October 24, 2025 3:27 PM
City Council to consider comprehensive plan to restore safety, rebuild vitality, and achieve fiscal stability
SANTA MONICA, Calif. (Oct. 24, 2025)- Santa Monica is poised to embark on a significant renewal effort with the City Council set to consider adoption of the Santa Monica Realignment Plan onTuesday, Oct.28.
The proposal is a comprehensive, multi-year framework developed in response to City Council directed strategic priorities that are intended to restore public safety and cleanliness, revitalize the local economy, rebuild organizational capacity, and achieve long-term fiscal balance for Satna Monica by FY 2027-28.
"This plan is about getting Santa Monica back on its feet - safe streets, vibrant neighborhoods, and a city organization strong enough to deliver," Mayor Lana Negretesaid. "Realignment is our roadmap to a safer, cleaner, fiscally stable, and more hopeful future."
The RealignmentGamePlan responds to years of pandemic-era disruption, rising public safety andhomeless concerns, visible deterioration of public spaces, and declining revenues that have eroded the city's once-strong financial foundation. The plan proposes a unified strategy to re-establish Santa Monica as a safe, cleanand vibrant coastal community, anchored through programs and projects that are organized around five strategic priorities.
1. Achieving Safe Neighborhoods & Clean Streets
Public safety and civic cleanliness are the foundation of community confidence.
The Realignment Game Plan introduces a new deployment model for the Santa Monica Police Department, centered on creation of a Downtown Police Substation at Santa Monica Place Mall and an expansion of the Santa Monica Police Department's Downtown Services Unit (DSU).
Key actions include:
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Doubling the size of the DSU to include 8-10 sworn officers daily, supported by eightnew Public Safety Officers providing a constant non-sworn presence across Third StreetPromenade, Palisades Park, Tongva Park, Reed Park, and Downtown parking structures.
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Overlapping patrol coverage with five additionalofficers daily in the Downtown core, ensuring visibility and responsiveness.
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Integrating homeless outreach and social service support teams with public safety operations to address the 50percentof service calls Downtown related to homelessness.
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Authorizing 10 police over-hire positions to offset anticipatedretirements and maintainsworn capacity.
Complementary initiatives have been developed as part of the plan to reinforce these public safety efforts:
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Relocating and re-imagining the SAMOSHELhomeless shelter into a new "healing center" model that integrates addiction treatment, mental health care, and transitional housing pathways.
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Expanding the SaMo Bridge diversion facility to increase alternatives to incarceration.
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Enhancing prosecutorial capacity within the City AttorneyOffice's Criminal Unit, boosting misdemeanor case-filing rates to approximately 90percentof legally fileable cases (about 3,500 per year).
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Partnering with Metro to align enforcement at the end-of-line E Line platforms and improve transit safety.
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Exploring new policy tools, including a potential Vehicle Habitation Ordinance modeled on San Diego's balanced approach.
The plan also launches a $3.5 million Downtown Capital Improvement Program, restoring civic identity throughthe following projects:
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Tree-canopy renewal (37 new trees, 403 tree-well upgrades)
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Crosswalk and signage modernization
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20,000 squarefeetofsidewalk repairs and Promenade paver replacements
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Trash receptacle replacement and safety barrier installations
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Gateway landscaping, artist crosswalks, and fountain restorations
An additional$500,000 is allocatedfor targeted corridor reinvestments with Business Improvement Districts on Montana Avenue, Main Street, Pico Boulevard, and Ocean Park Boulevard. The program also includes new Vision Zero investments that will fund quick-build pedestrian-safety projects across high-injury corridors.
2. Activating Economic Opportunity & Growth
Economic revitalization is essential to long-term stability.
With retail vacancies near 16percentand office vacancies around 35percent, the Realignment Plan pairs safety and infrastructure improvements with policies to attract investment and visitors.
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Launch of a large-format Santa Monica Music Festival in 2026 in partnership with Goldenvoice, along with monthly Promenade activation events and community programmingsupported by Business Improvement Districts (BIDs).
