HomeMy WebLinkAboutRDA Minutes 1998-02-11 Chairman Eugene R. Mullin M I N U T E S
Boardmembers:
James L. Datzman Redevelopment Agency
Joseph A. Fernekes
Karyl Matsumoto Municipal Services Building
John R. Penna
Community Room
February 11, 1998
AGENDA ACTION TAKEN
CALL TO ORDER: (Cassette No. 1) 7:00 p.m. Chairman Mullin presiding.
ROLL CALL: Boardmembers present: Datzman, Fernekes,
Matsumoto, Penna and
Mullin.
Boardmembers absent: None.
AGENDA REVIEW AGENDA REVIEW
Executive Director Wilson stated there were no
changes to the Agenda.
CONSENT CALENDAR CONSENT CALENDAR
'-"' Motion to approve Minutes of the Regular Meeting of Approved.
1/28/98.
2. Motion to confirm expense claims of 2/11/98. Approved in the amount of $220,476.50.
M/S Penna/Matsumoto - To approve the Consent
Calendar.
Carried by unanimous voice vote.
PUBLIC HEARINGS PUBLIC HEARINGS
3. Public Hearing - To consider California Community Chairman Mullin opened the Public Hearing.
Redevelopment law requirement for each redevelop-
ment agency to adopt a five year implementation plan Coordinator of Economic & Community Develop-
to monitor its progress in meeting both its affordable ment Beyer explained: accomplishments and any
housing obligations under the law and affordable changes proposed to the plan for the next two years;
housing needs of the community; Conduct Public special goals for the five year plan are the elimina-
Hearing; adopt resolution. .5'qO .~ tion of blight, and the use of Agency housing funds
and its plan; activities in the Gateway; there is a
A RESOLUTION APPROVING AN AMENDED modification due to the widening of Oyster Point
IMPLEMENTATION PLAN FOR REDEVELOP- Blvd. and the completion of the Overpass with the
MENT flyover; the El Camino has seen the approval of low
and moderate income housing units and Cosco has
purchased the former Macy's Warehouse with its
massive retail use; there is a significant change as a
result of the BART agreement, for that agreement
2/11/98
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AGENDA ACTION TAKEN
PUBLIC HEARINGS PUBLIC HEARINGS
Public Hearing - Continued. was put together and assumed that the City would
pay for the undergrounding of BART; the signed
agreement provides for BART picking up the plan,
and some of the assumptions will be modified; staff
is proposing to come back to the Agency to amend
the project area boundaries, Willow Gardens, and
Winston Manor Shopping Market; the amendment of
the plan will consider the assumptions and the land
use densities in the project area and the plan has
been modified.
Coordinator of CDBG Fragoso explained that the
housing production portion of the plan has three
requirements - that we produce affordable housing
and replace any housing that is lost and expand the
housing fund according to the redevelopment law
and provides times for doing so. She continued:
the Agency is in keeping with that and has far ex-
ceeded the requirements of redevelopment law; our
housing production, although the Agency has not
produced new housing, but has substantially rehabed
the hotels because they are affordable, which has
allowed us to offset the replacement of some units
lost over the years; we had a deficit of 11 units, but
the rehab has made up for the replacement obliga-
tion; we are reflecting the loss of one or two units
and staff feels we can meet that with the substantial
rehab that has given us production credit; the hous-
ing fund has been expended in a timely fashion with
excellent projects which helped us meet the expendi-
ture of that and the City continues to have a healthy
balance because the tax increases are increasing on a
year to year basis; perhaps the most significant
change is the one in the Downtown Central Devel-
opment where there is potential for development in
affordable housing; the other significant change that
is required by redevelopment law is that 15% of all
housing produced in any redevelopment area, and
that means the Downtown Central, must have 15%
affordable housing; if the developer is not required
by the Agency to construct the affordable units, then
the Agency must assume the obligation; so, staff
proposes to come back at a later date for an ordi-
nance for the Agency to require that developers in
those two project areas produce the affordable units
on site; staff will come back with an in-lieu option
with fees should the developer prove it is unfeasible
to do that; staff feels it is prudent to adopt this and
we will come back with an ordinance at a later date;
2/11/98
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AGENDA ACTION TAKEN
PUBLIC HEARINGS PUBLIC HEARINGS
Public Hearing - Continued. the other significant change is in the El Camino
Project area, for originally it was thought that 3,600
in new housing could be produced, and with staff's
experience with the McLellan project and recent
discussions of changing the density found that 3,600
is unrealistic and that has been scaled back to 500
that would be produced along the corridor reflecting
the lower density that will be discussed with the
Redevelopment Agency.
Chairman Mullin invited anyone wishing to speak on
the item to step to the podium, no one did and he
closed the Public Hearing.
