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From YouTube: Pittsburgh City Council Standing Committees - 5/27/20
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A
Hello
and
welcome
to
Pittsburgh
City
Council's
standing
committees,
meeting
for
Wednesday
May
27th
2020.
My
name
is
Kim
Clark,
Baskin
and
I
am
the
assistant
city
clerk
with
us.
Today
we
have
our
sign
language
interpreter
Nick,
Miller,
the
following
is
a
list
of
legislation
up
for
preliminary
approval
by
Pittsburgh
City
Council
Public,
Safety,
Services
Committee
mr.
O'connor
is
to
chair.
A
We
have
bill
number
348
resolution
authorizing
the
mayor
and
the
director
of
the
Department
of
Public
Safety
to
receive
grant
funding
from
the
US
Department
of
Health
and
Human
Services
to
assist
in
the
city's
emergency
medical
services,
efforts
to
prevent,
prepare
for
and
respond
to
the
coronavirus
and
further
providing
an
agreement
and
expenditures
not
to
exceed
one
hundred.
Thirty,
eight
thousand
one
hundred
sixty
two
dollars
and
sixty
six
cents
for
this
stated
purpose.
A
Public
Works
Committee
mr.
Coghill
is
the
chair.
We
have
bill
number
342
resolution
authorizing
the
mayor
and
the
director
of
the
Department
of
Public
Works
to
apply
for
grant
funding
from
the
Pennsylvania
Department
of
Conservation
and
natural
resources,
community
conservation
partnerships
program
to
provide
funding
to
update
the
city's
urban
forestry
master
plan.
The
grant
proposal
includes
an
ask
of
up
to
$35,000,
with
a
local
match
of
up
to
$35,000,
to
come
out
of
the
2021
city
of
Pittsburgh
Shh.
We
trust
fund.
A
Bill
number
343
resolution
authorizing
the
mayor
and
the
director
of
the
Department
of
Public
Works
to
receive
grant
funding
from
the
Keep
America
Beautiful
public
space
recycling
ran
in
the
form
of
sixty
clearstream
special
event.
Recycling
collection
frames
with
signage
frames,
sixty
cases
of
100
bags,
a
case
and
three
transport
storage
carts
with
the
cash
value
of
ten
thousand
two
hundred
and
eighty
five
dollars.
A
Land-Use
and
Economic
Development
Committee
mr.
Wilson
is
the
chair.
We
have
bill
number
248,
ordinance,
amending
and
supplementing
the
Pittsburgh
Code
of
Ordinances
title
nine
zooming
chapter
915,
environmental
performance
standards,
subsection
915
point:
oh
six,
sustainable
development
for
publicly
financed
buildings
by
deleting
certain
language
and
adding
a
new
subsection.
Nine
15-point
Olli
entitled
sustainable
development
for
city,
owned
facilities.
A
Bill
number
252
resolution
consenting
to
an
amendment
of
the
East
Liberty
trade
planning
study
and
authorizing
the
mayor
and
a
director
of
the
Department
of
City
Planning,
on
behalf
of
the
city
of
Pittsburgh,
to
take
necessary
actions
to
seek
necessary
consent
for
and,
if
obtained,
to
undertake
an
amended
planning
study.
As
a
prerequisite
to
considering
an
amendment
to
the
current
East,
Liberty
transit.
A
A
Intergovernmental
affairs
committee
mr.
Gross's,
the
chair,
we
have
bill
number
141
resolution,
adopting
plan
revision
to
the
city
of
Pittsburgh's
official
sewage
facilities,
plan
for
the
2926
smallman
Street
land
development
project,
located
at
twenty
nine
twenty
and
twenty
nine
thirty
small
ministry
bill
number
345
resolution
providing
for
an
agreement,
but
the
Fair
Housing
Partnership
to
provide
comprehensive,
fair
housing,
training
to
all
relevant
staff.
Members
of
the
city
of
Pittsburgh,
the
housing
authority
of
the
city
of
Pittsburgh,
the
Urban
Redevelopment
Authority
in
private
housing
providers.
B
Good
morning
and
welcome
to
the
Senate
committee
meeting
for
Wednesday
May
27
2020
Council
will
continue
to
meet
virtually
on
Tuesdays
and
Wednesdays
until
further
notice.
All
meetings
were
streamed,
live
on
the
city's
YouTube
channel.
Our
first
order
of
business
is
public
comment
for
those
speakers
that
have
registered
and
are
waiting
in
the
queue.
Please
give
your
name
in
neighborhood
for
the
record.
Each
speaker
will
be
given
three
minutes.
Our
lights
remind
everyone
that
the
rules
of
council
say
the
comments
are
limited
to
matters
of
concern.
B
C
Morning,
everybody
crystal
Jennings
currently
was
at
and
Wilkinsburg
PA.
As
you
know,
the
October
27
2017
consent
order
issued
by
Judge
Joseph
James
resolving
litigation
concerning
the
penny
parks
off
redevelopment
plan
in
his
order
bound
by
the
parties
included
in
the
city
of
Pittsburgh
to
publicly
support
and
the
mutual
cooperation
to
facilitate
the
community's
contain
content
there
and
including
the
consideration.
