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From YouTube: Committee of the Whole - 1/17/2023
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A
I
was
ready,
okay,
good
evening,
everyone
on
this
fine
Tuesday
evening.
I
am
going
to
go
ahead
and
call
the
meeting
of
the
city
of
Bloomington
Council
to
order
and
Madame
clerk.
Could
you
please
call
the
roll.
C
A
And
next
we're
going
to
have
a
public
comment.
Do
we
have
public
comment.
B
We
do
we
received
no
emailed
public
comment
and
we
have
three
people
registered
to
speak
to
in
person
and
one
virtually
the
first
to
speak
in
person
will
be
Carla,
Bailey,
Smith,
okay,.
A
A
Public
comment
is
an
opportunity
for
speakers
to
provide
their
views
and
feedback
to
the
city
council.
It
is
also
an
opportunity
for
the
city
council
to
listen
and
hear
diverse
points
of
view
to
maximize
the
impact
of
public
comment
and
show
respect
for
the
expression
of
All
Views.
Speakers
should
maintain
Civility
and
focus
on
City
issues.
Speakers
must
identify
themselves
for
the
record
but
are
not
required
to
give
their
address.
Each
speaker
is
given
the
four
for
three
minutes
and
the
council
does
not
respond
or
engage
in
debate.
A
D
You
hello,
my
name
is
Carla
Bailey,
Smith
and
I
am
here.
As
the
chair
of
the
central
Illinois
chapter
of
the
ACLU,
the
Bloomington
Police
Department
has
been
awarded
five
hundred
thousand
dollars
from
the
city
of
bloomington's
arpa
funds
for
a
violence
reduction.
Grant
Our
concern
is
specifically
with
the
proposal
to
purchase
and
use
drones
at
an
estimated
cost
of
fifty
six
thousand
dollars.
Our
committee
questions
the
use
of
surveillance
as
violence
prevention,
and
there
are
privacy
concerns.
D
The
Illinois
drone
surveillance
surveillance
act,
725
ilcs
states
that
a
drone
may
not
be
used
by
law
enforcement
to
gather
information
except
in
specific
cases.
These
include
to
counter
a
risk
of
a
terror
attack
based
on
credible
evidence
from
Homeland
Security
after
obtaining
a
search
warrant
based
on
probable
cause
with
Reasonable
Suspicion
of
imminent
harm,
Escape
of
suspect
or
destruction
of
evidence
to
find
missing
persons
for
crime,
scene
and
traffic
photography
and
in
a
disaster
or
Public
Health
Emergency.
D
The
ACLU
of
Illinois
is
aware
of
the
request
to
purchase
and
use
drones
and
would
remind
the
Bloomington
Police
Department
that
General
surveillance
is
prohibited.
Drones
could
be
present
at
a
public
event,
but
not
launched
and
used
unless
a
specific
situation
arises
or
there
is
reasonable
suspicion
of
imminent
harm.
D
We
hope
that
you,
the
Bloomington
city
council
members,
will
take
this
into
account
before
approving
the
use
of
these
funds
for
this
purpose.
If,
at
some
point
the
use
of
drones
is
implemented
by
the
Bloomington
Police
Department,
it
will
be
important
to
have
clearly
stated
protocols
and
prohibitions
for
usage
established
and
I
have
emailed
all
of
you.
You
should
have
received
it
at
six
o'clock,
although
I
think
I
left
out
Mr
Gleason
of
my
comments
and
the
supporting
documents
from
the
ACLU
of
Illinois.
So
you
have
a
record
of
that.
Thank
you.
B
Next
up
we
have
Serena
fish
and
then
to
follow
will
be
online
Robbie,
Durie,
dovery.
E
Myself
and
one
of
you,
Mr
Jeff,
here,
attended
the
last
pscrb
meeting,
so
we
have
a
complete
idea
of
what
this
is
and
I
would
suggest.
If
people
want
to
stir
things
up,
they
go
to
some
of
our
meetings
come
all
the
public
is
always
invited
hold
on
to
your
seats,
because
the
proposals
that
you're
going
to
hear
tonight
is
pretty
good
and
it
approaches
a
lot
of
things
that
a
lot
of
you
have
spoken
about
concerning
violence
and
I.
E
Myself
am
very
prepared
and
very
happy
because
they're
on
the
ground
running,
so
please
listen
to
the
proposal
and
make
your
own
decision
and,
like
I,
said
all
the
pscrb
meetings
are
public
invited.
We
certainly
would
like
everybody
to
come
when
we
have
a
quarterly
meeting
and
get
the
truth
straight
from
the
people
who
are
doing
it.
Thank
you
very
much
and
thank
you.
Mr
Grable.
For
being
there.
F
Hello,
can
you
hear
me
hello?
Can
you
hear
me?
Yes,
thank
you.
My
name
is
Robbie.
My
name
is
Ravi
lavori.
Thank
you
for
allowing
me
to
speak
to.
F
Today,
regarding
the
state
of
Illinois
violence
prevention,
Grant,
we
have
heard
we
have
seen
the
presentation
that
the
Bloomington
Police
Department
gave
to
the
pscrb.
I
would
like
to
say
it
is
fantastic
that
the
city
of
Bloomington
has
received
this
grant.
I
would
like
to
mention.
You
know
again
call
out
that
it
wasn't
that
long
ago,
last
year
that
several
members
of
your
this
Council
called
for
either
City
staff
or
for
task
force
to
be
put
together
to
study
the
sources
of
violence,
the
root
causes
of
violence
within
our
community.
F
There
were
some
that
poo
pooed
that
idea,
and
yet
here
we
are
where
we
have
this
opportunity
and
it's
a
shame
that
we
don't
have
more
developed
ideas
to
do
something
about
it
and
I.
Think
in
speaking
to
many
people
in
the
community,
I
think
we
would
like
to
see
more
programs
directed
from
the
city
itself
addressing
these
root
causes,
rather
than
funneling
money
toward
the
police
for
technology,
surveillance
and
deterrence.
F
Specifically,
the
idea
of
mobile
camera
platforms
to
monitor
Gatherings
I've
spoken
many
people.
They
feel
that
that
is
just
an
intimidation
tactic
to
potentially
discourage
rallies
and
protests.
The
Potential
Threat
of
mass
facial
recognition
to
identify
who
is
attending
these
type
of
gatherings.
F
Similarly,
with
drones,
I
believe
someone
mentioned
earlier,
that
is
against
Illinois
Law
most
of
those
usage.
Furthermore,
the
use
of
drones
for
urban
search
and
rescue
is
not
very
effective.
That
sort
of
functionality
would
be
much
better
at
the
county
level
and
again,
any
use
of
these
technology
platforms
would
be
better
with
strong
guidelines
in
place
to
make
sure
that
they're
used
responsibly
and
ethically,
but
mostly
I,
think
I
would
like
to
see
and
I
think
some
of
the
programs,
as
miss
fish
mentioned,
are
good.
F
Some
of
the
like
the
the
camp
or
some
of
the
Gun
Locker
programs.
We
need
more
social
programs
directed
at
reducing
or
preventing
violence,
not
necessarily
trying
to
deter
or
intimidate
people
that
that
really
does
not
work.
The
kind
of
things
to
address
the
reasons
people
might
turn
to
violence
is
going
to
be
a
much
better
use
of
this
money.
Thank
you
and
good
evening.
A
B
Becker
yes,
councilmember
Urban,
yes,
councilmember,
Ward,
aye,
councilmember
I
got
you
council,
member
crabill.
Yes,
thanks.
A
Okay
sounds
good,
yeah
item
passes
and
no
needs
to
announce,
and
the
next
item
on
the
agenda
is
the
the
regular
agenda
and
a
presentation
of
the
city's
proposed
Americans
with
Disabilities
Act
transition
plan,
as
requested
by
the
administration
department
and
I
believe
we're
going
straight
to
Deputy
city
manager.
Ties
thank.
K
You
mayor
mayor
and
council
members,
we're
actually
excited
about
this
presentation
by
Michael
hurt,
who
is
our
Chief
diversity
and
inclusion
officer,
Chief
diversity
and
inclusion
officer,
always
butcher's
title,
but
he's
been.
He
and
his
team
have
been
working
on
this
document
in
this
plan
for
quite
some
time
now,
really
what
it
is
and
he'll
speak
more
to
this.
K
Is
it
this
document,
and
this
plan
really
guides
our
efforts
at
making
sure
that
our
facilities,
our
programs
and
our
services
are
accessible
to
persons
with
disabilities
to
anyone
who
wants
to
participate
in
City,
related
services
and
projects
and
programs,
and
so
Michael
and
his
team
have
gone
around
the
city
facilities.
They've,
looked
at
our
facilities
and
to
measure
and
monitor
whether
or
not
they
are
accessible
and
meet
the
requirements
of
the
the
Ada
and
other
requirements,
and
so
with
that
I'll
toss
to
Michael
and
he'll.
Take
it
from
there.
Thank
you
good.
L
Afternoon,
I'm,
sorry
good
evening,
Mayor
Johnson
next
slide,
please
for
those
individuals
who
are
not
familiar
with
the
Ada
or
the
Americans
with
Disabilities
Act
I
want
to
run
through
just
a
few
slides
that
contain
facts
about
what
we
were
trying
to
do
here.
The
purpose
of
the
city's
88
transition
plan
is
to
demonstrate
the
city's
commitment
to
promoting
the
quality
of
opportunities
for
all
of
its
residents.
L
So
what
does
this
transition
plan
do?
The
main
thing
this
plan
will
do
is
to
improve
and
provide
access
access
being.
