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San Francisco committee delays vote on ordinance defining intermediate‑length occupancy after planning staff warn of enforcement, eviction risks
Summary
The Land Use and Transportation Committee on March 2, 2020, continued an ordinance to add an "intermediate‑length occupancy" (ILO) use to the planning code after Department of City Planning staff said enforcement could risk evictions and the department lacks authority over private lease terms; the chair directed stakeholder meetings and said amendments will return next week.
The Land Use and Transportation Committee of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors on March 2, 2020, continued consideration of an ordinance to create an "intermediate‑length occupancy" (ILO) residential use in the planning code after planning staff raised enforcement and scope concerns.
Diego Sanchez of the Department of City Planning told the committee the planning commission recommended placing interim controls on ILO activity to give the city time "to gather data on ILO, as well as to hammer out a complete and consistent set of permanent controls." Sanchez said the draft ordinance "lacks an explicit ILO in buildings with 9 dwelling units or less…
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