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He discussed the mediation process held on October 6 and November 22, 2010 and proposed <br /> concessions. Over the last few days, over 21 emails were received in support of the project, and <br /> a revised Condition 7 is proposed for flexibility of landscape species. <br /> The Council's options are to: 1) uphold the appeal and deny the proposed project, 2) deny the <br /> appeal and approve the project as proposed subject to conditions, 3) deny the appeal but to add <br /> mitigations offered by the Lopez' during the mediation process, or 4) continue to work on the <br /> proposal. <br /> David Persin, appellant, on behalf of three different families said the applicants fill their <br /> supporting documentation with accusations which decreases their credibility. He spoke of <br /> statements regarding placement of a trampoline in their backyard, and the fact that the <br /> applicant's backyard is less than 8 feet from their rear side bedrooms is the dispute. He added <br /> information about never exceeding noise levels, 9:00 p.m. curfews during school nights, and <br /> said the only numbers provided for the current project and neighborhood comparables those <br /> provided by the applicant to the City. The chart of mitigations, compromises, concessions and <br /> considerations positions the applicants as having done all they can do to compromise and this <br /> has led him to the conclusion that there is always more that can be done. <br /> Mr. Persin asked that the Council postpone making a decision to provide time for each member <br /> to visit the applicant and appellant homes and form their own opinions, which is critical to make <br /> a fair and representative position. They asked to make a decision based on creating <br /> compromise which may involve redrafting of plans for a smaller second story addition, combined <br /> with a partial first story addition or other revision. He acknowledges this is not what the <br /> applicants want, but they similarly do not want any second story addition at all and asked for an <br /> actual compromise and not simply cosmetic fixes. <br /> Councilmember McGovern read requirements of the 1969 document, Condition #6 and <br /> questioned whether it was assumed that a review process by a Committee would be conducted. <br /> Mr. Dolan said yes, but it was considered in the context that the Committee does not exist. <br /> Councilmember McGovern suggested the need for a Commission or peer review process and a <br /> process to address disputes prior to projects going to the Planning Commission and Council. <br /> She also suggested staff provide colored renditions of elevations in the future. Mr. Dolan said <br /> there are no design guidelines specific to the neighborhood and staff utilizes the zoning code <br /> and to retroactively include an additional design process for one neighborhood could be <br /> problematic. <br /> Councilmember Sullivan cited the proposal as discretionary, believes approval has much to do <br /> with neighborhood compatibility, impacts to neighbors, appropriate relationship of building to <br /> adjoining areas, scale of buildings, consistency with neighborhood character and preservation of <br /> views enjoyed by residents and others. <br /> Councilmember Thorne referred to pages 4 to 8 on Attachment 3 and confirmed with Mr. Dolan <br /> that the applicant had provided this chart. <br /> Vice Mayor Cook- Kallio questioned the square footage of 6895 Heath Court and 4426 Bacon <br /> Court which look more balanced than some of the other two -story homes. Mr. Dolan said one of <br /> the second story additions is 1,030 square feet which is comparable to the proposal. He <br /> confirmed that 4229 Echo Court looks disproportionate at 734 square feet. Mr. Dolan also <br /> pointed out that second stories are not always designed by architects, and he was not sure <br /> whether the Lopez's plans were prepared by an architect or a designer. <br /> City Council Minutes Page 5 of 11 February 15, 2011 <br />