Babb
picks
about
the
city
of
Pittsburgh
Council
of
legislation
to
expand
the
East
Liberty
trade
assistance
area
to
a
3/4
mile
radius
from
the
East
Liberty
MLK
bus
weigh
station.
C
C
The
consent
order
will
recall
the
reasons
for
expanding
a
trade
boundary.
They
include
the
need
to
prevent
replacement,
affordable
housing
for
the
312
apartments
laws
with
the
pimple
as
a
soft
compress,
was
vacated
and
demolished
the
need
to
prevent
such
housing
in
areas
as
close
as
feasible
to
the
pimpin
of
the
site
and
the
full
radius
around
property,
rather
than
only
the
east,
which
would
be
in
case
if
the
tree
radius
remains
unchanged.
C
The
need
to
prevent
mixed
income
housing
in
the
East
Larry
Garfield
in
friendship,
areas
to
address
increasing
development
pressure
and
lost
existing
affordable
housing.
So
I
would
ask
you
guys
to
vote
YES
when
expanding
the
tread.
We
definitely
need
affordable
housing
for
a
local
income,
renters
and
homeowners
out.
Here
we
definitely
plan
when
expanding
you
know,
coops
and
Community
Land
Trust
to
allow
our
residents
to
have
ownership
in
the
property
where
they've
grown
that
where
they
you
know,
built
families
and
and
built
just
laughs.
So
please
vote
YES
on
extending
the
trip.
Thank
you.
D
Okay,
okay,
yeah
I
just
wanted
to
speak
on
the
tread.
Definitely
there
was
a
court
order.
Of
course
that
said
that
this
district
should
expand.
So
we
should
definitely
be
following
this
court
order.
Okay,
I,
don't
know
I
I,
don't
know
why
councilman
Burgess
want
to
keep
it
status
quo,
but
no.
We
need
to
make
sure
that
we
follow
this
court
order.
D
We
need
to
make
sure
that
this
housing
is
expanded
because
right
now,
because
of
this
pandemic,
I
mean
everybody
see,
you
know
the
need,
for
you
know
little
income,
housing
and
the
in
the
housing
that
that
law,
that
capital
is
given.
It's
not
it's,
not
the
adequate
housing
that
we
need.
You
know
I'm
speaking
about
I'm
speaking
about
the
pin
flag
of
people
and
I'm,
also
just
speaking
about
as
a
housing
advocate
that
we
definitely
need
this
to
expand.
We
do
not
me
while
my
capital,
it
can
change
you
to.
D
E
Hi
I
am
also
calling
in
to
speak
about
countable
2020
2
0
hi.
That
is
scheduled
for
discussion
today,
I'm
also
referring
to
the
court
order
dated
October
27
2007
teen.
That
court
order
specifically
stated
and
I
know
that
you
guys
have
seen
this
court
order
I've,
given
it
to
all
of
you
in
the
past.
Please,
please
read
section
4
sexy
6.1,
D
and
Exhibit
D
and
Exhibit
E.
E
It's
very
clearly
states
that
all
of
the
parties
John
came
in
for
the
developer,
all
four
community
groups,
these
Lib
redevelopment
incorporated
Bloomfield,
Garfield,
friendship,
community
group
and
Android
Park,
Neighborhood
Association.
In
addition
to
the
city
and
the
city,
was
very
involved
in
all
of
the
negotiations.
We
all
agreed
that
the
boundary
would
be
set
at
three
quarter
mile.
The
reason
for
that
is
because,
right
now,
the
current
boundaries,
the
half
mile,
are
bursting
with
market
developments.
E
You
know
suitable
prices
for
affordable
housing
is
going
to
be
really
difficult
to
find
in
that
current
district
right
now.
The
district
includes
very
hard
to
the
very
center
of
East
Liberty
and
also
the
what
was
that
seizing
north
east
side
of
shady
sides.
That
area
does
not
need
any
more
apartment
building
and
it
would
be
very
difficult
for
a
non-profit
developer
to
find
a
spot
cheap
enough
to
board
affordable
housing
there.
So
we
had
all
discussed
it
for
many
months.
It
took
about
five.
My
we
discussed
it.
E
That's
Housing
Committee
gets
to
pick
what
developments
there
are
that
Housing
Committee
is
made
up
of
members,
one
member
of
each
of
those
community
groups
plus
Lindsay
Powell
from
the
mayor's
office.
Those
five
people
are
not
going
to
put
affordable
housing.
We're
not
wanted
for
where
it's
not
needed,
they're
going
to
put
it
where
it
needs
to
be.
The
URA
is
managing
this
process
with
us.
I
have
full
faith
in
the
URA
and
these
Housing
Committee
members
that
they
will
build
appropriate
housing
in
the
appropriate
area.
E
B
D
B
B
You,
our
first
committee
of
the
day,
is
finance
and
law
which
is
chaired
by
myself.
I
need
a
motion
to
waive
the
rules
of
council.
If
members
may
recall,
we
have
our
declaration
of
disaster
that
we
introduced
yesterday.
However,
we
actually
didn't
vote
it
yesterday,
so
we
need
to
bring
it
to
the
table
today,
so
we
can
vote
it
through.
So
can
I
vamos
he
waived.
