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HomeMy WebLinkAboutCity Council Meeting - Council - Minutes - 08/07/1990 i Kent, Washington August 7, 1990 In the absence of Mayor Kelleher, the regular meeting of the Kent City Council was called to order at 7 : 00 p.m. by Mayor Pro Tem Woods. Present: Councilmembers Dowell, Johnson, Mann, Orr and White, Assistant City Administrator Hansen, Acting City Attorney Williamson, Planning Director Harris, Public Works Director Wick- strom, Fire Chief Angelo, Police Chief Frederiksen, Information Services Director Spang, Personnel Director Olson, Finance Director McCarthy and City Clerk Jensen. Councilmember Houser has been excused from this meeting. City Administrator Chow and Parks Director Wilson were on vacation. Approximately 25 people were at the meeting. PUBLIC (PUBLIC COMMUNICATIONS - ITEM 1A) COMMUNICA- Employee of the Month. Mayor Pro Tem Woods TIONS announced that Grace Rieg of the Word Processing Department has been selected as the Employee of the Month for August. She pointed out that Grace is praised by the staff at City Hall for her out- standing motivation and dedication to her job. Information Services Director Ron Spang stated that she is an excellent employee, and that the detective unit has come to rely upon her to produce endless masses of typing for their investigations. Ms. Rieg will receive an Employee-of-the-Month plaque. (PUBLIC COMMUNICATIONS - ITEM 1B) Marie Jensen Week. Mayor Pro Tem Woods read a proclamation declaring August 5-11, 1990 as Marie Jensen Week in the City of Kent. She noted that Ms. Jensen has served as the City Clerk of Kent for twenty-five years and has been a knowledge- able, dedicated, dependable and caring employee for all those twenty-five years. Ms. Jensen was presented with the proclamation and a plaque. CONSENT MANN MOVED that Consent Calendar Items A through N CALENDAR be approved. Orr seconded and the motion carried. MINUTES (CONSENT CALENDAR - ITEM 3A) Approval of Minutes. APPROVAL of the minutes of the regular Council meeting of July 17 , 1990. HEALTH AND (CONSENT CALENDAR - ITEM 3H) SANITATION Goodwin Short Plat. ACCEPTANCE of the bill of sale and warranty agreement submitted by Randall 1 I August 7 , 1990 HEALTH AND S. Goodwin for continuous operation and main- SANITATION tenance of approximately 180 lineal feet of water- line improvements; 445 lineal feet of sanitary improvements; 334 lineal feet of storm sewer improvement, and 745 lineal feet of street improvements constructed in the vicinity of 98th Avenue South & S.E. 248th Street for the Goodwin Short Plat and release of the cash bond after expiration of the one year maintenance period. (CONSENT CALENDAR - ITEM 3I) Homecourt Hotel. ACCEPTANCE of the bill of sale and warranty agreement submitted by Young Development Company for continuous operation and maintenance of 2 , 339 lineal feet of waterline im- provements; 1558 . 4 lineal feet of sanitary sewer improvements; and 480 lineal feet of street im- provements constructed in the vicinity of S. 212th Street and 64th Avenue South for the Homecourt Hotel project and release of the cash bond after expiration of the one year maintenance period. STREETS (CONSENT CALENDAR - ITEM 3G) LID 335 - Improvement of 77th Ave. S. AUTHORIZA- TION to set September 18 , 1990 as the date for a public hearing on confirmation of final assess- ment roll for LID 335. (CONSENT CALENDAR - ITEM 3J) LID 330. APPROVAL to prepay the City Shops assessment on LID 330 in the amount of $12 , 733 . 41 as discussed with the Operations Committee at their July 24 meeting. The City feels it would be appropriate to prepay this assessment prior to de- termining the final bond sale amount, thus saving future interest costs and administrative costs. Expenditures to prepay this assessment are included in amounts set aside for annual LID pay- ments each year for LIDS budgeted for completion during the year but not used. TRAFFIC (CONSENT CALENDAR - ITEM 3L) CONTROL Speed Limit Change - West Valley Highway. ADOPTION of Ordinance 2934 changing the speed limits from 50 to 35 mph on West Valley Highway between S . 180th and 212th during construction. 