Long Beach, CA
File #: 16-021OB    Version: 1 Name: 092616-OB-2175 Atlantic Ave
Type: OB-Resolution Status: Adopted
File created: 9/13/2016 In control: Oversight Board of the Successor Agency to the Redevelopment Agency of the City of Long Beach
On agenda: 9/26/2016 Final action: 9/26/2016
Title: Recommendation to adopt resolution approving the decision of the City of Long Beach, as the Successor Agency to the Redevelopment Agency of the City of Long Beach, to approve an Amendment to the Revised Long Range Property Management Plan to change the permissible use of the property at 2175 Atlantic Avenue from Future Development to Government Use.
Attachments: 1. 092616.ob.item4.pdf, 2. O.B. 11-2016.pdf

TITLE

Recommendation to adopt resolution approving the decision of the City of Long Beach, as the Successor Agency to the Redevelopment Agency of the City of Long Beach, to approve an Amendment to the Revised Long Range Property Management Plan to change the permissible use of the property at 2175 Atlantic Avenue from Future Development to Government Use.

 

DISCUSSION

The City of Long Beach, as Successor Agency to the Redevelopment Agency of the City of Long Beach (Successor Agency), currently owns the property located at 2175 Atlantic Avenue (Subject Property) (Exhibit A). The Subject Property is approximately 13,990 square feet and is currently unimproved. Formerly owned by the Redevelopment Agency of the City of Long Beach, the Subject Property is included in the Successor Agency’s Long Range Property Management Plan, which was approved by the State of California Department of Finance (DOF) on March 10, 2015 and amended on June 24, 2015 (Revised Plan).  The Subject Property has been categorized with a permissible use of “Future Development,” allowing for the disposition of the Subject Property through a Request for Proposals (RFP) process for development consistent with the vision and intent of the Central Long Beach Redevelopment Project Area and its guiding documents. As further required in the Revised Plan, the Subject Property has been conveyed to the City and is now a City-owned asset.

 

Consistent with the practice to notify the public of the availability of a Future Development property, an RFP to purchase the Subject Property was advertised in the Long Beach Press-Telegram on February 18, 2016, and 6,924 potential proposers specializing in purchase and development opportunities were notified of the RFP opportunity. Of those proposers, 78 downloaded the RFP via the City’s electronic bid system. The Purchasing Division notified 733 Long Beach vendors to submit proposals, of which three downloaded the RFP and none submitted a proposal. The RFP document was made available from the Purchasing Division, located on the seventh floor of City Hall, and the Division’s website at: www.longbeach.gov/purchasing <http://www.longbeach.gov/purchasing>. An RFP announcement was also included in the Purchasing Division’s weekly update of Open Bid Opportunities, which is sent to 22 local,

minority and women-owned business groups. One proposal was received on April 26, 2016. 

 

A panel consisting of representatives from the Development Services and Economic and Property Development Departments, and an outside real estate economics consultant reviewed the one submittal. The panel determined that given the size of the Subject Property and lack of interest, the Subject Property would better serve the residents of Long Beach if retained for public use rather than private development. The Subject Property’s adjacency to Burnett Library, as well as its location within an area that is deficient in open space, creates an opportunity to both address excess parking demand for the Burnett Library and provide needed open space for the local community. In order to do so, the Subject Property would need to be reclassified as Government Use.

 

To further the goal of providing enhanced community benefits, staff requests that the Successor Agency authorize an Amendment to the Revised Plan to change the permissible use of the Subject Property to Government Use. 

 

This matter was approved by the Successor Agency to the Redevelopment Agency of the City of Long Beach on July 19, 2016.

 

 

TIMING CONSIDERATIONS

[Timing Considerations]

 

FISCAL IMPACT

[Fiscal Impact]

 

SUGGESTED ACTION

Approve recommendation.

 

BODY

[Enter Body Here]

 

Respectfully Submitted,

AMY J. BODEK, AICP

DIRECTOR OF DEVELOPMENT SERVICES

 

 

 

APPROVED:

 

PATRICK H. WEST

CITY MANAGER