About this meeting
- Government Body
- Planning Commission
- Meeting Type
- Planning Commission
- Location
- Monrovia, CA
- Meeting Date
- April 9, 2025
Transcript
59 sections
i just got this yesterday All right everybody Welcome Uh the time is now 7:30 p.m on Wednesday April 9th 2025 This meeting is now called to order Uh please stand uh for the pledge led by Commissioner Brown To the flag of the United States of America and to the republic for which it stands one nation under God indivisible with liberty and justice for all Thank you All right Can we please have a roll call Yes Commissioner Vashani is excused Commissioner Austin here Brown present Rose here Sheffller here Chief here Chair here Thank you All right Um next on the agenda we don't have any minutes to approve for this meeting So we will likely uh revisit the March 12th meeting uh minutes next meeting So we'll move along to the next item on the agenda which is the public input portion of tonight's meeting Uh so at this time uh citizens who wish to discuss any items that are not on the agenda may speak to the commission And just as a reminder uh the commission can't discuss or vote on items that are not on the agenda but we can use those to inform uh what we put on the agenda for future meetings Do we have any uh public input items tonight All right seeing none we can move right along to our public hearings for the night We have three public hearing items on the agenda Uh first up is PH1 which is an application for a conditional use permit uh CUP
2025-00002 The subject property is 931 West Darty Road with Sichuan Garden uh Lee Ping Lao as applicant Excuse me if I mispronounced that Uh this is an application for a a type 41 state alcohol and beverage control license to serve beer and wine at an existing restaurant Uh Sichuan Garden Um I believe we have Brenda with a staff report but we might have an IT issue that we need to resolve first This one will be faster than last time Sit tight Okay thank you April That's looking good Go ahead with the staff report Thank you Chair Thank you so much And good evening to you and the rest of the commission members So as mentioned before our first item tonight is a request for a conditional use permit for a state alcohol beverage control license to allow the incidental sale an on-site service of beer and wine for on-site consumption at an existing sit-down restaurant called Sichuan Garden The site is located at 931 West Dwarty Road within a freestanding multi-tenant building within the Monarch Shopping Center and is zoned as neighborhood commercial Food service will be offered throughout all hours of operation The restaurant provides a wide range of Chinese qu cuisine options including noodles and dumplings various sides and non-alcoholic beverages State
approval is also required for the sale and consumption of alcohol on site This includes that the restaurant have a fullervice kitchen during operating hours and certification be obtained by managers and servers through ABC's responsible beverage service training program Staff conducted a site visit to the restaurant and confirmed that the layout of the business reflects an operating bonafide eating establishment Uh the image on the upper leftand corner displays um a kitchen and the floor plan shows a total of 13 tables and 64 chairs One of these tables is located in a private dining room that will be kept unlocked at all times So in addition to standard conditions this project includes a specific condition um and that is requiring that the private dining room remain unlocked at all times as previously mentioned and window signs to be placed so that there is a clear and unobstructed view of the interior And with that staff recommends approval of the conditional use permit for incidental sale and service of beer and wine for on-site consumption at this location Uh thank you All right Thank you very much for the staff report Any questions from commissioners regarding the staff report Go ahead Commissioner Just one Is there a problem with signage there now I thought that was an unusual thing to uh No no problem with signage at the moment Just
a reminder It's a standard condition that reminder viewable from the outside Okay Any other questions All right Uh so now this is the time and place for public input uh regarding PH1 Uh will accept testimony in the following order Uh the applicant if they wish to speak uh persons in favor persons with concerns uh and then the applicant will have a chance to respond And uh just some reminders uh just those wishing to speak please come to the podium one at a time Just state your name for the record Uh do we have anybody wishing to speak Uh do we have the applicant I don't believe so No Got it Okay So no applicant Do we have any uh persons in wishing to speak in favor Any persons opposed wish to speak Then no need for a rebuttal Um any debate or dialogue discussion other questions from the commission Commissioner Austin No No Okay I'll take a motion if there is one I can do that I'll move that we approve conditional use permit CUP 2025- Z002 with the conditions as presented in the staff report I'll second that We have a motion and a second Can we please get a roll call vote Yes Commissioner Austin Yes Brown Yes Rose Yes Sheffller Yes Chief yes Chair yes All right Um no appeal language No Uh yes This is a public hearing and um just wanted to make sure the applicant and
everyone in the audience knows that decisions of the planning commission may be appealed to the city council if filed in writing within 10 days of tonight's decision and an appeal fee um does apply Thank you All right Thank you very much Um that completes uh PH1 We will move on in the agenda to our next item uh PH2 uh which is an application for a conditional use permit CUP 2025-00003 Uh the subject property for this cup is 245 West Foothill Boulevard uh with Kasa Kolina Healthcare Eric Rodriguez is the applicant and it's an application for a cup to establish a new outpatient physical therapy center within an existing commercial building And I believe we have Brenda back for another staff report That's right Thank you chair And hello again So in connection to this request uh we also will be looking at landscaping and ADA accessibility that will be uh updated at this site for the outpatient medical use So the site is located at 245 West Foothill Boulevard on the northwest corner of Acacia Avenue and Foothill Boulevard and is zoned as neighborhood commercial which requires a minor conditional use permit for medical outpatient uses Now the property is developed with a commercial building that was previously used as office space but has been vacant for approximately a year now As mentioned before medical outpatient uses generally require um approval of a minor conditional use permit by the development review committee However uh since the subject
site is adjacent to the to residentially zoned properties code requires a conditional use permit be reviewed by the planning commission due to the site's proximity to residential zones So Kasa Kolina Healthcare Center plans to open an outpatient physical rehabilitation center at the subject site where they will offer physical occupational and speech pathology services Their proposed hours of operation are from Monday through Saturday from 7:00 a.m to 6:00 p.m with a capacity of 9 to 12 employees and a maximum of 18 patients per hour All services will be provided by appointment only and will not involve overnight care emergency visits or walk-in urgent treatments These operations are designed to be low impact individualized and compatible with adjacent residential uses Uh tenant improvements include a new break room employee restroom therapy gym and other non-medical modifications Now uh here we see some pictures of how the site looks today So currently the parking lot has 37 stalls and this includes two ADA stalls that are located by the drive aisles off of Foothill Boulevard and Acacia Avenue The applicant is proposing to reconfigure the parking lot by adding two more parking stalls and increasing the amount of ADA stalls from 2 to eight stalls that will be all closely placed to the building A new path of travel will also be placed for pedestrians
to access from the sidewalk adjacent to Foothill Boulevard And a new light post will also be placed in the center of the lot illuminating the ADA parking stalls Uh new landscaping will be provided Uh this includes five Brisbane box trees and drought tolerant shrubs that will help with screening from the residential units that are located to the to the north Currently the site has seven palm trees located at the north and south end corners of the site that will be removed and replaced with new shrubs The new landscaping including the Brisbane box trees and shrubs will provide added screen uh screening from the adjacent residential properties to the north Now conditions have been placed to include that all physical therapy activities and equipment be conducted entirely within the enclosed building Hours of operation shall be limited to Monday through Saturday from 7:00 a.m to 6:00 p.m and any changes proposed to these hours in the future shall be approved by the DRC Aside from this the solid block wall along the north property line shall be maintained as a buffer between the commercial use and the neighboring residents And with that staff is recommen recommending approval to the planning commission Uh I am available for questions and I believe our applicant is here in the audience tonight too Thank you All right Thank you very much for the report Questions from commissioners Okay I have a couple Um just on the landscaping the um if you could flip back
there the tree plan is there um there are some mature trees that are on the site Are those going to be preserved or are those going to be removed and replaced besides the palms I know you mentioned the palms are going to be removed There are some trees that are being retained Um if you give me just a moment Is it those three green circles on the bottom Good question So the trees to remain are the kokas pomosa Oh I'm sorry excuse me I I misspoke uh the eucalyptus trees that are located to the south So yes the the three circles and green off of West Foothill Boulevard So those trees will remain Gotcha Thank you That and that um I know the one of the conditions uh talks about a tree retention plan Um is that are those part of the tree retention plan The Exactly Yes Okay Um yeah go ahead Commissioner Austin I do have a question apologize regarding um the the plant selection there I see some of them specifically the purple fountain grass is not necessarily a native plant It's a drought resistant and since we just went through a horrific fire season these are contributors to to spread of wildfire if it's possible to work with the applicant on putting some appropriate um plant life in there that's
