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Councilmember Sullivan said he was confused with the direction, said Karla Brown discussed <br /> the intent of the Initiative authors and to him, and the significance of this is that the agenda <br /> report identified many ways of how things could be interpreted. It seems that by the sponsors <br /> saying the intent of what was meant helps not only the voters understand but it also helps the <br /> City to understand those issues and provides a direction to develop that implementing <br /> ordinance later, which he thinks is necessary after the vote in November. He felt it gives Council <br /> guidance as to the Happy Valley Bypass Road, how it affects assisted living units, and plus it is <br /> in the public record. <br /> City Attorney Roush said he would generally agree with that; when called upon to interpret <br /> Initiatives, because there is no legislative history that might accompany a Council adopted <br /> statute or ordinance, courts do look to ballot arguments in terms of what information was <br /> presented to voters, and when it came time for staff to apply a particular project to the Initiative, <br /> they would look to what was expressed as the intent. <br /> Councilmember Sullivan said it provides some guidance. He said he believes the Initiative, what <br /> the proponents and what the 5,000 people who signed it did, is consistent with current General <br /> Plan policy, the policy of this City Council, and the priority to do a southeast hills ordinance. The <br /> goal of the City Council priority is a Southeast Hills Protection Plan, to reduce development in <br /> the southeast hills and get as much open space as possible. To him, this Initiative is exactly a <br /> means to achieving that goal. As far as a Council-sponsored Initiative, it could have done this <br /> before starting the Oak Grove process. Instead of going first to developing some hillside <br /> protection ordinance, we decided to use another process and he was an advocate for that <br /> process which was engaging neighbors and the developer to see if a compromise could be <br /> reached; not create an ordinance first. Getting enough signatures for the ballot tells him that a <br /> sufficient number of people in town did not like that approach and that we should have done the <br /> hillside protection ordinance first. Had this Initiative not qualified for the ballot, this Council would <br /> not be advocating to quickly put some sort of hillside protections in place, so he therefore <br /> disagrees with much of what he has heard. He said the report outlined many possible scenarios <br /> with a lot of questions the Council asked, he thinks it is very important that the proponents <br /> articulated their intent because it clarifies the more ambiguous items we are pointing to. He <br /> thinks the language is simple, straight-forward and reflective of what the community wants, <br /> thinks it has been helpful that they want option 1 on page 19 of what the 10-unit exemption <br /> means, they have clarified their intent on the housing cap as applied to assisted living facilities, <br /> and he thinks the intent on the Initiative as applied to roads answers the question about the <br /> Happy Valley Bypass Road. <br /> He said other concerns raised include the fiscal issues which have been demonstrated to be <br /> negligible. Regarding the school district, he thinks it is very likely that the Initiative itself would <br /> have no impact on the school district as far as their plans to build out facilities. The impact will <br /> be when discussion is held on how we want to build out the town. None of the other General <br /> Plan policies go away; just because we have a 10-unit exemption doesn't mean we will turn the <br /> hills into West Virginia and flatten them out, which he believes is a false argument. Regarding <br /> the 25% slope, his conclusion is that it is just fine-tuning what that is. <br /> Some of the positive things the report points out is that this would likely result in more workforce <br /> housing. The more houses built in the hills, the less opportunity the City will have to do <br /> something else. Regarding options outlined by staff and the current motion, he thinks the <br /> Council should do nothing and let the Initiative stand on its own. He thinks we should allow a <br /> debate on the pros and cons and let this work itself out in the community and the vote in <br /> November. Through this exercise, the citizens of Pleasanton will make an informed decision. It <br /> Special Meeting Minutes 14 June 26, 2008 <br />