Affordable housing now before council
Barbara Diamond
An income of $26,450 a year might be considered a living wage in some
parts of the United States. It would be a fortune in a Third World
Country, but in Orange County, it is officially a very low income.
Although the city has no official count and won’t until the complete
2000 census figures are available, it is certain that many workers in
Laguna Beach, and residents for that matter, earn far less than 50
percent of the median, which is the standard for very-low-income.
For minimum wage earners in town, less than $15,000 a year, living
here is little more than a dream. The late Alice Graves called them the
“working poor” and valiantly fought for a low-cost housing for them at
the city-owned property at 450 Glenneyre St.
The City Council will consider at its July 9 meeting an affordable
housing project proposed for the old Ahimsa Building, which would add 26
units to the city’s stock of very-low-income affordable housing. The
Planning Commission unanimously recommended the project, which would
fulfill the state’s requirement for very-low-income housing in Laguna
Beach, according to city senior planner Carolyn Martin.
The very-low-income designation is calculated by a formula based the
median income in the county, $52,900 for a single person.
Six of the 26, 400-square-foot units proposed for the
21,804-square-foot parcel on Glenneyre Street will be rented at $397 a
month to people who earn $15,870 a year, 30 percent of the median, or
less.
One unit will be set aside for a property manager and the remaining 20
units will be rented for $529 a month, limited to people who make 40
percent of the median, $21,160 a year, or less.
“We haven’t decided yet on how the occupants will be selected, but
generally in projects of this kind, it is done by a lottery,” said Pat
Barry, director of the city’s Community Services Department.
The developer, Related Cos. of California, wants to restrict occupancy
to one person per unit.
The proposed exterior is what many people expected the hotel at
Treasure Island to look like, a low-profile Craftsman-styled building
with a variety of textures, including real stone pillars and a variety of
heights and design elements.
The Glenneyre Street project will include a courtyard, a laundry
facility and an underground garage with parking for 10 bicycles and 50
cars.
If approved by the City Council at the July meeting, the project will
be leased to Related Cos. of California for $1 a year.
Plans for the project are available for review at City Hall. For more
information about the plan, contact the development department at
497-0398. For more information about residency, call Related Cos. at
660-7272.
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