►
Description
Meeting of the Oklahoma City Stakeholders Advisory Team Special Meeting - May 29, 2020 - Part 1. Orientation Meeting on development codes update.
C
C
Okay,
let's
get
started
again.
My
name
is
Lisa
Chronister
I'm,
the
assistant
planning
director,
if
I
haven't
met
you
previously
I'll
look
forward
to
meeting
you
in
person
and
the
next
time
we
get
together
and
I
want
to
thank
everybody
for
for
the
time
they
spent
already
and
preparing
for
this
meeting
and
welcome
everybody
to
this
inaugural
meeting
of
the
stakeholder
advisory
team
special
meeting.
C
There
are
a
few
announcements
regarding
how
this
virtual
meeting
will
work,
one
as
you've
been
advised.
This
meeting
is
being
recorded
if
the
videoconference
is
disconnected
at
any
time.
During
the
meeting,
the
meeting
will
be
stopped
and
reconvened
once
the
audio
and/or
video
connection
is
restored.
If
communications
are
unable
to
be
restored
within
30
minutes,
items
remaining
for
consideration
will
be
continued
to
Friday
June
19th
at
1:30
p.m.
be
a
videoconference.
C
Anyone
wishing
to
speak
under
public
comment.
Please
call
for
zero.
Five:
two:
nine
seven,
two
four
zero,
six
or
email
mark
dot
me
show
that's
ma:
RK
m
I,
SH
Oh
II
at
OKC
gov
speakers
will
be
allowed
three
to
comment
when
you
call
in
staff
will
be
muting
your
line.
Please
keep
your
lines
on
mute
until
you
are
recognized
to
speak
to
unmute
your
phone
press
star
six.
C
C
C
D
I'll
show
you
an
answer.
Sorry.
D
D
J
D
K
L
M
D
F
C
So,
to
start
with
the
basic
question
of
my
army
here
and
what
are
we?
What
are
we
doing
now
that
we
are
here?
Many
of
you
on
this
call
were
involved
in
either
the
Kline
OKC
update,
and/or
phase
1
of
the
code
update
project.
So
you
have
a
little
bit
of
this
background.
So
the
reason
and
we're
doing
this
project
is
to
implement
the
plan
OKC
recommendations,
plan
OKC
is
our
comprehensive
plan
that
was
updated
several
years
ago
and
that
plan
recommends
many
many
policies
to
to
completely
fulfill
the
plan.
C
So
we're
here
to
implement
the
final
KC
recommendations,
we're
here
to
improve
the
efficiency
and
outcome
of
development
and
I
know.
You
know
there
are
City
Council
members,
Planning,
Commission
members,
a
lot
of
professional
industry,
folks
developers,
contractors
on
this
call.
You
are
all
interested
in
making
development
the
best
it
can
be,
making
it
the
most
efficient.
C
It
can
be
and
making
sure
that
public
and
private
interests
get
the
best
possible
product
so
including
the
efficiency
and
outcomes
of
development,
and
this
project
also
seeks
to
make
the
process
easier
to
navigate
and
administer
again
many
people.
Most
of
the
people
on
this
call
have
had
experience
in
what
it
takes
to
get
a
project
done.
C
C
C
It's
been
a
long
goal
if,
if
we
don't
achieve
that,
what
have
we
achieved
if
we
have
a
code
update
that
doesn't
have
broad
and
sincere
community
support,
that
would
be
a
missed
opportunity.
We
want
to
make
the
right
things
easy.
We
want
to
make
sure
we're
consistent
with
best
practices
and
as
we
get
into
the
code
update
in
particular
you'll
see.
There
are
some
legal
aspects
of
that
that
we
need
to
comply
with.
We
don't
want
back
to
right-size
code.
C
We
don't
want
a
code,
that's
too
simple
or
too
complicated
needs
to
be
right
for
Oklahoma
City
as
big
and
as
diverse
as
we
are.
It
needs
to
be
comprehensive
and
integrated
across
all
aspects
of
development.
We
need
clear
processes
again
back
to
making
it
making
a
code,
that's
user
friendly
and
they
can
direct
things
easy.
C
C
One
is
a
plan:
okay,
see
if
you,
if
you
haven't
I,
gotten
very
familiar
with
plan,
okay,
see
lately,
you
can
go
to
plan,
okay,
see
dot
o-r-g
to
review
the
plan,
there's
also
a
phase
one
code
diagnosis.
