2017, 01-10 Formal Format MINUTES
City of Spokane Valley
City Council Regular Meeting
Formal Meeting Format
Tuesday, January 10,2017
Mayor Higgins called the meeting to order at 6:00 p.m.
Attendance: Staff
Rod Higgins,Mayor Mark Calhoun, City Manager
Arne Woodard, Deputy Mayor Cary Driskell, City Attorney
Caleb Collier, Councilmember Mike Stone, Parks &Rec Director
Pain Haley, Councilmember John Holman, Comm. & Eco. Dev. Manager
Mike Munch,Councilmember Erik Lamb, Deputy City Attorney
Ed Pace, Councilmember Chelsie Taylor, Finance Director
Morgan Koudelka, Sr.Administrative Analyst
Absent: Steve Worley,Cap. Improvement Program Mgr.
Sam Wood, Councilmember Jim Dingfield, Senior Engineer
Mark Werner,Police Chief
Christine Bainbridge, City Clerk
INVOCATION: Pastor Brad Bruszer of Genesis Church gave the invocation.
PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE Council, staff and the audience stood for the Pledge of Allegiance.
ROLL CALL City Clerk Bainbridge called the roll; all Councilmembers were present except
Councilmember Wood. It was moved by Deputy Mayor Woodard, seconded and unanimously agreed to
excuse Councilmember Wood from tonight's!meeting.
APPROVAL OF AGENDA It was moved by Deputy Mayor froodard,seconded and unanimously agreed
to approve the agenda.
INTRODUCTION OF SPECIAL GUESTS AND PRESENTATIONS n/a
COMMITTEE,BOARD,LIAISON SUMMARY REPORTS
There were no reports, although some Councilmembers commented about and expressed appreciation for
the work of the snow plow crews.
MAYOR'S REPORT:Mayor Higgins reported that he attended a Clean Air Board meeting,and that Board
was scheduled to hold a public hearing tonight on the moratorium of growing marijuana outdoors; also
noted lie attended a Boy Scout recognition banquet and said the valley was well represented with several
eagle scouts.
PUBLIC COMMENTS: Mayor Higgins invited public comment.
Laura Renz: spoke about the issue of service dogs and signage, and handed a copy of her poster for
businesses, to the City Clerk for distribution to Council; said she made a webpage, published an article on
the front page of the Sunday Spokesman a few weeks ago, and that all this has garnered a lot of interest;
and said the City of Spokane is interested in the issue and trying to get something on their books.
Stephanie Culver:also spoke about the issue of signage and service dogs,and handed a copy of her handouts
to the City Clerk for distribution to Council; mentioned the ADA (Americans with Disability Act)
requirements, and said it is very beneficial having businesses with appropriate signs.
Nina Fluegal: spoke about snow plowing; said she has seen kids walking on top of the berms because they
can't walk on the sidewalks and with the snow and ice, and that there is very little chance to get those
sidewalks clear; said maybe it would be a good investment for the City to pay someone to go behind the
Minutes Regular Council Meeting:01-10-2017 Page 1 of 4
Approved by Council:01-24-2017
plows to help clear the sidewalks,and perhaps the City could invest in ATV's(all-terrain vehicle)that have
a plow on the front.
City Manager Calhoun noted that both of these items are scheduled as administrative reports for next week's
Council meeting.
1. CONSENT AGENDA: Consists of items considered routine which are approved as a group. Any
member of Council may ask that an item be removed from the Consent Agenda to be considered separately.
Proposed Motion:I move to approve the CornsentA:;enda.
a. Approval of claim vouchers on Jan 10,2017 Request for Council Action Form,Total: $2,712,746.97
b. Approval of Payroll for Pay Period Ending December 15,2016: $398,054.35
c. Approval of Payroll for Pay Period Ending December 31,2016: $427,984.19
d.Approval of December 13, 2016 Council Meeting Minutes, Formal Meeting Format
e. Approval of December 20, 2016 Council Meeting Minutes, Study Session Format
It was moved by Deputy Mayor Woodard, seconded and unanimously agreed to approve the Consent
Agenda.