The
key
word
that
resonates
throughout
this
plan.
This
plan
will
list
the
physical
barriers
that
limit
accessibility
to
our
programs
activities
and
services
by
individuals
with
disabilities.
The
plan
puts
into
action
the
concerns
of
that
we've
heard
from
Disability
Advocates
from
people
in
the
disabled
community.
L
They
have
a
lot
of
high
hopes
and
my
priority
is
that
we
could
rise
to
the
occasion
to
meet
those
High
Hopes.
It's
different
on
this
side
of
the
table
to
write
a
transition
plan,
but
to
hear
the
other
side
of
the
table.
The
people
who
will
benefit
from
it
is
almost
life-changing.
L
L
What
is
our
transition
plan
and
what
is
in
it?
The
Americans
with
Disabilities
Act
is
a
federal
law,
so
the
act
of
1990,
1994
and
2008
ALL
speak
up.
Discrimination
against
people
with
disabilities
is
prohibited.
L
Title
II
specifically
speaks
to
us
as
a
state
or
a
local
government,
and
that
we
fall
under
the
auspices
of
Title
II
of
the
Americans
with
Disabilities
Act,
and
we
are
required,
therefore,
to
have
a
transition
plan
as
to
how
we
will
guarantee
access
for
us
for
our
residents.
L
So
this
plan
states
that
we
will
not
discriminate
against
individuals
who
are
differently
able,
but
instead
we
will
provide
appropriate
AIDS
so
that
differently,
abled
individuals
can
participate
equally
in
all
of
our
activities,
all
of
our
services
that
are
offered
by
the
city,
and
while
this
is
something
that
we
are
required
to
do,
I
wanted
to
set
forth
or
to
apprise
you
of
the
Spirit
by
which
our
office
created
this
plan
is
that
we
are
happy
to
do
this.
It
is
the
right
thing
to
do.
Thank
you.
L
I
want
to
well
I'm
sure
you
can
recall
the
original
Ada
transition
plan
that
have
been
hanging
out
there
for
a
few
years.
Really
it
was
a
skeleton
of
a
plan.
What
we
have
done
is
beat
it
up
a
little
bit.
We
beefed
it
up
a
lot
actually,
and
what
I
want
to
do
is
show
you,
the
Ada
page
that
we've
created,
we
call
it
access
Bloomington,.
L
L
L
Let's
go
see
the
green,
the
Complaint
Form
has
been
modified,
the
one
that
was
originally
there
was
four
or
five
pages
long.
It
was
way
too
cumbersome
for
what
it
was
intended
to
do.
So
this
is
now
a
one
and
a
half
one
and
a
half
page
form
individuals
can
submit
it
to
us
in
whatever
way
is
most
comfortable
for
them,
they
could
submit
it
online.
They
can
print
it
out,
they
can
bring
it
in
or
they
can
mail
it
in.
L
It
does
not
ask
for
a
lot
of
information.
Basically,
once
I
receive
the
form
if
it's
submitted
or
mailed
or,
however,
it
comes
to
me,
I
give
that
individual
a
call-
and
we
do
an
assessment
over
the
phone
to
see
what
the
situation
is.
We
want
to
make
this
as
easy
as
possible
for
our
residents,
because
that
was
one
of
the
complaints
we
found
out
during
our
public
meetings
is
that,
yes,
the
city
does
have
Avenues
in
place
to
address
complaints,
but
the
problem
was.
L
It
was
way
too
cumbersome
for
a
lot
of
individuals
in
our
community.
So
this
is
our
effort
to
make
it
as
simple
as
possible.
It
is
our
commitment
that
we
get
back
to
the
individual.
We're
trying
to
do
48
hours
is
what
we
plan
and
get
to
work
on
whatever
the
situation
is,
and
hopefully
it's
something
within
within
our
jurisdiction.
If
not,
we
will
direct
them
to
the
appropriate
agency.
L
Let's
take
a
look
at
some
of
the
site
evaluations
very
quickly.
Let's
look
at
City
Hall.
That
is
probably
the
one
that
is
going
to
have
the
most.
L
In
terms
of
violations,
sorry
I
don't
mean
violations
most
of
the
work
that
needs
to
be
done
in
Ada
in
terms
of
the
elevator.
The.
L
Hvac
system
and
things
of
that
nature,
so
I,
don't
know
why
that's
not
showing
but,
and
also
there
is
an
issue
in
the
parking
lot.
So
these
are
major
issues
which
we
need
to
look
probably
Beyond,
one
or
two
years
to
get
done
so
right
now
we
are
scheduling
or
we
are
planning
to
have
the
renovation
amounts
included
in
the
fy24
budget
for
City
Hall.
K
One
of
the
things
while
you're
looking
for
that
Michael
that
we
found
that
we're
working
through
is
that,
as
we
tried
to
update
some
this
webpage,
some
of
the
updates
aren't
taking
place
so
we're
working
through
that
to
get
make
sure
that
the
site
is
updated
with
dates
and
budget
numbers
as
appropriate.
So
that's
there
once
this
is
out
there
publicly
et
cetera,
et
cetera,
and
so
no
council
member
Ward
had
asked
a
question
about
that
and
we're
working
through
getting
those
things
updated.
So
that
will
show
up
on
this
page
once
that's
done.
Okay,.
L
And
those
updates
and
any
progress
we
make
in
terms
of
addressing
the
compliance
issues
in
our
facilities,
services
or
public
rights
of
way
that
will
also
be
available
to
any
Resident
to
bring
up
on
the
Internet.
They
can
also
bring
it
up
on
my
Bloomington
app,
and
that
is
another
Avenue
by
which
they
can
make
a
complaint
or
a
concern
known
to
our
office.
L
Yeah
and
that's
pretty
much
what
I
have
I'm
will
I
entertain
any
questions
right
now,
I'm.
L
L
As
I
mentioned,
some
of
the
things
that
we
had
put
into
this
plan
to
change
it
from
what
it
was
originally
so,
this
plan
is
a
living
document
and,
as
I
was
saying,
residents
can
monitor
the
progress
themselves
to
see
how
we're
coming
along
with
these
commitments
we've
made
to
the
community,
it
designates
a
person
to
oversee
compliance.
My
name,
my
contact
information
is
out
there
and
I
welcome
concerns
from
the
residents.
Also,
it
assigns
for
those
who
have
been
calling
and
didn't
know
where
to
Lodge
their
complaint.
L
I
provide
a
resource
so
now
I'm
there
as
a
resource
for
anyone
who
needs
to
speak
to
a
real
body,
as
opposed
to
as
opposed
to
getting
a
recording.
That
is,
the
transition
plan
comes
with
a
screen
reader.
One
of
the
things
we
had
was
that
our
website
was
not
compatible
with
all
screen
readers
that
were
used
by
people
with
visual
disabilities.
So
our
website
will
our
web
page
rather
will
have
a
built-in
screen
reader,
so
they
just
click
on
it
and
you've
got
it
going
there
next
slide.
L
As
we
mentioned
before,
the
grievance
and
appeal
procedure
has
been
has
been
abbreviated.
It
was
far
too
long
before
for
it
to
be
effective.
We
also
have
multiple
options
that
an
individual
can
use
to
notify
the
city
of
its
concerns,
being
our
our
online
portal
by
phone
mail
or
email
or
again
through
the
my
Bloomington
app
one
of
the
great
things
we
found
about.
L
H
Yeah
I,
don't
really
have
too
many
questions.
I
really
appreciate
it,
and
I
did
notice
that
our
compliance
is
really
pretty
good
and
I
want
to.
Thank
you
for
all
the
work
that
you've
done
is
in
the
transition
plan
print
out.
L
H
And
this
is
just
me
being
picky
when
I
read
through
the
plan,
Pages
13
through
16.,
read
to
me
as
an
introduction,
rather
than
the
real
content
of
the
plan
itself.
Could
those
pages
be
put
at
the
top
that
says,
look
what
the
city
has
done,
look
who
was
involved
and
then
go
on
item.
You
know
then
go
on
and
say
this
is
what
we're
doing
to
respond
to
all
of
that
I'm.
N
Thank
you
for
your
work
on
this
I
know
that
that
it's
been
something
that
you've
been
working
on
and
and
putting
a
lot
of
effort
into
one
of
the
things
that
I
really
appreciate
about
this.
N
This
document,
aside
from
the
fact
that
it's
a
living
document
and
that
there's
room
for
it
to
to
continue
to
grow,
is
something
that
you
said
at
the
very
beginning
of
your
presentation,
and
that
is
that
we're
doing
this
not
because
the
law
says
we
have
to
do
it,
but
we're
doing
it
because
it's
the
right
thing
to
do.
M
N
I
I
can't
emphasize
enough
how
important
it
is
that
the
K
that
the
city
is
is
doing
this,
because
it's
committed
to
doing
the
right
thing,
not
because
we
don't
have
any
choice.
N
N
It
makes
it
a
little
hard
to
to
kind
of
get
my
head
around,
but
I'm
wondering
were
there
were
there
instances
in
the
the
public
comment
that
you
got
the
the
meetings
that
you
went
to
the
the
one-on-one
kind
of
conversations
that
you
had
were
members
of
the
the
the
community
raised
issues
that
aren't
part
of
this
plan
and
like
where
what
what
kind
of
proportion
is
there
yeah.
L
I
think
a
part
of
that
falls
under
things
that
we
are
not
required
to
do,
but
we
want
to
do
one
of
the
complaints
were.
The
concerns
is
that
when
someone
who
is
visually
impaired
comes
into
the
government
center,
they
don't
know
which
floor
they're
getting
off
on.
