HomeMy WebLinkAboutMinutes 1997-10-01 Mayor Joseph A. Fernekes
Council:
James L. Datzman
Eugene R. Mullin
---qohn R. Penna
Robert Yee
"d
MINUTES
City Council
Municipal Services Building
Community Room
October 1, 1997
SPECIAL MEETING
CITY COUNCIL
OF THE
CITY OF SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO
OCTOBER 1, 1997
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, pursuant to Section 54956 of the Government Code of the State of California, that
the City Council of the City of South San Francisco will hold a Special Meeting on Wednesday, the 1st day of October
1997, at 6:00 p.m. in the Municipal Services Building, Community Room, 33 Arroyo Drive, South San Francisco,
California.
Purpose of the meeting joint session with Planning Commission to discuss:
Wireless communications.
General Plan Update.
3. Design Charette.
City Clerk
City of South San Francisco
Dated: August 29, 1997
AGENDA
ACTION TAKEN
CALL TO ORDER: (Cassette No. 1)
6:05 p.m. Mayor Fernekes presiding.
ROLL CALL:
Council Present:
Council Absent:
Datzman, Mullin, Yee and
Fernekes.
Penna.
Planning Commissioners Present: Baldocchi,
Barnett, Honan, Masuda, Sim, Teglia and Romero.
Wireless communications.
Planning Commissioners Absent: None.
Mayor Fernekes stated Council set direction to try to
keep the meeting to two hours and only go to 8:00
p.m.
10/1/97
Page 1
AGENDA ACTION TAKEN
Wireless - Continued.
:ouncilman Penna Arrived At 6:07 p.m.
10/1/97
Page 2
Chief Planner Harnish stated there are three items
all related to activities of the Planning Commission
and proceeded to introduce the staff and cite their
responsibilities: Senior Planners Steve Carlson and
Susie Kalkin; Consulting Planner Allison Knapp will
deal with Terrabay processing; and Consulting
Planner Michael Lappen handles the front counter,
business licenses and special planning projects.
He stated the wireless is an issue that has been
kicking around for some time and an ordinance was
drafted some months ago and the Planning Com-
mission raised concerns about the policies and regu-
lations and the issues in the City. There is a special
subcommittee with representatives from Council and
the Commission and we discussed direction on how
to proceed with this issue and we have a draft ordi-
nance in front of you, plus samples of ordinances
from other jurisdictions, so you will have a range of
possibilities. Staff has attempted to address this
issue in a straight forward way and it can be com-
plex dealing with some aspects and we felt the best
way is a simple approach, so this has fairly direct
provisions that he will summarize.
He related: first there are certain things permitted
by right which allows it to exist without discretion-
ary or administrative review; antenna placed on
existing structures other than towers in excess of 50'
tall and antenna is limited to 15' tall; if someone
wants to put one on a cellular, that would be permit-
ted by right as long as the antenna is 15' or less; as
regards existing towers that are constructed for
antennas and other towers that fall under the defini-
tion and are not greater than 15' and does not re-
quire equipment and that is by right and requires a
building permit; under the ordinance those two
categories are permitted by right and the second is
permitted through administrative review and the
applicant makes an application to the Planning Dept.
and we have 30 days to approve or deny and add an
additional layer of reviews; antennas 15' or less
added to structures less than 50' tall, for the lower
the building the more apparent the antenna and
being observed by the people or a billboard that
someone wants to add an antenna, then we look at it
in terms of color; the second category included in
the administration are additional antennas on existing
antennas and new equipment; all other facilities that
fall outside that are being reviewed by the Planning
Commission for approval; all city property is ex-
AGENDA ACTION TAKEN
Wireless - Continued.
