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From YouTube: City of Chandler Council Meeting 7.20.23
Description
City of Chandler Council Meeting 7.20.23
A
A
Thank
you,
council,
member
Harris
and
vice
mayor
for
out
of
your
not
being
here,
it's
always
harder
to
jump
in
on
these
calls.
But
we
appreciate
your
your
wisdom
and
insight
and
leadership
in
our
community
as
well
that
I'd
like
to
invite
Pastor
Mark
rossington
from
Epiphany
Lutheran
Church,
to
lead
us
in
an
invocation
and
council
member
Mark
Stewart
to
lead
us
in
the
Pledge
of
Allegiance.
D
We
ask
that
all
businesses
brought
before
the
council
tonight.
All
decisions
made
to
be
for
the
benefit
of
all
the
residents
of
Chandler,
all
the
business
owners
of
Chandler
and
all
those
who
visit
our
great
City.
We
thank
you
for
the
many
blessings
that
you
have
given
to
us
this
day
and
finally,
we
remember
those
who
are
at
disadvantage
and
being
out
in
the
heat
we
thank
you
for
City
agencies
and
other
Charities
which
seek
to
find
them
and
offer
them.
E
A
Thank
you,
Pastor
welcome.
Thank
you,
councilmember
Council,
on
Monday,
you
had
some
robust
conversations
related
to
the
agenda.
It's
a
good
agenda,
a
lot
of
infrastructure,
repair
and
work
with
parks
and
water,
and
is
there
any
interest
in
moving
any
item
to
action?
A
A
A
G
A
All
right,
thank
you,
Council.
We
do
have
one
action
item
tonight.
We
could
get
a
brief
presentation
on
just
the
fee
schedule
related
to
Management
Services
Public,
Work
utilities
that
we're
voting
on
tonight.
Thank
you,
Matthew.
H
All
right,
good
evening,
mayor
and
Council
great
to
be
here
talking
with
you
tonight
about
some
city-wide
fee
schedule,
adjustments
that
we're
proposing
to
make,
as
with
any
time,
you're
making
an
adjustment.
Sometimes
you
have
to
kind
of
evaluate
those
things
that
you're
doing,
and
you
know
my
dad
once
told
me
that
if
you
want
to
make
a
difference
in
the
world,
sometimes
you
have
to
put
your
money
where
your
mouth
is
and
he
was
right.
You
can
taste
the
change.
I
H
Right
so
this
evening,
we're
talking
about
resolution
56
96,
and
we
have
an
overview
of
kind
of
our
annual
review.
So
each
year
the
Departments
review
their
fees
as
part
of
the
budget
process
and
typically
the
effective
start
date
of
new
fees
is
July.
1St
this
year
is
a
little
delayed
to
an
August
first
effective
date
for
these
fees,
but
as
they
can
be
set
later
to
accommodate
communication,
posting
and
system
changes,
and
these
recommendations
again
are
proposed
to
be
recommended
for
an
August
1st
of
2023
implementation.
H
So
an
overview
of
our
fee
characteristics
fees
are
assessed
for
use
of
facilities
or
Services
benefiting
specific
groups.
Typically,
this
ensures
that
taxes
charged
to
support
the
general
service
benefit
all,
whereas,
if
someone's
receiving
an
individual
use
or
service
that
they're
paying
for
those
uses
or
Services
fees
reflect
the
recovery
of
those
costs
to
provide
the
service
unless
the
market
demands
a
lower
rate
and
the
authority
to
charge
must
exist
in
the
city
code,
so
our
fees
amounts
are
specific
and
set
by
resolution.
H
An
overview
of
our
schedule,
the
Departments
propose
their
fee
updates
in
January,
February
time
frame.
The
proposed
fees
are
analyzed
and
summarized
verified
in
the
city
code
that
the
authority
exists
to
charge
the
fee
in
March
and
April.
They're
posted
online
for
60
days
at
least
and
they've
been
posted
on
our
website
since
May
19th
of
23.
they're
also
posted
and
published
a
notice
of
intent
to.
H
Yp
schedule
and
we
do
social
media
postings
as
well.
