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HomeMy WebLinkAbout20031610.tiff BEFORE THE WELD COUNTY, COLORADO, PLANNING COMMISSION RESOLUTION OF RECOMMENDATION TO THE BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS Moved by Stephen Mokray, along with the addition of 2J, Development Standard #18, that the following resolution be introduced for passage by the Weld County Planning Commission. Be it resolved by the Weld County Planning Commission that the application for: CASE NUMBER: USR-1423 APPLICANT: Heather Weir PLANNER: Chris Gathman LEGAL DESCRIPTION: W2 SE4 Section 35, T9N, R66W of the 6th P.M.,Weld County, Colorado. REQUEST: Site Specific Development Plan and Special Use Permit for a dog kennel (not to exceed 60 dogs). LOCATION: North of and adjacent to WCR 98; 3/4 mile East of WCR 33. be recommended favorably to the Board of County Commissioners for the following reasons: 1. The submitted materials are in compliance with the application requirements of Section 23-2-260 of the Weld County Code. 2. It is the opinion of the Planning Commission that the applicant has shown compliance with Section 23-2-220 of the Weld County Code as follows: a. Section 23-2-220.A.1 -- The proposed use is consistent with Chapter 22 and any other applicable code provisions or ordinance in effect. Section 22-2-60 A.Goal 1 states "Conserve agricultural land for agricultural purposes which foster the economic health and continuance of agriculture." The property is designated as"High Potential Dry"and"Other" according to the 1979 Important Farmlands of Weld County Map. The kennel facility site will be located on only 10 acres of the site. The remaining 70 acres is designated in the federal CRP program. b. Section 23-2-220.A.2 --The proposed use is consistent with the intent of the A(Agricultural) Zone District. Section 23-4-40.H of the Weld County Code provides for kennels as a Use by Special Review in the A(Agricultural)Zone District. c. Section 23-2-220.A.3 --The uses which will be permitted will be compatible with the existing surrounding land uses. There is an existing single family residence located approximately 1/4 mile to the west of the site. Dryland crop parcels are located to the north,east and west of the site. d. Section 23-2-220.A.4 -- The uses which will be permitted will be compatible with future development of the surrounding area as permitted by the existing zoning and with the future development as projected by Chapter 22 of the Weld County Code and any other applicable code provisions or ordinances in effect, or the adopted Master Plans of affected municipalities. The site is not located within an urban growth boundary but is within the 3- mile referral area of the Town of Nunn. No referral response has been received from the Town of Nunn. e. Section 23-2-220.A.5 -- The application complies with Section 23-5 of the Weld County Code. Effective January 1, 2003, Building Permits issued on the proposed lots will be required to adhere to the fee structure of the County Wide Road Impact Program. (Ordinance 2002- 11) f. Section 23-2-220.A.6 --The applicant has demonstrated a diligent effort to conserve prime agricultural land in the locational decision for the proposed use. The site is classified as "High Potential Dry" and "Other" according to the 1979 Important Farmgrounds of Weld County Map. The dog kennel will be located on 10 acres of the site. The remaining 70 acres will remain in the Federal Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) program. ;f EXHIBIT 2003-1610 __ F Resolution USR-1423 Heather Weir Page 2 g. Section 23-2-220.A.7 -- The Design Standards (Section 23-2-240, Weld County Code), Operation Standards(Section 23-2-250,Weld County Code), Conditions of Approval and Development Standards ensure that there are adequate provisions for the protection of health, safety, and welfare of the inhabitants of the neighborhood and County. This recommendation is based,in part,upon a review of the application materials submitted by the applicant, other relevant information regarding the request, and responses from referral entities. The Planning Commission's recommendation for approval is conditional upon the following: 1. Prior to scheduling a Board of County Commissioners hearing: A. The applicant shall submit a detailed signage plan to the Weld County Department of Planning Services. (Department of Planning Services) B. The applicant shall either submit to the Weld County Department of Planning Services a copy of an agreement with the properties mineral owners/operators stipulating that the oil and gas activities have adequately been incorporated into the design of the site or show evidence that an adequate attempt has been made to mitigate the concerns of the mineral owners. (Department of Planning Services) 2. Prior to recording the plat: A. The plat shall be labeled USR-1423 (Department of Planning Services) B. The plat shall be amended to delineate the following: 1. The attached Development Standards. (Department of Planning Services) 2. Four (4) parking spaces shall be indicated on the plat. (Department of Planning Services) 3. Internal Traffic circulation shall be indicated on the plat. (Department of Planning Services) 4. The approved location of the access road. (Department of