Councilman Randy Corman
Highlands Task Force Asks For Community Input


WHAT:

Residents, businesses, and community groups are invited to attend a public input meeting on neighborhood revitalization in the Renton Highlands. This is an opportunity for you to express your thoughts about the Highlands community and share your ideas on what would make the Highlands a great place for residents and businesses. The Highlands Phase II Task Force wants to hear from you. Topics discussed at this meeting will be reviewed by the Task Force and included in their recommendation to the Renton City Council before the end of the year.



WHEN & WHERE: Thursday, February 28, 6-8 p.m.

Highlands Elementary School Cafeteria

2720 NE 7th Street, Renton


CONTACT:

Erika Conkling, Senior Planner 425-430-6578 or econkling@ci.renton.wa.us

Kris Sorensen, Planning Intern 425-430-6593 or ksorensen@ci.renton.wa.us
 
 
Councilman Randy Corman
We recently received email from Mayor Law, with the following note and the attached memo. The memo provides the results from spending an extra $150,000 (in overtime funding) in 2007 on neighborhood policing, something the council asked to include in the 2007 budget. The police, using this overtime money, delivered strong results from the extra patrols.

Here is Denis's note:

Dear Councilmembers,

As part of an effort to keep you informed on items you might be interested in knowing, or should be aware of in a timely fashion, I'll be sending out occasional e-mails if I have something to share. We'll talk a little about this tomorrow.

I do have an item that Chief Milosevich prepared for you (attached), which provides results of the traffic emphasis the council requested last year that was paid for with $150,000 in the police overtime budget. I'm impressed with the results and welcome your feedback. The Chief agrees that we should continue this effort. This is a classic example of responding to concerns by the public.

In terms of the Highlands effort, I also want to let you know that the Department has worked hard in the area to provide extra service in the sub-area, as requested by Council. The amount of crime occurring in this sub-area was actually much less than originally reported (incorrectly listed at 20% of the city's crime). A review of the actual stats from Jan. through Nov. of 2006 put the serious crime totals at between 4% to a high of 8% of certain crimes. While this is much lower than we thought, the Department is still placing an emphasis in the area.

Don't hesitate to call if you have any questions.
See you tomorrow.
Denis

Photobucket
 
 
Councilman Randy Corman
I agree with my collegue Marcie Palmer, and with Brett Kappenman and Terry Persson that we should open up the new Highlands Revitalization Committee to a larger group of applicants and make a broad effort to reach out for participants. Like Marcie, I want the next phase of Highlands work to be an inclusive effort, and I feel we have kept people on the sidelines who live near the Highlands but have not yet been included in the detail planning (other than speaking at public hearings). To make change in the highlands, we need a full court press, with everyone's help. This committee is going to provide the ideas and organizing work; their work is as much of a campaign as it is a technical committee. We simply do not want to shut people out who want to help.

Thanks,

Randy

Hello All-
As the 3rd member of the P&D Committee, I wanted to let you know that is was NOT my understanding that notice and applications would be mailed to everyone (property owners & renters?) in the Highlands. This second task force will be looking at issues involving the greater Highlands area, not just the previous Highlands "subarea" we worked on last year. Terri Briere was very clear in who would recieve the info, and if Terry Persson thought it should go to others beyond what she specifically stated, he should have spoken up at the meeting.

Mailing to such a large area would no doubt be expensive; however, I can see the reasoning behind doing so, since there has been such wide-spread interest in the Highlands & redevelopment for years. I also remember people expressing interest on serving on the first task force, and they were told they weren't eligible for that one because they didn't live in the "subarea" being addressed at that time, and would be considered for the next task force. I also don't think saying "people can go to the City website" for info is a good alternative to a mailing, since we know in this area there are many seniors and lower income folks who may not have access to or be comfortable with computers. Maybe an ad in the Renton Reporter would get the info out in a timely manner.

Thank you for letting us know of the situation and your concerns.

Marcie Palmer

Read the emails from Brett and Terry Person here )
Tags:
 
 
Councilman Randy Corman
29 November 2006 @ 12:00 pm




Democracy is the bludgeoning of the people, by the people, for the people. Oscar Wilde

Some land-use appeals generated a heated debate between private citizens at Monday's council meeting.

Those of you who have been reading my journal know that in late summer of 2006 I was concerned we were moving too hastily on the highlands land-use planning, with the risk of leaving some people and their concerns out of the process.

Thankfully, council finally convened a citizen task force in October, which worked long hours to deliver highlands recommendations to council on the very day they were needed for incorporation into the 2006 Comp plan amendments. This task force performed well, reaching unanimous task force agreement on rezoning, text amendments, and comprehensive plan changes for the highlands.

After so swiftly completing so much work affecting so many already-developed acres, it's not a huge surprise that we are now receiving a few appeals.

As these appeals make their way through the process, the important thing to remember is the appeals do not diminish the work that has been done. Appeals may do nothing, or they may lead to fine-tuning of the final product or supporting analysis, but they do not replace the hard work of the highland task force.

