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From YouTube: Clean Pittsburgh Commission Meeting - 4/14/22
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A
Good
morning
pittsburgh
and
welcome
to
the
clean
pittsburgh
commission
meeting
for
april
of
2022,
my
name
is
laurie
beth
jones,
my
pronouns
are
she
heard
and
I
am
the
co-chair
of
the
clean
pittsburgh
commission
for
this
calendar
year.
Thank
you
for
joining
us
this
morning.
We
will
begin
our
meeting
with
as
usual,
with
our
introductions.
A
Again.
My
name
is
lori
beth,
I'm
the
co-chair
of
the
commission
this
year
and
I
am
just
a
resident
from
the
grafton
heights
neighborhood.
So
thank
you
for
joining
us.
I
will
pass
to
my
co-chair
chris
mitchell.
B
C
Hi
guys,
my
name
is
ami
yeah
queeley,
I'm
recycling
specialist
with
the
city
of
pittsburgh,
bureau
of
environmental
services
and
there's
very
few
of
us
on
live
stream.
So
I
guess.
D
E
I
will
go
ahead
and
kick
this
off
to
oh,
let's
go
big
we're
going
to
go
councilman
krauss!
Oh.
F
I
don't
know
how
big
that
is.
I
appreciate
you
saying
that
so
I'm
councilman
bruce
krauss.
I
serve
the
third
council
district,
I'm
in
my
15th
year
as
a
member
of
city
council
and
believe
it
or
not.
I
was
an
original
member
of
the
clean
pittsburgh
commission
when
it
was
first
formed
under
mayor
murphy
and
my
pronouns.
Are
he
his
and
him
and
good
to
be
here
this
morning?
Thank
you
for
having
me,
oh,
I
have
to
kick
it
off
to
somebody
who
do.
I
kick
it
off
to
how
about
kelsey
ripper.
D
G
Hey
good
morning,
everybody,
this
is
sally
statelman,
councilman,
bobby
wilson's,
chief
of
staff,
my
pronouns.
Are
she
her
good
to
see
everybody
this
morning?
I
will
kick
it
over
to
sarah
kinter
kinder.
I
A
Yeah
erica,
you
are
don't
appear
to
be
muted,
but
we
cannot
hear
you
erica
young
is
the
secretary
of
the
commission
and
works
has
a
position
at
waste
management.
She
keeps
us
on
on
track.
So
thank
you
so
much
erica.
Hopefully
you
can
hear
us
and
so
we'll
just
continue
on
becca
morning.
A
And
david,
this
is
my
favorite
thing
to
do-
is
try
to
call
on
our
tech
support
through
the
city
channel,
so
thank
you
so
much
becca
for
taking
care
of
that,
so
that
I
didn't
have
to
do
it.
It
looks
like
emily
from
pennsylvania
resources.
Council
is
also
having
some
audio
connection
issues,
but
emily
is
here.
Thank
you
so
much
for
coming
and
so
just
to
stay
with
prc
for
a
hot.
Second.
How
about
sarah
shay.
L
K
I
am
currently
the
co-treasurer
with
afton
here
on
the
cpc.
I
you
she
her
pronouns
and
I
am
currently
a
suburban
outside
of
the
city
person
now
more
recently,
we
can
change
that.
It's
shame
I
know.
Well,
you
know
what
it's
probably
gonna.
It's
probably
gonna
convert
back
a
couple
years
in
the
city
a
couple
of
years
out,
but
anyways
nice
to
see
you
in
your
cat
bruce
this.
L
Morning,
everybody
erin
tobin,
I
use
she
her
pronouns.
I
am
professionally
with
the
pittsburgh
parks,
conservancy
community
engagement
manager
and
I
live
on
the
north
side
in
spring
hill.
Let's
see
sarah
kinter
have
you
gone.
A
M
A
A
The
clean
pittsburgh
commission
celebrates
the
300
000
neighbors
in
the
90
neighborhoods
of
pittsburgh,
and
a
firm's
member
representation
must
be
geographically
socioeconomically
and
racially
diverse.
In
order
for
the
body
to
be
effective,
relevant
and
creative,
the
commission
recognizes
deficiencies
and
actively
engages
different
perspectives
through
a
platform
of
mutual
respect.
This
engagement
and
respect
will
be
a
tenant
of
all
regular
meetings
and
all
program
functions
of
the
commission
as
well
as
present
in
all
communications,
when
a
distinct
neighborhood
is
in
focus,
initiatives
developed
with
that
neighborhood
will
be
shared
as
replicable
project
templates.
A
A
All
right
moving
right
along,
we
did
have
a
few
last
moment
changes
to
the
agenda
this
morning.
However,
they
have
been
updated
in
the
live
document
which
I
can
see.
Several
of
you
are
accessing
right
now.
So
if
I
could
have,
please
have
a
motion
to
approve
the
agenda
as
it
stands
right
now.
If
you
looked
at
it
yesterday,
it's
only
changed
very
very
moderately.
To
this
morning,
I
will
motion
to
approve.
A
And
omia
will
second.
Thank
you.
So
much
also
thank
you
erica
young
for
sending
out
last
month's
meeting
minutes
via
email
to
all
commission
members.
If
you
have
not
had
a
chance
to
take
a
look
at
those
here,
please
review
for
just
a
few
moments.
It's
two
pages
you
should
be
able
to
get
through
that
and
then
I
will
accept
a
motion
to
approve
the
march
meeting
minutes.
A
A
J
Really
bad
at
navigating
zoom
technology
so
bear
with
my
technical
issues
here.
J
M
A
A
Thank
you
thank
you
and
thank
you
erica,
no
problem.
A
Well,
heck.
That
means
we
get
to
talk
with
counselor
krauss.
Thank
you
so
much
for
joining
us
this
morning.
One
of
our
focus
points
is
and
has
been
paid
cleanups
and
councillor.
Krause
is
here
to
share
with
us
about
the
south
side
program
that
is
in
process.
Regarding
this.
F
Yeah,
thank
you
very
much
thanks.
It's
really
good
to
be
here
and
happy
to
share
a
little
bit
of.
I
guess
our
strategy,
if
you
will
many
of
you,
I'm
sure,
are
aware
of
the
south
side,
east
carson
street
and
the
many
challenges
that
we
face
on
a
multitude
of
levels,
but
one
of
them
is
clearly
waste
management.
F
When
I,
when
I
came
into
office,
probably
the
number
one
call
we
got
from
across
the
council
district
had
to
do
with
parking.
It's
still
a
big
issue,
but
the
number
one
call
no
matter
what
it
exceeds.
Every
other
call
we
get
is
around
waste
management
and
and
whoever
the
the
demographic
might
be,
their
inability
to
manage
their
waste
appropriately.
F
So
third
council
district
has
salsa
flat
slopes.
It
has
hilltop
neighborhoods
of
arlington
allentown
belts
over
knoxville,
mount
oliver
city,
saint
clair,
arlington
heights
and
mount
washington,
and
then
we
also
go
over
into
all
of
south
and
central
oakland.
So
it
is
clearly
the
most
diverse
council
district
of
the
nine
and
presents
the
the
most
opportunities
for
mismanagement
of
waste
across
every
demographic.
You
can
imagine
so
you
go
into
oakland.
After
a
weekend
and
you're
going
to
see
red
cup
hell
and
it
there
will
be
red
cups
and
pizza
boxes
and
mismanaged
trash
everywhere.
F
You
can
imagine
up
in
our
hilltop
neighborhoods.
They
are
probably
some
of
the
most
disrespected
neighborhoods
in
terms
of
outside
city
limit
contractors
coming
to
dump
construction
debris
in
those
neighborhoods,
and
then
we
have,
of
course,
the
south
side
and
all
the
challenges
that
it
it
faces
with
east
carson
street.
So
to
focus
in
specifically,
though,
on
what
we're
doing
to
try
to
manage
waste
on
carson
street,
which
is
why
I'm
here
I'll
tell
you
about
so
during
the
early
80s
and
into
the
90s.
