►
From YouTube: Pittsburgh City Council Standing Committees - 7/12/23
Description
No description was provided for this meeting.
If this is YOUR meeting, an easy way to fix this is to add a description to your video, wherever mtngs.io found it (probably YouTube).
A
A
C
A
Okay,
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
concerned.
Official
action
or
Liberation
which
are,
or
maybe
before,
city,
council
and
profanity
will
not
be
permitted
after
you
recall,
please
restate
your
name
and
provide
the
neighborhood
for
the
record.
You'll
be
given
three
minutes
to
speak.
Our
first
registered
speaker
is
Naomi
Mullen.
D
Yeah
I
honor,
my
husband,
who
is
a
true
City
of
Pittsburgh
Public
servant
from
the
1970s
until
2021
baby
trees,
do
not
change
fields
in
Bon
Air.
This
is
for
you
Michael
We.
The
People
upon
air
are
the
real
stakeholders.
We
have
paid
our
mortgages
taxes
and
voted.
We
accept
the
town
hall
meeting
to
give
a
resounding
no
to
developing
this
building
the
empty
School
building.
We
assigned
a
petition
to
say
we
want
a
green
State,
it's
not
a
building.
We
have
property
value
and
quality
of
life
to
protect.
D
D
We
do
not
consent
to
a
detrimental
building
remaining
to
Decay
the
community.
We
have
built
and
maintained
former
mayor
said:
dudo
was
defeated
and
left
in
disgrace.
He
appointed
the
panel
that
claimed
that
the
Bonaire
School
movements
could
be
made.
We
the
people
of,
have
driven
past
former
school
buildings
and
heard
the
stories
of
human
species
and
hallways
and
criminal
acts
around
those
buildings.
We
the
people
say
no
to
any
use
of
gold
except
become
a
green
space.
D
D
D
The
CL
list
of
building
to
a
developer
abuse
is
occurring
due
to
the
spread
of
blockbusting
and
intentional
infliction
of
the
stress.
Why
won't
he
advocate,
for
we,
the
people
who
have
been
harmed
by
this
detrimental
building?
Who
does
he
serve?
It
is
no
wonder
that
issues
that
the
school
district
persist
and
balances
don't
exist.
We
have
a
controller
that
seems
to
care
for
the
school
district
more
than
the
people
he
is
supposed
to
be
serving
the
memorial
Green
Space
the
solution
for
the
tea
safety
and
happiness
of
on
air.
D
D
D
I
don't
want
to
miss
my
public
comment,
which
is
to
say
that
I'm
thankful
for
all
the
councils
to
looking
into
the
food
Justice
fund
plan
and
I
hope
that
the
discussions
are
productive
today,
so
that
we
can
get
the
plan
adopted
as
soon
as
possible
without
any
delays,
and
once
the
plan
is
adopted,
that
we
can
get
it
up
and
running
so
that
we
can
make
sure
that
to
get
back
to
salt
as
soon
as
possible.
So
thank
you.
A
F
F
I've
been
coming
here
before
you
over
the
last
few
years,
because
I've
been
working
in
food
deserts
and
food
apartheid
neighborhoods
across
many
of
your
districts,
I
have
learned
from
many
of
the
residents
and
Community
leaders
firsthand
what
their
barriers
are
and
what
they
are
doing
to
create
real
solutions,
programs
and
Equitable
access
to
food
in
their
communities.
Each
neighborhood
has
different
needs
and
each
neighborhood
has
different
challenges.
F
Many
people
are
and
have
been
working
on
these
problems,
many
of
them
for
years
plans
are
in
progress
and
Community
Support
is
behind
them
and
so
much
of
their
effort.
So
much
of
their
effort
has
already
been
made.
However,
there
is
one
common
thread
that
each
of
these
neighborhoods
have,
and
that
is
need,
regardless
of
what
part
of
town
they
need.
F
This
is
what
the
intention
of
this
funding
is
to
me
and
why
I
continue
to
fight
for
it.
It
is
to
help
those
doing
the
hard
work,
supporting
real
community
service
and
change,
and
to
assure
that
the
Next
Generation,
our
kids,
can
grow
up
in
safer
and
healthier
communities
than
the
ones
that
we
currently
have
here
now,
a
grant
for
a
Grassroots
organization
to
support
its
Mission
or
the
growth
of
a
small
local
business
invested
in
providing
healthy
food
options
for
its
residents.
That
investment
will
pay
dividends
to
the
residents
for
years
to
come.
F
F
That
is
how
Council
in
the
city
can
work
to
create
real
access
and
real
food
I'm,
sorry
to
create
real
access
and
real
equity
for
its
residents.
Indeed-
and
not
just
in
word-
that
is
what
the
intention
of
these
funds
are.
In
my
experience
and
my
opinion
as
a
Grassroots
organizer,
a
true
investment
in
the
Equitable
development
of
food
systems
and
real
food
access
in
your
neighborhoods
neighborhoods
that
have
all
gone
for
way
too
long
without.
Thank
you.
F
G
Yes,
hi
I'm
here.
Thank
you
very
much.
My
name
is
Jody
McLaughlin
and
I.
Am
a
member
of
the
food
of
Justice
fund
committee.
I
want
to
thank
all
of
city
council
for
getting
the
food
Justice
fund
where
it
is
today
with
the
creation
of
the
food
Justice
fund
and
the
passage
of
this
planned
proposal.
Pennsylvania
will
be
the
first
state
to
have
a
fund
of
this
type
in
its
largest
urban
areas.
G
G
Justice
I
wanted
to
speak
today
about
the
importance
of
sticking
to
the
timeline
submitted
with
the
food
Justice
fund
plan
on
Monday
I
attended
agricultural
secretary
Russell
Redding's
stop
in
Pittsburgh
for
the
state's
Urban
agricultural
week
within
the
first
five
minutes,
I
was
on
site
at
wanakouche
Farm
on
the
North
side,
I
spoke
with
two
people
looking
for
additional
funding
to
support
the
food
work
they
do
in
Pittsburgh
throughout
the
day,
I
heard
from
other
people.
Looking
for
funding
opportunities,
grant
writing
assistance
and
similar
resources.
G
All
of
this
is
desperately
needed
for
Community
level.
Food
access
work
to
be
done.
The
people
I
spoke
with
as
well
as
many
others
are
why
it
is
important
that
we
stay
on
target
to
release
the
Grant
application
by
Fall
2023
and
award
grants
by
early
2024..
In
addition
to
Monday,
several
members
of
the
food
Justice
fund
committee
have
been
doing
Outreach
for
the
past
six
months
and
we
have
heard
a
similar
message
across
the
city.
G
They
need
the
food
Justice
Fund
in
order
to
infuse
healthy
foods
in
their
neighborhoods
and
Revitalize
the
local
food
economy
in
an
equitable
way.
They
are
eagerly
waiting
on
the
passage
of
this
plan.
So
the
next
steps
director
Varga
snapped
out
with
the
food
Justice
fund
committee
can
happen
in
order
for
the
program
to
be
launched
by
fall,
2023
I,
don't
think
I'm
alone
when
I
say
how
exciting
it
is
to
be
at
this
moment.
Well,
there
is
much
more
work
to
do.
G
I'm
optimistic
that
we
can
do
this
work
together,
so
we
can
begin
reinvesting
in
our
communities
as
quickly
as
possible.
I
appreciate
the
opportunity
to
speak
with
you
today
and
again
I.
Thank
you
for
getting
us
this
far
I
look
forward
to
hearing
the
discussion
amongst
Council
today.
Thank
you
for
your
time.
H
Good
morning,
everyone,
my
name,
is
Jamie
Marie,
Christian
I'm,
the
executive
director
and
founder
of
an
organization
called
lettuce
turn
up
the
beat
wearing
Carrick.
This
is
probably
my
fifth
time,
speaking
to
all
of
you
about
the
food
Justice
fund
and
I'm
sure
you're
sick
of
seeing
my
face.
I
have
no
poetry
for
you
today,
but
again.
I
will
thank
city,
council
and
meenergany's
office
for
including
the
food
Justice
fund
and
the
2023
budget.
Thank
you
again
to
councilwoman
gross
Warwick,
kale,
Smith
and
strasburger
for
your
support,
your
leadership
and
job.
H
H
H
I
can
go
on
and
on
about
that
and
their
interests
and
what
I
shared
about
the
need
for
access
to
cultural,
relevant
foods
and
how
that
conversation
needs
to
get
started.
But
I'm
going
to
tell
you
about
Tuesday
instead,
which
was
not
as
great
I
received.
Two
emails,
saying
that
my
grant
applications
were
denied.
One
was
from
a
very
large
charitable
organization
and
and
they
will
not
provide
funding
to
organizations
to
make
purchases
from
farms
as
an
incentive
which
I
had
intended
to
do.
H
I've
turned
down
other
grants
recently
because
they
wanted
to
cut
my
Farmers
out
of
the
picture
and
I'm
not
willing
to
sell
my
soul
for
eleven
thousand
dollars
and
it's
a
lot
of
money.
But
you
know
it's
ethics,
so
the
project
that
I
applied
for
funding
for
is
a
produce
stand
at
my
location
in
Carrick,
which
will
be
sourced
from
local
farms.
H
The
last
Monday
of
every
month
will
offer
a
free
produce
stand
every
other
day.
The
produce
will
be
priced
at
wholesale
and
it
would
still
be
much
more
cost,
effective
and
Equitable
for
folks
living
in
that
area
and
surrounding
communities
we're
located
within
walking
distance
of
Baldwin,
Borough
and
Brentwood.
So
Not
only
would
be
helping
the
folks
in
our
media
area
who
are
experiencing
food,
insecurities
we'd,
be
able
to
bring
in
revenue
from
outside
the
city
into
the
city.
I
really
just
wanted
to
throw
in
the
Chow.
H
At
that
point,
and
after
eight
years
of
hard
work
sacrifice
not
only
by
myself
but
by
my
family
and
many
many
many
long
sleepless
nights
I
took
to
my
true
introvert
South
and
shut
down
and
opened
a
book,
and
the
book
I
opened
was
given
to
me
as
a
gift
I
received
during
the
pandemic
from
a
bond
monk
who
lives
in
Greenfield.
We
were
giving
him
produce
throughout
the
pandemic
and
he
especially
appreciated
the
peaches,
which
was
great
when
I
opened.
The
book.
I
saw
a
message
he
wrote
to
me.
H
It
said
Jamie,
may
you
be
able
to
help
many
beings
as
I
read
through
the
introduction,
I
Came
Upon
This
quote
as
well.
Wisdom
is
like
the
tip
of
a
lamp
on
which
Darkness
cannot
abide
when
we
are
the
lamp
darkness
is
removed
without
effort,
and
that's
what
brought
me
back
I
know
now.
My
superpowers
are
my
big
mouth,
my
ability
to
make
meaningful
connections
and
to
look
at
situations
from
unique
perspective.
Thank.
I
My
title
is:
East
Palmyra,
Chuck,
mom,
yahalahi
and
I'm,
the
grand
Inca
chief
of
the
own
way
and
I'm
also
the
grand
Inca
Chief
member
of
the
Iroquois
Confederacy
of
Aboriginal
American
people
and
excluding
Indians,
not
taxes.
It's
a
specific
clause
in
the
Constitution
Indians,
which
applies
to
the
Aborigines
of
this
country
are
so-called
and
American
is
a
is
a
term
that
people
throw
around
so
frivolously,
but
it
means
so
much
to
us
because
originally,
the
definition
of
American
is
the
Aboriginal
races.
I
The
applied
to
the
copper
colored
people
here
that
was
met
by
your
ancestors
and
now
applied
to
the
descendants
of
Europeans.
So
I
want
to
say:
food
is
a
right
for
our
people.
It's
not
just
based
in
Commerce
and
trade
and
I
understand.
That's
what
city
officials
have
to
focus
on
for
our
people
for
the
indigenous
the
Aborigines?
We
look
at
food
as
a
part
of
our
culture
as
a
part
of
our
history.
I
Here
we
understand
the
importance
of
food
forestry
and
how
that
is
very
significant
moving
forward
and
helping
to
eliminate
certain
issues
of
poverty
and
and
hunger
in
the
communities
that
that
you
all
serve
and
I
think
that,
after
speaking,
with
secretary
reading
and
I've
known
him,
we've
had
many
meetings
and
we're
having
more
future
meetings
at
the
state
level
to
talk
about
food
forestry
and
what
that
can
look
like
across
the
region.
I
want
you
to.
I
You
know
carefully
think
about
this
as
you
discuss
it
and
see
the
importance
of
food
forestry,
because
it's
a
very
sustainable
model
I'll
be
doing
presentations
coming
up
in
the
future
and
I
hope.
You
will
be
willing
to
attend
those
presentations
to
really
explain
how
beneficial
that
can
be
for
the
City
of
Pittsburgh
and
I.
Thank
you
for
your
time.
I
yield.
I
A
J
Greetings:
I
am
an
Aboriginal
matriarch.
My
title
is
yojiology
channel
I'm
located
within
the
Delaware
territory,
as
you
may
call
it
Pittsburgh.
My
statement
today
is
to
invoke
my
people's
constitutional
indigenous
rights
regard
the
original
beings,
the
original
stewards
of
our
ancestral
lands,
the
Americas,
including
the
islands,
the
uncle
from
our
Great
Law
of
Peace.
My
people
are
acknowledged
in
multiple
maxims
of
Law
and
documents
such
as
the
constitution
of
Article,
1,
Section,
2,
Clause,
3
and
excluding
Indians,
not
tax.
J
The
Yoon
drip,
the
angel,
the
house,
Congress
resolution
331,
the
100th
second
session,
the
Delaware
treaty,
and
the
list
continues.
The
city
is
under
the
jurisdiction
of
the
state.
The
state
is
under
the
jurisdiction
of
the
city
and
the
city
is
under
the
jurisdiction
of
the
government.
Are
you
going
to
honor
your
oats
of
the
Constitution?
Are
you
going
to
continue
to
commit
you
18
U.S
code,
2381
treason,
18,
U.S
code,
1091,
genocide,
forces
simulation,
Eugenics,
colonization,
18,
U.S
code,
242,
deprivation
of
Rights
against?
J
Excuse
me:
deprivation
of
rights
under
the
color
of
law,
18,
U.S
code,
241,
conspiracy
against
rights,
and
the
list
continues
of
the
of
the
nefarious
actions
against
my
people.
The
Aboriginal
Americans
uphold
your
oath
to
the
Constitution,
uphold
your
Asia
tiska
folks,
ancestors
owed
to
the
Constitution,
uphold
your
slog
ancestors
oath
to
the
Constitution.
J
We
are
not
to
be
confused
with
title
25
Native
Americans,
who
are
the
immigrants
foreigners,
citizens
naturalized
citizens
under
the
jurisdiction
of
the
United
States,
which
is
a
corporation
AKA,
a
business
which
is
on
Stolen
land
and
stolen
resources
of
my
people?
Are
you
going
to
continue
to
walk
in
the
footsteps
of
the
many
nefarious
immigrants
ancestors,
such
as
Walter
Ashby
plucker,
a
physician,
the
First
Virginia
state,
Register
of
Vital
Statistics
from
1912
to
1946
a
promoter
of
eugenics,
a
discredited
movement
movement
into
ferrously,
pressuring
state
agencies
to
reclassifying
my
people
as
so-called
colored?
J
The
policy
the
policies
agency
was
effectively
to
erase
so-called
Indians
as
an
identity
as
it
has
as
and
as
made
it
difficult
for
Indians
so-called
to
gain
state
federal
recognition.
My
people
are
the
Aboriginal
Americans.
We
have
been
reclassified
as
so-called
black,
so-called
colors,
so-called
negro
and
so-called
African-American
and
so-called
Indian
as
well.
