HomeMy WebLinkAbout24 - Newport Coast Annexation and Development Agreement Extension (PA2015-165) - Newport Coast and Newport Ridge - CorrespondenceReceived After Agenda Printed
November 22, 2016
Item No. 24
November 22, 2016, Council Agenda Item Comments
The following comments on an item on the Newport Beach City Council agenda are submitted by:
Jim Mosher ( iimmosher(@yahoo.com ), 2210 Private Road, Newport Beach 92660 (949-548-6229)
Item 24. Newport Coast Annexation and Development Agreement
Extension (PA2015-165) — Newport Coast and Newport Ridge
This is a request from the Irvine Company ("IC") to extend for another 15 years the shadowy
rules governing future development in the Newport Coast annexation area. From the staff
report it would appear IC is making a mysteriously generous new offer to pay the City more than
$74 million to do something it apparently claims it could currently could do without paying the
City anything (and apparently without any new agreement), namely convert 1,042 unbuilt hotel
room entitlements into residential construction at a CPI -adjusted $71,100 each.
Why is IC being so generous? And what could be wrong with this?
The fact that the answers to those questions are not obvious from the staff report makes this
worrisome on many levels.
A few of my concerns follow.
1. The staff report is wholly inadequate to make a decision about the extension
The planning authority over the City's Newport Coast annexation area is extremely, and
probably unnecessarily, complex, involving overlapping agreements and jurisdictions, with
much under County control, but much within that subject to Coastal Commission restrictions,
and some (apparently) under City control
The confusion regarding Measure Y in 2014 was just one manifestation of the uncertainty
regarding what the present rules governing the annexation area may be, and the limits on its
future development potential.
As an example, Ms. Shawna Schaffner, speaking on behalf of IC to the Planning
Commission on October 6th, spoke of IC's separate Development Agreement with the
County in the past tense, yet the Cooperative Agreement referenced in the present staff
report not only speaks of the County DA in the present tense, but gives it perpetual primacy
over the City's DA. Does such an agreement continue to exist? What does it say? What
are the City's options and the pros and cons of each?
The staff report appears to recommend a continuation of this confusing state of affairs
without shedding any light on the multiple questions about it.
I suggested to the Planning Commission that it is irresponsible to make changes to either
the Development Agreement or City's General Plan without a frank and comprehensive
public discussion about the status of Newport Coast, including open-ended input from the
County and Coastal Commission. I make that same assertion to the Council.
At a minimum, an explanation of how the various agreements and jurisdictions interact, how
they relate to the current General Plan, how much territory has been turned over to the City
November 22, 2016, Council Item 24 Comments - Jim Mosher Page 2 of 6
by the County, how much is no longer owned by IC and therefore not subject to the DA, etc.,
and a clearer explanation of the alternatives available, would have been helpful.
Instead of shedding further light, the staff report (which doesn't even explain who one of the
proposed signatories -- the "Irvine Community Development Company" -- is, and how they
are related to IC) appears to ask the Council to rely, in large part, on the Planning
Commission's recommendation of approval from October 6`h. It fails to note that the
Commission:
• heard this at the end of a very long meeting,
• expressed considerable doubt and skepticism about what was being presented to it
and concern about their lack of understanding of how planning works in the
annexation area,
• noted the existing Agreement did not appear to have anticipated any need for
extensions and made no provision for them,
• expressed concern about knowing what public benefit the Agreement would confer,
• were told nothing about IC's purported ability to convert hotel allotments into
residential entitlements,
• and gave the matter at best perfunctory attention, being unsure of their role with
respect to development agreements in general.
2. The requested action relies on 15 to 40 years old CEQA analysis.
The threshold recommendation (staff report recommendation b) is for the Council to "Find
that all significant environmental concerns for the proposed project have been addressed in
the previously prepared environmental documents certified by the County of Orange and
described in Exhibit C of the Agreement."
Exhibit C is a list of environmental analyses performed between 15 and 40 years ago.
Nothing is offered in support of the contention that these are still relevant or that nothing has
changed in 40 years. This is especially troubling in view of there being no explanation at all
of where the new development being vested by the proposed DA would go or what it would
look like.
3. IC's fundamental premise for the request is fundamentally flawed
The few Annual Monitoring Review statements that IC has provided to the City over the
years have consistently indicated that build out under the existing DA was expected by
2015.
IC now contends that it is entitled to a continued protection of its rights because the City has
failed, for 15 years, to produce a promised new Local Coastal Program for Newport Coast.
Page 24-5 of the current staff report refutes that contention. Hence what IC claims to have
been its primary justification for expecting an extension has vanished. Yet the claimed
urgency has not.
