. Residential Land Use Table Showing Allowed R-MU Uses 45 AGRICULTURAL (2 ACRE MINIMUM) Zoning Diagram of Development Standards for Agricultural Uses AG-2    The above information is a synopsis of the regulations. Please see the zoning ordinance for the complete regulations. ZONING REGULATIONS OVERVIEW Additional Regulations (21A.32.052) RESIDENTIAL STRUCTURE RESIDENTIAL BUILDING COVERAGE AGRICULTURAL USE RESTRICTIONS A residential structure shall not be located farther than two hundred feet (200') from the front property line. The surface coverage of the principal dwelling shall not ex- ceed eighty percent (80%) of the buildable area for residential uses of the lot. No feeding, grazing, or sheltering of livestock and poultry, whether within penned enclosures or within enclosed buildings, shall be permitted within fifty feet (50') of an existing single- family dwelling on an adja- cent lot. Development Standards for Agricultural (AG) and Single-Family (SFD) Uses* (21A.32.052) LOT WIDTH LOT AREA FRONT/CORNER SIDE YARDREAR YARD SIDE YARDSHEIGHT Min. 150'Min. 2 acres AG: No min. SFD: Min. 30' AG: No min. SFD: No min. AG: No min. SFD: Min. 35' AG: Max. 45' SFD: Max. 30' *Regulations vary by use. See ordinance for regulations for other uses. The purpose of the AG-2 Agricultural District is to preserve and protect agricultural uses in suitable portions of Salt Lake City on lots not less than two (2) acres. These regulations are also designed to minimize conflicts between agricultural and nonagricultural uses. This district is appropriate in areas of the City where the applicable Master Plans support this type of land use.  This matches the general pro- vision for all zones. Isn't the "nuisance impact" applicable to all zones really?  46 OPEN SPACE Zoning Diagram of Development StandardsExamples OS   The above information is a synopsis of the regulations. Please see the zoning ordinance for the complete regulations. ZONING REGULATIONS OVERVIEW Additional Regulations (21A.32.100) RECREATION EQUIPMENT PUBLIC UTILITY STRUCTURES*LIGHTING LIMITS Recreation equipment heights are permitted to a height not to exceed eighty (80) feet when needed due to the nature of the equipment or for the use to operate safely, such as fences surround- ing golf course driving ranges. Heights for buildings or struc- tures for the Salt Lake City Public Utilities Department that are not specifically exempt in section 21A.02.050 of this title, are ex- empt from the height restrictions in this zoning district provided the building or structure is deemed by the director of the public utilities department as critical infrastruc- ture necessary to provide specific utility needs to the public. • Lighting is installed in a manner and location that will not have an adverse impact on the natural environment when placed in areas with wildlife habitat, traffic safety or on surrounding properties and uses; • Light sources shall be shielded to eliminate excessive glare or light into adjacent properties and have cutoffs to protect the view of the night sky; and • Light poles for outdoor uses, such as sports fields, amphithe- aters, and other similar uses may be permitted up to seventy (70) feet in height provided the lights are located a minimum of thirty (30) feet from a residential use and directed to reduce light trespass onto neighboring properties. *See ordinance for additional regulations regarding telecommunication structures. Development Standards (21A.32.100) LOT WIDTH LOT AREA FRONT/CORNER SIDE YARD REAR YARD  SIDE YARDSLANDSCAPE BUFFERS  HEIGHT No min. No min. Min. 10'Min. 10', Min. 15' if site over 4 acres. Min. 10', Min. 15' if site over 4 acres. 10' next to single/ two-family zones, requires trees, shrubs, fence. Sites <4 acres: Max. 35', for height >20' yard setback increases 1' per 1' height. Sites >4 acres: Max. 45', for >30', yard setback in- creases 1' per 1' height. Up to 60' allowed through Design Review. The purpose of the OS Open Space District is to preserve and enhance public and private open space, natural areas, and improved park and recreational areas. These areas serve to provide opportunities for active and passive outdoor recreation; provide contrasts to the built environment; preserve scenic qualities; protect sensitive or fragile environmental areas such as wetlands, steep slopes, ridge lines, meadows, and stream corridors; preserve the capacity and water quality of the stormwater drainage system; encourage sustainability, conservation and renewable energy and provide pedestrian and bicycle transportation connections. This district is appropriate in areas of the City where the applicable master plans support this type of land use.  This matches the general pro- vision for all zones. Isn't the "nuisance impact" applicable to all zones really? 47 The purpose of the R-MU Residential/Mixed Use District is to reinforce the mixed use character of the area and encourage the development of areas as high density residential urban neighborhoods containing retail, service commercial, and small scale office uses. This district is appropriate in areas of the City where the applicable master plans support high density, mixed use development. The standards for the district are intended to facilitate the creation of a walkable urban neighborhood with an emphasis on pedestrian scale activity while acknowledging the need for transit and automobile access. RESIDENTIAL/ MIXED USE REGULATIONS SUMMARY FOR MULTI-FAMILY, NONRESIDENTIAL, OR MIXED USE DEVELOPMENT Development Standards (21A.24.170) For Multi-family Residential & Mixed Uses LOT WIDTH LOT AREA FRONT/CORNER SIDE YARD REAR YARD  SIDE YARDS LANDSCAPE BUFFERSHEIGHTSURFACE PARKING  OPEN SPACE MIXED USE LIMITATION Min 50' No min. No min., max. 15' for 25% of facade length. 25% of lot depth, need not exceed 30' No min., min. 4 if provided. 10' next to single/two- family res- idential zones 75' max; non-res- idential limited to 45'.1 Located be- hind front line of the building or setback 30'. Min 20% of lot area, in- cludes yards, plazas, and courtyards Non-residen- tial use limited to first three floors. Design Standards GROUND FLOOR GLASS ENTRANCES MAXIMUM LENGTH OF BLANK WALLS BUILDING EQUIPMENT & SERVICE AREAS PARKING LOT LIGHT LIMITS PARKING STRUCTURES 40% glass & non-reflective, allows 5' of visibility into building, Min 1 entry for each street facing facade No blank walls over 15' long; must be bro- ken up by windows, doors, art, or architec- tural detailing. On roof or in rear yard. Sited to minimize visibility or screened and enclosed to appear to be an integral part of the architectural design of the building. If next to residential, light poles limited to 16' height, must be shielded, aimed down and lightproof fencing is required. Unattached parking structures shall be setback 45' from front property line or behind building. 1. Up to 125' is allowed through Design Review in the area generally between 200 and 500 East, and 150 South to 350 South. See ordi- nance for map. Zoning Diagram of Mixed Use Building Next to a Single/Two-Family ZoneDevelopment Examples R-MU The above information is a synopsis of the regulations. Please see the zoning ordinance for the complete regulations. Updated: 2/7/2023        48 Zoning District Overview - Salt Lake City Planning Division PERMITTED AND CONDITIONAL USES - SPECIAL PURPOSE DISTRICTS Use RP BP FP AG AG - 2 AG - 5 AG - 2 0 OS NO S A PL PL - 2 I UI MH EI MU Accessory use, except those that are otherwise specifically regulated else- where in this title P P P P P P P P20 P P P P P P P P Adaptive reuse of a landmark site C2 C2 C2 P2 Agricultural use C P P P P P P Air cargo terminals and package deliv- ery facility P P Airport P Alcohol: Bar establishment (2,500 square feet or less in floor area) C12 Brewpub (2,500 square feet or less in floor area) P12 C12 Brewpub (more than 2,500 square feet in floor area) P12 Tavern (2,500 square feet or less in floor area) C12 Ambulance service (indoor)P P Ambulance service (outdoor)P10 P10 Amphitheater, formal P C Amphitheater, informal P P Animal: Kennel on lots of 5 acres or larger C P8 P8 P8 P8 Pet cemetery P4 P4 P4 P4 P4,5 Stable (private)P P P P Stable (public)P P P P Veterinary office P P Antenna, communication tower P P C P P P P P21 P P C P P P Antenna, communication tower ex- ceeding the maximum building height in the zone C C P21 P P11 C C C Art gallery P P P P P P Artisan food production P24 Bed and breakfast P2 P P Bed and breakfast inn P2 P P Bed and breakfast manor P2 P P Bio-medical facility P23, 24 P23, 24 P23, 24 Botanical garden P P P P Cannabis production establishment P P P P P Cemetery P Clinic (medical, dental)P P P P P Commercial food preparation P24 P24 Community garden P P P P P P P P P P P P P P Updated 2/15/202349 Zoning District Overview - Salt Lake City Planning Division UseRPBP FPAGAG - 2 AG - 5 AG - 2 0 OSNO S APLPL - 2 IUIMH EIMU Accessory use, except those that are otherwise specifically regulated else- where in this title PPPPPPPP20PPPPPPPP Adaptive reuse of a landmark siteC2C2C2P2 Agricultural useCPPPPPP Air cargo terminals and package deliv- ery facility PP AirportP Alcohol: Bar establishment (2,500 square feet or less in floor area) C12 Brewpub (2,500 square feet or less in floor area) P12C12 Brewpub (more than 2,500 square feet in floor area) P12 Tavern (2,500 square feet or less in floor area) C12 Ambulance service (indoor)PP Ambulance service (outdoor)P10P10 Amphitheater, formalPC Amphitheater, informalPP Animal: Kennel on lots of 5 acres or largerCP8P8P8P8 Pet cemeteryP4P4P4P4P4,5 Stable (private)PPPP Stable (public)PPPP Veterinary officePP Antenna, communication towerPPCPPPPP21PPCPPP Antenna, communication tower ex- ceeding the maximum building height in the zone CCP21PP11CCC Art galleryPPPPPP Artisan food productionP24 Bed and breakfastP2PP Bed and breakfast innP2PP Bed and breakfast manorP2PP Bio-medical facilityP23, 24 P23, 24 P23, 24 Botanical gardenPPPP Cannabis production establishmentPPPPP CemeteryP Clinic (medical, dental)PPPPP Commercial food preparationP24P24 Community gardenPPPPPPPPPPPPPP Use RP BP FP AG AG - 2 AG - 5 AG - 2 0 OS NO S A PL PL - 2 I UI MH EI MU Convent/monastery P P Data center P24 Daycare center, adult P P P P P P P P Daycare center, child P P P P P P P P P Daycare, nonregistered home daycare P16 P16 P16 P16 P16 P16 P16 P16 P16 P16 P16 P16 P16 P16 P16 P16 P16 Daycare, registered home daycare or preschool P16 P16 P16 P16 P16 P16 P16 P16 P16 P16 P16 P16 P16 P16 P16 P16 P16 Dwelling: Accessory unit P P P P P P Assisted living facility (large)C P P Assisted living facility (limited capac- ity) P P P Assisted living facility (small)P P P Congregate care facility (large)C C C Congregate care facility (small)P P P Group home (large)C Group home (small)P P P P Living quarters for caretaker or secu- rity guard P P P C P P P P Manufactured home P P P Mobile home P Multi-family P P Residential support (large)C Residential support (small)P Rooming (boarding) house P Single-family (attached)P Single-family (detached)P P P P Twin home and two-family P Exhibition hall C P C P Extractive industry P24 Fairground C Farm stand, seasonal P P P P P P P P P P P P P Financial institution P P P Financial institution with drive- through facility P14 P14 Gas station P7 Golf course P24 P24 P24 Government facility C C P P P P P20 P C C C13 C P C Government facility requiring special design features for security purposes C C Government office P P P P P P P P Heliport C C P P C C Home occupation P17 P17 P17 P17 P17 P17 P17 P17 P17 P17 P17 P17 P17 P17 P17 P17 PERMITTED AND CONDITIONAL USES - SPECIAL PURPOSE DISTRICTS Updated 2/15/2023 50 Zoning District Overview - Salt Lake City Planning Division QUALIFYING PROVISIONS Use RP BP FP AG AG - 2 AG - 5 AG - 2 0 OS NO S A PL PL - 2 I UI MH EI MU Hospital, including accessory lodging facility C P P Hotel/motel C C P P Hunting club, duck P Industrial assembly P24 P24 Jail C Jewelry fabrication P Laboratory, medical related P24 P24 P24 P24 P24 Large wind energy system C C C C C C C P P Library P P P P P Light manufacturing C24 P24 Manufacturing, concrete or asphalt P15, 24 Meeting hall of membership organi- zation P P P P P Mixed use development P Mobile food business (operation on private property) P P P P P Municipal service uses, including City utility uses and police and fire stations C C P P P P P C C C14 C P C Museum C P P P P P P Nursing care facility P P P Office P P P P P P P P Open space P P P P P P P P P9 P P P P P P P P Park P P P P P P P P P P P P P P Parking: Commercial C Off site P P P P P C Off site (to support uses in an OS or NOS Zoning District) P Park and ride lot P C Park and ride lot shared with existing use P P P P P P P P Performing arts production facility P P Philanthropic use P P P P Place of worship P P P P P Radio, television station P6 P Reception center C22 C P P P P Recreation (indoor)C P P P P P P Recreation (outdoor)P P P P Research and development facility P24 P24 P24 P24 P24 Restaurant P7 P P Restaurant with drive-through facility P7, 14 P3 PERMITTED AND CONDITIONAL USES - SPECIAL PURPOSE DISTRICTS Updated 2/15/202351 Zoning District Overview - Salt Lake City Planning Division PERMITTED AND CONDITIONAL USES - SPECIAL PURPOSE DISTRICTS Use RP BP FP AG AG - 2 AG - 5 AG - 2 0 OS NO S A PL PL - 2 I UI MH EI MU Retail goods establishment P7 P P Retail, sales and service accessory use when located within a principal building P20 P Retail, sales and service accessory use when located within a principal building and operated primarily for the convenience of employees P P P P P P P P P Retail service establishment P School: College or university P P P K - 12 private P P P P K - 12 public P P P P Music conservatory P P P Professional and vocational P P P P P Seminary and religious institute P P C Small brewery C24 Solar array P24 P24 P19, 24 P24 P24 P24 Stadium C C C Storage, accessory (outdoor)P P P P Studio, art P Technology facility P24 P24 P24 P24 Theater, live performance C15 C15 C15 C15 C15 C15 C15 Theater, movie C C Transportation terminal, including bus, rail and trucking P Urban farm P P P P P P P P P P P P Utility, building or structure P1 P1 P1 P1 P1 P1 P1 P1 P1 P1 P1 P1 P1 P1 P1 P1 Utility, transmission wire, line, pipe or pole P1 P1 P1 P1 P1 P1 P1 P1 P1 P1 P1 P1 P1 P1 P1 P1 Vehicle, automobile rental agency P P Vending cart, private property P P Vending cart, public property P Warehouse P24 P24 Warehouse, accessory to retail and wholesale business (maximum 5,000 square foot floor plate) P Wholesale distribution P24 P24 Wireless telecommunications fa- cility (see Section 21A.40.090, Ta- ble 21A.40.090.E of this title) Zoological park P 52 Zoning District Overview - Salt Lake City Planning Division PERMITTED AND CONDITIONAL USES - SPECIAL PURPOSE DISTRICTS QUALIFYING PROVISIONS 1. Subject to conformance to the provisions in Subsection 21A.02.050.B of this title. 2. When located in a building listed on the Salt Lake City Register of Cultural Resources. 3. When located on an arterial street. 4. Subject to Salt Lake Valley Health Department approval. 5. In conjunction with, and within the boundaries of, a cemetery for human remains. 6. Radio station equipment and antennas shall be required to go through the site plan review process to ensure that the color, design and location of all proposed equipment and antennas are screened or integrated into the architecture of the project and are com- patible with surrounding uses. 7. When approved as part of a business park planned development pursuant to the provisions of Chapter 21A.55 of this title. 8. Kennels, whether within penned enclosures or within enclosed buildings, shall not be permitted within 200 feet of an existing single-family dwelling on an adjacent lot. 9. Trails and trailheads with signage are subject to Section 21A.46.120, "Sign Regulations For Special Purpose Districts", of this title. 10. Greater than 3 ambulances at location require a conditional use. 11. Maximum of 1 monopole per property and only when it is government owned and operated for public safety purposes. 12. Subject to conformance with the provisions in Section 21A.36.300, "Alcohol Related Establishments", of this title. 13. If located on a collector or arterial street according to the Salt Lake City Transportation Master Plan - major street plan: roadway functional classification map. 14. Subject to conformance to the provisions in Section 21A.40.060 of this title for drive-through use regulations. 15. Prohibited within 1,000 feet of a Single- or Two-Family Zoning District. 16. Allowed only within legal conforming single-family, duplex, and multi-family dwellings and subject to Section 21A.36.130 of this title. 17. Allowed only within legal conforming single-family, duplex, and multi-family dwellings and subject to Section 21A.36.030 of this title. 18. Must contain retail component for on-site food sales. 19. Prior to issuance of a building permit in the Development Area and the Eco-Industrial Buffer Area of the Northwest Quadrant Overlay, consultation with the Utah Division of Wildlife Resources is required to obtain recommendations on siting and equip- ment types for all solar arrays on a particular property to mitigate impacts to wildlife. 20. When customarily provided with the principal use and is accessory to the principal use. 21. New antennae and communication towers are allowed outside the telecommunication corridor in the OS Open Space District for public safety, public security or Salt Lake City Public Utilities Department purposes only. 22. Reception centers may be allowed in parks of 100 acres or more where the reception center is a subordinate use to the principal use of the property as a park. Reception centers are allowed in existing buildings, are limited to 1 reception center per park, and hours of operation are limited to park hours. Removal of existing recreation areas to accommodate the stand alone reception center use, including areas to accommodate parking for the reception center use, is not permitted. 23. Prohibited within 1/2 mile of a residential use if the facility produces hazardous or radioactive waste as defined by the Utah De- partment of Environmental Quality administrative rules. 24. Consult the water use and/or consumption limitations of Subsection 21A.33.010.D.1. Updated 2/15/2023 53 Zoning District Overview - Salt Lake City Planning Division PERMITTED AND CONDITIONAL USES - RESIDENTIAL MULTIFAMILY AND MIXED USE DISTRICTS Use RMF -30 RMF -35 RMF -45 RMF -75 RB R-MU -35 R-MU -45 R-MU RO Accessory use, except those that are otherwise spe- cifically regulated elsewhere in this title P P P P P P P P P Adaptive reuse of a landmark site C8 C8 C8 C8 P P P P P6 Alcohol, bar establishment (2,500 square feet or less in floor area) C9 C9 C9 C9 Alcohol, brewpub (2,500 square feet or less in floor area) C9 C9 C9 Alcohol, tavern (2,500 square feet or less in floor area) C9 Animal, veterinary office C C C P P6 Art gallery P P P P P Artisan food production (2,500 square feet or less in floor area) P3 P3 P3 P3 P Bed and breakfast inn P P P P Bed and breakfast manor P Clinic (medical, dental)P P P P P6 Commercial food preparation P21 P21 P21 P21 P21 Community garden P P P P P P P P P Community recreation center C Crematorium C C C Daycare center, adult C P P P P P P Daycare center, child C18 C18 C18 P P P P P P Daycare, nonregistered home daycare P18 P18 P18 P18 P18 P18 P18 P18 P18 Daycare, registered home daycare or preschool P18 P18 P18 P18 P18 P18 P18 P18 P18 Dwelling, accessory guest and servant's quarter Dwelling, accessory unit P P P P P P P P P Dwelling, assisted living facility (large)C P P C P P Dwelling, assisted living facility (limited capacity)C P P P P P P P P Dwelling, assisted living facility (small)P P P P P P Dwelling, congregate care facility (large)C C C C C C C Dwelling, congregate care facility (small)C P P P P P P P P Dwelling; dormitory, fraternity, sorority Dwelling, group home (large)C C C C C1 4 C C C C1 4 Dwelling, group home (small)P P P P P15 P P P P15 Dwelling, manufactured home P P P P P P P P Dwelling, multi- family P P P P P P P P P Dwelling, residential support (large)C C C C C1 6 Dwelling, residential support (small)C C P C C P P17 Dwelling, rooming (boarding) house C P C C C P P Dwelling, single- family (attached)P P P P P P P P P Updated 2/15/202354 Zoning District Overview - Salt Lake City Planning Division Use RMF -30 RMF -35 RMF -45 RMF -75 RB R-MU -35 R-MU -45 R-MU RO Dwelling, single- family (detached)P P P P P P P P P Dwelling, twin home and two- family P P P P P P P Financial institution P P P P6 Funeral home P P P P Governmental facility C C C C C C C C C6 Home occupation P20 P20 P20 P20 P20 P20 P20 P20 P20 Laboratory, medical related P21 P21 P21 P21 P21 Library C C C C C Mixed use development P1 P P P P Mobile food business (operation on private proper- ty) P P P Municipal service use, including City utility use and police and fire station C C C C C C C C C Museum P C P P P Nursing care facility P P P P P Office, excluding medical and dental clinic and office P P P P P6 Open space on lots less than 4 acres in size P P P P P P P P P Park P P P P P P P P P Parking, off site (to support nonconforming uses in a residential zone or uses in the CN or CB Zones) C C C C C Parking, park and ride lot shared with existing use P P P P P P P P P Place of worship on lots less than 4 acres in size C C C C C C C C C Reception center P P P Recreation (indoor)P P P P P Research and development facility P21 P21 Restaurant P P P P P Restaurant with drive-through facility Retail goods establishment P P P P Retail goods establishment, plant and garden shop with outdoor retail sales area P P P P Retail service establishment P P P P School, music conservatory P C C P School, professional and vocational P C C P P6 School, seminary and religious institute C C C C C C C C C Seasonal farm stand P P P P P Studio, art P P P P P Technology facility P21 P21 P21 P21 Temporary use of closed schools and churches C19 C19 C19 C19 C19 C19 Theater, live performance C1 3 C13 C13 C13 C1 3 PERMITTED AND CONDITIONAL USES - RESIDENTIAL MULTIFAMILY AND MIXED USE DISTRICTS Updated 2/15/2023 55 Zoning District Overview - Salt Lake City Planning Division QUALIFYING PROVISIONS 1. A single apartment unit may be located above first floor retail/office. 2. Provided that no more than 2 two-family buildings are located adjacent to one another and no more than 3 such dwellings are located along the same block face (within subdivisions approved after April 12, 1995). 3. Must contain retail component for on-site food sales. 4. Reserved. 5. See subsection 21A.02.050B of this title for utility regulations. 6. Building additions on lots less than 20,000 square feet for office uses may not exceed 50 percent of the building's footprint. Build- ing additions greater than 50 percent of the building's footprint or new office building construction are subject to a design review. 7. Subject to conformance to the provisions in section 21A.02.050 of this title. 8. Subject to conformance with the provisions of subsection 21A.24.010S of this title. 9. Subject to conformance with the provisions in section 21A.36.300, "Alcohol Related Establishments", of this title. 10. In the RB Zoning District, the total square footage, including patio space, shall not exceed 2,200 square feet in total. Total square footage will include a maximum 1,750 square feet of floor space within a business and a maximum of 450 square feet in an outdoor patio area. 11. Accessory guest or servant's quarters must be located within the buildable area on the lot. 12. Subject to conformance with the provisions of section 21A.36.150 of this title. 13. Prohibited within 1,000 feet of a Single- or Two-Family Zoning District. 14. Large group homes established in the RB and RO Districts shall be located above the ground floor. 15. Small group homes established in the RB and RO Districts shall be located above the ground floor. 16. Large residential support established in RO Districts shall be located above the ground floor. 17. Small residential support established in RO Districts shall be located above the ground floor. 18. Subject to section 21A.36.130 of this title. 19. Subject to section 21A.36.170 of this title. 20. Subject to section 21A.36.030 of this title. 21. Consult the water use and/or consumption limitations of Subsection 21A.33.010.D.1. Use RMF -30 RMF -35 RMF -45 RMF -75 RB R-MU -35 R-MU -45 R-MU RO Theater, movie C C C C C Urban farm P P P P P P P P P Utility, building or structure P5 P5 P5 P5 P5 P5 P5 P5 P5, 7 Utility, transmission wire, line, pipe or pole P5 P5 P5 P5 P5 P5 P5 P5 P5 Wireless telecommunicati ons facility (see section 21A.40.090, table 21A.40.090E of this title) PERMITTED AND CONDITIONAL USES - RESIDENTIAL MULTIFAMILY AND MIXED USE DISTRICTS Updated 2/15/202356 North Rose Park Lane Annexation & Rezone February 22, 2023 ATTACHMENT D: City Plan Policies The below are related policies from adopted City Master Plans. Each plan title is followed by a table where Staff has compiled related policies or discussion text from the associated plan. Some policies may not be directly applicable but have been identified in public or other comments and so have been included below. The plan policies related to growth and housing are applicable to the privately owned property that is intended for residential development. Staff has also included some policies related to recreational and open space uses that apply to the City/State properties. The Rose Park Small Area Plan policies related to the proposal are located in and discussed in Consideration 1. Salt Lake City Housing Plan Issues/Goals/Objectives Status in Relation to Proposal Discussion Housing Crisis Section Summary: The city is in an affordable housing crisis and if growth projections are correct, it will not improve unless bold and strategic measures are developed and enacted. Solutions must include using zoning ordinance to provide a mix of housing types in an effort to relieve the pressure put upon existing housing, creating sustainable and significant funding sources, preventing and diverting low income families from entering homelessness, and creating innovative housing for all income types. Consistent The zoning change would support additional housing in the City and relieve price pressures on existing housing. GOAL 1: Increase housing options: Reform city practices to promote a responsive, affordable, high- opportunity housing market Consistent Broad goal supports additional housing options to respond to housing needs and demand. Analysis regarding specific objectives/policies within this goal is noted below. Objective 1: Review and modify land-use and zoning regulations to reflect the affordability needs of a growing, pioneering city Consistent The proposed zoning change would add additional housing units to help increase the supply of housing in the City and reduce the price increase pressure on existing housing. 1.1.1 Develop flexible zoning tools and regulations, with a focus along significant transportation routes. Expanding this system of zoning with a focus on new residential and commercial development along transportation corridors will allow the private market to fill the Consistent This policy supports expanding zoning/regulations that support new housing, particularly along significant transportation routes. This property is located along a major transportation route (I-215), with very convenient access to that route. In the future, Redwood Road will also be quickly accessible from the development via a planned new direct 32 North Rose Park Lane Annexation & Rezone February 22, 2023 housing demand where the city needs it most. To ensure that the maximum potential of these regulatory changes is realized, the City will need to plan, design, fund, and construct the infrastructure that will be required to support the increases in residential density. This will require significant and targeted investment in multiple utility systems and other public improvements. Where possible, the City will seek public- private partnerships to fund the infrastructure improvements. road connection. The policy notes that there will likely be a need for significant infrastructure improvements. The improvements to support this development will likely occur from a mix of City/State funding (North Access Road) and private developer funding (all other improvements such as utilities). Goal 3: Equitable and Fair housing: Build a more equitable city Objective 3: Implement Life cycle Housing principles in neighborhoods throughout the city Plan Narrative: Salt Lake City should be a place where residents are not stifled in their housing choice, because certain neighborhoods are not conducive to their stage of life. The goal with this objective is to enable a diversity of housing types that responds to housing needs, allowing individuals to stay in their communities as their housing needs evolve. The Kem C. Gardner Policy Institute’s demographic projections show a growing senior population statewide, and while we know from the housing market study that Salt Lake City’s percentage of seniors (10% of total population) is relatively low compared to other municipalities in the state, the City will begin anticipating the needs of a growing senior community. However, seniors are not the only population that is demanding a different type of housing. Across the country there are trends for micro housing, community style living, generational housing to accommodate aging parents, and intentional community and living space that co-exist (like a day care in a Senior Center). There is not one way to achieve life cycle housing, but infinite possibilities and it is the goal to engage the community in way that not only fosters the possibility, but Neutral/ Consistent While the developer’s concept plans only show multi-family residential development, the zone would allow a mix of housing types, including single-family residential, townhomes, mixed use, and multi-family development. However, this policy is primarily intended to ensure that other types of housing are available in existing neighborhoods beyond single- family residential. 33 North Rose Park Lane Annexation & Rezone February 22, 2023 creates policy that allows for the building. 2016 Salt Lake Housing Policy (Housing Policy Statements Adopted by the City Council) Policy Status Discussion 1. Foster and celebrate the urban residential tradition; Neutral The proposal is not located within a highly urbanized area of the City. 2. Respect the character and charm of predominantly residential districts, including those with historic character and qualities, while also providing opportunities for the provision of local goods and services easily accessed by neighborhoods; Neutral The proposal does not involve commercial uses/local goods and services within a neighborhood. 3.Promote a diverse and balanced community by ensuring that a wide range of housing types and choices exist for all income levels, age groups, and types of households; Consistent The proposal would provide additional multi-family residential which meets a housing need in an area currently predominantly single-family. 4.Develop new housing opportunities throughout the City; Consistent The proposal adds additional housing in the City outside of the currently developed residential areas. 5. Ensure that affordable housing is available in all neighborhoods and not concentrated in a few areas of the city; Neutral The proposal does not currently involve any “income restricted” affordable housing. 6. Emphasize the value of transit- oriented development, transit accessibility, and proximity to services; Not consistent The proposal is not currently served by a dedicated transit route. It is likely that at full build-out a transit route would be supported due to the number of residents in this location. 7.Recognize that residents, business owners, and local government all have a role to play in creating and sustaining healthy neighborhoods; Neutral General statement that is not applicable to proposal. 8. Create an appropriate balance of rental and ownership opportunities in neighborhoods without jeopardizing an adequate supply of affordable housing; Neutral Any development on the site could be either rental or owner occupied. 9. Strongly incentivize or require the use of green building techniques and sustainability practices in public and private housing developments; Neutral/NA This pertains to creating new City regulations and does not apply. The proposal will have to comply with City ordinances and building codes related to sustainability practices and building techniques. 34 North Rose Park Lane Annexation & Rezone February 22, 2023 10. Examine the changing needs of Salt Lake City’s population, and develop and maintain reliable demographic information to support housing policy and residential development; Neutral/NA This is not directly related to this amendment. 11.Consider the needs of multi- generational households and ensure housing products are available to meet those needs. Neutral/NA The proposed concept plan does not address potential future specific unit types. 12.Address the livability of neighborhoods and concentrations of ageing adults, and plan and implement strategies that will allow residents to Age in Place. Neutral/NA This policy is aimed at ensuring a diversity of housing types in larger neighborhoods to allow residents to change housing types as they age, rather than in any one specific development. Plan Salt Lake Plan Salt Lake City is a City-wide master plan. This master plan is broad and not property specific. The following list includes excerpts of the narratives and policies from the plan regarding growth, housing, and parks and recreation. These are also further discussed in Consideration 1. Policies Status Staff Discussion Growth/ (Discussion excerpt) Growing responsibly, while providing people with choices about where they live, how they live, and how they get around. 1. Locate new development in areas with existing infrastructure and amenities, such as transit and transportation corridors. 2. Encourage a mix of land uses. 3. Promote infill and redevelopment of underutilized land. 4. Preserve open space and critical environmental areas. 5. Reduce consumption of natural resources, including water. 6. Accommodate and promote an increase in the City’s population. Mixed, Consistent/Neutral /Not Consistent 1. The proposal is located adjacent to a major freeway and will have connection to a major street (Redwood Road) due to future State/City infrastructure investment in a new road that accesses the property. However, additional, significant developer provided infrastructure will be required to be installed to serve the property. 2. The zoning of the private property would allow a mix of uses. 3. The private property is currently underutilized with at least half of it being used for outdoor equipment storage, and the zoning would encourage its redevelopment. 4. The private property is generally used for agricultural and horse boarding activities. These uses could fall under the term “open space.” Records do not indicate that it contains any critical environmental features, such as wetlands. The City (RAC) and State (State Park) properties 35 North Rose Park Lane Annexation & Rezone February 22, 2023 7. Work with regional partners and stakeholders to address growth collaboratively. 8. Provide access to opportunities for a healthy lifestyle (including parks, trails, recreation, and healthy food). function now, or will function, for uses that generally fall under “open space.” The City property itself has a deed restriction limiting the use of the property for open space type uses. 5. Multi-family residential development uses relatively little water compared to single-family residential, agricultural, or industrial development. 6. The proposal would accommodate approximately 1,800 new units over the next decade or so. 7. This policy isn’t directed at individual developments. However, the State/City will need to continue working together with regard to the North Access Road and any improvements to the I-215 interchange where they connect to City streets. 8. The site is directly adjacent to a regional recreational sports facility, which will soon have a playground, and will be a short walk to the Jordan River trail when the North Access Road is completed. This area of the City generally requires a car to visit a grocery or convenience store. The proposed mixed-use zoning of the private property would allow for future retail, such as grocery or convenience stores, and could be supported by the number of residents and also users of the RAC. Housing/ Access to a wide variety of housing types for all income levels throughout the city, providing the basic human need for safety and responding to changing demographics. Discussion (Excerpt) Almost half of the total housing units in Salt Lake are single- family detached dwellings. While preserving the existing housing stock will continue to be a Mixed, Consistent/Neutral/ Not Consistent 1. The proposal would allow for the creation of multi-family rental housing, but they could also be condominiums. The developer has not indicated that the housing will be income restricted. 2. Not applicable, this would generally be considered relatively high-density development. 3. Not applicable. This is aimed at ensuring a diverse range of housing options in predominantly single- family neighborhoods. 4. This area has a high level of current and planned vehicle transportation 36 North Rose Park Lane Annexation & Rezone February 22, 2023 priority for Salt Lake City, over the next 25 years, it will be critical for us to encourage and support a diversity of new housing options and types with a range of densities throughout the City to best meet the changing population. Policies: 1. Ensure access to affordable housing citywide (including rental and very low income). 2. Increase the number of medium density housing types and options. 3. Encourage housing options that accommodate aging in place. 4. Direct new growth toward areas with existing infrastructure and services that have the potential to be people-oriented. 5. Enable moderate density increases within existing neighborhoods where appropriate. 6. Promote energy efficient housing and rehabilitation of existing housing stock. 7. Promote high density residential in areas served by transit. 