Several
of
you
were
involved
in
in
that
project
with
off
the
coast,
consultants
and
others.
It
looks
like
this.
It's
also
I've
also
put
a
copy
of
this
in
the
Microsoft
team's
folder
a
bit.
C
Everybody
on
this
column
has
been
invited
to,
but
the
code
diagnosis
basically
went
through
and
drilled
down
into
really
what
wasn't
working
and
what
they
needed
to
change.
So
hanukkah
see
the
code,
diagnosis
existing
ordinances,
but
this
is
this
very
thick
book
is
our
existing
zoning
and
planning
code.
So
that's
also
obviously
the
basis
for
our
work
and
then
stakeholder
input,
a
lot
of
which
we
have
gathered
today
and
more
of
which
what
gather
as
we
need
you
to
possible
so
back
to
you
know.
Well,
how
does
the
SAT
been
into
all
of
this
work?
C
Sat
is
in
many
ways
at
the
center
of
the
work,
so
throughout
the
process
will
be
bringing
to
you.
A
staff
and
consultants
will
be
bringing
information
to
you
to
consider
you'll,
be
asking
us
to
research
certain
things
and
provide
input
on
certain
aspects
of
the
code.
There
will
be
a
lot
of
information
we've
collected
from
focus
groups,
surveys,
public
outreach,
we'll
be
bringing
that
to
you
to
consider
at
the
guiding
documents
we
just
talked
about,
such
as
the
comprehensive
plan
and
the
code.
C
It
says,
then,
at
certain
times
a
what's
called
a
policy
committee
will
meet
to
further
advise
the
SAT.
The
caustic
committee
is
made
up
of
the
City
Council
and
Planning
Commission
members
who
are
on
the
stakeholder
advisory
team.
So
that's
councillors,
super-nice
and
stone
and
planning
commissioners
powers,
Cravens
and
Highsmith.
So
at
certain
points
on
certain
topics,
we'll
ask
them
to
drill
down
into
certain
topics
and
feed
those
back
into
the
SAT.
C
So
this
team
is
bound,
but
by
the
Oklahoma,
open
records
and
open
meetings
act.
That
means
we
meet
in
quorum.
That
means
we
publicly
notice
our
meetings.
We
keep
minutes,
we
maintain
records
and
recordings
of
those
the
cup.
These
are
public
meetings
and
public
has
been
invited.
I
can't
see,
I
think
there
are
some
public
members
on
the
call
right
now
we
ask
you
know
for
this.
For
us
to
achieve
the
guiding
principles
and
the
concrete
results,
we
ask
for
regular
meeting
attendance,
an
active
participation.
C
We
anticipate
that
the
team
will
meet
every
other
month,
we'll
talk
more
about
a
specific
meeting
scheduled
at
the
end
of
the
presentation,
but
the
for
the
first
month
we're
going
to
try
to
meet
a
couple
of
times
to
try
to
kick
start
at
some
things:
a
regular
meeting
attendance,
active
participation.
That
means
ask
questions,
review
materials
before
and
after
the
meeting
we're
going
to
ask
the
team
to
know
really
look
at
our
work.
C
Not
just
not
just
attend
the
meetings,
but
you
know
really
look
at
hey
and
we
assess
the
current
code
correctly
in
your
opinion.
Well,
we
bring
forth
drafts
of
what
the
new
code
might
look
like.
Do
you
agree
with
the
structure?
The
components
do
you
think
the
graphics
are
where
they
need
to
be?
Do
you
think
the
maps
are
communicating
what
they
need
to
communicate
do
does
it.
C
The
staff
and
the
consultant
we're
gonna,
try
really
hard
not
to
use
too
much
jargon,
but
there
are
times
throughout
the
process
where
we're
going
to
get
pretty
technical,
and
we
won't
know
if
we're
getting
too
technical.
Unless
somebody
asks
a
question
and
says:
hey
I,
don't
understand
this
terminology,
I,
don't
understand
this
concept.
Please
explain
it
because
that's
a
cue
to
us
that
we're
not
communicating
effectively,
so
please
don't
be
shy.
I'll
probably
regret
this
later,
but
I
do
think.
C
When
your
colleagues
and
you
know
other
developers,
other
contractors
and
their
professional
service
groups
that
you
work
with
when
they
ask
you
hey,
tell
me
about
the
new
code:
hey
I,
don't
understand
what
why
we're
changing
this
thing.
We
want
you
to
be
able
to
reply
and
hey.
