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From YouTube: Housing Element Workshop
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B
A
The
city
of
mountain
view's
housing
element
project
and
to
get
an
update
on
where
we
are
in
the
process
and
to
have
great
discussion.
My
name
is
dave
javid,
with
plan
to
place.
I'm
part
of
the
consultant
team
led
by
bae,
and
you
will
meet
a
few
members
of
the
consultant
team
here
tonight
and
I'm
helping
with
the
engagement
portion
and
will
be
the
mc
tonight
to
make
sure
that
all
things
go
smoothly
and
as
we
typically
do
with
these
meetings,
we
do
have
a
live
interpretation
available
here
tonight
in
mandarin.
A
Excellent,
thank
you
alien
and
with
that
I'm
going
to
go
ahead
and
open
that
channel
and
make
sure
that
alien
could
get
in
there
and
that's
under
the
chinese
option
for
anyone
else
that
like
to
follow
along
excellent,
it
looks
like
we're
in
and
the
recording
is
started.
Hopefully
rachel.
Let
us
know
if
there's
an
issue
there,
let's
go
ahead
and
go
to
the
next
slide
and
I'm
going
to
hand
this
over
to
ellen
to
do
welcome.
D
Hi
good
evening,
everyone,
my
name,
is
ellen
yao.
I
am
a
senior
planner
with
the
city
of
mountain
view
and
the
project
planner
for
the
housing
element
update
project.
So,
as
you
can
see,
we
have
a
pretty
big
team
tonight
and
we're
really
excited
to
have
you
here
and
to
get
input
from
the
community.
So,
from
the
mountain
view
side
I'm
here
with
eileen
our
mandarin
community
outreach
specialists,
martin
alkire
eric
anderson,
christian
pinolar,
brittany,
whitehill
and
saroosh
abu
talabi,
and
then
we
also
have
our
consultant
team
from
bae
and
esa.
A
Excellent,
thank
you
ellen.
So
before
we
get
started
just
a
couple
of
logistical
items,
I'm
sure
you
are
all
zoom
experts
at
this
point,
but
just
as
a
reminder,
the
way
that
we
are
going
to
actually
have
the
conversation
here
with
you
all
tonight
is
mainly
going
to
be
through
the
small
groups
and
once
we
get
there,
the
mics
will
be
muted.
Just
so,
there
isn't
accidental
interruptions,
but
there
will
be
a
chance
to
contribute
and
we'd
love
to
hear
from
you
all
and
to
do
that.
A
You'll
use
the
hand
raise
function
that
you
can
access
through
the
reactions
window
on
most
computers
and
that'll,
bring
up
an
option
to
choose
the
raised
hand
and
or
through
your
participant
window.
So
you'll
have
an
opportunity
to
use
that.
Then
we
also
do
have
the
chat
available
and
you'll
see
that
that
is
available
right
now.
If
you
did
have
any
questions
or
comments,
but
we're
hoping
to
hold
all
those
questions
and
comments
to
have
a
robust
discussion
with
you
in
the
small
groups.
A
So
if
we
want
to
go
to
the
next
slide
so
in
terms
of
agenda
we've
gotten
through
the
welcome
introductions,
you're
going
to
have
a
presentation,
a
short
presentation
just
to
give
you
a
sense
of
the
background
of
what
a
housing
element
is
where
we
are
in
the
process,
what
the
community
engagement
process
looks
like
and
how
important
it
really
is
for
you
all
to
be
involved
and
then,
most
importantly,
we've
left
the
majority
of
the
meeting
to
have
small
group
discussions
with
you
all
and
we'll
move
into
those
small
groups.
A
There
is
also
going
to
be
a
couple
polls,
one
that
will
come
up
here
soon,
a
demographic
poll
just
to
kind
of
gauge
and
understand
who's
in
the
room
with
us.
There
will
be
another
poll
before
we
move
into
the
small
groups
that
will
be
topical
just
to
kind
of
understand
what
your
priorities
might
be
to
help
spur
the
discussion
in
the
small
groups
and
then
after
we
go
through
that
discussion,
we're
going
to
come
back
and
do
a
report
out
just
so.
