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Sangita said Site 7 carries 40% of the existing affordable housing in Pleasanton and there was <br /> an attempt to downplay this number by saying the number included senior affordable housing <br /> which. She questioned the reason for the compromise when only 70 acres needs to be <br /> submitted to the state. <br /> Lily asked that that Site 7 be removed from the list. <br /> Councilmember Sullivan asked staff to address the 100 acres on the list and the reasoning for it <br /> versus 70 acres. Mr. Dolan said ultimately, the Council only needs to rezone the 70 acres. Staff <br /> has been advised by several parties that it is wise to submit something with a buffer in case the <br /> State HCD objects to one or two of the sites. The task force has not yet felt comfortable <br /> reducing it below 100 acres, but it is something that could be done. <br /> Councilmember Sullivan noted that through environmental review, the City might find that not all <br /> of the 100 acres work and he confirmed this was another reason for the buffer; however, <br /> ultimately, it could be less than 100 acres approved for rezoning. <br /> Vic spoke about Bernal properties and stated opposition to Site 7. <br /> Manisha expressed opposition to development of Site 7, believing it would bring a tremendous <br /> amount of stress and traffic impacts to the neighborhood and school aged children.. <br /> Cindy expressed opposition to development of Site 7, and said they also do not want to spoil the <br /> nature study area. <br /> Nancy Allen, Danbury Park Homeowners Association, said residents do not want Site 7 on the <br /> list. Right now, potentially 800 units of the 2,000 units are in the three sites on the east side. The <br /> site is 3 miles from a freeway, 3 miles from BART, it is land locked, more than 1 mile from <br /> schools, 1 mile from Safeway shopping, and far from minimal services. In looking at numbers, if <br /> one area representing the south end of Pleasanton was removed, there is no balance. She <br /> requested reducing the 800 sites to at least 400 to create balance, ask that the entire site be <br /> removed through 2014 and revisit it after an East Side Specific Plan is completed. She also <br /> recommended Gateway stay at 13 acres and be considered for a greater number of acres, but <br /> to find more acreage across the City not currently on the list in order to help reduce density in <br /> higher impacted areas like the east side and Gateway. <br /> Lavonne Youel, spoke regarding Sites 11, 14 and 8 carrying 40% of the burden. Since they are <br /> not located close to a freeway. schools, or shopping, they would have an adverse effect on the <br /> infrastructure of Pleasanton. She asked the City to redistribute some of the sites so they are <br /> more evenly distributed, asked not to allow any building on the sites until the East Side Specific <br /> Plan is completed, asked to build units on the outskirts of the City and near freeways and BART, <br /> and zone additional areas in the south and west of Pleasanton to create a fair distribution. <br /> Dan Sapone echoed the many comments of speakers and said it is apparent that Site 7 would <br /> add traffic to an area they worked hard on not impacting, which is Valley Avenue and Santa Rita <br /> Road. He suggested dominant factors are still proximity to public transit, shopping, freeways <br /> and other services that residents of the units would benefit from. He supported the proposal of <br /> reducing the 800 units down to 400 units, and asked that if built, development occur after Bush <br /> is extended to El Charro. <br /> City Council Minutes Page 9 of 19 May 3, 2011 <br />