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From YouTube: Athens City Council Meeting 03-06-06
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A
Council
is
going
to
be
meeting
in
a
series
of
committee
meetings,
starting
first
with
planning
and
development,
then
environment,
finance
and
personnel
than
transportation
and
finally,
communications.
First
planning
and
development
committee.
The
chair
is
Fourth
Ward
council
members
that
becomes
Thank.
B
You,
mr.
president,
the
first
thing
that
I
have
to
share
with
all
of
you
is
that
we
will
not
be
hearing
a
report
from
the
Athens
Area
Chamber
of
Commerce.
This
evening,
Jennifer
Simon
had
another
meeting
that
she
had
to
go
to
and
say
we're
going
to
reschedule
that
I
told
her
of
people
probably
wouldn't
be
too
upset.
If
I
was
making
the
meetings
shorter
rather
than.
C
A
B
I
do
have
several
miscellaneous
items.
First
of
all,
I
believe
that
people
received
in
their
mailboxes
in
the
last
couple
of
weeks,
a
notice
from
the
law
director
about
leases
that
we
need
to
renew
some
easements
that
we
have
on
Ohio
University
land
I
looked
over
them
because
they
did
talk
about
authorizing
payment
to
renew
these
leases.
These
are
a
dollar
each,
so
we
need
to
go
ahead
and
bring
that
forward.
Did
people
get
a
chance
to
look
at
that?
Almost
all.
B
B
So
we've
been
working
on
implementing
the
recommendations
that
were
made
by
Maximus.
There
are
a
couple
other
things:
several
of
them
are
fees
that
exist
in
the
code
elsewhere,
but
because
we
wanted
to
have
them
all
in
one
place,
also
we're
going
to
bring
them
in
here
just
to
make
it
consistent
the
citations
for
sanitary
violations
and
solid
waste
disposal
violations.
B
Those
have
been
amended
in
the
code
and
we'll
just
be
making
that
consistent
in
the
ordinance
that
has
the
list
of
all
the
fees,
and
then
there
were
some
recommendations
from
Steve
Pearson
that
in
the
in
the
previous
ordinance,
the
applications
for
new
construction
had
a
an
application
fee,
plus
a
charge
per
square
foot
and
without
that
charge
per
square
foot.
The
application
fee
is
the
same
for
a
shed
in
your
backyard,
as
it
would
be
for
an
entire
shopping
center.
B
So
I
believe
that
this
is
just
bringing
it
some
of
these
things
back
to
the
status
that
they
had
before
some
areas
that
just
got
overlooked
when
that
overall
amendment
of
the
fees
was
brought
through
so
I'm.
Sorry,
it's
a
lot
of
detail
eyes.
It
was
just
handed
all
of
this
or
I
wouldn't
have
copies
of
it
in
all
of
your
hands.
I
can
pass
this
around
if
people
want
to
look
at
it,
but
I
think
we'd
be
talking
about
amending
that
ordinance.
Sorry
next
week
can.
B
And
then
the
question
about
rooming
houses
within
the
same
ordinance,
the
there
were
some
questions
about
definition
and
the
language
that
we
have
to
correct,
that
is
$90
per
housekeeping
unit
or
owner
occupied
unit
keeping
renters,
because
there
was
some
question
if
people
were
just
renting
a
room
in
their
house-
and
there
also
was
an
issue
where
there's
a
rental
permit
fee,
where
there
are
more
than
10
units
but
they're
in
multiple
buildings.
The
intention
was
that
those
are
multiple
buildings
on
one
site,
not
ten
different
houses
scattered
across
the
city.
C
B
B
C
Guess
that,
with
respect
to
that
question
about,
what's
going
on,
I
was
concerned
about
what
Jonathan
wrote
in
the
Athens
news,
not
about
what
I
said,
though
I
was
concerned,
I'm
concerned
about
the
interpretation
of
the
land
development
ordinance.
It
seems
to
be
a
little
hazy.
Little
loosey
goosey
I
was
wondering
if
anybody
has
the
ideas
on
how
we
could
tighten
that
up,
send
it
out.
C
C
Whole
thing,
but
it
seems
to
me
that
there
was
a
terrible
slip
that
the
origins
of
which
we
cannot
put
our
fingers
on,
but
it
seemed
like
we
avoided.
We
ignored
some
pretty
important
evidence
and
I
was
wondering
if
anybody
has
an
idea
about
sending
this
out
or
getting
someone
to
review
it,
just
tighten
it
up
or
whatever
the
land
development
ordinance.
It
seems
like
it's.
D
A
C
C
C
C
B
E
A
D
H
You
very
much
I'm
the
tobacco
prevention
coordinator
at
the
Assam
City
County,
Health,
Department,
and
also
the
chair
of
the
Athens
County
tobacco
prevention
coalition,
hookahs
or
water
pipes
originate
from
the
Middle
East
Asian,
north
and
Africa,
and
their
devices
are
these
big
contraptions
to
smoke.
Tobacco
out
of
hookah,
cafes
and
bars
are
opening
all
over
the
US,
especially
in
college
towns,
and
just
last
week
the
first
hookah
cafe
opened
here
in
Athens
and
then
another
one
is
opening
shortly.
H
So
this
is
of
great
concern
to
both
the
Health
Department
and
the
tobacco
prevention
coalition.
We're
concerned
because
hookah
smoking
attracts
young
people.
This
tobacco
is
flavored,
so
it
tastes
good
and
it
feels
less
harsh
because
it's
being
cooled
by
this
water
chamber
and
unfortunately,
because
it's
cooled
and
feels
less
harsh,
there's
a
myth
that
it's
healthier
or
a
safer
alternative
to
smoking
cigarettes.
Unfortunately,
that's
not
true,
and
we
know
that
smoking
hookahs
are
becoming
popular
here
in
Athens
as
well.
H
H
Studies
show
that
hookah
smoking
is
not
safer
than
smoking.
Cigarettes
who
can
smoke
contains
nicotine.
It
contains
carbon
monoxide
tar,
a
lot
of
chemicals
like
cobalt,
arsenic
and
lead,
and
these
are
the
same
chemicals
that
cause
heart:
disease,
respiratory
disease,
cancer
and
addiction.
Several
studies
show
the
short
and
long
term
health
effects
of
hope,
hookah
smoking.
H
Last
year,
the
World
Health
Organization
came
out
with
an
advisory
basically
recommending
that
hookah
smoking
be
considered
the
same
as
all
other
forms
of
tobacco
and
also
be
prohibited
in
public
places.
What
we're
asking
is
that
Norden
nose
be
written
to
require
a
warning
label,
so
this
would
be
a
clear
and
noticeable
and
easily
read
warning
label
and
it
would
be
placed
in
entrances
to
hoovy
establishments
and
on
the
front
page
of
hookah
menus.
This
is
an
effective
and
inexpensive
public
health
education
program.
H
The
required
cigarette
package
warning
label
for
1965
was
a
significant
step
in
educating
the
public
about
tobacco,
so
the
warning
label
that
we
recommend
is
hookah.
