Fayetteville holds pair of housing resolutions amid number of proposed amendments

D'Andre Jones, Fayetteville City Council member, speaks Monday, March 18, 2024, during a rally outside Fayetteville City Hall in support of a resolution he sponsored declaring a housing crisis in the city. The City Council considered the resolution, as well as a separate resolution dealing with housing, during Tuesday's meeting. (NWA Democrat-Gazette/Stacy Ryburn)
D'Andre Jones, Fayetteville City Council member, speaks Monday, March 18, 2024, during a rally outside Fayetteville City Hall in support of a resolution he sponsored declaring a housing crisis in the city. The City Council considered the resolution, as well as a separate resolution dealing with housing, during Tuesday's meeting. (NWA Democrat-Gazette/Stacy Ryburn)


FAYETTEVILLE -- Confusion over several proposed amendments and the process to craft resolutions prompted City Council members on Tuesday to hold a pair of proposals dealing with affordable housing for at least two weeks.

The first resolution would declare a housing crisis in the city and call for the creation of a task force and a housing coordinator position to address the issue. It was sponsored by council members D'Andre Jones and Sarah Moore.

The second resolution touts the city's past and current efforts to alleviate housing affordability issues and asks for higher developer fees to pay for a new planning staff position. It was crafted by Mike Wiederkehr, but co-sponsored by Scott Berna, Sarah Bunch, Teresa Turk and Holly Hertzberg.

Council members spent more than three hours discussing potential changes to both resolutions and hearing public comment from residents. In the end, both resolutions were tabled to April 2.

Jones offered amendments to his resolution, including removing the request to hire a housing coordinator, specifying criteria for the task force members and adding a section supporting the city's current efforts that borrowed largely from the second resolution.

Council Member Bob Stafford offered a pair of amendments. In one change, rather than specifically naming a new position, the city would commit to hiring staff as necessary to address the issue. Stafford's amendments also would have added language to the "whereas" clauses in the first resolution.

Senior Assistant City Attorney Blake Pennington offered a number of options to the council, including scheduling a workshop to shape one document. The council opted to ask Pennington to craft a combined resolution that it will consider in two weeks.

More than 30 residents spoke during public comment and expressed support for the first resolution. Many shared stories of their own struggles to find housing, experiencing rising rents and suboptimal living conditions.

Moore said she preferred to work out the potential amendments during a workshop or to go through each that night in the spirit of keeping deliberations public.

"Sometimes it's messy making the sausage," she said.

Council members expressed confusion at several points in the discussion. Berna said he wanted the council to show unity on the issue.

"My personal preference is we show the community a united front and merge the two resolutions," he said. "That shows a vision that we are on the same page."

Representatives with Circles NWA, New Beginnings and Arkansas Renters United initially presented the first resolution to the council, saying it was crafted primarily by community members. Solomon Burchfield with New Beginnings said its contents came from a series of community meetings in which residents shared their stories and discussed potential courses of action.

"I thought this was probably going to be the most noncontroversial resolution the City Council ever works on," he said.

Additionally, the council voted 8-0 to adopt a framework for a permit-ready home design program.

The program would enable residents who own lots within a proposed boundary relatively surrounding downtown and Walker Park to choose free of cost from a set of preapproved designs for homes. The city is looking at having 30 designs available.

The move will put regulations in city code for the program. Examples include having parking or garages in the rear or side of homes and requiring a contiguous set of three or more lots to have at least two different designs.

In a separate vote, the council voted 8-0 to enable developers under certain conditions to pay a fee instead of building a sidewalk associated with a project without having to get a waiver from the city engineer. Fees collected will go toward construction of sidewalks in other parts of town.


Council action

Fayetteville's City Council met Tuesday and approved:

Compensating residents up to $100,000 for water-damage claims. The city's utilities director could authorize up to $35,000 to compensate a property owner. The mayor could approve up to $50,000. The City Council, with a two-thirds vote, will be able to authorize up to $100,000.

Including proximity to schools as a condition the Planning Commission can consider with new short-term rental applications.

Source: Fayetteville

 



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