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Councilmember Cook-Kallio said the General Plan can be amended, but if citizens put forth an <br /> Initiative and in two years, a loophole is found, the only way to rectify that is through a ballot, <br /> which is not the same as a Council amendment to the General Plan. <br /> Mr. Roush agreed that this was correct in terms of amending a General Plan. He said it may not <br /> be possible to harmonize the two and staff would come back and ask Council to amend that <br /> portion of the General Plan which it could amend or have the Council put an Initiative in front of <br /> the voters that would amend what the voters had approved. <br /> Councilmember Sullivan referred to page 5 of the agenda report, the competing measure, and <br /> said if it passes, then the citizens Initiative would not go into effect. <br /> Mr. Roush said alternatively, if there is a competing Initiative, it would have a provision in it that <br /> if both measures pass and the Council-sponsored Initiative got more votes, the other Initiative <br /> would not be in force and he provided the example of Propositions 98 and 99. <br /> Sullivan questioned if that provision had been tested in the courts and how legal was it. <br /> Mr. Roush said it has been tested legally. <br /> Vice Mayor Thome asked staff that if direction were given from the Council to bring back <br /> language which would define and identify specific ridge lines to be protected, based on <br /> engineering data, view lines, geotechnical data, and define an elevation in south Pleasanton, <br /> and provide language for a process for counting houses under the housing cap based on actual <br /> impact to the infrastructure, could this be done by July 151°. <br /> Mr. Roush said his concern would be more on the issue of whether there would have to be an <br /> environmental analysis that would get in the way of having that kind of substantive Initiative in <br /> November. <br /> City Manager Fialho said staff would need to have the Council discuss this in more depth. He <br /> said staff spent a lot of time identifying the options in the report and were careful to put them <br /> forward the way they are reflected because it knows that in these three instances, staff can <br /> accomplish this by July 15t. Staff could bring ballot language to the Council that does not cause <br /> CEQA to be triggered. <br /> Vice Mayor Thome asked if the 119 to 224 units to be developed which would be moved to the <br /> valley floor included Oak Grove. <br /> Mr. Iserson said it includes a scenario where Oak Grove would not be built as proposed and the <br /> default provisions are included in that range of units. <br /> Councilmember McGovern referred to 25% or greater slope which has been in the General Plan <br /> since 1986 and discussed in many forms in the past. She is having a difficult time understanding <br /> why there is no definition for 25% slope because the City has been developing on hillsides since <br /> 1986 when 25% slopes were first discussed. She believes the City should continue what it has <br /> been doing since 1986. <br /> City Manager Fialho said staff can identify from a geotechnical perspective what a 25% slope is, <br /> but by prohibiting construction on 25% slopes, staff has to be absolutely clear on the <br /> Special Meeting Minutes 7 June 26, 2008 <br />