8. Support homeless services. infrastructure, a current and future high level of recreational access (RAC, Jordan River Trail), but a low level of nearby service access (retail, grocery) except via a car. The number of future residents in this location may support additional pedestrian accessible services, such as retail. 5. This is not in an existing neighborhood. 6. Newer construction is generally more energy efficient. 7. The area is not currently served by transit, but a transit stop could be possible in the future with the number of residents at the location. 8. Not applicable. Parks and Recreation GUIDING PRINCIPLE/ Protecting the natural environment while providing access and opportunities to recreate and enjoy nature. 2040 TARGETS: 1. Increase Park Space Neutral/Consistent Most of these policies aren’t directly applicable to the proposal, but the proposed Open Space zoning supports additional park space and allows the recreational facility to be “enhanced” with a second phase. (Target 1 and Initiative 4) The proposed private property zoning would support additional households that have both a park and a recreational space (RAC 37 North Rose Park Lane Annexation & Rezone February 22, 2023 2. Parks Or Open Space Within Walking Distance Of Every Household 3. Increase Miles Of Trails Initiatives: 1. Balance protection and management of natural lands with access to recreational opportunities. 2. Provide accessible parks and recreation spaces within 1/2 mile of all residents. 3. Enhance trail and open space connectivity through improved visual and physical connections. 4. Protect and enhance existing parks, recreational facilities, and trails allowing for modifications to enhance usability and promote activity. 5. Establish level of service standards that address type, proximity, quality, and quantity of park space that is responsive to both citywide and neighborhood needs. 6. Integrate artistic elements into parks, urban trails, and other urban public spaces. 7. Support urban agriculture and local food systems that produce healthy and sustainable food for the community, while providing valuable open space. and the Jordan River trail) within a ½ mile of their location. (Target 2 and Initiative 2) 38 North Rose Park Lane Annexation & Rezone February 22, 2023 ATTACHMENT H: Public Process & Comments Public Notice, Meetings, Comments The following is a list of public meetings that have been held, and other public input opportunities, related to the proposed project since the applications were submitted: • May 16, 2022: The Westpointe Community Council was sent the required 45-day notice for recognized community organizations. The notice asked for input from the organization and whether the organization would like the applicant to present at one of their meetings. • May 16, 2022: An online open house webpage was posted to provide additional information on the requests. A link as provided to the Westpointe Community Council and included in mailed notifications to nearby property owners. • May 17, 2022: Mailed early notifications were sent out to nearby property owners within 300 feet of the properties. Notice of the public hearing for the proposal included: • February 8, 2023 o Public hearing notice signs posted on the properties. • February 8, 2023 o Public hearing notice mailed. o Public notice posted on City and State websites and Planning Division listserv. Community Council Meetings The applicant informed Staff that they met with the Westpointe Community Council twice before the applicant submitted their annexation and zoning request. The most recent of those meetings was on January 8, 2020. Public Input: Staff received a call from a horse owner who utilizes the horse stables on the applicant’s property. The caller was concerned with the potential loss of the facility an d was provided information on how to attend the public hearing and how to provide a written comment. Staff also received one written comment opposed to the rezone of the private property. The comment is located on the following page. Staff received no other public comments or inquiries. Community Council Comments Staff requested comments from the Westpointe Community Council, but they did not provide any comments or a letter about the proposal prior to staff report publication. 62 1 Echeverria, Daniel From:Kelly Pickering Sent:Wednesday, February 15, 2023 1:42 PM To:Echeverria, Daniel Subject:(EXTERNAL) 2-22-23 Comments re Zoning Map Amendment at Approximately 2350 N. and Annexation at Approximately 2441 N. Rose Park Lane Mr. Echeverria:    This note is meant to comment on the Zoning Map Amendment for 2350 N. and Annexation at Approximately 2441 N.  Rose Park Lane being considered on February 22, 2023.  The 1,800‐ unit multi‐family residential development will  negatively impact the area in the following ways.    1. In this area, Rose Park does NOT house the infrastructure to accommodate water let alone sewer for 1,800 new  households.  Conservatively, the average household has three people.  This area cannot accommodate 5,400  residents and their vehicles.  2. Rose Park does NOT house the infrastructure in this area for school enrolment.  3. Rose Park does NOT house the infrastructure in this area for safety and enforcement and   4. This proposal will also negatively affect wildlife in this area.     Please consider this is not the best use for this land.    Kindest regards,     Kelly Hambleton‐Pickering  Resident   63 CITY COUNCIL // AUGUST 15, 2023 NORTH ROSE PARK LANE ANNEXATION AND ZONING AMENDMENT 2350, 2440, 2441, AND 2462 N ROSE PARK LANE PLNPCM2021-01124/01134 •Requests by JWright Properties (2350/2441 N) •Two requests: •Zoning Map Amendment (2350 N Rose Park Lane) •From AG-2, Agricultural •To R-MU, Residential/Mixed Use •Annexation from County to City –Zoning Requests •Apply R-MU to 2441 N •Apply OS to 2462 N •Apply OS to 2440 N •Intended to accommodate an 1,800 unit multi-family development on the 2350 N and 2441 N properties •City and State properties not involved in development Planning Commission Recommendation: Denial of annexation and zoning amendment REQUEST Salt Lake City // Planning Division 2441 (J Wright) 2350 (J Wright) 2440 (City) 2462 (State) CONTEXT Salt Lake City // Planning Division $1m from State for road planning “Sports Park Blvd” 2100 North Interchange (Access) Roughly paved road Horse boarding facility Single family neighborhood, elementary and middle schools (South of RAC) Zoning Map Amendment •Requires review against standard City considerations Annexation: •No consideration standards •Requires a zone be applied when annexed •Council forwarded the annexation to Planning Commission for a zoning recommendation •Staff used considerations for a rezone Salt Lake City // Planning Division ZONING AMENDMENT &ANNEXATION PROCESS •Proposed zone for J Wright (private)properties •75'height •Limited front setbacks to engage street •20%open space requirement •Allowed Use Examples: •Multi-family and low intensity commercial (i.e.retail,restaurant,office) Salt Lake City // Planning Division R-MU -RESIDENTIAL/MIXED USE 2440 (City) & 2462 (State): •Rose Park Plan (2001) calls for Open Space (OS) or Agriculture (AG) •Proposed OS –matches City and State use of properties 2350 & 2441 (J Wright -Private) •Rose Park Plan policy: •Zone properties OS or AG •“to be compatible with the State recreational (OHV) and open space land uses (RAC)” •Citywide policies •Access to healthy lifestyle/open space (RAC/Jordan River trail) •Redevelopment of underutilized property •Locating near existing infrastructure (significant planned City improvements –RAC/Sports Park Blvd) •Transit access (currently none) Salt Lake City // Planning Division PLAN CONSIDERATIONS F S t r e e t 2441 (J Wright) 2350 (J Wright) 2440 (City) 2462 (State) •Traffic study provided by applicant •Recommends phased improvements to support development •Intersection upgrades, road improvements (500 units) •Full build-out only possible if Sports Park Boulevard built •Freeway noise and air quality impacts •Could be mitigated with noise attenuating materials (similar to airport requirements) •MERV 13 HVAC filters to reduce pollution •Landscaping (trees) Salt Lake City // Planning Division ROAD IMPROVEMENTS &FREEWAY IMPACTS Turn Lane Signal/ Turn Lanes New Road •Improve/Widen Road •Add Sidewalk/ Crosswalk •Two letters generally opposed to the residential zone •One letter with conditions related to health/air quality (freeway) •Public comments at PC generally opposed (9 comments) •Air quality, infrastructure, traffic, RAC access limits Salt Lake City // Planning Division PUBLIC INPUT Recommended denial of zoning and annexation: 1.Rezoning •Doesn’t comply with Rose Park Plan •Calls for Open Space or Agricultural zoning. 2.Annexation •Doesn’t align with Plan Salt Lake policies regarding open space/recreation access •Plan Salt Lake emphasizes open space availability –RAC not accessible to general public •Doesn’t align with 2016 Council Housing Policy Statements that emphasize transit proximity and the livability of neighborhoods. •Transit not available in area Salt Lake City // Planning Division COMMISSION RECOMMENDATION •Commission didn’t offer concerns with the City and State property annexation/zoning. Staff recommended approval based on R-MU zone compatibility with RAC, utilization of City improvements (RAC/Sports Park Blvd), and proximity to open space (RAC /Jordan River Trail). Included 13 conditions: •Required, phased street improvements (striping, Rose Park Lane, sidewalks, utilities, traffic lights, Sports Park Blvd completion) •Air quality mitigations (HVAC filters, landscaping) •Noise mitigations (freeway sound attenuation, OHV park noise notice) •Setback and parking modifications •Road construction impact mitigations Salt Lake City // Planning Division STAFF RECOMMENDATION Daniel Echeverria // Senior Planner daniel.echeverria@slcgov.com Albuquerque | Boise | Denver | Las Vegas | Los Angeles | Los Cabos | Orange County | Phoenix | Portland | Reno | Salt Lake Ci ty | San Diego | Seattle | Tucson | Washington, D.C. 2350 N Rose Park Lane North Rose Park Lane Annexation and Zoning Amendment PLNPCM2021-01124 and PLNPCM2021-01134 Salt Lake City: City Council– August 15, 2023 Context Aerial 2 Applicant Parcel to be Rezoned Salt Lake City Parcel to be Annexed State of Utah Parcel to be Annexed Applicant Parcel to be Annexed and Zoned City Boundary Rose Park Small Area Plan (2001) 3 Pg. 17 Staff Report –Planning Commission: If and when existing properties in the County are annexed into the City they should be zoned for either agricultural or open space land uses to be compatible with the State recreational and open space land uses between Redwood Road and Interstate-215. Current Zoning AG-2 BP PL M-1 4 Salt Lake County Zoning: A-5 Proposed Zoning R-MU BP PL M-1 5 Site Plan 6 Required Road Plan (Sports Park Blvd.) 7 Site Rendering 8 Development Description: 9 •Mix of Units -a minimum of 2% will be 3 bedrooms, minimum 10% will be 2 bedrooms, with the remainder being 1 bedroom & studio. •Traffic Study •500 Units until North Access Road is constructed •Bike Amenities •Secure bike storage areas •Bike racks & lockers •Bike repair area •Bike washing area •Noise and Pollution •A condition requiring noise attenuation improvements for any new buildings is being recommended due to the proximity to the freeway. •Special freeway landscaping will be required which can help mitigate impacts of the freeway. •A requirement for a notice to residents/tenants/owners about potential noise from the OHV State Park is also recommended. •The freeway landscaping requirement is also proposed adjacent to the OHV State Park to reduce the potential for fugitive dust impacts to residents. Conditions of Approval from Staff to Planning Commision 10 1.That the owner of the 2350 N and 2441 N properties enter into a development agreement with the City that does the following: i.Traffic Impact Study Improvements: That the improvements noted in the transportation impact study addendum (dated 12/23/22), or equivalent improvements as determined by the Transportation Director, are completed prior to any Certificates of Occupancy being issued for development of the property. If other uses are proposed on site that differ from those evaluated in the study, the Transportation Director shall have the ability to require additional traffic studies and may require different off-site improvements for traffic impacts identified in such studies. (See Consideration 2) ii.Rose Park Lane Improvements: The developer shall make all public right of way improvements to the adjacent street Rose Park Lane that would be required by a subdivision process for each phase of their development in compliance with the improvement standards of Chapter 20.40 “Improvements and Flood Control” and Chapter 20.12 “Design Standards and Requirements” including, but not limited to, road widening, paving, curb, gutter, sidewalk, utilities, and park strip landscaping. This may include additional right-of-way improvement beyond the west-half of the adjacent Rose Park Lane right-of-way. (See Consideration 2) iii.Sidewalk Improvements: Sidewalk shall be installed both adjacent to the site and off-site to provide a complete pedestrian connection from each phase of the development to existing sidewalk infrastructure along the Regional Athletic Complex. Sidewalk shall have a minimum width of 5 feet. A crosswalk shall also be installed across Rose Park Lane. The final configuration of the sidewalk and crosswalk is subject to Transportation, Engineering, and Planning Director approval. (See Consideration 2) iv.Public Utility Improvements: That the developer complies with all Public Utility Department requirements to serve the development, including, but not limited to, installation of offsite water and sewer improvements. (See Consideration 2) v.City Drain Usage: If future development plans require discharging to City Drain, there may be offsite lift station upgrades required as determined by the Public Utilities Director. (See Consideration 2) vi.City Drain Setback: That a 50' setback from the City Drain apply to development of the property, measured from the average high-water elevation of the City Drain. No buildings or parking pavement shall be constructed within the setback. Fences, landscaping, sidewalks, and other improvements may be located within the setback. (See Consideration 3) Conditions of Approval 11 vii.R-MU Setback Conflicts: That the maximum front setback provisions of the R -MU ordinance in section 21A.24.170.E.8 do not apply where a greater setback is required along the City Drain (canal) or by the Freeway Scenic Landscape Setback where conditioned to apply along Rose Park Lane. (See Consideration 3) viii.Parking Requirement: That any uses comply with the General Context minimum parking requirements in Table 21A.44.040-A of the Salt Lake City Zoning Ordinance. This does not preclude modifications through the options provided in the Zoning Ordinance. (See Consideration 3) ix.Sound Attenuation: That residential uses be built with at least 30 dBs of sound attention in sleeping areas and 25 dBs of attenuation in other areas, due to the proximity to the freeway and noise impacts. A sound attenuation study would need to be provided to verify compliance, as described in City Code 18.88.020. (See Consideration 4) x.State Park Adjacent Landscaping: That the landscaped setback requirements of the “Freeway Scenic Landscape Setback” of 21A.48.110 (or its successor) be applied along the east property line where it is directly across the street from the Jordan River OHV State Recreation Area (2462 N Rose Park Lane). The requirement shall apply where new development occurs within 100' of that portion of the east property line. (See Consideration 4) xi.State Park Noise Disclosure: That a disclosure be provided to future residents, tenants, and owners regarding the potential for high levels of noise from the Jordan River OHV State Recreation Area. (See Consideration 4) North Rose Park Lane Annexation and Zoning Amendment PLNPCM2021-01124 and PLNPCM2021-01134 Salt Lake City: City Council–August 15, 2023 ERIN MENDENHALL DEPARTMENT of COMMUNITY Mayor and NEIGHBORHOODS Blake Thomas Director SALT LAKE CITY CORPORATION 451 SOUTH STATE STREET, ROOM 404 WWW.SLC.GOV P.O. BOX 145486, SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH 84114-5486 TEL 801.535.6230 FAX 801.535.6005 CITY COUNCIL TRANSMITTAL ________________________ Date Received: _________________ Lisa Shaffer, Chief Administrative Officer Date sent to Council: _________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ TO: Salt Lake City Council DATE: April 5, 2023 Darin Mano, Chair FROM: Blake Thomas, Director, Department of Community & Neighborhoods __________________________ SUBJECT: North Rose Park Lane Annexation and Zoning Map Amendment (Petitions PLNPCM2021-01124 and PLNPCM2021-01134) STAFF CONTACT: Daniel Echeverria, Senior Planner, daniel.echeverria@slcgov.com, 801- 535-7165 DOCUMENT TYPE: Ordinance RECOMMENDATION: The Planning Commission voted to recommend denial of the annexation and the requested zoning map amendment designation of R-MU for the two involved private properties. BUDGET IMPACT: No direct budget impact. If annexed, the properties would be subject to receiving City services for such things as fire, police, and utilities. BACKGROUND/DISCUSSION: JWright Communities, LLC, property owner and applicant, is requesting a zoning map amendment for an approximately 6-acre parcel of land located at 2350 N Rose Park Lane. The applicant is requesting a rezone from the AG-2, Agricultural, zone to the R-MU, Residential/Mixed-Use zone. The zoning is intended to support future development of an 1,800-unit multi-family residential development. No formal plans have been submitted for that development. The property is currently within Salt Lake City boundaries. Lisa Shaffer (Apr 5, 2023 13:13 MDT)04/05/2023 04/05/2023 In conjunction with the rezone request, the property owner filed a petition to annex approximately 28 acres of property located at approximately 2441 N Rose Park Lane. The annexation process requires that the City apply a zone at the same time a property is annexed into the City. The City Council reviewed the annexation petition in April 2022 and referred the annexation petition to the Commission for a recommendation on the proposed zoning. The properties involved and the requested zones are below: 1. 2440 N Rose Park Lane a. This is a City-owned property and has been shown as a future Regional Athletic Complex phase in City plans. b. The City proposed to zone the property OS, Open Space, to support future recreational use. 2. 2441 N Rose Park Lane (“Hunter Stables”) a. This is a privately owned parcel, owned by the applicant, JWright. b. The applicant is proposing the R- MU, Residential/Mixed-Use, zone to support an 1,800 dwelling unit development. 3. 2462 N Rose Park Lane a. This is a State-owned property utilized as part of the State’s Jordan River Off-Highway Vehicle State Park. b. The City proposed to zone the property OS, Open Space, to support continued recreational use. Planning Commission Hearing and Recommendation The Planning Commission reviewed the zoning map amendment and annexation zoning requests at their March 8th meeting and forwarded a negative recommendation on both requests. The meeting can be viewed here with this particular item beginning at 1:55:53. The vote on the motion was 6 to 4. The Commission’s motion to recommend denial was the following, recommending denial of: 1. The zoning map amendment, for the reason that it does not comply with the stated zoning goals of the small area master plan (Rose Park Small Area Plan). Map of the rezone and annexation properties, showing the OHV State Park, RAC, and a planned “North Access Road.” 2. The annexation, based on Plan Salt Lake and the access to open space are not met. And the 2016 Salt Lake Housing Policy points of emphasizing the value of transit-oriented developments and the livability of neighborhoods. For the zoning map amendment, the Commission’s motion refers to the Rose Park Small Area Plan (2001) which has policies that call for the Open Space or Agricultural zoning in the future for the rezone and associated annexation property. The requested R-MU zone does not align with those specific zones. For the annexation, the Commission’s motion refers to the citywide plan, Plan Salt Lake, and one of its policies that encourages access to parks and recreational spaces within a half mile of all residents. In its discussion, the Commission noted that despite the property being adjacent to the Regional Athletic Complex (RAC), use of the RAC is generally restricted to organized groups, such as leagues, and future residents of the conceptual 1,800 dwelling unit development wouldn’t be able to freely use the facility. The Commission’s motion also refers to the City Council’s adopted “Housing Policy Statements” from 2016 that emphasize transit-oriented development and livability of neighborhoods. The full referenced policies are as follows: • Emphasize the value of transit-oriented development, transit accessibility, and proximity to services; • Address the livability of neighborhoods and concentrations of ageing adults, and plan and implement strategies that will allow residents to Age in Place. There are similar policies in both Plan Salt Lake and the City’s adopted housing plan Growing SLC (2017.) The Commission’s motion and discussion were focused on the R-MU requests and the Commission did not offer any concerns regarding the proposed zoning designation of Open Space for the City and State properties involved in the annexation; however, since the zoning of these properties was included in the same petition, the Commission simply recommended denial of the entire petition. Nine individuals addressed the Commission during the public hearing, including a representative of the Westpointe Community Council. Comments at the public hearing addressed limited resident access to the RAC, traffic from the RAC, concerns with limited infrastructure, easement impacts on the developable area of the property, loss of the horse boarding facility and agricultural lifestyle, piecemeal annexations of this area of the City, safety related to mosquitoes and canals, parking issues and congestion on Rose Park Lane, air quality impacts from I-215, and RAC/OHV negative impacts on potential residents. A comment questioning why this area was appropriate for housing, while properties to the west in the Northpoint area were not, was also made. Planning Staff Recommendation to the Planning Commission The Commission recommendation was opposite that of the Staff recommendation. The Staff recommendation was to forward a positive recommendation with several conditions related to infrastructure requirements, water quality, air quality, and noise. Those are detailed on the second page of the staff report. Two additional conditions regarding HVAC system air filters to mitigate health impacts from the freeway and mitigation of construction impacts on adjacent property owners, were added after staff report publication in response to late arriving public comments. These conditions are located on the attached Staff presentation slides (Exhibit 2b). The Staff recommendation acknowledged the Rose Park Small Area Plan’s future land use map designations of Open Space and Agriculture do not correspond with the requested R-MU zone, but cited the plan’s policy reason for that zoning, which was to ensure those properties maintain compatibility with the RAC and OHV properties. The recommendation noted that residential and low-intensity commercial uses are generally compatible with recreational uses. The recommendation also relied on general policies from Plan Salt Lake and Growing SLC that support more housing throughout the City, including policies supporting housing with access to recreational uses (RAC/Jordan River Trail), existing infrastructure (I-215 freeway, new “North Access Road,”) and using underutilized properties for housing. Since the Commission forwarded a negative recommendation, an ordinance has not been prepared by the Attorney’s Office for the zoning map and annexation requests. If the City Council indicates support for the requests, the Attorney’s Office will draft an ordinance at that time. PUBLIC PROCESS: The proposal followed the City’s public input requirements required for a zoning amendment. The annexation was processed following the same input process. Details on that process are located in Attachment H of the Planning Commission staff report. The applicant met with the applicable community council on two occasions, but the community council did not provide any formal written comments to Planning Staff. A community council representative attended the Commission hearing and their comments focused on the limited or no access to the RAC facility that any new residents would have due to the facility’s current use policies. Planning Commission (PC) Records a) PC Agenda of March 8, 2023 (Click to Access) b) PC Minutes of March 8, 2023 (Click to Access) c) PC Staff Report of March 8, 2023 (Click to Access Report) EXHIBITS: 1) Project Chronology 2) Planning Commission – March 8, 2023 a) Additional Written Public Comments b) Staff Presentation c) Applicant Presentation 3) Notice of City Council Hearing 4) Original Petitions 5) Mailing List EXHIBITS 1. CHRONOLOGY 2. NOTICE OF CITY COUNCIL HEARING 3. PLANNING COMMISSION – March 8, 2023 a. Additional Public Comments b. Staff Presentation Slides c. Applicant Presentation Slides 4. ORIGINAL PETITIONS 5. MAILING LIST 1. CHRONOLOGY PROJECT CHRONOLOGY Petitions: PLNPCM2021-01124 and PLNPCM2021-01134 November 1, 2021 Applicant submits original annexation petition that includes only the applicant’s property at 2441 N Rose Park Lane. November 3, 2021 Applicant submits rezone petition for 2350 N property to Planning Division. November 18, 2021 Applications assigned to John Anderson, Planning Manager. Applications subsequently put on hold as applicant works with City and County to adjust the boundary request of their annexation to include the 2440 N (City) and 2462 N (State) properties in order not to create a new peninsula of County land. March 22, 2022 Salt Lake County Council approves resolution number 5956 agreeing to requested annexation to Salt Lake City. County Council reviewed the annexation request as the annexation property leaves a peninsula of County land. County resolution also encourages City to annex additional land in the area. March 24, 2022 Applicant resubmits annexation petition to City, now including the 2440 N and 2462 N properties. April 5, 2022 Salt Lake City Council approves Resolution 6 of 2022 agreeing to accept annexation petition for further consideration. Petition is forwarded to Planning Division for a Planning Commission recommendation on the zoning. May 5, 2022 Applications re-assigned to Dave Gellner, Senior Planner, for processing. May 16, 2022 Notice sent to Westpointe community council. Open house webpage posted to the Planning website. May 17, 2022 Mailed noticed provided to nearby property owners within 300 feet of the properties. October 4, 2022 Applications re-assigned to Daniel Echeverria, Senior Planner, for processing. February 8. 2023 For the February 22nd public hearing, public hearing notice signs posted on the properties, notices mailed to properties and residents within 300 feet, and notices posted on City and State websites. Notices sent on Planning Division listserv. February 22, 2023 Public hearing canceled due to weather. February 23, 2023 Project re-noticed for March 8th public hearing. Notice signs, mailers, online notice, and listserv notice all re-sent out. March 8, 2023 Planning Commission holds public hearing and provides negative recommendation on both the zoning amendment and annexation requests. 2. NOTICE OF CITY COUNCIL HEARING NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING The Salt Lake City Council is considering petitions PLNPCM2021-01124/01134: JWright Communities, LLC, property owner, is requesting a zoning map amendment for a ~6 acre parcel of land located at 2350 N Rose Park Lane. In conjunction with this request, the property owner has filed a petition to annex approximately 28 acres of property located at approximately 2441 N Rose Park Lane. The following petitions are associated with this proposal: 1. Annexation (PLNPCM2021-01124) – A petition to annex into Salt Lake City approximately 28 acres of property generally located at approximately 2441 N Rose Park Lane. The annexation requires designating a zone for each property within the annexation area. The properties are proposed to be zoned as follows: a. 2440 N Rose Park Lane – OS, Open Space b. 2441 N Rose Park Lane – R-MU, Residential/Mixed-Use c. 2462 N Rose Park Lane – OS, Open Space 2. Zoning Map Amendment (PLNPCM2021-01134) – A petition to rezone property located at approximately 2350 North Rose Park Lane from AG-2 – Agricultural to R-MU, Residential Mixed Use. The zoning is intended to support future development of an 1,800-unit multi-family residential development. The property is currently within Salt Lake City boundaries. The annexation process requires that the City apply a zone at the same time a property is annexed. Although the petition proposes specific zones for the properties, the Council may consider other zones. The properties at 2350 and 2441 N are currently used for horse boarding and outdoor equipment storage. The properties at 2440 N and 2462 N are currently vacant. The properties are in or near Council District 1, represented by Victoria Petro-Eschler. On March 8, 2023, the Planning Commission held a public hearing and voted to recommend denial of the associated petitions by the City Council. As part of their study, the City Council is holding an advertised public hearing to receive comments regarding the petitions. During the hearing, anyone desiring to address the City Council concerning this issue will be given an opportunity to speak. The Council may consider adopting the ordinance the same night of the public hearing. The hearing will be held: DATE: TBD TIME: 7:00 PM PLACE: Electronic and in-person options. 451 South State Street, Room 326, Salt Lake City, Utah ** This meeting will be held via electronic means, while also providing for an in-person opportunity to attend or participate in the hearing at the City and County Building, located at 451 South State Street, Room 326, Salt Lake City, Utah. For more information, including WebEx connection information, please visit www.slc.gov/council/virtual-meetings. Comments may also be provided by calling the 24-Hour comment line at (801) 535-7654 or sending an email to council.comments@slcgov.com. All comments received through any source are shared with the Council and added to the public record. If you have any questions relating to this proposal or would like to review the file, please call Daniel Echeverria at 801-535-71765 between the hours of 8:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m., Monday through Friday, or via e-mail at daniel.echeverria@slcgov.com. The application details can be accessed at www.slcpermits.com, by selecting the “planning” tab and entering the petition numbers PLNPCM2021-01124 or PLNPCM2021-01134. Additional information is also available on the Planning webpage here: https://bit.ly/slc-openhouse-01124 People with disabilities may make requests for reasonable accommodation, which may include alternate formats, interpreters, and other auxiliary aids and services. Please make requests at least two make a request, please contact the City Council Office at council.comments@slcgov.com, (801)535-7600, or relay service 711. 3. PLANNING COMMISSION – March 8, 2023 a. Additional Public Comments From: cindy cromer Sent: Wednesday, March 8, 2023 5:09 PM To: SLC Planning Commission Subject: Fw: comments about Rose Park Lane 1 It is part of the piecemeal annexation process which guarantees poor enforcement and coordination of services. Please ask for a briefing on how the Special Improvement District, not the County, is in charge and what has to happen to get to a comprehensive process instead of proceeding the way we have been. It is essential to the health of the Great Salt Lake that we have coordination of governmental efforts near the Lake. 2 This staff report is amazing and contains one of the longest lists of conditions of approval I have ever seen. But it doesn't require that the necessary road improvements occur PRIOR to construction. We are seeing a nightmare play out in Northpoint on 2200 West as the trucks for a million sq. ft. facility make their way down a country road which is no longer a safe place to travel on foot or by bicycle. And the permits from the County were NOT in place. Neither was the road you were promised, leading back to my first point about annexation. 3 It is inconceivable that you could conclude that there is no opportunity for housing in Northpoint, west of 215, but room for 1800 units immediately east of the freeway. It is unreasonable to decide that future airplane traffic above Northpoint makes it unusable for residences, but the noise and pollution from the freeway is just fine on Rose Park Lane next to an off-road vehicle park. It is hard for me to imagine a place more ill-suited for high density residential use than this one. And you took all sort of precautions with a hotel property in terms of noise attenuation when you removed it from the airport overlay at the expense of the organization providing the supported housing, but I see nothing about measuring ambient levels of sound here. 1 Echeverria, Daniel From:Mark Sweet Sent:Tuesday, February 21, 2023 3:54 AM To:Echeverria, Daniel Subject:(EXTERNAL) Rezoning 2441 N Rose Park Lane Questions on purpose and funding. Question the wisdom of cramming 1,800 condos onto 34 acres between I-215 and a flood control canal.(testing positive for West Nile Virus). Or will the DNR's ATV facility be used for this development? The area is served by a dead end road that is barely two lanes wide. And the nearest fire station is four and half miles away. Is the developer paying the impact fees for the cost of; 1- water line upgrades 2- sewer lines. 3- power lines 4- the canal contains gasoline, diesel and Lord knows what other contaminants. 5- how many causeways/culverts will there be. 6- rebuilding/upgrading North Rose Park Lane 7- sound barriers along the freeway. Will any of these units be designated low income? The bond issue voted on 20 years ago for the Regional Athletic Complex; called for a dozen plus soccer fields and a similar number of baseball/softball fields. Are the fields still to be built? Or are they to be replaced with high density housing? On days of soccer matches, traffic is terrible/obscene. Adding some 2,000 plus residents to the area will make it all the more worse. Mark Sweet Dear Commission Members: RE: PLNPCM2021-01124 and PLNPCM2021-01134: North Rose Park Lane Annexation and Zoning Amendment It has been well established in extensive research (cited herein) that residents, schools, and workers close to major highways are hugely affected negatively health wise. This new development proposal sits back to back on I 215, recently opened to heavy diesel truck traffic. 1800 units speaks loudly to the number of citizens that will be affected. There also will be a sound issue given heavy diesel truck traffic. While PM2.5 particulates are the major concern, it is known that some PM 2.5 contains black carbon (soot produced by incomplete combustion of fossil fuels) Additionally, the OHV park will be a major contributor to dust issues, acknowledged by the staff report This development needs to be required to: 1. Install the latest air filtration technology in every apartment and public space in the development. Either have HEPA install a central system, or provide each apartment with a HEPA filter system; 2. Require that UDOT plant a major pollution absorbing tree barrier on the west side of the property; 3. The developers work with the state and Davis County to plant a tree buffer at Jordan River OHV State Recreation Area; and, 4. Notice the applicants leasing/purchasing of the health risks associated with living close to a major highway as is noted in the staff recommendation for the sound issue. https://www.healtheffects.org/publication/mortality-air-pollution-associations- low-exposure-environments-maple-phase-2 BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS, JULY 14, 2022 – A comprehensive new study published today by the Health Effects Institute (HEI) reports increased risks of mortality in millions of Canadian citizens, including at the lowest levels of exposure to fine particulate matter air pollution (PM2.5), levels that fall below current U.S. and other ambient air quality standards. Long-term outdoor PM2.5 exposures as low as 2.5 micrograms per cubic meter were associated with increased risk of death, suggesting that lowering regulatory standards could yield further health benefits. http://jhr.uwpress.org/content/57/3/747.short ABSTRACT We examine the effect of traffic pollution on student outcomes by leveraging variation in wind patterns for schools the same distance from major highways. We compare within-student changes in achievement for students transitioning between schools near highways, where one school has greater levels of pollution because it is downwind of a highway. As students graduate from elementary/middle school to middle/high school, their test scores decrease, behavioral incidents increase, and absence rates increase when they attend a downwind school, relative to when they attend an upwind school in the same zip code. Even within zip codes, microclimates can contribute to inequality. https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11356-021-18458-3 Continual exposure to toxic metals through road dust might develop lifetime cancer risk in local inhabitants. 1 Clark, Aubrey From:Terry Marasco Sent:Tuesday, February 21, 2023 4:56 AM To:Clark, Aubrey Cc:Mendenhall, Erin; Petro-Eschler, Victoria; Norris, Nick; Kevin Parke; Westpointe 2 Subject:(EXTERNAL) Re: Please pass this document to all Commissioners Aubrey, please pass these also. Daniel Medoza at the U led these"  https://www.mdpi.com/1660‐4601/17/18/6931  More frequent peak exposures were associated with reduced math and ELA proficiency, as was greater school disadvantage. High frequency peak exposures were more strongly linked to lower math proficiency in more advantaged schools. Findings highlight the need for policies to reduce the number of days with peak air pollution.      