The
rules
of
council
to
365
can
be
on
our
agenda
so
much.
F
B
G
G
B
C
B
H
B
I
348
resolution
authorizing
the
mayor
and
director
of
the
Department
of
Public
Safety
to
receive
grant
funding
from
the
US
Department
of
Health
and
Human
Services
to
assist
in
the
city's
emergency
medical
services,
effort
to
prevent,
prepare
for
and
respond
to
the
coronavirus
and
further
providing
for
an
agreement
and
expenditures
not
to
exceed
one
hundred.
Thirty,
eight
thousand
one
hundred
sixty
two
dollars
in
66
cents
motion.
B
I
349
resolution
amending
resolution
number
four
93
which
authorized
the
mayor
and
director
in
the
Department
of
Public
Safety,
to
enter
on
behalf
of
the
city
into
a
three-year
professional
services.
Agreement
with
Johnson
Controls
for
security,
camera
integration
and
support
services
are
transferring
funds
from
equipment
and
supplies
to
professional
services.
K
B
I
342
resolution
authorizing
the
mayor
and
director
or
the
Department
of
Public
Works,
to
apply
for
grant
funding
from
the
Pennsylvania
Department
of
Conservation
and
natural
resources,
community
conservation
partnerships
program
to
provide
funding
to
update
the
city's
urban
forest
master
plan.
The
grant
proposal
includes
it
asked
of
up
to
$35,000,
with
a
local
match
of
up
to
$35,000,
to
come
out
of
the
2021
city
of
Pittsburgh,
shade
tree
trust
fund.
In
the
event
that
grant
is
awarded.
This
resolution
provides
for
an
agreement
and
expenditures
not
to
exceed
$75,000,
pushing
to
approve.
F
I
343
resolution
authorizing
the
mayor
and
director
or
the
Department
of
Public
Works,
to
receive
a
grant
from
the
Keep
America
Beautiful
public
space
recycling
grant
in
the
form
of
sixty
clearstream
special
event.
Recycling
collection
frames
with
sign
attorneys,
sixty
cases
of
100
bags,
slash
case
and
three
transport
slash
tourist
parts
with
a
cash
value
of
ten
thousand
two
hundred
and
eighty
five
dollars.
G
B
I
248
words
a
minute:
a
supplement
in
the
Pittsburg
code
of
witnesses,
title
nine
zone
in
Chapter,
nine,
fifteen
environmental
performance
standards,
subsection
nine
1506,
sustainable
development
of
publicly
financed
buildings
by
deleting
certain
language
and
adding
a
new
subsection
915
on
a
title.
The
stainable
development
or
city
owned
facilities.
B
M
A
brief
discussion
just
want
to
mention
that
there
was
a
public
hearing
held
last
week
and
what
this
does
is
this
changes.
This
adds
the
the
city,
properties
and
facilities
to
the
to
the
ordinance
to
currently
be
standing
ordinance,
and
so
any
new
properties
or
ones
that
any
new
properties
that
are
built
or
anyone
that
is
gonna
have
a
development
or
investment.
That's
greater
than
half
the
value
will
undergo
the
sustainable
development.
So
I
just
want
to
thank
reignover
and
his
team,
for
you
know,
walking
us
through
this.
So
thank
you.
M
B
I
368
resolution
authorizing
the
mayor
and
director
of
the
department
of
mobility
in
infrastructure
or
the
director
of
the
department
of
innovation
and
performance
to
enter
into
a
multi-year
licensing
agreement
with
psycho
media
technology
Inc
for
the
purposes
of
a
poll
inventory
and
on
it
specifically
for
the
purposes
of
street
light
and
telecommunication
attachment
inventory
in
year.
One
of
the
agreement
and
for
inventory
of
other
telecommunication
assets
in
subsequent
years
of
the
agreement
and
providing
the
payment
of
the
cost
not
to
exceed
seven
hundred.
Sixty-Eight
thousand
three
hundred
forty
six
dollars
and
seventy
five
cents.
H
So
this
is
a
multi-year
agreement
and
you
know
a
good
amount
of
money.
I
wanted
to
just
have
an
opportunity
to
discuss
it.
This
is
a
partnership
with
a
company
called
cyclone
media
that
would
audit
through
technology,
all
of
our
sort
of
all
of
our
infrastructure,
including
street
lamps
kind
of
anything.
That's
on
the
city
street.
That
has
to
do
with
that.
You
know
the
intersects
with
domi
and
innovation
performance,
so
street
lamps
and
small
cell
technology,
and
a
number
of
other
types
of
things
that
we
need
to
be
able
to
say
retrofit.
H
L
Yes,
I
had
a
lengthy
discussion
with
director
Rick's
and,
as
Councilwoman
Strassburger
said,
we're
gonna
need
inventory
of
these
pools
once
we
do
start,
you
know
accepting
their
antennas
and
whatever
else
goes
on
them.
The
inventory
from
what
I
understand
you
know
over
six
years
is
going
to
be
absorbed
by
the
cost
that
we're
charging
for
the
poles,
which
is
still
in
negotiation.
L
However,
I
think
we
are
taking
out
three
hundred
and
ten
thousand
dollars
from
old
bond
money
to
finance
the
first
phase
of
this,
so
we
are
ready
for
it
and
from
what
I
understand
you
know
that
old
blonde
money
will
be
recouped
once
we
actually
start.
