For the past 18 months, members of the Santa Barbara planning commission have been wrestling with various schemes to encourage high-density affordable housing in mixed-use developments built along existing transit lines and within a quarter of a mile jobs. The underlying notion is simple: By creating homes close to work, people might be reasonably able to walk, bicycle, or take the bus to work - anything but drive their cars.
The underlying motivation behind this push is both pragmatic and utopian. As to the former, congestion has already rendered 13 of the city’s main intersections severely sub-standard. In the next 20 years, city traffic engineers project that number could jump to 29. With the cost of road expansion prohibitive, traffic planners have concluded it’s far cheaper and quicker to change commuting habits. As to idealistic motivations, many activists and planners contend that automotive-based planning has spawned sprawl, pollution, and a sense of social fragmentation that’s neither healthy nor sustainable. But based on the contentious response to these plans at last Thursday’s three-hour planning commission discussion, it quickly became apparent that whatever path the commissioners might embark upon, they won’t be able to get there from here. At least not easily. Density remains very much a four-letter word in the minds of many South Coast planning activists, slow-growthers, and nimbies. The divide between the traditional slow-growthers - as represented by the Citizens Planning Association - and the so-called “smart-growthers” - as manifested by younger activists associated with the Community Environmental Council - is clearly generational in nature. Distrust is mutual, motives suspect, and there was scant evidence to suggest reconciliation of any kind is imminent.
On the table Thursday was the new acronym, MODA (Mobility Oriented Development Area). The idea is to establish pockets of high-density mixed-use development throughout the city in commercially zoned areas so that the new development will not encroach upon the character and personality of existing neighborhoods. These MODAs would be built close to transit lines and close to employment centers. One prospective location described as a “no brainer” for a MODA was La Cumbre Plaza.
As part of the MODA concept, City Hall would have to seriously relax - “decouple” is the term favored by city planners - its current parking requirements. By eliminating the space developers must set aside for parking - roughly 300 square feet per parking space - the cost of land would presumably be reduced. And with a decent public transit system in place, cars will become optional and not necessities. That, at least, is the theory.
Another key phrase used in current MODA discussions is “affordable by design.” By limiting the size of new residential units, city planners are hoping to discourage the recent proliferation of high-priced luxury condos. Through a mix of incentives and prohibitions, MODA advocates are hoping to encourage the development of smaller, less grandiose units, that would be - by dint of their more modest size - be affordable to nurses, firefighters, and others deemed to be part of the city’s critical workforce.
The $64 million question, of course, is who will build such nodules of new urban design, which are still a bit futuristic by Santa Barbara standards. Even more pressing is whether such developments can pay for themselves or compete economically with more traditional configurations. To resolve this issue, City Hall hired private consultants to figure out at what density private developers can manage to make money and build enough below-market housing to put meaningful a dent in Santa Barbara’s expensive housing market. Typically, Santa Barbara developers subsidize the cost of their “affordable” units with the gains they earn on high-end housing. Three weeks ago, the consultants released a report concluding that developers need to build at least 60 units per acre. That’s much more than existing zoning allows in most places throughout the city. This conclusion inflamed traditional slow-growthers to no end, many of whom have spent the better part of their adult lives battling development proposals they deemed inconsistent with the city’s small town character and charm.
In fact, much of last Thursday’s public comment was spent trashing the 60-units-per-acre figure, the assumptions underlying it (such as a 15 percent profit rate), and the motives of the consultants themselves. Longtime civic activist Lee Moldaver likened that rate of return to the enticements offered by billion-dollar bunko artist Bernie Madoff to lure prospective investors. An agent for La Cumbre Plaza cautioned the commissioner that the mall’s ownership structure would render any plan to make it a MODA exceptionally difficult. Architect Gil Berry provided a detailed critique of the assumptions underlying the 60-unit per acre thesis - the consultants assumed unreasonably astronomic land prices, he claimed, when cheaper real estate could be had - and concluded that densities of 22 units per acre could suffice. Also called into serious question was the ability of the Metropolitan Transit District (MTD) to provide the frequency and reliability of bus service needed for any prospective MODA plans to succeed. Looking at a map of proposed MODAs, Moldaver - who served on the MTD board for many years - commented, “If you approved everything on the table, it’s totally beyond MTD’s capacity to accommodate it.”
Critics of the MODA approach also worry that if the new “de-coupled” units are not required to provide adequate parking as part of a strategy to bring the cost of development down, then MODA residents and their visitors will park on public streets, creating a whole new planning nightmare. Mostly, they expressed profound skepticism with the basic formula by which such developments would be financed: allowing the development of luxury housing that the community does not need in order to underwrite the below-market units, which everyone agrees the community does need. While most members of the Planning Commission conceptually bought into the MODA approach, commissioner Sheila Lodge remained skeptical. “It’s a no-win game,” she declared. “If we build 60 market rate units to get 40 affordable ones, those 60 units will create 180 new jobs.” By that reckoning, any advantage created by the high-density MODAs will be more than offset by the new workers, who in turn will place more of a strain on the housing market than they’ll ameliorate. Critics of this strategy suggested that as an alternative, private employers be enticed, induced, or brow-beaten into subsiding the housing of their workforce, much the way UCSB and Westmont do.