Furthermore, it's important not to get upset with the parties making the appeals. Appealing a decision is a right under our law, and it is not productive to combat citizens for exercising their rights.

Instead, we should celebrate the fact that we live in a democracy that guarantees due process to all citizens, whether or not they hold the majority opinion. There is an established legal process for working through land-use appeals, and we need to simply give this process time to work. Democracy is the best system around, but no one has said that it is the fastest.

And please let Oscar Wilde's funny quip remain only a quip...greet your fellow citizens with kindness, and let's say 'no' to bludgeoning ourselves while the process works things out.
 
 
Councilman Randy Corman
I received this note from Terry Persson today, along with similar notes from Inez Peterson and City Hall. This is great news. Our Neighborhood Program's split with Highland Community Assocication (HCA) was stressful all around....its sooo nice to see a reconciliation.



Randy for your information. The HCA is now Officially Recognized. Worked with Norma for about an hour this morning, and all is well.

Thanks for the help...

Terry Persson</a>

-------------- Forwarded Message: --------------
From: "Norma McQuiller" <nmcquiller@ci.renton.wa.us>
To: <tpersson@comcast.net>
Cc: <angelsandel@aol.com>, "Alexander Pietsch" <apietsch@ci.renton.wa.us>, "Suzanne Dale Estey" <sdaleestey@ci.renton.wa.us>
Subject: HCA Application
Date: Mon, 16 Oct 2006 18:40:50 +0000

Dear Terry,

Congratulations on the Renton Highlands Community Association becoming an Officially Recognized Neighborhood under the City of Renton Neighborhood Program.



Because HCA has met the eligibility requirements, based on your application and by-laws, you will have the opportunity to enjoy the many benefits of the program.



Per our conversation, it was reassuring to know that we have the same commitment for Renton: promoting a positive communication and building viable partnerships between the HCA and the City.



As an officially recognized organization HCA will receive a city liaison to work with your association, eligibility for funding for neighborhood grants and picnics and have contact information about your association on the City’s web site.



I look forward to working with you in the future to continue to make Renton a great place to live.



Sincerely,



Norma McQuiller
Neighborhood Program Manager
City of Renton
425-430-6595
Fax 425-430-7300
 
 
Councilman Randy Corman
We resolved several important issues last night. We successfully chartered the Highland Citizen Advisory committee with a good cross-section of representatives, which seemed to meet with satisfaction from most parties. In addition, we passed a motion requesting the Administration to confirm that HCA now meets the criteria to enter back into the city's neighborhood program. Considering HCA is one of Renton's oldest, largest, and most active community associations, I believe this renewed formal relationship will be a relief for citizens and city employees alike.

The Highland Citizen Advisory Committee had their first meeting this morning, so they are now off and running! I wish them all the best as they work toward developing the plan for rejuvenated Renton Highlands.

The best part is, the council took all of the above actions unanimously, which left spirits high all around. Thanks council! What a great night.
Tags:
 
 
Councilman Randy Corman
08 October 2006 @ 10:42 am

Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting





One of my favorite broadway musicals has always been Oliver the Lionel Bart adaptation of the Charles Dickens classic Oliver Twist. (My wife and I even made a point of seeing this show performed live in London a few years back.)

One of Bart's catchiest and most memorable musical numbers is Oom-Pah-Pah. Here are some of the lyrics and the chorus...

...If you've got the patience,
Your own imaginations
will tell you just exactly what you want to hear:

Oom-pah-pah! Oom-pah-pah!
That's how it goes,
Oom-pah-pah! Oom-pah-pah!
Ev'ryone knows...
They all suppose what they want to suppose
When they hear oom-pah-pah

I noticed my lovely wife singing this tune as she made coffee this morning, and the lyrics struck me as very relevant to our efforts to keep the highlands revitalization moving forward.

It seems to me that parties on all sides of our highland controversy, including both elected officials and citizens, are letting their imaginations tell them exactly what they want to hear about one another's agendas and motives. Heck, I'm even doing it too, and I have open lines of communication to both sides of this dipute.

I've recieved sooooo much email this weekend about the Highlands Advisory Committee that I know we will all have to make a special effort to make this committee a success. I have a few ideas, and I will try to implement them, but after that I need to ask everyone to pull together on this.

Membership:

There are seven councilmembers, and I think they hold seven different ideas about the perfect composition of this committee. As I stated publically at last week's Committee of the Whole, I would personally like to see us lean toward inclusiveness. However, there is another perspective that anytime you form a working committee too many members can bog down the committee's progress.

Having said this, for those of you in the community that would like to see more HCA representation, I believe I MIGHT be able to get council support for adding one more HCA member. If I do, it probably won't be unanymous and I will really have to push to get the votes. The HCA member who was next on P&D Committees list is Sandel, because of her long history of leadership in the highlands and her constant involvment in city meetings on this topic (including her presence at the P&D committee meeting where the advisory committee was being defined).

