►
From YouTube: 2017 06 21 Cedar City Council Work Meeting
Description
Weekly scheduled public City Council meetings for Cedar City, UT
E
G
I
J
F
I
M
N
N
We
give
thanks
for
and
ask
you
to
bless
our
mayor
council
and
all
who
serve
this
city
in
promoting
a
brighter
future
for
us
all
and
Lord.
It
is
for
others
whose
work
it
is
to
fight
this
fire
in
our
community
that
we
come
before
you
to.
Thank
you
for
them
and
ask
you
to
keep
them
safe
both
on
the
ground
and
in
the
air.
It
must
make
you
sad
as
well
to
see
such
destruction
of
property
and
the
natural
beauty
of
our
land
so
severely
threatened.
Please
bless
us
with
cooling
temperatures
and
much-needed
rain.
N
Lord
bless
all
who
are
here
today
and
all
who
give
of
their
time
and
talents
to
make
our
community
better
and
stronger,
plus
the
agenda
set
before
this
council
today
and
bring
success
to
the
work
that
they
do
keep
all
of
us,
courageous
in
the
face
of
all
difficulty
and
wise
in
our
decisions
for
the
benefit
of
all,
we
ask
this
in
the
name
of
your
precious
Son,
Jesus,
Christ,
amen.
Thank.
O
J
M
B
D
Mayor
the
Fifth
Amendment
Constitution,
says
nor
be
deprived
of
life,
liberty
or
property
without
due
process
of
law.
We
have
a
problem
in
the
city
with
these
traffic
slowing
down
dips,
it's
basically
those
dips.
Rafting
is
judge,
jury
and
executioner.
I
received
a
report
yesterday
that
a
car
hit,
one
of
those
in
both
airbags
went
off.
The
car
was
totaled.
D
There's
got
to
be
a
better
way.
People
should
not
have
to
take
a
little
farther.
Let's
have
a
machine
go
and
go
off
and
blow
out
their
tires.
If
there's
you
know
you
say
well
they're
speeding,
they
deserve
it.
No,
we
should
not
be
having
people's
property
destroyed
because
they
didn't
see
the
sign
or
the
signs
or
things
were
missing,
I
think
they're,
safer
ways,
better
ways
to
do
it.
Rumble
strips
traffic
call
me,
but
the
neighborhood's
up
at
Fiddler's,
where
people
are
more
accustomed
to
it.
D
D
D
Thirdly,
today,
mr.
shirts,
maybe
you
can
answer
this
in
the
Chiefs
absence
during
the
fire
out.
There
is
listening
the
radio
and
cottonwood
tree
flared
and
they
asked
chief
Warby
to
send
over
a
brush
truck,
and
he
said
we
don't
have.
We
only
have
one
have
we
sent
our
stuff
out
so
much
now
that
we
are
relying
on
Canaryville
and
others
to
help
us.
Are
we
okay
that
way?
My.
H
Shirts
Cedar
City
Fire
Department;
no,
we
are
okay,
we've
we've
limited
the
trucks
that
we
sent
out
on
those
contracts
to
what's
available
and
we
keep
our
frontline
stuff
in
town.
I.
Think
what
g4b
was
referring
to
was
the
location
of
that
drum
along
side
of
the
canal.
We
kind
of
had
that
fire
split
up
into
two
divisions,
and
so
they
had
a
truck
on
that
side
and
we
had
a
couple
on
the
other
side.
But
thank
you.
Yep.
F
Speaking
of
coal
Drive
just
want
to
compliment
the
road
department
on
how
nice
that
looks.
Ryan
raising
the
route
of
the
manhole
covers
in
the
Gypsy
land,
the
adjacent
roads.
It
really
looks
nice,
thank
you
and
now
the
other
Road
you're
doing
I'm
sure
you're
do
what
do
you
do
a
five
year
rotation
seven
year,
pokin.
M
Therefore,
as
we
celebrate
independence
week
2017,
we
acknowledge
that
the
ability
should
choose
the
direction
of
Cedar.
City
lies
with
each
of
us.
Now,
therefore,
be
it
resolved
that
I'm
Melea
Wilson,
mayor
of
Cedar
City,
you
shall
do
hereby
proclaim
the
week
of
July
1st
through
7th
2007
is
Independence
week
and
salute
our
community
members
and
locally
owned
independent
businesses
who
are
integral
to
the
unique
flavor
of
Cedar
City
and
honor
their
efforts
to
make
Cedar
City
the
place.
We
want
to
live
and
work,
and
there
isn't
anyone
here
representing
Independence
week
organization.
M
F
F
E
E
F
H
H
H
The
hard
way
to
Arizona
and
got
turned
around
and
headed
to
Santa
Fe
New
Mexico,
and
they
spent
the
remainder
of
the
deployment
in
on
a
fire
near
Santa,
Fe
right
near
the
Colorado
border.
So
then
they
they've
demote
them
and
they're
on
their
way:
back:
okay,
they're,
probably
somewhere
in
Arizona
again
now,
anyway.
They're
in
route.
H
Also,
we've
prepared
a
little
press
release
that
will
put
out
either
this
evening
or
first
thing
in
the
morning,
just
with
some
general
cautionary
type
of
language,
just
what's
going
on
in
the
region
and
what
we
would
like
people
to
know
a
little
bit
about
the
fire
danger
and,
and
that
sort
of
thing
just
so.
The
council
knows
the
color
country
Interagency,
Fire
Center,
which
incorporates
the
BLM
and
for
service
and
state
folks.
H
H
Burning
or
we
think
just
maybe
some
juveniles
playing
around
we're
still
investigating
okay,
so
I
did
want
to
hit
on
some
ordinances
that
the
city
has
in
place
with
regards
to
number
one
open
burning,
open
burning
is
never
allowed
in
Cedar
City
by
ordinance,
hope
I,
don't
if
I
do
miss
speak
mr.
Domino,
please
correct
me:
we've
had
a
lot
of
questions
because
out
in
some
of
the
unincorporated
areas,
we
do
have
an
open
burn
where
people
can
get
rid
of
natural
vegetation
by
burning
within
Cedar
City
Limits.
H
It's
never
allowed
so
there's
no
burning
right
now.
Everything's
closed,
obviously,
no
burning
anywhere
conditions
are
pretty
dangerous
and
then
the
other
thing
that
I
wanted
to
mention
to
the
council
was
fireworks.
Of
course
we
follow
the
state
law
when
it
comes
to
fireworks.
They
the
state,
determines
when
they're
available
for
sale
when
they
can
be
discharged
legally
and
so
forth.
Cedar
City
follows
those
state
rules,
legal
Class,
C
fireworks
can
be
sold,
June
23rd
through
July
27th
and
then
again
in
December.
H
So
they
will
go
on,
sell
this
Friday
and
then
they
are
legal
to
discharge
between
the
hours
of
11:00
a.m.
and
11:00
p.m.
except
on
July
1st
through
the
7th
July
4th
hours
are
extended
to
midnight.
I'm
sorry
July,
1st
through
July
7th,
are
the
dates
they
can
be
discharged
legally
and
then
again.
December
31st
and
Chinese
New
Year,
New,
Year's
Eve.
H
Our
ordinance
states
that
we
have
this
in
our
ordinance
section,
17,
18,
F,
recommended
use
locations.
We
just
want
the
public
to
be
aware
that
we
have
designated
some
areas
that
are
safer
to
use
those
fireworks.
Those
legal
fireworks
and
those
areas
are
the
south
parking
lot
of
Cedar
City
High
School
parking
lot
at
the
constitutional
softball
park,
the
Canyon
View
middle
school
parking
lot.
H
Those
are
good
areas,
they
have
some
good
space
to
set
those
things
off
and
not
have
them
get
into
weeds
and
rush
in
and
cause
problems.
The
last
thing
that
I
wanted
to
mention
is
that,
even
even
though
they
are
legal
to
use,
if
you
start
a
fire
with
a
firework,
you
can
be
held
responsible
for
the
suppression
costs
and
they
can
get
astronomical
fairly
quickly.
