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From YouTube: Pittsburgh City Council Standing Committees - 3/1/23
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A
A
Next
order,
business
excuse
me
is
public
comment.
I
would
like
to
remind
our
speakers
that
the
rules
of
council
state
that
comments
are
limited
to
matters
of
concern.
Official
action
or
deliberation
which
are
or
maybe
before,
city,
council
and
profanity
will
not
be
permitted
after
you
recall,
please
restate
your
name
and
provide
your
neighborhood
for
the
record.
Our
first
registered
speaker
is
Naomi.
Mullen
I
do
not
see
Miss
Mullen
with
us
this
morning.
Our
next
registered
speaker
is
Elena
zatzoff,
whom
I
also
do
not
see.
C
Greetings
and
good
day,
my
career,
everyone,
the
home
rule,
powers,
subsection,
101,
the
city
of
Pittsburgh,
has
all
home
rule
powers
and
may
perform
any
function
and
exercise
any
power
not
denied
by
the
Constitution.
The
powers
of
the
city
shall
be
construed
liberally
in
favor
of
the
city.
What
does
this
mean
as
it
relates
to
the
Aboriginal
American
indigenous
people
here
in
North,
America
I'm
glad
you
asked
Article,
1,
Section,
2
cluster
and
excluding
Indians
not
taxed,
is
a
dividing
line
between
city
council
and
Aboriginal
Americans
here
in
this
territory.
C
To
be
more
specific,
Congress
acknowledges
the
contributions
made
by
the
Iroquois
Confederacy
of
Nations
and
other
Indian
nations
to
the
formation
and
development
of
the
United
States.
Your
government
overseers
reforms,
our
government
to
government
relationship
between
the
United
States
and
our
Indian
tribes,
including
all
Municipal
governments,
departments,
agencies,
corporations,
both
public
private,
for-profit,
non-profit
and
all
citizens
under
the
jurisdiction
of
the
same.
This
does
not
apply
to
title
25
so-called
Indians.
This
applies
to
our
people.
Only
the
aboriginy
American
Indians,
as
defined
in
the
Bouvier
dictionary
adapted
to
the
Constitution
with
States
Indians.
C
The
Aborigines
of
this
country
are
so-called
Congress,
also
reaffirms
the
trust,
responsibility
and
obligation
of
your
government
to
our
people
acknowledges
the
need
to
exercise
good
faith
and
upholding
treaties
with
RP.
People
will
be
clear
today,
till
tamman
Memorial
and
to
the
universe,
good
faith
to
our
people
here
in
the
Delaware
territory,
which
you
refer
to
as
Pittsburgh
Pennsylvania
ZIP
code
extent,
we
shall
work
with
local
school
communities
and
committees,
along
with
city
council,
to
create
food
Force
to
feed
all
the
people.
To
last.
C
For
hundreds
of
years,
we
shall
Implement
Reclamation
of
property
throughout
our
lands
to
be
restored
to
prepare
for
service
Enlightenment
on
the
Americas,
our
story,
our
culture
building
and
healing
skills
housing
for
a
future
7-stand
Generations
as
well.
We
shall
hold
on
foreigners
to
Immigrant
citizens
accountable
for
their
actions,
as
it
relates
to
our
people's
rights
punishable
by
imprisonment,
funds
and
or
the
death
penalty.
These
are
in
line
with
the
Great
Law
of
Peace,
the
law
of
treaties,
the
Constitution
international
law
between
your
government
and
our
people.
C
I
speak
for
myself
and
my
lineage
nation
and
put
on
the
record
I
shall
so
move
forward
upon
my
words
spoken
to
day,
I
will
exercise
my
indigenous
rights
with
impunity
and
I
continue
to
reach
and
extend
the
hand
of
peace
to
sit
at
the
peace
talks
tables
about
these
very
serious
issues
that
we
are
experiencing
here
in
the
Pittsburgh
territory.
You
call
it
Pittsburgh,
we
call
it
the
Delaware
territory
and
your
responsibility
as
city
council
to
make
sure
that
our
rights
are
protected
and
I.
You.
D
Good
morning,
council
members,
my
name
is
Bill
schlachter
longtime
resident
of
Mount
Washington.
The
last
time
I
spoke
to
you
at
standing
committee,
which
was
back
in
December.
D
Although
we've
been
talking
about
this
and
talking
about
this
topic
since
April
we're
coming
in
on
close
to
a
year,
I
highlighted
the
need
for
changes
to
the
proposed
short-term
rental
ordinance
in
order
to
promote
Community
stability,
specifically
the
need
for
primary
residence
to
be
required
to
be
an
Airbnb,
and
also
too
that
Airbnb
should
not
be
permitted
in
multi-units.
I
want
to
give
a
little
backdrop
about
other
things
happening
in
cities
across
our
country
and
prior
to
any
regulation
of
this
type
of
nature
cities
like
Philadelphia,
Nashville
Denver.
D
They
experienced
major
instability
in
their
housing
markets,
which
was
definitely
fueled
by
airbnbs
owned
by
non-resident
investor
LLCs.
Specifically,
these
corporate
investors.
They
just
gobbled
up
and
converted
a
slew
of
buildings
in
their
in
the
communities
and
burning
them
into
airbnbs
and
oftentimes.
They
pushed
out
long-time
residents
with
a
singular
goal
in
mind,
just
convert
as
many
units
as
people
to
make
more
money.
D
This
predatory
mentality
is
actively
happening
in
Pittsburgh,
as
we
speak,
particularly
up
on
Mount
Washington
become
a
major
communities
and
I
continue
to
speak
about
this,
but
yet
there
seems
to
be
no
sort
of
Swift
swiftness
in
action,
even
though
when
this
bill
was
introduced,
swiftness
was
promised
and
we're
closing
in
on
a
year.
So
I
don't
know
truly
what
swiftness
looks
like
for
this
Council?
D
D
The
other
issue
we're
having
too,
is
that
if
you,
if
you
think
about
hotels
and
you
think
about
airbnbs
a
lot
of
times,
you're,
seeing
these
multi-units
being
converted
into
airbnbs
and
that's
really
a
hotel-
that's
just
kind
of
masquerade
in
here
and
Mount
Washington,
for
example,
you
see
areas
that
were
specifically
zoned
for
no
hotels
and
now
putting
these
airbnbs
into
multi-units
is
truly
a
just
just
a
sleight
of
hand
around
the
zoning
laws,
and
that's
really
not
right
to
the
community,
because
it's
grown
against
the
promises
that
we've
that
have
been
put
forth
to
the
community,
and
so
I
really
want
you
to
think
about
and
continue
to
make
this
bill
better
I.
D
Don't
know
why
it's
taking
me
so
long,
I've
heard
so
many
excuses.
Over
the
past
year,
I
mean
heck,
I've
gone
and
run
three
marathons,
since
this
is
this
bill's
been
going
on,
I
mean
this.
Is
it's
just
not
right
to
the
community,
and
you
owe
it
to
the
community
to
act
on
this
bill
an
appropriate
way.
Thank
you
for
your
time.
A
Thank
you.
Our
last
registered
speaker
is
Carmen
Brown,
whom
I
also
do
not
see
with
us,
so
that
exhaust
our
list
of
registered
speakers.
If
there's
anyone
in
Chambers
wishing
to
speak,
please
come
forward
at
this
time,
provide
your
name
and
neighborhood
for
the
record.
You'll
be
given
three
minutes
to
speak.
E
Good
morning,
can
everyone
hear
me?
Yes,
okay,
my
name
is
Penny
mccague
I'm,
a
long
time
resident
I
have
a
couple
of
issues
to
discuss
with
you
today,
the
first
one
being
the
fact
that
my
husband
was
and
has
been
a
legally
suspended
on
a
temporary
basis
from
the
practice
of
law.
E
My
husband
is
one
of
the
finest
attorneys
and
people,
as
judge
O'toole
would
attest
to
around
so
I'm
asking
for
some
directions
here,
because
we
were
promised,
even
though
he
followed
the
rules
and
wanted
to
let
judge
Beth
lazara
know
that
in
fact
he
had
represented
this
one
particular
person
before
and
she
was
not
interested
judge.
Lazera
was
not
interested
in
hearing
from
Rick.
E
She
said
that
she
did
not
like
his
kind
and
threw
the
paper
back
at
him.
He
then
proceeded
to
judge
Manning,
who
was
still
serving
on
the
bench
and
judge
Manning,
said
rich
I'm,
amazed
that
you've
never
been.
He
was
cited
for
contempt,
but
yet
he
was
not
held
in
contempt
and
she
wanted
to
First
charge
him
with
over
seventy
five
hundred
dollars,
which
is
so
against
the
law.
The
maximum
a
person
can
be
charged
for
contempt,
is
500.
E
E
What
judge
Lazarus
wanting
me
to
pay
is
totally
unrealistic
when
I
did
exactly
according
to
what
I
was
supposed
to
do.
According
to
the
law,
foreign
and
then
I
contacted
Supreme,
Court,
Justice,
David,
wett
and
I've
known
David
a
long
time
like
many
other
people
that
I've
known
and
I
asked
him,
and
he
said:
can
you
fax
me
over
the
paperwork?
I
faxed
him
over
the
paperwork.
E
A
E
F
F
F
We
have
allied
with
people
of
all
different
backgrounds
of
ethnic
identities,
religions
and
political
affiliations,
and
we
are
all
in
agreeance.
That
is
time
to
fight
back.
We
are
fighting
the
fact
that
fighting
back
against
the
marginalization
gentrification
and
the
assimilation
of
indigenous
people
and
marginalized
people
we.
C
F
F
We
are
here
to
make
sure
that
indigenous
people
are
honored
in
the
treaties
that
were
made
of
old,
be
renewed
in
the
sense
of
being
implemented.
It's
no
good
to
just
have
these
things
on
the
books
and
no
one's
adhering
to
them.
So
as
an
indigenous
woman
and
the
chief
of
my
nation,
I
am
asking
city
council
to
act
in
good
faith
towards
the
indigenous
people
as
set
forth
in
the
Northwest
Ordinance
of
1787..
