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From YouTube: Boulder City Council Special Meeting 10-29-19
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A
A
Day
of
highs
and
lows
for
protesters
in
Lebanon
celebrations
broke
out
as
Prime
Minister
Hariri
announced
his
resignation,
but
earlier
protests
sites
were
attacked
with
demonstrators.
Blaming
supporters
of
Shiite
politicians,
Iraq's
rival
political
parties,
agree
to
work
together
to
oust
the
country's
Prime
Minister.
It
comes
after
over.
A
dozen
anti-government
protesters
were
gunned
down
by
masked
attackers
and
trading
in
a
Halloween
brexit
for
a
Christmas
ballot.
British
MPs
vote
to
hold
an
early
election
on
December
12th.
Their
third
trip
to
the
polls
in
just
five
years.
A
Welcome
back
to
the
france24
newsroom
here
in
Paris
I'm
Allison
Sargent.
Thank
you
for
joining
us.
Anti-Government
protesters
in
Lebanon
scored
a
victory.
This
Tuesday
after
nearly
two
weeks
of
demonstrations,
prime
minister
Saud
Hariri,
announced
his
resignation,
but
president
Michel
Aoun
hasn't
formally
accepted
that
resignation
yet
and
even
if
he
does
Hariri
would
remain
in
office
until
a
new
government
could
be
formed.
Hariri
said
he
wanted
to
give
the
country
a
quote
positive
shock
to
break
the
deadlock,
but
some
fear
his
resignation
could
leave
even
could
lead
to
even
greater
instability.
B
C
B
A
G
D
D
Barricades
and
roadblocks
were
set
up
with
protesters,
organizing
sit-ins
and
human
chains,
a
peaceful
strategy
aimed
at
paralyzing
the
country
that
finally
paid,
but
while
protests
have
remained
relatively
peaceful.
Some
experts
now
worry
about
the
political
stability
of
the
country.
In
the
wake
of
the
government's
resignation
in
the
lead-up
to
the
announcement,
a
mob
loyal
to
Shiite
groups,
Hezbollah
and
Amal
destroyed
a
protest
camp
in
central
Beirut.
This
came
after
Hezbollah
leader
Sayyed
Hassan
Nasrallah
criticized
protesters
last
week,
I.
B
H
A
Moving
over
to
Iraq,
where
state
media
reports
that
the
country's
two
largest
political
parties
have
agreed
to
work
together
to
meet
the
demands
of
protesters,
state
media
reports
that
the
populist
Shiite
cleric,
who
is
the
leader
of
Parliament's
largest
bloc,
asked
to
the
leader
of
the
second
largest
bloc
to
help
him
introduce
a
vote
of
no-confidence
against
the
Iraqi
Prime
Minister.
Their
alliance
comes
after
the
country's
already
violent
protests
saw
even
more
bloodshed.
When
a
group
of
masked
gunmen
opened
fire
on
protesters,
killing
18
people
and
wounding
hundreds
of
others,
Andrew
Hillier
has
more.
C
C
Of
them
amidst
thick
clouds
of
tear
gas,
these
protesters
have
defied
a
curfew
imposed
by
the
authorities
every
day
they
grow
in
number
using
sit-ins
and
strike
action
to
heat
pressure
on
the
country's
leaders.
Further
south
in
the
holy
city
of
Najaf
protesters
saw
their
demands
championed
by
moqtada
al-sadr
one
of
Iraq's,
most
influential
Shiite
clerics.
Seen
here
at
the
wheel
of
his
car,
he
invited
his
political
rival,
hadiyyah-lah
meanie,
who
leads
the
second-largest
bloc
in
parliament
to
work
towards
triggering
snap
elections.
C
I
J
Certainly,
that
has
really
been
very
very
present
in
this
prime
ministership
under
Boris
Johnson
has
that
deadlock
has
been
broken,
so
438
votes
in
favor
only
20
voted
against
of
this
early
general
election.
So
ignition
has
started.
We
just
need
one
more
bit
on
that
rocket,
and
that
is
the
upper
chamber,
the
House
of
Lords,
to
give
its
approval.
We
expect
it
to
do
that.
J
It
was
interesting
to
hear
the
word
refresh-
Parliament,
that's
quite
a
mild
word,
but
he's
really
accused
this
Parliament
of
not
wanting
to
deliver
brexit
of
standing
in
the
way
of
delivering
brexit,
not
respecting
the
vote
of
the
referendum
back
in
2016
and,
of
course,
his
pledge,
do-or-die,
no
ifs
or
buts
I
would
rather
die
in
a
ditch
than
ask
for
an
extension,
but
he
did
because
of
a
law
being
passed
and
very
much
control
of
Parliament
being
seized
by
the
opposition.