Sometimes
if
you
miss
a
ding
by
the
Bell
you're
getting
off
on
the
wrong
floor.
So
what
we
plan
to
do
is
install
a
voice
in
there.
L
That
will
tell
you
which
floor
you're
on
it
was
just
just
simple
things
like
that
that
make
life
so
much
better
for
people
and
also
when
you
come
into
a
building,
they
were
asking
for
a
directional
signage,
which
makes
perfect
sense
for
anyone,
whether
you
disabled
or
not.
You
walk
into
a
building.
You
don't
really
know
where
to
go
so
we're
going
to
update
the
signage
in
our
public
facilities.
Also.
N
L
Yeah,
actually,
you
can
program
the
elevator
voice
to
sound.
Like
you
know,
one
of
those
department
stores
back
in
the
50s
mezzanine
taxes,
the
the
technology
is,
is
there
so
we
really
want
to
use
it
to
make
these
trips
to
the
government
center
and
some
of
our
other
buildings
a
lot
easier
for
both
communities,
disabled
and
those
are
non-disabled.
L
Some
of
well
I,
don't
know
if
they
were
barriers.
I
know
a
lot
of
the
problems
we
were
having
involved
manpower
to
get
some
of
it
done.
L
The
city
is
experiencing
the
same
Manpower
issues,
as
is
the
rest
of
the
country.
That's
part
of
it
another
part
of
it
that
we're
having
right
now
is
if
we
can
get
the
correct
intergovernmental
agreements
and
allow
us
to
do
what
we
need
to
do.
That
would
help.
O
O
All
right,
Michael,
thanks
so
much
for
putting
all
the
time
in
what
I
really
appreciate
is
getting
all
the
community
involvement
and
with
regard
to
the
grievance
procedure,
if
somebody
says
hey,
I
can't
do
I
can't
fill
it
out.
Can
they
make
a
grievance
with
you
or
verbally
absolutely
okay.
I
know.
This
is
discrepancy
in
the
plan.
I
think
it
says
15
days
to
pour
a
response
and
then
in
in
the
grievance
procedure,
online
I
think
it
still
says
30.,
so
I
saw
a
discrepancy
there.
O
So
far.
How
many
people
have
contacted
you
to
say
make
agreements
or
report
an
issue
just
in
not
in
meeting
with
people,
but
just
your
daily.
O
L
L
The
facility
reviews
the
original
document
went
out
to
the
Department
of
directors
and
they
assigned
a
staff
member
to
do
it.
O
Okay,
so
like
like
City
Hall,
who
would
have
been
the
staff
members
not
who?
But
what
position
would
they
have
been.
L
In
someone
in
human
resources
did
the
Stafford
Buford
City
Hall?
L
O
Yeah
I
don't
know
if
I
agree
with
that.
Just
I
know
that
normal
did
it
a
little
bit
differently
and
I.
Just
wonder
if,
if
the
minimal
amount
of
problems
that
we
saw
is
based
on,
maybe
not
having
people
trained
in
the
Ada
to
you
know,
review
that
and,
and
so
I
know,
this
is
a
living
document,
so
those
things
can
be
redone
eventually,
if
necessary,
did
anybody
from
Lysol
and
work
first
go
into
or
were
part
of
the
facility
review?
O
Also,
some
suggestions
were
on
that
checklist.
To
give
more
detail,
maybe
even
photos
to
capture
each
different
item.
Do
you
did
you
do
that
during
the
inspections?
Is
that
something
you
could
add
to.
L
Them
yeah,
we
have
photos
and
it
just
is.
You
know
the
flavor
of
what
you
want.
We
try
not
to
make
the
document
cumbersome.
I
saw
Norma's
website,
it's
it's
very
nice,
but
this
isn't
what
we
had
decided
to
do.
But
if
that's
so,
if
that's
the
council's
wish,
we
could
certainly
add
those
photos.
Okay,.
O
G
M
L
B
O
I
think
Donna
said
have
a
link
to
all
the
facility
reviews,
but
have
them
all
in
one
right
now,
there's
like
12
different
links.
You
got
to
go
to
for
each
different
facility
to
look
at
them
if
we
could
just
have
them
all
grouped
into
one
it'd,
be
easier
for
people
to
take
a
look
at
that,
but
I
do
appreciate
your
efforts.
I
appreciate
you
listening
to
my
comments,
so
thank
you.
A
Okay,
then,
let's
is
there
I,
don't
want
you
to
let's,
let's
do
a
motion.
O
P
P
Appreciate
it,
this
is
so
much
better
than
the
skeletal
plan
that
existed
before
and
I
really
like
the
grievance
piece
that
that
was
added.
My
question
may
may
have
been
somewhere
in
the
documentation
and
I.
Just
just
didn't
grab
it.
P
If
you
get
a
complained
or
a
grievance
from
someone
who
say
has
cannot
get
access
to
a
privately
owned
building
downtown.
Could
they
file
a
grievance
with
the
city,
and
would
there
be
follow-up
in
terms
of
communicating
to
the
business
owner
or
a
system
of
accountability.
L
P
Because
I'm
sure
there
are
a
lot
of
places
that
could
be
upgraded
and
that
might
be
an
at
least
another
resource
or
point
of
information
that
that
could
be
provided
and
I
there's.
There
was
a
lot
of
reference
to
the
master
plan
for
our
sidewalks
and
that
those
spaces
and
the
process
of
making
them
accessible
whenever
public
works-
and
you
may
not
know
this,
but
whenever
they
evaluate
the
status
of
our
roads
and
sidewalks
annually
and
prioritize,
you
know
which
project
gets
done
next.
P
So
I
thought
that
might
be
useful.
I
know
there
are
many
rubrics
used,
but
in
some
cases
some
of
those
sidewalks
are
really
hard
for
folks
to
navigate
in
neighborhoods.
It's.
K
You
if
I
underst,
if
I,
can
I
guess
one
of
the
things
that
in
talking
to
Public
Works
about
how
they
prioritize
doing
work
on
sidewalks,
one
of
the
things
that
they
do
look
at
is
the
condition
of
the
sidewalk
and
and
part
of
that
is
whether
or
not
it's
Ada
accessible.
The
other
thing
I'll
say
is
that,
as
we
do
road
work,
we
also
go
in
and
make
sure
that
the
adjacent
sidewalks
are
Ada
accessible,
is
part
of
the
requirements
of
the
work
that
they
do
so.
K
P
Thank
you
and
just
I
support,
as
as
best
you
can
to
get
the
word
out,
because
I
think
that
people
will
truly
appreciate
and
use
this
resource.
Thank
you.
A
K
Mayor
can
I
add
one
more
thing,
I'm
so
sorry
sure,
and
it
goes
to
council
member
one
of
your
questions,
councilmember
cradle
about
I'm
gonna,
put
words
in
your
mouth.
How
we?
What
items
we
rated
in
the
checklist
correct
me
if
I'm
wrong
Michael,
but
that
checklist
are
those
things
that
are
required
to
be
checked
as
part
of
this
type
of
study,
correct.
L
Right,
the
checklist
is
very
specific
about
the
information
that
it
that
it
wants
you
to
gather.
Okay,.
K
L
After
you
just
go
through
the
checklist,
you'll
see
what
they're
asking
for
measurements.
Is
there
enough
room
to
get
a
wheelchair
into
an
elevator
and
to
make
it
turn
around
to
face
the
door?
It
tells
you
exactly
what
you
need
to
have
and
you
just
just
measured
accordingly,
the
height
of
the
wash
basin
in
the
restroom.
Is
there
room
enough
that
20
inches
to
get
a
wheelchair
under
there,
so
someone
can
wash
their
hands
if
they're
wheelchair-bound
so
does
it?
It
is
mostly
90
99
usable
with
just
a
yeah,
take
measure.
A
Thank
you,
you're
welcome,
so
you
know
other
questions.
Michael
I
want
to
say
thank
you
for
all
the
work
that
you've
done.
I
think
it
is
commendable
that,
as
a
not
only
as
a
as
an
organization,
but
also
as
a
community,
we're
committed
to
to
Ada
accessibility,
I've
traveled,
quite
a
bit
in
a
number
of
different
places
and
I
can
tell
you
that
the
the
commitment
is
different.
If
there
is
any
at
all
and
oftentimes,
it's
not
even
an
afterthought,
you
know
it's
just
not
people
just
don't
think
about
it.
A
So
this
is
something
that
we
should
all
be
proud
of
and
continue
to
encourage
and
I'm
hoping
that
you
know
Julie
mentioned
private
businesses,
I'm,
hoping
that
this
will
inspire
others
who
may
have
issues
of
accessibility
to
to
address
them.
So
thank
you
very
much.
A
So
there's
no
vote
so
we're
going
to
move
on
to
Item
B
on
the
regular
agenda
and
a
presentation
and
propose
uses
for
a
500
000
state
of
Illinois
violence,
prevention
Grant,
as
requested
by
the
administration
department
and
the
police
department,
and
we
should
thank
I,
believe
you
know
dceo
for
making
this
grant
available
to
us.
So
I'm
gonna
turn
over
Billy.
K
Thank
you
once
again
mayor.
We
learned
last
year
that
funds
were
being
appropriated
to
the
city
of
Bloomington
through
the
Department
of
Commerce
and
Economic
Opportunity
dceo,
to
help
address
and
prevent
violence.
Now
it
wasn't,
they
weren't
just
allocation
to
the
city
of
Bloomington,
but
two
communities
across
the
state.
K
This
happened
in
the
midst
of
a
time
where
these
Community,
our
all
of
our
communities,
obviously
including
our
own,
we're
having
conversations
about
how
to
address
violence
that
isn't
something
unique
to
us.
