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From YouTube: Pittsburgh City Council Standing Committees - 7/6/22
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A
A
B
A
Thank
you.
Our
next
order
of
business
is
public
comment.
I
would
like
to
remind
all
speakers
of
the
rules
of
council
state
that
comments
are
limited
to
matters
of
concern.
Official
action
or
deliberation
which
are,
or
maybe
before,
city,
council
and
profanity
will
not
be
permitted
once
you
recall,
please
restate
your
name
and
neighborhood
for
the
record.
Our
first
registered
speaker
is
dr
ronald
lynn,.
D
It's
miller
ronald
and
miller,
bell
silver
and
the
hill.
I
remember
the
american
physical
society.
I
want
to
call
attention
to
the
fine
structure.
Constant
1
over
137
is
one
of
the
most
important
ones
in
all
science.
I'm
a
global
intelligence
society,
u.s
national
candidate
for
president
2024.
D
I
played
a
lot
of
basketball
and
not
as
much
now
but
earlier
in
my
life.
Mr
lavelle,
do
you
play
basketball?
D
Do
you
play
basketball,
simple
question?
Well,
why
don't
you
meet
me
sometime
at
the
y
on
center
avenue
and
we'll
go
one-on-one?
I
was
sit
shop
and
say
the
other
day.
Basketball
and
the
amount
of
money
came
to
25
exactly
and
the
tall
black
man
who
was
in
line
said.
That
is
really
unusual,
and
I
said
well
that
that
would
be
like,
like
one
of
the
moves
of
michael
jordan
or
even
further
back
of
dr
j,
have
any
of
you
been
to
ruskin
park
in
harlem.
D
Perhaps
many
of
you
don't
remember
about
fifth
avenue
high
school
over
the
weekends
on
friday
nights
and
saturday
nights,
they
played
a
lot
of
basketball
drew
in
people
from
all
over
the
city.
D
An
invitation
to
play
up
dallas
was
really
something
well,
I
played
a
lot
of
basketball
at
wise
and
I
have
the
scars
to
prove
it,
because
there
are
a
lot
of
very
tall
men
who
were
annoyed
with
my
being
able
to
get
around
them
and
over
them
sometimes,
and
one
of
these
young
black
men.
I
was
playing
with
invited
me
to
play
up
dallas.
D
We
really
need
this
again
and
one
of
the
places
I
think
we
can
start
to
do
it
in
fact,
is
around
center
and
kirkpatrick
in
the
hill.
D
So
I
I'm
asking
you
as
counselors
mr
lavelle
in
particular,
to
to
join
with
me
to
see
if
we
can
get
an
nba
team.
Like
you
know,
connie
hawkins,
you
know
a
lot
of
people
remember
that,
but
I
think
it
would
be
very,
very
constructive
and
also
to
have
neighborhood
basketball
all
over
the
city.
E
E
Blockbusting
and
affliction
of
emotional
distress
have
harmed
the
upon
our
neighborhood.
Those
who
oppose
property
owners
of
black
air
do
so
as
their
own
peril.
We
also
say
no
reapportionment,
you
want
to
prevent
deterioration,
it
would
not.
It
would
not
help
us.
It
would
harm
us
to
be
reassuring
on
june
20th,
2022
the
detriment
on
air
school
building
more
sense
into
being
a
disruptive
and
nuisance
property.
E
E
Three
of
the
seven
has
the
escorted
out
of
the
building.
Here
it
down.
Other
neighborhoods
have
been
blighted
with
worse
she's,
not
allowed
to
happen
to
put
mayor.
The
outcry
to
the
school
board
has
proved
futile,
put
pressure
on
them
to
sell
it
to
the
city
for
a
dollar
carry
it
down.
The
pennsylvania
state
constitution
says
that
government
was
created
for
the
peace,
safety
and
happiness
of
we,
the
people,
decisions
and
actions
that
harm
the
people
are
not
acceptable.
E
E
Mayor,
danny
kaufman,
coghill
and
state
representative
venom
have
all
pledged
to
help
bonaire
get
rid
of
our
detrimental
school
property
and
replace
it
with
the
green
states.
The
michael
mullen
memorial
marine
space
will
be
beneficial
to
all
ages
and
stages
of
people.
A
beautiful
calming
place
to
enjoy
fruit,
trees,
flowers
and
birds
will
the
rest
of
the
city
how
to
promote
the
peace,
safety
and
happiness
of
the
marmara
neighborhood.
E
E
G
Okay,
I
think
that's
is
that
okay,
okay
good
morning
and
thank
you,
my
name
is
eric
gray
and
I
live
on
farmer
street
and
holy
shield.
I
want
to
voice
concerns
about
the
reapportionment
plan
currently
under
review
and
what
it
would
need
for
police
hell.
I'll
keep
my
comments
brief.
As
you've
heard,
many
of
my
fellow
polo
show
residents
express
similar
worries.
G
The
proposed
change
is
not
a
small
one
for
polar
shell,
which
would
move
from
district
seven
to
district
one
joining
communities
north
of
the
allegheny,
as
others
have
pointed
out
in
previous
meetings.
I
think
polo
shell
shares
a
number
of
interests
and
concerns
with
other
communities
currently
within
district
7
and
would
have
a
better
chance
of
furthering
these
interests
and
tackling
these
problems
by
remaining
in
the
same
district
and
continuing
to
work
with
these
other
communities.
A
B
B
They
did
put
in
one
of
those
bright,
yellow
pedestrian
crossings
at
the
top
of
coast.
They
put
a
sign
on
top
of
an
existing
sign.
Trust
me,
no
one's
going
to
see
it
up
there.
We
need
the
push
button
lights
because
of
the
way
the
bends
are
somebody's
going
to
get
hurt,
bike
racks
somebody
came
in
and
put
in
bike
racks
and
when
one
of
the
workers
was
asked
to
stop
by
a
property
owner,
they
were
promptly
told.
Oh,
we
got
the
owner's
permission.
B
B
I'm
speaking
on
behalf
of
pete
wagner,
who
gave
me
permission,
they
went
to
one
of
his
businesses
in
his
buildings
and
asked
for
permission,
and
they
said
I'm
we're
not
the
owners.
Pete
said
absolutely
not
they're
putting
in
bike
racks
when
you
got
rebarbed
so
bad.
I
didn't
realize
how
bad
the
rebarb
is
damaging
my
chair
and
I
want
to
know
who's
going
to
pay
for
it,
because
my
insurance
is
not.
B
I
was
at
the
watching
the
fireworks
there's
pieces
chunks
of
tire
out
of
this
from
me,
trying
to
cross
back
and
forth
on
broadway
the
detour
signs
with
this
with
the
sandbags
on
them.
You
can't
pass
on
the
sidewalk,
I'm
forced
into
the
rebarb
war
zone
of
broadway.
B
Please
also
beautiful.
I've
said
this
before
the
landslide
that
got
fixed
down
by
the
fowlerfield
bridge
hampshire
broadway.
They
left
a
20
by
30
foot,
cobblestone
area
that
was
so
damaged
from
the
weight
of
all
the
trucks,
and
it's
like
trying
to
go
across
now.
Domi
wants
to
take
away
the
hampshire.
Stop
that
my
cousin,
the
trolley
driver,
reminded
me
this
morning
on
the
trolley
they
weren't
allowed
to
take
that
out
because
they
need
it
for
the
senior
center.
So
you
want
them
to
go
through
the
cobblestone
fall.
B
B
Please
stop
this
beach
view
realm,
that
people
don't
want
it
mayor
gainey
one
of
your
first
photo
ops.
That's
a
taco
stand.
That's
going
to
affect
all
those
businesses,
we
don't
need
trees.
We
don't
need
this
planned,
nobody
wants
it,
they
need
another
hearing.
They
had
a
hearing
so
long
ago.
Isn't
there
like
a
like?
Do
we
even
know
the
people
still
exist
in
the
can
in
the
community
when
they
had
these
hearings?
What
was
it
tony?
Like
2016,
2015.
I
I
You
remember
it
you
hear
it.
You
forget
it,
but
I
I've
found
this
one,
and
this
is
from
in
july
of
2017,
where
I
said
dr
ronald
miller,
the
center
for
global
studies.
My
husband,
harold
brown,
had
stated
before
that
ron
is
saying
what
ron
is
saying
is
making
sense.
We
would
be
able
to
track
the
votes,
the
paper
valleys
now.
This
is
what
mr,
what
dr
miller
was
talking
about,
and
I
said
finally,
the
league
of
women.
I
Voters
also
realized
that
we
need
more
transparency
and
regular
periodic
reviews
of
the
voting
roles
and
the
new
machines
are
needed
before
the
next
president
to
be
elected.
