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From YouTube: October 3, 2022 City Council Listening Session
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A
All
this
listening
session
to
order
all
right,
I,
don't
know
what
the
normal
mayor
says,
but
I
think
we'll
go
ahead
and
just
get
started.
I
I
see
that
I
have
Sally
Ness
already
on
the
agenda.
So
if
you
want
to
come
down
and
sign
in
and
see
two
other
folks
that
are
here,
would
you
also
like
to
address
the
council
and.
D
A
10
minutes
so
we'll
give
you
10
minutes
we'll
give
each
person
here.
10
minutes
and
you'll
probably
want
to
leave
some
time.
If
you
want
to
have
the
council
respond
to
have
that
dialogue,
because
we
can't
do
that
outside
of
it,
because
we've
got
we've
got
three
folks
here
today,
I.
E
E
Okay,
so
hi
my
name's
Annette
Robinson.
Some
of
you
may
recognize
me
as
a
graduate
of
the
Bloomington
leadership
program
I'm
also
on
the
board
at
the
lake.
Excuse
me
of
Women
Voters,
but
tonight
I'm
here
as
the
daughter
of
Alan
and
Angela
matsky,
my
parents,
who
have
been
residents
of
Bloomington
for
61
years.
That's
the
hat
that
I'm
wearing.
E
I
wish
Lona
was
here
she's,
not
so
they
are
residents
at
8413,
Kell,
District,
3
I,
believe
they
built
their
home
there
61
years
ago.
Bloomington
back
then,
was
considered
the
sticks
by
all
practical
purposes.
They
raised
four
children,
they
take
pride
in
their
family,
their
home
and
being
a
part
of
the
Bloomington
community.
F
E
I
am
yes,
so
please
feel
free
to
join
us
at
the
table
anyway.
So
I
just
want
to
share
with
you
tonight
the
impact
of
fire
station
number
four
on
their
lives
and
the
community
and
what's
taking
place
my
little
background.
My
father's,
an
engineer,
my
mother
was
a
housewife.
They
literally
they
built
their
home.
They
designed
and
built
the
backyard
we
had
the
screened
in
porch.
We
have
the
pool
we
had
the
hot
tub.
We
had
the
ice
skating
rink
right.
We
had
all
of
that
growing
up
in
Bloomington,
they
have
beautiful
gardens.
E
They
take
great
pride,
is
what
I'm
trying
to
convey
in
their
home
their
yard
their
community
in
the
early
1970s
I
can't
remember
exactly
when,
but
the
OG
fire
station
number
four
was
proposed
and
built,
and
it
was
part
of
the
community.
The
neighbors
were
all
recruited
to
be
firefighters.
It
was
volunteer,
remember
the
days
the
building
that
they
put
in
was
fairly
unobtrusive
I
there
from
their
backyard.
You
really
couldn't
see
it.
There
were
beautiful
trees.
E
Okay,
there
were
cottonwoods-
maybe
they
weren't
that
beautiful,
but
you
know
they
were
pretty
it
kind
of,
and
it
dampened
to
kind
of
camouflage
that
dampened
the
noise.
If
you
will
and
I
almost
felt
like
it
was
kind
of
cool
to
have
a
fire
station
in
her
backyard
as
kids
right
we'd
like
we
could
hear
in
the
Summer
with
the
windows
open,
our
neighbors,
who
were
volunteers,
would
hear
it
go
up.
E
The
the
radio
go
off
and
you
could
see
them
running
up
the
streets
and
we'd
go
watch
the
trucks
roll
and
it
was
a
cool
thing
so
fast
forward
to
today
and
Fire
Station
Number
Four
I
did
send
photos.
Did
you
all
get
an
opportunity?
Yes?
Well
humor
me
anyway,
because
I
printed
and
it
costs
yeah
I
mean
it
was
a
lot
of
eggs,
so
just
pass
them
around
they're
different,
there's
one
through
seven,
but
this
is
used
from
their
backyard
and
what
this
fire
station
looks
like
today.
