►
From YouTube: Bloomington City Council, April 12, 2023
Description
No description was provided for this meeting.
If this is YOUR meeting, an easy way to fix this is to add a description to your video, wherever mtngs.io found it (probably YouTube).
A
B
A
C
D
D
The
city
as
well
as
City
administrative
buildings,
are
on
the
traditional
homelands
of
the
Miami
Delaware
Potawatomi
and
Shawnee
people,
and
we
acknowledge
that
they
are
past
present
and
future
caretakers
of
this
land.
We
also
acknowledge
that
much
of
the
economic
progress
and
development
in
Indiana
and
specifically
Bloomington
resulted
from
the
unpaid,
labor
and
forced
servitude
of
people
of
color,
specifically
enslaved,
African
labor.
D
Moving
into
the
agenda
summation
for
this
evening,
we
have
no
minutes
to
approve
we'll
move
so
we'll
move
directly
into
a
section
on
reports.
First
council
member
reports,
we
then
have
reports
from
the
mayor
and
city
offices.
We
will
have
two
this
evening,
one
from
the
mayor
in
particular,
and
then
a
second
on
the
sidewalk
Innovation
project
report.
From
his
kid,
we'll
then
have
hear
any
reports
from
Council
committees
and
then
move
into
our
first
period
of
first
of
two
periods
of
public
comment.
D
We'll
then
take
up
appointments
to
boards
and
commissions
following
that
will
be
legislation
for
second
readings
and
resolutions
there.
We
will
take
up
appropriation,
ordinance,
2302
to
specially
appropriate
funds
from
the
general
fund
for
construction
of
the
trades,
District
tech
center
and
Associated
construction
management
services
and
resolution
2306
to
approve
the
project.
46
Southern,
Indiana,
Regional,
climate
Alliance,
we'll
then
move
into
legislation
for
first
readings
included
there.
Our
ordinance
2304
to
amend
Title
20,
unified
development,
ordinance
of
the
Bloomington
municipal
code
regarding
technical
Corrections
set
forth
in
Bloomington
municipal
code,
20.
D
C
I
have
a
report,
as
liaison
from
the
planned
commission.
I
just
wanted
to
give
a
brief
overview
of
what
happened
on
Monday
to
the
council
and
the
public
petitions
that
were
tabled
were
the
SP
24-22
Cutters
Kirkwood
at
115
East
Kirkwood
Avenue,
so
that
one's
tabled
for
the
moment.
The
next
one
was
a
consent
agenda
which
was
sp-09-22.
C
Which
is
a
Bloomington
Redevelopment
commission
at
617,
North
Madison,
request
petitioner
requested,
in
extension
of
the
site
plan
granted
previously,
and
that
was
unanimously
approved,
and
there
was
you
know
no
controversy
with
that.
C
C
C
In
the
meantime,
the
Udo
has
changed
to
to
not
prefer
bump
outs,
not
our
eyebrows,
not
to
prefer
cul-de-sacs
because
of
conductivity.
C
So
the
the
recommendation
from
plan
commission
was
that
we
we
shouldn't,
approve
it
upon
questioning
by
the
members
of
the
planned
commission.
He
really
was
a
compliance
issue,
mostly
because
of
the
change
in
the
regulations,
and
it
really
is
not
was
no
practical
difference
in
in
what
was
going
to
happen.
C
Next,
one
was
sp-0923
a
development
North
on
North
Walnut,
core
SVA
group
Bloomington
Plato
at
2038,
now
North
Walnut
Street.
It
was
a
major
site
plan
approval
to
a
lot
of
the
construction
of
a
mixed-use
building
with
181
dwelling
units
and
426
bedrooms.
It's
at
the
site
where,
if
you
remember
the
great
wallet
was-
and
it
has
some
slope
slope
issues
there-
they
also
requested
approval,
the
affordable
housing
and
sustainable
development
incentives.
C
They
are
opting
to
do
a
payment
in
lieu
of
putting
affordable
housing
there.
All
they
have
were
compliant
with
all
issues,
so
it
was
approved
9-0
after
some
discussion.
C
The
last
one
was
some
technical
corrections
to
the
Udo
in
chapter
3
that
in
the
tables
that
will
come
up
before
the
council,
not
today,
it
would
be
first
reading
today
and
it'll
come
up
again,
I
believe
in
one
week
and
that
was
approved
990
to
approve
those
and
that's
the
end
of
my
my
summation.
If
anybody
has
any
questions,
they
can
ask
me
or
send
me
a
note
and
I'll
try
to
clarify
those.
Thank
you.
E
F
So
I'd
like
to
make
this
request
very
publicly
this
evening
during
our
council
meeting
for
the
record,
we
do
have
the
fiduciary
responsibility
for
the
city,
this
body,
we
should
be
provided
this
information,
so
I
would
just
respectfully
ask
that
the
total
expenditures
that
have
been
committed
to
the
by
the
city
for
annexation
be
given
to
the
council.
Thank
you.
G
Yeah.
Thank
you.
A
couple
of
reports.
First
of
all,
I
did
attend
the
Middle
Way
house
annual
luncheon,
which
was
in
person
again
after
several
years
of
not
occurring
during
the
pandemic
period,
and
it
it
was
an
appropriate
period
months
to
have
it
as
usual,
because
April
is
Sexual.
Assault,
Awareness,
Month
and
so
I
wanted
to
point
that
out
for
the
community,
and
there
is
a
theme
this
year,
which
is
called
Drawing
connections,
prevention,
demands,
equity
and
just
to
a
quote
from
the
website
about
this
theme.
G
G
Although
one
also
about
equity
and
Justice.
I,
just
want
to
shout
out
to
two
of
my
newest
Heroes,
as
you
probably
heard,
on
April
6,
just
two
days
after
the
55th
anniversary
of
the
murder
of
Martin
Luther
King
Jr
in
Memphis,
the
republican-controlled
state
legislature
of
the
state
of
Tennessee
expels
to
two
of
its
members.
G
Two
young
black
activist
members,
Justin
Jones,
who
represented
a
district
in
Nashville
and
Justin
J
Pearson
from
Memphis
these
young
men
and
the
courage
that
they've
shown
and
the
leadership
they've
shown
they're
very
new
to
the
state
house
in
Tennessee.
I
find
admirable
and
I
am
very
disturbed
by
This
Racist
action
of
the
Tennessee
legislature.
I
can
imagine
such
a
thing
could
happen
in
Indiana
and
want
to
say
to
our
Representatives.
G
Yet
another
mass
shooting
this
time
in
Nashville
prompted
their
demonstration
last
week.
G
Luckily,
more
Grassroots
democracy
prevailed
or
lower
level
democracy,
at
least
the
Nashville
metropolitan
Council
unanimously
reinstated
Justin
Jones
on
Monday,
the
Shelby
County
Commission
unanimously
reinstated
Justin
J
Pearson
today
and
I
just
want
to
quote
from
representative
Pearson
today
he
said:
Nashville
thought
that
they
could
silence
democracy,
but
they
didn't
know
the
Shelby
County
Commission.
So
the
message
for
all
the
people
in
Nashville
who
decided
to
expel
us,
you
can't
expel,
hope
you
can't
expel
love,
you
can't
expel
our
voice
and
you
sure,
can't
expel
our
fight.
G
We
look
forward
to
continuing
to
fight
continuing
to
Advocate
until
Justice
rolls
down
like
water
and
righteousness
like
an
ever-flowing
stream.
Let's
get
back
to
work
and
I
can't
do
his
eloquence,
Justice
he's
very
reminiscent
of
Martin,
Luther
King
and
the
way
he
talks
he's.
He
has
studied
a
Theology
and
is
very
good
at
using
imagery
to
make
his
point,
and
so
the
the
point
here
is
that
we
need
to
keep
speaking
up
about
the
the
murder
of
our
children
and
our
community
members,
because
everybody
can
access
a
gun.
G
G
D
D
Thank
you
and
I'll
just
finish
up
I'd
like
to
acknowledge
some
very
good
work
done
by
the
alternative,
Public
Safety
Outreach
special
committee.
This
is
a
subset
of
the
community
advisory
and
Public
Safety
commission
and
this
group
coordinated
a
town
hall
of
sorts
in
a
listening
session
around
issues
of
Public
Safety
under
the
theme
of
safety
for
all
at
the
expense
of
none.
D
This
event
was
held:
Monday
Tuesday
and
several
council
members,
council,
member
Sims
and
council
member
Piedmont
Smith
were
in
attendance
as
well,
and
I
appreciated
the
the
hard
work
that
went
into
planning
that
and
also
the
productive
discussions
that
were
co-led
by
sea
Jam
Representatives
as
well,
so
I
just
want
to
acknowledge
their
efforts
in
that
part.
D
I
You
very
much
it's
nice
to
be
here,
mayor
Hamilton
with
you
tonight.
I
know
you
have
a
busy
agenda
just
want
to
provide
brief
comments
on
several
items,
some
on
some
not
on
the
agenda
tonight.
First
and
most
substantively
councilmember
aloe
appreciate
your
teeing
that
up
I
did
want
to
talk
about
annexation
costs
tonight
and
also
we
will
be
sharing
a
more
detailed
written
report.
I
believe
in
the
morning
from
our
Legal
Office.
I
So
Council
has
asked,
as
you
indicated,
to
share
more
information
about
annexation,
which
we
want
to
do
both
on
the
cost
and
also
reflecting
some
of
the
public
discussion.
Lately.
I'll
do
that
tonight,
as
well
as,
if
just
very
brief
references
to
some
other
topics,
so
first
on
annexation,
cost
total
direct
cost
to
date
and
overall
in
the
in
the
annexation
process,
is
1.33
million
dollars,
1.33
million.
We
estimate
that
may
rise
to
over
1.5
million
with
litigation
expected.
I
It's
really
important
to
note
that
about
half
of
that
total
of
1.5,
if
that's
where
we
end
up
results
directly
from
the
Indiana
General
Assembly,
illegally,
stopping
annexation
in
2017
and
2019
actions.
In
other
words,
half
of
that
cost
has
been
caused
directly
by
the
general
assembly's
unlawful
actions.
I
It
will
cost
money
any
renewal
or
restarting
or
resetting
will
require
new
or
updated
fiscal
plans
which
are
the
largest
expense
of
annexation,
substantially,
adding
to
any
cost
of
future
annexation.
Again,
we'll
share
the
details
of
that
with
with
your
Council
tomorrow
morning.
Just
very
briefly,
also
discussions
of
the
size
of
annexation-
I,
just
you
know
much
of
this,
but
the
proposed
annexation
is
sized
because
nearly
20
years
have
now
passed
since
there's
been
any
annexation
in
the
city
20
years,
so
our
boundaries
no
longer
correspond
to
the
extent
of
our
community.
I
I'll
note
also
that
when
we
start
an
annexation
process,
it
is
advisable
to
start
with
the
largest
potentially
advisable
map,
because
the
process
cannot
increase
the
size
of
an
annexation.
The
public
process
can
only
trim
the
size
of
annexation
so,
and
indeed
that's
exactly
what
happened.
As
you
know,
the
city
council
considered
annexation
and
reduced
the
proposed
size
by
nearly
a
fifth,
almost
20
percent,
during
that
public
process
that
we
had
also
just
quickly.
I
As
you
know,
many
of
the
areas
proposed
for
annexation
have
been
identified
for
decades
as
areas
to
be
annexed,
literally
long
identified
on
maps,
as
quote
areas
intended
for
annexation
and
just
to
to
remind
us
as
well
in
1990
15
of
the
County's
urbanized
area
was
not
in
the
city
fifteen
percent.
In
1990..
I
Today,
it's
nearly
doubled
that,
with
27
percent
of
the
urbanized
area
defined
by
the
census
outside
City
boundaries,
the
planned
annexations
will
leave
approximately
12
percent
of
urbanized
areas
outside
the
city,
the
city
limits
of
Bloomington
and,
of
course,
as
you
know,
well
also
well,
thousands
of
the
current
or
prior
Property
Owners,
explicitly
agreed
to
be
annexed
into
the
city
in
exchange
for
city
sewer
service
legally
waiving
their
rights
to
a
monster
at
last
on
the
annexation.
I
just
want
to
point.
I
We
also
believe
we
have
a
responsibility
as
a
city
to
defend
our
city
against
unconstitutional
actions
by
the
state
legislature,
an
aggressive
State
Legislature
that
undermined
our
ability
to
serve
residents.
The
Supreme
Court
of
Indiana
ruled
that
the
2017
action
by
the
state
legislature
was
unlawful,
illegal
unconstitutional
halting
our
annexation.
We
are
now
also
asking
the
courts
to
stop
the
state
from
retroactively
voiding
contracts
that
the
city
and
landlords
land
owners
voluntarily
entered
into,
and
thus
indirectly
trying
to
achieve
what
the
state
was.
Not
the
state
supreme
court
prohibited
directly.
I
We
do
not
Sue
the
state
lightly,
but
both
of
the
annexation
cases
involve
fundamental
principles
of
constitutional
law
that
we
need
to
protect
if
we
are
able
to
operate
effectively
and
plan
confidently
for
our
future
and
maybe
most
important,
the
cost
of
not
completing
annexation
is
serious.
Boundaries
could
be
frozen
for
the
foreseeable
future,
a
major
detriment
to
our
community
future
voluntary
annexation
requires
significant
contiguity
with
current
boundaries.
I
You
can't
LeapFrog,
you
can't
spaghetti
Annex
through
through
thin
lines
anymore.
Great
swas
of
the
contiguous
areas
of
the
city
have
already
received
the
primary
city
benefit
of
sewer
and
water
service
that
allow
that
Urban
Development
and
could
be
absolute
barriers
to
Future
voluntary
annexation
that
we
all
would
want.
