E-mail reminder. Non e-mail
phone list was phoned.
Susan brought scones.
- Annual Election
- No one new volunteered for any of the officer positions, so
once again there were no choices on the ballots. Candidates were
the same as previous officers, Laura Ellersieck for President, Susan
Chu for Vice President and Kathy Vacio for Treasurer. The
Secretary position was and remains unfilled.
- Attendees filled out and deposited ballots as they arrived and
signed in.
- Should think about how we might support
absentee voting for future elections.
- Need
to get back to working on bylaws. It is possible that there might
be
more willing candidates if the officer duties were actually defined.
- Near
the end of the meeting, ballots were counted by Tim Price from the
Daisy Villa neighborhood across the wash, who had come to visit us.
- Results
were 14 ballots cast. 14 votes for Laura Ellersieck for President
and Susan Chu for Vice President. 12 votes for Kathy Vacio for
Treasurer, and 1 write-in vote for Kathy Vacio as Secretary.
- Ice Rink project status
- On Monday March 10 Council agenda, item 5B4
- Asking Council to reject all the bids received and opened Dec
28.
- Lowest bid is 90% higher then Engineer's Estimate
- Expect to take 6 months to rescope project and re-bid project.
- Rescoping includes
- reevaluating the projected revenue numbers to see if they can
raise it to support additional cost
- looking into finding some other funding sources
- looking into substituting some less expensive materials
- hoping construction costs are now falling and might be less by
time of re-bid.
- hoping financing costs will be lower by then (currently they
are higher then were)
- Estimating that rescoping and redoing the bids will cost
$500,000.
- Updated budget and appropriations request will be presented to
Council after new bids are received
- As usual, staff report makes no mention of how this is going to
affect the Civic Center reconstruction even though it is now clear
there is no way the original purpose of moving the ice rink out of the
civic center ballroom can be met in time.
- Member from Orange Grove expressed big concern about the
possibility of construction trucks arriving and departing via
Orange Grove and also the likelihood they might sit idling and
polluting
for long periods while waiting to enter the site.
- Discussed that we should try to contact PCC board member for
our area to ask what the board knows about the agreement with the city
for the new easement across PCC land off Foothill and what the story is
behind the reported refusal to allow construction access via that
route. Especially now that the traffic signal on Foothill at the PCC
driveway should be long since completed by the time ice rink
construction starts, that route is so much better in every way then the
alternatives. Yes, it could inconvenience PCC students using the
parking lot, but at least they are adults.
- Summary of community meeting about
planning process
- On March 5, Councilman Haderlein held a meeting to explain the
city's planning/development process for private property, mainly larger
commercial developments
- Richard
Bruckner, Director of Planning and Development, and Scott Reimers,
Associate Planner were there to do the explaining
- Planning
and Development department deals with planning and permitting for
private property in the city. Public Works deals with
development on
city owned land.
- Richard
Bruckner said they are guided in general by the city's General Plan
Principles and they go back to them all the time. Noted that
there are
about 170 different zones, including overlays, in Pasadena and it is
very hard to keep track of all of them. Constantly
reviewing some
aspect of the General Plan or a Specific Plan. Focusing in coming
months on a new Open Space Element of the plan and later this year on
the Land Use Element.
- Scott
Reimers went through a process flow chart of the major review steps a
development has to go through. Legislative review process is used
whenever a decision has to be made by the City Council, such as a
zoning change or master or general plan amendment. Otherwise it
goes
through "Quasi-Judicial" review process where a Hearing Officer makes
the decisions (though appeals can cause it to end up before the
Council).
- A
handout sheet was provided with each flow diagram and also a sheet with
a glossary on one side and a list of the general plan principles on the
other.
- Focus
of discussion was those steps where there is public notice and the
public is allowed to comment.
- A
point was made that when someone attends a hearing they should fill out
a speaker card whether or not they intend to speak. Might decide
by
the time you would be called that you want to say
something. If not,
can just decline to speak when called. Also, if you mark the box
to
get a "decision letter", even if you have to leave before the end of
the hearing they will send you a copy of the letter which says what
decision was reached.
- Several
attendees complained that they believe the city staff and council just
let developers do whatever they want. Richard Bruckner said that
there
are probably dozens of times a week that developers are told "no" they
can't do something.
- Developers
are supposedly encouraged to meet with neighbors/community early in the
process, but they cannot be forced to do so.
- First
official notice public gets comes early in the process only if the
project is determined to have "communitywide significance".
Criteria
are greater than 50000 sq ft with at least one discretionary action,
fifty or more housing units, or as determined by Planning
Director. If
it is determined to have community wide significance, then the City
Council is given a short information only presentation about the
project. They can't express an opinion at that time because that
pre-judgment could later disqualify them if it came to the council for
some decision. Councilpersons can just ask some general questions
and
request review by commissions that otherwise would not be
involved.
While the Council people can't say much, citizens can voice or submit
their comments.
- Developer
and city resident Bob May gave a short presentation of a private
developer's perspective
- Questions
and answers gradually devolved mostly into a few people going on and on
about their point of view on something rather then asking questions
directly related to the subject matter.
- One
potentially useful discussion was about how unnotified people feel they
are about the various hearings. Notice is at best
inconsistent. Sign
boards are frequently very difficult to see. Notices sent to
within
500 ft or whatever isn't far enough, especially when traffic is an
issue. Notices to neighborhood
leaders
are inconsistent.
