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Community Care Licensing has its own manual and its own internal administrative <br />policies by which the provisions are further interpreted. She noted that staff has been in <br />communication with the Alameda County Counsel's Office to obtain more information <br />about how the California regulations are being interpreted on an administrative level, <br />and the results are still pending. <br />Commissioner Fox inquired if Title 22 could be printed off and provided tonight for the <br />Commission. Ms. Seto replied that she could go to her office and obtain a copy. She <br />noted that the regulation did include many different exemptions. <br />Commissioner Fox stated that Exemption 7 is public recreation program for less than <br />16 hours for a total of 12 weeks, operated by various agencies and not by a city or <br />county agency; Exemption 8 is public and private schools that are run by school <br />districts; Exemption 9 is a school parenting program; Exemption 10 is a child daycare <br />that operates only one day per week for no more than four hours on that one day; and <br />Exemption 12 is the one she had requested earlier today which states: "any program <br />that provides activities for children in an instructional nature in a classroom-like setting <br />and satisfies both of the following: (a) is operated only during periods of the year when <br />students in grades K-12 inclusive are normally not in session with the public school <br />district where the program is located due to regularly scheduled vacations; and <br />(b) offers any number of sessions in the period specified in paragraph (a) that when <br />added together, do not exceed a total of 30 days when only school-aged children are <br />enrolled or 15 days when children younger than school-age are enrolled in the <br />program." <br />Commissioner Fox stated that Exemption 12 is what sounds to be most like the <br />proposed use because it is a classroom-like setting, but it does not provide the 12-week <br />back-to-back session provision and does not discuss 16 hours or less versus 16 hours <br />or more. She added that she did not understand how the State could produce the letter <br />and cite the statute when nothing in Section 101158 matches what is stated in the letter. <br />She stated that she did not see the statute the State is referring to. <br />Ms. Seto reiterated that staff was trying to work with the County Counsel's Office to <br />receive information about how that office has administratively decided to interpret these <br />regulations. <br />Commissioner Fox stated that she was concerned by the fact that she did not see a <br />match in the exemption letter to what is in the actual Code of Regulations. She noted <br />that if the State is citing a California Code of Regulation which does not really exist or <br />which the Commission cannot find, she was not certain how the Commission can or <br />should rely on it. Ms. Seto stated there are many provisions in the same regulation <br />under those same sections that give various agencies the authority to do their own <br />implementation, and this might be the authority under which they are working to apply <br />this. <br />EXCERPTS: PLANNING COMMISSION MINUTES, December 10, 2008 Page 5 of 21 <br />