Laserfiche WebLink
BACKGROUND <br /> The Vineyard Villa Mobile Home Park is a 208 -unit mobile home park in which residents <br /> own their own "mobile homes" but the land upon which the mobile homes are located is <br /> owned by the Park owner. The mobile home residents pay monthly rent to the Park <br /> owner in addition to paying utilities such as electricity, gas, and cable TV. Historically, <br /> and now by written agreement with the City, the Park is a "senior park," meaning that at <br /> least one of the residents in a unit must be at least 55 years old. <br /> In June 2007, the property owner, through its legal representatives, submitted an <br /> application for a Vesting Tentative Map to convert the Park from a rental property to one <br /> in which residents would own not only their mobile homes but would also have the <br /> opportunity to own their own "lots /spaces" (for purposes of the Subdivision Map Act, the <br /> lots would be considered condominiums). This conversion would not require any <br /> physical change to the property; thus, the Park would still appear as if it were a mobile <br /> home park. If the application is approved it will allow individual residents to own not <br /> only their mobile homes but also the spaces on which the mobile homes sit. The <br /> conversion will not immediately change the senior status of the Park nor the rents that <br /> are charged under the Rent Stabilization Agreement that the Park owner has with the <br /> City. <br /> For more background information, see the February 25, 2009 Planning Commission <br /> staff report (Attachment 6) and the memorandum of the City Attorney to the Planning <br /> Commission dated February 19, 2009, including the Questions and Answers that were <br /> attached to that memo (collectively, Attachment 9). <br /> On February 25, 2009, the Planning Commission denied the application on a number of <br /> grounds discussed in more detail below. Within the time permitted under the Code, the <br /> property owner filed an appeal to that denial (please see Attachment 4). <br /> DISCUSSION <br /> The conversion of rental mobile home parks to residential ownership is governed by the <br /> Subdivision Map Act (SMA). Government Code Section 66427.5 limits the authority of <br /> the City to review such applications, requiring only that: (1) the applicant submit a <br /> "survey of support" of the residents, and (2) the applicant submit a report on "the <br /> economic impact of conversion upon the residents." In staff's view, the applicant met <br /> both of these requirements. As described below, the Planning Commission did not <br /> agree that its jurisdiction was limited to these two issues, and it did not feel that the <br /> requirement for the survey of support had been adequately met. <br /> Planning Commission Decision <br /> After receiving public testimony and discussing the application, the Planning <br /> Commission unanimously denied the application (PMCC -2) at its February 25, 2009 <br /> meeting. The primary concerns raised by the Commission were whether the survey <br /> conducted by the Park owner demonstrated resident support for the conversion and the <br /> Page 2 of 6 <br />