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City Council Dives Into Hot Button Issues Tonight

Long-delayed effort to modernize 23-year-old General Plan, including the hot-button issue of affordable housing, is expected to take 18 months. Council also tackles traffic calming at Tuesday night meeting.

Mill Valley Mayor Garry Lion can be excused Tuesday night if he finds himself having a déjà vu moment or two.

Lion, who became mayor last month in the City Council’s annual rotation of the helm, was also mayor in 1989, the last time City Hall went through an update of the General Plan, the city’s guiding document for land use and development.

The lack of progress in recent years in updating the General Plan, particularly the affordable housing element, which state law requires to be updated every five years but hasn’t been since 2003, was identified at the council’s retreat in January 2011 as the city’s most glaring weakness.

“The General Plan is in need of attention,” City Manager Jim McCann said at the time.

It’s finally getting that attention Tuesday night, as the council is set to decide on a schedule and a scope of work for the process (see staff report, attached at right). The meeting is at 7:30 p.m. in the council chambers at City Hall at 26 Corte Madera Avenue.

The city’s proposal calls for the process to take 18 months, with a series of community workshops to kick it off once the council adopts the scope of work at its Jan. 17 meeting.

The 18-month timeline includes approximately one year to prepare a draft plan, including the housing element, followed by public hearings at the Planning Commission and the City Council before it is adopted by mid-2013.

City officials proposed an 18-month timeline under the assumption that the “community values” on which the 1989 General Plan was drafted haven’t changed much. Those seven values are:

  1. Preserving the quality and diversity of residential neighborhoods
  2. Maintaining healthy, attractive commercial areas serving local residents
  3. Maintaining the scenic quality of the bayfronts, ridgelines and hillsides
  4. Preserving and enhancing creeks, marshes and other natural areas
  5. Protecting people and buildings from natural hazards
  6. Minimizing traffic congestion and encouraging use of public transit
  7. Accommodating more low- and moderate-income households

The proposed timeline also takes into account the work City Hall has done on related policies since 1989 on issues like bicycle and pedestrian transit, downtown parking and the , the overhaul of one of the city’s two primary arteries which the council approved in July. The marathon effort to approve the Miller Ave. revamp is often cited by city officials as the primary reason for the recent delay on General Plan work.

As a result of recently adopted policies that can be folded into the General Plan, as well as the assumption that community values haven’t changed a great deal since 1989, city officials don't expect many new issues to pop up during the process.

“We believe there are a limited number of important issues that comprise the scope of work for the new plan,” Planning and Building Director Mike Moore wrote in the staff report.

That said, city officials propose to tackle individual issues, including the oft-controversial topics within the housing element, concurrently as opposed to one at a time. The proposal also recommends the creation of a 9-member General Plan Advisory Committee, which would lead the early stages of the process.

Traffic Calming

Also at both its Jan. 3 and Jan. 17 meetings, the City Council will examine a proposal on the city’s traffic calming policies that determine how City Hall responds to complaints about traffic volume, speeding cars or inappropriate driver behavior on residential streets.

In August 2010, the to pay consultant David Parisi to work with a citizen’s committee and come up with a plan to deal with traffic complaints in a way that doesn’t revive the “traffic wars” of past years.

The Sycamore Triangle – the collection of neighborhoods bordered by E. Blithedale Ave, Miller Ave. and Camino Alto - has long been rife with concerns about cars and trucks cutting through them to get to a main thoroughfare, a situation which has often pitted residents against one another when traffic calming measures on one street would simply move the problem to a nearby roadway.

City officials hope the long-delayed Traffic Calming Guide, as it is called, creates a system whereby a resident’s request for a speed bump on his street wouldn’t move forward without extensive community input.

It outlines a five-step process City Hall takes to respond to a complaint, starting with education and outreach and potentially ending with police enforcement of speed limits if a series of engineering measures like new signs or street reconfigurations.

The 411: The Mill Valley City Council meets Jan. 3 and Jan. 17 to examine proposals on an update of its General Plan and new Traffic Calming procedures. City Hall, 26 Corte Madera Ave.