You
know
collecting
from
the
cable
companies
and
in
doing
so,
I
think
we
saved
I.
Seventy
thousand
dollars,
I
want
to
say
just
by
signing
up
early
and
getting
them
on
board
and
started.
Is
that
right,
Councilwoman
Strassburger?
Is
that
the
way
you
understand
it?
That's.
G
You
mr.
chair,
so
I
have
talked
before
so
I
won't
talk
at
length
now
about
the
preemption
that
some
people
perceive
from
the
federal
and
state
governments
on
the
rollout
of
5g
and
I
know
that
the
administration
has
been
at
that
table
about
trying
to
challenge
what
we
are
and
are
not
allowed
to
do
so.
G
I
just
always
want
to
mention
to
members
of
the
public.
We've
had
this
discussion
about
small
cells
at
the
city
council
table
when
we
talked
about
how
to
do
a
permitting
process
in
private
property
in
our
zoning
code.
But
then
we've
also
talked
about
how
domi
is
working
with
the
telecoms
and
we're
fighting.
G
Over
contracts
about
them
trying
to
impose
their
rights
on
our
city
property,
which
is
you
know,
our
joint
property,
which
is
the
city
streets,
and
so
this
is
still
a
wrestling
match
and
so
I'm
in
favor
of
doing
this
inventory
because
I've,
the
fear
is
that
the
telecoms
would
be
putting
them
up
without
even
telling
us
everywhere.
They
want
my
first
year
on
council
I
think
we
had
an
agreement
with
Crowne
Plaza
crown
Council,
but
thank
you
I
always
get
it
wrong.
G
One
of
them
is
like
a
hotel
chain
and
so
I
remember,
being
adamant
under
director
Lam
Deborah
Lam
that
she
wanted
to
kind
of
give
them
permission
to
implement.
I
think
maybe
our
first
distributed
antenna,
small
cells
and
we
had
attached
it
as
the
council
to
a
shortlist
of
just
15
sites.
But
we
are
way
past
that
now-
and
you
see
these
small
cells
up
all
over
the
city,
both
on
private
property
and
now
increasingly
on
public
property.
So
I
and
I
know
that
our
own
assets
have
not
been
kept
track
of
as
much.
G
They
should
have
over
the
decades
right.
So
we
own
some
of
our
poles,
for
example,
but
we
don't.
We
do
not.
We
no
longer
own.
Many
of,
though
you
til
atte
poles
in
the
right-of-way
and
so
I
hope
that
this
is
a
first
step
and
that's
kind
of
its
managing
our
assets
in
the
right-of-way.
Much
more
proactively
and
I
look
forward
to
keeping
track
with
us
as
we
go
forward.
B
M
Thank
you,
I
just
want
to
ask,
since
it's
my
first
year,
I
just
wanted
to
you
know
as
I'm
looking
at
some
of
these
contracts
that
we,
you
know
put
out
and
get
bids
on
for
some.
Some
of
these
for
some
of
these
audits
and
inventory
I
just
wanted
to
know
what
is
the
reasoning
why
we
couldn't
do
this
in-house.
H
O
M
M
O
We
have
a
very
incomplete
inventory
of
the
polls,
so
there
are
polls
that,
but
we
own
our
street
light
poles.
We
have
about
60,000
of
our
own
streetlight
poles.
We
have
traffic,
poles,
traffic
signal
polls,
we
have
probably
2,400
or
more
of
the
traffic
poles
and
then
the
utility
poles,
which
we
do
not
those
are
not
ours,
but
we
still
govern
what
goes
in
the
public
right-of-way.
As
far
as
those
goes
in
there.
There
are
thousands
upon
thousands
of
those
and.
Q
Q
Specifically
what
pull
and
as
director
Rex
was
saying,
with
direct
inspections
or
other
kind
of
enforcement
activities,
verify
verifying
that,
then
installation
of
a
can
of
an
antenna
system
was
done
correctly
and
safely
and
the
type
of
stuff.
But
that's
that's
the
level
of
detail
that
we're
missing
that
we
need
to
get
throughout
the
entire
city.
Okay,.
B
L
No
I
just
wanted
to
say
director
rich.
Would
you
speak
to
you
know?
I
know
these
cable
companies.
They
really
want
to
be
around
the
stadiums
and
we're
large
people,
large
crowds
gather
but
you're
making
sure
you
hold
no
feet
to
the
fire,
whereas
it's
going
to
be
equitable
through
out,
for
instance,
the
South
Hills,
where
we
don't
have.
You
know
stadiums
and
concert
venues
yeah.
Q
So,
as
we
are
having
conversations
with
the
telecommunications
companies,
we've
been
and
again,
this
is
where,
if
you
look
at
the
FCC
rule,
one
of
the
things
that
it
says
is
that
it
allows
cities
to
recover
actual
cost.
It
doesn't
allow
us
to
price
market,
but
it
allows
us
to
recover
the
actual
cost
and
one
of
the
things
that
we're,
including
in
our
program
in
Pittsburgh,
is
an
equity
program.
