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residence, with the remaining acreage as one parcel. Based on the preceding, the Planning <br /> Director has agreed to initiate the repeal of the subject ordinance in its entirety, which <br /> will revert the zoning of the parcels to A-20a,pursuant to Condition Q of the subject <br /> ordinance, which allows the Director to initiate reversion of land to its original zoning or <br /> rezoning to a more appropriate designation should conditions of approval not be met or <br /> substantially complied with in a timely fashion. This will facilitate the proposed <br /> consolidation/resubdivision action required by the Trust. <br /> A review of Planning Department records indicates that the applicant worked <br /> diligently to complete conditions of approval and requirements of the tentative <br /> subdivision approval, however, the project ultimately stalled after the last time extension <br /> to complete subdivision requirements passed in 2015 and no further time extensions were <br /> sought. <br /> The proposed reversion to the original A-20a zoning would be consistent with the <br /> General Plan's Land Use Pattern Allocation Guide(LUPAG) map Important Agricultural <br /> Lands (ial) designation, which are lands, "with better potential for sustained high <br /> agricultural yields because of soil type, climate, topography, or other factors. <br /> Furthermore, since the subject parcel was rezoned the Ka`u Community Development <br /> Plan (CDP)was adopted. This long-range planning document articulates several goals, <br /> policies and actions related to conservation/preservation and protection of <br /> important/prime agricultural lands in Ka`u. Finally, the official Ka`u CDP Land Use <br /> Policy Map designates the subject rezone area as Important Agricultural Lands. Based on <br /> the preceding, the reversion to A-20a zoning will conform to the overall agricultural <br /> character of the surrounding area and will conform to the General Plan and Ka`u CDP. <br /> As required by the APD ordinance, the applicant retained Idaun & Associates <br /> to conduct an Archaeological Inventory Survey(AIS) for the entire project area. The <br /> AIS found that the area had been heavily impacted by historic and modern sugar cane <br /> cultivation and no remains of the former Meyer Camp and associated cemetery were <br /> identified by the survey. The AIS found a single archaeological site (remnants of a <br /> historic flume) and determined that the site was, "only significant for its information <br /> contend and the inventory-level documentation will be sufficient to warrant a <br /> 2 <br />