F
G
Good
morning
Council
my
name
is
Lynn
Thompson
McKinley,
and
what
is
happening
is
we
have
started
a
new
organization
called
fighting
back.
What
fighting
back
is
going
to
do
is
we're
going
to
make
changes
in
the
criminal
justice
system.
The
criminal
justice
system
is
one
that
is
so
blatant
where
they're
doing
questions
they're.
G
I'm
sorry,
I
didn't
what
we're
doing
is
we're
going
up
against
judges,
we're
going
up
to
make
changes
in
Allegheny,
County
Jail
as
to
where
people's
rights
are
being
taken
advantage
of
we're
taking
and
we're
doing
we're
going
up
the
Adas
we're
going
up
against
the
district
attorneys
we're
going
to
stop
this
corruption
in
Allegheny,
County
Jail.
G
So
what
we
want
to
do
is
we
want
to
make
Council
aware
that
what
we're
doing
we're
going
to
be
held
in
press
conferences,
we're
going
to
be
filing
civil
rights
lawsuits,
we're
going
to
we're
we're
not
going
to
be
another
place
that
we're
going
to
just
sit
down
and
not
take
advantage
of
the
things
that
we
want
to
do,
and
we
want
to
change.
We
have
to
change.
We
have
to
make
sure
that
the
people
that
are
doing
illegal
things,
such
as
judges
such
as
Adas,
such
as
probation
officers.
G
I
You
know,
I
come
down,
I've
been
coming
for
years,
I've
almost
stopped
coming,
but
when
I
see
the
way
this
council
is
run,
you
need
to
know
the
dirty
little
secrets.
I'm
sitting
down
here.
I
see
it
I
see
it
every
day.
When
units
are
on
the
red
on
the
on
the
TV,
you
don't
see
just.
I
I
I
You
know
I
get
mad
and
some
people
and
I
try
not
to
because
it's
not
the
people's
fault.
It's
this,
the
council,
the
answer
you
don't
come
on.
Okay,
we
can't
get
you
all
right.
Let's
go
call!
Somebody
else
then
go
back
to
you
can't
get
you
go
call.
Somebody
else
and
I'm
sitting
here,
I'll
sit
here
that
one
time
I
came
in
here,
one
with
the
two
o'clock
meeting
and
there
till
five,
because
Miss
gross
made
sure
she
called
all
the
people
that
spoke.
The
machine
was
acting
up.
I
I
I
want
everybody
in
here
if
you're
doing
wrong
go
to
jail
because
you
said,
but
you
explained
to
me
later,
that
you
that
I
must
misunderstood
when
I
said
it's
against
the
law,
but
it
must
be
because
you
don't
speak,
you
don't
answer
me
and
they
don't
they'll
answer
them.
I
got
a
little
confused,
but.
I
Let
me
I'm
a
little
confused
because
I'm
angry
today,
but
you
hear
where
the
Pittsburgh
Post-Gazette
is
taking
over
the
city
paper.
Citizens
helped
me
and
we're
going
to
still
read
the
city
paper
to
make
sure
they
don't
change,
and
is
this
a
lawyer
or
are
you
a
lawyer
or
what
are
you
back
there
talking?
Because
you
know?
Yes,
the
lawyers
talk
anytime,
you
want.
This
is
what
I'm
saying
we
can
talk
and
you
got
them
talking
behind
me.
That
shows
you
the
disrespect
you
have.
You
gave
us
three
minutes.
I
This
was
the
law
said
and
I
get
three
minutes,
but
you'll
have
business
owners
come
in
a
half
an
hour,
half
an
hour,
20
minutes.
We
get
three
minutes
when
you're
coming
into
our
city,
to
put
something
in
our
city,
but
I
can't
speak
up.
I
get
three
minutes:
I
tried
to
get
five
Miss
Harris
made
sure
that
I
couldn't
I
didn't
get
the
five
minutes
even
Bill
card
deal
when
he
came
down
said
he
would
come
and
speak
against.
You.
A
L
Hi
I'm
vernet
I'm
Bernadette
from
beach
view
first
I
want
to
say
last
week's
standing
committee
I
was
in
awe.
I
was
taken
back
to
my
paralegal
days
and
just
listening
to
the
process
of
all
of
you
and
watching
your
wheels
turn.
It
was
amazing.
Yesterday,
I
mentioned
these
new
glasses
popped
off
due
to
a
water.
Hidden
open,
pipe
I
went
back
yesterday.
That's
the
pictures.
It's
at
Garrison
and
Liberty
between
Penn
and
Liberty,
a
foot
a
child's
leg,
an
attorney's
stiletto,
not
good.
L
Today,
all
along
Grant
I
went
and
I
shared
yesterday
when
I
was
on
an
access
van
in
the
back,
it
was
like
being
in
the
back
seat
of
the
jackrabbit
for
years.
I've
come
down
to
town
either
for
school.
As
a
small
child,
we'd
go
to
the
five
and
dime
I
always
loved
going
to
town.
Even
today,
Point
Park
is
where
I
actually
pray
anyway.
Something
is
not
right.
L
It
turned
out
to
be
a
massive
Landslide
right
up
against
the
Fallowfield
Bridge
I
have
that
same
gut
feeling
with
Grant
Street
back
in
1988
in
a
law
class
A
teacher
would
like
to
play
in
Pittsburgh
infrastructure
trivia,
and
we
learned
several
things:
there's
lots
of
underground
tunnels.
We
have
more
underground
train
tunnels
than
we
have
Bridges.
L
L
Water
makes
its
way
if
the
walls
are
breaking
from
that
natural
aquifer
and
they're
coming
underneath
grant
that
could
be
causing
this,
because
today,
I
took
more
pictures,
you
have
pipes
either
now
up,
because
the
ground
has
sunk
or
vice
versa.
They
may
still
have
their
covers,
but
they're
sunken
and
it
is
a
danger.
I
have
never
seen
Grant
do
this
before
some
I'm
telling
you
it's
the
same
gut
feeling
I
had
that
turned
out
to
be
a
landslide.
A
B
N
Thank
you,
I'm
just
trying
to
get
my
camera
on
there.
We
go
I
appreciate
it
as
we
discussed
at
length
last
week
with
the
new
trucks.
I
I
have
a
lot
of
questions
and
concerns
around
the
coast.
Natural
gas
as
an
alternative
fuel
I
believe
the
councilman
Smith.
N
You
know
Express
concerns
as
well,
and
so
I'm
gonna
I
understand
that
there
are
lots
of
sightsee
issues
and
I
don't
want
to
believe
the
labor.
The
point
today,
but
I'm
going
to
vote
now
on
this
bill.
So
I
just
I
appreciate.
A
O
I
also
read
some
information
from
our
chief
of
Emergency
Management
achievement,
Emergency
Management,
about
how
we
need
to
do
a
little
bit
better
in
terms
of
using
the
electric
vehicles,
because
the
batteries
is,
you
know,
monitor,
couldn't
wait,
dispose
of
them
they're.
Also,
you
can't
use
the
jaws
of
life
because
you
can't
because
electric
shock
people
can
also
they
can
also
explode.
There's
all
kinds
of
stuff
he
wrote
about
so
I
have
concerns
about
either
way
to
be
honest
with
you,
but
mostly
for
people
to
invest
in
the
West
End.
O
Should
the
Sleep
itself
should
be
sending
a
message
that,
even
though
it
may
be
constantly,
even
though
it
may
be
more
time
consuming
when
we
want
to
do
those
things,
we
do
find
a
way
to
do
those
things
we
find
a
way
to
invest
in
neighborhoods
that
we
want
to
invest
in.
Someone
of
them
know
what
you
think.
Thank
you.
P
Yeah
I
just
wanted
to
say
that
I
was
at
the
briefing
yesterday
yesterday
and
just
based
on
that
a
few
things.
Well,
one
and
again
this
is
just
my
understanding
from
The
Briefing.
P
Really
we
have
a
bunch
of
these
trucks
that
are
new
and
more
coming
so
that
you
know
they've
already
been
purchased
and
that
electric
vehicles
for
trucks
of
this
size,
the
technology
just
isn't
there
yet
in
terms
of
the
chart
like
you,
have
to
charge
overnight
and
there's
risk
of
running
out
of
a
charge,
if
you
know
given
the
distances
that
they
have
to
go
to
to
the
dump
sites
Etc
and
then
also
with
regard
to
the
to
the
commercial
fueling
station
in
ferrywood
that
that
is,
you
know
almost
eight
miles
away
from
the
Strip
District
where,
where
these
you
know
where
the
trucks
are
kept.
P
So
in
essence,
that
would
be
a
40-minute
round
trip
to
go,
get
fuel
you
know
to
to
fuel
up,
and
that's
with
no
traffic
that'd
be
a
40
minute
round
trip
for
our
for
our
dry.
You
know
for
our
workers
in
in
in
and
and
then
longer
in
traffic,
which
you
know
given
the
amount
of
back
and
forth
that
they
need
to
do.
That
seems
like
a
lot.
So
with
all
that
in
mind,
you
know
I
I,
I'm
gonna.
P
It
seems
like
the
economical
choice
and
the
sort
of
practical
choice,
at
least
at
this
point
so
I'm
going
to
support
this
one.
O
A
Hold
on
hold
on
councilwoman
strasberger.
M
Thank
you,
I
want
to
underscore
everything,
councilwoman
warmick
just
said,
and
also
say,
let's
work
together
to
get
a
bio
digester,
something
to
get
renewable
natural
gas
so
that
we're
not
using.
So
we
can
use
these
same
vehicles
that
we
already
have
and
we'll
have
a
pretty
long
life
to
be
able
to
run
on
renewable
natural
gas
from
existing
wastewater
treatment
plants
transfer
stations.
M
Perhaps
we
can
work
with
the
landfills
that
were
actually
driving
30
miles
out
to
to
invest
in
that
technology
there,
so
they
can
fuel
up
there
I
mean
that
seems
like
the
best
possible
way
that
we
can
both
utilize
the
vehicles
that
are,
we
already
have
and
are
coming
our
way
as
we
March
toward
getting
electric
vehicles
that
and
infrastructure
with
electric
vehicles
that
have
you
know
that
allow
us
to
charge
quickly
and
efficiently
and
do
so,
despite
the
large
distances
that
they're
covering
so
I'm
going
to
vote
for
this
today,
but
let's
also
invest
in
the
technology
for
renewable
to
allow
for
renewable
natural
gas
to
power
these
trucks.
