Wednesday, February 25, 2009


SEATTLE COMMUNITY COUNCIL FEDERATION
Regular Meeting
NOAA (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Agency), Pacific Marine Center on Lake Union
1801 Fairview Avenue East
http://seattlefederation.blogspot.com/
Thursday, February 26, 2009

AGENDA

Street Vacations – Understanding the Process and the
Public Benefit Requirement
featuring Beverly Barnett, Seattle Department of Transportation

Street vacation petitions are filed by private property owners and developers throughout the City. Some are minor; others involve significant transfers of public right-of-ways to private interests. Seattle’s policies require a long-term public benefit to the general public for approval of a vacation petition. How does the City interpret and apply the “public benefit requirement?” Is it sufficient that the community would benefit from the economic growth a shopping mall would bring? Should major institutions such as universities and hospitals be off the hook because they serve a public purpose? Learn about the City’s complex street vacation process, the many issues and how you can get involved from Beverly Barnett who plays a major role in the street vacation process in the City.

The February meeting will also include our monthly Round Robin of issues and projects in your neighborhood. It is your opportunity to brief our citywide membership about what you are working on and to share perceptions on what is going right and what isn’t with our city government.

If you have informational materials you would like distributed at the meeting, please email electronic copies or links to Jeannie Hale at jeannieh@serv.net.

7:00 Call to Order and Introductions
Administration
1. Changes to the agenda
2. Treasurer’s report
3. President’s report

7:15 Street Vacations – Understanding the Process and the Public Benefit Requirement: Beverly Barnett, SDOT

8:00 Round Robin

1. Open and Participatory Government Plan
2. New alliance opposing the Dearborn/Goodwill project
3. Funding for the Mercer Project—or Not
4. HB 1490—Futurewise or Unwise Future?—an Update
5. Other issues/projects

9:00 Adjourn

NOAA is a federal facility on high security alert, so attendees must enter by the security gate and may need to present photo ID. If you haven't attended a recent Federation meeting, please send your name, contact information, and address to rickbarrett@gmail.com to be added to the entry list. No e-mail? Call 206-365-1267. The building is ADA compliant, with ample parking in front.

Sunday, February 15, 2009

The latest version of the TOD bill hit the street Friday night, 02/18/09, and significantly waters down some density requirements (The Senate version of the bill is SB 5687.)
The new draft requires 50 units/acre only in areas previously defined by the Puget Sound Regional Council as “growth centers.” These centers are: Auburn, DT Bellevue, Overlake, Everett, Federal Way, Kent, Lakewood, Lynnwood, Puyallup, Redmond, Seatac, Capitol Hill, DT Seattle, Northgate, the University District, DT Tacoma, and Tukwila.

Get the 02/13/09 version of HB 1490 at http://seattletransitblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/02/h-19642.pdf

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

PROPOSED REVISIONS TO NOISE ORDINANCE

SEATTLE COMMUNITY COUNCIL FEDERATION

February 11, 2009



City Councilmembers
City Hall, 600 4th Avenue, 2nd floor
P.O. Box 94749
Seattle, Washington 98124-4749

RE: PROPOSED REVISIONS TO NOISE ORDINANCE

Dear City Councilmembers:

The Seattle Community Council Federation understands that the City Council may vote as early as February 17 on a historic weakening of Seattle’s noise ordinance. In addition to other points made below, we urge that the Council not create for public agencies a major construction variance that could last the lifetime of each project. This would be another example of government as regulator going easier on itself than on others. If any such variance is to be created, it must not have a term of more than one year.

We suggest that as currently proposed, the variance for major public construction projects would go back on this uniquely strong commitment that the City Council made in the noise ordinance (SMC 25.08.010): “It is the express intent of the City Council to control the level of noise in a manner which promotes commerce; the use, value and enjoyment of property; sleep and repose; and the quality of the environment.”

Public construction variance must not be for more than one year at a time. The proposal that public agencies receive a variance for up to the lifetime of a project would dramatically weaken the noise ordinance. Currently, most major public projects rely on noise variances that last no more than two weeks, and they are being built successfully under this process.

This current need to re-apply for variances is a self-correcting process. The City and the public identify improvements for future variances as mistakes emerge from earlier variances. As the City Council committee was informed by staff at the December 16 meeting, the City cannot legally change the basics of a variance after it is issued. If the Council were to allow DPD to issue a variance for the life of each project, loopholes later discovered in the variance could not be corrected without facing a lawsuit from the public construction agency that holds the variance.

Appeals—and the very potential of their being filed—are an important tool for the public to protect itself from undue DPD permissiveness with public construction agencies. But the Transportation Committee’s proposal would limit appeals to Seattle's Hearing Examiner only about the initial application for this “forever” variance, and would allow appeals to Superior Court only up to the decision--one year into the variance--when DPD makes the variance permanent for the life of the project.

