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A
B
We're
gonna
go
ahead
and
it
started
welcome
everyone.
Southern
brick,
Environmental
Center,
don't
tell
the
other.
This
is
why
I'm
not
using
the
microphone,
don't
tell
the
other
department,
but
this
is
my
favorite
presentation.
So
little
housekeeping
things.
If
you
were
not
at
the
fire
and
EMS
presentation
last
week,
I
do
have
a
couple
of
packets.
They
gave
like
a
lot
of
a
folder
full
of
information,
so
I
have
those
in
the
back
to
see
me
and
then
at
the
end.
I
have
the
evaluations
up
here.
B
B
C
Molly,
thank
you
so
welcome
students
to
what
week,
four
I
guess
of
the
Civic
Leadership
Academy
again
I'm
a
director
of
parks
or
Public
Works,
Mike,
cable
before
I
get
into
our
presentation,
though
I
do
want
to
speak
a
little
bit
about
the
facility
that
we're
into
this
evening
we
had
our
further
last
Civic
Leadership
Academy
here
and
seems
like
a
great
location.
This
is
a
facility
that
was
built
in
conjunction
with
the
Pittsburgh
parks,
Conservancy
and
the
city
of
Pittsburgh,
raising
eighteen
million
dollars
to
build
not
only
this
building
but
the
surrounding
grounds.
C
So
if
you
came
in
from
the
parking
lot
you
saw
above
you,
the
solar
panels
that
are
collecting
the
energy
that
provides
energy
to
this
facility.
A
little
bit
off
site
is
our
areas
where
the
water
is
being
collected,
so
it's
an
F
zero
and
that
energy
facility
you've
probably
heard
of
LEED
Gold
and
LEED
Silver,
and
all
that.
But
this
building
is
under
the
Living
Building
Challenge,
which
is
a
higher
degree
of
sustainability
and
criteria
than
than
even
the
lead,
a
gold
and
silver
and
platinum.
C
So,
there's
a
lot
of
challenges
with
it
and
just
like
lead.
There
is
sort
of
checklist
about
a
year
later,
where
they
go
back
and
see
how
the
facility
is
performing
so
I
I
haven't
heard
of
that
information.
Yet,
but
I
know
that
it'll
be
coming
forth
with
it.
The
facility
is
I
think,
roughly
just
a
little
more
than
a
year
old
I
think
it
opened
up
last
September.
So
this
is
a
virtually
a
brand-new
facility,
so
we
like
being
here
and
we're
happy
that
you're
here
also
just
a
couple
of
things.
C
If,
if
I
could
request
the
view,
we
have
a
lot
of
presenters
this
evening
and
I
would
like
to
just
go
through
the
presentation.
I
would
like
to
hold
your
questions
until
the
end.
So
if
you
have
a
you
know,
question
maybe
just
jot
it
down
and
then
at
the
end,
we'll
have
plenty
of
time.
They
answer
questions
and
the
appropriate
staff,
member
or
members
can
provide
answers
to
your
questions.
How
so
let
me
proceed
on
with
the
presentation:
that's
titled.
C
We
build
this
city
and
I
think
that
you
know
I'm
not
sure
exactly
if
we
do
build
it,
but
I
certainly
think
we
have
big
hand
and
everything
that
goes
on
in
the
city.
A
lot
of
people
don't
realize
it.
We
just
don't
take
care
of
streets
and
parks
and
environmental
services
and
all
that,
but
you
know
we
give
out
permits
we're
inspecting
things.
I
mean
we're
just
we
support
other
departments,
so
you
know
I
think
more
than
any
other
department
in
the
city.
C
We
are
so
interconnected
to
all
the
departments
and
to
all
the
residents
of
the
city
of
Pittsburgh.
So
hopefully,
when
we
go
through
this
presentation,
you'll
get
a
better
feel
or
an
idea
of
just
exactly
what
Public
Works
is
doing
and
has
done
for
you
over
the
years.
So
this
is
I
think
you
guys
have
all
been
given
a
packet
of
information.
Some
of
this
is
going
to
be
in
there,
but
this
is
just
to
touch
a
little
bit
on
the
organization
chart.
This
department
will
be
right.
C
Now
is
in
a
little
bit
of
a
transition
which
I'll
go
on
touch
on
a
little
bit
later.
We
are
losing
some
aspects
of
the
transportation
and
Engineering
Bureau.
Some
of
those
services
are
going
to
be
going
over
to
a
new
department
called
the
department
of
mobility
and
infrastructure,
which
I'm
not
sure
if
they've
presented
yet
or
will
be
presenting.
So
so
that's
a
little
flavor
to
our
four
bureaus
is
administration
operations
which
includes
parks
and
streets,
translation,
engineering
and
then
environmental
services.
C
So
this
is
just
a
little
snapshot
of
some
of
the
areas
that
were
responsible
for
and
some
quantities
of
items
that
we
take.
Care
of.
Some
of
these
numbers
are
constantly
changing,
so
they're
about
as
dated
right
now
as
possible,
but
tomorrow
these
figures
could
change,
but
we
have
quite
a
lot
on
our
plate
in
terms
of
miles
of
streets
and
how
many
walls,
and
how
many
steps
and
Literary
septic
holes
empty
and
how
many
parks
we
maintain
and
how
many
buildings
how
much
equipment
we
maintain.
C
That
just
gives
you
a
little
flavor
of
how
broad
and
diverse
this
department
really
is
so
in
some
previous
presentations.
I
guess
some
of
our
stuff
may
have
been
a
little
dry
and
we
were
told
hey
you
got
to
put
some
graphs
in
there,
people
like
to
see
numbers
and
graphs,
and
things
like
that.
So
we
have
a
few
graphs
here,
just
to
give
you
a
little
flavor
and
again,
this
is
just
right.
C
Now
2017,
it's
going
to
take
on
a
little
bit
of
a
different
picture
in
eighteen,
but
this
is
the
capital
budget
and
most
of
the
departments
here,
city
planning
and
for
the
leasing
Authority
permits
you
appiy
oii.
You
are
a
nobody's
quite
anywhere
near
you
know
what
we
had
now
before
mobility
infrastructure
came
on,
that
seventeen
million
was
probably
added
or
of
twenty
eight.
So
we
were.
We
were
responsible
for
forty
five
million
dollars
in
capital
around
the
city.
So
what
happens
a
lot
of
times?
C
Is
you
know
the
police
will
get
capital
money
in
their
budget
and
then
they
run
to
our
architects
in
the
Bureau
of
transportation
engineering
in
the
architecture
division
and
they
say.
Oh
you
got
to
work
on
this.
Please,
oh
and
you
got
this,
so
we
got
them
to
put
all
the
capital
related
items
that
would
be
touching
us
or
that
we
would
have
some
some
aspect
of
working
on
and
getting
it
put
into
our
budget.
C
So
this
one
does,
though,
reflect
the
mobility
and
infrastructure
and
more
likely
that
next
year,
that
this
figure
will
increase
a
little
bit
more
because
more
capital
bill
will
be
moving
over
to
domi.
This
is
our
operating
budget,
so
of
the
bureau's
operations
has
the
biggest
slice
of
the
pie
and
by
our
most
services,
fifteen
million,
that
we
have
a
number
of
trust
funds
here.
The
shade
tree
wayfinder,
a
rat
is
the
Allegheny
Regional
Asset
district.
C
So
part
of
our
this
is
I,
wanted
to
show
our
street
resourcing
program
and
try
to
give
everybody
a
picture
of
what
it's
been
like
over
the
last
well
in
this
case,
23
years,
and
so
the
target
any
year
that
we
pave
it.
You
know
we're
looking
to
do
somewhere
in
between
86
to
108
miles.
You
know,
asphalt
has
a
useful
life
of
roughly
10
to
12
years.
C
Too
many
years
this
is
the
average
over
the
23
year
period,
and
so
we
should
be
doing
86
to
180
we're
roughly
doing
like
half
that
so
over
20
years
we've
only
paved
half
the
the
miles
of
streets.
We
should
have
paved.
We
have
900
miles
of
asphalt.
Streets
basically
tells
you
your
system,
the
road
systems
and
failure,
but
this
administration,
thanks
to
City,
Council
and
and
of
course,
Mayor
Peduto.
We
came
in
in
14
and
this
was
a
budget
it
was
already
prepared
for
us.
C
There
was
nothing
we
could
do
for
it
was
a
budget
was
already
passed
for
14,
so
we
were
only
able
to
do
39.3
miles
15,
we
jacked
it
to
54.
We
increased
in
1658
and
I'm
gonna.
Tell
you
my
estimate
for
this
year.
I
believe
that
we
are
going
to
hit
65
miles,
okay,
we're
rising,
and
it's
it's
again
a
credit
to
our
City
Council
and
our
mayor.
That's
been
able
to
give
us
the
money
to
do
the
the
resurfacing
that
we've
needed
to
do
now.
C
You'll,
look
in
the
budget
and
you
might
see
15
million
dollars.
All
15
million
dollars
does
not
go
entirely
distribu
servicing.
There
are
other
aspects
of
the
program
we
have
to
put
on
thermoplastic
line,
striping,
there's
pothole
patching
materials,
there's
crack
sealing.
There
is
handicap
ramps.
Handicaps
ramps
have
really
eaten
into
the
budget
at
one
time
they
were
only
like
six
or
seven
hundred
dollars
to
do
a
handicap
ramp
now
with
the
truncated
domes
and
those
are
the
yellow
red
or
the
multicolored
rectangular
units
in
the
handicap.
C
Ramp
now
cost
us
up
to
seventeen
hundred
dollars.
This
year
alone,
out
of
our
paving
program,
we
had
to
commit
three
million
dollars.
Almost
three
million
dollars
just
to
putting
handicap
ramps
in
I
would
rather
have
taken
out.
Three
million
I
mean
we
want
to
do
handicap
ramps,
but
you
know
we
also
want
to
do
a
lot
more
paving
so
that
three
million
could
have
turned
into
Oh,
probably
about
15
twenty
more
miles,
so
we
go
back
into
the
program
every
year,
each
quarter.
We
look
at
our
budget
and
we've
been
able.
C
We
start
out
the
year,
thinking
that
we
were
only
going
to
do
about
48
miles
and
each
time
we
met.
We
found
that
we
were
seeing
some
savings
from
some
of
the
other
aspects.
Maybe
the
handicap
ramps
weren't
costing
as
much.
We
did
build
a
contingency
in,
etc,
etc,
and
so
we
were
able
to
add
mileage
and
we've
had
three
meetings
so
far
and
each
time
we've
added
two
miles
and
we're
now
up
to
around
53.
C
C
So
we've
had
this
co-op
the
last
few
years.
Now
it's
really
ballooned
it's
with
Columbia
Gas.
Now
it's
with
Pennsylvania
American
Water,
it's
with
Pennsylvania
or
Pittsburgh
Water
and
Sewer
Authority.
All
those
authorities
that
are
doing
work
all
around
the
city
we're
trying
our
best
to
at
least
match
those
utility
utility
work.
Now
we
can't
commit
our
entire
program
to
all
the
utility
work
going
on,
or
else
we
wouldn't
be
looking
at
any
other
streets.
C
So,
as
I
said,
we
feel
we've
had
that's
been
a
complaint
years
ago.
It
was
about
you
know.
As
soon
as
we
paved
the
street.
What
happened?
The
utility
company
came
in
and
dug
up
a
couple
pits,
and
then
they
never
fixed
it
right
or
it
looked
terrible.
Now
we
have
better
utility
coordination.
We
have
regular
meetings
with
them
on
a
monthly
basis
before
well.
Yeah
well,
I
said
earlier
that
we've
added
streets
before
we
add
those
streets.
C
C
So
when
we
put
our
plan
out
in
the
beginning
of
the
year,
you'll
see
the
streets,
I,
think
they're
done
sort
of
in
a
dark,
grey,
shading
I
think
you
can
hit
on
that
and
it'll
kind
of
tell
you
when
the
that
is
intended
to
be
paved.
When
we
first
started
out,
we
had
a
much
larger
window,
but
we've
now
tailored
those
things
down
and
the
only
reason
it
would
come
off
if
there's
some
other
extraordinary
situations
so
that
you
know
it
is
a
program.
That's
it's!
C
C
So,
as
I
said
they
you
know
they
they
come
up
on.
The
website
looks
like
that.
You
can.
Click
on
the
this
street
and
it'll.
Tell
you
that
this
tree
will
be
paved
sometime
within
this
two-week
period
in
you
know,
September
or
let's
pick
October
October
1
to
October
10.
So
it
gives
you
an
idea
that
you
to
plan
for
in
case
that's
your
street
being
paved
I,
also
believe
that
robocalls
are
done
to
let
people
know
so
a
lot
of
times.
C
You
know
you'll
see
the
no
cut,
no
parking
signs
go
up
in
the
past.
If
you
were
having
a
street
done,
you
had
the
door
knockers
put
on
your
door,
we've
kind
of
moved
away
from
that,
because
that
was
sort
of
labor
intensive
for
both
us
and
the
the
contractor.
So
now
what
we
do
is
we
use
PW
essays,
robocall
List
and
if
you're
living
on
a
street
that's
getting
paved,
you
should
have
gotten
a
call,
letting
you
know
that
notification.
C
So
you
can
then
move
your
vehicle
and
be
off
that
street
for
those
couple
days
anybody
experience
the
robo
calls
or
a
good
Street
anybody
here
not
have
any
of
their
streets
paved
or
whatever
Oh
Walter.
You
have
to
give
me
your
street,
so
we
can
make
you
happy
so
there's
that
there's
an
old
utility
coordination
when
they
used
to
come
in,
they
would
just
pave
half
that
street
and
then
let
the
other
half
go.
And
so
we
believe
that
we
have.
C
So
there's
anybody
that
you
guys
all
familiar
with
the
the
website
for
the
paving
the
restrictor
surfacing:
okay
I.
If
you
go
into
the
city's
website,
you
know
Public
Works
I
believe
that
there's
a
you
can
like.
There's
a
I
think
it's
on
the
right
hand
side
you
just
click
on
it.
There's
a
number
of
Technology
things
there
that
you
can
click
on
to
see
we'll
talk
about
few
of
them
later
on
in
the
presentation,
but
the
paving
is
one
of
them.
C
So
this
is
just
a
little
bit
enhanced
of
what
I
would
of
the
earlier
slide.
You
can
go
into
any
one
of
these
locations
to
see
what
streets
getting
paved
and
one
of
these
being
paved,
and
you
can
see
you
know
we're
not
just
in
any
one
particular
neighborhood
we're
trying
to
branch
ourselves
to
canvass
the
whole
city.
Okay,
doctor.
B
C
B
C
About
bird's
eye
view
is,
and
maulwi
is
correct.
There
is
a
wealth
of
information
on
that
site.
You
can
see
crimes
being
committed.
You
can
see
streets
being
done.
You
can
see
the
inspectors
from
PLI
where
they've
gone
to.
If
you
care
to
know
all
that
stuff,
it's
a
it's
a
wonderful
site.
It's
just
got
a
lot
of.
We
were
looking
at
it
the
other
day
for
another
purpose,
about
again
utility
coordination.
C
People
downtown
were
complaining
about
us
coming
in
and
and
working
while
they
were
having
a
conference,
and
so
we
get
them
from
all
angles.
There's
no
good
time
to
do
any
work
in
town
used
to
be
able
to
do
it
at
night.
Now,
there's
people
living
down
there,
so
there's
no
good.
So
it's
the
best
time
to
work
downtown.
It's
like
a
tack,
late
o'clock
till
about
10:30
and
that's
it
so
not
much.
You
can
do
in
the
two
and
a
half
hours.
C
C
You
know,
tech
thing
that
we've
deployed
it
was
back
in
14
also
was
the
snowplow
tracker.
Has
anybody
here
been
able
to
look
at
that
worth
regards
to
whether
your
street
was
salted
and
plowed
or
whatever
not
too
much
plow
in
the
last
couple
of
years?
I
hope
it
works
out
there
this
year
too,
so
so
you,
you
have
looked
at
it.
