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109 <br />Patrick Mallett: If you’re doing homes you would have to have a lot, you would have to have a septic system; you would have 110 <br />to have a well, making permanent connections. 111 <br /> 112 <br />Tony Blake: But if you’re doing a mobile home park it’s different? And that would follow that same standard. 113 <br /> 114 <br />Patrick Mallett: Yeah. Because there’s not a lot so it’s a space… Conventional standards are from the driveway. And they’re 115 <br />really designed so that people can come in and come out and emergency services can service and solid waste can service 116 <br />them. One of the interesting things that is… A tiny home is the only way that you can get a single bedroom septic system. 117 <br /> 118 <br />Lisa Stuckey: Could those houses made out of container boxes? 119 <br /> 120 <br />Patrick Mallett: As long as you can build it to a standard it could be made out of recycled plastic. But it has to meet a code. 121 <br /> 122 <br />Lydia Wegman: Does it have to meet a building code of some kind? 123 <br /> 124 <br />Tony Blake: Well it has to meet a mobile home standard. 125 <br /> 126 <br />Patrick Mallett: The HUD standards for Mobile Homes, yeah. 127 <br /> 128 <br />Tony Blake: But the problem is with the tiny homes is that cost per square foot is so much greater than it is for a mobile home. 129 <br />And so it’s hard to justify. 130 <br /> 131 <br />Lisa Stuckey: But they’re taking those containers and making them into houses. But it’s the same, are they mobile or not 132 <br />mobile? 133 <br /> 134 <br />Patrick Mallett: Yeah, exactly. And what standard are the built to, and what type of utilities are the hooked up to (permanent or 135 <br />not)? This is part 2 of those 4 text changes that are moving through. Michael’s got one of them that will be part 3. I see it as a 136 <br />step in the right direction and at least we can give the people some answers and some guidance versus you can live in a 137 <br />camp retreat center if you get it approved. So our goal is to get this one to the February Public Hearing. 138 <br /> 139 <br />Tony Blake: One more question. How does this fit with accessory use, or does it? 140 <br /> 141 <br />Patrick Mallett: It’ll be the same as it applies for others. There’s supervision in there for the sheds. So let’s say you had an RV 142 <br />park, you had common open space, it’s owned by the landlord, and you have a caretaker. Theoretically you could get a shed 143 <br />and for an extra $5 a month you get a shelf in the storage accessory structure. But the same rules would apply as accessory 144 <br />shed structures. 145 <br /> 146 <br />Paul Guthrie: I’ve got a question. We have some in my house that watch all these tiny building shows that are on TV, so that’s 147 <br />my exposure. But one of the things those show is that there’s a growing range of cost on things of a similar size. Has there 148 <br />been any effort or any movement towards trying to get some more common definitions of these various alternatives? 149 <br /> 150 <br />Patrick Mallett: That’s the affordable housing part of this that Ashley is involved in. We’re getting into the mobile home park 151 <br />and the RV park part of it. The sustainability, affordability part is a much bigger then, and then defining it. I think they’ve spent 152 <br />a long time trying to define. 153 <br /> 154 <br />Paul Guthrie: There’s a broad range in those general exposures. 155 <br /> 156 <br />Patrick Mallett: Exactly. You ask 10 people what a tiny home is and 5 of them are probably going to say, “Like that show” and 157 <br />the other 5 are going to have very different opinions in what that is. But by far I think the most common product has wheels on 158 <br />it and a chasse and is built to either no standard or an RV standard. 159 <br /> 160 <br />Lydia Wegman: So should we expect some changes following your meeting with the attorneys and? 161 <br /> 162 <br /> 27