►
Description
No description was provided for this meeting.
If this is YOUR meeting, an easy way to fix this is to add a description to your video, wherever mtngs.io found it (probably YouTube).
A
A
A
So
if
we
do
get
disconnected
for
those
who
are
able
to
connect
right
now,
we
will
get
reconnected
as
soon
as
we
can,
because
this
video
is
being
recorded.
We
will
be
posting
it
onto
the
displacement
response
website.
So
for
folks
who
cannot
join
us
tonight,
there
will
be
access
to
this
video
recording.
A
We
also
want
to
let
you
know
that
there
are
interpretation
services
available
so
before
we
jump
into
the
rest
of
the
presentation,
I'd
like
to
invite
our
interpreters
to
welcome
folks
and
explain
how
to
get
into
the
Spanish
and
Mandarin
language
interpretation
rooms.
So
I
like
to
invite
Anna
and
Ivy
to
help
interpret
this
information.
B
C
A
So
just
a
brief
introductions.
I'm
Wayne,
Chen
I'm,
the
assistant
community
development
director
and
presenting
tonight
with
me,
is
Trisha
Gonzalez.
You
may
have
seen
her
in
various
meetings.
She
has
our
breakthrough.
Grunt
fellow
she
comes
to
us
from
the
Breakthrough
grant
program
that
is
funded
by
the
partnership
for
the
base
future
a
program
that
is
assisting
cities
and
helping
to
develop
housing
policies,
including
displacement
response
policies.
A
And,
of
course
we
have
our
amazing
Multicultural
engagement
program
team
and
we
have
our
great
staff
from
the
rent
stabilization
program
as
well.
So
so
thank
you
all
to
the
city
team
for
being
here
and
so
just
to
summarize
again,
the
goals
for
today
is
to
provide
a
summary
of
the
meeting
information
that
we've
heard.
To
date.
We
started
out
back
early
January
with
an
introduction
meeting.
Since
that
time,
we've
held
five
stakeholder
meetings.
A
We
want
to
provide
a
summary
of
those
meetings
and
what
we
would
like
to
know
is
whether
we
captured
your
input
correctly
and,
if
there's
anything,
that
we
are
missing
or,
if
there's
new
information
that
you
would
like
to
provide
when
I
hand
this
presentation
off
to
Trisha
later
on
in
the
presentation.
What
you
will
see
is
that
what
we've
tried
to
do
is
summarize
some
key
themes
and
topics
that
we
heard
frequently.
A
And
so
we
we've
gone
through
the
welcome
Logistics
and
I'm
going
to
go
through
quickly
again
for
the
background
in
case
folks
have
not
participated
in
this
process.
Today,
you'll
have
a
little
bit
of
the
background.
We're
going
to
spend
the
bulk
of
the
time
going
over
the
summary
of
our
input
received,
and
then
we
would
like
to
go
over
questions
and
answers
and
have
enough
time
for
folks
to
be
able
to
comment.
A
A
A
And
then
before
we
get
into
it
fully
We've
shared
this
information
before,
but
we
know
this
is
an
important
topic
for
all
members
of
the
community.
There
may
be
a
very
diverse
perspectives
on
this
topic,
and
so
we
just
ask
that
everyone
respect
all
the
participants
during
the
meeting
and
allow
folks
to
be
able
to
provide
their
their
input
and
we'll
be
managing
the
meeting
to
make
sure
that
folks
have
a
respectful
place
for
for
dialogue
and
then
how
to
participate
again.
You
can
enter
comments
in
the
chat.
A
You
can
raise
your
hand,
there's
a
raise
hand,
button
on
your
Zoom
screen
or
anyone
who's,
calling
you
by
phone.
You
could
press
star
nine
to
raise
your
hand
and
we'll
be
able
to
see
you
and
call
on
you
so
again.
A
At
the
background,
this
process
started
about
three
three
and
a
half
years
ago
there
were
a
series
of
Redevelopment
projects,
and
this
got
elevated
to
a
council
priority
and
back
in
2019
and
2020,
we
established
a
an
initial
framework
for
doing
this
work,
so
there
were
five
key
principles
established
and
six
initial
policy
areas
to
to
work
on.
These
were
all
unanimously
agreed
to
by
council
at
the
time.
A
Just
to
summarize,
our
displacement
response
strategy
addresses
or
seeks
to
address
both
prevention,
because
we
have
an
interest
in
preventing
tenant
displacement,
but
we
also
understand
that
there
may
be
situations
where
displacement,
whether
temporary
or
permanent,
displacement
cannot
be
avoided
and
so
mitigation
is
another
part
of
the
strategy
which
is,
if
displacement
occurs.