10/1/97
Page 3
empted from the regulations of the ordinance; if an
antenna was proposed on the Corporation Yard there
would be negotiation by staff and it would be re-
viewed by the City Council, but not go through the
normal permit process; there is a requirement if
there are any problems they would be pulled out and
removed; ordinances adopted in other jurisdictions
are a lot more detailed, but he believes the approach
is the same and provides the public review for those
facilities that raise public concern and the approval
process; there are representatives in the audience
available to answer questions; he had asked the
providers to nominate one of their number to make
one presentation, but the person nominated is not yet
present.
Mayor Fernekes opened it up to discussion and
stated he would rotate back and forth between Coun-
cil and the Commission.
Vice Mayor Mullin stated the first question deals
with the siting of their equipment by right, and he
read the staff report, but was not sure that Daly City
and Petaluma have the same provision of 50' tall
with a building permit. He stated that Kaiser is seen
from his front window, they have a lot of equipment
and could ask for another pole which Kaiser could
permit and then he would see a forest of antennas.
So, if it is not a standard, how did we come up with
that, what is the origin. The problem he sees, if
you have a large building with a large roof area and
if everybody gets into the market and slowly they
get absorbed - he would feel more comfortable by
starting off to have administrative referral rather
than the right to place them. He testified on more
microwave disks and his was a lonely voice, but it
can impact visual impacts based on the location, but
he guesses they don't want staff time devoted to
this. Was consideration given to Daly City's ap-
proach to have certain amounts of distance in the
permitted construction of the facilities.
Senior Planner Carlson stated the cities all have
different standards.
Chief Planner Harnish stated this was based on a
model SAMCAT ordinance. There are a number of
antenna facilities that were permitted by right and
we removed many of those and whittled it down to a
reasonable approach to allow some and it was really
a policy statement. This is a fine line of by right
AGENDA ACTION TAKEN
Wireless - Continued.
10/1/97
Page 4
and administrative review and staff will look at the
antennas that are under the by right category
through the building issues, but we shift that over to
the administrative review and develop a standard to
deal with the proliferation. Daly City's requirement
is 1,000' between the poles. The industry says it
could create hardship and Daly City has the ability
to lessen that if it is a hardship. Staff didn't see that
as a major issue and didn't go into that, but maybe
the industry could cover that.
Planning Commissioner Teglia stated right now basi-
cally everything requires a use permit and comes
before the Commission and through that process we
have the opportunity to sometimes improve that
situation through screening, and depending on the
application whatever changes are appropriate. The
permit process allows us to review it later.
Chief Planner Harnish stated the key is whether or
not we develop standards that the two bodies are
satisfied with to take care of every situation and that
is the key to remove these from the discretionary
review process.
Planning Commissioner Teglia stated these tend to
be unique to each site depending on how the antenna
is mounted on the building.
Chief Planner Harnish stated staff is trying to nar-
row a group of antennas applications as a class that
are innocuous and we could be able to develop
standard administration, and hand out a flyer on the
particular standards to the applicants. We could
address all of those issues so the Commission and
Council are satisfied that they are adequate and
don't need to look at it, but if we could keep on the
process of a use permit for everything it is a bit
more time consuming for the applicant to go
through.
Councilman Penna stated he visited Lockheed with
Cablevision and the first question is, aren't the
antennas getting shorter and smaller.
Ms. Jennifer McCook, Cellular One, stated it de-
pends on each carrier, and she could not speak for
the other carriers, but generally the antennas are
shorter and smaller and it depends on the topogra-
phy. Cellular One is using long antennas and one
antenna has three incorporated into the one.
AGENDA AC!!Q~ !A~N
Wireless - Continued.
10/I/97
Page 5
Councilman Penna stated what Ms. McCook is
talking about is instead of having one you are going
to be getting four or five and it will be larger be-
cause there are more.
Ms. McCook replied, not necessarily, it is hard to
explain as the technology expands and if the tech-
nology does change in two or three years we reduce
the site.
Councilman Penna stated he knows that a bill was
passed prohibiting home owner associations from
controlling satellites on each unit and now State law
has granted that, and under the Freedom of Speech
Act antennas can be restrictive.