He
did
ask
for
that
extension.
It's
being
granted.
J
The
deadline
is
no
longer
the
31st
of
October
and
so
on
Thursday.
It
is
now
going
to
be
the
31st
of
January
2020,
of
course,
as
the
UK
wants
to
leave
before
that
it
can
do
so.
But
there
is
a
a
deal
on
the
table.
There
is
an
extension
and
the
worry
of
the
opposition
parties
was
that
a
No
Deal
might
still
be
on
the
cards.
A
Benedict
pavia
reporting
from
London
their
protests
against
inequality
continue
in
Chile,
with
thousands
rallying
in
the
capital.
This
Tuesday
it's
the
12th
day
of
the
demonstrations
that
began
as
a
protest
against
a
now
canceled
hike
in
subway
ticket
prices.
The
mobilisation
continues,
despite
concessions
offered
by
president
piñera,
including
small
increases
in
minimum
wage
and
pensions
and
higher
taxes
on
the
wealthy
protesters,
though,
remain
unsatisfied.
They
are
calling
for
changes
to
Chile's
Constitution,
which
they
say
provides
the
legal
basis
for
the
country's
market-driven
system.
A
Lawmakers
in
the
United
States
voted
overwhelmingly
this
Tuesday
to
recognize
the
Armenian
Genocide,
the
House
of
Representatives
voted
405
to
11
in
favor
of
a
resolution.
It
says
that
the
US
will
commemorate
as
genocide,
the
killing
of
one-and-a-half
million
Armenians
by
the
Ottoman
Empire
between
1915
and
1923.
A
Staying
in
the
in
the
US,
where
the
impeachment
inquiry
against
President
Trump
saw
a
major
development.
This
Tuesday,
for
the
first
time
investigators
heard
testimony
from
an
official
who
actually
listened
in
on
the
phone
call
between
the
US
president
and
his
Ukrainian
counterpart
Lieutenant
Colonel
Alexander
vind
Minh
testified
that
he
was
concerned
by
that
call
and
did
not
think
it
proper
to
demand
that
a
foreign
government
investigate
a
US
citizen.
Earlier
we
spoke
to
American
legal
expert,
Eric
lizanne.
He
told
us
just
how
damaging
he
thinks.
Vindens
testimony
will
prove
to
be.
K
The
evidence
right
now
seems
overwhelming,
and
indeed
Nancy
Pelosi
today
elaborated
on
her
statement.
Yesterday,
she
being
the
Speaker
of
the
House
of
Representatives
that
is
conducting
the
inquiry
that
there
will
be
formal
procedures
established
by
vote,
firming
this
impeachment
in
vest,
Gatien
and
laying
out
the
exact
requirements
and
procedures
to
make
it
more
transparent
as
transparent
as
possible.
It
will
be
the
most
transparent,
open
impeachment
really
in
US
history,
there
have
only
been
two
others,
but
compared
to
the
others.
A
The
other
side
of
the
United
States
in
California
firefighters
are
battling
blazes
in
both
the
north
and
south
of
the
state.
The
mayor
of
Los
Angeles
says
that
the
so-called
Getti
fire,
which
is
burning
west
of
downtown,
has
now
been
15%
contained
since
Monday.
It
has
burned
at
least
a
dozen
homes
and
led
to
the
evacuation
of
over
seven
thousand
people
making
matters
worse.
California
is
expecting
strong
overnight
winds
across
the
state
which
authorities
worry,
could
help,
fan
the
flames
and
start
new
fires.
F
M
O
P
Oh
mark
Tuesday
marks
one
year
since
the
first
of
those
two
crashes
blamed
on
faulty
flight
control
software
installed
in
Boeing's
737
max
series
jets
together
those
two
crashes
killed
346
people,
seven
months
after
the
second
incident.
The
737
max
remains,
grounded
worldwide,
costing
Boeing
and
the
airlines
that
use
it.
Billions
of
dollars,
Boeing
CEO,
Dennis
Muhlenberg,
faced
tough
questions
from
US
senators
admitting
for
the
first
time
of
the
company,
made
mistakes
in
the
design
of
the
Macs
Boeing
and
u.s.
aviation
regulators,
both
of
faced
accusations
of
relaxed
oversight.
