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Council to make interpretations that will allow development. She asked the Council not to delay <br /> the process in writing another Initiative which will take time and during the delay, approvals will <br /> be sought to bulldoze trees and hills and she asked not to let this happen. She asked for a <br /> moratorium on hillside development until people can vote, <br /> Karla Brown spoke on behalf of all three authors of the Initiative. She said the initiative is not <br /> Kay Ayala's alone but that Ms. Ayala one of many who want to protect Pleasanton's quality of <br /> life. She clarified that the intent of the Initiative is to protect hills from development, direct <br /> development away from lands with environmentally sensitive features or with primary open <br /> space values, and to make the General Plan's definition of a housing unit consistent with the <br /> federal and state definitions. She quoted portions of the staff report the proponents agree with, <br /> believed there was no need for the Council to place a competing Initiative on the ballot and <br /> asked for their Initiative to stand on its own for residents to decide. She provided a letter to the <br /> City Clerk identifying those portions of the of the staff report that the proponents agree with. <br /> Councilmember Sullivan confirmed with Ms. Brown that the intent of the Initiative is to control <br /> construction of residential and commercial structures and not roads that may be on 25% slope <br /> and leads to the conclusion that the intent of the initiative is not to preclude construction of the <br /> Happy Valley Bypass Road.. <br /> Mayor Hosterman questioned how something like an extended stay hotel would be counted. <br /> Ms. Seto said many of those types of commercial facilities have microwaves, stoves, and <br /> bathrooms which would arguably fall under the Initiative's definition of a housing unit, but staffs <br /> practice has not been to count them. <br /> Steve Brozosky spoke regarding direct access to policymaking processes through the initiative <br /> and the referendum process, and quoted the Chair for the Speaker's Commission on the <br /> California Initiative process. He said the Council-sponsored Initiative was voted on in 1996 and <br /> asked voters to accept a housing unit cap, but there was no definition of what a housing unit <br /> was. He said as a school board member, the information about the school district fees was <br /> categorically incorrect as well as multi-family houses and impacts and he asked to let the <br /> citizen's Initiative stand on its own. <br /> Brian Arkin questioned whether the poison pill aspect could only affect the hillside and not the <br /> housing cap aspect. He also believed that the records show that devellopers have spent <br /> hundreds of thousands of dollars on three Council campaigns collectively, and he asked the <br /> Council to say no to the competing Initiative. <br /> Dolores Bengston said 80% of the City's open space is in farmland and paths, spoke of her <br /> work in saving trees and environmental work, is against the Initiative, and it troubles her that the <br /> stakeholders do not have input and the authors added a section that provides a more strict <br /> definition of a housing unit. She said the Initiative is not good law, believes everyone is sincere <br /> in their desire to make Pleasanton a better place to live, and suggested including residents and <br /> other stakeholders the opportunity to participate in a task force to consider new regulations for <br /> hillside development which would result in responsible, fair and environmentally sound <br /> guidelines. <br /> John Butera said one thing not addressed is the current economy, property values, revenues, <br /> and taxes, spoke regarding airport safety and encroaching development, arid cited recent fire <br /> Special Meeting Minutes 10 June 26, 2008 <br />