Discussion followed: the antennas covered by this
are to implement the zoning controls; on the matter
of newspaper racks, can Council use the same theo-
ry regarding the amount of newspaper racks; City
Attorney Mattas stated local governments do have
authority to place restrictions; Commissioner
Masuda asked if staff should recommend a limit on
the size of towers, say they come up and say they
want to put up a 100' tower so we should have a
maximum so there is no argument; that can be done,
but some may have a strong need to have a
particular height in excess of 65' and there may be
some areas where we do have some heights greater
than that and the 65' is the height limit in the in-
dustrial area; that is why staff has not included it in
the draft ordinance, but you could by policy deter-
mine 65' was the limit as the height limit; Commis-
sioner Teglia stated, aren't we trying to discourage
65' poles; yes, staff recommends a maximum height
of 45'; PG&E and California Water are not exempt
with their towers; true, they are not opposed in the
ordinance; staff talked about the School District; in
the current wording it would have to be controlled
by the City if the land was for joint use, however,
the School District would be exempt; pictures were
circulated of currently proposed antennas by Cellular
One, many are smaller, lower, less noticeable and a
lot depends on the wireless devise used; Vice Chair
Barnett asked shouldn't we, based on the actual
fiscal location and electrical restrictions, try to en-
courage the antennas so all are of the same covering
with the minimum amount of antennas; staff asks
that the applicant give a list of proposed sites and
we encourage them, where their sites are close to
existing facilities, put them on those sites; are
AGENDA ACTION TAKEN
Wireless - Continued.
10/1/97
Page 6
residential sites not allowed to have antennas; that is
all subject to use permits; Vice Chairman Barnett
stated one of the first presentations said your police
and paramedics can have these phones and in the
case of a real disaster has added assistance; he
brought up the question of security, why allow
them, for they can be tampered with and be insecure
and he is not seeing anything that relates to that;
staff feels they are reasonably secure, but not sure
how they can enforce it in the ordinance; there is a
document in the packet that discussed the broad
issues of the wireless and what the officials should
be looking at; these are facilities that will be made
use of in the community and staff's challenge is to
make them less conspicuous; the Chief Planner is
assuming that the providers have done everything
they can to make it secure from a safety viewpoint;
Ms. McCook stated they were very secure in their
radio and telephone equipment which is in cabinets
or in shelters that are tamper proof and bullet proof
with silent alarms in each switch, however, if they
are tampered with ---; Councilman Penna stated
where he was today he was told within 30 days they
are going into operations and they will go into satel-
lites, so in the future why will we need antennas; the
providers will need them in the next six months to a
year, due to expense and reliability the satellite may
not be mature enough and won't be ready for the ev-
eryday user; Councilman Datzman asked the logis-
tics of 65'; Cellular One has micro-seals and large
macros that are 65' or higher to increase clarity,
security and the number of users; Commissioner
Baldocchi stated, going back to the by right, Vice
Mayor Mullin had a concern of the ones at Kaiser
being 50' or above what would the carrier suggest
say we want to put some standards in the ordinance;
what would they suggest, can we paint them a cer-
tain color or box them in to make those antennas on
a 50' building pleasing; it is a condition to grant-
ing a permit and as long as they meet construction
standards then they get a permit; there is some
opportunity to include the standards, but the Chief
Planner thinks the better way is to move them to the
administrative process with the review guidelines
and say we can reduce them into categories and they
require screening or other kinds of decisions; Mr.
Mike Vernetti, Nextel, stated they are on the receiv-
ing end and do whatever the jurisdiction requires,
such as shielding so you can not see the shelters; the
antennas are 10 or 15' on the building, but you
can sometimes mount the antenna on the side and
AGENDA ACTION TAKEN
Wireless - Continued.