We
cannot
be
from
two
places
at
once.
We
cannot
be
immigrants,
we
cannot
be
foreigners
and
we
have
never
been
naturalized.
We
never
made
the
10
steps
of
naturalization
to
become
so-called
citizens.
K
E
K
Different
shirts,
Mr
Krause,
look
at
all
the
different
shirts
of
the
dead
people.
I
wanted
to
again
say
we
thank
you
to
the
Pittsburgh
Police,
the
citizens
and
residents
from
KV
Royal
irvis.
You
are
to
be
praised.
Brenda,
Tate
and
Reggie
udine
was
also
in
the
paper
win
the
tea,
because
I
I
was
talking
to
someone
that
I
said
cookie.
I
couldn't
figure
out
where
I
got
cookie.
K
The
cookie
was
our
chief
of
police
in
Wilkinsburg,
but
it
was
Brenda
Tate,
a
city
police,
a
city
policeman
that
called
the
thing
called
the
thing
also
citizens
Cornell
rest
is
running
for
president
and
I
believe
that
he
is
able
to
be
a
good
president
he's
very
educated
I
like
Bush.
When
we
had.
You
know
he
was
he
graduated
from
college,
but
he
had
to
have
tutors
and
they
were
saying
that
he
was
worried
about
selling
weed
and
drugs.
That's
what
they
said
now.
K
I
want
to
tell
you
that
I've
been
saying
for
years.
I
come
down
to
save
lives,
not
to
destroy
him
and
yesterday,
as
it
ended
up
worn
down.
Smithfield
I
ended
up
getting
ready
to
go
across
the
street
and
there
was
a
man
walking
beside
me.
Sort
of
passed
me
up
and
as
the
light
was
changing,
I
have
a
thing,
whereas
I'll
walk
with
you
I
think
I
started
to
say:
I'll
walk
with
you,
because
if
they
hit
me
they
got
to
hit
you
too,
but
then
I
was
recording
my
eye.
K
The
car
car
was
moving
and
I
said,
hey
and
snatched
him
back.
You
know
I
used
to
be
a
school
guard.
I
still
got
my
cap
talents
because
the
man
stopped
to
run.
He
stopped
and
he
said
who
you
saved
my
life
and
then
he
looked,
and
he
said
Miss
Brown
is
that
you
and
I'm
saying
who
are
you
it
was
grant
that
was
worked
with
the
rising
thought.
I
told
him
to
come
up
here
because
they're
talking
to
me
and
treat
me
like
I'm,
a
dog
come
up
there
and
tell
them.
K
I
am
saving
lives
like
I,
said
I
come
down
here.
To
do
I
want
you
to
understand
that
when
I
talk
about
the
police
and
I
told
the
policeman,
my
son
taught
me
about
you,
my
son.
When
I
went
he
was
on
B
Street
and
the
police
was.
He
was
at
the
car
when
they
left
I
said.
Were
they
messing
with
you
and
he
stopped
me
and
he
said
mom
wait
a
minute.
K
Mom,
not
all
cops
are
bad,
but
you
got
some
robes
and
you
do
got
robes
because
anytime
five
of
them
walked
out
see
people
think
I.
Want
you
to
understand
why
my
son
died.
He
was
on
the
floor.
Saying
I
have
one
lung,
he
was
begging
for
his
life
and
they
left
him
on
the
floor.
The
man
came
back
and
kicked
my
son
to
death.
There
was
blood
all
around
his
spleen,
but
they
wrote
down
heart
attack,
natural
heart.
Thank.
L
Miss
y'all
I've
been
being
a
grandma,
real,
quick.
We
need
more
garbage
cans
in
beach
view.
There's
five
between
coast
and
Fallowfield.
Fallowfield
Bridge
has
two
and
it's
at
seven
between
coast
and
chicken
Latino
there's
one
garbage
can
and
then
there's
one
at
the
monument.
But
we
have
all
these
food
places.
L
I
volunteer,
I
go
in
my
chair
and
I
pick
up
poop
bags,
it's
kind
of
like
when
I
tell
my
kid
put
this
in
the
garbage
not
on
it
not
near
it.
Put
it
in
the
garbage.
People
don't
do
that
they
leave
their
pretty
little
colored
scented
that
don't
work
and
I
clean
pick
them
up
and
then
I
have
to
travel
a
long
way
and
put
them
all
in
a
garbage.
Can
but
city
council,
your
rep
said
it's
not
going
to
happen.
It's
not
easy.
I,
don't
know
like
many
of
us
are.
L
L
I
got
trapped
in
Thorn
bushes,
completely,
covering
the
only
clear
sidewalk
on
the
right
side
towards
West
Liberty.
A
policeman
came
used.
His
vest
pushed
back
on
the
bushes
used
his
his
Club
I
had
blood
little
little
pricks
of
blood
everywhere.
All
over
me,
then
I
get
to
West
Liberty
and
there's
Japanese,
not
weed
going
from
there
up
to
Pioneer
can
I
almost
fell
off
the
curb
looked
up
at
the
city
steps.
Those
are
completely
covered.
L
I
did
not
see
one
pair
of
City
steps
on
my
travel
to
more
I
could
not
go
up.
Brookline
Boulevard
from
West
Liberty
on
either
side,
both
sidewalks,
not
passable
cross
through
the
zebra
lines
going
over
to
CVS
and
a
10
10
a
10
inch
pipe
had
no
cover
on
it.
Just
waiting
for
a
little
kid's
leg
to
go
down
into
it.
L
We're
Avenue
towards
the
pool
the
trees
have
made
all
the
cement
slabs
come
up
like
little
teepees
and
Tents,
and
steps
and
going
I
was
there
for
an
hour,
wonderful
pool
completely
Ada
accessible,
but
we
can't
get
there
from
beach
view.
Pedestrians
cannot
get
there
safely.
L
A
Thank
you
next
speaker.
Please,
are
there
any
further
speakers?
If
not
that
takes
us
to
our
standing
committee
agenda,
the
first
Committee
of
the
day
is
financed
and
law,
which
is
cheered
by
myself.
I'm
gonna
ask
Madam
clerk
to
please
read
bills:
1704
through
1711
altogether,
I'm
gonna
ask
members
to
ask
for
a
motion
to
approve
so
I
need
to
amend
two
of
the
bills
before
we
hold
for
a
public
hearing.
B
Bill
1704
excuse
me
resolution
amending
resolution,
7
26
of
2022,
which
reappropriated
federal
American
Rescue
plan
funding
by
updating
the
approved
projects
is
outlined
in
exhibit
a
version
5.
Bill
1705
resolution
amending
resolution,
411
of
2022,
which
authorized
an
amended
agreement
or
agreements
with
the
Ura
of
Pittsburgh
for
the
completion
of
projects
approved
in
the
city
of
Pittsburgh's
American
Rescue
plan
now
decreasing
the
not
to
exceed
amount
by
one
million
dollars
to
71
million
878
711
and
by
aligning
project
lines
accordingly.
1706.
B
Seventy
four
thousand
dollars
reducing
facility
improvements,
Recreation
and
senior
centers
by
one
million
five
hundred
sixty
six
thousand
one
hundred
twenty
one
dollars:
reducing
Information
Systems
modernization
by
183,
879
and
increasing
slope
failure
remediation
by
one
million
nine
hundred,
fifty
four
thousand
nine
hundred
twenty
one
dollars
and
forty
five
cent
Bill
1708
resolution.
Further
mending
resolution
number
723
of
2022,
effective,
December,
19
2022,
as
amended
entitled
resolution
adopting
and
approving
the
2023
capital
budget,
the
2023
community
development
program
and
the
2023
through
2028
Capital
Improvement
program
by
increasing
Capital
Equipment
acquisition
by
907
063.37.
N
Second,
discussion
with
thank
you
thanks,
Mr
chair.
Thank
you,
madam
president,
motion
to
then
amend
Bill
1704
in
1705.
Yes,.
A
Second,
thank
you,
one
is
amending
the
actual
attachment
and
the
other
is
amending
the
actual
Co-op
agreement.
So
1704
shows
you
the
different.
The
line
items
that
are
moving
1705
shows
you
the
actual
Co-op
agreements
that
are
companion
pieces
and
we're
really
moving
Dollars
around
all
the
programs
stay
intact,
but
for
accounting
purposes
of
those
dollars
we
need
to
put
them
in
the
correct
buckets,
and
we
want
to
do
this
now.
So
we
don't
have
to
have
a
second
public
hearing,
because
we're
changing
budget
line
items.
A
A
B
Bill
17
22
resolution
directing
the
Department
of
Finance
and
the
Law
Department
to
produce
deed
restrictions
relative
to
affordable
housing
for
the
publicly
owned
property
and
the
eighth
ward
of
the
city
of
Pittsburgh
designated
in
the
deed
registry
office
of
the
Allegheny
County
as
a
block
and
lot
zero.
Five
zero
zero
five
one
e-00-163000
Council
District
number
seven
motion
to
approve.
A
O
Thank
you
so
you'll
recall
that
when
we
talked
about
our
Pittsburgh
land
bank,
that
I
mentioned
that
in
my
district
I
would
be
wanting
the
land
bank
to
dispose,
especially
for
those
kinds
of
programs
that
are
in
a
program
for
affordable
housing
right.
So
we
had
a
long
discussion
about
whether
city
council
can
direct
the
land
bank
or
not
to
a
specific
end.
O
Buyer
like
a
community
garden,
Steward
who's
been
stewarding
a
garden
for
eight
years,
and
there
was
some
kind
of
back
and
forth
on
that,
but
that
mainly,
we
want
the
land
bank
to
dispose
of
properties
in
a
program
that
Council
directs
it
to
like,
affordable
housing.
And
so
we
also
talked
with
the
solicitor
about
how
that,
as
the
owner
of
a
property,
we
can
add
deed
restrictions,
and
so
this
is
an
effective
experiment.
O
So
this
parcel
in
Bloomfield,
where
a
vacant
lot
is
going
for
close
to
two
hundred
thousand
dollars
on
the
open
market
is
owned
by
the
city
of
Pittsburgh,
and
so
we're
asking
the
Law
Department
to
put
a
restriction
on
the
deed
that
it
be
used
only
for
affordable
housing
like
we
do.
In
a
light
tech
deal
or
like
we
do
in
inclusionary
zoning,
where
there's
a
restriction
on
the
deed
for
what
can
be
done
with
the
properties
and
then
once
that
research
in
some
place,
I
intend
to.
O
M
Just
I
mean
council
president
I'm,
sorry
I
just
want
to
say
mention
that
we
do
have
a
land
bank
hearing
on
July
20th
at
10
A.M
to
discuss
the
tri-party
agreement
and
councilman
gross
and
I
are
working
on
some
amendments.
Thank.
P
The
prime
her
I
guess
I
mean
councilman
gross,
is
the
only
one
that
can
speak
to
the
bill
so
interrogatory.
Yes,
I
didn't
pull
it
up,
but
how's
the
affordable
housing
defined
in
the
the
deed
restriction.
E
P
Q
Thank
you.
You
never
talked
to
councilwoman
gross
about
this
off
off
record
many
times,
and
this
is
great.
This
is
what
government
should
be
doing
to
provide
affordable
housing.
This
doesn't
cost
us
anything.
We
have
all
these
properties.
Hopefully
we
can
work
things
out
with
the
land
bank
as
far
as
how
they
operate,
and
you
know
I
think
it's
a
great
experiment.
If
we
count
how
many
structures
we
have
and
we
can
designate
them
towards
affordable
housing,
then
we're
doing
our
job
and
then
some
without
taking
out
a
70
million
dollar
loan.
R
R
How
do
they
match
up
with
the
land
bank
requirements
for
future
consideration
of
of
sale
and
what
happens
in
either
this
time
in
this
instance
or
in
the
future,
if
the
deed
restrictions
that
might
be
put
into
an
individual
attached
to
an
individual
property
do
not
match
up
to
the
land
bank?
That's
kind
of
my
outstanding
question
here:
interrogatory
or
solicitor,
Kubiak
I,
don't
know
who
can
answer
that
fast.
R
A
Thank
you
any
further
discussion.
If
none
councilman,
Warwick,
sorry
I.
S
I
A
That's
a
legal
question:
I,
don't
believe
I,
don't
believe
we
have
the
ability
to
say
I
want
this
to
go
to
Daniel
right
I,
don't
think
we
can
legally
do
that.
We
can
say
this
has
to
be
four
affordable
housing.
We
can
say
this
has
to
accompany
with
this
deed
restriction,
and
then
the
land
bank
has
to
leave
legally
publicize
that,
and
so
anyone
legal
then
has
a
legal
right
to
a
bid
on
said
property
and
then
there's
a
whole
process
for
which
that
goes
through.
But
we
can.
A
S
M
E
A
So
this
I've
been
asked
to
have
the
solicitor
provided.
C
More
or
less
good
morning,
everyone
yeah,
unfortunately,
no
councilwoman
Warwick.
We
cannot
designate
property
directly
to
it.
Councilman
Lavelle
was
correct.
So
if
we
put
on
the
deed
restrictions
on
things
like
farming,
all
that
kind
of
stuff,
but
then
it's
open
for
a
bid
at
that
piece
and
and
that's
the
process
that
has
to
go
through,
and
that
is
true
whether
the
land
bank
gives
it
away
or
we
give
it
away
like.
There's
not.
The
land
bank
does
have
a
number
of
standards.
C
That
I
think
you
know
further
shrink
the
universe
of
people
that
can
get
properties,
but
but
we
still
ultimately
are
responsible,
as
a
municipal
Corporation,
to
make
sure
that
we're
not
weighing
scan
for
one
person
over
another.
That's
really
not
something
we
can
ever
do
or.
P
I
just
wanted
to
say
that,
like,
although
I'm
supportive
of
this,
you
know
this
is
one
parcel,
and
you
know
the
big
picture
is
to
get
the
tri-party
agreement
in
place,
so
we're
not
just
picking
individual
council
members
or
picking
and
choosing
properties,
so
we
need
to
have
a
more
comprehensive
plan.
That's
what
the
tripod
agreement
being
passed
at
city
council
is
the
most
important
thing
we
could
do.
Probably
this
year.
M
I'm,
just
going
to
say,
I've
never
been
a
fan
of
the
land
bank
I'm
not
going
to
be
a
fan
of
the
land
bank.
I
am
working
with
councilwoman
gross.
To
put
some
amendments,
I
think
that
she's
always
been
trying
to
fight
to
keep
her
area
more
affordable
and
I
know
you're
doing
some
stuff
I
heard
yesterday.
Some
exciting
things
happening
in
your
districts.
M
I
want
to
thank
you
for
your
work
there,
but
when
we
I
don't
want
to
make
a
give
the
impression
to
the
public
that
it's
council
members
picking
and
choosing-
and
it's
just
one
council
member-
we
do
things
as
a
body
and
what
you
do.
What
you
are
doing
is
giving
the
land
bank
board
who's
appointed
generally
by
the
mayor's
office,
more
say
so
you're,
giving
one
person
the
say
over
the
land
versus
a
body
of
of
at
least
five.
M
So
when
you,
when
you
give
those
Impressions
I
just
want
to
be
I
want
to
be
I
want
to
be
very
clear
to
the
public
that,
although
this
mayor
might
do
everything
great
with
the
land,
you
don't
know
who
what's
going
to
happen
down
the
road.
So
for
me,
when
I'm,
cautious
and
a
little
bit
anxious
about
the
land
bank,
that's
why
thank
you,
but
thank
you,
councilman
gross
I'm,
supportive
of
this.
Thank
you.
