HomeMy WebLinkAbout23214 Sundance Springs Appeal Materials
APA
A DMINISTRATIVE PROJECT
DECISION APPEAL
APA APPLICATION PROCEDURE
Administrative Project Decision Appeals may be made pursuant to Bozeman Municipal Code section 38.250.030.
The filing of the appeal must be received by 5:00pm on the tenth working day following the final decision of the administrative
review authority. This application must be submitted with the fee to: Community Development; 20 East Olive St., Bozeman, MT
59715. The Public Counter staff MUST be present to accept application.
APA APPLICATION CHECKLIST
1.Create and submit a Planning application using the ProjectDox portal; After completing your Development Review
Application, you will receive a Notification Letter (example) via email. Please download this document to upload as a PDF to
the “Documents” folder in ProjectDox.
**An appellant need not obtain the signature of the property owner (as directed on the Notification Letter)**
2.Document sizing. For instructions on recommended document sizes and types, refer to our Development Center Website;
3.Naming protocol. All files should be numbered and named according to their order listed on your provided Submittal
Checklist. File names should start with a 3 digit numeric value (001, 002, etc.) followed by the document name. The numeric
value at the beginning of the file name ensures the order in which they are displayed. Refer to our Quick Guide for additional
information;
4.Name and address of the appellant;
5.The legal description and street address of the property involved in the appeal;
6.A description of the project, including the project number, that is the subject of the appeal;
7.Evidence that the appellant is an aggrieved person as defined in section 38.700.020;
8.The specific grounds and allegations for the appeal, and evidence necessary to support and justify a decision other than as
determined by the administrative review authority.
A public notice period is required for any Administrative Project Decision Appeal.
1.Completed and signed Noticing Checklist (N1) and Noticing Instructions and Declaration Form (N2.)
**The City will work with the property owner to complete the notice that must be posted on the site; the appellant must
complete the required notice by mail**
APPLICATION FEE
For most current application fee, see Schedule of Community Development fees. Fees are typically adjusted in annually.
CONTACT US
Alfred M. Stiff Professional Building
20 East Olive Street
Bozeman, MT 59715
phone 406-582-2260
fax 406-582-2263
planning@bozeman.net
www.bozeman.net/planning
APA Checklist Page 1 of 1 Revision Date: November 2021
NOTICING
Required Forms
Noticing Checklist (N1); Noticing Instructions & Declaration Form (N2)
BOZEMANMT
Community Development
DEVELOPMENT REVIEW APPLICATION
Remember to obtain owner signature on this form prior to uploading with the rest of your submittal
PROJECT INFORMATION
Project Name:Appeal of Administrative Approval of #22047
Project Type(s):Administrative Project Decision Appeal APA
Street Address:1.31-acre lot at the corner of South 3rd Avenue and Little Horse Drive.
Legal Description:
Sundance Springs Sub Ph 1B, S25, T02 S, R05 E, Comm Lot 2 Plat J-257
Description of Project:
Two buildings with second-floor offices and ground-level
grocery/retail/restaurant space and extensive outdoor patio space.
Current Zoning:B-1 Neighborhood Business District
Existing Use:Undeveloped
Proposed Use:Commercial
Gross Lot Area:57000
Number of Buildings:2
Type and Number of Dwellings:0
Building Size (SF):12428
Non-Residential Building Size (SF):12428
Building Height (ft):29.7
Affordable Housing (Y/N):
Departure/Deviation Request (Y/N):Yes
Zoning Verification Expedited (Y/N):No
PROPERTY OWNER
Company Name:406 Coal Blowers LLC
Name:Michael Schreiner
Full Address:P.O. Box 370, Bozeman, MT 59771
Email:michael@westernmountaininvestments.com
Phone:(406) 763-6162
APPLICANT
Company Name:N/A
Name:Geoffrey Poole
Full Address:3772 Alder Creek Drive , Bozeman, Montana 59715
Email:gpoole@eco-metrics.com
Phone:(406) 599-4313
REPRESENTATIVE
Company Name:Morrison, Sherwood, Wilson, Deola PLLP
Name:Robert Farris-Olsen
Full Address:401 North Last Chance Gulch PO Box 557, Helena, Montana 59624
Email:rfolsen@mswdlaw.com
Phone:(406) 442-3261
CERTIFICATIONS AND SIGNATURES
Applicant signature is captured electronically at time of application submittal. This application PDF must also be
signed by the property owner(s) for all application types before the submittal will be accepted. The only exception
to this is an informal review application that may be signed by the applicant(s) only. The applicant(s) and property
owner(s) submit this application for review under the terms and provisions of the Bozeman Municipal Code. It is
further indicated that any work undertaken to complete a development approved by the City of Bozeman shall be
in conformance with the requirements of the Bozeman Municipal Code and any special conditions established by
the approval authority. I acknowledge that the City has an Impact Fee Program and impact fees may be assessed
for my project. Further, I agree to grant City personnel and other review agency representative's access to the
subject site during the course of the review process (Section 38.200.050, BMC). I (We) hereby certify that the
above information is true and correct to the best of my (our) knowledge.
Certification of Completion and Compliance - I understand that conditions of approval may be applied to the
application and that I will comply with any conditions of approval or make necessary corrections to the application
materials in order to comply with municipal code provisions.
Statement of Intent to Construct According to the Final Plan - I acknowledge that construction not in
compliance with the approved final plan may result in delays of pccupancy or costs to correct noncompliance.
Property Owner Signature:
Printed Name:Michael Schreiner
CONTACT US
Alfred M. Stiff Professional Building phone 406-582-2260
20 East Olive Street fax 406-582-2263
Bozemn, MT 59715 planning@bozeman.net
www.bozeman.net/planning
PLNAPP-3572
Administration Process Decision Appeal
of Approval of Site Plan #22047
Names and addresses of appellants:
Tim Swanson
375 Peace Pipe Drive
Bozeman MT 59715
Nancy Swanson
375 Peace Pipe Drive
Bozeman MT 59715
Geoffrey Poole
3772 Ellis View Loop
Bozeman, MT 59715
PLNAPP-3572
Administration Process Decision Appeal
of Approval of Site Plan #22047
Address and Legal Description of property involved:
1.31-acre lot at the corner of South 3rd Avenue and Little Horse Drive.
Sundance Springs Sub Ph 1B, S25, T02 S, R05 E, Comm Lot 2 Plat J-257
Project description subject to appeal:
Site Plan #22047
Two buildings with second-floor offices and ground-level grocery/retail/restaurant space and extensive
outdoor patio space.
PLNAPP-3572
Administration Process Decision Appeal
of Approval of Site Plan #22047
Evidence of aggrieved persons
Tim and Nancy Swanson are residence of the Sundance Springs subdivision, of which the subject
property (Site Plan #22047) is a part. The Development Guidelines and Master Plan of the Sundance
Springs PUD govern their residence and the subject property. The live within sight and earshot of the
proposed development and purchased their home with the expectation that the city and any
development on the subject property would be bound by the terms of the PUD and the Chapter 38 of
the BMC, both of which are violated by Site Plan #22047.
Geoffrey Poole is a neighbor of the proposed development and lives in one of two residences that are
within 200 ft of the subject property. Chapter 38 of the BMC implicitly recognizes the potential impact
the subject property on his residence by requiring him to be noticed for development activities. His
deck overlooks the site and he purchased his property understanding the limits imposed by the
Sundance Springs PUD on the subject property. He has been in active dialog with the developer for
about two years, asking for changes to the site plan to reduce impacts on the peaceful use of his
residence as required by the PUD. The City’s and the developer’s failure to comply with the terms of
the PUD and and BMC will impact the peaceful enjoyment of his home.
The Swansons and Mr. Poole have been involved actively in reviewing and commenting on the
application, both individually and through their counsel’s letters to the City dated December 9, 2022,
December 13, 2022 and June 12, 2023. Those letters and comments set forth the specific impact that
this project will have on them, as well as establish their involvement in commenting on the process. As
such, they are aggrieved parties under BMC 38.250.030 (A), 38.700.030, and § 76-2-327 (1), MCA.
John M. Morrison
Frederick F. Sherwood
David K. W. Wilson, Jr.
Linda M. Deola
Brian J. Miller
Robert Farris-Olsen
Scott Peterson
rfolsen@mswdlaw.co
m
Attorneys at Law
401 North Last Chance Gulch
P.O. Box 557, Helena, Montana 59624-0557
www.mswdlaw.com
Andrée Larose
Anne Sherwood
(406) 442-3261
(406) 443-7294 FAX
July 11, 2023
Via ProjectDox
Bozeman City Commission
Director, Bozeman Community Development
RE: Appeal of Administrative Decision approving Site Plan #22047
Dear Commissioners and Ms. Bentley:
I am writing on behalf of my clients Geoffrey Poole and Tim and Nancy Swanson to appeal the
recent decision to approve Site Plan #22047. Respectfully, the decision was deficient. This
letter serves as an overview of the errors that are being appealed, the details of which are
articulated in the attached “grievance narrative” (a summary document providing graphics to aid
understanding of the grievance) “grievance details” (a detailed text description of the grievance),
and also in the 194 public comments that ask for denial of #22047, which were submitted by the
community, including neighbors, the HOAs, my clients, and my past written comments.
Previously, my clients apprised the City that the Sundance Springs PUD was structured and
approved by the City Commission as a phased “Master Plan and Development Guidelines only”
PUD under section BMC 18.54.080.A.3 of the 1992-era Bozeman Zoning Ordinance. As such,
the required elements of the PUD are a “Master Plan” and “Development Guidelines,” which
together set forth the terms governing development under the PUD. The City has not refuted or
even acknowledged these facts.
Previous comments explained that the current BMC requires compliance with all aspects of the
PUD set forth in its Approved Final Plan and Conditions of Final Approval. Thus, in the case of
the Sundance Springs PUD, the City is bound – at minimum – to enforce the requirements of the
Master Plan and Development Guidance of the PUD.
