►
From YouTube: Apopka City Council Meeting November 17, 2021
Description
Apopka City Council Meeting at City Hall on November 17, 2021 at 7 PM.
To view the meeting agenda visit: http://www.apopka.net/agenda
#ApopkaCityCouncilMeeting #CityofApopkaFL
A
B
C
B
B
B
Prior
to
this
development
information
from
the
new
york
stock
exchange,
which
was
established
in
1792
traveled
by
mail
or
messenger,
the
stock
ticker
was
invented
by
edward
callahan,
who
configured
a
telegraph
machine
to
print
stock,
quotes
on
streams
of
paper
tape.
The
ticker
got
its
name
from
the
sound
it.
Its
type
wheel
made
the
last
mechanical
stock
ticker
debuted
in
1960,
and
was
eventually
replaced
by
computerized
tickers
with
electronic
displays.
A
A
So
do
you
want
to
just
we'll
just
table
the
approval
of
minutes
it's
a
little
later
in
the
the
agenda,
so
if
you
get
a
chance
to
look
at
them
or
or
what
would
you
like
to
do.
E
F
A
A
F
The
okay
so
like
on
page
24
printed
the
the
business
around
the
planning
commission
appeal.
Commissioners,
you
have
I
for
both
sets.
That
was
a
3-2
vote
so
becker
and
velasquez
voting,
nay,
I
should
say.
F
And
then
my
comments
during
public
comments.
I
do
want
the
I
guess.
It's.
The
third
fourth
sentence
now
no
fifth
sentence
where
it
begins.
He
said
he's
receiving
emails
on
this
topic,
stating
I
just
want
that
to
be
very
clear
that
the
words
that
are
after
that
page
four,
so
he
said,
he's
receiving
emails
on
this
topic
stating,
and
I
want
the
to
say
that
the
emails
are
stating
not
that
I'm
stating
because
it's
stating
that
there
is
a
very
large
majority.
A
A
Just
in
just
a
few
minutes
next
up
we
have
the
present
presentation
by
the
apopka
youth
council.
They
want
to
show
us
a
video
and
with
us
today
we
have
the
whole
team
from
the
apopka
youth
council
and
adriana
gonzalez.
A
junior
at
apopka
high
school
is
going
to
take
over
so
andrea,
come
on
up.
H
I
When
I
was
12
years
old,
I
was
diagnosed
with
a
mild
form
of
tourette's
and
most
people
don't
notice
my
threats
because
I've
dealt
with
it
for
a
long
time,
so
I
know
how
to
suppress
it.
Whenever
I
look
at
my
own
personal
story,
I
bring
it
up
to
some
people
and
they're
quite
ignorant
to
the
idea,
and
it
makes
me
want
to
bring
it
up
less
and
less
going
to
new
places
and
meeting
new
people
is
more,
it's
always
more
exhausting
than
it
should
be.
I
I
usually
think
so
much
about
what
I'm
going
to
say,
or
I'm
going
to
go
over
how
I'm
going
to
act
in
any
social
situation
that
it
comes
out
either
awkward
or
like
I'm
trying
too
hard,
but
I
want
to
be
like
I
want
to
look
effortless.
I
hate
that
I
overthink
every
situation
afterwards
and
during
it,
and
that
causes
me
to
just
stress
out
more.
C
J
Athlete
and
performing
at
a
high
level,
especially
if
you
want
to
go
to
college,
for
that,
it
can
put
on
even
more
stress.
K
If
you're
waking
up
early
in
the
morning
before
school
practice
or
even
late
night,
practice
like
you
want
to
sleep,
but
you
have
to
finish
your
homework
or
study
for
a
test.
It
goes
for
everything
in
life,
like
your
parents,
expect
you
to
have
good
grades,
especially
for
student
athletes
like
that's,
not
easy,.
L
I
feel
like
a
lot
of
people,
don't
talk
about
this,
because
it's
something
very
personal.
I
don't
like
talking
about
it,
because
I
like
people,
thinking
that
I
depend
on
them
emotionally
like
sometimes.
I
just
feel
like
really
sad
it
like
stops
me
from
doing
like
the
smallest
things
I
can
do
like
sometimes
school
work.
Sometimes
I
feel
like
I'm
not
my
trauma
isn't
as
important
as
someone
else's,
because
I
do
come
from
like
a
nice
family.
I
What
is
something
we
can
do
or
peers
can
do
to
find
a
solution.
Any
mindfulness
practice
is
key
to
getting
out
of
your
head,
because
the
whole
topic
that
we're
talking
about
is
mental
health.
So,
if
you
can
become
more
aware
of
what
is
going
on
in
your
mind,
that
will
really
help
you
to
overcome
any
sorts
of
negative
thoughts.
Definitely.
J
Starting
within
the
family
will
help.
I
think
that
will
cause
the
most
change
because
you're
around
your
parents
a
lot
so
how
your
parents
are
going
to
be
talking
about
when
to
help
you
or
you
were
talking
about
their
own
mental
health.
That
will
help
a
lot.
I
feel.
I
Like
telling
people
that
it's
okay
to
have
therapy
and
not
have
it
looked
down
upon
because
it's
useful
and
it
helps
people.
So
what
do
you
think
that
our
local
government
can
do
as
well
as
the
apopka
city
community,
to
help
us
local
government
in
general
can
create
more
affordable
therapy
so
that
people
are
more
open
to
the
idea
of
getting
help?
I
think
that
the
mental
health
days
are
a
great
start,
but
if
you
want
to
have
more
of
a
impact.
G
M
So
it
was
crazy,
because
when
I
was
interviewing
the
youth
I
told
them-
I
said
you
know
as
soon
as
we
start
we
have.
We
actually
have
to
start
working
on
this
video
competition
for
the
florida
league
of
cities
and
part
of
their
their
interview
was
the
question
that
I
posed
for
them,
and
it
was
the
question
that
they
addressed
so
the
most
critical
youth
issue
that
they
feel
like
is
affecting
them
right
now
and
for
them
to
say
mental
health
was
just
like
I
was
blown
away.
I
couldn't
believe
that
you
know.
M
I
couldn't
believe
that
they
would
even
say
that,
so
from
there
we
were
able
to
contact,
miss
janet
and
she
was
able
to
help
us
put
the
video
together
and
I'm
just
so
proud
of
him.
M
So
what
we
hope
to
do-
and
that's
that
was
part
of
our
discussion,
part
of
our
meeting
before
we
met
with
you
all
today.
We
do
hope
to
expand
on
this.
M
They
have
expressed
an
interest
in
holding
a
mental
health
day,
almost
like
a
mental
health,
fair
where
we
have
local
therapists
and
we
invite
members
of
the
public
and
their
their
teachers
and
their
principals.
And
of
course,
we
want
to
make
sure
that
we
engage
the
youth
and
just
make
it
a
safe
place
for
people
to
come
and
to
talk,
and
maybe
even
like
a
town
hall
type
atmosphere
where
they're
just
able
to
express
their
feelings
and
express
what
they're
going
through.
M
It's
always
amazing
to
me,
you
know
I'm
a
former
teacher
just
the
things
that
they
are
still
that
they
have
to
deal
with
at
school.
They
blew
my
mind
when
they
were
telling
me
about
the
tick,
tock
challenge
and
them
having
having
people
going
into
the
restrooms
and
stealing
toilet
paper,
so
they're
unable
to
even
go
to
the
restroom
while
they're
at
school,
because
people
are
stealing
the
toilet
paper
and
the
paper
towels.
D
D
M
B
I
just
want
to
add
on
to
that.
You
know,
I
think
the
isolation
that
we've
gone
through
because
of
covet
has
been
a
big
part
of
that
and,
and
you
guys
are
hitting
it
there
to
go
from
isolation
to
interaction,
talking
being
able
to
share
that
with
somebody.
You
know
your
family,
your
friends,
your
church,
your
school
and
it's
just
getting
out
of
those
boxes.
You
know
because
that's
when
your
brain
starts
going
on,
you
know
the
feedback
loop
and
you
know
so.
Thank
you
for
doing
that
very
great
job.
B
E
Job
so
I
just
want
to
say
thank
you,
because
it
is
something
that
I
personally
have
dealt
with
for
the
last
two
years,
dealing
with
my
own
two
grandchildren
who
are
14
and
15,
and
I
can
tell
you
that
it
was
a
challenge.
It
was
difficult
and
the
way
that
I
stayed
in
touch
with
them
was
literally.
Sometimes
some
things
are
good
in
in
our
modern
world
and
facetime
actually
helped
me
through
that
with
them,
because
I
would
spend
time
with
them
at
facetime.
E
I
would
give
their
mom
a
break
because
their
mom
is
a
single
mom,
and
so
she
had
to
work,
and
I
would
go
and
pick
them
up.
It's
a
four
hour
drive
to
pick
them
up,
bring
them
home
and
spend
that
time
with
them,
and
so
it
was
you
know
interacting,
and
it
was
almost
like
homeschooling
and
I
realized
the
isolation
really
disconnected
them
and
they're
just
starting
to
get
back
to
it.
So
the
fact
that
you
even
are
expressing
this.