A
Thank
you
any
further
discussion,
if
none
I'll
also
just
say
very
supportive,
councilwoman
gross
I
think
this
is
a
pretty
Innovative
way
to
do
things.
All
those
in
favor
say.
B
N
To
approve
with
discussion
please
second
and
I
will
defer
discussion
and
have
comment
in
the
future.
Thank.
M
M
But
you've
been
doing
it
a
lot
without
an
assistant
and
I
Just
Want
to
Thank
You,
publicly
for
everything,
you've
done
and
councilman
gross
and
I
are
working
on
some
amendments
before
next
week
and
I
just
had
a
brief
conversation
with
the
mayor's
office
about
the
position
that
my
idea
of
the
position
is.
M
We
have
given
the
pre
the
mayor
in
the
last
budget,
109
positions,
and
there
are
still
some
positions
outstanding
and
I
said:
let's
work
with
him
on
using
one
of
those
positions
for
this
position,
so
that
we're
not
adding
more
to
the
budget
and
I
think
that
makes
sense.
We've
given
a
lot
of
a
lot
of
positions
and
some
of
those
are
still
on
field
and
I.
Think
councilman
gross
when
I
talked
to
director
he's
open
to
the
discussion,
so
I
think
that's
we'll
at
least
have
that
discussion.
M
Over
the
next
week,
and
so
before
next
week,
we'll
have
some
type
of
amendment
on
how
that
should
be
handled
with.
That
said,
I
think
that
overall
I
want
to
thank
the
food
Justice
fund
people
for
coming
to
the
table.
I
want
to
thank
all
the
council
members,
I
say
this
time
and
time
again
we
don't
do
this
as
one
or
two
or
three
people.
M
We
do
this
as
a
body
and
if
it
weren't
for
everyone
here,
this
fund
would
not
even
be
in
place
it
could
it
started
a
long
time
ago
during
the
pandemic,
we
started
putting
legislation
in
about
for
farming
and
different
things,
and
councilman
coghill
and
councilwoman
growth
started
doing
some
additional
things.
Every
member
here
did
something
in
terms
of
food
justice,
but
I
do
want
to
be
very
clear.
This
cannot
be
the
only
way
this
is
funded
for
the
future.
M
We've
got
to
get
some
funding
for
these
types
of
programs
from
our
business
communities
from
other
people
across
this
across
the
region.
Our
budget
director
cringes
every
time.
I
say
we
want
to
do
a
grant,
because
that's
really
not
what
we're
we're
here
to
fund
Paving
and
demo
of
homes,
the
that
are
falling
down
and
dilapidated,
taking
care.
M
And
police
and
trash,
and
all
those
things
that
also
affect
quality
of
life
for
people
and
then,
while
we're
doing
that,
let's
count
on
our
partners
to
help
us
fund
these
programs
in
a
way
that
they
really
should
be
funded
and,
most
importantly,
let's
fund
something
that
gets
food
into
the
homes
of
people.
So
with
that
said,
I
just
want
to
thank
you
all
for
your
work
and
thank
Council
as
a
body
for
their
work
and
and
the
food
Justice
on
folks,
I'm,
supportive
today
and
we'll
vote
to
amendments
next
week.
Thank.
Q
Thank
you,
Mr,
chair
and
I
want
to
start
by
thanking
all
the
food
groups.
When
you
come
down
and
I
see
your
passion
and
I
see
the
interest
and
I
know
I
know
this
money
is
going
to
go
to
good
use.
I
really
do
I.
Myself
have
a
passion
now
and
through
my
work
with
councilwoman
gross
and
the
city
Farms,
you
know
concept
I,
don't
know,
maybe
I
don't
know
quite
what
to
call
it.
Q
But
but
you
know
so:
I've
developed
a
passion,
myself
I've
got
an
orchard
growing
I'm
watching
these
trees
grow
up
to
be,
you
know
so,
and
it
makes
his
own
wine
yeah.
Yes,
it
was
Sunday
yeah,
we're
gonna
need
some
Stompers
if
you're
interested,
but
but
you
know,
and
and
for
the
cause
of
course
you
know
we're
feeding,
people
right
and
and
teaching
people
how
how
to
eat
it's.
Just
all
good,
so
we're
all
in
the
same
area
which
I've
learned
to
love
and
and
I
really
have
seen.
Q
The
Passion
of
the
gardeners,
whether
it's
in
Council,
women's
District
or
or
my
district
people
are
very
passionate
about
it.
So
it's
easy
to
get
people
involved
and-
and
you
know,
just
kind
of
fired
up
to
do
good
things
about
it
and
I'm
count
me
as
one
of
those
people.
Sorry
if
I
was
a
little
overzealous
trying
to
get
one
of
our
projects
funded
or
get
some
of
this
money,
appointed
I
was
I,
think
I
recommended
or
suggested,
but
I
I
love
the
passion
you
bring
for
your
own
projects
and
I.
Q
Just
ask
that
same
passion
when
and
I
want
you
to
be
I
want
to
educate
you
on
what
we're
doing
through
the
city.
I
mean
we
have
a
lot
of
infrastructure
already
in
place
and
large
thanks
to
our
director
Vargas
here
you
know
we
have
a
full-time
employee.
We
have
funding.
We
have
a
lot
of
things
dedicated
to
this
effort,
so
I
think.
O
Thank
you.
I
also
want
to
acknowledge
all
of
the
hard
work
that
so
many
members
of
the
community
who
are
here
in
Chambers
with
us
and
council
members
and
members
of
the
administration
have
had
many
many
meetings
all
together
and
lots
of
discussions
that
get
us
to
today.
And
it's
been
a
couple
of
years.
Work
I'm,
pretty
sure
that
I
first
started
having
this
conversation
the
summer
of
2021,
when
we
were
first
getting
the
American
Rescue
plan,
funds
and
I
just
want
to
acknowledge
I.
O
Don't
think
I
can
add
to
the
stories
that
we've
heard
in
public
testimony
at
the
public
hearing
or
public
comment
here
today
and
other
days
of
council,
that
of
that
kind
of
hard
work
and
Sweat
Equity.
That
people
are
putting
into
solving
food
and
Justice
in
the
city,
either
through
growing
food
or
producing
and
processing
food
or
Distributing
food.
And
we
know,
as
I've
said
this
many
times,
that
of
the
people
who
are
below
the
poverty
line
in
the
city
of
Pittsburgh
or
even
below
the
kind
of
new
metric.
O
That
I
think
is
called
Alice
and
I
can't
remember
the
ACT.
What
all
the
acronym
stands
for
that
in
the
city,
the
people
who
are
struggling
are
70
are
female-headed
households
with
children
in
the
home.
So
we
are
talking
about
our
kids
here
and
I
think
it
is
a
legitimate
investment
and
sure
the
majority
of
our
budget
goes
to
the
kinds
of
nuts
and
bolts
operations
that
keep
the
city
running
on
a
daily
basis,
and
it
goes
to
an
infrastructure,
but
we
make
investments
in
Community
Development
and
we
make
investments
in
Economic,
Development
and
I.
O
Don't
see
how
any
of
the
things
that
we
would
be
doing
here
are
exclusive
of
Economic
and
Community.
Development
I
think
it's
fundamental
that
we
help
our
neighborhoods
our
citizens
and
our
kids
Thrive.
So
I'm
really
excited
about
the
potential
and
I'm
so
grateful
to
the
administration,
the
entire
gaining
Administration
for
being
willing
to
kind
of
start
on
day
one
and,
having
done
so
much
great
preparation
and
I,
really
want
to
thank
director
Vargas,
especially
who
put
in
so
much
of
the
heavy
lifting
and
to
get
us
ready
to
get
started
right
away.
O
N
Give
you
the
opportunity
to
to
make
a
presentation
and
or
at
comment,
as
you
see,
okay,
sure.
T
Thank
you
so
much
first
I
I
just
want
to
say
that
I
appreciate
all
of
the
people
in
the
community
that
have
been
part
of
this
with
me
and
all
the
council
for
being
supportive
of
us
moving
forward
with
the
food
Justice
plan.
You
know
a
couple
things
I'd
like
to
point
out
about
the
plan
that
I
think
are
particularly
exciting
one.
It
sort
of
allows
us
to
to
do
two
things
about
approximately
half.
T
The
money
would
go
towards
what
would
be
considered
Grassroots
community-led
projects,
while
the
other
half
actually
goes
towards
thinking
through
system
level,
investments
in
our
food
Justice.
You
know
in
our
food
system
how
we
can
make
a
transformative
change
with
a
heavy
investment.
I
also
want
to
say
that
recognizing
to
what
council
president
said
about
this,
being
you
know
not
the
full
fund,
we
have
had
robust
conversation
around
how
this
really
kind
of
Sparks
and
establishes
the
work,
but
that
typical
of
other
funds
in
other
cities
as
well.
T
You
know
that
public
investment
transforms
into
into
dollars
that
come
from
the
film
Threat
by
community
and
others
who
get
involved
in
the
work,
and
you
know
if
you
look
at
other
cities
that
has
actually
made
that
transition.
So
that's
absolutely
something
that
you
know
would
be
important
to
this
sort
of
sustainability
of
this
particular
fund
and
I'll.
Just
also
mention
that
there
is
a
portion
of
the
fund,
that
is,
that
involves
the
capacity
to
run
it
well.
T
You
know
recognizing
that
with
arpa
dollars
we
are
on
a
pretty
tight
time
frame,
so
we've
got
two
years
to
allocate
four
years
to
spend
and
that's
you
know
that's
why
the
the
capacity
conversation
is
so
important,
because
you
know
our
ability
to
to
to
do
this
well
and
to
focus
on
it
and
it
kind
of
shows,
like
the
level
of
investment
that
we
have
as
a
city
to
move
this
work
forward.
The
capacity
is
just
as
important
to
that.
So
I'm
excited
about
this
I've
learned
a
lot
about
this
topic.
T
While
the
city
parks
department
has
always
supported
food
issues,
we've
been
more
on
the
the
charitable
giving
side
of
food
with
our
food
programs
office.
T
So
this
has
been
a
bit
of
a
new
topic
for
me,
but
one
that
I
am
extremely
energized
around
I
feel
really
excited
and
appreciative
of
the
support
that
Council
has
and
I'm
ready
to
to
move
forward
and
see
some
good
things
happen
here
and
again,
something
that
I
hope
that
the
rest
of
the
Pittsburgh
Community
can
get
behind
so
that
we
do
have
a
fund
in
the
future
that
is
sustained
by
multiple
partners
who
are
investing
in
this
work.
Thank
you
for
the
opportunity
to
comment.
N
Of
course,
no
thank
you
so
I'm
curious.
This
might
be
a
I,
don't
know,
maybe
an
unfair
question,
or
a
little
bit
too
far
out
there,
but
I'm
just
curious
with
your
expertise
and
experience.
If
you
could
imagine
for
us
what
your
thoughts
are
about,
the
the
future
of
the
food
system
on
a
local
level.
What
where,
where?
Where
do
you
see
us?
Where
do
you
see
us
going
and
where
do
you
see
our
role
as
working
with
larger
providers?
T
Yeah,
so
you
know
the
the
part
of
the
work
that
is
around
putting
larger
dollar
investments
in
Pittsburgh's
food
system
improvements.
You
know,
one
thing
that
I've
definitely
learned
is
that
the
food
system-
there's
everything
from
you-
know
growing
food
producing
food,
getting
food
to
people
consuming
food.
T
The
system
has
all
of
those
pieces
to
it
and
in
the
plan
we
talk
about,
we
haven't
necessarily
picked
out
like
what
those
two
Investments
would
look
like,
specifically
because
we
do
want
to
continue
to
make
this
part
of
a
community
dialogue,
but
there
are
absolutely
opportunities
in
Pitts
in
the
city.
The
city
already
does
some
really
great
work.
You
know
an
example
would
be
the
adopt
a
lot
program
which
does
provide
folks
with
access
to
start
to
grow
food,
but
there's
imperfections
within
all
of
that.
T
So
building
on
something
that
is
existing
or
I
know,
we've
talked
a
lot
about
the
the
like,
not
just
the
growing
piece,
but
also
the
being
able
to
kind
of
get
food
access
to
communities.
So
there's
there's
a
lot
of
opportunity
in
there,
but
it's
purposely
not
defined
in
the
plan
yet
because
we
wanted
to
be
able
to
have
a
more
robust,
Community
dialogue
around
what
those
those
two
kind
of
big
issues
could
be.
N
Weekend
we
could
talk
for
days,
I'm
sure
I,
just
I
would
like
to
have
a
better
understanding
of
of
the
responsibility
of
of
the
the
biggest
among
us
to
provide
for
the
least
Among
Us
right
and
this,
this
continuation
of
the
consolidation
and
moving
more
to
perimeters
of
cities
and
not
understanding
the
obligation
for
the
heart
and
soul
of
that
area
and
and
and
the
the
obligation
that
that
they
have
to
provide,
because
they
have
such
great
capacity.
That
and
and
the
reason
I
bring.
N
That
up
is
that
in
the
you
know,
sort
of
towards
the
beginning
to
the
middle
of
global
pandemic.
We
were
having
really
good
conversations
with
large-scale
providers
of
how
they
could
understand
more
so
their
responsibility
to
Service.
You
know,
historically
or
at
least
as
of
late
historically
underserved
areas
of
the
city
and
there
there
were
some
really
good
conversations
taking
place,
but
they
never
took
root
and
and
that
that
sads
me
I
I
thought
it
was
a
a
sort
of
a
a
restart
moment.
But
it
didn't
turn
out
to
be
so.
T
Yeah
and
I'll
just
also
mention
that
during
the
pandemic,
I
think
it
also
it
showed
the
strength
and
also
the
opportunities
in
our
more
charitable
kind
of
giving
of
food.
We
worked
with
a
number
of
large
Partners
to
make
sure
we
could
get
more
food
out
the
door
to
people
I.
Think
one
of
the
things
that
I've
been
learning
is
that
there
is
also
the
economic
Driver
part
of
the
food
system,
especially
since
we
run
farmers
markets
now,
which
is
another
kind
of
new
thing
under
my
plate.
T
You
know
seeing
the
the
value
of
connecting
local
growing
to
getting
that
into
the
hands
of
individuals
who
otherwise
might
not
get
fresh
fruit
and
produce
right
in
their
Community.
We
also
work
with
just
Harvest
to
make
sure
that
that
happens
with
you
know
utilizing
the
SNAP
benefits
at
the
farmer's
market.
T
So
all
of
those
things
play
a
role
in
making
sure
that
it's
not
it's
both
getting
as
much
food
to
families
that
need
them
in
communities
that
need
it
and
then
also
driving
an
economic,
a
sustainable
system
around
the
the
food
system.
That
allows
people
to
really
be
empowered
to
be
part
of
that
and
connecting
those
in
a
local
way
where
really
communities
can
kind
of
Drive
their
own.
Their
own
access
to.
N
Fresh
fruits,
the
longer
I'm
here,
the
more
I
understand
the
wisdom
of
things:
you're
not
either
or
they're,
always
and
both
and
and
that
there's
always
room
for
multiple
Avenues.
You
know
of
solution,
so
I
appreciate
everything
that
you've
done.
I
appreciate
the
council
too,
and
I
appreciate
you
being
here
this
morning
and
everyone
who
came
out
to
speak
and
and
to
petition
the
council's
approval
and
I'm
sure
we'll
have
the
vote
today
and
I'll
certainly
be
voting
in
the
affirmative.
So
thank
you
appreciate.
U
E
U
Q
I
I
really
just
want
to
thank
you
for
your.
Your
openness
and
your
willingness
to
have
myself
and
councilwoman
grow
sit
down
with
your
hires
as
far
as
the
food
program
goes
and
City
farms
and
things
of
that
nature
and
I.
