Draft Version G Allied Neighborhoods Association Conclusion Santa Barbara does not have the resources to accommodate everyone who would like to live here.

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Presentation transcript:

Draft Version G Allied Neighborhoods Association Conclusion Santa Barbara does not have the resources to accommodate everyone who would like to live here. Top priority should be given to maintaining the small-city ambiance of Santa Barbara. Stability is the best policy to Preserve our small-city heritage, Protect our current quality of life, and Secure our long-term sustainability. The character, charm, and charisma of Santa Barbara can’t be replaced – let’s keep them! Let your council know: Government/Council/Meet_Us/ Allied Neighborhoods Association, an alliance of neighborhood associations, has been working for almost four decades to preserve and protect the City and its neighborhoods through conservation and good planning. Read more about the current General Plan Update at sb-allied.org/PlanSantaBarbara.html. Allied Neighborhoods Assn. PSBWR h 5. About Allied ● Allied Neighborhoods Association (Est. ca. 1972) is an alliance of neighborhood organizations that exist within or partially within the City of Santa Barbara. ● Business is conducted by a Board of Directors, consisting of designees (and alternates) from the various member organizations. An Executive Committee, consisting of six (6) officers tends to business between monthly meetings of the Board. Regular Allied meetings are held the third Monday of each month, and the public is welcomed to attend and participate. ● Allied is a nonprofit Mutual Benefit Corporation organized under the Nonprofit Mutual Benefit Corporation Law of the State of California, Corporation # ● Allied has tax exempt status as a 501(c)(4) non-profit: IRS DLN (11/6/07), and California FTB, 755:G:JCA (12/3/08). Attractive, low-density, public housing projects, such as the Castillo Cottages, maintain the small-city ambiance of Santa Barbara while providing needed housing. Out-of-scale projects such as Chapala One (seen here from the back) violate the small- city ambiance of Santa Barbara while providing mostly up-scale luxury residences.

Draft Version G 1. Community Vision Visions for Santa Barbara’s future were surveyed by Allied Neighborhoods Association and the Citizens Planning Association and gauged from comments collected during City-sponsored workshops in the summer of While a variety of views were manifest, the desire to maintain Santa Barbara’s small-city ambiance and its qualities of life was almost universally expressed. Growth and its impacts on traffic congestion, views, air quality, and other aspects of the environment continue to be the major concern of most residents. 2. Living Within Our Resources Santa Barbara’s precious natural beauty and urban environment endure precariously, given our limited space, water, air basin, and other resources. Growth is the number one factor threatening the natural environment and the sustainability of communities. The Charter provision “Living Within Our Resources” will continue to be a mere platitude of limited practical utility until it is implemented with specific policies and code mandates. 4. Stability is Possible Santa Barbara has been relatively stable for the last several decades of the 20 th century, thereby protecting its historical, cultural, architectural, and environmental heritage. Stability does not mean stagnation. It does mean sustainable evolution and better utilization of the built environment: better not bigger. Other California cities have also taken tough stands against transformative growth. A prime example is Alameda's recent defense of its 1973 charter amendment limiting residential density. 3. Affordability Housing costs are inevitably high in attractive communities such as Santa Barbara. Growth and increased densities tend to impose increased costs on a community without generating compensating revenues. Since Santa Barbara can’t affordably house everybody, we must make sensible decisions as to the appropriate extent and limits of our efforts to do so. GoogleEarth/NASA imagery shows Santa Barbara filling the narrow strip between the Pacific Ocean and rugged Los Padres Forest. Traffic on Upper State Street is already becoming severely impacted.