HomeMy WebLinkAboutEconomic Advisory Board - Minutes - 01/19/2022
ECONOMIC ADVISORY BOARD
TYPE OF MEETING – REGULAR
January 19, 2022 4:00 - 6:00 pm
via Zoom
01/19/2022 – AGENDA Page 1
1. CALL TO ORDER
4:00pm
2. ROLL CALL
List of Board Members Present
o John Parks
o Renee Walkup
o Thierry Dossou
o Blake Naughton
o Denny Coleman
o Aric Light
o Mistene Nugent
o Jeff Havens
o Braulio Rojas
List of Board Members Absent – Excused or Unexcused, if no contact with Chair
has been made.
List of Staff Members Present
o Josh Birks
o Molly Saylor
o Meaghan Overton
o Noah Beels (briefly)
3. AGENDA REVIEW
Ultimately no changes
4. CITIZEN PARTICIPATION
N/A
5. APPROVAL OF MINUTES
No changes
6. UNFINISHED BUSINESS
N/A
7. NEW BUSINESS
ECONOMIC ADVISORY BOARD
TYPE OF MEETING – REGULAR
01/19/2022 – AGENDA Page 2
a. Introducing the Chair and Vice Chair
John Parks – Vice Chair
John used to be a language educator and is now a student finishing a
master’s degree in Political Science at CSU. He loves that Fort Collins
has a focus on sustainability and the triple bottom line.
Renee Walkup – Chair
Has been the Chair for six months and has been on the board for four
years. She recently transitioned from being an international
speaker/trainer to a 3d mosaic artist. She loves the vibe of the city, the
friends, the sustainability focus, and the downtown area.
b. Introducing New Members
Mistene Nugent
Mistene is a commercial-real-estate broker with CBRE. Previously she
was a business owner in town and worked at HP before. She’s lived in
FC since 1990 (originally from Iowa), loves the access to the outdoors,
and how the business community is engaged and vibrant. She loves
how everyone (business, city, and chamber) works together -
particularly during covid.
Blake Naughton
Blake is the vice president for engagement and extension and a
professor of human development at CSU. His background is in
education and workforce development policy. Has been at CSU for 2
years. He moved here with wife and two daughters from Missouri right
before Covid. He feels that the intergenerational mix is great rather than
a separation between “turfs” where different age groups hang out.
Terry Dossou
Senior program manager at Microsoft – currently driving some security
initiatives across the company. Before Microsoft he worked for HP here
in town. CSU alumnus in Computer Engineering & Computer Science.
He loves the outdoors, the food, and the community/people in FC.
Moving from Denver to FC, he thought the area looked boring; however,
he people and community really made the place home. He is passionate
about diversity, inclusion, and bringing & keeping talent in Fort Collins.
Braulio Rojas
Originally from the Dominican Republic – moved here in 2013. He has
ECONOMIC ADVISORY BOARD
TYPE OF MEETING – REGULAR
01/19/2022 – AGENDA Page 3
been serving on this board for three years. He tries to be involved in all
the community aspects. He likes FC because there is a good balance
between environmental enjoyment, retirement communities, and student
communities. There is a harmony. His academic background is finance
and business. He has been working for the last 4 years in financial
services department at Nutrien Ag solutions.
Denny Coleman
Moved here recently with wife to be closer to his kids. He had
vacationed out here several times when he lived in Saint Louis. He went
to school at University of Wisconsin Madison studying Urban and
Regional Planning. He worked at a not-for-profit housing organization,
then moved to community development banking, followed by work at the
City of St. Louis as the Director of Economic Development. Finally, he
worked as the Director of Economic Development at the County of St.
Louis. There, they built a job training center in an impoverished
community, worked in real estate development, business development,
and lots of entrepreneurial activities. He likes the proximity and
accessibility to open space that FC offers.
Jeff Havens
High school English teacher then standup comedian. He is currently a
keynote speaker. His company does online business development. He
and his family moved to FC from Michigan, and he additionally
appreciates the organization of the city, where everything is 15 minutes
from anything. In Michigan, he was on the board for affordable housing
– an issue that is top of mind for him.