F
We
had
a
local
development
company
here
called
southside
local
development
and
they
did
employ
one
person
that
came
out
maybe
like
three
times
a
week
to
try
to
manage
the
waste
on
carson
street
and
it
was
effective
for
its
time.
But
when
southside
local
development
company
closed
their
doors
somewhere
in
the
early,
I
guess
2000s.
F
There
was
no
coordinated
effort
to
manage
the
impact
of
of
participants
in
east
carson
street
in
a
coordinated
way,
and
we
we
had
to
figure
out
some
kind
of
a
solution
because,
as
a
member
of
council,
first
and
foremost,
I'm
a
fiduciary
agent
of
the
city,
our
primary
role
is
to
manage
the
budget
and
for
me
to
to
charge
city
residents
through
tax
dollar,
with
the
responsibility
of
cleaning
up
largely
con,
largely
a
constituent
that
comes
from
outside
the
city
to
participate
in
east
carson
street
and
make
them
pay
the
bill
for
keeping
it
clean.
F
I
couldn't
justify,
and
I
had
to
find
a
different
way
to
raise
the
necessary
dollars
to
be
able
to
manage
the
street
everyone
who
who
operates
a
business
on
the
street
regardless
of
what
kind
of
business
it
is,
has
the
right
to
conduct
their
business
in
a
clean
and
orderly
corridor,
and
I
was
greatly
concerned
about
a
number
of
daytime
businesses
we
have
that
had
to
come
in
and
clean
up
anything
that
any
thing
that
you
can
imagine
from
a
urine
to
feces
to
vomit
to
pizza,
to
you
know,
broken
liquor.
F
Bottles
to
you
know
all
kinds
of
single-use
plastic
that
you
can
imagine
and-
and
it
really
did
become
a
challenge.
F
So
under
the
peduto
administration
he
had
a
deputy
chief
of
staff
at
one
point
in
time
named
john
fournier
and
john,
and
I
sat
down
and
tried
to
figure
out
a
way
that
we
could
raise
necessary
dollars
to
put
a
clean
team
on
the
street
on
a
regular
basis
without
charging
taxpayers
to
do
it,
and
so
collectively
we
came
up
with
this
idea
of
collecting
revenue
from
parking
meters,
sequestering
that
money,
almost
like
a
business
improvement
district
and
through
legislation
limiting
the
use
of
those
funds
to
a
very
defined
area
of
east
carson
street,
and
you
would
have
thought
you
would
have
thought
that
I
I
don't
know
what
that
I
had
done
the
most
unbelievably.
F
You
know
you
know
horrible
thing
I
could
have
possibly
done.
How
dare
you
charge
someone
for
parking?
That's
just
you
know
the
you
know.
Everybody
has
the
right
to
free
parking
and
everybody
has
the
right
to
have
the
space
in
front
of
the
door
where
they're
going-
and
you
know
and-
and
I
could
not
believe
the
opposition
that
I
met
even
even
mayor
peduto-
was
adamantly
opposed
to
it-
that
we
had
never
charged
parking
at
night.
We
had
only
charged
parking
in
the
daylight
hours,
nine
to
nine
to
five.
F
I
had
met
with
some
administrators
at
the
time
who
will
remain
nameless
and
I
tried
to
explain
to
them
the
challenges
that
we
were
facing,
that
my
week
really
begins
thursday
night
and
doesn't
end
until
monday
morning,
but
city
services
are
all
geared
from
monday
through
friday,
nine
to
five,
and
I
explain
to
these
administrators
who
are
no
longer
with
the
city
that
these
were
the
challenges
I
was
facing,
and
this
was
the
help
that
I
needed
and
what
I
got
from
these
administrators.
F
I
swear
as
I
sit
here.
They
said
to
me.
They
didn't
call
me
councilman,
they
didn't
call
me
bruce.
They
didn't
call
me,
mr
krause.
They
called
me
pal
and
they
said
pal
if
it
happens
after
three
o'clock
on
a
friday
and
before
seven
o'clock
on
a
monday
you're
on
your
own,
and
they
got
up
and
walked
out
of
the
meeting,
and
that
was
sort
of
the
starting
point
of
how
the
hell
excuse.
F
My
french,
do
you
reinvent
the
the
culture
of
a
city
to
understand
that
that
successful
cities
operate
24,
7,
365
right
people
choose
to
live
where
they
choose
to
live
for
a
multitude
of
reasons?
Is
there
good
housing
stock
is
it
affordable?
Can
I
find
a
place
to
live?
Can
I
find
employment?
Is
the
employment
satisfying?
Does
it
pay
a
fair
wage?
Can
I
have
benefits
with
that
employment?
F
Can
I
educate
children
if
I
choose
to
have
children?
Can
I
further
my
education?
If
I
choose
to
do
so,
but
if
I'm
not
at
work,
not
at
home,
not
at
school,
what
do
you
want
to
do?
We
want
to
socialize
we're
social
beings?
We,
these
kinds
of
spaces
are
incredibly
important
for
us
to
be
able
to
be
out
gather
together.
You
know,
share.
You
know,
break
a
loaf
of
bread
share.
F
You
know
intimacies
with
our
our
neighbors
and
and
and
socialize
and
so
east
carson
street
is
a
court
is
clearly
a
prime
example
of
how
that
is
so
very
important.
And
so
what
do
we
do
to
protect
those
areas
of
of
socializing,
as
it
relates
to
making
sure
they're
clean
and
neat
and
orderly
at
all
times,
regardless
who's
using
them?
F
So
it
took
me
us
about
probably
two
years
to
convince
the
naysayers,
and
there
was
not
one,
not
one
person
that
supported
the
idea
to
convince
the
naysayers
that
this
actually
was
a
viable
opportunity
that
we
could.
We
could
basically
charge
people
that
come
to
use
the
services
of
the
south
side
to
make
certain
that
it
is
clean
and
orderly
and
well
maintained.
F
I
believe
the
number
is
meters
in
the
south
side
from
on
friday
and
saturday,
nights
from
6
p.m,
until
midnight
and
through
legislation
sequestered
those
dollars
to
illegally
had
to
be
returned
back
to
the
business
district,
to
provide
for
infrastructure,
improvement,
cleanliness
and
public
safety,
and
so
we
are
now
in
our
fourth,
maybe
fifth
year
of
doing
this.
F
F
We
now
sit
at
almost
nine
hundred
thousand
dollars
that
has
been
collected
had
it
not
been
for
pandemic
and
the
impact
that
it
had
on
the
business
district.
We
would
have
exceeded
a
million
dollars
at
this
point
in
time,
and
this
year
2000
20
22.
We
will
exceed
1
million
having
been
collected
through
parking
enhancement
district,
and
so
what
that
allows
us
to
do
is
to
provide
for
cameras
on
the
street
for
public
safety.
F
It
provides
for
us
to
do
info
infrastructure
improvements
as
necessary,
and
it
provides
for
us
to
have
a
clean
team
on
the
street
at
least
two
people
every
day
of
the
week,
monday
through
sunday,
and
not
having
to
charge
taxpayers
to
to
perform
those
services,
which
is
the
biggest
positive
of
it.
So
on
any
given
month,
the
clean
team
will
gather
approximately
1600
pounds
of
improperly
disposed
of
waste,
so
whether
that
is
pizza
boxes,
whether
that
is
cocktail
napkins,
whether
that
is
glass,
whether
that
is
a
single-use
plastic.
F
F
To
pick
those
up,
they
do
graffiti
removal
sticker
removal
and
basically
serve
as
ambassadors
on
the
street
to
guide
people
to
where
they
might
be
needing
to
go
or
services
that
they're
looking
for
or
businesses
that
they
might
be
looking
for
as
well
and
right
now
we
have
two
full-time
people
there,
mike
and
artie.
They
have
been
our
clean
team
ambassadors,
for
I
want
to
say
the
better
part
of
three
years
now
they
are
personally
known
by
probably
70
of
residents
that
live
in
the
south
side.
