At tonight’s city council meeting a community organizer told council how he was working with a developer of an apartment complex to integrate a dog park, an office for a cyclists’ organization, a community garden, classes where people can learn to garden and cook, and super-insulating walls into the project. Following him, Craig Justus, an attorney of integrity and conscience, objected to a claim by city staff that a private road, which runs right through Harry’s auto dealership, could serve as ingress and egress for the apartment. Representing the owners of the property, he argued that if the developers could be made to teach people how to make a garden, they surely could be required to tell tenants which roads they’re supposed to use.