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From YouTube: Pittsburgh City Council Standing Committees - 2/15/23
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A
B
A
A
You
our
next
order
of
business,
is
public
comment.
I
would
like
to
remind
our
speakers
of
the
rules
of
council
state
that
comments
are
limited
to
our
matters
of
concern.
Official
action
or
the
deliberation
which
are,
or
maybe
before,
city,
council
and
profanity
will
not
be
permitted
after
you
are
called.
Please
restate
your
name
and
neighborhood
for
the
record.
You
will
be
given
three
minutes
to
speak.
Our
first
registered
speaker
is
Naomi
Mullen.
C
D
C
We
have
shown
up
at
the
town
hall
meeting
to
give
resounding
no
to
developing
the
building.
We
have
signed
a
petition
to
say
we
want
a
green
space
according
to
the
Pennsylvania
Constitution.
The
purpose
of
government
is
for
the
peace,
safety
and
happiness
of
the
people
they
serve.
The
Bonaire
Memorial
Green
Space
is
the
solution
for
the
peace,
safety
and
happiness
of
the
Bonaire
Community.
Without
that
there
is
no
valid
governance.
C
C
He
appointed
a
panel
that
claimed
the
Bonaire
Elementary
School
building
should
remain
we,
the
people
of
Bonaire,
have
driven
past
former
school
buildings
and
heard
the
stories
of
defecation
in
the
hallways
and
criminal
acts
around
those
buildings.
We,
the
people,
say
no
to
any
use
of
the
school
except
to
be
torn
down
and
create
the
Green
Space.
C
We,
the
people
of
Bonaire,
welcome
a
green
space
to
replace
this
detrimental
building
after
having
three
youth
taken
out
of
the
building
and
handcuffs
and
four
others
when
it
shows
the
escalation
of
the
problem
there.
This
was
right
at
my
husband's
Channel
retired
deputy
chief
Mike
Mullen
touched
the
lives
of
many
people.
C
This
uncompromising
dedication
to
his
sworn
duties,
to
provide
for
the
safety
of
the
citizens
of
Pittsburgh
was
truly
exceptional
and
one
that
should
be
emulated
by
every
firefighter.
He
loves,
sharing
his
knowledge
of
firefighting
in
all
its
many
aspects,
to
make
our
firefighters,
safer,
smarter
and
more
efficient
on
the
fire
ground.
C
My
commute
most
of
the
firefighters
on
the
entire
Pittsburgh
Bureau
of
Fire
by
their
first
name
and
was
always
approachable
regardless
of
Frank.
If
you
had
questions,
he
would
stop
what
he
was
doing
to
answer
it.
He
worked
tirelessly
but
also
energetically
his
entire
career.
In
pursuit
of
more
knowledge,
his
legacy
will
serve
our
citizens
and
firefighters
for
years
to
come.
Michael
J
Mullen
lived
his
full
life
as
his
obituary
so
accurately
described.
C
E
On
two
mental
health
topics,
the
first
one
that
our
children
are
now
learning
from
machines
and
the
difficulties
that's
creating
for
them,
and
also
that
mental
health
should
be
part
of
all
school
curriculums.
Today,
I
want
to
talk
about
the
topic
of
the
justice
system.
Prevention
needs
needs
to
be
the
focus.
The
idea
of
punishment
for
crime
is
not
working
in
America.
We
have
more
people
in
our
jails
than
any
other
country
in
the
world,
and
it's
costing
trillions
of
dollars.
E
Research
needs
to
be
done
to
find
from
inmates
what
they
were
thinking
and
feeling
before
they
committed
a
crime,
what
they
were
thinking
and
feeling,
while
they
were
Community
crime
and
what
they
think
would
have
de-escalated
those
emotions
and
I
call
it
a
hotline,
but
it
can
be
given
any
creative
name
that
that
inmates
can
be
the
operators
for
people
who
are
having
these
emotions
and
feelings.
And
these
you
know
peer
support
is
working
in
mental
health.
E
We
need
to
start
thinking
about
the
justice
system
in
a
different
way,
because
it's
not
working
as
part
of
the
rehabilitation.
These
inmates
could
be
the
operators
and
and
when
they're
released
from
jail,
they
could
also
get
more
training
and
they'd
be
part
of
the
team.
You
know
many
communities
are
now
hiring
social
workers
to
work
with
police
on
difficult
calls,
while
these
individuals
that
were
inmates
with
with
their
training
and
their
knowledge,
they
could
also
be
part
of
that
team
for
de-escalation
in
the
community
community.
E
The
idea
of
presenting
this
idea
to
the
community
can
be
done
in
a
very
creative
way,
a
cool
way,
an
advertisement.
You
know
personal
stories
are
so
effective
and
you
know
person
telling
their
story
could
really
Inspire
somebody
else
to
make
that
telephone
call.
E
You
know
people's
lifestyles
of
crime,
it's
not
normal.
Nobody
really
wants,
or
you
know
why
they
want
or
feel
they.
E
Hurt
another
Humane,
that's
not
normal,
that's
that's
a
mental
health
issue
and
it
would
say
a
trillion
dollars
over
years.
Not
only
save
lives,
but
just
think
of
the
people
that
would
not
go
into
prison
and
their
lives
would
be
saved
as
well.
That's
a
release
from
prison
also
deal
with
an
unspoken
mental
health
issue.
They.
E
They're
free
they're
feeling
this
intensity
of
good
feelings,
and
they
don't
know
how
to
embrace
it.
They
don't
know
how
to
deal
with
it.
So
therefore,
they'll
commit
another
crime
to
go
back
to
prison
because
they
know
how
to
deal
with
those
feelings
that
needs
to
be
also
spoken
about
people
who
are
released
from
prison
and
their
emotions.
E
We
all
need
to
start
talking
about
these
subjects.
Our
society
is
now
in
the
future
and
the
knowledge
we
used
in
the
past
to
solve
our
problems
no
longer
are
effective.
We
need
to.
We
need
to
start
thinking
about
our
difficulties
and
create
with
creative,
new
knowledge
and
open
our
minds
to
and
with
original
perspective.
C
G
The
big
mic-
yes,
ma'am
hi,
my
name-
is
Tony
Griffin
I
live
in
Crawford
Square
I'm
down
here
for
about
the
permit
parking
we
have
to
pay
to
park
on
that
street.
You
have
the
people
there
to
come
to
the
pp,
Arena
doing
permit
parking
the
hour.
That's
left
is
free
and
we
don't
have
anywhere
to
park.
I,
don't
feel
that
we
should
not
have
to
pay
where
we
live
at
the
park.
And
then
these
people
come
up
and
take
our
parking
spots.
G
I
talked
to
to
The
Parking
Authorities.
They
said
that
I
need
to
come
to
city
council
and
ask
them
to
make
that
time
a
little
longer.
G
We
pay
too
much
money
in
this
place
and
cannot
park
where
we
live
at.
If
you
have
a
handicap,
you're
in
trouble
and
I
do
have
a
handicap.
I
had
a
brain
aneurysm
before
and
I
thank
God
for
a
second
Chad,
but
if
I
have
to
walk
that's
too
much
for
me,
I
am
asking
if
they
can
move
that
time
lease
up
till
8
o'clock
and
that
our
parking
wouldn't
be
really
free
for
them.
People
just
parking
at
the
PP
Arena.
H
My
name
is
Yvonne
F
Brown
I
live
in
the
Hill
district
at
Katie.
Rivers
tires
at
the
top
of
the
hill.
She
lives
in
down
at
the
bottom
and
I
do
know
what
she's
talking
about,
because
anytime
there's
a
penguin
game
you
park
they'll.
Even
they
were
parking
in
the
parking
lot
of
the
senior
citizens
until
we
until
I
started
fussing.
But
what
I
wanted
to
do
today
is
that
I
wanted
to
explain
in
order
for
you
to
know
about
the
future.
You
should
also
know
about
the
past
and
I
wanted
to
explain.
H
I
wanted
to
read
a
letter
that
I
had
wrote,
and
this
was
written
in
2004
citizens
on
March
11,
2004
opening
hearing
was
held
by
city
council
regarding
president
McCarty
in
his
closed
door
or
secret
meeting.
I
need
to
explain
to
you
that
what
had
happened
is
that
all
of
city
council,
the
white
men
went
to
Harrisburg,
Miss,
Carlisle
and
solidine
did
not
go
Miss.
Carlisle
I
filed
a
tried
to
call
file
a
lawsuit
for
because
she
she
was
adamant.
H
She
said
I
do
not
appreciate
at
being
at
the
water
fountain
to
find
out
that
Jesus
went
to
Harrisburg
and
you
didn't.
Let
me
know
so
what
it
was
that
all
of
the
whites
went
and
the
blacks
didn't
go.
When
I
talk
about
you
citizens,
when
I
talk
about
city
council
I've
been
here
27
years,
I've
been
coming,
I
see
it.
They
have
a
culture
of
racial
discrimination,
racial
and
especially,
if
you're
dark
complected,
they
wouldn't
let
Esther
Bush
speak.
They
wouldn't
let
bird
song
who
got
a
a
a
war
from
the
companies.
They
wouldn't.
H
Let
me
speak
Mateo
that
Tim
Steven,
Tim
Steven
may
I
continue
and
they
let
him
speak
when
they
bring
people
to
fight
to
off
the
police.
They
bring
Tim,
but
Tim
is
so
busy
worried
about
his
children.
He
said
I
wanted
to
tell
the
police
I
I
got
children
of
a
mixed
race.
I
got
upset
because,
if
he's
saying
mixed
race,
I
found
out
that
his
wife
is
supposed
to
be
Mexican.
So
what
he's
saying,
if
you're
running
into
any
light,
complected
children
not
dark
like
impacted
their
mind?
H
Well,
my
son
is
dead
because
five
policemen
left
my
son
in
Wilkinsburg
and
he's
on
the
floor
back
and
forth,
like
bleeding
from
the
head
asking,
he
was
saying:
I
have
one
lung
I
can't
breathe.
I
have
one
alone.
They
left
my
son.
What
I'm
trying
to
explain
to
you
is
this
you're
talking
about
the
police
actually
killing
them.
My
son
was
begging
for
his
life.
He
was
saying
man
I
have
one
lung.
