HomeMy WebLinkAboutSPJT Minutes 1999-08-05SRCC/PLANNING COMMISSION MINUTES (Spec. Jt. Workshop) 8/5/99 Page 1
IN THE COUNCIL CHAMBER OF THE CITY OF SAN RAFAEL, THURSDAY, AUGUST 5, 1999 AT
7:00 PM
Special Joint Workshop Meeting
San Rafael City Council/
Planning Commission
SAN RAFAEL CITY COUNCIL: Albert J. Boro, Mayor
Paul M. Cohen, Vice -Mayor
Barbara Heller, Councilmember
Cyr N. Miller, Councilmember
Gary O. Phillips, Councilmember
Absent: None
PLANNING COMMISSION: Richard O'Brien, Chairman
Jim Atchison, Commissioner
Tom Hinman, Commissioner
Jeff Kirchmann, Commissioner
Maribeth Lang, Commissioner
Absent: Ann Batman, Commissioner
Bruce Scott, Commissioner
COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT STAFF: Bob Brown, Community Development Director
Sheila Delimont, Planning Manager
Lynda Ferris, Code Enforcement Manager
Dean Parsons, Senior Planner
Others Present: Rod Gould, City Manager
Gus Guinan, Assistant City Attorney
Regina Buchanan, Deputy City Clerk
1. JOINT CITY COUNCIL/PLANNING COMMISSION ILLEGAL DWELLING UNIT WORKSHOP TO
DISCUSS AND ADVISE STAFF ON POTENTIAL AMENDMENTS TO THE SAN RAFAEL ZONING
ORDINANCE TO ADDRESS ILLEGAL DWELLING UNITS IN THE CITY OF SAN RAFAEL. THE
WORKSHOP WILL INCLUDE DISCUSSION ABOUT THE FOLLOWING ISSUES: METHODS TO
IMPROVE CODE ENFORCEMENT OF ILLEGAL DWELLING UNITS; LEGALIZATION OF ILLEGAL
UNITS; POTENTIAL ZONING ORDINANCE DEFINITION AMENDMENTS; PENALTIES FOR THE
CONSTRUCTION OF ILLEGAL DWELLING UNITS; NEIGHBORHOOD PARKING RESTRICTIONS;
THE ABILITY TO HAVE A SECOND KITCHEN IN A SINGLE-FAMILY RESIDENCE, ETC. -
File 10-13 x 10-2 x 115 x 13-8 x 13-16
Mayor Boro stated he will defer to the Assistant City Attorney for an
announcement about another item they thought they would be discussing this
evening, in case someone is present for that item.
Gus Guinan, Assistant City Attorney, announced that last Monday night at
the regular meeting of the City Council an Urgency Item was added to the
agenda and discussed, regarding the desirability of enacting a Moratorium
Ordinance on the location of retail outlets for the sale of tobacco
products. Mr. Guinan stated he thought at that time that such an Ordinance
could be passed at a special session which the Council then set for
tonight. Unfortunately, the City Charter does not allow for such latitude
and Ordinances can only be passed at a regular meeting of the City Council.
For that reason the item has been continued to the next regular meeting of
the City Council, which will be a week from Monday, August 16th, at 8:00
PM.
Mayor Boro explained that this is a workshop between the City Council and
the Planning Commission. He stated that we will start with a presentation
from our Community Development Director, Mr. Bob Brown, who will discuss
the goals, regulatory enforcement options with respect to second units, and
also issues regarding boarding houses. Prior to the Council and Planning
Commission discussion, staff will solicit input from anyone in the audience
who wishes to speak on these issues.
Community Development Director Bob Brown stated that as the Council and the
Planning Commissioners know, second unit regulations and enforcement have
been a challenge for San Rafael, as well as many other communities that
have similar situations where the housing market is expensive and
constrained. He explained that in our case, the solution to the problem
has not been due to a lack of effort on the part of the Council or the
Planning Commission and staff. He noted they have done an incredible
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amount of research and experimentation, but still find inherent legal
constraints and practical difficulties which frustrate everyone. He stated
that the purpose of tonight's meeting is to step back and clarify our goals
regarding second units, revisit the options we have considered or
implemented, and perhaps brainstorm some new ideas.
Mr. Brown added that we also want to discuss boarding houses, which is an
issue we have postponed a few times while we have been focusing on second
units but we would like to at least start discussion of that subject. He
stated that, again, we would like to discuss some of the constraints and
some of the options that we have considered.
Mr. Brown explained that what staff hopes to accomplish from both of these
discussions is no decisions tonight, but direction to staff in terms of
future regulatory changes the Council and Commission would like to have
looked at, and possibly any enforcement techniques that should be
implemented.
Mr. Brown explained that the way the agenda is structured tonight there
will be a brief presentation on second units, to brainstorm the goals with
the Council and Planning Commission, and have some discussion of options.
Then staff will do a brief presentation on boarding houses, once again
discussing and having questions about options, and then ask for public
input. When we conclude with public input we will come back to the Council
and Planning Commission and ask for your direction. He noted he has been
advised by the City Clerk that we need to utilize the microphones to get
the discussions on tape tonight.
There being no questions about the agenda or the process, Mr. Brown began
his presentation. He stated he will go over where we have been in the last
year and a half, saying we started with a definition of dwelling unit which
was based both on how people function as a housekeeping unit, and secondly
defined a dwelling unit as including a kitchen. A kitchen was defined as
including a cooking appliance. The problem with this definition was that
the physical thing, the kitchen, would be there, and then it would not be
there when the inspector came in. The "rollaway stove" game. In some
cases we had suspicions that there was an illegal unit and when we
inspected there was not the physical kitchen, the cooking appliance. That
is what started the discussion.
Mr. Brown stated there was a suggestion that San Anselmo had a very good
definition so we looked at it. They define "kitchen" as not just being a
cooking appliance, but more than one of four components: A refrigerator,
sink, cooking appliance and/or a food preparation and storage area. The
problem we faced with this definition was that there are legitimate
situations where people have wet bars, hobby rooms such as dark rooms where
there is a sink, counter and storage area, and perhaps a refrigerator for
film. There are also pool cabanas. Those may all be legitimate situations
but this definition of kitchen would preclude them. San Anselmo attempted
to exempt these by suggesting that staff could have some leeway in making a
determination. They also said that a kitchen that had through access
throughout the rest of the house could be allowed if it still met these
criteria of a second kitchen.
We felt this was too much discretion for staff, and our City Attorney's
office felt the definition was too loose so we ultimately adopted
definitions that were a bit tighter. The definition suggested that kitchen
is two or more of the four items mentioned, but it also had provisions for
a secondary kitchen. A secondary kitchen that had internal access to the
rest of the house would be permitted, and that is what we tried to
implement. The difficulty we had is that we found situations where there
is through access to what we assume is an illegal unit x, but when the
inspector shows up the access is open. We assume that when the inspector
leaves the access is no longer open.
Mr. Brown noted we have also had a situation where an applicant for a legal
second unit was unsuccessful at the Planning Commission and was able to
essentially build a second unit for a family member, but with through
access. They were able to get around our use permit requirements as a
result.
Mr. Brown noted that this Spring we talked with the Planning Commission
about modifying that definition again. This time we tried to take on the
whole issue of wet bars directly by defining a wet bar as having kitchen
components but without a cooking facility. Once again, that has the same
problem of the cooking facility not being there when the inspector arrives,
although it may have been there beforehand. The Planning Commission
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concluded that we were getting more convoluted in our approach and were
trying to swim upstream against a very strong economic incentive in a tight
housing market. Mr. Brown stated that it is for that reason that we are
here tonight.
(Councilmember Phillips arrived).
Mr. Brown stated he would like to take a step back and look at what are our
goals for dealing with second units. Using the overhead, Mr. Brown
reviewed seven sample goals which are based on General Plan policies and
asked for the Council and Commission to comment in terms of what are our
possible goals when dealing with second units.
Goal #1 is based on our current General Plan policies which encourage the
creation of legal second units consistent with Ordinance requirements, as a
source of affordable housing. Mr. Brown stated staff feels second units
are an important source of affordable housing and have now permitted 74
secondary units in the City.
Goal #2 would be to actively abate illegal units, those which have not had
permits, in an attempt to address potentially dangerous living conditions,
neighborhood parking difficulties, and overcrowding of neighborhoods.
Goal #3 would be to promote legalization of illegal units to improve those
potentially dangerous living conditions and meet our goal of providing
affordable housing.
Goal #4 could be to create incentives for legalizing illegal units and
these might include reducing application fees, flexibility in parking
requirements, which is typically one reason people with illegal units have
had trouble converting them, to get a use permit and legalize them. We
could also look at a streamlined approval process that might not
necessarily involve the typical hearings in front of the Planning
Commission.
Goal #5 would be to avoid legal challenges for actions taken.
Goal #6 would be to provide better criteria and clarity for the Code
Enforcement staff on this issue.
Goal #7 would be recognition that we need to balance our approach in Code
Enforcement. While we do have to deal with second units, there are many
other situations that need to be addressed through Code Enforcement, so we
need to balance those resources.
Mr. Brown stated those are some suggested goals and he would like to hear
feedback from the Council and Planning Commission as to whether these are
goals we would like to accomplish and whether they should be modified or
replaced.
Mayor Boro stated he has a question on Goals #3 and #4 which are obviously
related. He asked has there been any discussion about this approach at the
Planning Commission? Mr. Brown replied there has not been discussion of an
amnesty program or something of that nature in any detail. Mayor Boro
asked if staff knows of any communities that have tried something like
this? Mr. Brown replied that some communities have done this. Daly City
has done it, and San Francisco has been talking about it for years. He
stated there are many issues that go along with that, particularly
regarding equity between those who have come forward to legalize what they
have been operating illegally, versus those that have gone through the
process legally. There is also a question of how far you want to bend the
regulations to accommodate legalizing the units. You get the safety
benefit of having them inspected and brought up to Code, but to accomplish
that there may be difficulty with certain requirements. It may include
reducing the parking requirements to accomplish it.
Mayor Boro asked if there are any other questions or comments? Regarding a
question about process, Mr. Brown noted we would like to have discussion
about the goals first of all and then start getting into the specifics of
how we regulate and accomplish the goals.
Councilmember Cohen discussed goals #3 and #4, stating it has long been a
policy of the City to encourage the creation of legal second units
consistent with Ordinance requirements, as a source of affordable workforce
housing. He stated we should be very cautious as to how far we go in
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creating incentives for legalization when we come to flexibility in some of
the existing provisions. He noted someone had commented to him that we do
not have as much of a second unit problem as we have a parking problem. He
stated it is not necessarily the existence of the second unit in some
cases, but the impact on an already crowded neighborhood, or even an
already crowded block, with the addition of a car per person at a house
that was originally designed for one or two cars and now has four or five.
He stated that putting flexibility into the Ordinance to encourage the
legalization of those units seems to institutionalize the problem that
caused the complaints in the first place. He stated we should be cautious
about it. He stated in the staff report it suggests they might allow
tandem parking, but he is concerned about that issue, because he has heard
complaints about people not using tandem parking but parking in front of
their neighbors' homes. He stated that with regard to the reduced
application fees, we should be very careful about the incentives we create.
