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HomeMy WebLinkAboutIV(a)_Additional Materials Received_MosherDecember 6, 2023, GPAC Agenda Comments The following comments on items on the Newport Beach General Plan Advisory Committee agenda are submitted by: Jim Mosher (jimmosher@yahoo.com ), 2210 Private Road, Newport Beach 92660 (949-548-6229) Item III. PUBLIC COMMENTS ON NON-AGENDA ITEMS Past agendas have included an item disclosing staff’s understanding of the current subcommittee assignments and giving members an opportunity to make changes. I am not sure why this agenda is lacking that. Item IV.a. Meeting Minutes of August 21, 2023 The passages shown in italics below are from the draft minutes with suggested corrections shown in strikeout underline format. Page 2 of 6, first full sentence: “At the July 19, 2023, GPAC meeting, the GPAC raised questions about the inclusion of Banning Ranch and increase increased density limits in each focus areas area.” Page 2 of 6, full paragraph 2, sentence 2: “She noted that a lot of new units are needed to conform to the housing element, a 10,000-unit count with a 35-38 percent affordable, raw numbers without the density bonus, density bonus law, and highlighted that there is only an inclusionary housing requirement in the airport area.” Page 2 of 6, full paragraph 5: “Principal Planner Zdeba reported the following in attendance at the July 26 Land Use Element Subcommittee meeting: Matthew Brady, Anthony Maniscalchi, Robert Radar Rader, Debbie Stevens, Jim Mosher, Nancy Gardner, and Christy Walker.” Page 3 of 6, paragraph 1, sentence 1: “Committee Member Wahlberg supported the recommendation as written, thought the way to provide more affordable housing is to build more overall housing, disagreed that increased density will create more traffic, and believed that by limiting the number of housing units enriches Irvine Company.” Page 4 of 6, paragraph 9: “Motion made by Committee Member Klobe and seconded by Committee Member DeSantis to approve the Land Use Policy Matrix to forward to the Planning Commission minus the four density increases and but including other changes made over time. The motion was bifurcated for a separate vote for Banning Ranch.” [see video for verification] Page 4 of 6, last paragraph: “Nancy Gardner stated that the owners of Banning Ranch would like the property removed because they will not be adding housing to the property due to a dead deed restriction.” Page 5 of 6, paragraph 2 from end, last sentence: “Deputy Community Development Director Campbell relayed a 0.3 percent population reduction year-over-year for 2022-23 as per the State Department of Finance - Demographics Unit.” General Plan Advisory Committee - December 6, 2023 Item No. IVa Additional Materials Received Meeting Minutes of August 21, 2023 December 6, 2023, GPAC agenda comments - Jim Mosher Page 2 of 8 Page 5 of 6, paragraph 3 from end: “In response to Committee Member Mosher’s question, Principal Planner Zdeba noted housing occupancy and tenure date data in the demographics profile on page 33 of the agenda attachments and offered to discuss offline turnover rates in different housing types and furnish the GPAC with housing data.” Page 6 of 6, last paragraph: “With no further business, Co-Chair Evans adjourned the meeting at X:XX p.m. The next meeting is to be determined.” [The video is 1 hour 58 minutes long, so if the meeting started at 5:00 p.m., the adjournment would have been at 6:58 p.m. However, I’m not sure “5:00 p.m.” was the correct starting time. I think we may have waited for a quorum.] Item IV.b. Meeting Minutes of October 4, 2023 The passages shown in italics below are from the draft minutes with suggested corrections shown in strikeout underline format. Page 1 of 7, Item III, paragraph 1: “Virginia Enders Anders-Ellmore expressed concern for a climate action plan in Newport Beach and offered a speaker list for Item IV.f.” Page 2 of 7, paragraph 1, last sentence: “Once accepted, City staff and the consultant team will continue to work in concert with the GPAC and GPAC Outreach Subcommittee, as well as the General Plan Update Steering Committee (GPUSC)to implement the plan going forward.” Page 3 of 7, partial paragraph 1, last sentence: “Deputy Community Development Director Campbell thought this matter is a General Plan Update Steering Committee (GPUSC) discussion item.” Page 4 of 7, last paragraph, sentence 1: “Co-Chair Greer suggested the Subcommittee’s Subcommittee meet after today’s presentation to gather and collate information and discuss proactive next steps.” Page 7 of 7, full paragraph 1: “Virginia Enders Anders-Ellmore shared (handout) a list of people and groups to address the climate crisis that include Katrina Foley, Orange County Power Authority, United Nations Association Group in Orange County, Rotary Club – Steve Bender, Climate Reality Project of Orange County (OC), OC Goes Solar, and Switch is On.” Page 7 of 7, full paragraph 2, end of last sentence: “..., and encouraged an open mind for disruption methods to combat encroachment from Sacramento on the resident’s residents’ way of life.” Item IV.c. Housing Element Implementation and General Plan Update Schedules Housing Element Implementation Program Amendments Schedule As one of the eight members of GPAC’s Noise Element Subcommittee, I would like to express my gratitude to whoever managed to update the Noise Element without our ever having to meet. The process was