PLANNING COMMISSION WRAP-UP
- Share via
WHAT HAPPENED:
The planning commission voted unanimously to form a subcommittee to
study proposed changes to developmentfees.
WHAT IT MEANS:
The subcommittee will be made up of two or three planning
commissioners, city staff, three builders, a member of Huntington Beach
Tomorrow and one Realtor. The committee will return to the planning
commission with its findings at the planning commission meeting April 9.
The group is charged with studying staff’s proposal that the
development fees charged by the Huntington Beach Zoning and Subdivision
Ordinance be raised. They call these fees park in-lieu fees.
Planning commissioners, Downtown developers, residents and members
from the building industry are against this hike in fees. These fees pay
for developing new or rehabilitating existing neighborhood or community
parks and recreational facilities. They do not pay for park maintenance.
The ordinance currently sets a per-acre fee based on 60% of the
citywide average land value for residential low-density property.
Staff suggests that the fee be based on an appraisers estimate of the
real land value. It would require developers to pay an additional 20% for
any off-site improvements such as curbs, gutters, sidewalks and traffic
signals.
Developers and residents said the availability of affordable housing
in Huntington Beach could be jeopardized if the new fees were to go into
effect.
Vote: 6-0
IN FAVOR/AGAINST
WHAT HAPPENED:
The Planning Commission unanimously approved an amendment to the
Zoning and Subdivision Ordinance to allow public use on commercial land
of two or more acres, which will allow greater use of the property
without the necessity of rezoning.
The item will be forwarded to the City Council for adoption at a later
date.
WHAT IT MEANS:
The zoning code currently requires public and semipublic organizations
such as hospitals, schools and churches to be zoned as such if it is
located on a site of two or more acres.
This amendment would change that, allowing the city to preserve some
of its commercially zoned areas.
According to staff, property owners have complained about the current
requirement, because it allows a limited number of uses in comparison to
commercial, industrial and residential areas. The proposed amendment
would permit the hospital complex at Beach Boulevard and Newman Avenue to
remain in a commercial zone and not require a zoning map amendment to
public-semipublic use.
Vote: 6-0
IN FAVOR/AGAINST
WHAT HAPPENED:
The Planning Commission approved the 13.8-acre Huntington Beach
Hospital complex on Beach Boulevard to be rezoned for commercial office
use on eight separate parcels from its current public use designation.
The item will be forwarded to the City Council for adoption at a later
date.
WHAT IT MEANS:
The property is owned by the Center for Special Surgery Inc.,
Greenglass Associates, LLC and the Huntington Intercommunity Hospital.
Staff felt a commercial designation was appropriate for the hospital
and medical complex because it has frontage along Beach Boulevard, the
city’s primary commercial corridor.
The new designation would allow the hospital to proceed with plans to
construct convalescent facilities at the site, which requires a
conditional-use permit approved by the planning commission.
Vote: 6-0
IN FAVOR/AGAINST
NEXT MEETING
When: 5:15 p.m., Feb. 26 Where: Room B-8, City Council chambers, 2000 Main St.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.