HomeMy WebLinkAbout2014-05-08 - Planning Commission Minutes117 NW Lafayette Avenue Bend Oregon 97701-1925
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MINUTES
DESCHUTES COUNTY PLANNING COMMISSION
DESCHUTES SERVICES CENTER
1300 NW WALL STREET, BEND, OREGON, 97701
MAY 8, 2014 — 5:30 P.M.
CALL TO ORDER
Meeting was called to order at 5:30 p.m. by Chair Christen'Brown. Members present were
Vice Chair Hugh Palcic, Ed Criss and Steve Swisher. Absent: James Powell, Matt
Lisignoli and Todd Turner. Staff present were Nick Lelack, Planning Director; Laurie
Craghead, Assistant Legal Counsel; Peter Gutowsky, Principal Planner; Paul Blikstad,
Senior Planner; and Sher Buckner, Administrative Secretary.
PUBLIC COMMENTS
None.
III. DELIBERATIONS: TA -13-4 -> A text amendment to Deschutes County Code Title 19,
Chapter 19.20, Suburban LowDensity Residential Zone (SR -2.5) to allow the operation,
maintenance, and piping of existing irrigation systems as an outright use in the zone —
Paul Blikstad, Senior Planner.
Paul discussed the matrix sent to the Commissioners and summarized the proposal to
date.
Laurie mentioned a comment in one letter regarding whether COID could pipe without land
use regulations being considered. She did not find anything mentioning regulation of piping
through land use regulations. She looked at special districts' principal acts regarding
irrigation districts and how they were regulated. None of them said specifically that land
use regulations are involved, but there are situations such as road districts getting permits,
etc., so she sees nothing that says we cannot regulate districts. She believes the recent
Curl LUBA decision has no relevance to this proposal. The whole purpose of this text
amendment is to make it so that it does not matter if piping is part of a hydro facility — it
would be allowed as an outright purpose. We are being asked to nullify, in effect, the
LUBA decision to say that piping is an outright use. The reason LUBA came to their
decision, also, was that COID did not address any of the assignments of error, so they
accepted the Curls' arguments. This proposal also will not prevent COID from maintaining
the canal, so there is no inverse condemnation.
Chair Brown asked if Laurie was aware of anything pending in state or federal court that
might override this proposal, and Laurie said no.
Paul said he had looked at the Bend Area General Plan and felt it was pretty silent on the
issue of canal piping. Chair Brown felt there were different interpretations of the Plan from
both sides. The letter we received from the City did not say much, either, so it is
problematic to use the Plan as a guide.
Chair Brown asked the Commissioners if they felt that they had received and reviewed
enough information to make a decision. All said yes.
Vice Chair Palcic agreed that you could take any document and argue any side of it, either
way, pros and cons. When you look at the magnitude of the proposal, it speaks to
consideration of the overall Plan, too. Commissioner Swisher did not feel that the Plan was
necessarily helpful, either, and there is a bigger question of water use in the region and
conservation in the canal. He is trying to look at the bigger picture, not just the narrow
question. Commissioner Criss said he did not find information in the Plan that was much
help. He appreciates that the open space would be controlled by the landowners and not
the District. Conservation of water is a critical issue, and canal leakage is responsible for
much of the recharging. COID has not shown much appreciation for that aspect, which is
part of the bigger picture. The question.is whether this is allowable in the zone, but there
are bigger issues, too. We need to look at'hydro power, for example — a hydro plant should
not be in the SR 2.5 zone, and though this proposal does not include a hydro plant there, it
does include increased flow for the plant. Another important component is that these
canals in farm areas do not seem to have large impacts when piped, but when residential
properties are involved, values are affected.'
Vice Chair Palcic felt that the question was not whether this area will be piped — it can still
go through with conditional use. We are looking at outright permitted use — whether to
change the language of the Code from a conditional use to a permitted use. Chair Brown
said he is a huge advocate, of generating power at very little cost, and that needs to be
addressed. The question here is like being poked in the eye — he understands the
applicant wanting to put a power generator as close to the start of the canal as possible for
more power; but that piece of the canal was originally on public lands, and if you had sat
down with the owners and asked them about piping it in 2014 after homes were built near
it, they would have laughed. It would seem impractical and an unreasonable option. The
characteristics have now changed, the efficiency has changed. Here we do not put
concrete in a ditch as they do in California, but we pipe to increase head pressure. Also,
there is some question about whether all of that water goes back to the river once piped. It
is our job to protect the public access to the process and that is the most important part of
this.
Chair Brown said he had researched what had occurred prior to this proposal. The Bureau
of Reclamation has a process for making decisions which requires public input. He found
that that process had not been observed, and there is no solid foundation under this
proposal. The public has come to us and asked to be part of the process when the original
decisions are made. The Bureau of Reclamation did not issue a notice or talk to the public.
He does not feel it is appropriate to sit in judgment, whether the process was conscious or
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unconscious. He asked Laurie if this was a valid concern. Laurie said that unless it applies
to one of the Bend Area General Plan policies, it is not relevant.