Q
P
In
on
the
markets,
now,
European
index
is
mixed
on
Tuesday
London's,
footsie
100
closed
down
a
third
of
a
percent
cat
kennel
here
in
Paris
eked
out
some
minor
and
gains
by
the
closing
bell.
Frankfurt
Dax
ended
the
day,
just
under
the
flat
line
over
on
Wall
Street
indexes
lost
some
ground
as
investors
wait
for
an
expected
interest
rate
cut
from
the
Federal
Reserve
down
the
S&P
500,
both
closing
down
slightly
despite
a
new
record
high
on
SP
earlier
today,
shares
in
Google
parent
alphabet
lost
over
2%
as
earnings
amidst
expectations.
P
The
Nasdaq
end
of
the
day
in
the
red
by
over
half
a
percent
annexed
Saudi
Arabia's.
Future
investment
initiative
is
currently
underway
in
Riyadh.
The
early
conference,
nicknamed
Davos
in
the
desert,
is
once
again
drawing
high-profile
business
and
political
leaders
last
year
saw
many
of
them
skip
the
event
following
the
murder
of
dissident
journalists,
Jamal
Hogg
XI
by
a
team
of
Saudi
agents.
James
Vezina
has
the
details.
P
R
R
Governor
makes
no
mention
of
last
year's
attendance.
That's
because
many
would-be
investors
pulled
out
of
the
summit
after
the
murder
of
veteran
journalists,
homonka
Shoji
in
the
kingdom's
embassy
in
Istanbul,
but
a
year
on.
Many
of
those
who
boycotted
the
2018
edition
are
back
and
a
strong
turnout
could
help
to
revamp
the
crown
prince's
image.
Despite
the
CIA's
ruling
that
Mohammed
bin
Salman
was
responsible
for
the
killing
and
the
talk
on
everyone's
lips,
the
planned
IPO
for
State
oil
giant
Aramco,
considered
to
be
the
world's
most
profitable
company.
Aramco
claims
to
events.
R
Almost
seventy
billion
dollars
so
far
this
year
and
Saudi
Arabia
is
paying
to
offer
a
stake
of
up
to
five
percent
to
international
investors.
Mohammed
bin
Salman
is
calling
for
the
firm
to
be
valued
at
two
trillion
dollars,
but
company
executives
are
instead
putting
the
value
closer
to
1.5
trillion
time.
P
Now,
for
a
look
at
some
more
of
the
day's
top
business
headlines,
fiat-chrysler
is
reportedly
in
merger
talks
with
french,
auto
giant
PSA
Peugeot
Citroen
The
Wall
Street
Journal
reporting
the
possibility
of
an
all-stock
deal
that
could
see
the
two
firms
combine
as
equals.
Those
talks
come
just
months
after
a
failed
merger
deal
between
Fiat
Chrysler
and
PSAs
French
rival,
Renault
Airbus
has
confirmed
a
huge
sales
at
IndyGo
Airlines
Indian
budget
carriers
place
to
order
for
300
jets
from
Airbus
a321.
P
The
deal
worth
around
33
billion
euros
and
large
discounts
are
usually
negotiated
in
such
cases,
and
the
Pentagon
has
announced
a
deal
with
Lockheed
Martin
that
will
lower
the
price
of
new
f-35
Joint
Strike
Fighters
by
over
12%.
The
34
billion
dollar
deal
includes
a
delivery
of
478
f-35s,
reducing
the
price
for
jet
to
just
78
million
dollars
price
tag.
Washington
hopes
I'll,
encourage
allies
to
buy
into
the
Defense
Department's.
Most
costly
weapons
system
ever
can't
afford
health
insurance
stuff.
P
Finally,
for
business
shares
in
plant-based
protein
company
beyond
meat
just
got
sent
through
the
meat
grinder,
despite
the
company
announcing
its
first-ever
quarterly
profit
of
over
4
million
dollars,
shares
had
over
22%
of
their
values.
Sliced
off
Tuesday,
as
a
ban
on
share
sales,
finally
expired
following
the
company's
IPO.
All
the
stock
is
down
from
its
record
high
in
July.
It's
still
trading
over
three
times
its
initial
price.
It's
because
mean
alternatives.
O
O
T
Indeed,
so
there
was
a
bit
of
an
upset
a
bit
of
a
last
minute
drama
as
well,
and
a
shock
defeat
for
world
number
one
Ashleigh
Barty,
the
Australian
was
stunned
by
Dutch
player,
Kiki
Burton's,
who
was
added
to
the
tournament
just
hours
before
the
clash
to
replace
Naomi
Osaka.