more native than drought tolerant Yes we can work with the applicant on that Do we have any other questions All right seeing no other questions right now we can move on to the um to the public input portion of this hearing Uh so a reminder uh if uh the applicant would like to speak uh we'll take their testimony then persons in favor persons opposed and a chance for the uh um the applicant to respond Um again just a reminder uh if you'd like to speak please step up to the podium and state your name for the record Any do we have the would the applicant like to speak Um good evening council I my name is Eric Rodriguez I'm with a day architects I'm here uh with um most of the uh important people from Kasakalina Um I just wanted to introduce ourselves and let you know that we are here available from the architectural design perspective and of course from the facilities perspective to answer any potential questions from yourselves or anyone in the uh public gallery here So thank you Thank you Any persons in favor wish to speak All right Seeing none any opposed All right No need to rebut any uh questions or discussion from the commission Sorry let me close the public testimony portion of the of the hearing and move on to commissioner questions Uh just uh maybe a question from me uh on this Is Kasa Kolina an established
business elsewhere and moving or is it a new new business It is an established business They have uh two centers one in Pomona and one in the city of Isuza uh they operate a little bit differently The centers each have I believe uh they each have um hospitals and they operate on a 24hour basis where this operation will be uh different where it's just going to be uh outpatient medical services Thank you And just to clarify um there's no uh building expansion that's part of this particular cup correct Or plan Correct It's all interior and it's existing Any other questions All right If there's no other discussion then um I'll take a motion I move that we approve CUP 2025-00003 with conditions I'll second it All right Thank you Commissioners Rose and Sheffller Um can I get a roll call vote please Yes Commissioner Austin yes Brown yes Rose yes Sheffller yes Chief yes Chair Sthira yes All right Appeal language please All right motion passes And yes decisions of the planning commission may be appealed to the city council if filed in writing to the city clerk within 10 days of tonight's decision and an appeal fee does apply Thank you Very good Thank you Okay Uh moving right along in the agenda we have one more public hearing item tonight PH3 Uh it's a
proposed ordinance number 2025-03 and associated planning commission resolution number 2025-00001 uh from the city of Monrovia And this ordinance recommends amendments to add inclusionary housing requirements to the Monrovia Municipal Code Uh I think we have Sherry up with the staff report Yes Good evening chair and members of the commission Thank you very much Um we're here tonight to present to the commission a proposed inclusionary housing ordinance Um this ordinance has been in the making for several months now And before we get into the nuts and bolts of what this ordinance um contains and it's what's proposing I just wanted to do some background and a little discussion on why we're here So as the planning commission may recall um the city counsel I mean we adopted the city adopted a six cycle housing element in 2022 and that covers the years between 21 uh through 2029 And the m the purpose of this plan is to provide a plan for current and future needs of all segments of the city's population And it also includes uh uh goals and actions um regarding housing Now the primary purpose of the plan is to demonstrate that the city has sufficient housing uh capacity to um um to meet its regional housing needs assessment Um part of part of the plan includes a housing plan which is um long-term goals short-term actions that are both land use tools um different parameters of code uh revisions process changes to
uh facilitate that housing production One of those programs program 1.7 uh requires the city to study the uh explore the idea of adopting a collusionary housing ordinance the city doesn't have to adopt an inclusionary housing ordinance Um the city council though about 6 months ago started this um intensive study and there's been several uh study sessions and uh surveys and I think what came out of that is um the idea for affordable housing was very favorable and that is why we're here tonight So before we get into the ordinance it's important to understand what is an inclusionary housing ordinance And so what the inclusionary housing ordinance does in a nutshell is it requires a percentage of a market rate development that's being proposed to uh include a percentage of their total units as affordable units Um and it's one tool in our toolbox It's not the only tool but it it's one tool to help a city or local jurisdiction meet their RENA requirement Um as the commission is aware the city has already fulfilled a lot of different uh actions to try to meet this requirement The the inclusionary housing is the most direct um implementable tool to get the housing And these types of ordinances apply to developments of a certain size um they apply to either rental or for sale or both And they're typically designed to be city centric and that's because every city is unique Every city has different market conditions Every city has different priorities So in this slide we try to uh show and illustrate what inclusionary housing looks like
So we have one development that's all in orange and this is a development without inclusionary housing and then the development to the right of that is an inclus a development with inclusionary housing Now the shape and form look very identical and it shows that the affordable housing units are spread throughout the entire um building They're not located in a separate building or in a corner of the building And for the most part the size are very comparable to the other units Um and so what is affordable housing What does this mean So afford what I have put on this slide is each county has their own um established a affordable rental rates and this table shows the affordable rental rates that have been established for the year 2024 in LA County and the rates are based on uh the size of the units So for example um a household of two um that qualifies for low income would have a maximum rental rate of $1,571 And that rental rate um is to qualify for that rental rate you have to meet um the moderate income category that's based on LA County's um average median income And typically that rental rate is is um not more than an affordable housing cost for for any individual shouldn't be more than it should be you shouldn't be spending more than 30% of your gross income on housing and it should also include the cost of um utilities um etc
Now for the city of Monrovia this chart represents our uh regional housing needs assessment The commission has seen this before The first column where it says RENA by income level that's the city's target goal that we're looking to accommodate by the year 2029 Um you can see we have a total of 16 uh 70 units and those units are spread out by various income levels between very low and above moderate Um and then the next three columns show our attainment of meeting those um that goal Um and it's based on units approved in units entitled over a yearto-year um span Um this chart is actually incorporates uh the units that have been uh permitted issued and constructed between the years 2021 through 2024 So as I mentioned before um the city council began studying the idea of adopting a collusionary housing ordinance back in September of 2024 There's been three study sessions and the proposed ordinance that's before the commission tonight was um worked on very um we had a comprehensive approach and team that put this together The city staff worked alongside uh Sage Crest Planning and Environmental and they're here this evening We also have Kaiser Marsten um who facilitated the fiscal analysis Um and through this um intensive discussion um the council and staff we uh you know directed several studies and surveys to get input Um some
of the studies include a community input study Um we also did a survey of San Gabriel Valley cities to try to understand what best practices are throughout our region and what has worked and what has not worked Um the council was also very interested in getting developer input And so taking all that information together with respect to the surveys and the studies and the the discussion um the the staff working closely with our our team of consultants um really kind of identified very critical implementing principles that kind of drove the framework for this proposed ordinance The first one is the goal was to make an ordinance that was Monrovia centric and that was really to satisfy the needs and market conditions of Monrovia Um as I mentioned before every city has different u market needs and conditions Um they have different zoning laws that influence um the cost of housing Um the another goal was to provide an ordinance that was flexible and offered an a range of alternative means of compliance to the ordinance Um through our development input um developer input surveys Um it was highlighted that because there is a cost of providing affordable housing a lot of the developers liked the idea of uh tying the the threshold of of occlusionary housing to state laws for easy easy to implement and also they can also are incentivized by the density bonus waiverss and concession uh programs Um part of the the the framework also included considering the city's um community priorities specifically the general plan land use vision and how it relates to
neighborhood compatibility and the preservation of historic resources Um and then the goal was to ultimately produce affordable housing with minimal impact on housing production and prices And then lastly the goal was also to create an ordinance that's legally compliant with state law and court rulings So the the key piece of putting together this inclusionary housing ordinance was our fiscal analysis And um later this evening if you have questions we have our specialist the president of KMA who's here um Miss Kathy Hed She's done um probably a quarter of inclusionary housing ordinances in California if it's a good ratio It's close It's close Um and so um a little bit about this inclusionary uh excuse me afford fiscal analysis It's really essential to determine in it was first essential to determine here in the city of Monrovia um what the affordable affordability gap is associated with the different types of development that Monrovia is experiencing And so when we say afford a affordability gap essentially that's the difference in between the market rate value and the cost of producing and that affordable housing unit and and the affordable affordability gap as you can imagine changes in every city based on rental rates Right Monrovia has higher rental rates than some other cities in the San Gabriel Valley Um and other cities in the San Gabriel Valley have higher rates than ours So that affordability gap varies
