[Vision2020] NSA/Verizon/Zoning Trouble Timeline (was: Who
startedit? Who cares?)
g. crabtree
jampot at adelphia.net
Sat Dec 17 10:21:45 PST 2005
Please allow me to question one of Ms. Opyr's assertions. In item #4 of her timeline she states the following:
4. Three evangelical Christians -- two former NSA students and one ex-member of Christ Church -- filed a zoning complaint against NSA on the grounds that educational institutions are prohibited in the Central Business District. Why? Because the CBD was created to prevent the encroachment of the U of I on downtown retail space. This happened in the wake of the U of I's purchase of the old Murdock's Tavern and Cavenaugh's Hotel.
This is not exactly the way it was. Educational institutions are not prohibited, they are not expressly allowed. Neither are Food Co-Ops or lock shops but since they are both motor businesses, obviously they are a conforming use. In her following sentence she goes on to explain why the CBD was created, but this does not seem to be correct either. When the current city council set out to correct the language of the code it was determined that the city attorney at the time the code was changed had no recollection of intent to exclude educational intuitions. The then community development director had no recollection of intent to exclude educational institutions. The Daily News coverage of the process made no statement that excluding schools was a part of the process. When the city rezoned the Presbyterian church, the court house, the high school, and the 1912 building, the exact same language was interpreted to mean that schools are indeed permitted.
So, obviously, I am of the opinion that N.S.A. should be allowed downtown but rest assured, I have at no time felt the urge to kick anybody's teeth down their throat. I just think that both sides of this issue should be looked at more dispassionately.
As to buttons being pushed, mine certainly were when I made mention of the dreaded feminine hygiene appliance. While I in no way am willing to retract that comment, I am willing to be slightly contrite to those whose delicate sensibilities may have been bruised. In the future I will try to leave this sort of thing to General Patton. After all she's a professional.
With regard to Kathy's nerve and Joan's choppers I must say I don't quite get it, but I do know that if she had her willingness to get along and be a good neighbor, vision2020 would be less contentious and probably better populated.
G. Crabtree
----- Original Message -----
From: Joan Opyr
To: bill bonte
Cc: vision2020 at moscow.com
Sent: Friday, December 16, 2005 6:33 PM
Subject: [Vision2020] NSA/Verizon/Zoning Trouble Timeline (was: Who startedit? Who cares?)
On 16 Dec 2005, at 16:31, bill bonte wrote:
Speaking of who started it, what was the origin of the NSA zoning mess. I have read vision2020 and the daily news for the past 2 years and I still am not clear on two points.
1. Didn't the realtor who sold the building to NSA know that the planned use was a violation of the zoning ordinance? Shouldn't she bear some (financial) responsibility for this mess?
2. Why didn't the city intervene and forbid the use of the property as a college. Did they know what was to be done with the property or was NSA's opening a surprise? If I open a small grocery store in my garage, zoned R-2, I'm sure I'd be issued a zoning violation citation and forced to close.
I seems so simple to me: the CBD is not zoned for a college, close them down!
Bill Bonte
Hi Bill,
This is the timeline of events, as best I recall:
1. The Verizon Building was sold by Bennett Realty, specifically by Shelly Bennett. (I may be spelling her first name wrong. Perhaps it's Shelley?) There was more than one bid for the building, and Doug Wilson's was the lowest, not the highest. Why NSA won is anyone's guess. A tax write-off for Verizon because they sold to a non-profit. (Yes, I know; that opens up another can of worms.)
2. At the time of the Verizon sale, New St. Andrews was located -- illegally -- in the home of Chris Schlect on Polk Street. The City told Schlect and company that they could not operate a college in this residential zone. The college continued to operate in that location until the Verizon/Skattaboe Building was renovated and ready to be occupied.
3. NSA moved into the Verizon/Skattaboe Building. They did not get and do not now have an occupancy permit.
4. Three evangelical Christians -- two former NSA students and one ex-member of Christ Church -- filed a zoning complaint against NSA on the grounds that educational institutions are prohibited in the Central Business District. Why? Because the CBD was created to prevent the encroachment of the U of I on downtown retail space. This happened in the wake of the U of I's purchase of the old Murdock's Tavern and Cavenaugh's Hotel.
5. Joel Plaskon ruled on behalf of the City that the complaint filed against NSA was without merit or some such. (Mike Curley, the attorney for the three plaintiffs, will perhaps supply the correct terminology.)
6. Plaskon's ruling was appealed. The City Council then voted 4 to 2 that NSA could not, in fact, be located in the Central Business District under current zoning code.
7. Someone or ones set in motion the current attempt to amend the city zoning code so that NSA could remain downtown. I attended several city planning and zoning meetings, ably chaired by Jerry Schutz, who earned my eternal respect for his exemplary conduct of those hearings, during which everyone was hot under the collar and pretty damned feisty. He never lost his cool or, more importantly, his sense of humor and proportion. (I think Jerry is a Republican, so coming from this Democrat, this praise is high praise indeed.)
8. Planning and Zoning made a host of recommendations re: amending city code to allow NSA downtown. The City Council rejected those and bounced the whole thing back to P & Z, which worked again on this thankless task. The fight now seems to be about parking rather than a straight up-or-down should colleges be allowed in the Central Business District.
I say no; some say yes; others don't seem to give a tinker's damn. I envy the latter group because they're not tempted to kick one another's teeth down one another's throat over this issue. I'm sure they fight about other things -- whether or not Moscow needs a ring road; water mining; the proposed ball fields. Who knows? We're all different, and different things push our buttons.
(Mine are pushed by people who call my friends "simpering douche bags." I'm funny that way. I also don't much care for hectoring lurkers who get hold of the wrong end of the stick and then proceed to lecture me on bullying. I'm glad I don't have Kathy Sprague's nerve in my tooth.)
Joan Opyr/Auntie Establishment
www.joanopyr.com
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