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From YouTube: Black Mountain Board of Alderman Meeting (Feb. 11, 2019)
Description
Regular Meeting of the Black Mountain Board of Alderman. To view the meeting agenda, or future meeting agendas, please visit townofblackmountain.org
A
B
Let's
pray
together
father,
we
give
you
thanks
for
this
day.
We
give
you
thanks
for
this
place
and
a
beautiful
creation
that
you
have
given
us
in
a
wonderful
place
to
live
and
call
home
and
work
and
play
and
Lord.
We
thank
you
for
your
provision.
We
thank
you
Lord
for
your
love.
We
thank
you
for
your
redemption.
We
thank
you
for
this
town
and
for
the
larger
community
around
it.
We
thank
you
Lord
for
the
mayor
and
for
the
Board
of
Aldermen
and
Lord
tonight.
B
I
want
to
pray
that
in
each
decision
that
is
to
be
undertaken
in
this
place
that
there
would
be
clarity,
we
pray
Lord
that
there
would
be
unity
and
we
pray
Lord
that
there
would
be
wisdom.
We
pray
tonight
for
the
health
of
each
of
the
aldermen
and
all
the
folks
that
work
in
and
around
the
town
that
you
would
continue
Lord
to
bless
and
guide
Black
Mountain
as
she
welcomes
visitors
as
she
cares
for
the
needy
and
as
she
serves
the
needs
of
each
other.
B
C
C
Hi
I'm
Brenda,
and
welcome
to
this
premier
edition
of
act
2.
Thank
you
so
much
for
joining
us.
My
question
for
you:
have
you
ever
had
an
event
in
your
life
that
just
turned
things
around
well
retired
math
teacher
Maggie
Tuttle
certainly
has,
and
the
result
was
a
different
kind
of
lesson
plan,
one
that
led
to
a
whole
new
purpose
in
life.
D
E
Actually,
tying
I
am
talk,
part
time
for
about
five
minutes
and
then
a
little
bump
in
the
road
called
breast
cancer
that
I
dealt
with
took
a
year
to
get
through
that
whole
process
and
I
felt
so
blessed,
and
that
lots
of
time
to
think
and
I
thought
it
is
time
for
me
to
give
back
to
this
community.
What
it
has
given
to
me
put
my
name
in
the
Hat
and
ran
and
scared
to
death
at
first,
but
I
knew
I
was
a
good
people.
E
A
F
C
C
E
E
E
Now
he's
trying
her
hands
and
doing
some
production
type
things,
and
so,
if
you
get
a
chance,
these
stories
change
every
two
weeks
and
you
can
just
pull
them
up
on
YouTube
act,
two
stories,
but
I
was
her
first
guinea
pig
in
it
and
if
I
had
not
known
her
and
not
and
trusted
her
I
would
have
not
done
it,
but
I
knew
I
felt
like
it
would
showcase
black
mountain--
like
we
need
any
showcasing
but
I'm
very
proud
of
it
and
I.
Thank
you.
So
much
for
this
opportunity.
E
A
You
Megan
and
I'm
gonna
just
speak
on
behalf
of
the
board.
I
think
we're
also
very
very
proud
of
Maggie
and
the
work
that
she's
done.
She's
been
one
of
the
rocks
and
anchors
on
this
board
for
a
long
time
and
she
she's
the
voice
of
reason
and
just
calm,
steady
and
falling
along,
and
we
all
appreciate
her
I
love
her
to
death.
So
thank
Thank,
You,
Megan
you're.
G
A
H
So
some
of
the
things
we'll
discuss
today
will
be
our
call
volumes,
the
impacts
that
we
have
made
and
continue
to
make
on
the
drugs
and
drug
activity
here
in
the
town.
Some
of
the
completed
projects
are
grants
and
our
grant
searches
and
our
community
outreach
as
well.
Our
call
volumes,
of
course
in
2018,
were
twenty
four
thousand
one
hundred
eighty-five
calls
these
numbers
look
to
be
a
little
bit
down
this
year,
but
the
reason
being
is
mid-year.
H
We
went
to
a
new
national
incident
based
reporting
called
neighbors,
of
course,
and
it
kind
of
made
the
numbers
of
skew
because
it
changed
reporting
values
and
how
things
are
reporting
reported
them.
What
gets
reported
so
it
shows
our
numbers
are
a
little
bit
lower,
but
as
we
go
through
this
presentation,
I
think
you'll
see
with
the
rise
of
numbers
of
reports
and
arrests
and
everything
else
that
those
you
can
see
how
these
yearly
numbers
are
skewed.
H
Our
incident
reports
in
2018
were
1056
reports
that
shows
a
25%
growth
over
to
2017
narcotics
reports,
I'm,
sorry,
2017
reports
taking
and
that
should
be
actually
a
decline.
Twenty
six
point:
five
percent
decline.
Narcotics
reports
encompass
19
percent
of
that
driving,
while
impaired
another
12%,
Varsity
11
percent
and
then
all
other
offenses,
which
includes
like
domestic
violence,
probation
or
parole
violations,
welfare
checks,
pretrial
release
and
things
that
nature
encompassed
10%
and
then,
of
course,
there
was
was
several
other
types
of
calls
as
well.
H
Our
good
next
one,
our
arrests
made
were
4432.
That
is
a
thirteen
point.
Six
percent
increase
over
the
last
year.
The
largest
percentage
again
falls
into
what
is
categorized
now
through
nieghbors
is
all
their
offenses
which
include
driving
while
license
revoked,
resisting
public
officers
any
kind
of
weapons
violations.
Things
of
that
nature
that
encompassed
about
160
to
arrest.
Our
narcotics
arrest
accounted
for
104
arrest
warrant
services
accounted
for
37
driving
while
impaired
30,
arrests
and
then
drug
paraphernalia
was
another
17
arrests,
our
state
citations.
H
We
wrote
748
state
citations
last
year,
again
all
other
offenses,
which
includes
things
such
as
revoked
registration,
failure
to
register,
fictitious
registration
and
then
weapons
violations
through
traffic
stops
as
well
encompass
329,
citations,
driving
wild
license
revoked
for
130
citations
and
speeding
was
100
citations,
which
we
we've
really
been
working
on
that
just
in
the
month
of
December,
we
clocked
through
the
interstate
and
even
in
town
vehicles
at
90
to
130
miles
an
hour,
so
we're
really
trying
to
crack
down
on
a
lot
of
the
speeding
bit.
That's
coming
through
our
area.
H
Accidents
with
unknown
injury
were
57
hit-and-run
with
property
damage
only
was
51
and
then
accidents
involving
personal
injury
was
14
accidents
which
is
drastically
down.
