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HomeMy WebLinkAboutResolution 2014-07 Oversight Board (OB) of the Successor Age AGENDA REPORT Oversight Board of the Huntington Beach Successor Agency to the Redevelopment Agency MEETING DATE: November 5, 2014 SUBJECT/ACTION: Adopt Resolution No. 2014-07 of the Oversight Board of the Successor Agency to the Redevelopment Agency of the City of Huntington Beach Relating to Re-approving the Purchase and Sale Agreement for the Edinger Hotel location STATEMENT OF ISSUE: The Oversight Board is asked to re-approve the Purchase and Sale Agreement for parcels located on Edinger and Parkside for construction of a hotel. RECOMMENDED ACTION: Motion to: 1) Adopt Resolution No. 2014-07, "A Resolution of the Oversight Board of the Successor Agency to the Redevelopment Agency of the City of Huntington Beach Re-Approving A Purchase and Sale Agreement and Directing the Transfer of Ownership of Real Property in Accordance with Health and Safety Code Section 34181(a) [APN NOs. 142-081-06, 142-081-09, 142-081-10, 142-081-11, 142-081-12, and 142-081-28]" DISCUSSION: In response to the elimination of redevelopment agencies, in March 2011, the Huntington Beach City Council and the former Redevelopment Agency took various actions to transfer Agency assets and to transition activities of the former Agency to the City of Huntington Beach (City) in order to continue to implement redevelopment in the City. Subsequent to that, AB Ix 26 was signed into law on June 29, 2011, which considered the transfer of assets to be unauthorized and invalid and which dissolved the former Redevelopment Agency as of February 1, 2012. The Huntington Beach City Council and Successor Agency approved the process documentation confirming ownership of the former Redevelopment Agency assets with the Successor Agency. On January 8, 2013, the Oversight Board took action re-confirming the property assets are with the Successor Agency. However, Department of Finance (DOF) did not approve the transfers and instructed the Successor Agency to process the Long Range Property Management Plan (LRPMP) as the vehicle to re-confirm ownership. The Oversight Board is reviewing the LRPMP this meeting and therefore, it is asked to re-approve the Purchase and Sale Agreement and direct the transfer of ownership. The former Redevelopment Agency issued an RFP on October 2009 in search of a hotel developer to develop a high quality, select brand hotel on the site with a minimum of 125 hotel rooms. Ayres Hotel Company was selected by staff; however, the former Agency and Ayres could not come to terms and the property was transferred from the former Agency to the City for continued attempts at redevelopment. After several failed attempts with other hotel developers, on January 27, 2012, the City entered into a Purchase and Sale Agreement (PSA) with Campbell Lodging to purchase the property and develop the site as a Hyatt Place Hotel, or similar-brand hotel, ranging in size from 120 to 140 rooms. On October 2, 2012, Campbell Lodging, Inc. transferred its interest in the PSA to KPHL, LLC. Since then, there have been four amendments to the PSA (January 31, 2012 — 1st Amendment; June 2012 — 2nd Amendment; and January 25, 2013 — 3rd Amendment). On January 21, 2014, the parties entered into the 4th Amendment, which extended the close of escrow deadline to June 30, 2015. The property has been reconveyed to the Successor Agency and remains subject to the terms of the PSA. The extension allows additional time to process project entitlements and final parcel map as well as obtain a Finding of Completion and a certified LRPMP from the DOF. The sales price is substantiated by an appraisal review by Nagasaki & Associates, dated January 9, 2012, that valued the parcels at $2.94 million to $3.50 million. The property is fully entitled and the developer has the financing in place. Once the LRPMP has been approved by DOF,the sale can take place immediately. Attachment 1) Resolution No. 2014-07, "A Resolution of the Oversight Board of the Successor Agency to the Redevelopment Agency of the City of Huntington Beach Re-Approving A Purchase and Sale Agreement and Directing the Transfer of Ownership of Real Property in Accordance with Health and Safety Code Section 34181(a) [APN Nos. 142-081-06, 142-081-09, 142-081-10, 142-081-11, 142-081-12, and 142-081-28]." A IIACH. MENT # 1 II Oversight Board RESOLUTION NO. 2014-07 A RESOLUTION OF THE OVERSIGHT BOARD OF THE SUCCESSOR AGENCY TO THE REDEVELOPMENT AGENCY OF THE CITY OF HUNTINGTON BEACH RE-APPROVING A PURCHASE AND SALE AGREEMENT AND DIRECTING THE TRANSFER OF OWNERSHIP OF REAL PROPERTY IN ACCORDANCE WITH HEALTH AND SAFETY CODE SECTION 34181(a) [APN NOs. 142-081-06, 142-081-09, 142-081-10, 142-081-11, 142-081-12, AND 142-081-281 WHEREAS, the former Redevelopment Agency of the City of Huntington Beach ("Agency") was a redevelopment agency in the City of Huntington Beach ("City"), duly created pursuant to the California Community Redevelopment Law (Part 1 (commencing with Section 33000) of Division 24 of the California Health and Safety Code) ("CRL"); and The Agency was responsible for the administration of redevelopment activities within the City; and Section 33220 of the CRL provides that certain public bodies may aid and cooperate in the planning, undertaking, construction or operation of redevelopment projects; and The City and the Agency entered into a number of Cooperation Agreements to continue the effort to redevelop, revitalize and/or eliminate blight in the City to achieve the purposes and goals of the CRL, to repay debt to the City and to provide for affordable housing, as appropriate and as authorized by redevelopment law in effect at the time of approval of said agreements; and Pursuant to such authority set forth in the CRL and other applicable law, on March 7, 2011, by Resolution No. 2011-17, the City approved and accepted the transfer of certain real property located in the City of Huntington Beach, California, APN Nos. 142-081-06, 142-081- 09, 142-081-10, 142-081-11, 142-081-12, and 142-081-28 (collectively,the"Agency Property"); and Pursuant to Resolution No. 2011-17, the City executed certificates of acceptance (collectively, the "Certificates of Acceptance") for the Agency Deeds designed to transfer ownership of the Agency Property from the Agency to the City (collectively the "Agency Deeds"); and On or about March 10, 2011, the Agency Deeds, along with the Certificates of Acceptance, were recorded in the official records of the County of Orange; and . Neither the Cooperation Agreements nor the purported transfer of the Agency Property (or any of the related documents and actions) were challenged within the applicable statute of limitations; and 1 14-4452/113964 Oversight Board Reso. 2014-07 AB xl 26 ("AB 26") was signed by the Governor of California on June 28, 2011, making certain changes to the CRL and adding Part 1.8 and Part 1.85 to Division 24 of the California Health and Safety Code; and AB 26 states, in part, that "[t]he Legislature hereby finds that a transfer,of assets by a redevelopment agency [after January 1, 2011] is deemed not to be in the furtherance of the [CRL] and is thereby unauthorized."; and AB 26 further states, in part, that "[c]ommencing [February 1, 2012], ... arrangements between the city ... that created the redevelopment agency and the redevelopment agency are invalid..."; and AB 26 further states, in part, that "[a]ll ... properties [and] buildings ... of the former redevelopment agency are transferred on [February 1, 2012], to the control of the successor agency"; and Subsequent to the date of transfer of the Agency Property to the City, the City and Campbell Lodging, Inc. entered into that certain Purchase Agreement and Joint Escrow Instructions dated January 27, 2012, as further amended by an Amendment to Purchase and Sale Agreement and Joint Escrow Instructions dated January 31, 2012, and further amended by that Escrow Amendment/Supplement dated April 25, 2012, and further amended by that Second Amendment to Purchase and Sale Agreement and Joint Escrow Instructions dated June 25, 2012, and further amended by that Third Amendment to Purchase and Sale Agreement and Joint Escrow Instructions dated as of January 25, 2013, and further amended by that Fourth Amendment to Purchase and Sale Agreement and Joint Escrow Instructions dated as of January 21, 2014 (collectively, the "Purchase Agreement") relating to the sale of the Agency Property and the development thereon of a high-quality, first-class, four story, 120-140 room Hyatt Place Hotel or other brand hotel ("Project") pursuant to the terns and conditions contained in the Purchase Agreement. The rights of"Buyer" under the Purchase Agreement have been assigned to Miramar GP, LP, a California-limited partnership ("Miramar"), a private third party developer; and The disposition of the Agency Property pursuant to the Purchase Agreement is aimed at maximizing value in that the purchase price for the Agency Property pursuant to the Purchase Agreement is within the fair market value range of the Agency Property as determined by an appraisal of the Agency Property dated January 9, 2012 prepared by Nagasaki & Associates; and On or about April 20, 2012, the California State Controller issued correspondence stating, in part, that "[i]f your city ... received any assets from a redevelopment agency after January 1, 2011, your city ... hereby is ordered to ... reverse the transfer and return the applicable assets to the successor agency of the relevant redevelopment agency"; and Under AB 26, each successor agency shall have an oversight board with fiduciary responsibilities to holders of enforceable obligations and the taxing entities that benefit from 2 14-4452/113964 Oversight Board Reso. 2014-07 distributions of property taxes and other revenues pursuant to California Health and Safety Code Section 34188; and The oversight board has been established for Successor Agency to the Redevelopment Agency of