So
one
of
the
it's
one
of
the
things
that
we're
working
on
is,
as
these
telecommunication
companies
started
rolling
out.
Q
So
we
really
encourage
you
to
invest
in
this
area,
because
the
cost
of
breaking
ground,
and/or,
remediating
and
all
these
things
are
going
to
be
minimal.
So
I
think
that,
as
we
seen
the
impact
of
of
Kogut
on
people
working
remotely
that
the
need
for
a
better
equity
around
connectivity
is
it's
important
that
this
is
an
area
where,
where
I'm
going
to
start
building
programming,.
H
I
know
I'm
just
gonna
bring
up
the
equity
issue
when
it
comes
to
when
it
comes
to
street
lamps
as
well.
So
as
counseling
Coghill
pointed
out,
it's
around
its
around
connectivity,
but
it's
also
around
streetlights.
So
we
know
that
people
feel
safer
when
they
are
when
they're
in
areas
that
are
well-read,
and
this
can
also
identify
where
the
gaps
are
for
street
lights,
so
that
were
more
retrofitting
them
to
be
more
energy-efficient
and
hopefully
we'll
recoup
some
of
the
costs.
P
O
P
To
hear
that,
we're
talking
more
about
ways
that
we
can
address
this
I
do
think
that
there
needs
to
be
some
additional
information
that
we're
sharing
with
not
only
the
school
district
but
with
maybe
other
people
that
work
with
school
was
that
our
outside
of
Pittsburgh
public
schools,
because
we
actually
have
a
lot
of
students
that
probably
about
the
same
amount
of
students
attend
Pittsburgh,
Public
Schools.
Now
that
attend
other
schools.
P
So
I
think
that
we
have
to
have
those
conversations
and
I
really
have
urged
the
mayor's
office,
the
administration
to
fill
the
positions
for
the
Education
Commission,
so
that
we
I
think
now
is
the
time
that
we
need
to
start
looking
into
what
we
can
do
to
help
our
students
in
our
schools
in
our
in
our
city.
But
I
do
think
a
lot
of
this
has
to
do
with
when
we
talk
about
the
cost
for
I
think
it
was
one
of
the
essential
programs.
P
He
was
like
ten
dollars
a
month
or
something
that
ten
dollars
a
month
is
still
something
that
somewhere
families
just
don't
have,
and
so
I
think
it
would
be
nice
to
maybe
combine
that
with
the
learn
and
earn
program
and
and
how
we're
doing
some
of
these
things
that
we
could
really
make
sure
we're
getting
technology
really
into
the
hands
of
people
that
truly
need
it
and
I
mean
I
love
all
the
PR.
I
love
all
this,
but
if
we're
not
really
delivering
to
our
students
and
to
our
families,
it's
just
that
PR.
P
In
my
district
the
hand
getting
computers
into
the
hands
of
people
that
need
it,
but
I
think
that
we
have
so
many
computers
in
the
city
now
and
with
the
school
district
and
with
all
these
businesses
that
there's
got
to
be
some
collaboration
here
and
I
wish
I'd
see
more
of
that,
that's
all
I
say
thank
you.
Thank.
L
Councilman
one
more
thing:
I
just
wanted
to
thank
director
Rick's.
You
know
in
we're
not
part
of
the
negotiation
process,
of
course,
but
you
know
we
have
to
draw
a
line.
I
mean
they
want
something
for
nothing
always
and
if
you
look
at
comparable
cities,
we're
really
not
asking
for
much
so
stick
with
your.
You
know,
guns
there,
director
Rick's
and
let's
get
it
done
all
right.
O
B
H
G
I
Bill
345
resolution
providing
for
an
agreement
with
the
fair
housing
partnership
to
provide
comprehensive,
fair
housing,
training
to
all
relevant
staff,
members
of
the
city,
the
housing
authority
of
the
city,
but
you
are
a
and
the
private
housing
providers.
Training
will
include,
understand
and
affirmatively
furthering
fair
housing,
reasonable
accommodation
and
modifications
in
general,
fair
housing
laws
in
an
amount
not
weeks.
Sixty-Four
thousand
seven
hundred
and
fifty
dollars
motion.
B
F
If
an
improvement
contract
for
me,
I
month
will
be
here
right,
so
kind
of
making
bet,
so
private
housing
providers
are
those
that
are
not
the
housing
authorities
or
acting
as
third
party
for
the
housing
authorities,
so
that
that
includes
what
we
do
is
provide
a
open
to
the
public
training
that
allows
for
any
landlord
with
occupancy
to
come
and
receive
fair
housing
training.
So.
I
F
F
F
I
mean
we'll
again,
we
we
will
make
it
available.
We
hope
that
people
will
want
to
attend
as
it
stands
right
now.
It
is
you
know
it's
completely.
Voluntary
I
would
offer
up
what
we
know
and
the
opportunity
to
have
conversation
with
you
all
that,
as
you
look
at
things
like
first
occupancy
permits
that
you
may
want
to
consider
at
some
point
having
people
who
apply
for
those
go
through
fair
housing
training
and
that
you
can
do
that
in
a
way.
F
This
is
I'm,
sorry,
fun,
I'm,
not
supposed
to
jump
in
the
face.
Please
do
this.
