City considering its zoning options
- Share via
Deirdre Newman
A plan being tossed around to sell the Orange County Fairgrounds has
caused some City Council members to call for more proactive city
zoning.
Assemblyman John Campbell has proposed selling the state-owned
fairgrounds and moving the fair operations to the planned Great Park
at the closed El Toro Marine Air Base as part of a proposal to help
balance the state budget.
On Monday, Councilwoman Libby Cowan suggested examining publicly
owned property in the city, such as the fairgrounds, to make sure it
gets zoned in ways that reflect the city’s goals.
“We might not always hear about properties coming on the market
and then all of a sudden, it comes in front of us and we say, ‘wait a
minute,’” Cowan said. “There’s no benefit if we’re not proactive.”
Mayor Gary Monahan agreed that this should be a priority and
requested City Manager Allan Roeder follow up on it.
Assistant Development Services Director Perry Valantine said there
are a few ways to specify the zoning of properties for the future.
“The basic idea is to make a decision ahead of time as to what we
would do with these properties if we were faced with some alternative
development,” Valantine said. “Exactly how we would do that or how we
would enact it is something we would have to determine through this
study.”
The fairgrounds is currently zoned agricultural. Instead of
waiting to see if the site will be sold and who will develop the
property, the city should also zone it for parks, open space and/or
low-density housing just to be safe, Cowan said.
“We know that we don’t like dense housing, so if indeed we have an
opportunity, let’s go back in and do an underlying zoning of the
fairground,” Cowan said. “Let’s proactively identify it as
institutional and recreational and/or [low-density housing] so no one
comes in with a planned development that can be built out to some
crazy density.”
While the fairgrounds is the most recent example, there are other
properties around the city as well that merit zoning scrutiny, like
Bristol Street Mini Storage, which is owned by the county, Monahan
said. Its lease expires on Aug. 31.
“We need to rezone it and let whoever they’re going to cut a deal
with know what they’re going to have there,” Monahan said.
More proactive zoning might also have helped the Coast Community
College District have an easier time in its effort to develop an
apartment complex for the property where its current headquarters
are. The first proposal it issued asked developers to create a
project with a minimum number of units that exceeds the city’s
density allowance.
“Had we put out something that said, ‘if the college district
vacates the property, the city would rezone it to [medium-density],’
then they would have known this is the kind of density we could
expect here,” Valantine said. “Then maybe they would have asked for
bids that were more consistent with our plans.”
Former Mayor Sandra Genis said she thinks it’s worthwhile for the
city to start considering which properties it might like to obtain in
the future. But if the city goes as far as changing the general plan
for a certain property, it would involve significant and expensive
documentation, including an environmental impact report, Genis said.
“I think the city should be establishing an acquisition wish list,
but I don’t want us picking up the tab for [environmental impact
reports] that really should be done by developers, especially not in
this budgetary climate,” Genis said.
If the city sets a certain zoning for a property and a developer
who buys it doesn’t like the zoning, they can always ask for a zoning
change, Monahan said.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.