Okay,
so
if
you
haven't
again
it's
another
application
on
the
website
that
you
can
go
into
it's
only
activated
during
a
snow
event.
C
You
may
see
it
snow
and
then
it
may
not
snow
for
the
next
six
or
seven
hours,
and
you
all
think
that
the
snow
event
is
over
it's
not
over,
because
people
get
on
the
start,
get
on
the
phone
and
gonna
insult
my
street.
Is
there
still
more
snow
to
come?
We
have
to
wait
for
the
duration
of
that
event.
To
end
before
we
are
going
to.
You
know,
guarantee
you
that
we
will
get
to
every
one
of
your
streets
within
a
24
36
48
hour
period
depending
on
the
length
or
the
depth
of
snow.
C
But
this
is
a
you
know
again.
A
good
application
here,
you'll
see
a
map
like
this.
You
can
work
the
control
on
the
bottom
and
you
can
run
an
hour
and
see
what
the
streets
were
done.
You
can
see
what
where
the
truck
is.
Currently
you
can
click
on
your
Street
and
see
when
your
street
was
salted.
So
there's
a
lot
of
good
application.
There's
a
lot
of
good
information
here
that
I
would
out
ask
you
to
take
a
look
at
during
the
snow
event.
If
you
are
having
any
problems
with
snow
and
ice
control,.
C
C
We
did
a
pilot
project
in
the
West
End
of
the
city
for
about
what
bill
six
seven
months
period,
don't
like
that
yeah.
So
we
did
the
pilot
and
found
that
we
were
getting
all
sorts
of
data.
You
know
I
understand
on
our
cruise,
sometimes
that's
their
job
for
the
whole
day
they
get
in
a
truck
and
they
run
a
particular
route
and
they
look
at
120
garbage
cans
and
they
probably
don't
up
the
honor
in
20,
but
they
might
empty
40
or
50,
but
they
still
run
the
round
and
that
takes
the
day.
C
C
We
want
to
empty
it
a
little
bit
before
that
we
want
to
have
you
know
we
haven't
picked
that
what
that
criteria
is
going
to
be
yet,
and
it
might
be,
we
might
say
empty,
every
can
at
60%
four
or
higher,
so
we
found
cans
that
may
not
need
emptied
for
30
days.
We
might
say
that
that
can
doesn't
need
to
really
be
there.
We
might
be
able
to
take
that
can
of
redeploy
it
to
another
area
of
the
city,
that's
more
in
need.
C
The
the
software
will
tell
them
the
exact
route
that
they
should
take
the
empty
those
10
cans,
and
then
they
come
back
to
the
shop
and
they
actually
get
more
work
to
do
other
than
ride
around
for
seven
more
hours,
all
kind
of
a
bunch
empty
cans.
So
we
feel
that
we're
going
to
take
that
personnel
and
get
other
tasks
done
and
the
street
side
may
be
more
vacant.
Lots
cleaned
up,
maybe
more
vegetation,
clean,
cut,
there's
a
variety
of
tasks
that
can
be
done
with
those
personnel
rather
than
going
empty
of
literary
septic.
C
Then,
once
the
divisions
been
completed,
we
will
activate
it
and
start
collecting
that
data
and
seeing
how
well
the
divisions
are
performing
and
we
we
will
move
from
division
to
division,
and
then
we
will
finalize
this
in
2018.
We
I
think
we
have
enough
money
and
time
to
do
five
of
the
six
divisions,
so
the
last
division
will
be
done
early
in
eighteen
and
by
by
spring
of
eighteen.
We
shall
have
the
whole
system
intact.
C
So
this
is
sort
of
you
know,
look
it
you'll
see.
Cans
are
out
there
that
do
not
have
these
hoods
on
them.
You'll
see
your
cans
that
are
not
our
standard.
We
are
going
to
have
a
standard
literary
except
to
go
out
there
with
the
hood.
That'll
have
a
sensor
underneath
it,
and
that
sensor
is
just
always
sending
down
the
radar
so
to
speak,
to
detect
what
is
the
fill
level
of
that
little
receptacle?
C
And
it's
going
to
tell
us
so
we
can
also
be
proactive
to
litter
receptacles
like
on
Mount
Washington,
with
it
being
a
very
high
profile,
active
area.
If
we
know
that
those
cans
are
more
than
likely
to
be
filled
on
Saturday
or
Sunday,
and
don't
want
to
really
put
a
crew
on
or
have
to
call
crew
out,
especially
than
theum,
we
can
look
at
that
and
maybe
empty
them
on
Thursday
or
Friday
that
you
know
before
you,
even
if
they
may
be
only
a
twenty
or
thirty
percent.
C
But
then
those
cans
would
be
able
to
take
that
activity
through
the
weekend
and
then
we
can
get
back
at
it
on
Monday
without
having
to
you
know,
do
overtime
and
premium
pay.
So
you
know
my
staff
thinks
that
we're
going
to
see
maybe
a
30%
reduction
I'm
thinking
we
can
go
as
high
as
fifty
percent.
So
if
we
go
that
high,
that's
25
bodies
staying
in
the
division
doing
other
things
other
than
lower.
C
So
this
is
kind
of
data
from
the
pilot,
one
that
we
did.
I
I,
don't
know
that
this
is
going
to
be
exact,
but
it
just
give
you
a
flavor
of
what
we're
looking
at.
So
you
can
see
on
here,
993
3w,
that's
three
weeks.
Nine
days
five
days,
the
ones
in
red
bill
I
think
were
full
and
they
were.
They
were
already
full
for
a
day
two
days,
whatever
right.
C
Okay,
so
this
is
kind
of
what
it
looked
like
here's
one
ten
months
they
got
a
can
here
and
it's
right
EMAS
months,
the
the
amount
of
litter
and
that
can
at
that
pace
won't
be
empty.
It
won't
be
filled
for
ten
months
that
likely
as
akin
we're
going
to
pick
up
and
find
and
put
in
a
another
location
in
the
city
where
it's
going
to
better
serve
the
city.
So
again
we
the
data,
that's
going
to
come
out
now,
will
be
a
percentage.
C
It
will
be
telling
the
divisions
that
these
cans
are
60%,
full
they're,
70
percent,
full
three
percent
full
and
the
foreman
or
supervisor
will
hit
the
data
that
day
and
say
we
want
to
have
the
everybody
it's
over.
60
percent
it'll
spit
out
that
as
list
the
cans
might
be
30
might
before
you
might
only
be
10,
but
does
those
are
the
only
cans
we
dealt
with?
Crew
comes
back
in
does
other
jobs.
You
know
I
think
bill.
C
This
is
this
yeah
kind
of
saying
it
just
kind
of
tells
the
different
locations
where
they
were
at
these
are
the
locations
and
the
5th
division.
I
guess
is
the
percentage,
shelter
I
also
calculate,
say
a
ton
each
for
cubic
yards
or
square
yards.
So
we
can
figure
out
how
much
we're
saving
for
putting
in
the
landfills
and
such
and
then
these
are
the
late
cans
right.
C
E
Everyone,
my
name,
is
Marcel
Newman,
the
assistant
director
for
Public
Works,
Administration
I'm,
going
to
talk
about
just
a
few
areas
from
my
team
that
you
know
they
do
a
lot
of
mostly
personnel
issues.
We
do
a
lot
of
the
staffing,
the
trainings
such
things
as
sensitivity
issues,
and
we
are
also
right
now
transitioning
our
website
we're
making
huge
improvements
to
it.
E
We're
adding
you
know,
sort
of
like
apps,
like
you
have
on
your
phone,
where,
if
you
are
looking
for
volunteers
or
if
you're
looking
for
something
specific,
you
can
easily
go
to
it
and
find
it
so
that
should
be
completed
by
the
better
end
of
this
year.
The
next
thing
I
want
to
talk
about
is
our
warehouse.
We
have
a
warehouse
in
the
city,
Public
Works,
and
it
also
helps
with
city
parks
and
Parks
and
Recreation.
We
use
data
warehouse
for
delivering
of
tables
and
chairs
for
special
events.
E
We
also
have
19
divisions,
as
you
know,
and
we're
trying
to
centralize
all
our
purchasing
from
that
warehouse.
We're
moving
to
new
technologies
so
that
everything
can
be
standardized,
for
example,
for
buying
equipment,
we're
buying
it
from
the
same
vendor
so
that
when
we
need
to
when
we
need
to
repair
it,
we
can
take
it
to
that
same
vendor,
and
it's
all
will
be
standard
permits
and
inspections.
E
E
We
are
working
on,
we
were
talking
to
Council
about
permitting
or
other
facilities
such
as
deck,
hockey's
of
courts,
basketball,
courts,
tennis,
courts,
volleyball
courts,
so
that
that's
again
we're
transitioning
into
that.
Another
thing
we
do
on
our
team
is
maintenance
agreements
with
external
partners
and
organizations,
for
example.
E
I'll
also
talk
a
little
bit
more
about
volunteerism,
shelter,
rentals
and
community
gardens
on
the
next
slide.
So
if
you
are
neighborhood
organizer
and
would
like
to
organize
your
community
to
clean
up
a
park,
we
could
help
you
with
that.
We
have
applications
on
our
website,
and
this
is
the
new.
This
is
the
correct
place
on
our
website,
where
you
can
find
out
Nana
right
now.
E
E
We
can
also
work
with
you
if
you
have
some
other
beautification
ideas
for
your
parks.
I
know
you
are
working
on
a
class
project.
If
you
have
some
ideas
for
it,
I
can
work
with
you
and
give
you
permissions
and
perhaps
services
for
for
your
project,
Pok
shelters.
You
may
all
know
that
we
rent
our
park
shelters.
We
have
about
30
city
wide.
Most
of
them
are
in
a
major
regional
parks,
fractionally
Riverview
and
Highland
Park.
E
You
can
go
on
register,
Parks,
Pittsburgh,
PA
gov,
and
you
can
reserve
your
shelter
pay
for
it
online
and
just
be
done
with
it.
So
you
don't
have
to
come
into
any
city,
Pittsburgh
facilities
or
downtown
to
reserve
your
shelter.
The
fees
are
from
75
to
about
250
and
if
you
want
to
buy
an
alcohol
permits
at
$75,
also
our
our
team,
though
we
have
Gardens
throughout
the
city.
E
We
have
huge
garden
at
Highland,
Park,
another
one
in
beach
view
and
another
one
is
at
Ben
Deshawn,
which
is
on
the
south
side
slopes
and
MLK
and
the
Hill
District.
So
those
are,
they
used
to
be
parks
while
there
are
still
parks,
but
they
we
have
plots
there
and
we
can
issue
licenses
for
individual
plots.
If
you'd
like
to
have
maintained
a
garden
grow
your
own
vegetables
I.
Can
we
can
help
you
with
that?
I?
D
Evening,
folks,
and
thanks
for
coming
out
tonight
and
find
it
out
what
a
little
bit
about
what
our
department
does,
my
name
is
Bill
green,
the
operations
superintendent
for
Public
Works
I
oversee
the
street
maintenance
division
of
which
there
are
six
construction
division,
cleaning
liens
together
with
PLI
permits,
licenses
and
inspections.
We
are
very
actively
cleaning
up
several
homeless
camps
throughout
the
city
and
and
the
icing
on
the
special
special
events
committee
and
I'll
speak
to
each
one
of
those.
D
The
city
has
six
maintenance
divisions
carved
up
in
the
city,
the
smallest
of
which
is
the
sixth
division,
which
is
a
central
business
district
strip
district
and
a
bit
of
the
north
shore
between
the
stadiums.
It's
very
active
with
events.
So
that's
why
it's
small
an
area
there's
not
as
well
as
more
and
more
folks
live
in
downtown,
but
obviously
there's
aren't
a
lot
of
residents
in
that
particular
division.
We
operate
11
street
sweepers
sweeping
roughly
20
posted
routes
as
well
as
the
1200
or
I.
Guess
it's
1,200
miles
of
city
streets.
D
I'm
also
responsible
for
the
pothole
crews
that
go
out
and
working
with
the
mayor's
service
center.
We
react
to
three
one
ones
that
folks
call
in
and
that
usually
drives
our
day
as
far
as
pothole
complaints
go.
So
we
know
where
to
go,
and
you
know
address
those
concerns
of
the
residents.
We
also
maintain
the
trails
throughout
the
city,
not
in
the
parks
but
the
other
rails-to-trails
city,
that
many
of
you
probably
use.
If
your
bike
or
blade
or
a
runner
just
walk,
we
maintain
those
as
well
I'm,
also
responsible
for
snow
and
ice
control.
D
I
wish
I
could
be
responsible
for
snow
and
ice
control,
but
we
have
we
react
to
snow
and
ice
and
other
weather-related
emergencies
and
Mike
Mike
spoke
with
to
our
snowplow
tracker,
which
is
a
great
tool
to
sit
in
the
office
and
see
how
the
guys
are
doing.
If
you
go.
If
you
ever
go
on
that
site,
the
darker
the
street
gets
the
more
it
has
been
traveled
or
treated,
but
not
necessarily
treated.
D
It
just
means
it
was
traveled
that
much
you
may
be
going
back
to
the
barn
to
get
more
salt,
and
it
just
makes
the
street
darker,
but
when
the
street
turns
a
little
darker,
you'll
notice
that
that
that
means
it
has
been
treated
and
you
can
see
each
truck
in
each
position.
You
know
his
location
and
what
time
you
dial
into
your
street,
you
can
see
what
time
it
was
treated
and
we
also
used
us
as
managers.
We
use
it
as
a
tool
to
bear
out
some
claims
that
are
made
against
our
drivers.
D
F
D
Mirror
the
construction
division
is
located
than
Lawrenceville,
underneath
the
62nd
Street
bridge.
They
maintain
the
city,
steps
and
different
city
facilities
and
sidewalks.
We
have
over
600
sets
of
city
steps
totaling
over
22
miles,
so
that's
quite
a
Herculean
task
and
they're
getting
more
and
more
usage
as
people
start
to
appreciate
the
city
and
appreciate
the
steps
that
connect
all
these
other
neighborhoods
folks
are
riding
public
transit,
which
is
why
they
were
built
in
the
first
place
to
get
down
to
the
main
thoroughfare.
D
So
you
can
get
on
the
streetcar,
so
folks
are
riding
more
and
more
public
transit
and
living
in
places
that
they
don't
need.
A
car.
Don't
want
a
car,
so
they're
getting
more
and
more
usage.
I
also
worked
with
permits
licenses
and
inspections
PLI
to
address
clean
and
liens
in
the
city.
A
clean
and
lean
property
is
something
that
you
complain
or
someone
lodges
a
complaint
against
the
particular
property
for
overgrowth
unsightly.
The
gutters
torn
down.
It's
leaking
gutters
are
leaking
onto
your
property.
D
There
are
a
myriad
of
conditions
that
they
address,
so
PLI
sends
an
inspector
out
and
inspects
the
property
they
get.
One
notice
and
if
the
if
the
property
owner
addresses
it
that
goes
away
its
rien
spected
in
another
30
days,
60
days
total
and
after
that
another
30
days,
we
get
a
notice
or
the
homeowner
has
sent
a
notice
of
clean
and
lean
and
Public
Works
goes
and
addresses
the
property.
D
We
can't
maintain
it
in
perpetuity,
but
we
can
at
least
get
the
hedges
cut
and
get
the
debris
removed
if
it's
a
danger
to
the
kids
walking
to
the
bus
or
walking
to
school.
You
know
the
hedges
are
overgrown.
The
grass
is
overgrown
just
unsightly,
but
we
cannot
keep
revisiting
it
and
then
the
property
owner
will
be
served,
a
notice
of
lien
how
much
money
we
spent
to
clean
up
the
property
and
that
property
will
be
leaned
in
that
amount
and
another
part
of
my
day
is
addressing
homeless
camps
throughout
the
city.
D
Obviously
it
is
a
problem,
that's
bigger
than
myself
for
my
department,
but
we
do
what
we
can.
After
all,
these
folks,
some
of
them
want
to
live
in
those
conditions.
Some
of
them
have
just
happened
on
hard
times.
