SANTA CLARA CITY COUNCIL WORK MEETING
WEDNESDAY, JULY 6, 2016
MINUTES
THE CITY COUNCIL FOR THE CITY OF SANTA CLARA, WASHINGTON COUNTY, UTAH, met for a Work Meeting on Wednesday, July 6, 2016 at 5:00 p.m. in the City Council Chambers of the Town Hall at 2603 Santa Clara Drive, Santa Clara, Utah.
Notice of the time, place and agenda of the meeting was provided to the Spectrum and to each member of the governing body by emailing a copy of the Notice and Agenda to the Spectrum and also, along with any packet information, to the mayor and each council member, at least two days before the meeting.
Present: Mayor Rick Rosenberg
Council Members: Jerry Amundsen, Ken Sizemore, Herb Basso and Jarett Waite
City Manager: Edward Dickie
City Recorder: Chris Shelley
Others Present: Brock Jacobsen, Assistant City Manager; Brad Hays, Parks Director; Corey Bundy, Building Official; Dan Nelson, Fire Chief; Melodie Hayes; Allen Lyle, Cobble Creek; Tim Lyle; Dennis Garr, Cobble Creek; Ethan Snyder; Michael, Cobble Creek; Curtis Jensen
1. Call to Order: Mayor Rosenberg called the meeting to order at 5:02 p.m.
- Councilwoman Hafen was excused from the meeting.
2. Working Agenda:
A. General Business:
1. Discuss a Process for the possible Amendment and Revision of the Santa Clara City's General Plan for the South Hills and Downtown areas.
- Mayor Rosenberg said there has been a lot of discussion concerning the South Hills area and its connection to the downtown area. There has been a lot of interest from residents concerning the development of the South Hills and Downtown. He said the process needs to start to consider some amendments and revisions of the General Plan especially as it impacts those two areas. The BLM has indicated that development out there will be limited. We will have the opportunity for the RP&P Park. There is a lot of new trail alignments out there. The BLM has a very extensive trail and recreation plan for that area. The first corridor that will probably come into effect is the Plantations Drive corridor.
- Ed Dickie, City Manager, said that the park will be by the water tank.
- Herb Basso talked about whether the Council should consider changing the General Plan to support BLM's present philosophy verses something the City has there. Maybe keeping some of the City's plans in. The BLM's Administration can change and so can their philosophy. It would be harder for someone to develop the property if it wasn't proposed.
- Mayor Rosenberg stated that the corridor might provide opportunity for development but it is there for a transportation belt loop for Washington County. He understands that it will be like the Southern Corridor. It will definitely have limited access. It would connect Hwy 91 to I 15. A lot of the parcels along it are privately developed. The Council and Mayor Rosenberg discussed the map of the corridor, the BLM area and South Hills.
- Ed Dickie stated that BLM has no interest in releasing any more land because of the recreational, with the biking and things like that. That's why Mayor wanted to bring this forward and decide what to do with the South Hills.
- Mayor Rosenberg continued to discuss the BLM areas and what can and cannot be developed. Tonight's meeting is to talk about the process and give Staff a little bit of direction so that process can begin. We can have the BLM meet with Planning Commission and with Council. They should be involved in this planning effort for out there as well. The residents need to have some information given them especially in the Downtown area. The recreational area out there will be big. This is public land and can't be sold.
- Herb Basso said that area will need to have a services oriented facility. He would like to include this subject into future discussions.
- Mayor Rosenberg said that one of the things we need to do early in the game is have the BLM come over and get the BLM Planning Team to meet with the Planning Commission and bring what their vision is for the property. It is very different from what our General Plan is.
- Corey Bundy said that the State law says that if you are going to modify the General Plan you need to notify the residents. You need to advertise it in the paper for 10 days, send out mailings to the residents.
- Mayor Rosenberg said that last time we did a series of workshops with the public and he would like to do that again and have it take place over a period of time.
- Herb Basso asked about the shooting range.
- Mayor Rosenberg said the County is the lead on that.
- Brad Hays said that it may be a little while before the County is ready to move forward but the City can move ahead with our EA.
- Ed Dickie said that we can do work meetings or meet before the regular City Council meetings or just have an open house for this only on a separate night.
- Mayor Rosenberg said he thinks there does need to be a separate meeting for this. The sooner the better.
- Ed Dickie asked the Council when they would like to do this.