So
we
want
to
make
the
public
aware
be
be
safe,
please
if
you
decide
to
use
them,
no
open
burning,
and
we
hope
that
things
we
get
some
moisture
soon.
Q
Jason
Clark
manager
of
the
Heritage
Theatre
Festival
Hall.
We
have
before
you
a
renewing
contract.
This
is
between
the
State
Department
of
Child
and
Family
Services
or
DCFS.
For
the
last
four
years
they
have
been
using
our
facility
as
a
place
to
hold
meetings,
trainings,
etc.
That
was
happened
because
they
combined
both
the
regional
and
the
local
office,
and
in
doing
so
they
basically
eliminated
all
of
those
kind
of
training
and
meeting
spaces.
The
contract
is
only
two
notable
changes
to
this
contract
over
last
year.
One
is
there's
a
slight
increase.
Q
In
the
month
month,
payment
will
be
receiving
of
$54
more
also.
They
have
requested
a
two-year
contract
as
opposed
to
an
annual
contract.
Both
of
these
things,
I
think,
are
an
advantage.
We
continue
to
have
a
good
relationship
with
DCFS
and
for
the
foreseeable
future.
We
don't
foresee
them
changing
this
arrangement.
It
is
mutually
beneficial.
L
Good
evening,
mayor
and
council
Danny
Stuart
economic
development
director
got
a
couple
of
items
tonight.
First
of
all,
a
notice
went
out
in
the
mail
to
residents
of
Cedar
City
who
live
in
a
proposed
project
area
that
we
talked
about
almost
a
year
ago.
Wasn't
it
almost
a
year
ago,
has
taken
us
this
long
to
kind
of
hold
things
together
to
get
to
this
point,
but
this
notice
that
went
out
for
your
information
notifies
residents
that
we
are
interested
in
creating
a
community
reinvestment
project
area.
L
That's
the
current
name
for
those
types
of
areas,
they've
been
our
DA's
and
CDA's,
and
you
know
their
CRA
s,
and
but
the
creation
of
this
area
doesn't
affect
the
residents
who
live
within
that
area.
What
it
does
is
it
allows
the
city
to
create
local
property
tax
incentives
within
the
boundaries
of
that
area.
L
Initially,
the
area
was
that
we
looked
at
was
immediately
surrounding
the
the
old
bus
depot
which
is
currently
being
refurbished
for
the
core
works,
and
we
initiate
it
to
to
move
forward
with
some
local
incentives
on
that
project.
But
as
we
looked
at
the
area
that
whole
Coal
Creek
industrial
area,
there's
some
good
potential
for
investment
and
for
business
in
that
area,
residents
are
receiving
this
and
they're
being
notified
that
we
have
copies
of
of
the
actual
plan
available
here
at
the
city
office.
L
We
have
a
digital
I've,
responded
to
several
residents
today
and
got
copies
to
them
and
explain
that.
But
if,
if
you
have
constituents
who
ask
you
about
that,
what
it
means
is
we're
just
creating
an
area
where
development
can
occur
and
incentives
can
be
created.
Yeah,
that's
the
first
part.
The
second
part
I've
got
a
sheet
I'd
like
to
pass
out.
B
L
For
some
time
there
was
a
state
incentive
that
was
created
last
summer
for
them
to
move
here
and
part
of
that
state
incentive
hinged
on
us
being
able
to
support
them
and
do
some
things
locally
as
well.
But
if
you
look
at
this
side
that
has
this
chart,
it
lists
what
they're
calling
the
top
15
community
impact
projects
in
the
country
and
we've
got
general
motors
and
we've
got
Amazon.
L
We've
got
Charles
Schwab
and
a
lot
of
big
companies
and
and
then
we've
got
decor
works
in
Cedar,
City
Utah
being
recognized
as
a
significant
Community,
Impact
Award
and
I
just
wanted
to
make
you
aware
of
that.
We're
we're
proud
of
this
company
coming
to
Cedar
City.
What
they're
doing
aesthetically
for
our
Main
Street
is
important,
but
the
creation
of
new
jobs
is
even
more
important
will
have
a
long-lasting
effect
here
in
Cedar
City.
So
I
just
wanted
to
make
you
aware
of
that.
L
D
M
M
L
B
M
M
S
S
People
are
allowing
us
to
make
recommendation
since
my
first
one
is
personal
I'm,
a
diabetic
I've
been
so
for
30
years
or
so,
and
I'm
serious
enough,
but
I
have
to
inject
insulin
every
day,
believe
it
or
not
in
the
city
or
as
I
know,
there's
no
place
for
those
of
us
that
have
to
inject
insulin
can
get
rid
of
their
used.
Hypodermic
needles
I
personally
have
somewhere
between
5,000
and
10,000,
used
hypodermic
needles
at
home,
but
I
do
not
want
to
dump
into
the
trash.
S
If
I
do
I
just
heard
that
leading
cause
of
death
in
the
United
States
for
people
50
years
of
age
and
under
as
now
overdosing
on
drugs,
so
I
don't
want
to
play
any
part
and
letting
anyone
who
has
a
weakness
getting
their
hands
on
hypodermic
needles.
Now
I've
checked
with
the
police
department,
the
pharmacies
the
hospital
here
every
place
I
could
think
of.
Where
can
we
dump
off
these
used
hypodermic
needles?
S
No
one
has
any
idea
where
we
can
do
this
I've
got
a
lot
of
well
goose,
chases
and
found
that
they
weren't
true,
so
I'd
like
to
recommend
to
the
City
Council.
Please
look
into
this
for
those
of
us
that
have
these
hypodermic
needles
I
think
right
now
the
hundreds
of
people
that
use
insulin
in
town
are
probably
dumping
their
needles
in
the
trash
which
I
think
is,
is
too
risky.
S
S
I
think
we'd
find
all
kinds
of
people
that
would
donate
a
tree
from
their
property.
If
not,
maybe
corporations
would
purchase
one
and
somebody.
Perhaps
a
company
would
donate
a
cherry
picker
to
decorate
the
tree
and
some
both
students
are
University.
Your
high
school
could
come
in
put
up
the
decorations
I
think
it
would
be
a
nice
drawing
card
for
the
downtown
area
for
the
city
and
go
nicely
with
our
wonderful
decorations
on
Main
Street.
S
D
K
Adams
with
the
police
department,
this
is
something
we've
we've
addressed
and
we
haven't
had
a
lot
of
interest,
but
we've
had
some
and
in
our
drug
drop
box.
We
specifically
prohibit
that
only
because
the
incinerator
that
we
take,
those
two
won't
allow
those
that
incinerator
is
now
shut
down,
so
we're
not
actually
forced
now
to
look
at
alternatives
and
so
I'm
happy
to
research
that
to
see.
Ideally,
that
would
once
you've
bent
that
and
caused
that
cylinder
to
close
and
break
it's
probably
not,
but
people
are
creative
and
there's
always
that
chance
yeah.
Thank
you.
D
U
Good
evening,
I'm,
Jill,
Schuler
and
I'm
here
tonight,
as
the
chair
of
the
airport
board,
I
want
to
to
save
in
public
with
our
friends
and
our
neighbors
and,
on
behalf
the
board
to
offer
the
thanks
and
high-five
to
Jeremy
and
his
staff
at
Cedar
City
Regional
Airport,
the
airport
manager,
along
with
the
staff,
Jeremy
Nia's
staff
and
the
staff
at
sphere,
one
the
FBO
out
there
thank
them
for
their
tireless
work
with
the
BLM,
with
the
Forest
Service,
with
Rick
Sorenson.
Who
is
the
tank
base
commander
out
there?
U
The
work
that
they're
doing
is
just
phenomenal.
I
thought
it
might
be
kind
of
interesting
I,
don't
understand
all
of
this,
but
I
got
little
bit
of
information.