https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/1748‐9326/abbf7a  Pollution reduction benefits would be greatest in schools located in socioeconomically disadvantaged areas. Heterogeneity in exposure, disproportionately affecting socioeconomically disadvantaged schools, points to the need for fine resolution exposure estimation. The economic cost of absences associated with air pollution is substantial even excluding indirect costs such as hospital visits and medication. These findings may help elucidate the differential burden on individual schools and inform local decisions about recess and regulatory considerations for localized pollution sources.  Terry Marasco  Salt Lake City, Utah    "Objects in the mirror are closer than they appear"      On Mon, Feb 20, 2023 at 1:56 PM Terry Marasco <wrote:  Re: PLNPCM2021-01124 and PLNPCM2021-01134: North Rose Park Lane Annexation and Zoning Amendment    Thank you!    Terry Marasco  Salt Lake City, Utah    "Objects in the mirror are closer than they appear"  PLANNING COMMISSION – March 8, 20233 b. Staff Presentation Slides PLANNING COMMISSION // MARCH 8, 2023 NORTH ROSE PARK LANE ANNEXATION AND ZONING AMENDMENT 2350, 2440, 2441, AND 2462 N ROSE PARK LANE PLNPCM2021-01124/01134 •Requests by JWright Properties (2350/2441 N) •Two requests: •Zoning Map Amendment (2350 N Rose Park Lane) •From AG-2, Agricultural •To R-MU, Residential/Mixed Use •Annexation from County to City –Zoning Requests •Apply R-MU to 2441 N •Apply OS to 2462 N •Apply OS to 2440 N •Intended to accommodate an 1,800 unit multi-family development on the 2350 N and 2441 N properties •City and State properties not involved in development Recommendation: Staff is recommending a positive recommendation to the City Council with several conditions REQUEST Salt Lake City // Planning Division 2441 (J Wright) 2350 (J Wright) 2440 (City) 2462 (State) CONTEXT Salt Lake City // Planning Division 2100 North Interchange (Access) PROCESS AND ZONE Zoning Map Amendment •Requires review against standard City considerations •Consistency with plans, compatibility, impacts to services Annexation: •No consideration standards •City & State property included to comply with State law regarding creating “peninsulas” •Requires a zone be applied when annexed •Council forwarded the annexation to Commission for a zoning recommendation •Staff utilized considerations for a rezone Salt Lake City // Planning Division ZONING AMENDMENT &ANNEXATION PROCESS •Proposed Zone for J Wright (private)properties •Height: •Max.75'(multi-family/mixed-use), •Max.45'(non-residential) •Setbacks: •No front/side;min.25%lot depth/up to 30'rear setback •Max.Setback/Build-to Line: •Min.25%of building must be within 15'of front lot line •Open Space:20%of lot area •Freeway Landscape Buffer: •20'wide,shade tree for every 300 sq ft (equivalent to every 15'feet) •Allowed Use Examples: •Multi-family,retail,restaurant,office Salt Lake City // Planning Division R-MU -RESIDENTIAL/MIXED USE KEY CONSIDERATIONS 2440 (City) & 2462 (State): •Rose Park Plan (2001) calls for Open Space (OS) or Agriculture (AG) •Proposed OS –will be used for park/recreation -RAC and OHV facility 2350 & 2441 (JWright) •Rose Park Plan policy: •Zone properties OS or AG •“to be compatible with the State recreational (OHV) and open space land uses (RAC)” •Residential compatible with recreational uses •Citywide policies support additional housing throughout City •Access to healthy lifestyle (recreational access –sports/trail) •Redevelopment of underutilized property •Locating near existing infrastructure (significant planned improvements) •Compatibility and Citywide policies support requested zone Salt Lake City // Planning Division PLAN CONSIDERATIONS F S t r e e t 2441 (J Wright) 2350 (J Wright) 2440 (City) 2462 (State) •Traffic study shows need for road improvements •Abutting roadway is only semi-improved (no curb/gutter/etc.) •Inadequate utilities •Recommended conditions: •Phased improvements identified in traffic study •Roadway improvements to widen/improve adjacent street (Rose Park Lane) •Sidewalks and crosswalk to link development to existing sidewalks at RAC •All necessary utility improvements Salt Lake City // Planning Division PUBLIC IMPROVEMENTS F S t r e e t Turn Lane Signal/ Turn Lanes New Road (Partially funded) •Improve/Widen Road •Add Sidewalk/ Crosswalk •R-MU has no parking requirement •Mostly mapped in higher transit areas •Site has no current transit access •Recommend “General Context” intended for low/no transit access areas •Ex: 1.25 parking stalls for 2-bedroom units, 2 spaces for every 1,000 sq ft for retail •R-MU has a maximum front setback (15') •Public Utilities recommending condition for 50' setback for canal water quality •Setbacks conflict (15' vs 50’) •Recommend condition waiving R-MU setback where canal setback conflicts Salt Lake City // Planning Division R-MU ZONE CONDITIONS •Freeway -Noise and pollution from vehicles •Noise attenuation requirements condition •30 dbs attenuation for bedrooms/25 dbs elsewhere •Freeway landscaping (already required)help mitigate pollution •New condition not in report: •MERV 13 rated air filters in HVAC systems to reduce PM 2.5 air pollution from the freeway •OHV Park (ATVs)-Noise and dust from ATVs: •Intermittent noise can be very loud •Dust has negative health impacts •Recommend sound notice be provided to tenants/future owners •Recommend landscape buffer to help capture dust Salt Lake City // Planning Division FREEWAY NOISE/POLLUTION I-215 bordering site on west OHV State Park bordering site on east •Applicant original RMF-75 zone request •Concerns with single-use, no potential for local services (retail) •Staff discussed with applicant •Recommending the mixed-use residential zone to allow for services •Considered other zones and impacts •General Commercial/Industrial zones •Higher impact uses, loud outdoor mechanical uses •Residential/lower intensity commercial (office, retail, restaurant) •Little to no negative impacts to recreational uses •Additional recreational users •Activity and eyes on the recreational spaces Salt Lake City // Planning Division ALTERNATIVE ZONES/USES •Applicant included a concept plan, showing 1,800 dwelling units •Planned Development would be required due to having buildings without street frontage Salt Lake City // Planning Division CONCEPT SITE PLAN •Two letters generally opposed to the residential zone •One letter with conditions related to health/air quality •No letter from community council •RAC Use Clarification •Doesn’t currently have drop-in play hours •Use requires reservation and insurance policy •Construction Mitigation •Concerns regarding future construction activity •Condition: Work on a condition regarding construction mitigation to limit impacts Salt Lake City // Planning Division PUBLIC INPUT RECOMMENDATION Salt Lake City // Planning Division Staff recommends a positive recommendation to the City Council with conditions as listed in the report: 1.Roadway/Traffic Improvements 2.Rose Park Lane Improvements 3.Sidewalk Improvements 4.Public Utility Improvements 5.City Drain Lift Station 6.City Drain Setbacks 7.R-MU Setback Modification 8.General Parking Requirement 9.Sound Attenuation 10.State Park Landscape Buffer 11.State Park Noise Disclosure Salt Lake City // Planning Division RECOMMENDATION Additional conditions not in report: 12. HVAC Filters: •That air filters with a minimum rating of MERV 13, or equivalent, shall be used in all HVAC equipment. This applies to any replacement filters. 13.Construction Impacts: •That City Staff develop a condition to mitigate impacts on adjacent properties from construction activity on the 2350 and 2441 properties. QUESTIONS Salt Lake City // Planning Division Daniel Echeverria // Senior Planner daniel.echeverria@slcgov.com PLANNING COMMISSION – March 8, 202333 c. Applicant Presentation Slides Albuquerque | Boise | Denver | Las Vegas | Los Angeles | Los Cabos | Orange County | Phoenix | Portland | Reno | Salt Lake Ci ty | San Diego | Seattle | Tucson | Washington, D.C. 2350 N Rose Park Lane North Rose Park Lane Annexation and Zoning Amendment PLNPCM2021-01124 and PLNPCM2021-01134 Salt Lake City Planning Commission– February 22, 2023 Context Aerial 2 Context Aerial 3 Applicant Parcel to be Rezoned Salt Lake City Parcel to be Annexed State of Utah Parcel to be Annexed Applicant Parcel to be Annexed and Zoned City Boundary Rose Park Small Area Plan (2001) 4 Rose Park Small Area Plan (2001) -Policy: •Retain existing agricultural land uses along Rose Park Lane. -Policy: •If properties in the County are annexed into the City, retain the existing land use development by zoning the properties either agricultural or Open Space. -Discussion: •If and when existing properties in the County are annexed into the City they should be zoned for either agricultural or open space land uses to be compatible with the State recreational and open space land uses between Redwood Road and Interstate-215. 5 Current Zoning AG-2 BP PL M-1 6 Salt Lake County Zoning: A-5 Proposed Zoning R-MU BP PL M-1 7 Site Plan 8 Site Plan 9 Site Rendering 10 Conditions of Approval 11 1.That the owner of the 2350 N and 2441 N properties enter into a development agreement with the City that does the following: i.Traffic Impact Study Improvements: That the improvements noted in the transportation impact study addendum (dated 12/23/22), or equivalent improvements as determined by the Transportation Director, are completed prior to any Certificates of Occupancy being issued for development of the property. If other uses are proposed on site that differ from those evaluated in the study, the Transportation Director shall have the ability to require additional traffic studies and may require different off-site improvements for traffic impacts identified in such studies. (See Consideration 2) ii.Rose Park Lane Improvements: The developer shall make all public right of way improvements to the adjacent street Rose Park Lane that would be required by a subdivision process for each phase of their development in compliance with the improvement standards of Chapter 20.40 “Improvements and Flood Control” and Chapter 20.12 “Design Standards and Requirements” including, but not limited to, road widening, paving, curb, gutter, sidewalk, utilities, and park strip landscaping. This may include additional right-of-way improvement beyond the west-half of the adjacent Rose Park Lane right-of-way. (See Consideration 2) iii.Sidewalk Improvements: Sidewalk shall be installed both adjacent to the site and off-site to provide a complete pedestrian connection from each phase of the development to existing sidewalk infrastructure along the Regional Athletic Complex. Sidewalk shall have a minimum width of 5 feet. A crosswalk shall also be installed across Rose Park Lane. The final configuration of the sidewalk and crosswalk is subject to Transportation, Engineering, and Planning Director approval. (See Consideration 2) iv.Public Utility Improvements: That the developer complies with all Public Utility Department requirements to serve the development, including, but not limited to, installation of offsite water and sewer improvements. (See Consideration 2) v.City Drain Usage: If future development plans require discharging to City Drain, there may be offsite lift station upgrades required as determined by the Public Utilities Director. (See Consideration 2) vi.City Drain Setback: That a 50' setback from the City Drain apply to development of the property, measured from the average high-water elevation of the City Drain. No buildings or parking pavement shall be constructed within the setback. Fences, landscaping, sidewalks, and other improvements may be located within the setback. (See Consideration 3) Conditions of Approval 12 vii.R-MU Setback Conflicts: That the maximum front setback provisions of the R-MU ordinance in section 21A.24.170.E.8 do not apply where a greater setback is required along the City Drain (canal) or by the Freeway Scenic Landscape Setback where conditioned to apply along Rose Park Lane. (See Consideration 3) viii.Parking Requirement: That any uses comply with the General Context minimum parking requirements in Table 21A.44.040-A of the Salt Lake City Zoning Ordinance. This does not preclude modifications through the options provided in the Zoning Ordinance. (See Consideration 3) ix.Sound Attenuation: That residential uses be built with at least 30 dBs of sound attention in sleeping areas and 25 dBs of attenuation in other areas, due to the proximity to the freeway and noise impacts. A sound attenuation study would need to be provided to verify compliance, as described in City Code 18.88.020. (See Consideration 4) x.State Park Adjacent Landscaping: That the landscaped setback requirements of the “Freeway Scenic Landscape Setback” of 21A.48.110 (or its successor) be applied along the east property line where it is directly across the street from the Jordan River OHV State Recreation Area (2462 N Rose Park Lane). The requirement shall apply where new development occurs within 100' of that portion of the east property line. (See Consideration 4) xi.State Park Noise Disclosure: That a disclosure be provided to future residents, tenants, and owners regarding the potential for high levels of noise from the Jordan River OHV State Recreation Area. (See Consideration 4) North Rose Park Lane Annexation and Zoning Amendment PLNPCM2021-01124 and PLNPCM2021-01134 Salt Lake City Planning Commission –February 22, 2023 4. ORIGINAL PETITIONS Updated 7/1/20 Zoning Amendment  Amend the text of the Zoning Ordinance  Amend the Zoning Map OFFICE USE ONLY Received By: Date Received: Project #: Name or Section/s of Zoning Amendment: PLEASE PROVIDE THE FOLLOWING INFORMATION Address of Subject Property (or Area): Name of Applicant: Phone: Address of Applicant: E-mail of Applicant:Cell/Fax: Applicant’s Interest in Subject Property:  Owner  Contractor  Architect  Other: Name of Property Owner (if different from applicant): E-mail of Property Owner:Phone: Please note that additional information may be required by the project planner to ensure adequate information is provided for staff analysis. All information required for staff analysis will be copied and made public, including professional architectural or engineering drawings, for the purposes of public review by any interested party. AVAILABLE CONSULTATION If you have any questions regarding the requirements of this application, please contact Salt Lake City Planning Counter at (801) 535-7700 prior to submitting the application. REQUIRED FEE Map Amendment: filing fee of $1,058 plus $121 per acre in excess of one acre Text Amendment: filing fee of $1,058, plus fees for newspaper notice. Plus additional fee for mailed public notices. SIGNATURE If applicable, a notarized statement of consent authorizing applicant to act as an agent will be required. Signature of Owner or Agent: Date: SA L T L A K E C I T Y P L A N N IN G 10/28/2021 X n JAW Development, LLC; Attn.: Jeffrey D. Wright, P.E. and Jay Bollwinkel 801-302-2200; 801-364-9696 jeff@jwright.biz; jayb@grassligroup.com 801-386-6820; 801-364-9696 n jeff@jwright.biz 801-302-2200 2350 N. Rose Park Ln., Salt Lake City, Utah 84116 357 West 6160 South, Murray, UT 84107 JWright Communities Updated 7/1/20 St a f f R e v i e w SUBMITTAL REQUIREMENTS 1.Project Description (please attach additional sheets.) A statement declaring the purpose for the amendment. A description of the proposed use of the property being rezoned. List the reasons why the present zoning may not be appropriate for the area. Is the request amending the Zoning Map? If so, please list the parcel numbers to be changed. Is the request amending the text of the Zoning Ordinance? If so, please include language and the reference to the Zoning Ordinance to be changed. WHERE TO FILE THE COMPLETE APPLICATION Mailing Address: Planning Counter PO Box 145471 Salt Lake City, UT 84114 In Person: Planning Counter 451 South State Street, Room 215 Telephone: (801) 535-7700 INCOMPLETE APPLICATIONS WILL NOT BE ACCEPTED ______ I acknowledge that Salt Lake City requires the items above to be submitted before my application can be processed. I understand that Planning will not accept my application unless all of the following items are included in the submittal package. X X X X X 4842-6277-7292 EXHIBIT A SUBMITTAL REQUIREMENTS PROJECT DESCRIPTION 1. PURPOSE FOR THE AMENDMENT IN QUESTION: •Acreage: 4.93 acres •Address: 2350 N. Rose Park Ln., Salt Lake City, Utah 84116 (the “Property”) •Current Zoning: Agricultural 2 Acre Minimum (AG-2) •Proposed Zoning: High Density Multi-Family Residential District (RMF-75) 2. A DESCRIPTION OF THE PROPOSED USE OF THE PROPERTY BEING REZONED: The Property is currently in Salt Lake City. The intention is to annex in adjoining land from unincorporated Salt Lake County (the “Annexation Property”)1 and have a single, integrated multifamily project located on the combined land. The requested rezone will facilitate the development of this project, and will tie in infrastructure improvements intended for the area to facilitate development. The conceptual site plan, attached hereto as Exhibit B, contemplates, among other things for both the Property and Annexation Property: •11 buildings (5 stories – less than 75’ in height); •164 units per building (500 sq. ft. minimum); •Total density of 1,804 units; •Building coverage of 29%; •Parking Provided: Podium (2 levels each building) (1,760 parking spaces), and Surface (775 parking spaces) (total of 2,535 parking spaces); •Parking coverage of 30%; and •Landscaping coverage of 41%. 3. REASONS WHY THE PRESENT ZONING MAY NOT BE APPROPRIATE FOR THE AREA: •The Property is adjoined by the following zoning districts: •North: N/A Unincorporated [Annexation Property (High Density Multi-Family Residential District (RMF-75)) upon completion of annexation and rezone)] •East: Open Space (OS) •South: Single Family Residential (R-1-7000) separated by I-215 and Frontage Rd. •West: Business Park (BP) separated by I-215 •The Property is located within an agricultural area of the Rose Park Small Area Plan (adopted 2001), and other details therein are very limited. The Property is generally located within the Northwest Jordan River/Airport Master Plan (adopted 1992) but the exact location of the Property is not discussed within such Master Plan. The Northwest Jordan River/Airport Master Plan highlights the importance of eliminating use conflicts between adjacent properties. Multi-family residential housing does not conflict with the surrounding uses detailed above. Further, we intend to preserve open space and existing 1 The Annexation Property adjoins the Property to the north (2441 N. Rose Park Ln., Salt Lake City, Utah 84116). The Annexation Property is approximately 17.21 acres. Applicant is simultaneously seeking to annex the Annexation Property into Salt Lake City with requested zoning of RMF -75. 4842-6277-7292 trees on the Property and the Annexation Property in accordance with the Salt Lake City Urban Forestry. •A rezone of the Property would support business park uses in the area, if they develop in accordance with current zoning. The existing Salt Lake City Regional Athletic Complex (RAC) to the east provides an adjacent, complimentary use. Multi-family residential housing will involve efficient use of the Property and Annexation Property and coordinate well with existing and planned public infrastructure. •A rezone of the Property and the Annexation Property will support nearby developments, including, without limitation, the RAC, and will provide infrastructure improvements for the area to facilitate development. We have been in contact with the Utah Department of Transportation, Salt Lake City Public Utilities, and others with respect to constructing and/or contributing to: (i) Sports Park Boulevard, (ii) the upgrade of the intersection of Sports Park Boulevard and Redwood Road, (iii) new water and sewer lines through Sports Park Boulevard, and (iv) a Salt Lake City drain bridge on or near the Property. The installation of Sports Park Boulevard and the upgrade of the aforementioned intersection will reduce traffic congestion on Rose Park Lane after RAC sporting events. The construction of new water and sewer lines and the drain bridge will facilitate development in the area generally. 4.PARCEL NUMBERS TO BE CHANGED: •Property: Parcel Id. No. 08153010030000; AG-2 to RMF-75 •Annexation Property: Parcel Id. No. 08151000240000; Unincorporated to RMF-75 4842-6277-7292 EXHIBIT B SITE PLAN [See Attached] 20 21 23 54 13 65 48 68 18 46 12 2 5 44 95 45 56 22 42 11 3 13 5 44 DW N 10 % DW N 10 % DW N 10 % DW N 10 % DW N 10 % DW N 10 % DW N 10 % DW N 10 % DW N 10 % DW N 10 % PARKING ( T Y P ) 25 ' 25 ' 25 ' 25 ' 40'Rose P a r k L a n e C o u n t y Utah State Parks Jordan River OHV Park I-215 Sa l t L a k e C i t y Club House PLAYGROUND PERIMETER TRAIL GATHERING AREA FENCED DOG AREA PERIMETER TRAIL LAWN SALT LAKE DRAIN Pool HUNTER STABLES APARTMENTS CONCEPTUAL SITE PLAN 12 MAY 2021SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH Scale: 1" = 100'-0" 0 50' 100'200' Plotted: 5/12/21 at 9:42am By: dans P:\Projects\19-103 Hunter Stables HD\02-Working\01-Drawings\01-SD\19-103 Site Plan MColor 210512.dwgFile Path: SLC RAC TRAIL CONNECTING TO JORDAN RIVER AND LEGACY PARKWAY TRAIL ROAD CONNECTING TO N REDWOOD RD 23 13 65 48 68 18 46 12 2 5 44 95 45 56 22 42 11 3 13 5 44 DWN 10% DWN 10% DWN 10% DWN 10% DWN 10% DWN 10% DWN DWN 10% PA R K I N G ( T Y P ) 25' 40 ' Ro s e P a r k L a n e County U t a h S t a t e P a r k s Jo r d a n R i v e r O H V P a r k Salt Lake City N R E D W O O D R D JO R D A N R I V E R SPOTS PARK BOULEVARD Cl u b Ho u s e JORDAN RIVER AND LEGACY PARKWAY TRAIL P L A Y G R O U N D S A L T L A K E D R A I N Po o l HUNTER STABLES APARTMENTS CONCEPTUAL SITE PLAN 13 APRIL 2120SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH Scale: 1" = 100'-0" 0 50' 100'200' Plotted: 4/13/21 at 2:37pm By: tylerr P:\Projects\19-103 Hunter Stables HD\02-Working\01-Drawings\01-SD\19-2013 Site Plan MColor.dwgFile Path: SLC RAC TRAIL CONNECTING TO JORDAN RIVER AND LEGACY PARKWAY TRAIL ROAD CONNECTING TO N REDWOOD RD hƉĚĂƚĞĚϭϬͬϮϳͬϮϭ $QQH[DWLRQWR6DOW/DNH&LW\ K&&/h^KE>z WƌŽũĞĐƚη͗ZĞĐĞŝǀĞĚLJ͗ĂƚĞZĞĐĞŝǀĞĚ͗ WƌŽũĞĐƚEĂŵĞ͗ W>^WZKs/d,&K>>Kt/E'/E&KZDd/KE /ƐƚŚĞƐƵďũĞĐƚĂƌĞĂďŽƌĚĞƌŝŶŐƚŚĞĐƵƌƌĞŶƚďŽƵŶĚĂƌŝĞƐŽĨ^Ăůƚ>ĂŬĞŝƚLJ͍ FzĞƐFEŽ ZĞƋƵĞƐƚ͗ >ŽĐĂƚŝŽŶŽĨ^ƵďũĞĐƚWƌŽƉĞƌƚLJ͗ EĂŵĞŽĨƉƉůŝĐĂŶƚ͗WŚŽŶĞ͗ ĚĚƌĞƐƐŽĨƉƉůŝĐĂŶƚ͗ ͲŵĂŝůŽĨƉƉůŝĐĂŶƚ͗Ğůůͬ&Ădž͗ ƉƉůŝĐĂŶƚ͛Ɛ/ŶƚĞƌĞƐƚŝŶ^ƵďũĞĐƚWƌŽƉĞƌƚLJ͗ Î WůĞĂƐĞŶŽƚĞƚŚĂƚĂĚĚŝƚŝŽŶĂůŝŶĨŽƌŵĂƚŝŽŶŵĂLJďĞƌĞƋƵŝƌĞĚďLJƚŚĞƉƌŽũĞĐƚƉůĂŶŶĞƌƚŽĞŶƐƵƌĞĂĚĞƋƵĂƚĞ ŝŶĨŽƌŵĂƚŝŽŶŝƐƉƌŽǀŝĚĞĚĨŽƌƐƚĂĨĨĂŶĂůLJƐŝƐ͘ůůŝŶĨŽƌŵĂƚŝŽŶƌĞƋƵŝƌĞĚĨŽƌƐƚĂĨĨĂŶĂůLJƐŝƐǁŝůůďĞĐŽƉŝĞĚĂŶĚ ŵĂĚĞƉƵďůŝĐ͕ŝŶĐůƵĚŝŶŐƉƌŽĨĞƐƐŝŽŶĂůĂƌĐŚŝƚĞĐƚƵƌĂůŽƌĞŶŐŝŶĞĞƌŝŶŐĚƌĂǁŝŶŐƐ͕ĨŽƌƚŚĞƉƵƌƉŽƐĞƐŽĨƉƵďůŝĐ ƌĞǀŝĞǁďLJĂŶLJŝŶƚĞƌĞƐƚĞĚƉĂƌƚLJ͘ s/>>KE^h>dd/KE Î WůĂŶŶĞƌƐĂƌĞĂǀĂŝůĂďůĞĨŽƌĐŽŶƐƵůƚĂƚŝŽŶƉƌŝŽƌƚŽƐƵďŵŝƚƚŝŶŐƚŚŝƐĂƉƉůŝĐĂƚŝŽŶ͘WůĞĂƐĞĞŵĂŝů njŽŶŝŶŐΛƐůĐŐŽǀ͘ĐŽŵŝĨLJŽƵŚĂǀĞĂŶLJƋƵĞƐƚŝŽŶƐƌĞŐĂƌĚŝŶŐƚŚĞƌĞƋƵŝƌĞŵĞŶƚƐŽĨƚŚŝƐĂƉƉůŝĐĂƚŝŽŶ͘ t,ZdK&/>d,KDW>dWW>/d/KE ƉƉůLJŽŶůŝŶĞƚŚƌŽƵŐŚƚŚĞŝƚŝnjĞŶĐĐĞƐƐWŽƌƚĂů͘dŚĞƌĞŝƐĂƐƚĞƉͲďLJͲƐƚĞƉŐƵŝĚĞƚŽůĞĂƌŶ ŚŽǁƚŽƐƵďŵŝƚŽŶůŝŶĞ͘ ZYh/Z& &ŝůŝŶŐĨĞĞŽĨΨϭ͕ϯϰϰ WůƵƐĂĚĚŝƚŝŽŶĂůĨĞĞĨŽƌƌĞƋƵŝƌĞĚƉƵďůŝĐŶŽƚŝĐĞƐǁŝůůďĞĂƐƐĞƐƐĞĚĂĨƚĞƌƚŚĞĂƉƉůŝĐĂƚŝŽŶŝƐƐƵďŵŝƚƚĞĚ͘ ^/'EdhZ /ĨĂƉƉůŝĐĂďůĞ͕ĂŶŽƚĂƌŝnjĞĚƐƚĂƚĞŵĞŶƚŽĨĐŽŶƐĞŶƚĂƵƚŚŽƌŝnjŝŶŐĂƉƉůŝĐĂŶƚƚŽĂĐƚĂƐĂŶĂŐĞŶƚǁŝůůďĞƌĞƋƵŝƌĞĚ͘ ^ŝŐŶĂƚƵƌĞŽĨKǁŶĞƌŽƌŐĞŶƚ͗ĂƚĞ͗ 6$ / 7  / $ . 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State Street, Suite 306 Salt Lake City, Utah 84111 Subject: Annexation of  Acres on 2664 North Rose Park Lane Dear Mayor Mendehall, We formally request the annexation of the above referenced parcel to be classified as RMF75 zoning. We have attended the Westpointe Community Council and presented our project twice to gather input. We are now ready to proceed with Planning Commission review of our project. Thank you for your consideration. Sincerely, Jay Bollwinkel, Principal MGB+A, Inc. 145 W 200 S – Salt Lake City, Utah 84111 – 801-364-9696 – www.grassligroup.com ϭ͘What is the current use of the land? – ŐƌŝĐƵůƚƵƌĞ Ϯ͘What services are currently provided by another municipality, county, or special district? - EŽŶĞ ϯ͘Please identify any legal or factual barriers that would negatively affect the probability of annexation of the subject property? – EŽŶĞ tĞŚĂǀĞƌĞƐƵďŵŝƚƚĞĚƚŚŝƐĂŶŶĞdžĂƚŝŽŶƉĞƚŝƚŝŽŶƚŽŝŶĐůƵĚĞƚŚĞĂŶŶĞdžĂƚŝŽŶŽĨƚǁŽ;ϮͿƉƵďůŝĐůLJ ƉĂƌĐĞůƐ͕ƉĞƌƚŚĞƌĞƋƵĞƐƚŽĨ^Ăůƚ>ĂŬĞŽƵŶƚLJ͘dŚĞƐĞƉĂƌĐĞůƐĂƌĞŽǁŶĞĚďLJ^Ăůƚ>ĂŬĞŝƚLJŽƌƉ͘ ;ƉĂƌĐĞůηϬϴϭϱϭϬϬϬϯϬϬϬϬϬͿĂŶĚƚŚĞ^ƚĂƚĞŽĨhƚĂŚŝǀŝƐŝŽŶƐŽĨWĂƌŬƐΘZĞĐƌĞĂƚŝŽŶͲ;ƉĂƌĐĞůη ϬϴϭϱϭϬϬϬϮϵϬϬϬϬͿ͘ Property Owners: Jeff Wright JWright Communities, LLC 357 W 6160 S Murray, UT 84107 All ƉƌŝǀĂƚĞproperty owners support this annexation 1 PETITION FOR ANNEXATION TO: CITY RECORDER’S OFFICE OF SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH COUNTY CLERK’S OFFICE OF SALT LAKE COUNTY, UTAH: The undersigned owner (the “Petitioner”) of a portion of the Property (defined below) submits this Petition for Annexation (this “Petition”) and respectfully represents the following: 1.This Petition is made in accordance with the requirements of Utah Code § 10-2- 403. 2.The real property subject to this Petition: (i) contains land that is privately-owned by the Petitioner, (ii) contains land that is publicly owned by Salt Lake City Corp. and the State of Utah Division of Parks and Recreation, (iii) contains approximately 28.28 acres, (iv) is located within the unincorporated area of Salt Lake County, (v) is contiguous to the northern boundary of Salt Lake City’s limits, and (vi) is more particularly described on Exhibit “A” attached hereto (the “Property”). 3.The signature affixed hereto is that of the Petitioner and who, by so affixing its signature, states and confirms that: a.the Petitioner is the owner of all private land area within the Property; b. the Property is accurately described and depicted on the recordable map, attached hereto as Exhibit “A”, which was prepared by a licensed surveyor and which is made a part hereof by such reference; c.in accordance with Utah Code § 10-2-403(2)(a)(i)(A), a notice of intent to file a petition was properly filed with the City Recorder of Salt Lake City, Utah, a copy of which is attached hereto as Exhibit “B”; and d.in accordance with Utah Code § 10-2-403(2)(a)(i)(B), a notice was properly mailed to each “affected entity”, including, without limitation, the public entities that own a portion of the Property, a copy of which is attached hereto as Exhibit “A” , as evidenced by that certificate of completion attached hereto as Exhibit “C”. 4.The Petitioner hereby designates the following person as the sole sponsor, and the contact sponsor, for this Petition. The sponsor’s contact information is as follows: Jay Bollwinkel 145 W 200 S Salt Lake City, UT 84101 jayb@grassligroup.com 5.The Property is not, in whole or in part, subject to any other petition for annexation that was previously filed that has not been denied, rejected, or granted, in accordance to Utah Code § 10-2-403(4). 2 WHEREFORE, Petitioner hereby requests that this Petition be considered, accepted, and certified by the Salt Lake City Recorder in accordance with Utah Code § 10-2-405. DATED this day of March 2022. PETITIONER: JWright Communities By: Name: Jeffery D. Wright Its: NOTICE: THERE WILL BE NO PUBLIC ELECTION ON THE ANNEXATION PROPOSED BY THIS PETITION BECAUSE UTAH LAW DOES NOT PROVIDE FOR AN ANNEXATION TO BE APPROVED BY VOTERS AT A PUBLIC ELECTION. IF YOU SIGN THIS PETITION AND LATER DECIDE THAT YOU DO NOT SUPPORT THE PETITION, YOU MAY WITHDRAW YOUR SIGNATURE BY SUBMITTING A SIGNED, WRITTEN WITHDRAWAL WITH THE RECORDER OR CLERK OF SALT LAKE CITY. IF YOU CHOOSE TO WITHDRAW YOUR SIGNATURE, YOU SHALL DO SO NO LATER THAN THIRTY (30) DAYS AFTER SALT LAKE CITY RECEIVES NOTICE THAT THE PETITION HAS BEEN CERTIFIED. CONTACT SPONSOR: By: Name: Jay Bollwinkel Its: 23rd 3 EXHIBIT “A” Recordable Map or Plat [See Attached] 4 4852-6058-5424.4 5 EXHIBIT “B” Notice of Intent to File Petition & Notice to Affected Entities [See Attached] 6 7 8 9 10 11 EXHIBIT “C” Certificate of Completion [See Attached] 12 13 14 5. MAILING LIST Name Mailing Address City/State ZIP PROVO-JORDAN RIVER PARKWAY 1545 WEST 1000 NORTH SALT LAKE CITY UT 84116 ATTN Nancy B Regier UTAH DIVISION OF PARKS & RECREATION 1596 W North Temple SALT LAKE CITY UT 84116 STATE OF UTAH AND PROVO-JORDAN RIVER PARKWAY AUTHORITY STATE OFFICE BUILDING RM 404 SALT LAKE CITY UT 84114 JWRIGHT COMMUNITIES 357 W 6160 S MURRAY UT 84107 ATTN RHONDA DEVEREAUX HAPPY HORSE RANCH LLC 88 E EDGECOMBE DR SALT LAKE CITY UT 84103 ERIC PORTER 2800 N ROSE PARK LN SALT LAKE CITY UT 84116 ATTN: PROPERTY MANAGER STATE OF UTAH DIVISION OF PARKS AND 1594 W NORTHTEMPLE ST # 116 SALT LAKE CITY UT 84116 ATTN: JEFF WRIGHT JWRIGHT COMMUNITIES, LLC 357 W 6160 S MURRAY UT 84107 ATTN: PROPERTY MANAGEMENT SALT LAKE CITY CORPORATION PO BOX 145460 SALT LAKE CITY UT 84114 ETG LV TR 2125 N 2800 W BRIGHAM CITY UT 84302 ATTN: TAX ADM DIV 513-5346 ROSE PARK STAKE OF CHURCH OF JC OF LDS 50 E NORTHTEMPLE ST #2225 SALT LAKE CITY UT 84150 PARK MANAGEMENT II, LLC 1302 W MILLBRIDGE LN WEST BOUNTIFUL UT 84087 ATTN: HAMILTON PARTNERS HAMILTON I-215 LOGISTIC CENTER LLC 222 S MAIN ST # 1760 SALT LAKE CITY UT 84101 LBA RVI-COMPANY XLIII, LLC PO BOX 847 CARLSBAD CA 92018 CURRENT RESIDENT 2441 N ROSE PARK LN SALT LAKE CITY UT 84116 CURRENT RESIDENT 2575 N ROSE PARK LN SALT LAKE CITY UT 84116 CURRENT RESIDENT 2800 N ROSE PARK LN SALT LAKE CITY UT 84116 CURRENT RESIDENT 2462 N ROSE PARK LN SALT LAKE CITY UT 84116 CURRENT RESIDENT 2440 N ROSE PARK LN SALT LAKE CITY UT 84116 CURRENT RESIDENT 2350 N ROSE PARK LN SALT LAKE CITY UT 84116 CURRENT RESIDENT 2280 N ROSE PARK LN SALT LAKE CITY UT 84116 CURRENT RESIDENT 2280 N ROSE PARK LN SALT LAKE CITY UT 84116 CURRENT RESIDENT 2280 N ROSE PARK LN SALT LAKE CITY UT 84116 CURRENT RESIDENT 2075 W 2670 N SALT LAKE CITY UT 84116 CURRENT RESIDENT 2075 W 2670 N SALT LAKE CITY UT 84116 CURRENT RESIDENT 2476 N 2200 W SALT LAKE CITY UT 84116 CURRENT RESIDENT 2596 N 2200 W SALT LAKE CITY UT 84116 CURRENT RESIDENT 2520 N 2200 W SALT LAKE CITY UT 84116 CURRENT RESIDENT 2390 N 2200 W SALT LAKE CITY UT 84116 CURRENT RESIDENT 2320 N 2200 W SALT LAKE CITY UT 84116 CURRENT RESIDENT 2220 N 2200 W SALT LAKE CITY UT 84116 ATTN DANIEL ECHEVERRIA SALT LAKE CITY PLANNING DIVISION PO Box 145480 Salt Lake City UT 84114 CAP Plan, Matrix, & Policy Goals/Metrics Council Briefing July 18, 2023 Presented by Mary Beth Thompson, Aaron Price, and Mike Atkinson Capital Asset Planning Model Funding Sources Funding Source Description Transportation Fund Quarter Cent Sales Tax - Transportation and Streets projects Bonds General Obligation and Revenue Special Assessment Area Central Business District - Economic Promotion Grants Federal, State, County Class C Roads State Gas Tax General Fund Most flexible funding source, can be spent on any project Public/Private Partnerships Potential future funding source Impact Fees Fire, Parks, Police, and Transportation/Streets Donations Individuals and foundations Capital Asset Plan Elements Division Master Plans Division specific documents RDA & Public Utilities Input Strategic Collaboration 10 Year Division Capital Planning Long-term capital planning Annual Constituency Requests Reviewed to align with internal requests & not ranked Impact Fee Facilities Plans Determine Impact Fee Eligibility Capital Asset Plan Funding Sources Committees Finance Committee Provide detailed information on Funding Sources CAP Committee Internal project ranking and submittal to CDCIP Board CAP Committee Scoring General Fund Capital Asset Plan CAP Manager Funding Sources Final Scoring & Budget Finance Committee CAP Committee Once projects have been evaluated by the CAP Committee, they are forwarded to the CDCIP Board for recommendation to the Mayor and City Council. Mayor City Council Criteria Critical Failure Legal Obligation Risk: Life, Health & Safety Outside Funding Completed Project Design Promote Equity Environmental Conservation Beautification Efficient Investment Workforce Support Community Request Points (0-4):4 4 4 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 Y/N [Project Name] Submitting a request: When submitting a request, please provide answers to the following questions in addition to any information available related to the criteria. 1. Describe the project. 2. What is the problem the department is trying to solve? 3. Who will the project serve, and how will it improve services? 4. What is the requested timing of project completion, and what is the implication if the request is delayed or denied? 5. Is this a replacement or a new capital asset project? 6. Is there an estimated cost at this time? 7. What is the current annual maintenance and the estimated future annual maintenance? 8. Has the capital asset project been scoped? 