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From YouTube: Boulder City Council Meeting 6-1-21
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A
A
A
A
A
A
C
C
G
G
B
Okay,
very
good,
give
me
just
one
second:
okay,
welcome
everyone
to
the
tuesday
june
1st
regular
meeting
of
the
boulder
city
council.
We
will
start
with
a
few
announcements
to
kick
us
off.
First
coveted
19,
vaccinations
they're
widely
available,
and
you
can
find
out
information
about
how
to
get
a
vaccine,
how
to
sign
up
for
one
or
where
to
walk
in
at
boulder
county
dot,
org,
slash
families,
slash
disease,
slash,
coven,
19,
slash
vaccines.
You
can
see
that
on
the
screen
and
then
the
second
announcement
is
boards
and
commissions.
B
F
What
was
in
handy
present.
G
A
G
J
D
K
G
K
G
B
Excellent
excellent
good
to
have
us
all
here.
Next,
I
will
need
a
motion
to
amend
the
agenda.
Please
we'd,
like
to
add
item
8a.
B
It's
a
discussion
on
scheduling,
including
a
potential
scheduling
conflict
with
the
major
league
all-star
game,
as
well
as
a
few
other
items
to
cover.
So
could
I
get
a
motion
to
amend
the
agenda.
D
B
E
Thank
you
sam,
and
it
is
always
an
honor
to
present
this.
It's
my
second
year
reading
the
national
gun
violence
awareness
day
and
obviously
this
year
in
boulder
it
is
hits
home
a
little
harder
than
usual
so
june.
4Th
2021
is
national
gun
violence.
Awareness
day
every
day,
more
than
100
americans
are
killed
by
gun
violence
and
on
average
there
are
more
than
13
000
gun
homicides
every
year.
E
E
Council
and
law
enforcement
officers
know
their
communities
are
the
are
the
most
familiar
with
local
criminal
activity
and
how
to
address
it
and
are
well
positioned
to
understand
how
to
keep
their
communities
members
safe,
gun
violence.
Prevention
is
more
important
than
ever
as
the
kovid
19
pandemic
continues
to
exacerbate
gun
violence.
After
more
than
a
year
of
increased
gun,
sales,
increased
calls
to
suicide
and
domestic
violence
hotlines
and
an
increase
in
city
gun
violence.
E
In
january,
2013
hadiya
pendleton
was
tragically
shot
and
killed
at
age
15.
on
june
4th
2021
to
recognize
what
would
have
been
her
24th
birthday.
People
across
the
united
states
will
recognize
national
gun
violence
awareness
day
and,
where
orange
in
tribute
to
hadiya,
pendleton
other
victims
of
gun,
violence
and
the
loved
ones
of
those
victims.
E
Boulder
is
committed
more
than
ever,
to
being
part
of
the
change
that
prevents
the
unspeakable
pain
and
suffering
that
follows
these
events.
To
do
all
we
can
to
keep
firearms
out
of
the
wrong
hands
and
to
encourage
responsible
gun
ownership
to
keep
our
community
safe
by
wearing
orange.
On
june,
4th
2021
americans
will
raise
awareness
about
gun,
violence
and
honor
the
lives
of
gun,
violence,
victims
and
survivors.
E
With
that
sam,
I
believe
we
have
a
member
of
mom's
demand
action,
which
is
the
advocate
for
wear
orange
day
with
us
today,
christina
gardner-
and
I
I
would
also
just
like
to
take
a
moment
on
on
behalf
of
city
council,
to
really
thank
mom's
demand,
action
and
other
gun
violence
prevention
groups
in
the
area
for
being
so
supportive
to
our
community
for
for
quite
a
while
after
march
22nd,
and
for
the
advocacy
that
you
all
do
at
the
local
state
and
national
level
for
gun
violence
prevention.
M
Thank
you
for
that
wonderful
proclamation.
As
rachel
said,
my
name
is
christina
gardner,
I'm
a
south
boulder
resident,
also
a
member
of
the
leadership
team
for
the
boulder
group
of
moms
demand
action.
Thank
you
so
much
for
issuing
this
proclamation
to
recognize
national
gun
violence
awareness
day
and
for
the
opportunity
for
our
group
to
speak
tonight.
M
Our
local
group
appreciates
the
support
of
council
members
and
has
for
the
past
several
years,
and
we
also
would
like
to,
of
course
thank
rachel
for
her
longtime
gun,
violence,
prevention,
advocacy
and
for
being
a
former
member
of
mom's
demand
action
former
volunteer,
and
thank
you
also
to
to
mayor
sam
weaver
for
being
a
member
of
the
everytown
coalition
mayors
against
illegal
guns
and
the
statistics.
M
As
rachel
already
pointed
out
surrounding
gun
violence
in
our
country
are
staggering
and
unacceptable,
and
in
our
own
state
they
have
become
just
a
fact
of
everyday
life
for
those
of
us
here
in
colorado.
M
So,
with
a
rate
of
14
per
100
000
people,
colorado
has
the
21st
highest
rate
of
gun
deaths
in
the
u.s
and,
of
course,
as
rachel
also
pointed
out,
our
town
of
boulder
has
now
become
the
site
of
yet
another
mass
shooting.
With
the
tragedy
of
king
supers
and
as
was
also
mentioned,
this
makes
this
gun
violence
aware,
on
this
day,
very
personal
and
very
significant
to
our
local
community.
M
Our
volunteers
and
supporters
wear
orange
to
demand
a
future.
That's
free
from
gun,
violence
and
orange,
as
was
mentioned,
symbolizes
the
value
of
each
person's
life.
We
wear
it
to
honor
those
who
are
taken
and
wounded
by
gun
violence
and
the
call
for
an
end
to
this
crisis.
This
year.
For
where
orange
our
group
is
hosting
virtual
events
and
our
virtual
event
is
a
soul
box
project.
M
And
this
is
an
example
of
one
that
my
daughter
just
made
today,
and
it
was
made
for
terry
who
we
knew
at
king
supers,
and
so
she
filled
it
with
tissue
paper
and
a
couple
of
little
jewels
and
terry's
name,
and
she
chose
the
paper
very
specifically.
M
The
flowers
and
the
papers
were
chosen
very
specifically
for
carrie.
She
also
made
one
for
one
of
my
friends
who
was
lost
in
new
york
city
to
gun
violence
as
well
they're,
pretty
simple
to
make
my
10
year
old,
made
them
my
eight-year-old
made
one,
and
my
six-year-old
is
making
one
right
now.
M
You
can
learn
more
about
how
to
make
one
we'd
love
for
everyone
on
council
to
make
one
everyone
who
is
has
been
touched
by
the
tragedy
at
king
supers
to
make
one
you
can
go
to
soulboxproject.org
to
find
out
how
there's
a
really
useful
video
we'll
be
collecting
these
all
summer
to
mail
to
washington
dc,
and
we
would
love
to
have
a
large
representation
from
boulder
represented.
M
The
soulbox
project
will
be
creating
a
large
exhibit
on
the
national
mall
in
october
and
walking
all
of
these
soul
boxes
into
the
national
mall
in
mid-october,
and
we
will
have
representatives
from
our
local
boulder
moms
to
mount
demand
action
group
there
in
person
for
that
and
at
the
state
level.
We
have
three
gun
violence
prevention
bills
expected
to
pass
this
week,
and
so,
as
we
continue
to
mourn
the
lives
taken
at
the
table,
mesa
king
supers.
B
Thank
you
christina
and
thank
you
rachel
for
the
proclamation.
Next
we
have
a
proclamation
or
a
declaration
for
lesbian,
gay,
bisexual,
transgender
and
queer
pride
month,
and
this
declaration
will
be
presented
by
bob
yates.
N
Thanks
sam-
and
this
is
actually
the
second
time
today
that
this
proclamation
will
be
read
earlier
today,
juni
on
behalf
of
city
council,
read
this
proclamation
to
a
gathering
at
the
corner
of
pearl
and
broadway,
and
a
rainbow
flag
was
hoisted
up
on
the
flagpole.
Some
of
us
are
still
wearing
our
rainbow
clothes
from
earlier.
Today,
I've
seen
her.
Yes,
he
still
has
her
rainbow
scarf
on.
N
So
thanks
for
showing
the
spirit-
and
today
is
june,
one,
it
happens
to
be
the
very
beginning
of
pride
month,
so
we
thought
this
is
a
great
time
to
read
our
annual
pride
month.
Decoration
so
I'll,
read
that
and
then
I
think,
marty
moore
with
a
boulder
is
here
and
can
say
a
few
words
more
than
50
years
ago,
patrons
and
supporters
of
the
stonewall
inn
in
new
york
city
resisted
police
harassment
that
had
become
all
too
common
for
members
of
the
lesbian,
gay,
bisexual,
transgender
and
queer
community.
N
N
Boulder
has
a
diverse
lgbtq
community
that
includes
people
of
many
ethnicities,
religions
and
professions,
and
we
consider
diversity
to
be
a
societal
asset
that
enhances
and
enriches
the
lives
of
all
community
members.
Lgbtq
americans
have
made
and
continue
to
make
great
and
lasting
contributions
to
strengthen
the
fabric
of
our
community.
N
O
Hi,
this
is
marty
councilman
yates.
Thank
you
very
much
and
city
council.
Thank
you
for
the
declaration.
We're
grateful
today
was
a
great
day
back
in
person
almost
no
masks,
and
we
were
outside
and
council
member,
yates
and
and
joseph.
Thank
you
very
much
for
your
participation
and
nuria
was
a
total
pleasure
to
meet
you
and
your
words
were
impactful,
so
I
was
thinking
about
them
since
you
last
spoke
them.
So
thank
you.
So
much
we're
grateful
to
the
city
of
boulder.
O
There's
been
a
lot
of
progress
made
under
y'all's
leadership,
as
nuria
pointed
out
today
from
the
all
gender
bathrooms
at
the
library,
the
downtown
library,
to
changing
the
building
code,
which
we
haven't
even
really
announced
around
bathrooms
because
we
went
into
the
pandemic
right
after
the
building
codes
were
changed.
So
there's
a
lot
of
work,
that's
been
done
by
you
all
and
I'm
grateful,
and
I
know
it.
It
takes
a
lot
of
time.
O
I'm
grateful
for
all
the
time
you
commit
to
the
city
of
boulder
and
all
the
areas,
including
inclusion,
we're
stronger,
we're
a
stronger
community
because
of
your
leadership
and
we're
grateful.
I
wanted
to
let
you
know,
based
upon
mayor
weaver's
comment.
We
are
doing
a
pride
clinic
in
conjunction
with
el
centro,
amistad
b
cap
and
together
on
saturday
june
12th,
it's
j
and
j
vaccine
from
nine
until
one
and
then
also
there's
going
to
be
a
boulder
pride
motorcade,
so
you'll
all
want
to
be
at
that
starts
at
noon.
O
Sign
up
it's
a
secret
location.
I
can't
announce
it.
No,
I
don't
know
where
it's
at
so,
but
if
you'll
sign
up
one
I'll,
let
you
know
where,
where
we're
starting
for
the
parade
on
sunday
june
13th.
So
I
want
to
say
thank
you
and
I
want
to
say
thank
you,
especially
for
all
your
work.
During
the
pandemic,
the
work
of
your
staff
had
a
direct
impact
on
the
health
of
the
lgbtq
community
through
the
special
grants
that
you
all
sent
our
way
for
cares.
O
Funding
through
elizabeth
crowe
made
a
real
difference
and
was
a
lifeline
for
a
lot
of
people
who
were
suffering
and
continue
to
suffer,
but
we're
grateful
for
that
and
grateful
for
the
ongoing
support
of
the
city
of
boulder's
human
relations
commission
with
sponsorship
for
pride.
So
on
that
I
know
you
have
a
long
night
ahead
of
you.
I
want
to
thank
you
for
your
time
and
thank
you
very
much
for
your
work
and
for
honoring,
the
lgbtq
community.
B
Great
well,
thank
you
so
much
marty
for
being
here
much
appreciated
and
thank
you
bob
for
reading
that
and
with
that
we
will
turn
to
the
third
part
of
the
beginning
of
the
meeting,
which
is
our
municipal
court.
Quarterly
update,
provided
by
judge,
linda
cook,.
B
B
Well,
we
are
waiting
to
see
if
judge
cook
is
able
to
fix
her
technical
difficulties.
Who
I
see
she's
unmuted
linda.
Can
you
try
and
speak.
P
I'm
happy
to
give
it
a
shot.
I
don't
have
linda's
notes,
but
I
have
looked
over
the
presentation
a
couple
of
times
this
afternoon
to
look
at
it
and
perhaps,
if
linda
wants
to
check
back
in,
she
can
join
us.
P
If
I
recall
correctly
from
her
notes,
the
council
was
interested
in
getting
some
data
from
judge
cook
and
from
the
court
regarding
disparities
that
might
exist
across
racial
backgrounds,
of
our
individuals
that
come
to
court,
and
so
she
went
about
kind
of
breaking
it
down
and
what
she's
got
here
is,
I
think,
she's
going
to
join
from
her
office
she's
indicated,
but
what
she
went
about
doing
was
gathering
information
and
really
focused
on
traffic
cases,
and
the
primary
reason
for
that
is
there
aren't.
