Here are some of the items the...
Here are some of the items the council discussed Monday night:
MOBILE HOME CONVERSION ORDINANCE
Councilwoman Connie Boardman recommended the council delay a vote
on a mobile home park law in order to give direction to City Atty.
Jennifer McGrath on how to draft the ordinance dealing with the
conversion of parks.
Current law allows park owners to pay mobile home residents as
little as $5,000 a piece if the park owner decides to sell the park
or convert it to a different use. Boardman wants to introduce
legislation that would require mobile home owners to be paid fair
market value for their homes. It would also put other safeguards on
place to protect mobile home residents.
WHAT IT MEANS
Boardman asked for the delay because Councilwoman Jill Hardy could
not attend the meeting, and she wanted a full council present for the
vote, she said. Although the move irritated some of the dozens of
mobile home residents who attended the meeting, the delay may work in
their favor.
Councilman Dave Sullivan has said in the past that he supported
the mobile home ordinance, as has Councilwoman Debbie Cook. The
ordinance needs four votes to pass.
CELL PHONE BAN
It is now a crime to be caught talking on a cell phone in most
areas of the city’s public libraries. The City Council approved the
final reading of this ordinance, which also makes it illegal for a
cell phone to ring at the library. The ban was needed to combat an
increase in rude behavior, Library Director Ron Hayden said.
WHAT IT MEANS
Get caught talking on the phone in the library and you could face
a $100 fine. The City Council also elected to give Hayden enforcement
powers and the ability to appoint library staff members to hand out
tickets. Fines would only be issued in the most extreme cases, Hayden
said.
DOWNTOWN BUSINESS IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT
Retail and restaurant owners now have a self-governing apparatus
to make improvements to Main Street.
On Monday, the council approved the formation of the Downtown
Business Improvement District, a self-taxing entity designed to bring
more tourists dollars to the Pier Plaza and Main Street area. The
council approved the formation after a majority of business owners
approved the new district. The city’s auto dealers and hotels use a
similar system.
WHAT IT MEANS
Based on their size, business owners must pay a special fee toward
improving the Downtown area. Businesses in the most highly trafficked
area of Downtown must pay $250 annually if their operation is less
that a 1,000 square feet, $500 for those between 1,001 and 5,000
square feet, and $1,000 for anything larger than 5,000 square feet.
The money will go toward cleaning up the Downtown sidewalks,
marketing, events and general maintenance and repair.
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