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ย A state land use planner who has been a thorn in the side of the cityโ€™s long suffering UGB expansion proposal announced today that he is retiring early. Mark Radabaugh has served as the stateโ€™s point person throughout the cityโ€™s prolonged UGB process and has been a pointed critic of the cityโ€™s unprecedented expansion proposal.

Radabaughโ€™s dogged skepticism about Bendโ€™s ambitious plan earned him plenty of scorn from local politicians and planners. Councilor Mark Capell in a January interview with the Source likened the cityโ€™s relationship with Radabaughโ€™s employer, the Department of Land Conservation and Development, to its well-publicized feud with the Oregon Liquor Control Commission and called Radabaugh a โ€œroadblock.โ€

Radabaughโ€™s supervisors however stood by his work publicly and have defended the departmentโ€™s overall review that was based in large part on Radabaughโ€™s research and comments.

โ€œI know there have been some differences of opinion and some personality issues and I stand behind Mark. I think heโ€™s done an excellent job,โ€ Whitman told the city council in January. ย 

Based in part on Radabaughโ€™s review, the state decided earlier this year to send the city back to the proverbial drawing board, a process referred to in planning speak as a โ€œremand.โ€ The city opted to appeal the decision rather than revamp its proposal, presumably to a more modest request. After a series of recent hearings, the stateโ€™s oversight commission voted to largely uphold the departmentโ€™s recommendations. ย 

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