9. Has the capital asset project been designed? *Criteria has been developed in accordance with Resolution 29 of 2017 and the Mayor's Goals of: Our Growth, Our Environment, Our Communities, Our City Family. CAP Matrix* 2019 Council Policy Goals and Metrics Potential Policy Goals Potential Metrics High-Level Cost Estimate Bring all facilities out of deferred maintenance Appropriations vs. funding need identified in Public Services’ Facilities Dashboard that tracks each asset $6.8 million annually or $68 million over ten years Expand the City's urban trail network with an emphasis on East-West connections Total paved/unpaved network miles; number and funding for improved trail features; percentage of 9-Line completed $21 million for 9-Line implementation Increase the overall condition index of the City's street network from poor to fair Overall Condition Index (OCI); pavement condition survey every five years $133 million cost estimate (in addition to existing funding level) Implement the Foothill Trails Master Plan Distance of improved trails completed; number and funding for improved trailheads $TBD Advance the City’s sustainability goals through building energy efficiency upgrades Energy savings; carbon emission reductions $TBD Focus on renewal and maintenance projects over creating new assets Number, funding level and ratio of renewed assets vs. new assets $TBD 2023 Mayor Goals – CIP Related Our Environment •Work with the City’s Sustainable Infrastructure Steering Committee to draft and propose internal policy requiring capital projects to consider environmental justice impacts and incorporate green and sustainable infrastructure. •Complete Foothills Trails Master Plan evaluation and Plan addendum in collaboration with key stakeholders and indigenous leaders. Our Community •Develop a 5-Year Strategic Plan for Planned Growth to more effectively utilize impact fees for community benefits. •Complete the Neighborhood Byway Design Guidebook and finish design and/or construction of at least four neighborhood byways throughout the city. •Implement action items on the Vision Zero program to reduce traffic-related injuries and fatalities. •Propose adoption of Life on State to improve transportation and land uses along the corridor. THANK YOU Presented by Department of Finance CAP Matrix* Cri�cal Failure: When reviewing this criterium, par�cular focus should be paid to whether the request will prevent a cri�cal failure of a structure. Does this project follow the Sustainability Ordinance? Legal Obliga�ons: When reviewing this criterium, considera�ons include coming into compliance with ordinances and execu�ve orders, various contractual agreements, or state and federal mandates. Risk: Life, Health, and Safety: When reviewing this criterium, par�cular focus should be paid to whether the request will correct various types of code viola�ons or increase safety/reduce crime. Outside Funding: This criterium assesses whether there is outside funding support for a par�cular ini�a�ve, including federal and state grants, coordina�on with other agencies, public/private partnerships, or dona�ons. When analyzing outside funding, it should be noted how much of the funding will s�ll need to be provided by the City in addi�on to any outside support. Project Design Complete: This is in accordance with Resolu�on Number 29 of 2017 which states, "The Council intends to follow a guideline of approving construc�on funding for a capital project in the fiscal year immediately following the project's design wherever possible. Project costs become less accurate as more �me passes. The City can avoid expenses for re-es�ma�ng project costs by funding capital projects in a �mely manner.” Promote Equity: Considera�on should be given to underserved areas of the city in order to improve the infrastructure of the city as a whole ("close the gap amongst neighborhoods") rather than improving some areas and allowing others to deteriorate. A map showing the condi�on of the infrastructure of the city could help in performing this analysis. Environmental Conserva�on: This criterium involves analyzing whether a project provides environmentally sustainable solu�ons or helps preserve natural resources (watersheds, rivers, green space, etc.) Efficient Investment: The main considera�ons for efficient investment are whether a project func�ons to increase revenue or reduce expenses. Projec�ons on this front should be as accurate as possible and veted through the Department of Finance. Workforce Support: This criterium focuses on whether a project supports the physical, mental, or economic well- being of City employees, in keeping with the Mayor's goal of suppor�ng "Our City Family". Beau�fica�on: This relates to aesthe�c improvements including Art incorpora�on, Historic Preserva�on, Site Beau�fica�on, and other opportuni�es that express the City's value for the arts and improving quality of life through projects that go beyond func�onal efficiency. Community Request: While the financial limita�ons of any municipality inhibit the ability to act on every request - the concerns and desires of our residents are vital to understanding how best to allocate our limited resources, therefore, projects that are closely aligned with community requests should be given proper considera�on. *Criteria has been developed in accordance with Resolu�on 29 of 2017 and the Mayor's Goals of: Our Growth, Our Environment, Our Communi�es, Our City Family. COUNCIL STAFF REPORT CITY COUNCIL of SALT LAKE CITY tinyurl.com/SLCFY24 TO:City Council Members FROM: Ben Luedtke, Sylvia Richards Budget and Policy Analysts DATE: August 15, 2023 RE: Budget Amendment Number 1 of Fiscal Year (FY) 2024 Budget Amendment Number One includes ten proposed amendments, ($2,139,398) in revenues and $14,892,993 in expenditures of which $250,000 is from General Fund Balance, requesting changes to five funds. Most expenses in this budget amendment are housekeeping items found in section D. The transmittal included a separate ordinance for item D-2 that would correct a fee in the Consolidated Fee Schedule or CFS. The budget amendment and the CFS amendment will be listed as two separate items with two separate ordinances and votes on a Council formal meeting agenda. Fund Balance If all the items are adopted as proposed, then General Fund Balance (including Funding Our Future) would be projected at 11.38% which is $7,190,963 below the 13% minimum target. The FY2024 annual budget had a projected Fund Balance slightly above 13% of ongoing General Fund revenues. The decrease from 13% to 11.38% is caused by an $8.5 million estimate of expense changes (e.g., prepaid expenses, accounts payable outstanding). This is shown in the Fund Balance projections table on page three of this staff report. The actual expense changes are pending confirmation by the annual financial audit which is typically completed in December. The Finance Department does an expense change projection each year using a conservative approach (estimates expenses on the high-end). The actual amount could vary from the $8.5 million estimate. Historically the amount has ranged from approximately $4 million to $8 million. The projected Fund Balance does not include unused FY2023 budgets that drop to Fund Balance at the end of the fiscal year. The General Fund typically sees $2 million to $3 million drop to Fund Balance annually, which would increase the fund balance percentage. It also does not include actual revenues through the end of the last fiscal year. Those amounts are confirmed by the annual financial audit. Policy Question: The Council may wish to ask the Administration for additional information about the $8.5 million of estimated expense changes and whether the estimates may have changed since the annual budget deliberations in May and June. Two Straw Poll Requests The Administration is requesting straw polls for two items: A-1 Donation to CIP for Ball Field Sports Lighting at Riverside Park ($218,000 to the CIP Fund), and A-2 Funding for fall 2023 Downtown Open Streets Initiative ($250,000 from the General Fund Balance). Additionally, the Council may wish to note that item A-3 is a request to refund Impact and Permit Fees for the Ivory University House which has a separate briefing and staff report. The total amount being refunded is approximately $2.4 million. CITY COUNCIL OF SALT LAKE CITY 451 SOUTH STATE STREET, ROOM 304 P.O. BOX 145476, SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH 84114-5476 COUNCIL.SLCGOV.COM TEL 801-535-7600 FAX 801-535-7651 Project Timeline: Set Date: August 15, 2023 1st Briefing: August 15, 2023 Public Hearing: Sept. 5, 2023 2nd Briefing: Sept. 5 or 12, 2023 (if needed) Potential Action: Sept. 19, 2023 BACKGROUND/DISCUSSION: Revenue for FY 2023-24 Budget Adjustments As this is the first budget amendment of the new fiscal year, there are no revenue projection updates to report at this time. Fund Balance Chart The Administration’s chart below shows the current General Fund Balance figures. Fund balance has been updated to include proposed changes for BA#1. Based on those projections adjusted fund balance is projected to be at 11.38%. The Administration is requesting a budget amendment that reduces revenue by ($2,139,398) and new expenses of $14,892,993. The amendment proposes changes in five funds, with no increases in FTEs. The amendment also includes the use of $250,000 from the General Fund balance. The proposal includes ten initiatives for Council review. A summary spreadsheet outlining proposed budget changes is attached. The Administration requests this document be modified based on the decisions of the Council. The budget opening is separated in eight different categories: A. New Budget Items B. Grants for Existing Staff Resources C. Grants for New Staff Resources D. Housekeeping Items E. Grants Requiring No New Staff Resources F. Donations G. Council Consent Agenda Grant Awards I. Council Added Items PUBLIC PROCESS: Public Hearing Impact Fees Update The Administration’s transmittal provides an updated summary of impact fee tracking. The information is current as of 7/20/23. As a result, the City is on-track with impact fee budgeting to have no refunds during all of FY2024 and FY2025. The transportation section of the City’s Impact Fees Plan was updated in October 2020. The Administration is working on updates to the fire, parks, and police sections of the plan. Type Unallocated Cash “Available to Spend”Next Refund Trigger Date Amount of Expiring Impact Fees Fire $273,684 More than two years away - Parks $16,793,487 More than two years away - Police $1,402,656 More than two years away - Transportation $6,304,485 More than two years away - Note: Encumbrances are an administrative function when impact fees are held under a contract Section A: New Items (Note: to expedite the processing of this staff report, staff has included the Administration’s descriptions from the transmittal for some of these items) A-1: Donation for Northeast Ball Field Sports Lighting at Riverside Park ($218,000 Donation to the CIP Fund) The Council approved $300,000 of parks impact fees in FY2023 CIP to add four light poles and structures to the northeast ballfield at Riverside Park (the red marker in the below map). There are currently three baseball fields used by the leagues and a fourth practice field. This would be the first city-owned baseball field to receive lighting. The City received a donation of $218,000, which will allow the northwest ballfield to also be lit by the project. The total project budget would be $518,000. Straw Poll Request: The Administration requested a straw poll to allow for the receipt of the contract for the entire project. A-2: One-time Additional Funding for Fall 2023 Downtown Open Streets Events ($250,000 from General Fund Balance) The Council approved $500,000 in Budget Amendment #5 of FY2023 for downtown street enhanced activation over the 2023 summer. The Council re-appropriated the funds in the FY2024 annual budget and expanded the scope to include open streets events in the fall. This item is requesting an additional $250,000 for a total budget of $750,000. The additional funding would be used to purchase street infrastructure (e.g., bollards, Trax barriers, and parking signs) instead of renting it. The street infrastructure would be stored by the Streets Division when not in use. The Administration stated the street infrastructure would be available for other special events to use. The open streets event this fall would be shorter than the versions held over the summer the past few years. The events would be run for eight weeks instead of 15 weeks and not include Thursdays. The events would still be on Main Street from South Temple to 400 South. Main Street would be closed from Noon to 2am on Fridays and Saturdays. The events this fall would have enhanced activation and programming on every block including a “street market.” During the annual budget, the Council discussed how the end of temporary pandemic regulations made holding the open streets events more difficult such as permitting price and timing flexibility and loosening of outdoor dining and retail rules. The Administration stated a new permit was created to facilitate temporary extensions of premises during open streets events. Another adjustment is that the Economic Development Department is applying for the special event permit which includes taking on liability as the permit holder. The Downtown Alliance will continue to provide event management and support services. Policy Questions: ➢Calendar Year 2024 Open Streets Funding Needs – The Council may wish to discuss with the Administration how to coordinate funding and timing of potential downtown Open Streets events in 2024 and potential implementation of a permanent pedestrian mall on Main Street. A study is currently underway to provide options for creating a Main Street pedestrian mall downtown. The study results are expected to be available next year. The study website is available at https://open-main-street- deagis.hub.arcgis.com/ ➢Larger Activation and Programming Budget – The Council may wish to ask the Administration what the larger activation and programming budget ($185,000 instead of $45,000) could be used for and what differences the public could see downtown. ➢City-owned Street Infrastructure Available to Other Special Events – The Council may wish to ask the Administration how the street infrastructure would be made available to other special events such as whether a first-come first served approach is used, and would the cost be at fair market rental values or discounted. ➢Permitting Changes and Liability – The Council may wish to ask the Administration whether there are legislative changes to City Code or policies that could further facilitate open streets events. The Council may also wish to ask whether the event budget should include a line item for liability since the Economic Development Department is taking on that potential cost as the permit holder. ➢Coordination with 200 South Reconstruction Project – The Council may wish to ask the Administration whether the 200 South street reconstruction project could be an impediment to the fall open streets events as currently envisioned. A-3: Funding Impact Fees and Permit Fees Refund to Ivory University House ($754,483.23 from General Fund Balance and $1,648,715 from Impact Fees) A Public Benefits Analysis has been transmitted to the Council pertaining to the refunding of building permits and impact fees to Ivory University House L3C. The total amount being refunded is approximately $2.4 million. This amount consists of $754,483 in building permit fees and $1,648,715 in impact fees. Should the Public Benefits Analysis be approved by the Council, a budget will need to be in place for the refunds to happen. This will be accounted for by showing negative revenue for both the Impact Fees and Permit Fees being refunded. Staff note: This item is scheduled to have a separate Council briefing and staff report. The Administration transmitted a public benefits analysis separately from this budget amendment. The below tables are copied from the public benefits analysis showing a breakout of the impact fees and permit fees by type. Section B: Grants for Existing Staff Resources Section (None) (None) Section C: Grants for New Staff Resources Section (None) (None) Section D: Housekeeping D-1: AFSCME MOU Allocations (Budget Neutral – reallocating existing $511,001 Non-departmental General Fund budget to the appropriate department budgets) This is a follow up housekeeping item from the adopted annual budget which included a $511,001 line item for salary adjustments based on the negotiated Memorandum of Understanding between the City and the American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees or AFSCME local union. The proposal is to move the $511,001 out of Non- departmental and into the six department budgets with AFSCME represented employees. There wasn’t enough time between the conclusion of negotiations and Council adoption of the annual budget to include this breakout in the FY2024 Key Changes spreadsheet. AFSCME MOU Allocations – 911 Dispatch GF $104,175 AFSCME MOU Allocations – CAN GF $3,963 AFSCME MOU Allocations – Police GF $55,928 AFSCME MOU Allocations – Justice Courts GF $40 AFSCME MOU Allocations – Public Lands GF $36,737 AFSCME MOU Allocations – Public Services GF $310,158 D-2: Consolidated Fee Schedule (CFS) Change (Budget Neutral) Correction to CFS - Engineering Fees: During the FY24 budget, an increase in the engineering fee for lane closure was recommended by the administration. The intent was to separate the fee for sidewalk and lane closures, charging a higher rate for lane closures as justified by cost analysis. The increased fee was inadvertently applied to both sidewalk and lane closures. This correction will create a separate line item for these two types of closures with the appropriate fee applied to each. Staff note: The below table is a red lined version showing the proposed corrections to the Consolidated Fee Schedule. The transmittal included a separate ordinance for this amendment to the CFS. The budget amendment and the CFS amendment will be listed as two separate items and votes on a Council formal meeting agenda. D-3: Three Creeks West Roadway Rescope (Budget Neutral - $1,359,130 in the CIP Fund) The CIP application for "Three Creeks West - Roadways" includes only a single residential stretch of 1300 S, North of California Ave. that fronts ten residential properties and the Jordan River. This constituent application was two-part, with roadway reconstruction and utilities. This FY22-23 CIP request was submitted as follows: "Reconstruct a block of 1300 South and a block of 1000 West along Jordan River and install badly needed sewers. Will improve multimodal transportation, park access, public safety, and basic sanitation, expanding on the success of Three Creek Confluence Park." The subsequent estimate did not fully account for new utilities, nor was it eligible for utilities, as improvements for private development (which the applicant would benefit from) are not paid for by the City. Furthermore, if the sewer line was installed the property owners fronting a new line would be required by the health code to tie in at their own expense. After the City engaged with the impacted property owners not all of them agreed. Therefore, we proposed to move forward with this application with a scope limited to roadway reconstruction. No additional funds are required. The Engineering Division provided the following potential project timeline for the rescoped project. It’s important to note that construction could extend into 2025 pending resolution of permit complexities related to working adjacent to the Jordan River: -Fall 2023 – Advertise RFQ for Design Consultant -Winter 2023 / 2024 – Project Design -Spring 2024 – Construction Bidding & Contracting -Summer to Fall 2024 potentially extending to 2025 – Construction D-4: Reallocate Bond Funds from 1700 East to 2100 South Reconstruction ($1.5 Million Reallocation in CIP Fund) Public Services Engineering and CAN Transportation are recommending moving the bond funds from 1700 East to 2100 South to supplement the expanded scope and community-desired elements. The following are reasons that support the delay in the funding for the construction of 1700 East: -There is a high likelihood that Highland High School will be rebuilt in the next few years, which would likely damage the pavement and result in some needed design changes to accommodate the new school layout. -Public Utilities is planning a potential storm drain upgrade that would require significant roadway excavation shortly after the original 1700 East reconstruction project timeline. -The remaining bond funding is not adequate to fully reconstruct the segment of roadway and safety improvements necessary for a large school. -Certain elements of the desired 2100 South reconstruction project may not be completed without this adjustment. The Engineering Division provided the below table summarizing the total project funding and sources for reconstructing 2100 South through the Sugar House Business District (700 East to 1300 East). Construction level designs are anticipated to be completed this winter. Then the project would go out to bid when exact costs would be known. Additional funding based on the current designs might be needed and would come to the Council in a future budget opening. Alternatively, elements of the project designs could be removed to stay within existing budget constraints. The Division is evaluating increased eligibility for transportation impact fees. Source Amount Original 2100 South Bond Amount $8,000,000 Impact Fees $660,410 or more Class C $814,027 minimum Remaining contingency from 300 West project that can be applied to 2100 South $850,000 2022-2023 CIP Complete Streets $300,000 Anticipated funding from 2023-2024 CIP $2,750,000 (of $3,293,000 – the remainder goes to Virginia Street) Anticipated funding from BA1 $1,500,000 Total $14,874,437 Note: Public Utilities elements are funded separately and not reflected in the table The project webpage is publicly available at www.2100southslc.org D-5: Rescope Bridge Rehabilitation Funding as Local Match to Federal Funding for Rebuilding Three Bridges over the Jordan River ($6,348,507 in the CIP Fund) The City anticipates receiving approximately $21.6 million to help rebuild three City bridges over the Jordan River at 650 North, 200 South, and 500 South. UDOT would serve as the funding administrator as well as perform the design and construction of the bridges. The City would own and be responsible for maintenance of the rebuilt bridges. The first rebuild could begin in calendar year 2024 but is more likely in 2025. The funding is from the Federal Bipartisan Infrastructure Law’s new Bridge Formula Program. Utah, like other states, are annually awarded funds over five years determined by a formula. The minimum annual award for every state is at least $45 million. The Federal funding goes through UDOT which ultimately selects and awards funding to individual projects. The Council approved $2,648,507 in FY2021 CIP to rehabilitate the bridges at 650 North and 400 South over the Jordan River. Inspections later determined the bridges should be fully rebuilt partly as a result of damage from the March 2020 earthquake and continued deterioration. $3.7 million was approved by the Council in FY2023 CIP for rebuilding the 650 North bridge. The combined $6,348,507 is proposed to be rescoped as local matching funds to the Federal funding. The 500 South bridge would be fully covered by $7.2 million of Federal funding. The 650 North and 200 South bridges have a 6.77% required local match for the $14.4 million grant which would be $974,880. This leaves a remaining budget of $5,373,627. The Engineering Division anticipates a significant amount of the $5.3 million would be needed to relocate public utilities. Private utilities are relocated at no cost to the City as a requirement of their franchise agreements. Utility relocations must be coordinated by the City before construction begins. This budget request includes that any remaining funding be used to rebuild the 400 South bridge over the Jordan River if any of the $5.3 million is remaining after the other three bridge rebuilds and public utilities relocations. Policy Questions: ➢Potential to Add Funding from the Public Utilities Department – The Council may wish to ask the Administration to estimate the cost of relocating publicly owned utilities as part of the bridge rebuilds and consider including funding in future Public Utilities budget proposals to leverage more funding sources and avoid potential General Fund subsidization of an enterprise fund. ➢New Amenities with Bridge Rebuilds – The Council may wish to discuss with the Administration how the bridge rebuilds could bring new amenities to the impacted neighborhoods such as wider bridge decks, bike lanes, public art, lighting, traffic calming, etc. The 650 North bridge in particular would need to be coordinated with the upcoming 600 North / 700 North corridor transformation project that will construct many improvements and new amenities. Note some of the improvements and amenities could be partially eligible for impact fee funding if they are growth related. ➢Timing Bridge Rebuilds to Minimize East-West Travel Disruptions – The Council may wish to discuss with the Council what options exist to spread out the bridge rebuilds so impacts to neighborhoods are less and what other mitigation resources could be helpful. Alternatively, there might be cost savings from combining multiple bridge rebuilds under a single contract. ➢Status of the City’s Other Bridges and Funding Needs – The Council may wish to ask the Administration what the status of the City’s other bridges is, and what funding needs are anticipated in the coming years. D-6: Occupied Vehicle Mitigation Team Allocation (Budget Neutral – reallocating existing $45,000 in Public Services to the Fleet Fund and IMS Fund) For FY24, Salt Lake City Council approved 3 new FTEs for homelessness mitigation. One-time and ongoing funds were placed in Public Services Compliance General Fund budget. Some one-time funding for items related to this team belongs in other funds, namely Fleet and IMS. This request is to move the funds to the appropriate fund. D-7: Fleet Vehicle Purchases Re-appropriation ($14,424,993 from Fleet Fund Balance to Fleet Vehicle Replacement Fund) The Public Services Department is requesting the Council re-appropriate funds originally appropriated in FY2022 and FY2023 for vehicle purchases. These vehicles were unavailable to purchase before the end of FY2023 because of supply chain issues and limited ordering windows offered by vehicle manufacturers. The vehicles are still needed. If the re-appropriation is approved, then the vehicles would be ordered as soon as they become available. Section F: Donations (None) Section G: Donations (None) Section I: Council Added Items (None) ATTACHMENTS (none) ACRONYMS AFSCME - American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees CAFR – Comprehensive Annual Financial Report CAN – Department of Community and Neighborhoods CIP – Capital Improvement Program Fund FY – Fiscal Year GF – General Fund FOF – Funding Our Future IMS – Information Management Services MOU – Memorandum of Understanding UDOT – Utah Department of Transportation ERIN MENDENHALL Mayor CITY COUNCIL TRANSMITTAL MARY BETH THOMPSON Chief Financial Officer Date Received: 08/09/2023 Lisa Shaffer, Chief Administrative Officer Date sent to Council: 08/09/2023 TO: Salt Lake City Council DATE: August 8, 2023 Darin Mano, Chair FROM: Mary Beth Thompson, Chief Financial Officer SUBJECT: RE-RE-TRANSMITTING FY24 Budget Amendment #1 SPONSOR: NA STAFF CONTACT: Lisa Hunt (801) 535-7926 or Mary Beth Thompson (801) 535-6403 DOCUMENT TYPE: Budget Amendment Ordinance RECOMMENDATION: The Administration recommends that subsequent to a public hearing, the City Council adopt the following amendments to the FY24 adopted budget. BUDGET IMPACT: REVENUE EXPENSE GENERAL FUND $-754,483.23 $204,200.00 CIP FUND 218,000.00 218,000.00 CIP: IMPACT FEE FUND -1,648,715.00 0.00 FLEET FUND 36,800.00 14,461,793.00 IMS FUND 9,000.00 9,000.00 TOTAL $-2,139,398.23 $ 14,892,993.00 DEPARTMENT OF FINANCE POLICY AND BUDGET DIVISION 451 SOUTH STATE STREET PO BOX 145467, SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH 84114-5455 Lisa Shaffer (Aug 9, 2023 15:16 MDT) BACKGROUND/DISCUSSION: Revenue for FY24 Budget Adjustments The following chart shows a current projection of General Fund Revenue for FY24. Revenue FY23‐FY24 Annual Budget FY23‐24 Amended Budget Revised Forecast Amended Variance Favorable (Unfavorable) Property Taxes 129,847,140 129,847,140 129,847,140 ‐ Sale and Use Taxes 117,129,000 117,129,000 117,129,000 ‐ Franchise Taxes 12,348,127 12,348,127 12,348,127 ‐ Payment in Lieu of Taxes 1,905,573 1,905,573 1,905,573 ‐ Total Taxes 261,229,840 261,229,840 261,229,840 ‐ Licenses and Permits 40,878,104 40,878,104 40,878,104 ‐ Intergovernmental Revenue 5,134,621 5,134,621 5,134,621 ‐ Interest Income 8,000,000 8,000,000 8,000,000 ‐ Fines 4,063,548 4,063,548 4,063,548 ‐ Parking Meter Collections 2,801,089 2,801,089 2,801,089 ‐ Charges, Fees, and Rentals 4,881,922 4,881,922 4,881,922 ‐ Miscellaneous Revenue 3,502,359 3,502,359 3,502,359 ‐ Interfund Reimbursement 26,131,213 26,131,213 26,131,213 ‐ Transfers 9,938,944 9,938,944 9,938,944 ‐ Total W/O Special Tax 366,561,640 366,561,640 366,561,640 ‐ Additional Sales Tax (1/2%) 49,084,479 49,084,479 49,084,479 ‐ Total General Fund 415,646,119 415,646,119 415,646,119 ‐ Because of this budget amendment’s timing, there are no updates for Y24 projections available. The City has begun closing out the FY23 and will provide updates to Council as the audit progresses. Fund balance has been updated to include proposed changes for BA#1. Salt Lake City General Fund TOTAL Fund Balance Projections FY2023 Budget Projected FY2024 Budget FOF GF Only TOTAL FOF GF Only TOTAL Beginning Fund Balance 18,395,660 141,728,022 160,123,682 13,132,752 91,575,871 104,708,623 Budgeted Change in Fund Balance (2,100,608) (20,736,262) (22,836,870) (3,657,641) (29,211,158) (32,868,799) Prior Year Encumbrances (3,162,300) (17,260,909) (20,423,209) (1,879,654) (10,259,789) (12,139,443) Estimated Beginning Fund Balance 13,132,752 103,730,851 116,863,603 7,595,457 52,104,924 59,700,381 Beginning Fund Balance Percent 29.60% 27.04% 27.30% 14.51% 13.29% 13.43% Year End CAFR Adjustments Revenue Changes - - - - - - Expense Changes (Prepaids, Receivable, Etc.) (8,556,220) (8,556,220) (8,556,220) (8,556,220) Fund Balance w/ CAFR Changes 13,132,752 95,174,631 108,307,383 7,595,457 43,548,704 51,144,161 Final Fund Balance Percent 29.60% 24.81% 25.30% 14.51% 11.10% 11.51% Budget Amendment Use of Fund Balance BA#1 Revenue Adjustment - (475,000) (475,000) - (754,483) (754,483) BA#1 Expense Adjustment - - - 205,000 205,000 BA#2 Revenue Adjustment - - - - - - BA#2 Expense Adjustment - - - - - - BA#3 Revenue Adjustment - 6,000,000 6,000,000 - - - BA#3 Expense Adjustment - (6,538,000) (6,538,000) - - - BA#4 Revenue Adjustment - 194,600 194,600 - - - BA#4 Expense Adjustment - (7,584,328) (7,584,328) - - - BA#5 Revenue Adjustment - - - - - - BA#5 Expense Adjustment - (5,940,349) (5,940,349) - - - BA#6 Revenue Adjustment - 19,120,198 19,120,198 - - - BA#6 Expense Adjustment - (11,719,731) (12,219,731) - - - BA#7 Revenue Adjustment - - - - - - BA#7 Expense Adjustment - - - - - - Change in Revenue - - - - - - Change in Expense Fund Balance Budgeted Increase - - - - - - Adjusted Fund Balance 13,132,752 88,232,021 100,864,773 7,595,457 42,999,220 50,594,677 Adjusted Fund Balance Percent 29.60% 23.00% 23.57% 14.51% 10.96% 11.38% Projected Revenue 44,364,490 383,650,846 428,015,336 52,338,120 392,166,803 444,504,923 Based on those projections adjusted fund balance is projected to be at 11.38%. The Administration is requesting a budget amendment totaling $(2,139,398.23) in revenue and $14,892,993.00 in expenses. The amendment proposes changes in 5 funds, with zero increases in FTEs. The proposal includes 10 initiatives for Council review. A summary spreadsheet outlining proposed budget changes is attached. The Administration requests this document be modified based on the decisions of the Council. The budget amendment is separated in eight different categories: A. New Budget Items B. Grants for Existing Staff Resources C. Grants for New Staff Resources D. Housekeeping Items E. Grants Requiring No New Staff Resources F. Donations G. Council Consent Agenda Grant Awards I. Council Added Items PUBLIC PROCESS: Public Hearing Initiative Number/Name Fund Amount Salt Lake City FY 2023-24 Budget Amendment #1 Section A: New Items A-1: Donation to CIP for Ball Field Sports Lighting at Riverside Park CIP $218,000.00 Department: Public Services – Engineering Prepared By: Sean Fyfe, Mary Beth Thompson For questions, please include Sean Fyfe, Mary Beth Thompson The City will be receiving a donation for ball field sports lighting in Riverside Park. A budget of $300,000 currently exists for the project, but the quote for the cost of the lighting is $368,000. The installation of the lighting could start around mid-September to mid-October. The Administration, understanding that public comment is necessary before an official vote, would like to request a straw poll to allow for the receipt of the contract for the entire project. A-2: Funding for Open Streets Initiative GF $250,000.00 Department: Economic Development Prepared By: Roberta Reichgelt For questions, please include Lorena Riffo Jenson, Roberta Reichgelt, Mary Beth Thompson The Department of Economic Development (DED) is requesting additional funding for the Open Streets event on Main Street in downtown Salt Lake City this fall. Funding for infrastructure costs such as UTA Trax bollards, street maintenance, and no-parking signage will cost an estimated $250,000, and after including operations and activation costs by The Downtown Alliance totaling $500,000, the total costs exceed the $500,000 City Council allocated for the event. DED is requesting funding for these additional costs in the amount of $250,000 for Open Streets infrastructure, which is a one- time cost that will service the event for the year and for future Open Streets events. A-3: Funding for Impact and Permit Fee Refund to Ivory University House GF ($754,483.23) CIP/Impact Fund ($1,648,715.00) Department: CAN & Finance Prepared By: Randy Hillier For questions, please include Mary Beth Thompson, Rachel Otto, Blake Thomas, Kimberly Chytraus, Katie Lewis, Randy Hillier, Mike Atkinson A Public Benefits Analysis has been transmitted to the Council pertaining to the refunding of building permits and impact fees to Ivory University House L3C. The total amount being refunded is approximately $2.4 million. This amount consists of $754,483 in building permit fees and $1,648,715 in impact fees. Should the Public Benefits Analysis be approved by the Council, a budget will need to be in place for the refunds to happen. This will be accounted for by showing negative revenue for both the Impact Fees and Permit Fees being refunded. Section B: Grants for Existing Staff Resources Section C: Grants for New Staff Resources Section D: Housekeeping D-1: AFSCME MOU Allocations GF ($511,001.00) AFSCME MOU Allocations – 911 Dispatch GF $104,175.00 AFSCME MOU Allocations – CAN GF $3,963.00 AFSCME MOU Allocations – Police GF $55,928.00 AFSCME MOU Allocations – Justice Courts GF $40.00 AFSCME MOU Allocations – Public Lands GF $36,737.00 1 Initiative Number/Name Fund Amount Salt Lake City FY 2023-24 Budget Amendment #1 AFSCME MOU Allocations – Public Services GF $310,158.00 Department: Finance Prepared By: Mary Beth Thompson For questions, please include Mary Beth Thompson Update the AFSCME MOU allocations for fiscal year 2024. D-2: Consolidated Fee Schedule Change NA $0.00 Department: Finance Prepared By: Lisa Hunt For questions, please include Mary Beth Thompson, Lisa Hunt Correction to CFS - Engineering Fees: During the FY24 budget, an increase in the engineering fee for lane closure was recommended by the administration. The intent was to separate the fee for sidewalk and lane closures, charging a higher rate for lane closures as justified by cost analysis. The increased fee was inadvertently applied to both sidewalk and lane closures. This correction will create a separate line item for these two types of closures with the appropriate fee applied to each. D-3: Three Creeks West Roadway Rescope CIP $0.00 Department: Public Services – Engineering Prepared By: Josh Willie, Mark Stephens, JP Goates, Dustin Petersen For questions, please include Josh Willie, Mark Stephens, JP Goates, Dustin Petersen The CIP application for "Three Creeks West - Roadways" includes only a single residential stretch of 1300 S, North of California Ave. that fronts ten residential properties and the Jordan River. This constituent application was two-part, with roadway reconstruction and utilities. This FY22-23 CIP request was submitted as follows: "Reconstruct a block of 1300 South and a block of 1000 West along Jordan River and install badly needed sewers. Will improve multimodal transportation, park access, public safety, and basic sanitation, expanding on the success of Three Creek Confluence Park." The subsequent estimate did not fully account for new utilities, nor was it eligible for utilities, as improvements for private development (which the applicant would benefit from) are not paid for by the City. Furthermore, if the sewer line was installed the property owners fronting a new line would be required by the health code to tie in at their own expense. After the City engaged with the impacted property owners not all of them agreed. Therefore, we proposed to move forward with this application with a scope limited to roadway reconstruction. No additional funds are required. D-4: 1700 E. to 2100 S. Project Budget Reallocation CIP $0.00 Department: Public Services – Engineering Prepared By: Josh Willie, Mark Stephens, JP Goates, Dustin Petersen For questions, please include Josh Willie, Mark Stephens, JP Goates, Dustin Petersen Public Services Engineering and CAN Transportation are recommending moving the bond funds from 1700 East to 2100 South to supplement the expanded scope and community-desired elements. The following are reasons that support the delay in the funding for the construction of 1700 East: 1. There is a high likelihood that Highland High School will be rebuilt in the next few years, which would likely damage the pavement and result in some needed design changes to accommodate the new school layout. 2. Public Utilities is planning a potential storm drain upgrade that would require significant roadway excavation shortly after the original 1700 East reconstruction project timeline. 3. The remaining bond funding is not adequate to fully reconstruct the segment of roadway and safety improvements necessary for a large school. 