HomeMy WebLinkAbout4.23 Density Bonus CITY CLERK
File #0660-40
AGENDA STATEMENT
CITY COUNCIL MEETING DATE: June 20, 2000
SUBJECT:
Opposition to AB 779 -Density Bonus: Transit Villages
Report Prepared By: Eddie Peabody, Community Development
Director
ATTACHMENTS:
1)
2)
AB 779 Background and Analysis
Letter to Assemblyman Torlakson Opposing AB 779
RECOMMENDATION:
Oppose AB 779 and direct staff to send the attached letter with the
Mayor's signature to the Assemblyman Torlakson, with copies to
Senator Rainey and the Members of the Senate Local Government
Committee
FINANCIAL STATEMENT: None
DESCRIPTION:
Assembly Bill 779 requires cities and counties to grant a 25% residential and commercial density bonus,
and a 15% reduction in parking requirements to developments within a ¼ mile of a public transit station.
Development projects would qualify for the density bonuses and parking reductions in AB 779 regardlesS
of whether the City has adopted transit village plans. In short, this bill proposes to override all local
general plans and zoning within one-quarter mile of any existing or planned rail station in the state.
The residential and commercial density bonus increases the number of units (square footage for
commercial) to 25% more than the maximum number of units allowed by the general plan and zoning
ordinance. The parking reduction decreases the number of parking places to 15% less than the minimum
parking requirement. The idea is that the bonuses will motivate developers to invest near transit stations
by guaranteeing bigger projects and presumably better investment returns.
Most cities do not need these bonuses to plan and develop transit villages. The City of Dublin is currently
in the process of developing specific plans for two transit villages adjacent to the existing BART station in
Eastern Dublin and the future BART station in Western Dublin. These plans include high-density
housing, hotels, office and retail uses. Mandatory density bonuses and parking reductions would be
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COPIES TO:
ITEM NO.
detrimental to this process by removing the City's flexibility in negotiating with developers, and would
severely limit the City's ability to plan for the needs of the community.
AB 779 recently passed the State Assembly and will be considered by the Senate Local Government
Committee on Wednesday, June 21.
RECOMMENDATION:
Staff recommends that the Council oppose AB 779 and direct staff to send the attached letter with the
Mayor's signature to the Assemblyman Torlakson, with copies to Senator Rainey and the Members of the
Senate Local Government Committee.
AB 779 Assembly Bill - Bill Analysis Page 1 of 5
SENATE LOCAL GOVERNMENT COMMITTEE
Senator Richard K. Rainey, Chairman
BILL NO:
AUTHOR:
VERSION:
AB 779
Torlakson
6/15/00
HEARING: 6/21/00
FISCAL: No
CONSULTANT: Detwiler
TRANSIT VILLAGE DEVELOPMENT
Backqround and Existing Law
The Planning and Zoning Law requires every city and county
to adopt a general plan, with specified contents. Local
officials' land use decisions -- zoning, subdivisions,
public works, use permits -- must be consistent with their
general plans.
Over 20 years ago, the Legislature created the density
bonus as an exception to the usual consistency requirement.
When a developer promises to make at least 20% of the
housing units affordable for lower-income households, the
city or county must grant the developer 25% more units over
the otherwise maximum density allowed by the general plan
and zoning (AB 1151, Roos, 1979).
Over $14 billion has been invested in California's rail
public transit systems over the last 25 years but mass
transit ridership continues to slip. One reason is that
new development focuses on areas served by publicly
financed freeways and not on transit corridors. The public
investment in rail transit goes to waste when local
officials fail to promote private development around rail
transit stations. Local officials in some communities have
created transit villages by increasing residential and
commercial densities within walking distance of rail stops,
speeding up permits, and subsidizing public works to
attract private investors.
In 1994, legislators passed the Transit Village Development
Planning Act which allowed cities and counties to plan more
intense development around rail transit stations. Transit
village plans are supposed to identify areas where local
officials would be willing to grant 25% density bonuses (AB
3152, Bates, 1994). Because the plans are voluntary and
not linked to specific new sources of development money,
cities and counties have not embraced them.
