AGENDA <br />Phone: 541-682-5481 Meeting Location: <br />www.eugene-or.gov/pc Virtual Meeting (Via Zoom) <br />The Eugene Planning Commission welcomes your interest in these agenda items. Meetings will <br />continue to be held remotely using virtual meeting technology until further notice. Information <br />about online or other options for access and participation is available on the last page of this <br />agenda. <br />For the hearing impaired, assistive-listening devices or an interpreter can be provided with 72- <br />hour notice prior to the meeting. Spanish-language interpretation may also be provided with 72- <br />hour notice. These services may not be available during the Planning Commission meeting <br />based on service availability but may occur as a follow-up service. To arrange for these <br />services, contact the Planning Division at 541-682-5699. <br />TUESDAY, JANUARY 28, 2025 – Regular Meeting 5:30 pm – 7:30 pm <br />Commissioners: Ken Beeson; Diane Behling (Vice Chair); Tiffany Edwards; Dan Isaacson; <br />Jason Lear (Chair), Chris Ramey <br />The Commission will begin the meeting with the City’s Land Acknowledgement statement: <br />A.WORK SESSION: DELIBERATIONS ON LAND USE APPEAL FOR BRAEWOOD HILLS <br />(CITY FILE # PDT 24-1/ST 24-3) <br />Work Session for deliberations on the Land Use Appeal of the Hearings Official decision <br />denying a Tentative Planned Unit Development and a Tentative Subdivision to create 39 <br />residential lots, streets, and associated infrastructure improvements. The Public Hearing <br />was held before the Planning Commission on 01/14/2025. <br />Staff: Nick Gioello, 541-682-5485, NGioello@eugene-or.gov <br />Since time immemorial the Kalapuya people have been the Indigenous stewards to our <br />region, building dynamic communities, maintaining balance with wildlife, and enacting <br />sustainable land practices. This land acknowledgement is a way of resisting the erasure of <br />Indigenous histories and to honor Native communities by inviting truth and reconciliation. <br />Following treaties between 1851 and 1855, Kalapuya people were dispossessed of their <br />Indigenous homeland by the United States government and forcibly removed to the Coast <br />Reservation in Western Oregon. As we consider the impacts of colonization, we also <br />acknowledge the strength and resiliency of displaced Indigenous people. The City of Eugene <br />is built within the traditional homelands known as Kalapuya Ilihi. Kalapuya descendants are <br />citizens of the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde Community of Oregon and the <br />Confederated Tribes of the Siletz Indians of Oregon, they continue to make contributions in <br />our communities here and across the lands. We express our respect for the inherent political <br />sovereignty of all federally recognized Tribal Nations and Indigenous people who live in the <br />State of Oregon and across the nation. Therefore, the Planning Commission recognizes that <br />what we do today will affect the many generations who will come after us. <br />Planning Commission Agenda 01/28/2025 Page 1 of 42