He pointed out that if a person comes in and pays the regular fees for a
legal second unit, and then another person who wants to legalize an illegal
unit comes in and pays a reduced fee as an incentive, that could cause a
problem, and he would not recommend it.
Councilmember Cohen noted we have issued permits for 74 legal units and
even if we had never done an estimate of how many illegal units exist he
would think there was easily 10 times that number. He stated that over the
years since we have put this in, we have not had a flood of applications
and part of that is that it is hard to meet the requirements. He is not
sure how far we should go in loosening them up. However, he agrees we
should set it up so we encourage people to come in and go through the
process and legalize these units where they are appropriate. He stated
most people feel they will take their chances on enforcement and do not go
through the process.
Mayor Boro asked, over the last few years when we have had this increased
enforcement, how many illegal units have we abated with all of the
attention we have put on it. Mr. Brown replied the last few years we have
averaged about 30 or 40 illegal unit complaints each year and have been
able to abate about one-third of them.
Mayor Boro asked the group is there general agreement at this point, so he
can get a sense of where we are going, with suggested Goals #1 and #2. He
noted we are not adopting them now, and the public can certainly speak to
any of them after the discussion. The group agreed with #1 and #2.
Mayor Boro noted that Councilmember Cohen has voiced some salient points on
#3 and #4, and asked if anyone disagrees with his comments on those goals.
He noted they refer to giving incentives to bring in nonconforming units
by loosening some of the conditions.
Planning Commission Chair O'Brien stated that he agrees with Councilmember
Cohen on his comments on #3 and #4. Regarding tandem parking, he is also
opposed because it does not work. He noted that Palo Alto is trying to
enforce compact parking, but they have the same problem we do, with compact
cars parking in full-size spaces, so full-sized cars take up two spaces.
He stated it might be a good idea to re-evaluate that, and to include mini-
vans in their consideration.
Councilmember Phillips stated he agrees with Councilmember Cohen. When he
looks at #3 and #4 he is also wondering if there should not be an element
of penalty included in one of them, perhaps after passage of time if we
have a moratorium. He stated that the flip side of an incentive is
imposing a fairly severe penalty if illegal units do not comply. He wonders
if this incentive is only half of the equation, and that we need something
on the other side, and perhaps we need to be more strict and harsh that we
have been, to bring them into compliance. Some will respond to the
incentive, but others will not and may be more receptive to the penalty.
Planning Commissioner Kirchmann stated that the first incentive ought to be
to provide legal units in the first place and then we really need the most
severe disincentive for continuing with illegal units and waiting until
they are caught. He stated that somewhere in the middle might be a less
severe penalty for coming forward voluntarily to deal with a currently
illegal unit.
Mayor Boro noted the last three goals, Avoiding Legal Challenges, Provide
Better Criteria, and Balancing Enforcement Efforts with Other Enforcement
Priorities. He noted the issue of better criteria is what we are going to
try to come up with tonight. Also, the balancing issue is something the
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group might want to give direction on at the end, with respect to other
issues of code enforcement.
Councilmember Cohen asked can we talk about better criteria later, and Mr
Brown stated that would be fine.
Mayor Boro stated that we are pretty much in agreement on Goals #1 and #2,
and his concern is that we not come up with criteria that will have a
"chilling" effect on the community. He stated that when you look at some
of these goals, we must be very clear about what we are trying to do. He
stated that the way an illegal unit is reported is through a neighbor and
that is obviously their right, and we have an obligation to respond. He
stated he does not want people to begin to think, if they have a dark room,
or wet bar, or a cabana with a sink in it, that there is an issue there.
He stated that is really not an issue. As we define these criteria we have
to put them in perspective with respect to a second unit and not just
thinking that this may be a problem. He stated that reading through some
of these it could unintentionally have a chilling effect on people and we
are not trying to do that. We are trying to honestly respond to a
legitimate concern people have and at the same time balance out these
peoples' rights to do whatever they want to in their home. He stated it is
important as we come up with this criteria that they will not appear to
have that general scope that there is always the consideration that we are
looking at an illegal unit if these things exist.
Councilmember Cohen stated another thought occurred to him but he does not
know if it fits into these goals. He stated that we are talking about
mitigating the impacts and he thinks we want to be open to other ways to
approach the illegal unit issues. He stated we have an Ordinance that is
structured the way it is because we believe that if someone comes in and
meets all those criteria the impacts on the neighborhood will be mitigated.
He stated there may be other ways to approach those issues and we need to
constantly be looking at what other communities have done and whether there
may be other ways to approach them. He stated one of the things we have
discussed in the past is the possibility of doing some kind of permitting
for the parking, which concerns so many people and is at the heart of the
issue. He noted that San Anselmo has had their parking permit program in
place for many years. He stated he does not know how we could go about
introducing that in a given neighborhood when it has not previously been a
requirement. He stated he is not advocating starting such a program
immediately, but we should be open to mitigating the impacts and if our
current Ordinance is doing that effectively that is fine. If there are
other ways we can approach mitigating the impacts of second units we should
be open to that and consider them, and maybe the opportunity would be in
our approach to Goal #1.
Mayor Boro responded that we want to be very careful as a community and as
a Commission and Council, about some degree of "social legislation". He
stated there are examples in two communities right now where they are
dealing with things like campers in front yards. For every person who is
concerned about an illegal unit there maybe others who have 4 cars. They
do not have an illegal unit, but they have 4 cars and they are going to
have as much concern about their right to have 4 cars as someone else is
concerned about an illegal unit. We must be very sensitive to all sides of
the issue if we go forward with anything like that.
Councilmember Heller stated she thought San Anselmo had an overnight
parking program, and she thought we wanted to try a parking permit system,
which would be different.
City Manager Gould explained that San Anselmo bans overnight parking on the
street. He stated we have looked at that, and think that would cause
absolute anarchy in San Rafael. However, many neighbors seem to be more
interested in discussing a permit parking system for on -street parking
during the late hours of the night. He noted that, as Mayor Boro pointed
out, to design such a system you need to decide how many cars you are going
to allocate per unit for parking and how to deal with short-term visitors
and the like, and many exceptions.
Planning Commissioner Hinman noted that at the last Planning Commission
discussion of this issue, one comment from the public which was quite
dramatically simple, was that we are trying to solve parking problems by
regulating microwave ovens. He stated that although it is integrated into
a number of the goals, he was at one time debating whether the problem of
parking strategy might be dealt with by focusing on different parking
options distinct from the health and safety components of the second units.
Mr. Brown, again with the aid of the overhead, discussed 15 options staff
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has either implemented, considered or discarded for various reasons. He
stated he would like to go over them and see if there are any questions
about them.
Option #1 has been implemented and we now use the RBR (Residential Building
Report) which are the resale inspections, to identify illegal units. The
advantage is that the building inspectors have access to units at that time
so there is no additional staff workload and we do gain access. We have
discovered a handful of illegal kitchens through the RBR process, so that
is working pretty well.
Option #2, the original definition of the kitchen which described a kitchen
as requiring a cooking appliance. What is good about that is that it does
focus on a physical identifier if it is there when we inspect. The problem
is, of course, the "rollaway stove" we spoke about earlier. Another
constraint is the ability to install wet bars as essentially a second
kitchen if they include a cooking facility or an additional kitchen in a
cabana, etc.
Option #3, the current definition which redefines a kitchen, looking at 4
different components. If you have 2 or more of those you have a kitchen.
Once again, it focuses on physical identifiers to define the unit and makes
it more difficult for owners to hide the kitchen. However, once again we
end up with the problem of essentially banning wet bars, second kitchens in
cabanas, or hobby rooms, etc. There can be some unintended consequences.
Option #4 has been implemented to deal with those problems, by allowance
for a secondary kitchen if you have through access from that secondary
kitchen to the rest of the house. Theoretically it is integrated and used
in conjunction with the rest of the house by the household. He stated that
gets us around the wet bar problem but it still creates a problem for the
detached unit, the cabana, because it does not have through access to the
rest of the house so it would be precluded. Mr. Brown noted that the
biggest problem is that it has created a loophole where people whom we
assume have illegal second units have a door or a stairway to the rest of
the house and it is probably typically locked, but when we show up for
inspection it is open, so it is technically legal. He noted staff has also
had people calling who have discovered the loophole, asking can they create
internal access to get around it. He stated that has been a real problem
for staff.
Option #5 is strict reliance on the "separate household" definition which
really determines whether you have an illegal situation. If you have a
household that includes an elderly parent and there is a need for a second
kitchen for them for convenience but for the most part they really do
integrate together as one household, that is generally fine. However, our
focus is always on the physical kitchen. If we were able to enforce a
"separate household" definition, that really gets at whether we have two
separate households in a unit. The problem is that there is nothing
physical to see. Also, if we are to press those points and we really do
not have any physical evidence, it is virtually impossible to get an
inspection warrant just because we suspect people are operating a separate
household.
Option #6 was proposed to the Planning Commission earlier this year, which
was to separately define wet bars and hobby workshops, and allow them if
they do not have a cooking appliance. Mr. Brown stated we could go one
step further and say "a cooking appliance or a utility hookup". He stated
in some cases there magically would be no stove but there would be the gas
hookup there. This would take us one step further and say you could not
have the gas hookup either; if they are going to hide the stove they had
better hide the gas connection or the 220V electric connection. He stated
this gets us that much further into defining components of the house and
trying to differentiate those which may be perfectly innocuous versus those
which were intended for a separate household.
Option #7, we have talked about requiring use permits for secondary
kitchens but that obviously creates more bureaucratic hoops for people.
Mr. Brown stated his biggest concern about that is if we do get into a
Public Hearing process, how do we differentiate what looks the same as the
kitchen to be used for a secondary unit, versus one which could very well
be used as a second kitchen for the same household. He stated we may be
creating unreasonable expectations for the public that we could
differentiate a secondary kitchen that may be innocuous or potentially
creating illegal units in the hearing process.
Option #8 is requiring deed restrictions if you want a secondary kitchen.
Mr. Brown stated that is somewhat easier in terms of process, less onerous
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in terms of process and in terms of a single family homeowner, creates a
paper trail for us and, probably best of all, subsequent homeowners who
purchase that property will see right in the title that what may be
described by a realtor as an ideal opportunity for a second unit, is indeed
not legal. Mr. Brown stated that is not much of a building regulation and
he could not expect a building inspector or a permit clerk at the counter
to differentiate between what looks like a suspicious second unit and one
which looks OK so it is granted a deed restriction. Essentially, we are
creating a paper trail but we are not really creating an enforcement
mechanism.
Option #9, Annual Re -inspections of Abated Illegal Units - if we find an
illegal unit we would impose a requirement that we could come back in at
six months or a year, etc. Our attorneys tell us that is illegal because
it does not provide the due process. If we do not have probable cause to
suspect there is an illegal unit we cannot require access to a home and we
cannot demand that someone sign over consent for access.
Option #10, Progressive Fines for Rediscovered Illegal Units - that would
create a potential for a significant financial disincentive if you have a
repeat violator. The problem is that our City Charter imposes a maximum
fine of $500. According to the City Attorney's office, to change that
requires a public vote. Mr. Brown noted that right now we can impose the
$500 fine for each violation as long as it continues, so as long as we
regain access and see that the kitchen remains there, each time we see it
we can impose a $500 fine. He noted the problem is that even if we would
employ progressive fines, that it would not be equitable to apply that kind
of fine to a subsequent property owner, based on a violation that a former
property owner created.
