|
The
People of San Benito County do ordain as follows:
The
name of this ordinance is “The San Benito County Growth Control
Initiative”.
Section
1. Purpose
The
purpose of this Initiative is to protect San Benito County, its
agricultural lands and other valuable open space and natural resources,
from excessive and harmful development. The objectives are
to:
-
Preserve the Rural Character and the Quality of Life of San Benito
County
-
Protect Agricultural Lands and Maintain and Enhance Farming and
Ranching
-
Safeguard Natural Resources, Open Space, and Scenic Beauty
- Limit and Stabilize the Rate of Development
at a Level the County Can Live With
-
Reduce Traffic Congestion and Hazard
-
Lessen Air and Water Pollution
-
Permit Adequate Levels of Public Services
-
Secure Less Costly, Compact Urban Development instead of Scattered,
Sprawling Growth
Section
2. Findings
The citizens of San Benito County deliberately find and declare:
(a)
Growth. San Benito County is at a critical juncture.
Development and population in the County have increased very rapidly,
much faster than in surrounding counties and greater than twice
the State level. There are intense pressures for far more
growth; official projections are a population of 115,000 by the
year 2040. Huge developments are proposed, even in outlying
agricultural areas. Growth is increasingly fraying the County’s
rural and small town character and sense of community. Many
of the County’s valuable natural qualities have been destroyed
or impaired. Much that remains is in jeopardy.
(b)
Public Services. Rampant growth overwhelms the County’s
infrastructure and ability to provide critical public services (police
and fire protection, public health, parks), given the County Government’s
limited, more slowly growing revenues. Properly planned, compact
development in and near existing urban areas is much less costly
than sprawling or scattered development to users and to taxpayers.
(c)
Agriculture. Agriculture is the base for the County’s
economy and way of life. The County’s farming and grazing
lands are among the most productive in California, a bountiful source
of nearby vegetables, fruit and other produce. They are an
irreplaceable local, state and national resource. Increasingly,
this agricultural land is being paved and roofed over, and cut up
into parcels for quasi-rural residential development. Large parcel
sizes and freedom from residential interference are crucial for
viable farms and ranches. Preservation of agriculture is key to
preserving the natural resources as well as the economy of the County.
A vital agriculture, over the long term, can only be assured if
the County makes a strong commitment to its maintenance and enhancement.
(d)
Destruction of Natural Resources. Excessive,
sprawling, and scattered residential development needlessly destroy
not only the County’s farmland but also wildlife habitat,
scenic vistas, and other vital natural qualities. Obtrusive
development adjacent to public roads and on hilltops and slopes
preempts large amounts of open space. The County’s natural
beauty is being disfigured; its historic character lost.
(e)
Traffic and Health and Safety. In significant part,
San Benito County is being transformed from a rural community into
bedroom suburbs for persons employed elsewhere. A result is
dysfunctional commuting patterns which create severe congestion
and hazard on overloaded roads and streets. The County now
does not meet State air quality standards. Excessive development
exacerbates air pollution harmful to people and property; especially
vulnerable are persons with respiratory and heart problems, children,
the elderly. Sewage disposal facilities in the County’s
urban areas are seriously inadequate; remedial action is very expensive
and will take years.
(f)
Housing. San Benito County has provided much more than
its fair share of housing for the region; it has a gross excess
of housing over jobs. There is a substantial work commute
to other counties, which have not provided sufficient housing for
their workers. Residential development on large lots consumes a
huge amount of land but relatively provides little housing, certainly
not housing affordable for most County residents. Higher density
housing in and near built up areas would be much less costly to
homeowners, taxpayers and the County. There are thousands
of acres outside of agricultural areas to meet housing needs.
(g)
Development Regulations. The County must revise its land
use regulations to preserve agriculture and open space while meeting
housing needs. Under current regulations, tens of thousands
of dwelling units, housing more than 125,000 persons, legally could
be built on unincorporated lands outside of cities. The County
now limits the numbers of parcels that may be created each year,
but not the building permits that may be issued on the numerous
existing parcels. Current minimum parcel sizes of five acres
in Agricultural Productive Areas and forty acres in Agricultural
Rangeland Areas are unsuitable either for farming or for affordable
housing. Incompatible non-agricultural uses are permitted
broadly in agricultural areas. Moreover, development controls
that the County now does have can be eliminated at any time by a
majority of the Board of Supervisors.
(h)
Burden of Proof. Within the meaning of California Evidence
Code Section 669.5(c)(3), this ordinance is designed to protect
agricultural use as defined in Government Code Section 51201(b)
and open space land as defined in Government Code Section 65560(b).
(i)
Federal and State Law. This Initiative is subject to Federal
and State law, which is not always clearly determined and not infrequently
changes. Accordingly, the measure contains provisions that
it does not apply to the extent application would be inconsistent
with Federal or State law. These provisions are designed to
ensure that the Initiative will not conflict with superior law,
in the future as well as currently.
Section
3. General Plan Amendments
(a)
Sections 4 through 19 amend the San Benito County General Plan.
The amendments shall be placed in the Plan as specified or, absent
specification, as appropriate in the Land Use Element or the Open
Space and Conservation Element and on Plan maps, subject to further
relocation deemed proper by County officials. Material deleted
from the Plan by the amendments is in strikeout type (crossed out);
material added is underlined, except some headings in the
existing Plan are underlined. Further amendments of the Plan
are made in Section 24.
Section
4. Protection of Legal Rights; Compliance with the Law
Notwithstanding
their literal terms, the provisions of the Initiative do not apply
to the extent that courts determine that if they were applied they
would deprive any person or persons of constitutional or statutory
rights or privileges, would be a taking without requisite compensation,
or in any respect would be inconsistent with the United States or
State constitutions or laws. This limitation is to ensure
that the provisions do not infringe constitutional or other legal
rights or violate the law in any way, or subject the County to any
liability. To the extent that a provision of the Initiative
does not apply because of this Section, the County may permit only
that parcel creation, development, or use that meets the requirements
of law, that is most nearly consistent with the Initiative and is
in accord with the other provisions of this General Plan.
