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Agenda - Council - 04/11/2017
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Agenda - Council - 04/11/2017
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Council
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04/11/2017
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APPENDIX C (continued) <br /> Statement of Need &Justification <br /> (6) Evidence of Hardship <br /> On occasion, a residential homeowner must sell his owner occupied home, but is unable to do <br /> so only because the property lies within the right-of-way of a planned road. This is known as a <br /> hardship situation. <br /> The City of Ramsey understands this specific requirement, and the underlying law, are focused <br /> on residential situations only. We also understand the Metropolitan Council may be willing to <br /> discuss commercial hardship situations. With that in mind, Ramsey believes 6401 Hwy 10 is a <br /> "hardship"for a commercial property. 6401 Highway 10 is officially mapped, and needed 100% <br /> for acquisition—which makes selling the property challenging. <br /> Selling this property is challenging due to the timing uncertainty of a Sunfish Lake Boulevard <br /> project (i.e. 5, 10, 20 years). The building on this site is currently vacant. A new business takes <br /> several years to become well-established. Starting a business, and investing in a property, is a <br /> major decision. Most investors are hard-pressed to invest in a property that has such a large <br /> amount uncertainty, risk, and will become wrapped up in future government processes and <br /> potentially legal disputes. As a result, the 6401 Highway 10 property owner is stuck, and is <br /> unable to sell their property at market rate. <br /> Further Explanation <br /> Based on updated RALF guidelines—specifically language related to "imminent <br /> development/conversion"—Ramsey believes a situation of impasse and hardship is <br /> created for 6401 Highway 10. <br /> • From a RALF criteria perspective—to meet the imminent development/ <br /> conversion rule,the City must obtain an official building permit or site plan <br /> application (or similar evidence)that would result in the conversion of property <br /> to a "higher-value-use" BEFORE the City can utilize RALF. <br /> • From a developer/ investor perspective—no motivation exists invest thousands <br /> of dollars and a substantial amount of time to secure the purchase of a property <br /> and completion of various required government entitlement processes (i.e. site <br /> plan application or building permit) if you knew the City (via RALF)will <br /> ultimately take the property and halt your project. <br /> • In other words, the City believes these positions are opposite and conflicting, <br /> and creates a position of impasse (i.e. commercial hardship). As a result, the <br /> property won't be sold to a private investor, and property won't be purchased <br /> via RALF. The property will likely remain vacant, deteriorate, and attract crime. <br /> Update: based on a recent update from the Metropolitan Council (link), it appears there may be <br /> a desire to consider this application as an "exception"to the hardship rule. <br /> Page 12 of 19 <br />
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