How
could
different
policies
or
programs
be
implemented
to
make
the
impacts
of
that
displacement
more
manageable
and
then?
Finally,
there
are
other
responses
that
we
are
looking
at
as
well.
A
It's
currently
set
to
expire
in
2030,
but
they
that
law
does
provide
replacement
requirements
for
demolition
projects,
and
there
is
also
what
is
called
an
ALICE
act.
Provision
where
ordinant
cities
with
rent
civilization
can
create
a
replacement
replacement
requirements
and
what
you'll
see
in
the
the
summary
section
later
on
is
that
there
were
a
variety
of
input
about
local
replacement
requirements
and
including
having
the
city
look
at
local
SB
330
requirements.
A
Some
of
the
main
housing
resources
may
not
be
available
or
easily
available
for
acquiring
and
preserving
existing
housing
units.
So
setting
up
a
program
and
establishing
Partnerships
is
another
key
Focus
area
and
an
opportunity
to
purchase
is
also
a
potential
program
that
Council
has
asked
staff
to
evaluate,
and
we
did
receive
a
variety
of
input
regarding
opportunity
to
purchase
opportunity,
opportunity
to
purchase
programs.
There's
two
general
types.
A
Toppa
is
another
version
that
we
are
evaluating,
so
so
that's
a
key
Focus
area,
and
then
there
are
other
strategies
that
we
are
evaluating
as
well,
whether
that's
modifying
the
city's
existing
tenant,
relocation,
assistance,
ordinance,
making
replacement
requirements
for
ownership
units
more
feasible
and
other
items
as
well,
whether
that's
first
try
to
refusal
or
return
for
displaced,
tenants
or
other
policies
and
programs.
D
Thank
you
Wayne
good
evening.
Everyone
thanks
for
joining
us
during
our
current
seventh
session,
as
you
can
see
here
on
this
list
today
is
our
seventh
session
and
in
the
next
slide,
I
am
going
to
review
some
overarching
themes
that
we
gathered,
but
prior
to
that,
I'd
like
to
just
revisit
some
key
terms
that
Wayne
mentioned,
and
that
I'm
going
to
to
mention
again
in
the
next
slides
that
first
one
is
SB
330.
D
That's
a
state
law
that
requires
replacement
units
when
rent
stabilize
stabilized
housing
is
demolished
and
that's
currently
set
to
expire
in
2030..
Then
we
have
csfra,
Community,
stabilization
and
fair.
Rent
Act
is,
is
the
city's
stabilization
rent
stabilization
program,
which
was
passed
in
2016,
and
then
we
have
Treo,
which
is
the
city's
tenant
relocation
assistance
ordinance,
which
requires
relocation.
D
Next
slide,
please:
our
first
session
was
a
General
Session,
and
these
are
themes,
overarching
themes
that
that
presents
it
were
presented
during
that
session.
Preventing
displacement
is
preferred,
but
if
it
does
occur,
having
other
housing
opportunities
to
stay
in
Mountain
View
is
important.
D
D
D
D
Adding
new
Supply
market
rate
and
affordable
is
the
way
to
address
tenant
displacement.
Adding
regulations
requirements
is
not
the
way
to
address
tennis,
tenant
displacement,
they
create
unintended
consequences
and
make
projects
infeasible
high
costs,
City
fees
and
complicated
City
process
impedes
Redevelopment
and
new
production
paying
for
tenant
buyouts.
Relocation
benefits
makes
projects
rehab
or
Redevelopment
projects
infeasible
interest
in
discussing
Innovative
logistical
options
such
as
partnering
with
property
owners
to
address
temporary
displacement.
D
D
Those
were
the
major
themes
for
the
property
owner
session
and
we're
going
to
jump
into
the
non-profit,
developer
summary,
and
those
themes
include
interest
in
doing
acquisition,
preservation
and
Rehab
work.
Acquisition
of
smaller
buildings
are
more
challenging.
Larger
buildings
of
80
to
100
units
have
the
best
economies
of
scale
we
think
of
the
resident
first
without
the
thought
of
displacing
residents.
If
residents
come
with
the
building,
we
want
to
keep
them
in
place.
It
is
not
a
question
if
we
would
displace
them
or
not.