This
basically
revolves
around
a
consolidated
plan,
and
so,
if
you
look
inside
the
consolidated
plan,
it's
basically
a
five-year
plan,
and
so
each
by
viewers,
you
do
the
Tron
plan.
That
includes
an
analysis
of
impediments
to
fair
housing
and
then
how
you're
going
to
address
that
analysis
of
impediments
to
fair
housing.
F
F
Training,
you
know
it's
interesting.
You
would
think
we
get
more
on
the
private
end,
because
it's
it's
available
to
them
into
really
a
push
to
get
them
out
there.
So
we
may
get.
You
know
six,
seven,
eight,
maybe
ten
at
a
training
at
a
time,
some
private
provider.
Where
is
you
know
we
get
the
opportunity
to
get
to
the
large
public
housing
authority
and
get
kind
of
all
in
their
space
or
to
the
URA,
which
is
it
which
isn't
within
this
to
make
sure
that
they
understand.
F
So
the
impact
is
broad,
but
unfortunately,
right
now
it
is
very
difficult
to
get
housing.
Private
housing
providers
to
participate
I
wish
they
would
because
what
happens
with
a
lot
of
private
housing
providers?
Quite
frankly,
is
they
end
up
making
a
mistake
and
for
a
lot
of
them?
It's
a
mistake.
You
know
you
know,
I,
don't
want
to
kind
of
cast
people
some
bad,
they
make
mistakes,
they
end
up
on
the
wrong
side
of
it.
They
end
up
with
the
complaint,
quite
frankly
at
your
Commission,
and
then
they
get
the
train.
F
You
know
where
have
they
gotten
the
training
up
front?
You
know
it
would
be
a
much
better
space
for
them.
I
tell
them
all
the
time
when
I
do
these
I'm
so
help
I'm
so
thankful
that
I
see
them
here,
because
if
I
see
them
at
these
kind
of
trainings,
that
means
that
they're
taking
proactive
steps,
it's
not
costing
them.
F
N
F
B
G
G
There's
an
exhibit
attached
to
this
legislation
if
you're
curious,
there's
actual
specific
sites
already
listed
and
Exhibit
A,
so
2023
46,
Exhibit
A,
and
they
list
the
specific
sites
and
descriptions
of
them
so,
and
you
can
see
that
they're
really
great
about
half
of
them,
maybe
more
than
half
actually
are
in
right
away.
Well,
now
that
I'm
scrolling
through
and
looking
on
my
screen,
I
apologize,
every
single
one
is
right
away,
but
some
have
the
park
or
vacant
lots
in
addition
to
the
right
away
at
that
location.
G
So,
for
example,
in
councilman
Lavelle's
district
center-
and
here
and
is
you
know,
pretty
larger
installation
and
it's
got
it
in
the
right
of
way
and
then
some
over
into
the
property
adjacent
I'd
like
to
make
an
amendment,
because
there's
a
mistake
in
this
exhibit
a
so
it's
very
small.
It's
just
minor.
It's
it
just
miss
labels,
council
district
for
Polish
help
so
under
exhibit
a
madam
clerk
number
five.
Has
it
and
I'll
read
it
out
loud
because
most
members
or
the
public
aren't
looking
at
this
smell?
G
B
M
This
is
a
great
opportunity
for
especially
my
neighborhood
or
my
district
there's,
a
project
that
we
have
listed
on
this
on
this
sheet
and
it's
one
of
the
twelve.
It's
the
woods
run,
a
stream
inflow,
project
and
I
wanted
to
ask
about
a
lot
and
block
number,
because
it
specifically
is
the
whole
that
block
number
is
Oliver.
View,
Park
and
I
know
that
the
Friends
of
her
view
have
been
working
diligently
on
several
different
projects
there
I
just
want
to
know.
Where,
specifically,
does
this
money
go
to
this
grant
go
towards
which.
N
G
Out
cuz
that
doesn't
see
that's
not
very
specific
enough
right,
not
at
all
the
other
ones
are
all
very
specific
small
footprints
that
are
defined.
So
if
we
could
follow
up
with
them,
we
could
still
amend
it
in
writing
by
Tuesday
if
you'd
like
and
then
or
if
you
just
want
to
you
know
we
can
find
out
the
information
you
can
decide
whether
or
not
you
want
to
amend
it.
Well,.
G
M
G
N
H
This,
for
the
first
time
allowing
for
our
programs
to
be
utilized
on
vacant,
lots
right
of
ways,
rights
of
way
and
park.
Land
I
only
ask
because
a
couple
of
the
projects
in
district
8
are,
you
know,
have
been
going
for
many
years
now
and
then
assumed
presumed
to
be.
You
know,
program
eligible
this
whole
time
for
last
couple
of
years,
so
it
would
be
surprising
if
this
is
the
first
time
that
we
were
applying
programs
to
to
those
types
of
parcels.
J
J
The
programs
have
changed.
These
are
just
upgrading
the
agreements
in
certain
right
aways,
but
we've
done
grow
grants
in
right-of-ways
already
we
actually
raised
the
cap,
so
somebody
could
actually
apply
for
used
to
just
be
capped
at
a
million.
Now
it's
up
to
about
five
and
we're
thinking
of
raising
it
again.
