Friday, October 20, 2017

S.R. City Council Agenda Oct 24th

Greetings!

An hour ago, the full agenda for next week's Santa Rosa City Council was posted.  I have been watching the City website since the City's self-imposed posting deadline passed at 5pm yesterday.  Each hour today, more items received their staff reports, and new items appeared.  With the legal devastation of the district elections lawsuit, and the physical devastation of the fires, our City has had quite a set of whirlwinds on its plate.

The first indication of change came last week when the preliminary agenda contained an item  recommending the Council delay further public hearings on the district elections "until the citizens of Santa Rosa are fully capable of participating in the process".  I wondered then if City staff would be prepared for the questions which would be asked about whether that delay would result in the lawsuit it feared when it decided to change to district elections.

The final agenda has eliminated that recommendation, and the list of future Council meetings includes additional public hearings at the original pace.

The last item to be added to the agenda today:

  1. Responds to the need for reconstruction of parcel properties damaged by the fire, by adopting an three-year ordinance overlaying a special zoning district in the impacted areas of the City which allows property owners to obtain all waived development fees, process their permits through an expedited review absent of any hearings, avoid the development of any environmental impact reports, and construct or place "trailers, recreational vehicles, manufactured homes, tiny homes, and similar configurations" on their properties prior to and during re-construction of their homes or commercial properties; 
  2. Encourages the inclusion of granny units and small independent units built within the existing house footprint by waiving fees; and 
  3. Blocks price gouging in rental units throughout the City "as long as the City remains under a federal, state, or local declaration of emergency, provided, however, that notwithstanding a state of emergency, this Ordinance shall not extend beyond April 18, 2018 unless otherwise authorized by law".
Of course, there are other interesting items on the agenda.  These include: 
  • Adopting and approving the City's Salary Schedule; 
  • Approving the costs of the Annexation of Roseland, the agreements transferring housing projects and multi-year funds from the County, and establishing a new City/County District to transition South Park into the City's utility financing rates;
  • Establishing the salary, job description, and title of a Communications and Intergovernmental Relations Officer;
  • Approving straight-time overtime for exempt employees, lifting the vacation accrual limits, and establishing a disaster leave while the City is in a state of emergency. 
It appears that City staff are responding quickly to their needs to assist residents to rebuild.

  

Tuesday, October 10, 2017

Interactive Fire Map

Greetings!

This is a useful map, which should be shared with your family and friends trying to understand our situation.

http://sonomamap.maps.arcgis.com/apps/webappviewer/index.html?id=2089db8e15c04be886f6d4f8daf7b13f

Gregory

S.R. City Council Agenda, Oct 10th

Greetings!

Thanks again to our friend, Anne Seeley, of Concerned Citizens For Santa Rosa, and her report on this week's City Council Agenda. 

The meeting has been postponed until Wednesday, Oct 11th, and  the District Elections Public Hearing until next Tuesday, October 17th:

Friends:

  There is no Study Session before the 4PM meeting.

Consent
   There are 2 Consent agenda items asking the Council to approve payments made to contractors in the past which were made incorrectly, without the usual system, but in which the equipment has already been installed.  Essentially, retroactive approvals.

5PM Public Hearing
 15.1 District-based City Council Elections: Compositions of Districts (California Voting Rights Act).   
Why is this happening?   First, the City received a letter from an attorney who has been successful in suing other cities at their great cost, alleging violations of the California Voting Rights Act. When the cities lose the court cases, they have to pay millions in public money to cover attorney expenses, the litigant's and their own..
   Second, Santa Rosa has been ripe for District Elections (DE), as it has annexed a 700 plus acre area in the Southwest, wherein much of the City's Latino population lives.  Spreading the political power in the City, in addition to lowering to a large extent the cost of running for City Council, is the aim.   

   This is the 2nd hearing of 5 to be held. Last week citizens came forward with ideas of what guidelines should and should not be used in the new mapping of districts.
    At this hearing, the same will happen, but with the likely addition of suggestions from several groups for where the lines should be drawn for the districts.
    After this hearing, City staff and the demographic consultant they hired will draw some draft maps and they will be available for the public to comment on.
 Check on the City's website (https://srcity.org) for the maps to see what will be presented to the Council on November 1, at the next Public Hearing.
See you there!
Anne