F
We
are
about
to
add
a
third
person
to
the
the
clean
team
because
of
the
ongoing
impact
of
people
simply
not
knowing
how
to
find
a
garbage
can
be
responsible
about
managing
their
waste
on
a
personal
level
and
and
so
we're
we're
challenged
with
picking
up
after
them.
So
we're
about
to
add
a
third
person
at
the
end
of
or
beginning
of
may,
because
of
the
continuation
of
the
impact
we
have
the
summer
months
ahead
of
us,
which
we
expect
to
be
even
more
impactful
than
fall
or
winter
months.
F
We
report
out
every
month
to
an
organization
known
as
the
southside
planning
forum,
so
that
all
of
the
revenue,
the
recording
and
this
bursting
of
revenue
is
very
much
a
matter
of
public
record.
We
report
out
to
neighborhood
organizations
every
month
as
to
what
we've
spent.
What
is
in
the
account,
what
expenses
we
expect
to
have
coming
and
the
amount
of
waste
that
we
have
collected
and
the
you
know
what
we
anticipate
to
be
prepared
for
in
the
future.
F
So
our
our
mission,
now,
if
you
will
more
than
anything
else,
is
to
reinforce
the
concept
of
reduction
that
this
idea
that
we
can
continue
to
produce
single-use
waste
and
only
go
out
and
pick
it
up
and
that
it
is
a
free-for-all
if
you
will,
for
anybody
at
any
point
in
time
whatsoever
to
feel
completely
entitled
to
use
single
use.
Waste
and
then
leave
it
in
the
streets
is
not
sustainable.
F
We
can't
continue
to
do
that
for
the
rest
of
our
lives,
and
so
our
our
real
mission
now
is
to
educate
in
terms
of
reduction,
first
reuse,
reuse,
second,
recycle,
third
and
then
ultimately
dispose
of
fourth
and
hopefully
through
a
concerted
and
diligent
education
process.
We
might
actually
make
some
inroads
to
get
people
to
understand
the
importance
of
you
know
if
you
don't
need
to
take
that,
perhaps
it's
okay
to
say
no,
you
know
I'm
sure
you
heard
this
week.
F
Council
passed
the
ban
unanimously
on
plastic
bags,
which
really
was
a
12-year
12
or
13-year
process
to
actually
get
business,
to
understand
the
importance
of
reduction
of
of
plus
single-use
plastic
bags,
and
but
by
taking
your
time
being
diligent
and
never
losing
sight
of
the
of
the
fight.
F
We
actually
were
able
to
engage
business
into
actually
understanding
cooperating
and
wanting
to
be
leaders
in
in
re
in
the
reduction
of
single-use
plastic
bags.
So
I
think
we
can
do
the
same
thing
in
our
business
districts
with
single-use
containers
and
get
business
to
understand
the
importance
of
reduction
first
reuse.
Second,
recycle
third
and
disposal
for
it.
F
B
That's
so
great,
and
I've
learned
so
much
so
quickly
here
about
the
green
team.
On
the
south
side
there
I
know
you've
had
a
talks
with
other
districts
in
other
areas
about
ways
they
could
possibly
replicate
your
model,
but
nobody
else
gets
parking
quite
like
the
south
side.
So
what
was
the
like?
Best
suggestions,
you've
heard
from
other
districts
who
would
like
to
do
the
same
thing,
but
parking
wasn't
going
to
be
the
funding.
F
Yeah,
I
think,
ultimately,
we're
going
to
have
to
re-imagine
what
a
parking
enhancement
district
really
looks
like
in
terms
of
south
side.
We
want
to
reduce
vehicles,
we
don't
want
people
bringing
vehicles
as
as
much
as
possible.
F
We
were
having
great
success
before
the
pandemic,
encouraging
ride,
share
platforms
and
for
people
to
to
use
those
as
opposed
to
bringing
their
vehicles.
F
It
is
a
state
project
because
the
carson
street
is
a
state
highway,
but
the
the
project
is
focused
solely
on
improving
safety
on
the
east
carson
street
corridor,
so
whether
it
is
a
personal
vehicle,
public
transportation,
bike,
scooter
or
pedestrian,
the
the
project
is
geared
to
improve
safety
for
anyone
that
uses
the
street,
but
the
driving
factor
as
to
why
we,
as
taxpayers
collectively
are
investing
18
million
dollars
into
east
carson
street
is
that
the
danger
was
connected
directly
to
dui
and
that
we
were
found
to
be
the
sixth
most
dangerous
stretch
of
road
in
the
state
of
pennsylvania
based
on
dui.
F
So
for
me,
as
an
elected
official,
to
continue
to
advocate
to
bring
more
cars
into
food
and
beverage
business
where
people
can
consume
alcohol
and
drive
cars.
If
I
were
to
continue
to
advocate
for
that
platform,
you
have
to
vote
me
out,
because
that
is
not
where
we
should
be
going,
and
so
that
presents
and
brings
back
to
parking
enhancement
district,
the
real
challenge.
F
If
we're
collecting
revenue
from
people
that
are
driving
into
these
districts,
how
do
we
balance
safe
and
responsible
consumption
of
alcohol,
no
one
driving
under
the
influence
and
at
the
same
time,
using
the
vehicle
as
a
means
of
collection
of
revenue
to
be
able
to
perform
the
clean
services
that
we
want
to
see
so
that
right
there?
That
presents
a
challenge
of
sustainability?
F
How
do
we
continue
to
do
that
in
the
out
years,
and
is
that
the
exact
model
we
want
to
replicate
in
other
council
districts?
You
know,
I
think
there
are
certainly
parts
of
it
we
want
to,
but
do
we
want
to
do
it
in
its
entirety?
The
biggest
challenge
that
other
council
districts
face
is
the
number
of
meters
that
they
have
to
collect
parking
revenue
and
the
fact
that
the
legislation
calls
for
specific
areas
around
a
parking
enhancement.
F
District
must
be
part
of
the
residential
permit
parking
program
so
as
to
not
force
vehicles
off
of
the
main
street
and
further
clog
residential
areas.
So
we
do
have
that.
In
the
south
side,
everything
around
parking
enhancement
district
is
surrounded
with
parked
car,
with
residential
permit
parking.
So
two
things
the
number
of
meters
that
they
contain
by
which
they
can
actually
collect
revenue
to
make
it
beneficial
to
do
the
program
and
number
two
making
certain
that
the
residential
areas
that
surround
those
business
districts
participate
in
the
residential
permit
parking
program.
F
So
those
are
the
two
biggest
challenges.
I
think
the
the
council
district
most
right
for
the
benefit
of
a
parking
enhancement
district
would
probably
be
bobby
wilson
being
that
he
has
north
shore
bobby
wilson
and
and
councilman
level
being
they
have
a
lot
of
the
north
shore.
A
lot
of
the
impact
that
comes
in
around
our
sports
activities
and
those
kinds
of
things
I
think,
would
make
those
meters
right
for
for
benefit
from
parking
enhancement
district.
F
I
think
she
could
benefit
as
well
and
possibly
even
councilwoman
strasburger,
although
even
I
don't
know
that,
there's
enough
on
walnut
and
ellsworth
to
to
be
impactful
enough,
but
I'm
certainly
happy
to
to
work
with
them
and
they
have
expressed
desire
to
to
learn
more
about
it
to
see
if
it
would
work
and
if
they're
interested,
of
course,
I'm
more
than
happy
to
assist
in
any
way.
I
can
to
see
if
we
can
bring
that
in.
F
That's
I
mean
that
is.
That
is
key
to
everything,
but
you
know:
how
are
we
going
to
be
responsible
consumers,
you
know,
and
how
do
we?
How
do
we
first
and
foremost
reduce?
I
was
lucky
to
be
in
washington
dc
two
weekends
ago
to
a
responsible
hospitality
conference.
I
was
in
new
york
a
few
years
back
at
the
same
conference,
and
I
was
delighted
to
see
that
everywhere
I
went
I
was
asked:
do
you
want
a
bag
and
I
responded
first,
thank
you
for
asking
me.