D
D
It
is
important
to
address
over-income
tenants
and
avoid
inadvertently
displacing
those
who
may
not
be
able
to
qualify
for
an
affordable
housing
unit
because
they
exceed
the
income
qualifications
for
a
preserved
unit
or
a
replacement
unit.
Foreign
for
acquisition
projects
are
challenging
because
of
the
lack
of
funding
and
tax
credits.
D
A
A
Okay
looks
like
speed
is
okay,
maybe
just
Just
a
Touch
slower,
I
think,
but
we're
almost
on
the
right
pace
thanks.
So
much
of.
D
All
right
in
our
market
rate,
developer
session,
the
overarching
themes
were
as
follows:
focus
on
ways
to
increase
housing,
Supply
incentivize
developers
such
as
providing
higher
floor
area
ratios
or
fars
densities.
Streamlining
the
process
fee
waivers
City
needs
to
be
needs.
A
more
efficient
process
to
get
projects
done.
It
takes
too
long
and
discourages
development
project
team
expeditors
would
help
find
ways
to
fill
below
market
rate
units
faster,
identify
best
practices
instead
of
Reinventing
things.
D
City
ownership
of
land
may
be
useful.
Relocation
may
not
last
forever,
and
land
could
be
used
for
other
uses
in
the
future,
such
as
needed
parts
or
open
space
publicly
noticing
a
building
for
sale,
May,
Scare,
tenants
and
staff
that
live
in
the
building,
adding
more
housing
Supply
will
reduce
housing
prices,
because
rents
would
need
to
be
lowered
to
fill
the
units
in
practice.
It
may
not
work
that
way.
There
is
a
building
with
three
vacancies,
because
prospective
tenants
think
the
rent
is
too
high.
D
D
D
D
D
D
More
affordable
housing
at
lower
levels
are
needed,
identify
empty
sites
for
construction,
legalize
multiple
families
in
one
unit
to
help
make
the
rents
affordable,
reduce
barriers
to
housing
for
those
with
limited
English
proficiency
and
families
that
do
not
have
legal
status,
qualifications
and
high
credit
score
requirements.
Make
it
difficult
to
find
affordable
housing
laws
are
needed
to
prevent
Demolition
and
to
require
that
units
be
maintained.
D
So
we
thank
you
for
for
the
feedback
and
we're
here
today
to
ensure
that
we've
captured
everything
accurately
and
another
method
of
how
we're
going
about
that
is
to
have
our
ongoing
one-on-one
meetings
with
individuals
and
groups.
We
have
held
five
meetings
to
date
and
we
do
have
some
additional
meetings
scheduled
for
the
near
future.
D
We
also
did
find
that
a
lot
of
the
written
comments
that
were
emailed
to
the
city
were
pretty
consistent
with
the
feedback
we
heard
through
the
stakeholder
meetings
and
I
I
just
want
to
remind
folks
that
you
can
still
contact
the
email
address
listed
here
on
the
screen
displacementresponse
at
mountainview.gov.
If
you'd
like
to
schedule
a
one-on-one
or
have
additional
questions,
the
city
stop
is
definitely
willing
to
meet
with
you.
Thanks
again
and
I'm
going
to
hand
it
back
to
Wayne
for
some
q
a.
A
Great,
thank
you
very
much,
Trisha
and
again,
we'll
be
posting
information
updates
to
the
displacement
response
website
which
you'll
see
on
the
screen
here
again
for
folks
who
may
have
joined
a
little
bit
later.
We
do
have
interpretation
services
available
because
we
did
provide
this
information
a
bit
earlier,
I'd
like
to
ask
if
the
interpreters
can
go
ahead
and
interpret
this
information
in
Spanish
Mandarin
again
so
I'll
pause
for
that.
B
A
Okay,
great,
thank
you
very
much,
so
we
just
have
two
questions
for
discussion
and,
of
course,
if
folks
have
other
input
or
questions
or
comments,
please
feel
free
to
share
them.
A
F
H
Good
evening
everybody
this
is
Tessa
McFarland
I
just
wanted
to.
Thank
you
for
such
a
really
thorough
presentation
and
I
was
part
of
a
group
that
met
with
Wayne
on
a
101
on
one
and
I
and
I
guess
you
know.
One
of
the
things
that
came
up
was
the
Copa
and
toppa
and
just
curious
whether
these
programs
have
been
successful
elsewhere,
because
the
feedback
we
got
was
that
you
know
it
it
it's
it's.
It
can
create
delay
in
the
sales
process
and
so
I
think.
