THIS IS AN ARCHIVE OF LAKE TAHOE NEWS, WHICH WAS OPERATIONAL FROM 2009-2018. IT IS FREELY AVAILABLE FOR RESEARCH. THE WEBSITE IS NO LONGER UPDATED WITH NEW ARTICLES.

Defining rural — mapping out the future of EDC


image_pdfimage_print

By Joann Eisenbrandt

PLACERVILLE — “What the hell are you doing? Why would you make El Dorado County like Los Angeles … Are you all crazy? What is your vision? More big-box stores, more dense housing, more people, more traffic? You are supposed to take care of the people who live in your county.”

Dave Hammond, Shingle Springs                                                                                            Comments submitted for the Dec. 15 El Dorado County Board of Supervisors meeting

 

Land use planning is often seen as a tedious, technical pursuit, relegated for the most part to obscure planning department offices far removed from most residents’ daily lives. That is, until it directly threatens the things they hold most dear.

On Dec. 15, the El Dorado County Board of Supervisors is slated to approve the Targeted General Plan Amendment/Zoning Ordinance Update (TGPA/ZOU). California law requires counties to develop a General Plan to codify goals and policies to guide how land is developed and to review and update that plan regularly as needed. The TGPA/ZOU is the county’s response. More than a decade in the making, it includes amendments to the county’s 2004 General Plan and an extensive update of the Zoning Ordinance that implements it.

El Dorado County encompasses 1,805 square miles divided into two distinct areas, the Lake Tahoe Basin and the West Slope. The TGPA/ZOU affects only the unincorporated areas of the county and not cities like South Lake Tahoe and Placerville or publicly-owned lands.

Dave Hammond isn’t the only county resident unhappy with the TGPA/ZOU and the process through which it was created.

Many people don't want El Dorado County's rural nature threatened. Photo/LTN file

Many people don’t want El Dorado County’s rural nature threatened. Photo/LTN file

The 2004 General Plan states, “It is imperative to balance competing goals in approving the General Plan. The adopted General Plan encourages a balance between population growth, economic development, and the need to protect the environment ….” But as those who live at Lake Tahoe know all too well, the struggle to achieve this balance can be a protracted and emotional one. Even without TRPA, it’s no walk in the park.

The county’s West Slope has been no stranger to this struggle. Just how deep feelings run became apparent during three days of board meetings on the TGPA/ZOU on Nov.10, Nov. 12-13. Opponents of the TGPA/ZOU characterized it as a seriously-flawed, “developer driven” document that would create massive, unneeded and inappropriate rezoning of parcels for more intensive uses, lead to growth that cannot be supported by existing infrastructure or water resources, and create traffic gridlock especially along Highway 50. Most of all, they insisted, it will destroy the rural character of the county and create the Los Angeles that Dave Hammond fears.

County planning staff views it quite differently. Shawna Purvines, the county’s principal planner on the project and Long Range Planning’s main presenter at those meetings, characterizes it as a faithful representation of the views of past county planners and decision makers and the appropriate response to the state’s mandate to provide for growth in the county.

“I’ve heard the concern that the Zoning Ordinance is going to substantially change the character of the county,” Purvines told Lake Tahoe News,” and so I took that to heart and I started digging deeper. I went back to the Area Plans and the 1969 General Plan and to the 1949 Zoning Ordinance to be able to adequately respond …  these are not new policies, this is a new ordinance.”

After an initial two-year review, a General Plan is revisited every five years to compare its original assumptions with reality. The results of that five-year review in 2011 provided the impetus for the development of the TGPA/ZOU. It brings the Zoning Ordinance into conformity with the General Plan as required by state law, but does not, Purvines stressed, “overhaul” the 2004 General Plan, remove important development restrictions, create any new parcels or maximize the density potential of that plan. If the TGPA/ZOU were not implemented, she added, the environmental impacts would be unchanged from those identified in the 2004 General Plan’s environmental impact report (EIR).

An EIR is required by the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) for projects initiated by public agencies. It identifies significant environmental impacts the project could create, the mitigation measures to reduce them, and lists those impacts that cannot be mitigated to less-than-significant. If the lead agency, in this case the county, feels the merits of the project outweigh unmitigated impacts, they prepare a Statement of Overriding Considerations, declaring the overall benefits of the project make such potential negative impacts “acceptable.” The EIR prepared for the TGPA/ZOU is a “program EIR,” which means it focuses on general policies and zoning designations, not on site-specific development proposals.

