2006-11-21 Joint CC CIC MinutesMINUTES OF THE SPECIAL JOINT CITY COUNCIL
AND COMMUNITY IMPROVEMENT COMMISSION MEETING
TUESDAY- -NOVEMBER 21, 2006- -7:32 P.M.
Mayor/Chair Johnson convened the Special Joint Meeting at 9:12 p.m.
ROLL CALL – Present: Councilmembers/Commissioners Daysog,
deHaan, Gilmore, Matarrese and
Mayor/Chair Johnson – 5.
Absent: None.
* * *
Councilmember/Commissioner Daysog left the dais at 9:12 p.m. and
returned at 9:15 p.m.
* * *
CONSENT CALENDAR
Councilmember/Commissioner Matarrese moved approval of the Consent
Calendar.
Councilmember Commissioner deHaan seconded the motion, which
carried by unanimous voice vote – 4. [Absent: Councilmember/
Commissioner Daysog – 1.] [Items so enacted or adopted are
indicated by an asterisk preceding the paragraph number.]
(*06-568CC/*06-068CIC) Minutes of the Special Joint City Council
and Community Improvement Commission (CIC) Meeting held on October
17, 2006, the Special CIC Meeting held on November 1, 2006, and the
Special Joint City Council and CIC Meeting held on November 14,
2006. Approved.
(*06-569CC/*06-069CIC) Recommendation to accept the FY07 First-
quarter Financial Report and approve budget adjustments. Accepted.
AGENDA ITEMS
(06-570CC/06-070CIC) Presentation of Concept Plans for Northern
Waterfront Development and recommendation to approve an Exclusive
Negotiation Agreement with Encinal Real Estate, Inc. for relevant
properties within the Northern Waterfront redevelopment area.
The Development Services Director gave a brief presentation.
Ellen Lou and Carrie Byles, Skidmore, Owings and Merrill LLP
[Architects], provided a power point presentation.
Special Joint Meeting
Alameda City Council and Community Improvement Commission
November 21, 2006
Vice Mayor/Commissioner Gilmore stated the staff report indicates
that the Northern Waterfront Specific Plan (NWSP) would come to the
Council/Commission in January; inquired why the Council/Commission
is looking at the project now; stated that she was on the NWSP
Committee; the School District owns a piece of property on the
site; inquired whether a deal has been reached with the School
District; stated bringing the project forward without said deal is
premature; the applicant has not gone through community workshops
to see if the public thinks the project is a good idea; the process
seems backwards.
The Development Services Director stated the process is very
forward; typically staff time is spent whittling though issues
before anything is in any kind of condition to go out to the public
because of just the questions asked; the request is before the
Council/Commission because staff is going to spend a lot of time on
the project; staff wants to set up a cost recovery mechanism
upfront because of the size and scale of the project; consultants
need to be hired to help staff deal with some of the questions and
issues, such as cost and feasibility; a Settlement Agreement with
the School District in 2000 gave the District rights to certain
properties within the State Tidelands area; the School District’s
intentions have to be worked out.
Vice Mayor/Commissioner Gilmore inquired whether staff or the
developer would work with the School District.
The Development Services Director responded staff would work as a
team with the developer; stated the State Tidelands properties are
leased to Encinal Real Estate until 2029; however, the City manages
the lease; a joint effort has to be made; the City deals with more
real estate transactions than the School District and could help
set out an outline of what needs to be evaluated and a path of
actions which need to be accomplished to bring a decision to
completion.
Mayor/Chair Johnson stated the School District was not allowed to
go onto the property to complete environmental testing; the School
District was considering filing a lawsuit to access the property.
Peter Wang, Encinal Real Estate, Inc., stated the City compensated
the School District for loss of the Mastick Senior Center around
2000 by trying to assign the lease to the School District; the
State Tidelands Commission turned it down because the Tidelands
Trust designates use for maritime and commercial/public; the land
cannot be used for a school; the City Manager at the time signed an
extension of lease and an estoppel certificate; said documents were
e-mailed to the City today.
Special Joint Meeting
Alameda City Council and Community Improvement Commission
November 21, 2006
Mayor/Chair Johnson inquired whether Mr. Wang is indicating that
the School District does not have a legitimate right to property
within the area.