2 August 7, 1990 TRAFFIC (BIDS - ITEM 5A) CONTROL Signal Modification - 84th and S. 208th. Bid opening was held on July 17 , 1990. Two bids were received, both of which exceeded the Engineering estimate and available funding. Staff recommends that these bids be rejected, the specifications revised, and the bid re-advertised. WHITE SO MOVED. Mann seconded and the motion carried. (BIDS - ITEM 5B) Signal Modification - SR 516 and SR 167 . Bid opening was held on August 2 , 1990. The only bid received was from Signal Electric, Inc. , in the amount of $66, 472 and staff recommends that it be accepted. WHITE SO MOVED. Mann seconded. Motion carried. (BIDS - ITEM 5C) Rubber Rail Crossing Material. Bid opening was held August 7 for the purchase of material neces- sary to rubberize the railroad crossings on James Street, Titus Street and S. 228th Street. One bid was received from Riedel OMNI Rubber Products in the amount of $37 , 751. 81. Staff recommends ac- ceptance of the bid. WHITE MOVED that the bid be accepted. Johnson seconded and the motion carried. REZONE (CONSENT CALENDAR - ITEM 3M) Kent East Corporate Park Rezone. ADOPTION of Ordinance 2935 approving RZ-90-4 , rezoning a por- tion of 43 acres from GWC to M-2 for Trammell Crow Co. This was approved by the Council on July 17 , with the condition as recommended by the Hearing Examiner. REZONE & (OTHER BUSINESS - ITEM 4C) REZONE (PUBLIC HEARING - ITEM 2B) APPEAL Willis St. Restaurant & Motel Rezone No. RZ-90-3 . This meeting will consider the Hearing Examiner' s recommendation of conditional approval as of a request by John Anderson and Associates, PS, Inc. to rezone a 2 . 9 acre site from M2 , Limited Industrial, to M1C, Industrial Park Commercial suffix. The property is located on the south- east corner of W. Willis St. and 74th Ave. S. The Hearing Examiner has recommended that the 3 i i August 7, 1990 REZONE & rezone be approved with five conditions. The REZONE applicant, through his attorney, Nadine Zackrisson i APPEAL has appealed Conditions #4 and #5 . j Carol Proud of the Planning Department described the rezone, and noted that the Department agreed with the applicant and also recommended that Con- ditions #4 and #5 be modified. The public hearing on the appeal was declared open and Ms. Zackrisson noted that the Planning Depart- ment' s review of Condition #4 determined that greater design flexibility would provide opportu- nity for design solutions which may serve to both protect the trail and improve on-site development. She asked, therefore, that #4 be modified as follows: A landscape strip of at least 10 feet j in depth along with a berm of at least three feet in height, or a design alter- native acceptable to the Planning Depart- ment shall be provided along the eastern perimeter of the site to help establish a visual and aural buffer between users of the adjacent Interurban Trail. Ms. Zackrisson further noted that the City' s interest would be protected while allowing the applicant to work out design alternatives with City staff if Condition #5 were modified as follows: I The drainage channel, and the associated vegetation and wetland areas, shall be left in its existing state and shall not be disturbed unless modifications are approved and supervised by the Planning Department and Public Works. There were no further comments and the hearing was closed. JOHNSON MOVED to grant the appeal and to approve the Hearing Examiner' s recommendation for RZ-90-3 with five conditions, modifying #4 and #5, as noted above and to direct the City Attorney to prepare the necessary ordinance. White seconded and the motion carried. I 4 I I I i August 7, 1990 ANNEXATION (PUBLIC HEARINGS - ITEM 2A) ZONING Mortenson Annexation Zoning._ This public hearing is the second of two hearings to consider the Hearing Examiner's recommendation for initial zon- ing of R1-20, Single Family Residential (20, 000 of size square uare feet minimum 1 ) for the Mortenson Annexation No. AZ-88-2 . The property is approxi- mately nine (9) acres in size and is located in the vicinity of 98th Ave. S . and S. 218 th St. Mayor Pro Tem Woods declared the public hearing open. There were no comments from the audience and MANN MOVED to close the public hearing. Orr seconded and the motion carried. JOHNSON MOVED to approve the Hearing Examiner's recommendation for initial zoning of R1-20 for the Mo rtenson Annexa- tion and to authorize the City Attorney to prepare the necessary ordinance. White seconded and the it motion carried. FINAL PLAT (OTHER BUSINESS - ITEM 4B) Hemlock Acres No. 17 Final Plat. This meeting will consider the final plat map for the Hemlock ! Acres No. 17 final plat No. SU-88-3 . The property is approximately 4 . 