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HomeMy WebLinkAboutTB Minutes 1996-03-04 TOWN OF ITHACA SPECIAL TOWN BOARD MEETING MARCH 4 , 1996 5 : 30 P . M . At a Special Meeting of the Town Board of the Town of Ithaca , Tompkins County , New York held at the Town Hall , 126 East Seneca Street , Ithaca , New York there were present : PRESENT : Catherine Valentino , Supervisor , Carolyn Grigorov , Councilwoman ; David Klein , Councilman ; John P . Wolff , Councilman ; Mary Russell , Councilwoman . EXCUSED : Edward Conley , Councilman ; Ellen Z . Harrison , Councilwoman . ALSO PRESENT : John Barney , Attorney for the Town ; Joan Lent Noteboom , Town Clerk / Director of Administrative Services , Daniel Walker , Director of Engineering ; Fred Noteboom , Highway Superintendent ; Jonathan Kanter , Director of Planning , Andrew Frost , Director of Building / Zoning ; Justice Clarence Larkin ; Justice Raymond Bordoni , OTHERS PRESENT : Eva Hoffmann . Call to Order : Supervisor Valentino called the meeting to order at 5 : 37 p . m . , and led the assemblage in the Pledge of Allegiance . Supervisor Valentino - The purpose of this special meeting is to work on the Town ' s Priority Work Plans . I have invited the Town Justice ' s to come and comment about their courts . Justice Larkin - Each town in the county has two judges , magistrates , or justices , and some villages have one . Ithaca Town Court is the busiest in the county . Justice Bordoni and I get arraignments from every other town because Ithaca is in the center of the others . If , for example , another town doesn ' t have a justice available they call us . We make a great deal of felony arraignments . A felony stays in our court until a grand jury indicts , and then it goes up to the county court . The City court can ' t hear felonies and is part of the New York State court system . They are paid by the State , and they have seven clerks and two judges . We are different , we do not exist to make money for the Town of Ithaca . Through fines , penalties , and fees about 300 of what is sent to the state comes back to the town . Last year , we sent an excess of $ 150 , 000 to the state , the town received back $ 44 , 000 to $ 45 , 000 . Our courts closed and disposed of approximately 3 , 000 cases . The cases are not all vehicle and traffic , close to 600 were triple cases with many left open and not disposed of . It is very time consuming , and we are greatly handicapped by not having a court room . We don ' t even have offices in Town Hall , that is a handicap . Town of Dryden court has three court clerks , a court room , and the town judges have offices . If they have a call during the day , they can take care of it immediately . Town of Groton has a full - time court clerk , Lansing has two , Ulysses has one . When we have a jury trial or bench trial we should be able to record everything . Which is very important . I have three cases pending appeals . Now , I have to depend on my notes or my clerk ' s notes when I have to address these TOWN BOARD HINUTES 2 MARCH 4 , 1996 appeals . It ' s a difficult thing to do , and sometimes you can ' t recall the facts . We need a good tape recorder that will play back . If Justice Bordoni or I have a bench trail , jury trail , or a private , felony , or trial hearing it should all be on tape so the court is not accused of doing something improperly . Justice Bordoni and I are both busy , we love the work , and we are both dedicated to it . We want to serve the town well and the people well . Supervisor Valentino - Will you be able to use the tape recorder in the space you are using now ? Justice Larkin - I would have to carry it as there is no place to lock it up during the day . We have been locked out of the court room many times , and our files have been locked out because of renovations for the elevator installation . The copy machine won ' t work at times so we have to copy papers later and mail them . The defendant gets a copy , the lawyer gets a copy , you have to mail it all out and wait for them to sign the documents and mail them back . Councilwoman Grigorov - Maybe you can try to find a portable tape recorder . Justice Bordoni - I was asked earlier by some of the board members , how am I coming with finishing former Justice Wallenbeck ' s cases . A lot of bail money, was accumulated which requires research to find where it goes . When someone calls asking for the return of bail we usually ask them for a receipt . Sometimes after many years they don ' t have a receipt , so we have to do research and find out exactly when it was paid , what receipt was received , and check to see if the Sheriff ' s Department has a record of the bail . If we do not find it we have to research records in the vault or the basement . That means moving a four drawer file cabinet and cardboard boxes , and establishing some sort of work surface to look at the books and write . It would be nice to have everything all in one area . I haven ' t been able to find 30 - 40 % of what I was looking for . At the court housIe , when they put in the new elevator they took out space that we used to keep our files , phone , forms , and copy machine . We tried to get permission to move the filing cabinets downstairs to the jury room , but we can ' t because state law demands that there be free space in the jury room and the filing cabinets would take that space . Therefore , the filing cabinets are still upstairs and now when we go to court we have to carry everything with us . These are some very critical and important things we have to make sure are addressed in the new Town Hall so we have, the needed space . We do not want to build something that is not functional . Right now we are not very functional at the County court house . Supervisor Valentino - One of the things that surprised me when I started in January was how much court business actually goes on at the Town Hall in the day time . Justice Bordoni - You mean the arraignments ? TOWN BOARD MINUTES 3 MARCH 4 , 1996 pervisor Valentino - Yes , the arraignments and other court hearings . zere is a great deal of day time court activity in the building . Justice Larkin - The telephone ties up a lot of the Deputy Clerk ' s time during the day and the records are not available to them . Justice Clerk Judy Bernal or Justice Bordoni has them at home . Justice Sordoni is not available during the day . It ' s very awkward . Supervisor Valentino - Hopefully , it will not be for much longer because we will have a new Town Hall . Justice Larkin - I have court on Tuesday night at 7 : 00 p . m . , but I arrive about 5 : 30 p . m . , and court lasts to about 9 : 00 - 9 : 30 p . m . . The public is welcome to come . Supervisor Valentino - Justice Larkin holds court on Tuesday ' s and Justice Bordoni on Wednesday ' s . Councilman Klein - How long do you have to keep your records , will you need records storage in the new Town Hall ? Justice Larkin - Permanently . Iuncilman Klein - Could they be microfilmed ? stice Larkin - That would be the Town ' s responsibility . Mrs . Noteboom - Justice records are part of the Records Management Program . At some point and time , we can dispose of some of them . There are some records they do not have to keep forever , such as the original ticket after the disposition of the case . We have to ask the 7th Judicial District for permission to dispose of them even though it is on the disposition listing prepared by SARA . A lot of things in the cellar from former Justice Warren Bly and Judge Wallenbeck could be disposed of through the program . Justice Larkin - Not the tickets , I have them in my room upstairs . None of my old tickets come here , but all the other old files do after the case is closed . Councilman Klein - It would be nice to move to the new Town Hall only what was necessary . Mrs . Noteboom - I wrote Judge Bly and Judge Wallenbeck asking if they would please cooperate with the program and go through the boxes in the cellar . That did not come a pass , so at some point in time , that would be the thing to do . ouncilman Wolff - We can scan them and file them on discs to keep them . TOWN BOARD MINUTES 4 MARCH 4 , 1996 Mrs . Noteboom - We need space for the equipment , as well as a place to file the discs . Justice Bordoni - The materials and the supplies we need are provided on a very timely basis . We read books to keep updated which are supplied by the town . Doing research in this room and downstairs becomes awkward . Councilwoman Grigorov - Have you had a chance to look at the court spaces being proposed in the new Town Hall ? Councilman Klein Assuming , 119 Court Street is where we are going to , there will be refinements to the plan and the Justices will be consulted . Justice Bordoni - The Court Street site has no allowance for jury seating and no place for an attorney to take a client to speak to them privately . Councilman Klein al There is a conference room that could serve as a jury room as well as a� conference room for the functions of the courts and other first floor departments . Attorney Barney - How often do we have jury trials ? Justice Larkin - Jury trials are held on misdemeanors , however defendants are entitled to one for violations . I had one with Attorney Wiggins which lasted one night until 12 : 30 a . m . , and the following night until 12 : 00 a . m . , we had to adjourn , and then there were three sessions from 6 : 00 p . m . to 12 : 00 a . m . That was my only jury trial , but I have had bench trials . Attorney Barney - Justice Bordoni commented there was no place for the jury to sit , but the question is , is it necessary to build a space to accommodate jury seating by building another 40 to 50 square feet onto a room when you havIe so few jury trails . Justice Larkin - IWe would prefer not to have a jury trial , but if they ask for one they are entitled to have one . Attorney Barney - When you do have a jury trial it could be scheduled at a time when the Town Board does not meet so the same room could be used . Justice Larkin - What I think is more important is the overall size because we draw a jury of 55 names plus the participants . There should be plenty of room , that is an important feature , making sure we have enough room to be with . As the Town grows there will be more court activity . WORK SESSION - 19, 96 PRIORITIES WORK PLAN Attorney Barney - My priorities are driven by the Town ' s priorities . The Town Planner and I have discussed working on the Zoning Ordinance revision which was Committee . At the s seen by the Codes and Ordinance TOWN BOARD MINUTES 5 MARCH 4 , 1996 mmitteefs request , I have come up with a proposal which they are easonably comfortable with . I think it would be useful for this Board to see it and approve it . Councilman Klein - The Codes and Ordinance Committee talked to Attorney Barney about the zoning revision which means they will have less time to spend on other matters . The program Attorney Barney spelled out for revising the Zoning Ordinance seems to make sense . The revision will largely be the focus of the COC for the year . Councilwoman Grigorov - How does the Sign Ordinance fit into this ? Attorney Barney - We are already working on a Sign Ordinance for the next meeting . Supervisor Valentino - Then you would be spending a majority of your time on the Zoning Ordinance . Councilman Klein - Assuming the Board will feel comfortable with that , ' that needs to be discussed . The COC will do what the Board wants it to do , Again , we can not deal with a lot things , there is so much to be done on the Zoning Ordinance that if there is other legislation to be worked on the COC will n (* have time for the Zoning Ordinance . torney Barney - Much of the legislation the COC has been dealing with s been Zoning Ordinance related . This will put a rational approach to t from beginning to end instead of picking up little pieces as we go along . Mr . Frost - We have a Zoning Ordinance that works , it does need change , but things will not be falling apart if it is not revised this year . Councilman Klein - We are going to be working on the structure , revisions , and the documents . There will be a lot of areas to consider about policy decisions and revisions that the COC will not be dealing with . Those will be considered by the Town Board and Planning Board . Mr . Kanter - There are also pieces of the zoning that could involve follow ups to the Comprehensive Plan in terms of new zoning mechanisms . They weren ' t part of the original ordinance , but they would further the goals of the Comprehensive Plan . Councilwoman Grigorov - During the discussions of the Zoning Ordinance revisions we should consider the goals of the Comprehensive Plan . Mr . Kanter - It ' s a mixture of things , updating , restructuring , clarifying , but also adopting new pieces of zoning that would be consistent with the Comprehensive Plan . I TOWN BOARD MINUTES 6 MARCH 4 , 1996 Councilwoman Russell - As those pieces come up , will they be reviewed and sent on to the Town Board and Planning Board as a whole ? How will that work ? Supervisor Valentino - If there were revisions they would have to be seen by the Planning Board and the Town Board . Attorney Barney - Initially , the Codes and Ordinance Committee would provide the draft revisions to the Zoning Ordinance to see where they fit into the present ordinance . It would make sense to get an understanding from the Codes and Ordinance Committee whether that is the direction the Town wants to go . If there is a dichotomy of feelings about it , then you bring the issue to the Town Board and ask if they want it incorporated in the Zoning Ordinance . Try to fit revisions at the place where they would logically surface when drafting the Zoning Ordinance rather than trying to do them separately , like the Transfer of Development Rights . I think we have to have a rational process . Maybe it could be focused through the Codes and Ordinance Committee as a vehicle , then those areas requiring clear policy would be brought to the Town Board for policy guidance . Councilwoman Griglorov - What do you see as the Planning Committee ' s function in this process ? Attorney Barney - I think that would be whatever the Town Board would like that to be . Mr . Kanter - I have talked to the Codes and Ordinance Committee , Supervisor Valentino , and a number of Town Board Members . I would like to get a clear direction of how you would like this to work because there have been questions about how those two committees will coordinate . The Six Mile Conservation District was a Planning Committee project until it was sent to Codes and Ordinance Committee . We need to decide whether the Planning Committee should continue working on this as well as the rural residential district which they just started working on , or should they work on other kinds of zoning . Should all work be focused through the Codes and Ordinance Committee ? We have to decide if two groups can work on pieces of it , or whether one group has to work on it . Councilwoman Griglorov - It has to be the COC who establishes what is happening , but they may ask the Planning Board to look into something more detailed ahead of time . Councilman Klein I Historically , COC has not been a policy making board . Everyone has their opinion in terms of what goes into legislation , but it has been more like delegating the work , putting the pieces together , looking for problems , and then