Jury says Santa Barbara can and should do more for low- and middle-income residents
In
the latest blow to the city of Santa Barbara's planning policies, the civil
Grand Jury issued a report criticizing the city's ability to build affordable
housing, suggesting that it is inconsistent, lacks leadership and is stuck in
the thinking of yesteryear.
"The
City Council needs a change in vision," the report states. "It has
spent the recent years guarding the interests of certain residents and
neglecting the rich diversity of people that the city celebrates. The city of
Santa Barbara needs to show that it will embrace affordable housing or
inclusionary housing, as it did decades ago. Council members have been silent
regarding recent low-cost housing developments, and those building efforts have
floundered."
The
June 24 report follows a June 2 report that determined the city's Community
Development Department was adversarial with the business community and that the
department lacked leadership.
Community
Development Director George Buell, who recently announced his resignation,
said: "I will acknowledge that some of the findings and recommendations
are well-founded. However, staff is
concerned with a number of others that require analysis, and we are in the
process of doing that work now. Draft responses will be presented to the City
Council in mid-August."
About
20,000 people commute from Ventura County and northern Santa Barbara into the
city, where the median price of a house is $1.2 million. The jobs-housing
imbalance has led to massive delays in commute times from Ventura County and a
multimillion-dollar, decades-long project to widen Highway 101. Santa Barbara
created a high-density housing program that led to new apartments for the first
time in 40 years, but the homes are market-rate and have done little to help
low- and middle-income people find housing in the city.
While
the names and faces of the politicians change over the years, the lack of
affordable housing in the city has become as much as part of the city's lexicon
as the beach, the mountains and the red-tile roofs.
The
latest report points more blame in the direction of the City Council, and for
"prevaricated" or evasive leadership.
"This
indecisiveness has set one neighbor against another," the report states.
"Now each councilmember has the opportunity to show that for the sake of
the entire city, they can welcome housing for all those thousands of people who
contribute by working here but cannot enjoy living here."
The
affordable housing direction has been inconsistent, the report states.
"For
the past few years the City Council has wavered in its affordable housing
policies," the report states. "It now needs to define a more certain
path in terms of planning, building, financing, and leadership. The COVID-19
pandemic will deflate the budget in so many ways that the only way forward will
be to act in groundbreaking ways."
Noozhawk
By Joshua Molina
June 29, 2020
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