Communities
across
the
state
were
having
that
conversation
as
part
of
this
program,
the
city,
as
you
mentioned,
would
receive
five
hundred
thousand
dollars
if
our
application
is
approved
and
the
city
as
part
of
that
application
must
detail
how
we
would
plan
to
use
the
grant
funds,
which
is
what
we're
going
to
talk
about
tonight.
K
So
there
was
a
desire
to
be
balanced
in
the
reactive
reactivity
or
reactions
the
reactivity,
that's
a
word,
I
guess
with
being
proactive,
I
want
to
let
you
know
that
the
application
process
will
start
immediately
if
council
is
in
favor
of
what
is
being
proposed,
and
one
of
the
big
things
and
that's
important
to
note
is
that
the
funds
must
be
spent
by
June
30th.
K
You
know
so
that's
a
that's
a
pretty
short
window
in
terms
of
when
the
funds
must
be
spent
and
finally,
just
as
as
the
type
and
severity
of
crimes
and
violence
can
vary.
So
too
will
our
response.
I
mean
this
is
one
of
what
will
be
multiple
tools
to
to
work,
to
address
crime
and
violence
in
our
community,
and
so
with
that
I'll
turn
things
over
to
Chief,
simmington
and
assistant
chief
bays
and
they'll
talk
more
about
what's
being
proposed.
R
Thank
you,
Deputy
Deputy
city
manager,
to
the
council
and
mayor
and
city
manager,
thanks
for
the
opportunity
to
speak
to
this
grant,
please
Advance
the
slide
too.
Please.
R
Foreign
to
the
next
slide,
please,
and
very
good,
thank
you.
So,
as
you
are
aware,
we
presented
the
Bloomington
Police
Department
strategic
plan
to
you
and
has
have
spoken
about
it
on
numerous
occasions
when
we
focused
on
our
opportunity
to
research
and
and
of
course,
find
areas
that
we
can
expend
the
monies
that
would
benefit
the
safety
of
of
the
community.
R
R
So
I
will
lay
out
the
various
programs
that
my
staff
and
I
were
able
to
come
up
with
to
expend
the
monies,
if
approved,
certainly
by
a
city
council
and
then
supported
by
the
state
of
Illinois
number.
One
is
a
youth
summer
camp
which
was
is
part
of
our
strategic
plan,
one
of
the
goals
and
our
school
resource
resource
officers
have
stepped
in
to
take
the
lead
on
this
this
opportunity.
R
We
feel
that
this
provides
an
opportunity
for
us
to
engage
with
the
community,
especially
the
youth,
and
provide
an
outlet
for
the
Youth
during
the
summer.
This
would
be
a
one-week
summer
camp,
which
will
be
supervised
and
managed
by
the
police
officers
and
the
school
resource
officers.
I
myself
and
my
assistant,
Chiefs
and
and
many
in
the
department
would
support
and
participate
as
well.
That
engagement
will
allow
us
to
provide
problem,
solving
and
conflict
resolution,
training,
discipline,
life,
skill
team
building
exercises
and
would
also
include
day
trips
in
meals.
R
R
The
statement
on
a
mission
statement
that
was
put
forth
by
by
that
committee
is
to
protect,
educate
and
care
for
the
Youth
in
the
community.
We
feel
that
there
would
be
significant
buy-in
and
positive
outcomes
for
that
particular
Camp.
Another
is
the
tip
for
one
program.
We
are
in
the
midst
of
releasing
that
to
for
usage
to
the
community
later
this
week.
R
Over
2
000
police
agencies
in
the
United
States
use
this
tool,
and
it
has
been
very
good
for
Community
engagement
and
opening
providing
opportunities
for
those
who
have
information
concerning
crime,
whether
it
had
occurred
or
is
in
progress
to
provide
an
anonymous
tip
to
the
police
department,
which
we
would
monitor
to
ensure
that
we
have
a
response
to
that.
This
is
a
program.
R
That's
not
only
proactive
but
but
definitely
reactive
and,
as
we
have
struggled
in
the
past
year
with
having
community
members
come
forward
in
a
variety
of
crimes
to
to
provide
information
to
us,
and
a
lot
of
folks
are
just
afraid
to
do
so,
they're
afraid
of
any
ramifications
for
participating
or
providing
support
to
the
police
department
in
furthermore,
testifying
in
court,
if
brought
before
a
judge
on
a
charge.
So
we
feel
that
this
is
is
an
opportunity
to
open
up
a
more
user-friendly
Anonymous
way
to
provide
information
to
the
police
department.
R
We
we
also
in
the
same
breath,
would
like
to
provide
reward
money
for
Crime
tips.
It
is
something
that
we
have
not
been
able
to
do.
Crime
Stoppers
is
not
is
non-existent
in
McLean
County.
That
organization
is
not
available
to
to
do
this
again.
This
is
an
opportunity
for
us
to
incentivize,
providing
information,
that's
valuable
in
investigations
to
the
police,
particularly
violent
crime,
homicides,
illegal
gun,
possession
and
so
forth.
This
is
a
reactive
opportunity
and
then
we
have
the
national
integrated,
ballistics
information
Network.
R
This
is
a
purchase
that
would
pay
dividends
immediately
when
it
comes
to
gun
offenses.
So
if
we
collect
ballistic
material
from
a
crime
scene,
we
can
enter
that
information
into
this
this
network
and
it
would
provide
rapid
results
on
where
the
gun
is
has
been
used
in
in
previous
crimes.
R
Next,
please,
then,
we
have
a
two-prong,
proactive
gun,
availability
reduction
effort
and
in
doing
so,
a
gun
back
I'm.
Sorry,
a
gun
buyback
program
is
something
that
has
some
measured
positive
results
from
throughout
the
country,
but
also
bringing
a
gun
safe,
purchase
program
to
the
city
of
Bloomington,
allowing
residents
in
the
city
to
apply
to
receive
funds
or
receive
safes
and
I.
R
I
noted
at
the
bottom
that
the
five-year
average
of
guns
stolen
in
this
city
is
approximately
38
per
year
of
those
20
of
the
guns
that
we
seize
from
the
streets
are
also
stolen
guns,
and
so
this
would
provide
a
proactive
opportunity
for
us
to
encourage
the
use
of
safes
in
residence
or
in
the
homes
of
residents
that
do
not
have
their
guns
properly
locked
away.
R
Staying
with
the
course
of
proactive,
we
would
love
to
purchase
two
mobile,
overt
Public
Safety,
trailer
cameras.
We
currently
have
two
and
and
are
utilized
and
provide
a
good
opportunity
for
us
to
deter
crime,
violent
crime,
whether
that's
at
a
public
gathering
in
specific
hot
spots
around
the
city
totally
based
on
Trends.
This
also
allows
for
us
to
enhance
our
current
Network
and
there
are
policies
and
procedures
in
place
that
protect
any.
R
Conservative
of
privacy
with
our
community
residents
next,
please
and
then
an
overt
unmanned
aerial
vehicle,
and
it's
been
referred
to
as
a
drone,
the
law
which
actually
provides
a
footprint
or
a
blueprint
for
us
to
utilize
the
technology
lawfully,
and
we
will
do
so.
We
also
are
in
the
midst
of
creating
the
proper
policy
and
we
will
have
a
dashboard
that
is
available
to
the
public.
So
the
public
knows
of
the
uses
of
the
Drone
or
the
UAV.
R
H
Yeah
I
only
have
one
question
with
the
camp:
will
that
be
annual
or
just
a
one-time
thing?
Other
women.
R
If
you
can
hear
me
yes,
so
it
is
an
imperative
that
we
get
off
to
a
space
start.
This
will
be
the
kick
off
to
judge
how
well
the
camp
is
received
by
the
youth
and
we
plan
to
expand
that
at
the
vision
is
to
have
three
different
age
levels:
High
School,
junior
high
and
Elementary
School
Kids
the
first
year
would
be
Junior
High.
R
The
the
folks
on
the
committee
feel
that
that's
the
appropriate
first
step
and
then,
as
we
go
forward
into
next
summer,
we
hope
to
be
able
to
expand
that
by
a
week
or
two
again,
depending
on
the
outcome
and
participation
levels
of
this
one.
So.
H
Foreign
I
am
very
much
a
fan
of
if
you're
going
to
implement
something
like
this,
which
is
a
great
value.
It
needs
to
be
sustainable,
so
I
would
be
in
favor
of
sustainability,
which
means
in
the
budget.
Yes,.
A
Thank
you,
okay,
council
member
martini
and
then
Ward
and
urban.
G
Thank
you,
I
I,
don't
have
any
questions
about
any
of
the
items
that
you
presented.
I
I
did
want
to
bring
up,
though,
an
item
that
I've
learned
a
lot
about
in
the
last
week,
because
it
came
up
a
week
ago
from
one
of
my
one
of
my
residents,
a
practical
actionable
item
that
I
think
would
benefit
every
area
of
the
community
as
it
relates
to
both
crime
reduction
prevention
and
also
the
fear
of
crime,
and
that
is
better
Lighting
in
our
community.
G
G
And
then,
if
it's
not
the
light
bulb,
then
it
goes
back
in
queue
again
to
wait
for
the
city
to
attend
to
other
aspects
that
might
be
causing
that
street
light
to
be
out.
You
know,
I
I've
read
a
lot
about
this
in
the
last
week
and
all
over
the
globe.
I
think
you
know
there's
consensus,
that
this
is
something
that
is
simple,
actionable
and
produces
results
in
terms
of
deterring
crime.
G
That's
all
I
had.
