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MINUTES OF THE <br /> ORONO CITY COUNCIL MEETING <br /> Monday,March 9,2015 <br /> 7:00 o'clock p.m. <br /> (12. #15-3708 CITY OF ORONO—AMEND ZONING CODE SECTION 78-1405(A)(8)— <br /> STANDARDS FOR FENCES AS A NON-ENCROACHMENT,continued) <br /> Gaffron stated at its January meeting,the Planning Commission held a public hearing on the proposed <br /> amendment with no public comments forthcoming. The item was tabled upon Staff's recommendation as <br /> it was deterxnined that the draft ordinance was incomplete and there were specific changes requested by <br /> the Planning Commission. A revised draft ordinance was reviewed at a second public hearing held on <br /> February 17. Following some revisions,the Planning Commission voted 5-0 to recommend approval. <br /> Levang stated Staff and the Planning Commission has done a good job with the draft ordinance. <br /> Walsh stated if someone would like a 4-foot fence rather than a 6-foot fence,he would allow a 7-inch <br /> finial standard so they would be allowed on a lower fence. <br /> Gaffron stated the proposed text reads as follows: "Exception: post finials extending above the top of the <br /> fence shall not exceed 10 inches in width per finial and shall not extend above the top of the fence by <br /> more than 10 percent of the allowed maximum fence height at that location." Gaffron stated a 6-foot <br /> fence would be allowed a 7-inch finial above the top of the fence and a 42-inch fence would be allowed a <br /> 4-inch finial. Gaffron stated to his understanding they would be allowed under the current language. <br /> Walsh asked what the reasoning is behind the 42-inch fence versus a 6-foot fence. Walsh noted someone <br /> would be allowed to plant a 6 or 7-foot fence. <br /> Gaffron stated City Code for decades has defined which yards can have which fences and that he is not <br /> sure why 42-inches was picked. Gaffron stated the way the Code has read is that someone can have a <br /> 6-foot high fence in a side yard,but on a lakeshore lot,that fence must be reduced to 42 inches. Gaffron <br /> stated it comes down to a visual impact. <br /> Walsh stated it seems to be a double standard since someone would be allowed a 6-foot shrub or bush but <br /> not a 6-foot fence. <br /> Walsh stated in his view permanent needs to be defined better as it relates to temporary fencing. Walsh <br /> stated the City needs to separate it out from someone who might put out silt fencing to aggravate their <br /> neighbor and that he would suggest placing a limit on it from October to March. <br /> Gaffron asked if he is saying that snow fencing has a limited or seasonal time period. <br /> Walsh indicated that is correct. <br /> Gaffron noted he also talked about temporary fencing shall not be allowed to remain on a permanent basis <br /> and that they need to define what permanent is. <br /> Walsh stated permanent could be in the eyes of the beholder and that perhaps the City Attorney has a <br /> better definition. <br /> Mattick stated without a definition,permanent is rather open-ended. Mattick stated they perhaps could <br /> get rid of the concept of temporary or permanent and simply have a limit on how long the materials are <br /> allowed. <br /> Page 32 of 43 <br />