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HomeMy WebLinkAbout11 - Land Use Entitlements for the Residences at 4400 Von Karman Project (PA2020-061) - Correspondence - Koll Property AttorneyReceived After Agenda Printed January 26, 2021 Item No. 11 Cre ff Will is, a pmfcssional corporation The Law Offices of Geoffrey Willis 9891 Irvine Center Drive, Suite 200 Irvine, CA 92618 (949)374-3815 January 25, 2021 Via Email and First Class Mail City Clerk, City of Newport Beach 100 Civic Center Drive, Bay E, 211 Floor Newport Beach, CA 92660 Re: Residences at 4400 Von Karmen (the "Project") To Mayor Brad Avery and Members of the City Council: Writing on January 11, 2021 the day before the last scheduled hearing, The Picerne Group (the "Applicant") and its counsel Jennifer Hernandez both provided the City with "discussion" regarding the challenges of surrounding building owners — the owners of the common area being taken from them without their permission. Both of these letters were misleading and contain multiple significant factual and legal inaccuracies. A. Parking As an example, in the January 11, 2021 letter from Jennifer Hernandez, she states that "A few parties have questioned whether residential development is permitted on this surface parking lot location, and whether Koll and/or Picerne may replace surface parking spaces with covered parking spaces in nearby but different locations." By posing the question in this manner, the reader would incorrectly infer that the surrounding building owners have an issue with covered parking. This is both ridiculous and distracting from the true issue. The applicant is replacing required surface with both elevated and underground parking despite the fact that "on -grade" parking is required by the CC&Rs governing the Project area. Whether or not the parking is "covered" is irrelevant and attempts to distract from a fatal defect in the approval package. In addition, the description of parking for the proposed Project incorrectly assures the reader that parking for the surrounding offices will be replaced. However, the Addendum fails to note that the City's Code requires that parking be provided on-site, not off-site at a parking structure located 600 feet outside of the Property boundary. The Addendum improperly glosses over the fact that there is a 262 parking space deficiency during a significant portion of Project construction. B. Settlement Agreement In addition, the Applicant also inaccurately describes the prior settlement agreement in the 2015 action brought by Olen Properties regarding a different proposed development in the same general area as the present Project. Despite the description given in Applicant's letters, the settlement agreement only prohibits Olen from the argument that the CC&Rs prohibit any residential development. Olen has complied with the terms of that settlement agreement and has not made the argument that any and all residential development is completely barred in all circumstances from development within the Koll Center by the terms of the CC&Rs. C. No Required Retail Component As previously discussed in Olen's submittals on January 11 and 12 in this matter, Picerne fails to meet City planning requirements because there is no retail component described anywhere in the Addendum for the Project. Absent a retail component, the Project is NOT a mixed use project, fails to have supporting retail and other services as required by the City's General Plan and supporting City planning documents, and violates the City's own requirements. Accordingly, the Addendum fails as a CEQA document and illustrates the Project's fatal inconsistency with the City's planning requirements. D. Separate CEQA and CC&Rs Challenges To further distract from the serious flaws in the Applicant's approval package, Picerne and its counsel concoct an argument that attempts to conflate the serious environmental impacts caused by the Project with the separate but equally important monetary claims in which the City plays no role. The potential environmental harm caused by this Project is significant and fatal. The Applicant has implied that Olen has somehow tied these two independent cases together and demanded cash payment to settle the CEQA suit. This is completely untrue. Olen has separately and independently sought to eliminate true environmental impacts caused by the Applicant's Project while seeking compensation for the monetary harm it will suffer in a private dispute with the Applicant and the Declarant. In its prior challenge letters filed with the City, Olen raises significant and troubling issues relating to the serious environmental harm caused by the City including the fact that the Addendum fatally uses an antiquated traffic impact measurement tool (Level of Service or "LOS") with a recently approved mandatory traffic impact measurement tool (Vehicle Miles Traveled or "VMT"). LOS measures delays at traffic signals which is no longer allowed under CEQA. Additionally, even though the City used the wrong standard (LOS), that standard exceeded the City's own traffic threshold and precludes the use of the Addendum. In addition, despite its significance and importance, the applicant provides zero analysis of the impact of the Project on Greenhouse Gasses ("GHG"). Finally, the additional defects in the Addendum are plentiful including issues with aesthetics, air quality, cultural and tribal resources, energy, geology and soils, hazards and hazardous materials, hydrology and water quality, land use and planning, noise, as well as utilities and service systems. Olen challenges the potential adoption of the Addendum on numerous valid grounds. In contrast, in a private dispute with both Koll and Picerne, Olen has every right to pursue mitigation for violations of private disputes not involving the City. In the present case, in addition to the numerous CEQA violations, the actions of Picerne and Koll have created personal, private liability because of violations of the CC&Rs put in place to protect the interests of the individual building owners from bad actions like the actions being taken in the present case. Picerne and Koll simultaneously are significantly impacting the environment and separately and independently creating contractual damages claims. Olen has every right to act as a private citizen enforcing its public rights under CEQA as well as protecting itself from the violation of private contractual and similar obligations coming out of private agreements. In addition, the CEQA arguments posed by the Applicant are similarly incorrect and aimed to distract from the Addendum's significant failings. As an example, Jennifer Hernandez wrote "No commenter has challenged the fact that all displaced surface parking stalls are in fact replaced." This is completely untrue and misleading in multiple ways. First, Olen and many other have correctly claimed that parking is eliminated and never properly replaced. Second, Olen and others have pointed out that during construction there is a deficit of 262 parking spaces for a significant amount of time. Third, Olen and others have written to the City regarding the Applicant's intent to replace required "on-grade" parking with contractually barred underground and elevated parking. Significant parking rights are being taken away from Olen and it is disingenuous to argue that "no one has challenged" the significant loss of parking. In addition, the Applicant's letters do highlight one issue that has been ignored completely by the City and the Applicant. Koll is the Declarant of the Koll Business Center. The common area which is the site of the Project, is OWNED in part by each of the building owners whose property is subject to the CC&Rs, with each individual building owner, like Olen, owning an undivided interest in the common area. The City is allowing this Project to move forward without the consent of those that actually own the Project site land. This is a violation of CEQA, the Government Code and a number of other statutes relating to common interest ownership projects. The Applicant then launches into another diatribe complaining about the City seeking neighbor input ending with inapplicable case cites. The City has the absolute right to delay the Project to seek input from neighbors and other interest groups. We encourage the City to delay the Project to allow for further input from neighbors and other interested parties. What the cases cited by the Applicant DO stand for is that the City cannot in effect delegate its police powers to a group of private citizens. In the present case, were the City to say it would not consider the Project until there was "approval" by outside groups, that would be illegal. Simply delaying the Project to seek and process citizen input is not only allowed under CEQA, it is encouraged. Finally, the Applicant has publicly stated that if there is a conflict between the CC&Rs and the City's Design Guidelines, the Design Guidelines "override" the CC&Rs. Nothing could be further from the truth. The CC&Rs expressly provide that while the Design Guidelines "can fill the gaps" if issues are not addressed in the CC&Rs, it is also clear that the terms of the CC&Rs cannot be "overridden" by the Design Guidelines and inconsistencies are resolved in favor of the terms of the CC&Rs. This is a troubled Project with numerous significant and often undisclosed environmental impacts. Olen Properties encourages the City to deny this Project until such time that the Applicant complies with the requirements of law. Sincerely W& Geoffrey