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  • 07/25/2017 8:56 AM | Margaret Fulton (Administrator)

    Proposed updates to the seismic maps covering Santa Monica and the nearby area will have little impact on the way local government regulates construction in geohazard zones.

    State regulators issued proposed updates to local fault maps this month and the documents make slight alterations to the locations of fault lines in the city. City Hall has existing rules for construction within the geohazard zone and those rules will apply to any properties covered by the new borders.

    There are about 3,800 properties within the existing zone and when the new maps are finalized, any new properties covered by the faults will be notified, as will homes that were already covered by the fault map.

    Read More: http://smdp.com/quake-maps-wont-shakeup-seismic-rules/161853


  • 07/25/2017 8:48 AM | Margaret Fulton (Administrator)

    The City Council has long talked about the need to support affordable housing in Santa Monica and a pair of items at this week’s meeting will earmark significant local money for housing construction and preservation.

    The two proposals take different approaches to preserving housing. The first targets the actual housing supply while the second protects vulnerable tenants who could losing housing due to financial stress.

    The first item is a recommendation from the city’s Housing Commission to establish a new housing trust fund.

    The second item on the July 25 agenda would create a pilot program to help low income seniors pay their rent.

    Read More: http://smdp.com/council-to-debate-subsidies-for-affordable-housing/161858


  • 07/24/2017 8:58 AM | Margaret Fulton (Administrator)

    The Downtown Community Plan will have its last public hearing on Tuesday during the July 25 City Council Meeting.

    The zoning document will guide development in the Downtown area between Wilshire, the freeway, Lincoln and the beach. While Council has already revised zoning rules throughout the city, Downtown was specifically excluded from the citywide standards to allow for an area specific plan.

    Read More: http://smdp.com/downtown-zoning-rules-make-final-trip-to-council/161842


  • 07/21/2017 8:22 AM | Margaret Fulton (Administrator)

    He may have received the blessing — and the big bucks — of Silicon Valley’s biggest power players, but Brian Hanlon has one more demographic to charm: developers

    Hanlon is leading California YIMBY, a nonprofit lobbying organization that aims to push pro-housing, pro-development policies through the state legislature. So far, he’s raised $500,000 from tech bigwigs like Microsoft executive Nat Friedman and Pantheon CEO Zack Rosen.

    But developers have remained tepid, despite many sharing his organization’s goal of making housing easier and cheaper to build, he told The Real Deal.

    Read More: https://therealdeal.com/la/2017/07/20/california-yimby-brian-hanlon-on-what-real-estate-insiders-can-do-to-fight-nimbyism/


  • 07/21/2017 7:57 AM | Margaret Fulton (Administrator)

    Like many cities in Southern California, Santa Monica is split between two entrenched camps when it comes to the politics of growth, housing and development. Here’s how Rick Cole, Santa Monica’s city manager — and before that a deputy mayor of Los Angeles, city manager of Ventura and Azusa and mayor of Pasadena — describes the gulf.

    On one side, Cole told me over lunch recently, is the slow-growth or even no-growth faction, “a group of people who think until we have more water, until the air is clean, until traffic is solved, we don’t need even one more brick on top of brick.” For them, any new housing “is too much.”

    Read More:  http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/arts/la-ca-cm-building-type-santa-monica-downtown-20170721-story.html


  • 07/20/2017 5:48 PM | Margaret Fulton (Administrator)

    The Downtown Community Plan. It was bound to get a little ugly.

    With a final vote at City Council next Tuesday, both sides have had their say — community and slow growth groups on one side, the increasingly ubiquitous alliance of business, labor and transit activists on the other.

    As for parking, the really big news is that the city will eliminate minimum parking requirements for new developments and halve parking maximums. And not everyone’s happy about that.

    In a letter to the council, former and soon-to-be-again resident Cosmo Bua alleges that affordable housing is being used as a “sacred cow” to fast-track “projects which provide very little of it” at the expense of residents who have repeatedly called for more green, open space.

    Shifting parking — instead of a park — to Fourth and Arizona, Bua says, is a “slap in the face.”

    Read More: http://argonautnews.com/no-such-thing-as-free-parking/



  • 07/19/2017 11:05 AM | Margaret Fulton (Administrator)

    By Peter Bowes, BBC News, Los Angeles

    Homelessness in Los Angeles County soared by 23% in the past year and it shows. The problem has become tangible and inescapable, with makeshift tent encampments cropping up across the sprawling metropolis.

    The yearly homeless count in Los Angeles County rose to 58,000 in 2017, up from 46,874 in 2016.

    Read More: http://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-40635756

  • 07/19/2017 10:04 AM | Margaret Fulton (Administrator)

    The Rent Control Board has postponed a decision on revisions to construction based rent reduction rules and will now pick up the discussion at their August meeting.

    The Board made the decision this week citing a lack of time to study the proposed revisions and a desire to have all boardmembers present for the discussion.

    Staff released their report in the afternoon of July 11 in advance of a July 13 meeting. The 20 page report recommended language simplification throughout the ordinance and a set of “substantive” changes.

    Substantive revisions included rules requiring a tenant to have suffered some adverse effect before applying for a construction-related rent decrease, clarification of concepts for ease of citation, specifying state any rent decrease will cover the entire duration of construction impacts – not merely those occurring after the date on which the Board sends notice to the landlord that a rent decrease is possible, coordinating requests from multiple units within a single complex, clarifying the confidentially of mediation including notice that the agreements are not confidential themselves and allowing lawyers to participate, requiring tenants to provide a basis for the rent decrease, removing language made moot by past legal cases and equalizing rent decreases based on similar cases.

    While the law does not require a rent decrease for all construction in a rent controlled unit, it does provide for a rent decrease in most cases.

    Read More: http://smdp.com/construction-based-rent-adjustments-coming-back-to-rent-control-board/161778


  • 07/19/2017 9:53 AM | Margaret Fulton (Administrator)

    July 17, 2017 -- The Santa Monica City Attorney's Office last week filed its first lawsuit claiming a landlord harassed tenants by forcing existing roommates who were not on the lease to vacate, officials said.

    The lawsuit was filed Tuesday in Santa Monica Superior Court against Ante Trinidad and the Adel Luzuriaga Trust, the owners of a nine-unit rent-controlled building doing business as SanMo17 Property.

    Read More:  https://www.surfsantamonica.com/ssm_site/the_lookout/news/News-2017/July-2017/07_17_2017_Santa_Monica_Files_First_Tenant_Harassment_Lawsuit_Against_Landlord_%20for_Allegedly_Targeting_Roommates.html


  • 07/19/2017 9:51 AM | Margaret Fulton (Administrator)

    July 17, 2017 -- Can a city, especially one scarred by drought, embrace significant increases in population and new development without dipping deeper into a troubled water supply?

    The City of Santa Monica began testing that equation this month with a law limiting water use for new residential and commercial development to the existing level of use, which is the lowest since the 1990s ("Santa Monica Launches Program to Cap Water Use," June 14, 2017).

    Read More:  https://www.surfsantamonica.com/ssm_site/the_lookout/news/News-2017/July-2017/07_17_2017_Santa_Monica_Water_Neutrality_Law_Begins_with_Trickle_of_Doubts.html


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