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Just a short thought to get the word out quickly about anything in your neighborhood.
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Erma Murphy May 23, 2013 at 11:57 am
Well said Larry!
Larry the Hat Lautzker May 23, 2013 at 09:22 am
Every year we get a handful of folks who complain about something they don't like about the parade.Read More In this case, I could take a great deal of time to explain that most veterans go to the Civic Center or Presidio for a more tradition Memorial Day event. Fortunately or however by design, Mill Valley is NOT stuck in tradition. If I may speak as a community (as I see it), we all in our own way celebrate Memorial Day. I don't believe anyone takes for granted our Grand Parents, Fathers, Sons or Daughters who gave their lives so we could grow up in a better world filled with love, compassion and protecting our right to live in a free society. So we Celebrate Mill Valley on Memorial Day, ever mindful of our countries history. We celebrate in our own way. With a great Pancake breakfast that benefits the Volunteer Fire Dept. Then we go the Parade where all sorts and sizes of floats, people and organizations get to strut their stuff, ever reminding us how blessed we are to live in this great little town. Next the celebration continues, it's off to the KIDDO Carnival and Concert on the Green at the Community Center (one of the finest in the Nation) that benefits Music, Art and many other PUBLIC school programs. We inherited the right to celebrate Memorial Day consistent (I believe)with what our forefathers envisioned and fought for. A healthy and free society, where people work and play together to make our cities, towns, country and world a better place. Imagine a world where there are NO war veterans, I like the sound of a world filled with Peace veterans. That's what Memorial Day is for me and in Mill Valley we have a Great Party. Hope to see you there! Larry the Hat, Head Honcho 'I Love a Parade Committee' PS. Anyone can apply to be in the Parade or reach out to the I Love a Parade Committee to bring to light their concerns and hopefully with constructive ideas (not just complaining). If that's not enough, have your own entry that reflects what you want to happen in the parade. If you think complaining makes a difference, You are FREE to do that.
Erma Murphy May 22, 2013 at 02:17 pm
I spoke with the parade director Larry the Hat, and he confirmed that there will a be traditionalRead More color guard made up from local veterans from local American Legion Posts in the parade. We will take time to recognize the veterans who have sacrifice to keep our democracy safe.
Old Mill Park on Saturday afternoon
Thrasy Bulus May 21, 2013 at 01:33 pm
I've also noticed large numbers of people out and about enjoying the warm weather.
Rico May 23, 2013 at 04:55 pm
Reply to ScottRAB, There were never any traffic signals or STOP signs at that intersection, thatRead More intersection does not warrant any such control. Actually for traffic using Molino going to Old Mill, there is no delay with the circle, but traffic coming down from Molino to Cascade Dr. and from Cascade to Old Mill there is a delay and I doubt anyone pays any attention to the painted circle anyway, but the new painted crosswalk on Old Mill is a good idea, and so is the new Yield sign on Cascade Dr. Those 2 things are all that is really needed. Note that the Yield sign is a regulatory sign, and the other circle sign is only an advisory sign. According to the M.U.T.C.D, shall, should and may are the basic description of the classes of signs. A regulatory sign is mandatory or shall, like a STOP or a YIELD sign and is red and black, a warning sign or should sign is black on yellow, like when you see an arrow with a 25, that means it is not illegal to go faster than 25 mph but it is advised. Then you have guide signs (black on white) like the circle sign which are guide signs, so that sign means nothing if a motorist disregards it, which most all people do anyway. Mill Valley is not a big congested city in Europe, and that intersection is not even in a high volume-high speed location such as other intersections in town. Sorry for the above 2 posts, when posting on the Patch I have to remember never to hit the enter button, no more paragraphs. Perhaps this is to discourage long posts, and by the way, a question to the Patch editors, is there a limit to the number of characters when posting on the new Patch ?
Rico May 23, 2013 at 04:21 pm
Reply to ScottRAB,
Rico May 23, 2013 at 04:20 pm
Reply to ScottRAB.
Rico May 15, 2013 at 05:16 pm
I guess I can't hit the enter button because that submits the post so from now on (until they fixRead More the problem), all of my posts will be one paragraph. What Angelina did was her choice, based on the multi-billion dollar per cancer industry, and by the people that like do unnecessary surgeries to line their pockets. Ask one of those male doctors if he is willing to have his testicles removed "just in case" he might get testicular cancer in the future. I'll bet that they would laugh at anyone who proposed that question. There are many ways that people can take care of their bodies to prevent cancer, like taking vitamin D, magnesium, selenium, turmeric and many more anti-inflammatory herbs. Also diet and environmental factors play a role in the pre-disposition to get cancer. In most cases, genes only play about a 5% role in a chance of inheriting or contracting cancer. But this big business of cancer research doesn't want hear about anything else besides expensive pharmaceutical drugs and surgery, anything else would threaten their business model. This post is a test of the new Patch commenting system.
Rico May 15, 2013 at 04:55 pm
Yes, and she also announced that she is considering having her ovaries removed also.