San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

ENCINITAS TABLES PROPOSAL TO ADD DOWNTOWN PARKING SPACES

City Council wants to resolve outdoor dining issue first

- BY BARBARA HENRY Henry is a freelance writer.

A proposal to add 51 parking spots to downtown Encinitas by replacing parallel parking places with back-in, angled spots on many streets was tabled last week by the City Council.

Until there’s a decision on what to do with the outdoor dining areas that popped up along downtown’s portion of Coast Highway during the coronaviru­s pandemic, there’s no sense in redoing downtown parking, council members said.

“I want to see a whole list approach, so I support turning this down tonight,” Councilmem­ber Bruce Ehlers said.

Councilmem­ber Joy Lyndes agreed, saying, “I don’t think this covers enough things,” including bike lane issues and shared parking lot options.

Enforcemen­t of the twohour time limits on some downtown parking spots, which was dropped during the pandemic, has recently been reinstated and that should help free up parking spots, Councilmem­ber Kellie Hinze said.

Downtown Encinitas lost more than 40 spaces when it allowed restaurant­s to expand outdoor dining areas onto public rights-of-way during the pandemic, a city staff report states. Allowed under California law as a way to help the struggling restaurant industry, the temporary dining places remain in place. Eventually, they will require additional approvals, including state support, to become permanent, city employees said Wednesday

Roy Sapa’u, the city’s developmen­t services director, told the council that a draft ordinance that aims to resolve the situation will be out for public review in about six months.

The parking place restriping proposal that was before the council on Wednesday called for the creation of back-in, angled parking spots on Second through Fourth streets, as well as A, and C through I streets. The changes would have resulted in the creation of 51 spots, roughly 11 more than were lost with the outdoor dining areas on Coast Highway, but some of these new spots would have been in more distant areas.

Downtown’s business organizati­on — the Encinitas 101 Mainstreet Associatio­n — expressed “strong support” for the proposal when it was shared with the organizati­on, the city staff report stated. No one from the associatio­n spoke to the council Wednesday, but a downtown barber did plead for more parking.

Other people haven’t been supportive. The city’s Mobility and Traffic Safety Commission opposed the proposal at its Nov. 14 meeting, saying it would promote more use of vehicles at the expense of pedestrian­s and cyclists.

Several public speakers at Wednesday’s meeting echoed that view.

“It is car-centric, not people-centric,” Michael von Neumann, a city traffic commission­er, said.

In other action Wednesday, the council approved what it referred to as a “living document” that ranked potential bicycle and pedestrian projects with the goal of getting grant funding for them. The document contains a top five list for pedestrian projects and similar list for cyclists.

First on the bike improvemen­t list is a 5.9-mile, multiuse path along Vulcan Avenue from La Costa Avenue to Santa Fe Drive. The pedestrian list’s top item calls for infill sidewalks along a 0.5mile stretch of Leucadia Boulevard, between Neptune and Eolus avenues. The planning document, which council members said may be tweaked as necessary in the coming months, can be viewed at bit.ly/3jmhb1t.

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