►
From YouTube: Pittsburgh City Council Regular Meeting - 2/25/20
Description
No description was provided for this meeting.
If this is YOUR meeting, an easy way to fix this is to add a description to your video, wherever mtngs.io found it (probably YouTube).
A
A
When
the
wild
bird
is
injured,
resides
within
a
building
or
poses
an
imminent
risk
of
property
damage
or
physical
harm.
These
two
bills
are
sponsored
by
Councilman,
bruce
kraus
councilman
Daniel
LaBelle
presents
bill
number
142
resolution
providing
for
professional
services
agreement,
and/or
contracts
with
compass,
natural
gas,
Partners
LP
for
the
lease
of
a
compressed
natural
gas,
fueling
system
and
provision
of
fuel
for
the
payment
cost
not
to
exceed
three
hundred
and
seventy
eight
thousand
dollars.
A
The
trust
fund,
councilman,
Corey
O'connor,
presents
bill
number
144
resolution
authorizing
the
mayor
and
the
director
of
the
Department
of
Public
Safety
to
enter
on
behalf
of
the
city
of
Pittsburgh
into
an
agreement
with
Bucks
County
Community
College
for
hazardous
materials,
safety
officer,
training
and
certification
services
cost
not
to
exceed
$9,000
councilman
Bobby
Wilson
presents
bill
number
147
resolution
authorizing
the
city
of
Pittsburgh
to
enter
into
a
preservation
agreement
with
the
new
hazard
theater.
This
bill
is
sponsored
by
Councilman,
Bobby,
Wilson
and
council.
A
President
Theresa
cows
presents
bill
number
148
communication
from
Kevin
Paulus,
director
of
the
Office
of
Management
and
Budget,
submitting
acting
pay
approval
on
behalf
of
the
Department
of
mobility
and
infrastructure
for
Katie
Sawyer
and
on
behalf
of
the
Department
of
Public
Works
for
Donald
Modric
Park,
the
acting
pay
policy
revised
in
June
of
2018.
That
concludes
the
reading
of
the
legislation
for
introduction.
Thank
you
and
have
a
wonderful
day.
B
A
C
B
B
Thank
you
now,
please
rise
for
the
Pledge
of
Allegiance.
We
have
the
students
from
Pittsburgh's
Langley
k-8
school
in
my
district
and
district
2
and
the
Sheraton
section
of
the
city
of
Pittsburgh,
and
we
have
some
amazing
students
who
will
also
do
a
performance
after
and
then
we'll
have
a
moment
of
silence
after
the
pledge
you
want
to
start.
B
Okay
and
now
or
never
we're
gonna
have
the
students
do
a
performance
and
can
we
also
say
that
we're
joined
by
our
school
board
director
for
that
area
and
I
hadn't
seen
a
dr.
Hamlin
hello,
dr.
Han,
with
the
superintendent
of
Pittsburgh,
Public
Schools
and
our
school
board
member
Veronica
Edwards
was
of
that
section
and
she
can
introduce
the
other
people
with
her
I
know.
Mike
Nichols
brings
the
kids
here
every
year,
so
I'm
thinking
for
that.
But
if
you
want
to
your
performance
first
and
then
we'll
do
with
he's
speaking
after
the.
D
E
E
G
D
D
E
G
G
K
B
E
B
Q
Good
morning,
the
motto
of
the
school
district
is
expect.
Great
things.
Can
you
help
me
say
that
expect
great
things
said
again
expect
great
things
expect
great
things,
because
that's
what
we
expect
of
our
students,
but
we
don't
do
it
alone,
our
teachers,
our
superintendent,
my
fellow
board
members,
MIT's
Falls,
is
here
also
for
all
of
our
staff,
mr.
Nichols,
who
helps
us
and
read
to
our
children
and
bring
them
the
City
Council.
We
are
very
glad
to
be
here
today
and
for
myself
a
shout
out
for
Langley
Teresa
Cal
Smith
president.
Q
We
are
now
installing
a
safety
zone
around
the
school
and
included
in
that
safety
zone
was
mrs.
Cal
Smith
myself,
the
principal
of
Langley
and
infrastructure
department
of
the
city
of
Pittsburgh
ghetto
Mahan
y'all.
Thank
you.
We
are
looking
so
that
safety
zone
was
installed
to
keep
our
children
safe
and
we
did
it
as
a
team.
It
still
takes
teamwork
to
make
the
dream
work.
Thank
you.
P
And
I
have
the
Africa
behind
miss
terrorism
and
then
say
this
right.
So
thank
you
for
being
here.
Thank
you
for
supporting
our
students,
but
I
also
want
to
make
sure
that
we
thank
Miss
Edwards,
know
to
see
Kayla
Smith
also
for
their
support
of
the
school
as
well,
and
I
also
want
to
acknowledge
another
one.
