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CITY OF PLEASANTON <br />CITY COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES <br />February 24, 2022 <br />This meeting was conducted in accordance with Governor Newsom's <br />Executive Order N-29-20 and AB 361 COVID-19 pandemic protocols. <br />SPECIAL MEETING <br />Mayor Brown called the teleconferenced special meeting of the City Council from various remote <br />locations to order at the hour of 7:00 p.m. <br />ROLL CALL <br />Present: Councilmembers Arkin, Balch, Narum, Testa, Mayor Brown <br />Absent: None <br />PUBLIC COMMENT <br />Brad Hirst urged the City Council to select a map easy for residents to understand using main arterial <br />roads and other easy boundaries and encouraged the Council to keep neighborhoods intact. He noted <br />it is a 10 -year plan and a long-range decision. He endorsed the Lime Plan for its simplicity of having the <br />four districts meet at a single point and having Districts 1 and 3 vote in 2022 and Districts 2 and 4 vote <br />in 2024 for ease of understanding. <br />Larry Annis endorsed the Lime Plan, stating the other maps under consideration all look <br />gerrymandered. He added the Lime Plan has simple boundaries which are easy to understand. He <br />added the Lime Plan has the lowest population deviation between districts and noted each Lime Plan <br />district has a geographic diversity of downtown, suburban, and outlying neighborhoods. <br />Steve Van Dorn, President of the Pleasanton Chamber of Commerce, reported the Chamber analyzed <br />each map and recommends the Lime Plan. He stated it is because the Lime Plan splits downtown <br />along Main Street, follows major arterial streets, has the lowest population deviation at 1.8%, would be <br />easily defensible if the City faces a lawsuit, is easy to understand, and features the simplest split of the <br />Hacienda business park. He cited the Tangerine Map's awkward split of downtown and the use of <br />residential streets for dividers as negatives. He stated, should the Chamber -supported Lime Plan be <br />chosen, the Chamber also recommends having Districts 1 and 3 vote in 2022. <br />In response to Mayor Brown's inquiry, Mr. Van Dorn stated he must have misunderstood how the Lime <br />Plan splits Hacienda business park. <br />In response to Councilmember Testa's inquiry, Mayor Brown confirmed they have to wait until after <br />public comment has concluded to discuss the comments. <br />Justin Brown, speaking as a citizen and not as a Planning Commissioner, endorsed the Lime Plan. He <br />stated the most important criteria for him is having something easy to understand, a goal best met by <br />the Lime Plan's simplicity. He stated the map is easily defensible and added it has the lowest <br />deviations. He added he does not like the Tangerine Plan's boundary between Districts 3 and 4 and the <br />difficulty of explaining which district many residents would live in. <br />Ken Morgan endorsed the Lime or Green Plans. He stated it is easy to understand visually for using <br />major arterials, and has normal shapes, noting many cities in California and elsewhere have squiggly - <br />lined districts. He stated there are some positives despite the City being coerced into this process, <br />citing the opportunity for a Councilmember to gain an even better understanding of their district and be <br />able to serve it better by more closely knowing its needs. He stated it would be best to split the city like <br />