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Item 27 Comments RE: Hotel -Related Zoning Amendment <br />January 16, Z024 <br />Page 4 of 5 <br />the ZOA (i.e., P, C1, Cl-MD, C-SM, C-5, CR, MEMU Office District SD-H Zone III districts).10 While the <br />Land Use Element generally designates these areas as appropriate for multi -family housing <br />densities," the ZOA would effectively incentivize full -service hotel development (i.e., by right) over <br />multi -family residential projects that would generally require zone change or CUP (as discussed <br />above). This outcome runs counter to various goals and policies under the Housing Element,12 <br />which have not been addressed in the Staff Report, CEQA requires any inconsistency to be <br />addressed. (See e.g., Pfeiffer v. City of Sunnyvale (2011) 200 Cal.App.4th 1552,1566; Friends of the <br />Eel River v. Sonoma County Water Agency (2003) 108 CaLAppAth 859, 881.f3) <br />4. PROPOSED STANDARDS ARE WEAR AND DO HOT ADDRESS OTHER ISSUES <br />The Staff Report suggests that new standards applicable to hotels, motels, and full -service <br />hotels will promote hotel amenities and mitigate potential impacts. (See Staff Report, p. 6.) <br />However, the ZOA definitions and standards are general and vague. For example, there is no <br />performance standard to guide future decision -making to ensure impacts are mitigated (e.g„ where <br />and how often are shuttle services for patrons to be provided, what noise levels are acceptable for <br />adjacent uses near hotel projects, etc.).14 (Memo, pp. 6-9 [proposed SAMC §§ 41-199.5 & 41-199.6].) <br />Moreover, the proposed standards do not address numerous potential impacts that hotels can <br />cause, such as displacing housing, green space, low-income residents, or mobile home parks. Nor do <br />the standards address other impacts often caused by hotel development, such as increased vehicle <br />miles traveled ("VMT"), associated mobile emissions that affect air quality and greenhouse gas <br />("GHG") emissions, and removal of native plants and habitat (to name a few). <br />Some of these issues can be addressed through the discretionary approval process via <br />carefully crafted mitigation measures and conditions of approval that may include: contributing to <br />affordable housing; utilizing environmentally friendly construction and operation practices and <br />materials; providing public transit subsidies for workers; including affordable accommodations; <br />offering community spaces; providing unused rooms for temporary housing; and providing public <br />programming when and where possible. These and other issues can he addressed with more, not <br />less, oversight of hotel development -- as required by other nearby cities, as discussed below. <br />to Santa Ana Zoning Map (showing affected areas along Bristol, Main,17th, Grand, Dryer, and Edinger streets <br />[among others]), https://storage.googleapis.com/proudcity/santaanaca/uploads/2022/03/2.-Zoning-FULL- <br />CITY-2023-Feb.pdf. <br />11 Santa Ana General Land Use Plan Designation Map (identifying areas where multi -family density would be <br />appropriate), https://storage.googleapis.com/proudcity/santaanaca/uploads/2022/03/General_- <br />Plan_Land_Use_FAR_2 02 3, pdf. <br />12 Housing Element, supra fn. 5, pp. 10-11 (Goal 2 [foster diversity of quality housing, affordability levels], <br />Policies HE-2.1 (designated range of housing types), HE-2.2 (capitalize on TOD housing development), HE-2.5 <br />(facilitate diverse of housing types like mixed/multiuse housing], HE-2.8 [facilitate creative housing <br />solutions]). <br />13 See also CEQA Guidelines, Appen. G (conflict with any land use plan, policy, or regulation); Pocket Protectors <br />v. City of Sacramento (2004) 124 Cal.App.4th 903, 929 (EIR required to analyze projecfs inconsistency with <br />City land use ordinance for planned developments); Concerned Citizens v. Los Angeles Unified School District <br />(1994) 24 Cal.AppAth 826, 838 (SEIR acknowledged significant adverse impact on affordable housing stock). <br />14 CEQA requires mitigation measures to be performance based. (See e.g,, City of Maywood v. L.A. Unified <br />School DisL (2012) 208 Cal.App.4th 362, 407 [CEQA mitigation must be performance based]; Save Agoura <br />Cornell Knoll v. City of Agoura Hills (2020) 46 Cal.App.5th 665, 688-90 [invalidating MND where there was a <br />fair argument that mitigation lacked specific performance criteria].) <br />