There
are
a
number
of
service
groups
out
there
that
help
them.
One
I
work
with
is
operation
safety
net,
which
is
run
by
Mercy
outreach.
D
It's
over
on
the
south
side,
and
a
lot
of
the
homeless
camps
are
in
town
or
Southside
or
along
these
trails
only
because
the
services
that
they
need
are
closed
and
walkable
like
the
Red,
Door
or
The
Salvation
Army,
or
where
they
can
get
a
clean
sleeping
bag,
or
you
know
a
hot
meal
or
they're.
You
know
they
need
medication,
but
when
we
do
go
in
these
homeless
camps,
we
give
them
ample
notice
that
we're
coming
in
to
clean
up
I
mean
nobody
has
to
live
like
that.
D
Although
so
we
give
them
ample
notice
because
they
do
have
some
rights
and
we
just
have
to
be
respectful
of
that
and
we'll
tell
them
to
make
sure
they
take
their
medicine.
Take
everything
that
is
of
value
to
you,
because
anything
that's
left
here
is
going
to
be
thrown
away,
whether
it's
anything
couches
lamps
you'd,
be
surprised
what
we
find,
but
sometimes
we
just
place
a
30-yard
roll-off
box
there
and
the
actually,
the
residents
of
the
camp
pitch
in
and
clean
do
their
own
housekeeping,
which
is
nice
and
Chris.
D
Roach
with
operation
safety
has
been
a
great
tool,
great
asset,
and
we
also
work
with
PennDOT
sure
you
see
the
underneath
the
overpasses
and,
and
that
is
a
concern
to
PennDOT,
obviously
for
safety
reasons,
what
happened
in
Atlanta,
so
we
work
work
with
PennDOT
and
they
fence
some
places
in
like
if
you're
familiar
with
the
Northside
Anderson
Street.
They
fence
that
in
second
Avenue
at
the
10
Street
Bridge,
if
you're
familiar
and
the
other
thing
I
do
I
sit
on
the
Special
Events
Committee
as
a
department.
D
We
support
the
special
events
of
whether
it's
closing
roads
or
placing
barricades
stages.
They
present
the
special
event.
The
event
holder
presents
to
the
committee
and
outlines
his
his
event
and
how
he
wants
to
make
a
footprint
a
festival,
footprint,
a
parade.
Obviously,
there's
some
big-ticket
item
the
st.
Patrick's
Day,
the
marathon,
the
regatta.
Those
are
the
big
ones.
We
we
also
have
you
know,
hop,
skip
and
a
jump
on
the
North
Shore
every
other
week
to
raise
money
for
any
number
of
things,
so
they
all
require
our
support
and
they
all
come
in.
D
They
present
to
the
committee
and
we
vote
yes
or
no
and
give
them
the
assets
that
they
need
and
the
one
thing
that
has
happened-
and
this
is
just
the
way
of
the
world
that
we
have
been
more
focused
on
the
mass
gathering
and
crowd
safety.
Obviously,
what's
happened
in
France
and
other
places
is
a
concern
to
the
Public
Safety
Department
AHS.
D
So
we
have
gone
to
placing
trucks
and
other
immovable
objects
or
hard
to
move
objects
where
there
is
a
mass
gathering
or
a
crowd
just
for
just
for
safety
sake
and
the
trucks
work
easily,
because
they're
movable,
if
you
have
to
get
an
emergency
piece
of
equipment
and
there.
If
someone
has
a
hard
episode
or
something
like
that,
so
that's
about
it.
I'll
turn
it
over
to
someone
else.
C
The
bill
presented
the
snow
and
ice
program
since
we're
gonna
be
getting
into
that
relatively
in
the
next
month
or
two,
hopefully
not,
but
we'll
see
just
to
understand
our
scope.
It
isn't
just
about
taking
care
of
the
streets.
C
C
We
have
to
do
trails,
we
have
to
do
bike
lanes,
that's
it
so
a
lot
of
people,
just
you,
know
the
cars
they
get
upset
when
they
see
us
on
a
trail
or
a
bike
lane
or
whatever.
But
those
are
all
the
expectations,
everybody
who
rides
a
bike,
people
who
jog
and
run
you
wouldn't
think
they're
running
as
snow,
but
they
do
run
in
the
snow
and
so
we're
responsible
for
all
those
things.
And
you
know
bridges
are
unique,
I
mean.
Where
do
you
put
the
snow?
C
You
can
put
it
back
out
in
the
street
that
we
just
plowed
or
you
throw
it
over
the
fence
down
below,
like
the
Bloomfield
bridge
down
below
as
a
park.
So
you
know
H
each
thing
has
its
own
unique
way
of
taking
care
of
it
steps.
You
know
the
I
think
we
have
23
miles
of
steps.
So
what
we
you
know,
what
the
mayor's
Task
us
with
is
to
start
building
in
bridge
sidewalks
some
steps,
and
we
started
doing
that
last
year.
C
I
can't
give
you
exact
mileage,
but
we
started
to
look
at
the
park,
crews
and
the
street
crews
and
working
that
in
their
plan.
So,
while
the
you
know
when
the
park
crews
go
around,
they
might
hit
a
couple
of
streets
and
steps
and
their
route.
We've
used
specialty
divisions
that
are
not
special
they're
not
presenting
here
tonight.
But
we
have
you,
know:
construction
division,
Traffic,
Division
facilities,
division,
paving
division,
they
all
have
personnel
that
we
can
utilize.
C
So
when
it's
snow
and
the
Traffic
Division
is
not
going
to
be
putting
up
signs
or
painting
anything.
So
we
can
utilize
them
to
take
care
of
snow
and
ice
control,
saying
with
construction
they're
not
going
to
be
doing
any
projects
we've
been,
can
better
use
them
on
the
snow
and
ice
issues
and
when
the
snow
goes
away
and
melts
or
is
in
better
shape,
they
can
go
back
to
doing
the
things
that
they
do
in
our
normal
basis.
C
So
each
year
we
will,
we
will
tend
to
incorporate
more
and
more
of
these
assets
into
our
game
plan.
It
just
won't
be
streets
and
parks,
sidewalks
and
roads,
it'll
be
steps
and
more
steps,
more
Bridge,
sidewalks,
etc,
etc,
etc.
Don't
mention
we
have
1,200
miles
of
streets
and
I.
Don't
want
you
to
get
confused
when
I
did
say
earlier.
We
had
not
hired
miles
of
asphalt
streets,
so
we
have
900
miles
of
asphalt,
streets,
170,
miles
of
concrete
and/or,
brick
and
block
stone.
So
brick
and
block
stone
are
the
old
cobblestone
streets.
C
They
have
like
such
nice
character
that
sometimes
they've
paved
over
to
those
I
like
to
keep
the
character
as
best
we
can,
and
we
have
hundred
thirty
miles
of
streets
that
we
do
for
the
state.
There
are
state
roads
that
go
through
the
city,
so
we
are
responsible
for
doing
those,
but
we
do
get
reimbursed
by
the
state
I
think
somewhere
near
to
six
or
seven
hundred
thousand
dollars,
they'll
pass
for
a
winter
season,
and
if
there
is
an
extraordinary
winter,
I
mean
that's
the
basis.
They'll
give
us
extra
money
the
last
two
years.
C
We
have
not
had
an
extraordinary
winter
and
we've
gotten
extra
money.
So
I'm
not
sure
why,
but
we're
not
certainly
not
going
to
turn
it
down.
We
will
take
all
the
money
we
can
get
from
them.
So
all
right,
so
the
next
Bureau
of
Bureau
of
operations,
superintendent
Paulin,
is
here,
but
not
a
I'm
going
to
fill
in
form
tonight,
but
he'll
be
here
in
case.
We
have
to
answer
any
questions.
C
I'll
put
them
on
a
hot
seat
for
that,
but
I'll
do
a
little
bit
of
the
presentation
for
him,
so
our
Park
divisions
as
bill
said
there
are
six
street
divisions
and
there's
also
six
park
divisions.
They
are
not
parallel.
They
do
not
share
the
same
geographic
boundaries
and
you'll
see
that
in
the
packets
that
are
handed
out
there,
I
think
there
are
maps
showing
the
specific
divisions
and
the
neighborhoods
that
they
overlap,
but
all
the
park
divisions
work
off
of
a
standards
and
procedures
for
maintaining
the
parks
all
the
different
assets.
C
This
is
just
a
header
page,
but
it's
usually
something
of
about
a
thicker
almost
as
thick
as
a
Bible,
but
you
know
it's
documentation
that
the
foreman
used
to
convey
down
to
the
staff
so
that
the
the
facilities
are
being
maintained
on
a
consistent
basis,
too
much
we
were
seeing
that
you
know
one
division
was
cutting
grass
one
way.
Another
division
was
cutting
grass
another
way
and
when
those
people
transferred
to
that
division,
they
weren't
doing
it
the
same
way.
C
We
tend
to
have
everybody
doing
generally
the
same
thing
the
same
way,
so
it's
consistent
through
the
whole
system
and
the
document
the
documentation
is
written
and
such
that
it's
pretty
easy
that
if
anybody
here
was
to
come
work
for
us
and
work
in
a
park
and
say
I
gave
you
the
turf
maintenance,
documentation,
you'd
know
exactly
where
to
go
when
to
do
it,
how
to
do
it?
Why,
and
when
you
know
that's,
you
know
too
many
times
we're.
C
You
know
talking
new
people
coming
in
it's
okay
to
have
training,
and
you
know
that's
kind
of
in-service
training
sessions,
but
a
lot
of
times.
It's
just.
We
need
to
use
that
documentation
to
make
sure
we're
getting
consistency
through
our
parks,
so
all
our
assets,
the
courts,
the
ball
fields,
the
turf,
the
invasive
species,
the
trees,
etc,
etc.
All
those
have
programs
and
they're
all
sort
of
in
a
reactive
about
how
to
mate.
How
did
how
we
perform
that
service
and
a
lot
of
times
it's
to
try
to
be
as
proactive
as
possible?
C
You
know
kind
of
playground.
We
don't
want
to
go
and
take
the
truck
and
maybe
go
there.
Pick
up
the
paper
empty,
the
trash
yeah,
they
might
go
there
and
encounter
a
swing
seats
missing
if
they
have
that
on
a
truck
rather
than
telling
the
going
back
and
getting
one,
they
can
be
doing
things
proactively.
So
that's
the
way
the
documentation
is
written.
It
gives
a
choice
of
both
manual
and
mechanical
methods,
a
lot
of
times.
C
You
know
the
laborers
and
such
would
like
to
use
the
manual
way
because
it
sort
of
lasts
a
little
bit
longer.
But
that's
where
the
foremen
need
to
encourage
that
hey
you
take
the
blower
out.
You
take
the
vacuum
out:
bah
blah
blah.
So
every
that
all
the
six
divisions
work
off
of
that
standards
and
procedures
for
maintaining
their
parks.
C
This
past
year,
we
implemented
no
pesticides
to
be
used
in
parks.
That's
put
a
little
bit
of
a
challenge
on
the
staff.
I
think
Tom
you're
still
trying
to
figure
it
out,
but
I
just
don't
think
pesticides
fit
in
a
park
environment.
There
are
other
ways
to
do
it.
You
know
I
almost
I'm,
a
licensed,
applicator
I,
think
Tom
your
license.
Applicator
too
many
times
we
go
to
the
training
courses
and
they're
supposed
to
be
telling
you
about
IPM
integrated
pest
management.
Pesticides
should
be
the
last
thing
chosen.
There's
three
other.
C
You
know
practices
to
be
done
before
you
get
to
using
chemicals,
but
whenever
you
go
to
training,
what's
the
thing
you
hear
all
the
time?
There's
a
new
chemical,
here's,
a
new
chemical,
here's,
a
new
chemical.
So
you
know
we've
made
a
decision
about
no
pesticides,
because
we
believe
there's
other
ways
to
take
care
of
the
problem.
So
you
know
we're
still
trying
to
get
over
that
hurt
a
little
bit.
You
may
see
ball
fields
that
have
a
little
bit
more
grass
in
them
than
normal.
You
might
see
some.
C
C
C
C
Think
it's
I
I
think
it's
great
that
director
Griffith
supported
that
and,
of
course,
that
C
Council
passed
that
measure
and
every
year
you
know
we're,
given
that
you
know
we're
given
stuff
from
the
Trust
for
Public
Land
and
the
NRP
a
with
regards
to
how
we
rate
around
the
city
with
regards
to
our
parks,
and
we
do
have
about
160
parks.
We
certainly
have
a
need
to
clean
house
a
little
bit,
there's
probably
some
house
some
facilities
that
we
could
probably
reduce,
make
other
facilities,
enhance
them
a
little
bit
better.
C
But
with
the
with
the
Trust
for
Public,
Land
and
NRP
a
you
know,
we
just
weren't
hitting
favorable.
You
know
there
we
were.
We
were
really
low
in
the
rankings
and
that's
the
problem
with
having
sort
of
a
split
department.
You
know
we
are
responsible
for
the
maintenance
of
the
parks,
Parks
and
Recreation
mall.
We
have
they
presented
yet.
Okay,
so
you'll
hear
from
director
Griffith,
he
is
basically
responsible
for
the
programming
in
the
parks,
but
ideally
we
have
to
collectively
put
our
data
together
to
provide
that
information
to
tpo
and
then
our
PA.
C
So
there
were
years
where
there
really
wasn't
a
thorough
I,
don't
believe
there
was
a
really
a
thorough
job
done
on
the
the
data,
and
so
we
really
I
think
we
did
a
really
knock
up
job
this
year
and
the
information
that
we
turned
in
I
feel
very
confident
with
working
with
parks
and
work
with
my
fiscal
office
and
we've
elevated
ourselves
up
that
ladder
and
we
can
justify
every
expense,
so
I
think
they
were
missing
some
numbers
before
we
got
better,
there's
still
a
long
way
to
go,
but
we're
not
as
bad
as
some
of
the
other
cities.
C
As
we
looked
I
mean
we're
really
as
good
as
some
of
the
really
favorable
parks
around
the
country.
In
terms
of
how
many,
how
many,
how
much
tax
assets
we
have
for
10,000
residents,
you
know
we
probably
have
more
pools
per
resident
than
anybody
in
any
city.
We
have
a
lot
of
playgrounds,
so
we
have
a
lot
of
assets,
a
lot
of
things
we
can
be
proud
of,
but
there's
also
a
lot
of
things
we
don't
have
enough
of,
and
you
know
one
is,
we
don't
have
a
lot
of
acreage.
C
We
have
3,000
acres,
you
go
to
other
cities
and
there's
you
know,
there's
they're
gulping
up
every
square
inch
of
green
that
they
can
get
add
in
their
acreage,
and
that's
certainly
our
goal
too,
and
we
also
want
to
golf
it
up
and
add
it
when
we
can
certainly
be
in
a
position
to
maintain
it
properly.
I
don't
want
to
add
on
a
hundred
acre
park
and
not
have
the
resources
that
they
care
of
it
properly.
C
And
they
had
done
that
well
for
a
few
years
and
I
think
they
went
back
and
they
re
instituted
the
inventory
to
get
a
better
picture
of
the
the
landscape
and
I
think
we
have
what
33,000
Street
trees.
Now
these
are
the
ones
that
you
go
up
and
down
the
street.
We
don't
I
think
there
is
a
count.
For
you
know
all
the
trees
are
in
the
woodland
and
in
the
parks
and
all
that.
But
these
are
just
the
streets
that
you
know
drive
down.
C
You
see
all
the
oaks
and
the
maples
and
all
that
kind
of
stuff,
so
we
have
33,000
trees
and
now
they
know
you
know
the
game
plan
in
terms
of
taking
care
of
those
they're,
removing
the
the
hazardous
ones
pruning
the
hazardous
trees,
etc,
etcetera,
etcetera.
Five
years
ago,
six
years
ago
we
may
have
had
12
people
working
in
forestry.
We
added
five
tree
pruner
positions
since
that
time,
we've
reduced
it
by
two
but
added
two
skilled
laborers
to
take
care
of
the
they
go
around
with
the
stump
cutting
machine.