M
O
I
heard
the
comments
about
the
cost,
and
you
know
well
I
will
say
we're
not
the
East
end,
so
we
don't
have
universities,
we
don't
have
hospitals
which
some
people
want
to
sue,
but
at
the
same
time
benefit
from
it
greatly.
We
don't
have
those
things
in
our
district,
so
for
us
to
have
any
investment,
it
has
to
be
a
purposeful
effort
to
do
so
without
our
hearing.
O
This
is
an
area
that
everybody
talks
about
when
people
are,
you
know
taken
out
of
their
communities
when
there's
gentrification
occurring
when
there's
disinvestment
well,
this
is
one
of
those
neighborhoods,
and
so
we
could
say
one
thing
at
the
table
every
week
where
we
can
actually
do
it
when
it
comes
time
to
vote
so
today,
I'm
voting
now.
Thank
you.
K
K
A
B
1253
resolution
authorizing
the
issuance
of
two
warrants:
fifteen
thousand
dollars
each
in
connection
with
an
EEOC
matter
for
a
total
amount
of
thirty
thousand
dollars
in
full
and
final
settlement
of
litigation,
including
attorney
fees
and
Bill.
1254
resolution
authorizing
the
issuance
of
a
warrant
in
favor
of
Marianne
Oregon
and
Eugene
Oregon,
her
husband
and
their
attorneys
Edgar,
Snyder's
and
Associates
in
the
amount
of
seventy
five
thousand
dollars
relating
to
the
full
and
final
settlement
of
a
case
filed
in
the
Allegheny
County
Court
of
Common
Pleas.
A
Can
I
have
a
motion
to
waive
the
rules
of
council?
There
are
three
separate
invoices
under
law
which
exceed
the
five
thousand
dollar
threshold,
as
well
as
two
within
DPW.
What's
the
the
reason
it's
the
ones
in
law
are
for
three
different
plaintiffs
that
are
associated
with
the
same
case
and
they
had
to
get
an
independent
examiner
to
do
the
work
and
because
it
had
to
be
independent,
examiner
they're.
Not
we
don't
have
a
vendor
to
do
that.
Q
A
R
I
I
just
want
to
take
a
moment
to
thank
you
for
for
always
being
preparing
when
you
come
to
the
table
and
especially
assisting
with
explanatories
and
helping
Council
to
better
understand
how
and
why
some
of
these
things
come
on
the
invoices
and
every
time
it
happens,
you
you
have
the
answer
so
clearly
you
do
your
homework
and
I
just
want
to
recognize
that
and
said.
We
appreciate
it.
A
A
A
Thank
you
all
for
being
here.
If
you
all
introduce
yourself
for
the
record.
O
S
O
Say
in
the
group
being
chosen,
it's
my
understanding.
She
has
good
relationship
with
Lisa
and
that's
how
some
of
this
happens.
I'm
just
I'm
curious,
because
I'm
also
hearing
decisions
made
on
the
police
department
based
on
this
relationship,
so
I'd
like
to
know
a
little
bit
more
about
it.
To
be
honest
with.
S
You
so
I
can't
speak
to
any
things
with
the
police
Madam
president
I
can't
speak
that
maybe
director
can
I
don't
know
anything
about
that.
O
Okay,
well
so
it
was
chosen
because
it
was
part
of
the
pilot
program.
I'll
get
Lisa
to
the
table.
It
was
chosen
as
a
part
of
the
pilot
program
and
tell
me
what
all
would
entail,
and
why
does
this
not
come
before
city
council?
First,
because
I
did
I
did
feel
a
little
bit
better
after
I
talked
to
the
director,
but
I
just
wanted
for
the
public,
because
I've
spoke
to
a
lot
of
people
about
this.
So
I
want
to
make
sure
that
I
just
want
to
be
really
clear.
S
So
in
general,
the
the
Perry
School
Safety
project
was
a
pilot
program
because
of
the
amount
of
violence
in
that
particular
school
that
we
put
some
Outreach
type
workers
specifically
in
the
school,
and
we
also
have
employed
student
ambassadors
kind
of
like
a
peer-to-peer,
positive
relationship
which
has
certainly
changed
the
culture
of
Perry
and
they've
also
able
to
mediate
some
small
things.
They
have
certainly
reduced
the
amount
of
balance
and
fights
in
in
the
school
and
the
student
ambassadors,
or
employed
to
help
control
work
with
the
students
to
help
mediate.
Some
small
problems,
they've.
O
S
Then
you
also
have
Outreach
workers
that
are
in
the
school
every
day.
Their
only
poster
workstation
is
inside
the
schools,
whereas
they're
not
just
passing
by
that
is
their
workstation
from
the
beginning
of
school
to
the
end,
and
they
also
do
in
the
school
after
school
programs
and
things
with
with
the
students
as
well.
Q
I
I
think
we
just
wanted
to
make
sure
we
have
the
partnership.
Since
most
the
Outreach
workers
work
with
us
and
Reverend
Cornell
Jones
our
Outreach
coordinator.
We
wanted
to
ensure
that
continuity,
so
we
wanted
to
ensure
the
city
and
Department
of
Public
Safety
were
involved
with
it.
It
is
obviously
a
partnership
with
PPS
with
the
Outreach
team
and
with
the
Department
of
Public
Safety.
So
so.
O
Q
Right,
but
so
it's
also
for
reporting
and
tracking
information
powering.
O
How
is
Operation
better
blocked?
We
have
some
kind
of
data
on
how
they
execute
Grant
dollars.
Do
we
have
anything
like
that.
S
O
I'm
really
curious
how
the
community
feels
I
mean
from
the
conversations
I
had
it
wasn't
really
they
were.
They
were
mostly
concerned,
so
I
think
I
need
to
have
Lisa
come
to
the
table,
so
I'll
wait
till
she
gets
here.
We
get
Lisa
to
the
table.
Please
thank
you.
H
Great
thank
you
Mr
chair,
so
I
have
a
few
different
questions,
but
I
just
want
to
start
with
the
the
details
of
of
the
of
the
text
here
that
I
see.
So
this
is
an
exclusive
contract
with
operation
better
block,
or
was
there
an
RFQ
or
if
people
put
out.
K
H
Okay
and
the
grand
funds
are
coming
from
who
again.
H
On
crime
and
delinquency:
okay,
so
we're
going
to
be
one
of
the
entities
to
sign
on
in
favor
of
operation
beta
block
to
receive
these
Grant
funds.
Correct.
Q
And
the
funds
will
actually
come
through
us,
so
we'll
have
the
control
and
oversight
of
it.
We
were
we're
the
main
sponsor
their
sub,
awardees
to
the
Grand
similar
to
how
we
do
with
the
county,
like
our
annual
Jag
Grant,
which
is
through
Department
of
Justice,
the
county
is
the
primary.
They
funnel
that
money
to
the
city
into
other
municipalities
in
the
county.
So
there's
multiple
grants
that
are
out
that
and.
H
Q
H
I've
had
the
opportunity
to
to
be
at
the
programming
part
at
Perry,
High,
School
and
I
thought
I
was
very
productive,
productive
and
I'm
curious.
So
what
I
saw
was
kind
of
what
you
explained.
You
know
in
terms
of
taking
youth
that
I
don't
want
to
put
word
through
your
mouth.
So
please
correct
me,
but
youth
that
basically
I
mean
the
Perry
High
School
situation
started
because
there
was
an
incident
that
happened.
H
They
brought
together
the
youth
and
then
they've
been
meeting
with
them
during
lunch
time
for
a
couple
of
lunch
periods,
I
believe
and
so
I've
had
an
opportunity
to
to
organize
something
around
that.
Actually
we
took
learn
and
earn
the
learn
and
learn
program.
When
I
was
there
to
try
and
see
how
we
can
get.
You
know
jobs
summer,
jobs
in
in
the
in
the
hands
of
the
youth
and
I
I
thought
that
was
impactful.
H
Heard
you
describe
I've
seen
it
in
person,
I've
I've,
you
know,
I've
witnessed
it,
but
then
I've
also
heard
about
the
safe
patches,
probably.
S
Safe
passes
is
in
addition
to
that
Mr
councilman,
in
that,
after
school
and
before
school
you
have
people
Outreach
type
workers
or
people
in
the
community,
stakeholders
that
have
relationship
with
the
young
people
as
they
go
to
and
from
school
to
help
them
just
get
home
safely.
That's
essentially
all
the
safe
passage
programming,
that's
what
this
is.
That's
part
of
it.
Yes,
so
we
were
people
posted
outside
of
of
the
schools
before
school
and.
H
S
H
S
K
P
So,
first
of
all,
I'd
like
to
say
so,
it
sounds
like
there's.
Definitely
so
I've
with
some
of
the
other.
Stop
the
violence
programs,
specifically
with
what
the
work
that
the
Reach
team
is
doing.
It
seems
like
there
is
some
overlap,
certainly
in
the
high
schools,
which
is
is
fine,
there's
nothing
but
but
I
I
would
really
want
to
ensure
that
these
different
groups
are
working
together
so
that
you
know,
if
so,
for
example,
I
mean
I'm.
P
I'll
speak
to
my
district
right,
so
at
alderdice,
right
I
know
that
reach
has
an
Outreach
worker
who
goes
to
alderdice
works
at
alderdice.
So
if,
if
operation
Better
Block
also
has
that
I,
you
know,
obviously
the
two
of
them
should
100
percent
be
fully
coordinated
and
working
together,
also
just
general
I
mean-
and
this
isn't
specific
this
but
right.
You
know
we
get
siled
on
all
of
these
things,
and
that
makes
us
less
effective.
P
So
so,
like
just
hearing
now
about
the
safe
passages
program,
I
can
say
that
I
I've
been
dealing
with
issues
on
Murray,
Avenue
and
forward
related
to
kids.
Waiting
for
the
bus
and-
and
you
know
and
I-
have
concerns
about
kids
being
criminalized.