The City is also on notice that the record of the PUD’s requirements is incomplete. Although the
BMC requires that the Approved Final Plan be used as the basis for assessing Site Plan #22047,
the Approved Final Plan (including the Final Master Plan and Final Development Guidelines)
have been lost by the City, as have been some elements of Approved Preliminary Plan.
The City reviewed and approved Site Plan #22047 against the modern B-1 Zoning District and
the PUD’s Conditions of Preliminary Approval, which the City described as the surviving record
of PUD requirements. Yet surviving copies of the Master Plan, along with the Approved
Preliminary Plan’s Covenants and Development Guidelines, set forth many more requirements of
the Final PUD, including the required enforcement of the 1992-era Zoning Ordinance under the
PUD.
In short, the approval of Site Plan #22047 was in error because, in approving the plan, the City
violated in the BMC in multiple ways:
the modern BMC identifies the PUD’s Approved Final Plan as the required basis for
approval of #22047, but the Approved Final Plan is missing. Thus, the decision to assess
the plan against other documents violated the BMC;
the modern BMC enforces all requirements of the PUD, including the terms of the PUD’s
Master Plan and the Development Guidelines, which were vetted, modified, conditionally
approved, and ordered by the City Commission. The City violated the BMC by assessing
#22047 against the PUD’s Conditions of Preliminary Approval while ignoring all other
surviving requirements of the PUD.
the applicant has failed to demonstrate that the proposed locations for buildings and
parking lots meet the purpose of the Block Frontage Standards and the specific departure
criteria; therefore, the City violated the BMC in granting requested departures;
as documented in the Introduction to the PUD’s Covenants and Development Guidelines,
the PUD’s requirements operate beyond the requirements of the 1992 Zoning Ordinance.
Therefore, the City has violated the current BMC by not enforcing the 1992-era standard,
even if, as the City contends, only a subset of the Covenants are applicable;
the City has violated the BMC by elevating the City’s professed “preferences” above the
requirement to comply with the BMC. Based on preference, the City has allowed parking
reductions that will yield a parking demand exceeding available on-site parking by more
than 100 spaces. This will occur in a residential neighborhood where on-street parking
has been disallowed by order of the City Commission to protect public safety;
the City declines to enforce the Covenants and Development Guidelines on the basis that
its “custom and practice” is to set aside its enforcement authority over the PUD’s
Covenants and Development Guidelines, yet the evidence provided to the City shows
that, until now, the custom and practice has been to enforce the Sundance Springs
Covenants as legally binding.
Much of the acrimony surrounding Site Plan #22047 arises because the Applicant
designed a Site Plan that violates numerous terms of the PUD, by which the applicant agreed to
be bound voluntarily when purchasing the property. Site Plan #22047 simply ignores the terms
of PUD’s surviving Master Plan and the Covenants and Development Guidelines surviving in the
PUD’s Approved Preliminary Plan, all of which were vetted, modified, approved, and ordered by
the City Commission and are binding under the current BMC. Therefore, the applicant has failed
to meet the BMC’s mandate that he demonstrate compliance with all applicable standards and
requirements. Consequently, the City has violated the BMC by approving the non-compliant
Site Plan.
Again, the evidence that supports our assertions is found in the attached “narrative” and “details”
of this grievance, along with all public comment regarding the PUD, which are incorporated
herein by reference.
To that end, the City Commission should reaffirm the requirements of the PUD that were
established by order of the Commission and disapprove Site Plan #22047.
Sincerely,
Robert Farris-Olsen
1
Narrative: Grounds and Allegations for
Appealing Approval of #22047
Site Plan #22047 has been approved by the City under the
UDC, Chapter 38 of the BMC. The plan proposes a
commercial development under the Sundance Springs PUD.
Appellants: Tim and Nancy Swanson & Geoffrey Poole
Overview:
We are appealing the approval of Site Plan #22047 under
the Sundance Springs Planned Unit Development (PUD)
because:
● the City has lost the PUD’s Approved Final Plan;
without the Approved Final Plan, the City’s approval
of Site Plan #22047 violates the Bozeman Municipal
Code (BMC).
● The City ignored (and Site Plan #22047 violates) many
PUD requirements that are known from the surviving
record.
● the City’s approval of departures requested by the
applicant violated the BMC.
In the pages that follow, we document the grounds for
appeal.
1. Required
Elements of
the Sundance
Springs PUD
Grievance in
response to
Approval of Site
Plan #22047
Here we describe the required elements of the
Sundance Springs PUD.
In brief: The PUD must have a “Master Plan” and
“Development Guidelines” that set forth the
terms governing development under the PUD.
3
Sundance Springs PUD
●A Phased PUD
● A “Master Plan and Development Guidelines only”
PUD, pursuant to 1992 BMC 18.54.080.A.3.
The Sundance Springs PUD was submitted to the
City as a “Master Plan and Development
Guidelines only” PUD, as described by BMC
18.54.080.A.3 of the 1992-era municipal code.
4
Sundance Springs PUD
Two required elements describing PUD terms:
– Master Plan
– Development Guidelines
The Sundance Springs PUD, then, has two required
elements:
● a PUD Master Plan
● Development Guidelines
Having no other components, the “Master Plan” and
“Development Guidelines” set forth the terms
governing development under the PUD.
5
Approval
Authority
City
Commission
PUD’s have Two Approved Plans
Preliminary
Plan
Approved Preliminary Plan &
Conditions of Preliminary Approval
Final
Plan
Approved Final Plan &
Conditions of Final Approval
The PUD
Assures compliance
with Approved Prelim
Plan and Conditions
of Approval
Considers public
comment & compliance
with BMC and state regs.
Developer
(PUD Applicant)
Every PUD has two approved plans.
● An Preliminary Plan created by the PUD
applicant and then approved and ordered by
the City Commission, usually with associated
Conditions of Preliminary Approval.
● A Final Plan* is then compiled by the PUD
applicant and approved by a City Approval
Authority,** sometimes with attached Conditions
of Final Approval.”
*The Final Plan is created by combining the terms of the Approved
Preliminary Plan and the Conditions of Preliminary Approval.
**The Approval Authority ensures that the Final Plan complies with the
Approved Preliminary Plan and the Conditions of Preliminary Approval.
6
Sundance Springs PUD Documents
Conditions of Approval
(Findings of Fact & Order)
Approved Preliminary
PUD Master Plan
Approved
Preliminary
Development
Guidelines
Record of
Approval
Preliminary PUD:
File Z-95125
Final PUD:
File Z-9812
Approved
Preliminary Plan
Conditions of Approval
(Approval Letter)
Approved Final
PUD Master Plan
Approved
Final
Development
Guidelines
Record of
Approval
Approved
Final Plan
Each approved plan for the Sundance Springs PUD,
then, was required to have a Master Plan,
Development Guidelines, and potentially,
associated Conditions of Approval
The “final” versions of each document were required
to conform to all terms of the “preliminary” versions,
and with the Conditions of Preliminary Approval.
Having been ordered by the City Commission, the
terms of the Approved Final Plan* are “lawfully
adopted rules” that govern development within the
PUD.
* As described in the Master Plan and Development Guidelines
2. Role of the
Sundance
Springs PUDs
under the
Current BMC
Grievance in
response to
Approval of Site
Plan #22047
Having established that the Final Master Plan and
Final Development Guidelines contain the terms
of the PUD, we will now summarize how the
PUD is applied under the current BMC.
In brief: The current BMC requires compliance
with all aspects of the PUD.
8
Compliance with PUDs is required
BMC 38.100.50.A states:
“Wherever the requirements [of Chapter 38 of
the BMC] are at variance with the requirements
of any other lawfully adopted rules or
regulations ... the most restrictive requirements,
or those imposing the higher standards, will
govern” (emphasis added).
According to the current BMC...
The City must compare the requirements of the
Unified Development Code (UDC) with all other
lawfully adopted rules and regulations,* and impose
the most restrictive requirements thereof.
*Again, the terms of the PUD’s Master Plan and Development Guidelines
are lawfully adopted development rules.
9
Compliance with PUDs is required
BMC 38.430.040.A.3.d pertains to approvals
under a PUD:
“Issuance of building permits and other
development approvals are based on the
approved final plan and any conditions of
approval” (emphases added).
The City must ensure that development approvals
comply with the Master Plan and Development
Guidelines found in the Approved Final Plan along
with any Conditions of Final Approval.
10
Sundance Springs PUD Documents
Conditions of Approval
(Findings of Fact & Order)
Approved Preliminary
PUD Master Plan
Approved
Preliminary
Development
Guidelines
Record of
Approval
Preliminary PUD
Z-95125
Final PUD
Z-9812
Approved
Preliminary Plan
Conditions of Approval
(Approval Letter)
Approved Final
PUD Master Plan
Approved
Final
Development
Guidelines
Record of
Approval
Approved
Final Plan
Thus, if we look at the expected record for the PUD,
the documents noted with a green check mark
contain the terms of the PUD enforced by the BMC.
11
Compliance with PUDs is required
BMC 38.430.040.A.3.d states:
“No city administrative personnel are permitted
to issue permits for improvements which are not
indicated on the approved final plan.”
The City can not approve any proposed buildings or
improvements that are not indicated on the Final
Master Plan contained in the Sundance Springs
PUD Approved Final Plan.
12
Compliance with PUDs is required
BMC 38.430.080 states:
“The failure to comply with any of the terms,
conditions of approval or limitations contained
on the site plan, landscape plan, building
elevations, other approved documents, or other
element pertaining to a planned unit
development which has received final approval
from the city may subject the applicant or
current landowner to the enforcement remedies
contained in section 38.200.160.”
Finally, failure to comply with any terms of the
Sundance Springs Approved Final Plan or
Conditions of Final Approval is a violation of the law
that may subject the applicant to enforcement
actions.