AB 779 -- 6/15/00 -- Page 2
A 1998 University of California study reviewed builders'
and local officials' experiences with transit villages and
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ATTACHMENT
AB 779 Assembly Bill - Bill Analysis Page 2 of 5
found several common themes. One recommendation was that
local officials must grant density bonuses in transit
villages.
Proposed Law
Assembly Bill 779 requires cities and counties to grant a
25% residential density bonus, a 25% commercial density
bonus, and a 15% reduction in parking requirements to
development with a quarter-mile of a public transit
station.
Development projects qualify for the density bonuses and
parking reductions in AB 779 regardless if local officials
have adopted transit village plans. However, local
officials do not have to grant the bonuses and parking
reduction if they find that the city or county has already
adopted a specific plan that provides a 25% density bonus
or that the density bonus has adverse public health or
safety effects that can't be reduced or avoided.
The residential density bonus increases the number of units
to 25% more than the maximum number of units allowed by the
general plan and zoning ordinance, rounded up to the next
whole unit. The commercial density bonus increases the
amount of square footage to 25% more than the maximum area
allowed by the general plan and zoning ordinance, rounded
up to the next whole floor° A commercial builder must
comply with local set-back standards but must be allowed to
exceed height limits. The parking reduction decreases the
number of parking places to 15% less than the minimum
parking requirement.
AB 779 requires cities and counties to consider these
required density bonuses and the parking reduction to be
ministerial decisions unless the local officials find that
the city or county has already adopted a specific plan that
provides a 25% density bonus or that the density bonus has
adverse public health or safety effects that can't be
reduced or avoided.
If a development project triggers an environmental review
under the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA), the
AB 779 -- 6/15/00 -- Page 3
project must include the required density bonuses and the
parking reduction. The review of project alternatives
under CEQA shall not include reducing the densities or
increasing the parking requirements unless the reduction is
needed to avoid adverse public health or safety effects.
AB 779 includes both rail transit stations and ferry
landings within its definition of public transit station.
The bill repeals the ability of a city or county to require
a developer to enter into a development agreement as a
condition of implementing a density bonus.
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AB 779 Assembly Bill - Bill Analysis Page 3 of 5
Comments
1. Public dollars, private projects Public officials
have spent billions to rebuild and expand California's rail
transit: interurban rail lines, heavy-rail subways, and
light-rail trolleys. The public sector invests in rail
transit as part of a wider strategy to cut congestion and
boost air quality. But unless local land use decisions
attract private investors to build near transit stations,
the public's investment will be wasted. One way to
motivate private builders is to guarantee bigger projects
and presumably better investment returns. The density
bonuses and parking reductions in AB 779 will get their
attention.
2. A few inqredients short of the full recipe Common
sense and good economics suggest that local officials
should welcome developers who want to build near transit
stations. The UC report found good examples of communities
and builders who are doing just that. But a density bonus
is just one ingredient in a more complete recipe for
developing transit villages. Dedicating funding for plans
and pre-development activities will motivate local
officials t6 accept the more intense land use demands of
transit villages. Granting travel credits under the
congestion management program will mesh transit villages
with overall transportation planning. Better integrating
transit village plans into the land use laws can avoid
duplicative CEQA reviews. Building state offices in
transit villages will boost private investors' confidence.
Expanding the transit villages' radius from mile to
mile will encourage more development. The Committee may
wish to consider why AB 779 fails to include these other
AB 779 -- 6/15/00 -- Page 4
recommendations.
3. Window to the reqion Rail transit stations are truly
"windows to the region" that connect transit village
residents and workers with the wider metropolitan area.
When a suburban community persuades the transit district to
build a station but then insists on iow density
development, the loss is social as well as fiscal.
Communities with the benefits rail transit stations have a
regional obligation to promote more intense development and
capitalize on the public investment. AB 779 exempts
communities that have already adopted higher densities. It
forces density bonuses on communities that haven't been so
accommodating.
