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Chair Blank stated that the applicant is proposing to install a wall on one side to screen the tank <br />Commissioner Fox stated that she would like the tank screened from Diamond Court as well. <br />Chair Blank stated that he did not think it was the applicant's fault that the Diamond Court fence <br />was replaced and that he felt that requiring the applicant to screen the tank from Diamond Court <br />is equivalent to punishing the applicant because somebody replaced the solid fence with an open <br />fence. <br />Commissioner Fox stated that if the Commission were considering this use permit without any <br />work having been done previously as in the case of the sprung structure for the Presbyterian <br />Church on Valley Avenue and Busch Road, the Commission would have considered the property <br />placement to make sure it was properly screened and was right in the neighborhood rather than <br />looking out someone's door. <br />Chair Blank stated that this site is zoned agriculture and would have a different standard than the <br />environment of the sprung structure which is surrounded by houses and people. <br />Chair Fox noted that there have been other agriculturally zoned properties such as the <br />St. Elizabeth Seton Church where the Commission ensured that the location of the heating and <br />air-conditioning units for the expansion were away from the neighbors. <br />Chair Blank noted that the site in question is and open agriculture, unlike that of the St. Elizabeth <br />Seton Church property. <br />Commissioner Narum stated that she did not support installing any structure around the tank and <br />that if the Commission wanted the applicant to do that, the structure should look like a barn to <br />keep in line so it blends with the agricultural character of the site. <br />Chair Blank noted that planting bushes and painting the tank would blend in with agriculture. <br />Commissioner Narum stated that she did not want to make the determination of what color <br />would blend in with the site because a color that might blend in her opinion may not appear to be <br />so to someone else. She recalled that for the Sarich property, the Commission went through <br />visual analysis and planting bushes on-site. She suggested that 25-gallon bushes on the back side <br />might screen the tank, including the view from Diamond Court. She added that with respect to <br />screening from Diamond Court, she did not think the applicant should be punished for something <br />over which she had no control. She reiterated that she would not support building a structure <br />around the tank unless it looked like a barn. <br />Chair Blank inquired if the color of the paint could be left to the discretion of the Director of <br />Planning and Community Development. <br />Ms. Decker noted that the typical colors of City tanks that have gone up include Pleasanton <br />green, which is more or less the same color as the tank; beige, which is meant to fade into the <br />beige landscape when summertime comes; and a lighter sage color that fades off like the tank on <br />Bonde Ranch. She noted that staff has had discussions with respect to brown colors, and those <br />EXCERPTS: PLANNING COMMISSION MINUTES, Apri19, 2008 Page 13 of 15 <br />