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larger grading footprint. The impact of grading of the overall Environmentally <br />Superior Alternative, however, is reduced due to the reduction of total lots than <br />the Original Project. <br />• Biological Resources -Alternative 4 improves on the Original Project by greatly <br />reducing the amount of fill placed in drainages and reducing impacts on wetlands <br />and ephemeral streams. <br />• Geology, Soils, and Seismicity -Some construction in landslide /geologically <br />unstable areas would be reduced by the removal of homesites. <br />• Traffic -Reducing the number of lots from 98 to 51 units would reduce the <br />number of average daily traffic trips from 938 to 488 or by approximately 48%. <br />The result of these reductions would be to reduce the impacts at the <br />Angela/Bernal intersection from an unacceptable LOS "E" to an acceptable LOS <br />"D" and at the Hearst Drive/Bernal Avenue intersection from LOS F to LOS E. <br />• Police and Fire Services -The Original Project proposed two EVAs to serve 98 <br />homes while Alternative 4 proposes one fire road and one all surface road (in <br />addition to Hearst Drive itself) to serve 51 homes. With the reduction in number <br />of units the Fire Department finds these provisions to be acceptable. <br />No adverse impacts were found for Alternative 4 that were not also found for the <br />Original Project. Alternative 4 would provide mitigation of impacts superior to the <br />mitigation provided by the Original Project in the area of Biological Resources because <br />the amount of fill placed in drainages is reduced and thus impacts on wetlands and <br />ephemeral streams are also reduced. Accordingly, it is found to be the Environmentally <br />Superior Alternative. <br />The No Project Alternative <br />Description <br />An EIR is required to consider a "No Project" alternative. In the case of the Oak Grove <br />Planned Unit Development, the no project scenario takes as its starting point the <br />existing planning designation applicable to the site. As described in the DEIR, the 562- <br />acre site carries two designations: On the 489 acres within the Urban Growth Boundary <br />(UGB), the designation is Rural Density Residential (RDR), which allows no more than <br />one dwelling unit per five gross acres, or 98 dwelling units. On the 73 acres outside the <br />UGB, the designation is Public Health and Safety, which allows no development other <br />than asingle-family dwelling unit on existing private lots of record. (There is no existing <br />lot of record for this area.) <br />The Oak Grove Planned Unit Development is consistent with the level of development <br />the General Plan contemplates as the Original Project proposes exactly the maximum <br />number of residential units that the General Plan allows. The No Project Alternative <br />would be a project similarly consistent with the General Plan (i.e., a residential project of <br />98 units) but possibly configured in a different manner from the Original Project. <br />Page 8 of 43 <br />