Planning Services) C. The applicant shall obtain a sign-off from the Nunn Fire Protection District if the applicant chooses to use an access less than 20-feet in width. Evidence of such shall be provided to the Department of Planning Services. (Nunn Fire Protection District) D. The applicant shall address the requirements of the Weld County RE-9 School District as outlined in the referral received February 28, 2003. Evidence of such shall be provided to the Department of Planning Services. (Weld RE-9 School District) E. The applicant shall submit a dust abatement plan to the Environmental Health Services, Weld County Department of Public Health & Environment, for approval prior to operation. Evidence of such shall be provided to the Department of Planning Services. (Department of Public Health & Environment) F. The applicant shall provide written evidence to the Weld County Department of Public Health and Environment that the applicant has contacted the Colorado Department of Agriculture (CDA), Division of Animal Industry. This contact shall determine if a license under the Pet Animal Care Facilities Act (PACFA), as defined under C.R.S. 35-80-101 through 117. C.R.S. is required, or provide evidence that the applicant is not subject to the PACFA requirements. (Department of Public Health & Environment) Resolution USR-1423 Heather Weir Page 3 G. The applicant shall submit a waste handling plan,for approval, to the Environmental Health Services Division of the Weld County Department of Public Health & Environment. The plan shall include at a minimum, the following: 1. A list of wastes which are expected to be generated on site (this should include expected volumes and types of waste generated). 2. A list of the type and volume of chemicals expected to be stored on site. 3. The waste handler and the facility where the waste will be disposed (including facility name, address and phone number). (Department of Public Health & Environment) H. The applicant shall enter into a Private Improvements Agreement according to policy regarding collateral for improvements and post adequate collateral for transportation and non-transportation requirements. The agreement and form of collateral shall be reviewed by County Staff and accepted by the Board of County Commissioners or improvements shall be completed prior to recording the plat. (Department of Planning Services) I. The applicant shall provide verification from the Federal CRP program that the proposed access road can be installed where indicated on the plat or the access road shall be moved to border the western boundary of the property. (Department of Planning Services, CRP) J. The applicant shall submit a screening plan for review and approval by the Department of Planning Services. The screening plan shall address the screening of the kennel and turn out from the adjacent properties. K. The applicant shall submit two (2) paper copies of the plat for preliminary approval to the Weld County Department of Planning Services. (Department of Planning Services) 3. Upon completion of 1. and 2. above the applicant shall submit a Mylar plat along with all other documentation required as Conditions of Approval. The Mylar plat shall be recorded in the office of the Weld County Clerk and Recorder by Department of Planning Services' Staff. The plat shall be prepared in accordance with the requirements of Section 23-2-260.D of the Weld County Code. The Mylar plat and additional requirements shall be submitted within thirty (30)days from the date of the Board of County Commissioners resolution. The applicant shall be responsible for paying the recording fee. (Department of Planning Services) 4. The Department of Planning Services respectively requests the surveyor provide a digital copy of this Use by Special Review. Acceptable CAD formats are .dwg, .dxf, and .dgn (Microstation); acceptable GIS formats are ArcView shapefiles, Arclnfo Coverages and Arclnfo Export files format type is .e00. The preferred format for Images is .tif(Group 4). (Group 6 is not acceptable). This digital file may be sent to maps(a)co.weld.co.us. (Department of Planning Services) 5. Prior to Release of Building Permits: A. Separate building permits shall be obtained prior to any construction. (Department of Building Inspection) B. A plan review is required for each building. Two complete sets of plans are required when applying for the permit. (Department of Building Inspection) 6. Prior to Release of Certificate of Occupancy: A. An individual sewage disposal system is required for the proposed modular home and proposed kennel facility and shall be installed according to the Weld County Individual Sewage Disposal Regulations. (Department of Public Health & Environment) Resolution USR-1423 Heather Weir Page 4 B. The septic system is required to be designed by a Colorado Registered Professional Engineer according to the Weld County Individual Sewage Disposal Regulations. (Department of Public Health & Environment) C. Buildings shall conform to the requirements of the 1997 Uniform Building Code, 1998 International Mechanical Code, 1997 International Plumbing Code, 2002 National Electrical Code and Chapter 29 of the Weld County Code. (Department of Building Inspection) D. Each building will require an engineered