Aric Light
Lived in FC for 10 years. Got his undergraduate and graduate degrees
from CSU. Hopes to lend academic insight to applied work done on the
board. Is currently a financial analyst at Merryl-Lynch. He likes the
proximity to outdoor activities that Fort Collins offers.
c. Staff Introduction
Josh Birks
Economic Health and Development Director – leads up department
responsible for business support entrepreneurial innovation and urban
renewal. Been with the office for 13 years – director for 10 of those
years. He acts as staff liaison for the EAB who makes sure that
everyone gets packet materials, helps navigate the position, provides
ECONOMIC ADVISORY BOARD
TYPE OF MEETING – REGULAR
01/19/2022 – AGENDA Page 4
advice, and runs things behind the scenes.
d. Closing remarks: We serve for the pleasure of City Council - everything we do
goes as a suggestion to Council.
e. Housing Strategic Plan Update – Land Use Code Updates Phase I
Presentation – Meaghan Overton – 10 minutes
Meaghan Overton – City’s Housing Manager.
Goal is to get everyone up to speed on Land Use Code update.
Information included in packets.
Project involves revamping land use codes, which dictates what can be
built where, and the process that it needs to go through to be built. The
first phase of this work is focused on housing, and phase two will tackle
industrial and commercial uses. The purpose of this project is to align
the policies already set in place by various city plans (city plan, transit
master plan, our climate future plan, etc.). The plan began with an audit
done in 2020.
Quick history of Fort Collins: The first zoning code served from 1920’s to
mid-1950’s. Old Town is the historic core of the city. It’s walkable, mixed
use, has trees and alleys. At the end of this era, the chamber of
commerce adopted a mantra: “Fort Collins Expands.”
The late-1950’s to the 1980’s involved growing out from the core; the
city expanded outward. 27% of the city was built between 1960 and
1980. A lot of expansion was done via annexation of unincorporated
parts of Larimer County. In the 1980’s and 1990’s auto-dependence
became more pronounced, and a lot of work was done in construction of
single, detached houses. In 1997, the code was updated, and many
values from the core came back: trees, staying connected, and
biking/walking opportunities. We also see a lot more multi-unit
development.
The plan is now to accommodate the future vision. We want more
mobility, more diversity in the kinds of houses we have available, and
more focus on sustainability.
5 guiding principles shape the current work:
o (1) Increase overall housing capacity.
o (2) Enable more affordability.
o (3) Allow for more diverse housing choices.
ECONOMIC ADVISORY BOARD
TYPE OF MEETING – REGULAR
01/19/2022 – AGENDA Page 5
o (4) Make the code easier to understand.
o (5) Improve predictability of the development permit review
process.
Discussion – 20 minutes – Board
Comment (Jeff): A flood in Michigan town gave city an opportunity to
restructure downtown. Many complaints came from residents when a
reduction of 20 parking spaces was suggested. The city advertised that,
when visiting a city, no one remembers how great the parking is.
Supports removal of parking.
Comment (Denny) Suggests that there is always a percentage of the
population who believes that if they cannot park right in front of a store
whenever they want - they think there’s not enough parking.
Q (Denny) His experience with affordable housing is that it’s best if
there’s a percentage of the affordable housing is sold at market rate.
Does FC have plans to provide something like that.
o A (Meaghan) Inclusionary policy is not required in Fort Collins
(and wasn’t allowed in rental housing until last year). They
continue to look at inclusionary policy as a potential option, but
it would need to be carefully designed to work with whatever
densities are allowed in code. Expect more conversation about
this after code changes.
Q (Denny) In SL, historic preservation was important. What’s the feeling
on historic districts, particularly in old town?
o A (Meaghan) There are a few historic districts in FC (primarily
in Old Town area), and Housing works closely with historic
preservation staff to balance affordability and historic
preservation concerns. Example: use of an existing house is
more sustainable than building a new one, but the existing
houses wouldn’t be as energy efficient.