This uh fiscal analysis also um after after identifying the affordability gap it took and looked at different types of prototypical projects to understand how each project type uh changed and um was affected by an affordable inclusionary housing requirement So the the fiscal analysis it actually recommends a project size in which to trigger the ordinance It sets recommendations for income and affordability standards um that can be supported as well as a an inloo fee which is an alternative means a compliance um um that is that is the perfect balance and when when we're trying to understand what is the perfect balance how do you get to a sweet spot without tipping or stifling development right um the one thing that I've learned is a success uccessful ordinance is is one that will impact developers and create affordable housing units However not as much as desired And I think Kathy Head Miss Kathy Hed will tell you we know we're in a good shape when we have both all housing advocates upset with us and we have all developers upset with us So um now I want to just kind of walk you through the contents of the ordinance Um the crux of it is the applicability the affordable housing requirements the exemptions and the alternative means of compliance Um applicability So um the the ordinance is recommending that um the inclusionary housing requirement apply to new housing projects with five or more units in
first a target area And these target areas have been defined as Station Square uh Transit Village uh West Huntington Drive corridor and South Myrtle Avenue And that's the Oldtown Extension District Now the first reason why the city staff looked at these areas is because these are the areas already um where the city's experiencing its housing growth These were areas that were planned over 30 years ago that are close to transit to support high density walkable communities um uh close to uh jobs and and services These areas also make up predominantly all of the city's reena housing opportunity sites So we capture we capture our reena requirements in in these areas Um another reason why these areas were recommended is um is they also protect against unintended consequences resulting from the use of the density bonus And to explain that um is when when a project has an affordable housing requirement that's set at five units or five or more units That's the point at which the density bonus now kicks in and offers um a density increase as an incentive And it also allows developers to start taking advantage of waiverss of and concessions of development standards So if if um you had a project um and you needed uh a reduced setback or increased height through the use of the density bonus you can um this you can ask a developer could ask for that and the city has to provide that if there's
um an offer of affordable housing that meets the state density bonus thresholds Um and then another key reason um is for these targeted areas is that these areas um really allow housing development to capitalize on the city's um existing infrastructure and proximity to transit Okay Outside of these target areas we do have another net to try to capture more affordable housing And that first um net is the ordinance recommends that not only does it um capture this existing housing cycles uh arena requirement or um housing opportunity sites inventory but it also automatically captures any future sites So when we start we're already halfway in through this cycle So when staff starts looking at where we're going to be capturing future units to meet our future arena um the ordinance will already capture those sites Um staff has also incorporated a provision that any project that's outside of those areas that is proposing a general plan amendment for more density or a zone change for a residential use land use that the site be automatically triggered into the inclusionary housing requirement And then last but not least um there are several state laws that have um facilitate by residential housing on non-residential sites So we've threw in another kind of net to capture any byite housing project that would occur on a non-residential site Okay And so now if a project um hits the threshold and is required to incorporate afford
affordable housing these are the thresholds So if the project is an ownership project such as like a condominium project um the the recommend the recommended uh requirement of affordability based on the fiscal analysis that was conducted is 10% at moderate income For rental we have three different tiers The first tier is if you're doing 20 or fewer units it's 6% low income From 21 to 49 units uh it recommends 10% low income And then anything over 50% excuse me 50 units we have a recommended 15% low income Now you may be thinking or asking to yourself why are we going after low income units Why are we going after moderate income units And the reason is is that those are the the two areas in our arena where we really need some heavy lifting Um there are already a lot of state and federal funding incentives to large developers to secure very low um income And so this the moderate and the low it's like this is another way for us to try to attract these units As for exemptions um this ordinance would not apply to the addition of ADUs ADUs cannot be deed restricted Um SB9 units these are units that are proposed in uh or or it could be a subdivision in a single family home The maximum number of units in an SP9 development is four So that already would not in um uh be applicable Emergency shelters um again this is temporary housing not permanent housing Assisted living facilities are not your traditional housing
development and transitional supportive housing um already have a lot of affordability and uh the different types of housing So and in lui um so the state uh that the laws regarding um inclusionary housing basically say that the program has to also include an alternative means of compliance Um one of the first alternative means of compliance that's most frequently used is the in uh the inloo fee It's very popular amongst all the cities who have inclusionary housing ordinances and um the developers also like it Um and what it doesn't have to be applicable to all all types of projects And so what um Monrovia's ordinance is recommending it's that it be allowed for all ownership projects And by doing that um the ownership there's no um when the home sale if if there was a home that sells there's no loss of of return on your investment It's just easier and cleaner to have it to have it to pay the inloo fee um for rental projects between um five and 20 units or less those uh would all have the option to do the inluffy and those are smaller projects that um based on their size it doesn't really make sense uh it helps uh reduce the burden on the smaller scaled size projects and our enlu fee um program also is recommending that um the calculation be based on a per square foot and that fee as you can see is different between an ownership and a rental unit Okay so we're we're
getting close to the end I just wanted to give you some sample calculations of how this invol fee would apply So here's the first scenario You have a vacant property in which a developer proposes to build a 5-unit apartment complex Each unit's about 1,500 square ft So because this is an owner ownership no excuse me apartment complex we're using the $24.50 50 cents per square foot So five units times the total square footage times the square per square foot fee you get $183,750 and that would be the inclusionary and Lou fee for this particular project Scenario number two we have an existing property that's developed with three existing units Um and the developer wants to add two new units So a a new housing development has is now at the five hits the five but the per square foot fee is actually based on the net new number of units So we have two unit units times the size of the unit times the the fee Um in this scenario the uh fee would be $73,500 And last but not least scenario three the developer proposes to build a new 50 unit townhouse development These are four cell units and you can see for this particular scenario the total fee is a little over $2 million With respect to other uh types of alternative means of compliance this ordinance proposes uh allows developers to build those units offsite but within the city of Monrovia It also has a provision that would allow for the conversion of existing market rate units Now with um it's important to note that um the city may or may not get credit with the conversion of
market rate units HCD has um several questions and analysis that we would have to go through to see if we would qualify or not And it's it's not a a black and white methodology Um but nevertheless converting a unit an existing unit to an affordable unit is still a a gain for the city Um so right now um the city has already finalized uh the ordinance that's being presented to the commission We're eager to receive your feedback This is the planning commission's uh public hearing process It's and the commission would be making an advisory uh recommendation to the city council Um after tonight um if this goes through the next the city council would meet uh in May at the end of May May 20th So with that I conclude the staff report and I'm happy to answer any questions you may have Thank you Sher A lot went into that Um okay So questions from the commission Commissioner Rose two questions Um is there anything in this ordinance I couldn't find anything um that speaks to rates going up on these affordable units because we can start out affordable and not end up affordable So I don't know that that's legal that we can put any restrictions on that these homes remain affordable Yes So with state law what would happen is if um a housing developer was required to produce the affordable housing unit there would be an agreement that's recorded It's going to be deed restricted against the property and there'll