13
Summary
The terms of the Sundance Springs PUD final Master
Plan and final Development Guidelines are legally
adopted development rules enforced under current:
● BMC 38.100.050
● BMC 38.100.080
● BMC 38.430.040.A.3.d
● BMC 38.430.080.A
Failure to enforce or adhere to the terms
Sundance Springs PUD final Master Plan or final
Development Guidelines is a violation of BMC
Chapter 38.
In summary, failure to enforce or abide by the terms
of the final Master Plan or final Development
Guidelines is a violation of the BMC.
3. Existing
Record of the
Sundance
Springs PUD.
Grievance in
response to
Approval of Site
Plan #22047
We have established that the terms of the PUD
contained in the final Master Plan and final
Development Guidelines are enforced by the
current BMC.
Now we will review the City’s remaining record of
the PUD’s Approved Preliminary Plan and
Approved Final Plan.
In brief: The record is incomplete. The Approved
Final Plan and other elements of the PUD are
lost. The BMC requires that the missing
Approved Final Plan be used as the basis of
approval for Site Plan #22047.
15
Sundance Springs PUD Documents
Conditions of Approval
(Findings of Fact & Order)
Approved Preliminary
PUD Master Plan
Approved
Preliminary
Development
Guidelines
Record of
Approval
Preliminary PUD
Z-95125
Final PUD
Z-9812
Approved
Preliminary Plan
Conditions of Approval
(Approval Letter)
Approved Final
PUD Master Plan
Approved
Final
Development
Guidelines
Record of
Approval
Approved
Final Plan
MISSING
MISSING
MISSING
MISSING
MISSING
Much of the City’s record for the Sundance Springs
PUD has been lost.
Final PUD: All documents required by the BMC for
development review under the PUD (those with the
green check marks) are missing. Some parts of the
folder containing the record of Final Approval
survive.
Preliminary PUD: The Approved Preliminary Plan
folder is retained but the section describing the
Master Plan has been removed* from that folder.
*Disconcertingly, the same Master Plan description has also been removed
from the preliminary subdivision application for Sundance Springs
(Document P-9539).
16
Response from City Attorney’s Office
Signature**
The City Attorney’s office acknowledged that the missing
records were legally required for review of Site Plan
#22047, but characterized adherence to the BMC as a
“failing,” and as “strict” behavior.
The City stated that the outcome of adhering to the law
would be undesirable to the City, and that therefore the
City does not have to comply with the BMC but can
review the plan substituting other documents for the
Approved Final Plan.
Thus, the City’s position appears to be that the City does
not have to abide by the BMC if doing so would yield an
outcome that is undesirable to the City.
The claim that the “property could never be developed” in
compliance with the BMC is unsupported and specious.*
*The paths to development that comply with the BMC include the
Commission-ordered provision for development of the site if commercial
development is not allowed. (Condition of Preliminary Approval #29).
**The signature has been redacted because our grievance is not against a
particular person.
4. Reconstructing
Requirements of
the Sundance
Springs PUD
Grievance in
response to
Approval of Site
Plan #22047
We have established that review of #22047 can not
proceed under the BMC because the terms of the
PUD’s Approved Final Plan are unknown. The
City’s position is that it can review #22047 using
other documents.
Therefore, we now highlight known requirements of
the PUD derived from other documents in the
remaining record of the Sundance Springs PUD.
In brief: Surviving copies of the Master Plan and the
Approved Preliminary Plan’s Development
Guidelines document many requirements of the
PUD.
We contend that the City has violated the BMC by reviewing Site Plan
#22047 without the Approved Final Plan. Regardless, the Site Plan was
reviewed and approved.
18
Sundance Springs PUD Documents
Conditions of Approval
(Findings of Fact & Order)
Approved Preliminary
PUD Master Plan
Approved
Preliminary
Development
Guidelines
Record of
Approval
Preliminary PUD
Z-95125
Final PUD
Z-9812
Approved
Preliminary Plan
Conditions of Approval
(Approval Letter)
Approved Final
PUD Master Plan
Approved
Final
Development
Guidelines
Record of
Approval
Approved
Final Plan
MISSING
MISSING
MISSING
MISSING
MISSING
Here we examine some of the remaining contents of
the “record of approval” folder for the Approved
Final Plan (Z-9812).
19
Surviving Final Master Plan
The official Final Master Plan was contained in the
“Approved Final Plan” and therefore is lost.
However, the “Sundance Springs Master Plan”
survives in the remaining Z-9812 folder.
20
Surviving Final Master Plan
Pursuant to 1992 BMC 18.45.080.D.1 the role of the
PUD’s Master Plan is show “proposed conditions
pertaining to such elements as building locations,
open spaces, vehicular and pedestrian circulation,
and boundaries of the individual phases of the
PUD.”
The surviving Master Plan fulfills that role by showing
the proposed number, location, and use of the
building proposed under the PUD for Commercial
Lot #2, the lot associated with Site Plan #22047.
21
Market Study
The remaining Z-9812 folder also contains a Market
Study, ordered by the City Commission as a
Condition of Approval of Z-95125.
The Market Study includes a “Village Plan” – an
enlarged excerpt from the Master Plan – showing
the same building, building location, open spaces,
and vehicular and pedestrian circulation shown on
the surviving Master Plan Document.
22
Market Study & Master Plan Requirements
● Commercial Lots: No businesses so unique as
to draw traffic into the neighborhood
● Lot #2: Single story convenience store; one
building
The market study also describes the PUD’s
“Proposed Buildings.”
According to the Market Study, the PUD allocated a
single one-story building to Commercial Lot #2.
The designated use was a convenience store
(retail).
This information is consistent with the requirements
surviving Master Plan document.
23
Sundance Springs Marketing Info
After approval of the PUD, marketing information
describing the same Final Master Plan was
distributed to potential buyers of lots within
Sundance Springs.
24
1.31 ACRE COMMERCIAL LOT IN THE ORIGINAL SUNDANCE
SPRINGS PUD. THIS LOT HAS BEEN MASTER PLANNED
FOR A CONVENIENCE STORE.
Here, a past real estate listing for Commerical Lot #2
acknowledges that the PUD’s Master Plan
designated a Convenience Store on the site. This
is also consistent with the surviving Master Plan.
25
2020 Concept Review
Finally, the 2020 concept review of the proposed site
plan (City Document #20298) includes a copy of
the same Master Plan Map.
26
Sundance Springs PUD Documents
Conditions of Approval
(Findings of Fact & Order)
Approved Preliminary
PUD Master Plan
Approved
Preliminary
Development
Guidelines
Record of
Approval
Preliminary PUD
Z-95125
Final PUD
Z-9812
Approved
Preliminary Plan
Conditions of Approval
(Approval Letter)
Approved Final
PUD Master Plan
Approved
Final
Development
Guidelines
Record of
Approval
Approved
Final Plan
MISSING
MISSING
MISSING
MISSING MISSING
In summary, the final Master Plan contained in the
Approved Final Plan is lost, but requirements of the
Master Plan survive in multiple forms and in multiple
places in the remaining record of the PUD.
27
Sundance Springs PUD Documents
Conditions of Approval
(Findings of Fact & Order)
Approved Preliminary
PUD Master Plan
Approved
Preliminary
Development
Guidelines
Record of
Approval
Preliminary PUD
Z-95125
Final PUD
Z-9812
Approved
Preliminary Plan
Conditions of Approval
(Approval Letter)
Approved Final
PUD Master Plan
Approved
Final
Development
Guidelines
Record of
Approval
Approved
Final Plan
MISSING
MISSING
MISSING
MISSING MISSING
Now we will consider the Approved Preliminary
Development Guidelines that were reviewed,
amended, approved, and ordered by the City
Commission and survive within Z-95125.
28
Approved Preliminary Plan
The City Attorney’s office and Community
Development Staff acknowledge only the
subdivision’s “Covenants”
Yet the PUD’s Approved Preliminary Plan refers to
the same documents as the “Covenants and
Development Guidelines.” (Tab 8 of the Approved
Preliminary Plan in Z-95125)
As Development Guidelines, the associated
requirements:
● were vetted, amended, approved, and ordered by
the City Commission;
● are required elements of the Sundance Springs
PUD;
● put forth terms of the PUD that must be enforced
under the BMC.
29
Covenants & Development Guidelines
PUD Submittal Requirements (1992 BMC 18.54.080.D.2):
● submittal of Covenants is optional
● if submitted, protective covenants are part of the PUD’s
Development Guidelines
The dual role of the “Covenants and Development
Guidelines” is clarified by Section 18.54 of the
1992-era BMC – the code under which the PUD
was submitted and approved.
Section 18.54.080.D.2.h states that Covenants
submitted as part of the PUD’s preliminary plan are
part of the PUD’s Development Guidelines.
* The City contends that the Covenants represent purely private agreements
that need not be enforced under the BMC. Note that submission of
Covenants as part of the preliminary plan was optional under 1992 BMC
18.54.080.D.2. If the Covenants were intended by the PUD applicant to
be merely private agreements, they would not have been submitted for
approval as part of the Development Guidelines in the preliminary plan.
30
Covenants & Development Guidelines
Sundance
Springs
Commercial
Covenants
PUD
Commercial
Development
Guidelines
PUD’s Covenants
and Development
Guidelines
Tab 8, Z-95125
PUD’s Development Guidelines
● Approved by City Commission
(Jan 1996, Z-95125)
● Lawfully adopted development
rules
● Enforcement required by City
Sundance Springs Covenants
● Executed by developer (March
1998).
● Private agreements to which the
City is a party.
● Enforced by City’s custom and
practice (until now).
Therefore, the document contained under Tab 8 of
the Approved Preliminary Plan was used for two
separate legal purposes. It was:
● vetted, amnded, approved, and ordered by the
City Commission as the PUD’s Preliminary
Development Guidelines (as required under
1992 BMC 18.54.080.D.2), and
● the basis for the private Covenants executed by
the PUD applicant.
