Historical Advisory Commission - Regular Meeting

Thursday, January 9, 2025
Transcript
Video
Agenda

About this meeting

Government Body
Historical Advisory Commission
Meeting Type
Historical Advisory Commission
Location
Monterey, CA
Meeting Date
January 9, 2025

Transcript

559 sections (from 638 segments)

0:04 – 0:160

Yeah. Yeah. So, yeah, they really wants to bring the Yeah. Those elements And so far for the past

0:17 – 0:361

Mhmm. People we didn't have that. So, Michael, are you ready? Yep. Okay. Yeah. But it's good. That's wonderful. I'm going to call to order the Thursday, 01/09/2025 meeting in the Monterey County Historic Resources Bureau. Can I have roll call, please?

0:36 – 0:522

Present. Sheila Grader is absent. Linda Tolugan? Here. Kelly Morgantini is absent. William and Follin? Present. Michael Billard? Present. And Jay Forkas?

0:521

Present.

0:532

So we have five present and two absent. Okay. Thank you.

0:561

So we have a couple of meetings. Have great.

1:00 – 1:192

So members of the public should have their video turned off unless they're presented. This helps with bandwidth and should reduce distractions. That will help monitor and turn off videos as needed. We do ask that you keep yourself muted unless we're presenting. To mute yourself on the Zoom, there's a button at the bottom of the screen that looks like a microphone.

1:19 – 1:572

And if you've called in, you can do this by pressing star six. To participate during the public comment on Zoom platform, you can raise your hand by opening reactions tab at the bottom of the screen and clicking on the raise hand icon. And if you've called in by phone, you can also do this by pressing star nine. The way to participate is by sending an email to hrrvhearingcomments@kellyatmoderna.gov. This email is also on the agenda for today's meeting, and we'll be monitoring that in real time. If you have a question, comment, talk, but we'll try our best to respond.

1:57 – 2:181

Okay. Thanks, Phil. So before we start, happy New Year. Think. So I'm gonna open the floor to public comment on non agenda items that are under the pretty best historic resources for people, if anybody would like to come in at this time.

2:24 – 2:421

No comments. Okay. I'll close the folder of public comments. Is there any agenda additions, deletions, corrections? No. Those are. Okay. Thank you. So we'll move on to scheduled matters. The first matter is PON240293.

2:42 – 3:371

Yale Scott Trust. It's a public hearing to consider recommending a chief of planning and approve a design approval to allow the remodel of the previously altered 2,545 square foot historic single family residence, including converting the attached garage back to garage, 524 square foot 2nd Floor addition, the new 48 square foot 2nd Floor balcony, and conversion of an existing detached studio garage to a 508 square foot accessory dwelling unit, and a new entry redwood trellis. Colors and materials for the attached garage consist of cedar board siding, cedar board and bat siding, and community fishing. Wood clad windows and new glass writing. Colors and materials for accessory dwelling unit to be horizontal wood siding and gables, roof fireplace and chimney, wood clad windows, and the cedar roof to match the system.

3:381

Project location is 3360 5th Avenue in Carmelo. New presentation. Yes.

3:49 – 4:193

Good morning, HRV. My name is Erica, and I am the project partner for PLN two forty three. The proposed project is located at 52 65th Avenue in Carmel. It is located in the Carmel area land use plan. The zoning is medium density residential, two units per acre, and a design control district in the.

4:20 – 5:143

The proposed project is a design approval to allow the remodel of previously altered twenty five forty five square foot of storage single family residence, including converting the attached garage back into a garage, a five twenty four square foot 2nd Floor addition with a new 48 square foot 2nd Floor balcony and the conversion of an existing detached studio garage into a 580 square foot accessory dwelling unit with the new entry record. These are pictures of the home currently. The proposed projects will match existing. The addition to the single family residence will match existing homes, and the ADU will match colors and materials that the garage and art studio. A little history on the site.

5:14 – 5:433

We did have a phase one historic assessment prepared by Ken L. Shevey, who's a qualified historian for Monroe County. In 1951, the house was built as a one story post Adobe residence for, by LR McGuissy for nationally noted American watercolors Donald T. In 1953, the detached art studio garage was built and later altered in 1955. In 1955, the original attached garage was remodeled as living space.

5:43 – 7:023

In 1997, a full height angled fave with operable multi pane metal windows was added at the south side junction of the living room, wing, and dining room. In 2003, earthquake repairs were done, including removal and wall infill of an existing chimney on the rear, permitted for Monarch County permit four 574. The historian concluded that the proposed work will execute consistent with the secretary standards for rehabilitation. Our recommendation is that the HRRB adopts a resolution recommending the chief of planning finds a project exempt pursuant to section fifteen thirty three one and approves the design approval to allow the remodel of the previously altered twenty five forty five square foot historic single family residence, including converting the attached garage back into a garage, a 524 square foot 2nd Floor addition with a new 48 square foot 2nd Floor balcony, the conversion of an existing detached studio garage, a 580 square foot accessory building unit with the new entry reference shelves. This concludes the presentation, and we do have the owner, historian, and applicant here via.

7:03 – 7:451

Do you have a floor plans? Yes. Mhmm. I mean, that that'll probably come up. But Did I have some questions?

7:481

So this is actually speaking. I

8:002

think 14 on 18.2.

8:084

So it's just the system floor plan and the next page of the

8:15 – 8:501

I know the elevation is confusing because there's three versions of the elevation. That's the. So for plan purposes. Floor plan. Questions to them. You go from the originals. No. Any question when the planner goes public? With the applicant? Representative, like this, owner, the applicant, architect, would like to speak this time?

8:502

I can't hear you.

8:511

With the applicant or owner or anybody like to speak at this time?

8:582

Sure. I'll say something. So I'm Scott Gale, and Donald Teague was my grandfather.

9:041

And Good.

9:06 – 9:472

I inherited this house six years ago, and I love the house. It's a post Adobe, a a historic house, and it has some some quirks to it. And so my wife and I mostly, we wanna bring it into 2025, respecting the the the historic architecture and in in many ways, taking it back to what it was in 1951 when it was built. So the main thing is there was a two car garage in front that was converted to living space. We wanna take that back to being a two car garage.

9:47 – 10:292

So it'll, you know, pretty much look exactly like it the house looked when it was built. There will be a chimney that will be taken out as part of that, but that was added in 1955 or so. With the the studio space out back so he was a renowned illustrator and fine artist back in the day. He illustrated for Saturday evening post Colliers. And so he had a separate art studio out back, and they kinda when they got rid of the two car garage, they shoehorned a un really unusable one car garage as part of this studio structure out back.

10:30 – 11:412

So I wanna take now that we're gonna, you know, presumably get approval to put a two car garage back out front, convert the one car garage that currently exists to living space such that it can be used potentially as an ADU to, you know, address housing constraint issues if if we choose to lease it out that way. And I think other than that, you know, I wanna go to great lengths to preserve what exists. The main reason we wanna add a new bed bath and office space above the future two car garage is to create a modern living environment that's quiet, that is got really good temperature control. With the post Adobe's, it's hard to control temperature in winter in particular, even with insulating below and above. And plus, the the windows are single pane historic windows in the house.

11:41 – 12:392

I don't wanna take any of the existing windows out to meet their part of the, you know, the the history of the house. But it is a problem, you know, in the winter in particular, achieving adequate temperature control in in a in a bedroom at night. And so to add the the bedroom above, you know, what would become the two car garage addresses that problem. We have a blank slate we could put in double or triple pane windows and insulate up the wazoo and, you know, create a much more livable space year round. And so but my intent is I when this is all said and done, I I want it to, as reasonably as possible, be exactly same.

12:39 – 13:092

That's when it was built. And so that fifty years from now, when I'm gone and, you know, and my intent is for this house to never leave the family, by the way, so to never be sold. It all works. There's no discontinuities between what remains historic and what's been added. And and I'll I'll leave it at that.

13:09 – 13:411

Okay, Becky. Thanks for explaining that. One of the issues I had, these drawings are very confusing because to me, there's no information on the drawings. You know, nothing says you're saving windows. Nothing tells us what material is staying. What's you know, what was altered. Every elevation says altered, altered, altered. But there's nothing on the drawings that say what was altered, what's important, what's not important, what's gonna stay, what's not gonna stay. And and, like, the gentleman said that you're gonna keep the metal windows. Nothing says that.

13:41 – 14:061

So there's nothing to explain what's going on. I don't know if anybody else found that completely, but that was I'm looking at the coins and and especially with three sets of elevations and really no explanation. You know, the other thing we like is their staff. So when you look at north elevation, existing north elevation, the post is below that. So we're not looking all over the place trying to figure out what's going But there's no notes on the drawings.

14:06 – 14:491

There's no nothing about, you know, what was historic, what was changed. It's still historic, any of that information. So there's no way to really even understand what's going on. And then the other question is, in the DPR, it says character defining feature is second store or single story. And then you're adding on a big second story to it. And it's visible. It's it's actually I know it says it's added to the back, but it's not added to the back. It's on top of the front. And part of that new addition is actually extending farther on the front elevation than the front elevation is itself on the left side. So that's totally contrary to the Secretary of Interior Standards.