- Mayor Rosenberg said that he will let Planning Commission set the pace for the meetings. The other thing that needs to come into play is with the Historic District. They have new guidelines that the Committee has been working on and that should be brought into this discussion too. The South Hills and the Downtown are linked. They should be discussed together. We need to take the opportunity to educate the residents going through this process.
- Corey Bundy asked that when we are discussing and doing these workshops, are we looking at a modification for the whole General Plan even of what we created so far.
- Mayor Rosenberg said that he thinks we will be amending at least those two areas, the South Hills and the Historical District. And if you are going to go through it look at some other things that we already know about such as the SITLA property. The planning is evolving in these areas.
- Ed Dickie said that the Planning Commission, which is meeting on July 12 should put this on their agenda to set up the time line to do some open meetings.
- Mayor Rosenberg said that if they can get some schedules they can put it in the newsletter and get some announcements out there. He asked when the notices have to be done, when the discussions are going to start or when the amendment is finalized and coming through. The Planning Commission will have to do a public hearing.
- Corey Bundy said that when he read the State Law it said you need to do the notification before you start talking about it. You need to send a notice to everyone and let them know that the process is starting. Each affected address. He read from the State Code Book on the process. He said he will visit with Matt Ence, City Attorney and discuss the process.
- Mayor Rosenberg said to talk to Planning Commission and see what their schedule is and let the City Council know and we will start the planning.
- Curtis Jensen said the he feels that the Mayor is on the right track. He said there might be some other areas. He said they may give the Council some input on some other areas that they may want to address at the same time.
- Ken Sizemore had a question to clarify. What are the feelings about the open house verses the hearings?
- Mayor Rosenberg said he would like the Planning Commission to include the open house in the schedule because the Land Use Authority would host the open house and the Council would attend as well as anyone else who wanted to. The meetings with the Planning Commission and the BLM may want to happen before the open house so that information will be prepared for the open house. Definitely get information from the County too before the open house and encourage the BLM people to be at the open house.
- Ken Sizemore said the dilemma is they are in the midst of draft verses final and they may be reluctant to make any calls about land use out on the South Hills until their final document.
- Ed Dickie told Corey to get with the contact person at the BLM and get with them to set that up.
- Ken Sizemore reviewed the process: preliminary meetings with the Planning Commission and the BLM, an open house, formal public hearings, develop alternative changes.
2. Discussion of possible amendment for PDR Zone of Cobble Creek Townhomes and Access.
- Corey Bundy said they have had some discussions on the Cobble Creek development and the access road. He said they have some options.
- Ed Dickie said that Staff was directed by Council to get together with the engineer and the developer and others to see if we can find an option for a different access as far as to get to North Town road, what to do with Tuscany Drive and Jacob Drive. Council feels like Jacob Drive is a parking lot access to the park. When they met they came up with a couple of options.
- Corey Bundy said the first option is to extend the road up into Paradise Village. A second access could be a 20-foot asphalt along Patricia. The School District, which will be developing an elementary school to the south, has agreed to put curb, gutter and sidewalk along Tuscany and Patricia. Tuscany would be an access into the park. He said they talked about putting some elevated speed bumps or areas. In the future the main access north and south would be Patricia.
- Ed Dickie said that the thought for Jacob Drive through the park is to make sure there is a stop sign on Jacob, a stop sign on Tuscany and a sign that says 'Not a through street'. A lot of things to discourage the traffic. We could even look at putting in a crash gate. The school district is interested in Patricia being the main road through.
- Mayor Rosenberg asked what the recommendation Staff was going to make to Council next week.
- Corey Bundy said the recommendation is that the road goes up to North Town from this development, that Patricia is improved and that we put the slowing or 10 mph speed bumps and so forth through the park area and limit the access to Jacob.
- Mayor Rosenberg said that the developer and some homeowners are present at this meeting and asked if anyone would like to make comments on the proposals that are going to be made to Council. He said that this is a Work Meeting and there won't be any decisions made tonight.
