HomeMy WebLinkAboutRA Minutes 2000-05-01SRRA MINUTES (Regular) 5/1/2000 Page 1
IN THE COUNCIL CHAMBER OF THE CITY OF SAN RAFAEL, MONDAY, MAY 1, 2000 AT 7:30 PM
Regular Meeting: Present: Albert J. Boro, Chairman
San Rafael Redevelopment Agency: Barbara Heller, Vice -Chair
Cyr N. Miller, Member
Gary 0. Phillips, Member
Absent: Paul M. Cohen, Member
Also Present: Kenneth Nordhoff, Assistant Executive Director
Gus Guinan, Assistant Agency Attorney
Jeanne M. Leoncini, Agency Secretary
ORAL COMMUNICATIONS OF AN URGENCY NATURE:
None
CONSENT CALENDAR:
7:50 PM
Member Phillips moved and Member Heller seconded, to approve the following Consent
Calendar items:
AGENCY CONSIDERATION:
3. RESOLUTION AUTHORIZING A PROFESSIONAL SERVICES CONTRACT WITH WATRY DESIGN GROUP TO
CONDUCT A COLLABORATIVE DESIGN PROCESS. AND GENERATE A SCHEMATIC DESIGN AND A
PRELIMINARY RENDERING FOR THE NEW THIRD AND "C" STREETS PARKING GARAGE (RA)
File R-429 x (SRCC) 12-14
Senior Planner Katie Korzun recalled that at the meeting of April 3rd, the Agency
Members directed staff to proceed with the development of a new parking structure,
and to do so in an expeditious manner, indicating this was a very high priority for
the Agency. In considering how to move this high priority project forward, staff
determined they could perhaps do parallel tracking of some of the items that must be
done, rather than sequential processing. She explained the items they would like to
work in parallel at this time are the work being done on the Alternatives Analysis,
the Parking Management Study, and discussions concerning the purchase of the
property; in addition, staff would like to add the issue of design. Ms. Korzun
noted it could take several weeks to find the designer, and to put together a
process; therefore, staff would like to do that now, while these other items remain
in order.
SRRA MINUTES (Regular) 5/1/2000 Page 1
ITEM
RECOMMENDED ACTION
1. Approval
of Minutes of Regular
Meetings of Monday,
Approved as submitted.
April 3,
2000 and Monday, April
17, 2000 (AS)
2. Monthly
Investment Report (MS)
- File R-123
Accepted Monthly Investment
Report for month ending March,
2000, as presented.
AYES:
MEMBERS: Heller,
Miller, Phillips &
Chairman Boro
NOES:
MEMBERS: None
ABSENT:
MEMBERS: Cohen
AGENCY CONSIDERATION:
3. RESOLUTION AUTHORIZING A PROFESSIONAL SERVICES CONTRACT WITH WATRY DESIGN GROUP TO
CONDUCT A COLLABORATIVE DESIGN PROCESS. AND GENERATE A SCHEMATIC DESIGN AND A
PRELIMINARY RENDERING FOR THE NEW THIRD AND "C" STREETS PARKING GARAGE (RA)
File R-429 x (SRCC) 12-14
Senior Planner Katie Korzun recalled that at the meeting of April 3rd, the Agency
Members directed staff to proceed with the development of a new parking structure,
and to do so in an expeditious manner, indicating this was a very high priority for
the Agency. In considering how to move this high priority project forward, staff
determined they could perhaps do parallel tracking of some of the items that must be
done, rather than sequential processing. She explained the items they would like to
work in parallel at this time are the work being done on the Alternatives Analysis,
the Parking Management Study, and discussions concerning the purchase of the
property; in addition, staff would like to add the issue of design. Ms. Korzun
noted it could take several weeks to find the designer, and to put together a
process; therefore, staff would like to do that now, while these other items remain
in order.
SRRA MINUTES (Regular) 5/1/2000 Page 1
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Ms. Korzun stated that in trying to decide who the Agency should hire to work on the
preliminary design, staff agreed there were several things they needed to look at.
