INSIDE CITY HALL Here are some of...
- Share via
INSIDE CITY HALL
Here are some of the items the commission will consider Monday:
MOBILE HOME CONVERSION ORDINANCE
The commission will consider approving a mobile home conversion
ordinance.
On July 7, the City Council directed planning staff to change the
city’s procedures for mobile home park conversions. The city’s
present procedure is limited. In preparing the draft ordinance,
planners reviewed the ordinances of cities such as Laguna Beach and
Huntington Beach, as well as the Golden State Manufactured Home
Owners League.
The proposed changes to the zoning code will expand the city’s
procedures to include mobile home park closures in addition to mobile
home park conversions. The draft ordinance specifies the procedure
required for a mobile home park conversion/closure and what
constitutes “reasonable costs of relocation” when the commission
considers a mobile home park closure report.
WHAT TO EXPECT
Planning staffers recommends the provision of the ordinance be
applied to pending mobile home park conversion applications such as
the one filed by Joe Brown to turn the El Nido and Snug Harbor
Village parks into a medical office building.
POLICE FACILITY EXPANSION
The commission will consider a request for an extension from the
police department.
Last October, the commission approved the final master plan that
allows the construction of an 11,000-square-foot expansion of the
police facility. The police department is requesting a one-year time
extension, which will allow building permits to be obtained for
improvements to the basement.
WHAT TO EXPECT
Planning staff recommends approval because the extension will
provide sufficient time.
PLANNING APPLICATION
The commission will consider an application from Tim and Doug
DeCinces to build a four-unit, two-story development with an
exception from open space requirements.
The development is a revised version of an originally proposed
five-unit project that had additional exceptions for things such as
the parking requirements. The Planning Commission originally
considered the request in July, but continued it to give the DeCinces
more time to redesign the proposed development.
WHAT TO EXPECT
Planning staff feels that there is no justification to approve the
exception from open space. The proposed plans reflect an overbuilding
of the lot and would constitute a grant of special privileges not
enjoyed by similar projects that have been approved recently.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.