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From YouTube: 2017 07 26 Cedar City Council Action Meeting
Description
Weekly scheduled public City Council meetings for Cedar City, UT
A
We
pray
this
night
for
the
safety
of
our
police
officers,
our
firefighters
and
other
emergency
personnel
that
provide
us
the
comforts
of
living
in
Cedar
City
and
the
life
that
were
able
to
enjoy
with
the
safety
that
they
provide
for
us
and
we
pray
for
them
and
their
families
for
the
dedication
that
they
have
we're
grateful
for
the
moisture
that
we've
received
recently
to
help
our
our
dry
lands
here
in
this
desert
pray
that
we
may
continue
to
have
that
moisture.
No
need
to
you.
B
C
D
E
G
F
D
G
When
I
think
about
what
I
envisioned
with
the
sparkle
campaign,
what
they've
done
that
Hermes
is
is,
is,
is
that
thing
they
went
out,
they
refurbished
their
sign.
They
went
into
the
interior
and
and
install
an
entirely
new
interior,
and
the
place
is
full
every
day
at
lunch.
Now
it
pays
off
to
make
your
place
Sparkle
and
I
hope
that
the
other
businesses
along
Main
Street
will
follow
Hermes
example.
G
G
D
You
for
making
this
possible
along
those
lines.
Last
week
we
had
a
gentleman
Paul
Stuckey
who
came,
and
he
talked
her
in
the
RTA
portion
of
our
meeting
about
a
number
of
things,
but
one
of
them
was
sparkling
and
donating
money
and
putting
your
money
where
your
mouth
was
and
all
of
that
and
the
Thursday
a
basket
showed
up
with
a
card
in
it.
It
had
a
donation
from
him
for
the
sparkle
campaign
that
we
will
use.
D
B
D
And
with
that
we
will
move
to
oh
one
other
thing
you
haven't
recently
drive
past
the
cemetery.
The
new
building
is
being
constructed
and
framed
in
the
whole
thing.
I
drove
out
there
today
and
it's
exciting
the
progress
that's
being
made
so
go.
Take
a
look.
I
was
gonna
text,
you
pictures,
but
then
I
got
busy,
and
so
you
didn't
get
them.
What.
H
J
No
1450
is
the
road
that
goes
into
your
sub
into
the
into
the
paved
part
right
on
the
paved
portion
and
that,
according
to
York
Jones,
that
was
the
original
location,
but
the
previous
owners
of
Ford
cedar
back
in
approximately
oh
six
asked
for
that
to
be
relocated
because
of
the
I'm,
not
quite
sure
what
what
what
their
logic
was
know
this
by
now.
It
was
sitting
right
here,
and
this
is
where
we've
carved
out
a
spot
for
it.
J
J
Developers
that
develop
this
whole
section
here
and
this
building
here
asked
for
it
to
be
removed
and
moved
down
this
to
this
location
right
here
and
they
carved
out
a
piece
of
property
and
and
and
had
it
placed
right
here.
So
if
it
doesn't
matter
to
us,
if
the
city
wants
to
leave
it
there,
but
our
offer
Wilson
will
remain
if,
if
the
city
at
our
expense.
G
D
I
B
I
I
A
C
G
C
I
C
F
C
I
K
Miron
counsel,
Brian
danger,
Phil
leisure
services
director,
the
ESA
is
the
tournament
we
have
we
host
every
year,
for
we
call
it
the
Cedar,
City
fastpitch,
tournaments
and
girls
fastpitch
tournament.
We
we
get
that
money
back
in
revenue,
but
that's
just
that's
just
the
organization
that
collects
the
money
from
the
tournament
because
it
has
to
be
has
to
be
sponsored
and
we've
chosen
to
use
them
for
that.
So
you
pay
them
in.
G
L
We
heard
that
the
fire
went
through
there
and
they
lost
in
some
picnic
tables
and
found
their
sites.
We
called
them
up
and
said:
hey.
We
have
these
picnic
tables,
we
are
disposing
of.