This
evening
we
have
two
departments
that
are
proposing
fee
updates,
Management,
Services
and
public
works
and
utilities
for
Management
Services.
The
fee
is
for
a
short-term
rental
license
and
license
renewal
fee.
As
you'll
recall
recently,
a
new
short-term
license
was
introduced
to
Mayor
and
Council.
You
voted
in
favor
of
that
short-term
license,
and
this
would
authorize
a
fee
to
be
collected
for
those
short-term
licenses,
as
well
as
a
renewal
fee.
H
I
would
authorized
a
250
license
fee
and
a
250
annual
renewal
fee
associated
with
the
license,
and
this
would
be
in
effect
for
those
not
currently
licensed
when
they
do
their
renewal,
they
would
have
to
pay
the
fee
as
they
would
be
grandfathered
in,
but
those
that
would
be
net
new
additions
to
the
short-term
rental
license
would
pay
the
fee
after
August
1st,
with
that
I'll
ask
for
any
questions
on
this.
H
J
K
Yeah
through
the
mayor,
councilmember
Ellis,
the
statute
actually
limits
the
max
that
cities
can
charge
and
that
is
250
dollars.
So
the
rest
of
the
cost
to
collect
that
fee
is
absorbed
just
in
general
taxes.
K
Through
the
mayor
council,
member
Stewart,
we
have
a
software
that
helps
us
identify
short-term
rentals,
so
there's
that
annual
maintenance,
along
with
the
staff
we
have
to
send
letters
once
the
software
identifies
what
could
potentially
be
a
short-term
rental
staff,
then
generates
letters
that
get
mailed
that
help
educate,
I,
guess
people
who
have
short-term
rentals
and
have
them
contact
the
city.
K
So
we
can
talk
to
them
about
the
new
statute,
around
short-term
rentals
and,
of
course,
our
new
code
language,
because
a
lot
of
people
just
don't
know
so
we
work
with
the
public
extensively,
and
that
takes
it's
quite
a
bit
of
time
to
do
that,
and
that's
really
just
the
licensing
portion
of
it
that
we
can
substantiate
with
this
cost.
But
of
course,
there's
many
other
costs
around
this
with
Public,
Safety
and
so
on.
But
that's
not
part
of
this
overall
analysis
that
we
did
to
charge
the
250
dollars.
Okay,.
L
Yeah
under
buyer,
under
the
summary
proposal
modification
the
little
church
staff
put
together,
which
is
good
in
the
verbiage.
It
says
this
will
be
a
tech,
effective
July,
1st
2023
and
I
heard
August
2023.,
which
date
is
that
does
that
need
to
be
amended?
If
we
make
an
amendment
here
or
that's
I'm
concerned
by
the
legality
here,
yeah.
H
Yeah
through
the
mayor
vice
mayor,
if
the
posting
said
July
1st,
we
can
do
it
at
that
date
or
later,
but
it
cannot
be
before
mayor
and
Council
have
actually
approved
the
resolution
for
the
fee
change,
so
the
the
first
effective
date
it
could
be
possible
would
be
August
1st.
Well,
actually,
it
could
be
tomorrow
if
you
approve
it
tonight,
but
we're
not
anticipating
a
tomorrow
implementation
date.
It
would
be
an
August
1st
implementation
date.
L
M
M
G
There's
got
a
question
for
the
City
attorney,
City
attorney
I
wanted
to
know.
Do
we
if
we
say
yes,
this
action
today,
do
we
have
to
put
it
into
effect,
August
the
1st
or
could
we
say,
September
the
1st
and
then
my
last
question
is
that
is
this
a
little
bit
different
from
you
know?
Sometimes
we
have
to
read
ordinances
twice
before
we
Implement
something
new
this
different
or
is
this
we
don't
have
to
do
that.
M
You
this
is
not
an
ordinance.
There
is
not.
We
do
not
have
the
to
read
requirement
for
it.
It
can
go
into
effect
as
quickly
as
the
council
desires
if
the
counts
would
like
a
little
longer.
Implementation
to
September
1st
I
would
recommend
that
be
included
in
emotion
and
and
see
what
the
council
vote
and
just
a
reminder
by
law
and
by
our
process.