N
No
need
to
be
sorry,
it's
my
hope
that
you
will
follow
through
with
the
town
hall,
to
bring
this
to
an
awareness,
because
a
lot
of
times,
people
just
put
a
stigma
on
you
when
you're
doing
therapy,
and
so
a
lot
of
young
people
and
adults
as
well,
refuse
to
go
to
therapy
because
of
the
stigmas
is
the
task
people
start
looking
at
them.
Funny
stop
treating
them
funny,
so
want
to
make
sure
that
you
you
follow
through
with
that
and
especially
that
a
lot
of
parents
have
transitioned
doing
this.
N
Kovic
and
a
lot
of
kids
have
been
left
alone,
either
to
other
siblings
or
to
grandparents
or
articles
and
arts,
and
so
that's
also
a
mental
thing
that
they've
got
to
go
through
to
deal
with
death
at
such
a
young
age.
So
please
follow
through
on
your
idea.
F
Yeah,
I
agree
the
video
is
beautifully
done.
You
know
mental
health
kind
of
manifests
itself
differently
in
many
different
ways,
and
I
think
that
video
highlights
that
and
the
challenges-
and
I
I
appreciate
the
word
pressure
that
was
used
in
that
video,
because
the
pressures
again
manifests
themselves
differently.
Each
generation
is
faced
with
different
sets
of
pressures,
commissioner
banks
and
touched
on
it.
You
know,
were
in
the
midst
of
coming
out
of
this
pandemic.
F
That
isolation
aspect
was
a
pressure
and
then
what's
been
happening
over
the
last
call
it
10
years
in
social
media.
F
Dr
jackson
talked
about
it
in
terms
of
tick
tock,
but
you
know:
there's
x,
amount
of
social
media
platforms
that
are
out
there
that
give
negative
pressures
to
people
that
aren't
strong
minded
or
strong-willed
have
that
internal
fortitude
to
fight
against
those
pressures
you,
the
youth
council,
have
your
built-in
network
of
the
people
sitting
right
next
to
you
right,
so
be
that
external
pressure
for
other
people
be
that
that
kind
of
guiding
light
for
the
people
that
are
struggling
with
those
pressures
negatively.
F
But
then
it's
not
just
your
group.
It's
the
people
sitting
in
these
chambers
right
now,
I'm
sure
everybody
every
adult
in
here
would
would
lend
their
time
and
talents
to
help
you
out,
and
anybody
that
you
feel
is
is
needing
that
that
that
kind
of
shoulder
they
cry
on
or
our
lending
hands,
so
we've
got
a
great
community.
You've
got
a
great
group,
great
mentors
and
wonderful
product.
So
congratulations!
F
A
Next
up,
we
have
a
presentation
on
the
billy
dean
community
garden
improvements
presented
by
sue
leverens,
pretty
exciting.
O
I've
been
with
the
village
in
community
garden
since
about
2015..
The
garden
was
started.
O
Commissioner,
dean
helped
facilitate
its
creation
and
we
love
the
garden.
The
garden
has
been
just
a
sanctuary
during
covid
being
able
to
escape
out.
There
has
been
for
us
a
very
big
mental
health
boost,
to
say
the
least.
O
O
Let's
see
go
ahead
and
do
this
so
the
the
garden
is
about
an
acre
at
the
corner
of
park,
avenue
9th
street
in
case
anyone
hasn't
hasn't
seen
it
go
ahead
and
drive
by
it's
a
fenced
area,
and
you
can
see
the
red
barn
shed
on
there.
O
The
land
is
owned
by
the
city
of
apopka
and
we're
very
grateful.
It's
managed
and
operated
by
the
good
people
at
the
big
potato
foundation.
This
is
a
non-profit
foundation
and
we
offer
for
25
a
year
per
bed.
They're
four
foot
by
16
foot
very
large
raised
beds
and
a
few
volunteer
hours
keeps
the
cost
down.
O
So
the
gardeners
have
access
to
everything
that
they
need,
including
some
seeds.
We
have
a
woman
from
baker,
creek
heirloom
seeds
there
that
she's
she's
always
bringing
in
seeds
and
we
save
seeds
and
we
donate
seeds
and
people
can
go
into
our
greenhouse
that
we
created
and
you
know,
get
their
own.
O
O
A
few
scenes
from
around
the
garden
in
the
in
this.
This
is
our
start
of
our
education
garden.
Here,
here's
the
greenhouse,
it
was
a
kind
of
a
used
structure
and
four
of
us
kind
of
beat
it
back
together
after
it
was
transported
to
the
property
and
it's
holding
so
far,
some
more
beds
of
the
education
garden
and
there's
another
view
of
the
greenhouse.
O
These
are
some
of
the
fruits
of
the
garden.
I
personally
have
been
involved
in
we're
very
excited
about
our
first
bananas
out
there
right
now-
and
this
is
my
peanut
harvest
this
year.
It
was
much
better.
O
O
O
Very
generous
and
candy
coal
was
in
our
audience,
has
been
very,
very
helpful
in
getting
us
the
funding
utilizing
a
large
part
of
this
grant.
We
have
ox
construction.
They
were
retained
to
provide
several
items
for
the
garden,
including
a
new
pavilion
which
I'll
show
you
a
tool
shed
wooden,
trellises,
a
parking
and
gardening
area
for
the
disabled,
as
well
as
installing
more
irrigation,
doing
some
sight,
grading
and
debris
disposal.
O
This
group
is
impressive.
It's
led
by
david
francois,
ox
construction
employs
students
of
his
ox
school
of
construction,
which
is
a
nonprofit
organization
created
to
actively
train
our
youths
and
military
veterans,
hands-on
construction
trades.
They
have
an
intensive
24-week
program
and
their
goal
is
helping
students
develop
their
own
business
in
the
construction
industry
without
investing
a
lot
of
money.
O
So
they
are
gearing
up
to
start
on
their
portion
of
it.
The
rest
of
the
grant
will
be
used
to
purchase
a
number
of
things
tools.
Materials
to
rebuild
70
of
the
bads
bed
building
is
going
to
be
a
big
volunteer
effort.
If
anyone
wants
to
come
out
to
the
garden
we're
going
to
have
work
days-
and
you
know
I'll-
show
you
some
of
the
some
of
the
the
existing
beds
and
you'll-
see
why
we
need
to
rebuild
them.
O
So,
as
I
was
mentioning,
we
have
a
plan
to
rebuild
70
of
the
beds.
Add
water
saving
drip
irrigation
for
every
bed,
because
sometimes
right
now,
people
have
to
use
hoses
to
water
and
we
can
put
those
irrigation
drip
irrigation
on
on
timers,
so
they
automatically
go
off
at
dawn
and
water.
The
beds,
our
second
tool
storage
shed,
is
going
to
be
very
useful
because
the
one
we've
got
is
getting
pretty
crowded
with
tools.
O
We
need
to
be
able
to
purchase
some
better
soil,
soil
over
time,
kind
of
gets
old
and
it
needs
enriching,
and
when
we
make
new
beds,
you
know
we
need
soil,
so
we're
going
to
be
doing
that
adding
adding
the
disabled
gardener
beds,
and
we
have
some
plans
for
some
pollinator
beds
to
attract
more
bees
and
butterflies
and
that
will
help
to
improve
crop
yields
plus
they're
great
to
look
at
and
our
future
plans
is
adding
a
fence
area
with
honeybee
hives
and
we're
gonna
make
it
so
that
can
be
an
educational
opportunity
and
observers
will
have
a
window.
O
O
O
The
pollinator
beds
I
mentioned
those
will
be
metal,
troughs
kind
of
a
nod
to
our
agricultural
heritage,
and
one
of
the
things
discussed,
just
just
in
its
infancy
may
be
obtaining
a
patch
of
land
to
create
a
food
forest
in
order
to
give
people
in
the
surrounding
area
access
to
free,
healthy
food,
because
we're
kind
of
in
a
food
desert
over
there
and
many
other
exciting
ideas.
O
It'll
be
donated
to
the
local
food
banks
and
there'll,
be
a
lockable
component
to
store
secured
items
right
now
we
were
talking
about
putting
the
bed
building
materials
there,
because
it's
going
to
take
a
while
to
get
them
all
built.
We
want
to
attract
speakers
and
events
that
serve
the
community
and
we're
already
starting
to
do
that.
O
O
So
here's
here's.
What
the
beds
look
like
right
now,
some
of
them-
and
this
is
what
they'll
look
like
when
we're
done
so
we've
had
some
bed
building
parties
so
to
speak
and
we've
had
the
apopka
youth
council.
We've
had
local
garden
volunteers,
people
that
that
have
the
beds
and
we
had
some
help
from
four
roots.
O
O
This
is
our
compost
area,
where
we
dump
wood
chips
and
compost
in
piles
and
people
will
barrel
them
over
to
their
beds
and
fill
them.
And
then
these
are
an
experiment
that
my
husband
and
I
did.
These
are
three
there's
banana
circles.
We've
got
a
banana
circle,
a
papaya
circle,
another
banana
circle
and
we've
got
a
hugelkultur
berm
here,
and
it's
amazing
that
the
melons
and
squashes
that
grow
in
this
and
the
bananas
are
producing
gorgeous
bananas
and
we've
got
a
bunch
of
papaya.
So
it
really
is
kind
of
cool.
O
How
that's
been
working,
we
throw
the
debris
in
the
in
the
circles
and
the
plants
eat
it.