Section
5. State Housing Requirements
(a)
Nothing in the Initiative, including in this Section, shall be
applied to preclude County compliance with any legal obligation
to provide for housing.
(b)
To the maximum extent practicable, the County shall meet State
housing legal requirements in accordance with this Plan. If
the County must use Agricultural Productive or Agricultural Rangeland
Areas to meet these requirements, beyond the uses permitted by the
Initiative, it shall:
(1) use no more land in the areas than
is necessary for the State mandated housing;
(2) locate the housing adjacent, or
as near as possible, to existing urban or higher density residential
areas;
(3)
to the extent practicable, use non-prime rather than prime soils;
and
(4) ensure that at least 40% of the
housing provided shall be effectively and permanently committed
for occupancy by senior and other moderate, lower and very low income
persons, families and households, with at least one half of the
40% for lower and very low income households.
(c)
If the County must use the designated agricultural areas, the minimum
parcel size, limit on the number of dwelling units on a parcel,
maximum floor area, and height restrictions in the Initiative shall
not apply to the extent necessary to confine the use to the minimum
area needed to meet State legal requirements.
Section
6. Annual Limit on Dwelling Unit Permits
Policy 41 is added to the Land Use Element.
POLICY 41
There
shall be a limit each calendar year on the aggregate number of building
and placement permits issued, or other approvals granted, for the
construction of dwelling units in unincorporated areas of the County,
whether in single-unit or multi-unit structures, and for the initial
placement of manufactured housing, including mobile homes.
This aggregate limit shall equal 1%, on average over any three years,
of the County’s population in unincorporated areas divided
by the average number of persons per household in those areas, both
figures as determined by the most recent United States Census.
This annual limit may be increased by up to 50% (i.e. 0.5%) for
dwelling units permanently and effectively committed to occupancy
by an appropriate mix of senior and other moderate, lower and very
low income persons, families and households. The annual limit
may also be increased by up to 50% for dwelling units to be constructed
or placed on the basis of transferable development credits authorized
by Policy 7A. The limit shall not apply to the construction
within three years of dwelling units to replace units destroyed
or eliminated; nor shall it apply to dwelling units, if any, that
are exempt under State law from the annual limit or to State required
density bonus units. Dwelling units for moderate, lower and
very low income households or based on transferable development
credits may be given preference in allocating the 1% annual limit.
If fewer permits are granted than are permitted
under the annual limit and under the allowed annual increases for
moderate, lower and very low income households and for dwelling
units based on transferable development credits, then the number
of credits that could have been issued but were not in each category
shall be carried forward as an increase in that category for subsequent
years until permits are issued for that number or seven years have
elapsed.
Section
7. Transferable Development Credits Program
Policy 7A is added to the Land Use Element of the General
Plan.
POLICY 7A
The County shall establish a Transferable Development
Credits Program for those Agricultural Productive Areas that are
subdesignated Agricultural Productive 20 (AP 20). Property
owners may choose to participate in this program. It allows
participating owners to share in development values elsewhere in
the County, especially given the added development permitted there
under the program, while protecting agricultural and other valuable
natural resource lands.
(a) Transferable Development Credits shall be granted
by the County to property owners in conformity with this Policy,
according to rule, in number and manner to further the objectives
of the Initiative. Credits shall be granted on the following
bases:
(1) not less than one credit
times the number of parcels that legally could have been created
on a parcel prior to the Initiative minus the number of parcels
that may be created under the minimum parcel sizes established by
the Initiative;
(2) not less than four credits
for an owner forgoing the right to create an additional parcel permitted
under this Plan;
(3)
not less than four credits for an owner forgoing all dwelling
units on a parcel, which forbearance shall also include all dwelling
units on one of the parcels existing after any permitted subdivision
or subdivisions of the parcel.
The County may differentiate among areas in the number
of credits granted, in excess of the minimums guaranteed by this
subsection, to reflect development potential or harm, and among
grantees according to their willingness to participate in the program
at an earlier rather than later date.
(b)
Development credits may be used as the Board of Supervisors authorizes,
consistent with this Plan, in unincorporated areas not designated
Agricultural Productive or Agricultural Rangeland or areas west
of Highway 101, to build dwelling units or commercial and industrial
space that otherwise would not be permitted, or not permitted until
a later time. The Board shall provide for the efficacious
use of credits to accomplish the objectives of the Program. With
reasonable justification, the Board may permit more development
per credit in some receiving areas and for certain types of development.
Credits may also be used in incorporated areas, if their use is
approved by the city.
(c)
Credits may be sold or purchased, or otherwise transferred or received,
by any person including the County and other governmental or non-governmental
entities. The County may buy and sell credits, including by
means of a revolving fund replenished by the sale of credits, to
establish and maintain an effective market for the credits, or to
extinguish credits.
(d) The County shall make appropriate arrangements to inform
persons about the development credits program, to facilitate the
transfer of credits, and to ensure adequate, accurate records of
development credit grants, transfers and use.
(e) As a prerequisite to the grant
of development credits, owners shall convey to the County and, if
one is available, jointly to a land trust (that complies with the
Land Trust Standards and Practices of the Land Trust Alliance) an
easement on the parcel from which parcels could have been created
under (a)(1) or (a)(2) or on which dwellings are forgone under (a)(3).
The
easement shall bar any land division, development or use not permitted
by the Initiative on the parcel subject to the easement. In
addition, if credits are granted under (a)(2) the easement shall
relinquish any right to create the parcel forgone, and if granted
under (a)(3) the right to any dwelling unit or any other development
on the parcel involved or if that parcel is subdivided on one of
the parcels existing after any permitted subdivision or subdivisions
of the parcel, except development for agricultural use under Section
12 (1), Uses in Agricultural Areas, of the Initiative and for permitted
processing, packaging, storage or sale of produce or plants under
Section 12 (2). The Board of Supervisors may require that
additional restrictions be included in easements.