F
So,
what's
the
more
responsible
container
to
take
away
right,
we
find
the
pizza
boxes
in
the
street
all
the
time,
but
we
never
find
that
single
little
brown
paper
bag.
For
some
reason,
I
think
that
consumer
just
feels
a
higher
responsibility
to
take
less
packaging
and
the
packaging
they
take
disposal
properly.
F
I
know
that's
a
lot,
but
we
are
passionate
about
the
the
subject
and
sarah
shea
will
confirm
she
and
I
have
been
in
the
conversation
of
waste
management
for
as
many
years
as
I've
known
her,
which
is
something
like
17,
but
it's
I
think
it's
the
most
important
topic
that
we
face
really
as
a
nation
and,
as
you
know,
caretakers
of
the
planet.
You
know
we
are.
We
are
strangling
the
planet
through
single-use
container
and
and
there
has
to
be
a
better
way
to
do
it.
F
F
If
we
just
each
accept
our
own
personal
responsibility
in
caring
for
the
planet,
and
everyone
took
that
seriously
guess
what
we
wouldn't
have
the
problems
that
were
that
we're
having
you
know-
and
I
wish
there
was
a
there-
was
a
way
to
to
really
get
people
to
to
understand
the
responsibility
that
we
have.
How
does
it?
How
does
it
go?
F
We
we
don't
own
the
planet,
we
just
borrow
it
from
our
children
when
we
have
a
responsibility
to
to
you
know
return
it
to
them
in,
in
the
best
manner
that
we
can
and
and
the
way
we're
doing
it
right
now.
Is
it's
not
the
best
it's
not
the
highest
and
best
order
that
we
owe
them.
L
F
A
M
Yeah,
I
just
have
one
hi
councilman
cross
thanks
so
much
for
coming
on
and
talking
with
us
and
that's
a
really
awesome
initiative
to
hear
about.
I
wasn't
familiar
with
it.
I
work
with
prc
as
well
and
joined
back
in
2019,
and
so
we
used
to
be
on
the
south
side,
but
now
we're
over
on
the
north
side.
M
But
so
thinking
about
you
know,
working
with
some
of
the
businesses
on
the
south
side
and
waste
reduction,
like
you
were
talking
about,
you
know
electing
for
the
more
minimal
packaging.
That's
often
a
lesser
cost,
to
the
business
and
then
lesser
waste
to
deal
with
on
on
the
front
end
like
on
the
public
side.
M
From
your
clean
team's
perspective,
I
wonder,
is
do
have
you
guys
done
any
work
with
like
the
business
associations
or
done
any
outreach
with
them
on
like
just
having
a
training
or
a
discussion
about
waste
reduction
opportunities
that
are
also
cost-saving.
Yes,.
F
F
Yeah
we
have
at
length
and
not
to
to
pinpoint
anyone
individually.
We've
met
our
level
of
resistance.
F
We
want
what
we
want
when
we
want
it
the
way
we
want
it,
and
it
is
a
culture
that
we're
changing.
You
know
there
there.
It
is
clearly
a
culture
and-
and
I
think
business
plays
the
primary
role
in
the
shift
of
culture,
and
this
is
why
I'm
so
so
over
the
top
encouraged
by
someone
like
a
giant
eagle
that
would
that
would
partner
with
us
and
really
be
one
of
the
lead
spokespersons
in
the
reduction
of
single-use
plastic
bags,
and
it
wasn't
that
way.
F
12
and
15
years
ago,
when
I
first
came
onto
office,
we
we
were
having
those
conversations
and,
and
what
we
were
meaning
from
business,
was
resistance
that
no
you
just
simply
can't
do
that.
Here's
the
reasons
you
can't,
but
today
what
we
hear
is
now.
We
have
a
greater
responsibility
here
and
we
understand
our
role
here
and
we
actually
want
to
be
partners
with
you.
That's
a
significant
shift
in
culture
and
that's.
I
think
that
that
kind
of
a
partnership
is
really
what
we
want
to
see.
F
It's
really,
you
know
one
of
the
best
things
I've
ever
learned
about
being
in
a
public
office.
Is
it's
not
really
about
citing
people
into
compliance?
It's
really
more
about
educating
people
into
compliance.
You
know,
and
how
do
we
do
that?
How
do
we
build
friendships
and
partnerships
and
understand
that
you
know
we're
all
in
this
together
and
how
you
know?
What's
the
best
way
to
to
work
collectively
and
cooperatively?
F
You
know
our
our
thing
right
now,
our
thing
or
one
of
the
things
we're
focusing
on
right
now
in
on
the
carson's
recorder,
is
cigarette
litter
and
maybe
sarah
might
correct
my
numbers
if,
if
I'm
a
little
bit
off,
but
when
I
first
met
pennsylvania
resources,
council
and
I
met
sarah-
there
wasn't
a
campaign
they
were
doing.
Then
that
talked
about
one
cigarette
filter
will
contaminate
something
like
48,
000,
gallons
of
water,
with
something
like
16
known,
carcinogenic
chemicals
and
something
like
300
trillion.
F
Cigarette
butts
hit
the
streets
of
the
this
nation
on
an
annual
basis.
Now
that
was
15
17
years
ago,
so
you
can
only
imagine
the
impact
that
you
know
just
that
casual
regard
of
tossing
that
cigarette
butt
on
on
the
street.
Has
you
know,
years
and
years
and
years
of
impact?
You
know
that
one
brief
moment
of
just
not
thinking
through
your
action
and
the
kind
of
impact
it
has
for
generations
to
come.
So
we
received
a
grant
through
south
side,
community
council.
F
I
want
to
give
them
kudos,
they
got
several
hundred
cigarette
litter
containers
and
that
they
will
be
collected
by
the
clean
team
and
those
cigarette
butts
will
actually
be
weighed
so
that
we
know
that
the
amount
that
is
being
collected
and
they
will
actually
go
into
recycling
centers
and
they
will
be
recycled.
I
don't
know
how
they
do
that,
I
honestly
can't
say,
but
there
is
a
system
by
which
they
recycle
them
and
they
will
be
recycled.
A
We
are
also
the
commission.
Counselor
krause
is
working
on
a
creative
solution
for
collecting
cigarette
butt
litter
with
our
ballot.
M
A
Program
that
is
in
process
right
now,
so
we
look
forward
to
working
with
you
and
the
clean
team
on
that
in
the
future.
F
I
think
it
is
one
of
the
most
clever
things
I
have
heard
of
in.
In
all
the
years,
I've
been
fighting
the
fight
who
wouldn't
want
it's.
It's
almost
like
playing
a
game
right.
Whatever
the
question
might
be,
will
you
tell
the
the
public
at
large
a
little
bit
more
about
how
that's
going
to
work
and
how
you'll
select
the
question-
and
you
know,
put
your
answer
by
putting
your
butt
in.
B
F
B
Discuss
these
at
these
meetings,
we'll
have
an
update,
they're,
finally,
through
customs,
so
they're
on
our
way
here,
they've
been
stuck
at
the
border
for
like
a
month
and
a
half
we
thought
we'd
have
them
by
now,
but
the
ballot
bin
is
a
bright,
yellow.
B
Large
container
for
your
cigarette
butts
were
put
out
on
the
streets
and
then
asks
you
to
choose
an
answer
to
a
question
and
those
are
highly
customizable,
we'll
say:
what's
more
pittsburgh,
is
it
fries
on
a
salad
or
fries
on
a
sandwich,
and
you
can
take
your
cigarette
butt
and
put
it
in
there
and
you
see
who's
winning,
which
one
do?
Does
the
people
have
a
lot
of
choices,
very
engaging?
It's
very
colorful,
it's
very
fun!
It's
not
lecturing
people,
it's
just
getting
things
off
the
ground.
B
It's
had
a
lot
of
success
in
the
uk
where
this
is
based
and
we're
very
excited
to
have
those
in
we'll
be
working
with
nighttime
economy
districts.