So
this
is
our
plan
for
the
future.
O
So
here's
the
part
that
we
had-
and
these
are
the
permaculture
with
fruit
trees
and
the
trellis
and
here's
our
pavilion
a
second
tool.
Second
tool
shed,
another
berm
and
our
bees
and
our
compost
there.
We
have
a
plan
for
the
raised
metal
beds
at
the
perimeter,
that'll
attract
pollinators
and
here's
our
accessible
gardening
area
so
currently
garden
beds,
current
activity,
education
area,
future
activity,
education
area.
So
we
do
really
have
plans
to
get
a
lot
done
there
and
just
to
zoom
in
on
it.
O
A
E
Oh
okay,
because
that's
a
good
way
of
marketing
and
encouraging
some
of
our
residents
to
come
in
and
buy
a
bed
and
be
then
become
a
volunteer.
Yep.
O
O
There
are
a
couple
ways
we'll
get
a
we'll
get
truckloads
of
compost
which
are
based
on
sometimes
like
from
the
mushroom
industry.
They
have
really
rich
compost,
they
use
it
for
the
mushrooms
and
then
they
discard
it.
So
we'll
get
some
of
that.
We've
had
city
compost
before
and
sometimes
we'll
get
manure,
so
different
kinds
of
plant
foods
and
we'll
take
maybe
a
wheelbarrow
load
or
two
for
each
of
these
beds
and
dump
it
on
there
mix
it
in
you
know
every
season
or.
O
And
it
could
even
be
once
a
year
and
it
really
really
makes
the
plants
grow.
Well,
we
also
have
some.
We
do
everything
organically
there's,
no,
there's!
No
pesticides,
no
chemicals,
no
chemical
fertilizers!
It's
all
natural!
We
do
have
some
organic
fertilizer,
that's
been
donated
by
our
baker,
creek
person.
O
Shannon
mccabe
and
it's
it's
like
rocket
fuel
for
tomatoes.
I
love
this
stuff,
it's
all
organic
and
then,
with
these
banana
circles
they
just
literally
you
just
you,
take
weeds
and
rotten
fruit
and
just
leftovers
from
vegetables,
and
you
just
throw
them
in
these
holes
which
are
three
feet
deep
and
you
can
heap
them
up
and
and
they
just
they
just
kind
of
melt
and
the
and
the
the
plants
just
eat
it
up
and
they
grow
and
they
produce
it's
incredible.
O
So
I
did
that
as
an
experiment,
because
I
was
impressed
by
some
things
I
read
and
it's
really
working
out
well
so.
N
Well,
as
one
of
the
originals
with
the
ability
in
garden,
along
with
commissioner
dean
and
peter
jordan
who's,
one
of
my
former
students
and
mr
john
clown,
I'm
just
proud
to
see
the
garden
still
existing
and
thriving,
and
we
just
ask
the
community
to
get
behind
it
and,
let's
make
it
happen,
there
are
other
community
gardens
in
the
other
cities
that
have
gone
by
the
wayside,
but
the
one
here
in
apartment
still
exists
so
keep
doing
what
you're
doing
we're
proud
of
all
the
work
from
the
big
potato.
F
Thank
you
not
much
to
add,
I
mean
so
much
potential
there,
I'm
great
to
see
that
you
have
a
vision
and
goals
and
you're
marching
towards
those.
The
only
question
I
had
what's
a
food
forest,
I'm
not.
O
Familiar
with
the
term
a
food
forest
is
so
you
think
herbiculture.
What
it
is
is
a
permaculture
is
something
that
you
kind
of
plant
once
and
it
grows,
and
you
don't
replant
it
every
season
like
a
fruit
tree
with
a
food
forest.
You
would
have
that
kind
of
plant
and
you
would
also
have
some
that
you
would
also
plant.
O
So,
for
example,
you
have
a
tangerine
tree
and
some
mulberries,
and
you
know
some
other
things,
that'll
that'll,
you
know
just
grow
and
we
give
them
some
fertilizer
and
water,
and
that
kind
of
thing,
but
we'd
also
have
in
the
same
area.
Maybe
several
collard
plants,
people
and
you
can
just
literally
break
off
the
leaves
and
just
walk
home
with
them.
You
know
with
that
kind
of
thing.
G
O
You
know
the
kind
of
food
that
that
grows
well
in
the
area.
You
know
that
people
can
just
just
come
and
harvest,
and
it's
just
we
we
don't
have
any
solid
plans
for
it,
but
you
know
the
ideas
come
up
and
yeah,
I'm
very
intrigued
by
it.
It'd
be
a
lot
of
fun.
You
know
to
have
something
like
that.
A
O
A
You
well
thanks
for
the
big
potato
foundation
and
what
y'all
doing
to
make
this
happen.
It's
couldn't
have
done
it
without
you,
so
thanks
for
your
continued
support.
Yes,
thank
you.
Thanks.
A
Okay,
next
up,
we
have
the
bobby-
I
guess
you're
gonna,
introduce.
P
Good
evening
earlier
this
year,
the
city
contracted
with
the
east
central
florida
regional
planning
council
to
rewrite
the
comprehensive
plan.
The
comprehensive
plan
is
the
policy
document
which
guides
growth
and
future
growth
within
the
city
we've
contracted,
as
I
said,
with
the
east
central
florida
regional
planning
council.
Michelle
morrison
is
here
tonight
with
the
east
central
florida
regional
planning
council
who's
going
to
go
over
the
comprehensive
plan
update.
G
Q
Q
It's
we're
looking
at
the
format
of
it,
as
well
as
the
information
that's
in
it
so
required
by
the
florida
statutes
are
nine
elements
you
can
see
them
up
there.
Your
current
plan
does
have
nine
elements,
but
it's
changed
over
time.
The
school
element
has
been
dropped
and
there's
a
new
property
rights
element
which
I'm
I
think,
you're
familiar
with.
Q
Optional
elements
are
the
economic
element
and
resilience
and
sustainability,
and
that
resilience
and
sustainability
is
something
that's
a
little
more
innovative
and
coming
about
in
a
lot
of
newer,
comprehensive
plans.
We
think
about
resilience.
The
ability
to
recover
adapt
thrive
with
some
kinds
of
stresses
like
acute
stress,
something
like
the
pandemic
or
a
hurricane
or
chronic
stress
like
homelessness
or
unemployment.
Q
Q
The
process
is
two
tasks,
and
each
of
these
tasks
are
broken
down
into
smaller
tasks.
We
have
already
finished
the
first
one
which
ended
at
the
end
of
september,
and
that
was
pretty
extensive,
look
and
audit
of
every
single
goal:
objective
policy
in
all
of
the
elements,
as
well
as
all
the
data,
the
maps,
the
tables,
the
figures.
Q
Q
The
second
task
is
what
we're
working
on
right
now,
and
the
goals,
objectives
and
policies
will
go
through
four
resistance
revisions,
we're
looking
at
version
one
right
now,
the
goals,
objectives
and
policies,
and
then
we're
going
to
follow
that
up
with
data
and
analysis
do
another
round
of
that
after
city
review,
and
then
we
get
into
the
full
draft-
and
this
is
just
a
kind
of
a
picture
of
how
it
would
look.
The
the
window.
Pane
is
really
a
spreadsheet.
Q
So
right
now
we
have
a
lot
of
spreadsheets
with
hundreds
of
policies
and
data
on
them
and
it's
a
great
way
to
just
keep
all
everything
organized
and
then
also
have
a
pretty
visual
representation
of
what's
in
the
plan.
Currently,
the
spreadsheets
that
we're
looking
at
can
also
be
used
to
track
changes,
as
as
we
go
through
the
different
versions
and
then
once
the
comprehensive
plan
is
finalized,
you
can
keep
those
spreadsheets
and
then
keep
keep
using
them
for
future
versions.
Q
So
you
can't
really
see
what's
up
there
and
you
don't
really
need
to
read
all
the
words
that
are
up
there,
but
this
is
something
that
would
be
for
each
element
in
the
comprehensive
plan
would
have
the
goals,
objectives
and
policies.
There
are
even
some
colors
there
to
highlight
things
like
green
or
we're
going
to
keep
this
one
or
yellow
we're
going
to
change
a
few
words
on
it,
and
the
same
thing
is
done
for
the
data
audits.
Q
Q
So
what's
next,
what's
next
is
version
one
and
that
will
start
or
we'll
we'll
deliver
that
right
after
thanksgiving
version,
one
goals,
objectives
and
policies,
and
then
a
couple
months
after
that
we'll
be
delivering
the
data
and
analysis
and
that's
the
relevant
data
that
backs
up
the
goals,
objectives
and
policies.
Q
F
Q
F
For
this
activity,
I
mean
there's
no
understating
the
importance
of
something
like
this
right,
because,
if
our,
if
our
land
development
code
is
kind
of
our
bill
of
rights,
the
comprehensive
plan
is
the
constitution
right.
And
so
I
noticed
on
your
on
your
table
that
you
have
there
160
of
those
policies
centered
directly
around
future
land
use
so
which
is
going
to
be
very
critical
for
the
future
of
the
city,
considering
that
we're
in
a
high
high
growth,
high
development
kind
of
period
of
this
city.
