CALIFORNIA ELECTRICAL CODE The City Council will...
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CALIFORNIA ELECTRICAL CODE
The City Council will consider formally adopting the new
electrical code implemented by the state. City law requires the city
to hold a public hearing to consider the pros and cons of the new
electrical code.
WHAT TO EXPECT
This item is really just a housekeeping measure -- the city is
required to adopt the code and follow state law. Expect little
council debate on this issue and few public comments.
SOUTHEAST REDEVELOPMENT PLAN
The Council will discuss the progress of a five-year plan launched
in 2002 to revitalize 266 acres of industrial space in Southeast
Huntington Beach.
The area, which stretches from Magnolia Street to Beach Boulevard,
includes the AES power plant, the Ascon landfill, a former oil tank
farm, mobile-home parks and coastal wetlands.
WHAT TO EXPECT
It remains unclear what the annual update will find because the
massive area has seen many changes in the past year.
A desalination plant is attempting to link up with the AES power
plant, a homebuilder is attempting to build duplexes an triplexes on
the oil field and an environmental group has purchased a bulk of the
wetlands and plans to move forward with restoration.
COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANT
The City Council will approve this year’s allotment of the federal
government’s Community Development Block Grant. The city must create
an annual action plan to show how it plans to spend the $1.6-million
grant from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development.
WHAT IT MEANS
The block grant process is always a contentious one, often pitting
staffers’ recommendations against those put forward by a citizen
advisory group.
This year, the two sides are making nearly the same recommendation
save for one difference: City staffers are recommending the city
spend $125,000 of the money on upgrades to fire stations, while the
citizen advisory group wants to spend only $115,000 on the upgrades
and shift the extra $10,000 to a $40,000 lighting project at the Oak
View Community Park in one of the city’s low-income neighborhoods.
Expect many speakers at the hearing to testify about why their
community groups deserve funding.
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