- Ethan Snyder, 2326 Jacob Drive, said that they were told that this was going to be taken up on the July 13 meeting. He said a multitude of people are planning on coming to that meeting. He said he just heard about this meeting. The original plan was the stub street through Paradise Village at Zion and it's still unclear to him why this was pushed aside. He said it seems they are up against dollar signs more then actually would make the most sense. He said he thought this was attempted to be buried. He said if Jacob is left open it will be used. He said he doesn't buy it that this is going to be a 10mph and be discouraged to use. If this is going to be connected then the residents are not being heard. The issue is the number of trips that will be generated by this project going past Jacob and severely affecting the value and feel of his neighborhood. He said that if this allowed to be open then they have not been heard and the Council has not understood their concern. If the park access is the issue allow park access from both sides. Residents can go down Tuscany to reach that section of the parking lot. This is an issue of safety and not convenience. He said that he knows there are similar concerns for Patricia Drive. For a long-term standpoint, the original plan, through Paradise Village and Tuscany make the most sense. If Tuscany is an issue, it can be improved.
- Michael Lee, 2312 Jacob Drive, said he is grateful that the Council is considering adding an access over through the Village. His concerns are with these other accesses he doesn't understand why an access through Jacob Drive would still be necessary. He said that the City is trying to discourage access but making it an access. He said he was discouraged by the talk of if it gets bad enough the City could add a gate. That is discouraging because how will we know if it gets bad enough. Well if enough people come in and complain then the City would add a gate to discourage it even more. If we don't want people to use it, why make it an option at all? Speed bumps are ineffective. He said to please don't consider making Jacob an access.
- Dennis Garr, 3456 Mulberry Drive, said he is one of the developers. He said they really care about the neighborhoods and safety. He said they never really wanted to go down Jacob. He said they thought they had the two accesses coming in on Tuscany. Jacob is a designated street. He said he knows there is controversy. On the Master Plan Jacob should go through to Paradise up to North Town. He said they don't really care if it does or not. He said they met with Staff, the School Board, other landowners and that's when they got talking about the School Board putting in curb and gutter on Patricia. Paradise Village is a commercial area. Everybody has concerns of safety. He said that when residents bought on Jacob they didn't realize that it is a dedicated street and will be a through street. He said they are willing to work with whatever they can do. He said they want to be good neighbors. He said they have met with Staff five times and have changed the plan 3 or 4 times and tried to get the best of everybody's comments and look at everything with the City Planner and the City Manager. They don't want to be bad guys and make Jacob a bad road. He said they are willing to take information and thoughts and go from there. He said they want to know what the City would like and how it fits best into their design so they can move forward. He said they addressed with the School District about backing out onto Tuscany. They said that is not a concern for them at all. It happens everywhere. Mel, from the School Board said that.
- Ed Dickie stated that half of Staff feels that the access on Jacob Lane should be closed, that it's a park access. The other half feels that because it is on the Master Plan that it should be a road as the Master Plan calls. It is the Council's call. He said for Council to tell Staff how they want to handle that road.
- Herb Basso feels there will be less traffic to Jacob if there is another access to the park too. Some will come on Tuscany and some will come on Jacob. He said by design you can slow people down.
- Jerry Amundsen asked if a vicinity map is available. It gave an idea of circulation.
- Jarett Waite asked for the plan of the parking to show citizens.
- Todd Olsen, City Engineer, said that the School District had come up with plans years ago before any of the players were involved. Their access they had talked about was coming up Jacob and along the south side and coming back out to Patricia. After the discussion they talked about participating with the curb and gutter off of Patricia and not having concerns about the traffic and houses entering on to Tuscany but their initial thought would be their access would be Patricia and Tuscany for parking.
- Jerry Amundsen said at the meeting he went to with the School Board a couple of months ago, they didn't have any plans in the near future for the school. They have to fill other schools before this one even comes on board. They have sold the property that the high school was going to go on.
- Ed Dickie said that going back to Patricia, they do have the two accesses. The City Planner recommends that that goes in at this time because the School District is willing to pay their portion and it helps with the traffic. The recommendation from Staff right now is that is one of the roads that get looked at.
- David Whitehead, 2167 Jacob Drive, said he understands why residents don't want Jacob to go through. He said when the residents moved in on Jacob Drive, they encroached on everybody else that was on the frontier of Santa Clara. Then when Village on the Heights moved in we were concerned because of all the kids on Jacobs Drive. He said he knows the Council will make the best decision for the future for the community because it is going to continue to build out and fill in. He said that Paradise Village is a commercial development with no permanent residents. It is a resort community. It has worked out really well. The wash is a concern. When the water comes over that, it won't be drivable, but it won't happen very often. He said Paradise Village is self-contained. They have 3 accesses and they are connected in between. He said they are trying to keep it self-contained because one of the complaints that you get with a rental community is you don't want it attached to a residential community. He said their concern is they have a lot of people crossing the street with the amenities there is that going to be an issue for safety? He thinks the developer of Paradise Village would like to keep it self-contained but understands that it may not be possible.