Would
you
be
interested
in
and
they
jumped
at
the
case
and
the
chance
excuse
me
and
they'll
be
coming
down
a
man
named
Dave
Merrill
we
coming
and
picking
them
up
tomorrow
and
taking
them
up
to
a
Boy
Scout
camp.
So
we
just
like
they
counseled,
be
aware
that
one.
F
E
M
Just
wanted
to
introduce
Amanda
hunter
I
haven't
met
her
she's,
our
new
cache
receiving
clerk
at
the
front
counter,
and
we're
excited
to
have
her
here.
She
comes
to
us
by
way
of
Brian
hit
city,
so
she
knows
some
of
the
quirks
of
municipal
finance
and
so
it's
kind
of
nice.
She
comes
in
and
already
knows,
we're
career.
So
anyway,
this
is
a
man
hunter
and
we're
really
excited
to
have
her
she's
been
here
for
a
week
and
two
days.
That's.
E
E
D
M
F
N
Good
evening,
everyone,
my
name,
is
Corey
Dao
with
coral
engineers.
This
is
my
colleague
to
my
left,
Clint
Rogers.
We
gave
a
presentation
on
something
called
water
reuse
at
the
board
meeting
for
the
central
iron
County
Water
Conservancy
District
last
week,
councilman
cousins
was
kind
enough
to
invite
me
to
come
and
share
a
few
thoughts
with
you.
So
thank
you
for
the
invite
and
thank
you
to
mr.
Pittman
for
setting
this
up
so
Carollo
engineers
is
an
environmental
engineering
firm
that
focuses
solely
on
the
water
industry.
N
So
if
it's
wet,
we
like
to
go
after
it
so
tonight,
I'm
going
to
be
talking
to
you
about
water,
reuse,
I'm,
going
to
start
by
going
through
some
definitions,
because
that
can
mean
a
lot
of
different
things.
I'll
go
through
kind
of
kind
of
a
state
of
the
industry.
Give
you
some
major
projects
that
are
going
on
things
that
we
try
to
look
at
certain
regulations
in
some
possibilities
that
might
be
able
to
help
the
community
here
so
feel
free
to
ask
questions
any
time
and
guess
we
get
started.
N
N
N
Then
we
have
something
called
indirect
Pablo
Ruiz.
We
still
have
wastewater
treatment,
it's
sent
to
a
reservoir
where
it's
diluted
and
then
goes
straight
to
a
drinking
water
plant
and
then
back
into
the
water
system.
This
is
a
pretty
common
practice.
That's
done
lots
of
different
places,
for
example
down
in
Las
Vegas.
All
the
wastewater
is
sent
to
the
Las
Vegas
wash,
which
makes
its
way
to
Lake
Mead
again,
where
it's
diluted
and
then
it
gives
Las
Vegas
a
credit
to
withdrawal
from
the
Colorado
River.
N
Then
we
get
to
some
things
that
a
little
bit
more
technical
this
this
is
a
form
of
indirect
all
the
reuse
for
groundwater
recharge.
Again
we
come
out
of
the
wastewater
treatment
plant
and
it's
sent
to
an
advanced
water
treatment
facility.
This
utilizes
technology,
such
as
reverse,
osmosis
UV
disinfection
things
like
that.
Now
that
wastewater
is
injected
into
the
groundwater
aquifer
where
a
community
is
using
it,
and
then
it's
withdrawn
from
that
same
aquifer
for
potable
purposes,
injected.
N
It
can
be
both
for
purposes
of
this
discussion,
its
directly
injected,
and
it
usually
has
a
residence
time
of
about
six
months,
but
just
to
give
you
kind
of
an
idea,
the
quality
of
water
that's
injected
into
the
aquifer
generally
is
higher
quality
than
what's
already
in
the
aquifer,
so
it
serves
two
purposes
inning.
It
improves
the
quality
of
the
groundwater
basin
and
then
in
in
coastal
areas
like
I
want
California.
They
use
this
to
protect
against
sea
water
intrusion
for
salt
loads
coming
in
and
impeding
on
the
groundwater
aquifer.
So.
I
I
N
So
now
we're
getting
something
really
technical.