Smoking
causes
lung
heart
and
other
diseases
and
cancers.
Hookah
smoke
contains
nicotine
and
hookah.
Smoking
is
not
a
safe
alternative
to
cigarettes.
H
This
warning
label
is
essential
because
hookah
smoking
is
a
new
phenomenon.
People
are
not
aware
of
the
health
effects
of
smoking,
a
hookah
and
when
you
buy
cigarettes,
there's
a
warning
label
on
the
package,
but
when
you
order
a
hookah,
the
tobacco
comes
already
prepared
and
ready
to
smoke.
There's
no
warning
label
with
it,
so
people
could
be
smoking.
The
hookah,
without
even
knowing
that
there
are
health
effects
related
to
it.
It's
a
common
practice
to
have
a
warning
label
on
products
when
they're
found
to
be
dangerous
or
even
potentially
dangerous.
F
H
That's
a
good
question:
it's
hard
to
it's
hard
to
tease
out
I.
Looked
this
up
actually
today
and.
F
H
A
At
the
risk
of
getting
on
a
sofa
box
here,
you
know
but
I'm
gonna
do
it.
Having
been
the
executive
director
of
Hickory
Creek
for
two
and
a
half
years,
having
been
a
nursing
home
administrator
now
for
23
years,
I
have
seen
you
know
firsthand
exactly
what
smoking
does
to
people.
You
know
you
don't
see
it
because
the
people,
or
in
a
back
room
gasping
for
breath
they
are
on
oxygen
and
back
rooms
of
nursing
homes,
they're
not
out
in
public
walking
down
Court
Street
I
lost
my
mother
to
cigarette
addiction.
A
My
brother
has
it
I
smoked
for
20
years.
A
couple
of
years
ago
we
were
getting
fairly
serious
about
outlawing
cigarette
smoke
and
indoors
there
a
complete
thing.
There
was
a
time
this
council
was
fairly
progressive.
We
were
the
first
to
have
curbside
recycling
in
the
state.
I
believe
I
think
we
were
one
of
the
first
to
ever
even
talk
about
getting
rid
of
cigarette
smoke
indoors
in
public
buildings
and
why
we
doesn't
follow
through
with
it
I
think
I
know,
I'm,
not
going
to
say
I
hope
we
can
take
that
one.
A
No
one
wanted
to
cut
pay
the
political
price.
Frankly
in
blunt
light,
that's
what
it
was,
and
you
know
why
don't
we
just
look
at
that
again.
The
low
director
told
us
last
week
and
chambers
that
he
thought
that
probably
warning
labels
and
forcing
somebody
to
put
up
a
sign
would
be
more
difficult
to
do
than
eliminate
cigarette
smoke
all
together.
A
A
F
F
J
Important
activity
we
can
do
in
public
health,
of
course,
is
to
prevent
disease.
I,
don't
think,
is
any
adopted.
Cigarette
smoking
and
cigar
smoking
causes
lots
of
disease,
and
we
all
have
our
own
family
personal
experiences
with
that.
So
this
measure
of
passing
an
ordinance
to
allow
us
to
put
signs
and
hook
establishments
yeah
would
be
helpful.
J
A
step
further
Mike
you
mentioned
Bill
would
be
more
helpful
and
it
depends
upon
whether
council
is
ready
to
pay
the
political
price
and
undertake
this
endeavor,
but
it
would
be
important
and
I
would
applaud
you
if
you
were
to
seriously
take
that
issue
up
again.
We
would
all
be
very
pleased
at
the
Health,
Department
I.
Think.
There's
no
doubt
in
anybody's
mind
that
indoor
smoking
in
bars
and
restaurants
is
terribly
hazardous
to
your
health
and
anybody
that
comes
back
from
California,
where
they
have
outlawed
smoking
in
bars.
J
F
J
A
G
My
question
is:
is
there
any
thing
on
a
coming
up
on
a
state
or
federal
labeling
request
or
hookahs
I'm
not
opposed
to
our
doing
it?
I
I
think
it's
a
good
start,
but
it
concerned
me
when
this
first
hit
the
news
that
here
was
the
business
that
seemed
to
be
going
to
what
I've
believed
was
counter
to
health
advice,
and
so
I
was
wondering
what
is
happening
on
the
state
and
federal.
H
F
G
H
A
good
question
smoke-free
Ohio
as
it's
written
you
they
could
stay
open
if
they
were
qualified
if
they
qualified
as
a
retail
tobacco
store,
which
meant
that
80%
of
their
revenue
would
have
to
come
from
tobacco
alone,
so
they
would
have
to
probably
get
rid
of
the
food
part
of
it.
Okay,.
I
C
C
C
F
G
F
H
A
H
C
J
H
D
A
E
D
D
F
C
F
F
M
M
M
Historically,
solid
waste
legislation
was
passed
in
1988
by
the
Ohio
legislature,
initiating
a
comprehensive
statewide
planning
process
with
the
state
and
local
level.
The
goal
a
statewide
goal
emerged
from
this
to
decrease
Ohio's
waste
stream
by
25
percent
on
a
per
capita
basis
through
recycling
waste
reduction.
This
was
achieved
in
1994.
M
So
if
you
go
through,
my
proposal
pass
that
we
have
a
breakdown
of
our
recycling
rates
Athens
currently-
and
this
is
provided
by
mr.
Haslett
from
1999
to
2005,
and
we
run
right
around
25%
within
the
city
itself.
What
happens?
Is
our
numbers
go
down
when
we
go
to
the
district,
solid
waste
management,
district.
M
My
goal
as
an
intern
consultant
is
to
encourage
the
reduction
of
solid
waste
and
biodegradable
products
into
the
landfill
through
recycling,
education
and
waste
reduction
in
student
neighborhoods
through
educational
outreach.
A
sense
of
stewardship
may
be
fostered
by
students
for
streets
and
yards,
encouraging
care
and
a
sense
of
place
within
these
communities
and
within
my
scope
of
services.
I've
created
some
areas
and
one
is
to
develop
a
typology
of
why
we
recycling
is
not
occurring
in
certain
areas
through
observations
and
surveys.
M
So
I
began
creating
the
database
of
what
was
exactly
happening
on
specific
streets
and
I
targeted
West,
State,
Street,
North
and
South
Congress,
north
and
south
hi,
and
then
the
streets
that
come
off
of
Mill
and
Mill
Street
and
those
those
were
chosen
because
of
their
very
high
density
streets
for
students.
They're.
M
So
I,
there's
little
sheep
here,
that's
in
your
packet
and
I
went
I
would
specifically
on
Monday
mornings.
Before
the
trash
people
came
out,
start
walking.
The
streets
and
I
have
on
here
a
little
schematic
with
trash
cans
with
tops
without
tops
the
number
of
bags
and
number
of
cargo
boxes
I'm.
