HomeMy WebLinkAboutHO2009-017 Pacific Shores PropertiesRESOLUTION NO. HO- 2009 -017
A RESOLUTION OF A HEARING OFFICER OF THE CITY OF NEWPORT
BEACH DENYING WITH PREJUDICE REQUEST NO. 1 OF A REQUEST FOR
REASONABLE ACCOMMODATION NO. 2008 -001 FOR AN EXISTING SOBER
LIVING FACILITY LOCATED AT 3309 CLAY STREET, 492 ORANGE
AVENUE, AND 492 % ORANGE AVENUE (PA 2008 -181).
WHEREAS, Ordinance No. 2008 -05 was adopted by the Newport Beach City Council
on January 22, 2008, following noticed public hearings; and
WHEREAS, the adoption of Ordinance No. 2008 -05 amended the City of Newport
Beach's Municipal Code (NBMC) relating to Group Residential Uses; and
WHEREAS, Ordinance No. 2008 -05 added Chapter 20.98 to the NBMC. Chapter
20.98 sets forth a process to provide reasonable accommodations in the City's zoning and
land use regulations, policies, and practices when needed to provide an individual with a
disability an equal opportunity to use and enjoy a dwelling; and
WHEREAS, an application was filed by Pack Shores Properties, with respect to
properties located at 3309 Clay Street, 492 Orange Avenue, and 492 �/2 Orange Avenue, and
legally described as Lot 2 and Lot 1 in Block 6 of Tract No. 27 in the City of Newport Beach,
County of Orange, State of California (APN 425 - 282 -02 and 425 - 282 -01), requesting approval
of the following five requests for reasonable accommodation:
1. That residents of its facility at 3309 Clay Street, 492 Orange Avenue and 492 '/2
Orange Avenue be treated as a single housekeeping unit as defined in Section
20.03.030 of the Newport Beach Municipal Code;
2. That the City no longer classify or treat the properties at 3309 Clay Street, 492 Orange
Avenue and 492 �/2 Orange Avenue as "Residential Care Facilities," as defined by
NBMC Section 20.05.010;
3. That the City classify the use of the dwellings at 3309 Clay Street, 492 Orange Avenue
and 492'/2 Orange Avenue as a legal nonconforming use;
4. That all code provisions applicable to the use of 3309 Clay Street, 492 Orange Avenue
and 492 YZ Orange Avenue (including Zoning Code, Building Code, fire safety and any
other applicable code) be applied to those properties in the same manner that those
codes are applied and enforced to single family and two family residential uses located
in residential districts zoned R -2; and
5. That the City waive the requirement of NBMC Section 20.91A.020 that unlicensed
residential care facilities may be located only in a residential district zoned MFR with a
use permit.
WHEREAS, a public hearing was held on March 25, 2009, in the City Hall Council
Chambers, 3300 Newport Boulevard, Newport Beach, California. A notice of time, place and
City of Newport Beach
Hearing Officer Resolution
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492 Orange Avenue
492 Y2 Orange Avenue
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purpose of the meeting was given in accordance with the Municipal Code. Evidence, both
written and oral, was presented and considered at this meeting; and
WHEREAS, the hearing was presided over by Thomas W. Allen, Hearing Officer for
the City of Newport Beach; and
WHEREAS, pursuant to Section 20.98.025(B) of the NBMC, the written decision to
approve, conditionally approve, or deny a request for reasonable accommodation shall be
based on findings, all of which are required for approval.
WHEREAS, with respect to Reasonable Accommodation Request No. 1, that
residents of its facility located at 3309 Clay Street, 492 Orange Avenue and 492 %z Orange
Avenue be treated as a single housekeeping unit as defined in Section 20.03.030 of the
Newport Beach Municipal Code, not all of the five findings required can be made pursuant to
Section 20.98.025 (B) of the NBMC, as follows:
1. Finding: That the requested accommodation is requested by or on the behalf of
one or more individuals with a disability protected under the Fair Housing Laws.
