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<br />D-8 | City of Pleasanton Existing Programs Review <br />Table D-1: Existing Housing Element Programs Review <br />Program <br /># Program Objectives Responsible <br />Party Evaluation Modify / Delete / <br />Continue <br />posting at public places subject to normal <br />procedures. <br />12.1 <br />Maintain zoning adequate to <br />accommodate Pleasanton’s share of the <br />regional housing need for all income <br />levels. Sites designated High Density <br />Residential or Mixed Use shall be <br />developed at a minimum density of 30 <br />units per acre, and comport with the <br />adopted Housing Site Development <br />Standards and Design Guidelines for <br />Multifamily Development. <br />- City Council <br />The City continues to <br />monitor the zoning within <br />the City to accommodate <br />all RHNA needs. This is <br />implemented on an <br />ongoing basis. <br />Modify: Update to comply <br />with 6th Cycle Housing <br />Element rezoning <br />requirements. <br />12.2 <br />Attempt to rehabilitate five ownership- <br />housing units affordable to extremely low-, <br />low- and very low-income households <br />identified as having major building code <br />violations each year between 2015 and <br />2023, and maintain their affordability. <br />Attempt to rehabilitate at least one <br />apartment complex by 2020. Single-family <br />homes will be identified through the City’s <br />Housing Rehabilitation Program which <br />already has in place an outreach program. <br />The City will survey existing apartment <br />complexes, including working with local <br />non-profit housing development agencies, <br />to ascertain the need for rehabilitation. <br />Owners of identified complexes will be <br />contacted and made aware of the <br />availability of rehabilitation assistance. <br />Five ownership units and <br />one apartment complex <br />prior to the end of the <br />Planning Period <br />Housing Division <br />Since October 2016, <br />Habitat for Humanity has <br />administered the City’s <br />Housing Rehabilitation <br />Program, which provides <br />grants or loans to <br />extremely low-, very low-, <br />and low-income <br />homeowners. No <br />apartment projects <br />sought City funding for <br />rehabilitation projects <br />during this time. Since <br />2015, the City has issued <br />15 rehabilitation grants to <br />lower income <br />homeowners through this <br />program. <br />Modify: Expand to create <br />an inventory of properties <br />eligible and/or potentially <br />in need of rehabilitation. <br />12.3 <br />Strive to construct, rehabilitate, and <br />conserve the City’s regional share of <br />housing within the constraints of available <br />infrastructure, traffic, air quality, and <br />financial limits, by the conclusion of the <br />current Regional Housing Needs <br />Determination period – in 2023. <br />- City Council <br />The City continues to <br />strive to construct <br />housing within the <br />constraints of available <br />infrastructure, traffic, air <br />quality, and financial <br />limits. Combined, the <br />City’s 2015-2023 housing <br />Delete: Retain as a <br />policy. Programs for no <br />net loss address regional <br />housing needs capacity <br />(see Programs 1.1 and <br />12.1).