Taping of the Meetings:

This subject is a bit trickier than taping Council Meetings or Planning Commission Meetings, both of which I always advocate strongly for. Planning Commissioners, City Council Members, and the Mayor are all public servants with authority, and Open Public Meetings act supports complete openess of their actions. So government taping and distribution of the above meetings is the best way to go in my book.

Update on 10/11/06: Renton citizen Inez Peterson posed this question to the State Attorney General's office, and she recieved a response which clarifies that taping of this forum is permitted. Read part 1 of the official response here ...and part 2 here. This information is being forwarded around city hall.

To make any progress here, we will all have to try to ignore the usual music that begins whenever we talk about the highlands...:-)

Oom-pah-pah! Oom-pah-pah!
Ev'ryone knows...
They all suppose what they want to suppose
When they hear oom-pah-pah




Tags:
 
 
Councilman Randy Corman
04 October 2006 @ 09:49 pm
I've been asked why I seem to stubbornly and consistently advocate for Highland residents and Highland Community Association members in their issues with our city.


Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting

Here I am with HCA leaders installing the Highland gateway signs in 2003.



Here are a few reasons I continue to advocate for them...

(1) Renton residents, including HCA members, have elected me four times to represent them

(2) I recieve a salary to advocate for all the people who elected me

(3) I have always been an advocate for neighborhoods, and this one happens to be mine

(4) I have worked successfully with HCA for many years

(5) I often agree with HCA and other highlands residents' views on proposed zoning changes

I hope this clears things up!

Randy

P.S. This is not at all new. I'm in my fourth 4-year term. To get a better picture of my long history advocating for neighborhoods, please read this Seattle Times story from almost exactly ten years ago concerning the Winsper neighborhood (opposite end of town)...Read more... )
Tags:
 
 
Councilman Randy Corman
Some questions surfaced during our last council meeting (9/18/06) regarding Renton Highlands revitalization planning. The Planning Commission is reviewing zoning and text amendments that support Highlands revitalization, but we have not yet assembled the citizen advisory committee that is supposed to produce the vision for this area. A few citizens in attendance at Monday's meeting spoke to this concern. City staff's response was essentially that staff had considered the advisory committee an implementing committee which would work with the community to find ways to execute on the plan, but that the Planning Commission, Planning and Development Committee and Council would do the zoning and text planning. This explanation did not sit well with the citizen speakers, and considerable council debate ensued. I expressed my view that the advisory committee should complete it's vision for the area first, and then we should align the zoning with the proposed vision. I also stated that this did not have to hold up revitalization; council could simply lift the building moratorium immediately, and allow anyone wanting to build at ten units per acre or less to immediatly get started. Finally, Denis Law moved that the issue be placed in a Committee of the Whole meeting, which I strongly supported. This motion, and it's implications, was then hotly debated for a few minutes; but the motion passed.

Another issue raised by the above debate was the interrelationship and timing of the zoning, the Comprehensive Plan, and the zoning text amendments. Our city staff is working to have all three of the above documents updated by the end of this year...a noble goal, but increasingly unlikely given that the Highlands Advisory Committee has yet to be appointed. The zoning has not been the biggest issue. Sure, the zoning maps keep changing, which has been generating some confusion (and a bit of criticism), but there seems to be a general consensus that a reasonable up-zone in the Highlands study area would be okay so long as existing homes in good condition also remain conforming. Similarly, I have not seen the wide-spread challenge to those proposed comprehensive plan revisions that are not targeted at the Highlands study area. So the only area of great controversy, at least for now, seems to be the zoning text amendments that accompany the proposed highland zoning maps. Unfortunately, these text amendments have become so voluminous that they currently fill 93 pages, and essentially create some new zoning categories and requirements that have not been used or seen before. Considering the entire council has yet to be briefed on these amendments, and I (for one) will be looking for extensive public involvement and concurrence, it is looking extremely sporty to imagine these text amendments being ready for adoption in two to three months.

This is what I think we should do:

(1) Immediately lift the moratorium and allow builders to begin tearing down and replacing buildings in Renton Highlands under the current density limitations of 10 units per acre in the outskirts, and 20 units to the acre near Sunset.

(2) Jump-start the Highlands Advisory Committee, and include those citizens and businesses that have been outspoken on all sides of the issue as well as those that have been quietly watching and have something to add. Ask this committee to work to find their common ground (I know it exists), and then build a vision for a revitalized Highlands based on that common ground. Ask the committee to distill the vision into a narrative that the public and the council can understand (as opposed to cryptic zoning acronyms and ever-changing maps)...then get council and public buy-in.

(3) Ask staff and the Planning Commission to finalize zoning and text recommendations that support the vision established above.

(4) Council review and approves the final package.

Lifting the moritorium would infuse immediate life by getting low density reconstruction going again. Then, we could take the time to get the higher density Center Village planning right...so that all parties felt good about the process and the end result. I'm certain we can achieve revitilization faster this way than by fighting about it for another year ot three.
Tags:
 
 
Councilman Randy Corman
22 August 2006 @ 04:03 am
Another exciting council meeting tonight.