Seeing
if
there's
trash
can
overflow
recycling
if
it's
sorted
properly,
if
there's
recycling
contamination,
meaning
if
other
things
are
in
the
recycling
making
it
impossible
to
recycle.
If
there's
recycling
and
trash
cans
and
litter
I'm,
not
picking
through
trash
but
I'm,
observing
it.
M
But
with
this
information,
what
would
I
like
to
do
with
it?
First
of
all
be
doing
surveys
in
those
communities
and
getting
some
feedback
from
students
about
what
their
perception
is
about.
Recycling
in
the
barriers
and
also
just
their
knowledge
base
about
it
and
I
will
also
try
to
identify
block
leaders
and
those
people
could
be
used
as
resources
within
the
neighborhood's
to
do
education
to
act
as
mentors
role
models
and
to
provide
a
support
for
students
with
regard
to
solid
waste.
M
M
So
what
I'd
like
to
do
is
involve
students
I,
think
students
are
key,
our
key
player
in
this
aside
from
enforcement,
we
really
need
students
to
be
modeling
behaviors,
like
recycling
to
other
students,
and
we
saw
how
strongly
that
was
with
the
Jones
brothers
and
the
beautification
day.
That's
exactly
what
we
need
are
some
really
strong
student
leaders
that
are
helping
some
states.
Our
cities
are
also
doing
something
called
a
master
recycling
program
where
people
get
very
intense
training.
M
They
want
to
get
the
training,
they
even
pay
to
get
the
training
and
they
provide
resources
in
the
community
as
volunteers
and
mentors
again,
I'd
also
like
to
encourage
businesses
to
be
involved.
I
would
like
to
create
a
database
of
businesses
who
are
recycling
and
who
are
not,
and
then
discuss
recycling
options
with
these
business
owners
and
provide
information
to
these
businesses
about
recycling.
M
Businesses
also
can
be
a
resource
to
provide
education.
They
could
have
sorting
information
right
there,
even
displays
and
I
think
landlords
are
resource.
Landlords
are
have
a
huge
effect
on
our
economy
in
Athens
about
72
percent.
The
property
is
owned
by
landlords,
and
these
are
a
really
important
resource
for
us.
I
think
the
landlord
tenant
agreement
that
was
passed
by
City
Council
in
December
is
is
a
great
way
to
approach
it.
M
We
could
also
add
recycling
and
solid
waste
education
and
within
that,
so
that
student,
students
or
people
are
signing
that
and
the
landlord
has
a
responsibility
to
provide
that
education,
and
if
we
want
to
be
pretty
radical,
we
can
also
try
mandatory
recycling
and
that's
also
being
implemented
in
many
cities.
Now,
of
course,
we're
not
going
to
have
somebody
probably
peeking
through
our
trash
again,
but
at
least
it's
it's,
it's
providing
an
ethic
and
an
ethos
that
says
this
is
what's
important
to
our
community.
Let's
try
it.
M
We've
talked
I've
been
walking
working
with
Paul
Weil
and
mr.
Haslett
and
things
that
the
city
can
do.
We
can
provide
new
recycling
bins.
We
have
not
provided
recycling
bins
in
the
city
since
the
early
1990s
and
as
people
can
buy
those,
but
the
law
or
the
regulation
has
been
each
person
gets
one
within
the
house
is
distributed
one
and
then,
if
that
person
happens,
to
move
or
leave
or
something
it's
not
renewed,
so
I
think
we
need
new
bins
across
the
board
in
the
city.
That
would
be
my
recommendation.
M
We've
also
been
discussing
standardized
garbage
receptacles
many
cities
have
gone
this
way
when
you
have
standardized
receptacles,
there's
a
certain
way
that
the
trash
is
dealt
with.
The
solid
waste
is
dealt
with,
there's
a
good
strong
lid
on
top
oftentimes.
They
have
wheels
and
people
can
order
them
in
different
gallon
capacities.
This
would
keep
a
lot
of
the
solid
waste
and
litter
off
of
the
street.
By
providing
this,
they
could
also
be
done
in
small
sections,
where
we
target
small
areas
of
the
move
forward
with
that
because
of
the
cost.
M
The
other
option
is
having
bags
where
everybody
buys
those
bags
and
then
they're
put
out,
and
that's
the
only
thing
that's
picked
up,
but
I
think.
The
shortcoming
of
that
is.
We
have
a
problem
with
bags
already
in
the
city:
oftentimes
they're
loaded,
hi,
there,
mountains
of
them.
We
have
storage
issues
where
they're
placed
and
also
animals
get
into
them
and
then
littering
about
I
see
solid
waste
enforcement
as
a
price,
a
huge
problem.
M
We
have
a
solid
waste
ordinance
that
is
not
being
followed
about
85%
of
what
I'm
observing
in
these
student
aber
hoods
people
do
not
use
tops
on
their
trash
cans.
It's
a
very
simple
thing,
but
when
you
don't
have
a
top,
the
the
solid
waste
continues
to
grow.
It
comes
out,
it
moves
around
its
and
there
you
have
our
litter
problem
right
there
without
with
us
with
that
issue.
The
other
thing
is
storage
of
the
trash
receptacles
that
doesn't
seem
to
be
followed
and
I.
M
Think
we
could
have
an
update
on
the
city
web
page
with
recycling
information,
community
contacts
right
now,
I've
been
working
with
Jim,
hence
the
off-campus
living
office,
and
he
has
14
community
assistance
and
I
included
that
his
newsletter
in
here
and
you
can
see
where
his
community
assistants
are
on
here.
What's
what
their
names
are
and
where
they're
located-
and
these
are
the
high
student,
intense
neighborhoods
and
I-
did
training
with
those
students
about
proper,
solid
waste
and
the
disposal,
as
well
as
recycling
and
sorting
and
their
real
concern.
M
They
were
very
concerned
about
the
solid
waste
issues.
They
said
they
see
it.
They
see
the
litter
in
their
community.
He
has
asked
me
to
do
a
training
for
that.
His
community
assistance
for
next
year
and
he's
also
expressed
an
interest
in
having
them
become
block
readers.
So
you
will
have
students
right
within
those
streets
who
are
trained
in
solid
waste
management
and
recycling.
M
They
can
act
as
supports
the
students,
role
models
and
also
in
in
many
communities
they
get
out
the
night
before
and
they
knock
on
the
doors
and
say
you
know
come
on:
let's
get
your
trash
out.
Let's,
let's
get
the
recycling
out,
I've
been
interfacing
with
clean
committee,
I've
gone
out
on
trash
patrol
with
Mike
Cooper
from
the
Health
Department
on
several
Sunday
Saturdays
and
I'm
when
he
tickets.
M
Boger
bir
expressed
an
interest
in
doing
this.
So
he
already
has
two
huge
tumblers
from
a
previous
grant.
I'll
be
working
with
teachers
as
well
as
educating
students
and
getting
some
student
leaders,
so
we'll
be
composting
waste
out
of
his
kitchen,
but
not
his
kitchen
out
of
the
cafeteria
and
educating
students
as
well.