There
are
very
good
reasons
why
we
did
that.
Let
me
tell
you
why,
as
a
way
of
building
support
to
the
various
stakeholder
groups,.
C
So
with
that
background,
I'm
now
going
to
invite
everybody
to
introduce
themselves,
tell
us
your
name,
your
industry
or
area
of
expertise
and
then
I'll,
ask
everybody
and
to
succinctly
answer
the
question:
what's
the
most
important
thing
the
development
codes
update
to
accomplish
and
we
are
going
to
go
in
reverse
alphabetical
order
and
to
that
end,
I
passed
mr.
mark
sits
down
to
start
us
on.
Please.
N
Hi
everyone,
my
name,
is
Mark
zigzoo
I,
am
the
director
of
urban
planning
for
Johnson
and
associates?
Were
engineering
planning
and
surveying
company
here
the
last
questions,
kind
of
loaded
and
hard
to
come
up
with
just
one
thing,
so
the
things
I've
been
thinking
about
recently
that
I'd
love
to
see
accomplished
would
be
an
elimination
of
minimum
parking
requirements,
consolidation
of
urban
design
committees
and
anything
we
can
do
to
encourage
small-scale
incremental
development
in
the
core
without
making
it
more
expensive.
C
O
Yes
mark
today,
Universal
development,
I,
would
say
the
most
important
thing
when
addressing
these
code
updates
is
just
making
sure
that
we
revisit
the
current
codes
or
restrictions
that
we
have.
That
would
impact
one
group
of
people,
maybe
more
than
what's
evident
on
the
surface.
So
looking
at
some
of
the
the
zoning
ordinances
we
have
in
place
currently
and
it's
in
whether
they
are
appropriate.
P
Brice
Thompson
owner
of
court
construction-
we
are
a
commercial
general
contractor.
I
would
probably
say
for
me
what
the
day
is
to
make
the
process
clear
and
easy
for
somebody
to
figure
out
how
to
walk
through
to
create
opportunities
for
people
that
might
not
otherwise
take
on
the
challenge,
because
they
don't
know
what
the
wall.
No
there's
a
lot
of
good
people
out
there
with
great
ideas,
but
probably
don't
execute
a
little
bit
so
he'll,
be
mine.
G
E
B
Hi
I'm
Emily
Pomeroy
I'm,
a
lawyer
at
the
Center
for
Economic
Development
law,
we're
a
law
firm
that
represents
the
public
side
of
public-private
redevelopment
projects
around
the
state
and
a
lot
here
in
Oakland
I.
Think
an
important
part
of
the
an
update
to
the
code
would
be
one
that
promotes
equity
and
sustainability.
B
T
F
S
Yeah,
my
name
is
Marc
Livingston
I'm,
a
developer
and
builder
I've,
built
and
developed
in
four
different
states,
and
what
I'd
like
to
see
is
make
sure
that
we
keep
affordability
in
mind
through
this
process.
Also,
the
timing
of
how
long
it
takes
to
get
projects
through
city
for
approval
and
then
once
they're
under
development,
the
timing
of
inspections
and
then
the
last
thing
would
be
as
the
code
changes
making
sure
that
that's
communicated
out
there
to
the
developers
and
contractors
and
builders
not
trial
by
error.
M
C
O
W
F
J
Asa
Highsmith
I
am
Ward
six
planning
Commissioner,
also
an
architect
I
think
I've
got
a
I've,
got
a
whole
bunch
of
goals
for
this,
but
if
I
was
gonna
rank
them,
I
think
my
most
important
goal
would
be
us
finding
a
more
equitable
definition
of
what
a
neighborhood
is.
I,
don't
think
single-family
is
as
a
monoculture
in
the
way
that
we
build
it
is,
is
really
the
right
way
to
move
forward
as
a
city.
So
I'd
like
to
see
us
consider
that.
F
L
Chris
blending
like
tip
on
the
part-time,
real
estate,
developer
and
I
think
a
goal
out
of
this
would
be
to
come
up
with
the
predictable
efficient,
fair
process
that
reduces
burden
both
on
developer
city
staff,
the
architects
and
engineers
that
bring
it
for
the
design
committees
and
the
Planning
Commission.
Just
make
it
easier
on
everybody
involved,
not
just
not
just
the
one
side
of
it.
G
Yes,
yes,
clay
farha,
here
our
firm
does
development
in
management
and
I
was
involved
in
the
former
processes.
