Laserfiche WebLink
Council Members and Planning Commissioners asked questions and made <br />comments that included concerns with cost benefit and reminding residents to <br />view the City website for information on the various programs. The need to do a <br />better job of analyzing and articulating the information to the community was <br />stated. <br />Recommendation: <br />Receive information — No action required. (802) <br />B. Redwood City General Plan <br />II. Joint Study Session on the General Plan Vision and Process <br />Planning Manager Church explained that the meeting is not to make decisions <br />on specific issues but to begin discussion and provide general guidance on what <br />Council and Planning Commissioners do or do not want to see when the <br />document comes back later this summer. <br />Principal Planner Passanisi highlighted the role of the Downtown Area Plan, the <br />Downtown Study and the status of the General Plan. <br />Planning Commission Chairperson Paulson and Council Member Foust, Liaison <br />to the General Plan process, detailed the public input process that the Planning <br />Commission has been using over the past 12 months. <br />Council and Commission comments included the idea of using neighborhood <br />association meetings and going out where the residents already are <br />congregating such as the Farmers' Market rather than create new meetings to fit <br />into busy schedules. <br />Consultant Bottomley described the major themes that emerged from the <br />neighborhood meetings as stated in the staff report. <br />Public Comment: <br />Greg Greenway, Executive Director of Seaport Industrial Association, highlighted <br />that from a General Plan, long range planning point of view, it would benefit the <br />City to take into account the reality that industrial businesses plan to be in the <br />Seaport neighborhood for the long term. He stated that the area also represents <br />an intermodel transportation hub, and that it is an enormous recycling center. His <br />last overarching vision principle was that the Port and the industrial sector is a <br />part of the history, fabric and character of the community and unique to other <br />cities. He further expressed the support for the City's efforts in securing the water <br />supply and that the Bayfront Study comments should be incorporated into the <br />JOINT CITY COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES APRIL 4, 2005 <br />JOINT STUDY SESSION with PLANNING COMMISSION PAGE 4 <br />MINUTES BOOK NO. 60 <br />Page No. 437 <br />