The debate over density has roiled Santa Barbara’s once solid coalition of slow-growthers and environmentalists for more than ten years now, with both sides casting aspersions on the other’s motivations. Critics of high density development have been derides as racists, while affordable housing and “smart growth” advocates have been dismissed as developer stooges, whether wittingly or otherwise. In this vein, Micky Flacks - long an outspoken advocate of affordable housing - suggested there was something hypocritical about the argument that employers should create the housing required by their employees. “Cottage Hospital had a hell of a time providing employee housing, mainly because of those people who are now saying the employers need to do more.”
While MODA’s critics far outnumbered its supporters, the debate was hardly one-sided. “Who wants to live 60 units to an acre? Who wants to live in a dense downtown?” asked Megan Birney, a young woman working for the Community Environmental Council. “Me. I do,” she said, arguing that denser development allowed for a reduced carbon footprint. “We need to make sure there are options for everyone.” She was echoed in her concerns by co-worker Michael Chiacos, who noted Santa Barbara’s high housing costs lie at the root of environmental problems of major proportion. He blamed those costs for the fact that 30,000 people must commute into and out of Santa Barbara from other communities. That traffic creates air pollution and congestion, among other things. Plans to widen Highway 101 to ease peak hour gridlock will cost taxpayers no less than $1 billion, he stated. The same amount of relief could be obtained for a whole lot less, he said, by getting just 1,200 peak hour commuters to find an alternative to the automobile.
Architect Joe Andrulaitis, a vocal supporter of MODAs, argued that community character was not defined soley by the size and scale of the buildings permitted. “It’s about people,” he said. Andrulaitis said he bought a home when before the housing market went so stratospheric. If he hadn’t, he said, he’d be one of the 30,000 commuters. “If I didn’t live here, I couldn’t be the coach of my daughter’s soccer team,” he said. “I couldn’t be active with the [American Institute of Architects].”
Dick Jensen, a former UCSB administrator and member of Citizens Planning Association, provided the viewpoint of the converted skeptic. When City Hall approved Casa de Los Fuentes - a downtown workforce housing project that provides only a limited number of parking spaces for its residents - Jensen said he expected residents to colonize the nearby public streets to meet their parking needs. After bird-dogging the project, Jensen said his worst fears never came to pass. “The garage hasn’t filled up yet,” he said. “I was absolutely incorrect.”
Ultimately, the Planning Commission took no action. Some commissioners expressed frustration it’s taken too long for such a public dialog on MODAs to occur, and that the meeting was cut short on Thursday to make way for another gathering of city administrators. While there remains a clear divergence of opinion among commissioners as to the best way to proceed with MODAs, it’s equally clear they intend to move forward in that general direction. Commissioner Charmaine Jacobs, typically a moderate voice and vote, was both emphatic and passionate when it came to the fate of the 30,000 commuters. “We need these people,” she declared. “We can’t tell them to go get a job in Oxnard and leave us alone. We need these people.”



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Interesting thing about Casa De Los Fuentes, is that according to its website you can only live there if you work in the immediate downtown area, preference is given to those without cars (ie have a car dont apply) and it is a max two people per unit. One of the stated goals on the site is to keep families closer to work so they can enjoy their spare time more. I guess that is fine if your family is two people or less and likes a small unit.
They never design places for real workforce housing or any working professional downtown. If you are a dishwasher, security guard or department store worker, the city will build you a place to live thats under market. If you actually have a job thats not located in a retail space on State you get nothing. If they wanted to keep traffic off the freeway the fact is those in the lowest socioeconomic are more likely to take public transportation, they will double or triple up so the housing the city develops does not really keep cars off the street. Its the middles class that drives back and forth and this city does not cut them any breaks.
pointssouth (anonymous profile)
July 27, 2009 at 10:13 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Too often I have heard it said that we cannot afford to increase density, through MODA or otherwise, in our Downtown core because it will cost too much to provide MTD service to those people.
The 2000 Census showed that in Santa Barbara, 6.2% workers walked to jobs, 4.6% took the bus, and 3.4% biked. Over twice as many walked or biked than took the bus.
It costs a lot less to support a person on foot or bike than in a bus. Perhaps instead of saying that MODA is impossible because buses cost too much, we could look into the costs of providing safer, more pleasing ways of travel for those considering biking and walking. Perhaps a bike-sharing program like the successful Paris one would be a lot cheaper than new buses.
