Marin Independent Journal

‘THE FINISH LINE’

City nears vote on its general plan after long process

- By Lorenzo Morotti lmorotti@marinij.com

The Sausalito City Council could be within weeks of adopting its 2040 general plan, capping four years of work on the blueprint.

The council is scheduled to take up the plan at its meeting on Feb. 9, the first time potential approval is on the agenda, Mayor Jill Hoffman said. She said plan is nearly finished, but there is no hard approval deadline.

“We will see what happens,” Hoffman said. “I think we will give it a very serious look but we have three new council members. Even the ones who were on the working group and advisory committee for the general plan have to get caught up to speed, too. There is no magic reason it has to be now.”

Councilwom­an Susan Cleveland-Knowles said she expects the next meeting to be the last hearing on the plan because she and new council members Janelle Kellman and Melissa Blaustein were part of the planning process.

“We’ve spent the last four years on the broader general plan and now it is time to move on to the zoning and housing elements.”

—Susan Cleveland-Knowles, Sausalito councilwom­an

“We’re theoretica­lly at the finish line,” she said. “We’ve spent the last four years on the broader general plan and now it is time to move on to the zoning and housing elements.”

The city has spent about $1 million since hiring the M-Group, an urban planning consulting firm, to undertake the planning in 2017.

Hoffman said if the decision gets pushed out by one extra meeting, the city would not incur extra costs.

The plan will guide the city’s developmen­t over the next 20 years. The vote could be postponed over a portion of the plan that might allow housing to be built in the Marinship area, a waterfront site zoned for light industrial, applied art and maritime uses.

Hoffman said there have been disagreeme­nts over language to consider zoning

overlays citywide and over determinin­g whether to include restrictio­ns from the Marinship Specific Plan, a 1988 zoning ordinance that classifies buildings in Marinship as “legal nonconform­ing” or “conforming.”

Office spaces are not allowed to be built in the Marinship area, according to the specific plan. A “legal non-conforming” building in the Marinship is an office space that was built before the specific plan was ratified. Facilities that are within permitted uses are considered “conforming.”

At its meeting on Wednesday, the Planning Commission discussed the City Council’s recommenda­tion to remove “legal non-conforming” from the “Marinship office uses” part of the plan, replacing it with “conforming.”

After deliberati­on, the commission approved a recommenda­tion to the

council to replace “conforming” with “permitted,” as long as it keeps the current intent of office space restrictio­ns in the Marinship area.

Cleveland-Knowles said she still has to review the Planning Commission’s recommenda­tions, but the change to add “conforming” to the plan was in the spirit of keeping in line with the 1988 specific plan.

“Staff thought the intent of the original Marinship Specific Plan was to

have the existing office uses continue the same,” she said. “So that was the compromise that was recommende­d.”

Kristina Feller, chair of the Planning Commission, said another issue is the inclusion of a possible zoning overlay. She said the idea was rejected by the commission, the general plan working group and the general plan advisory committee, but it was approved by the former council.

“I don’t support an overlay in the Marinship and I don’t see the purpose of including it,” Feller said.

Geoff Bradley, president of the M-Group, assured the Planning Commission that the current language does not add a zoning overlay to the Marinship area. He said because the area is listed as industrial, a zoning overlay alone would not be able to change its designatio­ns.

“But if the city changes its mind, it could start the process to change the general plan,” Bradley said at the meeting.

Commission members Morgan Pierce and Richard Graef said they do not think an attempt to alter zoning in the general plan would succeed. Other commission­ers did not want to leave it to chance. The commission unanimousl­y recommende­d that the council restrict zoning overlays in the Marinship area.

“It’s just a recommenda­tion to put that language in the plan. The City Council could just reject it,” commission­er Nastassya Saad said. “We are just looking for a bit of extra protection.”

 ?? ALAN DEP — MARIN INDEPENDEN­T JOURNAL ?? Pedestrian­s and vehicles travel along Bridgeway in Sausalito in November. The city’s updated general plan will guide developmen­t for the next 20years.
ALAN DEP — MARIN INDEPENDEN­T JOURNAL Pedestrian­s and vehicles travel along Bridgeway in Sausalito in November. The city’s updated general plan will guide developmen­t for the next 20years.
 ?? ALAN DEP — MARIN INDEPENDEN­T JOURNAL ?? A World War II-era machine shop sits vacant in Sausalito on Thursday. The use of the Marinship area on the waterfront has been a point of contention among city interests.
ALAN DEP — MARIN INDEPENDEN­T JOURNAL A World War II-era machine shop sits vacant in Sausalito on Thursday. The use of the Marinship area on the waterfront has been a point of contention among city interests.
 ?? ALAN DEP — MARIN INDEPENDEN­T JOURNAL ?? Pedestrian­s cross Bridgeway in Sausalito on July 9. The city has been working to update its general plan for about four years.
ALAN DEP — MARIN INDEPENDEN­T JOURNAL Pedestrian­s cross Bridgeway in Sausalito on July 9. The city has been working to update its general plan for about four years.

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