14:501

And and and I I don't, you know, I don't understand how that's allowed. You know, that's yes.

14:562

Can you can you show me in a drawing where we're extending?

15:00 – 15:291

Yeah. I know. Go to the floor plan. Yeah. Let me see. It's that one right there. Go back one. If you look at the your second story addition and you look at the dimensions on the left side and then you look at the dashed line to your right of that wing standing out, that the the addition is actually further than the existing elevation.

15:292

That's on the that that's not visible from the street. That's on

15:35 – 15:575

Hold on. Hold on. The front, if you look at the dotted line, that's the existing footprint below. Yes. We've held that front back so that there's a the front does not go push out to the existing elevation. That's the existing front.

15:572

Right. The addition's back. Feet.

15:591

Yeah. But look to the right. The dash line. The the the second story addition is further out than the the dash line on the right side.

16:095

Right side.

16:10 – 16:231

And and any addition is supposed to be behind it. It's not supposed to be above. You know, once again, we're dealing with the DPR. It says that a character defining feature is second or a single story resonance.

16:245

Sorry. I don't know where you are. Can you say the right side?

16:291

The the lane to the left. Grid line. What is that? One two grid line two.

16:385

Oh, you're saying okay. You're saying this sticks out further than that.

16:43 – 17:001

Yes. Yeah. Oh. And and that's the primary elevation. That's your front elevation. In addition, it should be to the rear. And I know the plantates the rear, but it's not to the rear. It's actually even forward at the front elevation, which is not a component of such interior standards. You know,

17:005

especially any part of the front elevation?

17:03 – 17:341

Especially when the well, the the addition should be to the rear, not on top. It says it's to the rear, but it's not to the rear. It's on top. And that's totally contrary, especially when the character defining feature is a single story residence. So that that's contrary to the secretary of your If it if it helps, there is a Mhmm. A covered porch here. That way, it's still where that is. It's supposed to be behind the building and not on top of the

17:355

Does the porch I I hate to split I mean, does the porch not count as the front of the building?

17:411

It's supposed to be behind the building, not the front of the building. It's supposed to be behind the building.

17:465

You mean totally behind the whole building?

17:471

The mirror. Yeah. It's supposed

17:482

to be behind the mirror of

17:49 – 18:011

the building or the side that's not visible. And I'll I'll take it to the border. You know? As

18:01 – 18:155

far as the drawings, what what I I included was three sets of elevations, just hopefully for clarity's sake Right. Was that there are the existing as the building exists now.

18:151

Right.

18:155

There are the original elevations that built the building, and then there are the proposed elevations. Right.

18:22 – 18:521

I get that, but this is still I mean, in my opinion, it's contrary to everything but the subdivision interior standards of where, one, where an addition should be, and, two, the fact that the character defining feature is a single square. And and that's what you go by as character defining features. Well, okay. So let me go ahead. Let me open up the public comment.

18:55 – 19:526

This building has been changed over time. It is an example of the method of construction, and the construction's been altered to meet changing activities and times both by the original artist and now by these folks. The key here is that if you look at it, it says for its architecture, which is method of construction, but it also says association. And the principal issue here is the association of a world class watercolorist with innumerable prizes and membership and leadership of a number of agencies over time in adjacent to a town dedicated historically to art. And the association is the driving force here, and that's why I didn't see any issue with that.

19:526

I mean, it's clearly differentiated from the old.

19:57 – 20:221

Well, it's nice, but I still think it's in the wrong place. I mean, because in your DPR, it says the architecture significance. It says it's both under both standards, the architecture and and for the person. So I I I totally see that in contrast to the same current standards. But let me stop here, let me open it up to public comment on this project if anybody from the public would like to speak at this time.

20:261

Okay. So now we'll close the floor to public comment and bring it back to the board

20:305

So that

20:324

back to the board. From the street, what do you see? Do you have a photo from the street? Street view?

20:396

Can't see anything.

20:40 – 20:555

Currently, you can only see the garage. Yes. Go to can we go back to the photo? Because there's a whole bunch of bushes. What are they? Pit a squirm and trees in front of the house.

20:551

Yeah. Well, bushes can be pruned. I mean

20:585

Yeah. If you from the leftover and photograph, because all you have is trees.

21:034

Is that what you see from the street?

21:045

What you see.

21:044

So that would definitely be primary view.

21:071

Mhmm. And that is like an story to that. Yeah. Mhmm.

21:11 – 21:285

And that's where the garage is built. That chimney was built after the fact '55. In other words, they on the original drawing, they entered the garage from the side. It just didn't work, so they converted it to living space and then added that chimney.

21:281

See, that's where the second story is gonna be right there. And it's gonna be right up front.

21:35 – 21:522

And I I'll just clarify. The original plans were to have the enter the garage this way. It clearly didn't work. So when that you know, when they took occupancy in 1951, there was the garage. You entered this way. This is a driveway. And and then four

21:521

or five years later, this

21:542

was converted to living space.

21:57 – 22:255

They also added on the back of the building. I think it's six feet to the length of the garage was an addition after the fact. And then and then they added a bay window thing off the dining room. I mean, if you want, we can pull the plans up, and I can point to them specifically. But, again, we've approached it as, okay. The architecture is nice, but it's mostly the artist that's the historic component here.

22:26 – 22:421

Well, you could say that, but in the DPR, it still says the architecture is significant too for you. The character defining feature is a single story roof. So that's that's my dilemma, that's I mean, that's you know, it's not even attempted to be in the back. It's right up front.

22:435

Well, are you proposing, like, we just give up the backyard for an addition? Is that that's what you're saying?

22:48 – 23:141

Well, then you don't do the addition. I mean, that's the standards. You know? That's that's the criteria. And and the criteria is what you have to work with, and and you can't we can well, as as far as what I understand, the secretary of interior standards, we just can't make it up and say, oh, we don't wanna use the backyard. I mean, that that's not we don't look at it that way. We've got standards to look at. It's perfect. What

23:155

are the standards when the association it's the artist that's the the owner that's the important thing.

23:20 – 23:331

Well, you you've got the I mean, it it goes for both. I mean, you can't eliminate one for the other. Other. They understand that there are. It's confusing.

23:361

It is confusing.

23:414

It's really And

23:451

the comments from Yeah. The bad time.

23:50 – 24:380

For a better evaluation, historical evaluation for the secretary of standards. It will be nice to have all the drawings for clarity, like a master plan showing with the graphically showing the growth alterations of the building and what is proposed and with a legend so we can clearly, you know, be observed and evaluated. The same thing is for all the elevations, the floor plan showing what areas were outer and put a legend. It clearly be seen on all of us. Yeah.

24:40 – 24:530

Because it it it's like we need to have notes that describe exactly what you are the reason why those graphics, like elevations or floor plans have been done.

24:556

No. I understand. Yeah.

25:004

No. I got that.

25:067

So you're proposing to, like, demolish the the chimney there?

25:121

Yeah. That's where we're gonna take away from Excuse me.

25:146

But it's 55.

25:16 – 25:321

Excuse me. We can't have inner conversations. Open. Yeah. If you'd like to address the board, you could do that and ask that question, but not person to person. I just wanted to make the comment that

25:327

demolishing the chimney in the front

25:351

Can you state your name, please? My name

25:377

is Eloise Shim, and I I'm on

25:391

the historic resources board for Selena. Yeah.

25:44 – 26:017

So I just wanted to make the comment that demolishing the chimney on the front would really alter the design the the historic design components.

26:02 – 26:274

I think we're closed to the public, but I've been I know. I'd make a comment. Number one, that chimney is not historic anyway, so I'm not even I'm not even giving that chimney any Yeah. Any credo, basically. As much as it pains me, this is truly a primary elevation primary look.

26:30 – 26:524

Truly, the elevations of the post Adobe, the Adobe look, the big heavy roof, the exposed eaves disappears in the renderings that we see for the proposed project. So some of those features that that are included in the VPR, and I'm not even sure when the VPR was dated. My copy

26:521

is really hard to read. Additional function. Yeah. But

27:00 – 27:464

looking at those pictures and and the the information in the DPR, I don't see that character being enhanced with the proposed look. Some of the things that confuse me are I'm not worried about the chimney because the chimney wasn't there. But to see a two story coming as your primary view Mhmm. When you had a truly I don't wanna call it cottage style, but the Adobe Look singles form heavy shingled roof. And now we're going to a two story in the primary view with a different wood siding, which batten board is looks good with Adobe.

27:46 – 28:284

It it it fits. It's the appropriate technique. It makes a differentiation, but I don't see that character on that edition, and it's being in your primary. And I know that everybody is like, I know there's not floor space to put it on your site, but to stack them over the bedrooms on the back of the house where no one could see it might have been a better location for the two story edition. And I know you really wanna interact with me, but I'm giving my comments as a board member to the staff, the public, and the rest of the board members so that we can discuss it amongst ourselves. Only he's gonna he can't look at me to to allow you. It's up to him.