A
A
This
is
really
again
we're
going
to
ask
these
questions
as
we
go
throughout
the
process
and
every
get
engagement,
opportunity
to
understand
who
we're
speaking
to
and
to
make
sure
that
as
we
go
through
the
process,
we're
reaching
everyone
and
if
we're
not
course
correct
appropriately
to
connect
with
all
different
subgroups
within
mountain
view.
A
So
these
questions
are
fairly
standard,
that
you
would
probably
see
in
any
meeting
format
or
on
the
census,
just
to
get
a
quick
snapshot
of
who's
in
the
room
with
us,
and
it
looks
like
you
all
are
jumping
in
there,
which
is
fantastic.
I'm
gonna
give
this
maybe
another
minute
or
so
looks
like
about
a
third
of
you
have
taken
it
so
far
and
then
we'll
quickly
flash
the
results
on
this
screen.
A
A
What
type
of
housing
folks
live
in
income
levels
and
describing
generally,
why
you
decided
to
join
us
here
tonight
so
with
that,
I
think
most
people
have
had
a
chance
to
contribute
and
again,
if
you
don't
get
a
chance
to
contribute,
no
problem
at
all.
This
is
just
to
kind
of
get
a
quick
cage
of
who's
with
us
looks
like
a
couple
more
people
are
trying
to
get
in.
So
I'm
going
to
wait
just
maybe
five
more
seconds
here.
A
A
And
then
it
looks
like
most
of
you
as
expected,
live
in
mountain
view
and
are
obviously
here
to
find
out
more
about
this
process.
So
that's
great.
I
am
going
to
go
ahead
and
stop
sharing
that
now.
E
E
E
E
There
are
some
required
components
that
go
into
a
housing
element.
One
is
a
housing
needs
assessment
in
this
portion
of
the
housing
element.
We
are
looking
at
demographic
and
housing
trends.
We
do
this,
partly
by
looking
at
data.
We
have
a
variety
of
different
sources
that
we
use
for
that,
but
that's
also
part
of
what
we're
hoping
to
get
at
tonight
by
talking
to
all
of
you,
so
we
often
find
that
the
community
has
input
on
where
there
are
housing
needs
that
the
data
may
not
capture
and
so
we're
interested
in
hearing
from
you.
E
What
you're,
seeing
in
terms
of
housing
needs
in
your
community
there's
also
a
portion
of
the
housing
element
that
evaluates
the
prior
housing
element
to
figure
out
what
types
of
things
should
be
carried
forward
and
what
should
be
revised
or
updated
for
the
current
for
the
current
eight-year
cycle.
E
E
There's
a
constraints,
analysis
that
looks
at
barriers
to
addressing
housing
needs
in
mountain
view,
particularly
producing
new
units
across
the
affordability
spectrum
and
there's
a
goals,
policies
and
programs
section,
which
is
where
we
lay
the
groundwork
for
how
the
city
will
address.
Various
types
of
housing
needs
throughout
the
next
eight
year
period.
E
This
is
also
something
that
we're
hoping
to
get
feedback
from
you
all
on
tonight,
in
order
to
help
us
shape
this
plan
and
think
about
ways
that
we
can
fill
gaps
in
housing
needs
and
address
the
types
of
policies
and
programs
that
you'd
like
to
see
the
city
thinking
about
over
the
next
eight
years
at
a
sort
of
high
level,
there
are
various
objectives
that
the
housing
element
is
meant
to
achieve.
One
is
housing
production.
E
This
component
looks
at
accommodating
the
number
of
units
that
are
projected
in
the
city
for
over
the
housing
element
period.
This
is
determined
by
the
arena
allocation
which
we'll
have
some
slides
on
in
a
minute.
What
I
what
I
mean
by
that
phrase,
but
it's
the
projected
need
for
housing
in
the
city
over
the
planning
period.
E
We
also
look
at
housing
preservation,
so
ways
to
protect
and
rehabilitate
housing
in
the
community,
particularly
for
affordable
housing.
We
also
look
at
affirmatively
furthering
fair
housing,
so
ways
to
help
create
a
inclusive
community
that
provides
equal
access
to
opportunity
and
by
access
to
opportunity.
We're
thinking
about
things
like
jobs,
transit,
other
amenities
that
people
need
as
well
as
affordable
and
quality
housing.
