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10-14-2013 Council Minutes
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10-14-2013 Council Minutes
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, MINUTES OF THE <br /> ORONO CITY COUNCIL MEETING <br /> Monday,October 14,2013 <br /> 7:00 o'clock p.m. <br /> (8. #13-3629 RYANAND STACYALNESS, I169 NORTHARMDRIVE—SUBDIVISION, <br /> Continued) <br /> Gaffron indicated one of the questions that have been raised is how the statutes that were recently revised <br /> within the past three or four years would affect this parcel. The applicants' attorney has suggested that <br /> because the City has allowed other similar sized lots to be built on in recent years,they should be treated <br /> equally. The practical difficulty standards have also been cited. Gaffron noted the City is not processing <br /> a variance but rather a subdivision to create a new lot. <br /> In addition,the applicants' attorney suggests that the provisions of Item No. 7 were intended solely to <br /> allow for a dock on the lake parcel and not to prevent future development. Staff disagrees with that <br /> characterization and would offer the following comments: <br /> 1. It cannot be construed that the City has recently simply allowed development of small lakeshore <br /> lots. The City has, by action of the Legislature, been forced to permit residential development on <br /> certain classes of existing lots of record in the Shoreland that meet very specific conditions. It is <br /> important to remember that the statute applies to existing lots and not the creation of new lots. <br /> 2. It is the City's position that the applicants' properiy, by virtue of the Special Lot Combination <br /> agreement, is not similar to other lakeshore lots which do not have this binding covenant that <br /> allows the City to limit their development. <br /> 3. The practical difficulties standard relates to variance applications involving the zoning ordinance. <br /> The applicants are not applying for a variance. This is a subdivision that is governed by City <br /> Code Section 82-48 and Minnesota Statute 462358. Additionally,the argument that the <br /> agreement was not agreed to by the applicants is erroneous, as it is a document of record and <br /> binding on all future owners of the property. <br /> 4. The lake parcel cannot be considered as a"nonconforming single lot of record"by virtue of the <br /> Special Lot Combination Agreement which permanently makes it functionally combined with the <br /> off-lake parcel. It no longer retains its status as a separate lot and is therefore not subject to or <br /> benefitted by the cited statute provisions. <br /> 5. The applicants' attorney has argued that the Agreement was intended to be extinguished in the <br /> event the City allowed development of lots with similar characteristics in the future is misplaced. <br /> In the event the City Code allowed for the creation of nonconforming lots,which it does not,this <br /> argument might have some merit. If it Staffls position that establishment of such an onerous <br /> process as subdivision approval in accordance with City Codes at the time of such application to <br /> merely extinguish a covenant in itself indicates the intent and spirit of the agreement. The <br /> purpose of the agreement was to ensure that the applicant understood that they were combining <br /> two lots into one lot. <br /> Since the Planning Commission meeting,the applicants' attorney has raised a number of questions which <br /> have been addressed in Staffl s report. The first question asked if the lot would be buildable under the <br /> statutes and city code if it was not encumbered by the Special Lot Combination Agreement. Gaffron <br /> stated if the property was not encumbered by the Special Lot Combination Agreement, it would be <br /> buildable under the statute provided it meets the other required standards, but the fact remains that there is <br /> a Special Lot Combination Agreement in place. <br /> Page 7 of 23 <br />
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