4. Down at the station The CalTrain station in San Mateo
probably qualifies under AB 779, so does the Lafayette BART
station. But the bill doesn't define a "rail station."
Does the place where Sacramento's light-rail train stops at
39th Street fit the bill? What about where N-car stops
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AB 779 Assembly Bill - Bill Analysis Page 4 of 5
along Judah Street in San Francisco? If every trolley stop
is a "rail station," then the resulting -mile concentric
circles may cover entire neighborhoods, not just the
intended nodes. The Committee may wish to consider
adopting a better definition of "rail station."
5. Restore development agreements ? AB 779 repeals local
officials' current ability to require a builder to enter
into a development agreement for density bonuses.
Development agreements give both the private and the public
sector ample opportunities to negotiate the details of
long-term projects. The Committee may wish to consider an
amendment that restores this valuable tool.
6. Double referral Because AB 779 affects the California
Environmental Quality Act, the Senate Rules Committee has
ordered a double-referral to the Senate Committee on
Environmental Quality.
Assembly Actions
Assembly Local Government Committee: 5-3
Assembly Floor: 48-30
AB 779 -- 6/15/00 -- Paqe 5
Support and Opposition (6/15/)
Support : State Treasurer Philip Angelides, California
Council for Environmental and Economic Balance, California
Futures Network, California Housing Council, California
Transit Association, Planning and Conservation League,
Association of Bay Area Governments, City/County
Association of Governments of San Mateo County, Creative
Housing Association LLC, Sierra Club, Silicon Valley
Manufacturing Group,
Opposition : California State Association of Counties,
League of California Cities, Cities of Concord, Hayward,
Lafayette, Victorville. _
http://info.sen.ca.gov/pub/bill/asm/ab.07.../ab_779_cfa_20000615_13205 l_sen_comm.htm 06/19/2000
AB 779 Assembly Bill - AMENDED Page 1 of 5
BILL NUMBER: AB 779
BILL TEXT
AMENDED IN SENATE
AMENDED IN SENATE
AMENDED IN SENATE
AMENDED
JUNE 15, 2000
APRIL 24, 2000
JULY 8, 1999
INTRODUCED BY Assembly Member Torlakson
FEBRUARY 24, 1999
An act to amend Sections 65460, 65460.2, and 65460.4 of, and to
repeal and add Section 65460.10 of, the Government Code, relating to
infrastructure development.
LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
AB 779, as amended, Torlakson. Infrastructure development:
transit village plans.
The Transit Village Development Planning Act of 1994 authorizes a
city or county to prepare a transit village development plan that
addresses, among other things, increased densities of residential
development within not less than 1/4 mile of a rail transit station
and other land uses, including a retail district, as specified, and
sites where a density bonus of at least 25% may be granted pursuant
to specified performance standards. The act also authorizes a city,
county, or city and county to require a developer to enter into a
development agreement, as specified, to implement a density bonus
specified in the transit village plan and provides that no public
works project, tentative subdivision map, or parcel map may be
approved, nor zoning ordinance adopted or amended, within an area
covered by a transit village plan unless the map, project, or
ordinance is consistent with the adopted transit village plan.
This bill would revise these provisions to apply to a public
Transit station, as defined, and would revise the density bonuses and
any parking reduction available to project applicants for
commercial, residential, or mixed commercial and residential uses
within 1/4 mile of a public transit station, as specified. The
bill would authorize the city, county, or city and county to revise
an applicant's calculations to conform to these requirements.
The bill would also require that, where the California
Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) applies to an applicant's proposal
for a project, as specified, the environmental analysis shall not
include reduced density or increased parking alternatives or
recommend reduced density or increased parking as a mitigation
measure, unless it is necessary to reduce or avoid a specific,
adverse, and significant impact on public health or safety. If
compliance with CEQA is not otherwise required, the applicant's
request for or the agency's granting of the density bonus or parking
reduction would not make CEQA applicable and would not be interpreted
to require a general plan amendment, rezone, or any other
discretionary land use approval. The bill would also require the
agency to grant the request unless it makes a specified
a finding based on substantial evidence in the
record.
Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: no.
State-mandated local program: no.
THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS:
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AB 779 Assembly Bill - AMENDED Page 2 of 5
SECTION 1. Section 65460 of the Government Code is amended to
read:
65460. (a) This article shall be known and may be cited as the
Transit Village Development Planning Act of 1994.
(b) As used in this article, the following definitions shall
apply:
(1) "Public transit station" means an existing rail station,
cra ~!anncd rail ctation or ferry dock or
landing, or a planned rail station or ferry dock or landing for
which construction funds are committed or programmed.
-~ ' county, it~ .
(~) "~ ...... ~ ~ .......... crcia! ............. ~ ~ retail,
(2) "Commercial" or "commercial uses" means office, retail,
research and development, or public uses.
SEC. 2. Section 65460.2 of the Government Code is amended to read:
65460.2. A city or county may prepare a transit village plan for
a transit village development district that addresses cc..mc
or all of the following characteristics:
(a) A neighborhood centered around a transit station that is
planned and designed so that residents, workers, shoppers, and others
find it convenient and attractive to patronize transit.
(b) A mix of housing types, including multiple dwelling units,
within not more than a quarter mile of the exterior boundary of the
parcel on which the transit station is located.
(c) Other land uses, including a retail district oriented to the
transit station and civic uses, including day care centers and
libraries.
(d) Pedestrian and bicycle access to the transit station, with
attractively designed and landscaped pathways.
(e) A public transit system that should encourage and facilitate
intermodal service, and access by modes other than single occupant
vehicles.
(f) Demonstrable public benefits beyond the increase in transit
usage, including any cr all of the following:
(1) Reduction of traffic congestion.
(2) Improved air quality.
(3) Increased transit revenue yields.
(4) Increased stock of affordable housing.
(5) Redevelopment of depressed and marginal inner-city
neighborhoods.
(6) Live-travel options for transit-needy groups.
(7) Promotion of infill development and preservation of natural
resources.
(8) Promotion of a safe, attractive, pedestrian-friendly
environment around transit stations.
(9) Reduction of the need for additional travel by providing for
the sale of goods and services at transit stations. (10) Promotion of job opportunities.
(11) Improved cost effectiveness through the use of the existing
lnfrastructure.
(12) Increased sales and property tax revenue.
(13) Reduction in energy consumption.
(g) Other provisions that may be necessary, based on the report
prepared pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 14045.
SEC. 3. Section 65460.4 of the Government Code is amended to read:
65460.4. A transit village development district shall include all
land within not more than a quarter mile of the exterior boundary of
the parcel on which is located a public transit station designated
by the legislative body of a city, county, or city and county that
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AB 779 Assembly Bill - AMENDED Page 3 of 5
has jurisdiction over the station area.
For purposes of this article, "district" means a transit village
development district as defined in this section.
SEC. 4. Section 65460.10 of the Government Code is repealed.
SEC. 5. Section 65460.10 is added to the Government Code, to read:
65460.10. (a) Regardless of whether a transit village plan or a
transit village development district is adopted by an
a~cncy, a city, county, or city and county,
applicants for commercial, residential, or mixed commercial and
residential uses within one-quarter mile of a public transit station
shall be entitled to a 25 percent residential density bonus, a
minimum 25 percent commercial density bonus, and a 15 percent parking
reduction as defined ~---~ ~ .... ~^~ in
subdivision (f). A city, county, or city and county shall
consider the granting of a density bonus and parking reduction as
ministerial unless the agency city, county,
or city and county makes the findings in subdivision (g).
