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<br />Task 6.2 Mitigation Monitoring. The City is required to prepare plans to determine whether <br />mitigation measures, adopted in an EIR, are being implemented and how effectively they are <br />reducing the impacts they are intended to minimize. To be effective, such plans need to <br />specifically define the activities required to implement the mitigation measure, identify when <br />they need to be performed, indicate who is responsible for implementation, and establish criteria <br />by which their effectiveness can be judged. <br /> <br />Key components of the Mitigation Monitoring and Reporting Program for the Medical <br />CenterIRetail Development will identify in a table: <br /> <br />. The mitigation measures to be implemented by development phase (e.g., during final <br />design, during construction, and long-term during occupancy) <br /> <br />. The entity responsible for implementing a particular measure <br /> <br />. The entity responsible for verifying that a particular measure has been completed <br /> <br />. A monitoring milestone(s) or action(s) to mark implementation/completion of the <br />mitigation measure <br /> <br />. Recommendations for reporting monitoring actions or for noting <br />implementation/completion of a measure. <br /> <br />This document is a preliminary version and will be modified if the Planning Commission <br />recommends certification of the DEIR. At that time, the measures in the Mitigation Monitoring <br />and Reporting Program will be revised to reflect the actual measures recommended for inclusion <br />by the Planning Commission. <br /> <br />Task 7. Water Supply Assessment and Water Supply Verification <br /> <br />SB 610 and SB 221, passed into law in 2001, reflect the growing awareness of the need to <br />incorporate water supply and demand analysis at the earliest possible stage in the land use <br />planning process. <br /> <br />SB 610 amends the statutes of the Urban Water Management Planning Act. As a result of SB <br />610, water assessments must be furnished to local governments for inclusion in any <br />environmental documentation for projects meeting the specified requirements under S 10912 (a) <br />of the Water Code and subject to CEQA. Under this section, a "project" means any of the <br />following: a residential development with 500 or more dwelling units; a retail center employing <br />more than 1,000 persons or having more than 500,000 square feet of floor space; a commercial <br />building employing more than 1,000 persons or having more than 250,000 square feet of office <br />space; a hotel or motel with more than 500 rooms; a mixed use project with one or more of these <br />elements; or a project creating the equivalent demand of 500 residential units. In addition, if a <br />public water system has less than 5,000 service connections, then a project also means any <br />proposed residential, business, commercial, hotel or motel, or industrial development that would <br />account for an increase of 10 percent or more in the number of service connections. The <br />proposed project meets these requirements, and therefore a Water Supply Assessment (WSA) is <br />required for the project under SB 610. <br /> <br />Consulting Services Agreement between <br />City of San Leandro and ElP Associates <br /> <br />Page 37 of 44 <br />