These
fees
have
been
posted
for
public
comment
on
our
website
for
a
period
of
time.
Over
60
days.
A
So
this
should
not
catch
anyone.
I
mean
hypothetically
that
it's
been
out
there
I
realized
that
I
mean
just
because
it's
out
there,
people
won't
see
it,
but
neither
will
necessarily
our
conversations
here
tonight
and
August.
1St
was
just
a
a
date
of
a
of
a
kind
of
that
that
just
made
sense
there's
nothing
magical
about
that,
but
but
at
the
same
time
it
makes
sense
in
additional
comments
on
this
console.
H
All
right,
the
other
department
that
has
a
fee
changes,
Public,
Works
and
utilities
and
I'll
do
a
brief
overview
of
it
and
then,
if
there's
questions,
John
Knutson
from
the
public
works
director
will
be
able
to
answer
those.
Basically,
this
would
remove
the
separate
fees
for
residential
property
and
non-residential
property
for
those
that
are
applying
for
a
right-of-way
vacation
which,
in
my
mind,
I
thought.
You
know
a
beach
umbrella
on
a
right-of-way,
but
that's
not
what
this
is.
H
This
is
a
right
of
way
that
they're
abandoning
so
that
it's
not
going
to
be
in
use
either
our
right-of-way
or
there
right
away
to
process
that
there's
an
application
fee
currently
and
it's
dependent
upon
the
property
type,
not
the
individual,
requesting
the
vacation,
and
so
the
request
is
to
remove
those
separate
fees
and
charge
just
the
one
fee.
Apples
application
fee
of
a
thousand
dollars
to
help
recover
actual
costs
incurred
by
staff
time
staff
does
a
lot
of
research
and
spends
a
lot
of
time
on
these
right-of-way
vacation
applications.
H
In
a
similar
vein,
we
also
have
a
separate
fee
for
residential
and
non-residential
property
for
extinguishment
of
easement
applications.
One
is
200
if
it's
a
residential
property,
the
other
is
a
500
fee
for
a
non-residential
property
and
really
there's
no
distinguishment
in
the
level
of
work
or
effort.
That
goes
by
staff
into
these
application
reviews,
and
so
the
request
is
to
change
that
to
one
individual
fee
of
500.
H
A
Does
not
appear,
we
have
any
additional
questions.
Thank
you,
counsel,
with
that,
a
motion
would
be
in
order.
A
A
second
by
councilmember,
encinas
concept,
please
vote.
A
A
Yes
to
those
of
you
who
desire
to
come
and
address
the
council
tonight
again,
you'll
be
you'll,
be
speaking
to
us,
not
the
audience,
and
you
have
up
to
three
minutes
to
share
your
thoughts
and
concerns,
since
this
is
unscheduled
public
appearance.
We
cannot
address
your
concerns,
so
we
cannot
answer
any
questions
that
you
have,
but
we'll
certainly
have
staff
look
at
get
back
to
you
and
make
sure
that
we
can.
That
can
have
a
further
dialogue
around
your
concerns.
A
I
I
would
ask
if
you're
saying
the
same
thing
that
the
person
behind
you
or
in
front
of
you
is
going
to
say
you,
you
could
say
Amen
to
what
they
said
or
in
your
own
language,
but
you
have
up
to
three
minutes
when
the
light
is
green.
That
will
give
you
that
indication
when
it's
yellow
Please
wrap
up
when
it's
red
it's
time
to
to
stop
at
that
point.
A
N
N
I
am
here
today
to
talk
about
the
library
and
some
of
the
activities
and
books
and
things
that
are
going
on
in
the
library.
I
did
retire
from
the
Chandler
School
District
I
helped
to
open
Hamilton,
High,
School
and
I
helped
to
open
a
couple
of
the
other
schools
in
the
district.
I
also
have
a
degree
as
a
counselor
for
education.
N
One
of
the
concerns
that
I
have
and
I
know
that
I
sorry
I'm
here
first
I
was
hoping
to
be
later,
but
one
of
the
main
concerns
that
I
have
is
that
I
realize
that
something
new
was
added
on
I,
believe
in
April
the
book
board
book
and
board
Lounge
I'm
concerned
about
the
content,
not
only
of
some
of
the
books
that
parents
and
other
people
are
finding.