Our
board
members
that
are
in
here
today
miss
Cindy
follows
in
the
back
with
our
CTE
group
as
well.
But,
more
importantly,
thank
you
to
principal
saikhan
the
teachers.
The
support,
but
also
students
continue
to
do
your
best.
B
O
We're
childhood
for
grade
school
childhood
friends
am
is
glad
to
be
here
today.
So
you
know
this
is
nothing
new
I'm
happy
to
bring
the
kids
down
I'm
happy
to
support
that
of
the
superintendent
and
the
school
board
that
make
them
make
this
happen.
You
know
I
couldn't
do
it
alone,
so
I'm
just
happy
to
be
here
and
also
I'm
cancer-free,
seven
years.
O
That's
right:
Sarge
everybody
get
your
prostate
checked,
because
it's
very
important,
if
you
you
know
you
want
to
see
your
grandkids.
This
is
the
time
to
do
it.
Don't
wait
till
you're
50,
do
it
when
you're
40,
because
and
it's
a
scary
thing
and
it's
nothing
to
nothing
to
laugh
at
so
please
get
your
body
get
your
prostate
checked
immediately.
Thank
you
very
much,
and
we
also
made
a
card
for
the
mayor
is
a
sorry
for
his
mother
and
all
from
Langley,
Westwood
and
King
on
all
the
kids
to
put
their
names
on
it.
B
B
E
B
B
And
whereas
Career
and
Technical
Education
gives
high
school
students
experience
in
practical,
meaningful
applications
of
skills
such
as
reading,
writing
and
mathematics,
thus
improving
the
quality
of
their
education,
motivate
motivating
potential
dropouts
and
giving
all
students
leadership
opportunities
in
their
fields
and
in
their
communities,
and
whereas
Pittsburgh
Public,
Schools,
Career
and
Technical.
Education
programs
help
students
to
prepare
for
high-wage
high-skill
high
demand
careers
in
STEM
fields,
industry,
apprenticeships
and
for
two
or
four-year
degree.
B
B
B
B
B
D
P
You
we
appreciate
you
you're,
always
supporting
us,
you
always
at
our
school,
supporting
our
schools
as
well,
and
we
really
appreciate
your
support
on
a
regular
basis.
All
right,
but
I
also
want
to
give
special
thanks
to
Miss
Angela
Mike
as
well
direct
the
executive
director
of
CTE
and
her
team
also,
but
I
also
miss
Cindy
files,
who's
a
board
member
works
tirelessly,
and
it's
a
CTE
champion
on
a
regular
basis
24/7.
P
So
we
really
supports
you
and
thank
you
for
your
support,
but
also
to
our
students
for
partaking
in
the
Health
Careers
and
also
the
carpentry
trades
as
well.
So
thank
you
for
taking
on
those
endeavors
and
good
luck
and
to
all
your
future
endeavors
all
right.
Thank
you
and
happy
Mardi
Gras
high
Mardi,
Gras
beads.
B
C
Thank
you,
City
Council
for
acknowledging
Career
and
Technical
Education
Month
and
Pittsburgh
Public
Schools.
We
have
16
different
Career
and
Technical
Education
programs,
as
students
can
take
advantage
of
across
six
of
our
heists
and
I,
wanted
to
give
you
some
of
our
current
data.
This
past
year
we
had
students
graduate
from
high
school
with
over
500
certifications.
C
We
also
had
a
98
percent
graduation
rate
and
our
students
participated
in
over
400
work
based
learning
experiences
out
of
school.
So
a
lot
of
good
things
happening
in
Career
and
Technical
Education,
which
jump
starts
our
students
for
their
careers,
not
only
jobs
or
careers,
but
also
for
post-secondary.
Our
students
are
also
earning
do
enrollment
credits,
their
skills,
USA,
competition
winners.
In
fact,
Wednesday
night,
we'll
be
celebrating
19
who
meddled
competing
across
the
state
with
other
CTE
students,
and
today
our
carpentry
and
or
also
our
health
career
students
are
here.
C
Some
of
them
have
metal
and
be
recognized
Wednesday
night.
So,
as
was
talked
about
earlier
in
the
proclamation,
our
students
definitely
are
preparing
for
high-wage
high-skill
jobs
and
we
encourage
families
if
you're,
listening
and
students
check
us
out
on
the
website.
There's
an
online
application
and
hopefully
some
of
the
families
out
there
will
become
CT
part
of
our
CTE
family
next
year.
Thank
you.
R
Hi,
hello,
everyone.
Thank
you.
So
much
I
do
want
to
thank
City
Council.
This
is
amazing
that
you
have
recognized
the
work.
That's
that
the
Pittsburgh
Public
Schools
are
doing,
but
I
just
want
to
share
just
a
couple
of
lines
with
you.
I
got
this
this
morning
and
I
thought
how
appropriate
can
this
be?