31
Sundance Springs PUD Documents
Conditions of Approval
(Findings of Fact & Order)
Approved Preliminary
PUD Master Plan
Approved
Preliminary
Development
Guidelines
Record of
Approval
Preliminary PUD
Z-95125
Final PUD
Z-9812
Approved
Preliminary Plan
Conditions of Approval
(Approval Letter)
Approved Final
PUD Master Plan
Approved
Final
Development
Guidelines
Record of
Approval
Approved
Final Plan
MISSING
MISSING
MISSING
MISSING MISSING
Additional evidence that enforcement of the
Development Guidelines was expected by the City
Commission and is required under the BMC comes
from the Record of Preliminary Approval.
32
Public Hearings
According to the public record, Mr Dan Kamp was an
architect retained to review the planning process
and the PUD’s Preliminary Plan.
In public hearings, Mr Kamp testified to the City
Commission and to the public that enforcement of
the Development Guidelines would ensure that the
vision of the PUD’s original applicant would be
realized.
33
“Covenants and Developmental Guidelines are found in
Section. 8 of the submittal. … Site Plan review will occur for
all development within the neighborhood services area, and
that review will ensure compliance with the Guidelines.”
(Page 24, emphasis added)
Staff Report for Z-95125
Even more compelling is the above statement from
the Staff Report for Z-95125.
Prior to approving Z-95125, the Commission was
assured by Planning Staff that the Development
Guidelines* would be enforced during Site Plan
Review of Commercial Development under the
PUD.
*Found under Tab 8 in Z-95125, the PUD’s Preliminary Plan approved by the
City Commission.
5. Review and
Approval of
#22047
Grievance in
response to
Approval of Site
Plan #22047
We have established that the surviving record of PUD
requirements consists of, at minimum*:
● the surviving PUD Final Master Plan
● Preliminary Development Guidelines.
● Conditions of Preliminary Approval
● Staff Report for Z-95125
● Market Study ordered by City Commission
● Public record of City Board and Commission
meetings.
We now look at how the City applied this record to
the approval of Site Plan #22047.
In brief: The City recognizes only the Conditions of
Preliminary Approval as binding terms of the PUD.
Other surviving terms are ignored.
*Our previously submitted public comments include references to other City
documents that we incorporate here by reference as part of the relevant
record of PUD requirements.
35
City Review Process
- Staff Report
Sundance Springs Commercial Lot SP
Application #22047
June 28, 2023
Page 21
“The application has been reviewed against current BMC
standards, as well as any City required Covenants that were
imposed as a conditions of approval of the PUD.”
The City reviewed Site Plan #22047 against PUD’s
Conditions of Preliminary Approval and the
Current BMC.*
*The introduction to the PUD’s Preliminary Covenants and Development
Guidelines (again, vetted, amended, approved and ordered by the City
Commission) states that the Covenants and Development Guidelines
“detail how the Neighborhood Services Property within the Sundance
Springs Subdivision are to be developed and maintained beyond the
minimum requirements of the Bozeman Zoning Code which exists at
the date of the execution of this document.” Therefore, current BMC
38.100.050.A requires that Site Plan #22047 conform to the 1992-era
zoning ordinances.
36
Sundance Springs PUD Documents
Conditions of Approval
(Findings of Fact & Order)
Approved Preliminary
PUD Master Plan
Approved
Preliminary
Development
Guidelines
Record of
Approval
Preliminary PUD
Z-95125
Final PUD
Z-9812
Approved
Preliminary Plan
Conditions of Approval
(Approval Letter)
Approved Final
PUD Master Plan
Approved
Final
Development
Guidelines
Record of
Approval
Approved
Final Plan
MISSING
MISSING
MISSING
MISSING
IGNORED
IGNORED
IGNOREDIGNORED
MISSING
The only requirements of the PUD considered by the
City were the conditions of Preliminary Approval.
The City’s position, then, is that:
● the Conditions of Preliminary Approval of Z-
95125 are binding, but Development Guidelines
in Z-95125 (the approved document) are not;
● Surviving evidence of the terms of the Approved
Final Plan can be ignored, even though the
BMC identifies the Approved Final Planas the
required basis of approval for Site Plan #22047.
The City’s approval of Site Plan #22047 seems to
hinge on the assumption that the PUD had no
Master Plan and no Development Guidelines.*
*Again, the PUD was a “Master Plan and Development Guidelines only”
PUD approved under 1992 BMC 18.54.080.A.3 (as discussed
previously). The Master Plan and Development Guidelines were required
elements of the PUD setting forth the binding terms of the PUD.
6. Assessing Site
Plan #22047
against the
available record of
the Sundance
Springs PUD
Grievance in
response to
Approval of Site
Plan #22047
We have established that the City:
● violated the BMC by approving Site Plan
#22047 without the Approved Final Plan,
● ignored the surviving record of most
requirements of the Approved Final Plan
when approving #22047
● ignored the 1992-era zoning imposed by the
Development Guidelines of the PUD
Here we compare Site Plan #22047 to the
surviving requirements of the PUD’s Master Plan
and Development Guidelines.
In brief: Site Plan #22047 violates many
requirements of the PUD.
38
The PUD’s Development Guidelines
“Furthermore, the intent is to establish minimum
standards to ensure that the type of building
constructed is comparable to and blends with the
eclectic styles of housing found in the surrounding
developments...”
Proposed development Neighborhood buildings
The Development Guidelines require that
development on the Neighborhood Services Lots is
comparable to and blends with the surrounding
residences...
39
The PUD’s Development Guidelines
“… and that the type of building avoids the appearance of
‘Commercial Development.’”
Primary Roof Form Secondary Roof
Use Primary Roof Form
to enclose upper levels
Forms
Required design guidance Proposed development
“… and avoids the appearance of “Commercial
Development.”
40
The PUD’s Development Guidelines
Site Plan #22047 has:
● Inadequate setbacks
● Inadequate parking
● Oversized buildings
● Disallowed basements
● Improvements to support uses
requiring future approvals
As listed above, Site Plan #22047 violates many
other aspects of the Preliminary Development
Guidelines approved and ordered by the City
Commission.
41
Violations of the PUD’s Master Plan
Master Plan Requirements
● One building
● 5000 sq ft leasable space
● Single story
● Central location on lot
● Retail use only
● No provision for large patios
Site Plan #22047 Proposal
● Two buildings
● 12000+ sq ft leasable space
● Two story
● On east edge of lot
● Office / restaurant / retail
● 3000 sq ft of outdoor patios
As listed above, Site Plan #22047 violates multiple
provisions of the Master Plan.
7. Parking
Grievance in
response to
Approval of Site
Plan #22047
We will now address the City’s decision to approve
parking reductions allowed under the current B-1
Zoning District.
In brief: Parking reductions are not allowed under
the PUD. Modern reductions, if allowed, will
create a parking demand that exceeds on-site
parking by more than 100 spaces when applied
across the commercial lots. This will create
inordinate on-street parking demand where the
Commission has ordered no on-street parking.
43
Parking Restrictions
When the Sundance Springs PUD was created, the
City Commission ordered that no parking be
allowed on the residential streets to protect public
safety. Passage of emergency vehicles through the
24-ft wide streets could be blocked by on-street
parking.
44
Parking Demand
“[T]he City declines to
enforce [the PUD’s parking
standards] in favor of
encouraging the use of
modem minimum parking
standards.”
May 19, 2023 Letter from
City Attorney to Applicant,
Footnote #3
The City’s stated preference is to allow parking
reductions from anticipated parking demands.*
When eventually applied across the combined 6.23
acres of the two Sundance Springs Neighborhood
Services lots, such parking reductions will create
an excess parking demand of more than 100
spaces**.
There is simply no space in the surrounding
residential neighborhood to accommodate such an
excess parking demand.
* Parking reductions are not allowed under the Development Guidelines of
the PUD
** Site Plan #22047 has an excess parking demand of 24 spaces on a 1.31
acre lot, or an excess parking demand of 18 spaces per acre. The two
commercial lots in Sundance Springs are a combined 6.23 acres. 6.23
acres times 18 spaces/acre would create an excess parking demand of
114 spaces once both Commercial Services lots are developed.
45
Parking Demand
The City’s proposed solution – no parking signs on
the streets -- is not workable for such an extreme
excess parking demand. Rather, approval of Site
Plan #22047 will contribute to perpetual
enforcement problems for the City and perpetual
impacts on the residential area.
Once Sundance Springs Businesses are established
and limited by on-site parking, there will be
pressure to widen adjacent residential streets to
accommodate overflow parking* and to overturn
the No Parking order that was a condition of
approval for the PUD.
*The MAP Brewery in north Bozeman provides an example of exactly this
scenario.
46
Resulting Code Violation
BMC 38.100.050.A states:
“In their interpretation and application, the provisions of
this chapter are minimum requirements adopted for the
promotion of the health, safety and general welfare of
the community. In some instances the public interest will
be best served when such minimums are exceeded.
Wherever the requirements of this chapter are at
variance with the requirements of any other lawfully
adopted rules or regulations, or wherever there is an
internal conflict within this chapter, the most restrictive
requirements, or those imposing the higher standards,
will govern.” (emphases added)
Because the extreme excess parking demand, the
potential for illegally parked cars to block
emergency vehicle access into the neighborhood
elevates the City’s responsibility to protect public
safety (BMC 38.100.050.A).
In this case, the minimum standard of the current B-1
zoning district does not protect public safety.* The
parking reductions must be disallowed.
*Further, Site Plan #22047 violates the parking requirements of the PUD.
8. Requested
Departures from
Block Frontage
Standards in Site
Plan #22047
Grievance in
response to
Approval of Site
Plan #22047
Here, we discuss the City approval of departures
from the Block Frontage Standards in Site Plan
#22047. Required departure criteria were not
met.
In brief: For departures to be granted, the BMC
requires the applicant to demonstrate that
proposed conditions meet:
● the purpose(s) of the block frontage standards
● other applicable departure criteria.
