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Res08 14883
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Res08 14883
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Last modified
8/6/2008 2:15:07 PM
Creation date
8/6/2008 2:15:06 PM
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Template:
CC Index
CC Index - Document Type
Resolution
Meeting Type
Regular
Agency Type
City Council
Date
8/4/2008
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<br />fisheries. <br />4. Decisions regarding the preservation or development of Open Space Lands have a <br />direct impact on Redwood City residents' health and welfare. Inappropriate <br />development of Open Space Lands can strain community services by significantly <br />increasing traffic and overtaxing available drinking water supplies. Our children's <br />opportunities to connect with and develop an appreciation of nature are lost through <br />the destruction of precious open spaces. <br />5. Redwood City neighborhoods already suffer repeated flooding during stonn events <br />coupled with high tides. San Francisco Bay water levels are expected to rise <br />significantly over the next 50 years. Urban expansion into flood-prone shoreline <br />areas should not be allowed without a vote of the City's residents. <br />6. The so-called "Urban Reserve," which according to a July 11,2005 City staff report <br />was applied without environmental review to certain bayfront properties such as Bair <br />Island to imply a possibility of future development, does not authorize development <br />of these lands. By enacting this Charter Amendment, the voters of Redwood City <br />ensure that current and future voters have the right to protect open spaces from the <br />threat of inappropriate development and that any development placed on Redwood <br />City's rare environmentally sensitive open spaces is the best possible project for the <br />environment and the community. <br /> <br />C. Threats to Redwood City's Open Space Lands: <br />1. Threats to Redwood City's Open Space Lands are growing as a result of developers <br />seeking to build on lands that have been designated in the City's general plan as open <br />space for decades. <br />2. Existing parks suffer from overuse and crowding and will not be able to meet the <br />recreational needs of a growing population. <br />3. The Parks and Recreation Department has documented that Redwood City ranks well <br />below other cities in San Mateo County in the level of per capita open space and park <br />area. <br />4. Redwood City faces a significant challenge to reaching its goal of three acres of parks <br />per 1000 residents, due to shrinking availability and rising cost of land. Loss of open <br />space will make this problem worse. <br /> <br />D. The Role of the Redwood City Charter: The California Constitution vests <br />Redwood City, as a charter city, with far-reaching authority to make and enforce <br />ordinances and regulations addressing municipal concerns. The City's power to control <br />its own land use decisions and the procedure by which those decisions are made derives <br />from both its inherent police power and its considerable authority as a charter city to <br />govern its own municipal affairs. <br /> <br />E. The Role of Redwood City Residents in Protecting Open Space: Redwood City <br />residents have long played a critical role in protecting open space and baylands within the <br /> <br />Page 2 <br />
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