It outlined the project’s objectives to create affordable housing for the moderate income earner, create jobs, stop sales tax leakage from the county and promote and protect agriculture by expanding opportunities there for recreation and rural commerce. It identified “unmitigated adverse environmental impacts” and a Statement of Overriding Considerations was prepared. Impacts include, among others:  damage to scenic resources including historic buildings along scenic routes; loss and fragmentation of wildlife habitat; creation of substantial incompatibilities between land uses; creation of substantial population growth; substantial depletion of groundwater supplies; and, conflict with level-of-service (LOS) traffic standards and travel demand measures.

El Dorado County supervisors on Dec. 15 are expected to approve the General Plan documents. From left are, Ron Mikulaco, Shiva Frentzen, Brian Veerkamp, Sue Novasel and Michael Ranalli. Photo/Provided

El Dorado County supervisors on Dec. 15 are expected to approve the General Plan documents. The item will be discussed at 1pm in Placerville. From left are, Ron Mikulaco, Shiva Frentzen, Brian Veerkamp, Sue Novasel and Michael Ranalli. Photo/Provided

Rural Communities United (RCU), an unincorporated association originally formed to help pass the Measure Y initiative in 1998 to prohibit approval of residential developments that could lead to traffic congestion on Highway 50, finds these impacts unacceptable. Another community group, Shingle Springs Community Alliance, agrees. Individually and in concert, they have analyzed and commented upon the TGPA/ZOU throughout its formulation by the county.

Don Van Dyke outlined RCU’s concerns for Lake Tahoe News. “The biggest problem with this update is that it was represented as a very minimal update to the public. The reality is that it is a very major update especially to the building ordinance that will allow for increased density in both community and rural areas and doesn’t take into account our infrastructure like roadways and water to support all the development.”

In her comments to the board on Nov. 10, Monique Wilber, a former El Dorado County Senior Planner and an RCU member, insisted that the mitigation measures in the TGPA/ZOU are “infeasible,” and it relies on mitigations that “have proven ineffective in the past.” Many of the mitigations identified earlier in the 2004 General Plan, she added, have not been implemented at all.

County planning staff says the rezoning of 37,000 parcels, the removal of some zones and addition of new ones, and changes in the type and intensity of allowed uses on others was required to make the zoning maps consistent with the 2004 General Plan. Opponents contend it goes far beyond that. Sue Taylor, longtime land use planning activist, believes the project will, “destroy our rural lifestyle and the quality of life we have here.” Taylor believes the board has not done enough direct study of the project themselves. “They turned everything over to Long Range Planning,” she told Lake Tahoe News, “and have given Shawna Purvines our future.”

Supervisor Ron Mikulaco disputes Taylor’s claim. “I’ve read the documents in there … of course their concerns were taken into consideration. That’s why I put aside the time to go through all the materials.”

Howard Penn, unsuccessful candidate for county supervisor in 2014 and current executive director of the Planning and Conservation League, told LTN, “I don’t blame the county staff as others do. Ultimately, this is not the county staff’s fault. It’s the supervisors’. The direction comes directly from the supervisors and they are directly responsible for land use.” Penn believes the county is planning in a vacuum, and not looking at the impacts their decisions will make on surrounding counties, insisting that, “Land use planning and transportation planning are key issues for the future health of our entire state.”

Bill Center, local businessman and former El Dorado County supervisor, believes the county is repeating the mistakes it made that led to the creation of the Tahoe Regional Planning Agency (TRPA) at Lake Tahoe. “The completion of Tahoe Keys and the planned massive subdivision from Meyers to Echo Summit forced the first nationalization of land use planning in the country. It basically was caused by El Dorado County … by the county’s absolute refusal to recognize that rampant residential growth without any commercial development would kill the goose that laid the golden egg. Over and over, the West Slope has gone through the same kind of pressures, and unlike Keep Tahoe Blue, a simple statement of the environment we have focused on here is, ‘It’s Traffic Stupid’.”

The El Dorado Trail is a reminder even in Placerville the county is rural. Photo/LTN file

The El Dorado Trail is a reminder even in Placerville the county is rural. Photo/LTN file

Center refers to proposed large residential subdivisions on the West Slope, some adjacent to the Highway 50 corridor, and the traffic impacts they will create. While these private developments are not directly addressed in the TGPA/ZOU, some contend the zoning changes it allows will streamline their approval.

