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HomeMy WebLinkAbout2023-02-09; Update on Temporary Outdoor Activation Due to COVID-19 (Districts - All); Murphy, JeffTo the members of the: CITY COUNCIL Date 2fll1.3. CA ✓ cc✓ CM _✓ACM LocM (3) _L" February 9, 2023 Council Memorandum {city ofCarlsbad Memo ID# 2023018 To: From: Via: Re: Honorable Mayor Blackburn and Members of the City Council Jeff Murphy, Community Developmen � o· ector Geoff Patnoe, Assistant City Manager Update on Temporary Outdoor Activ · n Due to COVID-19 (Districts -All) On June 7, 2022 (Item #11)1, city staff provided City Council a report on the status of the temporary outdoor activation permits issued due to the COVID-19 pandemic. This is an update to that report. Background The COVID-19 pandemic has had a significant impact on the economy. The public health orders that mandated the closure of businesses or modifications to their operations hit businesses in the food and beverage, retail, and personal services sectors particularly hard. In response, the City Council approved the temporary suspension of certain land development standards to allow businesses to temporarily expand their operations into private parking lots, and those in the Village & Barrio Master Plan (VBMP) area to expand into the public right-of-way, allowing curb cafes and sidewalk dining in what is known as outdoor activation. A total of 116 businesses took advantage of this temporary opportunity. The temporary permits issued will expire once the state and county proclamations of state and local emergency expire, which Governor Newsom announced that the COVID-19 State of Emergency will end on February 28, 2023. San Diego County recently announced that the local emergency and local health emergency will also end February 28, 2023, matching the end of the state of California's previously announced plan. Discussion Curb Cafes A curb cafe is a deck structure that allows for outdoor seating to extend from the sidewalk into the street parking stalls for the purposes of food and/or beverage service. Curb cafes are allowed within the VBMP area with a right-of-way use permit, which is issued by the Community Development (CD) Department. To assist struggling businesses and maximize opportunities to allow continued operations during COVID-19 closure protocols, the City Council suspended certain standards as reflected in the table below. 1 https://records.carlsbadca.gov/Weblink/DocView.aspx?id=6282652&dbid=0&repo=CityofCarlsbad Community Services Branch Community Development Department 1635 Faraday Ave I Carlsbad, CA 92008 I 442-339-2600 t Council Memo -Update on Temporary Outdoor Activation Due to COVID-19 (Districts -All) February 9, 2023 Page 2 DEVELOPMENT STANDARD ESTABLISHED PANDEMIC STANDARDS STANDARDS Maximum curb cafes per street block Maximum length of curb cafe Maximum parking stalls per cafe Parking study shows 85% or more stalls within a street block occupied Four Frontage of business Two Remove curb cafe Unlimited Unlimited Four Curb cafe can remain A total of nine businesses were issued temporary curb cafe permits during the COVID-19 pandemic. Six of the businesses either constructed their curb cafe to meet established standards or subsequently modified their curb cafe to comply with VBMP requirements. As a result, those curb cafes have been permitted and are allowed to remain as currently constructed. The three remaining temporary curb cafes (Oak & Elixir, Pure Taco, and Campfire) will not be allowed to remain in their current configuration and will require modifications to meet standards if they are to continue to operate after February 28, 2023. These modifications may include reduction in size, change in materials, enhancing drainage, enhancing structural integrity and/or aesthetics. Sidewalk Dining Sidewalk dining is an outdoor extension of a food and/or beverage service with exterior seating on public property, typically on city sidewalks. Sidewalk dining is allowed within the VBMP area with a right-of-way use permit. There was only one VBMP established development standard affecting sidewalk dining that was temporarily suspended by the City Council. Under the VBMP, sidewalk dining is restricted to the frontage of the business it serves. During the state of emergency, businesses have been allowed to expand their sidewalk dining areas into·the frontage of adjacent businesses so long as the adjacent business owner agrees in writing to the encroachment. A total of 16 businesses were initially issued permits during the COVID-19 pandemic for temporary sidewalk dining, of which 10 have been removed. Of the remaining six, all of them will require some minor modifications to be consistent with VBMP standards. Outdoor displays An outdoor display is a temporary display of merchandise that is limited in size, duration, and