Do
you
understand
when
I
think
about
it?
H
I
Hi
I'm
Bernadette
from
Beachview
the
past
weeks,
I've
been
researching
scriptures
on
being
humble,
it's
time
for
me
to
be
humble
yesterday,
when
I
was
speaking,
my
TBI
was
flickering
and
I
was
trying
to
describe
a
location
on
the
corner
of
Noble's
time
and
Crafton
Boulevard,
but
later
Miss
kale
Smith
did
sit
with
me
and
I
was
able
to
explain
and
it's
called
the
West
End
trolley,
Trail
no
and.
I
I
They
had
little
bike
repair
stations,
kind
of
like
the
size
of
that
push
button
thing
over
there
like,
if
you
have,
if
you
have
a
flat
tire
or
whatever,
and
an
electric
station,
maybe
for
for
chairs,
would
be
really
nice
very
quickly.
I
need
some
help.
I
Kids,
who
have
IEPs
and
504s,
are
not
from
my
36
year
old
down
to
my
17
year
old
have
never
been
told
that
OVR,
the
Office
of
Vocational
and
Rehabilitation
is
they
are
to
have
an
assigned
counselor
in
ninth
grade
to
help
the
family
through
FAFSA
and
everything
else,
and
we've
been
struggling
with
a
mistake
that
was
made
and
the
school
the
people
that
are
supposed
to
be
helping.
I
The
college
told
us
she
was
accepted
and
the
college
is
telling
us
to
go
to
the
counselors
at
school
and
the
counselors
at
school
are
telling
us
to
go
to
the
college
counselor
and
a
therapist
at
Wesley
service
said
no,
you
go
to
OVR,
I
went
down
to
OVR
yesterday
and
I
cried
with
relief.
This
should
have
been
done
in
ninth
grade.
These
schools
are
not
letting
the
families
know
so
I'm
asking
you
guys
to
get
with
your
connections.
I
know
the
school
district
is
separate,
but
this
is
something
that
needs
to
happen.
I
So
if
you're
listening
mayor
get
a
hold
of
your
buddy
at
the
school
district
because
it's
not
happening
and
I'm
grateful
for
OVR
and
all
the
help
they
gave
me
yesterday
and
will
be
giving
us,
she
should
have
been
transitioning
all
year
and
she's
having
major
surgery
with
her
mouth
wired
shut
on
the
22nd
for
six
to
eight
weeks,
I
just
I
was
floored.
A
D
J
J
A
J
K
L
Yes,
I'm
on
my
way
in
actually
and
all
the
bills
that
we
just
held
for
for
to
hire.
Legal
Services
Board,
the
collective
bargaining
I
went.
J
N
B
H
J
K
Thank
you,
councilman
I
I
see
that
the
increase
is
a
hundred
and
fifty
thousand
dollars,
so
we're
going
roughly
from
about
170
to
330,
000
and
I'm.
Not
remembering,
and
this
extending
for
an
extra
year
is
the
communication
Services
directly
for
community
outreach
or
what
is
being
communicated
to
whom,
with
a
consulting
company
for
330,
000
I,
don't
I,
just
don't
recall.
Is
there
someone
on
the
line
from
City
Planning
or
on
Chambers.
K
O
Patrick
Cornell
Chief
Financial
Officer
for
the
city.
This
is
for
councilmanuel's,
correct
interpretation,
Services,
ASL
Services.
O
In
the
past,
this
was
funded
via
community
development,
block
grant
funding
through
planning
and
the
capital
budget,
and
this
year
with
the
shift
of
more
of
the
ADA
compliance
into
the
mayor's
office.
That's
where
this
contract
will
live.
I
would
add
that
some
of
this
is
for
Council
interpretation,
Services.
O
For
you
know
other
community
meeting
Services
when
we
moved
to
re-bid
and
this
year
for
future
Services,
we
can
have
the
conversation
with
the
clerk.
If
we
want
to
split
out
your
invoices
versus
the
mayor's
office
right.
O
Because
the
contract
is
already
in
place
with
this
iteration,
our
best
understanding
from
law
is
that
contracts
should.
O
K
P
Thank
you,
Mr
chair,
so
I
had
previous
conversations
with
the
Ada
coordinator,
healer.
That
was
here
because
she
was
reaching
out
in
terms
of
you
know,
funding
for
this,
and
this
just
seems
low.
So
could
you
like
compare
to
what
she
was
talking
about?
It's
like
you
tell
me,
the
I
think
the
big
hurdle
for
her
was
that
there
was.
P
You
know
during
the
time
in
covid
the
pandemic,
so
for
everyone's
Clarity
I.
Think
the
the
rule
previous
to
the
pandemic
was.
It
was
a
request
for
an
interpreter,
and
then
we
would
provide
that
if
someone
needed
that,
but
then
not
clear
as
to
like
the
full
change,
but
everything
went
online
and
we
went
forward
with
just
making
sure
that
everyone
had
access,
and
so
then
it
turned
into
not
a
request,
and
so
then
that
was
immediate
new,
something
that
we
hadn't
budgeted
before
budgeted
for
previously.
P
So
I
just
would
like
to
understand,
like
the
full
amount,
like
the
yearly
cost.
Sorry
because
this
seems
low
compared
to
what
she
was
talking
about.
So.
O
P
P
So
I
guess
that's
probably
a
question
for
law,
but
I
may
actually
have
some
some
Emos
about
that.
But
anyway,
when
this
comes
back
up,
it'd
be
good
to
have
some
clarity
on
whether
or
not
like
we're
exceeding
the
standard
and
just
for
the
Public's
knowledge
on
you
know
what
the
city
is
doing
to
meet
8080
ADA
accommodations,
all
right
thanks.
F
A
F
A
F
Mr,
chair,
I,
think
I
have
an
amendment
to
make
on
this,
so
740
Hillcrest
is
to
be
scratched.
I
believe
it's
in
front
of
us.
F
Okay,
I'd
like
to
make
a
motion
to
delete
itemo
on
Bill
1211.
D
K
K
If
someone
could
look
up
okay,
the
original
text
to
see
whether
it
needs
to
be
amended
before
we
finish
voting
on
this
I
think
we
need
to
know
I
don't
have
the
original
bill.
So
if
the
original
Bill
reads
has
that
typo,
then
we
can
easily
verbally
amend
it
now.
B
A
K
B
K
To
we
can
hold
if
we,
if
Mr
chair,
wants
to
just
move
on
assuming.
A
F
K
J
K
Thank
you.
Thank
you.
Mr
chair.
You
know
that
we
have
gone
back
and
forth
with
this.
I've
asked
questions
every.
K
Kind
of
project
of
DPW
and
the
equipment
leasing
Authority
has
come
up
to
the
purchasing
Natural
Gas
fueled,
mostly
waste
haulers.
So
if
you
wouldn't
mind,
if
we
have
someone
to
the
table,
who
can
speak
to
it,
there
we
go
again.
Thank.
J
R
K
On
up
so
I
voted
now
on
the
original
bill,
when
we
first
bought
four
of
my
recollection
ways:
tallers
fueled
by
compressed
natural
gas,
but
there
was
no
way
to
fuel
them,
and
so
we
had
to
spend
more
than
we
would
for
any
other
kind
of
vehicle
in
order
to
also
build
our
own
fueling
station.
K
But
we've
since
added
to
the
fleet
and
I
think
I
have
been
I've,
definitely
been
asking
questions
and
I
I'm
not
comfortable
with
us
expanding
this
contract,
so
I'm
I'm
going
to
ask
for
a
first
kind
of
further
description
of
what
we're
looking
at
here.
So
you
all
can
introduce
yourselves
to
the
public
and
give
us
a
little
more
background
here.
Thank
you.
S
Senior
manager
of
Fleet
Services,
Brandon
Walton,
so
the
compass
natural
gas
fueling
station
is
providing
fuel
for
our
Environmental.
S
Fleet
currently.
J
S
There
was
one
in
the
Strip
District
that
closed
down
in
the
Crafton
Ingram
one
is
oh
sorry,
and
the
the
craft
craft
and
Ingram
fueling
station
is
is
off
of
most
of
the
routes
plus
difficult
to
pull
in
and
out
of
for
those
large
trucks
and.
K
So
I
remember
when
I
voted
to
know
the
first
time
I
said
you
know,
this
seemed
like
an
idea
that
had
maybe
like
kind
of
like
missed
its
window
right
like
some
number
of
years
ago,
in
the
desire
to
reduce
City
air
pollution
and
create
some
leadership
by
changing
the
city
fleet.
There
was
a
suggestion
to
do
the
compressed
natural
gas,
but
that
it
was,
you
know
a
day
who's.
You
know
an
idea
whose
day
had
gone
by,
and
it's
certainly
in
having
to
fund
our
own
station
in
order
to
fuel
these
new
vehicles.
K
I
I
didn't
think
that,
even
though
we
know
there's
a
reduction
of
particulate
matter
and
and
no
one
loves,
no
one
would
defend
our
far
too
old
diesel
particulate
matter.
Spewing
Fleet,
especially
I'm
sure
the
city,
employees,
who
have
to
work
on
them
and
I'm
supportive
of
of
upgrading
the
fleet
and
reducing
the
particulate
matter.
Air
pollution
that
we
would
you
know
have
been
creating
I,
don't
want
to
support
our
local,
fossil
fuel
industry
and
I.
K
S
They
have
eight
current
on
order.
K
K
I
have
another
video
one
I
was
sitting
at
a
red
light
on
Baum
Boulevard,
which
is
not
a
narrow
alley
and
watching
one
of
the
trucks
trying
to
make
the
turn
off
of
Craig
Street,
as
if,
if
you
kept
straight
on
Craig,
you
would
just
dump
straight
onto
Bigelow,
but
instead
it
was
turning
right
to
come.
Downhill
on
Baum,
Boulevard
and
I
had
to
move
forward
back
up.
It
was
like
a
five
or
six
point
turn
just
to
make
a
90
degree
turn
on
on
multi-lane
city
streets.
S
K
K
And
so
yeah,
it's
almost
like
there's
a
kind
of
middle
section,
it's
visually
just
looking
at
it
like
trying
to
failing
to
make
its
turns,
and
so
what
are
we
going
to
do
with
routing?