But
now
we've
brought
the
digital
world
into
this,
and
I
understand
that
you
are
allowing
digital
gaming
inside
the
Library.
Okay,
as
well
as
that.
N
The
other
thing
I'm
concerned
about
is
your
author
in
Residence
program,
and
what
I'm
going
to
ask
is
the
process
that
you
are
choosing
these
people,
these
programs,
the
books
that
you
are
putting
on
the
shelves
who
is
on
a
committee?
Who
is
choosing
this
material?
N
Do
parents,
community
members
have
any
right
or
any
say
as
to
what
video
games
they
or
their
children
are
seeing
or
the
books
that
they
or
their
children
are
hearing
your
author
and
Resident
Sharon
Skinner
being
an
ex-english
teacher,
also
I
looked
up
some
of
her
books,
one
of
the
books
that
she
recommends
for
people
to
read
is
Charles
Manson
and
the
creepy
crawl.
N
Now
I
doesn't
sound
like
something
I
would
enjoy
reading.
Nor
would
I
enjoy
my
grandchildren
reading
that,
okay,
another
one
that
she
says
for
people
to
read,
say
the
right
thing:
how
to
talk
about
identity
and
Justice
and
diversity
and
I
know
that
people
will
be
talking
about
books
like
that
later
again,
who
chose
this
speaker?
She
herself
wrote
collars
and
curses
shape-shifting,
witchcraft,
elves
and
dark
curves
dark
curses
that
create
engaging
urban
fantasy.
That's
one
of
her
best
sellers.
N
Another
one
of
her
bestsellers,
the
healers
trilogy
talking
about
an
order
of
healing
that
mystical
creatures
do
and
there's
a
full
list
on
the
city
website
that
shows
these
books
again.
Are
these
appropriate?
Did
parents
or
anybody
in
the
community
have
any
say
over
any
of
these
elections
for
this
person
who
is
presenting
this
information?
Thank.
A
O
Thank
you
for
your
time
tonight.
Council,
my
name
is
Andrew
Adams.
My
address
is
880
East
Devon
Road,
so
I
am
I,
grew
up
in
the
Chandler
Unified
School
District
school,
so
I
went
to
Jacobson
Vogel
and
to
Hamilton
that's
where
I
graduated
from
I'm
a
father
I'm
a
small
business
owner
and
I'm
asking
the
council
today
to
help
us
stop
the
sexualization
of
our
children.
O
You
just
heard
about
a
few
books
that
are
in
the
library
when
I
was
a
kid
and
I
was
growing
up
and
I
was
going
through
school.
Having
books
like
this
offered
to
six-year-olds
and
eight-year-olds
was
not
something
that
at
least
I
saw
when
I
was
going
through.
School
I
was
not
exposed
to
any
of
this
material
and
I
grew
up
to
be
a
tolerant,
accepting
contributing.
Member
of
my
community
I
have
no
bias
towards
transgender
people,
homosexual
people
or
anybody.
O
O
O
O
A
C
East
Londale,
Place,
Queen,
Creek,
Arizona
and
I
genuinely
do
not
think
it's
a
good
idea
to
have
books
in
in
the
libraries
for
kids
that
are
talking
about
a
subject.
They
should
not
learn
until
they
are
allowed
to
move
out
of
their
own.
Their
parents
house,
because
imagine
if,
like
your
child,
just
goes
to
school,
comes
back
and
asks
you.
What
is
an
STD
you're
gonna
be
like
how
does
she
learn
this?
How
did
she
learn
this?
What
is
going
on?
C
A
P
P
I
had
to
have
a
minor
child
with
me
to
get
the
book,
and
so
it's
called
perfectly
normal,
and
it
says
on
the
cover
here
that
it's
a
definitive
book
about
puberty
and
sexual
health
for
today's
kids
and
teens
and
I'm
not
sure
as
a
parent,
that
sexual
needs
to
be
in
the
same
sentence
with
kids
or
teens,
or
why
we
would
be
teaching
kids
about
sex,
and
it
says
this
book
is
for
ages,
10
and
up.
