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#2490 - VanEeckhout Sketch Plan <br />May 12,1999 <br />Page 6 <br />The Rural Land Use Policies clearly indicate that the rural area will not be urbanized, i.e. it won't <br />be provided with urban services and it won't be expanded by rezoning. The City has held fast to this <br />policy, and has only veered from it in a few unique circumstances: <br />Sugar Woods on Brown Road North: The 1987 Hwy 12 CMP amendment recognized that <br />a service road should be developed between Brown Road and Willow Drive north of 12, <br />allowing commercial uses abutting 12. The plan suggested that single family development <br />north of that service road on the undeveloped 40 acre site would provide an appropriate <br />transition between the commercial uses along 12 and the 2-acre density residential to the <br />north. Due to soil and topography constraints, the site was provided with sewer, which <br />allowed the planned density to occur and preserved trees that would otherwise have been lost <br />to septic sites; <br />Fleming Trail Addition: Orono agreed to annex the Long Lake sewage treatment plant site <br />to Long Lake, subject to a platting of the site at densities providing a transition between the <br />1 /3-1 /2 acre lots nearby in Long Lake and the 2-plus acre Orono Oaks development in Orono. <br />The Fleming Trail site, which had been owned by the City of Long Lake for many years, <br />ultimately was platted into l-acre single family lots with sewer. <br />Orono has provided sew'cr to many existing airal neighborhoods where it was concluded <br />that septic systems were not a viable long-term alternative for replacing non-conforming <br />systems. <br />The City amended CMP in 1998 to expand the MUSA for existing and new development <br />along the northeast shore of Maxwell Bay, but did not change from the existing 2-acre <br />minimum lot size zoning. <br />There are two innovative options Planning Commission might consider for developing the <br />VanEeckhout property that may be consistent with the City's rural area goals: <br />A.Based on the proximity to the creek, this is a sensitive Shoreland area. As was done wath <br />Little Orchard on Maxwell Bay, it may be reasonable to allow the developer to prove how <br />many lots he could develop under our rural standards (by actually doing septic testing and <br />re-working lot layouts as necessary), then allow that number of lots to be developed with <br />sewer. This preserves the rural density while eliminating potential pollution from septic <br />systems near the creek. <br />B. To go one step further, the City might allow the number of lots that could be developed using <br />septic systems, to be developed via a sewered PRD by clustering the homesites near the <br />existing residence and leaving the majority of the property as preserved open space. This <br />I <br />I