Council delays vote on donut doc
The Whitefish City Council voted 4-1 on
Nov. 1 to bring back a revised interlocal agreement for the city’s
two-mile extraterritorial planning and zoning “doughnut”
jurisdiction as an action item on the Nov. 15 council meeting’s
agenda. Councilor John Muhlfeld voted in opposition.
Seventeen people addressed the council,
as the draft agreement was up for a vote last week. Sixteen raised
concerns about a draft “memorandum of understanding” that had not
yet been shown to the public. The MOU would provide guidelines for
county review of city ordinances that affect doughnut property
owners.
Other concerns included the one-year
notice for termination, which would allow Flathead County to
withdraw from the agreement if it disagrees with how a city
ordinance affects doughnut property; the need for a community
council to provide doughnut residents with representation; and the
need to pursue the lawsuit all the way to the Montana Supreme Court
if necessary.
Doughnut resident Lyle Phillips also
spoke. He represented the county in recent joint talks aimed at
resolving the city’s lawsuit against the county for unilaterally
rescinding the interlocal agreement.
The one-year termination clause is
needed to provide representation to doughnut residents, Phillips
said. The county representatives on the committee had originally
asked for six months but agreed to a longer time period, he pointed
out.
Whitefish attorney Sean Frampton said
his clients, Heiko and Elizabeth Arndt and Westridge Investments,
the intervenors in the city’s lawsuit, will not stipulate to
dismissing the lawsuit. When city and county representatives agreed
during an Oct. 18 work session to remove Section 13 from the new
interlocal agreement — which gave the county veto power over new
city legislation affecting the doughnut — the “central issue” in
the lawsuit was left “unresolved,” Frampton said.
City attorney Mary VanBuskirk said she
spoke with Flathead County attorney Peter Steele about the
intervenors’ decision, and they agreed that two pieces of “simple
language” should be added that would tie the new interlocal
agreement to dismissal of the lawsuit. If the intervenors refuse to
stipulate to dismiss the lawsuit, the city and county could go
ahead and do so, ending the lawsuit, VanBuskirk said.
“The intervenors don’t have standing,”
she said.
Most of the councilors defended the
draft MOU, pointing out that the city and county attorneys were
directed to draft an MOU during the Oct. 18 work session. The MOU
was a draft, and they had only received it a few days before the
council meeting, the councilors said.
“We’re not sitting on a bunch of secret
documents,” councilor Ryan Friel said.
“The MOU didn’t come out of thin air,”
mayor Mike Jenson said. “It came out of the work session.”
“Things come up at the last minute,”
councilor Chris Hyatt said.
The draft MOU cited the city’s and the
county’s “mutual interests in resolving the current litigation” and
their “wish to develop a process for continuing cooperation and
conversation.”
It called for each party to provide the
other with copies of proposed legislation, staff reports and
recommendations 45 days prior to a first hearing on new legislation
affecting the doughnut. Each party would have up to 30 days to
comment, and each party would “give due weight and consideration”
to the comments.
The draft MOU also gave the county up
to 180 days after the MOU’s signing to provide the city with
proposed modifications to the city’s Critical Areas Ordinance or
any other city ordinance. The impact of the CAO on doughnut
residents’ property rights was cited by the county when it acted to
unilaterally withdraw from the interlocal agreement in March
2008.
According to the draft MOU, the county
will provide the city with a list of suggested modifications to the
CAO 30 days prior to a joint work session in January. Costs to
review these modifications would be shared by the county and the
city.
Councilor John Muhlfeld said he wanted
a more specific list of proposed modifications.
“This isn’t ready,” he said of the
MOU.
As for the draft interlocal agreement,
Muhlfeld said he opposed the right of unilateral withdrawal and the
one-year termination clause.
“If we pass this, we will live to
regret it,” he said.
Councilor Turner Askew said he agreed
that a one-year termination notice was too short for planning
purposes, “but it’s not intended to actually be used.”
“It’s meant to hang over us, like the
Sword of Damocles,” he said.
Hyatt, who represented the city on the
city-county committee that worked on resolving the lawsuit,
defended the draft agreement and draft MOU as part of the overall
process.
“If they weren’t cooperating, I’d be
the first to say, ‘Let’s got to the Supreme Court,’” he said.
The councilors and city staff also
addressed the repeated call for establishing a community council to
represent doughnut residents. VanBuskirk and city manager Chuck
Stearns, who also sat on the joint negotiating committee, said it
was up to the doughnut residents and the county to create a
community council.
The city council could pass a
resolution in support of a community council for the doughnut,
Jenson said, but that’s all. Once it was established, the city
council could use Whitefish’s charter-city powers to adopt a policy
that honored the doughnut community council’s decisions, he
said.
VanBuskirk also suggested scheduling a
neighborhood meeting so doughnut residents could learn how to
establish a community council. Jenson said city facilities could be
used for the meeting.
The council directed city attorney Mary
VanBuskirk to have a version of the interlocal agreement ready for
their Nov. 15 meeting. The MOU will come back to the council later,
in December or January. The city and the county will hold another
joint meeting in January to narrow down which ordinances will be
reviewed.