P
So
keep
that
in
mind,
as
we
preview
a
little
bit
about
this
book,
it's
in
the
children's
sections
for
minors
only
that
kids
can
get
to
so
it
talks
about
sexual
desire
and
sexual
intercourse,
and
it
says
sexual
intercourse
happens
when
a
female
and
a
male
feel
very
sexy
and
very
attracted
to
each
other
to
each
other.
They
want
to
be
very
close
to
each
other
in
a
sexual
way,
so
close
that
the
male's
penis
goes
into
the
female's
vagina
and
the
vagina
stretches
open
in
a
way
that
fits
around
the
penis.
P
When
this
happens,
it
is
possible
for
a
female
and
a
male
once
their
reproductive
organs
have
grown
up
to
make
a
baby,
but
most
people
don't
have
sexual
intercourse
only
when
they
want
to
make
a
baby.
Most
often
they
have
sexual
intercourse
just
because
it
feels
good
and
then
there's
a
picture
of
a
boy
and
a
girl
in
bed
having
sex.
And
then
it
says
sexual
intercourse
is
having
sex,
can
involve
the
penis
and
the
vagina
or
the
mouth
and
the
genitals
or
the
penis
and
the
anus
after
sexual
intercourse.
P
That
involves
the
vagina
and
the
penis.
The
female
can
become
pregnant,
but
there
are
ways
that
people
can
help
protect
themselves
from
having
a
baby.
It
talks
about
AIDS,
it
talks
about
straight
and
gay
homosexually
homosexuality
and
heterosexuality
chapters.
It
also
has
a
lot
of
pictures
of
naked
people
from
Toddlers,
with
penises
to
young
girls,
with
sprouting
little
bud
breasts
and
a
little
bit
of
pubic
hair
to
adults,
with
a
lot
of
pubic,
hair
and
very
big
breasts.
P
So
every
page
has
young
girls
teenagers
in
naked
in
showers,
pictures
of
boys
in
locker
rooms
naked
in
their
schools,
depicting
that
they're
in
their
school
locker
rooms.
And
then
they
have
this
thing
about
the
female
sex
organs
and
it
says
a
thin
piece
of
skin
body
fat.
P
A
thin
piece
of
skin
called
the
hymen
covers
the
part
of
the
opening
to
the
vagina
when
a
girl
is
growing
or
when
she
is
very
active
while
exercising
or
playing
a
sport
or
sometimes
when
she
first
uses
a
tampon
or
during
the
first
time
she
has
sexual
intercourse.
The
hymen
stretches
and
may
tear
a
bit
and
the
opening
becomes
somewhat
larger.
And
then
it
gives
you
a
picture
of
how
to
bend
over
as
a
female,
with
a
mirror
to
look
at
your
vagina
and
your
anus
so
that
you
can
find
those
body
parts.
A
I
Well,
I
sound
like
a
bird
records,
Cindy
Barnes,
1601,
North,
Saba,
Street,
Chandler
Arizona,
eight
five,
two
two
five
I
too
went
to
the
library
but
I
go
quite
often.
I
have
three
toddler:
granddaughters
I'm,
a
retired
teacher
I'm,
a
girl
scout
leader
and
I,
found
some
very
interesting
books,
language
of
seabirds.
This
is
a
chapter
book.
None
of
my
toddler.
Kids
would
have
picked
it
up,
but
it's
the
main
purpose
of
the
Sunbirds,
the
seabirds.
The
language
is
Secret
being
secret.
I
There's
no
reason
any
book
has
to
do
with
anti-police
or
being
secret
with
adults
needs
to
be
given
to
children
under
18..
This
one
was
in
the
toddler
section,
the
hard
books
I'm
sure
you
all
remember
those
that
would
be
for
a
one
two-year-old
talking
about
he.
She
or
not.
She,
they
don't
know
how
to
speak.
Let
alone
know
their
pronouns.
I
This
one
is
I,
am
Jazz,
it's
a
boy
who
wants
to
be
a
girl
or
a
Girl,
Wants
To,
Be,
A
boy,
I,
don't
know
this
was
not
too
terribly
bad.
I
thought
it
was
appropriate,
especially
for
girls
that
want
to
be
a
tomboy
or
vice
versa.