I
We
even
learned
lately
some
other
impacts.
For
example,
rural
Transit,
we
now
know,
is
facing
substantial
negative
Federal
funding
implications,
as
its
service
area
is
increasingly
non-rural.
So
I
just
raised
that.
Thank
you
for
asking
about
annexation
again,
we'll
provide
more
detail.
And,
lastly,
just
briefly
I
want
to
mention
a
couple
things
you
will
be
considering
the
project
46
resolution
tonight.
I
know
Alex
Crowley
will
be
here
to
answer
questions
about
that.
If
you
have
questions
about
that
now,
I'm
happy
to
answer
them
here.
I
We
are
very
excited
about
this
Regional
cross-sector
bipartisan
Urban
rural
coalition
to
address
climate
change.
Together,
it's
an
emergency.
We
Face
there
are
also
extraordinary
opportunities
and
we
look
forward
to
working
with
our
our
colleagues
in
Monroe,
Brown
and
Bartholomew
counties
for
that
and
I
hope.
You
will
support
that
resolution
later.
I
We've
also
shared
some
information
with
you
recently
about
the
trades,
District
building
project
and
Tiff
versus
Creed
I'm.
Happy
to
answer
questions
about
that.
Now,
if
you
like
to
me
and
we'll
have
other
folks,
of
course,
with
the
substantive
presentation
and
also
share
some
information
about
fire
department
operations,
happy
to
take
questions,
I
also
know
you're
ready.
You
will
be
receiving
an
exciting
and
terrific
presentation
by
Innovation
director
about
our
sidewalks
as
soon
as
we
finish
here.
Thank
you
and
happy
to
answer
any
questions
you
have
on
any
of
those
topics.
Thank.
F
Thank
you
mayor
Hamilton,
did
you
say
1.33
million.
F
So
this
doesn't
seem
to
square
with
a
story
that
came
out
in
the
Herald
times
on
March
9th
of
2022.
That
was
13
months
ago,
which
broke
down
the
expenses
for
annexation
and
totaling
over
1.4
million
dollars
at
that
time,
and
it's
itemized.
I
J
What
is
the
status
of
our
case
in
the
courts?
When
can
we
expect
to
hear?
Do
you
think
I
mean
do
we
know
where
it
is
when's
it
going
to
be
the
next
ruling.
I
There
are
two
cases
and
if
we
get
too
deep
into
this
I'm
sure
we
can
ask
our
our
corporate
Council
to
share.
But
we.
K
I
2K
did
she
smile
and
say
yes:
okay,
okay,
all
right,
we
have
the
case
that
is
kind
of
a
more
traditional
annexation
case
on
areas
1A
and
1B
that
are
in
front
of
the
court.
We've
gone
through
some
preliminary
decisions
that
went
in
our
favor
there's
an
interlocutory,
an
intermediary
appeal.
That's
been
sought
that
we
don't
think
will
be
granted
we're
opposed
to
it,
which
would
mean
the
trial
could
begin
this
year.
There
is
a
tentative
date
set
for
that
later
in
the
year.
We
can't
be
sure
exactly
when
things
will
happen.
J
J
I
guess
I'm
really
interested
in
the
question
of
the
the
2019
law
so.
I
That's
case
number
two:
in
that
case
we
have
filed
a
summary
judgment
motion
that
case
doesn't
have
a
lot
of
factual
underlying
questions
about
it.
It's
it's
primarily
a
legal
question
is
that
constitutional
we
have
filed
our
state,
our
our
summary
judgment
motion,
which
is
an
extensive
argument
of
that
that
we
have
not
gotten
the
response
yet
it'll,
be
in
a
few
weeks
months.
I
think
I,
don't
know,
and
then
the
court
will
decide
exactly
how
that
will
proceed,
but
that
that
will
mostly
be
a
summary
judgment.
Motion
trial,
probably
well.
J
It
seems
to
me
that
the
second
case
affects
the
first,
like,
if
summary
judgment.
If,
if
the
city
prevails,
then
1A
and
1B
will
have
a
majority
of
sewer
waivers
that
count.
Last
I.
Remember
that
the
two
of
the
seven
areas
that
that
had
that
met
like
if
all
the
sewer
waivers
were
counted
right.
There
were
only
two
areas
that
were
not
one
a
and
one
B
right.
So
why
would
they
even
be
proceeding
on
the
first
case
when
the
second
case
is
pending.
I
Short
answer
to
that
is,
if
you'll
recall,
the
Constitutional
determination
from
the
Supreme
Court
took
about
three
and
a
half
years
ultimately
to
get
because
of
appeals
and
the
schedules
of
that.
So,
while
any
determination
could
be
positive,
if
it's
appealed
it's
a
very
long
time,
Horizon
potentially
and
our
view
is
it's
much
better
to
get
this
decision
on
the
major
errors
as
quickly
as
we
can
we're
we're
all
waiting
to
know
how
to
plan
so,
but.
J
It
is
possible
that
when
did
we,
when
did
we
the
city
file
in
the
2019
case.
I
J
I
J
D
Additional
questions
not
I
have
one
related
to
annexation.
Okay,
seeing
none
thank
you
for
your
comments,
mayor
on
annexation,
1.33
million
I'm
interested
in
what's
included
in
that
I
assume.
That
includes
things
like
outside
counsel,
that
we've
had
related
annexation
and
so
forth.
Does
it
also
include
our
staff
hours?
Does
it
all
what
what's
included?
What's
not
right.
I
The
1.33
million
is
all
the
expenditures
we
have
made.
They
are
primarily
of
two
sorts:
one
is
for
fiscal
advice
and
counsel
and
work
product,
doing
the
physical
analysis,
doing
their
partial
by
parcel
analysis
and
re
and
revising
that,
as
we
had
to
do
after
the
2019
law
in
2017
action
of
the
of
the
State
one
second,
is
outside
legal
counsel:
who've
been
critical.
This
is
a
very
complicated
and
Technical
area
of
the
law
and
they've
helped
us
with
that.
It
does
not
include
our
own
attorney's
time.
J
I
was
hoping
that
you
would
be
available
later,
for
you
know
certain
issues
that
are
on
the
agenda,
but
the
primary
concern
I
have
is
about
getting
accounting
info
for
I've
been
asking
about
the
Creed
and
the
Tiff,
and
you
mentioned
that
in
your
talk.
J
I
Deputy
controller
Cheryl
Gilliland
will
be
available
for
those
questions.
Okay,
I'm
also
happy
to
answer
any
questions
you
have
generally
in
a
policy
nature.
J
Right
because
I,
we
have
to
wait
till
that
point
comes
up
to
talk
about
it,
but
yeah
I,
just
I,
just
and
while
I'm
in
receipt
of
an
email
from
you
that
I
just
read
I'd
like
you
to
talk
to
answer
it
publicly
in
the
course
of
trying
to
establish.
J
You
know
why
whether
or
not
the
Tiff
would
be
a
better
source
of
revenue
for
that
I
found
that
it
was
a
very
difficult
to
find
anywhere
on
the
city
site,
how
much
money
was
in
the
Tiff,
but
more
specifically
what
it
was
spent
on,
and
so
one
thing
that
I'd
like
to
know
is:
can
you
and
your
staff
prepare
I
mean
the
Tiff
has
been
a
big
deal
with
a
lot
of
money
going
through
it
for
a
lot
of
years
and
it's
hard
to
say
well?
J
What
have
we
really
spent
it
on?
How
can
we
break
it
down
what
big
prod,
because
it
mostly
it's,
it's
large
dollars
and
few
disbursements
to
Big
projects
right?
So
can
you
talk
about
those
projects
at
all
and,
if
not,
can
we
have
that
be
a
regular
part
of
the
budget
from
now
on,
because
the
RDC
is
not
exactly
a
body
that
regularly
reports
to
us
and
it's
responsible
for
a
lot
of
money,
yeah.
I
I
think
those
are
really
well
taken.
Of
course,
the
RDC
does
produce
an
annual
report
that
gives
its
balances
to
end
of
the
year.
It's
coming
out
shortly
for
2022,
which
will
show
about
26
million,
as
I
think
I
mentioned.
The
2021
report
shows
about
22
million
in
Balance,
but
as
you
you
indicate,
and
of
course,
every
project
the
RDC
does.
Every
investment
they
make
is
is
itemized
in
a
meeting
and
it's
in
the
minutes.
But
as
you
indicate,
it
is
difficult
if
one.
J
I
would
go
better
and
say
with
respect
to
say,
Hopewell
or
any
other
project
I
think
it's
a
multi-year
project
right
and
it's
hard
to
really
tell
where
the
money's
going
what
it
was
for,
how
much
we
spent
over
time.
J
Most
many
of
the
big
most
of
the
big
projects
the
city
is
doing
are
not
done
in
one
year,
so
I
don't
want
to
have
to
scrape
every
set
of
agendas
of
the
RDC
to
figure
out
where
money
is
going,
and
so
when,
when
can
you
have
the
staff
prepare
report
like.
I
That
yeah,
I
think
and
first
I
also
just
want
to
note
that
we
of
course
appoint
the
members
of
the
RDC
Council
in
the
city
and
those
are
our
Representatives
Who
oversee
all
this.
Every
meeting
on
our
behalfs
but
I
totally
I,
do
agree.
I
think
we're
trying
to
put
together
that
kind
of
historical
summary.
It's
never
been
done
as
far
as
I
know
things
like
34
million
dollars
spent
on
switch
yard
Park.
I
You
know
we
we've
we've
talked
about
that,
but
having
that
on
a
list
of
five
million
dollars
spent
on
the
mill
and
and
down
the
line,
so
I
think,
while
we
may
have
talked
about
them
individually,
I'm
happy
to
try
to
put
that
together.
I
think
it'll
take
us
a
few
weeks
to
to
scrub
it
and
make
sure
we.
J
J
To
share
well
for
for
what
it's
worth,
I
did
receive
a
data
dump
from
New
World
to
our
accounting
system,
from
a
staff
member
in
the
controls
office.
That
was
79
pages
of
budget
data
every
transaction,
but
it
was
79
pages
over
five
years
right
and
that
is
almost
as
hard
to
process.
So
what
we're
looking
for
is
somewhere
in
between
yeah,
but
it's
not
normally
a
part
of
the
budget,
because
the
money
is
spent
outside
the
normal
budget
process.
J
I
We'll
be
happy
to
try
to
share
some
of
that
summary
I
mean
again.
We
can.
We
can
probably
remember
what
the
major
items
are.
You
know
switchyard
Park
trades
District,
including
the
mill
Hopewell
purchases
and
development
there.
It's
also
used
for
substantial
matches
of
federal
infrastructure,
17th
Street
Third
Street
projects
that
we
use
Tif
money
to
leverage
Federal
money
but
happy
to
try
to
get
a
comprehensible
one
or
two
page
summary
of
those
projects.
J
Well,
with
all
due
respect,
you
can
probably
remember
it
because
you
work
with
them
all
the
time
but
I
when
looking
at
that
budget
document
I
couldn't
I
did
not
remember
that
West
17th
Street
was
something
we
funded.
It's
not
easy
to
remember:
it's
not
not
easy
to
find
on
the
website
because
it
doesn't
exist
and
it
should
exist.
So
you
know
it's.
It
should
exist
because
we
shouldn't
be
expected
to
remember
something
that
momentous
we
should
have.
The
detail.
J
I
D
Thank
you.
We
are
a
time
for
at
our
time
limit
for
this
section.
I'd
rather
not
interrupt
Miss
kid
mid
report.
Are
there
additional
questions
for
the
mayor
before
okay,
seeing
none
I'm
guessing,
you
may
get
some
follow-up
via
email
or
phone.
D
G
D
M
M
M
I
want
to
recognize
the
hard
work
of
our
team.
We
had
representatives
from
multiple
leadership
levels
of
seven
City
departments,
plus
Bloomington
city
of
Bloomington
utilities,
plus
Bloomington,
Transit
and
I,
want
to
give
a
special
shout
out
to
Clarence
Boone
of
parks
and
Nathan
Herr
of
utilities.
They
completed
all
the
requirements
for
certification
and
Innovation
training.
M
Coaching
and
training
was
provided
by
Tim
Fife,
with
a
grant
from
Bloomberg
philanthropies
Center
for
Public
innovation.
We
also
could
not
have
completed
the
project
without
enthusiastic
support
from
multiple
divisions
of
Public
Works,
the
council
for
Community
accessibility
and
the
leadership
of
planning,
engineering,
housing
and
neighborhood
development.
And,
of
course,
our
mayor.
M
M
Had
we
known
the
solution,
it
would
have
been
a
project
management
exercise.
So
not
every
problem
is
suited
to
an
innovation
framework,
but
this
one
was
the
starting
point
was
to
define
the
problem
to
solve
and
then
deeply
understand
the
context
to
understand
the
context
we
conducted
14
resident
interviews
and
observed
10
residents,
not
in
a
creepy
way
on
their
journey
by
Sidewalk.
We
reviewed
all
of
the
city's
strategic
planning
and
meeting
documents
that
pertain
to
sidewalks
and
we
analyzed
the
data
from
six
years
of
our
year
reports.
M
The
research
pointed
to
a
number
of
different
directions
deserving
a
focus,
but
ultimately
the
voice
of
the
residence
was
clear.
They
just
want
to
be
able
to
get
where
they're
going
by
Sidewalk
without
having
to
step
into
traffic,
so
what's
getting
in
the
way
sidewalks
in
poor
condition,
most
of
which
use
historic
pavers.
Additionally,
residents
interviewed
were
unclear
about
who's
responsible
for
maintaining
the
pavement
service,
surface
encroachment
by
trees,
Hedges
low-hanging
branches.
