Seal Beach Community Development Director Alexa Smittle updated the council on the status of the cityās Housing Element during the July 22 council meeting.
Background
California requires cities to update the Housing Elements of their General Plans at regular intervals. The state has required Seal Beach to plan for 1,243 places for people to live (called a Regional Housing Needs Assessment). The state does not require the city to build anything. The city cannot legally force anyone to build anything. But the state can penalize cities that donāt plan for their allotted Regional Housing Needs Assessment. (āSeal Beach Housing Element, Zoning Code updates,ā at sunnews.org.)
Update
āAs council remembers, in April we submitted a revised draft of the Housing Element to
HCD,ā Smittle said, referring to the California Housing and Community Development Department.
āThey took their full 60 days of review and we did receive comments back
last month,ā Smittle said.
āThen we had a one-on-one meeting with our analyst thatās been assigned to us for this round. Overall, it was a very positive conversation,ā Smittle said.
āIt looks as though we are finally very close to having their agreement,ā Smittle said.
She said Seal Beach was on track.
āSo the next steps: Weāve actually already redlined the Draft Housing Element. Most of the corrections and things that HCD was looking for are clarifications, a little bit of additional information,ā Smittle said.
āThere are no major changes from the last draft that will be implemented, which is really, really good news,ā Smittle said.
āWhen we have that completely cleaned up, and run it by our legal team. Weāre also setting up another meeting with our analyst so that we can meet one-on-one with him; let him know the changes that weāve implemented in response to their comments,ā Smittle said.
āHopefully, he says weāre on the right track. We will then re-submit the Housing Element after making it publicly available on our website for seven days, send it back to HCD and, fingers crossed, we will be given a finding of substantial compliance at that time, which is really, really great news,ā Smittle said.
āThis process has really kind of been hung up waiting for that finding of substantial
compliance,ā Smittle said.
āOnce we have that, we can finish up the EIR thatās been underway,ā Smittle said.
āAll of this most likely wonāt come back to council until somewhere in April of next year,ā Smittle said.
She said the council would not bring the matter to council until the EIR can be completed.