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From YouTube: Bothell City Council Meeting - May 2, 2023
Description
0:00:15 - Call to Order, Pledge of Allegiance & Roll Call
0:02:05 - Meeting Agenda Approval
0:02:15 - Public Engagement Opportunities
0:03:05 - Proclamation: Asian American & Pacific Islander Heritage Month
0:07:10 - Proclamation: Affordable Housing Week
0:09:00 - City Manager Report
0:12:45 - Council Committee Reports
0:18:20 - Visitor Comment
0:27:40 - Projected Agenda Discussion
0:27:55 - Consent Agenda
0:29:00 - Study Session: 2024 Guiding Principles Document and Staff Update on Climate Change Element and Community Engagement Strategy
1:29:00 - Council Conversations
A
The
city
of
Bothell
is
now
providing
the
option
of
attending
Council
meetings
remotely
or
in
Person.
Public
comment
will
be
allowed,
both
in
writing
or
verbally
verbal
comments
may
be
taken
either
in
person
or
remotely
sign
up
sheets
were
provided
online
by
the
city
clerk's
office
via
link
from
the
agenda.
A
call-in
phone
number
was
provided
on
the
meeting
agenda
for
members
of
the
public
who
wish
to
listen
live
to
the
meeting.
A
If
you
have
called
in,
we
ask
that
you
mute
your
device
if
a
participant
fails
to
mute
their
connection
and
causes
A
disruption
to
the
meeting.
The
connection
will
be
terminated
for
our
study
session
item.
We
will
recess
and
move
to
conference,
room,
107
and
adjourn
the
meeting
from
there.
For
those
of
you
in
the
audience
room
107
has
some
seating
for
the
public.
A
However,
we
will
continue
to
broadcast
it
in
both
council
chambers
and
the
lobby
for
virtual
attendees,
because
room
107
is
teams
enabled
you
will
need
to
use
the
teams
link
provided
on
the
agenda.
As
a
reminder,
you
can
also
watch
the
meeting
on
YouTube
or
bctv
without
having
to
break
your
connection.
At
this
point,
we'll
take
a
moment
to
take
roll
call
of
the
council
members
by
position.
Number
please
say
here
when
the
city
clerk
calls
your
name.
A
E
F
A
Thank
you,
City
Clerk
next
I'd
like
to
reiterate
some
meeting
guidelines
for
remote
meeting
ads
and
D's.
Please
speak
clearly
and
pause,
frequently
mute
your
microphone
when
not
speaking,
and
we
don't
have
any
Council
attending
remotely
tonight
so
I'm
going
to
move
on
to
meeting
agenda
approval.
Are
there
any
changes
to
tonight's
agenda,
seeing
none
I'll
move
on
to
public
engagement
opportunities.
A
We
have
a
middle
housing
community
Forum,
coming
up
on
Wednesday
May
3rd
here
at
Bothell,
City
Hall
from
6
to
8
PM.
We
have
the
buffalo.gov
middle
housing
Forum,
where
you
can
ask
questions
and
provide
feedback
about
current
middle
housing
proposals,
sidewalk
surveys
open
through
May
15th.
You
can
share
your
thoughts
on
how
we
can
make
sidewalks
paths
and
crossings
safer
for
pedestrians
and
we've
got
a
dog
walker
watch
class
Thursday
May
18th
at
6
PM.
You
can
learn
how
and
when
to
call
9-1-1
when
spotting
suspicious
activity
in
your
neighborhood.
A
A
And
whereas
Asian
Americans
and
Pacific
Islanders
have
been
part
of
the
history
of
the
United
States
for
over
200
years,
contributing
to
the
economy,
culture,
education,
politics,
art,
science
and
technological
developments,
despite
institutional
and
systemic
injustices,
unjust
working
conditions,
prejudice
and
discrimination,
and
whereas
even
in
the
darkness
of
the
Exclusion
Act
and
Japanese
internment,
Asian,
American
and
Pacific
Islanders
persevered
and
the
rise
in
racially
motivated
discrimination.
Harassment
and
hate
crimes
against
the
aapi
community
cannot
erase
the
resilience,
strength,
accomplishments
and
joy
of
the
people
now
and
throughout
history.
Now,
therefore,
I
am
Mason.
A
I
believe
we
have
karya
here
to
accept
hello.
G
Sure,
good
evening,
on
behalf
of
the
organizations
and
agencies
that
serve
Asian,
American
and
Pacific
Islander
communities,
we
are
honored
thankful
and
grateful
to
receive
this
Proclamation
from
from
the
city
of
Toronto.
Thank
you,
mayor
and
council
members
for
this
Proclamation
for
honoring
uplifting
and
celebrating
the
Asian
American
and
Pacific
Islander
communities
in
U.S.
We
would
like
to
thank
for
the
support
and
resources
made
available
to
CISD
and
other
organizations,
agencies
who
share
the
passion
of
serving
and
helping
people
to
move
on
move
up
and
Thrive.
With
the
support
from
the
city.
G
We
are
able
to
provide
culturally
and
linguistically
a
relevant
service
and
programs
to
Asian
immigrants
in
the
City
of
Buffalo
and
other
cities
at
Eastside.
I
would
like
to
invite
you
all
to
join
our
first
annual
Senior
Resource
fair
at
North
Bellevue,
Senior,
North,
Belleville
community.
He
centered
tomorrow.
This
is
the
biggest
in-person
event
that
we
have
ever
host
since
kovic
pandemic
outbreak.
Three
years
ago,
we
anticipating
over
200
participants
to
attend
this
resource
sphere
and
health
workshops.
Again.
G
We
are
grateful
for
this
time
space
and
opportunity
that
could
observe
honor
celebrate
together
for
the
2023
Asian
American
and
Pacific
Islander
heritage
month.
That's
a
Chinese
Parable
saying
that,
together
with
persistence,
resilience
and
Synergy,
we
could
have
the
strength
and
capacity
to
move
a
mountain.
So,
let's
work
together
to
make
this
place
a
better
place
for
everyone.
Thank
you.
So
much.
A
Whereas
all
people
should
have
access
to
safe,
healthy
and
affordable
homes
within
communities
that
provide
opportunity,
and
whereas
the
U.S
Department
of
Housing
and
Urban
Development
defines
affordable
housing
as
housing
on
which
the
occupant
is
paying.
No
more
than
30
percent
of
gross
income
for
housing
costs,
including
utilities
and
whereas
Studies
have
found
that
each
100
increase
in
median
rent
results
in
a
15
increase
in
homelessness
in
Metro
areas
and
a
39
percent
increase
in
homelessness
in
nearby
suburbs
and
rural
areas.
A
And
whereas
the
covid-19
pandemic
has
exacerbated
many
existing
Financial
constraints
for
low
and
moderate
income.
Households
and
the
need
for
affordable
homes
and
the
number
of
people
experiencing.
Homelessness
has
remained
at
crisis
levels
and
whereas
everyone
benefits
from
affordable
housing,
including
the
people
who
reside
in
these
properties,
their
neighbors
businesses,
employees
and
the
community
as
a
whole.
And
whereas
United
to
raise
public
awareness,
people,
organizations
and
communities
throughout
King
County
are
participating
in
local,
affordable
housing.
Week.
A
Activities
to
elevate
the
critical
need
to
create
Healthy
Communities
with
ample
affordable
housing
and
whereas
the
city
of
Bothell
endorses
the
goals,
objectives
and
purposes
of
affordable
housing.
Week
and
in
doing
so
firmly
recommits
itself
to
ensuring
and
that
all
people
in
Bothell
live
in
dignity,
live
with
dignity
in
safe,
healthy
and
affordable
homes.
Now,
therefore,
I'm
Mason
Thompson
do
hereby
proclaim
the
week
of
May
7th
to
13
2023
as
affordable
housing
week
and
I
believe
we
have
Michael
from
nusa
here
to
accept.
A
Yet
all
right,
well
Michael,
thank
you
and
it's
affordable
housing
week.
We'll
move
on
to
this
city
manager,
report,
city
manager,.
H
Thank
you
very
much
mayor
and
good
evening.
City
council.
First
thing:
I
just
want
to
quickly
acknowledge
that
I'm
glad
to
be
back.
This
is
my
first
council
meeting
since
sometime
in
March.
So
really
we
won't
won't
get
into
that.
But
I
do
want
to
say
a
thank
you
to
the
executive
leadership
team
and
to
Deputy
city
manager.
H
H
Next,
some
some
other
good
news.
I
wanted
to
share.
If
you
weren't
following
along
that
at
last
week's
Sound
Transit
board
meeting
the
board
took
up
a
motion
and
resolution
that
recommended
that
was
recommended
by
the
system
expansion
committee
that
allocated
five
million
dollars
from
Sound
Transit
to
funds
to
support
the
support
work
on
one
Northeast,
185th
Street
Improvement
project
in
downtown
Bothell
to
be
prepared
for
bus,
Rapid
Transit.
