Richmond City  Council approves affordable housing complex on Central Avenue 
               
              By  Sarah Tan stan@bayareanewsgroup.com 
Posted:    01/12/2016 08:49:55 PM PST | Updated:   25 min. ago 
 
RICHMOND --  Richmond City Council members approved a plan Tuesday to build a 155-unit,  five-story affordable housing complex at 5620 Central Avenue, near the border  of El Cerrito and Richmond. 
 
The  project site is on the former Dolan Lumber property near Belmont Avenue and San  Mateo Street near the Richmond Annex neighborhood. Despite some concern from  community members about the added density and traffic in the area, as well as  the increased potential for flooding from a creek at the edge of the property  onto Belmont Ave., the motion passed, with only councilmember Eduardo Martinez  voting against the proposal, and Jovanka Beckles abstaining. 
 
"This  City Council has spent a lot of time talking about the need for affordable  housing, and I think we all agree we need more of that, even if we disagree on  how to get there, and this is an affordable housing project," Mayor Tom  Butt said.  
                          The  project, which the council officially approved in a closed session in late  November, had been in limbo since its initial proposal and conditional approval  in February 2015. 
               
              Last  year, the city's Planning Commission approved the project, pending certain  changes that required the building be set back farther from Central Avenue, and  that a creek on the edge of the property be revitalized. The developer then  came back with a lawsuit against the city, alleging that the changes violated a  housing density ordinance, and the city settled.  
            Community  members took issue with the fact that they still worried about flooding in the  area that might be worsened by construction on the site, and that a complex in  the area was approved in closed session.  
            "If  you raise the parking level of the project, all that water will be forced  toward Belmont," Fernando Meriscal said. His property lies on the east  side of the creek.  
               
              Residents  of Richmond Annex also complained that they had not been kept aware that a settlement  had been made behind closed doors, though it is not city policy to allow for  public comment in settlements. Had the City Council not approved this project,  the city might have been liable for another lawsuit from the developer. 
               
              Next, the  project will go before the city's Design Review Board, which will sign off on  the requirements of the complex, including final approval of the building's  setbacks from Central Avenue and from the nearby creek. 
               
              Councilmember  Gayle McLaughlin added an amendment and asked that the city Planning Department  alert neighborhood residents when the project would go before the Review Board,  which will happen later this month.  
               
              "If you  vote to approve this agreement, you'll be going against the neighborhood,  you'll be approving an outside developer's excessive requirements," said  Dave Harris, a member of the Richmond Annex Neighborhood Council.  
               
              Sarah  Tan covers Richmond. Contact her at 510-262-2789. Follow her @sarahjtan. 
 
               
            
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