E
The
raising
and
building
of
this
station
has
been
very
different
from
the
OG
and,
of
course,
I
have
a
different
lens
than
what
they
do
as
adults.
What
I
saw
as
a
kid
versus
today
but
I
have
to
say
that
I
have
been
disappointed,
disappointed
and
disheartened
in
the
process
and
I
think
there's,
hopefully
an
opportunity
to
learn
from
it
and
a
different
path
forward
and
I
want
to
start
just
with
the
communication.
E
E
If
you
were
there,
the
we're
in
the
old
fire
station,
the
city,
planner
I,
don't
know
if
you
were
there,
I
can't
remember
the
people
The
Architects
were
there
and
they
they
told
us
about
the
building
and
how
great
it
was
going
to
be.
We
raised
our
concerns
and
I
heard
it
was
some
news
stories,
two
stories
there's
going
to
be
a
fence
it'll,
pretty
much
camouflage
and
block
The
View.
Unless
the
fence
is
30
feet
high
along
the
property
line,
I,
don't
know
how
in
fact
that's
going
to
happen.
E
A
lot
of
things
that
were
told
to
us
I
haven't
quite
seen
that
coming
into
fruition,
if
you
will,
let
me
just
tell
you
at
my
parents
summer
and
what
it's
been
like:
dad's
90.,
so
he's
not
very
mobile
anymore
loves
his
loves
to
be
outside
in
the
summer.
He
takes
his
walker
and
he
goes
from
the
inside
of
the
house
out
to
the
deck
he
loves
to
sit
in
his
chair.
He
loves
to
listen
to
his
classical
music,
have
conversations
the
cacophony
of
construction.
Noise
has
been
beyond
having
the
ability
to
have
a
conversation.
E
It
starts
at
7
A.M.
It
goes
to
7
P.M.
They
work
hard
like
they
seriously.
These
workers
work
really
really
hard,
but
it's
really
impacted
the
quality
of
life.
For
my
parents,
when
you
layer,
on
top
of
that
literally
the
sandstorm
of
dust
I'm,
not
a
builder
I,
don't
know
what
they're
doing
with
these
concrete
blocks
and
cutting
them.
But
honestly
it
could
be
a
scene
from
Lawrence
of
Arabia.
It's
just.
It's
covered
everything.
It's
covered
the
houses,
it's
clogged
the
pool,
it's
just
been
a
real
I.
E
Think
nuisance
is
like
an
understatement
of
a
word,
but
it's
been
a
very
challenging
summer
for
them.
So
you
know:
they've
had
to
run
their
AC
full
time
because
you
can't
you
have
to
shut
the
noise
out
somehow
at
least
during
the
week-
and
you
know,
I
think
the
hardest
part
is
watching
as
this
building
is
being
built.
E
The
market
value
of
their
house
is
going
down
because,
let's
be
honest,
you've
seen
the
pictures.
Would
you
move
there?
Would
you
want
to
live
there
like
you,
don't
want
to
live
there?
I
don't
want
to
live
there,
and
so
it's
really
hard.
For
me
to
watch
that
right,
given
all
of
the
history,
so
okay
I,
don't
know
how
much
time
I
have
left
the
ask
which.
E
Three
minutes:
oh
great
I,
would
like
to
find
a
way
to
do
right
by
my
parents
and
a
handful
of
Neighbors
in
their
neighborhood
that
have
been
impacted.
I
have
ideas,
I
think,
there's
ways
forward
that
could
maybe
make
them
feel
like
the
city
of
Bloomington,
cares
about
them
and
they're
still
valued
citizens
and
that
they
weren't
the
sacrificial
Lambs
in
this
whole
process.
E
I
also
think
there's
some
thought
that
could
be
given
to
a
stipend
or
something
that
would
allow
for
them
to
maybe
do
a
little
Landscaping
and
and
give
some
camouflage
to
what
is
going
to
be
part
of
their
lives
for,
however
long
they
they're
alive
and
they
stay
there.
