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Council affirms planning approval for Dutch Bros drive‑thru at Sweetwater Road after traffic, health concerns
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Summary
The council denied an appeal from Heart Revolution Church and approved a conditional use permit for a 950‑sq‑ft Dutch Bros drive‑thru at 1838 Sweetwater Road, adding a native‑plant landscaping condition and requiring operational mitigation (line busters, traffic staff) intended to reduce queue spillback.
The National City Council on April 20 denied an appeal and approved a conditional use permit for a Dutch Bros drive‑thru proposed at 1838 Sweetwater Road.
Staff development director Martin Reeder summarized the proposal as a 950‑square‑foot, dual‑lane drive‑thru designed to hold up to 26 vehicles and reported a traffic study that estimated typical queues and found no need for intersection mitigation. Reeder said the project screened out of an extended VMT analysis and qualified for a CEQA notice of exemption as an infill redevelopment.
Attorney Daniel Bilarte, representing Heart Revolution Church, urged the council to revisit the traffic analysis and public‑health policies. He told the council the church operates three businesses on adjacent property, manages up to 600–?0 weekly visitors and uses volunteer traffic coordinators on Sundays. Bilarte pointed to a Fountain Valley Dutch Bros location cited in the traffic study that recorded a maximum observed queue of 32 cars and warned of possible spillback into the shopping‑center aisles and the public right‑of‑way at Prospect and Sweetwater.
John Caglia, speaking for the applicant, said Dutch Bros has opened multiple nearby stores and that queuing at most sites averages about 15 cars; he described mitigation measures the company uses, including “line busters” and traffic monitors at peak times and said he would accept staff‑directed landscaping conditions. Dutch Bros representatives also told the council they are willing to coordinate with the existing coffee shop and church and to recruit local youth for entry‑level jobs.
Council members questioned the timing and depth of staff analysis and raised concerns about weekday and weekend peak queues. City engineering staff explained that the traffic study collected queue data from four area Dutch Bros locations, that the 32‑car maximum was observed on a Saturday peak hour at a sampled site, and that the sampled average was about 22 cars. The city engineer said the project’s 26‑car capacity and dual‑lane design were intended to limit spillback and that infrequent instances of brief spillback could be managed by adjustments or conditional requirements.
Council members also required a condition to revise the landscape plan to prioritize native, drought‑tolerant plant species and included operational conditions (staffed line busters/traffic controllers) in the permit. After public comment and deliberation, a council motion to deny the appeal and adopt staff recommendations with the landscaping condition passed unanimously.
Next steps: The city will finalize the permit conditions and monitor operations; staff noted they can require adjustments if queuing or safety issues occur after opening.