Measure Y, the Control Traffic Congestion Initiative, prevented the approval of residential subdivisions that would create level of service (LOS) F on Highway 50. LOS F is the highest congestion level on the traffic measurement scale and essentially represents gridlock. Measure Y expired in 2008 and was reapproved, this time giving the board the discretion to selectively allow projects that create LOS F. According to Center, this was, “an opening they drove a Mack truck through.”

Another key issue is water. As the TGPA/ZOU points out, the majority of the groundwater supply in El Dorado County comes from “underground zones of hard crystalline or metamorphic rock within which there are fractures that provide natural storage for groundwater. The fractures do not form a connected system.” This makes it difficult to determine how much water will be available at a specific location. At the Nov. 10board meeting, Cheryl Langley, a Shingle Springs resident, insisted the county needs to develop a Ground Water Management Plan first as other counties have, and then base their development decisions on the results of those studies.

While the TGPA/ZOU includes the unincorporated areas of the county in the Lake Tahoe Basin, its potential impacts there are more limited. Although 14,500 of the 37,000 proposed parcel rezonings are for parcels in the Tahoe basin, most of these, county staff explained, are primarily name changes to make them consistent with TRPA’s Regional Plan designations since the current county zoning ordinance was adopted before the latest TRPA Regional Plan update. All projects in the Tahoe basin, including the TGPA/ZOU, must be consistent with the TRPA Regional Plan, its Code of Ordinances, Plan Area Statements and other regulations. When reviewing specific applications for land uses in the unincorporated areas at the lake, county planners must apply those TRPA standards. County development regulations may be more stringent than TRPA’s, but not less.

Under the TGPA/ZOU, the county will continue to work with TRPA and local entities in the completion of the Meyers Area Plan and to identify lands in the basin that can support affordable housing. Supervisor Sue Novasel, who was involved in the creation of the original Meyers Community Plan 25 years ago, explained that once the current Meyers Area Plan’s environmental documentation is completed it will need to be approved by the county and TRPA.

Asked why Tahoe residents need to be concerned about the impacts of the TGPA/ZOU on the West Slope, Novasel said, “I think some people forget that El Dorado County encompasses a large part of the Tahoe basin from Stateline to Tahoma and what happens on the West Slope as far as land use will have an impact on the Tahoe basin. The General Plan affects all of our departments and the health of the county in general. If we don’t have growth and the ability of the county to provide the services we need here, Tahoe will suffer.”

There have been years of talk about the TGPA/ZOU, but some say, not enough listening. “The most frustrating thing,” Don Van Dyke contends, “is that the county does not listen to residents. We need a change of culture at the county. We need the county to be working with residents and developers in projects that are good for everyone in the county.”

Many of the hundreds of pages of comments submitted by RCU and others, Van Dyke insists, were not answered at all or were inadequately responded to by the county in the project’s EIR.

“Over the past four or five years,” Van Dyke believes, “residents from mostly community regions who tried to become involved were routinely marginalized and bullied out of discussions with CEDAC.”

CEDAC is the Community and Economic Development Advisory Committee. It grew out of the 2004 General Plan’s desire to “establish a forum for discussion and make recommendations on pending environmental issues that affect the County’s economic vitality.”

Eva Robertson, an attorney and member of the CEDAC board was the only member opposed to certifying the EIR. In her comments to the board on Nov. 10 she said, “Certifying a deficient EIR leaves the county open to a viable legal challenge. My understanding is that the county has been successfully sued for CEQA violations more than once already.”

The 1996 General Plan was successfully sued and remained unimplemented until CEQA inadequacies were corrected to the court’s satisfaction in 2004.

Novasel stands behind the process. She told Lake Tahoe News, “We’ve had years and years of testimony and input from the public on this. What I’ve found is an effort to slow down the process just to slow down the process. I don’t know what happened with CEDAC but the board did not marginalize anyone in our meetings. We listened carefully and then made a decision. I don’t know how we could have done it any better.”

Some impacted property owners believe they didn’t even get the chance to comment because they failed to receive adequate notice about proposed zoning changes on their properties or adjacent ones. Some parcel owners did receive individual notices in the mail, others did not. Those that didn’t were part of the public notification process which included meeting notices, agendas and posting of project documents on the county website, articles and notices in the media and town hall meetings conducted by individual supervisors in their districts.