We've
met
with
the
nighttime
economy
committee,
whatever
it
was,
the
the
groups
of
nighttime
economy
business
is
earlier
to
discuss
how
we're
gonna
roll
these
out
and
we're
gonna
work
with.
Not
only
businesses
but
community
groups,
whoever
wants
to
take
a
little
ownership
over
it,
choose
the
question
and
just
maintain
it
and
empty
them,
recycle
them
all
these.
B
F
So
very
clever
it
it's
just.
You
know
again
it's
one
of
those
those
those
ways
of
educating
people
into
compliance,
not
citing
them
into
compliance,
and
actually
you
know
making
it
a
fun
thing
to
do.
I
I
you
know
when,
when
you
shared
that
with
me
chris,
when
we
did
our
walk,
it
was
one
of
the
most
enlightened
approaches,
I've
heard
of
in
years
and
years
and
years.
I
think
it's
great,
and
you
know
as
long
as
we're
on
the
subject
of
nighttime
economy,
I
would
like
to
give
a
shout
out.
F
Allison
harnden
is
our
nighttime
economy
coordinator,
and
I
had
the
pleasure
of
meeting
allison
about
it's
at
least
15.
It's
probably
closer
to
17
years
ago,
when
I
traveled
to
san
francisco
to
learn
about
nighttime
economy
and
this
organization,
known
as
the
responsible
hospitality
institute,
and
to
learn
about
how
cities
across
the
world
really
were,
were
learning
to
welcome
and
embrace.
F
You
know
food
and
beverage,
business
and
socializing
businesses
and
how
important
they
are
to
our
economy
and
why
we
should
protect
them
and
not
allow
them
to
spiral
out
of
control
and
become
problematic
and
all
those
things
and
through
the
years
allison.
I
became
very
good
friends
and
we
were
lucky
about
five
years
ago
now
to
actually
steal
her
away
from
the
responsible
hospitality
institute
and
to
bring
her
here
to
be
our
our
nighttime
economy
coordinator.
F
She
has,
oh
god,
I
I
30
years.
I
want
to
say
experience
with.
I
don't
know
how
many
dozens
and
dozens
of
major
cities
across
the
united
states
that
she
has
worked
with
to
to
you
know,
find
best
practices
and
policies
and
procedures,
and
I
can't
I
cannot
shout
her
praises
enough
and
how
lucky
we
are
to
have
her
here
in
the
city.
F
J
A
We
appreciate
your
your
continued
support
for
the
commission
and
and
always
your
enthusiasm
for
the
work
that
we
all
do
collectively
and
separately.
Yeah.
Thank.
N
A
Thank
you
so
much
I
we
will
let
the
counselor
go
on
to
to
their
very
I'm
sure
full
schedule
for
the
day.
Thank
you
so
much
for
joining
us.
Thank.
A
And
we
will
we're
gonna
move
forward
with
talking
about
a
little
bit
about
just
a
quick
update
on
pick
up
pittsburgh,
but
before
I
go
any
farther
I
said
I
was
going
to
say
this
at
the
jump
and
I
forgot.
I
actually
have
a
conflict
this
morning,
so
I
will
be
bowing
out
quietly
at
about
a
quarter
after
11
if
we're
still
going
at
that
point,
which
is
fine,
I'm
just
saying
my
goodbyes
now,
so
I
don't
have
to
interrupt
whomever
we'll
be
speaking
at
that
time.
B
B
We
know
those
contracts
are
still
ongoing
from
when
we
first
signed
them
still
good
work
being
gone
done,
pick
up
pgh,
for
I
think
everybody
here
knows,
but
just
for
the
watchers
at
home
viewers
was
our
attempt
at
recognizing
the
value
of
the
volunteer
work
that
is
keeping
pittsburgh,
going,
we're
overly
reliant
on
volunteers
and
cleaning
up
our
streets,
and
it's
just
sort
of
not
a
fair
system
right
where
people
make
money,
basically
flooding
our
streets
with
litter
and
because
of
the
single
use,
because
of
no
not
giving
enough
resources
to
to
do
anything
with
all
the
trash
after
it's
in
their
hands,
and
then
we
have
to
rely
on
unpaid
labor
to
clean
it
all
up.
B
It's
it's
not
an
equitable
system,
it's
not
fair
to
residents,
and
it
also
leads
to
a
huge
disparity
of
the
the
cleanliness
of
streets,
because
some
places
people
may
have
more
time
to
dedicate
to
this
than
others,
and
so
we'll
see
a
very
real
difference
in
the
quality
of
life
for
residents
based
on
this
volunteer
work.
So
when
this
was
piloted,
we
very
specifically
chose
areas
that
have
suffered
redlining
that
have
suffered
disinvestment,
allegheny,
clean
ways
and
operation
better
blocks.
B
Better
block
was
the
who
the
contract
was
awarded
to
in
the
first
pilot
program.
Now
that
we
have
seen
the
positive
aspects
of
it
and
I'll,
let
alicia
talk
more
about
what
we've
seen
earlier,
but
you
know
I
think
we've
had
presentations
from
both
allegheny
clean
ways
and
operation,
better
block
what
they've
done
so
far
and
we're
very
pleased
with
the
results.
B
We
want
to
find
new
avenues
to
continue
that
we
don't
want
it
to
always
have
to
come
out
of
the
clean
pittsburgh
commission
money,
because
we
always
want
to
sort
of
pilot
things
and
hand
it
off
to
the
city
or
other
resources
that
can
manage
it
after
we've
proved
it's
worth.
B
So
that's
going
to
be
the
next
steps
we
want
to
take
pick
up
pgh
and
that's
why
also
we
had
councilman
bruce
krauss
here
today
to
talk
about
how
they
were
able
to
fund
this
sort
of
work
and
learn
from
it
and
maybe
think
about
the
future
of
pick
up
pgh
in
the
same
way
of
thinking
of
outside
the
box
funding.
How
do
we
take
the
money
that
people
are
bringing
to
the
south
side
to
mess
it
up
to
specifically
clean
it
up?
B
You
know
we
don't
want
to
charge
the
taxpayers
necessarily
for
this
work,
but
we
do
know
that
it
does
need
paid
for.
So
I
don't
know
if
we
have
any
questions
on
pick
up
pgh.
That
was
my
somewhat
ignorant
roundup
of
of
what
I
know
about
it.
What
we
want
to
do
with
it
in
the
future,
but
it's
still
sort
of
open-ended
at
this
moment.
B
And
that's
all
right:
if
we
don't
have
any
questions,
I
think
we're
all
on
the
same
page
then
excellent.
I
will
let
alicia
talk
more
about
that.
She
is
plugging
her
brain
away
at
trying
to
find
the
best
way
to
present
this
within
the
city
within
the
county.
With
that,
whoever
will
listen.
This
is
something
worth
taking
forward.
So
we'll
have
updates
on
that
as
we
go.
So
why
don't
we
just
move
right
into
how
the
esplin
collection
event
went.
B
I
know
that
sarah
had
to
jump
off
and
she
gave
us
a
couple
of
stats
but
myrna's
here
and
she
can
tell
us
about
it.
The
collection
of
vent
is
something
that
we've
sort
of
been
told
for
a
long
time.
Everyone's
first
idea
is
put
a
dumpster
out
there.
You
know,
put
a
dumpster
out
there,
let
people
come
up
and
just
toss
whatever
they
want
in
there
and
it's.
It's
makes
a
lot
of
sense
as
as
a
first
idea,
but
we
have
to
be
careful
about
what
we
put
in
there.
B
It
can't
everything
can't
go
into
that
single
stream.
We
have
to
make
sure
things
are
separated
at
a
source
and
we
might
have
to
make
sure
that
you
know
things
are.
It
doesn't
get
too
heavy
all
this
stuff.
So
it's
been
a
long
road
of
kind
of
struggling.
What
to
do
with
this
idea
of
put
a
dumpster
out.
There
is-
and
this
was
a
great
first
attempt
at
that
at
manning-
the
dumpster.