{b) On land designated in'an agency's general plan and applicable
zoning ordinance as residential, either single family or multifamily,
an applicant shall be entitled to a residential density bonus of 25
percent more units than the maximum units allowed under the general
plan and zoning ordinance. The applicant shall calculate the
residential density bonus by establishing the maximum allowed density
under the ~cncy's city's, county's, or city
and county's general plan and applicable zoning ordinance and
increasing that number of units by 25 percent, rounded up to the
closest unit. The applicant shall make the request for the
residential density bonus at the time the application is submitted
and shall include the calculations justifying the requested
residential density bonus. Where the applicant's calculations
do not conform with the requirements of this subdivision, the city,
county, or city and county may revise them to so conform.
(c) On land designated in an a~ncy's a
city's, county's, or city and county's general plan and
applicable zoning ordinance for any type of commercial use, an
applicant shall be entitled to a commercial density bonus of a 25
percent increase in square footage more than the maximum square
footage allowed under the general plan and zoning ordinance. The
applicant shall calculate the commercial density bonus by
establishing the maximum allowed square footage under the
-v ....... .... ~'s city's, county's, or city and county's
general plan and zoning ordinance, including applicable setback
requirements, and increasing that square footage by 25 percent.
However, if the calculation results in a partial floor, the applicant
shall be granted a commercial density bonus of more than 25 percent
or a percentage equal to the additional square footage necessary to
construct a complete floor. An applicant granted a commercial
density bonus shall comply with applicable setback requirements and
other restrictions that determine the maximum footprint for the
project, but need not comply with height restrictions that otherwise
might apply. The applicant shall make the request for the commercial
density bonus at the time the application is submitted to the
a~cncy city, county, or city and county
and shall include the calculations justifying the requested
commercial density bonus. Where the applicant's calculations do
not conform with the requirements of this subdivision, the city,
county, or city and county may revise them to so conform.
(d) On land designated in an a~cncy's a
city's, county's, or city and county's general plan and
applicable zoning ordinance for mixed commercial and residential
uses, an applicant shall be entitled to both a residential and
commercial density bonus as set forth in subdivisions (b) and (c).
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AB 779 Assembly Bill - AMENDED Page 4 of 5
The applicant shall make the request for the residential density
bonus or the commercial density bonus or both at the time that the
application is submitted to the z~cncy cityz
county, or city and county and shall include the calculations
justifying the requested bonuses. Where the applicant's
calculations do not conform with the requirements of this
subdivision, the city, county, or city and county may revise them to
so conform.
(e) In the event that compliance with the California Environmental
Quality Act (CEQA) (Division 13 (commencing with Section 21000) of
the Public Resources Code) is required for either a residential,
commercial, or mixed commercial and residential project as described
in subdivision (b), {c), or {d), the project, as defined in Section
21065 of the Public Resources Code, shall include the residential or
commercial density bonus. Project alternatives in any environmental
analysis prepared under CEQA shall not include reduced density
alternatives or recommend reduced density as a mitigation measure,
unless the alternatives or mitigation are necessary to reduce or
avoid a specific, adverse, and significant impact on public health or
safety. In the event that compliance with CEQA is not otherwise
required, the applicant's request for or the agency's
city's, county's, or city and county's granting
of the residential or commercial density bonus shall not make CEQA
applicable. The request for or the granting of a residential or
commercial density bonus, in and of itself, shall not be interpreted
to require a general plan amendment, rezone, or any other
discretionary land use approval.
(f) On land designated in an ~gcncy's a
· tity's, county's, or city and county's general plan and
applicable zoning ordinance as residential, either single family or
multifamilY, any type of commercial, or mixed commercial and
residential uses, an applicant shall be entitled to a 15 percent
parking reduction from the agency's minimum parking requirement. The
parking reduction shall apply to the project in addition to the
density bonus granted pursuant to subdivision (b), (c), or (d). The
applicant shall make the request for the parking reduction at the
time the application is submitted to the agcncy
city, county, or city and county and shall include the
calculations justifying the requested parking reduction. In the
event that compliance with CEQA is required for a project for which a
parking reduction is requested, the project, as defined in Section
21065 of the Public Resources Code, shall include the parking
reduction. Project alternatives in any environmental analysis
prepared under CEQA shall not include increased parking alternatives
or recommend increased parking as mitigation, unless the alternatives
or mitigation are necessary to reduce or avoid a specific, adverse,
and significant impact on public health or safety. In the event that
compliance with CEQA is not otherwise required, the applicant's
request for or the agency's granting of the parking redUction shall
not make CEQA applicable. The request for or the granting of a
parking reduction, in and of itself, shall not be interpreted to
require a general plan amendment, rezone, or any other discretionary
land use approval.
