HomeMy WebLinkAboutCOUNCIL - AGENDA ITEM - 04/21/2020 - SECOND READING OF ORDINANCE NO. 057, 2020, AMENDINAgenda Item 14
Item # 14 Page 1
AGENDA ITEM SUMMARY April 21, 2020
City Council
STAFF
Mark Sears, Natural Areas Manager
Ingrid Decker, Legal
SUBJECT
Second Reading of Ordinance No. 057, 2020, Amending Section 2-568 of the Code of the City of Fort Collins
to Clarify Ethical Rules of Conduct to Address Employee Housing and Purchases from the City.
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
This item is coming to Council as a Second Reading. It is high priority as it will allow immediate housing of an
employee who will serve as a caretaker on a large remote property to help protect the valuable recently
acquired assets.
This Ordinance, unanimously adopted on First Reading on April 7, 2020, amends City Code to clarify that the
City Charter’s prohibition on City employees purchasing property from the City was not intended to prevent
employees from compensating the City for the value of housing that they are required to live in as a condition
of employment. This would confirm Council’s expectations related to this issue and to clarify how these kinds
of housing arrangements relate to the Charter requirement.
STAFF RECOMMENDATION
Staff recommends adoption of the Ordinance on Second Reading.
ATTACHMENTS
1. First Reading Agenda Item Summary, April 7, 2020 (w/o attachments) (PDF)
2. Ordinance No. 057, 2020 (PDF)
Agenda Item 11
Item # 11 Page 1
AGENDA ITEM SUMMARY April 7, 2020
City Council
STAFF
Mark Sears, Natural Areas Manager
Ingrid Decker, Legal
SUBJECT
First Reading of Ordinance No. 057, 2020, Amending Section 2-568 of the Code of the City of Fort Collins to
Clarify Ethical Rules of Conduct to Address Employee Housing and Purchases from the City.
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
The purpose of this item is to propose a Code change to clarify that the City Charter’s prohibition on City
employees purchasing property from the City was not intended to prevent employees from compensating the
City for the value of housing that they are required to live in as a condition of employment. This would confirm
Council’s expectations related to this issue and to clarify how these kinds of housing arrangements relate to the
Charter requirement.
STAFF RECOMMENDATION
Staff recommends adoption of the Ordinance on First Reading.
BACKGROUND / DISCUSSION
A. Employee Housing
City departments have on occasion found that arranging for an on-site employee at a City property serves
important purposes and helps to preserve the property, provide more readily available service to the public or
improves the employee’s access to a work site.
As a primary example, for over ten years Natural Areas has required three employees to live in City-provided
houses as a condition of their employment: a ranger at Gateway Natural Area; a ranger at Bobcat Ridge Natural
Area; and, a caretaker at Primrose Studio on Reservoir Ridge Natural Area. Recently Natural Areas worked
with the City Attorney’s Office (CAO) on a fourth Employee Housing Agreement to house an employee in an
existing home on the recently acquired Bishop Ranch property at the north end of Redstone Canyon, which
along with two other parcels was named the Crossline Canyons Natural Area. This employee will serve during
their off-duty hours as a sentinel for this remote property and house and monitor the 1,300-acre property and
care for the house and outbuildings.
The first ranger residence agreement, at Gateway Park in 2001, did not require the employee to pay rent; rather
the housing was provided in consideration of the duties to be performed by the employee on site. Over the next
ten years, Natural Areas shifted to charging employees rent for occupying the City houses. All four positions are
now required to compensate the City for approximately 50% of the fair market rental rate for the houses they are
required to live in.
ATTACHMENT 1
Agenda Item 11
Item # 11 Page 2
B. Relevant Charter Provision
During the preparation of the fourth Employee Housing Agreement a review of how this policy had evolved from
not charging the employees led to the realization there could be a question as to whether requiring employees
to pay the City for housing would potentially be in conflict with the City Charter.
Article IV, Section 9(b)(2) of the Charter says:
(2) Purchases from the City. No officer, employee or relative shall, directly or indirectly, purchase any
real or personal property from the city, except such property as is offered for sale at an established price,
and not by bid or auction, on the same terms and conditions as to all members of the general public.
The onsite residences occupied by City employees on City sites are not residences that the City would likely
ever offer for rental by the general public because of their location, for example, on Natural Areas properties.
There is also a question as to whether such an arrangement with an employee would be treated as a purchase
of real property from the City.