asking the applicable boards to deal with the outcome . It really needs the input from the policy makers . Attorney Barney - Having two committees working on the same thing may mix the issues . TOWN BOARD MINUTES 7 MARCH 4 , 1996 1p ervisor Valentino - I think that is a problem . Councilwoman Russell - The role of the Planning Committee is to review all the areas that are being defined by the Zoning Ordinance which need boundaries . That ' s the area that can be discussed in a policy making body . COC is more for review of the nuts and bolts of an ordinance . Councilwoman Grigorov - Would COC be doing more of the details involving policy as well ? Councilwoman Russell - These areas will need to be defined . What is going to be our rural residential zone ? What is going to be the other conservation districts ? Will there be a sliding scale in the rural residential zones ? Will it be 2 acres overall , or will it be 2 acres closer into Town , or 3 acres further outside of Town ? Issues like that could be discussed by the Planning Committee . Councilwoman Grigorov - What happens after they have discussed it , does it come back to us ? Councilwoman Russell - There would be a need for further recommendation from the COC ? . Kanter - If it worked that way wouldn ' t the Planning Committee work the boundaries until the Codes and Ordinances Committee has defined e zone . Councilwoman Grigorov - I do not want to have joint meetings all the time to solve the problems . Supervisor Valentino - Wouldn ' t setting the boundaries be something the Planning Board would work on ? Attorney Barney - Ultimately , the Zoning Ordinance draft would go to the Planning Board for their recommendation . There is no question the Planning Board could be delegated to define the initial cuts or where the boundaries are , if the Town Board wished to do that . Mr . Kanter - The Planning Board meeting lasts until about 10 : 00 p . m . just doing the development projects . This additional work would add an hour every meeting . They do meet twice a month regularly . " I think it is a good idea to have the Planning Board do this work , they have a good feeling for these things . Supervisor Valentino - They have the most experience with it . Councilwoman Grigorov - The Planning Board tried many times , finding time to do that kind of work would be very hard . i TOWN BOARD MINUTES 8 MARCH 4 . 1996 Councilman Klein - Which is why the Comprehensive Planning Committee was established , to gent that work done . The Planning Committee was to help with these issues because the Planning Board was always so busy . Attorney Barney - The Town Board needs to set the rules and we will function in any frame work you establish . It might make sense to define specific policy questions that they can research , such as two or three acre ranges , or two rural residential zones within a certain number of miles , or even Transfer of Development Rights . Do we even want it or do we not want it , those kind of issues might be worth looking into . Councilwoman Grigorov - That would come about from a request from the COC ? Attorney Barney - Yes , but if only that is the direction the Town Board wants to move towards . Those requests can be formulated quickly so you can ask them to do the work and make a recommendation . Councilman Klein - The Transfer of Development Rights in the Comprehensive Plan should be looked at or investigated . We do not want to . spend a lot of time at the COC meetings debating issues the Planning Committee and the Planning Board thinks are not good ideas . We also have to look at the Planning Department to do a lot of the work to prepare the various committees . Mr . Kanter deals with the COC , Planning Board , Conservation Board , and Planning Committee , he would be the common denominator to thel job . Mr . Kanter - Fortunately , we have two Board members who are on both the Codes and Ordinance Committee and Planning Committee that should help in getting these things running efficiently . Supervisor Valentino - I like the idea of coordination between the COC and Planning Committee on these issues . Attorney Barney - We can protect the residential group when we start talking about specific zones . Maybe the thing to do is begin with the rural residential zone . I will prepare a draft for the Codes and Ordinance Committee to look at , and then refer it to the Planning Committee to ask if there are any changes or alternatives to consider . Mr . Kanter - Some ,parts of the zoning may initially be out of order from the original table of contents . If they looked like items that could take several months for the Planning Committee to look at . Then we could identify things like rural residential districts , or other conservation districts . Councilwoman Grigorov - The Planning Committee could help expedite this whole process . Mr . Kanter - The Planning Department ' s proposed 1996 work plan is longer than what was needed , but I wanted to put in a status report . The plan TOWN BOARD MINUTES 9 MARCH 4 , 1996 tscribes in more detail than the annual report the status of the 1995 rk plans . Many of the things we started in 1995 , the Environmental Atlas and GIS , are at initial stages and will be ongoing work for several years . Supervisor Valentino and I are talking about a three year or longer work plan . That is why there is a lot of things listed . Obviously not all of them can be done in 1996 , so I started to set time frames over a three year period . Supervisor Valentino - We talked about moving Storm Water Management up on the priority list because of the January floods . Councilman Klein - Storm Water Management is something that has been put aside every year because other things come up , this involves the Highway , Engineering , Planning , and many departments . There are model ordinances . Mr . Walker - The ordinance is not the first thing we need to do , we need to study a plan . There is no sense having an ordinance until you decide what you want to gain . The DEC model is a good plan . Mr . Kanter - The Storm Water Management Plan is one of the things that we need to do . Figure out exactly what it is going to be , who is going .*j °do what , and how long it is going to take . It sounds like at least a one year project . Some of it involves technical engineering studies and f ormulas , as well as other general planning . The town needs to set up gulations so the problem does not reoccur . uncilman Klein - Where does it start ? Mr . Walker - It starts with an ' engineering analysis of our current water shed situation . The first part is related to the planning which starts as a water shed and drainage plan evaluation . We have a number of studies that have been done over the past few years , in the northeast and south hill areas . There is not too much problem on the West Hill at this point , but there has been a number of elements . Now we have the planimetric base map showing the hydrology , and we have started mapping water sheds in the town which have not been updated since about 1960 or 1970 . Councilman Klein - Is this something that planning does not have to deal with initially ? Mr . Walker - Planning and engineering work together , there will be resources from engineering and there will be resources from planning . Developing the Geographic Information System will depend on time available from a planning staffer or engineering staffer . I see it under my direction because it is more an engineering issue . The land use issue of how you control run off and then how you regulate it comes later , and that falls under the Planning Board . r . Noteboom - Ultimately , all of us are going to be involved . Highway as a more practical point of view . We need to assess the current TOWN BOARD MINUTES 10 MARCH 4 , 1996 situation before we could move ahead with any actual plans . Highway is interested in where pipes will run , the more practical portion . Councilman Klein - You probably already know where you have the problem areas . Mr . Noteboom - We are familiar with them , and we have learned about others at times when things have happened . We are expecting some real problem areas when Peregine Hollow develops . Councilman Klein - You do not have a map of the drainage in the town , but you can certainly identify some of the areas ? Mr . Noteboom - We don ' t have a handle on what is in place in a lot of areas in town . If we had all been here 25 years ago , we might know , but we haven ' t been . Mr . Walker - You can not separate the implementation , a new development causes changes which can be a problem or it could be a resolution . Mrs . Noteboom - That is why record management is so important , if someone had kept those map records from 25 years ago we would know where the drainage pipes are . Councilwoman Russell - There isn ' t any map which shows where all the pipes are ? Mr . Walker - No , there is a lot of scattered information . For example , the Eastern Heights area in the 1970 ' s had a lot of flooding down Slaterville Road and Pine Tree Road . The development of Eastern Heights increased run offs and problems , then the State built new culverts and the county changed the road drainage . The town did remedial work in 1976 or 1978 , we lined channels to come down the hill . Drainage structures are not just something you can forget because they do not last forever . Five years of water coming down a 10 - 15 % slope causes problems , this needs to be maintained , including annual inspection and tree removal . We do not have a map to go into work on those drainage pipes . When we track down the records we have , we are finding we do not have the right to be there . We have solved one of those areas on Quick ' s property because they had debris there . The brush grew up and Mr . Quick said it was flooding his driveway and asked us to come fix it . We asked fix what , and he said the diversion you built . We researched it by calling Larry Fraboni who said we built the diversion pipe on the Quick property , but we have never been there to mow the brush or maintain anything . Councilman Klein - Is there some kind of easement there ? Mr . Walker - There wasn ' t , but there is now . Councilman Klein - Mr . Quirk gave it to you ? TOWN BOARD MINUTES 11 MARCH 4 , 1996 . Walker - " Yes " . Councilman Klein —Because 15 years ago , he didn ' t . Mr . Walker - No , he had some kind of construction easement or permission to build it but there was never any follow through . Supervisor Valentino - That is a major problem we are finding , no documentation from years ago . Mr . Walker - The Northeast has all kinds of drainage in the back lots , but that was 20 some years ago , and no provisions were made to maintain them . Now those are in back lots and people do not want us to cut down their trees that are plugging the ditches . Mr . Frost - It was a phenomena that seems to have occurred in other governmental agencies in the 1970 ' s right up through the early 1980 ' s . They do not look at the whole picture of maintenance and a lot of things we are dealing with today shows no clear record , or records . just do not exist . Supervisor Valentino - I do not think all the swales they put into Eastern Heights when it was built show up on some of the maps . . Walker - They showed on the plans , but did not get built ? r . Kanter - If they were built 20 - 25 years ago , they may not be there any more . Supervisor Valentino - Some of them are not there . Councilman Klein - The swales , whether it is a road swale or back lot swale do fill up . Mr . Walker - It ' s not just the drainage , sewers back up . Supervisor Valentino visited a site of a saturated sewer that was built in the 1960 ' s . Councilman Klein - You filled it in , right ? Mr . Walker - No , we had never maintained it . We could not get into the area to unplug the clogs when we needed to . Right now we are doing the clearing of the right - of - way . If we mowed it every year we would not have the problems we have now . Now we are cutting down 16 - 18 inch willow trees from the sewer right - of - ways . That is one of the biggest priorities , understanding what we do have . Supervisor Valentino - That will be our starting point then . TOWN BOARD MINUTES 12 MARCH 4 , 1996 Councilman Klein I w During the Comprehensive Plan preparation we brought a lot of maps together , obviously , this was not one of them , but it sounds like that is what we have to start with . Mr . Walker - There was a basic hydrologic map reviewed during preparation of the Comprehensive Plan which shows the drainage device and major water sheds , but there was no real characterization of the water sheds in the analysis of the water sheds . We need to build a hydrologic model of our town , which we have the capabilities and program to do . It is just a matter of putting our energies together to get. it done . Councilman Klein - This should be listed as a major priority for the Engineering Department , and not so major a priority for the Planning Department because they will only be involved paraphilia for a while . Mr . Kanter - Staff resources could be significant with mapping , categorizing , and inventorying . Supervisor Valentino - is the rest of the Board in agreement on the Storm Water Management ? Councilwoman Russell - When I was on the Conservation Board , it seemed like every project we reviewed mentioned needing a Storm Water Management plan to find out what the drainage is going to do for this site or what kind of impact it is going to have on these properties , etc . . . Councilman Klein Whenever we get a lot of heavy rain there are a number of people that call and say there are areas that have problems . Every year there are areas that have chronic problems . Mr . Walker - The Environmental Protection Agency has issued water shed rules and storm water management erosion rules and mandates that say any project over 5 acres has to have an erosion plan and storm water management plan . We have incorporated this into projects like EcoVillage and any big projects we have been involved with . Case by case we have been looking at those . Mr . Kanter - The County is thinking about revising the rules of water shed regulations . That will be happening fairly soon and is something we should coordinate with them . Mr . Walker - I think there are regulations which are a little different from our stand point , they look more at pollutants rather than volumes of water . Mr . Kanter - Although , that is something we should look at in terms of the overall drainage plan . Councilwoman Russell - Bolton Point has a . lot of information and extensive mapping . TOWN BOARD MINUTES 13 MARCH 4 , 1996 . Walker - Not extensive mapping , they have matched the water sheds at drain into Cayuga Lake based on the individual water user . They have identified critical water sheds of water supplies in the county which include Cayuga Lake from Bolton Point and other communities like Trumansburg , and Six Mile Creek from the City of Ithaca , and from Fall Creek from the Cornell University water plant . They have been focusing on the water quality in those water sheds . Councilwoman Russell - It seems like that map would be a starting point . Mr . Walker - Yes , all those water sheds flow to the town , everything that flows to the city goes through the town first . Councilman Klein - Development of affordable housing is listed as a priority for 1997 . Based on the several proposals for subdivisions , should that be looked at sooner ? Mr . Kanter - We discussed hiring a housing agency who might have the information readily available to provide a basis for making judgements for what our needs are for affordable housing . They also could define what affordable housing is for the Town of Ithaca . Right now there is not enough staff time and expertise for something like this , but it is one of those things we might be able to do with some of the planning 4 udy monies budgeted for this year . . Frost - The County had an Affordable Housing Advisory Board that I s a member of for several years which involved research and studies involving people from Cornell , banks , contractors , and government . We never really got very far . It seemed to be clear that " affordable " meant different things to different people . The most constructive thing done was developing methods for accessing money for people to build homes . The County has done this research and did not get very far . Mr . Kanter - We looked at marketing studies of County data and City data , but it was not necessarily relevant to the town . There is not a good data base that has been put together for the town , so it is one thing we thought we might try and do . Mr . Frost - The Advisory Board concluded affordable housing within the outskirts of the town or city is just the reverse of what you want in terms of affordable housing . You want to know about central services , and businesses that go to the outskirts of the town or city so you can focus on bringing it closer . Mr . Kanter - The town seems to be the place where many people are focusing on new housing developments because there is not a lot of land left in the city . There is a lot of land in the town , unfortunately , a lot of it is in steep slopes and agricultural areas which raises a lot of her questions . Strictly focusing on the need for affordable housing is e study we could begin this year . TOWN BOARD MINUTES 14 MARCH 4 , 1996 Councilman Klein - How does this tie in with the agreement that former Supervisor John Whitcomb and Mayor Nichols signed last year for mutually beneficial planning studies that do not compete with each other . The need is with the city population , and the city really does not have much space left . Are their demographics worth studying , would the need be met within the town , and where do you put it and make it work . Supervisor Valentino - From previous work I have done for the union we saw a picture of the whole county in relation to the people that would need affordable housing . Cornell is the largest employer with about 10 , 000 employed . The people needing affordable housing all live beyond the boundaries of the City . They live in the far reaches of the County , such as Trumansburg . They commute long distances through the Town of Ithaca to get to work . It seems that it is important to develop affordable housing that would bring these people back towards the center of Ithaca . That would be the way to revitalize the City because these people shop in othler areas where they live . It would be interesting to see a study of those type of demographics . Councilwoman Russell - There must be some sort of affordable housing in the City . Are you saying there just isn ' t enough to accommodate the need ? Supervisor Valentino - There isn ' t really a lot of affordable housing in the City . Councilman Klein Because of the students the rental housing costs are extremely high except for the subsidized housing . Mr . Kanter - That is why there are certain aspects of these affordable low income projects coming before the Town that are attractive because they are not intended specifically for students . In fact the low income housing credit program only allows students if the person also has a family . The proposals the Town has been seeing under the Low Income Housing Credit Program are targeting young families or empty nesters . However , the proposal on the Raponi site could have single family houses for rent . Mrs . Noteboom - Those young families won ' t want to live here because they can ' t afford the prices in the stores . Mr . Kanter - The Low Income Housing Credit Program provides renting levels that would attract those families . Mrs . Noteboom - The cost of living around Ithaca is why people live in the other areas because it is cheaper to shop in those communities . These people commute into Ithaca but purchase products outside of Ithaca . That is sad because we are losing a lot of sales tax base . TOWN BOARD HINUTES 15 MARCH 4 , 1996 uncilwoman Russell - For example , Wegman ' s prices in Ithaca are much gher than they are in other communities . Councilman Wolff - We could start by developing the demographics and a needs study of what housing is already here . Councilwoman Grigorov - When they do these studies do they actually talk to people about wanting to live here if they could afford it , or if they would rather stay out in the country ? Hr . Kanter - Those surveys have not been done . Supervisor Valentino - The city has done some studies on affordable housing when we were studying the working poor problems . The city had some good statistics from interviews . Mrs . Noteboom - As much as Cornell University and Ithaca College help us provide jobs they also hurt us with housing prices . Councilman Wolff - I suspect some unconscious collusion among the landowners . At least there is more diversity of landowners now . You don ' t have just two or three landowners driving the prices anymore . f ounW. alker - In the City you do , eighty percent of the rental housing is ned by half a dozen landowners . cilman Klein - The consensus is that affordable housing is important . Councilman Wolff - The next step would be to determine what type of housing we would like to attract . Hr . Frost - Another affordable way to live is in a mobile home , right now we have one mobile home park , Collegeview . The Town of Ithaca is not considered one of the most affordable places to live . Councilwoman Russell - It might be worth examining whether these low income housing programs are going to be cut . Supervisor Valentino - Are these low income housing credits , State or Federal ? Hr . Kanter - The tax credit program is Federal , but it only has one more year , it may be re - authorized . That one is popular with investors . It does not actually take federal monies , except that people are getting income tax write offs . That means there is less revenues coming in . Councilman Wolff - Do you know of any housing programs specifically that have been large benefactors of that tax credit program . Kanter - We have a long list of ones that have been built in other Ireas . TOWN BOARD MINUTES 16 MARCH 4 , 1. 996 Councilman Klein The authorizations that are probably in jeopardy are the ones that have visible funding sources , such as those which are funded by HUD for construction of units . Since the tax credit program is a " back door appro�Iach " , it is not an appropriation , it decreases revenue to the government , but does not cause an actual expense to the government . Mr . Walker - It decreases a wealthy investors obligation . Councilman Klein - Probably the affordable housing the town is interested in , since we do not have a housing authority , is within a subsidized program , but probably not within Section 8 housing . . . . Councilman Wolff - Do we have Section 8 housing in the town ? Mr . Frost - There are some rental houses that are Section 8 in the Town . Eva Hoffmann - I used to work with Section 8 housing through the Economic Opportunity Corporation for the County . There is Section 8 housing outside of the City which includes the Town . Mr . Kanter - There is rehabilitation monies available for rural areas . The monies run through the County Small Cities Block Grant Program . Funding may go down , but if you keep the existing housing stock in good shape you will be able to keep people in the housing . It may not be housing as close to the center as wanted , but it at least will not lose people from the county because the housing stock is not good . Councilwoman Grigorov - The housing that will be built in order to get the tax credit will probably be built as cheaply as possible . Supervisor Valentino - I am worried about the DeHarder proposal , the Saddlewood Farms development seems to be much better . Councilman Klein i A lot of the communities do get these block grants to improve these housing stock , but the town has never applied for it . Was it excluded ? Mr . Kanter - No , it just seems that in the past it was something the town was not interested in getting into . No one is totally excluded from the town , but the individuals in the town would need to meet the guidelines . Councilman Klein - Is that tied to per capita income ? Mr . Walker - Per capita income in the Town is too high for people to qualify for many of these projects . Mr . Kanter - The county applies for these block grants on behalf of smaller communities , everything else outside the city . They are using the County ' s income figures to set those guidelines and that hurts the town more since our residents have higher incomes than surrounding areas , TOWN BOARD MINUTES 17 MARCH 4 , 1996 t that is not saying that there might not be people in the town that uld and would use these funds . Individuals can apply themselves through the County for these funds . In general , this study could look at the status of existing State and Federal programs and get a sketch of where they are and where they appear to be going . We had talked about some of the zoning mechanisms that would help provide incentives for affordable housing , such as density bonuses . Supervisor Valentino - We really need to get a better handle on getting some kind of affordable housing plan , otherwise we are- going to end up with a hit or miss system . We have 3 projects being discussed in the Town right now . Councilman Klein - Assuming Saddlewood Farms was approved and the developers charged ahead , what if the market is not there anymore , what have we allowed to be built ? Will this subdivision be deserted , go bankrupt , or be turned into student housing ? Councilman Wolff - You would think they wouldn ' t invest $ 21 million if their research was not right . Mr . Kanter - That is what the income credit program is about , getting investors who think they are going to get a good tax write off . The tvelopers are probably not putting in a lot of money . uncilman Klein - They probably set up separate partnerships for each of ese developments , so if one goes bankrupt the others would not . Mr . Walker - These developers are not marketing housing , they are marketing a financial project . Supervisor Valentino - Maybe we can coordinate with the city and county to get some kind of a plan , this should become a top priority . Councilman Wolff - Won ' t some of the Board ' s discussions about these proposals coming before us drive the need for better housing information ? Supervisor Valentino - Those subdivisions are driving this discussion for priorities . Mr . Kanter - Transportation and Planning : The two big issues are the Northeast Connector Study and the overall Transportation Plan . The Northeast Connector Study is more immediate depending on what it involves for staff time . The MPO may agree about what the study is going to entail , and the scope of the study . Then we will hire a consultant and have them do the study under the guidance of an oversight committee . Then the Transportation Plan , depending on how things go with the connector study , can begin in 1996 . If things progress well we could get to some of the planning preparation this year . We really need to sit wn and see what the Transportation Plan should be about . TOWN BOARD MINUTES 18 MARCH 4 , 1996 Mr . Noteboom - The transportation system in New York City helps make people get in and around . The harder you make it for people to get around the less people will come into that area , then they go other places outside the area . People will move there . Mr . Frost - It almost seems self - destructive because the better you make transportation the more people use it and the more problems it could create . Mr . Kanter - That is why one area of the Transportation Plan is not extending public bus routes to areas where there is not enough people to ride on the routes . You need increased population in outer areas so you can extend bus routes to them . Ms . Hoffmann - Bus routes or public transportation routes usually work best when they are built along corridors of population . The idea is to build in the areas where there are people living in multiple housing and single family housing close to other populated areas . Mr . Walker - We do not even have an official highway map , we have one dated from the 1970 ' s , but it is not updated . An official highway map is something the Planning Board and other town staff can help with because they know where roads are . If this board wants a Transportation Plan they need to approve it . Mrs . Noteboom - How could you do a Storm Water Management Plan without doing a Transportation Plan along with it ? You have to know where your roads are going , how the drainage will go off of them , what ditches , what roads , etc . . . Mr . Walker - Roads do effect drainage , but it is more in the way they are designed . The drainage plan can be done without a Transportation Plan . Mr . Kanter - Theme may not necessarily be a lot of new roads in the town because they cost a lot of money and there isn ' t State or Federal funds anymore , and there are physical constraints on the land . There are only certain places new roads could be built . Mr . Walker - Therie are very few places where we need new roads . We need to improve the transportation corridors . The Northeast Connector Study is a very high priority . The Town Board has to push it through the MPO , if we do not get some aggressive action on the MPO side it will not happen because the State does not wish to do its Councilman Klein - Are they going ahead with the study though ? Mr . Walker - They have been thinking about the study for three years . We had Caldwell Hill, Road approved as a reconstruction effort for last year , ( $ 260 , 000 ) on TIP . We said it was more important to plan the Northeast TOWN BOARD MINUTES 19 MARCH 4 , 1996 rridor so we said we would take it off TIP if they created the study . ey took the $ 260 , 000 and they are still thinking about setting up a committee to do the study . Councilman Klein - Past Supervisor Whitcomb had some correspondence with the State because he was concerned they would do ekactly as they did with the study . Mr . Kanter - The State has flip flopped and said they will give us some money , but not as much as was originally planned in the TIP . A study of that magnitude implies that a road is going to be built somewhere , and there is no money to build that type of federal highway . They have indicated from $ 80 , 000 to $ 100 , 000 could be available for an area planning study . It may recommend a new rcad alignment somewhere , but it may also need other traffic mitigation measures . The Northeast Connector Study will be done this year , if it isn ' t , then it won ' t happen at all . Mr . Walker - There are a very few places that need new roads . The Northeast Connector Study shows that it probably would not happen in the Town of Ithaca , it is more of a county master planning issue . When you say we have a Transportation Plan , it is to say that we have a the ansportation network that comes here and borders the Town of Dryden , ere the traffic should be going , but then it goes to the county . We do f have a plan addressing problem areas . We had a study done as part of comprehensive planning process by a consultant who evaluated all the roads in the town and all the intersections , but it was not a popular thing to do , so it didn ' t progress . Supervisor Valentino - What do we do now ? Mr . Walker - I think the Transportation Plan in the Town should be a high priority . Probably the land use planning issues have the strongest relation to the Transportation , and Public Works has to deal with the Highway Department . The other problem area is on the West Hill because we do not have any interconnection . I would like to see the Planning Committee take the map we have and make a master plan to find the serious issues and potential transportation routes . The MPO is the pipe line to the intermunicipal cooperation throughout the county . Councilman Klein - Ts there someone at the county level whose expertise is in transportation ? Mr . Kanter - We could probably get extensive data from David Boyd . The County has a good GIS system already in effect and they have traffic counters we could use . ouncilman Klein - What can the Town Board do to help push the MPO ? r . Walker - Be represented by an elected official on the Policy i TOWN BOARD MINUTES 20 MARCH 4 , 1996 Committee . The problem is the DOT likes to run these MPO ' s . Supervisdr Valentino - Unfortunately , I will be unable to attend those meetings until July . Mr . Kanter - The Parks and Open Space Plan and development plans are being considered through the Open Space and Greenways Committee of the Conservation Board for initial review . Then it will be going to the Planning Committee and Public Works Committee for more in depth review and revisions . In your packets is a listing of potential parks and developments to give you an idea of the range of different things that could evolve and the cost that might be involved . Councilwoman Russell - Does the Park and Open Space Plan prioritize these projects ? Mr . Kanter - It has not , but as we start working on them some of the priorities would be determined by existing park lands . Councilman Klein - Have we finished the improvements to the Eastern Heights park ? Mr . Walker - We have agreed on what to do , but it is not resolved yet . We need to discuss this further with Attorney Barney . Mr . Noteboom - The Eastern Heights Park improvements are scheduled to be completed this year . Councilwoman Russiell - Water front planning seems to be coming up as part of the Cornell Lake Source Cooling Project . Mr . Kanter - It is coming up , we are now working with the County , City , Chamber of Commerce , and Cornell on a water front plan . It ' s a joint project and each group contributes . It is going to have some method of enhancing public access . It is not going to take a lot of staff time as there is a consultant under contract with the County to do the study . Councilman Wolff - What enhancements may come out of this ? Mr . Kanter - There is a pier that was proposed to be built at the Farmer ' s Market area with private donations and volunteers - doing the construction . It will have a small pier where boats can tie up to go to the market . Mr . Frost - ThIe Building / Zoning Department ' s priorities ate self explanatory . The most important thing will be in retrieving information and upgrading the computer system . We should be able to put in a property tax addiress or parcel number and retrieve all the information about the property through the Planning , Town Clerk , and so forth . It will improve efficiency for most of us . In Building / Zoning ,, we are dealing with people we do not know who are spending thousands of dollars I I TOWN BOARD MINUTES 21 MARCH 4 , 1996 V change things . It takes a lot of time to resolve these things and at is our biggest challenge . We have certain legal issues in town that have been going on for years . The Board has been involved with them but they do not get resolved very easily . There will be smaller things done related to violation of codes which we prioritize by who complains , has anyone complained , and then driving to the site to see what is going on to resolve the issue . With time constraints we try to pick up everything and treat everyone the same way . We have a record on what we have done and have not done in case of an injury or death and we need backup to go to court . Documentation is the main source of what goes on through the Boards . Supervisor Valentino - In general , I think the zoning enforcement is pretty much on, top of things . Councilman Klein Is there something we should do this year with the sprinkler law ? Hr . Frost - If you take the installation costs out of the equation of the sprinkler local law there is no argument , sprinklers should put in the buildings . The money dictates this issue . It is one of the most difficult issues to be decided , but how do you put a price on a single life . I do know how I would modify the sprinkler law if my opinion were ked . uncilman Klein - We talked about having a form publicizing that the law will be going into effect . Hr . Frost - We have sent a letter to about sixty people informing them they had three years to comply with the law which goes into effect in July of 19980 We encouraged these people to contact us with any questions they may have . A list has been kept of the phone calls which have been received , there were about eight . The calls were from people who own small properties who have a . single house with three dwelling units . Stephen Lucente has spearheaded a coalition of landlords requesting receiving a mailing list of the people we sent the letters to . Subsequent conversations with him have not disclosed what that coalition is doing . Our intent was to put together a form describing the law and its requirements . Councilman Klein - Since the law becomes effective in July 1998 , probably people will be contacting you closer to that time . The concern is that if certain landowners do the work , and then , just prior to the law becoming effective the Town decides to modify the law those people would be very upset to have spent the money for the sprinkler systems . l . Frost - I would like to see some landowners pursue variances now . e most significant building needing to meet the sprinklers requirements TOWN BOARD MINUTES 22 MARCH 4 , 1996 is the Ithaca College Towers . They are planning to have the west tower fitted with sprinklers this summer . We do have a lot of buildings which were built in the 1950 ' s and 1960 ' s which were not built in compliance to the State Building Code . The Town adopted the State Building Code in June of 1960 . Last year the Town Board informally stated they would not be willing to change the sprinkler law . Councilman Klein T I am sympathetic to the landowner who with a three dwelling unit would have to retrofit the sprinklers , it would be very expensive . Mr . Frost - I would change the local law for buildings where the main door for each apartment opens directly outside where there are no interior doors or stairways , except where they were over two stories high . I would modify it for a simple wood frame structure where there is no more than three units . There are some units which are fire traps . I would like to see a variance procedure established where we can maintain a higher standard for buildings which have been built with lower standards '. Councilman Klein - Most owners will wait until 1998 to address this problem , or they will sell the property before they have to comply . Mr . Frost - We were the third municipality in the State to pass a 6 sprinkler local law , since that time 20 to 25 municipalities now have a similar local law ! Mr . Walker - The engineering priorities are mostly carry overs from 1995 . Water and sewer benefit assessments are a high topic priority . We will be reviewing every tax parcel in the Town for general assessment and water and sewer benefit assessments while working with the Town Clerk ' s office . Supervisor Valentino - Then there will be annual updates with the county to make sure all changes have been made . Mr . Walker - The technical manual for the Storm Water Management is a priority , we do have a start on it . It will set up procedures for usage during storm water impacts and it will have a land use and housing section with a waiter shed plan and drainage evaluation . The benefits , policies , and procedures will be a manual in regards to issues on water and sewer benefit assessments in conservation districts to maintain open space . Our benefits assessment formula was written in 1972 by an attorney . There are some weaknesses and it is hard to balance . The project management files are being cleaned out upstairs under the Records Management Program and we are about 50 % done . We have indexed all the drawings but we do not have them in order as space is limited . We are updating the highway records and the deeds to roads . We have a lot of roads that we have been using with no proof that we own them . We are TOWN BOARD MINUTES 23 MARCH 4 , 1996 t mrying to get all the records into one place . Hopefully , we will be ving ahead on the Town Hall . We will be developing capital provements plan for water and sewer . We do not have a lot of money to spend , and we do not have a big need for water expansion right now . The Water System Master Planning Committee meets twice a month , and the city is looking for ways to improve this plan also . Supervisor Valentino - If the City does certain things , that impact will change what the Town should do , especially along East Shore Drive . It is hard now to put a solid plan together until we know what the City will do , as that may reduce our costs significantly . Mr . Walker - There is a lot to running the Capital Plan because we are dealing with other agencies to determine what costs will be for the next few years . Contracts and agreements : The SJS agreement is at City Hall with the Mayor . The city did not agree with what the Town Committee came up with . Supervisor Valentino - Is this on the repairs listing ? Mr . Walker - Yes , the cost and share . The Route 366 Water Main Agreement is not done so we need to find out where it stands with the other entities . he SCLIWC has a twenty year agreement , the major purpose of the greement was to pay off the debt for building Bolton Point . The last and payments will be made this August . There are areas of concerns in maintaining the Town ' s rights for the investment to the water plant . The agreement can continue the way it is , but there is some activity being generated to encourage the formation of a water authority . Supervisor Valentino - Fortunately , former Supervisor Shirley Raffensperger is on the committee studying the idea of the authority . Mr . Walker - In Data management we are trying to keep everyone updated on the network and getting new networks in . We are checking into new equipment and protocols . Engineering will be ' providing support on the right - of - way inspection improvement program . Mr . Noteboom will have student interns to complete much of it . We have been talking about a Department of Public Works . We do not need to drastically change how things are being done . We work together very well so a Department of Public Works is not a high priority . Mr . Noteboom - They are all part of the same things because we have right - of - ways in water , sewer , parks , and roads . Mr . Walker - Land use and housing : The water shed plan and drainage valuation is a top priority . The water distribution system has taken a ack to seat other things over the years . Water System Master Plan TOWN BOARD MINUTES 24 MARCH 4 , 1996 started with intermunicipal cooperation . The valve and hydrant maintenance plan was a priority last year and 50 % of the things that needed to be repaired were completed last year . We are going to complete those this year . Tank maintenance program : The schedule is 50 % complete and we do not need to maintain all the tanks . East Hill tank , East Shore Drive main , and the Trumansburg Road water main replacement are the three critical links in the water distribution system needing work . I want to get a master plan done before we can commit funds . The sewer transmission plan is a combination of the Town and City project that links with the SJS agreement . The West Hill sewer that comes down from the hospital has a leak . Supervisor Valentino - Are the sewer lines on West Hill close to the water mains ? Mr . Walker - No , (they are quite separate , but we do have problems with that plugging up , l It is an old slate tiled sewer . Councilman Klein The DeWitt storm water pond is listed as being redesigned , don ' t you mean reconstructed ? There is also design work to be . completed on it by Engineering . Mr . Walker - I am looking at some of the specific site plans that Engineering will be designing . Mr . Noteboom - That storm water pond will be done this year . Councilman Klein - Engineering needs to complete that plan so it can be done . Mr . Noteboom - FEMA will be giving us approximately $ 13 , 000 for that area because of the flood damage . Councilman Klein Is the West Hill main going to be designed this year ? Mr . Walker - Yes , we are going to have the design planning , with construction in 1997 . The idea was for the sewer to be built because of a potential major subdivision being built in the area . The sewer would have been built in conjunction with the subdivision . Mr . Kanter - Unfortunately , the market was not right for that development to go on . Mr . Noteboom - Highway is the nut and bolts operation , whatever everyone plans and designs we build and maintain . All of our regular maintenance programs are going to be kept in place with time to take care of this year ' s storm damage . We are going to hire 4 to 6 more laborers this summer to do flagging so others can perform other tasks . Many things in the data base management area were consolidated for better understanding . We have a number of new programs to develop which we will be made part of the structure . By developing those will have a more consistent effort in I TOWN BOARD MINUTES 25 MARCH 4 , 1996 intaining our infrastructure . Councilman Klein - Should you put off repaving Brandywine until the drainage repairs are done ? Hr . Noteboom - We plan to have that done before paving Brandywine . I am not sure that this will help Brandywine or not , pipe there may be difficult because of the ditch being on bed rock . The pipes that already exist there work to capacity at high water times , so we need to install larger capacity pipes before paving . Hr . Walker - The biggest problem on Brandywine is that even if the retention pond is working it still throws a certain amount of water out . Hr . Noteboom - I would like to be able to respond to various citizens complaints and needs in a more timely manner while continuing planned work programs . There is always a cost and time factor for that . Sometimes we are in between jobs or already doing something so we do not always have a good handle on responding to complaints . Some of these policies are made up by the board . Councilman Klein - Are you tracking all the complaint calls ? Ar . Noteboom - Yes , we use a log and fill out a sheet for every call with 19he name , phone number , etc . mr . Frost - We try to keep people informed , even if it is every week or month , just so they know we have not forgotten them . Hr . Noteboom - We have discussed contracting certain jobs out . A contractor will not have to pull their forces off one job to do some other things . It is costing us money to pull some of our forces off one job to . do another . Supervisor Valentino - It is hard to know when someone calls to complain how serious it is . Hr . Noteboom - Sometimes it is not our problem , it may be the County ' s responsibility . Councilman Klein - What is the progress on the search for new health insurance ? Mrs . Noteboom - The health insurance is being worked on by Sherm DiSanto , Human Resource Specialist and Supervisor Valentino . It is one of the priorities this year . I am more worried about the records management , the system we first put into place several years ago is breaking down from a lack of space . The only records we can retrieve are the ones in she archival vault and some of the records upstairs . I have asked everal times for cooperation from the Justices to help me do that , but o one wants to prioritize it to help go through the records . I am very TOWN BOARD MINUTES 26 MARCH 4 , 1996 concerned about the new technology that everyone wants to invoke in 1996 . SARA still recognizes the hard copies as the official document , and I get nervous with all this new equipment and systems . I am afraid that the official copy may get lost in the shuffle because they are not being sent down to the archival vault as they should be . The indexing program worries me as we just do not have adequate time . My Deputy ' s spend 75 % of their time answering the phones and waiting on customers , so that does not leave a lot of time to get the work done . Councilman Klein - The indexing , how much could be done by having a third person come in ? Mrs . Noteboom - We need a computer system with the 6 . 