2 Initiative Number/Name Fund Amount Salt Lake City FY 2023-24 Budget Amendment #1 4. Certain elements of the desired 2100 South reconstruction project may not be funded without this request. D-5: Bridge Projects Funding Rescope for UDOT Match CIP $0.00 Department: Public Services - Engineering Prepared By: Josh Willie, Mark Stephens, JP Goates, Dustin Petersen For questions, please include Josh Willie, Mark Stephens, JP Goates, Dustin Petersen City Council previously approved $2,648,507 in FY21 for the rehabilitation of the 650 N bridge over the Jordan River and the 400 S bridge over the Jordan River. After the March 2020 earthquake, damage sustained to the 650 N bridge made it necessary to replace/reconstruct the bridge, and rehabilitation was no longer recommended. Subsequently, the City Council approved $3,700,000 in FY23 for the reconstruction of the 650 N bridge over the Jordan River. The combined available CIP funding from FY 21 and FY23 for bridge replacements/rehabilitation is $6,348,507. City Engineering received notice from UDOT in early July 2022 that the following three (3) bridges were eligible for replacement with Federal Bridge Formula Program (BFP) funding: 1) 650 N bridge over the Jordan River, 2) 200 S bridge over the Jordan River and 3) 500 S bridge over the Jordan River. The Engineering Division received a letter from UDOT on June 29, 2023, that they would be proceeding with the approval of the proposed BFP funding for the 650 N and 200 S bridges since no potential habitats were found for an endemic orchid, as previously suspected. The total approved project value for these two (2) bridge replacement projects is $14,400,000 which will require a 6.77% local match by Salt Lake City. The 500 S bridge BFP funding should be approved in August/September 2023 however no local match will be required since this bridge will be funded 100% by BFP funding. For these bridge replacements, UDOT will serve as the funding administrator as well as perform the design and construction of the bridges. Additionally, the City is required to coordinate private and public utility relocations prior to the reconstruction of each bridge. Public utility relocation must be funded by the City. As a result, Engineering is requesting that the $6,348,507 in available bridge CIP funding from FY21 and FY23 be made available to pay for 1) 6.77% local match requirement and 2) any necessary public utility relocations (private utilities would be required to relocate their respective utilities under their respective franchise agreements at no cost to the City). Any remaining funding after the match and public utility relocation costs would be applied to the design and reconstruction of the 400 S bridge over the Jordan River. D-6: Compliance Mitigation Team – Fleet and IMS GF ($45,800.00) Fleet $36,800.00 IMS $9,000.000 Department: Public Services - Compliance Prepared By: Dustin Petersen For questions, please contact Dustin Petersen For FY24, Salt Lake City Council approved 3 new FTEs for homelessness mitigation. One-time and ongoing funds were placed in Public Services Compliance General Fund budget. Some one-time funding for items related to this team belongs in other funds, namely Fleet and IMS. This request is to move the funds to the appropriate fund. D-7: Fleet Encumbrances GF $14,424,993.00 Department: Public Services - Fleet Prepared By: Dustin Petersen For questions, please contact Dustin Petersen This is the Fleet encumbrance rollover for vehicles that were committed with the funds in FY23 or earlier but have not been received or completed. A detailed list of vehicles is included in the Backup Documentation 3 Initiative Number/Name Fund Amount Salt Lake City FY 2023-24 Budget Amendment #1 Section E: Grants Requiring No Staff Resources Section F: Donations Section G: Consent Agenda Consent Agenda Section I: Council Added Items 4 Fiscal Year 2023-24 Budget Amendment #1 Administration Proposed Council Approved umber/Name Fund Revenue Amount Expenditure Amount Revenue Amount Expenditure Amount Ongoing or One- time FTEs Section A: New Items 1 Donation to CIP for Ball Field Sports Lighting at Riverside Park CIP 218,000.00 218,000.00 One-time - 2 Funding for Open Streets Initiative GF - 250,000.00 One-time - 3 Funding for Impact and Permit Fee Refund to Ivory University House Impact Fee (1,648,715.00) - One-time - 3 Funding for Impact and Permit Fee Refund to Ivory University House GF (754,483.23) - One-time - Section B: Grants for Existing Staff Resources Section C: Grants for New Staff Resources Section D: Housekeeping 1 AFSCME MOU Allocations - Non Dept GF - (511,001.00) Ongoing - 1 AFSCME MOU Allocations - 911 Dispatch GF - 104,175.00 Ongoing - 1 AFSCME MOU Allocations - CAN GF - 3,963.00 Ongoing - 1 AFSCME MOU Allocations - Police GF - 55,928.00 Ongoing - 1 AFSCME MOU Allocations - Justice Courts GF - 40.00 Ongoing - 1 AFSCME MOU Allocations - Public Lands GF - 36,737.00 Ongoing - 1 AFSCME MOU Allocations - Public Services GF - 310,158.00 Ongoing - 2 Consolidated Fee Schedule Change NA - - Ongoing - 3 Three Creeks West Roadway Rescope CIP - - One-time - 4 1700 E. to 2100 S. Project Budget Reallocation CIP - - One-time - 5 Bridge Projects Funding Rescope for UDOT Match CIP - - One-time - 6 Compliance Mitigation Team – Fleet and IMS GF - (45,800.00) One-time - 6 Compliance Mitigation Team – Fleet and IMS Fleet 36,800.00 36,800.00 One-time - 6 Compliance Mitigation Team – Fleet and IMS IMS 9,000.00 9,000.00 One-time - 7 Encumbrances - Fleet Fleet - 14,424,993.00 One-time - Section E: Grants Requiring No New Staff Resources Section F: Donations - Section G: Council Consent Agenda -- Grant Awards Consent Agenda # Section I: Council Added Items Total of Budget Amendment Items (2,139,398.23) 14,892,993.00 - - - 1 Fiscal Year 2023-24 Budget Amendment #1 Administration Proposed Council Approved Initiative Number/Name Fund Revenue Amount Expenditure Amount Revenue Amount Expenditure Amount Ongoing or One- time FTEs Total by Fund, Budget Amendment #1: General Fund GF (754,483.23) 204,200.00 - - - Impact Fee Fund Impact Fee (1,648,715.00) - - - - Fleet Fund Fleet 36,800.00 14,461,793.00 CIP Fund CIP 218,000.00 218,000.00 - - - IMS Fund IMS 9,000.00 9,000.00 - - - Total of Budget Amendment (2,139,398.23) 14,892,993.00 - - - Current Year Budget Summary, provided for information only FY 2023-24 Budget, Including Budget Amendments FY 2023-24 Adopted Budget BA #1 Total BA #2 Total BA #3 Total BA #4 Total BA #5 Total Total Revenue General Fund (Fund 1000) 448,514,918 (754,483.23) 447,760,434.77 Curb and Gutter (FC 20) 3,000 3,000.00 DEA Task Force Fund (FC 41) 1,397,355 1,397,355.00 Misc Special Service Districts (FC 46) 1,700,000 1,700,000.00 Street Lighting Enterprise (FC 48) 4,681,185 4,681,185.00 Water Fund (FC 51) 176,637,288 176,637,288.00 Sewer Fund (FC 52) 289,941,178 289,941,178.00 Storm Water Fund (FC 53) 19,865,892 19,865,892.00 Airport Fund (FC 54,55,56) 403,513,000 403,513,000.00 Refuse Fund (FC 57) 25,240,459 25,240,459.00 Golf Fund (FC 59) 12,710,067 12,710,067.00 E-911 Fund (FC 60) 3,925,000 3,925,000.00 Fleet Fund (FC 61) 32,108,969 36,800.00 32,145,769.00 IMS Fund (FC 65) 36,254,357 9,000.00 36,263,357.00 County Quarter Cent Sales Tax for Transportation (FC 69) 9,700,000 9,700,000.00 CDBG Operating Fund (FC 71) 5,597,763 5,597,763.00 Miscellaneous Grants (FC 72) 8,919,917 8,919,917.00 Other Special Revenue (FC 73) 400,000 400,000.00 Donation Fund (FC 77) 500,000 500,000.00 Housing Loans & Trust (FC 78) 14,659,043 14,659,043.00 Debt Service Fund (FC 81) 32,341,586 32,341,586.00 CIP Fund (FC 83, 84 & 86) 30,199,756 (1,430,715.00) 28,769,041.00 Governmental Immunity (FC 85) 3,888,581 3,888,581.00 Risk Fund (FC 87) 60,932,137 60,932,137.00 Total of Budget Amendment Items 1,623,631,451 (2,139,398.23) - - - - 1,621,492,052.77 2 Fiscal Year 2023-24 Budget Amendment #1 Total Expense BA #1 Total BA #2 Total BA #3 Total BA #4 Total BA #5 Total Total Expense General Fund (FC 10) 448,514,918 204,200.00 448,719,118.00 Curb and Gutter (FC 20) 3,000 3,000.00 DEA Task Force Fund (FC 41) 1,397,355 1,397,355.00 Misc Special Service Districts (FC 46) 1,700,000 1,700,000.00 Street Lighting Enterprise (FC 48) 6,044,119 6,044,119.00 Water Fund (FC 51) 177,953,787 177,953,787.00 Sewer Fund (FC 52) 301,832,622 301,832,622.00 Storm Water Fund (FC 53) 22,947,474 22,947,474.00 Airport Fund (FC 54,55,56) 520,438,997 520,438,997.00 Refuse Fund (FC 57) 28,263,792 28,263,792.00 Golf Fund (FC 59) 17,938,984 17,938,984.00 E-911 Fund (FC 60) 3,800,385 3,800,385.00 Fleet Fund (FC 61) 32,498,750 14,461,793.00 46,960,543.00 IMS Fund (FC 65) 38,702,171 9,000.00 38,711,171.00 County Quarter Cent Sales Tax for Transportation (FC 69) 9,700,000 9,700,000.00 CDBG Operating Fund (FC 71) 5,597,763 5,597,763.00 Miscellaneous Grants (FC 72) 8,919,917 8,919,917.00 Other Special Revenue (FC 73) 400,000 400,000.00 Donation Fund (FC 77) 500,000 500,000.00 Housing Loans & Trust (FC 78) 10,212,043 10,212,043.00 Debt Service Fund (FC 81) 34,894,979 34,894,979.00 CIP Fund (FC 83, 84 & 86) 29,708,286 218,000.00 29,926,286.00 Governmental Immunity (FC 85) 3,370,012 3,370,012.00 Risk Fund (FC 87) 63,574,655 63,574,655.00 - Total of Budget Amendment Items 1,768,914,009 14,892,993.00 - - - - 1,783,807,002.00 Budget Manager Analyst, City Council Contingent Appropriation 3 Unallocated Budget Amounts: by Major Area Expiring Amounts: by Major Area, by Month Impact Fees ‐ Summary Confidential Data pulled 07/20/2023 Area Cost Center UnAllocated Cash Notes: Impact fee - Police 8484001 $ 1,402,656 Impact fee - Fire 8484002 $ 273,684 B Impact fee - Parks 8484003 $ 16,793,487 C Impact fee - Streets 8484005 $ 6,304,485 D $ 24,774,312 E = A + B + C + D Calendar Fiscal Month Quarter $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ Police Fire Parks Streets - - - - - - - - - - - Total, Currently Expiring through Jun 2026 $ - $ - $ - $ 2,558,788 $ 2,558,788 202306 (Jun2023) 2023Q4 $ - $ - $ - $ - $ - Current Month 202307 (Jul2023) 202308 (Aug2023) 202309 (Sep2023) 202310 (Oct2023) 202311 (Nov2023) 202312 (Dec2023) 202401 (Jan2024) 202402 (Feb2024) 202403 (Mar2024) 202404 (Apr2024) 202405 (May2024) 202406 (Jun2024) 2024Q1 2024Q1 2024Q1 2024Q2 2024Q2 2024Q2 2024Q3 2024Q3 2024Q3 2024Q4 2024Q4 2024Q4 $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ - - - - - - - - - - - - $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ - - - - - - - - - - - - $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ - - - - - - - - - - - - $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ - - - - - - - - - - - - $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ - - - - - - - - - - - - 202407 (Jul2024) 202408 (Aug2024) 202409 (Sep2024) 202410 (Oct2024) 202411 (Nov2024) 202412 (Dec2024) 202501 (Jan2025) 202502 (Feb2025) 202503 (Mar2025) 202504 (Apr2025) 202505 (May2025) 202506 (Jun2025) 2025Q1 2025Q1 2025Q1 2025Q2 2025Q2 2025Q2 2025Q3 2025Q3 2025Q3 2025Q4 2025Q4 2025Q4 $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ - - - - - - - - - - - - $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ - - - - - - - - - - - - $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ - - - - - - - - - - - - $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ - - - - - - - - - - - - $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ - - - - - - - - - - - - 202507 (Jul2025) 202508 (Aug2025) 202509 (Sep2025) 202510 (Oct2025) 202511 (Nov2025) 202512 (Dec2025) 202601 (Jan2026) 202602 (Feb2026) 202603 (Mar2026) 202604 (Apr2026) 202605 (May2026) 202606 (Jun2026) 2026Q1 2026Q1 2026Q1 2026Q2 2026Q2 2026Q2 2026Q3 2026Q3 2026Q3 2026Q4 2026Q4 2026Q4 $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ - - - - - - - - - - - - $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ - - - - - - - - - - - - $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ - - - - - - - - - - - - $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ - - - - 1,103,628 113,748 3,960 26,929 95,407 1,065,383 95,762 53,972 $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ - - - - 1,103,628 113,748 3,960 26,929 95,407 1,065,383 95,762 53,972 - - - - - - - - - - - $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ - - - - - - - - - - - $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ - - - - - - - - - - - $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ - - - - - - - - - - - $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ 2023Q1 2023Q1 2023Q1 2023Q2 2023Q2 2023Q2 2023Q3 2023Q3 2023Q3 2023Q4 2023Q4 202207 (Jul2022) 202208 (Aug2022) 202209 (Sep2022) 202210 (Oct2022) 202211 (Nov2022) 202212 (Dec2022) 202301 (Jan2023) 202302 (Feb2023) 202303 (Mar2023) 202304 (Apr2023) 202305 (May2023) Total FY 20 2 6 FY 20 2 5 FY 20 2 4 FY 20 2 3 Impact Fees Confidential Data pulled 07/20/2023 AAA BBB CCC DDD = AAA - BBB - CCC Total $ 34,095,480 $ 3,419,972 $ 6,924,471 $ 2 ,751,037 TRUE TRUE TRUE TRUE 8484001 8484002 8484005 $ 16,793,487 8484003 C UnAllocated Budget Amount Police Allocation Budget Amended Allocation Encumbrances YTD Expenditures Allocation Remaining Appropriation Sum of Police Allocation Sum of Police Allocation Sum of Police Allocation YTD Sum of Police Allocation Description Cost Center Budget Amended Encumbrances Expenditures Remaining Appropriation IFFP Contract - Police 8423003 $ 9,000 $ - $ - $ 9,000 Grand Total $ 9,000 $ - $ - $ 9,000 Fire Allocation Budget Amended Allocation Encumbrances YTD Expenditures Allocation Remaining Appropriation Sum of Fire Allocation Sum of Fire Allocation Sum of Fire Allocation YTD Sum of Fire Allocation Description Cost Center Budget Amended Encumbrances Expenditures Remaining Appropriation Fire Training Center 8417015 $ (499,533) $ - $ (499,533) $ - $ 3,079 $ 3,021 $ - 58.00 $ 9,000 $ - $ - $ 9,000 $ 2,200,000 $ - $ 2,200,000 $ - Fire'sConsultant'sContract 8419202 IFFP Contract - Fire 8423004 IF Excess Capacity - Fire 8423006 Grand Total $ 1,712,546 $ 3,021 $ 1,700,467 9,058.00 Parks Allocation Budget Amended Allocation Encumbrances YTD Expenditures Allocation Remaining Appropriation Description Cost Center Sum of Parks Allocation Budget Amended Sum of Parks Allocation Encumbrances Sum of Parks Allocation YTD Expenditures Sum of Parks Allocation Remaining Appropriation Fisher Carriage House 8420130 $ 261,187 $ - $ 261,187 $ - Emigration Open Space ACQ 8422423 $ 700,000 $ - $ 700,000 $ - Waterpark Redevelopment Plan 8421402 $ 16,959 $ 1,705 $ 15,254 $ - JR Boat Ram 8420144 $ 3,337 $ - $ 3,337 $ - RAC Parcel Acquisition 8423454 $ 395,442 $ - $ 395,442 $ 0 Park'sConsultant'sContract 8419204 $ 2,638 $ 2,596 $ - $ 42 Cwide Dog Lease Imp 8418002 $ 23,262 $ 23,000 $ - $ 262 Rosewood Dog Park 8417013 $ 1,056 $ - $ - $ 1,056 Jordan R 3 Creeks Confluence 8417018 $ 1,570 $ - $ - $ 1,570 9line park 8416005 $ 16,495 $ 855 $ 13,968 $ 1,672 Jordan R Trail Land Acquisitn 8417017 $ 2,946 $ - $ - $ 2,946 ImperialParkShadeAcct'g 8419103 $ 6,398 $ - $ - $ 6,398 Rich Prk Comm Garden 8420138 $ 12,431 $ 4,328 $ - $ 8,103 IFFP Contract - Parks 8423005 $ 9,000 $ - $ - $ 9,000 Redwood Meadows Park Dev 8417014 $ 9,350 $ - $ - $ 9,350 9Line Orchard 8420136 $ 156,827 $ 132,168 $ 6,874 $ 17,785 Trailhead Prop Acquisition 8421403 $ 275,000 $ - $ 253,170 $ 21,830 Marmalade Park Block Phase II 8417011 $ 1,042,694 $ 240,179 $ 764,614 $ 37,902 IF Prop Acquisition 3 Creeks 8420406 $ 56,109 $ - $ 1,302 $ 54,808 Green loop 200 E Design 8422408 $ 608,490 $ 443,065 $ 93,673 $ 71,752 FY20 Bridge to Backman 8420430 $ 156,565 $ 44,791 $ 30,676 $ 81,099 Fisher House Exploration Ctr 8421401 $ 555,030 $ 52,760 $ 402,270 $ 100,000 Cnty #1 Match 3 Creek Confluen 8420424 $ 254,159 $ 133,125 $ 13,640 $ 107,393 UTGov Ph2 Foothill Trails 8420420 $ 122,281 $ - $ 1,310 $ 120,971 Three Creeks West Bank NewPark 8422403 $ 150,736 $ - $ - $ 150,736 Rose Park Neighborhood Center 8423403 $ 160,819 $ - $ 2,781 $ 158,038 Historic Renovation AllenParK 8422410 $ 420,000 $ 156,146 $ 104,230 $ 159,624 RAC Playground with ShadeSails 8422415 $ 179,323 $ - $ 712 $ 178,611 Bridge to Backman 8418005 $ 266,306 $ 10,285 $ 4,262 $ 251,758 900 S River Park Soccer Field 8423406 $ 287,848 $ - $ - $ 287,848 Lighting NE Baseball Field 8423409 $ 300,000 $ - $ 678 $ 299,322 Open Space Prop Acq-Trails 8423453 $ 300,000 $ - $ - $ 300,000 SLC Foothills Land Acquisition 8422413 $ 319,139 $ - $ - $ 319,139 Parley's Trail Design & Constr 8417012 $ 327,678 $ - $ - $ 327,678 Jordan Prk Event Grounds 8420134 $ 428,074 $ 5,593 $ 23,690 $ 398,791 Wasatch Hollow Improvements 8420142 $ 446,825 $ 18,467 $ 14,885 $ 413,472 Open Space Prop Acq-City Parks 8423452 $ 450,000 $ - $ - $ 450,000 Jordan Park Pedestrian Pathway 8422414 $ 510,000 $ 9,440 $ 34,921 $ 465,638 Gateway Triangle Property Park 8423408 $ 499,563 $ - $ 106 $ 499,457 RAC Playground Phase II 8423405 $ 521,564 $ - $ - $ 521,564 Mem. Tree Grove Design & Infra 8423407 $ 867,962 $ - $ 2,906 $ 865,056 Marmalade Plaza Project 8423451 $ 1,000,000 $ - $ 3,096 $ 996,905 SLCFoothillsTrailheadDevelpmnt 8422412 $ 1,304,682 $ 41,620 $ 62,596 $ 1,200,466 GlendaleWtrprk MstrPln&Rehab 8422406 $ 3,177,849 $ 524,018 $ 930,050 $ 1,723,781 Pioneer Park 8419150 $ 3,149,123 $ 69,208 $ 94,451 $ 2,985,464 Glendale Regional Park Phase 1 8423450 $ 4,350,000 $ - $ - $ 4,350,000 Grand Total $ 24,106,716 $ 1,913,351 $ 4,236,078 $ 17,957,287 Streets Allocation Budget Amended Allocation Encumbrances YTD Expenditures Allocation Remaining Appropriation Description Cost Center Sum of Street Allocation Budget Amended Sum of Street Allocation Encumbrances Sum of Street Allocation YTD Expenditures Sum of Street Allocation Remaining Appropriation Transportation Safety Improvem 8417007 $ 1,292 $ - $ 1,292 $ - 500/700 S Street Reconstructio 8412001 $ 15,026 $ 11,703 $ 3,323 $ - Trans Safety Improvements 8419007 $ 13,473 $ - $ 13,473 $ - 900 S Signal Improvements IF 8422615 $ 70,000 $ - $ 70,000 $ - Corridor Transformations IF 8422608 $ 25,398 $ 25,398 $ - $ - Trans Master Plan 8419006 $ 13,000 $ - $ 13,000 $ - 9 Line Central Ninth 8418011 $ 63,955 $ - $ 63,955 $ - Local Link Construction IF 8422606 $ 50,000 $ - $ 50,000 $ - Gladiola Street 8406001 $ 16,109 $ 12,925 $ 940 $ 2,244 Transportatn Safety Imprvmt IF 8422620 $ 44,400 $ - $ 38,084 $ 6,316 Urban Trails FY22 IF 8422619 $ 6,500 $ - $ - $ 6,500 Street'sConsultant'sContract 8419203 $ 29,817 $ 17,442 $ - $ 12,374 Complete Street Enhancements 8420120 $ 35,392 $ - $ 16,693 $ 18,699 500 to 700 S 8418016 $ 22,744 $ - $ - $ 22,744 900 South 9Line RR Cross IF 8422604 $ 28,000 $ - $ - $ 28,000 Transp Safety Improvements 8420110 $ 58,780 $ 17,300 $ 11,746 $ 29,734 1700S Corridor Transfrmtn IF 8422622 $ 35,300 $ - $ - $ 35,300 200S TransitCmpltStrtSuppl IF 8422602 $ 37,422 $ - $ - $ 37,422 300 N Complete Street Recons I 8423606 $ 40,000 $ - $ - $ 40,000 1300 S Bicycle Bypass (pedestr 8416004 $ 42,833 $ - $ - $ 42,833 400 South Viaduct Trail IF 8422611 $ 90,000 $ - $ - $ 90,000 Neighborhood Byways IF 8422614 $ 104,500 $ - $ - $ 104,500 Transit Cap-Freq Trans Routes 8423608 $ 110,000 $ - $ - $ 110,000 TransportationSafetyImprov IF 8421500 $ 281,586 $ 124,068 $ 40,300 $ 117,218 Indiana Ave/900 S Rehab Design 8412002 $ 124,593 $ - $ - $ 124,593 Bikeway Urban Trails 8418003 $ 181,846 $ - $ 542 $ 181,303 200 S Recon Trans Corridor IF 8423602 $ 252,000 $ - $ - $ 252,000 Street Improve Reconstruc 20 8420125 $ 780,182 $ 46,269 $ 393,884 $ 340,029 IF Complete Street Enhancement 8421502 $ 625,000 $ - $ - $ 625,000 Traffic Signal Upgrades 8421501 $ 836,736 $ 55,846 $ 45,972 $ 734,918 700 South Phase 7 IF 8423305 $ 1,120,000 $ - $ 166 $ 1,119,834 1300 East Reconstruction 8423625 $ 3,111,335 $ 1,192,649 $ 224,557 $ 1,694,129 Grand Total $ 8,267,218 $ 1,503,600 $ 987,926 $ 5,775,692 SALT LAKE CITY ORDINANCE No. of 2023 (First amendment to the Final Budget of Salt Lake City, including the employment staffing document, for Fiscal Year 2023-2024) An Ordinance Amending Salt Lake City Ordinance No. 29 of 2023 which adopted the Final Budget of Salt Lake City, Utah, for the Fiscal Year Beginning July 1, 2023, and Ending June 30, 2024. In June of 2023, the Salt Lake City Council adopted the final budget of Salt Lake City, Utah, including the employment staffing document, effective for the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2023, and ending June 30, 2024, in accordance with the requirements of Section 10-6-118 of the Utah Code. The City’s Budget Director, acting as the City’s Budget Officer, prepared and filed with the City Recorder proposed amendments to said duly adopted budget, including the amendments to the employment staffing document necessary to effectuate any staffing changes specifically stated herein, copies of which are attached hereto, for consideration by the City Council and inspection by the public. All conditions precedent to amend said budget, including the employment staffing document as provided above, have been accomplished. Be it ordained by the City Council of Salt Lake City, Utah: SECTION 1. Purpose. The purpose of this Ordinance is to amend the final budget of Salt Lake City, including the employment staffing document, as approved, ratified and finalized by Salt Lake City Ordinance No. 29 of 2023. SECTION 2. Adoption of Amendments. The budget amendments, including any amendments to the employment staffing document necessary to effectuate the staffing changes specifically stated herein, attached hereto and made a part of this Ordinance shall be, and the same hereby are adopted and incorporated into the budget of Salt Lake City, Utah, including any amendments to the employment staffing document described above, for the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2023 and ending June 30, 2024, in accordance with the requirements of Section 10-6-128 of the Utah Code. SECTION 3. Filing of copies of the Budget Amendments. The said Budget Officer is authorized and directed to certify and file a copy of said budget amendments, including any amendments to the employment staffing document, in the office of said Budget Officer and in the office of the City Recorder which amendments shall be available for public inspection. SECTION 4. Effective Date. This Ordinance shall take effect upon adoption. Passed by the City Council of Salt Lake City, Utah, this day of , 2023. CHAIRPERSON ATTEST: CITY RECORDER Transmitted to the Mayor on Mayor’s Action: Approved Vetoed MAYOR ATTEST: CITY RECORDER (SEAL) Bill No. of 2023. Published: . 2 Salt Lake City Attorney’s Office Approved As To Form Jaysen Oldroyd SALT LAKE CITY ORDINANCE No. of 2023 (First amendment to the Final Budget of Salt Lake City, including the employment staffing document, for Fiscal Year 2023-2024) An Ordinance Amending Salt Lake City Ordinance No. 29 of 2023 which adopted the Final Budget of Salt Lake City, Utah, for the Fiscal Year Beginning July 1, 2023, and Ending June 30, 2024. In June of 2023, the Salt Lake City Council adopted the final budget of Salt Lake City, Utah, including the employment staffing document, effective for the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2023, and ending June 30, 2024, in accordance with the requirements of Section 10-6-118 of the Utah Code. The City’s Budget Director, acting as the City’s Budget Officer, prepared and filed with the City Recorder proposed amendments to said duly adopted budget, including the amendments to the employment staffing document necessary to effectuate any staffing changes specifically stated herein, copies of which are attached hereto, for consideration by the City Council and inspection by the public. All conditions precedent to amend said budget, including the employment staffing document as provided above, have been accomplished. Be it ordained by the City Council of Salt Lake City, Utah: SECTION 1. Purpose. The purpose of this Ordinance is to amend the final budget of Salt Lake City, including the employment staffing document, as approved, ratified and finalized by Salt Lake City Ordinance No. 29 of 2023. SECTION 2. Adoption of Amendments. The budget amendments, including any amendments to the employment staffing document necessary to effectuate the staffing changes specifically stated herein, attached hereto and made a part of this Ordinance shall be, and the same hereby are adopted and incorporated into the budget of Salt Lake City, Utah, including any amendments to the employment staffing document described above, for the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2023 and ending June 30, 2024, in accordance with the requirements of Section 10-6-128 of the Utah Code. SECTION 3. Filing of copies of the Budget Amendments. The said Budget Officer is authorized and directed to certify and file a copy of said budget amendments, including any amendments to the employment staffing document, in the office of said Budget Officer and in the office of the City Recorder which amendments shall be available for public inspection. SECTION 4. Effective Date. This Ordinance shall take effect upon adoption. Passed by the City Council of Salt Lake City, Utah, this day of , 2023. CHAIRPERSON ATTEST: CITY RECORDER Transmitted to the Mayor on Mayor’s Action: Approved Vetoed MAYOR ATTEST: CITY RECORDER (SEAL) Bill No. of 2023. Published: . 2 Salt Lake City Attorney’s Office Approved As To Form Jaysen Oldroyd SALT LAKE CITY ORDINANCE No. of 2023 (Amendments to Lane and Sidewalk Closure Fees on the Salt Lake City Consolidated Fee Schedule) An ordinance amending the Salt Lake City Consolidated Fee Schedule to separately address lane closures and sidewalk closures. WHEREAS, on May 17, 2011 the City Council adopted Ordinances 2011-23, 2011-24 and 2011-25 to authorize and create the Salt Lake City Consolidated Fee Schedule; WHEREAS, it is now proposed that the Salt Lake City Consolidated Fee Schedule be amended to separately address fees related to lane closures and sidewalk closures as shown in the attached Exhibit A; and WHEREAS, the City Council finds (i) the fees and fee information set forth in Exhibit A are necessary, reasonable, and equitable in relation to regulatory and service costs incurred by the City; and (ii) adoption of this ordinance reasonably furthers the health, safety, and general welfare of the citizens of Salt Lake City. NOW, THEREFORE, be it ordained by the City Council of Salt Lake City, Utah: SECTION 1. That the Salt Lake City Consolidated Fee Schedule shall be, and hereby is, amended, in pertinent part, to reflect the fees and corresponding fee information set forth in the attached Exhibit A, and that a copy of the amended Salt Lake City Consolidated Fee Schedule shall be published on the official Salt Lake City website. SECTION 2. That this ordinance shall become effective upon publication. Passed by the City Council of Salt Lake City, Utah this day of 2023. CHAIRPERSON ATTEST: CITY RECORDER Transmitted to Mayor on . Mayor’s Action: Approved. Vetoed. MAYOR CITY RECORDER (SEAL) Bill No. of 2023. Published: APPROVED AS TO FORM Date: 7/28/23 By: EXHIBIT A Public Way Obstruction Permits Short term (One Week) Sidewalk Canopy $19 Per Week (Construction barricades) 14.32.405 Dumpster/pod $50 Each, Per Week (Construction barricades) 14.32.405 Sidewalk closure $98 Per Week (Construction barricades) 14.32.405 Lane closure $350 Per Week (Construction barricades) 14.32.405 Long term (1 month increments) Sidewalk Canopy $79 Per Week (Construction barricades) 14.32.405 Dumpster/pod $198 Each, Per Week (Construction barricades) 14.32.405 Sidewalk closure $394 Per Week (Construction barricades) 14.32.405 Lane Closure $1,400 Per Week (Construction barricades) 14.32.405 SALT LAKE CITY ORDINANCE No. of 2023 (Amendments to Lane and Sidewalk Closure Fees on the Salt Lake City Consolidated Fee Schedule) An ordinance amending the Salt Lake City Consolidated Fee Schedule separately address lane closures and sidewalk closures. WHEREAS, on May 17, 2011 the City Council adopted Ordinances 2011-23, 2011-24 and 2011-25 to authorize and create the Salt Lake City Consolidated Fee Schedule; WHEREAS, it is now proposed that the Salt Lake City Consolidated Fee Schedule be amended to separately address fees related to lane closures and sidewalk closures as shown in the attached Exhibit A; and WHEREAS, the City Council finds (i) the fees and fee information set forth in Exhibit A are necessary, reasonable, and equitable in relation to regulatory and service costs incurred by the City; and (ii) adoption of this ordinance reasonably furthers the health, safety, and general welfare of the citizens of Salt Lake City. NOW, THEREFORE, be it ordained by the City Council of Salt Lake City, Utah: SECTION 1. That the Salt Lake City Consolidated Fee Schedule shall be, and hereby is, amended, in pertinent part, to reflect the fees and corresponding fee information set forth in the attached Exhibit A, and that a copy of the amended Salt Lake City Consolidated Fee Schedule shall be published on the official Salt Lake City website. SECTION 2. That this ordinance shall become effective upon publication. Passed by the City Council of Salt Lake City, Utah this day of 2023. CHAIRPERSON ATTEST: CITY RECORDER Transmitted to Mayor on . Mayor’s Action: Approved. Vetoed. MAYOR CITY RECORDER (SEAL) Bill No. of 2023. Published: APPROVED AS TO FORM Date: By: EXHIBIT A Public Way Obstruction Permits Short term (One Week) Sidewalk Canopy $19 Per Week (Construction barricades) 14.32.405 Dumpster/pod $50 Each, Per Week (Construction barricades) 14.32.405 Lane or sSidewalk closure $350$98 Per Week (Construction barricades) 14.32.405 Lane closure $350 Per Week (Construction barricades) 14.32.405 Long term (1 month increments) Sidewalk Canopy $79 Per Week (Construction barricades) 14.32.405 Dumpster/pod $198 Each, Per Week (Construction barricades) 14.32.405 Lane or sSidewalk closure $1,400$394 Per Week (Construction barricades) 14.32.405 Lane Closure $1,400 Per Week (Construction barricades) 14.32.405 Alejandro Sanchez (Aug 9, 2023 15:08 MDT) Email: alejandro.sanchez@slcgov.com Signature: DEPARTMENT OF FINANCE POLICY AND BUDGET DIVISION 451 SOUTH STATE STREET PO BOX 145467, SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH 84114-5455 ERIN MENDENHALL Mayor MARY BETH THOMPSON Chief Financial Officer CITY COUNCIL TRANSMITTAL ___________________________________ Date Received: _______________ Lisa Shaffer, Chief Administrative Officer Date sent to Council: __________ ______________________________________________________________________________ TO: Salt Lake City Council DATE: August 2, 2023 Darin Mano, Chair FROM: Mary Beth Thompson, Chief Financial Officer SUBJECT: RE-TRANSMITTING FY24 Budget Amendment #1 SPONSOR: NA STAFF CONTACT: Lisa Hunt (801) 535-7926 or Mary Beth Thompson (801) 535-6403 DOCUMENT TYPE: Budget Amendment Ordinance RECOMMENDATION: The Administration recommends that subsequent to a public hearing, the City Council adopt the following amendments to the FY24 adopted budget. BUDGET IMPACT: REVENUE EXPENSE GENERAL FUND $-754,483.23 $250,000.00 CIP FUND 218,000.00 218,000.00 CIP: IMPACT FEE FUND -1,648,715.00 0.00 FLEET FUND 0.00 1,461,793.00 IMS FUND 0.00 9,000.00 TOTAL $-2,185,198.23 $ 1,893,793.00 08/03/2023 08/03/2023 Lisa Shaffer (Aug 3, 2023 09:54 MDT) BACKGROUND/DISCUSSION: Revenue for FY24 Budget Adjustments The following chart shows a current projection of General Fund Revenue for FY24. Because of this budget amendment’s timing, there are no updates for Y24 projections available. The City has begun closing out the FY23 and will provide updates to Council as the audit progresses. Revenue FY23-FY24 Annual Budget FY23-24 Amended Budget Revised Forecast Amended Variance Favorable (Unfavorable) Revenue FY22-FY23 Annual Budget FY22-FY23 Amended Budget Revised Forecast Amended Variance Property Taxes 129,847,140 129,847,140 129,847,140 - Sale and Use Taxes 117,129,000 117,129,000 117,129,000 - Franchise Taxes 12,348,127 12,348,127 12,348,127 - Payment in Lieu of Taxes 1,905,573 1,905,573 1,905,573 - Total Taxes 261,229,840 261,229,840 261,229,840 - Revenue FY22-FY23 Annual Budget FY22-FY23 Amended Budget Revised Forecast Amended Variance Licenses and Permits 40,878,104 40,878,104 40,878,104 - Intergovernmental Revenue 5,134,621 5,134,621 5,134,621 - Interest Income 8,000,000 8,000,000 8,000,000 - Fines 4,063,548 4,063,548 4,063,548 - Parking Meter Collections 2,801,089 2,801,089 2,801,089 - Charges, Fees, and Rentals 4,881,922 4,881,922 4,881,922 - Miscellaneous Revenue 3,502,359 3,502,359 3,502,359 - Interfund Reimbursement 26,131,213 26,131,213 26,131,213 - Transfers 9,938,944 9,938,944 9,938,944 - Total W/O Special Tax 366,561,640 366,561,640 366,561,640 - ObjectCodeDescription FY22-23 Annual Budget FY22-23 Amended Budget Revised Forecast Amended Variance Additional Sales Tax (1/2%)49,084,479 49,084,479 49,084,479 - Total General Fund 415,646,119 415,646,119 415,646,119 - Fund balance has been updated to include proposed changes for BA#1. Based on those projections adjusted fund balance is projected to be at 11.38%. FOF GF Only TOTAL FOF GF Only TOTAL Beginning Fund Balance 18,395,660 141,728,022 160,123,682 13,132,752 91,575,871 104,708,623 Budgeted Change in Fund Balance (2,100,608) (20,736,262) (22,836,870) (3,657,641) (29,211,158) (32,868,799) Prior Year Encumbrances (3,162,300) (17,260,909) (20,423,209) (1,879,654) (10,259,789) (12,139,443) Estimated Beginning Fund Balance 13,132,752 103,730,851 116,863,603 7,595,457 52,104,924 59,700,381 Beginning Fund Balance Percent 29.60%27.04%27.30%14.51%13.29%13.43% Year End CAFR Adjustments Revenue Changes - - - - - - Expense Changes (Prepaids, Receivable, Etc.) (8,556,220) (8,556,220) (8,556,220) (8,556,220) Fund Balance w/ CAFR Changes 13,132,752 95,174,631 108,307,383 7,595,457 43,548,704 51,144,161 Final Fund Balance Percent 29.60%24.81%25.30%14.51%11.10%11.51% Budget Amendment Use of Fund Balance BA#1 Revenue Adjustment - (475,000) (475,000) - (754,483) (754,483) BA#1 Expense Adjustment - - - 205,000 205,000 BA#2 Revenue Adjustment - - - - - - BA#2 Expense Adjustment - - - - - - BA#3 Revenue Adjustment - 6,000,000 6,000,000 - - - BA#3 Expense Adjustment - (6,538,000) (6,538,000) - - - BA#4 Revenue Adjustment - 194,600 194,600 - - - BA#4 Expense Adjustment - (7,584,328) (7,584,328) - - - BA#5 Revenue Adjustment - - - - - - BA#5 Expense Adjustment - (5,940,349) (5,940,349) - - - BA#6 Revenue Adjustment - 19,120,198 19,120,198 - - - BA#6 Expense Adjustment - (11,719,731) (12,219,731) - - - BA#7 Revenue Adjustment - - - - - - BA#7 Expense Adjustment - - - - - - Change in Revenue - - - - - - Change in Expense Fund Balance Budgeted Increase - - - - - - - - Adjusted Fund Balance 13,132,752 88,232,021 100,864,773 7,595,457 42,999,220 50,594,677 Adjusted Fund Balance Percent 29.60%23.00%23.57%14.51%10.96%11.38% Projected Revenue 44,364,490 383,650,846 428,015,336 52,338,120 392,166,803 444,504,923 FY2024 Budget Salt Lake City General Fund TOTAL FY2023 Budget Projected Fund Balance Projections The Administration is requesting a budget amendment totaling $(2,185,198.23) in revenue and $1,893,793.00 in expenses. The amendment proposes changes in 5 funds, with zero increases in FTEs. The proposal includes 10 initiatives for Council review. A summary spreadsheet outlining proposed budget changes is attached. The Administration requests this document be modified based on the decisions of the Council. The budget amendment is separated in eight different categories: A. New Budget Items B. Grants for Existing Staff Resources C. Grants for New Staff Resources D. Housekeeping Items E. Grants Requiring No New Staff Resources F. Donations G. Council Consent Agenda Grant Awards I. Council Added Items PUBLIC PROCESS: Public Hearing Salt Lake City FY 2023-24 Budget Amendment #1 Initiative Number/Name Fund Amount 1 Section A: New Items A-1: Donation to CIP for Ball Field Sports Lighting at Riverside Park CIP $218,000.00 Department: Public Services – Engineering Prepared By: Sean Fyfe, Mary Beth Thompson For questions, please include Sean Fyfe, Mary Beth Thompson The City will be receiving a donation for ball field sports lighting in Riverside Park. A budget of $300,000 currently exists for the project, but the quote for the cost of the lighting is $368,000 . The installation of the lighting could start around mid-September to mid-October. The Administration, understanding that public comment is necessary before an official vote, would like to request a straw poll to allow for the receipt of the contract for the entire project. A-2: Funding for Open Streets Initiative GF $250,000.00 Department: Economic Development Prepared By: Roberta Reichgelt For questions, please include Lorena Riffo Jenson, Roberta Reichgelt, Mary Beth Thompson The Department of Economic Development (DED) is requesting additional funding for the Open Streets event on Main Street in downtown Salt Lake City this fall. Funding for infrastructure costs such as UTA Trax bollards, street maintenance, and no-parking signage will cost an estimated $250,000, and after including operations and activation costs by The Downtown Alliance totaling $500,000, the total costs exceed the $500,000 City Council allocated for the event. DED is requesting funding for these additional costs in the amount of $250,000 for Open Streets infrastructure, which is a one- time cost that will service the event for the year and for future Open Streets events. A-3: Funding for Impact and Permit Fee Refund to Ivory University House GF ($754,483.23) CIP/Impact Fund ($1,648,715.00) Department: CAN & Finance Prepared By: Randy Hillier For questions, please include Mary Beth Thompson, Rachel Otto, Blake Thomas, Kimberly Chytraus, Katie Lewis, Randy Hillier, Mike Atkinson A Public Benefits Analysis has been transmitted to the Council pertaining to the refunding of building permits and impact fees to Ivory University House L3C. The total amount being refunded is approximately $2.4 million. This amount consists of $754,483 in building permit fees and $1,648,715 in impact fees. Should the Public Benefits Analysis be approved by the Council, a budget will need to be in place for the refunds to happen. This will be accounted for by showing negative revenue for both the Impact Fees and Permit Fees being refunded. Section B: Grants for Existing Staff Resources Section C: Grants for New Staff Resources Section D: Housekeeping D-1: AFSCME MOU Allocations GF ($511,001.00) AFSCME MOU Allocations – 911 Dispatch GF $104,175.00 AFSCME MOU Allocations – CAN GF $3,963.00 AFSCME MOU Allocations – Police GF $55,928.00 AFSCME MOU Allocations – Justice Courts GF $40.00 AFSCME MOU Allocations – Public Lands GF $36,737.00 Salt Lake City FY 2023-24 Budget Amendment #1 Initiative Number/Name Fund Amount 2 AFSCME MOU Allocations – Public Services GF $310,158.00 Department: Finance Prepared By: Mary Beth Thompson For questions, please include Mary Beth Thompson Update the AFSCME MOU allocations for fiscal year 2024. D-2: Consolidated Fee Schedule Change NA $0.00 Department: Finance Prepared By: Lisa Hunt For questions, please include Mary Beth Thompson, Lisa Hunt Correction to CFS - Engineering Fees: During the FY24 budget, an increase in the engineering fee for lane closure was recommended by the administration. The intent was to separate the fee for sidewalk and lane closures, charging a higher rate for lane closures as justified by cost analysis. The increased fee was inadvertently applied to both sidewalk and lane closures. This correction will create a separate line item for these two types of closures with the appropriate fee applied to each. D-3: Three Creeks West Roadway Rescope CIP $0.00 Department: Public Services – Engineering Prepared By: Josh Willie, Mark Stephens, JP Goates, Dustin Petersen For questions, please include Josh Willie, Mark Stephens, JP Goates, Dustin Petersen The CIP application for "Three Creeks West - Roadways" includes only a single residential stretch of 1300 S, North of California Ave. that fronts ten residential properties and the Jordan River. This constituent application was two -part, with roadway reconstruction and utilities. This FY22-23 CIP request was submitted as follows: "Reconstruct a block of 1300 South and a block of 1000 West along Jordan River and install badly needed sewers. Will improve multimodal transportation, park access, public safety , and basic sanitation, expanding on the success of Three Creek Confluence Park." The subsequent estimate did not fully account for new utilities, nor was it eligible for utilities, as improvements for priva te development (which the applicant would benefit from) are not paid for by the City. Furthermore, if the sewer line was installed the property owners fronting a new line would be required by the health code to tie in at their own expense. After the City engaged with the impacted property owners not all of them agreed. Therefore, we proposed to move forward with this application with a scope limited to roadway reconstruction. No additional funds are required. D-4: 1700 E. to 2100 S. Project Budget Reallocation CIP $0.00 Department: Public Services – Engineering Prepared By: Josh Willie, Mark Stephens, JP Goates, Dustin Petersen For questions, please include Josh Willie, Mark Stephens, JP Goates, Dustin Petersen Public Services Engineering and CAN Transportation are recommending moving the bond funds from 1700 East to 2100 South to supplement the expanded scope and community-desired elements. The following are reasons that support the delay in the funding for the construction of 1700 East: 1. There is a high likelihood that Highland High School will be rebuilt in the next few years, which would likely damage the pavement and result in some needed design changes to accommodate the new school layout. 2. Public Utilities is planning a potential storm drain upgrade that would require significant roadway excavation shortly after the original 1700 East reconstruction project timeline. 