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Councilmember Sullivan said the only advantage he sees of waiting is that when the Council <br />does discuss the report, it may come to the conclusion that it wants to adopt the ordinance <br />outright; however, he believed the changes of this were slim. <br />Mayor Hosterman opened public comment and noted there were no speakers. <br />Mayor Hosterman noted the Initiative was written without help from legal and planning staff, said <br />it says nothing about safeguarding the environment in the southeast hills, with no input from the <br />community and in her opinion poorly written, She said preserving the southeast hills has been <br />one of this Council's many priorities for a number of years, and requested staff move forward to <br />work on enacting correct language which can be legally implemented to safeguard the <br />southeast hills. <br />Councilmember Sullivan said whether individuals think the initiative is poorly written or not, the <br />fact is that signatures were obtained, it qualified for the ballot and it deserves to either be <br />adopted or placed on the ballot. He feels it is not about not liking the initiative but an attack on <br />citizens' rights to referend or create an initiative, which is one of the people's most important <br />rights. He said the Pleasanton Ridge was a citizen's initiative developed without City staff or <br />experts, said Measure D also protects the County from being developed outside of City limits, <br />believed sometimes measures do work and supported putting it on the ballot in a way it does <br />not compromise the integrity of the process. <br />Vice Mayor Thorne thanked staff for responding as quickly as it did with a very difficult and <br />thorough report, thinks the ultimate objective of the Council has been and is to develop a <br />comprehensive hillside protection ordinance. He believes those who signed the initiative have <br />that same goal and the debate here is the way to get there. <br />Councilmember McGovern voiced concerns about how the item was being discussed and said <br />the initiative does not remove any of the environmental protection from the General Plan, <br />overlays or anything in place. For the Council to say the Initiative is poorly written and that it had <br />no input from experts is an opinion and assumption. The reason the hillside preservation <br />ordinance is important is because there have been two developments approved with 50 units on <br />ridgelines, with one home where 40 feet was cut off the top of a hill to put in a 14,000 square <br />foot home. This has been in the City's General Plan for over 11 years, and felt the Council <br />should have approved it sooner and believes the issue is that people are concerned that other <br />developments are coming forward will be treated identically. She asked that it be placed on the <br />ballot and have straight-forward honest conversations about the Initiative. <br />Councilmember Cook-Kallio voiced her concerns with the Initiative's language, thinks all <br />stakeholders were not talked to, does not think the unintended consequences were explored, <br />agreed people do legislation all the time where unintended consequences happen but it is the <br />Council's job to be as careful as possible that it does not happen. She believes the Initiative is <br />vague and is bad law, it should go to the ballot, thinks more discussion is needed, and it may tie <br />the City up in litigation. She confirmed with the City Attorney that voters will be asked to vote on <br />the text of the Initiative; there will be a ballot question and within the voting materials will be the <br />text of the Initiative. <br />Motion: It was m/s by Hosterman/Cook-Kallio to order the election and direct staff to prepare for <br />the Council's July 15 meeting the required documents to place the initiative measure on the <br />November 2008 ballot. The motion passed by the following vote: <br />Regular City Council/ <br />Library Board of Trustees Minutes 11 June 17, 2008 <br />