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HRA Meeting <br />Minutes – Tuesday, May 15, 2012 <br />Page 4 <br />1 <br />Discussion ensued regarding the intent of this terminology; whether “social blight” was within <br />2 <br />the role of the HRA; and the original intent of the term to capture or minimize crime in specific <br />3 <br />areas where problems may be evident or where there was under-maximized use of <br />4 <br />opportunities (e.g. SE portion of Roseville). <br />5 <br />6 <br />Member Majerus opined that the HRA was not the “social” element for the City, but the <br />7 <br />“housing” element; and suggested removal of “social” and physical” from the title, leaving <br />8 <br />only “blight” without further specificity. <br />9 <br />10 <br />Member Quam questioned how the HRA addressed Objective b, and what options were <br />11 <br />currently available to the HRA. <br />12 <br />13 <br />Chair Maschka noted that pass-through financing was considered conduit financing; as well as <br />14 <br />the HRA’s bonding authority; both currently available as HRA tools. <br />15 <br />16 <br />Mr. Trudgeon clarified that the intent of staff was for a review of current or creation of new <br />17 <br />policies that provided straightforward methods for using those specific tools; whether the tools <br />18 <br />were useful to the HRA’s goals and mission; and what types of projects to invest in; as well as <br />19 <br />what parameters the HRA wanted to establish for particular projects. <br />20 <br />21 <br />Member Majerus questioned if this item wouldn’t be more applicable in the Action Plan rather <br />22 <br />than in the Strategic Plan. <br />23 <br />24 <br />After further discussion, Member Quam suggested revising the language of Objective B to <br />25 <br />[Utilizing] <br />“funding tools, rather than “Create policies that allow funding tools…” <br />26 <br />27 <br />Ms. Raye referenced Objective E under Goal IV and how best to write this with the HRA <br />28 <br />Board’s discussion and intent to address neighborhoods with multi-jurisdictions at the edges of <br />29 <br />the cities, but crossing jurisdictions while remaining a neighborhood. Ms. Raye suggested <br />30 <br />“Identify neighborhoods that need partnerships to make neighborhood- <br />language that would <br />31 <br />wide improvements.” <br />32 <br />33 <br />Chair Maschka questioned if that addressed Member Quam’s issue of underutilized corners. <br />34 <br />35 <br />Mr. Trudgeon stated that her concern was raised under Objective A, with this Objective <br />36 <br />intended to be about neighborhoods, not specific properties. <br />37 <br />38 <br />Member Quam concurred with Mr. Trudgeon’s comments. <br />39 <br />40 <br />Since a lot of those multi-jurisdictional areas were zoned commercial, Chair Maschka <br />41 <br />questioned how staff saw the structure of those neighborhoods. <br />42 <br />43 <br />Ms. Kelsey responded that this issue needed to be further addressed, since it was intended to be <br />44 <br />unique <br />under Goal II and included under “,” identifying redevelopment sites. Therefore, Ms. <br />45 <br />unique <br />Kelsey questioned if the HRA Board wanted to specifically call out “.” <br />46 <br />47 <br />Chair Maschka suggested that the HRA Board think of developments to foster through “good <br />48 <br />design,” not necessarily “unique. <br />49 <br />50 <br />Member Lee concurred, suggesting more creativity in pocket neighborhoods. <br />51 <br />52 <br />Member Majerus suggested language somewhere that addressed “… investigating <br />53 <br />opportunities or potential for pocket neighborhoods in the community.” <br />54 <br />55 <br /> <br />