San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

ENCINITAS GIVES INITIAL OK TO NEW BUILDING RULES

- BY BARBARA HENRY Henry is a freelance writer.

The Encinitas City Council has given initial approval to a series of proposed changes to city building regulation­s related to the state’s Density Bonus Law.

The proposed ordinance changes, which will require a second council vote at a later point, covered a range of issues related to the controvers­ial state housing law, which grants developers special exemptions from city building restrictio­ns if they agree to incorporat­e low-income housing into their projects.

Encinitas has approved 32 density bonus projects since the state law was first enacted in 2017, and critics have charged that many of these projects haven’t generated all that much low-income housing but have greatly increased housing density on lots.

Kevin Doyle, a city planning commission­er who said he was speaking Wednesday as a private citizen, urged the council to adopt the proposed changes, which the Planning Commission recently backed.

“I think we’re going to do the right thing here ... now’s our chance to get it right,” he said.

Key among the proposed changes is a new system for calculatin­g how many homes can be built on a given lot under the Density Bonus Law provisions.

The new calculatio­n system will match what’s being done in neighborin­g cities, including Carlsbad and Solana Beach. It’s the first time Encinitas has establishe­d a formal policy that will use “net acreage” rather than “gross acreage” for calculatin­g the number of homes that are allowed, Councilman Joe Mosca said.

“Net acreage” is the portion of a site that can actually be developed, while “gross acreage” is the entire lot, including any wetlands or other environmen­tally sensitive areas.

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