Option #11, Mr. Brown noted we have talked about a process that might allow
renters who are displaced by the abatement of an illegal unit to recover
civil penalties from a property owner to compensate them for their
relocation expenses. He noted that would be an opportunity for another
financial disincentive to increase the burden on owners of illegal units
and it would also be a benefit to the displaced tenants. The disincentive
essentially puts the City into a situation of dealing with civil penalties
between renters and landlords, and increases the workload, etc.
Option #12, we could preclude second units in certain neighborhoods that
are already impacted with parking problems, for example, or narrow streets.
Mr. Brown stated we think that is probably inconsistent with State law.
Certainly, to do so would require a significant burden of proof on the
City's part. He stated that it would certainly be divisive among
neighborhoods; and it would be an incentive for creating illegal units in
those neighborhoods since they could not legalize them.
Option #13, Mr. Brown noted we had discussed creating an amnesty or a
legalization program for illegal units. He stated this could be beneficial
in increasing safety of the units but will probably not address the parking
impacts because that is probably the reason they cannot legalize in the
present situation. It also creates a real inequity, as mentioned earlier,
between those who choose to go the legal route versus those who bootleg in
units and then ask for forgiveness.
Option #14, Mr. Brown mentioned we have talked about a parking permit
program. He stated the primary impact we hear the most about is the
additional parking for illegal units. The permit program is controversial,
expensive and would impact homeowners if they were limited in terms of the
numbers of vehicles for which they could get parking permits. Mr. Brown
stated he understands that the City Council has put forward such a proposal
to a number of neighborhood associations to discuss and if they had even a
minimal opinion to come forward, and we have not heard that any
neighborhood has made that proposal. They probably realize that it is very
difficult to get concurrence among all neighbors.
Option #15, we could theoretically relax our zoning standards for second
units, either creating use permits for secondary units or for an amnesty
program. Mr. Brown stated that the principal zoning standard that causes
difficulties in creating legal second units is parking provisions. He
stated it is probably not viable to try to increase those parking impacts
to rely on on -street parking if we cannot provide it on site.
Mr. Brown stated those are the basic options, but that there may be others
which staff has not considered, but he would first like to see if the
Council or Commission have any questions on these options.
Mayor Boro stated that Mr. Brown was talking about someone having a parent
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move back in and needing to have a second kitchen for the convenience of
the parent, which could be a problem. As Mr. Brown noted, someone
complains, staff makes a call, the stove is unplugged, and when the
inspector leaves the stove is plugged in again. Mayor Boro inquired, have
we ever thought about our Code Enforcement Officers answering ads which
appear to be second units possibly based on the price, rather than going
out to inspect after a complaint. He stated they would be shown the unit.
Mayor Boro stated he does not believe all of these are rented by word of
mouth, but a lot of them are through the newspaper. He asked if staff had
thought of that approach.
Mr. Brown asked Assistant City Attorney Guinan for a response on City staff
essentially representing themselves as potential renters. Mr. Guinan
stated it would depend on what concerns you are asking about. Legally, if
someone is publicly holding out a unit for rent anyone who is responding
can see what is being shown. He stated he has more concern about the
safety and a concern for staff getting involved in surreptitious activities
like that. He does not know that they have necessarily been trained to do
that.
Mayor Boro stated he is aware of that issue. He noted that we have 15
items here, and all of them have pitfalls. None of them were new. He is
trying to prevent people having existing illegal units and re -renting them.
He stated he would not expect someone to go in and say, "I gotcha!", and
then go into a battle. That would be another issue once they make their
findings, but they would have a basis for a finding. He stated he
understands the training, and the safety issue, and is not looking for our
Code Enforcement Officers to go out there and try to arrest someone or cite
them on the spot. He is thinking for another way to "disincent" people.
When you sell the house, if you find that, you know it is abated. The same
would be true if they advertise it. If we could structure it in such a way
that we get that information and, once we have the information, do
something with it. Mr. Guinan stated he thinks that is possible. He added
he is familiar with certain housing authorities on the Peninsula that have
used testers who have done exactly that to determine whether or not
landlords are discriminating on basis of race, sex or family composition
and his suspicion is that it probably would be the same sort of program so,
in concept, he thinks it is possible.
Councilmember Cohen stated he had a note to the same effect. He wants to
speak about the kitchen definition issue, but he thinks we ought to also
look at some other avenues. One that we ought to explore is that if these
folks are marketing units they are declaring publicly. He stated if we
have to do something in terms of the Ordinance, we could say we are going
to consider this evidence of a violation if the City tester goes and is
offered the unit for rent and it is not a legal unit. He stated he would
be interested in exploring that, recognizing that we have to come up with a
procedure as to how it is done, with training so people do not get
themselves into dangerous situations. He stated that he had also jotted
down a couple of other issues which have been pointed out to him. He noted
several ways to create a presumption that there is an illegal unit - two
mailboxes, 1123" and 1123A" for a household that is zoned single-family and
has no legal second dwelling; two utility hook-ups in the same situation.
They say that multiple phone lines in
today's environment are no big deal but multiple utility hook-ups are a
different story. They are often done so you can bill the renter for the
cost of the utilities for their unit. He stated he would like us to look
at some other clues and broaden the definition. He stated he does not know
if we can draft the Ordinance to say that "this is evidence of a
violation", but let us take a look at that.
Mr. Brown responded we certainly use all those external indicators to
constitute in terms of our way to gain access if given probable cause to
gain access. However, we do find situations where multiple mail boxes are
for a separate business and then we make sure there is a business license
for a home occupation. He stated he is not sure any of those could be used
as prohibitions but certainly they do give us the ability to gain access.
Councilmember Cohen added that with regard to the Residential Building
Report (RBR) there is mention in the staff report that reliance on this
might be a disincentive. He asked, do we not require these by Ordinance?
Mr. Brown stated we do require them, and that last year there were
questions about whether we are truly capturing all the sales with RBR's.
We did a survey for a two-month period and found that we did 100% of sales.
Councilmember Cohen then addressed the kitchen definition. He stated that
the disincentive is effective enforcement and we need to figure out how we
give staff the tools to do that. Repeatedly subjecting them to the
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rollaway stove is not going to do that. We need a better definition, and
we need to find a way to better address the wet bar issue. Mr. Cohen
stated he was favoring the 112 of 4 rule" in the kitchen definition, but an
example just occurred to him that he has a utility sink in his garage and
he and his wife have been discussing installing a refrigerator there also,
for extras on occasion. He stated that would clearly not be a kitchen, but
there is a working sink which gives you 2 of the 4 items and under the
definition we are discussing it could be presumed that it is a kitchen and
we are therefore presumed to have an illegal second unit. He stated we
need to come up with a more fine-tuned definition that presents visible
physical evidence, and at this point he is not quite sure what that is.
Planning Commissioner Atchison noted that the overnight parking issue is
not on this list but we discussed it earlier. He stated he has 4 legal
parking spots at this home, 2 on the pad and 2 in the garage. He knew
about the 4 legal spots when he bought his home and that was his option.
He stated he realizes the street is not his. If he had 6 cars, or has the
garage filled and cannot park in it, that is his problem. If we had an
overnight parking challenge and he could only put 2 on his pad and give up
his other 2 spots he does not have a problem with that. The whole issue is
parking. We have to give the staff tools to win these issues, and unless
we do get them the tools it is too difficult for them. We need to get
outside the box and re-examine the entire thing and stop trying to define a
kitchen. He stated it has not worked, and we should look to other issues,
such as the parking. He noted that is the principal issue and needs
solving. He cited the recent "cat Ordinance", and noted that if the cats
had been confined and there was not odor, no one would have reported
anything and nothing would have happened. If we can solve the parking
issue, no one would be calling about illegal units.
Councilmember Miller stated he would like to return to the definition of
kitchen, which is where it all began. We started with a very simple
Ordinance, then we had the problem with the rollaway stove. He stated when
he looked at that as the problem, he decided we could add another item to
the definition, which is the utility hook-up. If the utility hook-up is
not in that room, in any way, shape, or form, not capped or anything of
that sort, but actually not in the room; if that is added to the definition
with the stove and utility hook-up then it addresses the problem, and it
could be maintained with the very simple definition.
Councilmember Heller stated she thinks we would have a problem with putting
it all onto parking places because she is quite sure that in this City we
could find a lot of houses without any garages. Those people have to park
in the street. We are a community and part of the City was built in the
County with very low building standards. Some of them have been brought up
to City Standards, but a lot of them have not. Parking availability is
definitely a problem to look at.
Councilmember Cohen agreed. He stated this is why he mentioned San
Anselmo's Ordinance and the fact that it has been in place for many years.
He stated he did not purchase his San Rafael home with a view to how many
parking spaces it offered and how many vehicles he might choose to own. He
stated that is true for most of the homes in the City. He stated that if
you are suddenly going to say, you bought your house and have a large
street frontage and have been parking two cars out there and one car in
your one -car garage and all of a sudden you only get to have one car
because you bought a house with a one -car garage, it would be too bad for
that person. That is not a viable approach.
We are not going to be able to just say, "You cannot park on the street".
If we have a parking permit program that may or may not solve the problem
because you get back to saying, you have two unmarried people living in
this house and they each
have a car. Are they living together? Are they friends sharing living
expenses, or does one of them rent half the house to the other with a
separate kitchen? The fact that there are two people with two cars does
not answer any of those questions for you, and you get back to discussion
of the physical set-up of the house and the kitchen. Mr. Cohen stated it
might be that we should tighten up the definition of kitchen. He is not
convinced that Councilmember Miller's answer solves it. He stated that, as
a carpenter, he could pretty easily make the outlet not appear to be there
until the inspector left and with a sheetrock knife and a couple of minutes
he could have it back. He stated that we tried to avoid this problem with
the most recent definition and it did not work - it was just another
loophole. It may be that we consider erring on the side of making the
regulation more strict and if that turns into repeated problems then we are
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going to figure how to grant people exemptions to it and we can see how
that works. The looser definition, saying you cannot have a stove, results
in the stove disappearing. Then if you say if you have a connection to the
rest of the house it is not a second unit, that turned out to be an obvious
loophole. He stated perhaps we need to reduce the number of loopholes and
keep an eye on the possibility that people are going to get unintentionally
caught up in this and we need to give them an out if that happens.
Planning Commissioner Kirchmann asked how often, when there is an
enforcement complaint, do we go out and find a legitimate second kitchen?
He asked, is it really a problem where we respond to a complaint and go out
and say we have found a wet bar? Mr. Brown stated that under our current
definitions there really are not any legal situations. If we find a wet
bar it is technically legal. He stated that he is not sure in terms of
Code Enforcement in the field, but he does know that in building permitting
we have actually not been enforcing the Ordinance as written in all cases.
About half of the new homes being built in Loch Lomond, Country Club and
Fairhills, have wet bars in them and if we preclude those the Council would
hear about it very quickly. He stated that, in that sense we are not
enforcing the Ordinance entirely as written. In terms of field
inspections, in relatively few cases do they actually find wet bars and he
cannot say with any certainly.