So
that's
extremely
good
news.
H
We're
extremely
appreciative
of
the
partnership
that
we
do
have
as
a
city
and
a
community
with
sound
transit
to
deliver
the
brt
service
to
the
community
and
to
the
University
of
Washington
Bothell
and
Cascadia
campuses.
As
you
know,
Northeast
185th
Street
was
identified
by
the
downtown
plant
as
a
Transit
Corridor
and
needs
to
be
structurally
upgraded
use.
Some
utilities
work
some
structure,
Improvement
and
it
was
identified
in
this
fall
in
the
capital
facilities
plan
that
was
adopted
by
Council
for
2023-29.
H
Also
tonight
there
is
an
item
on
the
agenda
on
the
consent
agenda
bill
23064
that
would
be
for
approval
of
Professional
Services
with
rh2
engineering
for
final
design
of
that
project
as
well.
So
just
another
good
good
reminder
that
things
are
moving
forward.
Good
things
are
happening
and
we're
again
grateful
for
the
partnership
with
sounds
Transit
and
this
funding
that's
come
to
us
and
also
want
to
say
thank
you
to
Steve,
murakawa
and
Jason
Tory
for
their
support
on
that
project.
H
And
finally,
also
recently
we
celebrated
Earth,
Day
and
I-
know,
there's
Proclamation
for
that
too.
So
Shelby
Crowe
from
our
volunteer
special
and
special
event
permit
coordinator,
put
together
some
information
based
on
the
event
that
took
place
in
Bothell
and
there's
some
some
good
reminders
of
it.
We
have
a
community
coming
out
of
the
impact
it
can
make.
So
for
this
year's
Earth
day
and
week
volunteer
activities.
There
was
a
total
of
six
volunteer
work
parties
with
a
mix
of
public
and
private
groups
in
both
City
and
community
events
to
celebrate
our
Earth.
H
In
total,
there
was
at
least
150
volunteers
and
400
and
480
hours
served.
If
you
look
at
what
the
time
of
volunteering
is
estimated
at,
there's,
always
a
good
Benchmark
for
that
that
480
hours
would
equate
to
18
062
dollars.
So
I'm
really
grateful
for
the
for
the
volunteer
effort
itself,
but
also
what
it
stands
for
of
again
being
committed
to
making
Bothell
better
for
everyone.
So
thank
you
to
everyone
in
the
community
who
turned
out
and
I
know,
council
members
you
all
may
have
volunteered
as
well.
A
Well,
thank
you
and
it's
good
to
have
you
back
as
well.
We
love
having
Tony
here
with
us,
but
it
speaks
well
to
your
leadership
that
you
can
be
gone
and
things
can
not
really
miss
a
beat.
So
thank
you.
I
You
mayor
yeah
I,
just
want
to
give
a
brief
update
on
the
RPC
Regional
policy
committee.
We
had
a
couple
meetings
last
week,
first
meeting
with
discussions
on
the
veterans,
seniors
and
Human
Services
Levy
and
after
a
long,
hard
discussion,
a
lot
of
communities
around
the
region
are
very
supportive
of
the
the
levy
itself
and
it
is
moving
forward
to
the
King
County
council
at
a
10
cent
rate
versus
a
12
cent
rate.
There
was
a
lot
of
conversation
around
the
price
increase
and
what
that
would
do
to
the
taxpayers.
I
I
voiced
our
opinion
here
in
Bothell
is
very
supportive
of
the
services
and
what
what
we
expect
and
wish
to
have
the
opportunity
in
our
community,
but
as
an
RPC
representative
for
SCA,
the
caucus
decided
to
vote
in
favor
of
the
10
cent
versus
the
12
cent
and
so
as
being
appointed
by
the
sca
I
voted
it
for
the
10
cent.
But
I
just
wanted
the
council
to
know
that
I
did
voice
our
support
for
Human
Services
Veterans
Services
across
the
region.
So.
J
Mankey,
thank
you.
Mayor
I've
got
three
updates
to
provide
tonight.
The
first
is
the
public.
The
council
Public
Safety
Committee,
met
this
last
week
to
review
the
proposed
Amish
County
EMS
Levy
that
will
soon
be
coming
before
Council.
We
also
reviewed
actually
this
one
more
thing
on
that.
The
levy
is
a
renewal
of
the
current
Levy
that
we
have
and
ensures
that
all
residents
across
the
city
are
paying
the
same
rates
for
advanced
life
support
services,
which
are
recognized
as
Best
in
Class
in
the
nation.
J
So
it's
an
important
Levy
and
it
will
be
coming
before
Council
I
believe
here,
the
next
few
weeks
we
also
looked
at
preliminary
feedback
and
gave
preliminary
feedback
on
the
feature,
fire
Services
model
exploration
proposal,
which
will
also
be
coming
before
Council
very
soon
for
review
at
Snohomish
County.
Tomorrow
we
received
a
presentation
on
the
updated
housing
needs
and
characteristics
report
also
referred
to
as
the
h05
report,
the
deck
and
the
report
and
the
many
appendices
were
shared
out
to
council
by
the
city
clerk
last
week.
J
It's
an
interesting
read
a
couple
of
highlights
that
I
took
away
from
it
were
nearly
two-thirds
of
the
population
increase
in
Stonebridge
County
between
2010
and
2020
was
people
who
moved
here
from
other
states
within
our
Municipal
Urban
growth
area.
50.5
percent
of
the
folks
were
new
as
of
2020
from
2010,
so
we
grew
50.5
percent
within
the
city
limits
City
boundaries.
We
grew
17
between
2010
and
2020
and
in
the
next
20
years
they
are
projecting
that
the
Snohomish
County
part
of
our
city
is
going
to
need
two
times.
J
The
number
of
housing
units
that
we
have
today
if
they're,
modeling
and
predictions
are
correct,
so
I
would
say,
give
the
report
a
read
again.
It's
pretty
long
and
the
appendices
are
long.
So
you
might
need
some
coffee
or
do
it
while
you're
doing
something
else,
but
there
are
some
interesting
items
in
there
and
elements
in
there
that
I
think
the
council
would
be
interested
in
Reading
and
the
last
one
is
the
Summers
County
Law
And
Justice
committee.
J
We
reconvene
that
committee
for
the
first
time
in
three
years
so
has
not
met
since
the
beginning
of
the
pandemic.
There
were
a
lot
of
discussions
about
our
work
plan
and
kind
of
resetting
the
committee
to
to
what
the
focus
is,
what
the
Mandate
is
within
Summers
County
code
and
in
state
law.
So
we
will
be
reconvening
in
the
next
month
to
talk
about
what
our
work
plan
will
look
like.
What
are
the
most
important
topics
to
tackle.
One
of
them
that
came
up
was
the
Blake
decision
and
I
know.
J
Summers
County
Council
is
considering
legislation
and
there
are
other
cities
in
Summers
County,
already
planning
on
potential
legislation.
I
think
the
state
may
call
a
special
session.
We
don't
know
one
of
those
City
Council,
Members
or
County
council
members
is
also
a
State
Rep
and
he
said
that
he
put
his
money
on
a
special
session,
but
there's
no
way
to
know
yet
so
we
have
until
July
for
the
state
to
take
action.
Otherwise
all
drugs
will
become
legal
in
the
state.
J
H
H
So
the
legislature
has
been
called
back
for
a
up
to
30-day
session,
starting
on
May,
15th
and
again,
staff
will
continue
to
watch
activities
there,
where
we're
not
going
to
to
wait
and
until
the
last
minute
to
do
anything
but
we'll
bring
something
to
Council
in
June.
If
it
looks
like
the
local
local
passage
is
necessary,
but
we
were
fairly
confident
that
a
special
session
would
be
called
in
the
state
and
it
looks
like
it
has.
A
Foreign
anybody
else
all
right,
we'll
move
on
to
visitor
comment.
The
city
has
accepted
visitor
comment
and
writing
as
well
as
accepted
sign
up
sheets
for
those
who
wish
to
speak
at
tonight's
meeting.
Written
comments
submitted
to
the
city
clerk
no
later
than
3
pm
today
or
forwarded
to
do
all
city
council
members
and
are
part
of
the
record
when
the
clerk
calls
your
name.
You'll
have
three
minutes
to
speak.
Please
note:
the
council
will
receive
your
input,
but
on
the
advice
of
our
City
attorney,
we
do
not
engage
in
discussion
of
these
topics.
D
D
K
E
I
was
lucky
when
I
went
to
college
I
arrived
late
fall
of
1984.
E
E
E
He
had
all
kinds
of
friends
from
Nigeria
Kenya
they're
great
people,
Audi
got
his
masters
from
Gonzaga
University
and
he
just
retired
after
a
year
and
a
half
being
bought.
Federal
Way,
City
Manager
for
eight
years,
Federal
Way
I,
might
add,
has
the
same
violent
crime
rate
as
New
York
City,
which
we're
heading
towards
di,
did
not
record.
