Huntington Beach City Council votes against suing the state over mandated housing numbers
The Huntington Beach City Council on Monday night decided not to move forward with legal action challenging its state-mandated Regional Housing Needs Assessment requirements for the next cycle, which runs through October 2029.
Huntington Beach is required to zone for 13,386 residential units, according to the Southern California Assn. of Governments, during the upcoming sixth cycle of the housing element that starts this October. That number includes nearly 6,000 units deemed to be either very low income or low income.
Huntington Beach was one of several cities in the county â including Costa Mesa, Newport Beach, Fountain Valley and Laguna Beach â to appeal its RHNA housing requirement as too high last fall. City Atty. Michael Gates filed the appeal on Surf Cityâs behalf, but it was denied by SCAG, as were all of the appeals.
Councilman Erik Petersonâs agenda item Monday night sought to continue to fight the SCAG assessment by filing a challenge in state court. During a closed session last month that Peterson missed because he said he was stuck in traffic, the council voted against taking further action.
âI think it was a missed opportunity,â Peterson said. âFiling this appeal is the next logical step in trying to maintain a semblance of local control.â
However, it quickly became clear Petersonâs item Monday didnât have the votes to move forward. A substitute motion by Councilman Dan Kalmick to postpone the item indefinitely passed 5-2, with Peterson and Mayor Pro Tem Tito Ortiz voting no.
Kalmick brought up the substitute motion quickly, noting the Council had already discussed the matter in the March closed session. Councilman Mike Posey quickly concurred.
âI canât help it that Mr. Peterson couldnât get here on time,â Posey said. âIf it wasnât important then, itâs not important now, so we move on.â
Councilwoman Barbara Delgleize said she appreciated the appeal request, but the city had already appealed and lost the RHNA allocation numbers. She also concurred with Peterson that the stateâs mandated numbers are âunattainable and wrong.â
âThereâs enough cities out there that feel just like we do,â she said. âWe are not the only people in this area of Southern California that are having issues with these numbers, but we have to participate in planning of some kind...Weâve sued already, weâve sued a lot, and weâve lost. And guess what else? It costs a lot of money.â
Posey, who is on the regional council for SCAG, said he doesnât like the prospect of zoning for 13,386 units either. âBut youâre never going to go from 13,386 to zero,â he said. âYouâre not even going to go from 13,000 to 10,000 ... weâre going on a foolâs errand [by suing].â
The council listened to several callers during public comment who were in favor of Petersonâs item, and also received dozens of emails in support of the item. A petition online decrying the stateâs mandatory housing requirements, started by Huntington Beach finance commissioner Casey McKeon, has more than 700 signatures.
âThe path forward is through litigation, not through legislation, as others have suggested,â McKeon said while calling into Monday nightâs meeting. âIn 2019, former mayors Jill Hardy and Lyn Semeta warned how dangerous and unconstitutional this RHNA allocation is, and directed our city attorney to draft a letter outlining the supported facts. What has changed since then, that you no longer want to take up this fight for our city through the appeal process?â
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.