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uses are, according to your plan, kind of going to be included in this, I mean, commercial, <br />industrial, in these regional centers? <br />BROWN: That was the intent, yeah. <br />BOWMAN: Do the working committees look at the area and what may be <br />needed? So those are in those working group papers? <br />BROWN: Group papers. <br />BOWMAN: I mean in light of our last permit, you know, and I’m looking at <br />what industrial zoning allows, I’m just a little concern with floating, you know. I know it <br />wouldn’t happen but having a yoga studio next to the trucking guys that are leaving -. <br />BROWN: Yeah. <br />BOWMAN: So, okay. <br />BROWN: Well, perhaps the use of the term floating zone is, it might not have <br />been the wisest way to try to describe how this process is supposed to occur. <br />BOWMAN: I never let my kids float, you know. It’s like -. <br />BROWN: Yeah. <br />BOWMAN: So, thank you. <br />BROWN: And that has created some confusion and -. But the idea was, is <br />that a zoning designation would be created for each of the three different types of, or at <br />least the regional town center, okay, designation. And then at a later date once that starts <br />to try to happen on the ground and you bring all the stakeholders involved, whether they <br />be the individual lot owners of that project area, the subdivision, the homeowners <br />association, the developer, all of these kinds of stakeholders get involved, then you define <br />what area of land you’re going to apply that zoning designation to. And that’s where the <br />term floating zone apparently comes from. We found out that we may not necessarily <br />need to quite do it that way because it really all happens within the context of a master <br />planning effort, primarily like I said before the regional town centers, the three big ones. <br />WATANABE: Ms. Bowman. <br />BOWMAN: May I, quick question because I’m not familiar with these big <br />subdivisions. So if I was a landowner in this regional area my land would be worth more, <br />right? <br />BROWN: That’s the idea. The creation of a commercial center in Hawaiian <br />Paradise Park where you’re going to be asking people who have their nice one-acre lot <br /> EXHIBIT B <br />16 <br /> <br />