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KENT
ECONOMIC & COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT COMMITTEE MINUTES
February 10, 2014
Committee Members Committee Chair Bill Boyce, Dennis Higgins, and Jim Berrios. Boyce
called the meeting to order at 5:00 pm.
1. Approval of Minutes
Higgins Moved and Berrios Seconded a Motion to approve the Minutes of December
9, 2013. Motion PASSED 3-0.
2. Amend KCC Section 15.07.060 Zoning Code Landscape Requirements
Assistant City Attorney David Galazin that this amendment corrects Kent City Code Section
15.070.060 by adding in certain landscape provisions erroneously excluded from Ordinance
No. 4074 adopted by Kent City Council on February 19, 2013. These landscaping
requirements were discussed before the Land Use and Planning Board (LUPB) at their
October 8 and November 26, 2012 workshops and at the January 14 and 28, 2013 public
hearings, with the LUPB recommending approval of the proposed amendments as
presented, including the landscape provisions inadvertently left out.
Berrios Moved and Higgins Seconded a Motion to recommend adoption of the
ordinance amending Section 15.07.060 of the Kent City Code to correct an error in
Ordinance 4074. Motion PASSED 3-0.
3. Right Size Parking
Planning Manager Charlene Anderson encouraged people to go to King County's website
(rig htsizeparking.org) or to email Daniel Rowe, the Right Size Parking Project Manager to
avail themselves of the research, analysis and practical tools from the right size parking
project. Through the project, King County approved a proposal from the City of Kent for a
pilot project to consider right sizing parking as higher density residential is introduced to
the urban core. This pilot project implements one of the policies recently adopted under
the Downtown Subarea Action Plan (DSAP). Kent deliverables under the pilot project
include an inventory of parking in a portion of downtown, recommendations for
management strategies and recommendations for code amendments. Anderson introduced
Rick Williams with Rick Williams Consulting who presented findings and issues regarding
parking management strategies for the pilot project area. Williams explained that parking
needs to be managed in order to get the right people into the right place so that the
parking system is used efficiently. He stated that parking is an expensive resource and it is
a limited on-street resource. Customers want to be able to know where and how to use
parking. Managing parking reduces customer angst and improves their downtown
experience. Studies show that assuming an average sale of $25, a single parking stall can
generate $52,000 annually in retail sales.
On-street parking findings in Kent indicate that 66 percent of on-street parking is
unregulated with no limits. 46 percent of on-street parking is unstriped. During the peak
hour of parking in the project area, approximately 65% of on-street parking is occupied,
although there are some blocks/block faces that are occupied at 85 percent. Findings
showed that the typical parking duration in the 2-hour parking zones was 1 hour and 51
minutes. Williams added that removal of 'no-limit' stalls would improve turnover rate in
the retail area. Williams mentioned parking violation rates are higher than ticketing would
show. He added that 1 in 10 vehicles were moving between parking stalls in the two-hour
limit stalls. Williams stated the findings indicated off-street parking is under-utilized,
acknowledging the transit parking facility is ful and the Justice Center has a very workable
agreement to use the ShoWare lot for their overflow parking needs. Williams recommends
development of a parking plan, providing consistency and structure in the parking system,
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and using enforcement as appropriate. Dedicated or shared arrangements for employee
parking could free up parking in the more main-street areas.
Informational Only
4. Washington FIRST Robotics
Economic Development Manager Kurt Hanson introduced Erin McCallum, Executive Director
of Washington FIRST Robotics (WFR). Ms. McCallum stated that WFR was established in
2002, recently establishing their headquarters in Kent. This program works to ensure
Washington State students develop skills necessary to succeed in the workforce. Programs
are offered for kindergarten through high school where robot building competitions are held
across the state. McCallum stated that there are 897 teams. Competitions are held
September through April with over 300,000 volunteer hours put in from people with
experience in fabrication and engineering. WFR is looking at using local centers and schools
to hold competitions in and would like to partner with Kent to help spread the word to
engage local businesses. Hanson stated that they would try to time an event where Kent's
local TV Channel 21 could produce a segment on their program.
Informational Only
S. Economic & Community Development (ECD) 2014 Work Program
Economic Development Director Ben Wolters stated that review and adoption of the city-
wide Draft Economic Development Strategy (EDS) will be completed soon with more
discussions to be held in a workshop environment. Staff anticipates taking the EDS to City
Council initially in April.
With respect to aerospace recruitment and retention, Kent recently signed a contract for
$15,000 (under our existing budget) with the Economic Development Council (EDC) of
Seattle and King County (KC) for their own aerospace initiative. The King County Aerospace
Alliance (KCAA), an initiative County Executive Dale Constantine began, has been rolled
over to the EDC to administer. The KCAA hired a staff person to lead that effort and
through Kent's investment, staff intend to partner with EDC in their efforts to expand,
deepen and recruit new companies to the aerospace cluster in KC. Kent has the second
largest concentration of aerospace companies in KC at 50, just behind Seattle with 70
companies.
Wolters reported that SMG's contract terminates at the end of this year. There will be a
discussion with City Council on how best to proceed. Kent's first Branding Meetings will be
held February 241h and 25th. Kent's presence in the media market is through Showare and
we want to build on that to sell the City and to do a better job of telling a story. Kent
Downtown Partnership (KDP) is providing staff support and is collaborating with the city to
promote branding Kent. Wolters stated that staff's role with the East Hill Revitalization
Program is to foster growth and build capacity. The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA)
headquarters competition may start before spring 2014. A consultant is undertaking the
primary work on the Brownfield Inventory/EPA Grant. C.A.M.P.S. is in a stage of transition
from growth to stabilization.
Wolters stated that the City may pursue a potential sale of Par 3 to help fund the overall
golf enterprise. The ultimate decision lies with the City Council and Mayor. Staff will keep
the Committee updated.
The City is considering purchasing the remaining Naden remnant properties to create a
whole parcel for either public purposes or for potential sale of the property at some point in
the future. The City bought property near Clark Lake 15 years ago, and is evaluating its
highest and best use for part of the future operations for the City.
Planning Director Fred Satterstrom stated that the Comprehensive Plan Update is targeted
for completion by mid-year 2015 and will include preparing the vision & scope, completing
a buildable lands analysis, amending development regulations, completing environmental
analysis, and holding public outreach meetings. Satterstrom spoke about the Meeker Street
Revitalization Initiative and associated Impact Fees. He stated that the first LUPB workshop
discussion about the Downtown Design Guidelines was held on February 10, 2014.
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Wolters stated that there is a multi-departmental effort underway on a Downtown
Homeless Strategy involving Kent's Police, Human Services and the Parks Departments.
Once a strategy evolves, this item will go to a City Council Workshop.
Satterstrom spoke about the City/Downtown Gateways effort. A gateways recommendation
is included in the DSAP (approved and adopted November 2013) and will probably be
included as part of the Economic Development Strategy Plan. The Downtown Subarea was
recently expanded and will gain approval from the GMC in conjunction with the City's
update of the Comprehensive Plan. Satterstrom defined what a local improvement district
would look like and what it would include.
Wolters stated that three major permitting projects include Stryker-Boeing Surplus
property; Tarragon Phase III proposed development of urban style apartment buildings;
and the Grandview model project effort (located next to the Kent Highlands) currently
going through design review.
Satterstrom spoke about the coordinated effort to participate in a Regional Industrial Lands
Study to look at how much industrial land exists and what the outcome of that might be.
Wolters reported on the SR-516/Naden access area and previous efforts to bring lighting to
that area as it is a major thoroughfare with its access to SR-167. Staff is making progress
in their effort to obtain funding for the 2241h Bike connection that runs by REI and is
working with State lobbyist Doug Levy who is laying the groundwork to help the retention
efforts that will give employees transportation alternatives. Wolters reported that Code
Enforcement has been given car computers to help streamline their workload. Strategies
are being considered to address repeat code issues.
Satterstrom stated that staff may propose some amendments to the SEPA rules related to
categorical exemptions. Policies and regulations need to reflect current community values.
Any proposed amendments will be brought to Committee for consideration. The Residential
Design Standards were modified in 2007/2008. Master Builders are working with staff to
continue to evaluate those standards for feasibility.
Wolters spoke about KIVA update efforts, and that Sound Transit Planning will be a
standard topic of discussion for the year. Satterstrom identified the hours and the continual
process improvements coming out of the LEAN process, a culmination of 5-6 years of effort.
The Committee will continue to be kept informed as staff monitors workload.
Informational Only
6. Sound Transit Federal Way Link Light Rail Extension Planning
Planning Manager Charlene Anderson stated that the Sound Transit Board will identify a
preferred alternative route by early 2015. Anderson spoke about how Bellevue devoted a
lot of resources to study link light rail, budgeting $400,000 for consultant and staff
resources. She described the five guiding principles from the Bellevue report: Connect
Somewhere to Somewhere; Light rail should complement, not diminish, the character and
quality of Bellevue; Anticipate impacts and advocate for effective mitigation; Alignment
profile should consider unique qualities of each part of the community; and Public
involvement should be early and ongoing. Anderson also spoke about nine (9) best
practices. Staff will update the Committee monthly to prepare the City Council and staff for
commenting on the Draft Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS) for the light rail
extension. The DEIS is expected to be issued in late 2014.
7. Economic Development Report Update
Hanson announced that the Economic Development Specialist will be taking a position with
the City of Seattle Human Resources Department and his efforts with the City of Kent will
be greatly missed.
Adiournment
Committee Member Boyce adjourned the meeting at 7:00 p.m.
Pamela Mottram, Secretary
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Economic & Community Development Committee
ECDC Minutese
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