Showing posts with label Goleta City Council. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Goleta City Council. Show all posts

Monday, June 22, 2009

Glen Annie Golf Club says it will close - Pacific Coast Business Times


Glen Annie Golf Club says it will close - Pacific Coast Business Times

“We have no other options, and sadly, we are forced to close our doors on July 6,” the club announced in a June 22 newspaper advertisement. “We’re not sure what will happen to Glen Annie, but we know the closure directly affects the 75 people who work here, as well as the dozens of events planned in coming weeks.”


Glen Annie singled out the council’s vote as the driver for its decision to close.


“In a way, the city was being asked to bail out the owner for some unfortunate business decisions made years ago,” Connell said. “Essentially, the owner of the golf course is targeting the City Council with the onus of the golf course shutting down, but I don’t think they’ve explored all the options they have. They’re talking about 195 homes. I think that would more than cover their debt.”

Thursday, March 5, 2009

Yesterday's News: Goleta City Council votes to allow ATK expansion

SB Daily Sound/In a rare moment of harmony for the sometimes acrimonious Goleta City Council, the panel voted last night to allow a little known aerospace and defense company to dramatically expand its office building in the city’s Old Town redevelopment area.

Yesterday's News: Goleta Council Backs Inclusionary Exemption for Planned Assisted-Care Facility

Noozhawk/Applicants for Mariposa at Ellwood Shores got the nod from the Goleta City Council on Tuesday, which directed city staff to move forward with the General Plan Amendment the proposed 99-resident assisted-care facility would require.

The project drew a 4-0 vote of approval, with Councilwoman Margaret Connell abstaining.

Mariposa would be built at 7760 Hollister Ave.; Dixon’s Goleta Storage currently sits on the property, which is just under three acres in size.

Wednesday, June 18, 2008

Goleta Chamber Action Alert Follow Up - General Plan - Track 2 Amendments

From Tom Blabey at the Goleta Valley Chamber of Commerce:


After a year and half of public input, study, and thorough review, the Goleta City Council last night voted to approve all ~45 Track 2 amendments to the General Plan, ranging from land use to traffic to safety element policies. (Track 2 amendments did not require further environmental review)

With only minor exceptions, the Goleta Valley Chamber supported the approved amendments and is please that the Council has completed this first stage in fulfilling campaign promises to fix the General Plan. Below is a brief summary of some of the approved amendments of particular interest to the Chamber:

  • Retail and Other Commercial Centers (LU 1.6) - Now includes large regional commercial centers in language regarding design standards for new and renovated structures. Policy is now consistent with existing conditions.
  • Transfer of Development Rights Ordinance/Program (LU IA-6) - Now allows the consideration of "areas outside the City's jurisdiction as sender and/or receiver sites" to "facilitate regional planning goals."
  • Building Intensity Standards - Per advice from the City Attorney, the Council voted to retain the Floor to Area (FAR) tables in the General Plan, with added language that the standards are "recommended." The Council then directed staff to recalculate the FAR figures to accurately reflect current conditions in the city.
  • Coastal Resort Parcels (LU 9.1) - Council removed an arbitrary cap on the number of units at Bacara Resort as not appropriate for a General Plan.
  • Visual and Historic Element Policies - "Protect" now replaces "preserve" as more appropriate language, per definitions provided by staff and input from the community.
  • Limitation on Expansion of Intersections (TE 6.5) - Now clarifies that the Storke/Hollister intersection is exempt from the city-wide seven lane cap, reflecting both current conditions and city staff's need for flexibility to properly plan for traffic impacts related to growth outside the city limits.
Next up, staff will present the Planning Commission with recommendations for Track 3 amendments in late summer or early fall.

The Goleta Valley Chamber applauds both city planning staff and the Council for their diligence throughout the comprehensive review process.

If you would like further information or have any questions regarding the Council's actions, please contact Tom Blabey at the Chamber at 967-2500 or via email at tom@goletavalley.com. Or you may view the city staff reports on the city's website www.cityofgoleta.org.