Commissioner Kirchmann noted we do not have an Ordinance that says you
cannot have two kitchens in a structure. It says, "A dwelling unit has one
or more rooms designed, occupied, or intended for occupance as separate
living quarters with a kitchen, sleeping facilities and sanitary facilities
provided within the dwelling unit for the exclusive use of one or more
persons maintaining a household". He stated it seems to him that you could
quite legitimately have - and probably do have - a number of homes in San
Rafael that are traditional single-family homes occupied by one single
household, perhaps only one person, but have several kitchens, and that is
fine. He stated the part he is not finding is, why the physical
configuration would result in more than one dwelling unit. Mr. Brown
explained that, once again, you have facilities that could be utilized for
separate occupancy. It is just a matter of how these people socially
function when their doors are closed, and that we cannot really tell when
we do inspections. He stated he recalls one situation where we had a
family room downstairs. It had a wet bar and a microwave but there was no
attached bathroom, no exterior access to the unit and you had to go up
through the rest of the unit. In that case we did make an interpretation
and allowed it to exist. Technically, it did not meet the Code.
Mayor Boro stated he is where he was when we started tonight. He thinks
that if we are, either in jest or seriously, saying that having a wet bar
could potentially be a problem we are sending out the wrong message. It is
only a problem when someone has reported that they believe there is
something illegal happening and we go and look at it. He stated that if we
are saying that if you have the conditions you described, theoretically you
are out of compliance, that is not right, and that is what he meant by the
"chilling effect". So that definition has to change. Mayor Boro stated he
thinks it is only when someone is challenging whether or not there is
someone operating a second unit and you find these conditions, that is
fine. But when you say that if someone has a wet bar in the downstairs
family room therefore he is out of compliance with our Ordinance, that is
kind of crazy. Councilmember Cohen's example of a refrigerator and sink in
the garage, we do not want to think of that even in jest. If the Ordinance
is written as leading to that, we should change it.
Commissioner Hinman stated he has a question relating to the enforcement.
He asked, what is our relationship with the utilities as far as any inside
hook-ups? He asked do we have any information on the number of meters or
other utility providers? Planning Manager Sheila Delimont responded they
need to come in and get an electrical permit from the Building Division, so
we do have some illegal units coming in for the permit. That is through
the contractors coming in.
Councilmember Cohen stated he wanted to comment on the issue of precluding
second units in certain neighborhoods. He echoed staff's comment that it
would not be a workable solution. He stated we had a whole list of things
and spent a lot of time on a few of them, but he wanted to mention that and
stated he does not see it as a
workable solution. He noted we often get accused of that, but are always
able to say that it is not true because we get applications for second
units throughout the City. He stated if we move away from that policy we
will regret it.
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Mayor Boro stated he thinks our process, after we go through the boarding
house issues and hear from the public, will be to come back to these 15
points and give some direction to staff as to areas we think they should
pursue or come up with some refinement, so we will go over the entire thing
one more time with some planning direction, so we can cut that down from 15
to something much more workable. He noted we have already been in this
discussion for an hour.
Mr. Brown discussed boarding houses, and stated that our current definition
of boarding houses says, "A structure or portion thereof where rooms and/or
meals for three or more non -transient guests are provided for
compensation". He noted that non -transient means they are there for more
than 30 days. Renting 2 rooms is legal, renting 3 or more is not. The
definition says, "Such rooms cannot include complete cooking and sanitary
facilities", so there is some sharing, or they are simply not allowed to
use the cooking facilities. It includes single room occupancy development.
He noted that in 1994 we added, "Excludes the bona fide sharing of the
rent or ownership costs of housing and/or the sharing of expenses for
meals". Mr. Brown explained that the problem we face in regulating
boarding houses stems from the Supreme Court's Adamson decision in 1980.
The Supreme Court struck down what were very common restrictions, limiting
the total number of unrelated people that were residing in a dwelling unit
and really got to whether or not they constituted a bona fide housekeeping
unit. What the Supreme Court was saying in this case from Santa Barbara
was that the impacts of a single-family dwelling that is occupied by a
large family is really no different than occupancy by a number of unrelated
renters who were acting as a household and sharing rent, etc. They found
it was discriminatory to limit the number of residents or blood relations,
etc. That is what makes boarding houses so difficult, because there is
nothing physical at all. It really comes down to both the financial
relationships and the social relationships that are occurring in the
dwelling unit. In other words, if a couple are renting three rooms to
individuals with separate rental agreements and with limitations on their
access to the majority of the house, they do not share the kitchen
together, or chores, and really are acting as an independent couple in the
household, and the three individuals are individual households, that is
illegal. However, if they are sharing the costs of the dwelling unit,
sharing cooking facilities, then it probably is legal. He stated that is
the challenge that we face, and we tried to develop some criteria to assist
us in evaluating what is meant by sharing rental or ownership costs or
sharing of expenses, or constituting a housekeeping unit. Mr. Brown stated
that the City Attorney's office can assist us in developing criteria;
whether the common areas of the house are shared among renters with the
absence of locked doors, whether household responsibilities such as
maintenance and cooking are shared among occupants, whether the property
owner has conventional rental agreements for the tenants for long-term
occupancy to common areas of the property. Lastly, the issue of whether
rental costs constitute a proportionate share of the total ownership costs
of the house. In other words, if someone is making a house payment of
$1,000 a month and they are renting 5 rooms at $800 each, and then gaining
$4,000, far more than the household costs, clearly it is a commercial
operation for profit. That is not legal. However, if an elderly person is
renting rooms to help her pay her mortgage payments that probably is going
to be legal. The big problem we have in enforcement is trying to find out
what these financial relationships are. Very rarely will people share
their rental agreements with us. We cannot know how they share facilities
in the house. That is where we have difficulty in enforcing boarding
houses.
Mr. Brown then reviewed the 4 boarding house options for consideration:
1. We could continue with our current definition. Once again, that
makes it very difficult to really get at how these costs and
facilities are being shared.
2. We could eliminate the amendment regarding sharing of expenses that
was added in 1994. That would essentially stop advertising it out,
for a loophole to property owners but it places a less defined burden
of proof on those property owners. They would not be sure how they
prove to the City that they are not operating a boarding house and
there is less clarity for staff as to how we prove they are operating
a boarding house, and we still have to face the restrictions that the
Adamson decision places on it, so it does not get us very far.
3. We could add additional criteria, for example, we could make the
definition more specific. That increases the burden of proof for the
property owner very specifically and it certainly gives more
direction for our staff. However, once again, we are still basing
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our enforcement on nonphysical items and obtaining that information
can be very difficult.
4. Lastly, we could require either a business license or some
discretionary approval for renting of any rooms in a dwelling. He
stated that is a pretty heavy bureaucratic response. In terms of a
business license, the Attorney's office feels that is limited under
Prop. 218, and would constitute an additional tax which would require
a Citywide vote so that is not likely. The problem with a
discretionary planning permit is, once again, it probably sets up a
false expectation that we will be easily able to deny these. Once
again, the owner can allege that they are going to share and split
expenses, and we would have no proof to assume that would not be the
case. We really do not see great options in this area and that is
why we have not been very successful in many cases in enforcing
against complaints regarding alleged boarding houses.
Mayor Boro asked if Mr. Brown has put this issue in perspective as far as
the number of complaints, and what the success and failure ratio has been?
Councilmember Heller asked if staff has any idea how many boarding houses
we have. Mr. Brown stated he does not believe we have any permitted
boarding houses. We have been averaging about 2 or 3 complaints a year.
Mayor Boro asked if staff has had any success in dealing with the issues,
and have they been valid? Ms. Delimont responded that in one instance
staff used the criteria established by the City Attorney and had them
provide the proof related to that, and they were able to provide it.
Councilmember Phillips asked about the situations where they have had
complaints, and did they stem from parking and the number of cars, etc. and
was that the issue? Mr. Brown replied that is most likely the case.
Councilmember Cohen noted that in the staff report it was mentioned that
there is little or no physical evidence to solicit a court order to obtain
financial evidence. He asked, is staff saying that if there is physical
evidence then you can go and get a court order that lets you develop other
evidence to establish that it is a boarding house? Mr. Brown stated that
is probably the case, and the fact that physical evidence might be
individual rooms that each have exterior access but potentially no interior
access, or physical evidence like locks on kitchen cabinets and areas of
the home that are locked off and unavailable to rooms that are being
rented.
Councilmember Cohen referred back to Mayor Boro's comment earlier in the
evening, that in the staff report toward the back there are photocopies of
several pages from the Independent Journal's want ads offering rooms for
rent. He asked if a City -employed tester went and looked at a room and
asked what are the conditions, what does it cost and what do the utilities
run, will I have space to store my stuff and park my car, and how many
other people live here, and he is shown rooms, he asked, is that proof?
Mr. Brown replied that it is. Mr. Cohen stated that may be something we
want to take a look at in this case. He stated maybe it involves
periodically employing someone as a tester. He noted that he believes the
City Manager mentioned earlier that Fair Housing in Marin does do that
periodically with regard to discrimination on rental units, so that may be
something that the City wants to look at in terms of periodically testing.
He noted it would take some time, but we would not have to do it all day
every day, but if we periodically had someone call through the list of
rooms for rent and ask some basic questions we would pretty quickly get a
feel for which ones are legitimate rooms for rent and which ones maybe
needed more follow-up including going out and seeing the physical layout
and going from there. He noted it would not be a case of "Ha, gotcha!
Here's my badge!". They would come back and fill out a report and then you
have some basis to go and proceed with enforcement effort.
Councilmember Phillips followed-up on a question regarding parking. He
stated there would be a way to simplify it, and it seems to him that a lot
of the issues, particularly the boarding issue, centers on the procedure
for handling the parking. He asked are there problems with boarding, other
than parking, when you get right down to it? Mr. Brown responded that in
one particular instance there have been allegations regarding excessive
noise and excessive refuse, but principally the parking. He noted you
could have the same impact if you had a group of students that are co -
renting a house, or people of the same religious institution that rent.
Mr. Phillips noted that those uses would be legal, and to make that
distinction would be virtually impossible, it would seem to him. He stated
it sounds to him that this would be a minority of cases. He stated he will
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be interested in the public input on the parking issue.
Councilmember Heller asked, in connection with Mr. Phillips' remark about
students, have we looked at the communities with colleges? She noted that
when her daughter was at Davis there were always at least 4 women or 4 men
renting the houses. She wondered how they defined it and how did they
handle such a situation?
Mr. Brown responded that we have checked. Santa Barbara was the test case
and we have checked with other cities such as Palo Alto, Davis and
Berkeley. They all admit to having exactly the same problems,
differentiating between legitimate co -rentals versus rentals of individual
rooms to individuals operating entirely independent of one another.
Mayor Boro stated he thinks Mr. Brown is looking to see if anyone has any
comments at this point on those 4 options.
Councilmember Miller stated his basis feeling on this is to simply continue
with the current definition because it seems we are going to get into a
quagmire of everything in the process. He stated he is particularly
sensitive in terms of engaging of people's homes. He explained that to him
it is such a supersensitive issue that he feels strongly toward just
continuing the present definition.
Mayor Boro asked if there are any additional comments. There were none.
