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� a <br /> CHURCH: It jammed up my computer, so I couldn't turn my computer on[inaudibleJ— <br /> KAY: Oh, no— <br /> UNGER: The photos in the background, yeah, was pretty explicit also, so,right? Let's— <br /> KAY: Yeah, the photographs also show the flooding issue; the videos are just a moving <br /> photograph that shows those— <br /> UNGER: I think we are okay for now. <br /> KAY: Okay, thank you, Mr. Chair. With that, the Director is recommending a favorable <br /> recommendation to the County Council for Change of Zone Application 18-232,with those <br /> proposed condition changes. <br /> UNGER: Great, thank you. • <br /> KAY: You're welcome. <br /> UNGER: Commissioners, questions? <br /> VITOUSEK: Sure. Just, my question is how do'you guys define development-generated runoff? <br /> KAY: So, any, any runoff or drainage issues that may be caused by any construction on the <br /> property. So anything having to do with the development,be that structures,be that earth <br /> movement, be that driveways, or anything like that. <br /> There are three conditions in the proposed, in the recommendation that do address those issues. <br /> They are fairly standard conditions of approval,that we put in most of our, most of our rezone <br /> approvals. And that's Condition–pardon me–Condition J, "All development generated runoff <br /> shall be disposed of onsite and not be directed toward any adjacent properties"; so in that case <br /> any runoff there would have to be engineered to stay onsite, be that in drainage ditches or <br /> drywells or anything like that. And then Condition K is a floodplain, so, "All development shall <br /> comply with Chapter 27, Floodplain Management, of the Hawai`i County Code." And then <br /> Condition L, which is, "All earthwork and grading activity shall conform to Chapter 10,Erosion <br /> and Sediment Control, of the Hawaii County Code. So these conditions are intended to ensure <br /> that any impact from the development are maintained onsite and not spread to adjoining <br /> properties. <br /> VITOUSEK: And,basically, that's, again,just the development-generated runoff itself that's the <br /> water that's coming off of the roads or that kind of stuff,not the stuff that's already coming <br /> down now without the development. <br /> KAY: That's correct, yeah,because much of the–pardon me–much of the property and <br /> adjoining properties are already in the AO flood zone, which is considered a special zone, which <br /> accounts for annual flooding of one to three feet. And so the videos that you've seen and the <br /> photos that you've seen kind of play that out. So,basically, the applicant, successors or assigns <br /> 4 <br /> DRAFT <br />