Mr. Wang responded that he does not know of the school district
having a legitimate right; stated the City never officially
transferred the leasehold to the School District.
Mayor/Chair Johnson inquired whether the School District agrees
with Mr. Wang, to which Mr. Wang responded that he does not know.
Mayor/Chair Johnson stated the issue must be resolved before the
Council/Commission considers anything on the property.
Mr. Wang outlined the amount he has spent on studies; urged moving
toward a solution.
Mayor/Chair Johnson stated that she concurs with Vice Mayor/
Commissioner Gilmore that the matter seems to be coming in the
wrong order; the developer is requesting a subsidy; the developer
needs to bring forward a project, not a concept, before subsidy is
discussed; the Concept Plan does not appear to be compliant with
Measure A; she is concerned that the project would have priority
over other projects and is not convinced the City should commit to
do so; she concurs with Vice Mayor Gilmore questioning why the
matter should be addressed prior to completion of the NWSP.
Councilmember/Commissioner Daysog stated a letter from a member of
the public raised the concern that there would only be two public
hearings on the matter; there needs to be a commitment to more
public hearings if the project happens at all; the public should be
involved through the Planning Board or a process; City Hall has to
be prepared to juggle a lot of balls; the NWSP is coming forward;
City staff can deal with the School District issues; everything can
happen on parallel tracks; a commitment for greater public
involvement is needed; the Concept Plan needs to be flexible; the
NWSP might have ideas on the use and access of public space, which
might differ from the Concept Plan; the NWSP would take priority
over the Concept Plan.
Mr. Wang stated the Concept Plan is based upon the NWSP.
Councilmember/Commissioner Daysog stated the NWSP has not been
adopted; although the Concept Plan might be consistent with the
NWSP now, the NWSP could change when presented in January.
Former Councilmember Barbara Kerr, Northside Association, stated
Special Joint Meeting
Alameda City Council and Community Improvement Commission
November 21, 2006
the concept of Clement Avenue extension has been around for 45
years; Clement Avenue extension was clearly in place when Mr. Wang
bought the property; she has had it with the resistance to
implement the Clement Avenue extension; the neighborhood and future
West End project need the Clement Avenue extension in order to get
traffic to the bridges on the East End; the process is backwards;
the Planning and Building Department has not reviewed the project,
which is the normal process; the project should be under the
Planning and Building Department, not Development Services; the
City can ask developers for concessions; the NWSP is not approved
yet.
Jean Sweeney, NWSP Committee Member, outlined the history of street
closures for Alaska Packers; stated history should not be repeated;
a road needs to be in place before the development is considered;
traffic would be generated and Buena Vista residents would come
forward if the road is not in place.
Jay Ingram, Alameda, submitted a letter from Rosemary McNally and a
copy of his comments; stated the process is backwards; urged the
Council/Commission not to approve the ENA and to slow down and get
the community involved with plans viewed by the Planning and
Building Department, Planning Board and other commissions.
Valerie Ruma, Alameda, submitted comments; urged the
Council/Commission not to approve the ENA because the Concept Plan
should comply with the NWSP, which has not been approved; stated an
ENA is a tentative agreement to a certain schedule to proceed;
inquired how a schedule could be agreed upon when there is no
concrete idea of what is being planned; further stated the
Conceptual Plan is nothing more than a creative meandering; urged
keeping the community involved and not approving the ENA; stated
the plan should go through the regular process and be submitted to
the Planning and Building Department.
David Kirwin, Alameda, submitted comments; stated rolling into an
ENA without public and community involvement is of concern; that he
does not understand the necessity of an ENA; questioned who else
the City could negotiate with other than the applicant; stated
requests for public concessions and money are concerning; AUSD has
a right to some property; the application to the State Lands
Commission for the [property] swap could proceed without an ENA;
negotiations could go forward; a formal agreement is not needed to
allow communication to continue.
