ON THE AGENDA Here are some of...
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ON THE AGENDA
Here are some of the items the commission will consider Monday:
NEW FLOODPLAIN MANAGEMENT RULES
The commission will consider an ordinance that would change a
portion of the city’s code to conform with the Federal Emergency
Management Agency.
The agency requires that local cities participating in the
National Flood Insurance Program adopt updates to floodplain
management regulations, flood insurance study and flood insurance
rate maps.
In 2002, FEMA updated the Flood Insurance Rate Map that identifies
special flood hazard areas in the city and prepared a preliminary
Flood Insurance Study. The study provides updated flood profiles and
the boundaries and water surface elevations of the base floodplain.
It also develops flood risk data for various areas of the city that
will be used to establish flood insurance rates. FEMA will finalize
these documents in February.
Changing the code will ensure the city’s continued eligibility in
the National Flood Insurance Program.
WHAT TO EXPECT
Planning staff members recommend the commission pass the changes
along to the City Council for a first reading of the ordinance.
APPEAL OF
EXPANSION DENIAL
The commission will hear an appeal from Doyle Forth, representing
property owners Tim and Liz Kuhlmann.
The Kuhlmanns want to expand the second floor of their house at
3379 Fuchsia St. On Oct. 30, zoning administrator Perry Valantine
denied the expansion. Mayor Gary Monahan appealed that decision to
allow the commission to review the project in accordance with the new
residential design guidelines.
Valantine denied the project because it does not meet two criteria
of the new guidelines, which became effective Oct. 2. Those criteria
are a 10-foot second-story side setback and a
second-floor-to-first-floor ratio of 80%.
WHAT TO EXPECT
Planning staff members recommend upholding the denial of the
expansion because two of the guidelines will not be met and because
the proposal includes a long, unbroken building facade that creates a
negative visual effect from the next-door property and the street.
“It sounds like it’s just not in compliance with the guidelines
and the spirit of avoiding the big-box kind of thing,” commission
Chairman Bruce Garlich said.
PLANNING APPLICATION
The commission will consider a request from Tim Roberts,
representing the Lissoy Family Trust, which owns the properties at
168, 172 and 178 Merrill Place. The Lissoy family wants to build a
five-unit, two-story project with an exception to average individual
lot area requirements.
Each lot contains a single-family residence. The existing
residences would be demolished and the lots combined to construct the
five-unit project.
WHAT TO EXPECT
Planning staff members recommend rejecting the application because
they don’t believe there are any special circumstances that justify
the exception to average lot size. Also, the project doesn’t comply
with certain criteria of the new Residential Design Guidelines: the
average side setback of 10 feet and the requirement that the second
story provides visual relief to the side yard through things such as
roof plane brakes.
“Even if the proposed layout of the five units was modified to
make them more or less equal in size, it doesn’t look like they could
meet the 3,500 square foot average and still put in the driveway to
access the rear units,” Garlich said.
ST. JOACHIM PLANNING APPLICATION
Kluger Architects, representing the Roman Catholic Bishop of
Orange for St. Joachim Church at 1943 and 1964 Orange Ave., will
request permission to renovate.
The bishop proposes to renovate a convent to include living
quarters for priests and associates upstairs with community service
and meeting facilities downstairs. The bishop is also requesting a
permit to allow use of off-site church parking by people attending
meetings across the street on the convent site.
In November 1962, the City Council approved the construction and
operation of a residence for teachers at 1943 Orange Ave. Within the
past 10 years, the church has begun using some of the downstairs
rooms for church meetings. The bishop wants to modify the building to
better accommodate the meetings by converting the dining room, living
room, chapel and two of the parlors to community rooms and the third
parlor to an office. The rest of the first floor will be modified to
incorporate restrooms for the meeting participants and a kitchen and
dining room for the three priests and associates that will live in
the three bedroom suites upstairs.
WHAT TO EXPECT
Staff members recommend approving the application because the
church has been holding meetings in the convent for about 10 years
with no complaints from neighbors. Also, the church proposes adding
five parking spaces behind the convent. More parking would be
available across Orange Avenue.
“The city is asking if someone crosses the street and tries to sue
the city that [the city] be held harmless,” Garlich said. “The church
is trying to do this selectively. So the church, when I last talked
to them, they were in agreement with the spirit of the condition.
They’re just trying to work out some language that they felt was a
little too broad.”
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