Ventura County Civic Alliance — Livable Communities Newsletter – Nov. 15, 2022

Volume 16 / Number 64 / November 2022
Your Livable Communities Newsletter
Both of the last two Livable Communities Newsletters (May and August of 2022) used the Alliance’s State of the Region (SOTR) data to focus on what it will take to obtain the transportation structure required if Ventura County is to be a true livable community. We learned that, not only is there much more that needs to be done for transportation, but we also affirmed that housing is an integral part of the transportation puzzle that cannot be ignored.
Therefore, this edition of the Livable Communities Newsletter will discuss three different types of housing approaches currently being used right now in the County:
Traditional Developer
Publicly Developed and Funded
Public / Private Partnership
Let us know what you think at Info@CivicAlliance.org
Thanks,
Stacy Roscoe
Traditional Developer:
Hitch Ranch
by Stacy Roscoe
On June 15th, the Moorpark City Council unanimously approved the 755-unit residential Hitch Ranch development on 277-acres in northwest Moorpark. The largely undeveloped land is located north of Poindexter Avenue, extending about 1,700 feet to the west of Gabbert Road.
Comstock Homes plans to build 372 single-family homes and 383 multi-family apartments for rent. Single family homes will be one and two stories; the apartment buildings will be two and three stories. About 113 of the rental units will be affordable. Exact housing prices haven’t yet been determined.
The development will feature a seven-acre park adjacent to High Street that will have an amphitheater with a large lawn for community events. It calls for a five-mile network of trails that will connect with existing offsite trails. The circulation plan is designed to prevent traffic from flowing to just one or two intersections. It sets aside 29 acres for open space and a parcel dedicated to the city for the future development of more affordable housing.
The development will support Moorpark’s economy by providing more customers for businesses. In addition, it will add students to the city’s schools, which have seen declining enrollment.
When a lead agency approves a project that will result in significant unavoidable impacts that are disclosed in the Final EIR, the agency must state its reasons for supporting the approved action in writing. This Statement of Overriding Considerations is supported by substantial information in the record, which includes both the Draft and Final EIRs. Since implementation of the Hitch Ranch Specific Plan will result in significant unavoidable impacts, the decision-making body (the Moorpark City Council) was required to adopt a Statement of Overriding Considerations when it approved the Hitch Ranch Specific Plan.
In today’s world of housing crises, it is notable that a project with some roots back to 1992 can be created in 2022. This may be a sign that not only is the housing crises is real, but it is also fixable with the right planning and process.
Publicly Developed and Funded:
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Livable Communities for Students: Housing Community College Students
by Katrina Titus
It was the late nineties, and I drove as far as I could away from my hometown in Southern California looking for an extraordinary college experience. I landed at the College of the Redwoods, a community college in Humboldt County. I had saved up money working during high school, and my mom had saved $50 which helped me to be able to afford the deposit on a modest one-bedroom duplex for $225 a month. Last month on a trip to Arcata I drove past the quaint duplex where my higher education journey began and reflected on the starkly different housing experience of today’s college students.
While the minimum wage has gradually increased, the cost of rentals has skyrocketed past the affordability threshold, especially in the coastal communities of Ventura County. Aside from the challenges of housing, many of those who attend community college lacked a support system during high school that would have encouraged and guided them to apply for grants that could fund their educational aspirations and associated expenses, such as housing, to keep their focus on their studies. Many community college students are from families who are low-income or have been labeled as “unprepared for the rigors of a four-year university” (an actual quote from a 4-year college website, demonstrating the misunderstanding that leads to a bias against community college students). As such, community college students are often left to navigate higher education independently, with little financial acumen or guidance.
Locally, more than 50% of students at Ventura College are designated low-income, and need some level of financial assistance. In addition, 50% of these students are food insecure and 18% are housing insecure.
In October, Ventura College received $62.9 million from AB 183, a higher education trailer bill passed in June of 2022, providing one-time grants for the construction of student housing or for the acquisition and renovation of commercial properties into student housing for the purpose of providing affordable, low-cost housing options for students enrolled in public postsecondary education in California. The $62.9 million is expected to provide 320 beds within 95 units to low-income students. Anticipated rent costs are $400-$900 per month, and students will be able to use financial aid to cover the cost. This could provide housing for two percent of the school’s 14,500 students enrolled in classes, or roughly 11% of full-time students. While it will not resolve housing affordability, it will surely move the needle in the right direction to provide housing.  The plans for Ventura College’s new housing include a variety of sizes to support students’ needs. The proposed 95 housing units include 10 two-bedroom units for two students, 15 four-bedroom units for four students, and 60 units that are two bedrooms for four students. The Ventura College housing project will be located on campus property.