Discussion followed: Boardmember Penna did not
have a problem with this item; Boardmember
Matsumoto stated, this is where our staff should be
going; Vice Chairman Datzman asked, if it turned
out there was a decision for the downtown area what
would the obligation be, and how would it work for
our responsibility; the obligation is a one to one
replacement for the exact bedroom size, but the
single rooms of the hotels have been successful in
saving specific numbers of units; the Board has to
develop a replacement plan and it has four years to
do it; a developer has to provide the 15% affordable
housing, and if that is not feasible on-site, they have
to show us, and we would need a very compelling
reason, for if they do not produce, then it is the
Agency's obligation; it is the Agency that is respon-
sible and we can either assume that and do the con-
struction or require an inclusionary ordinance within
the project area; there has been thinking on whether
or not that could be a Citywide requirement and it is
an issue that will come back, but staff is talking
about the El Camino and the downtown area; this is
only a redevelopment requirement; cities have a way
of coming up with inclusionary clauses for housing
on a smaller scale; City Manager Wilson stated he is
developing some models for senior housing that the
Council could make citywide, take that and say
there is a concern about housing and you want a
mixed type, then many cities have said that all parts
of the City participate; staff has tried to look at all
housing needs; Chairman Mullin questioned "the
property at the corner of Linden and Baden to re-
move blight for the community theater; that is a
typo; why isn't there an accumulative total of pro-
jects; is it the nature of this chart where it does not
2/11/98
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AGENDA ACTION TAKEN
PUBLIC HEARINGS PUBLIC HEARINGS
Public Hearing - Continued. have a total; sharing single family homes; the City
has funded HIP which is a house sharing program
where they assist seniors with little funds to live in a
big house; it is one of the few non-profit agencies
that the Redevelopment Agency can assist; we do
get credit for HIP and Shelter Network in the yearly
reports that go to the State and the Agency will see
those in the block grant application.
M/S Fernekes/Penna - To adopt the Resolution.
RESOLUTION NO. 2-98
Carried by unanimous voice vote.
ADMINISTRATIVE BUSINESS ADMINISTRATIVE BUSINESS
4. Resolution approving loan agreement with MP City Manager Wilson related: following a prior dis-
Greenridg¢ Associates for a multi-family development cussion on Broadmoor Lumber where the City want-
on El Camino for affordable housing. ~'6t~ 3 ed to preserve its commercial property, the Feder-
ated Warehouse property, and at the appropriate
A RESOLUTION APPROVING THE LOAN time when we go into the revision of the plan we
AGREEMENT FOR THE DEVELOPMENT OF shift our residential and look for residential on the
GREENRIDGE AFFORDABLE HOUSING BE- mixed site; the requirement in the redevelopment
TWEEN THE REDEVELOPMENT AGENCY AND area is that 15% of the units be for low and moder-
MID-PENINSULA HOUSING COALITION ate income housing and Greystone has entered an
agreement to provide the housing and Mid-Peninsula
will construct the units. The agreement before
the Agency is to provide a low interest loan agree-
ment to the Mid-Peninsula Housing Coalition to
provide for the construction of 34 units of 940 to
1,500 sq. ft. units. The cost is $5.6 million and the
Agency picks up 17% of the total cost for the units
which allows the City to pick up an additional seven
units under redevelopment law. The City has a
deficit of low and moderate income housing and this
will help with that situation. The report also sum-
marizes the concerns of the loan agreement, eight
will be met and two include that the developer must
include evidence that he has met the commitment. It
includes a property manager after construction is
complete with restricted covenants for low income
housing for 55 years, and specifically points out the
number of low income housing. Staff believes this
is a good opportunity to pick up the seven units and
recommends adoption of the revised resolution.
Counsel Mattas stated he wanted to be sure the name
of the entity is Greenridge Assoc., a partnership,
2/11/98
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AGENDA ACTION TAKEN
ADMINISTRATIVE BUSINESS ADMINISTRATIVE BUSINESS
Resolution - Continued. and the agreement specifically approves the rent
agreement with a promissory note and has a deed of
trust consistent with the loan.
Discussion followed: this is a repayable loan; Mr.
Schwartz stated yes, at 3%; Mid-Peninsula manage-
ment starts with the selection and screening of the
tenants and they advertise widely, although residents
receive first consideration; they look at credit and
rental history, behavior, make a home visit and it is
done through a lottery system; the overall goal is
that any one moving in is a responsible person to the
community and the neighborhood; they have on site
management and someone lives on site and they
have their own maintenance and operate 35 others in
the bay area; is 55 years a long time to keep this as
a low market rate; Mr. Schwartz stated the major
source of financing is the low income tax program
from Federal and State; to get the maximum amount
of funds you have to commit to 55 years, which
they are pleased to do; Chairman Mullin questioned
why the E1 Camino project did not contribute any-
thing to the low income housing; at the time the
implementation plan was required, the El Camino
Corridor was already in, and was somewhat
grandfathered in, and at that time the Council did
not adopt the inclusionary clause.
M/S Datzman/Matsumoto - To adopt the revised
Resolution.
RESOLUTION NO. 3-98
Carried by unanimous voice vote.
GOOD AND WELFARE GOOD AND WELFARE
No one chose to speak.
M/S Fernekes/Datzman - To adjourn the meeting.
Carried by unanimous voice vote.
ADJOURNMENT: Time of adjournment was 7:47 p.m.
2/11/98
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AGENDA ACTION TAKEN
RESPECTFULLY SUBMITFED, APPROVED.
Eugene. Mullin, Chairman
Redevelopment Agency Redevelopment Agency
City of South San Francisco City of South San Francisco
The entries of this Agency meeting show the action taken by the Redevelopment Agency to dispose of an item. Oral
communications, arguments and comments are recorded on tape. The tape and documents related to the items are on
file in the Office of the City Clerk and are available for inspection, review and copying.
2/11/98
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