HASSO HERING

A perspective from Oregon’s mid-Willamette Valley

Accessory units: Mayor explains her veto

Written July 13th, 2018 by Hasso Hering

Not much room for accessory dwellings in this new North Albany neighborhood, at least not in the back yards.

Albany Mayor Sharon Konopa has vetoed a council-passed ordinance on accessory dwellings, hoping the members will agree on changes that she and all the councilors can support.

She submitted her two-page message — the first veto in her 10 years as mayor — on Friday. The council can override it, but it takes five votes to do so. Two of the six council members opposed the housing amendments to the city development code when the ordinance was acted on Wednesday, so any override without changes in the text is unlikely.

The 2017 legislature required cities and counties above certain sizes to allow “at least one accessory dwelling unit for each detached single-family dwelling, subject to reasonable local regulations relating to siting and design.” The units can be inside homes, or attached to the outside, or detached. The bill, SB 1051, passed the Senate 29-0 and the House 59-0.

“I do not feel,” the mayor wrote, “ADUs are a solution to the lack of low-income housing and the state has placed a burden on local governments in dealing with the unintended consequences.”

The Albany code does not comply with SB 1051 because it bans detached accessory units in some areas where single-family houses are permitted. Hence the amendment passed Wednesday. But there also were other changes, and those are what concerned Konopa.

In particular, the code amendment raises the allowed size of ADUs from 750 to 900 square feet. Konopa says this allows for two-bedroom units that could be occupied by four adults with four vehicles. “This can impact an existing single-family neighborhood’s livability,” she wrote.

She added: “The ordinance changes the current parking requirements of one off-street parking space for an ADU by allowing on-street parking, if there is enough street frontage.” And this, she wrote, “can transform the character of an existing single-family neighborhood into a multi-family.”

There’s no requirement in SB 1051 to increase the allowed size of accessory units or relax parking-space requirements. So why do so, her point seems to be. “I believe we should strive to lessen the impacts on existing neighborhoods,” she wrote.

Her message said she would have liked to have more discussion on those points at the council’s Wednesday session but this was prevented by a “call for the question.”

“My veto is to have a discussion over some amendments to help address all councilors’ concerns,” she wrote. She hopes to have the discussion and resolve the issue at the council’s next meeting. That’s a work session on July 23. The next regular session is on July 25. (hh)

 

 





5 responses to “Accessory units: Mayor explains her veto”

  1. Gothic Albany says:

    Kudos to the mayor. Don’t turn Albany into little Portlandia.

  2. Ray Kopczynski says:

    By city ordinance (5741), the mayor has the absolute right to veto any proposed ordinance. City council then will have the opportunity to either uphold it or overturn it. Perfectly apropos – and council will have that opportunity.

    I do hope it will be done transparently in a council meeting vs. very opaque via a work session…

    I disagree with the mayor’s veto for several reasons:

    1. I will hazard a guess that the actual number of single-dwelling residential lots inside the city limits that would actually allow for ADUs, due to set back requirements, etc., is much smaller than the monster-in-the-mayor’s- mind as envisioned. (Can you even imagine any in the historic district where Dick Olsen lives? I can’t…)

    2. I believe the number of folks who will actually apply to have an ADU will be very small. Not because some folks might not wish to actually have one, but rather the actual cost of building one. People would be building a small house – and that ain’t cheap by any stretch of the imagination… It’s not like you can go to IKEA or Home Depot and buy one as a “Do It Yourself” weekend project!

    3. IF (and it’s a very big “if” in my mind), we perceive a large demand for ADUs, the ordinance can always be changed… The mayor’s reasoning’s sound like NIMBY to me: “…OK for future development but not in existing neighborhoods…” (Due to lack of ADU applications, Portland has now incentivized their process by subsidizing all the SDC costs for someone who wants to build one.) I sure don’t perceive a tsunami of requests, nor a major problem arising in Albany…

    5. The parking issue… The street in front of your house is for *public* use. There is no way we can restrict that from being used by anyone living in an apartment, ADU, single family residence, etc.

    Compromise is/can be a good thing – IF there is such… We’ll see…

  3. Jon L Carter says:

    The AARP has advocated for ECHO ( Elderly Cottage Housing Opportunity) housing for years. ECHO housing AKA Granny Flats, Mother in Law house is pretty common in most parts of the world. The argument against them seems to stem from a fear of them being rented out at times to lower income people. Kind of sad.

  4. hj.anony1 says:

    I hope the sense of freedom the Mayor now feels on this issue may expand to other concerns! Wishful thinking perhaps.

    No room for those ADUs in zero lot line housing developments constructed by those tree cutting Hayden Homes & others.

  5. J. Jacobson says:

    As she explained-away her veto, Madam Mayor looked similar to Donald Trump as he pretended to reverse himself from the day before when he gushed over Putin even as he trashed the very nation he’s sworn to defend. It didn’t work for Trump. Ditto for Madam Mayor.

 

 
HH Today: A perspective from Oregon’s mid-Willamette Valley
Albany Albany City Council Albany council Albany downtown Albany Fire Department Albany housing Albany parks Albany Planning Commission Albany police Albany Post Office Albany Public Works Albany riverfront Albany schools Albany Station Albany streets Albany traffic Albany urban renewal apartments ARA Benton County bicycling bike lanes Bowman Park Bryant Park Calapooia River CARA climate change COVID-19 Cox Creek Cox Creek path Crocker Lane cumberland church cycling Dave Clark Path DEQ downtown Albany Edgewater Village Highway 20 homeless housing Interstate 5 land use Linn County Millersburg Monteith Riverpark North Albany ODOT Oregon coast Oregon legislature Pacific Power Portland & Western Queen Avenue Republic Services Riverside Drive Santiam Canal Scott Lepman Talking Water Gardens The Banks Tom Cordier Union Pacific urban renewal Water Avenue Waterfront Project Waverly Lake Willamette River


Copyright 2022. All Rights Reserved. Hasso Hering.
Website Serviced by Santiam Communications
Hasso Hering