1 windows so they can share the information back and forth in the computers . We need to play with it to find out how we want to develop the index . I was hoping by the time we got into a new Town Hall the Records Management System would be finished . Then we would know the indexing system well enough to network and correlate the information . The record storage area would have a library system for borrowing records with an " out " card . This will eliminate the need for additional space and filing cabinets . It can be . done if we have the cooperation , coordination and space to work on it . Realistically , we probably will not finish the program this year . Sherm DiSanto is doing a very good job with personnel , but we have a lot of issues that need to be worked on . Supervisor Valentino agrees that the personnel manual needs to be totally revised this year . Mr . Walker - The new proposed Town Hall on Court Street will decrease the hope for efficiency because of not having fully centralized records management . We will work around it , but it will lead to some of the same problems we have now because it will not be coordinated and centralized . Supervisor Valentino - My priority is the health insurance planning . Sherm DiSanto and I have appointments set up , and we are working on the retirement policy . We are looking into a health plan similar to Cornel 1 ' s . We will be coming to the Town Board with a proposal on that issue and the personnel manual . The other high priority is the accounting department . We definitely have to look at the software package to see what problems there are . Very soon we are going to have to get some staff trained on this software system . I will be monitoring the Accounting Department very closely . Councilman Klein - Have you dealt with any health insurance agents ? Mrs . Noteboom - Yes , we have had interviews with two or three of them . Mr . Walker - The newsletters about the new Town Hall will be mailed tomorrow , residents should have them by Thursday . Mrs . Noteboom - Next Tuesday night for the special election I will be delivering absentee ballots to each of the polling places . Then each of the Election Inspection Chairs will bring the ballots to Town Hall and I TOWN BOARD MINUTES 27 MARCH 4 , 1996 will be opening them in the town board room between 6 : 00 and 6 : 30 . The members of the press can hear the results then . ADJOURNMENT : As there was no further business to come before the Town board , Councilman Klein made a motion to adjourn , seconded by Councilman Wolff . The Supervisor adjourned the meeting at 9 : 20 p . m . Respectfully --submitted , 9Joan Lent Noteboom Town Clerk Minutes Transcribed by Deborah A . Kelley . TOWN OF ITHACA PROPOSED 1996 ENGINEERING PRIORITY WORK PLAN DATE 04 — Mar - 96 TEGORY ACTIVITY DEPT. COMMITTEE Rank STATUS ABC DMINISTRATION 1 Financial Management Water and sewer benefit assessment Review ENG PW, Rn A Started Manuals Stormwater Management ENG PW A started Benefit Assessment policies and procedures ENG PW A started Records Management Project management files ENG RMC A 50% Maps and drawings P, E2 RMC A indexed/started Utility record drawings ENG RMC A 25% Update highway records of roads and easement Highway PW B started Fling of records by tax parcel All RMC B CAPITAL PROJECTS New Town Hall ALL PW A pending Develop CIP ENG PW B started Highway Facility Design Highway PW C CONTRACTS and AGREEMENTS Revise SJS agreement Eng. SJS A started RTE 366 Water Main Agreement TB, ENG PW A 80% Revise SCLIWC intermunicipal Agreement TB, ENG PW B ATA MANAGEMENT Staff training on various applications ALL ADP A ongoing Implement PC network between Planning & Eng Eng. ADP A started HIGHWAY Develop ROW inspection and improvement program HW PW B Evaluate est of DPW ENG, HW PW C Parks PW C LAND USE/HOUSING Watershed Plan & Drainage Evaluation P9 E0 PW, PC A Develop Geographic Info System P, E PC, CB A Transportation Master Plan P, E PC, PW A Hydraulic Model of Water System Eng. PW B Develop Environmental Atlas P, E PC, CS B WATER Water System Master Plan ENG PW A Started Valve and Hydrant Maintenance ENG PW A 50% Tank Maintenance Program ENG PW A 50% Master Meter Installation ENG, BP PW A Designed East Hill Tank Plan & Design ENG PW B East Shore Dr. Main ENG PW B Tburg Rd. Water Replacement ENG PW B SEWER Sewage Transmission Plan ENG PW, SJS A West Hill Sewer Replacement ENG PW A 1996 Hicrhwav / Parks Work Plan 1 . Drainage and Storm Water Management Plan - - Priority 20 Implement Ten Year Pavement Plan . 3 . Evaluate Expansion of Highway/ Parks Facility , 4 . Implement Signs Program . 50 Right - of - Way Maintenance Program , 6 . Infrastructure and Data Base Development , 7 . Continue Providing Yard Waste Collection . S . Americans with Disabilities Act ( ADA ) Compliance Upgrades at All Park and Trail Facilities , 9 , Public Safety Improvements to Infrastructure . 10 . Major Projects : Eastern Heights Park Basketball Court Dewitt Storm Water Pond Redesign . Park Lane Road Cut Sandbank Road Reconstruction Other Flood Damage Repairs South Hill Recreation Way Improvements 11 . Respond to Various Citizen Complaints and Needs in a Timely Manner While Continuing Planned Work Program . Breakdown of 1996 Highway / Parks Work Plan 1 . Drainage and Storm Water Management Plan - - Priority a . Identify areas that need more immediate attention . 1 . Brandywine Drive piping . 20 Park Lane piping and all of Eastern Heights area . 3 . Dewitt Pond and adjoining areas . b . Work with Planning and Engineering to develop Town - wide needs and plan . 10 Check all existing drainage ways . 2 . Map Town - wide drainage areas . 3 . Develop maintenance plan and checklist . 4 . Develop priority plan to deal with problem areas . 2 . Implement Ten Year Pavement Plan . a . Permanent Improvements 16 List of roads to pave . I . Winthrop Drive II . Simsbury Drive III . Brandywine Drive IV . Chase Lane V . Sandra Place 2 . List job to be completed before paving . I . clean ditches II . Change pipe crossings III . Raise manholes IV . Raise shutoffs V . Fix shoulders VI . Center road and check slopes b . Preventative maintenance ii Include list of roads and trails ( See Appendix A ) I . Improve Drainage where possible . II . Check manhole and water shut offs , repair when necessary . III . Shim and repair base , where necessary IV . Crack seal . V . Cut brush and trees , where necessary VI . Repair shoulders VII . Stripping , where necessary VIII . Crosswalk stripping 3 . Evaluate Expansion of Highway/ Parks Facility . a . List Program and Space Needs b . Develop Financial Plan 1 . Bond project 2 . Spread over # years . I . Approach if spread over # years , how would it work . c . Grounds Maintenance and Improvements 1 . Drainage d . Buildings 1 . Air quality 29 Reseal block walls 3 . Complete work shop improvements at Annex 4 . Implement Signs Program . a . Roads and Trails . a . Includes inventory replacement and additional signage , where necessary b . This is an area that we fill in with because our man hours don ' t stretch far enough . 5 . Right - of - Way Maintenance Program . a . Mow roadsides b . Water and Sewer easements c . Trails 6 . Infrastructure and Data Base Development . a . Upgrade / Input Data on Computer Programs 1 , RSMS 2 , Highwayman Helper 3 . ZMap b . Sign Inventory i . Continue imputing data on computers 2 . Training to maximize use of programs . 3 . Continued training to move to making more people computer literate . 7 . Continue Providing Yard Waste Collection . a . Evaluate cost to provide services . b . Strive to Improve Efficiency i . Yard waste pickup 29 Drop off sites . 3 . Chip and Compost pickup 8 . Americans with Disabilities Act ( ADA ) Compliance Upgrades at All Park and Trail Facilities . 9 . Public Safety Improvements to Infrastructure . a . Guide Rails . b . Fencing . c . Crosswalk d . Pedestrian and Bicycle and Lanes . e . Storm Drain - - Child Proofing f . S .gnage lie Warnings g . Employee Training ' I Appendix A Oil and Stone Roads Slurry Seal Roads Winston Court Sapsucker Woods Road Updike Road Christopher Lane Pearsall Place Burleigh Drive Drew Road St . Catherine Circle Calkins Road Sienna Drive Hackberry Road Tareyton Drive Maplewood Drive Seven Mile Drive Sycamore Drive Vera Circle Poole Road qty OF 1p _ a TOWN OF ITHACA ,�,� �04'� 126 EAST SENECA STREET , ITHACA , N . Y . 14850 � Y TOWN CLERK 273-1721 HIGHWAY 273-1656 PARKS 273-8035 ENGINEERING 273-1747 PLANNING 273-1747 ZONING 273-1783 FAX (607) 273- 1704 MEMORANDUM TO : Cathy Valentino DATE : February 29 , 1996 FROM : Andrew S . Frost , Director of Building and Zoning ce) SUBJECT : 1996 Priorities Work Plan The following , albeit brief and perhaps repetitious , is a priority ' s work plan as I see it . Building / Zoning 1 ) Revise the Town ' s Sign Law . At the current time this is being addressed by COC . 2 ) Update the Zoning Ordinance , particularly as it relates to home occupations ( including professional uses ) , day care ( adult and child ) , second dwelling units ( which would include definitions of family and owner occupancy ) , satellite dishes , and ordinance definitions . General - Town Hall / Town Wide 3 ) Establish networking for town-wide information where , among other items , all information for a parcel of land , ( planning , engineering , building , zoning , town clerk , etc . ) can be computer accessed by way of tax parcel number and / or street address . Ager :1a Item No. 17 Town Clerk/Director Administrative Services 1996 Priorities Work Plan Town Clerk: 1 . Reorganization and review of Town of Ithaca contracts and agreements , including but not limited to indexing and categorizing by name , date , and terms . 2 . Update and review of appointments to boards and committees as appointed by Town Board . 3. Completion of indexing system of Town Board , Planning Board , Zoning Board of Appeals , and Conservation Board minutes . Continue plan development using indexing system for easier retrieval of information and elimination of excessive duplicating . 4. Plan and implementation of the 175th Historical Anniversary Celebration . Personnel : 1 . Review and revise Personnel Manual for active employees , retirees , and elected officials . 2 . Implementation and finalization of outside payroll service . 3 . Review and consider format changes for Employee Evaluation Forms , (by end of May) . 4 . Evaluate Violence in the Workplace responses . 5 . Complete analyzing and reviewing health insurance options . 6 . Development of training and education programs . Accounting 1 . Develop guidelines for adherence to purchasing and procurement policies of Town of Ithaca and State Comptroller . 2 . Further development of budgeting methods and time frames to insure adequate time for all departments and Town Board members to prepare and provide their information . Includes coordination of deadlines with the necessary Tompkins County departments , i . e . Assessment . Town Clerk/Director Administrative Services 1996 Priority Work Plan Page 2 . 3 . Development of Policies and Procedures Manual with calendar outlining revenues , disbursements , bond payments , and contract/agreement payments, etc. 4. Develop Capital Planning . 5 . Review and possible revision of financial reports . 6 . Ongoing review of computer accounting program to determine its efficiency and whether it is adequate to meet the needs of the Town . Respectfully submitted , Joan Lent Noteboom Town Clerk/Director of Administrative Services DRAFT TOWN OF =ACA PLANNIi ,'G DEPARTNTIENT PROPOSED 1996 PRIORITY WORK PLAN (Draft - February 2, 1996) I i I I I DRAFT TOWN OF ITHACA PLANNING DEPARTMENT PROPOSED 1996 PRIORITY WORK PLAN Project / Program Dept. Committee Rank (A ,B ,C) Year ADMINISTRATION Development Review Manual P,E PC A 96 GENERAL PLANNING Continue Development of G .I. S. P,E CB, ADP A Acquire hardware / software 96 Initiate map & info database 96 Continue Devel. of Envir. Atlas P,E CB B 96-98 Cayuga Lake Waterfront Planning Ping. PC, CB, TB C 96 alysis of Scenic Views / Vistas (Plug.) CB C 96-97 Devel. Affordable Housing Strategy Ping. PC ? 97 UNA / CEA Designation Study P,E PC, CB, PB, TB C 97-98 Initiate Historic Res, Survey Ping. PC ? 97 Stormwater Mgmt. Plan E, P, Hwy. PW, CB ? ? Devel. 5 Yr. Capital Plan E, P, Pks ., Hwy. PW, PC; TB ? ? TRANSPORTATION PLANNING N. E. Connector Study P, E, Hwy. MPO, PC, PW, TB A 96-97 Transportation Plan P, E, Hwy. PC, PW, PB, TB A Determine Scope of Work 96 Plan Preparation 97-98 t ranof Ithaca / Cornell Univ, P, E, Hwy. Town /Cornell B 96-98 sportation Comm . TransComm., TB i REGULATORY (ZONING , BEGS. , ETC) Zoning Ordinance Revisions P,E,Z PC, COC, TB A 96-97 (See Attachments for prel. COC and Pln. Comm. ,priorities) Enact Six Mile Creek Ping. TB A 96 Conservation District Establish Conservation Ping. PC, COQ, CB, TB B 96-97 Districts in Other Areas Establish Rural Res. District Ping. PC, COC, CB, TB B 96 Consider New "Institutional" Ping. PC, COC, TB ? 7 Zone Define "Unbuildable" Land Ping. PB, PC, COC, CB, B 96 TB MR, SLUD, Comm. /Ind. Rezonings Ping. COC, PB, TB B 96 PARKS AND OPEN SPACE PLANNING & DEVELOPMENT Complete Park, Rec. & Open Ping., Pks, CB, PW, PC, A 96 Space Plan Update pB, TB Pew & Maple Ave. Trails P, E, Pks. PW, CB, TB ? Design & Easemt. Ac s . 