foundation based on a site-specific geotechnical report or an open hole inspection performed by a Colorado registered engineer. Engineered foundations shall be designed by a Colorado registered engineer. (Department of Building Inspection) E. Building height shall be limited to the maximum height allowed per UBC Table 5-B. Wall and opening protection and limitations shall be in accordance with UBC Table 5-A. Separation of buildings of mixed occupancy classifications shall be in accordance with UBC Table 3-B and Chapter 3. Setback and offset distances shall be determined by Chapter 23 of the Weld County Code. (Department of Building Inspection) 7. The Special Review activity shall not occur nor shall any building or electrical permits be issued on the property until the Special Review plat is ready to be recorded in the office of the Weld County Clerk and Recorder. (Department of Planning Services) r SITE SPECIFIC DEVELOPMENT PLAN SPECIAL REVIEW PERMIT DEVELOPMENT STANDARDS Heather Weir USR-1423 1. The Site Specific Development Plan and Special Use Permit is for dog kennel (not to exceed 60 dogs) in the A(Agricultural)Zone District, as indicated in the application materials on file and subject to the Development Standards stated hereon. (Department of Planning Services) 2. Approval of this plan may create a vested property right pursuant to Section 23-8-10 of the Weld County Code. (Department of Planning Services) 3. The on-site and off-street parking spaces including access drives shall be surfaced with gravel, asphalt, concrete or equivalent and shall be graded to prevent drainage problems. (Department of Public Works) 4. All liquid and solid wastes (as defined in the Solid Wastes Disposal Sites and Facilities Act, 30-20-100.5, C.R.S.)shall be stored and removed for final disposal in a manner that protects against surface and groundwater contamination. (Department of Public Health and Environment) 5. No permanent disposal of wastes shall be permitted at this site. This is not meant to include those wastes specifically excluded from the definition of a solid waste in the Solid Wastes Disposal Sites and Facilities Act, 30-20-100.5, C.R.S., as amended. (Department of Public Health and Environment) 6. Waste materials shall be handled, stored, and disposed in a manner that controls fugitive dust, blowing debris, and other potential nuisance conditions. (Department of Public Health and Environment) 7. Fugitive dust shall be controlled on this site. The facility shall be operated in accordance with the approved Dust Abatement Plan at all times. (Department of Public Health and Environment) 8. The facility shall adhere to the maximum permissible noise levels allowed in the Residential Zone District as delineated in 25-12-103, C.R.S. (Department of Public Health and Environment) 9. Adequate toilet facilities shall be provided for the employees & volunteers of the facility. (Department of Public Health and Environment) 10. Any septic system located on the property must comply with all provisions of the Weld County Code, pertaining to Individual Sewage Disposal Systems. (Department of Public Health and Environment) 11. All potentially hazardous chemicals must be stored and handled in a safe manner in accordance with product labeling. (Department of Public Health and Environment) 12. If applicable, the facility shall maintain compliance with PACFA rules and regulations. (Department of Public Health & Environment) 13. If applicable, the applicant shall obtain a Storm Water Discharge Permit from the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment, Water Quality Control Division. (Department of Public Health and Environment) 14. The applicant shall operate in accordance with the approved "waste handling plan". (Department of Public Health & Environment) 15. A permanent, adequate water supply shall be provided for drinking and sanitary purposes.(Department of Public Health & Environment) Resolution USR-1423 Heather Weir Page 2 16. Potential purchasers should be aware that groundwater may not meet all drinking water standards as defined by the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment. The Weld County Department of Public Health and Environment strongly encourages well users to test their drinking water prior to consumption and periodically there after. (Department of Planning Services, Department of Public Health & Environment) 17. Effective January 1, 2003, Building Permits issued on the proposed lots will be required to adhere to the fee structure of the County Wide Road Impact Program, Area 3. (Ordinance 2002-11) (Department of Planning Services) 18. The dogs shall be supervised at all times when outdoors. The dogs shall be confined within the fences of the kennel facility at all times. 19. The property owner or operator shall be responsible for complying with the Design Standards of Section 23-2-240, Weld County Code. 20. The property owner or operator shall be responsible for complying with the Operation Standards of Section 23-2-250, Weld County Code. 21. The property owner or operator shall be responsible for complying with the standards of 23-4- 400, Weld County Code. 22. Personnel from the Weld County Government shall be granted access onto the property at any reasonable time in order to ensure the activities carried out on the property comply with the Development Standards stated herein and all applicable Weld County regulations. 