C
So
when
the
trees
are
cut,
they
go
down
and
remove
the
stumps.
So
we
that
we
have
now
18
people
working
in
forestry
to
give
you
a
picture
of
what
it
was
like
years
ago.
You
know
the
city
hasn't
gotten
any
smaller,
that
the
number
of
trees
has
certainly
increased,
especially
from
maybe
3040
years
ago,
and
the
crew
at
that
time
was
around
33
to
39
people
taking
care
of
the
city
of
Pittsburgh.
C
So
you
know,
I
will
tell
you
that
for
many
many
years
we
were
working
with
12,
a
third
of
that
to
take
care
of
the
same
sized
city
and
a
growing
population
of
trees.
So
we've
gotten
better.
We've
increased
the
number
we've
got
more
tree,
pruners
it's
a
hard
job
as
they
get
older,
it's
harder
and
harder,
but
we
can
prune
trees.
We
don't
need
aerial
bucket
trucks.
We
have
guys
who
can
climb.
So
if
I
don't
have
a
truck,
Tom
doesn't
have
a
truck,
they
can
throw
a
rope
up
in
the
tree.
C
They
can
get
up
in
that
tree.
They
can
prune
it
and
they
can
take
it
down
without
it
without
a
bucket
truck.
So
if
I
had,
if
I
had
no
vehicles,
I
could
still
put
a
tree
clout
tree
printers
up
in
trees,
taking
care
of
tree
work.
So
we
do
want
to
continue
to
look
at
our
resources.
Continue
to
add
to
that
staff,
but
I
think
the
thing.
The
one
thing
that's
really
important
is
that-
and
this
probably
has
happened
in
a
lot
of
your
communities.
C
There's
a
lot
of
trees
being
planted
out
there
and
I.
Think,
before
they're
planted
they'd
look
to
see
that
there's
a
group
of
three
tenders
that
will
take
care
of
those
trees
so
think
about
that
years
ago,
when
all
those
trees
were
being
planted.
Nobody
was
looking
at
him
for
20
years
and
then
they
were
passed
more
likely.
They
were
always
on
our
plate,
but
we
just
hadn't
had
the
time
to
go
to
those
little
trees.
Those
trees
grew
grew
wrong.
You
never
had
the
right
training,
prunings
and
all
that
stuff.
C
Now
we're
inheriting
trees
when
it's
getting
beyond
the
tree
tenders
we're
getting
trees
that
are
in
much
better
shape.
Healthier
trees
will
take
less
to
take
care
of
them
rather
than
having
to
cut
them
down
because
they
weren't
trained,
pruned
right
or
you
know,
whatever
the
reason
might
be,
and
it
might
have
a
disease
or
whatever.
So
the
three
tender
program
is
very
successful.
I
know
that
our
city
force
to
release
a
trophy
is
a
big
part
of
that
and
working
with
three
Pittsburgh.
C
So,
if
there's
a
community
here
that,
if
you
you
can
advocate
for
getting
trees
planted
through
tree
pittsburgh,
there's
money
from
tree
vitalize,
which
is
a
state
funded
private
program
and
we'll
be
happy
to
play
a
plant
trees
with
you
as
long
as
there's
a
kind
of
a
committed
volunteer
group
that
will
help
take
care
of
those
trees,
at
least
for
the
next
five
or
six
years.
Until
maybe
it
gets
beyond
your
scope.
C
Okay
and
the
last
area
is
to
have
equipment
division
where
they're
responsible
for
sixteen
hundred
pieces
of
equipment
or
roughly
line
trimmers
low
line,
trimmers
lawn
mowers,
things
that
you
might
be
using
in
your
houses
all
the
way
up
to
well.
We
used
to
have
a
crane,
but
we
sold
that
so
what's
our
biggest
piece
of
equipment,
great
all
yeah,
so
a
big
great
old
machine.
This
big
truck
scoops
out
scrapes
the
soil,
you've
probably
seen
it
without
realizing
what
it
might
be.
C
Sixteen
hundred
pieces
of
equipment
and
we
have
roughly
seven
mechanics
doing
repairing
that
equipment.
Five
heavy
equipment,
repair
specialists
and
two
equipment-
repair
specialists,
the
two
equipment,
fair,
especially,
are
generally
park,
related
equipment
and
the
h
er
SS
are
the
larger.
You
know
the
the
tractors,
the
salt,
the
plows
and
the
trucks,
the
salt
spreaders,
the
larger
heavy
equipment
that
they
maintain
all
right.
So
so
that's
it
for
parks
operations.
Let's
see
who's
up
next.
C
This
again
is
the
bureau
of
transportation
engineering
and,
as
I
said,
this
was
a
much
larger
bureau
before
and
a
lot
of
that
has
gone
over
to
the
department
of
mobility
and
infrastructure.
The
remaining
piece
of
going
into
2018
will
be
the
construction
services
architecture
and
the
facilities
maintenance.
C
But
that's
a
you
know:
that's
six
people
to
design
parks,
160
parks,
300
buildings-
you
know-
that's
that's
I
mean
again,
they're,
not
all
being
done
in
one
year's
time.
But
if
you
go
and
look
in
the
capital
budget,
you
will
see
that
in
the
last
year
this
year
and
next
year,
there's
a
lot
of
deliverables
on
the
record
for
that
staff.
C
To
be
doing
so,
we
are
going
to
be
ramping
up
the
facilities
division
next
year,
such
that
we're
going
to
probably
be
going
up
to
almost
14
people
there'll
be
at
least
12
senior,
regular
and
associate
project
managers,
and
then
there
will
be
underneath
them.
There
will
be
a
combination
of
our
facilities,
division,
which
is
at
1807
Fifth,
Avenue
they're,
the
ones
that
take
care
of
the
buildings.
They
have
the
HVAC
techs.
C
They
have
the
plumbers,
they
have
some
carpenters,
they
have
some
station
engineers
they're
the
ones
that
are
sort
of
taken
care
of
inside
of
the
buildings
like
this,
then
there's
a
construction
division,
that's
out
at
62nd
Street,
underneath
the
62nd
Street
Bridge
out
in
Lawrenceville
that
construction
division
basically
has
a
lot
of
the
exterior
work
they
do.
They'll
do
walls
they'll
do
steps,
they
can
do
pour
concrete
roadways,
I
mean
they're,
a
very
talented
bunch.
C
They
rebuild
playgrounds,
so
there
are
more
exterior
and
facilities
is
more
interior,
but
the
reality
is
that
they
both
are
operating
with
trades
people.
They
both
have
carpenters,
they
have
cement
finishers,
they
have
plumbers
iron
workers.
The
idea
is
we're
going
to
put
all
those
trades
together
under
one
roof.
C
Additionally,
there
is
a
warehousing
factor
with
facilities
and
at
the
62nd
Street
facility.
Separate
of
construction
is
our
warehouse
that
delivers
all
the
materials
that
to
Tom
and
Bill's
crews.
So
they're
we're
going
to
look
at
that
merging
construction
facilities
and
warehouse
under
one
roof
to
take
care
of
the
exterior
and
interior
needs
of
the
city.
So
the
bureau
next
year
will
have
an
assistant
director
of
facilities.
C
There
will
be
that
enhanced
architecture
division
and
then
we
will
then
condense
the
construction
facilities
and
warehouse
under
one
roof,
and
we
think
that
that
structure
will
have
us
taking
care
of
these
facilities
in
a
much
faster,
more
efficient
pace.
We're
going
through
a
study
right
now
to
see
if
there
is
a
need
to
enhance
the
numbers
of
trades
people
to
meet
the
needs
of
all
those
buildings
and
all
those
parks.
C
I
believe
that
they're
outside
of
the
city
I,
believe
they're
in
you
know:
Ross
Township,
cranberry
whatever
and
they're
already
situated,
and
they
don't
necessarily
want
to
move
in.
Have
they
already
have
a
family
and
are
situated
out
there?
So
you
know
we
need
plumbers,
we're
having
trouble
getting
plumbers,
we're
having
trouble
getting
some
electricians,
I.
Think
there's
there's
one
other
position:
what
is
it
a
bricklayer?
So
you
know
those
we've
filled,
some
of
them,
we've
not
filled
all
of
them
and
most
of
those
positions
have
remained
vacant
for
most
of
the
year.
C
We're
continuing
to
do
our
outreach
to
personal
and
civil
service
to
reach
out
to
the
unions
anywhere.
We
can
to
try
to
to
bring
that
talent
into
the
city,
so
we
can
fill
those
vacancies
and
then
create
those
that
enhance
the
vision.
Okay,
see
what's
next
all
right,
so
our
final
presentation
will
be
for
the
bureau
of
environmental
services
and
assistant
director
bill.
Klem
Yvette's
will
be
presenting
along
with
Sean
Michael
all
right.
Thank.
H
You
good
evening
and
again
thanks
for
coming
out,
we
it's
an
honor
to
present
in
front
of
you
folks.
We
would
appreciate
you
taking
the
time
to
come
out.
It
shows
how
involved
you
are
and
care
about
the
city
of
Pittsburgh.
So
thank
you
very
much.
As
Mike
said,
my
name
is
Bill.
Avouch
I'm,
the
assistant
director
and
with
me
tonight
is
Sean
wago
he's
going
to
talk
to
you
a
little
bit
about
recycling
when
I'm
finished,
with
the
topic
of
garbage.
H
We
are
responsible
for
the
refuse
and
recycling
collection
throughout
the
city
of
Pittsburgh.
We
offer
refuse
collection
once
a
week
from
your
households
and
recycling
were
there
every
other
week.
We
have
approximately
200
employees
about
160
of
those.
Do
the
actual
collections
and
I
need
to
tell
you
it's
an
honor
for
me
to
say
that
I
work
with
those
folks,
because
they're
very
hard-working
folks,
I
think
a
lot
of
times.
H
People
don't
realize
how
dangerous
that
job
is
when
they're
out
there
they're
out
in
all
the
elements,
there's
things
that
they're
collecting
that
all
of
you
want
to
get
rid
of,
and
you
just
want
to
get
it
away
from
your
house.
So
these
folks
are
the
ones
entrusted
it
taking
it
and
getting
it
away
from
your
house.
Our
budget
for
2017
is
almost
16
million
dollars.
H
We
run
36
refuse
routes
every
day.
34
of
those
are
in
the
city
of
Pittsburgh,
and
for
some
of
you
don't
know
we
actually
do
refuse
collection
in
the
the
borough
of
Wilkinsburg.
We
have
two
trucks
out
there
every
day
that
we
collect
and
we've
been
doing
that
for
a
number
of
years.
Now
we
have
ten
recycling
routes,
residential
that
we're
collecting
your
residential
recycling
every
other
week
and
we
collect
from
about
a
hundred
and
fifteen
thousand
households.
H
H
You
know,
refuse
you
put
it
out
there
and
you
wonder
what
happens
to
it.
You
go
to
bed
at
night,
you
wake
up
in
the
morning
a
lot
of
times
or
you
come
home
from
work
and
it's
gone.
So
you
wonder
like
what
the
heck
happened
to
it,
we're
taking
that
stuff
to
to
landfills.
We
have
four
divisions:
two
of
our
divisions
go
to
the
Monroeville,
the
central
and
eastern
part
of
the
city
and
the
other
to
go
out
towards
Finley
Township
out
route
20
to
30,
that's
a
southern
and
northern.
H
We
do
that
for
operational
reasons,
it's
more
efficient
for
us
to
do
that.
We
collect
about
we
landfill
about
eighty
seven.
Eighty
eight
thousand
tons
a
year
that
actually
gets
land
filled
and
it's
the
cost
of
the
taxpayer
is
about
2.2
million
dollars
a
year
that
roughly
averages
out
to
about
twenty
five
twenty
five
dollars,
a
ton,
the
recycling
material
that
we
collect.
It
goes
to
a
MuRF
of
materials,
recycling
facility
and
that's
located
down
in
the
Hazelwood
section
of
the
city
of
Pittsburgh.
H
They
do
the
processing
for
us
a
few
years
ago,
the
city
was
receiving
some
revenue
as
a
result
of
the
recycling
as
of
late.
We
are
starting
it.
We
weren't
receiving
money,
but
as
of
late,
we're
starting
to
receive
a
few
dollars
for
that.
So
it's
important
that
you
do
recycle
for
a
number
of
reasons.
Landfill
space
is
very
limited,
but
more
so
for
the
environment.
H
It's
very
important
that
you
take
the
time,
encourage
your
friends
and
it
is
a
state
law
that
you
do
recycle
we
processed
about
16,000
tons
last
year
or
in
2015,
and
that
was
a
cost
of
the
city
of
about
103
thousand
dollars.
What
do
we
collect
as
far
as
refuse
collection?
What
you
put
out
there?
Where
are
you
going
to
take?
Almost
anything
that
you
put
out
there
as
long
as
it
doesn't
break
the
truck
or
hurt
our
employees
we're
pretty
much
gonna,
take
almost
anything
you
put
out
there
within
reason.
H
H
We
ask
that
you
only
use
35
gallon
containers,
anything
larger
than
that
we're
not
going
to
collect
it's
very
dangerous.
It's
very
heavy
for
our
workers
to
pick
that
up.
So
we
ask
that
you
keep
the
containers
at
35,
gallons
or
less
or
you
can
put.
You
can
keep
the
containers
on
your
property,
but
take
the
bags
out
the
night
before
and
set
them
on
the
street.
We
will
collect
it
that
way
as
well.
H
Some
of
the
things
that
we're
not
going
to
collect
our
demolition,
material
or
construction
material.
If
you
do
a
small
project,
we're
going
to
take
that
for
you,
but
if
you're
putting
on
a
room
or
tearing
down
the
room,
something
that
we
can
handle,
we
do
not
take
freon
can
devices
such
as
refrigerators,
air
conditioners.
You
made
a
fires,
we
can't
take
tires.
We
can't
take
those
to
the
landfill
and
we
can't
take
cover
devices.
Recently,
within
the
last
few
years
the
computers
have
been
banned
from
the
landfill
peripherals
and
monitors
televisions.
I
Good
evening,
everybody
Shawn
wag
on
the
program
supervisor,
with
the
bureau
I
several
years
ago,
used
to
be
the
city's
recycling
supervisor,
so
hopefully
I'll
do
a
good
job
filling
in
for
our
recycling
supervisor.
Tonight,
just
some
of
the
stuff
that
bill
already
went
over
the
number
of
employees
to
go
to
the
next
one
again.
This
is
the
landfill
some
of
the
information,
obviously,
certainly
for
us
everything
we
recycle
versus
what
we
landfill,
no
matter
what
we
are
getting
as
far
as
a
rebate
for
the
recycling.
It
still
is
a
bonus
to
the
city.
I
It
costs
us
less
to
recycle
than
it
does
to
actually
pay
to
throw
something
away,
so
I'm
sure
the
more
we
can
recycle
the
better
off.
You
are
okay,
some
of
the
items
we
unfortunately
can't
landfill
or
recycle
easily.
We
do
have
to
deal
with
on
a
daily
basis
the
household
hazardous
waste
we
do
not
presently
collect
this.
We
work
with
the
county
with
the
state
nonprofits
to
put
on
different
programming
for
this
in
your
packets.
Everyone
has
one
of
these
little
handouts.
The
last
collection
event
for
the
year
is
actually
coming
up.
I
October
14th
these
go
on
periodically
through
the
summer.
It's
really
the
best
and
only
way
to
get
rid
of
a
lot
of
these
materials
things
like
water-based
paints.
You
can
dry
out
and
safely
landfill
a
lot
of
those
things
that
everybody
has
in
their
garage
or
basement.
There's
really
no
other
way
to
get
rid
of
those
other
than
work
with
a
contractor
to
come
in
and
take
those
items
as
the
e-waste
as
bill
said,
we're
no
longer
able
to
the
landfill,
the
TVs,
the
computers.
I
So
we
also
have
another
program
where
we
work
with
the
nonprofit's.
You
can
take
these
items
to
periodic
elections,
the
next
ones
coming
October
7th
at
settlers
cabin.
We
also
have
information
on
there.
