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Board meetings and strategic plans from Jayde Fiore's organization
The City Council meeting included proclamations recognizing Mental Health Month and the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence, Colorado's 150th statehood anniversary, and the 50th anniversary of the Heritage Lakewood Belmar Park museum. The council received a presentation from the Friends of Paja, highlighting their fundraising support for inclusive summer camp programs. Additionally, the meeting featured an initial public comment period where concerns regarding neighborhood growth, housing density, and the availability of data for zoning research were discussed.
The City Council processed several ordinances covering various municipal matters. Key actions included authorizing supplemental appropriations to the annual budget for tax refunds, grant funding recognition, and special election expenses. The Council also voted on property right-of-way vacations, the establishment of a building performance program, and amendments to the municipal code regarding general penalty provisions. Additionally, the Council considered and failed to pass several ordinances that would have repealed specific zoning and land use code updates from the previous year. A declaration of intent was also approved to acquire property for the construction of storm and sanitary sewer facilities.
The Lakewood City Council passed numerous resolutions throughout the first quarter of 2026. Key actions included the appointment of the Mayor Pro Tem, members to the Lakewood Advisory Commission, the Victim Assistance Compensation Board, the Board of Appeals, the Historic Preservation Commission, the Planning Commission, and the Budget and Audit Board. The Council established an ad-hoc committee for police transparency and another for charter review. Legislative actions involved calling for a special municipal election regarding zoning code amendments, setting water and sanitary sewer fees, encouraging a 'no' vote on a ballot question, approving an intergovernmental agreement for the US 6/Wadsworth Boulevard interchange project, and authorizing a salary performance increase for the City Attorney.
The meeting included the approval of the January 12, 2026 meeting minutes. The primary agenda item involved Purchase Sale Agreements for LRA properties, specifically regarding 6051 West Alama Avenue and 6203 and 6205 West Kfax Avenue. A presentation detailed the proposal from Spyro Development to transform these underutilized sites into community hubs supplying at least 50 units of affordable, age-restricted housing for seniors, averaging 54% of AMI. The proposal for the Alama Avenue site, named Alama Commons, was submitted for Low-Income Housing Tax Credit financing through CHAFA. The total project budget is near $22 million, reliant on federal tax credits, two state tax credits, and local contribution via land donation from the LRA. Key public improvements discussed included an estimated $800,000 cost for bringing three-phase power to the site, water/sewer fees, sidewalk extensions, and potential public art installations. The developer also provided an update on community outreach, noting a letter of support received for the Alama site. The Kfax site remains under development envisioning family units. The authority was set to vote on resolutions related to the land purchase contracts for both sites.
The virtual study session focused on proposed modifications to city council policies and procedures for the spring of 2026. Key discussion points included amending policies 1.1 and 5.8 to grant the mayor authority to modify agenda presentations for administrative reasons, and amending policy 1.2 to establish the mayor's responsibility for overseeing city council priority setting updates. Changes were noted for committee screening policies (4.1 and 4.2) to reflect current practices and acknowledge ad hoc committees. Discussions also covered clarifying that administrative matters are not policy development (policies 5.2 and 5.7), refining attendance rules to count all full council meetings against absence limits, and revising agenda setting rules for general business items. Furthermore, procedural rules regarding decorum and forum definitions were clarified, and changes were proposed for the HOA representative registration process and meeting recording requirements, ensuring policy decisions are recorded. The annual planning retreat schedule was discussed, along with civility standards in the Code of Conduct (6.1), and modification of the meeting schedule to standardize the order of names called during roll call votes.
Extracted from official board minutes, strategic plans, and video transcripts.
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