Currently, there are 11 of the 116 community colleges that provide on-campus housing. Other community colleges are exploring adding on-campus housing. As part of AB 183, the community colleges in Moorpark and Oxnard each received grants of approximately $250,000 to determine the feasibility of providing housing.
Construction on the Ventura College project is expected to begin in fall 2023, with resident occupancy as early as the beginning of 2025. Resident selection criteria, services offered, roommate selection and unit options are being developed now through 2024 with opportunities for the campus and community to provide input on what the final design, procedures, and practices will be.
Public / Private Partnership:
Anacapa Canyon
by John Lazarus—CSUCI Site Authority Executive Director of Operation
CSU Channel Islands (CSUCI) Site Authority has signed a long-term ground lease with global real estate investment company Kennedy Wilson to develop a 32-acre site within the campus’s University Glen residential community.
The development, located directly north of the existing University Glen neighborhood, will include 310 market-rate apartments, 109 for-sale homes, 170 income-restricted apartments for seniors, as well as community-serving amenities.
“We are thrilled to see the site’s redevelopment process begin, and to move ahead on a pioneering public-private partnership that will also generate a significant revenue stream to benefit our campus’s future growth for years to come, as well as provide housing options for our faculty, staff and other community members,” said CSUCI President Richard Yao, Ph.D. “We value our partnership with Kennedy Wilson and their proven commitment to building and maintaining strong communities, and we look forward to working together to bring our shared vision to life.”
The agreement will generate more than $5 million in payments to the Site Authority during the initial development and homes sales phases of the project, and will provide an ongoing revenue stream from the market-rate and senior apartments over the full life of the leases, which will run through June 30, 2098.
“This development is an important step in our larger partnership with CSU Channel Islands and will meaningfully contribute to a community that is short on supply of high-quality apartments and homes for faculty, staff, and local residents,” said Kennedy Wilson Managing Director Nick Bridges, who structured the partnership with the University. “Many people are rethinking how and where they want to live, and we continue to see a trend of residents moving from city centers toward communities that have access to the outdoors, are commutable to major employment centers, and are relatively affordable.”
Kennedy Wilson has also committed $1.5 million toward the future construction of an Early Childhood Education center on the CSUCI campus to provide affordable, high-quality early childhood education to the community, local farmworker families, and student parents working to earn a college degree. At the same time, the center will serve as a training experience for students in the University’s School of Education.
“Affordable and accessible childcare and education is a critical need among both CSUCI students who are parents and among regional farm workers,” said Nichole Ipach, CSUCI’s former Vice President for University Advancement. “Kennedy Wilson’s gift toward the construction of CSUCI’s future Early Childhood Education Center brings us one step closer to offering much needed childcare slots to Ventura County and an outstanding educational experience for our aspiring early childhood teachers.”
The California State University Channel Islands Site Authority was created to provide for the financing and support of the transition of the Camarillo Hospital site for use as a campus of the California State University. The area of east campus is ground-leased by the CSU to the Site Authority for the purposes of establishing a residential community to help facilitate the recruitment, retention and productivity of faculty and staff, and to generate funds for campus development.
The new residential project builds upon a seven-year partnership between Kennedy Wilson and CSUCI. Kennedy Wilson originally acquired an existing 386-unit apartment community, now called Mission Hills Apartments, as well as 15,000 square feet of retail from CSUCI in the adjacent University Glen neighborhood in 2016 and has since invested approximately $8 million to enhance unit interiors and the community’s amenities.
Work on the site began in April of 2022.
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Thank you for your Support!!
2021 State of the Region
A Special Thank You Goes to Our State of the Region Sponsors:
Research Sponsor –
Ventura County Community Foundation
Title Sponsor –
Ventura County Community College District
Domain Sponsors –
AERA Energy
AT&T
California Lutheran University – Center for Economics of
Social Issues
California State University Channel Islands
County of Ventura
Limoneira
Supporting Sponsors –
Athens Services
EPIC Wealth Partners
California Lutheran University – CENTER
FOR NONPROFIT LEADERSHIP
Gold Coast Transit
Montecito Bank
Ventura County Office of Education
Ventura County P-20 COUNCIL
The Port of Hueneme
Ventura County Coastal Association of
REALTORS
Southern California Edison
VCTC – Ventura County Transportation
COMMISSION
Contributing Sponsors –
Coast Reprographics
The Law Firm of Hiepler & Hiepler
Musick, Peeler & Garrett, LLP
Sespe Consulting Inc.
SoCalGas
Ventura County Credit Union
Friend Sponsors –
Community Property Management
Dyer Sheehan Group, Inc.
United Way
David Maron
Kate McLean & Steve Stone
Stacy and Kerry Roscoe