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• <br />requesting a mechanism to discontinue a conditional use permit <br />granted for a use once the use is discontinued at the location. <br />He said that according to state statute and Falcon Heights City <br />Code, the conditional use permit goes with the property not the <br />specific business use regardless of when the business closes. <br />However, if the conditional use permit is granted because of a <br />concern about the activities associated with the use rather than <br />site development features, the City may include a condition <br />terminating the conditional use upon business closure or <br />transfer of ownership. <br />DISCUSSION OF PROPOSED CONCEPT PLAN AND POLICIES TO BE INCLUDED <br />IN HE COMPREHENSIVE PLAN WITH PLANNING CONSULTANT AND THE <br />B IC <br />(See attachment 2, public attendance list.) <br />Fred Hoisington, Planning Consultant, briefly reviewed the <br />proposed comprehensive land use plan. He highlighted some <br />changes resulting since the community forum in November, 1990. <br />These changes included: <br />1) shift to limited business from multi-family residential <br />along the southside of Larpenteur, west of Snelling; <br />2) the removal of a collector street along Arlington <br />• through the state fairgrounds (due to conversations with <br />the University planner); <br />3) the removal of the neighborhood retail designation along <br />Lindig Street at Larpenteur Avenue. <br />City Planner, Susan Hoyt, identified significant policy changes. <br />These included: <br />1) Neighborhoods, Policy #6 <br />Maintain the single-family character of the <br />existing residential neighborhoods and discourage <br />redevelopment that may be considered a change in <br />use unless irreversible bli ht can be demonstrated. <br />The additional phrase is to accommodate serious <br />blight adjacent to central commercial district <br />2) Commercial, Policy #9, the addition of the statement: <br />Require that any redevelopment project that may <br />logically extend beyond the area already zoned for <br />commercial use have a straight boundary that <br />generally correlates with a public street line or <br />the rear lot lines of residences and take all of <br />3 <br />• <br />