Parks commissioner asks for more authority
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Deirdre Newman
Would the city be better off if the Parks and Recreation Commission
was invested with more authority to make decisions on parks, parkways
and medians?
Parks and Recreation Commissioner Byron de Arakal posed this
question to his colleagues on Wednesday with the goal of making the
approval process more efficient.
De Arakal said he would like to explore the possibility of having
issues concerning these three items go straight from the Parks and
Recreation Commission to the City Council, thereby bypassing the
Planning Commission. To do so, the City Council would need to give
the Parks and Recreation Commission planning authority over these
items.
One of the catalysts for de Arakal’s frustration was tortuous
approval for the TeWinkle Park Master Plan, which bounced around from
commission to commission to council and then back to the commissions.
If the Parks Commission had the authority of a planning
commission, “you avoid park-specific plans just getting dismembered
and torn to pieces over time because they’re going through three
different bodies,” de Arakal said.
Some of his colleagues expressed reservations with his preliminary
proposal.
“I have a concern that in the quest to make government more
efficient, details might not be allowed enough public scrutiny since
there would be one less level of review if the Planning Commission
review was eliminated,” parks Commissioner Wendy Leece said. “A case
in point is the current lack of input from the Mesa del Mar residents
regarding the tree removal and extension of the fields at TeWinkle
Park.”
The Planning Commission has the authority to regulate the growth,
development and beautification of the city for things such as public
and private buildings, parks and vacant lots. The Parks and
Recreation Department has the power to create policies on parks,
recreation, recreation facilities and parkway policies and make
recommendations to the council.
De Arakal said another reason he believes streamlining the process
is important is to avoid the politicization of park plans.
“The TeWinkle and Fairview [Park] master plans -- those plans got
politicized a lot because a lot of the people that were looking at
them were running for council,” de Arakal said. “And that’s not to
say that nobody on the Parks Commission won’t ever run for an office.
I’m not going to, that’s for sure.”
He hopes that no one on the planning staff views his exploration
as a power grab.
Some planning commissioners expressed their support for more
efficiency in the approval process, but didn’t embrace de Arakal’s
proposal in its entirety.
“I believe it’s important to have checks and balances and believe
the land-use, environmental impact review that the Planning
Commission takes with these kinds of projects is important to the
process,” Planning Commissioner Katrina Foley said. “And the
recreational perspective needs to be balanced against the land-use,
environmental impact review process.”
The reason that TeWinkle Park was so cumbersome was that it was
not processed correctly and really only needed to be considered by
the Parks and Recreation Commission and the Planning Commission,
Foley said.
Another issue brought up by de Arakal’s suggestion is general plan
conformity.
The Planning Commission needs to review any proposal for a
building or structure to make sure it conforms with the general plan
and therefore was required to review TeWinkle Park’s Master Plan,
said Perry Valantine, assistant Development Services director, in an
August memo.
Although not all areas of the park contain buildings and
structures, it’s not feasible to take out only the parts that do have
structures and not examine whether nonstructural features conform
with the general plan, Valantine wrote.
De Arakal said he is interested to find out if other cities have
multiple planning commissions. He said he has done some research and
found that the state gives city councils a good deal of autonomy in
giving commissions planning authority.
Marianne Milligan, senior deputy city attorney, said she would
need to research to see if the appropriate statutory responsibilities
for parks, parkways and medians could be delegated from the Planning
Commission to the Parks and Recreation Commission.
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