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In response to Councilmember Balch's inquiries, Assistant to the City Manager Hopkins clarified <br /> the Governor's budget is the funding mechanism and needs to pass both houses. She confirmed <br /> this is simply the proposed budget and there remains a long process with many opportunities for <br /> revision before a final version is approved. <br /> In response to Councilmember Balch's inquiry, Assistant to the City Manager Hopkins confirmed <br /> the HAU will be providing technical assistance and other items which would benefit the City's <br /> staff. <br /> In response to Councilmember Balch's earlier inquiry, Niccolo DeLuca, Senior Director at <br /> Townsend Public Affairs, confirmed this is a part of the Governor's proposal and must go through <br /> a long process before passage in June. <br /> In response to Councilmember Narum's inquiry, Mr. DeLuca could not confirm if the HAU had <br /> been previously approved and the Governor is simply attempting to fund it now. <br /> In response to Vice Mayor Testa's inquiry, Mr. DeLuca advised meetings are already public and <br /> some communities have concerns based on the Governor's statement. He noted some <br /> communities are comparing the Governor's budgetary language to a previous slip-up over his <br /> remarks on high-speed rail which were later clarified. Mr. DeLuca suggested working together to <br /> help Pleasanton through this proposal and noted there have been multiple differing reactions from <br /> other cities. <br /> In response to Vice Mayor Testa's inquiry, Mr. DeLuca stated the Governor's proposed budget <br /> includes about $650 million for affordable housing. He added this does not include Assembly <br /> proposals to fund affordable housing citing Assembly Bill 71 which is in the billions. He added the <br /> Senate has been amiable to helping cities address homelessness and affordable housing but <br /> does not yet have a proposal. <br /> In response to Mayor Brown's inquiry, Mr. DeLuca stated he cannot speculate on the intent <br /> behind the Governor's antagonistic statement. He noted he can understand the point of view on <br /> the statement from cities. He advised, based on the City's Legislative Framework, it is wiser to <br /> send a letter asking how they can work together. <br /> Mayor Brown noted Pleasanton has an approved Housing Element which should be in the letter. <br /> In response to Councilmember Balch's inquiry, Mr. DeLuca advised the draft letter would be <br /> helpful. He stated their tact has been to be selective on focused bills to receive extra effort and <br /> credited staff for its diligent work on previous letters. He added their preference is to be thoughtful <br /> and when they do weigh in, to stress Pleasanton's uniqueness. <br /> In response to Vice Mayor Testa's inquiry, Mr. DeLuca stated he could not confirm the overall cost <br /> of meeting affordable housing mandates statewide. He added there is also Senate Bill 5 which is <br /> a new affordable housing bond being introduced this year to help cities fund affordable housing to <br /> meet their Regional Housing Needs Allocation (RHNA) numbers. <br /> Mayor Brown opened public comment. <br /> Becky Dennis believes the Council is more aligned with the CCLC's perspective in taking an <br /> adversarial tone with the State. She cautioned against taking this tone, citing the expense and <br /> reputation hit from the failed Urban Habitat v. City of Pleasanton lawsuit. <br /> Mayor Brown closed public comment. <br /> City Council Minutes Page 10 of 12 February 2, 2021 <br />