entirely painless. It is comforting to learn that any noise concerns the citizens General Plan Advisory Committee - December 6, 2023 Item No. IVa Additional Materials Received Meeting Minutes of August 21, 2023 December 6, 2023, GPAC agenda comments - Jim Mosher Page 3 of 8 of Newport Beach might have over the next 20 or 30 years could be resolved simply by allowing housing closer to the airport than the City previously allowed it. It is also comforting to see the City has determined any environmental issues associated with doing so were fully analyzed and mitigated in the 2015 EIR associated with extension of the Airport Settlement Agreement, even though its authors presumably assumed no housing would be added in those areas. Regarding the future schedule, although I believe we were told they were outside GPAC’s scope, I seem to remember we were invited to comment on the draft code revisions creating Housing Opportunity Overlay Zoning Districts and the associated Objective Design Standards, which, according to the related web page, were the subject of a Planning Commission Study Session (Item 5) on September 21. At that time it was believed the EIR would be posted for public review in late November. It looks like that has been pushed to February 2024, with the Planning Commission reviewing the amendments in April. When are comments on the proposed amendments (as distinct from the EIR) expected by? General Plan Update Schedule – Six Months Out The schedule shows a Vision Statement Subcommittee in February, which I assume will be a followup to the discussion on the present agenda of Dudek’s Vision Statement Existing Conditions and Background Analysis report. I see a similar pattern of reports being reviewed at a GPAC meeting and the related subcommittee meeting after the GPUSC has reviewed the GPAC discussion and provided guidance. What, specifically, will the subcommittees be doing at these meetings? Will they be their only meetings? What is the reason for the exception of a Natural Resources and Recreation report being provided in February, but not followed by a subcommittee meeting? Will the Outreach Subcommittee ever meet again? I thought it was originally planned to have a continuing role. Item IV.d. Presentation of the Vision Statement and Resilience Existing Conditions and Background Analyses Although labeled “draft,” the agenda announcement says these are being presented in “final form.” Draft Vision Statement Existing Conditions and Background Analysis As a member of the Vision Statement subcommittee, I am grateful the report, in Section 4.2 (“Progress Made To-Date”), acknowledges it has met several times. More than one person has suggested it would be helpful for the process if records were kept of the various meetings and resulting documents shared for all to be able to see and review (if not converse about outside the noticed meetings). General Plan Advisory Committee - December 6, 2023 Item No. IVa Additional Materials Received Meeting Minutes of August 21, 2023 December 6, 2023, GPAC agenda comments - Jim Mosher Page 4 of 8 In the absence of such records, my recollection is the subcommittee assigned a member to review and comment on each of topic sections in the existing Vision Statement. I found this difficult to recognize from the list of topics discussed, which may give the impression some of those were skipped over. I also find it curious staff and the consultants chose not to share with the full GPAC for discussion the 9-page Vision Statement combined thoughts document1 that the subcommittee produced. While it was intended for further refinement by the subcommittee members, like other subcommittee products, it would seem useful for the whole GPAC to see. Quite recently, and long after the subcommittee’s last meeting, a resident asked me if our General Plan provides a vision or policy for the promotion of tourism. My conclusion was it does not, which seems very strange for an obvious tourist destination. Is one needed? While our City government contracts with an organization to promote tourism, the image they market is one I, at least, have difficulty recognizing as the city I live in. Draft Resilience Existing Conditions and Background Analysis I found this a bit difficult to follow as I thought the consultant was going to respond to requests to more explicitly include the topics of resilience and sustainability in the General Plan. Yet it seems to treat sustainability as a subset of resilience. I thought resilience had to do with a community's ability to recover from crises and disasters, while sustainability had to do with living in a way that will not create crises or disasters for future generations. While related, they seem distinctly different to me. As to the material, which I have not fully disgusted: ● In Section 3.1 (“Resilience in State Regulations and Guidance”), I am not sure where Table 1 came from, as it does not seem to match the state OPR’s General Plan Guidelines document. For example, Table 1 says there are no relevant requirements in the Housing Element. Yet page 100 of the General Plan Guidelines points to Government Code Section 65583(a)(8), which requires the Housing Element to provide “An analysis of opportunities for energy conservation with respect to residential development.” ● Section 3.2 (“Resilience in the Adopted General Plan”) seems to me to place naive confidence in the implementation measures associated with the policy pronouncements actually having been acted upon. ● Section 3.3 (“Resilience in Local Implementation”) does not appear to me to be an independent evaluation of whether the City has followed through on its implementation promises, but rather, without identifying its source, simply a regurgitation of City staff’s annual progress reports to the state. While those reports focus on things that have been done, it would seem the consultant would want to identify implementing actions that have not happened. 