Now,
that's
before
we
got
trump
citizens,
I
protest.
We
pay
thousands
of
dollars
for
the
penguins
for
for
that
land,
which
I
believe
it
was
our
land,
but
they
gave
it
to
the
penguins
and
they
provide
buses
to
take
mr
krause's
drinking
and
socializing
visiting
and
drunk
citizens
to
their
cars.
You
had
buses
that
would
take
the
drunks.
Well,
I
mean
the
drinking
people
to
their
cars.
I
Where
I
live
at
tires,
we
must
take
two
buses
to
get
to
mercy
hospital
at
the
bottom
of
the
hill
and
the
reason
why
I'm
saying
that,
if
you
can
take
him,
get
buses
for
drinks
to
send
them
out
in
your
neighborhood
to
kill
people
out
there
drunk
how
come
we
can't
get
buses
to
go
to
the
hospital.
I
don't
understand
that
and
I
still
got
a
couple
more
minutes.
I
do
want
to
say
that
this
I
am
very
disappointed
in
this
council
and
I
think
that
we
need
to
get
rid
of
the
table.
I
You
lawyer
tell
them.
We
need
to
get
rid
of
the
table
and
they
need
to
be
straight
across
because
they
talk
back
and
forth
to
each
other.
They
don't
have
to
look
at
us,
so
they
can
talk
and
talk
and
talk
and
we
can
say,
stop
and
I
get
holiday.
But
mr
burgess
don't
talk
to
her
that
way.
Why
she
talking
when
I'm
talking,
I
talk
about
mr
gross
and
mr
cardio,
both
of
them.
I
I
have
no
respect
for
them
because
they
don't
listen
to
us
and
you,
as
a
lawyer,
you're
supposed
to
help
us,
even
though
you're
trying
to
help
your
help
them
and
tell
them
to
say
that
the
media
will
be
amended.
That
means
they
can
change
it
anytime.
They
want.
No,
you
got
protocol
they're
supposed
to
go
by
protocol,
miss
smith.
You
know
that
too.
I
don't
like
it
when
you
change
spontaneous,
they
just
change
it
when
they
want.
How
is
that
this
is
supposed
to
be
a
city
business.
A
C
J
Well,
I
wanted
to
open
this
up
to
discussion
at
the
table
for
council
members
who,
I
think,
learned
an
array
of
options
for
about
this
to
to
discuss
publicly
yesterday
at
the
executive
session,
we
wanted
to
have
a
public
discussion
about
all
of
these
options,
but
it
is
it's
my
impression
that,
at
the
very
least,
the
intention
from
the
law
department
was
to
recommend
to
us
to
make
an
amendment
to.
J
To
consider
extending
the
jurisdiction
of
phcar
and
adding
that
as
a
at
minimum
a
voice
amendment
to
to
that,
but
we
also
discussed
many
different
options
yesterday,
so
I
heard
from
the
law
department,
you
know
many
different
options
that
we
have
as
council.
So
I
wanted
to
just
open
up
the
discussion
to
counsel
here.
K
Thank
you,
mr
chair,
so
I
am
supportive
of
council
approving
the
warrant,
but
unfortunately,
this
text
came
over
with
a
combined
language
that
I
don't
believe,
belongs
in
a
single
resolution,
and
so
I
think
what
we're
could
discuss
here
is
what
we
can
do
to
separate
the
issues
and
vote
through
approval
of
the
warrants
and
then
to
bring
the
language
back
in
a
different
form
for
consideration
of
the
the
rest
of
the
bill.
K
Typically,
council
bills
are
very
single
right
and
that's
that's
our
those
are
our
rules
and
that's
how
we
do
business
is
that
you
have
single
pieces
of
legislation
about
single
issues
and
you
don't
combine
them
all
the
way
some
other
bodies
of
government
do
so
I'm
open
to
discussion.
I
think
one
of
the
ways
to
do
is
to
bring
these
both
back
as
separate
bills
as
new
papers
sometime
in
the
future.
K
L
Yeah,
I
just
want
to
thank
councilwoman
and
and
councilwoman
strasberger
for
getting
that
all
straight,
because
we
had
a
lot
of
long
discussion
yesterday.
So
thank
you
both
for
and
making
the
recommendations.
So
I
think
we
should
do
what
you
said
strike
everything
prior
outside
of
paying
the
award,
but.
G
A
Discussion,
if
not,
I
I
agree
with
councilwoman
gross
and
council
president,
that
we
should
pay
the
warrant.
I
think
the
consideration
of
extending
the
human
race
commission
is
worth
a
discussion,
but
I
think
this
needs
to
be
a
separate
conversation
that
this
council
takes
up.
A
A
J
L
A
Any
opposed
the
bill
has
been
amended,
I'm
sorry,
okay,
so
we
now
just
for
the
public's
edification.
We
now
have
a
bill
before
us
that
reads:
resolution
authorizing
the
issue
of
a
warrant
in
favor
of
lynette
r
letterman
in
the
amount
of
four
thousand
dollars.
In
no
sense,
all
those
in
favor
say
aye.
J
J
C
504
resolution
authorizing
four
open-end
professional
services
agreement
with
multiple
venues:
vendors
to
provide
professional
services
on
an
on-call
basis,
as
required
related
to
traffic
signal
and
street
light
design
services,
as
needed
by
the
various
departments
of
the
city.
Each
agreement
being
at
an
amount
not
to
exceed
two
million
five
hundred
thousand
dollars
annually
for
a
two-year
term,
with
up
to
two
additional
one-year
options
and
providing
for
funding
of
the
cost
thereof.
A
Second,
any
discussion
seeing
none
all
those
in
favor
say
aye
aye
any
opposed
affirmative
recommendation.
Madam
clerk,
can
we
read
bill
505
and
517
together,
they're
accompanying
pieces.
C
Okay,
bill
505
resolution
further
amending
resolution,
number
797
of
2017
entitled
resolution
adopting
and
approving
the
2018
capital
budget
and
the
2018
cdbg
program
and
the
2018
through
2023
capital
improvement
program
by
removing
unencumbered
funds
from
projects
pending
closure
pursuant
to
chapter
218
of
the
city
code,
bill
2,
bill
517
resolution
further
amending
resolution,
number
858,
entitled
resolution
adopting
and
approving
the
2015
capital
budget
and
the
2015
cdbg
program
and
approving
the
2015
through
2020
capital
improvement
program
by
removing
unencumbered
funds
from
projects
pending
closure.
Pursuant
to
chapter
218
of
the
city
code.
L
C
A
Any
discussion
seeing
none,
I
will
simply
add
just
because
this
is
for
the
clerks
and
built
the
next
bill.
The
507
line
removes
dollars
that
the
clerk's
office
had,
I
think,
it's
25
000
that
they
hadn't
encumbered
yet
to
update
our
system,
take
our
vhs
tapes
and
modernize
them.
Those
funds
are
actually
carried
over
in
bill
506.
A
L
C
L
L
C
The
department
of
records
management.
C
Yeah
we
we
got
to
take
it
on
because
it's
just
been
sitting
there
for
years
and
years
and
years
and
years
imp
just
I
don't
know
why
they
it's
their
their
tapes.
So
but
I'm
not
sure,
we've.
L
C
Would
be
great
because
it's
about
a
million
dollar
projects,
the
number
of
types
that
we
have
that
need
digitizing,
and
this
is
just
just
a
small
amount
just
to
get
the
process
started.
We.
K
B
K
K
The
reason
that
the
city
clerk's
office
exists
is
to
make
sure
we
have
records
that
we
have
records
back,
how
many
250
years
or
more
now.
K
All
right,
so
the
legislative
records
of
our
city
council
from
1806,
and
so
these
are
some
of
them
that
are
disintegrating
on
magnetic
tapes
that
need
to
be
digitized
because
we
are
required.
We
want
to
keep
them
in
the
permanent
record.
So
just
just
for
clarification,
because
that
does
seem
like
a
hefty
price
tag
for
a
project
and
it's
it's
not
frivolous.
K
L
Not
right,
no,
I
can't
just
say
something
to
that.
I
understand
that
it's
not,
and
I
think
that
it's
really
important.
I
think
our
clerk
has
done
an
amazing
job
with
the
you
know,
archivists
and
all
the
work
that
they
do.
I
think
they've
done
an
amazing
job,
but
I
do
know
that
the
bureau
exists
because
it's
to
serve
city
council.
So
so
I
want
to
make
sure
that
you
know
we're
working
together.
That's
all
correct.
A
Thank
you.
Thank
you,
so
that
will
move
us
on
to
bill
507.