The application fails at this requirement. The City
violated the BMC in granting the departures.
48
BMC 38.25.060.E: In order for departures to be
granted, “[p]roject applicants must successfully
demonstrate to the review authority how the
proposed departure meets the purpose(s) of the
standard and other applicable departure criteria
that applies to the specific standard” (emphases
added).
Departure Requirements
Application #22047 requests departure from BMC
38.510.020.F.1 and BMC 38.510.030.C of the Block
Frontage Standards.
Departures can not be granted unless the applicant
demonstrates that the departure meets the purpose
of the standard and the departure-specific criteria
(pursuant to BMC 38.25.060.E).
49
Purpose: BMC 38.510.010.A.2. “To design sites
and orient buildings with an emphasis on compatible
development and creating a comfortable walking
environment.”
Walking Environment
Existing
Trail Frontage
Existing
Trail Frontage
Sidewalk and Street FrontageSidewalk andStreet FrontageParking
ParkingA purpose of the Block Frontage Standards is to
create a comfortable walking environment.
The application #22047 violates parking location
requirements (BMC 38.510.030.C) of the Block
Frontage Standards by locating parking:
● along 100% of the walkable street frontage to the
east,
● along ~90% of the walkable trail frontage to the
north, and
● in front of the building along the walkable primary
frontage to the south.
The departure can not be granted because the Site
Plan places parking lots along all existing walkable
frontages, and thus fails to create a comfortable
walking environment on any existing frontage.
50
Criterion: BMC 38.510.030.3.d: “There must be an
acceptable tradeoff in terms of the amount and
quality of storefront area that is integrated with the
development and the applicable parking location
departure.”
Site Plan #22047 Departure Narrative:
“The tradeoff for this requested parking departure is
open space for recreation and riparian buffer along
Middle Creek Ditch creating a better experience for the
intended users.”
Required Tradeoffs
Further, the specific departure criterion requires a
trade-off between parking location and the amount
and quality of storefront integration.
The trade-off described by the applicant is for open
space and riparian buffer southeast of the buildings
to promote a “better experience for the intended
users.”
The primary “intended users” to the southeast of the
proposed buildings are business patrons on the
proposed patios.
Departures designed to create required open spaces
and riparian buffers are not allowed.
Departures can not be approved to improve the
experience of business patrons on outdoor patios.
The departure can not be approved because
increased storefront integration has not been
demonstrated by the applicant.
51
Purpose: BMC 38.510.010.A.2. “To design sites and orient
buildings with an emphasis on compatible development and
creating a comfortable walking environment.”
Criterion: BMC 38.510.020.F.1.d: “Departures may be
considered provided the location and front orientation of the
buildings are compatible with the character of the area and
enhance the character of the street.”
Site Plan #22047 Departure Narrative:
“Frontage along South 3rd Avenue is not desirable in the location
due to the low-density agricultural/residential character of the
existing neighborhood.”
“Two-story buildings along this frontage would not match the low-
density agricultural/residential feel of adjacent neighborhoods.”
Compatibility of Development
A purpose of the Block Frontage Standards is to emphasize
compatible development. The specific departure criterion
requires the departure to be compatible with the
character of the area.
Perversely, the applicant requests a departure because the
building design is incompatible with the area.
In other words, because the applicant designed buildings
that are incompatible with the neighborhood, the
applicant has gained a departure from standards that
have the explicit purpose of “an emphasis on compatible
development.”*
The proposed building locations amplify incompatibility with
the surrounding neighborhood by moving incompatible
buildings off the adjacent arterial street, closer to nearby
residences, and fronting them on tranquil open space.
* By this logic, the standard would apply only those buildings designed to be
compatible with their surroundings. Any building in any development
designed to be incompatible with its surroundings would gain departure.
52
Addressing Frontages
Existing
Trail Frontage
Existing
Trail Frontage
Sidewalk and Street FrontageSidewalk and Street FrontageParking
ParkingP ro p o s e d T ra ilP ro p o sed T railFrontageFrontageSidewalk and Street FrontageSidewalk and Street FrontagePrimaryStreet Frontage
PrimaryStreet Frontage
Fundamentally, the Block Frontage Standards require that buildings be
sited to address a lot’s frontages. Here, instead, the applicant
adjusts the frontages to address his preferred building sites.
Site Plan #22047 proposes that the west building front the street to the
south. Yet the plan degrades all existing frontages by lining them
with parking while requiring creation of a new frontage for the east
building to address.
Brazenly, the applicant proposes to create the new frontage by building
a trail on property owned and controlled by the adjacent HOA,
without permission from the HOA. Without such permission, the
east building will never front a trail, yet existing frontages are
degraded with parking areas.
Recall that the entire departure is predicated on the “need” to move
incompatible buildings, designed by the applicant, off an arterial
street and closer to neighboring residences.
Approving such a departure makes a mockery of the primary purpose
of Block Frontage Standards – an emphasis on compatible
development.
The remedy required by the BMC is as simple as it is clear. If the City
enforced the terms of the PUD, as required by the BMC, a one-story
5000 sq ft building that complements the neighborhood and
supports retail use could address the main frontage to the south,
with ample room for parking without degrading existing frontages.
9. Preferences,
Customs, and
Practices of the
City
Grievance in
response to
Approval of Site
Plan #22047
We have shown that the City has violated the
BMC by granting departures requested by the
applicant because the applicant failed to
demonstrate how Site Plan #22047 meets the
intent of the Block Frontage Standards or or
specific approval criteria.
Next, we explore the City’s “preferences” and
“customs and practices” relied upon to approve
Site Plan #22047.
In brief: The City elevates it’s “preferences” over
compliance with the BMC and misrepresents its
“custom and practice” with respect to the
Sundance Springs PUD.
54
Preference, Custom & Practice
“[I]t is the City's custom and practice to only enforce those covenants
relied upon for approval of a development. Further, the City prefers to
encourage development of the commercial property pursuant to
today's BMC standards, which are reflective of the community's needs
and values today not those established over twenty years ago.
Therefore, the City declines to exercise authority it may have to
enforce the covenants.” (emphases added)
-Bozeman City Attorney’s Office
The City declines to enforce requirements of the
Sundance Springs PUD based on its:
●custom and practice* to enforce only covenants
relied upon to approve development, and
●preference* for development that reflects the
community’s needs and values.
The City seems to be unaware that:
●the Covenants and Development Guidelines were
relied upon heavily to approve the PUD;
●the City’s customs and practice has been to
enforce the terms of the PUD’s covenants, and;
●the current needs and values of the community
were expressed in nearly 200 public comments
and are well-reflected by the terms of the PUD.
*In the end, the City’s assessment of Site Plan #22047 is not a question of
preference, or “custom and practice.” The current BMC requires
enforcement of terms of the PUD, including the Development Guidelines.
55
Custom and Practice
2004 Enforcement of Sundance Springs Covenants Violation:
The practice of the City is to enforce the Sundance
Springs Covenants under the PUD. For instance,
in 2004 a residential developer violated a setback
established in the Covenants. The City
Commission took action to remedy the illegal
violation of a required setback.
This action was consistent with the City’s stated
custom of enforcing covenants relied upon for
approval of a development. The “Application
Criteria” used to approve the Sundance Springs
PUD (Tab 6, Z-95125) show that the Covenants
and Development Guidelines were relied upon
extensively for approval of the PUD.
That the City is now unwilling to enforce the
covenants represents a reversal of custom and
practice regarding the Sundance Springs PUD.
56
Public Comments
The community submitted 197 public comments to
the City, expressing their preferences, needs and
values.
●3 supported the proposed development;
●194 asked that Site Plan #22047 be denied.
The community has expressed its needs and values directly
in 197 public comments submitted regarding #22047.
194 requested denial of the application. 3 were in
support.
Common needs and values offered by the community in the
public comment included:
●compliance with the BMC and terms of the PUD
●protecting the tranquility of the adjacent open space;
●safety concerns caused by excess demand for on
street parking;
●ensuring peaceful enjoyment of neighborhood
residences;
●protecting the rural/agricultural neighborhood feel.
Therefore, enforcing (rather than ignoring) the terms of the
PUD, as vetted, amended, approved, and ordered by the
City Commission and as required under the BMC, would
reflect the community’s needs and values associated with
this residential area, including its tranquil open spaces
used for quiet recreation by City residents.
10. Applicant’s
Obligation of
Compliance
A video series exploring
the Sundance Springs
Planned Urban
Development (PUD) in
Bozeman, Montana
Here, we discuss the applicant’s voluntary
acceptance of the PUD’s terms, failure to meet
his obligation to demonstrate compliance with
the BMC, and the City’s associated complicity.
In brief: Much of the acrimony surrounding Site
Plan #22047 arises because the Applicant
willfully violates the terms of the PUD, terms to
which the applicant voluntary agreed when
purchasing the property.
In the end, the applicant fails to demonstrate
compliance with all applicable standards and
requirements, as required under the BMC.
Consequently, the City violated the BMC by
approving the deficient Site Plan.
58
Constructive Acceptance of
PUD Requirements
Sundance Springs Covenants and Development Guidelines
The City’s approval of Site Plan #22047 violated the
BMC because:
●the Approved Final Plan is missing,
●requirements of the PUD were not enforced, and
●requirements for departures were not met by the
applicant.
Ultimately, however, the contention around #22047,
arises primarily from the applicant’s decision to
knowingly create and submit for approval a Site
Plan that violates of dozens of the PUD’s
Covenants and Development Guidelines.
59
Voluntary Compliance with
Voluntary Agreements
Applicant
Signature
The City has discussed with the applicant the option
of altering the application to comply with the terms
of Covenants and Development Guidelines – terms
to which the applicant voluntarily agreed when
purchasing the property.
The applicant had declined to comply voluntarily with
his agreements. Instead, he instructed the City to
review the application knowing it was non-
compliant with PUD’s Covenants and Development
Guidelines, and the 1992 code enforced therein.
