Council favors starting Greenlight clock at 2000
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Mathis Winkler
NEWPORT BEACH -- Developers will probably have an easier time getting
approval for their projects after City Council members said Tuesday
they’d support a 2000 starting date for Greenlight’s “look-back”
provision.
Passed by voters in November, the new law requires citywide elections
on any general plan amendment for a project that adds more than 100
peak-hour car trips or dwelling units, or 40,000 square feet more than
the general plan allows.
The initiative’s look-back provision requires that 80% of previous
general plan amendments within each of the city’s 49 distinct
neighborhoods “adopted within the preceding 10 years” should count toward
the threshold, which triggers a citywide vote.
Council members had expressed concern about the text of the initiative
in previous meetings, saying it seemed to require a starting date for the
provision that reached back 10 years from the time it was passed. But
research by city officials convinced them that a 2000 date would not
contradict the initiative’s text.
City Atty. Bob Burnham said past court rulings on similar situations
showed that an initiative should not be applied retroactively unless the
measure itself clearly stated such an intent.
Burnham “got me with the last one,” said Councilman Steve Bromberg,
who had said in the past that Burnham’s arguments in favor of a 2000
starting date had not been convincing.
The five council members present at Tuesday’s study session --
Councilmen John Heffernan and Dennis O’Neil were excused because of other
engagements -- unanimously supported the 2000 starting date in a straw
vote.
At least one more council member must join the group because the
initiative requires six of the city’s seven council members to support
any guidelines to put Greenlight to work.
While council members agreed on most other issues, such as definitions
for “peak-hour trips” and “floor-area,” the inclusion or exclusion of
parking structures in deciding whether a project triggers a Greenlight
election remains uncertain.
Greenlight supporters wrote letters to council members saying that
parking structures should be included in calculating a project’s total
floor area.
“Lack of inclusion of parking garages will allow more square footage
for the adjacent building, thus indirectly allowing more traffic to
occur,” wrote Susan Caustin in a letter to council members.
Bromberg cast the only straw vote in support of including parking
structures.
Council members could vote on the guidelines as early as their Feb. 27
meeting.
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