E
E
So
the
regional
housing
needs
allocation
is
a
fairly
significant
component
of
the
housing
element.
We
shorten
this
to
arena,
so
that's
the
term
that
we
often
use
when
we're
talking
about
the
regional
housing
needs
allocation.
E
E
This
is
guided
by
plan
bay
area,
which
is
the
plan
to
guide
development
in
the
region
through
2050,
and
one
of
the
major
goals
of
that
plan
is
to
direct
housing
to
areas
where
there's
things
like
jobs
and
transit,
and
so
that
helps
to
guide
where
these
arena
allocations
are
allocated
by
city
and
county.
In
order
to
help
achieve
some
of
those
goals,
the
housing
element
is
required
to
show
the
city's
ability
to
meet
that
arena
allocation.
E
E
E
This
is
a
significant
increase
from
the
last
eight
year
period,
where
that
was
that
number
was
188
thousand.
This
is
due
to
changes
in
state
law
that
have
resulted
in
a
difference
in
the
way
that
the
state
projects
housing
needs
throughout
the
state
and
within
each
region
that
have
led
to
significantly
higher
arena
allocations
throughout
the
state.
E
You'll
also
see
here
that
there
are
allocations
for
various
income
levels.
This
means
that,
throughout
the
region,
all
cities
and
counties
are
needing
to
plan
for
very
low
income,
low
income,
moderate
income
and
above
moderate
income
housing.
So
really
looking
at
ways
to
address
housing
needs
that
spans
the
full
income
spectrum.
E
In
mountain
view,
the
arena
allocation
for
the
2023-2031
period
is
11
135
units,
so
this
is
the
number
of
units
that
the
city
will
need
to
plan
for
as
part
of
this
housing
element
that
we're
working
on
now,
like
the
rest
of
the
region,
you'll
see
that
this
is
a
significant
increase
from
the
last
eight
year
period,
where
the
city
needed
to
plan
for
just
under
3
000
units
and
again
you'll
see
that
this
this
need
is
divided
up
between
various
income
levels
in
order
to
address
needs
across
the
income
spectrum.
E
So
when
we
talk
about
households
at
each
of
these
different
income
levels,
I
just
wanted
to
provide
a
little
snapshot
of
what
this
could
mean.
There
are
a
number
of
different
permutations
that
households
can
take
at
every
income
level,
so
this
is
by
no
means
exhaustive
of
what
all
households
can
look
like
at
each
of
these
income
levels.
It's
just
sort
of
a
sample
of
some
potential
households.
E
So
we
have
a
moderate
income
household
with
four
people.
They
have
an
annual
income
of
178
000
per
year
that
puts
them
into
the
moderate
income
category.
E
This
could
be
a
household
where
say
one
one:
income
earner
is
an
elementary
school
teacher
and
the
other
is
a
legal
assistant.
We
have
a
five
person
household
with
an
annual
income
of
123
000
per
year.
This
would
make
this
household
a
low
income
household.
E
This
would
be,
could
be
a
household
where
you
have
say
a
real
estate
agent
and
a
butcher.
There's
of
course,
a
bunch
of
other
occupations
that
could
fall
within
this.
But
that's
this
is
the
example
that
we're
giving
here
we
have
a
very
low
income
household
with
three
people
and
an
annual
income
of
about
75
000
per
year.
This
would
be
a
single
income
earner,
who
is
a
crane
operator
in
our
example
here,
and
then
we
have
an
extremely
low
income
household.
E
So
how
will
mountain
view
address
its
arena
requirements?
The
primary
requirement
under
state
law
is
for
the
city
to
identify
sites
where
new
housing
can
be
built.
The
sites
that
are
identified
for
this
purpose
are
they.
They
must
meet
certain
criteria
that
are
set
by
the
state.
This
means
that
they
need
to
be
zoned
for
residential
use,
have
access
to
the
appropriate
utilities
for
residential
development
and
be
reasonably
likely
to
be
developed
within
the
planning
period
for
sites
that
are
identified
specifically
to
meet
the
low
income.