P
There
are
really
is
not
a
good
set
of
data
to
work
with
with
respect
to
fines,
although
I
think
she
will
speak
to
this
at
the
end
of
the
presentation,
but
not
a
great
deal
of
data
on
fines
that
you
can
position
with
respect
to
race
and
and
things
of
that
nature.
So
what
you
will
be
seeing
here
in
these
slides
are
the
numbers
with
respect
to
the
very
various
racial
breakouts.
P
My
role
would
probably
today
would
have
been
to
discuss
some
of
the
anecdotal
issues
that
we
face,
and
perhaps
I
can
start
with
that,
and
if
people
have
additional
questions,
when
you
see
the
slides,
there
really
isn't
a
significant
disparity
between
at
least
the
fines
that
are
imposed.
There
certainly
is
some
disparity
in
the
number
of
people
who
are
of
color
who
receive
citations
and,
if
you'll
recall
the
way
the
municipal
court
works,
we
receive
citations
from
two
different
entities.
P
We
receive
them
from
the
boulder
police
department
and
from
cu
boulder
police
department,
and
so
what
linda
did
was
gather
the
information
for
the
citations,
but
they
issue
tickets.
So
when
you
first
are
looking
at
the
racial
issues
from
that
perspective,
you're
looking
at
percentages
of
people
that
are
within
the
city
of
boulder,
perhaps
white
and
black
asians
hispanics,
and
I
believe,
indian.
She
also
broke
it
down
into
india
and
what
you
would
find
is
there
is
a
discrepancy
in
the
number
of
citations
that
are
issued.
P
Whites
and
blacks
are
actually
overrepresented
in
those
citations
blocks
to
a
higher
degree
than
than
white
people,
and
so
that's
certainly
something.
I
think
that
was
brought
to
the
attention
of
the
police
department
on
prior
occasions,
and
we
won't
spend
a
great
deal
of
time
talking
about
that,
but
that's
area,
one
which
is
to
discuss
how
our
citations
being
issued
and,
of
course
the
court
doesn't
have
much
control
over
that.
The
next
step
in
the
process
is:
when
tickets
come
to
court.
P
Then
we
have
individuals
who
often
will
actually
pay
their
tickets.
Most
people
are
offered
an
opportunity
to
pay
without
coming
to
court
on
traffic
cases,
so
many
of
them
will
accept
a
plea
bargain,
for
example,
if
they
had
a
four-point
speeding
ticket,
they
could
call
the
court
or
mail
the
court
or
go
online
even
and
pay
a
reduction,
a
reduced
fine
and
have
the
points
reduced
from
four
points
to
two
points
that
fine
is
set
and
so
that
fine
doesn't
really
vary
across
any
of
the
racial
areas
that
we
might
have
then
there
there.
P
But
there
are
some
who
do
choose
to
come
to
court
and
it's
actually
a
smaller
percentage
of
those
tickets
that
are
issued
of
people
who
come
to
court
and
when
they
come
to
court
they're
offered
plea
bargains.
A
lot
of
people
will
take
the
standard
plea
bargain
offer
that's
made
by
the
prosecutor's
office
and
actually,
when
they
come
to
speak
with
me,
they
will
be
told
about
their
plea.
Bargain
the
prosecutors
allow
us
to
tell
them
what
the
plea
bargain
offer
is,
and
they
may
accept
that
without
even
speaking
to
a
prosecutor.
P
Q
Okay,
can
you
tell
me
which
slide
you're
on.
P
Q
Perfectly
so
I
just
want
to
start
out
I'm
sorry
for
the
technical
difficulties.
I
was
in
the
courtroom
and
we
have
a
different
sound
system
in
there.
So
obviously
it
wasn't
compatible
with
tonight's
meeting
if
we
can
go
to
slide
two.
Q
The
two
topics
that
I'll
be
presenting
on
tonight
are:
council
member
young
asked
me
to
present
data
court
data
on
race
and
race
and
ethnicity.
So
that's
the
primary
focus.
I
do
want
to
emphasize
that
this
data
is
extracted
from
the
municipal
courts
records
management
system.
It
is
not
intended
to
be
reflected
abroad,
practices
across
the
enforcement
agencies,
they
issue
citations
in
the
state
and
county
court,
as
well
as
the
municipal
court.
So
this
is
not
the
full
body
of
that
data.
Q
Also,
it
has
not
been
subjected
to
any
type
of
academic
scrutiny.
Next
slide.
Please
here
are
some
notes
about
the
terms
that
I'm
using
and
the
limitations
that
we
have
so
the
the
terms
are
based
on
what
is
printed
on
the
citation,
and
it's
not
necessarily
what
I
would
use
in
a
different
context,
but
it's
just
easier
to
reflect.
What's
on
the
citations,
there
are
some
limitations
in
terms
of
what
our
court
database
records
management
system
collects.
Next
slide,
please.
Q
All
right
so
we're
going
to
focus
largely
on
traffic
cases,
as
judge
khan
was
discussing,
there's
there's
a
lot
that
goes
on
with
these
cases
and
it's
a
really
big
data
set.
So
it's
probably
the
best
data
set
for
this
kind
of
evaluation.
It
covers
the
last
three
years
and
if
you
have
questions
that
are
sort
of
one,
you
want
to
ask
about
anecdotal
experience.
That's
probably
bet
those
are
probably
best
directed
at
judge
khan
because
he
presides
over
most
of
these
dockets
next.
Q
Just
a
reminder
about
traffic
case
flow:
there
are
three
different
parts
of
the
criminal
justice
system
that
are
involved
in
addressing
these
cases
next
slide.
Please.
Q
Q
So
because
a
significant
number
of
traffic
citations
are
issued
to
people
who
don't
reside
in
boulder,
it's
really
difficult
to
see
if
there's
any
over-representation
of
any
race
or
ethnic
group.
When
you
look
at
the
entire
data
set
so
to
try
to
understand
any
potential
disparities,
I
used
a
subset
of
all
the
traffic
citations
issued
over
the
last
three
years.
That
consists
only
of
the
people
who
have
bolder
addresses.
Q
But
if
you
take
that
subset
of
tickets
issued
to
people
who
are
city
of
boulder
residents-
and
you
compare
it
across
the
city
of
boulder
population
breakdown,
you
can
see
that
whites
and
blacks
are
over
represented
compared
to
their
population
in
the
city
and
that
blacks
are
over
represented
to
a
greater
degree
than
whites.
Next.
R
Q
Please
all
right,
I'm
going
to
turn
now
to
the
next
phase
of
the
criminal
justice
system
when
it
comes
to
traffic
cases.
This
is
the
plea
bargaining
phase,
so,
as
judge
khan
was
mentioning
when
I
popped
back
in,
there
are
some
standard
plea
offers
that
are
made
by
the
prosecutors
that
the
judges
are
empowered
to
offer
to
people
who
appear
in
court
or
for
people
who
are
issued
citations.
Q
The
the
points
are
relevant.
You
can
see
that
these
there
are
point
reductions
that
are
offered.
The
points
are
relevant
because
if
you
accumulate
too
many
points,
your
driver's
license
is
suspended,
so
that
is
often
the
main
concern
for
people
coming
to
court
and
it's
standard
practice
in
all
municipal
and
county
courts
across
the
state
to
offer
plea
bargain
that
have
point
reductions.
Q
Q
So
to
try
to
understand
if
there
are
race
or
ethnic
disparities
in
plea
bargaining
practices.
What
I
did
was,
I
looked
at
the
very,
very
small
subset
of
cases
that
resulted
in
non-standard
plea
offers.
So
out
of
the
17
000
plus
cases
filed
over
the
last
three
years.
There
were
337
cases
where
the
plea
bargain
offered
deviated
from
one
of
those
two
standard
offers,
so
only
about
two
percent
of
the
total
cases.
Q
Non-Standard
plea
bargains
are
almost
always
better
than
the
standard
offer.
So
as
an
example,
somebody
might
be
offered
the
chance
to
have
their
four-point
violation
reduced
down
to
zero
points.
So
the
graph
on
the
left
shows
the
percent
of
individuals
by
race
and
ethnicity,
who
received
a
non-standard
plea.
Q
The
graph
on
the
right
shows,
for
the
sake
of
comparison,
the
break
of
race
and
ethnicity
across
all
traffic
citations
issued
in
that
same
time
frame.
So
what
you
look
when
you
see,
that
is
that
the
asian
subset
is
somewhat
over
represented
in
the
non-standard
plea
bargain
group,
while
hispanics
are
somewhat
underrepresented.
Q
But
again,
please
keep
in
mind
that
this
is
a
very
small
data
set
of
337
cases.
Next
slide,
please
so,
finally,
I'm
going
to
talk
about
the
phase
of
traffic
cases
that
is
left
to
the
judge,
which
is
the
imposition
of
penalties.
Again,
the
vast
majority
of
cases.
The
offender
pays,
the
pre-authorized
fine
amount
written
on
the
citation
by
the
officer
and
gets
that
standard,
two-point
reduction
for
the
smaller
percentage
of
offenders
who
come
to
court.
Q
Q
So
this
this
table
is
a
little
bit
busy,
but
let
me
just
try
to
walk
you
through
it
for
the
three
to
four
point
violations
which
are
noted
on
the
right:
the
pre-authorized
fine
amount
is
125,
except
for
non-injury
accidents
and
in
those
cases
we
add
a
designated
surcharge
onto
the
standard
amount
for
school
and
construction
zone
tickets.
The
law
requires
us
to
double
the
fine
amounts,
so
the
pre-authorized
fine
amount
is
250
and
that's
why
you'll
see
that
the
average
for
these
tickets
does
skew
slightly
higher
than
the
median.
Q
If
you
look
on
the
left,
the
zero
to
two
point
violations,
the
pre-authorized
fine
amount
is
one
hundred
dollars
again,
except
for
non-injury
accidents
when
a
surcharge
is
added
because
a
higher
percentage
of
these
violations
are
issued
when
there's
an
accident,
that's
probably
why
the
average
and
the
median
skew
higher
than
the
standard
pre-authorized
fine
amount,
so
an
example
might
be
a
ticket
issued
for
improper
backing.
That's
a
two-point
violation,
usually
there's
a
minor
accident
where
somebody
is
backed
into
another
car
or
an
object.
Q
The
average
and
median
fine
amounts
is
pretty
close
across
all
demographic
groups.
The
one
situation
that
did
jump
out
at
me
is
the
average
and
median
fines
for
asians
with
zero
to
two
point.
Violations
and
judge
khan
may
have
a
better
sense
of
why
that
might
be.
One
possible
explanation
is
that
there
may
be
fewer
accidents
for
this
demographic
group,
but
that
would
be
speculation
on
my
part
next
slide.
Please.
Q
All
right,
it
would
take
a
huge
amount
of
effort
to
produce
fine
data
for
the
fines
and
post
in
all
cases
where
a
judge
is
setting
the
fine
rather
than
the
standard
fine
being
assessed.
We
can
certainly
do
that
deep
dive,
if
that's
a
request
of
the
council,
but
it
was
relatively
easy
to
do
it
for
that
small
subset
of
people
who
received
a
non-standard
plea
bargain
that
337
or
two
percent
of
the
people.
So
here's
the
data
and
posed
about
the
imposed
about
the
fines
and
post
in
those
cases.
Q
So
you
know
again,
average
median
and
range,
and
the
n
indicates
the
number
of
people
in
each
of
those
groups
so
again,
very
small.
I
wouldn't.
I
would
encourage
you
not
to
extrapolate
anything
from
that.
Q
Okay,
I'm
going
to
talk
now
very
briefly
about
general
offenses.
The
situation
with
general
offenses,
though,
is
that
there
are
really
no
standard
plea
bargains
and
most
people
are
not
paying
a
pre-authorized
fine
amount.
So
the
analysis
is
just
is
much
higher
level
for
these
cases.
R
Q
So
these
are
the
percentage
of
citations
issued
by
the
various
enforcement
agencies
for
each
of
the
last
three
years
to
different
race
and
ethnic
groups,
and
just
so
you
know,
there's
a
broader
group
of
enforcement
agencies
that
issues
these
citations.
In
addition
to
the
boulder
police
department
and
the
cu
police
department,
the
open
space
and
mountain
parks
rangers
issued
quite
a
few
citations,
as
do
some
of
our
other
enforcement
agencies,
such
as
code
enforcement.
Q
So
this
chart
depicts
the
citations
issued
to
the
subset
of
people
experiencing
homelessness.
Extracting
that
data
is
imperfect,
it
is
based
on
the
charge
that
was
cited
like,
for
instance,
camping.
So
this
method
is
inevitably
going
to
include
some
violations
that
are
committed
by
people
who
are
not
experiencing
homelessness,
and
it
will
also
exclude
some
charges
that
are
mostly
completed
by
people
not
experiencing
homelessness.
So,
for
instance,
if
a
young
adult
up
here
experiencing
homelessness
is
cited
for
minor
in
possession,
that's
not
going
to
be
reflected
in
this
data.
Q
You
can
see
that
there
are
some
limitations
to
this
analysis,
because
the
way
the
court
collects
data
is
different
from
the
way.
The
point
of
time
survey
does
that.
Nevertheless,
you
can
see
that
whites
and
blacks
are
overrepresented
in
comparison
to
their
distribution
in
the
unhoused
population,
while
the
opposite
is
true
for
indians
or
native
americans
and
asians
next
slide.