Here
again,
some
residents
weren't
clear
that
even
trimming
Hedges
or
clearing
away
the
branches
was
their
responsibility.
M
The
city
maintains
some
of
these
things
for
Pathways
and
multi-use
trails,
which
look
like
sidewalks
to
Residents,
so
there's
some
confusion.
There
rough
transitions
between
sidewalks
and
driveways
and
Alley
entrances
and
different
things
blocking
the
sidewalk
like
trash
and
recycling,
bins
and
scooters.
M
So
what's
the
impact
of
these
barriers
in
human
terms,
during
interviews
with
residents,
we
heard
stories
like
the
one
of
a
young
woman
in
a
wheelchair
who
toppled
over
because
of
a
rough
transition
like
the
one
you
see
in
the
picture
here
she
lay
on
the
sidewalk
until
someone
could
help
her.
We
heard
things
like
I.
Just
don't
go
down
Washington
Street
on
trash
day,
and
we
heard
many
many
stories
of
people
having
to
step
into
traffic
and
worry
about
being
seen
by
cars.
M
M
The
Innovation
team
used
our
framework
to
whittle
that
group
down
to
a
much
smaller,
manageable
set
of
11
ideas,
and
then
we
held
two
virtual
meetings
where
participants
rated
those
ideas
based
on
the
ideas
ability
to
impact
the
goal
of
all
sidewalks,
always
navigable
for
everyone
and
their
degree
of
confidence
that
the
idea
could
actually
be
practically
implemented.
These
are
the
seven
ideas
with
the
highest
rankings.
M
M
M
I
mentioned
earlier
that
we
heard
from
many
folks
that
they're
confused
about
who
is
supposed
to
do
what
one
thing
we
can
do
pretty
easily
is
to
send
seasonal
updates
using
our
various
media
channels.
This
idea
had
broad
support
from
residents
and
our
internal
departments,
like
planning
engineering,
Utilities
in
hand
who
also
have
information
that
they
want
to
send
seasonally
in
a
bundle,
there's
also
the
possibility
of
gamifying
the
responsibility
with
challenges
that
invite
residents
to
clean
and
decorate
their
sidewalk
according
to
a
theme
and
send
us
pictures
to
post
to
our
social
media.
M
We
think
this
idea
is
a
just
do
it.
The
second
highest
rated
item
is
to
explore
more
funding
sources
for
sidewalks.
This
is
kind
of
a
no-brainer.
We
can
do
more
with
more
funding.
This
idea
is
also
a
requirement
of
some
of
the
other
recommendations,
but
most
notably
the
last
item
for
the
city
to
maintain
all
sidewalk
surfaces
that
we'll
talk
about
in
a
bit
getting
new
funding
for
sidewalks
has
become
more
attainable
with
Federal
funding
for
infrastructure.
M
There
are
vendors
who
manage
and
help
find
grants
for
cities,
and
we've
been
in
contact
with
one
of
those.
We
also
have
some
Grant
management
positions
that
were
approved
in
the
last
budget,
there's
also
room
to
explore
whether
existing
revenue
from
the
local
income
tax
or
scooter
Revenue
might
be
appropriate
uses
for
sidewalk
maintenance.
So
the
recommendation
here
is
to
keep
working
with
the
administration
on
how
existing
funds
could
be
used
and
work
with
a
Grant
Management
vendor
until
we
have
that
capacity
in-house.
M
These
stretches
of
sidewalk
make
up
the
highest
percent
of
our
poor
quality
sidewalks
and
our
challenging
and
more
expensive
to
repair
our
planning
and
Public
Works
departments
and
our
passionate
historic
preservationist
Gloria
column
have
been
working
with
the
preservation
commission
for
years
on
Alternatives
and
there's
some
recent
examples
that
both
look
nice
and
are
easier
for
strolling
and
rolling
because
of
the
complexity
of
getting
agreement
on
acceptable
Alternatives.
The
recommendation
here
is
to
focus
on
getting
these
segments
to
a
fair
condition.
While
we
continue
the
effort
to
find
even
more
navigable
Solutions.
M
M
M
M
These
are
represented
by
the
bright
blue
dots
that
you
see
here
and
the
promotional
campaign
would
be
simply
to
put
it
on
the
DOT
residents
participating
in
the
Prototype
and
City
staff
alike,
thought
the
idea
had
promise.
However,
implementation
is
surprisingly
complex
because
of
all
the
things
that
need
to
be
considered
to
determine
that
optimal
location
so
that
it
doesn't
block
the
sidewalk.
The
complexity
is
not
insurmountable,
but
more
testing
is
needed.
We
believe
that
the
previous
four
ideas
and
the
next
two
are
higher
priorities.
M
So
the
idea
would
work
like
this
City
staff
members
already
working
in
every
part
of
town
so
think
hand
inspectors
or
Brighton
B,
Town
Crews,
good
log
infractions
in
your
report,
the
enforcer,
possibly
the
single
point
of
contact
mentioned
in
solution
number
four,
would
contact
the
property
owner
directly
by
phone
or
email
and
then
follow
up
with
a
formal
letter.
They
would
let
them
know
what
is
out
of
compliance
any
known
resources
that
could
help
them
get
into
compliance
and
a
reasonable
time
frame
to
fix
it.
M
The
enforcer
would
also
specify
that,
if
the
issue
is
not
fixed
by
the
requested
due
date,
that
this
city
will
fix
the
issue
and
charge
the
property
owner
Equity
concerns,
of
course,
would
be
baked
into
this
option.
The
idea
also
had
broad
support
and
enthusiasm
for
two
reasons:
number
one.
In
the
end,
the
issue
is
fixed
either
by
the
property
owner
or
by
the
city.
The
idea
could
work
well
number
two.
The
idea
could
work
well
in
tandem
with
any
of
the
other
ideas
presented.
M
Our
recommendation
is
that
a
pilot
later
this
year
or
early
next
year,
would
start
with
sidewalks
adjacent
to
commercial
properties,
a
big
thanks
to
director
wayson
for
his
input
on
the
notification
process
here,
which
brings
us
to
our
last
item,
shifting
responsibility
for
maintaining
all
sidewalk
surfaces
to
the
city.
This
idea
had
low
support
in
the
ranking
process
because
the
financial
barrier
was
considered
to
be
too
high.
M
M
Some
recent
research
revealed
a
few
companies
that
are
trialing
alternative
materials
like
recycled
hard
plastics
and
recycled
rubber
that
perform
as
good
or
better
than
Concrete
in
climates
like
ours,
for
a
lower
cost
over
the
lifetime
of
the
material
I'm
excited
to
announce
that
we'll
begin
the
process
of
exploring
the
possibility
of
using
alternative
materials
starting
next
month
in
May,
an
indiana-based
vendor
will
meet
with
representatives
from
multiple
departments
to
answer
their
questions
about
the
material
and
determine
if
our
terrain
is
suitable
to
their
product.
If
so,
we'll
identify
a
pilot
area.
M
Here
again
in
this
chart,
the
horizontal
x-axis
represents
the
combined
degree
of
support
for
the
solution
options.
You
can
see
that
some
of
these
options
had
Net,
Zero
or
negative
support.
I
won't
go
into
detail
about
these
options
because
our
recommendation
for
all
of
them
is
the
same
to
not
move
forward
because
of
their
very
low
support.
M
M
J
Thank
you.
Thank
you.
Ms
Kidd,
for
an
excellent
presentation.
Very
interesting
I
have
two
questions.
One
of
them
is:
can
alternative
materials
be
used
to
help
solve
the
problem
of
the
historic
Stone
sidewalks?
Can
they
be?
Can
there
be
like
a
clear
epoxy
that
goes
over
it
or
some
you
know?
Is
there
some
material
that
will
allow
those
sidewalks
to
be
smooth
but
still
retain
their
character?.
M
I,
don't
know
the
answer
to
that.
That
would
be
a
great
question
for
Gloria
colombe,
the
historic
preservationist,
but
it
does
seem
like
there.
They
are
experimenting
with
Alternatives
already
there's
a
sidewalk,
that's
over
near
Fairview
school.
That
now
looks
much
better
and
it's
also
much
smoother.
It's
not
completely
smooth
like
concrete,
but
it
is
okay.
J
That
sounds
great
I'll
go
I'll,
go
see
it
yeah.
The
other
question
was:
can
you
give
us
an
example?
I
mean
yes,
I
was
one
of
the
people
who
helped
experiment
with
where
to
put
trash
cans.
I've
started
putting
my
can
out
differently
now
because
of
it,
but
what's
an
example
of
the
complexity
of
the
blue
dot
problem,
in
other
words,
give
us
a
one
or
two
ideas
of
why
this
is
a
complex
problem.
Right.
M
So
if
you
go
on
West
Kirkwood,
there
are
houses
that
have
a
teeny,
tiny
front
yard,
one
of
the
narrow,
older
sidewalks,
and
they
butt
up
against
a
very
busy
street.
So
the
cans
can't
be
put
in
the
street.
Their
yard
may
be
on
a
slope
or
too
small
to
place
a
can
there,
and
so
they
have
to
at
least
right
now
they
have
to
put
it
in
the
sidewalk
and
so
trying
to
figure
out
what
is
the
optimal
location
for
that
there
are
also
so
places.
M
If
we
think
about
putting
markers
on
the
ground,
we
have
public
land,
that
is
the
roadway,
and
then
we
have
private
land
which
are
people's
yards
and
and
in
some
cases
the
side
path.
That's
in
in
front
of
that,
so
negotiating
with
people
are
you,
okay,
with
the
Aesthetics
of
this
I
was
a
little
bit
challenging
and
then
I
mentioned
Washington
Street.
That's
an
example
of
the
optimal
location
would
be
to
place
it
in
the
yard,
but
there's
also
a
lot
of
on-street
parking
just
like
your
street.
M
J
I
appreciate
all
of
that
I
just
want
to
follow
up
with
one
question,
which
is
it's
just
it's
not
the
last
part.
We
are
at
time,
but
go
ahead.
Just
the
last
part
is:
can
we
put
blue
dots
out
in
places
where
there's
no
controversy
and
just
say
if
you
have
a
blue
dot
use
it.
F
Thanks
Miss
Kidd
for
the
report.
When
you
I'm
curious
about
the
support,
the
relative
support,
High
support,
low
support
the
denominator
is
20..
Is
that
the
is
that
the
number
of
participants.
M
F
All
of
them
are,
all
of
them,
seem
to
be
20.,
so
10
out
of
20
6
out
of
20
14
out
of
20.
F
L
F
So
you've
got
employees
of
the
city
that
make
up,
maybe
half
the
number.
Of
course
you
know
they
they
may
have
a
certain
bias.
So
I
would
say
this
needs
to
be
done
in
a
much
larger
scale
in
order
to
have
any
real
meaning
to
me,
at
least
not
that
these
aren't
good
ideas.
I
mean
there
are
good
ideas
here,
but
just
one
comment:
I
I
think
that
we've
got
a
frozen
Council
sidewalk
budget.
F
M
D
D
Great
okay,
thank
you.
Thank
you!
So
much
Miss
Kidd
that
takes
us
to
reports
from
Council
committees.
Are
there
any
reports
from
Council
committees
seeing
none
that
takes
us
to
our
first
period
of
public
comment?
May
I
see
a
show
of
hands
and
Chambers
as
to
how
many
would
like
to
make
a
public
comment.
I'm
seeing
one
Mr,
two
Mr
Lucas.
Could
you
extend
the
invitation
on
Zoom?
Please.
K
N
Thanks,
my
name
is
five
minutes.
Sorry,
my
name
is
Greg
Alexander
back
in
2019
two
years
before
you
all
put
me
on
the
traffic
commission,
I
saw
in
the
newspaper.
The
man
was
arrested
for
walking
in
the
street
on
Bloomfield
Road
I
happen
to
know
the
sidewalk
was
closed
on
both
sides
of
the
street.
He
had
no
choice
but
to
walk
in
the
road.
N
In
my
mind,
I'd
received
a
complaint
from
that
man.
From
the
moment
I
read
about
it,
I
dropped
everything
I
was
supposed
to
do
today
and
I
crafted
a
plight,
but
emotionally
wrenching
email
to
the
engineer
who
supervised
the
design
of
The
Detour.
N
I'm
superlative
at
it
I'm
dedicated
to
it
every
moment,
I'm
outside
I'm,
looking
for
people
who
are
struggling
with
transportation
for
council
member,
although
to
say
in
as
many
words
that
I'm
unable
to
perform
that
duty
is
personally
insulting
and
absurdly
counter
factual
I
received
complaints
from
Elm
Heights
residents.
For
example,
I
think
complaints
about
Atwater
are
extremely
important.
D
N
The
remaining
time
will
suffice.
Okay,
thank
you.
I
do
receive
complaints
from
Elm
Heights
residents,
for
example,
I
I,
think
complaints
about
Atwater
are
extremely
important.
They
know
that
I
listen
to
their
club,
they're
just
mad.
That
I
want
to
acknowledge
that
their
opinions
are
more
important
than
everyone
else
and
I
never
will
because
face
it.
Club
politics
is
not
as
important
as
Traffic
Safety,
certainly
not
to
me.
You
know:
I
have
said
stupid
things
on
social
media
for
30
years.
I
was
a
pioneer
of
that.
It's
so
valuable
to
me.
N
People
respond
and
correct
my
mistake
or
even
ridiculed
me
for
it,
and
then
everyone
who
saw
my
stupidity
sees
the
correction
as
well.
I
love
it
whether
I
make
a
friend
or
an
enemy
I
learned
so
much
from
that
process.
Well,
some
people
are
probably
going
to
speak
tonight
to
draw
your
attention
to
some
stupid
things.
I
said
and
really
I
only
want
to
respond
to
one
of
them.
