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dangers. He asked the Council not to disregard what a few people did to judge the Initiative and <br /> he asked not to dilute it with the Council's own Initiative. <br /> Laura Danielson asked the Council not to place a competing Initiative on the ballot. <br /> Julie Testa said the time for a task force has passed, and asked the Council to simply allow the <br /> citizen's Initiative to go to the voters without a competing one. <br /> John Carroll said it is clear that the Initiative process is necessary for further clarification, as the <br /> General Plan was not defined appropriately enough to explain how development is going to <br /> occur in the hillsides. He did not believe a competing measure would help clarify things, and <br /> said units are needed by BART and other transit providers to address smart growth <br /> development and not mansions in the hills. <br /> Mayor Hosterman closed the public comments. <br /> BREAK: The Council took a brief break and the meeting was reconvened thereafter. <br /> Vice Mayor Thorne thanked staff for responding to the Council's request for a 9212 report, said <br /> he believes the ultimate objective of the Council is and has been the development of a <br /> meaningful hillside protection ordinance and believes that the majority of those who signed the <br /> Initiative shares this with the Council. Over the last several months, he spoke to many people <br /> about this Initiative and the referendum for Oak Grove and has used the process to calibrate <br /> himself. Unfortunately opinions do tend to get polarized for one side or the other. He said most <br /> people were not aware that the Council had included the development of a hillside ordinance in <br /> a two-year work plan, the vast majority wants the Council to take some action right away, and <br /> most would prefer a collaborative public process to develop a hillside ordinance. He also heard <br /> and understands that the argument of having a public process on the ballot can be divisive but it <br /> does not necessarily have to be, he believes people will appreciate having the choice for either <br /> Initiative, thinks one way to make it divisive is to propel someone on the Council, prefers a <br /> collaborative public process over this particular Initiative because it is too flawed to be corrected <br /> by the definition of a few terms or a restatement of intent. It would become law the way it is <br /> written and any ordinance passed subsequently would have to use the Initiative as a guiding <br /> document. <br /> Motion: Vice Mayor Thorne moved to approve the third option, with direction Ito staff to return to <br /> the Council with a measure that asks a task force to evaluate the following: to define specific <br /> ridges based on engineering data, view lines, and geotechnical information rather than the 25% <br /> slope criteria; to evaluate the possibility of defining a specific elevation in South Pleasanton <br /> above which no construction could ever take place; to base accounting of housing units under <br /> the housing cap on a formula that actually has something to do with the impact those units have <br /> on the City's infrastructure; and include a timeframe by which this discussion must take place. <br /> Vice Mayor Thorne referred to the Save Our Community Park Initiative, which he co-authored, <br /> and saw a distinct difference between that Initiative and this one. He said the previous Initiative <br /> was designed to protect a public collaborative process that had already occurred. The task <br /> forces met in open session, were collaborative, there were joint meetings with the City Council <br /> and Parks and Recreation Commission, and the Initiative was intended to protect the public <br /> process. He sees this Initiative as circumventing a public process that has not yet occurred. <br /> Special Meeting Minutes 11 June 26, 2008 <br />