C
Ill
507
resolution
further
amending
resolution
number
796
entitled
resolution
adopting
and
approving
the
2014
capital
budget,
the
2014
cdbg
program
and
approving
the
2014
through
2019
capital
improvement
program
by
removing
unencumbered
funds
from
project
spending
closure.
Pursuant
to
chapter
218
of
the
city
code.
L
C
Field
508
resolution
further
amending
resolution,
a16
entitled
resolution
adopting
and
approving
the
2016
capital
budget,
the
2016
cdbg
program
and
approving
the
2016
through
2021
capital
improvement
program
by
removing
unencumbered
funds
from
projects
pending
closure.
Pursuant
to
chapter
218
of
the
city
code.
B
C
A
A
C
Pursuant
to
chapter
218
of
the
city
code,
bill
number
516
resolution
further
amending
resolution,
number
772,
entitled
resolution
adopting
and
approving
the
2013
capital
budget
in
the
2013
cdbg
program
and
approving
the
2013
through
2018
capital
improvement
program
by
removing
unencumbered
funds
from
projects
pending
closure.
Pursuant
to
chapter
218
of
the
city
code,
bill
number:
five:
that's
it.
J
A
C
519
resolution
amending
347,
which
authorized
the
mirror
and
the
city
solicitor
to
enter
into
a
professional
services
agreement
with
cozen
o'connor
for
professional
legal
services
in
connection
with
an
employment
related
matter
by
increasing
their
total
spend
by
twenty
five
thousand
dollars
for
a
new
not
to
exceed
amount
of
forty
thousand
dollars.
Bill
number
five:
twenty
resolution
authorizing
the
issuance
of
a
warrant
in
favor
of
jhoc
and
their
attorneys
in
the
amount
of
fifty
thousand
dollars
relating
to
the
full
and
final
settlement
of
a
case
file
in
the
allegheny
county
court
of
common
pleas.
L
A
C
Bill
522
ordinance,
amendment,
title
vi,
conduct
article
1,
regulated
rights
and
actions
by
creating
a
new
chapter;
620
protection
of
abortion
providers
from
out-of-state
investigation
or
prosecution,
prosecution
for
providing
legal
abortion
care
bill
number
523,
ordinance,
amending
title
vi,
conduct
article
1,
regulated
rights
and
actions
by
creating
a
new
chapter;
603
enforcement
limitations
regarding
bans
of
certain
reproductive
health
services,
bill
number,
524,
ordinance,
amendment,
title
vi,
conduct
article
1,
regulated
rights
and
actions
by
creating
a
new
chapter.
607
regulation
of
deceptive
advertising
by
limited
servicing
pregnancy,
centers.
F
A
Discussion
councilman
wilson.
Thank
you,
mr
chair.
I
just
wanted
to
take
a
second
to
recognize
that
in.
D
Response
to
a
supreme
court's
decision
recently,
you
know
these
three
bills
were
drafted
and
presented
last
week
this
week
continuing
to
work
with
our
law
department
to
make
these
the
best
enforceable
bills.
So
with
that.
J
M
M
The
supreme
court
of
this
country
has
an
ugly
history
of
of
of
using
the
literal
interpretation
of
constitution
as
a
smokescreen
to
rob
african
americans
of
their
rights.
In
the
1800s
there
were
in
early
1900s.
There
were
a
flurry
of
decisions
by
the
supreme
court
that
it
kept
black
people
in
literal
slavery
in
the
south,
and
so
when
you
see
this
quote
unquote,
conservative
court
began
to
talk
about
the
literal
interpretation
of
the
constitution.
M
It
really
is
a
smoke
screen
to
forward
a
white
male
racist
agenda
on
this
country,
and
I'm
going
to
make
it
very
clear
as
to
what
their
intention
is.
Their
intentions
is
to
drive
us
back
to
the
1950s
a
place
where
black
people
were
lynched
openly
in
picnic
atmosphere.
M
M
That's
what
we're
facing,
and
so
all
of
these
things
that
we're
now
going
to
have
to
fight
against
the
woman's
right
to
choose
the
voting
rights
act
and
the
black
people
voting
and
voting
id
and
voter
suppression
and
and
anti-discrimination,
and
don't
ask-
and
this
just
I
mean
the
metis
movement.
M
All
these
things
that
we're
going
to
have
to
fight
now
is
because
we
have
a
immoral
minority
of
this
country,
trying
to
drag
us
back
to
the
nasty
ugly
1950s,
and
so
I,
for
one,
will
stand
publicly
against
this
sort
of
tyranny
and
this
using
constitution
and
law
once
again
to
discriminate
and
to
oppress
people
of
color,
and
in
this
case
women
across
this
country,
and
also
you
know
we.
M
We
don't
talk
about
it,
but
you
do
know
that
abortion
is
disproportionately
women
of
color,
and
so,
when
we
talk
about
and
is
disproportionately
poor
and
it's
disproportionately
women
of
color.
And
so
when
we
start
talking
about
these
issues,
it
is
not
just
a
gender
issue.
It
is
also
specifically
a
racial
issue
right
because
you
know
that's
the
nature
of
this
country.
There
is
a
there
is
a
undercurrent
of,
and
I
you
know
I
I
guess
you're
catching
me
in
a
moment
I've
been
reading.
M
I
spent
this
weekend
weekend
reading
reading
white
rage
because
I
I
couldn't
understand
I
couldn't
understand
until
this
weekend
there
are
people
who
normally
act
all
right.
You
know
they,
don't
they
don't
they,
they
don't
act
racist.
Apparently
you
know
most
of
the
time.
In
fact
they
even
volunteer
for
things
to
help
black
people.
I
couldn't
understand
why
those
same
people
could
do
this
explicit
racist
things
and
why
people
around
them
allowed
them
to
do
it
and
supported
them,
and
then
I
understood
white
race
helped
me
to
understand
what
happens.
M
Is
it's
not
the
presence
of
black
people
that
triggers
the
rage?
It's
when
black
people
try
to
advance
themselves
when
black
people
show
that
they
are
superior
to
them
in
any
way,
when
black
people
have
perhaps
leadership,
opportunities
or
or
beliefs.
Whenever
black
people
stand
up
and
affirm
their
rightful
place,
then
that's
when
white
rage
kicks
in
and
then
it's?
Oh,
my
god,
oh
my
god.
We
can't
have
this
and
then
all
of
their
white
hatred,
all
of
their
white
privilege,
comes
out
in
explicit
vengeful
fashion
and
I'm
grateful
of
reading.
M
You
should
read
the
book
by
the
professor
from
emory.
It
was.
It
was
a
new
york
best
best
best
time
seller.
I
spent
this
week
in
reading
and
it
was
helped
me
understand
how
people
who
normally
normally
you
know,
are
anti-racist
but
except
when
black
people
rise
up
when
they
become
they
think
their
peers,
or
god
forbid
their
superiors.
M
That's
when
they
keep
that
white
racist
white
privilege
stuff
kicks
in
and
they
can't
help
themselves
but
react
in
a
racist
way,
and
so
we
see
this
supreme
court
acting
in
this
way.
That
is
anti-woman
anti-black
anti-immigrant.
This
is
going
to
be
the
fight
of
our
lives,
but
I'm
ready
for
it
because
I
fought
this
fought.
My
whole
life,
this
ain't
new
to
me
this.
This
happened
to
me
in
grade
school
in
high
school
in
college
and
here
on
this
council.
So
I'm
ready
for
the
fight.
Let's
go.
A
N
N
I
just
wanted
to
put
into
record
a
petition
that
I
have
from
the
people
of
honor
while
we're
on
this
subject.
N
I
just
didn't
want
their
hard
work
to
go
unnoticed,
I'm
I'm
very
honored
that
they
took
it
upon
themselves,
not
my
coaxing
to
sit
that
out
there
on
election
day
may
17th
and
get
pretty
much
90
of
the
voters
that
came
in.
I
just
like
to
read
it
and
then
we'll
put
in
the
record
and
then
next
week
you
know
we'll
we'll
talk
about
why
this
bonaire
neighborhood
should
remain
in
district,
four
and
council
president
kale
smith.
I
appreciate
your
efforts
to
try
to
make
these
neighborhoods
that
feel
like
they
should
be.
N
You
know
in
district
four,
I
know
polish
hill
feels
like
it
should
be
in
district
seven.
I
think
it's
very
important
for
the
identity
of
these
neighborhoods
and
and
who
they
are.
So
I
just
didn't
want
to
go
unnoticed.
I'm
not
here
to
argue
the
point
today.
I
hope
we
can
work
this
out.
You
know
throughout
next
week,
but
I
just
did
want
to
read
their
what
they
circulated.