Chuck
Livingston
has
accused
me
of
making
factual
errors.
I
love
him
for
doing
that.
I
do
I,
make
mistakes
and
I
want
truth.
N
That's
my
value
he
doesn't
have
to.
Like
me,
but
we're
on
the
same
side
at
the
end
of
the
day,
I
understand
if
the
council
doesn't
like
me,
if
you're
having
an
up
and
down
vote
on
whether
you
want
to
be
associated
with
me,
I'd
anticipate
unanimous
opposition,
but
council
member
always
motion
alleges
that
I
can't
receive
complaints
and
turn
them
into
recommendations
to
council.
That's
hogwash!
You
guys
know
it.
If
council
member
Alo
offers
no
substantive
criticism
of
my
conduct
as
a
traffic
commissioner,
then
his
criticism
is
insubstantive
thanks.
D
O
Okay,
can
you
guys
hear
me?
Yes,
thank
you,
okay!
Yes,
this
is
Carolyn
Wilder!
Sorry,
it's
not
letting
me
put
on
the
video,
but
I
just
wanted
to
come
in
and
say
I'm
a
student
from
Indiana
University
I'm
actually
attending
this
meeting
for
my
intro
to
American
politics,
class
and
I.
Just
kind
of
wanted
to
ask
you
guys,
because
my
project
is
over
Civic
engagement
and
how
we,
as
students
at
IU,
would
be
able
to
kind
of
get
involved
with
the
city
of
Bloomington,
like
the
city
council.
O
Basically,
just
if
we
were
to
have
like
a
Civic
engagement
thing,
we
want
to
talk
to
you.
Would
it
be
okay
for
any
of
our
students
to
even
form
a
committee
or
group
and
just
kind
of
come
to
a
city
council
meeting
or
hop
on
Zoom,
to
bring
this
to
your
guys's
attention.
D
O
Okay,
I'm
sorry
I
was
unaware
of
that.
This
was
kind
of
a
last
minute
thing.
I
was
speaking
to
with
my
professor,
so
I
apologize
for
the
interruption.
O
D
P
Hello,
my
name
is
Travis
Washington
I
live
in
Bloomington
Indiana.
My
goal
is
to
plant
over
a
hundred
trees,
April
29,
2023
and
I
would
like
to
invite
all
the
members
of
the
chamber.
My
main
goal
is
to
bring
people
together
whether
you're
a
Muslim
Jewish,
atheist,
Buddhist,
Christian
or
Hindu.
My
main
goal
is
to
show
the
whole
community
of
people
who
have
black
Latino
Asian
white
Arab
that
we
can
all
get
along
whether
you're
Democrat
Republican.
It
really
doesn't
matter.
P
That's
why
I'm
inviting
every
single
city
council
member
here
is
looking
pass
these
up
or
can
I,
not
okay,
I'll
give
it
to
you
because
I
know,
look
I,
see
it
on
TV
I,
don't
want
to
get
tased
today.
That's
not
how
I
want
to
go
viral,
but
to
me
I'm
a
bit
I
love
my
granny
and
Grandma
very
much
and
they
always
play
Louis
arm
Louis
Armstrong,
that's
a
wonderful
world!
P
This
is
a
chance
for
all
of
us
to
come
together
and
say
we
love
each
other,
I
mean
whatever
I'm
like
ranting
on
and
on,
but
thank
you
all
for
giving
me
this
time.
I'm
going
to
hand
you
this
form,
thank
you
have
a
good
one,
and
my
name
is
Travis.
Washington
excuse
the
My
Generation
only
types
we
don't
write
anymore.
D
Thank
you,
Mr
Washington.
So
do
we
have
anyone
else
on
Zoom
Mr
Lucas
than
anyone
else
here
in
Chambers
I'm,
not
seeing
any
okay?
Okay!
Thank
you.
That
concludes
our
first
period
of
two
periods
of
public
comment
that
takes
us
to
appointments
to
boards
and
commissions.
I
know
that
several
I
believe
several
committees
have
actually
been
working
on
appointments.
G
Want
to
recall
for
the
council
that
on
March
29th,
a
motion
was
introduced
to
remove
Luke
Swain
from
the
environmental
commission
for
non-attendance,
but
final
action
on
the
motion
was
postponed
to
tonight's
meeting.
Thank
you.
So
I
know
that
Council
staff
contacted
or
tried
to
contact
Mr
Swain,
for
you
know
any
feedback
you
may
have
and
I
believe
no
response
was
received.
K
K
D
D
L
F
G
L
H
A
Appropriation
ordinance
2302
to
specially
appropriate
funds
from
the
general
fund
for
construction
of
the
trades,
District
tech
center
and
Associated
construction
Management
Services.
The
synopsis
is
as
follows:
this
ordinance
appropriates
three
million
sixty
one
thousand
three
hundred
ninety
one
dollars
from
the
general
fund
to
help
pay
for
construction
of
the
trades,
District
tech
center
and
Associated
construction,
Management
Services
secured
by
the
dimension
Mill.
D
Q
Q
Bdc
president
Jim
Pearl,
representing
the
city's
Eda
Grant
co-recipient
and
members
of
our
design
team
at
Studio
access
representatives
of
the
city
Administration
are
here
also
tonight
we
don't
plan
to
do
a
full
repeat
of
last
week's
presentation
unless,
of
course,
the
city
council
wants
us
to
rather
I'd
just
like
to
summarize
some
of
the
key
supporting
Arguments
for
this
appropriation.
The
new
tech
center
will
solidify
the
trace
District
as
a
major
Innovation
Hub
for
bloomington's
for
the
Bloomington
regions,
emerging
Tech,
focused
economy.
Q
It
will
accelerate
new
business
startups
and
growth
stage
companies
and
ultimately
create
new
good,
paying
jobs
that
our
Citizens
need.
Bloomington,
despite
its
Economic
Development
and
entrepreneurial
strengths,
has
underlying
weaknesses.
Bloomington's
Tech
sector
startup
is
critically
important
to
creating
higher
wage
opportunities
for
its
residents
and
future
proofing.
The
city's
economic
health.
Q
Third
Bloomington
has
several
Economic
Development
and
entrepreneur
assets,
but
we
lack
resources
focused
on
Tech,
commercialization
and
integrated
support
for
post-incubation
startups.
The
tech
center
will
Target
new
and
existing
resources
to
mature
tech
companies
that
progressed
beyond
the
incubation
phase
and
have
demonstrated
commercial
viability.
Q
Fourth,
project
Partners
from
IU,
Innovation
and
commercialization
office
in
the
Ivy
Tech
Gail
and
Bill
Cook
Center
for
entrepreneurship,
have
committed
to
deliver
in-kind,
Services
in-kind,
Consulting
and
advisor
Services.
The
mill
successful
operating
team
is
what
position
to
provide
program,
development
and
Operational
Support
for
the
tech
center,
ensuring
that
services
are
economically
efficient
and
complement
the
Mill's
existing
entrepreneurial
programming,
the
most
successful
operating
team
as
well,
positioned
or
provide
program,
development
and
Operational
Support
for
the
tech
center,
ensuring
the
services
are
economic.
Oh
sorry,
it's
already
said
that
part.
Q
The
time
is
right
for
this
investment,
together
with
Indiana
University's
renewed
focus
on
driving
Regional
economic
development
in
the
transformational,
creating
helpful
incentives
and
producing
semiconductors
in
science
act.
The
chips
act
related
Investments
at
nswc,
crane,
Westgate,
bloomington's,
trades
district
is
poised
to
become
a
dynamic
hub
for
collaboration
and
acceleration
for
the
Region's
Innovation
clusters
and
finally,
Leverage
The
leveraging
the
three
and
a
half
million
dollar
Grant
enables
the
city
to
build
a
new
eight
and
a
half
million
dollar
Leed
certified
or
lead
silver
league
Class
A
office
building
for
five
million
dollars.
Q
J
R
J
Miss
Gillan,
thank
you.
I
wanted
to
address
you
appropriately,
so
I
I'd,
just
like
to
get
a
basics
of
the
I'm
trying
to
understand
the
question:
why
didn't
the
administration
choose
to
take
all
the
money
from
the
Tiff
doing
so
would
have
precluded
the
need
to
come
before
us
to
get
approval
for
creed
money.
This
is
something
the
administration
does
on
the
regular.
A
lot
of
money
goes
to
the
RDC.
Why
not
get
all
the
dollars
from
the
other?
J
Can
you
tell
us,
what's
in
the
Tiff
like
what
how
much
I
don't
even
know
where
to
start
I'm,
not
sure
if
you
can
answer
my
questions,
how
much
money
is
in
the
Tiff
right
now,
four,
three
nine.
R
Well,
in
terms
of
Tiff
I
believe
mayor
Hamilton
mentioned
that
it's
right,
around
26
million
is
our
ending
balance
of
December
31st,
2022.
and.
J
J
R
That
is
not
my
call
and
I
really
don't
know
the
answer
to
that.
Okay,.
J
R
We
can
have
mayor,
Hamilton
and
other
administrators
answer
that
question.
Okay,.
J
Okay,
well
I.
J
J
R
J
Okay,
well,
it's
at
least
more
than
a
one-year
project
yeah.
So,
finally,
can
you
at
least
give
us
a
sense
of
what
is
the
typical
Revenue
that
comes
in
to
the
Tiff
over
say
the
past
five
years
on
average
per
year?
How
much
revenue
is
coming
into
the
Tiff.
J
Okay
well
I
asked
for
this.
At
the
meeting
on
April
4th
Tuesday
I
sent
an
email
to
Mr
Underwood
on
Wednesday.
The
only
response
I
got
was
The
Memo
from
the
mayor
dated
yesterday,
which
was
less
than
48
hours
notice
before
our
meeting
and
so
I
guess
what
I'm
wondering
is
I'm,
not
sure
whether
you
can
answer
somebody
else.
When
were
we
going
to
get
that
information,
and
why
does
humidation
not
think
that
that's
relevant
to
a
decision
like
this
tonight.
R
That
I
do
not
have
the
answer
for
I'm.
Sorry,
we
I
will
just
say
that
the
Tiff
has
a
lot
of
projects
going
on
multiple
projects
going
on
there's
a
number
of
commitments,
and
we
I
actually
have
been
working
on
a
list
of
just
like
you
requested
earlier,
where
all
of
our
money
is
going
for
Tiff
and
that.
J
J
D
If
not
I'll
take
a
turn,
Ms
Gilliland
I'm
reading
over
the
memo
from
the
mayor
and
in
particular
question
two:
how
can
we
track
the
use
of
former
Creed
funds
now
residing
in
the
general
fund
and
I've?
Read
that
paragraph
probably
three
or
four
times
now,
and
it
still
seems
to
me
that
I'm
still
not
clear
on
the
answer
and
so
I
was
wondering
if
you
could
comment
on
that,
because
it
still
doesn't
sound
like
those
monies
will
be
accounted
for
separately.
R
D
R
J
The
mayor
writes
that
they
that
the
administration
does
not
feel
a
prudent
further
to
restrict
the
use
of
those
funds,
and
they
say
he
says
it
twice.
He
doesn't
believe
that
the
money
should
be
restricted
to
the
geographic
area
of
the
Creed.
I
mean
I
feel
like
I'm
asking
the
mayor
question
and
the
mayor's
not
here-
and
this
is
the
question
I-
wouldn't
have
asked
him
before,
but
he
should
be
here
during
this
moment
to
talk
about
it.
So
I'm,
frustrated
and
I
wish
that
you
could
give
me
a
useful
answer.
J
Ms,
Gildan,
but
I
know
you
can't
so
I'm
going
to
ask
the
question
to
the
person
who's.
Not
here.
If
you
want
to
answer
it,
you
can
but
I
know
you
don't
have
an
answer.
S
Let
me
see
if
I
can
answer
that
one
so
Alex
Riley
director
of
economic,
sustainable
development,
so
you
know
I,
think
I,
believe
you
met
with
the
mayor
and
I
believe
in
the
course
of
that
discussion
it
it.
S
Maybe
it
was
unclear
at
the
time-
and
maybe
you
have
a
better
understanding
but
I
want
to
just
clarify
that
for
the
whole
Council
of
how
the
money
is
raised
and
where
it
would
go
otherwise
and
therefore
you
know
why
it
benefits
the
entire
city
right.
So,
unlike
a
business
improvement
district
where
you
have
businesses
paying
into
a
fund
and
then
expecting
the
benefit
of
that
fund
to
come
to
accrue
back
to
them
in
the
case
of
Creed,
these
are
monies
that
we
would
have
not
gotten.
S
S
You
know
once
it's
been
kind
of
retired
as
a
district,
so
we
really
should
be
thinking
about
Creeds,
especially
now
that
the
districts
have
retired
as
being
benefits
the
whole
city
benefits
we
would
have
not
ever
gotten
had
it
actually
not
been
for
mayor
Fernandez
who's
established
the
first
Creed,
so
that
I
just
want
to
make
sure
everybody
understands
that
Dynamic.
It's
not
the
kind
of
you
know.
A
business
is
not
paid
into
it.
J
I'm
not
sure
where
you
got
your
definition
here,
but
I
I
was
here
in
2004
when
the
Creed
was
updated.
It
was
the
year
after
it
was
introduced,
and
I
can
assure
you
that
that
is
not
why
I
voted
for
it,
especially
as
a
representative
of
the
district
where
the
Creed
exists.
I
voted
for
it
because
I
expected
the
money
to
be
spent
in
the
area
where
the
that
that
was
affected
and.
S
It
was
during
the
time
of
the
existence
of
the
Creed.
The
Creed
is
now
no
longer
existing.
The
the
bidac
has
disbanded.
The
Creed
has
terminated,
it
expired.