Thank
you
very
much.
A
Okay,
thank
you.
Councilmember
Ward,.
N
Thank
you,
gentlemen.
Thank
you
for
this
I
I,
truly
appreciate
that
you
putting
the
effort
into
to
coming
up
with
these
projects
and
these
proposals
and
taking
taking
this
seriously.
We
have
this
opportunity.
That's
been
handed
to
us
and
I,
truly
appreciate
you,
you
taking
the
cities
City
staff's
request
seriously.
N
I
am
curious
about
something
and
and
and
I'm,
not
sure,
if
you're
the
ones
who
can
answer
this
or
if
perhaps
the
assistant
city
manager,
Deputy
city
manager,
can
can
answer
this
but
I'm
curious
to
know
who
else.
Besides,
the
police
department
was
approached
by
City
leadership
to
come
up
with
proposals.
K
K
N
K
K
N
K
Other
departments
we
did
discuss
with
this
this
with
other
departments.
Ultimately,
the
police
department's
proposal
was
there.
It
was
the
most
appropriate
it
was
the
most.
It
was
the
one
that
went
towards
addressing
issues
of
violence,
the
others
weren't
wouldn't
have
been
related
to
that.
So
they
were
the
department
that
provided
a
recommendation
that
would
address
issues
of
violence.
N
N
It
seems
like
a
very
limited
number
of
stakeholders
who
were
involved
in
coming
up
with
this
in
terms
of
of
what
they
might
think
of,
and
council
members,
Monty
and
I
don't
always
agree
on
a
lot
of
things.
But
the
proposal
that
you
just
made
frankly
is
an
example
of
the
kind
of
thing
that
I'm
talking
about
Street
lighting
I.
Why
on
Earth?
N
Would
the
police
department
think
to
come
up
with
that,
but
potentially
Public
Works
might
think
of
something
like
that
and
so
I'm
concerned
that
we
had
such
a
narrow
and
I'm
not
trying
to
to
say
you
guys
are
narrow,
I'm,
just
saying
that
that
we
had
such
a
narrow
group
of
stakeholders
from
whom
to
draw
and
to
offer
their
wisdom
and
their
ideas
and
their
creativity
I'm.
Also
not
hearing
and
and
correct
me
if
I'm
wrong,
if
Community
non
non-governmental
organizations
were
were
reached
out
to
to
come
up
with
ideas.
N
Other
communities
have
done
that
we
I
don't
know
if
council
member
Emig
was
planning
on
commenting
on
that,
but
other
communities
have
reached
out
and
have
spent
their
money
and
are
spending
their
money
to
do
just
that.
We've
also
had
other
communities
who
have
spent
money
intentionally
to
do
the
research
to
hire
academic
researchers.
Who
can
give
us
the
data
that
we
need
that
I've
I've
asked
for
on
things
like
suicide
rates
rates
of
domestic
violence,
juvenile
versus
adult
crime
rates,
neighborhood
crime
rates?
Even
where
are
the
street
lights
out?
Things
like
that?
N
N
It
feels
like
we're
kind
of
throwing
something
against
the
wall
and
seeing
what
will
stick
and
hoping
that
a
year
from
now
when
we
look
to
make
it
sustainable
that
it
was
worth
spending
the
money
on
I'd
like
to
know
that
up
front
beforehand
and
I
I
haven't
seen
very
many
data
to
to
demonstrate
that
so
I'm.
Not
against
these
ideas,
hear
me
out
I'm,
not
against
these
ideas.
I
need
some
data
to
tell
me
that
the
taxpayer
money
is
being
spent
wisely,
because
this
ultimately
is
taxpayer
money.
N
C
Actually,
I'll
comment
to
some
of
the
stuff
that
the
deputy
city
manager
shared
and
what
Chief
simmington
was
tasked
to
do
I'm
going
to
go
back
a
little
bit
further
because
I
think
it
fits
in
this
conversation.
C
You
know
Loosely
based
on
your
Council
initiative
that
was
brought
forward.
You
know
several
months
ago,
when
we
got
word
from
Senator
kaler
that
we
had
been
awarded
five
hundred
thousand
dollars
along
with
the
town
of
normal,
an
equal
amount.
We
felt
we
might
have
an
opportunity
to
Loosely
tie
this
to
that
Council
initiative,
so
conversations
occurred
with
regional
partners
that
were
ongoing
anyway.
C
Regarding
that
your
Council
initiative
and
felt
do
we
have
an
opportunity
we
also,
as
Deputy
city
manager
said,
this
was
shared
initially
with
all
the
different
city
departments,
not
that
we
were
under
a
rush
or
you
know
a
crunch
to
I
guess
find
a
use
for
all
these
funds,
but
we
did
fill.
C
It
was
appropriate
to
hand
this
over
to
the
police
department
with
very
strict
instruction
that
this
is
not
just
something
to
throw
away
the
money
and
see
if
you
know
this
lands
somewhere,
which
is
one
of
the
reasons
that
I
had
Chief
simmington
meet
with
you.
You
know
to
discuss
this
prior
to
it
being
shared
with
the
entire
Council
prior
to
it
being
discussed
and
shared
with
the
pscrb
and
then
ultimately
in
preparation
for
this
Council
presentation
tonight.
This
is
a
presentation
you
know.
C
If
we
get
a
thumbs
down
on
portions
of
this,
we
tweak
it
and
we
bring
it
back
before
we
hit
send
to
dco.
So
we're
not
locked
into
this.
You
know
that's
the
total
purpose
of
this
presentation
tonight.
You
know
now:
I
I
personally
support
the
presentation
and
the
work
that
Chief
simmington
has
brought
forward,
but
I'm
just
a
city
manager.
You
know
if
I've
got
a
council
that
ultimately
thinks
that
this
should
be
done
a
different
way.
C
Well,
then,
we're
going
to
follow
the
direction
of
the
council
I
just
felt
that
that
should
be
added.
I
Thank
you
mayor,
thank
you,
gentlemen
and
I
actually
had
multiple
questions,
but
councilmember
Boland
swiped
one.
So
you
know
well
I'll
just
keep
going
with
my
others
on
this.
One
of
the
in
items
here
on
this
presentation
was
the
national
integrated,
ballistics
information.
Network,
so
is
this
purchasing
this
program?
I
Is
this
something
that
we
in
our
budgeting
and
paying
for
on
a
regular
basis?
By
purchasing
this
program,
it's
going
to
actually
save
us
some
tax
dollar
money
in
the
future.
R
So
we
currently
do
not
have
that
at
our
fingertips.
We
collect
evidence.
We
have
to
send
it
to
the
Illinois
State
Police
lab
and
get
in
line
to
wait
for
for
that
to
be
examined
and
then
put
into
naiben
some
of
our
other
communities
in
Central
Illinois
that
have
a
higher
level
of
violence
where
we
were
awarded
this
tool
to
utilize
in
their
communities
and
they've.
Seen
a
lot
of
tremendous
output
from
the
technology
which
is
ever
increasing.
The
capabilities
are
assistant.
R
Chief
Bayes
was
on
the
phone
with
the
company
today,
and
so
we
feel
that
once
we
have
the
unit
there,
there
are
annual
costs
that
go
with
it,
but
and
upgrades
because
it's
it's
based
on
software
firmware
and
so
forth.
We
would
then
budget
for
those
those
items
going
forward
to
sustain
that.
This
will
also
provide
a
tool
for
our
neighbors
and
the
sheriff's
department
to
utilize
as
well.
R
So
it's
something
that
could
be
leveraged
by
by
the
law
enforcement
Community
here
in
the
Bloomington
Normal
area,
to
enhance
our
our
capabilities
holistically.
I
So
to
just
thank
you
very
much
because
that's
very
helpful,
because
the
I
think
I
I
will
continue
with
Donna
Bowlin
and
her
comment
about
this
scaling
up.
You
know
we
always
want
things
to
be
able
to
scale.
So
you
know
we
look
at
designing
the
camp
purchasing
the
gun
safes
to
provide
people
to
lock
their
weapons.
I
All
of
these
things
appear
to
me
to
need
a
necessity
or
emotion
to
scale
them
up,
and
so
I
am
a
thumbs
up
for
you
and
for
staff
to
move
forward
with
this
personally,
but
I
also
want
the
caveat
that
as
a
council
person
and
whoever
might
replace
me
later
on
down
the
road
that
there's
an
ability
to
allow
these
things
to
scale
up
to
improve
on
these
programs
to
make
sure
that
they
are
in
line
with
things
like
the
ACLU
and
those
guidelines.
I
But
just
you
know
to
continue
moving
in
this
direction,
for
the
safety
and
and
this
pattern,
so
I
don't
want
to
be
like
this
is
totally
a
thumbs
up.
Yay
you,
without
the
recognition
that
this
is
probably
going
to
need
additional
funding
in
future
years
and
as
a
council,
we
have
to
kind
of
think
of
that
as
well
to
hear
that
you're
going
to
team
with
project
Oz.
I
That's
a
wonderful
agency
and
I'm
thrilled
that
that
you
were
taking
on
that
partnership,
but
I'd
also
like
to
see
the
community
get
involved
in
scaling
these
things
up
for
you.
So
you
know
the
fundraising
and
whatever
might
be
the
need
for
helping
this
to
scale
up.
If
that
makes
sense-
and
thank
you
so
much
for
doing
this
presentation
tonight,
it's
very
exciting
for
the
future
of
our
city.
A
O
A
Okay,
15
minutes
next
I
do
believe.
Councilmember
Crumpler
had
asked
for
some
questions
to
be
asked.