F
F
So
so,
to
use
to
use
that
so
you're
basically
statutorily
reconciling
our
comprehensive
planted
current
florida
state
statutes
versus.
Are
we
taking
any
kind
of
discretionary
changes
from
a
city
perspective
during
this,
or
is
it
just
more
of
a
binary
hey?
Is
this
statutorily
still
relevant
or
not
and
then
making
those
appropriate
changes.
F
Okay,
yeah
and
then
you're
getting
most
of
that
discretionary
feedback
from
staff
level
solely
or
is
there
going
to
be
any
kind
of
communication
with
this
council
to
kind
of
give
our
feedback
on,
because
what
I,
what
I
fear
is
that
we're
going
to
get
very
far
down
the
path
here,
make
some
pretty
material
changes
to
our
comp
plan
and
it's
incongruent
with
what
maybe
this
council
might
be
comfortable
with.
So
how
do
we?
F
Q
As
early
as
version
two
but
version
three
is
the
full
right
with
the
text
so
we're
taking
everything
in
the
spreadsheets
and
then
adding
words
that
go
with
it
descriptions
and
then
the
tables
and
the
pictures.
So
I
certainly
think
you
would
be
involved
in
that
there's
no
way
we
can
get
to
the
final
draft.
If
you
haven't
seen
the.
F
Q
N
Well,
I
heard
you
refer
several
times
to
state
statues.
There's
also
going
to
be
some
room
for
local
home
room
rule
as
well.
B
I
guess
the
thing
that
really
rings.
The
bell
for
me
is
hearing
the
economic
development
side,
because
we
know
that's
something:
that's
just
such
a
driver
for
the
things
that
people
are
wanting
to
see
come
to
the
city
and
just
making
sure
that
you
know
we
have
such
a
population
growth,
but
we
need
those
jobs
so
that
people
stay
here
live
here,
work
here
and
eat
here,
and
that's
been
that
real
challenge.
You
know,
as
we've
sought
after
different
restaurants
to
come.
B
That's
a
that's
a
big
thing
ever
since
I've
been
involved
and
so
we're
seeing
it
move
that
direction
and
I
think
we're
cresting
that
hill.
So
we'll
begin
to
see
that
happen.
I
just
want
to
make
sure
that
that
is
included
in
our
plans
that
we,
you
know
again
with
our
zoning
and
our
future
plans,
that
we
make
sure
that
we
have
that
that
that
element
that
that
undergirds,
that
development.
G
B
E
I
think
everyone's
kind
of
asked
the
questions
at
what
stage
will
we
have
some
input,
or
you
know
that
we
will
at
least
see
it
before
it
becomes
a
final,
comprehensive
plan.
Q
You
could
probably
look
at
it
at
any
time
you
wanted,
but
it
would
make
most
sense
to
to
not
just
read
in
a
spreadsheet
but
to
read
it
the
goals,
objectives,
policies
and
see
the
data
that's
relevant
to
making
those
and
the
the
verbiage
that
goes
with
that.
E
So,
as
as
you
go
along
with
the
versi
versions,
will
you
be
coming
back
to
give
us
at
least
some
update
each
time?
A
level
of
this
is
completed
or
worked
on.
Q
I
believe
that
yeah
and
I
think
I
think
that
will
be
probably
march
time
frame.
One
thing
we've
heard
with
the
census-
and
I
know
with
the
with
the
pandemic.
Things
have
been
delayed
just
heard
last
week
that
our
data
that
we
expected
in
december
is
now
not
going
to
be
released
till
march
of
2022
and
that's
based
on
2020
census
data,
otherwise
we're
getting
data,
that's
estimated
and
projected
based
on
2010
census
data,
so
things
might
be
shifted
a
month
or
two,
okay.
Okay,
thank
you
very
much.
A
A
lot
of
great
work
comes
out
of
that
agency,
and
so
we
appreciate
what
the
central
florida
regional
planning
council
does
for.
Not
you
know
not
only
apopka,
but
I
guess
it's
is
it
three
counties
or
now
or
do
they
think
they've
moved
it
up
to
five
counts?
I
know
it's
orange,
seminole
and
and
osceola,
but
they
added
and
they
add
lake.
I
think
to
the
lake
has
been
added.
D
I
actually
have
a
nice
little
visual
up
on
this
and
we'll
also
get
right
to
that.
Thank
you.
But
yes,
louise,
I'm
sorry,
louise
nevis,
ruiz
who's,
actually
not
here
today,
I'm
not
him.
My
name
is
daphne
green.
I
think
the
agenda
does
have
him
down,
but
they
brought
me.
D
Oh
I'm
so
sorry
I
can
hear
me
perfectly,
but
yes,
I
think
the
agenda
list
louise
is
being
here,
but
I'm
actually
here
today
to
speak
with
you
about
the
brownfield
program
and
the
brownfield
coalition
to
which
your
city
is
a
member.
D
So
I
am
daphne
green,
I'm
a
planner
with
the
east
central
florida,
regional
planning,
council,
I'm
following
our
colleague
michelle
and
with
me
here
today.
To
present
our
help
me
room
presenting
is
our
p,
our
consultant
from
ppm,
mr
charles
ray
and
our
intern
ken
story,
so
I'm
going
to
jump
into
it.
So,
yes,
we
are
with
the
east
central
florida,
regional
planning
council
background
on
us.
D
We
are
one
of
ten
rpcs
in
the
state
of
florida
and
we
do
mainly
focus
on
providing
technical
assistance
services
to
our
partnering
cities
and
county
members
and
organizations
within
the
eight
county
region.
We
were
founded
in
1962
and
of
our
partnering
cities.
D
So
within
the
rpc.
We
have
the
economic
development
program
within
it.
It's
a
number
of
areas
of
expertise
that
we
focus
on
one
being
the
strategic
planning
and
grants
area.
This
has
been
a
pretty
successful
program,
bringing
in
over
12
million
over
the
last
10
years
and
also
making
sure
it's
been
a
been
providing
a
return
of
investment
of
over
259
percent,
essentially
meaning
for
every
two
dollars
spent
by
the
program.
250
goes
back
into
our
communities.
D
D
The
title
of
brownfield
really
just
opens
it
up
for
potential
funding
to
help
revitalize
it,
but
it's
usually
more
of
a
perceived
presence
of
contamination
due
to
the
appearance
of
the
property.
Some
examples
are
gas
stations,
medical
facilities,
old
factories,
old
auto
repair
shops
and
so
forth.
D
So
more
about
the
the
program.
There
are
a
number
of
benefits
that
can
come
out
of
this
program.
I
have
a
short
list
here
today,
but
I'll
tell
you.
I
did
a
health
impact
assessment
on
a
brownfield
program
in
my
previous
job
and
it
was
more
health
focused
and
we
were
able
to
understand
the
different
health
benefits.
D
Health
equity
and
racial
equity
benefits
tied
to
it
because
of
such
environmentally
environmental
justice
focused
work,
so
I
can
go
on
about
it,
but
right
now
I'll
just
focus
in
on
the
fact
that
it
helps
to
revitalize
parcels
that
otherwise
would
not
be
revitalized
due
to
the
fact
that
there
have
some
financial
constraints
or
legal
constraints
related
to
the
property
and
it's
past
uses
it
works
as
a
catalyst
for
neighborhood-wide
improvements.
By
allowing
this
funding
to
go
into
these
properties
and
opening
up
new
funding
sources
to
them
as
well.
D
It
also
helps
to
protect
our
natural
environmental
resources
that
may
be
at
risk
to
contamination
from
the
sites,
so
it
helps
to
protect
them,
reduce
flight
and
also
take
development
pressures
off
of
greenhouse.
I'm
sorry,
I'm
sorry
off
of
green
spaces
because
it
creates
a
new
infill
redevelopment
source.
D
So
the
brownfield
assessment
grant
award
that
we've
been
awarded
by
epa
is
going
to
be
focused
on
our
coalition
cities.
That
does
include
the
city
of
apopka,
the
cities
of
eustis
kissimmee
and
longwood.
We've
been
awarded
a
funding
amount
of
six
hundred
thousand
dollars.
That's
going
to
be
focused
in
over
the
next
three
year
period.
We
had
our
kickoff
meeting
in
early,
I
mean
in
late
october
and
we're
working
hard
to
ensure
that
the
majority
of
these
funds
do
go
directly
back
into
our
communities.
D
And
so
we
have
began
doing
some
work
prior
to
the
the
grant
the
kickoff
meeting.
Previously,
we
had
done
some
gis
analysis
to
identify
some
preliminary
brownfield
sites
along
the
obt
corridor
and
found
that
we
had
seen
at
least
120
properties
showing
the
the
great
need
for
redevelopment
along
the
corridor.
D
D
So,
where
we've
been
with
the
program
so
far
this
year
to
where
we
are
now
here's
a
little
timeline
for
you,
we
started
off
in
may.
When
epa
announced
the
grant
award
in
the
summer
months,
we
were
working
hard
by
beginning
to
inform
our
coalition
members
and
develop
a
war
war
program
that
would
be
a
framework
for
the
brownfield
program
and
also
developed
our
consultant
rfq
and
have
onboarded
our
con.
D
D
Current
tests
also
include
working
on
that
community
involvement
plan.
We
understand
and
appreciate
the
role
that
our
community
has
to
our
community.