96 Construction 97-98 Plans for Chase Farm Park & Access P,E, Parks, Hwy. PW, PC C 96-97 Complete Inlet Valley Archeological Parks /Ping. PC, CB, PW C 96 Survey Design Plan for Iacovelli Park Parks, E, P PW, PC, CB, TB C ? I Buttermilk Gateway Trail (if P, E. Pks ., PW, CB, TB ? ISTEA Grant comes through) City of Ithaca Design 97 Construction 98 2 i AQNGOING PLANNING DEPT. ACTIVITIES Ipport to Boards, Committees Ping. PB, TB, CB, ZBA COC, PC Public/Technical Assistance Ping. Library Coding & Organization Ping. Records Mgmt. / Filing P, E, Z Development Reviews P, E, Z PB, CB, ZBA, TB - - - - SEQR Reviews Ping. PB, ZBA, TB - - - - MPO Planning Committee P, E MPO, TB - - - - Staff Training/ Education Ping. - - - - - - (Conferences, Workshops ) McName c\ Istaff\jon\ 96wkp1n.mem 3 I 1995 Priority Work Plan Items Completed _ ADMINISTRATION: Update development application form Update development review spreadsheet File records by street address (cross-reference w/ tax map #'s) Update subdivision and site plan checklists GENERAL PLANNING : MPO Transport lion Planning: Rt, 96 Mitigation/Park-an&ride Analysis County Trail / Corridor Study (Completed in draft) TIP Amendment Airport Master Plan (partic. in Local Gov' t. Committee) REGULATORY: Cornell SLUR was enacted I # Fee4n-Lieu of Parkland. local law was enacted Sunset provisions for Subdivisions and Site Plans were enacted Building height requirements in Zoning were amended I 4 I 1995 Priority Work Plan Items in Progress DNIINISTRATION: Development Review Manual: Revised draft of staff responsibilities in devel. review completed. Needs editing, review, then finalize. GENERAL PLANNING : Development of GIS : Needs assessment and research into possible hardware and software completed in 1995 . 1996 Budget includes funds for acquisition of GIS. Development of Environmental Atlas: Preliminary base maps for UNA' s and wetlands was prepared. Will continue in 1996 and integrate into GIS when implemented. Cayuga Lake Waterfront Planning: Town entered into agreement with County, City, Chamber of Commerce and Cornell Univ. for joint study of waterfront area. County obtained grant from NYS as part of effort. Study team was assembled and has met with consultant to initiate study. GULATORY: Zoning Ordinance Revisions: Codes and Ordinances initiated comprehensive review of current Zoning Ordinance and has identified preliminary priorities for revisions (see attached list) . Will continue in 1996 . Six Mile Creek Conservation District: A proposed Conservation District has been drafted and revised several times . Public meetings were held. Final revisions and public hearings will be held in 1996 . Review of Status of MR, SLUD and Other Non-residential Districts: Analysis was completed. COC has recommended several rezonings to conform to Comprehensive Plan. Planning Board has held two public hearings . Additional public hearings to be held in 1996. Define "Unbuildable" Land: Amendment to Subdivision Regulations has been drafted to provide better guidance to Planning Board on determining location and number of lots / dwelling units in subdivisions, based on consideration of site constraints , such as steep slopes, erobable soils, wetlands, etc. Legal research, review and further revisions can be pursued in 1996. PARKS & OPEN SPACE DEVELOPMENT : Parks, Rec. and Open Space Plan Update: Was completed in draft in 1995, and now should undergo review by appropriate boards and committees and the public, necessary revisions, 5 i public hearings, and adoption in 1996. Plans for Chase Farm Park and Access: Preliminary analysis and discussions with residents of Chase Farm area were initiated in 1995 to determine possibility of through access from end of Chase Lane to Ridgecrest and addition of small neighborhood park (elements of Chase Farm Phase II that never came about). Landowners with affected parcels have shown interest. Town Board should determine whether this is something that should be pursued in 1996. Plans for Baldwin Trail (now referred to as Wm. & Hannah Pew Trail) : Preliminary work on obtaining easements was done in 1995, and an application for ISTEA Enhancement funds was submitted to NYS, including extension of the Maple Avenue Trail. If grant comes through (we should hear by April ' 96), design of these bicycle / pedestrian trails should be considered a high priority for 1996. If the grant does not come through, then the Town Board should determine the priority for 1996 or future years. Inlet Valley Archeological Survey: Cornell continued site research in 1995 on the two town parks on Seven Mile Drive and Bostwick Road to determine whether there are any constraints to future park development. Final site work will be completed in Spring of 1996, and a final report with specific recommendations will be completed in June 1996. 6 TOWN OF ITHACA CODES & ORDINANCES COMMITTEE CUMULATIVE LIST OF ZONING REVISION PRIORITIES (Not Necessarily in Order of Priorities) September 13, 1995 Home Occupations (Revise / update existing regs.) - Adult Dav Care (Add new provisions) Institutional Zone (Add new zone) Industrial Zone (Revise existing zone) Sign Ordinance (Revise / update ) Second Dwelling Unit in Residential Zones (Possibly change to special approval) Special Approvals (Planning Board vs . ZBA) Site Plan Modification Thresholds (Minor modifications handled administratively) Parking Standards (Update for all uses / zones) Gas Stations (Update standards : canopies, convenience stores, etc.) - Use Variance Procedures (Should have Planning Board recommendation before going to ZBA) Design / architectural Standards (and possible need for Design/Arch. Review Advisory Board) Historic Preservation (Start with historic resources survey; then discuss whether ordinance / review board desirable) Definitions (Update and add new definitions where appropriate) TOWN OF ITHACA PLANNING COMMITTEE Updated List of Priorities for 1996 (Summary of Discussion at 2 / 5 / 96 Meeting) (Not necessarily in order of priorities) HIGHEST PRIORITIES Rural Residential Districts: Study R-30 or other appropriate areas where lower density zoning would be desirable a. Start with areas adjacent to proposed Conservation Districts and Agricultural Districts . Agricultural zones: e . g. , more specific controls over uses / densities in AG zoning districts; expand AG zones to other appropriate areas . Some areas can be included in analysis of Rural . Residential as listed above. Have Agriculture Committee discuss possible zoning changes, look at incentives to encourage agriculture in Town. Planning Committee and Ag Committee can discuss in future. The future of agriculture on the West Hill is especially relevant in light of pending development pressures . Possible open space preservation strategies, such as : a, sewer and water assessment reductions for Conservation Districts, conservation easements, agricultural land, b , tax abatements for conservation easements, ce purchase of development rights (PDR) or transfer of development rights (TDR) . Parks, Recreation and Open Space Plan Update : Planning Committee to review when report is ready. Conservation Districts : Prioritize / study additional areas for Conservation zoning. OTHER PRIORITIES Residential zoning / housing: i i i I -z- a. Second dwelling unit in residential zones (look at special approval process instead of by right) . b . Affordable housing: Do housing needs assessment to determine Town of Ithaca needs (could be done by County or consultant) . Then look at possible zoning strategies to promote affordable housing. Historic resources survey: Work with Historic Ithaca, Cornell University or others to provide inventory of historic resources in Town. Scenic resources survey (scenic views /vistas) : Conservation Board is taking lead on this inventory and has identified this as one of their top priorities for 1996. I New Institutional and / or Educational zones (s) : Can use Cornell SLUR as a basis (can work with City and Cornell on this ) . Not an urgent priority, but keep in mind) . Educate developers on Town' s review process - address possible negative perception about developing within Ithaca. (Staff is completing Development Review Manual which outlines entire review process; also consider possibility of pampYilet for public distribution describing Town functions and services available to the public. OTHER SUBTECTS THAT SHOULD BE CONSIDERED FOR FUTURE PLANNING COMMITTEE INVOLVEMENT Northeast Connector Study: This project is in the MPO' s Transportation Improvement Program (TIP), but funding levels are being re-evaluated by the state. The state is willing to commit study funds, but probably at a lower level than originally determined. The MPO has set up a Study Group to establish the scope of this study, and will be working with the state to initiate this project in 1996 : Because of the magnitude and interest in this study, it is suggested that this be the transportation priority for 1996 . Transportation Plan / Amend Official Map : This will be a high priority project for staff and Public Works Committee, working with Planning Committee. Because of the effort that will be involved with the Northeast Connector Study, it is suggested that the 1996 task for the overall Transportation Plan be to identify II the scope and study process, with Plan work beginning in 1997. Waterfront Plan: Work with County, City, Cornell and Chamber of Commerce on study, of Cayuga Lake waterfront (e.g. , enhancing public access, recreational facilities opportunities for water-related businesses, etc. ) . I 1 i TOWN OF ITHACA PLANNING DEPARTMENT MEMORANDUM TO: CATHY VALENTINO, SUPERVISOR FROM: JON KANTER, DIRECTOR OF PLANNING RE: ROLE OF PLANNING COMMITTEE DATE: JANUARY 4, 1996 Ellen Harrison, Carolyn Grigorov and I got together today to discuss the role of the Planning Committee and its relationship to the Codes and Ordinances Committee. Attached is a description prepared by Ellen, revised to reflect our collective thoughts and recommendations, based on our meeting. We would be happy to discuss this with you in more detail at your convenience. Att. cc: Ellen Harrison Carolyn Grigorov ROLE OF PLANNING COMMITTEE AND RELATION TO CODES AND ORDINANCES COMMITTEE The Planning Committee role is to promote the implementation of the Town Comprehensive Plan and to recommend policies which flow from that document. In setting the Committee priorities, we, reviewed the Plan and selected implementation of several key measures as our highest priority. One was the development of a Conservation Zone which took most of our time over the past year. We are moving on to consideration of a Rural Residential zone. The Planning Committee should thus be taking a 'big picture" view of planning and development issues, targeting selected issues, discussing and developing policy recommendations and then forwarding those on for codification and implementation. Membership on the Planning Committee should include 3 members of the Town Board and the Chair (or designee) of the Planning Board. We would suggest that a member of the Conservation Board also be officially appointed by the Supervisor to serve as a liason to that group. At least one of the Town Board members on the Planning Committee should also be on the Codes and Ordinances Committee, since there is an important link between the two committees. The Codes and Ordinances Committee should take the policy direction established by the Planning Committee (or the Town Board as a whole) and flesh it out into appropriate legal vehicles. So, for example, the Planning Committee is recommending that the policy regarding second dwelling units in homes be redefined. The Planning Committee should develop its policy recommendation and then ask Codes and Ordinances to look at how that policy might best be incorporated into the zoning ordinance, subdivision regulations or elsewhere. In the case of the Conservation Zone, it is possible that the Planning Committee may have spent too much time on some of the specifics of the language and drafting, and could, perhaps, have sent the policy recommendations on to Codes and Ordinances sooner. Holding a joint meeting of the two committees occasionally (as we did re the Conservation Zone) seems useful, perhaps at the time the Planning Committee is °passing along" the policy recommendations to Codes and Ordinances. Liason with the Town Board and Planning Board deserves some consideration . For some substantial policv issues, it seems that it might be important to get a reading from the full Town Board before a lot of time is spent by Codes and Ordinances and potentially by the Planning Board on an issue that has not yet been reviewed by the Town Board as a whole. It might be worthwhile for the Planning Committee to have some time on the Town Board agenda every so often (our guess is that it would be no more frequent than every 3 to 4 months) to actually discuss policy issues. So for example, once the Planning Committee has discussed and developed a recommendation on second dwelling units, it might be brought to the Town Board for discussion to be sure that the concepts put forward by the Planning Committee are likely to be in line with what the Town Board favors. This would not likely entail voting on anything, and we would recognize that public input and other factors may alter the policy recommendations over the course of consideration of the issue by Codes and Ordinances, the Planning Board and the final Town Board review and vote. Such a discussion relatively early in the formal review process (after development of policy recommendations by the Planning Committee and before beginning to draft specific language) might save considerable time in the long run. EZH January 1 , 1996 (Revised January 4, 1996) [ fop I I C,• c FEB 14 f9..0 BARNEY , GROSSMAN , ROTH & DUBOW ATTORNEYS AT LAW PLANNING, ZONING. ENGINEERING SENECA BUILDING WEST SUITE 400 JOHN C. BARNEY 1 19 EAST SENECA STREET PETER G . GROSSMAN ITHACA, NEW YORK 14850 FACSIMILE NELSON E. ROTH (607) 272- 8806 DAVID A. DUBOW ( 607) 273- 6841 ( NOT FOR SERVICE OF PAPERS) RANDALL B . MARCUS HUGH C. KENT February 13 , 1996 Mr. Jonathan Kanter Director of Planning Town of Ithaca 126 East Seneca Street Ithaca, New York 14850 Re : New Zoning Ordinance Dear Jon: You have asked for a brief memo on the process for attacking the task of drafting a revised zoning ordinance for the Town and a preliminary estimate of costs if we were to be involved in the process. The assumption, I believe, was that the primary agency for the revision would be the Codes and Ordinances Committee of the Town (" COC") and the discussions below are based on that assumption. 