We're
seeing
Jets
we're
seeing
planes
we're
seeing
helicopters
come
back
and
forth.
You
may
be
interested
to
know
that
there's
been
as
many
as
22
different
equipment
types
out
at
the
airport
at
one
time
or
another.
Currently,
there's
one
be
ei
146,
that
is
a
large
jet,
it's
a
commercial
jet
that
would
hold
about
a
hundred
and
thirty
passengers
if
it
were
in
a
commercial
situation.
U
That's
what
you're,
seeing
that
huge
jet
that
is
dropping
the
fire
retardant
and
if
I've
got
anybody
in
the
audience
tonight
that
I'm
saying
something
wrong.
Please
correct
me
because
I
don't
want
to
misspeak
these,
but
I
tried
to
take
notes
as
quick
as
I.
Could
there
are
two
rj
85,
that's
a
little
smaller
jet,
similar
to
even
what
our
sky
west
regional
jet
is
out
here,
except
it
holds
about
90
instead
of
around
65
or
70.
There's
an
older
prop.
U
Those
four
airplanes
make
up
what
they
call
the
heavies
there's
the
ones
who
they're
dropping
between
two
and
three
thousand
pounds
of
retardant
as
they
go
across
rep
pounds.
Pardon
me
gallons
of
retardant.
There
are
four
single-engine
airplanes.
There's
one
lead
plane,
I
had
no
idea,
but
a
fire
of
this
size
requires
a
lead
plane
to
take
those
larger
planes
into
the
smoke
and
that
smaller
plane.
One
follows
the
other.
Wherever
it
is,
does
exactly
the
same
thing.
U
A
little
puff
of
smoke
comes
out
of
the
lead
plane
to
tell
the
big
plane
behind
to
drop
your
retardant
they've
got
a
wider
view
of
angle
of
vision
and
view,
and
they
follow
them
right
back
out.
There
are
two
air
attack
planes.
These
are
like
managers
in
the
sky.
These
guys
are
continuing
to
circle,
the
the
fire
up
there
and
managing
those
other
20
aircraft
coming
in
and
out,
so
that
there's
no
no
difficulty
of
airspace
nobody's
trying
to
occupy
the
same
place.
U
At
the
same
time,
there
are
five
small
helicopters
that
are
based
right
now
at
Brian,
head
and
working
out
of
Brian
head
directly
and
for
very
large
helicopters
that
you've
seen
with
buckets
this
wing
below
that
are
based
out
here.
To
give
you
an
idea:
Saturday
the
plane,
the
planes
in
the
there's
dropped,
eighty
thousand
gallons
of
red
fire
retardant
on
the
fire
and
based
on
two
to
three
thousand
gallons
per.
You
can
see
that
that's
at
least
40
trips
that
those
in
one
day
that
they
were
making
so
well.
U
It
takes
a
lot
of
people.
I
want
to
once
again
thank
the
folks
who
are
at
Cedar,
City,
Regional,
they're,
doing
and
the
folks
with
the
Fire
Brigades
and
the
hotshots,
the
pilots,
everyone
who's
involved
and
Jerry
McGarry
and
all
of
Jeremy
and
all
those
out
at
the
airport
who
are
keeping
everything
functioning,
because,
while
all
this
is
happening,
they're
still
functioning
for
commercial
traffic,
general
aviation,
corporate
traffic
charters
and
seaming
flights,
as
well
as
the
flight
school
and
assisting
those
with
lip,
the
fires,
it's
a
big
job.
U
R
About
it,
my
mom
used
to
say
that
every
day
you
learn
something
is
a
good
day
and
I'd,
no
idea
what
you'll
just
said
that
was
quite
informative,
it's
very
impressive,
too,
and
so
I
guess
that
will
lead
into
the
next
issue.
I
would
ask
that
our
City,
Council
and
leadership
consider
the
passenger
resolution
asking
our
state
legislature
to
reverse
their
poor
choice
in
restricting
the
city's
choices
are
opportunities
to
restrict
fireworks.
Every
city
in
the
state
of
Utah
is
different.
R
Our
state
legislature,
I
think
as
four
or
five
years
ago
for
some
I
can't
even
figure
out
the
reason
passed.
A
law
saying
cities
could
no
longer
restrict
fireworks
and
I
asked
it
and
I
that
was
a
poor
decision.
Then
they
wouldn't
like
it.
The
federal
government
told
the
state
what
they
could
do
and
I
don't
like
it.
When
the
state
tells
the
city's
what
they
can
do.
R
Many
of
us
have
seen
fires.
We
read
about
fire.
Some
of
us
have
even
had
them
in
our
own
personal
lives
and
they're
devastating
and
they're,
expensive
and,
and
it
doesn't
have
to
be
negligence,
it
could
just
be
through
nature,
but
we
don't
need
to
add
to
this
by
going
out
there
striking
matches
and
and
and
Senator
fireworks
and
so
forth.
So
that
was
my
issue
that
I
asked.
Did
you
please
consider?
Thank
you.
M
All
right
is
there.
Anyone
else
would
like
to
address
the
council.
All
right,
I,
don't
see
anyone,
so
we
will
move
on
with
our
business
agenda
with
our
public
portion.
First
item
number
one:
consider
local
consent
for
an
alcohol
license
for
dlb
productions,
LLC
located
at
eighteen,
eighty-three,
West,
Royal,
Hunt,
Drive,
mayor.
K
K
W
T
O
X
O
X
Really
all
right,
what
we're
going
to
do
here
is
we're
going
to
it's
kind
of
like
I'm,
going
back
we're
going
to
do
kind
of
an
Art,
Nouveau
kind
of
a
style.
You
know
business
and
we're
going
to
have
live
entertainment
in
there
we're
going
to
try
to
and
possibly
some
kind
of
ballroom
dancing
kind
of
thing.
So
what
do
you
do?
Is
you
come
in
you?
X
You
know
it's
reservation
kind
of
a
situation,
it's
very
upscale
and
we're
going
to
try
to
change
the
menu
I'm
working
with
the
withdrew
from
s
WATC
so
do
the
menu
and
stuff.
So
we
want
to
change
things
up.
I
own
mr.
B's
generals
dreamy
lounge,
so
we
have
about
a
thousand
people
that
have
come
through
that
I've
discussed
this
with
and
it's
something
that
they
want.
So
that's
why
I'm
doing
this,
so
we
don't
have
anything
here
in
town
that
really
caters
to
we'll
say
the
Shakespeare
people.
X
Quite
a
few
clients
that
come
in
do
a
lot
of
out-of-state
business
and
international
business,
and
there's
absolutely
no
place
to
take
these
people.
You
know
that's
what
they
feel
so
we're
going
to
provide
a
place
for
them
to
wine
and
dine
clients.
Also
afterwards,
some
entertainment
for
them
just
something.
You
know
just
something
more,
that
people
have
come
to
me
with
their
concerns
about
so
I
guess,
I'll,
step
up
to
the
plate
and
now
put
it
together
and
I.
Think
it'll
be
really
nice
I
think
it's
something
that
Cedar
really
will
enjoy.
Okay,.
M
X
X
We
have
to
get
through
this
liquor
license
process
first,
you
know
so
that's
kind
of
new.
For
me,
you
know
once
we
get
through
that
you
know
I,
don't
know.
Okay
I
did
it
I
thought
it's
going
to
take
a
month
to
get
my
barbershop
together.
It
took
three
months,
so
it
all
depends
on
how
fast
we
can
get
things
done
because
we
have
to
put
in
a
kitchen.
You
know
we
have
to
put
all
these
things
edit
them
that
are
in
there.
X
So
you
know
if
if
people
showed
up
to
work,
I
would
say
you
know
take
two
months:
once
we
get
to
go
on,
you
know
I,
it's
not
real
I,
guess
good
business.
Some
people
say
to
open
up
in
December
or
January
here
in
cedar.
But
if
that's
where
we're
at
that's,
what
we'll
do
you
know?
