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<br />Commissioner O'Connor inquired if the tree replacement plan would come back to the <br />Commission with the Pun or with the design review for each lot. Mr. Iserson replied that the <br />plan would come back both with the Tentative Tract Map, which legally creates the lots, and <br />with the design review of the individua110ts. He explained that this is a three-step process: the <br />Pun development plan, the Tentative Tract Map, and the design review of the individual <br />proposed homes. <br /> <br />Commissioner O'Connor further inquired whether the Commissioners would have the latitude to <br />address the size of the tree replacement when it comes before them at the Tentative Tract Map or <br />ifthe tree ordinance would simply be enforced. Mr. Iserson replied that the ordinance does not <br />generally go into that level of detail. He continued that the plan typically requires a mix of tree <br />sizes because the larger sized trees provide immediate impact and the smaller sized trees tend to <br />grow faster than the larger trees and do better in certain cases. <br /> <br />Commissioner Fox noted that the staff report indicated there was a difference between the <br />manner in which the applicant measured the height of the house and what staff was <br />recommending. She inquired what this difference was, whether the photosimu1ations were based <br />on the applicant's or staff's way, and what the net change might be. <br /> <br />Mr. Iserson indicated that what staffis recommending is derived from the Specific Plan, the <br />traditional measurement in which the vertical measurement is from the lowest elevation of the <br />building, where the house meets the finished grade, to the highest elevation of the building, as <br />opposed to the applicant's measurement which defines the proposed finished grade as six inches <br />below the top of the foundation. He added that quantifying the difference between the two <br />measurements would depend on the amount of grading done and the design of the house. <br /> <br />Commissioner Fox commented that based on the Specific Plan's definition then, it would not <br />make a difference if, from a neighbor's standpoint, the rear of a house, which is not visible from <br />Vineyard Avenue, is measured at 32 feet high. Mr. Iserson clarified that this would depend on <br />where the neighbor is standing in that if the neighbor's view shows the lowest and the highest <br />points of the house, the neighbor would perceive the building to be that high. He added, <br />however, that this may not occur considering the large amount of trees and the location ofthe <br />few neighbors in the area. <br /> <br />Commissioner Blank moved to make the Conditional Use Permit findings as listed in the <br />staff report, noting that this is an environmentally superior location for the water tank, and <br />to approve Cases PDR-520 and PCUP-162, subject to the Conditions of Approval listed in <br />Exhibit B of the staff report, as recommended by staff, with the modifications to the <br />conditions listed in the various staff memos to the Commission. <br />Commissioner Fox seconded the motion and proposed an amendment to the motion that <br />the landscaping for the retaining wall be fully irrigated to ensure that the wall is fully <br />screened year-round. <br /> <br />Commissioner Blank accepted the proposed amendment. <br /> <br />DRAFT EXCERPTS: PLANNING COMMISSION MINUTES, May 24, 2006 <br /> <br />Page70f9 <br />