So
those
are
a
couple
ideas.
I.
Have
you
and
I
need
to
talk.
I.
Do
recognize
that,
but
I
want
to
thank
you
for
listening
and
I
hope
that
I've
been
heard.
F
Yeah.
Okay,
thank
you
mayor.
Thank
you
for
that.
I
I
have
you're,
not
the
first
person.
That's
brought
this
to
and
you
maybe
you
may
be
I,
don't
know
if
the
people
that
I've
heard
from
and
the
people
that
you
talk
to
are
the
same
or
not
and
I
the
person
that
is
specifically
the
person
I
spoke
to
for
a
while
was
asked
to
remain
anonymous.
So
I
didn't
want
to
be
disclosing
of
that.
F
But
there's
there's
another
piece
of
this
that
I
have
communicated
with
the
city
manager
as
well,
which
is
you
know
this
isn't
the
last
one
of
these
that
we're
gonna
do
either
yeah
and
and
all
of
them
aside
from
fire
station
number
one.
The
other
three
that
we
have
to
do
are
very
tight
and
they're
very
close
knit
in
the
community,
and
so
this
is
this
impact
will
happen
again.
F
You
know
one
of
the
asks
I
made
of
the
city
manager
was.
Could
the
planners
look
at
you
know,
turning
turning
the
the
building
or
doing
something
else
so
that
the
highest
walls
are
on
the
street
as
opposed
to
up
against
the
residents?
You
know
other
things
like
that,
and
so
there
is
a
there's,
a
learning
thing,
both
in
the
short
term,
meaning
what
can
we
do
from
a
landscaping
perspective
and
everything
for
that
fire
station
to
to
support
some
of
the
asks
and
there's
a
longer
term
question.
F
We
need
to
ask
about
these
other
fire
stations
to
either
be
proactive
about
the
minimization
or
be
proactive
about
the
support
we
give
to
the
neighbors
so
absolutely
agree
with
you
and
very
happy
to
meet
with
the
community.
So
let's
get
a
let's
get
the
the
team
together.
E
You
know
one
thing:
I
think
that
would
have
been
nice
was
a
continued
communication
process
by
whether
it's
a
construction
team,
housing
themselves
at
Wanda,
Miller
and
just
having
like
a
monthly
hey.
This
is
where
we're
at
this
is
how
things
are
going,
how
things?
How
are
they
going
for
you
like?
What's
how
bad
is
the
noise
level
like?
Maybe
we
we
stop
later
or
start
later
or
stop
earlier
I
mean
just
so
they
feel
like
they're
heard,
and
they
they.
E
A
A
Sorry,
if
you're
around
I'll
just
want
to
check
with
you
Miss
Robinson
about
a
couple
of
your
comments,
make
sure
I
got
them
right
when
I
send
them
back
to
the
council
tonight.
Okay,
if
you're
sticking
around
I'll
check
in
with
you
at
the
end,
oh
okay,
yeah.
If
you're
sticking
on,
if
not
don't
worry
about
it,
I
got
you
yep,
Sally
hi,
please.
H
Okay,
last
meeting
after
I
spoke
council
member
Sean
Nelson
asked
the
driveway
when
it
goes
to
the
parking
lot.
That's
Smith
Park
or
replied
yes,
but
council
member
Nelson
comment.
That's
all
I
want
to
know.
That
is
a
problem
that
the
council
member
is
not
wanting
to
know
all
of
the
information.
Yes,
the
entrance
goes
to
Smith
Park,
but
it
was
not
built
for
Smith
Park.
H
It
was
built
to
address
the
intense
traffic
and
parking
generated
by
Darrell
Frick,
and
also
so
that
the
private
business
Success
Academy,
who
leases
from
dial
fruit,
can
expand
just
because
Daryl
fruch
generates
too
much
traffic
and
parking
and
that
the
private
business
Success
Academy
wants
to
expand,
does
not
mean
the
city
should
be
paying
for
an
entrance.