Wednesday, June 4, 2008

Fairview Gardens - Goleta City Council Supports Farm Worker Housing

A Chance for Fairview Gardens
Santa Barbara Independent


You're giving us your word. There isn't going to be a second chance, at least not from me," said Goleta Mayor Michael Bennett

Friday, May 30, 2008

Goleta Chamber Action Alert - Support the Goleta City Council on June 3rd

From the Goleta Valley Chamber of Commerce:


Goleta General Plan Amendments: Track 2 Final Deliberations - Support the Council on Tuesday, June 3rd, 2008

On Tuesday, June 3rd at 6 pm, the Goleta City Council is scheduled to begin final deliberations on the Track 2 General Plan amendments. These amendments did not require further environmental review and are a big step toward fixing inconsistent, contradictory, and illegal policies in the current plan.

Come out and support the Council as they review the recommended amendments and decide on final approval. Public input is critical to the process as the Council responds to the community's call to correct Goleta's flawed General Plan. The Council wants to hear from you.

Have your voice heard on Tuesday, June 3rd. For more information, please visit the City's website for agendas and staff reports or contact the Goleta Valley Chamber at 967-2500.

Friday, September 14, 2007

General Plan Amendments - Public Workshop

The City Council will co-host with the Planning Commission three public workshops on proposed General Plan Amendments that are sponsored and initiated by the City. The first is on Saturday, September 15: 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.

Saturday, August 4, 2007

Goleta General Plan Amendments

This coming Monday, August 6 at 6 p.m., the City Council will hold a second round public hearing to sponsor and initiate General Plan Amendments.

On Monday, September 4 at 6 p.m., the City Council will conduct a public workshop to receive input on the boundaries and objectives of a conceptual proposal for a City Sphere of Influence.

On Saturday, September 15 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., the City Council will co-host with the Planning Commission a public workshop on proposed General Plan Amendments that are sponsored and initiated by the City.

On Saturday, September 22 from 9 a.m. to 3p.m., the City Council will co-host with the Planning Commission a second public workshop on proposed General Plan Amendments that are sponsored and initiated by the City.

On Friday, October 5 from 9 a.m. to 3p.m., the City will conduct a Housing Element certification public workshop and site visits.

Link To Documents

Sunday, July 22, 2007

SBNP Opinion: Who will watch the watchers?

Hersel Mikaelian has a letter to the esteemed City Council of Goleta in today's SB News-Press opinion section. (Subscription required to view.)

Congratulations on the good work you already have done. However, many of your supporters are curious about changes that are not being brought about...

Friday, June 29, 2007

BlogaBarbara: The Back Story on Onnen's Absence

To truly understand my approach to Eric Onnen's absence from the last Goleta City Council meeting, one has to review what happened the week before when a vote for employee raises for City of Goleta workers took council to the midnight hour. While watching the meeting, it was clear that Onnen was keeping the meeting going unnecessarily with questions that did not pertain to government but were more suited to his extensive experience in the private sector. He brought up bonuses, for instance, which can't be given to public employees as it would be a gift of public funds. The meeting, it seemed, continued because he did not do his homework.


More at BlogaBarbara...

Thursday, June 28, 2007

BlogaBarbara: Absent Eric? Goleta Budget Vote Too Important to Miss...

BlogaBarbara

For a rookie councilmember, that's a really tough vote to miss -- especially when there is apparently a movement started to recall the last election.

Tuesday, June 26, 2007

Goleta Approves First Two-Year Budget

SB Independent
By Martha Sadler
June 26, 2007

Girsh Park founder Pat O'Malley was moved to tears, and found himself unable to finish his emotional "thank you" to the Goleta City Council and city staff, as they formally adopted the first two-year budget in the city's history on 6/25. Besides doubling its contribution to $100,000 annually, the city gave Girsh Park its own specific line item in the budget, rather than lumping it in with the larger recreation budget.

The council also approved $150,000 for a fish passage on San Jose Creek, to be added after modifications are made to prevent flooding in downtown Goleta. The city's relatively modest budget allocated expected revenues of about $30 million over the next two years, including $16 million in sales, property, and hotel bed taxes that must flow to the County of Santa Barbara as per the revenue neutrality agreement; a contract Goleta signed as a condition of its incorporation, promising that its becoming a city would not hurt the county's coffers.

Department heads also presented the council with projects they are working on for the near future. These ranged from a new park in Old Town, and a new city website, to the development of 600 residential units and 400 hotel rooms. The budget also includes cost of living increases of three percent annually for city employees, but no increase in retirement benefits. It identifies $8,000 as an unreserved fund balance for the coming fiscal year, which staff characterized as "a small cushion" and which city councilmembers worried was too small. In approving the budget, councilmember Roger Aceves challenged staff to increases revenues, suggesting business licenses as a potential source, and also recommending that staff examine strategies used by other cities. Aceves also challenged the business community to help fund city sports, arts, and music programs.