Educating
the
families
and
several
families
have
come
to
me
already
and
said
they
would
like
backyard
compost,
units
and
education.
A
M
I
Say
this
is
a
huge
scope
of
of
research
and
work
here.
I
mean
that's
a
lot
of
really
interesting
and
good
information.
Thank
you
and
I
was
gonna,
say
what
yeah
are
there
some
priorities
here
that
you're
planning
to
work
on
in
the
next
few
months,
or
are
you
working
on
all
of
this?
I
D
M
I
M
If
they're
educating
their
tenants
about
solid
waste
management
and
I,
think
over
and
over
it's
a
huge
issue
in
this
community,
be
it
recycling
or
disposal
just
and
if
it
was
written
into
the
tenant
agreement,
I
think
it
could
be
very
powerful.
I
think
there
are
a
few
landlords
who
actually
do
it
now
who
have
taken
that
responsibility
on
are.
M
I
L
I
F
I
I
I
I
K
B
B
Just
want
to
say,
if
you're
talking
about
doing
working
with
folks
who
want
to
do
backyard
composting,
we,
the
Community,
Food
initiatives,
has
a
project
that
is
supported
in
part
by
the
city,
and
you
know
in
the
area
of
trying
to
reduce
the
waste
stream.
So
would
suggest
that
you
talk
with
the
folks
that
CFI.
F
D
L
L
I
want
to
say
from
the
student
perspective
than
from
somebody
who
does
live
off-campus
and
tries
to
recycle
as
much
as
we
can
for
a
lot
of
the
reasons,
because
it
cuts
down
on
us
having
to
pay
for
garbage
bins
to
actually
put
trash
on,
I
mean
I,
live
in
a
house
of
five
people
and
there's
a
lot
of
trash
accumulates
each
week,
so
I'm
wondering
as
far
as
the
recycling
goes,
when
I
lived
on
campus
I
recycled
a
lot
more,
it
seemed
like
because
there
was
more
of
an
incentive
or
more
of
a
push.
L
This
was
the
recycle
mania
that
they
have
on
campus.
It
was
like
this
competition.
You
know,
let's
beat
all
the
other
schools
across
the
nation
and
recycle
as
much
as
we
can
so
I'm
wondering
if
there
isn't
something
that
can
be
done
with
the
off
campus,
which
is
very
similar
to
that
and
competition
with
maybe
with
other
communities
or
providing
some
sort
of
maybe
incentive.
L
That's
where
it
might
instill
a
sense
of
pride
and
wanting
to
recycle
a
lot
and
pushing
students
to
do
to
do
to
do
recycling
and
then
I
I
had
a
question
about
the
mandatory
recycling
programs.
This
was
something
that
I
talked
about
when
I
was
running
for
City
Council.
How
do
mandatory
recycling
programs
work
in
other
cities
or
how
I
mean?
How
are
they
well.
M
I
know
the
City
of
Seattle,
if
it's,
if
they're,
if
there's
25
percent
of
the
waste
could
be
recycled,
that's
when
they're
ticketed
and
they're
very
serious
about
their
solid
waste
issues.
They
have
landfill
issues
that
they
don't
have
huge.
Landfills,
like
we
still
haven't,
know
to
divert
our
waste
and
they've
put
a
lot
of
money
into
environmental
programs,
so
they
have
employed
people
to
do
that
now.
I,
don't
know
the
increments
of
violations
and
so
forth,
but
there
actually
is
some
kind
of
person
that
is
looking
at
that
do.
C
L
Have
another
question
just
a
general
question
about
recycling
that
you
might
be
able
to
answer?
Why
doesn't
oh
hi,
Oh,
recycle
green
glass
I
mean.
M
M
D
I've
had
some
discussion
to
be
part
of
the
committee,
realizing
that
since
I've
had
some
discussions
with
Joe
castle
are
about
this
and
Ray
has
lied
about
it
and
and
if
you
remember,
when
we
changed
the
rates,
what
year
and
a
half
ago,
I
think
John
now
Scott
in
front
of
us
in
saying
you
know,
we
really
should
have
a
different
rate.
I
think
it's
550
950
and
the
idea
is
that
that's
a
small
increment
for
one
back
can.
F
D
I
I
think
this
is
a
more
complicated
issue
once
you
start
that,
because
right
now,
if
you
don't
put
trash
out,
you're
still
charged
I
mean,
in
other
words,
once
we
get
into
the
situation
when
we
say
we're
counting
your
bags,
then
we
get
into
the
situation
about
people
to
earn
away,
as
I
have
often
been
and
I
say.
Well,
you
know,
can
I
have
two
bags
next
week?
Absolutely
not
you
know
so.
I
just
think
it.
It
really
becomes
very
complex.
If
you
have
the
trash
people
counting
the.
D
I
F
I
I
D
F
F
I
Students,
you
know
these.
A
lot
of
these
students
will
be
gone
in
one
or
two
years
and
then
you
have
a
whole
new
crop
of
students.
So
now
this
is
just
another
kind
of
brainstorm,
but
I
wonder
I
mean
what's
the
incentive
for
these
people
to
like
monitor
other
people's
trash
I'm.
Just
saying
it's
not
a.
I
Work
and
this
would
require
a
lot
of
landlord
cooperation,
but
maybe
some
of
these
people
who
were
willing
to
do
this
work
because
it's
significant,
you
know
community
work,
but
you
know
maybe
there's
something
in
it
for
the
landlord's
and
they
get.
You
know
this
particular
person
gets
a
tiny
cut
in
their
rent
every
once
in
a
while.
You
know
so
that
it
becomes
more
of
a
community
activity
that
people
care
about
and
that
the
landlords
are
on
board
with
it.
But
you
know
that's
a
big
sell.
They
give
people
the
University.
C
M
The
community
assessments
are
the
block
leaders
if
they
were
just
volunteers,
we'd
be
doing
it
because
it's
something
that
interests
them
I
mean
we
all
volunteer
in
some
capacity
in
our
lives
so
and
when
we're
teaching
solid,
good,
solid
waste
skills,
I
mean
that's
a
skill.
You
need
throughout
your
life,
it's
and
I
think
we'd
be
offering
a
very
good
service
to
students
to
beginning
than
that
that
they
can
take
that
to
the
suburbs
or
to
the
inner
city,
wherever
they're
gonna
move
or
to
their
rural
area.
I
think
it's.
M
M
L
This
is
about
the
bloc
leaders,
yeah
I,
certainly
just
in
contrast
with
what
you're
saying,
I
think
I
think
that
you
would
find
people
who
would
be
willing
to
be
block
leaders.
You
know
throughout
the
whole
community
I
certainly
would
be
interested
I
see
that
there's
no,
you
know
nobody
from
West,
Union,
Street
or
anything
like
that,
but
I
would
certainly
would
be
interested
in
I.
Think
many.