(g) The agcncy city, county, or city and
county shall grant an applicant's request for the residential
or commercial density bonus unless the agency makes a finding, based
on substantial evidence in the record, that (1) the agency
city, county, or city and county has already
adopted a specific plan cra transit cvorlay ~ono
that entitles the development to at least a 25 percent density bonus,
or (2) the residential or commercial density bonus will result in a
specific, adverse, and significant impact on public health or safety
and there is no feasible method available to substantially reduce or
avoid the specific, adverse, and substantial impact to an acceptable
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AB 779 Assembly Bill - AMENDED Page 5 of 5
level.
(h) The agcncy city, county, or city and
county shall grant an applicant's request for the parking
reduction unless the agcncy city, county, or
city and county makes a finding, based on substantial evidence
in the record, that (1) the a~cncy city,
county, or city and county has already adopted a specific plan
cra transit cuss!ay zcnc that entitles the
development to a 15 percent parking reduction, or (2) the parking
reduction will result in a specific, adverse, and significant impact
on public health or safety and there is no feasible method available
to substantially reduce or avoid the specific, adverse, and
substantial impact to an acceptable level.
(i) Applicants shall not be entitled to more than one statutory
density bonus.
(j) Notwithstanding Section 65803, this section shall apply to
charter cities for the reasons set forth in Section 65460.1 and
because denser development around rail stations is an issue of
statewide interest
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CITY OF DUBLIN
P.O. Box 2340, Dublin, California 94568
City Offices, 100 Civic Plaza, Dublin, California 94568
June 20,2000
Assemblyman Tom Torlakson
State Capitol
P.O. Box 942849
Sacramento, CA 94249
RE: AB 779.(Torlakson) Density Bonus: Transit Villages
Notice of Opposition, Unless Amended
Dear Assemblyman Torlakson:
I want to voice my strong opposition to your bill, AB 779 because it preempts
local authority for zoning and planning and is contrary to the best interests of
local government and our community.
Dublin is currently in the process of developing Specific Plans for two transit
villages adjacent to the existing BART station in Eastern Dublin and the future
BART station in Western Dublin. The plans for these areas will include high
density housing (25+ units/acre), hotels, office and retail uses.
The City is meeting the intent of the Bill by building high density housing and job
related office uses that maximize the potential of mass transit and minimize the
reliance on automobiles, especially in our transit corridors. Unfortunately,
mandatory density bonuses and reduced parking requirements would be
detrimental to this process by removing the City's flexibility in negotiating with
developers, and would severely limit the City's ability to plan for the needs of the
community.
Thank you for your consideration of the legitimate needs of local government to
maintain control of our planning and zoning. If you have any questions, or if I can
be of any assiStance, please call me at 925-833-6650.
Sincerely,
Guy S. Houston
Mayor
CC:
Senator Richard K. Rainey
Senate Local Government Committee
Administration (925)833-6650 - City Council (925)833-6605 · Finance (925)833-6640 · B .....
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ATTACHMENT 2
ITEM TO BE ADDED TO AGENDA
Opposition to AB 779-Density Bonus: Transit Villages
It is proposed that the Council add the following item,
Opposition to AB779- Density Bonuses:Transit Villages, to the
agenda as an urgency item, (Item 4.23).
Complete information regarding this issue was unavailable prior
to the printing of the Agenda.
Because AB 779 will be discussed in the Senate Local
Government Committee on June 21, 2000, the Council will need
to vote on this item tonight.
In order to discuss and vote on this item, the Council will first
need a 4/5 vote to add this to the Agenda as Item 4.23 at the end
of the Consent Calendar.