Think
you're,
probably
finding
out
that
I
found
out
the
energy
in
this
space
is
really
great.
You
know
you're
not
short
of
people
who
want
to
be
involved
and
are
passionate
about
it.
So
that's
what
makes
it
really
so
so
good
I
think,
but
but
no
I
just
wanted
to.
Q
Thank
you,
for
you
know
always
lending
us.
Your
air
and
being
involved
and
jumping
right
in
with
us
I
felt
so
I
really
appreciate
that
and
we're
working
on
that
Chuck
for
you,
okay,
which
I
think
you
desperately
need
and
at
the
same
time,
I
want
to
make
sure
that
if
we
have
any
trouble
spending
this
money,
I
have
a
two
Acre
Farm
I.
Don't
know
if
I
mentioned
that
that
we
could
throw
this
behind
all
right,
so
so
you're
all
invited
we're
all
going
to
go
there.
Okay,
we're
going
to
go
there
again.
Q
Most
of
us
have
been
there
already
so,
okay,
but
no
thanks
I
just
want
to
really
thank
you
for
your
work.
B
E
M
E
M
M
Want
to
delete
the
ones
for
the
five
thousand
dollar
donations:
it's
Trinity
Amy
Hope,
For,
Tomorrow
Save,
a
Life
Today
Westwood
Oakland
we're
going
to
do
that
in
a
different
form.
A
M
M
M
A
N
Motion
to
wave
worlds
Mr
chair,
thank.
O
A
M
R
A
B
Bill
1683
resolution
authorizing
the
mayor
and
the
director
of
Public
Works,
on
behalf
of
the
city
of
Pittsburgh,
to
enter
into
an
agreement
or
agreements
with
the
center
for
employment
opportunities
to
Grant
a
license
to
enter
onto
certain
city-owned
Parcels
for
the
purpose
of
performing
certain
work,
including
maintenance
and
beautification
services
that
fall
outside
the
regular
work
assigned
to
city
employees
at
no
cost
to
the
city.
Please.
M
N
No,
it's
it's
the
importance
of
electronic
waste
recycling,
and
so-
and
this
really
was
the
the
birth
thing
of
you-
know.
The
idea
by
Council
president
Smith
huge
huge,
huge
supporter
of
our
responsibility
to
responsibly
recycle
electronic
waste,
and
so
big
supporter
of
this
I
just
really
like
to
hear
your
thoughts
about
it
and
how
we
can
do
this
better
and
I
have
some
ideas
too.
Oh.
V
Absolutely
Chris
hornstein
director
of
Public
Works.
You
know
so
this
program
provides
us
access
to
a
vendor
who
takes
the
waste.
V
Pennsylvania,
yes,
you
know
in
accordance
with
state
law.
The
drop-off
point
is
down
in
the
Strip
District,
that's
subsidized
by
residents
subsidized
to
Residents,
based
on
weight
and
material.
So
it's
very
popular
as
also
part
of
this
service
that
they
provide.
They
also
do
some
community
outreach,
so
they
do
go
into
neighborhoods
to
try
to
gather
materials.
W
I,
don't
have
much
to
add
other
than
I
agree
with.
What's
been
already
stated
about
the
importance
of
providing
this
service
and
I'll
just
note
as
I
have
the
pleasure
to
sit
on
the
executive
Committee
of
connect,
the
Congress
of
neighboring
municipalities
and
a
constant
topic
of
conversation
at
that
table,
which
includes
the
city
but
also
some
of
our
inner
ring.
W
Suburban
municipality
neighbors
is
around
waste
management
and
the
fact
that
you
know
Pittsburgh
is
is
unique
in
operating
our
own
Environmental
Services
Bureau
and
offering
these
kinds
of
services
in
a
way
that
others
have
struggled
mightily
in
recent
years.
Those
who
contract
that
out
to
private
providers
in
reducing
the
types
of
materials
that
can
be
recycled
most
of
them
don't
collect
glass
for
recycling
anymore.
W
We
of
course,
still
do
and,
and
many
of
them
are
experiencing
runaway
costs
in
that
space,
whereas
we've
certainly
incurred
cost
increases,
as
the
cost
of
operating
our
Bureau
has
gone
up,
but
nothing
in
close
to
comparable
to
what
they're
experiencing
with
those
contracts.
So
I
think
that
I
bring
that
up,
just
as
a
bigger
picture
way
to
say
that
the
way
in
which
we
operate
and
manage
our
own
Environmental
Services
offering
to
City
residents,
is
really
highly
valuable.
W
I
give
a
great
deal
of
credit
to
director,
hornstein
and
superintendent
Weigel
for
for
doing
that,
and
well
not
well
this.
This
engagement
with
the
Pennsylvania
Resources
Council
is
not
something
that
we
fully
manage
in-house.
It's
something
we
can
do
because
we
operate
this
part
of
our
basic
Services
ourselves
rather
than
Contracting
it
out.
So
I'm
excited
about
this
renewal
and
I'm
excited
in
general
in
the
ways
in
which
we're
able
to
meet
City
residents
needs
with
our
Environmental
Services
Program.
So.
N
I
have
a
Litany
of
questions
and
I,
don't
think
they're
in
any
order
of
importance,
they're,
just
lots
of
ideas
that
are
bouncing
around
and
in
my
head
in
terms
of
our
own
responsibility
as
the
city.
How
do
we
ensure
that
we're
managing
and
recycling
our
electronic
waste?
As
we
reinvent
you
know
our?
You
know
the
needs
for
our
different
digital
devices
and
those
kinds
of
things.
Do
we
have
a?
We
have
a
a
a
sound
system
in
place.
V
E
E
N
The
years
which
I
guess
there's
some
advantage
to
that
another
thing
that
comes
to
mind
and
not
to
minimize
this
in
any
way,
but
most
of
us,
if
not
all
of
us,
have
wrestled
with
TVs
being
tossed
on
the
sidewalk
and
having
to
come
out
and
pick
them
up.
It
seems
to
be
like
we're
coming
to
the
end
of
those
big
old
monster,
TVs
that
they
have
finally
kind
of
cycled
out
and
we
I
it's
been
quite
a
while
since
I've
got
a
call
to
say:
oh,
you
know
huge
TV
over
Hillside.
V
N
Do
a
combination
of
of
you
know
a
a
bunch
of
different
things
happening
all
at
the
same
time.
I
hope,
there's
a
level
of
increased
understanding
of
individual
responsibility
to
manage.
You
know
our
waste,
especially
electronic
waste,
which
oftentimes
contains
Mercury,
which
then
can
you
know,
certainly
you
know,
do
do
greater
harm.
There's
a
there's,
a
I'm
going
to
plug
another.
N
You
know
entity,
that's
on
the
South
Side
called
e-cycle
24th
and
Mary
Street
and
they're
they're,
just
amazing
there,
they're
they're,
so
cooperative
and
anytime
I
have
a
question
about.
Is
this
possibly
recyclable
in
some
way
I'll
run
by
and
nine
times
out
of
ten
they're
like
you
absolutely
will
accept
that
we'll
take
it
and
and
we'll
recycle
it,
regardless
of
you
know
of
what
that
may
be.
E
N
To
take
this
too
far
off
I'm,
not
gonna,
I'm
I'll,
keep
it
tailored,
but
in
terms
of
other
hard
to
recycle
waste
paint
those
kinds
of
things.
How?
How
are
we
set
systematically
here
in
the
city
to
I
know
we
do
collections
of
those
and
I
believe
there's
a
cost
Associated
a
minor
cost
Associated.
But
could
you
talk
a
little
bit
about
those
kinds
of
items
and
what
we
do
to
to
help
recycle
that
as
well
yeah.
V
Well,
yes,
it
will
cover
the
paint.
It
will
cover
the
things
that
are
not
not
necessarily
electronic
but
that
are
still
regulated
by
the
state,
and
so
we
do
those
in
the
same
manner.
You
know
we
will
have
events
in
the
community.
We
will.
There
is
the
drop-off
site
located
on
the
Strip
District.
It
does
come
with
a
nominal
fee
by
weight,
but
I
think
it's
pretty
reasonable.
It
makes
it
pretty
accessible
for
folks.
V
Oh
absolutely
we
can,
if
you'd
like
offline
I,
can
certainly
get
you
current
statistics
on
how
much
has
been
collected
or
the
various
types
of
waste
that
they
they
serve.
Yeah
yeah.
N
W
Think
that's
a
great
idea
and
and
certainly
something
that
we
could.
We
could
do
a
broader
push
around.
In
fact,
it
might
be
very
timely
with
the
renewal
of
this
engagement
should
it
be
approved
that
that
would
be
a
great
time
to
to
do
another
round
of
communication,
broadly
across
All
Kinds
of
Kinds
of
platforms
to
share
that
information.
Certainly
I
know
that
information
about
this
offering
is
sent
out
to
City
residents
annually
with
the
Environmental
Services
sort.
W
So
when
we
in
the
same
way
in
which
we
tell
people
about
when
to
put
their
garbage
out
when
they're
Recycling
and
when
the
you
know
bulk
yard
waste
collections
will
occur
information
about,
if
not
all
the
events,
because
they
might
not
all
be
scheduled
at
that
time.
Certainly
the
Strip
District
location
is
shared
there,
but
we
can
absolutely
make
sure
that
that's
disseminated.
N
N
Great
idea,
yeah
I,
appreciate
that.
Thank
you
just
one
last
question.
You
know
my
trash
goes
out.
Wednesday
for
Thursday,
I
love
when
I
come
out
on
Thursday
and
I,
just
see
hundreds
and
hundreds
and
hundreds
of
blue
bins
out
there
that
people
are
understanding
their
responsibility
to
recycle
has
the
fact
that
we
distributed
containers.
Do
you
have
a
sense
that
that
has
increased
the
amount
of
recyclables
that
we
are
collecting
I.
W
V
V
Point
that's
correct:
yeah
I
mean
we
do
have
some
outstanding
neighborhoods
that
are
awaiting
their
cans.
That
has
to
do
with.
You
know
a
hiccup
in
the
manufacturing
process.
We're
working
with
the
vendor
on
that,
but
we're
very,
very
close.
I
want
to
say
we're
like
95
percent
of
residents
are
covered
in
terms
of
having
recycling
can
and.
E
N
People
are
using
them,
people
are
you
using
them,
so
I
I
don't
want
to
end
this
on
it
on
a
donor
by
any
means,
but
I'm
just
curious
being
that
we
are
doing
everything
that
we
can
do
to
make
certain
that
we
are
collecting
our
recyclables
in
a
responsible
manner.
What's
the
market
look
like
out
there
is
it
do
we
you
know,
are
they
being
purchased?
Do
we
is
there?
Is
there
a
market
for
the
recyclables
that
we're
collecting?
Do
you
feel
good
about
it?.
E
V
T
V
N
Know,
there's
there's
a
a
documentary
on
PBS
and
you
can
simply
get
it
online
by
going
to
PBS
called
plastic
Wars
I,
don't
know
if
you've
ever
witnessed
it,
but
it
will
completely
change
your
your
thought
process
around
our
personal
responsibility
to
manage
our
waste.
It's
just
staggering
the
amount
of
plastic
that
we
have
polluted
this
planet
with
and.
W
I
W
Them
and
that
we
continue
to
offer
that
service
it
is.
It
is
true,
unfortunately,
that,
as
you
work
your
way
up
kind
of
the
stream
in
that
market,
there
are
some
times
points
in
which
it
breaks
down,
but
that
doesn't
change
the
fact
that
as
an
individual
or
a
consumer
that
it
would
all,
it
would
automatically
end
up
in
a
landfill
without
question.
If
you
didn't
separate.
N
W
C
W
Percent
efficient
process
once
we
get
into
the
international
market
for
materials,
but
that
you're
guaranteeing
that
none
of
your
waste
will
be
properly
treated.
If
you
don't
separate
it
yourself,
so
that's
a
really
important
thing
that
folks
can
take
away
from
this
conversation.
N
There's
a
wonderful
spiritual
teacher
named
Louise,
Hay,
Louise
Hay,
says
heal
yourself,
Heal
the
World,
it's
just
all
about
our
personal
responsibility.
What
we
do
at
that
moment
in
time
to
ensure
that
we
are
doing
what
we
are
responsible
to
do.
It's
a
good
conversation.
I
really
appreciate
you
coming
here
to
to
share
and
thank
you
Mr
chair.
M
Thank
you
president.
Thank
you.
Thank
you.
I
just
want
to
first.
Thank
you
for
for
doing
this.
This
is,
it
is
something
that's
really
been
an
interest
to
me
for
a
long
time
and
it's
something
I
actually
did
with
Dan
Gilman
when
he
was
here,
and
they
came
up
with
that
other
program,
but
that
didn't
work
right
that
that
one-
and
so
this
is
why
we're
going
with
this
company
now
is.
V
That
correct
that's
correct!
Yes,
that
the
previous
provider
of
the
service
unfortunately
had
Financial
struggles
is.
M
That
what
it
was
I
knew
where
there
was
something
I
didn't
know
what
it
was.
I
wasn't
even
sure
how
they
were
selected,
but
but
I
just
do
want
to
say
that
I
think
that
overall
we
need
to
do
a
little
bit.
M
A
few
other
things
like
I
would
like
to
see
us
incentivize
businesses
to
stop
using
styrofoam
and
Plastics,
and
things
like
that
for
businesses
that
are
willing
to
work
with
us
to
do
some
incentives,
but
I
also
think
it
would
be
great
to
have
dumpsters
like
in
the
communities
and
the
the
collections
more
often
than
you
know
once
or
twice
a
year,
because
you
see
some
of
the
neighbors.
M
They
started
a
program
with
kids,
where
kids
paint
trash
cans,
and
then
somebody
adopts
the
trash
cans
from
the
community,
and
then
they
they
collect
garbage
all
over
the
area
to
try
to
minimize
what's
happening
on
the
hillside,
because
the
hilt,
because
when
people
are
throwing
TVs
on
the
hillside
and
other
things
it
also
create,
it
could
cause
landslides,
which
is
another
issue
that
we're
struggling
with
in
our
area.
So
I
just
think
it's
the
domino
effect
of
just
let's
get
it
up
and
give
them
a
good
way
to
get
rid
of
it.
M
First,
when
I
go
to
my
mother,
she
lives
in
Scott
Township.
Now
she
used
to
live
on
Fifth
Avenue
when
I
when
I
go
there.
It
looks
like
so
clean
the
whole
way
and
it's
trash
day.
I
mean
you
just
cannot
even
believe
it's
trash
day,
but
they
have
vehicles
that
have
an
arm.
They
still
have
two
drivers,
so
they're,
not
minimizing
any
jobs
and
kudos
to
our
DPW
to
our
our
employees
that
are
doing
the
trash
collection
across
the
city
because
they
helped
us
through
the
pandemic
and
through
some
very
difficult
times.
M
When
nobody
else
wanted
to
be
out
there,
they
were
doing
the
job
and
I
so
I
just
want
to
say.
We
are
really
fortunate
to
have
the
amazing
cruise
that
we
have,
but
I
think
that
would
be
helpful
to
give
them
the
tools
that
they
need.
It'd,
be
great
to
have
one
of
the
trucks
that
picks
the
trash
cans
up
and
dumps
it
in
it
would
be
great
to
have,
and
the
city
I
mean
there's
nothing
left
after
that.
There's
nothing
left
behind
the
streets.
M
I
mean
are
perfectly
clean,
but
what
I
always
keep
advocating
for?
Is
they
used
to
have
a
hokey
man
where
who's
come
behind
and
clean
up
the
trash
after
the
trash
man?
And
so
it
shouldn't
be
that
because
neighborhoods
have
rental
properties
or
abandoned
properties,
the
trash
is
just
left
in
Alleyways
or
whatever
for
us
to
clean
up
hundreds
of
tons
of
debris.
