Alpharetta City Council Meeting Agenda for November 16, 2015

Editor’s note: Late Friday there were several modifications made to the agenda which are now reflected in the electronic packets:

  • Updated site plans and elevations related to CLUP­-15-­11/Z-­15-­10/CU-­15-­11/V-­15-­25: Thompson Street Flats
  • Updated contract with GDOT related to the Encore Parkway Bridge Replacement Project
  • Deferral of PH­-15-­21: UDC Changes­ Definitions and Text Amendments

Below is the agenda for Monday night’s Alpharetta City Council meeting along with highlighted links to many of the supporting materials. Please feel free to leave questions and comments about agenda items in the comment section and I will do my best to respond in a timely manner.

I. CALL TO ORDER
II. ROLL CALL
III. PLEDGE TO THE FLAG
[Collapse] IV. PROCLAMATIONS AND PRESENTATIONS
A. Proclamation – Andy Yang
B. Crime Free Housing Presentation: Ascent at Windward and The Pointe at Preston Ridge
[Collapse] V. CONSENT AGENDA
A. Council Meeting Minutes (Meeting of 11/9/2015)
[Collapse] VI. PROJECT UPDATES
A. Convention Center
B. City Center – Public
C. City Center – Private
[Collapse] VII. PUBLIC HEARING
A. Z-15-11 Nathan Circle/Rob Forrest
B. CLUP-15-13/Z-15-14 Beecham Group/Old Milton Pkwy Townhomes
C. CLUP-15-12/Z-15-13/CU-15-12/V-15-22 Peach State Hospitality/Hotel.
NOTE:  This item has been withdrawn by the Applicant and will not be heard.
D. CLUP-15-11/Z-15-10/CU-15-11/V-15-25 Thompson Street Flats
E. PH-15-21 UDC Changes- Definitions and Text Amendments
NOTE: This item has been deferred and removed from this agenda.  The case has been rescheduled to appear on the December 07, 2015 City Council Agenda.
[Collapse] VIII. OLD BUSINESS
A. Procurement Card Policy (2nd Reading)
B. Parks Without Borders Program with Johns Creek Recreation and Parks
[Collapse] IX. NEW BUSINESS
A. Intergovernmental Agreement With City Of Milton: Facility Use And Court Services
B. Encore Parkway Bridge Replacement and Greenway Connection
[Collapse] X. WORKSHOP
A. Art In Public Places Program Guidelines
XI. PUBLIC COMMENT
XII. REPORTS
XIII. ADJOURNMENT

Alpharetta City Council Meeting Agenda for November 9, 2015

Below is the agenda for Monday night’s Alpharetta City Council meeting along with highlighted links to many of the supporting materials. Please feel free to leave questions and comments about agenda items in the comment section and I will do my best to respond in a timely manner.


I. CALL TO ORDER
II. ROLL CALL
III. PLEDGE TO THE FLAG
[Collapse] IV. CONSENT AGENDA
A. Council Meeting Minutes (Meeting of 11/2/2015)
B. Alcoholic Beverage License Application (PH-15-AB-12)

The Morning After, LLC d/b/a The Nest Café
58 Canton Street, Suite A
Consumption on Premises
Beer, Wine & Sunday Sales
Owner: The Morning After, LLC
Registered Agent: Jordan Segal

[Collapse] V. PROJECT UPDATES
A. Convention Center
B. City Center – Private Development
C. City Center – Public Development
VI. OLD BUSINESS
[Collapse] VII. NEW BUSINESS
A. Procurement Card Policy
B. Windward Parkway at GA 400 and Westside Parkway Improvements
C. Future Use of Old Library
D. Intergovernmental Agreement With City Of Milton: Facility Use And Court Services
[Collapse] VIII. WORKSHOP
A. Parks Without Borders Program with Johns Creek Recreation and Parks
B. Discussion on Milling And Resurfacing
C. Discussion of Public Art Ordinance
IX. PUBLIC COMMENT
X. REPORTS
XI. ADJOURNMENT

Millennials Move to Suburbs – “Cities are just a temporary place to land”

Quality-of-Life-Sioux-Falls-SD-500x332

Found an interesting link on Twitter today thanks to Jon Ray. ( aka @BKEGa1 ) The post was an exploration of why members of the Millennial generation are following previous generations into the suburbs as they get ready to settle down.

The article was written by Emily McMackin and posted on businessclimate.com. You should read the whole thing here but below are a couple of key passages:

Between 2010 and 2013, the number of 20- to 29-year-olds in the U.S. rose by 4 percent, but the percentage of residents in this demographic living in core cities grew by only 3.2 percent, the study noted. Why are cities losing 20-somethings, while suburbs and smaller towns are gaining them?

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They see the suburbs as an ideal place to settle down, and tend to view the urban core of cities as just a temporary place to land. Much of their reasoning stems from the desire to own their own homes or start families of their own – and wanting more space to do that.

This shouldn’t be surprising to anyone who realizes that big cities are less than ideal for raising a family. Yet many people in the development community continue to propagate the silly notion that Millennials are going to forego the superior public schools, more affordable single family homes and lower crime rates of the suburbs when they get ready to settle down.

Right now Alpharetta is blessed to be one of the greatest places in the state of Georgia to do business and raise a family. As long as we continue to grow and change in a manner consistent with those qualities the Millennial generation and their successors will continue to move here when they are ready to settle down. Our quality of life and property values will continue to improve accordingly.

However there is tremendous pressure from some in the business community and political arena to change Alpharetta into the next Midtown, Buckhead or Sandy Springs. They speak tirelessly of the impending doom suburbs will face if they don’t attract Millennials who are still at a stage in life when they are more interested in bar hopping than house shopping.

But the reality is that if Alpharetta becomes just another concrete jungle at the end of a MARTA line it will force Millennials to move even further from the city of Atlanta when they want to escape the high cost of living, miserable schools and crime that plague urban centers. The irony is that the urbanization of places like Alpharetta actually forces people to spread further out creating more of the sprawl so many urbanists loathe.