23. The Special Review area shall be limited to the plans shown hereon and governed by the foregoing standards and all applicable Weld County regulations. Substantial changes from the plans or Development Standards as shown or stated shall require the approval of an amendment of the Permit by the Weld County Board of County Commissioners before such changes from the plans or Development Standards are permitted. Any other changes shall be filed in the office of the Department of Planning Services. 24. The property owner or operator shall be responsible for complying with all of the foregoing Development Standards. Noncompliance with any of the foregoing Development Standards may be reason for revocation of the Permit by the Board of County Commissioners. Motion seconded by James Rohn r Resolution USR-1423 Heather Weir Page 3 VOTE: For Passage Against Passage Absent Fred Walker Michael Miller John Folsom John Hutson Bryant Gimlin Stephen Mokray Bruce Fitzgerald James Rohn Bernard Ruesgen The Chair declared the resolution passed and ordered that a certified copy be forwarded with the file of this case to the Board of County Commissioner's for further proceedings. CERTIFICATION OF COPY I, Voneen Macklin, Recording Secretary for the Weld County Planning Commission, do hereby certify that the above and foregoing resolution, is a true copy of the resolution of the Planning Commission of Weld County, Colorado, adopted on May 6, 2003. jated the 6th of May, 2003. uksw ce-L Voneen Macklin Secretary r 5 - - O3 Colorado. - " REQUEST: Site Specific Development Plan and a Special Review Permit for a business permitted as a use by right or accessory use in the Commercial Zone District(Food Warehouse) in the A(Agricultural)Zone District. LOCATION: West of 11'°Avenue and Southwest and adjacent to North 17 th Avenue. Sheri Lockman,Department of Planning Services presented Case USR-1424,reading the recommendation and comments into the record and requesting the deletion of 2J & L which have been completed. The Department of Planning Services is recommending approval of the application along with the Conditions of Approval and Development Standards. John Folsom asked about Condition of Approval #2C and the responses from the City of Greeley and the restrictions of that condition. Ms. Lockman stated that they do have to meet all requirements as they are getting water and sewer from the City of Greeley. James Rohn asked why the City of Greeley did not just annex the property immediately. Ms. Lockman stated that grants are the issue and the timing of those grants. For the project to obtain county grants it must still be in the county then to obtain city grants it will be annexed into the city. These are Federal Grants that are being applied for. Michael Miller asked if the ownership will remain with the county. Ms. Lockman indicated that the site will be handed over to the Food Bank. Don Warden, County Finance Director, provided clarification with regard to the site. The current site has been outgrown. There is a state Community Development Block Grant(CDBG)from the County and the City is also getting a$200,000(two hundred thousand)CDBG. The County is also putting$300,000(three hundred thousand)of general fund as well as the land donation. The rest will consist of foundation or private donors. The reason for the complication is for the County CDBG money to be obtained it is in a non entitlement area. This is in unincorporated Weld County. The City of Greeley gets their own CDBG money directly and non entitlement dollars cannot be used within a municipal corporation. To maximize the amount of Federal money to be received the timing issue comes into play. The County Commissioners intend to deed it to the Weld County Food Bank. There is a stipulation that it must be used for 25 years for this purpose to serve the citizens of Weld County. Michael Miller asked why the need for an improvements agreement if it was going to be County owned. Mr. Warden stated that it will eventually be the Food Bank and that is the way the agreement was approached. The Chair asked if there was anyone in the audience who wished to speak for or against this application. No one wished to speak. John Folsom moved to approve the deletion of#2 J & L. Stephan Mokray seconded. Motion carried. Stephen Mokray moved that Case USR-1424, along with the amendments, be forwarded to the Board of County Commissioners along with the Conditions of Approval and Development Standards with the Planning Commissions recommendation of approval. Bernie Ruesgen seconded the motion. The Chair asked the secretary to poll the members of the Planning Commission for their decision. John Folsom, yes; Stephan Mokray, yes; Michael Miller, yes; James Rohn, yes; Bernie Ruesgen, yes. Motion carried unanimously. CASE NUMBER: USR-1423 APPLICANT: Heather Weir PLANNER: Chris Gathman LEGAL DESCRIPTION: W2 SE4 Section 35, T9N, R66W of the 6th P.M.,Weld County, Colorado. REQUEST: Site Specific Development Plan and Special Use Permit for a dog kennel (not to exceed 60 dogs). . EXHIBIT Page-3- n Ifs CE_t/1Z LOCATION: North of and adjacent to WCR 98; 3/4 