N
We,
the
people
of
bonaire,
do
not
approve
of
the
redistricting
of
our
neighborhood.
We
hereby
sign
to
keep
on
air
in
district
four,
with
carrick
overbrook
brookline
beach
view
neighborhoods
for
our
own
welfare.
We
do
not
consent
to
joining
district
three
south
side
in
oakland,
so
I
just
want
to
put
that
into
record.
We
could
go
over
the
reasons
you
know
next
week.
If
we
need
to.
N
K
N
N
N
You
all
be
getting
copies
of
it.
I'm
gonna
have
my
chief
of
staff
put
them
in
your.
M
Very
quickly,
the
other
thing,
though,
and
that
this
is
for
the
viewing
public
and
for
members
this
reapportionment
may
only
last
18
months.
M
M
M
West
and
south
west
and
south
right
it'll
shift,
because
you
know
whether
I
take
60
of
them
or
whether
I
take
a
hundred
percent
of
them.
It
will
cut
me
off
probably
any
celebrity
at
the
very
minimum
I'll
stop
these
liberty
at
the
minimum.
That's
the
farthest.
I
would
be
able
to
go
and
then
I
would
lose.
I
would
lose
probably
stanton
heights
and
I
would
lose
garfield,
probably
at
least
maybe
more,
but
at
least
that
and
maybe
endpoint
breeze.
M
L
L
You
know
down
the
road,
but
I
also
want
to
say
that,
for
the
public's
knowledge
that
we
have
a
meeting
scheduled
on
monday
to
address
some
of
the
concerns,
we
heard
here
some
of
the
concerns
that
members
brought
to
us
and
we
think
that
we'll
be
able
to
make
everyone
address
everyone's
concerns
and
issues,
and
so
we'll
know
more
monday
about
what
happens
with
redistricting.
L
So
thank
you
for
your
help
with
it.
Thank
you
to
sean
carter
for
his
help.
All
the
council,
members
and
their
their
appointees
have
been
really
helpful
through
this
whole
process,
which
has
been
grueling
in
my
opinion,
but
with
all
of
you,
you
made
it
a
lot
easier.
So
thank
you.
Thank
you.
N
I
just
wanted
to
add:
I
I
believe
we're
almost
there.
I
really
do
I,
I
think
we're
really
close.
We
have
to
iron
out
some
things
on
monday
and
make
sure
that
technicalities
are
that
we
can
proceed
with.
You
know
each
each
district.
For
me,
you
know
I'm
way
steep
in
a
fight
over
the
bonner
school
that
I'm
committed
to
this
neighborhood
wants
a
green
space.
N
Many
people
have
told
me
it
won't
happen.
It
can't
happen
and
I'm
just
going
to
say
watch
me.
So
it's
it's
very
possible
and
naomi
who
calls
in
here
on
it.
You
know
every
tuesday
and
wednesday,
her
husband
mike
and
I
were
very
good
friends
she's
committed
to
it
the
neighborhood's
committed
to
it
so
and
for
that
reason
just
one
of
many
reasons
we'll,
hopefully
we
won't
have
to
rehash
at
the
table
next
week.
So
thank
you.
A
N
G
L
N
B
J
A
O
M
Reflection,
yeah
rick
brief.
Coming
yesterday
we
had
a
meeting
with
representatives
from
councilman
cross's
office
with
councilman
coghill,
with
the
chief
of
police,
with
the
commander
over
the
data
with
many
of
the
activists,
dr
harris.
M
Dr
banks,
randy
fisher,
tim
stevens,
just
a
flurry
of
them
and
actually,
I
think,
got
through
75
of
the
of
of
the
letters
on
an
agreement,
and
so
the
police
are
actually
in
the
midst
of
changing
their
data,
not
that
they're.
Both
the
data
collection
and
the
software
to
present
to
providers
support
the
report
so
we're
working
collaboratively
with
them
all
of
us
to
put
the
bill
in
even
a
stronger
place
that
everyone
agrees
with.
M
So
I
thank
everyone
for
their
their
partnership
and
we
think
that,
after
recess,
we
can
come
back
and
finish
this
and
bring
it
back
and
pass
a
stronger
bill
that
has
wider
community
support.
N
M
N
Yes,
in
speaking,
in
reference
to
the
meeting
yesterday,
first
of
all,
it's
no
secret.
I
had
stated
before,
and
I
still
believe
that
the
city
council
should
not
be
making
laws
for
law
enforcement.
N
She
come
from
the
mayor's
office,
I
believe,
and
whatever
his
prerogative
is,
and
what
whatever
he
feels
is
right
for
this
city
in
his
vision,
so
so
moving
forward,
though
you
know,
so
I
don't
know
how
I'll
react
to
future
laws
coming
from
this
council
on
law
enforcement,
I
especially
don't
like
adopting
laws
from
cities
that
have
failed
states
of
law
enforcement.
N
However,
I
will
say
this,
mr
burgess.
Thank
you
so
much.
You
know,
for
you
know
talking
this
out
with
me,
bringing
the
activists
in
hearing
their
opinions
on
things.
Most
importantly,
you
had
law
enforcement
there
yesterday,
so
you
got
me
to
a
comfort
level.
I
didn't
think
I
would
be
at
with
this,
so
you
know
I
do
appreciate.
You
know
you
checking
all
those
boxes
and
I
do
think
it
was
very
productive
and
I
think
we're
going
to
come
up
with
something
good
from
it.
So
thank
you.
N
L
I
just
want
to
say
thanks
for
bringing
everyone
together.
I
like
that
you
did
that,
but
I'm
eager
to
hear
what's
coming
from
it
from
it
all,
but
I
also
hope
that
when
you
have
meetings
that
we
also
include
officers
on
the
street
who
are
actually
doing
the
work-
and
I
think
we
cannot
forget-
what's
happening
on
our
streets
every
single
day-
and
you
know
we
continue
to
say
that
we
want
less
enforcement
less
this
less
that.
F
L
More
than
you
lately,
let
me
just
tell
you,
but
I
think
that
there's
a
lot
for
us
to
learn
from
the
meetings
that
we
had
with
the
kids,
I
mean
that
some
of
the
things
that
they
said
they
asked
for
and
their
parents
were
so
different
from
what
the
kids
actually
really
wanted.
So
I
hope
that
we
get
to
a
good
place
and
I
think
we're
talking
to
the
administration
about
some
things
moving
forward,
but
I'm
eager
to
hear
what
comes
from
all
this.
A
Thank
you,
councilman
strausberger,.
J
Thank
you.
I
I'm
really
grateful
to
councilman
burgess
councilman
krauss
for
introducing
this
bill,
and
I
know,
as
you
continue
to
work
through
it
over
the
next
six
weeks
and
maybe
beyond
just
wanted
to
agree
with
with
the
council
president
that
you
know
the
holistic
approach
to.
J
I
guess
maybe
slightly
different
the
holistic
approach
to
what
we
talked
about
time
and
time
again,
starting
in
2020
and
before
that,
but
really
starting
in
earnest
in
2020
to
transform
the
way
that
we
approach
public
safety
is
coming
to
fruition
through
our
policies
through
the
the
legislation,
the
the
you
know,
the
legislation
that
would
do
much
something
similar
to
this
bill,
but
for
for
drivers
that
we
passed
and
now
for
pedestrians
and
those
walking.
J
Get
an
update
on
what
has
been
done
and
what
the
progress
has
been
since
then,
and
actually
continue
to
dig
into
you
know,
even
after
these
bills
pass.
What
is
the
result?
What
is
the?
J
What
do
the
numbers
look
like?
What
is
the
data
showing
us?
Is
it
doing
enough?
Do
we
need
do
we
need
more?
Because
these
bills
are
are
a
great
start?
There's
there's
actually
much
more
that
we
did
pass
in
2020
2021
than
just
the
two
bills,
but
are
they
are
they
effective?
Are
they
reducing
the
number
of.
J
J
Shooting
of
an
unarmed
black
man
in
akron
is
just
bringing
this
back
up
for
for
me
right
now
that
you
know
we
can
pass
all
the
bills
we
want,
but
unless
they
are
applied
appropriately
and
we're
digging
in
as
council
members
and
we're
setting
up
a
system
to
hold
ourselves
and
our
city
accountable
to
the
bills
that
we
pass
in
perpetuity,
they're
not
going
to
do
they're
not
going
to
have
their
intended.
N
Yes,
first
again,
I
you
know,
I
want
to
thank
councilman
burgess
for
sparking
this
conversation
this
year.
You
know
it's
not
an
easy
task
to
take
on,
but
here
we
are,
you
know
taking
it
on,
and
I
think
we've
made
a
lot
of
progress,
even
as
councilwoman
strasberger
said.
