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THE CITY OF <br /> East Pleasanton Specific Plan <br /> Public Comments pLEASANTO\L <br /> "Underutilized." There is nothing more "underutilized" than open space. For instance, the Coyote <br /> Valley. <br /> Vote no on Measure B, a measure promulgated by billionaire developers at the expense of San <br /> Jose's taxpayers and environment. <br /> And vote yes on Measure C, a measure sponsored by the mayor and city council that would <br /> retain some public voice in plans for open land at the city's edge. Measure C would require <br /> fiscal and environmental review and, if housing is approved, require 50 percent to be affordable. <br /> Most of the 910 units of senior housing sought in Evergreen's industrial-zoned land are not for <br /> struggling moms and pops: 80 percent will be a gated community of million-dollar homes for <br /> people 55 or older. The 20 percent of affordable apartments will, of course, be outside the walls, <br /> and developers will be exempt from city requirements to build them concurrently with the market <br /> rate homes. <br /> If all the land potentially affected by Measure B citywide could no longer be used for economic <br /> development, it would result in a $24.5 million annual budget deficit. San Jose would lose its <br /> capacity to add the jobs it needs for a stable tax base like ones built by Santa Clara, Sunnyvale <br /> and Palo Alto. <br /> The rural Coyote Valley at the southern edge of San Jose for decades has been reserved for <br /> premium job-creating development. Many now believe this rich farming and wildlife corridor <br /> should never be developed at all. For either purpose, if Measure B passes, kiss it good-bye. <br /> The developers' campaign for Measure B and against Measure C argues that C is too complex. <br /> Yes, land use is a legally complex topic. But Measure B is 367 pages — read it, we dare you — <br /> and rife with contradictions and empty promises. <br /> One of them is to try to give a "preference" to veterans for housing. Under most circumstances, <br /> this would be illegal. <br /> See for yourself. Read the arguments and analyses of these measures on the ballot or on the <br /> City of San Jose election website. Look at the Yes and No campaigns' web sites. Notice who is <br /> supporting Measure B and who is not. Hint: Opponents include the AARP, League of Women <br /> Voters, affordable housing advocates including the grassroots PACT and the watchdog Citizens <br /> for Fiscal Responsibility. <br /> Measure B is not about Evergreen. It is about breaking San Jose's general plan to benefit <br /> developers. Vote no on B. And vote yes on Measure C to strengthen protection of rural land, <br /> whether B passes or not. <br /> Provided to City Council for the February 18, 2020, Meeting 33 <br />