It
came
out
of
Harrisburg
that
everyone
appears
to
agree.
More
needs
to
be
done
to
increase
apprenticeships,
Career
and
Technical
Training
to
address
Pennsylvania's
employment
issues.
R
This
goes
on
and
on
in
support
of
how
we
need
to
have
more
apprenticeships
and
internships
in
all
of
the
areas
that
miss
Mike
mentioned,
and
then
some,
but
I
also
want
you
to
know
that
it
says
in
here,
because
we're
not
filling
those
spaces.
Pennsylvania
is
going
out
of
the
state
to
bring
people
in.
No
that's,
not
okay.
We
want
to
continue
this
pipeline
from
Career
and
Technical
Education
here
in
Pittsburgh,
so
our
kids
stay
in
Pittsburgh
and
work
here
and
pay
taxes
and
do
all
those
wonderful
things
that
we
need
them
to
do.
R
But
I
do
want
you
to
know
that
there
are
miss
Mike
mentioned
high,
paying
skilled
jobs
that
our
kids
can
come
out
and
make,
and
it's
really
funny
because
some
of
us
think
I
don't
know.
I
must
have
picked
the
wrong
profession
because
these
people
are
making
pretty
good
money.
So
again,
thank
you
for
all
your
support.
We
need
community,
we
need
the
all
of
our
neighborhoods.
We
need
you,
we
need
the
mayor.
We
need
everyone
helping
to
support
so
that
we
can
keep
these
programs
running
and
again,
as
dr.
R
B
Want
to
say
how
much
I
appreciate
our
school
board
members,
because
Veronica's
here
today,
she
comes
here.
You
know
for
a
lot
events
and
she's
taking
care
of
her
mother
at
the
same
time,
and
so
I
appreciate
that,
but
I
also
appreciate
sandy
Falls
and
all
the
school
board
members,
because
they
are
working
on
a
volunteer
basis,
a
full-time
job,
helping
or
trying
to
help
our
kids
and
if
we
could
just
keep
politics
out
of
it
and
just
let
them
do
their
job.
B
We'd
probably
have
an
amazing
school
district
doing
amazing
and
they
are
doing
amazing
things.
You
just
know
a
little
bit
more
about
it.
So
I
just
want
to
thank
you
all
for
everything
you
do
and
dr.
Hamlet.
You
have
been
amazing,
so
I'm
gonna.
Thank
you
too,
for
always
being
here
and
being
supported.
But
thank
you
all.
Thank
you
to
everyone
for
all
the
work
you
do.
Just
everyone
want
to
come
up
before
a
photo.
All
members
won't
come
up
for
a
photo
I.
R
S
S
S
Okay,
so
this
is
the
Alderdice
National
Merit
Scholars
we
get
them
in
almost
every
year.
It's
great
that
you
know.
Alderdice
is
doing
such
a
good
job
for
our
city,
especially
a
you
know
in
my
district
I'm,
really
proud
that
Alderdice
continues
to
be
an
anchor
in
Squirrel
Hill.
So,
whereas
in
the
2019
2020
school
year
there
were
two
National
Merit
semifinalist,
only
1%
of
all
high
school
students
achieved
this
recognition
based
on
their
SATs,
a
National
Merit
Scholarship
qualifying
test.
S
In
addition,
there
were
fifteen
National
Merit
commended
students
who
are
being
recognized
as
ones
of
only
34,000
students
recognized
across
the
country.
Now,
therefore,
be
it
resolved
that
the
Council
of
the
city
of
Pittsburgh
does
hereby
commend
Auto
dice,
High
School
for
its
consistent
and
unwavering
emphasis
on
academics,
rigor
and
diversity
and
education,
and
congratulate
the
students
who
have
achieved
National,
Merit,
Scholar,
designation,
I
do
have
to
recognize
one
special
student
and
I
hope.
T
U
Dr.
McCoy
principal
at
all
are
nice
and
I
want
to
thank
councilman,
O'connor
and
the
whole
City
Council,
for
always
being
so
welcoming
where
you
know
down
here
at
least
once
or
twice
a
year
and
really
appreciate
the
support
you
have
for
Alderdice
and
Pittsburgh
Public
Schools-
and
you
know
we're
here
with
this
group.
We're
gonna
see
our
volleyball
team
in
a
minute,
but
this
group
is
being
recognized
for
how
they've
done
on
a
standardized
test
which
is
tops
in
the
nation.
U
But
you
look
at
this
group
of
students
and
there
are
so
much
more
than
that.
I
mean
you're
looking
at
athletes
and
people
involved
in
just
about
every
club
activity,
sport
in
the
school.
So
they
do
it
all
and
they're,
well-rounded
and
I.
Think
that's
what's
going
to
make
them
successful
in
the
future,
so
so
glad
to
recognize
them
again.