The
boundary
is
technically
no
longer
there
as
a
district,
and
so
what
we
have
left
is
a
general
sense
that
if
there
are
challenges
in
the
downtown,
certainly
that's
an
area
that
that
can
be
invested
in,
and
this
is
one
of
those
examples.
S
I
mean
it's
broadly
the
kind
of
downtown,
but
but
really
it's
not
tied
to
a
geographic
footprint
as
it
was
when
it
was
established
and
existed
as
a
district.
When
did
the
district
expire?
We
had
two
districts,
one
expired
in
2019,
which
was
the
Thompson
Creed
and
then
I
believe
this
one
was
2022..
So.
S
Well,
two
things
money
was
spent
within
the
district
in
both
districts
along
you
know,
significant
amounts
were
spent
in
both
along
the
way
when
that
District
expires.
There
are
as
as
noted,
Ms
Gillan
notice.
We
we
will
be
tracking
those
monies
and
making
sure
that
we
have
the
ability
to
understand
where
that
those
monies
are
spent
moving
forward
and
separately.
There
is
no.
The
administration
itself
cannot
appropriate
that
money
without
City
Council,
just
like
tonight,
would
be
through
an
appropriation
ordinance.
J
J
Listen
there's
what
there
were
17
million
dollars.
There
were
10
million
dollars
in
the
downtown
Creed
you're,
asking
for
3
million.
Now
for
this
building,
there's
seven
million
left,
which
you,
the
Administration,
has
moved
out
of
the
separate
fund,
but
it
says
it's
going
to
track
it,
but
it
believes
that
it
should
be
able
to
spend
on
anything
at
once.
Well,
in
that
15
years
that
it
existed,
the
tax
was
coming
in.
Was
that
also
true,
or
was
that
money
only
spent
in
the
area
where
the
money
was
collected?
J
S
The
downtown
Creed-
yes,
yes,
I,
can
certainly
speak
from
personal
experience.
Yes,
one
of
the
first
things
that
I
did
when
I
joined
the
city
was
a
and
in
fact
we
brought
it
to
the
council.
You
were
there
yeah,
remember
this,
that
it
was
a
reimbursement
through
Creed
funds
to
envisage
the
time
they
were
called
in
the
village.
They
were
building
out
their
facilities
at
the
showers
at
the
at
the
you
know,
the
Fountain
Square
Mall
right.
S
J
S
We
looked
at
proposals
and,
to
the
extent
that
they
were
valid
and
and
aligned
with
the
intent
of
the
Creed.
We
we
did
that.
That's
what
we
did
in
2017
there
weren't
a
lot
of
proposals
that
came
to
our
to
our
to
the
Forefront
well,
at
least
during
my
tenure
I
can't
really
speak
to
what
was
not
done
prior
to
my
joining
the
city.
This
is
a
perfect
example
of
the
of
an
expenditure
that
is
aligned
with
the
original
intent
of
the
Creed.
T
Sandberg
for
the
future
reference
of
what
that
District
was.
Can
you
give
us
the
an
idea
of
the
boundaries
of
where
these
dollars
that
were
contributing
to
the
Creed?
However,
it
was
passed
through
from
you
know:
State
return.
What
are
the
boundaries?
What
would
have
been
the
recipients?
What
are
the
geographic
boundaries
of
who
should
perhaps
have
been
the
recipient
of
this
money
before
it
expired
and
got
put
back
into
the
general
fund,
so.
S
Again,
there
are
two
Crete
districts.
The
exhibit
that's
up
is
the
Thompson,
as
I
mentioned
last
time.
That's
a
site-specific
Creed
that
was
largely
or
you
know,
the
the
around
the
building
that
was
the
Thompson
Factory
building.
So
and
then
this
is
the
downtown
Creed.
You
can
see
it
on
the
map
there.
So
if
it's
hard
to
read
for
you,
it's
roughly
just
south
of
11th
down
to
about
second
and
then
from
Morton,
and
then
it
kind
of
largely
tracks
with
what
is
that
Washington
before
it
cuts
in
around
the
square.
T
S
No,
what
the
sales
retail
tax
that
that
would
have
gone
to
the
state
did
go
to
the
state
and
then,
as
as
a
because
the
Creed
District
was
established
each
year,
we
were
able
to
recoup
a
certain
amount
of
money
back
above
the
Baseline
increment
that
was
established
when
the
Creed
was
established.
So
the
so
year
one
of
the
Creed
had
a
certain
amount
of
of
that
tax
revenue
going
up
to
the
state.
That
was
the
foundation.
S
Anything
above
that
could
come
back
down
to
us
above
that
Foundation
up
to
and
I
think
for
the
downtown
Crete.
It
was
750
000.
So
there
was
an
annual
cap,
so
you
couldn't
get
more
than
750
a
year,
and
so
that
started
to
come
back
down.
We
hit
the
cap
relatively
soon
and
three
or
four
years
into
the
Creed,
and
then
we
were
getting
that
money
down.
F
Thank
you.
Do
you
recall
Mr
Crowley,
how
much
was
spent
from
the
downtown
Crete
over
its
15-year
duration.
S
Do
the
math
I
don't
know
Cheryl,
do
you
happen
to
have
that
number
off
the
top
of
your
head.
R
I,
do
not
have
that
number
immediately
in
front
of
me,
but
we
can
provide
that
to
council.
S
I
mean
you
know:
if
you
want
a
rough
number,
I
think
it's
probably
in
the
million
dollar
range.
If
I
mean
we're
talking,
you
know
we
can
do
the
math,
probably
pretty
quickly
to
figure
out
what
that
cumulative
cap
looks
like.
But
that's
you
know
again.
This
goes
back
to
2004,
so
we
so
we
have
to
just
sort
of
tally
that.
T
We're
the
downtown
Merchants,
who
are
contributing
to
this
Creed
of
accrual
of
of
money,
were
they
ever
consulted
as
to
what
kind
of
things
could
benefit
them
throughout
the
history
of
the
screen
before
it
expired?
Now,
it's
back
in
the
general
fund.
S
So
again,
to
be
clear:
they
were
not
contributing
to
the
Creed,
they
were,
the
state
was
contributing
to
the
Creed
and
I
think
you
know
this
program
was
out
there.
People
were
aware
of
it.
Certainly
people
took
advantage
of
it
along
the
way.
We
had
at
least
several
businesses
that
I'm
in
recent
memory,
but
there
were
a
number
of
them,
so
people
were
aware
of
it.
I
don't
know
to
what
degree
so
so
I
would
say.
Yes,
generally
I
can't
speak
to
everybody
all.
J
J
H
It's
not
all
that
information
included
in
our
packet
materials
from
last
week,
specifically
the
Exhibit
C
of
appropriation,
ordinance
2302,
which
was
a
resolution
23-so1
in
front
of
the
bdac
for
its
dissolution.
There's
a
list
of
expenditures,
I
believe
of
what
came
out
of
the
Creed
over
time.
Specific
figures.
S
J
I
mean
I'm,
asking
I
feel
like
incredulous,
because
on
April
4th
I
I
wanted
to
ask
somebody
these
questions.
I
was
told
we'd
get
answers,
but
there
was
no
one
present
on
April
4th
to
answer
accounting
questions
and
now
I'm
being
told
by
the
administration.
Well,
we
can
get
you
that
stuff,
but
you
want
the
vote
now.
You
want
us
to
vote
now
on
something
when
we
don't
have
complete
information
to
understand
why
you
made
the
decisions
you
made.
S
So
if
that
was
a
question,
I
mean
I.
Think
at
the
last
meeting
you
ask
a
very
specific
question
right.
There
were
two
questions
and
they
were
addressed
in
the
memo
and
response.
One
question
was
why
the
Tiff,
or
why
sorry,
why
Creed
over
the
Tiff?
That
was
question
number
one
right
and
the
second
question
was
I.
Think
from
someone
else
was:
is
it
possible
to
track
the
expenditures
of
this
reverted
fund
within
the
general
fund?
Those
are
the
two
questions
that
were
specifically
asked.
S
H
I
just
wanted
to
follow
up
on
the
point
of
information.
I
was
requesting
which,
which
is
looking
at
page
139
140
of
last
week's
packet.
H
The
resolution
that
was
in
front
of
the
Bloomington
Industrial
Development
advisory
commission
there's
a
list
under
one
of
the,
whereas
Clauses
things
that
list,
for
instance,
Indiana
Enterprise,
Center
and
development,
including
the
demolition
of
building
1
1.95
million
that
sites
various
resolutions,
Council
resolutions,
renovation
of
IEC
Space
by
cook
Pharmaca
for
expansion
of
his
manufacturing
facilities,
Etc
4.77
million
there's
a
list
with
specific
dollar
figures
for
a
variety
of
projects.
Over
time
that
came
from
funds
collected
in
the
Creed
districts.
Is
that
exhaustive?
Is
that.
S
That's
just
that
you
know
I'm
glad
you
pointed
out
that's
a
summary
of
sort
of
high-level
project
expenditures
and
underlying
that
you
know,
is
a
new
world
system
report,
which
is
our
accounting
system
that
will
detail
the
Sub
sub
portions
of
those
that
roll
up
into
those
dollar
amounts.
We
just
don't.
H
S
It
was
prepared
by
legal
but
I,
believe
it
was
done
with
cooperation
from
the
controller's
office
and
and
should
be
exhausted.
G
So
I
I
I'm,
following
up
on
the
request
that
I
had
about
separate
accounting
for
the
Creed
funds
within
the
general
fund,
I
mean
most
accounting
systems
do
allow
for
sub-accounting.
But
from
the
responses
that
we
received
in
our
packet,
addendum
and
via
email
yesterday,
it
seems
like
there
will
not
be
any
sub-accounting
it'll
just
be
you
know.
If
there
are
big
expenditures,
then
we'll
come
to
council.
S
Well,
let
me
let
if
Miss
Gilliland
can
speak
to
the
actual
mechanics
of
the
how
the
accounting
system
works.
So
Cheryl
are
you
there.
R
Yes,
we
can
easily
track
all
of
the
expenditures
within
the
general
fund
where
the
the
funds
will
be
placed
or
is
placed
without
creating
a
new
fund.
It's
it'll
be
quite
simple
to
track
that,
and
we
can
give
you
we
can
run
reports
and
and
show
you
exactly
what
has
been
spent
as
we
go
along.
G
Thank
you
for
that.
Just
to
follow
up.
Can
we
so
there's
a
lot
of
mention
in
in
the
meeting
tonight
and
in
previous
meetings
as
well
about
oh
there's,
a
report
on
that?
It's
on
the
be
clear
portal
or
it's
in
this
and
that
system
etc.
Those
are
not
that
easy
to
use
and
are
not
evident
to
council
members
to
to
check
so
what
I
would
prefer
is
an
actual
report.
Every
time
you
know
like
a
biannual
or
quarterly
report
of
when
how
the
funds
are
spent
can
can
we
get
that.
G
T
Yes,
well
tonight
we
are
being
asked
to
allocate
a
portion
of
this
to
the
the
new
tech
center
if
the
remainder
of
the
Tiff
that's
been
rolled
into
the
general
fund.
Now,
is
it
fair
for
us
to
ask
if
the
Administration
has
other
plans
for
those
dollars
that
we
might
know
about,
or
is
that
just
you
know
as
it
comes
as
somebody
makes
a
proposal?
Oh,
we
want
to
use
it
for
this.
S
T
D
Additional
questions,
if
not
I'll,
take
a
turn.
Okay,
this
question
is
for
Miss
Gilliland.
It's
going
to
sound
suspiciously
like
the
question.
I've
already
asked
you
and
that's
because
it
is
I
want
to
follow
up
on
something
you
just
said
in
response
to
council
member
Sandberg
and
council
member
Piedmont
Smith,
you
said
that
you
can
certainly
indicate
what
funds
have
been
spent
on
that
are
coming
out
of
the
general
fund
and
I.
Understand
that
what
I'm
asking
you
is,
can
you
also
tell
us
the
source
of
those
funds?
D
R
D
D
D
E
It's
a
question
everything
we've
heard
so
moving
forward
for
every
Appropriations
ordinance,
that's
using
Tiff
funds.
There
will
be
a
report
accompanying
that
request
with
remaining
funds
where
the
resources
came
from
and
the
expenditures
is
that
what
I'm
hearing
moving
forward,
because
we
were
asking
about
the.
S
I
mean
I
think
it
would
be
prudent
for
any
future
use,
certainly
to
say:
okay,
here's
the
balance
right
here,
here's
the
balance,
here's
what
we
want
to
spend
it
to
on,
and
therefore
here's
the
the
net
remaining
balance
and
I.
You
know
I
think
and
then,
as
we
did
in
this
most
recent
appropriation
ordinance
even
summarizing,
maybe
the
his
the
history
from
this
moment
you
know
to
the
through
the
future
allocations
of
those
monies,
so
I
think
that
it
would
be
a
good
policy
I
think
for
people
to
do
that
and
for
the
council.
E
I
agree:
we
know
the
amount
we
know
what's
being
requested.
We
know,
what's
going
to
be
remaining,
we've
heard
it
can
be
tracked,
I've
heard
Miss
Gilliland
say
we
can
even
do
some
itemized
stuff
I
think
it
would
have
been
really
nice.
I
agree
with
some
of
my
colleagues.
We'd
have
had
all
this
before,
but
I,
don't
know
how
we
would
have
known
that,
but
the
point
I'm
trying
to
make
is
moving
forward.
E
S
I
would
also
point
out
that
this
is
this
is
kind
of
a
it's
an
interesting
moment,
because
every
what
what
what
the
history
is
is
very
different
because
it's
been
sort
of
un
tethered
from
the
decree
District.
So
what's
what
the
future
process
and
policy
can
really
I?