K
So
you've
got
now
this
kind
of
multi-layer
thing
where
you
have
multi
multiple
different
trucks
in
the
fleet,
with
multiple
different
turning
radiuses
multi.
Multiple
different
kind
of
fueling
needs
where
the
fueling
stations
are,
and
so
this
has
got
to
make
routing
actually
more
difficult
and
not
less
difficult.
S
S
The
length
of
the
trucks
is
really
a
lot
more
in
operators
getting
more
used
to
the
length
of
the
trucks
it
will
affect
some
routes,
but
not
that
many
as
it's
about
a
three
to
four
foot
difference
for
the
most
part.
K
K
Is
you
know
in
an
alley
from
the
1860s
so,
and
these
are
highly
densely
populated
neighborhoods,
that
you
know
they
need
garbage
pickup
and
we
have
the
obligation
to
do
garbage
pickup
there.
So
I
I,
don't
like
the
trucks,
I
voted,
no
on
them
in
the
past
and
and
then
so,
let's
just
speak
to
the
dollars.
K
This
reads:
extending
the
term
through
December
2025,
so
we
have
to
continue
to
lease
our
own
fueling
station
that
we've
now
it's
not
like
we
own
it.
We
lease
it.
We
had
someone
build
it
instead
of
building
our
own
and
so
but
we're
like
the
sole
customer
of
it.
I
guess
right,
and
so
it's
going
from
378
thousand
dollars
for
a
new
class
not
to
exceed
756
hundred
thousand
dollars
through
just
the
next.
You
know
through
the
end
of
2025,
so
not
quite
36
months.
So
what
is
our
cost?
K
S
I
wasn't
around
for
the
first
few
that
we
purchased
I
can't
speak
to
it
right
now.
The
cost
of
the
CNG
versus
the
diesel
is
about
it's
about
a
wash
the
crane
carrier.
Chassis
that
we
used
to
buy
diesel
was
very
expensive.
We
moved
to
a
Dennis
Eagle
CNG,
so
it's
about
the
same
price.
K
S
To
the
cost
of
the
fueling
station,
the
lease
is
is
a
bit
much,
but
compared
to
diesel
for
2022
diesel
was
just
over
six
dollars
a
gallon
at
its
highest
point.
Cng
never
broke
three
dollars
per
gallon
equivalent
during.
K
Okay,
so
we've
got
one
price
for
the
fuel
about
one
price
specifically
for
the
trucks,
and
then
we've
also
got
a
leasing
cost
here.
I
would
feel
better
if
the
administration
had
actually
worked
out
these
numbers,
so
I
don't
have
to
try
to
do
it
live
on
TV.
To
tell
me
what
are
we
spending
more
running
these
compressed
natural
gas
vehicles
and
should
I
vote
yes
or
no
on
the
extension
of
this
contract.
K
M
Thank
you.
Just
I
just
want
to
clarify
that
when
you
talked
about
the
that
there's
no
place
in
the
city
limits,
actually
the
one
that
you
refer
to
Giant
Eagle's
natural
gas
gas
station
is
actually
within
City
Limits.
It's
actually
in
ferrywood,
not
Grafton,
which
is
a
city
neighborhood
at
the
bottom
of
Steuben
Street.
When
you
go
to
the
right
or
the
left,
and
the
Thornburg
Bridge
straight
ahead
is
all
within
city
limits
in
District,
Two
and
ferrywood
is
a
city.
M
So
I
don't
understand
why
we're
not
trying
to
do
our
best
to
get
our
trucks
to
a
city
business.
Somebody
who
invested
in
our
communities
and
especially
heavily
invested
in
fairy
wood
and
that
area
has
been
so
disinvested
with
by
the
by
government
across
the
board.
So
for
me,
I'd
like
to
see
us
make
sure
that
not
only
are
we
supporting
local
businesses
but
they're
we're
working
with
them
to
employ
people
from
their
neighborhoods,
so
I'm
gonna
I'm,
either
gonna.
T
Oh
yeah
I
mean
I
just
sort
of
yeah
same
type
of
questions.
If
we
could
just
get
like
a
very
clear,
like
you
know
how
many
vehicles,
what's
the
lifespan
you
know
for
the
existing
Vehicles
so
that
we
can
see
over
the
lifespan
of
these
vehicles
and
if
we're
replacing
with
electric
anyway,
we've
already
got
Aid
electric,
you
know:
what's
the
plan
for
that
to
sort
of
yeah,
just
a
a
clear
cost
analysis
over
I
would
say
over
the
lifespan
of
the
existing
Vehicles
as
well.
D
Thank
you
all
I'm,
really,
just
echoing
what
I've
heard
already
and
saying.
In
addition.
Well,
I
am
another
person
who
feels
uncomfortable
with
supporting
our
fossil
fuel
industry
in
the
region.
Given
that
the
extraction
portion
of
the
of
procuring
natural
gas
is
not
clean,
it's
not
natural,
it's
not
it
repletes,
our
air,
pollutes
or
water,
and
recognizing
that
the
alternative
right
now
with
some
of
our
vehicles,
these
types
of
vehicles
is
diesel.
Which
tail
end
pollution
is
much
higher,
so
I
have
voted
in
favor
of
this
in
the
in
the
past.
D
You
know
Environmental
Services,
Fleet,
so
sort
of
just
explaining
my
previous
vote
for
this
and
my
willingness
to
support
it.
If
we
are
able
to
get
that
information
and
understand
exactly
where
we
are
in
the
timing
of
all
of
our
fleets
and
our
path
towards
a
truly
sustainable
Fleet
for
our
Environmental
Services
vehicles,.
A
F
You
thank
you
so
Brandon
we
have
12..
We've
got
another
12
purchased
right
they're
on
their
way.
F
S
Are
we
going
to
get
this
so
we
have
five
delivered,
total,
two
of
which
are
already
on
our
list
of
in-service
vehicles,
and
then
we
have
four
more
due
by
the
end
of
March
and
another
five
do
between
April
and
June.
F
S
They
are
a
bit
longer
we're
learning
through
building
the
spec,
how
to
shorten
them
to
get
it
more
comparable
to
the
diesel.
The
last.
J
F
A
big
deal
so
you're
saying
it's
cost
neutral,
meaning
compared
to
a
diesel,
but
that's
not
factoring
in
the
fueling
station.
We're.
F
F
S
I
think
that
once
we
do,
the
math
we'll
see
actually
at
Cost
savings
on
the
CNG
versus,
especially
looking
at
2022.
S
Sizes
they
I
mean
they
do,
but
we
would
have
to
change
operations.
That's
that's
on
DPW,
if
that's
a
possibility,
but
the
Packer
body
itself
is
a
25
yard.
That's
what
we
need
to
pick
up
the
current
routes
that
we
have
that
size
packer.
Otherwise,
the
chassis
is
the
same
chassis.
The
only
thing
that
could
change
would
be
the
body.
T
Yeah
just
a
question
because
again
because
I'm
new,
so
why?
If
we're
moving
toward
electrics,
did
we
buy
12
new.
S
S
Two,
we
are
in
contract
with
the
companies
that
we
ordered
them
from,
so
the
LA
has
already
signed
a
contract,
the
vehicles
are
already
been
ordered
and
the
majority
of
them
are
actually
already
built
and
are
just
in
the
final
stages
of
manufacturing.
J
A
A
Do
any
further
discussion,
if
not
I'll,
simply
add
it's.
My
understanding.
I
could
be
totally
wrong
that
the
electric
vehicles
are
equally
as
long
as
the
other
ones,
maybe
even
an
inch
or
two
longer
because
of
the
battery
so
either
way
we're
going
to
have
the
routing
conversation
that's
going
to
need
to
take
place
even
when
we
come
become
more
efficient.
Just
because.
K
That's
what's
our
love
done
and
now
that
you
brought
that
up,
we
and
since
I'm,
not
on
the
ELA,
so
I'm
kind
of
like
just
throwing
it
out
there
for
those
of
you
who
are
that
if
we
had
a
different
Staffing
levels,
we
could
run
trucks
that
weren't
as
big
in
the
Packers
right
as
I.
Think
you
just
threw
in
right
to
get
the.
What
was
the
size
of
the
Packers
that
you
said
we
are
we're
required
to
do
well,
we
are
buying
for
25.
K
They're
so
they're
very
large,
right
and
again,
some
of
our
city
alleys,
are
from
the
1860s
right
and
older
cities
that
have
smaller
rights
of
way
and
tight
Corners
by
smaller
trucks.
But
if
you
buy
smaller
trucks,
you
generally,
you
need
more
crew
right.
You
need
more
people
doing
those
runs,
and
so
sometimes
we're
cutting
off
our
nose.
Despite
our
face
right,
so
we're
trying
to
save
money
on
personnel
and
then
we're
spending
more
on
this
equipment
and
we're
doing
fewer
runs
on
trucks
that
really
are
not
built
for
our
streets
right
and
so
I.
K
Just
I
I
just
need
to
point
that
out
so
right,
and
so
we
there's
a
this
is
deep
discussions
that
we
have
at
other
times
and
not
in
the
middle
of
a
weekly
agenda,
but
I'm
I
I,
think
I
heard
councilwoman
Smith
suggest
that
we
hold
the
bill
for
a
week
to
get
more
information,
so
I'm
I'm
gonna
make
that
motion
to
hold
one
week.
Second,.
Q
I
F
K
Just
kind
of
like
I
I
really
didn't
catch
the
stuff
like
when
I
read
the
agenda
when
it
first
came
out,
but
so
now
this
is
really
kind
of
making
me
ask.
So
this
one
is
specifically,
it
says,
uses
for
All,
City
departments.
So
is
this
including
the
trucks
that
we
were
just
talking
about,
and
this
9
million
9.5
million
dollar
purchase
cooperation.
K
Right
and
just
for
Citizens
since
I'm,
also
not
looking
at
the
text
file
here,
that
the
vehicles
are
all
listed
in
the
text
file.
If
citizens
want
to
go.
Click
on
this.
A
K
So
since
I
have
Ela
at
the
table
in
in
years
past,
when
I've
gone
to
try
to
find
the
specific
list
of
vehicles,
it's
been
hard
to
find,
can
I
ask
that
it
be
attached
here
so
that
it's
actually
in
register,
because
it's
hard
to
find
you
go
to
the
city
website,
you
can't
find
it.
