HomeMy WebLinkAboutAUGUST 26, 2008 MINUTES
CITY OF VIRGINIA BEACH
"COMMUNITY FOR A LIFETIME"
CITY COUNCIL
Ai',1 YOR MliYERA Ii OBERNDORF, A/-Large
f'f( F MA YOR LOUiS R. JONES, Bayslde - !Jis/rIc/ .J
W/I.UAM R. !JeS7JiPH, At-Large
ff.1RRY E. DfliZIiI" KempSVille - Dis/rIct 2
Ii( iBI.R7' M DYHR.. ('enlervllle - Dlst"c/1
B.,RBARA Ai. HI.NU,T, Prmass Anne l>tst"ct 7
II/:BA S. Me( 'iANAN. Rose Hall- /!istrict 3
.I<iHN E UHRIN, Beach !JISI"cI6
R! iN A ViUANU/iVA, At-I.arge
litiS/iMARY WiLSON, At-I.arge
.1.'.\1FS L WOOD, f.vnnhaven -Dls/"ct 5
CITY COUNCIL AGENDA
( 'lIY MANAGER - JAMES K SPORE
C/lY A1TORNt;Y - UiSLIE L LILLEY
('/I Y ASSESSOR - JERAUJ BANAGAN
C'IIY A[I{)f7'OR- I,YNDONS. REMIAS
('/; Y ('UiRK - RUTH HODGES FRASER, MMC
26 AUGUST 2008
I. CITY COUNCIL'S BRIEFING
-Conference Room -
A. COMMUNITY LEGISLATIVE AGENDA Draft
Robert Matthias, Assistant to the City Manager
II. CITY MANAGER'S BRIEFING
('fTY HALL BUILDING
2401 COURTHOUSE DRIVE
VIRGINIA BEACH, VIRGINIA 23456-8005
PHONE(757) 385-4303
FAX (757) 385-5669
E-MAIL: Ctycncf@vbgov.com
1 :30 PM
A. VML "GO GREEN" CHALLENGE
Clay Bernick, Coordinator, Environmental Management Center - Planning
m. COUNCIL COMMENTS
IV. REVIEW OF AGENDA
V. INFORMAL SESSION
- Conference Room -
A. CALL TO ORDER - Mayor Meyera E. Oberndorf
B. ROLL CALL OF CITY COUNCIL
C. RECESS TO CLOSED SESSION
3:00 PM
VI. FORMAL SESSION
- Council Chamber -
6:00 PM
A. CALL TO ORDER - Mayor Meyera E. Oberndorf
B. INVOCATION: Reverend Jim Blanchard
Pastor, Rivers of Living Waters Church
C. PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE TO THE FLAG OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
D. ELECTRONIC ROLL CALL OF CITY COUNCIL
E. CERTIFICATION OF CLOSED SESSION
F. MINUTES
1. INFORMAL and FORMAL SESSIONS
August 12, 2008
G. MAYOR'S PRESENTATION
1. VIRGINIA BEACH 911 REACCREDITATION
Craig Hartley, Deputy Executive Director
Commission on Accreditation for Law Enforcement Agencies
H. AGENDA FOR FORMAL SESSION
I. PUBLIC HEARING
1. INSTALLMENT PURCHASE AGREEMENT
Acquisition of Agricultural Land Preservation (ARP) Easement-3380 Indian Creek Road
1. CONSENT AGENDA
K. ORDINANCES/RESOLUTION
1. Ordinance to REDUCE City Departments' FY 2008-09 Operating Budgets by 1.25% and
EST ABLISH a Reserve re fuel/energy increases and tax relief for the elderly and
disabled.
2. Resolution to ESTABLISH Mid-Atlantic Regional Ambulance, Inc. and AUTHORIZE
an annual EMS permit re private ambulance service.
3. Ordinances to ACCEPT and APPROPRIATE:
a. a Grant from the Virginia Wireless E-911 Services Board re a Telecommunicator
Job Task Analysis.
b. a monetary donation from SCG International, LLC re ultrasonic weapons
cleaning equipment for the Police.
4. Ordinance to TRANSFER funds to the Virginia Aquarium- Phase II, re Seal holding
pools.
L. PLANNING
1. Petition of BRUCE AND ELIZABETH HEDLUND for a Variance to the Subdivision
Ordinance re subdividing their property for an additional family home at 5711 Lancelot
Drive.
DISTRICT 2 - KEMPSVILLE
APPLICANTS REQUEST
WITHDRA W AL
2. Application of DANNY COLLIER for a Conditional Use Permit re automotive sales,
service and storage at 1605 Pleasure House Road.
DISTRICT 4 - BA YSIDE
RECOMMENDATION
APPROV AL
3. Application of CYPRESS CREEK, L.L.c. for a Conditional Use Permit re a riding
academy, horses for hire or board and commercial kennel at 1628 Mill Landing Road.
DISTRICT 7 - PRINCESS ANNE
RECOMMENDA TION
APPROV AL
4. Application of the BUDDHIST EDUCATION CENTER OF AMERICA, INC. for a
Modification of Conditions to extend compliance re a religious facility (approved by City
Council on August 28,2007) at 4177 West Neck Road
DISTRICT 7 - PRINCESS ANNE
Staff RECOMMENDATION
Planning Commission RECOMMENDATION
APPROV AL
DENIAL
5. Application ofLEONILO O. GLORIA for a Modification of Condition No.5 re a sign
for the senior and disabled housing (approved by City Council on February 22,2005) at
1236 Kempsville Road.
DISTRICT 2 - KEMPSVILLE
RECOMMENDATION
APPROV AL
6. Applications of the City of Virginia Beach:
a. Ordinance to AMEND Section 108 of the City Zoning Ordinance (CZO) re posting
of signs giving notice of certain zoning applications.
RECOMMENDA TION
APPROV AL
b. Ordinance to AMEND the City Zoning Ordinance (CZO) regulations pertaining
to communication towers and building-mounted antennas, (deferred by City
Council on July 8, 2008).
RECOMMENDA TION
APPROV AL
c. Ordinance to AMEND Appendix F - Chesapeake Bay Preservation Area
Ordinance, re inclusion of water surface area of a swimming pool in the
calculation of impervious cover.
Staff RECOMMENDATION
Planning Commission RECOMMENDATION
APPROVAL
DENIAL
M. APPOINTMENTS
AGRICUL TURAL ADVISORY COMMISSION
BEACHES AND W A TERW A YS COMMISSION
COMMUNITY MEDICAL ADVISORY COMMISSION
DEVELOPMENT AUTHORITY
HISTORIC SITES ORGANIZING COMMITTEE
HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSION
PARKS AND RECREATION COMMISSION
PUBLIC LIBRARY BOARD
REVIEW AND ALLOCATION COMMITTEE
WETLAND'S BOARD
WORKFORCE HOUSING ADVISORY COMMITTEE
N. UNFINISHED BUSINESS
O. NEW BUSINESS
1. SCHEDULE re City Council Sessions of November 4 and 11, 2008
P. ADJOURNMENT
Comprehensive Plan
Open Houses
September 15, 2008 Tallwood Elementary School District # 1 - Centerville
7:00 - 9:00 PM
September 18, 2008 Fairfield Elementary School District #2 - Kempsville
7:00 - 9:00 PM
September 22,2008 Red Mill Elementary School District #7 - Princess Anne
7:00 - 9:00 PM
September 29,2008 Creeds Elementary District #7 - Princess Anne
7:00 - 9:00 PM
October 2, 2008 Landstown High School District #7 - Princess Anne
7:00 - 9:00 PM
October 6, 2008 Bow Creek Recreation Center District #3 - Rose Hall
7:00 - 9:00 PM District #6 - Beach
October 9,2008 White Oaks Elementary District #3 - Rose Hall
7:00 - 9:00 PM School
October 13,2008 Convention Center District #6 - Beach
7:00 - 9:00 PM
October 16, 2008 Association for Research & District #5 - Lynnhaven
7:00 - 9:00 PM Enlightenment District #6 - Beach
October 20, 2008 Princess Anne High School District #4 Bayside
7:00 - 9:00 PM District #5 - Lynnhaven
October 23,2008 Bayside Recreation Center District #4 Bayside
7:00 - 9:00 PM District #5 - Lynnhaven
October 27,2008 Cox High School District #5 - Lynnhaven
7:00 - 9:00 PM
Agenda 8/26/08 afb
www vbgov com
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MINUTES
VIRGINIA BEACH CITY COUNCIL
Virginia Beach, Virginia
August 26, 2008
Mayor Meyera E. Oberndorf called to order the City Council Session for the CITY COUNCIL'S
BRIEFING re the "draft" COMMUNITY LEGISLATIVE AGENDA in the City Council Conference
Room, City Hall, on Tuesday, August 26,2008, at 1:45 P.M
Council Members Present:
Barbara M Henley, Vice Mayor Louis R. Jones, Reba S. McClanan, Mayor
Meyera E. Oberndorf John E. Uhrin, Ron A. Villanueva, Rosemary Wilson
and James L. Wood
Council Members Absent:
William R. "Bill" DeSteph
[Out of the City re afamily matter)
Harry E. Diezel
[Entered 3: 1 0 P.M - previous
Appointment)
Robert M Dyer
[Entered: 2:00 P.M)
August 26, 2008
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MA YOR'S COMMENTS
ITEM # 57923
Mayor Oberndorf advised Councilman Diezel had a previous appointment and will be late. Councilman
DeSteph is out of the City on a family matter.
ITEM # 57924
The Mayor welcomed Zeljana Manojlovic, Senior at Princess Anne High School.. Zeljana is taking
advanced placement Government, which requires two (2) political service hours. Zeljana decided to
attend a City Council meeting.
August 26, 2008
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C IT Y CO UN C I L 'S B R IE FIN G
COMMUNITY LEGISLATIVE AGENDA DRAFT
ITEM # 57925
1 :45 P.M
Robert Matthias, Assistant to the City Manager. introduced the Draft 2009 Community Legislative
Agenda.
2009 COMMUNITY LEGISLATIVE AGENDA
City of Virginia Beach
Table of Contents
TABLE OF CONTENTS-
PREFACE-
CITY OF VIRGINIA BEACH 2009 REQUESTED CODE OF VIRGINIA CHANGES-
1.
Arrest or Issuance of a Summons by an Officer on Observations of a Different
Officer
Authorizationfor an Officer Other than the Arresting Officer to Obtain Warrant in
DUI Cases Based on the Arresting Officer's Observations
DUI Cost Recovery Program
Required Crash Reports
Energy Conservation
CSA Administrative Allocation
Loss of Medicaid Eligibility for Teens in Foster Care with Earned Income
Weapons in Public Buildings
Allow VRS to Administer the Other Post Employee Benefits (OPEB) Trust
Automatic Enrollment for New Employees into the City's Deferred Compensation
Program
Do Not Refund Employer Paid Contributions
Job-Related Disability Retirement: Alternative Eligibility Guidelines
Retirement Benefits for Involuntary Separation
Four Year State Supported College in Virginia Beach
Capture of Sales Tax from Tourism Related Venue
Smoke Free Restaurants
Expansion of the Virginia Human Rights Act
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
CITY OF VIRGINIA BEACH FUNDING ITEMS-
1.
2.
3.
Virginia Aquarium & Marine Science Center-Ocean in Motion Aquarium Truck
Support for Regional Plan for Geropsychiatric Services
Support for Additional State General Fund Dollars for Mental Health and Mental
Retardation
Fundingfor Public Health Services
Virginia Beach Convention Center Funding
Sandler Center for the Performing Arts
4.
5,
6.
Page #
1
2-3
4-19
4-5
5-7
7-8
8
9
9
10
10-11
11
11-12
12-13
13-15
15-18
18
18
19
19
20-21
22-23
23
24
24-25
25-26
August 26. 2008
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C IT Y CO UN C I L 'S B R IE FIN G
COMMUNITY LEGISLATIVE AGENDA DRAFT
ITEM # 57925 (Continued)
The 2009 Session of the General Assembly will take place during the second year of the Commonwealth's
adopted biennium budget; eight months before the statewide elections for Governor, Lieutenant
Governor, Attorney General and all 100 House seats. Despite the impending election, there are
important issues that should be addressed. Foremost among these is transportation. When City Council
adopted the Legislative Agenda for the 2008 Session of the General Assembly, the assumption was that
the regional transportation funding issues for the six major projects had been addressed through House
Bill 3202 of the 2007 Session. City Council had also requested that the State address the statewide
funding issues for matching of federal dollars for transportation and funding of urban road projects and
highway maintenance. With the decision by the State's Supreme Court finding most of House Bill 3202
unconstitutional and the General Assembly's failure to address transportation either during the regular
Session or the Special Session, the City Council reaffirms its desire that this basic public service be
addressed adequately and expeditiously. To put the funding issue in perspective, in 1985 the City
received approximately $6-MILLION a year in urban funding. That increased to almost $30-MILLION
in 2004 and now because of the lack of General Assembly action, will be reduced to less than $/0-
MILLION per year in the current six year plan.
With the growth in the transportation system and the impact of inflation taken into consideration, it is
clear the state funding for transportation is hopelessly inadequate. Furthermore, without the General
Assembly addressing the regional needs for the six, and now seven major projects including the Hampton
Roads Bridge Tunnel, none of those key projects have moved forward. This means that Route 460, the
Southeastern Parkway and Greenbelt, and 1-64 on the Peninsula and Souths ide, as well as the Hampton
Roads Third Crossing and the Hampton Roads Bridge Tunnel may have to be removed from the regional
long range Transportation Plan because that Plan must be fiscally constrained by Federal law and
regulations. The City Council has consistently requested the General Assembly provide $275-MILLION
a year in ongoing funding through General Assembly action, as well as the ability to toll the major
projects. It is likely another $40-5-MILLION a year will be needed to supplement the tolls and the
Hampton Roads Bridge Tunnel. Furthermore, a major increase in transportation funding to address the
shortfall in maintenance funding and to fund the statewide funding program that provides money for
urban, secondary and primary roads, as well as transit, should and must be provided.
Education at the K-12 level is a partnership between the Commonwealth and local governments. During
the 2008 session of the General Assembly, there was a move to fundamentally upset that partnership by
reducing future appropriations to local governments as a result of changing the current standards of
quality (SOQ's) and what is included in those standards. The City of Virginia Beach spends almost $200-
MILLION in local tax dollars above what is required to meet the standards of quality. This provides an
education for our children to compete in the worldwide market place. Members of the General Assembly
label these efforts local aspirations and do not think, for instance, that teacher salary increases given by
the Virginia Beach School Board above and beyond that funded by the General Assembly should be part
of the cost sharing between the Commonwealth and local government. Furthermore, during a recent
meeting of the Joint Legislative Audit and Review Commission (JLARC), it was obvious that at least one
member of JLARC, who is also a member of the House Appropriations Committee, wants to cut state
funding for the employer share of social security benefits given to teachers. This would be a significant
decrease in state funding to education. The General Assembly should fully fund the true cost of the
Standards of Quality (SOQ's), rather than considering reducing its share of education funding.
August 26, 2008
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C I T Y CO UN C I L 'S B R IE FIN G
COMMUNITY LEGISLATIVE AGENDA DRAFT
ITEM # 57925 (Continued)
Finally, the City Council repeats its request that the State fully fund the true cost of traditional state
current government service, court corrections, mental health, public health, etc. Local governments, for
years, have been paying a larger share of these State responsibilities in order to retain employees and
provide services to our citizens. The Commonwealth needs to realize that it is under funding these
important and basic efforts.
1. ARREST OR ISSUANCE OF A SUMMONS BY AN OFFICER BASED ON OBSERVA TlONS OF A
DIFFERENT OFFICER
Chief A.M. Jacocks
Department of Police
J 19.2-81. Arrest without warrant authorized in certain cases - The following officers shall have the
powers of arrest as provided in this section:
1. Members of the State Police force of the Commonwealth
2, Sheriffs of the various counties and cities, and their Deputies
3. Members of any county police force of any duly constituted police force of any city or town
4. The Commissioner, members and employees of the Marine Resources Commission be granted the
power of arrest pursuant to J 28.2-900
5. Regular Game Wardens appointed pursuant to J 29,1-200
6. United States Coast Guard and United States Coast Guard Reserve commissioned, warrant and petty
officers authorized under J 29.1-205 to make arrests
7. The special policemen of the counties as provided by J 15.2-1737, provided such officers are in
uniform, or displaying a badge of office
Such officers may arrest, without a warrant, any person who commits any crime in the presence of the
officer and any person whom he has reasonable grounds or probable cause to suspect of having
committed afelony not in his presence
2. A UTHORIZA TION FOR AN OFFICER OTHER THAN THE ARRESTING OFFICER TO OBTAIN A
WARRANT IN DUI CASES BASED ON THE ARRESTING OFFICER'S OBSERVA TIONS
Chief A.M. Jacocks
Department of Police
The City requests a legislative change that would enable a police officer to stop and arrest an intoxicated
driver and transfer that arrest to another police officer. This change would allow supervisors and
specialized officers, such as K-9 and SWAT officers, to remain available. The arresting officer or
supervisor would still appear in court to testify. This recommended change is similar to the modification
that was made several years ago to allow marine police officers to transfer a boater under the influence
violation to another police officer.
August 26, 2008
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C I T Y CO UN C I L 'S B R IE FIN G
COMMUNITY LEGISLATIVE AGENDA DRAFT
ITEM # 57925 (Continued)
Request:
~ 19.2-81. Arrest without warrant authorized in certain cases. The following officers shall have the
powers of arrest as provided in this section:
1. Members of the State Police force of the Commonwealth
2. Sheriffs of the various counties and cities, and their Dputies
3. Members of any county police force or any duly constituted police force of any city or town of the
Commonwealth
4. The Commissioner. members and employees of the Marine Resources Commission granted the power
of arrest pursuant to ~ 28.2-900
5. Regular conservation police officers appointed pursuant to ~ 29.1-200
6. United States Coast Guard and United States Coast Guard Reserve commissioned, warrant, and petty
officers authorized under ~ 29.1-205 to make arrests
7. The special Police of the counties as provided by ~ 15,2-1737. provided such officers are in uniform, or
displaying a badge of office
8. Conservation officers appointed pursuant to ~ 10.1-115
Such officers may arrest. without a warrant, any person who commits any crime in the presence of the
officer and any person whom he has reasonable grounds or probable cause to suspect of having
committed afelony not in his presence. Any such officer may arrest without a warrant any person whom
the officer has probable cause to suspect of operating in his presence either a vehicle while intoxicated in
violation of 18.2-266, 18.2-266.1, 18.2-272, or 46.2-341.24; or a watercraft or motor boat (i) while
intoxicated in violation of subsection B of ~ 29.1-738 or (ii) in violation of an order issued pursuant to ~
29.1-738.4,; in his prcscnce, and may thereafter transfer custody of the person suspected of the violation
to another officer. who may obtain a warrant based upon statements made to him by the arresting officer.
Any such officer may, at the scene of any accident involving a motor vehicle. watercraft as defined in ~
29.1-712 or motorboat. or at any hospital or medical facility to which any person involved in such
accident has been transported, or in the apprehension of any person charged with the theft of any motor
vehicle, on any of the highways or waters of the Commonwealth, upon reasonable grounds to believe,
based upon personal investigation, including information obtained from eyewitnesses, that a crime has
been committed by any person then and there present, apprehend such person without a warrant of
arrest. In addition, such officer may, within three hours of the occurrence of any such accident involving
a motor vehicle, arrest without a warrant at any location any person whom the officer has probable cause
to suspect of driving or operating such motor vehicle while intoxicated in violation of ~ 18.2-266. 18,2-
266.1. 46.2-341.24. 18.2-272. or a substantially similar ordinance of any county. city. or town in the
Commonwealth.