Daryl
fruit
and
the
private
business
Success
Academy
need
staff
report
2018-226
dated
August
23
2018
that
included
a
driveway
as
a
condition.
H
States
all
mitigation
measures
identified
in
the
staff
report
must
be
constructed
and
or
funded
prior
to
any
increase
in
weekday
School
enrollment
does
not
state
the
city
will
provide
funding.
As
I
stated
last
week.
The
city
did
not
need
a
new
entrance
to
the
park.
The
city
wanted
to
keep
the
former
entrance
and
paid
to
get
an
easement
that
should
have
been
provided
after
daf
purchased
the
property
from
the
power
company.
At
the
last
meeting,
I
said
the
city
had
an
entrance.
H
There
is
no
data
to
suggest
the
city
wanted
or
needed
a
new
entrance
or
a
new
location
for
the
park
entrance
last
meeting,
councilmember
Coulter
commented
what
I've
been
hearing
you
over
these
weeks
is
that
you
want
the
council
to
have
accurate
information
and
when
I'm,
not
understanding
still
is,
who
decides
what
is
or
is
not
accurate
information
to
answer
that
question
I
sent
the
council
to
examples.
In
2012,
the
former
sitter
attorney
stated
that
Hydro
disease
probably
did
not
represent
the
building.
He
signed
the
application
for
the
conditional
use
permit.
H
H
Does
a
person
who
signs
the
application
for
the
conditional
use
permit
is
listed
as
applicant
and
also
signs
the
amended
and
restated
site
development
agreement
represent
the
building?
If
the
answer
is
yes,
then
the
former
City
attorney
provided
council,
with
at
with
inaccurate
information
in
2015,
did
staff
provide
council
with
a
memo
that
indicated
access
easement
over
8201
property
to
City
parking
lot.
That
stated
current
agreement
not
provided
and
proposed
agreement
provided.
H
H
If
the
answers
above
are
yes,
then
staff
provided
council
with
an
accurate
information
at
the
last
meeting,
I
provided
an
example
of
council
voting
on
inaccurate
information
when
Council
was
inaccurately
informed,
that
the
shared
agreement,
in
effect
at
the
time
did
not
provide
an
easement
for
the
entrance
when
it
did.
This
is
not
an
opinion
and
the
data
decides
what
is
or
is
not
accurate
information.
H
Mayor's
previous
comment:
you
believe
they
should
have
done
one
thing.
Obviously,
the
staff,
the
council,
the
mayor
and
the
legal
team
did
what
they
believed
was
correct.
The
concern
is
Council
making
decisions
based
on
inaccurate
information,
such
as
being
told
the
previous
agreement
did
not
provide
an
easement
when
it
did
the
point.
Yes,
the
council
did
what
they
believed
was
correct,
but
it
was
based
on
inaccurate
information,
September
22nd,
2022
I
sent
mayor
and
Council
an
email,
titled
September,
18.,
September,
2018,
planner,
inaccurately
States,
Northerly
Northerly
lot,
underutilized
Council
was
inaccurately
informed.
H
The
Northerly
lot
is
underutilized
and
that
is
information.
Council
uses
to
determine
how
they
vote.
I
have
pictures
of
the
planner
at
Smith,
Park
and
the
entrances
to
daf
were
blocked
off
with
cones,
and
there
were
only
four
parking
spaces
available
in
the
Smith
Park
parking
lot,
which
is
a
non-exclusive
use,
said
to
be
needed
occasionally
yet
filled
every
Friday
negatively
impacting
the
park
and
use
of
the
park.
Council
also
voted
after
the
hearing.
After
hearing
the
mayor,
inaccurately
State
and
I
even
had
happened
to
have
the
ability
to
have
conversations
with
Excel
Energy.
