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KUSP LandWatch News
Week of December 7, 2009 to December 11, 2009

 

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 December 7, 2009 to December 11, 2009

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.

Gary Patton's Land Use Links

 

Monday, December 7, 2009
Heritage Oaks, And Future Items At LAFCO

Tomorrow, the Monterey County Board of Supervisors will consider the Heritage Oaks subdivision, which has been pending in the Monterey County planning system for years. There are a number of issues, but the overriding issue is water. North Monterey County is dependent on groundwater, and the aquifers serving North County are in an overdraft condition. The question for the Board is whether or not to authorize the creation of thirty-two new lots, all of which would draw on that same, overdrafted supply.

Typically, the Monterey County Board of Supervisors says “yes” to developers, and approves development proposals, even when adverse impacts are clear. Tomorrow may be different. North County Supervisor Lou Calcagno is seeking reelection, and is being challenged by North County resident Ed Mitchell, who is complaining that pro-development decisions have shortchanged the North Monterey County area. “Politics” does play into governmental decisions, and often in a very good way. When local residents get organized, to the extent that they can challenge established incumbents, their concerns have a way of getting paid attention to.

Monterey County residents might also take a look at the list of “future items” on the agenda of the Monterey County Local Agency Formation Commission, which meets this afternoon. Development of prime farmlands in the Salinas Valley continues to be a real threat. There is more information on the KUSP website.

For KUSP, this is Gary Patton.

More Information

Monterey County Website
http://www.co.monterey.ca.us/

Monterey County Board of Supervisors Agenda
http://publicagendas.co.monterey.ca.us/

Heritage Oaks Subdivision
http://www.co.monterey.ca.us/planning/docs/eirs/heritage%20oaks%20subdivision/heritage_oaks_main.htm

Monterey County LAFCO Agenda For The December 7, 2009 LAFCO Meeting
http://www.co.monterey.ca.us/lafco/2009/120709%20Reg%20Mtg/Web%20Docs/120709%20Agenda.htm

Lou Calcagno For Supervisor Website (2006)
http://www.loucalcagno.com/

Reelect Lou Calcagno Facebook Page (2009)
http://www.facebook.com/pages/Re-Elect-Supervisor-Lou-Calcagno/91812258631

Ed Mitchell For Supervisor Website
http://mitchellforsupervisor.com/

Tuesday, December 8, 2009
The Monterey County General Plan

Tomorrow, the Monterey County Planning Commission will discuss a schedule for hearings on the proposed Monterey County General Plan Update. I have to chuckle when I see that the agenda lists this item as “General Plan 2007.” Someone who hasn’t been following the saga of the Monterey County General Plan Update, and who read the agenda as a matter of first impression, might think that the County was a bit “behind,” since the Commission is only now talking about the schedule for hearings on a 2007 General Plan proposal.

In fact, Monterey County has been working on an update to its 1982 General Plan since 1999. That’s ten years! The current proposal, now called “General Plan 2007,” is also known as GPU5. This is the fifth version of a proposed General Plan Update. Since the Board of Supervisors has plenary power to adopt a General Plan, the only reason that an Update hasn’t been adopted during the last ten years is that the Board of Supervisors hasn’t wanted to make a decision. Its failure to update its old, 1982 General Plan means that land use policies adopted twenty-seven years ago continue to influence development decisions today.

The General Plan is the “Constitution” for land use, and if you want Monterey County to update its policies, to take account of current economic and environmental realities, don’t miss your opportunity to weigh in now.

For KUSP, this is Gary Patton.

More Information:

Monterey County Website
http://www.co.monterey.ca.us/

Planning Commission Agenda For December 9, 2009
http://www.co.monterey.ca.us/planning/cca/pc/2009/12-09-09/pc12-09-09a.htm

General Plan Update
http://www.co.monterey.ca.us/planning/gpu/GPU_2007/gpu_2007.htm

To get involved, contact LandWatch Monterey County
http://www.landwatch.org

Wednesday, December 9, 2009
Biking and Walking in Marina

The City of Marina has upgraded its website, and it’s now very easy to get helpful bulletins about what the City government is doing. I’ve signed up to get alerts on various land use related items, and would like to suggest that residents of Marina do likewise. If you want some initial guidance, you can go to the KUSP website, and click on the icon for the Land Use Report. Track down today’s written transcript, which has a list of the necessary links.