Business
owners
are
having
frustration
so
like
this
would
be
perfect
right.
This
is
exactly
what
we
need,
so
you
know
it's
really
important
that
that
we're
kind
of
all
all
communicating
and
I
know
that
that
and.
S
S
S
P
Right
so
so,
and
you
know,
and
I
have
lots
of
different
groups
sort
of
so
so
it
would
be.
I
was
actually
it's
on
my
my
list
soon
to
have
a
have
sort
of
a
general
meeting
about
that
particular
situation
with
all
this.
But
anyway,
that's
that's
a
separate
topic
so
or
not
separate,
but
extended
topic
and
then
also
I
feel
like
it
would
be
helpful
for
the
public
and
for
us
and
I
don't
know,
perhaps
Madame
President.
P
We
can
talk
about
the
best
format
right,
whether
it's
a
post
agenda
or
what
but
where
we
can
have
all
these
different
groups
who
are
doing
this
same
work
come
to
the
council
table,
explain
what
it
is.
They're
doing
explain
to
each
other
what
they're
doing
right
so
that
we
can
have
Clarity.
The
public
can
have
Clarity
and
I
know
that
there's
this
reporting
rubric
that
we're
putting
together.
P
So
maybe
that's
something
we
councilman
Lavelle
and
Iceberg,
maybe
after
that
becomes
available,
but
at
any
rate
I
think
that
would
be
helpful
for
everybody,
because
they're
they're
I
there
is
so
much
good
work
being
done,
but
I
think
that,
unfortunately,
the
the
sort
of
message,
often
with
the
public
is,
will
you
know
where's
all
this
money
we're
still
seeing
we're
still
seeing
shooting
so
nothing.
You
know
nothing's
happening
so
I
think
it's
helpful
for
people
to
know
the
some
more
detail
about
the
inner
workings
of
these
programs.
The
protocols
Etc.
We.
P
Yeah
and
and
maybe
also
information
about
how
these
things
are
working
in
other
cities
right
and
how
they
have
worked
enough,
because
there
is
obviously
evidence
that
that
this
type
of
violence
intervention
works
right.
It
just
takes
a
little
time
so
yeah,
maybe
that's
something
we
can
talk
about
setting
up
so.
P
N
N
Is
that
we're
only
hearing
about
these
things
at
the
last
minute
when
the
grants
have
already
been
received
and
Council
was
discussing
this
at
the
table
with
the
administration
I
think
just
last
week
that
you
might,
as
the
administration
get
better
program
results
and
better
Services
by
involving
Council
input
at
the
front
end
when
you're
doing
the
grant
seeking
and
designing
your
programs
that
you're
applying
for
the
grants
that
we
should
be
discussing
what
you
are
looking
for
outside
funding
for
and
maybe
even
needing
Council
approvals
to
do
the
grant
seeking,
instead
of
just
coming
to
the
table,
saying
like
oh
surprise,
this
money
fell
from
the
sky
and
we're
going
to
do
this
thing
is
I,
think
making
it's
making
me
uncomfortable.
N
On
the
other
hand,
I
love
the
concept
of
introducing
seniors
and
Elders
into
school
buildings
and
interacting
with
our
our
city,
kids
and
I've
often
thought
that
schools
were
strange
in
a
way
to
keep
students
apart
from
other
age
groups
for
so
much
of
their
early
lives.
It
just
is
a
you
know,
not
the
healthiest
situation
and
prevents
kids
are
learning.
N
You
know
we
have
things
like
bring
your
kid
to
school
day
once
a
year
or
you
know,
I
just
recently
went
and
read
to
the
kids
at
Ulster
school,
and
it
was
amazing
and
wonderful,
but
that's
like
a
one
day
a
year
thing
and
that
it's
I'm
in
favor
of
this
concept,
but
I
and
I
also
have
to
say,
there's
almost
no
detail
either
in
your
presentation
here
at
the
table,
nor
in
the
attachments
to
this
legislation
that
are
in
the
public
record,
there's
a
cover
letter
that
has
two
sentences,
there's
a
fiscal
impact
statement
that
just
says
you
know
we're
getting
this
money
and
it'll
be
a
two-year
program.
N
I
could
read
it
out
loud,
so
it's
incredibly
short,
you
know,
it'll
be
Professional
Services
day-to-day
operations,
hiring
necessary
staff,
and
it
literally
just
says
we're
receiving
these
funds.
2.5
million
dollars
to
support
the
safe
passages
program
which
places
Elders
in
schools
and
there's
no
detail
at
all
in
any
of
these,
so
I
would
like
to
see
a
Grant
application,
and
so,
if
you
could
email
that
to
me,
I'm
happy
to
support
this
program,
but
in
the
future,
I
think
you
know
by-
and
several
other
members
have
said.
N
This
isn't
a
good
enough
system
that
we
just
are
ourselves
in.
The
public
are
just
kind
of
surprised
by
these
these
outside
dollars,
and
they
may
not
be
our
citizens
priorities
or
Council
priorities,
and
so
I
think
we'll
be
talking
to
a
different
product.
Excuse
me
process
in
the
future.
Thank
you.
O
A
A
S
Yes,
sir,
so
they
would
be
in
house
in
public
safety.
However,
one
would
also
be
would
spend
time
in
operation
Better
Block
as
well.
O
Just
a
couple
things
well
at
least
I'm,
a
director
Frank
I'd
like
to
talk
to
you
a
little
bit
about
Chief
Frank
right,
Chief,
Frank
I'd
like
to
talk
to
you
a
little
bit
about
how
this
process
came
about,
how
it
was
selected,
operation,
better
block
part
of
the
rumors
I
mentioned
earlier,
going
around
that
Diana
Buco
and
you
have
a
good
relationship
and
she
liked
what
was
happening
at
Perry
and
that's
how
this
came
about
and
that
she
wanted
to
explain.
O
Let
me
just
say
this
prefer
this
by
saying:
I
love,
Diana,
Buco.
She
and
I
have
a
long
relationship
together,
working
a
relationship
together.
She
helped
me
do
some
things
in
the
West
End
that
uncovered
a
lot
of
things
that
we
needed
to
have
uncovered.
So
with
that
said,
I
want
to
say
that,
but
at
the
same
time,
I'm
wondering
how
her
relationship
and
her
seeing
what's
happened.
What
happened
to
Perry
some
that
somebody
thought
that
this
was
a
good
idea
to
apply
for
State
dollars.
O
It's
been
interesting,
there's
around
14
million
dollars
in
state
funds
coming
to
this.
It's
this
region
and
almost
all
for
the
same
types
of
work.
I
have
the
off
our
offices
bringing
out
the
paperwork,
so
I'm
curious
how
this
is
going
to
differ,
how
this,
how
you
feel
this
is
going
to
be
effective
and
what
happened
who's
going
to
hold
them
accountable?
O
What's
the
reporting
process,
all
that
stuff
but
I
do
want
to
say,
I
feel
much
better
today,
if
you
think
this
is
crazy
today,
you
should
have
saw
me
yesterday
when
I
talked
to
the
director,
so
I
feel
much
better
today.
He
called
me
down
a
little
bit
here,
but
I'm
still
going
to
say
they
have
a
lot
of
concerns.
T
Everybody
feels
better
after
they
talk
to
the
director,
so
not
not
I
think
quite
the
the
picture
you
have
there,
so
the
the
pccd
grants
are.
Let
me
take
a
step
back.
Sometimes
we
get
invitations
and
opportunities
to
apply
for
money
that
are
pretty
open-ended.
Like
oh
there's,
money
for
infrastructure.
What
do
you
want
to
do?
T
Or
you
know
those
kinds
of
like
the
federal
grants
or
the
earmarks
or
someone
the
pccd
ones
are
pretty
constrained
and
they'll
say
you
can
apply
for
money
to
do
equipment
or
you
can
apply
so
this
one
was
one
that
was
very
clearly
pegged
to
work
that
you
want
to
do
around
education.
It
wasn't
it
wasn't
for
any
kind
of
work
that
you
wanted
to
do
at
all
and
it
was
unique,
apply
for
up
to
I,
think
three
and
a
half
million
dollars
or
something
for
work.
T
That
was
specifically
around
education,
and
you
know-
and
we
know
from
all
the
things
that
everybody
has
said-
is
that
you
know
there's
a
very
kind
of
close
relationship
between
what
happens
in
school.
What
happens
after
school?
What
happens
in
our
streets,
and-
and
you
know
we
know
through
the
director
and
and
and
through
David
and
others-
you
know
we
did
know
about
what
was
happening
at
Perry
and
the
results
that
were
they
were
getting
there,
so
we
actually
reached
out
to
to
them
to
say.
T
Let
us
understand
more
about
this
program.
Let
us
understand
the
metrics,
and
is
this
something
that
we
should
apply
to
do
at
other.
Schools
that
are
struggling
I
will
say
that
that
Diana
was
really
gracious,
because
this
is
something
that
she
kind
of
worked
on:
cooked
up,
funded
for
a
long
time
and
I
said
you
know.
Does
this
going
to
feel
like
us
stealing
your
idea
is
this
going
to
feel?
Would
you
help
us
with
the
budgeting?
T
Would
you
and
she
just
very
graciously
said
look
if
this
is
going
to
save
kids
lives,
all
yours,
and
so
she
did.
You
know
help
us
sort
of,
as
did
as
did
Mr
Thompson
help
us
to
understand
exactly
how
it
was
organized
so
that
we
could
budget
for
it
so
that
we
could
put
in
a
budget
to
expand
this
over
two
years
to
other
schools.
And
so
it
was
mostly
just
grounded
in
our
being
incredibly
impressed
by
the
results
that
they
were
getting
at
Perry
and
wanting
all
of
our
students
to
have
that
opportunity.
T
I
mean
I
well,
sustainable
I,
I
think
are.
That
will
be
an
open
question
after
the
two
years,
and
so
it
is
to
your
point
extremely
important
that
we
track
to
make
sure
that
the
results
are,
as
you
know,
as
replicable
as
as
we
hope
that
they
are
and
then
I
think
the
ongoing
sustainability
could
be
the
responsibility
of
the
school
district.
It
could
be
the
responsibility
it
could
be.