Please.
Q
And
the
final
subgroup
I
studied
was
the
data
for
young
adults
based
on
general
offenses,
committed
by
people
age
18
to
25..
A
very
high
percentage
of
these
violations
are
for
minors
who
possessed
or
consumed
alcohol
or
marijuana.
So
I
don't
want
you
to
think
that
that
these
are
all
noise
and
nuisance
party
violations.
Certainly
those
are
encompassed
in
this
group,
but
we
get
a
very
high
percentage
of
cases
for
those
two
violations:
minors
in
possession
of
alcohol
and
marijuana.
Q
Obviously,
not
all
violators
are
cu
students,
but
since
many
of
them
are,
I
thought
it
might
be
helpful
to
look
at
our
data
compared
against
the
demographics
of
cu
students
and,
as
you
can
see,
citations
issued
to
white
and
black
ben
offenders
exceed
their
representation
in
the
cu
student
body,
while
the
reverse
is
true
for
hispanic
and
asian
violators.
Q
S
Thank
you,
judge,
cook
and
judge
khan,
one
just
a
quick
question
and
I'm
wondering
if
what
kind
of
takeaways
you
have
from
this
data,
if
any.
Q
I
I
think
probably
it
raises
some
questions
that
might
be
worth
studying,
but
I'm
not
sure
that
it's
given
me
any
strong
takeaways
how
about
for
you
judge
khan,
because
you
see
most
of
those
people
charged
with
those
17
000
plus
traffic
violations.
P
The
the
data
does
not
seem
to
to
create
a
big
takeaway
counselor,
but
I
I
can't
say
that,
what's
probably
more
significant
in
our
court
is
the
economic
realities
that
people
face.
It
seems
to
go
across
ethnicity,
the
people
that
I
see
in
the
traffic
arena
and
many
of
them
are
coming
from
outside
of
our
city.
They
work
inside
the
city
and
they
travel
to
and
from
or
their
students
who
are
commuting
to
school.
P
What
I've
experienced
is
that
people
struggle
financially
and
have
struggled
financially
significantly
during
covid,
and
so
even
looking
at
this
data
from
an
ethnicity
perspective,
those
things
tend
to
impact
socioeconomic
groups,
but
greater
if,
as
you
go
down
the
economic
chain
and
so
for
us
for
when,
whenever
I'm
looking
at
fines
and
considering
what
we've
done,
it's
really
helpful
to
see
the
data
broken
out,
so
that
I
can
feel
comfortable
that
I'm
not
in
doing
something.
That's
not
appropriate
with
individuals.
P
And
so
I
try
to
elicit
that
from
them
when
I'm
talking
to
them-
and
I
think
it's
really
important
that
we
do
this
work,
where
we
look
back
and
see
what
whether
there
are
discrepancies
as
far
as
the
fines
that
I
we
do
impose
because
it
does
keep
us.
I
don't
know
if
honest
is
right
word,
but
it
allows
us
to
kind
of
look
back
and
say:
are
we
doing
what
we
think
we're
doing?
So
I
think
the
work's
fairly
important
and
I'm
glad
the
council.
Does
it.
B
Q
All
right
next
slide,
so
just
a
brief
community
court
update
next
slide.
Please.
Q
As
a
reminder,
I
told
you
in
october
that
we
had
just
been
awarded
a
community
court
grant,
and
these
are
the
details
of
that
grant
that
I
shared
with
you
in
october.
We'll
go
to
the
next
slide.
I'll
show
you
where
we're
at
with
the
implementation.
Q
So
those
top
four
bullets
kind
of
olive,
green
color
shows
that
what
we've
done
so
far,
we're
really
excited
that
we've
that
we
are
close
to
signing
contracts
with
the
three
big
service
providers
who
would
be
working
with
for
those
what
is
really
the
heart
of
the
grant
financially
and
the
other
thing
we're
really
excited
about
is
the
fact
that
we're
taking
court
out
in
the
community
to
the
unhoused
at
a
location
that
they
frequent
over
there
at
deacon's
closet
at
grace,
commons
church
and
the
way
we
do
that
is.
Q
We
have
a
team
of
people
that
are
going
out
with
a
surface
just
like
many
of
you
are
using
these
days,
and
they
are,
you
know,
finding
people
right
there
on
the
sidewalk
having
them
sit
down
on
a
stool
and
they're
participating
in
court
just
the
way
we
are
on
soon
they're
doing
it,
but
they're
doing
it
from
that
location
and
I'm
in
the
courtroom.
Q
We
do
hope,
though,
to
realize
our
dream
of
having
community
court
located
somewhere
in
a
facility
so
that
we
can
have
it
co-located
with
key
homeless
service
providers.
That's
our
vision,
that's
the
way
they
do
it
in
spokane,
which
has
a
lot
of
parallels
to
us,
and
so
we
are
continuing
to
search
for
a
location
where
that
can
happen
next
slide.
Please.
Q
And
here's
some
initial
community
court
data
from
the
first
two
quarters
of
the
grant
just
showing
you
how
many
people
we've
screened
enrolled.
The
number
of
cases
that
reflects
you
can
see
that
there
are
quite
a
few
number
of
cases,
given
the
number
of
people
enrolled
for
all
of
these
cases,
we've
assigned
sanctions
or
tasks,
many
of
which
you
can
see
a
very
high
number
of
which
have
been
completed,
and
that
is
resulting
in
the
opportunity
for
these
folks
to
have
their
cases
dismissed.
Q
So
that's
a
very
high
level
overview
of
where
we're
at
with
community
at
court.
At
this
point,
and
next
slide
is
the
end
and
questions
you
may
have
about
community
court.
F
Q
Well,
really,
we
can
obtain
almost
anything
except
residential
treatment.
We
don't
have
enough
funding
for
that.
We,
if
we
put
somebody
in
residential
treatment,
we
could
probably
spend
the
grant
using.
You
know
over
three
or
four
people.
Q
However,
one
of
the
models
or
one
of
the
community
courts
in
new
york
when
they
started
doing
this,
their
initial
use
or
their
initial
approach-
was
to
have
outreach
workers
working
with
this
pot.
You
know
working
with
the
population
of
people
that
might
need
substance,
use
treatment
and
just
trying
to
figure
out
where
they
were
in
terms
of
their
readiness
for
treatment
and
to
try
to
build
trust
and
relationships
and
then
get
them
engaged
in
hopes
and
bringing
them
into
treatment
on
a
rather
than
just
going
in
and
saying,
okay
you're
assigned
treatment.
Q
This
population
is
pretty
skittish
about
engaging
people
and
they're
very
relationship
based,
so
we
anticipate
that
we
will
have
outreach
workers
who
will
start
that
engagement
and
then
slowly
as
people
become
more
trusting
and
more
interested
in
working
on
that
topic.
They'll
have
the
opportunity
to
do
so.
It
could
range
from
individual
treatment
to
group
sessions
depending
on
what
we
find,
and
it
can
include
medication,
assisted
treatment
for
people
who
are
open
to
that
and
for
situations
where
we
have
a
medication
that
makes
sense
for
that.
Individual.
F
Q
E
Yeah,
thanks
for
the
presentation,
judge
cook,
it's
cool
to
hear
that
you're
going
out
to
deakin's,
closet
and
kind
of
meeting
people
where
they
are
so.
I
was
just
curious
when
you
say
you're
hoping
to
to
work
with
partners
like
they
do
in
spokane.
What
what?
What
do
you
mean
by
that
or
what
will
that
look
like
like?
Where
do
you
visualize,
going
out
outside
of
deacon's
closet
or
places
like
that?
What
sort
of
partners.
Q
So
in
spokane
they
have
community
court
in
two
different
sites.
One
site
is
in
their
library,
which
is
downtown
as
ours
is,
and
one
site
is
in
a
community
center
in
a
you
know,
think
about,
for
instance,
a
parallel
would
be
if
it
were
at
the
south,
boulder
rec
center,
or
something
like
that,
and
in
one
room
they're
conducting
court
and
in
the
other
room
there
are
up
to
about,
I
would
say:
30
service
providers
that
work
with
the
homeless,
and
so
people
can
go
to
court
and
handle
their
court
case.
Q
But
then
they
can
go
next
door
to
the
room
where
the
service
providers
are
located
and
they're
all
there
in
one
place.
So
if
they
need
to
apply
for
a
social
security
card,
they
can
do
that
there.
If
they
want
to
interface
with
a
substance,
use
treatment,
provider
or
mental
health
treatment
provider.
Q
They
can
do
that
there
and
it
can
be
big
things
like
substance,
user,
mental
health
treatment
and
it
can
be
as
small
as
the
lions
club,
for
instance,
has
representatives
they
are
in
spokane
and
the
lions
club
charity
is
vision,
and
so
they
are
there
with
free
glasses
that
are
readers
that
they
will
provide
to
people
who
may
have
lost
their
readers
or
be
in
need
of
readers.
So
it
can
run
sort
of
the
whole
spectrum
of
the
various
different
resources
that
people
experiencing
homelessness
might
need
and
in
spokane-
and
we
hope
to
emulate
this.
Q
You
don't
have
to
have
a
court
case
to
go
and
participate
in
sort
of
that
resource.
Fair
part
of
the
community
court
session.
Q
Spokane
is
doing
it
weekly,
we
are,
we've
started
our
community
court
doing
it
every
other
week,
just
because
we're
trying
to
see
what
the
demand
is,
if
you
will
and
again
right
now,
it's
limited
to
the
mobile
or
pop-up
court
as
we
sometimes
call
it,
but
if
we
can
find
a
site
where
we
can
do
it
and
the
demand
is
there
for
doing
it
on
a
more
frequent
basis,
we
can
do
that.
Spokane
is
about
twice
the
size
of
boulder,
so
the
the
need
may
be
different.
Okay,.
S
Yeah,
thank
you.
Judge
cook
sounds
like
you're,
making
great
progress
and,
and
hopefully
some
have
great
impact,
I'm
wondering
who
is
conducting
the
outreach.
Is
it
the
court
navigators
or
was
it
personnel
that
was
hired
to
the
grant
and
what?
What
is
the
funding
being
used
for
so.
Q
Q
I
know
for,
but
once
they
are
signed.
I
think
that
one
of
the
entities
will
be
ready
to
go
right
away
with
some
outreach
providers
and
the
other
entity
will
want
to
hire
specifically
for
that
position.
But
we
envision
them
going
out
with
the
navigators
being
introduced
via
by
the
navigators
or
maybe
the
homeless,
outreach
team
officers
to
individuals.
Q
So
there's
kind
of
a
warm
handoff
from
people
that
this
population
already
knows
and
trusts,
and
then
I
think
they
and
they
may
vegan's
closet
would
be
a
great
place
for
them
to
go
on
a
regular
basis
as
well
as
some
other
places.
Q
B
Thank
you,
mary.
Any
other
questions,
counsel
great,
seeing
none
I'll.
Thank
you,
judge,
cook
and
judge
khan
for
being
here.
Thank
you
for
the
updates
and
great
good
luck
on
the
community
court
implementation.
We
really
do
look
forward
to
hearing
how
the
in
particular
the
substance,
abuse
treatment
goes
so
that'll
be
great.
Thank
you
both
for
your
work.
B
We
have
great
sympathy,
no
problem,
and
with
that
we
will
be
moving
on
to
open
comment
and
before
we
begin
I'll
call
on
brenda
ritenauer
to
talk
to
us
about
our
protocols.
Brenda.
H
H
Great,
so
just
going
over
our
rules
quickly.
As
a
reminder,
these
rules
help
keep
our
meetings
secure
from
those
who
might
be
out
to
disrupt
us
in
our
zoom
platform.
So
the
meeting
has
been
called
to
conduct
the
business
of
the
city
of
boulder
activities
that
disrupt
delay
or
otherwise
interfere
with
the
meeting
are
prohibited.
H
H
H
Our
next
slide
is
that
no
video
will
be
permitted
other
than
city
officials,
employees
and
invited
speakers
or
presenters.
Others
will
participate
by
voice.
Only
the
person
presiding
the
meeting
this
evening,
mayor
weaver,
shall
enforce
these
rules
by
muting.
Anyone
who
violates
the
rule
or
asking
me
to
do
so.
B
Excellent
thanks
very
much
for
that
tonight.
We
had
eight
people
signed
up
for
open
comment
and
the
first
three
are
evan
ravitz
david
dadone
and
patrick
murphy.
Evan.
T
Hi
evan
rabbits
north
boulder
good
evening,
I'm
speaking
tonight
about
my
personal
experiences
in
boulder,
with
being
homeless,
directly
caused
by
city
action
and
about
when
I
was
evicted
under
the
city's
occupancy
laws.
The
old
mall
commission
had
police
shut
down.
My
tightrope
show
on
the
mall
repeatedly
in
the
80s.
Until
a
lawyer
discovered
they
were
purely
an
advisory
body
under
the
city
charter.
T
T
It's
a
travesty
council
intended
to
spend
2.7
million
dollars
to
chase
the
homeless
around
instead
of
providing
a
safe
legal
camp
like
denver
now
has
two
successful
examples
of,
but
I'm
intrigued
to
see.
Your
final
vote
has
been
removed
from
tonight's
agenda.