Facts in support of finding. The applicant submitted a statement signed by the facility
manager that every resident of the facility is in recovery from alcohol or drug addiction.
Federal regulations and case law have defined recovery from alcoholism and drug addiction
as a disability, because it is a physical or mental condition that substantially impairs one or
more major daily life activities.
2. Finding: That the requested accommodation is necessary to provide one or
more individuals with a disability an equal opportunity to use and enjoy a
dwelling.
Facts do not support the finding. The request to be considered a single housekeeping unit is
essentially a request to be exempted from all of the provisions of Ordinance No. 2008 -05
which place any sort of reasonable regulation on the operations of residential care facilities.
The applicant asserts that being treated as a single housekeeping unit is necessary because
residents cannot live independently without the threat of relapse, because the environment
provided by the facility is necessary to achieve an opportunity for residents to live in a setting
which is a self -paced recovery option that provides time for personal psychological growth
while avoiding the use of alcohol and other substances. The applicant also asserts that
without the sober living environment offered by the facility, residents of the facility would not
be able to live in a supportive environment in a residential area.
City of Newport Beach
Hearing Officer Resolution
3309 Clay Street
492 Orange Avenue
492 %2 Orange Avenue
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The Hearing Officer finds that total exemption from the provisions of Ordinance No. 2008 -05
is not necessary to afford residents of the facility the opportunity to live in and enjoy a
dwelling or a similar sober living setting.
The Hearing Officer finds that the facility does not operate in manner consistent with the
NBMC definition of a single housekeeping unit. The NBMC Section 20.03.030 (Definitions)
defines a single housekeeping unit as:
"The functional equivalent of a traditional family, whose members are an interactive
group of persons jointly occupying a single dwelling unit, including the joint use of and
responsibility for common areas, and sharing household activities and responsibilities
such as meals, chores, household maintenance, and expenses, and where, if the unit
is rented, all adult residents have chosen to jointly occupy the entire premises of the
dwelling unit, under a single written lease with joint use and responsibility for the
premises, and the makeup of the household occupying the unit is determined by the
residents of the unit rather than the landlord or property manager."
The facility's operations most closely resemble a boarding house use. Copies of leases
submitted to the California Department of Alcohol and Drive Programs (ADP), entitled
"Agreement to Stay in My House," indicate that each resident enters a separate written
agreement to reside at the facility. Based upon the applicant's characterization of the facility
as being one of leased rooms to tenants and the use pattern described by the individual
leases, the facility's operations are much closer to the NBMC's definition of a boarding house
or group residential use than a single housekeeping unit. Except for the fact that facility
residents are recovering alcoholics, the facility would be classified as a prohibited Group
Residential use, or a Boarding or Rooming House as that term is defined in NBMC Section
20.05.030. ( "Residential Use Classifications: A residence or dwelling unit, or part thereof,
wherein a room or rooms are rented under two or more separate written or oral rental
agreements, leases or subleases or combination thereof ... ")
No evidence was provided that clients are an interactive group of persons jointly occupying a
single dwelling unit who share common areas. It appears there is no joint responsibility for
meals or expenses, no single written lease, and the makeup of the household is determined
by the facility operator rather than the residents. Furthermore, contradictory information
exists in the record, submitted by the applicant in 2007, regarding whether the facility was a
sober living facility or a group of boarding houses.
Pursuant to NBMC Section 20.98.025(C), the City may consider the following factors in
determining whether the requested accommodation is necessary to provide the disabled
individual an equal opportunity to use and enjoy a dwelling:
A. Whether the requested accommodation will affirmatively enhance the quality of
life of one or more individuals with a disability.
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Hearing Officer Resolution
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492 Orange Avenue
492 '/z Orange Avenue
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If the requested accommodation were to be granted, any number of the applicant's
current and potential clients could live in the home located in an R -2 District along with
other individuals in recovery. This is situation can serve to affirmatively enhance the
quality of life of a person in recovery from addiction, unless overcrowding of the facility
or institutionalization of the neighborhood interferes with the resident's re- integration
into society.
