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Item 21 - Public Hearing - Amendments to the Transit Zoning Code (SD-84) Zoning District and Citywide Zoning Code
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Item 21 - Public Hearing - Amendments to the Transit Zoning Code (SD-84) Zoning District and Citywide Zoning Code
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Agenda Packet
Agency
Planning & Building
Item #
21
Date
5/6/2025
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ZOA No. 2024-02 & AA No. 2024-03 (Transit Zoning Code Amendments) <br />May 6, 2025 <br />Page 5 <br />information regarding environmental conditions impacting residents in the Logan and <br />Lacy neighborhoods. Recent CalEnviroScreen 4.0 data confirms that these <br />neighborhoods rank at 90% or above among California's most pollution -burdened <br />communities, with Environmental Justice (EJ) maps showing higher exposure to <br />Particulate Matter (PM) 2.5, Air Toxics Cancer Risk, Hazardous Waste Proximity, Diesel <br />Particulate Matter, and Toxic Releases to Air. This information is included as Exhibit 4 to <br />this staff report. These multiple sources of environmental exposure and pollution burden <br />communities of color, including the Logan and Lacy neighborhoods, present an alarming <br />set of challenges that affect residents' quality of life and life expectancy with continued <br />heavy industrial uses nearby. <br />Senate Bill (SB) 1000 went into effect in 2016, requiring local governments to address <br />pollution and other hazards that disproportionately impact low-income and communities <br />of color within their jurisdiction to proactively plan for and address environmental concerns <br />when developing and updating components of the General Plan. The City and community <br />worked to ensure that the new General Plan included SB 1000 requirements of <br />addressing EJ through facilitating transparency and public engagement in the planning <br />and decision -making processes, reducing harmful pollutants and the associated health <br />risks in disadvantaged communities, and promoting equitable access to health -inducing <br />benefits such as healthy housing options. Of note, the City's new General Plan mixed - <br />use land use designations in the TZC area were largely left intact, including those in the <br />Lacy and Logan neighborhoods, when the General Plan Update was adopted in 2022. <br />Environmental Justice/Disadvantaged Communities (DACs) Profile: Logan and Lacy <br />Neighborhood Impacts <br />For the Logan and Lacy neighborhoods, incompatible land uses allowed from past zoning <br />decisions, including the industrial overlay zones, have perpetuated the practices of <br />locating industrial uses or other noxious and unwanted uses near communities of color. <br />The Logan and Lacy neighborhoods have a population of 5,907 within 1,564 households, <br />a median household income of $56,864, average household size of nearly four persons, <br />median age 27 years, and per -capita income of $23,495. Seventy-four percent (74%) are <br />renter -occupied units based on demographic forecasts for 2023. Nearly 25% of the <br />population is under 14 years of age, and 14% are 55 years of age and older. Nearly 3% <br />of the population attended up to 12th grade with no diploma, over 31 % are high school <br />graduates, and nearly 97% of the working population over 16 years of age are employed.' <br />This data illustrates that the Logan and Lacy neighborhoods are within the second and <br />third highest scored census tracts in Santa Ana, each with a composite score of 90% or <br />greater, ranking in the 90th percentile or greater of census tracts in the State, and identified <br />ESRI Community Analyst summary data, which utilizes U.S. Census Bureau sources (2017-2021 <br />American Community Survey & 2020 Decennial Census Data), enhanced by ESRI's forecasts and <br />aggregations, covering demographics like population, income, age, and employment. <br />
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