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<br />City of Santa Ana Planning Commission <br />November 9, 2020 <br />Page 3 <br /> <br /> <br />their effectiveness by applying these parkland dedication requirements to all new market- <br />rate projects, including those smaller than 100 units. <br />Most importantly, we urge the City to take up these Code revisions now. <br />Implementation Actions OS-1.6 and OS-1.15 both defer the amendments until 2022, two <br />years after the City’s planned Update adoption. By deferring implementation for two <br />years, the City would create an extended period of legal uncertainty for developers, City <br />residents and other stakeholders. During this period, the “no net loss of parkland” and <br />expanded parkland dedication requirements for large developments would constitute <br />City policy but would not yet be reflected in the Municipal Code. Projects will need to be <br />consistent with the General Plan policies, but without Code revisions, developers will not <br />know how to comply. <br />The General Plan serves as a “constitution” for the regulation of future <br />development in the City. DeVita v County of Napa (1995) 9 Cal.4th 763, 772. The City’s <br />land use regulations must be consistent with the General Plan. Lesher Communications, <br />Inc. v City of Walnut Creek (1990) 52 Cal.3d 531, 544. To avoid an extended period of <br />inconsistency between the General Plan and the Code and the resultant uncertainty, the <br />City should adopt the Update concurrently with the Municipal Code amendments <br />implementing Actions OS-1.6 and OS-1.15. The City should not take action on the <br />Update until those code amendments are also ready for adoption. <br />By adopting the Update on a rushed timeline, the City also risks creating <br />unintended consequences inconsistent with the City’s affordable housing goals. In our <br />October 6, 2020 letter to the City, which is hereby incorporated by reference, we urged <br />the City to provide for more affordable housing under the Update and avoid undermining <br />the Housing Element and the City’s HOO. As we explained in that letter, the Update <br />would cause substantial population growth, but fails to provide for sufficient deeply <br />affordable housing, increasing the risk of displacement. Moreover, the Update’s <br />upzonings would reduce the HOO’s effectiveness because the HOO’s inclusionary <br />requirements would apply to fewer projects. The Update would therefore impede General <br />Plan Housing Element Policy 2.6, which calls for the inclusion of affordable units in new <br />residential developments via the HOO. The City should avoid this inconsistency by <br />deferring the Update until next year so that it can be adopted concurrently with the City’s <br />new Housing Element, and should simultaneously amend the HOO to ensure sufficient <br />affordable housing production, as discussed in our October 6 letter. <br />