HomeMy WebLinkAbout03-28-2023 Full Agenda
Mayor and City Council of the City of San Bernardino Page 1
CITY OF SAN BERNARDINO
AGENDA
FOR THE
SPECIAL MEETING OF THE MAYOR AND CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF SAN BERNARDINO,
MAYOR AND CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF SAN BERNARDINO ACTING AS THE SUCCESSOR
AGENCY TO THE REDEVELOPMENT AGENCY, MAYOR AND CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF SAN
BERNARDINO ACTING AS THE SUCCESSOR HOUSING AGENCY TO THE REDEVELOPMENT
AGENCY, AND MAYOR AND CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF SAN BERNARDINO ACTING AS THE
HOUSING AUTHORITY, AND MAYOR AND CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF SAN BERNARDINO
ACTING AS THE SAN BERNARDINO JOINT POWERS FINANCING AUTHORITY
TUESDAY, MARCH 28, 2023
9:00 AM PST/12:00 PM EST - OPEN SESSION
108 CANNON HOUSE OFFICE BUILDING. WASHINGTON, D.C. 20510 • WWW.SBCITY.ORG
Theodore Sanchez
COUNCIL MEMBER, WARD 1 Helen Tran
MAYOR
Damon L. Alexander
COUNCIL MEMBER, WARD 7
Sandra Ibarra
COUNCIL MEMBER, WARD 2
Charles E. McNeely
INTERIM CITY MANAGER
Juan Figueroa
COUNCIL MEMBER, WARD 3 Sonia Carvalho
CITY ATTORNEY
Fred Shorett
MAYOR PRO TEM, WARD 4 Genoveva Rocha
CITY CLERK
Ben Reynoso
COUNCIL MEMBER, WARD 5
Kimberly Calvin
COUNCIL MEMBER, WARD 6
Welcome to a meeting of the Mayor and City Council of the City of San Bernardino.
PLEASE VIEW THE LAST PAGES OF THE AGENDA FOR PUBLIC COMMENT OPTIONS, OR
CLICK ON THE FOLLOWING LINK: TINYURL.COM/MCCPUBLICCOMMENTS
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use this link: tinyurl.com/agendabackup. Select the corresponding year and meeting date folders to
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Mayor and City Council of the City of San Bernardino Page 2
CALL TO ORDER
Attendee Name
Council Member, Ward 2 Sandra Ibarra
Council Member, Ward 3 Juan Figueroa
Council Member, Ward 6 Kimberly Calvin
Council Member, Ward 7 Damon L Alexander
Mayor Helen Tran
9:00 A.M. PST (12:00 PM EST)
PUBLIC COMMENTS FOR ITEMS LISTED ON THE AGENDA
DISCUSSION
1. City of San Bernardino Discussion on Homeless Strategic Initiative; Housing; Economic
Development; California Disaster Relief - Meeting with the Office of Representative Aguilar.
ADJOURNMENT
The next joint special meeting of the Mayor and City Council and the Mayor and City Council
Acting as the Successor Agency to the Redevelopment Agency will be held on March 28, 2023,
at 1029 Longworth House Office Building. Open Session will begin at 10:00 AM PST/1:00 PM
EST.
CERTIFICATION OF POSTING AGENDA
I, Genoveva Rocha, CMC, City Clerk for the City of San Bernardino, California, hereby certify
that the agenda for the March 28, 2023, Special Meeting of the Mayor and City Council and the
Mayor and City Council acting as the Successor Agency to the Redevelopment Agency was
posted at the San Bernardino Public Library located at 555 West 6th Street, San Bernardino,
California, and on the City's website sbcity.org on Saturday, March 25, 2023.
I declare under the penalty of perjury that the foregoing is true and correct.
Genoveva Rocha, CMC, City Clerk
Mayor and City Council of the City of San Bernardino Page 3
PUBLIC COMMENT OPTIONS
1) Written comments can be emailed to publiccomments@sbcity.org. Written public
comments received up to 5:00 p.m. on Monday, March 27th (or otherwise indicated on
the agenda) will be provided to the Mayor and City council and made part of the
meeting record.
Please note: messages submitted via email and this page are only monitored from the
publication of the final agenda until the deadline to submit public comments. Please contact
the City Clerk at 909-384-5002 or SBCityClerk@sbcity.org for assistance outside of this
timeframe.
NOTICE OF A SPECIAL MEETING OF THE
MAYOR AND CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF SAN BERNARDINO
DATE:
SUBJECT:
Saturday, March 25, 2023
Special Meeting on Tuesday, March 28, 2023
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that a Special Meeting has been called by the
City Manager, with a consensus of the City Council, for Tuesday, March 28,
2023, at 9:00 AM PST/12:00 PM EST.
Said meeting shall be for the purpose of the following:
DISCUSSION
City of San Bernardino discussion on homeless strategic initiative; housing;
economic development; California Disaster Relief - Meeting with the Office
of Representative Aguilar.
