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ARDEN HILLS CITY COUNCIL WORK SESSION—OCTOBER 28, 2024 4 <br /> Jason Zimmerman said Arden Hills utilizes a Land Use Chart to document which uses are <br /> allowed in each zoning district, and to indicated if they are permitted by right, permitted <br /> conditionally through a Conditional Use Permit(CUP), permitted through a Planned Unit <br /> Development(PUD)process, permitted on an interim basis, or prohibited. A high number of uses <br /> (58%) are only allowed after they have received a CUP. <br /> In addition to creating barriers to development by adding time, money, and procedures to the <br /> approval process,the potential to have the City deny a CUP request upon the conclusion of the <br /> process may make some applicants reluctant to seek approval, thereby stifling investment. <br /> Adjusting the way in which uses are permitted—moving from "permitted conditionally"to <br /> "permitted with standards" or even simply to "permitted"—would help streamline the process for <br /> those seeking permits, for City staff, and for the members of the Planning Commission and City <br /> Council. To further complicate matters, the specific special requirements for up to ten zoning <br /> districts require land use applications for many uses to be reviewed through a CUP or PUD <br /> process (or both), even though the Land Use Chart indicates many uses are permitted by right. <br /> The discrepancies between the text and the chart should be rectified for the sake of clarity and, if <br /> possible, the additional layers of review and approval reduced for many of the reasons noted <br /> above. For many types of land use applications,the City follows a review process that involves a <br /> required public hearing with the Planning Commission and provides an option to hold a second <br /> public hearing with the City Council. This is inconsistent with most communities in the Twin <br /> Cities which only hold one public hearing (usually with the Planning Commission). The optional <br /> second hearing can add time and cost for the applicant, City staff, and elected officials— <br /> especially if it is used frequently. A more efficient and common approach would be to limit the <br /> public hearing to the Planning Commission only and rely on that testimony, findings, and <br /> recommendations when the City Council considers approval. The City Council can still accept <br /> public testimony if it chose at the public meeting. <br /> Jason Zimmerman outlined next steps. Following the Joint Meeting, work will begin on more <br /> closely examining and drafting new sections of code. Three work sessions with the Planning <br /> Commission are scheduled for the first half of 2025. At each, HKGi will share specific questions <br /> and work through potential changes to the code language. HKGi will provide updates to the City <br /> Council after each meeting. Initially, City staff had expressed interest in pursuing a set of"minor <br /> updates"to the code that would address inconsistencies and organization during the first half of <br /> the project. While HKGi has identified many of these issues and can point to how they will be <br /> resolved, the time and effort needed to bring these items forward for review and approval would <br /> likely be an inefficient use of resources—especially considering that the adjustments needed to <br /> address the "major updates"that have been identified would require many of these same parts of <br /> code to be modified again later in the year. Therefore, HKGi recommends identifying these minor <br /> updates but waiting to implement them in conjunction with the other code amendments <br /> HKGi will present details related to the information above at the Joint Meeting and then look for <br /> confirmation from the City Council and Planning Commission regarding the issues that should be <br /> addressed as part of the project. Any topics that the City feels should not be addressed—or any <br /> that HKGi has missed and should be included—will be discussed. <br /> Councilmember Holden referenced a slide for residential units. She thought some apartments <br /> were missing <br />