The room was packed Tuesday as attendees anxiously awaited the sole item on the special Berkeley City Council agenda: a large rezoning proposal to allow denser housing throughout the city.
But that excitement was cut short when planning staff revealed that they missed a critical state requirement for the proposed changes, pushing a final vote to the fall at the earliest. Under California Senate Bill 18, cities must provide ample notice to the appropriate indigenous tribes as well as the opportunity for consultation on changes to the general plan — such as those proposed under the rezoning item before the Berkeley City Council.
Planning and Development Department director Jordan Klein estimated that between staff time and consultants, the cost of the rezoning item is already approaching $750,000.
“We really regret any delay that might be caused as a result,” Klein said.
Instead, the council voted unanimously on a set of guidelines for planning staff to work into a revised ordinance — revisions that could take months to complete, pending the required tribal consultation and a forthcoming evacuation study for high fire risk areas of the Berkeley hills.
The small apartment-style housing goes by many names — such as “gentle density” and “missing middle” — but several speakers in the council chambers also described it as a gentrifying force that would endanger the fire-prone neighborhoods of the Berkeley hills.
Under the proposed ordinance from planning staff, several low-density zoning districts would be rezoned to encourage multi-unit housing — including in the Berkeley hills — in the hopes of easing the housing crisis.
“This is one of the most ambitious rezoning efforts of any city in the United States, and I think it’s appropriate that it starts here in Berkeley,” Berkeley Mayor Jesse Arreguin said.
‘Formed in a crucible of racism’
Several council members and public commenters expressed hope that the proposed changes would make progress toward undoing Berkeley’s legacy as the first city to enforce single-family zoning. In 1916, the Elmwood neighborhood adopted exclusionary zoning rules to prevent a Black-owned dance hall from moving in.
Councilmember Mark Humbert, whose district included the Elmwood neighborhood, said the zoning category was “formed in a crucible of racism.”
“As council member for District 8, I feel I have a historic obligation to fix this,” Humbert said.
Humbert also recognized the efforts of former councilmember Lori Droste who previously represented District 8. During her tenure on the council, Droste introduced legislation calling for an end to single-family zoning throughout the city.
While that measure passed unanimously in December 2022, it may still be several more months before the council can take substantive action and pass the middle housing ordinance.
“This is Berkeley’s best chance to create homes for middle and moderate-income people like teachers, firefighters, seniors, and kids who grew up here,” Droste wrote in a post on X.
In addition to Droste, state Sen. Nancy Skinner and Assemblymember Buffy Wicks also sent letters urging the City Council to pass the ordinance.
But changes to zoning in the hills were a sticking point for many public commenters, as well as Vice Mayor Susan Wengraf and Councilmember Sophie Hahn, who is also running for mayor this year.
“This is one of the most ambitious rezoning efforts of any city in the United States, and I think it’s appropriate that it starts here in Berkeley.”
Mayor Jesse Arreguin
Both represent portions of the Berkeley hills and raised concerns that additional density would make it harder for residents to evacuate in the case of a wildfire.
However, a representative of the California Housing Defense Fund — an organization that takes legal action against cities for failing to comply with housing laws — argued that increased density in the hills would mitigate the risks of wildfire spread because new developments would fall under fire-resistant codes, unlike many of the Berkeley hills homes that were built decades ago.
Assessing wildfire risks
The Berkeley Fire Department is currently conducting an evacuation study on the impact of additional density, and the council agreed Tuesday to hold off on any action in the hillside zone until its completion.
What eventually passed unanimously was a motion from Arreguin and Councilmember Rashi Kesarwani that introduced maximum density standards and some tweaks to the planning staff recommendation.
The motion provides direction for planning staff when they come back with a revised ordinance in a few months.
Despite no final vote taking place Tuesday, dozens of speakers in person and on Zoom spoke out in support and opposition to the proposed changes.
Public commenters were largely divided on the middle housing issue along age and homeownership: older Berkeley homeowners tended to oppose the measure, while younger renters tended to support it.
“We have land acknowledgments, we have BLM signs, but we’re not sure if we’re actually going to turn any of that into policy,” said one commenter, who was speaking in support of the housing proposal.
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