The
easement, to run with the land, shall be negative only; it shall
convey no possessory interest to the County or land trust, nor confer
any right of public access. The owner shall retain exclusive
occupancy and use. The County has no responsibility or liability
because of the easement for acts or omissions on the parcel, except
in good faith and effectually to prevent or remedy violations of
the easement.
Easements shall be duly recorded in
the County land records.
(f) Nothing in the Initiative bars
the County from granting development credits for areas not included
or on bases other than specified in this Policy.
Section
8. Minimum Parcel Sizes
(a)
The third paragraph on page 8 of the Land Use Element of the Plan
is amended to read:
1.
AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVE (5 acre minimum lot size)
This
designation is applied especially to those lands which are identified
as being prime agricultural lands but also includes agriculturally
productive lands of any type, including grazing lands.
The minimum lot size in this area shall be five acres.
The minimum parcel size on lands designated Agricultural Productive
is twenty acres in the area bounded by the San Benito County-Santa
Clara County Boundary from Highway 101 to Pacheco Creek, Pacheco
Creek to Highway 156, south on Highway 156 to Fairview Road, Fairview
Road to McCloskey Road, McCloskey Road to the Hollister City Boundary,
generally north, west and south along that Boundary to Wright Road,
Wright Road to Buena Vista Road, Buena Vista Road to Highway 156,
southwest on Highway 156 to Union Road, Union Road south
to the area designated Manufacturing (M1) on the General Plan Land
Use Designation Maps, by a line southwest and south along the western
boundary of that area to the area designated Agricultural Rangeland,
generally west and northwest along the northern boundary of the
areas designated Agricultural Rangeland (including the areas redesignated
Agricultural Rangeland by Section 9 of the Initiative) to the San
Benito County-Monterey County boundary, that boundary to Highway
101, and Highway 101 to the San Benito County-Santa Clara County
Boundary. This area shall be subdesignated Agricultural
Productive 20 (AP 20), including on the General Plan Land Use
Designations Maps.
In other areas designated Agricultural Productive the
minimum parcel size isbe isisi
five acres. These areas shall be subdesignated Agricultural
Productive 5 (AP 5), including on the Land Use Designation Maps.
(b)
the fourth paragraph on page 8 of the Land Use Element is amended
to read:
2.
AGRICULTURAL RANGELAND (40 acre minimum lot size)
This
designation applies primarily to rangeland, watersheds and hillside
areas is assigned to the remote hillside areas, watershed
and rangeland, such as Williamson Act land, many of which have been
classified as some form of open space within the Open Space and
Conservation Elements. These areas are typified by a lack
of transportation access, high to very high fire hazard,
and by the lack of utility services, or by steep slopes
or remoteness. to allow for more dense types of development.
Many of these areas are found within the critical fire hazard
area or in the ”out-back” areas of the many isolated
canyons throughout the County. The minimum parcel
size for areas designated Agricultural Rangeland is 160 acres.
(c) The areas subdesignated Agricultural Productive 20 and
Agricultural Productive 5 and the areas designated Agricultural
Rangeland are depicted approximately on the map in the Appendix.
That map is for purposes of illustration only; it is not enacted
by this Initiative.
Section
9. Redesignations
The area designated Agricultural Productive (AP) on the General
Plan Land Use Designation Maps east and south of Hollister (including
the area west and south of Bolado Park) is redesignated Agricultural
Rangeland (AR), except for that part of the area bounded by a straight
line extended due south from Best Road to the line that separates
the north and south halves of Section 19, that line extended due
west to the San Benito River, and the San Benito River to Hospital
Road. Areas designated Rural in the western part of the County,
south of Highway 156, that are contiguous with areas designated
Agricultural Rangeland are redesignated Agricultural Rangeland.
All of the areas redesignated Agricultural Rangeland by this section
shall be changed to that designation on the General Plan Land Use
Designation Maps, and are subject to the provisions of this Initiative
and the General Plan that apply to Agricultural Rangeland Areas.
(Redesignations made by this section are illustrated on the Map
in the Appendix.)
Section
10. Flood Plain Designations
The Flood category on page 15 of the Land Use Element
is amended to read:
FLOOD
This category applies to land located within the1% flood
hazard zones (100-year flood plain) on the Federal Emergency Management
Agency maps adopted by the County. Uses allowed on existing
lots of record within the category include agriculture, grazing,
mineral extraction, wildlife refuges, land in its natural state,
and selected low intensity recreation and other such uses permitted
by the San Benito County Flood Zone Ordinance. Future
commercial and industrial uUses shall be carefully evaluated
on a case by case basis pursuant to flood mitigation criteria
with respect to flood concerns.
The Flood Plain designations on the General Plan Land
Use Designation Maps are an overlay on other land use designations
and subdesignations within whose boundaries on the maps the Flood
Plain areas are located. The Flood Plain areas are governed
by the General Plan provisions for the underlying designations and
subdesignations and, to the extent that they are more restrictive,
or impose additional requirements, by the flood plain provisions
of this Plan, and by ordinances and regulations implementing those
provisions.
Section
11. Certificates of Compliance
Policy 42 is added to the Land Use Element.
Policy 42
The County may not grant certificates of compliance except
as required by State law. All relevant restrictive conditions
permissible under State law shall be imposed on conditional certificates
of compliance, and the owner or subsequent transferees held to strict
compliance with those conditions. A certificate of compliance
by itself creates no right to develop, or diminishes in any respect
the County’s authority to control development.