H
There's
not
a
record
of
this
conversation
at
all.
There
is
no
data
to
support.
There
was
ever
a
conversation
after
the
hearing
was
closed.
In
addition
to
the
mayor
offering
to
pay
for
the
driver
for
Success
Academy
needed
the
mayor
offered
the
public
Smith
Park
playground
to
the
private
business
of
sex
Academy,
the
mayor
chose
to
ignore
recommendation
by
the
Planning
Commission,
requiring
the
applicants
provide
their
own
playground.
H
The
mayor,
States
rough
transcription
I
agree
with
some
of
the
speakers
this
evening
that
maybe
they
put
putting
a
playground
might
be
something
that
would
be
Overkill
or
really
unnecessary,
I
think
the
school
utilizing
the
playground
in
the
park
would
work
just
fine,
maybe
sometimes
maybe
times
when
some
of
the
neighborhood
people
want
to
use
it
at
the
same
time,
but
to
interact
and
use
it
with
the
recess.
Kids.
H
The
mayor
comments
about
the
neighborhood,
interacting
with
the
recess
kids,
does
not
recognize
that
school-aged
kids
pose
a
danger
to
those
who
are
younger
an
older
child
using
the
apparatus.
At
the
same
time
as
a
younger
child
can
cause
the
younger
child
to
lose
balance
and
fall,
a
preschool
child
can
climb
the
chain
and
disc
ladders
and
navigate
the
curved
walkway
and
the
many
openings,
but
not
when
there
are
active,
school-aged
children
nearby.
H
The
mayor
chose
not
to
recognize
the
danger
posts
to
preschool
children
who
try
to
navigate
the
playground
used
by
school-aged
children,
regardless
of
other
organizations.
Do
the
Minnesota,
Safety
Council
States
player
areas
for
different
age
groups
should
be
separated.
The
Minnesota,
County's
intergovernmental
trust
areas
for
preschool
chill
age.
Children
should
be
separate
from
areas
intended
for
school-aged
children,
the
public
playground,
safety
handbook,
a
school,
on
the
other
hand,
may
have
no
children
under
age.
H
Four
attending
the
council
did
not
hear
this
information
at
the
hearing,
because
residents
did
not
know
the
mayor
was
going
to
offer
the
public
playground
to
the
private
business
Success
Academy
until
after
the
hearing
was
closed
to
the
public.
The
mayor
provided
an
opinion
and
unfortunately
come
to
voted.
Council
voted
to
support
an
opinion
and
not
the
recommendations
of
the
Planning
Commission
or
the
guidance
of
other
state
organizations.
F
Mayor
of
so
I
I
think,
there's
a
nugget
in
there
that's
kind
of
interesting,
which
is
you
know,
and
maybe
something
for
consideration,
since
we
have
Smith
Park
as
one
of
the
parks
we're
looking
at.
You
know,
if,
if
we
should,
if
there
is
a
general
rule
and
I,
don't
know
the
answer
to
this,
that
there
should
be
separate
areas
for
preschool
children
like
accessible
for
preschool
children
like
equipment,
changes
or
additions,
or
whatever
to
accommodate
varying
age
groups.
F
I
mean
that
seems
like
something
that
might
be
worth
considering
when
we
know
that
that
playground
will
be
something
that
we
are.
That
will
continue
to
need
to
accommodate
school-aged
children
as
well
as
kids,
who
are
not
in
school
age,
so
that
might
be
something
to
put
on
the
Smith
Park
list
right.
So
thanks
for
that,
I
hadn't
really
ever
heard
of
that.
So
that's
very
cool
question
for
you.
That
was
a
school
before
correct,
Lutheran
School
is
that
right
was
it?
Was
it
a
was?
F
H
F
H
Does
have
you
can
tell
the
one
side
is
for
the
lower
and
one
side's
for
older,
but
when
the
30
kids
came
out
of
the
playground,
yeah
yeah,
they
didn't
stick
to.