If
you
look
at
our
numbers,
these
figures
show
a
decrease
of
7%
over
last
year
and
over
a
13%
decrease
over
2016,
as
well,
so
being
more
proactive
and
being
out
in
through
public
education
with
the
community.
We're
able
to
start
seeing.
You
know
the
effects
of
this
public
education
by
seeing
these
numbers
decline
in
accidents.
H
H
And
what
we
have
have
seen
is
a
25%
increase
in
2017
over
16
and
now
we've
seen
another
sixty
two
and
a
half
percent
increase
over
last
year's
drug
arrest
and
the
impacts
we've
had
and
a
lot
of
that
has
to
do
with
with
our
partnership
with
Homeland
Security,
which
we'll
talk
about
a
little
bit
later.
When
we
get
some
of
the
other
stuff,
and
you
can
go
through
the
next
few.
H
One
gram
of
fentanyl
is
enough
to
kill
almost
1,100
people
non-opioid
people,
just
in
one
bust
alone,
we
took
over
over
eight
grams
off
of
one
individual,
and
this
is
what
has
been
you
know:
plaguing
law
enforcement
in
our
searches
and
stuff.
This
stuff's
absorbed
through
the
skin,
but
one
of
the
things
and
I
think
John
may
be
able
to
to
attest
to
is
when
we
started
pulling
some
of
these
larger
amounts
of
fentanyl
off
the
street.
There
was
a
time
mid
year
last
year
that
we
started
seeing
a
decline
in
overdose
throughout.
H
You
know
our
jurisdiction,
which
we
took
a
major
player
out
and
he
has
been
prosecuted
on
a
federal
level
and
we'll
talk
about
those
as
well
later
on
the
majority
again
that
we're
seeing
is
marijuana
and
we're
seeing
a
lot
of
the
derivatives
that
come
from
marijuana.
We're
not
seeing
as
much
of
the
green
leafy
marijuana
we're
seeing
more
of
where
they're
cooking
out
the
THC
and
they're
making
what
they
call
butter
with
it.
And
what
you
got
to
keep
in
mind
is
what
we're
dealing
with.
H
H
There
you
go
so
looking
at
this
diagram
here,
the
majority
again,
what
came
out
of
the
schedule
six
but
again
keep
in
mind
that
those
13,000
468
grams,
that
we
took
out
right
there,
the
majority
that
was
derivatives
of
some
way,
shape
or
form
it
wasn't
the
green
leafy
marijuana.
We
had
a
hundred
and
seventeen
grams
of
Schedule
three,
which
is
like
your
steroids
and
opioids
2077
grams
of
your
schedule,
one
or
your
schedule
two
rather,
which
is
methamphetamine
crack
and
crack
cocaine,
and
then
also
your
schedule.
H
One
is
going
to
be
your
heroin
fentanyl
and
car
fentanyl.
With
that
being
said,
we
took
1600
or
16,000
108
were
seized
off
the
streets.
That
differs
a
little
bit
from
what
I
put
into
what
you
guys
were
given,
because
a
few
of
those
cases
I've
actually
come
full
circle
and
we
were
able
to
add
those
statistics
into
this
chief
six
that.
H
We
have
our
own
evidence
room,
and
the
good
thing
is
what
we
end
up
doing
with
a
lot
of
this
stuff,
like
the
fennel,
the
methamphetamine
and
stuff,
like
that,
working
with
Homeland
Security
were
able
to
deliver
it
to
their
their
labs
and
were
able
to
get
it
processed
a
lot
quicker.
We
did
have
one
bus
that
that
the
young
man
had
it.
He
had
12
grams
of
what
he
thought
was
cocaine.
H
I
H
Have
we
have
several
checks
and
balances
in
place
absolutely
and
we're
getting
ready
to
switch
over
and
increase
the
size
by
moving
our
evidence
to
another
room,
but
we
have
a
new
tagging
system
to
get
evidence
in
and
out.
We
also
worked
with
the
district
attorney's
office
to
ensure
that
we
have
those
checks
and
balances
in
place
that
you
know,
so
we
don't
run
into
issues
of
Asheville
and
other
places
out
absolutely.
H
So
I
think
the
big
thing
to
keep
in
mind
with
with
the
1600
or
16,000
108
grams,
that
equivalent
still
almost
3/4
of
a
million
dollars
in
street
value
of
drugs
and
narcotics
that
were
taken
off
our
streets
here
in
town.
Again,
it's
it's
kind
of
mind-boggling,
I
figured
you
know.
We
wouldn't
see
this,
but
but
again,
keep
in
mind.
A
lot
of
this
is
what
we
catch
travelling
through.
H
We
just
don't
want
to
come
in
through
the
we
also
seized
one
hundred
fifty
six
thousand
seven
hundred
thirty-seven
dollars
and
that
doesn't
represent
the
stay
side.
That's
only
while
we've
seized
and
taken
through
federal
courts
at
this
time,
there's
additional
monies
that
will
be
coming
through
on
a
stateside
the
side
portion.
D
H
And
when
I
talk
about
it,
it's
starting
to
flow
steady
once
we
start
getting
some
of
these
court
cases,
it
has
to
go
through
and
be
totally
adjudicated
before
they
can
release
those
funds,
but
once
it
starts,
these
cases
start
getting
totally
adjudicated.
We'll
start
seeing
you
know
larger
sums
deposited
into
our
drug
asset
forfeiture
funds
as
we
move
along.
H
So
again
we
talk
about
seizures
and
we
talk
about
money,
but
some
of
the
things
that
we
have
worked
with
homeland
security
to
do
is
again
try
to
help
we're
looking
for
ways
to
try
to
help
the
town
and
help
our
department,
as
well
through
being
able
to
get
things.
You
know
through
seizure.
One
of
the
things
that
we
just
recently
got
was
a
2015
King,
Ranch
truck
the
trucks
valued
at
about
$45,000.
We
put
about
thirteen
five
into
it
for
the
emergency
equipment.
H
The
other,
the
other
way,
which
is
really
kind
of
5050
with
me,
is
it's
important
to
get
the
drugs
off
the
street,
so
they're
not
dispersed.
But
again.
Last
year
we
were
seeing
a
lot
of
officers
who
are
accidentally
getting
overdosed
through.
You
know,
going
through
a
car,
doing,
searches
and
being
exposed
to
fentanyl.
So
we
worked
with
project
Lazarus
to
get
narcan
injectors.