the City of Huntington Beach ("Successor Agency") (which oversight board shall hereinafter be referred to as the "Oversight Board") and all seven (7) members have been appointed to the Oversight Board pursuant to California Health and Safety Code Section 34179; and AB 1484 ("AB 1484") was signed by the Governor of California on June 27, 2012, making changes to AB 26 and certain additional changes to the CRL; and AB 1484, at Section 34179.5(c)(2) of Part 1.85 of the California Health and Safety Code, categorizes certain assets as those "transferred after January 1, 2011 ... by the redevelopment agency ... to the city ... that formed the redevelopment agency..." ("Section 34179.5(c)(2) Assets"); and AB 1484, at Section 34179.5(c)(1) of Part 1.85 of the California Health and Safety Code, categorizes certain other assets as those "transferred from the former redevelopment agency to the successor agency on or about February 1, 2012." ("Section 34179.5(c)(1) Assets"); and Because (i)AB 26 states that a transfer of assets by a redevelopment agency after January 1, 2011 was "unauthorized", (ii) AB 26 states that commencing February 1, 2012, arrangements between a redevelopment agency and the city that created it are "invalid" and (iii) the State Controller has purported to order that ownership of certain assets be vested in successor agencies, the Agency Property is therefore not categorized as Section 34179.5(c)(2)Assets; and Because AB 26 states that all properties and buildings of the former redevelopment agency are transferred on February 1, 2012 to the control of the successor agency, the Agency Property was therefore categorized as Section 34179.5(c)(1)Assets; and The City and Successor Agency do not acknowledge that the purported transfer of the Agency Property by the Agency to the City in 2011 was not in furtherance of the CRL; and The City and Successor Agency do not acknowledge the effectiveness of the Legislature's purported deeming not to be in furtherance of the CRL of the purported transfer of assets that was conducted in accordance with the CRL at the time when made and was not challenged within the applicable statute of limitations; and The City and Successor Agency do not acknowledge that commencing February 1, 2012, arrangements between the redevelopment agency and the city that created it are invalid; and The City and Successor Agency do not acknowledge the effectiveness of the California State Controller's order to reverse the transfer of the Agency Property and return the applicable assets to the Successor Agency; and 3 14-4452/113964 Oversight Board-Reso. 2014-07 The City and Successor Agency have limited financial resources and desire not to initiate litigation at this time with regard to AB 26, AB 1484 and/or the purported order by the California State Controller that ownership of the Agency Property be vested in the Successor Agency; and Therefore, in order to avoid the costs of litigation and other costs, the City and Successor Agency took action in a manner consistent with AB 26, AB 1484 and the California State Controller's purported order, and in furtherance of the Successor Agency's duties under Section 34179.6(h)(1) and Section 34179.6(f), by processing documentation reflecting ownership of the Agency Property by the Successor Agency pursuant to City Resolution No. 2012-71 and Successor Agency Resolution No. 2012-07, without acknowledging the effectiveness of AB 26, AB 1484 and/or such order and duties, expressly disclaiming the same: Quitclaim Deeds were recorded on October 17, 2012 whereby the City quitclaimed to the Successor Agency the City's right, title and interest in the Agency Property; and Pursuant to H&S Code Section 34191.5(b) of the Dissolution Act, once the California Department of Finance ("DOF") issues a Finding of Completion to the Successor Agency, the Successor Agency shall prepare a Long Range Property Management Plan -("LRPMP") that addresses the disposition and use of certain real properties of the former Agency. The LRPMP shall be submitted to the Oversight Board and the DOF for approval no later than 6 months following the issuance of the Finding of Completion to the Successor Agency; and On May 13, 2014, the Successor Agency received its Finding of Completion; and At this same meeting of the Oversight Board, the Oversight Board will consider for approval the Successor Agency's LRPMP whereby the Successor Agency proposes, among other things, to sell the Agency Property to Miramar pursuant to the proposed Purchase Agreement. The LRPMP will thereafter be submitted to the DOF for review concurrently with the proposed Purchase Agreement; and The anticipated sale proceeds from the.sale of the Agency Property to Miramar pursuant to the proposed Purchase Agreement in the amount of$3,100,000 will be remitted after the close of escrow to the Orange County Auditor-Controller's Office for distribution to the taxing entities in accordance with H&S Code Section 34191.5(c)(2)(B) of the Dissolution Act; and The proposed Purchase Agreement was previously considered by the Oversight Board and approved on January 8, 2013 by Resolution No. 2013-04; and All of the prerequisites with respect to the approval of this Resolution have been met. NOW, THEREFORE, the Oversight Board of the Successor Agency to the Redevelopment Agency of the City of Huntington Beach does hereby resolve as follows: 1. The Oversight Board hereby finds and determines that the foregoing recitals are true and correct. 