be a monitoring program and um that requires the affordability for um for a rental for 55 years That's so for rentals Correct For ownership it's for 45 years Okay So um so these new our new things that are going up those will be protected Um we can only protect the ones that are deed restricted through the ordinance Right Right Right Not the I know the regular ones The market rate Yeah Market rate can do whatever Correct Got it Okay Because that was a that's my concern What's the use of having it affordable if it's not going to remain affordable The other thing um about these inloo fees My question is if a developer um and maybe I'm not understanding it correctly but if a if a developer chooses to pay the inloo fees am I understanding that they can pay inlue fees instead of creating affordable units Um yes Uh but maybe so the way that the ENLU fee program has been designed the smaller scale products forget that can pay the ENL fee Anything greater than I think it was 20 has to build it into the project has to uh create the affordable unit and maintain it for 55 years within their project So there's no inloo fee option So there's no inloo that's where for over 20 units Okay So they can't opt to pay the enloo fee and get all the benefits of building an eight-story building and not having affordable units Correct Okay That was my big concern I want to see those units put in there if they're going to get the benefits Okay Thank you Commissioner
Chief Yes One question regarding inlue fees Who do those fees get paid to and is it all upfront Hm Well those fees would be taken in through the city and um I we we don't so we haven't established our implementation policy program yet Um most fees are paid at the at the by CFO So once the building's built um the developer has to pay those fees in prior to CFO We can have Kathy Head weigh in on that if she wants to Are they normally at CFO Um but then we would manage those through a a housing trust fund here at the city So it varies from city to city Hi I'm Kathy Head I'm president of Kaiser Marston It varies from city to city Um sometimes you see it at the end um before a CFO is issued Sometimes you see it split up between at the beginning of construction or the middle of construction CFO Typically you'll see a phased project where it'll be paid by phases but it's fine any of those ways That's your policy decision Most of our fees are all paid at CFO So so that fee goes into the affordable housing trust fund and that money is intended to be used by the city to increase affordable housing supply Is that correct That's correct So then um uh what is is that going to be done in a timely manner or or does that money uh sit there for an extended period of time Yeah Well there's uh reporting there's yearly reporting requirements Um there there would be yearly reporting requirements on what our fees that we're charging on And at the end of five years if we haven't used the money we need to also report that and show that we are going to use it Um it's not just constructing a unit The city has a lot of options to take that
money It could be a firsttime home buyer program It could be put into a housing rehab program It could allow to facilitate the conversion of existing market rate units to affordable units Um so I I I I see a lot of good potential to use it It may take some time to accumulate it How does that plan uh you said the plan is not finalized How does that what's the path to that plan coming into existence Is that something the city council weighs in on Yes So the the fees that are shown here in this uh proposed ordinance would have to be adopted by council by resolution and then either with that uh resolution or separately trailing little behind it we would bring back an implementation uh plan that would identify the nuts and bolts of managing the program Commissioner Brown I have a couple questions Do we have an estimate on how much we think we're going to get from these inloo fees Let's bring up our specialist Hello again I'm still Kathy Head My guess is now looking at it your apartment projects are likely not to be small They're I expect there to be very few small apartment projects So there should be no inloo fees generated or very little minimal inloo fees ownership housing and and something that I mean there was a lot covered in the presentation but one thing that's important is the reason we're suggesting in l fees be allowed to be paid for all ownership projects is because the affordability gaps are so big between your market rate prices and the affordable price that if you develop them one you can't develop that many units and two you have lottery winners you know you know when you get these units so to take those fees and use them towards all the projects that that were just mentioned is a more efficient way to go That's a
long way of saying I have no idea how much the fees will be Um I don't expect that you'll see most of your ownership housing will be infill small infill So it'll take some time to generate a significant amount of capital and that's why programs like first-time home buyer or rehab etc are probably your best use of the fees Okay And I was just in Arcadia last week and I said exactly the same thing Mhm Um could we talk a little bit more about that Um just maybe an example uh if we have say a small you know a bungalow court of five units uh it's an ownership project so it would be uh eligible for the inloo fee Uh so if if the developer wanted to sell those units at market rate they could develop those five that five unit bungalow court hypothetically and uh then just pay the inloo fee and then sell them at market rate Is that correct Yes that's how that works That's how that works Okay Yeah Go Commissioner Brown Um so another alternative is that developers instead of the inloop fee can develop affordable housing on an alternate site Correct What are what are the par like what are our parameters on that so that we don't unintentionally create areas now that are all you know instead of it being nicely dispersed the way you showed it on that model we're creating areas with high concentration so what are we doing about that so there are parameters in the ordinance that basically a developer can't come in and say uh I want to build my project Don't worry I'm going to put my affordable housing units on this lot over here The first thing is we don't have a lot of this lot We don't have a lot of extra land in Monrovia Um we put that alternative means of compliance in there um in case maybe the
city has a site where we want to incorporate affordable housing The the purpose though is that they would ha they would have to have a plan and a permit done to build before they could even do their project Um there would be a review process in place to make sure it made sense Commissioner Austin Sure Um this might go to Kathy but I'll direct it back to you Sherry the um per square foot fee does that a permanent thing or is that adjusted due to inflation or like a county government coming up and saying this is what affordable is now So we are going to be looking at that fee on an annual basis for adjustment purposes Okay I think this ordinance is one that would be scrutinized every year um and monitored every year especially not just the fees but to make sure we're it's working right And um evaluating areas where maybe we want to expand towards or make other adjustments on density to gain more affordable housing Back to you again Sher um the level of comfort about the thresholds So I know that I listened to Kathy's three presentations of the city council seems to be quite equipped to to make these judgments because what was the thing 15% of zero is still zero Saying that all day thresholds at a good rate just to say that is a BIA comment that I stole just to attribute it appropriately So our thresholds are are a comfortable level that we can see success Yes And I think the other thing
that we didn't mention but Kathy Head has has trained me now in the last 6 months is that there are significant laws in in you know making sure the ordinance is not confiscatory and it doesn't uh take away the fair and reasonable return on investment that a developer has And there's been state law There's been court cases that say that but there's no recipe that tells us how to make sure that it's not confiscatory or it's going to deprive a developer Right That's the crux of this fiscal analysis And I think um Kaiser Martian's analysis is very conservative and it's a very balanced approach Um and so sta staff recommends it One last question and this is to Kathy The study was started two years ago Is it still germanine or applicable in 2025 financial terms We're closing in on it being stale I I I would suggest adopting soon Okay Uh one of the things you said Sherry is we would scrutinize this ordinance and see whether or not it's successful likely on an annual basis How do we figure out if it's successful or not versus and you know on the flip side how do we figure out if it's not being successful and what does success mean Well I think um your planning team has dialogue every single day with developers across the counter Um and we also um will be evaluating are we capturing are are is it is it deterring development when people come in to the counter and they say I want to do a project I don't think this day and age that a large developer is going to walk away because of what's being proposed
Um are we are we seeing areas of the city where maybe we should have thought about expanding the inclusionary housing ordinance Um there every every year we do an annual general plan report It's a housing progress report to the state and we will be doing a review also within that within that process We'll we'll hopefully see the the the zeros turn into numbers real whole numbers Go ahead One last thing but hopefully um regarding the affordability index that's calculated annually by LA County Yes So that would adjust those correct up or down on those rates going forward Correct And some new numbers will be coming out very shortly So that would go up and down Correct Commissioner Chief are there examples where this ordinance has been successful in Southern California And are they using the same type of numbers that we're looking at You know what I'm going to have Miss Kathy Hed respond to that Thank you Or or Mr David Blumenthal from Sage Crest who conducted our San Gable Valley city survey Thank you Mr Chair members commissioner David Blumthone principal with sage press planning and environmental Um the short answer is yes There's there's a lot of uh cities out there that have done very successful inclusionary ordinances There are some cities out there that have done um not successful ordinances and um have um put them on hold since since they've implemented it The um surveys we show um have shown pretty much all the well most of the ordinances are very successful Now the numbers need to be tailored per city because um the numbers that Kathy puts together are actually uh based on
