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Section 1. Introduction | 15Pleasanton Climate Action Plan 2.0 <br />By the Numbers <br />685 responses from two community surveys <br />13 Committee on Energy and the Environment public hearings <br />5 public hearings across City commissions and committees <br />4 City Council public hearings <br />2 meetings with the Chamber of Commerce <br />6 focus groups with representation from approximately 25 different <br />implementation partners and community organizations and businesses <br />2 community meetings <br />22,700 utility customers reached with mailer to raise awareness about the CAP <br />2.0 planning process <br />500+views of youth- and City-created videos on climate action <br />Dozens of social media posts, community newsletters, and newspaper and TV <br />ads to engage the community <br />1.3 CAP 2.0 Public Process and Engagement <br />How We Got Here <br />Pleasanton’s CAP 2.0 took two years to complete. The Committee on <br />Energy and the Environment (EEC) was the primary City committee <br />providing input and guidance to staff and the City’s professional services <br />team. The City relied on EEC direction and community input to inform <br />every stage of the plan’s development, from its overarching goals, vision <br />and targets, to sectors of focus, specific strategies and actions, and their <br />implementation. The City Council, commissions, committees, residents, <br />businesses, implementation partners, City staff, and the professional <br />services team worked together to: <br />• Conduct a baseline assessment of existing plans, policies, state <br />legislation, and progress since the 2012 CAP to understand the <br />existing context and build on lessons learned. <br />• Assess vulnerabilities to climate change impacts, especially <br />increased heat, extreme weather, wildfire, and water uncertainty. <br />• Prepare a comprehensive community engagement plan to guide <br />public outreach, engagement, and communications. The plan was <br />adjusted to focus on virtual engagement in light of COVID-19. <br />• Articulate a vision and guiding principles to guide strategy and <br />action development, co-benefits, and action selection criteria. <br />• Evaluate existing emissions and forecast future emissions, explore emission reduction pathways, and set 2030 and 2045 GHG emission <br />reduction targets. <br />• Develop and refine strategies and actions through focus groups, <br />workshops, and surveys; qualitative analysis of impact, cost, <br />feasibility, level of support, equity, and co-benefits; and quantitative <br />analysis of emissions reductions, costs, cost savings, and staff time to <br />implement CAP 2.0 actions. <br />• Prepare this CAP 2.0 document and corresponding CEQA materials <br />for environmental and public review. <br />How We Engaged <br />The City engaged community members and organizations, businesses, <br />other community stakeholders, City committees and commissions, and <br />City staff throughout the planning process using a range of in-person <br />and digital platforms. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the City paused <br />in-person engagement in March 2020 and transitioned all engagement <br />to the virtual environment, including the addition of virtual surveys, <br />trivia, and workshops to diversify engagement methods and reach more <br />residents.