1 This is supposed to be a view-only link. The blue headings are the ones in the existing Vision Statement, and the pinkish ones suggested additional headings. General Plan Advisory Committee - December 6, 2023 Item No. IVa Additional Materials Received Meeting Minutes of August 21, 2023 December 6, 2023, GPAC agenda comments - Jim Mosher Page 5 of 8 ● In Section 3.4, the statement that the City has recently updated its Local Coastal Program to address sea level rise also seems a bit naive. My understanding is Appendix A to the Implementation Plan, approved by the City Council in 2016, was regarded as a stop-gap placeholder, yet has not been updated since. ● In Figure 2 on page 25, I am not sure I understand how the populated areas of the Peninsula would flood while the ocean-facing sand stays dry. I thought the sand was generally lower than the housing and flooding comes from the sea. Is the assumption that storm water will fill the harbor to a level higher than the open ocean? ● In Section 4.1.2.2 (“Beach and Cliff Erosion”), do we not expect erosion around the Upper Bay? ● On pages 34 and 35, aren’t the subsections misnumbered? Aren’t they “4.1.3.1” and “4.1.3.2”? ● In Sections 4.2.1 (“City of Newport Beach Website”) and 4.3.2 (“Energy Action Plan”), it is good to see the City has an Energy Action Plan. Did the consultant determine if any actions have been taken, recently, as a result of it? ● Figure 11 (“Vehicle Miles Traveled in Newport Beach”) on page 43 depicts an interesting metric. And I agree that where I live on the west side of the Upper Bay is far from any services, but much of the information does not seem credible. How could it be that a resident living at the eastern tip of Lido Isle travels shorter distances than one living in Lido Village? ● Similarly, as someone who uses a bicycle as their primary means of transportation, I can only vaguely relate to the network of bicycle trails depicted in Figure 12 (Transportation Routes in Newport Beach). Why is a piece of MacArthur shown, but not the Back Bay Road? ● Likewise, the description in Section 4.4.3 (“Active Transportation”) of Class III Bike routes “as bike boulevards, which are characterized by their location on low-stress residential streets and by traffic-calming measures, such as roundabouts and neighborhood traffic circles” is hard for me to relate to. I haven’t encountered many roundabouts or traffic circles in Newport Beach, and would likely find them more of a challenge than a help. ● In Section 4.4.4.2 (“Bicycle Parking”) on page 47, I am intrigued by the photo caption’s reference to “bicycle lockers (right),” but am unable to see them. ● I assume Section 5 (“Issues and Opportunities”), which I have not yet studied, provides some good suggestions for improvement, but I find disappointing the conclusions in Section 5.3.2.6 (“Access to Grant Funds”) and the Section 6 recommendation that as to the existing General Plan, its handling of resilience and sustainability in disparate places is good enough. ● GPAC has long been hoping for a discussion from the consultant of whether there might be a different structure to the General Plan from that chosen in 2006 that might be more effective. It does not look like such insight will be coming, and only a few policy tweaks General Plan Advisory Committee - December 6, 2023 Item No. IVa Additional Materials Received Meeting Minutes of August 21, 2023 December 6, 2023, GPAC agenda comments - Jim Mosher Page 6 of 8 within the existing framework will be recommended. But to better address things like resilience and sustainability shouldn’t we at least consider adding to the existing plan some kind of cross-index so readers could find those disconnected policies and implementations related to the topics of their interest? Item IV.e. Updates on Outreach and Engagement Updated “Newport, Together” Website The Institute for Local Government will be hosting a free webinar with Social Pinpoint tomorrow, December 7, from 11:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m., entitled “Using Data For More Inclusive Public Engagement.” The announcement says it will address the questions: How do local governments ensure their public engagement process is equitable? How do you evaluate your process to ensure it is inclusive and representative? How do you reach the hard-to-reach? ● Home page ● The logo and icons are very large, filling the entire screen on my laptop. ● The question visible (only) if one scrolls below them is “What do you envision for the future of Newport Beach?” – to be answered in 140 characters or less. ○ The question seems extremely vague, specifying neither a time nor a quality to respond about, nor whether what is being sought is an aspiration or a prediction, nor what the response will be used for. ○ Answering such a vague and open-ended question in 140 characters or less makes it especially intimidating or pointless. ● As an example, the lengths of the four sentences of bold text leading up to the question are 136, 194, 269, and 111 characters. ● The question itself takes 53 characters to express. ● Why is there a 140-character limitation on the response? ● What kind of response is expected? ● The paragraph near the bottom introducing the General Plan Update Steering Committee & General Plan Advisory Committee should link to their web pages ● What is a General Plan? ● The title is “What is a General Plan?” but immediately under that it says “What is a General Plan Update?” Was the latter intended to go further down the page above the update timeline? ● Two of the logos adopted here and elsewhere for the existing elements are confusing to me. ○ That an open book represents Historical Resources is not very self-evident to me. It could equally well be a book about anything else. I think a stylized image of the Pavilion would be much more evocative for Newport Beach. ○ The brush apparently meant to symbolize Arts and Culture looks to me like it is for painting a house or a boat. Wouldn’t it be better to use General Plan Advisory Committee - December 6, 2023 Item No. IVa Additional Materials Received Meeting Minutes of August 21, 2023 December 6, 2023, GPAC agenda comments - Jim Mosher Page 7 of 8 something more recognizable as an artist’s brush, and perhaps combine it with a musical instrument or something more obviously cultural? ● Shouldn't these paragraphs describing the General Plan elements and Implementation Program link to the actual documents? ● Get Engaged! ● It seems misleading to say there have been no past events. ● Resource and Document Library ● The link to the “complete” “current” General Plan is neither current nor complete. ○ It provides only links to the current Housing and Circulation Elements, which are posted as separate documents below it. ○ It provides outdated copies of the Land Use and Noise Elements, not showing the changes approved by the City Council on November 14. ○ Additionally, the Table of Contents does not correlate with the updated Housing and Circulation Elements, and possibly others ● The Learn More link under the GPUSC leads to a page showing documents labeled “Current_GPAC_Agenda” and “Current_GPU_Agenda,” neither of which are current (they are from May 3, 2023, and June 12, 2023). ● Contact Us ● I’m not sure what the purpose the green box saying “Open” is. ● The form limits comments to 350 characters. Why? ● I see no explanation of why one should use the contact form rather than the email address listed at the bottom of each page. Should that be offered as an alternative? Workshop-In-A-Box ● 36 slides seems like a lot, even with many being photos. How long is the presentation supposed to last? ● It would be helpful if the slides were numbered so viewers could refer to them (I will refer to them by their page numbers in the 37-page agenda attachment, which are one greater than the slide number). ● Page 6: Is it true that “A General Plan is a guide for the future of a community”? Or is it “a guide for the future development of a community”? ● Page 8: ○ It is not quite true that the “Previous comprehensive update was conducted in 2006.” It was “completed in 2006.” The former GPAC worked on it for several years. ○ It is not true that “The 2006 General Plan was 780 pages.” As adopted by Resolution No. 2006-76, it appears to have consisted of 630 pages. The number quoted may reflect a later Housing Element, as those have grown in length, with the most recent one, weighing in at 588 pages, nearly as long as the entire 2006 document, including the Housing Element of the day. General Plan Advisory Committee - December 6, 2023 Item No. IVa Additional Materials Received Meeting Minutes of August 21, 2023 December 6, 2023, GPAC agenda comments - Jim Mosher Page 8 of 8 ● Page 11: same comment as above as to element logos. Historical and Arts/Cultural are non-intuitive. Land Use is also a bit difficult to decipher (it is apparently a map with a point “pinned” in the lower left). ● Page 27: ○ Noise and Land Use are not “being updated” – they have been updated with final approval on November 14. ○ I don’t know what “Noise is being updated along a concurrent process” means. Is that also an outdated statement? ● Page 29: ○ Why are the elements listed in a different order from that in which they were shown? ○ Why is Historical Resources missing? ● Page 31: ○ The activity seems similar to the question I had trouble with, appearing on the Newport, Together home page (see Item IV.e comments, above). ○ If a single word response is desired, shouldn’t the two be aligned? ○ I don’t think it will leave participants thinking they have accomplished much. ● Page 35: ○ Shouldn’t engagement emphasize some way to provide a more thoughtful response to the presentation? ○ “Get Engaged” on the Newport, Together website doesn’t currently offer any way for the public to provide input. It implies they have to show up somewhere in person to do so. Item V. COMMITTEE ANNOUNCEMENTS OR MATTERS WHICH MEMBERS WOULD LIKE PLACED ON A FUTURE AGENDA FOR DISCUSSION, ACTION OR REPORT ● See comment under Item IV.e, above, about tomorrow’s free Social Pinpoint webinar. ● I continue to hope there will be a discussion of alternative formats for general plans, as well as a discussion of what policy topics are and are not appropriate for inclusion in one. General Plan Advisory Committee - December 6, 2023 Item No. IVa Additional Materials Received Meeting Minutes of August 21, 2023