INSIDE CITY HALL Here are a few...
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INSIDE CITY HALL
Here are a few of the items the council considered Tuesday.
CITY APPEALS PROCESS
The council considered whether aspects of the city’s appeals
process needed to be tweaked. It considered the overall appeals
process, where residents or applicants who disagree with decisions on
development projects appeal them directly to the council.
The council also considered the development appeals process, where
projects are appealed from a city planner to the zoning administrator
or from the zoning administrator to the Planning Commission.
The council opted not to change the appeals process at all.
WHAT IT MEANS
The appeals process doesn’t change.
WHAT WAS SAID
“I will be the first to admit I have had concerns about some
appeals brought forward that have complied with everything, but some
of the alternatives, in my opinion, won’t really fix the problem, so
we’re going to leave it as is,” Councilman Allan Mansoor said.
PERMIT APPEAL
The council postponed deciding on an appeal of the Planning
Commission’s denial of a request to change a permit for a business at
1045 El Camino Drive to discontinue a car wash and gasoline sales and
become solely an automotive-repair facility. The appeal was made by
Daniel Carlton, representing Jack Sakzlyan, owner of Your
Neighborhood Service Station, and property owner El Camino Partners.
The commission felt the proposed change in use was incompatible
with the property’s zoning, which was changed to medium-density
residential housing to enable housing to be developed on this
property.
Councilman Mike Scheafer abstained from voting since he wasn’t
sure if he had a conflict of interest since, as an insurance agent,
he insures some significant properties close to this property.
With only four council members voting, the council deadlocked on
two votes -- one to uphold the commission’s decision and schedule a
hearing to revoke Sakzlyan’s permit, because it no longer complies
with zoning. The other deadlocked vote was to uphold the commission’s
decision. The item was continued to the commission’s Oct. 18 meeting
to give Scheafer a chance to investigate whether his situation poses
a conflict of interest.
WHAT IT MEANS
The council will reconsider the item on Oct. 18.
WHAT WAS SAID
“We’ve tried much too hard to fix something that’s not broken,”
Mayor Gary Monahan said. “I think we need to back off.”
FAIRGROUNDS RESOLUTION
The council adopted a resolution opposing the findings of the
California Performance Review, which described the Orange County
Fairgrounds as “underutilized.”
It also adopted a position, as a matter of council policy,
opposing the closure and/or relocation of the fairgrounds and
reaffirmed the city’s general plan designation for the property as
fairgrounds and its zoning as institutional/recreational.
WHAT IT MEANS
Not much, since the city has no authority over whether the state
decides to sell the fairgrounds.
WHAT WAS SAID
“We’re always talking to the state and telling and retelling and
retelling them how we feel,” Monahan said.
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