Our
coalition
communities
have
to
play
in
this
work,
so
the
community
involvement
plan
will
help
to
enforce
that
we're
also
developing
a
brownfields
advisory
committee.
D
We
really
want
this
to
be
a
new
tool
to
be
a
benefit
of
our
coalition
cities,
so
we're
going
to
and
involve
you
all
and
and
propose
the
action
of
you
approving
the
answer
local
agreement.
So
we
can
continue
with
this
work
and
that's
essentially
my
presentation
for
you
all
today.
If
you
have
any
comments
or
questions,
I'm
happy
to
take
them,
and
I
have
my
contact
information
here
as
well.
E
For
daphne,
no
no,
I
just
I
remember
being
involved
in
a
brownfield
in
in
our
community
and
if
I'm
not
mistaken,
that's
where
walmart
the
the
sam's
club.
E
Was
former
brownfield,
and
so
I
remember
going
to
all
the
community
meetings
and
seeing.
E
And
and
it
took
a
while,
but
look
what
it
gave
us,
it's.
D
A
great
tool
at
increasing
jobs
and
increasing
businesses,
and
also
giving
communities
what
they
need
if
it's
a
good,
a
way
to
bring
in
community
benefits,
if
they
see
a
need
for
food,
we
can
bring
in
food
businesses.
If
you
need
just
more
jobs,
it
can
help
to
create
more
businesses
and
mix
use
development.
Q
B
D
Essentially,
I
think
that
it
may
be
kind
of
a
mix,
but
I
think
it
is
dependent
upon
the
the
sites
that
are
presented
and
how
we
can
get
our
our
consultants
to
conduct
those
those
site
assessments.
So.
B
N
I
heard
you
say
that
this
program
doesn't
cost
us
anything.
So
that
means
that
these
grants
does
not
require
matching
funds.
G
G
N
F
D
F
Yeah,
because
the
only
the
only
new
one
that
we've
done
recently
was
down
off
keene
and
okay,
apopka
right.
So
really
I
mean
to
the
point
being
is
that
businesses
have
to
apply
for
those
and
then
apply
for
those
kind
of
phase,
one
studies
and
the
incentives
that
go
along
with
brownfield
programs
right.
D
Essentially,
yes,
we
want
to
get
the
word
out
to
them
and
then
have
them
come
into
the
become
involved
with
it
and
then
yes,
we
can.
We
can.
A
A
Okay,
all
right
next
up
public
comment
period.
A
R
Hello,
I
am
cheryl
manch
with
remnant
christian
center
representing
the
apopka
resource
center,
also
known
as
the
nextstep
foundation.
Non-Profit.
I'd
like
to
take
a
moment.
We
have
a
lot
of
supporters
here.
I'd
like
to
start
with
the
pastors
that
are
here
in
support
of
the
art.
Would
you
please
stand.
H
R
R
Thank
you
and
remain
standing
and
those
that
are
here
with
nonprofits
supporting
the
art.
Would
you
please
stand.
R
Okay,
so
the
last
time
we
were
here,
we
were
asking
for
a
hundred
and
fifty
thousand
dollars
from
the
electric
company
overage
to
buy
the
building
on
central
avenue.
R
That's
a
great
price
that
building
is
worth
a
whole
lot
more
money.
There's
been
a
lot
of
renovation
done
on
it,
but
before
we
get
into
that,
you
asked
for
us
to
present
a
proposal,
so
you
can
get
an
eyes
on
what
we're
actually
proposing,
which
made
total
sense.
R
So
we
did
get
this
together
in
may,
but
due
to
delays,
this
was
the
first
chance
we
got
to
come
to
council
to
explain
it,
so
I'm
going
to
go
over
it
briefly,
because
most
of
you
have
not
seen
this
yet.
R
So
if
you
go
to
the
executive,
summary
you'll
see
this
just
a
small
portion
of
community
partners
that
we're
already
working
with
including
advent
health,
orlando
health,
next
step,
united
against
poverty,
habitat
for
humanity,
second
harvest,
big
potato,
who
was
here
tonight,
they're
going
to
be
helping
us
and
several
others,
including
the
police
department.
R
R
We've
been
trying
for
50
years
to
do
it
a
certain
way
and
it's
not
working.
So
we
have
to
be
intentional
and
have
collective
efforts
across
a
diverse
set
of
organizations.
So
we
can
empower
households
to
self-sufficiency.
I'm
not
going
to
read
every
one
of
these
lines,
I'm
going
to
hit
the
main
points
of
this.
R
What
we're
asking
for
is
for
the
the
the
community
leaders,
the
area,
stakeholders,
the
churches,
the
nonprofits,
all
the
support
organizations
that
assist
low
and
moderate
income,
individuals
and
families
to
join
the
ark,
because
they're
the
eyes
and
ears
of
their
community
and
they're,
aware
of
their
residents
needs
and
the
the
arc
is
okay.
I'm
just
gonna
throw
this
out
there.
It
is
not
a
homeless
shelter.
R
There
is
not
gonna,
be
a
bunch
of
homeless
people.
Hanging
out,
you
know
doing
drugs
or
you
know
drinking
and
partying.
That's
not
what
it's
there
for
we
love
them.
We
take
care
of
them,
but
we're
going
to
help
them
as
well,
but
this
is
this
is
for
our
low
to
moderate
income
families
which
we
have
a
majority
of
those
in
apopka
and
we're
going
to
be
an
entry
point.
R
This
building
is
going
to
be
like
an
administrative
office,
there's
going
to
be
desks,
chairs
computers,
phones,
when
people
come
in,
it's
going
to
be
a
one-on-one
to
do
a
case
management,
and
we
have
access
to
this
fantastic
software
advent
health
has
just
purchased
it
they're,
going
to
use
it
for
all
of
their
hospitals
and
all
their
outreaches.
R
This
software
is
leading
edge
and
I
used
to
telecommunications,
so
I
can
actually
tell
you
this
is
leading
edge
where
we're
going
to
get
on
the
computer
and
after
doing
the
case
management,
whatever
that
person
needs
be
it.
You
know,
we've
got
the
four
pillars.
What
we
call
the
four
pillars.
You
need
four
pillars
to
bring
somebody
out
of
low
income
into
a
higher
income,
and
it's
going
to
be
the
economic,
educational,
health
and
wellness
and
character,
and
leadership
and
character
and
leadership
include
spiritual.
R
Okay,
you
need
those
four
legs
to
bring
to
support
people
and
bring
them
up.
You
can't
just
do
one
because
then
the
rest
of
the
rest
of
them
crumble,
the
way
we're
looking
at
this
is.
We
have
learned,
and
when
I
say
we
I
mean
we
have
in
the
last
three
years
brought
in
the
top
professionals
in
central
florida.
R
Thank
you
mayor
for
that.
We
have
had
the
homeless
coalition.
They
have
brought
in
their
studies
of
their
20-year
studies.
We
have
brought
in
orange
blossom
clinic.
We
have
brought
in
advent
health.
We
have
brought
in
all
the
leaders
of
central
florida
and
orlando
to
tell
us
what
is
needed
for
apopka.
R
So
we
we
did
intense
data
studies.
We
had
leaders
of
of
non-profits
step
forward
and
explain
what
has
worked
and
what
has
not
worked.
We
have
these
community.
These
community
leaders
they're
going
to
be
coming
alongside
the
ark
to
help
us
get
started
and
help
us
along
along
the
way
with
all
of
their
research
and
with
all
of
their
help
as
well.
So
I'm
just
going
to
move
on
what.
R
What
is
what
is
the
art
going
to
give
it's
going
to
be
the
community
services
page
government
benefits
employment,
help
medical
housing,
spiritual
education,
personal
and
transportation.
G
R
R
So
this
way
churches,
instead
of
one
church,
trying
to
do
10
different
things.
One
church
can
just
focus
on
their
their
core,
their
core
asset.
They
think
that
they're
best
at
and
then
they
can
send
that
person
to
another
church.
Maybe
their
core
asset
is
is
doing
food
and
the
first
church
is
is
good
at
counseling.
R
Well,
now,
churches
don't
have
to
do
everything
they
can.
Just
focus
on
their
one
thing
that
they're
good
at
saves
them
money.
They
don't
have
to
spend
all
their
money
trying
to
address
all
their
parishioners
needs
and
they
can.
They
can
get
all
the
help
for
the
parishioners
by
working
together.
Okay,
so
there's
many
things
I
put
in
here.
We
have
short-term
goals.
What
we
want
to
do
in
the
first
12
months.
R
We
have
proof
of
all
these
organizations
that
have
been
doing
this
before
okay
and
on
the
last
page
we
have
I
okay,
there
are
the
the
income.
Poverty
level
is
about
twenty
five
thousand
000
you're
precariously
housed,
if
you're,
using
50
or
more
of
your
income
on
housing.
Well,
that's
right!
Now,
that's
1500!
That's
just
enough
to
get
an
apartment
nowadays,
so
most
people
in
apopka
are
precariously
housed.
Okay,
that's.
We
need
to
be
aware
of
that.
R
So
what
we
want
to
do
is
bring
up
the
education
level,
bring
people
from
10
to
10
12
hour
jobs
to
20
30,
an
hour
jobs.
We
have
the
partners
to
do.
