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From YouTube: Pittsburgh City Council Standing Committees - 1/23/19
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A
Hello
and
welcome
to
Pittsburgh
City
Council's
standing
committees,
meeting
for
Wednesday
January
23rd
2019.
My
name
is
Kim
Clark,
Baskin
and
I'm
your
deputy
city
clerk
with
us.
Today
we
have
our
sign
language
interpreter
Amber,
bailar,
the
following
is
a
list
of
legislation
up
for
preliminary
approval
by
Pittsburgh,
City,
Council,
finance
and
law
committee.
A
Reverend
Burgess
is
the
chair
bill
number
12
47
resolution
authorizing
the
issuance
of
a
warrant
in
favor
of
Farrell
in
Risinger
LLC
in
an
amount
not
to
exceed
ten
thousand
two
hundred
and
twenty
eight
dollars
and
sixty
cents
for
professional
legal
services
regarding
a
police
matter,
bill
number
twelve.
Forty
eight
resolution
authorizing
the
issuance
of
a
warrant
in
favor
of
Schneider
Harrison,
siegel
and
lewis
LLP
in
an
amount
not
to
exceed
eight
thousand
two
hundred
and
twenty
three
dollars
in
ninety
two
cents
for
professional
services
in
connection
with
the
police
matter,
bill
number
twelve.
A
A
Eighty
four
resolution
amending
resolution
number
fourteen
of
2019
realigning
a
total
amount
of
four
million
three
hundred
and
twenty-two
thousand
dollars
between
various
accounts
within
the
2018
operating
budget.
This
transfer
is
necessary
for
the
2018
close
to
meet
final
expenditures
for
fiscal
year.
2018
bill
number,
twelve,
eighty
five
resolution
to
authorize
and
directs
the
incurring
of
non
electoral
debt
through
the
issuance
of
a
series
of
general
obligation,
bonds
of
the
city
of
Pittsburgh
and
the
maximum
aggregate
principal
amount
of
sixty
two
million
four
hundred
and
thirty-five
thousand
dollars
bill
number
twelve.
A
Bill
number
twelve,
eighty
seven
resolution
providing
for
the
issuance
of
a
warrant
in
the
total
sum
of
six
thousand
eight
hundred
and
fifty-seven
dollars
in
two
cents
in
favor
of
Diane
and
Ronald
Bakke
care
of
Robert
Pierce
&
Associates
is
final
settlement
related
to
the
action
filed
in
the
common
court
of
Allegheny
County
bill
number
twelve.
Eighty
eight
resolution
authorizing
the
issuance
of
a
warrant
in
the
amount
of
5303
dollars
in
thirty
four
cents.
It's
at
pepper,
Hamilton,
LLP
for
professional,
consulting
and
legal
services
in
relation
to
False
Claims
Act
litigation
bill
number.
Twelve.
A
Eighty
nine
resolution
authorizing
the
issuance
of
a
warrant
in
favor
of
Gleason
&
associates
p.c
in
an
amount
not
to
exceed
nine
thousand
nine
hundred
and
forty
six
dollars
for
professional
services.
In
connection
with
the
lawsuit
filed
in
an
Allegheny
County,
Court
of
Common
Pleas
bill
number
1290
resolution
authorizing
the
issuance
of
a
warrant
in
favor
of
Kittleson
LLC
in
an
amount
not
to
exceed
ten
thousand
eighty
two
dollars
and
twenty
cents
for
professionals.
A
Services
in
connection
with
the
lawsuit
filed
in
Allegheny
County
Court
of
Common
Pleas
bill
number
1291
resolution
authorizing
pursuant
to
chapter
210.
It
acceptance
of
gifts
by
the
city
of
the
city
code,
the
mayor
and
the
director
of
the
Department
of
Public
Safety
to
accept
a
donation
from
Alcoa
corporation
of
$5,000
to
be
deposited
in
the
public
safety
support,
trust
fund,
Public,
Safety,
Services
Committee.
Mr.
A
Laval
is
the
chair
bill
number
12,
93
resolution
authorizing
the
mayor
and
the
director
of
the
Department
of
Public
Safety
to
execute
relevant
agreements
to
receive
grant
funding
from
the
Hillman
Family
Foundation
Nina
Hamilton
Fisher
foundation
to
provide
funds
to
support
the
creation
and
support
of
a
domestic
violence
team
housed
in
a
Pittsburgh
Bureau
of
police
and
further
providing
for
an
agreement
and
expenditures
not
to
exceed
$500,000.
For
this
stated
purpose.
A
Public
works
committee,
mrs.
Kelsey
Smith,
is
the
chair.
Bill
number
12
39
resolution
authorizing
the
mayor
and
the
director
of
the
department
of
mobility
and
infrastructure,
on
behalf
of
the
city
of
Pittsburgh,
to
enter
into
a
license
and
operating
agreement
with
hft
Management
Inc
doing
business
as
gateway
outdoor
advertising
for
services
related
to
installation,
operation,
maintenance
and
advertising
of
transit,
shelters
and
associated
street
furniture.
A
Harris
is
the
chair
bill
number
1290
to
resolution
authorizing
the
mayor
and
director
of
Human
Resources
in
civil
service
commission
to
enter
into
an
agreement
with
Willis
Towers
Watson
for
services
related
to
supporting
the
city
with
development
and
negotiation
of
employee
benefits
that
are
provided
to
city
employees
for
some
not
to
exceed
1
million
one
hundred
sixteen
thousand
dollars
over
four
years
and
for
the
payments
of
the
costs
there
of
intergovernmental
affairs
committee.
Mr.
B
Good
morning
and
welcome
to
Pittsburgh
City
Council
Standing
Committee
meeting
of
Wednesday
January
23rd
2019,
our
first
order
of
business
is
public
comment.
We
like
to
remind
everyone
that
the
rules
of
council
state
that
comment
is
limited
to
matters
of
concern.
Official
action
or
deliberation
which
are
or
may
be
before,
council
profanity
will
not
be
permitted
in
order
will
be
maintained
at
all
times
with
the
first
speaker.
Please
take
the
podium.
C
Looks
like
I'm,
the
only
fellow
my
name
is
Howard
Phillip
Jackson
HP
Jackson
out
here
in
the
world.
Today
I
represent
beep
m
Hazelwood
initiative,
senator
life
and
the
reality
about.
What's
going
on
with
our
young
people
today,
I'd
like
to
respond
about
the
mayor's
actions
in,
like
it's
very
positive
I,
remember
before
he
was
running
for
office.
That
was
his
main
game
to
go
ahead
and
find
a
way
to
find
out
where
the
resources
were.
C
These
weapons
are
coming
from
all
right,
because
now
our
babies
are
10,
10,
11,
12
years
old
have
weapons
today
are
and
the
reality
of
it
is
it's
not
just
a
black
issue,
white
issue.
It's
a
humanitarian
issue,
all
right!
Basically,
it's
on
like
how
are
we
going
to
protect
our
children
for
the
future?
All
right
I
mean
these
incidences
that
happen.
The
mayor
recognized
me
being
in
media,
sometimes
like
when
a
child
just
had
its
brains,
blowed
out,
or
things
happen
in
front
of
my
my
mom's
yard.
C
You
know
and
I'm
looking
at
people
with
bandanas
on
and
just
acting
like
these
dirties
superstars,
in
the
media,
okay,
to
eliminate
life
and
the
reality
of
it
is
we're
doing
things
now
to
go
in
the
highest
ones
and
make
them
aware
of
it.
But
like
how
can
you
have
a
child
of
your
own,
my
grandson?
He
had
his
oldest
cousin,
my
oldest
Branson
21,
for
bullets
in
his
head.
C
After
he
he's
athlete
a
successful
being
a
champion
of
Porter
City,
our
Alderdice,
and
then
he
has
a
classmate
that
he
has
for
two
years
up
in
otter
days.
Wow
eliminated
this
ham
Street
all
right,
and
then
you
got
people
just
coming
up
with
memorials
and
not
even
interacting
with
the
family.
Okay,
because
it's
a
human
touch
issue
all
right.
C
Alright,
you
know
the
transition
is
so
so
out
of
place,
the
devil's
ear.
You
want
to
call
it
that
there's
no
spiritual
format,
there's
no
men
today,
it's
all
single-parent,
mostly
females
and
man
has
to
go
ahead
and
make
a
presence
all
right.
He
has
to
make
a
presence
in
order
to
go
ahead
and
help
save
our
children's
future.
You
know
you
got
to
have
a
man
in
your
life
and
it's
great
to
have
mom,
but
you
need
that
man
and
we
need
you
today.
Men.
Thank
you.
Thank.
D
Miss
Meena,
my
name,
is
Rafiq
Brooklands
and
I
reside
in
the
city
of
Pittsburgh,
a
petition
by
Rafiq
Brookins,
a
petition
calling
for
reparations
for
indigenous
American
populations
as
well
as
African,
American
descendants
and
populations.
This
petition
calls
for
the
reparations
for
over
4.5
million
American
Indian
Alaskan
native
Native
Hawaiian
other
Pacific
Islanders,
as
well
as
all
of
the
573
plus
registered
Native
American
tribes,
all
of
which
were
viciously
attacked
and
brutally
murdered
in
butchered
by
the
masses
for
hundreds
of
years.
D
Continuing
this
petition
also
calls
for
reparations
for
over
forty
five
million
black
African
Americans,
who
are
the
direct
descendants
of
the
African
people
who
were
brutalized,
victimized
and
forcibly
enslaved
for
over
400
years.
This
petition
calls
for
all
banks
in
the
world
to
provide
access
to
emergency
reparation
relief
funds
in
the
amount
of
$100,000
per
affected
person
per
year
for
at
least
two
generations.