NEW BUSINESS:
2. Second Reading Proposed Ordinance 17-001 Amending Alarm Systems—Morgan Koudelka
After City Clerk Bainbridge read the ordinance title, it was moved by Deputy Mayor Woodard and seconded
to approve Ordinance 17-001 amendingSVMC 7.20. Mr.Koudelka again explained some of the major changes
with this ordinance amendment, such as eliminating all registration requirements, and making the appeal
process simpler; and said if this is adopted tonight, the City would be issuing refund checks to those who pre-
paid 2017 registration fees.Mr.Koudelka noted that there were some comments last week about the perception
that we are taking something away from people in that we previously had some free false alarms; he said that
a lot of this false information has been passed from alarm companies; he said that the program has been in
place for six years and has always been based on cost recovery; said the fee was the same if it were the first or
subsequent false alarms,and that the only free false alarm was within the first sixty-days of someone having a
new alarm system, in order to give a grace period to get familiar with the alarm system;he said we will continue
to work with people and grant exceptions for such things as power outages,or weather events,and that the idea
is to control the number of false alarms. Mr. Koudelka explained that if an officer never goes to the home or
business,there would be no cost, and with the new system, there is no registration fee either. Mayor Higgins
invited public comment.Nina Fluegal: said she has an alarm system and the company calls her first as that is
the way she set it up; she questioned how the City could put a price on an officer's time since they work on a
salary, and that should be part of their job. Tony Lazanis: said he hasn't read the document, but suggested
Council beware of Mr. Koudelka; said this is why we have a police department, so they can monitor things
and if they get an alarm they're supposed to go check it; said it seems that someone is making money off this,
that citizens pay enough taxes to have that service, and Council should beware of what they're doing, as
someone is trying to stick it to the citizens.
Mr. Koudelka said police respond to alarm activations;that alarm companies tell customers that if they don't
have an alarm reduction in place, not to worry about how many times it occurs, as they will call the police
every time and the police will check it out and make sure everyone is ok; said our police officers were chasing
a lot of false alarm calls and it was getting worse; and when officers respond to false alarms, they have less
time for pro-active policing like patrolling neighborhoods and looking for suspicious activity; and that not
everyone has an alarm system so this is strictly cost-recovery; said the cost is broken out according to the
dispatch records, which show how many officers responded and how long they were there; also the cost of
administering the program was factored in, as well as the cost for the bank to process the payments, including
return check fees; said the rates were previously reduced and likely will be reduced again, but we are waiting
for the County to provide that information.Mayor Higgins invited further comments. Laura Renz said she has
an alarm system and it is her responsibility to make sure the equipment is working properly; and that she
doesn't want officers to have to conte to false alarms. There were no further public comments. Vote by
Acclamatiion.In Favor: Unanimous. Opposed: None. Motion carried.
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Approved by Council:01-24-2017
3. Proposed Resolution 17-001 Repealing and Replacing 16-002, Bank Signing Authority—Chelsie Taylor
It was moved by Deputy Mayor Woodard and seconded to approve Resolution #17-001 declaring which
qualified public depositories the City is authorized to conduct,inancial transactions with, and declaring ii'hich
Councilmembers and City officers have signing authority on behalf of the City. Finance Director Taylor
explained that due to the change in staff and elected officials, the resolution needed to be updated concerning
who is authorized to sign checks,and which qualified financial depositories the City may use to make payments
on claims or obligations. Mayor Higgins invited public comment; no comments were offered. Vote by
Acclamation:In Favor: Unanimous. Opposed:None. Motion carried.
4. Motion Consideration: GIS Enterprise License Interlocal Agreement—Morgan Koudelka
It was moved by Deputy Mayor Woodard and seconded to authorize the City Manager to execute the Interlocal
Agreement for Participation in the County of Spokane ESRI Enterprise License Agreement. Senior
Administrative Analyst Koudelka explained that as he mentioned last week,there are many things GIS licenses
do for us; and that every four years Spokane County,on our behalf, negotiates with the vendor, ESRI; that we
enter into an enterprise license agreement with the County and a few other-jurisdictions,which results in saving
18% on our annual cost. Councilmember Munch indicated that following our link, the link only works about
a quarter of the time,and Mr. Koudelka said he would check on that.Mayor Higgins invited public comment;
no comments were offered. Vote by Acclamation: In Favor: Unanimous. Opposed.'None. Motion carried.
5. Motion Consideration: Bid Award,Appleway Trail, Pines to Evergreen—Steve Worley
It was moved by Deputy Mayor Woodard and seconded to authorize the City Manager to finalize and execute
the contract for the Appleivay Shared Use Path—Pines to Evergreen Project#0227 to T. LaRiviere Equipment
&Excavation, Inc., in the arilount of$1,680,981.00.Mr. Worley explained that this bid is for the second phase
of the Appleway Trail Project; and as noted in the Request for Council Action form, the explained why the
lowest bid was rejected.Mayor Higgins invited public comment and Mr.Lazanis asked if this was about Barker
Road;when Mayor Higgins said this is the Appleway Trail,Mr.Lazanis said if there is federal money,it should
go to Pines or Barker Road,and Council needs to prioritize Pines before they do anything else. There were no
further public comments. Councilmember Pace said he would vote no just to protest the DBE(Disadvantaged
Business Enterprise) federal requirement. Vote by Acclamation: In Favor: Mayor Higgins, Deputy Mayor
Woodard, and Councilmembers Munch and Haley. Opposed: Councilinembers Pace and Collier. Motion
carried.