So
if
sooner
you
know,
I
mean
yesterday
would
have
worked
great
but
but
so
just
go
through
the
process
see
how
it
goes
and
but
I
think
honestly,
you
know
I
think
I'm
putting
the
right
people
together.
For
this.
X
You
know
it's
going
to
be
something's
going
to
last.
You
know.
It's
not
just
a
hodgepodge
kind
of
thing
or
such
as
an
idea.
This
is
something
going
through
my
shop
for
six
months.
You
know
and
I've
actually
been
listening
to
the
people
here
in
town,
tell
me
what
they
want.
So
even
with
people
that
teach
dance
you
know,
there's
no
place
that
like
swing
dance
here
or
anything
like
that,
you
know
I'm,
an
older
guy.
X
So
I'm,
not
you
know
looking
at
that
kind
of
stuff,
but
for
old
guys,
like
myself
or
something
you
know
to
to
do
that
these
people
have
stepped
up
and
they
said
they
would.
You
know
like
an
hour
before
teach
people
you
know
so
that
everybody
could
engage.
So
it
gives
us
something
to
do
that
is
I,
don't
know,
I
think
it's
fun.
It.
X
There
you
go
see
and
as
what
we're
looking
for
so,
but
you
know,
the
thing
is
that
when
I,
you
know
just
just
to
bring
up
that
on
take
up
too
much
time
here
guys.
But
you
know
when
eight
when
they
came
to
me,
there's
like
there's
no
place
to
do
this
and
they're
asking
me
what
time
of
the
day.
When
should
we
do
it?
What
this
and
that
you
know
and
stuff,
and
it's
just
like
and
I
know
myself
personally
I've
been
looking
for
a
place
and
there
is
no
place.
D
Y
X
Yeah
but
he's
yeah
and
and
I'm,
not
so
I'm
saying
I'm
working
I
feel
I'm
working
with
the
right
people.
You
know
working
with
this
guy
over
at
SWA
tech.
You
know
he's
when
I
explained
it
to
him.
He
jumped
on
board
I
didn't
ask
him
to
he
jumped
in
I
was
like
then
I'll
do
it.
You
know
so
I
feel
confident
in
that
that
I'm
not
going
to
have
something
that
doesn't
survive
here
and
cedar.
X
M
X
M
X
I
Carla
Fossum
with
go
civil
engineering
mayor
council.
What
we've
got
before
you
is
a
a
general
land
use
amendment
to
kind
of
take
this
central
commercial.
Add
land
use
out
of
the
the
whole
property
so
that
we
can
zone
it
all
as
a
dense
residential,
and
it
will
be
similar
to
what's
to
the
north
event,
then
it
otherwise
it's
just
doesn't
doesn't
fit.
I
M
I
I
G
G
The
r3
is
only
a
couple
of
the
things
that
this,
this
property
there's
some
soils
issues
and
because
of
the
the
type
of
soils
issues
that
are
over
here,
the
city's
kit
has
requested
that
any
development
done
there
does
not
have
public
roads,
so
everything
would
have
to
be
private
roads
or
parking
lots
or
whatever,
and
so
that's
kind
of
one
reason
to
not
what
we're
trying
to
avoid
is
doing
a
APD
with
the
homeowners,
association
and
stuff.
What
they
would
like
to
do
is
do
some
married
student
housing
on
this.
G
There's
two
entrances
to
the
property
here
off
of
this
street
and
then
there's
also
a
road
that's
already
dedicated
across
and
down.
Here
we
will
be
putting
in
that
road
right
there
over
to
the
property,
so
it
basically
would
have
three
different
accesses
to
the
property.
Two
different
sides.
I
know
that
was
something
that
was
asked
at
Planning
Commission
and
we've
the
more
we
talked
that
that
they
do
want
to
put
that
in
because
they
feel
like
that
would
be
a
better
entrance
for
most
people
rather
than
circling
around
and
coming
around
through
the
residential.
G
The
the
drainage
right
now,
currently
all
this
property
drains
to
basically
over
into
this
corner
right
here
in
talking
with
Kia.
Well,
we
would
be
required
to
do,
is
basically
provide
detentions
there.
The
amount
of
water
that
can
run
off
the
property
would
be
limited
to
what
currently
runs
off
the
property
now.
So,
if
you,
you
basically
calculate
know
what
it
is
now
and
that's
all
you're
ever
allowed
to
have
leave
the
property,
so
you
detain
it.
When
you
make
hard
surface,
you
create
more
water.
If
you
tain
the
water
there,
while
it
slowly
runs.
D
G
G
I,
don't
know
how
they
compare
with
trail
side,
but
the
souls
report
we
just
got
recently
said
the
recommendation
is
peers
down
at
least
25
feet,
yeah.
So
no
matter
what
you
build
and
if
you
do
small
homes
you're
still
going
to
have,
there's
recommendation
is
still
that
appears
and
or
big
building
to
still
just
piers
all
the
way
around
so
and
then
you
over
X
for
the
roads
in
the
driveway
and
that
kind
of
thing,
so
it
is
I,
don't
know
that
it's
as
bad
as
trail
side,
but
its
back.
It's
not.
G
There
was
no
recommend
a
think.
The
over
X
might
have
been
10
or
11
feet,
but
they
said
they
would
not
recommend
to
do
that
because
of
the
same
problems.
They've
had
a
trail
site,
so
the
cost
to
develop
it
is
a
little
higher
and
and
then
with
it,
you
know
being
adjacent
to
commercial
and,
and
that
kind
of
thing
that's
why
we
proceeded
this
way
seems.
G
They're,
basically,
they
would
that
the
the
city
infrastructure,
the
cities
responsibly,
would
end
up
the
property.
Okay,
because
you
bring
in
a
sewer
main.
You
know.
Obviously,
the
sewer
main
outside
the
property
is
the
city's
inside
the
property.
It's
the
developer.
The
roads
would
end
where
the
public
roads
end.
Okay
would
become
private,
so
pretty
much
everything
within
it
is
private.
G
V
G
G
G
M
G
Plan
yet
another
recommendation
from
the
soils
is
and
also
I,
think
from
I'm
impressed,
which
you
came
and
talked
at
Planning
Commission
was
to
do
small,
smaller
detention
basins
around
it
and
I.
One
of
the
things
we're
looking
at
doing
is
some
smaller
Park
areas.
That
would
each
be
detention
so
that
you
don't
have
it
all
at
one
end,
one
big
pond
so
not.
M
AA
Good
evening
councils
mayor's
staff,
Tim
Watson,
with
Watson
engineering,
we
are
proposing
a
realignment
or
relocation
is
probably
a
better
word
for
that
for
a
master
plan.
Road
a
66
foot
wide
master
plan,
Road
front
that
is
currently
master
planned
here
along
cross
Hollow
Road
that
connects
by
the
pond
and
generally
makes
its
way
through
the
the
valley
here
and
over
to
us
you
over
by
the
college
farm
this
road,
or
this
section
of
Hidden
Hills
Drive,
is
already
being
constructed
as
a
66
foot
wide
Road.
AA
AB
AA
D
AA
That's
the
plan
right
now
we're
moving
forward
full
steam
ahead
with
that.
This
is
the
last
step
to
make
sure
that
that
plan
works
so.
O
What
staff
wanted
to
ask
the
council
of
there's
two
amendments
to
the
road
master
plan,
they're
being
proposers
this
one
and
there's
one
down
on
the
south
end
of
town
if
we
could
bump
the
final
decision
for
a
couple
weeks
on
these
and
take
a
field
trip?
So
you
can
see
the
area
and
then
put
the
matter
back
on
your
agenda
to
devote
this.
F
AC
M
M
AA
M
AA
All
of
us
we,
we
have
the
property
owners
potentially
coming
in
on
July
19th
Oh,
for
a
meeting
so
we'd
love
to
have
that
we
possibly
could
I
think
that
the
was
it
the
12th
you're
proposing
717.
