KUSP provided
a brief Land Use Report on KUSP Radio from January 2003 to May 2016. Archives of past transcripts are
available here.
Week of November 9, 2009 to November 13, 2009
- Monday, November 9, 2009
Tomorrow Evening In Live Oak
- Tuesday, November 10, 2009
Housing Policy in San Luis Obispo County
- Wednesday, November 11, 2009
Highway 68 and Toro Park
- Thursday, November 12, 2009
H.R. 4040
- Friday, November 13, 2009
Meetings Coming Up
The following Land Use Reports have been presented on KUSP Radio by Gary A. Patton. The Wittwer & Parkin law firm is located in Santa Cruz, California, and practices environmental and governmental law. As part of its practice, the law firm files litigation and takes other action on behalf of its clients, which are typically private individuals, governmental agencies, environmental organizations, or community groups. Whenever the Land Use Report comments on an issue with which the Wittwer & Parkin law firm is involved on behalf of a client, Mr. Patton will make this relationship clear, as part of his commentary. Mr. Patton’s comments do not represent the views of Wittwer & Parkin, LLP, KUSP Radio, nor of any of its sponsors.
Monday, November
9, 2009
Tomorrow Evening In Live Oak |
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Tomorrow, doing something a little out of the ordinary,
the Santa Cruz County Board of Supervisors will hold
an evening meeting at the Live Oak School Gymnasium, located
at 1916 Capitola Road. That location is in the “Live
Oak” area, and in the First Supervisorial District,
for those not intimately familiar with Santa Cruz County
geography. The meeting starts at 7:00 p.m.
If you are a resident of either Live Oak or Soquel, both
of which are within the First District, and both of which
are within the territory of the Santa Cruz County Redevelopment
Agency, this would be a particularly good meeting for you
to attend. The Board is meeting in its capacity as the
Redevelopment Agency, and the single item on its evening
agenda is the proposed adoption of a new Five-Year Implementation
Plan for the Agency, designed to guide Agency activities
during the period from 2010 to 2014.
First District County Supervisor John Leopold, who is
in his first year of service on the Board of Supervisors,
has made community building in Live Oak and Soquel a focus
of particular attention, and there have been lots of public
workshops about the Plan. The Redevelopment Agency
has money to spend, and how it spends it can make a huge
difference for the future. You can get information
about what is being proposed on the KUSP website, and you
can speak out with your own views tomorrow evening.
For KUSP, this is Gary Patton.
More Information
Santa Cruz County Website
http://www.co.santa-cruz.ca.us/
Board Agenda
http://sccounty01.co.santa-cruz.ca.us/bds/
Govstream/ASP/Display/SCCB_AgendaDisplayWeb
.asp?MeetingDate=11/10/2009
Staff Report
http://sccounty01.co.santa-cruz.ca.us/bds/
Govstream/BDSvData/non_legacy/agendas/
2009/20091110/PDF/025.pdf
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Tuesday, November
10, 2009
Housing Policy in San Luis Obispo County |
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Item C-2 on today’s agenda for the San Luis Obispo
County Board of Supervisors is a hearing to consider an Annual
Report and Action Plan for the County’s Affordable
Housing Fund. For anyone who cares about affordable housing,
this is an important item.
Like many other jurisdictions, San Luis Obispo County has
what is called an “inclusionary housing” ordinance.
The purpose of this ordinance is to require developers to
provide new affordable housing opportunities as they are
given permission to develop new market-rate housing. The
report on today’s agenda is massively discouraging
to anyone who cares about affordable housing. The program
was begun in December 2008, and unlike the most rigorous
versions of such inclusionary programs doesn’t actually
require developers to construct affordable housing; instead,
the developers can just pay what’s called an “in-lieu” fee.
During the last year in San Luis Obispo County, no actual
affordable units were constructed, and only $6,508 dollars
were collected for the County’s affordable housing
fund. The staff estimates that about $100,000 in County funds
(plus other funding) is needed to create a single affordable
unit.
The County staff is recommending that the Board adopt a
fee schedule, going forward, that will actually reduce future
fees. If you think that’s not the right direction,
you might want to let the Board know.
For KUSP, this is Gary Patton.
More Information:
San Luis Obispo County Website
http://www.slocounty.ca.gov/site4.aspx
Board of Supervisors Agenda
http://slocounty.granicus.com/
AgendaViewer.php?view_id=2&event_id=59
Staff Report, Inclusionary Housing Item
http://slocounty.granicus.com/MetaViewer.php?
view_id=2&event_id=59&meta_id=159684
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Wednesday, November
11, 2009
Highway 68 and Toro Park |
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The Highway 68 Coalition, one of my favorite
Monterey County grassroots groups, is always waging a battle to preserve
and protect Highway 68, and to oppose further congesting-causing
projects.* Based on news reports from last week, their
job just got a little harder!
Usually, local governments “review” proposed
development projects, and then say either “yes,” or “no” to
a proposal made to them by a landowner/developer. The “yes” or “no” answer
is supposed to reflect the policies in the local General
Plan, but local governments do get around that constraint
by allowing the developers to ask them to approve a
General Plan amendment at the same time that they approve
the project. The Monterey County Board of Supervisors
does that routinely.