B. Whether the individual or individuals with a disability will be denied an equal
opportunity to enjoy the housing type of their choice absent the
accommodation.
The Hearing Officer finds that the exemption requested goes beyond what is
necessary to achieve the goal of affording disabled individuals an equal opportunity to
enjoy the housing type of their choice. The City indicated that more narrowly tailored
exemptions could be requested by the applicant that would enable disabled individuals
to reside at the applicant's facility, and the applicant submitted additional requests as a
result.
C. In the case of a residential care facility, whether the requested accommodation
is necessary to make facilities of a similar nature or operation economically
viable in light of the particularities of the relevant market and market
participants.
The applicant did not submit evidence that treating the facility as a single
housekeeping unit is necessary to make the facility viable in light of the current market
for the type of services it provides. The applicant objected to requests by the City for
such evidence. Therefore, the Hearing Officer is unable to determine that being
treated as a single housekeeping unit is necessary for the facilities to be financially
viable.
D. In the case of a residential care facility, whether the existing supply of facilities
of a similar nature and operation in the community is sufficient to provide
individuals with a disability an equal opportunity to live in a residential setting.
The City has estimated that there are approximately 233 approved sober living beds in
the City. Operators of many sober living facilities within the City have reported
decreased census and vacant beds, which could afford potential Pacific Shores clients
an equal opportunity to live in a sober living environment. The evidence presented as
part of the application does not support the applicant's contention that treating
residents of its facility as a single housekeeping unit will change the availability of the
existing supply of facilities of a similar nature, or afford them a substantially greater
access to an equal opportunity to live in a residential setting.
City of Newport Beach
Hearing Officer Resolution
3309 Clay Street
492 Orange Avenue
492 % Orange Avenue
3. Finding: That the requested accommodation will not impose an undue financial
or administrative burden on the City as "undue financial or administrative
burden" is defined in Fair Housing Laws and interpretive case law.
Facts in support of finding. The Hearing Officer finds that treating the facility as a single
housekeeping unit will not impose a currently identifiable undue financial or administrative
burden on the City. However, in making this finding, it is noted that approximately 56 to 58
individuals could be housed at the three properties if some rooms not currently labeled as
"bedrooms" on plans on file at the City were used as bedrooms. If resident populations are
unregulated and previous code violations associated with the property were continued,
currently unidentifiable financial or administrative burdens could arise as a result.
4. Finding: That the requested accommodation will not result in a fundamental
alteration in the nature of the City's zoning program, as "fundamental alteration
is defined in Fair Housing Laws and interpretive case law.
Facts do not support the finding. The purpose of the NBMC's definition of a single
housekeeping unit is to allow the City to determine whether groups of related or unrelated
individuals are living together in a dwelling as a single housekeeping unit. This definition is
necessary because of the persistent attempts by property owners acting as landlords to
establish illegal boarding houses and illegal units in dwellings within the City.
Groups living as a single housekeeping unit are permitted to live together in any residential
zone in Newport Beach. Groups not living as a single housekeeping unit are prohibited from
establishing residences in any of the City's residential zones, with the single exception of
those groups not living as a single housekeeping unit in residential care facilities of any size.
All residential care facilities in the City have already received a reasonable accommodation
from the NBMC restrictions on groups not living as a single housekeeping unit through
provisions of the NBMC that offer opportunities for new facilities to be established, and
existing facilities to continue in their current locations, subject to approval of a use permit with
appropriate impact mitigation. Licensed facilities housing six or fewer residents are permitted
in any residential zone of the City.