Although
the
well-known
and
up-to-date
places
you
can
on
a
daily
basis,
take
that
there
is
a
fee
for
a
lot
of
this
material.
The
big
heavy
televisions,
computer
monitors,
it's
all
leaded
glass,
there's,
there's
really
no
good
way
to
get
rid
of
that
other
than
through
a
recycle
or,
and
it
unfortunately
cost
those
folks
to
get
rid
of
that
leaded
glass.
I
So
unfortunately,
the
resident
has
to
pay
that
a
little
bit
about
our
recycling.
We
take
quite
a
lot
of
materials
at
the
curb
and
our
drop-offs.
We
take
glass
plastics
one
through
five
and
seven
all
the
metal
cans,
food
containers,
anything
basically
plastic,
that's
three
gallon
or
less
everybody's,
probably
familiar
everything.
Plastic
has
a
little
number
on
the
bottom
of
it.
I'm
that
kind
of
coincides
what
that
material
is
made
of,
but
just
because
it
has
that
symbol
doesn't
mean
we
can
take
it.
I
If
it's
your
kids
toys
or
a
big
plastic
bench,
it
will
not
go
through
the
equipment
at
the
sorting
facility.
So
then
it
becomes
trash
on
the
backside.
So
it's
we
do
our
best
to
really
put
out
a
lot
of
information
on
the
website.
The
annual
Miller
every
opportunity
we
can
to
try
to
educate
our
folks.
What
we
can
take
at
the
curb
it's
anything
we
can
do
to
get
help
getting
that
word
out
the
better.
We
also
have
a
little
bit
of
information
in
your
packet,
just
a
quick
and
easy.
I
I
It
does
make
it
a
lot
easier
for
folks,
there's
no
sorting,
there's
no
multiple
containers,
multiple
bags,
so
all
that
stuff
goes
to
a
facility
where
they're
able
to
actually
take
it
all
and
separate
it
out
again,
it's
a
pretty
amazing.
We
do
have
a
little
bit
information,
I
didn't
put
it
in
your
pack,
but
if
you
are
interested
in
that,
we
have
it
up
here.
The
big
thing
with
that
is
that
you
only
really
put
the
materials
in
that
you're
supposed
to
again.
I
If
you
put
the
large
items
in
it
will
not
go
through
the
sorting
material.
If
you
put
some
oddball
glass
window
glass,
things
like
that,
it's
not
made
to
go
through
all
the
different
things
and,
last
but
not
least,
there's
folks
down
that
are
physically
sorting
that
stuff.
So
if
you
put
a
you
know
big
pane
of
glass
or
a
big
sharp
piece
of
metal
in
there,
you
know
there's
always
folks
that
could
unfortunately
get
cut
or
hurt.
So
again,
we
have
a
lot
of
that
information
available
on
the
website
as
well.
I
But
you
know
please
work
with
us
to
make
sure
we
get
the
right
stuff
and
it
all
works
out
well
set
out.
That's
another
big
one.
Besides
getting
the
right
material,
we
need
to
put
out
correctly
if
you've
ever
been
behind
the
truck
as
it
goes
down
the
street.
If
you're
late
for
work
trying
to
get
the
kids
to
school,
the
quicker
we
can
get
our
job
done
safely
and
out
of
your
way,
the
better.
I
If
you've
ever
seen
some
of
the
houses
on
it,
you
would
think
they
took
20
minutes
to
mix
this
stuff
together
at
the
curb.
If
it
takes
us
more
than
a
few
seconds
to
figure
out
if
it's
trash
or
recycling
you're
not
going
to
be
happy
with
us,
if
you're
behind
us
in
the
truck.
It's
very
simple,
just
slightly
separate
your
trash
from
your
recycling,
you
know
again
the
the
trash
needs
to
be
properly
contained,
not
spread
out
all
over
your
street.
Our
folks
do
a
great
job.
I
They
clean
up
a
lot,
but
if
you've
thrown
the
stuff
out
from
the
sidewalk
or
the
animals
get
into
it
the
night
before,
there's
only
so
much,
we
can
do
and
get
to
another
thousand
houses.
Likewise,
the
recycling
have
it
either
bagged
or
again
and
a
container
cardboards
a
big
one.
We
certainly
take
cardboard
the
street,
but
we
do
need
a
little
help
break
those
boxes
down.
I
We
do
provide
a
lot
of
other
programming
than
just
the
typical
street
side
collection
on
any
given
Deer
year.
We
provide
assistance
over
a
hundred
special
events
every
year,
that's
from
things
as
large
as
the
the
marathon
or
the
Great
Race
to
you
know
small
church
festivals.
We
do
have
containers
that
we
could
loan
out.
I
We
also
have
an
extensive
program
in
our
the
parks
and
in
the
business
districts,
where
we
have
different
containers
out
if
you're
out
and
have
a
bottler
can
you
should
be
able
to
recycle
that
no
matter
where
you're
at
so
that's
a
program
each
year
we
we
work
to
build
on
and
that
that's
something
we'll
continue
to
do.
We
also
have
five
different
drop-off
locations
throughout
the
the
city
to
try
to
make
it
very
convenient
for
folks.
I
A
couple
of
those
are
open:
24/7,
our
largest
facilities
at
construction
junction,
it's
one
of
the
most
popular
and
we
have
three
Public
Works
facilities
that
take
all
the
same
material
that
we
take
curbside
and
the
other
drop-offs,
but
at
those
locations
we
also
take
scrap
metal.
You
know,
if
you
know,
you're
cleaning
out
the
basement.
You
have
something
you
don't
want
to
put
out
the
curb
the
landfill.
You
can
certainly
take
it
there.
We
take
yard
debris
from
our
residents
there.
I
It's
a
year-round
drop-off
in
addition
to
our
twice
a
year,
curbside
which
the
next
curbside
collection
is
going
to
be
November
18th,
it's
a
Saturday,
we'll
come
right
to
your
house
pick
your
stuff
up.
We
just
need
to
have
it
out
the
curb
and
properly
contained.
Last
but
not
least,
we
also
take
tires
from
our
residents
each
the
three
Public
Works
facilities
take
those
so
we
partner
to
per
visit
to
per
visit.
So
it's
it's
a
item.
I
We
want
to
keep
by
the
landfill
something
we
want
to
do
for
our
residents,
but
it
is
a
cost
to
the
city.
So
we
tried
to
limit
it.
You
know,
if
you
had
a
couple
in
the
garage
or
you've
got
flat
tire.
We
want
to
kind
of
discourage
those
folks
that
maybe
have
some
sort
of
small
business
going
in
the
side
and
want
to
try
to
bring
us
a
whole
truckload
of
tires.
So
again,
these
are
all
your
tax
dollars
at
work.
I
It's
it's
again,
the
more
we
could
keep
out
of
the
landfill,
the
more
money
we
have
to
do.
Other
programming
things
like
that.
For
you
and
I
believe
that's
the
last
slide,
so
last
but
not
least,
for
anybody
that
is
interested,
we
did
bring
recycling
containers
for
everybody
if
you
want
they're
on
the
way
out.
If
you
want
stop
by
out
of
the
gates
you're
more
than
welcome
to
take
one,
please
use
it.
C
You
have
to
stick
around
for
a
few
more
minutes
before
you
get
the
recycling
event.
So
let
me
just
go
over
just
a
few
other
brief
things,
and
then
we
will
open
the
floor
up
for
questions
which
I'll
asked
male
eventually
to
make
sure
we
monitor
and
I'm
not
gonna
pick
them
you're
gonna,
pick
them
and
all
that
so
before
I
get
into
some
of
the
stuff.
What
will
happen
now
is
you'll
see
scrolling
pictures
of
all
the
types
of
work
that
and
projects
that
were
involved
in
while
we're
talking.
C
You
can
casually
look
up
at
it
whatever
occasionally
so
there's
a
lot
of
it.
Just
it'll
just
keep
scrolling
through.
So
if
you
miss
it
one
time
eventually,
they'll
come
around.
Maybe
a
couple
three
times,
there's
a
couple
other
sort
of
housekeeping
things
that
one
thing
I
did
never
did
mention
it,
but
it
is
in
your
packet.
We
are
roughly
are
almost
700
employees.
That
number
will
be
somewhat
reduced.
Probably
around
60
65
employees.
C
J
J
Do
some
other
design
work
with
the
city
I've
been
running
in
time
lapse
of
the
Greenfield
bridge
construction
project,
which
has
been
why
I'm
still
here
really
is
that
that
hasn't
wrapped
up
yet-
and
it's
not
finished
so
so
that
video
will
be
at
the
opening
party
on
October
14th.
If
anyone
is
planning
on
going
to
that,
I
should
be
showing
the
video
there.
It's
also
online
right
now
so
yeah,
that's
what
I've
been
up
to
Thanks.
C
So
I
mentioned
the
Greenfield
bridge
its
it
is.
It
is
probably
right
now
the
single
biggest
project
that
Public
Works
has
ever
undertaken.
It's
the
19
million
dollar
renovation
of
the
Greenfield
bridge.
It's
been
a
long
time.
It
was
fun
for
the
implosion,
but
you
just
started
to
say:
there's
a
party
on
October
14th
and
Pat
Hassett,
Assistant,
Director,
Pat
acid
is
live
in
Greenfield.
He
likes
parties.
He
likes
the
he
likes
to
put
on
a
good
show.
So
he's
pretty
happy
about
the
bridge.
We're
all
happy
about
it.
C
C
Compliments
even
just
comments.
3-1-1,
really
like
people
who
go
through
the
3-1-1.
It's
it's!
You
know
you
can
still.
If
you
got
like
an
emergency,
you
can
still
call
down
the
office,
but
we
do
encourage
you
to
all
get
it
into
three
wonders
awake.
It's
log!
There's
a
physical
history
of
that
complaint
or
whatever,
and
it
can
always
be
looked
at
later
on.
So
if
you
call
it
in
and
then
you
get
a
response
back
saying
it's
been
completed
and
you
say
no,
it
hasn't.
They
can
open
it
back
up.
So
there's
a
history
there.
C
We
do,
encourage
you
to
faithfully
use
the
3-1-1.
Okay
and
again,
I
do
say.
If
you
have
compliments
you,
you
can
certainly
call
those
in
too
it's
not
a
complaint
line.
It's
a
compliment.
Complaint
comment
line,
as
you
saw
I,
think
we
try
to
show
you
that
we
have
been
trying
to
use
a
lot
of
Technology
in
our
department
to
manage
the
things
that
we
do
to
be
more
efficient
about
the
work
we
do
and
there's
still
more
to
come,
rolling
out
stuff
every
year.
C
We're
always
looking
at
things
to
be
more
efficient
about
what
we're
doing
we'll
look
at
whatever
the
next
great
thing
might
be,
maybe
turf
maintenance
and
how
we
can
maybe
reduce
that
I.
Don't
know
we
pick
litter
receptacles
because
it's
certainly
a
function.
That
is
not
done
seasonally
it's
done
all
year
long
and
that
any
any
improvement
we
make
in
that
program
should
have
a
significant
change
in
terms
of
resources
back
to
the
to
the
divisions.
Everything
else
is
sort
of
a
seasonal
thing.
You
know
snow
and
ice.
C
Picking
up
leaves
cuttin
grass
they're
all
seasonal
functions,
so
they
don't
generate
the
same
amount
of
cost
as
the
litter
receptacles
do.
But
we
will
look
at
some
of
those
other
programs
and
use
the
technology
to
make
things
better
and
then
whatever
is
not
answered
here.
You
know
you
all
have
my
card
in
the
packet.
You
can
email
me
and
we
will
I
will
try
to
answer
it
for
you
or
we
will
get
it
to
the
the
correct
staff
member
to
provide
an
answer.
C
H
C
Under
ninety
thousand
less
than
10
years
or
eleven
ten
years,
you
know
that's
what
42,000
tons
less
and
I
can't.
We
can't
say
that
the
recycling
is
gone,
the
same
way,
but
it's
going
up
everybody's
getting
better.
So
it's
a
compliment.
All
you
that
you're
reducing
how
much
going
to
the
landfill,
even
though
we're
you
know
we're
sitting,
that's
growing
in
population
and
that
number
is
going
way
down.
So
that
means
it's
we're
spending
much
less
money
when
you
figure
it
out,
$29
a
ton.
Forty
thousand
less
tons
going
into
landfill
over
here.
C
It's
a
million
promised
to
a
million
to
every
year
that
we're
saving
recycling
is
going
up,
ton
each
and
that's
not
going
in
the
landfill,
and
that
is
at
times
most
times
their
revenue.
So
you
know
what
do
we
want
to
do?
We
want
to
make
sure
we
strike
little
more
and
we
just
have
a
thing,
and
you
know
it's
not
scientific
I
go
down
in
my
neighborhood
and
when
I
see
my
neighbors
with
three
white
bags
in
one
blue
bag
and
pretty
much
guess
and
they're,
not
recycling,
you
should
see
almost
three
blue
bag.
C
The
one
white
bag,
so,
if
somebody's
not
doing
that
and
again,
we
all
know
there's
other
things
get
thrown
out,
but
not
on
a
consistent
basis.
It
should
be
one
two
three:
you
should
have
more
blue
bags
going
out.
There's
a
lot
more
that
can
be
recycler.
You
know
a
single
stream,
so
there's
a
lot
of
things.
I
go
down,
not
that
I
purposely
do
it.
I
go
now
walk
my
dog
and
I
can
see
those
bags
and
I
go
God.
C
You
know,
you
know
a
lot
of
stuff
that
could
have
been
in
a
blue
bag.
So
so
there's
all
what
we
can
all
do.
A
lot
better,
but
everybody's
doing
great
the
recycling
is
going
up,
the
landfill
tonnage
is
going
down
and
that's
a
positive
thing
with
that.
I
think
we've
made
our
presentation
and
we're
here
to
answer
any
questions
you
might
have
so.
C
A
Roi
blankenship
knoxville
community,
okay,
Roy
Blankenship
I'm
from
the
community
in
Knoxville.
Basically,
it's
a
two-part
kind
of
question.
It's
about
the
water
system
and,
what's
going
on
with
the
water
being
at
the
infrastructure,
is
bad
and
they're
gonna
have
to
sooner
or
later
dig
up
these
water
lines
right,
DPW-
and
you
were
talking
about
the
curbs
in
the
street.
You
know-
is
that
like
a
60/40
split
on
the
work
or
are
the
bill?
Well,.
C
The
the
responsibility
for
the
water
issue
is
right
now
being
borne
entirely
from
Pittsburgh
Water
and
Sewer
Authority.
They
were
leased
the
WA,
the
city's
water
and
source
system,
probably
24
years
ago.
So
I
do
believe,
though,
that
we
will
be
involved
in
some
way
shape
or
form
I
mean.
That
was
at
one
time.
It
was.
You
know
before
PWSA
it
was
its
own
City
Department,
the
Department
of
Water
Public
Works,
had
levels
of
responsibility
for
the
lot
of
the
source
and
catch
basins,
and
things
like
that.
C
C
Have
to
get
yeah
as
I
said
earlier,
you
know
they
are
utility
also,
so
they
you
know
whatever
they
tear
up
they're
gonna
be
responsible
for
you
know,
pay
them
currently,
like
I
said
we
might
be
working
with
them
doing
some
streets,
they'll
do
some
streets,
but
there
are
utility
too,
and
they
they're.
Actually
we
actually
saved
them
money
because
they
had
their
own
contractor,
doing
resurfacing
of
projects
and
they're
now
paying
almost
six
or
seven
dollars
less
a
square
square
yard
by
going
under
our
contract.
C
So
what
we
did
is
we
took
their
quantities
included
in
our
contract.
The
our
contractor
or
the
bidders
would
know
exactly
what
the
total
square
yardage
would
be
and
we're
actually
saving
PwC
a
lot
of
money
which
is
ultimately
saving
all
of
you
a
lot
of
money,
because
maybe
maybe
your
bills
might
go
down,
but
we'll
see
what
happens.
Thank
you,
like
the
things
I
write.