10/1/97
Page 7
are facade mounts; they make every effort for the
antennas not to be intrusive as long as it gives us
freedom to use our imagination; every situation is
different and Mr. Vernetti wants to point out the
sites are unique generally, so the Council certainly
can impose guidelines, but you could make them as
flexible as possible; Commissioner Teglia stated the
last few applications received by the Commission
have not had options, like the Basque facade mount-
ing; a facade mounting can be buried beneath the
stucco and that can be in the ordinance; there is a
difference in putting an antenna on an existing build-
ing rather than on a new one, but that can be ex-
plored by staff in the standard of guidelines; Vice
Mayor Mullin stated the County placed an antenna,
a mono pole, in Country Club above Alida and he
had trouble finding it for it was on private property
and was painted green; the reason he had problems
finding it was because all of the utilities were above
ground, and the fact he could not find it showed
efforts to reduce the intrusion; while on the Subcom-
mittee he recalls some of the mono poles had
branches on them to look like trees; we have to
make decisions on what we will allow underground
or above ground and it seems to the Vice Mayor we
can do more if everything is above ground and the
mono pole at fire station number 5 is ugly; he does
not have a handle on how much this is going to
proliferate and the staff report of the various provid-
ers can't provide their plans or where they are going
to go, he guesses for competitive reasons and our
reason is that the community is not impacted by this
type of device; he wants to see the providers' two or
five year plan, so we will know that the community
will not be impacted at the end of that time; the
Sunnyvale ordinance went on and on about the
benefits to the city and we have talked about the
earthquakes and one of these poles may be standing
but what are we getting by allowing the on-rush of
technology before we are ready to handle it; the
Chief Planner stated the broader issue is the service
they provide to the community as a whole, and this
is just the change in wireless communication and the
wireless modem; we are dealing with a temporary
technology and he believes in the future the antenna
will become small and obscure and will be unnotice-
able or we will have satellites; Vice Mayor Mullin
asked, when the facility becomes obsolete are they
required to remove it and are they bonded; Senior
Planner Carlson stated the owner is obligated to
see the facility removed, and we could require a
AGENDA ACTION TAKEN
Wireless - Continued.
10/1/97
Page 8
bond to remove it; Chief Planner Harnish stated
bonds are relatively difficult to enforce, we could
require one, but it is difficult to get the bond compa-
ny to pay off; we have other mechanisms under the
use permit and the City will have some facilities;
staff requires that the providers provide an inventory
of the existing facilities, but don't address the future
because the plans are short range and most compa-
nies only know'plans for a couple of years; Mr.
Vernetti stated their plans only go to the next two or
three years, for the user population is 17% and if
others want the device, then we have to build anoth-
er antenna and that is why we cannot predict, but we
have no objections to telling you what we have on
the drawing board; we have to make an estimate of
what share of the market we will get; Chairman
Romero stated the Commission always asks an appli-
cant for existing and future sites, so they can tell
what to anticipate; Councilman Datzman asked if
the ordinance had been shared with the providers
and was there opposition; Mr. Mark Fuller, GTE,
stated he just received a copy yesterday, so he is not
saying he has a problem, but wants to take a look at
it; Councilman Datzman feels it gives good guide-
lines for staff for the situations and wants to move
ahead; Vice Mayor Mullin stated he would praise
efforts to diminish intrusion; City Attorney Mattas
stated the ordinance has the effect of eliminating
visual intrusions and that is just an implication of
general esthetics, so you can start to look at the
architecture and if you want to be more precise then
direct staff to look at that; Mayor Fernekes stated
direction is, by right, it is to be placed under ad-
ministration review, the second is to determine a
maximum height limit between 50' and 65', encour-
age co-location, there is an issue of security and
Cellular One addressed their boxes or alarms are
contained by their own company, flexibility to
stealth antenna, visual intrusions - that every effort
should be made to go with the areas in underground
and above ground utilities and look at the future
plans of the carriers and try to get from them what
the future brings so both boards are kept abreast;