Maybe
our
new
city
manager
has
pulled
you
back
from
the
brink.
T
T
My
landlord
always
suspected
that
the
complaint
came
from
a
neighbor
who
worked
for
the
city
and
we
both
suspected
the
purpose
was
to
defeat
the
ballot
initiative,
which
council
opposed
so
as
well
as
causing
people
to
live
in
the
shadows
out
of
fear
of
being
evicted.
This
law
can
be
used
for
political
purposes,
so
I
will
vote
for.
The
bedrooms
are
for
people
initiative
and
hope
that
council
improves
it
by
incentivizing
affordability
and
car
sharing.
Thank
you.
U
Yeah,
can
you
hear
me:
we
can
great
good
evening
good
evening
council,
I'm
david
dadone
executive
director
and
chief
curator
for
the
boulder
museum
of
contemporary
art,
and
I
think
we
have
a
slide
great
next
slide.
Next
thursday
july
10th
bimocca
will
celebrate
the
opening
of
our
summer
exhibition
the
stubborn
influence
of
painting
gas
curated
by
colorado
artist,
kate
pedley.
U
The
works
and
view
include
photography
next
slide.
Textile
next
slide
ceramics,
video
and
mix
media
constructions.
We
invite
you
to
join
for
a
fee
free
public
opening
reception
on
june
10th
from
5
to
8
p.m
as
well.
I
would
like
to
extend
our
gratitude
to
mary
yang
for
her
thoughtful
remarks
at
seguimos.
We
continue
a
program
at
bimocca
last
thursday
that
celebrated
and
honor
the
community
generated
sculpture
at
movimientosige,
which
will
be
on
display
in
bimaka's
inside
out
exhibition
platform
until
march
2022.
V
V
V
V
The
muni
effort
has
wasted
10
years
at
over
30
million
dollars,
even
though
boulder
likes
to
think
we
moved
excel
to
change
and
excel
panders
to
boulder's
vanity
and
pretends
to
agree.
Boulder
is
only
about
four
percent
of
excel's
total
electric
customer
base.
My
goal
is
not
to
shame
boulder,
which
it
certainly
deserves.
In
my
opinion,
my
goal
is
to
accelerate
carbon
reduction
in
order
to
mitigate
the
imminent
and
current
destruction
caused
by
climate
change.
V
As
city
manager.
You
need
to
know
when
to
be
a
cheerleader
and
when
to
be
a
critical
filter
for
nonsense,
such
as
the
following
three
lowlights
of
boulder's
failed
muni
effort
one.
It
had
always
been
clear
that
boulder
needed
to
first
pass
muster
with
the
public
utilities
commission.
Instead,
we
wasted
many
years
and
much
money
going
instead
to
the
district
court
and
the
ferc
two,
the
largest
expense
of
the
muni,
was
going
to
be
stranded,
cost
and
never
ever
in
ten
years,
was
an
estimate
of
this
made
and
entered
in
to
the
financial
analysis.
V
V
W
Know
ahead
of
time
how
long
how
many
people
are
gonna,
be
speaking
on
the
open
comments,
so
you
can
switch
it
to
three
minutes.
If
there's
only
nine
people,
I
mean
on
the
public
hearing,
you
keep
it
at
three
minutes,
because
there
aren't
too
many
people
there.
It's
like
you're,
so
inconsistent,
even
within
one
council
meeting,
you're
inconsistent
between
all
your
boards.
W
It's
like
these
are
so
basic,
like
you're,
getting
away
with
18
minutes
instead
of
27
like
what
is
this
about
come
on
people
regarding
the
nexus
study
that
came
out
about
demolition
in
boulder,
it
finally
came
down
to
one
dollar
per
square
foot:
that's
nothing,
and
when,
when
a
place
is
demoed,
the
the
value
of
that
structure
goes
gets
embedded
into
the
land
and,
if
there's
a
good,
valuable
structure
there
that
you
could
repurpose
we're
not
hearing
about
it,
because
the
the
the
subsidy
that
the
city
does
is
a
dollar
square
foot
for
demoing.
W
W
The
you
need
to
do
a
hearing
for
rocky
flats
seriously.
This
this
city
has
come
to
such
a
poor
representation
of
people.
You,
you
should
be
ashamed
of
yourself
really
nuria.
You
know
you're
new
here,
you
better
take
a
hold
of
this
situation,
because
this
is
not
okay,.
X
Good
evening,
city
council,
this
shouldn't
be
shouldn't.
Take
me
long,
as
I'm
still
wondering
why
do
we
have
restrictions
on
the
jails
for
a
quote-unquote,
coven
19?
When
we
have
vaccinations
rate
up,
vaccination
rates
are
up,
we
have
vaccinations
that
are
readily
available.
Yet
this
past
saturday
I
had
to
play
police
because
I
witnessed
two
girls
being
harassed
and
gawked
at
by
two
men
from
the
homeless,
encampment
behind
boulder
high
school,
which
has
been
cleaned
up,
because
I
did
a
lot
of
complaining
this
weekend.
X
That's
what
I
got
to
waste
my
saturday
on
for
doing
your
jobs.
I
don't
understand
why
you
rachel
friend,
why
you
aaron
brockett,
and
why
you
sweat,
lick,
sit
here
constantly
and
give
lame
duck
ideology
to
an
issue
that
is
very
cut
and
dry.
I
suggest
you
go
to
my
hometown
of
delray
beach
florida.
We
are
the
rehab
capital
of
north
america.
We
actually
got
it
right.
You
guys
can't
seem
to
do
it.
There's
a
company
or
actually
an
industry
called
carp,
comprehensive
alcoholism,
rehabilitation,
rehabilitation
programs.
They
are
governed,
governmently,
governmentally,
funded.
X
They
work
side
by
side
with
the
judges.
So
when
these
criminals,
who
you
guys
think
just
should
give
tickets
to
constantly
and
let
them
run
amok
our
city
in
our
courts
in
florida,
the
judges
sit
here
and
go
well.
No.
This
is
what
you've
done
and
if
you'd
like
to
either
go
to
jail-
or
you
can
go
to
carp,
we're
more
than
happy
to
pay
for
it.
X
They
go
home
and
they
tell
their
parents
and
the
people
who
go
back
to
florida,
that
I
wrote
on
a
plane
with
two
weeks
ago,
went
home
and
told
their
parents
what
they
got
to
hang
out
with,
and
I
saw
a
lot
of
mom
and
dads
at
the
united
airlines
baggage
claim
not
very
happy.
So
you
guys
better
wake
up
smell
the
coffee
and
all
the
feces
outside
of
our
homes
that
we're
dealing
with,
because
you
guys
have
let
this
come
out
of
hand.
Y
Hello
council,
I
am
here
to
say
that
I
wish
my
community
a
joyous
pride
month
and
I
wish
each
and
every
one
of
you
a
distressing
and
challenging
one.
Keep
the
words
pride
out
of
your
mouths.
Keep
the
rainbows
off
of
your
dumb
queer
people
are
not
just
like
you
and
we
don't
want
to
be.
We
don't
want
the
things
you
want.
I
am
not
gay
as
unhappy
but
queer
as
in
you
keep
stonewall
out
of
your
mouths.
Storm
de
la
vie
miss
major
silvia
rivera,
marsha,
p
johnson.
Y
They
resisted
arrest
and
threw
bricks
at
cops
to
protect
each
other.
That
is
what
pride
month
means.
It
means
fighting
cops
at
the
time
they
were
condemned
by
the
wealthy
white
assimilationist
gay
organizations
like
the
mattachine
society
and
the
daughters
of
bolitis.
Have
you
bothered
learning
that
history?
I
imagine
bob
yates
who
hypocritically
read
this
toothless
declaration
was
the
kind
of
guy
who
got
together
to
beat
up
long
hairs
and
back
in
high
school,
and
you
don't
stand
hand
in
hand
with
the
lgbt
community.
What
a
joke
you
despise
me.
Y
You
think
I'm
annoying
and
crass
and
hysterical,
because
I
am
the
one
who
is
fighting
tirelessly
for
our
queer
rights.
You
do
not.
You
tell
me
that
I
am
uncivil
and
that
I
am
whatever
you
don't
care
about
lgbt
people
when
we
are
actually
queer
and
strange
and
off-putting
to
your
middle-class
upper-class
white
cis-hut
sensibilities.
Y
If
you
insist
that
the
courthouse
is
the
only
place
that
homeless
people
should
be
accessing
services,
if
you
demonize
and
min
people
with
addictions
and
mischaracterize
how
those
work
physiologically
and
mentally
in
terms
of
ptsd
and
societal
oppression,
then
you
are
forcing
people
who
have
often
been
victims
of
police
brutality
and
sexual
assault
from
police
officers
to
be
booked
into
the
criminal
justice
system,
have
their
dead
names
displayed
in
the
courts
and
in
press
releases
in
the
newspaper
forever
and
then
put
in
boulder
county
jail
trans
women
put
with
men
in
boulder
county
jail.
Y
B
Z
Z
We
as
a
community
have
been
through
a
lot,
and
I
come
here
tonight
with
an
ask
that
I
believe,
would
help
uplift
our
community
with
covet
restrictions,
loosening.
I
would
love
to
see
some
sort
of
government
sponsored
community,
outdoor
gathering
or
festival
type
event
towards
the
end
of
summer.
Maybe
during
the
fall-
and
I
see
this
event
as
helping
to
facilitate
our
community's
healing,
and
I
think
it
would
do
that
by
one.
Z
You
know
allowing
us,
as
a
community
to
hold
space
for
reflecting
on
and
sorting
through
our
past
year
with
our
neighbors,
who
have
experienced
these
events
alongside
us
and
then
two.
I
think
it
can
be
a
a
place
where
those
that
are
still
dealing
with
the
ramifications
of
the
pandemic
and
whether
that's
the
financial
ramifications
or
mental
health,
etc
can
get
accesses
to
the
resources
that
they
need
all
in
one
place,
and
this
especially
speaks
to
our
neighbors
that
are
typically
marginalized
and
have
been
affected
the
most
over
the
past
year
and
then.
Z
Lastly,
I
think
it
would
be
a
great
opportunity
for
us
to
showcase
the
strengths
of
our
community,
so,
like
the
you
know,
loving
caring
neighbors
that
are
here
in
boulder,
but
also
the
arts,
the
food,
the
music
of
the
various
cultures
that
are
represented
here
in
boulder,
and
so
I
also
cannot
forget
that
you
know,
as
government
is
for
the
people
by
the
people.
It
would
be
imperative
that
the
event
be
planned
alongside
community
members.
Z
AA
Thank
you.
I've
been
a
resident
of
boulder
since
1999.
I'd
like
to
discuss
crime
in
boulder,
which
is
soaring
each
day.
I
read
new
incidents
of
crime
in
our
city
and
how
people
are
afraid
to
use
the
parks,
bike
paths
discarded,
needle
needles
are
found
everywhere,
such
as
next
to
the
bike
paths
and
the
mapleton
ball
fields,
etc.
AA
This
is
thanks
to
the
city
giving
out
free
noodles,
not
even
a
needle
exchange.
I've
been
a
crime
victim
and
the
person
that
threatened
my
life,
because
I
wouldn't
give
him
any
money.
He
was
not
arrested
as
the
jail
is
closed
like
when
will
the
jail
reopen
covet
is
pretty
much
over.
We
have
vaccinations
anyway.
The
person
who
threatened
me
was
only
given
a
summons
to
appear
in
court,
which
he
didn't
do
because
there
was
no
incentive
in
there.
He
had
no
known
address
for
them
to
the
police
to
go
apprehend
him.
AA
I
also
want
to
talk
about
bill
senate
bill
273.
I
don't
understand
why
city
council
supports
bill
273.
If
this
bill
passes,
it
won't
be
a
good
thing
for
the
increasing
crime
we
have
in
boulder
police
will
not
be
able
to
do
their
job
and
protect
the
community
from
violent
offenders
who
will
be
released
back
into
the
community.
Boulder
police
department
needs
funding
and
tools
needed
to
protect
our
community
city
council
should
approve
and
enforce
ordinances
that
prevent
illegal
camps
from
redeveloping
and
prevent
the
use
of
propane
tanks.
AA
If
this
bill
passes,
there
will
be
no
meaningful
consequences
for
illegal
behavior.
273
isn't
about
bail
equity,
it's
about
making
it
impossible
for
the
police
to
protect
our
communities.
I
don't
understand
why
city
council
won't
adequately
enforce
our
laws
and
protect
our
residents
and
local
business
owners.
AA
It's
it's
like
you
care
more
about
people
who
come
into
boulder.
Don't
stay
very
long
choose
to
live
on
the
streets.
Do
drugs
commit
crimes.
Then
you
do
more
about
the
residents
who
live
here
and
really
care
about
the
city
and
and
form
the
community
and
guess
what
there's
a
new
situation
in
texas?
That's
developed.
AA
AA
B
With
that,
we
will
close
open
comment
and
bring
it
back
and
first
I'll
turn
to
staff
maria
or
the
attorney
looking
around
sandra
there
you
are
maria
sandra.
Do
you
have
any
response
or
feedback.
B
Great.
Thank
you
both
council,
any
response
feedback
great,
seeing
none
close
open
comment
completely
and
I'll
turn
back
to
alicia.