First, they wanted someone who specialized in parking structures; someone who would
be able to respond to a high priority/short timeline project; and someone who could
solicit and deal with public input. Ms. Korzun stated staff was very aware that
while this is a fast -tracked project, it is also high priority, which means a lot of
public input; therefore, staff wanted someone with expertise in that area. Finally,
staff wanted someone familiar with San Rafael.
Ms. Korzun stated staff believed they had found someone with all those elements,
the Watry Design Group. She noted staff had been working with the Watry Design
Group to come up with an alternative analysis, and has now gone back and asked for
the additional alternatives the Agency Members requested. She pointed out the
Agency also has a history with the Watry Design Group, as years ago they worked on
some of the existing parking structures. More recently, the Watry Design Group did
the design for the Fair, Isaac parking structures, and while that was not an Agency
project, it was a local project.
Ms. Korzun stated the biggest reason staff was attracted to the Watry Design Group
was the fact that they insist on starting with public input, noting they do not like
designing a public structure without public input. She stated they have a process
they have developed and used many times before called a Collaborative Design
Workshop, which staff felt very directly met the Agency's needs. Ms. Korzun
explained the Collaborative Workshop would bring together all the stakeholders, and
the Watry Design Group invited the Agency to determine who the stakeholders are.
They quickly educate the stakeholders as to the constraints of the site, and then
engage them in a process of working out what their priority issues are with the
parking structure. Watry would then take the issues that come out of the public
workshop, come before the Agency with the results, and the Agency Members prioritize
and add anything they might want. From those Critical Issues, and after a major
amount of discussion with staff, Watry would develop a schematic plan, schematic
elevations, and a cost estimate, and based on what the Agency Members have asked for
and what the community has asked for, return again to the Agency and make a
schematic design presentation showing how big it would be, what it might cost, and
what it might look like. At that point, the Agency Members could send the schematic
design to any of the other Boards and Commissions. Then, once the Agency gives
approval to move forward with the schematic design, the Watry Design Group would
then do a computer rendering, which would drop the schematic design elevation into
an actual photo representation of the street, and they would be able to come back to
the Agency and show, in general terms, what it would look like on the street. Ms.
Korzun noted this would give the Agency a very clear idea of what the Agency might
be getting, and it could also be used in the environmental analysis,
Ms. Korzun stated staff was attracted to this proposal because it not only brought
in the public, it also was very structured, and it would be brought back before the
Agency for review at each of the steps, so the process would not go forward without
the Agency Members being involved and brought in at each step. Ms. Korzun stated at
that point, after the Agency received the rendering, that portion of the contract
would be finished; then, if the Agency wanted to go forward with the structure, or
with Watry, the Agency would enter into a new contract. She reiterated this was not
an ongoing thing, it was only a contract for the schematic design, which would come
from a public process, and then a computer rendering.
Ms. Korzun noted staff believed the Watry Design Group was the firm to go with, and
explained what would be involved in the collaborative process. She stated staff
would notify everyone they could think of, including everyone within 300 feet,
everyone with a business license, all the property owners, BID, and homeowner
associations. In addition, she reported Watry had informed staff it was very
important to have buy -in and education by the decision -makers, so they would like to
have two Agency Members and two members of the Design Review Board attend the
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workshop, and members of the Planning Commission, as well, if there is going to be
any kind of Planning Commission review. Ms. Korzun stated that if the Agency is
going forward, she would like the Agency Members to consider a date, which was to
have been May 24th, but it turned out that is also the first meeting of the General
Plan 2000 Committee. She suggested that possibly they could meet on May 25th, and
asked the Agency Members to consider who might attend, and to authorize staff to
send invitations to both the Planning Commission and the Design Review Board.
Member Miller stated he liked the process; however, he felt this was being pushed
too fast, and did not allow the opportunity to develop the interest and
understanding of the public in the entire concept of the parking issue, which the
Agency was now working through. He stated he would rather see this particular issue
couched in the broader issue. He acknowledged this would be a great opportunity for
the Agency in terms of positive public relations, explaining such things as why the
Agency needs the additional parking, what is happening, and why the Agency is going
with a parking structure. Then, when the Management Plan is completed, staff would
be able to draw up several different strategies to bring people forward, and provide
the context in which the design process would fit in beautifully.