ADJOURNMENT
The next joint special meeting of the Mayor and City Council and the Mayor and City Council
Acting as the Successor Agency to the Redevelopment Agency will be held on March 28, 2023
at 1029 Longworth House Office Building. Open Session will begin at 10:00 AM PST/1:00 PM
EST
Genoveva Rocha, CMC, City Clerk
The City will continuously pursue funding sources The City will construct a State Approved modular facility/campus The City will issue a competitive RFP (Request for Proposal) for lead operators and developer The City will continue to form strategic partnerships -Home Key -PLHA -CDBG -ESG -ARPA -HOME-ARP -HHAP Help Obtain Vital Documentation Pet Kennel Income Stability Homeward Bound Job training/placement Mental Health Services Substance Abuse Recovery Storage Lockers Housing Navigation Case Management Mailboxes Sevrices (Homeless Outreach CAMPUS City of San Bernardino Cassandra Searcy 909 384-7270 Searcy_Ca@sbcity.org 201 North E Street San Bernardino, CA 92401
Total Shelter Beds Needed 253 Active Shelter Beds Citywide Database Homeless/Street Outreach Navigation and Recuperative Care Center Project Homekey (Round 3) Investment in affordable housing for (low & very low income) CAMPUS The campus will provide comprehensive services to the Homeless Community and viable services to the local community. 342 Beds needed to reach 595 Shelter Beds -BENCHMARK
City of San
Bernardino’s
Navigation
Center
Helping People & Families Exit
Homelessness
•San Bernardino is home to 40% of the County’s homeless
population
•Homelessness in the City has increased 175% since 2017
•Shelters in the City are at or near full capacity
•There is an inadequate supply of affordable housing
•Homelessness is expected to increase
Key Characteristics of Homeless
Population
Homeless men
outnumber homeless
women 2:1
44% Suffer from a mental
health disorder
59% are chronically
homeless
60% Have a substance
use problem 80% Have no income 27% Became homeless
for the first time
PHASE I
Navigation Center
Navigation Center Site Option
NAVIGATION CENTER COMPONENTS
Prefabricated Modules: low cost and fast
▪Panel system assembled on-site (by union
labor)
▪Can manufacture hundreds per month
▪Panels have the highest possible fire rating
▪Highly insulated,30%recycled plastics
▪Steel-framed construction;durable for 20+
years
▪Temporary units can be set up almost anywhere
and relocated to a new location if needed
Spacious,
Comfortable
and Secure
IMG_9334.jpeg
8 of 18
PHASE II
TRANSITIONAL
HOUSING
Two-story system
Design dramatically reduces site work.
For situations where more density is
required.
Custom Solutions to Tackle Unique Housing Problems
Onsite Housing
Option
Tiny Homes
Tiny Homes Layout
Next Steps
•The City has negotiated an Agreement to secure site
control
•A bid for an architectural evaluation has been
accepted
•The City will construct a State Approved modular
facility/campus
•The City is drafting a competitive RFP for a Professional
Lead Operator
Questions & Feedback
San Bernardino
Transformative investments to catalyze sustainable
Made possible with the support of The James Irvine Foundation
San Bernardino Community
Stakeholders
Investment Playbook
and equitable economic growth
This Investment Playbook will increase climate readiness, bring new
energy to the local economy, and improve quality of life in San Bernardino’s
communities. It brings together big moves across six key categories:
What will the
Investment Playbook do?
CAPACITY
Ensure that stakeholders have the capacity to
design and implement Playbook projects
• Nerve Center
• Staffing Surge
• Climate Solutions Team
• Technical Assistance for Community
Organizations
INNOVATION
Invest in key drivers of the Inland
Empire economy
• Sustainable Mobility Hub
• National Security Innovation Ecosystem
• Enterprise District
• Sustainable Logistics Center of Excellence
• Downtown Satellite Campuses
• Annual Climate Readiness Summit
INFRASTRUCTURE
Create a sustainable and connected platform
for equitable growth
• Zero-Emission Buses
• Complete Streets
• Fiber Network Installation
• Enhanced Infrastructure Financing District
• City Hall Renovation
• Climate-Ready SB
ENTREPRENEURSHIP
Support startup activity and small
business success
• Entrepreneurial Resource Center
• Food Entrepreneurship Hub
• Supply SB
• Center for Youth Financial Literacy and
Entrepreneurship
• Local Small Business Retail Plaza
HOUSING
Increase housing density near multimodal
transit
• Carousel Mall Redevelopment
• Heart of Mobility
• Homelessness initiative
• Homeownership initiative
• Downtown Habitat for Humanity Project
• Permanent Residential Real Estate
Cooperative
COMMUNITY
Expand opportunities and improve
outcomes for all residents
• Cybersecurity Tech Workforce Hub
• El Sol Holistic Campus
• Community Leadership Empowerment Workshop
• Olympic Aquatic Center
• Institute for Child Development and Family
Relations – Downtown
• Economic Opportunity Center
• E Street Arts Corridor
• Inland Port Career Resource Center
• Purposeful Pathways Initiative
READY-TO-GO LAST MILE EXPLORATION
These projects are largely complete,
with clear design, costs, and plans for
implementation
These intermediate-stage projects need to
get specific on design and cost
These early-stage projects will need more
development before they are ready to fund
and implement
Proposed ready-to-go projects total roughly $1 billion
This Playbook focuses on
Downtown San Bernardino,
a small geography with
outsized impact
Though underpopulated and underinvested
today, the downtown core has major potential,
with inexpensive city-owned land, historic
buildings, and close proximity to multimodal
transit. A reinvigorated, climate-ready urban
core will catalyze growth and improve quality
of life throughout the city, making it more
attractive for current and prospective residents
and businesses alike. The geographic focus of
this Playbook will provide the critical mass of
coordinated investment that San Bernardino
needs to reclaim its position as one of the crown
jewels of the Inland Empire.