3. The remaining bond funding is not adequate to fully reconstruct the segment of roadway and safety improvements necessary for a large school. Salt Lake City FY 2023-24 Budget Amendment #1 Initiative Number/Name Fund Amount 3 4. Certain elements of the desired 2100 South reconstruction project may not be funded without this request. D-5: Bridge Projects Funding Rescope for UDOT Match CIP $0.00 Department: Public Services - Engineering Prepared By: Josh Willie, Mark Stephens, JP Goates, Dustin Petersen For questions, please include Josh Willie, Mark Stephens, JP Goates, Dustin Petersen City Council previously approved $2,648,507 in FY21 for the rehabilitation of the 650 N bridge over the Jordan River and the 400 S bridge over the Jordan River. After the March 2020 earthquake, damage sustained to the 650 N bridge made it necessary to replace/reconstruct the bridge, and rehabilitation was no longer recommended. Subsequently, the City Council approved $3,700,000 in FY23 for the reconstruction of the 650 N bridge over the Jordan River. The combined available CIP funding from FY 21 and FY23 for bridge replacements/rehabilitation is $6,348,507. City Engineering received notice from UDOT in early July 2022 that the following three (3) bridges were eligible for replacement with Federal Bridge Formula Program (BFP) funding: 1) 650 N bridge ov er the Jordan River, 2) 200 S bridge over the Jordan River and 3) 500 S bridge over the Jordan River. The Engineering Division received a letter from UDOT on June 29, 2023, that they would be proceeding with the approval of the proposed BFP funding for th e 650 N and 200 S bridges since no potential habitats were found for an endemic orchid, as previously suspected. The total approved project value for these two (2) bridge replacement projects is $14,400,000 which will require a 6.77% local match by Salt L ake City. The 500 S bridge BFP funding should be approved in August/September 2023 however no local match will be required since this bridge will be funded 100% by BFP funding. For these bridge replacements, UDOT will serve as the funding administrator as well as perform the design and construction of the bridges. Additionally, the City is required to coordinate private and public utility relocations prior to the reconstruction of each bridge. Public utility relocation must be funded by the City. As a result, Engineering is requesting that the $6,348,507 in available bridge CIP funding from FY21 and FY23 be made available to pay for 1) 6.77% local match requirement and 2) any necessary public utility relocations (private utilities woul d be required to relocate their respective utilities under their respective franchise agreements at no cost to the City). Any remaining funding after the match and public utility relocation costs would be applied to the design and reconstruction of the 400 S bridge over the Jordan River. D-6: Compliance Mitigation Team – Fleet and IMS GF ($45,000.00) Fleet $36,800.00 IMS $9,000.000 Department: Public Services - Compliance Prepared By: Dustin Petersen For questions, please contact Dustin Petersen For FY24, Salt Lake City Council approved 3 new FTEs for homelessness mitigation. One -time and ongoing funds were placed in Public Services Compliance General Fund budget. Some one -time funding for items related to this team belongs in other funds, namely Fleet and IMS. This request is to move the funds to the appropriate fund. D-7: Fleet Encumbrances GF $1,424,993.00 Department: Public Services - Fleet Prepared By: Dustin Petersen For questions, please contact Dustin Petersen This is the Fleet encumbrance rollover for vehicles that were committed with the funds in FY23 or earlier but have not been received or completed. A detailed list of vehicles is included in the Backup Documentation Salt Lake City FY 2023-24 Budget Amendment #1 Initiative Number/Name Fund Amount 4 Section E: Grants Requiring No Staff Resources Section F: Donations Section G: Consent Agenda Consent Agenda Section I: Council Added Items Initiative Number/Name Fund Revenue Amount Expenditure Amount Revenue Amount Expenditure Amount Ongoing or One- time FTEs 1 Donation to CIP for Ball Field Sports Lighting at Riverside Park CIP 218,000.00 218,000.00 One-time - 2 Funding for Open Streets Initiative GF - 250,000.00 One-time - 3 Funding for Impact and Permit Fee Refund to Ivory University House Impact Fee (1,648,715.00) - One-time - 3 Funding for Impact and Permit Fee Refund to Ivory University House GF (754,483.23) - One-time - 1 AFSCME MOU Allocations - Non Dept GF - (511,001.00)Ongoing - 1 AFSCME MOU Allocations - 911 Dispatch GF - 104,175.00 Ongoing - 1 AFSCME MOU Allocations - CAN GF - 3,963.00 Ongoing - 1 AFSCME MOU Allocations - Police GF - 55,928.00 Ongoing - 1 AFSCME MOU Allocations - Justice Courts GF - 40.00 Ongoing - 1 AFSCME MOU Allocations - Public Lands GF - 36,737.00 Ongoing - 1 AFSCME MOU Allocations - Public Services GF - 310,158.00 Ongoing - 2 Consolidated Fee Schedule Change NA - - Ongoing - 3 Three Creeks West Roadway Rescope CIP - - One-time - 4 1700 E. to 2100 S. Project Budget Reallocation CIP - - One-time - 5 Bridge Projects Funding Rescope for UDOT Match CIP - - One-time - 6 Compliance Mitigation Team – Fleet and IMS GF - (45,000.00) One-time - 6 Compliance Mitigation Team – Fleet and IMS Fleet - 36,800.00 One-time - 6 Compliance Mitigation Team – Fleet and IMS IMS - 9,000.00 One-time - 7 Encumbrances - Fleet Fleet - 1,424,993.00 One-time - Section E: Grants Requiring No New Staff Resources - Consent Agenda # Total of Budget Amendment Items (2,185,198.23) 1,893,793.00 - - - Fiscal Year 2023-24 Budget Amendment #1 Council ApprovedAdministration Proposed Section I: Council Added Items Section A: New Items Section D: Housekeeping Section F: Donations Section G: Council Consent Agenda -- Grant Awards Section C: Grants for New Staff Resources Section B: Grants for Existing Staff Resources 1 Fiscal Year 2023-24 Budget Amendment #1 Initiative Number/Name Fund Revenue Amount Expenditure Amount Revenue Amount Expenditure Amount Ongoing or One- time FTEs Total by Fund, Budget Amendment #1: General Fund GF (754,483.23) 205,000.00 - - - Impact Fee Fund Impact Fee (1,648,715.00) - - - - Fleet Fund Fleet - 1,461,793.00 CIP Fund CIP 218,000.00 218,000.00 - - - IMS Fund IMS - 9,000.00 - - - Total of Budget Amendment Items (2,185,198.23) 1,893,793.00 - - - Current Year Budget Summary, provided for information only FY 2023-24 Budget, Including Budget Amendments FY 2023-24 Adopted Budget BA #1 Total BA #2 Total BA #3 Total BA #4 Total BA #5 Total Total Revenue General Fund (Fund 1000)448,514,917 (754,483.23) 447,760,433.77 Curb and Gutter (FC 20)3,000 3,000.00 DEA Task Force Fund (FC 41)1,397,355 1,397,355.00 Misc Special Service Districts (FC 46)1,700,000 1,700,000.00 Street Lighting Enterprise (FC 48)6,044,149 6,044,149.00 Water Fund (FC 51)177,953,787 177,953,787.00 Sewer Fund (FC 52)301,832,622 301,832,622.00 Storm Water Fund (FC 53)22,947,474 22,947,474.00 Airport Fund (FC 54,55,56)520,438,997 520,438,997.00 Refuse Fund (FC 57)28,263,792 28,263,792.00 Golf Fund (FC 59)17,938,984 17,938,984.00 E-911 Fund (FC 60)3,800,385 3,800,385.00 Fleet Fund (FC 61)32,498,750 32,498,750.00 IMS Fund (FC 65)38,702,171 38,702,171.00 County Quarter Cent Sales Tax for Transportation (FC 69)9,700,000 9,700,000.00 CDBG Operating Fund (FC 71)5,597,763 5,597,763.00 Miscellaneous Grants (FC 72)8,919,917 8,919,917.00 Other Special Revenue (FC 73)400,000 400,000.00 Donation Fund (FC 77)500,000 500,000.00 Housing Loans & Trust (FC 78)10,212,043 10,212,043.00 Debt Service Fund (FC 81)34,894,979 34,894,979.00 CIP Fund (FC 83, 84 & 86)29,708,286 (1,430,715.00) 28,277,571.00 Governmental Immunity (FC 85)3,370,012 3,370,012.00 Risk Fund (FC 87)63,574,655 63,574,655.00 Total of Budget Amendment Items 1,768,914,038 (2,185,198.23) - - - - 1,766,728,839.77 Administration Proposed Council Approved 2 Fiscal Year 2023-24 Budget Amendment #1 Total Expense BA #1 Total BA #2 Total BA #3 Total BA #4 Total BA #5 Total Total Expense General Fund (FC 10)425,537,408 205,000.00 425,742,408.00 Curb and Gutter (FC 20)3,000 3,000.00 DEA Task Force Fund (FC 41)1,762,560 1,762,560.00 Misc Special Service Districts (FC 46)1,700,000 1,700,000.00 Street Lighting Enterprise (FC 48)5,757,825 5,757,825.00 Water Fund (FC 51)132,752,815 132,752,815.00 Sewer Fund (FC 52)255,914,580 255,914,580.00 Storm Water Fund (FC 53)18,699,722 18,699,722.00 Airport Fund (FC 54,55,56)384,681,671 384,681,671.00 Refuse Fund (FC 57)24,952,672 24,952,672.00 Golf Fund (FC 59)14,726,016 14,726,016.00 E-911 Fund (FC 60)3,800,385 3,800,385.00 Fleet Fund (FC 61)30,426,032 1,461,793.00 31,887,825.00 IMS Fund (FC 65)30,523,167 9,000.00 30,532,167.00 County Quarter Cent Sales Tax for Transportation (FC 69)9,458,748 9,458,748.00 CDBG Operating Fund (FC 71)4,958,433 4,958,433.00 Miscellaneous Grants (FC 72)26,614,153 26,614,153.00 Other Special Revenue (FC 73)300,000 300,000.00 Donation Fund (FC 77)287,250 287,250.00 Housing Loans & Trust (FC 78)25,779,253 25,779,253.00 Debt Service Fund (FC 81)33,658,558 33,658,558.00 CIP Fund (FC 83, 84 & 86)35,460,387 218,000.00 35,678,387.00 Governmental Immunity (FC 85)3,169,767 3,169,767.00 Risk Fund (FC 87)54,679,000 54,679,000.00 - Total of Budget Amendment Items 1,525,603,402 1,893,793.00 - - - - 1,527,497,195.00 Budget Manager Analyst, City Council Contingent Appropriation 3 Impact Fees - Summary Confidential Data pulled 07/20/2023 Unallocated Budget Amounts: by Major Area Area Cost Center UnAllocated Cash Notes: Impact fee - Police 8484001 1,402,656$ Impact fee - Fire 8484002 273,684$ B Impact fee - Parks 8484003 16,793,487$ C Impact fee - Streets 8484005 6,304,485$ D 24,774,312$ Expiring Amounts: by Major Area, by Month 202207 (Jul2022)2023Q1 -$ -$ -$ -$ -$ 202208 (Aug2022)2023Q1 -$ -$ -$ -$ -$ 202209 (Sep2022)2023Q1 -$ -$ -$ -$ -$ 202210 (Oct2022)2023Q2 -$ -$ -$ -$ -$ 202211 (Nov2022)2023Q2 -$ -$ -$ -$ -$ 202212 (Dec2022)2023Q2 -$ -$ -$ -$ -$ 202301 (Jan2023)2023Q3 -$ -$ -$ -$ -$ 202302 (Feb2023)2023Q3 -$ -$ -$ -$ -$ 202303 (Mar2023)2023Q3 -$ -$ -$ -$ -$ 202304 (Apr2023)2023Q4 -$ -$ -$ -$ -$ 202305 (May2023)2023Q4 -$ -$ -$ -$ -$ 202306 (Jun2023)2023Q4 -$ -$ -$ -$ -$ Current Month 202307 (Jul2023)2024Q1 -$ -$ -$ -$ -$ 202308 (Aug2023)2024Q1 -$ -$ -$ -$ -$ 202309 (Sep2023)2024Q1 -$ -$ -$ -$ -$ 202310 (Oct2023)2024Q2 -$ -$ -$ -$ -$ 202311 (Nov2023)2024Q2 -$ -$ -$ -$ -$ 202312 (Dec2023)2024Q2 -$ -$ -$ -$ -$ 202401 (Jan2024)2024Q3 -$ -$ -$ -$ -$ 202402 (Feb2024)2024Q3 -$ -$ -$ -$ -$ 202403 (Mar2024)2024Q3 -$ -$ -$ -$ -$ 202404 (Apr2024)2024Q4 -$ -$ -$ -$ -$ 202405 (May2024)2024Q4 -$ -$ -$ -$ -$ 202406 (Jun2024)2024Q4 -$ -$ -$ -$ -$ 202407 (Jul2024)2025Q1 -$ -$ -$ -$ -$ 202408 (Aug2024)2025Q1 -$ -$ -$ -$ -$ 202409 (Sep2024)2025Q1 -$ -$ -$ -$ -$ 202410 (Oct2024)2025Q2 -$ -$ -$ -$ -$ 202411 (Nov2024)2025Q2 -$ -$ -$ -$ -$ 202412 (Dec2024)2025Q2 -$ -$ -$ -$ -$ 202501 (Jan2025)2025Q3 -$ -$ -$ -$ -$ 202502 (Feb2025)2025Q3 -$ -$ -$ -$ -$ 202503 (Mar2025)2025Q3 -$ -$ -$ -$ -$ 202504 (Apr2025)2025Q4 -$ -$ -$ -$ -$ 202505 (May2025)2025Q4 -$ -$ -$ -$ -$ 202506 (Jun2025)2025Q4 -$ -$ -$ -$ -$ 202507 (Jul2025)2026Q1 -$ -$ -$ -$ -$ 202508 (Aug2025)2026Q1 -$ -$ -$ -$ -$ 202509 (Sep2025)2026Q1 -$ -$ -$ -$ -$ 202510 (Oct2025)2026Q2 -$ -$ -$ -$ -$ 202511 (Nov2025)2026Q2 -$ -$ -$ 1,103,628$ 1,103,628$ 202512 (Dec2025)2026Q2 -$ -$ -$ 113,748$ 113,748$ 202601 (Jan2026)2026Q3 -$ -$ -$ 3,960$ 3,960$ 202602 (Feb2026)2026Q3 -$ -$ -$ 26,929$ 26,929$ 202603 (Mar2026)2026Q3 -$ -$ -$ 95,407$ 95,407$ 202604 (Apr2026)2026Q4 -$ -$ -$ 1,065,383$ 1,065,383$ 202605 (May2026)2026Q4 -$ -$ -$ 95,762$ 95,762$ 202606 (Jun2026)2026Q4 -$ -$ -$ 53,972$ 53,972$ Total, Currently Expiring through Jun 2026 -$ -$ -$ 2,558,788$ 2,558,788$ FY 2 0 2 3 Calendar Month FY 2 0 2 4 FY 2 0 2 5 FY 2 0 2 6 Fiscal Quarter E = A + B + C + D Police Fire Parks Streets Total Impact Fees Confidential Data pulled 07/20/2023 AAA BBB CCC DDD = AAA - BBB - CCC Police Allocation Budget Amended Allocation Encumbrances YTD Expenditures Allocation Remaining Appropriation Values Description Cost Center Sum of Police Allocation Budget Amended Sum of Police Allocation Encumbrances Sum of Police Allocation YTD Expenditures Sum of Police Allocation Remaining Appropriation IFFP Contract - Police 8423003 9,000$ -$ -$ 9,000$ Grand Total 9,000$ -$ -$ 9,000$ A Fire Allocation Budget Amended Allocation Encumbrances YTD Expenditures Allocation Remaining Appropriation Values Description Cost Center Sum of Fire Allocation Budget Amended Sum of Fire Allocation Encumbrances Sum of Fire Allocation YTD Expenditures Sum of Fire Allocation Remaining Appropriation Fire Training Center 8417015 (499,533)$ -$ (499,533)$ -$ Fire'sConsultant'sContract 8419202 3,079$ 3,021$ -$ 58.00 IFFP Contract - Fire 8423004 9,000$ -$ -$ 9,000$ B IF Excess Capacity - Fire 8423006 2,200,000$ -$ 2,200,000$ -$ Grand Total 1,712,546$ 3,021$ 1,700,467$ 9,058.00 Parks Allocation Budget Amended Allocation Encumbrances YTD Expenditures Allocation Remaining Appropriation Values Description Cost Center Sum of Parks Allocation Budget Amended Sum of Parks Allocation Encumbrances Sum of Parks Allocation YTD Expenditures Sum of Parks Allocation Remaining Appropriation Fisher Carriage House 8420130 261,187$ -$ 261,187$ -$ Emigration Open Space ACQ 8422423 700,000$ -$ 700,000$ -$ Waterpark Redevelopment Plan 8421402 16,959$ 1,705$ 15,254$ -$ JR Boat Ram 8420144 3,337$ -$ 3,337$ -$ RAC Parcel Acquisition 8423454 395,442$ -$ 395,442$ 0$ Park'sConsultant'sContract 8419204 2,638$ 2,596$ -$ 42$ Cwide Dog Lease Imp 8418002 23,262$ 23,000$ -$ 262$ Rosewood Dog Park 8417013 1,056$ -$ -$ 1,056$ Jordan R 3 Creeks Confluence 8417018 1,570$ -$ -$ 1,570$ 9line park 8416005 16,495$ 855$ 13,968$ 1,672$ Jordan R Trail Land Acquisitn 8417017 2,946$ -$ -$ 2,946$ ImperialParkShadeAcct'g 8419103 6,398$ -$ -$ 6,398$ Rich Prk Comm Garden 8420138 12,431$ 4,328$ -$ 8,103$ FY IFFP Contract - Parks 8423005 9,000$ -$ -$ 9,000$ Redwood Meadows Park Dev 8417014 9,350$ -$ -$ 9,350$ 9Line Orchard 8420136 156,827$ 132,168$ 6,874$ 17,785$ Trailhead Prop Acquisition 8421403 275,000$ -$ 253,170$ 21,830$ Marmalade Park Block Phase II 8417011 1,042,694$ 240,179$ 764,614$ 37,902$ IF Prop Acquisition 3 Creeks 8420406 56,109$ -$ 1,302$ 54,808$ Green loop 200 E Design 8422408 608,490$ 443,065$ 93,673$ 71,752$ C FY20 Bridge to Backman 8420430 156,565$ 44,791$ 30,676$ 81,099$ Fisher House Exploration Ctr 8421401 555,030$ 52,760$ 402,270$ 100,000$ Cnty #1 Match 3 Creek Confluen 8420424 254,159$ 133,125$ 13,640$ 107,393$ UTGov Ph2 Foothill Trails 8420420 122,281$ -$ 1,310$ 120,971$ Three Creeks West Bank NewPark 8422403 150,736$ -$ -$ 150,736$ Rose Park Neighborhood Center 8423403 160,819$ -$ 2,781$ 158,038$ Historic Renovation AllenParK 8422410 420,000$ 156,146$ 104,230$ 159,624$ RAC Playground with ShadeSails 8422415 179,323$ -$ 712$ 178,611$ Bridge to Backman 8418005 266,306$ 10,285$ 4,262$ 251,758$ 900 S River Park Soccer Field 8423406 287,848$ -$ -$ 287,848$ Lighting NE Baseball Field 8423409 300,000$ -$ 678$ 299,322$ Open Space Prop Acq-Trails 8423453 300,000$ -$ -$ 300,000$ SLC Foothills Land Acquisition 8422413 319,139$ -$ -$ 319,139$ Parley's Trail Design & Constr 8417012 327,678$ -$ -$ 327,678$ Jordan Prk Event Grounds 8420134 428,074$ 5,593$ 23,690$ 398,791$ Wasatch Hollow Improvements 8420142 446,825$ 18,467$ 14,885$ 413,472$ Open Space Prop Acq-City Parks 8423452 450,000$ -$ -$ 450,000$ Jordan Park Pedestrian Pathway 8422414 510,000$ 9,440$ 34,921$ 465,638$ Gateway Triangle Property Park 8423408 499,563$ -$ 106$ 499,457$ RAC Playground Phase II 8423405 521,564$ -$ -$ 521,564$ Mem. Tree Grove Design & Infra 8423407 867,962$ -$ 2,906$ 865,056$ Marmalade Plaza Project 8423451 1,000,000$ -$ 3,096$ 996,905$ SLCFoothillsTrailheadDevelpmnt 8422412 1,304,682$ 41,620$ 62,596$ 1,200,466$ GlendaleWtrprk MstrPln&Rehab 8422406 3,177,849$ 524,018$ 930,050$ 1,723,781$ Pioneer Park 8419150 3,149,123$ 69,208$ 94,451$ 2,985,464$ Glendale Regional Park Phase 1 8423450 4,350,000$ -$ -$ 4,350,000$ Grand Total 24,106,716$ 1,913,351$ 4,236,078$ 17,957,287$ Streets Allocation Budget Amended Allocation Encumbrances YTD Expenditures Allocation Remaining Appropriation Values Description Cost Center Sum of Street Allocation Budget Amended Sum of Street Allocation Encumbrances Sum of Street Allocation YTD Expenditures Sum of Street Allocation Remaining Appropriation Transportation Safety Improvem 8417007 1,292$ -$ 1,292$ -$ 500/700 S Street Reconstructio 8412001 15,026$ 11,703$ 3,323$ -$ Trans Safety Improvements 8419007 13,473$ -$ 13,473$ -$ 900 S Signal Improvements IF 8422615 70,000$ -$ 70,000$ -$ Corridor Transformations IF 8422608 25,398$ 25,398$ -$ -$ Trans Master Plan 8419006 13,000$ -$ 13,000$ -$ 9 Line Central Ninth 8418011 63,955$ -$ 63,955$ -$ Local Link Construction IF 8422606 50,000$ -$ 50,000$ -$ Gladiola Street 8406001 16,109$ 12,925$ 940$ 2,244$ Transportatn Safety Imprvmt IF 8422620 44,400$ -$ 38,084$ 6,316$ Urban Trails FY22 IF 8422619 6,500$ -$ -$ 6,500$ Street'sConsultant'sContract 8419203 29,817$ 17,442$ -$ 12,374$ Complete Street Enhancements 8420120 35,392$ -$ 16,693$ 18,699$ 500 to 700 S 8418016 22,744$ -$ -$ 22,744$ D 900 South 9Line RR Cross IF 8422604 28,000$ -$ -$ 28,000$ Transp Safety Improvements 8420110 58,780$ 17,300$ 11,746$ 29,734$ 1700S Corridor Transfrmtn IF 8422622 35,300$ -$ -$ 35,300$ 200S TransitCmpltStrtSuppl IF 8422602 37,422$ -$ -$ 37,422$ 300 N Complete Street Recons I 8423606 40,000$ -$ -$ 40,000$ 1300 S Bicycle Bypass (pedestr 8416004 42,833$ -$ -$ 42,833$ 400 South Viaduct Trail IF 8422611 90,000$ -$ -$ 90,000$ Neighborhood Byways IF 8422614 104,500$ -$ -$ 104,500$ Transit Cap-Freq Trans Routes 8423608 110,000$ -$ -$ 110,000$ TransportationSafetyImprov IF 8421500 281,586$ 124,068$ 40,300$ 117,218$ Indiana Ave/900 S Rehab Design 8412002 124,593$ -$ -$ 124,593$ Bikeway Urban Trails 8418003 181,846$ -$ 542$ 181,303$ 200 S Recon Trans Corridor IF 8423602 252,000$ -$ -$ 252,000$ Street Improve Reconstruc 20 8420125 780,182$ 46,269$ 393,884$ 340,029$ IF Complete Street Enhancement 8421502 625,000$ -$ -$ 625,000$ Traffic Signal Upgrades 8421501 836,736$ 55,846$ 45,972$ 734,918$ 700 South Phase 7 IF 8423305 1,120,000$ -$ 166$ 1,119,834$ 1300 East Reconstruction 8423625 3,111,335$ 1,192,649$ 224,557$ 1,694,129$ Grand Total 8,267,218$ 1,503,600$ 987,926$ 5,775,692$ Total 34,095,480$ 3,419,972$ 6,924,471$ 23,751,037$ E = A + B + C + D TRUE TRUE TRUE TRUE 8484002 24,774,312$ 8484003 8484005 16,793,487$ 6,304,485$ $273,684 UnAllocated Budget Amount 8484001 1,402,656$ SALT LAKE CITY ORDINANCE No. ______ of 2023 (First amendment to the Final Budget of Salt Lake City, including the employment staffing document, for Fiscal Year 2023-2024) An Ordinance Amending Salt Lake City Ordinance No. 29 of 2023 which adopted the Final Budget of Salt Lake City, Utah, for the Fiscal Year Beginning July 1, 2023, and Ending June 30, 2024. In June of 2023, the Salt Lake City Council adopted the final budget of Salt Lake City, Utah, including the employment staffing document, effective for the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2023, and ending June 30, 2024, in accordance with the requirements of Section 10-6-118 of the Utah Code. The City’s Budget Director, acting as the City’s Budget Officer, prepared and filed with the City Recorder proposed amendments to said duly adopted budget, including the amendments to the employment staffing document necessary to effectuate any staffing changes specifically stated herein, copies of which are attached hereto, for consideration by the City Council and inspection by the public. All conditions precedent to amend said budget, including the employment staffing document as provided above, have been accomplished. Be it ordained by the City Council of Salt Lake City, Utah: SECTION 1. Purpose. The purpose of this Ordinance is to amend the final budget of Salt Lake City, including the employment staffing document, as approved, ratified and finalized by Salt Lake City Ordinance No. 29 of 2023. SECTION 2. Adoption of Amendments. The budget amendments, including any amendments to the employment staffing document necessary to effectuate the staffing changes 2 specifically stated herein, attached hereto and made a part of this Ordinance shall be, and the same hereby are adopted and incorporated into the budget of Salt Lake City, Utah, including any amendments to the employment staffing document described above, for the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2023 and ending June 30, 2024, in accordance with the requirements of Section 10-6-128 of the Utah Code. SECTION 3. Filing of copies of the Budget Amendments. The said Budget Officer is authorized and directed to certify and file a copy of said budget amendments, including any amendments to the employment staffing document, in the office of said Budget Officer and in the office of the City Recorder which amendments shall be available for public inspection. SECTION 4. Effective Date. This Ordinance shall take effect upon adoption. Passed by the City Council of Salt Lake City, Utah, this _____ day of __________, 2023. ________________________ CHAIRPERSON ATTEST: ______________________________ CITY RECORDER Transmitted to the Mayor on __________________ Mayor’s Action: ____ Approved ____ Vetoed _________________________ MAYOR ATTEST: _______________________________ CITY RECORDER (SEAL) Bill No. _________ of 2023. Published: ___________________. Salt Lake City Attorney’s Office Approved As To Form ___ _______ Jaysen Oldroyd SALT LAKE CITY ORDINANCE No. ______ of 2023 (First amendment to the Final Budget of Salt Lake City, including the employment staffing document, for Fiscal Year 2023-2024) An Ordinance Amending Salt Lake City Ordinance No. 29 of 2023 which adopted the Final Budget of Salt Lake City, Utah, for the Fiscal Year Beginning July 1, 2023, and Ending June 30, 2024. In June of 2023, the Salt Lake City Council adopted the final budget of Salt Lake City, Utah, including the employment staffing document, effective for the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2023, and ending June 30, 2024, in accordance with the requirements of Section 10-6-118 of the Utah Code. The City’s Budget Director, acting as the City’s Budget Officer, prepared and filed with the City Recorder proposed amendments to said duly adopted budget, including the amendments to the employment staffing document necessary to effectuate any staffing changes specifically stated herein, copies of which are attached hereto, for consideration by the City Council and inspection by the public. All conditions precedent to amend said budget, including the employment staffing document as provided above, have been accomplished. Be it ordained by the City Council of Salt Lake City, Utah: SECTION 1. Purpose. The purpose of this Ordinance is to amend the final budget of Salt Lake City, including the employment staffing document, as approved, ratified and finalized by Salt Lake City Ordinance No. 29 of 2023. SECTION 2. Adoption of Amendments. The budget amendments, including any amendments to the employment staffing document necessary to effectuate the staffing changes 2 specifically stated herein, attached hereto and made a part of this Ordinance shall be, and the same hereby are adopted and incorporated into the budget of Salt Lake City, Utah, including any amendments to the employment staffing document described above, for the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2023 and ending June 30, 2024, in accordance with the requirements of Section 10-6-128 of the Utah Code. SECTION 3. Filing of copies of the Budget Amendments. The said Budget Officer is authorized and directed to certify and file a copy of said budget amendments, including any amendments to the employment staffing document, in the office of said Budget Officer and in the office of the City Recorder which amendments shall be available for public inspection. SECTION 4. Effective Date. This Ordinance shall take effect upon adoption. Passed by the City Council of Salt Lake City, Utah, this _____ day of __________, 2023. ________________________ CHAIRPERSON ATTEST: ______________________________ CITY RECORDER Transmitted to the Mayor on __________________ Mayor’s Action: ____ Approved ____ Vetoed _________________________ MAYOR ATTEST: _______________________________ CITY RECORDER (SEAL) Bill No. _________ of 2023. Published: ___________________. Salt Lake City Attorney’s Office Approved As To Form ___ _______ Jaysen Oldroyd SALT LAKE CITY ORDINANCE No. ___ of 2023 (Amendments to Lane and Sidewalk Closure Fees on the Salt Lake City Consolidated Fee Schedule) An ordinance amending the Salt Lake City Consolidated Fee Schedule to separately address lane closures and sidewalk closures. WHEREAS, on May 17, 2011 the City Council adopted Ordinances 2011-23, 2011-24 and 2011-25 to authorize and create the Salt Lake City Consolidated Fee Schedule; WHEREAS, it is now proposed that the Salt Lake City Consolidated Fee Schedule be amended to separately address fees related to lane closures and sidewalk closures as shown in the attached Exhibit A; and WHEREAS, the City Council finds (i) the fees and fee information set forth in Exhibit A are necessary, reasonable, and equitable in relation to regulatory and service costs incurred by the City; and (ii) adoption of this ordinance reasonably furthers the health, safety, and general welfare of the citizens of Salt Lake City. NOW, THEREFORE, be it ordained by the City Council of Salt Lake City, Utah: SECTION 1. That the Salt Lake City Consolidated Fee Schedule shall be, and hereby is, amended, in pertinent part, to reflect the fees and corresponding fee information set forth in the attached Exhibit A, and that a copy of the amended Salt Lake City Consolidated Fee Schedule shall be published on the official Salt Lake City website. SECTION 2. That this ordinance shall become effective upon publication. Passed by the City Council of Salt Lake City, Utah this ___ day of ____________ 2023. ______________________________________ CHAIRPERSON ATTEST: _________________________ CITY RECORDER Transmitted to Mayor on ____________________________. Mayor’s Action: _________ Approved. ____________ Vetoed. _______________________________________ MAYOR _________________________ CITY RECORDER (SEAL) Bill No. _______ of 2023. Published: __________________ APPROVED AS TO FORM Date:_______7/28/23_____________________ By: ___________________________________ EXHIBIT A Public Way Obstruction Permits Short term (One Week) Sidewalk Canopy $19 Per Week (Construction barricades) 14.32.405 Dumpster/pod $50 Each, Per Week (Construction barricades) 14.32.405 Sidewalk closure $98 Per Week (Construction barricades) 14.32.405 Lane closure $350 Per Week (Construction barricades) 14.32.405 Long term (1 month increments) Sidewalk Canopy $79 Per Week (Construction barricades) 14.32.405 Dumpster/pod $198 Each, Per Week (Construction barricades) 14.32.405 Sidewalk closure $394 Per Week (Construction barricades) 14.32.405 Lane Closure $1,400 Per Week (Construction barricades) 14.32.405 SALT LAKE CITY ORDINANCE No. ___ of 2023 (Amendments to Lane and Sidewalk Closure Fees on the Salt Lake City Consolidated Fee Schedule) An ordinance amending the Salt Lake City Consolidated Fee Schedule separately address lane closures and sidewalk closures. WHEREAS, on May 17, 2011 the City Council adopted Ordinances 2011-23, 2011-24 and 2011-25 to authorize and create the Salt Lake City Consolidated Fee Schedule; WHEREAS, it is now proposed that the Salt Lake City Consolidated Fee Schedule be amended to separately address fees related to lane closures and sidewalk closures as shown in the attached Exhibit A; and WHEREAS, the City Council finds (i) the fees and fee information set forth in Exhibit A are necessary, reasonable, and equitable in relation to regulatory and service costs incurred by the City; and (ii) adoption of this ordinance reasonably furthers the health, safety, and general welfare of the citizens of Salt Lake City. NOW, THEREFORE, be it ordained by the City Council of Salt Lake City, Utah: SECTION 1. That the Salt Lake City Consolidated Fee Schedule shall be, and hereby is, amended, in pertinent part, to reflect the fees and corresponding fee information set forth in the attached Exhibit A, and that a copy of the amended Salt Lake City Consolidated Fee Schedule shall be published on the official Salt Lake City website. SECTION 2. That this ordinance shall become effective upon publication. Passed by the City Council of Salt Lake City, Utah this ___ day of ____________ 2023. ______________________________________ CHAIRPERSON ATTEST: _________________________ CITY RECORDER Transmitted to Mayor on ____________________________. Mayor’s Action: _________ Approved. ____________ Vetoed. _______________________________________ MAYOR _________________________ CITY RECORDER (SEAL) Bill No. _______ of 2023. Published: __________________ APPROVED AS TO FORM Date:__________________________________ By: ___________________________________ EXHIBIT A Public Way Obstruction Permits Short term (One Week) Sidewalk Canopy $19 Per Week (Construction barricades) 14.32.405 Dumpster/pod $50 Each, Per Week (Construction barricades) 14.32.405 Lane or sSidewalk closure $350$98 Per Week (Construction barricades) 14.32.405 Lane closure $350 Per Week (Construction barricades) 14.32.405 Long term (1 month increments) Sidewalk Canopy $79 Per Week (Construction barricades) 14.32.405 Dumpster/pod $198 Each, Per Week (Construction barricades) 14.32.405 Lane or sSidewalk closure $1,400$394 Per Week (Construction barricades) 14.32.405 Lane Closure $1,400 Per Week (Construction barricades) 14.32.405 Signature: Email: Alejandro Sanchez (Aug 3, 2023 09:44 MDT) alejandro.sanchez@slcgov.com CITY COUNCIL // AUGUST 15, 2023 NORTH ROSE PARK LANE ANNEXATION AND ZONING AMENDMENT 2350, 2440, 2441, AND 2462 N ROSE PARK LANE PLNPCM2021-01124/01134 •Requests by JWright Properties (2350/2441 N) •Two requests: •Zoning Map Amendment (2350 N Rose Park Lane) •From AG-2, Agricultural •To R-MU, Residential/Mixed Use •Annexation from County to City –Zoning Requests •Apply R-MU to 2441 N •Apply OS to 2462 N •Apply OS to 2440 N •Intended to accommodate an 1,800 unit multi-family development on the 2350 N and 2441 N properties •City and State properties not involved in development Planning Commission Recommendation: Denial of annexation and zoning amendment REQUEST Salt Lake City // Planning Division 2441 (J Wright) 2350 (J Wright) 2440 (City) 2462 (State) CONTEXT Salt Lake City // Planning Division $1m from State for road planning “Sports Park Blvd” 2100 North Interchange (Access) Roughly paved road Horse boarding facility Single family neighborhood, elementary and middle schools (South of RAC) Zoning Map Amendment •Requires review against standard City considerations Annexation: •No consideration standards •Requires a zone be applied when annexed •Council forwarded the annexation to Planning Commission for a zoning recommendation •Staff used considerations for a rezone Salt Lake City // Planning Division ZONING AMENDMENT &ANNEXATION PROCESS •Proposed zone for J Wright (private)properties •75'height •Limited front setbacks to engage street •20%open space requirement •Allowed Use Examples: •Multi-family and low intensity commercial (i.e.retail,restaurant,office) Salt Lake City // Planning Division R-MU -RESIDENTIAL/MIXED USE 2440 (City) & 2462 (State): •Rose Park Plan (2001) calls for Open Space (OS) or Agriculture (AG) •Proposed OS –matches City and State use of properties 2350 & 2441 (J Wright -Private) •Rose Park Plan policy: •Zone properties OS or AG •“to be compatible with the State recreational (OHV) and open space land uses (RAC)” •Citywide policies •Access to healthy lifestyle/open space (RAC/Jordan River trail) •Redevelopment of underutilized property •Locating near existing infrastructure (significant planned City improvements –RAC/Sports Park Blvd) •Transit access (currently none) Salt Lake City // Planning Division PLAN CONSIDERATIONS F S t r e e t 2441 (J Wright) 2350 (J Wright) 2440 (City) 2462 (State) •Traffic study provided by applicant •Recommends phased improvements to support development •Intersection upgrades, road improvements (500 units) •Full build-out only possible if Sports Park Boulevard built •Freeway noise and air quality impacts •Could be mitigated with noise attenuating materials (similar to airport requirements) •MERV 13 HVAC filters to reduce pollution •Landscaping (trees) Salt Lake City // Planning Division ROAD IMPROVEMENTS &FREEWAY IMPACTS Turn Lane Signal/ Turn Lanes New Road •Improve/Widen Road •Add Sidewalk/ Crosswalk •Two letters generally opposed to the residential zone •One letter with conditions related to health/air quality (freeway) •Public comments at PC generally opposed (9 comments) •Air quality, infrastructure, traffic, RAC access limits Salt Lake City // Planning Division PUBLIC INPUT Recommended denial of zoning and annexation: 1.Rezoning •Doesn’t comply with Rose Park Plan •Calls for Open Space or Agricultural zoning. 2.Annexation •Doesn’t align with Plan Salt Lake policies regarding open space/recreation access •Plan Salt Lake emphasizes open space availability –RAC not accessible to general public •Doesn’t align with 2016 Council Housing Policy Statements that emphasize transit proximity and the livability of neighborhoods. •Transit not available in area Salt Lake City // Planning Division COMMISSION RECOMMENDATION •Commission didn’t offer concerns with the City and State property annexation/zoning. Staff recommended approval based on R-MU zone compatibility with RAC, utilization of City improvements (RAC/Sports Park Blvd), and proximity to open space (RAC /Jordan River Trail). Included 13 conditions: •Required, phased street improvements (striping, Rose Park Lane, sidewalks, utilities, traffic lights, Sports Park Blvd completion) •Air quality mitigations (HVAC filters, landscaping) •Noise mitigations (freeway sound attenuation, OHV park noise notice) •Setback and parking modifications •Road construction impact mitigations Salt Lake City // Planning Division STAFF RECOMMENDATION Daniel Echeverria // Senior Planner daniel.echeverria@slcgov.com CITY COUNCIL OF SALT LAKE CITY 451 SOUTH STATE STREET, ROOM 304 P.O. BOX 145476, SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH 84114-5476 SLCCOUNCIL.COM TEL 801-535-7600 FAX 801-535-7651 COUNCIL STAFF REPORT CITY COUNCIL of SALT LAKE CITY TO:City Council Members FROM: Allison Rowland Budget & Policy Analyst DATE:August 15, 2023 RE: RESOLUTION: IVORY UNIVERSITY HOUSE PUBLIC BENEFITS ANALYSIS ISSUE AT-A-GLANCE The Council will be briefed on a public benefit analysis conducted by the City Finance Department for a project that would provide 465 units of new student housing at the University of Utah. The project, which is under construction at 434 South Mario Capecchi Drive, is being developed by Ivory University House L3C, a “low- profit limited liability company” (see Section A3 below for more information). The public benefit analysis was performed to assess whether Salt Lake City could and should waive impact and permit fees, as well as providing refunds for fees the project has already paid. The public benefit analysis concludes that “While the project is not income restricted, it will be rent restricted and will address critical affordable housing needs of students.” The amount waived or refunded would total just over $2.4 million. In return, over a period of ten years, Ivory University House would pledge the same sum to fund need-based scholarships administered by the University of Utah and reserved for Salt Lake City students. Goal of the briefing: Review the public benefit analysis and consider adopting a resolution which would authorize impact fee and permit fee waivers and refunds for Ivory University House L3C. Item Schedule: Briefing: August 15, 2023 Public Hearing: September 1 Potential Action: September 19 Page | 2 ADDITIONAL INFORMATION AND BACKGROUND A.The Student Housing Project. 1.Project Overview. Ivory University House is currently under construction on 5.4 acres at 434 South Mario Capecchi Drive. The developer holds a 99-year ground lease on the property, which is owned by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS) and was formerly the site of an LDS church and a parking lot. At completion it would consist of four buildings with 465 apartment-style units for 621 University of Utah students. It would also include community rooms, classrooms, and an outdoor study area. The total project cost is estimated at $96 million and is financed through conventional (non- governmental) sources, along with a $10 million donation from the Clark and Christine Ivory Foundation. The first of the four buildings, Building A is scheduled for completion in Fall 2023. Building B is scheduled for Fall 2024, Building C for Fall 2025, and Building D for Winter 2026. In response to a staff question, Ivory University House stated: “[A]ll Ivory University House (IUH) residents go through the same application process. This process includes completing an online application, interviewing with an IUH team member, confirming their agreement to the lease terms and code of conduct, then receiving a room assignment. We are careful to comply with the Fair Housing Act and do not give preference to any protected class.” 2.Rent Restrictions. Ivory University House L3C would enter into a restricted rent agreement with Salt Lake City that would index rents at the equivalent of 30% of the monthly income limit set annually by the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) for a one-person household at 80% AMI or below in the Salt Lake City Metro Area (see chart below). However, unlike HUD units, these would not be income restricted. In addition, since this is student housing, rents would be calculated by bedroom rather than by unit, with a limit of one student occupant per bedroom. For example, the unit types and maximum monthly rent per bedroom in 2022 would be the following: Bedrooms / Units Maximum Rent per Bedroom (% of AMI) 2022 Maximum Rent per Bedroom Large studios with full kitchen 144 80%$1,434 Small studios with kitchenette 243 75%$1,344 Three-bedroom, three-bath 234 bedrooms in 78 units 55%$986 Page | 3 Finally, utilities are usually included in the amount of maximum rent under HUD limits but in this case, there would be an additional utility fee with an initial maximum of $55 per month. This could increase by not more than 3% per year. The City’s Division of Housing Stability would monitor compliance of deed restriction terms, including annual updates to HUD parameters. 3.About L3Cs (Low-profit Limited Liability Companies). The Ivory University House project is being developed by Ivory University House L3C. This type of legal entity is relatively new and is not as widely known as nonprofit or LLC business types. An L3C must have a primarily charitable or educational purpose but it is allowed to earn a small profit, defined as one to ten percent, which can be used to fund additional charitable projects (for additional information, see https://le.utah.gov/xcode/Title48/Chapter3A/C48-3a-P13_1800010118000101.pdf). Since these entities can make a profit, they are not exempt from Federal income taxes and donations to them cannot be deducted from the contributor’s income taxes. Page | 4 B. The Public Benefits Analysis. 1.Legal Framework. Utah Code requires that before a municipal legislative body decides to appropriate any funds to a for-profit entity, it must receive a public benefits analysis and hold a public hearing. The public hearing for this item is scheduled for September 1, 2023. 