August 26, 2008
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C IT Y CO UN C I L 'S B R IE FIN G
COMMUNITY LEGISLATIVE AGENDA DRAFT
ITEM # 57925 (Continued)
3. DUI COST RECOVERY PROGRAM
Chief A.M. Jacocks
Department of Police
This change would clarify that the DUI cost recovery program applies to all DUI arrests. The Attorney
General has issued an opinion that the current statute only applies in cases involving an accident.
Request:
9 15.2-1716. Reimbursement of expenses incurred in responding to DUI incidents and other traffic
incidents.
A. Any locality may provide by ordinance that a person convicted of violating any of the following
provisions shall be liable for restitution at the time of sentencing or in a separate civil action to the
locality or to any responding volunteer fire or rescue squad. or both, for reasonable expenses incurred by
the locality for respel'ldil'lg law enforcement, fire fighting, rescue and emergency services, including by the
Sheriff's office of such locality, or by any volunteer fire or rescue squad. or by any combination of the
foregoing, when providing an appropriate emergency response to any accident, incident related to such
violation or the arrest of the individual for such violation:
1. The provisions of 9 18.2-51.4. 18.2-266. 18.2-266.1. 29.1-738. 29.1-738.02. 18.2-272 or a similar
ordinance, when such operation of a motor vehicle. engine. train or watercraft while so impaired is the
proximate cause of the accident or incident
2. The provisions of Article 7 (9 46.2-852 et seq.) of Chapter 8 of Title 46.2 relating to reckless driving.
when such reckless driving is the proximate cause of the accident or incident
3. The provisions of Article 1 (9 46.2-300 et seq.) of Chapter 3 of Title 46.2 relating to driving without a
license or driving with a suspended or revoked license; and
4. The provisions of 9 46.2-894 relating to improperly leaving the scene of an accident
B. Personal liability under this section for reasonable expenses of an appropriate emergency response
shall not exceed $1,000 in the aggregate for a particular accident or incident occurring in such locality.
In determining the "reasonable expenses," a locality may bill a flat fee of $250 or a minute-by-minute
accounting of the actual costs incurred. As used in this section. "appropriate emergency response"
includes all costs of providing law-enforcement. fire-fighting. rescue and emergency medical services.
The court may order as restitution the reasonable expenses incurred by the locality for responding law
enforcement. fire-fighting, rescue and emergency medical services. The provisions of this section shall
not preempt or limit any remedy available to the Commonwealth, to the locality or to any volunteer
rescue squad to recover the reasonable expenses of an emergency response to an accident or incident not
involving impaired driving, operation of a vehicle or other conduct as set forth herein.
August 26, 2008
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C IT Y CO UN C I L 'S B R IE FIN G
COMMUNITY LEGISLATIVE AGENDA DRAFT
ITEM # 57925 (Continued)
4. REQUIRED CRASH REPORTS
Chief A.M. Jacocks
Department of Police
Background Information:
State Code ~ 46.2-373 requires law enforcement officers to submit an accident report if total damage to
all involved vehicles exceeds $1,000. This dollar amount was set approximately 10 years ago and is
much too low based on the current cost to repair vehicles. If this amount is raised to $2,500, it would
greatly reduce the amount of paperwork necessary at minor accident scenes, reduce the burden on the
courts in their attempt to determine fault and reduce the time officers spend investigating minor
accidents.
Request:
~ 46.2-373. Report by law-enforcement officer investigating accident.
Every law-enforcement officer who in the course of duty investigates a motor vehicle accident resulting in
injury to or death of any person or total property damage to an apparent extent of $-J-()OO $2500 or more,
either at the time of and at the scene of the accident or thereafter and elsewhere, by interviewing
participants or witnesses shall, within twenty jour hours after completing the investigation, forward a
written report of the accident to the Department. The report shall include the name or names of the
insurance carrier or of the insurance agent of the automobile liability policy on each vehicle involved in
the accident.
5. Energy Conservation
Bob Matthias
Assistant to the City Manager
Office of the City Manager
Background Information:
This is a placeholder for a possible issue still being researched by staff. Staff is investigating what
authority local governments, including Virginia Beach, have to allow density credits for energy efficient
buildings, in addition to whether localities have any ability to require more energy conservation in
buildings constructed. We are also examining whether the State can allow tax rebates or credits, both at
the state and local level, for those who build energy efficient buildings. Finally, the Commonwealth's
Climate Change Commission is meeting next week as a part of a series of meetings. We are following
that Commission to see what recommendations may come for both statewide enabling legislation, as well
as enabling legislation for localities.
August 26, 2008
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C IT Y CO UN C I L 'S B R IE FIN G
COMMUNITY LEGISLATIVE AGENDA DRAFT
ITEM # 57925 (Continued)
6. CSA ADMINISTRA T/VE ALLOCA TION
Bob Morin
Department Director
Department of H "man Services
Background Information;
The funding formula to carry out the provisions of the Comprehensive Services Act defines the formula
for local administrative costs based upon pool allocations from 1997. The maximum allocation any
locality can receive for administrative costs is $50,000. This amount has not increased in the past 8
years, despite continuing increases in the oversight responsibilities of CSA. FY 07 expenditures for CSA
in Virginia Beach were $10,838,856, which required a supplemental request of additional state and local
dollars. For FY 08, the CSA allocation is $11,771,757. Covering additional administrative costs on top
of the local share of any supplemental request for child-specific services is an undue hardship.
Request:
The General Assembly is requested to amend Title 2.2, Chapter 52 of the Code of Virginia to eliminate
the maximum administrative allocation of $50,000 in order to improve localities' ability to meet the
administrative requirements of the CSA and to permit a maximum amount equal to 2% of the allocation to
be usedfor administrative costs.
7. Loss OF MEDICAID ELIGIBILITY FOR TEENS IN FOSTER CARE WITH EARNED INCOME
Bob Morin
Department Director
Department of H "man Services
Background Information:
Under current Virginia law, the local Department of Social Services must discontinue Medicaid to a
foster care child between the ages of 19 and 21 if the foster child earns more than $208.33 in gross
income per month. These foster children need to have the benefit of Medicaid to cover the cost of their
medical expenses, and they also need to have the opportunity to earn income beyond the current
limitations. This law appears to be in direct conflict with the "independent living" program for foster
children, which was designed to assist children in foster care aged 16-21 in becoming self-sufficient.
Achieving the goal of self-sufficiency must include the opportunity for youth to earn income that will
prepare them for survival in an independent living situation.
August 26,2008
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C IT Y CO UN C I L 'S B R IE FIN G
COMMUNITY LEGISLATIVE AGENDA DRAFT
ITEM # 57925 (Continued)
Request:
The City requests that the General Assembly amend Title 32.1 of the Code of Virginia to allow foster
children between the ages of 19-21 to be exempt from the income limitation, thus allowing them to remain
eligible for Medicaid. This would give older foster children the opportunity to earn the income necessary
to achieve the goal of self-sufficiency.
8. WEAPONS IN PUBLIC BUILDINGS
Bob Morin
Department Director
Department of Human Services
Background Information:
The General Assembly passed legislation in 2003 (codified at Virginia Code f 15.2-915) which prevents
localities from prohibiting or restricting the carrying of weapons into City buildings. As a result, the City
may no longer prohibit people from bringing firearms into facilities run by Mental Health. Mental
Retardation and Substance Abuse Services and Social Services.
Request:
The City requests that the General Assembly amend the Code of Virginia to authorize localities to
prohibit firearms, pellet guns, air guns or other weapons on the premises offacilities operated by Mental
Health, Mental Retardation and Substance Abuse Services and Social Services, except when in the
possession of licensed security personnel or law enforcement officers.
9. ALLOW VRS TO ADMINISTER THE OTHER POST EMPLOYEE BENEFITS (OPEB) TRUST
Patti Phillips
Department Director
Department of Finance
Background Information:
The 2007 General Assembly adopted SB789 which allows localities, school divisions, and certain
political subdivisions to establish local trusts to fund post employment benefits other than pensions
(OP EB). The original bill included the option of having The Virginia Retirement Service (VRS) set up an
OPEB trust for localities, but this provision was stricken upon final passage. VRS was amenable to
taking on this task. It is still a good idea for VRS to take on this role so that the trusts can be
professionally managed. Patricia Phillips, Director of Finance, advised this is handled through the
Virginia Municipal League (VML) / Virginia Association of Counties (VA CO) pool, not VRS.
Request:
Amend the Code of Virginia by adding Chapter 15 of Title 15.2, an article numbered 8, consisting of H
15.2-1544 through 15.2-1549 to include the establishment and management of a pooled OPEB Trust
Fund for localities by VRS.
August 26, 2008
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C IT Y CO UN C I L 'S B R IE FIN G
COMMUNITY LEGISLATIVE AGENDA DRAFT
ITEM # 57925 (Continued)
10. AUTOMATIC ENROLLMENT FOR NEW EMPLOYEES INTO THE CITY'S DEFERRED COMPENSATION
PROGRAM
Patti Phillips
Department Director
Department of Finance
Background Information
State law only allows state governmental employers to automatically enroll new employees into their
Deferred Compensation Program. It would be beneficial for the City of Virginia Beach and other
Virginia localities to also have this option as it further encourages employees to save for retirement.
Request
Amend the Code of Virginia to allow Virginia Beach and other localities to change its Deferred
Compensation Plan from an "opt in" plan to an "opt out" plan.
51,1-601.1, Participation in plan by certain employees.
All employees of the Commonwealth. its agencies, and all localities within the Commonwealth of Virginia
commencing employment or who are reemployed on or after January I, 2008, in a position covered by
the Virginia Retirement System, and who have not elected to participate in a plan established pursuant to
J 403(b) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, shall participate in the plan described in J
51.1-602, unless such employee elects, in a manner prescribed by the Board, not to participate in such
plan. The amount of the deferral for any such employee participating in the plan shall equal, on a
semimonthly basis, $20 of otherwise payable compensation, unless the employee elects to defer a different
amount.
11. Do NOT REFUND EMPLOYER PAID CONTRIBUTIONS
Patti Phillips
Department Director
Background Information:
VRS refunds the employee portion of a locality's VRS contribution to job-related disability retirees. The
actuarial calculations for future benefits take into consideration the contributions made by the municipal
employer on behalf of the employee. The lump sum return of the employee contributions is a financially
unsound practice to continue.
Request:
Discontinue the practice of refunding the employee portion of the City's VRS contribution to disability
retirees unless the employee has actually paid these contributions. These contributions which have been
paid by the employer (taxpayers) are needed to fund future disability benefits. VRS should only refund
contributions actually contributed by the disabled employee. The means to correct the issue is shown
below.
August 26, 2008
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C IT Y CO UN C I L 'S B R IE FIN G
COMMUNITY LEGISLATIVE AGENDA DRAFT
ITEM # 57925 (Continued)
9 51.1-161. Withdrawal ofcontributions before retirement:
A. If a member has ceased to be an employee, other than by death or retirement, he may receive a refund
of his accumulated contributions, reduced by the amount of any retirement allowance previously received
by him under any of the provisions of this chapter or the abolished system.
B. Accumulated contributions, provided the emvlovee actuallv made the contributions, shall be refunded
to a member upon retirement for disability from a cause that is compensable under the Virginia Workers'
Compensation Act (9 65.2-100 et seq.) or to his designated beneficiary upon the death of the member
from a cause that is compensable under the Virginia Workers' Compensation Act.
c. If a member becomes covered by an optional retirement plan established under 99 51.1-126, 51.1-
126.5, or 51.1-126.6, the member may elect to have his accumulated contributions, as reduced by the
amount of any retirement allowance previously received by him under any of the provisions of Chapters I
(9 51.1-124.1 et seq.), 2 (9 51,1-200 et seq.), 2.1 (9 51.1-211 et seq.), or 3 (9 51.1-300 et seq.) of this title
or the abolished system, transferred directly to such optional retirement plan as a credit to his account in
such plan. No portion of the transferred amount shall be available to the member until benefits under the
optional retirement plan are otherwise available for distribution. An election to transfer the accumulated
contributions to an optional retirement plan shall be treated as a withdrawal of the member's
accumulated contributions for purposes of 9 51.1-128.
12. JOB-RELATED DISABILITY RETIREMENT: ALTERNATIVE ELIGIBILITY GUIDELINES
Patti Phillips
Department Director
Department of Finance
Background Information:
The current VRS Disability Retirement Code provisions provide for employees to retire on disability if
they can not perform the job for which they were hired and the disability is a result of a job-related
injury. This is the case even if the employee is medically able to perform other work without diminution
of salary or benefits within the local government.
VRS' eligibility determination process for disability retirements does not afford localities the opportunity
to provide employees an alternate position within the employee's medical capabilities.
Presently, employees are entitled to disability retirement when an injury renders them unable to perform
the essential functions of their specific job. In some cases; however, the employee is capable of
performing other work and the locality may have alternate positions available for the employee within the
parameters of the employee's medical restrictions.
The General Assembly is requested to amend Virginia Code 9 51,1-156 Disability retirement to provide
additional eligibility criteria for a job-related disability retirement to provide that employees must be
totally and permanently disabled from their current job and other positions with comparable pay within
their employer's organization or to allow a local government employer the option to review the
knowledge, skills and abilities of employees with job-related injuries and advise VRS if alternate positions
are available; andfor VRS to deny an employee who is determined to be medically capable ofperforming
an alternate position eligibility for job-related disability retirement pursuant to the following guidelines:
August 26, 2008
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C I T Y CO UN C I L 'S B R IE FIN G
COMMUNITY LEGISLATIVE AGENDA DRAFT
ITEM # 57925 (Continued)
1. If the employee cannot perform the essential functions of the job for which he/she was hired and
the local government cannot retain the employee in that position, then, the local government shall have
the option of finding an available alternate position within its organization or affiliated organizations
(locality, school board, development authority, constitutional offices) (a) for which the employee is
qualified, or can be qualified, that is within the employee's medical restrictions; (b) that does not result in
a diminution of salary or benefits; and (c) that has been offered to the employee. IF the locality chooses
to and may be successful in finding an alternate position, the employee is capable of performing other
work, and the alternate position is offered, the employee would not be eligible for disability retirement.
Rather he/she would be required to accept the alternate position.
2. a. In the case of law enforcement employees: if the local government chooses to find an alternate
position within its organization or affiliated organization and one is available within the employee's
medical restrictions, that would not result in a diminution of salary or benefits, then any person disabled
in any covered public safety position who (1) has at least fifteen (15) years of service in a LEO covered
position and (2) who takes municipal employment in a non-covered position with the same local
government shall retain the rights to the annual allowance in Virginia Code 51.1-217 when they qualify
for a service retirement. In addition, if said member retires with a service retirement at 25 years or more
the service retirements will be unreduced. [This would also require an amendment to 9 51.1-138 or
creation ofa 9 51,1-138,1.]
b. If the local government chooses to find an alternate position and one is available within the
employee's medical restrictions, that would not result in a diminution of salary or benefits, then in the
case of law enforcement employees with at least fifieen (15) years of service in a LEO position and who
accept an alternate non-LEO position, upon service retirement from the same local government, the
employee would be eligible, upon request, to obtain a retired law-enforcement officers photo
identification card. [This provision would also require an amendment to 99.1-1000.]
Patricia Phillips advised the State employees have a program very similar to the one proposed entitled
"Virginia Sickness and Disability Program". Councilman Dyer advised this was one of the
recommendations of the Blue Ribbon Task Force.
13. RETIREMENT BENEFITS FOR INVOLUNTARY SEPARATION
PATTI PHILLIPS
Department Director
Department of Finance
Background Information:
Currently, the transitional severance benefit and the optional retirement benefits are only available to
state employees.
Request:
Broaden the State language to allow localities, at their option and cost, to participate in the following
programs: the severance package (9 2.2-3203) is probably doable without a code change: the second
piece (92.2-3204) of purchasing VRS time for employees whose positions are reduced probably needs a
Code Amendment. This would be a great option if, in future budgets, layoffs greater than those who can
be transitioned are required.
August 26, 2008
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C IT Y CO UN C I L 'S B R IE FIN G
COMMUNITY LEGISLATIVE AGENDA DRAFT
ITEM # 57925 (Continued)
82.2-3202. Eligibility for transitional severance benefit.
Any full-time employee of the Commonwealth (i) whose position is covered by the Virginia Personnel Act
(8 2.2-2900 et seq.), (ii) whose position is exempt from the Virginia Personnel Act pursuant to
subdivisions 2, 4 (except those persons specified in subsection C of this section), 7, 15 or 16 of 8 2.2-
2905, (iii) who is employed by the State Corporation Commission, (iv) who is employed by the Virginia
Workers' Compensation Commission, (v) who is employed by the Virginia Retirement System, (vi) who is
employed by the State Lottery Department, (vii) who is employed by the Medical College of Virginia
Hospitals or the University of Virginia Medical Center, (viii) who is employed at a state educational
institution as faculty (including, but not limited to, presidents, teaching and research faculty) such as
defined in the Consolidated Salary Authorization for Faculty Positions in Institutions of Higher
Education, 1994-95, or (ix) whose position is exempt from the Virginia Personnel Act pursuant to
subdivision 3 or 20 of 8 2.2-2905; and (a) for whom reemployment with the Commonwealth is not
possible because there is no available position for which the employee is qualified or the position offered
to the employee requires relocation or a reduction in salary and (b) whose involuntary separation was
due to causes other than job performance or misconduct, shall be eligible, under the conditions specified,
for the transitional severance benefit conferred by this chapter, The date of involuntary separation shall
mean the date an employee was terminated from employment or placed on leave without pay, layoff or
equivalent status.
B. An otherwise eligible employee whose position is contingent upon project grants as defined in the
Catalogue of Federal Domestic Assistance shall not be eligible for the transitional severance benefit
conferred by this chapter unless the funding source has agreed to assume all financial responsibility
therefore in its written contract with the Commonwealth.
C. Members of the Judicial Retirement System (8 51.1-300 et seq.) and officers elected by popular vote
shall not be eligible for the transitional severance benefit conferred by this chapter.
D. Eligibility shall commence on the date of involuntary separation.
E. Persons authorized by 8 2.2-106 or 51.1-124.22 to appoint a chief administrative officer or the
administrative head of an agency shall adhere to the same criteria for eligibility for transitional
severance benefits as is required for gubernatorial appointees pursuant to subsection A.
82.2-3203. Transitional severance benefit conferred.
A. On the date of involuntary separation, an eligible employee with (i) two years' service or less to the
Commonwealth shall be entitled to receive a transitional severance benefit equivalent to four weeks of
salary; (ii) three years through and including nine years of consecutive service to the Commonwealth
shall be entitled to receive a transitional severance benefit equivalent to four weeks of salary plus one
additional week of salary for every year of service over two years; (iii) ten years through and including
fourteen years of consecutive service to the Commonwealth shall be entitled to receive a transitional
severance benefit equivalent to twelve weeks of salary plus two additional weeks of salary for every year
of service over nine years; or (iv) fifteen years or more of consecutive service to the Commonwealth shall
be entitled to receive a transitional severance benefit equivalent to two weeks of salary for every year of
service, not to exceed thirty-six weeks of salary.
B. Transitional severance benefits shall be computed by the terminating agency's payroll department.
Partial years of service shall be rounded to the next highest year of service.
August 26, 2008
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C IT Y CO UN C I L 'S B R IE FIN G
COMMUNITY LEGISLATIVE AGENDA DRAFT
ITEM # 57925 (Continued)
C. Transitional severance benefits shall be paid in the same manner as normal salary. In accordance with
~ 60.2-229, transitional severance benefits shall be allocated to the date of involuntary separation. The
right of any employee who receives a transitional severance benefit to also receive unemployment
compensation pursuant to ~ 60.2-100 et seq. shall not be denied, abridged, or modified in any way due to
receipt of the transitional severance benefit; however, any employee who is entitled to unemployment
compensation shall have his transitional severance benefit reduced by the amount of such unemployment
compensation. Any offset to a terminated employee's transitional severance benefit due to reductions for
unemployment compensation shall be paid in one lump sum at the time the last transitional severance
benefit payment is made.
