HomeMy WebLinkAbout2024-03-19 - Supplementals
400 South Hope Street, 8th Floor | Los Angeles, CA 90071 | T 213.896.2400 | F 213.896.2450
Holland & Knight LLP | www.hklaw.com
Ryan M. Leaderman
+1 213-896-2405
Ryan.Leaderman@hklaw.com
Genna Yarkin
+1 415-743-6990
Genna.Yarkin@hklaw.com
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March 15, 2024
Design Review Committee
10500 Civic Center Drive
Rancho Cucamonga, California 91730
Via: City.Clerk@CityofRC.us
Re: Foothill Lofts Project (DRC2022-0126) – The Appropriate Scope of Review for
Design Review Committee; State Density Bonus Law Incentive Request
Dear Committee Members:
We want to thank staff for its hard work processing the entitlement application for the Foothill
Lofts project (the “Project”).1 On behalf of Foothill Lofts LLC (the “Applicant”), we are excited
that the Project is approaching public hearing review in the City of Rancho Cucamonga (the
“City”). To this end, it is our understanding that a Design Review Committee (the “DRC”) hearing
for the Project will occur next week on March 19, 2024, for which the City published an agenda
and staff report yesterday (the “Staff Report”).2
The stated purpose of the DRC is to “discuss and provide direction to an applicant on the design
of their project before recommending to the main body of the Planning Commission.”3 The Staff
Report directs the DRC to consider two specific design-related staff recommendations:
• Sidewalk width (Applicant proposes six to eight foot wide sidewalk, while staff would like
a ten foot wide sidewalk)
1 The Project would provide high-quality housing, including five percent very low income housing, in an urban infill
location in substantial conformance with the City’s General Plan, inclusive of the Housing Element and Land Use
Element, that would further the City’s compliance with its Regional Housing Needs Assessment (“RHNA”) allocation.
2 See https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/mhf5k9avd18ao2q3om8ae/DRC-Agenda-Packet-3-19-
24.pdf?rlkey=ugjf7094zod0gw9hkrv6xj470&dl=0.
3 See https://www.cityofrc.us/your-government/city-council-agendas.
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• Protected bike lane and adjacent barrier on Foothill Boulevard (Applicant proposes a Class
IV five foot wide bike lane with four foot raised median, City would like a Class IV seven
foot wide bike lane with four foot raised median)
The Staff Report asserts that these recommendations are based on meeting “the minimum
requirements outlined in the General Plan.”4 We disagree with this assessment, and wish to remind
the City of the Project’s compliance with applicable objective standards and of the mandatorily
limited scope of the DRC’s (and later the Planning Commission)’s review of the Project pursuant
to the Housing Accountability Act (the “HAA”). We also make a State Density Bonus Law
incentive request in the alternative for the second-listed item above. We are providing this letter
in advance of the DRC hearing to help inform the Committee of its legally limited scope of review,
so that the DRC does not make recommendations that the Planning Commission is legally
restricted from applying to the Project.
The HAA Legally Limits the Scope of Review
On December 1, 2022, the City determined that the Project’s planning application was complete
for processing. In compliance with the HAA, the City thereafter sent the Applicant “written
documentation identifying the provision or provisions, and an explanation of the reason or reasons
[the City] considers the housing development to be inconsistent, not in compliance, or not in
conformity” with any “applicable plan, program, policy, ordinance, standard, requirement, or other
similar provision”5 within 60 days of determining the application to be complete,6 on January 30,
2023.
First, for any requirement that the City fails to provide the-above described documentation, the
Project “shall be deemed consistent, compliant, and in conformity” with the requirement.7
Even for requirements for which the City does identify a perceived inconsistency, the HAA is clear
that only “applicable, objective general plan, zoning, and subdivision and criteria, including design
review standards, in effect at the time the application was deemed complete” can be applied to the
Project, unless a specific adverse “public health or safety” impact would occur.8 In order to apply
a subjective standard and either disapprove the Project or condition it in any way that would have
the effect of lowering its density, the health and safety impacts must be “significant, direct, and
unavoidable,” must be based on “objective, identified written public health or safety standards,
policies, or conditions,” and there must be no other way to satisfactorily mitigate or avoid the