We got some good business done for the safety of school kids (young ones walking and older ones driving) reviewed an annexation petition, listened to a gentleman's concerns about increased business jet traffic at the airport, had a warm introduction from the new Renton School Superintendant, and then moved on to the Highlands audience comment.

Pretty quickly the emotions surrounding the Renton Highlands came to a boil again. It began when the Renton community activist that was recently brutilized in a home invasion crime expressed disappontment that she felt re-victimized by the mayor after discussing the need for more law enforcement in the area.

Then we listened to both Phil and Heidi Beckley, who together leveled numerous criticisms at multitudes of people. Mr. Beckley complained about an article by Inez Petersen in the Fairwood Flyer which was negative about Renton. While he was sharing this, I was thinking that I did not imagine what council might do about it, since Ms. Pettersen is a private citizen, the Fairwood Flyer is not our publication, and we have taken a position as a council of being neutral on Fairwood's incorporation even while there is strong citizen debate on the issue.

Then Heidi Beckley, a long-time friend of mine, approached the podium and criticized all members of the council for not staying the course on the plan the council was reviewing in April (when Lipstickgate first broke out--which she referred to as that ugly personal thing, or something like that). She felt that all of the council had been bullied into backing off of the Mayor's plan by a "few people." She specifically critisized me personally for attending the August 17 Highlands Community Association meeting (even though it was also attended by a State House Representative, two other city council members, our Public Works Director, our Police Chief, Our Community Services Director, Several other city staff, and about forty citizens from the Highlands...not a bad turnout for a warm August day.) Ms. Beckley expressed support for the way the mayor has effectively treated these constituants (they would say they have been shunned), and encouraged me to do the same. (Ms. Beckley mistakenly believes that HCA is the reason I am not in favor of blighting, community renewal act takings, and high density apartments in Renton Highlands.)

After Heidi's comments, I expressed my belief that she and I still had many common goals, particularly in cleaning up the Highlands business environment, but I clarified that I've held my views on not wanting massive new apartment constuction in the Highlands for many years. The same is true for my protection of private property rights, which dates back to the city's efforts to condemn my backyard for an apartment developer in 1989. I mentioned that making single family non-confoming and building apartments at densities up to 80 units per acre was not a way to get the neighborhood we both were looking for... and suddenly Dan Clawson jumped in and attacked me for "falsely" and "misleadingly" stating that we had ever considered looking at building up to 80 units per acre.

Huh? But here is the current proposed zoning map from the city website:

Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting




(To verify the source of the above map, click here, scroll down to the rezone section, and select 'proposed rezones:draft 2 (currently proposed)')

Everywhere the map says 80 DU/AC bonus, it stands for 80 dwelling units per acre if the developer includes low income units in the building. Between the dark gray (80 DU) and black areas (75 DU), the majority of the study area can be built with this type of density. Since Dan Clawson is a member of the Planning and Development Committee, he should know this map very well. In light of the fact that Mr. Clawson publically accused me of making false statments (again), and my statements prove honest and true (as they always do) by the above map, perhaps Mr. Clawson could explain to the public whether he was extremely confused tonight, whether he himself was trying to mislead, or whether he had some other motivation when he said that we never considered 80 unit per acre densities.

While you contemplate that, here is some info from a planning firm, the Lincoln Land Use Institute, on "visualizing densities." Click Here , but you have to open a free profile to get to the good stuff.

We don't want the "Little Boxes on the Hillside" look!
Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting


And below is what 70 units per acre looks like:
Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting

And below is what 37 units per acre looks like:

Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting

And below, right from the North Highlands study area, is what 10 units to the acre looks like:

Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting

Of all the pictures above, the one that would NOT BE ALLOWED in the study area UNDER THE MAYOR'S PROPOSAL is the one immediately above, with the single family homes. This is picture of four homes that replaced one 1940's era duplex on Harrington Circle. This is also the development that the market forces were giving us eighteen months ago when council slapped an onerous moritorium on this area, thus halting redevelopment. This is also the development pattern that the lawful owners of the property were building, that required no expensive or controversial blighting or community renewal actions, and did not involve tying up potentially tens of millions of taxpayer dollars in public/private partnerships that are subject to risk. These single family projects were refreshing, free to the taxpayers, and provided great opportunities for families to buy their first new home.

I hope that one day the mayor may let go of her bitterness toward me, HCA, and countless other highland residents, and let the council majority restore some sense to the Highlands plan. With all the personal attacks, and conspiricy theories I have to endure just because I don't want sixteen-hundred apartments replacing the homes near me, I'm going to have to start wearing hip-waders at city hall.

Do I want highland revitalization? Yes, probably more than anyone. With a wife and five kids living right on the boundary of the affected area, I would love some updating and some more shopping. Do I want high density apartments when I could see single family move in, no.