Councilmember/Commissioner Daysog stated there might appear to be
two approaches: 1) going step-by-step ironing out inconsistencies
with the NWSP, school land issues, and dealing with Clement Avenue
Special Joint Meeting
Alameda City Council and Community Improvement Commission
November 21, 2006
extension issues, or 2) work on parallel tracks; however, there are
not two approaches; the NWSP is to come before the Council in
January; there is not a rush to do the ENA; the ENA could come back
in January; there is a case for working rapidly on parallel tracks;
the City has done so successfully in the past with the Catellus
project; that he would encourage a commitment to more public input;
although an ENA might not be approved tonight, it is not the end;
the NWSP will be presented and the Concept Plan can be compared
very soon.
Mayor/Chair Johnson stated that she understands why staff is
proposing the ENA, but approving the ENA now would be the wrong
order; noted ENAs have been used in the past when someone does not
own the property.
The Development Services Director stated 6.78 acres are Tidelands
property controlled by a City lease and not owned by Mr. Wang.
Mayor/Chair Johnson stated a project application should be
submitted before considering a subsidy; the City should not commit
to prioritizing staff time to a project in the concept stage.
Councilmember/Commissioner Matarrese concurred with Councilmember/
Commissioner Daysog about moving a number of northern waterfront
elements along together; however, the Economic Development
Commission (EDC) and Planning Board have brought creative concepts
to reality in the past, which allows many opportunities for public
comment; the NWSP should be in place before the boards consider the
matter; an ENA is premature until the concept goes through the
process and there is a project; an appropriate project could be
brought to the CIC after being sifted and vetted; the community
would have an additional opportunity to comment when the matter is
brought back to the CIC to determine if the project is worth the
benefit.
Councilmember/Commissioner deHaan stated that he does not want to
discourage Mr. Wang from going forward with the creative project;
the concept has not been flushed out in its entirety; his concern
is the departure from the past practice; the sequencing is
different; the procedure needs to be approved if it is the mode in
which developments are going to be done; the current procedures in
place should be followed; there should be an in-depth discussion,
if the development mechanism is changing; the existing process
works or should be addressed as an agenda item if it does not work;
an ENA is not appropriate; urged Mr. Wang to go forward; stated the
Planning and Building Department needs to work with Mr. Wang to
make it happen, flush out options and give the community an
opportunity for involvement moving forward.
Special Joint Meeting
Alameda City Council and Community Improvement Commission
November 21, 2006
Mr. Wang noted that the plan presented meets Measure A
requirements; stated every lot is a minimum of 2000 square feet.
In response to Mayor Johnson’s inquiry regarding high-rise housing,
Mr. Wang stated the high-rise is for senior citizen assisted
living.
Mr. Wang further stated an ENA is needed because the project is
very complicated.
Mayor/Chair Johnson encouraged Mr. Wang to ensure whatever plan he
brings forward is Measure A compliant.
Councilmember/Commissioner Daysog stated that he recognizes the
need for an ENA; developers need a degree of certainty about the
developer’s and City’s responsibilities before moving forward with
the preliminary parts of a project; the ENA process would flush out
the details about what is wanted for the northern waterfront; the
ENA process would determine whether public financing should be tax
increment financing or mello roos; the process flushes out the land
use design details, financials and other issues, such as Measure A
compliance and Clement Avenue extension; he is confident issues can
be dealt with; however, there has to be a lot more public input and
an understanding that the plan might change through the ENA process
as the NWSP comes forward; the Concept Plan cannot trump the NWSP;
urged Mr. Wang to keep his team together and bring the matter back
rapidly if the ENA is not approved tonight.
Mr. Wang stated that he is not asking the City to issue any bond,
tax increment or mello roos financing; however, he cannot get
private financing without the ENA and DDA; he can afford seed
financing for study, but needs bank support for the development.
Councilmember/Commissioner deHaan stated waiting for the NWSP to
come forward should not stop Mr. Wang from working with the
Planning and Building Department and Development Services; noted
most developers would not take on lagoons; encouraged Mr. Wang to
continue and directed staff to work with Mr. Wang.
Mayor/Chair Johnson stated direction needs to be included in a
motion; stated there is very little information on the project,
such as the number of residential units and building height; too
much is being requested based on a concept; staff time should not
be directed until an application is put forward.
Mr. Wang noted the land exchange might take three to four years.
Special Joint Meeting
Alameda City Council and Community Improvement Commission
November 21, 2006
Mayor Johnson stated a project application is needed before
prioritizing staff time on the project.
