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Director's Report CITY OF CUPERTINO 10300 TORRE AVENUE, CUPERTINO, CALIFORNIA 95014 DEPARTMENT OF COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT Subject: Report of the Community Development Direct~~ Planning Commission Agenda Date: Tuesday, December 11, 2007 The City Council met on December 4, 2007, and discussed the following items of interest to the Planning Commission: 1. Declaration of November 7, 2007 election results: The City Council adopted a resolution accepting the declaration of election results for the November 6, 2007 general election. The oath of office was administered to the newly elected Council member Gilbert Wong and reelected Council member Kris Wang. 2. Election of Mayor and Vice Mayor: The City Council elected Dolly Sandoval as Mayor and Orrin Mahoney as Vice Mayor. Council members and members of the audience were invited to say farewell to outgoing Council member Richard Lowenthal. 3. Retirement of Eileen Murray: Assistant City Attorney, Eileen Murray announced her retirement effective December 29,2007. Eileen has served as Assistant City Attorney since 1998. She will be greatly missed. 4. New Assistant Planner hired: Leslie Gross will be joining the Community Development Department as an Assistant Planner, beginning on December 10, 2007. Enclosures: Newspaper Articles Joint Venture calls for better valley cell phone coverage - Silicon Valley / San Jose Business Journal: Page 1 of 2 Silicon Valley / San Jose Business Journal. December 3, 2007 http://sanjose.bizjournals.com/sanjose/stories/2007/12/03/newscolumn 1 .htm I SILICON VALLEY I SAN JOSE BusinessJournal Friday, November 30. 2007 Joint Venture calls for better valley cell phone coverage Silicon Valley / San Jose Business Journal Few things about Silicon Valley frustrate the locals more than spotty cell phone service. The level of discontent is incongruous with the valley's stature in the technology world. The cell phone companies claim that the problem is because they have been unable to get local governments to allow the construction of cell phone towers where they are sorely needed. Now Joint Venture: Silicon Valley Network has entered the fray. It is collecting reports from angry cell phone users on where the dead zones are. It's putting the information on its Web site: ~~jQ~~!Y.~.~~!:,:~.~.Q~g. Russell Hancock, the president and CEO of Joint Venture, a business, labor, government, university and non-profit forum for problem solving, spoke with the Business Journal's Timothy Roberts about what the organization is doing. Q: Why all the fuss over cell phones? A: We don't have very good cell phone coverage in Silicon Valley. Some places just can't hold a signal. My favorite is Sand Hill Road. We can do better than this. Other places, even far-flung places like Asia, have figured it out. Q: Why haven't we figured it out? A: It comes down to towers. You have to site the transmitters and receivers. Cell phone use is increasing exponentially. We are experiencing a sea change as people replace land lines with cell phones. But cell phone companies have a hard time siting the towers. They get stalled in the approval process. We have a process in which it is easy for anyone at any point for some reason to object. Democracy is our best friend but sometimes it's also our worst enemy. Q: How can Joint Venture help? A: We will try to insert ourselves in the siting process. We want to be on the record in favor of more cell towers when these issues come up before government. This is more than a local decision. There is a regional interest, too. Bad cell phone service makes us less competitive. It's harder to do business here. There are also security concerns. People want to be able to call for help. People don't want to be without their cell phones anymore. We are also asking people to report dead zones to our Web site. And we want to equip the decision-makers with all the information that they need. We want to give them the best information. One thing we'd like to do is to create a primer that answers key questions and concerns, and provides a lot of evidence. It would show how other communities have resolved similar issues. It would contain a model ordinance. http://sanjose.bizjournals.com/sanjose/stories/2007/12/03/newscolumnl.htm!?t=printable 12/4/2007 Joint Venture calls for better valley cell phone coverage - Silicon Valley 1 San Jose Business Journal: Q: What would be in this primer? Page 2 of2 A: How to site a tower in a sensitive location, for example. Or the answer to the concerns that always seem to come up about the health impact ofliving near a cell tower. That issue has been refuted, yet it keeps coming up. We are trying to take that off the table. We also want the decision makers to know that they can disguise cell towers. People think the towers have to be ugly, but they can be built to look like a tree. We will be a neutral party. When the (cell phone) carriers say that the towers can be disguised, they are pressing a material interest. It's helpful to hear from a third party. Q: You are going to attend these meetings and hearings? A: We are actually going to show up at hearings. The classic thing is that all of the objectors will show up and the politicians will play to the majority in the room. Q: What are you going to do with the catalog of dead zones? A: Publish it. It will embarrass any community that is trying to attract business or tout its livability. All contents of this site @American City Business Journals Inc. All rights reserved. http://sanjose.bizjournals.com/sanjose/stories/2007 1 12/03/newscolumn l.html ?t=printable 12/4/2007 Sources: HP enters deal to sell Cupertino site to Sand Hill- Silicon Valley / San Jose Business Journal: Page 1 of 2 Silicon Valley I San Jose Business Journal - December 3, 2007 http://sanjose.bizjournals.com/sanjose/stories/2007/12/03/story8.htm I SILICON VALLEY I SAN JOSE BusilessJournal Friday, November 30, 2007 Sources: HP enters deal to sell Cupertino site to Sand Hill Silicon Valley I San Jose Business Journal.. by Sharon Simonson .!!.