28:281

Right now, we're at the board.

28:292

So No. At some point, I'd like to address the comments.

28:32 – 29:144

Usually open it back to the applicant after we're done discussing. On the addition on the east elevation, I see a rise in elevation on the primary roof, not the addition to the not the addition roof addition, but the primary residence addition height. And I I don't really know why why it looks elevated, or maybe it's just not a really good picture of it, elevation of it, but this is what I go by. I have to look at the elevation. So on the east elevation, you'll see the rise difference where you don't necessarily see it on the existing.

29:164

So those are some things that I'm not sure why we have an elevation roof rise here.

29:224

The only way I can do it is take east elevation to east elevation.

29:291

And these are So we

29:304

definitely have a roof rise.

29:321

The front of the house.

29:34 – 30:114

Not quite sure what that is. It's hard to see, but when you finally put the west elevation, the west elevations together, this is lower. This has popped up. I don't know why that is. So that would give me an indication that besides just the addition, remodel of that, we're popping up roofs for some reason instead of playing in a min, which would keep it more consistent with their lower I don't know how to say it.

30:11 – 30:404

The roofs are heavy and lower sitting on adobe, and the houses look rounded. The taller they get, the less grounded they look, and it takes away from that character. And that's what I see in these drawings. And the windows have changed on elevation too. Somewhat as troubling for me. See, because the This one? I think those are No. I'll flip it over. See, I think This is the garage.

30:411

Yeah. No. You

30:424

This one. Nope. Okay. Yeah. You see the problem.

30:461

These ones. Yeah. Those, I think those windows on that.

30:504

So I think that might be

30:531

Where's that? That's

30:57 – 31:084

this one. Because that's the that's the That would be this one, and that would be this. North elevation. North elevation. Can't see these.

31:088

See those

31:10 – 31:334

So those bush go together. Over the bush. Yeah. So I don't think that window changes. There is a couple I've thought that can change, though, but this would modify. It's it's it's hard to read when you don't stack them. And then, of course, I print them double size. I can't put them over each other. So but I think that looks the same.

31:331

Yeah. That's that's actually the. This

31:37 – 32:214

that's the house. This is the house Okay. Built original. This is the house now. These are the new ones. So some of some of the like, I agree with I agree with you, John, that there are comments on here that, like, retaining the original windows, new windows to match rich you know, the new windows to match the original, any relocated windows if you're taking one out and putting it back into the structure to maintain the steel windows, Those that kind of noting and if we're changing the roof or if we're gonna match, keep the existing, it's it's not clear. But It's even the context of

32:211

the garage doors. Right? I mean, in the historic.

32:292

Really? Those are

32:321

yeah. I don't So

32:374

those are my reservations, basically, my concerns with reviewing the plan specifically.

32:44 – 33:071

I mean, look at that picture, and you see a two story addition on there with different siding. I mean, that that totally changes the whole Yeah. Look at the whole image. Like I said, you know, additions are supposed to be in the back. Here, we go into the side. Sorry. That a nonsignificant view.

33:114

So that was my comment. If anybody else wanted to these are a little bigger if you wanted.

33:22 – 33:361

Any other comments from this? Oh. It's ready to. Yeah, I think so. Okay.

33:37 – 34:012

May I Yes. So I'd like to address your your comments about putting the addition in the back. So this is actually the third iteration with Ray, the architect. Initially, we looked if if we could pull up a diagram of just Of a floor plan. Floor plan of the house.

34:03 – 34:482

First so initially, we thought about putting an additional here, and we had elevations done, everything. And I vetoed this after we were done because, you know, you know, we're talking about exteriors. To me, they're they're the symmetry of this living room is fabulous on the inside. And there's two on either side of this historic fireplace, there's a full on full sheet watercolor of teaks here and here. And to have a passageway through here, it just destroyed the feel on the inside.

34:482

So I had spent $20 with Ray, and I fixated. Then we looked at the back of the house and going up.

34:56 – 35:145

I have to interrupt. They had a permit built there of an addition that size five years ago. No historic anything. Just go ahead and do the addition. House wasn't considered historic back there, or at least they got a building permit to put an addition there.

35:15 – 35:332

So yeah. And I had I had inherited these plans from my mother, Linda, that she got a permit, never pulled the trigger on it, to go out in this direction. So I thought, you know, let's just carry on with that. And we got all the way to, like, basically submitting to y'all. Yeah.

35:33 – 36:022

And I'm sitting there in the living room, and I'm like, I don't wanna do this. It's gonna kill the whole vibe of the living room to go out from there. Then we looked at the back, and we had a whole I don't know that we got to the point of full formal elevations. And I we have a problem with this house. There's a water intrusion problem where water is getting in somehow towards the front of the house, and the slope is towards the back of the house, and water pools there in the winter.

36:03 – 36:372

And I have a sump pump in the back of the house in the crawl space entrance right now. It sucks this water out as it stimulates this. I've had people under there telling me there's dried mud down there, and there's a nice thick foundation for this building. My gut tells me, don't go up in the back of the house because I'm gonna double the weight on this foundation, that I have a water intrusion problem. We think we can put a French drain out front and catch that water and divert it to, you know, the lowest part of the property.

36:38 – 37:182

But there's no guarantee in this renovation if we do that. There may there's a spring that just on a lot opposite me on the other side of the hill. Well, water appears to when it's raining and the ground gets saturated, water appears to just come magically out in the middle of this unspilt lot. There's no, like, stream. It just goes up. And I may have, like, a little seasonal spring thing going on underneath my house that I don't even know. So my intuition tells me, don't go up and back and double the weight on this foundation. I may crack the foundation. I do I know? No.

37:18 – 37:402

I don't have a crystal ball. But so Ray got pretty far along with the back of the house, and I'm like, Ray, my intuition, my gut is telling me, let's not do this in the back of the house. Then we looked around, and we're like, the garage is on a slab. That slab is thick. We can put the weight on the slab.

37:40 – 38:222

The whole rest of the house has a crawl space. And so that's how we arrived at wanting to go above where the original two car garage was because there's a huge thick slab there, and I'm confident we can put the additional weight on without adverse consequence. And so that you know, I wanted to take time to address the issue that's been brought up because we did we spent over a year, like, around and around figuring out where to add this space that we can have quiet and keep control tastefully and sensibly.

38:261

I mean, we we still have standards to go by. I mean, yeah, I have I certainly understand your situation. Don't get me wrong. I mean, I know what you're up against. But

38:405

Can we do a couple questions?

38:43 – 39:055

And I I don't mean I don't wanna sound I I I don't know. I can't describe it. I don't take it the wrong way. Why wouldn't we come in and say that the historic component's the artist and we have no don't care about the building? How does that work? Does that mean we ignore the building?

39:05 – 39:161

It's already in the PPR. It's already documented. It's already documented. What? That it's the building's historic. The architecture is historic.

39:175

Oh, we did that? Or

39:191

For the method of construction. Mhmm. Can't stop.

39:215

Method of construction. Okay. Alright.

39:232

That's fine.

39:24 – 39:455

So my second question is, when you say the back of the house rather than taking away is backyard and a pathway to the studio, would it qualify to have the addition in the back portion of the house over those bedrooms, assuming we could solve the structural potential problem?

39:56 – 40:285

the roof, Belinda had a question about the roof going up and down. The roof over the living room is smaller, and the porch was added after the fact too. And then the roofs over the garage and the library are are much higher. It just spans more. So that's the difference in the roofs. We we are not touching that roof section. Once you leave the garage, at least in this proposal, all the roofs stay exactly where they are.

40:32 – 40:464

East elevation. East elevates. East elevation. That's popping up. It's not my drawings. I'm just referencing the drawings.

40:475

You said it's popping up from existing to proposed?

40:494

East elevation. It's east elevation. There's a that roof is elevated, Not the addition right there.

41:004

I don't know why.

41:012

I don't either. No.

41:034

But I'm just referencing I'm just looking at the drawings, and it doesn't

41:063

At the library? Identify that.

41:082

No. That's the the dining type of May I address that? Oh. So

41:151

Which sheets are those three? My sheets are those three?

41:204

Sheet a 3.3 and then a sheet 3.1.

41:251

We'll start with 3.1.

41:27 – 42:012

So the the ceiling so the where the the bay window, we could so this this currently is the dining area. And then as you come down the other side, that's where the kitchen is. And the ceiling in the dining room is about seven feet up. Like, it's a headbanger. And if so it's not to current code.

42:01 – 42:462

And if it were I get like, if it were any lower, I would feel like I'm gonna be crushed. And as you transition in the house from the the living room down a few steps into the dining room, there is we call it the headbanger. Like, somebody tall, they have to crane down to get underneath an element to get down into the dining room area. So the by adding that slight elevation of the roof in the area that we're talking about from the east elevation, we're basically creating additional space to solve this. So you're remodeling your dining room and kitchen area?

