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Public outreach gives guidelines

Planning Department can use residents’ opinions to create new regulations.

June 02, 2009|By Melanie Hicken

NORTH GLENDALE — Creating design guidelines for Foothill Boulevard, limiting residential growth and maintaining its unique small-town feel were among the top concerns residents shared with city planners over the course of several months of community outreach, officials reported Monday.

About 30 residents and business and property owners attended a Planning Department meeting Monday aimed at sharing the results of its public outreach campaign regarding a North Glendale Community Plan. City planners said they wanted the public to vet the comments and confirm their accuracy.

The community input will be used to help develop new development guidelines for land use, transportation, parks and open space, community services, infrastructure and sustainability, as well as design and zoning standards, for North Glendale.

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“It will ultimately be kind of a vision plan for North Glendale,” said Alan Loomis, principal urban designer for the city. “It will be an expression of how the community of North Glendale and La Crescenta would like to see their community evolve.”

The plan’s area includes the neighborhoods of Whiting Woods, Montrose, Verdugo City, Sparr Heights, Montecito Park and the Glendale portion of La Crescenta, according to a city report.

In August, the City Council directed the Planning Department to study the North Glendale area in response to concerns from Crescenta Valley residents who felt the area’s rural feel and mountain views were being lost to encroaching development. They also said they wanted safer walkways and lighting.

In December, the council authorized roughly $6,000 to solicit public input from area residents to help develop a community plan.

The meetings were at four locations to gather input on topics that had commonly been brought up by residents. The most common concerns related to Foothill Boulevard and its current and future development projects, Loomis said.

“There’s a lot of interest in how Foothill Boulevard should be developed,” he said.

Foothill Boulevard projects have often sparked controversy. In April, city commissioners unanimously opposed a controversial three-story mixed-use proposal for the former Foothill Builders and Hardware site.

La Crescenta resident Nancy Comeau — a member of Highway Highlands Neighbors, which organized to oppose the project — ranked the proposed three-story building as her top concern.

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