Kenai funds comprehensive plan

The city of Kenai will put $44,300 toward the creation of its new comprehensive plan, including $15,000 to hire planing consultant Elizabeth Benson of Anchorage-based Benson Planning Associates to carry out the revision.

An ordinance passed by the Kenai City Council at its Wednesday meeting appropriated $30,000 to the existing $14,400 of comprehensive plan project funding. The ordinance passed unanimously, with council member Terry Bookey absent from the meeting.

Kenai’s current comprehensive plan, a document meant to direct future city land-use decisions, was created in 2003 and last revised in 2013. The 2013 draft was approved by the city council but rejected by voters in a ballot proposition. Opponents of the plan said it promoted sprawling development that would threaten the character of residential neighborhoods. The 2013 plan will be used as a draft for the present revision.

Benson’s proposed work plan, given in a Jan. 28 letter to City Manager Rick Koch, estimates the revision will take 128 hours. Her attendance at five meetings in support of the plan will take 42 hours, totalling 170 hours for which she will be compensated at $80 per hour. Her visits to Kenai will consist of three public meetings and two with the Kenai planning and zoning commission. She wrote that her work on the plan revision would completed on July 31, 2016.

Council member Bob Molloy said he considered the funds appropriated in the ordinance inadequate.

“Part of that is because my views of this are different from the administration’s,” Molloy said. “This is really based on the approach of tweaking the existing (2013) plan, instead of reopening this and having some new items, which I think is supported by the comments were received during the public comment period.”

Molloy said he “would encourage a more flexible approach that’s going to require some more funding.” He also described Benson’s breakdown of her proposed work as “bare bones.”

“There isn’t really isn’t even much interaction with the planning and zoning commission,” Molloy said.

Molloy recommended additional funding of the comprehensive plan in the future, and amended to the ordinance to reflect this possibility by replacing a reference to $44,300 as the revision’s “total project budget” with a designation of the amount as the “current project budget.” The amendment passed unanimously.

Council member Tim Navarre said the city had spent $150,000 developing the 2013 draft of the comprehensive plan, and reiterated his position that it was acceptable as a draft for a present revision because not all its elements were controversial.

“I look forward to starting back on this plan,” Navarre said. “I think it benefits the city, and I don’t think it benefits the city to spend another $150,000.”

Council member Henry Knackstedt asked Koch if he believed Benson’s work plan should “substantially cover the work that needs to be done.” Koch said he did, adding that much of the document was made of information that hadn’t changed since 2013.

“The comp plan that went before the voters and was rejected was comprised of six chapters, and a rather large appendix that was a collection of data,” Koch said. “The first four chapters of the plan were pretty technical recitals. Some portions of those chapters speak to the purpose of the comp plan. There’s the history of Kenai, there’s demographic information and population information. … Regardless of what’s in the subsequent chapters five and six, the first four chapters are going to look the same.”

Kenai resident Bob MacIntosh spoke on the funding ordinance, saying it “locks into what I see as a flawed process with the comprehensive plan.”

“It was a process that was designed by the city without public input, as far as I know, and once the process is funded the city will steamroll the process through, again doing it the way they did last time,” Macintosh said. “… We should start our process the other direction,”

MacIntosh said he were prefer to create “a citizen’s committee to oversee the process.” Questioned by Molloy, he elaborated on this idea, describing a group consisting of five Kenai resident volunteers chosen randomly from a pool of applicants, as well as a representative of local realtors and a Kenai Chamber of Commerce representative speaking for local business owners. The Kenai city planner and a member each of the Kenai council and planning and zoning commissions would hold advisory seats. He said the group would “monitor the whole process, and if they thought the process was getting out of hand, they’d let the public know.”

Reach Ben Boettger at ben.boettger@peninsulaclarion.com.

More in News

Homer High School sophomore Sierra Mullikin is one of the students who participated in the community walk-in on Wednesday, April 24. Communities across the state of Alaska held walk-ins in support of legislative funding for public education. (Photo by Emilie Springer)
Teachers, staff and community members ‘walk-in’ at 9 district schools

The unions representing Kenai Peninsula Borough School District staff organized a widespread,… Continue reading

Economist Sam Tappen shares insights about job and economic trends in Alaska and on the Kenai Peninsula during the Kenai Peninsula Economic Development District’s Industry Outlook Forum at Soldotna Regional Sports Complex in Soldotna, Alaska, on Thursday, April 25, 2024. (screenshot)
Kenai Peninsula job outlook outpaces other parts of Alaska

During one of the first panels of the Kenai Peninsula Economic Development… Continue reading

Angel Patterson-Moe and Natalie Norris stand in front of one of their Red Eye Rides vehicles in Seward, Alaska, on Wednesday, April 24, 2024. (Jake Dye/Peninsula Clarion)
Seward’s Red Eye Rides marks 2 years of a ‘little idea’ to connect communities

Around two years ago, Angel Patterson-Moe drove in the middle of the… Continue reading

Jake Dye/Peninsula Clarion
Oliver Trobaugh speaks to representatives of Bear Creek Volunteer Fire Department during Career Day at Seward High School in Seward on Wednesday.
Seward students explore future ambitions at Career Day

Seward High School hosted roughly two dozen Kenai Peninsula businesses Wednesday for… Continue reading

Foliage surrounds the Soldotna Police Department sign on Tuesday, Aug. 30, 2022 in Soldotna, Alaska. (Ashlyn O’Hara/Peninsula Clarion)
Ninilchik resident charged with vehicle theft arrested for eluding police

Additional charges have been brought against a Ninilchik resident arrested last month… Continue reading

U.S. Department of Justice Logo. (Graphic by Jake Dye/Peninsula Clarion)
Sterling resident charged with wire fraud involving COVID-19 relief funds

Sterling resident Kent Tompkins, 55, was arrested last week, on April 16,… Continue reading

Poster for Kenai Peninsula Trout Unlimited Fishing Gear Swap. (Courtesy Kenai Peninsula Trout Unlimited)
Trout Unlimted gear swap to return, expands to include outdoor gear

The Kenai Peninsula Chapter of Trout Unlimited will host its second annual… Continue reading

The Kasilof River is seen from the Kasilof River Recreation Area, July 30, 2019, in Kasilof, Alaska. (Photo by Erin Thompson/Peninsula Clarion)
Bait prohibited on Kasilof River from May 1 to May 15

Emergency order issued Tuesday restores bait restriction

Girl Scout Troop 210, which includes Caitlyn Eskelin, Emma Hindman, Kadie Newkirk and Lyberty Stockman, present their “Bucket Trees” to a panel of judges in the 34th Annual Caring for the Kenai Competition at Kenai Central High School in Kenai, Alaska, on Thursday, April 18, 2024. (Jake Dye/Peninsula Clarion)
Bucket trees take top award at 34th Caring for the Kenai

A solution to help campers safely and successfully extinguish their fires won… Continue reading

Most Read