Audi
did
not
retire
in
Federal
Way,
he
retired
in
Port
Orchard
bless
him.
He
deserves
everything,
he's
a
quality
man,
as
were
his
friends.
E
E
E
D
C
Thank
you.
My
name
is
Ed
Ingle
and
I'm.
The
mobility
Justice
advocate
of
the
Snohomish
County
transportation,
Coalition
or
snow
tracker
short
snow
track
is
mobility
management
Coalition
that
advocates
for
connecting
people
and
communities,
and
so
it
was
County
and
Beyond
with
safe,
Equitable
and
accessible
Transportation.
It
is
to
do
this.
C
We
can
be
in
public
nonprofit
and
private
transportation,
human
service
agencies
to
identify
Mobility
gaps
and
opportunities,
especially
for
our
priority
populations,
including
people
with
disabilities,
older
adults,
youth,
low-income
households,
people
of
color
and
tribes,
a
unifying
issue
across
our
priority
populations
and
slow
or
no
access
or
ability
to
use
a
personal
vehicle.
In
addition,
party
populations
tend
to
be
disproportionately
impacted
by
for
land
use
patterns
and
transportation,
options
that
increase
exposure
to
air
pollutants
and
household
housing
and
transportation
costs,
which
in
turn,
decrease
life
expectancy
and
social,
economic
Mobility
on
April
19th.
C
During
a
Planning
Commission
meeting
staff
and
members
review
the
existing
comprehensive
plans,
19
vision,
statements
for
Content,
one
of
the
key
points
discussed,
was
accessibility
in
relation
to
the
provision
of
Human,
Services,
Safety
and
Security
modes
of
transportation
and
Recreation
opportunities.
C
Additionally,
today,
council
members
will
be
briefed
on
community
engagement
strategies
for
the
climate
change
portion,
the
comprehensive
plan
we
appreciate
the
staff
is
layout,
some
of
the
potential
barriers
and
challenges
that
come
with
Community
engagement,
and
we
hope
that
the
listed
mitigation
measures
will
be
used
in
the
process
as
Bothell
updates
and
updates
the
accessibility
points
of
this
comprehensive
plan
and
engages
in
climate
change.
Community
engagement
snowshack
provides
best
practices
endorsed
by
such
organizations
as
AARP
policy
link
and
the
National
Association
of
city
transportation
officials.
C
We
recommend
setting
a
goal
to
reach
zero
traffic
fatalities
and
serious
injuries
within
the
next
decade,
establishing
a
data-driven
strategic
plan
that
reaches
the
goal
of
using
the
U.S
Department
of
Transportation
Safe
Systems
approach,
sending
goals
to
increase
housing
and
transportation,
affordability
to
become
an
age
and
ability
friendly
Community
by
allowing
for
abundant
and
dense
housing
options
for
seniors
to
Asian
place,
bully
funding,
implementing
Ada
projects
to
realize
the
city's
transition
plan
within
the
next
decade,
building
in
all
ages
and
abilities,
Bikeway
Network,
implementing
more
robust,
automated
speed
enforcement,
where
Revenue
directed
towards
physical
safety
improvements,
so
Target
streets,
completing
City,
wide
Regional
Trails.
C
Implementing
projects,
including
a
city-wide
bike
plan,
and
also
reducing
parking
requirements
on
new
development
and
requiring
new
projects
to
implement
Transportation
demand
management
strategies
by
Contracting
related
transportation
management
association.
These
policies
will
improve
Mobility
options
for
everyone,
but
they
will
also
act
as
climate
policies.
With
that,
I
conclude
my
comment.
Thank
you
very
much.
D
A
A
D
F
A
All
right,
we
are
going
to
break
right
now
before
the
study
session
in
room
107.
It
is
6
26.
We
will
break
for
nine
minutes
and
we
will
see
you
at
6
35.
A
H
You
mayor,
and
we
do
have
one
study
session
tonight,
it's
a
good
one,
so
we
are
really
in
the
in
the
throes
of
planned
discussions
now
and
tonight's
study
session
is
really
going
to
be
a
good
opportunity
to
make
sure
that
things
are
framed.
H
N
So,
just
to
sort
of
frame
where
we're
hoping
to
go
with
the
discussion
tonight,
there's
kind
of
two
main
components
that
we're
kind
of
hoping
to
get
out
of
the
study
session.
One
is
to
get
feedback
on
the
recommendations
that
came
out
of
our
April
19th
study
session
with
Planning
Commission
and
to
see,
if
there's
any
missing
gaps
from
that.
Are
there
things
that
you
didn't
talk
about,
that
you
wanted
to
see
or
anything
that
comes
to
mind,
that
you
didn't
think
that
you
saw
or
read
about
in
the
recommendations
from
Commission.
N
N
Moving
forward
just
to
place
you
in
the
timeline
of
where
everything's
at
remind
you
what
we
talked
about,
what
we're
going
to
talk
about
the
status
update
on
the
climate
change
element,
as
well
as
a
status
update
on
the
finalized
Community
engagement
strategy
that
we're
really
going
to
be
ramping
up
the
action
on
this
summer,
we'll
just
go
over
really
briefly:
the
kind
of
best
practices
and
definitions
policies
and
implement
ation
measures.
Vision
that
was
currently
called
division
will
be
calling.
N
Calling
and
then
an
overview
of
the
Planning
Commission
study
session
kind
of
briefly
going
over
the
main
topics
of
conversation
that
we
heard
from
them
really
important
to
convey
timeline.
We
are
here
in
Q2
2023.
This
is
just
the
2023
timeline,
just
a
reminder
of
what
we
talked
about.
Last
time
we
got
the
contracts
approved.
N
So
in
this
quarter
the
big
ticket
items
are
the
draft
climate
change
plan.
We
have
to
have
a
draft
by
the
end
of
June
in
order
to
get
our
grant
deliverables.
Obviously,
that
draft
will
be
more
than
open
to
bins
and
changes
over
time
throughout
the
rest
of
the
life
of
and
work,
but
we
do
need
to
have
at
least
a
draft
by
the
end
of
June.
We'll
also
have
a
draft
of
our
racial
Equity
analysis
and
toolkit.
N
This
will
be
an
expansion
of
the
work,
that's
already
being
done
for
Middle
housing
and
being
expanded
to
the
breadth
of
the
comp
plan
and
then
we'll
be
using
that
throughout
the
life
of
the
work
over
the
summer
and
revising
it
over
time.
From
what
we
hear
from
the
community,
an
engagement
so
summer
is
going
to
be
big
for
engagement
for
us
and
we'll
get
into
that
a
little
bit
later,
especially
with
a
lot
of
the
summer
time.
Activities
that
bring
folks
out.
N
That's
what
we're
going
to
be
really
trying
to
engage
folks
with
and
then
land
use.
Alternatives
is
something
we
need
to
identify
by
the
end
of
soon
as
well,
in
order
for
the
transportation
team
to
get
the
work
done,
so
so
a
status
update
on
the
climate
change
element.
This
is
what
we've
heard
from
our
consultant
team.
That's
been
doing.
The
groundwork
first
component
is
taking
the
department
of
commerce's
model
climate
element
that
they've
been
developing.
N
N
81
second
component
or
assessment
is
about
Equity,
so
developing
an
assessment
to
figure
out
where,
in
the
city
is
their
vulnerable
populations,
vulnerable
lands,
whether
those
things
intersect,
where
many
efforts
and
then
economy.
So
this
one's
a
little
bit
more
about
implementation
strategies
and
looking
at
what
are
some
of
the
costs
and
benefits
potentially
want
to
come
out
of
any
of
our
implementation
work
and
then
the
drafting
of
the
plan.
So
those
three
rules
of
assessments
are
going
to
all
go
into
putting
together
the
draft
plan,
along
with
public
input
we
receive.
N
That
will
be
more
the
revisions
over
the
summer
and
then
presenting
that
progress
to
both
the
working
group
that
we're
putting
together
with
the
cbo's
and
other
folks
in
the
community,
the
community
itself
again
throughout
the
summer,
and
then
Planning,
Commission
and
Council.
Like
I,
said
our
draft
element.
O
We've
been
working
with
our
Consultants
to
get
in
touch
with
the
community-based
organizations
and
other
stakeholders
in
the
community
for
the
this,
for
building
the
working
groups,
and
so
we'll
be
doing
some
very
targeted
meetings
with
them.
Some
initial
sort
of
conversations
and
getting
that
going
here
very
shortly.
This
this
timeline
is
the
the
broader
Community
engagement
timeline.
So
the
time
that
you
saw
before
was
where
we
are
for
for
2023.
This
is
sort
of
your
bigger
picture
through
the
end
of
the
comp
plan,
so
we're
we've.
O
We've
done
the
initial
Outreach
we're
going
to
be
doing
more
of
that
ongoing
into
Q2,
which
is
where
we
are
right
now.