We are not assured by the December 16 amendment language requiring that the new variance be only for the minimum period needed, by claims that DPD can change the variance in mid-stream, and by promises of other protections to be included in the Director’s Rule. These provisions leave great and inappropriate discretion to the Mayor and DPD that is more likely to be used to loosen the variance further than to strengthen it, and the Director’s Rule can be changed at any time. Later legislation attempting to strengthen the variance process could not legally apply to an existing variance, which would be governed by what the noise ordinance said at the time that the variance was issued.

With projects like the Alaska Way Viaduct replacement, SR-520, and the next phase of Sound Transit light rail, Seattle is about to experience the largest and noisiest construction in its history. This is not the time to weaken the noise ordinance, an important bulwark of livability and the public health. The proposed construction variance would lock in permissive treatment of night-time construction noise that Seattle residents and businesses would suffer from for a decade. Please don’t do it.

If the Council must create a public construction variance, it must be for no longer than one year, with each additional year by a separate application that can be appealed to the Hearing Examiner. Experience with a past year's variance would ensure the best decision on next year’s application, as would a yearly right of appeal to the Hearing Examiner.

Don’t repeal the current right to appeal temporary variances to the Hearing Examiner. Another serious weakening in the noise ordinance that the City Council’s Transportation Committee adopted on December 16 was to eliminate the current right to appeal any temporary noise variance to the Hearing Examiner. This change went far beyond transportation projects, as temporary variances can exempt an applicant from any part of the noise ordinance, such as provisions on nightlife noise. We are glad to hear that Councilmember Sally Clark, Vice Chair of the Transportation Committee, no longer supports this change, and we urge you to support her in keeping the noise ordinance’s current right to appeal temporary variances.

Don’t repeal the current requirement for due notice about public meetings regarding proposed variances. We also welcome that Councilmember Clark wishes to reverse the committee’s December 16 repeal of the current requirement for a “public meeting on due notice” for any proposed variance of more than two weeks. However, we urge that in doing so, the Council should not fail to restore the requirement that the meeting have “due notice,” and that “due notice” must be required not only of the public meeting, but of the deadline for written public comment.

Need for public outreach on this legislation. The City Council has not provided for the public outreach that must occur before a policy change of this magnitude is imposed on the public. DPD did absolutely no public outreach on these proposals before presenting them to the City Council on April 16. It is not enough for the Council to blame the executive; the Council must either send the proposal back for a true process, or conduct that process itself, and has done neither. With an issue like this which affects people’s health and their ability to live in the city, it is essential for the City Council to ensure widespread public notice, discussion, and the opportunity to comment. There should be a series of public meetings, and notice of the proposal should be sent to those who have commented to DPD in the past on noise from major public construction projects.

Land Use Information Bulletin must not be used to curtail Council and public debate. It was a disservice to public debate that the December 25 and January 26 issuances in the Land Use Information Bulletin did not list as a possible Council action the limitation of the proposed public construction variance to a one-year term. Its omission has caused the Councilmembers not to receive thorough analysis of this reasonable measure, and the noise ordinance amendments should be postponed until its omission from the Land Use Information Bulletin is corrected. In any case, the Council should recognize that listing of this proposal in the Land Use Information Bulletin is not required prior to its adoption. Such listing is mandated only by the state’s Growth Management Act, and only for development regulations, which as defined by the GMA do not include the noise ordinance.

Thank you for considering the views of the Seattle Community Council Federation.

Sincerely,

Jeannie Hale, President
3425 West Laurelhurst Drive NE
Seattle, Washington 98105
206-525-5135 / fax 206-525-9631
jeannieh@serv.net

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

THE RAINIER VALLEY POST: Will you be impacted by TOD? Check our maps

THE RAINIER VALLEY POST: Will you be impacted by TOD? Check our maps

As Light Rail expands northward similar TODs will appear in north Seattle Neighborhoods. Meanwhile FutureWise is hoping to push HB 1490 and SB 5687 through the legislature this week, before most Seattle citizens have even heard of these two bills, which completely remove local control of zoning and mandate a minimum of 50 dwelling units per acre.
Each bill contains an identical New Section 9, added to chapter 36. 70A RCW that mandates "...all comprehensive plans and development regulations adopted under this chapter must authorize transit oriented development within one-half mile of a major transit station. The allowed net density for these transit oriented development areas must be fifty dwelling units per acre."

Go to http://apps.leg.wa.gov/DistrictFinder/Default.aspx to contact your legislators to tell them to defeat these social engineering bills. Do this today, tomorrow may be too late.

THE RAINIER VALLEY POST: Is RV already zoned for density required by TOD bill?

THE RAINIER VALLEY POST: Is RV already zoned for density required by TOD bill?

See this post for the zoning maps. Areas within the circles would require 50 housing units per acre, many times the present density.