F
L
People
would
be
I,
don't
I,
don't
think
it's
a
hard
to
sell,
necessarily
I
think
it's
something
that
people
you
know
will
want
to
do.
You
know,
like
I,
keep
saying
a
sense
of
pride
in
this
community
and
making
it
you
know
more
beautiful
and
I.
Think
people
would
really
you
know,
watch
onto
that.
Okay,
okay,.
D
Lorraine
is
going
to
be
giving
us
of
the
other
presentations
later
down
the
pike.
As
progress
goes
on,
you
will
notice
in
your
package.
You
also
put
out
the
Athens
talking
waste
district
recycling
center
newsletter,
I
notice,
it's
issue,
1
volume,
1
volume,
1
number
1
February
just
so
they
have
an
education
component
going
on
part
of
the
thing
about
the
recycling
bins
is
that
we
haven't
had
any
and
I.
If
the
garbage
fund
is
flush
enough,
I
would
like
to
see
us
at
least
reprime
the
city,
somehow
mostly
because
it
hasn't
so
many
years.
D
I
notice
on
I've
been
walking
around
with
recycling,
and
many
people
require
more
than
one
bin
to
recycle.
You
know
I've
seen
people
with
those
pickle
buckets
and
milk
crates
and
stuff
like
that,
and
if
we
could
do
that,
just
to
prime
the
pump
we
may
be
able
to
get
a
little
bit
more
percentage
out
and
I
I.
Don't
have
the
numbers
with
me,
I
don't
know
Lorraine.
Did
you
bring
the
prices
that
Gracie
sent
us
no
I.
D
D
D
D
K
D
K
I
I
M
M
But
also
the
clean
committee
has
been
working
on
this
and
they've
just
put
together
a
recycling
video
and
that's
going
to
be
distributed.
Apparently
Jim,
hence,
is
going
to
make
a
whole
lot
of
copies
and
distribute
them
to
students.
So
he's
he's
gonna
begin
working
with
them
as
well,
so
that
would
be
helpful.
Okay,.
D
G
E
Yeah,
okay,
we're
gonna
open
a
Finance
and
Personnel
Committee.
We
have
the
work
issues
we
want
to
discuss.
All
of
them
are
have
to
do
with
with
recurring
programs
that
the
mayor
applies
for
grants
to
work
with,
and
we
need
to
pass
authorizing
ordinances
to
allow
that
to
happen.
So
the
first
one
is
a
community
housing
improvement
grant.
E
Computer
community
housing
improvement
program
grant
that's
where
the
chip
comes
in,
which
we
heard
from
the
Ducks
Dale
extinct
duck
Stanley
from
tri-county
Community
Action,
whose
office
has
handled
these
grants
for
several
years
for
us
so
next
week
we
would
like
to
put
up
an
ordinance
authorizing
the
mayor
to
submit
a
fiscal
year.
2006
chip
grant
to
the
Ohio
Department
of
Development
can
designate
the
Hocking
Athens
Perry
Community
Action
Agency
as
the
chip
program
grant,
contract
administrator,
ok,.
E
Second,
one
is
a
similar
ordinance
request
authorizing
the
mayor
to
submit
an
application
for
an
emergency
shelter
grant
agreement
through
the
Ohio
Department
of
Development
and
good
works.
This
is
a
pass
through
from
the
development
comes
through
the
city
of
Athens,
for
good
works
to
operate
a
a
shelter
and
programs
to
flow
out
of
that.
D
E
E
Drug
abuse,
resistance,
education
or
dare
law
enforcement
rant
again.
This
is
an
annual
application
that
the
mayor
makes
for
some
funds
that
would
pay
up
to
fifty
percent
of
a
officer,
a
police
officer's
salary
when
he
or
she
is
designated
as
it
as
the
DARE
officer
of
those
into
schools
and
presents
the
program.
E
I
K
F
K
Look
edibles
any
of
the
different
programs
we're
running
over
there.
You
can
do
it.
The
violence
against
women
grant
that
we
get
and
say.
Should
we
take
those
people
off
of
that
the
same
thing
with
the
investigations,
units,
etc
so
yeah,
but
right
now
from
what
is
budgeted
and
funded.
We
were
one
officer
down
from
that
standpoint,
but
we
do
have
an
officer,
that's
on
workers,
compensation
leave
and
another
one,
that's
on
military
leave,
but
we
have
hired
two
officers
in
the
last
four
months.
E
This
particular
program
I
happen
to
be
it's
a
community
center
about
a
year
ago
when
they
had
their
annual
recognition
banquet
for
school-aged
people,
young
people
who
were
involved
in
the
program.
There
were
scores
and
scores
of
school
children
and
their
parents
who
came
to
this
to
be
recognized
and
receive
a
certificate
that
they
had
completed
the
program
and
participated.
F
E
B
L
Yeah
I
actually
did
the
dare
program,
probably
I,
don't
know
if
everybody
in
here
did
you
know.
Fifth
grade
was
a
lot
not
so
far
along
or
not
so
far
back
for
me
and.
L
Great
I
mean
it
was
the
best
part
of
fifth
grade.
I
mean
it
was.
It
was
really
effective.
Then,
like
you
said,
I
mean
people
gather
at
the
dare
the
ceremony
and
it
was
very
effective
and
for
growing
up
looking
forward
to
that
in
fifth
grade.
Getting
that
education
was,
it
was
very
good.
Okay,
I
would.
F
E
And
the
final
recurring
event
that
I'd
like
to
bring
up
is
request
for
an
ordinance
authorizing
the
mayor
to
submit
an
application
to
the
Ohio
Department
of
Development
for
Community
Development
Block
Grant
CDBG
grant
for
the
calendar
year
2006-
and
this
is
the
small
cities
formula
program
which
is
I
I.
Think
you
said
there
at
this
point.
We
don't
know
what
could
be
available
to
us.
It's.
E
K
Various
projects
this
year,
it's
doing
a
at
the
water
plant,
a
safety
project
for
the
water
wells.
It's
done
primarily
I've
been
using
it
for
the
Uptown
traffic,
signalization
masked
iron
and
the
computerization
of
the
signals
there
and
that's
going
on
for
about
five
years.
Openness,
maybe
six,
but
it
can
be
used.
There's
a
set
of
criteria
for
low
and
moderate
income
areas
of
the
city
that
it
can
be
done
for
a
lot
of
infrastructure
type
projects.
That
would
be
near
needed
to
be
done.
D
D
K
B
Last
year
we
were
talking
about
Stimpson
Avenue
to
sidewalks
in
particular,
because
the
disabilities
Commission
identified
that
as
their
top
priority
in
terms
of
ramps
and
broken
curbs
and
things
that
were
on
the
sidewalks
and
we're
all
in
receipt
of
a
letter
from
another
individual
talking
to
us
about
problems
with
sidewalks,
so
I
know.
At
that
time
there
was
a
request
for
qualification,
sent
out
to
really
look
overall
at
Stimson
Avenue,
and
so
that
project
got
kind
of
set
aside,
because
there
was
a
the
possibility
of
really
doing
it.
