JANUARY 30, 2015, KEIZERTIMES, PAGE 3 Area C proponents kept meeting with neighbors By CRAIG MURPHY Of the Keizertimes Before meeting with Keiz- er City Councilors last week, proponents of new develop- ment in Keizer Station’s Area C continued to meet with neighbors. One example took place at the Jan. 15 Greater Gub- ser Neighborhood Associa- tion meeting, as Brian Moore from Mountain West Invest- ment Corporation talked about his company’s plans for 180 apartment units and Ben Settecase from Bonaventure Senior Housing talked about his company’s plans for a 154- unit retirement center. Company representa- tives had previously met with neighbors in a group setting back in October. They also met with some neighbors such as Kevin Hohnbaum in- dividually, as well as city staff members such as director of Community Development Nate Brown, who was also at the GGNA meeting. Moore, director of Real Es- tate Development for Moun- tain West, noted he had been brought up to speed on the controversial history of Area C proposals. “There have been uses peo- ple were not excited about in the past, like Walmart,” he said. “This is not Walmart. Walmart is not involved at all. We’re de- veloping the residential por- tion of it. The prior approval was settled by people like Kevin. We had helpful con- versations with him. That ap- proval we’re seeking to change as little as possible. It was a product of a lot of discussions and public process. We seek to honor as many of those com- mitments as possible.” While noting he doesn’t know who intends to do commercial development in Area C, Moore said the new plan puts the previous idea in reverse order. “As far as infrastructure, there was a lot required,” Moore said. “What was an- ticipated was the commercial would happen fi rst. All of the facilities required – the street improvements, all of that – was going to be required of that commercial developer. The traffi c from commercial would be substantially higher than something like Bonaven- ture. What we’re trying to do is honor all of that. We’re teaming up to have adequate capital to do all those im- provements, even though ours is substantially fewer trips than if commercial had gone fi rst. That puts the lower traffi c im- pact uses fi rst, meaning fewer trips, yet it still provides the infrastructure as if commercial is going in fi rst. (The infra- structure) has a large price tag, which is why we’re trying to do it together.” Mark Caillier, the current GGNA president who was on the council when the Area C master plan was approved in 2011, wanted to know what would happen down the road. “At some point will you get compensated by the future commercial development?” Caillier asked. Moore answered affi rma- tively. “That is our desire, yes,” Moore said. “We will record all the costs. When subsequent development comes along, they’ll basically pay us back.” Meetings with neighbors yielded changes to plans, in- cluding a reconfi guring of the Bonaventure facility and ad- ditional trees. The companies will also pay for the construc- tion of sidewalk along Che- mawa Road, all the way south to Verda Lane in places where there is currently no sidewalk. Moore said the apartment buildings will not add to cur- rent city stormwater systems. “We will have rain gardens dispersed throughout,” he said. “It’s a qualitative way to treat rainwater run-off before it goes off to the aquifer. It also detains the water on site so it does not have an impact off- site. Some older developments shovel water into the city’s sys- tem of pipes. There are some challenges in the city pipes now for capacity. This keeps the stormwater contained on- site. We maintain it. This serves us well and it serves the com- munity well. A lot of that is already being reviewed.” Settecase said soil tests have already been done. “There is overfl ow con- nected to the storm system,” Settecase said. “The city’s concern is downstream. We’re doing a full report under the direction of the city. We’re confi dent (our system) can contain all of our water on- site.” Settecase acknowledged there is some risk in doing residential before commercial. “There is some risk, but we are willing to take that risk and bet that it will be a good catalyst for the future of that area,” he said. “This will serve KEIZERTIMES/Craig Murphy Brian Moore with Mountain West Investment Corporation talks about his company’s Area C proposal at the Jan. 15 Greater Gubser Neighborhood Association meeting. the seniors in the Keizer Sta- tion area. The (master plan) says you have to plant 20 trees total for Area C; we will put in 23 for our part alone.” Settecase said the new fa- cility will have independent living, assisted living and memory care. A four-story part of the building was going to be along Chemawa origi- nally, but concerns were raised about that. “From the street, (the pre- viously approved medical of- fi ce) was a more imposing presence than our building will be,” Settecase said. “The medical offi ce had only a 30- foot setback from the street. We are 63 feet back. We will also have 98 parking spots. It was 285 spots before. “We have four stories fac- ing Kuebler (Boulevard) in Salem,” he added. “We are doing it different here due to the concerns of the neighbor- hood. The whole idea was to put the taller parts back on the new road, with a depth of trees, to make it a welcoming presence in that neighbor- hood.” KPD offers tips for Super Bowl parties Super Bowl Sunday is this weekend. As such, the Keizer Police Department wants to remind Keizerites that not all drunk drivers leave bars and restau- rants. Households throughout the country will be hosting Super Bowl parties where al- coholic beverages will be con- sumed. Here are a few tips to get your guests home safe. • Ask all of your guests to designate their sober drivers in advance, or help them arrange ride-sharing with sober driv- ers. If you plan to stay sober, offer to drive guests home. • Encourage your drinking guests to pace themselves. • Serve plenty of food and non-alcoholic beverages at the party. • Stop serving alcohol at the end of the third quarter – this is a good time to serve coffee and dessert. • Thank the designated so- ber drivers at your party. You could even acknowledge them on social media using the hashtag #designateddriver. KEIZER CLASSIFIEDS LIQUIDATIONS NURSERY LIQUIDATION. 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