the city's act income levels and the city's sales rates and property values that go in and that can vary between you and Arcadia and Bradbury are all different um numbers and that's why it's critical that we had um Kathy prepare that fiscal analysis um to make sure this is tailored towards Monrovia Thank you So just expanding on that um I think one of the comments in the staff report talked about some of the other ordinances in the St Gabriel Valley Um and you know how much affordable housing was actually built versus how much the inloo fee was utilized Um I think the comment was like South Pasadena has has built a lot of affordable housing Was it Alhamra tend to just have developers use the inloo fee um what drives those things Uh is it just different rates different uh provisions uh in their ordinance Tell us some more about that I I think um a little bit of that and a little bit of the local development climate I think um Pasadena is going to develop a lot of affordable housing whether or not they have an affordable inclusionary ordinance They just tend to build they're just one of the cities that um the way the city was developed is um conducive to a lot of um high density projects and a lot of affordable units So um you see that um and then um you see the opposite again where some cities where it's it's the ordinance that drives those because otherwise they wouldn't see anything at all Uh so given all of that experience from the other cities that have come before us in the St in Gabriel Valley How do you expect to see this ordinance utilized um and instantiated in Monrovia Like what do you think will happen Um putting my uh bringing out the crystal ball on that one putting the magic cap on Um you know I I think this has been very tailored um to meet the city's needs There there has been a lot more research on what we typically
do um for these types of ordinances You know getting community input getting developer input input That's that's very rare for these these ordinances Um so I think we're we're find hope hopefully found the very sweet spot for you Um as Kath said there's a way for us to really predict the number of units you're going to see out of this Um but we we feel that this is um a very um well-written ordinance that will be successful for you and taking a look at it on an annual basis will definitely help you uh tailor it a little bit more Okay Yeah And it's also fair to say that a lot of cities are in the same at the same place where we are right now Um some of the cities in the study were were had just approved or adopted their ordinance Um so I think time will tell um you know all the planning directors work together closely with the COG and we talk and we share stories and ideas um and you know we we we will continue to have a discussion of what's not only working and not working here in Monrovia but keep our we always keep our ears like what else can we do if it's not working or are good you know what Monrovia is actually knows how to do this jump in for a No I don't think I just wanted to say a couple things because I'm chatty Uh and because I worked on a lot of these ordinances in the surrounding communities Um your ordinance one of the reasons I think it will work is because when you did your housing element you created the areas in which you expected the housing to be built and the train obviously has a significant influence on the apartment development And I think clearly that is where apartment development will be focused with a little bit coming into town but mainly by the train And so that's I think what guides yours I just finished Arcadia and Arcadia what theirs what guides theirs is in
their housing element they created they reszoned and when they resoneed they reszoned for the downtown mixeduse area primarily to provide additional density and in return then for that reasonzoning said oh and by the way we're going to make you do affordable housing and so there's that Pasadena which I worked on in 2001 and then they actually redid it in the early 20s um not with me Um what they experienced as David said is a lot of density bonus projects And so those were going to provide affordable housing one way or the other And so that's part of the reason they changed their ordinance was to add another increment of affordability because they weren't really getting anything from their inclusionary ordinance that they weren't getting from density bonus And then Pomona which I finished probably a couple years ago now that one is actually seeing more ownership development you know subdivision type development and is going to be generating a fair amount of inloo fees Oh and South Pasadena is just getting going too So anyway that's what I have to say about that Thank you Um one more Um following my hypothetical bungalow court uh example uh if we have uh that five unit bungalow court that gets built um uh but the inluff fee is not paid So it's uh it's those are affordable units uh ownership units and then someone wants to sell one of those later um it's deed restricted at that point they can only sell it for a certain value What what happens there And part of this is getting at the return on investment typically that you see in property ownership in this area right And this is another reason that I suggest in Luffy for ownership housing because if you allow like the density bonus which some developers are
starting to use for ownership it didn't used to be as common is the way that statute is written on the first sale it goes to market and then the city gets repaid the original affordability gap plus um an equity share But then what happens is you've got the density but no longer the affordable unit So in my opinion my professional opinion for a density bonus project or and then adding inclusionary into it which gives you more um authority than the density bonus is if you then impose the long-term affordability restriction then you keep it in the inventory for a long time but now your homeowners who own it aren't really getting any significant equity appreciation from owning the home And and then so that also over a long term creates a disincentive to keep the unit up right That's why I and then given the large affordability gap which I already mentioned I just say take the Enluffy and use it for rental Yeah So you're saying that my my example is basically a unicorn You're not going to see that I'd be very surprised unless somebody's selling it to their sister Okay Okay Um more questions I have more Um Uh Oh Uh Just Oh here Here you go Thank you Um sorry Just one on the specific um assisted living uh facilities were exempt Um did we consider any other types of um like I saw some definitions about uh like rehab facilities or retirement uh communities or or anything like that Um what went
into the decision to um limit the exemption to assisted living facilities rather than you know a wider swath I mean we're the ordinance is really focusing on your traditional housing units Assisted living for example is um it's it's end of life housing or close to end of life housing and there's medical components to it It's not your traditional housing Um so like a 55 plus community would be subject to this Yes Was there any consideration in exempting those No they they also get benefit from the density bonus as well Senior housing does Oh yeah Um you reminded me of my other line of questioning on on density bonus So currently we don't have a a density bonus ordinance Correct That is correct What's the plan So shortly we wanted to get this uh moving and grooving on the inclusionary housing Um our team is has already been working on a density bonus Um we just needed a little bit more time before we did liftoff The state's law is already in in place So we would still be f we're still following the state standards with even without an ordinance Right Okay Um other questions All right So this is a public hearing Uh now that we've uh momentarily exhausted our fountain of questions we can move on to the public input portion of this hearing Um so again just a reminder uh if you have public input please uh step up to the podium and state your name Uh we will take uh persons in favor and persons opposed uh and then uh we'll have a chance for the the city staff to respond Um so do we have anybody wishing to speak
in favor of the inclusionary housing ordinance and associated planning commission resolution Go ahead Please approach the podium and just tell us your name and go ahead City Council ladies and gentlemen my name is Dr Short is Dr K My last name is Karam Manuguian is very long I own the property on Myrtle and Maple It's approximately 100,000 square footage And I would like to know what's the input for density and affordable As Sherry mentioned the density is not been decided yet I would like to know on this property how is it mixeduse Can they do mixuse on that property and height That's important also And of course affordable housing is going to be bonus as many as number of units is going to be Usually I build it in Glendel uh there on San Fernando corridor uh it was 150 unit per acre of course there was 15% of affordable housing there uh I don't know how is going to be here because my property in your plans and I'm interested to know in the future more and I don't know with whom I going to work planner
or anything I would like to bring my architect and see Okay Uh I think we uh might be able to uh get a couple answers uh for some of the questions that you asked Another issue here I own all the block from the Myrtle to Ivy except uh norththeast corner which is 8,000 square footage and I am after it about 5 years they are not interested to sell the property even I pay them more than market value Is that going to stop me to do my project And I would like to say why if they don't want to sell it I can't force them I don't know if city can involve that Uh I I am asking but uh I don't want to stop the project because you would like me to do the project Okay Uh is that the completion of your Thank you Yeah Awesome Thank you very much uh for your comments I think we can answer a couple of those things and I believe uh some of them are gerine to the public hearing tonight Uh and some of them may be best uh dealt with directly uh with the city staff offline Um but uh let's go through and collect other public testimony uh and we'll gather the questions up and try to respond to them at the end All right Uh any other persons in favor This is what Good evening My name is Tom Scill I own the property adjacent across the street from Dr K Um my I guess it's I am in favor of the project However I do have a question as it relates to is there any provision within the ordinance to either allow or prohibit a developer from expanding and