These
are
those
working
groups,
we're
building
those
relationships,
we're
formulating
those
plans
and
then
in
Q3
Q4
we
get
to
do
those
deep
Dives.
This
is
where
we
have
pop-up
events,
this
Summer
that
will
be
interacting
with
the
community,
where
they
are
we're
going
to
be
having
lots
of
conversations.
O
Okay,
good
interactions,
they
they're,
building
that
trust
and
getting
that
feedback,
and
then
q1
Q2
of
2024
we're
going
to
take
what
we've
heard
from
this
year
and
process
it
we're
going
to
take
a
look
at
you
know:
where
do
we
need
more
information?
Where
do
we
need
more
feedback?
Where
do
we
have
enough?
What
are
the
gaps?
O
What
are
they
saying
and
then
we'll
report
that
to
you
all,
Planning,
Commission
and
Council,
and
then
Q3
Q4
of
2024
is
we're
going
to
close
the
loop
so
take
all
those
things
that
we've
been
working
on,
put
it
all
together
and
report
back
to
the
community,
how
we,
how
we
heard
from
them,
what
we
heard
and
how
we
used
it
to
make
decisions,
a
plan.
N
N
What
do
they
mean
so
just
kind
of
setting
that
Baseline
of
and
I
think,
even
in
our
current
plan,
there's
some
room
for
improvement
there,
so
just
trying
to
set
that
Baseline
of
understanding
again
mrsc
code,
I,
love
mrsc,
they
just
I-
think
really
capture
some
of
these.
Really
these
statements
really
well
so
I
won't
read
it
all
aloud,
but
I
think
to
me
comes
out
of
something
like
guiding
principles
document.
N
The
two
main
things
to
me
are:
what
are
the
Community
Values
that
are
shared
and
how
do
those
inform
the
future
that
he
wants
to
see?
Those
are
the
two
really
big
components
in
thinking
about
the
visioning
process
and
how
we
might
get
our
guiding
principles
document
differently
so
in
terms
of
the
structure.
So
obviously
the
first
is
the
guiding
principles
or
the
visioning
document
that
we
currently
have.
This
is
what's
really
setting
that
tone
and
direction.
N
It
should
be
something
high
level.
It
should
be
something
that's
looking
to
the
Future
and
describing
these
shared
values
in
a
way
that
isn't
particularly
lengthy
or
in
super
big
detail.
N
Goals
in
terms
of
goldness
is
something
that's
not
currently
in
our
plan,
but
in
terms
of
the
best
practice,
it
really
should
be
an
aim
objective.
It
should
be
a
statement
of
what
you
want
to
see
in
the
end,
so,
for
example,
or
something
related
to
the
environment,
you
would
say
like
a
environment
that
balances
a
Harmony
between
the
built
environment
and
the
actual
environment,
something
kind
of
general,
not
super
specific,
and
it's
stating
an
end
point
policy
is
still
a
fairly
general
statement,
but
it's
getting
drilling
down
a
little
deeper
and
it's
crit
it's.
N
What
are
we
going
to
do
to
get
to
our
goal?
It's
more
of
an
action
statement
and
then
the
actions
that
we
currently
have,
which
we're
going
to
be
calling
implementation
measures
are,
how
do
we
do
it?
So
we
know
what
our
aim
is.
We
have
a
path
of
what
we're
going
to
do,
but
then
how
are
we
actually
going
to
do
it?
N
So
implementation
measures
are
best
thought
about
is
more
specific,
actionable
items
that
you
can
measure
it
by
have
a
success
metric
so
you're
talking
about
a
specific
program
that
has
a
timeline
that
you
can
affix
funding
to.
So
you
actually
know
it's
an
achievable
thing,
so
that
would
be
something
like
if
a
policy
was
ensure
safe
and
clean
waterways
or
preserve
water
recharge
areas,
an
implementation
measure
would
be
all
right.
So
what
is
an
actual
program
that
would
achieve
that.
N
As
a
reminder,
this
is
our
current
vision
statement
looked
at
the
one
since
night,
the
original
one
and
that
from
1991
it
looks
pretty
much
the
same.
The
structure
is
the
same.
Most
of
the
text
is
pretty
much
the
same,
except
for
there's
one
one
statement
that
has
been
added
that
was
added
in
2015.,
so
that's
not
necessarily
A
Bad
Thing,
not
necessarily
a
good
thing.
N
So
we
discussed
a
couple
different
options
for
formatting
with
Planning
Commission,
and
we
really
came
to
this
point
where
we
all
agree
that
we
really
like
kind
of
a
hybrid
approach,
something
that
retained
the
Integrity
of
the
content
of
the
existing
vision
statement,
but
created
more
of
a
thematic
approach
with
more
visuals.
So
something
that's
really
more
engaging
to
the
eye,
something
that
people
would
actually
want
to
read
through
the
whole
thing
and
really
take
onto
account.
So
that
was
the
consensus
at
the
end
of
that
meeting.
N
N
The
first
one
was
consolidating
some
of
the
statements
related
to
the
natural
environment.
I
think
there
were
five
that
all
kind
of
touched
around
the
edges
of
climate
change
and
environment
without
really
getting
to
the
meat
of
it,
and
it's
an
opportunity
for
us
to
shorten
up
that
document
and
to
make
a
more
robust
statement
about
what
we
actually
really
want
to
see
there.
N
Another
was
kind
of
a
basic
just
terminology
and
language
even
terms
like
sustainability.
What
did
that
mean
in
1991
versus
what
it
means
now
what
environmentalism
mean
32
years
ago?
What
is
it
now?
This
goes
across
the
board,
with
all
the
different
themes
of
just
looking
at
the
language
itself
and
making
sure
we're
being
really
intentional
about
what
does
that
mean?
Now?
Are
there
better
words
to
be
used
now,
another
one
that
was
brought
up
was
generally,
you
know
things
that
are
unique
to
Bothell,
and
one
topic
that
came
up
was
well.
N
N
Another
big
topic
was
this
General
conversation
about
human
services
and
then
building
those
Community
relationships
with
those
services?
There's
quite
a
bit
of
discussion
on
community
safety.
What
does
that
mean
responsiveness
of
services
versus
what
does
it
mean
to
be
Equitable
in
community
safety?
What
does
it
mean
to
be
sensitive
to
different
cultural
groups
in
the
provision
of
Safety
Services?
So
that
was
a
big
topic
of
conversation
and
then
also
expanding
the
breadth
of
what
is
social
services
and
Human
Services
mean
there
were
a
number
of
different
things
like
Medical
Services
mental
health
services?
N
How
do
we
better
reflect
that
breadth
of
Human
Services
in
the
city
and
then
the
last
big
bucket
was
diversity,
Equity,
inclusion
and
accessibility?
There's
a
lot
of
discussion
about
ADA
expanding
what
we
mean
by
Ada
the
breadth
of
what
we
can
provide.
So
one
was,
you
know
just
again
with
language
being
really
intentional
about
language
and
how
we
use
the
words,
especially
if
we're
going
to
be
shortening
the
document
but
then
again
expanding
that
emphasis
on
what
inclusivity
and
accessibility
means
in
all
of
the
different
components
of
the
plans.
N
And
then
yeah,
like
I,
mentioned
expanding
language
relating
to
accessibility
to
Encompass
all
the
different
forms
there
was,
and
even
with
the
plan
itself,
you
know,
how
is
the
plan
able
to
be
digested
by
people?
Do
we
want
to
have
an
interactive
component?
If
we
do?
How
do
we
make
sure
that
folks
that
have
that
are
blind
can
hear
you
know?
Do
we
have
some
kind
of
an
audio
component
to
the
plan?
If
it's
online,
we
also
want
to
maybe
provide
it
in
a
PDF
form.
N
We
also
want
to
have
a
simplified
site
for
people
that
maybe
don't
have
great
internet
service
and
then
some
kind
of
General
overall
commentary,
one
that
was
brought
up
was
you
know
what
does
make?
What
makes
Bothell
unique
and
how
is
that
reflected
in
The
Guiding
principles
and
we
felt
staff
felt
like
that
was
a
really
great
opportunity
for
Community
engagement
throughout
the
summer
of
just
asking
people.
So
as
a
common
thing
on
the
website,
you
could
have
a
reboost.
We
have
what
you
love
about.
Bothell
makes
a
special.
Why
just
stay
here?
N
Why
do
you
want
to
be
here,
and
we
think
we
could
even
directly
use
some
of
the
commentary
that
comes
out
of
that
into
the
guiding
principles
and
really
make
it
a
clear
reflection
of
what
people
said
to
us
and
what
we
hear
another
one
that
was
brought
up
was
we
have
this
really
special
relationship
as
a
fairly
small
jurisdiction
with
a
pretty
big
university
and
that
there
could
be
an
opportunity
there
to
strengthen
that
relationship
and
highlight
that
in
some
way
again
the
connectivity
of
trails
and
waterways?
