At the start of the meeting, two members of the public used the open comment period to press the Planning Board on housing policy and development processes. Ed Byrne, a North Boulder resident, said long permitting and code requirements seem to be preventing middle‑income housing projects from progressing and urged staff and the board to do more problem‑solving to keep projects from being "nibbled to death." He cited previous local projects and asked the board to consider what could be done during active review to keep development moving.
Lynn Siegel followed, criticizing dense, small‑unit projects and subsidies she perceives as contributing to both homelessness at one end of the spectrum and unaffordable high‑end housing at the other. She said Boulder should resist certain state and market pressures for higher density and questioned planned unit mixes.
The board acknowledged both comments and moved into the scheduled agenda; neither public comment directly altered the board’s subsequent actions at this meeting but framed the broader community context in which the Arapahoe project and EBSP implementation were considered.
Representative quote
"I would be so disheartened if I was bringing this project forward and had made so little progress towards solutions in the time that's been spent on the project so far," said Ed Byrne, urging code‑level problem solving.
Ending
Public commenters raised housing concerns that board members later referenced while discussing design and livability for the large East Boulder proposal later on the agenda.