H
If
a
Copa
or
toppa
was
put
into
place,
it
would
really
have
to
be
finally
tuned
in
a
way
that
would
make
it
workable,
and
so
that
that
was
one
comment
and
then
the
and
then
the
other
comment
was
on
the
on
the
units.
The
Thousand
units
lost,
I,
I,
guess
I.
We
had
just
asked
for
a
little
more
of
a
deep
dive
into
that,
and
you
know
and
really
look
at.
H
You
know
the
total
number
of
affordable
units
and
BMR
units,
the
total
in
the
pipeline,
where
the
in-lu
fees
have
gone
and
that
sort
of
thing
and
and
then
again
I
think
on
the
displacement
strategy.
H
I
think
that
there
should
be
some
means
testing
so
that
it
really
does
help
the
people
who
really
need
it,
and
so
those
were
my
my
oh
and
then
that
one
final
Point
there
was
some
discussion
during
our
our
discussion
of
you
know
that
there
are
naturally
occurring
affordable
units
and
that
sometimes
the
the
housing
providers.
H
You
know
they'd
like
to
rehabilitate
them,
but
it's
such
a
difficult
process
under
the
CIS
for
regs
to
try
to
get
an
adjustment
for
the
annual
General
adjustment
for
that
covered
units
to
allow
for
some
Capital
Improvements
to
be
made,
and
so
I
think.
The
point
on
that
was
just
that.
You
know
we
have
to
look
at
how
the
entirety
of
the
city
regs
affect
the
question
that
we're
asking
and
so,
for
example,
how
do
we
preserve
naturally
occurring
affordable
units?
H
Well,
one
way
to
do
it
would
be
to
allow
housing
providers
more
leeway
in
how
they
rehabilitate
those
units-
and
you
know,
and
and
make
it
work
really
for
everybody.
So
those
are
my
comments.
Thank
you
all.
So
much
for
all
your
efforts
really
appreciate
it.
A
Yeah,
thank
you
so
much
Tessa
and
I
do
want
to
confirm
that.
Yes,
we've
received
written
input
from
from
you
and
or
or
folks
who
do
want
to
send
a
written
input
are.
The
intention
is
to
be
able
to
directly
include
the
written
input
into
our
staff
report
for
Council
when
the
the
date
for
that
is
is
finalized
and
we're
writing
at
the
summary
and
I
think
just
to
clarify.
A
A
We
didn't
do
that
here
tonight
because
they
they're
ongoing,
but
we
do
plan
to
include
that
in
one
of
the
pieces
that
we
did
here
was
just
take
a
look
at
the
data
again,
which
we'll
do
means
testing
did
come
up
more
than
once,
so
we
want
to
be
able
to
summarize
that
for
Council
and
rehab,
and
especially
for
smaller
units,
that
theme
came
up
a
couple
of
different
times
in
the
stakeholder
meetings
as
well.
A
So
definitely
just
want
to
confirm
that
we
received
the
input
where
going
through
the
process
of
doing
more
evaluation
right
now,
and
we
we
do
intend
to
include
that
information
for
Council
to
to
process
and
digest.
We
are
also,
as
part
of
our
homework,
looking
at
case
studies
of
other
cities,
primarily
in
the
Bay
Area,
but
also
in
California,
and
then
also
examples
across
the
country
for
opportunity
to
Purchase
Act
programs.
A
Our
understanding
is
that
it
is
relatively
new,
so
we
have
a
sort
of
a
handful
of
case
studies
that
we're
looking
at
and
where
going
over,
how
each
city
is
either
set
them
up
for
those
have
passed
or
for
those
cities
that
are
going
through
the
process
of
evaluating
and
considering
a
premier
program.
What
information,
what
kind
of
criteria
and
program
design
elements
they're
they're
thinking
about,
so
we're
we're
putting
together
some
information
there.
So
we're
definitely
looking
closely
at
the
the
cities
that
either
have
them
or
are
evaluating
oppa
programs.
I
A
Thanks
so
much
for
confirming
yes,
we
if,
if
we're
on
the
Mark,
we
want
to
hear
it
so
that
we
we
know
when
we're
writing
up
for
Council.
We
are
on
the
market
if
we
have
a
tweak
that
is
needed
or
if
we
need
to
add
anything
else,
do
do
let
us
know
as
well,
so
whether
we're
on
the
market
or
we
need
to
add
a
little
bit
more.
A
Both
comments
are
more
than
welcome.
So
thanks
for
that,
Wayne.
D
A
There's
there's
not
a
deadline
right
now
for
for
staff,
the
sort
of
practical
input
process
for
us
to
be
able
to
consider
and
write
it
up.