Motion: Vice Chair Palcic motioned to deny the proposed application, based upon the
applicant's inability to demonstrate consistency with the Bend Area General Plan:
community goals, natural features, open spaces, urban trail policies and community
appearance policies. Chair Brown felt it is inappropriate to add these reasons to the
motion. He would also like to see the questions documented by Commissioner Powell be
added to the record forwarded to the Board.
Vice Chair Palcic amended his motion to: Deny the proposed application, based upon the
applicant's inability to demonstrate consistency with the Bend Area General Plan.
Seconded by Commissioner Criss.
Discussion:
Commissioner Swisher felt that the uses of water and energy are critical issues in the
nation. We could save water by piping the entire state, and it is a renewable resource. At
some time this issue may need to be addressed. The question today is whether the
application has met the conditions, and the answer is no. There is also an economic
impact.
Chair Brown felt the applicant had neglected to give us the full story — the manager did not
speak about other possibilities for power generation when he spoke to us, and they could
not have picked a worse location for the piping in this proposal. It may be very difficult to
get a conditional use permit, so this may not be COID's "out." He is not willing to look at
this as an "either, or." There are other areas that would not be such battlegrounds.
Commissioner Criss spoke about public testimony regarding animal life "moving or dying,"
and he does not feel any district, has the right to make that call. Any other improvement
must take into effect an anirrmal migration route or calving area, and there are animals living
along the canal.
Motion passed.
IV. PUBLIC HEARING: Draft Planning Division FY 2014-2015 Work Plan — Nick Lelack,
Community Development Director.
Nick presented a Power Point on the Work Plan process. Commissioner Criss asked if
there was any way to address soil classifications which may be incorrect regarding EFU
lands. Nick said that one thing we are hearing at the open houses regarding agricultural
lands is that we need to take another look at the soils in the County, and additional studies
are a possibility. There are also a number of people who have asked to be removed from
the destination resort map. We could re -open that process. Applications to be added to
the map include a fee; removals of properties do not. Only property owner signature and a
request are required for removal. There could be opposition but at this point we do not
know.
Peter Gutowsky said it is an option for the County to allow a process for map amendments
every 30 months, and it has been 30 months since the last time. If the Board wants us to
do this, we could issue a press release indicating that people have 30 days to request to
add/remove lands, and we process those requests according to local and state legislative
and map amendments. Nick said that this may or may not require a significant allocation of
resources.
Public Testimony:
Merry Ann Moore testified and asked for prioritization of two items. First would be the text
amendment relating to code enforcement for property owners being protected when a
neighbor may want to do something new with his/her land, to make sure that prior
agreements and conditions of approval are met before new permits are issued. This is a
commonsense measure that could head off a lot of conflicts and keep people from having
to hire lawyers. The second priority would be the unmapping of properties such as hers
from the destination resorts. She owns her land (two acres) and does not want to be in the
map. If this was made a priority (unmapping), what would be the next step at the Board?
Will there be another public hearing, can they strip out line items, etc?
Nick said the Board will hold a public hearing on the work plan, and they can remove or
add any projects. Merry Ann said that when the 900 owners were mapped, they only had
to fill out a piece of paper to stay there. Why does there have to be an entire public hearing
process for her two -acre parcel? Chair Brown said that the 900 referred to were already
zoned; they were not applying to change. Nick said that any time the map is amended
there has to be a public hearing, whether it is one property or multiple properties.
Frank Baldwin agreed with Merry Ann — they want out of the map, and he has written to the
Board about this.
Kevin Blair testified that he would like his property removed from the destination resort
map.
Motion: Commissioner Criss.motioned to close the oral and written testimony. Seconded
by Commissioner Swisher. Motion passed.
Discussion:
Chair Brown said he would like to add removal of properties from the destination resort
map to the Work Plan; Commissioner Swisher agreed.
Motion: Commissioner Criss motioned that they move forward with a recommendation to
the Board, subject to reordering the items on the Work Plan. Seconded by Vice Chair
Palcic. Motion passed
Chair Brown suggested the Commissioners come up with their priorities for the work plan
items, to be forwarded to the Board. Chair Brown and Commissioner Swisher discussed a
process for listing the items in priority order. Nick clarified the difference between the
citizen requested table and the report listing projects we are already undertaking. Chair
Brown agreed that the items they are looking at on the citizen requested table would be
those they would like to see added to the Work Plan and that they need to prioritize their
top five choices.
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V. PLANNING COMMISSION & STAFF COMMENTS
Peter Gutowsky described the process to date for the public meetings on agricultural
lands. Commissioner Swisher thanked Nick for the information and training provided to
him as a new Commissioner.
VI. ADJOURN
There being no further business, the meeting was adjourned.
Respec T
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Sher Buckner
Administrative Secretary
The video record of this meeting can be located at: http://deschutes.granicus.com/ViewPublisher.php?view—id=5
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