AA
Seventeenth,
which
should
be
a
Monday
for
the
field
trip,
yes,
okay
and
so
mmm-hmm.
H
AA
AA
M
Gonna,
so
that
work
on
the
action,
gender,
so
we're
going
to
go
back
to
item
number
three.
We
did
have
a
number
of
individuals
here.
Sorry
I
didn't
notice
that
you
wanted
to
speak.
If
you
would
like
to
address
the
council,
we
will
have
our
official
public
hearing
next
week
on
this
item,
but
where
you
all
made
the
effort
to
be
here,
if
any
of
you
would
like
to
address
the
council,
now
is
your
opportunity.
Z
The
proposed
plan
like
they
said
we
were
at
the
meeting
two
weeks
ago
and
they
kind
of
changed
what
they
said.
Their
target
demographic
was
going
to
be
three
different
times,
so
it's
a
little
confusing
because
first
they
said
this
was
going
to
be
geared
towards
married
students
when
it
was
kind
of
brought
up
that
we
have
a
lot
of
housing
geared
specifically
toward
the
university.
Then
things
changed
too
well.
This
would
be
married
couples
because
there's
a
shortage
on
housing.
Z
For
that,
then
it
was
also
brought
up
that
there's
a
shortage
of
rental
properties
for
families.
So
once
again
it
was
changed
while
this
would
be
for
married
couples
and
young
families.
If
that
is
their
target
demographic,
then
it
logically
makes
no
sense
to
change
the
zoning
laws.
Sorry,
pregnancy
hormones,
my
house
is
that
one
right
there
they
they
said
that
would
be
the
main
road
in
and
out.
Z
Mm-Hmm.
Excuse
me
right
if
the
zone
has
changed
and
like
he
said
at
current
zoning
laws,
if
this
is
put
to
the
add
three
are
three
are
three.
Thank
you.
Then.
That
means
that
in
that
ten
acre
lot,
there
can
be
up
to
two
hundred
and
forty
apartments
if
their
target
demographic
is
married,
couples
or
young
families,
the
traffic
alone.
That
is
a
high
probability,
just
logically
common
sense.
You
can
safely
bet
on
one
car,
her
apartment.
If
it's
a
married
student
or
married
couples.
Z
Z
That
is
the
main
entrance
and
exit
I'm
about
to
have
two
kids,
two
dogs,
and
here,
where
we
have
all
this
lovely
scholarship
housing.
We
already
have
a
problem
with
traffic
you
get
especially
during
the
school
year.
You
will
get
people
going
60
or
70
miles
an
hour.
I
don't
want
the
liability,
especially
coming
around
that
curve,
as
the
only
entrance
to
this
place.
That
is
a
liability
for
my
home.
That
is
a
liability
for
my
family.
I
am
not
willing
to
take
that
risk
with
my
children
with
my
neighbor's
children.
Z
This
is
a
quiet,
safe,
family
neighborhood.
Most
of
us
bought
our
homes
there
because
it
is
a
quiet,
family
neighborhood.
If
we
change
the
zoning
laws
to
allow
for
these
apartment
complexes,
we
have
no
safety
net
anymore.
We
have
no
protection
against
this.
If
we
keep
the
zoning
laws
how
they
are,
then
the
original
proposed
and
I
realized
that
it's
a
different
company
of
my
understandings
correct.
The
original
plan
was
for
72
plat
Erb
435
duplexes,
that's
70
properties,
I
have
friends
of
mine
who
fit
what
they're
proposed
target
demographic
word.
Z
They
live
in
a
community
of
duplexes.
The
most
amount
of
cars
that
you
can
fit
between
driveways
in
the
street
is
three
per
house:
basic
math
70
properties,
even
if
there
were
literally
three
cars
for
every
house,
that
is
30
cars
less
than
the
probable
minimum.
If
this
is
an
apartment
complex
that
takes
the
liability
down
drastically
for
my
property
for
my
family,
for
my
neighbors
that
takes
everything
down
drastically.
If
this
really
is
their
target
demographic
for
these
married
couples
and
young
families,
then
it
doesn't
make
any
sense
to
change
from
what
it
is.
Z
The
art
which
is
small
family
homes
or
duplexes
to
this
r3m
it
causes
way
more
problems.
Then
we
need
it
destroys
the
atmosphere
of
the
community
that
we've
built
there,
and
it
raises
a
multiplicity
of
liability
issues
for
family
and
property.
This
is
something
that
we
don't
want.
We
don't
want
a
giant
apartment
complex
with
people
coming
in
and
out,
especially
because
it
directly
affects
my
property.
That
is
the
main
entrance
that
was
brought
up
during
the
original
meeting.
Z
T
Z
T
V
B
Z
If
it's
still
going
to
run
by
my
property,
then
you're
still
going
to
get
high
traffic
you're
still
going
to
get
people
who
aren't
paying
attention
you're
going
to
get
the
people
who
are
too
busy
paying
attention
to
their
cellphone
and
paying
attention
to
the
road,
and
especially
during
the
school
year,
we
already
have
a
major
problem
with
that:
I've
written
down
license
plate
numbers
because
they
go
zipping
down
that
road.
Half
of
them
are
on
their
cell
phones,
I
wish.
Z
That
was
an
exaggeration,
but
the
number
of
times
that
you
look
up
and
you
realize
that
their
eyes
aren't
on
the
road
at
all
and
they're
going
well
above
the
speed
limit
they're
going
to
hit
somebody
and
be
halfway
down
the
street
before
they
realize
what's
happened.
That
is
a
major
problem
right
now
during
the
school
year
as
it,
and
that's
only
with
that
small
section
right
there
of
scholarship
housing.
Z
If
we
put
in
a
massive
apartment,
complex
I
realize
the
target
demographic
is
going
to
be
geared
more
towards
married
students,
married
couples
and
young
families.
If
they
stick
with
what
they
said
in
the
last
meeting,
but
if
they
can't
reach
that
target
demographic,
it
would
be
poor
business
sense
to
turn
away
college
students
who
get
together
with
friends
and
say:
hey,
let's
one
rent
one
of
these
apartments
there.
Z
If
they
can't
reach
their
target
demographic
they're,
not
going
to
say
no
to
renting
out
these
apartments
to
people,
they've
got
it's
how
they're
making
their
money
it's,
how
they're
recuperating
their
costs
for
buying
this
land
and
putting
up
this
complex
in
the
first
place,
and
that
just
means
more
traffic.
That
means
college
kids,
and
you
know
if
you
go
strictly
by
stereotypes.
Z
J
J
D
D
J
You
know
the
main
problem
and
I
understand
them
worrying
about
that,
though,
but
the
more
development
and
that
you
have
in
there
you
are
required
to
have
so
many
outlets,
so
we'd
have
to
make
with
kit
and
see
what
I
mean
kid
wanted
to
shut
down
the
road
and
so
forth.
You
know
you
can
do
that,
but
we
have
to
still
meet
city
code
on,
but
are
you
being
people
in
a
nightmare,
but.
D
J
That
may
be
the
one
thing
that
really
needs
to
can
be
fed
back
into
this.
That
keeps
getting
to
forgot.
There's
only
so
many
ways
you
can
pay
for
private
roads
in
there.
So
if
you,
if
you
were
saying
we're,
you
know
she
says
she
has
a
lot
of
friends.
So
if
we
divided
all
that
up
and
a
little
lots
and
then
you
guys
took
over
the
roads,
they
would
buy
the
Lots
and
put
up
a
single
family
home
or
a
duplex
in
there.
J
If
you
put
in
a
PUD
where
there's
a
homeowner's
association,
then
the
homeowners
association
would
pay
for
the
roads
that
are
going
to
be
in
there.
The
number
one
problem
or
heaven
right
now
is
the
amount
of
suing
going
on
inside
PU
Dee's
until
they
learn
to
get
that.
You
know
get
that
under
control,
where
they're
coming
back
and
suing
everybody
involved
with
the
PUD
I
mean
you
should
I
puts
up
an
assign,
and
there.