D. For twelve months after the employee's date of involuntary separation, the employee shall continue to
be covered under the (i) health insurance plan created in ~ 2,2-2818 for the Commonwealth's employees,
if he participated in such plan prior to his date of involuntary separation, and (ii) group life insurance
plan administered by the Virginia Retirement System pursuant to Chapter 5 (~ 51.1-500 et seq) of Title
51.1. During such twelve months, the terminating agency shall continue to pay its share of the terminated
employee's premiums. Upon expiration of such twelve month period, the terminated employee shall be
eligible to purchase continuing health insurance coverage under COBRA.
E. Transitional severance benefit payments shall cease if a terminated employee is reemployed or hired in
an individual capacity as an independent contractor or consultant by any agency or institution of the
Commonwealth during the time he is receiving such payments.
F. All transitional severance benefits payable pursuant to this section shall be subject to applicable
federal laws and regulations.
~ 2.2-3204. Retirement program.
A. In lieu of the transitional severance benefit provided in ~ 2.2-3203, any otherwise eligible employee
who, on the date of involuntary separation, is also (i) a vested member of the Virginia Retirement System,
the State Police Officers' Retirement System, or the Virginia Law Officers' Retirement System and (ii) at
least fifty years of age, may elect to have the Commonwealth, purchase on his behalf, years to be
credited to either his age or creditable service or a combination of age and creditable service, except that
any years of credit purchased on behalf of a member of the Virginia Retirement System, the State Police
Officers' Retirement System, or the Virginia Law Officers' Retirement System who is eligible for
unreduced retirement shall be added to his creditable service and not his age. The cost of each year of
age or creditable service purchased by the Commonwealth shall be equal to fifteen percent of the
employee's present annual compensation. The number of years of age or creditable service to be
purchased by the Commonwealth shall be equal to the quotient obtained by dividing (i) the cash value of
the benefits to which the employee would be entitled under subsections A and D of ~ 2.2-3203 by (ii) the
cost of each year of age or creditable service. Partial years shall be rounded up to the next highest year.
Deferred retirement under the provisions of subsection C of ~~ 51.1-153, 51,1-205, and 51,1-216, and
disability retirement under the provisions of ~ 51.1-156 et seq. and ~ 51.1-209, shall not be available
under this section.
August 26,2008
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C IT Y CO UN C I L 'S B R IE FIN G
COMMUNITY LEGISLATIVE AGENDA DRAFT
ITEM # 57925 (Continued)
B. In lieu of the (i) transitional severance benefit provided in ~ 2.2-3203 and (ii) the retirement program
provided in subsection A, any employee who is otherwise eligible may take immediate retirement
pursuant to ~ 51.1-155.1.
C. The retirement allowance for any employee electing to retire under this section who, by adding years
to his age, is between ages fifty-five and sixty-five, shall be reduced on the actuarial basis provided in
subdivisionA. 2. of~ 51,1-155.
14. FOUR YEAR STATE-SUPPORTED COLLEGE IN VIRGINIA BEACH
MARCY SIMS
Department Director
Department of Public Libraries
Background Information:
City Council has consistently been on record requesting afour year State-supported university be created
within the City of Virginia Beach. The City recommends that the General Assembly investigate this
request either through a study done by the State Council of Higher Education (SCHEV) or some other
agency addressing this issue,
15. CAPTURE OF SALES TAX FROM TOURISM RELA TED VENUE
James Spore
City Manager
Office of the City Manager
Background Information:
A number of localities, starting with Roanoke in 1995, have received authority from the General
Assembly to capture a portion of the sales tax generated in certain venues. These jurisdictions which now
include Norfolk, Richmond, Hampton, Newport News, Portsmouth, Salem, Staunton and Suffolk can
retain 3-!0 % of the 5% sales tax generated within a convention hotel or other tourism related facility to
pay for debt service. Virginia Beach wishes to receive this authority for a similarly defined project.
Request:
The General Assembly is requested to amend ~ 58.1-608.3 to ADD Virginia Beach to the localities that
already have this authority.
August 26, 2008
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C IT Y CO UN C I L 'S B R I E FIN G
COMMUNITY LEGISLATIVE AGENDA DRAFT
ITEM # 57925 (Continued)
16. SMOKE FREE RESTAURANTS
City Council
City of Virginia Beach
Background Information:
City Council requests the General Assembly to either prohibit smoking in restaurants statewide or adopt
enabling legislation that would allow localities to prohibit smoking in restaurants. The City Council
supports this legislation in the interest of public health, not only for the citizens who might wish to go to a
smoke free establishment, but also for hospitality workers who are exposed to second-hand smoke in a
smoking establishment.
Request:
The City requests that the General Assembly prohibit smoking in restaurants statewide or enact
legislation to enable localities to prohibit smoking in restaurants.
17. EXPANSION OF THE VIRGINIA HUMAN RIGHTS ACT
Virginia Beach Human Rights Commission
Background:
The Virginia Human Rights Act (Va. Code J 2.2-3900 et seq.) currently prohibits discrimination based on
race, color, religion, national origin. sex, pregnancy. childbirth or related medical conditions. age,
marital status, or disability.
Request:
The City requests that the General Assembly Amend the Virginia Human Rights Act to also prohibit
discrimination based on sexual orientation.
August 26, 2008
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C IT Y CO UN C I L 'S B R IE FIN G
COMMUNITY LEGISLATIVE AGENDA DRAFT
ITEM # 57925 (Continued)
CITY OF VIRGINIA BEACH
2009 FUNDING ITEMS
The City Council of Virginia Beach recognizes the Commonwealth, as well as the City, are
facing very difficult and trying fiscal realities. Nevertheless, the City Council is including these
requests for funding to the Commonwealth for non-state agencies, as well as State
responsibilities that are under funded. Many of these requests are long standing, others are new;
all merit funding by the Commonwealth when resources are available.
1. VIRGINIA AQUARIUM & MARINE SCIENCE CENTER-OCEAN IN MOTION AQUARIUM TRUCK
LYNN CLEMENTS
Department Director
Museums
Request:
The Virginia Aquarium is asking the General Assembly for $900,000 to:
. purchase a replacement "Ocean in Motion" vehicle outfitted with state-ol-the art aquariums
. upgrade the vehicle's onsite "docking" facilities
. expand the holding systems for marine species used in outreach
. And support the staffing critical to the success of the program
Section 1.01 Mileage and salt water have started to take their toll on the existing vehicle, which will need to be
replaced within two years, We will add a large "truck port" to protect the vehicle from the elements and provide
shelter for staff doing weekly maintenance, We plan to increase the number of animals carried aboard the truck and
will need additional holding space for them in our upcoming Marine Animal Care facility, Finally, the success of
the program hinges on having qualified staff to coordinate with schools, conduct the programs, handle routine
vehicle maintenance and provide care to the animals with life support systems,
2. SUPPORT FOR REGIONAL PLAN FOR GEROPSYCHlA TRIC SER VICES
BOB MORIN
Department Director
Human Services
Request:
During the last General Assembly Session, there was a Budget Amendment submitted that would have
provided substantial funding towards "more fully funding" systems of care in HP R V and in the Northern
Virginia area (HP R II), and for funding the development of systems of care in the remaining 5 regions of
the state. Support is requested for resubmission of a budget amendment to provide the proposed services
as outlined in the HPR V Regional Plan for Geropsychiatric Services.
August 26, 2008
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C IT Y CO UN C I L 'S B R I E FIN G
COMMUNITY LEGISLATIVE AGENDA DRAFT
ITEM # 57925 (Continued)
3. SUPPORT FOR ADDITIONAL STATE GENERAL FUND DOLLARS FOR MENTAL HEALTH
AND MENTAL RETARDATION
BOB MORIN
Department Director
Human Services
Request:
The City of Virginia Beach is requesting that the General Assembly fully fund the mental health, mental
retardation and substance abuse system to meet the needs of children and adults on waiting lists for
services. Funding is also requested to meet the needs of low-income families to include child-care,
affordable housing, employment, health care and transportation. Additionally, the City requests that
funds be made available to adequately cover the cost of building community capacity as a result of
downsizing Eastern State Hospital and Hancock Geriatric Unit. Specifically, funding is requested for the
HPR V Regional Plan for Geropsychiatric Services. The total cost of the plan is S7.3-MILLION It is
designed in a menu format that will allow for a phased in funding approach.
This is a standing request from the City Council.
4. FUNDING FOR PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICES
Venita Newby-Owens, M.D., M.P.H.
Department Director
Department of Health
Request:
The General Assembly is requested to fully fund the Virginia Beach Public Health Department
and equalize funding for Virginia Beach on a per capita basis to match Norfolk and Portsmouth.
5. VIRGINIA BEACH CONVENTION CENTER FUNDING
James Ricketts
Department Director
Convention & Visitors Bureau
Request:
The General Assembly is requested to provide the remainder of the $10-MILLION, beyond what has
been appropriated. This is in keeping with the benefits to the Commonwealth based on the amount of state
tax revenue that will be generated from the new facility over a ten-year period and the precedent set in
State funding assistance provided to the Richmond Convention Center.
August 26, 2008
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C IT Y CO UN C I L 'S B R IE FIN G
COMMUNITY LEGISLATIVE AGENDA DRAFT
ITEM # 57925 (Continued)
6. SANDLER CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS
Emily Spruill
Cultural Arts Coordinator
Office of Cultural Affairs
Request:
The General Assembly is requested to appropriate $300,000 for the operations of the Sadler Center for
the Performing Arts.
Mr. Matthias referenced the addition of items, Councilman Wood identified a need to amend the Code re
"look-a~like" firearms i.e. toy, spring-loaded guns. The way the Code reads, the perpetrator can get
away with a minor offense because this weapon is not defined in the City Code as a "gun ".
Council Lady Wilson referenced funding of Economic Development. It is very hard for this City to
compete with other States and encourage businesses and additional funding should be requested to
compete for Economic Development. Mr. Matthias advised the City has been successful in obtaining a
few grants over the years.
Councilman Villanueva referenced approaching the General Assembly to revise the Chesapeake Bay Act
to consider swimming pools, ponds, BMP's (Best Management Practices) to be considered as non
impervious areas.
Clay Bernick, Environmental Management Administrator, advised there may be some conflicts with the
State Storm Water legislation which must be examined
Mr. Matthias advised approximately $200-MILLION (40q;) on the tax rate is providedfor the Standards
of Quality. The State just created a Commission on K-12 funding, which is a way for the General
Assembly to decrease the amount of funds placed in Education when they rebenchmark the Standards of
Quality. The SOQ's are rebenchmarked every two (2) years. This year the funding was approximately a
$1-BILLION over the Biennium. The General Assembly is examining ways to decrease the increase in
funding. Delegata Tata has been requested to make sure the Commission includes as afact the amount of
funds all local governments are providing above and beyond that required by the Standards of Quality.
Exact amounts concerning the City donations as opposed to the State will be provided next week. At the
present time, funding re the SEQ's is intended to be 55% State and 45% Local.
A Public Hearing re the COMMUNITY LEGISLA TIVE A GENDA has been scheduled for September
23, 2008, with final adoption October 7, 2008. The Joint City Council, School Board and Virginia
Beach General Assembly Delegation meeting has been scheduledfor Wednesday, November 12, 2008,
August 26. 2008
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C I T Y MANA G E R 'S B R IE FIN G
VML 'GO GREEN' CHALLENGE
ITEM # 57926
2:28 P.M.
Clay Bernick, Environmental Management Administrator, distributed information re the VIRGINIA
MUNICIPAL LEAGUE'S (VML) "GO GREEN" CHALLENGE.
BRIEFING OBJECTIVES
.' What is the VML Go Green Challenge?
+, Review How Virginia Beach is Meeting the Virginia Municipal League's Go Green Challenge
. Request Council to Formally Adopt a Resolution to Support Sustainability, Climate Protection
and Related Efforts
VIRGINIA MUNICIPAL LEAGUE'S GO GREEN CHALLENGE
.. What is the Go Green Challenge?
.' Who is Involved?
. What has Virginia Beach done so far?
WHAT IS THE GO GREEN CHALLENGE?
. A friendly competition among VML member local governments to encourage the
implementation of specific environmental policies and practical actions that not only reduce
carbon emissions, but can save local governments money
. The initiative, endorsed by the VML's Executive Committee, recognizes that the
Commonwealth's communities need to take innovative steps to reduce energy usage and
promote sustainability
WHO IS INVOLVED?
'. As of August 22,68 out of208, or 33% of VML member jurisdictions representing 44% of the
state's population, are participating in the competition
'. As of August 22, 12 of 16 VML member local governments in Hampton Roads are
participating, representing 49% of the total VML participant population
.' Nationwide, over:! (this number literally changes "hour by hour ''J cities are involved in some
form of similar sustainable programs.
Virginia Municipal League Go Green Challenge consists of eleven (II) categories, thirty (30 action
areas and two hundred (200) possible points. Mr. Bernick distributed a copy of the Survey Questionnaire.
This is a self-evaluating report card.
August 26, 2008
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C IT Y MANA G E R 'S B R IE FIN G
VML 'GO GREEN' CHALLENGE
ITEM # 57926 (Continued)
HOW IS VIRGINIA BEACH MEETING THE CHALLENGE?
.. Planning's Environmental Management Center Team is compiling data for scoring for each
category and action area, assisted by:
. Green Ribbon Committee (GRC)
. Joint Energy Committee (JEC)
. Schools
. Other Departments (CVB, Finance, Management Services, Public Works)
,if; Results are to be submitted to VML by September 30, 2008
f' Team will provide written report as part of Council package before submittal to VML
The completed survey will be provided to City Council.
GOVERNMENT POLICY ADOPTION
. Policy Adoption will help City meet "Go Green" Challenge
· Mayor Oberndorf signed Us. Conference of Mayors' Climate Protection Agreement in
2005. Signatories commit to take actions to:
· Strive to meet or beat the Kyoto Protocol targets in their own communities
· Urge their state governments, and the federal government, to enact policies and
programs to meet or beat the greenhouse gas emission reduction target
suggested for the United States in the Kyoto Protocol - a 7% reduction from 1990
levels by 2012
· Urge the Us. Congress to pass draft bipartisan greenhouse gas reduction
legislation. which would establish a national emission trading system
. Resolution for City Council to collectively support this effort and a broader sustainability
strategy forthcoming for consideration in September
WHAT CAN VIRGINIA BEACH HOPE TO DO IN THE SHORT TERM?
.' Continue to identify low- to no-cost measures to help improve the City's performance in each of
the eleven (11) VML Go Green Challenge categories (example - wind power generation zoning
ordinance amendments)
f' Become better recognized as a leader and an example in the region, state and nation of a
sustainable community
\t Begin afocused effort to market Virginia Beach as a location for promoting educational and
economic development that is sustainable for the City and recruiting businesses that export
sustainable goods (services. products. programs and ideas)
· Begin to formalize the City's widespread "green" initiatives in a sustainability framework as is
happening in other cities throughout the nation
Mayor Oberndorf advised Councilman DeSteph had distributed a CD, which he has requested the City
Council view re Offshore Drilling. He is also going to request Senator Wagner to discuss offshore
drilling. Mayor Oberndorf requested an expert of offshore drilling also be present to advise both the
pro's and con's. Mayor Oberndorf advised this could be a separate discussion and briefing
Mr. Bernick advised an area approximately twenty (20) miles off of Sandbridge has been identified
already by the Federal Department of Energy as the best location for wind powered generation on the
east coast. south of New England. Old Dominion University is conducting research re how to generate
energy and power from removing the overabundance of algae in our waterways. Mayor Oberndorf
referenced Virginia Wesleyan has a building with a green roof and suggested recognition. Council Lady
Wilson referenced the successful algae program.
August 26, 2008
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CITY COUNCIL COMMENTS
ITEM # 57927
2:47 P.M.
Councilman Dyer recognized the success of the Community Conversations on Thursday, August 21, 2008
and the City Council Retreat, August 22, 23, 2008.
Councilman Dyer brought forward the concept of discussions relative a Policy Workshop dedicated
toward dealing with specific issues and City Council dialogue. Councilman Dyer suggested dedicating a
couple of hours the first Tuesday of each Month for interaction and dialogue among the Council
Members as the City moves forward in a challenging economic time. Councilman Dyer also suggested the
regularly scheduled Workshop on the Third Tuesday be solely dedicated to City Council Dialogue among
each other instead of Staff Briefings.
Councilman Villanueva concurred and suggested both the high and top priority topics addressed at the
Retreat be discussed. The month of November should be dedicated towards Budget, as the General
Assembly will address their further recommendations and their Forecast in October.
Top
Priorities
Policy Agenda
Targets
High
Business Attraction (Targeted Business and Incentives)
Burton Station Development
Road Funding Plan and Policy Direction
Mass Transit Policy Direction
Compensation Policy
Landfill and SPSA
Town Center Phase IV
Neighborhood Road Improvement
Policy Direction
Lynnhaven Parkway Project
Neighborhood Preservation Program
Beach/Sand Replenishment
Dome Site
Total Compensation Policy for New
Hires
Top
Priorities
Management Agenda
Targets
High
BRAC Strategy
Energy related Business Attraction Strategy
Gang Strategy
Public Parking
Public Safety Staffing
Animal Control and Facility
Agricultural Business Expansion Plan
and Study
Storm water and Ditch Maintenance
Convention Center
Real Estate Tax/Assessment Impact
Impact Analysis
Green Initiative
Mayor Oberndorf reiterated the City Council is anxious to receive the report from the Southeastern
Public Service Authority concerning the land use of the Welden field of Virginia, L.L.c. application and
their adjacent landfill.
August 26, 2008
111 II
- 24 -
AGE N DA REV I E W S E S S ION
2:52 P.M.
ITEM # 57928
K.1. Ordinance to REDUCE City Departments' FY 2008-09 Operating Budgets by
1.25% and ESTABLISH a Reserve refueVenergy increases and tax relieffor the
elderly and disabled.
Councilman DeSteph and Councilman Diezel agree Public Safety should be excluded.
The City Manager advised even the Public Safety Directors have requested not to be exempt.
Councilman Wood does not concur with the idea of blanket authorization to cut 1/25% form the FY
2008-09 Operating Budgets. Most likely the cuts would involve Personnel. Councilman Wood requested
a listing of the reductions.
This item shall be DEFERRED until the City Council Session of September 23, 2008, with the City
Manager providing a listing by September 9, 2008.
ITEM # 57929
Ordinance to AUTHORIZE acquisition of ARP in behalf of Barry D. &
Paula W Knight @ 3380 Indian Creek Rd DISTRICT 7 - PRINCESS
ANNE
The City Attorney distributed the Ordinance, which was advertised for a Public Hearing, but not listed on
the City Council Agenda under Ordinances/Resolution. The City Attorney noted a correction in the
amount of$1,244,346 $/,221,316 advertised.
The City Attorney requested this item be ADDED to the Agenda.
ITEM # 57930
BY CONSENSUS, the following items shall compose the CONSENT AGENDA:
K. ORDINANCES/RESOLUTION
1. Ordinance to REDUCE City Departments' FY 2008-09 Operating Budgets by
1.25% and ESTABLISH a Reserve refuel/energy increases and tax relieffor the
elderly and disabled.
2. Resolution to ESTABLISH Mid-Atlantic Regional Ambulance, Inc. and
AUTHORIZE an annual EMS permit re private ambulance service.
August 26, 2008
II I II
- 25 -
AGE N DA REV IE W S E S S ION
ITEM # 57930 (Continued)
3. Ordinances to ACCEPT and APPROPRIATE:
a. a Grantjrom the Virginia Wireless E~911 Services Board re a
Telecommunicator Job Task Analysis.
b. a monetary donation from SCG International. LLC re ultrasonic
weapons cleaning equipment for the Police.
4. Ordinance to TRANSFER funds to the Virginia Aquarium- Phase II, re Seal
holding pools.
Item K.l. (1.25% reduction) shall be DEFERRED, BY CONSENT until the City Council Session of
September 23, 2008. with a listing provided by September 9, 2008.
