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WATANABE: Okay. <br />OGATA: I have a -. <br />WATANABE: Yes, Ms. Ogata. <br />OGATA: I have a question. As I read it now and as I understand it – so please <br />correct me if I’m wrong – we would receive a draft of the Plan, we would have, the proposal is to <br />have 60 days to turn that around; however, if the Commission saw the need for an amendment or <br />a revision, would that restart the 60 days? <br />YUEN: No, that would be part of your recommendation up to the Council. <br />OGATA: Okay. So it wouldn’t, I mean, say we have been discussing that for 40 <br />days so far and then all of a sudden somebody comes up with a recommendation for a revision, <br />or something like that. Would that kind of amendment or revision restart the clock or we’ll <br />already be in the 40 days? <br />YUEN: No, once the Plan is transmitted to the Commission, that’s when the 60 <br />days start, and regardless of what the Commission may do in its own deliberations. Because if <br />you restart it for amendments by the Commission, conceivably, you know, that could itself take <br />forever; just as if you had no timeframe, you would not know when to bring it out of the <br />Commission. <br />OGATA: Okay. <br />WATANABE: Mr. Woodward. <br />WOODWARD: I think what Mr. Yuen is saying is we don’t make the final deliberations; <br />we just send a recommendation to the Council. And we have quite a bit of leeway. If we want <br />to send a recommendation to approve provisions 1 through 8 of 9, we send that recommendation <br />to the Council; if there is one we object to, we suggest revisions to it. It’s really up to the <br />Council then to make the decision. So I don’t think it’s a matter of having it back and forth <br />between us and the people that drafted the original Community Development Plan; it’s a matter <br />of sending our recommendation to the Council. And we have the ability to modify or make <br />recommendations on, you know, line items essentially. <br />WATANABE: Mr. Alameda. <br />ALAMEDA: I’m just thinking about it, I don’t see three more months being that big of a <br />problem considering the ten years that we may never see the document again. You know what I <br />mean? It’s just three more months of more scrutiny, additional scrutiny that the County Council <br />can probably benefit from. I mean nobody is going to look at one document better than <br />Commissioner Siracusa. You know what I mean? So that may be additional, I don’t see that as <br />a huge problem unless there is some backlog or maybe there is some issue with administration- <br />wise. But, I don’t know, three more months for documents that we are not going to see again in <br />ten years, I don’t know, to me it’s not a big deal. <br />EXHIBIT B <br />8 <br /> <br />