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1. Executive Summary <br /> The Save Pleasanton's Hills & Housing Cap Initiative, if adopted by the City <br /> Council or approved by the voters,would amend the City's General Plan by adding new <br /> policies to the Land Use Element under Open Space and Growth Management. In its <br /> simplest terms, the Initiative would: (a)prohibit(subject to certain exemptions)the <br /> placement of housing units and structures, as well as grading to construct residential and <br /> commercial structures, on properties with slopes greater than 25%or within 100 vertical <br /> feet of a ridgeline; and(b)define a housing unit to include any residence that has a <br /> kitchen and a bathroom. <br /> Some terms of the Initiative, however, are not defined and therefore, in the <br /> absence of an implementing ordinance that would define certain terms with more <br /> specificity,will be subject to City Council interpretation when the terms of the Initiative <br /> are applied to specific development projects. <br /> Hillside Development: <br /> Similar to some of the existing policies in the General Plan limiting development <br /> in areas of 25%or greater slope, the Initiative will create a general prohibition on placing <br /> housing units and structures on slopes of 25%or greater, or within 100 vertical feet of a <br /> ridgeline,as well as a general prohibition on grading to construct residential or <br /> commercial structures in those areas. However,the critical terms of"slope", "structure", <br /> and "ridgeline" are not defined in the Initiative itself. <br /> Although the Initiative creates an exemption for developments of 10 or fewer <br /> units on a"legal parcel",the Initiative also prohibits the subdivision of a"legal parcel". <br /> This language is open to several interpretations,with significantly different results. <br /> As applied, the Initiative's hillside development restrictions may result in the <br /> reduction of 119-224 housing units from hillside areas, generally west of Foothill Road <br /> and in the Happy Valley and North Sycamore areas. It is,however, expected that those <br /> units will shift to other places in the City,but likely be replaced by smaller homes or <br /> apartments through infill projects or redevelopment of already developed property. <br /> Housing Units: <br /> The second policy proposed by the Initiative defines housing units. This <br /> definition also presents questions of interpretation. The Initiative indicates (in its <br /> "statement of reasons" for the Initiative)that the Pleasanton definition of housing unit <br /> should be consistent with the U.S. Census Bureau and the State of Califbmia definitions <br /> of a housing unit when determining the housing cap. Although State law provides that <br /> second units(which otherwise meet the Initiative's definition of a housing unit)are not to <br /> be counted towards the housing cap, unresolved and hence subject to interpretation is <br />