So
I'm
gonna
have
City
manage
Collision
to
ask
those
questions.
C
You
did
I'm
I'm
the
messenger
tonight
and
appreciate
the
opportunity.
C
Obviously
Alderman
Crumpler
was
not
able
to
attend,
but
to
I,
don't
think
anyone's
surprised,
he's
prepped
for
the
meeting
both
presentations
and
wanted
me
to
share
comments
and
questions
to
both
presentations,
but
the
the
last
one
very
similar
questions
to
his
had
already
been
shared,
so
I'm
going
to
read
the
script
that
he's
prepared
for
me,
thanks
to
Chief
simmington
and
his
staff
for
bringing
this
plan
before
Council
I
appreciate
the
emphasis
on
community
safety
and
more
effective
policing,
the
gun,
buyback
program
and
the
summer
youth
camp
are
both
positive
ways
to
engage
residents.
C
I
would
like
to
see
more
of
this
grant
money
directed
toward
Community
Education.
For
example.
Could
we
survey
residents
to
learn
their
perceptions
of
gun
violence
in
our
community
number?
Two.
Can
we
investigate
with
other
communities
in
Illinois
are
doing
to
help
provide
educational
opportunities
for
residents
to
learn
alternatives
to
using
violence,
to
solve
problems
and
number
three?
And
lastly,
what
existing
programs
in
our
schools
and
communities
like
conflict
resolution
or
others
could
be
expanded
with
this
grant
thanks.
R
So
in
in
looking
and
talking
to
my
my
peer
Chiefs
around
central
Illinois,
everyone
has
a
sort
of
a
hodgepodge
way
of
of
going
about
spending
these
monies
and
please
counsel,
with
all
due
respect.
There
are
a
variety
of
of
monies
being
thrown
at
violence
reduction
and
they
differ
tremendously
in
the
amount
that
is
out
there
in
a
type
of
grants
that
that
have
been
put
forward
with
the
amount
of
time
that
we
have
to
devote
to
such
project.
R
We
can't
just
stop
and
pivot
and
hope
that
a
Year's
worth
of
work
can
get
done
in
a
matter
of
a
few
months
in
an
effort
to
apply
and
be
be
awarded.
The
money,
if,
if
approved
by
Council
I,
just
for
full
transparency
assistant
chief
base,
has
worked
on
this
project
and
put
forth
ton
a
ton
of
hours
and
we're
not
even
at
an
application
stage
to
be
to
be
frank
with
you
and
we've,
we've
engaged
with
other
offices
within
within
city
government.
R
We
know
they're
they're
in
it
are
an
array
of
of
things
in
place
in
this
community
which
everyone
should
be
proud
of,
that
provides
support
to
not
only
the
police
department
but
to
the
community
in
educating
Youth
and
others
about
violence
and
the
use
of
violence
in
the
community
there.
There
are
groups
and
organizations
that,
for
instance,
work
on
conflict
resolution,
we're
at
the
table
with
with
them
having
those
discussions.
Is
that
something
that
the
police
is
engaged
in
on
a
regular
basis?
R
No,
not
necessarily
because
they're
not
calling
upon
us
to
to
engage
with
them,
because
sometimes
you
know
the
the
anti-police
sentiment.
But
we
are.
We
are
aware
that
that
work
is
being
done
and
the
community
is
is
receiving
that
through
a
variety
of
other
organizations.
R
We
we
are,
for
instance,
at
the
boys
and
girls
club.
We
are
assisting
and
engaging
with
project
our
Oz.
We
are
at
Western
Avenue,
Community
Center,
for
instance,
and
and
working
with
the
Juvenile
Justice
Coalition
here
in
McLean
County.
R
A
Thank
you,
council,
member
Becker,
enig
and
then
craville.
J
So
real
quick
from
my
side,
one
I
really
do
appreciate
what
you
put
together.
I
did
like
councilmember
montani's
comment
on
lighting
and
and
I
have
had
that
comment
to
me
from
multiple
residents
in
the
city.
What
I?
The
other
piece
I
wanted
to
comment
on
is
just
for
awareness.
I
do
sit
on
the
criminal
justice
committee
with
you
and
and
I.
J
Think
not
everyone
is
aware
of
how
much
data
you
guys
do
get
and
you
get
data
that
is
better
than
any
that
I
have
seen
in
my
career
as
far
as
focused
data
on
specific
areas
like
recidivism
reduction
of
crime,
preventing
juvenile
offenders
from
becoming
offenders
as
adults
and
I'm.
Talking
about
you
know.
This
is
yourself
normal:
the
county,
the
County
Health
Department,
the
parole
board,
the
people
from
the
jail
Dr,
Frank
Beck,
and
his
staff
from
the
University
of
Illinois
State.
J
Sorry,
almost
at
Illinois
biased,
because
I
went
there,
but
Dr
Beck's
data
that
he
provides
you
guys
and
that
I
know
you
guys.
Use
really
does
give
basis
to
a
lot
of
the
decisions.
You're,
making
and
and
I
really
think
people
need
to
be
aware.
J
Frank
Beck
is
he's
a
genius
when
it
comes
to
this
kind
of
data
and
the
the
department
does
get
all
of
this
data
from
him.
They
do
collaborate
with
every
organization
in
the
county
and
Beyond
to
use
that
data
proactively
as
well.
So
this
isn't
just
you
know
you
guys
making
a
decision
on
your
own
I.
J
Think
people
need
to
understand
how
much
data
goes
into
this,
and
you
know
I
would
just
encourage
people
to
realize
that
that,
and
also
the
comment
that
was
made
here
of
having
to
spend
this
by
June
30th
does
dramatically
in
today's
world
of
how
long
it
takes
to
spend
money
and
do
things
does
dramatically
limit
the
options,
so
it
might
be
a
used
or
lose
it
in
some
cases
where
you
might
not
get
the
perfect
answer,
but
you
get
a
good
answer
that
will
help
us
move
forward.
So
I
I
understand
those
two
constraints.
P
Yes,
thank
you
and
thank
you
for
the
presentation,
I've
I've
I
would
say
for
me
the
the
lighting
question
I've
had
just
as
many
constituents
complain
about
bright
lights
and
and
light
pollution
as
I
have
folks
who
are
worried
about
street
lights
being
in
disrepair,
so
it
it
almost
illustrates
that
any
time
we
try
to
approach
a
problem,
they're
they're,
it's
it's
complicated.
There
are
a
lot,
a
lot
of
things
to
consider
and
certainly
kinder
things
to
do
environmentally,
while
also
Illuminating
the
environment.
P
P
There
was
a
public
radio
program
in
which
the
city
officials
had
interviewed
recipients
of
the
seven
hundred
thousand
dollars
in
Grant
funds
they
received
from
the
same
source
and
their
approach
was
to
have
local
organizations
apply
for
these
funds
and
in
that
rigorous
application
process
indicate
not
just
sustainability,
but
rationale
for
why
those
methods
would
work
and
and
everything
from
from
mental
health
programming
to
something
called
a
peace.
P
Peace,
Keepers
Network,
which
is
essentially
a
restorative
justice
model
to
the
heart
of
Illinois,
big
brothers
and
big
sisters
and
a
program
called
cure.
Violence
which,
when
I
dug
into
more
I
found
to
be
really
interesting
and
Carbondale,
is
spending
about
sixty
thousand
dollars
of
these
funds.
On
a
study
aimed
at
dissecting
the
causes
and
patterns
associated
with
gun,
violence
and
Carbondale.
So
I
I
in
in
the
spirit
of
this
process.
P
I,
do
wonder
if
there's
a
way
to
get
a
broader
series
of
opportunities,
because
when
I
listen
to
everything,
it
does
seem
that
you,
you
did
a
great
job
of
looking
at
reactive
versus
proactive,
but
in
the
bulk
of
what
was
presented,
it
seemed
to
be
more
an
emphasis
on
not
getting
caught
or
having
an
opportunity
to
apprehend
criminals
versus
not
inclined
to
commit
the
crime
in
the
first
place
and
I
I
can't
help,
but
wonder
if
there
isn't
a
better
way
of
reallocating
funds
and
I
was
I
was
thinking
about
Dr
Beck
as
well.
P
So
I'm
glad
you
mentioned
him
I'm
very
impressed
with
the
work
he's
done
and
I
I
was
wondering.
Could
we
allocate
some
funds
to
his
Institute
to
specifically
look
at
ways,
so
it
it's?
Not
it's
not
a
one
and
done,
but
there's
actually
research.
That's
that's
reliable!
That's
valid!
That
comes
back,
that's
locally,
situated
in
collaboration
with
all
of
the
levers
that
you're
using
for
us
to
allocate
these
funds
and
I
know
that
the
funds
must
be
spent.
Can
they
be
allocated
by
June
30th?
P
In
other
words,
could
we
create
a
mechanism,
for
we
are
allocating
X
number
of
dollars
to
let's,
let's
think
back
to
older
woman,
Ward's
initiative
and
panel,
some
local
resources
and
those
who
are
directly
affected
by
crime
in
our
community,
as
well
as
those
who
work
with
organizations,
social
welfare
programs?
P
What
have
you
to
to
come
to
some
recommendation
about
how
else
or
in
what
ways
might
we
parse
These
funds
so
that
they're
more
distributed,
and
not
just
for
bigger
and
better
technology
to
to
prevent?
P
Potentially,
because
somebody
won't
do
it
if
they
get
caught
or
catching
someone,
because
it
gets
reported
and
I
want
to
see
data
on
that,
because
I
believe
that
you've
done
research
or
where
I
I'm
interested
like
what?
What
are
the
numbers
I
like?