We
should
have
some
way
to
help
clean
up
that
stuff.
That's
that's
on
the
talking
about
trash
and
then
watch
Chris
Potter.
What
is.
E
M
I
just
want
to
say
I
just
think,
I
would
love
to
be
able
to
give
you
more
tools
and
more
help,
but
this
is
one
of
those
things.
Those
trucks
are
so
expensive
and
it
would
be
great
to
get
somebody
to
help
us
get
make
the
initial
purchases
and
then
continue
to
keep
our
trash
collection
in
the
public
control
so
that
never
becomes
privatized
but
it'd
be
great
to
have
the
help
getting
to
a
place
where
we
can
do
a
better
job
for
the
public.
W
If
I
could
just
address
the
last
question,
first
I
I
think
that
there's
there's
no
one
around
this
table
or
in
this
building.
Who
has
any
intention
of
Outsourcing
that
work
and
we're.
I
W
Have
that
as
an
internal
function
of
city,
government
and
I
think
for
reasons
I
mentioned
earlier,
it
has
great
value
to
the
resident
that
it
is
something
that
the
city
provides.
I,
don't
know.
If
you
want
to
talk
about
the
equipment
question
there,
that's
not
necessarily
as
easy
to
implement
in
an
urban
environment
as
it
is
in
Suburban
communities,
but
directory.
V
Yeah
I
think
you
know
certainly
something
we're
always
exploring
new
technologies
that
it
relates
to
our
vehicles
and
how
we
can
like
improve
efficiency
in
the
collection
and
improve
the
safety
for
our
employees,
who
are
out
in
the
street
and
it's
extremely
dangerous
job.
I.
Don't
think
people
really
realize
quite
how
dangerous
it
is
so
I
give
our
employees
who
are
working,
Environmental,
Services,
doing
collection
every
day.
A
lot
of
credit.
V
That
yeah-
and
they
are
you,
know
just
to
remind
folks-
I
mean
they're
out
there.
You
know
rain
shine
snow,
you
know
collecting
everyone's
trash
for
the
benefit
of
the
public,
and
that
does
you
know,
takes
a
toll
and
it
takes
a
wear.
So
we're
extremely
appreciative
of
their
efforts.
V
You
know
the
difficulty
with
the
vehicle
with
the
arm
has
to
do
with
in
a
lot
of
City
neighborhoods
Nearness
of
the
street,
along
with
on
on
street
parking.
It
just
makes
it.
You
know
impractable,
if
not
impossible,
to
guarantee
that
we.
V
There
are
some
streets
that
could
make
sense,
which
is
why
we're
always
kind
of
exploring
our
different
Alternatives
and
how
we
can
do
collection,
but
but
certainly
a
majority
of
the
streets
with
on-street
parking,
make
it
almost
impossible
to
utilize
that
CityWalk.
M
Can
I
ask
you
what
it
would
take
for
us
to
do
the
dumpster
collections?
If
we
wanted
to
do
one
per
neighborhood,
you
know
90
neighbor.
If
we
wanted
to
do
one
per
neighborhood
a
year,
what
would
that
take?
What
would
the
class
be?
Could
you
do
you
have
any
idea
what
that.
V
E
V
V
M
So
I
just
want
to
ask
you
to
please
look
into
that,
because
that
that
and
having
somebody
going
behind
the
vehicles
to
clean
them
up
until
we
get
to
figure
out
a
way
to
make
this
a
little
bit
better
for
the
public,
because
I
think
we
do
an
amazing
job
and
I
do
want
to
say.
We
do
an
amazing
job
with
the
taxes
that
we
have
and
the
boroughs
they
also
pay
for
their.
M
M
But
I
know
it
is
because
I
like
the
schools
where
they
go
to
school
and
then
in
the
North
Hills,
so
like
their
schools.
My
family's
in
you
know
well
my
sister
and
daughter
in
North
Hills
and
North
Allegheny
School
Districts,
and
it's
amazing
what
you
see
them
doing
for
the
kids
there,
and
it
actually
makes
me
sad
sometimes
for
what
our
kids
don't
have.
Sometimes
so
all
right,
but
that's
I'm,
gonna
shut
up
right
now
before
I
start
getting
more
letters
and
stuff.
Thank
you.
Everyone.
O
Thank
you
appreciate
it
I
think
a
lot
of
members
have
covered
a
lot
on
the
topic,
but
I
just
wanted
to
come
back
to
the
question
of
the
kind
of
heavy
metals
that
we're
now
concerned
about
right
increasingly
in
the
electronics
and
maybe
expand
a
little
bit
about
that.
So
it's
not
just
that
the
TV
evolved
when
it
was
a
tube
TV.
O
It
didn't
have
the
kind
of
rare
earth
minerals
in
it
and
it
was
just
you
know,
garbage
on
the
hillside,
which
is
bad,
but
now
that
there's
there's
really
actually
very
dangerous
contamination
that
leeches
from
electronics.
And
so
can
you
speak
a
little
bit
about
briefly
I
know:
we've
gone
on
for
a
long
time
about
this
specific
way
that
we're
recycling
it
and
maybe
touch
a
little
bit
about
kind
of
like
what
the
vendors
that
PRC
is
using
and
how
they're
being
handled
safely.
V
Well,
I,
you
know
we,
we
rely
on
PRC
to
collect
the
materials
and
to
work
with
permanent
entities
by
the
state
and
the
and
the
federal
government,
depending
on
the
waste
stream,
so
everyone
that
they
utilize
in
terms
of
their
recycling
effort
will
be.
You
know
certified
to
handle
that
waste
and
we'll
responsibly
do
that
in
accordance
with
state
law
and
federal
laws
as
applicable
to
the
waste
stream,
and
so
really
it
is
for
us,
like
the
absolutely
like
most
responsible
way,
it's
not
something
that
we
could
do
internally.
V
It's
not
something
that
it
would
be.
You
know
there's
just
not
that
many
people
that
actually
perform
that
service,
as
of
yet
in
terms
of
the
electronic
waste
recycling
and
to
your
point
extremely
important,
because
the
newer
devices,
the
newer
technology
over
the
last
two
decades,
a
lot
of
rare
earth.
Minerals
are
part
of
those
not
naturally
found.
O
Toxic
carcinogenic,
you
know
lithium,
cadmium,
Mercury,
lead
and
that
are
part
of
the
kind
of
new
battery
powered
electrification
and
is
problematic
right,
and
so
we
know
I've
done
a
little
bit
of
reading
this.
There
are
new
mines
internationally,
but
Mining
and
even
nationally
mining.
For
these
minerals,
it's
creating
an
entire
new
extractive
economy.
That
is
bad
for
the
planet
in
itself
and
that
I
believe
that
the
federal
government
is
starting
to
provide
some
funding
for
the
recovery
of
those
minerals
from
our
recycled
electronic.
W
Waste
right
so
I
was
going
to
make
a
similar
Point
council
president
by
their
name,
Rare
Earth,
minimal
minerals.
They
are,
by
definition,
also
very
rare
right,
and
so
when
they,
in
addition
to
being
extremely
concerning
environmental
risks,
if
they
find
their
way
into
the
waste
stream
improperly,
the
Environmental
impacts
of
extracting
them
are
very
high,
and
so
it's
it's
critical
right
that
they
be
to
the
greatest
exam
possible
recycled.
W
Rather
than
disposed
of,
so
that
we
can
globally
minimize
to
the
extent
possible
the
amount
of
additional
extraction
that's
necessary
to
meet
Demand
right.
So
for
every
you
know,
phone
with
a
lithium
battery
that
is
no
longer
usable,
but
where
that
lithium
can
be
reused
in
the
creation
of
a
new
battery,
we
don't
have
to
mine
that
we
Humanity
doesn't
have
to
mind
that
amount
of
lithium
right.
O
P
Thank
you,
Mr
chair,
so
I
recently
cleaned
out
a
family
member's
home
and
and
had
the
experience
of
finding
a
lot
of
different
stuff.
P
Let's
say:
yeah
missed
the
joke.
I'm
sitting
here,
don't
know.
What's
going
on
so
I'm
gonna
continue
so
the
yeah.
So
in
that
experience
there
was
a
bunch
of
the
stuff.
That's
I'm,
looking
at
the
website
right
now
for
the
household
chemical
recycling
for
the
City
of
Pittsburgh
residents.
That's
what
we're
talking
about
so
you're
looking
to
expand
the
program
continuation
so
that
we
continue
on
a
bi-monthly
basis.
Yes,
I
found
a
very
like
I.
Have
it
I'm
just
I?
P
Multiple
different,
you
know:
I
got
in
touch
with
PRC
and
there's
a
bunch
of
different
events
that
they
have
like
Monroeville,
that's
the
next
one.
It's
on
the
19th
I
think
so
I
can
probably
round
it
off
and
take
it
there.
But.
V
Not
seeing
that
available
as
an
option,
if
it's
not
on
our
website,
then
we
should
look
at
that
and
make
sure
we
correct
that.
So
we
have
the
correct
information
up
there.
Yes,
there
are
times
I
believe
it's
between
Saturdays
on
between
11
and
2.,
for
daily
drop
off
down
at
the
recycling
center
Saturday's.
P
P
V
P
Okay
and
then
so
I'm,
just
not
educated
enough
to
know
where
this
falls
into
maybe
Sean
wagon
last
instance,
but
there
were
some
other
stuff
that
in
the
basement
that
I
couldn't
figure
out.
So,
for
instance,
one
was
a
cordless
lawnmower.
W
I
mean
I
I
believe
that
if
it's,
you
know
a
battery
powered
device,
then
It
ultimately
could
be
recycled
through
this.
S
S
S
And
what
what
percentage
of
the
program
kind
of
depends
on
on
these
fees
that
residents
are
paying
when
they,
when
they
drop
some
I
mean
like?
Is
that
with
that
you
see
what
I'm
do
you
see
what
I'm
asking
like.
E
V
V
S
I
mean
I'm
asking
because
I
mean
I.
Think
it's
it's
sort
of
obvious
right
is
yes,
if
you're
a
conscientious
person,
you
know
I
mean,
as
we
can
see
like,
with
the
blue
bins
on
a
mass
scale.
If
you
really
want
to
effectively
right
you,
you
make
it
easy
and
you
make
it
and
I.
E
S
I
S
Actually
pay
people
to
do
it,
then
you
really
get
people
recycling
it
right,
like
you
actually
have
so
I
mean
if
there
was
a
way
to
kind
of
flip
it
where
we
were
actually
because
you
know
when
you
have
something,
for
example,
all
the
way
in
the
Strip
District
and
you
have
communities,
people
don't
have
vehicles,
you
know,
even
even
having
events
from
time
to
time
obviously
makes
I.
I
mean
I,
know
that
it's
that's
something
that
we'd
like
to
do
I'm
sure,
but
anyway,
to
kind
of
move
in
that
direction.
S
Even
if
there
was
some
like
an
income
based
I
mean
I
I
feel
like
if
you
were
paying
people
to
I
mean
I'm
thinking
like
I
mean
I
just
cleaned
out.
My
basement
I
mean
we're
talking,
I
mean
think
of
like
how
many
cell
phone
you
know
a
family
with
a
few
kids
I
mean
how
many
cell
phones
do
you
have,
and
it's
just
I
mean
to
toss
a
cell
phone
in
the
garbage
is
so
easy.
W
To
totally
understand
your
point,
right
I
mean
the
the
I
think
I
think
everyone
would
agree
that
the
to
your
point
about
making
it
as
easy
as
possible.
W
You
know,
curbside
collection
is
the
kind
of
gold
standard
in
that,
and
yet
it's
not
possible
to
manage
some
of
these
very
specific
and
and
particularly
regulated
materials
in
that
way,
right.
E
W
At
I
think
the
city
is,
as
I
was
saying,
ahead
of
the
curve
regionally
and
still
having
a
pretty
broad
single
stream
recycling
program
when
others
have
eliminated
a
lot
of
materials
that
they
collect.
That
way,
these
types
of
things
are
just
not
practical
to
collect
in
that
fashion.
We'd
have
to
have
you
know,
seven
to
ten
trucks,
go
down
the
street
to
pick
up
all
the
different
things
and
keep.
W
Don't
mean
you
were
proposing
that
I'm
just
sort
of
laying
out
kind
of
the
spectrum
right,
and
so
so
from
there
we
for
these
types
of
things,
it
is
somewhat
necessary
for
it
to
not
be
a
point
of
you
know
a
on
Street
collection,
but
for
folks
to
get
it
to
a
location.
I
think
we'd
welcome
opportunities
to
make
that
more
accessible.
W
It's
somewhat
contingent
upon
the
capacity
of
the
provider
right
I
mean
we
we're
Reliant,
also
on
prc's
capacity
for
the
hosting
of
events
and
how
many
they
can
have
and
where,
as
well
as
you
know,
our
own
capacity
to
to
manage
the
program.
I
I
hear
you
loud
and
clear
on
the
cost.
I
do
think
that
the
fees
are
reasonable
and
pretty
much
consistent
with
PRC
and
others
who
do
this
model
across
the
Commonwealth.
S
S
S
Right
I
mean
I'm,
just
sort
of
trying
to
figure
out
like
how
much
would
it
cost
ultimately
to
I
mean
it
would
be
nice
just
to
know
like
how
much
would
it
cost
to
let
people
drop
off
their
E-Waste
for
free
and
how
much
would
it
cost
to
actually
pay
people
to
come
and
drop
off?
I
mean
I
know
that
it's
not.
It
would
just
be
something
I.
W
Of
back
of
the
envelope
calculation,
if
you
were
to
double
the
cost
associated
with
today's
authorization,
that
would
fully
subsidize
the
fee.
W
Unless
I
misunderstanding,
we
can
follow
up
afterwards
to
confirm
this,
but
but
to
the
best
of
my
knowledge,
the
amount
associated
with
this
agreement
covers
the
city's
contribution
towards
the
processing,
and
then
the
users
contribute
the
contribution
via
the
fee
makes
up
the
other
half,
so
the
other
costs
are
are
already
borne
by
us.
So
no
I
think
doubling
that
amount
would
would
reflect
full
payment
for
the
full
cost
of
the
program.
S
F
E
S
For
the
but
I
just
have
a
feeling
that
there
aren't,
as
many
I
mean
there,
may
be
lots
of
E-Waste
being
recycled
and
that's
great
and
it's
so
nice
that
there
are
so
many
people
but
I'm
sure,
there's
lots
of
e-wast
that
also
isn't
being
recycled
and
whether
it's
being
thrown
over
a
hillside
or
just
tossed
in
the
garbage.
Because
these
devices
are
smaller
and
smaller.
S
W
E
W
Today,
I
will
just
note
that
for
for
devices
as
small
as
cell
phones-
it's
not
part
of
our
program,
but
there
are.
There
are
many
free
ways
to
recycle
those
in
a
appropriate
manner.
There
are
not
insignificant
number
of
businesses.
I
happen
to
know
that,
like
all
Target
locations,
just
as
an
example
have
a
place
where
you
can
sort
of
just
drop
one
into
a
bin,
you
don't
pay
for
that.
It's.
E
W
Enough
that
they
can
process
it,
so
you
can
do
that
for
free.
It's
really
larger
items
that
you
can't
take
there,
that
we're
hoping
I
mean
not
to
say
that
if
someone
came
in
with
a
bag
of
five
old
cell
phones,
we
wouldn't
take
them,
but
but
there
are
other
ways
folks
can
dispose
of
those
think
more
TVs
cans
of
unused
paint.
You
know
bigger
items,
you
know,
as
councilman
Wilson
was
asking
something
with
a
large
battery
that.