H
You
wouldn't
expect
them
to
right:
I
mean
the
children
were
being
appropriate.
Students
right.
It
was
inappropriate,
in
my
opinion,
in
its
opinion
that
the
mayor
offered
the
playground
after
the
hearing
was
closed.
So
there
was
no
conversation,
there
was
no
conversation
before
it
was
voted
on
and
there
was
no
conversation.
I
understand
it.
I
mean
it
just
came
out
of
left
field
and
it
was
voted
on
and
again
it's
part
of
the
inaccurate
information.
H
C
We
have
time.
First
of
all,
it
was
not
my
recollection
that
we
gave
the
part
to
the
facility
we
removed
the
requirement
for
them
to
build
their
own
Park.
It's
a
completely
different
thing
in
my
mind,
I,
don't
know
if
that's
your
recollection
or
not,
so
we
did
not
give
that
to
him.
That's
inaccurate
information
that
you
provided
to
I
asked
a
simple,
yes
or
no
question
without
any
commentary
or
anything
else,
the
fact
is:
is
Miss
Ness.
C
The
fact
is,
is
the
answer
to
the
question
I
asked
is
yes,
it
goes
to
the
Smith
Park
parking
lot.
That
is
where
it
goes.
The
recommendation
of
the
Traffic
Engineers,
Bolton
and
Mac
was
that,
regardless
of
the
expansion
of
the
school,
that
we
should
change
that,
regardless
of
that.
H
H
H
Valley
that
entire
property
is
Cedar
Valley,
the
city
needed
a
Park
and
Cedar
Valley,
and
the
City
built
that
Park,
together
with
conditions.
We
did
the
same
thing
with
the
field
behind
Darrell
fruit
as
a
field.
We
did
the
same
thing.
We
built
that
together
the
playground,
the
it's
our
property,
we
built
it
and
all
sudden
they
were
using
it,
there's
no
shared
agreement
on
it.
There
was
no
liability
insurance
on
it.
There
was
none
of
the
particulars
you're
talking
about
the
other,
Public
Schools,
our
municipalities.
Yes,
we
work
with
our
municipalities,
our
Bloomington
schools.
C
A
For
this
we
can't
put
the
conversation
off
right
here.
We've
got
another
person
and
maybe
there's
a
possibility.
We
only
have
a
little
extra
time
at
the
end,
but
if
not
we'll
have
to
hold
those
questions
until
we.
D
Get
together
a
very,
very
brief
comment:
I
just
I
just
want
to
address
something
that
that
has
come
up
now
and
that
is
that
the
the
idea
that
that
things
would
change
after
the
public
comment
period
is
closed.
That
happens
frequently
in
the
work
that
the
city
council
does
on
ordinances,
on
development
plans
and
all
kinds
of
things
that
we
make
changes
to
conditions
we
make
changes
to
ordinances,
that's
just
the
nature
of
the
process.
D
A
Five
minutes
all
right,
so
hopefully
we
can
get
this
done
in
five
minutes
here.
Apologize
for
the
I.
B
B
B
B
B
It's
about
September,
eight
months
or
so
I've
sat
on
board.
You
know
before
committees,
the
boards
and
whatnot
and
usually
on
a
board,
there's
always
some
type
of
Treasury
or
Supa
report
or
some
type
of
Financial
Health
of
a
given
organization.
B
D
The
time
that
I
started
on
the
board
that
that
was
sort
of
when
it
initially
became
more
challenging
for
Artistry
to
get
the
financial
information
and
by
the
time
Finance
by
the
time
when
I
was
on
the
board
that
that
information
was
coming
forward.
Then
it
became
clear
that
the
financial
difficulties
that
Artistry
was
in.
B
D
B
Right
right,
so
then
you
know
so
you
you
did
know
they
were
in
trouble
like.
A
Well,
Mr
Thule,
maybe
didn't
have
the
opportunity
to
watch
the
presentation,
but
their
the
bookkeeper
had
passed
away.