Mr. Brown suggested taking public comment if the Mayor would like. Mayor
Boro agreed.
Mr. Brown noted that two people had submitted requests to speak, and for
the balance of the speakers he will look for a show of hands and he will
ask that they fill out their name and address on the sheet he will provide.
Sandra Miller of 8 Aquinas Drive and a member of the Dominican/Black Canyon
Neighborhood Association, stated she would be willing to answer any of the
ads in the paper on rooms for rent if the group would do the same for her;
she has one that she would like looked into. She stated she will not go
into the history of her case because it is all in previous minutes, but the
situation next door to her home is still an ongoing problem. The neighbors
believe that it is a boarding house and at any given time each bedroom is
being rented out, in addition to the dining room, family room and even the
kitchen dinette area. She stated the owner lives in the unfinished garage
among containers of toxic garden chemicals, with no ventilation because the
two garage doors facing the street have not been opened in over 20 years.
She noted the neighborhood is zoned R-1, which she interprets as Single -
Family Residential but the City obviously has a different interpretation of
criteria to meet this definition. She stated they purchased their homes
specifically because of this Zoning Ordinance as a place to live and raise
their families. The children of the neighborhood have not been allowed to
play in our cul-de-sac since this situation has existed. Since strange
tragedies happen daily, the parents of one boy who is now 8 years old have
lived in fear of the safety for the child's entire life. Ms. Miller asked,
would you want to raise a family in our neighborhood with these
circumstances? She stated that furthermore, the Neighborhood Watch Program
is entirely ineffective in their cul -d -sac. The Code Enforcement
Department has conducted an investigation into this property and has come
to the conclusion that the numerous renters are living as a family. She
stated the neighbors are extremely dissatisfied with this conclusion. She
noted she has a residential rental agreement between Larry Shore, the
landlord, and Chris MacManus, the tenant, dated March 4, 1999, with an
addendum to room rental, stating the conditions of the security deposit,
one of which is a rental commitment of one year and additional fees for
utilities. She noted that Mr. MacManus has also filed a complaint with
Marin Mediation Services, Case #99H176, because Mr. Shore is in violation
of California Civil Code regarding forfeiture of his deposit and change in
terms regarding utility payment. Mr. MacManus is moving out tomorrow, and
she (Ms. Miller) is sure you can understand the reactions of the other
current tenants living there who would not make a statement on our behalf
for fear of retaliation by the landlord. Former tenants have stated that
they cook in their rooms because of the filthy condition of the kitchen.
Furthermore, Mr. Shore also demands that the rent be paid to him in cash,
thus avoiding any paper trail for investigation or declared income for tax
purposes. He is clearly taking advantage of City, State and Federal
governments for his own financial gain. Ms. Miller stated that for her and
her neighbors the quality of life still continues to deteriorate with
regard to their safety and economic and parking impacts. She stated one of
the things she does want to add is that safety is more of an issue to her
and her neighbors than parking.
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Ms. Miller stated she has a photograph of Mr. Shore's 20 year-old black
Cadillac limousine that is parked crossways in his driveway, purposely to
prevent any tenants including one who is disabled, from using this only
off-street parking space available to his many tenants. Ms. Miller stated
he parks his second car on the street in front of her house and suggests to
the renters to park up and down the adjacent Dominican Drive.
Ms. Miller stated his ad for room rental was noted in the staff report, but
she has one as recent as August 1st. She stated this clearly is in
violation of the City code regarding boarding houses. She noted that a few
months ago Mr. Shore's own daughter called her because she needed a place
to live temporarily. When questioned about why she could not live with her
father in his family residence, she stated that all the rooms were rented
out and there was not room for her, and her father said that he did not
want any women in the house. Mr. Shore did not even have room for his own
daughter because of his so-called "family" of tenants.
Ms. Miller stated she has also researched with local realtors a document
called Transfer Disclosure Statement in which the seller must disclose all
known material facts about the property; for example, any nuisances. The
law is clear that a property owner has the legal obligation to disclose any
facts affecting the value or the desirability of the property. In this
case, we have a history of extreme dissatisfaction with the Code
Enforcement and City of San Rafael in which you would be made a party to
the liability. She asked, if given the choice of buying a home in San
Rafael, knowing these facts, would you choose to move onto Lower Aquinas
Drive? She stated she has spoken with other communities who informed her
that they would have put a stop to this situation from the very beginning.
She stated if we were always as inconsiderate as Mr. Shore there would be
well over 50 additional people and cars, just in our cul-de-sac. She
stated we ask you to respond with a clear conscience as to why you continue
to allow a situation such as this to exist in the City of San Rafael to the
detriment of law-abiding residents, that directly impacts the safety and
well-being of a neighborhood. It does not demonstrate the leadership that
we expect from our representatives. She stated there should be no need for
us to spend this much energy on an illegal situation; we all deserve to
live in a safe living environment, just as you all do.
Dick Watts of 16 Eye Street stated he would like to offer comment and
information for consideration tonight. He stated he would like to speak
from two perspectives - first as Chairman of the Sun Valley Neighborhood
Association which includes 1,100 homes in West San Rafael. They organized
a little over a year ago and are working on a visioning process. They
asked the residents about the attributes of their neighborhood that make it
a great place to live, and also what attributes might be improved to make
it even better. He stated he shared with the Planning Commission an
earlier draft of a spread sheet of their "work in progress" which
summarizes the neighbors' input. He passed out a copy to the Council,
Commission and staff. He stated he has highlighted the concerns about
illegal dwelling units and also about the parking problems in the
neighborhood. He stated he is submitting it as data or information for
consideration. Mr. Watts added that as a second perspective, speaking for
himself as an individual resident of San Rafael and a homeowner, in his
neighborhood on Eye Street which is very good looking, across the street a
neighbor has put in a legal second unit and done it properly so it is not
evident that there is a second unit there and there is no parking problem.
However, he can walk around the corner and find the unit that many people
in the neighborhood feel is an illegal unit and is perhaps also a boarding
house. There is at least one illegal rental unit. He stated the property
over -utilized the space as far as having built out and is not attractive to
look at, as well as being a fire hazard. He stated it has been checked
before. Depending on whom you talk to, the number of vehicles associated
with this property ranges from 9 to 12, mostly parked in front of other
people's properties. This has had a negative effect on our community and
the values of the neighborhood. He stated that supporting affordable legal
units and opposing illegal units are not mutually exclusive. Also, he has
worked for quite a few years and a lot of his savings is invested in his
home. The value of his home is hopefully to support his retirement and
other family needs. If people conduct illegal units in the area, it will
have a negative impact on the market value of his home and he submits that
they are taking something from him, that they are stealing from him. Mr.
Watts commended the Council and Commission for attacking this very
difficult problem and urged that they persevere with it.
Elissa Giambastiani, Executive Director of the San Rafael Chamber of
Commerce, stated she is here representing the Marin Consortium for
Workforce Housing. She stated she lives in Terra Linda where there are a
number of instances where there are more people living in some houses than
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perhaps there should be. She stated she sympathizes with the struggle to
try to come up with some fair and equitable solution to this problem. She
added we all know it is going to get worse. There are going to be more and
more people having to live together because they cannot afford the housing
costs which are astronomical. She asked, when a single room in a home
costs $500 a month, what are young people going to do? She noted that
Councilmember Phillips was talking about his daughter graduating from
College and that she will be a teacher in this community. She stated we
want these young people in our community, but where will they live? She
stated that preserving as many of the second units as we can is incredibly
important, and she has to agree with the people who have illustrated
examples where people are abusing the privilege and making it uncomfortable
for others in their neighborhoods.
Ms. Giambastiani stated that it is a shame we have to spend more time
talking about where we will park our vehicles than we spend thinking of
where we are going to find homes for people. She stated she believes there
should be some incentive to legalize illegal units and to make them
conforming. If this means that the owners of second units need some help,
the Marin Housing Council has a program and the Marin Housing Authority has
a grant and loan program for low-income homeowners which could be of
assistance to some of the property owners, particularly the owners who
really needed the income from the second unit in order to keep living in
our community. She stated she does not think you necessarily have to
reduce fees in order to provide an incentive, but she thinks the objective
is to make the units as receptive to the community as we can, by legalizing
them. She stated she does not
like to disagree with Councilmember Cohen, but she does think that tandem
parking does work for some people, the ones who really want to be good
neighbors. She does not think we should say that it does not always work.
Ms. Giambastiani stated that her last comment has to do with the General
Plan policies, Protecting and Conserving Existing Housing. She noted it
talks about protection of our rental housing stock and about house sharing.
She noted it says, "encourage and facilitate house sharing in appropriate
locations where it will provide housing for low- and moderate -income
residents and not significantly impact the neighborhood". She closed by
wishing the group good luck in this difficult job they have to do.
Ted Rooyen, a resident of San Rafael, stated he is delighted to see all the
attention that is given, and particularly the last speaker with whom he
agrees about the need for housing. He suggested that the group not give a
"No" to, but really consider the program she mentioned because it has
enormous value. He noted that a similar system was used in Sydney,
Australia with tremendous success. They have built hundreds of units for
low-cost housing. They got people who are lending and collecting the
profits to deposit them in an agency run by the county. From the interest
on that money they have built all these houses. In addition, it has
resolved a great many difficulties that arise and the agency is working
extremely well. He stated if that happens in San Rafael it will be another
first for Marin and first for the United States. He requested that the
group pay attention to the possibility of that happening.
Lorenzo Ersland of 196 Union Street stated he was just elected President of
the Montecito Area Residents Association (MARA). One of the first things
they did was to list all of the issues that affect their neighborhood and
they have about 50 or 60 issues. They prioritized them and illegal units
in the neighborhood is a top priority and is very much an issue. He stated
that in his neighborhood, as in others, they are not just talking about
second units but also third units, fourth units, etc. He noted there is a
house that borders on his back yard which looks like a single-family
dwelling from the front, but he knows for a fact that there are four
apartments in there. He stated that at that house there is no parking so
all of the people who live there, at least 5 households, are all parking on
Belle Avenue. He stated parking is definitely an issue, but not the only
issue. It also impacts the property value, as well as noise and the
greater densities of people.
Mr. Ersland commended Mayor Boro on his great idea about the ads. He
stated if someone puts an ad in the paper advertising a studio apartment
and that unit is not zoned for anything other than a single-family
dwelling, he does not know why you would even need probable cause. He
thinks that is a good idea and should be included in the 15 options. Mr.
Ersland added that since parking in his neighborhood is a critical issue,
he knows what has been said about the parking permit process, but he thinks
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that is what it will come down to. From his point of view, you would not
necessarily have to restrict the number of permits per household. If a
person has 3 cars and has to park them on the street they could have 3
permits but, at the same time, if you have a house with people with 8
different last names and that property is not zoned for anything but a
single-family dwelling, that would be a way to pinpoint where illegal units
are. He stated he thinks that whatever problems there are with parking
permits, they could certainly be worked out. He stated a lot of people in
his neighborhood feel very strongly about this issue and are very much in
favor of parking permits.
