San Diego Union-Tribune

DEL MAR LOOKS TO FINALIZE AFFORDABLE HOUSING DEAL AHEAD OF 2024 DEADLINE

City works with Del Mar Fairground­s officials on plan for units on site

- BY LUKE HAROLD

With an April 2024 deadline closing in, the city of Del Mar and Del Mar Fairground­s are still trying to come to terms on an affordable housing project at the fairground­s with at least 61 units.

Both sides are evaluating potential locations. The city has studied the planning and finances for two areas on the fairground­s: one near the corner area off Via de la Valle and Jimmy Durante Boulevard, and another next to the fire station.

“As part of the binding agreement we are working on with the

Fairground­s,” Del Mar City Manager Ashley Jones said via email, “we will continue to work collaborat­ively to determine which of these two sites, or any other potential locations, would be most suitable for affordable housing.”

The housing on the fairground­s is supposed to account for about half of the 113 affordable units that the city has to provide zoning for as part of the state’s sixth-cycle Regional Housing Needs Allocation. Communicat­ion between the city and fairground­s on that housing dates back about three years, when the city first adopted its housing element with a provision about negotiatin­g with the fairground­s to add housing on its state-owned land.

If a deal doesn’t happen, the city listed the north bluff as an alternativ­e site to upzone for affordable housing.

But developmen­t on the north bluff hasn’t been a popular idea in Del Mar. Three years ago, it was the proposed site of the Marisol hotel ballot measure, which included 22 affordable housing units, but nearly 60 percent of Del Mar residents voted no.

The north bluff is also the proposed site for a 259-unit complex called Seaside Ridge, which is currently at a standstill. The city has deemed the applicatio­n for the project incomplete, but the developer believes the project should be eligible to proceed “by right,” meaning it would be allowed to essentiall­y circumvent the city’s zoning regulation­s. One-third of Seaside Ridge’s units would be reserved for lowerincom­e tenants.

State Sen. Catherine Blakespear introduced Senate Bill 547, which would’ve required the fair

grounds to enter into a lease by April 30, 2024, for an affordable housing developmen­t with at least 61 units. But the bill stalled in the Assembly, with members of the Agricultur­e Committee concerned that it might set precedent for land use at other state fairground­s.

Blakespear said the goal of SB 547 was to “make it clear at the highest level of state ownership that this was an approved and preferred option.”

“If we do have this critical housing shortage, what is the solution for it? It’s not to sprawl out into the backcountr­y,” Blakespear said. “It’s to have this gentle density, to sprinkle in additional housing in a way that’s acceptable.”

Del Mar council members and residents have been critical of the city’s

RHNA assignment of 175 units, including the 113 affordable units. San Diego County is responsibl­e for adding about 170,000 new housing units during the sixth RHNA cycle, which runs from 2021 to 2029. The San Diego Associatio­n of Government­s divided those units among each community using a methodolog­y based on proximity to jobs and transit. Coastal cities complained that the methodolog­y left them with larger RHNA assignment­s compared to what they had received in the past.

But Del Mar city officials and Blakespear agreed that the Del Mar Fairground­s remains a logical host for its fair share of that housing, since the seasonal jobs there played a role in elevating Del Mar’s RHNA assignment.

“Probably at least half of our RHNA numbers are due to the fairground­s, and the fairground­s occupies a little less than one-third of our land area,” Del Mar Mayor

Tracy Martinez said. “I don’t think any other city that has fairground­s in it has this uniqueness.”

Del Mar Fairground­s spokespers­on Tristan Hallman said that board President G. Joyce Rowland and CEO Carlene Moore were unavailabl­e for interviews. But he sent a statement from Moore that said the fairground­s “remains actively engaged with the City of Del Mar regarding the City’s state-mandated need to provide affordable housing.”

“In conjunctio­n with our comprehens­ive planning process, the District is working quickly and diligently to assess possible sites for housing on our property and to work through potential regulatory issues before our Board of Directors decides whether and how to proceed with a formal agreement with the City,” Moore said.

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