You
go
to
the
Eli
website.
It's
not
actually
there,
it's
not!
If
it's
not
in
the
text
file,
you
know,
maybe
you
have
to
dig
through
the
middle
of
a
budget
hearing.
S
It
is
listed
in
the
capital
budget
documents.
K
Okay,
so
there's
a
a
9
million
465
dollar
budget
line
that
I
would
know
if
I
were
a
citizen.
Is
this
budget
line
that
has
the
list
of
vehicles
or.
O
K
K
Then
it
and
then
again
for
the
public.
Then
it's
in
the
legislative
record
and
so
I'm
just
I'm
just
noticing
that
the
entire
time
I
speak
you're
only
looking
at
the
back
of
our
heads
so
too
for
councilwoman
Warwick
too,
when
we're
on
when
we're
on
camera,
it's
just
about
there.
I
go
he's.
P
P
Correct
and
I
know
there's
been
a
lot
of
discussion
around
getting
to
Net
Zero
in
terms
of
our
Fleet,
even
in
the
prior
Bill
1214,
so
I'm
interested
to
see
what
the
plan
is
with
that.
Is
there
a
there's
like
a
guiding
post
that
everyone's
going
by
on
the
equipment,
leasing
Authority,
who
has
to
how
many
were
buying.
S
Versus
the
equipment
leasing
Authority
in
the
past
did
pass
an
agreement
that
they
would
purchase
the
most
fuel
efficient
vehicle
available.
If,
if
it
were,
would
fit
operations
and
we
would
have
the
ability
to
operate
it,
maintain
it
fuel
it
right
now,
with
every
vehicle
purchase,
we
take
a
look
at
what's
available
versus
what
we
can
put
in
our
Fleet.
S
Unfortunately,
there
aren't
as
many
fossil
fuel
free
Vehicles
such
as
EVS
available
in
every
class
that
we'd
like
so
we're
just
continuing
to
monitor
it,
we're
hoping
for
some
more
vehicles
that
come
out
this
year
after
work
truck
week
and
the
US
Auto
Show.
P
So
this
nine
and
a
half
this
would
purchase
new
vehicles
147.
You
said
yes,
okay
and
you
said
there
used
to
be
a.
Would
you
call
it
an.
P
Is
there
is
that
policy
still
in
place,
yes,
okay,
and
does
that
when
they're
making
decisions
and
votes
on
that
do
they
you
know
are,
are
they
keeping
track
of
that,
and
can
we
see
that.
S
I
believe
it
reflects
on
all
of
the
minutes
as
well
as
in
within
their
bylaws.
P
S
Take
a
look
at
what's
available
and
and
again
you
know.
P
Okay,
but
you
think
we
can
roughly
get
a
breakdown
of
I
mean
we
could
talk
offline
about
this,
but
basically
you
know
what
these
new
147,
what
some
of
these
be
the
compressed
natural
gas?
P
Yes
I
mean
outside
of
the
Packers,
no
okay,
so
we're
not
doing
outside
the
Packers,
okay
and
but
then
you
know
in
terms
of
what
a
regular
gas
hybrid,
fully
electric
that
whole
breakdown
and
like
what
the
barriers
are
to
going
fully.
P
S
That
whole
breakdown,
yeah
most
of
its
availability
and
the
ability
to
put
charging
infrastructure
in
the
charging
infrastructure
is
very
expensive,
and
it's
not
quite
where
it
needs
to
be
technology-wise.
You
know
you.
S
P
S
On
this,
I
can
get
you
a
breakdown
of
what
we
currently
have
as
well
as,
what's
on
the
plan
for
the
coming
year
and
and
provide
that
before
next
week,.
P
S
P
S
Is
almost
100
electric
we're
Fielding
the
last
15
that
should
put
them
somewhere
between
90
and
100,
fully
electric
right.
J
S
I
could
try
to
put
something
together
for
you.
Okay,.
P
Great
I
can
make
the
motion
now
or
asking.
S
We
don't
know
where
we're
at
yet
we're
too
new,
so
we're
going
to
test
them.
We
that's
why
we
purchased
them
as
recycling
Vehicles
recycling
Vehicles
don't
have
to
travel
to
the
landfill,
but
we
are
putting
DP
stickers
on
all
eight
of
them,
and
environmental
services
has
agreed
to
run
some
routes
to
the
landfill
so
that
we
can
test
their
ability
to
make
it
there
and
back.
S
S
F
The
Recycled
trucks
are
they
also
25
yards?
Yes,
so
they're
just
same
size,
yes,
okay,
so
when
are
we
going
to
know
if
we
could?
When
are
we
going
to
test
it.
S
Once
we
get
them
in
service,
we'll
start
testing
right
away.
We.
D
S
And
then
we
expect
them
to
arrive
at
the
body
company,
which
is
where
it'll
get
the
Packer
by
May
1st
and
then
it's
on
a
normal
one.
It's
it's
six
to
eight
weeks
turn
around,
but
there
could
be
any
number
of
things
when
it
comes
to
testing
the
packet
versus
The
Electric
System.
S
So
it
could
delay
it.
But
we
expect
anywhere.
S
M
M
F
F
So
basically,
you
gotta
when
you're
done
with
it.
At
the
end
of
the
day,
it's
got
a
charge
overnight.
It's.
S
Which
is
where
right
next
to
the
Environmental
Services
location,
it's
often
referred
to
as
the
tow
pound
lot.
Oh
31st.
M
Madam
president,
thank
you
and
I
just
wanted
men
I
just
want
to
mention
that
on
the
ELA
we
do
have
two
members
of
council
that
sit
on
the
ELA
and
I
want
to
thank
them
for
their
work
on
this,
but
I
think
overall
I
think
it's
the
whole
process
of
the
ELA
that
I'd
like
to
for
us
to
look
at
and
see
if
we
can
do
something
a
little
bit
different,
especially
making
sure
some
of
these
things
are
public
before
their
purchase.
So
but
that's
it
I
think.
Thank
you.
M
I
know
that
you
do
a
ton
of
work
on
this
and
I
mean
everybody
talks
about
how
much
how
knowledgeable
you
are
in
the
area
but
I
think
for
just
the
public
and
for
council's
own
notification.
I
think
we
need
to
look
at
that
process
and
to
know
that
we
do
have
members
on
there
and
I
want
to
thank
them
for
their
time
that
they
spend
on
their
councilman
coghill
and
councilman
Lavelle,
two
very
different
opinions,
but
two
really
great
Representatives.
K
J
B
J
A
K
Thank
you.
I
was
going
to
try
to
get
your
attention
and
say
that
my
staff
found
an
attachment
that
says
the
purchase
price
is
clearly
thirty,
five
thousand,
so
it's
different
yeah
yeah.
So
there's
another
attachment
directly
I
appreciate
if
you
want
to
come
on
in
since
we
dragged
you
down
here,
I
apologize,
but
just
as
we
were
discussing
the
trucks,
my
staff
kind
of
ran
a
it's.
The
second
piece
of
paper
in
here
for
clarification-
if
you
just
want
to
introduce
yourself
and
confirm
which
number
we've
got
here,
would
be
great
sure.
R
K
J
J
K
Amends
Bill
2023,
1211
under
item
a
purchase
price
I
motion
to
amend
to
make
that
35
000.
dollars.
Second,.
K
A
K
A
Any
opposed
Furniture
recommendation.
Thank
you,
director
Madam
president.
M
M
K
M
You
I'd
like
to
call
the
solicitor
to
the
table.
M
M
Anyway,
thank
you
for
being
here
and
I.
Just
want
to
ask
you
a
little
bit
about
these
bills
and
I
know
that
councilman
Wilson
would
like
to
also
ask
some
questions.
Is
there
any
part
of
these
bills
that
are
related
to
any
any
further
arbitration
other
than
the
police
bills?.
N
M
M
For
me,
it's
it's
concerning
that,
there's
not
somebody
on
staff
that
I
know
that
you
have
some
people
that
do
handle
some
of
these
things,
but
somebody
who's
considered
an
expert
at
this
point.
You
know
that
we're,
instead
of
having
to
pay
for
another
consulting
fee
but
I
also
I,
know
that
councilman
Wilson
has
some
some
comments
and
some
questions,
but
I
wanted
to
know
if
there
was
any
part
that
is
for
that
will
be
used
for
anything
other
than
policing.
So
specifically,
will
there
be
yes
or
no.
N
So
I
know
that
I
wanted
to
apologize
I
from
my
understanding.
There
was
an
executive
session
yesterday
that
I
wasn't
present
for
I
didn't
know
about
that's
on
me.
That's
on
the
Law
Department.
N
So
I
was
present
for
the
one
for
12-1,
I
will
say:
I
think
we're
getting
into
areas
that
I
would
be
in
a
position
where
I
am
waving.
Attorney-Client,
privilege
and
I
am
concerned
about
doing
that.
So,
but
that
said,
I
really
I,
don't
think
we
had
a
chance
to
have
a
fulsome
conversation
about
it,
because
there
was
lots
going
on
that
week.
So
I
am
certainly
very
supportive
of
the
idea
of
holding
this
bill
having
another
executive
session,
and
then
we
can
do
a
real,
deep
dive
into
all
of
these
issues.
M
I'm
gonna
be
honest:
I'm
not
I'm,
not
I'm,
not
fond
of
having
the
executive
sessions
all
the
time,
because
I
think
when
we're
talking
about
Contracting
and
some
of
the
things
I
think
the
public
has
a
right
to
know.
Are
we
using
these
these
dollars?
For
you
know
all
contracts,
are
we
using
them
for
just
policing?
Is
there
something
specific
that
you're
concerned
about?
N
M
J
P
Thank
you,
Mr,
chair
solicitor,
thanks
for
being
here
and
thanks
for
you
know,
waiting
in
terms
of
you
know
bringing
us
back
to
the
table,
because
I
I
do
think
this
is
important.
P
I
think
the
council
president
was
was
talking
about
the
point
that
I
was
trying
to
unders
trying
to
make,
but
originally
I
was
just
trying
to
understand
reading
the
bill,
the
actual
text
of
the
bill
yeah,
which
Union
is
being
which
Union
is
involved
in
this
in
this
contract
or
I.
