Fillmore City Council Meeting
Fillmore City Council members.
Fillmore City Council members.
Members of KB Homes speaking to Council.
Members of KB Homes speaking to Council.

The Fillmore City Council waived certain temporary use permit fees and banner hanging fees for local service clubs and organizations.

Public Hearing Modification #4 to the project approved for tract Map 5353 for development permit 15-03 zoning ordinance amendment 15-02 and variance 17-01 sought by KB Homes was discussed. 104 units near Central Avenue and River Street include 3-story residential units. 33 condo-style and duplex units with granny flats are included.

The meeting with KB Homes was overshadowed by the lawsuit it filed against the City of Fillmore that day.

During public comment time, three residents of Edgewood Drive expressed serious concern about the size of the project adding too many cars on River Street. Ron Howard worried about quality of life issues with school children and traffic. River Street becomes an "Autobahn" at certain times of the day. He cited too many units as a cause of alarm. Also cited the 3-story units as not fitting into the area well with their 35-foot height.

Robert Espinosa worried about possibly 200 more cars, the traffic and parking problems. All residents cited the narrow streets, especially River Street.

Councilwoman Diane McCall was passionate about what she found as deficiencies in the plan. She was particularly critical about the shadow of a lawsuit by KB Homes against the city (which the council was informed of that night) had been filed that day. She found the architecture to be too similar in design, color, like a "collection." "They all look the same" according to McCall. "This town is Craftsman" she stated, recalling a 1930s style.

All council members agreed the design did not fit Fillmore's look. Councilman Minajares found the plan "woefully inadequate" in design. He also was concerned about inadequate parking in time of growth. Councilman Holmgram "was 'no' from the start". He found the design "Too Santa Clarita", lacking the Fillmore style, "too boxy" looking too much like Irvine. He also worried about traffic problems which he thought would be caused by the size of the project. The plan also looked too much like a "collection" to him.

Mayor Carrie Broggie thought a lot of work needed to be done but that "we can get there". The council was unanimously in agreement about problems with density, 3-story units, parking, and inappropriate architectural style for Fillmore.

Representatives of KB Homes agreed that they and the city might work-out the differences of opinion. But the lawsuit has been filed.