Lots
of
people
could
think.
O
About
how
we
do
that,
I
asked
you
why
we
applied
and
not
the
school
district
directly,
and
you
said
so
that
we
do
have
some
saying
that
so
that
makes
me
realize,
then
that
we're
going
to
have
some
staff
involved.
We're
gonna
have
some
police
officers
involved.
So
then
it
brings
me
to
the
question
why
it
didn't
come
before
city
council
or
why
there
was
no
discussion
prior
to
this
whole
to
this,
to
this
program
being
applying
for
the
grant.
I
think
that
some
I
think
it's
something
city
council
is
looking
at
now.
O
I
can
tell
you
we
are
to
talk
about
how
we're
Distributing
and
applying
for
Grants
across
the
city
of
Pittsburgh.
We
need
to
have
accountability
for
all
these
public
dollars
and
there's
way
too
much
way
too
many
dollars
going
out
the
door
and
not
seeing
a
lot
of
results
back
so
whether
it's
coming
from
the
state,
a
private
you
know,
entity
whatever,
however,
we're
getting
it
I
want
to
make
sure
that
what
we're
doing
is
effective
for
the
for
the
residents
that
we
see
a
reduction
in
homicides.
O
We
see
a
reduction
in
violence
that
we
see
more
people
getting
help.
We
want
to
see
results
and
the
people
want
to
see
results.
They
are
so
tired
of
every
day
you
put
on
TV,
put
on
the
news,
pick
up
a
newspaper
and
you
see
violence
across
the
entire
region.
It's
not
it's
not
isolated
to
Pittsburgh,
but
Pittsburgh
likes
to
set
itself
apart
as
a
leader.
O
It's
time
to
lead
in
this
area
the
area
that
we
most
need
to
help
in
I
think
you
know
our
downtown
should
be
a
safe
place
for
people
to
go,
but
so
should
our
neighborhoods
be
a
safe
place
for
people
to
live
and
our
schools
should
definitely
be
safe.
So
if
there's
a
way,
we
can
do
this
and
it
works
I'm
all
for
it,
but
I
want
accountability.
O
I
want
some
reporting
back
I'll
work
with
Ricky
Moody
again
on
this
as
well,
to
make
sure
that
we
have
some
kind
of
reporting
and
I
know
that
you
guys
have
been
working
really
well
with
him.
So
thank
you
for
that.
Could.
T
I
just
address
the
second
part
of
your
question,
which
is
the
other
pccd
money
which
I
think
you
thought
maybe
for
similar
kinds
of
things,
the
other
PCC
grant
that
we
got
was
actually
for
equipment.
It's
not
for
you,
know,
programming
or
any
of
that
at
all.
It's
really
equipment
in
the
police,
Bureau.
T
O
Q
O
T
I'm
not
I'm,
not
sure
if
this
is.
If
this
is
clear
to
folks
the
work
started
on
ESG
funding,
so
the
work
has
been
going
on
and
and
the
work
the
contract
is
I,
don't
mean
to
say
the
contract
is
an
incredibly
important
thing
to
get
done
and
we
really
are
looking
forward
to
bringing
that
forward
very
very
soon.
T
It's
not
it's
not
getting
in
the
way
of
us
continuing
to
do
the
work,
because,
because
the
team
is
working,
the
the
you
know
the
roots
teams
are
out
the
you
know
the
hubs
that
we
have
are
open
and
so
on
and
so
forth.
So
there
is
urgency
to
finish
the
contract.
I
just
want
to
assure
you
that
the
ABS,
because
that's
going.
O
H
Thank
you,
Mr
chair,
that
kind
of
goes
into
what
I
was
going
to
talk
about
the
tail
end
of
what
you
were
requesting
council
president.
So
whenever
I
I
recently
worked
on
a
bill
where
it
was
a
sub-awardee
that
would
receive
funds
first
off,
let
me
just
make
clear:
like
I
went,
saw
it
in
person.
The
you
know
have
a
good
relationship
with
the
Outreach
workers
that
worked.
There
just
saw
them
and
the
students
at
the
one
Northside
event
last
week,
and
you
know
it
was
phenomenal.
H
They
were
the
students
were
there,
they
were
engaged
they're
very
proud
of.
You
know
what
what
they're
a
part
of
that
said.
You
know
in
terms
of
process
like
recently
I
had
to
pull
back
the
brakes
on.
You
know
something
I
was
working
on
and
to
make
sure
that
we
were
on
the
up
and
up
with
doing
that,
and
my
concern
is
that
I
was
given.
H
I
was
advised
by
their
Law
Department
in
procurement
to
do
to
change
language
and
to
make
sure
that
we
were
doing
this
appropriately
and
that
language
in
the
bill
and
that
we
would
put
on
an
RFQ
request
for
qualifications
for
a
sub
word
e
for
our
arpa
funds,
and
so
I'd
like
to
to
know
how
this
is
different
than
that.
And
if
that's
also
the
same
guidance
that
I've
been
recommended
should
continue.
Here.
Q
Yeah,
so
this
legislation
is
to
accept
the
grant.
There
will
be
further
legislation.
Charles
and
I
talked
about
it
yesterday
to
engage
with
obb
to
complete
this,
as
now
obb
is
written
in
the
grant,
so
that
typically
is
where
law
starts
to
come
in
and
figures
out
what
the
procurement
process
is
to
ensure
we're
complying
with
both
the
pccd
requirements,
as
well
as
city
code
requirements.
So
there
will
be
an
additional
legislation
in
the
future.
Regarding
the
actual
agreement.
G
H
Yeah
I
see
the
difference,
I
guess
I'm
wondering
just
you
know
if
that,
if
that
so,
for
instance,
what
you're
describing
is
that
the
upper
funds
come
in
and
it's
not
like
we
applied
for
those
those
funds
with
other
organizations.
Look
at
that
this
one
is
okay.
This
is
the
group
that
we,
you
know,
think
and
do
the
work
to
this
other
entity,
the
in
the
pccdd,
pccd
and
they're,
going
to
evaluate
that
and
possibly
honor
the
funds.
H
Q
You
have
to
present
for
the
a
plan
right
because
when
they,
when
they
review
grants
applications,
we
have
to
make
sure
that
we
have
a
solid
plan
that
they
believe
will
work.
Since
obb
has
already
been
doing
the
work
at
Perry
there,
who
we
worked
in
with
the
grant
again
that
we
will
still
have
to
go
through
a
process
to
engage
with
ob
being
contract
with
them
as
the
sub
awardee
or
sub
contractor
for
the
work
at
the
other
schools
and
to
continue
the
work
at
Perry.
Q
H
I'll
reach
out
to
law
because
I
mean
I'd
like
to
get
that
get
that
answer
before
final
vote
in
terms
of
is
there
is
this,
you
know,
is
this
different
or
is
it
the
same?
So
oh,
but
you
know
before
I,
take
a
final
vote
on
it.
T
I
heard
councilwoman
gross,
you
know,
ask
to
see
the
application
I
think
I
think
we
could
also
send
you.
The
the
solicitation
which
asked
us
to
it
was
fairly
clear
that
you
know
they
wanted
to
see
that
the
project
that
you
were
applying
for
was
to
expand
something
that
was
already
kind
of
on
the
ground
and
working
and
and
I'd.
T
Also
like
you
to
see
the
letters
of
support
that
went
with
the
application
from
various
people
in
the
school
district
Community
organizations
on
the
North
side,
who
had
seen
the
the
things,
so
you
know
their
their
just
you,
you
can
just
see
the
whole
thing.
O
Sorry,
the
groups
that
you
mentioned
that
wrote
letters
of
support
are
they
receiving
any
of
the
dollars.
T
Probably
not
as
groups,
because
the
way
that
the
program
works
is
that
credible
or
trustworthy
Community
Partners
are
actually
the
folks
who
are
funded
to
do
the
work.
So
I
don't
know
like
you,
wouldn't
send
an
organization
into
the
school.
Now
their
members
may
be
the
people
who
are
tap.
They
are
community
members
who
are
tapped
to
be
the
elders
who
are
in
the
school
or
the
credible,
and
then,
of
course,
the
kids
themselves
begin
to
receive
payments.
So.
O
What
I'm,
at
what
I
I'm
asking
this
because
I
since
I've
been
here
since
2009
every
time
a
group
comes
and
seems
supportive
of
a
program
they
come
to
the
table
and
they
came
to
the
table
for
the
Housing
Opportunity
fund
and
insisted
they
weren't
going
to
get
a
dime
from
the
funding
and
they
got
money.
They
got.
They
got
money
from
the
funding.
So
every
time
somebody
comes
here,
it
seems
like
they're
getting
paid
to
come
here
and
speak
publicly
and
I
want
them.
To
be
honest,
about
is
what
I
want
them
to
do.
O
You
know
yes,
we're
getting
funding,
no
we're
not
getting
funding,
but
mostly
when
I
was
just
telling
councilman
Lavelle
I
think
it
would
be
so
helpful
and
we're
going
to
get
maybe
our
budget
office
in
your
budget
office
to
work
together
or
you
are
depart
our
budget
budget
office
in
OMB
to
work
together
to
maybe
come
up
work
with
you
to
come
up
with
a
chart,
so
the
community
can
see
these
are
the
dollars
that
we
have.
This
is
where
they're
going.
This
is
what
we're,
why
we're
finding
it?
O
Why
we're
involved
something
visual
for
people
to
see,
and
these
are
the
amount
of
people
that
we
served
and
have
you
know
when
I
ran
a
federal
program
we
had
to
sign
in
people
had
to
sign
in
sign
in
sheets
they
had
to
you
had
to
keep
track
of
who
you
were
serving
it?
Wasn't
you
somebody
could
just
write
down
somebody's
name.
O
They
verified
that
and
so
I
think
it's
it's
incumbent
upon
us,
because
this
is
such
a
serious
issue
to
make
sure
that
we're
giving
the
public
some
real,
clear
information
and
confidence
and
what
we're
doing
is
going
to
be
it's
going
to
work
and
be
in
their
best
interest
of
the
public
for
real.
So
for
me,
if
we
can
come
up
with
some
kind
of
visual,
I,
think
and
post
that
places,
I
think
it
might
be
more
helpful.