I remember about four years ago when the mayor (then a council member) waged a bitter, hostile fight to try to prevent 40 single family homes from being built on ten acres of properly-zoned vacant land in her neighborhood of Renton Hill. Ironically, four years later, she is using every means (and person) she can muster to convert already occupied low-density land in my neighborhood into sixteen hundred apartment units, at densities up to 80 units per acre...I doubt I'm the only one who percieves this as hypocritical.

Like I say, another exciting night!
 
 
Councilman Randy Corman


  

  


  


As a reminder, I am not in favor of making single family homes or well-kept duplexes into non-conforming uses in the Renton Highlands. I have been disagreeing with some city staff and some council members on this topic recently. We can provide greater zoning flexibility, such as allowing townhouses for instance, without making the single family homes and good duplexes non-conforming. The people that have been diligently upgrading their properties through the years, or building single family homes, deserve to be treated fairly in this regard. Making them non-confoming will not help them, and will not help the greater Renton Highlands.
 
 
Councilman Randy Corman
If you are having financial difficulty keeping your home fixed up, or you know of a neighbor that is having such difficulty, be sure to inquire about the program described in the flyer below. This program will make repairs free of charge under the circumstances described in the flyer, and it applies throughout the City of Renton.


  (CLICK ON THE FLYER TO ENLARGE)


I believe this housing assistance program may be an essential ingredient in upgrading older neighborhoods in Renton Highlands. But I think we may wish to supplement it with city spending on sidewalks and landscape (such as street trees). And it's been suggested that we may wish to implement low-interest or deferred payment loans that would allow lower-income residents to get assistance with new roofs, siding, windows, paint or landscape improvements. We have $1.5 million dollars set aside for Renton Highlands revitalization...should we use this money as loan capitol for this type of program? I would like to hear your thoughts....

Please leave your comments below. They will be posted immediately. If you are not signed into Livejournal, just check the anonymous box, but please go ahead and sign your name at the bottom of your comment, so I and others will know who is writing.
 
 
Councilman Randy Corman
17 July 2006 @ 11:20 pm
Great News! After 30 minutes of debate, the council approved my motion to formally remove eminent domain and Community Renewal Act from further consideration. The motion also included direction for the Mayor to devise a plan for enhanced enforcement of crime and code violations in the Renton highlands. Even though there was a fair amount of debate the motion passed unanimously! Yay!
 
 
Councilman Randy Corman
Dear world,

Tonight I'm going to make a motion that Renton City Council pass the following resolution. Our Council Liaison is actively working to notify other council members, but I wanted the rest of the world to know as well....
___________________________________________________________________________________________

'It is moved that Renton City Council Adopt the following position by resolution:

The Renton City Council continues to be committed to the revitalization of the Highlands community, especially the sub-area that has been the focus of the City's attention most recently.

Because a good deal of negative attention has been focused on the State’s Community Renewal Act, particularly the portion that allows for the potential use of eminent domain, Council recommends that the administration continue working with the community on redevelopment opportunities, through appropriate rezoning of the area, without the use of the Community Renewal Act, or eminent domain, to achieve these goals.

Council also supports the use of an aggressive code enforcement effort to target those properties that violate city codes and are a public nuisance and a police enforcement plan that will result in reducing overall crime problems in the community that have been identified by the administration.

It is recommended that there be additional meetings of the Committee of the Whole, in the upcoming weeks, to finalize a rezoning of the area that will meet the needs of current property owners, while also providing new opportunities and encouragement for developers to make an investment in this community.'

__________________________________________________________________________________________

Tonight's meeting is not a scheduled public hearing, so anyone who feels the desire to comment on this matter would need to do so in the Audience Comment section at the beginning or end of the meeting. The staff has not had time to prepare for large crowds, so I'm not necessarily encouraging you all turnout, but you may want to tune into the meeting and/or make sure enough folks are attending to represent your interests.

I'll let you know how it went with an entry after the meeting!

Best Wishes,

Randy
 
 
Councilman Randy Corman
The city council and mayor have spent a great deal of energy lately arguing about the best way to revitalize Renton Highlands. I summarized my views in an earlier blog, and I'm happy that we have made some progress since then. In particular, the mayor has joined the council majority in backing away from use of the Community Renewal Act with it's threat of eminent domain, and instead now agrees to more of a free market approach. Still, she and two other council members, Dan Clawson and Terri Briere, are clinging to the idea that we should not support any revitalization effort unless it focuses on high density multi-family in place of the current land use. I strongly differ with this view, as do my council colleagues Denis Law, Marcie Palmer, and Don Persson. The four of us appear to share a belief that single family homes can still have a prominent place in revitalization. I took my daughter on a bike ride through the subject neighborhood this evening, and took the following pictures to illustrate my point.

Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting

This development went in about two or three years ago, not long before we enacted the now infamous moratorium on development. These four beautiful homes replaced a single 60 year old duplex building on this site. As a result of this construction, the assessed value of this property went up from about $200,000 to over $1,000,000, increasing the appearance of the neighborhood and increasing the city's property tax revenues by five times! That is five times as much property tax money for police, fire protection, parks, street repairs, libraries and other services. Or dare I say, even cut taxes elsewhere? Yay! Now why did we enact that moratorium again?...