In these lean fiscal times, looking at the cost-effectiveness of actions makes more sense than ever.
oryx (anonymous profile)
July 27, 2009 at 10:17 p.m. (Suggest removal)
A reason for the strong public reaction against MODA and density is because the Plan Santa Barbara procedure has placed the cart before the horse.
First, the increment of residential and commercial growth must be selected for the General Plan Update; then, second, where to place whatever that amount of growth is the next question, such as placement into the MODA or spread around the whole city instead.
Right now, this planning process is doing the opposite, with the MODA cart before the horse of deciding the growth increment amount.
The MODA concept would not be so troubling to much of the public if everyone knew how much new urban development this really was going to be under the preferred plan alternative that comes out of the General Plan Update and its corresponding Environmental Impact Report.
Depending upon who becomes the Deciders as a result of the upcoming City Council election, in the end --once the number of new residential units and commercial space are decided-- the MODA may not be that dense and intensively urban as some currently may expect if the residential and commercial growth increment is not so large under the preferred option decided for Plan Santa Barbara General Plan Update.
John Ledbetter and the other primary City planning staff readily have acknowledged that the amount of long-term growth and where to put it are separate questions. Ledbetter has mentioned a lump-of-clay analogy, where we first should decide on how big the urban clay ball will be before we spread it around into MODA or not.
David_Pritchett (David Pritchett)
July 27, 2009 at 11:02 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Increased density is fundamentally driven by population growth. Almost all population growth in the U.S. is due to international immigrants and their children. The U.S. currently admits between 1 and 2 million legal immigrants a year. Even with our horrendous unemployment, over 140,000 work visas (which often become permanent) are granted _every_ _month_. Unless we are willing to confront the racial power groups and business interests pushing for more immigration, we will condemn ourselves to live in ever more crowded and unpleasant conditions, with a quality of life and wages/salaries on a downward spiral.
revisionist (anonymous profile)
July 28, 2009 at 7:17 a.m. (Suggest removal)
It would be wonderful if all comments posted, including this one, could be fact-checked for accuracy. Por exemplo, "revisionist" claims that "almost all" population growth is "due to international immigrants..." Wrong. US population growth is mostly due to internal birth rates. And, ultimately, the vast majority of Americans spring from "international immigrants," including Mr./Ms. revisionist - unless he/she claims 100% pure Native American blood. As Pogo said, "We have met the enemy and he is us."
But, more to the point: Good on the Community Environmental Council for once again demonstrating smart leadership on complicated issues. They are absolutely on the right side of this endless debate, and it's good to see that they have the courage of their convictions. Unfortunately, the City of SB hired consultants who did not help the conversation in the least by coming up with an astronomically high figure for density. 60 units/acre is a figure guaranteed to make groups like CPA and the League of Women Voters positively hysterical (although good on former CPA-er Dick Jensen for "seeing the light" on higher densities and admitting it).
Here's another, and I think better, way of looking at SB density: The current density for SB is around 4 units/acre. There are MANY examples of wonderfully designed apartments and condos, scattered throughout SB's neighborhoods, that provide 20-30 units/acre -- and no one complains, and no one has died as a result of their presence over the last 40 years. If more such projects could be replicated along the lines that the MODA proposal calls for, SB would go a long way to solving its jobs-housing imbalance. So SB's goal should be to increase its average density to, say, 8 units/acre over the next 20 years -- THAT would help SB become a more self-reliant city, less dependent on importing commuters who aren't able to coach their daughters' soccer teams or participate on PTA boards.
And, yes, an occasional mixed use project with up to 60 units/acre (think something the size of the Balboa Building) could provide jobs and housing to more people who won't be needing that extra car (or two).
Pagurus (anonymous profile)
July 28, 2009 at 9 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Whether we like it or not, the planning model used in most of Southern California development has been a complete and utter mistake from the get go. Relying on individual automobiles and highways while promoting urban sprawl might have been a good idea when the population of the state was in the hundreds of thousands, but it's madness to continue in that direction.
While I completely agree we can't put all trust in the developers, and we certainly don't want the development to mirror the housing projects of Chicago, we do need to put some serious thought into affordable housing for the purpose of sustaining a working population in SB. Businesses will not come to SB if there are no skilled workers, and skilled workers won't come to SB if there is nowhere to live. It's as simple as that.
dakine (anonymous profile)
July 28, 2009 at 9:41 a.m. (Suggest removal)
The notion that the rift between the (young) "smart growthers" and the (old) "slow growthers" is fundamentally generational is nonsense. Most of us old timers fully embrace the idealistic principles of the youthful activists, such as anti-sprawl, sustainability, and social justice.