H
The
officers
were
to
have
the
narcan
injectors
for
their
safety
in
case
were
exposed,
but
in
this
past
year
we
were
able
to
save
and
make
a
difference
in
four
people's
lives
here
in
Black,
Mountain
that
it
overdosed
and
and
we're
clinic
or
technically
dead,
and
it
reduced
those
those
effects
of
the
opioids
on
them
and
save
their
lives.
So
you
know
we're
seeing
a
much
greater
response
from
our
guys
in
trying
to
add
a
little
more
safety
and
helping
and
helping
the
citizens
out
here
in
the
town.
H
So
I
talked
earlier
about
the
partnership
with
Homeland
Security.
This
partnership
is
reaped
so
many
rewards
already
for
us.
It's
it's
allowed
us
to
be
able
to
investigate
the
narcotics
and
stuff
coming
through
the
town
by
allowing
us
to
put
in
the
overtime
it
takes
to
work
these
cases.
So
far
in
2018
the
later
half
of
2018,
we
invested
a
little
over
two
hundred
and
ten
hours
into
overtime.
H
We
were
reimbursed
five
thousand
thirty-seven
dollars
of
that
already
through
Homeland
Security
through
what
they
call
slot
funds
and
we
have
an
additional
two
thousand
eight
hundred
eighty
one,
that's
just
two
thousand
eighteen,
we've
already
included
some
in
nineteen
as
well
and
and
they're
reimbursing
those
funds
to
us.
They've
also
bought
us
equipment.
We
we
were
running
into
much
larger
quantities
of
narcotics
than
what
we
typically
do.
H
So
we
needed
scales,
we
needed
cameras
with
lenses,
they
we
purchased,
that
they
were
inversed
us
and
the
partnership
has
also
provided
much
harsher
penalties,
those
that
commit
crimes,
especially
narcotics
crimes.
Here
in
the
town,
we
in
2018
charged
eight
individuals
with
everything
from
trafficking
Schedule,
one
and
two
narcotics
distribution
of
Schedule,
one
and
two
narcotics
conspiracy
to
traffic
Schedule.
One
and
two
narcotics
conspiracy
distribute
one
to
narcotics,
possession
of
a
firearm
in
the
furtherance
of
a
narcotic
crime
and
financial
crimes
to
include
tax
evasion
and
hiding
assets
garnered
through
illicit
means.
H
H
H
This
grant
allowed
us
purchased
22
cameras
a
docking
station
in
a
computer
system
which
met
with
the
strict
guidelines
that,
for
the
evidence
chain
of
custody,
it's
an
invaluable
tool.
It
helps
us
to
kind
of
look
at
our
day-to-day
operations,
how
we're
doing
business
our
interactions
with
people
and
kind
of
look
and
see
how
we
can
improve
and
do
better,
but
but
it
also
helps
when
we
have
complaints.
H
H
But,
more
importantly,
what
the
body
cameras
did
provide
is
the
fact
that
it
proved
allegations
to
be
false,
and
it
proved
that
you
know
what
was
told
on
the
officers
wasn't
true
that
not
only
protects
the
officers
that
protects
the
town
and
I
think
that
in
itself,
the
weight
of
that
is
much
more
important
than
even
the
cost.
It's
gonna
save
us
in
the
long
term,
from
any
complaints
lawsuits
things
of
that
nature,
so
k9,
Brisco
retired.
H
H
We
had
the
people
that
actually
own
the
k9
come
up
and
set
the
panel
with
us
and
help
us
to
select
the
individual
and
then,
of
course,
ultimately
loking
Newhouse
was
selected
as
as
the
new
k-9
officer
in
2018.
He
went
down
and
met
his
new
partner
caiman,
who
is
a
Belgian
Malinois,
he's
a
multi-purpose
drug
detection,
narcotics,
tracking
and
apprehension
dog?
H
What
is
very
good
about
the
demeanor
of
this
dog
is
you
can
take
him
and
walk
through
the
schools
and
and
he's
like
what
he
still
has
a
pub
but
he's
you
can
tell
he
wants
to
be
patted,
he
wants
to
be
loved
on
and
he
loves
the
attention
from
the
children
and
then
you
can
turn
around
and
put
him
outside
a
car
to
do
a
narcotic
search
or
a
trach,
and
he
knows
it's
time
for
business.
So
it's
it's
really
hard
to
find
a
Belgian
Malinois
that
that
can
switch
back
and
forth
like
that.
H
But
this
dog
is
a
perfect
he's.
Great
we've
had
him
into
schools
multiple
times
the
kids
love
him.
They
look
forward
to
him
coming
into
the
schools
and
he's
been
a
great
addition.
Already's
made
an
impact
through
approximately
eight
or
nine
searches
and
every
one
of
them.
The
one
has
revealed
narcotics,
the
one
that
did
not
turn
up.
Any
weight
of
narcotics
was
just
based
off
the
fact
that
they
just
delivered
so.
H
Last
year
we
started
well
actually
in
2017
with
the
lives
and
working
the
narcotics
we
started,
seeing
that
we
needed
something
a
little
more
here
in
town.
We
wanted
a
a
quicker
response.
We
wanted
better
training
for
the
staff
to
be
able
to
serve
search
warrants,
narcotic
search
warrants,
fugitive
apprehension
and
things
of
that
nature.
H
We
had
done
the
department,
those
that
were
interested,
submit
a
letter
of
intent.
We
said
interviews,
we
had
a
very,
very
difficult
agility
course,
and
then
they
had
to
also
qualify
at
a
much
much
higher
standard
than
what
you
would
qualify
even
for
state
state
certification.
So
we
put
a
lot
of
stringent
things
on
on
this.
H
For
you
to
be
a
member
of
this
team,
we
pulled
in
through
a
BTEC
and
was
able
to
do
our
SRT
certification
in-house
which
what
it
ultimately
did
is
it
kept
overtime
down
on
the
town
that
kept
so
it
didn't
affect
the
budget
and
we
were
able
to
hold
it
in-house
and
get
every
one
of
our
officers.
Srt
certified
I.
Think
the
key
thing
to
remember
with
this
SRT
team
is
when
we
hear
SRT
SWAT.
Whatever
you
hear,
you
tend
to
think
that
it's
tactical,
this
team
is
not
just
tactical.
H
This
team
is
very
well
versed
in
rescue
woodland
operations,
negotiations,
personal
protection,
crowd,
control,
search
warrant
service.
You
know
mutual
aid
to
the
surrounding
agencies
and
and
during
the
very
short
time
of
its
existence,
we've
already
accumulated
on
the
12
19
20,
almost
20
100
hours
in
training
to
advance
those
skills.
H
Just
a
little
bit
of
statistics
to
let
you
know
how
how
good
this
team
is.
The
average
response
time
for
our
team
to
respond
to
a
call
here
in
Black
Mountains?