B
E
E
G
There
are
some
changes
as
well
in
the
way
the
penalties
are
phrased,
and
one
of
the
big
changes
is
that,
for
example,
if
a
cab
company
were
operating
without
a
license,
that
would
become
an
organizational
fine
instead
of
an
individual
fine
and
those
are
ten
times
the
amount
of
an
individual
fine.
So
that's
a
change
throughout
I.
G
There
had
been
a
suggested
change
and
before
I
first
started
working
on
this,
and
when
I
talked
to
Teresa
in
the
Code
office,
it
turned
out
that
the
proposed
change
would
have
been
less
revenue
for
the
city
than
the
the
way
it
was.
So
we
put
it
back
to
the
language
that
it
had
previously
and
that's
taxi
cab.
Business
license
fee
is
fifty
five
dollars
per
vehicle
used
by
the
cab
company.
Instead
of
a
fifty
dollar
license
fee
plus
ten
dollars
a
cab,
and
we
would
actually
have
gotten
fewer
revenues
than
than
we
currently
do.
D
G
G
G
G
L
D
D
F
B
D
C
G
F
G
I,
don't
know
why
some
of
the
corrections
when
some
of
them
didn't
but
Mike
Miller,
said
the
same
thing.
He
had
some
problems
with
the
correction
not
coming
through
in
the
law
office,
but
those
are
basically,
you
know
the
work
that
we've
done.
I
all
of
this
last
edition
was
done
with
the
police
chief
and
the
law
director.
It
was
just
some
language
situations
that
we
were
hammering
through.
N
N
G
N
C
N
Don't
know
it,
but
it's
a
direct
reward
that
we
get
why
drivers
aren't
distracted
and
it's
safe
in
there.
Okay
just
to
run
through
this
very
quickly,
and
if
you
could
maybe
answer
a
couple
things
when
you
were
saying
the
$50
per
cab,
that's
what
we
pay
now
right,
but
I
didn't.
Where
do
you
charge?
The
driver?
I
didn't
see
that
in.
G
G
N
Great
okay,
I'm,
just
a
couple
notes:
you
answer
the
one
for
vehicle
because
I
have
that
me:
could
you
explain
the
main?
It
seems
contradictory,
I,
don't
mind
a
limousine
service
being
treated
as
a
taxi
cab
as
any
vehicle
could
be
treated
as
a
cab
taxi
cab,
but
in
the
business
of
taxis
and
limos,
there's
difference
in
tax,
not
tax
insurance,
because
limousines
aren't
hailed
right
there
by
appointment.
So
therefore
that
insurance
is
cheaper
right.
N
G
The
discussion
that
I
had
with
the
police
chief
on
this
issue
and
the
law
director
was
that
it
would
only
be
when
the
limousine
is
being
used
as
a
cab
and
has
the
markings
and
is
used
as
part
of
the
fleet.
That
was
the
distinction
that
it's
not
a
limousine
service
as
such,
where
you
hire
the
lemon
scene
to
do
a
party
or
whatever.
F
G
N
N
You
probably
know
that
from
your
personal
insurance,
it's
a
fifty
a
hundred
and
one
hundred
three
hundred
I
mean
it's
pretty
much
the
same.
That
was
a
question
because
I
did
checked
four
three
and
four
dollar
fare
as
it
comes
out
to
an
extra
like
eight
hundred
and
some
dollars
a
year
for
me
about
850.
But
if
I
we
don't
have
any
claim.
So
our
insurance
is
reasonable
and
are
we
I
told
you
before
we
don't
hire
drivers
I?
Don't
that
have
points
either
so
for
us.
N
N
With
the
bonding-
and
this
is
a
complaint
down
at
the
bottom
from
the
taxicab
stands
and
call
stations
that
a
couple
of
the
drivers
have
said
to
me.
If
limos
are
allowed
to
park
as
taxicabs,
they
take
up
two
to
three
spaces,
and
are
they
doing
that?
Oh
yeah,
yeah,
I,
haven't
been
out
to
drive
lately
but
I'm
hearing
that
I
can't
imagine
anybody
wanting
a
limo
for
a
taxicab
just
to
maneuver
it
and
the
gas.
G
G
N
G
N
N
I
do
like
the
appeal
and
review
and
I
assume
that
that
would
be
on
page
eight
down
at
the
bottom,
that
we
could
go
to
the
board
that
you're
creating
okay.
Is
there
a
one
time
I
mentioned
about
having
someone
it
could
be
like
from
John's
organization
or
mine
that
maybe
could
somehow
be
involved
in
that
board
just
to
kind
of
know?
What's
going
on?
It
may
not
have
a
voting
power.
However,
you
set
it
up,
I,
don't
know,
but
just
the
somehow.
H
N
G
N
G
N
Well,
I
mean
it
hasn't
been
so
far
and
yeah
I
see
now.
Teresa
has
handled
this
in
the
past
on
page
8,
at
the
top,
where
you
discussed
the
felonies,
the
all
that
stuff,
but
there's
no
length
mention
of
points
on
license,
although
that
has
been
kind
of
an
unwritten
rule
from
the
Code
office.
So
maybe
it's
some.
What
some
point
that
should
be
put
in
somewhere
board
or
here
I,
don't
know,
I
think
they
allow
so
many
points
that
they
have
in
the
past.
It
hasn't
affected
me.
N
N
Destroy
truthfully
we'll
get
somebody
in
the
rear,
we
don't
know
they
have
an
open
container
until
we
expose
them.
But
then
also
there
have
been
I
have
heard
it
not
with
us,
but
there
has
been
a
group
of
like
four
or
five
that
had
beer
in
the
back
end
van
drinking
and
they
got
cited
and
actually
went
to
court
for
it.
But
when
I
read
this
I
thought:
okay,
now
we're
being
respected,
because
it
says
the
suspension
of
the
taxicab
operator
driver's
license
and
the
taxicab
business
license.
N
G
B
G
What
I'm
hearing
from
the
cab
drivers?
It's
pull
up
to
the
curb
get
out
right,
but
in
the
event
that,
right,
when
that
happens,
a
policeman
comes
up
behind
them
and
stop
summoned
edited.
I
G
G
G
It's
in
our
code
and
that's
why
it
cites
102,
o
4
and
1,
o
2
O
5
of
our
code
defines
the
organizational
code.
Then,
if
you
go
to
the
state
law,
it
explains
that
what
it
is
is
that
the
fines
are
tenfold
from
an
individual
point.
But
so,
if
it's
that
the
cab
company
is
found
liable
for
something
they're
charged
ten
times,
the
amount
of
what
an
individual
would
be.
Has
that
ever
happened
in.
F
N
G
I'm
skip
chance
taxi,
it's
alliterative
I
should
be
able
to
get
that.
The
other
little
detail
about
this
is
that
I
will
not
be
here
for
the
meeting
next
week
and
so
Amy
will
introduce
it
and,
as
I
said,
I'll
try
together.