August 26, 2008
111 II
- 26 -
AGE N DA REV IE W S E S S ION
ITEM # 57931
BY CONSENSUS, the following items shall compose the CONSENT AGENDA:
L PLANNING
1. Petition of BRUCE and ELIZABETH HEDLUND for a Variance to the
Subdivision Ordinance re subdividing their property for an additional family home
at 5711 Lancelot Drive.
DISTRICT 2 - KEMPSVILLE
2. Application of DANNY COLLIER for a Conditional Use Permit re automotive sales,
service and storage at 1605 Pleasure House Road.
DISTRICT 4 - BA YSIDE
5. Application ofLEONILO O. GLORIA for a Modification of Condition No.5 re a
sign for the senior and disabled housing (approved by City Council on February 22,
2005) at 1236 Kempsville Road.
DISTRICT 2 - KEMPSVILLE
6. Application of the City of Virginia Beach:
a. Ordinance to AMEND Section 108 of the City Zoning Ordinance (CZO)
re posting of signs giving notice of certain zoning applications.
Item L.1. (BRUCE and ELIZABETH HEDLUND) shall be WITHDRA WN, BY CONSENT
August 26, 2008
111 II
- 27 -
ITEM #57932
Mayor Meyera E. Oberndorf entertained a motion to permit City Council to conduct its CLOSED
SESSION, pursuant to Section 2,1-3711 (A), Code of Virginia, as amended, for the following purpose:
PERSONNEL MATTERS: Discussion, consideration of, or interviews
of prospective candidates for employment, assignment, appointment,
promotion, performance, demotion, salaries, disciplining or resignation
of specific public officers, appointees or employees pursuant to Section
2.2-3711 (A)(l)
Council Appointments: Boards, Commissions, Committees,
Authorities, Agencies and Appointees
Annual Review of Council Appointees
PUBLICLY-HELD PROPERTY; Discussion or consideration of the,
acquisition, or of the disposition of publicly-held property, where
discussion in an open meeting would adversely affect the bargaining
position or negotiating strategy of the public body pursuant to Section
2.2-3711 (A)(3).
Acquisition/Disposition of City Property: ARP - Baum District
LEGAL MATTERS: Consultation with legal counselor briefings by
staff members, consultants, pertaining to actual or probable litigation,
where such consultation or briefing in an open meeting would adversely
affect the negotiating or litigating posture of the public body, or
consultation with legal counsel employed or retained by a public body
regarding specific legal matters requiring the provision of legal advice
by counsel pursuant to Section 2.2-3711 (A)(7).
Buddhist Temple
Chesapeake Bay Act
Cape Henry Beach
Upon motion by Councilman Dyer, seconded by Councilman Diezel, City Council voted to proceed
into CLOSED SESSION at 3:30 P.M.
August 26, 2008
I Ii I
III II II
- 28 -
ITEM #57932 (Continued)
Voting: 10-0
Council Members Voting Aye:
Harry E. Diezel, Robert M Dyer, Barbara M Henley, Vice Mayor Louis R.
Jones, Reba S. McClanan, Mayor Meyera E. Oberndorf John E. Uhrin, Ron
A. Villanueva, Rosemary Wilson and James L. Wood
Council Members Voting Nay:
None
Council Members Absent;
William R. "Bill" DeSteph
Closed Session: 3:30 P.M. - 5:15 P.M.)
(Council Appointee Evaluation: 5:15 P.M. - 5:30 P.M.)
(Dinner: 5:30 P.M. - 6:00 P.M.)
August 26, 2008
'I
- 29 -
FORMAL SESSION
VIRGINIA BEACH CITY COUNCIL
August 26, 2008
6:03 P.M.
Mayor Meyera E. Oberndorf called to order the FORMAL SESSION of the VIRGINIA BEACH CITY
COUNCIL in the Council Chamber, City Hall Building, on Tuesday, August 26, 2008, at 6:03P,M
Council Members Present:
Harry E. Diezel, Robert M Dyer, Barbara M Henley, Vice Mayor
Louis R. Jones, Reba S. McClanan, Mayor Meyera E. Oberndorf,
John E. Uhrin, Ron A. Villanueva, Rosemary Wilson and James L.
Wood
Council Members Absent:
William R. "Bill" DeSteph
[Out of the City re a Family Matter]
INVOCA TION: Reverend Jim Blanchard
Pastor,
PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE TO THE FLAG OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Vice Mayor Jones DISCLOSED, for many years, he served on the Board of Directors of Resource Bank.
Three (3) years ago, Fulton Financial Corporation ("Fulton Financial") purchased Resource Bank. On
March 31, 2007, Vice Mayor Jones retired from the Board of Directors, Although, he is no longer a
Board Member, he owns stock in Fulton Financial, and that stock ownership causes him to have a
"personal interest" in Fulton Financial. However, due to the size of Fulton Financial and the volume of
transactions it handles in any given year, Fulton Financial, or any of the banks that are owned by Fulton
Financial, may have an interest in numerous matters in which Vice Mayor Jones has no personal
knowledge. In order to ensure his compliance with both the letter and the spirit of the State and Local
Government Conflict of Interests Act, it is his practice to thoroughly review the agenda for each meeting
of City Council for the purpose of identifYing any matters in which he might have an actual or potential
conflict. If, during his review, he identifies any matters, Vice Mayor Jones will prepare and file the
appropriate disclosure letter to be recorded in the official records of City Council. Vice Mayor Jones
regular(v makes this disclosure, Vice Mayor Jones' letter of April 10, 2007, is hereby made a part of the
record.
Council Lady Rosemary Wilson DISCLOSED her husband is a principal in the accounting firm of
Goodman and Company and is directly and indirectly involved in many of Goodman and Company's
transactions. However, due to the size of Goodman and Company and the volume of transactions it
handles in any given year, Goodman and Company has an interest in numerous matters in which her
husband is not personally involved and of which she does not have personal knowledge. In order to
ensure her compliance with both the letter and the spirit of the State and Local Government Conflict of
Interests Act, it is her practice to thoroughly review the agenda for each meeting of City Council for the
purpose of identifYing any matters in which she might have an actual or potential conflict. If, during her
review she identifies any matters, she will prepare and file the appropriate disclosure letter to be
recorded in the official records of City Council. Council Lady Wilson regularly makes this disclosure.
Council Lady Wilson's letter of January 27, 2004, is hereby made a part of the record.
August 26, 2008
,I
- 30 -
FORMAL SESSION
VIRGINIA BEACH CITY COUNCIL
(Continued)
Council Lady Rosemary Wilson DISCLOSED she is a Real Estate Agent affiliated with Prudential
Decker Realty. Because of the nature of Real Estate Agent affiliation, the size of Prudential, and the
volume of transactions it handles in any given year, Prudential has an interest in numerous matters in
which she is not personally involved and of which she does not have personal knowledge. In order to
ensure her compliance with both the letter and the spirit of the State and Local Government Conflict of
Interests Act, it is her practice to thoroughly review the agenda for each meeting of City Council for the
purpose of identifying any matters in which she might have an actual or potential conflict. If, during her
review she identifies any matters, she will prepare and file the appropriate disclosure letter to be
recorded in the official records of City Council. Council Lady Wilson regularly makes this disclosure.
Council Lady Wilson's letter of January 27, 2004, is hereby made a part of the record.
August 26, 2008
II I II
- 31 -
Item V-E.
CERTIFICATION OF CLOSED SESSION
ITEM # 57933
Upon motion by Councilman Dyer. seconded by Councilman Wood, City Council CERTIFIED THE
CLOSED SESSION TO BE IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE MOTION TO RECESS.
Only public business matters lawfully exempt from Open Meeting
requirements by Virginia law were discussed in Closed Session to
which this certification resolution applies.
AND,
Only such public business matters as were identified in the motion
convening the Closed Session were heard, discussed or considered
by Virginia Beach City Council.
Voting: J 0-0
Council Members Voting Aye:
Harry E. Diezel, Robert M Dyer. Barbara M Henley, Vice Mayor Louis R.
Jones, Reba S. McClanan, Mayor Meyera E. Oberndorf, John E. Uhrin. Ron
A. Villanueva, Rosemary Wilson and James L. Wood
Council Members Voting Nay:
None
Council Members Absent:
William R. "Bill" DeSteph
August 26, 2008
II II
RESOLUTION
CERTIFICATION OF CLOSED SESSION
VIRGINIA BEACH CITY COUNCIL
WHEREAS: The Virginia Beach City Council convened into CLOSED SESSION, pursuant to the
affirmative vote recorded in ITEM #57932, Page 27, and in accordance with the provisions of The Virginia
Freedom of Information Act, and,
WHEREAS: Section 22-3712 of the Code of Virginia requires a certification by the governing body
that such Closed Session was conducted in conformity with Virginia law.
NOff, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOL VED: That the Virginia Beach City Council hereby certifies that,
to the best of each member's knowledge, (a) only public business matters lawfully exempted from Open
Meeting requirements by Virginia law were discussed in Closed Session to which this certification resolution
applies; and, (b) only such public business matters as were identified in the motion convening this Closed
Session were heard, discussed or considered by Virginia Beach City Council.
uth Hodges Fraser, MMC
City Clerk
August 26, 2008
II I I
- 32 -
Item V-F.]
ITEM # 57934
Upon motion by Councilman Dyer, seconded by Council Lady Wilson, City Council APPROVED the
MINUTES of the INFORMAL and FORMAL SESSIONS of August 12,2008
Voting: 10-0
Council Members Voting Aye:
Harry E. Diezel, Robert M Dyer, Barbara M Henley, Vice Mayor Louis R.
Jones, Reba S. McClanan, Mayor Meyera E. Oberndorf, John E. Uhrin, Ron
A. Villanueva, Rosemary Wilson and James L. Wood
Council Members Voting Nay:
None
Council Members Absent;
William R. "Bill" DeSteph
August 26, 2008
- 33 -
Item V-G.
PRESENTATION
ITEM # 57935
Gwen Cowart, Director - Communications and Information Technology, introduced Crag Hartley
Craig Hartley, Deputy Executive Director - Commission on Accreditation for Law Enforcement Agencies
(CALEA) Public Safety Communications Accreditation Program PRESENTED the VIRGINIA BEACH
9-1-1 REACCREDITATION.
Ms. Cowart advised the individuals present were instrumental in the achievement of the reaccreditation:
Angie Anderson
Doug Onhaizer
Boh Niaherger
Virginia Beach is the first city Emergency Communications Center in Virginia to earn CALEA
reaccreditations. VB9-1-1 first earned CALEA ACCREDITATION in 2005 and must meet or exceed the
Commission's 216 communications standards every three years in order to remain accredited
August 26. 2008
, "
- 34 -
Item V-H.I.
ADOPTAGENDA
FOR FORMAL SESSION
ITEM # 57936
BY CONSENSUS, City Council ADOPTED:
AGENDA FOR THE FORMAL SESSION
ADDED:
Ordinance to AUTHORIZE acquisition of ARP in behalf of Barry D. &
Paula W. Knight @ 3380 Indian Creek Rd DISTRICT 7 - PRINCESS
ANNE
August 26, 2008
II I I
- 35 ~
Item V-I.1.
PUBLIC HEARING
ITEM # 57937
Mayor DECLARED A PUBLIC HEARING:
INSTALLMENT PURCHASE AGREEMENT
Acquisition of Agricultural Land Preservation (ARP) Easement-3380
Indian Creek Road
There being no speakers, Mayor OberndorfCLOSED THE PUBLIC HEARING.
August 26, 2008
'I
- 36 -
Item V-l.2.
ADD-ON
ITEM # 57938
Upon motion by Vice Mayor Jones, seconded by Councilman Dyer, City Council ADDED to the Agenda,
as Consent Item K. 5.:
Ordinance to AUTHORIZE acquisition of ARP in behalf of Barry D.
and Paula W. Knight @ 3380 Indian Creek Rd DISTRICT 7 -
PRINCESS ANNE
The City Attorney distributed the Ordinance, which was advertised for a Public Hearing, but not listed on
the City Council Agenda under Ordinances/Resolution. The City Attorney noted a correction in the
amount of$1,244,346 $1,22'1,316 advertised.
Voting: 10-0
Council Members Voting Aye:
Harry E. Diezel, Robert M Dyer, Barbara M Henley, Vice Mayor Louis R.
Jones, Reba S. McClanan, Mayor Meyera E. Oberndorf John E. Uhrin, Ron
A. Villanueva, Rosemary Wilson and James L. Wood
Council Members Voting Nay:
None
Council Members Absent:
William R. "Bill" DeSteph
August 26, 2008
II I II
1 AN ORDINANCE AUTHORIZING THE ACQUISITION OF AN
2 AGRICULTURAL LAND PRESERVATION EASEMENT AND
3 THE ISSUANCE BY THE CITY OF ITS CONTRACT
4 OBLIGATIONS IN THE MAXIMUM PRINCIPAL AMOUNT OF
5 $1,244,346. (PROPERTY OF BARRY D. KNIGHT AND
6 PAULA W. KNIGHT)
7
8
9 WHEREAS, pursuant to the Agricultural Lands Preservation Ordinance (the
10 "Ordinance"), Appendix J of the Code of the City of Virginia Beach, there has been
11 presented to the City Council a request for approval of an Installment Purchase Agreement
12 (the form and standard provisions of which have been previously approved by the City
13 Council, a summary of the material terms of which is hereto attached, and a true copy of
14 which is on file in the City Attorney's Office) for the acquisition of the Development Rights
15 (as defined in the Installment Purchase Agreement) on certain property located in the City
16 and more fully described in Exhibit B of the Installment Purchase Agreement for a
17 purchase price of $1,244,346; and
18
19 WHEREAS, the aforesaid Development Rights shall be acquired through the
20 acquisition of a perpetual agricultural land preservation easement, as defined in, and in
21 compliance with, the requirements of the Ordinance; and
22
23 WHEREAS, the City Council has reviewed the proposed terms and conditions of the
24 purchase as evidenced by the Installment Purchase Agreement;
25
26 NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT ORDAINED BYTHE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF
27 VIRGINIA BEACH, VIRGINIA:
28
29 1. The City Council hereby determines and finds that the proposed terms and
30 conditions of the purchase of the Development Rights pursuant to the Installment Purchase
31 Agreement, including the purchase price and manner of payment, are fair and reasonable
32 and in furtherance of the purposes of the Ordinance, and the City Manager or his designee
33 is hereby authorized to approve, upon or before the execution and delivery of the
34 Installment Purchase Agreement, the rate of interest to accrue on the unpaid principal
35 balance of the purchase price set forth hereinabove as the greater of 3.41 00% per annum
36 or the per annum rate which is equal to the yield on United States Treasury STRIPS
37 purchased by the City to fund such unpaid principal balance; provided, however, that such
38 rate of interest shall not exceed 5.4100% unless the approval of the City Council by
39 resolution duly adopted is first obtained.
40
41 2. The City Council hereby further determines that funding is available for the
42 acquisition of the Development Rights pursuant to the Installment Purchase Agreement on
43 the terms and conditions set forth therein.
44
45 3. The City Council hereby expressly approves the Installment Purchase
46 Agreement and, subject to the determination of the City Attorney that there are no defects
II I II
47 in title to the property or other restrictions or encumbrances thereon which may, in the
48 opinion of the City Attorney, adversely affect the City's interests, authorizes the City
49 Manager or his designee to execute and deliver the Installment Purchase Agreement in
50 substantially the same form and substance as approved hereby with such minor
51 modifications, insertions, completions or omissions which do not materially alter the
52 purchase price or manner of payment, as the City Manager or his designee shall approve.
53 The City Council further directs the City Clerk to affix the seal of the City to, and attest
54 same on, the Installment Purchase Agreement. The City Council expressly authorizes the
55 incurrence of the indebtedness represented by the issuance and delivery of the Installment
56 Purchase Agreement.
57
58 4. The City Council hereby elects to issue the indebtedness under the Charter
59 of the City rather than pursuant to the Public Finance Act of 1991 and hereby constitutes
60 the indebtedness a contractual obligation bearing the full faith and credit of the City.
61
62 Adoption requires an affirmative vote of a majority of all members of the City
63 Council.
64
65 Adopted by the Council of the City of Virginia Beach, Virginia, on this 26ttPayof
66 Allgll!':r, 2008.
CA 10754
V:lapplicationslcitylawprodlcycom32\WpdocsID025IP003100065448. DOC
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DATE: August 25, 2008
TO CONTENT:
APPROVED AS TO LEGAL SUFFICIENCY:
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City Attorney's Office
CERTIFIED AS TO AVAILABILITY OF FUNDS:
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Director of Finance
2
II I 'I
AGRICUL TURAL RESERVE PROGRAM
INSTALLMENT PURCHASE AGREEMENT NO. 2006-79
SUMMARY OF MATERIAL TERMS
SELLER: KNIGHT, Barry D. and Paula W.
PROPERTY LOCATION: 3380 Indian Creek Road, Princess Anne District
PURCHASE PRICE: $1,244,346
EASEMENT AREA: 175.26 acres, more or less
DEVELOPMENT POTENTIAL: 16 single-family dwelling sites (16 acquired)
DURATION: Perpetual
INTEREST RATE: Equal to yield on U.S. Treasury STRIPS acquired by City to fund purchase
price, but not less than 3.4100% (actual rate to be determined when STRIPS are purchased prior
to execution oflPA). Rate may not exceed 5.4100% without approval of City Council.
TERMS: Interest only twice per year for 25 years, with payment of principal due 25 years from
IP A date
RESTRICTIONS ON TRANSFER: IPA ownership may not be transferred (except for Estate
Settlement Transfer) for one (1) year following execution and delivery of IPA.
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- 37 -
Item V-K
ORDINANCES/RESOLUTION
ITEM # 57939
Upon motion by Vice Mayor Jones, seconded by Council Lady Wilson, City Council APPROVED in
ONE MOTION Items I (DEFERRED), 2,3a.b, 4 and 5 (ADD-ON) of the CONSENT AGENDA.
Item K.l. DEFERRED until the City Council Session of September 23,2008. Information re the
reductions shall be provided on September 9, 2008.
Voting: 10-0
Council Members Voting Aye:
Harry E. Diezel, Robert M Dyer, Barbara M Henley, Vice Mayor Louis R.
Jones, Reba S. McClanan, Mayor Meyera E. Oberndorf John E. Uhrin, Ron
A. Villanueva, Rosemary Wilson and James L. Wood
Council Members Voting Nay:
None
Council Members Absent:
William R. "Bill" DeSteph
August 26, 2008
- 38 -
Item V-K.l.
ORDINANCES/RESOLUTION
ITEM # 57940
Upon motion by Vice Mayor Jones, seconded by Council Lady Wilson, City Council DEFERRED until
the City Council Session of September 23, 2008:
Ordinance to REDUCE City Departments' FY 2008-09 Operating
Budgets by 1.25% and ESTABLISH a Reserve re fuel/energy increases
and tax relief for the elderly and disabled. Staff to give proposed
Savings Report
A listing of the Department's reduction shall be provided on September 9, 2008.
Voting:
10-0 (By Consent)
Council Members Voting Aye;
Harry E. Diezel, Robert M Dyer, Barbara M Henley, Vice Mayor Louis R.
Jones, Reba S. McClanan, Mayor Meyera E. Oberndorf John E. Uhrin, Ron
A. Villanueva, Rosemary Wilson and James L. Wood
Council Members Voting Nay:
None
Council Members Absent:
William R. "Bill" DeSteph
August 26, 2008
I I II
- 39 -
Item V-K.2.
ORDINANCES/RESOLUTION
ITEM # 57941
Upon motion by Vice Mayor Jones, seconded by Council Lady Wilson, City Council ADOPTED:
Resolution to ESTABLISH Mid-Atlantic Regional Ambulance, Inc. and
A UTHORIZE an annual EMS permit re private ambulance service.
Voting:
10-0 (By Consent)
Council Members Voting Aye:
Harry E. Diezel, Robert M Dyer, Barbara M Henley, Vice Mayor Louis R.