There's
that
piece
but
then,
of
course,
folks
can
submit
comments
up
until
you
know
the
day
of
the
council
meeting.
We
are
I'm
close
to
confirming
and
finalizing
when
that
meeting
will
be,
and
once
we
have
that
information,
we
will
post
it
to
the
website
and
we
will
send
out
a
notification
to
anyone
who
is
registered
for
the
displacement
response
interest
list.
A
It
will
be
by
June,
so
it
will
happen
in
the
next
few
months,
so
Q2
of
2023.
So
we
hope
to
be
able
to
bring
it
back
to
council
before
June,
but
no
no
later
than
June
is
what
we're
targeting
right
now.
A
So
once
we
have
the
information
out
then
and
if
they're
getting
updates
in
terms
of
the
timing
for
scheduling
one-on-ones,
we'll
be
able
to
provide
some
information,
ideally
if
you'd
like
to
have
a
one-on-one,
so
that
your
input
can
get
into
the
the
council
report
for
when
we
summarize
it
or
to
give
us
enough
time
to
be
able
to
analyze
your
suggestions,
the
the
sooner
the
better.
So
we'll
give
you
enough
lead
time
once
we
know
and
ideally
for
the
one-on-one
sessions.
A
Probably
you
know
up
to
a
few
weeks
before
the
the
council
meetings
when
we'll
need
to
have
that.
So
we
can
actually
do
the
analysis,
but
if
you
do
want
to
continue
to
send
email
responses
and
provide
additional
input
up
until
the
council
meeting,
of
course,
you're
free
to
to
do
that,
we
just
may
not
be
able
to
pack
it
up
with
the
council
report.
G
J
Thank
you.
I
just
wanted
to
give
an
alternate
point
of
view
on
whether
Trio
should
be
available
to
all
income
levels.
So
there
are
things
that
income
alone
doesn't
capture.
J
You
don't
know
who
is
sending
one
or
two
or
who
knows
how
many
children
through
college
at
the
time
and
despite
High
income
may
not
may
have
low
disposable
income
and
also,
if
you
restrict
Trejo
benefits
to
only
certain
income
levels,
then
is
that
a
disincentive
to
renting
to
people
who
can
afford
the
rent
but
are
at
a
lower
income
level
rather
than
aiming
for
higher
income
renters?
Who
you
would
not
have
to
pay
Trio
for?
If
you
ever
were
looking
to
empty
and
demolish
the
property?
J
We
don't
know
who's
sending
money
to
relatives
out
of
the
area
and
you
know,
needs
the
lower
rent
and
just
so
I
support
Trio
for
all
income
levels,
because
all
kinds
of
each
each
renter
family
has
their
own
story
and
their
own
needs
and
our
housing
stock,
except
when
a
non-profit
takes
over
having
our
housing
stock.
You
know
needed.
Maintenance
is
required
of
the
property
owner
and
replacing
old
units
with
new
units
changes.
J
A
Thanks
for
that
comment,
Edie
I
think
that
was
a
a
new
perspective,
so
we'll
definitely
capture
that.
Thank
you.
A
Why
don't
I
go
ahead
and
just
hop
over
to
the
second
question
and
it's
related
and
we've
sort
of
already
started
to
touch
on
it?
Give
me
one
second
here
again,
there's
different
ways
to
participate.
A
Intercoms
in
the
chat
box,
you
can
raise
your
hand
for
phone
attendees,
please
press
star,
9
to
raise
your
hand
and
then
the
corollary
to
the
first
question.
Are
there
any
main
points
we
have?
We
have
missed
and
I
think
Edie
provided
an
example
of
one
perspective
that
we
have
not
heard
yet.
Is
there
anything
else
from
any
of
the
participants
here
tonight.
K
Hi
Tim
McKenzie
he
him
pronouns,
montaloma,
neighborhood
and
just
I
I,
don't
know
if
this
is
the
situation
in
Mountain
View
or
what
but
I've
definitely
seen
sort
of
in
the
Zeitgeist
in
news
reports
across
the
country
talking
about
in
the
housing
crisis
generally
of
like
for-profit,
multinational
corporations,
purchasing
housing
stock
and
then
turning
it
into
Perpetual,
renting
and
increasing
the
prices
and
I
think
I
think
that
there's
it
was
captured
a
little
bit
in
some
of
the
summaries,
but
there's
a
big
difference
between
say.