~~!.~!!.::.~~~~.~~~...~~.~. has entered into a contract to sell 17.4 acres in Cupertino once contemplated as the site for a large retail and housing mixed-used development that the city's voters rejected in a ballot referendum late last year. While the valley-based computer-equipment maker is not disclosing the potential buyer's name or the anticipated purchase price, according to commercial real estate sources, it is Sand Hill Properties and its principal Peter Pau. Pau also declined comment. The deal, assuming it goes through, would close a long and convoluted chapter in the history of the property, which remains vacant and undeveloped despite its excellent location in one of the region's most sought-after cities. Besides boasting frontage along busy Stevens Creek Boulevard, the property is a stone's throw from Cupertino Square, the former Vallco Fashion Park, which is undergoing massive redevelopment and recently traded to a well-capitalized international turn-around firm. Former Cupertino Mayor and long-time city councilman Richard Lowenthal, who leaves office this month after eight years in public service in his hometown, says he could not be happier with Pau's decision. It is widely believed at Cupertino City Hall that Sand Hill and Pau are the buyers, he says. "It's a wonderful thing. Sand Hill gets the community on board, which is probably the most important thing with that property, and they have a track record of (commercial) success," he says. For example, he cites Cupertino Village at Wolfe and Homestead roads in Cupertino. Pau acquired the conventional neighborhood center and redeveloped it in the late 1990S, transforming it from a "dead duck" to the city's busiest and most prosperous retail complex, Lowenthal says. The property, which now has an Asian theme, includes a hotel, which Pau built, and is anchored by 99 Ranch Market, a chain of grocery stores that specialize in Asian foods. "Cupertino Village is always mobbed," Lowenthal says. "Our worst problem there is that it does not have enough parking." Sand Hill sold the center, which has 114,000 square feet, for more than $65 million to an affiliate of :J.g.~.~~... ~~~!!Y..~.~.~P.~. in early 2006. Based in New York, Kimco is a publicly traded real estate investment trust that specializes in owning neighborhood shopping centers. Pau and Sand Hill hit another home run with a new Whole Foods grocery store, which opened earlier this year, also on Stevens Creek Boulevard, Lowenthal says. That store also has proven extremely popular with Cupertino shoppers, he says. http://sanjose.bizjournals.com/san jose/stories/2007 / 12/03/story8 .html ?t=printable 12/4/2007 Sources: HP enters deal to sell Cupertino site to Sand Hill - Silicon Valley 1 San Jose Business Journal: Page 2 of 2 At present, Pau's company is developing of 60,000-square-feet of offices in Cupertino dubbed Cupertino Landing. The three-story building, which was developed without signed tenants in hand, fronts North De Anza Boulevard across from the ~PP.!.~..!.!!~.~. headquarters. It is expected to be complete early next year. Pennsylvania home builder !~.!.!..~!..~!.~~.!:~...!.!!~.~. and local development partner Keenan & Bariteau had sought to build 380 condominiums and 113,000 square feet of new shop space on the 17-acre H-P site and a neighboring eight acres also owned by ;!!g. But after the council approved the project in March 2006, enraged Cupertino activists gathered sufficient voter signatures to put the project before the town's electorate. Some Cupertino residents are extremely sensitive to new-home construction in their community because they fear too many new school children will damage the town's respected school districts. Voters turned down the development, 63-37 percent, last November, overturning the ordinance that would have changed the zoning to allow it. Zoning now allows retail, offices, light industrial and hotels but no housing, according to public record. By law, the Cupertino city council was prohibited from entertaining a project akin to Toll's for the same site for the last year. In May, Apple acquired a portion of the property, the eight-acre parcel at 19191 Vallco Parkway that includes a nearly 150,000-square-foot office building. That building, which HP argued was functionally obsolete, had been slated for demolition under the previous plan. Public record of the sale to Apple does not include a purchase price though the property carried an assessed value of nearly $27 million for the 2006 tax year. Sand Hill also is redeveloping the Sunnyvale Town Center. SHARON SIMONSON covers real estatefor the Business Journal. Reach her at (408) 299-1853. All contents of this site @American City Business Journals Inc. All rights reserved. hUp:1 Isan jose. bizj ournals.comlsanj ose/stories12007 1 12/03/story8 .html ?t=printable 12/412007