“The county has an ordinance that tells it how to implement CEQA,” Purvines explained. “The county defaults to the basic CEQA requirements (for notice). If there are more than 1,000 parcels we default to public notification. We believe we did more than the minimums but there is a difference of opinion on who should get a notice.”

Lori Parlin, founder of Shingle Springs Community Alliance, says the county put an inappropriate burden on residents to seek out information. “There were 200 meetings held, and I’ve been to a lot of them, but they did not provide any site-specific information to attendees. I didn’t know they were rezoning property next to me. My back fence is now going to be next to a parcel zoned regional commercial, which would allow for a WalMart or Costco. “

The TGPA/ZOU project was discussed at Supervisor Michael Ranalli’s Dec. 10 town hall meeting in Shingle Springs. In response to similar concerns raised again by Parlin and others, Ranalli said, “We took a pounding for trying to bring the General Plan up to date. There still may be things in there that are not optimum for certain areas. Staff will be asked to review this again in a year.”

Supervisor Shiva Frentzen had her own concerns over the public notification process. She was the lone vote against giving tentative approval to the major components of the TGPA/ZOU at the Nov. 13 board meeting saying, “My struggle is with fairness and doing what’s right.”

In an email to Lake Tahoe News, Frentzen explained, “My concerns with the ZOU are: Altering the rights of the property owners without directly notifying them; altering the neighborhoods without proper notification within a one mile radius; it affects our resources and infrastructure; it has unintended consequences; the economic impact of all these policies and updates are not analyzed.”

If the board approves the TGPA/ZOU on Dec. 15, Rural Communities United is prepared to stop talking and take action. RCU had requested an appeal hearing to go over their concerns, and again at the Nov. 10 board meeting asked the supervisors to postpone a decision and agree to re-examine the project in smaller, more manageable pieces. These were both rejected. RCU attorney Tom Infusino warned the board that if they approve the project, “You should have no doubt left in your mind your actions will be challenged in Superior Court.”

Brian Veerkamp, chairman of the Board of Supervisors, declined to respond to LTN’s questions on the TGPA/ZOU due to this threat of litigation.

After years of discussion, what happens next remains an unknown. Will there be a lawsuit, and if so, what impacts will it have on implementation of all or part of the TGPA/ZOU? How did things get to this point, and where should the finger of blame be pointed? There are no simple answers.

Once again, it’s that tricky balancing act between economy and environment. The fight over the TGPA/ZOU is more than all the individual details. It’s about how El Dorado County envisions itself, now and in the future, and who gets to determine the framework of that future. The 2004 General Plan lists as its objective, “To foster a rural quality of life.” The problem comes with finding agreement on exactly what that rural quality of life looks like. As Supervisor Ranalli put it at his Dec. 10 gathering, “I think rural depends on your point of view, but it’s worth defining. After all, some people who live in El Dorado Hills think they’re rural.”

image_pdfimage_print

About author

This article was written by admin

Comments

Comments (13)
  1. Tahoebluewire says - Posted: December 14, 2015

    Placerville and the Shingle Springs area was a different world in the 80s. It’s gone forever and getting much worse. Driven by out of town transplants, they are destroying what’s left for a fast buck. America has lost its soul. So sad.

  2. Carl Ribaudo says - Posted: December 14, 2015

    There are approximately 39 million people living in California up from 31 million twenty years ago. While I think we all would love to retain the character of the places we live and we all would love for some other place to absorb the growth I am not sure that’s possible. A tough issue for sure.

  3. Justice says - Posted: December 14, 2015

    The problem has always been the paid for “developer interests” received by Board members usually trump the residents interests. These re-zones are not wanted by the people near them and the resources to support them, water, roads, sewer, etc. are not there and are unfunded. People moved to this county for a rural environment and for zoning to be maintained, as it is. It is no surprise that an attorney is advising the county that it is legally vulnerable and looking at a lawsuit.

  4. Carl Ribaudo says - Posted: December 14, 2015

    Of course the rezones are not wanted by the residents but the demand is there and I suspect every county in California will have to absorb the growing population which is projected to grow to 45 million over the next 15 years. Is it realistic to assume EDC will not be impacted and just zone our way out of this and every other county can deal with it? This is a tough issue with no easy way around it.