Guess,
specifically,
you
know
Campbell
Durant
or
the
other
name
is
Fisher
Phillips.
You
know
specifically,
is
it
which
you
know
which,
what's
it
called
the
bargaining
process?
What's
the
the.
P
Yeah,
so
that's
why
I
like
to
to
get
dig
into
is
really
where?
Where
is
the
money
going
for
what
union
contract
that
we're
working
on
yeah.
N
And
again,
I'd
love
to
get
into
that
in
more
detail
and
happy
to,
but
I
believe
that
by
talking
about
it
here
at
the
table,
I'd
be
waving,
attorney,
client,
privilege
so
I'd
like
us
to
say
that
and
for
an
executive
session
again
I
wish.
You
know.
I
am
happy
to
do
I'm
happy
to
hold
this
bill
and
for
us
to
have
that
meeting
and
then
I
can
answer
all
of
your
questions.
P
Is
it
always
going
to
be
attorney-client
privilege
to
keep
that
I
mean?
Would
it
be
against
internal
client
privilege
to
actually
have
which
Union
we
would
be
using
I.
P
Is
an
open
one
that
you're
talking
about,
but
if
we
change
that
rule
and
we
did
individual
contracts
with
outside
representation,
is
there
a
future
that
we
would
see?
We.
J
N
J
N
I
would,
in
order
for
me
to
answer
that
question
I
want
to
make
sure
you
understand
all
of
it
and
in
order
to
do
that,
I
have
to
give
you
information,
that's
privileged
and
then
I
think
we
could
say:
hey
is
this
information?
Is
you
know,
are
you
okay,
if
I
State
this
information,
this
would
not
be
privileged
and.
A
F
N
I
said
the
contracts
are
written
for
all
all
unions.
F
M
Yeah
I
just
want
to
briefly
say:
I.
Think
that's
what
bought
councilman,
Wilson
and
I
were
both
asking
right
he's
going
to
be
used
for
something
other
than
the
fop
contract.
So
you're
saying
yes,
they
are,
it
could
be.
Yes,
they
could
be
yeah.
Okay,
that's
I!
Think
that's
what
we're
trying
to
get
to
okay,
all
right.
N
M
D
M
M
N
F
A
Opposed
both
bills
will
be
held
for
executive
session
that
exhausts
our
first
Committee
of
the
day
and
I
apologize.
I
meant
to
do
this
at
the
very
at
the
very
beginning
of
our
meeting,
but
I
do
want
to
take
a
moment
to
just
acknowledge
the
young
men
from
Central
Catholic,
who
are
here
with
us
today,
learning
about
our
government
and
who
are
clearly
very
enthralled
in
this
wonderful.
V
M
Can
I
just
add
that
we
have
council
members
that
attended
Central
Catholic
in
my
in
recent
memory,
Reverend
Burgess,
councilman,
Corey,
O'connor
and
Doug
Shields,
and
my
brother
was
the
vice
principal
of
central
for
about
20
years.
So
you
have
a
lot
of
history
here
in
the
city
of
Pittsburgh.
A
So
welcome
to
city
council
chambers.
We
hope
you
actually
do
get
something
out
of
this
experience
with
that
we
need
a
motion
to
approve
the
invoices
and.
J
J
A
B
F
A
A
B
I
B
1203
resolution
taking
appropriating
and
condemning
by
the
city
of
Pittsburgh
for
public
roadway
purposes,
certain
property
in
the
Fifth
Ward
of
the
city
of
Pittsburgh,
owned
by
German
and
Francois
bar
Nuevo,
located
along
shinley,
Farms
Terrace
and
authorizing
the
payment
of
just
compensation
and
necessary,
and
incidental
acquisition
costs
thereto.
Related.
A
That's
all
right
question:
seeing
none
all
those
in
favor
say:
aye
aye
any
opposed
one
abstention
as
I
live
on
the
street
affected
land
use
that
takes
us
to
land
use
and
economic
development
committee
chaired
by
councilman
Wilson
our
first
deferred
papers,
Bill
592.,.
B
B
Bill
1219
resolution
amending
resolution
877
of
2021,
which
authorized
the
mayor
in
the
department
of
permits,
licenses
and
inspection
to
enter
into
an
amended
agreement
or
agreements
with
at
Power
Consulting
Corporation
to
provide
customer
service
and
soft
skills
training
to
the
department
staff.
The
amended
agreement
shall
be
in
an
amount
not
to
exceed
58
150,
listen.
B
B
B
Right
yeah,
yeah,
I
heard
58,
but
it's
actually
resolution
amending
resolution
number
877
of
2021,
which
authorized
the
mayor
and
the
department
of
permits
licenses
and
inspections
to
enter
into
an
amended
agreement
with
the
ACT
power
Consulting
Corporation,
to
provide
customer
service
and
soft
skills
training
to
the
department
staff.
The
amended
agreement
shall
be
an
amount
not
to
exceed
78
150
dollars.
P
Your
name
and
title
for
the
record
all.
U
Sarah
Kinder,
director
of
the
Department
of
permits,
licenses
and
inspections.
As
you
know,
we
have
worked
really
hard
to
ensure
that
we
have
appropriate
technical
skills
in
our
department
to
administer
and
enforce
the
codes,
the
property
maintenance
and
construction
codes,
but
we
need
to
balance
that
with
appropriate
soft
skills
to
communicate
to
customers
effectively
and
sometimes
that
communication
has
to
do
with
giving
bad
news.
We
issue
code
enforcement
violations.
U
P
Well,
thank
you
director.
It's
always
a
special
day
in
city,
council
and
Chambers,
where
we
have
pli
at
the
table.
P
Can
you
tell
me
just
I
just
had
one
question
about
this,
which
is
so
these
are
soft
skills,
so
this
training
to
everyone
that
has
to
interact
with
the
public
or
you
have
a
new
Community
engagement
strategy.
U
We
usually
split
up
the
the
different
groups,
just
based
on
the
the
type
of
work
that
folks
do
so
Code
Enforcement
Officers
would
be
in
a
different
training
than
our
application
technicians,
because
they're
doing
a
different
type
of
work,
different
type
of
skill
set,
but
it's
intended
for
all
pli
staff.
A
F
U
F
U
Power
half
power,
they
have
three
trainers
that
have
been
dedicated
to
the
city
and
yeah.
It's
about
sometimes
giving
bad
news.
Sometimes
it's
really
just
you
know
helping
people
through
the
process,
who
are
maybe
the
first
time
they've
ever
interacted
with
pli
they're,
doing
something
for
their
their
one
family
or
two
family
structure,
and
we
might
not
see
them
again
in
a
few
years
until
they're
ready
to
do
something
else,
so
helping
all
sorts
of
customers.
A
D
You
well
I'm,
just
I'm
very
much
in
support
of
this
I
think
spending
the
time
to
make
sure
that
anyone
who's
interacting
with
the
public
has
soft
I.
Don't
actually
love
the
terms
soft
skills,
but
because
I
think
they're
as
important
as
technical
skills.
But
has
the
skills
to
be
able
to
work
with
the
public,
especially
in
this
department,
can
do
wonders
to
create
a
reputation
for
working
with
the
city,
whether
you're
a
resident
you're
trying
to
put
in
a
garage
or
replace
your
garage
or
whatever.
It
is
a
fence
to
Bringing
actual
business.
Here?
D
If
we're
going
to
keep
our
population
above
300
000,
which
is
so
critical,
we
have
to
have
be
on
our
a
game
like
with
every
time
that
we
have
an
interaction
with
the
public,
so
I'm
so
happy
that
you're
investing
in
this
and
in
your
and
our
employees
as
city
as
a
city
and
I
would
love
to
see
that
extended
to
other
departments
as
well
as
much
as
possible.
If
you
have
a
good
experience
with
this
entity.
So
thank
you
for
what
you're
doing
and
just
wanted
to
state
that.
K
Thank
you
director
glad
to
see
you
here.
I
I
was
a
little
distracted
by
our
guests
in
the
audience
so
I
wanted
I
mean
you
might
have
already
covered
this
I
apologize,
but
do
are
we
applying
these
for
interacting
with
both
residential
customer
citations
and
Commercial
customer
citations
practice.
K
Did
if
you,
you
know,
said
it
already,
I
apologize
for
making
a
repeat
it,
but
could
you
say
a
little
bit
about
kind
of
how
like,
where
the
difficult
conversations
kind
of
like
what
are
the
frequency
of
each
kind?
You
and
I
have
talked
many
times
in
the
past
about
especially
women-owned
businesses,
but
a
lot
of
small
businesses.
K
U
A
great
question,
so
we
are
working
with
folks
to
go
through
the
the
construction
inspection
process
and
the
code
enforcement
process.
So
if
we've
been
called
out
on
a
complaint,
we
might
be
issuing
a
citation.
Our
inspectors
are
obligated
to
explain
what
we
cited
for
and
what
you
have
to
do
to
Abate.
That
violation,
and
we
should
be
really
clear
about
that
and
there's
some
really
important
skills
in
explaining
what
the
what
the
citation
is
under
code.
U
We
should
be
able
to
point
to
Something
in
black
and
white
and
say
this
is
why
it's
a
violation,
then
here's
what
we're
going
to
expect
for
you
to
bait
you're
going
to
go
through
the
permit
process,
or
you
know
it's
in
a
historic
district.
So
you
have
to
go
through
the
HRC
process.
So
there's
that
communication
and
then
there's
the
soft
skills
related
to
sort
of
Stress
Management.
You
know
when
you
are
issuing
a
lot
of
citations.
U
Our
inspectors
have
a
hard
job
and
there's
an
erosion
of
compassion
and
empathy
that
can
happen
over
a
period
of
time
because
you're
just
sort
of
going
through
the
motions,
but
this
might
be
the
first
time
this
customer's
ever
experienced
this.
So
we
need
to
acknowledge
that
reflect.
Remember
that
and
then,
as
public
servants
be
able
to
explain
the
process,
us
like
it's
fresh
each
time.
K
K
But
then
it's
it
creates
this
cascading
level
of
work
for
people
in
our
organizational
chart
who
are
already
overworked
right
so
that
we're
getting
caught.