4 14-4452/113964 Oversight Board - Reso. 2014-07 2. The Oversight Board hereby re-approves of the terms of the Purchase Agreement. 3. The Oversight Board hereby re-approves of and directs the sale and conveyance of the Agency Property from the City or Successor Agency to Miramar in accordance with the terms and conditions set forth in the Purchase Agreement, for the purpose of developing the Project. 4. The Oversight Board hereby approves of the transfer to the Successor Agency of the purchase price received from the sale of the Agency Property for distribution to the taxing agencies in accordance with AB 26/AB 1484. Specifically, the Oversight Board hereby approves of the transfer of all of the net proceeds received from the sale of the Agency Property to the Orange County Auditor-Controller and the distribution of such proceeds to the taxing entities. 5. The Oversight Board hereby acknowledges and agrees that the Purchase Agreement constitutes the existence of an enforceable obligation pursuant to Part 1.8 and Part 1.85 of Division 24 of the Health and Safety Code for the purposes of, without limitation, the disposition of assets previously owned by the Agency. 6. The Oversight Board hereby authorizes and directs the Executive Director of the Successor Agency, or his or her designee, and the City Manager, or his or her designee, to take all actions and sign any and all documents necessary to implement and effectuate the Purchase Agreement and the actions approved by this Resolution (including, without limitation, approving extensions of deadlines or dates set forth in the Purchase Agreement and its attachments) as determined necessary by the City Manager or Executive Director, or his or her designee, approving amendments to the Purchase Agreement and its attachments as determined necessary by the City Manager or Executive Director, or his or her designee, to effectuate the Purchase Agreement, executing documents on behalf of the Successor Agency and City (including, without limitation, assignment and assumption agreements, certificates of acceptance, grant deeds and quitclaim deeds), and administering the Successor Agency's and City's obligations, responsibilities and duties to be performed pursuant to this Resolution and the Purchase Agreement. 7. The Oversight Board does not intend, by adoption of this Resolution, to waive any constitutional, legal and/or equitable rights of the Oversight Board, the Successor Agency or the City under law and/or in equity by virtue of the adoption of this Resolution and actions approved and taken pursuant to this Resolution and, therefore, reserves all such rights of the Oversight Board, the Successor Agency and the City under law and/or in equity. 8. If any provision of this Resolution or the application of any such provision to any person or circumstance is held invalid, such invalidity shall not affect other provisions or applications of this Resolution that can be given effect without the invalid provision or application, and to this end the provisions of this Resolution are severable. The Oversight Board declares that its Board would have adopted this Resolution irrespective of the invalidity of any particular portion of this Resolution. 5 14-4452/113964 Oversight Board Reso. 2014-07 9. This Resolution shall take effect upon the date of its adoption. PASSED AND ADOPTED by the Oversight Board ;eeting Succes Agency to the Redevelopment Agency of the City of Huntington Beach at a ther held on the 5th day of November,2014. 6h?a*rpern REVIEW D AND APPROVED: OVED: C7 cyl� ,7xe ut' e Director Deputy Exec erector APPROVED AS TO FORM: 4r� Board Course 6 14-4452/113964 Oversight Board Res. No. 2014-07 STATE OF CALIFORNIA ) COUNTY OF ORANGE ) ss CITY OF HUNTINGTON BEACH ) I, JOAN FLYNN, Secretary of the Huntington Beach Oversight Board of the Successor Agency of the Former City of Huntington Beach Redevelopment Agency, Huntington Beach, California DO HEREBY CERTIFY that the foregoing resolution was duly adopted by the Huntington Beach Oversight Board of the Successor Agency of the Former City of Huntington Beach Huntington Beach Redevelopment Agency at a meeting held on November 5, 2014 and that it was so adopted by the following vote: AYES: Board Members: Carchio, L. Dunn, Bone, Delgado, Fritzal NOES: Board Members: None ABSENT: Board Members: Harper, A. Dunn ABSTAIN: Board Members: None 4(-XOA� Secre&fry of the Huntington each Oversight Board of the Successor Agency of the Former City of Huntington Beach Redevelopment Agency Huntington Beach, California