You
know
having
people
there
separating
out
the
e-waste
the
tires
and
making
sure
things
don't
get
out
of
hand
very
quickly.
N
Thanks
yeah,
it
went
swimmingly,
it
was
just
fantastic.
Our
staff
loved
it,
as
you
can
imagine
that
it
was
just
a
huge
success
as
far
as
they
were
concerned,
because
everything
they
collected
were
things
that
we
find,
typically
in
dumb
sites
and
so
we're
presenting
that
clean,
collected,
4.37
tons
of
of
trash
from
a
fairly
small
community.
You
know
that
esplin's,
a
a
very
small
community,
actually
so
that's
great
news
and
22
tires-
were
also
collected.
That
day,
I
don't
have
the
stats
from
sarah
you'll
have
to
give
those
chris,
but.
M
I
actually
think
I've
got
the
e-loop
invoice
here,
so
we
definitely
got
less
televisions
than
we
expected
less
e-waste
in
general
than
we
expected,
but
still
I
think
it
was.
Let's
see.
M
About
199
pounds
of
televisions.
G
M
B
I
have
a
fifteen
hundred
fifteen
hundred
pounds
of
e-waste.
That's
what
I.
N
Yeah
and
this
just
a
note
of
kind
of
the
history
of
this,
this
was
an
idea
that,
as
chris
said,
we've
been
mulling
for
for
years
or
trying
to
get
going
for
years
and
was
actually
part
of
the
original
budget
that
we
proposed
or
that
we
put
forth
for
our
poor
approval.
And
in
fact,
when
we
met
with
former
mayor
peduto.
N
I
think
our
original
request
just
had
a
few.
We
were
going
to
try
to
pilot
it
or
have
just
a
few,
and
his
suggestion
was
to
do
one
in
every
in
every
council
district
and
then
that
then
the
budget,
the
full
budget,
wasn't
approved,
and
so
we
had
to
make
some
some
cuts
and
that's
what
got.
That
was
one
of
the
things
that
got
cut
because
it's
it's
not
inexpensive.
N
And
but
I'm
really
glad
that
we
started
with
a
a
community
like
esplin,
because
it
was
very.
K
N
It
was
very
doable
and
a
quick.
You
know
it
was
a
fairly
quick
turnaround
and
it
was
hugely
successful.
So
I
think
that
it's
a
great
pilot
can
show
that
it
can
be
done
and
can
be
done
and
when
I
say
it's
not
inexpensive
comparatively,
especially
if
you
compare
it
to
cleaning
up
the
illegally
dumped
trash,
it's
extremely
affordable
and
much
way,
and
it's
it's
a
service.
You
know
that
I
think
what
we
as
a
city
can
provide
to
residents.
So
I
love
it.
B
Do
more
for
this
pilot,
we
wanted
to
make
sure
that
we
were
serving
our
neighborhood
of
focus
very
specifically,
and
so
we
had
to
be
kind
of
quiet
on
social
media.
We
couldn't
promote
it
too
much.
We
had
to
keep
it
within
some
very
specific
amounts,
so
we
we
ended
up
using
door
hangers
for
the
residents
just
because
there's
only
about
100
or
so
homes
in
this
neighborhood,
but
I'm
very
pleased
with
how
everything
went.
I
think
this
is
definitely
something
we
can
take
to
multiple
sources.
B
H
Yeah
thanks
chris,
you
probably
know
what
I'm
gonna
say
here,
but
when
pli
performs
emergency
or
even
planned
demolitions,
we
find
that
the
what
the
vacant
lot
is
then
used
as
a
dumping
ground.
So
if
you
found
success
in
this
program,
I
would
ask
that
you
know.
Perhaps
we
connect
on
setting
up
a
a
place
for
people,
maybe
for
a
limited
time,
to
throw
away
items
in
a
responsible
way
on
these
vacant.
H
Lots
that
become
just
a
target
for
for
dumping
items
following
city
demolition,
and
you
know
we're
we're
performing
demolition
on
long
condemned
structures
where
there
was
no
activity
and
people
are
sometimes
throwing
garbage
on
the
condemned
structures.
Those
those
structures
are
gone,
but
the
vacant
lot
is
still
there.
So
just
something
for
the
dpw
and
our
partners
to
consider.
B
That's
interesting:
do
you
find
that,
like
the
newly
deconstructed
or
torn
down,
lots
are
more
hit
than
the
regular
vacant
lots
that
were
already
standing
for
a
long
time,
yeah.
H
That's
a
good
question.
I
don't
know
I
just
am
sort
of
responding
or
reacting
to
the
types
of
complaints
that
we
get
in
after
we've
demolished
a
structure,
and
it
just
seems
like
for
the
first,
maybe
two
to
three
weeks.
N
Oh
sorry,
sorry
just
to
respond
to
sarah's
we
we
have
looked
at
ways
to
have
a
dumpster
ongoing.
You
know
because,
unfortunately,.
N
Our
needs
for
disposal
are
not
always
on
a
particular
day
right.
You
know
that
that
happens.
N
N
The
you
know
the
I
guess
the
ideal
is
that
there'd
be
a
dumpster
always
available
for
people
to
use
the
problem
with
that
and
the
problem
with
having
it
even
for
an
extended
period
of
time
is,
as
chris
alluded
to
things
get
thrown
in
there,
that
shouldn't
be
or
they
can't
be,
and
so
there
does
need
to
be
some
monitoring
of
it
and
and
there
and
then
the
other
issue
is
not.
N
Everyone
has
access
to
vehicles
to
be
able
to
to
get
to
the
dumpster,
and
so
that's
why
we
went
with
the
one
day
where
we
were
available
to
actually
be
there
to
monitor
and
to
collect,
but
I'm
with
you
I
would
love
to
see
you
know
some
way,
and
maybe
we
can
figure
that
out,
but
right
now
we
have
it.
H
Yeah,
I
appreciate
that
I
totally
understand
the
operational
logic
and
why
that
makes
sense.
It
just
reminds
me
of
a
really
quick
story.
We
had
performed
a
city-funded
demolition
and
left
the
site,
and
the
next
morning
there
were
like
seven
peak
cans
in
the
middle
of
the
lot,
and
those
are
hard
to
get
rid
of,
so
it
just
seemed
pretty.
They
were
like.
Oh,
the
city
was
there,
the
city
will
take
care
of
this
and
they
left
the
pink
hands
for
us
the
next
day
and
a
neighbor
called
to
complain.
H
So
yeah
understand
what
you
mean
as
well.
Folks,
throwing
things
out
that
you
know
shouldn't
just
be
in
the
general
bin.
A
And
it
is
helpful
to
us
to
to
have
more
ideas
of
who,
as
a
commission,
to
work
with
for
for
some
of
these
pain
points
across
the
city.
I
know
that
chris
and
I
have
had
some
conversations
of
like
well
how
how
do
we
do
that?
A
How
do
we
work
together
with
you
know
the
other
departments,
so
that
may
be
an
opportunity
for
us
with
pli,
specifically,
especially
when
I
know
you
know,
sometimes
the
demolitions
will
happen
in
in
little
clusters
or
something
like
that
that
we
might
be
able
to
set
up
a
parallel,
something
or
other.
So
thank
you.
A
Okay
is
that
is
that
esplin?
Is
that
esplan
in
a
nutshell,
all
right,
so
well,
then
we
will.
I
would
like
to
just
go
ahead
and
kind
of
skip
ish.
The
finance
committee
updates,
because
no
finance
committee
errs
are
here
right
now,
but
I
do
believe
that
we
at
least
as
a
piggy
back
on
esplin,
that
we
came
in
under
budget
for
that
event.
So
yay.
B
I
do
have
one
thing
for
finance
for
budget
to
bring
up
for
our
cameras.
B
We
had
to
have
allegheny
city
electric,
go
out
and
repair
one
of
our
outlets
that
the
cameras
are
plugged
into
in
in
the
electricity
poles,
and
so
I'd
like
to
have
a
vote
to
pay
that
invoice
for
allegheny
city
electric
for
repairing
one
of
our
things.