Bob McCallister of 115 Jewell Street, also a MARA member of their Board,
stated he has been involved in this process since the earliest meetings and
even heard some of his own suggestions from two years ago being raised by
others tonight. He stated we have been hearing tonight that the
desirability of many housing units is a given and is accepted by all here
in San Rafael. He does not personally feel that this is necessarily true,
and would like to see the City and County living a little more within its
means. They actually have been squeezing in an infinite number of new
homes and businesses, but questions do we really want to. He stated that
while he applauds and thanks the Mayor, Council and Planning Commission and
staff for the outstanding job they have done in revitalizing Downtown, he
feels it may be time to say, "Enough is enough" - enough restaurants, nail
salons and auto shops. He stated that in an economic sense San Rafael is
doing just fine, and even our neighborhoods with all the overcrowding and
much ugliness, remain a good investment and we have that to be thankful
for. However, we do not live in San Rafael primarily for financial
reasons. He stated they moved here for the quality of life that made San
Rafael and Marin in general such a special place to live. He stated he is
hard pressed to find anyone these days who feels that the quality of life
has improved. Traffic has become unbearable and the density and hostility
which accompanies it do not make for a happy life. With response to Ms.
Giambastiani's comments, Mr. McAllister stated he has to empathize that
there are a lot of people looking for homes; at what point do you close the
door and say, "Enough is enough"? He stated he would hate to see this
become a place where we let everybody in and do everything
we can for them, with the net result that nobody wants to live here. At a
certain point things become ugly and become San Francisco or something like
it. He stated he would hate to see that happen.
Harry Winters of 201 Spring Grove Avenue, President of the West End
Neighborhood Association (WENA), stated one of the questions tonight was
about the balance of enforcement efforts versus other enforcement
priorities in the City. He stated that recently an Ordinance was passed
prohibiting parking of commercial vehicles in residential areas. It was
decided then that it would be enforced on a complaint basis. He stated he
can see that the same area here might be enforced on a complaint basis,
which certainly should answer some of the problems of where you put your
resources in enforcement. He stated that on the parking problem, the
question of the number of vehicles per household really is not pertinent.
He thinks it is the amount of curb in front of a house, and each
residential address should be issued parking permits for that residential
address based on how many cars can be parked in front of that residence.
He stated he does not care how many driveway spaces they have, or garages,
or how many cars they want to own, if there is room to park 2 cars in front
of their house they should be issued 2 permits with the house address on
them but not with the owner's name. For overnight parking it could be
laid on the dashboard or hung on the mirror. He does not think anyone has
a right to park on the street. That is a public street. He thinks that a
permit system might work. It would not depend on the name on the permit,
but would just be allocating the public street area to that house based on
the curb in front of that house.
Mr. Winters stated his final comment has to do, not with the issues brought
up, but with a letter he got on Tuesday, addressed to him as a Homeowners
Association President. He is sure a number of other people got copies
because it was a professionally addressed letter with a printed label, etc.
It stated, "San Rafael homeowners urged to defend their rights at this
upcoming meeting tonight. Please join us to represent our rights to City
officials". Mr. Winters stated the letter is anonymous and not signed. He
stated anyone who has a legitimate letter like this to put out to the
public should have the courage to sign it and anyone who has an honest
argument would sign the letter. He thinks the people who put this letter
out are not looking out for homeowners. They are looking out for other
agendas. He stated your constituents are probably represented by
neighborhood associations more than they are by housing advocates or by
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other organizations which are not really concerned with the quality of life
in the neighborhoods. They are concerned with other agendas, and he would
urge anyone who got this letter to treat it like any kind of an anonymous
letter. He stated he resents getting something like this and he would hope
that whoever put it out would get up and admit to it, but he does not think
they will.
Hugo Landecker of 127 San Rafael Avenue in Gerstle Park stated we are
talking about second units, and should be talking about illegal units. He
stated that in his neighborhood there are many properties that have many
illegal units and Gerstle Park is full of illegal units. The abatement
program has been a failure. He stated they would like to see some progress
made. He stated he realizes it is a difficult issue to come up with a
change in the process but he hopes the City can come up with something. He
noted we keep hearing about how parking is a problem and he agrees, but
along with parking comes traffic. If we could wave a magic wand and get
rid of all of the automobiles from the illegal units would that make all of
the problems go away? No. It is a housing and density problem. As we
compress housing and make people live closer and closer together that is
where you are getting the problems. He noted you might have a number of
residences, with the illegal units interspersed among them. You are now
putting more people closer together. In the summer months the weather is
hot and you have your windows open and instead of having to listen to a
couple of stereos, you might have to listen to a few more. It is more
noise, and more animals, barking dogs, etc. He stated that getting rid of
the automobiles is not the only thing; that is just part of the problem.
Mr. Landecker stated that the bottom line is the housing density which is
really the problem. Regarding rental price, he noted we keep talking about
the illegal units being rented at below market rate but they are not. They
are rented for whatever the landlord can get for them. There is nothing in
any City Ordinance that says, we will give you a good deal on rent if it is
an illegal unit. It is not going to happen. He stated the renters are
paying top dollar for these places. We have Ordinances that are supposed
to abate these units and they do not work, and in the meantime the property
owners are not only laughing at the Council and Planning Commission, they
are laughing at everyone in the audience, and they are laughing all the way
to the bank every month when they get that rent check. Mr. Landecker added
that the living standards in these illegal units vary tremendously. Some
of them are not fit for a dog and some might be very nice, so it runs a
gamut. He stated the process really should be abatement and if anyone
wants to protest the abatement the Zoning Ordinance definitely allows them
to apply for a variance. He stated he does not know if the sympathy would
be there for granting a variance, but the Zoning Ordinance does allow it.
He noted we heard from the business community how we have so many
businesses coming into San Rafael and they cannot find housing for their
employees. He stated if you turn the clock back a few years, we did not
have enough business in San Rafael. Now we have the business and do not
have the housing. The next thing we will have more business and will want
more housing. Mr. Landecker stated that if you listen to the Chamber of
Commerce we are going to fill this whole community up with housing, illegal
and otherwise.
Coleman Persily, a San Rafael resident, stated he wishes to support the
position of the Housing Authority. He stated we have to remember that we
went to the Board of Supervisors and found that without question there is a
housing crisis in Marin County. He stated he does not think this is the
time for us to suddenly start going after illegal second units because when
you do that you get someone to move out, and where are these people going
to go? He stated we need affordable housing and do not have enough of it
so that if you have someone who happens to be letting someone live in their
house on an affordable basis that is the need of the community right now.
He stated that from the business point of view it has got to be understood
that the business people are having a difficult time hiring all over the
place. They want low salaried employees. He asked, where are these low
salaried employees going to go? Even the middle-class employees now have
to go to Sonoma and other places. He feels that the most important thing
now is not suppressing or going after these kinds of places, but to
consider the emergency as far as affordable housing is concerned, and
therefore he supports the Housing Authority's report today. Mr. Persily
referred to the mention of amnesty in the staff report, and stated he feels
this is the time for the City to give those people who are living here to
let them stay, let them alone and do not push. Give them all amnesty and
stop checking up to get people out of their homes. After you get the
amnesty, from then on you watch your building permits and use permits, but
as of this time he feels we need amnesty for all the second units and stop
suppressing people. Right now they need housing and the City's attitude
should be affordable housing, let people alone, stop pushing people around
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and let's have amnesty.
Melany Kramer, a San Rafael resident, stated she is not a homeowner nor a
housing advocate but she understands what it is like to try to live on a
low wage income since she returned to San Rafael from Sacramento three
years ago, where she was formerly a high salaried attorney. She stated we
need to deal with reality, and reality is that there is an increasing gap
in earning capacity and the ability to pay for housing in this community.
She stated the question is, what are we going to do about it? She stated
that what we are talking about is blending the best ideas and staying away
from the mud slinging so we can come up with a combination of amnesty,
required conformity within a reasonable length of time including grant
applications and other things Ms. Giambastiani was speaking about. Then we
need to realize the extent to which we allow the economics of Marin County
and the housing prices that are going sky high to drive an increasing wedge
between the haves and the have nots. She stated she is not a prophet of
doom, but if we do not see some kind of economic warfare we are going to be
either very lucky or extremely naive, and it is only a question of time.
She stated she is not trying to look for trouble - it is there. She stated
we should talk about some positive things we can do. She noted that many
illegal units are substandard, and described one in particular detail.
Ms. Kramer asked that the issue of parking not be minimized. It is not
just a politically correct type issue, it is a safety issue. Having
parking on any street is a safety issue, since it can make it impossible
for police cars or fire trucks to get through. She stated San Anselmo has
a good program, and permits by curb frontage can work. She stated that
because she had a car that would not be permitted in her sister's unit she
got a permit from the Police Department that cost her $5 a month and she
parked in a City lot but had to be out by 8 AM. It can work. She added
that Sacramento had a permit program neighborhood -by neighborhood, and it
was so successful that an increasing number of neighborhoods asked to join
the program. It is now throughout the City of Sacramento. She stated
there is so much positive energy here and this is such a great community,
let us make it even better.
Mayor Boro stated he would like to have the people who have not spoken yet
come back to the issue of illegal units and boarding house issues and the
points that the Council and Planning Commission have to consider if they
wish to add to them or discourage us from pursuing any of them, that would
be to our benefit tonight, He stated we should keep it at that level and
not get into different beliefs, whether you are a business person or
property owner, or whatever. If the speakers stick to the issues before us
it would be productive. He stated he would like to end the meeting around
9:30 or so, so let us see if we can move forward.
Noble (Rocky) Birdsey of 21 Belle Avenue stated he has heard the issue of
parking brought up many times and it is always going to be there and will
get worse. He stated the solution may be, as was done for Downtown, to do
a bond measure. In San Francisco they bought lots in the Richmond District
and created parking there for business and residential use. He stated it
is expensive, but it could be done here. He stated it needs to be
addressed because the population is getting bigger, and
traffic will get worse. He noted the second unit issue of course has to be
worked on. He agreed with Ms. Giambastiani's recommendation about the
Housing Authority for housing relief.
Joan Webb, a resident of Prospect Drive in San Rafael, stated she will
address some issues that have not been addressed, principally visitors and
Code Enforcement. She stated her neighbor across the street has a problem,
and he reports her for many unrelated things such as when the lady next
door died, etc. She suggested there should be a way that the City has with
selecting the calls to which the Code Enforcement should respond, and
finding a businesslike way that the Code Enforcement people could come out.
She stated she was a victim of the "chill factor". Two Code Enforcement
people arrived at her house and went down a side staircase to a side door
and flashed a badge at someone standing by the door and asked if this was a
unit. The man stated he did not know, but guessed so, and Ms. Webb stated
she received a "pre -something" and had to hire an attorney. She stated her
health is not good and she has Medicare nurses and others coming to help.
Her son has had home schooling. She stated it affected her health by being
essentially persecuted by Code Enforcement. She stated that when she
purchased the home it had a wet sink in it, and a neighbor who cannot
remember that has told her that four other people owned her house before
her, when only one did.
