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01 ATTACHMENTS
City of Pleasanton
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CITY CLERK
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2012
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112712 Special Meeting
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11/16/2012 4:42:30 PM
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CITY CLERK
CITY CLERK - TYPE
AGENDA REPORT
DOCUMENT DATE
11/27/2012
DESTRUCT DATE
15Y
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for Pleasanton should be ongoing and not just looking at specific properties as a way to protect <br /> whatever would come in the future. <br /> Vice Mayor Thome referred to engineering data that creates a nexus to a view line, and <br /> questioned where the 25% came from. Mr. Iserson said in an area where there are unstable <br /> slopes, potential geotechnical or geological issues, there is more of a risk of failure if building on <br /> it. Additional study is needed to ensure it is safe and this is where 25% was identified. He said <br /> there is no one number that would be applicable in every situation, but it was formulated as an <br /> average number that made sense and flagged areas that required further review. <br /> Councilmember Sullivan said he would have assumed there had been significant discussion <br /> during the 1996 General Plan regarding the 25%, and Mr. Iserson said the references were <br /> actually contained in the General Plan prior to 1996, in the 1989 Plan. <br /> Councilmember Sullivan referred to Policy 5.1 in the Open Space Element which states, <br /> "develop a hillside protection ordinance", and he questioned why it was in the PowerPoint <br /> presentation and not in the agenda report. City Manager Fialho said the premise of Agenda Item <br /> 20 is how to go about protecting the hills—by regulation, ordinance or policy. In the background <br /> section of the report, staff covered the tools it had on hand today to protect hillside <br /> development, such as Measure F, Urban Growth Boundaries, 25% slopes in the Open Space <br /> Element and Public Safety Element. And, this policy is clearly there, but it is not an instrument <br /> staff currently utilizes. It is not a separate ordinance that we call upon to consider development <br /> on affected properties. <br /> Councilmember Sullivan questioned when the Council would talk about options for the housing <br /> cap. City Manager Fialho said the Council's direction was to bring back options on hillside <br /> development regulations, Item 21 relates to the Initiative which deals with 25% slopes, hillside <br /> development and the housing cap. If more information is needed on the housing cap and how a <br /> unit is defined, then the Council should ask for follow-up information on that issue under Item <br /> 21. <br /> Councilmember McGovern said she found the grading ordinance under Public Health and <br /> Safety, Program 7.5; "Develop a grading ordinance which establishes criteria for evaluating and <br /> controlling grading due to development." <br /> Councilmember Cook-Kallio said she wondered how the bypass road the Council approved <br /> would fall under this, and Mr. Iserson said this was one of the questions to address because it <br /> may apply only to roads or to 25% sloped lands where housing would be built upon. She <br /> questioned what happens to permits and entitlements already granted prior to this. Mr. Iserson <br /> said generally, if the Council has approved a development and found it consistent at that time, it <br /> is legal. She believed there was a project issued many sewer permits, and City Attorney Roush <br /> said the representation is there have been sewer connection fees paid for a certain <br /> development on the Lund property and there would be a question as to whether the payment of <br /> this vests that property owner to allow a certain amount of development to go ahead, which is <br /> an open question and not something that can be resolved tonight. <br /> Councilmember McGovern referred to the various pictures of developments on page 6 of 9, and <br /> said one of the concerns is that the ridge tops seem to be flat or less slope than the sides of <br /> getting to them. Even though they are flat, most people do not want houses on top of the ridge <br /> tops but she believed this is what was occurring with some projects. She said many homes do <br /> stand out and the problem is that slopes were graded to get to the flat top which was on top of a <br /> ridge. So, the Council should probably look at restricting building to something like 100 feet. <br /> City Council Minutes 8 May 20, 2008 <br />
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