J
Into
the
lawsuit,
so
you
have
that
all
right
or
the
other
alternative
is
you
come
in
and
build
something
that's
held
and
owned
by
the
developer,
and
then
he
pays
for
those
roads
himself,
and
so
that's
really.
The
key
issue
I
think
when
you
look
at
this
is
I
I
understand
all
the
things
there's
actually
more
than
two
types
of
students.
I
want
you
to
know
that
we
ran
to
a
lot
of
students
from
all
over
the
place.
They
have
a
12
page
application.
They
have
to
go
through
with
some.
J
Does
that
prevent
us
from
getting
a
bad
student
here
and
there
no,
but
it
also
doesn't
provide
you
from
not
eating
a
bad
neighbor
or
something
here
in
neighborhood
when
you
do
a
subdivision
also
also,
this
is
not
scholarship.
How
most
of
the
tenants
that
are
in
here
are
not
even
going
to
school.
These
are
people
that
live
here
and
work
that
we
ran
to
because
we
own
these
apartments
right
here
too
so
I
will.
D
J
Really
the
whole
and
when
they
bought
the
three
different
things,
we've
always
said,
I
think
Ron
keeps
saying
married
student
housing.
The
truth
of
the
matter
is,
it
is
going
to
be
married.
Housing
don't
do
some
people
that
are
probably
not
students.
You
know
they're
working
on
doing
that,
but
I
think
the
neighborhood
brought
up
the
family
and
Families
things.
I,
don't
remember
that
ever
being
brought
up,
but
we
stated
is.
This
is
for
a
married.
Has
married
housing,
complex.
B
J
I,
don't
think
there's
I
mean
there's
the
reason
this
is
so
tough
is
we've
got
to
figure
out
how
much
no
one
has
to
be
for
parking,
but
how
much
has
to
be
used
for
water
retention
in
there?
So
we
don't
have
the
problems.
So
you
know
I
can't
tell
you
the
one
number,
but
I
can
even
tell
you
that
the
proposal
isn't
just
apartment
savings,
but
maybe
some
other
types
of
you
know
duplexes
and
things
in
there
to
milk
and
mix
in
the
area,
but
the
hardest
thing
about
it
is.
J
We
have
to
have
a
substantial
size
because
everything
in
there
is
going
to
be
on
helical
gears
and
that's
what
everything
around
us
should
have
been
done
in
the
first
place
in
that
area.
But
you
know
you
it's
going
to
be
a
considerable
amount
of
extra
money
to
put
those
in
there
underneath
those
buildings
so
but
again
paying
for
the
streets,
because
everything
in
that
twenty
acres
will
be
ours.
V
J
Had
some
soil
tests
done
on
all
this
property
here
and
that
everything
will
have
to
be
over
X?
That
is
not
a
physical
structure
and
the
physical
structures
will
be
on
helical
piers
and
then
will
be
instead
of
going
on
the
ground.
We'll
still
on
top
of
those
here
appears
have
concrete
I,
guess
what
you
call
trusses.
That
will
be
what
holds
their
house
to
the
beers.
P
M
M
AC
AC
AC
P
I'm
Thelma
castle
and
I
live
right
next
to
them,
but
I
have
the
same
concerns
about
these
people
with
their
babies.
Our
street
is
quite
quiet
most
the
time
except
the
college,
kids
and
in
those
apartments
up
there
on
the
end,
they
were
saying
they
were
not
Scholarship
in
that,
but
there's
five
people
living
in
most
those
apartments.
P
These
are
students
that
share
and
so
that
we
do
have
a
lot
of
speeding
and
all
night
and
gun
on
their
motors
and
I've
set
out
in
my
yard,
and
maybe
one
out
of
five
completely
stop
like
they
should
I'm,
probably
exaggerating
on
that.
But
I
am
glad
to
hear
that
different
from
the
original
development.
P
Y
Y
Figure
out
how
to
use
a
clicker,
so
right
here
is
my
home
and,
as
you
can
see,
I've
got
three
little
kids,
and
so
my
biggest
concern
also
was
the
traffic
with
zoning
it
for
more
more
apartments,
they're,
just
that
much
more
traffic.
The
original,
with
the
plan
granted
like
they
had
said
things
have
changed
hands
and
it's
another
group
putting
in
this
other
apartment
complex,
but
whereas
before
it
was
the
upwards
of
70
apartments,
there
are
townhouses.
Y
That
already
was
enough
to
give
me
heartburn
we're
thinking
that
much
more
traffic
coming
through
I'm
greatly
relieved
to
find
out
that
there
will
be
an
entrance
to
the
north,
but
traffic
is
still
a
great
concern
for
all
of
us
living
along
that
Street.
It's
quiet
a
lot
of
the
time,
especially
in
the
summer,
but
from
those
college
kids
get
in
it's
already
crazy
with
traffic.
Y
So
having
that
many
more
residences
there
directly
behind
my
home
does
give
me
keeps
me
up
at
night
wearing,
but
you
know:
I
have
three
little
kids
and
already
I
can't
let
them
me
out
in
the
front
yard,
because
the
traffic,
and
just
that
many
more,
not
only
coming
by
my
house
in
the
front
but
also
down
the
side,
is
a
great
concern
to
me.
So
I'm
grateful
to
hear
that
there
will
be
a
an
entrance
to
the
north,
but
if
possible
it
would
be
wonderful
if
it
could
stay
zoned
as
it
is
Thanks.
D
It's
it's
an
age-old
problem,
it's
a
very
difficult
one,
and
at
least
for
now,
if
we
do
nothing
else,
these
people
are
entitled
to
develop
the
artery
just
as
they
they
want
to
do.
The
only
questions
if
we
are
going
to
allow
them
to
make
that
an
r3
on
the
other
side,
but
that
open
space
that
that
you've
enjoyed
for
all
these
years
belongs
to
someone
and-
and
that's
like
saying.
Well,
you
own
a
lawnmower,
but
you
can't
use
it
because
it
bothers
me.
D
We
can't
say
that
someone
that
that
creates
a
taking
by
the
government,
which
is
prohibited
by
the
Constitution
United
States,
and
so
we
have
to
balance
that
as
best
we
can
hopefully
to
the
we
talk
to
the
developer
and
try
to
ask
you
to
make
that
as
you
soon
as
you
possibly
can
to
let
these
folks
continue.
But
we
do
have
that
obligation
to
allow
developers
to
do
developing
because
they
own
the
land.
B
T
T
J
J
J
Tom
Jake
Mike
of
Encino
he's
left
toms
left
in
the
middle
of
this
for
right
now.
That
is
how
the
road
is
put
through,
maybe
the
bigger
question
to
as
all
those
units
going
to
be
put
in
at
one
time
in
one
year.
No,
you
know
we
have
to
take
with
the
market
needs
and
what's
going
on
and
that's
a
large
piece
of
property
to
I.
Think
eventually,
can
you
tell
me
if
I'm
wrong,
isn't
this
road,
though
dedicated
in
all
the
way
here
to
so
eventually
that
road
will
connect
to
that
road
and.
J
So
the
right
now
it
does
if
I
guess,
if
it
comes
right
to
the
I,
came
to
the
corner
there
and
then
goes
over
and
connects
this
way
and
out
that
way.
But
then,
if
you
go
out
on
the
bigger
scope,
Athene's
again
there
to
get
go
out
to
show
the
two
acre
kit,
can
you
show
the
20
acres
again,
so
probably
what
the
the
full
20
acres?
So
you
see
stuff
two
roads
here
again
to
you.
J
Have
this
as
any
I
know,
you
said,
is
what
the
developer
to
do,
because
we'll
own
them
again
there
too,
but
you'll-
have
this
road
here
at
this
end
too,
that
more
than
likely
will
connect
into
that
area
also
because
it
is
a
master
pan
burger
and
then
there
is
a
master
plan
road.
That
goes
this
way
too.