And I heard through the grapevine that the corner home in the above photo was recently estimated to be worth nearly $500,000, a stunning appreciation of nearly 100% since it was built. That property that was worth $200,000 a few years ago, now subdivided, may be close to a value of $2,000,000 thanks to a high quality creative builder, excellent pride in ownership by the residents, and good old american free enterprise.


Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting

And here, a creative builder did the same thing. This time the builder did not have the easy corner lot access, but still managed to replace a duplex with four homes. Why would we be opposed to this?

Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting

My daughter receives input from a neighbor...

"That moratorium is thiiiiis stupid.....and why do we need apartments when we could have pretty houses?..."

Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting

Some duplexes remain in good shape! This is one my wife and I purchased from former Renton Mayor Don Custer in 1990. In addition to Don being a charming statesman and Renton's youngest-ever mayor, he is a great craftsman, and he personally remodeled the entire interior of this building (including the interior floor plan). Don bragged that neither unit was ever vacant for a single day, as his tenants typically stayed for many years, and when they did move there were other nice people very interested. That has been our experience as well. (This duplex was just outside the specific area being considered for Community Renewal Act blighting, but it is within the greater highlands study area.)
 
 
Councilman Randy Corman
The Journal did a good job capturing viewpoints in this story, but I feel the mayor is way too pessimistic. We still have many unused tools to encourage redevelopment. Some of these are; flexible new zoning, waiving impact fees, fast-track building permits, reduced permit fees for projects that meet community goals, and free stock building plans. In fact, what we have been doing is just the opposite of encouraging free-market revitilization. Ironically, we've maintained a construction moratorium in this area during the last 14 months, at a time when buildable land is scarce and land values are soaring.

And I disagree with the suggestion that the city not spend budgeted money for highlands public infrastructure merely because the Community Renewal Act (CRA) failed. The first million dollars of highland money was set aside during the Jesse Tanner administration, when there was no talk of CRA. This money can be used to fix crumbling sidewalks and inferior pavement which has made it difficult for even the most motivated property owners to obtain curbside appeal. And the CRA, formerly known as the Urban Renewal Act, is not always effective. Historically, half of the time CRA has been used across the nation it has made things worse, not better. It's had an even worse record where an organized faction of the community is working against it, as has been the case in Renton. I question whether CRA is even appropriate in an area such as Renton Highlands, where market forces are already pushing land values to one million dollars per acre at current conditions, and individual duplexes have been selling for $300,000 to $400,000.

There is no reason that we can't clean up the highlands quickly using the tools of the free market, collaboration with residents and property owners, and city support and incentives. Enough pessimism and grief. Let's get it done, and as a partnership!

_________________________________________________________________________________________________________





Renton backs off Highlands threat: Mayor says by not using power of eminent domain, progress could be slowed


By Dean A. Radford
Journal Reporter


RENTON — In a retreat from what some residents saw as threats to condemn their private property, Mayor Kathy Keolker is recommending that the marketplace become the driving force behind redevelopment of an aging part of the Highlands.

However, not using the city's power of eminent domain under the state Community Renewal Act could slow the progress toward a healthier and safer neighborhood, she argued, with less public money available for the job.

It's a course that some on the council favor and certainly one that citizen activists with a strong belief in private property rights support.

Rarely, if ever, have city officials — and the community — faced such an emotionally charged issue as revitalizing the Highlands.

It has soured some relationships within the council, the mayor and some of the people they represent.

"We just need to take a break," said Keolker, who said she's saddened by the situation she faces.

"The vision is good. The goal is good. We can't get there right now," she said.

The use of the city's power to condemn property became a rallying point for some neighborhood activists, even though the city offered assurances it would only use such power as a last resort and only to protect public health and safety.

Without a plan for Highlands revitalization in which the city is a major player, Keolker said, it's unlikely she would recommend spending the $1.5 million the council has set aside for street, sidewalk and stormwater improvements there.

Her recommendations are now before the City Council, which include working with the Renton Housing Authority to redevelop its affordable housing.

And the city would continue to "vigorously pursue" violations of city codes involving "unsafe, unhealthful, derelict or nuisance properties," she wrote the council.

Keolker has asked the council to still pursue the concept of an urban village for about 360 acres of the Highlands near the Hi-Lands Shopping Center off Sunset Boulevard just east of Interstate 405.

Through new zoning yet developed, the city would increase the housing density in the Highlands area, helping to spark economic development, while still providing affordable housing.

The housing there now — some single-family homes but mostly duplexes and triplexes — was built about 60 years ago to temporarily house World War II workers at the Boeing plant in Renton and their families.

Keolker has taken the brunt of the criticism from those Highlands' activists who say the city is being heavy-handed in its drive to redevelop the neighborhood.

She points out that this is the city's policy — not hers — and the City Council told her to act boldly and aggressively in the Highlands.