Although the residents of residential care facilities receive preferential treatment because of
their disabled status, the NBMC applies regulations to unlicensed and larger (more than
seven residents) licensed facilities. These regulations are in place to ensure that the
fundamental purposes of the Zoning Code can be achieved, and to ensure that the adverse
secondary impacts higher density residential care facilities may have on the surrounding
neighborhood can be mitigated. If a residential care facility is treated as a single
housekeeping unit, it is entirely exempt from any of the reasonable controls the City might
place on the facility, and the City would be unable to make any reasonable effort to reduce
the adverse secondary impacts resulting from the facility such as noise, overcrowding, unruly
City of Newport Beach
Hearing Officer Resolution
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492 Orange Avenue
492'/ Orange Avenue
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behavior by residents of applicant's facility to the detriment of neighbors, the disproportionate
consumption of available on- street parking, and the overconcentration of facilities within a
single block to the point of creating a quasi - institutional environment in this neighborhood.
Pursuant to Section 20.98.025(D) of the NBMC, the City may also consider the following
factors in determining whether the requested accommodation would require a fundamental
alteration in the nature of the City's zoning program:
A. Whether the requested accommodation would fundamentally alter the character
of the neighborhood.
Since the establishment of the first of the dwellings as a sober living environment, a
number of adverse secondary impacts have been reported to the City by residents of
the neighboring properties, thereby altering the character of the neighborhood. Some
of the impacts reported associated with the operation of the facility include, but are not
limited to:
• Meetings held at one or more of the applicant's facilities
• Excessive use of on- street parking by facility residents and their guests
• Secondhand smoke
• Noise late at night
B. Whether the accommodation would result in a substantial increase in traffic or
insufficient parking.
The applicant has stated that residents are permitted to have personal vehicles at the
properties, but that few residents own cars. The applicant has stated that "all park
along Old Newport or along the commercial park area on Orange. No resident parks
along Clay or the non - commercial parking area along Orange (i.e., Orange NE of
Clay)."
Each building at the subject site provides two enclosed parking spaces, consistent with
the NBMC parking requirement of two parking spaces per dwelling unit for single -
family and two- family residential uses. The NBMC parking requirement for residential
care facilities is one off - street parking and loading space for every three beds. As a
residential care facility, with 50 resident clients, the Pacific Shores facility .would be
required to provide 17 off - street parking spaces. Since the facility does not provide the
required 17 off - street parking spaces, granting the requested accommodation would
result in insufficient on -site parking.
The Institute of Transportation Engineers (ITE) establishes standards for trip
generation rates based on the use classification of a site. In the case of a single family
dwelling, the standard trip rate is 9.57 average daily trips per dwelling, and for
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Hearing Officer Resolution
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492 Orange Avenue
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duplexes the standard trip rate is 6.72 average daily trips per dwelling. Trip rates for
residential care facilities are 2.74 average daily trips per each occupied bed. Based
on these standards, a 50 -bed residential care facility would generate approximately
137 average daily trips. The evidence shows this facility will generate average daily
trips substantially in excess of the surrounding single- and two- family dwellings.
C. Whether granting the requested accommodation would substantially undermine
any express purpose of either the City's General Plan or an applicable Specific
Plan.
General Plan Policy LU 6.2.7 requires the City to regulate day care and residential
care facilities to the maximum extent allowed by federal and state law. A request for
reasonable accommodation is consistent with this policy. The City adopted Ordinance
No. 2008 -005 in order to implement General Plan Policy LU 6.2.7. Granting the
reasonable accommodation request to treat the facility as a single housekeeping unit
rather than as a residential care facility would exempt the facility from the provisions of
Ordinance No. 2008 -005, and preclude the City from applying any reasonable
regulations on the facility, thereby undermining the express purpose of the General
Plan with regard to these facilities.
The Hearing Officer finds that the facility does not operate in manner consistent with
the NBMC definition of a single housekeeping unit, as provided for in NBMC Section
20.03.030 (Definitions):
"The functional equivalent of a traditional family, whose members are an
interactive group of persons jointly occupying a single dwelling unit, including
the joint use of and responsibility for common areas, and sharing household
activities and responsibilities such as meals, chores, household maintenance,
and expenses, and where, if the unit is rented, all adult residents have chosen
to jointly occupy the entire premises of the dwelling unit, under a single written
lease with joint use and responsibility for the premises, and the makeup of the
household occupying the unit is determined by the residents of the unit rather
than the landlord or property manager."