Section
12. Uses in Agricultural Areas
Paragraph two on page 8 of the Land Use Element of the General
Plan is amended as follows:
AGRICULTURAL
This
category applies to the majority of the land area within San Benito
County. It is divided into two designations, Agricultural
Productive and Agricultural Rangeland. This land is now generally
used for agriculture, including grazing, natural resources, watershed,
outdoor recreation, open space, wildlife refuges and very low density
residential. This land is presently used for
agriculture, hillsides over 30%, rangeland and open space purposes.
The uses allowed within this category include agriculture, grazing,
land in its natural state, wildlife refuges, very low intensity
residential, and uses that, by their nature, must be located in
undeveloped areas. Conditional uses include mineral extraction,
low density recreational facilities and institutional land uses.
This category is divided into two density zones; Apart
from uses preemptively authorized by Federal or State law, uses
allowed in Agricultural Productive and Agricultural Rangeland Areas
are the following, with their customary and appropriate accessory
uses and structures, provided that the uses comply with all the
provisions of this Plan and with County ordinances and regulations
implementing the Plan:
(1) Agriculture and horticulture,
including but not limited to arboretums, gardens, nurseries, dairies,
and rearing, feeding and sale of cattle and other ruminants (however,
the floor area of greenhouses is limited to 1% of a parcel’s
area or 40,000 square feet, whichever is greater, except to the
extent that the greenhouses are used to grow crops in the underlying
soil);
(2) Processing, packaging, storage
or sale of agricultural produce or plants, a major portion
of which over the course of a year were grown in San Benito County;
3) Provision of agricultural
services and manufacture of products to meet the unmet needs of
County agriculture that cannot practically be met outside the designated
Agricultural Areas;
(4) Rearing, feeding, training,
care, study or sale or rental of animals, consistent with Federal,
State and County environmental protection regulations;
(5) One single family dwelling
unit per parcel (except as provided under Policy 7B of the Land
Use Element for clustering or required by Policy 16 of the Open
Space and Conservation Element), secondary units mandated by State
law, housing for bona fide agricultural workers employed
on the parcel involved or on a farm or ranch of which the parcel
is a part (this housing may not be used as housing for non-farm
workers), and rental of rooms to lodgers in a single family dwelling
unit;
(6) Home occupations and offices,
secondary to residential use, primarily conducted by residents of
a parcel, that will not have deleterious effects on the environment
or visual qualities;
(7) Outdoor recreation and pastimes
predominantly for active participants, not spectators, and subordinate,
auxiliary uses including short-term lodging and provision of food
and drink; this category of uses does not include, among other things,
amusement or theme parks, stadiums or arenas, or recreational vehicle
parking for more than several days, but it does include low-intensity
campgrounds, without sewage or electrical hookups, and picnic areas;
uses permitted under this paragraph may not interfere materially
with agriculture or with the ability to use Grade 1 or 2 soils for
agriculture and shall accord with a rural environment;
(8) Accommodations for short-term
visitors not to exceed fifteen rental units, and provision of food
and drink, which do not interfere materially with agriculture and
are in accord with a rural environment;
(9) Use of historic structures
to preserve the structures, their historic qualities or setting
that will not have deleterious effects on agriculture, the environment
or visual qualities;
(10) Exploration, extraction,
processing, storage and transmission of energy, minerals, water,
rock or soil entirely or largely from San Benito County, consistent
with Federal, State and County environmental regulations and visual
safeguards;
(11) Disposal, treatment and
processing of wastes from San Benito County, consistent with Federal,
State and County environmental and visual regulations, that the
Board of Supervisors finds reasonably cannot be provided outside
areas designated Agricultural; composting is not subject to this
finding requirement and may use material from outside the County;
(12) Special, occasional short-term
events related to agriculture or animals (for example, fairs, rodeos,
horseshows, wine festivals) that do not interfere materially with
agriculture or cause more than short-term environmental harm;
(13) Appropriately limited commercial
or professional uses (for example, neighborhood stores, repair shops,
medical facilities, veterinary services, child care centers) predominantly
to provide goods or services to meet the unmet needs of residents,
highway users, and permitted activities in the designated Agricultural
Areas that practically cannot be met outside those areas;
(14) Institutional and other
non-profit uses that predominantly serve residents of the Agricultural
Areas or that would be permitted by for-profit entities, and facilities
for meetings and retreats not to exceed, in aggregate, 10,000 square
feet floor area including accessory buildings; and
(15) County and other government
facilities and infrastructure, private air strips, and public utilities,
that are limited to meeting the needs created by permitted uses
in the designated Agricultural Areas, except to the extent the Board
of Supervisors finds reasonably more extensive need that cannot
be met outside those areas; government outdoor recreation facilities
and ancillary accommodations are permitted whenever like private
uses would be allowed.
Section
13. Areas of Special Environmental Concern
(a) Policy 3 of the Open Space and Conservation Element
of the Plan is amended to read:
POLICY 3 - Protection of wetlands Mitigation for wetland
development
Development shall be sited to avoid encroachment on wetlands.
Mitigation shall be required for any development proposals that
have the potential to reduce wetland habitat from primary
direct or indirect secondary effects of the
development. Development, agricultural conversion, keeping
of animals, or topographical alteration may not be permitted if,
cumulatively, the quantity or biological quality of wetlands would
be reduced materially. For purposes of this policy, “wetlands”
are areas that under common climatic circumstances are permanently
or periodically covered by water, or where hydrophytic vegetation
is substantially present or soils are primarily hydric in nature.
(b) Policy 32A is added to the Land Use Element of
the General Plan.
POLICY 32A
No
building, in whole or in part, may be located on a slope with a
grade of more than 30%. No building may be located on a site
that has access over a slope of more than 30%. Percentages
are based on the steepness of slopes in their natural, unaltered
state, and are calculated by dividing altitude increase by twenty
over each twenty feet of surface distance.