N
We
have
a
number
of
regional
Trails
throughout
the
city,
the
number
of
waterways
throughout
the
city,
and
that
is
a
pretty
unique
component
of
waffle
document
length.
Everyone
agreed
could
be
shorter,
it
should
be
shorter
and
then
again,
language
and
terminology
best
practices.
That
was
an
overall
comment
we
had
so
timeline
for
the
providing
principles
is
what
this
is.
So
the
spring
is
really
was
wanting
to
figure
out
establishing
a
preferred
format.
N
Then
we
can
move
forward,
create
a
draft
of
some
kind
of
formatting
or
start
to
think
about
how
we
want
to
put
that
together
and
then,
through
the
summer.
Affirming
those
values
and
principles
with
the
community
and
then
in
the
fall.
We
really
want
to
get
to
a
point
where
we
have
a
more
kind
of
finalized
document
that
we
can
then
use
to
begin
drafting
everything
else.
As
that
foundational
piece
and
then
we'll
begin,
our
doing
our
drafting
of
the
actual
elements
themselves
in
the
fall
and
the
winter.
N
F
Just
a
quick
question:
what
are
the
number
one
I
know
you
have
the
calendar
of
community
engagement,
the
details
in
the
packet,
but
can
you
also
is
it
okay
if
you
publish
a
location
so
that
and
is
it
okay
for
us
council
members
to
attend
those
different
engagement
opportunities
just
to
even
if
just
flies
on
the
wall
or
to
participate,
and
why.
F
M
Yeah
I
would
encourage
participation,
All
City
Council
Members.
If
you're
available,
we
can
be
specific
about
if
it's
format
and
the
type
of
event
that's
occurring,
how
long
it
will
be
so
yeah.
Absolutely
awesome,
I'm
sure
we'll
hear
about
more
as
we
go
that
we
haven't
I've
been
articulate
quite.
F
N
N
F
I
mean
at
work
and,
like
you
know,
if
you
want
to
have
something
collaborative
I
know,
there's
a
formal
process
and
all
that.
But
if
you
bring
this
earlier,
then
if
you
have
to
rework
anything,
you
don't
have
to
have
to
delay
or
get
crunched
in
your
time
get
into
a
time
crunch
when
you
actually
have
to
implement
some
of
this
stuff.
H
I
mean
that's
part
of
again
like
getting
the
early.
Look
too
is
to
make
sure
that
having
touch
points
with
the
council
so
that
you're
you're
able
to
to
see
how
it's
progressing
and
not
wait
until
I,
hear
that
and
I
think
we're
always
going
to
try
and
find
the
right
balance
between
making
the
most
of
council's
time.
Knowing
that
is
precious,
and
we
have
other
things
on
the
agenda
throughout
the
summer
and
making
sure
that
it's
also
done
precious
that
used
to.
But
where
am
I
in
this,
so
we'll
keep
track.
H
Yeah,
the
councils
should
give
it
a
great
picture
of
a
vision
of
the
council's
vision.
So
again,
while
there
is
this,
there's
also,
then
the
prescription
major
of
doing
a
comprehensive
plan,
certainly
the
work
that
the
council's
already
done
is.
H
M
I
think
we
can
also
do
some
internal
reporting
back
yeah,
given
the
platforms
that
we
have.
We
do
have
an
online
portal
that
we're
going
to
be
launching
we're
going
to
get
pretty
immediate
feedback
from
the
community
and
there
are
ways
for
us
to
report
back
in
our
internal
basis.
As
we
hear
what
is.
N
But
that's
that's
the
goal
and
that
will
be
a
really
great
tool,
because
that
will
be
something
we
can
use
throughout
the
entirety
of
the
life
of
this
project
in
the
past
summer.
Time
as
just
have
to
work
on
anything,
and
it's
really
ad
clock,
we
can
all
sorts
of
different
things,
there's
like
mapping
surveys
and
like
all
kinds
of
fun
stuff,
so
cool.
B
L
I
have
a
a
couple
questions,
slash
comments
and
I
tend
to
be
blunt
and
and
I
do
not
tend
to
step
on
any
toes.
So
if
I'm,
stepping
on
toes
I'm
apologizing
now
one
I
appreciate
the
effort
for
getting
Community
input.
I
saw
the
scope,
looks
great,
including
mobile
home
parks
manufactured
which
is
great,
I
have
been
and
here's
the
part
where
I
do
not
want
to
step
on
toes,
but
maybe
stepping
on
toes.
G
L
You
rarely
hear
any
dissenting
voice
on
this
Planning
Commission
I've
never
seen
that
before.
In
all
the
years
I've
watched,
Planning,
Commission
I
have
not
seen
a
huge
variety
of
opinions.
There
now
am
I
inferring
anything
from
that.
No
because
it
would
be
like
saying:
okay,
what
child?
Don't
you
want
after
you've
had
five
kids
and
you
say,
there's
a
lot
of
kids
here:
I'm,
not
inferring,
that
I
don't
want
any
of
those
current
plenty
Commissioners,
but
that
voice
that
you're
talking
about
going
and
getting
from
the
community
is.
L
This
is
where
we're
going
to
hear
them
is
what
you're
digging
up
and
so
I
really
appreciate
it.
Part
of
my
question
is
like
on
the
summer
nights
out.
Is
there
going
to
be
a
place
because
I
know
how
people
tend
to
be?
Is
they
tell
you
to
your
face
and
they
think
they've
done
their
job
and
they
go
back
about
life?
Is
there
a
place
where
people
can
record
their
comments?
Write
them
down,
I
mean.
L
Are
you
going
to
include
that,
so
that
someone
who
has
a
good
idea
it
doesn't
get
lost
because
it
was
buried
under
a
whole
bunch
of
other
life
that
was
happening.
O
Yeah,
if
there's
going
to
be
lots
of
different
ways
that
we're
going
to
be
engaging
with
the
community,
so
in
person
we
may
have
something
like
a
comment
box,
we
might
have
a
QR
code
so
that
they
can
do
something
interactive
on
the
portal.
These
are
all
different
types
of
Engagement.
It's
not
intended
to
be
one
note,
because
we're
not
trying
to
reach
one
person
or
one
type
of
person,
so
there
will
be
those
different
tools.
O
The
engagement
portal
will
also
be
running
this
whole
time,
so
there's
always
going
to
be
that
open
door
which
we're
pretty
excited
about
because
we
haven't
had
that
as
of
yet
so
I
I
think.
If
somebody
has
an
idea,
there
will
be
a
place
for
them
to
communicate
that,
whether
it's
at
two
in
the
morning
or
at
two
in
the
afternoon
at
a
summer
nights
event
well.
L
I,
don't
want
to
speak
for
everybody
who
has
campaigned
here
me
for
both
times
I
ran
I
would
tell
people
to
hold
my
feet
to
the
fire,
because
I
think
it's
response,
that's
the
way
that
we
ought
to
be
as
electeds
people
ought
to
be
able
to
hold
our
feet
to
the
fire,
and
so,
if
you
have
somebody
who's,
really
passionate
pass
on
this
message.
There
are
some
council
members
who
want
you
to
hold
their
feet
to
the
fire.
L
Please
let
them
know
what
your
feelings
are
on,
that
I
mean
you
have
my
permission,
my
request
to
encourage
people
to
give
us
feedback,
that's
really
important
to
have,
and
then
I
appreciated
your
wanting
to
update
the
language
this
document.
How
long
do
we
plan
for
it
to
sit
on
the
Shelf
before
it
needs
to
be
replaced
again.
L
10
years
we're
thinking
about
text
opportunity,
okay,
so
my
linguistic
background
is
like
okay.
How
fast
does
language
change
I
mean
I'm?
Looking
at
the
word,
you
were
talking
about
updating
language
and
I'm,
looking
at
so
here,
I'm
scrambling
think
of
a
word
think
of
a
word,
think
of
a
word
and
I
couldn't,
but
I
I
saw
Equity
up
there
and
I
thought
yeah.
Equity
has
kind
of
changed
its
meaning
over
time.
L
M
L
A
little
key
keywords
in
the
back
or
something
like
that.
That
would
be
great,
because
I
think
that
would
help
people
over
time
if
those
words
are
comparatively
new
in
our
vernacular
or
vulnerable
to
change
over
time
describing
what
they
those
mean
at
this
point
in
time
for
us
is
really
important,
so
yeah.
P
B
P
O
With
a
caveat
one
of
the
cool
things
that
I
harp
on
this
portal,
because
I
think
it's
really
cool
and
it's
really
great
the
the
portal
has
all
of
that
data
analytics
sort
of
built
in.
We
can
also
use
our
data
analytics
from
our
website,
so
like
website
traffic,
you
know
if
we
did
this
thing
here.
How
did
that
translate
into
website
traffic
like
we
can
see
all
of
those
things
with
the
portal?
We'll
just
need
to
be
conscious
that
it
is
a
it
is
a.
It
is
a
curve.
O
O
Will
not
be
a
perfect
problem.