6. Motion Consideration: Consultant Agreement Design Barker-Rd/BNSF Separation Project- Steve Worley
It was moved by Deputy Mayor Woodard and seconded to authorize the City Manager to finalize and execute
a Contract it'ith David Evans and Associates in the amount of$1,274,031 for the Barker Road/BNSF Grade
Separation project design services. Mr.Worley explained the issue as noted in his Request for Council Action
form; said that this is the consultant we have for moving the design of the Barker Road; and as an aside, said
staff has issued an RFQ (request for qualifications) for the Pines Road and those came in last Friday, so that
will be coming to Council soon for a similar contract to begin the design of the Pines Road grade separation
project. Mayor Higgins invited public comment; no comments were offered. Councilmember Collier said lie
is concerned we are throwing money at something that may or may not come to fruition; and Councilmember
Haley agreed,adding that there is no certainty if the requirements will change. Vote by Acclamation:In Favor:
Mayor Higgins, Deputy Mayor Woodard, and Councilmember Munch. Opposed: Councilmembers Collier,
Haley and Pace. Motion failed.
7. Motion Consideration: Pines Road Underpass Right-of-way acquisition—Steve Worley
It was moved by Deputy Mayor Woodard and seconded to authorize the City Manager to finalize and execute
the documents for the purchase of the Pinecroft property for the Pines Road/BNSF Grade Separation project.
Mr. Worley explained the background of the acquisition of the property, as noted in his Request for Council
Action form; said the owner wanted to develop it, or have the City purchase it; said Council previously gave
direction to move forward with the property purchase. There was brief discussion about the configuration of
the property,and the property owner's preference of the City doing a boundary line adjustment. Mayor Higgins
Minutes Regular Council Meeting:01-10-2017 Page 3 of 4
Approved by Council:01-24-2017
invited public comment.Nina Fluegal asked about the price and how we would pay for it. Mr. Calhoun said
the price is $7.50 per square foot,with a total price of$470,000; and Mr. Worley mentioned that it would be
paid from capita!reserve fund 312. Mr. Calhoun also mentioned that the price is per the appraised per square
foot dollar figure. Mayor Higgins invited further public comment. Brad Bruszer said he wasn't familiar with
this issue and asked where the property is located. Mr. Worley explained the location of the property, east of
Pines Road, owned by Pinecroft, LLC. There were no further public comments. Vote by Acclamation: In
Favor: Unanimous. Opposed:None. Motion carried.
PUBLIC COMMENTS: Mayor Higgins invited public comment; no comments were offered.
ADMINISTRATIVE REPORTS
8. Railroad Bridge Repair/Maintenance—Cary Driskell
Via his PowerPoint presentation, Mr. DriskeIl explained about the safety concerns with the Burlington
Northern Santa Fe bridge southeast of Trent near Kaiser, as well as the Union Pacific bridge near Spokane
Valley Mall; he mentioned there have been several train derailments across the country, some of which
involved materials such as crude oil, or anhydrous ammonia. Mr. Driskell explained that most likely local
jurisdictions have no authority to regulate railroads as the FRSA (Federal Railroad Safety Act) is the
statutory regulating act for rail safety. Mr. Driskell explained that a concerned citizen contacted staff last
year to express potential safety concerns involving those two bridges, and Mr. Driskell showed photos of
the areas in question. Councilmember Munch said he thinks we need to contact the federal delegation now;
that as shown in the photos, the wood doesn't look dangerous, but it is worrisome and federal delegation
needs to be aware of the concern. Mr.Driskell said that staff will not give up on attempts to influence people
to look at this; said the answers he has received so far are not wholly satisfying, but he will continue to
pursue this,and he also mentioned contacting state entities to try to identify some leverage points.
9.Advance Agenda- Mayor Higgins
Deputy Mayor Woodard said that during the next Advance Agenda meeting, he would ask for
reconsideration of tonight's agenda item#6 on the Barker Road contract; said nothing is certain about the
next requirement; that we are already in jeopardy of losing up to $10 million; that it is a critical railroad
crossing; we have no clue of what will be required for an under or over pass; and if we let this go, we'll
never see the Barker Road crossed. There were no other suggestions for the Advance Agenda.
CITY MANAGER COMMENTS
Mr. Calhoun noted that we are in the process of a full-city plow, which started yesterday morning;that we
have nine plows and several contracted road graders; and ideally we'd have twelve, and that it takes about
600 total road grader hours to do a full city plow, but since we are in competition with Spokane City and
Spokane County for graders, we only have six graders. Mr. Calhoun noted that citizens who have snow-
related concerns are encouraged to either complete a"report a concern"which can be found on our website,
or to call us directly at 921-1000. Mr. Calhoun said he is pleased to announce that he has selected John
Hohman as the new Deputy City Manager for the City of Spokane Valley. After Mr. Calhoun gave some
background on Mr. Holtman's qualifications, everyone joined Mr. Calhoun in welcoming Mr. Hohman to
his new position.