Thirty,
five
minutes.
If
you
look
at
Buncombe
County
as
SRT
team,
they
have
any
call-out
time
of
two
hours
and
15
minutes
if
you
look
at
APD
you're
looking
at
hour
and
45
minutes,
but
it
can
take
before
they're
on
scene,
but
we
have
averaged
out
of
all
of
our
calls
35
minutes
in
wall
scene
as
a
team.
H
Since
the
inception
we
executed
eight
narc
search
warrants:
we've
executed,
five,
violent
offender,
arrests,
assisting
with
the
the
US
Marshals.
We
had
five
mutual
aid
request,
which
resulted
in
the
arrest
of
the
offender
and
as
well
as
seizing
weapons
and
narcotics.
We
had
one
person
barricaded
in
the
home
with
a
weapon
and
wouldn't
come
out,
and
then
they
responded
all
three
inclement
weather
events
we
had
this
past
year.
Out
of
all
the
events
that
we
responded
to,
there
were
no
injuries
for
the
officers
or
the
suspects.
H
What's
the
biggest
concern
you
have
here
at
the
department
and
they
talked
about
the
radio
issues
and
again,
if
you're,
smart,
you
sit
back
and
you're
kind
of
watching
and
sure
enough.
As
I
watched
my
evaluated,
we
were
having
issues
with
battery
operated
charge,
the
staining
and
direct
contact
with
our
communications.
H
So
we
sought
out
and
started
talking
to
wireless
communication,
who
does
a
lot
of
the
surrounding
agencies
worked
with
them
in
the
past
great
group
of
people
after
several
quite
a
few
months
of
negotiations,
came
up
with
a
scenario
that
fit
the
town
benefit
of
the
town
in
two
ways:
number
one
it
provided
the
department
with
much-needed
quality
communications
equipment
then.
Secondly,
through
the
negotiations,
we
were
able
to
save
the
town
approximately
two
to
two
hundred
thousand
dollars.
H
Once
the
proposal
was
written,
we
brought
it
to
the
council
and,
like
I
said,
you
know,
you
guys
have
been
very
very
supportive
to
you
know,
make
sure
that
we're
well
taken
care
of
and
for
that
work.
We're
definitely
deeply
grateful
for
that.
We
implemented
this
project
this
past
year
and
we
implemented
in
three
phases.
H
The
first
phase
actually
replace
the
handhelds
and
the
in-car
radios
immediately,
even
under
the
old
BHS
system,
because
of
the
the
way
the
transmitting
sending
and
receiving
signals
in
these
new
radios,
we
immediately
seen
better
receiving
reception
and
communications
with
with
our
dispatch.
Secondly,
we
upgraded
our
communication
center.
This
allowed
us
to
go
to
what's
called
Viper.
It's
a
voice,
interoperability
plan
for
emergency
responders.
H
Again,
once
we,
we
went
the
Viper
our
tower
locks
in
with
all
the
other
Viper
towers.
It
gives
us
just
a
greater
range
of
coverage
within
the
town
and
even
outside
the
town,
but
it
also
opened
up
our
lines
of
communication
with
those
other
agencies
that
come
in
and
support
us,
and
we
help
support
them
as
well,
so
immediately
we're
able
to
communicate
much
much
better,
much
quicker
with
these
people
and
then
phase
3
of
it,
which
just
got
completed
a
month
or
so
ago,
was
the
upgrade
to
the
VHF
repeater.
H
We
also
implemented
some
new
decals,
the
one
thing
that
I'll
say
about
the
the
new
decals
is
these
guys
wanted
something
that
kind
of
spoke
to
Black
Mountain?
They
wanted
people
to
be
able
to
recognize
it
and
they
felt
like
through
what
they
designed
that
this
is
a
much
better
decal
in
the
sensitive
markets,
our
town
and
our
department,
much
better.
H
It's
it's
more
easily
recognizable
from
a
greater
distance,
and
not
only
that
it's
quickly
recognizable
as
a
police
vehicle,
and
so
we
implemented
these
and
we've
gotten
a
lot
of
great
feedback
from
the
implementation
of
this
our
grants
we
have
been
awarded,
$24,500
no
match
grant.
This
replaces
our
MDT's
and
our
printers
that
are
outdated.
We
are
waiting
on
the
funds
to
be
released
on
this,
but
we
have
been
awarded
this
grant.
It's
coming.
H
The
second
grant
that
we
got
the
governors
highway
safety
program,
three
points
that
we
click
it
and
tickets
DWI
checkpoints
things
of
that
nature.
We
create
enough
points
for
one
of
the
few
agencies
who
accrued
enough
points
that
we
were
able
to
apply
for
this
grant.
This
grant
is
valued
at
about
fifty
one
thousand.
Seven
hundred
seventy-five
dollars,
forty
thousand
five
hundred-
oh,
that
goes
toward
the
car,
a
vehicle
and
the
installation
of
the
equipment.
Four
thousand
7500
goes
for
the
in-car
video
camera
system.
Four
hundred
of
us
for
an
in-car
printer.
H
Upcoming
grant
opportunities,
they're
getting
ready,
opened
up
the
governor's
crime
commission
grant
again
for
up
to
twenty
five
thousand
dollars.
We
will
again
be
applying
for
that
to
look
at
waste
may
be
offset
some
of
the
capital
needs
of
the
department,
some
of
the
equipment
that
is
beginning
to
age
and
then
also
we
have
some
ballistic
vests
that
are
reaching
their
life
span,
so
we
will
be
looking
at
going
through
and
using
Department
of
Justice
North
Carolina
League
of
Municipalities.
H
Our
community
initiatives
pretty
much
like
last
year.
Just
it
was.
It
was
much
better.
This
year
we
had
a
lot
better
response
in
our
booth
at
sourwood,
people
knew
we
were
going
to
be
there
and
we
had.
You
know
people
coming
up
to
talk
to
us
and
reach
out
to
us.
We
use
sourwood
again
that
the
big
thing
is
is
we
want
to
make
ourselves
accessible
outside
of
a
professional
environment
to
the
community,
and
this
is
just
one
way:
we're
able
to
do
that.
H
H
Coffee
with
a
cop
just
had
one.
This
past
Saturday
had
a
lot
of
people
saying
that
when
I'm
camping
on
weekend,
you
know
we
work
through
the
week
or
we
don't
this
earlier
or
whatever
and
sure
enough
I
mean
if
we
had
a
great
great
attendance
this
past
Saturday
at
Starbucks.
We
will
continue
to
do
that.
This
is
a
good
time
for
the
community
step
out
and
talk
with
us.
There's
no
agenda
these
meetings.