The
boys
that
want
to
be
so
this
one
was
above,
and
this
one
I
was
surprised,
was
the
history
of
Harvey
Milk.
I
A
G
A
Q
Mayor
councilmer
Stewart
will
provide
you
with
some
background
information
as.
A
You,
sir
great
all
right
next
on
our
agenda
is
Council
announcements
and
I'll
start
I.
One
of
my
big
saddest
moments
this
year
so
far
was
not
being
able
to
participate
in
the
for
our
city
day.
I've
made
the
the
last
nine
and
but
from
what
I
hear
this
was
the
most
amazing
ever
and
I.
Think
council,
member
Ellis
is
going
to
share
some
details
that
I
don't
need
to
other
than
we.
We
set
a
record
of
kids
shared
of
kids
served.
A
I
do
want
to
thank
all
of
the
volunteers
and
sponsors
who
were
involved,
what
an
incredible
difference
that
you
made
and
council
member
Ellis
thanks
for
carrying
the
water
for
us
and
I
I,
don't
know
if
any
other
council
member
was
there.
I
know
you've,
participated
and
we're
for
this
program,
but
thank
you
Council
for
your
leadership,
particularly
with
us.
A
Secondly,
I
do
want
to
just
briefly
talk
about
Road
Safety,
as
we
know
that
we
have
our
students
that
are
heading
back
to
school,
so
there's
more
people
walking
to
school,
driving
to
school,
biking
to
school
and
believe
it
or
not,
they're,
not
always
paying
attention.
Perhaps
at
the
way
that
you
believe
and
I
believe
that
they
should
so,
please
be
patient
around
school
zones.
There's
a
lot
more
traffic,
keep
in
mind.
A
Everyone
is
adjusting
to
new
schedules
and
will
find
a
sense
of
equilibrium
like
we
do
every
year,
but
it's
particularly
hectic
that
first
week
and
at
the
same
time
we're
experiencing
a
heat
wave
here.
Aren't
we
it's
been
brutally
hot
over
the
last
several
weeks
and
it's
supposed
to
continue
with
monsoons,
not
quite
in
sight.
So
I
would
like
to
remind
everyone:
parents,
if
your
kids
are
walking
to
school,
make
sure
that
particularly
that
way
home
to
remind
them
again
and
again
to
stay
hydrated.
A
Everyone
else
Please
be
aware
of
your
situation.
Your
circumstances
so
you're
not
out
in
the
sun.
More
than
you
need
to
I,
saw
council
member
Ellis
carrying
an
umbrella
to
the
council
meeting
tonight
to
stay
out
of
the
heat.
Well
done,
it's
also
a
great
idea,
if
you
know-
or
if
you
have
others
to
know
to
be
aware
of
where
our
heat
relief
stations
are
and
there's
several
not
only
libraries
but
others
that
you
can
go
in.
A
Seek
water
cool
off
and
these
locations
can
be
found
at
chandleraz.gov
forward,
slash,
heat
relief
and,
lastly,
I.
The
reason
I
wasn't
able
to
be
at
this.
Our
most
awesome
event
is
that
I
spent
some
time
as
a
mayor
in
Kansas
City
with
seven
other
Mayors,
with
Institute
of
of
Creative
Design,
mayor's
Institute
on
City
design,
and
each
of
us
brought
a
project.
A
That's
only
100
yards
long,
and
then
we
run
into
bash's
private
property
and
then
there
so
I
I
look
forward
to
some
folks
that
will
continue
to
help
us
and
working
with
staff
to
see
how
we
can
make
this
a
true
amenity,
perhaps
event
driven
amenity
in
our
South
part
of
the
community,
with
that
tremendous
area
of
Snedigar
Park
on
the
bottom.
But
what
a
great
time
and
and
councilmember
Stewart
I
got
a
tour
of
the
women's
pro
soccer
stadium
that
is
opening
next
March.
So
we
got
a.
A
The
second
part
of
this
program,
I
I,
flew
from
there
to
New
York
City
to
be
part
of
the
a
Bloomberg
Harvard
City
leader
initiative
with
39
other
mayors,
and
this
program
provides
training
and
guiding,
and
some
a
lot
of
education
on
different
things
for
Mayors
and
Senior
Leaders
with
tools
that
will
help
expand
our
problem.