So
this
is
just
more
a
technical
thing
going
through
accepting
the
grow
grants
and
who
needs
to
approve.
J
M
O
The
the
separation
subdivision
area
subdivision-
thank
you.
I
was
struggling
with
the
word
subdivision
of
the
parcel
to
get
that
which
I,
which
I
don't
think
we
we
blocked
for
this
agreement
that,
as
councilman
O'connor
indicated
that
one
would
actually
be
signed
by
the
Director
of
Public
Works,
but
certainly
we
can
give
you
a
drawing.
That
shows
where
this
project
is.
It
is
not
throughout
the
whole
of
the
review
park.
It's
a
very
small
project,
but
it
is
the
park.
Is
one
single
parcel
right
now
great.
M
L
J
That
so
the
grow
program
goes
to
all
83
municipalities.
This
is
our
portion
that
PWSA
applied
for
so
basically
we'll
do
matching
funds
with
each
municipality,
who
can
show
that
they're
gonna
hold
X
amount
of
water
out
of
the
system
for
growth
for
a
green
project
and
then
we'll
match
the
funds
with
the
grow
program.
So,
if
you're
outside
of
the
city,
you
can
also
apply.
B
Thank
you
any
further
discussion
for
members.
If
not
I
have
one
question
as
director
Rick's,
if
you're
still
on
will
we
be
actually
be
able
to
see
drawings
of
the
projects
prior
to
implementation
versus
sort
of
the
description?
That's
in
the
package
to
just
say,
is
somewhere
close
to
hearing
in
cinder
we're
going
to
take
over
a
lot.
O
B
B
The
bill
is
recommended
that
exhaust
our
agenda
I
do
have
a
meeting
announcement
which
is
to
register
for
comment
by
phone
for
councils,
regular
and
Standing
Committee
meetings.
Please
call
the
clerk's
office
at
4,
1
2,
2,
5,
5,
2,
1,
3
8,
the
deadline
for
speaker
registration
is
9:00
a.m.
the
date
of
the
meeting
for
comments
to
the
clerk's
office.
Usually
female
city
clerk
at
Pittsburg,
pH
gov.
Is
there
any
other
announcement
from
members
council?
President
smith,
thank.
P
D
P
Don't
know
that
I'm
the
right
person
to
talk
about
it,
but
I.
Just
think
that
you
know
we
saw
happen
and
what
we
continue
to
see
happen
in
our
country
has
been
really
difficult
because
we
try
to
bring
our
world
together,
try
to
bring
people
together,
and
you
know
in
our
city
of
Pittsburgh.
We
know
how
our
police
work
constantly
with
our
community
day-in
day-out,
and
yet
it
takes
one
incident
and
won
one
battle
officer
to
turn
the
whole
world
upside
down
and
for
the
african-american
community.
We
know
that
this
is
not
one
incident.
P
P
Don't
know
what
we
can
do
you
know
on
our
local
level,
but
I'd
like
to
have
some
conversations
about
what
we
can
do
when
things
happen
on
a
national
level,
because
those
are
the
things
that
are
affecting
us
locally
as
well.
You
know
it
shouldn't
be
that
you
fear
walking
down
the
street
or
that
you
fear,
calling
the
police
or
having
the
police
around
and
I
mean.
As
I
mentioned.
Our
police
officers
do
an
amazing
job
with
police
community
relationships
and
that's
because
the
community
also
does
a
lot
to
build
those
relationships
locally.
P
K
Unfortunately,
though,
this
is
not
new,
there
was
a
period
of
time
up
until
around
nineteen
in
the
1960s
all
through
the
early
1900's,
where
african-americans
were
lynched
in
the
south
by
police
officers
by
the
general
public.
It
was
a
public
spectacle,
I
I'm,
going
to
suggest
the
first
way
is
for
us
to
in
Collinsville
and
I
have
begun
this
process
to
be
honest
with
each
other,
about
racism
and
about
white
privilege.
You
know,
because
to
deny
it
existence
reinforces
that
problem
right.
We
need
to
be
honest
with
each
other.
K
We
have
problems
here
on
this
council
with
white
privilege
and
would
racism.
We
have
problems
in
our
city
with
white
privilege
and
racism.
We
have
problem
in
our
country
and
so
I
think
part
of
it
is
to
stop
hiding
the
truth
about
this,
to
have
public
regular
conversations
and
be
very
honest.
You
know
to
say
that
there
are
some
things
that
we
do
that
are
even
if
we
don't
when
I
say
that
race
is
that
you
may
not
be
a
bad
person.
K
You
may
not
hate
African
Americans,
but
when
you
start
a
whisper
campaign
when
you
start
to
attack
African
Americans
without
proof,
unfortunately
doing
that
is
unfortunately
a
systemic
racism.
Does
it
make
you
a
bad
person,
it
does
make
you
it
does
mean
that
you're
doing
some
I
mean
that
is
racist,
and
we
have
there
to
say
I.
Think
part
of
this
is
to
have
that
open
conversation,
because
people
who
engage
in
bad
behavior
and
then
hide
back
into
their
group
saying.
Well,
that's
just
how
things
are
done.
Well,
no,
it's
not
how
things
are
done.