H
It
gives
them
the
opportunity
to
directly
approach
us
talk
to
us
with
any
concerns,
questions,
ways
we
can
improve
business,
and
so
it's
just
a
great
time
to
hang
out
and
open
the
lines
of
communication
between
us
and
the
citizens
again,
our
community
outreach.
We
still
believe
that
we
have
to
invest
time
in
our
children.
H
We
feel
like
that,
if
we
can
invest
that
time
with
the
children
that
it
will
lessen
the
stress
on
the
child
when,
when
we're
around,
but
maybe
maybe
even
less
than
that
stress
with
a
parent
who
is
stressed
out
around
law
enforcement
as
well,
so
we
we
try
to
take
our
time.
We
spend
lots
of
time
in
the
schools
and
and-
and
we
get
a
lot
of
time
working
with
these
schools
as
well
through
our
SRT
team,
they
open
up
their
doors.
Let
us
use
it
so
we
can
be
prepared
in
the
event.
H
You
know
we
have
some
sort
of
situation
there.
Also,
with
talking
about
the
schools,
we're
looking
to
expand
our
outreach
to
to
our
school-aged
young
people
during
2013
I've
got
a
couple
of
officers
who
are
looking
into
a
program
will
be
a
Cadet
Corps
program.
The
program
will
consist
of
youth
between
15
and
20,
mainly
from
the
high
schools.
H
There
will
be
criteria
set
for
those
who
participate
in
this,
this
Cadet
Corps
the
criteria,
some
of
the
criteria
that
we're
looking
at
is
like
maintaining
a
2.5
GPA
having
high
ethical
standards
showing
interest
in
in
the
law
enforcement
career
field,
but
but
that's
still
in
the
early
age
stages,
but
we
are
hoping
to
get
that
started
sometime
in
the
upcoming
budget.
Here
again,
our
community
outreach
Thanksgiving
meals.
We
feel
you
know
very
deeply
that
our
job
isn't
just
to
write,
write
tickets.
You
know
we're
here
to
take
care
of
our
citizens
and
I.
H
H
We
provided
12
families
with
with
Thanksgiving
and
Christmas
meals,
and
again
this
included
your
hands
or
turkey
and
all
the
trimmings
and
desserts
and
drinks,
but
we
were
also
helped
able
to
help
16
elderly
folks
in
our
community
and
we
provided
them
with
non-perishable
food
items
that
would
help
sustain
them
through
the
holidays.
Can't
tell
you
how
much
it
means
to
be
able
to
go
out
and
see
in
these
people's
eyes.
You
know
the
appreciation
and
be
able
to
sit
around
and
talk
for
a
few
minutes
and
Mara
Collins
and
town
manager.
H
Harold
was
able
to
go
out.
You
know
a
couple
times
with
us
on
on
some
of
these
deliveries
and
they
can
attest
to
how
fortunate
we
are
to
be
able
to
give
back
to
the
community.
I
can't
say
enough,
and
we
can't
do
it
without
the
help
of
you
know
our
businesses
and
our
people
buying
the
shirts
or
making
donations
to
the
department
to
be
able
to
do
this
outreach.
H
We
almost
doubled
it.
This
year
it's
grown
exponentially
this
year
we
were
able
to
help
18
families,
totaling
29
children.
When
we
first
started,
we
adopted
nine
children
right
off
the
bat
of
course,
Jaime's
guys
and
Public
Works
did
a
little
fundraiser
and
they
donated
some
money
and
we
were
able
to
adopt
ten
more
and
then
my
guys
want
to
do
a
no
shave
December
and
they
come
up
with
a
lot
of
money,
and
so
we
adopted
ten
more.
Let's
hope
it
just
kind
of
kept
growing.
H
Here
in
the
town
come
over
to
the
training
room
and
we
broke
up
into
groups
and
kind
of
at
our
first
elf
rapping
party,
so
to
speak,
speak
which
what
would
have
took
us
weeks
on
weeks
to
rap.
We
write
them
in
just
a
few
hours
with
all
that
help,
but
it
means
a
lot
to
see
people
turn
out
to
support
their
community
and
try
to
help
and
again
I.
Just
I
can't
say
how
fortunate
I
feel
to
work
in
a
community
that
has
such
a
heart
that
they're
willing
to
step
out
and
help
others.
H
It
just
means
it
means
a
lot.
So
in
closing,
I've
taken
up
a
lot
of
your
time.
This
year
was
a
great
success,
but
it
was
only
a
great
success
because
of
the
support
that
we
have
from
the
Board
of
Aldermen
and
our
citizens.
We
can't
do
what
we
do
and
we
can't
be
successful
without
the
support
of
you
guys.
H
Our
federal
partnerships
were
able
to
save
the
town,
money
and
overtime
budget,
but
it
also,
more
importantly,
helped
violent
offenders
and
drug
dealers
more
accountable
for
their
crimes
within
the
town,
partnerships
and
bonds
that
we
built
with
our
citizens.
We
reap
rewards
of
that
through
being
able
to
give
back
to
the
community
and
provide
Christmas
and
Thanksgiving
to
the
communities
and
I'll
leave
you
with
just
saying
that
you
know
we
don't
take
the
job
as
police
officers
here
in
Black
Mountain
lightly.
A
J
So
automated
will
be
adoption
of
minutes,
January
10th,
2019
agenda
session
minutes,
January
14th,
2000,
19th,
regular
session
minutes
in
January,
14th
2019,
closed
session
minutes
item
B
will
be
coffee
public
hearing
for
closure
of
the
remainder
of
an
unopened,
platted
portion
of
first
Street.
If
you'll
recall
a
couple
months
ago,
we
did
closed
a
portion
of
1st
Street
that
does
connect
to
this.
That
was
petitioned
by
the
person
that
had
joins
that
back
then
up
and
right
away.
J
This
portion
is
about
75
feet
in
length,
roughly
30
feet
in
width
that
was
requested
to
be
added
to
that
petition,
but
come
to
find
out.
It
needs
to
be
done
separately.
So
the
Planning
Board
had
recommend
that
this.
This
section,
like
I,
said
30
foot
and
with
35
foot
in
length
to
be
closed
and
C
would
be
the
resolution
accepting
the
contribution
of
Macomb
County
Riverwalk
Greenway
funding,
interlocal
agreement.
J
D
is
a
budget
amendment
for
insurance
settlement.
This
is
for
an
accident.
A
police
car
was
involved
in
so
this
is
just
some
accounting
money
out
and
money
back
in
from
from
insurance.
So
it
was
a
covered
accident
item.
A
is
a
budget
amendment
for
the
purchase
of
a
police
vehicle.
