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Land Use Element- Sustainability <br /> Program 2.1: Reduce the need for vehicular traffic by locating employment, residential, <br /> and service activities close together, and plan development so it is easily accessible by <br /> transit, bicycle, and on foot. <br /> Program 2.6: Require design features in new development and redeveloped areas to <br /> encourage transit, bicycle, and pedestrian access, such as connections between activity <br /> centers and residential areas, and road design that accommodates transit vehicles, <br /> where feasible <br /> Air Quality Element— Land Use <br /> Policy 2: Support development plans that reduce mobile-source emissions by reducing <br /> vehicle trips and vehicle-miles traveled (VMT). <br /> Policy 3: Separate air pollution sensitive land uses from sources of air pollution. <br /> Air Quality Element— Development <br /> Policy 5: Review proposed projects for their potential to impact air quality conditions. <br /> Program 5.1: Include air quality as a factor in the City's environmental review process. <br /> Encourage development plans which minimize negative impacts on air quality. <br /> CAP Strategies <br /> • Encourage and facilitate more walking and cycling trips. <br /> • Create the building site context that allows people to walk, bike or take transit <br /> rather than drive. <br /> • Decrease travel time and VMT, less idling leads to fuel savings and less <br /> consumption and GHG Emissions. <br /> The overarching goals of the above legislation and the City's policy documents are to <br /> reduce greenhouse gas emissions by encouraging infill development that would increase <br /> walking and bicycle riding, minimize VMT and reduce fuel consumption. Drive-throughs, <br /> by definition, are designed and oriented to automobile users, requiring inclusion of a <br /> dedicated drive-through queueing lane and site plan that can accommodate a stream of <br /> vehicles circulating into and through the drive-through. While drive-throughs can be <br /> designed to operate safely, they nonetheless favor automobile circulation over <br /> pedestrian access, and require more of a site to be dedicated to that need, versus <br /> pedestrian-oriented features and amenities. <br /> The General Plan and CAP identify vehicle fuel combustion as the City's largest single <br /> source of air pollution which is exacerbated by trip frequency and length/duration, as well <br /> as idling vehicles. Based on this, the City Council believes the drive-through component <br /> of the proposed restaurant would reduce the City's ability to meet the stated goals of the <br /> General Plan and CAP as the drive-through component would potentially increase <br /> vehicular trips and VMT, as well as increase both the number and the proportion of <br /> customers driving to the proposed restaurant, versus using alternative modes like <br />