- Jarett Waite asked if David Whitehead foresees changing plans if that road does go through.
- David Whitehead said the initial plan wasn't for that road to be there but for the water to channel through. The change would be to put the road right through the two neighborhoods but that would connect right to the park.
- Brad Hays said that with the development of Cobble Creek with their extension of Tuscany to the park what he would like to recommend is that the City take the pavement and to up to the pickle ball courts and complete that part of the parking lot and do nothing with the rest of Rachel Drive until the School District comes in.
-Allen Lyle, Cobble Creek Town Homes Developer, said that this plan is a great plan. He wants the residents to know that they are on their side. He said he wants to meet their concerns and needs. Their motto has always been that they build quality condominiums at affordable prices. Doing a quality community means a lot to him. He said they don't use realtors so the money can be passed on to the buyers. He said he makes a plea to the Council tonight. He said the developers have cut out 13 units. He said he asks that with the 2 1/2 acres in the middle, it being a park within a park if the City would split 50%-50% on the fees that they would do for park fees to be able to make that area really nice with a huge pool, clubhouse and play. That would help them cut those costs and pass them on to the buyers. He said their first choice would be not to tie into Paradise Village because they're a nightly rental and we will be a little community of residents. He said they would like to keep it that way. He said they would like to go out through Patricia and Tuscany. He would like to see Jacob blocked off too. He said maybe something could be put in that in the future if the road needs to be hooked up they can do that. He said they will do whatever the Council recommends. If the City puts up a crash gate they can eventually take it off if they need to.
- Jarett Waite asked where the crash gate would be.
- Allen Lyle said it would be right on the property line.
- Mayor Rosenberg said you would want to get the gate inside the park.
- Herb Basso asked Allen Lyle if the City splits the fees would their amenities be available to everyone. He said if they are going to lessen any kind of impact fees it should be a benefit for all because everyone is paying them.
- Allen Lyle said this would be keeping their residents off of the City's properties and keep them home.
- Jarett Waite said that if there is a crash gate between Paradise Village and this development does that meet our codes?
- Mayor Rosenberg said it wouldn't be a through street except when the City decides to open it. It's an emergency access so there would be two accesses. There are a multitude of things that can be done but there is not one that makes everybody 100% happy.
- Ed Dickie said if that is the Council's decision when it comes down, that there is a crash gate there, Patricia would have to go in as a second access.
- Mayor Rosenberg said that Patricia is already a dedicated road. It has been dedicated before any of these properties developed. He stated that Cobble Creek is under 100 units. The two accesses come into play when Tuscany at Cliff Rose is added. Patricia will cover the increase that way. The emergency fire access will go out through Paradise Village. It will be closed so there is the problem of mixing the short-term rentals with the permanent neighborhood and then there is a crash gate in the park which allows Brad to open it when it's needed but it could stay closed for the majority of the time. That would eliminate a lot of through traffic down on Jacob. The crash gate doesn't stop pedestrians. There was discussion on where the crash gates should go. There was also a discussion of driveways on Patricia. They also discussed a loop road through the park. It would be just a park road. There could be a pedestrian access on Jacob. It would be open all the time.
- Brad Hays said that if they want a connection, it would make more sense to go on the north side along the wash because otherwise you are going through the playground, the basketball courts, and the trails.
- Mayor Rosenberg said it would be tight going along the wash and with the splash pad.
- Ken Sizemore expressed his concern with the backing up onto the road.
- Ed Dickie said there could even be a back alley road just for those. That would be something unique. He said those work pretty well and in a situation like this that might be ideal. It's something to look at.
- Mayor Rosenberg said that Staff has given a recommendation so Council can take things under advisement and repeat this conversation next week. We can give Staff some input and they can revise their recommendation that is presented next week. There is going to be a room full of residents. The developer is past Planning Commission and past all the public hearings. Public comment right now is by grace of the Council. There has to be two permanent accesses. Patricia provides the open second. One of the things that makes Paradise Village successful is by our ordinance, they have to be isolated. Our ordinance forces those projects to be isolated from the neighborhood to some degree so that the neighborhood conflict isn't going on.