Q (Jeff) Asks if there any conversation regarding incentivizing individual
property owners (of small apartment complexes or of individual houses)
to provide affordable housing.
o A (Meaghan) That’s a subject that falls in the Housing Plan,
though not the Land Use Code project. The Housing Plan is on
a much slower timeline and looks at occupancy, rental
licensing, and small landlord incentives. Most of the housing
ECONOMIC ADVISORY BOARD
TYPE OF MEETING – REGULAR
01/19/2022 – AGENDA Page 6
that will be available in FC has already been built since there is
not enough capacity to build enough to match what already
exists. Work needs to be done with what we have and can’t
necessarily “build our way out of it.”
Q (John) FC, and the rest of the country, have a history of redlining and
exclusionary practices. Is the commitment to equity tied into some of
what you guys are looking at?
o A (Meaghan) The housing plan delves into the history beyond
what was mentioned today (e.g., a plan that only allowed
certain races or incomes to buy housing). There was also an
equity and opportunity assessment that looked at displacement,
gentrification, and access to different kinds of opportunity in the
community geographically. This allows identification of the most
vulnerable communities are located, and where neighborhood
change and gentrification are occurring.
Q (John) The City has recently adopted higher efficiency code and
wonders whether that’s tied in with the Land Use Code, the
sustainability, and the cost aspects of new builds.
o A (Meaghan) The city is also updating the building code on
February 15th. Energy and sustainability compliance will be
dealt with through the building code, not the Land Use Code.
Q (Renee) Since the pandemic, have the numbers of people who are
moving in adjust – is there new data on that. And second, has the
funding changed for affordable housing?
o A (Meaghan) A lot of the trends that existed before the
pandemic are pretty similar to current trends. There is a rapidly
growing older population, smaller family sizes, and people
doubling up on housing. The city invests 1.5 – 3 million dollars
in affordable housing; based on production goals, the required
amount is closer to 10-11.5 million dollars per year. There are
recovery funds that are beginning to be allocated to projects
across the city, so she expects housing to be one of the top
priorities. Money from the City is focused towards the lowest-
income groups. The city is also getting 2.6 million towards
housing from ARPA.
Q (Renee) Developers said that they’re not getting incentives to build
affordable housing. Have any adjustments been made to that?
ECONOMIC ADVISORY BOARD
TYPE OF MEETING – REGULAR
01/19/2022 – AGENDA Page 7
o A (Noah Beals – Development Review Manager for the City)
We are only one piece of the puzzle, and we are teeing up that
conversation for the future, but we’re not incorporating it in our
current work.
o A (Meaghan) We also have credits that are only for those hard-
to-develop units (30% median income or below). It’s a flat rate
that developers can apply to their fees, but it’s a limited
program because of funding. With more funding, more money
could be applied there. Some additional funding went there in
the first round of ARPA.
Meaghan: Draft is expected to come out around April. She and Noah would
love to come back and share the details of the draft, then.
f. Plastic Bag Update
Presentation – Molly Saylor – 10 minutes
Working on plastic pollution is a city council priority and is in our city’s
strategic plan. The program is funded by bag fee revenue of about
$120k in 2022. This strategy also supports an Our Climate Future
alignment as a move towards zero waste.
In developing Our Climate Future, we learned that more renewing,
recycling, and composting was one of the big priorities of our BIPOC
community in FC. So, we know that this is an important place to be
working, especially working within equity.
This work specifically is centering community and equity. It centers
community by making the plastic bag fee revenue available for things
that the community might want to lead or co-lead with our city. We are
also centering equity by partnering with historically underrepresented
groups including people living with a disability.
The Bag Ordinance was passed by City Council in February 2021 and
was affirmed by voters in April 2021. It will become effective on May 1,
2022, and ban plastic bags at large grocers (over 10k square feet).
Paper bags will then be available for purchase for 12 cents. Half of the
12-cent fee will go to the grocers, and the other half will go to the city.
The fee that goes to the city will go to waste reduction measures. Note
that participants of federal, state, and local income-qualified programs
will be exempt from this fee if they can present a current benefit card.