Think
do
that
clearly,
and
and
again
we
can
we,
we
did
it
retroactively
on
the
Creed
districts
through
the
ordinance,
whereas
Clauses,
but
but
this
is
an
interesting
moment
that
allows
us
to
kind
of
make
that
part
of
the
process
moving
forward.
Okay,.
E
E
I
think
that'll
stop
a
bunch
of
misunderstandings
moving
forward,
so
if
that
could
be
reported-
and
so
you
know,
while
it's
in
in
force,
we
do
this,
but
now
does
it
expire
that
broadens
it
or
whatever
and
make
and
make
sure
we
know
that
when
we've
been
asked
to
approve
funds,
that
goes
against
maybe
some
of
our
previous
thinking,
if
that
makes
it
yeah
some
of
us.
So
that's
that's
all
I'm
asking
so
thank
you.
D
Thank
you.
Let's
get
a
public
comment
now,
while
Mr
Lucas
extends
the
invitation
on
Zoom,
let's
see
a
show
of
hands
and
Chambers
of
who
would
like
to
order
or
offer
public
comment
I'm
seeing
one
Mr
Lucas.
K
Yes,
if
they're
members
of
the
public
that
would
like
to
comment
on
this
appropriation
ordinance,
please
let
us
know
by
raising
your
hand
in
Zoom,
you
can
do
that
by
clicking
on
the
reactions,
tab
or
the
more
tab
in
your
control
bar.
You
can
also
send
the
meeting
host
a
chat
to.
Let
us
know
you'd
like
to
speak.
V
U
Our
local
economy,
our
national
and
local
economies,
have
shifted
significantly
over
time.
The
major
local
employers
that
have
come
and
gone
the
pandemic
hit
is
hard.
This
is
a
really
unique
time
in
our
community.
National
and
Statewide
opportunities
include
U.S
chips
and
science
act
and
India.
Already.
U
This
is
about
building
an
employment
and
Innovation
ecosystem
to
serve
our
neighbors
now
and
into
the
future.
The
bedc
requester
support
for
this
appropriation
and
thank
you
for
your
consideration.
B
Good
evening
Council,
this
is
Christopher
mg
from
the
greater
Bloomington
Chamber
of
Commerce
I
wasn't
planning
on
speaking
tonight,
but
I
just
wanted
to
reiterate
a
few
of
the
points
that
Eric
spoonmore,
the
president
CEO
of
the
chamber
said
last
week.
We
do
support
using
Creed
funds
for
this
project.
This
is
an
investment
in
the
trades
district
for
a
tech
center
and
right
now
the
tech
center
is,
is
the
mill
in
a
parking
garage
and
I
think
it
needs
this
investment
to
sort
of
push
this
District
to
where
I
think
it
should
be.
B
I
also
want
to
say,
I
appreciate
the
due
diligence
of
this
Council
on
tracking
these
funds.
I
think
they
are
important
that
we
use
them
for
these
sort
of
Economic
Development
projects
that
will
end
up
benefiting
the
the
Creed
district
and
using
some
of
the
other
funds
for
specific
projects
within
that
District.
So
we
we
can
do
sort
of
both
in
this
and
it's
going
to
take
due
diligence
moving
forward
that
those
funds
are
used
for
appropriate
projects.
But
this
I
believe
the
tech
center
is
an
appropriate
project
for
Creed
funds
and
I.
D
J
J
J
Just
just
a
handful
of
things,
the
biggest
one
was
4.77
million
in
2005
to
08
for
Cook
pharmacokin
to
incentivize
cook
Pharmaca.
They
did
a
pretty
good
job
of
creating
jobs
with
that
money
great
and
it
was
in.
If
actually
it
wasn't,
if
that's
in
the
the
Thompson
Creed
such
as
in
I,
mean
that's,
there's
is
there
17
million
dollars
together
in
the
two,
then
that
money
came
from
the
Thompson
Creed
renovation
of
Fountain
Square
Mall,
736
thousand
dollars
the
Indiana
Enterprise
Center
for
demolition
of
the
old
RCA
building,
1.95
million?
J
J
J
I
mean
I'm,
pretty
sure
that
I'm,
not
the
only
person
here
whose
ideas
about
how
we
could
spend
that
money
and
I
have
floated
the
idea
in
recent
weeks
of
a
downtown
circulator
which
I'm
planning
to
bring
as
a
resolution.
J
We
spent
some
of
it.
There's
still
10
million
dollars.
Left
I
wouldn't
be
complaining
here.
If
the
administration
hadn't
brought
a
request
for
creed
money
to
build
the
police
station
at
the
last
minute,
the
mayor
took
that
potential
off
the
table
that
they
were
going
to
solicit
Creed
funds
in
order
to
finish
the
police
station.
But
it's
a
lot
of
things.
It's
a
lot
of
important
things,
but
Public
Safety
is
not
Economic
Development,
not
in
the
they
understand.
I
mean
there
were.
J
These
are
funds
specifically
for
economic
development
and
for
20
years
I've
been
idly
wondering
about
it,
and
I
should
have
been
more
attentive,
because
this
is
exactly
the
outcome
that
I
worried
about
that.
The
administration
is,
is
rope-a-doping
us
they're,
putting
the
money
into
the
general
fund,
they're
daring
us
to
keep
track
of
it.
Yes,
they're
gonna,
they're,
gonna
track
it,
but
I
mean
why
not
keep
it
in
the
fund.
Why
close
the
fund?
J
J
We
do
not
feel
it
prudent
further
to
restrict
the
use
of
those
funds.
Beyond
state
requirements,
particularly
when
Council
will
already
be
able
to
see
and
approve
their
appropriation,
but
look
how
difficult
it
was
for
for
us
to
remember
there's
a
reason
that
there's
no
Creed
report,
because
it
would
have
been
empty
for
year
after
year.
J
J
This
is
not
does
not
build
confidence
in
the
administration,
but
then
I'm
used
to
that
I
asked
questions
on
April
4th
reasonable
questions.
Had
there
been
somebody
in
the
room
to
answer
them
from
the
controller's
office,
some
of
this
might
have
been
avoided.
I
would
have
been
able
to
vote
for
for
this
project
last
week,
but
instead
the
mayor
comes
in
early
to
report.
Doesn't
even
get
the
idea
that
you're
supposed
to
wait
until
the
item
on
the
agenda
is
there
he's
supposed
to
speak
to
it?
J
Then
I
guess
it's
not
convenient
for
him
because
he's
not
here,
and
he
leaves
it
to
other
people,
including
Mr
Crowley,
who
shouldn't
have
to
answer
for
the
mayor
and
Ms
Gilliland,
who
isn't
it
not
equipped
to
answer
the
questions?
The
reasonable
questions
that
I
had
the
trades
District
garage,
the
selling
point
for
the
reason
I
voted
for
a
parking
garage
because
I'm
not
a
big
fan
but
I
voted
for
it
because
it
makes
sense
if
the
entire
trades
District
gets
built
out.
J
You
don't
want
structured
parking
to
it's
going
to
cost
more,
to
put
structured
parking
in
each
building
than
to
put
it
in
one
building.
But
one
another
thing
I'd
like
to
see
when
we're
doing
accounting
is
how
much
Park
how
much
has
parking
been
used
and
how
much
are
we
paying
to
carry
the
cost
of
the
trades
District
while
we're
waiting
for
the
tradition
to
get
built
out?
And
yes,
the
taste's
deal
fell
through,
but
now
we're
having
to
build
a
building
in
order
to
attract
business?
J
Is
there
going
to
be
other
business
coming,
I
believe
there
will
be,
but
there's
a
cost
to
carrying
that
garage.
Did
it
have
to
be
built
when
it
was
built?
Could
it
have
waited
a
couple
years?
Could
we
have
saved
taxpayer
money
in
the
short
term?
Well,
I!
Guess
we're
never
going
to
find
that
out
so
I'm
a
little
pissed
I
think
it's
pretty
clear.
I
support
this
project
I!
Think
it's
a
good
idea,
but
like
with
the
the
time
when
cook
came
to
us
asking
for
payment
in
lieu
of
taxes.
J
After
we
know
their
involvement
with
annexation,
I
couldn't
vote
for
them
and
I
couldn't
vote
against
it,
and
so
I
abstained
I'm
going
to
abstain
tonight
because
I
agree
with
the
purposes
of
it,
but
I
do
not
agree
in
any
way
with
the
Cavalier
way
that
the
mayor
and
I'll
put
it
squarely
on
his
shoulders.
Thinks
about
this
money
and
the
way
that
he's
instructed
his
staff
to
respond
to
questions.
J
I
am
used
to
getting
answers
from
the
Administration
less
than
48
hours,
sometimes
the
afternoon
of
a
meeting
where
we
asked
for
it
a
week
ago
and
I
hope
that
any
future
Administration
is
more
responsive
because
it
we
have
it
in
our
power
to
continue
to
postpone
things
that
we
don't
get
information.
It's
not
enough
for
me
tonight
to
ask
that
the
my
colleagues
put
this
on
hold,
but
the
administration
deserves
it.
J
J
I
would
love
to
hear
some
feedback
from
my
colleagues
about
their
opinions
about
how
they
get
information
from
the
administration,
but
at
some
point
this
has
to
end,
and
if
we
don't
put
our
foot
our
feet
down
and
say,
you've
got
to
give
us
information
before
we
vote,
then
it
never
will
and
they're
going
to
keep
rope-a-doping
us.
Thank
you.
G
I
would
like
to
thank
Mr,
East
and
Mr
Fernandez
for
the
details
in
their
proposal
and
just
kind
of
bring
us
back
to
the
the
project
at
hand.
So
I
am
excited
about
this
project.
I
think
that
you
know,
after
a
long
delay
this
this
building
will
finally
really
activate
the
trades
District
I
I'm,
very
confident
in
the
leadership
moving
forward
and
I'm
particularly
pleased
with
the
Sustainable
Building
design
that
has
been
proposed
with
the
large
Windows
the
photo
the
photovoltaic
display.
G
You
know
for
solar
energy,
The,
Green,
Roof,
the
low
emitting
materials
all
leading
up
to
a
lead,
certification,
silver
or
better
I
do
wish
it
would
be
a
little
bit
taller
I
think
for
this.
This
position
in
the
city,
this
location,
a
taller
building,
would
have
been
preferred,
but
I
understand
the
financial
constraints
there.
G
So
I'm
very
much
in
support
of
the
building
I
will
be
voting
yes
on
this
appropriation.
I
do
share
some
of
the
concerns
expressed
by
my
colleagues
about
the
Creed
funds,
in
particular
the
fact
that
they
were
not
used
while
the
Creed
District
existed
to
the
degree
that
they
could
have
been
I.
G
Do
understand
that
it
was
actually
under
the
Hamilton
Administration
that
we
last
used
Crete
funds
for
envisage,
so
that
I
think
was
a
little
unclear
with
my
colleague's
statement,
but
yeah
yeah
I
think
that
there
were
missed
opportunities
and
that
could
have
been
more
proactive
leadership
in
using
these
funds
earlier.
G
So
that
is
disappointing
and
also
just
I
would
have
preferred
a
a
separate
fund
be
created
with
a
specific
oversight
legally,
but
I
understand
that
the
state
legislature
or
the
state
code
says
that
the
funds
have
to
be
in
the
general
fund
after
the
expiration
of
the
district.
So
I
just
want
to
keep
an
eye
on
them
and
make
sure
that
we
come
forward
with
good
projects
either
from
Council
Members
or
from
the
mayor's
Administration
or
or
from
people
in
the
community,
businesses
or
other
entities.
G
F
Thank
you,
I
have
a
great
deal
of
sympathy
for
council
member
vulner's
position
and
I
know
he's
spoken
about
this
quite
a
bit
in
terms
of
its
use
within
the
within
the
area
that
it
was
derived.
That
was
his
expectation.
He
ever
had
every
right
to
expect
that
I
also
have
sympathy
regarding
specifically
the
use
of
this
fund
or
various
funds,
for
instance
the
commitment
to
the
Creed
dollars
for
the
showers
purchase
and
renovation.
F
That
commitment
was
withdrawn
at
the
last
minute,
which
put
a
lot
of
questions
in
my
mind
as
to
how
there
would
be
adequate
funds
for
the
per
purpose
of
renovation.
I
understand
now.
My
understanding
now
is
that
there
are
not
adequate
funds
for
the
needs
of
Public
Safety
for
the
west
side
of
showers
and
the
administration
is
struggling
to
find
those
funds
or
to
not
fully
renovate
the
west
side
of
the
showers
for
the
purpose
that
it
aimed,
which
is
for
the
needs
of
Public
Safety,
very
important
purpose.
F
When
it
is
our
responsibility
to
oversee
these
decisions,
make
decisions
make
the
best
decisions
on
on
behalf
of
the
community,
so
I
take
umbrage
with
that.
I
agree
with
council,
member
volan
and
so
I'm
in
a
difficult
position,
because
I
agree
on
the
purpose
and
the
project
I
think
it's
good,
so
I'm
again
at
a
in
a
dilemma
where
I
would
like
to
support
it,
but
I'm
I'm
feeling
non-cooperative
right
now,
once
again,
with
the
the
way
the
administration
essentially
approaches
the
council
regarding
Appropriations,
like
this,
so
I'll.
Consider
my
colleagues
comments
now.
H
You
thank
you
councilman
Piedmont
Smith.
Thank
you
very
much
to
Mr
Fernandez
Mr
East
for
all
the
work
that's
gone
into
this
and
other
partners
like
the
BEC
and
City
staff.
Of
course,
I'm
happy
to
support
the
project.
I
think
this
is
a
a
reasonable
use
of
funds
that
were
collected
for
economic
development.