This
is
a
partially
funded
vehicle
with
with
grant
funding
seventeen
thousand
five
hundred
dollars
in
grant
funding
the
other
twenty
three
thousand
dollars
comes
from
ABC,
restricted
funds.
J
Item
F
is
salary
and
compensation
rate
adjustment,
so
administration
is
requesting
this
adjustment
for
the
golf
course
superintendent,
currently
that
vacant
that
position
has
been
vacant
for
a
number
of
years.
Currently
mr.
Jerry
Krugman
has
he's
been
in
that
position
for
I,
guess
the
past
three
or
four
years
or
so,
and
has
assumed
some
of
those
responsibilities,
so
account
administration
would
request
that
he
be
bumped
up
to
$3,000
a
year
of
pay
increase
and,
lastly,
you'll
have
a
call
for
public
hearing
for
text
amendments
to
add
the
fede
ordinance.
J
This
is
something
the
board
had
kind
of
directed
me
to
put
together
under
the
the
Tao
attorney
has
done
really
most
of
work,
but
this
would
be
a
call
for
public
hearing
for
that
for
those
regulations
and
we've,
you
know:
we've
looked
at
some
other
places
and
kind
of
adopted
some
of
what
some
what
they've
done,
and
this
would
be
coming
to
you
for
a
public
hearing
at
your
next
meeting
in
March
and
that'll.
Be
it
for
your
consent
agenda.
I
Well,
as
I
mentioned
in
the
agenda,
meeting,
I
had
spent
a
good
bit
of
time
with
our
finance
director
and
Dean
had,
as
you
might
suspect,
just
because
of
the
ongoing
budget.
Work
has
a
lot
of
a
lot
of
information
on
on
the
detail
that
we
talked
a
little
bit
about
at
last
month's
meeting
about
this
water
purchase
and
in
the
nuts
and
bolts
of
actually
how
it
would
work
for
us
in
the
water
fund
and
the
main
concern
before
we
completed
and
voted
on.
I
The
amendment
in
front
of
us
is
how
much
capacity
we
could
afford
to
buy,
because
we
have
to
pay
a
commitment
fee
if
you
will
capacity
fee
for
purchasing
the
water
from
city
of
Asheville.
That's
in
addition
to
purchasing
the
water,
but
you
have
to
pay
a
capacity
for
sort
of
reserves.
The
water
for
us,
if
you
will
so
and
so
the
long
and
short
of
it,
is
that
the
the
agreement,
as
it
was
right,
think
actually,
as
a
town
attorney
had
presented
it
to
us,
we
went
we're
currently
purchasing
200.
I
We
would
purchase
another
100
thousand
gallons
a
day
one
year
from
now.
An
additional
100,000
gallons
a
day
two
years
from
now
is
that
right,
yeah,
and
so
the
question
was,
you
know
how
much
capacity
is
in
that
how
much
extra
capacity,
because
we're
taking
on
some
new
customers
from
the
city
of
Asheville.
We
have
a
about
a
business
expansion,
and
so
in
looking
at
that,
we
we
arrived
out
of
if
we
did
the
purchase
just
as
it
was
proposed,
and
that
is
getting
us
up
to
400,000
a
day
over
the
next
two
years.
I
Of
something
in
the
neighborhood
of
100
100
to
150
extra
capacity
because
we're
using
on
the
average
150
now
and
then
we're
going
to
add
the
Asheville
City
customers,
which
basically
gets
us
up
another
hundred
thousand,
so
that's
250
and
so
and
then
there's
a
buffer
there.
It's
not
you
know.
Sometimes
we
go
over
so,
let's,
let's
sort
of
say
that
we're
kind
of
at
300
to
make
it
safe.
That
gives
us
really
extra
capacity
of
100.
I
We
can't
afford
that
dean
rant
random
numbers
and
if
we
look
only
at
that
water
purchase
of
400
thousand
gallons
a
day
and
what
we
project
we'll
be
using
selling
there
there's
an
that
margin
in
there
that
that
still
makes
it
work
for
the
water
fund.
It's
basically
around
one
hundred
thousand
dollars
a
year
which
may
sound
like
a
lot
of
money,
but
in
a
an
enterprise
as
large
as
a
water
fund,
and
that's
not
all
that
doesn't
really
account
for
all
of
the
cost
involved.
I
I
would
make
the
motion
that
we,
that
that
with
the
change-
and
that
would
be
in
Ron,
be
the
section
B
part
three.
The
city
is
committed
to
deliver
the
city
being
the
city
of
Ashland.
City
is
committed
to
deliver
four
hundred
thousand
gallons
per
day,
beginning
June,
1
2021
or
immediately
after
the
town
has
used
400
thousand
a
day
and
the
contracts
written.
I
G
A
G
K
Good
evening,
when
we
last
continued
this
meeting
this
hearing,
you
asked
me
to
get
back
to
the
planning
board
and
see
if
they
had
comments
about
the
proposed
amendments
that
attorneys
need
had
put
together
and
I've
provided
verbatim
comments
to
you
from
the
Planning
Board.
At
least
Milton
had
comments
and
support
continuing
noticing,
over
and
beyond
the
statutory
requirements,
and
it
was
in
support
of
extending
that
to
the
200
feet
and
you
had
those
verbatim
there
and
those
were
the
only
comments
that
we
received
back.
K
G
It's
slightly
selfish,
there's
a
friend
of
mine
said:
if
you
want
to
test
your
restrictive
elements,
I
ask
the
litigator
what
he
thinks
of
them
is
there's
a
lot
of
court
history
with
that
a
jayson
requirement.
So
if
something
comes
up,
the
decisions
already
been
made
to
Lansford
for
us,
and
if
we
don't
make
the
200
Peter
requirement
but
an
option,
then
we
don't
get
the
skin
because
it
was
a
requirement.
We
maybe
miss
somebody.
G
L
Thank
you,
Lisa
Milton,
406,
West,
8th
Street
and
after
her
Jessica
brought
this
back
to
us
at
the
Planning.
Board
I
did
some
looking
as
to
the
things
we
had
discussed
and
the
the
items
that
was
discussed
by
found
at
the
last
meeting
and
I
had
some
comments
that
I'd
like
to
share
to
see
if
those
possibly
could
clarify
some
of
the
problems
that
we
have
with
that.
L
Many
of
the
street
closures
are
only
a
couple
of
parcels
huah,
but
those
some
of
them
have
multiple
parcels
and
the
some
of
the
biggest
problems
that
we
have
encountered
with
road
closure
requests
have
come
from
requests
to
only
close
a
portion
of
an
unopened
Road,
particularly
a
portion
that
is
at
the
start
of
the
unopened
road.