November 22, 2016, Council Item 24 Comments - Jim Mosher Page 3 of 6
4. The negotiation appears to have been materially misrepresented to the public
Although City staff now says the City has no obligation to produce a new LCP for Newport
Coast, and presumably no intention of creating one, at the October 6th Planning Commission
hearing (see 4:05 in the SPON video), staff actually confirmed IC's erroneous claims about
this (although suggesting it was somehow "a separate issue"). This certainly clouded the
discussion.
More seriously, City staff told the Commission on October 6th that they could provide no
details about the possible public benefits of the proposed extension because they were
being negotiated between IC and Council representatives (who they believed to be Mayor
Dixon and Council member Selich), and staff was not privy to the content of those
discussions (see 3:48 and 4:02 in the SPON video). Yet the present report tells us that City
staff is proposing the public benefit. Something clearly doesn't add up.
5. IC and the City have failed to abide by the terms of the existing Agreement
Section 6.1 of the existing Development Agreement (see page 24-41 of the present staff
report) requires the City to request from IC for public review an Annual Monitoring Review
statement describing the evolving status of the annexation area. To the best of my
knowledge, the status of the Newport Coast (Coastal Zone) portion of the DA has not been
publicly reviewed since September 10, 2013, when it was Item 18 on the City Council
agenda (consisting of a cursory update to a previous review for the period ending December
31, 2011), and the status of the Newport Ridge (non Coastal Zone) portion has not been
publicly reviewed a single time during the entire 15 year life of the existing DA.
Moreover, the little information revealed in those reports seems inconsistent with the
numbers presented in the present staff report.
For example, Table 2 on page 24-3 reports 422 residential units remaining to be built in the
Newport Coast LCP segment, yet the 2013 Review (handwritten page 14) refers to
"approximately 189 residential units for which building permits have not been issued,"
although the document cited for that number appears to indicate 219. Does anyone know
what the real number is?
As to the Newport Ridge area, since no Annual Review has ever been conducted it is
impossible for the public to know if the numbers presented in Table 1 on page 24-2 are
accurate, or not. This is particularly worrisome because in connection with Measure Y in
2014, City staff was unable to show where or what the alleged 363 unbuilt residential units
exist in the City's current General Plan. Vesting a right to build them without anyone asking
what they are or where they would go seems unconscionable.
November 22, 2016, Council Item 24 Comments - Jim Mosher Page 4 of 6
6. The requested Agreement appears inconsistent with the LCP
The "Funding Requirements" section on page 24-2 of the present staff report says the
conversion of hotel units into residential dwelling units (the primary thing a public benefit is
being offered for) is "allowed by the Newport Coast LCP."
I am unable to find anything in the Coastal Commission certified Newport Coast LCP
suggesting that is allowed. On the contrary, the LCP sets very clear and separate maxima
on the allowable number of dwellings and visitor serving accommodations. Given the
Commission's strong preference for visitor serving accommodations over residences, it
seems extremely unlikely such a provision would exist, or be allowed without amendment to
the LCP.
Instead, this seems to refer to a provision slipped into the City's General Plan by City
Council Resolution 2000-88, a month before voters enacted Greenlight (Charter Section
423) which would severely restrict such conversions. But if the conversions are inconsistent
with the LCP, the significance of a long -ago General Plan provision is unclear, and certainly
not clarified by the present staff report.
Beyond that, the staff report and the proposed Agreement (as did a letter from the County
provided to the Planning Commission as part of their agenda Item 6 on October 6`h) casually
toss around the word "hotel unit" as if it is the same as "accommodation" in the LCP, even
though the LCP makes a distinction between the two.
7. The benefit to the public, beyond money, is not explained
I am unable to find anything in the staff report explaining why, aside from the money, it is in
the City's interest to grant IC this extension.
On the contrary, the report cryptically suggests, but without further explanation, that if the
existing DA is allowed to end, as it was expected to, control over planning in the annexation
area would pass to the City, getting the County out of the picture entirely. To me, the clarity
that would bring seems a major public benefit, possibly outweighing the money.
8. The basis of the monetary benefit is not explained
If City staff is indeed the one suggesting to the City Council the appropriate monetary benefit
it would seem incumbent upon them to explain how the numbers were arrived out.
I am unable to find in the report any rationale whatsoever for why $71,100 per hotel unit to
residence conversion and $10,000 per hotel unit construction have been selected as
appropriate public benefits. Why are they not $20,000 or $120,000? What is the
reasoning? Is this based on some kind of economic study? I haven't a clue.
9. No benefit is being asked for vesting "normal" residential construction rights
Equally troublesome, the proposed Agreement appears intended to lock in entitlements for
residential construction unrelated to the hotel (visitor accommodation?) allotments, but
offers no public benefit at all for conferring that right on IC? What is the rationale for that?
