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neighborhood maps provided by the City of Santa Ana makes the claim by the project <br />management team the project site is not part of the Park Santiago neighborhood as a false <br />claim (https://www.santa-ana.org/neighborhood-initiatives/community-engagement- <br />and-volunteer-opportunities). In making this false claim the project management team <br />again indicates that it sides more closely with the Developer than with the residents of <br />Park Santiago. Again it should be reiterated, the six parcels identified for use in this <br />development, contrary to what the project management team is claiming, are part of the <br />Park Santiago neighborhood and any justification using an argument that the parcels are <br />not is totally false and should be rejected by the City Council. <br />7. The number of proposed parking spaces planned for the project has always been a major <br />concern with the residents of Park Santiago. With insufficient parking made available for <br />the residents there will be renters who will park their vehicles along Bush Street and <br />Spurgeon Street. As evidence of this one only needs to view the excessive number of <br />vehicles from a nearby apartment complex parked along Santiago near 17th Street. The <br />Developer has planned for 904 spaces of which 150 (17%) are identified as tandem parking <br />for the 496 units or a rate of 1.80 parking spots per unit. The Request for Planning <br />Commission Action in Table 9: Parking Per SAMC Section 41-1322 Multi -family Dwellings <br />notes that for a project of this size the Santa Ana Municipal Code (SAMC) requires 1,420 <br />spaces or a ratio of 2.86 spaces per unit. However, the project management team has <br />elected to disregard the SAMC requirements and allow the Developer to provide <br />significantly less. However they again side with the Developer by saying that the SAMC is <br />outdated and the parking requirements were established in 1997. To assume that the <br />number of vehicles per household unit has decreased in number since 1997 is a naive <br />statement, in fact the opposite is true. The project management team again has sided with <br />the Developer and will allow significantly less than the SAMC mandated 1,420 parking <br />spots. An attempt is made to address the Park Santiago residents concerns regarding <br />inadequate parking by making it a requirement to have a minimum of 952 spaces or 2.0 <br />spaces per unit. Compounding this decision the project management team has agreed <br />with the Developer's assertion that the 2.0 parking spots per unit can be obtained through <br />the use of valet services. Valet services for apartment dwellers is illogical. The project <br />management team admitted during the January 14th Planning Commission meeting that <br />the use of valet parking to address a shortage of parking spaces had never been used for a <br />multi -family apartment complex in Santa Ana before. Besides, who will be waiting for a <br />valet to bring them their car so that they can run to the store for groceries? Where will <br />the valet parkthese extra cars, in the Park Santiago neighborhood? The City Council should <br />not allow this project to violate the SAMC parking requirements of 2.86 spaces per unit. <br />Nor should the project be allowed to use valet services to meet the requirement. <br />8. As noted in the Request For Planning Commission Action Table 6: Professional Zone <br />Comparison, the project will reduce the current set back from the east property line <br />nearest to the existing homes on Spurgeon Street from 50 feet minimum to 40 feet 7 inches <br />minimum. It also reduces the existing requirement of 25 feet maximum height within <br />approximately 240 feet of the east property line to 40 to 66 feet. Both of these changes <br />will significantly impact the home owners who reside on Spurgeon Street adjacent to the <br />project and contributes to the negative aesthetic impact which the EIR noted as being <br />