Are
they
working
traffic
stops
are
down
significantly
before
we
even
passed
that
bill,
they
knew
it
was
coming,
they
knew
they
were
going
to
have
to
adjust,
but
you
know
I
keep
sounding
the
alarm.
There
are
many
forms
of
police
reform
that
we
can
look
at.
N
One
of
those
are
the
amount
of
police
officers
that
we
have
and
how
they're
being
utilized
again,
I
want
to
just
because
I
feel
it's
my
duty
to
keep
sounding
the
alarm
here.
We
are
at
under
900
police
officers.
Now
we
lose
approximately
30
to
40
per
year
to
other
police
agencies
recruiting
from
our
young
people.
N
We
do
not
have
a
recruiting
class.
A
recruiting
class
is
not
going
to
be
on
the
street
if
we
started
tomorrow
until
2024,
we
have
270
police
officers
who
are
due
to
retire
could
retire
tomorrow.
So
those
it's
not
the
police
reform
that
rev's
working
on,
but
it's
also
police
reform.
We
need
to
make
sure
that
we
have
the
right
amount
of
officers
on
the
street.
We
need
to
make
sure
we're
not
losing
them
to
these
agencies
that
are
just
hiring
them
away,
easy
pickings
for
them.
N
I
will
tell
you
so
I
would
like
to
make
sure
this
council
focuses
on
that
and
finds
out
what
about
the
recruiting
class
and-
and
I
know
the
agency
I
talked
to
the
commander
yesterday
or
acting
chief
yesterday-
they
are
going
to
do
their
own
internal
study
as
to
how
many
police
officers
they
need
and
what
zone
in
which
district,
but
you
know
so
I
just
want
to
keep
bringing
that
up,
because
I
think
we
need
to
be
focusing
on
that.
So
thanks.
A
Thank
you
any
further
discussion,
I'll
just
note
two
things
one.
I
actually
do
think
we
have
a
comprehensive
way
to
address
violence.
I
think,
if
you
read
through
the
mayor's
plans
for
peace
which
number
of
you
are
at
when
he
announced
it,
is
a
comprehensive
approach
that
sort
of
looks
at
all
the
policies
that
we've
put
together
over
the
last
few
years.
But
now
we
have
an
administration,
that's
willing
to
fully
fund
them
and
really
sort
of
make
all
the
various
initiatives
work
together
and
talk
to
one
another.
A
So
I
think
we'll
be
able
to
see
the
impact-
and
I
know
even
on
the
gvi
side,
they're
beginning
to
work
to
actually
begin
documenting
how
they're
actually
saving
lives
and
how
they're
actually
having
impacts
within
our
various
districts
and
be
able
to
actually
document
that
work.
So
I
think
the
things
are
in
place.
We
have
to
commit
to
fully
funding
them.
We
have
to
ensure
that
they're
taught
each
sort
of
each
initiative
is
working
with.
A
A
No
one
has
yet
to
be
able
to
tell
me
how
many
officers
we
actually
need
in
our
city
and
it's
interesting
because,
generally
speaking
in
our
country,
if
crime
is
down,
we
say,
oh,
the
police
are
doing
a
really
good
job.
Therefore,
we
need
to
fund
more
police.
When
crime
is
up,
we
say.
Oh,
we
need
more
police
to
fight
the
crime,
and
so
we
fund
more
police.
I
say
that
to
say
either
way
solely
policing
is
not
the
issue.
A
It's
not
what's
going
to
solve
our
issues,
because
so
many
of
them
are
social
and
economic
in
nature.
But
with
that
being
said,
we
did
vote
on
a
bill,
maybe
two
or
three
weeks
ago.
That's
that's
to
study
the
issue
and
give
us
some
input
into
how
many
offices
do
we
really
need?
Is
it
900?
Is
it
800?
It's
a
thousand.
A
L
K
Just
time
in
and
say
that
I've
bought
up
now
for
several
years,
especially
in
budget
discussions
and
again
recently
at
the
table,
that
our
our
police
department
and
our
number
of
officers
is
not
the
same
number
and
it's
probably
too
close
to
the
same
number
in
pittsburgh.
And
so
when
we
look
at
our
benchmark
cities
as
I've
shown
before
at
the
table.
K
L
So
that's
not
exactly
what
I
was
going
to
say,
but
you
know,
I
think,
we're
all
for
funding
programs.
I
think
we've
been
funding
a
lot
of
programs.
L
So
I
think
when
we
talk
about,
I
ran
a
federally
funded
program
and
a
publicly
you
know
funded
program
for
pittsburgh,
public
schools,
and
we
had
to
document.
We
had
to
make
sure
that
we
showed
successes
and
and
and
whatever
and
donna
mcmanus
who
also
had
one
of
the
same
programs.
She
lived
in.
She
lives
in
your.
L
L
She
showed
how
parental
involvement
in
schools
decreased,
referrals,
decreased
disciplinary
actions
and
increased
performance
and
grades
so
when,
if
she
can
document
that
by
having
parents
come
in
and
she
kept
that,
I
think
that
we
could
expect
the
groups
that
we're
funding
to
document
something
and
show
some
successes
and
show
the
kids
that
we're
not
just
giving
friends
money,
we're
actually
hearing
about
their
their
self-interest,
their
interests
and
that
we're
ready
to
help
them
and
put
provide
programs
that
actually
will
reduce
violence
for
the
kids,
because
a
lot
of
it
is
social
and,
as
we
heard
that
the
other
day,
there's
a
lot
of
pain
and
not
a
lot
of
help.
M
M
M
We
have
these
literally
almost
suburban-like
neighborhoods
in
pittsburgh
that
are
not
diverse.
We
have
black
people
living
in
communities
that
are
70
percent.
Poor
we've
done
the
research
that
shows
that
banks
won't
lend
to
them.
25
percent
of
the
population
is
african-american
6
percent
of
the
loans.
M
It's
not
a
program
problem.
We
we're
dealing
with
the
symptoms
of
the
problem.
The
real
ugliness
of
this
problem
is
that
racism
is
alive
and
well
in
pittsburgh.
It
is
baked
into
our
culture.
It
is
baked
into
our
system.
It
is
every
day
we
wake
up.
We
are
living
in
a
racist
city
with
racist
impacts
right
the
segregation
of
our
city
is
unforgivable
unforgettable.
M
We
we
could
stop
that
tomorrow,
we
choose
not
to
our
schools
are
segregated.
We
could
change
that
tomorrow.
We
choose
not
to
until
we
begin
to
honestly
decide
to
no
longer
let
the
racism
of
our
history
control
our
city
and
we're
doing
it.
This
is
not
easy.
It's
not
easy,
lift
it's
a
hard
lift!
It's
a
hard
lift,
desegregating
neighborhoods,
that's
hard
right!
It's
hard,
it's
hard
for
both.
M
I
get
that
push
back
from
black
communities
right
when,
when
I
start
putting
market
rate
housing
in
the
black
communities,
the
black
communities
get
angry
too
saying
these
are
not
for
us,
but
it
is.
The
future
of
our
country
is,
and
I'm
grateful
for
this
because
I've
lived
long
enough
now
to
see
it.
You
know
I
have
three.
I
have
three
of
my
four
children
are
now
doing
phds
and
they
can
live
wherever
they
want.
They
won't
have
to
worry
about
the
color
of
their
skin.
M
They'll
have
the
resource
to
live
wherever
they
want
and,
and
they
don't
think
in
terms
of
color
like
I
do
they
don't
they.
Their
friends
are
mixed.
They
live
in
a
they
live
in
a
world.
That's
that's,
not
my
world
right.
They
they
can
date
who
they
want.
My
you
know
my
sons
can
date,
the
ones
that
are
not
married.
One
son
left
he
can
he
dates
who
he
wants
right.
In
my
time
my
friends
told
me
I
could
come
to
their
house.
M
I
could
eat
dinner
with
them,
but
if
I
looked
at
their
dog
at
their
sisters
they
would
kill
me
right.
It
was
it
was.
It
was
known.
I
was
told
explicitly
that
I
had
to.
I
could
only
date,
you
know
in
my
community
and
in
my
culture
and
that's
okay,
I
mean
I,
I
think
I
picked
a
good
person.
It
worked
out
for
me.
I
I
just
think
and
and
having
having
having
been
on
council
and
watched
council's
unwillingness
to
even
control
the
racism
on
its
own
floor.
M
I
have
seen
it
in
my
own
eyes.
I've
watched
it
flourish
without
us,
putting
any
any
making
allowing
it
to
occur
as
if,
well
you
know
it's
how
it's
supposed
to
be.