And
if
you
don't
mind,
I
want
to
kind
of
pass
her
on
the
mic.
So
you
can
introduce
yourselves
all
right.
D
P
So
I
just
want
to
take
a
moment
to
commit
commend
these
students,
but
I
also
make
sure
we
commend
the
leaders,
the
leader
of
the
building
right
dr.
McCoy,
give
me
an
hour
counselors
for
supporting
our
students,
but
I
also
again
commend
you
celebrate
you,
you've
committed
yourself
to
being
the
very
best
and
brightest
that
we
have
in
Pittsburgh.
We
want
to
make
sure
we
continue
that,
but
also
up
enough
your
brothers
and
sisters
as
well
with
you
along
the
way.
Okay,
continue
to
do
great
things.
S
S
Now,
therefore,
be
it
resolved
that
the
Council
of
the
city
of
Pittsburgh
does
hereby
recognize
the
hard
work
and
commitment
shown
by
the
Alderdice
girls
volleyball
team
and
commends
the
trust
and
dedication
shown
by
their
coaches
and
congratulate
them
on
their
sixth
straight
City
League
championship
and
be
it
further
resolved
that
the
Council
of
the
city
of
Pittsburgh
does
hereby
declare
Tuesday
February
25th
to
be
Alderdice.
Girls,
volleyball
city
league,
championship
day
in
the
city
of
Pittsburgh.
U
Thank
you
again,
councilman
and
just
like
I
said
about
our
National
Merit
Scholars.
You
know
we're
recognizing
these
students
for
their
athletic
accomplishments,
but
they're
just
overall
well-rounded
students,
they're
involved
in
so
many
things,
and
they
make
all
dice
an
amazing
place
before
we
introduced
individual
students.
Coach
Kean.
Do
you
want
to
say
a
few
words.
W
I'm,
a
teen
I
was
actually
on
the
very
first
city
league,
win
in
2014
coached
by
rich
O'brien
and
but
I'd
really
like
to
thank
Corey,
O'connor
and
all
of
City
Council
for
having
us
here
today,
and
also
dr.
James,
McCoy
and
I'm.
My
assistant
coach,
rich
O'brien,
so
I'm
really
proud
of
these
girls.
They
worked
really
hard.
They
did
win
the
city
championship
this
year,
but
they
also
played
really
really
well
in
the
state.
W
L
B
The
next
order
of
business
is
public
comment.
Anyone
wishing
to
speak
comment
before
City
Council
has
three
minutes
to
speak.
Please
give
your
name
in
neighborhood
for
the
record.
The
green
light
will
indicate
the
start
of
three
minutes
when
the
yellow
light
comes
on.
You
have
one
minute
to
summarize
when
the
red
light
comes
on,
your
time
is
up.
Well,
the
first
speaker
please
come
to
the
podium.
E
T
Buon
Giorno
as
dr.
Ronald
and
Miller
and
Bloomfield
and
bel
super
a
lot,
a
member
of
the
Italian
sons
and
daughters
of
America,
the
Bloomfield
group,
Giuseppe
Moretti.
You
know
who
he
is,
who
he
was
you're
a
pip
Panther
holo
fan.
You
should
know
great
sculptor
I'm,
a
GIS
candidate
for
president
2020
global
intelligence,
work,
I
founded
the
CGS
III,
a
Center
for
Global,
Studies,
International,
interdisciplinary
in
1998,
and
the
gis
global
intelligence
Society
in
2010.
T
T
What
you
do
in
it
is
a
different
matter,
but
I
take
you
to
be
the
most
important
and
then
the
state,
and
then
the
federal
government
and
public
comment
is
key
to
that.
Rule
of
law
allows
for
response
and
holding
to
account
and
ethics
concern
or
anti
concern
of
Pittsburgh
City.
Council
is
public
comment.
T
There
is
a
pattern
when
I
do
public
comment
of
uncivil
action
performed
or
committed
by
Pittsburgh
City
Council
violates
my
speech
right
under
the
US
and
Pennsylvania
constitutions
and
Pennsylvania
public
comment,
statues
that
includes
multiple
episodes
2013
to
2020
that
involve
his
skill,
Smith
mr.
Crouse
mr.
Burgess
MS
gross
and
now
pre
and
Chris
a
proceeded
2010
to
2014
by
episodes
that
involve
the
past
president
of
Council,
Darlene,
Harris
and
and
mr.
William
Peduto,
post
seated
by
the
2020
February
18
disorder
debacle
led
by
mr.
Burgess.
That
interrupted
my
public
comment.
V
I've
resided
in
Greenville
for
basically
over
65
years,
my
first
two
years
were
in
Wheeling,
West
Virginia,
sometimes
I
wish
my
parents
would
have
stayed
there
right
now.
I
feel
like
a
liar
to
everybody
that
I
tell
my
address
to,
because
when
you
give
my
address,
you
give
it
as
407
Alger,
Street,
nope
I
live
at
407,
horror,
Street
and
from
this
day
forward.
That's
what
I'll
use
companies
that
deliver
to
us
can't
find
us.
My
new
neighbor
came
to
me
just
yesterday
and
said
you
know
they
wanted
me
to
go
to
zero.
V
You
know
quota
pick.
My
packages
up
I
did
suggest
to
him
what
I
tell
them
take
it
to
our
post
office,
we'll
get
our
items
and
it
works,
but
the
other
things
I
mean
come
on.
I've
lived
here,
22
years,
nobody
can
figure
out,
there's
a
ditch
down
that
road.
Nobody
can
figure
out
who
it
belongs,
I
get
told
the
school
board,
I
get
told
the
city
and
the
last
time
out,
I
got
told
PWSA
I,
really
don't
care
who
it
belongs
to.
V
It
needs
taken
care
of
there's
three
houses
back
there
on
the
only
house
that
that
ditch
affects,
because
when
it
rains
it
pours
into
my
house,
all
I
asked
him
to
do
clean
the
ditch
doats
rape,
my
hillside,
which
is
what
they
did
a
few
years
back-
guess,
what's
happening
from
them
doing
that
the
hill
slidin
that
whole
hill
from
the
back
of
Hall
work,
the
Greenfield
Avenue
is
now
gonna,
be
one
big
good
mudslide
and
the
sore
at
the
bottom
of
the
hill.
It's
never
clean.
V
They
clean
it
one
day
and
the
next
day
it's
still
back
up
one
of
the
reasons
greenfield
school
and
I'm
not
condemning
the
school,
because
I
went
to
Greenfield,
they
mowed
the
lawn
and
they
need
it
Leigh
and
it
all
washes
down.
I,
don't
know
what
the
solutions
to
any
of
this
is
but
I
mean
come
on
folks.
Would
you
like
to
live
in
a
house?
It's
got
water
damage
all
over
it
or
that
you
do
shudder.
Every
time
you
hear
the
rain
like
we're
gonna
do
today,
no
I!
Don't
want
to
do
that.
V
V
They
came,
they
scooped
up
the
asphalt
they
reheated
it
and
they
relayed
it
couldn't
tell
the
difference,
but
we
got
potholes
now
and
that's
also
my
walkway,
because
there's
no
walkway
to
back
there
I
don't
blame
the
city
on
that
either
they
did
try
to
attempt
to
build
a
hillside
up
on
the
other
side,
also
with
a
lot
of
the
stone
from
taking
it
out
of
the
hill
people
still
dump.
We
had
and
I'm
not
sad
to
say
to
me
and
passed
away
a
tree
removed.
Thank
you
for
your
time.
Thank
you.
H
Good
morning,
I'm
doing
a
lot
of
better
I
was
really
sick.
Last
week,
whether
you
know
it
or
not,
I
went
on
for
oh
you've
on
brown.
I
live
in
the
Hill
District,
but
I
went
to.
It
was
a
place
that
was
talking
about
cancer,
come
to
be
check
for
cancer.
My
mother
died
from
cancer.
My
older
sister
and
I've
had
a
little
problem,
so
I
said
I'll
go
see,
but
when
I
went
in
my
blood
pressure
was
so
high.
They
called
Matilda
theis,
they
didn't
answer.
She
said
you
need
to
go
to
the
hospital.
H
Well
I'm
right
on
Forbes
I
said:
I'll
walk
up
the
press,
but
she
said
no,
no,
you
might
have
a
heart
attack
by
then
or
stroke.
I
went
to
the
hospital
I'm
just
saying
this,
for
the
people
to
understand.
Just
writing
from
Forbes
up
to
the
hospital
was
1383
dollars,
so
you
see
how
expense
expensive
going
to
the
hospital
or
even
getting
sick.
Now.
I
have
another
problem,
but
my
councilman
is
not
here
and
I
want
every
one
of
you
who
are
constant
people
to
please
listen
and
please
follow
my
words.
We
have.
H
We
have
fallen
people
that
live
in
our
building.
We
have
all
racists,
but
there's
a
Chinese
people.
They
talk
to
me
and,
and
she
came
and
she
was
saying
that
the
manager,
because
the
man
is
making
noise
up
over
her
head,
told
her
to
call
the
police
911
saying
that
she
did,
but
she
can
hardly
speak
English.
Ok,
so
by
this
sign
another
four
and
a
woman
that
I
know
can
speak
English,
so
I
took
her
up
there,
and
so
she
said
911.
H
Even
she
says
no
9-1-1
see
what
what
it
needs
to
be
understood
here,
we're
good
for
it.
We
respect
our
police,
but
in
other
countries
no,
they
do
not.
This
foreign
woman
has
the
police
coming,
but
she
can't
even
explain
please.
If
you
have
seniors
in
your
district,
please
call
them
back
tell
them.
They
have
interpreters,
they
come
here,
they're
sponsored
so
there
are
interpreters,
so
find
the
interpreters
and
ask
the
companies
what
they
should
say:
don't
have
them
cuz.
She
was
saying
her
here.
H
She
showed
me
earplugs,
there's
another
thing:
I
must
say
about
the
child
wealth.
You
know
babysitting
I
want
to
just
to
understand
that
miss
I
didn't
know
she
was
pregnant.
She
left
came
back,
she
was
gone.
You
were
say
excused
the
absent
member
for
months.
She
was
guns,
came
back
with
her
baby
on
her
lap
and
said
all
day
long,
but
when
I
brought
my
father,
your
old
red
baby,
you
had
mr.
Burgess
tell
me
it's
not
the
time
and
the
place.
H
I,
don't
think
it
was
the
time
I
place
for
her
baby
to
be
sitting
there
all
day,
plus
all
the
months
that
she
couldn't
even
come
back
Tuesday
days
a
week,
I
told
her
this
you
couldn't
come
back
two
days
a
week.
I
was
a
caseworker.
When
them
young
girls
had
babies,
they
had
to
go
to
school,
they
had
to
get
a
job,
but
she
can
take
and
I'm
finding
out
five
thousand
a
month.
She
just
said
it
all
time:
no,
that's
the
cestus
service
and
some
of
you,
when
you
don't
come
to
the
meetings.
H
B
Brown
have
a
good
day
speaker,
please
next
speaker,
please
seeing
no
further
speakers
we'll
move
on
to
the
prison
next
order
of
business
presentation
of
papers,
we'll
start
with
councilman
Burgess,
chair
of
urban
recreation,
Thank
You,
Reverend
Burgess,
and
thank
you
for
cheering
the
meeting.
Last
week,
councilman
Carl
Hill,
chair
of
public
works.
Y
X
Councilman
Krause
presents
bill
number
145,
ordinance
amending
ordinance,
number
36,
a
mininet
supplement
in
the
Pittsburg
called
title:
six
conduct
article
three
dogs,
cats
and
other
animals
by
repealing
chapter
six
39
in
its
entirety
and
adding
a
new
chapter.
639
species
and
red
eared
sliders
prohibited
in
the
keeping
sale
exchange,
adoption
exchange
or
transfer
of
such
animals.
B
X
Bill
number
143
resolution
amending
resolution
837,
which
authorized
and
directed
in
the
city
controller
to
create
a
special
trust
fund
to
be
designated
as
the
Schenley
Park
rink
trust
fund
for
the
purpose
of
depositing
funds
and
expenditure
of
funds
for
any
and
all
related
expenses
to
authorize
the
Department
of
Parks
and
Recreation
to
utilize.
The
trust
fund,
Thank.
B
B
B
B
Y
B
S
B
X
The
code
account
information
to
the
2020
Year
bill
number
124
resolution
amending
resolution
629
of
2019,
which
is
a
resolution
authorizing
the
purchase
of
certain
property
by
the
city
in
lieu
of
eminent
domain.
In
order
to
advance
city's
proposed
permanent
closure,
the
Timberland
Bridge
to
provide
specific
pay
information
and
adjust
a
cold
account.
Information
to
the
2020
year's
bill.
X
B
Y
Excuse
me,
this
completes
the
final
piece
of
assemblage
so
that
we
have
a
complete
campus
from
which
to
work
that
we
can
begin
the
actual
construction
of
the
new
4th
division.
I
know:
councilman
Coghill
has
been
working
diligently
to
make
this
happen
along
with
myself
and
you
council,
president
Kyle
Smith.
So
this
is
the
the
last
assemblage
that
we
need
to
complete
the
campus
to
begin
the
work
and
I
just
want
to
take
a
time
here
to
thank
everybody
for
their
patience.
Y
N
I
just
want
to
say,
I'm
thrilled.
You
know
that
we're
going
to
be
breaking
ground,
I
hope
this
spring
we've
been
really
lucky,
because
we've
had
a
mild
winter,
I've
only
shoveled,
my
walk
once
so,
just
in
time
for
next
winter,
I'm
hoping
this
project
is
finished
by
then
and
I
want
to
thank
councilman,
councilman
Kraus,
and
you,
madam
president,
for
your
support
and
all
you
had
to
do
with
it.
So
thank.
B
You
any
other
members
I
just
want
to
thank
both
of
you
for
the
work
that
it
shows
when
the
southwest
sticks
together.
What
we
can
accomplish-
and
so
I
want
to
thank
you
both
for
sticking
together,
leading
this
charge
and
making
sure
that
the
residents
in
our
side
of
town
have
two
divisions,
not
one
to
serve
that
many
neighborhoods,
because
we
can't
definitely
tell
the
response
in
our
area
has
been
definitely
changed.
B
B
X
X
N
B
X
Y
Y
Y
B
D
Y
B
J
A
J
A
B
X
B
A
B
X
Councilman
Wilson
presents
bill
number
137
reported
the
Committee
on
land
using
economic
development
for
February
19
2020,
with
an
affirmative
recommendation.
Bill
number
110
resolution
authorizing
the
mayor
and
director
of
City
Planning
of
the
city
to
accept
a
remittance
from
Point
Park
University
in
the
amount
of
$15,000.
This
remittance
will
fund
the
design
and
fabrication
of
historic
district
signage
not
to
exceed
$15,000.
B
You
have
heard
the
reading
in
the
title,
the
bills
and
in
the
bill
is
there
any
discussion
on
the
bill,
so
I'm
just
gonna
just
ask
a
question
real
quickly
and
it's
just
I'm
wondering
who's,
putting
the
signs
up
for
a
point
part,
because
there's
often
times
in
our
neighborhoods,
we
asked
about
signage
and
banners
and
we're
told
that
they
have
to
put
them
up
at
their
own
expense
and
I'm
costs.
I'm
curious,
even
though
I
see
15,000
for
the
banners
is
that
also
installation
and
removal
I
just
want
to
know.
That's
all
minors.
B
M
B
B
Was
it
the
banners
it's
expensive
because
we
have
to
pay
for
the
banners
to
be
installed
and
removed,
and
all
that
so
I'd
like
to
see
if
there's
some
way,
that
we
can
work
that
out
a
little
bit
with
the
city
or
some
someone
to
help
us
with
that
cost
to
free
that
cost.
But
Thank
You
Councilwoman
see
no
further
discussion.
The
bill
is
not
ready
for
final
action,
all
in
favor
of
the
passage
well
that
I,
when
the
name
is
called
those
opposed,
will
vote
no
with
a
clerk.
Please
call
the
roll
Reverend.
W
D
B
X
Councilwoman
gross
presents
bill
number
138
reported
the
Committee
on
intergovernmental
affairs
for
February
19
2020,
with
an
affirmative
recommendation.
Bill
number
35
resolution
requesting
the
approval
of
an
inter
municipal
transfer
of
liquor
license
from
Bell
Park
Inc,
so
the
applicant
known
as
950
Pennsylvania
LLC
for
the
premises
located
at
950
Penn
Avenue
known
as
no
950
pin
LLC
pursuant
to
the
amended
Pennsylvania
liquor
code.
Bill
number
104
resolution
authorizing
the
approval
of
the
2020
Housing
Opportunity
Fund
annual
allocation
plan
council
districts.
All.
B
A
B
Bill
has
never
received
a
legally
required.
Number
of
votes
was
finally
passed
and
now
we'll
move
on
to
motions
and
resolutions.
The
meat
haven't
one
meeting
announcement
this
afternoon
council
has
a
cablecast
post
agenda
discussion
at
1:30
on
the
bill
on
bill.
1
1
1
as
it
relates
to
the
parks
plan
tomorrow,
Wednesday
February
26
council
will
hold
a
cablecast
post
agenda
discussion
at
1:30
p.m.
on
paid
sick
leave.
The
council
parks
plan
is
that
councilman
Burgess,
correct
and
the
paid
sick
leave
is
councilman
O'connor.
Can
we
have
a?
B
J
A
It
resolved
that
the
Council
of
the
city
of
Pittsburgh
makes
known
its
opposition
to
any
modernization
effort
that
seeks
to
also
weaken
or
diminish
the
efficacy
and
intent
of
the
Community
Reinvestment
Act,
including
OCC
2018
0:08
1515.
The
rule
change
proposed
by
the
OCC
and
FDIC
and
be
it
further
resolved
that
this
council
encourages
community
development
institutions,
neighborhood
groups
and
other
concerned
organizations
to
help
ensure
that
accountable.
Strengthening
in
impactful
investments
remain
the
central
focus
of
the
Community
Reinvestment
Act.
A
S
A
S
Thank
you
I
want
to
thank
that
in
my
office
as
well
as
PC
RG
I
want
to
thank
councilman
Gross
for
sponsoring
I
know
I
spoke
with
Councilwoman
Strassburger,
who
would
like
to
also
be
a
sponsor
as
well
just
so
everybody
knows
if
this
change
does
happen.
Pc
RG
believes
that
we
could
lose
maybe
90
to
180
million
dollars
over
the
next
five
years
for
our
community
groups
and
mortgages,
and
things
like
that.
So
I
just
want
to
thank
everybody
for
the
support
on
this.
Thank.
B
M
Yeah,
the
federal
Community
Reinvestment
Act
is
the
tool
that
we
have
to
fight
redlining.