The council was 100 percent behind the policy, but that support has waned, in part because of misinformation spread by neighborhood activists, she said.

Those scare tactics, Keolker said, have prevented a discussion about affordable housing for those on lower incomes who live in the Highlands.

Prominent among those activists is Inez Somerville Petersen, the secretary of the Highlands Community Association. The group, she said, was to lay out its next moves Tuesday night at a board meeting, but she said they won't drop their appeal of land-use decisions the city has made in the Highlands.

She denies spreading misinformation either at City Council meetings or through her numerous e-mails. Her information, she said, comes from official city sources.

To understand Keolker's message, Petersen said, you have to read between the lines.

"The declaration of blight is taken off the table, but only temporarily," Petersen said. She points to a line in Keolker's letter:

"In time, we may find that some of our original ideas will become necessary to bring about widespread improvements," Keolker wrote.

To Petersen, that means that Keolker "is not really conceding anything here."

It's too early to say how property owners and prospective developers will respond to redoing the neighborhood. But ultimately the city may have to step in "unless some miracle occurs," Keolker said. "You can always hope for miracles."

Angering Petersen, too, is the loss of the city's official recognition of the association because she lives along Lake Washington, not the Highlands. It's city policy that board members of its neighborhood associations actually live in the neighborhood.

"She (Keolker) has tried to buy herself some time to get her own cronies in a housing association that will go along with her ideas," Petersen said.

Keolker said there are plenty of Highlands residents who support revitalization, some of whom don't like the direction the Highlands association has taken or its political activism.

"We would like to have a positive relationship with the people who live in the Highlands," she said.

Keolker won't place a deadline on when she wants to see real progress in the Highlands, something, she said, that might look like an "implied threat."

And Petersen said "there is no timeline on private property rights."

Randy Corman, the council's president, said from his viewpoint there is no timeline to get things done in the Highlands by the private sector. However, redevelopment will occur and some residents will fix up their homes.

"We won't be able to force it," he said.

Dean Radford covers Renton. He can be reached at dean.radford@kingcountyjournal.com or 253-872-6719.

Last modified: June 28. 2006 12:00AM
 
 
Current Mood: anxious
Current Music: all quiet (it's early)
 
 
Councilman Randy Corman
26 June 2006 @ 11:31 pm
Tonight's council meeting was productive. The administration presented a new recommended Highland's neighborhood approach which reflected growing council majority feelings in the Highlands. The Community Renewal Act and eminent domain will no longer be considered for this neighborhood. We are hoping we can instead accelerate the positive changes that residents have already begun in this neighborhood, enact more-flexible zoning, lift the construction moratorium, and begin healing the trust issues. I'm optimistic that we are close to agreement on this lightning-rod issue for the first time in months. Very good news.
Tags:
 
 
Current Mood: good
Current Music: techno
 
 
Councilman Randy Corman
Here is an interesting story in today's newpaper.....

______________________________________________________________________________________


Highlands residents fight against city's plans: Some fear Renton will use eminent domain to make them leave


By Jamie Swift
Journal Reporter


RENTON — City Councilman Randy Corman can empathize with residents of the Highlands who are fearful the city will condemn their homes to develop a high-density urban village intended to reinvigorate the area.

Corman, the council president, stood side-by-side on a busy street corner Friday afternoon with a group of Highlands residents waving "no eminent domain" signs.

"The mayor tried to take my house," Corman said.

Mayor Kathy Keolker was a city councilwoman in 1989. That year, the council tried to condemn Corman's Highlands home — the same home he lives in now — to clear the way for a new development.

After a court battle, Corman won and was able to keep his home. But he says he'll never forget the frustration and the intimidation of challenging government.

Corman was so disturbed by the situation that in 1991 he decided to run for the City Council. He targeted Keolker, because "of the pivotal role she took in condemning my property," he said.

Keolker held on to her seat, but Corman would grab a spot on the council in 1994.

On occasion, Corman said, he'll say to his wife that he should work harder to cooperate with Keolker.

But his wife always responds: "But she tried to take our house," Corman says, with a chuckle.

"That's the back story," Corman said. "That's what set up this whole grudge match."

The mayor was out of the office Friday and could not be reached for comment but the city's vision for the Highlands is to transform a neighborhood, which is dotted with blighted homes, into an urban village. To that end, the city is trying to increase the housing density.

However, an appeal lodged by the Highlands Community Association puts the city's vision on hold, at least until the fall, said Alex Pietsch, the city's administrator of economic development, neighborhoods and strategic planning.

Pietsch said Friday the city has always talked about eminent domain as "a last choice after all other strategies have been exhausted."

He said the belief that the city is likely to condemn properties is "being perpetuated by people who have their own agendas."

The residents believe they are in the path of the city's vision for a renewed urban village in the Highlands, near Sunset Boulevard Northeast, just east of Interstate 405. And they are concerned the city will use eminent domain powers to make them leave.

Corman estimates the city is unlikely to use eminent domain to build its urban village, considering the current makeup of the City Council.