As
my
understanding
in
January
right
joined,
the
board,
I
think
it
was.
B
F
The
only
the
only
connection
is
the
obviously
the
the
agreement
to
run
the
box
office
and
things
like
that
on
behalf
for
the
city
and
it's
other
in
its
other,
you
know
members,
and
then
they
go
through
a
grant
process,
like
all
the
other
artists
do
and
have
gotten
what
was
it
50,
000
I
think
this
past
year,
for
example,
in
in
Grant
funds
like
same
as
you
know,
cantati
same
as
the
ballet
same
as
all
you
know,
all
the
other,
the
symphony
they
all
go
through.
That
process.
B
B
B
G
G
B
F
B
B
G
A
So
we
are
at
time,
can
we
can
can
I
get
your
guys's
permission
to
go
an
additional?
Let's
say
four
more
minutes.
A
D
B
Yeah
yeah
yeah
and
that's
my
concern.
You
know
like
art
I,
want
to
see
it
more
like
Enterprise
and
there
has
to
be
some
oversight,
like
you
said,
very,
very
big
concern.
You
know
and
it
sounds
like
you
knew
about
some
of
the
stuff
and
every
board.
I've
sat
on
like
I
said
you
and
the
city
manager
have
sat
on
this
board
for
a
long
time.
Every
board
that
I've
sat
on
I
kind
of
know,
the
Financial
Health
of
those
organizations
and
I
would
have
said
something.
D
That
that
the
board,
for
varying
reasons,
some
of
which
were
entirely
out
of
the
board's
control,
but
the
board
didn't,
have
the
information
it
needed,
but
that
information
was
late
incoming
and
by
the
time
that
information
came
forward
from
the
Auditors
from
including
a
bookkeeper
who
likely
said
they
it
was.
It
became
clear
the
extent
to
which
Artistry
was
experiencing
these
difficulties.
D
Month
we
so
we
meet
quarterly.
Okay,
an
Artistry
board
meets
quarterly,
and
then
that
was
a
change
ad
right
after
I
started.
B
B
Asked
for
the
city,
manager's
resignation
I'm
a
resident
asking
for
your
resignation,
because
I
think
it's
poor,
okay
and
I
know
you
apologize
right,
but
this
is
our
tax
dollars
that
went
to
Artistry.
That
should
not
have
I'm
going
to
be
very
direct
with
you
guys
here.
A
lot
of
people
are
hot
about
this.
F
So
the
the
you're
suggesting
that
the
hundred
and
fifty
thousand
dollars
shouldn't
have
been
allocated
so
just
to
be
very
clear,
Dwayne
didn't
vote
for
it
and
neither
did
Tim.
So
it
was
a
5-2.
Is
that
right
or
yeah.
D
F
No,
they
agreed
it
did
yes,
but
they
they
didn't
agree
with
it.
So,
just
as
because
I
was
super
harsh
on
that
in
that
meeting,
but
also
voted
for
it.
I'll
explain
to
you
why
I
did
not
that
you
asked,
but
here's
the
thing
I
know
you
I
know
you
think
it's
about
art,
but
we
were
trying.
F
Doing,
like
you
know
the
ticket
taking
and
stuff
like
that,
call
call
it
what
you
will,
but
you
know
this
strategic
priorities
fund.
I,
have
you
know
it
was?
It
was
money
we
could
use
to
help
people
who
deserve
to
get
paid,
get
paid
and
I'll
just
explain
it
to
you
that
way
and
I
don't
want
to
speak
for
anybody
else
in
terms
of
why
they
chose
to
vote.
B
I
G
H
A
Of
points
their
own
board
members,
so
I
want
to
thank
the
council
and
I
want
to
thank
our
our
our
listeners
here.
Folks,
who
came
in
to
present
before
us
I
need
a
motion
to
adjourn
second.
F
A
Emotion
in
a
second
all,
those
in
favor.