Section
14. Visual Safeguards
(a) Policy 16 of the Open Space and Conservation Element
is amended to read:
POLICY 16 - Ridgeline development
To preserve the rural character of the area, new development
shall be directed away from the horizon through the use of building
envelopes and integration of building architecture into the contour
of the horizon. Parcels may not be created that have
no building site other than a ridgeline or hilltop, or that would
entail a building or buildings projecting into the view of any ridgeline
or hilltop from public places, unless there is no other possible
configuration. Structures may not be located on ridgelines
or hilltops, or where they will visibly project into the upward
or horizontal view of a ridgeline or hilltop from public roads or
parks, unless there is no less intrusive site on a parcel or a contiguous
parcel in common ownership.
(b)
Policy 36 of the Land Use Element is amended to read:
POLICY 36
The County shall maintain high standards of siting and design
in the for development of for
all land uses. Standards and criteria shall be established
by the County.
Development and alteration of land surfaces shall be subordinate
to and blend harmoniously with the natural and open space qualities
of the area where located, so as not needlessly to impair those
qualities. Structures shall be located, to the extent practicable,
on that part of a parcel that minimizes their visual impact from
public roads and parks. In all cases, appropriate preservation
of vegetation, landscaping, screening, and building materials shall
be required to reduce as much as practicable the visibility of development
and scars from grading. To the extent possible, access roads shall
be located, including by consolidation, where they are least visible
from public roads and parks. Exterior lighting must be designed
and placed to confine direct rays to the parcel where the lighting
is located. In Agricultural Areas, signs shall be no more
numerous, larger or noticeable than is necessary to provide essential
information, and shall be compatible with a rural environment and
the Scenic Roads and Highways Element. The height of buildings
may not exceed 30 feet, except to the extent that the Board of Supervisors
finds reasonably that a greater height is necessary for uses under
Section 12 (1), (2), (3), (11) and (15) of the Initiative.
(c) Policy 7B is added to the Land Use Element.
Policy
7B
In
Agricultural Areas, the County may allow permissible development
to be clustered by transfer of the development from one parcel to
another if the transfer clearly will reduce the adverse visual impact
of the development and is consistent with all the provisions of
this Plan. Clustered development may be on a single parcel
or, notwithstanding Section 8 of the Initiative, on separate contiguous
parcels that do not exceed two acres each.
As
a prerequisite to clustering under this policy, the owner of the
parcel from which development is transferred shall convey an easement
to the County and, if available, jointly to an independent land
trust (that complies with the Land Trust Standards Practices of
the Land Trust Alliance). The easement shall bar any
development on the parcel from which development is transferred
except for agricultural use under Section 12 (1) of the Initiative
(which does not include residential development) and under Section
12 (2) for permitted processing, packaging, storage or sale of produce
or plants. The easement, to run with the land, shall be negative
only; it shall convey no possessory interest to the County or land
trust, nor confer any right of public access. The owner
shall retain exclusive occupancy and use. The County
has no responsibility or liability because of the easement for acts
or omissions on the parcel, except in good faith and effectually
to prevent or remedy violations of the easement. Easements
shall be duly recorded in the County’s land records.
Section
15. Maximum Floor Area
Policy 7C is added to the Land Use Element.
POLICY 7C
In Agricultural Areas the maximum aggregate floor area
in buildings on a parcel may not exceed 1% of the parcel’s
area or 40,000 square feet, whichever is greater. The Board
of Supervisors may increase the maximum floor area for buildings
and greenhouses by up to 40,000 square feet if necessary for permitted
uses under Section 12 of the Initiative. The Board may increase
the maximum by another 40,000 square feet for permitted processing,
packaging and storage facilities under Section 12 (2).
Section
16. Definitions
For purposes of the Initiative, unless the text or context
clearly indicates otherwise:
“Agricultural Productive Areas” means areas
designated Agricultural Productive and “Agricultural Rangeland
Areas” means areas designated Agricultural Rangeland on the
General Plan Land Use Designations maps on December 1. 2002, or
by the Initiative; “Agricultural Areas” are Agricultural
Productive and Agricultural Rangeland areas;
“Building”
is any structure having a roof with a floor area of more than fifty
square feet, except greenhouses and water tanks;
“Development” includes the construction or
placement of a building or structure, including mobile dwelling
units;
“Initiative” is the self-named San Benito
County Growth Control Initiative;
“Moderate, lower and very low income persons, families
or households” have the same meaning as under Section 50093,
50079.5 and 50105 of the California Health and Safety Code, respectively,
or successor state statutory definitions;
“State Law” includes State constitutional
provisions, valid statutes and court declared common law;
“Structure” includes any building, greenhouse,
tower, utility line, dam, pumping facility, or anything constructed,
erected, or placed, the use of which requires location on ground
or attachment to something located on ground.
Section
17. Application
(a)
The Initiative does not affect the validity of parcels, development,
and uses to the extent that they existed legally at the time the
Initiative became effective, unless they are voluntarily eliminated
or abandoned. However, the County may not permit parcels,
development, or uses to be changed or expanded in ways that are
inconsistent with the prohibitions, restrictions, limitations,
or requirements of the Initiative.
(b) The County shall apply the prohibitions, restrictions,
limitations, and requirements of the Initiative to proposed parcels,
development, and uses unless they have received all discretionary
County authorizations and approvals prior to the effective date
of the Initiative, except to the extent precluded by State law.
Section
18. Inconsistent County Plans, Ordinances and Actions
(a) To the extent that there is inconsistency between
a provision of the Initiative and another provision of the General
Plan that other provision is superseded and the Initiative shall
govern unless voters approved the other provision after approval
of the Initiative. However, General Plan provisions are
not to be deemed inconsistent with the Initiative because they
impose prohibitions, restrictions, limitations or requirements
in addition to those imposed by the Initiative. In that
respect, the Initiative establishes only minimum standards, which
the County may augment without creating inconsistency.