And is it even legal?
November 22, 2016, Council Item 24 Comments - Jim Mosher Page 5 of 6
10. The status of other agreements protected by the requested agreement is not
explained
See Items 1 and 5, above. At least in my mind it is completely unclear what other
agreements IC has with the County and Coastal Commission, what their status is and how
they impinge on the City's authority with or without a new DA.
Again, it seems irresponsible to enter into anything without a comprehensive understanding
of this.
My guess is that under the proposed Agreement, staff expects the City to receive payments
for conversions and construction authorized by the County, with little or no input from
Newport Beach residents. But I have no real idea, if that is correct or not.
11. The relationship to recently requested General Plan amendments is not explained
On October 6t", City staff asked the Planning Commission (as agenda Item 6) to affirm
certain administrative "corrections" to the voter -approved Land Use Tables of the 2006
General Plan.
Since the present staff report explains so little, is perhaps unsurprising that it provides no
explanation of what relevance, if any, that action has to the present request.
If agreed to as an extension before January 1, 2017, does the present proposal lock in a
right to what is allowed under the "corrected" General Plan or to some earlier General Plan?
Does it matter if the General Plan is inconsistent with the LCP?
For the "corrected" one certainly is:
It defines "anomalies" whose mapped geographic extents differ from those of the
corresponding "planning areas" in the LCP (for example, the Pelican Hill Golf
Clubhouse appears to be outside City Anomaly 60 even though its development is
intended to be limited as part of the otherwise corresponding Planning Area 13 in
the LCP).
• It assigns a limit of 2,150 "hotel rooms" to the mapped area when the LCP clearly
limits the visitor serving accommodations to 1,950.
• It assigns a development limit of 2,960,000 square feet when the corresponding
figure in the LCP is 2,660,000.
12. This appears to be nothing more than another City supported effort to make another
end run around Greenlight
Given the revelation with this staff report of some deeply -hidden right to convert hotel room
allocations to residential construction entitlements, and the sudden urgency of getting this
adopted in time for the old DA to be "extended" before it expires on January 1" (as opposed
to negotiating a new agreement for land that could possibly be placed entirely under City
control), it appears this is nothing more than another attempt to assist IC in making an end
run around the citizens' Greenlight initiative. This time by "vesting" what will apparently be
November 22, 2016, Council Item 24 Comments - Jim Mosher Page 6 of 6
claimed to be a pre-Greenlight conversion right, and this time on the flimsy (and it turns out
erroneous) excuse that the City failed to perform its obligation to produce a new LCP during
the first 15 years IC has already had to enjoy that right.
As the City Council knows, a significant portion of the Newport Beach public is already
incensed by City staff enabling IC to add 79 dwelling units to Newport Center in 2012 by
means of scheme that purportedly avoids counting them toward the Greenlight limit for the
statistical area.
As City staff knows, hotel to residential conversions are supposed to count toward the
Greenlight totals.
The staff report does not explain if the conversions contemplated under this DA would be
counted toward Greenlight or not, or how the conversions could be made consistent with the
LCP.
But considering the public has already been burned by 79 illicit conversions, if this is indeed
a scheme to use some sort of purported legal loophole to enable 1,042 more non-
Greenlight-counted conversions, the political fallout could be extreme.
The Council may therefore wish to be cautious about adopting staff's recommendation: it
may be hard to convince your constituents that a payment of $71,100 per unit is sufficient to
not be counted toward Greenlight. The people's Charter certainly makes no mention of that.
13. The Agreement contains errors
As to its substance, I believe Clause 9 of the Recitals (staff report, page 24-16) cites the
incorrect dates of hearing and adoption.
And Clause 1 of the proposed Agreement refers to "Sections 2.2 and 2.3" of the existing
Agreement. I find this curious because the existing Agreement has no Section 2.3, at least
that I can find, and because it would certainly seem of interest what properties have been
extinguished from the Development Agreement because they are no longer owned by TIC
or a TIC affiliate. Is anyone going to ask?
It would certainly sound like pursuant to Sections 2.2.2 and 2.2.3 of the existing DA, much of
the developable portions of the annexation area are no longer part of the DA — which brings
into question the meaning of much of the data provided in Tables 1 and 2 of the staff report,
and what the amended DA applies to.
Based on this small sampling in the first two paragraphs above, I would suspect other
clauses in the proposed amendment (and the original Agreement) contain errors.
In summary, I believe the Council should reject this proposal. If a development agreement is
warranted at all, it should be negotiated after the present one has expired and the steps have
been taken for the City to assume complete control over the area, as the staff report implies is
possible.