K
L
My
name
is
Brittany
I'm
I
live
in
Polish
Hill
and
my
question
is
so
so:
I
live
in
Polish
Hill,
but
I
actually
work
in
Monroeville,
so
I
work
outside
of
the
city.
So
this
you
don't
have
to
answer
this
if
you
don't
want
to,
but
my
I
work
in
a
10-story
like
office
building
that
doesn't
recycle
at
all
in
the
building
which,
like
super,
like
I,
actually
take
my
recycling
home.
It
really
like
bothers
me.
L
So
is
there
a
way
like
my
company,
that
I
work
for
like
is
a
tenant
in
that
office
building,
so
I
don't
want
to
be
leavin,
though
I
know
the
owner
of
the
building.
I
don't
be
like
hey.
Where
are
the
recycling
bins
or
why
don't
we
do
this?
Why
isn't
this
like
an
option
here,
but
do
you
have
suggestions
for
what
you
would
say
to
people
like
in
the
city
that
that
work
were
outside
of
it
to
like
do
something
like
like
about
that?
I,
don't
understand.
C
I'm
gonna
I'm
gonna
just
answer
something,
but
I'm
gonna
actually
ask
bill
or
Sean
to
provide
what
they
think
on
it,
but
I
think
the
the
the
problem
is
that
statewide,
it's
there's,
not
a
consistent
recycling
policy,
so
you
can
have
something
like
we
have
in
the
city,
which
is
a
pretty
broad
and
diverse
recycling
program.
But
then
you
can
go
to
Penn,
Hills
and
I,
don't
know
so
I'm
just
using
an
example.
They
might
only
do
glass
and
paper
or
something
like
that
and
so
people.
C
As
you
know,
a
lot
of
people
coming
into
the
city
like
down
at
Point
State
Park.
We
have
a
lot
of
events
and
that
draws
a
lot
of
people
from
outside
of
city,
and
you
can
we
put
the
blue
recycling
trailer
at
the
at
the
other
side
of
the
portal
bridge
and
that's
just
for
recycling.
At
the
end
of
the
night,
there
was
a
lot
of
solid
waste
in
there
because
people
just
didn't
know.
C
So
we
I
believe
that
the
state
needs
to
do
a
better
job
about
making
something
more
uniform
across
the
state,
rather
than
going
from.
You
know
county
to
county
to
county
and
having
all
different
types
of
recycling
programs
door.
Shawn.
You
want
try
to
answer
what,
in
terms
of
coming
out,
you
know
from
outside
of
city
and.
I
The
state
does
control
that
and
it's
unfortunately,
it's
based
on
population,
so
not
every
municipality
is
required
to
recycle
with
the
city.
We
are
based
on
the
amount
of
people
we
have,
but
something
like
that
I
would
contact
Monroeville.
You
know
see
what
their
particular
rules
and
regulations
are.
With
that
I
know
within
the
city
we
do
require
all
the
businesses
to
recycle.
It
is
a
very
difficult
thing
to
always
enforce
that
I
believe
we
have
over
11,000
commercial
listings
in
our
recycling
officers.
There's
three
folks
in
it.
M
Excuse
me,
my
name
is
Eric
young
Marshall,
shaylen
and
I
have
several
rental
properties
throughout
the
city,
and
some
of
them
are
older
homes
and
older
neighborhoods
and
the
city
has
planted
trees
along
the
sidewalk
in
several
of
my
homes.
Those
trees
are
looking
for
water
and
tearing
up
my
terracotta
or
the
pipes.
So
my
question
is
because
it
cost
me
around
six.
Twelve
thousand
dollars
in
repairs
can
I
cut
and
kill
that
tree.
C
But
there
are
programs
where
the
tree
probably
and
sounds
like
it
needs
to
be
roof,
pruned
and
probably
have
some
sidewalk
repairs
to
do
and
such
you
could
file
a
claim
through
the
law
department.
There
is
sort
of
an
outlay
of
yourself
for
paying
for
like
the
concrete
repairs,
but
the
city
would
reimburse
you
a
certain
amount
per
square
yard.
It's
not
going
to
cover
it
100%,
but
it's
it's
something
better
than
it
was.
It
used
to
be
like
four
dollars:
eight
dollars
now
a
square
yard
ursin
like
that.
C
But
just
say
you
go
that
route
and
open
up
your
sidewalk
forestry
way.
They
would
come
out
and
schedule
a
root
pruning
to
prune
those
trees
back
and
the
forester
would
then
also
look
at
the
tree.
Make
an
assessment
the
tree
whether
or
not
that
tree
really
should
I
mean
she
does
have
the
authority
in
power
to
say
whether
a
tree
should
be
removed
or
not.
So
she
could.
C
N
O
Hi,
my
name
is
Sarah
Weber
and
I
live
in
Squirrel,
Hill,
South,
very
close
to
shun
Lee
Park
and
my
question
was:
is
there
currently
a
community
process
for
either
making
changes,
say
either
closing
a
street
or,
if
the,
if
the,
if
the
neighbors
you
know
feel
like
a
certain
traffic,
part
of
pattern
makes
no
sense
or
it's
bound
to
cost
liability
kind
of
bility
of
loss
of
life
is
their
neighborhood
process,
where
neighbors
can
petition
or
who's
the
legal
owner
of
streets
like
Werder
with
the
pertinent
authority.
Well,.
C
C
If
it's
in
the
park,
I
don't
know,
I
was
going
to
say
that
if
it
was
not
in
the
park,
the
municipal
traffic
engineer,
who
used
to
be
in
public
works
at
one
time,
is
now
on
dummy.
You
would
you
would
make
a
petition
to
that
individual
and
then
they
would
make
an
assessment
rather
than
make
it
a
one-way
to
a
change.
The
pattern
closed
it.
Whatever
the
case
may
be
whatever
you're
appealing
just
in
the
park.
It's
a
it's
a
different
animal.
So
what
street
would
you
be?
Posturing
or
you
just
it's.
O
C
So
I
do
know,
there's
a
the
piece
from
percocet
up
into
Prospect.
That's
been
closed
for
years
and
I
just
kind
of
know.
That
I
mean
I
I
think
that
we
would
want
to
see
a
request
from
the
community
group
to
say
that
we
wanted
like
to
do
this,
and
we
will
certainly
entertain
that
I.
Don't
think
it's
out
of
the
realm
of
things
but
I
know
before
we
tried
to
remove
that
guardrail
and
it
caused
the
firestorm
of
issues
yeah.
C
C
Well,
the
Conservancy
in
the
city
have
had
a
private
public
partnership
for
probably
19
20
years
now
it's
around
1998
the
conservancies
role
at
the
time
and
I
believe
it
still
is
the
same.
The
idea
was,
the
city
did
not
have
the
means
or
the
capital
dollars
to
make
the
necessary
investments
in
the
park,
so
the
idea
would
be
the
city
might
come
forth
with
ideas
to
renovate
structures
or
do
improvements,
and
we
might
come
to
the
table.
Let's
just
say:
let's
just
use
a
shiny
visitor
center
over
in
Shawnee
park
as
an
example.
C
C
That's
still
the
role
I
mean
the
way
I
see
it
today,
but
they
certainly
have
grown
as
an
organization.
The
fact
that
they're
in
here
in
this
building
operating
the
center
that
was
once
operated
by
city
personnel,
they
own
this
building
correct.
No,
the
city,
the
city
owns,
that's
the
thing.
Any
any
asset
built
on
city
land
is
owned
by
the
city
of
Pittsburgh.
C
One
thing
about
parks,
it's
very,
very
difficult
to
sell,
Park
land
or
any
kind
of
a
park
asset.
So
the
Conservancy
is
expanded.
I
mean
they.
They
have
a
lot
of
horticultural
people,
they
have
a
lot
of
educational
stuff,
but
I
mean
we
work
pretty
well
with
them,
and
a
lot
of
we're
working
on
two
projects.
Now:
McKinley
Park
chicken
hill
project
and
Allegheny
Commons
Park,
the
Northeast,
quad
and
fountain.
Those
two
projects
are
going
on.
C
They
raised
the
money
week
and
we're
concern
in
kind
services
they're
going
to
manage
the
project,
but
we're
also
going
to
have
staff
inspecting
it
and
overseeing
and
we're
and
commenting
on
the
design.
So
we're
not
excluded
from
any
of
the
process
where
we're
going
both
going
down.
The
same
path,
but
everything
bill
in
the
atria
is
building
Schenley,
Plaza,
I'm,
sorry,
the
porch
I'm.
Sorry,
it
was
supposed
to
be
in
a
tree
as
in
the
beginning,
the
porch
at
which
is
neat
in
Park
facility.
C
C
That's
basically
how
we
deal
I
mean
they,
as
you
know,
they've
done
signature
projects
in
all
the
parks.
They
solely
didn't
do
the
whole
project
they
got.
They
got
help
from
us
whether
it
was
a
Lincoln
services
or
Capitol
money.
The
fact
that
we're
in
rad
parks
we
have
rad
capital
so
we're
able
to
take
that
money
and
kind
of
match
it.
With
the
Conservancy
Westinghouse
plan,
which
was
completed
last
year,
we've
had
the
money.
For
years
we
were
holding
five
hundred
thousand.
C
We
knew
the
project
actually
was
about
a
million
five,
and
we
said
we're
not
we're
not
doing
anything
to
you
raise
the
other
million,
and
then
we
can
put
the
shovel
in
the
ground
and
that's
so.
They
finally
raised
the
rest
of
their
money,
and
then
we
put
the
shovel
in
the
ground
built
it,
and
it's
got
a
beautiful
memorial
pond
down
here
now.
Okay,
thank
you.
Thank
you.
P
P
I
Plastic
bags
and
wrap
themselves
are
recycled.
Okay,
unfortunately,
through
our
curbside
program
they
are
not
okay.
So
your
best
bet,
if
you
want
those
items
to
be
recycled,
take
the
back
to
the
store.
Giant
Eagle
has
a
program.
Target
Walmart,
a
bunch
of
place
retail
spots
have
places
you
can
take
those
back.
Okay,.
C
Not
exactly
the
reason
being
is
that
dog
parks,
no
matter
how
big
they
are,
are
a
high
maintenance
item
right.
You
almost
lose
them
right
away
because
they're
running
around
and
doing
what
they
do.
You
lose
the
turf
and
all
that.
So
the
idea
is
that
we've
built
them,
but
the
intention
is:
is
that
there's
a
either
community
group
or
a
volunteer
group
that
will
help?
Yes,
we
do
go
in
and
do
some
things
we're
not
completely
abandoning
them.
C
You'll
cut
the
grass
whenever
grass
is
left,
but
the
problem
is,
is
that
say
you
lose
it?
It
goes
to
all
denuded
and
you
want
to
reestablish
grass,
you
don't
throw
seed
down,
it
doesn't
grow,
it
may
come
up
green,
but
it
doesn't
take
a
foothold
and
you're
gonna
lose
it
in
a
matter
of
days
or
weeks.
So
the
idea
is
sort
of
like
what
the
county
does.
C
C
We
don't
have
the
same
luxury
in
the
city,
parks
we're
in
a
much
smaller
or
a
creech,
and
all
that,
but
we've
tried
to
make
them
large
enough
so
that
we
don't
lose
them
I
just
built
one
up
in
Holland
Park
last
year,
and
you
know
I
ride
by
and
look
at
it
I
think
it's
like
90%
green
yeah,
it's
a
little
bare
in
the
front,
but
that's
what
everybody
tends
to
hang
out.
They
need
to
kind
of
spread
out
a
little
bit.
C
And
John
Valentine
and
that
group
pushed
for
it
and
we
were
able
to
make
that
happen,
and
you
know
it
doesn't
meet
the
two
acre
criteria,
but
I
think
it
meets
the
needs
of
the
people
living
downtown.
I
haven't
seen
it
as
it's
still
green,
or
is
it
yeah
good?
Well,
that's
good
to
know
I
think
there's
a
limit
on
dog
sighs
so
that
might
have
a
factor
of
some
people.
P
C
C
You
pick
up
your
putting
to
go
and
we'll
empty
the
can
so
like
yeah
we're
not
doing
you
know,
full-blown
maintenance,
but
we
are
participating
and,
looking
for
you
know
the
the
community
groups
and
and
the
volunteers
to
do
a
little
bit
up
in
Mount
Washington.
We
work
with
the
pawls
group
and
you
know
they
shut
it
down
for
a
period
of
a
few
weeks.
We
put
the
locks
in
the
gates,
they
do
an
ancillary.
C
You
know
throw
some
seed
down,
they,
you
know
greening
up
a
little
bit,
but
again
you
know
turf
takes
a
year
to
establish
itself,
so
you
end
up
losing
it
right
away,
so
yeah
I've
been
outside
for
a
while.
So
you
know
the
dog
parks
are
increasing
in
size.
It's
good
to
hear,
though,
that
that's
being
used,
and
it's
not.
Q
Q
I
don't
know
if
this
is
a
question
you
can
answer,
but
I
was
asked
to
ask
this
question
by
my
husband
and
he
wanted
to
know
if
anybody
could
explain
why
there's
I
hope
it's
for
a
good
reason.
Why
there's
so
much
construction
everywhere
you
go
in
the
city,
there
are
detours
everywhere
and
it's
not
a
complaint.
Cuz
we're
glad
it's
getting
taken
care
of.
Sir.
Q
R
C
C
I
guess
we're
lucky
to
have
a
lot
of
money
in
this
territory
to
do
these
kind
of
projects,
so
I
guess
we're
blessed
and
we'll
have
nice
facilities
for
years
to
come.
I'll
just
be
happy
to
see
one
year
of
no
construction,
so
just
to
see
how
it
is
to
get
around
with
no
new
orange
and
barrels
and
all
that
kind
of
stuff,
hi.
S
That's
used
a
lot,
you
know
with
you
know
the
youth,
you
know
athletic
programs
and
the
adult
Athletic
programs
and
everything-
and
you
know
when
I'm
back
there
I
just
you
know
I
just
want
to
like
like
why
like.
Why
can't
we
fix
these
benches?
And
you
know,
and-
and
you
know
make
you
know-
I
don't
know
just
just
just
not
so
much
clean
up
the
park,
but
just
improve
it
and
there's
some
city
steps
that
are
behind
it
and
everything,
and
so
it
was
kind
of
you
know
along
the
lines
of
park.
S
C
The
simple
answer
is
yes,
we
always
like
encourage
when
we
can
get
the
community
groups
and
volunteers
to
help
us
do
work
and
jointly
help
to
take
care
of
a
facility.
There
are
going
to
be
the
limitations
as
to
what
we
are
allowing
you.
That's
not
us
it's
the
unions,
but
we
can
certainly
work
something
out,
Dunbar's,
a
facility
that
you
know
it's
had
some
improvements
over
the
years,
but
it's
also
got
some
things
that
are
still
low,
fatiguing
and
and
and
show
that
that
look
of
like
1950s
1960s
and
all
that
kind
stuff.
C
But,
as
I
said
earlier,
we
have
kind
of
put
in
Bill
and
Tom,
maybe
on
the
spot,
but
we'll
see
what
happens
and
if
you
guys
want
to
offer
anything.
Let
me
know
I
said
earlier:
we
increase
the
in
construction
division,
the
number
of
cement
finishes.
We
have
so
you
know
I.
Think.
Last
year
we
had
three.
Now
we
have
six,
so
we're
going
to
be
able
to
take
those
cement,
finishers
and
fix
those
types
of
assets,
the
bleachers
and
and
they
can
do
some
other
work
out
there.
C
C
T
R
Nancy
left
from
Lawrenceville
and
I'm
not
going
to
ask
any
questions
because
I'd
like
to
get
out
of
here
before
midnight,
but
I.
Thank
you,
I.
Thank
you
for
all
the
work
you
do
and
for
being
here
tonight
with
us
and
for
the
new
track.
I've
always
used.
The
big
green
trash
can
and
I
tie
blue
bags
on
it,
because
I
have
almost
no
garbage
just
a
lot
of
recycling
every
week,
so
it'll
be
nice
to
have
a
blue
one
too.
Thank
you
guys
and
women.
Thank.
