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Density Transfers and other Legal & Procedural Issues
Summary
BCPOA has been actively researching density transfers and other legal
and procedural issues in the Base Area, both as they affect the Bridger
Mountain Village PUD application and in terms of their implications for
Bridger Canyon as a whole. Our preliminary conclusions include the
following:
With respect to density transfers, we believe that:
- 10 of the development transfers claimed to support the
density of 75 recreational homes sought for Bridger Mountain Village
are ineligible or nonexistent.
- 7 of the 10 originate outside of the Base Area, and may
not be transferred into a Base Area PUD. 3 of the 7 are based on
doubling the density from a noncontiguous area, for which only 2 unit
transfers were recorded, so the 7 are really only 6.
- the other 3 of the 10 have already been transferred to Ross Peak
Ranch, based on erroneous outparcel logic (the transfers did not
originate from actual tracts of record) and a faulty delineation of the
zone boundary.
- The North Slope is limited by the 1996 Settlement to 12 recreational homes under an approved PUD (currently the application designates 36 or 37)
- Development of the North Slope is subject to a requirement to develop a second base area.
- BCPOA is unable to locate recorded deed restrictions required by
the 1996 Settlement; these restrictions are essential to protect the
canyon from future zoning changes increasing Base Area density
Legal and procedural issues include the following:
- If BCP's assertion that the BMV project does not need to
demonstrate significant community benefits is upheld, then the project
is illegal spot zoning.
- The boundaries of the BMV PUD are not contiguous. This is primarily critical because BCP seeks double (1-in-20 PUD)
density on units transferred from noncontiguous areas (which are also not
held by a party to the application)
- The approval process as applied for does not conform to the
sequence of approvals required in the zoning, and the application fails
to provide critical required information, including location and
dimensions of structures and accessory uses
In addition, we are now researching some further issues that have come up in the course of our investigations:
- In the Bridger Park (Ross Peak Ranch) PUD, density units were doubled
from 1-in-40 underlying density to 1-in-20 PUD density for
noncontiguous parcels not held in common ownership, contrary both to
the letter of the zoning and the requirement to provide significant
community benefits
- The BMV application seeks guesthouses for recreational homes; guesthouses are not a conditional use in the B4 zone
- The gerrymandering of land in the Bridger Park PUD (see large map)
included a 50-foot wide strip of the North Slope property, totaling
about 3 acres. That strip was not a tract of record, so one could argue
that the entire North Slope is already in a PUD, such that some
amendment is required if it is to be included in the BMV PUD, particularly if density transfers not involved in the earlier PUD are
to be considered. At a minimum
the roughly 5 acres involved in the earlier PUD should be excluded from the current application's open
space calculation.
- The 1996 Settlement allocated 50 rec home density units to 360 Ranch properties based on the rationale of 1-in-10 density.
At the time, the Base Area included the ~110 acre North Slope and ~260 acre Hammersmark properties (the latter is now Ross Peak Ranch), for a total of about 500 acres.
The settlement allocated those 50 units to the 360 Ranch properties in general. However, when the commission de-annexed the North Slope and Hammersmark properties
from the Base Area, it did not reduce the density in the Base area accordingly, though by the 1-in-10 rationale it should have fallen from 50 to 13. In addition, the
Hammersmark and North Slope properties acquired 18 new density units from the underlying zoning in their new RF designation (5 on the North Slope and 13 on Hammersmark). Thus 360 Ranch was the sole beneficiary
of an increase in the total density of Bridger Canyon by 18 homes. Now, the North Slope has been annexed back into the Base Area, increasing the total density of the Base Area by 5 homes.
- The BMV PUD seeks to transfer 13 rec home density units from Bridger Bowl. Those rec home units are associated with 48 overnight density units, which Bridger Bowl retains.
However, the only justification for providing the rec home density is to provide an incentive or subsidy for overnight accommodations. Therefore the rec home and overnight units
should not be separated.
The following sections discuss the above in more detail, and provide
some follow-up questions. While we believe our findings to be correct,
they are preliminary, and we welcome comments and corrections.
Density Transfers
Supporting documentation:
- base/research/BBxfer12remaining.pdf
recorded transfer of 13 development rights from Bridger Bowl to BCP
Base Area properties (one of the 13 has already been used in Bridger
Park/Ross Peak, per point 5 of our analysis above).
- base/research/DelaneyNoSlope2ndBase.pdf
Delaney covenant on the North Slope property, requiring development of
the Second Base Area to accompany North Slope development (point 3 of
analysis)
- base/research/NorthSlopeDorenBB.pdf
recorded transfer of 4 development rights from Doren/Beasley Creek
property, and 2 from Bridger Bowl, per point 1 of analysis above. BCPOA
is still checking to determine whether these rights have been
previously used.
- base/research/RossPeakoutparcels.pdf
memos from Morrison & Maierle and Base Area Associates describing
the disposition of Bridger Park/Ross Peak density transfers, including
those from outparcels (points 1b and 1c)
- base/research/BridgerPark.jpg
map of Bridger Park (Ross Peak Ranch) PUD, showing outparcel transfers
from areas that are not separate tracts of record, #1, #2, and #4 on
the map legend. LARGE FILE. Note that this map shows the Base Area
boundary along the North Slope as south of Bridger Creek. Contrast with
Base Area Plan Map 1 and a zoning map in the appendix (which appears similar to the official zoning map in the planning office), which together with the text clearly show that the zone boundary lies north of the creek, coincident with the property boundary.
- base/research/NoSlopeDeAnnexResolution.pdf
resolution de-annexing the North Slope from the Base Area. Note that
the resolution removes the North Slope parcel only (not any adjacent
Bridger Bowl property) - further proof of the impossibility of an
outparcel existing between parcel and zone boundaries.
- base/pud/StaffReportFull.pdf April 12 GCPD Staff Report containing the 1996 Stipulation & Settlement Agreement (Exhibit A, page 48)
- zoning/regulations_012699.htm Bridger Canyon Zoning Regulation, Section 13. Section 13.9 provides for density unit transfers, consummated through a PUD.
Legal & Procedural Issues
Background:
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