42:474

Yes. Include that in your design because it changes your interior elevations, which changes. So it should be kind of addressed as a remodel.

42:574

Yeah. Because your your hump that roof's lifting. And when we look at it, we just I

43:041

Okay. I

43:04 – 43:284

don't wanna have to do the design to figure out why it's lifting, but I assumed it was because you're incorporating an area outside of your current kitchen and but you're just lifting. So just call it a remodel of the kitchen and dining area because that remodel is not purely interior. It's affecting the design of the building. So I think if we just address it in that fashion, it should be fine.

43:281

And we go to.

43:314

It'll address it. That's all.

43:351

See, that's what Linda was talking about of that main window. The ceiling's kicked up. Whole roof is kicked out. Oh, yeah. Two big roofers kicked out. So

43:452

Yeah. And then

43:471

And you see it on the

43:484

the the elevation below it. You'll see off to the right of the addition. That's that's that same

43:531

ridge that

43:554

you'll see.

43:562

So this I mean, this section here is we're bringing this up a bit. None of that would be visible from the street, I'll point out.

44:04 – 44:184

No. I get that. It's just it just shows the inconsistency of what we're looking at, why we're confused on why things are changing because I don't I don't see it in the description, and I don't see it I don't see it in a floor plan.

44:205

See it.

44:214

That's all.

44:225

Yeah. I get it.

44:23 – 44:434

I was just indicating why if we're looking at just an addition of an addition over the over a one section, we should only see a revision on that front elevation, that left elevation, and the rear. We shouldn't see it throughout all the other aspects of the house. That's all. And that's what we were comparing. That's all.

44:455

We can color code that. Just

44:471

clarify. Okay. Yeah. Go ahead.

44:51 – 45:236

Yeah. Couple of things. Number one, photograph if you see it coming into the garage is a little deceiving because as you come fifteenth from the main highway, you can't see the building at all. It's screened behind ten, twelve, 14 feet of vegetation. When you come up the other way, you can't see it until you're on top of it because you've got the same vegetation in terms of trees.

45:23 – 46:056

The standards say for rehabilitation that you maintain the character defining features of the fee the building, the character of the building, but you can change to meet contemporary standards, the adjustment in that way. In this sense, it's predicated on the problems with the building, its environment, and the other. This is sort of the one solution. And, I've been out in front of that thing a handful of times scratching my head about it. But, again, the public right of way thing, that, that's the first time I've seen that image. And, you know, you can't you've gotta be standing at a certain point in there, to see it.

46:051

Yeah. But tomorrow, they could choose to prune those.

46:076

They could choose to, but I doubt if

46:09 – 46:291

they will. So you can't hide it. I mean, you can say I can't see it, but, you know, I mean, they're they're obviously overgrown, and they decide to prune it, and then all of a sudden, it's there. But it's still two stories, Ken. I mean, it's, like, it's right in front, two stories. It's not even behind. I mean, the question they ask is, can they could do it behind the that one in the back above the bedrooms?

46:29 – 47:044

Yeah. Great. I I I personally don't like saying, I'll move it to the back. Right. But I've done enough significant structures in in view sheds where we have to somehow keep from taking away from the character of the building. And I always say if it's from whatever street the public sees it from, that will be I consider that the primary elevation. Some people, no. No. You know, the Capitol Building can be seen from three sides. You know?

47:04 – 47:384

And I'm like, great. Oh, you got three primaries. Whatever. But in this instance, the only place the public would ever see this is gonna be from the driveway because that's the only open spot, it looks like, with vegetation. And so but I'm not even really concerned too much with if you took the chimney down and still carry that character there and any place else put a two story edition, I probably wouldn't be concerned with it.

47:39 – 48:064

It's just that that corner is truly gonna be the primary. I know there's bushes. That's wonderful. I mean, there's a picture in here somewhere I just dated October that granted, you don't see that front of the building down by the chimney, but you definitely see that roofline. And you put a two story, the only thing you're gonna see is that two story.

48:07 – 48:374

So I get it. I'm just making that as a statement of fact. I don't wanna get into saying move it to here, move it to there. That's really a design person's expertise. And I hate it when I go to meetings and everybody goes, why don't you just put it over there? And I'm like, there was 10 reasons why we didn't put it there. And I understand it's not a process of a, b, and c. There's

48:384

Each one has a multitude of constraints, controls, and everything else.

48:475

Can I ask a question? Is I'm sorry.

48:504

It's all to John. I don't know. That's that's up. I leave him to control the

48:555

Yeah. I'm looking for agreement here. I heard a conversation about the chimney. We still have the desire to remove that chimney because it came after the fact and convert it back into a garage.

49:054

I just wanna make that sure it's not a desire. I'm saying I don't put any of particular weight on that chimney.

49:13 – 49:304

Some people have mentioned, oh, you see the chimney? You don't wanna take that out. I personally don't consider that chimney going to be an historic feature that I'm worried about if you took it out. If you decide it's like, I'm gonna resize that building, and I'm gonna put stucco over that Adobe, I'm gonna have a problem with that.

49:305

Sure. Sure.

49:314

Sure. It's just the way it is. Let's see.

49:331

That's what

49:344

I wanna clarify that.

49:351

See, but that's where the standards

49:37 – 50:104

I'm not recommending anything. I'm just I'm stating what I see in my head as a concern for this historic for maintaining the historicity of this building. The adobes are beautiful structures. Love this adobe. And a lot of people go, I'm just gonna tear it down, and I'm just like, just sell it to me because I'd rather just keep the adobes. I just it's a method of construction that's not used anymore. It's an an exceptionally California native look.

50:125

My office is in the first

50:13 – 50:514

And we should attempt to maintain them and Hello? Keep them if we can. And this resource is a beautiful structure. Granted, it's got some of its old features that modern day society we're gonna have issues with, so I don't have a problem with that. We just have to do it in a in a fashion that we're comfortable with maintaining the historicity of the site as best we possibly can and still allow you, the owner, to live in it comfortably. Otherwise, what good is

50:515

it? Well, Scott's willing to keep the windows, but we proposed new windows would be different. Is that wrong? Should they be

51:00 – 51:174

in the same windows in the new edition would it they can be new because it's a new edition, and it needs to be distinct and different. Alright. If you do have windows that are placed back into the Adobe area, it would be nice to pull an existing window that's

51:175

in We're able to do that.

51:18 – 51:334

And then just place it into places where you're replacing windows in the existing exterior facade of the building. K. I'm I've discussed, I think, it to a point, and I don't know if Dennis, any other board members wanna discuss anything.

51:34 – 52:141

I'll I'll just say to to Melinda's explanation of the chimney. You know, if if the chimney's added, like, in '74, you know, and it's not part of the original and it hasn't gained significance as that, then then, you know, all you have to do is say, you know, it was added, and we don't, you know, we're gonna move it and move it. So it's all based on the the defining features and significance of when it was built. I mean, if it's you and it was added and you don't want it, I mean, that's that's fine. You know? There's no issues at any no question as far as direction? I'd like

52:144

to make a motion.

52:158

Oh, wait a

52:151

minute. I'm just

52:164

Oh, more discussion?

52:17 – 52:478

I went to see this. So I stood right where we're looking at this here. And as you know, there's trees all around up and down the street, so you don't really see a lot of the homes there. And so for me, the key is really what you're gonna see is the two stories there. And so does the two stories fit with the standards, again, that we have to deal with all the time? And I don't know because it looks you know, it looks good to me, but does it really meet the standards? And that's what I'm

52:471

not sure. Yeah. No. It doesn't. Mhmm. Is there any

52:538

because this is the only part of the house you see.

52:581

We don't. Okay. Yes. So

53:022

I I take it from the conversation that the home is deemed historic.

53:071

Oh, from the PPR. Yes.

53:108

Alright.

53:110

True. She list and I don't know.

53:15 – 53:532

Little bit. The basis is kind of substantial evidence, and the substantial evidence we have is the phase one historic report indicating that it's historically significant and why it's historically significant. And that's the DPR form that Chris Marcus is referencing. But my understanding is is that we we propose I think it's historic for two reasons, but we've proposed that it's historic. And my I'm trying to figure out as as a committee, are you concurring with that, that it is, at your level, deemed historic Yes. Today. Mhmm. Okay. Thank you.

53:571

So, I mean, I I'll make a motion.

54:05 – 55:204

I'm not sure if it's a motion, but I would recommend that if the owner applicant and his representatives are interested in making additions or revisions to the plan that indicate the windows, the the retention of the types of roof, the retention of the wood wood panel, you know, all of the features as required. I hate to ask to move it, but I really don't know if this board is going to approve an addition on that primary phase. Don't believe I can, but if if you wanted to take this back and find a alternative and and, of course, I know that owner has spent a ton of money on this already, but, indicate on the plans specifically how you're retaining the features so that when we see them, we understand that a little better. Asking if the owner ownership is interested in reapplying or revising that and coming back to us. Does that make sense?

55:202

Yeah. There through the chairs, there's There's a better way

55:244

say it.