Since Council adoption and voter approval, we’ve seen:
ECONOMIC ADVISORY BOARD
TYPE OF MEETING – REGULAR
01/19/2022 – AGENDA Page 8
o The Colorado Plastic Pollution Reduction Act passed.
o Engagement and collaboration with grocers and
disproportionately impacted groups.
o A lead sustainability specialist hired to manage this ordinance
as well as the programs that it generates via the applied fees.
o Just sent out first wave of reusable bags to 1,300 low and
moderate-income households, including some tips on how else
folks can start getting ready for the change in May. More
households will be receiving bags this winter and spring.
Had opportunity to get deep engagement with stakeholders including all
15 large grocers, several disproportionately affected communities
(seniors, low-moderate income, disabilities). Largely, people are ready
to go. Some have expressed support, but need some tips, guidance, or
information before they’re “ready to go.” Grocers fit into these first two
categories. There are some concerns, though. These took the form of
dislike of the regulation or aspects of it, such as the fee, or imposition of
new barriers on people with disabilities or other types of hardships (like
chronic long-term illnesses). Some community members are unable to
shop in stores, so they would have no choice but to pay that reusable
bag fee.
o These stories are considered in plans for materials that are
given out before the ordinance, into the communication
planning, storyboarding, and into recommendations to City
Council about how to adapt the ordinance.
o Engagement will be ongoing rather than “dip in, dip out.” They
will continue to check in with people as time goes on since
people can’t predict how things will go.
The Colorado Plastic Pollution Reduction Act Timeline
o 2023 - All retailers to charge 10-cents per plastic or paper bag
(with some exemptions). 60-40 City-grocer split.
o 2024 – Plastic bags banned (fee on paper bags maintained);
Styrofoam food containers banned at retail food establishments.
Staff Recommended Changes
o Timeline - Maintain the timeline. By tackling the grocers where
most of the plastic bags are coming from, we can learn a lot of
lessons to help the rest of the community transition over as the
ECONOMIC ADVISORY BOARD
TYPE OF MEETING – REGULAR
01/19/2022 – AGENDA Page 9
state’s bill comes into effect.
o Fees -- Adopt the state’s fee (10 cents) and split (60-40 City-
grocer). This is the same revenue from the city perspective.
Grocers support this decision so the State can be aligned.
o Exemptions - Maintain the exemption for all income-qualified
programs (State is more focused on food-based assistance
programs. FC will keep the broader exemption) but allow
administrative rules for all other exceptions (if we encounter
disproportionate barriers, we want to be able to act on
opportunities to remove them).
o Definitions – Align to State definitions and clean up other non-
substantive elements, as identified by Staff.
Next Steps & Timeline
o Planning details of the roll-out with grocers and community
members. Goal is to make everything clear and as easy as
possible for everyone who shops.
o Based on Council feedback, we may bring back an updated
ordinance draft. The new draft would require council
consideration.
o March and April will be about community-wide communications
and outreach.
o Ordinance goes into effect on May 1st, and we will continue
checking in with grocers and disproportionately impacted
stakeholders.
Discussion – 20 minutes – Board
Q (Renee) Notes that someone buying few items will automatically be
given a bag and that employee-packers will pack inefficiently and
overuse bags. What is the training plan that sees that the stores will
implement these plans? What is the communication plan at the stores?
Will there be signage reminding people to bring their bags in?
o A (Molly) State language requires that grocers provide signage
alerting customers will be charged for paper bags. Additionally,
grocers will also be required to create a Fee Revenue Plan (fee
revenue cannot be treated as general revenue) that applies to
either recovering fees attributed to this ordinance or towards
further reducing plastic waste/ increase recycling. A
ECONOMIC ADVISORY BOARD
TYPE OF MEETING – REGULAR
01/19/2022 – AGENDA Page 10
recommended application of this income is additional signage in
parking lot (if they own it) to remind customers to take in their
bags.
An additional step in getting grocers prepared has been
a series of conversations with grocery store employees
on how to work together to make sure everyone has
what they need. A major concern was that cashiers are
the “front line” of enforcing this mandate and take most
of the heat from unhappy customers. QR being created
for customers to scan and send feedback to us.
o We are working on the training element. There are some lines
where we’re city staff and it’s not our business, but customer
feedback to baggers when customers are responsible for
paying for the bags will likely correct those wasteful bagging
behaviors. Some grocers will also allow pick-up customers to
choose whether they’d like their groceries bagged or not.