C
U
My
name
is
ty
I'm
from
Mount
Washington
I
talked
a
few
things
about
some
of
the
things
that
are
enforced
like
street.
Sweeping
I
know
that
they're
trailed
by
someone
that
gives
tickets
to
everybody,
but
what
about
sidewalk
sidewalk
clearing
for
people
that
don't
shovel
their
sidewalks?
What
about
trash
and
recycling?
You
talk
a
lot
about
the
enforcement
who's.
The
group-
that's
enforcing
it
oh
and
be
talked
about
how
they
need
more
revenue.
Now,
no
one
likes
to
be
fined,
especially
people
in
Pittsburgh.
U
C
Particularly
if
you're
referring
to
snow
and
ice
in
the
winter
and
not
clearing
sidewalks
with
a
certain
period
of
time,
that
would
fall
correctly
more
so
under
Mike's
crew.
We
have
a
number
of
inspectors
that
work
in
each
of
the
geographic
divisions.
They
have
a
geographic
area
to
take
care
of
it's
just
it's
one
person
and
trying
to
cover
what
could
be
a
9
square
mile
area.
So
are
you
fully.
C
We
need
we
need
more
people
in
order
to
to
do
that.
Some
of
that
could
possibly
fall
to
Pio
I.
They
have
a
lot
more
inspectors,
we
have,
but
they
also
have
a
lot
of
other
things
that
they
need
to
inspect.
So
you
know
we
can
certainly
look
together,
and
so
maybe
how
we
can
partner
with
Pio
I,
to
look
at
those
levels
of
enforcement
with
regards
to
the
enforcement
of
the
solid
way
or
the
refuse,
and
all
that
bill.
That
would
be
you
guys
or
or
you
are
you
talking
about
just.
H
From
the
refuge
and
recycling
side
of
it,
we
do
enforcement
internally
with
our
foremen
and
our
supervisors.
Our
goal
is
not
to
issue
citations,
we're
looking
for
a
win-win
situation.
There's
a
process
that
we
go
through,
I,
don't
mind,
issuing
citations
and
and
and
recovering
some
money
through
the
court
system.
But
what
we
do
first,
is
we
try
and
warn
the
people,
whether
it's
through
verbal
communication
with
the
foreman
and
a
resident
or
we'll
send
out
letters,
or
we
brought
literature
that
we
use
doorknockers
will
put
on
there.
H
C
Let
me
let
me
expand
it
out
a
little
bit,
though,
to
and
tell
you
is,
you
know
something
negative
that
really
affects
us
is
we
actually
are
enforcing
a
lot
of
things?
We
are
writing
citations
and
a
lot
of
this
goes
to
court
housing.
Court
housing
court
gets
down
to
housing
court,
it
goes
before
district
justice
and
sometimes
they
throw
a
lot
of
this
stuff
out
and
the
problem
we
think,
is
that
it's
not
going
to
the
justice
that
is
in
that
particular
geographic
area.
C
It
might
be
a
justices
lived
out
of
the
city,
so
he
or
she
may
have
no
real
care
about
being
in
Pittsburgh,
and
so
we've
lost
a
lot
we
do
lie.
We
do
write
a
lot
of
citations,
we
do
send
a
lot
of
stuff
to
court
and
it's
it's
a
little
defeating.
So
we've
had
discussions
with
the
court
and
what
we
do
is
we
go
down
to
the
municipal
courts
building.
So
it's
whoever
you
get
that
day.
We
want
them.
We
would
like
them
to
be
held
heard
in
the
district.
C
So
if
there's
something
happened
in
the
Southside,
we
want
to
go
to
the
judge.
Riccardi,
you
know
when
it's
happening
up
in
Brookline
area,
I
think
it
is
a
judge,
king
or
whatever
I'm,
not
sure.
So
we
want
it
to
go
into
the
dish
into
the
communities
be
held
by
those.
Let
those
district
justices
hear
it,
and
we
feel
that
we'll
have
more
wins
than
losses.
B
This
isn't
really
like
a
revenue
raiser,
but
as
the
community
affairs
I
feel
like
I
should
say
it
with
snow,
especially-
and
this
is
maybe
my
personal
pet
peeve,
just
talk
to
your
neighbors
like
I,
live
next
to
a
bunch
of
college
kids
and
they
never
shoveled
their
walk,
and
it
really
annoyed
me
so
I
just
talked
to
them,
and
they
just
didn't
know
that
they
had
to
so
it
might
be
that
kind
of
case,
so
just
putting
that
plug
in.
You
can
also
talk
to
your
neighbors
about
these
sort
of
things.
C
C
I
believe
it
has
to
be
done,
I
don't
think
it
has
to
go
to
the
legislature,
but
it
there
is
some
hierarchy
of
you
know
who
makes
the
assignment,
so
we
are
working.
We
met
with
those
those
representatives
we've
waste.
Our
concerns
is
not
just
us.
It's
PLI
has
the
same
thing.
You
can
imagine
they're,
citing
people
for
sidewalks
for
buildings.
You
know
building
issues
or
whatever
they're
experiencing
the
same
thing,
probably
probably
three
times
or
four
times
what
we're
dealing
with.
So
we
had
our.
C
We
had
our
meeting
with
them,
so
we've
had
to
have
some
further
conversations,
but
you
know
it
might
be
that
we
have
to
may
it
may
have
to
eventually
go
to
our
state
legislators
to
make
something,
a
change
in
Harrisburg
to
make
that
happen,
but
we
we
believe
that
we
can
make
that
happen.
We
have
enough
locals
to
to
affect
that
affect
that.
Okay,.
V
I
am
as
RFK
pool
from
square
Hill
and
about
it
counted.
Molly
made
one
of
the
things
that
college
kids,
especially
the
ones
coming
from
smaller
towns
or
many
international
ones.
One
of
the
things
is
that
they
have
no
idea
about
recite
worth
recycling.
They
don't
know
what
it
is
and
why
they
should
do
that.
Are
there
any
programs,
educational
programs
with
universities
here.
H
We
work
with
the
University's
Duquesne
carnegie-mellon
University
of
Pittsburgh.
We
work
with
them,
but
they
do
in-house
when
the
students
do
move
in.
It's
funny
that
you
mentioned
October
7th,
our
Bureau
is
doing
a
sweep
in
the
Oakland
area.
We're
sending
out
eight
or
ten
foremen
and
all
they're
gonna
do
is
canvass
the
entire
area
of
Oakland
looking
for
violations,
hopefully
talking
to
students
and
educating
them
of
what
they're
doing
wrong
and
thanking
them
if
they
are
doing
things
right.
H
C
Thank
you,
I
would
offer
that
correct
wrong,
though
I
would
offer
that
we
put
a
mailer
that
goes
out,
so
it's
going
to
somebody
may
not
go
to
those
students,
but
it's
going
to
landlord
landlord
has
a
responsibility
to
make
sure
his
his
occupants
are
following
whatever
the
rules
and
regulations
are
so
there's
there's
plenty
of
information
out
there
that
we
think,
hopefully
everybody
will
understand
that
how
to
do
better
recycling.
Okay,
thank.
C
W
I'm
Tracey
Kennedy
I'm
from
Squirrel,
Hill
and
I,
moved
recently
to
Pittsburgh
from
Philadelphia,
and
so
one
thing
that
really
really
excites
me.
One
of
the
many
things
that
excites
me
about
Pittsburgh
is
the
many
green
spaces
and
I
think
it's
a
really
unique
asset
of
the
city
and
I
was
just
curious.
If
there
is
any
there's
any
efforts
or
any
talk
of
like
greening
additional
spaces
throughout
the
city
for
safety
or
for
other
reasons,
we.
C
Are
I
believe
that
we're
always
looking
to
increase
our
green
space?
As
I
said,
we
only
have
about
3,000
acres
of
green
space,
there's
a
lot
of
open
green
space
that
isn't
necessary
park.
Oh
there's
a
lot
of
hillsides
and
all
that,
but
there
are
plans
that
maybe
make
you
know
some
trails
through
there
and
things
of
that
nature
question
not
whether
they
would
fall
under
this
too
and
for
maintenance
or
whatever
it
might
be
a
volunteer
efforts.
But
probably
we
made
an
acquisition
last
year.
I
think
was
it.
C
Last
year
Tom
yes,
pays
parklet
Hays
Park
down
in
Hays
area
of
the
city.
It's
roughly
600
acres,
I
believe
yeah,
it's
probably
a
very
hilly,
but
it
has
a
lot
of.
It
does
have
a
lot
of
features.
A
lot
of
promise
so
I
think
that's
something
that
we'll
see
being
developed
over
the
next
several
years,
but
we're
always
looking
for
a
green
space.
Thank.
W
X
C
N
H
Do
offer
a
backyard
service
for
folks
that
are
the
only
able-bodied
person
in
the
house.
What
they
can
do
is
contact
our
office,
there's
a
form
that
they
have
to
get
filled
out
by
their
physician,
saying
that
they
cannot
carry
the
trash
down
to
the
curb
and
again,
the
only
able-bodied
person
in
the
house,
and
our
folks
will
then
go
to
the
back
yard
and
collect
the
trash
for
them
and
the
recycling.
Okay.
Y
Are
there?
Are
there
I,
don't
know
if
you,
if
you
at
some
point,
would
consider
a
clinic
where
people
can
bring
their
cans
somewhere
and
have
that
because
then
it
will
always
be
able,
because
otherwise,
sometimes
they
will
I
mean
because
of
time
they'll
take
the
lid
off
and
then
it's
on
the
ground
or
it
gets
lost,
or
sometimes
people
end
up
putting
a
can
to
the
curb
without
the
lid
and
sometimes
that's
a
problem.
Sometimes
it's
not
so
I
wondered.
Is
there
a
brand
or
a
type
of
can
that
that
you
know
of
that?
Y
Y
You
know,
distress
to
the
neighboring
properties
because
of
water
or
goddess
or
whatever
are
you
do?
You
have
like
a
sort
of
section
that
addresses
these
kind
of
or
another
example
is
especially
like
in
in
Oakland
the
the
pavements
people
park?
Half
on
the
pavement,
sometimes
all
the
way
on
the
pavements,
so
the
the
landlord
becomes
or
the
home
becomes
like
a
parking
garage.
Y
But
then
they
in
in
cases
like
that,
will
the
city
help
to
help
to
repair
the
pavement
from
and
the
other
problem
with
those
kinds
of
instances
is
if
you,
if,
if
you
want
to
have
somebody
work
on
the
house,
it's
almost
dangerous
for
them
for
you
to
put
a
ladder
for
that
person
to
work,
because
the
cars
are
coming
from
two
directions
and
they'll
come
from
one
direction
and
park
or
they'll
come
from
the
other.
Okay.
C
Thank
you
for
missing
the
PRI
present,
yet,
okay,
those
are
everything
you've
addressed.
There
basically
is
basically
under
another
department.
The
permits
license
ins
inspections.
So
if
you
want
to
save
that,
for
when
you
meet
with
director,
Kennedy
I
think
she
can
answer
those
for
you.
Okay,
thank
you.
Hi.
Z
Matthew
darwin
from
the
east
livery
and
I've
moved
into
there
a
few
few
years
ago
and
I
lived
in
Lana
and
I
just
got
back
from
Chicago
this
past
weekend.
One
thing
some
people
from
Pittsburgh
and
I
were
talking
about
when
we
want
Chicago
is
the
amount
of
greenery
and
Fries
compared
to
all
the
other
cities
I've
been
to
was.
Has
the
city
always
been
like
this,
or
was
this
put
into
action
at
a
certain
point,
herb
you're.
C
I've
been
with
in
my
prior
life,
I
worked
in
the
Department
of
Parks
Recreation
for
about
1718
years
and
I
moved
then
moved
over
to
public
work.
So
having
been
in
the
in
with
forestry
for
a
long
time,
I
would
say
that
we
probably
weren't
as
green
I,
think
that
there
were
a
lot
of
varying
funding
sources.
That
I
mean
there
were
years
where
they
were
planning
like
2,000
trees
really.
But,
as
I
said,
when
those
trees
weren't
being
maintained
properly,
they
ended
up
being
problems
later
on
and
they
were
probably
cut.
C
So
you
know
again,
we
never
did
an
inventory
back
in
60s
and
70s.
Nobody
knew
exactly
what
the
workload
was.
We
know
now
it's
33,000
street
trees,
but
we
also
have
a
very,
very
broad,
diverse
green
space
in
the
wooded
in
the
urban
air
in
the
wooded
areas
and
such
do
you
know
what
the
figures
you
don't
know
that
somebody's
done
like
an
estimation.
C
C
AA
Hello,
I'm,
a
you
know:
I'm
a
phone
scroll
hill.
Thank
you
all
for
being
here
tonight.
It's
I
notice,
as
you
might
a
murder
that
a
lot
about
pedestrian
crosswalks
some
are
marks
on
or
not
so
I'm.
Just
wondering
a
there's
a
standard
to
decide
before
you
guys
decide
which
crosswalk
will
be
marked,
which
one
not
yeah.
C
I,
don't
I,
don't
know
what
the
criteria
is
found
in
the
crosswalks
I
do
know
that
we
are
have
really
ramped
up
the
ability
to
get
to
a
lot
of
our
crosswalks
this
year.
I,
don't
know
if
you
guys
in
driving
around
you
might
see
a
more
colorful
city,
you'll
see
the
blue,
the
yellow,
the
yellow
and
the
white
being.
You
know,
spray-painted
and
marked
around
and
part
of
that.
C
So
what
we
were
able
to
do
is
both
bill
and
Tom
gave
up
six
of
their
staff
to
go
down
some
of
their
skilled
staff
to
go
down
to
traffic
and
then
subsequently,
we
hired
some
seasonal
laborers
to
supplement
that
loss
in
the
parks
and
the
streets
and
those
six
people
went
down
to
traffic
and
they
were
actually
able
to
create
two
more
crews.
So
that's
why
you've
been
able
to
see
a
lot
of
line,
striping,
crosswalk,
painting,
the
handicapped,
curbs
and
the
yellow
curve.
So
we
intent
it
worked
last
year.
C
They
didn't
do
it
quite
as
early
but
I
think
we
did
it
something
like
June.
Through
November
this
year
we
were
able
to
get
them
started
in
April,
so
they've
actually
been
going
since
April
and
they'll
go
to
November
pray
that
the
weather
stays
nice.
It
is
and
they'll
continue
to
death
through
November.
So
I
truly
don't
know
what
the
criteria
is.
I
agree
with
you
there's
some
places
where
crosswalks
do
go
in
and
some
that
don't
and
I
know
there's
a
criteria
for
that.
So.
T
AB
Evening,
my
name
is
Michelle
Parker
I'm
from
central
North
Side.
Thank
you
for
being
here
this
evening.
All
of
you
a
couple
questions
for
the
sidewalks
snow
removal.
I
know
in
Central,
North
Side.
We
have
snow
angels,
we
help
our
neighbors
get
rid
of
the
snow
and
I
saw
them
and
so
forth.
But
we
do
have
some
elderly
neighbors
who
have
sidewalks
in
disrepair.
So
I,
don't
mind.
You
know
not
spending
my
fund
money
to
repair
my
sidewalk,
but
I'm
not
gonna.
Do
the
whole
street.
B
There
are,
you:
are
a
loans,
0%
interest
home
improvement
loans
that
a
lot
of
people
we
use
to
cover
this.
There
are
also
for
senior
citizens
who
can
demonstrate
that
they
are
in
financial
need.
There
are
additional
resources
that
I
can
email
out
to
you,
guys
I'll
put
it
on
the
slack,
there's
a
few
different
nonprofit
organizations
who
will
give
them
some
grants
and
some
assistance
that
way.
Okay,.
C
You
know
if
that
happens,
have
a
tree.
That's
is
causing
that
damage
and
they
are
actually
going
to
go
the
route
of
replacing
that
sidewalk.
You
know,
fortunately,
can
ruin
and/or
determine
if
the
tree
needs
to
cut
you
stay
or
just
be
prune
back
and
that
can
be
turned
as
a
law
claimed
at
least
recover
some
sum
of
money
that
you
would
outweigh.
