|
November
22, 2002
David
Potter, Chair [Sent By FAX and Email]
Monterey County Board of Supervisors
240 Church Street
Salinas, CA 93901
RE:
General Plan Update and Property Owner Requests
November 26, 2002 Agenda Item S-11
Dear
Chairperson Potter and Board Members:
To
date, as a new General Plan has been developed, the Monterey County
Board of Supervisors has maintained a commitment to principle-based
planning. The draft GPU was based on twelve guiding objectives,
and these guiding objectives articulated important planning principles
that represent the heart and soul of the draft GPU.
Moreover, these twelve guiding objectives were developed from one
of the most aggressive and successful public outreach efforts that
has ever been undertaken in this county.
The
public understands and overwhelmingly supports the planning principles
upon which the draft GPU has been based. Among other things,
these principles require that new growth be directed into a small
number of areas specifically set aside for urban level development.
This fundamental principle will guarantee that new growth goes where
services can be provided in a cost-effective manner, and will also
make certain that the community preserves and protects the commercial
agricultural lands that support our local economy, and the natural
and open space lands that make Monterey County such a unique and
spectacular place.
It
is now time to do a next draft of the General Plan Update.
LandWatch asks each member of the Board to maintain the Boards
commitment to principle-based planning, as you take your actions
on November 26th. Specifically, LandWatch asks Board Members to
deny all property owner requests that are inconsistent with the
fundamental, guiding objectives that are the foundation upon which
the draft General Plan Update has been based.
The
County Administrative Officer is making a recommendation to you
that proposes political compromise as the foundation
for your decision-making on November 26th.
Please
reject this approach. You are asked by the CAO to approve at least
twelve different property owner requests for the development of
rural and agricultural lands that are inconsistent with the principles
upon which the draft General Plan Update has been based. All of
these property owner requests have been subjected to review by the
public, Planning Commission, and the Countys planning staffas
well as by the Board of Supervisors itself. These are proposals
that both the Planning Commission and the planning staff have agreed
are fundamentally inconsistent with the principles upon which the
draft GPU is based.
Naturally,
approving only twelve inconsistent property owner requests is better
than approving thirty-four, or two hundred and seventy. This Board
gets public credit, however, not for the five votes that may be
mobilized for a compromised plan, but for three votes mobilized
for a General Plan based on principle.
The
ultimate adoption of an internally consistent, legally sufficient
General Plan that will meet the needs of Monterey County in the
21st Century depends on your continued commitment to principle-based
planning.
Again,
LandWatch urges your Board to maintain such a commitment to a principle-based
planning process. The new General Plan for Monterey County should
be based on the good planning principles developed through the Countys
extensive public processprinciples that the public overwhelmingly
supports. Accommodating individual development requests when
these go contrary to the principles that establish the public interest
is not a victory. Its a defeat.
Rancho
San Juan
A
number of the property owner requests are related to a proposed
development at Rancho San Juan, adjacent to the City of Salinas.
This is an extremely controversial (and massive) development proposal
that has been officially opposed by the City of Salinas, and that
has drawn very critical commentary from members of the public, and
from groups like LandWatch.
I
am restating a recommendation made in earlier comments on the draft
General Plan Update. You can return to a principle-based planning
approach in the Rancho San Juan area by eliminating any reference
to Rancho San Juan in the new GPUbut including language in
the GPU that says that the County is processing a Specific Plan
request for this area, submitted under the current General Plan,
and that when a decision has been made on this Specific Plan for
Rancho San Juan, the new General Plan Update will be amended to
incorporate the decisions made in that specific planning process.
All the property owner requests related to Rancho San Juan should
be considered, and either accepted or rejected, as part of that
Specific Plan process.
Placing commitments to Rancho San Juan in the new GPU is to make
a precommitment, prior to completing the Specific Plan process
now underway. The Board should reject such a precommitment, and
carry the current Specific Plan process to completion.
Return
The Next Draft To The Public
The current proposal is to direct a redraft of the General
Plan Update, and then to bring that redraft back to the next Board
of Supervisors for further review and action. LandWatch urges you
(whatever your decisions today) to direct the County Administrative
Officer to incorporate the changes you mandate, and then to return
the next draft to the public, and submit it to environmental
review. This Board has been tinkering with the draft
GPU for about three months. Its time to give the public another
chance to comment on the next draft. The Board, of course, will
always get the final word.
Thank
you for taking our strongly held views into consideration.

cc:
CAO; County GPU Staff; Planning Commission
[Return
to County Plan Update Issues and Actions]
x
|