SF Chronicle Digs Into City of Mill Valley’s Affordable Housing Efforts and Friends of Hauke Park’s Lawsuit That Cites ‘Continued Discrimination’ Against Residents in Eastern Part of Town

An architectural rendering shows an affordable housing project proposed at 1 Hamilton Drive in Mill Valley. It would have approx. 45 homes. (Rendering by Van Meter Williams Pollack LLP).
“Indeed, the neighborhood group — which explicitly opposes high-density housing — seems more concerned with the building’s five-story height than it does with fair housing practices,” Hoeven writes. As has been the case for the past several months, the crux of the argument has been Soluri’s claim that “if the city actually did a legitimate site inventory and identified other (affordable housing) sites … then they wouldn’t need to construct so many units” at this particular location,” he told Hoeven .
The case has caused Silva to fear that fair housing could become “the next CEQA,” Hoeven reports. Just as the California Environmental Quality Act is often abused to delay or deny climate-friendly projects, rich communities may start filing fair housing lawsuits arguing that affordable housing should instead be built in even wealthier areas, Silva said. The state Housing and Community Development Department told Hoeven in a statement that fair housing law “should not be used to prevent affordable housing from being built in a particular community but should be used to ensure that affordable housing is being built in all communities.”
Councilmembers have countered that the Hamilton Drive site shows the most promise as a City-owned parcel in proximity to transit corridors and commercial areas, but that all other options are on the table.
“This is not going to be the only site we will look at for affordable housing,” Councilmember Urban Carmel added in September, noting that other sites, like the Edgewood Reservoir, the Miller Avenue commercial corridor and areas around the Mill Valley Golf Course and Boyle Park tennis courts, are potentially on the table.
Councilmembers have countered that the Hamilton Drive site shows the most promise as a City-owned parcel in proximity to transit corridors and commercial areas, but that all other options are on the table. “This is not going to be the only site we will look at for affordable housing,” Councilmember Urban Carmel added in September, noting that other sites, like the Edgewood Reservoir, the Miller Avenue commercial corridor and areas around the Mill Valley Golf Course and Boyle Park tennis courts, are potentially on the table.
“The City Attorney’s office is reviewing the petition and will be advising Council on how to proceed,” said City Manager Todd Cusimano. “We are confident that the City’s Housing Element meets state law requirements and that the City’s action to adopt it was in compliance with CEQA.”
“The City recently received a response from HCD on the City’s Housing Element that was adopted by City Council in May,” said senior planner Danielle Staude. “As noted in the HCD letter, the adopted Housing Element addresses most statutory Housing Element requirements and staff is in the process of providing additional information and data to address HCD comments.”