E
E
So,
there's
also
some
additional
analysis
that
we
need
to
consider
as
a
part
of
the
site's
analysis,
besides
just
looking
at
those
base
requirements
so
for
certain
types
of
sites
which
include
non-vacant
sites,
sites
that
have
existing
development,
that
would
need
to
be
redeveloped
to
accommodate
housing
and
also
for
particularly
small
sites
or
particularly
large
sites.
We
need
to
do
some
additional
analysis
to
make
sure
that
it's
reasonably
likely
that
housing
could
actually
be
built
on
those
sites.
E
Where
there
are
not,
you
know
significantly
higher
levels
of
pollution
or
other
environmental
constraints
and
so
making
sure
that,
particularly
for
low-income
household
for
low-income
sites,
we're
providing
access
to
high
opportunity
if
the
sites
that
are
already
zoned
in
the
city
do
not
provide
enough
capacity
to
meet
the
city's
full
arena,
there
is
a
requirement
that
the
city
re-zone
in
order
to
create
enough
residential
sites
to
meet
that
requirement.
E
The
city
has
sort
of
gotten
us
to
this
point
through
the
groundwork
that
they've
laid
over
the
past
several
years
and
also
currently
undergoing
to
create
some
of
that
residential
capacity.
So
this
includes
the
precise
plans
that
the
city
has
adopted
in
recent
years.
E
The
r3
zoning
update,
which
is
currently
in
process-
and
we
also
think
that
even
outside
of
these
areas,
there
are
other
sites
throughout
the
city
that
could
potentially
accommodate
new
housing
development
over
the
next
eight
years.
E
E
Your
immediate
annual
household
income
is
about
148
000,
again,
that's
a
little
bit
higher
than
the
county,
and
you
have
a
large
proportion
of
one-person
households
which
comprise
about
30
of
all
households
in
the
city
in
the
county.
It's
more
like
20,.
E
The
mountain
view
is
slightly
less
diverse
in
terms
of
race
and
ethnicity
than
santa
clara
county
in
the
bay
area.
This
slide
shows
that
44
of
your
population
is
white
and
not
of
hispanic
or
latino
origin.
That's
compared
to
32
percent
in
the
county
and
39
in
the
area
overall
and
there's
a
correspondingly
smaller
share
of
households
that
I'm
sorry
of
the
population
that
identifies
with
other
races
and
ethnicities.
E
There
is
a
component
of
the
housing
element
where
we'll
be
diving
a
little
bit
deeper
into
this
data,
to
look
at
some
of
the
factors
that
may
be
at
play
here
that
are
influencing
the
demographics
in
mountain
view.
In
this
way
I
mentioned
special
needs
households
a
few
slides
ago.
This
is
a
term,
that's
id,
that's
defined
by
the
state
and
is-
and
it
includes
seniors,
large
families,
single-parent
households,
farm
workers,
people
who
are
experiencing
homelessness
and
people
with
disabilities.
E
E
There
are
about
100,
606,
homeless,
individuals
living
in
mountain
view.
This
is,
as
of
the
2019
point
in
time,
count
which
is
the
most
recent
that
we
have
available
right
now
and
at
that
point
in
time,
that
was
an
increase
of
416
from
two
years
prior
to
that.
E
So
this
would
not
reflect
some
of
the
more
recent
efforts,
like
the
project,
homekey
project
that
some
of
you
may
be
familiar
with
in
mountain
view
that
have
occurred
since
the
2019
point
in
time.
Account.
E
E
E
So
mountain
view
has
seen
significant
increases
in
rent
over
the
past
10
years
or
so
similar
to
santa
clara
county
in
the
bay
area.
This
chart
shows
a
median
contract
rent
between
2009
and
2019..
E
The
blue
line
on
top
is
mountain
view.
So,
as
you
can
see,
it's
gone
up
quite
a
bit
in
that
time
period
and
it's
also
significantly
higher
or
at
least
consistently
higher
than
santa
clara
county
and
the
bay
area
throughout
that
entire
period,
and
we
see
sort
of
a
similar
trend.
When
we
look
at
home
prices,
this
chart
shows
2001
through
2020
the
zillow
home
price
index.
E
The
sort
of
blue
green
line
at
the
top
again
is
mountain
view
and
you'll
see
that
throughout
this
period,
mountain
view
has
consistently
had
higher
home
prices
than
both
santa
clara
county
and
the
bay
area.