F
So
I
wanted
to
get
a
question
out
there
that
I
asked
at
cac
this
morning
just
to
for
the
record
it's
about
item
3b,
which
is
about
electric
smoking
device
taxes.
F
AC
AC
Okay,
thank
you,
council
member
brocket,
for
bringing
this
up
this
morning
so
very
high
level,
and
we
can
we'll
go
into
this
more
during
second
reading,
but
these
devices
can
be
broken
down
into
several
categories
and
you
can
see
on
the
left
hand
of
your
slide
number
one
is
the
actual
devices
themselves.
So
some
of
these
devices
are
refillable
devices
that
take
a
proprietary,
pod
or
or
refill.
AC
Others
are
designed
to
take
organic
material
or
some
other
form
of
concentrate
that
can
be
purchased
at
bulk
and
then
filled
and
then
on
the
hand
side
under
number
two.
We
actually
have
pods
and
disposable
devices
themselves
that
come
pre-filled
and
then
are
designed
to
be
disposed
of
after
they're
they're
fully
consumed.
AC
So
number
one
is
the
devices
themselves.
Those
would
be
taxed
under
the
ordinance
actually,
as
the
ordinances
currently
written
are
taxed
at
40,
and
then
the
devices
themselves
are
the
the
pods
and
and
disposables
that
come
pre-filled
with
marijuana
would
be
taxed
at
the
marijuana
rates.
So
circle
number
one
would
be
taxed
at
the
40
percent,
plus
the
city's
normal
3.86
percent.
AC
The
disposable,
pods
or
devices
that
are
pre-filled
and
contain
marijuana
would
be
taxed
at
the
additional
three
and
a
half
percent,
plus
the
city's
3.86
percent.
The
value
of
the
the
actual
plastic
itself
that
these
these
pods
and
cartridges
come
in.
We
we're
viewing
as
de
minimis
and
that
we
wouldn't
attempt
to
break
that
value
out
from
the
actual
disposable
device
itself
and
then
the
third
scenario
is
when
these
products
are
sold
in
bundles.
So
what
you
see
here
in
the
middle
is
is
a
pax
era.
AC
Vaporizer
the
bottom
half
in
the
blue
circle
is
actually
essentially
a
battery
and
then
the
top
part
that's
circled
in
red,
is
the
refillable
or
the
the
disposable
pod
that
contains
their
marijuana.
So
we
would
look
at
that,
based
on
on
the
value
of
each
component
of
that,
so
the
reusable
battery
piece
would
be
taxed
at
the
40
percent
and
then
the
disposable
pod
would
be
taxed
at
the
value
of
the
marijuana.
That's
in
it
at
the
three
and
a
half
percent.
F
L
Sorry
about
that,
I
have
also
a
question
about
the
the
ordinance
one
of
the
letters
we
got
claimed
that
some
of
the
devices
for
consumption
of
marijuana
run
into
the
hundreds
of
dollars
is,
that
is
that
true,
I'm
sadly
out
of
date.
AC
L
AD
This
mark
this
doesn't
go
to
the
underlying
tax
that
was
passed
by
the
voters
in
2019
as
an
attempt
to
discourage
youth
access
to
these
smoking
devices.
This
is
a
clarification
of
the
code,
but
some
businesses
have
refused
to
pay
the
tax
because
they
claim
it
doesn't
apply
to
anything.
That's
used
for
marijuana.
L
But
I
I
don't
think
it
changes
my
question,
which
is
if
it
then,
if
we
then
clarify
the
ordinance
to
make
it
applicable
to
those
devices.
What
exactly
will
be
achieving
if
we
can
fairly
predict
that
those
devices
will
still
be
acquired
but
through
a
10-minute
car
ride
to
another
municipality.
AD
So
now,
if
those
devices
are
sold
in
tobacco
shop
or
any
other
shop,
they're
taxed,
the
marijuana
businesses
are
review.
Marijuana
is
actually
some
smoke
shops
like
the
federal
refusing
to
pay
the
tax,
claiming
that
it's
not
intended
for
products
that
are
used
to
smoke
to
to
vape
marijuana
products,
which
isn't
the
case.
L
And
I
guess
my
my
last
question:
is
you
know,
as
you
look
at
the
statutory
language,
we
clearly
have
enough
scope
in
there
to
make
it
applicable.
We
we
did
have
the
appropriate
language
in
there,
but
I
I
do
question
a
little
bit
whether
that
was
the
original
intent
of
this
legislation.
L
I
mean
it
really
spoke
and
it
really
did
speak
almost
entirely
to
vaping
devices
and
and
the
like.
AD
B
Very
good,
thank
you.
All
bob.
E
F
So
if
sam,
do
you
mind
if
I
just
speak
a
few
words
as
I
vote?
F
No
of
course
not
go
for
it
great
so
I'll,
although
yes
on
the
consent
agenda,
but
I'm
going
to
vote
may
on
3c
the
supplemental
appropriations,
the
2021
budget,
just
to
be
clear,
I'm
supportive
of
the
vast
majority
of
those
budget
appropriations,
including
the
downtown
ambassadors,
the
new
park
rangers,
but
I'm
voting
no
just
because
I
feel
like
the
additional
police
funding
at
this
time
when
we
have
so
many
unfilled
positions
in
the
police
department
is
not
the
right
way
to
be
spending
that
money.
F
While
we
still
have
so
many
departments
that
are
suffering
cuts
because
of
coding.
So
that's
that's
why
I
just
wanted
to
speak
to
it.
Thank
you.
E
G
AE
I'll
be
voting
yes
on
everything,
and
I
hope
that
this
helps
the
community,
those
especially
who
have
been
calling
in
and
worried
about
the
crime
that's
happening.
I
hope
it
shall
help,
show
that
we're
very
serious
about
fixing
these
issues.
K
N
G
AF
Thank
you.
Thank
you,
council.
My
name
is
dan
burke,
director
of
the
open
space
of
mountain
parks,
department
and
phil
will
join
us
in
just
a
minute.
I
I
just
wanted
to
first
to
express
my
thanks
to
council
for
providing
us
with
a
few
months
of
time
to
walk
you
through
the
process
that
was
undertaken
over
the
last
five
years
to
bring
this
name
change
before
you
and
and
just
to
express
how
exciting
it
is
to
bring
this
to
fruition.
AF
It's
been
a
five-year
effort
that
it's
involved,
a
number
of
community
members,
community
groups,
bor,
a
board,
a
commission,
a
lot
of
staff,
folks,
the
council,
of
course,
and
over
a
dozen
native
american
nations
that
we
have
consulted
with
and-
and
I
believe
that
we
have
are
bringing
forward
a
a
name
that
was
suggested
from
the
recent
consultation,
the
city
conducted
with
american
indian
nations,
that
is
very
appropriate
and
from
the
open
space
the
mountain
parks
department
perspective.
AF
We
would
be
honored
to
rename
this
particular
park
that
we
manage
to
the
people's
crossing,
so
just
want
to
provide
that
perspective
and
that
and
to
thanks
everybody.
Who's
had
a
hand
in
this,
and
with
that,
I
invite
philip
yates
from
communications
department
to
walk
us
through
how
this
came
to
be.
AG
AG
Yeah
before
we
share
information
about
the
process
that
we
went,
undertook
as
dan
said
for
close
to
five
years,
just
want
to
show
the
location
for
everyone
where
settlers
park
is
it's
in
far
west
boulder,
just
north
of
canyon
and
just
south
of
the
red
rocks
formation
in
far
west
boulder
next
slide.
AG
AG
The
city
of
boulder
actually
acquired
the
parcels
where
the
current
settlers
park,
trailhead
and
parts
of
the
park
area
exist
in
1961
and
1965,
but
through
a
lot
of
the
research
that
osmp
did
is
that
it
didn't
actually
indicates
that
the
area
has
primarily
been
known
as
red
rocks
for
most
of
its
time,
and
in
fact
the
the
name
settlers
park
does
not
appear
to
be
in
widespread
or
formal,
informal
or
colloquial
usage
prior
to
the
1990s.
AG
So
yeah
the
way
this
started,
and
we
really
want
to
just
thank
the
the
incredible
work
of
community
members
in
developing
the
indigenous
people's
day
resolution.
Because
that's
what
started
this
process?
The
resolution
had
two
major
goals.
The
first
was
focus
on
the
boulder
area
and
its
significance
to
native
american
culture
and
accurately
portray
the
history
of
indigenous
interaction
with
euro-american
settlers
who
arrived
in
the
19th
century.
AG
AG
AG
AG
Now,
as
it
relates
to
settlers
park,
the
resolution
specific
requires
the
city
to
correct
emissions
of
the
native
american
presence
in
public
places,
resources
and
cultural
programming,
and
it
actually
specifically
directed
the
city
to
receive
input
from
american
indian
tribal
nations
that
share
agreements
with
the
city
for
a
name
that
commemorates
the
indigenous
presence
on
the
park.
Land
known
as
settlers
park.
AG
AG
So,
just
running
through
the
steps
of
how
the
process
came
to
be
with
the
direction
provided
by
the
indigenous
peoples
day
resolution
following
that
city
staff,
we
documented
name
suggestions
that
came
in
for
I
think
two
years
following
the
adoption
of
the
resolution,
then,
as
we
moved
forward
and
we
started
organizing
city
tribal
consultation,
we
collected
those
names
and
then
presented
them
at
the
2019
consultation
with
14
tribal
governments.
During
that
time,
we
presented
information
on
the
indigenous
peoples
day
resolution
tribal
representatives
visited
settlers
park.
AG
I
believe
some
folks
on
this
meeting
actually
participated
in
that
we
discussed
the
naming
suggestions
documented
by
city
staff
and
what
that
resulted.
It
was
about
a
two-hour
conversation
and
what
resulted
was
a
broadly
supported,
name
suggestion
for
further
discussion
and
here's
just
a
picture
of
staff
and
representatives
when
we
ended
the
second
day
of
consultation
in
2019.
AG
AG
So
the
next
step
in
the
process
was
a
city
tribal
working
group
that
was
convened
following
the
2019
consultation,
and
that
was
focused
on
updating
agreements
with
this
that
the
city
shares
with
tribal
nations.
But
what
the
working
group
also
did
was
they
ultimately
recommended
further
consideration
of
the
name
suggestion
that
received
support
at
the
2019
consultation.
AG
Many
of
us
participated
several
weeks
ago
in
the
2021
consultation.
Where
again
we
spoke
about
for
about
two
hours
about
renaming
settlers
park.
They
reflected
on
the
name
suggestion
that
was
supported
at
the
2019
consultation
and
during
that
conversation,
a
tribal
representative
and
elder
who
actually
previously
consulted
with
the
city
in
the
1990s
and
early
2000s,
provided
insights
that
led
to
a
collaborative
discussion
among
representatives
and,
ultimately,
the
name,
the
people's
crossing
and
we're
here.
We
are
tonight
for
to
provide
this
information
and
receive
any
final
direction
regarding
the
name.
AG
AG
Renaming
this
area
and
installing
additional
interpretive
materials,
education,
signage,
will
really
help
my
the
city
to
acknowledge
the
indigenous
presence
on
the
boulder
area.
Land
help
boulder
fulfill
the
indigenous
peoples
day
resolution
help
advance
city,
racial
equity
planning
goals
and
strategies.
AG
As
an
important
part
of
the
2021
consultation,
we
agreed
to
form
a
working
group
to
help
us
develop
interpretive
signage
and
materials
for
the
area,
and
I
we
believe
this
might
mark
the
first
time
a
city
facility
has
ever
been
named
with
a
guidance
and
insights
from
american
indian
tribal
nations.
So
we
with
this
renaming,
we
believe
we
can
accomplish
several
important
steps
forward.
AG
AG
All
many
people
can
read
it,
but
probably
worthwhile
for
some
of
our
audience
to
read
them
out.
It's
the
apache
tribe
of
oklahoma,
the
cheyenne
and
arapaho
tribes
of
oklahoma,
the
cheyenne
river
sioux
tribe,
the
comanche
nation
of
oklahoma,
the
eastern
shoshone
tribe,
the
hickory
apache
nation,
the
kiowa
tribe
of
oklahoma,
the
northern
arapaho
tribe,
the
northern
cheyenne
tribe,
the
ogallala
sioux
tribe,
the
pawnee
nation
of
oklahoma,
the
rosebud
sioux
tribe,
the
southern
new
indian
tribe,
the
standing
rock
sioux
tribe,
the
yupe
mountain
tribe
and
the
indian
tribe
of
the
uinta
and
uray
reservation.
AG
AG
And
I
think
what
is
really
important
just
to
extend
our
gratitude
to
consultants
who
have
helped
us
through
this
process.
Ernest
has
provided
several
training
sessions
on
consultation,
ernest
house
of
the
keystone
policy
center.
We
want
to
extend
our
gratitude
to
him,
but
also
to
jessica
yaquinto
with
living
heritage.
Anthropology
who's
played
an
important
role
in
helping
us
to
organize
and
facilitate
consultation.
Conversations
so
again
extend
our
deep
gratitude
to
them
for
helping
us
next
slide.
AG
With
moving
forward,
we
have
several
steps
that
we
have
planned
following
tonight,
and
so
what
we're
looking
for
in
early
august
is
to
have
a
tentative
city,
tribal
working
group
meeting,
where
we
can
discuss
at
just
a
very
high
level
the
education
and
commemoration
for
the
area
and
to
receive
some
input
on
our
land.