This
will
only
begin
to
repair
the
damage
and
destruction
that
happened
to
these
very
beautiful
groups
of
human
beings
that
continue
to
score
them
till
this
very
day.
D
This
petition
calls
for
all
countries,
governments,
families,
banks,
corporations
and
any
other
entities
that
directly
or
indirectly
benefited
and
profited
from
the
mass
genocide
and
enslavement
of
the
indigenous
populations
of
America
and
the
African
and
the
African
American
people
of
America,
as
our
descendants
who
contribute
to
this
massive
debt
owed
to
these
people,
so
as
to
only
try
and
begin
to
remedy
such
an
abhorrent
tragedy
in
human
history.
We
are
calling
on
Congress
all
branches
of
the
federal
state
city
and
local
governments
to
contribute
to
the
dissemination
of
the
funds
to
all
associated
parties.
D
50
million
people
$100,000
per
affected
person
per
year.
That's
five
trillion
dollars
a
year
for
two
generations
at
least
reparations
for
the
descendants
of
the
Africans
in
slave's
in
1619
has
been
one
of
the
recommendations
in
the
report
and
only
working
group
of
experts
on
people
of
African
descent.
On
its
mission
to
the
United
States
of
America
number
68
of
this
2016
United
United
Nations
report
states
that,
despite
the
positive
measures,
the
working
group
remains
extremely
concerned
about
the
human
rights
situation
of
african-americans,
in
particular
the
legacy
of
colonial
history
and
slave
Minh.
D
Racial,
racial
subordination,
segregation,
racial
terrorism
and
racial
inequality
in
the
United.
States
remains
a
serious
challenge,
as
there
has
been
no
real
commitment
to
reparations
and
to
truth
and
reconciliation
for
people
of
African
descent,
contemporary
police
killings
and
the
trauma
that
they
create
are
reminiscent
of
the
past
racial
terror
of
lynching,
impunity
for
state
violence,
as
we
Zone
in
the
current
Human
Rights
crisis,
and
must
be
addressed
as
a
matter
of
urgency.
Thank
you
very
much.
B
E
B
Thank
you
very
much.
We
will
start
with
the
finance
and
Law
Committee.
Mr.
Coghill
is
here.
We
are
eight
members.
Eight
members
now
strong
we're
going
to
ask
the
clerk
to
read
bills
on
the
on
page
one
bill
Reid
bill
1305,
then,
on
page
on
page
to
rebuild
1287
and
then
on
page
three
rebuilds,
12,
88,
89
and
90,
all
of
them
called
for
executive
session.
So
you
can
read
them
all
together.
Bill.
B
E
B
F
B
E
B
E
B
E
G
B
F
I
J
E
F
K
B
B
I
was
actually
finance,
chair,
I,
think
eight
years
ago,
or
was
eight
years
ago
when
we
started
this
process
of
regular
borrowing,
and
we
set
up
this
system
where
we
would
go
out
to
bond
in
in
every
two
to
three
years
and
use
those
bond
monies
for
our
capital
tool
and
in
our
capital
budget
and
our
capital
infrastructures.
That's
primarily
what
the
body
is
used
for,
and
so
we,
the
boring,
is
always
going
to
be
around
60
somewhere
in
some
number
like
that
60
over
over
to
three
years
and
then
another
60.
B
B
It
was
with
ak-47
the
ica.
All
of
us
sat
in
a
room
inside
the
strategy,
and
so
what
you're
seeing
now
is
the
continuation
of
a
strategy
that
was
actually
agreed
upon
eight
nine
years
ago
and
so
you're.
Seeing
now
the
continuation
of
this
wanted
to
give
you
that
history,
since
I,
was
in
the
room
and
this
occur.
If
you
would
identify
yourself
and
talk
to
us
about
this
bar
once
I'm.
L
Jennifer
gula,
I'm
the
acting
director
treasurer
of
the
finance
department
today,
but
also
serve
as
the
assistant
director
and
absence
of
Margaret.
This
is
a
borrowing
that
was
actually
for
capital
projects
that
were
already
placed
in
the
current
budget,
and
it's
just
finances
responsibility
to
oversee
the
issuance
of
the
bonds
and
to
make
sure
that
the
that
we're
being
fiscally
responsible
and
staying
with
the
confines
of
our
debt
management
policy.
B
M
Please
so,
as
you
had
mentioned,
councilman
that
this
is
part
of
a
strategic
plan
to
issue
debt
and
I
know
that
capital
planning
has
gone
through
a
very
comprehensive
development
process
of
these
capital
projects
and
scrutinizing
in
a
very
scrutinizing
manner.
Of
course,
we
are
always
contemplating
whether
or
not
the
city
has
really
one
of
three
options
issued
debt
in
order
to
fulfill
these
capital
projects,
pay
cash
for
these
projects,
a
portion
of
which
you
are
most
certainly
going
to
pay
for,
and
not
out
of
this
sixty
million
dollars,
but
certainly
other
capital
projects.
M
You
have
set
aside
money
to
pay
cash
for
a
long
term,
useful
life
capital
projects
or
not
do
the
projects.
Those
are
really
the
three
options
that
you
have
and
again.
This
was
all
part
of
a
very
comprehensive
strategy
with
regard
to
how
to
balance
the
issuance
of
debt,
the
use
of
cash
and
fulfill
these
projects
that
are
that
have
been
on
the
radar
screen
for
quite
a
long
time.
I
hope
that
helps
yes,.
N
Don't
say
we
really
did
go
through
the
full
six
months,
EPF
C
process
this
year.
We
got
a
lot
of
really
great
input,
specifically
from
council
offices,
so
thank
you
for
working
on
that
we're
also
really
trying
to
get
better
at
expressing
what
our
kind
of
longer-term
needs
are,
and
so,
if
we're
in
the
planning
stages
for
something
now
we're
going
to
be
construction
money
in
the
future.
N
B
L
F
So
that's
over
the
40
million
that
was
just
issued
for
building
that
isn't
necessary.
Okay,
so
this
will
take
us
up
to.
In
the
last
five
years,
two
hundred
million
dollars
correct
I,
have
never
seen
in
five
years
ever
bonds
being
taken
out.
I,
know
you're
here
to
make
sure
it's
sufficiently
done
and
I'm
not
sure.
If
you
were
here
at
the
beginning
at
the
five
years,
no
one.
O
F
O
F
F
F
M
M
That's
the
total
over
the
outstanding
life
of
those
existing
bonds.
So
again,
I
think
I
had
forwarded
to
Council
a
list
of
the
city's
outstanding
debt,
and
hopefully
you
had
an
opportunity
to
see
it
1998.
What
remains
of
the
city's
pension
bonds
is
142
million
685,
there's
2012
2014
18,
roughly
four
hundred
forty
two
million
dollars
would
be
the
city's
outstanding
profile
after
this
debt
issuance.
So
if
you
subtract
60
million
you
get
the
380
million
dollars
existing
142
of
that
is
the
pension
obligation
issued
in
1998
I.
F
F
F
F
N
N
But
they'll
tell
you
the
exact
location
and
then
also
there's
in
them
in
the
capital
budget.
For
each
one
of
these
we
identify
the
specific
location
for
each
of
the
deliverables
and
then
the
fund
source.
So
if
you're
looking
for
you
know
the
specific
park
projects
that
were
bond
funded,
you
can
go
to
the
bond
project
in
the
capital
budget
and
it
should
list
which
ones
are
bond
funding
the
park
reconstruction
so.
F
I
P
P
That
160
in
2019,
okay,
so
just
a
question,
its
technical
I,
think
you
guys
got
us
this
answer.
The
bond
in
front
of
us
actually
says
sixty
two
point:
four:
can
you
just
explain
why
you
have
that
I'm
sure
it's
you
know
four
markets
and
different
things
like
that.
But
could
you
just
explain
why
it's
62
opposed
to
the
actual
60
by.
M
M
M
Our
that
we'll
call
it
the
optimal
solution
on
behalf
of
City
Council,
we
may
need
to
move
slightly
some
bonds
and
all
we
did
was
very
simply
was
they
had
a
hundred
thousand
dollars
worth
of
bonds
in
each
maturity
as
an
increment
to
allow
for
some
alteration
to
that
not
to
exceed
schedule
that
was
included
in
the
exhibit
B
of
the
debt
resolution?
So
it's
really
to
provide
that's
the
that's.
M
M
That
would
we'll
call
it
compromise
the
salient
it's
a
good
order
that
we
want
to
accept.
We
would
not
be
able
to
accept
it
if
we
didn't
provide
for
a
little
bit
of
overage
we're
not
issuing
anymore
we're
not
doing
any
more
than
sixty
million
dollars
in
capital
our
projects.
It
just
helps
us
solve
the
equation.
If
someone
wants
to
present
to
the
city
a
discount
order
in
the
course
of
all
the
orders
and
when
we
tally
them
all
up,
we're
trying
to
make
sure
we
will
stay
below
sixty
two
million
for
thirty-five.
P
Right
yeah
and
that's
what
I
just
wanted.
Everybody
I
think
we
I
was
briefed
on
this
as
well
as
why
it
was
2.4
more
than
sixty,
but
it
it
doesn't
make
sense
to
give
us
a
cushion
like
you
said:
if
something
comes
in
higher
or
lower,
so
I
just
wanted
everybody
to
know
that
we're
not
spending
62
we're
spending
60,
but
that's
there
just
in
case
I'm
good.
Thank
you
very
much.
Mr.
cocoa.
Q
Thanks
for
meeting
with
us
last
week,
really
really
helped
me
out.
I
could
tell
you
so
so
our
rating
right
now
is
ee.
You
have.
Q
You
know
initially
I'm
always
I,
don't
want
to
borrow
any
money,
but
I
understand,
bonds
and
bonds
are
really.