60
Demonstration of Compliance
BMC 38.100.080.A states:
“It is the obligation of the person proposing the
development to demonstrate compliance with
all applicable standards and regulations.”
By developing a Site Plan that he knew did not
comply with the Commission-approved Covenants
and Development Guidelines contained in Z-95125,
the applicant has failed to meet his obligation to
demonstrate compliance with the BMC and PUD.
The City has been complicit by:
●agreeing to review application #22047 in absence
of PUD’s Approved Final Plan;
●forsaking due diligence in determining surviving
requirements of the PUD;
●failing to enforce surviving PUD requirements;
●failing to adhere to the BMC’s required protocol
for approving departures;
●misrepresenting its customs and practices;
●elevating its preferences above compliance with
the BMC.
11. Request to
Overturn the
Approval of Site
Plan 22047
Grievance in
response to
Approval of Site
Plan #22047
62
Our Request
Primary Roof Form Secondary Roof
Use Primary Roof Form to
enclose upper levels
Forms
“Furthermore, the intent is to establish minimum
standards to ensure that the type of building
constructed is comparable to and blends with the
eclectic styles of housing found in the surrounding
developments and that the type of building avoids the
appearance of ‘Commercial Development.’”
- Covenants and Development Guidelines
Sundance Springs PUD
Based on the facts provided herein, the appellants
ask the City Commission to:
●reaffirm and enforce the terms of the PUD’s
Master Plan and Development Guidelines,
which were vetted, amended, approved, and
ordered by the City Commission;
●disapprove Site Plan #22047, which violates the
terms of the BMC and PUD in numerous ways,
●instruct the Community Development staff to:
● comply with BMC 38.100.05, BMC 38.100.080,
BMC 38.430.040.A.3.d, and BMC
38.430.080.A, and
●enforce the terms of the PUD’s Master Plan and
Development Guidelines
when approving future Site Plans under the
Sundance Springs PUD.
Detail: Grounds and allegations for the appeal
of approval of Site Plan #22047
The June 28, 2023 Staff Report and Findings of Fact (SRFoF)
that form the basis of approval for Site Plan #22047 concludes that
Site Plan #22047 has met the requirements of Chapter 38 BMC,
including those of the Sundance Springs PUD. This approval was in
error for multiple reasons.
First, the City lacked the requisite information to render a
decision. Indeed, City lost the Approved Final Plan for the Sundance
Springs PUD, and without that plan, the City could not know the
requirements of the PUD, nor approve the application without
violating the BMC. Further, the applicant could not meet its
obligation1 to demonstrate compliance with the Approved Final Plan.
This alone is sufficient to reverse the City’s approval.
Second, the City’s attempt to compile the remaining record of
PUD requirements was flawed. The City approved the application
based on two sets of requirements: 1) PUD’s Conditions of Preliminary
Approval and 2) the current B-1 Standard. The City considered
neither the partial set of requirements from the PUD’s Final Master
Plan (surviving within folder Z-9812) nor the Preliminary
Development Guidelines (surviving within Z-95125). Site Plan
#22047 violates many of these requirements. Again, this action alone
is sufficient to reverse the City’s approval.
Third, the City’s approval of departures from Block Frontage
Standards was non-complaint with the BMC. Specifically, the
applicant failed to successfully demonstrate to the review authority
how the proposed departure meets the purpose(s) of the standard and
other applicable departure criteria that applies to the specific
standard, pursuant to BMC 38.250.060.E. Again, this action alone
requires disapproval.
Forth, the City’s insistence that modern parking reductions can
be applied to the Sundance Springs Neighborhood Services Lots
violates the requirements of the PUD, fails to protect public safety as
required under the BMC, and conflicts with the intent of an order of
1 BMC 38.100.080: “It is the obligation of the person proposing the
development to demonstrate compliance with all applicable standards and
regulations.”
the City Commission regarding on-street parking on the narrow
streets of the Sundance Springs Subdivision. Yet again, this condition
alone is sufficient for disapproval.
In the end, the City’s approval of #22047 was predicated on the
following: 1) omissions of or failure to account for, many issues raised
in public comments provided by the appellants, their attorney, and
other members of the public, and 2) multiple factual errors regarding
the requirements of Chapter 38 BMC, including the Sundance Springs
PUD. Because of these problems, Site Plan # 22047 was approved in
error.2
A. Omissions
The City’s decision omitted critical information, and as such, cannot
be affirmed.
1.The SRFoF fails consider the binding “Master Plan” and
“Development Guidelines,” and in doing so, failed to analyze
development requirements.
When the Sundance Springs PUD was developed in the mid
1990s, it was done so as a “Phased PUD Based Only on Master Plan
and Development Guidelines” (pursuant to 1992 BMC 18.54.080.A.3).
The submittal requirements for such a PUD (1992 BMC 18.54.080.D)
mandated such a PUD be comprised of two components – a “Master
Plan” and “Development Guidelines” – which specify binding
development requirements under the PUD (pursuant to 1992 BMC
18.54.080.C).
The preliminary and final plans for the PUD, submitted to the
city in the 1990’s, were required to have a “Master Plan.” The table
of contents of Z-951253 lists a section entitled “Master Plan
Objectives,” which was approved by the City Commission. However,
the “Master Plan Objectives” have been removed from Z-95125.4
2 The public record and comments, which are incorporated herein by
reference, demonstrate these omissions and errors.
3 Folder Z-95125 contains what remains of the Approved Preliminary Plan,
which was vetted, amended, approved, and ordered by the City Commission.
4 The table of contents of P-9539 also makes reference to the same “Master
Plan Objectives,” which have also been removed from that document.
In the surviving folder of the final PUD (Z-9812), however, there
is a map entitled “Sundance Springs Master Plan” This “Master Plan”
was part of final PUD as evidenced by:
The Master Plan provided the basis for a Market Study ordered
by the City Commission as a condition of approval for Z-95125.
That Market Study also describes the “Proposed Buildings”
under the Master Plan.5
The same Master Plan is contained in document 20-298, the
folder for the conceptual review of #22047, which was compiled
when the Final PUD was not missing. The conceptual review
also references requirements of the PUD’s Master Plan.
The SRFoF does not acknowledge that a “Master Plan” was
required under the PUD and approved by the City Commission. Nor
does the SRFoF attempt to consider the best available evidence
regarding the requirements of the “Master Plan.” Therefore, even if
reconstruction of PUD requirements were allowed under the BMC, the
City would be failing to meet its obligation under BMC
38.430.040.A.3.d by ignoring the fact that the PUD required a Master
Plan and a copy of the Master Plan survives.
2.The SRFoF ignores the market study requirement and
associate order of the City Commission.
Relatedly, the SRFoF failed to consider the market study and
associated order of the City Commission. As part of the PUD approval
process, The City Commission ordered that a market study for the
Commercial Lots show that “50% of the business” for the “proposed
uses within the neighborhood service area will be supported by area
residents.” If the study could not demonstrate the same, the City
Commission ordered residential development on the Commercial
Lots.6 The Market Study is found in the surviving folder for the Final
PUD (Z-9812).
The effect of the ordered Market Study was to require the Final
PUD to propose specific buildings and uses on the Commercial Lots;
5 The market study assumed the Commercial Lot #2 would contain a single,
one story, 5000 sq ft building with retail use, as mandated by the surviving
Master Plan.
6 The requirements of the Market Study were raised in comments provided by
R. Farris-Olsen on June 12, 2023.
the Market Study ordered by the Commission could not be fulfilled in
the absence of proposed buildings and uses. The PUD’s proposed uses
are shown on the PUD’s “Master Plan” for the Commercial Lots, and
the “Master Plan” represents PUD requirements for building sizes,
locations, leasable floor area, etc. (BMC 38.430.040.A.3.d).
A copy of the Master Plan is included in market study, and the
associated uses serve as the assumptions for the study (e.g.,
“Proposed Buildings” described by the Market Study). The Market
Study also includes a copy of the B-1 Neighborhood Services District
Zoning Code, which includes the requirement that all buildings on the
Commercial Lots be less than 5000 square feet of gross floor area.
The Market Study describes the Master Plan’s “Proposed
Buildings” on Lot #2 as a “one story convenience store complete with
auto fueling capabilities. In addition to the auto fuel, it is anticipated
that the store will carry limited grocery items, wine/beer, beverages,
and similar local convenience items which should reduce trip
generation to areas outside of the service area.” The Market Study
does “not anticipate that there will be … stores so unique as to
generate traffic or use from outside the service area.”
Therefore, in order to assure that 50% of the business comes
from the service area, as ordered by the City Commission, uses on the
Commercial Lots must be limited in size (buildings of less than 5000
sq ft), must reduce trip generation out of the service area, and must
not generate traffic into the service area. These requirements are
reflected on the Master Plan.
In contrast, the City approved Site Plan #22047 which proposes
12,000 sq feet of Commercial space, 6000 sq feet of full-height
basement space, and 3000 sq feet of outdoor business-use patio
overlooking Mt Ellis. This violates all of the requirements of the
Master Plan while invalidating the Market Study’s assumed conditions
on the lots. Given that Site Plan #22047 invalidates the Market
Study’s conclusion that 50% of the business will come from the
intended service area, the Commission has ordered that the
commercial lots must be divided into six residential lots.
So the effect of the Commission’s conditions of approval for Z-
95125 is that one of two scenarios are allowed on the Commercial Lot
#2:
commercial development that adheres to the uses proposed by
the Master Plan7, which form the basis of the Market Study – in
other words, a single 5000 sq ft convenience store on
Commercial Lot #2, or;
residential development on both Commercial Lots in the
Sundance Spring Subdivision.
Compliance with the building locations and uses outlined on the
Master Plan are required under BMC 38.430.040.A.3.d and by the
Conditions of Approval for Z-95125, as ordered by the City
Commission.
3.The City did not appreciate that the Development Guidelines
are mandatory, and not simply private agreements between
parties.