15 acres in size and is located on the north side of S.E. 240th St. , approximately 500 feet west of 116th Ave. S .E. There were no comments from the audience and JOHNSON MOVED for the approval of Hemlock Acres No. 17 Final Plat No. SU-88-3 . Mann seconded and the motion carried. i SENIOR (OTHER BUSINESS - ITEM 4D) HOUSING Senior Housing Advisory Committee Final Recommen- dations Phase I. The final recommendations of the Senior Housing Advisory Committee have been for- warded for Council action. The Phase 1 recom- mendations relate to ownership, management and development of the 92 units of Senior Housing authorized by voters in February 1990. The Planning Committee reviewed these recommendations at their July 17 meeting and approved them with a change to Action Item One: Ownership and Manage- ment. Janet Shull of the Planning Department noted that this was a three phase program: I 5 II i August 7, 1990 SENIOR 1. Policy development HOUSING 2 . Site selection and design development 3 . Construction The entire 20 page report of the Senior Housing Advisory Committee' s final recommendations was distributed with the agenda packet and has been made a part of the record. Ms. Shull noted the name of members of the committee and expressed appreciation to the many others who had helped with this project, both before the election to pass the bond and since then, to study the program. Tracy Faust spoke on the subject of ownership and management of the senior housing, noting that the committee recommends that ownership and management be turned over to King County. She explained that the City could not own and operate such a program; that it must be done by a housing authority. It is recommended therefore: Action Item One• Ownership and Management (as amended) The Mayor or Mayor Pro Tem is directed to negoti- ate with the King County Housing Authority a Housing Cooperation Agreement consistent with the final recommendations of the Senior Housing Advisory Committee for the purposes of owning and managing the Kent Senior Housing, with the final cooperation agreement to be approved by City Council ordinance. The Housing Cooperation Agreement must contain the provisions outlined in Chapter Four of this report, and any additional provisions which are deemed necessary by the City' s Legal Department. Action Item Two: Development The City of Kent is to develop the senior housing utilizing a design/build/turnkey method which re- quires a single RFP for the purposes of selecting the senior housing site(s) , building(s) and de- sign-development teams (s) . This Action Item would be conducted as outlined in Chapter Three and the Appendix of the report. 6 August 7, 1990 SENIOR Action Item Three: Construction Process HOUSING The City of Kent Administration is to retain pro- fessional services for the purposes of overseeing the construction of the senior housing. This Action Item would pertain to Phase Three of the senior housing program. Action Item Four• Support Services. The City of Kent will ensure that the Kent Senior Housing consist of independent living units with the capacity to provide support services for some of the units. This Action Item must be further developed in Phase Two of the Senior Housing program by the Advisory Committee and staff and must address the concerns outlined in Chapter Three of the report. Steve Delmore, Chairman of the Committee, address- ed Action Items Two, Three and Four, giving the rationale for each, as shown in the printed report. Upon questions from the Council, the fol- lowing was determined: any negotiations with King County Housing Authority would require approval by the Council, that property for the project would be removed from the tax rolls, that Kent citizens would be given priority and that the project would