Commissioner Baldocchi asked if the City can work
with the carriers to co-locate, so it is one location
where we can pick key central areas to put their
equipment and if in that area there is City property
we can encourage their putting it on City property
and we get more revenue; Commissioner Teglia
stated that was one part and the other major part of
Subcommittee discussions was policies and an
AGENDA ACTION TAKEN
1. Wireless - Continued.
RECESS:
RECALL TO ORDER:
2. General Plan Update.
10/1/97
Page 9
aggressive approach to have a location to increase
revenue like the Basque Cultural moving the antenna
back to the City property, but the City was not
interested for that requires planning and cooperation
of the Manager's Office; when an application comes
in then the City Manager looks at it to see if it is in
or near City property; Chairman Romero stated the
City has to monitor whether the towers are going to
continue to be used or are abandoned; Vice Mayor
Mullin asked if there are health risks, for there was
something about notification if someone was work-
ing near it; the Chief Planner thought it was still
unknown.
Mayor Fernekes declared a recess at 7:05 p.m.
Mayor Fernekes recalled the meeting to order at
7:18 p.m., members of both Boards were present.
Chief Planner Harnish explained: we are at a mile-
stone in the general plan; we have finished the basic
data and the boards received a summary yesterday;
staff is looking for comments from Council and the
Commission on the details, particularly when they
prepare the environmental report; the purpose of
tonight's meeting is for consultants to summarize the
documents and identify major issues based on direc-
tion at the last workshop; the project manager and
traffic consultant will address the two bodies and
summarize and discuss with you the next steps; this
will be different from the first workshop and staff is
not looking for a lot of direction, that will come
forward at the next stage, however, he is encourag-
ing a question and answer session.
Vice Mayor Mullin wanted a step by step process,
we have already had a study session, now take me
through where we started and through each step.
Chief Planner Harnish stated we got to the point
now where we have gathered the basic information
and the plans, we have identified your issues and
concerns you want addressed. The next step is to
prepare alternative plans and take a look at potential
alternatives or approaches to develop the land use
plan and policies and look at economic strategies
and the infrastructures of the city. We will look at
alternatives or options and we will focus on specific
areas and some areas are set. Everything is subject
to discussion and the consultants will be focusing on
those and the implications - what kind of policies
AGENDA ACTION TAKEN
General Plan - Continued.
10/1/97
Page 10
that will be subjected, and there will be town hall
meetings for feedback and comment. Once that has
been developed, the alternative scenarios goes out
for comment needs, outside the city family, and
those will be made available to whoever wants it.
An outreach will be conducted, a series of meetings
scheduled and presentations for various Boards and
Commissions' input for inclusion. Some of that has
already been gathered and will continue on and then
the next step beyond that process it will be refined,
the general plan, and go through the formal public
hearing process. The EIR will be attached to the
general plan, whatever preferred alternative.
Mr. Rajeev Bhatia stated it is an interactive process
and when you review the EIR it discusses alterna-
tives which is what we are doing, however, the EIR
is a separate document and will be a formal state-
ment of all the information and analysis. He stated
the last few pages of the document respond to the
issues of the two bodies. Based on their research
we identified other issues and proceeded to explain:
information is organized into topical land use; each
chapter has a summary and we realize not every-
body would be interested in all of it, so look at the
text; some areas have alternatives to resolve the
issues of the policies; we have had to go out and .
collect a lot of information for the general plan, like
preparing land use information; the object is to give
the city a comprehensive plan for other projects
where you want to analyze the plan; there are many
people living outside the city who work here and
vice versa; with the extension of BART to the Air-
port you will be part of this as to how we direct the
marketing forces, for that is the key to the general
plan that we can use for community benefit, because
land is scarce in San Mateo County; he showed
population growth in S.S.F., as well as in San
Mateo County itself; he showed the historic shore-
line with the original homes and the industries to the
east in 1916; the first war growth period; a lot of
the bay had been filled and the growth between 1916
and 1977; there are unincorporated pockets in the
city, but other than that there is no land that is
vacant or what is there is currently proposed for
development; residential continues to be the primary
land use, but freight forwarding uses are not far
behind; how far do we want to go to reuse a site;
what criteria should be used; access from 101 and
use around the BART station; there are several
neighborhoods that do not have good access for
AGENDA ACTION TAKEN
General Plan - Continued.
