COUNCIL UPDATE: Council Extends Housing Moratorium to
Explore Ways to Preserve Neighborhoods
By Jorge Casuso
Unable to fully digest two pounds of documents in three days, the City
Council Tuesday night postponed taking full action on a series of measures
to preserve the character of Santa Monica's residential neighborhoods.
To buy time to further explore the proposals and set up public meetings,
the council is expected to extend for two months a moratorium on the demolition
and construction of multi-family housing that is set to expire March 28.
"What this does is give us some breathing room to try and preserve
the character people care about," said Mayor Ken Genser, who was
chairing his first meeting after a three-week hospital stay.
Before postponing a final vote on several proposals, the council approved
a citywide Construction Rate Program that allows only one multi-family
housing project to be built within a 500-foot radius every 18 months in
multi-family zones. The 45-day interim ordinance, which will likely be
tweaked, exempts affordable housing and controls the design and site layout
of condominium projects.
The council also unanimously rejected a measure to ease building size
and parking restrictions to encourage more affordable housing after residents
objected it would make neighborhoods even more densely populated.
"There has to simply be a better way to build affordable housing,"
said Giles Smith. "Making the lives of current residents worse is
not the answer."
"This is atrocious," said Robin Waner, who chairs the Wilshire-Montana
Neighborhood Coalition. "Now we're talking about raising heights,
reducing setbacks. That goes against everything the moratorium was passed
for. You're going in the wrong direction. You're going up when you should
be going down."
After taking action on the measures, the council directed staff to further
explore ways to stem what city officials fear is a growing wave of condo
construction spurred by rising land and housing costs.
The proposals include the following:
3Extending citywide the North of Wishire
building standards that limit height and address other neighborhood compatibility
concerns.
3Hiking the fees developers must pay
if they choose not to construct the required 30 percent low and moderate-income
units on site. Staff is recommending that the council increase the current
base fee of $7.13-per-square-foot of floor area for condominiums to $11.01.
3 Exempting empty lots, uninhabitable
buildings and remodeling projects from the moratorium.
3 Exploring ways to preserve existing
housing types such as courtyard buildings and bungalows that are "character
giving."
3 Exploring ways to preserve affordable
housing.
"We're not saying stop development," said Councilman Michael
Feinstein, "but trying to direct it and harness it to preserve what
we have. Nobody is trying to just say, 'Let's shut down development.'"
But Councilman Paul Rosenstein argued that the moratorium approved last
May, as well as the proposed measures, are overkill and politically motivated.
"The moratorium was based on the assumption that there was this
wild desire for redevelopment when the reality is that landlords are rehabbing
their buildings to cash in on the housing market," Rosenstein said
after the meeting.
Rosenstein said that the moratorium was spurred by two dozen new condominium
projects in a city with 4,000 to 5,000 multi-family buildings. At that
rate, Rosenstein argued, it would take 200 years to replace the housing.
"We need to stop wasting our time justifying a moratorium we can't
justify," Rosenstein said. "Getting into a moratorium is easy,
getting out of it in a way that shows the community we're doing something
is much more difficult."
Despite the two-month extension, city staff warned the council that the
measures it was contemplating were too complex to fully craft on such
short notice.
"We're only going to be returning with minor modifications,"
said Suzanne Frick, the city's planning director. "We won't be able
to make substantial changes within a two-month period. There's very little
we could do."
Frick noted that the city is expected to adopt new development standards
in one year to a year-and-a-half.
Community leaders welcomed the extra time to study the issue.
"You need adequate time, you need to extend your moratorium,"
said Michael Tarbet, a leader of Santa Monicans for Renters' Rights who
specializes in housing issues. " You haven't been provided with sufficient
information. You need time to look at the whole mix."
Lookout Staff writer Teresa Rochester contributed to this report.
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