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guidelines, and case-specific studies such as traffic reports and acoustical analyses. These <br /> documents are reviewed by staff, the public is notified and input received, and public hearings are <br /> held by the Planning Commission and City Council. In some cases, the Housing Commission <br /> first considers the project to make recommendations and to assess the affordability of the project <br /> and its compliance with the Inclusionary Zoning Ordinance; this occurs during, not after, staff's <br /> review of the project. The environmental review for these projects is usually an EIR or Negative <br /> Declaration (or Mitigated Negative Declaration), unless the project is within a Specific Plan area <br /> for which an EIR was previously prepared, in which case no further environmental analysis <br /> occurs. The Planning Commission makes its recommendation to the City Council, which adopts <br /> an ordinance approving a PUD development plan. The City's goal is to process PUD applications <br /> within 6 months; however, an application can take longer to process depending on its complexity, <br /> such as when an EIR is required by the California Environmental Quality Act(CEQA). <br /> The City encourages, prior to submittal of a formal PUD application, the use of the Preliminary <br /> Review process. Although not required, the City has found that this three-to four-week review <br /> process facilitates and shortens the overall process. No fee is required and detailed plans are not <br /> encouraged; submittal of a rough site plan and conceptual building designs is sufficient to achieve <br /> the intended purpose, which is to identify key issues, make suggestions to improve the project, <br /> and assign a staff person to work with the developer. In some cases, neighborhood meetings or <br /> workshops conducted by the Housing Commission or Planning Commission are held. <br /> Development in conventional zoning districts requires only design review and possibly conditional <br /> use permit approval. These typically require Planning Commission and sometimes City Council <br /> approval, although the City has been streamlining its use-permit process and has amended its <br /> Code to allow approval of second units at the staff level. Shelters, transitional housing, and <br /> non-PUD multiple-family housing developments would also go to the Planning Commission. If <br /> they are handled with a Negative Declaration or are categorically exempt, it is the City's goal to <br /> process these applications within approximately 8 weeks; however, the process can be longer <br /> depending on the complexity of the application. Variances, minor subdivisions, lot-line <br /> adjustments, design review for single-family homes, and minor changes to approved PUD's and <br /> design review projects are also handled administratively. It is the City's goal to process these <br /> applications within six weeks. <br /> The City's review process is coordinated so that staffs planning, building, and engineering review <br /> occurs simultaneously through a Staff Review Board. Furthermore, after project approval is <br /> obtained, these divisions work together in the building permit and final map processes so that <br /> plan check occurs simultaneously among all divisions to streamline this portion of the process. <br /> The Building and Safety Division coordinates the plan-check and permit-issuance procedure, <br /> while the Engineering Division coordinates the final map approval process. For projects which <br /> have been approved, the Building Division offers an expedited outside plan check process. <br /> Policy 31 of Pleasanton's 2003 Housing Element allows for an expedited permit process as an <br /> incentive for housing developments which include at least 25 percent very-low and low-income <br /> housing unit held in perpetuity. This policy is incorporated in Pleasanton's 2007-2014 Housing <br /> Element. <br /> City of Pleasanton Housing Element BACKGROUND—February 2012 92 <br />