K
That
is
just
seeing
this
as
a
source
of
money
and
I
think
that
there
could
and
should
be
some
sort
of
is
some
sort
of
additional
city
tax
that
could
be
used
to
fund
Trey
or
things
like
that,
depending
on
the
size
of
the
landlord,
the
number
of
properties
that
they
actually
own
and
maintain
I,
don't
know
what
that
would
look
like
I,
don't
know
the
exact
details
of
how
that
would
work
out,
but
is
something
that
scales
with
the
size
of
the
car
I
know
we
did
that
with
the
business
tax,
so
something
that
could
scale
similarly
and
something
that
can
favor
actual
human
beings
rather
than
faceless
multinational
corporations
that
are
mining,
the
residents
of
the
city
for
profit
and
not
providing
housing
as
a
human
right.
K
So
I
want
I
want
to
pull
on
that
threat
a
little
bit
and
also
just
highlight
again,
I
think
this
was
mentioned
in
the
in
the
summaries
but
vacancy
taxes,
for
if
people
are
just
holding
the
the
apartment
off
to
try
to
get
someone
locked
in
at
a
higher
rate
there,
there
should
be
some
sort
of
cost
to
that.
I
know
that
was
already
captured,
but
I
don't
I'm,
not
sure
that
I
really
heard
that
that
first
point
and
I
wanted
to
highlight
that.
A
Thanks
to
me,
yes,
I
think
that
first
point
is
also
in
the
perspective.
So
thanks
for
mentioning
that
and
we'll
capture
it
and
if
you're
aware
of
any
examples
of
something
that
you
were
referring
to,
we
would
love
to
hear
examples.
I
know
folks
in
their
email
comments
when
they've
been
summarizing.
A
Their
points
have
also
pointed
us
to
a
different
housing
authorities
or
different
agencies
or
cities
that
may
be
reflective
of
the
common
or
the
types
of
options
that
they're
thinking
of
so
pointing
us
to
different
sources
like
different
programs
that
may
exist
or
different
cities
are
also
most
welcome.
So
thank
you,
foreign.
G
Mentioned
you
can
raise
your
hand
if
you
would
like
to
speak.
You
can
type
your
question
in
the
Q
a
or
in
the
chat
and
if
you
prefer
to
type
your
question
in
another
language
such
as
Spanish
or
Chinese,
feel
free
to
do
that,
and
we
can
translate
that
for
you.
J
So
one
thing
that
did
come
up
in
the
tenant
meeting
I
attended,
was
just
interest
to
research
and
find
out
more
about
Airbnb
Apartments,
and
how
much
is
that
changing
the
use
of
the
current
stock
of
apartments
in
Mountain
View?
J
And
then
this
is
Trio
related
and
so
I
think
that
you
know
a
way
to
strengthen
the
trio
is
to
look
more
at
right
of
return
at
the
same
rent
and
in
other
words,
even
for
someone.
You
know
like
some
Trio
might
convert
to
BMR
or
you
know
some
type
of
affordable
housing
and
then
it'll
be
income
qualified.
J
But
for
someone
who
is
over
that
income
level,
the
ability
to
return
at
the
same
rent-
or
you
know,
a
an
AGA
escalated
rent
would
be
much
more
meaningful
than
the
right
of
return
to
the
market
rate.
A
Okay,
thank
you
thanks
CD,
the
the
option
that
you
are
referring
to
is
one
of
the
options
that
we're
evaluating
under
the
Alice
act.
So
we're
we're
we're
studying
that
and
understanding
what
kind
of
initial
rents
could
be
set
for.
A
I
guess:
I'll
call
the
new
csfree
units
under
the
Alice
act,
so
we
are
studying
that.
So
thanks
for
thanks
for
flagging
that.
F
F
L
I
can
go
ahead
and
Spanish
right
now
would
like
to
say
good
evening
and
obviously
let
you
know
that
you've
heard
both
sides
both
for
wanting
to
rent
and
own,
and
what
would
you
give
us
or
let
us
know
to
do
to
motivate
us
to
keep
asking
for
this:
affordable
housing.
We
live
in
Mountain
View
and
we
enjoy
living
here
and
really
where
we're
asking
for
affordable
housing.
The
pricing
that's
coming
out
is
really
what
we're
already
paying
so
we're
just
asking.
A
Thank
you
very
much
for
for
that
that
question
I
think
one
piece
of
information
that
folks
could
provide
would
be
to
when
we're
looking
at
replacement
requirements
or
the
ability
for
cities
to
be
able
to
establish
replacement
requirements.
