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Commissioner Brown asked if the Planning Commission agreed with the City Council's <br /> recommendation or the Task Force's recommendation which is there should be no PUD <br /> requirement for all residential in the downtown. <br /> Chair Allen said she thought there was a hybrid staff proposed. <br /> Ms. Clark confirmed the suggested policy language was on page 6 of 15 of the agenda report. <br /> Chair Allen said the City Council agreed with the initial recommendation in April that a PUD be <br /> required just specifically for residential projects that were behind commercial in the designated <br /> areas. They agreed that a PUD was warranted there. They did not ask staff to take that further. <br /> It was after the last Task Force that staff added the idea of a PUD for any residential, including <br /> the remodel because of the sensitivity of the public to residential. <br /> She said the hybrid asks to step back and look at whether there are certain occasions where a <br /> PUD makes sense. One is to just do it only with what the City Council originally agreed to <br /> which is new ground floor residential behind commercial. This is an option they have to say <br /> yes or no to. It does not mean they go any further. Another option is requiring a PUD given <br /> Barone's has been a concern of some of the public, requiring a PUD for certain residential <br /> projects if they are of a certain scale that could be risky. <br /> Commissioner Ritter noted this will be a PUD because it is outside of the normal guidelines <br /> and standards for that lot. <br /> Chair Allen stated she did not believe it was. <br /> Mr. Beaudin stated that this site is zoned Downtown Commercial. If commercial remained at <br /> front and residential in rear, then it would warrant a similar process to the Spring Street project. <br /> If there was a large site in the downtown, they would hold a workshop. It would not necessarily <br /> be a PUD but would warrant that consultation. <br /> Commissioner Brown said when looking at the Task Force recommendation or the City Council <br /> recommendation regarding Barone's, the Task Force recommendation was to incorporate a <br /> residential overlay which does not mean it was approved for rezoning. The City Council's <br /> recommendation was to incorporate a map annotation to note potential for future mixed-use <br /> subject to approval of a PUD rezoning for that. So, a PUD is required regardless of whether <br /> the Planning Commission went with a February 26 Task Force recommendation or the City <br /> Council recommendation. <br /> Chair Allen said this is not correct because the annotation that Councilmember Kathy Narum <br /> provided was only specific to zoning if they came in with a PUD for mixed use zoning. Then in <br /> fact, they would require a PUD. But Barone's could come in with a commercial zoning request <br /> just because that is their existing zoning. They could come in and as long as they had the <br /> square footage of the restaurant, they could come in with a valid request to put residential <br /> behind it up to 26 or 28 units. <br /> Mr. Beaudin said he was not sure of the unit count but the possibility of putting residential <br /> behind commercial does exist. <br /> Planning Commission Minutes Page 17 of 27 June 26, 2019 <br /> <br /> (CEQA) process. <br /> Planning Commission Minutes Page 16 of 27 June 26, 2019 <br /> asked by <br /> Planning Commission Minutes Page 13 of 27 June 26, 2019 <br />d disappointment with what was being presented, stating the PDA Vitality <br /> Committee began meeting and red-lining the 2002 DSP in 2013. They provided it to staff in <br /> 2014 and have been awaiting this process. She said although there have been wins, there <br /> Planning Commission Minutes Page 6 of 27 June 26, 2019 <br />