1 . Possible Program COC has , as you know, already embarked on the revision process. Essentially, a tentative table of contents has been developed outlining in very broad terms the initially proposed elements of a revised ordinance (Copy attached). Using that table as a guide , the next step has been for us to prepare draft language for one or two of the proposed Articles of the new ordinance for review and comment by COC . Based on those comments, the Articles are rewritten into semi-final form, and drafts of the next Articles can be prepared for consideration at the next meeting. During the process Articles (particularly the definition section) that have been previously reviewed can be revisited and updated to reflect issues that may arise as subsequent Articles are studied. To date I believe we have reviewed essentially four Articles including the ones dealing with definitions and (at the moment site specific) conservation zones. The process was interrupted slightly in order to consider the Six Mile Valley Conservation District proposal and then the year end rush and change in elected officials suspended further activities until tonight. We would suggest that the process begun last year be continued in essentially the same manner. However, if the revision of the Ordinance is to be completed in our lifetimes, we would suggest that (a) The revision of the zoning ordinance be the only matter COC works on until an initial draft of a complete ordinance has been prepared and reviewed by COC ; and (b) Until COC completes that initial draft, other Town groups or bodies refrain from working on matters that necessarily will require alteration of the general provisions of the Ordinance . The reason for these recommendations are that the interruption of COC ' s study of the ordinance from time to time with other projects impedes the continuity of thought that is essential to producing an internally consistent ordinance . and necessarily delays the entire process. Further, if other groups are themselves working on essentially zoning matters of their own, there is substantial duplication of effort with sometimes differing objectives. Once a draft ordinance is prepared, it should be widely circulated to all groups and boards of the Town for input before being again reviewed by COC and revisions made to reflect any suggestions received. The next step would be submission of the proposed ordinance to the Planning Board for review and recommendation to the Town Board. The final step would be review and possible adoption of the revised ordinance by the Town Board. 2 . Time to Complete . If the foregoing suggested program were adopted, and if COC chose not to meet more frequently than monthly, I would expect the process of initial COC review to take about eighteen months. Realistically, if COC intensively reviews each Article, it seems likely that approximately two Articles, on average, could be reviewed and substantially completed at each meeting. If COC were willing to meet more frequently, the overall time frame could be reduced. Once COC has completed an initial draft, probably two months would be an appropriate period for circulation and comment, and two more months for COC to compile and react to the comments making whatever changes seemed appropriate in the draft before sending it on. The Planning Board should probably be allowed a couple of months for review and revision, and another two months for the Town Board to review and act. Thus, taken altogether, and if the process were not placed on a " fast track" the likely time period to complete seems about two years. If COC were to meet twice monthly, that time period could be shortened to perhaps sixteen months. 3 . Legal Costs It is difficult to assign a specific amount of additional legal costs to the process, because if another body m or group such as an outside consultant were to do the work, there would still, presumably, . be the need for some legal input as to some of the issues that may be peculiar to the Town arising out of some of the litigation conducted over the years, and some review and comment of any draft and finished product. The amounts in that situation can' t really be quantified without understanding of. the roles expected from your lawyers, but there would likely be some substantial costs. If, however, the program outlined in this letter is chosen, an approximate estimate of the costs is as follows (not taking into account that some of these costs would be incurred anyway even if the process were handled outside of our office) : Assuming approximately 3 .5 hours of preparation for each meeting and approximately 2.5 hours at each meeting , the total cost of legal time of our office would be approximately $ 14,000. Most of this amount would not affect generally the Town' s budget for legal fees if COC met monthly, as it - would be money that in the past has been spent on other matters considered by COC . If the COC meetings were to be accelerated, it would mean either increased legal costs in the current year, or reduction of other services. If there is any other information we might provide , I' d be happy to try and do so . With best regards. Very truly yours, r i JCB :bc Enc. U let j . TOWN OF ITHACA ZONING ORDINANCE TABLE OF CONTENTS ARTICLE I TITLE Section 100 - TITLE ARTICLE II PURPOSE Section 200 - PURPOSE ARTICLE III INTERPRETATION AND DEFINITIONS Section 300 - INTERPRETATION Section 301 - CONTROLLING REGULATION Section 302 - DEFINED TERlIMS ARTICLE IV ESTABLISHMENT OF ZONES Section 400 - ZONES Section 401 - ZONE BOUNDARIES Section 402 - PROHIBITION OF USES ARTICLE V CONSERVATION ZONES Section 500 - PURPOSE Section 501 - PERMITTED PRINCIPAL USES Section 502 - USES AUTHORIZED BY SPECIAL PERMIT ONLY Section 503 - PERMITTED ACCESSORY USES Section 504 - PERMITTED ACCESSORY BUILDINGS Section 505 - HEIGHT LIMITATIONS Section 506 - YARD REGULATIONS Section 506 - BUILDING COVERAGE Section 507 - SIZE AND AREA OF LOT Section 508 - SPECIAL PROPERTIES ARTICLE VI AGRICULTURAL ZONES Section 600 - PURPOSE Section 601 - PERMITTED PRINCIPAL USES Section 602 - USES AUTHORIZED BY SPECIAL PERMIT ONLY Section 603 - PERMITTED ACCESSORY USES Section 604 - PERMITTED ACCESSORY BUILDINGS Section 605 - HEIGHT LIMITATIONS Section 606 - YARD REGULATIONS Section 606 - BUILDING COVERAGE Section 607 - SIZE AND AREA OF LOT ncwwnc tc, wp5 NchUoallzw October 4 , 1995 6:43pm Section 608 - SPECIAL PROPERTIES Section 609 - PERFORMANCE STANDARDS Section 610 - RADIO TRANSNUSSION TOWERS ARTICLE VII LOW DENSITY RESIDENTIAL ZONES Section 700 - PURPOSE Section 701 - PERMITTED PRINCIPAL USES Section 702 - USES AUTHORIZED BY SPECIAL PERMIT ONLY Section 703 - PERMITTED ACCESSORY USES Section 704 - PERMITTED ACCESSORY BUILDINGS Section 705 - HEIGHT LIMITATIONS Section 706 - YARD REGULATIONS Section 706 - BUILDING COVERAGE Section 707 - SIZE AND AREA OF LOT Section 708 - SPECIAL PROPERTIES ARTICLE VIII INIEDI NI DENSITY RESIDENTIAL ZONES Section 800 - PURPOSE Section 801 - PERMITTED PRINCIPAL USES Section 802 - USES AUTHORIZED BY SPECIAL PERMIT ONLY Section 803 - PERMITTED ACCESSORY USES Section 804 - PERMITTED ACCESSORY BUILDINGS Section 805 - HEIGHT LIMITATIONS Section 806 - YARD REGULATIONS Section 806 - BUILDING COVERAGE Section 807 - SIZE AND AREA OF LOT Section 808 - SPECIAL PROPERTIES ARTICLE IX HIGH DENSITY RESIDENTIAL ZONES Section 900 - PURPOSE Section 901 - PERMITTED PRINCIPAL USES Section 902 - USES AUTHORIZED BY SPECIAL PERMIT ONLY Section 903 - PERMITTED ACCESSORY USES Section 904 - PERMITTED ACCESSORY BUILDINGS Section 905 - HEIGHT LIMITATIONS Section 906 - YARD REGULATIONS Section 906 - BUILDING COVERAGE Section 907 - SIZE AND AREA OF LOT Section 908 - SPECIAL PROPERTIES 2 ncwzonatc, wp5NthVocallaw Oaooer 4 , 1995 6:43pm ARTICLE X MOBILE HOME PARK ZONES Section 1000 - PURPOSE Section 1001 - LOCATION Section 1002 - PERMITTED PRINCIPAL USES Section 1003 - USES AUTHORIZED BY SPECIAL PERMIT ONLY Section 1004 - PERMITTED ACCESSORY USES Section 1005 - PERMITTED ACCESSORY BUILDINGS Section 1006 - HEIGHT LIMITATIONS Section 1007 - YARD REGULATIONS Section 1008 - BUILDING COVERAGE Section 1009 - SIZE AND AREA OF LOT Section 1010 - SPECIAL PROPERTIES Section 1011 - SPECIAL REQUIREMENTS Section 1012 - SITE PLAN APPROVAL ARTICLE XI MULTIPLE RESIDENCE ZONES Section 1100 - PURPOSE Section 1101 - LOCATION Section 1102 - PERM=ED PRINCIPAL USES Section 1103 - USES AUTHORIZED BY SPECIAL PERMIT ONLY Section 1104 - PERMITTED ACCESSORY USES Section 1105 - PERMITTED ACCESSORY BUILDINGS Section 1106 - HEIGHT LIMITATIONS Section 1107 - YARD REGULATIONS Section 1108 - BUILDING COVERAGE Section 1109 - SIZE AND AREA OF LOT Section 1110 - SPECIAL PROPERTIES Section 1111 - SPECIAL REQUIREMENTS Section 1112 - SITE PLAN APPROVAL ARTICLE XII BUSINESS ZONES GENERALLY Section 1200 - PURPOSE Section 1201 - COMMERCIAL TARGET AREA Section 1203 - HEIGHT LD=ATIONS Section 1204 - YARD REGULATIONS Section 1205 - BUILDING COVERAGE Section 1206 - SIZE AND AREA OF LOT Section 1207 - SPECIAL PROPERTIES Section 1208 - SPECIAL REQUIREMENTS Section 1209 - SITE PLAN APPROVAL 3 ammacar, wp511ichUocalliw Oaober 4. 1995 6:43pm Section 1210 - PERFORMANCE STANDARDS ARTICLE XIII BUSINESS ZONES A Section 1301 - PURPOSE Section 1302 - PERMITTED PRINCIPAL USES Section 1303 - USES AUTHORIZED BY SPECIAL PERMIT ONLY Section 1304 - PERMITTED ACCESSORY USES Section 1305 - PERMITTED ACCESSORY BUILDINGS ARTICLE XIV BUSINESS ZONES B Section 1401 - PURPOSE Section 1402 - PERMITTED PRINCIPAL USES Section 1403 - USES AUTHORIZED BY SPECIAL PERMIT ONLY Section 1404 - PERMITTED ACCESSORY USES Section 1405 - PERMITTED ACCESSORY BUILDINGS ARTICLE XV BUSINESS ZONES C Section 1501 - PURPOSE Section 1502 - PERMITTED PRINCIPAL USES Section 1503 - USES AUTHORIZED BY SPECIAL PERMIT ONLY Section 1504 - PERMITTED ACCESSORY USES Section 1505 - PERMITTED ACCESSORY BUILDINGS ARTICLE XVI BUSINESS ZONES D Section 1601 - PURPOSE Section 1602 - PERNT= PRINCIPAL USES Section 1603 - USES AUTHORIZED BY SPECIAL PERMIT ONLY Section 1604 - PERMITTED ACCESSORY USES Section 1605 - PERMITTED ACCESSORY BUILDINGS ARTICLE XVII BUSINESS ZONES E Section 1701 - PURPOSE Section 1702 - PERMITTED PRINCIPAL USES Section 1703 - USES AUTHORIZED BY SPECIAL PERMIT ONLY Section 1704 - PERMITTED ACCESSORY USES Section 1705 - PERMI'T'TED ACCESSORY BUILDINGS ARTICLE XVIII LIGHT INDUSTRIAL ZONES Section 1800 - PURPOSE 4 newrone.tc, wp511iffiUonllaw October 4 , 1995 6:43pm Section 1801 - PERMITTED PRINCIPAL USES Section 1802 - USES AUTHORIZED BY SPECIAL PERMIT ONLY Section 1803 - PERMITTED ACCESSORY USES Section 1804 - PERMITTED ACCESSORY BUILDINGS Section 1805 - HEIGHT LIMITATIONS Section 1806 - YARD REGULATIONS Section 1807 - BUILDING COVERAGE Section 1808 - SIZE AND AREA OF LOT Section 1809 - SPECIAL PROPERTIES Section 1810 - SPECIAL REQUIREMENTS Section 1811 - SITE PLAN APPROVAL Section 1812 - PERFORMANCE STANDARDS ARTICLE XIX INDUSTRIAL ZONFS Section 1900 - PURPOSE Section 1901 - PERMITTED PRINCIPAL USES Section 1902 - USES AUTHORIZED BY SPECIAL PERMIT ONLY Section 1903 - PERMITTED ACCESSORY USES Section 1904 - PERMITTED ACCESSORY BUILDINGS Section 1905 - HEIGHT LMITATIONS Section 1906 - YARD REGULATIONS Section 1907 - BUILDING COVERAGE Section 1908 - SIZE AND AREA OF LOT Section 1909 - SPECIAL PROPERTIES Section 1910 - SPECIAL REQUIREMENTS Section 1911 - SITE PLAN APPROVAL Section 1912 - PERFORMANCE STANDARDS ARTICLE XX INSTITUTIONAL ZONES Section 2000 - PURPOSE Section 2001 - LOCATION Section 2002 - PERMITTED PRINCIPAL USES Section 2003 - USES AUTHORIZED BY SPECIAL PERMIT ONLY Section 2004 - PERMITTED ACCESSORY USES Section 2005 - PERMITTED ACCESSORY BUILDINGS Section 2006 - HEIGHT LIMITATIONS Section 2007 - YARD REGULATIONS Section 2008 - BUILDING COVERAGE Section 2009 - SIZE AND AREA OF LOT Section 2010 - SPECIAL PROPERTIES 5 acwzone tr, wp5 NEhUoallaw October 4. 1995 6:43pm Section 2011 - SPECIAL REQUIREMENTS Section 2012 - SITE PLAN APPROVAL Section 2013 - PERFORMANCE STANDARDS ARTICLE XXI PLANNED DEVELOPMENT ZONES Section 2100 - PURPOSE Section 2101 - LOCATION Section 2102 - PERMITTED USES Section 2103 - SITE PLAN APPROVAL Section 2104 - PERFORMANCE STANDARDS ARTICLE X.YII PROCEDURES FOR CREATION OF NEW ZONES Section 2200 - ZONES TO WHICH APPLICABLE Section 2201 - GENERAL PROVISIONS Section 2202 - PROCEDURES FOR CREATION OF ZONE ARTICLE XXLII SITE PLAIN REVIEW AND APPROVAL PROCEDURES Section 2300 - APPLICATIONS FOR REZONING Section 2301 - SITE PLANS RELATED TO SPECIAL APPROVALS Section 2302 - SITE PLAN REQUIREMENTS Section 2303 - FINAL SITE PLAN APPROVAL AND MODIFICATIONS Section 2304 - WAIVER OF REQUIREMENTS RELATED TO SITE PLAN Section 2305 - GENERAL CONSIDERATIONS Section 2306 - OTHER PROVISIONS Section 2307 - FAILURE OF TIMELY ACTION BY TOWN BOARD OR PLANNING BOARD ARTICLE XXIV SPECIAL APPROVALS Section 2400 - GENERAL PROVISIONS Section 2401 - GENERAL CONDITIONS REQUIRED FOR ALL SPECIAL PERMITS Section 2402 - PROCEDURE FOR SPECIAL PERMITS Section 2403 - ENVIRONMENTAL REVIEW ARTICLE XXV NON-CONFORNI NG USES Section 2500 - NONCONFORMING LOTS OF RECORD Section 2501 - NONCONFORMING USES OF LAND Section 2503 - NONCONFORMING STRUCTURES Section 2504 - NONCONFORMING USES OF STRUCTURES Section 2505 - CONTINUATION OF CONSTRUCTION 6 aewwaatc, wp5 NthVonilaw October 4 , 1995 6:43pm Section 2506 - ALTERATIONS IN USE Section 2507 - ENLARGEMENT OF NON-CONFORMING STRUCTURE Section 2507 - RESTORATION Section 2508 - A1MORTIZATION OF CERTAIN NON-CONFORMING USES Section 2509 - BOARD OF APPEALS DETERMINATION ARTICLE XXVI FLOOD DAMAGE PROTECTION Section 2600 - PURPOSE Section 2601 - DEFINITIONS Section 2602 - GENERAL PROVISIONS Section 2603 - ADMINISTRATION Section 2604 - PROVISIONS FOR FLOOD HAZARD REDUCTION Section 2607 - VARIANCE PROCEDURE ARTICLE XXVII SPECIAL REGULATIONS Section 2700 - APPLICATION Section 2701 - DISH ANTENNAE Section 2702 - JUNK OR SALVAGE YARDS [CONSIDER MOVING TO ZONE WHERE ALLOWED, E. G. INDUSTRIAL] Section 2703 - EXTRACTION OR DEPOSIT OF FILL AND RELATED PRODUCTS Section 2704 - PUBLIC GARAGES AND GASOLINE SALES STATIONS [CONSIDER MOVING TO ZONE WHERE ALLOWED, E. G.BUSINESS E] Section 2705 - ABANDONED CELLAR HOLES AND BUILDINGS ARTICLE XXVIII GENERAL PROVISIONS Section 2800 - EXISTING LOTS Section 2801 - BUILDING FLOOR AREA Section 2802 - TRAILERS Section 2803 - FRONT YARD TRANSITION Section 2804 - SIDE YARD ON CORNER LOT Section 2805 - SIDE AND REAR YARD TRANSITION Section 2806 - PORCHES AND CARPORTS Section 2807 - FENCES AND WALLS Section 2808 - PROJECTIONS IN YARDS Section 2809 - REDUCTION OF LOT AREA Section 2810 - MORE THAN ONE BUILDING ON A LOT Section 2811 - PARKING FACILITIES Section 2812 - APPROVAL OF COUNTY HEALTH DEPARTMENT Section 2813 - ELDER COTTAGES 7 PRELIM NARY : FOR DISCUSSION PURPOSES ONLY DRAFT (Fran Draft Parks , Recreation & Open Space Plan Update) Table 5 - 1 . Proposed Future Parks , Improvements , and Estimated Costs Proposed Proposed Capital Estimated Park Site Improvements to Site Cost Inlet Valley Community 2 baseball/softball diamonds, 1 soccer field. 4 tennis courts, 1 basketball Park Complex * ** (Tutelo & Saponi court, 5 ac. lawn areas, 2 mi. of walkways, 2 play structures, 2 comfort sites with connection via Mancini land) stations, .5 mi. roads & 50 parking spaces, 4 2000 fL picnic pavilions, . (25 ac.) 40 picnic tables, benches, signage, security lighting, landscape plantings $760,000 Vincenzo Iacovelli 1 ac. lawn area, walkways, benches, signage, play structure, basketball Neighborhood Park * •• (3S ac.) court, security lighting, landscape plantings $809000 Chase Farts 12 ac. lawn area, walkways, benches, signage, play structure, basketball Neighborhood Park (1S ac.) court, security lighting, landscape plantings 5759000 Westwood Hills/Woolf Lane 12 ac. lawn area, walkways, benches, signage, play structure, security $659000 Neighborhood Park ** (1 .7 ac.) lighting, landscape plantings Dates Dr./Duboise Rd. Neighborhood I2 ac. lawn area, walkways, benches, signage, play structure, basketball Park (1 .5 ac.) court, security lighting, landscape plantings $759000 Neighborhood Park to East of 12 ac. of lawn area, walkways, benches, signage, play structure, security Fortner Odd Fellows Complex (1.5 ac.) lighting, landscape plantings $659000 Trumansburg Rd./Hopkins Rd. 12 ac. of lawn area, walkways, benches, signage, play structure, security Neighborhood Park ( 1 .5 ac.) lighting, landscape plantings $659000 West Haven Rd./Mecklenburg Rd./Elm 1 ac. lawn area, walkways, benches, signage, play structure , basketball St. Neighborhood Park (6S ac) court, security lighting, landscape plantings 5801000 Coy Glen Rd./Elm St./City 12 ac. of lawn area, walkways, benches, signage, play structure, security Neighborhood Park ( 1 .5 ac.) lighting, landscape plantings 5659000 .Maple Ave./ Mitchell St. 12 ac. lawn area. walkways, benches, signage, play structure, basketball Neighborhood Park (1S - 3 ac.) court, security lighting, landscape plantings $809000 West Hill Community Park 1 baseball/softball diamond, 1 soccer field, 4 tennis courts, 1 basketball (20 ac.) court, 4 ac. lawn areas, 1 mi. walkways, 1 play structure, 1 comfort station, 50 parking spaces, 2 20x30 fL picnic pavilions, 20 picnic tables, benches, signage, security lighting, landscape plantings $475,000 South Hill Community Park 1 baseball/softball diamond, 1 basketball court, 5 ac. lawn areas, .5 mi. (10 ac.) walkways. 