It was moved by Deputy Mayor Woodard seconded and unanimously agreedtto adjourn. The meeting
adjourned at 7:21 p.m.
ATTE Si. L.R. Higgi s,_Ma or
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hristine Bainbridge, City Clerk
Minutes Regular Council Meeting:01-10-2017 Page 4 of 4
Approved by Council:01-24-2017
GENERAL PUBLIC COMMENT
SIGNIN SHEET
SPOKANE VALLEY CITY COUNCIL MEETING
Tuesday, January 10, 2017
6:00 p.m. :Regular Meeting
GENE AL CI ' IZEN COMMENTS
YOUR SPEAKING TIME WILL GENERALLY BE LIMITED TO THREE MINUTE
Please sign in if you wish to make public comments.
NAME TOPIC OF CONCERN YOU YOUR CITY OF RESIDENCE
111 1[1 T WILL SPEAK ABOUT
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Please dote that once information is entered on this forms it becomes apubblic recond subject to public disclosure,
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We understand the importance of your pets and
ESA, (Emotional Support Animals) however, only 0
Service Dogs are permitted in our office. ,
o Must be leashed, work from the floor, and
controlled at all times.
o Service Animals by ADA definition, Titles II and Ill, are dogs which are individually
trained to do work or perform tasks for an individual with a disability. The work per-
formed must be directly related to the person's disability.
(ADA phone number 800-514-0301 )
A Spokane County Code 5.04.070, Control of Dogs, states that all dogs in a public
setting must be leashed, and licensed through SCRAPS.
(phone number 509-477-2532)
All Service Animal Teams must adhere to the ADA regulations regarding manners,
which does allow removal of a service animal should they bark, growl, lunge, act
aggressive, or not be housebroken.
We work closely with SCRAPS and the ADA to
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compliance at all times, and that our patrons are
as well, The safety of our clients, and staff, are
1.5/4',..- It of extreme importance to us, so please adhere
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Signage and information provided by Northwest Service Dog Alliance
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Email : NWSDallianco@gmail.com
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We bye all furry companions however,
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A service animal is a dog that is individually trained to
do work or perform tasks for a person with a disability.
Sorry, pets and comfort animals ,
are not permitted.
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Our Service Animal Policy
Food safety concerns and compliance with health codes are
paramount for our company. We also recognize the need to allow
individually trained service animals to assist those with disabilities.
What you can expect from us:
• All trained service animals are welcome in our stores.
• We will provide a safe and pleasant environment, and
management will address any customer concerns or interactions
that are brought to our attention.
• We will remain compliant with applicable ADA guidelines that can
be found at the ADA.gov website.
What we require of you:
• Only individually trained service dogs are allowed in the store.
• Be prepared to address what work or task your dog has been
trained to perform. Our ADA approved questions are only meant
to validate that your dog is indeed a service animal in accordance
with our policy.
• Your service animal must remain on the floor and under control at
all times. Animals may not be carried by their owner and no
animal may ever be placed in a grocery cart or basket.
What about comfort, therapy, emotional support
or companion animals?
• Comfort, therapy, emotional support and companion animals are
not considered service animals by the ADA. Refer to the
ADA.gov website for the definition of a service animal.
• To best ensure food safety and health concerns, this group of
animals is not allowed in the store.
• If needed, we are happy to personally assist with your shopping
needs as an alternative to your reliance on a comfort, therapy,
emotional support or companion animal.
Thank you for your cooperation and compliance with our service
animal policy. Please ask if you have further questions.
My name is Stephanie Culver. I am a service dog handler. I am currently working at super 1
foods owned by Rosauers on the south hill. I have been there for close to a year. As you walk
into the store you see you normal no pets sign plus an additional one by the carts. It states
"Service Animals only, We love our furry companions, however for security and health reasons
only animals who remain on the floor at all times and under full control are allowed. A service
animal is a dog that is individually trained to do work or perform tasks for a person with a
disability. Sorry, pet and comfort animals are not permitted." In a basket below this sign is
information on some papers that you can take with you. Those papers go into more details
including stating how they follow ADA regulations. Due to this sign and available information
have only seen 1 dog in the store and it was a legitimate service dog. When I talked to my
managers about my service dog they welcomed him on my off time with open arms and knew
exactly what to ask.
While working at Walmart and shopping around town I would regularly see untrained pets
inside the store some in shopping carts, some loose, some on leash but uncontrolled. The
owners claim he/she is a service animal but can't answer the task question or say it's an
emotional support dog thinking it counts when it doesn't. Business owners and managers don't
say anything to them. I think it pays to have an informative sign that goes into more detail than
"no pets."