At least four of the seven council members are against using eminent domain, Corman said Friday — which marked the one-year anniversary of the U.S. Supreme Court's Kelo V. New London decision, which broadened governments' eminent domain rights.

In response to that year-old decision, President Bush on Friday signed an executive order declaring the federal government can only seize private property for a public use such as a hospital or road.

Last month, Corman pitched a resolution to the City Council which would have eliminated the possibility of using eminent domain powers in the Highlands neighborhood.

"I was essentially filibustered," said Corman, adding that council members unwilling to commit to such a step used government process to avoid a vote on the resolution.

Until the city eliminates eminent domain as an option, the Highlands residents will live in a constant state of anxiety, Corman said.

"It's like taking months away from their lives," Corman said.

"As soon as you realize how many rights have to get trampled to do this, you should realize you need to do the hard work of finding another idea," Corman said.



Jamie Swift can be reached at jamie.swift@kingcountyjournal.com or 253-872-6646.
 
 
Councilman Randy Corman
21 June 2006 @ 12:16 pm
I want to see the Highlands revitalized as much or more than just about anyone else. I've lived (with my family of seven) within two blocks of the 1940s duplex area for 20 years. For fifteen years I have been an owner of a remodeled duplex in this neighborhood, and I've never lost faith that the area was poised for an economic renaissance (For 15 years I've been sure that the area will turn the corner the next year).

When prosperity did not come, I began tossing in my two cents over the years, letting the City Economic Development department know that the area could probably sustain a slightly higher housing density (such as small lot single family, or possibly townhouses) if that is what it would take to finally bring some new construction. For this reason, I was delighted this year when the mayor announced that staff was going to focus attention on finally revitalizing the highland residential areas.

Somewhere along the way, however, we drove off-course, hit some bumps, lost our cargo, and had a wreck. And like a highway accident, there was a lot of blame afterward. But it's now time to get our bearings and get going in a safe and appropriate direction.

Since the property is privately held, the city can not treat the land as a blank slate. Any illusion of that has been eliminated by the clear resistance the neighborhood had shown to the mechanisms of blighting, community renewal act imposition, and eminent domain. Efforts to use these tools now or in the forseeable future will certainly meet with strong opposition from at least some of the residents and property owners. HCA (hca-renton.org) is organizing more activities to shut down this option, and to me it is as sensible as deliberately running a car into a brick wall for us to continue trying this approach.

Instead, we need to get the residents and land owners back on our side, and work this issue as a team. I don't think it will be that difficult. HCA's website has a proposal that seems very sensible to me. I expect that if we adopted it today, we would see both new construction and improved maintenance in the Highlands. In general the HCA proposal calls for flexible zoning, allowing single-family and duplexes as conforming uses, aesthetic standards for higher-density housing, low interest loans to seniors who need to maintain the appearance of their property, tighter maintenance standards in the neighborhood, aggressive enforcement by the city code compliance officers, public infrastructure maintenance where needed, neighbors joining together to enact neighborhood covenants, increased coordination with the police and/or neighborhood watch, and no declaration of blight or eminent domain takings. None of this seems counter-productive to me, and several leaders of HCA have already said that they can live with our proposed zoning if we continue to allow low density as well.

I would add to the HCA proposal some tools that we could supply as a city, at no cost to the property owners. For instance, we could consider creating stock-plans for townhouse development; "follow this free building plan, and you are allowed four new townhouses where you currently have an old duplex" for instance. we could also waive mitigation and impact fees in the redevelopment district.

We have talked about creating a citizen committee to oversee this plan. I think this is a good step, if we can readily reach agreement on who the comittee members are. If we have too much trouble reaching agreement on this point, we may have to keep the planning in the hands of the council. I would feel best having members of this committee primarily be property owners and residents in the neighborhood, supplemented by a representative of Renton Housing Authority, the planning commission, a city council member, and a city staff member.

The only thing we will need to let go of is the view that we are going to build high-density apartments at this site, on land that we have accumulated by eminent domain takings. Since I never wanted such a thing to happen, this one is pretty easy for me to let go of.

The final concern is what happens if some lone holdout refuses to fix or sell their old duplex, and it runs the neighborhood down. I believe the answer to this is that if it in really bad shape, we can solve it under current nuisance abatement ordinances with far less legal expense and political issues than we will incur trying to blight a neighborhood in the face of so much opposition. The public speakers at our hearings have made the case that many of the owners are not trying to harm neighboring property values; they would like to do more, but because of age or limited financial means they can not. In these cases, the option of extending property repair and clean-up assistance, rather than an eviction notice, seems more humane.

I hope you, citizens of Renton, can agree with me. I will be encouraging the rest of the council to move in this direction. With it's outstanding vistas, excellent access, proximity to shopping and the lake, and fantastic residents, we can make the Renton Highlands a beautiful place to live.

Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting

Me on an afternoon walk with my family through the North Harrington neighborhood.
 
 
Current Mood: contemplative