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and incorporating key concepts from other planning efforts. She provided an overview of the two (2) <br /> year plus process to date which included 18 Task Force meetings and over 70 total public outreach <br /> opportunities and methods. She advised the public outreach input was completed in 2019 and reported <br /> back to the Task Force to provide policy direction in the DSP draft. <br /> Ms. Clark provided an overview of principal changes to the 2002 plan which included new "mixed-use" <br /> land use designations, a Town Square District concept, an active ground floor overlay and exception <br /> process, streetscape concepts, clarification on ground floor residential uses, update on existing <br /> conditions, consolidate/combining chapters of the DSP, and Improved readability and graphics. <br /> Senior Planner Shweta Bonn provided an overview of topics to which Council already provided <br /> direction that included modifying the Municipal Code to address massage establishment requirements <br /> citywide, notification to the Planning Commission when any exceptions are made to active ground Floor <br /> overlay by staff, prohibiting ground-floor residential uses on some streets, City Council approved <br /> property-owner initiated requests at 4212 First Street and 475/483 St. John Street, development <br /> standards for Downtown Commercial, Mixed use-Downtown, Mixed-use-Transitional and Residential <br /> districts and a right to do business ordinance. <br /> Senior Planner Bonn provided an overview of recommended approaches that staff would like Council to <br /> confirm which include establishing the Zoning Administrator as the approving body for outdoor dining, a <br /> policy implementation action to establish standards for story poles and visuals for downtown projects, to <br /> not provide a policy for where ground-floor residential uses may be constructed on corner-lots so that <br /> requests may be viewed on a case-by-case basis, establishing additional resident height with a <br /> Planned Unit Development (PUD), Draft DSP Policy LD-P.49 which requires improvements to existing <br /> buildings and landscaping when new residential in-fill is proposed, the establishment of a parking <br /> strategy working group to identify improvements to parking supply and management. <br /> Senior Planner Bonn presented the discussion topic on whether a PUD should be required for <br /> residential development and four options for consideration: Option 1. Maintain current approach: <br /> projects that meet development standards, Design Guidelines, and policies are subject to Design <br /> Review by the Planning Commission. Projects that seek to deviate from established standards are <br /> subject to the PUD process. This is the Planning Commission's recommendation. Option 2. Require <br /> PUD for projects that include new ground-floor residential units. This is Staff's recommendation. Option <br /> 2.b. Require PUD for projects that propose more than two new ground-floor residential units. Option 3. <br /> Require a PUD if residential does not already exist on the site. Option 4. Require a PUD of proposed <br /> residential with a redevelopment area of a certain size or a certain unit increase. Additional approvals <br /> requested included, General Plan Amendments; Municipal Code Amendments; Downtown Design <br /> Guidelines text and DSP boundary map amendments; and Downtown Hospitality Guidelines <br /> Senior Planner Bonn advised the Draft Environmental Impact Report (EIR) was made available on <br /> February 2019 and was open for public comment through mid-March. The City received seven letters. <br /> She advised a Final EIR (FEIR) is the master response which addresses changes to the DSP since the <br /> November 2018 DRAFT and advised that the findings and conclusions of the DEIR remain valid. <br /> Senior Planner Bonn provided an overview of staff recommendations which include a resolution <br /> certifying the FEIR for the DSP update, a resolution to rescind the 2002 DSP, introduction of an <br /> ordinance approving changes to the zoning designations for certain properties and introduction of an <br /> ordinance amending Chapter 17.24 (Transportation Systems Management) and Title 18 (Zoning) of the <br /> Municipal Code to implement the policies of the updated DSP. <br /> In response to Mayor Thorne's inquiry, Senior Planner Bonn clarified there are no four-story buildings in <br /> the DSP. <br /> City Council Minutes Page 4 of 11 August 20, 2019 <br />