K
It's
absolutely
not
how
things
is.
That
is
how
we
have
done
that
historically
to
to
vilify
individual
people
of
particularly
african-american
in
particularly
african-american
men.
This
is
something
that
we
do
and,
and
it
has
to
stop
and
I-
think
this
demonization
of
black
men
is
part
of
the
problem
of
why
we
see
you
know
and
I've.
My
heart
goes
out
made
to
your
officers
who
are
who
are
in
you
know
these
Lois,
these
low-income
communities
that
are
segregated
right
and
they're
coming
from
a
different
culture.
K
They
don't
understand
the
culture,
they
understand
the
people
and
they
have
been
subject
to
the
you
know:
the
demonization
of
black
men
on
television
and
we're
in
in
movies,
and
so
I
think
I
think
we
have
to
admit
say
all
this.
But
until
we
start
being
honest,
you
know
and
saying
out
loud.
Some
things
are
unacceptable.
They're,
unacceptable
in
public
they're,
unacceptable
in
private
they're,
unacceptable
period.
K
You
know
nobody,
no
person,
no
person
should
be
demonized,
no
person
should
be
afraid
of
police
officers,
no
person,
male,
female
and
and-
and
so
I
think
you
know,
I
think
that
part
of
it
part
of
it
is
this
affirming
the
dignity
of
every
person
and
I'm
I'm.
You
know
and
when
we
see
people
being
mistreated,
if
not
being
swept
under
the
rug.
It's
you
know
how
things
are
no
good
and
and
so
I'm.
K
Sorry,
that's
a
long
time,
but
I
spend
most
of
my
life
most
of
my
life,
trying
to
help
people
who
have
been
oppressed
to
discriminated
against
and
a
lot
of
it
occurs,
at
least
in
our
city,
because
of
there's
a
quiet
acceptance
that
this
is
simply
how
things
are
done
and
I'm
no
longer
willing
to
accept
that
on
any
level
and
I.
Think
having
this
point,
I
get
I
think
you
know,
prison
Smith
is
is
probably
one
of
the
most
compassionate
people.
K
I've
ever
met,
and
my
friend,
of
course,
but
I
appreciate
her
sympathy
and
I
think
there's
something
we
can
do,
and
that
is
to
have
this
conversation
publicly
over
and
over
again
and
when
people
do
these
things
privately,
either
bring
it
up
in
public
or
tell
them
probably
it's
awful
it's
off
limits.
You
know
all
that
they're
doing
things
that
are
just
not
right,
I'm,
talking
too
much,
that's
nothing
be
blessed.
Can.
P
I
respond
to
that
real
quickly,
councilman
I,
just
wanna,
say
for
me:
I
just
want
to
say
that
I've
not
always
been
compassionate
I
mean
people
have
taught
me
too
so
I
think
sometimes
having
a
conversation.
Learning
and
understanding
more
I
mean
really
helps
when
you
really
sit
down
and
talk
to
one
another.
P
I
mean
there
were
times
where
I
just
couldn't
understand
some
of
the
things
that
people
were
saying
and
then
I
mean
over
the
years
I
mean
I'm
older,
now,
I've
grown
I've,
changed,
I've,
heard
other
people
and
what
they've
gone
through
and
I've
learned
from
them.
So
I
think
having
those
conversations
is
so
important
because
it
does
help
people
understand
something.
P
I
think
you
know
I've
once
before
called
for
a
post
agenda
on
race
in
the
city
of
Pittsburgh,
and
you
know
we
talked
about
having
that
so
maybe
well,
maybe
that's.
One
of
the
things
we
can
do
is
schedule
that
and
have
some
conversations,
if
nothing
more
than
just
start
having
conversations,
and
maybe
we
can
help
change
other
people
and
teach
other
people.
If
it's
a
lot
of
people
are
teaching
still
teaching
me.
I
can
say,
I
know
at
all.
I
couldn't
be
good
to
state
right,
but
I
did
want
to
have
the
conversation.
P
I
didn't
want
people
to
know
that
we
do
care,
we
do
see.
What's
going
on
and
and
I
usually
you
know
always
say,
there's
two
sides
to
every
story
and
I
always
oftentimes
side
with
you
on
the
side
of
caution.
I
always
you
know,
try
to
wait
and
see
what
happens
with
all
the
details,
but
there's
sometimes
you
just
see
things
and
you
just
know
it
just
couldn't
it
didn't
have
to
be
that
way.
P
B
Thank
you
to
both
un
remember
juses
point.
As
you
may
be
aware,
why'd
you
all
aware
we
currently
have
the
Commission
to
create
racial
equity
legislation
before
Council.
We
have
not
voted
on
that.
Yet
when
we
introduced
it,
the
mayor
had
30
days
to
respond,
which
he
did.
He
asked
that
we
have
a
public
conversation
about
the
bill
before
voting
on
it.
B
Now
that
we
are
able
to
hold
public
hearings
and
post
agendas
via
the
zoom
platform,
we
can
now
move
to
get
those
scheduled,
and
that
will
be
the
sort
of
first
iteration
of
having
this
conversation.
That'll
be
our
first
foray
into
this,
so
I
work
with
the
clerk's
office
to
begin
getting
that
scheduled
sounds.