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MINUTES OF TIM <br />ORONO PLANNING COA"HSSION MEETING <br />Monday, Apiril 17,2017 <br />6:30 o'clock p.m. <br />The intent of this review is to look at the advantages and potential disadvantages of an interim use permll <br />An interim use permit is intended to be temporary and allows for sunsetting of a use for a temporary time <br />period that may not be appropriate on a permanent basis. <br />In considering whether the City should adopt an interim use ordinance, it may be helpful to identify <br />examples where a temporary use may be reasonable but is not appropriate at a given location on a <br />permanent basis. Examples found in other Minnesota cities' codes are typically tied to specific zoning <br />districts. While there are some consistencies, it also appears that every city has its own ideas of what to <br />regulate via an interim use permit. <br />Gaffron stated area cities that utilize an interim use permit include Plymouth, Medina, and Minnetonka. <br />Some of the uses defiried as an interim use by those cities are regulated by different methods in Orono, <br />such as by licensing or special event permit. <br />Gaffron noted there are a few local governments that list an interim use similar to that proposed by the <br />applicants. Isanti County lists as an interim use, "Temporary construction facilities associated with road <br />construction or reconstruction projects. Facility types allowed include blacktopping processing facilities <br />which includes the processing of recycled materials as well as concrete recycling storage areas." <br />The City of Andover allows the temporary processing and storage of sand, gravel, or other materials. In <br />addition, Chisago City allows temporary processing or recycling plant in conjunction with a specific <br />project. <br />Adding the ability to allow for specified interim uses within specified zoning districts gives the City and <br />property owners a method or tool for the temporary use of property. It provides an option for properties <br />that are expected to be developed in the future in conformity with the zoning code, but for various reasons <br />such future development will not occur immediately. As it relates to the Eisinger property, the developer <br />has gained preliminary plat approval for housing, but does not anticipate actual development of the site <br />for a number of years. <br />An example of how an interim use permit could have been used in Orono was the former produce market <br />at County Road 6 and Highway 12. That site was zoned for single-family use and was operating via a <br />Page 14 of 72 <br />