E
V
Probably
the
thing
I
would
also
add
there,
too,
is
that
you
know
certainly
something
we
can
explore
in
future
contracts
increasing
the
frequency
which
they're
providing
the
service.
One
of
the
limitations
for
us
is,
you
know
we
as
the
city
at
our
Environmental
Services
location,
where
the
recycling
pickup
is
we're
not
certified
the
whole,
the
Hazardous
Waste
for
any
amount
of
time.
So
you
know
the
resource.
Resources
Council
is
literally
like
when,
when
people
drop
it
off
at
the
end
of
their
pickup
they're,
literally
taking
it
away
to
their
appropriate
location
and.
W
V
That
also,
you
know,
provides
I
think,
and
it
would
be
extremely
difficult
for
us
to
achieve
that
certification,
if
not
impossible,
and
so
you
know
that
that
gives
us
something
else
to
contemplate
when
we
go
to
when
we
look
at
this
in
the
future.
In
terms
of
you
know,
increasing
the
opportunity
for
folks
to
participate,
making
a
little
bit
easier,
addressing
the
accessibility
question.
S
It
it
for
now,
anyway,
I'd
be
happy
to
help
promote
this
through
the
community
groups
and
that
kind
of
thing,
and
even
even
just
smaller
ways.
Just
you
know
in
general,
the
E-Waste,
Recycling
and
hazardous
materials.
So
thanks.
V
Oh
no,
this
is
a.
This
is
a
term
in
the
contract.
It
was
part
of
the
when
we
competitively
bid
this
via
RFP
I
want
to
say
2021.
It
included
the
option
year.
This
is.
W
W
And-
and
this
question
has
come
up
not
infrequently
recently
so
just
very
briefly:
typically,
we
negotiate
contracts
with
an
initial
period
and
an
optional
extension
period,
and
we
do
that
usually
with
the
presumption
that
we'll
take
advantage
of
the
extensions,
but
that
that
gives
us
an
opportunity
if
the
vendor
is
not
performing
to
exit
earlier
right.
So,
instead
of
signing
a
three-year
contract,
we'll
sign
a
two-year
contract
with
a
one-year
extension.
W
It
would
be
Our
intention
from
the
outset
to
utilize
all
three
years,
but
if
they've
failed
to
perform,
which
is
not
the
case
here
then
we'll
ask
your
authorization
to
extend
and
then
at
the
end
of
the
contract,
we'll
rebid.
So
it's
it's
a
it's
a
protection
actually
for
the
city
in
the
event
that
someone
we
select
does
not
perform
rather
than
us,
avoiding
an
opportunity
to
put
it
back
to
Market
good.
P
Thank
you,
Mr,
chair,
I,
just
didn't
know,
is
there
so
there
I
just
want
to
say
there
are
opportunities
out
there
where
we
charge
there
are
opportunities,
recycle
or
dispose
of
properly
that
are
free,
whereas
we
that
are
out
there
that
but
we
charge
to
take
that
in
and
I
understand
that
for
some
I'm
not
sure
why
how
we
come
to
these,
like
200
290,
2.95
cents,
a
pound
for
quarts
of
oil
and
so
like,
if
you
take
that
to
AutoZone
they'll,
take
it
for
free,
is
it
and
on
also
like,
if
you
take
electronics
to
the
Guardian
Storage,
which
is
in
the
strip
and
I've
taken
a
printer
there
in
the
past?
P
That's
free!
Is
there
a
way
to
just
like
we
do
on
our
site
for
other
things
that
direct
them
to
other
websites
outside
the
city?
Is
there
a
way
to
include
like
here
are
some
free
options.
Here
are
some
other
Alternatives
in
this
and
there's
there's
like
a
a
pop-up
that
comes
up.
Do
you
realize
you're
going
outside
of
the
city's
website
we're
not
responsible
for
what
you're
going
to
view
next,
but
then
there
is
also.
If
we
can
do
that
thinking,
we
can
also
offer
guidance
to
safer,
dispose
of.
U
P
For
instance,
materials
like
latex
paint,
latex
and
acrylic
paint
that
the
EPA
gives
guidance
on
to
to
let
them
dry
or
put
kitty
litter
in
it
or
something
else
stop
making
it
hard.
And
then
you
can
dispose
of
it
in
the
garbage.
W
Leads
to
the
second
part
of
your
question,
I
think
we
certainly
could
explore
that
if
there's
you
know
EPA
or
dep
or
other
forms
of
guidance
that
we
can
just
make
more
readily
available
to
folks
that
that's
that's
an
easy,
yes
and
we'll.
Happily
look
into
that
directing
folks
to
other
resources.
We
always
have
to
be
careful
that
we
are
not
indirectly
or
unintentionally,
advantaging
one
private
business
over
another,
so
I
think
off
the
top
of
my
head.
W
If
there
were
a
you
know,
non-profit
organization
or
which
PRC
might
have
this
resources,
but
if
someone,
if
a
third
party
had
a
resource
that
where
they
maintained
a
kind
of
compendium
right
of
that
information,
that
we
could
direct
folks
to
I'd
be
comfortable
with
that
us
self-maintaining
it,
we
run
the
risk
that
we
inadvertently
miss
someone
and
now
we've
we've
kind
of
run,
afoul
of
Our
obligation
to.
P
I
understand,
as
you
can,
as
you
can
tell
on
my
oh,
my
my
duty
to
clear
out
the
basement
of
someone
else's
house.
I
was
like
trying
to
save
some
money
here
so
I'm
sure
all
residents
are
looking
for
that
so
I
didn't,
even
though
you
know
we're
trying
to
do
the
right
thing
make
sure
they
do
recycle
and
provide
them
opportunities.
Just
thinking
that
there
are
some
cheaper
options.
N
Thank
you,
councilman
cross.
Thank
you,
Mr
chair,
just
one
last
thought,
I'd
like
to
leave
you
with
and
then
Mr
chair.
If
I
could
cast
I
vote
on
this
and
all
remaining
bills,
I
had
the
pleasure
of
meeting
Sarah
Alessia
from
PRC,
probably
20
odd
years
ago,
and
there
was
a
fact
they
shared
with
me
that
I
never
forgotten,
always
stuck
with
me
and
keep
in
mind
this
data
was
accurate
20
years
ago.
N
Just
try
to
wrap
your
brain
around
the
the
you
know
the
Staggering
effects,
if
you
think
it's
just
oh,
it's
just
one
cigarette
butt
in
the
street.
It
isn't
so
anyway.
With
that
great
conversation,
I
really
appreciate
you
taking
the
time
to
to
spend
with
us
here
today
to
do
this
and
clearly
in
the
affirmative
thanks
everybody
thank.
O
I
O
And
then,
if
we're
going
to
pull
that
data,
can
I
also
see
the
amount
that
people
are
paying
to
drop
off
their
yard
waste,
because
I
would
love
to
waive
those
fees
right,
and
so
just
as
councilwoman
work
was
pointing
out
that
we're
charging
people,
but
we
want
them
to
do
it,
which
is
not
what
you
do
when
you
want
people
to
do
something
you
don't
actually
put
fees
in
the
as
a
barrier
right,
it's
a
disincentive.
So
let's
not
also
disincentivize
our
composting
of
yard
waste.
We
have
yard
waste
drop
off
on.
W
Yard
waste,
in
addition
to
collecting
it
twice
a
year,
if
you
drop
it
off
and
have
a
city
address,
you're
only
charged
if
you're
dropping
it
off
in
a
pickup
truck
or.
O
W
W
A
V
Looking
into
it
considering
a
lot
of
a
lot
of
thoughts,
energy
on
that
have
not
really
kind
of
formalized
anything
in
terms
of
a
plan
of
action,
but
it's
certainly
something
that
is
on
our
radar
of
services
that
we
would
love
to
provide
internally
from
the
Department,
but
just
kind
of
coalescing,
around
thoughts
and
ideas.
At
the
moment,
okay,
in.
W
Addition
to
dpw's
work
around
this,
the
planning
department,
has
also
been
doing
some
investigations
and
thinking
around
that
I'll,
add
and
I'll
give
credit
to
director,
hornstein
and
Sean
that
I
think
there's
long
term.
This
is
not
something
that
we
could
Implement
next
year
or
or
in
the
immediate
Horizon,
but
we've
been
thinking
a
lot
about
increasing
the.
W
A
I'm,
more
than
willing
to
also
just
help
thinking
it
through
it's,
it's
a
New
Concept
to
me
that
has
been
brought
to
me
by
community
members
who
have
asked.
Are
we
considering
this
and
so
I've
just
started
sort
of
investigating
on
my
own
and
learning
how
other
cities
are
beginning
to
deal
with
this
so
more
than
willing
to
also
help
out,
to
the
extent
that
I
can.
M
Third
round
Madam
president,
just
real
briefly
the
is
there
any
thought,
like
I
I,
really
noticed
like
a
lot
of
the
trash,
that's
really
significant
and
the
the
hard
to
recycle
materials
that
I
knows
or
a
lot
of
time,
oftentimes
in
communities
that
are
struggling
a
little
bit
more
and
I'm
wondering
if
there's
any
way
to
help
offset
that
cost,
like
maybe
even
using
some
of
the
Stop
the
Violence
funds,
to
do
grants
to
help
people
to
recycle
them,
because
there
is
this
Broken,
Window,
Theory
and
there's
all
kinds
of
things
and
I
think
if
you're
giving
somebody
a
cleaner
environment,
helping
them
to
take
greater
Pride,
that
would
certainly
go
be
included
and
stop
stopping
the
violence.
M
You
know
the
the
illegal
dumping
and
all
the
other
things
is
tremendous
to
the
taxpayers,
so
I
think
in
some
way
it
also
benefits
the
taxpayers.
It
benefits
everybody.
If
we
do
this
in
a
better
way.
That's
all
I'm
going
to
say
in
terms
of
that,
so
I
really
would
like
to
work
with
you
on
even
either
using
the
Stop,
the
Violence
funds
or
identifying
funds
where
we
could
put
in
some
lower.
M
Some
lower
costs
are
totally
free
because,
initially,
when
we
started
that's
what
I
wanted,
it
was
because
I
saw
what
was
happening
in
some
of
the
neighborhoods
and
I
thought.
I
wanted
to
help
the
help
get
the
trash
up
off
the
street,
and
then
I
do
want
to
thank
on
the
for
the
clean
Pittsburgh
commission,
all
the
work
that
they
do
as
well
and
I
want
to
thank
our
person.
Who's
on.
M
There
is
Lori
Beth
Jones
and
she
does
a
great
job
too,
and
I
just
want
to
thank
everyone
for
their
work
on
that
as
well.
So
thank
you.
O
Councilman
Lavelle
I'm
deeply
disappointed
in
you,
I've
been
getting
about
Municipal
composting
for
nine
straight
years.
At
this
table,
I
will
start
from
the
top.
If
you'd
like
me
to
when
my
daughter
was
seven,
we
went
to
Tacoma
Washington
when
we
finished
dinner
at
our
friend's
house.
We
all
walked
outside
and
there
were
two
matching
big
beautiful
lidded
Municipal
garbage
bins
right,
but
one
was
green
and
one
was
brown.
You
scraped
your
entire
plate
crab
legs
included
into
the
green
bin,
because
the
green
bin
was
picked
up
weekly
and
that
was
composting.
O
The
brown
bin.
You
did
not
put
the
stinky
crab
legs,
all
your
food,
any
of
your
food
and
because
it's
only
picked
up
every
other
week
right
my
daughter's
16.
Now
she
was
seven
then
and
I've
been
telling
that
story
at
this
table
ever
since,
and
not
only
that
you
clearly
have
not
been
sitting
through
or
our
annual
budget
discussions
on
the
equipment,
leasing
Authority,
where
every
year
since
then
and
I've
been
studying,
The
Institute
for
local
self-reliance.
That
has
done
studies
on
composting
Municipal
composting.
O
That
says,
you
can
cut
the
tonnage
of
your
waste
by
50
percent
right
and
so
every
year
at
the
equipment,
leasing,
Authority
discussions,
I
say
what
is
the
miles
per
gallon,
that
our
waste
haulers
get.
Lo
and
behold
at
first
they
told
us.
It
was
five
miles
per
gallon.
Now
they're
telling
us
it's
three
miles
per
gallon,
each
one
of
those
drives
how
many
miles
out
to
the
landfill
15
miles,
either
out
to
Imperial
or
out
to
Westmoreland
County.
O
O
You
know
really
bad
for
the
environment
and
bad
for
employees,
that
entire
crew
drives
that
truck
15
miles
out
to
that
landfill
and
dumps
it.
If
we
cut
that
tonnage
in
half
that
would
be
half
as
many
vehicles
mild
traveled
right,
you
could
do
twice
as
much
with
each
crew
and
with
each
truck.
So
that's
the
speech
I've
been
giving
that
you
missed
for
the
last
nine
years.
I
am
wholeheartedly
also
in
favor
of
Municipal
composting,
if
you've
never
heard
of
it
by
the
way.
M
O
Also
voted
no
when
I
tried
to
do
pilots
for
composting
into
the
budget
for
two
or
three
years
in
a
row
and
and
so
yeah
at
budget
I
tried
to
do
capital
budget
amendments
for
several
years.
I'm
grateful
that
first,
the
Purdue
Administration
now
the
Gainey
Administration
has
solicited
a
grant
funding
so
that
we
can
do
some
composting
pilots
and,
if
you'll,
give
me
time
after
the
manual
tuck
your
ear
off
about
composting.
A
I'd
be
more
than
willing
to
do
that.
I've
heard
your
speech
about
the
trucks
and
the
mileage.
I've
also
heard
that
story
I
apologize
for
just
now,
putting
it
all
together
and
understanding
and
understanding
the
need
of
why
this
could
be
important
for
our
city.
So
we
can.
We
can
talk
offline,
any
further
discussion,
if
not
all
those
in
favor
say
aye
aye
any
opposed
affirmative
recommendation
that
takes
us
to
Bill
1685.
Bill.
M
B
Bill
1681
resolution
provided
for
the
filing
of
applications
by
the
Commonwealth
of
PA
Department
of
Human
Services
for
Grants
and
connection
with
the
joint
jobs,
Initiative
Program
employment
advancement
and
retention
Network,
and
providing
for
the
authorization
to
enter
into
agreements
with
various
agencies
and
to
pay
for
expenditures
for
cost
to
support.
Implement
and
administer
the
program
cost
not
to
exceed
three
million
828
594
dollars.
O
Thank
you,
Mr
chair.
Can
we
have
someone
to
the
table
to
describe
this
program
and
am
I
just
not
recognizing
it,
or
is
this
a
brand
new
program
and
a
four
million
dollar
expenditure?
It.
O
X
Learn
and
earn
is
actually
for
the
Youth.
The
urn
program
is
a
program
that
we've
been
writing
for
the
city
for
over
20
years,
so
we
do
this
every
year.
It's
not
a
new
program.
We
work
with
the
Department
of
Human
Services,
which
was
formerly
known
as
the
Department
of
Public
Welfare,
to
help
young
well,
not
young,
but
to
help
City
residents
become
self-sufficient.
X
O
X
The
earn
program
but
as
I
said,
it
was
formerly
known
as
Spock,
and
then
it-
and
that
was
back
in
I,
want
to
say
maybe
1988
and
then
it
changed
names
in
probably
the
early
90s
to
earn
and
earn
stands
for
employment
advancement
and
retention.
Network,
and
that's
just
to
provide
services
such
as
job
skills,
job
training,
life
skills,
soft
skills
and
just
to
try
to
help
the
the
people
who
need
help
to
become
self-sufficient.
So
we
do
contract
with
subcontractors.
We
have
three
subcontractors.
