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Planning Commission adopts annual report and requests training on 0‑lot‑line design, stormwater and state housing laws
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Summary
Carlsbad Planning Commission approved its annual report and proposed work plan and discussed the Village and Barrio master plan’s 0‑lot‑line design, stormwater and fire access; commissioners asked staff for training on state laws SB 79 and AB 2097 and a possible study session.
The Carlsbad Planning Commission unanimously approved its annual report and proposed work plan at the April 15 meeting and asked staff to bring training or a study session on 0‑lot‑line design, stormwater management and recent state housing laws.
Mike Strong, director of community development, presented the recurring item required by the municipal code and described Attachment A (past commission activities) and Attachment B (proposed work plan). "What is presented to the commission this evening is included in the resolution as Attachment A is the previous activities performed or accomplished by the Planning Commission," he said, asking commissioners to confirm priorities for the upcoming fiscal year.
Commissioner Lafferty raised concerns that 0‑lot‑line development in the Village and Barrio master plan can conflict with stormwater requirements and fire access, citing prior projects that used narrow alleys for drainage. She asked whether the commission could study design precedents and coordinate stormwater and safety solutions. Strong replied that design solutions exist and that the city’s fire marshal and engineering review these matters; he offered a special study session and training with engineering and fire staff.
Lafferty also asked whether recent state laws would be addressed in the annual work plan, referencing SB 79 and AB 2097 and potential changes to alternative street design near transit. Strong said both AB 2097 and SB 79 are already effective as state law and that an omnibus zoning cleanup would address technical clarifications; he invited the commission to request a presentation on those laws and alternative street design.
After discussion, Commissioner Burrows moved to approve the staff recommendation to adopt the annual report and the proposed work plan; Commissioner Mertz seconded. The commission approved the motion. Staff announced two May meetings (May 6 and May 20) and reported on Historic Preservation Commission activities, including an expanded third‑grade art contest.
Staff said that if the commission wants targeted training on the Village and Barrio plan, stormwater design or fire access, those topics can be scheduled for upcoming learning sessions.