be self-supporting. White noted that we should set a goal to have Kent citizens as 90% of the tenants since Kent taxpayers would be footing the bill. ORR MOVED to approve the final recommen- dations of the Senior Housing Advisory Committee shown as Action Items One through Four on page 20 of the report, noting that Item One has been modified. (The change is shown in these minutes) . Mann seconded and the motion carried. COUNCIL (CONSENT CALENDAR - ITEM 3C) Excused Absence for Councilmembers. APPROVAL to excuse the absence of Councilmember Christi Houser from the August 7, Council meeting and to excuse absences for Councilmember Judy Woods for the August 21 and September 4 Council meetings. Both Councilmembers will be out of town on those dates. 7 August 7 , 1990 LEGISLATIVE (OTHER BUSINESS - ADDED ITEM 4F) DISTRICTS Legislative District. Councilmember White dis- tributed copies of .a resolution calling for Kent to be placed in a single legislative district. He noted that this issue has been discussed in the past, and is advocated by the Chamber of Commerce. He pointed out that Kent is presently within four State legislative districts, three King County Council districts, and two Congressional dis- tricts. HE MOVED for adoption of Resolution 1254 to so provide and Dowell seconded. White asked that the Mayor send copies of the resolution to each State legislator and the Governor, along with a cover letter emphasizing that it is frustrating not being a large enough part of any district to have an impact. The motion carried. PERSONNEL (CONSENT CALENDAR - ITEM 3D) Reclassifications. APPROVAL to implement the reclassification recommendation findings of Bill Ewing & Associates, effective September 1, 1990 as recommended by the Operations Committee. The findings identified 72 positions currently working out of their present position classifications. The cost to adjust the present internal salary inequities within the City, effective September 1, 1990 through the end of the year would be $44 , 982 . (OTHER BUSINESS - ITEM 4A) Salary Survey. The Personnel Department is pro- viding salary survey results, identification of fiscal impact and recommendations for the imple- mentation of the salary survey conducted by Bill Ewing and Associates. i Don Olson, Personnel Director, noted that City compensation levals had been compared to munici- palities within a 40 mile radius and he pointed out the benchmark classifications used. Olson noted that the results showed that the present level of compensation was not competitive in the following divisions: Engineering, Code Enforce- ment, Legal, Planning and Parks. He also recom- mended that because of the costs involved, any changes become effective January 1, 1991. He noted for White that the median figure in the salary survey would be the maximum figure in Kent's pay range. He noted for Dowell that some 8 August 7 , 1990 PERSONNEL positions are presently overpaid, but that there is no implementation plan on them. Becky Fowler of the Personnel Department clarified for Orr that in order to ease the financial burden, implementa- tion of the salary survey can take place over a two year span, half the first year and half the following year. Hansen noted that this item has not been considered by the Operations Committee and Olson suggested that they review it. White agreed and asked that the Personnel Director look into the possibility of freezing the salaries of the positions which are currently overpaid. POLICE (CONSENT CALENDAR - ITEM 3N) Enhanced Penalties for Drug Activities. ADOPTION of Resolution 1253 including a map of school boundaries and bus routes as approved by the Public Safety Committee on June 4, 1990. The map will allow implementation of enhanced penalties for unlawful drug activities in those areas. PARKS (CONSENT CALENDAR - ITEM 3E) Russell Road Picnic Shelter. AUTHORIZATION to accept as complete the Russell Road Picnic Shelter CORRECTED • REFER TD p p r ^ project, and to release retainage to Golf Land- UTES OF scaping upon receipt of state release as recom- mended by the Parks Committee. (CONSENT CALENDAR - ITEM 3F) j Resource Center Kitchen Remodel. AUTHORIZATION to transfer $3 , 217 .80 from the unexpended Kent- Kherson Peace Park project funds to cover an overage in the Resource Center Kitchen Remodel project. (CONSENT CALENDAR - ITEM 3K) Lake Fenwick. AUTHORIZATION to expend $260 . 