E
I
G
L
You
very
much
I
put
this
on
the
agenda
around
the
committee
agenda:
the
parking
tickets
more
specifically
duplicate
parking
tickets,
because
there
was
this
council.
No,
we
received
an
email
about
a
concern
on
getting
duplicate
tickets
and
an
empty
in
the
empty
garage
and
then
also
I've
had
some
friends
and
other
people
mentioned
to
me.
Well,
we
get
to
duplicate
tickets
on
the
street
to
know
every
couple
of
hours.
L
You
know,
Oh
get
two
and
three
tickets,
sometimes
so
I
wanted
to
bring
this
up
after
I
talked
to
the
mayor
for
a
little
bit
today,
and
also
captain
Pyle
kind
of
just
got
some
more
information
on
why
the
city
does
ticket
when
you
ticket
you
more
than
more
than
once
when
you're
violate
the
meter,
and
while
it
is
written
into
the
code
that
you
can
receive
a
ticket
every
hour
after
your
initial
violation.
Usually
it
averages
about
two
two
and
a
half
hours.
Captain
Kyle
says
as
far
as
getting
those
duplicate
tickets.
L
So
there
are
some
flexibility
there,
but
the
concern
was
that
there
was
they
were
getting
duplicate
tickets
in
the
garage
in
an
empty
garage
and
their
concern
was
well
as
the
money
is
the
city
just
trying
to
bring
in
more
money
when
in
all
actuality,
what
it
is
is
it's
a
deterrence
issue
and
keeping
people
from
just
taking
their
car
into
the
garage
and
leaving
it.
You
know
for,
however
long
and
only
receiving
a
five
dollar
ticket,
which
is
what
the
first
ticket
is.
So
he
explained
to
me.
L
You
know
the
example
would
be.
If
you
would
go
into
the
garage
and
park
your
car
for
ten
hours,
then
it
would
be
about
675
to
feed
the
meter,
whereas
if
you
just
went
and
left
and
didn't
pay
it
at
all,
it
would
only
be
five
dollars,
that's
just
with
one
citation,
so
it
obviously
would
make
sense
to
do
multiple
citations
and
that
it
would
be
a
deterrence
issue
from
future
violations
in
the
same
way
as
with
meters
on
the
street.
It's
the
same
same
deal.
L
You
know
you
can
park
your
car
and
leave
it
for
six
hours
and
you
know
only
get
that
five
dollar
ticket
where
the
city
is
losing
revenue
on
those
meters,
so
I
just
wanted
to
bring
that
up
and
just
to
put
that
out
there
as
to
why
the
city
does
do
what
it
does
why
the
code
is
written.
The
way
that
it
is
yes,
okay,.
I
I
G
L
K
L
L
Died
down
at
all
excellent
okay,
still
going,
but
yeah
I
just
wanted
to
bring
up
the
issue
and
I
didn't
know
if
the
mayor
had
anything
additional
to
say
as
far
as
why
the
duplicate
tickets
do
occur,
but
it
you
know
it's
fair
and
it's
very
logical,
and
that
was
a
question.
Is
this
fair
and
logical
to
do
duplicate
tickets?
And
the
answer
is
yes,
it's
a
deterrence
issue,
so
I
just
wanted
to
bring
that
up,
plus.
L
As
captain
Pyle
also
said,
you
know,
you
could
easily
get
three
and
four
tickets
sometimes
sitting
in
the
garage
that
long
and
if
you
know,
they're
pretty
flexible.
If
you
were
to
go
in
and
talk
to
them,
they
might
boy
to
ticket
or
two
but
they're
pretty
flexible
with
it
right.
Yeah
they're,
flexible
with
it,
so
I
mean
it's
a
very
fair.
So
next
is
the.
Unless
ain't
got
anything
else
to
say
about
parking
tickets,
duplicate
parking
tickets.
L
G
Another
ordinance
for
Amy
to
introduce
on
Monday
night
and
ironically,
where
I
will
be,
who
is
at
a
transportation
conference.
He
in
East
Lansing
Michigan,
a
community
that
has
gone
to
a
combined
City,
University
transportation
plan.
That's
been
in
operation
just
over
a
year
and
so
I'm
very
excited
to
be
doing
that
and
I
will
be
going
with
the
transportation
person
from
oh,
you,
sherry
Berenson.
So
we
can
here
with
double
leaders
and
be
sure
that
were
covering
you
know
all
of
the
different
things
that
are
offered
there.
G
It's
like
five
different
workshops,
but
it
is
time
for
the
transportation
grant
application.
This
is
just
an
ordinance
to
enter
in
for
the
mayor
to
enter
to
the
grant
application
process
for
transportation
and
just
kind
of
to
give
you
a
general
idea
of
how
this
works.
The
total
grants
are
close
to
$400,000
and
the
city's
share
of
that
is
around
100,000,
and
then
we
get
back
our
contracts,
our
fare
box
and
advertising.
That's
on
the
side
of
the
bus.
G
So
when
it
comes
down
to
the
actual
cash
that
that
the
city
of
Athens
is
paying
out
for
transportation,
I
still
maintain.
It's
when
the
best
bargains
we
have
going.
We
a
bus
system
does
not
cover
it
us,
but
but
we
do
pretty
well
with
ours,
and
so
this
is
just
the
opportunity
to
apply
for
those
federal
and
state
grants.
The
cap
budgets,
in
other
words,
when
we
buy
buses,
the
federal
pays
80%
the
state
pays
10
and
we
paid
10%.
F
L
L
B
L
L
D
L
K
K
We're
also
have
our
bidding
with
an
alternate
a
little
bit
on
this
one
for
some
work
on
West
Washington
Street
that
wasn't
included
in
the
original,
but
we
do
think
there's
some
curve
work.
There
need
to
do
the
architect
estimated
or
the
engineer
estimated
about
35
to
37
thousand
dollars
on
that.
But
as
long
as
we're
in
the
area,
we
think
we
should
probably
finish
it
up
and
do
it
do
it
properly.
K
We
still
didn't
have
time
to
you
know,
do
the
legislation
on
that,
but
we
may
may
actually
bid
it
that
way,
because
if
we
include
all
the
construction
items
there
we'll
need
about
another
hundred
and
twenty
seven
thousand
dollars
on
this
this
project
and
that
what
that's
allowing
for
is
two
hundred
and
seventy-five
thousand
dollars
construction
cost
and
then
a
ten
percent
contingency
of
twenty
seven
five
and
ten
percent
for
any
construction
engineering
or
inspection
work.
That's
being
done.
Our
hope,
of
course,
is
that
it
will
come
in
under
bid
totally.
K
We
would
have
been
put
in
that
hundred
and
twenty
seven
thousand
plus
forty
five
thousand.
We
did
in
design
engineering
and
the
issue
toupees
two
hundred
and
three
thousand
dollars.
So
it's
still
we're
paying
less
than
fifty
percent
of
the
project
and
that's
if
all
the
contingencies
go
bad
and
everything
else.