- Ken Sizemore said that the Council all confers that Jacob isn't a dedicated street through the park. That the park is going to be parking lot. There is probably going to be a crash gate somewhere there that divides the traffic so there isn't that flow up and down the street. Is everyone agreed? He said the only struggle he is having is the traffic study that was done for this. What will happen when there is Patricia and Tuscany as the main accesses? Does that traffic study still apply? The other issue is the units fronting Tuscany.
- Mayor Rosenberg said that there isn't a traffic study only a recommendation. He said that he feels for the residents that front Patricia but that road has been dedicated and planned since before their subdivision was built.
- Ken Sizemore asked the developers if this discussion resolved the questions they had. Do they know where they are moving?
- Mayor Rosenberg asked if the Council was okay eliminating the access to Paradise Village.
- The Council all said they were. Mayor Rosenberg asked if the City Engineer, Public Safety, Planning were okay with it. He said he won't be here next week and Tode Hafen will be Mayor Pro Tem.
- Ed Dickie said he thinks what Jack Taylor will say is that he has always seen Jacob as a through road. He is okay if that is the decision.
3. Discussion of possible uses of the back 1/2 acre of the Rosenlof Property across from City Hall where the home currently sits.
- Herb Basso said he went through the house and the property. One of two choices comes to his mind. Does the City want to be landlords or not? Do we want to sell it? He doesn't think the City ought to be landlords to residents. It could some kind of a business that fits or sell it. We should not be in the residential business. There are two businesses looking for something that size. It wouldn't take much to fix it up and sell it. There is a market to lease. There is probably enough parking for a business. The parking would be the challenge. The house has some settlement issues.
- Ken Sizemore said he thinks it would be a big mistake to lose that asset. Why give it up? He said he thinks a residential lease is appropriate.
- Herb Basso would love to move to commercial if the City is going to lease it out.
- Corey Bundy said it would need to have 16 parking stalls. He said he is fine with the residential use as long as Council understands that there will be some investment to get it out to a residential standard.
- Mayor Rosenberg said there would need to be two units made there to make it an affordable rental unit.
- Corey Bundy said they will have to look at it and evaluate it.
- Mayor Rosenberg said there should be a proposal if it is going to be converted to a rental. Here is what it is going to cost to upgrade it, here is what the projected revenue. He said it needs to be run through a couple of scenarios and see what the greatest return is and talk about those numbers. He said it would be cool to have two affordable housings up there. The City Council's direction is to follow the ordinance and see about affordable housing.
- Ed Dickie said that they are working with someone now and with Corey to get the old mercantile ready to go.
- Corey Bundy said that DeFoure didn't present a plan. The building is an old building. It doesn't have insulation. It needs a structural review. He said he went down and met with DeFoure and they wanted to proceed like they didn't meet with them. If someone comes into the City and wants to change the building occupancy it needs to be put on paper. All that he has received are sketch drawings. A representative said they will get an architect and a design but Corey said he hasn't seen it yet.
- Ed Dickie said that they turned back the Rap Tax funds. The others gave us a detailed list of what they are spending the Rap Tax funds on. That will be on the next Council Meeting to approve a resolution on how we handle that.
- Jerry Amundsen asked what the Council thought about, in the instance of the developments going on, engineers providing a kmz file of the development that lands right into Google Earth. Then Council can pull up Google Earth as see how it situates with the surrounding development. He said he thinks it's easy to convert it and they can just email it to the City and Ed could pull up Google Earth. He can get details and he will experiment with it to see how long it takes to do it. It would be useful to see all the connectivity. It can be a part of their preliminary plat.
3. Staff Reports:
Brock Jacobsen
- He said that the fiscal year was just finished off and we have started a new one. The Budget Amendment was done at a Special Meeting last Thursday. There are some big purchases that are happening.
- League of Cities and Towns is in September (14th-16th).
- We have two new part time employees: in administration and court. They will be great additions. Their names are Misty and Gina and they will come to Council so they can be introduced.
- Jack Taylor will repost the position for the employee he needs for the Public Works Department.
- There is no bill yet for SHAC. He said he spoke with Tiffany LeJoice who is over that now. She said it is sitting on her desk. He said he will cut a check for $32,000 now for her.