00 from King County Bond Issue proceeds to cover recording fees and administrative costs for the purchase of Tax Lots 44 and 215 at Lake Fenwick. (OTHER BUSINESS - ITEM 4E) Glass Works - East Hill Fire Station. The Council is requested to review and approve the jury' s selection of dichroic cast glass artwork by Paul Marioni and Ann Troutner for the Headquarters Fire Station. 9 i August 7 , 1990 PARKS The artists were selected by the jury in an open competition for the project. Liz Carpenter of the Cultural Arts Department, showed drawings of the artwork and distributed a sample of the material. She noted for White that this project is funded by the 2% City Art Fund. MANN MOVED that the artwork by Mr. Marioni and Ms. Troutner be approved. White seconded. The motion carried. FINANCE (CONSENT CALENDAR - ITEM 3B) Approval of Bills. APPROVAL of payment of the bills received through August 3 , 1990 after auditing by the Operations Committee at its meeting at 2 : 00 p.m. on August 14, 1990. Approval of checks issued for vouchers: Date Check Numbers Amount 7/16 - 7/30 94316 - 94336 $ 114 , 808 . 01 7/31/90 94338 - 94989 1,393 932-37 - - 14,.74rw3 1 .1 :. ^ 'I w. r k. .w. ,. Approval of checks issued for payroll• .. \'� Date Check Numbers Amount 7/20/90 138639 - 139430 $ 836, 308 .40 (REPORTS - ITEM 7G) 1991 Budget. Finance Director McCarthy distrib- uted copies of the proposed expenditures section 1991 for the 1991 budget, noting that a meeting has BUDGET been scheduled for Council to set priorities on Thursday, August 9 at the Senior Center from 7 :45 a.m. to 3 : 00 p.m. McCarthy recapped the probable amounts which would be available in the various funds and proposals for new sources of revenues. With information gained at the meeting, staff will prepare material for later presentation at Council meetings. White stated that the Council regularly adopts plans such as the Fire Master Plan, Six Year Transportation Improvement Plan, etc. and limited funds are available. He stated that he would like 10 August 7 , 1990 FINANCE to see a balanced budget presented to Council based upon goals set by Council and plans already 1991 adopted. Council would then recognize that in BUDGET order to add something to the budget, something else must be removed. Professional staff should be able to set priorities, he stated and the role of the Council was to set policy and not to function as administrators. McCarthy stated that there was never enough money to fund all programs. It was confirmed that these concerns have been discussed before and Hansen suggested that this be discussed at the end of the budget process in December, for action in the future. It was con- firmed for Dowell, that the Council would be asked to prioritize items for each department. Mann stated that it should be shown that the Council Target Issues adopted in January are for the following years budget. It was agreed that the process could not now be changed for the 1991 budget. At Dowell ' s request for an approximate bottom line figure, McCarthy stated it would be $1. 6 million for operating needs or $700, 000 if the Council wants to put $900, 000 into the contingency fund. The figure for capital needs would be another million dollars. Hansen noted that staff was open to suggestions as to how to refine the process. REPORTS (REPORTS - ITEM 7A) Council President. Woods reminded the Council- members of the Suburban Cities meeting this week, and the budget meeting to be held at the Senior Center on Thursday, August 9. Woods commented on the new carpet, upholstery and arrangement of furniture in the Council Chambers and expressed appreciation to Charlie Lindsey, Purchasing Agent, who was in charge of this project. (REPORTS - ITEM 7F) Parks Committee. Dowell noted that the Parks Committee will meet at 4 : 00 p.m. on Wednesday, 11 August 7, 1990 REPORTS August 15. This was later changed to Tuesday, August 21 from 5: 30 to 6: 00 A.m. , in the City Hall Courtroom. ADJOURNMENT The meeting was adjourned at 8: 45 p.m. A - -I Marie en en, CMC City C k 12