Portland City Hall (Circa 1915) |
There is a dispute about who first compared sausage-making to the legislative process in the 1800s, but it doesn’t matter; the essence still holds.
Two proposed amendments from Commissioner Mingus Mapps would thwart attempts by the city Planning and Sustainability Commission to restrict recommendations from the Portland Historic Landmarks Commission to the City Council, and to dilute the professional qualifications required of landmarks commission members.
One Mapps amendment would leave qualifications for landmarks commissioners the same as they have been for the past 50 years. The other would give both the landmarks commission and the PSC equal opportunities to advise the City Council on matters involving proposed new historic districts or reducing the size of current districts. Recent history makes it clear that the developer-driven PSC as now composed likely would never support historic preservation.
You can sign up to testify to the City Council via Zoom. Register here:
https://us06web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_S1s7hjhvSU2jtgSIb3VzsA
Another vital amend, this one from Commissioner Carmen Rubio, would revise rules for deciding when to demolish a landmark by removing a current standard allowing demolition when a building has “no reasonable economic value.” We believe the “no economic value” standard can promote intentional neglect by an owner wanting to demolish an important historical structure by ignoring routine maintenance.
The importance of the “no reasonable economic value” rule came to
the City Council’s attention recently in the case of the Yamaguchi Hotel
building that later served as home of the Blanchet House charity that provides
food and shelter for the needy. After
moving to a new building Blanchet House did little or nothing to maintain the
old building and then sought demolition saying it no longer had economic value.
There are eight proposed to the Historic Resources Code Project, but the three addressed here are the most important for the preservation community. They are numbered 3, 5 and 6 on the list.
Those of you willing to support proposed amendments 3, 5 and 6 can email your support to council members listed below. Don't wait; there is little time left. I could not find a working email address for Mayor Ted Wheeler.
Commissioner Carmen Rubio Comm.Rubio@portlandoregon.gov
Commissioner Dan Ryan CommissionerRyanOffice@portlandoregon.gov
Commissioner Mingus Mapps MappsOffice@portlandoregon.gov
Commissioner Joann Hardesty joann@portlandoregon.gov
No comments:
Post a Comment