Sample letter to Coastal Commission OPPOSING San Mateo Supervisors’ LCP update
Please don’t wait. Fax your letter to 415-904-5400 before 5 pm TODAY - Friday, December 4.
———————————————-
December 4, 2009
RE: Agenda Item TH18.a
Bonnie Neely, Chair & Members
California Coastal Commission
c/o North Central Coast District Office
Charles Lester, Senior Deputy Director
45 Fremont Street, Suite 2000
San Francisco, CA 94105-2219
Via Fax: (415) 904-5400
Subject: San Mateo County LCP Amendment No. SMC-MAJ-1-07 (Midcoast LCP Update)
Dear Chair Neely and Members of the Commission:
As a resident of the Midcoast, I am writing in response to the County Staff report on the few remaining points in need of resolution between the County and the Coastal Commission in the Local Coastal Program Update process. I appreciate the Board of Supervisors keeping the public involved over the past ten years.
a. Growth Rate
Building and Planning Department’s acknowledges that “…over the past five years (2004-2008), an average of 38 units have been approved annually.” In light of this fact, and the strain on resources already pushing road and highway infrastructure beyond their limits, I do not find a compelling basis for raising the growth rate beyond the CCC’s proposed 40 unit limits.
I do not support the Building and Planning Department’s request for “deletion of the requirement that second units document an affordable sale or rental price in order to be exempt from the growth limit.” The argument that “…second units can be assumed to be affordable due to limits on their size, and because documenting and monitoring the affordability of second units places unnecessary administrative demands and challenges on limited staff resources” falls flat because the County has not yet accounted for the number of existing second units, permitted and unpermitted. While these future units may be affordable, they still create infrastructure demands that must be met.
b. Private Wells
I support the Coastal Commission staff recommendation for a temporary moratorium on private wells in the urban area extending from Miramar through Montara. Half Moon Bay does not allow new private wells to be drilled for residential development. The Midcoast Ground Water Study, Phase II shows that all of our aquifers are at risk from saltwater intrusion and overdraft from the 946 wells that have been drilled since 1989. There are over 1,000 if we count those that existed previous to 1989. Families dependent on wells have no guarantee from the County that their water supply is reliable. I recommend that the County work with Coastside County Water District and Montara Water and Sanitary District to create a sustainable supply to meet all the planning needs at buildout.