Well,
it
should
be
measurable.
N
Another
component-
that's
common
in
all
different
kinds
of
like
comp
planning,
Etc
area
planning,
is
having
some
kind
of
document
in
their
memorializing.
The
public
engagement
process.
You'll
have
that
correctly.
So
that's
something
that
we
definitely
want
to
add
is
probably
an
appendix
of
just.
This
is
all
the
engagement
work
we
did.
This
is
our
process
of
going
through
it.
This
is
what
we've
learned
from
it.
This
is
how
we
utilized
it.
Also,
so
people
feel
like
well
I,
went
and
showed
up
at
that
thing
that
go.
What
did
you
do
with
it?
N
M
M
But
getting
some
sort
of
iterative
approach
so
that
we
can
learn
as
we
move
along,
especially
in
in-person
events.
You
know
was,
unfortunately,
people
directly
having
a
booth
interviewing
people
having
videos.
You
know
what
was
the
most
effective
for
the
instructor
for
the
next
time.
We
do
it.
No.
P
Q
I
have
some
I
have
some
okay
I,
don't
know,
try
not
to
be
two-pointed
questions,
but
some
kind
of
wonderings
that
I
have
and
I
guess
hopes
for
like
where
you're
headed
next
well,
I
will
go
in
order.
Okay,
so
at
the
start
of
your
presentation
you
said
you
were
drafting
a
climate
change
plan
and
and
I
would
just
love
some
clarification
on
I
realize
that's
like
a
you,
have
a
grant
that
you're
received
funding
for
you
have
a
deadline
for
it,
you're
working
towards
it.
Q
N
The
climate
element
is
I
have
to
use
something
really
setting
the
stage
for
the
climate
action
plan.
The
action
plan
is
more
the
implementation
component,
whereas
the
climate
element
is
really
setting
up
those
goals
and
policies
of
what
do
we
want
to
get
out
of
our
climate
change
goals?
What
are
they?
Those
end
results
that
we
want
to
see
as
a
result
of
any
of
the
actions
we
might
take
and
what
are
the
policies
that
will
get
us
there
and
then
that
would
really
help
inform
how
we
develop
the
climate
action
plan.
Implementation
component.
Q
Okay
and
I
know
that
that
is
related
to
HB
1181.
Is
it
required
by
law
to
be
called
climate
change
plan,
or
is
that
just
kind
of
how
we're
calling
it
don't.
M
I
mean
we've
wrestled
with
how
to
message
this
and
make
sure
that
people
feel
that
it's
accessible
to
them
and
meaningful
to
them.
So
the
words
of
like
adaptation,
litigation
change,
we're
sort
of
playing
with
what
works
the
best,
and
maybe
that's
one
way
to
engage
with
the
community
over
the
next
few
months.
What
really
resonates
with
people
when
we
talk
about
climate,
because
sometimes
it
doesn't
feel
relatable,
it
feels
out
of
control.
M
Sometimes
when
you
use
the
term
climate
change,
it
can
for
people
off
so
or
sensitive
to
that,
but
we're
not
quite
sure
exactly
what
to
call
I,
don't
think,
there's
anything
that
dictates
what
we
call
I.
N
Q
There
yeah,
because,
like
the
the
terminologies
do
to
me
previously
when
we
talked
about
this
I'd
heard
it
called
like
the
climate
element
and
so
I'm
like
and
and
you're
I
am
sensitive
to
what
you
are
sensitive
to
as
well,
which
is
like.
Is
this?
What
we
really
want
to
call
it,
and
so
I
would
be
open
to
feedback
from
Community.
Q
You
know
planning,
for
you
know,
climate
change
like
I
I,
don't
know
what
it
is,
but
I
would
be
part
of
your
constituency.
That
would
say
I'm
uncomfortable
with
that
terminology
and
would
welcome
something
that
kind
of
hits
it
more
like
more
solidly,
and
thank
you
for
the
the
insight
into
like
that.
A
climate
action
plan
would
be
like
a
policy
that
could
be
implemented
in
the
future,
but
this
is
more
guidance
and
kind
of
big
picture
planning,
and
that
would
be
just
a
piece
of
it.
So
I
really
appreciate
that.
Q
I
also
really
appreciate
that
you
went
through
kind
of
the
the
terminology
about
vision,
statements,
guiding
principles
and
goals,
and
and
I
would
like
to
see
a
little
stronger
like
Clarity
I
guess
on
on.
You
know
what
is
policy
and
what
is
like
the
action
and
implementation
phase,
because
that
can
be
like,
like
I
love
policy
and
implementation.
It's
like
one
of
my
favorite
things
in
the
world.
Q
N
Yeah
that
sometimes
is
integrated
into
comp
plan.
So
I'll
have
like
a
how
to
read
this
document
section
that
will
help
the
reader
even
understand
what
they're
looking
at
that's
something
that
we
could
even
think
about
integrating
it's
just
like
a
one
sheeter
going
through
hey.
These
are
all
the
components,
and
this
is
how
to
read
it
and
what
they.
Q
Mean
your
Arrowhead,
like
funneling
it
down
was
beautiful,
I,
really,
love
that
and
so
I
think
the
visual
is
strong
and
I
think
just
having
the
like
the
terminology.
Solid
would
play
really
well
with
that
when
it
comes
to
the
topics
that
you
brought
forth
to
us
tonight:
environment,
Human,
Services,
Dei,
I,
think
of
those
as
lenses
for
every
element
of
the
comp
plan
that
we
can
look
at.
You
know
when,
when
we
I
have
the
I
have
the
required
elements
slide
up
here.
Q
Thank
you
very
much
for
including
that
when
we
think
of
land
use
I,
think
of
you
know
we
need
to
look
at
it
from
an
environmental
lens.
We
need
to
look
at
it
from
a
community
relationships
lens
and
a
Dei
lens,
and
so
those
are
I
think
correctly
identified
as
guiding
principles
that
we
want
to
see
in
our
our
future
comp
plan,
and
so
for
me,
I,
don't
know
if
this
is
helpful
to
you,
but
I.
Q
Think
of
it
as
each
and
every
of
these
required
components
is
going
to
need
an
analysis
through
these
lenses
for
us
to
really
feel
like
it's
for
me
to
feel.
Like
it's
really
comprehensive
and
then
I
had
a
question
about
reconciling
the
council
priority
plan,
Romney
kind
of
talked
about
that
as
well
I.
Remember,
no
I'm,
not
even
gonna,
go
there
I'm,
sorry
pop
culture.
References
can
sometimes
go
very
wrong.
You
cancel
meetings
but
I'm
just
remembering
fold
it
in
right.
Q
We
just
need
to
fold
in
the
the
council
priority
with
our
vision
statement:
I'm,
not
referencing.
The
name
of
the
show.
B
Q
and
and
I
do
think
it
is
time
for
a
Refresh
on
that
I
really
love
kind
of
what
you're
talking
about
of
just
making
a
little
more
streamlined
grouping
things
by
categories
that
little
graphic
that
you
had
from
San
Jose
was
lovely.
You
know
it
could
be
very
fun
to
see
something
like
that
and
and
then
I
guess.
It's
kind
of
to
my
point
about
you
know
folding
in
Dei,
into
everything.
Q
I
I
heard
that
we're
getting
a
Dei
coordinator
in
in
the
near
future
and
so
I
very
much
I
was
hoping
that
was
going
to
be
part
of
your
Council
report.
Tonight.
Q
There's
somebody
coming
to
join
us
and,
and
so
I'm,
just
looking
forward
to
as
we're
as
we're
working
on
each
of
these
pieces
having
our
new
coordinator
weigh
in
in
each
of
those
areas,
so
excited
about
that
I
very
much
agree
with
you
that
we
should
have
a
like
a
little
report
section
at
the
end.
I'm
surprised
it's
not
required.
Maybe
I'm
not
surprised,
maybe
that
the
state
doesn't
require
it,
but
you
should
really
have
a.
Q
This
is
how
we
engage
with
our
community
summary
narrative
in
every
document
right
just
as
that
guide
posts,
and
so
I'm
really
glad
that
you're
thinking
of
including
that
somewhere
between
required
by
state
law-
and
we
should
always
do
that-
is
where
I
land,
oh
no,
on
that
one
So
yeah!
Thank
you
every
for
everything
all
of
the
work
in
preparation
that
went
into
this
and
I'm
really
looking
forward
to
the
next
steps
when
we
start
singing
some
like
work
product,
that's
implementing
our
feedback.
So
thank
you.
J
I
think
I'll
go
next
I
organize
my
thoughts,
just
as
you
have
the
bullets
up
here,
so
I'm
happy
to
see
that
first,
the
Planning
Commission
and
staff
recommendations.
J
Yes,
I
agree
that
19
Vision
points
is
too
many
a
lot,
so
any
thoughtful
merging
of
like
mission
statements
together,
I
think,
is
going
to
be
welcomed
by
all,
while
keeping
the
components
that
are
there.
