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Seaside City Council Considers Affordable Housing Policy For Fort Ord |
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January 14, 2002 Mayor
Jerry Smith and Council Members [Sent by FAX: 831-899-6227]
Dear Mayor Smith and Council Members: LandWatch Monterey County is a nonprofit, nonpartisan public benefit organization working throughout Monterey County on the important land use policy issues that will affect the future of our communities. We are specifically committed to policies that will make sure that new residential developments provide affordable housing opportunities for working families. LandWatch urges the Seaside City Council to strengthen the proposed Policy Regarding Affordable Housing Development on the Former Fort Ord (North Seaside), as described in its agenda for the January 16, 2003 meeting. The proposed affordable housing policy states, Not less than 20% of total new or substantially rehabilitated residential units constructed within the North Seaside area shall be affordable to households of very low, low, and moderate income status. We think that the specified percentage could (and should) be higher, and that the policy should specifically commit the city to maintaining the permanent affordability of all such units, as a key part of its policy. Other policy statements would also assist in providing more affordable housing. Under current market conditions, Seaside no longer provides any affordable for sale housing. In the past, this was not true, and many working families were able to buy homes in Seaside. As existing Seaside homes are sold at market prices (which are significantly more than an average or below average income person can afford) the composition of the community will changeand working families will no longer be able to afford a home in Seaside. The Fort Ord lands to be transferred to local jurisdictions like Seaside are an important resource that should be used for community benefit. Properly used, they can help offset the economic and social impacts that escalating market prices are causing. In the City of Marina, which faces the same kind of market conditions that are affecting the housing market in Seaside, the City Council decided to adopt a more ambitious policy on affordable housing on the former Fort Ord. The Marina approach includes a number of General Plan policies, and an affordable housing Framework. Marina is different from Seaside, and not everything that Marina did is relevant in the Seaside context. A number of the policies that Marina established, however, may well be relevant to Seaside, and we believe that they are worthy of consideration. The Marina approach includes all of the elements outlined below: Housing Policies in the General Plan:
Affordable Housing Framework For Fort Ord:
As indicated earlier, LandWatch also believes that all new or substantially rehabilitated homes constructed in the North Seaside area should be permanently maintained as affordable, so that escalating housing prices in the future dont eliminate any new affordable housing opportunities that the community is able to create. A policy to accomplish that could be phrased as follows:
Conclusion We urge the Council to ask its staff to consult with the Housing Authority of Monterey County, nonprofit housing developers, and other interested and knowledgeable organizations and individuals, and then to bring back to the Council a report indicating how the City of Seaside can maximize affordable housing opportunities in the North Seaside area. We truly believe that current and future residents of Seaside will be grateful if the Council does the most it possibly can, at this time, to create and then permanently maintain the maximum possible amount of affordable housing on the former Fort Ord. Thank you for taking our views into consideration. [Return to Seaside Issues and Actions] posted 01/15/03 |
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