55:25 – 55:562

Concerns that have been expressed by board members regarding the currently proposed design. The hearing on the item has been opened, so it could go to a motion to take action on the project. So that would be a prefer deny. Or because of the concerns expressed as the owner, would you prefer if the hearing was continued to be uncertain and then you could decide what you wanted to redesign based on the comments you've received and then come back to the board?

55:565

I think

55:572

you're asking me. Yes. Yes. In light of the conversation this morning, I have to request a continuance.

56:07 – 56:182

And procedurally, also wanna make clear that while individual board members kind of express their concerns, ultimately, board's gonna decide as, like, a collective body. So I would

56:188

Of course.

56:192

Yeah. It wouldn't be like, ah, this one board member said this. We'll do that. It's fine. Yeah.

56:234

And that's why I was recommending to the board to come back, but I don't know how to really phrase that.

56:305

So we understand it's not definitive, but I understand what people Yeah. And

56:351

the other thing I would do is just make sure the drawings are clear.

56:399

Mm-mm.

56:39 – 57:021

You know? And and I would get rid of the first elevations, the originals, and just deal with the what's you know, just show us the two, you know, the Existing and Existing and and not the originals. And then just make sure what the windows you're keeping and just make it you know, and and do elevation elevation, you know, existing or existing because we don't like

57:025

So you okay. It's better to

57:031

compare compare it. Correct. Yes.

57:07 – 57:272

So Sure. Just a procedural question. I'm you know, so you you made a site visit. Do you ever like to come into a home that you're evaluating to see it from the inside also to help your decision making? Because if you do, I'd be happy to we come back the interiors are private.

57:27 – 57:424

So we we're not really I mean, if you wanna lift your ceilings and do a full remodel on the inside, you don't touch your outside, we're still good. It's just the Yeah. The changing of the significant historic features on the exterior is more of our concern.

57:422

Right. Well, the reason I ask is because we brought up we were talking about the east elevation and the raising of that one part of the roof structure.

57:511

Mhmm. Yeah.

57:52 – 58:262

And I think if you see the home from the inside, you see the headbanger I described, this clerk is not to code today by any and we see the the the seven foot ceiling where the dining room is. You understand, you know, quickly why we're wanting to do that. And then, like I said, it's not visible from the street. So, anyways, I don't need an answer. But if if at some point down the road, if it would be helpful, I'm happy to waive any privacy issues and just show you this part of the house that's on

58:261

the back side. Right? Pardon?

58:28 – 58:534

That wouldn't and the the lifting of that roof is not something that we would turn down. I'm just saying it's just not addressed and why is it occurring. Okay. It it's not that that would be a significant impact to the structure because it's still maintaining its look and its character even if you lifted a foot. It's just that second story addition on the primary elevation is our, I think, is our greatest crux here. Yep.

58:53 – 59:072

There's so many, you know, pieces to this. So we've proposed to move the the kitchen wall out four feet. Is that gonna be a nonstarter for any

59:07 – 59:304

None of us have even no. I'm I saw it, and I figured maybe that's could be one of the reasons why the roof elevated a little bit, but I didn't understand why it shouldn't have popped it up that high Mhmm. Especially with the cut the way it is. But, no, that is not a it's, again, not on the primary. I don't think anybody even noticed it. Yeah. I mean, I I recognize it on the floor plan. I didn't know that it was filled in. But

59:324

It yeah. That's not really an issue. Yeah.

59:341

I mean, should it be like you're an ancient, you know, as long as you're not still doing something crazy. Don't know. Yeah.

59:44 – 59:560

And, clearly, show the floor plan whatever you alter. Like, the entrance with by the kitchen. You know? No. You you added that area. You know? That's you show that.

59:562

Sure. Sure. Are we, I guess, at the point where we're gonna have a motion?

1:00:01 – 1:00:264

Yeah. Yeah. Okay. How do I I motion to continue this project to a say as a date uncertain to allow the applicant and the applicant's agents to make some revisions and come back with an another design, a go around. Yeah. More detailed plans?

1:00:270

I'll cycle the most. Okay.

1:00:291

Any discussion on the motion? All in favor? Aye. Okay. Projects continue.

1:00:385

Thank you all.

1:00:402

Mhmm. Thank you for your time. Sorry for the I'll send you

1:00:441

the hearing recording so you

1:00:45 – 1:00:572

have all the discussion. Oh, we can send you the hearing recording information if you wanna review it. Okay. Alright. Wonderful. Yeah. Thanks. Oh, thank you. I forget it.

1:00:571

Yeah. Yeah. It's yeah.

1:00:582

All want when it's all said and done, it'll be great.

1:01:001

Thank And

1:01:030

Go ahead. Thanks. See you.

1:01:16 – 1:01:431

Okay. So other matters. Right along. Draft certified local government program. Thank you. Bye. Hopefully, you point to that, or you just point to that. I

1:01:462

think the easiest in the past couple of years, what we've done is I've just pulled it up, and we've scrolled through it.

1:01:521

Okay. Thank you. Alright.

1:02:17 – 1:02:482

I guess I I will say this should be changed January 9. It's just Mhmm. Legislative context. Mhmm. In the reporting period, we added two properties to the register, and we applied that stored resources zoning overlay in one of them.

1:02:56 – 1:03:252

This is all general plan information. They're all plan updates. This is the Sequa process. Most of it's, I think, the same as last year. Yeah.

1:03:35 – 1:04:092

We did bring one project from a responsible agency to the board for input. It's the one to create for replacement. I think the only section one zero six document we've reviewed and all yours have been here has been the bridge for replacement projects. Sometimes people reach out to me as the secretary, and usually it's an area of potential effect, and there's no resources there.

1:04:161

That was tremendous. I

1:04:24 – 1:04:399

have a question about it shows that my term ends at December '26. I've got a notice from staff that I needed to ask for reappointment, so I'm now clear.

1:04:411

Yeah. We'll be

1:04:444

sending that to PC. So we'll, if you could just send us the information. Oh, we'll send it up to you. We'll email you. So

1:04:532

Right? In

1:04:55 – 1:05:159

my files Correct. I don't have a copy of my latest appointment, so I can't verify this. Okay. I have communicated with the supervisor, with the changeover in history five. Yeah. They'll probably but if you have some documentation that shows that I've been there's three in three year terms, aren't they?

1:05:151

I think they're ours. Mine are very

1:05:184

Mine vary depending upon the I don't know why

1:05:222

I feel Depending how they feel at the time.

1:05:254

I get a feeling that they wanna get rid of you.

1:05:279

That's fine with me.

1:05:283

I mean, I'll double check with Alyssa.

1:05:311

It's when you get the one year. Yeah. Yep.

1:05:359

How about the month to month? Then

1:05:390

you're in trouble. Supervisor. No. I did get a

1:05:424

notice also, and I've submitted it in, and I believe they're pushing it through. It's hard to say. Yeah. Know that Melissa was working that working with that with that.

1:05:521

Okay. Okay. Next I see in there is like It's just good being every US.

1:06:008

Senate confirmation.

1:06:152

I'll have to give that person a callback. It's the third

1:06:181

time I've called them. Oh, I

1:06:212

don't know.

1:06:214

I don't know, but it could be it could be important to get caught. I

1:06:292

believe we have the resumes and statements qualification from everyone.

1:06:36 – 1:06:501

Has everyone sent in I've got my training here. Should I send it in, or can I just give it to you? Should I send it in or email it in?

1:06:502

If you could email it, but I'll also take it. Okay. I'll email it. Sure.

1:06:574

I think we're missing all these. Right?

1:06:591

I think she's on there. There's one. She'll be on there.

1:07:064

Yeah. That's, what, September? Yeah. Till September 2024.

1:07:131

Yeah. We're missing. It looks

1:07:172

like we're missing Sheila's as well.

1:07:228

Enjoy California preservation balance and stuff. Little good. Yeah. That is.

1:07:322

We will send the last email to both of them. If we don't receive anything, I think we're just going to submit to the state.

1:07:39 – 1:08:121

Okay. I have a question. It says there's no vacancy, but do do the people who who their term is expired, do they just automatically get reinstated? No. They just continue until they get reappointed or there's a replacement. Mhmm. They get reappointed. If Well, they they they they well, typically, they'll ask to get reappointed. But until that happens, they they are on the board, still as a member.

1:08:13 – 1:08:292

They're they remain on the board until somebody fills that position, whether it's somebody else or whether, they're reappointed in the same position. So, like, if somebody's term expires, they continue until that position is filled.

1:08:317

Oh, until somebody applies to replace them, is that right?

1:08:37 – 1:08:562

Somebody could apply to replace them, or they could request that they be reappointed, in which case they would continue in that, position. We didn't do any

1:08:561

sort of thing on that.

1:09:01 – 1:10:062

This is the same information on those three properties that we added to our register and zoning overlay. We also added two properties to the Mills Act. That was there's Bagley House and Rachel Las Palmas. This list of the design approvals we reviewed. These are the five things I have as the most critical preservation planning issues, preservation of point, century resources, the lack of context statements for each planning area to assist in evaluation of resources, ensuring that all projects are referred to the HRB for review and recommendation, loss slash damage due to demolitions and with them and insensitive remodels and contentious preservation projects.