X
Actually
we
work
with
edsi,
which
is
educational,
Data,
Systems,
Incorporated,
Goodwill
Industries
and
an
organization
called
padco.
So
our
clients
come
into
our
office,
which
is
located
on
Wood
Street.
They
come
to
our
office
and
you
have
orientation,
and
then
we
send
them
out
to
our
subcontractors
to
provide
the
services.
X
And
I
also
want
to
note,
too,
that
it
does
not
cost
the
city
any
money
to
operate
this
program.
The
money
is
given
to
us
and
we
come
to
you
to
ask
you
if
we
can
encumber
the
money
and
then
we
use
that
money
and
we
actually
pay
the
city,
the
cost
of
city
services,
so
we
actually
paid
the
city
to
let
us
operate
the
program
and
we
are
actually
city
employees
who
operate
the
program.
Thank.
O
O
O
O
X
S
Oh
yeah
I
that
that
clarifies
but
I
it's
funny
because
I
mean
I'm
new
to
to
this
relatively
so,
but
there
is
sort
of
generally.
It
feels
like
kind
of
a
disconnect
between
all
the
different
services
that
are
available
right,
like
through
DHS,
so
I
mean
I'm,
glad
that
you're
here
and
so
that.
S
Y
Y
To
explain
sure
yeah,
please
so
how
it
works,
is
a
client
or
you
know,
someone
who
needs
Financial
Services
or
help
if
they
apply
for
cash
benefits
from
the
Department
of
Human,
Services
they're
automatically
referred
to
a
program
which
would
be
either
City,
urn
or
County
iron,
and
they
make
that
decision.
You
cannot
receive
cash
assistance
from
the
Department
of
Human
Services
without
attending
a
program,
a
program
to
gain
employment.
Y
So
it's
it
helps.
Well,
you
know
it's
a
beautiful
thing.
What
we
do
we
also
on
top
of
the
you
know,
because
there's
other
things
that
come
into
play
or
the
reasons
why
they
aren't
working.
So
we
have,
you
know,
remedial
burial,
remediation
things
that
try
to
get
them
out
of
that
cycle
of
consistently
coming
back
to
receive
the
funds
from
the
Department
of
Human
Services.
Y
Too,
we're
kind
of
like
hands
off
as
far
as
how
we
get
them.
We
don't
really
have
a
choice
in
the
manner
like
right
now.
The
the
numbers
are
extremely
low
because
of
the
covid
and
things
of
that
nature.
They
are
allowing
a
lot
of
them
to
stay
home.
It's
going
to
increase
in
that
because
they're
putting
things
back
into
play
because
you
know
things
are
opening
up
now.
Jobs
are
opening
and
things
of
that
nature.
Y
So
it's
we're
getting
back
to
the
way
that
it
used
to
be,
but
the
whole
time
through
covet.
We
still
had
to
work
with
the
participants
whether
they
were
home
or
not,
or
you
know
working,
but
our
ultimate
goal
is
to
help
them
come
off
of
the
Department
of
Health.
You
know
Human
Services
and
just
walk
into
a
career,
something
that
will
help
them
become
self-sufficient,
so
they
don't
need
those
things
and.
S
So
basically,
if
someone
applies
for
cash
benefits,
DHS
sends
them
to
you
and
then
you
would
say
refer
them
hypothetically
to
Good,
Will
or
whatever
somewhere
and
then
and
then
is
there
follow-up
on
whether
or
not
that
were
you
know
that.
T
Y
Once
they
we
have
guidelines
from
the
state
that
we
have
to
follow
all
the
way
through
there's
you
know
you
can't
just
do
what
you
want,
or
you
know
we
have
to
stick
to
the
guidelines
so
once
they
are
employed,
we
follow
them
for
a
complete
year.
E
Y
There's
benchmarks
at
six
months
and
12
months
once
they
complete
that
12
months
of
service,
we
would
close
them
out
and
hopefully
that
will
move
them
forward
to
not.
You
know,
coming
back
to
the
program.
Sometimes
life
shows
up.
You
know
you
can
get
laid
off
different
things
happen.
There
are
always
as
long
as
they
apply
for
the
cash
assistance
they're
going
to
come
right
back
yeah,
but
the
ultimate
goal
is
to
work
with
them
for
that
year.
Once
they
find
employment,
some
people
find
it
quickly.
Y
Y
So
we
also
do
have
snap
and
the
snap
participants
are
not
required.
Okay,
to
do
that.
You
know
they
they're
what
we
call
volunteers
so
they're
just
they
want
to
come
in
to
see
what
they
can
do.
If
they
can
find
something,
then
they
do
that
as
well.
But
if
you
just
receive
cap
or
medical,
you
are
not
required,
but
if
it's
just
the
cash
assistant
that
pushes
them
into
a
program.
X
Our
contractors
are
paid
on
a
performance-based
contract,
so
it
sounded
like
you
were
kind
of
seeing
if
we
kind
of
had
any
responsibility
to
the
contractors
once
the
clients
get
there,
they
get
paid
per
placement,
so
the
client
they
get
paid.
If
the
client,
if
we
send
the
client
there
the
contractor,
gets
in,
gets
a
payment.
If
the
client
Gets
a
Job,
the
contractor
gets
a
payment
so.
A
M
A
M
P
Thank
you
Mr
chair,
so
the
the
bill
I'm
looking
to
hold
for
one
week,
I
pledged
the
Council
last
week
that
I
would
provide
an
update
on
what's
on
the
final
product.
That
would
potentially
could
be
an
amendment
to
or
a
you
know,
replaced
by
substitution.
P
Other
one
I
have
not
done
that
because
there
is
not
a
final
product
yet
so
I'm
gonna
look
to
hold
one
week,
I
believe
we
can
have
something
in
place
to
have
a
discussion
about
in
a
couple
days.
M
Thank
you.
I
just
want
to
thank
councilman
Wilson
for
working
on
this
and
Muhammad
so
much
for
so
long
I'm
trying
to
get
this
to
a
place
where
we're
more
agreeable
and
he
listens
to
me
every
time
he
comes
up.
I
yell
at
him
about
something
about
it
and
so
I
just
want
to
say
I
want
to
apologize
to
him,
but
he
usually
calls
when
I'm
trying
to
get
ready,
and
this
does
not
come
naturally.
Okay,
so
sometimes
it
doesn't
even
come
anymore.
M
A
B
2022
661
ordinance
accepting
a
new
street
name:
Woodring
Court
in
the
23rd
ward
of
the
city
of
Pittsburgh,
as
per
recommendation
by
the
city
of
Pittsburgh
addressing
committee,
the
following
street
name
was
approved
by
CPAC
in
June
2022.
The
name
listed
in
this
ordinance
shall
be
made
official
in
accordance
with
the
Pittsburgh
code,
title
for
public
places
and
property
chapter
420,
uniform,
Street
naming
and
addressing.
B
A
Opposed
bill
will
be
held.
You
said
three
weeks,
two
two
sorry,
two
weeks:
new
papers,
bills,
1691.
B
No
1691
Ordnance
accepting
a
new
street
name:
Cougar
Circle
in
the
14th
ward
of
the
city
of
Pittsburgh.
As
per
recommendation
now,
the
city
of
Pittsburgh
addressing
committee,
the
following
street
name,
was
approved
by
CPAC
in
May
2023.
The
name
listed
in
this
ordinance
shall
be
made
official
in
accordance
with
the
Pittsburgh
code
title
four
public
places
and
property
chapter
420,
uniform,
Street
naming
and
addressing.
B
M
M
B
Bill
1692
ordinance
accepting
a
new
street
name,
principal
name
in
18th
ward
of
the
city
of
Pittsburgh,
as
per
recommendation
by
the
city
of
Pittsburgh
addressing
committee,
the
following
street
name
was
approved
by
CPAC
in
May
2023.
The
name
listed
in
this
ordinance
shall
be
made
official
in
accordance
with
the
Pittsburgh
code.
Title
four
public
places
in
property,
chapter
420,
unicorn,
Street,
naming
and
properties
motion.
E
B
Bill
1693
ordinance,
accepting
two
new
street
names
composite
Street
and
Battery
Street
in
the
15th
ward
of
the
city
of
Pittsburgh
is
per
recommendation
by
the
city
of
Pittsburgh
addressing
committee.
The
following
street
names
were
approved
by
CPAC
in
May
2023.
The
names
listed
in
this
ordinance
shall
be
made
official
in
accordance
with
the
Pittsburgh
code
title
four
public
places
in
property,
chapter
420,
uniform,
Street
naming
and
addressing
mission.
E
A
R
To
approve
discussion
second,
thank
you.
Mr,
chair,
I
am
going
to
first
make
a
motion
to
amend
with
a
voice
Amendment,
it's
a
Amendment
at
the
request
of
budget
office.
So
if
you're
reading
the
body
of
the
bill,
there's
a
section
one
that
the
city
council
will
dedicate
subject,
properties
within
Hayes
and
Sinclair
neighborhoods,
currently
known
as
Hayes
woods
and
Hayes
Woods
Park-
and
there
are
three
bullet
points
underneath
that
with
various
block
and
lot
numbers.
R
This
is
to
add
a
fourth
bullet
point
that
was
just
accidentally
left
out.
So
this
would
be
a
voice
Amendment.
Sorry,
let
me
pull
it
up
to
add
the
a
fourth
bullet
point
and
then
92
Dash
h-125
as
the
additional
block
a
mod
number.
M
C
M
R
I
just
want
to
thank
Patrick
Cornell
for
answering
all
my
questions
and
very
thoroughly
summarizing
all
of
the
work
that
has
gone
into
this
and
over
the
past
two
plus
years
between
City
and
Ura.
So
thank
you.
S
Yeah
I
did
so.
This
is
very
exciting.
Of
course,
Hayes
Woods
is
in
District
Five
and
you
know
it's
a
new
park
and
with
lots
of
potential
I
do
have
one
one
issue
that
did
come
up
and
I
don't
know
director.
Maybe
if
you
wanted
to
come
to
the
table,
it's.
I
S
Really
a
budget
issue,
it's
the
question,
came
up
about
the
Deer
and
I
guess:
I'm
going
to
use
this
conversation
so
so
twofold
one
is
just.
It
would
be
great
to
have
a
general
update
on
what's
what's
happening
with
deer
management,
but
also
the
concern
here
is
that
currently
or
in
in
Haze
Woods,
there
has
been
hunting
because
it
wasn't
an
official
city
park
where
hunting
is
not
allowed,
so
hunting
has
been
going
on
and,
of
course
that
has
so.
The
concern
is
now
that
it
is
a
park.
S
If
somehow
there's,
if
the
hunting
stops,
then
we
just
have
a
new.
You
know
a
new
explosion
of
deer
at
any
rate,
so
that
that
concern
was
raised
to
to
me
and
so
I
just
would
kind
of
like
to
to
get
an
update
on
the
deer
management.
Sure.
W
Yeah
so
Jake
Paul,
like
Deputy
Mayor
and
director
of
The
Office
of
Management
and
budget
you're,
you're
correct
right
that
up
until
it's
been
about
six
years
since
the
Ura
purchased
this
land.
W
And
during
that
entire
time
many
steps
were
being
taken
to
prepare
it
to
become
a
park.
But
it
took
that
long
to
be
a
combination
of
placement
of
conservation,
easements,
resub,
division
of
the
parcel
to
split
out
a
portion
that
is
in
Baldwin.
E
W
E
W
That
accommodated
a
vehicle
for
someone
with
a
physical
disability.
So
so
there
was
a
lot
of
work
that
took
place
and
then
and
I
give
that
backstory
just
to
say
that
in
that
time
it's
not
been
an
official
park
right
and
so
per
Pennsylvania
law.
It.
It
I'm,
not
surprised
to
hear
one
that
there
are
a
lot
of
deer.
W
Its
size
and
and
that
under
certain
circumstances
in
season
hunting
could
have
occurred.
There
you're
correct
that
hunting's
not
permitted
in
city
parks,
and
so
with
this
designation
we
would
begin
the
process
consistent
with
all.
E
W
Our
other
parks
of
posting
it
for
to
prohibit
hunting,
which
is
an
across-the-board
consideration
that
we
deploy
in
all
city
parks.
How
that
affects
deer
populations
and
the
management
of
deer
generally
is
also
a
question
that
we're
working
I
think
aggressively
to
to
handle
the
way
in
which
that
works
for
your
in
the
Public's
understanding
is
in
order
to
be
considered
by
The
Game
Commission
for
a
deer
management
program.
You
first
have
to
essentially
run
a
pilot
program
within
the
normal
deer
hunting.
W
We
are
working
on
plants
which
we
intend
to
brief
Counsel
on
and
have
a
wider
public
discussion
about,
probably
shortly
after
the
council
August
recess,
to
describe
plans
for
an
initial
effort
in
the
kind
of
November
deer
hunting
season
of
this
year.
That
would
satisfy
the
state
requirements
for
piloting
efforts
and
then
that
could,
if
successful
as
we
hope
it
would
be
form
the
basis
of
a
broad
of
a
permit
from
the
state
to
have
a
broader
strategy
and
policy
that
could
occur
outside
of
that
window
of
time.
I
W
M
W
They
were
purchased.
We
received
the
Deeds
for
these
Parcels
from
the
Ura
about
10
days
ago,
so
they
are
City
owned
as
of
today,
but
until
very
recently
they
were
still
owned
by
the
Ura.
So
this
action
is
meant
to
follow
the
fact
that
we
have
now
acquired
them
and
they
are
deeded
to
us
to
then
take
the
further
necessary
step
of
designating
them
as
Parkland.
Now
that
they're
in
our
ownership
and.
P
So
then,
there's
still
Parcels
that
are
not
that
are
within
what's
called
Hayes
woods,
but
that
are
still
that
will
still
be
owned
by
the
Ura.
W
No,
not
not
at
this
time
everything
that
was
split
so
there
were
there
was
the
the
group
of
parcels
that
the
ra
initially
purchased.
W
Some
of
those
Parcels
cross,
the
municipal
boundary
from
the
city
into
Baldwin.
So
part
of
the
work
that
was
done
over
the
past
six
years
was
to
subdivide
those
Parcels
draw
the
line
at
the
city
border
and
then
convey
the
portions
that
are
in
Baldwin
burrow
to
Baldwin,
so
the
Ura
directly
sold
those
to
Baldwin
after
the
subdivision
was
done.
I
think
I
think
essentially
sold
them
for
a
dollar
right
gave
them
donated
to
them
to
them.
W
We
then,
as
I
mentioned
again,
I
can't
recall
off
the
top
of
my
head
if
it
was
an
easement
or
another
subdivision,
but
a
very,
very
tiny
sliver
of
the
park
at
its
very
edge,
was
transferred
to
an
adjacent
property
owner
in
exchange
for
a
portion
of
her
backyard,
essentially
to
facilitate
access
to
her
house.
Her
house
happens
to
be
across
the
stream
from
her
Main
Road,
the
bridge
that
she
had
washed
out
and
to
repair
that
and
restore
access.
W
It
had
to
go
via
a
different
route
and
that
just
had
needed
to
take
a
tiny
little
sliver
of
our
land.
In
addition
to
that,
there
was
these
Parcels
have
not
been.
The
parcel
lines
had
not
been
re-surveyed
in
a
long
time,
and
there
was
a
technical
or
data
error
in
the
County
recorder
of
deeds
office
GIS
file
for
the
parcel
boundaries.
It
took
a
few
months
to
correct
that
as
well.
W
So
all
of
those
steps
haven't
been
taken
and
dcnr
conservation
easements
having
been
placed
on
the
land
to
ensure
that
any
natural
resources
that
might
be
beneath
it
are
protected
and
can't
be.
You
know
extracted
in
the
future
that
took
several
years
at
the
beginning
of
this
process.