Jones, Reba S. McClanan, Mayor Meyera E. Oberndorf, John E. Uhrin, Ron
A, Villanueva, Rosemary Wilson and James L. Wood
Council Members Voting Nay:
None
Council Members Absent:
William R. "Bill" DeSteph
August 26, 2008
1 A RESOLUTION TO APPROVE ESTABLISHMENT OF MID-
2 ATLANTIC REGIONAL AMBULANCE, INC. SERVICE IN
3 VIRGINIA BEACH AND TO APPROVE AN ANNUAL EMS
4 PERMIT FOR PROVIDING PRIVATE AMBULANCE
5 SERVICES
6
7 WHEREAS, in accordance with Code of Virginia S 15.2-995, City Council must
8 approve the establishment of an emergency medical service organization in the City of
9 Virginia Beach; and
10
11 WHEREAS, in accordance with Code of Virginia S 32.1-111.14 and City Code S
12 10.5-2, any individual or organization that desires to operate an emergency medical
13 services agency or emergency medical services vehicles in Virginia Beach for emergency
14 transport or non-emergency transport purposes must apply for a permit; and
15
16 WHEREAS, a request for establishment and an application for a permit has been
17 received from Mid-Atlantic Regional Ambulance, Inc.; and
18
19 WHEREAS, this request and application has been recommended for approval by
20 the Virginia Beach Department of Emergency Medical Services; and
21
22 WHEREAS, City Council finds the approval of this request and application is in the
23 best interests of the citizens of Virginia Beach as it will assure continued and adequate
24 emergency services and will preserve, protect and promote the public health, safety and
25 general welfare of the citizens.
26
27 NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF
28 VIRGINIA BEACH, VIRGINIA:
29
30 That the request of Mid-Atlantic Regional Ambulance, Inc. for the establishment of
31 its emergency medical service in the City of Virginia Beach, and its application for an
32 annual EMS permit for providing private EMS ambulance services in the City of Virginia
33 Beach is hereby approved and granted, effective immediately.
34
35 Adopted by the Council of the City of Virginia Beach, Virginia, on the 26th day of
36 ---AugllSt ,2008.
APPROVED AS TO CONTENT:
APPROVED AS TO LEGAL
SUFFICIENCY:
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Emergency Medical Services
CA10814 / R-3 / August 14, 2008
i I II II
- 40-
Item V-K.3.a/b.
ORDINANCES/RESOLUTION
ITEM # 57942
Upon motion by Vice Mayor Jones, seconded by Council Lady Wilson, City Council ADOPTED:
Ordinances to ACCEPT and APPROPRIATE:
a. Grant from the Virginia Wireless E-911 Services Board re Telecommunicator Job
Task Analysis.
b. Monetary donation from SCG International, LLC re ultrasonic weapons cleaning
equipment for the Police.
Voting: 10-0 (By Consent)
Council Members Voting Aye:
Harry E. Diezel, Robert M Dyer, Barbara M Henley, Vice Mayor Louis R.
Jones, Reba S. McClanan, Mayor Meyera E. Oberndorf. John E. Uhrin, Ron
A. Villanueva, Rosemary Wilson and James L. Wood
Council Members Voting Nay;
None
Council Members Absent:
William R. "Bill" DeSteph
August 26, 2008
,I ,I
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
AN ORDINANCE TO ACCEPT A VIRGINIA
WIRELESS E-911 SERVICES BOARD GRANT FOR A
TELECOMMUNICATOR JOB TASK ANALYSIS
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT ORDAINED BY THE COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF
VIRGINIA BEACH, VIRGINIA:
That $150,000 is hereby accepted from the Virginia Wireless E-911 Service
Board for a telecommunicator job task analysis and is appropriated to the
Communications and Information Technology Department, with grant revenue
increased accordingly.
Adopted by the Council of the City of Virginia Beach, Virginia, on the 26th day
of August, 2008.
An affirmative vote from the majority of the members of City Council is required.
APPROVED AS TO CONTENT:
APPROVED AS TO LEGAL
SUFFICIENCY:
B~Q-
Management Services
K~J=
City Attorney's Office
CA 10844
R-3
August 19,2008
I I
1 AN ORDINANCE TO ACCEPT A DONATION FOR THE
2 PURCHASE OF ULTRASONIC WEAPONS CLEANING
3 EQUIPMENT
4 BE IT ORDAINED BY THE COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF VIRGINIA BEACH,
5 VIRGINIA:
6 That $6,776 is hereby accepted from SCG International, LLC, and appropriated to
7 the Police Department's FY 2008-09 Operating Budget for the purchase of ultrasonic
8 weapons cleaning equipment, with estimated revenues increased accordingly.
Adopted by the Council of the City of Virginia Beach, Virginia on the 26th day
of August 2008.
An affirmative vote from the majority of the members of City Council is required.
Approved as to Content:
Approved as to Legal Sufficiency:
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City Attorney's Office
CA 10841
R-2
August 14, 2008
,I II
- 41 -
Item V-K.4.
ORDINANCES/RESOLUTION
ITEM # 57943
Upon motion by Vice Mayor Jones, seconded by Council Lady Wilson, City Council ADOPTED:
Ordinance to TRANSFER funds to the Virginia Aquarium- Phase II,
re Seal holding pools.
Voting:
10-0 (By Consent)
Council Members Voting Aye:
Harry E. Diezel, Robert M Dyer, Barbara M Henley, Vice Mayor Louis R.
Jones, Reba S. McClanan, Mayor Meyera E. Oberndorf John E. Uhrin, Ron
A. Villanueva, Rosemary Wilson and James L. Wood
Council Members Voting Nay:
None
Council Members Absent:
William R. "Bill" DeSteph
August 26, 2008
I il
1 AN ORDINANCE FOR A TRANSFER TO UPGRADE SEAL
2 HOLDING POOLS AT THE VIRGINIA AQUARIUM
3 BE IT ORDAINED BY THE COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF VIRGINIA BEACH,
4 VIRGINIA:
5
6 That $200,000 is hereby transferred from the General Fund Reserve for
7 Contingencies - Regular to CIP # 3-278, "Virginia Aquarium Renewal and Replacement-
8 Phase II" in the FY 2008-09 Capital Budget to complete upgrades to the Seal Holding
9 Pools at the Virginia Aquarium, with revenue from local sources increased accordingly.
Adopted by the Council of the City of Virginia Beach, Virginia on the26th day
of August 2008.
Approved as to Content:
Approved as to Legal Sufficiency:
c~=E-
CA 10843
R-2
August 14, 2008
,I II
- 42 -
Item V-K.5.
ORDINANCES/RESOLUTION
ITEM # 57944
ADD-ON
Upon motion by Vice Mayor Jones, seconded by Council Lady Wilson, City Council ADOPTED:
Ordinance to AUTHORIZE acquisition of ARP in behalf of Barry D.
and Paula W. Knight @ 3380 Indian Creek Rd DISTRICT 7 -
PRINCESS ANNE
The City Attorney distributed the Ordinance, which was advertised for a Public Hearing, but not listed on
the City Council Agenda under Ordinances/Resolution. The City Attorney noted a correction in the
amount of$1,244,346 $1,224,346 advertised.
Voting:
10-0 (By Consent)
Council Members Voting Aye:
Harry E. Diezel, Robert M Dyer, Barbara M Henley, Vice Mayor Louis R.
Jones, Reba S. McClanan, Mayor Meyera E. Oberndorf John E. Uhrin, Ron
A. Villanueva, Rosemary Wilson and James L. Wood
Council Members Voting Nay:
None
Council Members Absent:
William R. "Bill" DeSteph
August 26, 2008
i I
I I il II
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CITY OF VIRGINIA BEACH
AGENDA ITEM
ITEM:
An Ordinance Authorizing the Acquisition of an Agricultural land
Preservation Easement and the Issuance by the City of its Contract
Obligations in the Maximum Amount of $1,244,346 (Property of Barry D.
Knight and Paula W. Knight)
MEETING DATE: August 26, 2008
. Background: In May, 1995, the Agricultural lands Preservation Ordinance (the
"Ordinance") was adopted by the City Council for the purpose of promoting and
encouraging the preservation of farmland in the rural southern portion of the City.
Under the Agricultural Reserve Program established by the Ordinance, the City
purchases the development rights of eligible parcels of land, leaving the fee simple
ownership of the land unchanged. These purchases are embodied by perpetual
agricultural land preservation easements pursuant to which only agricultural uses, as
defined in the Ordinance, are allowed on the land.
The subject property has been appraised by an independent appraiser retained
by the City. The appraiser has determined the fair market value of the property, based
upon nine (9) comparable sales. From the fair market value, the value of the
development rights has been determined by subtracting $900 per acre, which has
previously been established as the farm value (i.e., value of the land restricted to
agricultural uses) for land throughout the southern rural area of the City. The resulting
amount is the value of the development rights of the property.
All offers by the City to purchase the development rights to property are
expressly made contingent upon the absence of any title defects or other conditions
which, in the opinion of the City Attorney, may adversely affect the City's interests, and
other standard contingencies.
. Considerations: The subject property consists of three (3) parcels of land
having approximately 175.26 acres outside of marshland or swampland. It is owned by
Barry D. Knight and Paula W. Knight. Under current development regulations, there is a
total development potential of sixteen (16) single-family dwelling building sites, none of
which will be reserved for future development as a 3-acre building site. Property
owners are no longer required to designate the location of the area reserved for future
building sites, but are required to subdivide such sites prior to building on them. The
site, which is shown on the attached location Map, is located at 3380 Indian Creek
Road, in the District of Princess Anne. The proposed purchase price, as stated in the
ordinance, is $1,244,346. This price is the equivalent of approximately $7,100 per acre
of easement acquired.
ii I I
2
The terms of the proposed acquisition are that the City would pay interest only for
a period of 25 years, with the principal amount being due and payable 25 years from the
date of closing. The interest rate to be paid by the City will be the greater of 3.4100%
per annum or the per annum rate which is equal to the yield on U.S. Treasury STRIPS
purchased by the City to fund its principal obligation under the Installment Purchase
Agreement, not to exceed 5.4100% without the further approval of the City Council.
The proposed terms and conditions of the purchase of the Development Rights
pursuant to the Installment Purchase Agreement, including the purchase price and
manner of payment, are fair and reasonable and in furtherance of the purposes of the
Ordinance.
. Public Information: The ordinance has been advertised by publication in a
newspaper having general circulation in the City once per week for two successive
weeks.
. Alternatives: The City Council may decline to purchase the development rights
to the property.
. Recommendations: Adoption of the ordinance and acquisition of the
development rights, assuming all contingencies are met.
. Attachments: Ordinance; Summary of Material Terms of Installment Purchase
Agreement (full Agreement is on file in the City Attorney's Office); area map showing
location of property.
Recommended Action: Adoption ~.
Submitting Department/Agency: Agriculture Department
City Manager: ~ k ,~~
V-L. PLANNING
1. BRUCE AND ELIZABETH HEDLUND
2. DANNY COLLIER
3. CYPRESS CREEK, L.L.c.
4. BUDDHIST EDUCATION CENTER
OF AMERICA, INC.
5. LEONILO O. GLORIA
6. CITY OF VIRGINIA BEACH
a. City Zoning Ordinance
b, City Zoning Ordinance
c. City Zoning Ordinance
- 43 -
ITEM 57945
II I 'I II
VARIANCE
CONDITIONAL USE PERMIT
CONDITIONAL USE PERMIT
MODIFICATION OF CONDITIONS
to extend compliance re a religious
facility (Approved August 28, 2007)
MODIFICA TION OF CONDITION
No.5. re a sign for senior and disabled
housing
AMEND Section J 08 of the City Zoning
Ordinance (CZO) re posting of signs
giving notice of certain zoning
applications.
AMEND regulations pertaining to
communication towers and building-
mounted antennas
AMEND Appendix F - Chesapeake
Bay Preservation Area Ordinance, re \
inclusion of water surface area of a
swimming pool in the calculation of I
mpervious cover,
August 26, 2008
II ,I
- 44-
Item V-L.
ITEM 57946
PLANNING
Upon motion by Vice Mayor Jones, seconded by Councilman Dyer, City Council APPROVED IN ONE
MOTION, Items 1 (WITHDRA WAL), 2, 5 and 6a of the PLANNING BY CONSENT AGENDA.
Voting:
10-0 (By Consent)
Council Members Voting Aye:
Harry E. Diezel, Robert M Dyer, Barbara M Henley, Vice Mayor Louis R.
Jones, Reba S. McClanan, Mayor Meyera E. Oberndorf John E. Uhrin, Ron
A. Villanueva, Rosemary Wilson and James L. Wood
Council Members Voting Nay:
None
Council Members Absent:
William R. "Bill" DeSteph
August 26, 2008
'I
- 45 -
.Item V-L.l.
ITEM 57947
PLANNING
Upon motion by Vice Mayor Jones, seconded by Councilman Dyer, City Council ALLOWED
WITHDRAWAL of THE Petition of BRUCE AND ELIZABETH HEDLUND for a Variance to the
Subdivision Ordinance re subdividing their property for an additional family home:
Petition of BRUCE & ELIZABETH HEDLUND, Subdivision Variance,
5711 Lancelot Drive, District 2 - Kempsville
Voting:
10-0 (By Consent)
Council Members Voting Aye:
Harry E. Diezel, Robert M Dyer, Barbara M Henley, Vice Mayor Louis R.
Jones, Reba S. McClanan, Mayor Meyera E. Oberndorf, John E. Uhrin, Ron
A. Villanueva, Rosemary Wilson and James L. Wood
Council Members Voting Nay:
None
Council Members Absent:
William R. "Bill" DeSteph
August 26, 2008
- 46-
.Item V-L.2.
ITEM 57948
PLANNING
Upon motion by Vice Mayor Jones, seconded by Councilman Dyer, City Council ADOPTED Ordinance
upon application of DANNY COLLIER for a Conditional Use Permit re automotive sales, service and
storage:
ORDINANCE UPON APPLICATION OF DANNY COLLIER,
CONDITIONAL USE PERMIT (MOTOR VEHICLE SALES, SERVICE
AND STORAGE R080835290
BE IT HEREBY ORDAINED BY THE COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF VIRGINIA BEACH, VIRGINIA
Ordinance upon application of DANNY COLLIER, Conditional Use
Permit (motor vehicle sales, service and storage), 1605 Pleasure House
Road. District 4 - Bayside.
The following conditions shall be required:
1. The existing entrances to the site located closest to the intersection of Pleasure House Road
and Thoroughgood Road shall be closed. The applicant shall work with current Planning
and Traffic Engineering staffs to determine an adequate means of closure.
2. The building shall be painted earth tone colors. The applicant shall provide a color palette
of the proposed paint to be used on the building to current Planning staff for approval.
3. Parking spaces and display area space shall be clearly delineated on a site plan and the
parking lot must be striped in accordance with the approved plan. Vehicles are to be parked
in the designated areas, and no vehicles shall be parked within any portion of the public
right-o.fway. Vehicles shall not be displayed on raised platforms. The applicant shall
provide to current Planning Staff a parking lot layout plan with the appropriate spaces
delineated on the plan.
4. All automotive detailing and service shall be performed inside the building. No outside
storage of equipment, parts, or materials shall be permitted.
5. No outside storage of vehicles in a state of obvious disrepair shall be permitted. If vehicles
in this condition require storage, then such vehicles shall be stored within the building.
6. All outdoor lighting shall be shielded to direct light and glare onto the premises; said
lighting and glare shall be deflected. shaded and focused away from ac:ijoining property. Any
outdoor lighting fixtures shall not be erected any higher than fourteen (J 4) feet.
7. No outside paging system shall be permitted.
8, No advertising banners, streamers, balloons, pennants or similar devices shall be permitted
on any vehicles or the site. There shall be no signs in excess offour (4) square feet installed
or displayed on the exterior or interior of the windows of the building.
August 26, 2008
Ii i I
- 47 -
.Item V-L.3.
ITEM 57948 (Continued)
PLANNING
This Ordinance shall be effective in accordance with Section 107 (f) of the Zoning Ordinance.
Adopted by the Council of the City of Virginia Beach, Virginia, on the Twenty-sixth of August Two
Thousand Eight
Voting:
10-0 (By Consent)
Council Members Voting Aye:
Harry E. Diezel, Robert M Dyer, Barbara M Henley, Vice Mayor Louis R.
Jones, Reba S. McClanan, Mayor Meyera E. Oberndorf, John E. Uhrin, Ron
A. Villanueva, Rosemary Wilson and James L. Wood
Council Members Voting Nay:
None
Council Members Absent:
William R, "Bill" DeSteph
August 26, 2008
- 48 -
.Item V-L.3.
ITEM 57949
PLANNING
Attorney Morris Fine, 2101 Parks Avenue, represented the applicant, advised there may be some 4-H
type of shows without interference to the neighbors, in addition to the six (6) shows allotted.
Upon motion by Council Lady Henley, seconded by Councilman Villanueva, City Council ADOPTED, as
REVISED, Ordinance upon application of CYPRESS CREEK, L.L.C., Conditional Use Permits (riding
academy, horses for hire or boarding and commercial kennel);
ORDINANCE UPON APPLICATION OF CYPRESS CREEK. L.L.c.,
CONDITIONAL USE PERMITS (RIDING ACADEMY, HORSES FOR
HIRE OR BOARDING AND COMMERCIAL KENNEL), R08083529I
BE IT HEREBY ORDAINED BY THE COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF VIRGINIA BEACH, VIRGINIA
Ordinance upon application of CYPRESS CREEK, L.L.c., Conditional
Use Permits (riding academy, horses for hire or boarding and
commercial kennel), 1628 Mill Landing Road, District 7 - Princess Anne
The following conditions shall be required. as REVISED:
Riding Academv, Horses for Hire and Boarding
1. A Fire Plan, developed specifically for this site, designed to aid in fire prevention,
suppression and elimination of potential fire hazards, shall be developed in conjunction with
the Fire Marshal's Office, and shall be approved and implemented prior to the issuance of a
Certificate of Occupancy for the Conditional Use Permit. Such Plan is not meant to supplant
any additional recommendations of the Fire Marshal's Office.
2. There shall be no more than six (6) horse shows per year. Horse shows shall be held only
between the hours of 8:00 A.M and 8:00 P.M, with participant access to the site for the
purpose of the shows limited to after 7:00 A.M and before 10:00 P.M There shall be no
overnight transient lodging or camping of show participants are attendees.
3. Horse shows shall be oriented to the students of the riding academy and local horse stables
and riding academies. The maximum number of rider participants at any show shall not
exceed eight-five (85).
4. All parking for the horse show participants and attendees shall be located on-site,
5. There shall be no permanent outside speakers or sound systems.
6. Any lighting fixtures illuminating the outdoor riding area shall be turned off no later than
9:00 P.M All lighting shall be installed in a way as to direct all light inward to the site to
prevent spillover to adjacent properties.
7. There shall be no permanent food court on the property. A food concession may be operated
on the site during horse shows. Such concession shall be removed upon the end of a show,
August 26, 2008
II I II II
- 49-
.Item V-L.3.
ITEM 57949 (Continued)
PLANNING
8. The applicant shall consult with the City of Virginia Beach, Department of Agriculture, as
well as the Department of Public Works / Stormwater Management, pertaining to the most
efficient and appropriate method of animal waste collection and disposal.
9. Upon one (1) year from the date of approval, the Zoning Administrator shall
administratively review the Conditional Use Permit. In the event that no wffld-complaints
have been made, the Conditional Use Permit shall remain in effect.
Commercial Kennel
1. No more than twelve (12) adult dogs (over six (6) months of age) shall be kept on the
property at any time.
2. Dog litter shall be picked up on a daily basis and shall be disposed of in a lawful manner.
3. All boarded dogs and Celts shall be kept within the kennel between sunset and sunrise.
4. Boarded dogs shall not be allowed to roam the property. Such animals shall be contained
within the kennel and its associated dog runs.