But
we
don't
know
what
happened
because
we
weren't
there
and
so
now
we're
calling
your
department,
sometimes
I'm,
calling
you
directly
and
pulling
you
away
from
stuff.
K
U
So
if
I
could
respond
councilwoman,
this
is
a
amend,
an
extend
of
a
contract,
so
we've
had
these
trainings
before
and
I
think
that
they
are
useful
and
successful
for
the
Department.
We
had
a
training
last
year
prior
to
launching
the
lead
safety
ordinance,
knowing
that
we'd
be
working
directly
with
child
occupied
facilities,
especially
maybe
smaller
ones,
that
aren't
that
weren't
familiar
with
those
rules
and
really
did
some
some
role
playing
essentially
with
the
inspectors
and
what
that
would
look
like
these
are
new
citations.
U
This
is
what
it's
going
to
look
like
under
city
code.
Here's
what
you
need
to
do
to
Abate
and
I
think
it
really
prepared
the
the
code
enforcement
group
to
take
that
on
and
feel
comfortable
about
it
because
issuing
citations
for
something
brand
new.
Is
you
know
something
that
we
needed
to
talk
through.
C
M
I'm,
sorry,
thank
you.
First
of
all,
director
I
want
to
thank
you
because
there's
two
weekends
in
a
row
I
bothered
you
on
a
Saturday
morning
and
you
responded
and
you
were
so
pleasant.
You
could
probably
give
the
training
yourself
I'm
sure,
but
but
I
just
want
to
say
thank
you
for
that.
But
I
do
want
to
say,
I,
think
part
of
the
frustration
that
our
residents
are
feeling
or
because
a
lot
of
times
when
we
can't
do
something
we
say
it's
the
state
code.
M
It's
the
state
law,
it's
federal
law,
it's
this,
but
they
see
I
border
the
most
boroughs.
So
what
they
see
in
my
area
is
Mount
Lebanon
upper
Sinclair
Greentree,
following
all
the
same
state
codes
that
we
follow
via
not
having
any
of
the
issues
that
we
have
to
the
magnitude
that
we
have
them.
So
they
feel
like
it's
just
a
way
that
we
just
don't
care
about
the
city
residents
and
that
we
allow
them
to
live
next
to
some
of
the
stuff,
and
some
of
that
is
also
our
magistrates
and
I.
M
Do
want
to
say
that
we
have
a
magistrate.
That's
been
doing,
holding
people
accountable
and
increasing
things,
so
I
do
think
that
he's
been
helpful
and
the
community
feels
that
they
feel
that
and
I
also
keep
saying
the
one
thing
I
wish
we
would
do
is
have
somebody
at
the
magistrate
or
any
housing
court
from
our
Housing
Opportunity
fund
or
from
the
Ura
to
give
resources
that
we
do
have
available.
So
maybe
somebody's,
not
someone
who
can't
fix
truly
can't
fix
a
railing
or
truly
can't
fix
a
roof.
M
They
call
anything
conquil,
but
they
truly
can't
fix
something
that
they
really
have
the
resources
that
we
connect
them
to
those
resources
and
I
know.
Some
of
that
is
occurring,
go
ahead.
U
Thank
you,
council
president.
We
issue
a
letter
with
all
of
our
citations.
That
say
here
are
resources,
but
getting
that
flyer
at
the
time
you're
getting
a
citation
is
not
is
not
helpful
at
that
time.
So
I
would
agree
that
at
the
time
that
you're
in
court
and
we
can
have
a
face-to-face
interaction,
directing
people
to
Services
is
helpful.
The
Ura
has
been
a
good
partner,
but
it's
it
needs
further
points
of
intervention
or
touch
points.
M
M
You
know
the
second
you
drive
into
the
City
and
that
just
won't
be
that
way
and
they
allow
some
of
their
properties
to
become
most
blooded
that
are
closer
to
ours.
And
so
you
know
it's.
It's
almost
sets
up.
M
M
Going
to
be
able
to
use
our
Parks
either
because
we
have
some
amazing
Parks,
but
anyway,
for
the
most
part,
we
have
great
Borough.
You
know
neighbors,
including
Dormont,
who
helped
us
with
swimming,
but
you
know
I
know
you
see
what's
happening
and
it's
just
I
mean
when
you're
dealing
with
this
blight
and
I.
M
Somebody
told
me
that
they're
doing
some
a
series
of
some
articles
on
some
of
the
housing
in
Pittsburgh
and
when
you
see
those
things
year
after
year
time
after
time,
it
doesn't
matter
how
kind
you
are
when
you're,
when
you're
calling
somebody-
and
you
feel
so
frustrated
if
you're
living
next
to
filth
and
blight
you're
angry
and
it
doesn't
matter
how
kind
you
know
somebody
is
about
it.
I
just
want
to
say
so.
I
appreciate
the
efforts,
but
I
want
to
make
sure
that
we
go
a
little
bit
farther.
Thank
you.
K
Thank
you
and
councilwoman
Smith
I'm,
supportive
of
what
you're
talking
about,
but
I
also
I
also
have
to
acknowledge
in
these
conversations
that
we
have.
You
know:
polarized
opposite
markets
in
a
lot
of
the
city
right,
and
so
we
have
blight
in
abandonment,
but
we
also
have
like
under
investment,
but
then
we
have
hyper
investment
and
gentrification
displacement
and
sometimes
it's
the
same
actors
kind
of
that
are
the
guilty
parties
on
each
end.
K
So
in
my
district
the
speculators
are
weaponizing,
the
kind
of
word
we
use
now
right,
using
citations
and
Reporting
in
order
to
get
properties
out
from
under
families,
especially
seniors,
and
so
we
have
a
lot
of
colloquial
kind
of
anecdotal
storytelling
about.
You
know
the
you
know
it's
it's
after
the
fact.
We
can't
do
anything
about
it,
but
the
gentleman
who
lived
for
decades
in
the
house
next
door
to
me,
you
know
it
I'm
told
by
constituents.
K
You
know
somebody
got
his
house
from
him
by
like
because
they
had
all
these
citations,
so
they
literally
are
actively
calling
and
Reporting
on
drooping
gutters
or
crack
sidewalks,
and
we
need
to
be
vigilant
that
we're
you
know
we're
not
allowing
our
neighborhoods
wealth
to
be
stolen
from
them.
But
in
fact
both
the
blight
is
stealing
wealth
from
our
neighbors
and
residents,
as
well
as
this
spec
of
like
over
investment
right
and
aggressive
home
buying.
K
You
know
in
my
district
we've
been
tearing
down
those
signs,
We
Buy
Ugly
Houses,
and
we
buy
signs
for
decades
right.
But
then
you
know
I
I
get.
We
all
get
text
messages
we
get
people
knocking
on
our
doors.
We
get.
You
know
trying
to
buy
our
houses
from
us,
so
I
just
want
to
make
sure
it
sounds
like
offering
assistance.
K
M
And
just
just
to
respond
to
that,
yeah
I
absolutely
understand
that,
because
it
does
it
happen
in
our
districts
as
well,
but
I
do
think
that
there
needs
to
be
a
balance,
but
that
doesn't
mean
people
even
if
somebody's
poor
doesn't
mean
somebody.
Next
to
you
has
to
look
a
blight
and
filth.
You
can
be
poor
and
clean
up
your
clean
up.
You
can
be
mentally
ill
and
take
help
and
advantage
of
some
of
the
programs
out
there
and
but
I
really
think
it's
us
connecting
them
to
some
part,
but
a
lot
of
times.
M
The
blight
is
the
city
of
Pittsburgh's
own
properties,
and
so
that
to
me,
that's
inexcusable
and
we
shouldn't
allow
our
residents.
We
shouldn't
be
contributing
to
our
residents,
ill
health
and
their
mental
stability
instability,
because
we're
allowing
them
to
live
next
to
fill
properties
with
rodents
and
I
mean
you've
seen
them
all.
I
mean
they're
horrific,
and
some
of
them
have
been
going
on
for
decades,
literally
where
they
fall
down
on
their
own.
So
that's
not
okay,
and
so
that,
for
those
things
we
need
to
be
more
proactive
and
I.
M
Think
councilman,
Calgary
and
I
are
looking
for
additional
dollars
for
demo
so
that
we
can
get
some
more
money
and
I
don't
care
where
we
take
it
because,
honestly,
at
this
point
it's
affecting
our
the
quality
of
life
and
the
health,
and
it
contributes
to
some
of
the
crime
and
some
of
the
things
happening
in
the
city
of
Pittsburgh.
If
you
don't
think
that
there's
something
to
that
Broken
Window
Theory
and
people
living
next
to
filth
and
trash
and
not
having
any,
why
would
they
feel
value
we
don't
make?
M
F
You,
madam
president,
and
I,
couldn't
agree
with
you
more
demo.
I
mean
you
know,
I've
seen.
My
district
is
not
riddled
with
them,
but
we
do
have
some
I
have
some
on
the
docket
to
be
taken
down
this
year,
I
hope
but
yeah.
When
we
have
these
homes
that
are
falling
down,
I
think
we
need
a
lot
more
money
in
the
demolition.
I
know,
councilman
lavelle's
argued
for
it
in
the
past.
You.
U
I
believe
that
we
received
additional
arpa
funding
for
2023.
That
was
about
three
million.
F
Dollars,
in
addition,
we
did
that
yeah
right
thanks
to
Council,
and
that
was
on
top
of
what.
U
F
Right,
you
know
my
other
question
is
to
like
these
LLCs
they're
everywhere
right.
We
can't
find
them.
You
know
they're
in
New,
York
they're
in
Israel
they're
all
over
the
world,
so
we
can
cite
site
site.
U
So
we've
been
taking
a
different
approach.
In
the
last
two
years,
we
have
a
Lexus
Nexus
tool
called
accurate,
which
we
try
to
search
for
appropriate
places
to
serve
the
citation
and
show
that
we
can
give
legal
notice,
and
we've
been
also
been
working
with
the
magistrates
to
use
constable
services
so
that
we
can
again
attest.