This
is
referred
to
as
direct
potable
reuse,
so
this
is
coming
out
of
the
wastewater
treatment
plant
to
again
to
an
advanced
water
treatment
facility
and
then
from
there
it
goes
directly
into
one
or
two
places:
either
the
drinking
water
plant
and
then
directly
to
the
users,
or
we
completely
skip
the
drinking
water
treatment
plan.
It
goes
to
the
fresh
water
distribution
system.
N
Now
this
may
seem
a
little
unsettling,
but
again
this
is
very
high
quality
water
and
there
there's
a
saying,
that's
kind
of
been
a
detriment
to
water
reuse
of
toilet
to
tap,
which
is
a
very
wrong
miss
concession
of.
What's
going
on.
There
are
several
treatment,
barriers
and
online
monitoring
tools
that
are
going
on
before
it
reaches
the
customers.
So
it's
a
multi
barrier
approach.
So
if
there
was
a
certain
piece
of
technology
that
safe
failed,
you
have
enough
barriers
there.
N
N
N
So
let's
go
into
a
little
bit
more
of
these
things,
so
landscape
irrigation
is
kind
of
the
low
hanging
fruit.
Let's
say
this
is
great,
because
there's
really
not
a
whole
lot
of
risk
involved
and
you're
able
to
meet
a
demand,
and
the
idea
here
is
as
we
move
up
this
tree
and
the
fruit
gets
a
little
harder
to
get
to
the
risk
goes
up,
but
potentially
that
reward
can
be
greater
as
well.
So
as
we
go
up
from
irrigation,
there's
other
other
non
potable
purposes
that
we
can
utilize
it
for
commercial
purposes.
Industrial.
N
It's
still
really
easy
to
achieve
that
water
quality.
But
don't
you
get
into
complications
like
cross-contamination,
things
like
that
that
are
still
fairly
easy
to
deal
with,
but
there's
that
additional
risk
to
it,
and
then
we
get
into
indirect
polymer
use
with
surface
water
augmentation
as
well
as
ground
water
augmentation.
N
It
like
I,
said
a
little
bit
more
risky
because
you're
introducing
something
that
once
was
wastewater
into
a
drinking
water
source,
but
we
have
the
tools
and
technology
necessary
to
make
that
safe
and
then
again
up
at
the
top.
You
have
direct
polymer
reuse,
which
has
the
most
risk
associated
with
it.
But
again
it's
protective
of
Public
Health.
So.
G
N
Absolutely
and
there's
even
I
believe
type
1
reuse
in
Utah.
It
defines
it
as
human
contact
is
likely
so
that
they
make
that
definition,
but
depending
on
what
type
of
crop
you're
irrigating.
So
like
alfalfa,
you
know
there's
not
a
whole
lot
direct
contact
but
another
crop.
You
could
have
more
direct
contact
with
that
and
it's
definitely
safe
for
that.
So.
I
N
Absolutely
yeah
so,
and
the
good
thing
about
landscape
irrigation
is
that
you're
able
to
easily
meet
seasonal
demands
right.
We
use
a
lot
more
water
when
it's
hot
outside
and
you
have
a
resource
to
deal
with
that,
but
the
downside
is
is
when
it
gets
cold.
Now
you
have
all
this
water
that
you
don't
really
know
what
to
do
with
for
your
other
non
potable
purposes,
such
as
commercial
and
industrial.
N
N
N
So
the
state
of
California
is
currently
in
the
process
of
setting
regulations
or
that
that
that
highest-risk
type
of
potable
water
reuse,
because
it's
a
huge
problem
in
California,
they
say
the
drought
is
quote-unquote
over
now,
but
for
the
past
decade
they've
the
water
has
been
declining
rapidly
and
they've
they've
been
putting
a
lot
of
money
into
research
and
they're.
Looking
at
this
quite
well,
so
this
is
a
reality
in
California
right
now.
N
Some
other
states
that
are
are
looking
at
reuse,
maybe
not
directly
but
indirectly,
in
my
home
state
of
Nevada.
At
the
end
of
2016,
we
published
new
regulations
for
indirect
potable
water
reuse
for
groundwater
recharge.