mile East of WCR 33. Chris Gathman,Department of Planning Services presented Case USR-1423,reading the recommendation and comments into the record. The Department of Planning Services is recommending approval of the application along with the Conditions of Approval and Development Standards. James Rohn asked Mr. Gathman about the school district payment and what is the need. Mr. Gathman stated that there is no structure on the property presently. There will be the addition of two residences. The language is the standard. The application-does not indicate if there will be additional children but the possibility is there. John Folsom asked for clarification on whether or not the applicant is proposing to live on the site. Mr. Gathman stated that the applicant will live in the same facility as the kennel. The residence would be located at one end of the building. There will be a secondary residence with a caretaker. Michael Miller questioned the well permit application and the water can be used to water any domestic animals that are owned by the property owner without any restrictions. The owner would be allowed 7 dogs as a Use By Right without having to get into the Special Use Permit for a kennel. The application is also proposing having 10 cats on site. If two species were on site there could be 15 animals before the Special Use would need to be applied for. There is not special formula to determine the number of animals per acre. Heather Weir, applicant, provided clarification on the site. A model was displayed for visual affect. The location of the facility will be in the center of the 80 acre parcel. The modular is for a caretaker to be on the property full time. Ms.Weir works at CSU in the Veterinarian Hospital. The dogs will be indoors most of the time. They are turned out periodically and when this occurs there will be someone there. The dogs are indoors unless someone is with them. The turn out areas will have 3 feet of sand fecal waste will be removed at turn out times. John Folsom asked about the species of dogs. Ms. Weir indicated there will be greyhounds. They are brought to the site from the race track then they are adopted out. They stay at the facility long enough to be spayed,neutered,vaccinated and profiled personality wise then go to Adoption Groups. There may be some volunteers that would access the site. This would be infrequent. James Rohn asked about the number of dogs and the length of time the dogs will be at the facility. Ms.Weir stated that she gets to a certain number of animals then takes then out of state to adoption facilities. Normally there will be 20-30 before a trip to the adoption groups. Mr. Rohn asked about the maximum amount and how long would that amount be needed. Ms.Weir stated it would be no more than two weeks. Mr. Rohn would like to see this added in the conditions. Mr. Miller stated it would be tough to enforce. Stephen Mokray asked about the dogs being trained for racing and require special exercising. Ms. Weir stated that she wants more space so they have more freedom. Greyhounds are referred to as couch potatoes. The racing is more of a sprint nature. The animals do fine with regular size yards. They require less exercise then some breeds. Mr. Mokray asked if additional fence height was needed. Ms. Weir indicated that she presently has a four foot fence but the facility will have six foot fences. They make good family pets. James Rohn asked about the letter from the neighbors. Is the grey hound breed that barks a lot or quiet. Ms. Weir stated that in general they are known to be quiet dogs. The dogs are quiet and very calm. Mr. Rohn asked the age of the dogs when they are received. Ms.Weir stated that they can range from 2 yrs to 11-12 yrs old. There are some occasions when an injured animal or puppies are received, but this is very rare. Michael Miller asked how far off the road the facility will be located. Ms.Weir indicated that it would be 300 feet from CR 98 and slightly to the west but centered mostly. Mr. Mokray asked how close the nearest neighbor is located. Ms. Weir stated that to the west there is a single family home 1/4 mile away. Page -4- The Chair asked if there was anyone in the audience who wished to speak for or against this application. Kay Schmidt, neighbor,closest to the facility. Her concerns are that greyhounds are barkers. The animals do not know anything but kennel life. They are muzzled because they are barking. Ms. Schmidt has had to get rid of her dogs due to the attraction of wildlife. Those dogs ran the deer away and the antelope but attracted the coyotes. Another concern is the traffic. The increase of 2-3 is more than what comes down the road now. Strongly against. James Rohn asked about the research on the greyhounds and them being barkers. Ms.Schmidt stated that she has read is available off the internet and the Colorado Greyhound Companions. They are site hounds and cannot be off lead and bark. A site hound is a dog that catches site of something and gives chase. That is part of their nature, accidents happen. Mr. Ruesgen asked about getting rid of her personal dogs and if they were in a kennel. Ms. Schmidt indicated they were in an outside kennel and the barking was not fair to the neighbors. Her property is approximately 1300 