(b) Any provision of any existing or subsequently adopted
specific, area or other plan that is not part of the General Plan
and of any zoning ordinance or any other ordinance, resolution
or policy of the County may not be applied to the extent that
the application would be inconsistent with the Initiative, except
as State law mandates to the contrary.
(c) No subdivision or parcel map, development
plan, development agreement, use permit, variance or other action
inconsistent with the prohibitions, restrictions, limitations
or requirements of the Initiative may be approved, permitted or
taken by the County (including approval or permission by operation
of law because of inaction), except as required by State law.
Section
19. Compliance and Enforcement
The
County government shall implement and enforce the provisions of
the Initiative diligently and effectually. It shall use
the most effective means at its disposal, subject to any official
discretion required by State law, to prevent, abate and remedy
violations of the Initiative. Residents of the County may enforce the Initiative by suits
for injunctive relief against the County or any person in violation
of the Initiative or to prevent impending violations.
Section
20. Effective Date
This Initiative shall become effective as provided by statute,
except if all the General Plan amendments permitted by law in
the year in which the measure is approved have been made the Initiative
shall become effective and amend the plan at the beginning of
January 1 of the following year.
Section
21. Amendments
As mandated by State law, this Initiative may be repealed
or amended only by vote of the people of San Benito County, except
the Board of Supervisors may amend the Initiative (1) to impose
additional prohibitions, restrictions, limitations and requirements
on the division, development, use and alteration of land, and
(2) to increase or reduce the maximum floor areas in Section 15.
The Board may also make or provide for non-substantive modifications
to the Initiative for purpose of clarification, consistency of
form or organization of the General Plan. Any modifications
must be consistent with the substantive provisions and purpose
of the Initiative.
Section
22. Severability
If one or more than one section, subsection, paragraph,
subparagraph, sentence, clause, term, or application of this Initiative
is invalid, that invalidity shall not affect the validity of any
other part or application unless the clear effect would be to
defeat the overall purpose of the measure. Each part and
application of this Initiative would have been enacted as it was
irrespective of the fact that one or more other parts or applications
are declared invalid or inapplicable, except to the extent the
effect clearly would be to defeat the purpose of the measure.
Section
23. Conflicting Ballot Measures
If
there are other General Plan amendments on the same ballot as
this measure that are approved by the voters, this measure shall
be effective, except to the extent that its provisions are in
actual, irreconcilable conflict with particular Plan amendments
of one or more other measures and that measure or those measures
received more votes. Otherwise, provisions in another measure
shall be ineffective in nullifying the provisions of this Initiative.
Section
24. General Plan Consistency
The
General Plan is amended as follows to eliminate or revise material
that is or may deemed to be inconsistent with this Initiative
or no longer appropriate.
(a) General Plan Maps (characterized as Figures) shall
be changed expeditiously to conform to the textual provisions
of the Initiative.
(b) Tables in the General Plan Elements, which
summarize the policies of the Plan, to the extent not amended
below shall be revised promptly to conform to the textual provisions
of the Initiative.
(c)
General Plan text below in strikeout type (crossed out) is deleted
from the Plan. Material underlined is added to the Plan
(except some section and paragraph headings are underlined in
the existing Plan). Because of the volume, material unchanged
is omitted, even within a paragraph, unless regarded as helpful
in making sense of an amendment. Material unchanged is not
enacted by this Initiative.
LAND USE ELEMENT
Page 1
The
time-horizon of this Plan Update is 10 years. It is intended,
however, that this General Plan be reviewed annually and updated
every three years as required to insure that the
most recent technical data, community goals and State law requirements
are recognized.
Page
5
TABLE 1
UNINCORPORATED SAN BENITO COUNTY LAND USE BREAKDOWN
| DESIGNATION |
ACRES |
TYPES
OF HOUSING ALLOWABLE |
DWELLING
UNITS(1) |
POPULATION |
MAXIMUM
POPULATION PER ACRE |
| Agricultural
Productive |
56650 |
SF
1 unit/5acres |
11000 |
36029 |
0.64 |
|
(a) Agricultural Productive 20 |
|
SF
1 unit/20 acres |
|
|
0.16 |
|
(b) Agricultural Productive 5 |
|
SF
1 unit/5acres |
|
|
0.64 |
| Agricultural
Rangeland |
659174 |
SF
1 unit/40160acres |
16479 |
52403 |
0.8
0.02 |
| Rural |
10516 |
SF
1 unit/5acres |
2103 |
6688 |
0.64 |
| Rural/Urban |
1718 |
SF
up to 8 units/Acre or Mobile Home Parks |
13704 |
43578 |
25.45 |
Page 13
1.
RURAL
Within
areas where the average cross slope equals or exceeds 30%, the
number of allowable units will be determined by use of the County’s
slope density formula.
Page
16
INDUSTRIAL
In
some limited cases, isolated industrial uses will continue to
be permitted as overlay zoning without a general plan amendment.,
provided that the zoning conforms to the Initiative.
GOAL 1
OBJECTIVES
1. 1.
To protect prime
agricultural areas in order to preserve them for the present and
future agricultural production vital to the County.
GOAL 2
OBJECTIVES
b)
To encourage an overall rural approach to development, such as
large lots or the clustering of home sites to preserve the maximum
open space possible in accordance with the Initiative.
GOAL 4
OBJECTIVES
c)
to identify and plan for commercial services near existing federal,
state, and regional parks in conformity with the Initiative.
GOAL 9
f)
Consistent with this Plan, Uutilize area
plans, master plans, specific plans, community plans and other
planning studies to allow population growth in geographic areas
that will maintain an adequate level of public services (fire,
schools, sheriff), and protect natural resources.
POLICY 1
The
agriculturally designated areas of the County shall be developed
at a low density use (5 acre minimum lot size).