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Modernizing permittingto achieve the following plan-review timelines:
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Residential Plan Review Turnaround Times:
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ADU conversions - 1 week
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ADU new construction - 2 weeks
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Single Unit Dwelling new construction - 3 weeks
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Single Unit Dwelling remodel- 2 weeks
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Non-Residential & Mixed UsePlan Review Turnaround Times:
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Nonresidential or mixed-use building new construction - 5 weeks
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Retail/Office structural tenant improvement - 2 weeks
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Restaurant tenantimprovement - 2 weeks
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Commercialnon-structural tenant improvements - 1week
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Implementing an AI-based Archistarpilot program for single-family and ADU plan-checks.
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Reducing outdoor dining fees to $1 per square foot for sidewalk dining and $2 per square foot for parklets, while eliminating city wastewater capacity charges.
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Temporarily suspending Transportation Demand Management survey requirements for businesses.
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Reopening all branch libraries by 2026 as neighborhood learning and workforce-development hubs.
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Exploring expansion of Entertainment Zones Downtown, at the Pier, and within other BID corridors.
3. Developing Affordable, Livable & Secure Housing for All
Housing stability underpins community health.
The plan introducesseveral housing related programs and policies, including:
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A Vacant Property Registration Ordinance targeting approximately 170 vacant parcels to deter blight and promote reuse.
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A Rent Registry Ordinance covering approximately 15,000 non-rent-controlled units to enhance transparency and tenant protections.
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Additional Code Enforcement staff to provide seven-day coverage and evening response.
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Focused city-led housing development Downtown, leveragingmunicipal land to produce housing and re-energize the Promenade while exploring ways to ensure that development along the boulevards remainscompatible with existing neighborhoods.
4. Creating Organizational Capacity
Delivering on Realignment requires rebuilding the operational backbone of the city.
Investments to create greater city organizational capacity include:
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Restoring maintenance and cleaning capacity for parking structures, parks, and beaches, with new custodial, groundskeeping, and mechanical staff.
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Expanding the Homeless Support Team (HoST) to seven-day service with enhanced cleanup and response capability.
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Launching the city-operated Ambulance Operator Program in 2026, generating an estimated $7 million in annual revenue.
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Re-establishing the Urban Forester position and pruning program.
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Reinvesting in certain city operations - Finance, Human Resources, Event Services, and Marine Safety- to support expanded service delivery.
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Initiating a land-asset strategy for key city-owned Downtown parcels (including 4th/5th/Arizona,Parking Structure 1,Old Fire Station 1,Kiss-and-Ride Lot), projected to generate $100-$200 million in value and replenish cash reserves to the $200-$300 million range by 2028.
5. Building Organizational Health
The Realignment Game Plan also recognizes that a strong city depends on a healthy workforce.
The plan also launches a cultural renewal effort- "One SaMo"- built on the values of Humility, Integrity, Motivation, and Care, emphasizing team orientation, accountability, and care for colleagues and community alike.
Fiscal Framework and Road to Balance
The Realignment Game Plan also outlines a 24-month fiscal stabilization program that funds strategic investments while achieving a structurally balanced General Fund by FY 2027-28.
Key fiscal componentsinclude:
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Expenditure realignment producing about $7.5 millioninannual savings.
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New recurring revenues (approximately $24 millionper year) from updated parking programs, EMS transport, credit-card recovery, digital-signage concessions, and fee compliance.
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Exploration of a 2026 parcel tax measure to maintainpartnership fundingbetween the city and Santa Monica Malibu Unified School District.
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Strategic land-asset monetization to rebuild reserves and restore fiscal resilience.
"Realignment is about getting Santa Monica back on its feet," City Manager Oliver Chisaid. "We'reinvesting in public safety, cleaning up our streets, and rebuilding the financial and organizational strength that make great cities endure. This plan is a promise- that Santa Monica's best days are ahead."
Residents can review the complete staff report and attachments at santamonica.gov and are invited to attend or livestream the City Council meeting on Tuesday, Oct.28 at 5:30 p.m. in Council Chambers, City Hall.
Media Contact
Tati Simonian Public Information Officer [email protected]
Categories
City Management, Council And Commissions, Strategic Priorities, Transparency, Your City Hall
Departments
City Council, City Manager's Office