using an EIFD or the enhanced infrastructure financing district to complete a project within this area That would be it Now that I've served up that fast ball Thank you All right Thank you Any other persons wishing to speak in favor All right Persons opposed Go ahead Please come up to the podium and state your name and direct your testimony to me and we'll go from there Hello Uh my name is Janelle Douglas and I actually live in the epicenter of where all these buildings are going up and I've owned my property I live in a condo on Genanoa and I've owned that property for about 18 years and since I've been on that street the crime rates have increased Um my fiance just got had his tailgate stolen There's all kinds of stuff going on in that street A bunch of homeless people are walking around on that street So my concern is these these apartment complexes that are going up all around me and engulfing me I I thought I saw numbers a few slides back by 2029 there was going to be 519 um units that Monrovia had to come up with Did I read that right There's like between now and 2029 the number jumped significantly Yeah I can I can clarify One of the first slides It's a regional housing needs assessment It's what the state says we should be able to accommodate within the city in that period of the housing applicability of the housing element So my question is where are those people going to go and are they going to go in the apartments
around my condo That's my question if if that's the only area that the city is building that's my concern because I'm already contending with a lot on my street And I have one more question How do you define extremely low income I think that was on the the table Uh very low A very low income So what types of people are very low income Yeah I think we saw it's all income based Uh and it was on the table from earlier in the presentation Maybe we can just bring that up Would those be people that are currently homeless now Not necessarily Okay Sure Okay These are the rental rates but um so ba basically the average median income for LA County is $98,200 and the um to qualify for very low um it's 50 it's it I think it's is that 50% of the med area median income Okay Yeah Um I have another slide that I can bring up maybe in a little bit later that shows the whole the income the income Yeah let's income Okay let's let give me a chance and we'll bring that up It's in the staff report We can bring it up Yep And then what was the number um by 2029 that that the city had to had to house because it jumped significantly That was the arena We can bring up the arena table as well Oh okay I think Erin it might be a good idea for Sherry
or city staff to explain how that arena numbers work Yes And they're not necessarily at end and end product There's a goal Correct Yeah Let's we'll come back to that Okay Uh those are my questions Thank you I think we've captured those we can show some of those tables and talk about a couple of these topics uh in our in our dialogue going forward Okay Would you like me to comment now or should we wait You It's up to you Let's just see if there's any uh anyone else opposed before we delve into answering some of these questions or or discussing some of these topics All right I don't see anyone else So yeah um this is the income levels Yes Can you please one more gentleman Oh we have another person opposed Please state your name My name is Paul Groard And a couple questions I have is um one you're talking about putting a housing right on the corner of Permos to Maple Okay I have a building right diagonally across them but you don't don't want automotive shops in their housing So how's that going to affect me if you put in that You put in housing and I have a building I lease out that's an auto shop I used to run the auto shop at one time Yet the city's been against that for quite a while because of noise restrictions or seeing cars being worked on So how's that going to affect me if they put or my tenant if they put those in there And then if they do housing right up there to um the primrose are you going to go across the street later and do those houses and do mine which is near Pep Boys which a lot of Pep Boys is empty Okay U is that the conclusion of your of your comments Yeah I don't think we can comment on specific projects or or specific properties necessarily Um but you don't want you don't
want automotive near housing And yet you're proposing putting automotive near housing I mean housing near automotive You're proposing doing that which the city's been against They've had problems with some auto shops They're saying residents complain uh residential places complain They don't want to see the cars being worked on They don't want noise other things and yet you're proposing to do that to a property that I have So why would you propose something when the city's been against it I think we can capture your concerns as a matter of public record and are you likely to move on further to go further west and then push me out I think uh we can also talk about uh revisit the applicable areas that we're talking about for this particular Another question is what if somebody doesn't want to sell their property What if you get developers buying up one somebody says no I'm not selling Can we stay there I think we've captured uh a couple general questions here Okay Thank you Thank you for your testimony All right Um Sherry if you want to Yes start Oh we have another person Oh yes Please go ahead Hi Um I own the property at 1550 South Myrtle Avenue which is Pomona and South Myrtle And um they put the stop sign there I mean the signal there a while back because of the accidents And my when I came to council meeting before the large unit was um built next to the Chevron station which is still under construction I came to the city council meeting and I asked them I said do you realize that when you come off the 210 freeway at Myrtle you come off and you're at the lane to turn left Let's say but people who live in those units have to scoot all the way over to the signal
to turn right to get to their units And I said "Is there any plan to revise the off-ramp at two at the Myrtle and the 210 freeway because the traffic is horrific I'm out there every day and um I get off the freeway at Myrtle and it's just hard to deal with the traffic and I and I know that the construction is going on at the building so a lot of that's blocked off to through traffic right now But once it's opened up you've got the through traffic coming on and the people getting off the 210 freeway at Myrtle It's it's horrific And I can imagine if you're going to be putting more housing in at the um 210 South to Dwarty and there's residential in there Um if you're going to put uh fivetory buildings sevenstory buildings where are all those people going to park Um can the infrastructure of the schools first first responders can they handle all the influx of new people coming in and the traffic The traffic on Myrtle and the 210 is horrible So thank you for your questions and comments Thank you All right Another person opposed Please state your name Uh Kevin Le Neither opposed or in favor Uh just a question on the slides that were presented Uh the third example you mentioned 20 units or less um that would be required for the inloo fee but did I see it mention 50 units that you offered that uh calculation for some close to $2 million in fees That's one question And then is the density bonus as well as the inloo fee
um the developers tools as you mentioned one or the other or can you do both Were you able to capture that question I'm not sure I understood the first part of it If if you don't I think it was a clarification on the applicability of the inloo fee Okay You offer three scenarios scenarios [Music] The $2 million Okay So that that slide was actually um you're right It would and Luffy wouldn't have you That's a good catch Luffy would not uh qualify there I think this scenario was probably caught caught through our study session slides Okay when we were still discussing does apply because it's ownership Oh it's ownership There you go Thank you Kathy Good catch For sale units That's why she's here guys Oh for sale Yeah for sale units Uh so inloo fee applies for all of those items or for all all ownership projects Yeah like I said Okay Any other p uh persons wishing to provide public input All right let's get into some of these things Let's talk about uh income levels I think first So this this slide up here shows um how one could qualify for an affordable housing unit So the the each county has affordable um area median income The area median income for Los Angeles County is
$98,200 And when the state talks about the provision of affordable housing affordable housing is broken down into categories ranging from a moderate to low to very low and to extremely low And each of those categories are based on a percentage of what the LA what the county's area median income is So for example very low would be 50% of 98,200 Am I getting this mix No you're you're totally your logic is correct Okay You're just wrong Okay No that's why you're here No that's Yeah And actually we figured out what the discrepancy was between our numbers too So we're good there Um here's the story because no one will ever understand or get this but if you actually look at the lowinccome number and compare it to the median you'll see the low-inccome number is actually higher than the median on that chart when it's supposed to be 80% But it isn't What happens is and this is a state law statute that and and the the way the state law statute works is the very lowincome and the lowincome numbers that are applied for the counties throughout the state are set by HUD at the federal government And what they're doing is they're stabilizing the section 8 assistance program in highcost areas So the statutes all still say 50% of median and 80% of median but this year low income is 112% of the median So you just got to accept it as true So basically what this chart is correct but it isn't 50% or 80% And it's only used as Sher mentioned to qualify folks to live in the units Then the