In
all
three
geographies
home
prices
have
really
increased
quite
a
bit
in
the
2001
time
period.
We're
seeing
these
prices
are
somewhere.
In
the
you
know:
high
400,
thousands,
low
five
hundred
thousands
and
now
in
all
three
geographies
they're
over
a
million
and
in
mountain
view
in
particular,
they've
really
increased
quite
a
bit.
E
The
price
of
1.8
million
so
with
that,
I'm
going
to
turn
it
back
over
to
dave
to
talk
about
our
breakout
room
discussions
thanks
so
much
for
being
here
tonight
and
I'll
stop
talking.
Thank
you.
A
Great,
thank
you
so
much
stephanie
right
on
time.
Perfectly
done
so,
as
we
mentioned
earlier.
The
main
reason
we're
here
tonight
is
to
hear
from
you
all,
so
we
wanted
to
provide
plenty
of
time
for
that
to
happen.
One
thing
I
forgot
to
mention
earlier
is
along
with
the
discussions
in
the
breakout
rooms.
A
Next
is
we're
going
to
split
up
evenly
into
three
groups
and
you're
going
to
see
yourself
manually,
get
moved
and
or
if
you
don't
something,
will
pop
up
and
move
you
into
a
room
once
you're
there
you're
going
to
have
a
facilitated
discussion
and
your
facilitators.
The
first
thing
they're
going
to
do
is
just
mute
mics,
just
to
make
sure
that
we
don't
have
any
potential
distractions,
but
once
you
do
want
to
contribute
again
using
a
hand
raised
feature
will
allow
you
to
contribute.
A
We
highly
recommend
that
you
all
have
your
videos
on,
so
we
can
see
each
other.
You
can
even
use
your
your
own
hand
and
raise
your
hand
physically
if
you'd
like
to
speak,
and
we
could
meet
you
that
way,
but
we're
really
hoping
to
hear
from
everyone
and,
as
part
of
that
discussion,
we
have
a
few
topics
that
we'd
like
to
discuss.
A
A
So
before
we
launch
into
the
small
groups,
if
we
can
go
to
the
next
slide,
I
think
that's
our
live
poll.
I'm
gonna
go
ahead!
Oh
sorry,
I
forgot
the
feedback
form
that
I
mentioned
earlier.
So
here
are
links
to
the
feedback
forms
that
I
mentioned,
and
these
are
basically
online
multiple
choice,
questions
and
an
opportunity
to
provide
additional
comments
or
feedback
that
you'd
like
to
be
included
as
part
of
the
summary
of
this
engagement
and
of
this
workshop.
A
So,
as
you
see
here,
these
are
short
links
to
each
one
of
those
community
input
forms
as
well
as
these
cool
qr
codes,
that
if
you
bring
your
phone
up
to
with
your
camera,
it'll,
take
you
directly
to
those
forms
again
we're
just
showing
this
not
as
a
way
to
have
you
leave
the
meeting.
We're
really
hoping
you
stick
with
us,
but
this
is
just
another
way
to
get
feedback
and
something
to
share
out
with
your
friends
and
neighbors,
and
we'll
remind
you
about
this
link
as
well
within
the
small
groups.
A
So
with
that,
I
want
to
just
launch
one
more
live
poll
as
a
larger
group
here
together
again,
just
to
understand
generally,
what
topics
you
think
are
critical
and
that'll
help
us
kind
of
think
through
the
discussion
as
well
in
a
small
group.
So
I'm
launching
that
now
and
you
should
see
that
pop
up
in
front
of
you,
I'm
going
to
read
through
the
questions,
but
you
all
should
be
able
to
see
them.
The
first
question
is:
how
satisfied
are
you
with
your
current
housing
situation
from
satisfied
to
dissatisfied?
A
The
second
question
is:
how
satisfied
are
you
with
the
affordability
of
housing
in
mountain
view,
very
similar
discussion
that
we're
hoping
to
have
third,
is:
how
satisfied
are
you
with
the
variety
of
housing
types
that
are
available
in
mountain
view,
again
kind
of
feeding
into
the
affordability
of
housing
and
allowing
everyone
that
would
like
to
stay
in
mountain
view
to
stay
in
mountain
view?