2.Public Benefits Identified. In finding that the City fees proposed to be waived for Ivory University House L3C are appropriate and “proportionate to the public benefit it provides,” the Administration identified the following specific public benefits. a. The University of Utah’s housing shortage, illustrated by a wait list for on-campus housing at 2,280 students, increases the pressure on the housing market in Salt Lake City. The creation of 465 units of privately financed housing for 621 students at affordable rent levels would increase the City’s overall housing stock and contribute to a reduction in demand by students in the Salt Lake City rental market. b. Construction of additional student housing located adjacent to the University of Utah reduces campus traffic, enhancing the health and safety of the surrounding communities. c. All of the project’s units will be subject to a voluntary, deeded, restrictive use agreement for 30 years. This will restrict rents to levels considered affordable at 80% AMI under annual HUD standards, though income levels will not be restricted. d. At least 25% of Ivory University House residents will receive additional, need-based rental assistance, which will further contribute to student support and access to affordable housing. These students will have a choice of any unit type available and not be segregated in any way from other students. They also would be allowed to seek any additional aid needed to fund their studies. 3.Waiver and Reimbursement Amounts. The proposed waivers and reimbursements for City permit and impact fees would total $2,403,198 for the full project. Ivory University House L3C already paid $754,483 in permit fees for the two phases of project construction, and $1,648,715 in impact fees. (See the tables on the transmittal’s pages 3 and 4.) a.Permit Fees. Permit fees are typically paid into the general fund and are set at a rate based on the City’s cost for reviewing and administering building permits and inspections. With a waiver, these services would be provided by the City at no cost, apart from the fees paid to the Public Utilities Department, which may not be waived. This allocation would appear in an upcoming budget amendment. b.Impact Fees. Under Utah Code, a city may exempt a “low-income housing” project from impact fees, but that term is not defined by the State. Meanwhile, City Code allows a 100% exemption for rental housing that does not exceed HUD affordability guidelines for a household whose income is 60% or below AMI. The Administration recommends an impact fee waiver for Ivory University House L3C, because “while the Project is not income restricted, it will be rent restricted and will address critical affordable housing needs of students.” C.Scholarships. The terms of the property lease for Ivory University House require that all profits from its operations be donated to student scholarships at the University of Utah. The resulting Ivory University House Scholarship Fund will be administered directly by the University of Utah in accordance with the University’s typical eligibility requirements and criteria for need-based scholarships. University policy states that it “prohibits discrimination, harassment, or prejudicial treatment of a student because of their race, color, religion, national origin, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity or expression, age, or status as an individual with a disability, as a disabled veteran, or as a veteran of the Vietnam era.” Page | 5 Neither Ivory University House L3C nor the owner of the leased property, the LDS Church, would be involved in the selection of scholarship recipients, and these scholarships would be applicable to several different housing options, including but not limited to Ivory University House. This housing will have a code of conduct similar to that of on-campus housing, which includes a prohibition on alcohol and drugs. Ivory University House has committed to the LDS Church to apply this rule but stated that, “Any student who desires to live in the community consistent with the code of conduct is welcome.” Information about the code of conduct and links to other resources can be found at https://www.housing.utah.edu/living-the- u/resident-policies-responsibilities-2. 1.Scholarships for City Residents. If Salt Lake City agrees to not charge permit and impact fees, and to refund amounts paid earlier—which would combine for a total of $2,403,198—Ivory University House would work with the University of Utah to earmark need-based scholarships for Salt Lake City residents in the same amount, paid over a period of ten years. These would be funded by the operations of the project and, as stated in the public benefits analysis (see section B above): “Depending on a student’s needs, these scholarships may come in the form of tuition stipends, paid internships, or housing assistance. In essence, University House will invest the value of fees waived directly into the individual lives of some of the City’s residents who otherwise lack financial access to opportunity.” 2.Determining City Residence. The criteria for determining which students would qualify as Salt Lake City residents has not yet been developed or formalized between the University, Ivory University House, and the City. One issue will likely be when and how long a student would need to live within City boundaries to be considered a resident. It also may be worth considering that the University of Utah grants in-state tuition benefits to any existing student who completes 12 consecutive months in Utah, but this criteria might not make sense for determining Salt Lake City residence. The partners in this project have stated that they are “open to tailoring that definition in such a way to have the greatest impact for SLC residents in need.” (See Policy Question 1 below). POLICY QUESTIONS 1. The Council may wish to ask the Administration and the Attorney’s Office about whether details of the developer’s commitment to provide scholarships to Salt Lake City residents need to be worked into the proposed resolution. For now, the plan is apparently to use a separate agreement for this information. In either case, the Council may wish to discuss the following issues: -How would student residence be demonstrated? For example, would it be based on the address of a parent (or other financially responsible party)? Open only to students who have graduated from a high school located within Salt Lake City? Or some other way? -Is it sufficiently certain that the University of Utah would agree to provide need-based financial aid to Salt Lake City residents with the first $2.4 million of Ivory University Housing L3C donations? It appears from the transmittal that the goal is to provide what is technically referred to as need-based financial aid, which tends to support greater equity, rather than merit-based scholarships. -How would compliance with these terms be audited over the ten years the agreement is in force? 2. The Council may wish to ask the Administration why 25% was chosen as the share of Ivory University Housing residents who would receive need-based rental assistance, and how the level of rental assistance for each resident will be determined. This 25% is in addition to the number who would receive financial aid though the University of Utah from the Ivory University Housing Scholarship Fund. MARY BETH THOMPSON Finance Director ERIN MENDENHALL Mayor DEPARTMENT OF FINANCE POLICY AND BUDGET DIVISION 451 SOUTH STATE STREET, ROOM 238 PO BOX 145467, SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH 84114-5455 TEL 801-535-6394 CITY COUNCIL TRANSMITTAL ________________________ Date Received: ___________ Lisa Shaffer, Chief Administrative Officer Date sent to Council: ___________ ____________________________________________ ____________________________ TO: Salt Lake City Council DATE: July 3, 2023 Darin Mano FROM: Mary Beth Thompson, Chief Financial Officer Katherine Lewis, City Attorney SUBJECT: Authorizing the refund of certain building fees and an exemption from impact fees incurred in the development of a student housing project by Ivory University House L3C. Ivory University House L3C will pledge to use these funds toward scholarships funded by the operations of Ivory University House in an amount equal to the fees refunded: Public Benefit Analysis under Utah Code Section 10-8-2. SPONSOR: NA STAFF CONTACT: Kimberly Chytraus, City Attorney (801) 535-7685 Blake Thomas, Director of Community & Neighborhoods Department Randy Hillier, Policy and Budget Analyst (801) 535-6606, DOCUMENT TYPE: Public Benefits Analysis and Recommendation RECOMMENDATION: It is recommended that the Salt Lake City Council provide a refund of certain building fees and an exemption from impact fees incurred in the development of a student housing project by Ivory University House L3C (“University House”). Because of the timing of development, University House has paid the fees described herein, so if the fee waiver is granted the City will refund the paid amounts. University House has also committed that, if the fees are refunded, it will pledge scholarships funded by the operations of Ivory University House in an amount equal to the fees refunded (an amount over $2,400,000) for Salt Lake City residents to be paid over a period of ten years. A portion of the Impact Fees being refunded, specifically the Fire Fee in the amount of $79,515, will need to be obtained from the general fund through an upcoming budget amendment since these fees have already been spent. Katherine Lewis (Jul 13, 2023 14:57 MDT) Lisa Shaffer (Jul 13, 2023 15:02 MDT)07/13/2023 07/13/2023 BUDGET IMPACT: NA BACKGROUND/DISCUSSION: PUBLIC PROCESS: Public Hearing Alejandro Sanchez (Jul 13, 2023 15:01 MDT) 1 MEMORANDUM TO: City Council Members SUBJECT: Analysis of Public Benefits Provided by Fee Waiver and Refund to Ivory University House INTRODUCTION It is recommended that the Salt Lake City Council provide a refund of certain building fees and an exemption from impact fees incurred in the development of a student housing project by Ivory University House L3C (“University House”). Because of the timing of development, University House has paid the fees described herein, so if the fee waiver is granted the City will refund the paid amounts. University House has also committed that, if the fees are refunded, it will pledge scholarships funded by the operations of Ivory University House in an amount equal to the fees refunded (an amount over $2,400,000) for Salt Lake City residents to be paid over a period of ten years. University House is developing a student housing project at 434 South Mario Capecchi Drive, Salt Lake City, Utah known as the Ivory University House (the “Project”). The Project is being developed in two separate phases. University House paid the permit fees for the Project in the amount of $754,483.23, broken down as follows: Permit 1st Phase Fees Paid 2nd Phase Fees Paid Total Building Permit Fee $211,114.98 $211,117.77 $422,232.75 Plan Check Fee $137,224.74 $137,226.55 $274,451.29 Utah State Surcharge $2,111.15 $2,111.18 $4,222.33 Fire Sprinkler $3,398.41 $3,398.41 $6,796.82 Plumbing $8,080.71 $9,572.78 $17,653.49 Electrical $4,315.60 $5,805.61 $10,121.21 Mechanical $6,429.83 $12,575.51 $19,005.34 Fire Alarm Permit Not yet applied for Not yet applied for Not yet applied for Total $372,675.42 $381,807.81 $754,483.23 University House initially applied for a permit fee waiver under Salt Lake City Code (“City Code”) Section 18.20.220, but such waiver is only available to a nonprofit organization building affordable housing (limited to households under 80% of the City’s average median income (“AMI”))1. As discussed herein, because University House operates on a nonprofit basis and rent 1 Code Section 18.20.220 (E) establishes the standard for a fee waiver request by a nonprofit organization: “HAAB [Housing Advisory and Appeals Board] may recommend granting the waiver or deferral if it finds that the project or projects, and the sponsoring nonprofit organization furthers the city’s established low income housing goals to provide housing for persons or families under eighty percent (80%) of the city ’s median income, as defined by the United States department of housing and urban development, and also meets all applicable guidelines established for any such programs by the United States department of housing and urban development. HAAB may recommend that 2 is considered affordable under the HUD standard described below, it is recommended that the Project’s actual fees be refunded as described herein. In addition, the Administration is seeking an exemption and reimbursement of impact fees for the Project. Ivory paid the impact fees for the Project in the amount of $1,648,715, broken down as follows for 465 units: Impact Fee Permit Fee per Unit 1st Phase Paid (280 units) 2nd Phase Paid (185 units) Total Fire Fee $171 $47,880 $31,635 $79,515 Park Fee $3,078 $861,840 $569,430 $1,431,270 Police Fee $59 $16,520 $10,915 $27,435 Roadway Fee $242 $67,760 $42,735 $110,495 TOTAL $994,000 $654,715 $1,648,715 City Code Section 18.98.060 provides for an exemption from the payment of impact fees for housing that meets certain rent restrictions and income restrictions, ranging from 60% - 80% AMI2. While the Project is not income restricted, it will be rent restricted and will address critical affordable housing needs of students. It is recommended that the Project be granted an impact fee waiver and the paid impact fees be refunded to University House, in the actual amount of the impact fees, which is $1,648,715. LEGAL FRAMEWORK Utah Code section 10-8-2 states municipalities may appropriate funds for “corporate purposes only.” Utah Code §10-8-2(1)(a)(i). Those purposes are, in the judgment of the municipal legislative body, any purpose that “provides for the safety, health, prosperity, moral well-being, peace, order, comfort, or convenience of the inhabitants of the city.” Utah Code § 10-8-2(3). A municipal legislative body must determine that the “net value received for any money appropriated” is “measured on a project-by-project basis over the life of the project.” Utah Code § 10-8-2(3)(a). The municipal legislative branch “may consider intangible benefits received by the municipality in determining net value received.” Utah Code § 10-8-2(3)(c). Moreover, a “determination of value received, made by the municipality’s legislative body, shall be presumed valid unless it can be shown that the determination was arbitrary, capricious, or illegal.” Utah Code § 10-8-2(3)(b). Prior to the municipal legislative body making a decision to appropriate any funds for a corporate purpose, a public hearing must be held. If the entity receiving the benefit from the City waivers may be granted for remodeling or construction of offices for nonprofit housing cor porations if it finds that such remodeling or construction will save the corporation money and that such savings will be applied to a specific housing project.” 2 City Code Section 18.98.060 in relevant part provides: “The following housing may be exempt from the payment of impact fees, to the following extent: “1. A one hundred percent (100%) exemption shall be granted for rental housing for which the annualized rent per dwelling unit does not exceed thirty percent (30%) of the annual income of a family whose annual income equals sixty percent (60%) of the median income for Salt Lake City, as determined by HUD;” 3 is a for-profit entity, then a study (“Study”) that demonstrates the purpose for the appropriation must be undertaken and posted for review by the public at least 14 days before a public hearing on the issue. Utah Code § 10-8-2(3)(e). The factors to be considered in the Study are set forth under Utah Code as: (i) what identified benefit the municipality will receive in return for any money or resources appropriated; (ii) the municipality’s purpose for the appropriation, including an analysis of the way the appropriation will be used to enhance the safety, health, prosperity, moral well-being, peace, order, comfort, or convenience of the inhabitants of the municipality; and (iii) whether the appropriation is necessary and appropriate to accomplish the reasonable goals and objectives of the municipality in the area of economic development, job creation, affordable housing, blight elimination, job preservation, the preservation of historic structures and property, and any other public purpose. Utah Code § 10-8-2(3)(e)(i)-(iii). This Study examines each of these factors below. BACKGROUND OF THE PROJECT The Developer. University House is a low-profit limited liability company, wholly owned by the Ivory University House Trust, with the Clark and Christine Ivory Foundation as its beneficiary (a 501(c)(3) private foundation). University House leases the underlying real property from The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. It is an express requirement of that Lease that University House donate all profits to student scholarships at the University of Utah. This contractual obligation that University House not retain any profits ensures that University House will operate the Project on a nonprofit basis in order to continue leasing the property. The Project. Ivory University House is the only privately funded, philanthropically driven student housing project in Salt Lake City and Utah. The Project is located on 5.4 acres bordered by South Campus Drive, Mario Capecchi Drive, and Research Road. The Project is financed through conventional financing and a $10,000,000 personal donation from the Ivory family. The total Project cost is estimated to be approximately $96,000,000. It will have four buildings and 465 apartments. There are three unit types: 144 studios with a full kitchen, 243 studios with a kitchenette, and 78 units with 3 bedrooms and 3 bathrooms. The Project will also include community rooms, classrooms, and outdoor study areas. The single living structure is designed to allow students to focus on their studies with common areas to promote student engagement. The Project is across the street from the University of Utah, with a TRAX station a 3-minute walking distance and the Student Life Center a 5-minute walking distance. The Ground Lease. The property is owned by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, and is ground leased to University House with a ground lease term of 99 years. The terms of the ground lease require that all profits, i.e., “the amount gross revenue exceed the costs and expenses associated with operating [the Project]” be donated by University House to a 4 scholarship fund and housing assistance for students attending the University of Utah. The ground lease can only be assigned to a tax-exempt charitable organization (a 501(c)(3)). Affordable Housing. The maximum rent per bed will be at or below 30% of the monthly income limit set by the Department of Housing and Urban Development (“HUD”) for a single person household of 80% AMI or below. Since the project is student housing, rents will be calculated by bedroom rather than by unit, with a limit of one student occupant per bedroom. There will be an additional utility fee of an initial maximum of $55 per month, which may increase not more than 3% per year (note that utilities are usually included in the amount of maximum rent under HUD’s limits). The rent restriction will be evidenced by a restrictive use agreement recorded against the leasehold interest held by University House (meaning the restriction is in place as long as University House is leasing the land). HUD considers rent for persons at 80% of AMI as affordable for low-income households. The amount of rent may be adjusted with changes to HUD’s schedule. Maximum Monthly Rent Per Bedroom by Unit Type Unit Type Maximum Rent per Bedroom - AMI 2022 Maximum Rent per Bedroom # of Bedrooms Single Bedroom Unit: 440 - 455 sq ft 80% $1,434 144 Single Bedroom Unit: 345 sq ft 75% $1,344 243 3-Bedroom Unit (per bedroom) 55% $986 234 Source: AMI data as per HUD’s FY 22 Income Limit Documentation System for the Salt Lake City, UT HUD Metro FMR Area Note: Units will be rent restricted but not income restricted. Note: Maximum rent is assessed per bedroom and based on 30% of income for the applicable AMI for a household size of one and will be updated annually based on AMI data as per HUD’s Income Limit Documentation System for the Salt Lake City, UT HUD Metro FMR Area. In addition to voluntarily restricting rents across the board, University House and the University and Utah have committed that no less than 25% of the Project residents will receive additional housing assistance. This will ensure that even students with the most financial need will have the opportunity to live at the Project. The Scholarship Fund. All profits from the housing project will be donated to a new scholarship fund called the Ivory University House Scholarship Fund and will provide scholarships, internships, or housing assistance for students at the University of Utah. The fund was seeded by an additional $6,000,000 gift from the Clark and Christine Ivory Foundation and is administered by the University of Utah, with priority given to students with the most financial need. Applications for the first year recently opened and the fund has already received over 450 5 applications, one third of which came from students with significant financial needs. University House has committed that if the fees are refunded, it will pledge scholarships funded by the operations of the Project in an amount equal to the fees waived for Salt Lake City residents to be paid over a period of ten years. TERMS OF ASSISTANCE AND PUBLIC BENEFITS PROVIDED I. Terms of Assistance A. Waiver of Permit Fees. Under the City Code, a request to waive permit fees is reviewed by the Housing Advisory and Appeals Board (“HAAB”), who reviews the request in a public meeting and forwards its recommendation to the Director of Community and Neighborhoods. The waiver is available to nonprofit organizations who are developing housing for persons or families under eighty percent (80%) of AMI. The Director may approve the waiver. The permit fees are typically paid into the general fund to cover the cost of the services of reviewing and administering the permit, including building inspections. With a waiver, those services are provided by the City at no cost. Fees paid to Public Utilities may not be waived. The total amount of fees waived by the City is calculated as $754,483.23, plus the actual costs of the fire alarm permit fees. B. Exemption of Impact Fees. An exemption of impact fees is also approved by the Director of Community and Neighborhoods. A 100% exemption is available for rental housing for which the annualized rent per dwelling unit does not exceed thirty percent (30%) of the annual income of a family whose annual income equals sixty percent (60%) of AMI. There are additional exemptions available for nonrental housing with higher income restrictions. Such rent and income restrictions are documented and enforced through the recordation of a restrictive use agreement on the property. The City’s exemption is allowed pursuant to the Utah Code,3 which provides that the City can give an exemption for “low income housing”. The Utah Code does not provide a definition for “low income housing” and the City relies on its Code for the definition. The total amount of the impact fees that could be waived is $1,648,715. II. Public Benefits Provided by Fee Waiver and Exemption The Project is not strictly eligible for the permit fee waiver or impact fee exemption under the City Code because University House, as a L3C, is a for-profit entity, and the Project is not income restricted to residents whose income is at or below 60% AMI. However, because the Project will provide significant and much needed benefits to the City, the Administration proposes the fee waiver and impact fee exemption as appropriate for the Project. University House, while a low-profit entity, has agreed to donate all its profits to the University of Utah for a scholarship fund. Therefore, any proceeds will be reinvested in the student population and into the housing located in Salt Lake City. University House estimates that the 3 11-36a-403 Other provisions of impact fee enactment. (1) A local political subdivision or private entity may include a provision in an impact fee enactment that: (a) provides an impact fee exemption for: (i) development activity attributable to: (A) low income housing; . . . and (b) except for an exemption under Subsection (1)(a)(i)(A), establishes one or more sources of funds other than impact fees to pay for that development activity. 6 benefit to the student population and community will be over $1 billion over the life of the ground lease. Student housing is not typically eligible for affordable housing subsidies available to other types of housing developments, however, creation of 465 units at affordable rent levels brings a significant benefit to the Salt Lake City housing market. Increasing the housing stock within Salt Lake City in the form of student housing contributes to a decrease in demand for students in the Salt Lake City rental market. The rent restriction will help insulate students from the massive rate increases that continue to impact the rental market, driven in part by the housing demand. The proposed development offers a significant public benefit to Salt Lake City. It includes the construction of privately financed student housing, comprising 465 units with rents below 80% of the area median income. Additionally, 100% of the units will be subject to a voluntary deeded restrictive use agreement for the 99-year lease period, and 25% of students will receive additional rental assistance. These efforts will provide crucial student support and access to affordable housing, all without any current public subsidy. In view of these benefits, the fees waived by the City for this development are proportionate to the public benefit it provides. III. Ivory University House will Benefit Salt Lake City Residents Ivory University House is a unique philanthropic project. As with any innovative project, it doesn’t fit neatly into any existing box. It has taken collaboration between The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, the University of Utah, Salt Lake City, and University House to make this project a reality. University House and the University of Utah intend to honor their partnership with the City by pledging scholarships funded by the operations of the Project in amount equal to fees waived (in an amount over $2,400,000) for Salt Lake City residents to be paid over a period of ten years. Depending on a student’s needs, these scholarships may come in the form of tuition stipends, paid internships, or housing assistance. In essence, University House will invest the value of fees waived directly into the individual lives of some of the City’s residents who otherwise lack financial access to opportunity. IIV. Salt Lake City’s Purposes and Enhancing the Quality of Life for Residents. The City places a high value on health and safety. Housing an additional 621 students in the Project will reduce the number of cars commuting to campus, which has a positive environmental impact on air quality. Fewer cars also means fewer accidents that could occur in heavy campus traffic. Reducing campus traffic enhances the health and safety of the surrounding communities. The Project is located within walking distance of a TRAX station, providing easy access to public transportation to the students who will live in the Project. Additionally, every student is provided a public transit pass. V. Accomplishing Salt Lake City’s Goals. Support of the Project helps accomplish the goals of the City in affordable housing. Salt Lake City faces a critical housing shortage. The University of Utah draws students from all over to the University, and similarly faces a housing shortage for its students. As of last year, the University of Utah had a wait list of 2,280 students seeking an on-campus living experience. The 7 University’s housing shortage increases the pressure on the housing needs in Salt Lake City, given the large numbers of students who need affordable housing. The Project is being developed on a site that was not previously used for residential purposes, thus the redevelopment of the site is a true increase in housing units without any displacement. The ability to house 621 students in the Project will mean there are 621 fewer people who need housing in Salt Lake City. The Project is also better suited to meeting the needs of the student population that a typical housing project in the city. Growing SLC: A Five Year Housing Plan envisions Salt Lake City as a place for a growing, diverse population to find housing opportunities that are safe, secure, and enrich lives and communities, recognizes the changing nature of the city, and provides the foundation for creating goals and strategies to manage the housing needs of tomorrow. The City’s support of the Project through the fee waivers and refunds meets the housing plan goals by expanding housing opportunities, addressing systematic failures in the rental market, and contributing to the diverse housing types available for the student population. University House has created a new approach to satisfy a fundamental need in our housing stock and this innovation is mutually beneficial to the purposes in Growing SLC. Within Growing SLC, the Council adopted policy statements to be used for evaluating and appropriating City funds for housing. The priorities relevant to the Project are as follows: (1) Create a net increase in affordable housing units while: (i) Avoiding displacement of existing affordable housing to the extent possible, and (ii) Retaining and expanding the diversity of AMI and innovative housing types. (2) Include collaboration with community and private sector partners to enable opportunities for in kind contributions, creative financing and service delivery models. (3) Include affordable housing in transit-oriented developments because access to public transit increases access to opportunities. Moderate increases in density should be encouraged along transit corridors. (4) Incentivize affordable housing within areas of high opportunity. The project will also have the added benefit of providing scholarship assistance to Salt Lake City residents. CONCLUSION Approval of a permit fee and impact fee waiver and refunds supports many of the City’s goals with respect to the creation of affordable and diverse housing. Additionally, the Project will create a broad public benefit through its philanthropic mission. Although the Project does not meet the codified requirements for a permit fee waiver and impact fee exemption, the Project fulfills a specific need and provides public benefits to the City that satisfy the requirements of Utah Code § 10-8-2. For these reasons, the Administration requests that City Council approve the requested permit fee and impact fee waiver and refunds. 8 REFERENCES This analysis has been available in the City Recorder’s Office, Room 415, City & County Building, 451 South State Street since __________, 2023. The City Council will hold a public hearing on whether to adopt a resolution approving the proposed study. The public hearing will be held _______________. RESOLUTION NO. _____ OF 2023 Authorizing Impact Fee and Permit Fee Waivers and Refunds for Ivory University House L3C WHEREAS, the Salt Lake City Department of Community and Neighborhoods has proposed the waiver and refund of certain permit and impact fees (the “Fee Waiver”) paid by the Ivory University House L3C, a low-profit limited liability company (“University House”); and WHEREAS, University House is developing a student housing project at 434 South Mario Capecchi Drive (the “Project”); and WHEREAS, the Project will offer 465 units for 621 University of Utah students with a maximum rent per bed at or below 30% of the monthly income limit set by the Department of Housing and Urban Development for a single person household of 80% area median income (“AMI”) or below; and WHEREAS, all profits from the Project will be donated to a new scholarship fund at the University of Utah, with priority given to students with the most financial need, and if the Fee Waiver is granted, then University House will pledge scholarships for Salt Lake City residents in the amount of the Fee Waiver over a period of ten years; and WHEREAS, the Project provides rent rates at or below 80% AMI and significant public benefits but does not meet the City code requirements to waive permit fees or impact fees for affordable housing because University House is legally a for-profit entity and the Project is not income restricted as the residents will be students; and WHEREAS, Utah Code section 10-8-2 states that municipalities may appropriate funds for “corporate purposes only,” and those purposes are, in the judgment of the municipal 2 legislative body, any purpose that “provides for the safety, health, prosperity, moral well-being, peace, order, comfort, or convenience of the inhabitants of the city.” Utah Code § 10-8-2(3); and WHEREAS, Utah Code Section 10-8-2(3)(e) allows public entities to provide nonmonetary assistance and waive fees to for-profit entities after a public hearing and conducting a study to consider intangible benefits received by the municipality in determining net value received for the appropriation; and WHEREAS, the City performed an analysis (the “Analysis”) of the public benefits of providing the Fee Waiver to University House, which Analysis was included in the transmittal to the City Council before the public hearing; and WHEREAS, the City Council has, following the giving of not less than 14 days public notice, conducted a public hearing relating to the foregoing, in satisfaction of the requirements of Utah Code Section 10-8-2; and WHEREAS, the City Council has reviewed the Analysis, and has fully considered the conclusions set forth therein and all comments made during the public hearing; THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED by the City Council of Salt Lake City, Utah, as follows: 1. The City Council hereby adopts the conclusions set forth in the Analysis, and hereby finds and determines that, for all the reasons set forth in the Analysis, the Fee Waiver is appropriate under these circumstances. 2. The City Council hereby authorizes the City administration to waive and refund the fees consistent with this Resolution and incorporating such other terms and agreements as recommended by the City Attorney’s office. 3 Passed by the City Council of Salt Lake City, Utah, this _____ day of ________ 2023. SALT LAKE CITY COUNCIL By: ______________________ CHAIRPERSON ATTEST: ____________________________ CITY RECORDER APPROVED AS TO FORM: Salt Lake City Attorney’s Office ___________________________ Kimberly Chytraus, Senior City Attorney Date: ______________________ June 5, 2023 UNALLOCATED PROGRAM INCOME FUNDING PROPOSALS & NEXT STEPS CITY COUNCIL WORK SESSION //August 15, 2023 $23,000,000 $21,000,000 ACCUMULATED FUNDS PROGRAM INCOME SOURCE 4/30/23 BALANCE HUD REGULATIONS CDBG $6,255,941 HOME $9,427,209 American Dream Downpayment Initiative (ADDI)$48,805 NON-RESTRICTED Renter Rehab Program $1,716,265 Miscellaneous Bank Funds $1,759,136 Riverpark $3,608,786 TOTAL $22,816,142 $23,000,000 $21,000,000 PROPOSED FUNDING ALLOCATIONS TYPE PROJECT/PROGRAM LEAD HUD - CDBG HUD - HOME/ ADDI NON- RESTRICTED DEVELOPMENT RDA NOFA RDA $6,476,014 1159 West Temple (Book Cliffs)HASLC $3,000,000 ACQUISITION Strategic, Opportunity Area, or CLT Property Acquisition CAN, HASLC, and/or RDA $5,755,941 RENTAL ASSISTANCE Tenant Relocation Assistance Housing Stability $180,000 NEIGHBORHOOD IMPROVEMENTS Neighborhood Business Improvement Program Housing Stability $250,000 Westside Sidewalk/Infrastructure Improvements Transportation/ Engineering $250,000 TENANT & HOMEOWNER LOAN FUND Homebuyer Program Housing Stability $1,000,000 Community Land Trust Housing Stability $1,144,187 Home Repair Program Housing Stability $500,000 NOAH Renter Rehab Program Housing Stability $1,200,000 PUBLIC SERVICES First Step House, Employment Non-profit organizations $26,492 First Step House, Peer Support $22,892 SL Donated Dental $5,308 The Inn Between $5,308 DEBT SERVICE Line of Credit Payoff n/a $3,000,000 TOTAL:$6,255,941 $9,476,014 $7,084,187 $23,000,000 $21,000,000 HUDPROGRAM INCOME $6,500,000 $21,000,000 MOVING FORWARD - BEST PRACTICES & TRANSPARENCY •Beginning with the FY24 fiscal year, program income (PI) generated from HUD-funded activities will be recaptured on an annual basis. •PI will be estimated and considered as part of the annual HUD application process, with final funding allocations by the City Council. $6,500,000 $21,000,000 NEXT STEPS – HUD FUNDS 1.If the Council indicates support for the Administration’s proposed funding allocations, Housing Stability will finalize and transmit a substantial amendment to the HUD 5-Year Consolidated Plan (Con Plan) and 1-Year Action Plan (Action Plan). 2.Housing Stability will work with Council Staff to initiate the 30-day minimum required public input process, including public noticing and a public hearing. 3.After public input, City Council considers and adopts resolutions for the Con Plan and Action Plan substantial amendments. 