U
Yes,
this
this
entity
did
receive
notice
so
that
we
can
issue
fines
and
and
request
that
there
are
non-responsive
owners,
however,
that
we're
not
able
to
contact
and
those
remain
in
violation
until,
unfortunately,
the
city
is
burdened
with
potentially
having
to
perform
a
demolition
due
to
an
unsafe
structure.
If
it
gets
that.
F
Bad
yeah
see
I've
suggested
that
in
the
past,
I
had
a
couple
Properties
by
accident.
I
said
well,
we'll
get
that
thing
condemned
and
knock
it
down
as
soon
as
the
homeowner
or
the
property
owner
found
out
that
oh,
this
is
susceptible
to
be
in
demoed.
You
know,
then
they
moved
it
and
they
sold
the
property
right
away.
We
cannot
condemn
anything
unless
it's
deemed
unsafe.
F
U
So
we
have
to
get
right
of
Entry
to
enter
our
private
property.
We
can
issue
citations
based
on
what
we
can
see
from
the
public
right
away
or
from
an
adjacent
property
owner
who
will
allow
us
onto
the
property?
We
can't
you
know
triple
on
anyone's
Fourth,
Amendment
rights,
even.
F
F
F
F
Yeah
I'm
just
looking
at
it
as
a
scare
tactic
for
people
who
ignore
the
fines
yeah.
So,
okay,
that's
that's
it
and
thank
you
again
for
meeting
today
we're
doing
our
own
intervention
today.
Thank.
A
D
J
U
Department
of
Mobility
infrastructure
and
pli
pli
does,
to
the
extent
that
a
sidewalk
Property
Maintenance
issue
is
causing
a
hazard,
tripping
Hazard.
Something
to
that
nature.
The
department
of
mobility
and
infrastructure
can
also
issue
citations
for
sidewalks
that
don't
meet
their
specs
and
standards
and
require
that
they
get
a
permit
through
Domi
for
a
sidewalk
repair.
A
A
M
M
A
T
Yeah
I
just
said:
well,
since
you
brought
up
sidewalks,
oh
so
what
is
the
so
I
mean
we
I
have
a
very
specific.
You
know
the
request
that
we
sent
into
pli,
where
there's
two
sidewalks
on
either
side
of
the
street.
In
my
district
and
the
buildings
they
enter
their
sidewalks
that
run
along
the
the
parking
areas
behind
both
buildings.
Well,
the
sidewalks
are
just
a
mess
and
actually
someone
from
councilwoman
strasberger's,
District,
tripped
and
and
her.
T
You
know
her
father
tripped
and
hurt
himself
and
that's
what
anyway,
we
reported
it
and
what
what
we
heard
from
pli
is
that
these
are
like
group
owned.
You
know
the
buildings
are
not
owned
by
one
entity
and
because
I
had
wanted
to
contact
the
owner
directly
right
to
just
say,
look
to
be
neighborly.
Can
you
you
know,
but
there
doesn't
seem
to
be
anyone
to
contact.
So
what?
Where
do,
I
go
from
there?
You.
T
T
P
P
It
in
the
past,
on
just
like
these
questions,
always
arise
about
pli.
We
need
more
bills
that
you
know
for
contracts
that
you
know
you're
not
on
the
agenda
as
much.
We
need
to
have
more
more.
R
A
Q
Teen
resolution
amending
resolution,
727
of
2021
authorizing
the
mayor
and
the
director
of
innovation
and
performance
on
behalf
of
the
city
of
Pittsburgh,
to
enter
into
an
agreement
or
agreements
and
amendments.
There,
too,
with
vision,
point
systems
to
obtain
twyloflex
Support
Services
to
meet
the
needs
of
the
city
of
Pittsburgh
at
an
additional
cost
not
to
exceed
15
600
dollars.
T
W
Good
afternoon
Heidi
Norman,
director
of
innovation
and
performance.
Thank
you
so
vision.
Point
systems
is
support
for
twilio,
which
is
an
online
phone
communication
system
that
many
of
our
call
centers
use
so,
for
example,
the
3-1-1
services
the
call
center
within
permits,
licensing
and
inspection.
Even
the
inp
IT
Help
Desk
uses
twilio
vision.
Point
systems
is
the
only
authorized
servicer
outside
of
twilio
itself.
However,
their
services
cost
about
50
percent
of
what
the
twilio
support
services
cost.
W
So
we
would
like
to
move
over
to
this
support
organization
in
order
to
reduce
our
support
costs
for
our
overall
spend
on
these
communication
services
within
the
it
call
centers.
T
I
was
going
to
say
yeah
just
to
sort
of
so
when
yeah
with
with
software,
you
have
like
the
software
and
the
software
maker
itself
services
that
software,
but
then
there
are
also
other
companies
that
they
partner
with
that
can
provide
those
services,
and
in
this
case,
that
that's
what
this
is-
and
it
sounds
like
for
that.
The
partner
is
able
to
provide
the
service
for
less
than
the
twilio
correct.
Twilio
makes
the
software.
W
For
twilio,
it
was
originally
acquired
in
2020
when
we
all
went
home
due
to
the
pandemic
and
has
since
been
renewed
through
the
standard
procurement
processes
and.
W
See
we
have
other
than
3-1-1,
certainly,
let's
see
where
I
have
it
listed:
311
imp
service
deaths,
Finance
pli
for
our
One-Stop
Domi,
DPW
and
environmental
services.
That's
for
multiple
departments!
Okay,
thank
you.
A
A
Q
J
Q
Well,
1206
a
resolution
adopting
the
plan
revision
to
the
city
of
Pittsburgh's
official
sewage
facilities,
plan
for
Meriden,
Street
residences
project
residences
project
will,
which
will
involve
the
development
of
eight
single-family
residences
with
Associated
utilities.
The
site
address
is
117,
121,
125
and
129
Meriden
Street
and
114
118
122
and
126
Hallock
Street
in
the
19th
Ward
motion
to
approve.
A
Discussion,
seeing
none
all
those
in
favor
say
aye
aye
in
the
opposed,
firmsofrecommendation
dot
exhaust
our
agenda.
We
do
have
meeting
announcements
this
afternoon
at
2
30
yeah
this
afternoon
at
2,
30,
Council,
holder,
cable,
cast
public
hearing
on
bills,
1157
and
1181
as
they
relate
to
the
renaming
of
Herschel
Park
in
Charlottesville.
A
Chartel's
fears
speaker
registration
closed
at
1
pm
this
afternoon
next
week,
Council
will
hold
our
regular
and
standing
Community
meetings
on
Tuesday
February
21st
and
Wednesday
February
22nd
at
10
A.M,
speaker
registration
will
close
at
9
A.M
the
day
of
the
meeting
so
register
to
speak.
At
these
meetings
and
hearings,
please
fill
out
the
sign
up
form
on
the
council
meeting
webpage.
You
may
also
call
a
clerk's
office
at
412-255-2138
Madam
president.
M
Thank
you
and
I
just
real
quickly
want
to
say
making
some
changes
on
the
committee,
so
the
public
knows
I'm
moving
councilman.
M
Committee
and
and
with
that
said,
we
were
also
putting
the
committee
together
for
the
the
mayor's
office
to
address
the
violence
of
the
world.
J
M
Actually,
to
hopefully
reduce
the
violence
in
the
city
of
Pittsburgh
and
I.
Think
with
yesterday's
the
violence
here
yesterday,
I
think
it's
really
important
that
we
talk
about
how
we're
working
together
with
the
school
districts,
the
school
district
and
other
schools
around
the
area
as
well,
because
our
kids
are
all
together
out
in
the
communities.
M
They
don't
care
where
they
go
to
school,
they're
together
in
the
community,
so
I
think
I
think
we
all
feel
like
such
a
sense
of
urgency
and
our
community
feels
such
despair
and
talking
to
people
yesterday
that
how
hopeless
they
feel
people
are
feeling
and
how
just
traumatized
by
everything
that's
happening
in
our
city
and
I.
Think
that
you
know
we're
all
coming
together
and
I
just
want
to
assure
the
public
that
we
hear
them.
We
know
that
there's
a
lot
of
pain.
M
We
want
to
help
be
a
part
of
that
solution
and
give
some
hope
to
the
community
and
I
do
think
that
this
committee,
even
though
it
may
sound,
simple,
simplified,
you
know
when
it
started
with
the
curfew
and
now
it's
you
know
we're
talking
about
Resource,
Centers
I
do
think.
Having
the
conversation
is,
is
helpful.
I
do
think
that
there
are
programs
that
are
going
into
homes
of
kids
and
that
they're
really
having
an
impact.
So
it's
finding
some
of
those
programs
that
are
really
working
and
doing
those
kinds
of
things.
M
And
how
do
we
then
duplicate
that
across
the
areas
that
are
most
needed,
but
I
think
that
there's
going
to
be
a
lot
that
this
committee
is
tasked
with
and
although
I
knew,
who
I'm
putting
on
I'm
waiting
for
the
mayor's
office
to
to
make
that
announcement
for
their
side,
so
they're
going
to
make
the
general
announcement,
but
there
will
be
a
role
for
the
public
and
there'll,
be
a
role
for
every
council
member.
Even
though
we
can
only
have
five
people
on
the
committee
and
only
I.
M
Think
three
of
the
five
are
going
to
be
members
of
council.
There
is
going
to
be
a
public
process
and
what
I'm
asking
is
for
I'm
asking
the
committee
to
please
consider
having
all
the
council
members
do
some
work
under
their
committees
at
your
chair.
So
how
can
this?
How
could
technology
pay
a
part
and
what
we're
doing
to
help
stem
the
violence?
M
How
can
you
know
land
use
and
and
facilities
and
city
parks
and
all
those
things
play
a
part
in
working
together
for
some
solutions,
but
there
will
be
some
public
processes
and
some
public
hearings
I
hope
that
the
committee
you
know
task
us
with
withholding
so
I,
but
I
want
the
public
to
know
we
are
working
on
it.
We
do
hear
you
and
we
are
working
desperately
to
try
to
have
some
answers
before
the
weather
breaks
and
we
know
crime
typically
increase.
M
When
kids
are
you
know
not
in
school
and
and
times
free,
but
but
I
just
want
them
to
know
that
you
know
we
I
feel
so
badly
for
what's
happening
and,
and
can
you
imagine
I
mean
I
was
reading
the
the
media,
some
of
the
different
media
sources
yesterday
and
just
going
through
all
the
things
kids
that
are
affecting
kids
with
you
know,
human
trafficking.