Member Phillips stated most of the people who have discussed the issue of parking
with him, and whom he suspects reflect the greater majority, already recognize the
Agency has a serious issue, and would like to move forward rather quickly,
rationally, and with public input, as Ms. Korzun has suggested, and which he
believed was a good approach. Mr. Phillips stated he would be in favor of moving
more quickly.
Member Heller stated she agreed with Member Phillips. She felt a group meeting
would be called for, noting it would not preclude the Agency from having further
community meetings, or meetings with the BID or the Chamber of Commerce. She
stated, from what she has heard, the community would like to see the Agency begin to
move faster, because people are beginning to complain about the lack of parking at
lunch time. Ms. Heller noted there was a conflict with the meeting date of May
24th, but she believed the end of May or first part of June would be a good time to
start.
Chairman Boro acknowledged there was a problem; however, he noted the Agency has
been waiting a long time for the Parking Management Study to come forward, and
believed that was very important for a number of reasons. First, it would change
the whole approach to parking, from the impact it will have on consumers, to the
cost. He noted that when the Agency begins to discuss a garage such as this, and
move forward to the issue of design, one of the first questions is going to be how
much is it going to cost, and how the Agency is going to pay for it. He expected
the Parking Management Plan would address issues that have not been discussed before
in San Rafael, with respect to cost, how to run the lots, and how to man them, and
he believed there were implications. He stated he would like to have something more
definitive with regard to what the Agency would actually see from the Parking
Management Study, noting that could be the introduction. He stated everyone knows
the Agency needs parking, and everyone voted to pursue this site; therefore, there
was no reason staff could not talk with the property owners. However, he also
believed that if they were to have a public process, they should first go with the
acknowledgement that everyone knows there is a problem, which has led to the Parking
Management Study which, in turn, has shown the Parking District is not run very
efficiently, indicating it might have to be managed differently, perhaps even going
to the private sector to manage it for the Agency. Chairman Boro noted there would
be cost implications to the users of the structures, and there will be questions
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regarding how the Agency is going to finance a new garage, and whether that might be
done through fees or bonds. Chairman Boro believed the Agency needed to have a
little better understanding before just having everyone sit down and design a
garage. He stated he was against doing this, and asked if there was some way staff
could return to the Agency?
Economic Development Director Nancy Mackle noted Ms. Korzun's idea of dual tracking
would address that. She explained the Parking Management Study would bring up a lot
of issues that were not going to be resolved by that one simple document, noting it
was going to take discussion between management and the Agency, as well as with the
community. She reiterated it would be a starting point, and the Agency would have
to take a long, hard look at some of the recommendations made in the Management
Study, explaining it would not clearly lay -out exactly what needed to be done. She
reported staff currently has a draft of the Parking Management Study, and would be
reviewing it and re -writing a portion of it. Next month the study would probably be
reviewed by the Department Directors, and then staff would prepare it to come before
the Agency Members for their input. She pointed out that even after that, it might
still require additional refinement and further investigation, depending upon the
implications addressed in the report.
Referring to the actual parking structure, Ms. Mackle stated there was a certain
level of the project that needed to be designed, regardless of such issues as
whether there will be attendants, or the type of payment system. She noted the
basics could be designed, including such issues as how much of the site was going to
be used, how big it will be, and how to work with the neighboring properties. She
reiterated this would only be the starting point, not the final design, and there
would be more community input as these two processes dovetail, noting that by
summer, they would have the Parking Management Plan and the reaction to it, as well
as some of the initial design. She pointed out staff would not completely design
the structure, and all the financing issues would first have to be worked out so
Assistant Executive Director Nordhoff could raise the money to build it. Therefore,
she reiterated it would all start coming together in the summer, and staff would not
hold one phase until they were finished with the other.