Okay,.
AB
And
I
have
my
situation
covered,
but
just
as
an
FYI,
so
what
I'm
on
Sandusky
and
North
next
Allegheny
general,
so
people
use
my
sidewalk
as
a
parking
lot.
So
I
keep
my
sidewalk
and
repair,
but
I
have
cars
who
continually
you
know,
damage
my
sidewalk
because
they're
parking
there.
So
that's
just
kind
of
FYI
I
mean
if
cars.
AB
AB
C
V
C
They
sort
of
like
fade
after
a
while,
but
now
our
art,
our
Traffic
Division,
is
the
one
that
does
the
line
striping
on
the
streets
and
the
curbs
and
the
crosswalks,
and
all
that
we
will
put
out.
Also,
though
some
thermoplastic
line
striping,
that's
the
one,
that's
the
stuff,
that's
a
little
bit
more
permanent.
That
goes
down.
That's
probably
intended
to
last
about
ten
years.
So
that's
ten,
less
striping
Zoar
five
to
ten
less
strivings.
C
We
have
to
do
because
they
do
a
crosswalk
today,
more
like
they
have
to
deal
with
in
a
couple
of
years,
because
it's
going
to
fade.
So
you
know
the
ones
that
look
like
piano
keys
looks
like
like
a
pad
going
down,
that's
thermoplastic,
and
that
has
to
be
done
by
a
contractor.
We're
not
skilled
enough.
Yet
to
do
that.
Okay,.
AB
C
It
does
it
does
go
on
the
list
for
the
last
two
years.
We
didn't
do
it
the
first
year
in
14,
15
16,
and
this
year
we
have
added.
We
do
primaries
and
secondaries.
So,
to
give
you
an
example,
a
primary
might
be
beechwood
Boulevard,
that's
a
main
drag
in
terms
of
volume
of
traffic
secondary
would
be
the
streets
that
are
leading
off
of
it
and
then,
of
course,
everybody
should
be
able
to
figure
out
a
tertiary
would
be
the
alleys
and
all
that.
C
So
when
our
painting
program
in
years
past,
they
would
just
basically
look
at
primaries
and
secondaries.
Maybe
alleys
might
have
been
done
by
an
in-house
crew,
maybe
not,
but
with
our
program
we
are
doing
all
three
and
you're
right.
We
don't
do
an
equal
amount
of
tertiaries,
but
we
do
commit
some
money
to
doing
tertiaries
and
we've
done
that.
C
The
last
three
years
and
I'll
have
to
tell
you
I've,
actually
gotten
more
compliments
for
doing
somebody's
alley
than
I've
done
for
some
of
the
primaries
and
secondaries
and
because
they
either
got
there
to
be
able
to
get
their
cars
back
in
the
alley
or
they
walk
in
the
alleys
a
lot
or
whatever.
So
we
do
them
now.
You
know
the
tertiaries
are
smaller
and
with
so
we're
able
to
do
a
lot
more
and
I.
Think
I
don't
have
a
figure
for
you,
but
we
do
commit
money
to
doing
alleys
things
that
we
do
not.
D
AB
C
N
C
H
N
AC
AD
April
class
or
a
Greenfield
I
just
wanted
to
comment
on
two
of
the
things
that
have
already
been
discussed.
One
was
the
commercial
property
owners
responsibility
as
far
as
recycling
I
had
the
experience
just
for
anybody
who
does
work
in
the
city
and
especially
some
of
the
smaller
commercial
buildings.
Where
you
have
just
a
few
offices.
A
lot
of
the
property
owners
do
not
provide
that
recycling.
I
did
in
my
research
when
I
was
working
in
a
building
like
this
and
found.
AD
You
know
they
are
legally
responsible
in
the
city
for
providing
containers
and
services
to
haul
away
recycling.
So
we
were
able
to
just
you
know,
send
a
note
to
the
property
landlord,
and
you
know
to
our
surprise.
He
actually
complied
with
it
really
quickly
and
and
got
the
containers
out
there
and
hired
waste
management
or
somebody.
So
that
was
a
good
experience.
It
can
be
done
and
I
also
wanted
to
just
comment.
I
don't
know
if
this
was
the
case
with
Molly's
younger
neighbors
that
they,
you
know
we're
not
snow,
shoveling
and
stuff.
AD
C
AC
Hi
I'm
Rob
I
live
in
Garfield
I,
don't
really
have
any
important
questions
and
the
issues
but
I
did
want
to
thank
everyone
involved
for
the
presentation
today
and
the
work
that
you
do.
I
just
wanted
to
say
two
things,
and
that
is
I'm
known.
As
from
the
pictures
you
have
pictures,
I
lived
not
too
far
from
East
Liberty
of
the
bridges
and
the
lighting
arrangements
that
you
created
over
those
bridges.
I
just
want
to
tell
you
those
are
so
beautiful
and
they
really
do
add
a
lot
to
the
experience
of
living
in
the
city.
AC
It's
a
rare
experience
to
be
in
Pittsburgh
and
to
be
in
like
this
romantic
kind
of
lighting
in
the
evening.
It
does
add
a
lot
to
the
experience
of
living
in
the
city,
and
the
second
thing
is
that
the
investments
that
the
city
parks
have
made
in
like
the
water
recreational
aspects
are
some
of
my
favorite
parts
and
I
really
do
appreciate.
I
know
a
lot
of
children
in
my
neighborhood
and
my
own
have
derived
a
lot
of
joy
from
those
experiences.
So
thank
you
for
that,
and
definitely
continue
to
make
those
investments.
Thank.
C
You
and,
and
to
speak
to
the
you
I
mean
you'll,
hear
this
with
director
Griffin.
But
you
know
a
lot
of
the
closed
polls
are
being
converted
into
spray
parks,
so
they
are
being
repurposed
and
I.
Think
the
next
one
down
the
line
that
they're
working
on
my
staffs
working
on
is
at
Paulsen
pool
that
so
that's
I
think
they've
already
done
some
work
on
the
building
in
terms
of
demoing,
some
of
the
building
and
they'll
be
working
on
that
in
2018,
hopefully
getting
it
open
in
2018.
Thank
you.
I'm.
AE
Bianca
I
live
in
Homewood,
but
I
also
in
city,
employee
work
for
a
3-1-1
line
with
that
being
said,
the
gentleman
in
the
front
who
has
the
root
pruning
issue.
That
would
be
an
ideal.
Yes,
I
forgot
your
name.
You
said
it
I
forget
that
would
be
an
ideal
time
for
you
to
use
3-1-1,
because
there
were
two
things
that
he
asked
you
to
do:
that's,
instead
of
having
to
contact
forestry,
to
request
a
root,
pruning
and
contact
the
law
department.
AE
AE
AE
You
know
a
year
later,
they're
still
in
disrepair,
they're
still
not
cleaned
up,
because
we're
told
that
they
need
a
court
court
has
to
order
it
or
the
magistrate
has
to
order
it,
but
at
the
same
time,
there's
also
properties
that
get
clean
and
leaned
that
there
weren't
orders
for
so
I
guess
I'm
trying
to
get
some
clarity
on
deep.
What's
what
do
you
need
or
does
DPW
need
to
exercise
that?
Well.
C
The
best
thing
I
can
give
that
out
is
this.
The
the
mayor
certainly
would
like
us
to
get
into
a
property
that
needs
to
cut
cleaned
debris,
removed
whatever
a
lot
quicker
than
what
has
been
what
it's
been
in
the
past
we're
running
again
following
what
PL
eyes
procedure
has
been,
they
do
the
three
notices
we've
had
had
meetings.
C
The
mayor
would
like
it
to
happen
within
five
days,
so
we
are
we're,
not
the
ones
that
are
they
have
to
create,
that
you
know
create
that
that
has
to
be
done
created
through
PLI
and
whatever
there
are
as
existing
ordinances
in
the
city
code.
That
might
need
to
be
amended
and
enhanced
for
us
to
allowed
to
be
do
that
to
be
allowed
to
do
that.
C
So
there
is
a
desire
to
do
that,
but
it
when
that
happens,
then
we're
there
we're
going
to
have
to
be
able
to
be
ramped
up
in
terms
of
personnel,
because
right
now
we're
putting
at
least
a
minimal
effort
at
taking
care
of
the
cleaning
liens
that
are
given
each
division,
because
there
are
so
many
other
things
that
division
has
to
do.
So.
C
The
mayor
has
asked
us
to:
you
know,
give
him
some
information
to
tell
them
they
I'm
going
to
need
five
more
Labor's
in
each
division
or
whatever,
and
then
we'll
make
those
try
to
get
those
resources.
The
problem,
though,
is
that
most
of
the
properties,
as
you
know,
our
dead
end
so
they're.
You
know
we
I've
built
I've,
sent
out
800
letters
to
properties
that
we've
cut
and
cleaned
degree
and
I
will
probably
tell
you
that
we've
captured
at
least
responses
from
people
probably
may
have
no
more
than
15
and
I
think.
C
Maybe
three
or
four
people
have
paid
to
date,
most
people
when
I'm
writing
a
letter.
It's
gone
to
the
same
address
that
we
just
cleaned
and
leaned
I
know
that's
coming
back
as
a
non
deliverable
thing.
I
was
sending
letters
to
Arizona
of
California
like
to
corporations
and
companies
and
I
thought
wow.
This
is
going
to
get
to
somebody
they're
going
to
actually
pay
us.
What
we
do
you
know
for
the
services
we
did
coming
back,
undeliverable
the
the
company's
gone
under
and
all
that.
So
it's
very
disheartening.
C
As
we
all
know,
somebody
owns
that
house
I
mean
the
people
that
it's
under
that
name
may
have
passed
away,
but
they
have
probably
have
children
and
some
enough
so
we've
gone
to
the
court
records
there,
Allegheny
County's
records
and
ask
them
to
have
better
information
that
what
what
we're
sending
out
is
going
to
go
to
a
party.
That's
going
to
then
be
responsible
for
paying
us
for
what
and
when
we
start
capturing
that
money
and
you
know
paying
for
the
resources
that
we're
committing
to
do
it.
C
AE
C
N
C
F
J
N
AF
C
How
to
drive
the
problem
is
yes,
it
did
cause
some
confusion
for
the
last
couple
days,
but
they
they
now
have
got
the
markings
down.
The
signs
are
up.
I
heard
the
other
day.
I
had
a
staff
member
report.
Late
I
didn't
know
that
she
lived
in
Highland
Park.
It
took
like
45
minutes
just
to
get
from
Stanton
to
Center,
and
then
I
asked
her
today.
How
did
it
go
and
she
said,
was
much
better
everything,
so
I
Drive
every
night
I
take
my
daughter
to
work
over
at
UPMC
and
I
got
I
mean
I.
C
Even
I
was
confused,
I
didn't
know
where
I
was
driving
in
the
wrong
lane.
Thank
God.
It
was
no
traffic
at
that
time
of
night.
So,
yes,
it
was
very
confusing,
but
as
my
understanding
that
that
as
each
night
they
were
making
improvements,
so
it
looks
to
be
a
lot
better,
but
it
is
that
is
bike
lanes
and
then
they've
narrowed
down,
instead
of
it
being
two
lanes
for
traffic
in
some
places.
It's
a
single
lane
with
turning
lanes
and
such
okay.
AG
D
We
addressed
the
homeless
camps
through
operation
safety
net.
They
go
in
first
they're
a
friendly
face
to
these
folks.
We
come
in
with
equipment,
we're
the
bad
guys,
so
we
kind
of
lay
some
groundwork
with
them.
We
post
it
so
they
know
whether
to
take
it.
Like
I
said
earlier,
to
take
their
belongings
take
what's
important
to
them.
They
have
papers,
they
have
medications,
there's
stuff
that
they
need
to
exist,
and
so
we
make
sure
that
they
have
all
that
and
like
I
said.
D
So
we
do
have
our
problem
areas
that
we
address
and
again
working
with
PennDOT
and
working
with
safety
net.
That's
how
we
address
them.
All
we
can
do
is
maintain
them.
I
mean
it
actually
has
become
almost
like
a
an
environmental
rubbish
route
that
we
we
maintain
and
just
make
regular
stops
and
take
care
of
them
all
right.
AF
But
my
name
is
Justin
sander
I
just
have
a
quick
question
and
I
may
be
beating
a
dead
horse
with
some
of
the
recycling
questions,
but
I
get
the
sense
that
we
are
improving,
but
or
do
we
have
any
say
in
the
strategy
for
the
city
of
Pittsburgh
in
terms
of
what
the
recycling
program
is
going
to
look
like
for
the
next
five
to
ten
years,
because
I
know
other
cities
in
other
states
are
obviously
taking
more
dramatic
steps
towards
eliminating
plastic
bags
altogether
and
I
know
that
they
are
doing
being
much
more
proactive
in
the
sense
of
they
are
creating
programs
that
are
radically
changing.
AF
How
we
look
at
recycling
from
top
to
bottom.
So
does
this
organization
have
a
influence
on
mayor
Peduto,
so
verall
plan
for
recycling
as
a
as
a
means
to
an
end
for
the
city,
because,
ultimately,
that
has
an
impact
on
the
environment,
the
parks,
the
all
of
the
other
surrounding
areas
of
the
city?
Yes,.
I
Certainly
through
mayor
Peduto
office,
where
we're
certainly
looking
at
all
those
things
to
headed
toward
zero
waste,
it's
it's
something
that
evolves
for
our
area.
There's
a
lot
of
things
that
they're
doing
other
places
that
we
just
quite
haven't
caught
up
with
them.
Yet
composting
different
things
and
a
part,
fortunately
costs
us
a
lot
more
to
do
them
here
than
it
does
other
places
so,
certainly
down
the
line.
It's
it's
stuff,
we're
looking
at
to
always
improve
and
and
make
the
process
easier
and
better
and.
AF
I
C
H
C
It's
been
a
long
night.
I
do
appreciate
all
the
questions
he
gave
us
some
tough
ones.
I
hope
we
answered
hope
we
made
a
nice
presentation
for
you.
There's
one
thing
I
one
other
thing:
I
did
I
mean
these
have
been
scrolling
along,
and
just
one
thing
to
tell
you
about.
Our
sustainability
feature
is
how
many
Hana
Park
who
lives
near
Highland,
Park
anybody
here
or
Highland,
Park.
Okay,
so
did
you
see
the
lake
Carnegie
yeah
all
right,
so
we
got
aerators
in
there.
C
So
let
me
just
tell
you,
like
you
know
that
water
comes
in
and
water
goes
out.
The
other
end
of
lake
right.
It's
just
like
flushing
water
down
the
drain,
waste
of
water
wasting
water
to
the
extent
of
84
million
gallons
of
water.
Okay,
put
these
aerators
in
to
keep
the
water
moving,
because
you
know
the
water
is
not
on
feeding
Lake
anymore.
We
will
turn
it
on
only
when
it
drops
to
a
lowest
level
to
feed
some
water
back
in
there
same
amount
of
water
is
in
there
the
aerators.
C
In
there
we
will
reduce
that
down
from
84
million
to
1
million
gallons.
That's
an
83
million
dollar,
83
million
gallons
of
water
that
we're
gonna
save
the
city
because,
but
those
aerators
so
I
understand
you
may
see
the
water
on
occasionally,
but
that's
only
to
feed
it
because
it
evaporated
or
and
just
need
to
bring
it
up
to
a
certain
level,
but
that
was
water
going
in
water
simply
just
going
down
the
other
dent
as
a
catch
basin
and
out
and
out
into
the
river
play
waste
of
water.
C
That's
correct!
The
PSA
worked
with
us.
We
paid
they
paid
for
the
mechanism,
that's
inside
the
log,
cabin
richly
with
peanuts,
a
I
think
donned
a
scuba
suit
and
helped
put
some
of
the
aerators
in
the
bottom
of
the
lake,
and
it's
working
perfectly
that's
I
mean
that's
a
significant
amount
of
water,
that's
pretty
dynamic!
So
I
will
end
with
that.
Thank
you
very
much
for
allowing
us
this
opportunity.