The City also failed to consider the Development Guidelines that
were part of the surviving record of the PUD. This document, entitled
“Covenants and Development Guidelines” is found in Tab #8 of the
preliminary plan (Z-98125), and serves two purposes. The document
was vetted, amended, approved, and ordered by the City Commission
as the PUD’s required “Development Guidelines” in January 19968. It
was also executed and the Sundance Springs Covenants by the
original applicant for the PUD in March 1998. Therefore the terms of
the document are enforced in two ways: 1) as the binding terms of the
PUD, and 2) also as private agreements among the lot owners. The
City failed to appreciate the binding nature of the development
guidelines, and resultingly, failed to evaluate the requirements
articulated therein. As such, the approval was in error.
As part and parcel of this omission, the City also failed to
acknowledge or consider that Site Plan #22047 violates the
architectural guidelines and other aspects of the PUD’s development
7 BMC 38.430.040.A.3.d requires compliance with the PUD’s Master Plan even
in the absence of a Market Study. However, the requirement for compliance
with the Market Study is derived from the Commission’s conditions of approval
of Z-95125, while compliance with the Mater Plan is based on the BMC.
8 Although the Covenants share the same text as the Development Guidelines,
the Covenants are a separate legal document from the PUD. The PUD’s
Development Guidelines must be enforced even if the private Covenants need
not be.
guidelines. As documented in public comment9, the proposal violates a
number of the PUD’s Development Guidelines that were vetted,
modified, approved, and ordered as part of Z-98125 by the City
Commission. The violations are primarily in Articles VIII (Building
and Site Development), IX (Buildings Guidelines), and X (Site
Development and Landscape Design) of the Development Guidelines,
and inadequate setbacks, inadequate parking, oversized buildings,
disallowed basements, and proposed improvements designed to
support uses requiring future approvals (outdoor uses on large
patios).
In light of these omissions, the City’s approval of Site Plan
#22047 was not authorized.
4.The City did not consider the applicable 1992 BMC during
Site Plan review.
The City again erred by failing to account for the 1992 zoning
requirement. The PUD’s Development Guidelines, as approved by the
City Commission, established the 1992-era zoning as the default basis
for development under the PUD. The preliminary plan of the PUD
approved by the City Commission (Z-95125) states that the Covenants
and Development Guidelines are to be applied “beyond the minimum
requirements of the Bozeman Zoning Code which exists at the date of
execution of this document.” Z-95125 was approved in January of
1996.
And, even if the Development Guidelines are ignored and only a
subset of the Covenants are applicable,10 those “applicable” covenants
operate within the context of their legal declaration, which states:
“The covenants detail how the Neighborhood Services Property
within the Sundance Springs Subdivision are to be developed
and maintained beyond the minimum requirements of the
Bozeman Zoning Code which exists at the date of execution of
this document.”
9 See public comment submitted by Rob Farris-Olsen on December 13, 2022,
and June 12, 2023.
10 Appellants have demonstrated that all of the Covenants are applicable because
the same text is used as binding Development Guidelines under the PUD. The
City has not acknowledged or refuted the same, but is resolute that only those
listed in Exhibit B to Covenants are the “applicable Covenants.”
The Covenants were executed on March 4, 1998. Therefore, any
development requirements not specifically described by the
“applicable” Covenants (as defined by the City) must comply with
requirements of the 1992-era zoning.
5.The City’s assertion that it could not enforce the Covenants
and Development Guidelines was incorrect.
The City’s refusal to enforce the Development Guidelines and its
failure to consider its past enforcement of the Covenants was another
error11. In its letter to the applicant, the City Attorney’s office stated
that it is the City’s custom to enforce Covenants only when they were
relied upon for approval of land development. The City’s records (Z-
95125, Tab 6) show that the City relied on all of the Covenants to
approve the preliminary plan for the PUD. The City’s records also
show that the City has enforced the Covenants and Development
Guidelines as legal requirements for development under the PUD (Z-
040148). These facts a well-documented in public comment
submitted by R. Farris-Olsen on June 12, 2023. The City’s failure to
enforce these codes now, or acknowledge its past custom and policy,
was incorrect.
6.The failure to consider the lack of on-street parking renders
the City’s decision to approve the Site Plan ineffective.
The City’s analysis also fails to account for the dearth of parking,
and that by granting a departure for parking, will create a deficit of
more than 100 parking spaces when development of both Sundance
Springs Commercial Lots is complete.
The approved Site Plan has a parking demand that is 24 spaces
in excess of the parking provided. As a 1.31 acre development, this
yields an 18 space excess parking demand per acre of development.
When such parking reductions are applied across Neighborhood
Services Lots (which together amount to 6.23 acres), the total parking
demand for adjacent residential streets will exceed available on-site
parking by more than 100 spaces. (The deficit of 18 spaces per acre
times 6.23 acres is a total parking deficit of 114 spaces.)
11 Again, the subdivision’s Covenants and the PUD’s Development Guideline
are two separate sets of legal obligations, which contain the same development
requirements.
Permitting allowing parking reductions that will ultimate yield
parking demands that is 100 spaces in excess of available parking in a
location where the City Commission has prohibited on-street parking
in the name of public safety (interference with emergency vehicle
access on the 24-foot-wide residential streets) violates the intent of
the City Commission order and the City’s obligation to protect public
safety under BMC 38.100.050. The proposed solution of posting
streets as “no parking” does little except create a perpetual
enforcement issue for the City by creating an island of “no parking”
signs to be enforced, but which are more than a mile from any other
area in need of parking enforcement.12 Allowing parking reductions
that will create a parking deficit of more than 100 spaces creates an
marked incentive for patrons to park illegally. In this location, where
illegal parking will block emergency vehicle access, the approval of
Site Plan #22047 fails to consider public safety. Protection of public
safety was the intent of the Commission’s order prohibiting on-street
parking and a requirement of the UDC (BMC 38.100.050.A).
B. Factual Errors
In addition to the omissions, the SRFoF is replete with factual
inaccuracies, rendering the approval erroneous. When these errors
are considered, the City should not have approved Site Plan #22047.
At its most basic level, the City erred by assuming that the Conditions
of Preliminary Approval were the only binding requirements of the
PUD and failed to consider the PUD’s Master Plan and Development
Guidelines. The Master Plan and Development Guidelines – which,
again, were vetted, amended, approved, and ordered by the City
Commission – are binding on the City and the applicant.
1.The covenants are not simply private agreements between
subdivision lot owners, the City is a party to all of them – not
just those listed in Exhibit B.
This error is compounded by the City’s determination that the
Sundance Springs Covenants represent only “private agreements”
12 Also, the SRFoF fails to identify Good Medicine Way and White Eagle Circle
as streets within a 2-minute walk of the site where on-street parking will be
problematic. In proposing to post Ellis View Loop as no-parking, guests of
residents will not be able to park on the street. A resident-only parking district
similar to that surrounding Montana State University will be required on Ellis
View Loop if SP #22047 is approved.
among the subdivision lot owners. This determination is wrong.
Condition of Approval 33a and Exhibit B of the Covenants make clear
that the City is a party to the entirety of the Covenants,13 and not
simply Exhibit B.
Conditions of Approval 33a states: “The Covenants shall be
amended to indicate that the City of Bozeman is a party to the
Covenants…” The Commission goes on to order that that some of the
covenants cannot be modified without City approval, but nowhere
does the City Commission state “The City is a party to those covenants
that are modified by this Order” or any other such language that
suggests that the City is a party to only some of the covenants.
Similarly, Exhibit B is entitled “Covenants Amendments
Requiring Consent by the City of Bozeman” (emphasis added). Exhibit
B states, “The City of Bozeman is a party to the Covenants…” and
then goes on to explain that the subsequently listed Articles require
consent of the city to be amended. The idea that this Exhibit limits
the number of covenants to which the City is a party appears to be a
mythical belief that the City simply will not reassess by carefully
considering the language of the Conditions of Approval
Despite numerous requests during public comment, the SRFoF
does not reference language from the PUD, the Conditions of
Approval, nor the Covenants and Development Guidelines that shows
that the Commission intended to limit the number of Covenants to
which the City is a party.14 Accordingly, the City is bound by the
Covenants and Development Guidelines, and its approval of Site Plan
13 And even if the City were not a party to all of the Covenants, they are still
bound by the covenants as the “Development Guidelines”. While Development
Guidelines were required as part of a PUD application in the mid 1990s (1992
BMC 18.54.080.D.2), covenants were not required to be included in the
Development Guidelines. However, any covenants included in a phased PUD
application were explicitly considered a component of the binding Development
Guidelines (1992 BMC 18.54.080.D.2.h). If the text of Sundance Springs
covenants were not intended to represent the binding Development Guidelines,
they could have been omitted from the PUD application.
14 Until now, the City’s custom and practice has been to enforce the PUD’s
Covenants as legally binding development requirements in the Sundance
Springs PUD (see public comment submitted by Rob Farris-Olsen on June 12,
2023).
# 22047 – which contains significant violations of the Covenants and
Development Guidelines – was in error.15
2.Site Plan # 22047 should have been assessed against the
1992-era code
Additionally, the approval was in error because it incorrectly
assumes that the BMC allows Site Plan #22047 to be assessed against
only the current B-1 Neighborhood Business District. The
Development Guidelines of the PUD, in force under current BMC
38.430.040.A.3.d, mandates that development requirements
referencing the “B-1 Neighborhood Services District” be assessed
against that 1992-era code.16 Site Plan #22047 violates the following
aspects of the 1992 B-1 District:
Each proposed buildings exceeds the 5000 sq ft gross floor area
cap (1992 BMC 18.28.020).
Outdoor uses are allowed only by approval of the City (1992
BMC 18.28.020) yet improvements (3000 sq ft patios) to support
outdoor uses are included in the Site Plan.17
SP #22047 violates the setbacks of the 1992 B-1 District (1992
BMC 18.28.050).