C. Proposed Solution
Staff considered several lease arrangement options to avoid raising this Charter question. One possibility was
to not charge the employees but, instead, consider the value of the housing to be part of the total compensation
for their employment and reduce their salaries accordingly. However, this would have a negative impact on their
employee benefits contributions including retirement accounts and Social Security. Another option was to keep
their salaries the same and not charge them anything for their City-provided housing, but Natural Areas felt this
would create an unfair windfall for a few employees.
In light of this, staff is requesting a change to Section 2-568 of the City Code regarding ethical rules of conduct
to clarify and establish Council’s concurrence that the Charter prohibition on City employees’ purchases from
the City was not intended to include City employees compensating the City for the value of housing that they are
required to live in as a condition of employment.
Over the last ten plus years, it has proven to be essential to the management of Gateway, Bobcat Ridge and
Primrose Studio to have employees live in houses on site to provide an almost 24/7 presence. It is also essential
to the management of Crossline Canyons to have an employee live on site to monitor and care for the property
and the house.
CITY FINANCIAL IMPACTS
The City benefits financially by having employees live in City owned housing on remote sites to provide a
presence on the site, monitor and care for the property and house in exchange for reduced rent.
BOARD / COMMISSION RECOMMENDATION
The Land Conservation and Stewardship Board recommends that City Council approve the proposed Code
Change.
PUBLIC OUTREACH
The only public outreach has been to the Land Conservation and Stewardship Board on March 11, 2020.
ATTACHMENTS
1. Land Conservation and Stewardship Board minutes, March 18, 2020 (draft) (PDF)
-1-
ORDINANCE NO. 057, 2020
OF THE COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF FORT COLLINS
AMENDING SECTION 2-568 OF THE CODE OF THE CITY OF FORT COLLINS
TO CLARIFY ETHICAL RULES OF CONDUCT TO ADDRESS EMPLOYEE
HOUSING AND PURCHASES FROM THE CITY
WHEREAS, City departments have on occasion found that arranging for an on-site
employee at a City property serves important purposes and helps to preserve the property, provide
more readily available service to the public or improves the employee’s access to a work site; and
WHEREAS, for many years the City’s Natural Areas Department has required three
employees to live in City-provided houses on Natural Areas’ properties as a condition of their
employment, to help safeguard and maintain these properties; and
WHEREAS, although such arrangements did not require the employee to pay rent to the
City for this housing, over time these arrangements have evolved to include a charge to the
employees of approximately 50% of the fair market rental rate for the houses they live in; and
WHEREAS, in evaluating whether requiring employees to pay rent for housing they live
in as a requirement of their jobs could be seen as a conflict with Article IV, Section 9(b)(2) of the
City Charter, which prohibits employees from purchasing real or personal property from the City
except property that is offered for sale on the same terms and conditions to all members of the
general public, staff has concluded that such arrangements don’t fall within the intended scope of
the Charter prohibition; and
WHEREAS, because the City does not intend to offer these houses for rent by the public,
and paying for housing would not necessarily be considered a purchase of real property from the
City, to confirm Council’s expectations related to this issue and to clarify how these kinds of
housing arrangements relate to the Charter requirement, staff is proposing this Ordinance to amend
Section 2-568 of the City Code regarding ethical rules of conduct to clarify that the Charter
prohibition on employees’ purchases from the City should not be interpreted and was not intended
to apply to employees paying for employee housing provided by the City; and
WHEREAS, the Council has determined that the proposed Code amendment it is in the
best interest of the City and its citizens.
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT ORDAINED BY THE COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF FORT
COLLINS as follows:
Section 1. That the City Council hereby makes and adopts the determinations and
findings contained in the recitals set forth above.
Section 2. That Section 2-568 of the Code of the City of Fort Collins is hereby
amended by the addition of a new subsection (a)(14) to read as follows, and the remaining
subsections renumbered accordingly:
-2-
Sec. 2-568. - Ethical rules of conduct.
(a) Definitions. The following words, terms and phrases, when used in this Section, Section 2-
569 and in Section 9 of the Charter Article IV, shall have the following meanings:
…
14) Purchases from the city, as described in Section 9(b)(2) of Charter Article IV, shall
not include payments by an employee to the city pursuant to an agreement for housing in
which such employee is required to live as a condition of employment with the city.
Introduced, considered favorably on first reading, and ordered published this 7th day of
April, A.D. 2020 and to be presented for final passage on the 21st day of April, A.D. 2020.
__________________________________
Mayor
ATTEST:
_____________________________
City Clerk
Passed and adopted on final reading on this 21st day of April, A.D. 2020.
__________________________________
Mayor
ATTEST:
_____________________________
City Clerk