Mr. Wang stated that he cannot submit a project application until
he knows what the project should be; said work requires staff time;
otherwise years continue to go by without anything being completed;
encouraged the Council/Commission to direct staff to work with him;
stated that he could provide the City with tentative maps
applications.
Mayor/Chair Johnson stated that the Council/Commission does not
know how many units are being proposed.
Mr. Wang stated approximately 200 housing units are proposed.
Mayor/Chair Johnson inquired how many square feet of commercial and
retail space are proposed, to which Mr. Wang responded 200,000
square feet.
Mayor/Chair Johnson stated another way to work out cost recovery
needs to be figured out if staff believes it is appropriate to
dedicate a lot of staff time to the project; cautioned against
prioritizing staff time at the expense of other projects that have
been waiting to move forward, including individual homeowner
projects.
Mr. Wang stated privately funded projects can move forward much
faster than the Naval Air Station project; perhaps tax increment
could be used for the City’s next project.
Councilmember/Commissioner Matarrese moved approval of postponing
an ENA until the following occur: 1) that there is an approved
NWSP; 2) there is an application or staff can move forward on the
project as a project, not a concept, concurrent with public
hearings at the EDC because tax increment money was mentioned, and
at the Planning Board because projects at said stage rightfully go
through the Planning Board for screening before returning to the
CIC.
Mayor/Chair Johnson inquired whether Councilmember/Commissioner
Matarrese’s motion refers to the ENA returning to the CIC for
consideration, to which Councilmember/Commissioner Matarrese
responded in the affirmative.
Councilmember/Commissioner deHaan requested Councilmember/
Commissioner Matarrese to clarify whether the Planning Board and
EDC addressing the issue would be the opportunity for the community
input and outreach that would occur; stated how the community would
Special Joint Meeting
Alameda City Council and Community Improvement Commission
November 21, 2006
be engaged is a concerning factor; inquired whether the Planning
Board and EDC would be the appropriate forum.
Mayor/Chair Johnson stated there is a City process for engaging the
community; the project proposer has their own outreach
responsibility.
Councilmember/Commissioner Matarrese amended the motion to include
direction to have the developer work with the public within the
process prior to bringing back an ENA.
Councilmember/Commissioner Daysog stated the public process
outlined is very preliminary because the ideas presented are
conceptual; that he likes the idea of having public input on the
preliminary aspect; encouraged work be done within a quick
timeframe following NWSP adoption; encouraged additional public
meetings also be held after the public input which would occur
prior to the ENA.
Councilmember/Commissioner Matarrese stated after the NWSP is
approved there would be a measuring device that could be used and
would help the applicant fine-tune his concept; the EDC should
probably be the first stop because the EDC deals in concepts; the
Planning Board would be subsequent; there would be a chance for the
public to visualize from concept to economics to hard planning
issues and comment at least three to four times prior to the EBA
coming back.
Vice Mayor/Commissioner Gilmore stated that she would add
encouraging the applicant to set up a meeting with the neighbors
and neighborhood association regardless of the City’s public
process; sometimes neighbors cannot attend public meetings and the
applicant could set up the most convenient time for the neighbors
who would be the most directly affected by the development and the
most well versed in the history of the site.
Mayor/Chair Johnson stated the motion should set forth minimum
requirements, not maximum requirements because there might be some
steps not being raised tonight; the Council/Commission should not
necessarily set a timeframe because pushing the project through is
not the City’s job.
Councilmember/Commissioner deHaan stated the motion should address
concerns about Clement Avenue extension and its impacts, which
hopefully are addressed in the NWSP.
Mayor/Chair Johnson stated the matter might need to go to the
Transportation Commission.
Special Joint Meeting
Alameda City Council and Community Improvement Commission
November 21, 2006
Councilmember/Commissioner Daysog stated there ought to be a goal
or timeline for the initial EDC and Planning Board public meetings;
the meetings should happen soon after the NWSP is adopted in
January or February.
Mayor/Chair Johnson stated the timing depends upon when further
information is developed and there is a more specific plan; how
much time it will take is not known; it is too early to start
setting timeframes.