You
know
it's
child
abuse,
you
know,
foster
care,
I
I
mean
just
across
the
board.
M
This
is
not
okay,
we
all
have
to
get
involved
and
we
all
have
to
help
our
kids
and
we
all
have
to
be
part
of
the
solution
and
I
think
that
we're
going
to
get
to
that
a
place
where
we
at
least
helped
decrease
some
of
that
stuff
and
and
do
I
think
right
now
we
need
an
intervention.
I
mentioned
this
before
and
I
think
we're
going
to
have
some
intervention
with
all
of
us
working
together,
but
long
term.
M
I
think
that
there
are
some
long-term
solutions
that
hopefully
will
have
a
better
impact
on
our
community.
You
know
we're
it's
just
it's
heartbreaking,
I,
don't
have
the
words
to
say
how
sorry
I
feel
for
what
people
are
living
through.
So
I
just
want
to
say
that
City
councils,
you
know
trying
our
best
to
do
what
we
can
to
to
help
stem
this
violence,
and
we
know
it's
also
affecting
businesses.
M
It's
affecting
kids,
it's
the
best
affecting
businesses,
it's
affecting
our
schools
and
the
success
of
our
schools
and
and
our
city
and
people
wanting
to
live
here.
So
it's
having
an
effect
on
everybody,
and
so
we
need
everybody
to
come
together
and
I
do
want
to
thank
the
pittsburghers.
There
were
so
many
people
that
reached
out
to
us
and
said
we
love
this
idea.
We
want
to
help.
How
can
we
help?
Even
if
we
don't?
Even
if
we
don't
like
this
idea?
M
Maybe
you
could
do
this
instead,
I
want
to
thank
them
for
reaching
out
and
coming
up
with
some
solutions
and
coming
up
with
some
feedback,
because
my
office
was
inundated
with
emails
and
calls
and
text
messages,
Facebook
stuff.
So
I
want
to
thank
pittsburgers
for
for
reaching
up
and
to
let
people
know
we're
working
on
it.
X
I
appreciate
the
leadership
of
the
president
and
I
do
also
we're
praying
for
the
family
of
the
western
house,
students,
both
those
who
are
shot
in
all
the
Wilkinsburg
and
Westinghouse
students
who
attend
rushing
house
for
their
peace
of
mind,
and
you
know
after
this
stress,
has
ordered
Personnel.
You
know
I
reflect
on
the
past,
and
this
is
not
the
first
time
we've
lived
through
this.
X
Although
things
are
bad,
they
were
not
as
bad
as
the
crocodemic
crack
epidemic.
We're
a
Twitter
report
was
a
single
most
dangerous
place
in
Pennsylvania
for
a
while
and
what
has
remained
the
same
and
I
I
want
to
make
sure
we
come
back
to
this.
We
have
allowed
certain
communities
to
be
concentrated
for
and
in
Pittsburgh,
almost
every
fourth
concentrated
Community
is
African-American
and
I
always
think
about
this,
and
we
don't
think
about
this.
Every
time
we
build
a
market
rate
development
on
the
south
side,
it
has
no
affordable
housing
in
it.
X
X
Segregated
policies
of
our
country
of
our
city
and
our
state
and
so
I
feel
bad
for
kids,
but
this
has
been
you
know,
300
years
in
the
making
and
we've
not
gotten
this
right.
We
do
do
some
things
that
help
the
root
cause
of
this
and
I
want
to
say.
Make
sure
that
we're
all
clear
is
our
races,
segregated
policies
that
forced
primarily
black
and
brown
people
to
live
in
hopelessness
and
concentrated
poor
War
zones
until
we
fundamentally
decide
to
put
the
half
a
billion
dollars
needed
in
Homewood.
X
In
the
you
know,
half
a
billion
dollars
needed
in
the
hill
until
we
decide
to
make
these
low-income
communities
priority
and
and
or
you
know,
and
at
the
same
time,
building
affordable
housing
in
the
Strip
District
in
Lawrenceville,
in
South
Side
in
Squirrel
Hill
in
Shadyside,
in
the
segregated
in
Priest,
in
these
segregated
communities.
X
Until
we
decide
to
consciously
desegregate
these
communities
economically
I
think
we're
going
to
have
these
problems
over
my
grandma
deck
it'll
be
over
because
we've
not
changed
the
economic
reality
of
these
families
and
until
we
do
that
and
give
them
hope
for
jobs
and
upward
Mobility.
F
J
F
Years
old,
so
yeah
I
mean
we
know,
guns
are
a
problem
in
our
society.
There's
no
secret
about
that,
but
I
do
feel
the
younger.
The
person
are
the
more
dangerous
they
can
be.
I.
Just
think
and
I
think
that's
who
we
really
need
to
reach
out
to,
but
I
just
wanted
to
mentioned
and
also
I
had
one
in
Brookline
juvenile
as
well.
So
it
seems.
M
So
I
just
want
to
say
real
quickly
that
you
know
I,
hear
everything
Reverend
saying
but
I
do
want
to
say
that
if
I
don't
acknowledge
that
chartier
City
defies
everything
you
just
said
they
will
be
very
upset.
They
have
worked
extremely
hard
to
keep
their
Community.
M
Predominantly
black
neighborhood
in
the
city
of
Pittsburgh
has
the
highest
home
ownership
in
the
entire
city
of
Pittsburgh,
with
about
90
homeowner,
occupied
homes
and
low
crime,
and
they
would
be
very
upset
they,
but
they
work
hard
in
their
Community
to
make
their
Community
as
amazing
as
it
is,
and
it
if
you've
never
been
to
Shorter
City,
you
know
do
yourself
a
favor
I
know:
Reverend.
You
have
been
and
go
visit
and
see
what
an
amazing
black
community
looks
like,
because
it
is
it.
M
M
Believe
me
giving
the
directive
so
I
do
want
to
say
that,
but
I
also
want
to
say
that
when
we
talk
about
guns,
you
know
this
I
think
we
have
to
look
at
the
underlying
issues
and
I
mean
it's
easy
to
say
it's
gun,
violence,
gun
violence,
but
there
are
things
that
and
there's
things
that
we
cannot
control.
But
there
are
things
we
can
control
and
so
like
locally
I'm,
just
curious.
M
You
know,
I,
don't
know
what
the
protocols
are
for
3D
printers
and
do
we
allow
them
to
be
used
in
libraries
by
young
kids
to
create.
You
know
to
make
the
guns,
because
I'm
hearing
that
there's
a
lot
of
that
and
in
our
schools
and
I,
think
it's
trying
not
to
find
out
the
policies
that
they're
helping
to
contribute
to
that
influx
of
guns,
on
the
streets
and-
and
so
even
though
I
think
you
know
that
has
to
be
part
of
the
solution.
M
You
know
that
are
affected
by
whether
they're
not
living
it
or
not,
those
the
kids
that
they
go
to
school
with
to
play
with
in
the
community,
see
sooner
or
later,
in
the
work
environment
and
just
in
general
I
just
think
we
need
to
address
this
issue
in
general
and
just
I
think
helping
to
find
the
underlying
solution
you
know
causes
and
addressing
those
is
is
going
to
really
make
our
society
better
for
all.
That's
all.
D
I
agree
with
with
what
everyone
has
said:
we
have
to
address
the
underlying
causes.
We
can't
well,
we
can't
program
our
way
out
of
this.
We
also
have
to
do
everything
we
can
in
our
power
to
you
know,
to
provide
opportunities
to
Youth
and
and
I
also
just
wanted
to
point
everyone
to
a
new
report
from
the
Bureau
of
Alcohol,
Tobacco
and
Firearms
and
explosives
the
first
time
in
20
years
that
they
produced
a
report
around
the
proliferation
of
stolen.
J
D
Untraceable
weapons
and
other
deadly
devices
that
show
that,
had
we
been
able
to
succeed
in
passing
and
enforcing
our
lost
and
stolen
bills
that
we
passed
10
years
ago,
50
I,
don't
know
how
many
years
ago,
at
this
point
and
at
the
state
level,
that
certainly
would
make
a
dent
in
at
least
having
the
the
data
and
the
information
to
be
able
to
trace
some
of
these,
the
proliferation
of
guns
that
are
flowing
into
our
communities.
It's
it's
not
a
Panacea,
but
it
certainly
does
help
and
straw
purchases.
D
So
there
was
a
really
great
I
shared
this
on
Twitter,
but
there's
a
really
great
interview
on
the
wesa's
Confluence
yesterday
that
covered
this
and
gets
into
the
details
and
I
just
wanted
to
publicize
that,
and
have
everyone
listen
to
that
if
they
can
there's
there's
also
some
news
media
that
covered
this
new
report
as
well.
A
Thank
you.
I
actually
did
review
the
report,
the
most
critical
thing
about
it
is
they
actually
have
the
data
prior
to
that
report,
they
really
didn't
have
the
data
to
prove
it
now
they
actually
have
spent
20
years
collecting
the
data
which
allows
you
to
have
a
better
understanding
of
what's
happening,
but
thank
you
any
councilman,
Warwick.
T
I
think
just
because
I
do
want
to
mention.
I
I
had
a
meeting
on
Friday
with
the
team
from
reach,
which
is
doing
a
lot
of
the
violence
prevention
work
or
you
know
they
have
a
large
contract
for
that.
T
So
I
I
do
just
want
to
acknowledge
the
work
that
is
being
done
by
so
many
Community
groups,
right
Acro
across
the
city,
whether
it
be
through
violence,
prevention
or
otherwise,
and
and
just
underscore
that,
if
those
groups
are
in
our
districts,
how
important
it
is
for
us
to
you
know,
support
the
work
that
they're
doing,
highlight
the
work
that
they're
doing
and
and
connect
and
and
connect
them
with
additional
resources
that
they
need,
because
that
that
kind
of
community
level
work
is
really
what
what
it
is
that
is
going
to
connect
with
these
families,
as
council
president
was
talking
about
right,
the
folks
in
the
community
connecting
with
these
kids
and
trying
to
protect
them,
where
they
can,
at
any
rate
thanks.