AG
Acknowledgment
that
we
are
developing
late
summer
and
early
fall
provide
another
update
on
the
work
that
we're
doing
right
now,
in
august
and
early
october,
we
will
look
to
replace
the
sign
infrastructure,
that's
in
the
area
and
then
by
late
september
and
early
october.
We
would
like
to
have
all
the
work
or
we
plan
to
have
all
the
work
done
to
have
the
commemoration
of
settlers
park
be
renamed
to
the
people's
crossing
officially
completed
by
then
next
slide.
AG
And
here
are
just
a
few
examples
of
the
sign
infrastructure
that
we're
looking
right
now
to
install
in
the
area.
The
first
is
the
trail
id
sign
with
a
template
font
styles.
That's
what
we
planned
for
the
parking
lot.
A
secondary
kiosk
would
be
located
as
you
walk
from
the
parking
lot
up
to
red
rocks
and
then
the
way
finding
signs
would
just
be
to
help
people
go
through
the
area,
but
all
these
sign
packages,
all
these
signs
would
be
have
the
new
name,
the
people's
crossing.
AG
Slide
and
then
moving
forward.
We
anticipate
removing
or
replacing
these
older
interpretive
panels
and
signs
with
new
long-term
interpretive
panels
developed
by
the
city
tribal
working
group.
But
in
the
meantime
we
are
also
anticipating
installing
additional
temporary
signage
here
to
again
explain
the
meaning
behind
the
name
and
how
it
came
to
pass
and
how
we
all
developed
it
in
cooperation
with
american
indian
tribal
nations.
AG
S
S
Nevertheless,
it's
been
a
really
thoughtful
process
and
I'm
really
grateful
to
staff
and
for
ernest
and
jessica,
as
well
as
all
of
the
tribal
nations
and
members
that
participated
in
the
tribal
consultation.
So
thank
you
all.
S
I
was.
I
also
had
the
privilege
of
being
at
this
year's
tribal
consultation
during
the
conversation
regarding
the
the
actual
renaming,
and
I
have
to
just
share
that
it
was
one
of
the
most
beautiful
processes
in
terms
of
the
collaborative
and
differential
and
just
inclusive
manner,
in
which
everyone
who
was
there
and
in
particular,
the
tribal
members
that
just
it
was
just
a
beauty
to
behold
and
we
can
only
aspire
to
that
kind
of
consensus,
building
and
and
collaborative
way
of
being.
So.
Thank
you
all
once
again
and.
B
Great
well
I'll
jump
in
here
as
well
and
echo
what
mary
said.
It
has
been
a
a
very
enriching
process
to
watch
this
develop
and
to
have
the
privilege
to
interact
with
the
tribal
nations
assembled
as
a
group
and
to
watch
them
interact
with
each
other
amongst
themselves
and
with
us.
B
AE
B
Was
great,
I'm
very
happy
that
we're
here
and
you
know
I
I
never
could
have
imagined
how
wonderful
a
name
would
end
up
on
this
park
and
it
is
a
beautiful
name
and
a
beautiful
concept.
So
thank
you
to
staff.
Thank
you
to
our
consultants
and
thank
you
most
of
all
to
the
tribal
nations
who
have
helped
us,
look
back
and
learn
from
mistakes
and
hopefully
be
able
to
walk
together
in
solidarity.
Aaron.
F
Yeah
echo,
all
of
that,
just
thanks
so
much
to
everyone,
city
staff
that
worked
so
hard
on
this
and
the
council,
members
who
participated
and
all
the
community
members
and
the
human
relations
committee
members
and
the
and
the
tribal
nation
participants,
and
so
we
we
took
the
slow
road
on
this
one
on
this
renaming,
but
I
think
it
was.
It
was
the
right
road
and
we've
ended
up
with
a
process
and
a
name
that
our
community
can
be
proud
of
for
generations.
So
thanks
everyone.
B
Very
good
and
I'll
just
comment
that
this
will
be
a
bit
undramatic
in
the
sense
that
we
probably
won't
take
an
action
tonight
to
call
it
up,
but
what
that
non-action
is
is
our
wholehearted
approval
of
the
city
manager,
approval
of
this
park
name.
So,
even
though
we're
not
going
to
be
voting
on
this
by
not
calling
it
up,
we
are
giving
our
unanimous
approval
of
of
this
name,
so
council
staff
any
further
comments,
all
right,
very
good.
Thank
you
all
so
much
and
with
that
I'll
turn
back
to
you,
alicia.
G
G
Right.
Thank
you,
sir
item
4c
is
our
call
of
consideration
item
for
a
non-conforming
use
review
to
permit
renovation
and
reconfiguration
of
an
existing
three-story?
Eighteen
thousand
four
hundred
and
sixty
nine
square
foot
twenty
four
unit
apartment
building
at
1024
marine
street
into
two
interconnected
buildings
and
eighteen
attached
dwelling
units
with
a
new
ground
floor
common
area.
The
existing
building
and
site
are
not
conforming
to
density,
open
space
and
parking
reviewed
under
case
number
lur
zero,
two
2020-00020.
B
Thank
you
any
any
question
desire
to
call
it
up.
I
saw
two
at
the
same
time
we'll
go
with
aaron
and
then
mark
erin.
L
Just
a
procedural
question:
I
if
we
do
not
call
this
up,
I
assume
the
decisions
of
staff
and
planning
board
are
controlling.
Is
that
correct?
That's
correct!
Okay,
thanks.
F
Aaron
yeah,
I
have
no
desire
to
call
this
up.
The
planning
board
7-0
vote
on
this
was
very
compelling.
One
thing
I
just
wanted
a
question
about
that.
I
know
that
there
was
a
question
about
whether
the
dining
rooms
could
be
changed
into
bedrooms.
If
the
applicant
re-did
would
they
be
able
to
redo
their
applications,
to
make
it
completely
clear
that
the
dining
rooms
are
not
bedrooms
and
reapply
with
this
denial.
AH
Thanks
for
the
question
aaron,
they
would
we
think
that
there's
a
solution
to
the
floor
plans
out
there.
So
it's
just
a
matter
of
the
applicant
redesigning
those
floor
plans
and
resubmitting
an
application.
B
Thank
you,
aaron
sounds
like
no
desire
for
this
one
either
alicia.
G
All
right,
sir.
Next,
our
agenda,
we
have
our
public
hearings
item
5a
is
the
second
reading
and
a
consideration
of
a
motion
to
adopt
ordinance,
84
36
amending
section
6-14-13
acts
and
6-16-13
prohibited
acts
of
the
brc
1981
to
allow
the
sale
of
consumable
hemp
infused
products
at
marijuana,
retail
businesses
and
setting
forth
related.
AI
Thank
you.
This
one
should
be
an
easy
one.
I'm
kathy
haddock
with
the
city
attorney's
office.
This
ordinance
is
a
recommendation
from
the
cannabis
licensing
and
advisory
board.
The
only
consumable
products
allowed
to
be
sold
at
marijuana
businesses
is
marijuana
when
we
did
the
language
changes
for
hemp
and
marijuana
together
being
considered
cannabis.
AI
AI
This
is
to
correct
that
inadvertent
mistake
and
let
marijuana
businesses
sell
all
cannabis
products,
not
just
marijuana
ones,
at
the
public
hearing
before
clab.
On
this
there
was
no
opposition,
and
I
have
not
heard
of
any
opposition
separately,
so
this
ordinance
is
supported
by
both
staff
and
cloud.
B
B
All
right
with
that,
we
will
close
the
public
hearing
and
bring
this
back
to
council
council.
Looking
for
discussion,
comments,
questions
or
emotion,.
L
Mark,
I
think
kathy
is
right.
This
this
does
seem
to
be
an
easy
one
to
me,
I'm
not
quite
sure
what
the
other
side
of
it
is,
and
so,
if
there's
a
reason
to
be
more
cautious,
I'd
I'd
like
to
hear
it.
AI
B
B
D
B
So
we
have
a
motion
and
a
second
you
need
discussion
great,
seeing
no
hands
for
discussion.
If
you
do
not
want
this
motion
to
pass,
please
let
me
know
now:
this
is
the
vote.
F
D
K
B
I
Thank
you
very
much.
I
greatly
appreciate
it
so
mayor
council.
Thank
you
very
much
for
having
me
here
today
to
represent
this,
I'm
hoping
that
I
can
help
emily
pull
up
the
presentation
very
quickly.
Thank
you,
and
essentially
today
we're
looking
to
we're
asking
you
to
please
consider
repealing
the
aircraft
the
ordinance
restricting
aircraft
at
the
airport,
so,
as
our
next
slide
shows
as
iq
emily
for
the
next
slide,
so
essentially
back
in.
I
Thank
you.
The
current.
The
current
ordinance
restricts
ultralight
vehicles,
in
particular
as
well
as
balloons,
kites
and
unmanned
rockets,
because
they're
not
they
were
not
considered
to
be
aircraft
back
in
1982
and
so,
as
the
next
slide
shows
in
1982.
Whenever
that
was
adopted,
the
faa
had
been
considering
various
ordinances
and
regulations
around
that,
but
then
they
decided
they
weren't
going
to
actually
follow
through
on
that,
so
boulder
kind
of
jumped
the
gun
a
little
bit.
I
I
So
in
the
next
slide,.
I
Thank
you
so
essentially
in
the
next
slide.
That
over
here
is
that
we
have
started
allowing
the
ultralight
vehicle
to
use
the
aircraft
use
at
the
airport
in
response
to
that,
but
in
order
to
make
sure
that
the
fix
is
long-term,
we're
asking
city
council
to
actually
repeal
the
ordinance.
I
The
important
thing
to
note,
however,
is
that
in
the
future
the
city
can
always
request
a
safety
study
be
done
by
the
faa
if
we
feel
there
are
restrictions
needed
on
a
type
of
aircraft,
but
currently
the
faa
does
not
feel
that
these
aircraft
are
unsafe
at
our
airport.
So
essentially,
then
we
have
a
recommendation
that
in
the
next
slide,
the
council
repeal
the
ordinance
so
that
we're
in
compliance
with
faa
regulations
and
that
we
would
not
be
subject
to
losing
grants.
I
You
know
we
having
to
repay
grants
that
the
faa
had
given
us
for
the
upkeep
and
maintenance
of
the
airport.
So
with
that
any,
as
the
next
slide
says,
if
there
are
any
questions,
I'd
be
happy
to
answer
them.
B
Great
thanks
so
much
erica
council
questions,
I
see
mary
and
then
we'll
start
with
mary,
and
then
we
have
aaron
and
mark
mary.
S
Thank
you
erica.
Just
a
quick
question,
I'm
wondering
if
the
city
could
sustain
the
airport
without
the
grants
of
the
faa.
I
And
I
don't
know
the
answer
off
the
top
of
my
head.
I
think
that
we'd
have,
to
you
know,
find
a
source
of
revenue
and
really
increase
the
the
hangar
fees
and
so
forth
at
the
airport,
and
we'd
need
to
actually
do
an
in-depth
analysis
to
ascertain
whether
or
not
those
grants.
I
F
Erica
thanks
for
that
just
wanted
to
clarify,
given
the
grants
that
we
have
accepted
in
the
past
from
the
faa
that
have
conditioned
us
to
behave
in
certain
ways
at
the
airport.
We
essentially
don't
really
have
a
choice
on
on
repealing
this
ordinance
right
because
it
sounds
like
we'd
be
subject
to
faa
action
of
one
kind
or
another.
If
we
tried
to
continue
to
forbid
these,
these
types
of
aircraft.
F
B
Okay,
very
good
mark
is.
L
Erika
is
there
any
discretion
in
the
nature
of
what
can
initiate
a
request
for
a
a
study?
For
instance,
I
know
noise
pollution
is
a
major
issue
for
residents
around
the
airport.
Is
that
the
basis
for
calling
for
a
study.
I
I
Felt
that
a
particular
aircraft
or
air
craft
type
were
to
be
unsafe,
but
the
faa
has
already
shared
with
us
that
they
don't
feel
these
aircraft
are
unsafe
and
can
operate
safely
at
the
airport
and
our
airport
manager
had
agreed
with
that
assessment.
B
W
This
is
as
much
a
no-brainer
as
the
other
ones,
but
it's
also
a
no-brainer
that
when
you've
got
nine
people,
you
do
three
minutes
each
done.
B
All
right,
thank
you,
lynn,
with
that
we
will
close
public
hearing
and
bring
it
back
to
council
council
discussion
questions
motion.
B
F
F
S
And
I
would
echo
what
aaron
said
and,
in
addition
add
that
if
the
airport
is
used
in
emergency
situations
such
as
fires
and
floods,
it's
it's
been
critical
to
the
safety
of
the
residents,
and
I
will
say
that
if
we
were
to
not,
it
sounds
like
from
what
erica
said.
If
we
were
to
not
accept
grants
from
the
faa,
the
airport
would
become
even
more
exclusive
than
it
might
be
already,
and
so,
for
all
those
reasons,
I
support
this.