feet from the facility. James Rohn asked about the noise requirements. Ms.Davis,Department of Health and Environment,stated that the applicant must meet the level or the residential zone as part of the Colorado State Statute. Mr.Rohn asked about the decibel level. Ms. Davis stated it was 50 decibels for the residential district. Jerry Kuntz,neighbor is planning on building a retirement home on the 36 acres west of proposed site. The major concern is this being a commercial venture not an agriculture venture. There needs to be a commercial well permitted if this is going to be a commercial business. He feels as though this is a commercial venture. The school district does charge a fee for the children that will go to school. The change from agriculture to commercial is not accepted. There is no way to control or limit the number of dogs if the maximum is sixty dogs. Mr. Miller stated that the State Engineer has said that as long as the dogs are owned then it is not a commercial venture. Stephen Mokray asked where Mr.Kuntz would be located with regards to facility. Mr.Kuntz stated his house would be approximately 300-400 feet from the facility. Larry Williams, neighbor, own 80 acres to the west. The major concern is this property is residential not commercial. There is a large concern for the noise from the dogs barking. The land was purchased as a residential property not to live next to a dog kennel. The area is not a commercial type area. There is a fine line on the ownership of the dogs. James Rohn stated that the noise level must be under 50 decibels. The lawyer researched the information from the letter. The applicant should have provided the surrounding property owners up to '/: mile the locations of the proposed building. Stephen Mokray asked about the noise factor and is there condition for landscape for noise suppression. Mr. Gathman stated it could be considered. Staff took into account that there is a residence to the west of the site. The enclosures will be on the opposite side looking to the east. The eastern parcels are presently vacant. Landscaping of the site can be looked at for visual issues. There is nothing there so that is the reason nothing was proposed in the condition. The location of the kennels and the character of the area was taken into consideration. Mr. Kuntz stated that it is hard for the dogs to get over the decibel limit but the constant factor is the issue. Mr. Miller stated this would be a nuisance factor. Ms. Davis added that 50 decibels are similar to a private business office. John Folsom asked Ms. Davis about the state pet care act and does it have standards similar to CAFO with regard to waste and other things. Ms. Davis stated she is not sure but there is a lot of standards for housing and clean up. Valerie Hunter Goss,volunteer dog walker, indicated that barking is not an issue. There is insulation that can be added to the building to keep quiet. The dogs will only be out when there is someone there. Page -5- Michael Conine, neighbor, owns the property to the north. He has built homes on CR 100 and almost lost a deal due to the disclosure statement indicating the proposed kennel and the purchasers not wanting to be around a kennel. Mr.Conine questioned why they are allowed to have two residences in the 10 acres without doing a recorded exemption. Mr.Miller indicated that the residences are a part of the Use by Special Review process. Mr.Gathman stated that there will be help living on the site that will be covered under permit. Mr. Conine indicated that there are hundreds of coyotes and the amount of wildlife is numerous. The concern is that this will change when all the dogs arrive. There is no way one person can keep dogs quiet with a squirt bottle. Lindsay Conine, neighbor, indicated her concerns with the noise. They did not choose to have the dog kennel next to them. It does not matter what kind of dogs,if one barks they all bark. The coyote population is thick in the area now. The wildlife is part of the area. The CRP program is to leave the land as it is. There are pheasants there also. Mr.Rohn asked where Ms.Conine was located. Ms.Conine indicated she is located to the north. Emma Weiss,neighbor,indicated concerns for safety. The greyhound are trained to chase. If one gets out the children are not safe. Can the animals dig under the fences to get out. The number of dogs is far to many. If you cannot count the dogs how count the decibel level. Nuisance of the huge dog kennel. There is also a chicken farm located northeast of the property. If they are taught to chase rabbits what will happen if one gets out and chases the chickens. The Chair closed the public portion. Heather Weir provided some clarification with some fo the concerns. The dogs are muzzelled at the track and this is not to restrict them from barking. They are muzzelled when in groups for their protection. Ms. Weir has been doing this from her house for 5 years in Loveland and in a cul de sac. It is not her desire to disrupt the peace and quiet of the surrounding area. The dogs will be indoors most of the time. The cannot see outdoors so the dogs will not have any reason to know the wildlife is happening around them. The coyotes have their own domain. The dogs will not be running loose on any