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SUPPLEMENTAL MATERIAL <br /> Provided to the City Council <br /> Pleasanton City Clerk After Distribution of Packet <br /> •ubject: JDEDZ Comparative Analysis Date <br /> From: Matt Sullivan [mailto: ] <br /> Sent:Tuesday,August 16, 2016 10:09 AM <br /> To: Mayor and City Council<citycouncilpcitvofpleasantonca.gov>; Nelson Fialho<NFialho @cityofpleasantonca.gov> <br /> Subject:JDEDZ Comparative Analysis <br /> Dear Mayor, Council, and Nelson, <br /> I was surprised when reading the JDEDZ Supplemental Comparative Analysis for tonight's City Council <br /> meeting. I was expecting an impartial analysis of the effects of the initiative on the EDZ project, but what I <br /> found was a one-sided political argument against the initiative and in support of the big-box component of the <br /> plan. But then it struck me that the Mayor, three Councilmembers (with the fourth"neutral"), the city staff, the <br /> Planning Commission, and the Chamber of Commerce (who calls the shots anyway) all oppose the initiative <br /> and strongly supports Costco. Then it made sense: This is nothing but the first salvo in a city versus the public <br /> political campaign over a big-box store! The irony is that for those of us who oppose to the plan the city is <br /> using our own taxpayer money to fund a campaign against us. <br /> The Executive Summary lists some conclusions which seem to stray from previously presented "facts" into the <br /> realm of"political speech". For example: <br /> How can the report conclude that the transportation impacts of the initiative project would likely be the <br /> "Cow <br /> it would including one (or two?) big-box stores on the property? What about all the truck traffic that <br /> will be needed to support a Costco? What about all the cars going to and from the "biggest gas station in the <br /> state"? If Costco will be the regional draw its purported to be, what about all the cars coming on and off of I- <br /> 680 and I-580 to get there? This is a ludicrous conclusion. And since Costco/Nearon will not be paying for the <br /> critical transportation improvements on Johnson Drive, Stoneridge Drive, 580, 680, and 84 necessitated by the <br /> project as mitigations, the "diminishing feasibility" argument for funding is false. After all, with Costco, the <br /> people of Pleasanton will be providing most of this funding. <br /> 2. Similarly, the air quality argument is ridicules. Any reduction in traffic intensity that results in lower air <br /> quality impacts will be welcome. This position is like saying eating a piece of pizza for lunch is only <br /> marginally worse than a salad for your cholesterol, so why not have the pizza! <br /> 3. Regarding economic impacts, we SHOULD NOT be approving new retail projects that will be a parasite on <br /> our existing businesses whether they include a big-box store or not. This is a recipe for urban decay. The <br /> concept that the big-box would draw only from the region and that the other retail would draw only from the <br /> Pleasanton market is hard to believe. Funny that this conclusion wasn't presented in the EIR or original <br /> Economic Study. As I recall, the findings from the Economic Study was that the customers from the EDZ <br /> would come from population growth, not existing markets. This new conclusion seems to be inconsistent with <br /> these earlier statements. The authors of these studies are still ignoring the negative impacts big box stores have <br /> had on local economies all across the country as if Pleasanton exists in some kind of bubble where these facts <br /> do not apply. As I have argued previously, perhaps we should keep the zoning as it is and provide space for <br /> Atil'ght industrial, R&D, and service commercial. This is true economic diversity, not ever more retail projects in <br /> ace to the bottom with our neighboring cities. <br /> 1 <br />