H
Revitalization,
that's
not
to
say,
I,
don't
have
some
sympathy
with
and
share
some
of
the
views
expressed
by
other
colleagues
about
tracking
money
and
and
transparency,
but
specifically
the
money
that
was
in
the
Creed
districts
has
been
transferred
to
the
general
fund
that
ship
has
sailed.
We
can't
change
that
with
a
vote
now.
H
One
way
the
other
I
also
know
that
I
don't
think
there
would
be
anything
prohibiting
the
establishment
of
a
new
fund
and
an
interfund
transfer
from
the
general
fund
to
that
fund
of
the
amount
remaining
that
came
from
Creed,
the
Creed
funds,
the
IDF
I
think
was
the
actual
fund
name,
but
from
the
Creed
districts
after
this
appropriation
is
made,
assuming
it
is
made
specifically
with
respect
to
the
downtown
Creed,
which
has
been
the
focus
of
councilmember,
Roland's,
ire
and
and
sort
of
interest
over
time.
H
If
that
list
in
the
resolution
before
bedak
was
exhaustive,
it
looks
like
just
shy
of
800
000
is
all
that
was
suspended
in
from
the
in
the
downtown
Creed
District,
meaning
that
about
10.8
million
was
what
remains
since
there's
also
several
million
more
more
than
several
million
remaining
from
the
Thompson
Creed
district
one
could,
if
they
wanted
to,
for
instance,
my
colleague,
Mr
Roland,
could
think
of
the
3.5
that's
being
appropriated
now
as
coming
exclusively
from
Thomson
Creed.
H
What
were
Tom's
and
Creed
dollars
and
could
think
of
the
10.8
remaining
from
the
downtown
Creed
District
as
yet
to
be
utilized.
He
could,
for
instance,
demand
that
all
10.8
million
go
to
economic
revitalization
projects
in
the
confines
of
the
downtown,
Creed
District
or
immediately
adjacent
to
it.
That's
up
to
us
ultimately
on
future
Appropriations
to
decide
what
we
support
and
what
we
don't
I,
don't
think
our
power
to
do
so.
Is
it
all
diminished
by
supporting
this
appropriation
tonight
so
I
take
some
of
those
points
to
heart.
H
I
think
you
know
if
the
council
collectively
comes
behind
ideas
for
those
funds,
whether
the
circulator
idea
that
the
customer
Roland
is
circulated,
sorry,
the
pun
in
the
past
or
other
ideas.
H
You
know
we
can
request
an
appropriation
of
that
front
and
it'll
be
the
normal
situation
of
we
can't
originated
Appropriations,
at
least
I,
don't
think,
but
but
you
know,
depending
on
collaboration
with
the
mayor,
to
bring
to
bring
those
in
the
future.
So
for
all
those
reasons
you
know
I'm
happy
to
support
the
appropriation
ordinance
tonight
and
also
interested
in
following
up
on
on
some
of
the
related
details
of
of
what
were
funds
collected
for
the
cree
districts
in
the
days
and
months
to
come.
Thank
you.
C
Thank
you,
I
just
want
to
thank
Mr
East,
then
Mr
Fernandez
for
bringing
this
along.
Getting
us
going.
It's
really
a
great
project
and
my
colleagues
have
some.
You
know
good
points
about
the
issues
with
the
city,
bringing
forth
the
funds
and
telling
us
more
being
kind
of
more
transparent
and
making
it
easier
for
us
to
make
decisions.
But
you
know
it
doesn't
override
how
good
of
a
project
this
is
and
what
all
the
important
things
it's
going
to
do
for
the
future,
so
I.
C
Thank
you
for
that
and
I
think
that
you
know
we
have
some
work
to
do
with
kind
of
working
with
the
administration
on
other
things,
but
I'm
going
to
support
the
projects,
because
it's
a
great
project
and
I.
Thank
you
both
for
doing
it.
Thank
you.
Thank.
T
T
I
think
it
met
with
some
objection
for
those
of
us
that
felt
that
money
should
have
been
earmarked
for
the
downtown
revitalization
and
a
variety
of
projects
that
we
could
have
used
for
that.
So
what
I'm
going
to
be
looking
at
very
closely
going
forward
is
what
is
being
designed
for
the
rest
of
the
Creed
dollars
that
now
it's
the
understanding
from
reading
that
memo
that
it's
not
going
to
be
carved
out
for
downtown.
It
can
be
used
for
anything
that
the
administration
wants
to
use
it
for,
and
obviously
with
our
okay
or
permission.
T
You
hear
the
rumors
and
what
I'm
hearing
is
that
we
may
be.
You
know
quite
a
few
million
dollars
short
of
being
able
to
do
justice
back
here
to
the
Bloomington,
Police
Department,
and
so
that's
the
next
I'll
just
put
you
on
notice.
Now
that
I
want
to
hear
a
lot
more
details
about
the
progress
for
the
Bloomington
Police
Department
and
will
our
lack
of
having
enough
to
do
what
we
said
we
were
going
to
do.
Will
that
impact
fire?
T
Will
they
then
get
out
the
short
end
of
the
Stick
of
not
being
able
to
get
what
they
need
to
renovate
station
one
and
the
various
other
improvements
that
they
needed
and
that
34
million
dollars
from
the
Ed
lit
that
we
had
specifically
earmarked
for
police
and
fire
that
that's
going
to
be
used
wisely
and
in
the
best
interest
of
the
police
and
the
fire
and
the
public?
Thank
you.
W
Thank
you.
This
is
brief.
I
support
this
project
this
week,
as
I
did
last
week.
Thank
you
for
everyone
involved
in
this
I
will
say:
I
can
empathize
with
council
member
of
Olin
on
this
one
that
there
are
times
that
we
feel
like
the
process
is
flawed
from
the
beginning,
and
so
it's
really
hard
to
get
on
board
with
something
like
this.
Just
to
digress.
W
It
reminds
me
of
a
2020
project
brought
by
Public
Works,
to
repave
College,
Mall
Road
and
in
our
transportation
plan
we
were
supposed
to
have
bike
Lanes
painted
on
that
road,
but
we
were
told
the
road
was
too
narrow.
That
was
I,
think
a
two-night
to
council
meeting
debate
with
many
many
hours.
We
lost
that
we
lost
that
debate
on
bike
Lanes,
but
really
now
there
are
actually
bike
Lanes
painted
on
that
road.
So
I,
don't
know
how
that
happened,
but
I
think
the
debate
was
helpful.
W
W
I
also
just
want
to
mention
that
trades
to
me
is
is
also
a
lot
more
than
just
Tech
and
I
know
that
the
mill
offers
a
lot
of
options
for
folks
in
there
in
a
space
to
do
other
things,
but
I'm
also
interested
in
bringing
you
know
like
trades
back
to
downtown
and
giving
spaces
and
potentially
subsidies
for
folks
who
are
artists
and
makers
and
like
Building,
Trades
and
and
people
who
repair
like
leather
and
wood
and
metal
products.
W
E
Thank
you.
I,
too,
want
to
thank
everyone
for
their
presentation
and
also
my
colleague
as
a
member
of
Olin
for
bringing
some
things
up.
That
I
think
is
of
interest
and
importance.
How
could
we
ever
ever
disagree
with
my
colleague
on
anything,
however?
I
think
there
were
some
very,
very
good
points
that
he
brought
up
and
I
think
we've
talked
about
them
and
hopefully
alleviated
them
going
in
the
future.
I
think
there
will
be
more
discussion,
as
my
other
counsel
or
colleague,
down
down
now
councilmember
Sandberg
said
because
we
just
don't
have
a
feeling.
E
E
But
I
think
it's
also
been
clarified
that
once
the
district
expired,
then
the
rules
changed,
and
we
didn't
know
that
so
I'm
going
to
support
what
we're
what's
being
asked
tonight
and
since
the
rules
have
changed,
and
we
had
so
many
discussions,
maybe
we
could
talk
with
someone
else
and
turn
some
of
these
funds
into
substantial
amount
of
dollars
for
sidewalk
repair.
Now,
how
many
people
would
dislike
me
if
I
make
that
suggestion
I'm
done?
Thank
you.
J
Okay,
just
to
be
clear.
The
primary
issue
for
me:
Isn't,
the
worthiness
of
the
project,
I-
think
that
the
gentleman
presenting
the
project
you
know
have
heard
that
plenty.
It
isn't
the
lack
of
fiscal
transparency
from
the
administration.
It's
the
lack
of
decisional
transparency.
They
could
have
chosen
to
fund
it
through
the
Tiff
and
why
didn't
they
want
to
use
the
Tiff?
They
said
it's
for
Hopewell.
Well,
how
much
the
hope
will
cost.
We
don't
know.
J
We
just
want
to
save
all
the
money
for
Hopewell
the
master
plan
for
Hopewell
as
a
reason
for
not
using
the
Tiff
did
not
come
to
the
council.
It's
an
area,
the
size
of
any
other
overlay,
that's
in
the
comprehensive
plan
which
we
had
to
vote
on
when
the
Udo
was
adopted,
but
somehow
Hopewell
doesn't
count
somehow
under
former
deputy
mayor
mikronison.
This
was
something
that
was
entirely
the
domain
of
the
executive.
J
Okay,
fine!
Well,
that's
not
exactly
transparent
for
us
in
order
to
be
able
to
decide
why
the
Creed
and
not
the
Tiff,
okay
and
also,
if
they
didn't
want
to
go
through
this,
then
they
should
have
gone
for
Tiff
money
because
then
they
all
had
to
do
was
go
through
the
RDC
they've
gone
through
the
RDC
for
millions
of
dollars
of
other
things.
They
could
have
done
it
for
this
too.
J
So
I
wonder
if
the
Creed
can
be
reimbursed
by
the
Tiff.
Yes,
I
know
the
fund
doesn't
exist
anymore,
yes,
I
know
it's
moved,
but
that
three
million
dollars
should
be
coming
from
the
Tiff.
The
Tiff
is
the
same
similar
as
the
Creed.
It's
a
tax
increment
financing.
J
The
Creed
was
just
specifically
for
downtown
Economic,
Development
or
Thompson
Economic
Development.
Why
didn't
the
Administration
build
the
trades
garage
with
Creed
money?
Why
didn't
they
build
the
forestry
garage
with
Creed
money?
They
could
have
I
mean
they've
been
sitting
on
it
for
years
for
a
decade.
Why
sit
on
this
chunk
of
change
for
so
long
councilman,
Rose
Margaret
said
the
process
being
flawed
for
the
beginning.
Yes,
it
is,
and
we
can
change
it,
it's
just
that
the
administration
is
daring
us
to
use
the
only
options
we
have
are
nuclear
ones.
J
We'd
have
to
hold
up
the
annual
budget
in
order
to
get
the
attention
of
the
administration
and
I
know
that
it's
not
something
that
any
of
us
want
to
do.
We
it's
a
quiz
inducing
Prospect,
but
what
other
choice
do
we
have
and
if
we're
trying
to
get
information
in
a
timely
fashion
for
God's
sake
at
least
48
hours
for
the
meeting
so
like
like
we
have
to
do
with
public
notice.
J
One
last
thing
we
spent
1.95
million
dollars
to
tear
down
the
RCA
building.
We
had
to
pay
to
leave
that
site
follow
for
12
years,
let
alone
two
million
dollars
I.
You
know,
I
I
just
realized
that
there's
a
member
of
the
RDC
in
the
audience
I
should
have
asked
him
to
to
weigh
in
on
this.
But
all
this
leaves
you
with
more
questions
and
answers.
I'm,
very
disappointed
and
again
I
I
appreciate
very
much
the
feedback
my
colleagues
have
given
me.
It
hasn't
changed.
My
vote
I
have
to
abstain.
Thank
you.
D
If
not
I'll
finish
up,
thank
you
to
those
who
presented
this
idea.
I
think
the
idea
is
solid
and
I,
especially
and
I
certainly
share
the
concerns
that
my
colleagues
have
all
outlined.
There's
no
need
to
outline
those
again,
but
I
especially
want
to
applaud
the
ways
in
which
these
dollars
are
leveraging
outside
dollars
and
I,
especially
want
to
acknowledge
the
work
done
for
the
Eda
Grant.
So
I'll
be
glad
to
support
this
project.
F
F
A
D
S
This
well
Alex
Riley
economic,
sustainable
development,
I'll
just
Echo
a
little
bit
of
what
the
mayor
said
and
wanted
to
just
underscore
certain
points.
So,
what's
in
front
of
you
is
a
resolution
and
it
we
would
be
the
first
of
a
coalition
of
entities
to
advance
this
resolution,
so
I
believe
we,
you
know
all
agree
and
feel
strongly
about
the
challenges
that
are
facing
us
related
to
climate.
S
The
basic
premise
of
this
is
to
bring
together
multiple
communities,
Bloomington
Columbus
Nashville
and
the
counties
that
they
reside
in
and
possibly
other
entities
as
as
they
may
want
to
join
so,
for
example,
if
Ellisville
as
an
incorporated
entity
would
want
to
join
welcome
them
into
the
into
the
into
the
mix.
S
S
So
we
want
to
make
sure
that
we,
in
that
we
include
people
of
the
Next
Generation
into
the
efforts,
and
so
the
idea
here
is
to
really
lay
the
groundwork
for
this
collaboration
between
all
of
these
different
entities
and
their
respective
private
sector
and
non-profits
in
order
to
work
together,
and
we
believe
one
of
the
benefits
and
not
an
insignificant
one
would
be
that
it
would
create
kind
of
a
critical
mass
that
we
as
an
individual
City
may
not
have
to
the
same
degree,
to
attract
Federal
funding
which,
as
you
all
know,
is
pretty
substantial
for
the
next
handful
of
years
and
and
certainly
use
any
kind
of
local
governmental
funding
that
that
each
of
the
approving
communities
would
put
forward
to
have
that
match
locally
from
private
sector,
but
then
cumulatively,
to
really
try
to
to
draw
down
that
that
kind
of
federal
funding
that
we
think
is
is
more
likely
to
happen.