We
will
we'll
do
this.
I've
watched
it
and
so
great,
hopefully,
that
some
of
that
evil
will
be
leaving
soon,
but
it
is
still
part
and
parcel
of
our
city
and
I'm
sorry
to
say
that
right.
So
when
we
talk
about
program
means
that's
not
the
issue,
we
talk
about
money,
that's
not
the
issue.
M
M
It
happens
every
day
and
you
can
see
it
over
and
over
and
over
again,
and
so
until
we
see
you
know
until
we
give
these
kids
hope
that
they're
not
trapped
in
this
cycle
of
endless
poverty,
you're
going
to
have
these
results
of
the
problem
right.
It's
because
these
kids
don't
think
they
have
a
future.
M
M
I
believe
that,
down
to
my
toes,
I
believe
when
you
give
you-
and
I
will
agree
when
you
give
a
kid
a
job,
that's
why
I
support
the
unions.
You
give
a
kid
a
job,
they
make
money,
and
they
I
saw
that
my
father
right,
my
father,
joined
the
union
and
worked
in
the
mills
and
could
support
his
family.
He
changed.
M
These
kids
are
lost,
they're
lost,
and
so
it's
hard
it's
going
to
be
hard,
we're
going
to
make
these
tough
choices
and
there's
always
going
to
be
a
tendency
to
fund
the
police
and
not
fund
programming.
It's
always
going
to
be
that
tendency.
You
know,
because
you
know
police.
Unfortunately,
in
this
history
in
our
country,
there's
a
dark
history
of
how
they
began
in
the
south
right.
There's
always
going
to
be
that
that
instinct,
but
that's
not
the
problem.
The
problem
is
poverty
want
to
be
very
clear:
it's
not
racial.
M
It's
poverty,
it's
insta!
It
is
institutionalized,
concentrated
poverty.
If
you
put
poor
people
together
in
any
place
and
you
rob
them
of
the
ability
to
get
resources,
you
will
see
this
occur,
whether
it's
appalachia,
whether
it's
hispanics
in
in
rural
communities,
anywhere
there
is
concentrated
poverty.
Dr
wilson
of
harvard
wrote
about
sociologists,
wrote
about
this
extensively.
M
The
enemy
we
face
is
don't,
don't
I'm
saying
this
to
date,
I'm
going
to
say
this:
over
and
over
again
the
enemy
is
concentrated
poverty
and
the
reason
that
we
have
concentrated
poverty
is
because
it
benefits
a
group
of
people
and
punishes
a
group
of
people.
It's
racist,
but
it
doesn't
have
just
a
racist
origin.
It's
because
they
make
profit
from
it.
M
It's
profitable
to
have
poor
people
in
ghettos,
it's
profitable,
to
have
poor
people
in
ghettos,
because
their
housing
prices
are
down,
they
can't
get
home
equities,
they
can't
get
concentrated
wealth
and
wealth
is
redistributed,
and
so
you
know
I'm
I'm
I'm.
I
guess.
Maybe
I've
been
reading
too
much
right.
M
L
A
Thank
you,
councilman.
N
I'll
be
brief,
I'll
be
brief.
I
promise
you
that's
the
woman
regrets
now.
I
just
wanted
to
mr
chairs
to
what
you
were
saying.
You're
right.
I
agree
with
you.
We
don't
know
how
many
police
we
actually
need,
and
once
we
find
that
out,
we'll
be
much
better
off
in
a
much
better
place
to
decide
what
we
need
to
do
with
a
recruiting
class
or
not.
N
N
The
other
thing
is,
you
know.
As
far
as
training
goes,
you
know
we're
losing
veteran
officers
and
until
we
get
that
number,
I
don't
think
it's
right.
We
can't
we
got
to
make
sure
we
don't
deplete
this
force
to
the
point
where
if
we
do
decide,
oh,
we
do
need
those
900
officers
and
we're
stuck
at
600.
N
I
think
it's
very
important
to
address
that
issue.
So
with
that,
I
just
want
to
say
one
more
thing
as
far
as
you
know
us
making
our
us
making
legislation
to
create
laws
for
law
enforcement,
which
is
again
I'm
uncomfortable
with
is
I
have
trusted
this
mayor.
I
have
trusted
mr
gainey
to
do
the
right
thing.
I
think
he's
his
heart's
in
the
right
spot.
He
ran
on
this
issue
a
lot
of
these
things
I
think,
can
be
handled
by
police
policy.
N
Simply
he
tells
the
commanders,
the
commanders
tell
the
sergeants
and
they
put
it
out
there
and
the
police.
You
want
to
stop
stopping
and
frisk
they
stop.
So
I
don't
know
if
it
all
has
to
be
done
through
legislation.
I
think
that
may
create
problems
down
the
road,
maybe
for
the
next
chief,
whoever
he
or
she
may
be
have
to
to
go
by
laws
that
we
enacted
that
they
might
not
agree
with.
So
okay,
that's
it!
Thank
you.
I
vote
yes
to
hold.
A
Thank
you.
Well,
so
I
agree
with
you
in
terms
of
the
pay
right.
We
should
absolutely
be
paying
our
officers
at
a
rate
that
is
commensurate
with
the
job
that
they're
doing
no
disagreement
there
at
all,
and
I
think
the
staffing
study
that
we
voted
on
a
couple
weeks
ago
will
also
help
address
what
that
looks
like
as
it
relates
to
putting
things
in
law
as
a
body
you're
currently
comfortable
with
our
current
mayor.
A
What
if
we
had
a
doug
mastroianni
as
an
example,
become
the
mayor
of
the
city
of
pittsburgh?
I
would
be
terrified
by
what
he
may
do
with
pub
in
the
public
safety
department.
Therefore,
that's
sort
of
the
reason
to
codify
things
so
that
you
cannot
have
someone
go
crazy
in
some
of
the
policies
that
they
may
initiate,
but
understood
we'll.
A
All
right,
all
those
in
favor
of
a
six
week
hold
say
I
I
in
the
opposed
the
bill,
will
be
held
for
six
weeks.
That
takes
us
to
our
public
works
committee,
chaired
by
councilman
coghill.
One
supplemental
paper
bill
539.
C
Bill
539
resolution
authorizing
the
mayor
and
the
director
of
the
department
of
public
works
to
apply
for
a
grant
from
the
redevelopment
authority
of
allegheny
county's
trail
development
fund
for
the
reconstruction
of
a
trail
in
upper
mckinley
park.
In
the
amount
of
two
hundred
fifty
six
thousand
seven
hundred
and
ninety
three
dollars.
J
N
So
I
just
wanna,
say
you
know:
I've
taken
a
walk
through
there.
It's
beautiful
patch
of
woods,
councilwoman
gross,
told
me,
there's
pawpaw
trees
in
there
somewhere,
I'm
I'm
on
the
search
for
them.
I
still
don't
know
what
they
look
like,
but
I
will
find
them,
and
I
want
to
thank
councilman
krauss,
for
you
know
relating
this
and
moving
this
along
well
worth
to
put
the
money
in
the
trail
building
in
this
beautiful
piece
of
woods
that
it
joins
the
park.
Thanks.
G
J
K
You
I
appreciate
it
and
I'm
gonna,
I'm
just
gonna
talk
about
this
bill
for
a
second,
but
I'm
also
going
to
ask
director
lucas
there.
She
is
thank
you
for
for
being
here
today.
I
I
just
wanted
to
give
the
director
a
chance
to
talk
through
this,
because
the
the
title
of
the
bill
doesn't
really
describe
what's
being
done
and
there
is
an
attachment
letter,
but
the
table
and
the
text
file
also
doesn't
say
it,
and
and
these
some
of
these
bills
are
being
transferred
out
of
district
7.
K
But
I've
been
working
with
the
administration
to
make
sure
that
the
dhomi
projects
that
are
in
district
7
also
remain
funded,
and
so
I
just
wanted
to
to
have
the
director
here
to
explain,
what's
happening
with
this
specific
bill
so
director,
if
you
just,
could
identify
yourself
for
us
and
tell
us
kind
of
what
these
two
pots
of
money
are
going
to.
H
Project
is
fully
funded
by
dced
grants
and
the
tiff,
but
these
funding
sources
were
not
in
place
at
the
project
initiation.
So
bond
money
was
allocated.
Project
expenses
are
being
moved
from
the
bond
money
to
the
dced
into
sources,
freeing
up
the
bond
money.
Some
smallmouth
money
has
been
reallocated
previously.
H
H
Was
a
place
over
while
these
other
sources
that
hadn't
been
identified
came
online.