There was no evidence provided that clients may be an interactive group of persons
jointly occupying a single dwelling unit and sharing common areas. There is no
evidence of joint responsibility for meals or expenses or a single written lease, and the
members of the household are selected by the facility operator rather than by other
residents. The applicant characterizes the facility as one of leased rooms to tenants
with a use pattern described by the individual leases as more closely resembling a
boarding house or group residential use, as defined by the NBMC, than a single
housekeeping unit. Except for the fact that facility's residents are recovering
alcoholics, the facility would be classified as a prohibited Group Residential use, or a
City of Newport Beach
Hearing Officer Resolution
3309 Clay Street
492 Orange Avenue
492'/2 Orange Avenue
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Boarding or Rooming House as that term is defined NBMC 20.05.030. A and C,
"Residential Use Classifications, "A residence or dwelling unit, or part thereof, wherein
a room or rooms are rented under two or more separate written or oral rental
agreements, leases or subleases or combination thereof...," and "Shared living
quarters, occupied by two or more persons not living together as a single
housekeeping unit."
D. In the case of a residential care facility, whether the requested accommodation
would create an institutionalized environment due to the number of and
distance between facilities that are similar in nature or operation.
There are no other documented facilities, similar in nature or operation to the subject
facility, within the vicinity of the subject facility. In considering whether granting the
requested accommodation would create an institutionalized environment, however, it
is noted that approximately 56 to 58 individuals could be housed at the three subject
facilities if some rooms, not currently labeled as "bedrooms" on the plans on file at the
City, were used as bedrooms. An unregulated occupancy of the facility would result in
an overconcentration of the use of the facility and the potential institutionalization of
the residential neighborhood with associated adverse secondary impacts such as
noise, overcrowding, unruly behavior by residents of the facility, a disproportionate
utilization of available on- street parking by the facility, and traffic impacts.
5. Finding: That the requested accommodation will not, under the specific facts of
the case, result in a direct threat to the health or safety of other individuals or
substantial physical damage to the property of others.
Facts in support of finding. A request for reasonable accommodation may be denied if
granting it would pose "a direct threat to the health or safety of other individuals or result in
substantial physical damage to the property of others," (refer to 42 U.S.C. § 3604(f)(9). This
is a very limited exception and can only be used when, based on the specific facts of a
situation, a requested accommodation results in a significant and particularized threat.
Federal cases interpreting this exception in the Fair Housing Amendment Act, adopted in
1988, indicate that requested accommodations cannot be denied due to generalized fears of
the risks posed by disabled persons.
WHEREAS, the project qualifies for a Categorical Exemption pursuant to Section
(Section 15061(b)(3) (Existing Facilities). This class of projects has been determined not to
have a significant effect on the environment and is exempt from the provisions of CEQA. This
activity is also covered by the general rule that CEQA applies only to projects that have the
potential for causing a significant effect on the environment of the CEQA Guidelines. It can be
seen with certainty that there is no possibility that this activity will have a significant effect on
the environment and therefore it is not subject to CEQA.
City of Newport Beach
Hearing Officer Resolution
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492 Orange Avenue
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NOW THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED:
Section 1. The Hearing Officer of the City of Newport Beach hereby denies with prejudice
Request No. 1 of Reasonable Accommodation No. 2008 -001.
Section 2. This action shall become final and effective fourteen days after the adoption of
this Resolution unless within such time an appeal is filed with the City Clerk in accordance
with the provisions of Title 20 Planning and Zoning, of the Newport Beach Municipal Code.
PASSED, APPROVED AND ADOPTED THIS o)t DAY OR41 2009.
By:
Thomas W. Allen, Hearing Officer
ATTEST: