HomeMy WebLinkAboutCity Council Meeting - Council Workshop - Minutes - 02/18/2003 COUNCIL WORKSHOP MINUTES
. FEBRUARY 18, 2003
COUNCIL MEMBERS PRESENT: Tim Clark, Connie Epperly, Leona Orr, Julie Peterson, Bruce
White, Rico Yingling
STAFF PRESENT: Mike Martin,Dena Laurent, May Miller, John Hodgson,Tom Brubaker, Fred
Satterstrom, Don Wickstrom, Charlene Anderson, Len Olive, Cyndi Wilbur, Jackie Bicknell
PUBLIC PRESENT: Randy Forsyth, Gary Young, Eric LaBrie, J. B. Ruth, Geri Waller,Denise
Stiffarm
The workshop was called to order at 5:00 P.M. by Leona Orr, filling in for Council President Judy
Woods.
State Legislative Update
Chief Administrative Officer Mike Martin handed out the Week 5 of the Legislative Session report.
He said the Mayor had testified concerning the Sales Tax Streamlining bill and that staff thinks they
are hearing the message but continue to be very conservative about what might happen in the future.
Staff is working on getting other impacted cities to work with Kent on the bill. Tax Increment
Financing is the bill that would provide a tax credit from the state to a city. It is trying to make some
sort of improvement in an area that would cause an increase in retail sales tax or property tax. Forty-
four states have a property tax (TIF) and we're trying to work it so this particular piece of legislation
. works on vacant and occupied land. The business industry, the tribes, and the Governor's office are
getting very interested and they all have different takes on it.
Out-of-State Electricity Purchases: Between $300,000-$800,000 annually is lost on this. The State
UTC allowed a rule change to allow Boeing and other industrial buyers to buy their electricity out of
state, thus avoiding the local utility tax. There are only a small number of jurisdictions that are really
affected by this. Transportation RTID (Regional Transportation Improvement District): They are
talking about a 3-5 cent gas tax, and a one half percent sales tax on new and used cars, if the voters
agree. Whether we would have certain bonding authority to bond for big projects is being clarified
by one of the bills. Another bill would provide certain local optional gas tax authority.
Transportation-Street Utility and CTR. This is a bill that would give legislation to assist cities with
local road M & O needs via the authority to establish street utilities. We are very interested because
it's definitely another tool for us that has been accepted by the community in other jurisdictions. If it
passes, it's just another possible way of keeping our road infrastructure where it should be.
Municipal Court: King County is shedding as much of their district court services as they can. They
believe it costs them as much as $4 million to provide district court services to the cities. What we
want to do is say to cities who will be losing these courts, `If you want to contract with us, we're
going to do that at full cost recovery', which is something they don't do right now. With this bill
cities will have the ability to contract among each other, hear cases, and pay the contract fee to the
city hearing the cases. There are three other cities in this area that have talked to us about providing
court services. If the Aukeen Court Building comes available to us, potentially we could have some
• of those other cities help us pay for the overhead that we would need to retire debt on that building.
Julie Peterson asked Mr. Martin to encapsulate Judge McSeveney's opposition to the bill. Mike
Martin said that the Judge believes the route of consolidation among the cities somehow limits the
Council Workshop,2/18/03 2
• access of residents to the court system (or what he calls the access to justice). He also believes there
is a lack of accountability when judges from one jurisdiction are not elected from that jurisdiction.
They no longer reflect the views of the community that they are supposed to be overseeing in term of
thejudicial system. There are too many unelected municipal court judges. Cities contracting with
others would somehow cause people to have to drive to Seattle to get their court case heard. We are
at odds with Judge McSeveney on this one.
Senate Bill 5808: There was talk that something needed to be done about labor costs and how labor
costs are arbitrated. Currently, cities' ability to pay for a contract is not allowed to be taken into
consideration. This bill would allow that to be taken into consideration. Doug Levy feels that there
is zero chance for this passing. This bill would have attached the COLAs to an implicit price
deflator, which is another mechanism that is almost always lower than the COLA and more in line
with the way revenue is increased. Rico Yingling asked if that bill could be followed up and
information reported back.
Council Retreat Facilitator Recommendation
Mike Martin said that after conducting interviews with about 12 candidates, staff recommends hiring
Bonnie Berk of Berk and Associates as the new facilitator to assist with Council retreats. (He handed
out Ms. Berk's resume to the Councilmembers.) He said a retreat is being planned with Ms. Berk and
she will be meeting with city staff and Councilmembers to plan the agenda.
2002 Annual Coma Plan Amendments
Community Development Director Fred Satterstrom said that permits is the biggest part of
. Community Development. It is also responsible for the Planning side, the policy development, the
Comprehensive Planning under Growth Management Act, development of regulations, and the
conformance with the Growth Management Act. That is where the annual amendments to the
Comprehensive Plan come from. State law allows a city to entertain Comprehensive Plan
amendments no more than once a year. Historically, we have processed certain public ones at the
same time. The Capital Facilities element comes forward from the board under the GMA
amendments along with the Capital Facility Plans of the Federal Way and Kent School Districts.
Staff has a proposal for future consideration of these Capital Facility Plan amendments as opposed to
what has been done over the past several years.
Planning Manager Charlene Anderson gave a slide presentation showing the locations of the
proposed Comprehensive Plan Amendments and Rezone areas. She also talked about
Comprehensive Plan Land Use & Zoning District Map Amendment Standards of Review, the Land
Use and Planning Board recommendations, the Federal Way and Kent School District's Annual
Proposal of Chronolog, and the calculation of school impact fees. Fred Satterstrom added that
school impact fees in Kent are assessed at the time that a building permit is issued. For single family
or multiple family units, that fee per unit has been paid since 1996. It is a small part of what any
school district uses in order to fund its capital facilities. Councilmember Leona Orr stated that since
1993, $21,000,000 has been collected in impact fees. The school district has used that money to
build two junior highs, one high school, and six elementary schools. If the money had not been
collected through the impact fees, then the taxpayers, as a whole, would have picked up the tab for
the $21,000,000. They came as part of the Growth Management Act.
•
Council Workshop, 2/18/03 3
• Ms. Anderson went over the City of Kent Finance Department Annual Proposal. Mr. Satterstrom
said that, if possible, in the future, fiscal matters which do not have to be reviewed by the Board
would be reviewed by the Council only.
Councilmember Rico Yingling recommended that the Land Use and Planning Board should not look
at school impact fees. Mr. Satterstrom said that if Council passed a motion saying that those fiscal
matters shall be handled by the City Council through the budgetary process,then staff would work
with the Finance Department to make sure that the public hearing on the budget was also a public
hearing on the Capital Facilities Plan under GMA. The existing ordinance would be changed. Leona
Orr suggested bringing that to the Planning Committee to get Council concurrence.
Ms. Orr asked if the Council was comfortable taking the amendments directly to Council, and the
consensus was to take it to Council. She said that if Councilmembers had additional questions or
needed more explanation, they could get in touch with Fred, Charlene, or other staff that had worked
on the amendments. It was decided to bring it to Council in two weeks.
The workshop adjourned at 6:08 PM.
•
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220 4`h Ave. South,Kent, 98032
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