If
you
and
Implement
these
programs?
How
do
you
know
they're
working?
How
does
it
really
reduce
crime
significantly,
because
the
Peoria
groups
really
had
to
they
their
their
proposals
had
to
come
up
with
a
methodology
or
they
wouldn't
have
been
funded?
S
I've
spoken
to
they're
of
the
same
position.
Some
agencies
only
got
their
paperwork
to
apply
for
Grants
up
to
like
three
or
four
days
ago.
Even
now,
so
I
did
meet
with
the
assigned
State
Grant
coordinator
via
a
zoom
meeting,
and
she
confirmed
the
money
must
be
expended.
I.E
costed
it
it's
a
reimbursement
Grant,
so
it
would
be
an
expenditure
to
be
reimbursed
upon
submission
for
the
funds
expended.
S
So
what
that
means
is
we'll
be
spending
money
with
the
hopes
and
great
anticipation
that
would
qualify
under
the
grant
to
be
reimbursed
after
expenditure.
The
initials
links
that
they
sent
out
links
to
12
documents
on
a
site
and
one
of
them
included
a
overall
description
of
the
grant
which
I
actually
said.
S
So
we
are
at
a
point
with
six
months
roughly
to
procure
whatever
process
that
that
requires,
as
we
move
forward,
get
the
prop
meet
the
proper
procurement
guidelines
within
our
system
order
and
hopefully
supply
chain
delays
and
other
orders
on
tangible
goods
would
not
be
impactful.
I.
Think
absolutely
the
methodology
that
you're
speaking
to
is
obviously
the
tried
and
true
way
of
approaching
problems
right
from
an
analytics
perspective
and
developing
a
response,
premises
and
conclusions
right
based
on
on
data.
A
Okay,
let's
see
there's
a
few
people
who
want
to
speak,
it's
more
so
we'll
can
we
extend
for
10
minutes.
A
Exactly
okay,
a
second
who's.
B
Thank
you:
councilmember
watch,
yes,
councilmember
Bolin,
yes,
council,
member
Martini,
council,
member
email,
yes
councilmember,
Becker,
yeah,
councilmember,
Irvin,
councilmember,
Ward,
councilmember
crabill;
yes,.
A
O
O
I
think
they'll
most
likely
work,
but
you
always
think
about
well.
What
are
what
are
the?
O
What
are
other
ideas
right
and
would
those
ideas
be
better
right
if
you
compared
the
two
so
I
like
some
of
the
ideas
that
that
many
of
the
other
council
members
you
know
have
made-
and
maybe
those
are
things
that
we
could
tweak
this
plan
or
use
other
funds
potentially
received
from
the
state
or
otherwise
I
just
wanted
to
quickly
focus
on
the
the
Drone,
and
that
was
what
caused
me
the
most
concern,
just
like
the
alpr
cameras
and
just
privacy
issues,
but
you
know
in
doing
some
research
with
information
that
the
chief
provided
to
me
today
and,
and
one
of
them
was
a
statement
from
the
Illinois
police,
Chiefs
Association.
O
Basically,
right
now,
under
the
statute,
law
enforcement
can
use
drones
to
photograph
accidents,
scenes
and
crime
scenes
to
search
for
missing
persons
and
after
an
emergency
is
underway,
but
cannot
proactively,
proactively,
observe
a
community
event
such
as
a
concert
or
parade.
Is
that
accurate?
Basically,
that's
what
it
is
right
now.
R
Correct
unless
we
have
a
bona
fide
warning
that
a
potential
threat
of
violence
would
take
place
right
right.
O
And
then
HB
5452
is
a
bill
that
you
referenced
as
well
as
the
Chiefs
Association
that
could
be
brought
up
and
that
I
think
it's
based
in
part
on
the
the
Highland
incident
and
if
maybe
there
was
something
there
for
that
parade,
maybe
something
maybe
it
could
have
been
stopped
and
and
and
so
that's
part
of
the
bill
to
actually
use
it.
For
events,
that's
I
think
the
big
focus
of
the
change
is
to
use
it
for
events
and
then
on
the
drones
themselves.
You
respond.
O
R
O
H
H
If
any
group
does
want
money,
they
can
apply
for
the
art
grants,
also,
if
not
just
this
500,
000,
Grant
and
I
believe
maybe
not
a
big
part,
but
a
significant
part
of
getting
reducing
violent
crimes
is
getting
the
criminal
and
the
guns
off
the
street,
and
that's
your
role
and
the
500
000
should
be
then
used
for
that.
That's
just
my
class.
Thank
you.
Q
Thank
you,
Mr
Mayor,
thank
you
for
the
presentation.
I
appreciate
the
hard
work
you
put
into
it
and
I
just
have
one
question
on
the
work
put
into
it:
I'm,
assuming
that
the
work
that
you
put
in
to
make
the
determination
of
where
monies
could
be
spent.
Q
You
looked
in
some
various
studies
and
things
like
that
that
were
already
at
your
disposal
of
things
that
could
be
done
to
have
an
immediate
impact
on
our
local
community.
Is
that
correct.
R
Yes,
sir,
and
looking
at
Best
Practices
around
the
nation,
certainly
we
we
were
in
touch
with
our
peers,
not
only
locally,
but
throughout
the
United
States
and
the
International
Association
of
chiefs
of
police
and
so
drawing
some
of
those
best
practices
into
the
city
of
Bloomington
to
help
us
with
driving
down
violence.
We
felt
is
covered
here.
Okay,.
Q
Next
thing
that
the
the
software
and
the
hardware
that
you
have
mentioned
to
be
able
to
I
think
it's
it's
purchased
from
the
state
or
the
state
license
it
out
and,
and
things
like
that,
that
particular
software,
one
of
the
things
you
mentioned,
was
the
ability
to
have
it.
Would
it
would
help
other
communities
Here
Local,
McLean
County,
the
town
of
normal?
Q
Any
of
our
you
know
the
Danvers
has
its
own
police
force
that
other
we
could
collaborate
with
and
and
share
the
technology
with
them
to
to
assist
them
in
fighting
crime
in
their
communities
is
because
that
would
also
finding
crime
in
another
Community
helps
fight
crime
in
our
community.
Is
that
correct.
R
Yes,
sir,
that
that
is
correct
crime
does
not
know
a
jurisdiction
but
I.
It's
fair
to
say
that
this
jurisdiction,
holistically
with
all
of
the
partners
that
have
been
involved,
all
right,
we're
doing
a
very
good
job
and
that
speaks
to
the
level.
The
low
level
of
violence
compared
to
like
cities,
Across
the
Nation
and
here
in
Illinois,
okay,.
Q
And-
and
my
last
question
is
regarding
the
the
the
gun
safe
purchases,
which
just
sounds
like
a
fantastic
idea
to
me-
that
if
we
could
get,
if
small
says
or
or
for
for
handguns
or
a
larger
safe
for
long
guns,
if
someone
has
them
in
the
home
and
they
don't
really
truly
have
a
way
to
secure
them,
would
that
would
help
greatly
in
keeping
guns
out
of
the
hands
of
children?
Who
don't
always
act
within
the
smartest
way
when
they
get
a
handgun
or
a
long
gun
in
their
in
their
hands?
Q
S
Again,
consider
considering
the
timeline
in
our
procurement
rules.
We
can
absolutely
pursue
a
local
purchase.
It
would
be
a
matter
of
whether
that
vendor
and
I
have
concerns
with
regards
to
whom
we
go
with
we're
able
to
fulfill
that
within
the
time
period,
to
allow
for
the
disbursement
of
the
funds
to
claim
back
on
the
reimbursement.
Joint
purchasing
agreements
is
one
option.
You
know.
Ultimately,
we
we
would
have
a
limited
Source
locally
for
that
various
different
stores
or
retailers
would
sell
them.
S
You
know
I
suspect,
we're
looking
for
a
certain
level
of
quality
to
actually
provide
some
some
deterrence
right
and
some,
but
that
that
could
be
open
if
directed
as
such,
just
what
the
procurement
policies
and
the
things
in
place
it
builds
in
additional
times
for
for
buying
things.
Okay,
thank
you.
G
So
there's
been
a
lot
of
conversation
about
Peoria
tonight.
I
recall
previously
doing
some
research
about
the
don't
shoot,
Peoria
program,
which
was
geared
toward
very
similar
to
some
of
the
conversations
we've
had
around
gun
violence
prevention,
which
then
ultimately
I
think
after
many
years
of
not
seeing
any
positive
results
from
that
kind
of
morphed
into
another
community-based
organization.
I
think
Peoria
Community
against
violence
I
just
bring
this
up,
because
this
is
a
very
finite
period
of
time.
It's
a
relatively
small
amount
of
money.
G
I've
not
seen
these
other
efforts
in
these
other
communities
produce
the
desired
outcomes
and
change
that
was
very
well
intended,
as
those
programs
were
designed.
Peoria's
homicide
race
just
a
few
months
ago,
was
referred
to
as
a
Public
Health
crisis
and
indicated
it
increased
150
percent
I
think
in
about
five
years,
so
I
just
bring
that
up
again
to
affirm
in
support
of
what
you've
recommended.
My
last
comment
is
about
the
issue
of
drones,
which
you
know
I
think
the
way
you've
positioned
them.
I
understand
and
I'm
comfortable
with
it.
G
I
follow
next
door,
particularly
the
postings
that
residents
in
all
of
our
neighborhoods
across
the
town,
put
up
about
property
crimes
and
other
crimes,
accidents
and
so
forth,
and
the
first
post
out
there
is
who,
on
my
street,
has
ring
doorbells,
who
might
have
video
that
can
help
me
solve
this
issue.