I
think
oh,
I
should
have
entered
that
into
some
sort
of
thing.
B
You
know
what
what
I'm
going
to
do
is
I'm
going
to
send
everybody
an
email
and
ask
for
an
email
vote
on
that,
because
I
did
not
prepare
to
have
that
ready
for
everybody
and
should
have
given
it
to
you
beforehand.
So
that's
my
fault
watch
for
an
email
from
me
by
end
of
day
asking
for
a
vote
on
that.
Thank
you.
A
Thank
you.
Oh
I
guess
it's
still
just
going
to
be
chris
to
share
with
us
the
annual
report.
B
So
I
think
we
have
the
final
version
of
the
annual
report
ready
to
go.
I
say
final
if
we
can
still
add
anything,
probably
by
this
weekend
or
something,
but
we
do
want
to
share
that
out
as
soon
as
possible.
It
should
have
been
attached
to
your
calendar.
Invite,
along
with
the
agenda.
B
B
We
have
bothered
you
for
information
to
put
in
here
and
all
the
great
information
that
everybody
has
shared
and
if
anybody
has
anything
else,
they'd
like
to
add
or
point
out
or
fix,
we
we've
got
a
little
bit
of
time,
but
I'm
going
to
say
by
next,
let's,
let's
say
monday
by
monday,
we're
going
to
consider
this
final
and
put
it
up
on
the
website,
share
it
out
with
everybody
and
anybody
who
may
be
interested
in
it.
A
I'm
showing
it
to
you
right
now.
Those
links
to
the
attached
documents
are
in
the
middle
of
the
calendar,
invite
email-
I
know
every
once,
while
my
eyeballs
just
skim
right
over
them.
A
G
A
So
by
monday
on
the
annual
report-
and
it
is
time
for
member
organization
updates-
I
and
I
am
going
to
go
to
my
meeting
so
thank
you
all
chris
will
take
care
of
you
and
we'll
see
you.
Our
next
meeting
is
may
12th.
We
are
not
done
yet
so
member
organization
updates.
Thank
you
all
good
to
see
you.
N
I'll
kick
us
off
since
I'm
my
camera's
on
we've
got
a
lot.
I
mean
everyone
has
a
lot
it's
earth
month,
so
lots
of
stuff
happening
this
weekend.
We
have
our.
We
kick
off
our
riverfront
cleanup
season
with
a
cleanup
but
duck
hollow
and
we'll
be
working
with
friends
of
the
riverfront
and
not
nine
mile
run
watershed
association.
N
N
We
also
have
a
riverfront
cleanup
outside
of
the
city,
but
still
everyone's
welcome
to
join
it's
up
near
verona,
the
mouth
of
sandy,
creek
and
and
then
the
following
week,
we'll
be
back
at
some
scene,
greenway
doing
a
another
cleanup
of
that,
still
working
chipping
away
at
that
decades,
old
dump
site
at
the
end
of
the
month
on
april
30th
into
may.
First,
we
have
our
second
annual
tri-tracial
on
and
for
those
of
you
who
don't
know
what
that
is,
that
is
a
biking,
dumpsite,
cleanup
and
camping.
N
That's
those
are
the
try
parts
of
it
and
overnight
event
this
year,
we've
added
a
water
cleanup
as
well.
So
it's
a
it's
biking
to
mckeesport
doing
a
dump
site
cleanup
there,
camping
overnight,
doing
a
riverfront,
cleanup
and
biking
back,
so
quite
the
athletic
weekend.
For
anyone
also,
you
know
lots
of
lots
of
other
events,
litter
kits
going
out
all
over
the
place
and
a
regular,
dumb
buster
program
happening
at
this
point
six
days
a
week.
N
Also,
we
just
recently
donated
the
nine
cameras
to
the
city
for
surveillance,
so
those
will
be
going
up
shortly.
At
least
some
of
them
will
be
going
up
short.
M
Awesome
myrna
I've
always
wanted
to
join
for
the
triathlon
ever
since
I
heard
about
it
same
weekend
as
marathon
weekend.
So
I
can't
do
this,
but
it's
all
the
things
I
love
so
yeah
prc
is
kicking
off
a
lot
of
our
a
lot
of
our
programs
into
like
actual
in-person
stuff
this
month.
So
we're
starting
this
weekend
with
our
first
household
hazardous
waste
collection
of
the
year
this
saturday
april
16th
at
ppg
pants
arena.
M
We
still
have
plenty
of
spaces
open
for
folks
to
register.
So
I
think
we've
got
some
stuff
up
on
our
social
media.
If
you
guys
feel
like
sharing
it
out
to
anyone.
Yeah
folks
do
have
to
register
in
advance.
So
yeah
this.
If
you
know
anyone
who's,
got
paint
cans
to
get
rid
of
first
opportunity
to
do
so.
This
will
be
followed
by
a
number
of
other
household
hazardous
waste
collections
april.
30Th
we've
got
one
in
beaver
county.
M
Our
full
schedule
is
like
we've,
also
got
one
the
seventh
in
north
park
seventh
of
may,
and
then
they
kind
of
just
keep
rolling
throughout
pretty
much
every
third
weekend
in
different
parts
of
southwestern
pa.
Our
hard
to
recycle
collection
won't
kick
off
until
june
4th.
We
have
our
first
one
of
those
up
in
terrenham,
so
all
those
are
posted
on
our
website.
Prc.Org.
You
can
go
see
in
all
of
the
2022
schedule
up
there.
We
just
started
our
zero
waste
events
program
too.
M
With
the
ms
walk
last
weekend
we
got
events
pretty
much
every
weekend
through
scheduled
up
until
the
arts
fest
pretty
much
so
and
I'm
still
hiring
for
a
lot
of
those.
So
if
you
know
anyone
who
wants
to
work
and
pick
up
a
couple
shifts
or
fifteen
dollars
an
hour
to
be
a
zero
waste
ambassador,
zero
waste
goalie,
basically
at
our
events,
got
lots
of
opportunities
to
do
so,
mostly
at
the
marathon
on
may
1st,
so
especially
early
in
the
morning
and
but
see,
we've
got
a.
M
I
don't
know
if
you
got.
This
is
like
on
a
personal
update
for
prc
staffing,
our
long-time
education
coordinator,
our
education
manager,
nancy,
is
retiring
at
the
end
of
this
year.
M
So
if
you
know
her
send
her
some
well
wishes,
she's
gonna
be
doing
either
the
appalachian
trail
or
like
the
discovery,
walk
which
is
like
across
the
country
walking
wild,
but
we
just
brought
in
our
new
education
coordinator,
and
we
are
also
hiring
still
currently
for
our
e-waste
and
hhw
program
support
it's
recycling
operations,
specialists,
so
we're
actively
interviewing
for
that
role
now,
and
I
think
that's
pretty
much.
It.
C
Totally
sounds
great:
I
love
prc,
heart
yeah,
so
environmental
services
recycling.
You
know
we've
got
a
lot
going
on
here.
We
are
gearing
up
for
our
southern
distribution
of
recycling
cans,
that's
kind
of
slated
to
happen,
mid-may,
we'll
be
working
with
very
pacific,
and
some
vendors
to
you
know
distribute
cans
throughout
our
southern
neighborhoods
they'll
be
receiving
a
postcard
in
the
mail.
You
know
just
to
help.
You
know
we
we
were,
we
had
some
voice
to.
C
You
know
helping
district
8
and
erica
strasberger
with
the
bag
ban
or
not
bag
ban,
but
you
know
reducing
the
use
of
single-use
plastics,
so
that
would
that's
also
important
in
the
recycling
stream
as
well.
So
we
are
all
trying
to
work
on
reducing
the
amount
of
single-use
plastics
that
are
used
in
our
city
and
the
blue
bin
will
help
with
that
as
well.
C
We
do
have
also
a
yard
debris
prior
to
that
we
have
a
yard
debris
collection
coming
up
on
the
23rd
of
april
is
a
saturday
and
it's
gonna
be
all
around
all
all
over
the
city,
so
you
know
get
get
get
those
those
bramble
and
I
don't
know
I
don't
have
a
yard.