B
Super
thanks
and
I'll
jump
in
here
and
say:
airplane
noise
is
a
real
issue
in
the
region
and
it
you
know,
what's
been
going
on
at
some
of
the
neighboring
airports
near
us,
have
been
creating
a
good
deal
of
angst
among
the
impacted
communities
which
include
some
of
our
communities,
particularly
in
the
north
and
east
part
of
the
city.
B
This
action
really
is
unrelated
to
noise.
I
don't
think
allowing
balloons
and
ultra
lights
is
going
to
make
much
of
a
difference
in
the
noise
profile
of
our
airport
and,
like
mary
said
when
it's
needed.
This
airport
is
a
critical
facility
for
us.
We've
used
it
for
evacuations
and
both
floods
and
fires
so
having
the
airport
is
a
great
benefit.
The
noise
that
comes
from
some
of
the
activities
at
local
regional
airports
is
being
problematic
and
that's
something
that
we
should
consider
and
keep
in
mind
as
we
go
forward.
B
K
F
G
B
Very
good,
thank
you,
and
I
I
want
to
tee
this
up
as
a
broader
discussion
than
just
that.
B
We
will
probably
start
with
that,
but
at
cec
this
morning
we
had
some
scheduling
discussions
that
I
wanted
to
bring
to
all
of
council,
and
one
of
the
ones
that
got
brought
up
is
exactly
what
alicia
just
told
us
about,
which
is
that
at
our
special
meeting
in
july,
the
first
meeting
that
we
are
back
from
our
break
that
falls
on
the
same
date,
which
I
believe
is
july
13th
as
the
all-star
game,
the
major
league
baseball,
all-star
game
and
councilmember
joseph
brought
up
this
conflict
and
wanted
to
see
if
we
wanted
to
make
any
considerations
over
the
all-star
game.
B
So
junior
I'll
turn
to
you
and
see
if
you
want
to
say
anything
else
about
this.
AJ
AE
Thanks
judy
yeah,
I
just
had
wondered
if
we
might
adjust
the
meeting
to
either
a
study
session
or
move
it
to
a
thursday,
the
15th,
because
some
of
us
might
be
attending
or
wanting
to
attend.
Normally.
I
would
not
have
brought
this
up,
but
this
is
a
pretty
big
deal
for
our
state,
especially
considering
the
reasons
why
the
game
was
transferred
to
colorado,
and
I
applaud
the
major.
I
applaud
major
league
baseball
for
moving
it
to
the
state
of
colorado
due
to
georgia's
restrictive
voting
laws
that
were
now
being
implemented.
E
I
I
think
it's
a
bit
of
a
slippery
slope
if
we
start
moving
things
around
for
events
like
this,
like
there's,
been
some
big
political
nights
on
tuesdays
where
or
things
maybe
I
wanted
to
testify
or
go
to
at
the
state
house
too,
and-
and
you
just
kind
of
have
to
pick
so
I
I
would
be
cautious
of
us
opening
this
can
of
worms
of
moving
council
meetings
around
for
other
events.
L
You
know
I
I
share
rachel's
caution,
but
I
I
I
feel
persuaded
by
mirabei's
comments
that
this
game
was
moved
here
for
a
very,
very
specific
reason
because
of
what
was
happening
in
georgia,
and
I
would
like
to
be
supportive
of
major
league
baseball
in
having
the
courage
to
do
that,
and
I
I
think
that
possibly
rescheduling
the
meeting
would
be
an
appropriate
way
of
expressing
that
support.
L
I
I
think
this
would
be
an
appropriate
reason
for
considering
a
a
rescheduling.
N
I'm
pretty
agnostic
about
this,
I'm
happy
to
go
with
world
council.
I
just
wanted
to
observe
that
I
think
converting
this
into
a
study
session
is
probably
not
going
to
work,
because
we
have
two
pretty
important
public
hearings
at
night.
As
a
matter
of
fact,
I
think
those
are
the
only
two
items
of
business.
That
night
are
those
two
public
hearings,
so
I
think,
moving
to
a
study
session
is
not
probably
an
option,
but
I'm
fine
with
postponing
it
until
of
july
14th
or
15th.
S
We've
I'm
kind
of
like
bob
I'm
kind
of
agnostic,
but
I
will
say
this
that
we
have
moved
meetings
around
for
particular
needs
of
one
council
member,
for
whatever
reason
they
can't
attend
on
a
tuesday
and
we
have
been
accommodating
of
singular
council
members
when
they
have
asked.
So
that's
that's
one
comment
and
then
the
other
comment
is
just
that:
I'm
not
a
big
baseball
fan,
but
I
am
a
voting
rights
fan.
So
you
know
I'll
go
with
the
will
of
council
on
this
one.
F
That's
right,
I
think
we
do
need
to
have
a
meeting
that
week.
You
know
personally,
I
wouldn't
reschedule
it
for
a
sporting
event.
As
much
as
I
support
the
voting
rights
issue,
I
would
save
her
for
a
few
words
at
the
meeting
itself,
but
if
people
wanted
to
move
it
to
wednesday
or
thursday
that
week,
I
think
we'd
probably
work
with
that.
If
that
would
be
preferable.
B
AE
Again,
I
said
this
wasn't
meant
to
move
it
just
because
of
me.
It
was
partially
just
for
the
community
as
well.
I
don't
know
if
our
community
is
interested
in
baseball,
like
I
I
am.
I
don't
know
if
others
share
that
same
same
passion,
it
was
more.
You
know
if
people
were
wanting
to
either
be
watching
the
game
or
be
attending,
because
it
was
a
pretty
big
honor
for
our
state,
so
that
was
it
wasn't
just
for
me
to
move
it
that
that
I
don't
care
about.
AE
It
was
more
for
the
community
and
if,
if
it
would,
you
know,
be
a
better
timing
to
to
move
it
to
a
different
day.
So
that's
all.
It
was
just
a
thought.
No
worries
if
it
doesn't
happen,
but
just
a
thought.
AJ
I
was
just
gonna
add
similar
to
mark.
I
find
maryby's
view
compelling
that
we
do
this
job,
not
just
for
us.
The
the
fact
that
it
is
public
is
not
for
us.
It's
for
community
members
and
if
most
of
the
community
or
a
lot
of
community
members
will
be
watching
a
game
and
they
will
not
be
watching
city
council.
AJ
I
just
think
again,
what's
the
purpose
of
having
this
broadcast
on
channel
8,
so
I
really
think
switching
the
day
is
probably
going
to
be
good
for
community
and
also
for
the
special
meeting.
My
understanding
is
that
we
will
not
have
open
comment,
so
I
don't
think
anyone
will
be
inconvenienced
in
that
way.
So
I
I
I
think,
that's
a
good
idea
to
change
the
date
I
I
find
I
find
it
compelling.
L
You
know
and
and
just
a
short
comment
under
the
circumstances
I
I
know,
a
lot
of
people
are
not
baseball
fans,
but
under
the
circumstances
under
which
we
receive
the
all-star
game,
I'm
suggesting
this
year.
People
should
be
because
it
was
an
important
thing.
B
That's
great
thanks,
everyone
and
I'll
just
weigh
in
here.
I
am
a
baseball
fan.
I
would
not
move
this
for
the
all-star
game,
but
I
I
think
it
for
me.
There's
enough
time
in
the
week
I'm
happy
to
move
the
meeting
to
thursday,
which
would
be
a
typical
time
for
us
to
put
it
on.
We
do
not
have
the
luxury
of
making
it
into
a
study
session.
We
have
four
and
a
half
hours
of
meeting
that
night
already
scheduled
with
no
public
comment
or
no
open
comment.
B
Rather
so
it's
a
big
meeting,
see
she's
already
wrestling
with
this
will
probably
move
one
of
those
items
off.
So
it's
a
minimum
of
three
hours.
Each
of
the
items
with
you
know
an
energetic
council
could
be
more
than
than
an
hour
and
a
half
scheduled.
So
this
is
a
big
meeting
that
we
definitely
shouldn't
shift
over
into
a
study
session.
I'm
happy
having
it
on
that
night,
because
these
meetings
are
taped
for
a
reason
so
that
people
can
watch
them
if
they
want
afterwards.
B
That
being
said,
this
is
a
pretty
different
kind
of
all-star
game
because
of
the
reason
it
was
moved
to
colorado,
so
I'm
I'm
ambivalent
about
whether
we
move
it
to
the
thursday
night,
but
I
certainly
do
not
want
to
change
it
into
a
study
session.
Rachel.
E
Just
sometimes,
I
think
we
think
of
ourselves
more
than
the
other
people
have
to
be
at
the
meeting.
So
I
guess
before
we
make
a
decision,
I
would
hope
that
nuria
has
a
chance
to
check
in
with
staff
people
schedule
vacations.
We
a
lot
of
us
say,
like
tuesday
night's
the
night
that
I
leave
available
for
council.
It's
true
of
me
that
week
so
I'm
cautious
of
moving
this.
I
am
a
baseball
fan
too,
and-
and
I
I
hope,
to
get
tickets
to
this
game.
E
So
it's
not
like
I'm
I'm
against
people
watching
the
game,
but
I
I
think
that
it's
maybe
a
little
bit
self-centered
of
us
to
to
think
of
ourselves
and
and
community
members
largely
watch
our
meetings.
A
lot
read
read
tweet
recaps
of
our
meetings
and
then
a
lot
watch
them
the
day
after
so
I
think
that
the
community
will
be
able
to
watch
the
meeting
at
their
leisure
if
they
want
to,
but
I'd
be
leery
of
moving
this
without
really
checking
whatever
staff
need
to
be.
There.
AB
Thank
you,
sam,
and
to
counsel
for
the
discussion,
certainly
appreciate
all
the
information
brought
together.
We
definitely
want
to
maintain
it
for
that
week
and
believe
that
it
cannot
be
turned
for
the
reasons
you
mentioned.
Sam
into
a
study
session.
We've
got
some
meaty
items
and
having
a
special
call
was
in
a
short
month
a
way
for
us
to
have
two
meetings
in
the
month
of
july.
AB
Having
said
that,
I
do
believe
that
we
are
working
to
reschedule
one
of
those,
but
we
still
have
about
a
little
over
three
hours
for
the
others
I
might
put
if
our
planning
staff
is
on-
and
I
do
not
know
if
they
are
just
put
them
on
the
spot,
to
make
sure
that
that
is,
that
works
for
them,
and
I
do
not
see
them
actually.
B
One
is
a
concept
review
for
diagonal
plaza
and
the
other
is
the
community
culture
and
safety
tax
or
the
community
capital
infrastructure
tax.
So
those
are
the
three
items
all
of
them
would
involve.
Planning
staff
and
the
capital
tax
issue
would
involve
more
staff
as
well,
and
I
would
also
remind
us
just
to
put
in
the
hopper
that
we
will
be
meeting
that
next
tuesday
in
a
regular
meeting
on
the
20th
as
well.
B
So
if
we
do
move
this
to
thursday,
we'll
be
having
a
thursday
meeting
a
monday
cac
and
a
tuesday
meeting
so
just
to
have
that
all
out
there.
So
why
don't?
We
take
a
straw
poll
and
do
it
that
way?
We'll
start
who
would
like
to
see
the
meeting
moved
from
the
13th
raise
your
hand,
one
two
three,
I
see
three,
I'm
missing
anyone,
okay
and
that's
only
three
so
I'll
assume
the
rest
of
us
are
to
not
move
it.
I.
B
Okay,
nearby
juni
bob
and
mark,
so
it's
super
close.
Let's
see
who
would
prefer
to
keep
it,
raise
your
hand
if
you
prefer
to
keep
it
I'll
assume.
It's
everyone
else,
one
two,
three
four
and
there's
adam
five,
we're
just
gonna
go
with
that.
We're
gonna
keep
it
and
we
will
definitely
make
some
time
to
say
some
words
about
what's
going
on
and
that
we
thought
about
moving
it
because
of
the
reason
that
the
all-star
game
got
moved
to
colorado
all
right.
B
Everyone
thanks
for
that
conversation,
so
I'm
gonna
tee
up
a
few
more
items
here.
So
one
of
the
conversations
that
we
had
this
morning
at
cac
involved
planning
staff
and
what
we're
going
to
be
able
to
get
done
this
year
or
not.
B
It
was
triggered
because
the
use
tables
meeting,
which
was
scheduled,
the
planning
staff,
won't
be
able
to
be
ready
for
that,
because
one
of
the
staff
who
was
involved
is
no
longer
working
for
the
city,
and
so,
as
we
talked
about
that,
it
also
became
clear
that
potentially
the
sub-community
plan,
this
boulder
sub-community
plan
could
also
potentially
move
past
the
end
of
this
council,
and
so
one
thing
I
wanted
to
do
and
that
brought
up
the
conversation
that
in
august
we're
scheduled
to
have
a
midterm
check-in
for
the
year
to
see
how
we're
doing
for
our
work
plan,
and
so
part
of
the
conversation
was.
B
I
was
hopeful.
We'd
have
that
earlier
than
august,
so
that
we
could
definitely
review
and
touch
on
all
of
these
items.
So
I
wanted
to
flag
those
as
concerns.
Personally,
I'm
hopeful
that
we
will
do
what
we
can
to
get
those
handled
in
this
council.
But
if
we
need
to
have
one
move
off
into
a
a
future
council
of
items
that
are
on
our
work
plan,
I
think
we
want
to
be
talking
about
it
sooner
than
later
and
so
nuri.