10/1/97
Page 11
shopping like for groceries; they are looking at the
different neighborhoods with constraints; much of
the areas have conservation plans, like Sign Hill and
San Bruno Mountain, so maybe the City wants to
look at creating wet lands, but at the same time
make sure that the development does not bother the
conservation; the City is built out; 65 CNEL areas
current and those in the future that will change with
the new plan; we are looking for questions on how
this is organized; if you have any burning ideas
that you want us to consider let us know, so we can
focus for it is not the last opportunity for we will be
coming back.
Ms. Jan Barsted briefly went through the transpor-
tation issues: the mode people use to travel through
the City and the automobile and carpool; they have
looked at percentages of people using different
modes of travel; looked at commute patterns and
there is a big correlation of people that reside in
S.S.F. and work else where and we are trying to
connect them; we have looked at agencies that oper-
ate, that regulate the City and agencies that regulate
the funding for transportation; one of the largest
modes of transportation is the automobile and we
have that figure; we have looked at the interchanges
and Chestnut and El Camino; traffic projections are
going to increase and we will see more and more on
the freeways; there are few planned improvements,
but there are discussions of auxiliary roads - one
will be the BART extension, a new station at Hickey
with a projected use of 8,000 daily riders; that is
going to be people that would otherwise be in auto-
mobiles; the other is Caltrain which currently has
100,000 daily riders and because it is restrained and
the Samtrans buses cannot find access to change the
Caltrain Station to increase access; possibly shuttle
bus services could be used for alternative transporta-
tion for now there is no Samtrans service; there are
three shuttle buses that are provided by the compan-
ies and public agencies that fund 75% of the service
that accommodates 700 riders a day; we will look at
trying to manage the demands and encourage car-
pools and bicycle facilities to help people find an
alternative mode; we are addressing the big issues
like trucks parking in some areas where there is no
where to unload and they block the roadways; etc.
Mr. Rajeev Bhatia spoke of the vast material given
the two bodies and wanted to go through the meth-
odology without going through a great deal of detail.
AGENDA A~TION TAKEN
General Plan - Continued.
10/1/97
Page 12
He stated the regional content is very important and
they did a market study analysis and reviewed data
and a forecast. The fiscal analysis is important to
look at the land use and the costs and benefits to
help direct a balanced economy for the City of
S.S.F. They compared the cost of doing business in
S.S.F., new business and on-going business, com-
pared to all of the other cities in the County and
S.S.F. is better. S.S.F. continues to be the engine
of the County's industry base and is 45% of the
County's inventory.
He continued at great length: increasing rental rates
while there continues to be a strong market; need to
look at policies for the future industrial expansion
and the City has taken care of the freight forwarding
land use issue due to the expansion of the Airport;
there are a number of key industries that are con-
tracting regionally in food production that have been
growing in the last five years, and if the Council
wants it, he will be looking to protect that and other
industries; there is more pressure for office develop-
ment; they have looked at the hotel market which is
strong because of the expansion of the Airport and
the growth of R&D and financing is available that
was not available during the recession; the City will
capture one full service hotel; residential housing
will continue to rise and there is pressure to look
at the commercial for residential because of the
demand for housing of all types and prices; and an
employee survey of the 101.