The real difference is between ideology and pragmatism, most of older residents
falling into the latter camp by dint of experience and observation: our dreaming is tempered by a dose of empirical skepticism. For example:
In order for the MODA to work (rather than just resulting in more population, more congestion, and more workers looking for housing) requires an almost perfect storm of felicitous circumstances: its residence must work within it or nearby (and continue to do so), they must be willing to satisfy a substantial amount of their shopping and leisure time needs there, and be willing to drive much less and opt to walk or take alternate transit. Good luck!
The MODA also depends heavily on the concept of "affordable by design": that smaller dwelling units will, ipso facto, become affordable to local workers. Who says that the return of economic "normalcy" will not bring many who are willing and able to bid up the price of a pied a tierre in one of the most desirable locales on the planet? That seems to be the case in all the other such highly desirable spots with which I'm familiar.
Sure we want our workers to live amongst us, rather than commuting from Oxnard. And who doesn't want to be optimistic and take whatever measures we can to try to alleviate the problem. But why can't we be realistic and admit the very real probability that severe workforce and housing affordability problems are inevitable in the most attractive and desirable communities? I know of none that have been able to avoid them.
We risk adulterating our own such community by pursuing unrealistic dreams that we can magically build our way out of these problems.
joer43 (anonymous profile)
July 28, 2009 at 12:53 p.m. (Suggest removal)
To address the revisionist/pagarus rift: From what I see, the growth rates are driven by immigration. The immigrant pressure groups themselves will point out their growing numbers and a cursory look around Santa Barbara County proves that point. The changing demographics in the schools is a good example of this.
Whether or not you think the open border is a good thing, to deny the impact it has on population growth is simply a case of avoiding what is uncomfortable.
billclausen (anonymous profile)
July 28, 2009 at 3:06 p.m. (Suggest removal)
There is nothing inherently bad in commuting. It's done in all cities in the world --- not all people want to live cheek by jowl by someone else in crowded "dense" developments. Some (and I would have thought CECers would be in this category) like open space between buildings. Some prefer single family houses. Some, true, prefer apartment complexes --- but the downtown is a neighborhood that belongs to all of us and deserves special attention and care.
As for Mrs Flack's comments about the Cottage employee housing: the issue was not employee housing, Cottage provision of same, but the location of it and the re-use of an existing building rather than tearing it down. It's sad that the discussion can not be on the issues and the facts but is made into an us versus them oration.
citti (anonymous profile)
July 28, 2009 at 6:20 p.m. (Suggest removal)
By dint of experience and observation, I conclude that restricting development leads to another kinds of "density"; illegal garage conversions, and crowded occupancy of existing housing. The other danger of a no-growth policy is intervention by the State.
A compromise strategy would be to adopt the MODA approach, but restrict the rate of new development, and carefully observe the results.
Steve_Johnson (anonymous profile)
July 28, 2009 at 9:32 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Does Steve really believe that housing overcrowding and illegal garage conversions - in one of the most desirable and attractive communities, one with a substantial immigrant population - is caused by development restriction? And that it can be lessened by relaxing those restrictions? I'm willing to bet Miami or even Monte Carlo has even worse crowding and substandard garage conversions.
joer43 (anonymous profile)
July 29, 2009 at 12:23 p.m. (Suggest removal)
And while people argue we safely dwell in the ocean and watch your paradise crumble into an abyss of over crowding, gangs, rebellion and petty egotistical quibbling.
As the quote below goes...
"For instance, on the planet Earth, man had always assumed that he was more intelligent than dolphins because he had achieved so much--the wheel, New York, wars and so on--while all the dolphins had ever done was muck about in the water having a good time. But conversely, the dolphins had always believed that they were far more intelligent than man--for precisely the same reasons."
-Douglas Adams, The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy-
sixdolphins (anonymous profile)
July 29, 2009 at 3:44 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Comparing development projects by density and height is about as useful as thinking Clint Eastwood and I are equally good looking because we are about the same weight and height.
It aint' the mass, its how it's distributed.
wingnut (anonymous profile)
July 29, 2009 at 5:41 p.m. (Suggest removal)
FYI: "the city's small town character and charm." has been a tourist trap since the earthquake in 1925. Locals matter little in this theme park.
Num1UofAn (anonymous profile)
July 29, 2009 at 11:16 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Law of the jungle.... entitlement to live here, is bogus. Special living arrangements for city and county ee's, worse. Many natives here can't get these jobs with all the "perks" and have rented all their lives. Others have a couple of generations living together in the family home. If you want to live here you make sacrifices or go the greener pastures.
lordleadbetter (anonymous profile)
July 30, 2009 at 10:04 a.m. (Suggest removal)
If you want a candid explanation of what has happened to land values in the R3 zone, spend a minute watching this:
http://homepage.mac.com/saj777/pop_th...
Steve_Johnson (anonymous profile)
August 3, 2009 at 5:27 p.m. (Suggest removal)