- Also
at the meeting, ordinary citizen John McDonnell was introduced and
given a certificate of appreciation for his self-made and carried out
project to beautify New York Drive by planting and caring for oak trees.
- 650 Sierra Madre Villa sold
- According to LA County Assessor, the SMV/Rosemead corner parcel
(just north of Allstate building) was sold for just over $6 million in
mid-November '07.
- Makes one wonder if it's the same developer who's got the two
parcels to the south of it.
- A development proposal has not been resubmitted yet for the
"Allstate" and "Burroughs" parcels.
- CVS Pharmacy - permit request for full alcohol sales
- Permit
hearing, originally scheduled 2/20 requested both full alcohol sales
and being open 24 hours.
- The
24 hours request was withdrawn after a meeting with neighbors and staff
and the hearing was rescheduled to allow time for staff reconsideration
of the request.
- Hearing
for full alcohol sales now scheduled for 3/13
- City
staff is recommending against the permit because
- There
are already 3 full alcohol for off-site use establishments in the
census tract and the state dept of Alcoholic Beverage Control considers
more then two to be over concentration
- A
1996 City resolution with guidelines for granting such a permit
requires five findings of public benefit be made (employment, taxes,
unique addition, contributing to long term development goals, upgrading
of area). None of those required benefits is expected.
- Site
is in close proximity to sensitive uses, ie residential.
- Permit request 5023
- 3885 East Foothill Blvd., NW corner Foothill & Michillinda
- Proposed East Pasadena YMCA
- Pre-plan review presented to City Council on March 3
- http://www.ci.pasadena.ca.us/councilagendas/2008
agendas/Mar_03_08/10A.pdf
- http://www.ci.pasadena.ca.us/councilagendas/2008
agendas/Mar_03_08/10A ATTACHMENT A.pdf
- To
be located on 2.16 acres currently owned by Avery International, parcel
to be split.
- South
of current Avery International Building south of Bradley street, west
of Edison power lines, north and east of flood control channel and
flood control land.
- 130
parking spaces on it's land, 119 additional to be on land leased from
Edison.
- two
story 41,000 sq ft building
- traffic
study and initial environmental study to be done by April
- Supposed
to be a neighborhood meeting in April. (Probably aren't any
residential neighbors within the required notification distance.)
- City
Council has to approve a zoning amendment for the site which is zoned
PD-1 - Eaton Canyon Industrial Park. It is needed because the
split off parcel would be less then the currently required size and
because current zoning doesn't provide for the proposed usage "clubs
and lodges".
- anything else attendees wish to discuss
- Pasadena
Conference on Aging on Tuesday March 18, 8 am to 2:30 pm
- Just up the hill from us at First Church of the Nazarene,
3700 E. Sierra
Madre Blvd
- Free, includes breakfast and lunch
- 42 different workshops being presented
- Tables with pamphlets and assorted stuff being given away
- You don't have to attend the whole time
- If interested, RSVP to Souci Hovsepian 626 744-6927,
shovsepian@cityofpasadena.net
- former theater status
- have heard that the area zoning/plan does not allow for the
land owner proposal for a Babies R' Us
- landowner does not seem to be progressing to any other plan,
so future still totally unknown
- Wickes furniture closing
- mention was made that maybe Babies R' Us could go into that
building
- PWP contractors blowing
their truck horns at Alameda/Avocado gate
- neighbors mentioned that big trucks under contract to
Pasadena Water and Power have been blowing their horns repeatedly when
they find the gate at Avocado and Alameda closed.
- also mentioned a perception that when there are multiple
trucks they seem to get into a horn blowing competition with each other.
- contractor name on trucks is something like Polk & Stein
- will contact PWP/city to complain
- Too short left-hand turn
light northbound Sierra Madre Villa to westbound Foothill
- attendees mentioned noticing that the turn signal is now
really short, allowing at most 3 cars to turn. When there is a
truck nothing else gets to turn.
- This is now leading to some people who are aware of this
problem to instead go straight across at Foothill and instead turn left
on Mataro or La Tierra and proceed through the neighborhood street to
Santa Paula Ave and then back south to Foothill.
- Question arose as to whether light is controlled by
Caltrans. Don't think so, think it is city.
- Need to complain to city's traffic department about why that
signal is so short instead of paying attention to the sensors in the
lane and letting the waiting cars clear the turn.
- Pleasures club on
Foothill now officially closed
- It was noticed that the so called "Gentleman's Club" that was
on the south side of Foothill (across from the shopping center with
Ralphs) has now been closed and fenced off. Finally it is really
gone.
- potential for light/x-walk
across Sierra Madre Villa at Electronic Drive
- Question was raised as to whether there has been any news
about potentially putting a cross-walk/signal light on Sierra Madre
Villa at Electronic Drive.
- Have no knowledge of any formal plans. Only have heard
that it could come about as a mitigation measure as a result of further
development such as of the former Allstate property.
- Need to ask if it shouldn't be added to the city's Capital
Improvement Program, and if so how that is done.
- Discussed the lighted pedestrian crosswalk at Sunnyslope on
Orange Grove and the strange activation system. Apparently there
is a camera on a pole which is supposed to notice when pedestrians are
there and cause it to light up. But it is frequently lit when no
one is there and not lit when someone is. Why not just have a
push button? Pedestrians are used to them and it is proven low
tech functional. Maybe because the crosswalk itself isn't
controlled so pedestrians aren't told when they can cross.
Next meeting is
April 12, 2008.
Adjourned about
12:50 pm