1 play structure, 1 comfort station, 20 parking spaces, 10, picnic tables, benches, signage, security lighting, landscape plantings $280,000 Tareyton Park Improvements *• Upgrade the existing ballfield to regulation standards. $35,000 A.D.A. Compliance Miscellaneous modifications to bring existing park facilities into compliance with Americans With Disabilities Act standards $50,000 TOTAL $2450,000 * Bold face type indicates that development of all or part of the proposed park is in 1996-2000 Parks Dept. Work Plan. ° * Town has acquired the site. DRAFT PRELIMIMARY : FOR DISCUSSION PURPOSES ONLY (Fran Draft Parks , Recreation & Open Space Plan Update ) DRAFT Table 5-2. Future Bicycle/Pedestrian Paths and Estimated Costs Proposed Path Proposed Route Length Estimated Cost East Ithaca Maple Ave. between east and south sections of path 0.3 mi. total: Recreation Way 7600 Lf bikelanes; 530.000 Improvements 19600 Lf sidewalk 20.000 $50,000 Wm. & Hannah Pew East Ithaca Rea Way to NYS Rte. 79 via Honness, 1 .4 mi. total: Trail Baldwin lands, Tudor Park & Park Lane 4,000 Lf bike/ped. paths; $759000 3 .500 Lf sidewalks; 400000 1 ,900 Lf bikelanes 35.000 $ 150,000 Upper South Hill Chase Ln. to Codd. Rd @ Hudson via Deer Rum, 5.3 mi. total: Network Raponi & I.C. lands; Deer Run to Danby Rd. via 26.400 Lf bike/ped. paths. $500,000 So. Hill comm. park; east to Codd. Rd & So. Hill 42100 Lf sidewalks 50.000 Rec. Way via Troy Park "" 3550.000 Sapsucker Woods to Lab. of Ornithology to Cornell campus via Salem 2.7 mi. total: Comell University Pk.Birchwood, Muriel & Blue Grass Ln., Hasbrouck 4,000 Lf bike/ped. paths; 5759000 Apts. and Fuertes Observatory 6.800 Lf sidewalks; 759000 5,000 Lf bikelanes 90.000 5240,000 Aurora St/Buttermilk Aurora St. to Upper Buttermilk Falls St. Pk. via 2.0 mi. total: Falls Path Axiohm, Ithacare, Cayuga Vista, W. King Rd. 8.500 Lf bike/ped. paths. 51609000 2200 Lf sidewalk; 259000 2,200 Lf bikelanes 45.000 5230,000 So. Hill Rec. Way to So. Hill Rec. Way at Hudson St. to Buttermilk Falls 2. 1 mi. total: Buttermilk Fls. St. Pk. St. Pk. via former DL&W RR grade. 109100 Lf bike/ped. paths; 5959000 Extension 750 Lf sidewalk 5.000 S1009000 Inlet Valley Path Saponi pant to future State Black Diamond trail via 1 .3 mi, total: Tutelo park & Five Mile Drive. 5,300 Lf bike/ped paths; $ 1009000 1 ,600 Lf sidewalk; 20,000 500 Lf bikelanes 10.000 $ 130,000 Upper West Hill Path Vicui iry of Elm St. north to Hayts & Hopkins Rd. 3. 1 mi. total: $310,000 via new comm. park, w/ spur to hospital. 16.300 Lf bike/ped. path Lower West Hill Path Woolf Ln. to Cass Park via Evergreen Ln.. hospital, 2.9 mi. total: Cayuga Cliffs property and former LVRR grade, w/ 13.500 Lf bike/ped. paths; 32559000 spur north to LVRR grade at Indian Creek 2,100 Lf sidewalk; 25,000 600 Lf bikelanes 10.000 529Q000 *" TOTAL 21 .1 miles 52,0509000 • Bold face type indicates that development of all or part of the proposed path is in 1996-2000 Parks Dept. Work Plan. Assumes cost share with City City to assume a minimum of 50% of project cost. •'* Assumes 1,200 Lf of bike/ped. path along former LVRR grade to be built by State as part of Black Diamond Trail. •' "" The portion of the path between Chase Lane & Whitetail Dr. is on 1996.2000 Work Plan. DRAFT TOWN OF ITHACA AFFIDAVIT OF POSTING AND PUBLICATION I � Joan Lent Noteboom being duly sworn , say that I am the Town Clerk of the Town of Ithaca , Tompkins County , New York ; that the following notice has been duly posted on the sign board of the Town Clerk of the Town of Ithaca and that the notice has been duly published in the local newspaper : ( Ithaca Journal ) Notice of Public Hearing SCLIWC Master Meter Agreement Location of sign board used for posting : Town Clerk ' s Office 126 East Seneca Street Date of Posting : February 27 , 1996 Ithaca , NY 14850 Date of Publication : March 1 , 1996 T wn Clerk , Town of Ithaca STATE OF NEW YORK ) COUNTY OF TOMPKINS ) SS : TOWN OF ITHACA ) Sworn to and subscribed before me this J_�l _[ � day of Warck Mary J. Saxton Notary Public, State of New York Registration #01SA5044003 Notary 4wlic Qualified in Tioga County My Commission Expires May 22, 1997 i jy OFIT� TOWN OF ITHACA 4, ' 21044- 126 EAST SENECA STREET , ITHACA , N . Y . 14850 Y TOWN CLERK 273- 1721 HIGHWAY 273-1656 PARKS 273-8035 ENGINEERING 273-1747 PLANNING 273- 1747 ZONING 273- 1783 FAX (607 ) 273- 1704 NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING TOWN OF ITHACA PLEASE TAKE NOTICE , that the Town Board of the Town of Ithaca will hold a public hearing at a regular meeting of the Town Board on March 11 , 1996 , at 6 : 30 p . m . , at the Town Hall , 126 East Seneca Street , Ithaca , New York in order that they may consider an agreement ' for a capital project with the Southern Cayuga Lake Intermunicpal Water Commission for the installation of master meters on transmission lines , issuance of bonds for the same , and execution of an agreement to participate in such project , all at a maximum cost to the Town of Ithaca of $ 100 , 000 , and PLEASE TAKE FURTHER NOTICE , all citizens at the aforementioned time and place shall be afforded the opportunity to voice their approval or opposition of the said agreement . PLEASE TAKE FURTHER NOTICE , individuals with visual impairments , hearing impairments or other special needs , will be provided with assistance as necessary , upon request . Persons - desiring assistance must make a request not less than 48 hours prior to the time of the public hearing . The Ithaca Journal Joan Lent Noteboom Town Clerk February 27 , 1996 NOTICE ` OF PUBLIC HEARING i TOWN OF ITHACA PLEASE ; TAKE: NOTICE, that .the Town Board of •the:3own : PUBLISH : Friday , March 1 , 1996 hearingcatargula1rmeetinigc of the Town Board on March 11 , 1996, at 6:30 p m. at the Town Hall, 126 East Sten- eca Street Ithaca, New York ,. In order. that they may con- sider an agreetnent for a capital project with the Southern Cayuga Lake Inter, municipal Water Commission for the Installotion'l of master ; meters ; on transmission . lines, ; Issuance . of. ::bonds'; for ' the some,; and ezecutlon : of .an' agreement `to - perticlpote in : such ,,prolect„ all :at almoxi- mum. cost , to t the ' Town of Ithoco"of $ 100;000; and PLEASE TAKE FURTHER NCB- . ! TICE ;.all 'h' citizens t, dt ° the aforementioned ' time and place. shall : be ,afforded; the opportunity to voice their ap proval or opposition of . the said ogreement. PLEASE -TAKE FURTHER NO- TICE; Individuals with visual Impairments;-hearing impalr- ments or other special needs, will. .be provided with assts- • tonce. as necessary, upon re- quest., Persons desiring assis. tance must make a request not less than 48 hours prior to the time of the public hear- ing Joan lent Noteboom Town Clerk March 1 , 1996 TOWN OF ITHACA AFFIDAVIT OF POSTING AND PUBLICATION I , Joan Lent Noteboom being duly sworn , say that I am the Town Clerk of the Town of Ithaca , Tompkins County , New York , that the following notice has been duly posted on the sign board of the Town Clerk of the Town of Ithaca and that the notice has been duly published in the local newspaper : ( Ithaca Journal ) Notice of Special Election Location of sign board used for posting : Town Clerk ' s Office 126 East Seneca St . Date of Posting : February 27 , 1996 Ithaca . NY 14850 Date of Publication : March 1 , 1996 To0i Clerk , Town of Ithaca STATE OF NEW YORK ) COUNTY OF TOMPKINS ) SS : TOWN OF ITHACA ) Sworn to and subscribed before me this o * 1 day of Mary J. Saxton Notary Public, State of New York Registration #01SA5044003 Notary P i s Qualified in Tioga County My Commission Expires May 22, 1997 i fpfp.. , Sj1{, , ti.n'• , . 1[r tr jNOT777777111111,ICE OFs ' SPECIAL ; e;F .qW1LECTIONii 3' NQTICEj IS':HEREBY.gGIVEN that o; Spe"ciglrElection ofifhe refiidenta .ond;_ taxpayorb ' of;j thetlTowrrof.Ithbcd mpkins ', County;'.;NewaYor(<;�' will ' be held in;slid=Town omthe}12th3 day of" in5rch,rrr1996, 1 6t ; Jvhtch thetpolls will begkept opp""en between':fhe'uhours,tof " 12:00 noonrand, 8;04'p:m: ti for.',, li,vpurppose'iiofI3ortng uporiyt:the;, ,followin " Fro PROP,OSITION'NO :1 , a5ficll tithe resolution;of {the ' town Board�of �tfie=Town t'oF Ithacci••outhorizina the;oc ui- sition 'of the premises of 119 West;4.Co6rtf,Street, Ithacb; New�'Yo�k',�;i•'and ;tha""•: :con: stroction :.thereon' of"al' new Town.-'Hall -;at 4a�costb not:- to exceed. $21000;000'.00 .' in; elusiveFA nd {: purchoie fcosts,"fsaid ''acquisition� end ;construI, n;*.t " , 411 financed by'th'S"ex'penditure yof'all `of. ` the funds in the;Town;Building Reser've`•. , E,und.�l f. ;ap rox-. imately;K$;1350;000'.00, the;; Wuancero�!Generalr':Obliga=`- ` tionst; Serial-; f}onils • mv.. the , amount 'of`-' not', more ' thbnt '$500;000. .00� 'an'd -�the ;bal•; once ` from;currentkfundsi+ ' a proved2� , �r .k"i�; {4 ; � } III The pollingg plOCes ; at 'sucfi: nelecILI I ill be,gsvfollows ; #; Board of,Cooperative Educa i tronal ;Servtces, 555aNOrren , 7Road?ai Ithaca, , New York; �'dmrth .Buildtn9 • Forelectionr( isMcfs�No 6 `7;8tand�,9 �. E:,I#hpsir,H'o;filro Apartments1028r+Ellisr Hol ? It C lowrRocd r"�thoca;;Newlyork; fo,14850 f£Eorelectiont,districta i Nos ' 4;S sand 1 •l o+(y [ Ithoca :Veteran ;Volunteer Fire ' Oman's" 'AsaociahontBullding{? r638==;Elmiai Road;kathoca;,;y News York, �fofTelection dlelr `trIctatNos++�1;2`3and10 All='electo�s�`oE�the�tTownnof llthaca i ,Tompkins CaunN, I New"York; who<<rare rep ry tared*.voters4ofrthe Town, ony C.Februbry;l6; 19.96,orwithal, registration',".r p9stmar ked-=no: Mister, than Februaryryjl'b, 1996; and recefyed`by'the eoard;of . f Elections no'Iater Chant :ebru ary 21i;. 1�996, tshallbe quoi l �iked'to�vote,7at,sych Specicltl Election: �r t t � � z ^s f8yy;orderroF.th�esTown Boa�di ot�the' Town+ of'Ithcc6 r ` Dated iFebruary' rl2j }1996?f Ithaeb; New, Yorkt rI t.� �• : Joan{LentsNoteboom t aMarc ;71 „1,996"'yt� .t���? it 4� h I �� i qty OF 1 ,% TOWN OF ITHACA 126 EAST SENECA STREET , ITHACA , N . Y . 14850 TOWN CLERK 273- 1721 HIGHWAY 273- 1656 PARKS 273-8035 ENGINEERING 273-1747 PLANNING 273-1747 ZONING 273-1783 FAX (607) 273 . 1704 Legal Notice NOTICE OF SPECIAL ELECTION NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that a Special Election of the residents and taxpayers of the Town of Ithaca , Tompkins County, New York , will be held in said Town on the 12th day of March , 1996 , at which the polls will be kept open between the hours of 12 : 00 noon and 8 : 00 p . m . for the purpose of voting upon the following proposition : Proposition No . 1 Shall the resolution of the Town Board of the Town of Ithaca authorizing the acquisition of the premises at 119 West Court Street , Ithaca , New York and the construction thereon of a new Town Hall at a cost not to exceed $2 , 000 , 000 . 00 inclusive of land purchase costs , said acquisition and construction to be financed by the expenditure of all of the funds in the Town Building Reserve Fund of approximately $ 1 , 350 , 000 . 00 , the issuance of General Obligations Serial Bonds in the amount of not more than $500 , 000 . 00 and the balance from current funds , be approved ? The polling places at such election will be as follows : Board of Cooperative Educational Services , 555 Warren Road , Ithaca , New York , Smith Building , for election districts Nos . 6 , 7 , 8 and 9 . Ellis Hollow Road Apartments , 1028 Ellis Hollow Road , Ithaca , New York , 14850 , for election districts Nos . 4 , 5 and 11 . i Ithaca Veteran Volunteer Fireman ' s Association Building , 638 Elmira Road , Ithaca , New York , for election districts Nos . 1 , 2 , 3 and 10 . All electors of the Town of Ithaca , Tompkins County, New York , 6who are registered voters of the Town on February 16 , 1996 or with a registration postmarked no later than February 16 , 1996 and received by the Board of Elections no later than February 21 , 1996 , shall be qualified to vote at such Special Election . By order of the Town Board of the Town of Ithaca . ,Dated : February 12 , 1996 Ithaca , New York Jo n Lent Noteboom , Town Clerk ..v i i TOWN OF ITHACA AFFIDAVIT OF POSTING AND PUBLICATION I , Joan Lent Noteboom , being duly sworn , say that I am the Town Clerk of the Town of Ithaca , Tompkins County , New York ; that the following notice has been duly posted on the sign board of the Town Clerk of the Town of Ithaca and that the notice has been duly published in the local newspaper : ( Ithaca Journal ) Public Hearing Notice - Ithacare ST .tID# 7 Location of sign board used for posting : Town Clerk ' s Office 126 East Seneca Street Date of Posting : February 28 , . 1996 Ithaca , NY 14850 Date of Publication : March 1 , 1996 Town lerk , Town of Ithaca STATE OF NEW YORK ) COUNTY OF TOMPKINS ) SS : TOWN OF ITHACA ) Sworn to and subscribed before me this day of ` Qc �''('� l. 19 Mary J. Saxton Notary Public, State of New York Registration #01SA5044003 Qualified in Tioga County Notary P c My Commission Expires May 22, 1997 i i I t < -t. ; asl ttr If r {F{ ( r Th'e Ithaca' Journal° `Friday Ma --r � 4 `Fr•'v er'tb ' A , .NOT ICE-' ' OF-'jP, UBLIC• ' }. :,: ;;' ^�`• TOWN OF;ITHACA ` :� s �. . ;;,I'LEASEr;TAKE,,;:NQTICE�that . ;tfie`;Town:tBobFdSofr.',tFe.;Town rof.• I►hacawill: fiold` a public „ . ;. FiearinggWat;a 'regular.,meetingg u f_the:Tovin ,Board on' March Ok 00 Of .` the Tov+n Hall;1.26':EOP. S�en e, Street, . lthacc; New York tosconsider:amamendmentfto � Towmof Ithaca�localsL'ow No; s ;•lof thecyeor• 1 �,94 c'reafing s Sppaecial landiUse YDistrI t No, a ch amendment{Rputho- A ." rile srredocationPofethe>ypro� O�`{p`osgiJ:1t17aCOCe;CenterI•Senior4 ivingfiCommuniy,buitding"£to°. `tat�ewaed �location asshown rr` dOliia�eVlaed;site PPlanwhich� , •building{ is`� locafed• ;on�fhe� it 4l of Dcnby,Rood ap proxlmately2,000 Cs I • , ,of,fhe enfranceito„Ithaca Col- s ;lege;,on th&f428' t'ccre �o r,? ! `. tion� of�Town Hof lthbco ,4 OXI ' f!crcelajNo:�3,9g1 '1 3i�deaig.� ' Hated aasSpecialIt, nd Usea � t> ,DisfricftNo:�7;' cnd ir,F�� =4 PIEASEa.TAKE�F,URTHERt�NO •TICE; :all�scitizens :�at4ther 1.cforementioned„'fime , and,. ce`. ahall};beafforded the° opporlunily,fo"voice';fheir 'afr provalr or:;opposition '• of the:; �• : .;aaid .amendment �and: .., .., . •PLEASETAKE3FISRTHER N0=4 „TICE,`•f Individuals°;V 1fC isual r iinpairments; 'hearing`'Impair ments`oriother ipeciaFheeclm ill =6e�provideed�.with:assts „toncet'as 'neceasary, upon re ; ry ?} nee murst makes a rdques ` not lesstthgn"�48f11`o"uia ' rior.'t sio�the time of�the puffbttl�.ic eor tµj.tngr .r.,y�„ Y:.ti:2ir uv"15;•,'4';yby�si�u it 3� �JoonYlent Noteboom� I � ; r I