Discussion followed: Commissioner Masuda spoke
of the free shuttle service to businesses east of 101
and questioned why it only has 700 riders; the con-
sultants just reported the facts, but did not do re-
search as to the why, however, they will look at it
because the roadway is constrained and will be
contacting TSM; Commissioner Honan asked if a
ferry line into the City had been looked at; yes, but
it was determined to not be economic, but with
increased employment it might; with the BART
situation how many more people are using the ferry
service; flights over S.S.F. out the gap; height
limitation for airplanes; Councilman Penna wants
further information on the noise issue; to exceed the
limitations they have to get permission from the
Airport Land Commission; they only have control
over land use; Councilman Penna had asked the
consultants to look at surplus SP lines to try to
preserve them as transportation and this is not
AGENDA ACTION TAKEN
General Plan - Continued.
10/1/97
Page 13
in the report; the consultants are not recommending
any policies; Councilman Penna wants the consultant
to recommend a policy that would prevent the own-
ers from using other than corridor transportation;
Commissioner Teglia stated it appears the 8,000
ridership a day of BART will heavily impact our
City and he does not see a benefit unless there is a
bus station to the industrial area; the Hickey Station
is two miles away and the San Bruno Station is one
mile away; single event aircraft noise in neighbor-
hoods; the County believes that land use should
solve congestion; City allocations for housing from
the County; that should be addressed in the general
plan, as well as potential job elements; there is little
land left and we should look at other issues like
shuttles and getting the autos off the road; how can
we encourage people who work here to live here;
making housing affordable; suggestion of going up
in housing, since we can't go sideways, to make
affordable housing; staff is working with BART to
make the BART right-of-way for a bicycle path for
we need to make a plan to entice people to commute
to BART using that pathway; Councilman Yee
suggested having a workshop and narrow it down to
one or two items, because they were not going to
get too much out of this for the document is very
important and time is important; this will bind the
City for 25 years and from here on timing is the
most critical with the Airport expansion; Planning
Commission Chairman Romero was concerned on
the lack of shopping centers, because it is more
difficult to go to the store and we are losing the
grocery stores and are unable to get dog food and
milk so, it is important to revitalize the centers and
attract businesses to service the community for if we
have more people in the next twenty years we need
to service their needs; more aircraft noise in what
were quiet neighborhoods, such as Old Town, that
are below 65 CNEL, yet should have a higher noise
factor; Councilman Penna feels that the noise moni-
toring is not being measured properly; Commission-
er Baldocchi spoke to representatives of Fibergen
that are encouraging their employees to ride their
bike to the train, take the train with their bikes; she
wanted this document to be done right and not have
it be that we missed key opportunities; she was
concerned about the amount of parking spaces in the
proposed BART Station; there will be 1,300 parking
spaces; we are already anticipating an overflow into
the neighborhoods and Commissioner Baldocchi
wants that looked at if possible; Chief Planner will
AGENDA ACTION TAKEN
2,._~ General Plan - Continued.
3. Design Charette.
10/1/97
Page 14
look at that; Mayor Fernekes stated there will be
Kiss and Ride; it is the responsibility of BART to
supply the parking; Mayor Fernekes liked Council-
man Yee's suggestion of a workshop to concentrate
on one or two issues.
Chief Planner Harnish stated the City was ap-
proached by the AIA on whether we thought it
appropriate to put on a charette. These are put on
once a year with the cooperation of a City and a
group of dedicated professionals on issues important
to the community. We involve people from the
community to hear the charette and what it will do
for the City. If the Council has interest in sponsor-
ing the charette and what areas do you want cov-
ered. Also give us direction if you feel it is appro-
priate for a formal proposal and provide $7,500.
After the presentation is made by the members of
the AIA and if you think it is appropriate for the
City to sponsor and direct me to come back for
formal action to authorize the expenditures.
Mr. Jim Griffith, Director of American Institute of
Architects, described the various urban design
charettes they had put on. He stated other members
of AIA were present who have been coordinators of
past charettes.