News reports last week indicate that the Board is planning
to go way beyond its normal “review” function,
to facilitate the latest big development proposal along Highway
68. In order to promote the development, the Board is considering
selling off parkland at Toro Park, which is right on Highway
68, to provide necessary access for an 870-acre development
proposed by a Southern California developer. Naturally, the
Board is meeting in a closed “litigation session” to
discuss this incredibly creative way to make a big development
happen. There is more in the transcript of today’s
Land Use Report.
For KUSP, this is Gary Patton.
More Information:
Contact Information For Highway 68 Coalition
http://www.volunteermatch.org/search/org11385.jsp
Monterey County Herald Article on Possible Sale of Toro
Park Lands
http://www.montereyherald.com/
local/ci_13727969?nclick_check=1
Herald “Rant” On Park Sale Proposal
http://www.montereyherald.com/opinion/ci_13742399
*Highway 68 in Monterey County runs from the City of Monterey
to the City of Salinas. Its beauty has been somewhat
tarnished, over the years, by the development projects
that have been allowed along its route by the Monterey
County Board of Supervisors. Still, it’s a lovely drive. More accurately, it’s
a lovely drive when it hasn’t turned into a miles-long
parking lot, because of the traffic congestion that has
accompanied those County-approved development projects, both
along Highway 68 and in the Carmel Valley, which is
best accessed from Salinas by using Highway 68 and the Los
Laureles Grade Road.
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Thursday, November
12, 2009
H.R. 4040 |
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Land use decisions are mostly made by local
governments, acting in their “regulatory” capacity. That isn’t
the only way, however, that important land use decisions
get made. Yesterday, I mentioned the possibility that the
Monterey County Board of Supervisors might sell off County
parkland to a Southern California developer, to facilitate
a major new development on Highway 68. If the Board did that,
it would be going beyond the “regulatory” realm,
and acting as a landowner. In addition, not all land use decisions
are made at the “local” level. The federal government,
for instance, sometimes takes dramatically important actions
that affect land use.
Congress Member Sam Farr is proposing a dramatically important
land use action in his new bill, H.R. 4040. There is
more information about this bill in the transcript of today’s
Land Use Report. In summary, H.R. 4040 would enact the Big
Sur Forest Service Management Act, implementing multiple
measures to protect public lands in the Northern Santa Lucia
Mountains. That includes designating over 90 miles of Wild
and Scenic Rivers, adding Horse Canyon and Black Butte to
the Ventana Wilderness Area, and establishing a Big Sur Management
Unit to provide greater management and budgetary autonomy,
thus helping to address concerns unique to the Northern Unit
of the Los Padres National Forest. Contact the Ventana Wilderness
Alliance if you’d like to get involved.
For KUSP, this is Gary Patton.
More Information
Sam Farr Statement on the Big Sur Forest Service Management
Unit Act
http://www.farr.house.gov/index.php?option=
com_content&task=view&id=606
Text of H.R. 4040
http://www.farr.house.gov/images/stories/
Documents/big%20sur%20bill.pdf
Ventana Wilderness Alliance
http://www.ventanawild.org/
Ventana Wilderness Alliance News Release on H.R. 4040
http://www.ventanawild.org/forum08/
viewtopic.php?p=1501&#p1501
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Friday,
November 13, 2009
Meetings Coming Up |
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I like to give listeners a “heads up” on interesting
meetings that will be held in the Central Coast Region. Next
January, the Ecological Farming Association is going to be
holding its annual “EcoFarm” conference at the
Asilomar Conference Center. This is always a terrific event,
and you can register online now. In addition, of particular
interest to San Luis Obispo County residents, the last edition
of the EcoFarm newsletter indicated that a Sustainable Ag
Expo would be held in the City of San Luis Obispo on November
16th and 17th. That’s next week. I didn’t
see mention of that event on the EcoFarm website, so if you’re
interested, you should contact EcoFarm directly to get the
final word.
How about a Central California Invasive Weed Symposium?
There is such a thing, co-sponsored by the California Native
Plant Society, and the 11th Annual Symposium is actually
taking place today, at the Santa Cruz County Fairgrounds,
located at 2601 East Lake Avenue in Watsonville. I’m
probably too late in getting the word out for this event,
though dedicated weed whackers (invasive weed whackers, that
is) could probably still get admitted. Probably more pertinent
for most, I encourage you to link up with the California
Native Plant Society, which does incredibly great work on
habitat issues throughout the Central Coast Region. I’ve
put the relevant links in the transcript of today’s
Land Use Report.
For KUSP, this is Gary Patton.
More Information
Eco Farm Website
http://www.eco-farm.org/
California Native Plant Society
http://www.cnps.org/
California Native Plant Society, Santa Cruz County Chapter
http://www.cruzcnps.org/
California Native Plant Society, Monterey Bay Chapter
http://www.montereybaycnps.org/
California Native Plant Society, San Luis Obispo County
Chapter
http://www.cnps-slo.org/
Information on the Invasive Weed Symposium
http://www.co.monterey.ca.us/ag/Weed_Symposium_2009.htm
Registration for the Invasive Weed Symposium
http://cciws2009.eventbrite.com/
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Archives
of past transcripts are available here
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