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Correspondence - Item #15
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Correspondence - Item #15
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Planning & Building
Item #
15
Date
12/3/2024
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Santa Ana City Council <br /> November 18, 2024 <br /> Page 9 <br /> 2. The Amended Ordinance would unlawfully terminate existing,lawful nonconforming uses <br /> in violation of rights protected by California law and the City's Municipal Code. <br /> A lawful nonconforming use is "one that existed lawfully before a zoning restriction became <br /> effective and that is not in conformity with the ordinance when it continues thereafter." Hansen <br /> Bros. Enters., Inc. v. Bd. of Supervisors, 907 P.2d 1324, 1327 n.l (Cal. 1996) (citing cases). The <br /> nature and extent of the use at the time the use is rendered nonconforming"determines the right to <br /> continue the use." Id. California courts have long held that a party may continue to use their <br /> property even though such use is nonconforming. (Hill v. Manhattan Beach, 6 Cal.3d 279, 285-86 <br /> (Cal. 1971);Livingston Rock& Gravel Co. v. Los Angeles County,43 Cal.2d 121, 127(Cal. 1954); <br /> Edmonds v.Los Angeles County,40 Cal.2d 642, 651 (Cal. 1953);E.B.Jones v. City ofLos Angeles, <br /> 211 Cal.304, 310-311 (Cal. 1930).) The reason is simple: immediate termination of previously <br /> lawful(and now non-conforming)uses would be of doubtful constitutionality. (Livingston Rock& <br /> Gravel Co., 43 Cal. 2d at 127; Edmonds, 40 Cal. 2d at 651.) This follows from "vested rights" <br /> principles, which provide that when a zoning ordinance changes, a property owner may have a <br /> "vested right" to continue the existing use, notwithstanding the newer zoning restriction. (City of <br /> Ukiah v. County of Mendocino, 196 Cal.App. 3d 47, 56-57 (Cal. Ct. App. 1987).) <br /> Santa Ana's proposed Ordinances would violate these principles. Hosts are making lawful uses of <br /> their property, and they have made significant investments in their homes to offer them as STRs. <br /> Settled California law affords them nonconforming use rights to continue their STR use. The <br /> Amended Ordinance cannot legally withdraw those rights. <br /> Prohibiting existing STRs also directly conflicts with the City's Municipal Code, which provides <br /> that legal nonconforming land uses may continue subject to limitations on expansion or <br /> enlargement of the use, or abandonment of use. (See Santa Ana Mun. Code § 41-683 —41-689.) <br /> 3. Recent United States Supreme Court cases establish that the Amended Ordinance would <br /> result in a taking, entitling all hosts of the 700+ existing STRs in the City to compensation. <br /> The Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment safeguards rights deeply rooted in United <br /> States history. Property rights, traditionally viewed as a "bundle of sticks," are crucial to liberty, <br /> with constitutional framers emphasizing private property as bulwark against unlawful exercises of <br /> state power. The right to lease one's property is a critical aspect of these rights, protected by the <br /> Takings Clause of the U.S. and California constitutions, which requires just compensation for <br /> property taken or damaged for public use. <br /> The Supreme Court recently expanded physical takings law to encompass temporary and <br /> intermittent physical invasions similar to deprivations of the right to lease. In Cedar Point Nursery <br /> v. Hassid, the Court held that a regulation requiring agricultural employers to allow union <br /> organizers to have periodic and temporary access to farm workers on the property constituted a <br /> physical (and not aregulatory)taking. (594 U.S.at 143.)Simply put,the"regulation appropriate[d] <br /> for the enjoyment of third parties the owners' right to exclude," which, again, the Court hailed as <br /> "`one of the most treasured' rights of property ownership." (Id. at 149.) The ordinance here not <br /> only impedes on the corollary right to include, it also effectively requires hosts to allow renters <br /> 9 <br />
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