N
I
think
I
appreciate
it
and
I
I
appreciate
being
sent
on
the
grant
proposal,
so
I
will
look
out
for
that
and
the
support
letters
to
put
a
little
more
details
on
this
I
know
that
councilman
Smith
said
she
was
familiar
with
the
program
at
Perry
and
councilman.
Wilson
is
familiar
with
the
program
at
Perry,
but
I
actually
think
and
now
I'm
a
little
confused.
They
did.
The
program
at
Perry
also
have
City
involvement.
Q
No,
the
program
at
Perry
was
just
I
mean
they
work
with
us,
because
we
work
closely
with
operation.
Better
Block
and
our
police
officers
are
obviously
work
closely
with
Outreach
team
and
Outreach
workers.
So
there
was
some
communication
and
coordination
there,
but
we
were
not
directly
funding
that
or
doing
anything
more
than
just
our
standard
work
that
we
do
with
all
Outreach
workers
in
this
city.
Q
With
this
grant,
we
will
be
more
involved
with
this
one
because
it
is
expanding
city-wide.
We
want
to
ensure
that
as
councilwoman
Warwick
mentioned,
you
know
we
want
to
ensure
that
we're
not
creating
silos
and
we're
making
sure
everything
goes
and
flows
together
between
all
the
different
Outreach
teams
and
workers.
In
that
space.
N
N
In
this
there's
no
material,
so
are
we
naming
the
schools
and
are
the
Public
Safety?
Is
the
public
safety
involvement
here
restricted
to
just
Outreach
workers
and
the
two,
the
350
986
dollars
for
salary
and
benefits
of
new
Public
Safety
employees
that
is
being
used
are
those
who
are
new
Outreach
workers
specifically.
S
N
Your
it
says
in
the
summary
attachment
that's
the
fiscal
impact
statement.
It
says
350
986
dollars
for
salary
and
benefits
of
two
employees
to
oversee
and
administer
the
program.
Q
Similarly,
the
when
the
reach
folks,
Outreach
teams
get
information,
they
share
that
with
Reverend
Jones,
and
then
that
is
disseminated
between
the
groups
to
ensure
good
communication
and
Ensure
that
intelligence,
so
to
speak,
is
shared.
So
when
there's
a
concern
of
heightened
violence
or
potential
retaliation,
everybody
is
aware
of
it.
If
that
makes
sense,.
N
I
appreciate
you
appreciate
you
clarifying
that,
because
I
think
I've
heard
another
member
mention,
the
police
will
be
involved
and
the
answer
is
yes,
and
so
I
was
just
trying
to
figure
out
then
exactly
what
we're
voting
on,
because
there's
a
there's
a
community
concern
about
there
being
you
know,
officers
in
school
right
now,
that's
PPS
officers,
but
so
we're
not
I
just
want
just
to
be
clear:
we're
not
putting
Pittsburgh
Police
Officers
into
City
Schools.
N
Thank
you,
I
apologize
if
the
camera
angles,
I,
actually
I
needed
you
to
say
the
rubrics
I
couldn't
see
your
response
at
all:
I
apologize
for
not
being
there
so
okay,
that's
that's
clear
for
me
and
I
look
forward
to
reading
the
rest
of
the
grand
because,
again
on
the
face
of
it,
the
concept
I
think
is
really
encouraging
and
that
and
I
I'm
hopeful
that
we'll
get
good
outcomes
and
I
think
it's
great
to
have
just
kind
of
more
grown-ups,
interacting
positively
with
our
kids.
N
A
F
G
B
M
Thank
you,
I
would
love
to
call
the
directors
of
the
table
to
learn
a
little
bit
more
about
just
to
hear
an
update
on
how
the
safe
routes
to
school
program
is
going
and
I'll
talk
as
you're
walking,
so
that
we
can
save
some
time
I,
mostly
I'm,
interested
in
finding
out
how
it's
going.
If
there's
an
update,
I
see
that
this
one
and
the
previous
one
has
to
do
with
safe
routes
to
school,
because
my
main
question
is:
how
are
we
choosing?
J
Sure
Kim
Lucas
director
for
the
city's
Department
of
mobility
and
infrastructure,
so
you
all
probably
remember
the
safe
routes
to
school
grant
that
was
applied
for
in
2018
or
19..
This
is
that
money,
so
we
hired
the
city's
first
safe
route
to
school
coordinator.
I
think
it
might
have
been
the
first
safe
routes
of
school
coordinator
that
the
Commonwealth
of
Pennsylvania's
Department
of
Transportation,
has
ever
allowed
to
be
hired.
So
there
was
a
learning
curve
it
took
a
while
for
us
to
be
able
to
staff
up.
J
We
had
to
get
their
approvals,
and
so
this
is
for
specifically
some
of
the
physical
improvements
that
were
identified
three
years
ago
on
those
walkthroughs.
So
the
first
three
schools
that
we
identified
were
Arlington
Elementary,
School,
Propel,
Hazelwood
and
Faison
Pre-K.
So
these
are
the
ones
from
our
very
inaugural
year
of
the
program.
It's
just
taken
us
this
long
through
the
PennDOT
oversight
process
to
get
to
the
stage
where
we're
able
to
use
that
money
for
the
actual
preliminary
engineering
and
construction.
J
So
those
schools
were
selected
by
working
with
PPS
transportation
to
find
out
where
kids
were
walking
to
school
and
where
a
lot
of
kids
were
being
bussed
into
school,
who
lived
geographically
close
enough
to
walk.
This
was
prior
to
the
covid
reduction
in
bus
service.
That
happened
a
couple
years
ago,
where
a
lot
of
schools.
J
That
is
how
and
making
sure
that
we
had
some
Geographic
diversity
and,
looking
at
the
title,
one
schools
as
well
to
make
sure
that
we
were
targeting
our
most
underserved
schools.
First,
that's
how
we
got
to
this
first
list
now
that
was
the
very
initial
year
since
that
time,
we've
been
able
to
think
about
things
like
opening
up
a
survey
to
see
where
schools
want
to
raise
their
hand
and
get
us
to
work
with
them.
J
As
well,
we've
also
recently
applied
for
the
Safe
Streets
for
all
Grant,
which
you
all
probably
saw
a
newspaper
article
a
couple
weeks
ago
about
wanting
to
the
city
to
pursue
that
money.
We
pursued
it.
We
have
so
far
been
unsuccessful
in
getting
it,
but
it
was
for
a
proactive
approach
where
we
could
do
a
larger
number
of
schools,
with
sort
of
a
template
of
treatments
to
make
those
schools
more
accessible
for
people
walking
and
biking.
So
it's
been
really
successful
in
that
people
know
about
the
program
they
love
the
program.
J
We've
hosted
cross
crossing
guard,
Appreciation,
Day,
walk
to
school
day,
bike,
just
bike
and
walk
to
school
day,
and
things
like
that.
The
physical
improvements
have
been
a
little
behind
because
of
the
PennDOT
again
oversight
process,
which
is
pretty
cumbersome
and
expensive,
but
we
are
we're
continuing
to
grow.
M
J
So
that's
a
pretty
substantial
signal
project
and
then
at
phase
on
at
Braddock
in
Susquehanna
we're
going
to
install
a
pedestrian
Refuge
Island
crosswalk
improvements
at
you
know:
High
VIs
crosswalks
at
Braddock
and
Tioga,
and
then
on
Tioga
Street
we're
going
to
install
what
we
call
a
choker
which
is
to
help
reduce
the
lane
width
so
that
people
slow
down
and
we've
already
done
some
improvements
that
we
were
able
to
do
that.
We
didn't
need
the
PennDOT
Capital
funding
to
do.
J
For
example,
at
a
number
of
these
schools,
we've
installed
wayfinding
signage
for
to
that
mimic
the
school
bus
route,
so
that
kids
can
help
identify
how
to
get
to
school
along
the
safest
route.
And
we
did
that
in
conjunction
with
the
school
administrators
who
helped
us
prioritize
where
to
to
do
that.
Work.
M
I
understand
that
this
is
part
of
a
grant
and
that
it's
now
just
kind
of
coming
to
fruition
because
of
all
those
bureaucratic
hurdles,
so
federal
government.
If
anyone
from
the
federal
government
is
listening,
can
you
please
structure
your
grants
more
like
a
or
piece
they
go
straight
to
the
cities
and
don't
have
to
filter
through
PennDOT?
Thank
you
I
doubt.
M
Anyone
heard
that,
but
I'll
keep
drumming
that
drumming
that
one
so
I
guess,
can
we
in
the
future
take
advantage
of
some
of
our
other
programs
that
involve
the
public
like
the
re-envisioned
traffic
calming
request
program
so
that
as
people
like,
will
there
be
the
opportunity
to
look
at
what
those
requests
are
coming
in
and
overlay
them
on
top
of
like
routes
where
kids
are
walking
to
school
and
say
well,
we
might
not
be
able
to
do
like
the
entire
feeder
pattern
to
Colfax,
but
we
can
take
care
of
this
traffic
calming
area
and
maybe
it
gets.
M
J
So
and
what
I
was
looking
at
on,
my
phone
was
for
our
traffic
calming
selection
criteria,
because
we
do
exactly
what
you're
suggesting.
J
We
receive
that
request
from
the
public
of
which
we
have
about
a
thousand
right.
Now
we
give
every
request
a
score,
so
some
of
that's
based
on
engineering
data
like
the
speed
how
many
cars
are
using
that
street
the
crash
history,
but
we
also
look
at
pedestrian
generators.
So
is
there
a
school
that
this
location
would
serve
and
if
there
is
a
school
or
a
hospital
or
a
Rec,
Center
or
a
senior
center,
it
gets
more
points.
So
it
gets
bumped
up
on
our
list.
J
That
is
one
of
the
the
gaps,
though,
when
we
rely
on
community
requests
is
that
it
doesn't
capture
a
hundred
percent
of
the
locations
of
need,
so
by
looking
at
things
proactively
like
the
location
of
trip,
generators
like
schools
and
applying
for
grants
that
use
schools
as
sort
of
our
cookie
cutter
metric
for
what
part
of
the
city
to
focus.