Once
all
that
work
was
completed
and
pursuant
to
Prior
authorizations,
we
engaged
in
a
transfer
from
the
Ura
to
the
city
for
one
dollar,
for
the
Deeds
to.
W
Now
own
them
separately,
council
is
authorized
through
the
the
arpa
budgeting
process
in
a
previous
version
and
having
nothing
to
do
with
the
Amendments.
They
were
introduced
today,
the
reimbursement
to
the
Ura
of
their
six
years
worth
of
holding
costs
and
the
legal
fees
associated
with
all
the
actions
that
I
just
mentioned,
since
they
were
conducting
those
activities
on
our
behalf,
so
we'll
be
paying
them
two
million
dollars
to
cover
those
costs
and
then,
with
this
action
today,
the
process
really
is
completed.
W
In
that
we've
taken
possession
of
the
properties
they're
now
owned
by
the
city.
Their
borders
are
correctly
aligned
with
the
city
border
and
everything
else
the
easements
are
in
place
and
so
we're
in
a
position
where
we
can
formally
designate
it
as
a
park.
Assuming
council's
approval
of
today's
action
kind
of
in
a
coterminous
manner.
Where
beginning
the
process
of
seeking
rad
the
Allegheny
Regional
asset,
District
recognition
for
this
as
a
regional
park
as
well.
A
S
I
just
said
just
one
more
question
since
we're
here
and
can
you
clarify
and
if
not
I
can
there
is
a
big
project
with
Duquesne
Light
that's
happening
Duquesne.
W
Light
a
Duquesne
Light
already
has,
and
and
this
predated
the
yore's
ownership
or
our
ownership,
and
there
was
an
easement
that
already
existed
there
for
them.
There
are
some
high
tension,
power
lines
that
run
through
the
site.
They
need
to
reposition
them
within
their
current
right-of-way,
so
I
I
believe
they're
building
new
towers
and
moving
the
lines
slightly
South
to
be
further
from
the
face
of
the
hillside
or
other
in
otherwise,
in
other
ways
improving
or
repairing
their
existing
infrastructure.
W
That
is
requiring
a
access
easement
on
their
part
and
their
ability
to
build
a
temporary
Access
Road.
In
order
to
get
in
and
out
to
make
those
improvements.
It's.
W
For
sure
that
we
might
adopt
that
access
road
as
one
of
the
means
of
permanent
Ingress
and
egress
to
the
park.
W
We'd,
take
it
from
them
in
its
temporary
condition
and
improve
upon
it
until
it's
way
in
and
out,
but
that
we're
still
looking
at
that
in
the
meantime,
you
know
they
have
as
a
utility
kind
of
an
access
right
to
maintain
their
existing
infrastructure.
They're,
not
adding
anything
new,
though
they
will
be
replacing
components
of
what
they're
and
it
might
be
moving
slightly
kind
of
within
the
band
that
they
presently
maintain.
Yeah.
S
It's
kind
of
a
weird
spot
because
it
creates
I
mean
it's
like
these
huge.
These.
P
R
W
W
Yeah,
because
of
that
that,
generally
speaking,
that's
not
going
to
change,
you
know
something
of
that.
Nature
will
still
be
there
and,
and
there
will
be
a
lot
of
work
after
today's
action,
as
we
begin
actually
or
further
efforts
to
master
plan
the
park
and
then
plan
over
series
of
years
for
budgeted.
Improvements
to
you
know,
add
amenities
or
add
access
points
and
turn
it
from
a
wild
space
into
a
park.
W
The
the
plan
has
always
been,
although
the
plenty
of
opportunity
to
discuss
this,
that
it
remain
a
pretty
to
be
a
more
primitive
Park
than
some
of
our
other
regional
parks
and
be
more
about
preserving
kind
of
Wild
Spaces,
but
also
make
them
accessible
to
the
public.
So
I,
don't
we
don't
anticipate?
You
know
like
building
15
playgrounds
and
10
ball
fields
or
anything
like
that.
There
right
we're
talking
about
trails,
and
you
know
maybe
some
access
roads
and
visit
a
visitor
center
minimal
work
like
that,
really
a
lot
of
ecological
restoration.
You.
I
W
The
removal
of
invasive
species
and
the
promotion
of
a
more
Native
you
know
habitat
is
the
primary
focus
there,
but
but
the
power
lines
are
still
going
to
be
there.
They
were
there
before
we
bought
it
they're
going
to
have
to
continue
to
be
there
and
we'll
have
to
figure
out
exactly
how
those
publicly
accessible
Vistas,
maybe
intersect
with
that
easement
I'm
sure
that's
something
we
can
resolve,
but
that's
not
been
sorted
out.
Quite
yet.
I'd.
I
W
And
in
fact,
I
might
be
mistaken
on
the
timeline
but
I'm
fairly
certain.
It
was
last
year
that
an
ordinance
was
adopted
to
make
that
legally
permissible,
and
it's
entirely
consistent
with
our
plans
that
that
be
part
of
the
programming
in
this
park
over
time
am
I
right
about
the
timing.
Council
here's
the
direction
it
gives
the.
W
I
I
think
as
we
over
time
as
we
build
out
or
make
investments
in
Haze,
Woods
I
think
it
could
be
another
ideal
location.
Yes,
there's.
S
M
I,
just
real
quickly,
I
just
wanted
to
say
we
had
this
issue
with
the
hunting
you
mentioned
in
parks,
and
what
I
found
out
back
then
was
that,
even
though
this
the
city
doesn't
enforce
the
gaming
laws,
that
there
was
some
way
that
in
the
state
allows
hunting
and
Parks,
we
don't
or
something,
but
so
that
there's
some
way
the
only
way
we
enforce
it
is
through
I,
think
gun
laws
or
some
other
things
like
that.
M
E
M
W
I
do
think
we
need
to
do
something.
No,
absolutely
so
again,
just
to
reiterate
Our
intention
is
to
to
bring
a
plan
that
we
can
discuss.
This
fall
for
exactly
that
reason.
So
it's
not
yeah
it's
not
it's!
It's
not
that
we're
working
on
it
in
Asylum.
We
want
to
have
something
ready
to
to
present
to
you
and
to
other
stakeholders
to
to
have
that
discussion,
but
we
fully
intend
to
have
it
again.
W
I
was
saying
earlier:
I
am
I,
anticipate,
probably
in
September
after
Council
returns
from
its
recess
would
be
the
time
to
do
that
in
advance
of
November
when
something
would
would
come
up,
but
just
to
go
back
to
your
initial
Point.
There's,
there's
nothing
healthy
for
the
deer
that
live
within
City
Limits.
At
this
time
about
the
extent
of
overpopulation,
it's
a
a
health
risk
to
them
as
well.
Both
given
the
high
population
numbers,
the
food
insecurity
that
they
face.
M
W
E
P
Thank
you,
Mr,
chair
I.
Just
can't
let
this
moment
pass
because
you
know
one
and
I'm
I'm
excited
about
the
the
park.
You
know,
Hayes
was
being
protected
and
you
know
rightly
so.
I
think
man
I
enjoy
all
our
pork,
especially
you
know
the
ones
that
are
you
know
that
are
protected
like
this.
E
P
Designated
as
a
park,
but
in
terms
of
like
how
we're
going
to
manage
this
because
I
know
in
terms
of
like
what
and
you're
alluding
to
this
in
terms
of
like
well,
this
park
looks
like
we'll
be
investing
in
trails
and
we'll
be
investing
in
I
care.
What
else
you
said,
but
then
it
just
seemed
like
you're
like
just
a
boost.
The
ecological
like.
W
P
P
So
then,
how
do
we
manage?
You
know
a
lot
of
jokes.
How
do
we
manage
you
know
all
the
the
I
don't
want
to
use
the
word
disinvestment,
because
we
couldn't
predict
that
there
would
be
so
many
landslides
in
Riverview
Park.
We
couldn't
predict
you
know.
Maybe
we
could
predict
it.
P
You
know
on
some
level
you
know
x
amount
of
landslides
a
year
that
will
happen
in
this
region,
but
they
happened
in
Riverview
Park
to
happen
in
other
parks
and
that's
on
top
of
the
the
tennis
courts,
the
rec
centers,
not
the
Recs,
the
the
centers
that
are
in
the
parks.
In
terms
of
you
know,
the
shelters
I
mean
I
can
go
on
about.
You
know
this
investment
or
Investments
that
we
have
to
make,
and
so
then,
how
do
we
manage
this?
P
If
we're
adopting
this
as
a
city
park-
and
you
know
I
just
want
to
hear
what
the
management
plan
is
going
to
be,
since
there
is
so
much
money
that
we
have
to
spend
already
in
our
current
Parks
right.
W
So
consistent
with
I
think
the
the
local
community
and
and
sort
of
wider
wishes,
and
almost
at
this
point,
10
years
worth
of
discussion
around
this
location
right,
it's
always
been
envisioned
as
I
said,
to
be
to
remain
fairly
wild
place,
not
a
highly
developed,
highly
programmed
Park.
So
again,
the
costs
that
we
imagine
here
for
physical
Investments
would
be
much
more
along
the
lines
of
trails.
You
know
the
necessary
kind
of
sight,
Ingress
and
egress,
but
not
additional
facilities
or
things
of
that
nature.
W
So
I,
don't
know
that
that
hazewood's
under
that
vision
would
be
competing
with
the
types
of
Investments
that.
I
W
Be
made
in
other
parks
in
their
recreational
assets
and
Facilities,
right
as
it
relates
to
Landslide
management.
You
know
that
is
an
issue
that
is
has.
W
A
as
obsidian
as
a
region
right
in
the
way
that
climate
change
is
causing
that
to
happen,
and
so
certainly
there
are
two
parts
that
answer
one
is
we're
going
to
continue
to
plow
away
at
making
the
necessary
repairs
or
remediations
to
Riverview
Park,
certainly
where
they
have
the
highest
density
of
them.
In
a
park,
though,
there
are
other
parks
where
they
exist
and
there
are
other
City.
W
A
park
where
it's
in
a
Greenway
or
otherwise
on
public
land,
where
we're
working
on
it
and
it's
a
challenge,
and
it
is
something
that
we
I
wish.
We
could
do
more
quickly
and
we
continue
to
pursue
resources
from
outside
of
City
taxpayer
dollars
like
Federal
and
other
types
of
support
to
address
them.
W
Part
and
parcel
of
all
of
this
is
why
it's
it's
necessary
to
pursue
rad
designation
of
haze,
Woods
Park,
so
that
it,
along
with
the
other
five
regional
parks,
are
eligible,
not
just
for
our
own
City
general
fund
resources
or
Parks
tax
funds,
both
of
which
could
be
brought
to
bear
to
address
the
needs
here
and
in
all
of
our
other
Parks,
but
also
rad
funds
to
handle
something
of
this
scale,
which
we
know
will
be
a
regional
attraction
right
I
mean
it
is
on
the
City
Line
right.
W
So
so
there
are
people
who
live
in
Baldwin,
Township,
I'm,
sorry,
Bowman,
Borough
and
I
believe
Castle,
Shannon
and
new
Homestead
and
other
other
neighborhoods
who
are
immediately
not
new
Homestead.
So
that's
the
neighborhood
Munhall
that
are
immediately
abutting.
The
park-
and
so
we
imagine
folks,
who
are
other
than
City
residents,
will
utilize
it,
and
so
it's
appropriate
that
it
be
receive
a
portion
of
its
support
from
from
the
regional
asset
district
and
we've.
While
we
won't
have
a
definitive
answer
from
them
until
they
consider
our
2023
application.
W
We've
received
initial
positive
indications
that
they're
eager
to
consider
this
for
regional
asset
designation
and
that
there
are
additional
rad
funds
that
could
come
to
the
city
to
support
this
and
other
types
of
investment
of
that
nature.
So.
P
P
You
know
a
couple
Trails
because,
like
you
know,
even
in
review
Park,
we
want
that
to
be
wild
as
well
yeah,
and
so
we
have
Trails
as
well,
and
so
with
those
Trails.
The
two
of
them
I
know
are
blocked
off.
W
I
think
the
advantage
we
have
is
that
those
Trails,
the
ones
you're
referencing,
were
built
before
landslides
became
such
a
pressing
issue
in
our
region
due
to
climate
change
right,
and
so
they
were
constructed
in
a
way
that
never
contemplated
that
risk
and
thus
were
prone
to
it
right.
We
now
have
the
benefit
for
things.
We
are
constructing
into
the
future
of
a
better
geotechnical
kind
of
understanding
of
the
soils
in
our
region
and
in
our
parks
and
how
they're
behaving
and
the
light
of
increased
rainfall.
W
So
my
I,
obviously
nothing
is-
is
for
certain,
and
if
you
were
to
ask
me
if,
at
some
point
in
the
next
50
years,
a
trail
we
build
in
Riverview
Park
might
be
washed
out
at
some
point.
Of
course,
it
will
at
some
point,
but
I
think
that
we
are
in
a
position
not
to
invite
those
same
challenges,
because
where
we
will
be
building
these
trails
with
knowledge,
we
now
have,
and
some
things
lessons.
We've
learned
from
a
review
about
how
to
build
trails
that
don't
present
the
same
risk.
We're
having
to
deal.
E
P
Okay,
all
right!
Well,
thanks
for
thanks
for
the
answer
and
provide
the
input
you
did
so
I'll
be
I'm
excited
for
the
you
know
to
go
and
use
it
myself
when
this,
when
some
of
these
are
some
of
these
trails
are
in
place
and
everything
so
just
wanted
to
see
how
we're
going
to
manage
all
this,
because
you
know
it's
like
it's
but
yeah
thanks
for
coming
to
the
table.
Let
me
answer
those
questions.
S
Sorry
yep
so
Pittsburgh
Parks
Conservancy
is
working
and
they
have
a
dedicated
staff.
Member
and
a
grant.
I
think
230,
000
Grant
from
RK
melon
and
there's
doing
they're
doing
some
goat,
scaping
and
and
the
trail
it.
There
is
already
a
trail
system,
a
lot
of
it
or
what's
sort
of
deep
called
deer
Trails,
so
they're
really
just
they're
there,
but
but
the
staff
members
using
volunteers
and
such
to
just
clear
out
make
those
Trails
a
little
bit
more
usable
right
rather
rather
than
building
new
trails
in.
W
E
I
W
W
Access
points
improved
upon
to
to
make
it
accessible
in.
E
B
E
A
B
A
A
Discussion,
seeing
none
all
those
in
favor
say
aye
aye
any
opposed
affirmative
recommendation
that
exhaust
our
agenda.
We
do
have
meeting
announcements
next
week.
Council
will
hold
this
regular
meeting
on
Tuesday
July
18th
at
10
A.M.
In
the
standing
committee
meeting
on
Wednesday
July
19th
at
10
A.M
speaker
registration
will
close
at
9am
the
day
of
the
meetings
to
register
to
speak.
Please
fill
out
the
sign
up
form
on
the
council
meeting
webpage
or
call
the
clerk's
office
at
255-2138
on
Thursday
July
20th
at
10.
A
A.M
Council
will
hold
a
cable
cast
public
hearing
on
Bill
0376,
as
relates
to
authorizing
a
cooperation
agreement
or
agreements
with
the
Pittsburgh
City,
the
urban
Redevelopment
Authority
and
the
Pittsburgh
Land
Bank.
Also
on
Thursday
July
20th
at
1
pm
Council
will
be
holding
an
interview
with
director.
Kubiak.
Excuse
me
for
the
appointment
on
the
pwsa
board:
solicitor.
Kubiakabi,
sorry
anything
from
Members.
If
not
motion,
to
approve
the
minutes
and
adjourn
the
meeting
so.