It
is
the
tool
that
ensures
that
banks
have
to
report
on
their
mortgage
lending.
It
should
not
be
weakened
because
we
need
that
information
to
hold
big
banks
accountable.
It
is
also
the
tool
that
we
have
to
ensure
that
there
is
reinvestment
by
big
banks
in
the
neighborhoods
that
need
that
investment,
so
the
Community
Reinvestment
Act
is
a
federal
law
should
not
be
weakened
so
that
we
can
ensure
that
reinvestment,
and
so
it's
very
alarming.
M
The
deadline
for
comment
all
public
can
comment
is
March
9th.
They
don't
actually
have
the
contact
information,
but
I'm
sure
we
can
all
provide
it
on
our
website
so
that
we
can
weaken
this
wolf.
Council
Thank
You,
councilman
O'conner
for
the
work
that,
for
you
doing
the
work
in
your
staff
to
bring
it
to
our
attention.
This
will
of
council
will
go
to
public
comment
by
March
9th,
but
also
the
public
can
also
have
their
individual
voices
heard.
Thank.
B
I
Z
Yet
African
Americans
have
been
a
not
allowed
to
buy
homes
and
certain
communities
and
B
in
their
own
communities
where
they
are
buying
the
home,
their
housing
prices
go
down.
My
father
was
not
a
lot
the
mortgage
they
would
not,
even
though
he
was
working
full-time,
they
would
no
one
would
give
him
a
mortgage
because
he
was
an
african-american
right.
Z
We
lived
in
the
West
End
at
that
time
in
Ingram,
and
my
father
and
family
wanted
to
stay
in
the
West
End,
but
they
could
not
buy
a
house
in
the
West
End
because
they
were
african-american,
and
so
they
went
to
the
only
place
where
they
could
buy
a
house
which
was
in
Homewood.
They
still
couldn't
get
a
mortgage.
The
person
who
owned
the
house
wanted
to
leave
because
of
white
flight,
so
my
father
paid
his
mortgage
payment
directly
to
the
owner
of
the
house
for
15
years
until
he
bought
the
house.
Z
He
bought
the
house
in
1957
for
about
fifteen
thousand
dollars
and
over
his
lifestyle
lifespan.
The
house
went
up
a
few
thousand
dollars,
but
mostly
it
went
down,
and
now
the
house
in
2020
is
worth
less
than
what
my
father
purchased
it
for
it's
just
it
is
it
is.
It
is
a
shame
that
exists
in
our
city,
but
it's
a
fact
and.
Z
We'll
be
talking
more
about
that
there's.
Also
a
book
called
white
fragility
that
I
would
I
will
bring
in
maps
out
what
word
order
copies
to
council
to
read
about
right,
because
you'll
know
you
were
things
you'll
find
out.
Is
that
when
you
start
talking
about
these
issues,
people
get
uncomfortable
right.
We
talk
about
these
reality.
Issues
of
the
experiences
of
African,
American,
African,
Americans
you'll
you'll
see
a
visible
uncomfortability
of
people
because
of
often
times
they
really
believe
that
things
have
been
equal,
that
their
success
in
life
has
become
on
their
own
marriage.
Z
When
there
has
not
been
structure
impediments,
you
know,
there's
structural
play
if
my
father
had
bought
that
same
house
in
Point
Breeze.
He
had
bought
that
same
house
anywhere
in
in
the
same
house
laughter.
My
house,
my
home,
has
three
three
kids,
three
bathrooms
a
full
basement.
If
he
had
bought
that
same
house
in
Queen
breeze
right
now,
that
house
would
probably
be
350
375
some
number
like
that,
but
because
in
Homewood
it's
probably
worth
$18,000
and
so
one
of
the
things
he
talked
about.
Z
You
know
he
lived
to
92,
but
one
of
the
things
he
talked
about
was
how
he
did
everything
right.
He
raised
his
kids
right
my
brother.
Now
neither
one
of
us
have
ever
been
in
jail.
How
he
paid
all
of
his
bills
paid
all
this
taxes
did
everything
everyone
told
him
to
do
yet.
You
know
he
did
not
earn
worked
everyday
worked
hard
for
for
all
of
his
life
he's.
My
father
didn't
retire
until
he
was
in
his
80s.
He
walked
five
miles
every
other
day.
Z
This
is
what
it's
like,
and
you
know,
I
want
going
to
diatribe,
but
that's
been
on
my
mind
last.
We
must
be
really
on
my
mind.
You
know
I
think
there
is
a
disconnect
and
I
need
to
talk
more
about
what
it
means
to
be
to
live
in
Pittsburgh,
black
and
especially,
to
live
black
and
poor
there.
It
is
a.
It
is
a.
It
is
a
significantly
different
experience
than
being
in
the
majority
culture
in
this
city,
and
so
I
appreciate
the
the
will
of
council
to
help
strengthen
the
law.