1:10:16 – 1:10:511

You know, I know there one of the meetings when Craig was here, You know, I asked him about the issue we have where, you know, we need matching funds if we wanna do a grant or something. And and he said if we find one that we wanna do that, would look to get matching funds for us. So that's an option for us now that if we find we probably should decide what we wanna do or something or what's important for us to do. And then if there's a grant that comes up that we wanna do it, Craig will look at matching funds for us to do something.

1:10:595

Yeah. If you wanna

1:11:022

that would be amazing.

1:11:041

Mhmm. Let me What do

1:11:07 – 1:11:294

you think would be priority? Contact statements in some of our areas? You know, we talked about Carmel Valley. Carmel Valley. Right. There seems to be every once in a while, I see something pop up. It's like, oh, then I'm like, dang, man. We gotta get those. But we don't have one in the Farxet Valley.

1:11:29 – 1:11:452

I I guess the staff, I think, would probably be content statements and survey, but, like, at the lower urban, I guess, urbanized areas of the county. So, Carmel Valley is a good example. Just because the county is so rural, lot of the spread out resources are

1:11:464

And I I know she had brought it from the county also.

1:11:51 – 1:12:062

There's, like, Astroville, Pajaro, and Moss Landing, like, community areas Mhmm. Where they could do potential surveys. I think the more rural areas of Monmouth County would be difficult. We do have the two agricultural contexts.

1:12:06 – 1:12:224

Just ran across some old, old farm buildings that the county had no knowledge in there. They're driving on the tax accessor records. And I looked at it, and I'm like, these weren't built yesterday, guys.

1:12:22 – 1:12:564

as you could tell by the redwood and the siding. These have been here, and they're in fabulous shape. But, strangely, they're up in one of the hills, just tucked away and was on private property for years and years and it was an old barn. And I'm like, nope. We're keeping this one. Saw our guys. And they go, well, the county says we gotta take them down. I'm like, those stay. The rest of his crap can go, but that stays. So we're it's You know, we used interesting to find them hidden Yeah. In the middle of nowhere that you don't even know they're there. Very good shape. Yeah. Very good shape.

1:12:571

Because we used to get a project from Los Landing at the outlet. Yeah. That's right. Haven't. They've done a lot of work out there. Yeah.

1:13:06 – 1:13:264

So North County, Carmel Valley. Carmel Valley has much more aggressive development, I think, than North County. I could be wrong. I don't you know, you guys see the permits coming and go up more than I do, but it just seems like I always see things

1:13:262

every something permits

1:13:274

Every time I drive by, something changes.

1:13:29 – 1:13:492

Yeah. I think there are pretty severe limit restrictions in locations in North County. Most of the permitting and work I see up there is either, like, an individual single family home Yeah. Construction or some kind of resource related permit, like a restoration permit or grading.

1:13:51 – 1:14:114

So I would think Carmel Valley might be more priority. Probably have more resources, historic resources there that maybe it'd be nice to identify. Know. And stuff that I know that we're tucked in all over out there. Because I walk in, no way to touch it.

1:14:11 – 1:14:232

There might be some interest in that. It also might depend on what's available. Like, some of the grants are, like, it needs to have a maritime focus and others are Yeah. Yeah. Like, tribal cultural resources, things like that.

1:14:39 – 1:14:582

Yeah. The two projects to the register. Last year, we had a goal of working with staff on training projects And work with staff to on an effort to update the county ordinance.

1:15:03 – 1:15:431

You know, we were gonna try and work with realtors too. Right. Right. To get, you know Yeah. Like a public health. Yeah. Yeah. So I think somebody was saying that even the city of Carmel or somebody had an within escrow where they have to check the box about historic. So it was identified through escrow about, like, potentially being historic or but, I mean, as long as we start with the or something, you know, like

1:15:472

Wait. This is for new.

1:15:484

So I didn't I think you put that in wrong

1:15:51 – 1:16:191

I did. Yeah. Yeah. I'll have question. Yes. I have a question. Of those I said I think it said 15 were granted the Mills Act program. So

1:16:217

were any of were any of the applications for the Mills Act program, were they were any of them denied?

1:16:31 – 1:16:482

No. The 15 is the total number of properties in our Mills Act program. Yeah. And then two were added in the reporting period, and another two were added in December, which was after this reports reporting period. But none of the Mills Act applications have been denied.

1:16:49 – 1:17:007

Okay. So are but are all of those 15, are they all in the District 5 of the county? No. No. No.

1:17:001

You know, we actually have the Mills Act coming up if you wanna wait for that. That's on the agenda to talk about. Oh, okay. So

1:17:087

Yeah. I don't wanna get ahead of myself here. Okay.

1:17:14 – 1:17:292

In terms of last year's goal goals, we haven't put training curriculum together. The long range work plan has a historic preservation ordinance. It's a low priority task.

1:17:339

As determined by the supervisors?

1:17:37 – 1:18:042

Yes, sir. The long range work programs by the by the board of supervisors. So they actually marked it down? Literally, they actually. I don't know when that's going back to the the PC or the board. I think Craig is working on the long range work program for the next year.

1:18:049

Oh, it's just a shame because we've done a lot of work in the past.

1:18:091

You did a lot of work on that?

1:18:119

I myself have got a a file of you know, a lot of work was done. Yeah. You know, it's not that we're starting from ground zero.

1:18:40 – 1:19:072

For the next year, the four goals I listed are to provide additional staff training. They need to work with staff in order to update the ordinance, update our public information to make the lists and what is historic easier to navigate. And then I just added work realtors in the public to find information and sort of resources.

1:19:22 – 1:19:552

And then f and g are regarding things that we might want assistance from the opposite historic preservation on. One was targeted training on loss or damage of resources through unpermitted demolition and demolition by neglect. Then we had some other listed training ideas. I may be forgetting it. What is CABO?

1:19:57 – 1:20:184

California Builders Building Officials. Album. It's basically where all the building officials get together and yuck it up. No. And share. Yeah. It's a organization that represents, building officials and thus building codes and the and the historic code

1:20:181

would be one of them.

1:20:199

It's really, yeah, related to the next item about the historic building code.

1:20:372

That was all I had in the draft.

1:20:421

Thank you. Looks good. Mhmm. One. Little what? I

1:20:50 – 1:21:019

think after you make a take a request for training, and if you don't get a response, let's just send it in what it is so we can meet the deadline. Uh-huh.

1:21:010

Will do. Okay.

1:21:10 – 1:21:281

Okay. Done with that. So item three is discussion of accounting. Part of that's here. I asked it to be here because I'm meeting with my supervisor that wants to get rid of the NOSAC.

1:21:284

What? I just abolish it? Just I didn't hear you.

1:21:33 – 1:22:081

Oh, I said I asked for this to be on the agenda because I have a meeting with my supervisor who's not happy with the NOSAC. Things that just supports the rich, and and and is questioning whether we should have it or not. Okay. So and I got that meeting coming on the twentieth. So the question you know, a couple things. You know? We've we've got that cap that was established a long time ago. Okay. And, you know, part of the situation that I've talked to Megan, she goes, well, all my clients that asked for the mills, have bought expensive properties because that's, you know, that's what they cost. Right?

1:22:08 – 1:22:461

A lot of the historic you know, costs a lot of money. So the question is, you know, I mean, just because they're spending a lot of money, should they be prejudiced against using Mills Act just because, you know, you're saying, well, you know, I spent 20,000,000 for this house, so you shouldn't have the Mills Act. But but they're the ones that can afford buying property to keep it historic. And so why shouldn't they be able to use those? Yeah. You know, it's one of those policy questions. Right? Mhmm. You're asking, is it only for the ones I do or so we can't afford it? But, I mean, everything around here, I mean, five oh, you know, you know, what you know?

1:22:46 – 1:23:071

I mean, what's the the question came up, is the cap too low to be that need to be considered a cap? Because I was looking. It was, like, of the five out of 17 were over the cap. Yeah. And Then we I was trying to find out how many, like, residences there are dwelling units there are in county, you know, So

1:23:07 – 1:23:209

the reason for the cap was that we're trying to put some guardrails on the loss of revenue to the county. Yes. That's the reason for the cap. What if there were no cap?

1:23:25 – 1:23:594

It'd be the same number of applicants, the same number of requests. I don't think it would change anything. Because those would either. The five that came in that they were over, and they justified why they were over. I'll be honest. I would love to get the Act on my house. I know it's not historic, but the property taxes are killing us. So and the maintenance on them. That's what's happened. Every every project that has come forward were in need of made In need of repairs.

1:23:594

mean, it wasn't like, oh, this is pristine. I just wanna save the tax money. I mean, they all justified justifiable budgets on how they were gonna spend the money. There

1:24:102

may have been applicants that looked at the cap exception process and then decided not to submit. Oh. But, yeah, everyone who has applied over the cap has been approved. Yeah.