The
the
instances,
two
of
them
that
we
have
encountered
contained
lots
that
were
not
within
the
closed
portion
request,
but
they
were
further
down
the
road
that
was
unopened.
Two
of
the
Lots
had
no
road
frontage.
L
Had
they
not
been
notified,
they
would
not
have
been
aware
that
they
were
going
to
it.
That
point
have
a
landlocked
lot,
because
with
the
unopened
road,
they
could
request
opening
it
to
allow
them
access
to
that
parcel
links
of
unopened
streets
and
alleys
vary
tremendously.
By
setting
a
fixed
distance
from
the
requested
closure,
it
could
result
in
impacted
property
owners
not
receiving
notice
if
an
impacted
property
owners
isn't
notified
of
the
closure
request
and
the
board
votes
to
close
the
street.
The
property
owners.
L
Recourse
is
only
available
to
them
to
appeal
to
the
general
Court
of
Justice,
not
the
Zoning
Board
of
Adjustment,
resulting
in
sizeable
cost
to
property
owners,
as
well
as
to
the
town.
If
the
text
amendment
contained
language
that
every
property
owner
of
budding
any
part
of
an
unopened
street
or
alley
received
notice
by
certified
or
registered
mail
of
the
closure
request,
this
would
better
align
our
code
with
the
general
statute
number
162,
a
299
and
one
other
request
that
I
would
hope
the
town
was
considered
not
tonight.
L
Maybe
it
needs
a
discussion,
but
I
would
ask
that
you
consider
adding
text
to
such
that
the
town
may
reserve
a
right
title
and
interest
in
any
improvements
or
easements
within
a
street
closed.
Pursuant
to
the
north
carolina
general
statute,
168
299,
these
easements
could
be
valuable
in
the
future
development
of
their
town.
Thanks
for
your
time
and
consideration,
I
appreciate
it.
A
I
I
May
notice
may
be
sent
to
others
of
property
within
200
feet
may,
and
that's
you
just
made
a
comment
to
that:
I
guess
what
I'm
not
clear
is
which
I
think
it's
a
good
suggestion
reckon
recommendation
because
you're
not
you're
not
conflicting,
with
law
as
an
attorney
saying,
you're,
saying
notice
to
every
property
owner
that
abuts,
the
the
unclosed
Road
any
portion
of
it.
Any
portion
of
does
that
create
a
problem
on
intersection.
G
Rd,
but
the
intent
I
think
is
the
same,
is
if
this
board
the
attitude
toward
the
closing
the
streets
changes
over
time,
and
there
was
the
time
when
this
board
would
never
vote
the
closing
of
a
section
of
a
street
period
and
and
then
obviously,
in
my
mind,
if
somebody
came
to
you
and
wanted
to
close
as
Lisa
describes,
close
off
the
end
of
the
street
of
a
completely
landlocked
everybody,
this
board
probably
wouldn't
pass
that.
But
how
did
you
get
that
information
and
I
think
Lisa's
approach?
Oh,
that
makes
better
sense.
G
The
200
feet
is
pretty
arbitrary
number
and
if
you
wanted
to
give
this
board
of
the
Planning
Board
that
discretion
to
notify
everybody
on
the
street
because
the
closed
no
part
not
effective,
then
this
could
be
reworded,
that
the
board
of
the
Planning
Board
may
give
notice
to
everybody
on
adjoining
any
portion
of
his
Street
to
be
closed
and
I.
Think
that
serves
my
purpose
of
giving
me
a
lawsuit,
I
can
win
and
serves
of
planning
boards
purpose
I'm,
giving
those
to
people
might
really
be
affected
by
the
sequester.
So.
I
G
I
think
and
you've
got
it
to
work
with
tonight
if
everybody's
comfortable,
but
if,
if
that's
the
direction
you
want
to
take,
then
I
could
change
or
by
motion.
You
could
change
the
resolution
of
the
ordinance.
That's
in
front
of
you
to
read
that
those
may
be
sent
to
all
owners
of
property
adjoining
any
portion
of
the
street
to
be
closed.
I
A
E
A
G
E
F
G
If
you
just
remove
the
200
feet,
you're
back
to
where
what
the
statute
says,
if
this
forth
launched,
you
won't
have
the
ability-
and
you
won't-
have
the
planning
board-
to
have
the
ability
to
give
notice
to
people
other
than
those
abutting
the
partners.
In
the
petition
to
be
closed,
the
wording
would
be
changed,
200
feet
that
they
may
give
notice
to
all
property
owners
whose
properties
are
but
rajulun.
D
I
To
make
a
motion
to
accept
ordinance,
two
that
we
accept
ordinance,
number
zero
1904
with
the
amendments
in
section
one
Part
B
three
to
read
and
I'd
like
to
ask
for
the
assistance
of
the
town
attorney
to
help
you.
This
notice
of
the
request
and
pursuant
review
by
the
Planning
Board
shall
be
sent
to
all
property
owners.
I
G
D
G
G
I
G
G
D
A
G
K
I'm
just
here
to
introduce
local
artist,
Julia
Burke.
She
has
many
years
of
experience,
creating
and
installing
public
art
in
many
cities
in
the
southeast,
and
you
have
in
your
packet
some
information
about
her
and
her
work
and
she's
here
to
present
that
information
and
answer
any
questions
you
may
have.
Thank
you.
Hi.
M
All
I'm
Julia,
so
you
have
the
packet
and
I
think
and
with
respect
to
not
being
redundant,
it
might
be
just
easiest.
If
you
have
questions
to
ask
me
otherwise
pretty
much,
what
I
would
offer
be,
what
our
I've
already
been.
You
know
you've
been
given.
This
is
an
awesome
opportunity
for
our
town.
It's
an
awesome
opportunity
for
me
and
getting
to
celebrate
nature
art
and
it's
a
gift
from
a
fabulous
foundation.
I,
don't
it's
to
me
a
pretty
much
of
a
you
know,
a
win-win
situation
for
all.
So
are
there
any
questions.
F
M
Would
have
to
be
one
heck
of
a
Spider
Man
to
be
able
to
access
up
to
the
site
for
40
years
we
did
stuff
for
Disney
for
Universal
and
what
public
can
access?
If
you
think
they
might,
they
will
that's
pretty
much
what
you
have
to
go
on,
so
my
the
key
will
be.
This
is
just
a
very,
very
simple,
lock
up.
This
was
as
much
for
me
to
have
a
good
visual.
M
The
main
way
they
could
ever
get
to
this
is
if
they
use
these
cutouts
for
a
foothold
and
we're
not
going
to
place
them
where
that's
going,
to
be
viable
way
to
get
a
hold
of
it.