V
V
J
C
J
J
M
M
A
Alright,
so
with
the
new
budget,
we
all
department
heads
have
submitted
some
additional
fee
schedule.
Changes
they'd
like
to
make
I
kind
of
threw
this
together
fairly
quickly.
There's
a
couple
things
I
need
to
correct
and
so
I'll
just
go
through
what
you've
seen
and
then
make
the
adjustments.
Then
I'll
submit
a
new
one
for
you
to
look
at
before
we
vote
on
the
next
week.
A
A
one
addition
that
they'd
like
to
make
that
didn't
make
the
few
scheduled
was
a
looks
like
the
lease
for
the
FedEx
hangar
has
a
built-in
provision
where
it
increases
from
time
to
time,
so
that
needs
to
be
updated
to
four
hundred
and
sixteen
dollars
and
25
cents
a
month.
Apparently,
that's
been
in
place
for
about
a
year,
yeah.
E
Public
or
instructor,
the
the
least
that
we
have
with
FedEx,
has
a
CPI
adjustment
that
they
go
through
every
year
and
they
take
a
look
at
if
the
rates
have
changed
and
it's
an
automatic
update.
Their
lease
has
actually
gone
through.
The
airport
board.
Therefore,
board
approved
it.
Probably
six
months
ago
we
were
thinking
it
came
before
the
City
Council,
but
we're
look
and
see
if
it
did.
If
it
didn't,
then
we'll
bring
it
to
you
again
next
week
and
we'll
include
that
in
this.
E
If
it's
already
been
there,
then
it
should
have
just
been
updated
on
our
website,
but
that's
the
CPI
adjustment
they're
already
paying
and
they're
already
fine
with
that
and
with
the
other.
The
other
increases
that
that
Tyler
was
talking
about.
If
you
remember,
while
some
of
you
weren't
here
but
about
five
years
ago,
we
did
a
study
of
all
the
airports
around
Utah
and
similar
size.
We
took
a
look
at
what
rates
they
charge
and
we
did
a
five-year
plan
to
increase
our
rates
gradually
to
get
up
to
where
they
are.
E
E
The
Public
Works
Department
went
out
there
and
did
over
60
manhole
rehabilitations
throughout
the
city,
we'll
turn
around
here
in
August
and
take
another
week
where
we'll
go
out
and
hit
a
bunch
more
of
them.
But
those
are
the
most
severe
ones
that
had
to
actually
be
dug
out
and
report.
These
others
might
be
a
quicker
fix
or
we
can
just
raise
the
collar
and
put
in
patch
around.
E
E
E
E
A
The
other
adjustments
under
the
calf
section
they'd
like
to
add
a
day
pass
where
you
can
purchase
that
for
$4
per
day.
The
next
adjustment
deals
with
water
acquisition
assessments.
So
right
now
this
section
is
under
impact
fees
and
it's
kind
of
caused
some
confusion.
We
like
to
move
that
and
put
it
under
the
water
title
under
economic
development.
This
is
one
that
I
need
to
change,
so
yeah
banners
1
to
14
will
be
$50.
Ok,.
D
A
I
just
got
yes
there
and
then
15
to
25
will
be
at
$90
and
then,
as
stated
there
under
the
business
licensing
section,
we're
gonna
propose
adding
a
new
home
based
exemption
license
for
$15.
We'll
talk
about
that
over
the
next
item
in
the
agenda
and
then
under
these
are
under
Parks
and
Rec.
We
want
to
change
that
title
to
Leisure
Services,
to
reflect
the
name
of
the
department
and
then
they'd
like
to
start
charging
these
competitive
tournaments
that
come
in
and
use
our
fields
when
it
comes
to
kicks
and
asy
nye.
M
T
AD
AD
Derrick
Morton
with
c
CFC
and
loser
services
board.
So
when
we
were
putting
together
these
fees
and
the
master
plan,
the
the
priority
order
is
for
rec
to
have
priority
over
the
competitive
teams.
So
you
can't
have
a
competitive
club
come
in
and
then
basically
buy
out
a
red
program,
so
that
was,
they
always
have
the
priority
in
the
fall.
It's
a
why
so
and
spring
at
c
CFC.
AD
The
reason
for
these
fees
was
to
actually
go
back
in
to
help
improve
bicentennial.
We
understand
there
needs
to
be
improvement,
there's
not
as
much
money
in
the
budget.
So
this
is
a
start,
so
that
was
kind
of
the
genesis
of
it.
But
as
far
as
scheduling
it
was
our
understanding
in
the
discussion
that
you
wouldn't
be
able
to
buy
out
a
rec
program.
AD
D
AD
K
D
AC
T
K
Was
a
bargain
and
estate?
Well,
you
know:
we've
we've
kept
that
down
for
quite
a
while.
In
fact,
we
started
vaccinating
four
or
five
years
ago
and
we've
never
charged
so
a
fellow
that
was
appropriate
to
recoup
those
and
yeah
we'll
see
I
hope
not
it's.
It's
a
small
increase
for
the
service
we
provide
so
okay
yeah.
Thank
you
create.
M
A
The
City
Utah
passed
a
new
law
dealing
with
home-based
businesses,
so
essentially,
the
reasoning
behind
this
is
some
cities
in
the
state
were
using
this,
basically
just
for
revenue,
and
there
was
an
individual
that
didn't
like
it,
and
so
they
ran
a
bill
through
they've
tried
it
for
three
or
four
years
now.
Finally,
got
it
passed
so
there's
two
exceptions
to
getting
a
business
license.
One.
Y
D
A
D
D
A
I've
suggested
the
definition
for
a
business
operated,
occasionally
I
left
it
broad,
so
really
city
staff
kind
of
determine
what's
appropriate.
What's
not.
The
second
exception
is,
if
you
are
a
home-based
business
and
your
impact
is
minimal,
then
you're
not
required
to
get
a
business
license
and
it's
left
up
to
the
cities
to
determine
what
impact
means.
So,
essentially,
what
they're
getting
at
is
the
computer
programmer
who's
in
his
office
and
has
very
little
traffic
coming
to
his
house
he's
just
online.
Well,
there's
really
no
impact
to
the
roads
infrastructure.
Anything
like
that.
A
I've
got
a
hairdresser
that
has
ten
clients
come
every
day
and
drive
in
and
park,
and
well
then
that
could
be
some
impact
and
we'd
want
them
to
have
a
business
license
at
that
point,
so
I've
suggested
a
definition
for
off-site
impact
as
well,
and
this
is
fairly
broad.
Just
dealing
with
traffic
does
Street
use
light
noise,
so
that
would
be
kind
of
a
case-by-case
basis.
The
one
that
crash
or
the
one
Edition
that
the
city
wanted
to
add
is
a
Part
C
run
on
will
have
businesses
that
come
talk
to
her
and
say
hey.
A
F
O
AB
So
I
came
because
I
wanted
that,
but.
C
AB
You
so
the
fee
question
that
I
just
wanted
to
make
sure
what
was
communicated
there.
It's
not
just
for
tournaments
from
what
I
understood
it's
actually
the
competitive
program
teams
in
general
pay,
so
so
the
difference
between
competitive
soccer
teams
that
are
local
cedar
teams
and
hosting
a
tournament
that
brings
outside
competitive
teams
into
cedar.
AB
M
O
AB
It
is
very
different,
actually
them
so
plain,
and
the
league
is
different
than
an
event
that
brings
in
a
tournament
right.
So
you
have
a
league
like
the
baseball
team.
You
when
you
play
baseball,
you
sign
up
for
your
team,
and
you
had
a
season
that
you
played
in
those
fields.
Right
soccer
is
the
same
way.
We
have
a
season
that
we
go
play
on
the
fields.
AB
M
AD
Morton
and
Kelvin
Shane,
so
it
is
so
it's
the
competitive
teams,
just
like
baseball
and
some
of
these
others
as
they
go.
We
wanted
to
kind
of
focus
on
those.