K
But
to
give
you
a
little
update
on
the
street
rebuild
fund,
we
started
the
year
after
encumbrances
was
seven
hundred
and
three
thousand
dollars
in
that,
and
that
included
some
amount
of
money
from
FEMA
for
a
slip
on
sunset,
the
middle
slope,
but
so
far,
you've
approved
one
hundred
and
sixty
one
thousand
dollars
on
the
state
route.
Six.
Eighty
two,
fifty
six
Union
Street,
interchange
and
three
hundred
thousand
dollars
on
sunset
slips.
So
that's
four
hundred
and
sixty
one.
K
F
K
F
K
Are
all
of
the
projects
that
we
have
on
the
books?
You
know
this
year
for
that,
but
it
also
points
out
that
there
is
not
very
much
money
there
for
an
overall
paving
projects
within
the
city
or
sidewalks
etcetera,
because
in
looking
at
the
January
report,
the
estimated
revenue
is
still
less
than
expenditures
budgeted
in
the
street
department,
where
they
carried
forward
to
two
hundred
and
forty
some
thousand
dollars
and
I.
Think
if
I,
my
math
is
right
in
the
revenue
does
come
in
at
that
which,
I
think
is
a
little
bit
low.
K
We
only
have
fifteen
hundred
dollars
in
the
street
fund
for
playing
play
money
which
isn't
anything
so,
even
though
we're
going
to
do
the
street
tour
and
everything
what's
in
the
budget
right
now
for
equipment
and
capital
projects,
I
think
is
two
hundred
and
ninety
one
thousand
dollars
and
just
be
aware
that
there's
also
vehicles
there.
That
Ron
is
preparing
the
report
that
are,
if
you
want
to
see
a
1989
truck,
that
still
of
service
and
needs
replaced.
K
B
K
Don't
believe
that
those
were
submitted
to
them
for
it,
but
usually
no
dot
money,
they
have
to
be
a
DA
compliant,
and
so
it
was
was
written.
They're,
usually
I.
Think
five
foot
sidewalks
in
this
case,
where
the
problem
I
think
on
Stimson
and
you
got
it
in
two
places-
is
there's
walls
and
then
now
the
new
Bank
is
created,
more
walls,
I,
don't
think
they
got
a
five-foot
sidewalk.
B
So
there
is
a
disabilities
Commission
meeting
on
Wednesday.
If
you
want
you
to
take
that
along
sure
and
let
them
look
at
it
that.
K
B
K
If
you'd
have
rain
dates
and
certain
of
it
events,
the
contractor,
can't
cut
you
know,
can't
control
acts
of
God
I
guess
then
that
usually
gets
extended
that
we
would
want
to.
We
would
hope
it
would
end
about
a
week
before
school
would
start,
because
you
have
teacher
days
and
everything
else
and
what
our
plan
really
is
is
to
get
out
of
that
area.
That's
the
first
where
the
buses
come.
Those
are
the
first
two
blocks
that
we're
going
to
do
we'll
be
down
on
the
South
High.
F
K
D
K
You
know,
but
that's
what
Derek
Ranas
is
developing
for
me,
now
he's
getting
the
square
footage
for
all
of
those
that
are
available,
and
we
will
have
that
before
we
actually
go
to
have
an
ordinance
on
the
table.
I'll
be
able
to
tell
you
next
week,
hopefully
how
much
that
is,
but
we
then
that'll
be
our
engineers
estimate,
because
until
it
gets
bid
we
don't
really
know
the
contract
price.
K
D
K
That's
what
our
plan
is:
I
think
that
we
will.
We
should
probably
pay
the
contractor
directly
since
were
supervising
and
controlling
the
project,
but
the
contractor
will
have
to
give
us
the
unit
price.
We
will
then
use
that
to
build
a
property
owner,
we
pay
the
curbs
and
we
pay
the
tourney
and,
with
the
ad,
a
ramps
on
corners
and
there's
certain
areas
that
we
pay
for,
but
directly
in
front
of
the
home
or
rental
unit.
K
K
E
K
E
L
D
I'm
kind
of
disappointed
we
can't
put
more
money
into
sidewalks.
It
sounds
like
we
were
pretty
that
much
tapped
down.
I
got
actually
got
stopped
by
a
bomb,
a
singer.
What
sidewalk
are
going
to
this
year
being
that
he
is
a
transportation
before
so
that's
the
question
I
have
to
put
to
us
sometime,
the
other
one
is
I.
Think
I
got
a
recommendation
of
one.
They
would
association
about
the
street
suite
for
running
full-time
at
next
Spring
Break
they're,
just
coming
up
real
soon.
Is
that
the
intent?
Is
it
hyper
running?
Yes?
F
D
K
K
K
I
Communication
committee
I
just
report
on
the
conversation
that
we
had
tonight
on
safety
issues
and
we've
had
about
11
people
there,
not
a
large
group,
but
we
did
cover
some
issues
that
probably
have
been
covered
before,
but
I
will
repeat
them.
Police
and
fire
staffing
and
judge
meeting
was
able
to
report
from
the
police
community
dialogue
which
she
said
was
really
useful
and
that
there
was
a
good
exchange
of
information
and
good
kind
of
communication
between
the
students
and
the
police
on
other
issues
that
were
raised.
I
I'm
gonna
call
it
the
Richland
pseudo,
sidewalk
or
crosswalk.
There's
a
lot
of
discussion
about
you
know
who
had
the
right
away
and
how
to
inform
people
whether
students
should
be
crossing
our
cars
should
be
stopping
wellhead
protection,
water
protection
as
a
as
a
water
safety
issue,
bike,
rider
safety
and
some
awareness
that
we
need
to
share
the
road
with
bikers
some
controversy
over
the
value
of
streetlights
many
people,
or
at
least
some
students
had
raised
the
issue
last
time
about
streetlights
being
out
in
some
places
being
rather
dark
or
some
places
needing
streetlights.
I
Some
combination
of
both,
but
that
was
an
issue
slippery
or
broken
sidewalks
slippery
bricks
and,
let's
see
and
and
and
I
guess
we're
kind
of
tight
on
the
on
this
budget.
I
can
see,
but
maybe
you
know,
painting-
and
you
know
some
more
visibility
for
the
for
the
ramps
and
other
other
indentations
for
dangerous
walking
points.
Yes,
patinka.
I
I
I
So
anyway,
it
was
an
interesting
discussion
and
you
know
one
of
the
things
that
we
talked
about.
Informally.
Was
you
know
how
to
move
forward
from
some
of
these
things,
that
the
conversation
is
bring
up
the
issues
and
create
opportunities
for
citizens
and
council
people
to
speak,
and
then
we
might,
you
know,
revisit
some
of
these
issues
and
talk
about
you
know.
How
are
we
going
to
kind
of
make
sure
that
some
things
get
done
as
they're
as
a
result
of
some
of
these
conversations
by.