Our
regulations
were
very
similar
to
Utah's
before
then
that
they've
created
a
new
class
of
reclaimed
water,
a
plus,
so
kind
of
the
the
basic
improvements
they
made
to.
N
That
is
that
that
water
quality
has
to
meet
the
minimum
regulations,
met
in
the
national
primary
water,
primary
drinking
water
regulations,
and
then
they
have
to
follow
something
referred
to
as
the
12
1010
rule.
So
what
that
that
means
is
for
enteric
virus
Cryptosporidium
and
Giardia,
they
have
to
prove
log
removal
credit
for
each
of
these
constituents
to
a
certain
degree
before
it's
deemed
acceptable.
N
So
it
is
pretty
pretty
high
again
high
tech
technology
and
it
protects
the
public
health
through
their
drinking
water
supply
and
there's
several
other
states
that
are
looking
at
updating
the
regulations
such
as
Colorado
and
Arizona,
are
looking
at
this
right
now,
as
we
speak.
So
a
lot
of
surrounding
areas
right
now
are
are
kind
of
catching
on
to
it.
N
The
above
okay,
so
I
thought
I'd,
give
it
a
little
bit
of
perspective
on
a
few
products
they're
going
on.
So
we're
we're
right
over
here,
and
these
stars
represent
some
of
the
first
direct
potable
water
reuse
projects
in
the
country.
A
while
ago,
the
community
in
Binx
Big,
Spring
Texas,
was
literally
running
out
of
they're
down
to
the
last
drop.
So
they
had
to
do
something
so
Texas
yeah,
as
I
mentioned
before
California,
is
in
the
process
of
forming
regulations,
they've
they're,
taking
time
to
make
sure
they
get
right.
N
Texas
are
kind
of
the
the
gunslingers
of
the
water
industry.
They
realize
they
had
a
problem,
so
they
said.
Let's
do
this
and
we'll
worry
about
the
regulation
later
so
right
now,
Texas
kind
of
treats
direct
potable
water
reuse
as
a
case-by-case
basis,
but
in
Big
Spring
they
saw
it
they're
running
out
of
water,
so
they
decided
to
fix
it.
So
they
they're
the
first
operating
direct
potable
water
reuse
facility
in
the
nation
just
to
the
east
of
that
and
Wichita
Falls
they're
kind
of
in
the
same
scenario.
N
They
they
built
a
direct
potable
water
ease
facility,
and
then
they
got
a
bunch
of
rain,
and
so
they
kind
of
changed
how
they
operated
to
a
more
indirect
process,
but
they're
able
to
switch
back
and
forth
and
then
pretty
soon
El
Paso
will
operate.
The
first
direct
when
I
say
I
mean
direct
direct.
So
it's
going
to
be
directly
from
the
advanced
water
treatment
plant
to
the
pipes.
So
it's
going
to
bypass
the
environment
and
bypass
the
drinking
water
plant
and
go
directly
into
the
distribution
system
they're.
Currently
in
the
design
phase.
N
For
that
and
then
over
in
New
Mexico
there's
a
small
community
in
cloud
cough
Cloudcroft,
New,
Mexico,
it's
a
ski
resort,
community
they
get
a
lot
of
seasonal
demand,
spikes
and
they
needed
some
assistance,
meaning
the
spikes
so
right
now,
they're
in
the
process
of
constructing
a
direct,
Pablo
water
or
use
facility
to
meet
those
demands.
So
I
thought
I'd
kind
of
show
this
just
to
show
that
you
know
it's
it's
not
too
far
from
home
and
it's
kind
of
catching
on
in
other
parts
of
the
country.
N
Again,
just
some
other
major
projects
to
mention
over.
In
San
Diego
there's
the
indirect
potable
water
use
augmentation
to
a
reservoir.
This
isn't
direct,
but
it
this
is
kind
of
the
first
plan
of
its
kind,
because
the
treated
water
is
going
to
a
very
small
water
reservoir.