1:24:20 – 1:24:441

But, I mean, you know, I talked to Megan. She, you know, she has, you know, clients that have expensive problems that are, you know, historic. And she goes she keeps sending one to apply for the. You know? And it's like, you know, are you gonna battle the cap by too much? Or and everybody I've talked to that's done in said the tax credit they get is never it's way below what they spent.

1:24:444

Right? Yeah.

1:24:451

I mean, it doesn't Yeah. I mean, it's an incentive in a way, but it never matches their expenses that they have to pay to to take care of the Yeah.

1:24:52 – 1:25:194

The store. So Yeah. I I the cap, I mean, I don't think I mean, if we adjusted the cap up, which we've heard a lot of public outrry for it, and I I understand that. But it hasn't stopped anybody from actually applying and getting it that we know of. Or maybe they're just saying they see it and they just run. I'm not sure. Maybe people have asked you and said, oh, yeah. There's a cap. Forget it. And they just left thinking that they can't justify it.

1:25:224

And if that's the case, then maybe

1:25:241

It's hard

1:25:242

for me to tell. Most of the people that do ask regarding the MILLS Act do end up applying.

1:25:281

Yeah. But if somebody has a $20,000,000 house

1:25:342

Yeah. I think it may be discouraging for people who have the 20 to the $45,000,000 house that may see it and not apply, but, that may be where it's it's not the type of the

1:25:441

plan is. It's I'm wondering what kind of chance they would have that.

1:25:484

Yeah. They might be discouraged because the caps are are lower or in yeah. I think

1:25:58 – 1:26:152

this is an ongoing discussion at the board of supervisors level. The other element of this cap is also all these public agencies have limited resources. Do the people that have $20,000,000 home need the relief in order to do the maintenance?

1:26:188

Not only that supervisors are elected at political positions. We don't. We're here for history. And

1:26:261

the thing

1:26:268

is what they're

1:26:27 – 1:27:074

up I mean, that's the incentive to maintain and keep the historic structures. I mean, that's the purpose of it. Mhmm. So if you don't give them an incentive to maintain and keep the historic structures, then they can go in and do whatever they want. I don't I don't Yeah. There there is that offset. I mean, as we get into the building code of this store, if if it's historic, it can be deemed historic. If it can be deemed it doesn't say it has to. It just says if it meets the criteria to be deemed historic, the historic building code also kicks in. And that says you'd preserve.

1:27:07 – 1:27:484

So I'm I mean and everybody says, well, that's an election. You get to elect to use that building code. And but you go to that historic review board, and they said, uh-uh. That's mandated law. So we get into a area of fog. You know? Oh, it's not historic. It hasn't been deemed historic. Doesn't matter. Building code says, if it qualifies to me, then you have to follow the historic code, which allows a lot of movement, but it's a mandate. It's a law. And so it's like, nah. I don't wanna use that because you know? And so everybody's you got to. So but that's the incentive.

1:27:494

You know? The Mills Act is that incentive to maintain and keep those structures because, otherwise, who's watching? Who's gonna know?

1:27:572

People try and bend around it.

1:28:00 – 1:28:281

Correct. Yeah. But, you know, five out of the 17 we have is properties. We're over the cap. Yeah. So when you think of you know, I was trying to see how many dwelling units are there. I didn't get I don't know what the real number is of all the but, I mean, if you figure how many homes and apartments and everything there is and how much tax they're getting, you know, we're talking about pennies. Yeah. I mean, you're talking about 70 houses. Right? And the whole county.

1:28:284

What is yeah. What was the full tax revenue from property taxes, and how much was reduced by the Males Act? I it would be an interesting number to know.

1:28:371

That's what I was curious. I mean, because, I mean, you're looking at, like, 17 out of the whole county. You know? Mhmm. Every home in the county, and that can't. You know? And five of those were over the cap.

1:28:474

So It can't be a huge percentage of loss.

1:28:501

I don't know how much they're losing, but

1:28:542

and you have some information.

1:28:574

I would think someone would have asked that at the board level, but at the supervisor board level, but I don't know.

1:29:081

What would I have?

1:29:11 – 1:29:414

One thing that I never thought was really tied down on the Mills Act is when they come in and show us their maintenance costs. And, well, it's gonna cost this much for the windows. Significant feature. It's gonna cost so much for the sides, so much for the roof, so much for this. But then they get into landscaping. Okay. That's culture. That, I agree with, to a to an extent. But then septic tank. Well, it's part of the plumbing. You never see it. It's not a historic feature. Yeah. Boy, you sure do. They gotta pay yeah.

1:29:41 – 1:29:594

But so then we gotta pave the road, then then we gotta put the property fence line up. So it's never really cut and dry where repair and maintenance costs. What constitutes those? This is quite a report. Yikes. Who prepares this? Someone's working it.

1:29:592

That was that was me. I'm impressed. We were did not support Young's project initially, but it was approved.

1:30:114

And I think that was that where you were talking about how much you spent?

1:30:152

Yes. So I just

1:30:164

I'm never hearing it. I just can't remember.

1:30:18 – 1:30:329

It's sort of intangible how much in terms of public policy, the fact that we do have a program that incentivizes historic preservation. That's the big argument, I think.

1:30:34 – 1:30:592

So the total savings annual was estimated to be about $375,000 each year, and that was from last year. So because those projects were approved, the total the annual bills act property production is about $400,000.

1:30:594

Okay. And what is the what does Monterey County pull in last year for property taxes?

1:31:074

Alright. That's gotta be a big number.

1:31:091

I do not know.

1:31:104

Bigger than 400,000.

1:31:112

Yes. You wanna talk about it in another

1:31:130

time? He's

1:31:144

like, no.

1:31:142

I'd love to, but Awesome. Kelly's not here.

1:31:191

Hi, Craig. Good to

1:31:222

see you too.

1:31:245

Sorry about that.

1:31:251

No problem. I have a question.

1:31:277

What what is the cap for the county? I know where Salinas is a 100,000. What is it for the counties?

1:31:339

3,000,000.

1:31:35 – 1:31:492

Do you mean the cap on savings or, because the way our program is structured is there's a cap on the property value to enter into a contract, but then there is a cap on the amount of tax savings received.

1:31:497

The the amount of tax savings received. For for Salinas, I think it's a 100,000.

1:32:01 – 1:32:192

I don't remember. We don't actually cap that value. We only cap, if a property if a residential property is valued above $3,000,000, we either wouldn't approve a Mills Act contract or they need to make some additional justifications for why they need an exception to that $3,000,000 cap.

1:32:251

Well, everything is worth everything in

1:32:297

Monterey County is more than $3,000,000. Right?

1:32:331

Not every month, but A lot of things are A

1:32:374

lot of things are.

1:32:408

We have our share.

1:32:439

That does force an evaluation and a commitment and a public statement on the part of the property owner. Yeah. I mean, it has to be justified.

1:32:549

That involves

1:32:56 – 1:33:122

Only a a portion of this goes to the County Of Monterey. A lot of it is divided up to school districts, redevelopment agencies Yeah. The cities. I think the the county receives a much smaller portion of it.

1:33:12 – 1:33:474

Yeah. That's why I was looking at the 400,000 is coming off of the revenue that the tax assessor would take. So my question is how much does a tax assessor get in that year? Is it a 1%? I mean, it's 400,000 point 01%, point 00001%. You know? Oh. May because you know that tax bill. You know, if they sat down, they got, what, nine registers down down up the tax people, and they're at least five of them are always open. 24, you know, every day of the week.

1:33:494

There's people down there handing them big big checks.

1:33:532

There is a poll one of the things that came up at the last board hearing was do we only look at the fiscal impact to the county, or do we look at the fiscal impact to to everyone?

1:34:044

Yeah. It should be everyone. And that's why I was looking at it as a percentage of what

1:34:078

they call.

1:34:084

Yeah. Because if it's, like, 25%, okay. Maybe we should reconsider. But I'm I'm thinking it's a pretty small and yeah. So it's

1:34:181

like at 3,000 or 5,000? So I kept 3,000.

1:34:21 – 1:34:352

The It's 3,000,000. It's 3,000,000 for residential properties. I believe it's 5,000,000 for commercial properties. And most of the historic resources have been single family residences. Mhmm.

1:34:40 – 1:34:541

There. So most of the board's screaming about the cap, I guess, because that's gonna because like we say, I mean, 3,000,000. You know?

1:34:544

What is it gonna take for us to change it, to up it? Just an amendment to the ordinance? Mhmm.

1:35:022

That would require an amendment to the ordinance.

1:35:064

And that would get sent all the way through

1:35:081

the ordinance. For tax receipts for property tax

1:35:114

People who are questioning.

1:35:132

Yeah. Is it I think it 400,000

1:35:158

is 1%. Now there's your art essentially the historical properties of

1:35:221

the county.

1:35:238

Yeah. We have a very historic county. Not exactly wasting money.