Q (Jeff) If the State is planning on making all plastic bags banned in the
upcoming years, why aren’t we taking steps towards doing the same
thing now? You’re doing a lot of work for 15 locations now, and next
year you’ll have to do the same work for 100 locations. Why not prepare
everyone now?
o A (Molly) Grocers is where most bags come from, so tackling
this now will get us most of the way there. This is also a great
learning opportunity to test and see what works and understand
how to message this to the community and we’ll be better
poised for a smooth transition in the future.
o Comment (Thierry) A good strategy here is “nail it and scale
it.” Since this is state-wide policy, the success is really the
communication. Reach out to a group of people, work with
them, and learn what worked and what didn’t work, then apply
to other stores sounds like a great strategy to me.
Comment (Braulio) Thinks this is a great project and overdue. This will
be difficult because we are changing people’s behaviors. We all grew up
without thinking about bags because they were always available. People
change behaviors when there’s a financial impact. I don’t see another
way to do it but to charge for their behavior.
Q (Braulio)Another element that people can include is a third option to
buy a bag that is non-plastic for a little bit more money. Maybe the City
ECONOMIC ADVISORY BOARD
TYPE OF MEETING – REGULAR
01/19/2022 – AGENDA Page 11
could create bags as a non-profit project.
o A (Molly) We are doing something like that. Plastic will be
outright banned, but we will be making paper bags available for
10 cents. We still want to discourage paper because, while
better for the environment than plastic, still has it’s own cost to
the climate (greenhouse gas). We are also giving other options
such as, put items directly into cart and take cart out to car.
Comment (Braulio) Notes that this could provide an incentive for store
owners to profit from people forgetting their bags and having to buy
them.
Comment (Jeff) Some stores also offer reusable bags for sale at
checkout so customers can pay a few dollars for a reusable bag rather
than 10 cents for a paper bag that they’ll never use again.
Q (John) Recalls a previous presentation stated that 15 stores create
10 million bags in a year. That must be a big impact when it goes from a
net cost to a net revenue source. Mentions that Ireland in the early 2000
had a nation-wide plastic bag removal and had a huge positive
messaging campaign “keep Ireland green” that had the whole public
behind it. Encourages Fort Collins to follow suit with a positive
campaign in advance of the ordinance (e.g. “we’re keeping FC green.”
or “we are keeping 10 million bags out of landfills.”) Suggests avoiding
negative connotation.
8. BOARD MEMBER REPORTS
Q (Blake) What is a board member report
A(Renee) Someone on the board might have a comment or topic that
they might want to bring up.
(John) We will be having elections coming up in the next few months [March]
for the positions of Chair and Vice Chair. This gives you time to see what
EAB is about and maybe throw hats in the ring.
(Renee) Typically we’ve voted for board elections in January when no
one knows anyone. So now new members can get to know people and
fulfill a position.
Q (Mistene) Can you clarify the meeting cadence.
A (Renee) Third Wednesday of every month. Next month we will
discuss having a hybrid option.
Q (John) Noted that dates on EAB page is citing starting date for members
ECONOMIC ADVISORY BOARD
TYPE OF MEETING – REGULAR
01/19/2022 – AGENDA Page 12
rather than termination dates.
A (Josh) Board term length has been staggered. Some people are
appointed for one year, some appointed for two years, and others for
three years. He will confer with clerk to verify that dates are correct.
Q (Braulio) Wants to confirm that in-person meetings will cover dinner costs.
A(John) confirms.
9. OTHER BUSINESS
10. ADJOURNMENT
5:59pm
UPCOMING TOPICS
Economic Health Strategic Plan Update [February; Re-occurring]
Revisit Meeting In-Person [February]
East Mulberry Corridor Annexation Feasibility [Q1, 2022]
Our Climate Future – ClimateWise Update [TBD]