5. Upon one (1) year from the date of approval, the Zoning Administrator shall
administratively review the Conditional Use Permit for the kennel. In the event that no
w:Htd complaints have been made, the Conditional Use Permit shall remain in effect.
This Ordinance shall be effective in accordance with Section 107 (f) of the Zoning Ordinance.
Adopted by the Council of the City of Virginia Beach, Virginia, on the Twenty-sixth of August Two
Thousand Eight
Voting:
10-0 (By Consent)
Council Members Voting Aye:
Harry E. Diezel, Robert M Dyer, Barbara M Henley, Vice Mayor Louis R.
Jones, Reba S. McClanan, Mayor Meyera E. Oberndorf John E. Uhrin, Ron
A. Villanueva, Rosemary Wilson and James L. Wood
Council Members Voting Nay:
None
Council Members Absent:
William R. "Bill" DeSteph
August 26, 2008
II I II
- 50 -
.Item V-LA.
PLANNING
ITEM 57950
The following registered in SUPPORT:
Attorney Morris H Fine, 2101 Parks Avenue, represented the applicant and advised the Buddhist Monks
had operated a Temple on Kempsville Road. When, Kemepsville Road was expanded, the property the
City took was the property on which their temple had been located. The Buddhist decided to move into
the country. Unfortunately, The residential markets have gone into a "free fall" and the applicants owe
$770,000 on the mortgage. Their home has not been marketable. Attorney Fine referenced the Religious
Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act of 2000 passed by Congress.
Mary and Katie Estes, 1625 Mill Landing Road, Phone: 721-209
Marilyn Caputo, 4117 Charity Neck Road, Phone: 355-87688
Chuc Thanh, 4177 West Neck Road, Phone: 689-3408
Sylvia Estes, 1628 Mill Landing Road, Phone: 435-0786
Scott Dilatush. 1348 Johnstown Road, Chesapeake, Virginia. Phone: 721-6900
Samantha Niezgada. 725 Sir Walter Circle, Phone: 339-1753
Christopher Tritong, 704 Wyfold Court, Chesapeake, Virginia, Phone: 436-6977
Bonnie Osborn, 4025 West Colonial Parkway, Phone: 431-2555
William Osborn, 4025 West Colonial Parkway, Phone: 431-2555
Genez Malebranche, 6400 Knotts Island Road, Phone: 721-9465
Willie Lenoir. 183 Olane Drive, Phone; 877-1835
Karen Pennington, 9345 First View Street, Norfolk, Virginia, Phone: 588-7119
The following registered in OPPOSITION
Louis Cullipher, 1449 Princess Anne Road, Phone: 426-2212
Dan Franken, 4161 West Neck Road, Phone: 426-0476, referenced a petition signed by one
hundred thirty (130) citiznes in OPPOSITION, (Pleasant Ridge Neighbors).
Jerry Lang, 1476 Princess Anne Road, Phone: 426-5445
Amy Lang, 1476 Princess Anne Road, Phone: 426-5445
Donna Franken, 4161 West Neck Road, Phone: 426-0476
Judy Hojfenberger, 4021 Dawley Road, Phone: 426-6292
Daniel Franken, Jr., 2009 Ripplemen Court, Phone: 619-8479
Sara Hembree, 2080 Jarvis Road
Michelle Fryman, 2429 West Landing Road, Phone: 426-7299
August 26, 2008
I ,I
- 51 -
.Item V-LA.
ITEM 57950 (Continued)
PLANNING
Upon motion by Council Lady Henley. seconded by Council Lady McClanan. City Council DENIED
Application of the BUDDHIST EDUCATION CENTER OF AMERICA, INC. for a Modification of
Conditions to extend compliance re a religious facility (approved by City Council on August 28.2007)
ORDINANCE UPON APPLICATION OF BUDDHIST EDUCATION
CENTER, MODIFICATION OF A CONDITIONAL USE PERMIT
(RELIGIOUS USE). 4177 WEST NECK ROAD. DISTRICT 7 -
PRINCESS ANNE
Ordinance upon application of BUDDHIST EDUCATION CENTER.
modification of a conditional use permit (religious use), 4177 west neck
Road, DISTRICT 7 - PRINCESS ANNE
Voting: 8-2
Council Members Voting Aye:
Barbara M Henley, Vice Mayor Louis R. Jones, Reba S. McClanan, Mayor
Meyera E. Oberndorf John E. Uhrin, Ron A. Villanueva, Rosemary Wilson
and James L. Wood
Council Members Voting Nay:
Harry E. Diezel and Robert M Dyer
Council Members Absent:
William R. "Bill" DeSteph
August 26, 2008
", ,I II
- 52 -
.Item V-L.5.
ITEM 57951
PLANNING
Upon motion by Vice Mayor Jones, seconded by Councilman Dyer, City Council ADOPTED Ordinance
upon application of LEONILO O. GLORIA, Modification of a Conditional Use Permit (senior and
disabled housing).
ORDINANCE UPON APPLICATION OF LEONILO 0. GLORIA,
MODIFICATION OF A CONDITIONAL USE PERMIT (SENIOR AND
DISABLED HOUSING). 1236 KEMPSVILLE ROAD, DISTRICT 2 -
KEMPSVILLE. R080835292
BE IT HEREBY ORDAINED BY THE COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF VIRGINIA BEACH, VIRGINIA
Ordinance upon application of LEONILO 0. GLORIA. modification of a
conditional use permit (senior and disabled housing). 1236 Kempsville
Road.
DISTRICT 2 - KEMPSVILLE
The following conditions shall be required;
1. All conditions, with the exception of Number 5 attached to the Conditional Use Permit
permitting housing for seniors and disabled persons granted by the City Council on February
22, 2005, remain in affect.
2. Condition Number 5 of the Conditional Use Permit, permitting housing for seniors and
disabled persons granted by the City Council on February 22, 2005, is deleted and replaced
with the following: " The Conditional Use Permit shall allow one freestanding sign as shown
on the photograph submitted with the 2008 application. "
This Ordinance shall be effective in accordance with Section 107 (j) of the Zoning Ordinance.
Adopted by the Council of the City of Virginia Beach. Virginia, on the Twenty-sixth of August Two
Thousand Eight
Voting:
10-0 (By Consent)
Council Members Voting Aye:
Harry E. Diezel, Robert M Dyer. Barbara M Henley, Vice Mayor Louis R.
Jones, Reba S. McClanan, Mayor Meyera E. OberndorJ, John E. Uhrin. Ron
A. Villanueva, Rosemary Wilson and James L. Wood
Council Members Voting Nay:
None
Council Members Absent:
William R. "Bill" DeSteph
August 26, 2008
I! i il
- 53 -
,Item V-L.6.a.
ITEM 57952.
PLANNING
Upon motion by Vice Mayor Jones. seconded by Councilman Dyer, City Council ADOPTED Application
of the City of Virginia Beach:
Ordinance to AMEND Section 108 of the City Zoning Ordinance (C20)
re posting of signs giving notice of certain zoning applications
Voting:
10-0 (By Consent)
Council Members Voting Aye:
Harry E. Diezel, Robert M Dyer, Barbara M Henley, Vice Mayor Louis R.
Jones, Reba S. McClanan, Mayor Meyera E. Oberndorf John E. Uhrin, Ron
A. Villanueva, Rosemary Wilson and James L. Wood
Council Members Voting Nay:
None
Council Members Absent:
William R. "Bill" DeSteph
August 26, 2008
,I II
1 AN ORDINANCE TO AMEND SECTION 108 OF THE
2 CITY ZONING ORDINANCE BY ESTABLISHING
3 REQUIREMENTS FOR THE POSTING OF SIGNS
4 GIVING NOTICE OF CERTAIN ZONING
5 APPLICATIONS
6
7 Section Amended: City Zoning Ordinance Section
8 108
9
10 Whereas, the public necessity, convenience, general welfare and good zoning
11 practice so require;
12
13 BE IT ORDAINED BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF VIRGINIA
14 BEACH, VIRGINIA:
15
16 That Section 108 of the City Zoning Ordinance IS hereby amended and
17 reordained to read as follows:
18
19 Sec. 108. Posting of signs relating to applications for rezoning, etc.
20
21 (a) In any case in which a property owner or other authorized person petitions
22 the city council for the approval of any application seeking a rezoning, conditional use
23 permit, approval of a PD-H1 or PD-H2 land use plan, resolution pertaining to a
24 nonconforming use or structure, subdivision or floodplain variance or reconsideration of
25 conditions, the applicant shall erect, on the property which is the subject of the
26 application or within the unimproved portion of the abuttinq public street, a sign of a
27 size, type and lettering approved by the planning director. All such siqns shall be
28 posted and maintained in such manner as to be unobscured bv veqetation or other
29 obstructions. One such sign shall be posted within ten (10) feet of the paved portion or,
30 if present. the sidewalk of every public street adjoining the property or in such alternate
31 location or locations as may be prescribed by the planning director. Such sign shall be
32 erected not less than thirty (30) days before the planning commission hearing, or if
33 none, the city council hearing, and shall state the nature of the application and date and
34 time of the hearing. Such signs may not be removed until the city council has acted
35 upon the application, and shall be removed no later than five (5) days thereafter. In any
36 case in which the planning commission or city council determines that the requirements
37 of this section have not been met, the application shall be deferred; provided, however,
38 that the city council may, for any other appropriate reason, deny such application.
39
40 (b) Applications before the board of zoning appeals shall be subject to the
41 requirements of subsection (a) hereof. Any application in which such requirements have
42 not been met may be deferred or denied by the board.
43
" I II
44 (c) No person havinq actual notice of an application for which a siqn is
45 required to be posted by this section. or to whom a written notice meetinq the
46 requirements of Virqinia Code Section 15.2-2204 has been mailed. shall contest the
47 validity of any city council action by reason of the applicant's failure to comply with the
48 provisions of this section. Nothinq in this subsection shall be construed to create any
49 new riqht to contest the action of the city council.
50
Adopted by the Council of the City of Virginia Beach, Virginia, on this 26th day of
August, 2008.
2
II! II
- 54 -
Item V-L.6.b.
ITEM 57953
PLANNING
The following registered in SUPPORT:
Attorney Stephen R. Romine, 999 Waterside Drive, Phone: 441-8921, represented Verizon Wireless
Steven LaPorta, 936 Rio Grande Drive, Phone; 426-8128, resident of Lago Mar
Attorney Lisa Murphy, 283 Constitution Drive, Suite 525, Phone; 217-4537, represented New Cingular
Wireless, PCS, LLC t/a A T & T
Veronica Guagenti, 913 Estrella court, Phone: 426-53329, represented Lago Mar citizens
A MOTION was made by Council Lady Henley, seconded by Councilman Dyer, to ADOPT, without
modification of the P-I District recommended by the Planning Commission:
Ordinance to AMEND the City Zoning Ordinance (CZO) regulations
pertaining to communication towers and building-mounted antennas,
(deferred by City Council on July 8, 2008).
Upon SUBSTITUTE MOTION by Councilman Wood, seconded by Council Lady Wilson, City Council
ADOPTED the Planning Commission's Version with modification to the P-I allowing towers in open
space and natural areas by Conditional Use Permit:
Ordinance to AMEND the City Zoning Ordinance (CZO)' regulations
pertaining to communication towers and building-mounted antennas,
Voting: 6-4
Council Members Voting Aye:
Harry E, Diezel, Robert M Dyer, Vice Mayor Louis R. Jones" Ron A. Villanueva,
Rosemary Wilson and James L. Wood
Council Members Voting Nay:
Barbara M Henley, Reba S. McClanan, Mayor Meyera E. Oberndorf
and John E. Uhrin
Council Members Absent:
William R. "Bill" DeSteph
August 26, 2008
III II II
1 AN ORDINANCE AMENDING CITY ZONING ORDINANCE
2 REGULATIONS PERTAINING TO COMMUNICATION
3 TOWERS AND BUILDING-MOUNTED ANTENNAS,
4 INCLUDING DEFINITIONS, PREAPPLlCATION AND
5 APPLICATION REQUIREMENTS, LOCATIONAL,
6 LANDSCAPING AND OTHER REQUIREMENTS, AND
7 ZONING DISTRICTS WHERE PERMITTED
8 SECTIONS AMENDED: CITY ZONING ORDINANCE
9 99111,232,301,401,501,601,701,801,901,1001,
10 1501, 1511 AND 1521
11
12
13 WHEREAS, the public necessity, convenience, general welfare and good zoning
14 practice so require;
'15
16 BE IT ORDAINED BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF VIRGINIA
17 BEACH, VIRGINIA:
18 That Sections 111, 232, 301, 401, 501, 601, 701, 801, 901, 1001, 1501, 1511
19 and 1521 of the City Zoning Ordinance, pertaining to communication towers and
:~o building mounted antennas, be, and hereby are, amended and reordained to read as
:~1 follows:
:~2 Sec. 111. Definitions
:~3
:~4 Antenna, building mounted. An antenna Any structure or device affixed to a
:~5 building or other structure, except a water tank, for the purpose of supporting broadcast
26 equipment of any frequency or electromagnetic wave, or any similar system of wires,
27 poles, rods, reflecting discs or similar devices used for the transmission or reception of
:~8 electromagnetic waves. The term does not include communication towers, antennas
:~9 mounted on communication towers, home satellite dishes, or television or radio
30 antennas used primarily for the benefit of the occupants of, or visitors to, property on
31 which such antennas are located.
32
33
34 Communication tower. 1\ tower of any size which supports communication
35 (broadcast or receiving) equipment utilized by commercial, government, or other public
36 and quasi public users. Any pole. spire or other structure, includinq supportinq lines,
37 cables. wires. braces, masts or other appurtenances, intended or used primarily for the
38 purpose of affixinq antennas or other wireless telecommunications equipment or for
39 housinq such equipment. +Ris The term does not include private home use of satellite
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
159
130
(31
i32
d3
(34
i35
136
i37
i38
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
:1 II
dishes and television antennas or Qy amateur radio operators as licensed by the
Federal Communications Commission.
Wireless telecommunication eauioment includes antennas and their
appurtenances used for purposes of providinq wireless telecommunication services.
Sec. 207. Building-mounted antennas.
The following provisions shall apply to building-mounted antennas in all districts
in which they are permitted:
(a) Antennas shall, through the use of screening, colorization, placement,
design, or any combination thereof, be as visually unobtrusive as is reasonably
practicable;
(b) No antenna shall be located upon any building or structure less than fifty
(50) feet in height;
(c) No antenna shall extend to a height greater than twenty-two (22) feet above
the highest point of the building or structure to which it is affixed;
(d) No antenna shall be erected unless a professional engineer licensed in the
Commonwealth of Virginia certifies to the building official that the proposed antenna, or
array of antennas, complies with all applicable Federal Communications Commission
regulations, including, without limitation, regulations pertaining to the emission of radio
frequency radiation; and
(e) Buildings or other structures housing electronic equipment or other
equipment or materials used in connection with the operation of an antenna shall meet
all application setback and landscaping requirements.
Sec. 232.
Communication towers.
(a) I\pplication. Each application f-or a conditional use permit f-or a
communication tower shall include the follo'l.'ing inf-ormation in addition to the general
information required by this ordinance.
(1) Site plan or plan dra'lJn to scale specifying the location of tower(s), guy
anchors (if any), transmission building and other accessory uses, parking,
::lCcess, landscaped areas (specifying size, spacing and plant materials
proposed), fences, and adjacent land uses. The administr::ltor of
2
85 landsoape oervioos o\'1all review and approve tile landscaped areas shown
~~ ::G~;
~~ ~) :r:~=,a ::~:~~~:::: u: . e ~. '. ;~~ m. .~
90
91
92
~; =~;;;;~;., . .'
~~~ ~) ;;;;;;;;;~=~:::;::;
~
106
~ \;~ ~ :SP:C:iU\:::q:Ui:o:m:n:t:.
~';~ (1~ ::':n~~;,~~~~r~~d~~O~~u~, . -~
1\ 1
~\! ~~' '~~~ ~,!.:;r~
1\5
\\\ ~~~E~
120
~~ ~,~~~~i~i~;::~
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
3
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
(8)
,I II
For property lines not ~butting the ~bove uses or districts, the minimum
setb~ck requirement sh~1I be ~t le~st hA,enty five (25) f-oet unless ~ gre~ter
setb~ck is specified due to other circumst~nces ~s ~ condition of ~pprov~1.
More th~n one (1) to'Ner on ~ site shall be permitted, providing that all
setback, design, ~nd I3ndscape requirements are met.
Towers hA/o hundred (200) f-oet or less in height shall have ~ g~lv~nized
finish or be p~inted silver. HOIf/ever, if ~ny regul3tion of the Federal
I\vi~tion I\dministr~tion or Feder~1 Communic~tions Commission
contr~dicts this requirement, then th~t regul~tion sh~1I govern.
Towers more th~n two hundred (200) feet in height sh~1I be painted in
~ccord~nce '!lith regul3tions by Feder~1 Communications Commission
~nd/or the Feder~ll\vi~tion ^dministr~tion.
Towers shall be iIIumin~ted ~s required by the Feder~1 Communic~tions
Commission ~nd/or Feder~1 /\vi~tion ^dministr~tion. HO'Never, no lighting
sh~1I be incorpor~ted if not required by the Feder~1 Communic~tions
Commission ~nd/or the Feder~ll\\'iation I\dministr~tion.
L~ndsc~ping sh~1I be required as follows:
(i)
For towers two hundred (200) feet or less in height, at le~st one (1)
row of evergreen shrubs c~p~ble of f-orming a continuous hedge ~t
least five (5) feet in height sh~1I be provided with individu~1
plantings sp~ced not more th~n five (5) feet ap~rt ~nd ~t least one
(1) row of evergreen trees with ~ minimum c~liper of one ~nd throe
fourths (1 3/4) inches ~t the time of planting and spaced not more
th~n twenty five (25) feet ~p~rt sh~1I be provided 'Nithin fifteen (15)
feet of the perimeter of the setb~ck are~ required by items (1), (2)
or (3) ~bove.
(ii)
For towers more th~n two hundred (200) feet in height, in ~ddition
to the requirements for landsc~ping in (8)(i) ~bove, one (1) row of
deciduous trees, with ~ minimum caliper of tv..'O and one h~lf (2 1/2)
inches ~t time of planting and sp~ced not more than forty (40) feet
~part shall be provided within twenty five (25) feet of the perimeter
of the setback ~re~ required by items (1), (2) or (3) ~bo\'e.
(iii)
In lieu of the ~bove requirements, in special c~ses, including cases
where ~ required tree 'Nould be closer to the tower or to ~ guy wire
supporting the to\\'er th~n the height of the tree at m~turity, the
applicant may prepare a det~iled pl~n ~nd specifications for
landsc~pe ~nd screening, including pl::mtings, fences, walls,
topogr~phy, etc., to screen to':..ers and ~ccessory uses. The pl3n
4
7
'8
79
80
18~
\82
~83
~84
~85
~86
~87
~88
~89
~90
~9~
~92
~93
~94
~q5
~96
~97
~~8
~q9
2.'00
2.0~
2.02
2.03
2.04
2.05
2.06
2.07
2.08
2.09
2.~0
2.~~
2.~2
2~3
2~4
2~5
2~6
2~7
2~8
2~9
220
221
222
~
5
3
7
~8
29
.30
~3'\
2.32
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
2'~ '\
242
2,~3
244
2.~5
2;~6 ~
2;\7
2.~8
2;~9
2'50
25'\
252
253
254
255
2'56
251
258
259
260
26'\
262
263
264
265
266
267
~
6
I I
268 (a) PurlJose. The purpose of this section is to (1) facilitate the provision of
269 wireless communications services to the citizens and businesses of the City; (2)
270 minimize the risk of physical damaqe and other potential adverse impacts of
271 communications towers; (3) require, where commercially reasonable. the ioint use of
272 communications towers by providers of wireless telecommunications services so as to
273 avoid unnecessary proliferation of communication towers and related facilities; and (4)
274 allow the use of public property under circumstances in which such use (i) minimizes
275 the potential adverse visual and other impacts of communication towers and their
276 appurtenances: (ij) does not adversely affect the operation of public facilities such as
277 public safety communications facilities and water tanks for their primary purpose; and
2:78 (iij) conforms to applicable requirements pertaininq to the use of public property for
2:79 purposes of communication tower sitinq.