We
have
impact
health
with
pastor
keith
here
they're
going
to
be
doing
this
wonderful
program
with
four
different
levels
of
training.
R
Aaa
programs-
that's
going
to
be
paid
for
completely
free
for
the
people
that
want
to
participate
in
it.
Okay,
so
I
like
to
say
the
ark
is
going
to
be
the
lifeboat
to
our
community
and
diane
vazquez.
I
want
to
thank
you
for
coming
to
our
church.
What
you
said
was
very
impactful
to
me.
I
memorized
one
thing
that
you
said
when
you
were
explaining
when
you
were
working
for
the
police
force
for
21
years.
You
said
that
you
want
to
be
an
example
to
young
women
and.
D
R
I
know
you
must
have
gone
through
hell
and
back
being
on
a
police
force
in
new
york,
so
you
wanted
to
you
said,
and
I
won't
forget
it.
He
said.
Sometimes
we
have
to
show
them
that
we
have
to
lead
them
to
show
them
the
way
and
that's
what
we're
trying
to
do
with
the
art
we're
trying
to
lead
them
by
showing
them
the
way
with
our
community
working
together
as
one
thank.
A
I
tell
you
the
the
proposal
that
cheryl
put
together
for
us.
You
know
I
sit
on
the
board
just
so
everybody
understands,
and
I
think
I
don't
know
how
many
times
she's
done
a
present
or
a
a
statement,
a
proposal,
but
this
thing
is
very,
very,
very
well
done,
so
I
hope
you
get
a
chance
to
you
know
kind
of
go
through
it.
You
know
page
by
page
and
and
if
you
have
any
questions
I
think
we
could.
You
know
we
can
have
a
couple
of
our
board.
A
E
Well,
I
just
have
this
one
statement.
I
mean
I
had
some
reservations
about
the
resource
center
and
some
of
the
pastors
did
know.
I
had
some
reservations,
but
I
have
been
speaking
to
different
people
and,
of
course
I
had
a
a
very
deep
conversation
with
you
and-
and
I
realized
that
maybe
I'm
seeing
things
a
little
differently
from
a
different
perspective.
E
E
I
have
a
lot
of
different
life
experiences
at
this
stage
of
my
life
and
you
know
I've
experienced
living
in
the
projects
and
I
and
I
understand
what
it
is
to
kind
of
always
struggle
to
try
and
lift
be
lifted
up
from
the
next
level
and
when
I
said
that
sometimes
what
you
have
to
do
is
to
lead
to
show
someone
how
to
get
to
that
point
and
and
what
I
was
my
reservations,
was
creating
more
programs
and
just
having
people
just
be
satisfied
with
that
program.
I
want.
E
I
want
people
who
are
struggling
to
realize
that
there
is
a
better
way
for
themselves
and
it's
not
always
going
to
be
that
way
for
them,
because
some
choose
to
be
homeless,
and
I
mean
I
I've
seen
it.
I've
dealt
with
mental
illness
on
a
very
personal
level
with
family
members,
and
I
realize
it's
not
easy.
E
E
G
E
A
hand
out
and
that's
that's
what
I
want
and-
and
I
I
thank
you-
it's
been
a
pleasure
and
certainly
you
know
things
happened
for
a
reason
that
I
met
you
and
your
daughter
and
was
able
to
have
this
very
serious
conversation.
So
thank
you
very
much.
Yeah.
B
Again
quickly,
just
caring
and
transformative
with
accountability,
and
I
think
that
you
really
answered
the
concerns
that
have
been
out
there.
Is
this
going
to
attract
negative
elements
and
just
simply
bring
things
down,
though
it's
going
to
help
lift
people
up,
and
I
love
the
fact
that
it's
bringing
together
everyone's
strengths
that
we
can
work
together
and
and
really
help
those
who
want
to
be
helped
and
also
deal
with
and
address
those
real
needs.
And,
as
the
the
kids
said
earlier
than
the
necessity
for
mental
health,
will
that
really
root
in.
B
N
I'm
excited
about
the
resource
center
and
I
think
it
started
off
with
a
bad
rap
when
people
were
saying
it's
going
to
be
a
homeless
center,
but
the
resource
center
is
a
is
a
need
and
not
a
want.
It's
something
that
we
need
in
our
center
in
our
city.
So
I'm
proud
to
see
this
take
place
and
unless
you've
been
there,
you
don't
understand.
N
N
F
Yeah
I
mean
I,
I
struggle
with
this
one,
because
a
lot
of
people,
I've
I've,
had
people
approach
me
the
last
two
weeks
and
say
hey.
I
heard
you're
the
commissioner
that
doesn't
doesn't
support
this
and
I
think
that's
an
unfair
assessment
of
of
where
I
stand
on
this
topic.
I've
always
you
know
me
being
the
details.
F
Guy
that
I
am
you
know
the
success
of
things
like
this
are
in
the
details,
because
we've
set
up
here
and
again,
it's
not
the
apopka
resource
center,
but
we've
we've
sunk
costs
into
other
initiatives
here
that
have
not
sustained
themselves.
You
you
look
at
the
the
ucf
incubator.
We
sunk
over
a
hundred
thousand
dollars
into
that
and
it
failed
after
its
first
year.
F
I
absolutely
100
will
take
you
up
on
the
offer
for
me
to
meet
with
your
board,
just
because
you
know
in
a
it's
in
a
space
like
this,
it's
hard
for
me
to
articulate
my
thoughts
very
well
at
a
detail
level
that
I
like
and
I'm
comfortable
communicating
then,
and
so
me,
it's
much
more
effective
for
me
to
sit
with
with
you
all
whiteboard
stuff
out,
because
that's
how
my
head
works,
I'm
visually
inclined,
but
I
would
like
to
have
that
conversation
with
you
absolutely
so,
whenever
we're
ever
happy
to
do
it
well,.
E
T
T
I
had
a
ministry
director,
bunny
acree
who'd
been
here
most
of
her
life
and
so
together
we
saw
a
need
around
the
church
and
began
to
address
it
and
through
that
we
knew
that
something
bigger
than
what
we
were
doing
here
needed
to
take
place.
So
I
can
tell
you
we
visited
samford
east
orlando
kissimmee,
downtown
orlando
leesburg
winter
garden.
All
that
have
something
similar
to
what
we're
trying
to
start
here
in
apopka
resource
center.
We
knew
that
we
had
the
bridges
center.
We
knew
that
we
had
the
hope
community
center.
T
We
knew
that
there
were
already
some
things
in
apopka
that
were
happening,
but
no
one
was
bringing
it
all
together
in
a
concerted
effort
to
really
make
a
difference
beyond
just
feeding
them,
giving
them
some
clothes
and
hoping
for
the
best,
hoping
they'd,
eventually
drift
off,
and
so
we
we
thought
that
if,
if
all
of
these
agencies,
businesses
and
church-faith
communities
would
all
work
together
that
we
could
make
a
difference
in
a
percentage
of
them,
not
all
of
them
are
going
to
come
there,
because,
just
like
we
heard
from
the
apopka
youth
council
today,
mental
health
issue
is
real
and
I
know,
let's
be
honest.
U
U
And
events
manager
for
the
orange
county
bar
association
and
currently
I'm
an
office
manager
and
a
digital
court
reporter
for
a
small
court
reporting
office
in
altamonte
springs,
and
so
what
am
I
up
to
well
I'll
share
with
you?
Very
briefly,
god
has
called
me
to
address
some
very
serious
issues
on
the
different
forms
of
abuse,
domestic
violence
and
human
trafficking.
U
U
I
have
an
attorney
a
female
attorney,
who
is
a
former
prosecutor
at
the
seminole
county,
courthouse
very
strong
prosecutor
against
domestic
violence,
and
I
thank
the
good
lord
for
bringing
her
in
my
life,
but
not
only
what
she
addresses.
Let
me
be
specific.
She
addresses
the
laws
of
us
on
sexual
abuse.
U
U
U
U
I
am
currently
working
as
a
matter
of
fact.
In
january,
I
am
submitting
the
paperwork.
Officially,
I'm
going
to
mail
it
out
january
3rd
to
the
state
department
to
move
forward
with
this
ministry,
and
god
has
brought
me
not
only
attorneys
but
a
marketing
person
as
well.
Who
who
knows
how
god
connected
me
with
attorneys
and
judges?
U
C
U
C
A
Okay
well.
Well,
thank
you
all
for
coming
out
today
I
mean
I
had
it
under
my
mayor's
report,
but
I'll
just
let
me
just
wrap
it
up
and
see
you
can
you
guys
can
get
home
and
and
rest
up
one
of
the
things
that
we
did
a
couple
commitments
I
think
we
made
is
one
is
as
an
arc
we're
not
gonna
re
duplicate
services.
That's
the
whole
goal
is
to
the
things
that
that
we
we
don't
have
in
our
in
our
town.
Let's
say
like
identity.
A
A
We
said
we
would
match
dollar
for
dollar,
for
whatever
city
dollars
came
our
way
we
would
match
with
with
either
private
or
church
dollars,
so
that
that
we
show
that
we
as
a
group
are
committed
not
not
only
with
sweat
equity
but
with
equity,
and
so
I
think,
some
of
those
things
I
think
wanted
to
be.
