Pacific City goes to council
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Jenny Marder
The long-awaited Planning Commission approval of the proposed Pacific
City project was anticlimactic when it came since the project has
been appealed and must go before the City Council.
The Planning Commission approved the plan 6 to 1 at a special
meeting last week. That was by no means a green light since the
Robert Mayer Corp., which owns the Hyatt Regency Huntington Beach
Resort & Spa and the Hilton Waterfront Beach Resort have appealed the
project to the City Council.
Robert Mayer Corp. President Steve Bone has said the project lacks
the necessary on-site parking, and fails to adequately address
traffic impacts or bacteria from storm water runoff.
The project must now go before the City Council.
The Planning Commission’s approval was also not without
conditions. Commissioners placed a condition on the project requiring
a minimum of 500 self-parking spaces to be open to the public at all
times.
They set requirements for cleanup of the contaminated land, which
included placing a tarp over trucks leaving the site, to prevent the
escape of contaminated soil. They also required that signs be posted
every 250 feet around the perimeter of the property during
construction. Each sign will contain contact information for the site
supervisor, city officials and contacts at the Air Quality Management
District.
They also required the applicant to construct sidewalks on
Huntington Street and Atlanta Avenue to make the surrounding area
safer for pedestrians.
“On a project this big, everything needs to be talked about and I
think all in all, the community’s concerns were heard,” said Michael
Gagnet, vice president of developer Makar Properties. “I think that
[the Planning Commission] was firm and they were fair. We’re looking
forward to getting going.”
Plans for Pacific City, which would stretch along the coast and be
bordered by Atlanta Avenue, Huntington and First streets, call for
516 homes, a luxury hotel, shops, restaurants and offices.
Commissioner Robert Dingwall, who cast the sole vote against the
project, fears that the cleanup of the site, formerly a Chevron Corp.
oil field, will be done improperly. He’s also worried that the
project lacks sufficient parking and will create traffic jams in
surrounding streets.
“Because of these issues that I feel were not handled or handled
improperly, I would be abandoning my fiduciary responsibility to the
citizens of the community and abandoning my pledge to the citizens of
the community to put their health and welfare above all things,”
Dingwall said.
Commissioner Tom Livengood feels that the Planning Commission
addressed all these concerns.
“I think that the project is a good project and I think that the
conditions we imposed on it make it a good project,” Livengood said.
The City Council will vote on the project’s environmental report
on June 7.
“We’re one stop closer to putting to action the vision of the
city,” Gagnet said.
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