It
is
kind
of
unfair
in
a
lot
of
ways,
because
c
CFC
would
carry
the
burden
on
those
as
opposed
to
a
y.
So
it's
a
purely
rep
program
and
c
CFC
spring
or
it's
a
purely
rep
program.
So
it
realizes
the
competitive
soccer
programs
and
the
CC
FC
tournament,
starting
not
this
year,
but
next
year
that
could
end
up
paying
those
fees
and.
AB
AD
It's
throughout
the
whole
season,
so
you'll
have
in
this
in
the
spring
is
really
where
CC
FC
will
use
for
the
competitive
fields
in
the
fall.
Because
a
why
sells
got
them,
they
will
will
have
the
competitive
elsewhere,
but
where
C
CFC
has
the
field
for
rec
C
the
spring
they're
able
to
use
color
country
football
club
so
think
of
it
as
Little
League,
yeah,
Little
League,
so
you've
got
the
American,
League
and
National
League.
AD
So
that's
it
does
fee
them.
You
know
the
competitive
soccer
and
that
tournament
and
then
plus,
if
you're,
doing
a
for-profit
clinic
like
if
you're
doing
a
clink,
so
even
a
why
so,
if
they're
doing
it
clinic
would
have
to
pay
a
filled
rental
fee
or
someone
like
Bryce.
If
he
wanted
to
reserve
that
field,
then
he
would
then
have
to
pay
a
filled
rental
fee,
yep.
AB
AB
It's
that
I
want
to
make
it
if
the
money's
being
taking
from
soccer
kids
and
families
that
are
supporting
soccer
I
want
to
make
it
very
required
that
that
money
goes
to
improve
those
fields
right
that
because
another
sport
who
can
just
take
that
and
use
it
somewhere
else
or
more
short
on
our
budget
for
the
rec
center,
and
so
we're
going
to
now
take
from
the
kids
that
and
families
that
care
about
soccer
and
want
to
improve
their
facilities
and
then
we're
using
it
in
other
places.
So
that's
the
part
of
discussion.
AB
AD
D
D
D
We
in
line
mine,
all
games
are
competitive.
So
how
are
you
differentiating
competitors?
Travel?
Okay?
So
so
you
got
the
Tigers
over
here
on
this
side
of
Cedar
City,
some
kids
and
some
kids
over
here.
That's
all
part
of
the
deal,
but
when
you
bring
in
some
people
from
Mesquite
and
that
kind
of
thing,
that's
when
you
start
paying
that
so.
D
D
D
AB
AD
O
A
difficulty
with
all
these
general
fund
operations,
you're
marking
money
just
to
one
specific
thing,
and
if
we're
going
to
do
that
with
soccer,
maybe
we
need
to
look
back
and
assess
a
fee
for
the
capital
improvements
the
city
already
put
in
which
we've
never
assessed.
We
haven't
assessed
that
for
baseball
or
soccer
or
anybody
else,
and
if
we
get
our
general
fund
operations
so
compartmentalized
that
we're
tracking
down
every
dollar
to
every
soccer
field,
baseball
field,
etc,
etc.
D
I
D
W
This
is
a
smaller
number
and
the
scale
of
our
operation.
So
if
Leisure
Services
is
willing
to
track
these
fees
throughout
the
year
and
they
want
to
say
Jason,
we
collected
three
thousand
dollars
and
I'll
come
to
the
council
and
say:
can
we
transfer
this
to
the
capital
improvement
fund
a
near
market
for
soccer?
That's
that's
fine,
but
we're
not
going
to
create
a
whole
fund
and.
M
The
one
thing
we're
going
to
get
into
is
then
you're
going
I
mean
where
we
offer
all
these
different
rec
programs
and
they
all
have
their
certain
fees.
Then
you're
going
to
have
most
of
them
right
now
go
into
the
big
pot,
and
we
have
Jen's
budget
that
we,
you
know,
do
for
recreation
programs,
but
then
we're
going
to
get
into
then
tumblings
going
to
want
their
fees
to
go
towards
Matt's,
and
this.
O
D
O
While
ago
the
Council
passed
a
program,
it
was
based
on
a
proposal
from
chief
phillips
with
the
fire
department
yeah.
They
gave
departments
an
avenue
to
do
what
Leisure
Services
is
advocating.
They
do
here,
but
the
program
that
the
Council
passed
required
the
department
to
go
out
and
create
some
sort
of
business
plan
and
show
how
this
excess
revenue.
If
you
want
to
consider
it,
excess
revenue
would
be
generated
and
show
how
that
plan
would
be
feasible.
O
It
also
required
the
department
up
front
to
come
in
and
say
these
are
the
things
that
we
want
to
spend
this
money
on.
If
we,
if,
if
Leisure
Services,
wants
to
go
through
that
route,
they
have
that
route
available
to
them
as
well.
It's
a
little
more
complex
and
just
getting
a
fee
increase
in
them.
Saying
please
send
all
that
feedback.
AB
And
part
of
the
theory
of
why
I
do
feel
that
way
in
a
navy
if
it
caused
more
rigmarole
and
headache
and
there's
I'm,
not
I,
haven't
talked
about
enough
about
this,
to
understand
the
bureaucracy
beside
that
and
if
it
really
makes
sense
or
not.
But
but
soccer
is
the
growing
sport
nationally
locally
soccer
is
the
sport
that's
growing,
and
so
to
me
it's
actually
a
wise
investment
to
try
to
to
make
sure
that
that
money
that's
being
raised
because
it's
growing
is
used
to
continue
to
help
it
grow
in
our
community.
AB
I
mean
you
talked
about
this
tournament.
This
he
says
he's
trying
to
do.
120
soccer
teams,
it's
bigger
than
the
Summer
Games,
so
there's
there's
a
real
value
to
making
those
fields
a
place
that
soccer
teams
want
to
come
and
play,
and
so
I'd
rather
see
that
if
I'm
spending
the
money
as
a
parent
as
a
coach
to
do
that,
I
would
rather
see
them
improve
the
sport
that
that
we're
trying
to
help
grow
and.
AD
AD
We
want
to
see
them,
it's
not
much,
but
here's
something
to
help,
go
towards
it
and
help
that
we're
willing
to
step
forward
to
the
plate
to
make
that
happen,
and
that
was
the
big
concern
in
Leisure
Services
we're
talking
about,
which
is
why,
when
it
came
up
in
January
the
same
time
as
the
Gulf
fees
and
all
that
coming
into
play,
we
tabled
it
finished
up
the
master
plan
and
then
brought
it
back
once
we're
like.
Okay,
we've
had
some
more
discussion,
here's
how
we
can
make
it
work
and.
AB
AB
M
D
M
AB
C
W
Will
be
your
bedtime
story,
so
you
can
all
go
home
and
sleep
alright,
so
I
know
you've
all
been
anxious
to
have
the
certified
tax
rate.
We've
had
the
County
run
the
numbers
and
do
the
assessments,
and
so
we
have
some
rates
for
you.
I
gave
you
two
pieces
of
paper.
One
is
from
the
official
website
and
one
is
a
spreadsheet
that
I
do
so.
W
W
0.1
from
over
700
thousand
last
year,
because
we
had
a
portion
of
our
library
bond
that
we're
done
with
so
the
total
certified
tax
rate.
That's
proposed
is
point:
zero,
zero,
two,
seven,
seven,
seven
and
as
I
mentioned
a
few
weeks
ago,
we
are
not
going
through
truth
and
taxation
or
increasing
the
rates.
They
just
fluctuate
year-to-year
and
tell.
D
Z
W
W
Yeah,
so,
okay,
so
those
original
numbers
are
always
ran
to
give
you
that
assessment,
and
that
gives
you
a
rate
and
then
the
new
properties
get
multiplied
into
that
new
rate.
So
it's
really
strange
math,
but
that's
why
it
fluctuates
so
as
property
values
increase
that
rate
changes
down
to
give
you
that
amount
and
his
properties
decrease.
The
rate
goes
up
and.