‘Dip house’ survives vote
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Barbara Diamond
Approval on Tuesday of the proposed “dip house” cast a pall over the
City Council.
The council voted 3-2 after a closed session with the city
attorney to approve the 1,100 square-foot house for the problematic
lot on Glenneyre Street at the dip near Calliope Street.
“Speaking with the city attorney can be a sobering experience,”
said a despondent Councilwoman Cheryl Kinsman. “The problem is that
this is a legal building site. The question is what do we want to put
on it? Do we want to decide ourselves or have the court decide? I
want us to decide.”
Kinsman voted with Mayor Elizabeth Pearson-Schneider and
Councilwoman Jane Egly to approve the project.
“I don’t support this project, but I will vote for it,” Egly said.
“It shouldn’t have been a legal building site, but after conferring
with the city attorney, the wise decision is to vote to allow the
project.”
“We did what was best for the city, because we had to,’ Kinsman
said. “We couldn’t let it go to court. We would have lost.”
Pearson-Schneider said the city should have required an
environmental impact report on the property, but the staff said that
no distinctive habitat and the absence of a city-mapped watercourse
inclined them toward the less demanding negative declaration of
impacts.
“I don’t think we have approached this project with enough care,”
said Councilwoman Toni Iseman, who voted against the project and
wanted it returned to the Design Review board for further scrutiny.
A parade of neighbors objected verbally and by letter to the
project. The long-standing objections were based on traffic safety --
the lack of sight lines driving out of the property onto a collector
street -- and environmental concerns.
“There is a watershed, I have seen it overflow,” said Annette
Stevens, who lives across Glenneyre Street from the proposed home.
“If he wants to build, he should build on my side of the street. I am
100 feet from a blue line stream.”
A blue line stream is one that is colored blue on U.S. maps.
Restrictions apply to the proximity of buildings near the stream,
unless there is no other place for a structure on a lot that can be
built upon. “Development on a stream bed is folly,” Bluebird Canyon
resident Leah Vasquez said. “The lot should never have been listed as
a legal building site.”
The project had been rejected by the Design Review Board on a 3-2
vote and was appealed by property owner, Jeff Garner, the architect
for the home, which he designed for his son on the challenging lot.
“Does this project make good sense? Probably not,” Community
Development Department Director John Montgomery said.
“There is only one person who wants this project approved -- well
maybe his attorney, too,” Kinsman said.
Attorney Gene Gratz said denial of the current project would
constitute a taking because the parcel is a legal building site and
the proposed home met all city codes and every request the city had
made of the architect. He said the council was obliged to approve the
project.
The proposed project is for a 1,100-square-foot, single-family
home and attached two-car carport under it. The elevated home will be
built on caissions driven into the bedrock below the flood plain.
More than 80 percent of the lot will be covered with impermeable
material, only about 30 percent of it house.
A long driveway to near the back of the property doubles back to
wind up under the house for vehicle storage that allows a turnaround
so that drivers do not back out onto heavily traveled Glenneyre
Street.
“Glenneyre is not just a street, it’s a thoroughfare,” Iseman
said. “Our job is to ensure public safety.”
Gratz said his client would indemnify the city and hold it
harmless. Councilman Steven Dicterow, who voted to deny the project,
requested a pledge not to sue.
City Attorney Philip Kohn recommended the council direct staff to
prepare a resolution with the council findings to approve the project
and conditions of approval. The conditions include a review by the
Army Corps of Engineers and the county, which has a drainage project
planned sometime in the future.
The resolution will come back to the council on the consent
calendar for the June 7 meeting.
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