Chairman Boro stated it was not a matter of holding one until the other was
finished; rather, it seemed staff had been working on one for so long that he felt
the Agency should begin to look at that first before beginning another phase. He
believed that if staff held a design workshop within the next three or four weeks,
then everyone was going to ask when the garage was being built; however, at that
stage, the Agency would not even know how it was going to finance it. He noted the
last time the Agency had discussed parking in the downtown, he had been the one who
suggested they not do things in a sequential manner, rather do some of them in
tandem; therefore, he was not opposed to that. However, he felt there were certain
things happening that really should be out there before the public, before the
Agency states it is going to build a new garage. He acknowledged the Agency was at
the point where it knows it needs the parking; however, it did not seem quite
logical to design a garage and then have to wait many, many months, pointing out
staff had not yet negotiated the sale of the property, which could take as much as
two years. Therefore, he stated it did not seem logical for the Agency to jump into
the design of something before some of these other questions are answered.
Ms. Korzun stated she would like to do the workshop, find out what those who
currently park think about it, and then before going into the schematics, clarify
more of the management issues.
Chairman Boro noted the staff report heading to this subject stated the Agency would
generate a schematic design, which to him meant that for this contract, and for this
period, the Watry Design Group was going to come up with one; however, Ms. Korzun
had also stated she was going to ask the users what they want. He noted it would
make sense for the Agency to first get reaction to the plan and find out what the
SRRA MINUTES (Regular) 5/1/2000 Page 4
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needs are, and then do a design; however, it sounded as though the Agency would be
doing the design at the same time staff was talking to people about what their needs
are. Ms. Korzun explained staff would be asking people what they would like to see
in the new parking structure, and how they believed it should work, pointing out
that at the workshop they would only be listing Critical Issues, not doing the
design, and the people at the workshop would be providing staff with input that
would be incorporated into the schematic design.
Assistant Executive Director Nordhoff stated staff hoped the workshop would either
compliment or contrast issues they were already working on with the Parking
Management Study; however, that was something they would have to hear from the
community's input, and get a sense of what is important to them. He believed the
workshop would give staff another level of information that will help in finalizing
and refining the Parking Management Study with regard to policy issues and direction
that might be important to the Agency Members concerning the various types of
parking customers who come to the downtown. Chairman Boro noted that was not what
the staff report had indicated, stating it had been his impression, in reading the
report, that staff would hold the workshop, and come up with the schematic design.
He noted staff had not blended the two together in the report.
Ms. Korzun pointed out the last sentence on the first page stated, "The workshop
results are compiled in a Critical Issues Report which is presented to the Agency
for review and acceptance". She explained the Agency Members would then add what
they wanted to that, and direct staff to go forward. She stated she should have
noted that prior to the Agency Members going forward with the schematic plans, there
would be additional information from the Parking Management Study. She stated that
could be dovetailed in, explaining they would do the workshop, and then stop until
the Agency Members direct them to go forward with the next step, which would be the
schematics. Ms. Korzun reiterated the outcome of the workshop would not be the
design, it would be a list of the Critical Issues.
Chairman Boro stated the reason he was so interested in getting the public involved
in the Parking Management Study was because everyone knows one of the big issues
that is going to be addressed is the cost of parking in San Rafael, noting it is
going to be significantly different than it is today. Therefore, he believed the
Agency needed to cross that bridge early and let people know that, rather than after
getting into the new structure. Mr. Nordhoff stated staff could take some elements
of the Parking Management Study that are already in place or already known, such as
certain issues dealing with cost, operations, and types of equipment, and put that
together as part of the public meeting, to let the public know that as this goes
forward, those will be the types of issues the Agency will be dealing with. He
noted they could discuss the type of use that will go in, the type of equipment to
be used, the security levels that must be put into place, and then also point out
that there will be a different rate structure and cost of service. Mr. Nordhoff
stated that while staff does not necessarily have the answers to all those types of
questions, that information would at least be out there, and people's awareness
would be that this would be something different, that it would not be a building
such as the Agency has had before, and the Agency would not be charging what it had
been charging, rather it would be something much different than what they have been
accustomed to. Mr. Nordhoff stated staff would really like to be able to get the
public's input.
Ms. Mackle also pointed out that it would be coming back to the Agency before staff
went out to bid, and staff was proposing doing this in several steps; therefore,
there would be multiple opportunities for the Agency to discuss it. She stated the
actual cost would be laid out before going to bid, noting the Agency would have to
review the revenue stream in order to raise the bonds, or whatever other financing
scheme the Agency might come up with.
