Laserfiche WebLink
Santa Ana City Council <br />November 18, 2024 <br />Page 7 <br />If the City Council were to ignore the substantial evidence in the record of potential impacts and <br />proceed with adopting the Amended Ordinance without first preparing an EIR to analyze these <br />potentially significant impacts, alternatives to the STR ban that may result in lesser impacts, and <br />mitigation measures to reduce the potential impacts, such an action would constitute an abuse of <br />discretion. <br />Prohibiting STRs in Santa Ana Violates State and Federal Law <br />The prohibition of STRs in the City violates state and federal laws in numerous ways. Specifically: <br />1. STRs have legally operated in Santa Ana, with the City's knowledge and acceptance, for <br />Clpr <br />STRs have operated legally in the City for decades and the City has acknowledged the operation <br />of STRs within its boundaries for years. For instance, on September 15, 2015, the City Council <br />implemented "an emergency ordinance adopting a 45-day temporary moratorium on the <br />establishment or expansion of any short term residential rental use." (Ordinance No. NS-2886.) <br />This ordinance acknowledged that "[t]he current provisions of the Santa Ana Municipal Code [] <br />do not clearly identify short-term residential rental uses or take into account the potential impacts <br />associated with the establishment of STRs within existing residential zones. As such, provisions <br />of ... the Code ... require review, study, and possible revision in order to respond to recent <br />concerns relating to the impacts of these short-term rental uses in the City." (Id., Section 1.13 <br />(emphasis added).) Importantly, the 2015 emergency ordinance for the moratorium specially <br />provided: "No short-term residential rental is permitted in a residential zone as defined in Article <br />I of Chapter 41 of the Code." (Id., Section 2.) Of course, this new prohibition would not have been <br />necessary had STRs not been an existing lawful use in the City. On October 20, 2015, the City <br />Council considered a recommendation to extend the moratorium adopted on September 15, 2015, <br />but it declined to do so. The result was that STRs continued operating as lawful residential uses <br />throughout the City. <br />Then, after continuously issuing ministerial business licenses for hosts renting their property on a <br />short-term basis and long after the temporary moratorium expired, the City changed its position. <br />Around early 2022, the City suddenly claimed that STRs were prohibited based on the City's <br />"permissive" zoning ordinance and commenced enforcement actions against existing hosts. And <br />now, the City states in the Staff Report that "STRs are not, and have never been, a permitted use <br />under the City's zoning code. Therefore, STRs have always been prohibited by the City and this <br />ordinance is reaffirming existing policy and practice." (November 19, 2024, Staff Report, p. 3.) <br />This position is directly contradicted by the Municipal Code itself. "Short -Term Rentals" are <br />mentioned in the Municipal Code in the context of urban lot splits. The Municipal Code <br />specifically states that "Short-term vacation rentals (STRs)" are not permitted in dwelling units on <br />lots created by an urban lot split. (Santa Ana Mun. Code § 41.2109(1)(2); see also id. § 41- <br />2115(1)(2) [same prohibition for dwelling units on lot for Two -Unit Projects].) Notably, in both of <br />these code provisions, the prohibition on STRs on these types of lots is in a separate subpart <br />7 <br />