4.Once adopted, Housing Stability submit the substantial amendments to HUD. 5.HUD has 30-days to approve the amendments. $6,500,000 $21,000,000 HUD TIMELINESS REQUIREMENTS •There will be strict expenditure/timeliness requirements once the Consolidated Plan and Annual Action Plan are amended to recognize the funds. •CDBG and HOME have different timeliness requirements. CDBG requirements are more immediate. •CDBG Example: Of the $11,853,704 in total CDBG resources, the City shall only be allowed to have $5,096,644 ($3,397,763 X 1.5) remaining on May 1, 2024. Annual Grant $3,397,763 Reallocated Funds $1,200,000 Current Program Income $1,000,000 Dormant Program Income $6,255,941 TOTAL $11,853,704 $6,500,000 $21,000,000 PROPOSED ALLOCATIONS: CDBG Property Acquisition:$5,755,941 •Acquisition of property for future housing development (80% AMI and <). •CAN with work with the RDA and/or Housing Authority to identify and purchase a property or multiple properties. The Council could identify policy priorities such as: o High Opportunity Property Acquisition o Community Land Trust Acquisitions o Missing Middle Housing West Side Improvements: $250,000 •Sidewalk and/or related infrastructure improvements on the West Side, to promote safety, accessibility, and connectivity. •Funding will likely be leveraged with an existing infrastructure project to maximize community impact. Façade Program:$250,000 •Neighborhood Business Improvement Program (aka Façade Program), providing grants of up to $50,000 for for-profit businesses. •Housing Stability will increase the amount of funding available to allocate through this year’s application round, from $925,000 to $1,175,000. $6,500,000 $21,000,000 PROPOSED ALLOCATIONS: HOME RDA NOFA:$5,755,941 •Gap financing for the development of affordable housing. •Funding to be issued through the RDA’s annual Housing Development Loan Program (HDLP) Notice of Funding Availability (NOFA). •The RDA can move forward with issuing the NOFA and selecting projects for funding while the HUD substantial amendments are in process. HUD will need to approve the substantial amendments before contractual obligations are issued. HOUSING DEVELOPMENT – 1159 WEST TEMPLE: $3,000,000 •Gap financing for a Housing Authority of Salt Lake City project that is adjacent to City-owned property by Smith’s Ballpark and will include ~55 units, of which ~11 will be 3-bedroom units to expand housing opportunities for families. Affordability will range from 25% to 60% AMI. •Funding would be leveraged with allocations already approved by the RDA Board and would be subject to the underwriting and lending standards outlined in the RDA’s HDLP policy. $23,000,000 $21,000,000 NON-RESTRICTEDPROGRAM INCOME $6,500,000 $21,000,000 MOVING FORWARD - BEST PRACTICES & TRANSPARENCY •The Administration proposes that a Tenant and Homeowner Loan Fund (THLF) be established. •The THLF would be a self-replenishing fund that utilizes principal and interest payments to fund new housing actives that directly support tenants and homeowners. •Revolving programs may include: o Homebuyer Program o Community Land Trust (“CLT”) o Home Repair Program o NOAH Renter Rehab •As program income continues to be generated from projects and activities funded with non- restricted funds, future program income shall be deposited into the THLF pending annual budget allocations by the City Council. COMMUNITYLAND TRUSTHOME REPAIR PROGRAM NOAHRENTER REHAB PROGRAM HOMEBUYER PROGRAM TENANT & HOMEOWNERLOAN FUND If the Council indicates general support for the establishment of a Tenant and Homeowner Loan Fund (THLF) and related programs, the Administration will return with draft legislative policies for the Council’s consideration. PROG R A M I N C O M E ANNU A L B U D G E T ANNUAL BUDGET ANNUAL BUDGET PROGR A M I N C O M E ANNUA L B U D G E T ANNUA L B U D G E T PROGR A M I N C O M E PRO G R A M I N C O M E ANN U A L B U D G E T NEXT STEPS – NON-RESTRICTED FUNDS $6,500,000 $21,000,000 PROPOSED ALLOCATIONS: NON-RESTRICTED –TENANT & HOMEOWNER LOAN FUND (REVOLVING) Homebuyer Program:$1,000,000 •Provides mortgage financing for low- and moderate-income households to further affordable homeownership. Community Land Trust: $1,144,187 •Provides affordable homeownership opportunities, as homebuyers purchase the housing improvements and ground lease the land from the City at a below-market rate. Home Repair Program:$500,000 •Provides grants and loans to low- and moderate-income homeowners to address emergency and chronic structural, plumbing, electrical, and mechanical home repair and replacement needs. NOAH Renter Rehab Program:$1,200,000 •Provides loans to individuals who own naturally occurring affordable housing that is offered for rent, primarily single-family homes and small- scale multifamily buildings, and want to make the necessary repairs to maintain habitability in return for rent restrictions. (new program) Note: Legislative polices need to be established for these programs. $6,500,000 $21,000,000 PROPOSED ALLOCATIONS: NON-RESTRICTED –ONE TIME ALLOCATIONS Rental Assistance:$180,000 •A pilot Tenant Relocation Program to help tenants who are directly impacted by new development to find new living arrangements they can afford and to offset the cost of relocation. This funding would be combined with $180,000 approved through the FY24 Budget. Public Services:$60,000 •To bring the following CDBG Public Service applications up to the full funding request: o First Step House, Employment: $26,492 o First Step House, Peer Support: $22,892 o SL Donated Dental: $5,308 o The Inn Between: $5,308 Debt Service:$3,000,000 •To pay off two lines of credit that were utilized years ago to assume shares in some of the mortgage loans issued by the Homebuyer program. $6,500,000 $21,000,000 QUESTIONS FOR THE CITY COUNCIL 1.Is the Council supportive of the Administration’s proposed funding allocations? Ø If so, the Administration will transmit the necessary HUD substantial amendments and initiate the public input process. 2.Is the Council supportive of establishing a Tenant and Homeowner Loan Fund (THLF) and linking the following programs to the THLF? o Homebuyer Program o Community Land Trust (“CLT”) o Home Repair Program o NOAH Renter Rehab Ø If so, the Administration will return to the Council with draft legislative polices. Dormant Housing Funds Summary Chart HUD - CDBG HUD - HOME/ ADDI NON- RESTRICTEDTYPEPROJECT/PROGRAM LEAD Next Steps Advertised as part of the RDA's upcoming Notice of Funding Availability, and Housing Stability Division prepare substantial amendments transmittalRDA NOFA RDA $6,476,014 $3,000,000 DEVELOPMENT ACQUISITION Housing Stability Division coordinates with City Housing Authority for potential direct award to this development, and prepare substantial amendments transmittal1159 West Temple (Book Cliffs)HASLC Strategic, Opportunity Area, or CLT CAN, HASLC,Housing Stability Division prepare substantial amendments transmittal$5,755,941Property Acquisition and/or RDA Pending transmittals of the final Thriving in Place Plan RENTAL ASSISTANCE Tenant Relocation Assistance Housing Stability $180,000 and the new Five-year Housing Plan, and Council briefing(s) Neighborhood Business Improvement Program Housing Stability Division prepare substantial amendments transmittal Housing Stability Division prepare substantial amendments transmittal Housing Stability $250,000 $250,000 NEIGHBORHOOD IMPROVEMENTS Westside Sidewalk/Infrastructure Improvements Transportation/ Engineering Homebuyer Program $1,000,000 Housing Stability draft new or amendments to existing policies for transmittals and Council briefing(s)TENANT & HOMEOWNER LOAN FUND Community Land Trust Home Repair Program NOAH Renter Rehab Program First Step House, Employment First Step House, Peer Support SL Donated Dental $1,144,187 $500,000Housing Stability $1,200,000 $26,492 Housing Stability proceed with one-time allocations to these nonprofits to bring them back up to the board and mayoral funding recommendation amounts$22,892 $5,308 $5,308 PUBLIC SERVICES DEBT SERVICE Non-profit organizations n/a The Inn Between Housing Stability proceed with payoff and closing these lines of creditLine of Credit Payoff $3,000,000 TOTAL:$6,255,941 $9,476,014 $7,084,187 Last updated July 27, 2023 ERIN MENDENHALL DEPARTMENT of COMMUNITY Mayor and NEIGHBORHOODS Blake Thomas Director SALT LAKE CITY CORPORATION 451 SOUTH STATE STREET, ROOM 404 WWW.SLC.GOV P.O. BOX 145486, SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH 84114-5486 TEL 801.535.6230 FAX 801.535.6005 CITY COUNCIL TRANSMITTAL ________________________ Date Received: _________________ Lisa Shaffer, Chief Administrative Officer Date sent to Council: _________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ TO: Salt Lake City Council DATE: June 1, 2023 Darin Mano, Chair FROM: Blake Thomas, Director, Department of Community and Neighborhoods __________________________ SUBJECT: Recommended funding allocations and establishment of a Tenant and Homeowner Loan Fund (“THLF”) utilizing unallocated program income generated by activities within the Housing Stability Division STAFF CONTACT: Tammy Hunsaker, Deputy Director, Community and Neighborhoods Department, 385-315-3315, tammy.hunsaker@slcgov.com Tony Milner, Director, Housing Stability Division, 801-535-6168, tony.milner@slcgov.com DOCUMENT TYPE: Information only RECOMMENDATION: Briefing and policy discussion BUDGET IMPACT: N/A BACKGROUND/DISCUSSION: On February 7, 2023, the Department of Community and Neighborhoods (“CAN”) and the Division of Housing Stability briefed the City Council on certain funds that are available for housing and community development activities. The February briefing not only included a summary of unallocated program income funds, but also included a summary of U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (“HUD”) funds that have already been budgeted and are being utilized during the current fiscal year. Currently, this transmittal focuses solely on the unallocated program income, a portion of which is non-restricted and a portion of which is subject to HUD requirements and needs to be recognized through the HUD Consolidated Plan framework. Program income continues to be generated from the approximate 575 outstanding homebuyer and housing rehab loans, which currently have a balance of approximately $25 million. The cumulative program income balance has increased from $20,412,990 as of November 30, 2022 to $22,816,142 as of April 30, 2023. Beginning on July 1, 2023, with the start of the 2024 fiscal year, program income generated from HUD-restricted funds, including Community Development Block Grant (“CDBG”) and Home Investment Lisa Shaffer (Jun 1, 2023 11:15 MDT)06/01/2023 06/01/2023 Partnerships Program (“HOME”), will be recaptured and allocated annually through the HUD funding process. Program income generated from non-restricted funds is proposed to be deposited into a revolving loan fund, as detailed below, pending annual budget allocations by the Council. I. Tenant and Homeowner Loan Fund It is the Administration’s priority to utilize a portion of the non-restricted funding to capitalize a revolving loan fund that would be established through legislative action as the Salt Lake City Tenant and Homeowner Loan Fund (“THLF”). This would ensure that a portion of the program income that has been generated over decades continues to produce revenue for ongoing housing activities. As proposed, the THLF would support programs and activities that provide assistance directly to tenants and homeowners, complementing the RDA’s housing funds that are targeted to developers. The THLF is proposed to be structured as follows: • On an annual basis, the Council shall allocate revenue from the THLF to revolving programs and initiatives that may include the City’s Community Land Trust (“CLT”), Homebuyer Program, and Home Repair Program, as well as a new program intended to support naturally occurring affordable housing (“NOAH”). This will ensure that the THLF is a self-replenishing fund that utilizes principal and interest payments to fund new housing actives that directly support tenants and homeowners. • In addition to revolving programs and initiatives, the THLF could be strategically used to fund non-revolving initiatives such as the Tenant Relocation Assistance program that is proposed in the Thriving in Place (“TIP”) draft plan. • As program income continues to be generated from projects and activities funded with non-restricted funds, future program income shall be deposited into the THLF pending annual budget allocations by the City Council. In addition to establishing the THLF through City Council action with legislative policies, the Administration is preparing to transmit draft legislative polices for the Council’s consideration for each of the programs anticipated to be funded by the THLF. II. Available Funds Since the February 2023 briefing, the unallocated program income has continued to generate new revenue with the following balances as of April 30, 2023: PROGRAM INCOME SOURCE 4/30/23 BALANCE HUD REGULATIONS CDBG $6,255,941 HOME $9,427,209 American Dream Downpayment Initiative (ADDI) $48,805 NON- RESTRICTED Renter Rehab Program $1,716,265 Miscellaneous Bank Funds $1,759,136 Riverpark $3,608,786 TOTAL $22,816,142 *Note: ADDI is a discontinued HUD initiative that was provided through the HOME program. As such, the ADDI program income is treated as HOME PI and used in accordance with HOME regulations. Program income generated as a result of activities originally funded through CDBG and HOME programs retain their federal identity in perpetuity and are subject to all federal requirements. The non-restricted program income has either been generated by activities originally funded with non- federal funds or by activities originally funded with a federal grant that was closed-out and federal restrictions severed. III. Funding Eligibility, Requirements, and Restrictions Information on eligible uses of funds, requirements, and restrictions is as follows: • Non-Restricted Funds: The non-restricted program income does not have specific requirements or restrictions, HUD or otherwise. However, the Administration recommends that these funds continue to be allocated to housing activities in a revolving nature and be used in part to capitalize the THLF. • HUD-Restricted Funds: Refer to Exhibit A for a summary of area median income (“AMI”) restrictions and eligible uses of CDBG and HOME program income. The CDBG “Public Services” category, which is typically available to allocate up to 15% of the City’s annual CDBG award to non-profit organizations, is not an eligible use. This is because the amount of historical program income generated on an annual basis is unable to be determined for the program income. As such, HUD has advised the City to allocate the funds to eligible uses other than Public Services. IV. Steps to Utilize Funds To utilize the funds, revenue and expenditures must be budgeted through the City’s annual budget process. In addition, to utilize the dormant CDBG and HOME program income, HUD will require that the funds be recognized in the Consolidated Plan framework. The City’s 2020 – 2024 Consolidated Plan (“Con Plan”), which covers the HUD 2020 – 2024 program years and the City’s 2021 – 2025 fiscal years, estimates resources and identifies activities to address housing and community development needs over this period. The Con Plan is carried out through annual Action Plans, which provide a concise summary of the actions, activities, and the specific federal and non-federal resources that will be used each year to address the priority needs and specific goals identified by the Con Plan. The steps required to recognize the funds in the Con Plan framework are as follows: 1. The City Council shall approve funding allocations for the dormant CDBG and HOME program income, to be incorporated into the 2023-24 fiscal year along with the standard HUD allocations that have already been approved. To be consistent with how the City approves of HUD funding allocations, the Council may wish to amend Resolution 9 of 2023, the resolution adopting HUD funding allocations for the 2023-24 fiscal year, to incorporate the program income allocations. 2. The Administration shall utilize the funding allocations to prepare substantial amendments to the FY 2023 – 2024 Annual Action Plan and Con Plan. 3. Public noticing and hearing requirements shall be carried out pursuant to the 2020-2024 Citizen Participation Plan, which is Appendix C of the Con Plan. 4. The City Council shall approve substantial amendments to the FY 2023 – 2024 Action Plan and Con Plan. 5. The Administration shall submit the substantial amendments to HUD for review and approval. V. Timely Use of Funds Once the funds are recognized through the Con Plan framework, they will be subject to HUD’s timeliness requirements. A summary of these requirements is as follows: • CDBG: If the dormant CDBG program income funds are recognized in the 2023 – 2024 Action Plan, as the Administration is proposing, they will be factored into the timeliness calculation that will occur on May 2, 2024. HUD calculates the ratio of unexpended funds to the City’s annual grant award 60 days prior to the end of the fiscal year. To do this, HUD sums the amount of program income the City has on hand with the amount of funds remaining in the CDBG line of credit and divides by the amount of the annual grant award. If the ratio is less than or equal to 1.5, then the City has met the timely performance requirement. If the ratio is more than 1.5, then the City is considered untimely and future HUD funds could be at risk. • HOME HOME funds must be committed to specific projects within twenty-four (24) months of the City’s receipt of funds. Commitment means the City has entered into a legally binding agreement with subrecipients for the completion of an eligible HOME activity. HOME funds cannot be committed until: o All necessary financing for the project has been secured o A budget and implementation schedule have been established o Underwriting and subsidy layering analysis have been completed o Construction is scheduled to start within twelve months of the agreement date o Environmental review requirements have been met If HOME funds are not committed within 24 months or fully expended within sixty (60) months, they will be recaptured by HUD. VI. Proposed Allocations The Administration proposes the following funding allocations, considering the various eligible uses and timeliness requirements of the different funding sources: TYPE PROJECT/PROGRAM LEAD HUD - CDBG HUD - HOME/ ADDI NON- RESTRICTED DEVELOPMENT RDA NOFA RDA $6,476,014 1159 West Temple (Book Cliffs) HASLC $3,000,000 ACQUISITION Strategic, Opportunity Area, or CLT Property Acquisition CAN, HASLC, and/or RDA $5,755,941 RENTAL ASSISTANCE Tenant Relocation Assistance Housing Stability $180,000 NEIGHBORHOOD IMPROVEMENTS Neighborhood Business Improvement Program Housing Stability $250,000 Westside Sidewalk/Infrastructure Improvements Transportation/ Engineering $250,000 TENANT & HOMEOWNER LOAN FUND Homebuyer Program Housing Stability $1,000,000 Community Land Trust Housing Stability $1,144,187 Home Repair Program Housing Stability $500,000 NOAH Renter Rehab Program Housing Stability $1,200,000 PUBLIC SERVICES First Step House, Employment Non-profit organizations $26,492 First Step House, Peer Support $22,892 SL Donated Dental $5,308 The Inn Between $5,308 DEBT SERVICE Line of Credit Payoff n/a $3,000,000 TOTAL: $6,255,941 $9,476,014 $7,084,187 Additional information on the proposed projects and activities is as follows: 1. DEVELOPMENT RDA NOFA, $6,476,014 1159 S West Temple, up to $3,000,000 • RDA NOFA Funding would be allocated to specific projects via a competitive Notice of Funding Availability (“NOFA”) through the RDA’s Housing Development Loan Program (“HDLP”). • 1159 S West Temple (Book Cliffs Lodge) Due to the inter-governmental relationship between the City and the Housing Authority of Salt Lake City (“HASLC”), the Administration inquired with HASLC on development projects that, once a funding gap is filled, are shovel- ready and would be on a development schedule that would meet HUD’s timeliness requirements. The project, located at 1159 S West Temple and known as Book Cliffs Lodge, has not been able to obtain competitive 9% Low Income Housing Tax Credits and continues to have a funding gap. HASLC applied for non-competitive 4% tax credits, which are anticipated to be obtained this summer, leaving a ~$3,000,000 funding gap. As such, up to $3,000,000 is proposed to be combined with the funding already allocated by the RDA to provide construction financing for the project. Funding would be allocated subject to the underwriting and lending standards outlined in the RDA’s HDLP policy. The project is adjacent to City-owned property by Smith’s Ballpark and will include 55 units, of which 11 will be 3-bedroom units to expand housing opportunities for families. Affordability will range from 25% to 60% of the area median income (“AMI”). 2. ACQUISITION Strategic, East Side, and/or CLT Property Acquisition, $5,755,941 • Due to strict timeliness requirements for CDBG, the acquisition of property is the likeliest way for the City to meet spend down requirements. As such, the Administration recommends allocating the majority of CDBG program income for the acquisition of property, as follows: o A partnership between CAN, RDA, and/or the HASLC to identify and purchase property that is either located in a strategic location or in a high opportunity area for the future development of affordable housing; or o Single-family homes and/or missing middle typology housing that will be incorporated into to the City’s CLT, with the City retaining ownership of the land in perpetuity and homeowners purchasing the housing units. 3. RENTAL ASSISTANCE Tenant Relocation Assistance, $180,000 • Funding to help tenants who are directly impacted by new development to find new living arrangements they can afford and to offset the cost of relocation. This funding would be combined with $180,000 proposed through the Mayor’s Recommended FY24 Budget, for a total of $360,00 to assist approximately 60 displaced households in a pilot program. 4. NEIGHBORHOOD IMPROVEMENTS Neighborhood Building Improvement Program, $250,000 Sidewalk/Infrastructure Improvements, $250,000 • Neighborhood Business Improvement Program (“NBIP”) The Council has expressed interest in committing a portion of CDBG program income to the NBIP, aka the façade program. The Administration recommends allocating $250,000 to the NBIP, which would be combined with the $925,000 already allocated through the FY24 HUD funding process. This will bring the FY24 total to $1,175,000, which is almost double that of the previous fiscal year’s budget. Housing Stability has already issued a competitive application process and will increase the number of projects awarded funded if the Council appropriates these additional funds. • Sidewalk/Infrastructure Improvements The Council has expressed interest in committing a portion of CDBG program income to sidewalk and/or infrastructure improvements, with a focus on the City’s west side. The Administration recommends allocating $250,000 to this initiative, to be combined with other CDBG infrastructure funds that are unexpended and continue to be factored into the CDBG timeliness ratio, including: o $322,000, FY 21-22 bus stop improvements o $92,789, FY 22-23 bus stop improvements o $550,000, FY 22-23 Ballpark TRAX pedestrian crossing 5. REVOLVING LOAN FUND PROGRAMS & ACTIVITIES Tenant and Homeowner Loan Fund (“THLF”): $3,844,187 • The Administration recommends allocating a significant portion of the non- restricted funds to the THLF, which is proposed to be a revolving resource that supports programs providing direct assistance to residents. Funding is proposed to be earmarked as follows: o Homebuyer Program, $1,000,000 Provides mortgage financing for low- and moderate-income households to further affordable homeownership. o Community Land Trust, $1,144,187 Homebuyers purchase the housing improvements and ground lease the land from the City at a below-market rate. To maximize affordability, mortgages are issued through the Homebuyer Program to CLT homebuyers. o Home Repair Program, $500,000 Provides grants and loans to low- and moderate-income homeowners to address emergency and chronic structural, plumbing, electrical, and mechanical home repair and replacement needs. o NOAH Renter Rehabilitation Program, $1,200,000 Provides loans to individuals who own naturally occurring affordable housing that is offered for rent, primarily single-family homes and small- scale multifamily buildings, and want to make the necessary repairs to maintain habitability in return for rent restrictions. 6. PUBLIC SRVICES First Step House, Salt Lake Donated Dental, The Inn Between, $60,000 • During the FY24 HUD funding allocation process, the City Council reduced the funding award for certain program from the Mayor’s recommended amount. The Council expressed interest in utilizing dormant program income to bring these programs back up to the Mayor’s recommended level. The ”Public Services” category is not an eligible use of the dormant CDBG program income. As such, the Administration recommends funding these programs with non-restricted funds for a total of $60,000 divided as follows: o First Step House, Employment Preparation and Placement Program, provides supportive employment services to high-risk, high-need individuals caught in the cycles of relapse, mental illness, incarceration, homelessness, and underemployment, $26,492 o First Step House, Peer Support Services, salaries and administration costs to provide peer-based supportive services, delivered by certified Peer Support Specialists, $22,892 o Salt Lake Donated Dental Services, Community Dental Project, salaries, supplies, and lab to support homeless and low-income individuals with dental services, $5,308 o The Inn Between, End of Life Care and Medical Respite, provides homeless individuals who need hospice or other end of life care and temporary medical respite housing for homeless individuals experiencing a medical crisis, $5,308 7. DEBT SERVICE Line of Credit Payoff, $3,000,000 • The Administration recommends that funds be allocated to pay off two lines of credit (“LOC”) that were utilized years ago to assume shares in some of the mortgage loans issued by the Homebuyer program. The LOCs were secured by the homebuyers’ properties and loan proceeds. As of May 2023, the LOCs have an outstanding balance of $1.34 million and $1.84 million, for a total of $3.18 million. PUBLIC PROCESS: A public process will be carried out pursuant to the 2020-2024 Citizen Participation Plan, which is Appendix C of the Con Plan. EXHIBITS: A. Eligible Uses of CDBG and HOME Program Income Funds EXHIBIT A: ELIGIBLE USES of CDBG & HOME PROGRAM INCOME FUNDS CDBG PI FUNDS ELIGIBLE ACTIVITIES CON PLAN ELIGIBLE TYPICAL NATIONAL OBJECTIVE DETAILS HOUSING Rehabilitation: Single and Multi-Unit Residential YES LMI households; prevent or eliminate blight; meet unfunded, urgent local need May rehabilitate or reconstruct or convert structures, provide homeownership assistance, and housing counseling. Includes all activity costs such as applicant intake, construction specs and procurement, and construction. All activities must result in achievement of a CDBG national objective, typically by providing housing to an LMI household. Construction of Housing (limited) YES Direct Homeownership Assistance YES Housing Counseling YES Public Housing Modernization YES Energy Efficiency Improvements YES Rehabilitation Administration YES Lead-Based Paint/Lead Hazard Abatement YES Code Enforcement YES PUBLIC IMPROVEMENTS & FACILITIES Senior Centers NO LMI households; prevent or eliminate blight; meet unfunded, urgent local need May acquire, construct, reconstruct, or rehabilitate a public facility or improvement. All activities must result in achievement of a CDBG national objective, typically by providing access to a facility or improvement to an LMI clientele or to LMI persons residing in a qualified area. Facility for Persons with Disabilities NO Homeless Facilities (not operating costs) NO Youth Centers/Facilities NO Neighborhood Facilities YES Parks, Recreational Facilities YES Parking Facilities YES Solid Waste Disposal Facilities NO Flood and Drainage Facilities NO Water/Sewer Improvements NO Sidewalks YES Child Care Centers NO Fire Stations/Equipment NO Health Facilities NO Removal of Architectural Barriers NO PROPERTY ACQUISITION Acquisition of Property YES LMI persons, families, or area; prevent or eliminate blight; meet unfunded, urgent local need May buy, clean up, demolish, dispose of, and relocate occupants from a property for an eligible public purpose. Disposition YES Clearance and Demolition YES Clean-up of Contaminated Sites/Brownfields YES Relocation YES ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT Commercial/ Industrial Building Rehabilitation YES LMI persons, families, or area; businesses providing LMI jobs or services; prevent or eliminate blight; meet unfunded, urgent need May assist commercial or industrial activities. All activities must result in achievement of a CDBG national objective, typically by creating or retaining permanent LMI jobs or serving an LMI area. Project examples range from working capital loans, to neighborhood store expansion. Commercial/Industrial Land Acquisition/ Disposition NO Commercial/Industrial Infrastructure Development NO Commercial/Industrial Building Construction NO Micro-Enterprise Assistance NO Note: Public Services and Administration/Planning activities are not listed, as they cannot be funded with the Dormant PI. Note: "LMI" is low and moderate-income, which is generally defined as 80% of the area median income (“AMI”) and below. Note: CDBG funds for Housing activities must be utilized for permanent housing and not transitional or emergency shelters. HOME PI FUNDS ELIGIBLE PROJECTS CON PLAN ELIGIBLE ELIGIBLE BENEFICIARIES TYPES OF ASSISTANCE Tenant Based Rental Assistance (TBRA) YES Tenant-Based Rental Assistance limit 60% AMI. Development and Homebuyer assistance limit is 80% AMI<. 5 or > units: 20% of units must be at 50% AMI <. All funds must be for 80% AMI and below. Can be used on mixed income developments, number of affordable units is based on Funding amount. HOME allows multiple forms of financial assistance or subsidy: grants, loans, interest subsidies, loan guarantees, equity investments to be provided for eligible projects. Once a commitment is made with HOME PI funds, the project must be completed in a four- year timeframe. New Construction- Rental & Homeownership YES Rehabilitation YES Reconstruction YES Program Staff - Specific to TBRA YES Acquisition YES Project Related Soft Costs YES Homebuyer Assistance; DPA or Acquisition YES Note: Any construction, rehabilitation, soft costs, and acquisition costs are eligible as part of a complete project not as stand-alone costs. Note: Rehabilitation includes conversion to an existing structure, adaptive reuse, site improvements & infrastructure. Note: Tenant-Based Rental Assistance is referred to as “TBRA”, Down-Payment Assistance is “DPA”. ERIN MENDENHALL Mayor OFFICE OF THE MAYOR P.O. BOX 145474 451 SOUTH STATE STREET, ROOM 306 SALT LAKE CITY, UT 84114-5474 WWW.SLCMAYOR.COM TEL 801-535-7704 CITY COUNCIL TRANSMITTAL ______________________________ Date Received: 6/29/2023 Rachel Otto, Chief of Staff Date Sent to Council: 6/29/2023 TO: Salt Lake City Council DATE 6/29/2023 Darin Mano, Chair FROM: Rachel Otto, Chief of Staff Office of the Mayor SUBJECT: Board Appointment Recommendation: Police Civilian Review Board STAFF CONTACT: April Patterson April.Patterson@slcgov.com DOCUMENT TYPE: Board Appointment Recommendation: Police Civilian Review Board RECOMMENDATION: The Administration recommends the Council consider the recommendation in the attached letter from the Mayor and appoint Elizabeth Hanna member of the Police Civilian Review Board. ERIN MENDENHALL Mayor OFFICE OF THE MAYOR P.O. BOX 145474 451 SOUTH STATE STREET, ROOM 306 SALT LAKE CITY, UT 84114-5474 WWW.SLCMAYOR.COM TEL 801-535-7704 June 29, 2023 Salt Lake City Council 451 S State Street Room 304 PO Box 145476 Salt Lake City, UT 84114 Dear Council Member Mano, Listed below is my recommendation for the membership appointment for: Police Civilian Review Board Elizabeth Hanna to be appointed for a three year term ending the first Monday in September 2026 and starting from date of City Council advice. I respectfully ask for your consideration and support for this appointment. Respectfully, Erin Mendenhall, Mayor cc: file City Council Announcements August 15, 2023 For Your Information: A.Notification of removal of Artworks from the City’s Public Art Collection: The Mayor approved the recommendation from the Salt Lake Art Design Board to remove the following artworks from the City’s public art collection: a. Wayne Chubin’s Friends of the Park, which was originally placed on the façade of the storage building within Herman Franks Park (700 East 1300 South). b. Thomas Tessman’s Pierpont Benches, which were originally located on the Pierpont Walkway between 200 South & Pierpont Avenue. The recommendations are based on multiple programmatic priorities: 1. Both artworks could not be located and are now considered lost; and 2. Deaccession of both artworks has been recommended as a course of action by a professional assessment of our public art collection. An informational transmittal was received in the Council Office on August 8 satisfying the 45-day advance notice requirement in City Code before an artwork in the City’s collection may be removed. Information Needed: B. November & December Council Meetings: Due to General Election Day, the date of Council meetings in November AND when the Council convenes as the Board of Canvassers is changing, too. November meetings: The Council has typically avoided holding Council Meetings on Election day. Since the elections have been moved to November 21, this conflicts with a scheduled Council Meeting. Does the Council want to reschedule? It could work to reschedule the November 21 (election day) Council Meeting to November 28, 2023. Does November 28th work for Council Members or would you prefer another schedule? Below are the current meetings scheduled and possible conflicts for each Tuesday. ➢November 7, 2023 – Reschedule Nov 21? Possible Conflicts: Mpact Conference (Formally Railvolution) – so far no Council Members are planning to attend, but City staff may be. ➢November 14, 2023 – Currently RDA, Council Work Session & Formal scheduled. ➢November 21, 2023 – Currently Council Work Session, Formal. General Election Day – reschedule to Nov 7 or Nov 28? ➢November 28, 2023 – Reschedule Nov 21? No conflicts December meetings: The Recorder’s office is coordinating with the County on adding District 7 to the ballot, timeline for counting votes and providing final numbers. We are asking that the final election results be provided by December 5 at 4:00 p.m. so that the Council meeting dates don’t need to change. However, in case that’s not possible, could Council Members hold December 6, Wednesday, as a tentative meeting date to quickly convene as the Board of Canvassers? ➢December 5, 2023 - Currently Council Work Session & Formal scheduled. Plan to include the Board of Canvassers meeting here, too. ➢Tentative - December 6, 2023 – If needed for the Board of Canvassers; Possible Limited Formal ➢December 12. 2023 - Currently RDA, Council Work Session & Formal scheduled. If a meeting is needed on December 6th, what time works for Council Members? (Council Members can attend remotely in order to hold the meeting.) SALT LAKE CITY CORPORATION SWORN STATEMENT SUPPORTING CLOSURE OF MEETING I, ____________ , acted as the presiding member of the _______________________________in which met on _________ Appropriate notice was given of the Council's meeting as required by §52-4-202. A quorum of the Council was present at the meeting and voted by at least a two-thirds vote, as detailed in the minutes of the open meeting, to close a portion of the meeting to discuss the following: §52-4-205(l)(a) discussion of the character, professional competence, or physical or mental health of an individual; §52 -4-205(1 )(b) strategy sessions to discuss collective bargaining; §52-4-205(l )(c) strategy sessions to discuss pending or reasonably imminent litigation; §52-4-205( l )(d) strategy sessions to discuss the purchase, exchange, or lease of real property, including any form of a water right or water shares, if public discussion of the transaction would: (i) disclose the appraisal or estimated value of the property under consideration; or (ii) prevent the public body from completing the transaction on the best possible terms; §52-4-205(l )(e) strategy sessions to discuss the sale of real property, including any form of a water right or water shares if: (i) public discussion of the transaction would: ((A) disclose the appraisal or estimated value of the property under consideration; or (B) prevent the public body from completing the transaction on the best possible terms; (ii) if the public body previously gave public notice that the property would be offered for sale; and (iii) the terms of the sale are publicly disclosed before the public body approves the sale; §52-4-205(1)(f) discussion regarding deployment of security personnel, devices, or systems; and §52-4-205(1)(g) investigative proceedings regarding allegations of criminal misconduct. A Closed Meeting may also be held for Attorney-Client matters that are privileged pursuant to Utah Code §78B-1-137, and for other lawful purposes that satisfy the pertinent requirements of the Utah Open and Public Meetings Act. Other, described as follows: ____________________________________________________________ The content of the closed portion of the Council meeting was restricted to a discussion of the matter(s) for which the meeting was closed. With regard to the closed meeting, the following was publicly announced and recorded, and entered on the minutes of the open meeting at which the closed meeting was approved: (a)the reason or reasons for holding the closed meeting; (b)the location where the closed meeting will be held; and (c)the vote of each member of the public body either for or against the motion to hold the closed meeting. The recording and any minutes of the closed meeting will include: (a)the date, time, and place of the meeting; (b)the names of members Present and Absent; and (c)the names of all others present except where such disclosure would infringe on the confidentiality necessary to fulfill the original purpose of closing the meeting. Pursuant to §52-4-206(6),a sworn statement is required to close a meeting under §52-4-205(1)(a) or (f), but a record by tape recording or detailed minutes is not required; and Pursuant to §52-4-206(1), a record by tape recording and/or detailed written minutes is required for a meeting closed under §52-4-205(1)(b),(c),(d),(e),and (g): A record was not made. A record was made by: : Tape recording Detailed written minutes I hereby swear or affin11 under penalty of perjury that the above information is true and correct to the best of my knowledge. Presiding Member Date of Signature Salt Lake City CouncilDarin Mano August 15, 2023 4 44 08/16/2023 Closed Session - Sworn Statement Final Audit Report 2023-08-16 Created:2023-08-15 By:Michelle Barney (michelle.barney@slcgov.com) Status:Signed Transaction ID:CBJCHBCAABAAawj1U4q2areAH6HHc2p9FYeJCaGOTlSn "Closed Session - Sworn Statement" History Document created by Michelle Barney (michelle.barney@slcgov.com) 2023-08-15 - 10:44:29 PM GMT Document emailed to Darin Mano (darin.mano@slcgov.com) for signature 2023-08-15 - 11:03:55 PM GMT Email viewed by Darin Mano (darin.mano@slcgov.com) 2023-08-16 - 3:55:02 AM GMT Document e-signed by Darin Mano (darin.mano@slcgov.com) Signature Date: 2023-08-16 - 5:02:15 PM GMT - Time Source: server Agreement completed. 2023-08-16 - 5:02:15 PM GMT