A
So
I
read
through
those
questions
to
hopefully
stall
long
enough
to
give
you
all
a
chance
to
take
this.
This
poll
looks
like
we're
about
three
quarters
of
the
way
there,
so
I'm
gonna
give
you
all
about
another
30
seconds,
and
this
is
really
important.
A
I
think
for
us
all
to
see
as
a
larger
group,
of
where
some
of
those
priorities
are
before
we
kind
of
get
in
and
dive
deep
into
the
discussion
and
again
this
will
kind
of
help
maybe
spur
the
discussion
as
we
move
into
those
groups,
and
one
thing
I
forgot
to
mention,
as
you
all
finishing
this
is
you'll
see
when
you
get
into
small
groups,
we
have
a
virtual
whiteboard
that
we
use
where
we're
going
to
be
taking
all
the
notes
and
the
chat
will
be
available
as
well.
A
If
you
wanted
to
chat
instead
of
giving
verbal
comments
and
for
those
that
are
using
their
phones,
if
you
downline
that'll,
bring
up
your
hand
raise
function
so
that
you
can
verbally
contribute
as
well.
So
all
those
options
are
available
to
you
and
I
think
I've
stalled
long
enough.
So
I'm
going
to
go
ahead
and
end
the
poll,
and
we
can
all
see
the
results
here
in
a
second
okay.
So
they're
sharing
back
out
all
to
you.
A
So
first
question
of
how
satisfied
are
you
with
the
current
housing
situation,
looks
like
we
have
answers
across
the
board,
I'm
about
a
30
year,
satisfied
and
about
another.
Third:
are
not
so
satisfied
and
that's
kind
of
why
we're
here
tonight
to
speak
through
that?
How
satisfied
are
you
with
the
affordability
of
housing?
A
And
then,
how
do
you
feel
about
how
much
housing
has
been
built
over
the
past
few
years
and
about
half
of
you
again
or
more
than
half
think
that
we
can
use
more
housing
in
mountain
view?
And
maybe
not
enough
has
been.
E
A
And
then,
lastly,
how
well
do
you
think
mountain
provides
access
to
housing
for
a
variety
of
demographic
types
and
looks
that
one
as
well
either
neutral
or
you'd
like
to
see
more
opportunity
for
all?
So
thank
you
so
much
again,
that
is
really
really
helpful
and
again
on
the
feedback
forum.
It
looks
like
there
was
a
question
of
whether
there's
an
option
to
provide
other
comments
that
there
is
on
that
input
form,
but
we're
really
here
to
hear
from
you
live
and
in
person.
A
Okay,
I
think
I
think
we're
ready,
so
I'm
going
to
go
ahead
and
open
all
the
rooms
again
you're
going
to
be
moved
over
there
manually.
Some
of
you
are
going
to
stay
right
here.
This
mainly
with
us-
and
one
note
on
that
I
wanted
to
mention-
is
if
there
are
any
mandarin
speakers
that
are
following
along
with
us
right
now
and
they're,
hopefully
hearing
me
through
aileen
our
interpreter.
A
If
you
can
use
the
hand
raise
to,
let
us
know
that
you
would
like
to
continue
to
follow
along
in
mandarin.
That
would
be
a
huge
help,
so
that
hand
raised
feature
in
your
reactions
window
will.
Let
us
know
so
that
way.
I
make
sure
that
I
keep
you
in
this
main
room
and
again
worst
case
scenario.
If
you
get
moved
to
another
room
and
want
to
come
back
here,
so
you
can
follow
along
in
mandarin,
you
could
just
simply
leave
the
room
that
I
put
you
in
okay.
C
A
Don't
see
any
hand
raised
so
here
we
go
I'm
going
to
open
the
rooms.
You
all
are
going
to
go,
have
a
great
time,
I'm
going
to
come
back
here
and
do
a
quick
report
out
and
then
send
you
on
your
way.
So
thanks
all
for
sticking
with
us-
and
here
we
go
have
a
good
time-
looks
like
folks
are
trickling
back
in
now.
Thank
you.
So
much
for
sticking
with
us
and
the
great
conversations
I
was
popping
around
all
the
rooms
and
it
sounded
like
we
got
a
lot
of
fantastic
input.
A
So
we
really
really
appreciate
your
time
here
tonight.