Goleta OKs More Than $30M in Spending Over Two Years

Santa Barbara Newsroom
By Tom Schultz
June 26, 2007

The Goleta City Council on Monday approved more than $30 million in spending over the next two fiscal years — finalizing balanced budgets focused on growing the young municipality amid concerns about possible future deficits.

In a 4-0 vote, the council approved $15.42 million in expenditures in fiscal year 2007-08 starting next month, and another $15.74 mllion in spending in 2008-09. Revenues would outpace disbursements by just $10,000 in the first year and $16,000 during the next.

In a separate 4-0 vote, the council approved Redevelopment Agency budgets focused on cleaning up blight across Old Town that provide nearly $11 million in spending in 2007-08 and more than $3.8 million in spending in 2008-09.

"There's a lot going on here and we're very excited as we tackle the next two years," City Manager Dan Singer told councl members. He said it would make sense for the city to formally review its botttom line with the council in six months.

Councilman Roger Aceves challenged City Hall staff to keep looking for cost savings as well as new revenue streams. If city projections hold true, Goleta will be nearly $900,000 in the red by July 2010 and more than $1.2 million in the red by July 2012.

Councilman Eric Onnen, who last week sugggested the city hold the line on staff raises to create more of a financial cushion while the city is still in the black, was reportedly at home ill and did not vote.

Monday's evening session to adopt the budget followed a series of workshops that began in late May. The hearing moved quickly compared to a meeting a week earlier, when the council remained at City Hall to nearly midnight debating cost-saving strategies.

Key issues in recent weeks included: Should the Goleta forgo pay raises for City Hall staff members, for example, or perhaps promise less help by way of funding grants to outside organizations? Should the city make reigning in ongoing costs a priority, or perhaps cut one-time expenditures?

Onnen last week said he was obligated to speak out in favor of restraining ongoing costs such as salary increases.

"We've got a zero-sum budget," he said a week ago. "And we're not going to save resources to prepare for that? I think it's imprudent. . . If I was staff, I would build in some rate increases into my budget proposal as well.

"But we have flat revenues," he said. "I'm not suggesting there be no cost of living increases over the next two-year period. I'm saying we don't commit to that in this (budget). If we say we are going to wait and see, then that's what their expectation will be. We can't change it after we give it to them. That's the point."

Other council members defended the raises. The budget approved Monday retains 3 percent cost of living adjustments in each of the next two years at a cost of more than $200,000. It also keeps money flowing to outside organizations, including $200,000 over two years to Girsh Park and $40,000 over the same time period to the Goleta Valley Chamber of Commerce.

"The idea of not giving staff what I think of as their just reward is unconscionable, placed in the context of some of the other spending in this budget," Councilwoman Jonny Wallis said last week. "If we don't pay our staff well, we're not going to make progress as a city."

Goleta, a city of 30,000 residents, incorporated in 2002.

While overall city revenues will barely outpace spending in the next two business cycles, according to projections, City Manager Dan Singer has expressed confidence that projections gauging how much tax and fee money will hit the coffers are solid.

This comes as several council members push for new negotiations over a contract that sends half of Goleta's tax revenue to Santa Barbara County, under terms of a deal the two governments worked out upon Goleta's successful 2002 incorporation. Councilmen Onnen, Aceves and Michael Bennett promised to renegotiate the agreement to make it more favorable to the city during last fall's bruising council election campaign.

As it stands today, Goleta's new budget would provide for a variety of programs and services.

The largest expense — nearly 40 percent of all spending — would go to public safety. The city would pay the Santa Barbara Sheriff's Department more than $11 million over the next two business cycles to patrol neighborhoods.

Planning, another key function in Goleta, would account for about 13 percent of costs.

On Monday, officials took an opportunity to highlight some of the programs the new budgets will pay for.

"The numbers don't mean that much to the people watching at home, but the activities we'll be accomplishing . . . should be of interest," Mayor Jean Blois said.

Among those actiivities, the city plans to expand programing on its government access TV channel 19, redesign its Web site, further promote carpooling among its employees, continue helping to spruce up Old Town homes and businesses, add a community resource deputy to its police force, create a geographic information system for property owners, finish its first general plan, build new trails at Ellwood Mesa, open new parks, repair the Goleta library and expand street sweeping.

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