SRO (single room occupancy, aka rooming house) legalization is in the news this week. Here's a thread.
Minneapolis planning staff proposed a modest/weak version that doesn't live up to the concept of legalizing SROs citywide: lowest density zoning districts in the city would be exempted and, perhaps most significantly, only government entities and non-profits could run them.
On Monday, Planning Commission had a chance to modify the staff recommendation, but the only change was to tweak the lot size requirements so that 5,000 sq ft is the standard minimum for SROs across the city. (staff had proposed a 7500 sq ft min in R3 districts, 5k in all others)
The City Council will ultimately decide what is approved. The authors are Council Members Gordon, Goodman, and Schroeder. The 2040 plan, passed in 2018, called for removing barriers to single room occupancy and other "innovative housing types." minneapolis2040.com/policies/innov…
Commissioner Chris Meyer proposed eliminating the requirement that SROs be operated by government or a non-profit, but that failed by a 5-5 vote.
Meyer also proposed allowing SROs citywide (by eliminating the restriction in low density R1 and R2 districts - with a cap of 9 bedrooms - but that also failed by a 5-5 vote.
Here's Commissioner Meyer explaining the three amendments he wanted to make to staff's proposal.
Here's Commissioner Ford, who weirdly was a member of the Minneapolis City Council 50 years ago during the time when the city was fighting to eliminate rooming houses/SROs. Offers "a mea culpa for the work that we didn't do back in the 1970s" providing for well regulated SROs.
Jason Wittenberg, a planning manager at the city, said the objective with restricting SROs to government and non profits was to "wade in" to legalization slowly and revisiting in the future who is allowed to operate an SRO.
Commissioner Marwah voted for expanding beyond non-profits and government operators. Says other cities have seen demand for a range of SROs that serve a role as workforce and other types of housing, not just for those at risk of homelessness.
Wittenberg talked about the policy changes being spurred by Hennepin County repurposing hotels as housing for people experiencing homelessness.
Wittenberg: "I think there's a concern that if this does not go well, and does not have very strong oversight... that it could really jeopardize the reestablishment of this as a viable housing option" throughout the city.
Meyer: "We really need to do a lot to address the homelessness crisis. I don't think it's the appropriate time to be wading slowly." SROs an important part of the housing spectrum to help people avoid homelessness. Decades ago the city demolished many of them.
Ford supported putting them in all zoning districts citywide, but opposed the idea of opening them up to for profit operators. Compared it to the problems he sees with for-profit nursing homes.
Commissioner Baxley: "I get concerned when we start to mandate or define the idea of 'good neighbor.' So I think it's a particularly appropriate time to amp up that discussion." Supports opening it up citywide.
Ford, the 70s-era council member, said in his experience "those gradual things actually don't happen" when it comes to the low density zones of the city. His concern about not legalizing citywide: "we'll find ourselves with an economically segregated community still."
Wittenberg said it might be seen as a "bait and switch" to allow rooming houses in the parts of the city that were promised nothing bigger than a triplex under the 2040 plan. Meyer countered by suggesting a cap of 9 bedrooms (comparable to a triplex) for SROs in those districts.
Meyer: "I just wanna remind everyone about the context of the encampments... if we're expansive about it, this can be used for work housing and co-living, so I do really believe it makes the most sense to not restrict this to non-profits [and gov't]."
To reiterate: this goes to the City Council next, where it's unlikely to be made more expansive (IT'S AN ELECTION YEAR and the most reliable voters are the ones who want no part of a rooming house next door). But you can still ask your council member to support that change.
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If you ask me, I say these recent well-attended Uptown Association meetings are secretly guerilla urbanist pranks intended to prove even the most cranked up "parking shortage" grievance-havers can find a place to park.
A thread from earlier tonight.
Tangled web: The PAC "We Heart Minneapolis" had a table at the Uptown Association meeting. The PAC and the Uptown Association have the same chair, Andrea Corbin.
At the start, Corbin promoted tomorrow's caucuses. She donated to the MN GOP less than a year ago and now she's at the helm of a $600k effort to turn people out to the DFL caucus.
Old Man Jeremiah Ellison talking about the old days at city hall (again). Says current government structure is an obstacle to communication, keeps everyone from getting on the same page. As a result the city is less effective at addressing big problems like homeless encampments.
Ellison on how pre-2021 government helped create a common understanding of a problem: Council members wouldn't "just get a staff report, they'd maybe be in a meeting where it's dawning on you... we thought that was gonna work but it's not gonna work."
Ellison: If that discussion doesn't occur, we're constantly gonna have council members trying to solve this issue from the dais, Frey admin being a little bit obstructionist - and continue to have disagreements.
Dumbest news you'll hear all day: Longtime organizers of the Uptown Art Fair—a pedestrian fair—say they will no longer hold their event due to city pedestrianizing Hennepin Ave. audacy.com/wccoradio/news…
My impression has always been that the Uptown Association's whole reason for existing was the art fair. So we're lucky they didn't pack up in a huff, take Uptown with them, and define New Uptown as 2 blocks in any direction from the Bachman's parking lot.
I'm gonna need them to diagram how the new medians on Hennepin make it impossible to set up and sell art. More likely they wanted to bail on Uptown and needed a reason that felt politically satisfying.
There was extended debate over whether the fee should be left at $452 per ton or changed to TBD, pending staff analysis. Council left it at $452.
Even so, appears there is no disagreement that the fee amount will be amended by July 1, 2025.
Procedural objections may obscure what this is really about: the council forcing an issue where the mayor and his administration wanted to move slower. The result is carbon fees in 2025 instead of 2026.
Something I've been warning about all year has finally happened. Mayor Frey has hired his pal Lisa Goodman to fill a role that was created for her in last year's budget — voted on while she was still a council member.
Goodman starts work Monday as the city's Director of Strategic Initiatives in the Office of Public Service. You can imagine folks at CPED are breathing a sigh of relief she won't be housed in their department.
That's an email announcement from Brett Hjelle (rhymes with "jelly" not "hellyessy"), the city's deputy COO. If you believe the interview process was "rigorous and thorough" — hahaha, good one.