rents just to make things more confusing are based on the actual percentages So that's why the chart is confusing But that's why I felt like I had to say it Otherwise people are going to start doing the math and think there was a typo Okay I think that was a good clarification Stay close Um and by the way the the public uh input portion uh the public hearing is closed uh for the moment um we can reopen it if we need to Um but uh let's continue Yeah So as you can see from this chart you see the categories of the income levels and I think that's that's a key one of the key takeaways Okay Um then we're going to go back quickly and I um forgive me but I just I don't want to take you through too many slides to this slide Okay Okay Yes Let's talk So every city and county in the state of California um has this requirement to have a housing element and that housing element's purpose is to ensure that the city or county is meeting a target requirement of uh so that when they they so that as development is occurring right we're we're the goal is to have some of your development not all be above market or or market rate housing The idea is to capture each city's fair share of these income categories Okay Now um the state first every every housing cycle the state says releases a grand number and
says the state of California needs uh to attain to to have this goal of affordable housing Um and it's it's a production goal to meet existing and future need And then the each regional council of government takes those and divides them up based on their allocation from the state to the cities So the state of California to to SCAG the Southern California Association of Government is the one that um passed through to the city of Monrovia We became we had our reena uh requirement and this is by income level And here you again you see the income levels for very low low moderate and above moderate and the total Now the city's not required to construct those units through the housing element policies and actions We're required to show that we are not uh prohibiting development from occurring so that they don't occur That we have available zoning uh classifications to accommodate housing densities that contribute to affordable housing Um the state has said you know their general number I don't even know if it's if it's still valid today but a zoning designation of 30 or more units it h has a real more realistic um uh that there's more possibility that a unit would be affordable um going through um the housing element process we also have to identify where in the city we believe development is going to occur and for the city of Monrovia Um when for years for over 20 years before the gold line came to the city of Monroia the city of Monrovia had
planned that there would be higher density housing around the city's station and this is Station Square Um it higher density housing was planned just south of Myrtle Avenue or Oldtown District This is called Otown extension And then other opportunities near uh this is on the west end of the city that borders Arcadia and um so the cities had already had built in a general plan density of 54 units per acre in those areas to capture higher density projects um in order to uh tell the state this is where we think the housing is we have to demonstrate that this is where the housing trends have been And so it it it over the last 15 years we have seen a lot of development in Station Square We've seen uh the Fifth and Huntington uh housing project go up And then in the South Myrtle Avenue corridor that's where we have the Avalon project we are not allowed to pick sites that are um here at city hall for example where there's no realistic uh you know possibility of having housing here Um so with that table that's that's a a goal Okay Over the years we would always produce uh housing We we Monroia has always been a strong housing producer Um but the state is really looking at cities and counties now to make sure that they're doing everything to produce affordable housing Um the inclusionary housing ordinance is not reszoning anyone's property So the zones and general plan land use designations that are in place today are remaining Simply what
this ordinance is doing is there have been several projects that have been developed in Station Square but a lot of those units are market rate units This ordinance would allow any future development to capture a portion of those future projects to include affordable housing Um anyone who has is interested in potentially developing their site with housing I um would we our planning team would love to meet and discuss the different property characteristics and um you know with each any property owner We have a full service planning division We're open Monday through Thursday Come to the counter I can give you our contact information following the meeting Um and I'm trying to see if there's anything else Um another line of potential questioning is uh presuming developers do come in and take advantage of uh the increased density um possible in these areas How does the city plan to deal with that increase in density Yeah Are our infrastructure and all the other um city services and parking and traffic and whatnot set up to handle that Yeah Yes Or that's part of the reason why the city is anticip is is recommending or excuse me your staff is recommending um allowing the inclusionary or enforcing the inclusionary housing first and foremost in the areas where the higher density has been planned These areas have already experienced a lot of infrastructure improvements prior to the gold line um to support the higher density
developments These are areas that are generally generally um outside of uh having significant impacts to lower density areas Um so they there there are some areas where there still are single family homes in there but but but for the majority there there there are areas where we're not going to have significant impacts to neighborhood compatibility or any historic resources And um those thoughts h were actually put into the general plan land use vision 30 years ago Okay Were there other items that we missed There was a question about an enhanced infrastructure financing district Yes I don't that word does not come up in the ordinance Um I I don't think it applies to the ordinance but if Miss Kathy Head wants to respond to that one No Okay Yeah I mean I mean it's something the city would have to adopt and it has an entire structure that the state has set up to do It's a means of collecting it It it's redevelopment 2.0 except it's not really Um well it's it's supposed to be a means to then create revenues where you can create infrastructure but it would have nothing to do with this and there's no affordability requirement associated with it Yeah Okay Thank you Uh I guess no would have done but well no that that was useful uh context We are focusing this discussion on uh the you know consideration of the inclusionary housing ordinance uh and what we are going to say as a commission to uh the city council when they consider uh whether or not to adopt it or to change it in some way Um okay
uh given that uh I think we've addressed uh most of the public comments Um I would like to return to my fellow commissioners and uh open this up for some more dialogue Sure Awesome I do have a um I do have a question It's regarding this is a tool Correct Do we use this as a tool That is correct To grow housing um some being inclusionary Um I think last time or or some time back there was 2 million housing units or more in the state that we're short of Then in January we lost about 10,000 housing units So the primary goal of this for the city council to adopt is a tool for you guys to get good planning and development Am I accurate in that Yes Um I have some some more some more questions Um are there any applications in progress that would be impacted by this ordinance Like how does that work Potentially Potentially So if an application is already in progress and this ordinance gets passed then what's Yeah So if an if an applicant has submitted an application that's been deemed complete then they're not going to be affected by this ordinance Okay uh but if the application is not in yet or whatever and this uh ordinance becomes part of the municipal code then they would be subject to that right Um okay so can we talk about the uh impact on uh housing prices and rent of this ordinance What do we expect that to be Will this drive up rents and you know other not affordable but other rents and housing prices I mean this by how much This is a commonly asked question is is won't the developers
just simply charge more rent or higher sales prices to accommodate this requirement to which I always flippantly reply because they stopped at a price that they could have gotten more then I mean I think that's a really important concept is a developer establishes a threshold price they think they can achieve and a profit that they want to achieve Sometimes they achieve more sometimes they achieve less That's the the simplistic answer to this question is no I don't believe it will impact what developers can get for for property because we've set it up in a manner that is conservatively based and does not is not confiscatory and does not deprive a property owner of a fair and reasonable return on their investment That being said if you take it to a macroeconomic level to the extent that you are creating less supply if you set up a program that isn't viable so you create less supply and prices go up because the demand is higher than the supply But I think that and and you're now surrounded by communities with inclusionary housing so it's not like you know they can just go anywhere to to do their development So as long as you have a program that's reasonable and has has been backed up I don't think it will affect it I think that's good to know Um given all of the uh ups and downs we've especially seen in the economic markets very recently Um one question that's in my mind is you know how have cities with inclusionary housing ordinances fared during the last uh few or couple economic downturns say like in 2008 2009 like that time frame Super good question Um I helped Claremont write their inclusionary housing ordinance right before the Great Recession So 2007 we adopted we're right on the top of it And so what happened is you the whole market crashed So nothing was developed It not wasn't because there