Those
sources
have
now
come
online,
and
so
we
are
back
filling
in
with
those
new
sources
so
that
the
local
money
can
be
freed
up
or
other
emerging
issues
like
the
el
paso,
the
landslide
and
the
work
related
to
the
forbes
avenue
bridge
project.
K
I'm
sorry,
thank
you
director.
That's
that's
the
part.
That's
not
clear
if
you
could
talk
about
the
projects
that
you're
doing
with
these
funds,
so
it
doesn't
say
forbes
avenue
in
the
title.
So
could
you
speak
to
what
is
the
four
hundred
and
twenty
six
thousand
dollars
three
hundred
and
sixty
one?
No
four
hundred
twenty
six
thousand
three
hundred
sixty
one
dollars
going
towards
it
says
four:
it
doesn't.
A
H
Yes,
so
the
fourth
avenue
work
is
to
fund
improvements,
east
and
west
of
the
bridge
itself
for
work
that
is
outside
of
the
bridge
project
scope,
but
that
is
necessary
because
of
the
changes
that
are
happening
with
the
bridge.
Reconstruction.
K
Great
great,
I
just
wanted
to
let
members
know,
because
again
it's
not
obvious
from
the
title.
So
half
of
this
pot
of
money
basically
is
going
to
forbes
avenue
and
fern
hollow
bridge
in
districts,
5
and
district
9,
or
maybe
even
I'm
not
directing,
where
the
lines
go
on
the
other
side
of
the
district
8
as
well.
No
okay,
thank
you
and
then
there's
a
related
bill
with
a
much
smaller
amount.
K
That
is
next.
That,
I
think
is
is
pretty
straightforward.
So
half
of
the
pot
roughly
is
going
to
a
slope
remediation
which
is
affecting
of
quite
a
few
houses
where
stanton
heights
and
morningside
come
together.
That
is
a
now
going
to
be
councilman
level.
You
might
be
interested
it's
going
to
be
a
300
foot,
retaining
wall
for
a
landslide
that
could
have
been
remediated
many
years
ago.
Many
many
many
years
ago,
back
when
councilman
dowd
was
on
on
at
this
table.
I
have
records
from
his
office
there.
K
We
tried
many
times
so
watch
out
in
your
neighborhood,
where
your
landslide
is
just
starting
and
make
sure
that
we
actually
do
the
work
before
it
becomes
a
300
foot
long.
Retaining
wall
that
cost
is
costing
us
a
lot
of
money.
I
have
all
the
receipts
and
emails
for
many
years
if
you'd
like
to
check
on
them.
K
So
so
I'm
sorry
I'm
being
asked
where
it
is
so,
the
the
kind
of
in
the
1600
block
or
so
of
morningside,
where
el
paso
is
below
kelly
field,
I'm
sure
you're
pretty
close
to
the
river
edge
here
so
like
you
know
where
greenwood
goes
up
from
morningside
to
stanton
heights
off
to
your
left.
K
There's
a
kind
of
I
like
to
call
it
like
an
embankment,
I'm
not
sure
exactly
what
the
technical
term
would
be
right.
It's
like
a
little
bit
of
a
bluff
from
some
people's
backyards
to
the
next
street
up
and
that
is
entirely
falling
off
the
hill
and
it
started
small
10
years
ago
and
councilman
dowd
had
dpw
and
pwsa
out
there
to
look
at
the
sites.
I
had
the
administration
out
there
to
look
at
the
sites.
K
K
G
J
K
H
A
question
for
me:
this
is
kim
lucas
director
for
domi
498
is
specifically
to
move
the
money
for
el
paso
and
4.99
is
specifically
to
move
the
money
for
small.
I'm
sorry.
K
K
K
But
then
the
second
bill
499
adds
a
smaller
amount
of
73
638
dollars
to
complete
streets.
But
it
has
an
attached
letter
that
says
forbes
avenue.
A
Gross,
it
may
be
helpful
if
we
have
director
pollock
coming.
K
F
Good
morning
still
everyone
jake
paula
director
of
the
office
of
management
and
budget
yeah.
I
can
answer
that
question
councilman.
Your
initial
point
was
correct.
I
think
director
lucas's.
His
point
is
also
correct
in
terms
of
the
overall
impact
of
the
two
bills
together,
but
the
first
bill
is
moving
from
one
of
the
smallmouth
street
pots
and
splitting
it
and
then
the
second
bill
is
moving
a
small
remainder
and
a
second
smallmouth
street
pot
to
the
same
forbes
avenue
project.
F
So
the
combined
impact
of
the
bills
is,
as
you
discussed
in
discussion
on
the
first
one.
A
portion
of
the
funds
are
moving
to
el
paso
to
address
the
landslide
and
then
a
portion
of
the
funds
from
smallmen
that
are
moving
to
the
necessary
sort
of
linkages
between
the
federally
funded
emergency
reconstruction
of
the
fern
hollow
bridge
and
some
street
scape
or
street
mapping
lining,
I
should
say,
and
other
improvements
on
the
sides
to
make
to
facilitate
that
I'll.
F
Just
also
note
to
a
point
you
made
in
your
discussion
of
the
first
bill
that,
while
these
funds
are
leaving
your
district
in
the
of
course
of
these
two
bills
in
the
controller's
close
package
of
legislation,
the
council
voted
on
earlier
today.
Bills
505
through
517
other
funds
from
older
expired
projects
were
allocated
into
some
some
projects
in
district
seven.
I
believe
that
the
net
effect
of
the
two
is
about
even.
K
Great
thank
you
director,
so
I
do
appreciate
the
vast
amount
of
work
that
went
in
between
your
office
and
the
controller's
office.
K
It's
awkward
that
I'm
talking
to
you,
and
I
can't
see
you
because
you're
behind
me
and
my
microphone's
in
front
of
me,
but
I
apologize
and
that
that
was
a
tremendous
amount
of
housekeeping
that
needed
to
be
done
so
that
we're
using
the
not
letting
funds
expire
and
that
we're
making
sure
that
we
are
use
all
of
our
projects
are
basically
staying
fully
funded,
but
with
money,
that's
all
cleaned
up
and
is
not
at
risk.
So
I
do
appreciate
that.
Thank
you.
E
C
500
resolution
authorizing
the
mayor
and
director
of
the
department
of
finance
and
the
director
of
the
department
of
public
works
on
behalf
of
the
city,
to
enter
into
an
agreement
with
the
university
of
pittsburgh,
granting
the
university
a
temporary
construction,
easements
and
permanent
easements
in
order
to
permit
the
implementation
of
a
comprehensive
storm
water
management
strategy
for
the
benefit
of
shinley
park
on
under
and
about
a
certain
parcel
known,
real
property
known
as
mazorsky
field
located
within
shinley's
park.
In
the
fourth
ward.
C
M
A
O
Thank
you,
mr
chair.
I
want
to
refer
to
the
sponsor
of
the
bill.
This
is
the
joint
task
force
that
we
had
came
up
with
this
amendment
to
the
code
to
have
subcontractors
also
register
pli
is
very
supportive.
When
the
bill
is
passed,
they
have
almost
300
days,
250,
plus
to
get
everything
registered
in
the
system.
Let
subcontractors
know
this
is
from
the
task
force.
A
lot
of
people
not
paying
their
taxes
in
the
city
is
what
we
had
found
and
that's
what
this
technical
amendment
to
our
code
would
do.
N
Yeah
I
want
to
thank
councilman
o'connor.
This
is
a
good
thing.
As
we
know
many
times
you
have,
a
general
contractor
will
come
in
put
up
a
10-story
building,
but
what
we
don't
know
is
a
lot
of
times,
they'll
bring
in
subcontractors
who
aren't
registered
with
the
city.
Who
aren't
you
know,
meeting
our
standards
and
really
undercutting
our
local
workforce
and
our
building
trades-
and
I
know
steve
mazz-
is
here
today
steve.
N
A
Thank
you,
president
smith.
L
I
just
wanted
to
thank
councilman,
o'connor
and
steve
mazza
who's
here
district
2
resident
for
their
work
on
this
together.
Thank
you
and
for
everyone
who
worked
on
it.
Thank
you.
K
Just
to
be
on
the
record,
I
want
to
also
thank
all
of
the
work
from
the
task
force
and
the
unions
that
went
into
this.
We
know
that
a
lot
of
the
buildings
that,
for
example,
in
the
strip
district,
where
they
demonstrated
for
several
years,
I
want
to
say,
kept
up
the
to
keep
it
in
front
of
public
attention,
went
up
with
non-union,
labor,
also
unsafe
labor,
as
well
as
wage
theft
and
tax
evasion.
So
it
really
takes
sometimes
our
citizens
bringing
these
issues
to
us.