So
it's
not
like
it's
going
to
something
as
large
as
Lake
Mead,
so
everything's
concentrated
but
they're,
addressing
it
with
technology
and
the
latest
and
greatest
monitoring
tools
that
we
have
there
so
that
they
can
react
in
real
time.
N
Now
that
we
want
to
mention
is
in
Tampa
Florida
they're,
building
a
50
million
gallon
per
day,
Aquifer
recharge
project.
This
has
been
a
big
shift
of
how
they
look
at
Pablo
reuse
in
Florida,
then
again,
El
Paso
is
going
to
be
the
first
project
that
looks
at
a
direct
to
distribution.
Type
of
DPR,
so
kind
of
one
of
the
things
I
enjoy
about
water
reuse.
Is
that
we
pretty
much?
We
have
the
technology
to
treat
the
water
to
whatever
purpose
is
needed.
It
used
to
be.
We
evaluated
our
water
resources
in
these
separate
silos.
N
So
you'd
look
at
your
storm
water.
You
would
look
at
your
fresh
water
sources
and
then
you
would
evaluate
wastewater
in
separate
silos
now
it's
kind
of
an
integrative
master
planning
approach
that
we
take,
because
we
have
the
technology
to
make
it
inequality
that
we
needed
some
examples
of
that.
That
Corolla
has
looked
at.
Are
these
agencies
here,
probably
the
most
famous
being
the
one
water
la
project?
N
This
was
a
massive
study
for
a
massive
city
that
looked
at
all
of
their
resources
from
potable
to
wastewater
and
evaluated
how
they
could
better
utilize
it
to
have
a
better
water
resource
management
plan,
a
lot
of
feasibility
analysis.
But
the
key
is
that
everything
was
integrated.
There
was
no
type
of
no
water
quality
kind
of
turning
their
back
towards
the
other
kind
of
Florida.
That's
in
their
management
plan.
Everyone
worked
together
to
look
at
what
they
needed
to
achieve
the
purposes.
N
So
what
this
table
is
showing
here
is
kind
of
the
first
step
that
a
community
takes
and
looking
at
a
value
and
how
they
may
use
water
reuse.
The
first
step
with
anything,
is
doing
a
feasibility
study
to
evaluate
the
quality
of
your
wastewater
and
what
demands
a
community
has
to
see
what
they
can
use
it
for
and
there's
a
lot
of
grant
funding
out
there,
either
on
a
federal
level
or
a
state
level
that
provides
funding
to
these
resources.
N
They
provide
a
grant
through
their
srf
program,
to
look
at
these
kinds
of
projects
to
do
an
overall
evaluation
of
what
what
you
could
use
the
the
wastewater
effluent
for
this
would
probably
be
a
collaborative
approach
between
the
city
and
the
central
n,
County,
Water
District
and
the
city
of
Enoch
just
to
see
what
you
need
the
water
for
what
you
can
use
it
for
to
the
best
supplement
your
water
supplies.
So,
if
you're
interested
in
more
information
on
those
funding
opportunities,
I'd
be
happy
to
share
it
with
you.
N
There's
three
key
areas
that
you
look
at
with
water
rees
projects.
You
have
a
regulatory
aspect,
a
public
aspect
and
a
technical
aspect.
I'll
be
quite
frank
with
you.
The
technical
portion
of
this
is
the
easiest
part
we
have.
The
technology
to
like
I
said:
make
a
water
quality.
Whatever
we
need
doesn't
matter
how
dirty
the
water
is,
we
can
make
it
as
clean
as
you
want
it.
D
M
N
E
N
N
That's
all
right!
I
can
move
on
it's
alright
anyway.
So
what
the
video
is?
A
media
news
outlet
just
showing
what's
going
on
and
it
shows
public
officials
taking
a
glass
of
water
at
the
end
of
the
trim,
training
and
drinking
it,
and
it's
great
because
one
is
perfectly
safe
and
you're
directly
interacting
with
the
public
and
having
educational
opportunities
where
you're
bringing
the
public
in
to
take
a
tour
of
this
facility.
So
they
understand
what's
going
on
and
the
the
outcome
that
we
saw
was
that
people
felt
better
about
it
afterwards.