I
don't
know
if
you
have
news
on
that.
AB
We
are
so
I
appreciate
that
sam
and
did
we
did
talk
about
it
briefly.
We
are
gonna
move
that
up
to
talk
about.
We
think
it's
an
appropriate
moment.
I
think
we
were
I'm
just
waiting
for
confirmation
on
the
date,
but
we
can
certainly
be
flexible
as
we
can
move
it
up
there.
We
knew
that
the
july
20th
meeting
was
available
and
we
were
actually
thinking
of
another
date
in
mind,
so
we
will
confirm
that,
but
certainly
we'll
be
moving,
that
up.
B
If
you
have
feedback
tonight,
we'll
be
happy
to
take
it,
but
just
be
aware
that
we
need
to
check
in
and-
and
with
that
said,
I
wanted
to
bring
up
one
other
item,
I'll
probably
turn
to
rachel
to
to
lay
it
out
in
more
detail,
but
there
are
likely
to
be
some
measures
passed
at
the
state
house,
which
may
then
result
in
us
wanting
to
do
a
few
things
and
I'll
turn
to
rachel
on
rachel.
You
suggested
this
to
me,
so
I
need
to
talk
about
it.
E
All
right:
well,
I
think
it
was
mentioned
earlier
in
the
in
christina
gardner's
speech
that
we
are
expecting
that
the
state
legislature
will
pass
three
gun
bills
this
this
week
and
hopefully
they
will
be
signed
into
law
by
governor
paulus.
One
of
them
repeals
preemption
and
preemption
is
the
state
law
that
resulted
in
our
assault
weapons
ban
getting
struck
down
so
when,
if
and
when
preemption
is
repealed,
we
may
want
to
reinstate
our
assault
weapons
ban.
E
I
would
maybe
turn
to
tom
or
sandra
on
on
whether
that's
necessary,
but
additionally,
depending
on
how
that
final
law
comes
out.
E
We
certainly
didn't
expect
to
have
the
tragedy
that
we
did
this
year,
nor
for
us
to
have
preemption
lifted
and
the
ability
to
look
at
some
got
new
gun
laws,
and
so
I
thought
that
maybe
in
the
kind
of
the
the
lull
before
a
new
council
gets
here
like
that
sort
of
september
october
november
period
with
this
council.
E
That
worked
a
lot
of
you
so
hard
in
the
assault,
weapons
ban
initially
and
then
all
of
us
who
have
been
so
profoundly
impacted
by
the
tragedy
could
could
use
that
time
to
add
to
our
work
plan
and
one
more
question
for
tom.
Before
you
answer.
E
B
Mexico,
thanks
rachel
tom
or
sandra.
What
are
your
thoughts
on
the
repeal
of
preemption?
Do
we
need
to
reinstate
our
assault,
weapons
ban
and
how
much
work
would
it
be
to
do
so
and
maybe
add
a
few
other
items.
AD
Well
I'll
answer
the
first
question
and
defer
to
sandra
on
the
second
that
you
don't
need
to
do
anything.
If
the
I
I
will.
I
want
to
conserve,
consult
with
our
outside
legal
team
for
marlon
porter,
but
I
would
suggest
that
what
we'll
do
is
move
to
the
supreme
court
for
immediate
remand
to
the
district
court
to
dismiss
the
case,
which
would
automatically
reinstate
our
ban.
AD
So
you
wouldn't
need
to
do
anything
in
terms
of
staffing,
we're,
as
you
know,
going
through
a
transition
and
sandra's
working
very
hard
on
that,
and
I'm
not
sure
how
much
capacity
the
city
attorney's
office
is
going
to
have
in
the
next
couple
of
months
to
take
on
new
projects.
E
Sorry,
just
real
quick
is
that
something,
though,
that
it
seemed
like
giffords
was,
was
interested
in
helping
us
to
come
up
with
ordinance
language
as
as
needed.
So
is.
AD
Giffords
in
every
town,
we
have
some
great
partners
in
this
effort,
and
so
we
can
do
that
if
it's
just
limited
to
gun
things,
I
think
we
could
probably
handle
something,
but
I'm
not
sure
what
other
things
you
were
thinking
of
in
terms
of
implementing
new
laws
in
september
or
october,
and
I
look
rachel,
I'm
not
familiar
with
this
concept
of
a
low
on
city
council.
It's
not
happened
in
my
10
years,
but
if
it
happens,
it
would
be
nice.
E
Well,
it's
sort
of
a
political
wall
where
you
know
you
don't
want
to.
You
know
ideally
tackle
things
that
that
you
know
right
right
before
an
election.
You
know
the
equivalent
of
appointing
a
supreme
court
justice
when,
when
there's
about
to
be
an
election,
so
that
kind
of
a
law,
a
political
law,
especially
where,
where
we
could
you
know,
do
something
that
is
not
politically
controversial,
because
I
think
it
would
be
not
holy
but
largely
supported
by
the
community.
W
J
The
city
attorney's
office
is
going
through
a
pretty
major
transition
right
now,
and
so
I'm
just
very
cognizant
of
the
workload
that
our
attorneys
have,
and
I
mean
to
the
extent
that
we
can
work
with
the
giffords
group.
That
would
be
wonderful.
You
know
if
they
can
take
on
that
work
for
us
and
if
it's
limited
to
that,
we
can
certainly
look
into
that.
J
So
I'm
happy
to
to
keep
the
conversation
going
and
I
think
it
really
does
determine
it.
It's
based
on
timing,
though
too
I
mean
I
I
just
don't
know
we.
We
have
a
lot
of
other
work
with
the
hill
and
some
other
things
going
on.
So
I
do
think
it's
an
important
issue
and,
to
the
extent
that
we
can
work
with
the
outside
council,
we
can
we.
B
So
here's
my
suggestion
for
this.
It
sounds
like
the
work
plan
review
will
be
moved
up
so
july.
13
seems
like
a
pretty
good
candidate
date,
so
sandra.
If
you'd
be
able
to
think
about
what
kind
of
capacity
you
might
have
for
a
conversation
that
we'd
have
on
the
13th.
We'll
also
know
more
about
what
passed
as
far
as
the
preemption
repeal.
So
maybe
there
will
be
more
concrete
questions
about
schedule
at
that
time.
A
B
Of
all
those
scheduling
items
and
if
we
do
move
the
work
plan,
discussion
up
to
july
13th
be
thinking
about
priorities,
specifically
what
we
need
to
get
done
in
this
council,
and
if
we
had
to
push
something
off
to
the
beginning
of
the
next
council,
what
that
would
be
what
we
prefer
and
then
also
be
thinking
about
gun,
violence,
prevention
measures,
and
we
can
hear
from
the
city
attorney's
office
on
july
13th
about
capacity
and
then
discuss
that
further
then
so
that
covers
everything
that
I
wanted
to
bring
forward
about
scheduling.
B
B
S
No
just
a
just
a
quick
comment
that
a
couple
weeks
ago
I
sent
out
a
hotline
about
the
nuisance,
ordinance,
nuisance,
noise,
ordinance
and
or
and
there's
another
discussion
regarding
another
method
that
can
be
used
to
address
noise
with
chief
harold,
and
I
had
asked
that
perhaps
she
present
some
of
this
information
she
shared
with
me
and
initially
I
thought
it
might
take
more
time
than
it
appears
that
it
will
take.
S
B
And
the
22nd
you're
referring
to
is
the
police
department,
master
plan,
update
and
crime
update
as
well.
So,
okay
super
thanks
for
that.
Okay
and
the
last
subject
bob
reminded
me
about
today
when
we
heard
from
the
engagement
subcommittee.
One
of
the
points
we
touched
on
was
coming
back
to
in-person
meetings
and
we
resolved
that
and
we
said
that
we're
going
to
do
in-person
council
meetings
when
we
return
from
our
break.
What
I
do
not
believe
we
resolved
is
study
sessions,
and
so
what
had
been
put
out
there
was.
B
How
do
we
want
to
handle
our
study
sessions
after
we
returned
from
our
break,
and
so
I
thought
we
would
have
a
little
time
and
we
do
to
have
a
little
discussion
here
of
that,
because
I
think,
for
our
purposes
and
staff
purposes,
we
need
to
put
a
bow
on
that
and
make
sure
that
we
have
a
plan
for
how
we're
going
to
do
study
sessions
and
the
engagement
subcommittee
had
given
us
some
ideas
and
choices.
D
Yeah,
I
just
thought:
we'd
have
a
conversation
that
we
decided
on
leaving
it,
as
is
for
study
sessions,
but
we're
doing
virtual
ones,
at
least
that's
my
recollection,
but
I
could
be
wrong.
B
I
I
do
think
we
talked
about
that.
I
didn't
come
away
with
the
decision,
necessarily
that
we
had
and
bob
hadn't
been
clear.
Maybe
bob
I'm
misrepresenting
you,
but
I
know
that
some
of
the
ideas
we
had
talked
about
included
meeting
in
person
but
having
some
people
be
able
to
telecon
in
so
definitely
it
was
we're
talking
about
different.
I'm
happy.
B
N
Yeah
thanks
thanks
adam
I
I'm
like,
like
sam
I'm
happy
to
do
whatever
council
wishes
it
just
rachel
and
I,
when
we
kind
of
compared
notes
after
that
meeting,
were
a
little
unclear
about
whether
the
decision
had
been
made.
We
had
made
a
recommendation,
but
it
wasn't
a
strong
recommendation
that
we
go
to
in-person
study
sessions
as
well,
to
give
council
members
the
options
to
participate
remotely,
but
then
there
was
some
discussion
about
keeping
it
all
remote.
N
For
now
we
just
wanted
to
kind
of
bottom
that
out
for
the
benefit
of
staff
and
just
be
really
clear
about
our
decision.
We
actually
have
an
engagement
committee
meeting
tomorrow,
so
we
wanted
to
ask
the
question
tonight
and
if
it's
the
little
council
to
have
all
study
sessions
for
the
foreseeable
future,
virtually
that's
fine.
If
council
members
want
to
go
back
in
some
sort
of
hybrid,
that's
fine
too,
we
just
wanted
to
let
staff
know
so
they
can
plan.
AE
E
That
meeting
went
so
late
that
night,
my
recollection's
pretty
fuzzy
as
well.
It
seemed
to
me
that
what
the
engagement
subcommittee
was
was
sort
of
honing
in
on
was
that
we
would
come
back
for
council
meetings
which,
with
study
sessions
and
regular
voting
meetings,
but
that
we
would
not
come
back
for
things
like
cac
and
subcommittee
meetings,
so
that
that
I
think
we
hopefully
we're
all
clear
on
that
and
that
we
really
wanted
to
build
in
a
remote
option
for
people
and
and
wanted
to
work
through,
like
that.
E
E
We've
established
that
one
anyhow,
and
so
maybe
what
happened
was
that
it's
we
haven't
established
the
protocols
yet
for
how
to
like
sign
up
to
for
who's
going
to
be
there,
and
so
maybe
it
was
staff
wanting
to
delay
a
little
bit
on
on
coming
back
for
study
sessions.
While
we
figured
out
how
to
how
to
ensure
that
not
everybody's
taking
the
same
day
off.
E
But
that's
that's
a
that's
a
hypothesis,
but
I
do
support
going
back
for
for
both
and
making
sure
that
that
we
build
in
the
options
because
it
will
free
us
up.
I
think
for
people
that
are
are
going
on
business
trips
and
things
like
that.
If
they
can
schedule
those
around
study
sessions
and
be
able
to
be
remote
for
for
foreseeable
future
will
be
helpful.
F
Yeah,
I
would
go
ahead
and
keep
study
sessions
virtual
for
at
least
a
couple
months,
just
as
a
way
of
easing
back
into
the
in
person.
I
don't
feel
super
strongly
about
it
as
long
as
there's
an
option
for
council
members
to
be
remote,
but
that
would
be
my
top
choice
is
to
keep
study
sessions
virtual
for
a
while
longer.
AJ
Yeah,
I
think
somehow
some
of
us
heard
differently
during
the
meeting,
and
I
think
I
did.
I
think
we
did
agree
that
study
sessions
would
be
remote,
and
I
do
support
that
as
well
to
keep
it
virtual
for
now
for
the
foreseeable
future.
But
I
think
that
was
a
decision
and
I
agree
with
it
to
stay
virtual.
S
Yeah,
that
was
my
recollection
as
well
that
we
did
decide
that
study
sessions
would
remain
remote
for
a
while.
B
All
right,
I
think,
that's
clear
enough,
so
I
think
bob
and
rachel
and
nuria.
It's
clear
that
council
would
like
to
for
the
foreseeable
future,
keep
all
study
sessions
virtual
and
we
will
have
all
council
meetings
in
person.
So
I
think
that
is
all
that
I
had
for
this
matters
item.
Is
there
anything
else?
Any
other
council
member
would
like
to
bring
up.
B
If
that's
the
case,
I
think
we're
going
to
adjourn
this
meeting,
we're
going
to
adjourn
this
meeting
at
8
26
p.m.
So,
congratulations
to
everyone
and
let's
enjoy
the
time
we
have
for
the
rest
of
the
evening.
I
will
see
you
all
soon
and
thanks
for
a
great
meeting
mark,
did
you
have
something
before
we
go
start.