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PC-2009-18, PUD-68, CONTINUING LIFE COMMUNITIES
City of Pleasanton
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PC-2009-18, PUD-68, CONTINUING LIFE COMMUNITIES
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CITY CLERK
CITY CLERK - TYPE
RESOLUTIONS
DOCUMENT DATE
6/24/2009
DESTRUCT DATE
PERMANENT
DOCUMENT NO
PC-2009-18
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7:00 p.m. and before 10:00 a.m., and proper soil preparation for landscaped <br />areas that includes a minimum of two inches of mulch and two inches of <br />organic soil amendment, as recommended by a qualified landscape <br />architect. <br />16. Pest Management Plan. An Integrated Pest Management Plan shall be <br />prepared by each project developer, and implemented to minimize the risk <br />of pollutants associated with landscape establishment and maintenance <br />practices in surface water runoff and infiltration to groundwater. All <br />Integrated Pest Management Plan guidelines shall comply with California <br />Department of Pesticide Regulation and Alameda County Agricultural <br />Commissioner rules and regulations in regards to pesticide storage, use, <br />transportation, reporting, and safety. The plan shall encourage minimization <br />and efficiency of chemical and fertilizer use. Because the receiving water <br />has been listed as impaired by diazinon, diazinon use shall be prohibited. <br />Each property owner shall be responsible for implementation of the <br />Integrated Pest Management Plan. The plan must be approved by the City <br />Engineer prior to the beginning of occupancy. <br />17. Cooperative Agreement—Traffic Mitigation. Prior to the recordation of a <br />final map for the Staples Ranch Site, the City of Pleasanton will confer with <br />the City of Livermore, the City of Dublin and Alameda County on a strategy <br />to fund and complete mitigation measures within each other's jurisdictions. <br />More specifically, the City of Pleasanton shall seek to enter into one or more <br />binding agreements with each of these other local agencies in order to <br />facilitate a fair and equitable sub -regional approach to traffic mitigation, to <br />the mutual benefit of all of the affected jurisdictions. Depending on the <br />willingness of these other local agencies to enter into such agreements, the <br />ultimate result may be a single multijurisdictional agreement or one or more <br />agreements between Pleasanton and one or more of the other agencies. <br />The strategy will address fair share mitigation for projects approved by one <br />jurisdiction that contribute cumulatively considerable traffic to intersections <br />and roadway segments in neighboring jurisdiction(s) with cumulatively <br />substandard LOS. <br />The applicable standard for LOS will be that established by each local <br />agency for its current jurisdictional area and its sphere of influence. If <br />spheres of influence overlap or jurisdiction over an intersection is split <br />between two local agencies, the standard to be achieved by mitigation, <br />where feasible, will be determined by mutual agreement of the jurisdictions <br />involved. <br />The City of Pleasanton is willing to ensure that projects it approves <br />contribute fair share mitigation cost for improvements in other jurisdictions <br />but only if the other jurisdictions are also willing to reciprocate for projects <br />14 <br />
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