Coordinated
investments that
benefit everyone
Playbook investments were
identified through more
than 40 individual and
group interviews with local
stakeholders. Each project
was selected based on its
ability to:
Three levels of
project readiness
The Playbook’s 36 transformational investments represent the building
blocks of a more sustainable and broadly prosperous future. Projects that
made the cut took one of three forms.
Build on San
Bernardino’s
strengths
Unlock federal, state,
and local resources
Leverage market
momentum and
work underway
Drive equitable
growth via
community wealth-
building strategies
Where does the Playbook focus?
Approach: Leveraging Local Knowledge to Identify Priorities and Projects
Local knowledge and expertise form the backbone of the San
Bernardino Investment Playbook. Dozens of in-depth individual and
group interviews with community stakeholders surfaced invaluable
information about the concerns and aspirations of San Bernardino
residents and provided context and inspiration for the Playbook as a
whole. These conversations identified six priority areas as well as the
individual projects within each category.
Making the most of this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity is no simple task
Funds are being dispersed through dozens of different federal programs, each governed by
different agencies with different application processes, delivery mechanisms, timelines, and
reporting requirements. State governments have funds to disburse as well.
If cities hope to maximize return on these extraordinary investments, they must organize now.
Over the past year and a half, the federal government has embarked on a massive
effort to accelerate climate action and equitable economic growth in American
communities. This unprecedented level of federal funding has created new
possibilities for transformative investment at scale.
Why now?
$1.9
TRILLION
American Rescue Plan (ARPA)
$1.2
TRILLION
Infrastructure Investmentand Jobs Act (IIJA)
$280
BILLION
CHIPS and Science Act (CHIPS)
$490
BILLION
Inflation Reduction Act (IRA)
DoD
grant
Federal and
state tax
incentives
Private sector
debt
HUD block
grant
Low-interest
loan from local
philanthropy
DOT
competitive
grant
EDA
competitive
grant
State
non-competitive
grant
Local
investors
An innovative approach to transformative investment
A growing number of cities throughout the
United States are using Investment Playbooks
to organize themselves for action
An Investment Playbook will help San Bernardino meet this unusual moment
The San Bernardino Investment Playbook offers a cohesive
approach to climate action and economic recovery that
leverages San Bernardino’s existing strengths and makes
the most of public, private, and civic investment. Anchored
in community priorities and distinctive local strengths,
the Playbook highlights needed investments and explains
how they can be staged and sequenced in order to deliver
benefits that are more than the sum of their parts.
The Playbook also explains how to move from idea to action.
It sets out a process for matching local projects with federal
funding and other private, public, and civic resources. It also
addresses a make-or-break factor—capacity to act—to ensure
that projects are financed and delivered in a coordinated and
timely fashion.
Capacity
Define Priorities
PLAYBOOK
Infrastructure
Housing
Innovation
Entrepreneurship
Community
PROJECT 1
PROJECT 2
PROJECTS
PROJECT 3
PROJECT 4
PROJECT 5
PROJECT 6
PROJECT 7
PROJECT 8
PROJECT 9
PROJECT 10
PROJECT 11
PROJECT 12
1 Identify Projects2
FUNDING SOURCES
Secure funding3
Federal Government
StateGovernment
Private Sector
Civic & Philanthropic
The first stage of an ongoing process
The San Bernardino Investment Playbook is a living document that will evolve over time,
triggering new projects and unlocking new investment as new priorities surface. As ready-
to-go projects get underway, last-mile projects will secure funds and exploratory projects will
become more concrete.
Looking ahead, a more extensive design process will be needed to make the most of the recent
influx of federal and state funding (e.g., CHIPS and Science Act, Inflation Reduction Action,
California climate and housing legislation). The Playbook framework gives San Bernardino a
way to identify new opportunities and get projects ready to go.
Track progress
over time
Investment
Playbook
LifecycleLaunch projects and
adapt as needed
Identify local
projects and
available funds
Design and
cost out projects
Secure
funds
Collaboration to Identify Priorities and ProjectsA new way of working
Conventional approaches have not led to
better outcomes. Reliance on one-and-done
planning, top-down decision making, and
minimal coordination across projects mean
that investments do not benefit everyone and
longstanding disparities remain unresolved.
Investment Playbooks offer a different
approach. Based on community needs and
local strengths, Playbooks address disparities
and improve quality of life for all residents.
What’s more, they are designed to evolve
over time, coordinating and sequencing
investments for maximum impact.