The following was sent from Jeff Otto to Amy Liberty, Deputy Clerk/Treasurer, who works with the Planning Commission. In spite of his honest effort to be of assistance based on lots of experience on this topic, there was no response of any kind received.
Of additional note is the attachment Jeff sent regarding Lakeville annexations of Eureka properties. I was in attendance at that PC meeting. Chair Melanie Storlie was unclear on exactly what properties have been annexed and asked Amy Liberty if there was a map. The Deputy Clerk replied she did not have one. Apparently, Mr. Otto had no difficulty in procuring one.
From: ottojs@frontiernet.net
<ottojs@frontiernet.net>
Sent: Wednesday, August 21, 2024 12:12 PM
To: 'Eureka Township Deputy Clerk' <deputyclerk@eurekatownship-mn.us>
Subject: PC Zoning Study
Hi Amy,
Please share with all PC members. Note attached 2023
map and legend from Lakeville showing Eureka properties that have been annexed.
The population of Eureka is approximately 1600 with about
900 of voting age, not all owners live in the township.
You all would be better served and save time by first having
a detailed discussion with the Met Council representative assigned to the
townships of Dakota County to understand the change thresholds that would
require a Comprehensive Plan Amendment. This includes the plan detail
requirements (sewer, water, road infrastructure) for such an amendment.
You are likely to get up-front information of some aspects the Met Council may
not consider since they have at least four times that I am aware of over the
past 18 years indicated that they do not want Eureka to increase density or
change zoning until 2040. Two major reasons for this is still available
housing rights and the concern to protect gravel resources for the metropolitan
area. They do not want to repeat the mistake of allowing major gravel
resources in Apple Valley area to be lost to massive development of all types
covering them.
For many years the Met Council rep assigned to Eureka was
Mr. Patrick Boylan. I don’t know if he still is. One general point I
remember is if they would allow us to do anything significant, they required a
“sustainable development plan” of at least 1000 acres that includes details for
adequate services for sewer, water, and roads. Multiple zoning categories, for
example, encourage high density housing to be within walking distance of
neighborhood services such as drug store and groceries. If anything requirements
may be more stringent now, but I don’t know. This is why a fresh dialog is
essential.
Lake Elmo was sued by the Met Council about 25 years ago for
not having a Comprehensive Plan that the State-authorized Met Council
approved. Lake Elmo spent $200,000 in legal fees ($400,000 in today’s
dollars) fighting and was forced to change half their zoning area to match the
Council’s oversight directive.
Even in 2006 when I made my first (of 3) thorough study of
Eureka properties and cataloged them in a computer database, our Council
representative was shocked that Eureka had 80% more housing rights than they
had assumed from our common “Agriculture” zoning of 1 house per quarter-quarter
section of the Public Land Survey system. Zoning in Minnesota (and most states)
is derived from the survey grid done when becoming a territory. Incorporation
into a municipality authorizes much more flexibility for area zoning with many
zoning categories to enable very high density development with thoughtful
buffering from high-impact development to less intrusive. Lakeville is a good
example and obviously Minneapolis is a classic big city.
While it can be more convenient to describe township zoning
by acreage, it is misleading and can result in poor land use choices such as
thinking going to 10-acre lot sizes is a good idea (which is properly described
as 4 houses per quarter-quarter section, known as “Rural Residential”).
Actual 10-acre minimum size is one of the worst choices for the long term for
reasons too lengthy to describe here and clearly contradicts goal of critical
preservation of ag land. This also would automatically make 104 currently
buildable lots (between 2 and 10 acres in size) fall into the Grandfathered
protection category (by State law), meaning they would still be buildable but
then those owners would have to go through the process of obtaining County
property record documents to prove grandfather status before being allowed to
apply for a Eureka building permit. We already have about 180 housing rights in
this category that must be accurately tracked as used or transferred.
ALL property owners should of course receive a postcard
(doesn’t have to be more expensive letter) for a MAJOR ZONING CHANGE survey and
open house describing both and response deadline, encouraging use of web survey
(with website and link highlighted on postcard) with option to instead get
paper copy from town hall or by mail if desired. Besides some owners not using
computer communication, there are also some property owners located outside the
area or out of state.
To cherry pick who you think should be informed and trust
word of mouth on something of this wide potential impact is to invite a
significant lawsuit. Hiding behind simple legal publication requirement will
not sit well with public when some discover too late what may be allowed next
to them. Transparency.
A proper survey must have unique ID traced to owner
name whether via web or paper (not PID since there are many owners with more
than one property) to avoid ballot stuffing. I guarantee some will want to do
it because I witnessed it at a previous open house when people could place
stars on images. A couple people took a full page of stick-ons and used
them all on only a couple options as in NO-NO-NO.
Attached is the southern portion of the July 2023 Lakeville
Zoning Map showing Eureka and airport land now part of Lakeville.
Starting with the airport in the right center, next east is 97-acre Hat Trick
property taken about 2009 (my Board era), then the recent Adelman property and
about the same time to the far left is the group of parcels on the west side of
Dodd. The legend image is the entire list of zoning colors and classes
for all of Lakeville.
Using the same zoning class names as Lakeville where the
definition may fit could be a benefit to a potential buyer. Does anyone really
think the Lakeville professional planner is too dumb to see parallels in
descriptions that might be used here?
By the way, it is understood that a major negotiating
mistake with the 1973 plat proposal to establish the 75 lots of Eureka Estates
was to not include the cost of paving 240th Street from Dodd to the
Eureka Estates entrances in the developer’s cost plan. Eureka taxpayers have
instead been paying for higher gravel road maintenance for 50 years and
counting.
Jeff Otto
Town Board 2007-2010, twice Chair and attorney liaison
Member or Chair of several zoning-related task forces and
Zoning Ordinance amendments