City will look at rehab rules
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June Casagrande
In response to complaints from neighbors of a peninsula drug- and
alcohol-recovery home, council members will hold a study session on
rehabs and the laws that govern them.
City Attorney Bob Burnham will give a report on fair housing laws
that may govern such group homes and shed light on lingering
questions about exactly what powers the city has to regulate
residential treatment facilities.
“We’ll be looking at two things,” Burnham said. “There will be an
overview of the federal law that’s applicable to local regulation of
group homes and then we’ll probably chat a little about some possible
ordinance amendments that the council may or may not want to
consider.”
Specifically, the discussion will consider when federal housing
laws override city-zoning laws and when use permits are required.
“We need to listen to everybody,” said Mayor Tod Ridgeway, whose
district includes the Narconon recovery home that has been the target
of neighbors’ complaints in recent months. “To the extent the
complaints are legitimate, we’ll look at them.”
Ridgeway said that the city needs to examine occupancy rules,
which govern how many people can live in properties of varying types
and sizes, as a way to control effects of businesses near residential
areas.
Neighbors have lobbied the City Council during meetings in recent
months to report noise and litter such as cigarette butts from the
Narconon facility. Linda Orozco, who has led residents in their
efforts to fix the alleged problems, had asked the city to look into
the law, prompting the study session.
“What we would like to see is for all these rehabs in our city to
cease and desist until they’ve gone through the Planning Commission
for a permit and conduct an environmental report that shows the full
impact to neighbors,” Orozco said.
Jerry Marshall, president of Narconon Southern California, said he
believes the facility is a good neighbor and that it has already
taken steps to address neighbors’ complaints. Six-day-a-week trash
pickup has been reduced to three days a week. Staff at the facility
have been instructed to work harder to assure that cigarette butts
and other trash don’t litter the property.
“We’re trying to be good neighbors and we have been for eight
years,” Marshall said. “We’re working even harder now.”
Orozoco said conditions have not improved.
Narconon is an international, nonprofit drug- and
alcohol-treatment program based on the writings of L. Ron Hubbard
founder of the Church of Scientology.
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