impact.9
4 Staff Report at page 5.
5 Govt. Code Section 65589.5(j)(2)(A).
6 Govt. Code Section 65589.5(j)(2)(A)(ii).
7 Govt. Code Section 65589.5(j)(2)(B).
8 Govt. Code Section 65589.5(j)(1).
9 Govt. Code Section 65589.5(j)(1).
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Even where a requirement is objective, it must be applied in a way that is “appropriate to, and
consistent with, meeting the jurisdiction's share of the regional housing need” and “shall be applied
to facilitate and accommodate development at the density permitted on the site and proposed by
the development.”10
In evaluating a project’s consistency with an objective requirement, the project shall be deemed
consistent, compliant, and in conformity with an applicable plan, program, policy, ordinance,
standard, requirement, or other similar provision if there is substantial evidence that would allow
a reasonable person to conclude” that it is consistent.11
Finally, if an applicant makes a State Density Bonus Law request to modify or avoid the
applicability of a requirement, such request does “not constitute a valid basis on which to find a
proposed housing development is inconsistent” with the requirement.12
The Project Complies With Applicable Objective Standards, and the City Lacks the Ability
to Subjectively Condition the Project on the Desired Bike Lane and Sidewalk Widths
Sidewalk Width
The Project proposes six to eight foot wide sidewalks at varying locations around the Project site.
At no point is the Project’s sidewalk less than six feet. We understand that in recent conversations,
the City has expressed a desire for ten foot wide sidewalks, and the Staff Report indicates the
Project must “construct a 10-foot-wide linear (not meandering) sidewalk offset with the new curb”
because of the Project site’s location within the City Corridor – High land use designation.13 The
Staff Report asserts that Volume 4, pages 319 and 325 of the General Plan specify a “minimum of
10 feet in width” in this corridor.14
However, the six foot wide sidewalk component of the Project is entirely consistent with the
comment the City provided in its January 30, 2023 inconsistency letter, to which the Applicant
responded as follows:
10 Govt. Code Section 65589.5(f)(1).
11 Govt. Code Section 65589.5(f)(4).
12 Govt. Code Section 65589.5(j)(3)
13 Staff Report at pages 6-7.
14 Staff Report at page 7.
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The Applicant revised the Project to satisfy the identified “inconsistency” by providing the six foot
wide sidewalks referenced in the January 30, 2023 inconsistency letter. The second inconsistency
letter the City provided on July 24, 2023 indicated that this issue had not been resolved, but did
not provide any more specific feedback. Instead, the letter referred the Applicant back to the
January 30, 2023 letter. Because the City failed to raise any more specific inconsistency in the
HAA-mandated timeline, the Project has legally been deemed consistent. Raising an alleged 10-
foot requirement for the first time in the Staff Report is too late under the HAA.
Even if the Project were not already legally deemed consistent, we have not been able to locate a
mandatory, objective requirement for a ten foot wide sidewalk, and the City has likewise not
identified one. The General Plan description of a “pedestrian way” portion of a frontage is “the
clear path for pedestrian activity. The width of this space is calibrated to anticipated pedestrian
volumes, generally in the range of 6 feet in neighborhoods to allow for comfortable walking side-
by-side and up to 10 to 12 feet in urban corridor environments (free of any landscaping,
furnishings, and dining) to allow for a combination of walking aimed at a destination and
interaction with the features of the corridor.”15 The later descriptions on the Staff Report-cited
pages do not reference 12 feet at all, and instead describe the “typical width” as six to eight feet,
and eight to ten feet for “highly-active” districts and corridors.16
The above descriptions use subjective terms such as “anticipated pedestrian volumes,” “generally,”
“up to,” “typical,” and “highly-active” without any set way of determining what areas would
require six feet, and which require eight, ten, or even 12 feet. It’s not just that these are highly
subjective standards, there is no evidence whatsoever that this long vacant site with virtually no
pedestrian activity along its frontage is anything remotely like a (subjective) highly-active area.
15 General Plan, Volume 4, Chapter 2, page 315.
16 General Plan, Volume 4, Chapter 2, pages 319, 325.
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Accordingly, to the extent there is any objective mandatory requirement it is for a six foot
minimum, and a reasonable person would conclude the Project complies.
If the Project were required to comply by providing two to four feet of extra sidewalk around the
perimeter of the Project site, such change would impact the Project’s ability to be built at its
proposed and permitted density. There are twenty dwelling units and amenity areas along the
ground floor Foothill Boulevard frontage, for example, with several residential levels above the
ground floor. If there were an increase in the sidewalk width, this would result in the loss of area
necessary for the dwelling units. Accordingly, the City is prohibited from applying any such
requirement because it would not “facilitate and accommodate development at the density
permitted on the site and proposed by the development.”