So
what
we're
going
to
do
next
is
just
do
a
very
quick
kind
of
round
robin
record
out
just
highlighting
the
very
high
level
key
themes
that
we
heard
in
each
one
of
the
discussions
and
then
we'll
bring
the
presentation
back
up
so
that
you
can
get
a
reminder
of
where
to
go
for
more
input
and
where
to
go
to
continue
to
track
along
with
the
project.
A
So
I'm
going
to
ask
the
lead
facilitators
of
each
group
to
do
the
report
out
and
I
might
just
go
right
down
the
line
from
the
main
room
and
start
there
and
alan.
You
were
in
a
pretty
good
flow.
So
I'm
going
to
start
with
you
and
if
you
want
to
share
your
screen
and
bring
up,
your
virtual
bore,
feel
free
or
we
can
just
kind
of
share
and
move
on.
So
we'll
just
keep
it
real,
quick
snapshot
of
what
was
discussed.
D
Thanks
dave,
so
we
had
a
lot
of
discussion.
I
think
we
stayed
pretty
heavy
on
question
one
and
two,
but
we
talked
about
reducing
cost
and
about
density
and
affordability,
and
that
was
kind
of
some
of
the
major
issues
that
we
saw
in
the
city.
We
did
also
talk
about
solutions
and
how
we
can
address
the
housing
needs
and
goals.
That
kind
of
you
know.
We
talked
about
parking
being
an
issue.
D
D
You
know
ensuring
that
our
corporate
businesses
are
paying
into
funds
to
support
our
infrastructure
and
then
how
we
can
make
sure
that
our
unhoused
is
being
housed
and
a
couple
of
suggestions
in
making
sure
that
we're
talking
to
existing
workers,
who
may
not
be
current
residents
of
mountain
view.
So
that's
pretty
much
what
we
had
in
room
number,
one,
a
lot
more
comments,
you
know
were
captured
on
our
board.
A
Excellent,
thank
you
ellen
and
yeah.
Just
as
a
reminder,
all
this
great
information
is
going
to
be
put
into
a
brief
summary
that
we'll
have
a
report
out,
so
you
all
can
get
a
good
sense
of
all
the
great
discussion
that
was
that
was
had
so
next
we'll
go
down
the
line
and
go
to
stephanie
stephanie.
I
want
to
give
a
quick
report
out
of
your
discussion.
E
Yeah
hi
everybody,
so
we
had
a
good
discussion.
We
talked
about
sort
of
making
the
arena
allocations,
be
something
that's
realistic
and
how
to
make
those
numbers
that
are
actually
achievable.
In
mountain
view,
we
talked
about
a
need
for
a
variety
of
housing
types,
including
adus
and
duplexes.
We
also
talked
about
stacked
flat,
condominiums
and
co-ops.
E
There
was
some
interest
in
sustainability.
They
need
more
sustainability,
features
in
mountain
view,
particularly
in
relation
to
older
homes,
sort
of
being
having
fewer
sustainability
features
and
some
newer
homes
and
trying
to
sort
of
upgrade
that
over
time
as
new
housing
is
built
and
some
discussion
about
higher
density.
E
We
also
had
some
discussions
about
parking,
potentially
unbundling
parking
from
residential
units.
Although
there
was
a
little
bit
of
a
disagreement
about
whether
or
not
that
was
the
right
path
to
go
or
not,
and
we
talked
about
you
know:
how
can
the
city
keep
housing
prices
from
skyrocketing
and
sort
of
keep
them
in
check?
What
can
the
city
do
to
incentivize
developers
to
build
in
advantageous
okay
locations?
E
We
talked
a
lot
about
putting
housing
near
where
there
are
already
jobs
in
order
to
create
some
housing,
that's
sort
of
near
where
the
jobs
are,
but
also
from
a
sustainability
perspective.
E
We
talked
about
the
need
to
think
about
how
various
city
programs
could
be
financed
as
a
part
of
this
and
again
we
talked
about
a
variety
of
housing
types
and
then
in
the
how
housing
should
look
in
the
next
10
years.
We
did
talk
again
about
more
sustainable
housing.
