HILLSIDE DEVELOPMENT A controversial zoning amendment will...
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HILLSIDE DEVELOPMENT
A controversial zoning amendment will make its way to the City
Council after months of debate in the Planning Commission.
The ordinance deals with the expansion of hillsides in the rear of
Huntington Harbour properties. Several residents living below the
homes say the expansions harm the character of the neighborhood and
have asked the city officials to ban further development. Hillside
homeowners argue that regulation is a violation of their property
rights.
WHAT TO EXPECT
The ordinance before the council is a watered down version of the
original request and doesn’t do much to limit expansions.
The council must now decide if it wants to reinstate the
ordinance’s original ban, undoing months of public hearings at the
Planning Commission, or pass the law the way it is.
HOUCHEN REPLACEMENT
The council needs to determine how to replace former Councilwoman
Pam Julien Houchen, who resigned on Sept. 1. The city charter
requires that Houchen’s position be filled by appointment or special
election before the Nov. 2 election.
The council planned to take up the replacement at its Sept. 20
meeting, but Mayor Cathy Green pulled the item because Councilwoman
Debbie Cook was not in attendance.
WHAT TO EXPECT
The council has two choices: appoint someone after a brief
application process or call a special election.
A special election seems highly unlikely given the cost and
timing. Still, finding a replacement the entire council can agree on
may be difficult.
MORATORIUM ON THREE-STORY HOMES
The council is looking to put a 45-day ban on building permits for
all three-story single-family homes until it determines a way to
better regulate their construction.
At the council’s Sept. 7 meeting, dozens of neighbors showed up to
protest the expansion of Alise Clevely’s home, saying her plans to
expand from a two-story to a three-story could encourage others to do
so and change the character of their neighborhood.
Councilman Dave Sullivan tried to block Clevely’s expansion, but
was unable to secure a majority of votes. Instead the council asked
planning staff members to return with an ordinance dealing with such
expansions.
WHAT TO EXPECT
Most of the council seemed interested in a regulating the
construction of three-story homes, but it remains unclear what will
happen after the moratorium expires.
And getting a favorable vote on a moratorium could also be
difficult. The law requires six affirmative votes for adoption and
just two detractors could stop the ordinance.
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