Finally, the City has not identified any health and safety impacts that would result from some areas
of the Project having six foot wide sidewalks, let alone impacts that are “significant, direct, and
unavoidable,” based on “objective, identified written public health or safety standards, policies, or
conditions,” with no other way to satisfactorily mitigate or avoid the impact. As such, pursuant to
the HAA, the City cannot require wider sidewalks.
Bike Lane
The Project proposes a five foot wide protected bike lane with a four foot wide raised protected
separator for a total of nine feet on the Foothill Boulevard frontage. In recent conversations, City
staff has expressed a desire for a seven foot wide bike lane plus the four foot raised separator, and
the Staff Report asserts that “a cycle track along the project frontage would involve the
construction of a 4-foot wide raised median and 7-foot-wide protected bicycle lane.”17 The Staff
Report does not cite to any standard for this alleged requirement, let alone an objective one. The
City is prohibited from requiring a seven foot wide bike lane for several reasons.
First, the City’s January 30, 2023 HAA inconsistency letter did not specifically raise the issue of
the bike lane. Rather, it provided the following statement, to which the Applicant responded in its
May 23, 2023 resubmission:
17 Staff Report at page 6.
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The Applicant provided more specific street cross-sections in its May 23, 2023 resubmission. The
City thereafter provided a second inconsistency letter on July 24, 2023 indicating that some issues
had been resolved, but that “the Project remains inconsistent with the other standards” including
Item 22 from the City’s January 30, 2023 letter. Rather than providing any more specific comment
about a bike lane width requirement in this second letter, the City merely referred the Applicant
back to the January 30 letter. Because the City did not raise this issue with any specificity in the
HAA-required timeframe, the Project has legally been deemed consistent with any applicable bike
lane width requirements.
Even if the above were not the case, we have not been able to locate an objective, adopted
requirement for a seven foot bike lane width. We understand that in recent conversations, the City
has similarly been unable to point to one, and as noted above the Staff Report does not cite to one.
Rather, to the extent there is any objective requirement, any “reasonable person” would conclude
that the Project complies. For the Class IV Separated Bike (Cycle Track) category, the General
Plan defines it as providing “delineated right-of-way assigned to bicyclists that have a physical
separation between them and a vehicle. This separation can include parked vehicles, bollards,
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curbs, or any other physical devise that provides this separation.”18 The General Plan does not
specify a required width for the bike lane or the separation feature. Instead, the General Plan refers
to the “standards and guidelines promulgated by the National Association of City Transportation
Officials (NATCO)”19 which contain the following “recommended” feature for a one-way
protected cycle track: “The minimum desired width for a cycle track should be 5 feet. In areas with
high bicyclist volume or uphill sections, the minimum desired width should be 7 feet to allow for
bicyclists passing each other.”20 The City has not adopted this “recommendation” as a mandatory
standard, nor has it made any adopted determination of what qualifies as “high bicyclist volume”
or an “uphill section.” Accordingly, to the extent there is any objective and applicable standard,
the Project meets it at the “recommended” five foot minimum.
Further, even if there were a seven foot objective requirement, if the Project was required to
comply by pushing further into the Project site to accommodate it, such change would impact the
Project’s ability to be built at its proposed and permitted density for the same reasons addressed in
the sidewalk width discussion of this letter. Accordingly, the City is prohibited from applying any
such requirement because it would not “facilitate and accommodate development at the density
permitted on the site and proposed by the development.” Additionally, the City has not identified
any health and safety impact that would result from a five foot wide bike lane, let alone any impact
that is “significant, direct, and unavoidable,” based on “objective, identified written public health
or safety standards, policies, or conditions,” with no other way to satisfactorily mitigate or avoid.
The Applicant has proposed a five foot wide bike lane and four foot wide raised median to provide
the desired “separation” to protect the bike lane – see Attachment C to the Staff Report and the
below yellow-highlighted labels indicating a six foot wide sidewalk (in some locations it is up to
eight feet), five foot wide bike lane, and four foot wide raised median:
18 General Plan Volume 2, Chapter 4, page 169.
19 General Plan Volume 4, Chapter 2, page 357.
20 See http://natco.org/publication/urban-bikeway-design-guide/cycle-tracks/one-way-protected-cycle-
tracks/#design.