Some
of
our
efforts
on,
we
hope
to
as
equitably
as
possible,
distribute
those
resources.
M
My
last
question
is
given
that
you
know
I
totally
understand
the
three
women
requests
are
not
the
ideal
way,
because
they
don't
capture
people
who
aren't
making
the
requests
right
and
there's
some
inequity
there
and
so
I
get
that
you're.
Also
working
for
this
project,
working
with
schools
and
transportation
division
of
the
schools,
do
you
ever
coordinate
with
EMS
and
and
talk
with
them?
M
You
know
I
would
imagine
in
fact,
I've
heard
that
you
know
you
could
you
could
talk
to
any
Zone
any
District
at
EMS
and
they
would
be
able
to
tell
you
the
top
three
you
know
intersections
where
they
see
the
most
see
that
of
most
concern
or
the
corridors
where
they
really
are.
You
know
paying
a
lot
of
attention
to
have
you
ever
done.
Focus
groups
or
you
know,
talked
with
them
about
their
experiences.
That's.
J
A
great
idea,
so
we
have
recurring
monthly
meetings
with
the
Pittsburgh
Bureau
of
police.
That
sometimes
also
has
representatives
from
other
portions
of
Public
Safety.
So
we
are
engaging
on
a
recurrent
basis
around
specific
projects
and
we
do
get
requests
sometimes,
when
you
know
they've
done
a
traffic
study
or
something
a
speed
study,
and
they
say
we
really
think
that
this
intervention
would
benefit
this
location.
So
we
do
but
I
think
there's
always
opportunity
to
do
more.
I
will
say,
especially:
we
engage
with
EMS,
specifically
around
things
like
speed,
humps
design,
yeah.
K
J
From
some
of
the
ambulance,
drivers
was
that
we,
you
know,
were
concerned
about
the
comfort
of
the
people
we're
transporting,
and
so
my
staff
wanted
to
make
sure
that
we
showed
that
we
heard
that
concern
and
that
we
could
experience
it
ourselves
and
engage
deeply
in
that
way.
So
we
are,
we
are
engaged
with
them
and
we
can
continue
to
grow.
That.
M
Great
and
if
there's
a
way
that
I
can
even
help
convene,
you
know
as
a
way
to
start
that
conversation
to
continue
that
conversation,
but
more
around,
like
you
know,
as
we're.
Creating
our
capital
budget
requests
this
summer,
as
you
as
a
department,
are
as
every
council
member
is
like.
If
there's
a,
if
there's
a
way
that
I
can
maybe
help
with
that
to
see
if
it
works
in
one
area,
and
then
you
know,
maybe
it
works
in
other
areas
too.
I'd
be
happy
to
to
take
part
in
that
conversation
as
well,
and.
J
I
just
one
other
thing
you
mentioned
about
way
back
on
the
direct
recipient
of
federal
funds.
So
with
the
raise
Grant,
which
the
city
recently
was
awarded
for
an
over
11
million
dollars
for
Center
Avenue
work
in
the
Hill
district,
there
is
an
option
with
that:
Federal
money
to
be
a
direct
recipient
as
the
city
so
to
bypass
Penn
DOT
oversight.
However,
because
nobody
in
the
Commonwealth
of
Pennsylvania
has
done
that
yet
we
do
not
think
that
we've
got
the
framework
in
place
for
the
procurement
to
provide
all
of
our.
J
And
oversight
to
really
manage
a
large
Grant
like
that
at
this
time.
But
it
is
something
that
my
Department's
actively
pursuing
and
to
find
out
what
it
would
take
for
us
to
become
that
direct
recipient
make
sure
we
have
all
the
financial
and
accounting
and
procurement
processes
in
place
so
that
we
can
have
more
control
over
that
money
and
more
efficient
work
as
well.
J
I
mean
they
could
potentially
they
do
work
with
the
direct
recipients.
For
example,
PRT
is
a
direct
recipient
of
Federal
Transit
money,
and
so
there
are
relationships
that
they
could
probably
point
to
that
help
guide
us
in
standing
up
our
processes.
Okay
and
I-
think
the
Federal
Highway
Administration
directly
could
as
well.
N
Thank
you
Mr
chair,
so
thank
you
director
and
you
know:
I'm
really
excited
about
the
safe
routes
to
schools
in
general
and
we've
talked
about
it
many
times
and
I
talked
about
it.
I
think
before
you
worked
on
me
in
relation
to
not
just
school
buildings
and
they're
kind
of
surrounding
infrastructure,
but
also
our
high
frequency
school
bus
stops,
but
I'll
get
to
that
in
a
minute.
N
N
J
Off
the
top
of
my
head
and
these
schools
were
selected
pre-covered,
and
so
we
were
looking
at
data
from
that
time
of
not
only
how
many
kids
were
currently
walking,
because
if
a
school
had
100
of
their
kids
walking,
it
might
not
be
the
best
school
for
us
to
invest
in
because
they
obviously
had
what
they
perceived
to
be
safe
route.
So
we
were
looking
for
places
where
there
were
a
lot
of
kids
that
lived
close
but
were
getting
busted
and
I
know
especially
Arlington
school.
N
It
just
it's
so
just
getting
a
reminder
for
the
public.
If
you
don't
have
kids,
some
schools
are
magnet
schools,
and
so
you
know,
hypothetically
100
of
the
kids
are
not
coming
from
the
neighborhood
they're
coming
from
anywhere
else
in
the
city,
so
buildings
are
Blended
where
it's
both
the
feeder
map
or
the
kids
coming
from
the
neighborhood,
either
on
foot
or
by
bus,
but
then
also
other
kids
coming
from
farther
out
so
yeah.
N
It's
just
a
matter
of
curiosity
honestly
I
do
want
to
also
emphasize
councilman
strasberger's
comments
that
everywhere
sorry
everywhere
that
we
are
replacing
infrastructure
to
improve
our
surface
infrastructure
as
well.
So
we
know
that
we
had
50
years
of
or
50
years
behind,
of
replacing
the
water
lines,
the
sewer
lines,
the
gas
lines
and
some
places
they're
they're
doing
them
all
at
once,
and
then
we
won't
be
touching
that
street
for
a
while,
but
as
we
reconstruct
that
street
there's
an
opportunity
to
put
in
Greater
safety
infrastructure.
N
And
then
I've
got
to
take
this
opportunity,
while
you're
at
the
table
and
I
don't
often
do
this.
But
it
is
germane
to
the
legislative
item.
I
have
these
kinds
of
concerns
from
the
principal
and
parents
at
Fulton
Elementary
in
Highland
Park,
which
is
actually
one
of
the
schools
that
is
surrounded
by
infrastructure
work
right
now.
Typically,
there
are
kids
walking
right
past.
N
My
house
on
Euclid
to
the
school
and
Euclid
is
in
its
final
phases
of
having
first
water,
then
sewer
and
then
also
gas
line
Replacements
and
there's
a
little
bit
of
a
bombed
out
street
at
the
moment,
but
we'll
be
put
back
in
place.
But
the
there
is
no
dedicated
bus
lane.
N
The
curb,
so
Domi
needs
to
kind
of
get
in
there
and
clarify
working
with
there's
a
crossing
guard,
but
still
working.
Maybe
another
crossing
guard
is
needed
and
I
know
that
we
have
this
at
several
elementary
schools
around
the
city.
Some
in
my
district,
some
are
my
district.
Where
there's
just
too
many
people
in
conflict
and
you've
got
these
tiny.
You
know
K-5
students,
especially
trying
to
navigate
against
aggressive
driving
by
both
school
buses
and
and
cars.
So
it's
dangerous.
N
So
if
you
could
follow
up
with
me
or
have
someone
from
your
office
follow
up
with
me
about
what
we
can
do
at
Fulton
Elementary,
but
I
mean
the
email
mentions
still
Worth
Liberty
school,
which
is
not
in
my
district
in
Montessori,
which
my
district
surrounds,
but
structure
physically
on
friendship.
Avenue
is
not
in
my
district.
I
would
be
appreciative.
P
Yeah
thanks
so
I'm
very
glad
to
hear
about
Propel.
We
talked
about
that
earlier
so
that
that's
very
good
news
I
mean
I.
I
knew
about
that
project.
I
did
have
one
question
so
as
far
as
calculating
the
kids
that
are
bussing
versus
walking,
do
you
also
have
a
way
to
include
kids?
Who
are
being
excuse
me
who
are
being
driven
to
school?
P
I
mean
I,
know.
For
example,
at
greenfields
we've
talked
about
Greenfield
school
and
they
obviously
are
very
interested
in
in
traffic
calming
or
school
zone
mechanisms
and
lots
of
parents
drive
their
kids
to
school.
J
Yeah,
that's
harder
data
to
get
from
Transportation
at
PPS,
it's
more
anecdotal
that
we
get
from.
J
G
P
Okay,
okay,
great
and
then
just
on
a
sort
of
on
a
separate
note,
so
you
know
that
I'm
I'm,
obviously
I'm
and
we've
talked
about
this
before
I.
Think
one
of
the
frustrations
with
with
you
know,
Street
projects
is,
they
do
take
a
long
time
right
or
the
the
list
is
very
long
and
and
there's
backlog,
so
I'm
I'm,
always
a
big
fan
of
low-cost.
P
P
It
was
funny
because
we
had
had
a
stop
sign
conversation
and
I
just
had
a
call
from
a
constituent
where
he
said.
Oh
there's
people
running
the
stop
sign
on
my
street
and
whatever.
And
what
can
we
do
so?
You
know
I,
look
at
the
Google,
Maps
and
I.
See
it
and
just
you
know,
Having
learned
somewhat:
I
immediately
saw
I'm
like
yeah.
P
There's,
no
way
this
guy's
getting
a
speed
bump
in
this
area
right
because
it's
just
not
a
TR,
it
just
is
a
small
street
and
it's
not
you
know
there
isn't
going
to
be
enough.
Traffic
in
this
I
mean
maybe
someday
long
in
the
future
when
we're
really
getting
traffic
calming
everywhere,
but
this
is
not
a
but
and
and
I
said
to
him.