I
just
want
to
keep
planning
in
planning
what
I
mean
by
that
is,
it
is
planning
for
future
development
and
I
do
have
some
problems
with
the
idea
that
on
the
outer
core
that
you
can't
even
own
it,
because
it
doesn't
have
utilities
etc
and
I
know
that
that
doesn't
go
well
with
the
whole
idea
of
interior
development.
But
again
planning
is
planning,
and
another
last
thing,
I
want
to
say
is.
B
G
B
M
M
Y
Dotson
a
partner
for
the
project
development
company-
probably
what
has
resonated
the
most
with
me?
What
everyone
has
said
is
the
idea
of
equitable
development.
I,
think
that
would
comment
on
maybe
some
of
aces
comments
that
he
had
earlier,
as
well
as
how
historically
I
think
our
code
has
prevented
other
types
of
groups
of
people
from
being
able
to
develop,
and
then
I
also
think
it
should
take
into
account
sustainability
in
regard
to
preserving
kind
of
the
rural
landscape
of
Oklahoma
City.
Z
Z
To
a
point
where
we
can
put
people
back
at
the
center
of
our
development
to
much
of
the
20th
century
and
into
this
current
century,
we
have
put
the
focus
on
development
on
the
automobile
instead
of
the
people
that
the
automobile
is
meant
to
serve
and
that
our
urban
built
environment
is
meant
to
serve
so
I.
Think
if
we
can
put
put
people
first
in
the
development
should
be.
Z
You
know
our
most
important
thing
and
related
to
that
I
think
being
able
to
have
development
by
right
so
that
we
can
incrementally
develop
incrementally
increase
the
usage,
the
intensity
of
our
current
built
environment.
That
ties
really
into
being
mindful
of
the
public
liability
that
we
are
putting
on
to
the
citizens
of
the
city
of
Oklahoma
City.
Z
As
we
develop
our
municipality,
we
need
to
be
able
to
pay
for
the
roads
and
the
pipes
and
the
services
that
our
citizens
rely
on
and
for
the
quality
of
life
that
we
have
come
to
expect
and
making
sure
that
our
development
codes
and
our
development
patterns
are
conducive
to
supporting
that,
so
that
we
are
not
faced
with
out
size
liabilities
that
the
tax
base
frankly
cannot
cover.
I.
Think
those
are
the
three
primary
areas
that
that,
hopefully,
this
review
will
will
succeed
in
accomplishing.
H
Friday
everybody
Scott
Cravens
Ward,
a
planning,
Commissioner
and
principal
managing
member
of
full
sail
capital
investment,
Weiser
II
firm
here
in
Oklahoma
City
and
like
a
lot
of
people
on
this
call,
apparently
a
part-time
developer,
a
real
estate
investor
as
president
of
Scott
Investment
Corp,
my
goals,
B
I,
think
this
echos
a
lot
of
what
people
had
said
so
I
get
to
piggyback
off
of
that.
Our
brilliance
I
think
this
process
should
be
very
predictable,
think
it
should
create
predictability
for
developers.
I
think
you
should
be
efficient.
H
H
T
There
I'm
councilperson
Cooper.
The
word
to
those
of
you
who
don't
know
word
to
southern
boundary
is
Northwest
23rd
Street.
We
go
all
the
way
up
to
Northwest
122nd.
Our
eastern
border
is
mostly
I-235,
sometimes
western,
and
then
our
western
border
is
meridian,
sometimes
like
Kepner,
sometimes
in
the
avenue.
T
T
Philosophy
and
English,
which
is
really
my
background,
those
those
those
areas
most
important
things
for
the
development
code
update
to
accomplish
for
me,
are
as
follows:
one
I
really
would
like
to
learn
which
will
require
a
lot
of
listening
on.
My
part
learn
a
little
bit
more
from
our
developers
to
hear
in
what
ways
we,
as
a
city,
staff
and
council,
can
help.
You
know
clear
out:
whatever
red
tape
seems
to
be
there.
T
If
there
you
know
so
efficiency
would
be
something
I'm
interested
in,
but
then
from
there
you
know,
I've
been
doing
my
homework
on
this
topic
for
a
while.
Now
and
you
know,
I
live
in
the
Paseo
and,
to
my
mind
there
was
a
moment
and
I'm
guessing.
This
is
gonna.
Disagree
with
some
of
the
book
on
this
this
meeting
and
that's
fine,
because
I
think
sometimes
growth
happens.