N
I
get
asked
this
all
the
time
like.
Would
you
drink
eight
glasses
a
day
for
the
rest
of
your
life
and
bathe
your
kids
in
it?
And
the
answer
is
absolutely
we
all
close
with
a
famous
quote
that
we
have
in
the
water
industry
by
a
famous
engineer
in
South
Africa.
It
says
water
should
be
judged
not
by
its
history
but
by
its
quality.
N
It
doesn't
matter
whether
the
water
came
from
what
matters
is
how
how
high
is
the
quality
that
you're
dealing
with?
We
have
the
technology
to
make
it
whatever
quality
we
need,
and
water
reuse
is
a
great
thing,
because
I
forget
the
statistic
of
what
percentage
of
the
earth
is
water
and
then
yeah
and
then
less
than
2%
is
actual
fresh
water.
There's
seven
eight
billion
people
on
the
planet
right
now
we
need
to
find
ways
to
not
just
use
water
once,
but
to
continue
to
use
it
in
use
it
to
extend
that
resource.
N
D
You
very
much,
and
just
so
the
council
knows
and
councilman
Roly
should
know
this,
because
it
hopefully
is
on
your
calendar
but
the
beginning
of
August,
where
we
said
we
were
going
to
get
all
staff
together
after
they've
done
some
research
on
what
we
could
do
with
our
treatment
plant
water
and
all
that
we
are
bringing
everyone
together
for
that
meeting
and
start
the
conversations.
So,
if
that
is
on
your
calendar,
for
the
8th
right,
I
think.
J
D
D
I
D
G
D
F
O
E
G
D
G
C
Couple
of
comments
I
wanted
to
thank
both
the
residents
in
that
area.
I've
been
around
and
visited
with
quite
a
few
of
them
and
for
their
willingness
to
try
and
work
with
the
levites
and
be
good
neighbors
and
for
the
levites
response
to
the
residents
concerns
and
for
their
willingness
to
try
and
and
be
good
neighbors
and
work
with
them.
So
I
I
want
to
commend
all
of
you
involved
that
for
taking
a
positive
approach
and
trying
to
work
this
out.
G
G
Affirmation
from
the
Levites
that
they
will
put
in
the
road
and
the
playgrounds
and
all
of
those
things
there
is
really
no
legal,
legally
binding
thing
to
require
to
do
that.
It's
just
the
word.
Is
there
any
way
that
that
can
be
memorialized
in
any
in
any
way
that
if
they
were
to
fail
to
deliver
on
that,
the
the
thing
becomes
moot.
O
G
E
G
Park,
part
of
part
of
the
the
me
the
the
complete
advantage
to
the
people
living
there
to
having
that
change
to
an
r3.
Is
it
that
it
makes
it
economically
feasible
for
Levites
to
create
the
road
to
the
north,
and,
if
that
were
to
go,
are
three
without
a
road
to
the
north.
That
would
be
a
great
travesty.
Well,.
F
G
H
G
H
I'm
not
sure
it's
actually
required
by
the
city.
We
do
have
a
to
access
rule
on
subdivisions
and
PU
DS
that
if
you
go
over
80
launch,
you
need
to
install
a
second
access
now,
I'm,
not
sure
what
the
fire
code
says
when
you
put
in
250
apartment
reasons,
our
our
ordinances
really
don't
address
that
situation,
because.
G
E
P
F
A
G
I
C
D
Okay,
item
number
consider:
approval
of
an
ordinance
amending
the
zone
from
are
are
three
am
on
property
located
in
the
vicinity
of
1,000
South
450
West,
south
of
IFA
Country
Store.
O
E
E
J
G
G
I
A
O
So
mr.
Stewart
can
be
here
today,
if
you
recall,
from
a
discussion
last
week,
irrigation
district,
one
of
their
property
left
out
of
this
community
reinvestment
area.
What
I
would
suggest
that
the
council
is
inclined
to
approve
this
draft
is
to
do
it
with
that
caveat,
and
then,
when
we
get
to
the
point
where
we
actually
finalized,
the
ordinance
will
have
adjusted
that
map
to
exclude
that
and.