My WebLink
|
Help
|
About
|
Sign Out
01
City of Pleasanton
>
CITY CLERK
>
AGENDA PACKETS
>
2010
>
020210
>
01
Metadata
Thumbnails
Annotations
Entry Properties
Last modified
1/27/2010 11:55:23 AM
Creation date
1/27/2010 11:55:18 AM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
CITY CLERK
CITY CLERK - TYPE
STAFF REPORTS
DOCUMENT DATE
2/2/2010
DESTRUCT DATE
15 Y
DOCUMENT NO
01
There are no annotations on this page.
Document management portal powered by Laserfiche WebLink 9 © 1998-2015
Laserfiche.
All rights reserved.
/
42
PDF
Print
Pages to print
Enter page numbers and/or page ranges separated by commas. For example, 1,3,5-12.
After downloading, print the document using a PDF reader (e.g. Adobe Reader).
View images
View plain text
Councilmember McGovern asked if that would mean leaving vacancies open for more than 1 <br /> year. Mr. Bocian said it potentially could but would depend upon the stage of the development <br /> process. He said the goal is clearly to minimize offsite relocation and that permanent relocation <br /> should not be necessary. Councilmember McGovern noted that state law deems it permanent if <br /> any person is out of their unit for more than 1 year, and Mr. Bocian said that is certainly not the <br /> goal. <br /> Councilmember McGovern requested the cost per unit. Mr. Bocian performed some brief <br /> calculations and provided a rough cost of $280,000 per unit. He said the actual cost would be <br /> determined once the project has been designed and that all estimates are conservatively high. <br /> Councilmember McGovern asked how, without knowing the ultimate cost, funding opportunities, <br /> and credit rates, how it was determined that the City would contribute $4 million. Mr. Bocian <br /> explained that the Council set aside $4 million for the Kottinger Place project via an agenda <br /> report several years ago. He said that since the Council approved that report, staff felt it had <br /> direction from the Council to work with that amount. <br /> Councilmember McGovern asked how much of the low- income housing fund is currently <br /> earmarked for other projects. Mr. Bocian said there is nothing of significance aside from some <br /> lower- income housing loans. Mr. Fialho confirmed that it is primarily promised for low- income <br /> housing loans and added that the Council has programmatically cleared the funds for any <br /> projects that may come forward. <br /> Councilmember McGovern said land acquisition dollars should be considered as a financing <br /> source and that, with the addition of the $14.6 million in the low- income housing fund, there are <br /> certainly other sites in the community that could be used for additional housing. Mr. Fialho said <br /> the sky is the limit and that the General Plan allows the Council to extract contributions from the <br /> City's other development projects to use towards an amenity like this. He said one way to <br /> accommodate affordability requirements would be through cash subsidies. <br /> Councilmember McGovern said she has had multiple conversations with Jack Dove who has <br /> been working with certain owners to identify potential senior housing sites in the City. She asked <br /> if the potential for that has been taken off the table. Mr. Fialho said no, that everyone is aware of <br /> the significant challenges in addressing affordability throughout the community. He said there <br /> are several pieces of land in proximity to this property that could accommodate additional <br /> housing, including several vacant parcels along Stanley Drive, near St. Augustine's Church, and <br /> in the business park. He said that tonight staff is looking to the Council and task force for <br /> consensus around the number of units to move forward with. He said the Council could also <br /> provide direction to pursue multiple options in tandem. <br /> Councilmember McGovern noted that the Sienna Project recommended 100 units at Kottinger <br /> Place, 40 at Pleasanton Gardens, and suggested that a capacity of 150 -units on Kottinger may <br /> be excessive. Mr. Fialho noted that there is also a 2 -story 128 -unit option. He said there is also <br /> a recent example in Pleasanton of the City retaining land and constructing a private structure <br /> assisted living facility. He suggested that the Council may choose to build around parameters <br /> that involve assisted living or skilled nursing, which would allow residents of Kottinger Place to <br /> eventually transition across the street into whichever situation were suitable. <br /> Vice -Mayor Cook- Kallio asked how many individuals are on the current wait list of both sites, if <br /> the Kottinger Place wait list is closed, the approximate age of individuals on the list, how often <br /> the list is purged, and whether anyone have been rejected from either for accessibility issues. <br /> City Council Minutes Page 10 of 16 December 1, 2009 <br />
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.