Solving
strengthen
our
City
Halls,
improve
Communications
and
help
us
be
truly
data
driven
and,
on
a
personal
note,
I.
A
It
was
amazing
for
me
to
be
in
the
same
room
with
the
mayor
of
Wellington,
New
Zealand,
Cape,
Town,
South,
Africa,
Amsterdam,
Netherlands,
Calgary
Alberta,
many
from
California
Pennsylvania,
Kansas,
they've,
been
Everywhere,
Man
they've
been
everywhere,
and
I
really
believe
that
this
will
help
us
as
a
city.
A
So
thank
you
Council
for
allowing
me
to
be
gone
for
a
week
and
learn
some
more
councilmember
and
cedis
no
announcements
for
me
this
week.
Thank
you,
councilmember
Ellis,.
J
Thank
you,
mayor
really
appreciate
it.
I
mean
when
you
talked
about
the
back
to
school.
It
was
a
great
success.
It
was
epic
this
year
you
missed
it,
but
these
things
does
not.
They
don't
happen
in
a
vacuum.
It
took
a
whole
Community
to
come
together
and
make
it
happen.
As
you
can
see
in
those
pictures,
people
can
Farm
all
over
the
campus
open
their
campus
for
us
and
we
had
kids
from
all
over
I
mean
the
the
lines
were
wrapped.
J
Want
to
thank
all
the
volunteers
and
everyone
that
took
part
into
this
and
really
really
won
my
heart
to
see
all
the
communities
come
together.
We
were
able
to
pass
out
2500,
backpacks,
four
thousand
pair
of
socks
and
underwear
and
then
550
pairs
of
shoes.
Also
165
haircuts
was
done
and
it
was
not
just
any
haircut.
It
was
a
haircut
that
the
kids
were
walking
away,
feeling
so
good
shaking
their
hair
feeling
really
proud
that
they
had.
J
Somebody
really
took
the
time
to
do
their
hair
I
had
a
real
good
time
with
everyone
that
was
there
and
we
we
were.
It
was
hot.
It
was
hot.
We
had
to
keep
telling
everyone
keep
drinking,
I,
think
I'm,
still
recovering
from
that
I'm
trying
to
stay
hydrated,
but
Chandler
knows
how
to
do
it
and
we
did
it
really
Grand
and
everybody
had
a
real
good
time.
J
At
the
end
of
the
week
for
New
York
and
while
I'm
there
I
will
have
an
opportunity
to
visit
with
the
embassy,
the
Haitian
Embassy
in
New
York
and
then
also
we'll
have
a
chance
to
go
to
United
Nation
and
bring
Chandler's
name
there,
and
my
job
is
to
make
sure
that
channel
is
Global
and
everywhere
I
go
I,
bring
it
and
not
making
sure
that
everybody
knows
about
it.
Thank.
A
E
Thank
you,
mayor
and
I
want
to
give
a
shout
out
to
officer
Jay
Clark,
who
I
had
the
privilege
of
going
on
a
ride
along
this
Saturday
and
if
you
haven't
been
on
a
ride
along
and
you
follow
things
going
on
the
city.
It
was
absolutely
amazing
and.
E
This
police
force
I
I.
We
ran
around
all
night
long
and
unfortunately
it
was
uneventful,
which
is
just
a
testament
to
how
things
are
being
done
in
our
city.
I
know
that
crime
continues
to
decrease,
but
it's
a
professional
group,
it's
extremely
Community
focused
and
when
you
sit
with
somebody
for
six
hours,
you
know
the
first
two
hours
is
kind
of
like
it's
real
fluffy
and
it's
all.
E
But
as
you
sit
with
somebody
for
a
while,
you,
you
kind
of
really
get
to
into
those
conversations
you
kind
of
talk
about
what's
going
on,
and
it
was
very
evident
to
me
there's
a
spirit
of
service
and
I
think
that
permeates
throughout
the
police
forces.
It's
not
just
Officer
Clark
that
shared
that,
but
when
I
was
on
scene
with
a
unfortunately,
a
motorcycle
accident
I
could
feel
this
Spirit
of
service.