Councilmember/Commissioner Matarrese stated it is important to have
the Transportation Commission review prior to the ENA returning for
a vote as well as adding in a minimum expectation that the
applicant makes direct contact with the neighborhood association
and neighbors of the site; said additions [to the motion] are good;
Councilmember/Commissioner Daysog’s point is that the issue should
be revisited to determine the timing once the NWSP is approved;
timing might not be known; the Council/Commission should receive a
report indicating the applicant’s status and the potential for
meeting with the EDC and Planning Board within a month of the NWSP
being approved; the Council/Commission can decide what direction to
take at said point and the update would afford another opportunity
for public input.
Councilmember/Commissioner Daysog stated Councilmember/Commissioner
Matarrese’s recommendation is reasonable.
Councilmember/Commissioner Matarrese stated an update on the status
would return to the Council/Commission.
Councilmember/Commissioner Daysog stated the developer or someone
else would have to make the case to bring the matter back sooner
rather than later.
Councilmember/Commissioner deHaan suggested the Recreation and
Parks Commission address the issue.
Mayor/Chair Johnson stated the action would set the minimum; there
could be other commissions.
Councilmember/Commissioner Matarrese stated said matter should be
discussed at the meeting addressing the status because then the
plan may start talking about a public park in more real terms; the
developer is doing a lot of work that may be moving the project
along quite fast and items might become a project sooner than
anticipated; said information would not be known until the NWSP is
passed.
Special Joint Meeting
Alameda City Council and Community Improvement Commission
November 21, 2006
Councilmember/Commissioner Daysog stated the outline of the public
input process would return following the NWSP adoption; there
should be a commitment to enter into an ENA if the developer
satisfies the public input meetings.
Mayor/Chair Johnson stated said commitment cannot be made now; the
ENA would come back for consideration; the Council/Commission
should not commit to entering into an agreement if the developer
completes various steps; the Council/Commission might decide an ENA
is not appropriate when the matter returns; it is not the
appropriate time to consider the ENA; after the proposed meetings
is the correct time to consider an ENA, but the Council/Commission
is not committing to approval.
Councilmember/Commissioner Matarrese stated the process allows for
reaching the correct point to consider an ENA.
Councilmember/Commissioner deHaan stated the process allows
consideration [of an ENA]; however, he is not sure an ENA is
necessary; he does not know whether the 6.7 acres [of Tidelands
property] kicks in the need for an ENA.
Councilmember/Commissioner Matarrese stated said discussion would
occur when the ENA returns; the City would have the benefit of the
NWSP, additional public input and board/commission deliberation at
said time.
Councilmember/Commissioner deHaan seconded the motion with the
modifications.
Councilmember/Commissioner Daysog stated although he would like an
understanding that the City would enter into an ENA, he is
satisfied that there is a process in place once the NWSP is
adopted.
Mayor/Chair Johnson stated the steps that the City expects the
applicant to complete would lead to consideration of an ENA;
however, the City is not committing to enter into an ENA upon
completion of said steps; the process is normal; the City does not
commit to an agreement with a developer when all the City has is a
concept.
Councilmember/Commissioner Daysog stated the normal process is the
developer comes forward with a concept, which is reviewed for
consistencies with applicable plans; the plan is presented to the
public, which involves being flexible; entering into an ENA is
reasonable once said processes are completed.
Special Joint Meeting
Alameda City Council and Community Improvement Commission
November 21, 2006
Mayor/Chair Johnson stated there might be an ENA or some other
agreement or no agreement at all.
On the call for the question, the motion carried by unanimous voice
vote – 5.
(06-571CC/06-071CIC) Joint Public Hearing to consider the
Proposed Sixth Amendment to the Community Improvement Plan for the
Business and Waterfront Improvement Project.
Mayor Johnson opened the public portion of the hearing.
Proponents: None.
Opponents: None.
Neutral: Former Councilmember Barbara Kerr, Alameda; and Bill
Smith, Alameda.
Councilmember/Commissioner Matarrese requested staff to respond to
Ms. Kerr’s comments regarding the use designations.
The Development Services Director stated land use changes in the
current redevelopment plan would make it consistent with the
General Plan; the modifications to the CIC’s land use map are being
made in order to have it conform with the City’s General Plan.