The
visual
aesthetic
I
think
is
good
to
an
extent,
though
I
think
the
words
the
meat
and
potatoes
of
what
this
is
is
the
most
important
thing.
I
think
when
you
get
too
visually
creative,
it
works
against
the
inclusiveness
and
accessibility
of
the
document
screen
readers
text
to
speech.
J
All
of
that
becomes
more
difficult,
so
say
be
aware
of
the
attention
there.
Between
those
things
consolidating
climate
change
items
was
called
out
in
there.
I
think
there
were
five
I
think
that
makes
sense,
adding
inclusivity,
I,
think
item
19's
got
belonging
in
there,
so
I
think.
That's
a
quick
and
easy
way
to
include
that
word.
If
that
word
is
one
that
Planning
Commission
wanted
to
include
I.
Think
it's
good
agreeing
that
the
crisis,
responder
Services,
should
be
added
to
item
four.
J
Those
are
new
public
safety
measures
that
we
didn't
have
in
last
plans,
so
I
think
it
makes
sense
to
call
that
out
to
CRC
and
the
radar
Navigator
program
and,
yes,
all
right,
sir
sorry,
no
terminology
changing
it.
Language
evolves
right,
yes,
exactly
and
then
yes
to
the
appendix
of
the
work
that
went
into
this
I.
Think
for
anybody
who
looks
at
it
later.
They
would
want
to
know
all
the
work
that
was
completed.
J
J
I
think
we
need
a
nod
to
two
counties
in
here
and
the
fact
that
we're
one
city
in
two
counties
in
91,
my
family,
came
to
Bothell
and
we
were
in
an
incorporated
Stonebridge
County
in
Canyon
Park,
and
we
got
annexed
in
in
93
and
so
I
think,
including
that
in
there
that
makes
us
unique.
It's
a
unique
thing,
I
think
there's
only
three
cities
in
the
state
that
are
in
two
counties
so
it'd
be
a
good
way
to
honor
that,
in
regards
to
you
Doug
Bothell,
we
should
also
mention
Cascadia.
J
There
could
be
three
kind
of
at
large
members
and
then,
if
each
council,
member
weighed
in
with
somebody
or
kind
of
sought
out
interest
and
then
recommended
somebody
I
think
that
would
be
a
good
way
to
go
about
that.
Just
so,
we
got
a
broad
spectrum
of
folks
looking
at
it
and
just
different
opinions
and
I,
don't
I,
don't
have
any
I
think
the
the
Planning
Commission.
We
obviously
all
select
those
together,
but
this
is
kind
of
a
longer
tail
project
and
it's
again
two
counties,
big
city.
I
Most
of
my
stuff
was
already
asked
or
answered,
but
I
had
a
question
on
outcomes,
intentional
outcomes,
and
how
do
we
measure
those
outcomes
so,
as
we
kind
of
look
through
each
one
of
these?
I
I
O
I
think
there's
a
few
ways
to
measure
that
I
think
we
can
measure
it
by
quality
and
diversity
of
comments.
So
how
many
comments
are
we
getting?
Are
we
getting
the
same?
Two
people
we
you
know
have
heard
from
before,
or
are
we
getting
a
diverse
group
of
people
to
respond,
as
well
as
diverse
comments
and
feedback?
O
You
know
with?
Are
they
all
saying
the
same
thing,
or
are
we
getting
a
lot
of
different
types
of
feedback?
I
think
those
are
really
good
ways
to
measure
it
and
then,
in
terms
of
quantity
you
can
track
where
you
started.
You
know.
Maybe
we
start
with
10
people
coming
getting
giving
us
feedback
at
a
pop-up
event,
but
then
by
the
third
one
we
have
30..
You
know
that
that
to
me
is
good
progress
and
that's
measurable
I,
don't
think
we
can
say
something
like
well.
O
H
O
H
To
do
an
after
Action
Report
on
the
comprehensive
planning
process,
how
would
we,
how
would
we
debrief
what
are
the
things
that
we'd
want
to
look
for
at
the
end
of
this
process
to
say,
keep
her
pass,
I
think
it's
a
great
suggestion.
It's
something
we
can.
We
can
look
at
it
in
terms
of
developing
the
meaningful
data
for
outreach,
as
well
as
some
of
the
other
areas
of
what
are
we
doing.
I
I
think
so
for
me,
it
just
understanding
where
we
have
been
where
we
are
and
where
we're
going
I
think
we
have
to
have
context
of
as
an
example,
we
engaged
with
100
people
previously
we're
engaging
with
200
people.
Now
what
did
the
first
hundred
say
versus
what
the
second
200
said,
understanding
to
me
just
more
context,
because
it's
easy
to
say
we
have
a
snapshot
of
where
we
are
right
now
do
we
have
a
snapshot
of
where
we
came
from
and
then
into
the
future,
where
we're
going
as
we
continue
to
grow.
I
Having
that
information
as
a
palette
moving
forward
for
the
next
time
we
go
through,
this
exercise,
I
believe,
would
be
kind
of
important
yeah,
so
just
to
me
outcomes
being
intentional
understanding,
those
outcomes
when
we
talk
about
equity
and
inclusiveness
and
all
that,
what
is
the
outcome
that
we
want
to
receive
from
that
Equity
piece
right?
Do
we
want
to
have
X
amount
of
people
engaging
within
our
community
that
are
of
color
or
talk
about
lands,
equity
and
land?
What
is
that?
What
does
that
look
like?
I
N
I
think
we'll
probably
have
more
information
on
that
in
June
when
we
come
to
you
with
the
racial
Equity
toolkit,
it's
going
to
be
drafted
because
that's
going
to
be
kind
of
the
toolkit
that
we
use
both
in
our
engagement
activities
and
as
a
part
of
the
foundational
component
of
drafting
the
plan
itself
and
in
terms
of
success,
metrics
I
think
I'm
really
careful
about
what
questions
are
we
asking
and
we're
asking
a
question?
Why
are
we
asking.
B
N
That
you
know
those
that's
a
lot
of
what
comes
into.
Why
are
we
asking
people
things
in
the
first
place?
How
are
we
asking
it?
Are
we
getting
the
kinds
of
responses
we're
hoping
for?
Is
the
questions
making
sense
to
people
if
we're
doing
some
kind
of
like
a
physical
activity
with
you
know,
are
they
understanding
what
we're
doing
are
they
getting
it?
Are
they
enjoying
it?
N
Those
are
I
think
are
some
of
the
important
metrics
of,
like
means,
they're
being
intentional
to
me,
that
comes
down
to
a
lot
of
like
how
we're
phrasing
things
setting
up
active,
we're
asking
you
something.
What
are
we
hoping
to
get
out
of
it,
and
is
that
really
gonna?
Is
that
going
to
be
helpful
for
us
and
yeah.
I
So
to
me
the
outcome
is
they
understand,
we're
asking
information
to
acquire
right
so
so
to
me,
when
we
talk
about
climate
right,
if
you
say
it
one
way:
somebody's
offended
by
it.
If
you
say
it
another
way,
they're
not
offended
by
it.
So
how
do
we
ask
the
question
and
what
is
the
outcome
that
we're
trying
to
get
from
the
question
right?
I
So
it
doesn't
matter
if
it's
Equity
or
inclusion
or
if
it's
climate
or
whatever
it
is
I'm,
just
hoping
as
we
move
forward
in
everything
that
we
do,
we
can
set
a
measure
of
what
is
the
outcome
that
we're
trying
to
achieve
right
if
we're
talking
about
housing?
What
is
the
ultimate
outcome
that
we're
looking
for
in
housing?
I
F
F
Q
I
jumped
in
with
a
question
sure
AWC
conference,
the
City
of
Olympia,
presented
about
an
equity
tool.
Have
you
had
a
chance
to
review
that
or
take
a
look
at
it?
Q
It's
really
pretty
awesome
it.
It
basically
breaks
down
the,
and
this
is
obviously
for
our
da
coordinator
as
well,
but
it
breaks
down
kind
of
the
engagement
process
to
make
sure
that
we
are
and
looking
comprehensively
at
our
community
and
making
sure
that
we're
reaching
out
to
people
who
are
excluding
so
who
have
been
excluded.
So
I
would
love
to
get
that
information
to
you.
I
attended
the
conference,
but
that
doesn't
mean
I
have
like
the
two.
H
A
So
I
before
I
get
started.
When
is
I
worked
up
a
list
of
items
that
I'd
like
to
address
or
like,
and
some
of
them
seem
far
too
granular
for
this
meeting.
I
think
Kyle
probably
forwarded
along
like
what's
the
schedule
of
when
you
guys
are
coming
back
to
us
for
instruction
and
like
I,
am
happy
to
tell
you
all
those
things
now,
but
if
there's
a
better
time,
I'm
also
happy
production
on
well
like
just
specific
land
use,
complain
things
that
I
would
like
to
see.