Mr. Tom Gillman, AIA, stated a charette is a brief
and intense period of time where we look at a spe-
cific problem and people from the outside have a
view, take a look at things with a fresh way and
provide a catalyst. He provided a slide show show-
ing examples of charettes in other cities: they
spread out into teams; they pull up drawings and do
program reviews and there is input from the various
teams; the community is encouraged to participate;
most of the charettes are located in vacant buildings;
they were located in the old library of City Hall
and that charette came together at the instigation of
the Planning Commission for the revitalization of the
downtown as the study area; five years after the
fact, Redwood City still talks about their charette;
they also serve as facilitator and have celebrations
with the community; in Redwood City they made
presentations to the Chamber of Commerce and they
donated wine for the community celebration; etc.
Discussion followed: Vice Mayor Mullin suggested
the charette focus on Grand Avenue/Airport/the
AGENDA ACTION TAKEN
3. Design Charette - Continued.
10/1/97
Page 15
Caltrain intersection intermodel; he also asked how
many teams were put together; they conceptually
monitor every one else, so at the end of the day they
all are on the same team; they did one in San Carlos
and each team took one or two blocks of Laurel
Avenue; so, they are all looking at the landscaping
and looking at the buildings; they worked in Half
Moon Bay; only two or three students are involved;
Commissioner Sim stated this is a good opportunity
for a charette due to the work on the general plan
and asked if more high school students could be
involved; he questioned follow-up after the charette
was made, for he wanted some of the ideas to be
used; the time factor is three months or maybe a
shorter timetable, for it depends upon the areas and
the research; there is work the architects expect staff
to do on site plans and City maps and photos of
buildings; usually student participation is welcomed,
but they use them for menial tasks because there is a
minimal time frame with little time to teach people;
Councilman Penna feels housing for people to live
and work here, and if we are going to do anything,
concentrate on the downtown, the R-3 area, with
high quality housing and improve and expand on the
area; Commissioner Teglia stated the Caltrain station
could be the focus, but as a sidelight, how big can
you stretch it with the housing ideas; maybe look at
it as a corridor, maybe look at crossing 101 as we
did at one time with the Shearwater Project; one
team can look at a broader area, and another team
can look at a specific project, so teams can look at
different levels and you can get a variety of designs;
they did one in Burlingame that was too spread out,
all along the east side, and what happened was that
nothing developed that was concrete; Councilman
Yee stated what was needed in the transit center is
how to integrate 101 to where the people work, the
train station and west of 101 with the businesses
downtown; we can't go over 101, so the only way is
to go under it so that is something the team can look
at; Commissioner Baldocchi stated, if we stay fo-
cused in that area we can go to arteries or up to
Grand Avenue, but we can apply those ideas to
other parts of town; Councilman Datzman stated he
has seen Grand Avenue go backwards, and different
things have occurred and people come up at a meet-
ing and say, how come nothing is happening they
they want to see money spent and something hap-
pen; he still thinks we should do something differ-
ent, for when you look at Fashion Island where they
created an indoor mall and looked at Sacramento
AGENDA ACTION TAKEN
3. Design Charette - Continued.
ADJOURNMENT:
ESPECTFULLY SUBMITTED,
Barbara A. Battaya, City Clerk
City of South San Francisco
and the old town area; he has learned a lot in the
last seven or eight months about the word consen-
sus; he is interested in the charette on the transpor-
tation center and the downtown; Chairman Romero
agreed and said there is a hub for accessing 101 in
both directions, and it is causing a problem to the
east of 101 patrons that service the areas and the
restaurants; he encouraged the Council to go for-
ward with this; Mayor Fernekes stated he was hear-
ing consensus, generally, that the transportation
center and Grand Avenue.
M/S Teglia/Masuda - To adjourn the Planning Com-
mission meeting.
Carried by unanimous voice vote.
M/S Mullin/Datzman - To adjourn the City Council
meeting.
Carried by unanimous voice vote.
Time of adjournment was 9:00 p.m.
APPROVED.
Jos~h'A. ~ernek~MayO"/~
Ci~ of Sot~th San- Francisco
The entries of this Council meeting show the action taken by the City Council to dispose of an item. Oral communica-
tions, 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.
10/1/97
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