  5. TeaTotal says - Posted: December 14, 2015

    This is not a tough issue for those with lips permanently attached to $$$ developer rear end. They want whatever short-term growth that enriches the few(including those that rely on ‘consulting’ fees?) while sacrificing the quality of life for the many- if there’s a buck to be made they couldn’t care less about infrastructure or water because the nameless, faceless corp. entities will be long gone and the locals that ‘serviced’ them will call themselves ‘businessmen’ and run for political office- There are other options available to EDC residents and we must be vigilant-
    And thanks to Joann Eisenbrandt and LTN for the hard work and excellent journalism it took to produce this article

  6. Carl Ribaudo says - Posted: December 14, 2015

    Tea you fail to address the issue, the population growth is real and it’s going to impact this county regardless of our personal view . Yes quality of life will be impacted how could it not be when you add that many people to a state and yes evil developers will benefit the same as any business owner benefits from providing a product or service. All I am suggesting is contrary to your comments it is a real and tough issue but feel free to think otherwise.

  7. 4-mer-usmc says - Posted: December 14, 2015

    While some people want no change of any sort, and zero population growth in their desirable to live in cities and towns, there is no way to stop either. Indeed the 1980s were a different world and no one gets to go back. Being “Driven by out of town transplants that are destroying what’s left for a fast buck” must be similar to what the Native Americans felt when they were encroached upon.

    History does repeat itself.

  8. TeaTotal says - Posted: December 14, 2015

    I addressed the issue by pointing out the differences between the ‘profit over all’ pro-developers plans and the vast majority of residents that want more ‘slow-growth’ sustainable development that requires the profiteers to pay for the future costs of the negative externalities-
    And somehow tying the genocide of the Native Americans to this relatively minor issue is incomprehensible.

  9. Dogula says - Posted: December 14, 2015

    Definition of a developer: Someone who wants to build a house in the woods.
    Definition of an environmentalist: Someone who already has a house in the woods.
    Yes, El Dorado County was very different when I moved there in 1980. It grew very quickly from neighborhoods where you knew everybody and couldn’t drive down the street without constantly waving at your friends, to a place where you go out and won’t know anybody for a week.
    But nearly all of us moved from somewhere else. You CANNOT just find someplace nice and slam the door behind yourself. That attitude is so incredibly common and so incredibly selfish, it blows my mind.
    All you “no-growthers”; How many kids do YOU have?

  10. 4-mer-usmc says - Posted: December 14, 2015

    Tea-Total:

    Say whatever you’d like but you’re pointing to a NIMBY attitude. I imagine that those who were here before you probably didn’t want you here either but like Dogula said, “You cannot just find someplace nice and slam the door behind yourself.” If that was possible I never would have lost what I grew up with and enjoyed, but that’s just not the way it is. Some call it “progress”; I call it “the inevitable” since population growth continues to escalate and people have to go somewhere.

  11. steve says - Posted: December 14, 2015

    Carl- I was not aware that the state was mandating counties to provide room for x amount of growth. Is there a law or some other reference for this mandate- thanks steve

  12. Justin-o says - Posted: December 16, 2015

    I don’t know what you want to call it, scary, crummy, whatever, but while my fist is up in the air with Tea, every last one of you who posted has a valid point. I came to the realization after finally being able to move back here that the 80’s are long behind us. Unfortunately. Diamond Springs use to be quiet. I’ve never lived so shell shocked by noise pollution in my life, this coming from someone who lived over 9 years a block an half from HWY 80 in Sac! And they only intend to flood more traffic through it and is in works now, what you see in front of Walmart will now cut to HWY 49. Between the Disposal that begins sending trucks as early as 3AM and now this? This place is going to hell in a hand basket already. I will fight the good fight but only as long as it takes me to get the hell out of here. So minus 4 on your population stat for me :(

  13. Sue Taylor says - Posted: December 16, 2015

    The people commenting in favor of what just happened act like our county didn’t already have zoning and a general plan that allows for growth. We did. It was called the 2004 general plan that has yet to be implemented. Instead of what was already a plan for a lot of growth we just got a new growth plan on steroids. The county just rezoned 37,000 parcels without even notifying the property owners. Buried in those rezones were favors for special interests. People that live in the county should see if you or your neighbor’s property were rezoned or if your defined zoning changed definition or if you are now only residential or only agriculturial and what rules now apply and if it affected your expectation of use of your property. If you find that you don’t like what happened you might want to file your on case with the county.