NEWS A12 • HERMISTONHERALD.COM WEDNESDAy, FEbRuARy 20, 2019 Housing bills sponsored by Portland legislators draw complaints from east side By JADE MCDOWELL NEWS EDITOR Former Umatilla County commissioner says county needs a manager ment the commission- Former Umatilla ers have with department County Commissioner heads. He said three com- Larry Givens said it’s time missioners mean three for the county to have a styles of administration, manager and part-time and the system creates “inconsistency and discord commissioners. Givens, who lost among departments and re-election last year, told is not good for morale,” the county’s Charter according to the minutes, and that is a reason Review Commit- to have a manager. tee at its Jan. 15 County Com- meeting the county missioner Bill Elf- needs a manager ering in November who is educated also suggested the and experienced in county move to a municipal govern- ment, according to manager to oversee Givens the meeting min- operations and the utes, and a political budget. Commissioner George science education would Murdock spoke with the be helpful. Givens explained the committee in December. board of commissioners is He has been adamant he to create and oversee pol- would not make sugges- icy and conduct outside tions to the committee, but work, such as promoting he did answer their ques- the county and obtaining tions. He said elections do grants. Five part-time com- not guarantee continuity, missioners receiving a sti- but a county administrator pend of $28,000 a year, could help with continuity for example, would be bet- and institutionalizing the ter suited to the work than county’s vision. He told the the three full-time com- committee 27 of Oregon’s missioners the county 36 counties have some form of county manager. employs, he said. Linn County admin- Commissioners now make almost $91,000 a istrator Ralph Wyatt also year. A county manager spoke at the December would cost a chunk of meeting. He said he has money, Givens said, but the a range of responsibili- decrease in salaries for the ties, from human resources commissioners would off- director to overseeing pay- set that cost. roll and the motor poll. County-wide represen- Linn County employs tation on the board also more than 670 people and matters, he said, so two has a budget of $148 mil- commissioners could be lion. Commissioners there at-large and the others from make $96,000 a year, he districts. The county could said, and have authority limit commissioners to over the county budget. working 20 hours a month He said new commission- and mandate they can only ers can take as long as two miss a certain number of years “to get up to speed” meetings. That might make on county government. The committee has it tough to some who have jobs, he told the commit- the task of reviewing the tee, but retirees would be county charter, the found- ing document for the local interested. Givens also complained government, and suggest- about the liaison arrange- ing charges. By HERMISTON HERALD As Oregon communities struggle to fix housing prob- lems, solutions sponsored by legislators on the west side of the state are drawing com- plaints from Eastern Oregon. The city of Hermiston is voicing opposition to a bill banning single-family res- idential zoning in commu- nities of more than 10,000 people. House Bill 2001, spon- sored by House Speaker Tina Kotek (D-Portland), would require cities to allow “mid- dle housing” — duplexes, triplexes, quadplexes and cottages clustered around a courtyard — in all of its residential zones. Propo- nents of the bill say it will help reduce the state’s hous- ing shortage and create more diverse neighborhoods. Hermiston city planner Clint Spencer said the city has “pretty strong feelings” against the bill. He submit- ted written testimony to the House Committee On Human Services and Hous- ing for a public hearing held Feb. 11. Spencer called the bill a “top-down” solution that takes control away from cities. He said it also con- flicts with Statewide Plan- ning Goal 1, which seeks to include citizen input on all stages of land use planning. “It would be changing the character of existing neigh- borhoods without the neigh- borhood having any say in it,” he told the Hermiston Herald. The bill as currently writ- ten would retroactively include existing zones within cities. Spencer said for many neighborhoods in Hermiston, the water and sewer pipes, street width, on-street park- ing and other elements were planned with single homes in mind. If someone was able to start building fourplexes on HH file photo The state legislature is considering bills that would protect tenants from steep rent increases and no-cost evictions. empty lots there instead, it would in some cases require new infrastructure to accom- modate the strain. “Who pays for that?” he asked. Allowing multi-fam- ily dwellings in all residen- tial zones would also impact long-term planning that cit- ies already poured time and money into creating, as it essentially “quadruples our buildable land.” Spencer said he agrees that communities need to find solutions to their hous- ing shortages, but there are better ways to do so. Herm- iston, for example, saw an increase in housing permits issued last year after mak- ing several changes, includ- ing the creation of an infill program and easing require- ments for setbacks and lot coverage. If HB 2001 passes, Ore- gon would be the first state to ban single-family zoning. But cities such as Minneap- olis, Minnesota have started to embrace the tactic as a way to diversify neighbor- hoods by removing a desig- nation that has historically kept low-income families and people of color out of certain neighborhoods. Proponents also hope that the bill will encourage new housing to open up faster as developers add multi-fam- ily dwellings instead of tra- ditional houses to lots. The Oregon Housing Alli- ance submitted testimony to the House Committee on Human Services and Hous- ing stating there is a “mis- match between the types of homes available, the peo- ple who need a place to live, and the incomes that people earn.” “Increasing the num- ber of homes which can be built per lot, subject to rea- sonable restrictions allowed under HB 2001, may over time either help to decrease the cost per home or offer options which are better aligned with current needs based on household size,” wrote the coalition. House Bill 2001 is one of several bills introduced during the legislative session in an effort to tackle Ore- gon’s housing shortage. Sen. Bill Hansell (R-Ath- ena) recently spoke out on the Senate floor about Senate 2019 LEASE A NEW 2019 1.9 % 60 APR mos. LE Gas or Hybrid! LEASE A NEW 2019 AWD SE Dynamic all-wheel drive $ 269 mo. 36 mos. $ 0 Security Deposit $ 3,349 $ 179 mo. 36 mos. 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It also bans no-cause evictions for tenants on month-to-month leases after the first 12 months. “One size does not fit all,” Hansell told his colleagues. “If Portland has a problem — and I believe they do — don’t impose the fix on the rest of the state.” He said housing develop- ers and landlords in his dis- trict have written him to say that the bill would unfairly tilt Oregon’s housing laws in favor of tenants. A tenant would be able to give 30 days notice without cause to exit the lease, for example, but a landlord could not. Hansell said the bill, while meant to protect ten- ants, would actually hurt them as landlords became much more strict in their screening process and hous- ing developers pulled out of Oregon altogether. He said landlords needed to be able to raise rents fast enough to keep up with increases in property taxes and other costs.