POLICY 2
The
type of uses allowed on most agriculturally designated areas within
the County include agriculture, agricultural processing, grazing
, land in its natural state, wildlife refuges, and low intensity
residential. Uses subject to use permit approval, if
consistent with this Plan, include low intensity recreational
facilities, mineral extraction and processing, and also institutional
uses and uses, that, by their nature, should be located in undeveloped
areas.
POLICY 5
Encourage
the private development of participatory recreational facilities,
such as riding areas, camping facilities and hunting clubs.,
that are consistent with the provisions of the Initiative.
POLICY 15
The
majority Much of the development with a density
greater than two units per acre shall occur within the Cities
of San Juan Bautista, Hollister and the Paicines Ranch Resort
project site. All commercial development providing comparative
shopping and serving a regional need, major cultural and institutional
uses and all industrial uses (excluding agricultural-related uses
and low profile compatible industry) shall occur within the Cities,
except for those uses which by their nature should or could be
located in undeveloped areas. Development outside the
Cities shall be in compliance with the Initiative.
POLICY 20
Allow
the development of Neighborhood Plans, consistent with this
Plan, where public interest is demonstrated to maintain and
establish community identity, to coordinate traffic and circulation,
to promote infill development where public services are already
in demand, to identify recreational needs and ensure coordinated
development.
POLICY
21
Designate areas on the General Plan Land Use Map for existing
Neighborhood Commercial
Centers
in the Community of Aromas, Dunneville, and Tres Pinos, and designate
existing commercial facilities in Paicines and Panoche for thoroughfare
Commercial on General Plan Land Use Map.
POLICY
22
To
allow commercial areas in the unincorporated areas to develop,
a general plan amendment shall be required for the establishment
of new commercial areas. In some limited situations, new
small scale isolated commercial operations will be allowed as
overlay zoning in other land use categories., if consistent
with this Plan.
POLICY
27
ACTIONS
a)
Regional centers shall be located near existing or future highway
interchanges or major intersections., as permitted by
the Initiative.
POLICY
30
Direct
industrial development to unincorporated lands within close proximity
to transportation systems, natural resources and existing industrial
operations or to isolated areas that are appropriate for certain
types of industry., provided that the location complies
with the provisions of the Initiative.
POLICY
31
In
some limited situations, new small scale isolated industrial operations
will be allowed as overlay zoning in other land use categories.
if in accord with the Initiative.
POLICY
32
Absent
adequate mitigation and compliance with the Initiative,
development shall not be located on environmentally sensitive
lands (wetlands, erodable soil, archaeological resources, important
plant and animal communities).
POLICY
34
The
County shall amend its Ordinance and Regulations (e.g. Zoning,
Subdivision, Capital Improvements) to conform to the plan and
policies of the Land Use Element. within one year from
the date of adoption.
OPEN SPACE AND CONSERVATION ELEMENT
Page
1
The
Open Space/Conservation Element is designed with a 10-year horizon.
Thus, we are looking ahead to the year 2000. It is intended
that this plan be reviewed annually and updated as needed.
approximately every three years to insure that the most recent
technical data, community goals, and State law requirements are
recognized.
POLICY
5
ACTIONS
2.
Development near oak woodlands shall be clustered to avoid, where
technically or economically practical and consistent with the
Initiative, the loss of trees, and transitional buffers shall
be developed to help maintain viable ecosystems.
POLICY
10
ACTIONS:
1.
The County, by resolution, will establish a policy of urban concentration
for the protection of air quality. The resolution should
specifically discourage prohibit the development
of commercial and residential areas outside of urban centers,
other than those defined in the Land Use Element, in order to
reduce the impacts of air pollution caused by commuting and shopping.
GOAL
2
To
encourage the orderly development of identified concentrations
within the County, in accordance with the Initiative, utilizing
the infilling of existing developed areas and communities, along
with an orderly and efficient development plan for public and
private services (water and sewer districts).
OBJECTIVES
As
it becomes evident that services will soon be available, the County
may choose to increase the allowable density through zoning,
consistent with this Plan, provided that development of these
lands considers ultimate development or urban density through
a master plan for street design and home site location as well
as the provision for urban-type services, such as sewer and storm
drains.
POLICY
13
It
will be the County’s policy to require specific plans,
which are consistent with this Plan, for small, large, new,
or expanding communities that are not incorporated which would
clearly identify centers of urban growth and land uses within
these areas.
POLICY
15
ACTIONS
3.
The County may, at the appropriate time, develop plans for the
unincorporated communities within the County. which
are consistent with this Plan.
POLICY
17
General
Plan Amendments, Specific Plans, Area Plans, and Area of Special
Study that result in a net increase in general plan buildout
(Table 1 of the Land Use Element), shall include methods to conserve
open space for natural resources including agriculture, wildlife
habitat, and water (e.g. conservation easements and/or other similar
resource protection measures). Proposed development areas
shall also include measures to protect resources on-site and contiguous
to the project with the use of permissible clustering,
conservation easements, and other similar programs.
POLICY
22
ACTIONS
5. 5.
Approval of residential
subdivisions where residential densities are already allowed will
be permitted if the following evidence is provided:
d.
subdivision is clustered, consistent with the Initiative,
to minimize land use conflicts.
POLICY
33
It
is the policy of San Benito County to promote and support,
in accordance with the Initiative, the location of new agriculture-related
business and industry and support programs that promote local
agricultural products and increase marketing opportunities.
POLICY
38
ACTIONS
4.
Subdivisions and lot-line adjustments (that create new building
sites) within or near hazardous areas shall be allowed, consistent
with the Initiative, provided that building sites for each
new parcel have adequate access and lot location is consistent
with policies 2 and 4 of the element and with the Initiative.
GOAL
8
Encourage
private development of recreational facilities including, but
not limited to, riding stables, golf courses, camping facilities,
dude ranches and hunting clubs, and residential parks.,
which are consistent with the Initiative.