property. Greyhounds are not known to be bitters. They are good family dogs. Michael Miller asked when they are let out, how long is this time. Ms.Weir stated they would have access to dog door to turn out are. Typically it would be around 20 minutes but when Ms.Weir is at home and can monitor it could be longer. Ms.Miller stated the anytime there are dogs outside they will be attended to. Ms. Weir stated that her personal dogs will have more ability to roam. Mr. Miller asked if there were any precautions for the possibility of digging under the fence. Ms.Weir stated that the dogs are not know for digging. There has not been any precautions for this at any race track or other facility. The dogs will be attended to and if the digging happens it can be attended to immediately. Mr. Miller questioned the size of the fence and if it was adequate. Ms. Weir stated that greyhounds are athletic but the do not have the muscular structure for anything other than running. James Rohn asked if the inside kennel will be insulated. Ms. Weir stated that the building itself will be insulated. Mr. Rohn asked if there was anyway to limit the maximum number of dogs or the amount of time that the animals will be there. Ms. Weir cannot predict what will happen but would like to be able to have the flexibility if there is an emergency situation. Mr. Rohn would rather see it be limited to two weeks as the maximum amount of time the dogs can be there or limit the number of dogs to 50. Ms. Weir stated she would look at ways to mitigate the neighbors concerns but limiting the number of dogs will not address the issues for them. Bernie Ruesgen asked about the water and ownership of the dogs. They are being referred to as foster dogs and is this more of a broker situation or actual ownership. Ms.Weir said she spoke with Scott Cuthbertson with the Resource Division on the phone. Mr. Cuthbertson likened to a small time breeder. This person would be the owner of the dogs while they are on the property. She makes all decisions concerning them. Stephen Mokray asked the size of the run out area. Ms.Weir stated the turn out area is approximately 70 feet x 50 and the residential area is 45x50. Mr. Mokray asked if she would be willing to place some type of Page -6- landscaping in the area to mitigate the noise issue. Ms.Weir indicated she would be interested in this. She was planning on doing a wind break on the west side and planting trees and shrubbery on the east side. These will attract wildlife. Stephen Mokray asked about the number transported in a year and where they go. Ms.Weir said that she transports approximately 150 year and the are transported to a Greyhound Adoption Facility in Washington and Greyhound Friends for life in California. James Rohn moved to insert development Standard#18 to state"The dogs shall be supervised at all times when outdoors. The dogs shall be confined within the fences of the kennel facility at all times,"and add 2J to state"The applicant shall submit a screening plan for review and approval by the department of Planning services. This screening plan shall address screening from the kennel and turn out facility area from the adjacent properties." Stephen Mokray seconded. The Chair asked the secretary to poll the members of the Planning Commission for their decision. John Folsom, yes; Stephan Mokray, yes; Michael Miller, yes; James Rohn, yes; Bernie Ruesgen, yes. Motion carried unanimously. Heather Weir questioned the statement about the dogs being confined to the kennel at all times. This makes is sound as though she cannot walk the dogs on the property. Mr.Miller stated that this is just when the dogs are loose they need to be in the kennel. It does not restrict Ms.Weir from walking her dogs on her property. John Folsom stated that he resides in a subdivision that has a greyhound kennel and there has been no problem. The amount of barking is minimal. There is no noise that can be heard from the kennel. There is only a three foot fences and they have never gotten out. Stephen Mokray moved that Case USR-1423, along with the amendments, be forwarded to the Board of County Commissioners along with the Conditions of Approval and Development Standards with the Planning Commissions recommendation of approval. James Rohn seconded the motion. The Chair asked the secretary to poll the members of the Planning Commission for their decision. John Folsom, yes; Stephan Mokray, yes; Michael Miller, yes; James Rohn, yes; Bernie Ruesgen, no. Motion carried. Bernie Ruesgen stated that the special review should be not granted based on code section 23-2-200. It does not meet the intent of the code. It is not compatible with the existing plan residential of the neighbors and it does not do anything to advance the general welfare of the present and future residences. Michael Miller commented that housing animals indoors in an insulated building will greatly reduce the noise factor. There was some concern with the additional traffic but there are plans for an increase in homes which will bring an increase in traffic. There will be less impact from 60 dogs inside a building verses the 10-20 houses that could be built in the area in the future. Meeting adjourned at 3:30pm Respectfully submitted J Voneen Macklin Secretary Page-7- Hello