E
E
There
was
sort
of
the
echoing
the
thought
of
you
know:
people
who
don't
live
in
mountain
view,
but
might
want
to
that
ellen
mentioned
of
trying
to
figure
out
how
to
reach
out
to
that
population,
trying
to
think
about
community
building
outreach
to
renters.
There
was
a
suggestion
to
put
an
ad
on
craigslist.
I
think
we
had
some
good
suggestions
here
for
us
to
consider
and
so
they've
got
a
really
good
discussion
thanks.
Everybody
excellent.
A
Thank
you
stephanie
and
last
but
not
least,
we're
gonna
go
to
evan
to
do
a
quick
report
out
of
your
room,
yeah.
B
Thanks
dave,
and
so
not
to
you
know,
reiterate,
I
think
a
lot
of
the
the
same
points
were
covered.
You
know
in
our
our
room
number
two
majority
of
our
focus,
we're
on
the
first
two
questions.
I
think
everybody
had
a
lot
of
great
input.
It
was
focused
on
affordability
was
one
of
the
main
topics,
but
also
the
the
amount
of
housing
provided
and
the
the
varying
types
of
housing.
B
So
whether
it's
townhouse
row
house
accessory
dwelling
units,
that
was
a
major
point
of
clarification
for
folks,
multi-general,
generational
housing
and
providing
you
know,
senior
housing
as
well
as
more
workforce
housing,
and
then
you
know
some
of
the
infrastructure
considerations
that
went
along
with
that
and
providing
for
schools
and
parks,
as
stephanie
mentioned.
So
some
of
the
solutions
people
talked
about
is
by
building
more
housing
and
and
using
some
of
the
more
data-driven
approaches
to
looking
at
the
site's
inventory
and
passed
kind
of
historical.
B
You
know
information
to
to
find
those
locations
where
housing
might
be
developed.
That
was
brought
up
and
increasing
some
of
the
density
and
looking
at
zoning
considerations
as
well,
you
know
we
did
also
talk
about
some
of
the
you
know,
the
future
outlook
for
the
city
and
how
to
build
more
housing
units
creating
more
of
a
village
community
along
specific
corridors,
and
then
you
know
ways
to
solicit
more
feedback.
B
I
think
transparency
was
brought
up
and
reaching
out
to
folks
who
may
not
have
access
to
resources
as
easily
and
providing
translation
services
and
making
sure
everyone's
voice
is
heard
so
yeah.
I
I
think
we
had
a
great
discussion
and
I
appreciate
everyone's
feedback.
Thank
you.
A
Excellent,
thank
you
and
thank
you
all
again.
That
was
fantastic,
really
really
great
discussion
and
feedback.
So
we
are
right
on
time
and
about
to
wrap
up.
I
was
just
gonna,
you
nailed
it
way
to
go
stephanie's
bringing
up
the
final
slide
just
to
remind
you
all
of
how
to
continue
to
stay
involved
in
upcoming
events,
stephanie
I'll
turn
it
back
over
to
you
to
wrap
up.
E
A
E
You
I
was
so
yeah.
We
really
appreciate
you
all
being
here
tonight
and
we
hope
that
you
continue
to
stay
involved
in
this
process
and
let
everybody
else
know
that
they
should
also
get
involved
in
this
process.
You
can
go
to
the
city's
website.
Mvhouseyelement.Org
is
the
website
for
the
housing
element
update.
E
C
E
So
those
are
not
yet
calendared
or
quite
figured
out
exactly
what
those
are
going
to
be.
But
if
you
go
to
mvhousingelement.org,
you
can
sign
up
for
updates,
and
if
we,
when
we
have
future
events,
you'll
get
an
email,
letting
you
know
that
these
updates
are
coming
and
just
scroll
back
to
the
qr
code.
Real
quick
in
case
any
of
you
want
to
get
onto
that
community
feedback
form.
You
can
also
go
to
the
website.
A
Perfect,
thank
you
so
much
stephanie.
Unless
there
are
any
other
wrap-up
thoughts
by
ellen
and
team,
I
think
we
are
going
to
close
the
meeting
all
right.
Thank
you
all
again
so
much
for
joining
us
here
tonight.
We
look
forward
to
seeing
you
again
in
the
future
and
have
a
great
rest
of
your
evening.
Take
care,
bye.