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Zoning Option <br />Advantage <br />Disadvantage <br />Euclidian <br />Separates <br />(compartmentalizes) <br />noxious uses <br />Too restrictive <br />Consistent /reliable <br />Not exhaustive <br />Known /have it <br />4 <br />Common sense <br />PUD <br />More flexible <br />Less rigor <br />Smart Growth <br />Consider regional role /place <br />Have to be dense <br />Encourage collaboration <br />All or nothing <br />Ramsey Final Report <br />Grant No. 05 -1237 <br />City of Ramsey <br />Create a checklist of the specific core objectives <br />The next task became to refine these value statements into specific checklist. The group was able to take <br />this quite far, but in the end, we ended up designating a smaller group of staff, Dan Markel, and Steering <br />Committee member Will Thompsen (who has considerable experience with city planning) to refine the <br />vision statements into a checklist. <br />Create and Refine a City Vision Statement <br />The group also agreed on a vision statement for the City. While it is still in the process of final <br />wordsmithing, it reads: <br />Without compromising private property rights and the needs of future generations, Ramsey <br />will evolve through citizen driven, collaborative processes that respect the balance and <br />connectivity between its unique urban, rural and natural environments. <br />This statement is supplemented by a list of supporting values that also are included in the Appendix. <br />Explore Alternative Zoning Practices <br />Dan Marckel guided the group through this part of the process, outlining the alternatives available and <br />their strengths and weaknesses. The components and vision statement served to focus the discussion, <br />while the evaluation process will assist City staff, the Planning Commission, and City Council in future <br />land use policy decisions. <br />Marckel brought the participants a variety of examples of current practices in the Twin Cities region and <br />elsewhere. He began with the Euclidean zoning that has governed city codes for more than three <br />generations, then explained some of the alternatives that have emerged in recent years including Smart <br />Growth, the New Urbanism, Formed -Based Codes, and the points system used by cities such as Maple <br />Grove. Marckel outlined what analysts have seen as the strengths and weaknesses of each method, doing <br />so in such a way that did not bias the presentation towards one method or another. <br />The Work Group then discussed what they saw as the strengths and weaknesses of each method. The <br />results of this discussion are summarized in the following table. <br />- 18 - <br />