Livermore City Council declines to send contested affordable housing project to public vote

Livermore residents may not get to vote on a bitterly contested affordable housing project after all.

After a court decision appeared likely to send the project before voters this November, city officials have determined a referendum isn’t necessary and that construction can move forward on the 130-unit complex downtown.

In March, a state appellate court ruled that the city had to consider a petition for a referendum by a neighborhood group opposing the project, set to be developed by the Hayward nonprofit Eden Housing.

But on Monday, the City Council, which has the final say over whether to put the issue on the ballot, voted 4-1 to effectively halt the measure.

The neighborhood group, Move Eden Housing, which gathered the thousands of signatures needed for a referendum, argues the project can’t proceed without a public vote. City officials, however, contend the court ruling makes clear that a referendum is needed only to fund a proposed public park that would border the complex, not to build the housing itself.

Over objections from residents who accused the city of denying the will of the voters, the council voted to pause plans for the 1-acre park as officials continue working with the developer on the housing project, planned for the corner of Railroad Avenue and South L Street.

During Monday’s public meeting, Councilmember Evan Branning, whose district includes downtown, chastised residents who’ve opposed and delayed the project. Before pursuing the referendum, opponents unsuccessfully sued the city in 2021 to block the development.

“You are the ones sowing hate and division in our community,” said Branning. “You have the option to welcome our neighbors, to bring them in, to say that Livermore is a community that loves each other.”

Opponents, meanwhile, echoed a familiar refrain: We support affordable housing, just not this specific project.

“Eden Housing can be built somewhere else in this town, not downtown, where we play, where we walk, where we eat, where we entertain ourselves,” said resident Greg Rogowski. “Everyone here isn’t against Eden Housing — we’re just against where it’s going right now.”

In its interpretation of the court ruling, the city maintains that its agreement to sell the land for the project to Eden Housing was an “administrative act,” which can’t be challenged by a referendum. Therefore, city officials said, only the decision on the new park is subject to a public vote.

FOLLOW US ON GOOGLE NEWS

Read original article here

Denial of responsibility! Swift Telecast is an automatic aggregator of the all world’s media. In each content, the hyperlink to the primary source is specified. All trademarks belong to their rightful owners, all materials to their authors. If you are the owner of the content and do not want us to publish your materials, please contact us by email – swifttelecast.com. The content will be deleted within 24 hours.

Leave a Comment