So
the
terminology
kind
of
escapes
to
me,
but
leaves
you
know
all
that's
great
stuff,
get
it
in
bags.
Paper
bags
bundle
those
twigs.
C
We
will
be
coming
to
collect
it
and
we
will
be
sending
it
off
to
wood
waste
for
processing
and
yeah.
That's
that's
happening
as
well.
We'll
also
have
some
mulch
collection
happening
soon
after
that
date,
we
don't
have
anything
set
in
stone
completely,
but
we'll
be
announcing
that
we
don't
have
a
lot
and
it
won't
be
as
broad
as
our
previous
pickups
have
been
previously.
C
We
were
all
over
the
city,
but
capacity
issues
have
led
us
to
just
kind
of
keep
it
to
what
was
collected
as
part
of
our
christmas
tree
collection,
this
previous
holiday
season,
and
that
will
be
again
at
the
of
the
the
zoo
overflow
parking
lot.
The
lay
down
area
behind
the
zoo
and
yeah
that
that
will
be
you'll
be
first
come
first
serve
once
we
run
out
it's
over
pine
mulch.
You
know
good
for
mulching
and
I
guess
blueberries
and
roses
yeah.
C
So
that's
that's
what
we
are
doing
as
well
in
that
front
and
also
we
will
be
announcing
soon
enough.
Our
new
e-waste
and
hhw
collections,
we're
hoping
to
have
that
up
and
going
in
in
march
may
as
well
a
little
bit.
Some
things
are
similar.
C
You
know
we're
trying
to
keep
pricing
as
close
to
as
what
we
previously
had-
and
you
know
some
you
know
days
during
the
week
and
also
weekend
day
as
well,
but
we're
happy
to
finally
offer
again
an
option
for
people
to
dispose
of
the
hard
to
recycle,
electronics
and
also
household
hazardous
waste,
to
keep
it
out
of
our
streams
and
off
of
our
hillsides
because
yep,
it's
ongoing
problem,
but
yeah
we'll
have
something
to
announce
for
that
soon.
But
yeah
stay
tuned
and
thank
you
guys.
I
think
that's
it.
Chris.
C
You
have
anything
else
for
our
apartment.
I
think.
B
Speaking
for
environmental
services,
broadly,
the
posting
for
the
anti-letter
inspectors
has
gone,
live
we're
already
getting
applications
for
that
it'll
be
up
for
the
next
for
a
full
month.
I
think
it's
been
about
a
week
now
very
excited
about
that.
We
are
hiring
two.
B
This
year
we
have
a
timeline
of
what
the
responsibilities
that
they
will
be
handling
as
the
the
team
grows,
with
an
eye
towards
eight
full-time
anti-litter
inspectors
in
2025,
as
we
gain
new
inspectors
each
year,
the
the
amount
of
things
that
they
absorb
from
other
departments
will
grow.
B
We
are
on
track
to
get
them
in
existing
city
services
like
computronix,
and
things
like
that
for
sighting
and
enforcement,
where
everything's
moving
very
smoothly
on
that
and
everybody
seems
to
be
very
happy
with
the
idea
of
of
the
absorption
schedule,
with
all
trash
enforcement
in
the
city
being
handled
by
these
eight
individuals
by
2025.
H
And
I
have
one
quick
update
for
the
department
of
permits,
licenses
and
inspections.
Many
of
you
may
be
aware
that
city
council
passed
an
update
to
title
13,
which
is
the
stormwater
ordinance
for
the
city
of
pittsburgh,
which
really
has
to
do
with
big
developments
that
are
disturbing
quite
a
lot
of
surface
or
soil,
or
creating
a
lot
of
impervious
surface,
the
goal
being
to
stop
runoff
and
really
ensure
that
water
is
collected
on
site
as
much
as
possible
before
it's
conveyed
to
our
stormwater
system
so
beginning
on
march
31st
2022.
H
We
are
accepting
a
stormwater
permit
for
the
review,
inspection
and
insurance
of
compliance
under
title
13.
So
it's
something
new
that
pli
is
doing
and
performing
inspections
again,
so
that
we
can
stay
in
compliance
with
our
epa
storm
water
permit
and
ensure
that
runoff
and
litter
that
comes
with
runoff
is
not
making
it
into
our
water
resources.
N
I
have
two
that
I
forgot
one
is
there's.
We
have
a
big
littered
cleanup
in
lincoln
levington
on
also
on
earth
day
and
that's
coordinated
by
the
community
and
they've
just
asked
us
to
assist
with
that
and
and
then
also
we
will
be
hiring
a
program
manager,
probably
sometime
late
may
and
a
another
dumb
buster
crew
leader.
D
Okay
yeah
cause
I'm
like
seeing
I'm
like
chris,
is
in
two
places
and
I'm
sorry
I
stepped
out
for
a
call,
and
so
I
didn't
hear
mirna's
update.
So
I'm
sorry
if
this
is
repetitive,
but
so
we
have
literally
coming
up.
We
have
the
kickoff
on
earth
day,
but
it's
an
eight
week
program.
D
There's
a
colleague
division
this
year
and
a
neighborhood
division,
so
the
colleague
division
will
be
more
corporate
focused,
so
employees
will
create
teams
and
compete
against
each
other
for
prizes
and
be
part
of
tournaments
it'll
be
a
lot
of
fun,
so
we
still
have
a
few
spots
for
a
few
more
teams.
So
that
part
comes
it's
a
thousand
dollar
donation
that
comes
with
a
lot
of
benefits
as
well
and
then
and
then
on.
The
neighborhood
division.
D
It'll
be
different,
neighborhoods
competing
against
each
other,
and
I
think
we
already
have
five
or
six
neighborhoods.
So
we
have
more
room
for
more
as
well,
and
that
is
free.
So
ten,
neighbors
or
community
members
can
get
together
and
be
part
of
a
team.
D
And
if
someone
doesn't
have
a
team,
but
they
want
to
be
part
of
it,
they
can
still
sign
up
as
a
free
agent
and
they'll
will
help
match
them
to
a
team
or
a
bunch
of
free
agents
will
become
a
team,
so
they
will
compete
as
well
and
there'll
be
tournaments
for
them
and
prizes,
and
it
was
a
lot
of
fun
last
year.
So
I'm
really
looking
forward
to
seeing
how
it
goes.
This
year
we
had
some
really
creative
participants
making
like
trash
monsters
and
things.
D
So
it
was
a
lot
of
fun,
so
that's
happening,
and
then
we
are
focusing
our
spring
very
much
on
clean
up
time.
So
we
have
cleanups
going
on
next
week
in
junction,
hollow
duck
hollow
south
side
and
chateau
the
week
after
that
as
well,
and
so
those
are
public
and
posted
on
our
on
our
website
and
yeah.
We're
just
excited
and
a
little
overwhelmed
with
the
amount
of
events
happening
over
the
next
two
weeks.
As
I'm
sure
everyone
is
and
that's
it.
N
One
additional
thing
about
the
litter
league
this
year,
our
partnership
with
cinderlands
is
cinderlands,
is
generously
providing
a
happy
hour
for
the
literally
kickoff
and
anyone
that
cleans
up
so
that's
on
earth
day
and
so
saying
this
to
everyone
in
the
pittsburgh
area.
Anyone
who
picks
up
litter
that
day
and
can
bring
proof
of
that.
So
we're
saying
like
a
photo
of
you
with
like
a
bag
of
trash
that
you've
picked
up.
N
Something
like
that
can
we
will
be
able
to
get
a
discount
at
super
glance
or
happy
hour,
so
joining
the
fun.
B
All
right,
I
kind
of
got,
kicked
off
my
computer
right
over
here.
I
still
see
myself
on
mine
how
that
works.
It
pulled
like
a
jamie
maddraxx
but
like
if
anybody
else
has
anything
else,
we
can
go
ahead
and
call
a
motion
to
adjourn.