A
I
wanted
to
bring
out,
because
I
think
it's
important,
that
that
we're
we're
we're
all
in
it
together,
we're
all
in
it
to
to
to
you
know,
form
those
relationships
to
to
not
duplicate
services
and
and
that
we
are
going
to
put
you
know
our
money
where
our
mouth
is
as
well.
So
thank
you
all
for
coming
out
tonight
and
we
appreciate
what
what
ark
is
going
to
do
for
the
city
of
apopka.
Thank
you.
A
Okay,
do
we
want
to
go
back
and
do
the
approval
of
minutes?
Everybody
had
a
chance
to.
E
C
E
And-
and
I
I
know
commissioner
becker
made
some
changes
and
susan
did
make
note
of
that
right.
Yeah
yeah.
A
G
A
A
I'll
oppose
motion
carries
unanimously
business
item
approval
of
a
transportation
impact
fee-
credit
bobby-
I
guess
pam
wasn't
feeling
well
so
she
had
to
go
home
yeah.
So
he's
going
to
read
it
verbatim
right
exactly
and
wrote.
P
The
under
this
agreement,
the
transportation
impact
fees
from
the
two
projects
will
be
combined
and
put
into
an
escrow
account
that
will
be
used
to
pay
for
the
improvements
to
king
street
and
peterson
peterson
road,
which
will
be
done
by
the
crossroads
429
developer.
At
the
same
time,
they
are
doing
the
site
work.
P
P
Section
5
of
the
agreement
addresses
the
extension
of
a
force
main
to
both
sites.
The
city
is
not
party
to
this
section
as
the
agreement
be
of
the
agreement,
because
it
does
not
impact
the
credit
eligible.
However,
it
will
allow
the
two
developers
to
share
the
costs
of
the
force
main
that
can
be
constructed
along
with
the
roadway
improvements
benefit
to
the
city
is
that
the
road
will
only
need
to
be
torn
of
once.
A
Okay,
any
questions
on
this
business
item:
okay,
anybody
from
public!
We
should
speak
on
this
matter,
not
we'll
close.
The
public
hearing
look
for
a
motion
to
approve
the
transportation
impact
fee,
credit
agreement
between
the
city
of
apopka
and
arrow
rock
3,
ge,
apopka,
llc
and
pmdw
ventures.
Llc
got
a
motion
by
commissioner
smith,
second
segment,
mr
velazquez,
all
those
in
favor.
A
No
changes;
okay,
anybody
from
the
public
wishes
to
speak
on
this
matter,
not
we'll
close.
The
public
hearing
look
for
a
motion
to
adopt
ordinance
number
2864.,
so
move
got
a
motion
by
commissioner
maxon.
Second,
second
by
mr
commissioner
becker
all
those
in
favor
aye,
all
opposed
motion
carries
unanimously
next
up
ordinance,
number
2865.
A
Anybody
from
the
public
wish
to
speak
on
this
matter,
not
we'll
close.
The
public
hearing
look
for
a
motion
to
adopt
ordinance
number
2865.,
so
got
a
motion
by
commissioner
smith.
Second,
second
by
commissioner
velasquez,
all
those
in
favor
aye.
G
W
S
S
S
S
C
C
B
A
J
A
R
E
W
Okay
resolution
2021-57
a
resolution
of
the
city
of
apopka
to
vacate
a
15.
Why
15
foot
wide
right
of
way
located
west
of
forest
avenue
and
south
of
east
3rd
street?
In
section
10,
township
21
range
28
of
orange
county
florida,
providing
directions
to
the
city
clerk
for
severability
for
conflicts
and
an
effective
date.
P
Bobby
yes,
seeking
to
vacate
a
15-foot
wide
unimproved
public
right-of-way.
This
is
an
alleyway
planet
alleyway,
but
an
estimated
area
of
0.027
acres
located
west
of
forest
avenue
and
south
of
east
3rd
street
utility
providers
have
issued
letters
of
no
objection.
P
A
C
X
Good
evening
vladimir
ortega,
finance
director
city
of
apopka
resolution
number
2021
2021-58,
is
regarding
the
water
company
of
america
that
was
a
water
piggyback
contract
as
a
consultant
for
utility
revenue
enhancements
their
scope
of
services,
included
the
analysis
of
the
water
wastewater
and
reclaimed
water
system
to
correct
any
system
under
billions
and
miss
feelings.
The
city
council
approval
for
the
pv
piggyback
contract
was
april,
15
2020,
but
the
work
began
in
fiscal
year
2021..
X
The
first
billing
cycle
was
received
at
the
end
of
fiscal
year,
2021
from
water
company
of
america.
This
amendment
is
to
provide
payment
for
the
total
cost
of
their
contractor
services
during
fiscal
year,
2021
for
a
hundred
and
five
thousand
four
hundred
and
forty
eight
dollars
and
38
cents,
and
the
request
is
for
council
adoption
of
resolution.
2021-58.
X
E
A
Yeah,
if
you
all
remember
this
is
we've
gosh.
It's
been
yeah
like
a
year
and
a
half
and
almost
almost
two
years,
and
so
I
had
a
a
bet
with
one
of
our
our
engineers
down
at
public
works.
Is
he
didn't
think
we
would?
We
would
secure
this
much
revenue
from
these
under
or
uncollected
water
bills,
and
so
I
think,
we're
over
we're
over
500
000.
Now
that
we're
we're
going
to
collect
per
year
either
under
reported
or
or
not
reported.
A
So
it's
yeah,
it's
really
been
a
a
great
addition
to
you
know,
give
propping
up
our
our
utilities.
So,
okay,
anybody
from
the
public
wishes
to
speak
on
this
matter,
not
we'll
close.
The
public
hearing
and
look
for
a
motion
to
approve
resolution.
2021-6
so
got
a
motion
by
commissioner
becker.
C
A
X
The
first
amendment
is
for
the
community
development
block
around
the
cdbg
for
800
000
is
the
city
of
apoca,
was
a
water
seven
hundred
and
fifty
thousand
dollars
from
cdbg
housing
assistant.
The
city
match
requirement
is
fifty
thousand
dollars
and
the
approval
of
the
grandma
agreement
was
provided
during
the
october
six
city
council
meeting.
This
amendment
provides
funding
to
the
appropriated
account
lines
to
be
expensed
and
subsequently
reimbursed
by
the
cdbg
grant.
X
The
second
amendment
is
related
to
sorry
to
the
recreation
assigned
capital
projects
and
in
fiscal
year
2021.
A
budget
amendment
was
authorized
during
the
city
council
meeting
held
on
july
21st
2021
to
assign
some
of
the
duke
energy
public
service
tax
revenue
funds
to
three
capital
projects
within
the
recreation
department.
X
E
X
X
Both
contracts
collect
revenue
and
the
city
shares
as
percentage
with
each
vendor,
and
the
amendment
decides
an
expense
account
line
for
the
vendor.
Accordingly,
to
their
agreement,
the
payments
were
previously
being
recorded
on
a
revenue
account
which
was
incorrect.
So
this
is
to
correct
that
and
put
budget
on
the
correct
line
for
thirty
thousand
dollars.
X
The
next
one
is
for
the
mainland
village
special
assessments-
and
this
is
a
the
mainland
village
subdivision-
requires
a
fan
for
the
stormwater
pond
and
it's
a
cost
of
14
795
and
then
the
last
one
is
the
water
company
that
we
just
discussed
for
2021
their
water,
piggyback
contract
and
the
city
council
already
approved
the
piggyback
on
april
15,
and
this
is
for
the
cycle
of
the
new
year
to
record
budget
for
the
contract
for
fiscal
year,
2022
of
231
000
to
17.84,
and
the
request
is
to
adopt
a
resolution.
Number
2021-60.
C
A
Questions
for
vladimir
putin,
okay,
anybody
from
public
wish
to
speak
on
this
matter.
No,
we'll
close
the
public
hearing.
Look
for
a
motion
to
approve
resolution.
2021-60
so
moved
got
a
motion
by
commissioner
benson's,
exact
second
by
commissioner
smith.
All
those
in
favor
aye,
all
opposed
motion
carries
unanimously
all
right
city
council
reports,
mr
blasquez.
E
Oh
god
other
than
you
know
I
I
have
to
say
well,
of
course,
we
you
know
we
do
attend.
The
saturday
sounds.
We
support
it.
You're
out
there
with
debbie
every
weekend.
C
E
I'm
out
there
with
ed
and
no
matter
the
mosquitoes,
the
weather
we
sit
out
there
and
we
support
the
the
weak
saturday
sounds.
E
So
I
appreciate
that
you
know
it's
it's
a
way
of
continuing
to
promote
the
saturday
sounds
and
of
course
yesterday
was
a
was
a
you
know
very
exciting
for
me
to
kind
of
go
into
a
home,
that's
a
hundred
years
old
in
aero
estate
and
and
meet
the
family
that
took
it
over
the
david
and
lisa
newark
and
that
that
was
an
interesting
tour
of
the
home
and
certainly
very
interesting
to
learn
the
history
of
it
so
that
you
know
that
was
my
week.
B
N
Well,
I
have,
I
think,
13
more
days
for
this
no
shave
to
donate
those
funds
to
cancer
society.
So
I'm
looking
forward
to
that
in
addition,
that
I
just
want
to
say
was
an
outstanding
event
with
a
johnny
land,
gala,
excellent
event
and
then
outstanding
presentation
on
the
state
of
the
city.
