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09/09/2013 <br /> Impact: Impact 7-18: Cumulative With Project Impact on Marsh Road/Scott Drive <br /> Intersection. Under Cumulative With Project conditions during the PM peak <br /> hour, the intersection, would remain at LOS F and the proposed project could <br /> contribute up to 14.4 seconds of delay. The intersection of Marsh Road/Scott <br /> Drive is located in the City of Menlo Park. <br /> Mitigation: Mitigation 7-18. To mitigate the cumulative impact at the intersection of Marsh <br /> Road and Scott Drive, the eastbound approach of Scott Drive would need to be <br /> restriped to include a total of one shared through/left-turn lane and one right-turn <br /> lane. (Marsh Road is considered north-south and Scott Drive is considered east- <br /> west.) With these improvements, the level of service (LOS) at this intersection <br /> would remain an unacceptable LOS F during the PM peak hour. Although the <br /> LOS F still exceeds the City of Menlo Park LOS standard, the LOS under <br /> Cumulative With Project conditions would be better than that under Cumulative <br /> No Project conditions. <br /> Traffic from the proposed project could contribute up to 14.4 seconds to the PM <br /> delay at this intersection over Cumulative No Project conditions (see Draft EIR <br /> Table 7.16); other Cumulative growth could add up to 74.4 seconds to the delay <br /> over Near Term No Project conditions. The proposed project would contribute its <br /> fair share to a mitigation fund established to pay for the cost of this improvement <br /> (estimated, based on the Draft EIR, to be 16 percent) at the time of issuance of a <br /> building permit or, if the City adds the improvements to its Traffic Impact Fee <br /> Program (TIF) project list, the proposed project would pay its Traffic Impact Fee <br /> in effect at time of payment and issuance of a building permit. <br /> Finding: Implementation of Mitigation 7-18 would reduce the project's contribution to this <br /> cumulative impact to a less-than-significant level. However, because this <br /> improvement would require City of Menlo Park approval, the City of Redwood <br /> City cannot ensure the construction of this improvement. Without implementation <br /> of the proposed mitigation, the impact would be significant and unavoidable. <br /> Facts in Support of Finding: Implementation of Mitigation 7-18 would reduce the project's <br /> contribution to the cumulative traffic impact at the Marsh Road/Scott Drive <br /> intersection to a less-than-significant level through the project's payment of its <br /> fair share (estimated to be 16 percent) to a mitigation fund, or if in effect at <br /> building permit issuance, through payment of its City Traffic Impact Fee, to <br /> restripe the intersection. However, the City cannot guarantee in advance that the <br /> City of Menlo Park will approve the mitigation, so the impact is currently <br /> considered significant and unavoidable. These facts are described in Draft EIR <br /> chapter 7 (Transportation, Circulation, and Parking) on pages 7-1 through 7-70, <br /> Draft EIR appendix 21.3 (Supplemental Transportation Information), and Final <br /> EIR appendix A (Supplemental Traffic Information), which are hereby <br /> incorporated by reference. <br /> Impact: Impact 7-19: Cumulative With Project Impacts on Freeway Segments. <br /> Traffic generated by the proposed project is expected to result in the following <br /> freeway segment operational effects: <br /> ATTY/RE50.2901/STANFORD EIR CERTIFICATION RESO.#15294 <br /> REV:09-10-13 VR MUFF#100 <br /> Page 40 of 55 <br />