That
was
just
coming
from
all
the
officers
and
the
and
the
fire
department
that
was
on
scene
and
I.
E
Couldn't
you
wouldn't
believe
how
fast
we
were
first
on
scene,
which
was
in
about
40
seconds?
Maybe
a
minute-
and
there
were
probably
five
police
officers
there
within
three
minutes
and
the
fire
department
was
there
in
under
four
minutes,
maybe
even
three
minutes.
It
was
like
that
and
helping
this
gentleman
and
fortunately
he's
going
to
be
okay,
but
I
just
wanted
to
share
a
big
thank
you
to
Jay
and
the
rest
of
the
team
out
there,
keeping
the
streets
safe.
It
was
a
good
time
and
I'm
glad
there
was.
E
There
were
no
big
events,
so
that's
all
I
had
tonight,
mayor
and
oh
and
by
the
way
Jay
was
a
product
of
the
lateral
program
that
Chief
brought
us
a
few
years
ago
that
we
all
voted
in,
and
so
he
came
from
another
department.
He
said
it
is
a
world
of
difference
here
compared
to
what
he's
used
to
so
it
was
a
testament.
So
thank
you.
Thank
you.
Chief.
F
Posted
all
right,
thank
you,
mayor,
well
that
kind
of
dovetails
off
of
council
member
Stewart
tomorrow,
I'll
be
doing
a
Facebook
live
about
a
program
that
Council
started
some
time
ago,
we're
about
Midway
through
converting
our
LED
lights,
we're
about
halfway
through
I'm,
going
to
be
doing
a
Facebook
live
talking
to
some
of
our
traffic
folks
on
what
they're
doing
how
it
affects
our
residents
and
the
reason
that
dovetails
with
police
is
because
these
are
energy,
efficient
lights
and
there's
a
significant
cost
savings
there
and
that
will
be
going
to
fund
new
officers.
F
So
they
will
be
continue
to
be
able
to
do
the
job
that
they
do.
So,
if
you
want
join
me
for
my
Facebook,
live
that'll
be
on
the
Chandler
AZ
city
council,
Facebook
page,
so
it
should
be
pretty
interesting.
I
actually
got
up
in
a
bucket
to
test
write
test
it
out
today.
Don't
know
if
I'll
be
doing
that
tomorrow,
but
it,
but
it
should
be
fun,
but
it
really
is
a
great
program.
It's
very
significant
to
pretty
much
everyone
who
lives
here
in
Chandler,
so
I
just
thought.
F
A
Council,
member
posted
those
getting
in
one
of
those
Vehicles
has
always
been
on
my
bucket
list.
Q
J
Q
City
manager,
thank
you
mayor.
You
know,
councilman
Poston,
I,
don't
think
it's
just
the
kids
that
are
happy
to
be
back
in
CRST
I
think
the
parents
are
happy
to
have
them
back
in
and
I
would
count
myself
as
one
of
those.
So
my
two
kids
went
back
to
school
as
well,
and
I
am
thrilled
that
that's
where
they
are
so
excellent.
Q
I
just
wanted
to
make
a
couple
of
brief
announcements
regarding
staff
and
thank
you,
mayor
and
councilor
Ellis
for
bringing
up
operation
back
to
school.
I
wanted
to
particularly
highlight
the
efforts
of
one
of
our
staff,
who
was
our
primary
liaison
for
that
event.
Cc
cantabrana
did
a
phenomenal
job
working
with
for
our
city,
and
we
tremendously
appreciate
all
of
her
efforts
over
many
months
to
prepare.
For
that
event
as
well.
Also
just
a
great
reminder
to
me
today
is
we
had
a
power
outage
affecting
the
downtown
area.
Q
Some
of
them
are
still
working
now
with
disadvantaged
residents
who
need
that
additional
assistance
in
working
with
our
partners
like
Salvation
Army,
to
get
them,
especially
in
this
very,
very
hot
part
of
the
year,
the
services
they
need
so
just
wanted
to
thank
them
for
doing
what
they
do
so
well
every
single
day.
Thank
you
mayor.
Thank
you,
council.