Because I’m signed up on the Marina “Notify Me” alert system, I have learned that the Draft Marina Pedestrian and Bicycle Master Plan is now ready for public review. Public hearings will begin soon, including hearings involving the City Public Works Commission in December, hearings before the Planning Commission in January, and before the City Council in February, where final approval is anticipated.

Transportation and circulation issues (key parts of a community’s General Plan, by the way) often determine just how a community develops. If you live or work in Marina, the new Pedestrian and Bicycle Master Plan effort provides you with a real opportunity to help shape the future of the community. “Smart growth” principles say that basing our transportation system on the automobile is often counterproductive, in all sorts of ways. Check out the current Draft Master Plan, and then weigh in with your thoughts!

For KUSP, this is Gary Patton.

More Information:

Marina City Website
http://www.ci.marina.ca.us/

“Notify Me” Sign Up Page
http://www.ci.marina.ca.us/list.aspx

Notice and Link To Draft Plan
http://www.ci.marina.ca.us/CivicAlerts.aspx?AID=126

Get more information about the Pedestrian and Bicycle Mater Plan By Emailing planning@ci.marina.ca.us

Thursday, December 10, 2009
Opportunities For Engagement

In the City of Santa Cruz, a community group called “Santa Cruzans for Responsible Planning,” or SCRP, is actively engaged in maximizing civic engagement and oversight where key land use and development issues are involved. If you’re interested in being more than a spectator, you might want to get involved yourself. I’ve put a contact email address in the written transcript of today’s Land Use Report.

Another way to get engaged in land use and planning issues is to become a member of one of the City’s advisory bodies that review land use, public works, and development issues, before they go to the Santa Cruz City Council. Often the City’s Commissions have a big impact on the ultimate decisions made by the City Council on land use related matters.

If you have any interest in that idea, please be advised that the Santa Cruz City Council will soon be making appointments or reappointments to various City Commissions. Applications are due by January 13th and the City Council is scheduled to take action on the appointments or reappointments at their meeting on January 26th.

The Downtown Commission has one vacancy; the Historic Preservation Commission has two vacancies; the Public Works Commission has one vacancy; the San Lorenzo River Committee has two vacancies; the Transportation Commission has two vacancies; and the Water Commission also has two vacancies.

If you’re a City resident, here’s a chance to get directly engaged in these key policy issues.

For KUSP, this is Gary Patton.

More Information

Contact SCRP at scrpsc@gmail.com

City of Santa Cruz Website
http://www.ci.santa-cruz.ca.us/

List of Current Openings and Information on Commissions
http://www.ci.santa-cruz.ca.us/index.aspx?page=715

Friday, December 11, 2009
Sustainable Events!

Here are some upcoming opportunities to find out how to make our communities more “sustainable.”

In Santa Cruz, on Thursday, December 17th, at 6:30 p.m. at the Santa Cruz High School Auditorium, Bruce Appleyard and Josh Hart are going to be making a presentation based on research done in the late 1960's by Berkeley Professor of Urban Design, Donald Appleyard. That research dramatically revealed the reality of car-based urban planning, and has become a fixture in sociology and planning texts.

Bruce Appleyard is Donald Appleyard’s son, and is a PhD candidate in urban planning at UC Berkeley. Josh Hart is a UCSC graduate who is back in California after three years in Great Britain, and after having obtained a master's degree in transport planning from UWE Bristol. He will present contemporary evidence of the impacts of automobiles on local communities, and outline best practices from places where livable streets have become a priority. His research shows the social benefits of a human-centered, livable streets approach to planning.

On a more celebratory note, Marina residents are invited to join the Citizens For Sustainable Marina at a Holiday Potluck to be held Monday, December 14th, at 7:00 p.m. at the Marina Library. No RSVP is needed. There is more information in the transcript of today’s Land Use Report.

For KUSP, this is Gary Patton.

More Information

Driven To Excess Website
http://www.livingstreets.org.uk/news/uk/-/driven-to-excess

People Power Website
http://peoplepowersc.org/

For more information on the Holiday Potluck sponsored by Citizens For Sustainable Marina, contact Frank Lambert at 831-384-9122.

Archives of past transcripts are available here


LandWatch's mission is to protect Monterey County's future by addressing climate change, community health, and social inequities in housing and infrastructure. By encouraging greater public participation in planning, we connect people to government, address human needs and inspire conservation of natural resources.

 

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