We're
looking
at
Provisions
that
the
state
has
provided
we're
looking
at
laws
that
the
state
has
provided
for
cities
to
be
able
to
create
these
replacement
requirements
and,
for
example,
the
state
SB
330
replacement
requirements
provides
information
about
the
the
income
levels
that
the
new
replacement
units
need
to
be
at.
A
One
of
the
comments
that
we
heard
from
the
nonprofit
developers
is
making
sure
that
the
incomes
of
the
existing
tenants
could
match
the
the
the
rent
levels
of
the
new
units
is
important,
because
when,
if
there
is
a
mismatch,
a
displacement
could
still
occur,
so
I
think
it'd
be
helpful
to
know
the
types
of
rent
levels
you're
looking
at
or
or
what
is
Affordable
for
your
income
and
for
your
household
size.
The
way
we
determine
affordability
levels
is
both
based
on
the
income
and
the
household
size.
A
The
number
of
people
of
the
household
so
I
think
that
kind
of
information
could
help
inform
the
city
council
in
terms
of
if
it
wishes
to
move
forward
with
local
replacement
requirements.
What
income
levels
and
rents
would
those
new
units
need
to
be
at
and
what
kind
of
sales
prices
if
they
are
going
to
be
count
condos
or
for
sale
housing?
A
Programs
so
I
think
that's
that's
one
piece
of
information
and
I
think
Council
had
asked
us
to
take
a
look
at
ways
of
addressing
temporary
replacement
temporary
relocation.
So
if
you
have
additional
input
about
what
could
be
helpful
for
you
if
there
needs
to
be
temporary
relocation,
assistance
and
being
able
to
move
back
to
a
new
unit,
we'd
like
to
hear
your
your
experience
and
your
thoughts
about
what
would
be
helpful
in
that
way
as
well.
I
I
The
Ami
will
increase,
which,
which
increases
the
the
BMR
costs
and
income
qualifications
for
the
remaining
low
income
residents,
and
so
I'm
wondering.
Is
there
any
way
to
to
make
the
Ami
measurement
a
little
bit
smarter
so
that
we're
not
continually
increasing
it?
You
know
sort
of
a
positive
feedback
on
displacement.
A
Thanks
for
that
that
question
I
think
what
you're
suggesting
is
that
there
is
a
there
is
a
feedback
loop
in
that
way,
so
that,
if
folks,
who
may
not
be
able
to
live
in
the
area
or
Mountain
View
mobile
and
that
may
have
an
input
into
how
the
the
area's
median
income
is
calculated
the
next
year
and
so
on
and
so
forth.
So
as
we
lose
more
lower
income,
families
than
the
Ami
levels
get
higher
and
so
on
and
so
forth.
So
on.
A
On
that
note,
we
we
don't
have
the
ability
to
change
the
Ami
levels
that
we
refer
to,
or
whether
it's
from
the
state's
Housing
and
Community
Development
Department,
or
whether
it's
through
another
set
of
income
limits
through
the
low
income
housing
tax
credit
program.
But
cities
can
essentially
take
a
look
at
what
the
income
levels
are.
That
is
needed
for
that
particular
City
and
just
you
know,
reference
those
those
those
income
charts.
A
So
those
those
income
charts
are
handy
references
for
for
us
to
look
at
and
for
non-profit
developers
to
look
at,
for
you
know
tenants
to
look
at,
but
there
are.
A
We
could
say,
for
example,
that
a
replacement
housing
must
have
housing
affordable
to
folks,
making
a
50
Ami
and
that's
a
number
in
a
chart,
but
Council
might
say
well.
D
for
affordability
levels
are
needed.
So
what
about
the
30
Ami
level?
And
of
course
we
work
on
different
projects
not
related
to
this,
the
spaceman
response
project,
but
other
projects
where
we're
addressing
folks
who
may
be
unsheltered
and
they
there
might
be
of
units
at
15
Ami.
A
So
that's
the
way
we
we
would
look
at
it
and
we'd,
hear
the
feedback
and
say
what
are
the
rents
and
what
are
the
levels
that
are
needed,
and
then
we
can
refer
to
the
Chart.
But
we
don't
have
to
be
locked
in
by
the
charts.
