HomeMy WebLinkAbout04-11-2018 - Item 3 - Cooper1
Tonikian, Victoria
From:Bell, Kyle
Sent:Wednesday, April 11, 2018 2:07 PM
To:Purrington, Teresa; Tonikian, Victoria; Cox, Rebecca
Cc:Davidson, Doug
Subject:FW: April 10, 2018 Council Review Of The Zoning Regulations Update
Please provide the email below as correspondence for the Planning Commission hearing this evening (950
Orcutt)
Kyle Bell
CDD Associate Planner
Community Development
919 Palm Street, San Luis Obispo, CA 93401-3218
E KBell@slocity.org
T 805.781.7524
slocity.org
From: Allan Cooper <
Sent: Wednesday, April 11, 2018 2:00 PM
To: Davidson, Doug <ddavidson@slocity.org>; Bell, Kyle <KBell@slocity.org>
Subject: April 10, 2018 Council Review Of The Zoning Regulations Update
Dear Doug and Kyle -
I know I'm submitting this too late for the PC to see today, but could you at least place this
letter into the City's correspondence file? Thanks!
- Allan
To: SLO Planning Commission
Re: April 10, 2018 Council Review Of The Zoning Regulations Update
From: Allan Cooper, Secretary Save Our Downtown
Date: April 11, 2018
Last night, the Council set policy on a number of very important and controversial changes to our Zoning Regulations.
These policy changes include: 1) significantly increasing the densities in R-2, -3 & -4 residential neighborhoods; 2)
quadrupling (at a minimum) the densities of housing in our downtown core; 3) increasing our densities in R-1 residential
neighborhoods through accessory dwelling units (ADU’s) and tiny homes; 4) reducing, and in some cases eliminating, the
opportunity for public comment on virtually all projects; 5) consolidating decision making powers in the hands of the
Director; and 6) cutting back on automobile parking.
Last night’s staff report contained eight questions and the Council was prompted to answer “yes” or “no” to each
question. Though this protocol was not strictly followed, the Council gave tacit approval to all eight zoning changes.
Additional areas of concerned were added by Council such as more opportunities for micro-businesses, locating housing
in defunct shopping malls and auto parks and increased flexibility in siting schools.
Many of the property owners and landlords who oppose these policy changes were not speaking from personal financial
interest. In other words, we were not representing the “monied interests”. Should all eight proposals be implemented, our
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property values will go up and our rental incomes will increase. This is because the homes we live in will be valued based
on the increase in potential rental income they will earn (should we decide to vacate these properties and many of us will
do so under these circumstances) and our rental properties will become lucrative mini-dorms.
But instead of focussing on our pocket books, we filled the Council Chamber last night fighting for the heart and soul of
San Luis Obispo. We all believe the SLO Life will be a thing of the past should the City continue to move this
aggressively toward densification - toward stacking and packing more people into tighter quarters while making across-
the-board reductions in parking requirements. Traffic congestion will become untenable, parking will become unavailable
and neighborhood cohesion - that is what’s left of it - will be long gone. Why? Because personalized transportation is not
going away. Because we will not soon be riding bicycles or riding mass transit. Many predict that, with the lower fuel
costs of solar powered electric vehicles and with the added convenience of self-driving cars, personalized transportation
will increase, not decrease. This will demand more car parking, not less and more cars, not fewer, will be clogging up our
roads.
Throughout the City, there is a feeling of being in the country while also being in the city. This, too, will be lost once San
Luis Obispo continues to encourage the construction of mid-rise and high-rise buildings. Doug Davidson last night
insisted that building heights were not part of this discussion. But pressures for taller buildings will increase once R-2, -3
and -4 properties are literally up-zoned. And pressures for taller buildings will increase once density restrictions
downtown are removed in exchange for smaller units.
We resist the civic homogenization that can turn any town into every other town. This too will be lost once our former
emphasis on public engagement, good planning and contextual fit is taken off the table.
With regards to public engagement: Derek Johnson commented that public feedback will remain the same. We find this
hard to believe for several reasons. First the ARC’s purview will be scaled back to conceptual review. This will limit the
public’s opportunity to comment on parking layouts, floor plan layouts and landscaping as these items will be referred to
the Director. Second, the Tree Committee’s purview will be scaled back as they will no longer review street tree removal.
Again this will stifle the public’s opportunity to comment. Lastly, both ARC and CHC recommendations will be simply
“advisory” to the the Director. The Director will make all final decisions without any public oversight.
With regards to good planning and contextual fit: For Tier 1 projects (5 units or smaller and less than 10,000 sq.ft.), the
Planning Commission will automatically be left out of the review process, no matter how controversial the project may be
and so will go “good planning”. When the meeting dates for the CHC and ARC are scheduled to take place at the same
time, there will be little opportunity for the ARC to be advised of concerns the CHC may have with any given project.
And so will go “contextual fit”. Moreover, if the CHC denies the project and the ARC approves the project, then these
disagreements must be sorted out by the Director, again leaving the public completely out of these deliberations.
We are therefore urging the City to put a stop to this steamroller mentality centered on under-parked, overly-dense
developments and this knee jerk reaction to simplifying (or “dumbing down”) the development review process. Thank
you!