S
The
bigger
the
footprint
that
we're
that
we're
presenting
so
I'm
happy
to
answer
any
questions.
I,
don't
know
if
that
helps
clarify
a
little
bit
but
happy
to
answer
any
questions
you
might
have.
Thank.
E
Thank
you
in
the
memo
we're
talking
about
cost
outlay
from
each
entity,
50
Cent
per
capita
and,
first
of
all,
what
entities
are
we
talking
about
they're,
just
Bloomington?
Is
it
County
City.
S
Potentially
seven,
you
know
six
first
starters,
so
Bloomington
itself,
yeah
Monroe
County,
the
Nashville
and
Brown
County
Columbus
and
Bartholomew
County.
So
those
those
would
be
this
six
entities,
assuming
they
all
approve
this
resolution.
So.
E
Okay,
let's
just
look
at
Bloomington
based
on
this
50
Cent
per
capita.
How
much
is
our
anticipated
contribution
so.
S
Yeah,
so
we
have
a
line
in
the
it's
actually
a
line,
so
you
may
not
recall
this,
but
there
is
a
line
in
the
economic
development,
local
income
tax
budget
that
was
dealing
with
climate
economy,
in
that
there
were
several
items
that
we
had
forecasted
would
be
targeted
for
for
funding,
and
we
anticipated
this
being
one
of
them
so
that
money
that
we
were
requesting
for
2023
would
align
with
that
original
budget
projection.
S
S
J
S
Yeah
sort
of
negate
you
know
yeah,
okay,
remove
this.
J
S
D
Seeing
none
let's
go
to
public
comment,
are
those
in
chamber
or
is
there
anyone
in
Chambers
who
would
like
to
offer
comment
if
you
could
raise
your
hand
while
Mr
Lucas?
Could
you
extend
our
invitation
on
Zoom?
Please.
K
G
Yeah
I
I
think
this
is
a
great
first
step
for
regional
cooperation
in
climate
action
and
I
was
actually
in
Nashville
with
the
mayor
and
when
he
and
mayor
lenup,
from
Columbus
and
town
manager,
Sandy
Jones
from
Nashville
all
kind
of
officially
launched
the
project
on
March
24th,
and
it
was
fitting
because
the
the
official
who
kicked
off
the
proceedings,
Anna
hofstetter
from
the
Town
Council
of
Nashville,
pointed
out
that
that
day,
the
schools
were
actually
closed
in
Nashville
because
of
flooding.
G
G
We
have
you
know
the
climate
action
plan
in
place.
We've
done
a
lot
here
in
Bloomington,
but
some
of
our
private
sector
entities
could
learn
a
lot
from
the
businesses
in
Columbus
such
as
Cummins
that
have
done
a
lot
in
the
realm
of
sustainability,
and
you
know
the
smaller
community
of
Nashville
Brown
County
can
kind
of
tag
along
and
use
some
of
the
resources
that
we've
developed
as
far
as
measuring
greenhouse
gas
reduction,
hopefully
reduction
and
some
other
best
practices.
G
So
I
think
it's
it's
a
win-win
situation,
and
hopefully
it's
the
start
of
you
know:
bigger
Coalition,
just
like
Mr
Crowley
mentioned
with
the
private
sector
and
non-profit
sector
as
well
so
I'm
very
much
in
favor.
Thank
you
for
Flaherty.
H
Thank
you
similar
comments
to
my
colleague,
just
I
think
this
is
there's
a
lot
of
opportunity
here
for
knowledge,
sharing
and
setting
Collective
goals
across
multiple
units
of
government,
as
well
as
sharing
among
non-profit
private
sector
institutional
actors
and
sharing
in
the
ambition
with
with
large
entities
like
IU,
for
instance,
in
in
setting
targets
and
and
working
to
achieve
them,
also
wanted
to
recognize
the
work
of
of
Lauren
Clemens
who's.
H
Of
course,
no
longer
the
city
of
Bloomington
and
has
moved
on
to
a
different
position,
but
I
know
put
a
lot
of
work
into
the
initial
Regional
climate
convening
and
some
of
the
the
groundwork
that
led
to
this
being
developed,
of
course,
along
with
current
city
staff
in
ESD.
H
So,
finally,
just
a
note
that
yeah
I
think
this
is
a
really
great
tool
to
help
leverage
some
of
the
bipartisan
infrastructure
law
and
inflation
reduction
act,
opportunities
that
are
available
and
some
of
which
are
not
yet
available,
but
will
be
soon
so
I
appreciate
that
we've
got
some
Avenues
through
which
to
to
leverage
those
funds
collectively
in
a
regional
setting
and
I'll
be
happy
to
support
tonight.
Thank
you.
T
Someone
who
has
attended
the
Lake,
Monroe
Watershed
Summit
I,
really
do
feel
the
need
that
we
have
Regional
Partnerships
with
these
climate
issues
and
these
critical
issues
before
us,
with
with
everything
that
we
can
do
much
better
when
we
have
County
cooperation
than
if
we're
trying
to
go
it
alone,
so
again,
Kudos
and
looking
forward
to
hearing
more
details
about
where
the
various
funding
is
going
to
be
going
toward
and
how
it
can
be
leveraged
for
other
Federal
and
and
state
funding
opportunities.
Thanks.
Thank.
E
E
E
So
I
too,
am
looking
forward
to
next
steps
and
it's
just
more
enthusiasm,
I
think
all
the
way
around,
because
you're
not
doing
things
in
a
vacuum
or
in
a
silo
and
I'd
like
to
see
it
even
broaden,
even
more
I'd
like
to
get
some
of
our
neighbors
to
the
I
guess,
that'd
be
west
and
south,
and
you
know
in
involved,
so
we
can
have
a
bigger
impact.
So
I
will
support
this,
and
thank
you
very
much.
J
W
Thank
you.
This
is
very
exciting
everything
that
has
been
said
and
similar
to
what
council
member
Sims
was
saying.
I
think
a
lot
of
folks
in
Bloomington
sometimes
say
this
isn't
a
problem
we
can
solve
on
our
own
and
I
actually
think
it's
both
and
both
and
solutions.
So
now
we
get
to
work
regionally
along
with
doing
work
in
our
own
City.
Thanks.
W
F
A
F
A
C
H
F
D
A
Ordinance
2304
to
amend
Title
20
of
the
Bloomington
municipal
code
regarding
technical
Corrections
set
forth
in
BMC
20..
The
synopsis
is
as
follows.
This
petition
contains
Corrections
or
clarifications
in
the
Udo.
These
errors
range
from
missing
references
to
terminology
correction
to
missing
texts
to
syncing
references
across
the
Udo.
There
are
19
amendments
identified
some
appearing
multiple
times
in
code.
F
J
J
A
Ordinance
2305
to
amend
Title
20,
the
unified
development
ordinance
of
the
Bloomington
municipal
code
regarding
amendments
and
updates
set
forth
in
BMC,
20.03,
20.05
and
20.07.
The
synopsis
is
as
follows.
This
petition
contains
amendments
related
to
use
regulations
in
chapter
3,
subdivision
standards
in
chapter
5
and
divisions,
definitions,
sorry
in
chapter
7
of
the
Udo,
there
are
61
amendments
identified.
F
F
D
A
It
Madam
clerk.
Will
you
please
read?
Yes,
just
a
quick
clarification.
Did
you
refer
2305
to
the
next
regular
session,
or
did
you
were
you
doing
that
later?
Very
briefly?
Yes,
I
did
okay.
Thank
you.
I
just
wanted
to
make
sure
I
got
it.
Okay,
ordinance,
2306
to
amend
titled,
20,
unified
development,
ordinance
of
the
Bloomington
municipal
code
regarding
amendments
and
updates
set
forth
in
Bloomington
Municipal
Code
20.04.
The
synopsis
is
as
follows.
This
petition
contains
amendments
in
chapter
4
related
to
design
requirements
for
uses
in
the
Udo.
There
are
55
amendments
identified.
F
A
Ordinance
2307
to
amend
Title
20
at
the
unified
development
ordinance
of
the
Bloomington
municipal
code
regarding
amendments
and
updates
set
forth
in
Bloomington
Municipal
Code
20.06,
the
synopsis
is
as
follows.
This
petition
contains
amendments
in
chapter
6
related
to
processes
and
procedures
in
the
Udo.
There
are
21
amendments
identified.
J
Please
go
I
all
I
know
is
that
the
last
time
we
talked
about
Udo
changes
25
hours
of
meetings
over
six
days
over
two
weeks.
It
was
one
of
the
most
controversial
things.
We've
ever
had
an
extremely
toxic
discussion.
J
I
am
dreading
the
possibility
that
and
I
notice
I
did
not
recommend
the
technical
amendments.
I
feel
like
those
can
be
disposed
of
readily,
but
the
other
ones
I'm
just
astonished
that
we
would
be
taking
these
up
before
the
primary,
let
alone
I
mean
how
much
time
we're
going
to
need
to
dispose
of
these
I.
Can't.
Even
imagine
that's
why
I'm
making
the
motion
I
just
wanted
people
to
know.
Why?
Thank
you.
H
Well,
I
have
not
dug
in
at
a
deep
substantive
level.
Yet
with
respect
to
these
ordinances,
I
will
note
that
the
plan
commission
recommended
all
of
them
unanimously
and
I
wanted
to
invite.
H
C
Yes,
thank
you,
council,
member
Flaherty,
for
pointing
that
out
and
asking
me
to
comment.
None
of
them
were
controversial
in
the
least
the
only
one
that
you
know
brought
forth
some
more
discussion
again
was
the
parking
maximums.
C
Everything
else
was
kind
of
verbiage
and
a
few
changes
to
tables
to
reflect
some
of
the
corrections
in
the
text
and
so
yeah.
Most
of
it
was
just
just
pretty
technical
corrections
to
a
lot
to
a
lot
of
things,
and
the
only
thing
that
really
you
know
had
discussion
was
was
the
parking
maximums
yeah.
J
Why,
then,
is
the
first
ordinance
of
the
four
introduced
tonight?
Labeled
technical
Corrections,
because
my
reading
of
technical
correction
is
a
typos
here
or
word
choices
there.
That's
a
technical
correction,
you're
talking
about
minor
changes
to
the
Udo
that
okay
yeah.
K
To
ask
in
case
it's
helpful:
did
that
proposal
make
it
into
these
four
ordinances?
It
was
my
understanding
that
there
may
be
an
additional
proposal
coming
out
of
the
plane
commission,
at
least
according
to
director
Robinson
related
to
parking
maximums
in
the
future.
So
I
just
wondered
if
that
part
of
the
discussion
made
it
into
these
proposals.
J
D
D
K
Y
Then
good
evening
my
name
is
Dana
I'm.
Sorry,
my
name
is
Dave
Askins
with
the
b-square
bulletin,
and
my
question
is
what
happened
to
the
motion
to
remove
Greg
Alexander
from
the
traffic
commission.
It
was
postponed
to
this
meeting
under
Robert's
Rules
I'm,
just
going
to
read
aloud
a
paragraph
when
the
appointed
time
has
been
reached
for
a
postponed
question
be
taken
up
and
as
soon
as
no
other
business
of
a
higher
priority
interferes
the
cherish
States.
The
question
is
pending.
Y
Therefore,
no
further
motion
is
normally
needed
to
bring
the
question
before
the
assembly.
However,
if
the
chair
fails
to
State
the
question
at
the
correct
time,
any
member
May
then
demand
that
the
postponed
question
be
taken
up
as
ordered
by
making
a
call
for
the
orders
of
the
day
so
I'll
be
making
a
call
for
the
orders
of
the
day
is
not
something
that
you
expect
to
hear.
Somebody
do
at
a
Bloomington
city
council
meeting.
Y
So
that's
fine,
but
you
know
the
expectation
was
that
somebody
would
say
a
word
or
two
about
that
motion
and
in
fact
the
expectation
was
that
there
would
be
an
up
or
down
vote
on
the
motion
and
we
got
no
explanation
at
all
about
what's
happening.
What's
the
status
of
that
motion
procedurally,
is
it
dead?
Can
it
be
brought
back
at
any
time?
Y
Y
It
was
evident
that
two
council
members
had
a
problem.
Neither
of
them
wanted
to
say
anything
and
no
one
on
the
council
wanted
to
exercise
their
ability
under
Bloomington
municipal
code,
to
challenge
a
colleague
to
not
abstain
and
explain
why
they're,
explaining
or
else
vote
that
could
have
been
done.
This
could
have
been
handled
long
before
now
and
now
it's
still
not
handled
I'm
sick
of
writing
about
this
issue.
Y
Y
J
F
Yes,
I
will
withdraw
the
motion.
Thank
you.
J
May
I
ask
one
more
question:
Madam
chair
does
Mr
Rallo
intend
to
bring
back
the
motion,
or
can
we
retire
it
with
prejudice.
L
K
Yes,
thank
you
just
another
reminder
that
the
council
has
a
scheduled
budget
Advance
coming
up
on
April
25th.
That
is
two
weeks
from
yesterday,
so
I
imagine
there
will
be
some
Communications
ahead
of
that
meeting.
Oh
yes,
I
believe
six
o'clock,
six.
D
D
Can
get
to
that
confirmation
or
you
could
defer
to
interview
Team
B,
so
we'll
we'll
confirm
that
nothing
else
for
the
good
of
the
order,
seeing
no
further
business.
We
are
adjourned.
Thank
you.
Everyone
good
night.