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take measures and a certain number is determined to be mandatory. It also allows the City to <br /> adopt the "basic" level of CalGreen compliance which is required as a minimum by the State. <br /> CalGreen also offers two additional levels for cities to consider which are in addition to and <br /> impose greater requirements than the Basic level, which are Tier 1 and Tier 2. These add <br /> another list of mandatory requirements to Basic requirements and require implementation of a <br /> certain choice of a number of electives. Tier 1 is at a certain level of Basic and Tier 2 is another <br /> level beyond that. One of the things this transition will do is change the City's vocabulary; in <br /> moving forward. The reference to points, if adopted, will terminate as part of the older system. <br /> Mr. Dolan presented examples of basic measures for a residential project such as a storm water <br /> management plan, reduced flow plumbing fixtures and fittings, and automatic irrigation system <br /> controls. He clarified that "voluntary" means that it is voluntary for the City or municipality to <br /> adopt that level. <br /> In making the transition to CalGreen, staff wanted to ensure the transition is equal to the City's <br /> current requirements. Staff was not charged with making them stricter or to go in the opposite <br /> direction; their exercise was to determine how the two systems relate to each other in order to <br /> adopt the correct level of CalGreen that the City could say is the equivalent of what it has in its <br /> current regulations. This was done by taking the list of requirements presented in CalGreen and <br /> running them through the paint system to achieve a score, which could provide a comparison. <br /> In terms of the point system, Mr. Dolan said LEED requires a 40 point minimum. When the Cal <br /> basic was run through, staff found it achieved 15 total points, which is below what the <br /> requirement was before. However, if CalGreen Tier 1 requirements were run, one would get +46 <br /> points. CalGreen Tier 2 measures scored at +59 points. Scores could rise or lower depending <br /> upon electives chosen. <br /> Councilmember McGovern questioned what the current LEED level requirement is for the City, <br /> stating she has never seen anything lower than 50 points. Ms. Rondash replied that the City's <br /> current requirement is the certified level at 40 points. Mr. Dolan added that it is not uncommon <br /> for the Planning Commission and City Council to require something above the City's ordinance, <br /> and he clarified 40 points is for a commercial project, and that often, dialogue involves <br /> residential projects. <br /> Mr. Dolan said a single family requirement uses the Build It Green system and a minimum <br /> requirement is 50 points. There are various sub - categories where points are required to be <br /> included. Staff ran the CalGreen Basic system through Build It Green which equals 18 points, <br /> and Tier 1 would bring a score of 51 points. More points can be achieved depending upon <br /> electives chosen. When staff did the exercise, they wanted to be realistic. It would be natural to <br /> choose electives easy to use, cost - effective, and easily incorporated into various projects. <br /> However, if they chose other electives, scores could rise. <br /> For Build It Green multi - family projects, 50 points is also required, and staff had similar results. <br /> In an apples for apples comparison in terms of what level of green requirements they should <br /> choose within CalGreen to equate to what the City has now, Tier 1 most closely matches what <br /> the City has, with it being just slightly more stringent. <br /> Mr. Dolan noted there are challenges in doing the exercise. Not all measures are in both <br /> systems, some measures are just slightly different, and the systems weight and value measures <br /> City Council Minutes Page 4 of 15 January 4, 2011 <br />