was inclusionary it was because there was nothing And so in 2012 Claremont went back and amended their ordinance to reflect the then current economic climate And then from 2012 to 2021 it's been a very successful program It was all based their program until 2021 was all ownership It didn't have a rental component There's reasons for that there you the state didn't allow rental inclusionary till 2017 after the Palmer decision in 2009 So that was the reason So in 2020 they came back and added rental in but their ordinance has been very much ownership based Um so that one is one in your general vicinity not particularly market area but your general vicinity that just recognized the situation other communities that I work in left their inclusionary in place as it sat and just recognized that development wasn't going to happen So you know again hypothetically if we were to enter a recessionary period would the uh as we're recovering out of that uh would a place with inclusionary housing have a slower recovery So what I did this is I did this a number of years ago because this is a good question that comes up a lot is I looked at cities 10 years before they adopted inclusionary and 10 years after I looked at four cities and looked at 10 years before and after They went up they went down There was no discernable pattern to what to when the inclusionary was adopted and what happened to the supply and demand It's one factor but you know interest rates and marketability etc play a much more significant role than a well ststructured ordinance That being said and as David said as well in the current high interest rate environment that we're in and the sort of uncertain times that we're in it you know it may
be a while before you see development of any kind Yeah Should I just stand here Um I think that was probably the end of my economic focused questions Um any other Yeah So um just probably for city staff um have we considered what alternatives to inclusionary housing um that also have the goal of increasing affordable housing uh have we pursued You mentioned a couple of them Yeah So um our team over the last three years we've done some really targeted um municipal code amendments Um the planning commission just recently looked at the ADU um ordinance update Um that allows for a lot more ADUs Now that ordinance is now in effect Um couple years back we removed we reduced the unit size requirement The city had a larger unit size So by lowering that unit size that was the goal was that more units could be produced on site um if they met the density requirement in the general plan The thought is that smaller units are cheaper to build Um last year um the city removed its conditional use permit requirement for multifamily housing um that uh took out any type of uncertainty in processing a multif family development It also reduced the time for approval and the cost the application cost Um with that this uh staff also presented and the planning commission looked at and council approved objective design standards and those took
out also all the subjectivity and design review um you know making projects easy to zoning code easy to follow and easy to implement Um there are other things that are in our work plan that um that are all included in the housing plan that that uh your planning division is working very hard on trying to get out the door So more tools this is not this is not the last tool there there are more that will be forthcoming Okay Um a couple more specifics Um uh what happens when someone uh who is living in one of these units and qualified uh according to the income limits um then starts making more money uh and doesn't qualify anymore I'm sorry to make you get back up No it's okay I'm not far Okay So on ownership housing it doesn't matter So when they move in they could win the lottery the next day and they're still qualified to live in the unit until they choose to sell it and then they have to sell it at affordable price On rental then you'll set this up in your procedures when you do it There are variety of ways to do it The most straightforward way to do it is when somebody becomes over income then they either have to stay and pay the market rent or they have to move and you have to then have so they live in that unit the next available unit of that type that comes up becomes the affordable unit So rental unit people qualify and re-qualify as Sher was mentioning the monitoring on ownership you just want to make sure they live in the unit Okay Um so you you you triggered my thought um in uh another element of this ordinance says that um the affordable units need to be similar to the market price units but uh they could be slightly
different size They could have different finishes Um can you talk a little bit about that Are we kind of setting up a two class Well go ahead David So um not really Um from from the outside they're they're absolutely going to look exactly the same Um where the um difference is is is just to kind of accommodate the um the higher cost of providing that affordable unit So in the case of let's say someone builds a luxury apartments they have top-end appliances Sub-Zeros um in there um for the affordable units they're not going to be able to to afford to do a $10,000 um stove and oven Instead they're going to do something a little bit cheaper like an LG or Samsung or something like that So that's where those different um materials come in They may do carpet instead of tile flooring Um but from the outside and the way the ordinance is designed is this unit will look like any other unit Um so we're not kind of ostracizing the uh people that live in those units Okay And I can add that they'll also have full access to all the property amenities as well And how about uh what's the expected cost like the administrative burden to the city of running this program And uh you know how do we that's under evaluation Okay Okay Um All right Any other questions All right Um well given that um I think we're ready to move on to a motion I move to approve planning commission resolution number 2025-00001 I'll second
All right we have a motion in a second Commissioner Austin yes Brown yes Rose uh yes Sheffller yes She yes Chair yes All right that motion carries Uh do we need appeal language here No So um the next stop for this ordinance will be the city council May 20th Um and I do just want to thank you know a lot of time with the entire planning division has been involved with this along we've spent many hours with David Blumenthal and Kathy Hed Thank goodness for Kathy Head She is the expert of all every every inclusionary housing ordinance in California Um and I I really you know want to say thank you to my team um for everyone has touched this So thank you Yeah this is a very complex uh topic and I can see a lot of work went into it I appreciate all your work all your explanations all your communication and I also want to thank the members of the public who came and and spoke and and weighed in Uh your input is valued as well Um okay Uh with that I think we can move on to administrative reports which we have none of Uh so next up um uh unless you need a drink of water uh Sherry is the community development director report All right Just looking for my agenda here Let's see Okay Yeah here we go So the just two two updates really The first uh big update is the um Monrovia area partnership The annual neighborhood conference is coming up It's just two weeks away Um I have put flyers in front of each of the commission We have extra flyers here if anyone's interested in picking one up before they go This
is a wonderful event for the community Um a lot of uh relevant Germaine topics regarding fire safety um how to how to get an ADU application through the city's planning and building process Um I really urge everyone to participate There may be some tree giveaways some native tree giveaways So um we're looking forward to seeing you there Um and with respect to development updates um we we have several that are still moving through the process We um made a decision to renotice the 347 Highland project So that one is going through another 30-day review the state clearing house I do anticipate it will be some time before that comes to the commission We'll staff will be giving you an update So we'll give you a a a good it will be coming So start reading Um um so with that that concludes all my reports Thank you Okay Any questions for Sherry I just want to comment on uh on all the work for the last year on this city staff Um our council colleagues put the effort in I think it was well done Um and I think it's a good tool and we we need to provide you with tools to provide people with tools and options and um you appreciate it Any other reports I'd I'd like to offer my thanks as well It's been a tremendous amount of work you've done and you've done it really well So thank you Commissioner Shefflin I've got a question for Sher and possibly John two years ago I don't know who was going to take it on Evergreen the project on Evergreen to
the west of Primrose A slew of people came in They were they were all concerned about the h selling the housing for the project that was going through there They went through and they took out half of the housing I want to say there's one house still left and people live in it I thought that was all taken care of at that point and again it's been two years or plus possibly Yeah So that project is the Aoyo at Monrovia station project right Um that project has had some financing issues and um it's al the property is also owned by the part there's a partnership as as part of the the developer and they are working to assemble and get that project off the ground Um they're currently entitled They've been applying for uh yearly extensions to keep their entitlements alive They have one more year of I think they have they just got their they have one more year I think they have through March of 2027 on that project So if they don't build it but our team is very working closely with the developer to try to see what we can do to to keep it up There have been over the years some property maintenance issues If if anyone sees um any property maintenance issues call us and we can take care of that No my my my my my question was I I thought everything was already taken care of In other words there were people in here that were afraid to have children They were concerned They didn't know they're coming or going and they they indicated that everything was taken care of at that point Yeah So that one remaining house is a rental house Um but unfortunately the city has very little cap ability to do anything to force the development
Right We're we're doing our best to support the developer So the end goal is development Thank you Any other reports or questions Um I'll just make a comment about the map conference I've been to the map conference uh for the last uh a few years It's a great um opportunity to learn about the city um and and learn about you know some interesting topics there It's always fun uh and good good chance to rub elbows with your your fellow community members too So highly recommend people check that out And there's free food too So that's a that's a bonus All right Um given that I think we uh have exhausted our agenda for this evening Um hopefully not ourselves Um uh our next regular meeting is scheduled for May 14th of 2025 and this meeting is now adjourned at 9:23 p.m Thank you
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.