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She asked when her father comes to visit, is he allowed to park in front of
her house overnight? She stated she has a nurse coming to give her oxygen,
and inquired if she is allowed to park in front of her house? She asked,
what if her son has three friends over, does she have to respond to the
City, and get a guest permit for a nurse to stay to take care of her when
she is too ill to even breathe? She stated she feels the City has become
invasive. She stated there has been discussion about homeowners rights,
and she asked how about our rights to just live here and raise our children
and receive health care if we need it, and try to make ends meet without
being addressed by Code Enforcement Officers who leave messages on
telephones. She stated that in order to become legal you will have to add
new hallways to your house, and then two weeks later you will receive a
call saying you have to take the hallways out. She stated no one ever came
into her house to find out if she has hallways, a kitchen, or whatever.
There has to be some tightening up on the front end. She would like us to
consider we live in a place where hopefully we will be allowed visitors.
Jan Robinson, 104 Jewell Street, stated she has income property in San
Rafael and pays Federal and State income tax on it, as well as property
taxes. She would like to encourage going the other direction. She noted
Councilmember Phillips brought up the issue of being stricter and having
violation actions for the ones which are indicated as illegal units.
Wayne Johnson of 88 Jewell Street, stated that the City could share part of
the fine with the tenants for becoming whistle -blowers for their landlord.
Patrick Murphy of 21 La Vista, stated he supports the Mayor's suggestion of
investigating advertisements. He stated that when he started a business in
San Rafael over 12 years ago he put an advertisement in the paper. A Code
Enforcement Officer talked to him and told him he needed a business
license. He stated there is nothing different about this.
Steve Patterson of 323 Bayview Street, Co -Chair of the Federation of San
Rafael Neighborhoods, stated he has been involved in this issue for a long
time and wanted to thank everyone for doing so much work on this issue. He
stated he particularly wanted to thank City Manager Gould, noting it was 2
years ago he came to a Federation meeting and heard from a whole array of
neighborhood leaders, from the area south of Puerto Suello Hill in
particular, that illegal units was one of the major issues that was
undermining the social fabric of our neighborhoods and the quality of life.
As a result of that, Mr. Gould had City staff spend considerable time
working on the re -definition of what constitutes a unit. He stated he
feels that definition is really close to working. He thinks there are some
loopholes and Mr. Brown in his excellent presentation tonight alluded to
some of those loopholes, particularly the interior stairway loopholes. He
stated he thinks some of the enforcement activity has been hampered since
the previous Code Enforcement Officer left last Fall, and it has only been
recently that Lynda Ferris has been hired. Mr. Patterson noted that
another Code Enforcement Officer is about to be hired, so he is hopeful
that the Code Enforcement mechanism will begin to become fully functional
when complaints are lodged, and that true follow-up can be done. Mr.
Patterson thanked everyone for what they have done. He stated illegal
units are an epidemic in some neighborhoods, and less of an issue in
others. He noted that when someone lives next to a problem situation like
many people in this audience do, and have 8 to 10 cars at one property
address associated with that address and you cannot even park in front of
your own house, it becomes a highly charged, emotional issue and creates a
level of contentiousness on a block. He stated he thinks we are close to
getting to where we need to go. He stated a lot of communities ignore this
issue, and he commends the City and stated that the Federation really
appreciates it.
Mayor Boro stated that what Mr. Brown would like the Council and Commission
to do is to quickly go through these 15 items and see if there are some
that we would like further work done on, and some that we would like to not
pursue at this stage.
Commissioner Hinman stated that one of the comments brought up a question
he had, and he would like to ask Mr. Gould: Did we not recently have a
Citywide poll on what mattered to the public at large? He noted that
certainly there were many people with concerns here tonight regarding
second units but, as he recalls, this did not come up as high as some other
priorities on the Citywide poll. Mr. Gould responded that is correct. He
stated the sensitivity to illegal units was registered with a fairly low
number of respondents to the professional survey, but to those who were
cognizant of the problem it was significant. Mr. Hinman stated that people
were very eloquent on it this evening and he was trying to look at it on
the broader, Citywide basis.
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Commissioner Hinman then asked Mayor Boro about process as we go through
these suggestions. He stated that perhaps they tend to group themselves
into three separate areas or, in some way partition them, so there seem to
be definitional and site -related topics, then there is process in terms of
amortization/amnesty, and a third general grouping might be
zoning/parking/neighborhood solutions.
Mayor Boro asked Mr. Brown to walk the group through and see if we can get
some concurrences or comments. He agrees that the first couple have to do
with definition and it seems the first one makes sense and that would be a
positive way to pursue it. He asked how Mr. Brown would want to pursue #2
and #3?
Mr. Brown stated that on #2, #3, #4 and #6, they all get down to how we
define "dwelling unit" and secondary, how we define "kitchen". He stated
the question is, do we continue on with our current broad definition of
kitchen and, if that is the case, how do we exempt what would be legal or
innocuous situations?
Commissioner Lang stated she thinks she disagrees with Mr. Brown. She
stated he may have gone too fast. Focusing on the definition of kitchens
assumes that you are going to keep the same method of proof that you
currently use, and that is some sort of physical evidence. She stated a
very viable alternative method of proof has been suggested here, by using
testers or people who would respond to an advertisement which would in
essence get you admissions from the owners of the property, which would
slip you very nicely into your existing definition which just requires the
intent to have the premises occupied separately. You could obtain that
admission very easily and safely if it were done in a non -confrontational
manner, just gathering information, going back and writing an affidavit and
submitting it to Code Enforcement Officers, or however you wanted to handle
it. It is an alternative way of proving the same thing, that would
completely remove four of the definitions, and would get us out of pushing
the microwaves around which is what we are doing now. Commissioner Lang
asked if Mr. Brown knows of any municipality that uses that method of
proof? Mr. Brown stated he does not know of any, and in fact through the
years he has been advised by attorneys that you cannot use evidence that
is gained under false pretenses when you are essentially portraying
yourself as other than an enforcement officer. He stated that is why we
need to really pursue that with the City Attorney's office. It certainly
could be another tool.
Mayor Boro asked, why could you not say, "I am 'Phil Bull' from the Code
Enforcement Office and I see you have an ad and would like to know what you
are offering? There would be no false pretenses. It would be just like
the person who went up to see someone who had a business advertised and we
check and found he did not have a business license. We went out and told
him he was running a business and needs a license. If someone is running
an ad and we go out and say, "It doesn't make sense, you running this ad in
this R-1 neighborhood, what's up?" He stated he does not think that is
false. Mr. Brown stated that if the property owner says that this is a
situation where he is renting a room and sharing household facilities, if
they are that savvy, can we simply say, "OK"?
Councilmember Cohen stated he would like to pursue this, and perhaps hear
from the City Attorney's office. There are a number of instances where
governmental entities use exactly this technique, like sending minors in to
attempt to purchase cigarettes or alcohol, or police officers posing as
prostitutes, where people are clearly portraying themselves as something
other than they are, and simply an interested consumer as opposed to
someone working on behalf of an agency that has police powers. He stated
if we cannot get an answer tonight, it is something we should look into
further.
Mr. Guinan stated he will attempt to answer. He stated he believes that
Councilmember Cohen is right, and that if someone is publicly holding out
and advertising a room for rent a law enforcement officer/code enforcement
officer can legitimately call and go to that residence and inquire about
what is being offered. He stated he can see some real potential problems
and before such a process would be initiated, he would suggest that he take
a look at it more thoroughly and provide the Code Enforcement Division a
written opinion that can address this specific issue. He stated he does
not think there is a blanket prohibition on such things. On the other hand
he does know you can get very politically into the area of entrapment if
you are not careful. He stated that in his years of criminal practice, on
the defense side, he used that successfully on several occasions. He
stated it is not a black -and -white issue and does merit a little more
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study.
Councilmember Phillips stated that it strikes him as having merit but he
also does not believe it is a panacea, because particularly with the demand
for housing what it is, he suspects many are rented without an ad in the
newspaper. Furthermore, those existing situations that are being rented do
not fall into that category either. He stated that maybe one part of the
answer, but not the complete one and he would not want to let it rest
there. Physical evidence should be part of the definition in determining
whether there is a violation.
Mr. Brown agreed, and stated that after being burned once a property owner
would be much more careful about how they advertised their unit and how
they described it over the phone and then tried to assess it if they get an
actual applicant, feeling it might be an enforcement officer. He stated it
does give us an additional tool if it is legal, to try to identify
situations that could be illegal.
Councilmember Heller asked, could that also work a little better with the
boarding houses? Mr. Brown replied that it would give us the opportunity
to really try to define and obtain statements from property owners as to
whether or not this is a true shared living situation, or truly independent
living situation. He stated he keeps coming back to that, because renting
of rooms, in and of itself, is not illegal. Renting rooms to people who
operate and live totally independently of one another without sharing
equally in financial and social settings in the house, is illegal.
Mayor Boro recommended to Mr. Guinan that when he pursues this issue he
might want to revisit the issue of penalty and what recourse we might have.
He stated if we are serious about this and want to pursue it - he agrees
that it is only one part - but it is just one way to go at it. If we are
going to try to slow this illegal process down we have to get it whatever
way we can. He stated it is very difficult when someone complains, the
inspectors show up, the stove gets switched, and it is futile. He stated
this might be a way to go, but he also thinks we should look at the
penalty. When we have gotten serious about abating issues in certain parts
of the City with respect to illegal conditions, we abated those issues and
fined the property owners.
Mayor Boro added that we have to do something with the definition and the
loophole as an issue, but we can work with that. He is concerned when he
reads something like, "Define and allow wet bars without cooking appliances
or gas or 220 connection". He asked, what does that mean? Does it mean if
I have a home and happen to have a family room with a wet bar and happen to
have a 220 connection there, even though I am just living in that home, do
I theoretically have a problem? Mr. Brown stated that is where the
definition of "through access" is concerned. In some situations those are
created as a perfectly acceptable use for the family but a subsequent owner
takes that same physical setting and rents it out. Mayor Boro stated that
in the process of renting it out, it is the renting out that is the
problem, not having the wet bar. Mr. Brown agreed. Mayor Boro asked, why
prohibit someone from having a wet bar with a 220 connection if they want
to have that in their home or their cabana? He stated that in the process
of having that, they now are promoting this illegal use, and that is
another issue. When you read this, it is kind of crazy to say that people
cannot have that kind of use in their home. He stated he thinks we have to
frame it a little differently. It is the use of it, and not the presence
of it.
Mr. Brown stated that to the extent that we can, in a definition, focus on
the use by two separate households living independently, that certainly is
the true definition of the problem here. He stated the only concern we
have is, how do you enforce? Even using the additional tool of looking at
ads and following up on those, he is not sure of the extent that verbal
comments and statement of intent from property owner, if that is truly
illegal. It is the actual activity of renting and operating two separate
households. Once again, to prove that, it goes to testimony from someone
as to how these two families operate and live independently, if you do not
have anything physical to base it on. He stated the additional tool would
help. You would get a foot in the door and possibly educate property
owners and dissuade some. However, we still need to work with the City
Attorney's office to find out if merely verbal expressions of intent to
rent under these conditions would be illegal.
Mr. Guinan stated the answer to that is, "No". If it is just a simple
intent without any sort of physical evidence to support it, it would be
very difficult to find a violation. The idea of the testers is to get
inside and to find out if there are any physical aspects in addition to the
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intent of the individual in order to make some sort of violation stick.
