Notable agenda items for the Jan. 22 meeting:
- A new traffic light is being requested for the intersection of Carriage Lane and Allen Road. Carriage Lane is halfway between Northmoor Road and Willow Knolls Drive on Allen.
- A new strip mall is being proposed for the corner of Knoxville and Alta roads. “No specific site plans or users are specified at this time,” but they’re going to build a 152,400 ft.2 multi-tenant building with a drive-thru. Part of land to be used will need to be annexed to the city. The neighbors don’t like it, of course. They are against the added lights, noise, garbage, drainage, and tree removal, and are concerned that this will lower their property values and quality of life.
- The owner of Tequila’s in Chillicothe, Javier Munoz, wants to open a Mexican restaurant on Pioneer Parkway in the old Cinco de Mayo’s building. The previous owner of the building did not pay his HRA taxes, and Munoz said he had no affiliation with that owner. This is coming before the council because he’s applying for a liquor license.
- You’ll be able to drink a glass of local wine from the Mackinaw Valley Winery while dining alfresco on the corner of State and Water if this liquor license is approved.
- City staff wants to explore possible incentive programs to improve hospitality (i.e., hotel accommodations) downtown. Possible programs include the usual suspects (enterprise zone status, TIF, special service assessment) plus a few new ideas (“historic tax credits for buildings older than 1936,” “Civic Center supported capital expenditures,” “voluntary HRA tax to be used for capital improvements”). This should make for an interesting discussion. What was somewhat amusing was reading the litany of consultants/specialists who have told us we need better hotel accommodations downtown (Johnson Consulting, HVS consultants, PACVB, and a Six Sigma Black Belt team!). It reminds me of how many consultants said the Sears block should have urban density and mixed use.
- The Zoning Board of Appeals and City Staff want to change the fee structure for variance requests. The board felt that the fees were too high for small, residential requests and was actually discouraging residents from applying for variances and building permits for things like decks, sheds, and fences. The staff did a survey of other communities and based on their findings, have come up with a new fee structure. The proposed fee structure would charge a lower fee for residential variances than non-residential. It would also charge a lower fee if the variance is applied for before construction begins. Sign variances would have to pay a higher fee because “Staff and Board are of the opinion that improper signage pose traffic safety and aesthetics problems.”
- Once again, the Zoning Commission and City Staff are at odds. The first item is about a request to add an access point for 901 W. Glen Ave. It’s in what’s called an “overlay district” that restricts the number of access points purposely in order to prevent too much traffic congestion. The building owners/tenants share access points with other property owners. The staff isn’t necessarily against putting in another access point, but the petitioner (Michael Landwirth) did not submit a complete application, thus staff could not adequately review the request. Nevertheless, the Zoning Commission approved it on a 5-1 vote (Klise voted no), even though they have no idea what use is being proposed for the subject property. So now the council will have to sort it out.
- The second split decision is the Missouri Ave. project requested by Floyd Rashid. He wants to have a parcel that contains a vacant house on the corner of Missouri and War Memorial rezoned from residential to neighborhood commercial, or “CN,” under the Land Development Code. The residents on Missouri are opposed, and the Zoning Commission voted 6-0 to deny the rezoning. But City staff points out that it’s consistent with the Comprehensive Plan, is adjacent to existing CN zoning to the east, and under the Land Development Code would be a small-scale development that would be compatible with the residential neighborhood. This should also be an interesting discussion.
Although not on the agenda, no doubt there will be some discussion under new business about what the process will be to replace outgoing City Manager Randy Oliver.
just what Peoria doesn’t need, another strip mall.
I always wondered what happened to Cinco de Mayo. Looking forward to trying out Tequila’s.
Mouse: You have to love Peoria — no specific plans for the strip mall and it will still probably get approved….. the insanity reaches new heights!
Then for 901 Glen — “The staff isn’t necessarily against putting in another access point, but the petitioner (Michael Landwirth) did not submit a complete application, thus staff could not adequately review the request. Nevertheless, the Zoning Commission approved it on a 5-1 vote (Klise voted no), even though they have no idea what use is being proposed for the subject property.”
Just try that if you are a little fish — you mean there is no regulation that an incomplete application should be automatically rejected? More tax dollars down the drain. The neighbors do not even get an opportunity is to voice any concerns if they have any for the Emperor’s new clothes type of project?
And the zoning commissioners, save Marjorie Klise, voted to approve this incomplete – mystery project? Seemingly common sense is one requirement to being a commissioner? Perhaps not.
What is the purpose of having this process if anyone can just circumvent it?
Just last April they rezoned the corner just south of there (a smidge north of route 6) from medical/office park to commercial. The developer wanted to build a strip mall; he didn’t have potential tenants either. Well that strip mall is under construction with a sign out front saying they are looking for tenants. So now we are going to rezone the next block to do the same thing, before the first one is even occupied. We are out sprawling the sprawl.
“You’ll be able to drink a glass of local wine from the Mackinaw Valley Winery while dining alfresco on the corner of State and Water if this liquor license is approved.”
I believe I will get drunk and beat up the first non-smoker I see.
Tequila’s will fail too. Nobody can compete with Jalapenos and it’s right around the corner.
If no-one can compete with Jalepenos, then how does Vallarta’s on University stay in business? It lies smack dab between two mexican restaurants with the exact same menu, run by the same people. Jalepeno’s in the Metro Centre, and Fiesta on Dries lane… which recently went under.
If Tequila’s is half as good as Cinco was, they’ll do just fine.
Ask any bank and they will tell you that restaurant or food service businesses have the highest rate of failure of any business in the country. Hopefully this new restaurant has their own funding because they are going to need it.
Hopefully they pay their taxes too, unlike their predecessor.
Just remember folks, when you hear that a restaurant didn’t pay their taxes, that means they stole it from you. Restaurants in Peoria charge 2% on the total bill to pay for the Civic Center. Despite what you might think of the tax, that is your money that they collect, then pocket. That’s why I’m all for any measure that punishes this, including pulling their health permits.