P
Oh
well,
you
know
what
I
do
on
mice,
because
you
know
we
have
people
who
Street
I
live
on
a
very
little
Street
people
fly
up
and
down
and
I
know
in
the
summer.
Anyway,
we
always
buy
those
plastic,
those
little
plastic,
men
that
hold
the
flag
out
right,
I
mean
we
just
buy
them
and
stick
them
out
on
the
street.
I
stick
one
down
in
the
corner,
but
what
occurred
to
me
is
there.
Is
there
any
I
remember
at
there
was
at
one
point
a
program.
P
It
was
a
few
years
ago,
yeah
slow
streets
and
they
were
like
these
sandwich
boards
and
I
mean
without
actually
having
it
be
part
of
that
program.
Would
it
be
possible
for
us,
as
the
city,
in
the
same
way,
that
we
sort
of
give
out
blue
like
a
complimentary
blue
bin?
To
just
give
you
know
if
there's
a
neighborhood,
that's
like
yeah.
These
people
fly
around
this
corner
to
something
that
they
can
kind
of
stick
out
there
as
a.
J
P
But
it's
the
same:
no
I
just
meant
I
meant
the
sign
like
yeah,
not
the
program
to
like
make
it
a
slow
street.
We
have
to
ask
the
neighbors
and
whatever,
but
just
like
you
know,
like
the
physical
Sandwich
Board
that
says
like
slow
down
our
kids
live
here
or
whatever
that's.
P
O
I
just
want
to
thank
you
for
the
work
that
Domi
has
done
around
Langley,
because
it
was
Domi
that
discovered
when
kids
were
getting
hit
by
cars
and
things
were
happening
there
that
they
never
transition
when
they
transition
the
school.
They
never
transitioned
the
traffic
pattern
on
the
outside,
and
so
thank
you
for
your
work
there,
because
since
then,
I
don't
think
we've
had
any
major
incidents
so
but
I
do
want
to
know
when
the
Bullards,
those
Bullards
Bullards
ballards,
what
do
they
call?
They
were
supposed
to
be
temporary
across
the
city?
J
O
A
Thank
you
any
further
discussion,
if
not
I'll
simply
mention
I,
know.
Kappa
downtown
has
been
interested
in
additional
signage
to
get
cars
to
slow
down
the
other
problem.
I,
don't
think
you
can
solve
it
the
way
they
want
it
solved,
but
in
in
that
block,
when
parents
pick
up
kids
just
run
out
from
the
door
in
the
middle
of
the
block
and
so
they're
looking
to
figure
out
how
to
address
something
there,
but
just
want
to
make
sure
it
was
at
least
on
your
radar.
J
Yeah
I
personally
have
been
out
there
during
pickup
time
in
the
afternoon.
There's
multiple
school
buses
for
multiple
schools
that
are
serving
that
specific
area
and
they
pull
into
the
bike
lane
and
they're
using
the
cross
streets
and
I
I
am
very
familiar
with
that
and
we
have
staff.
That's
been
working
with
them,
but
I
can
follow
up
on
that
as
well.
A
Okay,
thank
you
and
just
because
you
mentioned
it.
Real
quick
I
asked
the
Ura
last
week
to
reach
out
to
your
office
to
discuss
the
raise
Grant
and
to
better
coordinate
between
our
efforts
for
a
number
of
developments
there
and
the
info
structure
dollars
just
FYI.
K
B
H
Well,
thank
you.
Mr,
chair,
councilman,
Lavelle
I
think
this
is
the
the
bridge
that
connects
our
districts
and
just
looking
for
what
I
have
my
hunch
is
that
we're
going
to
repair
the
beam
that
has
been
taken
it
down
to
to
one
way
in,
like
a
10-foot
section,.
J
Major
rehab,
this
agreement
will
cover
preliminary
engineering
for
the
tip
Rehabilitation
of
this
window.
Bridge
construction
is
tentatively
going
to
begin
in
2027..
This
1100
foot
Bridge
was
originally
constructed
in
1930
and
the
last
time
that
it
had
a
major
rehab
was
in
the
1990s.
So
of
course
we're
a
bit
overdue
on
that.
The
design
that
was
used
during
that
rehab,
which
reused
original
steel
forms
for
the
concrete
deck,
has
led
to
those
pervasive
maintenance
issues.
So
this
major
project
will
take
care
of
those
and
and
hopefully
get
us.
H
This
is
exciting:
what
happened
to
the
the
kind
of.
J
K
J
H
Okay,
okay,
so
it's
so
their
engineering
firm
costs,
and
then
this
will
be
the
the
design
that
will
will
use
millions
of
more
dollars
to
rehab
that
bridge
yeah,
so
I'm,
just
looking
for
that
update
on
terms
of
like
so
I
guess
what
I'm
getting
from
this
is
like.
A
B
A
P
Yes,
so
just
to
clarify,
excuse.
P
Yeah
thanks,
so
there
is
a
playground
project
in
Four,
Mile
Run.
That
was
that
there
was
a
verbal
commitment
to
additional
funds
for
that
playground
and
the
parts
were
ordered.
The
plans
were
made
Etc,
but
then
it
somehow
I
don't
know
if
there
was
just
a
Miss
is
before
I
was
here
a
miscommunication,
but
that
funding
did
not
actually
make
it
into
the
project,
so
they
were
short
a
little
bit
on
that
playground
project.
So,
rather
than
go
backwards
and
redesign,
we
just
are
supplementing.
P
Supplementing
that
playground
project
using
using
old
unused
neighborhood
needs
money
and
mono
and
Four
Mile
Run
mono
Oakland
connector
money.
That
said,
we
did
make
a
mistake
on
the
the
money
in
that
there
was
another
playground
project
that
had
been
gotten
neighborhood
and
neighborhood
needs
commitment
years
ago.
K
M
A
H
O
Discussion
yeah
I
would
like
to
have
had
some
discussion
about
holding
it
for
eight
weeks
before
we
hit
hold
it
for
eight
weeks,
so
we
can
hold
it
for
one.
Let's
talk,
yeah
and
then
we'll
okay,
thank
you,
but
I
do
want
to
thank
you
for
doing
a
lot
of
work
on
this,
but
I
think
councilman
gross
is
also
going
to
put
in
some
amendments
too.
So
it'd
be
good
for
us
all
to
sit
down
and
talk.
Thank
you.
O
O
B
661
resolution
accepting
a
new
street
name
would
ring
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
of
2022.
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.
A
Q
M
O
B
K
A
B
B
Bill
1248
resolution
amending
resolution,
429
of
2022
authorizing
the
mayor
and
the
director
of
the
Department
of
Public
Safety,
to
enter
on
behalf
of
the
city
of
Pittsburgh
and
to
a
professional
service
agreement
or
agreements
with
open
Innovation
plans.
Llc
for
records
management
software
services
at
an
overall
cost
to
the
city
not
to
exceed
131
692.92.
To
add
funding
due
to
an
increased
scope
of
work.
P
P
But
this
has
actually
happened
a
couple
of
times
now,
where
Tech
or
you
know,
I.T
related
legislation
has
come
through,
but
it
hasn't
come
through
inp,
and
so
it's
sort
of
surprised
me
at
the
you
know
when
it
when
it
comes
in
as
a
new
paper
I
mean
this
is
fine.
I
looked
it
up,
so
it
didn't.
You
know
it's
fine!
It's
for
animal
control,
records
management
to
replace
an
outdated
system.
B
P
A
Opposed
affirmative
recommendation
that
exhaust
our
agenda
for
today
we
do
have
meeting
announcements
this
afternoon,
Council
will
hold
a
cable
cast
postage
agenda,
discussion
at
1
30
and
a
cable
cast
public
hearing
at
2
30.
A
K
A
Will
hold
a
cable
cast
post
agenda
discussion
at
1
30
and
a
cable
cast
public
hearing
at
2
30
on
the
status
of
registered
Community
organizations
to
register
to
speak
at
the
public
hearing.
Please
fill
out
the
sign
up
form
on
the
council
meeting
webpage
or
call
the
clerk's
office
at
412-255-2138.
Speaker
registration
will
close
this
afternoon
at
1
pm
next
week.
Council
will
hold
our
regular
and
steady
committee
meetings
on
Tuesday
March,
7th
and
Wednesdays
March
8th
at
10,
A.M
respectively.
A
Speaker
registration
will
close
at
9
A.M
the
day
of
the
meeting
to
register
to
speak
at
these
meetings
and
hearings.
Please
fill
out
the
sign
up
form
on
the
council
meeting
webpage.
Let
me
also
call
the
clerk's
office
at
412-255-2138
and
on
Thursday
March
9th
at
1
pm
Council
will
hold
a
pre-agenda
interviews
for
OMB
assistant
director,
the
parking
authority
board,
the
public
art
committee,
the
Housing
Opportunity
fund,
Advisory
board
and
the
clean
Pittsburgh
Commission
anything
from
Members
yeah.
O
First,
I
want
to
reconsider
the
bill
with
the
make
a
motion
to
reconsider.
Do
you
remember
the
bill
number
was
12.
N
O
A
O
And
then
Madam
clerk,
you
send
a
letter
to
the
Law
Department
saying
that
we
once
or
you
work
with
our
solicitor
to
know
that
it's
okay
for
Council
to
vote
on
this
that
came
through
the
proper
way
and
the
proper
process.
He
can
word
that
a
little
bit
better
for
me.
Thank
you.
So.
A
O
O
Yeah
I
just
want
to
say,
I
want
to
call
for
a
post
agenda
on
the
state
of
mental
health
in
the
region
and
we're
gonna
have
a
post
agenda
for
that,
and
I
want
to
remind
people
that
we
have
a
post
agenda
and
a
public
hearing
today
on
rcos
and
the
status
of
rcos
and
what
needs
to
happen
or
not
doesn't
need
to
happen
in
the
city
of
Pittsburgh.
So
that's
today,
at
1,
30
and
2
30.
A
All
those
in
favor
say
aye
aye,
any
opposed
Madam
president
will
work
with
Madam
clerk.
Thank
you
anything
else
for
members,
if
not
motion
to
excuse
the
absent
member,
prove
the
minutes
and
adjourn
the
meeting.