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News:

NFABSD Supports Lawsuit Challenging City of San Diego’s Massive, Irresponsible Upzoning of Single-Family Neighborhoods

 

Click here to view the 04/11 press release

Click here to read the filing

Click here to donate for the lawsuit

The Problems with Sustainable Development Areas

Neighbors For A Better San Diego led the fight against the adoption of the definition of Sustainable Development Areas (SDAs) as anywhere within 1 mile of a future bus stop. This was clearly done to maximize random infill housing opportunities for developers, not to promote transit adoption. Instead NFABSD argued for a widely accepted standard of 1/2 mile walking distance to existing transit.

As we stated in our letter to the City Council:

Dear Council President Elo-Rivera and Councilmembers,


Neighbors For A Better San Diego (NFABSD) opposes the introduction of so-called
Sustainable Development Areas (SDAs) as a replacement for Transit Priority Areas (TPAs)
in local land development codes, as proposed in Item 5 of the Land Development Code
update.


While the proposed SDA does use walking distance to determine distance to a Major
Transit Stop, as advocated by NFABSD, the replacement of the half-mile distance with a
one mile distance basically undoes the benefits of mapping walking distance and results
in a map that is even larger than the already overly-expansive TPA map.


Every home built one mile from transit under SDA incentives will take away from the
number of homes built close to transit. The resulting low-density infill development
violates San Diego’s Climate Action Plan both by reinforcing suburban automobile use
patterns for longer trips and by failing to create centralized mixed-use densities that
would facilitate walking and biking for local neighborhood trips.


The SDA definition has been materially revised at every step of the review process. The
justification and analysis of these changes has not been properly presented or analyzed
in the Staff Reports or represented on the DRAFT webmap, including the most recent
changes to add Specific Plans to the SDA definition. (Specifically, the Staff Report has not
been updated to include the unspecified added acreage from Specific Plans.)

Read the full letter here.

Our detailed and rigorous analysis of the problems with the SDA definition can be found in the attachments listed below

LACK OF ADHERENCE TO WIDELY-ADOPTED TRANSIT-ORIENTED DEVELOMENT
STANDARDS

One-Half Mile Walking Distance Standard for Transit-Oriented Development
Critique of San Diego’s Transit Priority Map
Viability of “Rolling” to Transit as Justification for 1 Mile Distance From Transit
Permitting of Affordable ADUs Based on Future Transit Stops
Misclassification of Rapid Buses as Bus Rapid Transit

 

OMMISSION OF A FULL ANALYSIS OF SAN DIEGO’S HOUSING CAPACITY UNDER SDAS
Equating Acreage to Housing
SDA Housing Capacity
Expanded SDA Undermines Climate Action

Response to Staff Report

 

EVER-CHANGING CODE DURING REVIEW AND OUT OF SCOPE FOR THE LDC UPDATE
Sustainable Development Area Code Revision Timeline
EIR Considerations
Definitional Incongruities
Need for EIR to Convert Bonus ADU Code to SDAs
Need for EIR to Convert Complete Communities Housing Solutions to SDAs

OVERCONSIDERATION AND UNDERCONSIDERATION OF REGULATORY RISKS
Grant Restrictions
AFFH Requires Close Proximity to Transit
Challenges of Changing Mobility Zones
Challenges of Changing Opportunity Zones
SANDAG’S Controversial Endorsement of 1 Mile SDA
SANDAG Letter 1-19-23
HCD Letter 2-9-23
SDAs and Transit Equity

ADDENDUM

Fire Hazard and Specific Plans

Latest Updates

April 9, 2024

Deregulating San Diego - The Bonus ADU program

The details of San Diego's Bonus ADU program were buried on page 5 of the 2020 Planning Department Staff Report, while page 1 declared that the proposal was implementing state law...(open)

March 27, 2024

Deregulating San Diego - SB 10

The SB 10 bullet we dodged was peddled as "Missing Middle Housing" by City Hall.

It wasn't, and here's why it matters...(open)

March 21, 2024

Deregulating San Diego - Complete [Chaos in Our] Communities

Of all the significant land-use policies approved by the San Diego City Council in 2020 amid COVID lockdowns, the most impactful is Complete Communities Housing Solutions (CCHS), yet most San Diegans are unaware of how CCHS can affect their neighborhoods...(open)

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