J
Being
you
know
not
that
different
than
the
naturally
affordable
housing
in
the
community
and
I
wonder
if,
because
there
is
a
rent
registry
that
is
being
further
utilized
bit
by
bit
of
csfra
units
and
I,
wonder
if
BMR
units
could
be
linked
to
that
and
you
know
have
the
BMR
rents,
you
know
at
least
for
move-in
rate
be
linked
to
something
hopefully
lower,
maybe
equal,
the
you
know,
because
BMR
units
are
often
newer,
but
I
would
prefer
lower
than
the
naturally
affordable
housing
averages
that
we
are.
J
A
As
folks
are
pondering,
perhaps
their
their
last
questions,
we
want
to
encourage
you
to
sign
up
for
the
interest
list.
That's
a
really
good
way
to
just
automatically
receive
updates,
especially
when
the
council
meeting
is
getting
finalized.
Then
you'll
you'll
have
the
date
and,
of
course,
it'll
be
updated
on
the
website.
But
if
you
sign
up
for
the
interest
list,
you'll
get
a
notification
about
that
and
then
again
encourage
folks.
A
If
you
would
like
to
schedule
a
one-on-one
meeting,
we
we
have
a
good
amount
of
time
to
be
able
to
meet
with
folks
and
talk
about
any
particular
areas
of
focus
that
you
may
have
so
I
want
to
encourage
that
as
well.
That's
the
displacement
response
website
that
we've
been
sharing.
It's
also
again
on
on
the
internet
and
we'll
Endeavor
to
respond
as
quickly
as
possible
to
to
find
a
time.
E
Yeah,
hey
just
can
you
guys
hear
me
yeah
all
right,
cool,
a
quick
question
more
than
a
comment.
I
I
just
wanted
to
know
if,
through
the
process,
any
of
the
kind
of
developers-
or
you
know,
comp,
Property
Owners
have
expressed
or
or
noted,
any
kind
of
thoughts
around
kind
of
like
how
rezoning
may
or
may
not
influence
the
feasibility
of
projects.
E
Or
you
know,
their
ability
to
you
know,
maintain
property
as
a
long
term
like
increase
to
Value
just
in
terms
of
like
up
zoning.
Basically,
you
know
if
you
could
just
touch
on
anything
that
might
have
been
discussed
if,
if
at
all,
I
think
that'd
be
really
helpful.
A
Thanks
Alex,
yes,
we
had
folks
say
that
having
higher
Fourier
ratios
or
higher
densities
can
create
value
for
the
property
owner
and
it
can
help
be
able
to
absorb
any
local
replacement
requirements.
So
definitely
up
zoning
or
increasing
development
capacity
on
a
particular
site
would
would
be
very
helpful.
A
Thanks
Edie,
what
we
found
is
that
a
lot
of
cities
are
evaluating
different
programs,
but
not
all
cities
are
looking
at
the
same
things.
So
there's
a
a
group
of
cities
that
are
looking
at
Opportunity
protosac
programs
and
where
trying
to
get
a
nice
snapshot
of
other
types
of
policies
that
that
folks
are
looking
at
so
Community
Land
Trust
we're
looking
at
regions
or
cities
that
may
have
Community,
Land
trusts
or
Co-op
type
of
programs
as
well.
A
As
you
know,
local
local
replacement
requirements,
and
so
we're
we're
we're
we're
doing
that.
But
it's
not
it's
not
really
possible
to
say
whether
there
is
you
know,
one
city,
that's
doing,
every
city
is
doing
its
own
thing
for
the
folks
that
are
that
are
doing
those
things.
A
So
so
we
don't
have
an
exact
comparison,
but
we
are
looking
at
the
input
that
we
received
about
different
different
parts
and
then
we're
just
trying
to
find
and
look
for
good
case
studies
again
whether
it's
in
the
Bay,
Area
or
California,
or
you
know,
even
across
the
country.
A
Okay,
I
think
we
we'll
just
do
one
final
call
and
if
there's
no
other
questions
again,
thank
you
so
much
for
your
participation.
It's
an
important
topic.
A
The
diverse
range
of
input
gives
us
a
lot
to
try
to
put
together,
but
it
makes
for
really
good
information
to
to
try
to
sum
up
and
and
bring
back
to
council
so
I
appreciate,
and
we
appreciate
all
the
input
that
you've
all
provided
appreciate.
Your
time.
Please
do
reach
out
to
us
sign
up
for
the
interest
list
and
when
we
have
confirmation
of
the
council
meeting
date,
we
will
post
it
and
we'll
send
that
out.
So
with
that
I
think
we
do.
Have
one
I
see
a
heart
thanks
Alex.
A
Thank
you
all
very
much
and
have
a
really
good
evening.
Bye-Bye.