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In the spirit of compromise and in service of a great Project, the Applicant is also willing to provide
the seven foot desired bike lane width by reducing the raised median to a two foot width. In no
case however, is the Project able to provide the four foot wide median while also providing a seven
foot wide bike lane – such requirement would reduce the Project site’s buildable area and thus its
density.
State Density Bonus Law Incentive Request for a Five Foot Wide Bike Lane Width
For all of the above-described reasons, the City is unable to impose a seven foot bike lane width
requirement. Without abandoning any of the above arguments, if the City does not accept the five
foot bike lane and four foot wide raised median or alternate proposal of a seven foot bike lane and
reduced two foot wide raised median, the Applicant now alternatively chooses to identify its thus-
far reserved State Density Bonus Law incentive request. By nature of providing at least five percent
very low income units, the Project is entitled to one incentive.21 Because redesigning the Project’s
entire site plan to accommodate an additional two feet of bike lane would be a costly endeavor that
would “result in identifiable and actual cost reductions,” qualifying it for an incentive.
Thank you for your attention to this matter.
Sincerely yours,
HOLLAND & KNIGHT LLP
Ryan M. Leaderman
Genna Yarkin
cc: Sean McPherson - Principal Planner
Nick Ghirelli - City Attorney
Darrin Olson - Realm
Todd Cadwell - Realm
Chuck Buquet, Charles Joseph Associates
21 Govt. Code Section 65915(d)(2)(A).
Design Review DRC2023-00248March 19, 2024Design Review Committee
Who: Paul Frederick
What: A request to construct a 14,678 square-foot building for a
restaurant/bar with outdoor patio dining; 10 pickle-ball courts; and a 1,771
square-foot building with a coffee bar, restrooms, and storage.
Where: Northwest corner of 4th Street and Resort Parkway
Entitlements: Design Review DRC2023-00248
Project Description
Location
6TH STREET HERMOSA AVELand Use General Plan Zoning
Site Vacant Urban
Neighborhood
The Resort Specific Plan,
Planning Area 1A
North Multi-Family
Residential
Urban
Neighborhood
The Resort Specific Plan,
Planning Area 1A
South City of Ontario Urban
Commercial
Ontario Center Specific
Plan
East Multi-Family
Residential
Urban
Neighborhood
The Resort Specific Plan,
Planning Area 1A
West Office/Business
Park
21st Century
Employment Mixed Employment 2 (ME2)
Looking North from 4th Street
Site Plan
Primary
Structure
4th Street Resort Parkway
Landscape Plan
Compliance with Development Standards
Development Standard Required Proposed Complies?
Building Height Max. 60’39’YES
Floor Area Max 35,000 16,449 YES
Resort Parkway ROW Min. 5’5’YES
4th Street ROW Min. 10’10’YES
PA1A Boundary Setback from Cleveland Avenue Min. 10’10’YES
Setback from Interior Property Line 0’134’YES
Building 1 Elevations(primary building)
Top: East – Resort Parkway
view
Bottom: South – 4th Street
view
Building 1 Elevations(primary building)
Top: North – Interior lot
Bottom: West – Adjacent
property
Building 2 Elevations(accessory building)
Top: East – Resort Parkway
view
Bottom: South – 4th Street
view
Building 2 Elevations(accessory building)
Top: North – Interior lot
Bottom: West – Adjacent
property
Rendering
Rendering
Discussion Items
•Fences and Walls. Staff recommends replacing all proposed solid walls with tubular style
fencing, and to remove or relocate fencing from specific areas of the site.
•Elevations: Staff is recommending enhancing the elevations to break up massing and
potentially incorporate more fenestration, particularly along the east elevation of the
primary building which also enhances the building entry and primary façade.
•Shade structures. Staff recommends adding shade structures over all the outdoor
recreation courts. The applicant is proposing to install shade structures over the
recreational courtside seating areas.
Original: Combo block wall and
tubular fencing along project
perimeter
Revised: Tubular fencing design
Input: Removing/modifying fencing
located in front of building entry.
Fences & Walls
Original: Blank upper story
portion of façade.
Revised: Window treatment
installation. No
enhancement to building
primary entry.
Input: Façade
enhancements.
East Elevation/Primary Building Entry
Original: Partial/No shade
structures
Revised: Shaded courtside
seating areas
Input: Courts and/or
Seating Areas
Shade Structures
Recommendation
•Recommend Approval with Modifications to the design of the project by
incorporating revisions requested by the Committee.