location and placed on public property, most often on the city sidewalks. Outdoor displays are allowed within the VBMP area with a right-of-way use permit, issued by the Community Development Department. Like curb cafes, there were a handful of established standards Council Memo -Update on Temporary Outdoor Activation Due to COVID-19 (Districts -All) February 9, 2023 Page 3 that needed to be suspended (see table below) to allow not only mo.re displays, but to also allow certain businesses to operate outdoors such as barbershops and nail salons. ESTABLISHED PANDEMIC DEVELOPMENT STANDARD STANDARDS STANDARDS Maximum number of displays Location of outdoor displays Business operations allowed to operate outdoors where displays allowed One Unlimited Frontage of business Unlimited Prohibited Allowed Only three businesses requested outdoor displays, and all three meet the established standards set forth in the VBMP. Temporary use of private parking lots The Carlsbad Municipal Code (CMC) allows for special events that are short term in du ration, held entirely on private property and do not impact public roads or services. These functions typically involve such activities as weekend sales or special business events, which are often held in the business's parking lot. These special events are allowed with a private property permit. ' While the CMC allows for special events, many city planning zones that allow commercial and retail businesses also require that all operations be conducted wholly within a building. The intent of this restriction is to prevent business activities from regularly being conducted outdoors, where operations may impinge upon neighboring properties with excessive noise, parking impacts and other issues. Given the uncertainty on how long the COVID-19 pandemic would last, the City Council agreed to allow businesses to operate outside under the special-events provisions of the CMC for the duration ofthe COVID-19 pandemic, even in zones that require that commercial and retail activity be conducted within a structure. This allowed businesses such as gyms, churches, restaurants, salons, and other similar retail uses to operate in private parking lots and private common areas. A total of 100 private property permits have been issued to businesses. Twenty-six were issued to businesses located within the VBMP area while the remaining 74 were issued to businesses elsewhere in the city. Roughly 60% of the private property permits issued both inside and outside the VBMP area were for eating and dining establishments, while the remaining 40% were for other retail enterprises such as gyms, churches, and personal services. A higher percentage of the private property permits, 73%, issued inside the VBMP area were for eating Council Memo -Update on Temporary Outdoor Activation Due to COVID-19 (Districts -All) February 9, 2023 Page 4 and dining establishments. With the scaling back of the COVID-19 protocols, roughly 80% of the businesses outside the VBMP area voluntarily removed the temporary improvements and restored the areas back into parking lot use. Assembly Bill 61, approved in 2021, requires local governments to reduce the number of parking spaces that they would otherwise require if necessary to provide relief for outdoor activation until January 1, 2024. In other words, any outdoor activation in a private property parking lot is allowed to remain until the end of this calendar year. Next Steps Later this month, the Community Development Department will notify the nine businesses in writing (three curb cafe and six sidewalk cafe) of the need to either modify or remove their outdoor activation. Businesses will be given 90 days after the termination of the emergency orders (May 31, 2023) to either modify their temporary outdoor activations to make them permanent under the current CMC or remove the activation and restore the area to previous conditions. Letters addressed to all curb cafe owners will also sent advising them that annual right-of-way use permit fees shall be reimposed. For outdoor activation on private parking lots, staff intends to issue letters to those businesses later this year altering them to the January 2024 expiration date when the improvements will need to be removed. Staff will be made available to answer any questions to ensure a smooth transition. cc: Scott Chadwick, City Manager Cindie McMahon, City Attorney Mike Calderwood, Fire Chief Randy Metz, Fire Division Chief David Graham, Chief Innovation Officer Matt Sanford, Economic Development Manager Ron Kemp, Senior Assistant City Attorney Tom Frank, Transportation Director Mike Strong, Assistant Director of Community Development Eric Lardy, City Planner Jason Geldert, LDE Engineering Manager Robbie Hickerson, Code Enforcement Manager Chris Glassen, LDE Engineering Technician