N
The
land
use
component
we
are
going
to
be
coming
to
in
July
to
talk
about
so
we'll
have
more
information,
then
we're
starting
those
conversations
with
our
consultant
team,
which
is
kind
of
the
you
know.
Baseline
of
you
know
what
do
we
want
to
see
out
of
our
land
use
plan
and
how
do
we
want
to
structure
it?
So
we
are
meeting
in
the
next
couple
weeks
to
kind
of
go
over
some
of
that.
So
we
should
have
some
draft
recommendations
to
bring
to
you
in
July
to
talk
about
that.
Workshop
I.
M
Know
Steve's
in
the
room,
I
think
we're
also
coming
back
with
transportation
in
June.
A
Awesome
I
will
save
some
of
what
I've
got
written
down.
Yes
to
consolidating
the
goals,
as
well
as
everything
have
a
goal
talked
about
the
vision
statement
already,
I,
don't
want
and
I
think
I've
heard
this
from
a
few
people
in
a
certain
in
various
ways.
I
don't
want
to
recycle
the
1991
comp
plan
and
division
statement
like
I'd
like
to
do
our
own
vision
statement
based
on
what
we
care
about
now
and
kind
of
the
state
we're
at
now.
A
A
I
was
older
than
that
possibility.
One
is
getting
signed
tomorrow
and
Jason
said
something
that
I
really
liked.
That
is
something
I
care
about.
A
lot
is
resilience,
is
a
theme
and
uses
I
think
as
an
example
of
something,
but
you
know
in
all
of
the
ways
that
we
can
be
resilient.
A
I
would
like
to
and
I
would
like
that
to
be
a
theme
of
this
comp
plan,
not
just
climate
resilience,
but
you
know
Financial
resilience,
transfer,
Transportation,
you
know
if
one
part
of
your
system
breaks
is
there
another
one
that
you
can
go
to
so
some
of
the
some
of
the
inherent
necessary
redundancies
in
that
I
think
resilience
is
a
theme
is
important.
A
We've
hired
a
community
development
director
that
is
an
expert
in
sustainable
development.
I
want
a
lot
of
sustainable
development
in
Bothell,
so
I
want
you
to
bring
all
of
that
in
here
and
bring
us
great
recommendations
that
I
don't
even
know
what
they
are
yet,
but
please
please
bring
that.
The
other
thing
I
wanted
to
touch
on
is
the
urban
3
data
that
we've
got
I
want
to
know
that
we
have
built
a
comp
plan
around
future
Financial
sustainability
and
I.
A
Don't
know
if
we're
going
to
be
able
to
quantify
that
in
terms
of
like
how
granular
we're
going
to
be
able
to
get
on
that.
But
I
want
to
know
that
in
20
30
40
years
that
we
have
left
a
city
that
is
in
a
better
position
the
budget
than
been
in
recent
years
through
the
work
we've
done
through
this
comp
plan.
A
F
A
People
don't
like
it
when
you
keep
going
back
to
them
and
asking
them
to
raise
their
property
taxes
to
provide
basic
services
so-
and
we've
already
had
to
do
that
a
couple
times
and
I
would
I
would
prefer
to
leave
future
councils
in
a
position
where
they
don't
have
to
do
that.
So,
if
we
can,
if
we
can
look
at
land
use
with
an
eye
toward
reducing
some
of
that
upward
pressure
that
we've
seen
on
taxes,
yes,
please.
M
Return
in
June
I
believe
on
the
climate
element
a
little
bit
more
into
detail.
Yeah
I'll
be
sure
to
give
it
a
little
bit
more
of
we're
on
sustainability
and
how
the
comp
plan
is
going
to
address
it
through
the
lens
of
transportation.
Land
use
a
lot
of
really
great
ideas
and
how
that
could
be
teed
up
for
the
climate
action
plan.
We
do
a
carbon
footprint
analysis,
greenhouse
gas
questions,
analysis
as
well,
so
really
good
position.
I
think
awesome.
A
Fantastic,
oh
and
I
wanted
to
Second
something
that
councilmember
Aldrich
said
a
while
ago
about
weaving
some
of
these
things
into
all
of
the
different
parts
of
our
our
I'll
win
and
make
sure
that,
like
that
was
a
really
good
point
and
I
just
want
to
Second
what
she
already
said
about
making
sure
that
we
look
at
all
of
the
different
parts
of
our
comp
plan
through
these
particular
lenses
that
are
valuable
to
our
community.
N
And
that
was
something
that
we
decided
early
on
is
we're
going
to
have
our
Standalone
climate
change
element
or
whatever
at
the
beginning,
but
we
also
want
to
make
sure
that
those
policies
and
goals
are
integrated
throughout
all
of
the
elements.
People
get.
The
touches
on
everything
and
same
goes
for
academically
components.
M
F
The
whole
thing:
it's
all
interrelated
everything
you
do,
every
element
of
those
elements
thing
the
sections
doesn't
work,
Silo
it's
affected
by
this,
which
is
affected
by
the
gears
of
a
you
know,
engine
you
know
so
a
machine
Gears
of
a
machine.
Q
Q
N
L
P
Well
and
I
think
what's
interesting
too,
and
now
I
keep
thinking
like
back
in
1991
when
the
most
of
this
was
you
know,
but
it's
it's
true,
because
there's
been
a
big
evolution
on
how
we
look
at
being
environmental
stewards,
and
you
know
why
we
have
the
responsibility
to
be
more
dense
here
to
protect
natural
areas
that
if
you
build
density
correctly,
people
will
travel
less
miles
in
cars,
which
is
better
for
the
environment,
and
people
will
take
other
routes
of
Transportation
people
will
like
it
and
and
it
it's
it's
hard
to
look
at
the
comp
plan
without
that
Silo.
P
It's
just
the
city,
but
what
we
do
here
does
affect
the
rest
of
the
state,
because
that's
part
of
why
we're
in
the
growth
area
and
other
parts
aren't
and
so
I
think
telling
that
story
about
how
okay,
like
here's,
how
density
will
help
the
environment
or
if
we
choose
this
path
to
grow.
Here's
the
the
trade-off
of
of
what
that
does.
P
A
Another
thing
that
I
would
like
to
see
in
there
is
that
kind
of
an
acknowledgment
that
all
of
the
changes
that
we
make
take
a
long
time
to
get
implemented,
and
we
require
a
whole
lot
of
private
development
and
external
things
to
actually
do
them.
So
they
take
a
long
time
to
do.
And
fundamentally,
the
comp
plan
isn't
for
us
to
our
kids
and
kind
of
looking
at
what
we
can
do
to
better
tee
up
future
generations
to
have
the
same
opportunities.
A
A
Think
about
that,
and
you
know
when
we,
when
we
change
zoning
like
it,
doesn't
mean
that,
like
nothing
changes
it
a
whole
bunch
of
things
have
to
happen
after
that,
and
it
takes
decades
for
these
changes
to
really
bear
fruit.
So
just
an
acknowledgment
that
these
are
things
that
we
are
doing
for
future
Generations,
more
so
than
for.
A
Thank
you
very
much
looking
forward
to
the
next
one
really
excited
to
do
this
like
getting
to
be
on
Council
is
part
of
a
comp
plan.
Update
is
really
cool
and
like
I'm
I
am
super
excited
to
go
through
this
process
with
y'all
and
I'm
glad
we
had
guys
here
to
do
it
with
I
think
we've
got
a
really
good.
A
F
I
Think
we
should
find
out
I,
don't
know
what
their
names
are,
but
there's
a
couple
that
cleans
a
long,
Bothell,
okay,
145th,
okay,
every
single
morning,
no
way
oh
clock
in
the
morning,
they're
out
to
every
single
can.
B
I
I
Cool,
like
they
literally
clean
145th
every
morning,
drive
by
and
see
them
every
morning.
It's
the
age,
the
vest
on
they
got
their
lights
on
they're,
probably
in
their
70s.
Oh,
my
goodness,
yeah
yeah,
okay,
that's
pretty
cool,
so
I'll
find
out
I'll
find
out
who
it
is
yeah
should
be
something
for
them.
Absolutely.
It's.
Q
I
L
L
I
would
guess
his
mom
had
she
had
some
neurological
degenerative
disease,
they
were
immigrants
from
Russia
or
somewhere,
and
he
would
make
sure
his
mom
would
have
a
walk
outside
every
day
that
the
nice
would-
and
this
is
a
little
teenage
boy
and
he's
rolling
her
over
the
bumpy
street.
It's
bumpy,
you
know
Street,
that's
in
the
in
the
cemetery,
so
she
can
enjoy
the
air.
She
can
hardly
even
I
mean
she's.
L
She
was
had
very
little.
Motoric
ability,
left
and
I
was
like
I
want
to
recognize
him
and
I
hate
that
when
there's
somebody
who's
a
hero,
an
unsung
hero
that
gets
lost
in
the
shuffle,
so
inside
I'm
panicking
find
out
who
they.