| #e.21052 | Monday 9:00AM to 4:30PM December 10,
2012 | CM | 6.00 |
• Expand your subdivision knowledge by knowing how city, county and township platting processes work.
• Analyze a comprehensive plan to determine if all the key elements are included.
• Know how annexation decisions are made and what filing requirements need to be fulfilled.
• Recognize who has the power to zone and how those decisions affect you.
• Ensure that critical environmental laws and procedures are adhered to.
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Instructors:
Rhil Grillo
is a partner with the law firm of Davis Wright Tremaine LLP. He is a seasoned land use
attorney with more than 30 years experience in a broad range of planning, permitting and development
issues. Mr. Grillo works closely with clients in industries such as healthcare, housing and mixed use
development, telecommunications, energy, hospitality, agribusiness, and manufacturing. He is a founding
member of the Working Waterfront Coalition, served as a former land use hearings officer for various
cities and counties in Oregon and Washington and is a frequent speaker on current land use topics. In
addition, Mr. Grillo is a former member, Executive Committee and a member of the Land Use and Real
Estate Section of the Oregon State Bar, as well as the Environmental and Land Use Section of the
Washington State Bar Association, the American Bar Association, the Oregon Planning Association, the
American Planning Association, the Urban Land Institute, the National Association of Industrial and
Office Properties and the Home Builders Association of Metropolitan Portland. He earned his B.A.
degree from Michigan State University and his J.D. degree from Lewis and Clark Law School.
Michael Robinson
is a partner in the Portland office of Perkins Coie LLP, where his practice is
concentrated in the areas of land use law, municipal law and transportation law. Mr. Robinson earned his
B.A. and M.R.C.P. degrees from the University of Oklahoma and his J.D. degree, cum laude, from
Northwestern School of Law of Lewis and Clark College. He is a member of the American Institute of
Certified Planners (AICP) and serves on the Executive Committee of the Real Estate and Land Use
Section of the Oregon State Bar.
Seth King
is an associate with the law firm of Perkins Coie, LLP, where he practices land use law
with an emphasis on zoning and development matters. He has extensive experience advocating at quasijudicial
hearings, obtaining permit and entitlement approvals, and negotiating development and taxincrement
financing agreements with regulatory agencies. Representative clients have included
homebuilders, institutions, property owners, and developers of master-planned communities. Mr. King
also has handled real estate acquisitions and sales, assisted in the creation of condominiums, and
represented municipal governments during his legal career. Previously he was an adjunct instructor at the
University of Central Florida, Assistant City Attorney for the City of Orlando Office of Legal Affairs and
an associate with the law firm of Baker & Hostetler LLP. Mr. King has been involved with the National
Association of Industrial and Office Properties (Board of Directors) and the St. Andrew Legal Clinic Race
for Justice Planning Committee. He is admitted to the Oregon State Bar. Mr. King earned his B.A. degree,
with high distinction, from the University of Michigan and his J.D. degree from the University of Virginia
Law School. While in law school he was the Articles Development Editor, Journal of Law and Politics.
Ty Wyman
is of counsel to the Portland law firm of Dunn Carney Allen Higgins & Tongue LLP,
where he focuses his practice exclusively on land use issues. He has extensive experience presenting
applications to city and county hearing bodies for all types of entitlement, including permits, plan
amendments and Urban Growth Boundary (UGB) expansions. Mr. Wyman has particular experience in
issues related to traffic impact mitigation, including negotiating approval conditions, reduction of impact
fees and development agreements. He earned his B.A. degree from the University of California at Berkley
and his J.D. degree from the University of Oregon. Mr. Wyman has written many articles including
“Neskowin Wall Permit Should be Upheld” for The Oregonian, and “Pay Attention to Metro’s Decisions
in Planning Investment Strategy” for The Apartment Investors Journal. He also has spoken at various
classes and seminars including Sustainable Development; Incentives in Local Zoning Codes, Real Estate
Development and Finance Seminar, and Measure 37- The Nuts and Bolts and What’s Next. Mr. Wyman is
a member of the Oregon State Bar (Real Estate and Land Use Section).
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