280
2~81 (b) PrealJlJlication conference. Prior to submittinq an application for a
282 conditional use permit for a communication tower, the applicant shall meet with the
283 Director of Planninq or his desiqnee in order to discuss:
284
285
286
~~87
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
~~g7
298
299
~~OO
301
302
303
304
305
306
(1 )
The feasibility of co-Iocatinq the proposed antenna facilities on an
existinq communication tower or other suitable structure. includinq
a publicly-owned facility. where such use will not adversely affect
the primary use of such facility;
(2)
The availability of suitable alternative sites. includinq publicly-
owned sites. for the proposed communication tower;
(3) Specific issues presented by the proposed application. includinq,
but not limited to. potential interference with qovernmental public
safety communications facilities. potential visual and other impacts
on nearby properties and means. if any. of eliminatinq or mitiqatinq
such potential impacts:
(4) The feasibility of camouflaqinq wireless telecommunications
equipment: and
(5) Such other matters as may be relevant to the application,
No application for a conditional use permit for a communication tower shall be
accepted by the Planninq Director unless a preapplication conference has been held.
7
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
3,22
323
3,24
325
3,26
3,27
328
3,29
3,30
3,31
332
3,33
334
~B5
3,36
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
345
II II II
(c) Application requirements. In addition to the information required by
Section 221, applications for a conditional use permit shall include the followinq items:
(1) A site plan or plan drawn to scale, showinq the location and desiqn
of the proposed tower, includinQ any accessory buildinqs or other
appurtenances, vehicular parkinq areas, access points, landscaped
areas, adiacent land uses. and any other information required by
the PlanninQ Director;
(2) A landscapinq plan showinq the type, size, number and location of
plant materials, includinQ existinq trees or other plant materials to
be used;
(3) A report from a professional enQineer licensed in Virqinia, under
seal. detailinQ the heiqht. desiqn and total anticipated capacity of
the proposed tower, includinq the number and type of antennas that
can be accommodated, and any other information deemed
necessary by the Buildinq Code Administrator to determine whether
such tower conforms to the requirements of the Virqinia Uniform
Statewide Buildinq Code. Such report shall also include a
certification from the enqineer that the tower is capable of
supportinq the total anticipated capacity of the tower, includinq all
appurtenances;
(4)
A certification from a professional enqineer licensed in Virqinia,
under seal. that all antennas or antenna arrays intended to be
affixed to the proposed tower comply with all applicable requlations
promulqated by the Federal Communications Commission
pertaininq to the emission of radio frequency radiation;
(5)
Where the proposed communication tower is to be located within
one-Quarter mile of any residential or apartment zoninq district or
use, an application shall be supplemented by the followinq
materials no later than thirty (30) days prior to the date of the public
hearinq before the Planninq Commission:
(A) Balloon tests, computer-qenerated photoqraphic simulations
showinq such tower in the proposed location. visibility maps,
and any other information deemed necessary by the
8
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
354
355
356 (6)
357
358
359
3t,30
3;)1
3;)2
3>d3
3134
3135
3136
3,t37
3138
3139
370
3,71
3,72
373
3,74
3,75
3,76
377
378
379
380
381
382
383
'" ,I I
Planninq Director to assess the visual impact of the tower
and ~sappurtenances: and
(8) A summary of the applicant's planned contacts with the
residents of the area reqardinq the proposed tower. The
applicant shall, as soon as practicable after such contacts
have occurred, notify the Planninq Director of the substance
of such contacts. includinq the neiqhborhoods or other areas
in which residents were contacted by the applicant:
Verifiable information satisfactory to the Planninq Director of the
lack of available space or structural capacity for the applicant's
wireless telecommunications equipment on (i) existinq towers,
buildinqs or other structures. (ij) sites on which existinq towers are
located, or (iij) sites on which the proposed tower would be less
visible from or located a qreater distance from residential or
apartment districts than the proposed location. Information
submitted to demonstrate such findinqs shall include, but not be
limited to:
(A) The absence of existinq towers or other structures meetinq
the heiqht. structural strenqth or other technical needs of the
applicant within the appropriate qeoqraphic area;
(8) Enqineerinq analyses demonstratinq that the applicant's
proposed equipment would cause interference with the
equipment on an existinq tower of other structure. or the
equipment on an existinq tower or other structure would
cause interference with the applicant's proposed equipment:
or
(C) Evidence that the rents. fees or other contractual provisions
required to co-locate the applicant's antenna equipment on
an existinq communications tower. or to construct a
communications tower on property to be purchased or
leased. would be commercially unreasonable in liqht of the
location of the proposed facilities:
9
384
385
386
387
388
389
390
391
392
393
394
395
396
397
3,98
399
400
401
402
403
404
4D5
406
407
4D8
409
410
411
412
413
414
415
416
417
418
419
420
421
422
I I
(7)
Where the proposed communication tower or antenna is to be
located within one (1) mile of an existinq or planned public safety
communications facility, an intermodulation study submitted by a
professional enqineer licensed in Virqinia. under seal. Such study
shall:
(A) Include the frequencies used by the City or other public
entity for public safety purposes at any site within one (1)
mile of the proposed facility;
(8) Analyze 2nd. 3rd, 5th and 7th order intermodulation
calculations usinq the maximum number of siqnals for each
order; and
(C) Include the frequencies used for each intermodulation order
calculation, the name of the channel used and the
bandwidth of each channel;
(8) A qeoqraphical map, with sufficient markinqs and detail. illustratinq
that the proposed communications equipment will not be located
within a 200 - foot buffer of the microwave path between any
existinq public safety communications sites: and
(9) Where the proposed wireless communication equipment is to be
located on a water tank or within the secure area of any water tank
site, a security plan showinq the times at which access to the
proposed equipment will be allowed, the identities of the persons
with authorized access to such facilities and such other information
as the Director of Public Utilities may require: provided. however. if
such security plan is incorporated in a lease between the City and
the applicant. this requirement shall be waived.
(d) Locational and de sian requirements. In determininq whether to qrant or
deny a conditional use permit application for a new or expanded communication tower
or other wireless telecommunication equipment. the City Council shall qive primary
consideration to the followinq factors:
(1) Whether the antennas or other equipment intended to be affixed to
such tower cannot be accommodated on an existinq or approved
10
423
424
425
426
427
428
429
430
431
432
433
434
435
436
437
438
439
440
441
442
443
444
445
446
447
448
449
450
451
452
453
454
455
456
457
458
459
460
461
I ,I
tower within such radius as is reasonably necessary to provide
adequate coveraqe and capacity for any of the followinq reasons:
(A) The planned equipment would exceed the heiqht or
structural capacity of the existinq or approved tower. and the
existinq or approved tower cannot reasonably be modified
so as to accommodate the planned equipment. as
documented by a licensed professional enqineer;
(B) The planned equipment would cause electromaqnetic
interference affectinq the usaqe of other existinq or
approved equipment. and such interference cannot
reasonably be prevented; or
(C) Existinq or approved communication towers or other
structures within such radius cannot accommodate the
planned equipment at a heiqht necessary for its proper
functioninq;
(2) Whether the proposed communication tower is desiqned
structurally and in all other respects to accommodate both the
planned equipment and comparable equipment of at least two (2)
additional users if the proposed tower is qreater than one hundred
(100) feet in heiqht or at least one (1) additional user if the
proposed tower is less than one hundred (100) feet in heiqht; and
(3) Whether the proposed application conforms. if applicable. to the
requirements of subsection (h). pertaininq to public safety
communications facilities and water tanks; and
(4) Whether the applicant has aqreed. in writinq, to allow the co-
location of the equipment of other wireless telecommunications
providers. to the extent of the capacitv of the proposed
communication tower. upon commercially reasonable terms
applicable to the location of the proposed tower.
(e) Construction requirements. All communication towers constructed or
expanded after the adoption of this section shall comply with or exceed all applicable
requirements of the Virqinia Uniform Statewide Buildinq Code. indudinq all model codes
11
,I ,I
462 incorporated therein. In addition. all such towers shall be non-illuminated and painted
463 such color or colors as to minimize visibility. unless otherwise required by Federal
464 Aviation Administration. Federal Communications Commission or other applicable laws
465 or requlations.
466
467 (f) Landscapina and screenina requirements. Landscapinq and screeninq
468 shall conform to the followinq standards:
469
470 (1) Existinq trees on the lot or within the leased area or other area
471 within the control of the applicant shall be preserved to the
472 maximum extent practicable;
473
474 (2) To the extent permitted by applicable setback requirements. towers
475 shall be located on a site so as to maximize the effectiveness of
476 trees as screeninq;
477
478 (3) For towers one hundred (100) feet or less in heiqht. at least one (1)
479 row of everqreen shrubs forminq a continuous hedqe at least five
4<30 (5) feet in heiqht. with individual plantinqs spaced not more than
4:31 five (5) feet apart. shall be provided. In addition. at least one (1)
432 row of everqreen trees with a minimum caliper of one and three-
433 fourths (1 %) inches at the time of plantinq and spaced not more
434 than twenty-five (25) feet apart shall be provided within fifteen (15)
435 feet of the perimeter of the required setback line;
436
437 (4) For towers more than one hundred (100) feet in heiqht. in addition
4038 to the requirements of subdivision (3) above. one (1) row of
4039 deciduous trees. with a minimum caliper of two and one-half (2 ~)
490 inches at time of plantinq and spaced not more than forty (40) feet
491 apart shall be provided within twenty-five (25) feet of the perimeter
492 of the required setback;
493
494 (5) All required landscapinq shall: (i) be installed in accordance with
495 established procedures usinq plant materials of qood quality. (ij) be
496 installed by the first plantinq season followinq the qrantinq of a
497 conditional use permit. unless appropriate surety in form acceptable
498 to the City Attorney is first provided. and (iij) at all times be
499 maintained in healthy and qrowinq condition.
500
12
Ei01
Ei02
Ei03
Ei04
505
506
507
508
509
510
E;11
E;12
E;13
514
E;15
Ei16
Ei17
Ei18
Ei19
Ei20
Ei21
Ei22
Ei23
Ei24
Ei25
Ei26
Ei27
Ei28
Ei29
Ei30
Ei31
Ei32
533
534
535
536
537
538
539
; ,I II
Existinq landscapinq meetinq the requirements of this section or other screeninq
may be used to satisfy the foreqoinq standards, which may be modified by the City
Council as it deems appropriate.
(q) Setback reauirements. The followinq setback requirements shall apply to
communication towers other than those affixed to electrical transmission line structures:
1. Minimum side and rear yard setbacks, as measured from the base
of the communication tower, excludinq its appurtenances, shall be
fifty (50) feet in residential. apartment. mixed-use and aqricultural
districts and twenty-five (25) feet in all other districts, provided,
however, that no tower shall be located closer to an existinq
residential or apartment structure than a distance equal to one
hundred twenty-five per cent (125%) of the heiqht of the tower and
provided further, that the minimum setback from any street. as
measured from the base of the tower, shall be fifty (50) feet.
Notwithstandinq the foreqoinq provisions, the City Council may
require a qreater or lesser setback when it deems such other
setback to be necessary or advisable to protect existinq or future
structures from damaqe, to enhance the screeninq effect of on- or
off- site trees or other veqetation, or for other appropriate reasons.
2. Minimum setbacks of equipment buildinqs shall be as specified in
the zoninq district requlations.
(h) Public safetv communications facilities; water tanks. In liqht of the special
security and public safety concerns applicable to sites occupied by City facilities such as
public safety communications facilities and water tanks, the followinq additional
requirements shall apply:
(1) Public safetv communications facilities. No private wireless
telecommunications facilities shall be allowed: (i) on sites with
public safety communications facilities or within the secure
compounds of such sites; (in in any location at which the Director or
Communication and Information Technoloqy determines, based
upon an intermodulation study required by subdivision (7) of
subsection (c), that the operation of the proposed wireless
telecommunications facilities would present a substantial possibility
of causinq interference with one or more public safety
13
Ei40
Ei41
Ei42
543
544
545
546
547
548
549
550
551
552
5,53
5,54
5,55
5,56
5,57
558
559
5dO
5.31
5d2
5d3
5'34
5~35
5t36
5t37
5t38
5t39
5'70
571
572
573
574
575
576
577
578
I ,I
communications facilities and cannot be satisfactorily mitiaated: or
(iii) in any location within a 200 - foot buffer of the microwave path
of any existina or future public safety communications microwave
facility.
(2) Water tanks. No private wireless telecommunications facilities
shall be allowed on any City water tank or within the secure area of
any water tank site unless there is a demonstrable public need for
wireless telecommunications services in the area to be served by
such facilities and there is no reasonable alternative site available.
In such cases. the applicant shall be required. as a condition of the
conditional use permit. to comply at all times with a security plan
approved by the City Council
(i) Other requirements. The followina additional reaulations shall apply to all
communication towers:
(1) No sianaae shall be permitted on any communication tower;
(2) All communication towers and their appurtenances shall comply
with applicable reaulations of the Federal Communications
Commission and Federal Aviation Administration. Where
reaulations and requirements of this section conflict with those of
the Federal Communications Commission or the Federal Aviation
Administration. the federal requirement shall aovern;
(3) All communication towers shall be subiect to periodic reinspection
by the Buildina Code Administrator. If any additions, chanaes or
modifications are to be made to the structural characteristics of the
tower, the Buildina Code Administrator shall have the authority to
require proof, throuqh the submission of enaineerina and structural
data. that the addition, chanqe or modification conforms to
structural wind load and all other requirements of the Uniform
Statewide Buildina Code; and
(4) Any communication tower or wireless telecommunications
equipment that are not in use for a period of one (1) year shall be
removed within ninety (90) days after notification by the Planning
Director. If not so removed, the City may contract for their removal
14
579
580
581
582
583
584
585
586
587
588
589
5nO
5!)1
592
593
594
595
596
597
598
599
600
601
602
61]3
6')4
6')5
6')6
61)7
608
609
610
611
612
613
614
615
,I II
and charqe the cost thereof to the owner of the communication
tower or wireless telecommunications equipment.
(j) Communication towers affixed to electric transmission line structures and
buildinq-mounted antennas shall be allowed as principal uses where so permitted in the
district requlations. provided that the followinq requirements are met:
1. Communication towers and buildinq-mounted antennas shall be
made of materials or painted in such manner as to match. to the
maximum extent practicable. the color of the structure upon which
they are affixed or mounted;
2. Communication towers shall not proiect above the top of the
structure to which they are affixed by more than twenty per cent
(20%) of the heiqht of the structure:
3. The owner of the communication tower or his aqent submits to the
Planninq Director a list containinq the name and last known
address of the owner of all abuttinq lots. as shown on the current
real estate tax assessment books or current real estate tax
assessment records. The Planninq Director shall thereafter notify
such property owners of the filinq of the site plan or buildinq permit
application seekinq approval of the communication tower. No such
site plan or buildinq permit shall be approved for a period of seven
(7) days from the mailinq of the notices; and
4. Buildinq-mounted antennas shall conform to the requirements of
Section 207
Sec. 301. Use regulations [Preservation District].
(a) Principal and conditional uses. The following chart lists those uses permitted
within the P-1 Preservation District. Those uses and structures shall be permitted as either
principal uses indicated by a "P" or as conditional uses indicated by a "C." No uses or structures
other than as specified shall be permitted.
TABLE INSET:
USE
P-1
Communication towers
C
15
6'16
6'17
6'18
619
620
621
622
623
624
625
626
627
628
629
630
6~31
6:32
6:33
6:~4
635
6:36
637
6:38
6:39
640
6.l1
642
6.B
6.l4
6.t5
6,l6
6.t7
648
649
650
651
652
653
654
655
656
657
658
659
660
661
i : II
Television or other broadcasting stations and line of sight relay
devices
C
Sec. 401. Use regulations [Agricultural Districts].
(a) Principal and conditional uses. The following chart lists those uses
permitted within the AG-1 and AG-2 Agricultural Districts. Those uses and structures in
the respective agricultural districts shall be permitted as either principal uses indicated
by a "P" or as conditional uses indicated by a "C." Uses and structures indicated by an
"X" shall be prohibited in the respective districts. No uses or structures other than as
specified shall be permitted.
USE
AG-1
AG-2
Buildinq-mounted antennas. subiect to
the requirements of Section 207
E
E
Communication towers meetinq
the requirements of Section 232m
E
E
Communication towers. except
as specified above
C
C
Television or other broadcasting stations,
cellular telephone antenna ~md line of sight
rel3Y devices
C
C
Sec. 501. Use regulations [Residential Districts].
(a) Principal and conditional uses. The following chart lists those uses
permitted within the R-40 through R-2.5 Residential Districts. Those uses and structures
in the respective residential districts shall be permitted as either principal uses indicated
by a "P" or as conditional uses indicated by a "C." Uses and structures indicated by an
"X" shall be prohibited in the respective districts. No uses or structures other than as
specified shall be permitted.
16
I i
662
Use
R40 R~O R~O R-15 ~10 ~ R-
7.5 50
R- R-5S R-2.5
5R
Communication
towers meetinQ
the requirements
of Section 232(j)
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
Communication
towers. except
as specified
above
C
C
C
C
C
C
C
C
C
C
Television or
other
broadcasting
stations, cellul~r
telephone
~ntenn~ aM
line of sight
rol~y dovices
C
C
C
C
C
C
C
C
C
C
6G3
6134
6135 Sec. 601. Use regulations [Apartment Districts].
61>6
61>7 (a) Principal and conditional uses. The following chart lists those uses
61>8 permitted within the A-12 through A-36 Apartment Districts. Those uses and structures
61>9 in the respective apartment districts shall be permitted as either principal uses indicated
67'0 by a "P" or as conditional uses indicated by a "C." Uses and structures indicated by an
67'1 "X" shall be prohibited in the respective districts. No uses or structures other than as
672 specified shall be permitted.
673
674
Use
A-12 A-18 A-24 A-36
J\ntennas, building mounted Buildinq-mounted antennas.
subiect to the requirements of Section 207
P
P
P
P
Communication towers meetinq
the requirements of Section 232(j) P P P P
Communication towers. except as specified above C C C C
Television or other broadcasting stations, cellul~r C C C C
17
II I il
telephone antenna and line of sight relay de'Jices
67'5
676
677 Sec. 701. Use regulations [Hotel District].
678
679 (a) Principal and conditional uses. The following chart lists those uses
680 permitted within the H-1 Hotel District. Those uses and structures in the district shall be
681 permitted as either principal uses indicated by a "P" or as conditional uses indicated by
682 a "C." Uses and structures indicated by an "X" shall be prohibited in the district. No uses
683 or structures other than as specified shall be permitted.
684
685
686
Use
H-1
Antenna, building mounted Buildinq-mounted antennas, subiect to the requirements
of Section 207
P
Communication towers meetino the requirements of Section 232(i)
E
C
Communication towers, except as specified above
Television or other broadcasting stations, cellul3r telephone antennas and line of
sight relay devices
C
6B7
6B8
6H9 Sec. 801. Use regulations [Office Districts].
6nO
6n1 (a) Principal and conditional uses. The following chart lists those uses permitted
6n2 within the 0-1 and 0-2 Office Districts. Those uses and structures in the respective GffiGe
6n3 Districts office districts shall be permitted as either principal uses indicated by a "P" or as
6!l4 conditional uses indicated by a "C." Uses and structures indicated by an "X" shall be prohibited
695 in the respective districts. No uses or structures other than as specified shall be permitted.