Otherwise,
you're
going
to
be
super
tall
to
be
able
to
access
anything
to
get
up
high
enough
to
get
ahold
of
it
with
all
that
said,
I
cannot
make
it
perfect.
That
way,
any
bridge
is
liable
to
that
any
bench.
Anything
that's
in
public
domain.
You
know
my.
F
M
M
I
mean
that's
the
best,
because
this
is
my
livelihood
as
well,
and
I.
Don't
have
no
intention
of
setting
myself
up
for
failure.
We've
already
talked
about
mocking
this
up
to
find
out
where
we
can
hold
on
here
and
swing
a
leg
up
and
what
we
could
access
that,
and
that
is
the
best
that
I
could
do.
I
would
hope
that
we
wouldn't
have
to
put
a
barrier
around
it,
because
that
almost
then
is
not
a
it
defeats.
M
M
D
E
E
G
The
question
of
course,
was:
are
we?
What
kind
of
liability
are
we
undertaking?
Is
that
creating
nuisance?
Will
Science
Hill
keep
people
off
of
it?
Don't
play
on
it
perhaps,
but
the
people
were
worried
about
are
the
kids,
who
probably
don't
read?
Some
of
those
signs
are
with
the
parents.
Obviously,.
M
We've
had
I
mean,
there's
been
there's
two
other
pieces
around
and
we've
had
no
incidents
in
the
last
two
to
three
years.
So
there's
a
ton
of
traffic
in
this
particular
location,
I,
think
that
is
to
the
advantage,
because
people
have
they
gain
an
ownership
after
a
while
at
first
they're
sort
of
home.
What
have
you
put
here
and
then
there's
an
interaction
that
happens
and
then
an
ownership
happens
and
I've
watched.
It
happen
with
the
other
two
sculptures
that
arrive,
and
it's
pretty
awesome
so
and
with
that
ownership
becomes
responsibility
and
people
going.
M
I
J
N
All
right,
you
have
in
front
of
you
just
our
recommended
pool
rate
revisions
and
also
some
policy
changes
since
about
2005
I
started
in
September
of
18.
So
my
knowledge
is
not
too
in-depth
on
the
pool
operations,
because
I
wasn't
here
in
this
summer,
but
based
on
some
of
the
research
I've
done
and
working
with
our
pool
manager.
Since
2015
we
haven't
done
any
type
of
rate,
increases
or
changed
any
of
the
way
we
determine
who
received
what
type
of
rate
via
a
resident
non-resident
policy.
N
O
B
N
For
a
lifeguard
at
the
pool,
it's
it's,
it
comes
down
to
consent
of
care,
a
child
being
without
an
adult
if
they
are
choking
or
whatever.
We
can't
do
anything
until
they're
unconscious
until
it
becomes
life-threatening.
The
other
side
of
that
is
that
pool
staff
via
the
pool
manager,
lifeguard
seat
working
in
the
concession
stand,
are
not
only
responsible
for
the
pool
work
for
the
parking
lot
and
the
lake
and
the
things
that
surround
the
area.
N
O
P
F
J
F
G
J
And
the
employees
at
the
golf
course
and
think
it's
big
marry
this
to
me
but
I,
don't
we
don't
pay
the
green
fees?
What
we
do?
Pay
the
cart
fees,
the
employees
I
think
that
was
something
that
was
always
there
not
always,
but
in
the
past
has
been
no
charge,
but
that
is
something
the
employee
does
pay
for.
Currently,.
F
N
J
Just
say
you
know
they
did
some
research,
like
he
mentioned
on
some
of
these
other
localities.
Close
to
us,
Asheville
City
has
no
employee
pass.
There's
no
discount
given
to
Asheville
City
there
is
Montreat,
does
give
an
employee
pass
for
only
full-time
employees.
That's
it.
No.
No
other
person
in
the
household
gets
to
go
for
free,
Buchan
County,
whether
that
be
north
bunkum,
oh
and
Cane,
Creek
or
one
etc.
There
is
there
is
the
employee
does
have
a
discount
there
and
Hall
Creek,
which
is
East
Asheville
Recreation
Club.
F
J
D
P
N
P
A
clear
pass,
I
didn't
have
one
or
two
team
links
that
Deb's
use
them,
because
there
were
quite
a
few
and
everyone
that
would
come
on
a
regular
basis
and
of
course,
you
know
they're
they're
working
all
the
time.
So
what
would?
What
would
the
board
proposed
in
terms
of
people
statute?
Would
they
be
under.
N
D
P
P
F
P
G
Or
bill
get
ready
to
go
to
the
legislature
to
put
us
to
even
number
election
Eaters.
It
does
read,
as
your
resolution
did
a
few
months
ago,
that
the
way
we
will
go
into
even
your
cycles
is.
It
does
bump
each
term
out
one
you
that's,
and
so
the
bill
matches
the
resolution.
If
this
board
wants
to
change
that
any
fashion.
Probably
now
is
the
time
to
address
it
because
the
legislature
that's
a
local
bill
that
will
go
through.
We
want
to
turn
the
pot
in
out
there.
F
Just
a
thank
you
to
the
folks
with
the
Swami
little
Valley
Martin
Luther
King
breakfast
committee.
They
had
the
29th
celebration,
I!
Guess
that's
what
you
could
call
it
this
past
Saturday
at
camp
Dorothy
Wallace.
It
was
well
attended.
We
had
over
250
people
there,
but
a
great
speaker
who
would
be
an
excellent
job,
excellent
job.
D
F
Who
were
able
to
be
there
from
the
board
from
the
town
who
appreciate
it?
I
mean
I,
heard
reports
that
this
was
the
best
one
ever
and
you
know
I
think
it's
it's
the
kind
of
occasion,
that's
kind
of
a
sad
occasion,
but
it
was
also
a
joyous
occasion
and
that
the
community
really
supported
me
endeavor
and
it's
just
gonna
get
bigger
from
here.
So,
oh
you
folks
have
made
it
out.
Thank
you
if
you
weren't
able
to
make
it
out,
but
you
made
a
donation
towards
the
scholarships.
Thank
you
and
thank
you.
F
G
A
You
all
don't
reckon
recognize
excellence
of.
What's
going
on
this,
this
town,
then
what
was
presented
is
not
going
to
make
you
change
your
mind.
I
can
remember
50
years
ago,
when
this
little
old
town
had
one
police
car
that
was
shared
and
it
was
a
used
X
highway
patrol
car
and
they
just
kept
it
hot
and
rotating
it
back
and
forth.
We
have
come
so
far
and
continue
to
come
further.