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Member Phillips felt that rather than two separate and distinct issues, they were
very much related. One thing he liked about proceeding at this point, and perhaps
having them converge, was that when staff does hold the public meeting, they would
not be presenting just another study of an issue about which people already knew
there was a problem. It went a step beyond that, by acknowledging the Agency has
recognized there is a problem, has analyzed it in order to make reasonable
decisions, and furthermore, is showing the steps the Agency has already begun taking
to alleviate the concerns and problems facing the downtown. Mr. Phillips believed
they went hand in hand, and that it would be a more distinct step if the Agency were
able to state there was already a group coming in that would actually address the
concerns, not just talk about it.
Member Miller stated he still believed this needed a sequence, noting it took time
to build the relationships and for people to understand it. In addition, it took
time for the Agency to be able to really contact and get into the community, so it
did not look like the decisions had already been made. Mr. Miller stated Ms.
Korzun's explanation of going for the Critical Issues rather than the design made a
lot of sense; however, he still felt more time was needed. He stated that once a
public process is started, the Agency cannot just wait for people to come to the
Agency, staff had to have time to go back to the community. He stated that would be
his argument, in terms of doing it now, so staff would have time to go back to the
community, show them the Critical Issues that had been developed, and then discuss
the design.
Member Heller asked what kind of timeline there would be, noting Chairman Boro and
Member Miller were considering waiting until the Parking Management Plan is
completed, which she believed was to be presented in July? Mr. Nordhoff reported he
hoped to be able to present the Study no later than 45 days from now, or July 1st.
Ms. Heller asked if Chairman Boro and Member Miller wanted to wait and begin the
process at the same time? She stated she was not convinced the Agency needed to
wait, noting staff would like to have the workshop, and then begin to take the
information they get and move it forward. She also pointed out she did not see the
public process as stopping with just one workshop.
Chairman Boro noted he had not interpreted the staff report the same way the issue
was now being portrayed by staff, and stated he would feel more comfortable if staff
would return before the Agency, presenting a timeline for this effort and for the
Parking Management Study, informing the Agency what was going to happen over the
next six months, where the two intersect, and how they are going to compliment each
other. He believed they could still do it quickly if staff came back in two weeks.
Member Phillips stated he was willing to get on with it, noting he felt the Agency
Members were micro -managing the process, and should turn it over to staff and let
them continue. He stated staff had heard all of the comments by the Agency Members,
and he felt confident they would integrate those comments into their process. He
acknowledged the Agency did a lot of public input, and agreed that was very good;
however, in this instance they were talking about a garage, and he would be in favor
of moving more quickly.
Ms. Mackle stated staff was planning to return at the Agency meeting of May 15th to
present the site analysis, and seek direction on such issues as whether they should
go underground, and whether they should include the corner retail properties.
Therefore, staff could add the timeline Chairman Boro requested, showing how it
would all come together. She also noted that staff could postpone the workshop.
Chairman Boro noted staff was now planning to schedule the workshop the first part
of June; therefore, it would only need to be postponed approximately ten days. Ms.
Mackle stated that prior to noticing a meeting, she wanted to make certain, at the
meeting of May 15th, that staff was doing what the Agency Members wanted.
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Chairman Boro stated he felt the Agency Members were still split on this issue;
therefore, he suggested the issue be carried over for two weeks, to the Agency
meeting of May 15th, with the understanding that it would be coming back for action,
and with some of the specifics that had been discussed tonight. He acknowledged it
might not address all of Member Miller's concerns, but would at least present a
sequence. Member Miller stated he agreed with Member Phillips's statement that the
Agency had to get on with this, noting he did not expect it to go on for three or
four months. However, he believed a quick two-week breather would give staff a
chance to get things a little more together, certainly with respect to the public
outreach program, how staff was going to get the people there, and how things were
going to meld.
4. AGENCY MEMBER REPORTS:
a. RE: DOWNTOWN FARMERS' MARKET - File R-181
Economic Development Director Nancy Mackle announced the Annual Downtown
Farmers' Market would begin this week, and invited everyone to attend on
Thursday night.
There being no further business to come before the Redevelopment Agency, the meeting was
adjourned at 8:22 PM.
A
JEAN til'. LEONCINI, Agency Secretary
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