Commissioner Lang stated she is confused. She stated she is reading in
clear terms the definition of a dwelling unit, which specifically says,
"intended for occupancy". She stated that if a competent adult interviews
a dwelling owner, who then makes admissions of intent to do this, and the
competent adult reduces that to a sworn affidavit and presents it to the
Community Development Officer, what more do you need to provide a violation
for that Ordinance? Mr. Guinan responded that it is his opinion that you
would need some indication of physical evidence from the structure, that in
fact there was an illegal second unit there. Commissioner Lang asked,
would you read the word "intended" to be meaningless? Mr. Guinan explained
it is the question of how do you prove intent. He stated he would be glad
to talk with Ms. Lang afterwards about it, but he really thinks that in
order to prove intent you are going to have to show some sort of
circumstantial evidence, whether it be physical or whatever, in order to
support your statement. Commissioner Lang stated in that case we have a
real problem. She stated we have done a great deal of work trying to find
a definition of physical evidence that is provable and we cannot seem to do
that after tremendous effort. She stated we have to look at alternatives
and think creatively. We have a nicely worded Ordinance that is very broad
and it seems we have to be looking for different ways to get them into this
definition. She stated it does not require physical evidence, because
microwaves move.
Mayor Boro asked Mr. Guinan to take the scenario of having testers go out,
and following Councilmember Cohen's idea of kids going in and buying
cigarettes. He noted it is not going in and asking, "Do you have Camels
for sale?", and then walking out the door. It is when you buy the Camels
that you have the violation. He stated, perhaps you have to go the whole
route, and go in and look at it, be a tester, and run it. He stated, then
you have the proof. He stated he does not think we can solve this tonight,
but he thinks it is something that it makes sense to pursue. Obviously we
cannot set ourselves up for liability but it seems logical that if people
are advertising the rooms and people are renting them, and they are
illegal, we ought to somehow be able to intercede and prevent that.
Councilmember Cohen stated that it will not get us anywhere to spend a lot
more time tonight discussing and debating the issue but he would like to
hear more about it because it seems to him that we are onto something that
might be a different approach. He stated that the flip side of it may also
help us because if what we are saying is "intended" and we can establish
methods for proving intent, he noted that advertising for rent is pretty
good admission of intent. He stated he would also like the City Attorney's
office to explore the issue of adopting the stricter definition without the
gaping holes that we have previously had, and leave it in some
circumstances to the judgment of the Code Enforcement Officer to say, "OK
(Mr. K.), you have shown me your house. A neighbor did call and complain.
What you obviously have here is a wet bar in your family room. There is a
counter and a sink and a microwave but I see no other evidence that you
intend to operate this as a second dwelling unit and rent it out, so I am
not going to pursue this complaint any further". Mr. Cohen noted that
right now the Ordinance creates some loopholes, but it does not say that a
second kitchen is inherently illegal. It says that having a second
dwelling unit intended to be operated as a second dwelling unit is illegal.
He stated that should be explored, because he thinks that having the loose
definitions which are easy to get around is what has created the problem
for us over the years in terms of enforcement.
Mr. Cohen stated he does not think we need to adopt deed restrictions. He
does not think that we need to start tomorrow morning putting the parking
program together. He still remains open that if a neighborhood really want
to come forward almost as a whole and say they would like to impose parking
restrictions on themselves, we would then have to talk about the real cost
to the City in enforcing such a program. He stated if we can combine
definitions with some definition of what it used to say, "intended for use
as a dwelling unit" that may help out. He stated it is not the good
neighbor that is the problem. It is the abusive one, and we need to have
the tools to deal with the abusive one without making the good neighbor a
criminal. He stated he thinks we are getting close to that if we can
pursue this issue of testers. He stated the problem of strictly going
after advertisements is that it does not give the inspector something to
look for when he does the RBR (Residential Building Report). There needs
also to be a physical component to that. He stated he favors tightening up
the definitions a bit and seeing where that takes us. If we find, six
months or a year from now, that our net has become so tight that we are
dragging them in and people need to explain themselves who are clearly not
renting second units, then we will have to revisit the issue. It would
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behoove us to have a tighter definition that Code Enforcement can work with
and rely on them exercising some judgment when they decide to pursue a case
of violation of the Second Unit Ordinance.
Mayor Boro agreed with Mr. Cohen's remarks, but stated he was concerned
when he spoke about the net and hauling people in here! He explained that
is only because when someone sells their home and they happen to have a wet
bar in it and also a microwave that they might pop popcorn on, he hopes
that we are not to go in and say that this is an illegal unit and you need
to abate it. Mr. Brown stated he thinks that what he is hearing is
reliance more on the dual aspects of the intent to rent separately, and
something physical there so we can use the tool to gain access. Even if
there are 2 of the 4 components it still complies with the definition, and
we should try to eliminate all of the potential loopholes that send us
spinning.
Mayor Boro asked about the definition of amnesty (#13). He stated he
senses some negativity in the group and feels we are sending out the wrong
message. He stated if people have an illegal unit for whatever reason and
they want to legalize it, they ought to come in, and if it is strictly that
people can meet the requirements, the Planning Commission and the Council
will uphold the person's right to have it. He stated he does not think
that has been keeping people from legalizing illegal units. He thinks it
is because they cannot meet our requirements.
Councilmember Heller suggested that #12 be deleted, and the entire group
agreed.
Mayor Boro addressed the issue of parking, stating he agrees with Mr.
Cohen. If a neighborhood comes and says they have 75% of the neighbors who
have signed -up and are willing to live with this, and please tell us how
much it will cost and how it will be enforced, he would be willing to
pursue it. He stated, however, he truly believes there will be many people
who do not share some of the concerns that a lot of the audience tonight
shares, about excess cars, because they feel they have a right to own as
many cars as they want and they will park them on the street because that
is where they live. Mayor Boro stated that if the City is to pursue this,
they will need evidence of real support for it from a given community. He
noted we have offered this before; this is not the first time. He noted we
are installing speed bumps on Belle Avenue and the neighbors are supporting
it.
Mayor Boro stated he does not think we want to relax the Zoning standards
(#15) .
Mr. Brown noted using advertisements and renters' testimony to go toward
the intent to rent separately. He stated another situation we face is
looking at building permits for new additions, new homes, etc. He stated
that in many cases we see a wet bar but it does not appear significant. In
another set of plans we can be pretty certain that it eventually will be
utilized as rental space. It is named something else, but it looks and
smells like a second unit. However, we have no reason to deny the building
permit. He is wondering how the Council and Planning Commission feel about
providing staff with the opportunity to require deed restrictions in
certain situations where there is exterior access, the components of an
additional kitchen and adjacent rest room, and those cases where staff can
suggest that the area can be separated from the rest of the home as an
independent living unit. He wondered if staff could be allowed to require
a deed restriction from the property owner. It creates a paper trail and
notifies future buyers. It would allow staff to sign off the plan with a
clear conscience. It also creates some paperwork in the file so that if
there is subsequent Code Enforcement action we at least have some
documentation that this was an issue the owner was made aware of. The
other reason would be that as future owners purchase the property they
purchase something that looks for all intents and purposes that it maybe
has been rented out. There is a clear chain in the title that suggests to
them that is not legal. Mayor Boro stated if someone is building and they
have no intention of having a second unit they should not be concerned and
the deed restriction should not in any way harm them. He recommended that
Mr. Brown include the deed restrictions (#8).
Mayor Boro noted that it was discussed earlier that the City Attorney would
look at the issues of fines and penalties (#10 and #11).
Commissioner Kirchmann stated he does not know if it is illegal or not, but
the idea of requiring the illegal owner to pay some sort of relocation
benefits to the displaced tenant strikes him as being equitable, if that is
possible.
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Councilmember Cohen stated, to follow up on that, if we move to definitions
that rely less exclusively on the physical configuration, then the question
comes, what does it mean to order a unit abated. He noted, if we say it is
not the physical construction of the second kitchen that defines a second
unit, abating it would mean physically removing the kitchen. He noted we
even discussed concepts of making them take the gas line out, all the way
back to the source for that particular connection. But if we are saying it
is not those physical things, in and of themselves, that make second unit,
there have to be other things. He stated he thinks increasing penalties
and other ways of making it increasingly expensive to violate the Ordinance
and get caught with an illegal second unit, it becomes more important.
Whether it is the vehicle suggested here, or some other one staff can find,
he does think progressive disincentives that get more severe should, with
this new approach we are discussing, be effective.
Mayor Boro stated that with regard to boarding houses he has a request. He
stated that Ms. Miller has made statements tonight and, in fairness to her,
she has reported problems in the past. He stated we owe it to her as well
as ourselves to discuss the problems. He stated he is interested in
knowing what options we might be able to offer her through the City, what
private options she might have and, quite frankly because we are not
hearing from anyone else on Aquinas Drive, he is interested in her
representation that the whole cul-de-sac up there is living in terror
because of what is happening. He stated he would like to get a sense of
what is really happening there and if it is as represented, what can we do
about it? If there is nothing to do about it we should say so. On the
other hand, if we can do something he would like to know what our options
are or options we might suggest that she might have as a private person to
pursue this as a private nuisance.
Mr. Brown agreed, and added that Ms. Miller contacted staff this week and
said there is a tenant who wants to talk to us. We will interview that
individual. We have not had that kind of cooperation in the past from
tenants so that is another avenue.
Mayor Boro asked if there is any other comment on boarding houses. Hearing
none, he stated that now that staff has all of this input and ideas he is
wondering when staff will report back. Mr. Brown stated it will be in late
September or October.
Councilmember Cohen referred to boarding houses and stated we need to
reiterate that the California State Supreme Court has limited to an extent
our ability to deal with this issue. He noted that, in connection with the
remarks of the gentleman from Montecito who mentioned permits with
different last names as being an indication of a boarding house, the State
Supreme Court says that does not tell you anything. He stated it is not
unwillingness or a lack of willingness on the part of the City and its
officials, but a matter of interpretation by the California Supreme Court
that limits the cities to regulate how people choose to live together. It
would be helpful if we had more effective tools. He stated that when we
have egregious examples we need to find ways to respond. Perhaps we need
to call the IRS and ask to go over the records. He noted we have had
repeated testimony about this particular incident and we really need to get
to the bottom. He stated he cannot believe we are powerless, and perhaps
there are other agencies that should be involved. He does not believe that
there is nothing anyone can do and we must find a way to respond.
Mr. Brown stated staff has been working on it and have inspected the home,
looked at financial records from the owner and nothing led us to believe
that there was anything beyond a commercial renting of rooms, beyond just a
sharing of expenses or contribution toward expenses. However, having
additional testimony would be helpful. He added that staff has inspected
the garage and, as mentioned before, there is nothing that requires you to
park in a garage. You are not allowed to convert a garage by adding heat,
wall-to-wall carpeting or other installations that preclude you from
parking in it, but people store beds and dressers in garages and we cannot
legislate against that.
Mayor Boro thanked the members of the Planning Commission and members of
the Council for taking the time to be here this evening, and members of the
public whose input was appreciated.
There being no further business, the meeting was adjourned at 9:00 PM.
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ALBERT J. BORO
MAYOR OF THE CITY OF SAN RAFAEL
JEANNE M. LEONCINI, City Clerk
APPROVED THIS DAY OF
ROBERT M. BROWN
COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT DIRECTOR
2000
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