1:35:29 – 1:35:412

It might raise questions on whether the cap is effective in doing what it's intended to do, whether it should be a cap or it should be, like, a cap on the amount of property tax savings received so there isn't all of these extra findings.

1:35:479

That would be an interesting switch. It could be a cap on the amount of

1:35:541

property tax. I believe you're

1:35:568

a cap on property taxes. As

1:35:58 – 1:36:154

part of this, we're in no agreement. I know the city of Monterey. I've done several of these spells acts with the city of Monterey, and they do require they go in every couple years and take a look at them. Make sure they're being maintained and that they're following their their agreement. Do we have any of that?

1:36:151

Yeah. That's all we're checking up. You see it's every year or something?

1:36:182

Or they are supposed to submit reports annually to me.

1:36:254

That happened regularly? I'm just asking.

1:36:304

would forget.

1:36:322

Many of them are very diligent, and many of them I haven't heard from ever.

1:36:364

Oh, okay.

1:36:371

So now there's funny noises.

1:36:392

It's usually like yeah. It's the ones that submit it submit it every single year. The ones that

1:36:471

Right on.

1:36:482

Don't submit it have never submitted it, and we've never told them, hey. We need you to submit.

1:36:54 – 1:37:138

I've ridden my bike by some of the homes we've approved in Pebble Beach, and the ones we have all looked great. They've they've done everything. Oh, there you go. Considering

1:37:17 – 1:37:444

the value of properties, like I said, I bought properties couple 100,000 and now been valued in the millions. So just based on that alone, I would think the 3,000,000 cap might be considered low for our area. Maybe not for Nebraska. Or Mhmm. But definitely for this area, I think 3,000,000 gap would be considered low for residential.

1:37:482

Sorry. I'm won't be testing.

1:37:504

That's okay. I just wanted to make that statement because we're kinda getting stuck here.

1:37:558

3 and 52 of the total taxes left? Mhmm. Or is that just all real estate?

1:38:041

I just wanted to say

1:38:06 – 1:38:277

that I just read because I'm from San Jose, and I just read that the median for a house in San Jose is the highest in the nation. It's, like, oh, 2,000,000 or something. And so this area is much higher than San Jose.

1:38:368

So did we say that right? The receipts were a little over $1,000,000,000?

1:38:41 – 1:39:122

I want to make sure. The assessor, the next page provides a summary of taxes that will be for fiscal year 2023 to 2024. I believe that that is 2023 to 2024. Total taxable value was $89,000,000,000, and the total tax levy was 1,000,000,000.

1:39:131

Yeah. It's gonna

1:39:138

be well under 1%.

1:39:16 – 1:39:281

Mister Supervisor. Mister excuse me. I haven't got a lot of information. I'll come through several.

1:39:298

Yeah. I know.

1:39:32 – 1:40:109

I think it it seems to me that the 3,000,000 cap is probably low based on the the facts on the ground. However, the the thing to argue is that it does limit the loss of tax revenue to the county. And we do have a provision for exceptions, which is pretty rigorous. And so I think it is working. I think it's a balance.

1:40:10 – 1:40:259

It's a it's like so many of the things in public policy. There are many things that have to just sort of be compromised and reconciled. I think it's it is it as far as we have seen, it's it's working.

1:40:309

And I can see why having that figure there, it gives the supervisor some level of comfort that we're not.

1:40:408

Absolutely. The numbers say it there.

1:40:428

is a pretty good investment in the history

1:40:441

of the county. I

1:40:479

hope that helps, John. Good luck in your meeting. You

1:40:528

gotta bring a return on investment. Yeah. Yeah. Exactly.

1:40:58 – 1:41:401

Okay. Well, something's just in the back of our minds about how we're moving forward. So any other discussion on that right now? We're talk okay. No. So one thing just to bring up, Stella and I have been working with planning on two violations planning violations. One in Sprinkles, and one is the seagullish house Yeah. In Carmel that's on a point with Big Rock. You They've know, been working that she's been mentioning. K. And so they finally have the red tag on it. Which house is this? It's on right past the Frank Lloyd Warehouse. You're right. The Butterfly House. Yeah.

1:41:408

Yeah. It's

1:41:401

got Big Rock and I grew by their. And we do that without permits and stuff for years. Yeah.

1:41:494

They were under remodel in 2009. So

1:41:53 – 1:42:151

we had a walk through out there with Liz and their permit expediter or whatever. And then I've got another walk through with May out there next Tuesday. But in the meantime, it's been red tagged. So Took a while. And it's gonna, according to this, we're gonna have to go through a whole coastal development permit. So Alright.

1:42:154

Were they doing any changes to the exterior? A lot.

1:42:192

Their initial permit, I do not believe included any of those.

1:42:234

Yeah. Because I remember looking at that commit years ago, and it was purely I mean, they have some severe damage to that house.

1:42:308

That's the big one I'm

1:42:314

Big idea. The big steel columns are just rotted.

1:42:348

Yeah. Because they're in

1:42:354

terrible weather.

1:42:374

And they were going in and cutting out section of metal and fixing it.

1:42:431

They fixed a lot of it. Yeah. But yeah. So, anyway, that's Okay.

1:42:464

That's Just to give

1:42:47 – 1:43:001

you an update that that's what we've been spending some time doing. And then, also, we do have election of officers. So the question is, you know, like, Mel

1:43:029

That needs to get agendized

1:43:041

for the next meeting?

1:43:062

Yes. Okay.

1:43:094

Only nominated you, didn't we?

1:43:121

You sure?

1:43:134

thought we did. I think we said, oh, yeah. Keep it the same. I think it was our

1:43:200

But they've been last year.

1:43:214

I think it was judo.

1:43:252

Okay. We can agendize that for next year. I think they also need to agendize the 2025 hearing dates. Okay. Perfect. For next meeting, I mean. Yeah.

1:43:37 – 1:43:581

Okay. So yeah. Anything else? Just recognizing all that stuff that's going on down south with Oh. Oh. And Yeah. Malibu and Yeah. Get a turquoise. You know? Fire safe.

1:44:00 – 1:44:168

The question, well, for us. The Situation today, is there any way I read the standards, and there seems to be wiggle room at times. Is there any way or anything they could do that we would approve that second story before we got it?

1:44:171

Well, he talked about the at the top.

1:44:208

I mean, I'm over where it is right now.

1:44:255

Okay. So Devin,

1:44:268

if that's the case, then why did the company why did they get this far?

1:44:32 – 1:44:481

Because they they went off cancer report. Because the language because typically, what I tend to do is, you know, they're not gonna most of the time, they don't sit in bicycles and, oh, cancer and sleep. Yes. And stand up and says it it implies, then they follow that. Okay.

1:44:488

So so more reason to have these con these classes worth of staff so they understand this.

1:44:54 – 1:45:082

Typically, the planners do have to the historians report an analysis. They're mostly the for cancer report was a little interesting that he did both the phase one and phase two phase two same study.

1:45:088

He's trying to avoid going down a path that's nowhere.

1:45:13 – 1:45:301

But I I was surprised that the life working there on Kent, you know, report, because it's kinda like rationalizing, you know, that this is it was on the backside, so it's okay. You know? Yeah. And it's actually been mentioned. Ken is not Yeah. On the front. You know?

1:45:30 – 1:46:028

I I felt that too because he was playing with words here. Yeah. Exactly. It's like, you know, you're not we're not amateurs. And one more thing for everybody. Starting January 16 at the Monterey Museum of Art program, Morley Bair, Modernism in Northern California Architecture in Photography. So it goes from January 16 to April 27. That's the museum one? Yeah. Mhmm. That's good. Monterey Museum of Art Okay. Pacific.

1:46:021

Yeah. Mhmm.

1:46:03 – 1:46:380

There is a memorial event for Rune Anderson. Mhmm. He was one of the original charter members of the Salinas Historical Review Board. Mhmm. This is organized by the woman's club at Salinas. It's gonna be the info's California info center, at the depot at the Salinas Depot Complex Mhmm. On January 25. K. One to 3PM.

1:46:39 – 1:46:501

What day is that? What day is that? January 25. I'm gonna be is it weekday or is it weekend? I think it's let's see.

1:46:529

That would be a Saturday?

1:46:540

Yes. A Saturday. Okay. Mhmm.

1:46:588

Okay. And so when are we gonna be able to get on a train and go to San Francisco?

1:47:030

Oh, you can go to San Francisco, but

1:47:051

you have to be. Okay.

1:47:100

You have a couple to San Jose, and Oh, no. No.

1:47:138

I want it down here. Fine.

1:47:141

Not one here again. What should we do? Thank you. Thank

1:47:192

you. We'll

1:47:208

probably get there quicker.

1:47:241

Jordan. Okay. That will be the day.

1:47:260

Yeah. Before you could go to

1:47:291

your moderate all the way. Yeah. Yeah. I I should know about it if that helps.

This transcript was automatically generated from the official public meeting video and is presented unedited. It reflects remarks made on the public record by elected officials, staff, and public commenters. Transcript accuracy may vary; view the original recording for reference.