F
Nothing
to
add,
I
just
wanted
to
wish
everybody
a
happy
thanksgiving.
I
don't
think
we'll
meet
again
before
that,
so
the
staff,
your
teams,
the
rest
of
the
council
and
the
residents
of
apopka.
I
hope
everybody
has
a
safe
and
enjoyable.
We
have
so
much
to
be
thankful,
for
it
just
seems
like
there's
a
lot
of
people
that
are
sick
and
down
right
now
and
just
for
us
to
be
able
to
be
upright
at
times.
That's
that's
thanks
enough,
so
I
just
wish
everybody
a
happy
thanksgiving.
C
V
F
V
C
V
No
there's
still
by
account
that
we
have
four
remaining
parcels
that
have
not
been
sold
to
taurus
yet
so.
D
A
You,
jim
all
right
all
right,
mayor's
report,
coronavirus,
state
and
local
recovery
funds.
I
know
edward
we're
going
to
be
in
the
next,
probably
not
maybe
next
or
for
sure,
by
the
the
second
meeting
in
december,
we'll
be
coming
back
with
a
firm
idea
on
where
we
can
spend
those
dollars.
So
I
just
want
you
know
we're
we're.
You
know
it's.
It's
just
been
a
kind
of
struggle.
We
continue
to.
I
continue
to
question
the
federal
government.
A
Why
we
got
we
got
7
million
and
ocoee
got
24,
but
haven't
gotten
a
good
answer,
but
you
know
we
will
we'll
we'll
continue
to
fight
that
fight,
but
just
so
you
do
know
that
we
we
are
in
the
budget.
So
this
is
the
physical
20
122
budget,
the
federal
budget
we've
got
the
the
water
water
tanks
are
in
the
budget.
So
it's
a
it's!
A
million
dollar
budget
item.
That's
it's
in
there,
it's!
So
it's
just
waiting
for
approval
from
from
congress.
A
Okay,
a
couple
other
things:
we've
got
a
virtual
public
meeting
for
the
kelly
park,
road
study,
it's
gonna
be
thursday
november
18th.
So,
just
a
couple
tomorrow
from
six
to
seven
pm,
it's
to
evaluate
the
improvements,
road
improvements
from
round
lake
road,
all
the
way
up
to
up
to
rock
springs
road.
So,
if
you're
interested
in
that
that
corridor,
it
should
be
interesting.
We
also
on
november
19th,
so
friday,
we've
got
at
fire
station
1
10
a.m.
A
We're
going
to
honor
our
our
firefighters
that
saved
that
the
child
you
know
was
out
in
the
rock
springs
mobile
home
park,
so
that
should
be
a
great
event.
We're
not
only
celebrating
our
firefighters,
but
also
the
the
folks
that
that
were
there
on
the
scene,
the
residents
who
that
also
helped
as
well.
So
that's
really
good.
A
Had
the
honor
to
get
invited
to
it
was
a
a
joint
venture
between
career
source
and
ocps
about
training
programs
training.
You
know
technical
training,
programs
and
they've
gone
to
the
private
sector.
A
Now
this
last
one
I
had
was
on
monday,
I
had
it
was
for
the
public
side
of
of
employer,
so
it
was
nice
to
talk
with
other
cities
and
counties
about
maybe
internal
programs,
and
I
know
that
the
fire
department
now
is
working
on
a
program
with
with
valencia
to
have
a
program
here,
so
they
can
get
their
certifications
right
here
at
apopka.
So
there's
a
lot
of
programming.
We
want
to
look
at.
A
You
know
public
works,
maybe
we
partner
with
ocoee
or
winter
garden,
or
some
of
these
other
cities
to
you
know
the
the
for
instance,
probably
one
of
our
biggest
shortages
right
now,
dispatch
and
police
and
some
of
the
other
real
high
demand
jobs
that
we
could
maybe
come
up
with
some
some
some
programming
to
get
the
the
certificate
that
they
would
need
to
be
able
to
to
get
that
that
good
good
paying
job.
A
So
you
know
we'll
continue
to
monitor
that
and
if
we
can
help
ocps,
you
know
with
with
and
career
source
put
that
program
together
here
in
apopka
we'd
love
to
we'd
love
to
be
able
to
do
it.
The
employee,
thanksgiving
food
drive
to
benefit
lows
and
fishes
will
end
on
friday.
To
date,
we've
collected
462
items
thanks
to
all
the
employees
that
have
have
donated
to
the
cause.
It's
it's
you
know
loads
and
fishes
is
our.
A
You
know
our
food
bank,
you
know
for
all
of
apopka
and
we're
we're
excited
to
kind
of
help
them
where
we
can
kind
of
neat
finn
frock
on
saturday
was
rented
the
entire
camp.
We
walk
and
we
had
between.
I
hear
seven
and
800
people
out
there
and
they
enjoy
themselves.
You
know
immensely
so
starting
to
get
some
traction
there
and
I
think
you'll
you'll
start
to
see
a
lot
more
activities
going
on
there
and
on
on
that
note,
on
december,
the
7th
from
4
to
7
p.m.
A
It's
a
tuesday
night
we're
going
to
do
a
s'mores
event,
so
this
is
going
to
be
our
open
house
for
camp.
We
was
so
s'mores
christmas
crafts
and
tours
for
the
community,
so
you
know
bring
your
kid
out.
You
know!
If,
if
you're,
you
know,
a
stay-at-home
mom
want
to
bring
them
out
at
four
o'clock
right
after
school
or
up
until
seven
o'clock.
A
It
should
be
a
great
event,
come
out
and
see
camp
wewa
we'll
have
some
of
the
campsites
open,
and
on
that
note
we
just
today
we
had
forest
lake
academy
brought
out
about
20
students
to
help
help
us
with
some
clean
up
there
and
last
week,
two
weeks
ago
we
had
a
journey.
Christian
church
brought
some
some
youth
out
there
to
help
us
so
we're
getting
a
lot
of
it's
kind
of
neat
that
we're
getting
a
lot
of
these.
These
groups
that
are
coming
out
to
help
us
with
camp.
A
Well,
you
know
so
we
we
just
now
just
got
to
keep
finding
projects
for
them
to
to
to
take
on
and
and
so
but
it's
neat
that
they're
they're
engaged
with
that
sheila
oaks
update.
We
installed
another
baffle
box
yesterday,
the
the
rest
of
baffle
boxes
have
come
in.
So
it's
just
a
question
when
we
get
those
installed
amphitheater
bathroom
update,
there
are
three
walls
up
and
four
more
to
go.
I
guess
so
knock
on
wood.
A
It
should
be
done
by
hopefully
by
the
end
of
next
week,
but
that's
that's
the
plan,
and
so
that
will
really
make
you
know.
Hopefully,
for
the
pops
concert
having
bathrooms
right
there,
next
to
the
amphitheater
that
will
be
88,
you
know
compliant
will
be
really
nice,
and
so
we're
really
excited
about
that
and
last
but
not
least,
is
wow.
This
is
crazy.
A
We
found
about
a
a
an
opportunity
for
a
grant,
a
federal
grant,
a
state
grant
for
some
federal
dollars
that
came
down
for
some
some
water
projects,
and
so
I
I
gave
it
to
my
team
at
vlad
and
and
naret
and
nicole,
and
they
were,
I
said,
listen
we've
only
got
three
days
to
put
together
this
grant
proposal
and
they
said
we
can't
do
it.
We
can't
do
it
mayor,
it
can't
be
done.
I
go,
listen,
do
the
best
you
can
in
three
days
it's
got
to
be
there
about.
A
You
know,
12
o'clock,
that
you
know
that
afternoon
I
said
all
they
can
do
is
tell
us
no,
I
said
just
do
it,
so
we
came
back
and
you
won't
believe
this.
We
got
250
000
matching
grant
to
do
all
the
septic
to
sewer
for
camp
wewa.
So
half
of
all
the
septic
consumer
will
be
paid
for,
and
this
is
even
bigger,
not
from
a
not
from
a
city
perspective,
but
from
an
environmental
perspective.
You
know
we
have
to
meet
bmaps,
which
are
basin
management
action
plans.
A
We
have
to
start
to
reduce
our
nitrogen
and
phosphorus
going
into
the
ground
water,
and
so
there
are
different
ways
to
do
it
like
when
we,
if
you
all
help
us
fund
the
you
know
the
on-site
program
out
at
we
got
glenn
that
goes
toward
reducing
our
nitrogen,
which
helps
us
with
our
bmap.
Well,
this
one.
A
We
have
four
trailer
parks
that
are
within
our
our
utility
service
area,
but
that
are
not
in
the
city,
but
there
are
four
trailer
parks
and
we
just
got
a
grant
from
dep
for
five
million
dollars
to
help
us
to
convert
those
over
from
from
their
package
plants,
which
are
very
wasteful.
I
mean
not
not
good
for
the
environment
at
all
to
to
to
hook
them
up
to
our
our
sewer
plant.
A
So
congratulations
to
the
team
that
put
that
that
you
know
that
grant
together
in
about
three
days
and
so
what
a
great
great
way
to
end
this.
This
meeting
and
and
like
commissioner
becker
said,
let's
all
have
a
great
thanksgiving.
Okay.