It
is
something
that,
while
we
don't
want
to
be
surveilled
when
we're
Crime
Victims,
we
hope
that
somebody
has
some
evidence
that
would
help
solve
that
problem
for
us.
So
again,
thank
you
very
much
for
your
presentation.
Q
N
City
manager,
Gleason
I,
thought
I
saw
you
nodding
an
agreement
on
that
is.
Can
you
give
some
clarification
about
why,
given
that
we
were
aware
of
these
funds
like
in
June
or
something
May
or
June
yeah.
C
Actually
Senator
Dave
Kaylor
reached
out
about
that
time
frame
and
said
just
want
to
make
the
city
of
Bloomington
Town
normal
aware
that
these
funds
are
coming
absent.
A
whole
lot
of
detail
and
I
think
it
was
AC
Bays
shared
that
the
absence
of
that
detail
continued
well
into
the
fall.
N
C
C
C
C
Actually,
the
deputy
city
manager,
the
comment
about
me
reaching
out
to
all
of
my
department
directors,
that's
an
email,
it's
in
August
or
September,
where
I
reach
out
and
say:
I,
don't
want
to
assume
that
you
know
this
is
just
a
police
department
Grant
so,
but
the
actual,
formal
and
I
see
sea
Bays
anxiously
wanting
to
comment
to
this,
but
it
did
take
quite
some
time
so.
N
C
That
was
earlier
related
to
my
conversation
or
my
comments
previously
about.
Can
these
unexpected
funds
be
Loosely
tied
to
your
Council
initiative?
Conversations
like
that
had
occurred,
I,
don't
know
if
that's
what
you're
you're
getting
at,
but
yes.
N
N
N
We
can't
come
up
with
something
new
now
and
yet
we've
known
about
this,
for
at
least
as
long
as
we've
taken
to
come
up
with
something
I'll
move
on
from
that,
though
I
I'm
curious
in
terms
of
of
the
cooperation
with
other
police
departments,
some
of
the
programs,
the
ballistics
thing,
for
example,
I'm
curious
to
know,
are
they
proposing
to
put
up
any
money
from
their
funds
or
are
there
duplication
of
efforts?
A
R
Yes,
ma'am
I
I
have
a
a
listing
here.
R
For
instance,
Springfield
Police
Department
they're
they're
receiving
three
million
dollars
shot
spotter
the
night
been
screening
tools,
Skywatch
cameras,
a
response,
trailer
training,
simulator
ring
doorbells,
firearm,
sighting
system,
Decatur
I,
don't
know
the
exact
amount
but
they're
upgrading
their
body,
worn
cameras
and
storage
surveillance
cameras,
they're
perched
they're,
proposing
to
purchase
Vehicles
portable
hard
drives
forensic
software
desktop
computers
to
replace
computers
in
the
PD,
normal
Police
Department.
R
Our
neighboring
city,
Chief
Petrelli,
had
spoke
to
the
items
that
he
wants
for
their
Department
surveillance
equipment,
drones,
rapid
response,
equipment,
training
in
education,
technology,
Pro,
protective
equipment,
officer,
safety,
enhancements,
3D
scanner,
digital
evidence,
upgrades
and
then
Peoria,
250
million
over
a
three-year
period
and
are
all
broken
down.
Some
are
our
funds.
R
Others
are
dco
funds
and
then
there
was
another
Grant
provided
by
the
state
of
Illinois
for
reimaging
Public
Safety
from
the
office
of
firearm
and
violence
prevention,
they're,
looking
at
body,
worn
camera
replacement
in
car
videos,
alprs
the
automatic
license
plate
readers,
communication
or
I'm
sorry,
Community
awareness
and
as
older
woman
emick
spoke
to
cure
violence,
Workforce
Development
and
some
other.
Some
other
items.
N
So,
at
least
in
with
the
town
of
normal
there's
some
duplication
about
the
drones,
for
example,
and
it
leaves
me
wondering
if,
if
we
couldn't
collaborate
so
that
we're
not
duplicating
those
efforts,
I'll
wrap
I
know
we're
over
time
and
I'll
wrap
up
with
this
one
last
comment
and
and
that's
to
say
that
we
came
up
pretty
quickly
with
an
application
system
to
solicit
from
from
Community
groups
how
to
use
the
the
covid
relief
money
to
solicit
for
Economic
and
Development
and
and
other
other
programs
I,
don't
see
why
we
couldn't
quickly
come
up
with
a
way
of
soliciting
applications
for
from
Community
groups
for
shovel
ready
programs
that
they
might
have
in
their
back
pocket.
S
Older
oral
lemon,
Ward
I
think
what
you're
asking
so
the
some
of
these
proposals
that
we've
made
were
discussed
in
several
meetings
from
a
committee
we
organized
prior
to
even
known
about
these
funds.
We
have
we
sat
in
our
Osborne
room
and
we
had
different
stakeholders
from
the
Department,
our
crime
intelligence
analyst
unit.
Some
of
these
things
came
up
during
those
conversations
which
far
proceeded
the
even
the
sound
or
win
of
these
funds.
These
were
proposals.
I
know
the
trailer
cameras
were
proposals.
S
I
know
the
Niven
system
was
supposed
to
the
gun,
buyback
I,
don't
think
made
the
list
that
came
up
after
and
so
far,
but
absolutely
at
least
two
meetings
and
I'm
thinking
more
like
three
of
an
internal
committee
trying
to
address
gun
violence
prior
to
the
funding
even
became
an
aware
to
us.
If
that
speaks
to
what
you
were
asking,
so
we
absolutely
had
those
conversations
we
have
the
photos
of
our
notes
and
and
all
of
those
things
from
those
wings.
A
Good.
Thank
you
very
much
for
all
the
work
that
you've
done.
I
know,
you've
done
it
and
they're
quite
a
bit
of
pressure,
particularly
in
terms
of
time,
but
definitely
something.
These
are
all
good
things
to
to
consider.
G
A
Mean
this
is
not
the
end
of
everything,
I
think
we
we
do
have
annually.
We
have
a
budget.
You
know
that
we
can
use
to
to
to
allocate
for
different
ideas.
You
know
whether
it
is
these
that
you
you've
proposed
to
you
know
perpetuate
them.
You
know
over
time
or
other
ideas
that
people
might
have
so
I
I,
don't
think
this
is.
This
should
be
the
the
end
of
the
the
conversation.
So
thank
you
all
very
much
do
we
is.
A
Is
this
Tim
coming
back
as
a
as
an
item
on
on
Council
the
council
meeting,
or
do
we
need
to
just
kind
of
give
you
a
sense
of
the
council
today
that
we
were.
K
R
That
accurate,
yes,
sir,
that
would
be
accurate.
So
so
we
can
advance
the
application
process
so.
K
K
Yes,
so
thank
you,
Jeff.
One
of
the
things
that
Jeff
and
Scott
talked
about
earlier
is
that
there
would
need
to
be
a
budget
amendment
at
some
point
in
order
to
approve
the
spending.
So
that
would
be
what
you
would
be
approving,
but
you
all
need
some
level
of
direction
to
know
whether
or
not
to
move
forward
with
this
part
of
the
application
process.
Is
that
correct?
Yes,
sir?
That
is.
A
N
M
A
C
Thank
you,
mayor
and
Council
I
believe
I
have
four
slides
new
hires.
We
have
four
new
I'm.
Sorry
we
have
more
than
this.
We
have
two
slides
on
the
new
hires
Kyle
is
new
to
I.T.
Ron
is
yeah,
Ron
is
new
to
Public
Works
Darcy's
new
to
economic
Community
development
is
an
inspector.
C
Mike
is
a
new
Public
Safety
dispatcher
and
in
fact,
on
that
comment,
or
on
on
that
topic,
you
know
I
think
we
all
realize
that
you
know
Public,
Safety,
dispatcher,
good
ones,
worth
their
weight
and
in
Gold
to
be
quite
honest
and
Darren
wolf
is
the
communications
manager
works
for
both
Chiefs
Eric
West
and
Chief
simmington,
and
does
a
great
job
next
slide:
Angela
to
fire
a
support
staff
James
laborer
with
solid
waste
steel
with
Solid
Waste
as
a
labor
look
at
the
spelling
of
that
first
name.
C
He
was
destined
for
you
know
for
that
job,
but
City
and
then
Robert
is
also
been
hired
as
a
laborer
with
solid
waste
all
right-
and
this
is
new
in
23,
and
why
I
didn't
think
of
this
sooner
shame
on
me,
but
we're
also
at
Committee
of
the
whole
going
to
recognize
internal
promotions.
Katie
was
promoted
to
business
manager
and
Parks
and
Recreation.
She
does
an
excellent
job.
C
She
does
tremendous
work
for
the
director
Eric
veal
and
then
Clint
was
promoted
to
a
multi-discipline
inspector
for
ecd
I
do
know
for
a
fact
that
the
different
training
and
certifications
that
Clint
had
to
go
through
in
order
to
achieve
achieve
that
multi-discipline
inspector
status
was
quite
lengthy,
so
credit
to
him
next
slide.
C
Please
January
27
28th,
so
that's
in
not
this
weekend,
but
next
animal
crackers,
education
classes
at
the
Miller,
Park
Zoo
next
slide,
Bloomington,
Parks
and
Rec
winter
spring
events
that
magazine
is
out
can
also
be
found
at
Bloomington
park,
parks,
dot,
org
and
I.
Think
that's
it
all
right.
Thank
you,
mayor.
A
Thank
you
and
at
this
point
we
will
ask
for
a
motion
to
adjourn.