We
can't
we
don't
know
everything.
K
We
can't
be
everywhere
and
know
everything,
so
it
took
a
lot
of
work.
It
was
a
really
important
research
and
and
attention
to
detail
honestly
and
working
for
workers
rights
that
resulted
in
this
policy.
So
thank
you
also
councilman,
for
sticking
with
it.
I
know
it's
been
a
few
years
in
the
works
yep.
I
appreciate
it.
A
M
See
if
I
like
what
you're
going
to
say,
I
want
to
first
of
all
in
particular
thanks.
H
M
Massa
and
the
carpenters
union
for
their
overall
commitment
to
raising
minority
recruitment
in
the
unions
in
their
union.
They
have,
I
believe,
I've
been
to
their
site.
We've
had
private
conversations
and
I
am
absolutely
confident
in
their
commitment
to
diversity
and
inclusion
in
their
union
and
in
the
work
that
they
represent.
So
I
want
to
say
that
publicly.
M
I
appreciate
your
friendship,
but
more
than
that,
I
appreciate
your
union's
commitment
to
inclusion
and
diversity
and
leading
the
unions
in
many
ways
in
that
effort.
So
I
want
to
recognize
that
and
then.
Secondly,
we
want
to
support
the
bill
and
mr
connor's
leading
of
the
bill.
This
is
certainly
the
right
thing
at
the
right
time
to
do.
A
Thank
you
any
further
discussion,
seeing
none
all
those
in
favor
say:
aye
aye
opposed
affirmative
recommendation
that
takes
us
to
innovation,
performance
asset
management
committee
chaired
by
councilwoman
strasberger.
One
new
paper
bill,
521
bill.
C
521
resolution
amending
resolution
number
855
authorizing
the
mayor
and
director
the
department
of
innovation
and
performance
to
enter
into
a
fourth
amendment
to
corporation
and
project
agreement
for
the
creation
and
operation
of
the
regional
data
center
agreement
with
allegheny
county
and
the
university
of
pittsburgh.
Extending
the
term
and
increasing
the
amount.
A
F
A
We
do
have
meeting
announcements
this
afternoon.
Council
will
hold
a
briefing
with
sessions
at
2
p.m
and
2
30
p.m,
relative
to
new
software
for
pli,
and,
I
believe,
that's
on
zoom
for
everybody.
On
thursday
july
7th
at
6
pm
council
will
hold
a
public
hearing
on
the
proposed
annexation
of
wilkinsburg
and
council
chambers
I'll
find
out.
Registration
closes
at
3
p.m.
July
7.
next
week,
council
will
hold
our
regular
10
a.m
and
regular
and
standing
committee
meetings
on
tuesday
july
12th
and
wednesday
july
13th,
respectively.
A
L
Thank
you.
I
just
actually
want
to
form
two
task
force
again.
So
thank
you
to
the
members
who
are
always
willing
to
step
up
to
the
plate
here.
L
One
task
force
councilwoman
gross
councilwoman,
strasberger
and
myself
have
been
talking
about
using
the
311
call
center,
for
thank
you
to
dan
friedson
for
offering
his
free
legal
services
to
the
residents,
and
especially
at
youth,
our
youth
at
risk,
but
to
help
people
in
the
community,
and
so
we
talked
to
councilwoman
strasberger
said
she
would
talk
to
her
husband's
law
firm
and
there
are
others,
we're
hoping
our
own
law
department
pitches
in
making
sure
that
we're
making
resources
available,
not
just
through
law,
the
law
department
or
through
legal
services
free
legal
services,
but
that
we
have
social
workers
that
might
be
able
to
answer
calls
social
workers
attorneys
housing
experts.
L
We
talked
about
different
ways
that
we
could
should
approach
this
and
address
this
and
work
with
the
administration
on
it.
So
I'm
performing
a
task
force
to
work
on
those
things
and
what
exactly
our
311
call
center
on
off
hours
might
look
like,
so
that
we
could
use
it
on
weekends
evenings,
whatever.
Whatever
the
task
force
puts
together
so
on
that
task
force,
I'm
putting
on
councilwoman
strasberger
and
councilwoman
gross
to
co-chair
councilman
burgess
councilman
wilson,
I
forgot
to
ask
you
councilman
wilson.
L
If
and
if
you
can't
do
it
just
let
me
know
and
and
hopefully
you'll
get
some
additional
people
and
work
with
the
administration
on
that.
L
The
second
task
force
is
when
I,
these
are
things
that
we
caught
from
our
meeting
with
the
youth,
and
so
we
talked
about
training
with
councilman
coghill,
doing
roofing
and
different
kind
of
construction
jobs
and
getting
our
youth
more
prepared
working
with
the
carpenters
and
other
such
unions
that
might
be
able
to
help
our
youth
get
in
into
a
better
area
into
some
workforce.
So
on
that
committee,
I'm
putting
councilman
culkin
when
asking
him
to
chair
councilman
lavelle.
L
If
you
don't
mind
again,
another
thing:
councilman
krauss
and
councilman
o'connor.
If
you
don't
mind,
because
you
just
did
that
thing
too.
So
if,
though,
if
you
can
all
work
together,
that
would
be
great
and
getting
those
things
together
and
maybe
bring
us
back
something
maybe
like
mid-september
or
something.
So
we
can
have
something
together
to
offer.
L
We
want
to
get
the
youth
the
meeting
together
with
the
youth
again,
so
I
I
just
we
probably
want
to
do
that
when
we
first
return
from
break,
so
maybe
we
can
get
something
by
break
in
place
that
we
can
do
all
this.
If
that
doesn't,
if
it
seems
like
it's
too
much,
let
me
know
and
then
we'll
reschedule
a
different
day,
but
we
do
want
to
get
the
youth
back
here
to
meet
with
us
to
follow
up
to.
L
Let
them
know
that
we
heard
them
that
we're
working
on
things
that
they
really
care
about.
One
of
the
other
things
I
hope
councilwoman
gross
and
councilwoman
strasberger-
and
I
also
talked
about,
is
that
we
heard
the
youth
say
that
they
really
need
help
with
getting
permits.
Sewing
classes
driver's
license
their
work.
What
are
those
work
cards
employ
the
cards
for
employment?
A
N
So
listen,
I
just.
Madam
president,
I
want
to
thank
you.
I
I
cherish
that.
I
I
look
forward
to
that.
In
fact
you
and
I
have
talked
and
councilman
gross
and
I've
talked
I
want
to
get
that
into
the
schools.
You
know
some
sort
of
career
day
of
some
sort
and
I
hope
you
all
can
start
on
that
today.
In
some
fashion.
Oh.
N
School
district
right,
yeah
right,
so
I'm
hoping
you
bring
that
up
and
let's
let's
proceed
with
that.
That
to
me
is
the
most
productive
thing
we
can
do.
And,
madam
clark,
I
just
wanted
to
say:
don't
let
that
bother
you
about
bill
maheroski.
You
know
he
was.
He
was
no
willie,
storgel
or
roberto
clementine.
I
will
tell
you
that.
E
O
K
Right,
I
just
wanted
to
echo
and
thank
councilwoman
smith
again
for
spearheading
the
dialogue
with
our
our
neediest
community
members
and
for
the
hosting
event
a
few
weeks
ago,
but
also
this
task
force.
I'm
really
looking
forward
to
the
idea
that
we
can
be
the
you
know
at
the
the
front
door
as
it
were.
K
K
But
let's
be
sure
that
we're
not
being
gendered
about
the
other
programs,
because
working
with
the
trades
is
great.
But
one
thing
that
one
of
our
youth
stood
up
and
told
the
entire
room
full
of
people
was
she
wanted
programs
for
youth,
but
not
just
football,
and
that
there
we
wanted
to
be
sure
that
we
were
inclusive
in
the
kinds
of
programs
that
we
develop
here.
So
I
just
wanted
to
remind
us
of
their
call
to
action.
L
A
I
know
we
often
work
with
duquesne
university
to
provide
free
law
clinics,
tango,
title
expungement
issues
and
they've
been
great
partner,
so
they
can
often
even
have
some
of
their
students
potentially
even
get
credit
for
working
those
lines.
So
that's
sort
of
my
only
recommendation.
A
L
Want
to
say
that
we've
been
working
and
talking
with
the
administration,
who
has
been
remarkable
in
this
whole
part
that
they
seem
to
really
want
to
help
and
do
things
to
help
our
youth.
So
I
I
just
want
to
thank
everyone
for
wanting
to
work
together
and
wanting
to
make
some
differences
and
thank
our
youth
for
making
sure
they
opened
their
mouths
and
told
us
what
they
needed.