On May 12, 2021, Governor Brown signed into state legislation HB 2006, a bill intended to respond to the current statewide housing crisis authorizing cities to site emergency shelters if certain conditions are met. The new law took effect immediately and requires local governments to approve an application for an emergency shelter regardless of state or local land use laws, if the application meets specific approval criteria outlined in the bill, as codified below. An "emergency shelter" provides "shelter on a temporary basis for individuals and families who lack permanent housing." Any emergency shelter use or activity specifically authorized below may not be put to any other use without securing the necessary land use approval as required by state law and the Cornelius Municipal Code.
Compliance with this state law is not a land use decision and it removes state requirements for a mailed notice, public hearing, or solicitation of public comment on an application. Local governments are obligated to approve applications for shelters that meet the criteria below. Decisions under this law may not be appealed to the planning commission, city council or the Land Use Board of Appeals but may be appealed using the writ of review process provided under ORS
34.010 through
34.100.
(Ord. 2024-03 § 1 (Exh. A), 2024)