Chief Dan Nelson
- He said the crews are coming off of their mandatory two days off. They have been in Pine Valley for the last few weeks. There were three engines up there at one point. They haven't gone back out there yet.
- The crews will be doing project work. We get paid for the days off if we do 14 days straight.
- We are getting ready for the new budget and spending money.
- There have been no firework issues whatsoever.
- Tomorrow there is going to be a small, quick burn in the corrals by Dutchman's. This is Kent Frei's property right now but is going to belong to the LDS Church. It is an agriculture burn.
- The generator broke. We have had to replace it with two generators.
- The Razor has been on 3 calls. One recently to Snow Canyon and one on Pioneer Parkway and the house call on Dutchman Drive. It was used by Police in the recent kidnapping case. They also used it for a SWAT exercise.
Brad Hays
- He said that Parks has new personnel. A young man named Brock Anderson, and a new young man named Jeff Lee.
- The new entrance sign is finally under construction. The footing is in the ground and it will be poured tomorrow. It is pretty big. The base is 16 feet wide and 6 feet across. Paul Lilywhite is designing it. We are working with Blake Electric to get solar light on the sign.
- He thanked the Staff for working on the park across the street. He said they did it in two days. He said he was amazed to see how well everyone worked together. They did a good job. They also did all the bark. Herb Basso donated all the bark.
- He met with the BLM, Teresa Burke, Dave and Lyn Scott, and looked over the concept plan. They thought the plan looked good. He said they will be bringing the concept plan to the Council on July 13 to see what the Council thinks of it. The park has increased to 51 acres.
- He said they are still working on Canyon View. The building is still being worked on. The plumbers and electricians have been there. Hopefully the improvements will begin on it in 2 weeks.
Corey Bundy
- There were 85 homes built in Santa Clara last year. It was a very good year. He anticipates at least 50 this year.
- There are a lot of inspections going on.
- He is working with the CED to get some LED lights in the City Council Room. He said he will come back with the pricing. It should save the City a little money.
- The DeFoure property in St. George hasn't sold. That is the major slow up.
- Mayor Rosenberg talked about how Ken Matheson on Country Lane contacted him and said he spoke to Corey about a buyer that is interested in his home wanting to use the easement to access the property. Corey told him it was more of a sewer access not a property access. It is not a public access.
Mayor Rosenberg
- The wash work behind Country Lane is proceeding very well. The Sand Hollow Wash now is defined. They will be starting on the new concrete section fairly quickly. All that material that is there stacked on the side will go away and the rock will go back in. They want the Mayor to talk to the Fire Crews about doing a burn in October on some of the Tamarisk Trees and stuff pulled out of there. He said he is happy with it. Over time that wash has crawled from the back of Sunset Plateau on the St. George City side all the way across the open and was right behind the homes on Country Lane. Every time there was flooding it was right behind those homes creating a real issue. The Flood Control Authority has gone in and participated with the City of St. George and FEMA and they have cleaned that out. The residents are very pleased.
- He met with the College. They are working on some new strategic planning and they are starting to work on their academic programs. They are looking at a lot of the polytechnic type of programs a lot of engineering, applied sciences and business. It is exciting.
- He went to the MPO Meeting and we pushed the Commissioners a little on the transportation tax issue. There is still no movement on Commissioner Iverson's part to put it on the ballot. They have to decide in about a month. They discussed a little about the bus routes to Springdale.
- He reminded the Council that he will not be at the City Council Meeting next week.
- Ken Sizemore asked the Mayor what was happening on Dean Terry's property.
Mayor: It is part of the Sand Hollow Wash project.
- Mayor goes to CIB tomorrow. He will sit on the hot seat and beg for money. Hopefully they will give the City their request. The FEMA money is set-aside for the City. We have cleared the title search on 3 of the 5 properties and are working on the other 2. He said he is hopeful that by the end of the month the last hurdle has been cleared and the money will be on its way.
Ed Dickie- HAPPY BIRTHDAY to the Mayor tomorrow!
4. Executive Session: None
5. Adjournment:
Meeting Adjourned at 8:08 p.m.
__________________________ Date Approved: ________________
Chris Shelley - City Recorder
Notice of Special Accommodations (ADA)
NOTICE OF SPECIAL ACCOMMODATION DURING PUBLIC MEETINGS
In compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act, individuals needing special accommodations (including auxiliary communicative aids and services) during this meeting should notify Chris Shelley at 435-673-6712 ext. 203.