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ATTACHMENT 5 <br />PCUP-200, John Pfund, Tri-Valley Martial Arts <br />Application for a conditional use permit to allow a martial arts academy which would (a) <br />include up to 20 students ages 5 to 12 years, and an additional 10 students 16 years and <br />older and 1 employee, Monday through Friday between the hours of 11:30 a.m. and <br />9:00 p.m.; and (2) provide (a) child transportation to the academy from elementary and <br />middle schools, (b) an afternoon program for children between the hours of 11:30 a.m. and <br />6:15 p.m., (c) an area for homework activities, (d) after-school martial arts-related games <br />and activities, (e) seasonal camps, and (f) care and supervision from 9:00 a.m. to 6:15 p.m. <br />on school holidays, two weeks during the school winter break, and ten weeks during the <br />school summer break, in an existing building located at 1262 Quarry Lane, Suite A, in the <br />Valley Business Park. Zoning for the property is PUD-I (Planned Unit Development - <br />Industrial) District. <br />Ms. Amos presented the staff report and detailed the history, layout, and scope of this <br />application. <br />Ms. Decker stated that staff had received various questions regarding the project and wished to <br />answer them for the benefit of all the Commissioners. <br />Ms. Decker then addressed the question of how the program interfaced with the school system <br />and whether it was specifically endorsed by the Pleasanton Unified School District (PUSD). <br />When staff discussed this with PUSD, the District responded that while business brochures for <br />extra-curricular activities are made available to families, it was not specifically endorsed by the <br />District and that businesses operated independently of the District. <br />Ms. Decker also addressed what school sites the applicant had been transporting children from in <br />Pleasanton to his facility prior to the City's cease letter to the applicant that he cease operations <br />pending a decision on the conditional use permit. The school sites were was Lydiksen <br />Elementary School, Hearst Elementary School, Valley View Elementary School, and Pleasanton <br />Middle School. She added that at Valley View Elementary School, there was an adult from the <br />school to the van provided by teaching staff from PUSD. She noted that staff was questioned <br />regarding the pickup location by the van and that if that was slightly off school property, which <br />introduced liability issues. She noted that the District and the applicant were addressing that <br />issue. <br />Ms. Decker noted that the question of how the children were being picked up had been addressed <br />thoroughly in the staff report; the van could transport up to 14 children and an employee's sports <br />utility vehicle was capable of transporting up to seven children and would be driven by a private <br />party. The condition of approval stating that parents would sign the children into and out of the <br />facility originated from the Planning Commission's specific desire to have children escorted by a <br />supervising adult; however, it did not address transportation. <br />Ms. Decker noted that staff had received two letters from Barbara Bobincheck, the Licensing <br />Program Manager from the Department of Social Services (DSS), one stating that the facility <br />needed a child daycare license, and another, superseding the first letter, stating that they did not <br />need a daycare license. The policy was faxed to staff, outlining how the policy can be exempted <br />EXCERPTS: PLANNING COMMISSION MINUTES, February 13, 2008 Page 1 of 19 <br />