SP #22047 violates the parking requirements of the 1992 B-1
District (1992 BMC 18.28.020.C).
Under the 1992 B-1 district, any and every use approved as part
of a PUD requires a Conditional User Permit at the time the use
is proposed (1992 BMC 18.28.020.B).18
15 In the Staff Report on Z-95125 (Page 24), the City Commission received
assurances from Staff that the PUD’s Covenants and Development Guidelines
(found under Tab 8 of Z-95125) would be enforced during Site Plan Review.
The public and City Commission received similar assurances during public
hearings (see public comment submitted by Rob Farris-Olsen on June 12,
2023).
16 According to current BMC 38.430.040.A.3.d, the requirements of the PUD
are in force under the current BMC. The introduction to PUD’s Development
Guidelines, as approved by the City Commission (Tab 8, Z-95125), clearly state
that the development code applicable under the PUD is the 1992-era zoning.
17 Permitting the construction of 3000 sq ft of patio space is not appropriate
until the applicant has identified and applied for approval of outdoor uses as
required under the PUD.
18 The requirement of a Conditional User Permit for and and every use
specified in a PUD is set forth in the 1992 B-1 district enforced by the PUD.
The effect of assessing #22047 against only the current B-1
district is to impart “major changes” in the terms of the PUD without
required due process (violating BMC 38.430.040.A.3.d.2) and also to
impart changes (such as changes to parking requirements) that are
not included in the list of allowable “minor” and “major changes”
found in BMC 38.430.040.A.3.d.
These requirements were brought to the applicant’s and the
City’s attention in 2020, when City Planner Susanna Montana had
access to the (now missing) Approved Final Plan and complied the
2020 Concept Review for SP #22047. Based her review of the
Approved Final Plan, she concluded:
Page 1: the applicable zoning is “Neighborhood Service District
pursuant to the 1998 Sundance Springs Planned Unit
Development.”
Page 4, Point 5: “The 1998 Sundance Springs PUD designated
this property as B-1, Neighborhood Service District, pursuant to
the 1992 zoning ordinance.19
Accordingly, by applying the wrong zoning standards, the City’s
approval of Site Plan #22047 was in error.
3.The City’s approval of block frontage requests was improper.
Furthermore, the City’s approval of the block frontage request
was not allowed under the BMC..20 The BMC requires that the
applicant demonstrate that the proposed departure meets both the
purpose of the standard and the specific approval criteria for the
standard.21
This requirement is emphasized in the Staff Report for Z-95125. See public
comment submitted by Rob Farris-Olsen on June 12, 2023.
19 See public comments submitted by R Farris-Olsen on Dec 13, 2022.
20 See pages 12-15 of public comments submitted by R Farris-Olsen on Dec
13, 2022.
21 BMC 38.250.060.E requires that “[p]roject applicants must successfully
demonstrate to the review authority how the proposed departure meets the
purpose(s) of the standard and other applicable departure criteria that applies
to the specific standard.” Quite clearly, this departure request also fails to
meet the requirements of BMC 38.250.060.E. See pages 12-15 of public
comments submitted by R Farris-Olsen on Dec 13, 2022.
A purpose of the Block Frontage Standards is to create a
comfortable walking environment. The application #22047 violates
parking location requirements (BMC 38.510.030.C) of the Block
Frontage Standards by locating parking along 100% of the walkable
street frontage to the east, along ~90% of the walkable trail frontage
to the north, and in front of the building along the walkable primary
frontage to the south. The departure cannot be granted because the
Site Plan places parking lots along all existing walkable frontages, and
thus fails to create a comfortable walking environment on any existing
frontage.
The specific departure criterion requires a “trade-off between
parking location and the amount and quality of storefront
integration.” The trade-off described by the applicant in the departure
narrative is for open space and riparian buffer southeast of the
buildings, to promote a “better experience for the intended users.”
The primary “intended users” to the southeast of the proposed
buildings are business patrons on the proposed patios. Departures
designed to create required open spaces and riparian buffers are not
allowed. Departures cannot be approved to improve the experience of
business patrons on outdoor patios. The departure cannot be
approved because increased storefront integration has not been
demonstrated by the applicant.
Another purpose of the Block Frontage Standards is to
“emphasize compatible development.” The specific departure criterion
requires the departure to be “compatible with the character of the
area.” Yet, the applicant requests a departure because the building
design is incompatible with the area. In other words, because the
applicant designed buildings that are incompatible with the
neighborhood, the applicant has gained a departure from standards
that have the explicit purpose of “an emphasis on compatible
development.” In fact, the proposed building locations amplify
incompatibility with the surrounding neighborhood by moving
incompatible buildings off the adjacent arterial street, closer to
nearby residences, and fronting them on tranquil open space.
Fundamentally, the Block Frontage Standards require that
buildings be sited to address a lot’s frontages. Here, instead, the
applicant adjusts the frontages to address his preferred building sites.
Specifically, the Site Plan would degrade all existing frontages by
lining them with parking while requiring creation of a new frontage
for the east building to front. Brazenly, the applicant proposes to
create the new frontage by building a trail on property owned and
controlled by the adjacent HOA, without permission from the HOA22.
Without such permission, the east building will never front a trail, yet
existing frontages are degraded with parking areas.
In essence, the entire departure is predicated on the purported
“need” to move buildings, designed by the applicant to be
incompatible with the neighborhood, off an arterial street and closer
to neighboring residences. Instead, the BMC and PUD require that
the applicant to design buildings that are compatible with the
neighborhood and are sited in accordance with the Block Frontage
Standards.
For all of the reasons stated above, approving the requested
departure undermines the the primary purposes of Block Frontage
Standards – an emphasis on compatible development and creating a
comfortable walking environment.
4.The City’s reliance on the applicants’ ability to control
common space was in error.
The City’s decision is also based on a misinterpretation of the
covenants, or Development Guidelines, control over common space.
The Applicant and City misread the language in the covenants, which
states state “The Sundance Springs Neighborhood Services Owners
Association (NSOA) shall control and maintain the common open
space adjacent to the commercial lots and Goldenstein Road and
South 3rd Avenue and right-of-way of Little Horse Drive” (emphasis
added). In this case the “and” means any open space which is
simultaneously adjacent to the commercial lots and the named roads.
Several lines of evidence undercut the applicant’s contrary
interpretation of the Covenants. The proposed trail extensions are on
land that:
has been controlled and maintained by the residential HOA for
more than 25 years;
22 In public comment, the President of the Sundance Springs HOA has stated
that approval of the trail on HOA property is unlikely.
is contained within the residential Phase 1A of the subdivision
(the residential phase) while the commercial lots are within
Phase 1B;
is under the control of the Sundance Springs Residential HOA
per the Residential Covenants;
most importantly, is owned by the Sundance Springs Residential
HOA, as indicated in public records.
Further, in the past, the applicant has acknowledged the HOA’s
control of the land by approaching the HOA board asking for
permission to build the trail extension.
Notably, the applicant attempts to rely on the terms of the
Covenants to claim control over land owned by someone else, yet the
applicant ignores a remarkable array of the terms of the Commercial
Covenant that provide requirements he found inconvenient and failed
to follow. The applicant treats the Covenants as a collection of
requirements that he can enforce or ignore at his convenience. The
City essentially follows this same logic, and by doing so wrongly
approved Site Plan #22047.
5.The City’s assumption that the applicant could obtain
approval from the NSOA for development was wrong.
Finally, the City erred by approving a Site Plan that can never be
developed. The Covenants and Development Guidelines require that
the Neighborhood Services Owners Association (NSOA), through the
Building and Landscape Review Committee, approve all developments
prior to construction. This is an impossibility, here, because the NSOA
was dissolved by the State of Montana in 2003 and cannot be
reconstituted under Montana State Law. Mont. Earth Res. P'ship v. N.
Blaine Estates, 1998 MT 254, ¶ 31 291 Mont. 216, 967 P.2d 376 This
means that the applicant cannot get permission for improvements on
any of the land that actually is controlled by the NSOA, because the
NSOA does not exist.
Owner Property Address Mailing Address Tax Records Verified Notes Geocode
(Y/N) Jan 17 2022
Sundance Springs Residential Owners Assoc Inc PO Box 933 Bozeman, MT 59771 N (non-valued property)Adjoiner Contiguous 06-0798-25-1-18-01-6500
City of Bozeman Ellis View Loop PO Box 1230 Bozeman, MT 59771 N (non-valued property)Adjoiner Not Contiguous 06-0798-25-1-07-12-6500
Ryan Lafoley S 3rd Ave 206 Ridge Trl, Bozeman MT 59715 Y Adjoiner Not Contiguous 06-0798-25-1-20-01-0000
Shelley & Gordon Vance N/A 3008 Macnab St, Bozeman MT 59715 Y Adjoiner Not Contiguous 06-0798-25-1-01-20-0000
Lisa & Henry Miklush 3775 Ellis View Loop 3775 Ellis View Loop, Bozeman MT 59715 Y Adjoiner Not Contiguous 06-0798-25-1-08-12-0000
Ellis View Estates Sub Homeowners Assoc Ellis View Loop 1627 W Main St #370, Bozeman MT 59715 N (non-valued property)Adjoiner Not Contiguous 06-0798-25-1-07-01-6500
Geoffrey Poole 3772 Ellis View Loop 3772 Ellis View Loop, Bozeman MT 59715 Y Adjoiner Not Contiguous 06-0798-25-1-07-10-0000
Catherine Zimmer 4405 White Eagle Cir.4405 White Eagle Cir, Bozeman MT 59715 Y Adjoiner Not Contiguous 06-0798-25-1-18-51-0000
SITE NAME: Sundance Springs Phase 1B Comm Lot 2
LEGAL DESCRIPTION: Sundance Springs Sub Ph 1B, S25, T02 S, R05 E, Acres 1.31, Comm Lot 2 Plat J-257
OWNER: 406 Coal Blowers, LLC
N1 Noticing Procedure