You
know
three
generations
from
now.
If
we've
fixed
a
bridge
today,
we
first
of
all
like
matt,
said
we
don't
have
the
cash
as
far
as
I
know
to
pay
for
these
things
now.
I
have
infrastructures,
problems
and
I
know.
Other
council
members
have
major
infrastructure
problems
that
are
going
to
need
fixed
within
the
next
two
I
hope
one
year.
But
you
know
thirty
years
from
now,
this
type
of
project
is
going
to
be
used
by.
Q
M
We
thank
you
compliment
excellent
question.
Any
issuance
of
debt
is
always
considered
a
credit
negative,
no
different
than
any
time.
You
borrow
in
your
personal
lines
of
credit.
It's
the
credit
negative.
The
question
is:
have
you
sufficiently
provided
for
the
repayment
of
that
debt?
How
is
your
overall
debt
profile
based
upon
your
history
and
where
it
currently
stands
and
what
it
looks
like
going
forward?
M
It's
come
down
materially,
and
you
are
now
below
the
targeted
level
that
this
counsel
previously
identified
as
12%
of
expenditures
kudos
to
this
council
and
prior
council
members
for
the
hard
work
you've
done
in
getting
to
this
point,
because
it's
difficult.
We
know
that.
But
the
great
news
is
that
you
bet
you're
beyond
the
debt
cliff
the
vision
that
was
we'll
call
it
or
the
strategy
that
was
developed
with
a
vision.
To
get
to
this
point
in
order
to
address
infrastructure.
Q
Q
Previous
future
generations
are
going
to
benefit
from
this
and
from
what
I
understand
that
bonds
move
in
the
market,
there
were
people
if
you're
in
the
right
tax
bracket,
they're
very
attractive,
because
they
feel
that
ultimately-
and
we
hope
it
doesn't,
come
to
ever
raising
taxes,
but
ultimately
the
taxpayer
is
liable
for
that
bond.
It's.
M
Q
R
You
I
just
want
to
be
clear.
First
of
all,
thank
you
for
the
explanation
and
meeting
with
us
during
the
council
briefing,
but
I
do
want
to
make
some
things
clear
for
the
public
because
we
did
meet
with
people
after
that
briefing,
and
so
they
had
made
specific
requests
and
I
want
to
make
sure
that
they
understand
that,
while
we're
working
on
those
requests
that
were
limited
in
to
the
funding
that
we
have
available
to
address
those
those
requests.
R
I
R
S
R
R
If
you
recall,
we
I
mean
everybody
knows
that
we
allocated
money
and
we
are
short
like
two
million
dollars,
because
we
had
changed
that
and
we
have
heard
from
the
advocates
over
and
over
again
that
they
want
that
money
restored
and
I
agree
with
them.
We
made
an
agreement
to
the
public.
We
did
news
conferences.
We
made
a
big
to-do
about
it.
We're
sitting
here
today
with
women's
groups
and
talking
about
domestic
violence.
R
There's
a
lot
of
women
in
domestic
violence
situations
waiting
for
housing-
and
you
know
I'm,
not
gonna,
say
one
thing
and
then
do
something
different.
So
if
we
say
that
we're
going
to
allocate
that
funding
for
housing,
we
need
to
find
that
funding,
but
I
want
to
make
it
clear
that
these
funds
cannot
be
used,
but
they
have
a
commitment
from
this
council
to
find
those
funds
one
way
or
the
other
a
projects
coming
off
of
this
budget
or
out
of
this
budget.
R
T
T
Yeah
and-
and
we
had
I-
think
our
advisors
are
financial
advisors
at
the
table,
and
I
was
amazed
that
at
that
time
the
amount
that
we
were
spending
on
payments
to
the
to
Wall
Street.
Basically,
for
these
bonds,
each
year
out
of
our
capital,
funds
was
eighty
million
dollars,
I
mean
I.
Have
our
in
tax
revenue
was
eighty
million
dollars?
M
T
T
M
T
N
S
T
So
we've
gone
down
thirty
million
dollars
in
the
last
four
years
on
those
payments,
but
so
we're
still
it
we're
asking
today
right
we're
being
asked
to
vote
on
borrowing,
sixty
million
dollars
we're
paying
fifty
million
dollars
a
year
cash
last
year
this
year
next
year
for
the
staff,
so
that
well
some
we'll
say
you
know
it
really
isn't
fair.
We
can't
go
out
and
spend
every
dollar
right.
T
Lifecycle
I
think
it's
right
to
vend
spread
that
burden
out
over
the
life
of
the
asset,
so
that
today's
taxpayer
isn't
trying
to
pay
for
it
all.
However,
the
other
side
of
that
argument
is
just
like
with
your
household
budget.
You
don't
want
to
take
out
so
much
debt
that
you're
really
blowing
money
to
the
bank
when
you
could
be
paying
for
it
out
of
pocket
and.
E
T
I'm
kind
of
struggling
with
where
we
are
in
the
middle
here
so
well,
12%
sounds
like
a
good
number.
I
would
I.
It
gives
me
pause
still
to
say
we
guess
we
have
higher
revenue,
largely
in
terms
of
higher
property
values.
A
lot
of
you
see
a
lot
of
real
estate
investment
in
too
many
of
our
neighborhoods.
It's
too
much
gentrification.
All
in
one
place,
we're
hoping
that
other
neighborhoods.
We
can
spread
out
that
development
and
find
the
right
place
where
neighborhoods
are
getting,
what
they
need
and
people
aren't
displaced
for
either
too
much.
T
Poverty
too,
like
concentrated
poverty
or
concentrated
wealth,
but
at
the
same
time,
it's
possible
that
we
cut
and
slashed
so
much
under
act.
47
we've
dramatically
brought
down
our
annual
expenses
and
I
think
those
are
going
to
need
to
come
back
up
somewhat.
How
many
of
us
council
members
are
constantly
mad
at
permits,
licenses
and
inspections,
because
we
feel
that
there
isn't
enough
staffing
there
to
meet
our
needs.
How
many
councilmembers
have
complained
about
the
Department
of
Law,
because
there
isn't
enough
resources
and
time
in
personnel
there
to
meet
our
constituents
demands
our
our
demands?
T
How
many
counts
I
know:
councilman
Smith
is
not
very
happy
with
the
Department
of
Planning
right
now,
because
she
says:
there's
not
enough
personnel
there
to
show
up
in
her
neighborhoods
and
do
what
needs
to
be
done
and
we
haven't
actually
done
community
plans
so
I'm
still
really
struggling
with
where
we
are
in
those
needs.
I
went
to
the
capital
budget
meetings
I
submitted.
T
And
then
let
me
tell
you
one
more
thing:
I
struggle
with
I
know
and
I've
talked
to
many
times
at
the
table
here
during
my
time
on
PWSA
that
we
all
know
we
have
a
tremendous
amount
of
infrastructure
to
repair
underground
and
that
we
have
to
find
the
balance
of
what's
being
built
above
ground
and,
what's
you
know,
stabilizing?
What's
underground,
especially
in
terms
of
we
know,
we
have
a
combined
sewer
overflow,
we
know
we're
facing
EPA
regulation.
T
I
T
T
M
U
M
T
B
B
I
will
say
that
some
of
our
newer
council
members
may
not
know
that
I
have
been
active,
was
very
active
at
some
point
on
this
whole
idea
of
borrowing
and
capital
budget
reform.
In
fact,
council
Andrew,
yak
and
I
together
drafted
wrote,
negotiated
the
capital
reform
act
which
changed
the
whole
way
we
do
borrowing.
Some
of
you
were
not
on
council
then,
but
so
we
put
legislation
that
limited.
B
That
way
we
could
borrow
how
we
could
borrow
that's
number
one
number
two
in
addition
right
after
I
accidentally,
seven
I
was
part
of
the
members
of
council
that
supported
and
introduced
legislation
to
incorporate
ak-47
safeguards
into
into
the
city
code,
and
so
some
of
the
things
that
were
suggested
by
ak-47
and
I
started
this
before
when
we
were
in
ak-47
I
started
this
process.
Probably
my
first
year
on
council
I
began
to
legislate,
ak-47
recommendations.
So
I
did
it
before
we
right.
B
We
were
in
back
47
legislating
ak-47
red
letters,
actually
several
recommendations
so
that
when
we
Monday
we
got
out
of
four
ak-47.
Those
recommendations
would
not
just
be
recommendations,
but
they
would
be
goals,
targets
and
codified,
and
then,
as
we
began,
to
extract
47,
we
then
voted
even
even
more
so
I'm
going
to
suggest
for
those
of
you
and
I'm
not
trying
to
persuade
council
people
from
doing
their
due
diligence.
B
I
am
going
to
say:
I
will
stand
as
as
and
say
that
as
your
finance
chair
and
representing
this
president
of
Council
I
have
I,
have
been
active
or
making
sure
that
our
borrowing
is
responsible,
that's
front,
and
that's
number
one,
so
I'm
going
to
argue
that
without
this
borrowing
we
won't
have
a
capital
budget,
and
this
was
this
process
is
not
under
this
mayor.
This
is
the
continuation
of
8
9
and
mr.
Bennet
was
with
me
in
those
conversations.
B
So
you
can
verify
that
I'm
telling
the
absolute
truth
that
this
process
of
borrowing
for
the
capital
budget
is
not
unique
to
this
year
or
last
year
or
the
year
before
or
for
this
mayor
he
is
following
a
process
that
we
established
I
believe
eight
nine
years
ago.
That's
number
one
2012
2012
2012,
and
so
that's
the
this
is
the
continuation.
The
second
thing
is
that
we
are
not
funding
the
capital
budget
completely
with
borrowing
we
are
still
using.
Pago
we
are
still
using.
Where
is
that
it
is
this.
B
Is
our
capital
budget
is
actually
a
mixture
of
income
sources
so
that
we're
able
to
do
the
projects
now,
the
40
million
for
the
four
they
for
the
building
is
an
outlier
and
should
really
be
decided
separately.
That's
not
really
this
conversation.
This
conversation,
it's
about
the
capital
budget.
Really,
so
that's
number
one
bill.
You
want
to
add
anything
because
you,
yes.
S
S
In
really
generically
on
on
this
particular
issuance
and
the
and
the
reason
why
we're
doing
it
now
number
one
and
I
think
most
importantly,
is
that
we
passed
a
capital
budget,
Council,
passed
capital
budget
and
in
that
capital
budget.
In
order
to
do
all
the
projects
that
are
listed
there,
which
are
various,
would
affect
every
neighbor
in
the
city.
You
need
a
funding
pot.
S
S
But
if
we
want
to
be
able
to
implement
that
budget,
we
need
that
sixty
million
dollars.
If
not,
we
will
need
to
then
either
parse
it
back
or
find
a
different
funding
stream
for
it
and,
as
you
said,
finance
sure
Burgess
that
many
of
those
dollars
are
matching
dollars.
We
have,
although
the
federal
government's
not
working
right
now,
eventually
they
will
and
will
be
able
to
do
some
of
the
highway
projects,
bridge
projects
and
other
projects
that
are
within
there.
S
B
You
very
much
but
sure
I
get
invited.
We
thank
you
for
your
work,
always
as
our
council
Budget
Office.
So
that's
my
remarks
about
this
this
this
issuance
this
issuance,
although
we
can
agree
or
disagree,
I'm
simply
saying
this
is
the
this
is
the
the
normal
outcome
of
a
process
that
we
establish
many
many
years
ago.
This
is
the
next
installment
of
a
process
that
was
in
place
since
2012.
Yes,
2012,
that's
number
one
now
or
the
separate
note.
B
B
If,
if
we
are
serious
about
reducing
than
the
the
number
of
the
27,000
of
people
who
need
affordable
housing,
if
we
want
to
increase
in
for
about
housing
in
a
responsible
way
in
this
city,
the
answer
at
least
mr.
LaBelle
and
I
believe
and
I.
Think
members
of
you
are
a
agree.
The
real
answer
is
to
do
a
one-time
borrowing,
and
it
is
it
is.
It
is
the
ten
million
dollars
that
we've
that
we
have
have
have
set
up.
B
If
you
look
through
the
line
items
most
of
that
money
goes
to
people
not
to
brick-and-mortar
right,
it
gives
right
rebase,
it
gives
owners
and
all
those
things
are
important,
but
they
and
they
will.
They
will
keep
people
in
their
present
homes
right,
but
it
won't
add
to
the
number
of
affordable
housing
and
we
don't
have
enough.
The
federal
government
and
the
state
government
does
not
give
us
enough
funding
ability
to
fund
enough
affordable
housing
at
the
scale.
That's
needed
right
and
in
things
like.
B
Like
for
percents,
which
which
which
have
higher
a
higher
gap,
those
things
that
can
be
done
more
quickly
and
efficiency
without
competition,
so
I'm
gonna
use
this
as
an
opportunity
to
suggest.
Mr.
Laval
and
I
have
met
with
the
administration,
the
URA
to
say
that
we
believe
and
I
hope.
Council
will
agree
that
the
most
responsible
thing
for
us
to
do
is
for
the
uoa
actually
to
take
out
a
barn
for
brick
and
mortar
around
between
60
and
100
million
dollar,
one-time
insurance
specifically
to
front
affordable
housing
or.
B
You
know,
if
you,
if
you
do
ten
of
those,
then
you
have
fundamentally
changed
and
and
they're
in
their
mixed
income
housing
and
they
are.
They
will
then
leverage
private
dollars
and
they
will
rebuild
neighborhoods.
They
will
also
attract
business,
they
will
just
be
it
will
be
cathartic
and
transformational,
and
so
that's
I
think
the
ultimate
goal
that
I
am
going
to
be
pushing
for
over
the
next
18
months
or
so
is
for
the
or
a
to
take
out
this
bond
specifically
for
brick
and
mortar
projects,
so
that
we
can
actually
address
the
housing
needs.
B
So
I,
think
and
I
agree
with
with
with
Councilman
Smith
I
think
that
we
need
both
this
bond
for
our
capital
projects.
Then
I
think
we
need
a
new
funding,
a
new,
not
necessarily
a
new
funding
stream,
but
a
new
dollar
amount
that
can
be
used
today
on
projects,
because,
even
though
the
for
about
Housing
Trust
Fund
is
good,
it
only
put
maybe
a
million
or
two
into
projects
over
the,
and
it
won't
make
that
much
difference.
R
B
F
F
B
R
Just
wanna
say
when
we
first
went
down
this
road
I
said
that
there
was
not
gonna
be
enough
funding
and
this
was
not
gonna
be
okay
and
we
were
going
to
do
something
more
significant,
but
that
never
happened.
I
was
you
know
everybody
pushed
for
this,
and
now
we
have
it
and
I
just
want
to
say.
I
ever
I
thought
that
there
was
something
shady
going
on
in
the
city.
It's
around
housing
I
really
feel
like
there's
something
just
deep
in
my
tap
into
my
heart.
R
I
just
feel
like
something
is
not
right
and
for
me,
I'm
gonna
watch
every
dollar
and
when
I
don't
want
to
keep
hearing
that
we're
putting
money
in
and
we're
just
hiring
more
staff
and
they
were
not
delivering
results
for
the
residents
to
me.
That's
that's
the
key
thing.
I
really
when
I
said
that
we
did
this
similar
programs
in
my
district
with
the
Neighborhood
Stabilization
program,
I
say
at
the
time
you
know
we're
talking:
five
million
dollars
for
the
entire
city
of
Pittsburgh.
We
had
a
million
dollars
for
one
neighborhood.
R
In
my
district
it
did.
Seven
houses
took
three
and
a
half
years
and
yielded
very
little
results,
and
so
I
felt
then
that
this
was
not
the
right
way
and
I
still
feel
that
way.
Now
and
I'm
gonna
be
really
cautious
before
I
pursue
any
additional
streams
of
funding
or
issuing
bonds
or
anything
else,
I
think
what
we
need
to
do
is
make
sure
that
the
funding
is
there
and
that
we're
starting
to
see
results
before
we
continue
to
add
more
and
more
money,
but
I
do
think
that
we
need
to.
F
I
N
N
F
N
F
O
F
Millions
of
dollars,
as
we
came
down
to
the
lowest
year,
I,
can
go
out,
go
in
and
pull
those
for
house
from
when
we
talked
about
having
this
in
2019,
and
we
only
have
as
oh
we're
having
a
savings.
They
share
60
million.
Well,
fifty
would
you
say:
52
million,
but
yet
we're
borrowing.
That's
our
debt.
F
O
F
The
best
practice,
the
best
practice,
is
to
utilize.
What
you
have
you
should
you
should
watch
our
money
in
the
city
the
same
way
you
watch
your
own
money
and
people
have
a
tendency
to
only
run
budget
time.
Think
oh
and
then
ignored
the
rest
of
the
time
and
then
the
next
year
we
come
up
and
weren't
dead
again
and
it's
costing
us
five
million.
So
it's
costing
us
five
million
and
we
would
add
52
million
this
year
to
spend
I,
don't
believe,
is
responsible
just
like
when
we
voted
for
the
10.
F
They
pulled
and
I
couldn't
really
look
over
this
because
I
had
some
issues
at
the
time
my
mom
was
dying,
but
I
have
looked
at
it
and,
as
she
put
10
million
it,
you
took
ten
million
Anna
or
five
million
hundred
housing
and
then
then
guilt
or
once
the
community
found
that
the
end
allow
for
250,000
back
in
that.
But
it's
still
$250,000.
F
B
E
B
E
1293
resolution
authorizing
the
mayor
and
director
of
the
Department
of
Public
Safety
to
execute
relevant
agreements
to
receive
grant
funding
from
the
Hillman
Family
Foundation
Nina
Nina
Hamilton
Fisher
foundation
to
provide
funds
to
support
the
creation
and
support
of
a
domestic
violence
team
housed
in
the
Pittsburgh
Bureau
of
police
and
further
providing
for
an
agreement
and
expenditures
not
to
exceed
$500,000
for
the
stated
purpose.
I
need.
N
O
This
is,
as
we
all
may
know,
we
get
about
13,000
domestic
calls
a
year
in
the
city
of
Pittsburgh,
and
this
500
thousand
will
be
dispersed
over
five
years
to
go
support
a
new
sergeant,
a
new
detective
and
a
new
clerical
specialist
will
then
specialize
in
addressing
these
concerns.
It
will
also
expand
and
increase
our
capacity
in
our
relationship
with
the
woman
shelter
that
also
works
to
support
these
victims
does.
R
B
H
O
B
R
H
H
Over
thank
you
as
councilman
LaBelle
mentioned.
This
is
a
very
gracious
donation
from
the
Nina
Baldwin
Fisher
foundation,
as
the
administration
has
prioritized
domestic
violence
for
quite
some
time.
We
have
basically
one
detective
that
specializes
in
domestic
violence
within
the
city's
Police
Bureau.
This
donation
of
$500,000
will
provide
a
foundation
for
us
to
actually
establish
a
unit
with
in
Pittsburgh
Bureau
police,
which
will
allow
us
to
add
a
sergeant,
an
additional
detective
and
a
civilian
analyst
that
will
work
with
a
database.
As
mentioned
in
a
press
release.
We
are
currently
handling
close
to
13,000.
H
Domestic
violence
calls
within
the
city
annually,
and
some
of
these
are
very
violent
and
some
and
those
violent
ones
require
a
specialty
detectives.
I
mean
this
is
a
special
special
unit
that
we
concentrate
on
the
most
violent
of
these
type
incidents
and
with
that
being
said,
we
would
provide
specialized
training
to
these
detectives
and
to
the
sergeant,
and
the
analyst
will
allow
us
to
create
a
comprehensive
database
to
keep
track
of
the
incidence
and
the
PFA
services.
H
We
have
seen
some
very
violent
homicides
in
the
past
and
with
this
unit
we
are
hoping
number
one
to
address
the
crimes
and
number
two
to
prevent
any
incident
from
becoming
a
more
tragic
event
with
that,
I
will
turn
it
over
to
the
chief
I
want
to
offer
my
sincere
thanks
to
the
foundation
for
their
contribution
and
I'll
allow
the
chief
to
go
into
a
little
bit
more
detail
about
the
Foundation's
contribution
and
how
it
will
be
used.
Yeah.
V
This
able
to
track
repeat
offenders,
so
they
don't
fall
between
the
cracks
and
the
help
in
coordination
with
the
the
women's
center
and
shelter
to
help
us
go
through
this
and
look
and
see
where
we're
at
today
and
where
we
need
to
be
to
do
a
better
job
for
those
who
are
victimized
by
domestic
violence.
So
I
think
this
is
something
that's
great
for
the
city
of
Pittsburgh.
It
gives
us
that
opportunity
to
Grob
become
more
professional.
V
As
you
know,
our
officers
out
in
the
field
are
the
ones
that
respond
to
these
calls
day
in
and
day
out
and
whether
there's
an
arrest
made
or
not
an
arrest
made.
But
we
need
to
make
sure
nobody
falls
between
the
cracks
and
we
need
to
make
sure
we're
very
proactive
on
those
who
are
repeat
offenders.
And
we
need
to
make
sure
that
we
provide
the
necessary
assistance
for
the
victims
to
help
them.
So
I'm.
R
So
I,
just
I,
do
have
a
few
questions.
You
know
this
is
something
I
think
I've
talked
about
this
many
times
before.
That
is
very
obviously
near
and
dear
to
my
heart.
My
sister
raised
two
of
her
nephews.
Her
sister-in-law
was
stabbed
four
times
by
her
husband
and
a
domestic
violence
and
killed,
and
so
my
sister
raised
my
her
nephew's
and
there
were
no
sign,
no
obvious
signs
at
the
you
know.
They
know
I
mean
he
was
a
pilot.
R
U
R
R
Is
specific
to
the
police,
okay
and
so
so,
I'm
glad
that
cuz
I
was
wondering
if
we
had
to
worry
about
the
funding
for
next
year
and
so
I'm
glad
to
support
five
years,
but
I
do
have
concerns
about
and
I
wonder
how
you
see
this
playing
out
because
we
have
houses
now
in
our
district,
where
a
lot
of
times
the
collars,
because
we
put
also
put
laws
in
place
that
people
cannot
evict
people
who
are
calling
for
domestic
violence.
Well
that
to
me,
is
a
catch-22
because
you're
also
keeping
people
in
that
situation.
R
You're,
not
people
are
not
getting
help
and
what
we've
noticed,
especially
in
the
house
and
Sheridan
with
repeated
calls.
The
woman
is
constantly
calling
for
help
they're
constantly
doing
things
to
whatever
they
can
the
police
do
whatever
they
can
to
do
in
neighbors
to
do
whatever
they
can.
But
yet
this
person
continues
to
come
back
and
she's
and
it's
really
it's
a
disruption
to
the
whole
entire
community.
And
so
it's
it's
not
just
a
domestic
violence
situation.
It's
just
in
one
house.
R
It
really
affects
an
entire
community,
and
so
I
want
to
know
how
you
see
that
playing
out
with
with
these
laws
in
place.
How
do
you,
how
do
you
get
somebody
like
her
to
get
help
when
she
calls
all
the
time
it's
pursuing?
The
p.m.
and
she's
happy
obeys
against
him.
I
do
want
to
say
that
she's
had
PFA
is
against
him.
I.
V
Think
where
this
helps
us
even
more,
as
I
said
before,
that
you
have
the
officers
who
respond
to
these
calls
many
times
it's
different
officers
responding
to
the
same
place,
so
you
don't
have
that
consistency
with
knowing
everything
that's
going
on.
You
may
be
told
it's
repeat
address
by
9-1-1,
but
with
this
you
have
this
unit,
that's
able
to
reach
out
and
keep
offering
assistance
and
find
out.
What's
going
to
keep
trying
to
help
that
person
you
don't
want
to
you
don't
want
to
punish.
V
R
V
And
I
think
one
of
the
things
that
we
have
to
you
know
promote
that
you're,
probably
aware
of,
but
the
success
we've
had
over
the
years
since
2013
with
our
the
the
lap
phones.
So
anytime
our
officers
go
to
a
domestic,
they
have
a
phone,
they
can
give
it
to
them.
Well,
they
they
give
him
a
questionnaire
house.
V
You
know
where
does
it
rate
and
then
they
offer
them
the
phone
to
call
inter
provided
assistance
that
that's
been
it
that's
been
a
great
thing
and
that
that
was
within
partnership
at
that
time,
with
the
same
thing
with
the
woman's
Center
and
shelter.
So
we
have
a
great
relationship
with
them.
I
think
we're
doing
a
lot
of
great
things.
I
think
there's
a
lot
of
things
that
we're
doing
that
other
departments
think
we're
ahead
of
them
on
that.
V
R
H
The
civilian
analysts
will
be
special,
especially
trained
in
this
type
of
work,
a
lot
of
times.
The
only
thing
that
we're
relying
on
is,
if
we
return
to
the
same
resident
and
that
individual
states
that
they've
made
numerous
calls-
or
in
fact
they
go
back
to
the
911
call
center
and
find
out,
but
that
doesn't
give
any
details.
All
as
saying
is,
there's
been
repeated
calls
to
this
address
so
that
the
important
the
important
part
of
this
will
be
the
analyst
as
well
as
working
hand-in-hand
with
the
detectives
and
the
sergeant.
Okay.
V
B
G
G
We
have
dedicated
ourselves
over
the
years
to
understanding
workplace
violence
that
might
begin
in
the
home,
but
rears
its
ugly
head
in
a
workplace.
How
to
do
that
and
domestic
violence
also
seems
to
just
intimate
that
it
is
only
between
sexually
intimate
partners
and
that's
not
true.
It
can
happen
in
any
kind
of
different
family
dynamics
within
the
home
and
outside
the
home.
So
I,
just
I,
don't
want
us
I,
don't
want
us
to
leave
with
just
thinking
that
domestic
violence
is
this
neat
little
package
that
we
can.
G
W
Thank
you
so
much
for
asking
that
I'd
be
happy
to
do
that
into
answer.
Mr.
crosses
question.
Women
center
and
shelter
is
one
a
for
domestic
violence
program
and
partner
violence
programs.
We
should
say
in
the
county
and
you
can
reach
our
hotline
by
calling
for
one
two,
six,
eight
seven,
eight
zero,
zero
five
you
can
call
and
we
can
accommodate
any
language,
and
we
are,
of
course
24/7
confidential
and
free,
Women's,
Center
and
shelter
serves
about
seventy
five
hundred
victims
or
survivors
of
intimate
partner
violence.
W
Every
year
we
were
very
proud
to
merge
standing
firm
into
our
operations.
Last
December
and
I
do
really
like
their
terminology
used,
which
is
partner,
violence
and
I
also
hear
what
you're
saying
about
domestic
violence
really
can
can
happen
among
any
people
who
live
together
and
typically
in
a
family
situation.
So
when
we're
talking
about
intimate
partner,
violence,
domestic
violence,
etc,
we
are
talking
about
the
use
of
a
power
in
control
within
a
relationship
and
oftentimes.
The
manifestations,
of
course,
that
we
see
we
most
visibly
see
and
once
against
the
law
include
physical
abuse.
W
Stalking
strangulation
is
very
commonly
used
and
often
can
lead
to
nearly
thala,
D
or
lethality
as
well,
and
then
there's
a
spectrum
of
other
types
of
abuse.
Of
course,
emotional
abuse,
spiritual
abuse,
financial
abuse
is
very
common
and
it
is
extraordinarily
complex.
I
appreciate
your
comments
on
that
earlier,
because
it
is
very
complex
and
can
often
times
requires
a
lot
of
help
and
support
from
a
myriad
of
different
people
to
really
be
able
to
escape
the
relationships.
W
We
receive
about
over
a
thousand
calls
every
year
through
the
lethality
assessment
program
about
70%
of
them
are
clients
who
are
new
to
women's
center
and
shelter.
So
to
get
back
to
your
question
about
identification,
that's
huge!
That's
a
huge
number
of
new
clients
through
this
partnership,
so
we're
very
happy
to
be
able
to
have
the
opportunity
to
build
on
the
success
of
the
lethality
assessment
protocol
or
program
to
be
able
to
help
additional
victims
who
are
being
served
by
the
police
and
responded
to
by
the
police.
Can.
G
I
just
and
then
I'll
turn
the
forty
I
promise.
So
the
reason
I
brought
Dudley
is
to
distress
the
complexity
of
the
situation
and
how
important
our
understanding
of
the
complexity
of
this
situation
is
going
to
be
in
our
training
platform
and
and
that
I
don't
want
any
of
us
to
ever
be
so
narrow-minded
that
we
think
oh.
This
is
what
that
is,
because
it
isn't
just
that
it
is
this
huge
monster
of
violence
that
takes
place
between
people
and
in
all
kinds
of
different
settings.
G
They
may
tend
to
start
in
the
home,
but
they
can
manifest
themselves
in
any
number
of
different
ways
outside
the
home
as
well
too.
So
again,
thank
you
so
very
much
for
for
your
enlightenment
and
your
awareness
and
the
understanding
of
just
how
very
important
this
problem
is
and
again
to
the
Hillman
foundation.
For
being
so,
gracious
as
to
assist
in
funding.
R
R
Just
want
to
point
out
that
the
result
that
Authority
assessment
and
that
legislation,
everything
that
came
about
was
really
driven
by
Reverend
Burgess
and
his
work
on
that
and
I
really
want
to.
Thank
him
for
that,
because
he
allowed
me
to
be
a
part
of
it
too
and
I
just
really
want
to
thank
you
for
your
work,
I
think
a
lot
of
times.
R
People
don't
recognize
the
things
that
you've
done
that
have
really
helped
a
lot
of
victims
in
a
lot
of
ways
and
people
that
are
struggling,
and
this
was
one
that
was
really
affected,
women
and
I
to
me
and
other
people
in
domestic
violence
and
I
I.
Just
really
want
to
thank
you
for
your
work
on
that
I.
G
R
R
B
Think
is
heard
about
and
then,
when
Cassandra
Wade
was
killed
and
I
Athenee
Brown
and
the
police
came
to
her
apartment
knocked
on
the
door,
never
saw
her
and
he
said
everything
was
okay
and
then
they
left
and
he
killed
her
in
himself
I
just
couldn't
take
it.
I
am
I
believe
really
that
our
work
should
speak
for
us.
You
know,
I,
don't
really
and
I
appreciate
that
the
kind
of
words
and
I'm
grateful
for
counsel
to
be
able
to
lead
this,
but
really
it
takes
all
of
us
working
together.
B
R
B
The
council,
we
speak
as
as
as
as
we
speak
as
all
as
five
at
least
often
more
than
that,
and
so
this
is
what
this
of
all
the
things
I've
done
on
council.
This
is
the
thing,
although
I
never
talked
about
it,
you
almost
never
talk
about
it.
It
is
the
thing
I
am
proudest
of
it
is
the
single
thing.
I
am
proudest
of
in
terms
of
my
time
on
council
that
I
can
say
that
in
my
time
here
it's
not
being
vain.
B
I
did
it
for
my
mother
and
my
and
so
I,
don't
say
that
usually,
but
I
just
felt
they
had
to
tell
the
backstory
of
why
I
feel
so
strongly.
I,
don't
talk
about
it
much
sleeve,
because
I
think
I
think
women
should
leave
this
issue
right.
I
think
this
is
issue
that
women
should
leave.
Although
it's
not
limit
to
women,
it
is
disproportionately
affected
by
women
and
so
I'm
I
I'm
with
you
right,
I'm,
always
with
you.
B
I
B
Q
Two
of
his
men
were
called
out
to
a
scene
and
it
was
domestic
violence-related
and
not
only
was
an
officer
lost
that
day,
one
was
wounded,
probably
permanently,
and
on
top
of
that,
the
woman
who
was
being
abused
was
killed
as
well,
so
and
in
all
three
of
those
subjects
right
there.
You
know
as
far
as
getting
this
money
from
hill
ma'am
sorry
what
was
it
was
Baldwin,
Nina
Baldwin.
You
know,
I'm
thankful,
also
that
we
have
foundations
in
this
city
who
have
deep
pockets
and
who
can
give
to
these
causes.
Q
You
know
and
to
know
that
we're
going
to
have
a
specimen
specified
unit
on
this,
and
you
know
not
only
world
saved,
maybe
a
woman
or
for
that
matter,
a
man's
life
someday
or
a
child,
but
police
officers,
the
police
officers
I
think
to
a
tee,
will
tell
you,
you
know
the
most
uncertain
call
you
just
don't
know
what
to
expect
as
a
domestic,
and
you
just
never
know
what
state
that
person's
in
there
and
what
they're
capable
of
doing
as
my
brother
Alex
found
out
some
time
ago.
So
so
I
enthusiastically
support
it.
Q
W
I'm
happy,
as
a
matter
of
fact,
this
initiative
partnership
visited
Boston
to
learn
more
about
what
they
do.
They
actually
have.
You
know
Boston,
of
course,
the
city
about
twice
our
size
has
20
domestic
violence,
specialist
specialists
in
their
unit
and
ten
cars
assigned,
and
so
we
are
able,
and
then
there
are
other
Pro.
W
Q
Wonder
if
their
numbers
have
dropped
in
the,
however
many
years
they've
been
going
for,
but
you
know
I
think
it
just
helps
all
aspects.
Of
course
the
person
being
abused,
the
police
officer
that
has
to
respond
it's
good
all
the
way
through,
and
you
know
to
have
those
funds
for
five
years
and
if
we
it's
proven
to
work
after
five
years,
we'll
find
funding
to
keep
it
going.
Certainly
soon
there.
R
F
I
F
F
F
F
V
V
Analysts
to
work
with
the
one
detective
that
currently
does
our
RL
ap
and
through
that
there's
gonna,
be
training
training
that
goes
on
with
our
officers
who
are
responding.
We
want
to
make
sure
we
have
the
best
practices,
so
they're
there's
a
lot
going
into
that,
but
the
personnel-wise
that's
the
ones
that
will
be
added
right
away.
Well,.
F
I
B
T
T
W
X
W
Just
to
what
we
I
would
love
to
engage
in
that
conversation
at
another
time,
I
think
that
we
can
absolutely
talk
about
successes
barriers,
you
know
future
hopes,
etc.
We
would
I
think
we'd
all
love
to
engage
in
that
conversation.
I
know
one
thing,
because
we've
talked
about
identification
a
few
times
women
Center
has
served
now
year.
We
served
1500
more
victims
of
intimate
partner
violence
and
we
had
the
year
prior
and
the
years
part
of
that,
which
I
think
is
actually
it
doesn't
mean.
W
T
T
You
know
accounting,
but
also
we
struggle
with
these
issues
about
how
to
make
when
we
say
livable
neighborhoods
when
we
say
livable,
you
know
and
work
on
assets
that
make
people's
lives
easier,
partly
because
we
understand
that
it's
partly
circumstances
that
can
exacerbate
these
situations,
and
so
we
need
both
to
work
on
causes
and
and
consequences
and
responses.
So
thank
you
for
doing
your
part,
obviously
supported
today.
Someone.
B
Else,
no
one
else.
This
is
part
of
a
we
need
to
reduce
all
of
ours:
homicide,
suicide,
domestic
violence,
mass
shootings,
I
quote
and
reduced.
We
have
a
motion
to
approve
on
the
table
all
of
those
in
favor
signify
by
saying
aye,
hi,
poseurs
name
recommendation.
H
F
B
You
very
much
thank
you
very
much.
We
have
invoices
on
the
table.
I
need
a
motion
for
the
invoices
and
then
is
second
questions
on
invoices.
No
questions
on
invoices,
all
those
in
favor
signify
by
saying
aye
opposed,
nay,
all
right
there
are
no
interdepartmental
transfer.
There
is
a
peak.
Are
the
P
cards
are
on
the
table?
Emotions
be
a
second.
B
R
R
B
F
Billboards.
Thank
you
at
one
time
also
yeah.
Y
So
a
little
bit
of
the
history
that
had
been
mentioned
last
time
at
the
table
gateway
was
at
one
point,
part
of
a
company
called
Pittsburg
outdoor
advertising,
going
back
to
Henry
Posner
one
of
his
firms
in
the
late
1970s,
the
firm
kind
of
divested
their
billboard
assets
at
some
point
and
switched
pivoted
to
an
entirely
transit
oriented
advertising
firm.
They
they
got
out
of
the
billboard
business
in
the
late
80s
Early
90s
sold
those
billboards
to
Martin
media
who
in
turn
sold
those
billboards
to
Lamar.
Y
F
Y
It,
the
you
know,
the
benefit
to
the
city
is
a
combination
of
the
the
potential
revenue
split,
the
guaranteed
minimum
or
the
the
percentage
of
yield,
as
well
as
obviously
the
fixtures
themselves.
The
assets
to
your
point
about
maintenance,
I
think
as
a
department
that
is
prioritizing
to
have
not
just
vehicular
travel
but
multimodal
travel.
We're
interested
in
not
just
making
sure
that
we
collect
the
revenue,
but
that
it's
actually
serving
as
a
transit
amenity
to
people.
Y
F
Thank
you,
and
and
by
the
way,
do
you
know
where
we're
at
because
I
think
it's
about
maybe
six
seven
years
now
that
we
put
in
the
amount
that
would
be
given
to
the
city
from
the
billboards.
F
I
Y
T
Y
F
T
F
T
Right,
that's
accurate
all
right,
so
these
are
city
assets
that
we're
looking
to
franchise
right
and
I
know
that
in
different
contexts
know
again,
I
understand
these.
Are
the
bus
shelters
that
most
of
us
have
a
lot
of
grievances
about
I,
totally
understand
that
there's
a
dramatic
room
for
movement
I
have
personally
called
as
a
citizen
and
even
since,
being
on
council
and
complained
about
bus,
shelter,
conditions,
broken
windows,
dangerous,
you
know,
lack
of
it
really
late
on
neighborhood
corners,
so
there's
a
dramatic
room
for
improvement.
F
Y
F
Y
O
Y
F
T
Go
back
over
the
entire
post
agenda
because
we
were
all
there,
but
there
is
a
spectrum
of
privatization
right.
So,
even
if,
for
example,
we
have
owned
the
underlying
water
pipes
and
water
plants,
we
still
had
issue
and
had
to
fire
and
Sue
Veolia,
because
they
had
the
exact
same
kind
of
contract
right
and
you
hold
them
in.
We
all
hold
them
in
and
quizzed
them
over
post
agendas,
and
it
was
a
difficult
situation.
Sir.
R
I
R
Really,
what's
the
public
you
should
have
control
of
so
we
have
a
lot
of
concerns
with
that,
but
I
will
say
for
this.
This
is
something
that
we
need
to
have
done.
The
shelters
are
in
bad
shape.
I
would
say:
let's
pass
this
this
week,
get
them
the
cut.
My
colleagues,
the
contract,
get
them
the
information
that
they're
requesting
and
if
they
don't
receive
it
by
Tuesday,
we'll
reconvene.
T
Y
B
T
E
B
E
1295
resolution
amending
resolution
number
701
to
now
read
as
follows:
resolution
authorizing
the
mayor
and
the
director
of
mobility
and
infrastructure
on
behalf
of
the
city,
to
enter
into
an
agreement
with
PennDOT
under
which
PennDOT
will
make
improvements
to
and
transfer
industrial
highway.
Approximately
1.2
miles
of
roadway
mission.
Y
Y
Fairy
wood
and
in
exchange
the
the
numbering
system,
the
state
is
taking
responsibility
for
a
portion
of
Euclid
Avenue
and
center
Avenue.
This
is
sort
of
a
completion
of
turn
back
processes
in
East
Liberty
to
kind
of
connect
as
part
of
the
the
two-way
conversion
of
pen
circle
and
the
kind
of
reconnection
of
the
street
grid
in
East.
Liberty
PennDOT
still
needs
to
maintain
a
safe
house
kind
of
through
these
done
and.
R
I
want
to
say
that
the
work
and
industrial
highway
has
already
been
deleted
about
almost
a
year
ago
time,
and
it
was
one
of
the
best
paving
jobs
behind
our
district,
because
the
city
I
mean
the
state
pave
was
super
paved
it
so,
which
is
I,
think
six
inches
deep
or
four
six
inches
deep.
Not
you
have
to
were
one
or
two
like
we
do
or
three
so
they
super
pave.
Did
they
put
new?
They
addressed
all
the
all
the
water
issues,
any
kind
of
drainage
issues,
new
guardrails.
They
do
really
did
a
great
job.
R
R
R
T
I
know
from
being
in
this
footprint
frequently
and
like
stitch
mints
are
in
this
foot
bin
frequently,
and
we
know
the
long-term
plans
for
this
transit
oriented
investment
district.
That's
the
trig
that
again,
we
know
it's
mainly
district
nine,
but
we
each
have
a
little
parcel
parcels
of
it
that
we
want
to
increase
pedestrian
safety
again.
I
read
for
the
text.
File
and
I
was
trying
to
get
in
touch
with
councilman
Smith
this
morning
and
I'm
not
clear
and
my
understanding
that
we
would
be
giving
to
PennDOT
these
parts
of
Euclid
and
center
correct.
T
So
we
had
a
pedestrian
or
bicyclist
fatality
in
Auckland
a
number
of
years
ago,
that
was
my
constituent
and
she's
Nicks
and
she
was
killed
on
Forbes.
You
know
the
museum's
right,
and
so
we
struggled
for
more
than
a
year
with
PennDOT
because
they
wouldn't
allow
us
to
make
that
area
safer,
and
the
solution
was
to
take
that
section
of
Forbes
away
from
PennDOT
and
return
it
to
city
and
so
I'm,
not
understanding.
T
They
said
these
are
people
down
massing
on
sidewalks,
trying
to
cross
these
intersections
that
used
to
just
kind
of
be
urban
highway,
especially
that
we're
talking
about
right
around
the
corner
from
Baum,
where
it's
incredibly
stressful
there
now
well,
no
matter
what
you're
doing
if
you're,
just
looking
at
it,
if
you're
on
foot,
if
you're
done
bicycle,
if
you're
pushing
a
baby
stroller
as
I
used
to
down
bomb
and
now
you've
got
car
all
these
vehicle
and
non
vehicle
competing
for
safety.
Right
I
have
concerns
about
this.
T
Y
Y
T
R
Y
T
T
That's
the
room,
I'd
be
happy
to
ask
you,
questions
as
well,
and
I've
expressed
these
concerns
directly
to
the
Secretary
of
Transportation
of
the
state
of
Pennsylvania.
I
have
Butler
Street,
that's
a
PennDOT
Road
I
have
Bigelow
that
depend
out.
Road
I
have
Penn
Avenue,
that's
a
PennDOT
Road
and
we
struggle
and
struggle
to
be
a
neighborhood
that
people
can
live
in
and
be
an
urban
highway.
At
the
same
time,
trust
me
thank.
T
B
B
T
Y
T
R
F
Well,
it's
three
different
council
members
projects,
but
I
can
tell
you
that
I
had
state
roads
in
my
district
and
the
city
took
them
back
and,
yes,
you
have
to
make
the
repairs,
but
is
there
merchants
on
all
these
streets?
Okay,
when
you
go
to
get
permits,
you
gotta
get
state
permits
to
go,
I
mean
it
is
just
a
mess.
It
was
a
mess
for
all.
My
business
districts
and
I
know
everyone's
happy
now
that
the
city
has
taken
over
those
streets.
R
O
R
B
R
P
B
E
I
F
B
E
B
P
Yeah,
these
are
equipment,
leasing,
funds
we
have
this
I'll
bring
everybody
to
the
table.
This
is
what
we
do
every
year
when
we
buy
different
equipment.
I'll
bring
everybody
up.
I
know
guys
running
out
of
days
here,
so
I'm
sure
he'll
want
to
come
back
up
to
the
table,
see
us
for
a
couple
more
times:
I
build
your
own
committee.
R
Z
Million
of
that
would
be
operating
funds
through
the
police
department
and
another
five
million
from
capital
funds,
which
is
exclusively
Pago
funding.
These
funds
will
support
the
2019
acquisition
plan
that
our
board
voted
on
on
December
6
and
the
ELA
board
appreciates
City
Council's
support
for
this
funding.
R
P
It
this
PWSA
or
Alka
Singh.
They
don't
touch
any
of
this
stuff
right.
Okay,
cuz
I,
always
the
one
thing
I've
requested
the
last
couple
years
in
budget
just
knowing
that
we're
gonna
be
doing
a
lot
of
green
infrastructure
and
it's
probably
for
Public
Works.
Although
we
haven't
gotten
to
the
maintenance
agreement
of
okay,
we
do
a
big
stormwater
maintenance
project.
Is
it
City?
Is
it
look
works?
Is
it
PWSA?
Some
of
it
could
be
Alka
san?
P
P
AA
U
P
P
I
P
O
AA
That
will
not
be
part
of
the
equipment,
leasing,
the
equipment,
leasing,
Authority.
As
most
know,
it's
a
separate
Authority,
which
is
committee
funded
through
the
city
of
Pittsburgh.
At
one
time
it
was
a
standalone,
it
did
its
own
funding,
financing
and
so
forth.
But
now
what
we're
doing
is
asking
you
to
approve
the
funding
so
that
we
can
purchase
the
necessary
equipment,
but
what
you're
asking
for
would
be
totally
something
different:
a
separate
agreement
between
PWSA,
the
city,
okay,.
P
F
Z
Z
Correct
me
not
coming
out
of
bond
that
is
not
bond
funded.
We
also
are
funding
with
a
few
various
trust
funds
as
well,
but
no
no
bond
funding
will
trust.
Z
F
F
O
F
F
AA
AA
This
was
in
the
5th
division
as
well
as
in
the
second
division
we
are,
we
did
buy
new
dump
trucks
there
in
a
process
of
being
put
in
service.
If
you
look
on
the
list,
you
can
see
more
dumps
or
additional
dump
trucks
to
be
purchased.
We're
looking
also
in
public
works
to
get
street
sweepers
leased
rather
than
purchase,
and
we
rather
we
leased
because
they
can
be
maintained
because
they're
high
maintenance,
but
on
the
equipment
we
had
every
piece
of
equipment
available
on
the
road.
Again
it
was
very
cold,
very
cold.
AA
Normally,
rock
salt
loses
its
effectiveness
at
less
than
17
degrees
and
we
were
below
zero.
So
there
were
some
streets
that
were
treated
several
times
and
just
didn't
open
up,
or
there
was
some
dead-end
or
tertiary
streets
that
we
weren't
able
to
get
to
until
yesterday,
but
they
did
try
to
get
caught
up
on
a
lot
of
streets
and
in
the
city
of
Pittsburgh,
but
it
was
a
very
difficult
storm,
especially
when
you're
dealing
with
ice
rain
freezing
below
zero
temperatures
wait,
you
know.
AA
So
it
was
a
very
difficult
event,
but
you
know
again:
it
takes
the
the
storms
do
take
a
toll
on
our
equipment.
There's
no
doubt
about
it.
You
know
when
we
are
in
a
storm
mode.
We
have
mechanics
working
around
the
clock
to
make
sure
they're
up
and
running
our
fleet
is
an
old
fleet
but
we're
adding
more
money
to
the
fleet.
So
we
can
replace
our
vehicles
sooner
than
we
are.
AA
F
M
AA
We
adding
well
that
would
be
the
decision
of
the
police
department,
but
right
now
they
are
gonna,
be
ordered
or
purchase
shortly,
but
we
put
in
service
again
with
police
vehicles.
We
order
police
vehicles
every
year,
but
of
course
we
do
have
accidents
and
lose
vehicles
and
vehicles
need
to
be
taken
out
of
service,
but
director
history
was
here.
He
could
answer
that
specific
question,
but
we
can
get
back
beyond
that.
Okay,
I
believe
it's
additional
vehicles,
my
understanding
there
was
additional
canine
units,
I
hope.
AA
What
the
SWAT
unit
has
is:
they
have
various
types
of
vehicles
that
they
use
for
different
operations
in
their
Bureau
and
they
request
that
a
pickup
truck
to
carry
met,
supplies
and
so
forth.
And
if
you
look
on
your
the
fire
department's
the
same
way
so
again
in
a
bureau
departments
public,
they
do
need
pickups.
They
put
caps
on
them
and
use
them
for
supplies
and
materials,
and
let
them
respond
to
emergency
situations.
A
lot.
AA
You're
faster,
there's
two
situations:
the
notification.
When
a
SWAT
unit
is
requested,
it
will
go
on
all
four
all
on-duty
officers,
SWAT
to
report
to
a
certain
location,
so
officers
throughout
the
city
of
Pittsburgh
who
work
in
police
vehicles
are
in
their
vehicles
with
their
sirens
and
lights.
To
get
to
that
particular
location
for
on
duty
personnel.
The
situation
occurs.
AA
If
they
say
we
need
off-duty
officers
to
respond,
off-duty
officers
respond
and
her
personal
vehicles
with
flashing
lights,
and
it's
something
we
have
to
deal
with,
because
the
incident
Squirrel
Hill
there
was
a
lot
of
vehicles
going
to
the
scene
and
her
personal
vehicles
with
flashing
lights.
When
I
say
you
know,
emergency
flashing
lights,
not
take
us
back.
You.
I
AA
Typical,
you
know
blinkers
and
so
something
we
need
to
address
and
also
when
the
SWAT
unit
is
required.
There
are
folks
at
the
various
locations
where
the
SWAT
units
are,
they
jump
in
those
vehicles
and
they
get
them
to
site
as
possibly
they
can.
Now.
We
do
have
a
lot
of
vehicles
that
are
unmarked
and
they
are.
They
got
emergency
lights
on
them,
they're
hidden,
so
that
folks
know
that
they're
unmarked,
please,
but
they
do
respond.
Okay,.
AA
F
AA
Well,
they
that's
why
they
have
immediately
the
on-duty
officers
respond
immediately
wherever
there
are
working
throughout
the
city
of
Pittsburgh.
They
respond
immediately.
So
you
may
see
a
police
vehicle
from
you
know,
sign
to
Southside
over
on
the
north
side,
responded,
that's
probably
a
SWAT
situation
right.
U
F
AA
They
got
the
blue
flashing
lights
and
there
are
some
laws
that
we
found
out
that
the
state
police
are
enforcing.
But
now
you
know
top
the
director
history.
They
are
aware
of
it
and
they're
looking
at
because
what
happened
in
Squirrel
Hill
would
have
been
nice.
You
know
we
had
emergency
lights
on
our
personal
vehicles,
just
some
red
flashing
light,
but
we
have
to
be
careful
because
in
state
code
doesn't
permit
that.
AA
F
AA
O
AA
F
AA
F
AA
Of
the
spots
well
they're
handed
down
what
they
do
is
they
go
through
a
process,
a
hand
vehicles
down
to
where
they're
needed
they
may
have
a
vehicle
with
very
low
bow
H
on
it
and
they'll
give
it
to
someone
who
really
needs
it
and
they
move
the
vehicles
around
to
where
they're
needed,
based
on
the
mileage
and
a
condition
of
the
vehicles
but
again
I
think
on
average
fear,
maybe
three
four
years
for
police
vehicles.
We
don't
have
them
that
long.
Well,.
X
I'm
Peter
McDevitt
I'm,
the
senior
asset
management
analyst
in
OMB
and
I
do
a
lot
of
the
administrative
work
for
the
LA,
so
purchasing
vehicles
paying
for
vehicles
and
helping
the
former
fleet
manager
build
the
plan.
But,
as
chief
Costa
was
saying,
the
police
vehicles
we
actually
purchase
with
operating
money
because
they
have
a
shorter
life
span.
F
X
They
do
go
through
more
miles
because
those
are
the
policeman's
office,
it
offices,
they
don't
go
into
the
office,
they
go
to
their
vehicles
and
they
patrol
on
the
units.
So
they
go
through
a
lot
more
miles
law
quicker
than
most
of
our
other
vehicles
and
whenever
we
do
purchase
replacement
replacements,
as
chief
Costa
said,
if
we
can
reuse
that
vehicle
somewhere
else
before
decommissioning
it,
we
certainly
will.
I
AA
AA
F
AA
S
AA
AA
AA
X
F
I
F
Okay:
okay,
that's
all.
B
AB
Who
are
you
know
coming
across
city
vehicles
that
are
idling
or
driving
in
areas
where
they're
you
know
trying
to
be
get
some
fresh
air
and
and
are
experiencing
the
direct
impacts
of
polluting
vehicles?
So
those
are
both
of
my
concerns
and
issues
and
I'm
really
looking
forward
to
our
meeting,
where
I
can
understand
how
the
legislation
plays
out
with
the
ELA
and
how
you,
you
know
how
you
make
decisions
about
what
kind
of
priority
you
know
the
prioritization
of
this
department
versus
that
department
getting
the
most
the
cleanest
vehicles
possible
right,
we've
been
doing.
AA
That
we've
been
purchasing
electric
vehicles,
we've
been
buying
hybrid
vehicles,
we
are
looking
at
in
public,
works,
more
environmental,
friendly
vehicles
and
that's
our
goal
to
change
over
where
we
possibly
can.
But
unfortunately,
a
lot
of
our
equipment
is
diesel-powered
because
that
needs
the
diesel
fuel.
The
power,
the
equipment
that's
necessary
to
do
the
job,
so
we're
kind
of
limited
there,
but
we
are
going
to
look
at
it.
But
again
we
are
electric
vehicles,
as
you
can
see
from
the
list.
B
U
Q
Just
want
to
say,
I
know
the
importance
of
keeping
up
on
vehicles,
whether
it's
police,
Public,
Works,
firefighters,
you
know,
police
chasing
the
car
is
not
up
to
par.
You
need
good
quality
and
I
can't
stand.
One
thing
I
can't
stand.
Seeing
is
a
broken-down
police,
car
or
a
fire
engine
that
needs
work,
so
I'll
say
for
the
most
part,
our
vehicles
seem
to
be
tip-top,
so
I
think
you've
been
keeping
it
very
well.
The
only
question
I
had
for
for
a
guy
was
sold.
Hogs
ain't,
nothing
wouldn't
pick
up
trucks
with
a
thrower.
AA
A
pickup
truck
with
a
rear
spreader,
yes
that
body
they
also
have
a
pile,
their
four-wheel
drive.
They
are
used
to
get
into
our
narrow
streets,
our
dead-end
streets
when
they
have
to
back
in
and
so
forth.
So
they
are
used
a
lot
of
our
tertiary
straights,
but
they,
let's
probably
be
in
page
anyway,
but
we
do
have
those,
and
we
have
a
large
number
of
a
large
fleet
of
these
smaller
pickup
trucks.
They.
T
O
M
M
AA
Q
AA
Q
AA
O
AA
We've
also
been
buying
one
time:
dump
trucks
yeah.
We
also
been
buying
some
one
time:
dump
trucks
where
they
can
carry
more
salt.
We
call
them
one
time
there's,
but
they
can
carry
more
so
they
get
into
some
of
our
narrow
streets
as
well.
So
we've
been
not
only
in
the
past,
the
city's
always
by
the
large
trucks
now
we're
by
a
large
medium,
small
and
the
small
small
pickups
and.
Q
AA
D
AA
Most
of
the
pickup
trucks
today
are
built
with
standard
equipment
is
now
air
conditioning,
am/fm
radios,
a
lot
of
pickups
are
getting
out
of
being
manual
shifts.
They're
all
gonna
be
automatics
that
we
do
buy
automatics,
but
you
know
we
do
my
not
completely
loaded
but
in
a
comfortable
vehicle
for
our
employees
to
traveling
yeah.
Thank.
E
F
F
I
AA
AA
AB
AA
Need
to
get
a
contractor
back
in
there,
it's
a
better
material
to
use.
It
has
longer
life.
If
you
paint
a
crosswalk
paint
it
with
regular
paint,
it's
gonna
be
required
to
be
painted
a
minimum
of
twice
a
year.
Thermoplastic
you
may
get
four
or
five
years
out
of
it.
Thermoplastic
is
highly
highly
visible,
with
lights
at
nighttime,
so
it
makes
it
a
much
safer
crosswalk.
But
again
we
have
had
problems
where
it
spilled
off,
but
the
key
is
that
that
has
to
be
applied
right
after
new
asphalt
has
been
laid.
It.
F
Will
look
as
much
fine?
It
is
worse
than
other
straws
and
couplets,
and
a
lot
of
cities
I.
AA
Q
B
B
AA
AA
AA
Yes,
yes,
rock
salt
is
only
good
till
17
degrees
and
then
it
lose
its
effectiveness.
Then,
if
you
add
a
chemical
like
liquid
calcium,
it
may
get
you
down
like
you
know,
10
degrees
or
5
degrees,
but
just
look
what
the
new
salt
were
using,
can't
you
below
zero
and
it
continues
the
mill,
snow
and
ice
good.
B
Snow
zero.
Thank
you
very
much
for
your
investment
and
for
thinking
and
that
all
those
in
favor
signify
by
saying
aye,
opposed,
nay
positive
recommendation.
I
believe
that
is
exhausted
our
agenda
on
a
slow-moving,
the
agenda
the
day,
I,
don't
know
why,
if
there
is
any,
is
there
it
is?
Is
there
any
conversation?
He
final
conversation
any
any
remarks.
Five
members
of
council,
if
not
I'll,
accept
a
motion
to
adjourn
the
meeting
and
fruitless,
approve
the
minutes
and
the
join
the.