Councilmember/Commissioner Matarrese inquired whether the General
Plan has the designation of Community-Commercial (C-C), which is
the designation he is familiar with for all of the stations;
inquired whether there is an error and requested someone to check.
The Development Services Director responded that she does not have
a way to check tonight; the documents were reviewed by the Planning
and Building Department staff because the General Plan needed to be
overlaid onto the land use map; the language in the plan amendment
being considered would make the General Plan the dominant land use
document; the General Plan, as amended from time to time, would be
the guiding land use plan.
Councilmember/Commissioner Matarrese requested the land use map be
modified to match the General Plan if the General Plan has the C-C
designation; stated the City needs to get on a path to amend the
General Plan if C-C is not the General Plan designation; the
stations have always been referred to as C-C; said change would be
an administrative change; the General Plan needs to change if it
has the medium density residential designation.
Special Joint Meeting
Alameda City Council and Community Improvement Commission
November 21, 2006
The City Manager stated staff would check for consistency with the
General Plan; the matter would be addressed if the General Plan
does not reflect C-C.
The Development Services Director stated separate land use maps for
the CIC improvement areas would be done away with and default to
the City’s General Plan; the General Plan would become the
dominant, guiding principle behind all land use evaluations for the
CIC.
In response to Mayor/Chair Johnson’s inquiry regarding when said
change would take place, the Development Services Director stated
the amendment is being considered tonight.
Mayo/Chair Johnson inquired whether the action tonight is the last
step, to which the Development Services Director responded in the
affirmative.
There being no further speakers, Councilmember/Commissioner
Matarrese moved approval of closing the Public Hearing.
Vice Mayor/Commissioner Gilmore seconded the motion, which carried
by unanimous voice vote – 5.
(06-572CC/06-072CIC) Joint Public Hearing to consider
certification of a supplemental Environmental Impact Report (EIR),
approval of a General Plan Amendment, Master Plan Amendment, a
Development Agreement Amendment, two new Development Agreements, a
Disposition and Development Agreement Amendment and a new
Disposition and Development Agreement to replace 1,300,000 square
feet of approved, but not yet constructed, office and research and
development uses with 400,000 square feet of a Health Club and up
to 300 residential units in the Catellus Mixed Use Development. Continued to December 5, 2006.
Mayor/Chair Johnson announced that the Hearing was continued to
December 5, 2006.
David Kirwin, Alameda, stated there are six different topics; noted
that he would not have the ability to vote on one item with six
different topics; stated the City should report out on closed
session discussions on the matter.
Mayor/Chair Johnson requested staff to describe the process; noted
the agreement would be available to the public a certain number of
days prior to the hearing.
Special Joint Meeting
Alameda City Council and Community Improvement Commission
November 21, 2006
The Assistant City Manager stated State law requires that the DDA
be published fourteen days prior to being considered for adoption.
Mayor/Chair Johnson inquired whether the document has been made
public, to which the Assistant City Manager responded in the
affirmative.
The Assistant City Manager noted that there would be one agenda
item with eight actions.
Vice Mayor/Commissioner Gilmore inquired whether the existing
agreement with Catellus is also available, to which the Assistant
City Manager responded the document would be made available.
Councilmember/Commissioner Daysog noted that the meeting to adopt
the Catellus DDA was held in the Elks Lodge.
Councilmember/Commissioner Matarrese noted there is a nice overflow
room at the library.
Mayor/Chair Johnson stated the public needs to know the proposed
agreement has not been approved by the CIC; the draft is coming to
the CIC at a public hearing.
Councilmember/Commissioner Matarrese stated the speaker’s request
for an outline of the closed sessions seems appropriate.
Mayor/Chair Johnson inquired whether the documents could be posted
online, to which the Assistant City Manager responded in the
affirmative.
Bill Smith, Alameda, commented on meetings.
ADJOURNMENT
There being no further business, Mayor/Chair Johnson adjourned the
Special Joint Meeting at 11:04 p.m.
Respectfully submitted,
Lara Weisiger
City Clerk
The agenda for this meeting was posted in accordance with the Brown
Act.
Special Joint Meeting
Alameda City Council and Community Improvement Commission
November 21, 2006