696
USE
0-1
0-2
1
Antennas, building mounted Buildinq-mounted antennas, subiect to the
requirements of Section 207
X
P
Communication towers meetinq the requirements of Section 232m
E
P
Communication towers, except as specified above
C
C
18
I I
Television or other broadcasting stations, cellular telephone antennas and
line of sight relay devices
C
C
697
698
699 Sec. 901. Use regulations [Business Districts].
700
701 (a) Principal and conditional uses. The following chart lists those uses permitted
702 within the B-1 through B-4K Business Districts. Those uses and structures in the respective
703 business districts shall be permitted as either principal uses indicated by a "P" or as conditional
704 uses indicated by a "C." Uses and structures indicated by an "X" shall be prohibited in the
705 respective districts. No uses or structures other than as specified shall be permitted.
706
707
USE B-1 B- B-2 B-3 B- B-4 B- B-
1A 3A 4C 4K
Antennas, building mounted Buildinq-
mounted antennas meetinq the X X P P P P P X
requirements of Section 207
Communication towers meetinq the E E E E E E E E
requirements of Section 232m
Communication towers. except as X C C C C C C X
specified above
Radio or television broadcasting stations X C C C C C C X
and line of sight relay devices
708
709
710 Sec. 1001. Use regulations [Industrial Districts].
i'11
712 (a) Principal and conditional uses. The following chart lists those uses
i'13 permitted within the 1-1 and 1-2 Industrial Districts. Those uses and structures in the
i'14 respective industrial districts shall be permitted as either principal uses indicated by a
715 "P" or as conditional uses indicated by a "C." Uses and structures indicated by an "X"
,'16 shall be prohibited in the respective districts. No uses or structures other than as
717 specified shall be permitted.
718
719
Use
1-1
1-2
Antennas. buildinq mounted Buildinq-mounted antennas meetinq the
requirements of Section 207
P
P
19
720
721
722
723
724
725
726
727
728
729
730
731
732
733
734
735
736
737
738
739
7'~0
7'41
7'42
7'43
7'44
7'45
7'46
7'47
7'48
7'49
7'50
751
752
753
754
755
756
757
758
759
760
,I ,I
Communication towers meetinq the requirements of Section 232(i)
.E
C
.E
C
Communication towers. except as specified above
Radio or television transmission, cellul3r telephone 3ntenn3 and relay
stations
C
C
Sec. 1501. Use regulations [RT-1 Resort Tourist District].
(a) The following chart lists those uses permitted within the RT-1 Resort Tourist
District as either principal uses, as indicated by a "P," or as conditional uses, as indicated by a
"C." Conditional uses shall be subject to the provisions of Part C of Article 2 (section 220 et
seq.). No uses or structures other than those specified shall be permitted. All uses, whether
principal or conditional, should to the greatest extent possible adhere to the provisions of the
Oceanfront Resort Area Design Guidelines.
Use
RT-1
Building-mounted antennas meetinq the
requirements of Section 207
p
Sec. 1511. Use regulations [RT-2 Resort Tourist District].
(a) The following chart lists those uses permitted within the RT-2 Resort Tourist
District as either principal uses, as indicated by a "P," or as conditional uses, as indicated by a
"C." Conditional uses shall be subject to the provisions of Part C of Article 2 (section 220 et
seq.). Buildings within the RT-2 District may include any principal or conditional uses in
combination with any other principal or conditional uses. No uses or structures other than those
specified shall be permitted. All uses, whether principal or conditional, should to the greatest
extent possible adhere to the provisions of the Oceanfront Resort Area Design Guidelines.
Use
RT-2
l\ntenn3S, building mounted Buildinq-mounted
antennas meetinq the requirements of Section 207
P
Communication towers
C
Radio and television broadcasting stations,
cellul3r 3ntenn3 3nd line of sight rel3Y devices
C
20
1 1
761
762
763
764
765
766
767
768
769
770
771
772
773
774
775
776
777
778
779
730
731
732
733
784
785
,I il
Sec. 1521. Use regulations [RT-3 Resort Tourist District].
(a) The following chart lists those uses permitted within the RT-3 Resort Tourist
District as either principal uses, as indicated by a "P" or as conditional uses, as indicated by a
"C." Conditional uses shall be subject to the provisions of Part C of Article 2 (section 220 et
seq.). Except for single-family, duplex, semidetached and attached dwellings, buildings within
the RT-3 District may include any principal or conditional uses in combination with any other
principal or conditional use. No uses or structures other than those specified shall be permitted.
All uses, whether principal or conditional, should to the greatest extent possible adhere to the
provisions of the Oceanfront Resort Area Design Guidelines.
Use
RT-3
/\ntenn3S, building mounted Buildina-mounted
antennas meetina the reauirements of Section 207
P
Communication towers
C
Radio and television broadcasting stations,
cellular ~mtenna and line of sight relny devices
p
Adopted by the Council of the City of Virginia Beach, Virginia, on this 26th day of
August, 2008.
21
, I II
- 55 -
Item V-L.6.c.
ITEM 57954
PLANNING
The following registered in SUPPORT:
Joan Salvati, 101 North 154th Street, Richmond, Phone: (804) 225-3440, Director - Chesapeake Bay
Local Assistance, represented the Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation.
The following registered in OPPOSITION:
Brad Martin, 2305 Bayville Road, Phone:460-6278
John Olivieri, 1213 Kiitiwake Court, Phone: (757) 961-0740\
Billy Garrington, 471 Southside Place
Attorney R. E. Bourdon, Pembroke One 5th Floor, Phone: 499-89761
Upon motion by Council Lady Wilson, seconded by Councilman Wood, City Council ACCEPTED the
PLANNING COMMISSION'S RECOMMENDATION TO DENY:
Ordinance to AMEND Appendix F ~ Chesapeake Bay Preservation Area
Ordinance, re inclusion of water surface area of a swimming pool in the
calculation of impervious cover
Voting: 10-0
Council Members Voting Aye;
Harry E. Diezel, Robert M Dyer, Barbara M Henley, Vice Mayor Louis R.
Jones, Reba S. McClanan, Mayor Meyera E. Oberndorj: John E. Uhrin, Ron
A. Villanueva, Rosemary Wilson and James L. Wood
Council Members Voting Nay;
None
Council Members Absent:
William R. "Bill" DeSteph
August 26, 2008
Item V.M.
- 56 -
ITEM 57955
BY CONCENSUS, City Council RESCHEDULED the following APPOINTMENTS:
BEACHES AND WATERWAYS COMMISSION
COMMUNITY MEDICAL ADVISORY COMMISSION
HISTORIC SITES ORGANIZING COMMITTEE
HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSION
REVIEW AND ALLOCATION COMMITTEE
WETLAND'S BOARD
WORKFORCE HOUSING ADVISORY COMMITTEE
II I II II
August 26, 2008
i i
i I
- 57 -
Item v'M.1.
ITEM 57956
APPOINTMENTS
Upon NOMINATION by Vice Mayor Jones, City Council REAPPOINTED:
Michael Louis Cullipher
4 year term
10/1/08 - 09/30/12
A GRICULTURAL AD VISOR Y COMMISSION
Voting: 10-0
Council Members Voting Aye:
Harry E. Diezel, Robert M Dyer, Barbara M Henley, Vice Mayor Louis R.
Jones, Reba S. McClanan, Mayor Meyera E. Oberndorf John E. Uhrin, Ron
A. Villanueva, Rosemary Wilson and James L. Wood
Council Members Voting Nay:
None
Council Members Absent:
William R. "Bill" DeSteph
August 26, 2008
,I ,I
- 58 -
Item V.M.2.
ITEM 57957
APPOINTMENTS
Upon NOMINA TION by Vice Mayor Jones, City Council REAPPOINTED:
Dr. W. Andrew Dickson, Jr.
5 year term 09/01/08 - 08/31/13
Delegate Harry R. Purkey
5 year term 09/01/08 - 08/31/13
COMMUNITY MEDICAL ADVISORY COMMISSION
Voting; 10-0
Council Members Voting Aye:
Harry E. Diezel, Robert M Dyer, Barbara M Henley, Vice Mayor Louis R.
Jones, Reba S. McClanan, Mayor Meyera E. Oberndorf. John E. Uhrin, Ron
A. Villanueva, Rosemary Wilson and James L. Wood
Council Members Voting Nay:
None
Council Members Absent:
William R. "Bill" DeSteph
August 26, 2008
I I
I I
- 59 -
Item V.M.3.
ITEM 57958
APPOINTMENTS
Upon NOMINATION by Vice Mayor Jones, City Council REAPPOINTED:
Donald V. Jellig
4 year term
09/01/08 - 08/31/12
Jerrold L. Miller
4 year term
09/01/08 - 08/31/12
DEVELOPMENT AUTHORITY
Voting: 10-0
Council Members Voting Aye;
Harry E. Diezel, Robert M Dyer, Barbara M Henley. Vice Mayor Louis R.
Jones, Reba S. McClanan. Mayor Meyera E. Oberndorf John E. Uhrin, Ron
A. Villanueva, Rosemary Wilson and James L. Wood
Council Members Voting Nay:
None
Council Members Absent:
William R. "Bill" DeSteph
August 26,2008
, ,II
- 60-
Item v'M.4.
ITEM 57959
APPOINTMENTS
Upon NOMINATION by Vice Mayor Jones, City Council REAPPOINTED:
Nicholas F. Anoia
3 year term
09/01/08 - 08/31/11 J.
Michael Fentress
3 year term
09/01/08 - 08/31/11
Paula Knight
3 year term 09/01/08 - 08/31/11
AND,
APPOINTED:
Student Brian Mitchell
(Tallwood High School)-
2 year term 09/01/08 - 06/30/10
PARKS AND RECREATION COMMISSION
Voting: 10-0
Council Members Voting Aye:
Harry E. Diezel, Robert M Dyer, Barbara M Henley, Vice Mayor Louis R.
Jones, Reba S. McClanan, Mayor Meyera E. OberndorJ, John E. Uhrin, Ron
A. Villanueva, Rosemary Wilson and James L. Wood
Council Members Voting Nay:
None
Council Members Absent:
William R. "Bill" DeSteph
August 26, 2008
I ,I
- 61 -
Item v.M. 5.
ITEM 57960
APPOINTMENTS
Upon NOMINA TION by Vice Mayor Jones. City Council REAPPOINTED:
Joseph W. Hood
3 year term
09/01/08 - 08/31/11
Carol K. Weinstein
3 year term
09/01/08 - 08/31/11
AND,
APPOINTED:
Student Linh Nguyen
(First Colonial Legal Academy)-
2 year term
09/01/08 - 06/31/10
PUBLIC LIBRAR Y BOARD
Voting: 10-0
Council Members Voting Aye:
Harry E. Diezel. Robert M Dyer. Barbara M Henley, Vice Mayor Louis R.
Jones. Reba S McClanan. Mayor Meyera E. Oberndorf, John E. Uhrin, Ron
A. Villanueva, Rosemary Wilson and James L. Wood
Council Members Voting Nay:
None
Council Members Absent;
William R. "Bill" DeSteph
August 26, 2008
I il
- 62 -
Item v.M. 6.
ITEM 57961
APPOINTMENTS
Upon NOMINATION by Vice Mayor Jones, City Council REAPPOINTED:
Richard A. Algaban
3 year term
09/01/08 - 08/31/11
REVIEW AND ALLOCATION COMMITTEE
Voting: 10-0
Council Members Voting Aye:
Harry E. Diezel, Robert M Dyer, Barbara M Henley, Vice Mayor Louis R.
Jones, Reba S. McClanan, Mayor Meyera E. Oberndorf, John E. Uhrin, Ron
A. Villanueva, Rosemary Wilson and James L. Wood
Council Members Voting Nay:
None
Council Members Absent:
William R. "Bill" DeSteph
August 26, 2008
I II
- 63 -
Item v.M. 7.
ITEM 57962
APPOINTMENTS
Upon NOMINATION by Vice Mayor Jones, City Council REAPPOINTED:
Molly P. Brown
5 year term
10/01/08 - 09/30/13
Stephen Vinson
5 year term
10/01/08 - 09/30/13
AND
APPOINTED,
Jeff Marks
5 year term 1
0/01/08 - 09/30/13
Patrick Shuler
5 year term
10/01/08 - 09/30/13
Barbara M. Wolcott,
AS ALTERNA TE
5year term
10/01/08 - 09/30/13
WETLANDS BOARD
Voting: 10-0
Council Members Voting Aye:
Harry E. Diezel, Robert M Dyer, Barbara M Henley, Vice Mayor Louis R.
Jones, Reba S. McClanan, Mayor Meyera E. Oberndorf, John E. Uhrin, Ron
A. Villanueva, Rosemary Wilson and James L. Wood
Council Members Voting Nay:
None
Council Members Absent:
William R. "Bill" DeSteph
August 26, 2008
- 64-
Item v'M.8
ITEM 57963
APPOINTMENTS
Upon NOMINATION by Vice Mayor Jones, City Council REAPPOINTED:
Robert S. Miller
4 year term
10/01/08 - 09/30/13
Ronald Ripley
4 year term
10/01/08 - 09/30/13
WORKFORCE HOUSING ADVISORY COMMITTEE
Voting; 10-0
Council Members Voting Aye:
Harry E. Diezel, Robert M Dyer, Barbara M Henley, Vice Mayor Louis R,
Jones. Reba S. McClanan, Mayor Meyera E. Oberndorf. John E. Uhrin, Ron
A. Villanueva, Rosemary Wilson and James L. Wood
Council Members Voting Nay:
None
Council Members Absent:
William R. "Bill" DeSteph
August 26, 2008
I ,I
- 65 -
Item V. O.
ITEM 57964
NEW BUSINESS
Upon motion by Councilman Uhrin, seconded by Councilman Dyer, City Council
CANCELLED all City Council Sessions of November 4 and 11, 2008.
Voting: 9-0
Council Members Voting Aye:
Harry E. Diezel, Robert M Dyer, Barbara M Henley, Vice Mayor Louis R.
Jones, Reba S. McClanan, Mayor Meyera E. Oberndorf John E. Uhrin, Ron
A. Villanueva, and Rosemary Wilson
Council Members Voting Nay:
None
Council Members Absent;
William R. "Bill" DeSteph and James L. Wood
August 26, 2008
I II
- 66-
Item V. o.
ADJOURNMENT
ITEM # 57965
Mayor Meyera E. Oberndorf DECLARED the City Council Meeting ADJOURNED at 8:56 P.M.
l::2J?-~_--c2~fj~-~
Beverly 0. Hooks, CMC
Chief Deputy City Clerk
------~
uth Hodges Fraser, MMC
City Clerk
Meyera E. Oberndorf
Mayor
City of Virginia Beach
Virginia
August 26, 2008
- 66-
Item V. o.
ADJOURNMENT
ITEM # 57965
Ii i II II
Mayor Meyera E. Oberndorf DECLARED the City Council Meeting ADJOURNED at 8:56 P.M.
az~___~~_~_~~
Beverly 0. Hooks, CMC
Chief Deputy City Clerk
--~--!)~
Oberndorf
uth Hodges Fraser, MMC
City Clerk
City of Virginia Beach
Virginia
August 26, 2008
I I
; I
rstamendmentcenter.org: Religious Liberty in Public Life - Free-exercise Clause Topic
I I I I I
Page 1 0 -' 3
~ First Anlendnlent Center ,';WWfll,t.H1H'ndmenlc8r1t81 or~
D
D
cas.. &
r..ourc..
Home> Topics> Religious liberty> Free-exercise clause> RLUIPA, religious bUildings & zoning
Overview >
By John Ferguson
Contributing writer
As its name suggests, the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons
Act of 2000 (RLUIPA) 1 was passed by Congress in an effort to protect the
religious rights of prisoners and of people who wish to use property for
religious purposes when zoning laws forbid such uses. ~
Yet from its inception state and local governments have repeatedly
challenged the law's constitutionality in court. Many judges hearing these
challenges have ruled that the law is constitutional, J but increasingly,
federal appeals courts are split on the issue.
The language of RLUIPA is surprisingly clear. It requires, "No government
shall impose or implement a land use regulation in a manner that imposes a
substantial burden on the religious exercise of a person, including a religious
assembly or institution," unless the government can demonstrate that it has
a "compelling governmental interest" in the regulation and there is no less-
burdensome method of meeting that interest. The law goes on to provide
similar restrictions on "substantial burden on the religious exercise of a
person residing in or confined to an institution." 4
Both the language and the legal concepts described closely track RLUIPA's
ideological predecessor, the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA),
which was held unconstitutional by the Supreme Court in 1997. While some
states passed additional protection for religious conduct, Congress passed
RLUIPA as an effort to provide protections at the federal level.
Land-use and law enforcement groups responded swiftly to RLUIPA's
passage. Lawsuits claiming RLUIPA violated the establishment clause were
filed, with mixed results. Conflicting rulings in the circuit courts made U.S.
Su preme Cou rt intervention necessa ry.
The 2004-2005 Supreme Court term resolved some of these issues.
Although the Court denied certiorari in June 2005 to a Virginia prisoner in
the case of Bass v. Madison, it did agree to hear a strikingly similar case -
Cutter v. Wilkinson.
Cutter concerned claims by prisoners that Ohio prison regulations denying
them access to religious literature and the opportunity to conduct religious
SEARCH MORE
I
I
free-exercise
clause issues>
Workplace religious
liberty
RLUIPA, religious
buildings & zoning
Blue laws
Prisoners' rig hts
http://www . firstamendmentcenter . org/rel_liberty /free _exercise/topic .aspx?topic=religious _buildings
8/28/2008
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rstamendmentcenter.org: Religious Liberty in Public Life - Free-exercise Clause Topic
services violated RLUIPA. The state argued that the RLUIPA provision
involving prisoners was unconstitutional under the establishment clause. The
Court unanimously backed RLUIPA.
Page 2 0 ;' 3
Though Cutter did not concern RLUIPA's land-use provisions, both the
prisoner and land-use portions of RLUIPA share much the same language.
This similarity leads many to believe that the Court's rationale in the
prisoner context will readily be usable in the land-use arena. That is why the
Court's unanimous decision upholding RLUIPA in Cutter is viewed as good
news to those hoping to rely on RLUIPA in various zoning disputes.
Many scholars say this guidance suggests that courts could reasonably find
all of RLUIPA constitutional.
Updated August 2008
Notes
1 42 U.S.C. sections 2000cc to 2000cc-5.
2 See 146 Congressional Record 5.7774, 7775.
3 Decisions upholding RLUIPA include Mayweathers v. Newland, 314 F.3d
1062 (9th Cir. 2002), cert. denied, Oct. 6, 2003; Charles v. Verhagen, 220
F.Supp.2d 955 (W.D. Wis. 2002), upheld on appeal (7th Cir. Oct. 30, 2003);
Freedom Baptist Church v. Middletown, 204 F. Supp. 2d 857 (E.D.Pa. 2002);
Johnson v. Martin, 223 F.Supp.2d 820 (W.D. Mich. 2002); and Gerhardt v.
Lazaroff, 221 F.Supp.2d 827 (S.D. Ohio 2002). Additionally, in the prison-
rights case of Marria v. Broaddus, a federal district court in New York
observed that neither side in that case disputed the constitutionality of
RLUIPA and that the court therefore assumed it was constitutional. 2003
U.s. Dist. LEXIS 13329 (S.D.N.Y. July 31, 2003). Although a federal district
court ruled in Ghashiyah v. United States that RLUIPA's prisoner-rights
provisions were unconstitutional, the court noted, "A number of courts have
addressed the issue of whether RLUIPA is constitutional; most have held that
it is." 250 F. Supp. 2d 1016 (E.D. Wis. 2003).
442 U.S.c. sections 2000cc.
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irstamendmentcenter.org: Religious Liberty in Public Life - Free-exercise Clause Topic
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~ Print
Last system update: Thursday, August 7,2008115:43:50
http://www . firstamendmentcenter .org/rel_liberty /free _ exercise/topic.aspx?topic=religious buildings
8/28/2008