POLICY
44
It
will be the County’s policy, where appropriate under
this Plan, to utilize land use ordinances to encourage land
owners to provide private recreational facilities and open space
areas. In accordance with the Initiative, Iit
will also be the County’s policy to allow for an economic
return on land while it is being utilized as open space.
ACTIONS
3.
Encourage the development of private recreation (e.g. campgrounds)
near existing Federal and State parks in accord with the Initiative.
POLICY
46
Develop
a County-wide parks master plan, consistent with this Plan,
to identify long-range recreational needs of the County, potential
trail corridors, and areas for potential recreational-tourist
services/programs.
GOAL
10
OBJECTIVE
b. b.
Develop a County-wide
parks master plan to identify potential areas to provide private
and public recreational-tourist services/programs, needed recreation
for County residents, and long-range recreational needs of the
County in accord with this Plan.
HOUSING
ELEMENT
Page
44
Other
constraints to development include flood plains, earthquake fault
zones, and significant agricultural and mineral resources.
Low development densities of one unit per 40 acres or one unit
per five acres are encouraged in areas where one or a combination
of environmental hazards exist.
Page
45
Land
Use. Consistent with the countywide goal to maintain a rural
atmosphere, and to direct development from environmentally hazardous
areas, the vast majority of the County is identified for Agricultural
Rangeland use (1 unit per 40 160 acres) and Agricultural
Productive (1 unit per five and twenty acres). There
is ample land outside areas designated Agriculture to meet County
housing needs. The Land Use Element, however
provides for areas of urban density in the Rural/Urban land use
category and Areas of Special Study.
Page 49
The
zoning ordinance also includes provisions for second homes to
be constructed on a five acre parcel if the home is for a family
member or an employee and is consistent with the Initiative.
Subject to the same limitation, Aa third
home for a family member or employee may be constructed pending
use permit approval.
TABLE 32
GENERAL PLAN AND ZONING
| General
Plan |
Zoning
Districts |
Density |
| Agricultural
Rangeland |
Agricultural
Rangeland |
1unit/40160
acres* |
| Agricultural
Productive |
Agricultural
Productive |
1
unit/5 and 20 acres* |
Page
50
Growth
Management. The County recently has amended
the Land Use Element to include goals and policies for the establishment
of a growth management program. Policy requires that affordable
housing be exempt from the given special treatment under
the growth management program. The future growth
management program shall provide evidence that the County will
be able to meet Regional Housing Needs for the unincorporated
area as discussed in Chapter 6 of this Element comply with
State housing legal requirements.
Page
74
Policy
3-A. Allow the construction of affordable housing on larger
lots in accordance with the Initiative that are consistent
with the County’s mobile home ordinance and second unit
senior ordinance.
PROGRAM
3-3
Continue
to use the Senior Citizen Second Unit Ordinance to allow the construction
of second units to house the elderly. in accord with
the Initiative.
NOISE
ELEMENT
GOAL #1
POLICIES
1.
To insure that County land near airports, particularly land lying
within future clear zones, will be reserved for only those uses
deemed to be compatible with the high noise levels associated
with an airport. Such uses might include open space,
agriculture, cemetery, golf course or appropriate industrial uses,
consistent with the Initiative.
Page
35
SITE PLANNING
2. 2.
Placement of dwelling
units, consistent with the provisions of the Initiative,
as far as possible from the noise source and placement of driveways
and non dwelling units between dwelling units the and noise
source effectively reduces noise impacts.
SCENIC
ROADS AND HIGHWAYS ELEMENT
Page
8
SIGNS
OBJECTIVE
Eliminate signs within the Scenic Corridor, other
than those identified in the permitted use section of the Zoning
Ordinance. which are consistent with Section 36 of the
Land Use Element. This does not apply to temporary signs,
advertising the sale of agricultural commodities produced or processed
on site, nor does it apply to State, County of City signs.,
which are in accord with the provisions of the Initiative.
POLICY # 6
It will be the policy of San Benito County to protect the
Scenic Corridor from the proliferation of unnecessary signs.
ACTIONS
Develop a sign ordinance which controls the locations and
types of signs throughout the County areas. Suggested permitted
uses within a Scenic Corridor have been provided in Appendix A.
These uses could be used as a guideline for the development of
a Scenic Highway Combining District Ordinance., provided
that the ordinance conforms to the Plan.
SEISMIC
SAFETY/SAFETY ELEMENTS
POLICY
#4
ACTIONS
a.
The County shall establish an Overlay Zoning District for environmentally
hazardous areas (an “EH” District), which discourages
development in areas geologically hazardous to the health, safety
and welfare of the citizens of the community and will concurrently
develop density transfer policies in accordance with the provisions
of this Plan which would allow for the transfer of some of
the densities, which may have been allowed in hazardous zones.
TRANSPORTATION
ELEMENT
Page
7
There
are several private landing strips in San Benito County.
These are allowed in agricultural zones, subject to Section
12(15) of the Initiative, and regulated through the use permit
process.
POLICY
2
ACTION
a.
Until the Transportation Master Plan is completed, subdividers/developers
along Southside Road (Enterprise Road – Highway 25) or Cienega
Road (Hospital Road – Airline Highway) shall finance studies
to determine needed spot improvements along the two-lane facilities
and provide funding and/or actual improvements to sections of
the road.
POLICY 10
Consistent with Policy 36 of the Land Use Element, Rroad
and private access road development in hillside areas shall minimize
cut and fill and shall follow the natural contours of the land
as much as possible.
POLICY 20
In accordance with the Initiative, Ssupport
the development of mixed land uses to reduce vehicle trips on
collectors and arterials.
POLICY 25
In appropriate areas under the Initiative, Eencourage
clustered land use to encourage pedestrian and combined pedestrian
and transit use.
[Return
to Regional Issues and Actions]
02/09/03
|