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reasoning behind the recommendation and incorporate additional comments. Once <br />the recommendation is presented to the Planning Commission, public notification and <br />opportunity for public comment would follow established city procedures (i.e. <br />Hearings and comment sessions prior to both Planning Commission and City Council <br />decisions.) <br />WHAT ARE THE STEPS THAT NEED TO HAPPEN? <br />After City Council approves the CCOS concept as the next step, they will need to <br />select a facilitator, a method for appointing the Team determined and the Team <br />appointed, and begin initial citizen outreach. The Team would meet multiple times <br />over several months to develop consensus recommendations and develop the <br />lexicon. After the recommendation has been drafted, there would be additional public <br />outreach and revision in order to verify the recommendation captures the community <br />consensus. Finally, the recommendation would go through the established Planning <br />Commission and City Council approval processes. This would probably take about a <br />year to a year and a half. Once the Collaborative Community Objective Setting <br />Process has been completed, individual areas could create their own localized plans, <br />such as refinement plans. <br />WHAT HAPPENS AFTER CCOS? <br />After the City Council has approved the outcomes of the CCOS, more work still needs <br />to be done. Individual areas would need to do localized planning to determine what <br />specific locations along the key transit corridors should be the focus of initial <br />planning, what kind of infrastructure investments (parks, transportation, incentives, <br />etc.) are necessary in that area to create true 20-minute neighborhoods, how to <br />coordinate with other areas on decisions or recommendations that have a broader <br />impact, and the specifics of how to balance changes with preserving neighborhood <br />character. This would involve refinement planning or another localized planning <br />process for the individual areas. <br />After the localized planning has been completed, the plans would need to be <br />implemented. This would include both modifying city land use code and <br />comprehensive plan designations as needed to reflect the outcomes of the process, and <br />as well identifying, prioritizing and incorporating into city workplans the projects <br />necessary to accomplish identified infrastructure improvements and other changes. <br /> <br />