The law was amended in 2019 to prioritize affordable housing when government-owned land is sold or leased.
The process begins with the notice of availability, which alerts affordable housing developers registered with the state that the city intends to sell or lease its property. The notice also starts the clock on a 60-day window for interested bidders to respond with redevelopment plans. After the window, the law requires the city to engage in a 90-day negotiation period with respondents and give priority to the entity proposing the highest number of affordable housing units.
As drafted, the notice of availability expresses the city’s desire to get cash for the COB site.
“The successful respondent will be the respondent who can maximize the monetary payments to the city while redeveloping the site as a high-quality mixed-use, mixed-income development that includes low-and moderate-income residential units,” the draft notice of availability states.
Councilmembers Kent Lee, Sean Elo-Rivera and Raul Campillo said they were in favor of making the COB site available for redevelopment. Councilmember Vivian Moreno was absent.
Elo-Rivera seconded a motion by Lee to recommend approval of the surplus designation to the full council. The motion was modified, at Elo-Rivera’s request, to require language in the notice of availability to ensure that bidders enter into a project labor agreement. Project labor agreements, which are required for city-procured capital improvement projects, are union contracts that establish wages, hours and working conditions for construction work.
There was no discussion on the city’s plans related to the fire station in the operations building.
Wednesday’s committee meeting also included a presentation by the Downtown San Diego Partnership and its partners on a new vision for the Civic Center complex. The concept, prepared by third-party consultant U3 Advisors and funded by Prebys Foundation, is centered around creating an arts and education hub complemented by a world-class public space, thousands of residential units, shops and restaurants, and a hotel.
The vision has the mayor’s support but is distinct from his past effort. It is also largely theoretical and seemingly at odds with the mayor’s decision to stay put.
“It’s just frank for me to note that the vision is difficult to materialize if there is no future plan for what the city’s role is in the space,” Lee said. “This is an odd real estate market, to say the least, … and so I know there have been some discussions about the city not moving forward (with a new City Hall) … but I think that would be a mistake in this market.”
Elo-Rivera expressed a similar sentiment.
“The mayor pulled the plug on conversations around identifying a new City Hall. And I think that was a mistake, because if we’re serious about building a Civic Center that lives up to its name — which is a place that serves people — then we can’t let outdated politics or austerity optics get in the way of that,” he said. “I don’t think that was actually about sound fiscal policy, because it didn’t really save us money. It was about looking frugal, and that is, in fact, costing us time, opportunity and public trust. We’re spending millions to maintain a crumbling and inefficient building, while the land beneath it, which is some of the most valuable public land in the region, is sitting underutilized.”
As for the COB site, the city expects to publish the notice of availability, pending full council approval, in late July or early August, Christina Bibler, director of San Diego’s Economic Development Department, told the Union-Tribune.
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