We
pulled
out
with
a
shoulder
injury,
Burton
struggled
early
on
trailing
by
a
set
and
a
break,
but
pulled
off
a
resounding
comeback,
with
ruthless
returning
to
overwhelm
party
in
the
second
and
third
sets.
T
Staying
with
tennis
and
the
latest
from
day
two
at
the
Paris
Masters
defending
champion
Karen
kachanov
has
been
knocked
out
by
Janet
Leonardo
struck,
struck,
managed
to
edge
forward
in
a
tight
first
set,
that's
lasted
46
minutes.
The
pair
will
going
level
into
the
third
set
after
catching
off,
fought
back
to
win
the
second.
T
The
German,
though,
broke
catching
off
in
the
fourth
game
of
the
final
set
for
the
first
time
in
the
match:
winning
76
3-6
7-5
kachanov
early
exits
dashes
his
hopes
for
qualifying
for
next
month's
ATP
finals
in
London
and
Alex
did
minore
has
booked
his
place
in
the
second
round
at
in
the
French
capital
after
beating
last
loads.
A
Jer
in
straight
sets
the
Australian
lost
his
serve
in
the
opening
game,
but
came
back
to
break
the
Serbian
to
take
the
first
set
in
33
minutes.
T
Two
lates
goal:
stop
division
side,
VFL
Bochum
from
pulling
off
one
of
the
greatest
upsets
in
the
competition
so
far
against
Bayern
Munich,
the
Bundesliga
champions
trailed
for
most
of
the
game
with
an
own
after
an
own
goal.
But
Bayern
Munich
made
a
late
comeback.
Equalizing
in
the
83rd
minute
after
surgeon
debris
found
to
the
back
of
the
net.
T
T
Bulgaria
have
been
slapped
with
a
stadium
ban
for
their
fans,
racist
abuse
of
England
players
in
a
Euro
2020
qualifier
wafer
ordered
Bulgaria
to
play
their
next
competitive
game
behind
closed
doors
for
Nazi
salutes
and
monkey
chants
by
supporters.
During
this
team,
six
nil
loss
against
the
World
Cup
semi-finalists.
T
Iteration
has
also
been
fined
75,000
euros
by
UEFA.
The
band
will
see
final
Euro
2020
qualifying
game
against
the
Czech
Republic
in
an
empty
ground
which
will
cost
its
Federation
an
estimated
a
hundred
thousand
euros
in
lost
revenue.
A
second
match
ban
has
been
suspended
for
two
years
and
finally,
a
new
era
has
begun
for
the
United
States
women's
team.
T
After
they
named
a
new
head
coach,
latsko
and
anis
ski
has
taken
over
from
Jill
Ellis,
who
has
won
that
back-to-back
World
Cups
with
Team
USA
the
43
year
old,
who
was
born
in
North
Macedonia,
has
been
in
charge
of
rain
FC
in
the
National
Women's
Soccer
League.
For
the
past
two
seasons
where
star
striker,
Megan
Rapinoe
plays
her
club
football
and
an
auskey
said
his
priority
is
getting
to
the
2020
Tokyo
Olympics.
The
USS
qualifying
campaign
starts
at
the
end
of
January.
T
V
It's
very
important
to
know
that
the
players
are
excited
just
as
as
well
as
me.
Okay,
like
I,
said
before
they're
some
of
the
best
players
in
the
world
and
to
know
that
some
of
the
best
players
in
the
world
valued
the
knowledge,
the
understanding
and
the
job
that
I
do.
It's
extremely
important
for
me
and
I
mean
I'm
just
humbled
by
some
of
some
of
their
comments.
So.
O
F
W
These
men
are
preparing
their
10
pounds
worth
of
cocaine
for
injection.
It's
a
quick
and
cheap
hi,
and
just
one
of
multiple
substances
that
they
take,
but
they're
just
the
most
visible
example
of
a
worsening
drug
crisis
in
Glasgow
and
across
Scotland,
which
now
has
one
of
the
highest
rates
of
drug
related
deaths
in
Europe.
Local
social
workers
say
that
not
enough
is
being
done
to
tackle
the
scourge
there.
X
W
W
Z
Obviously,
there
are
deep-rooted
social
problems,
poverty
and
equality,
oppression
and
historical
political
problems
that
feed
any
of
that
need
for
oblivion
and
but
I
think
the
normalization
of
addiction
passing
as
culture
and
Scotland
has
a
lot
to
do
be
the
this
step.
We
see
yourselves
and
no
official.
D
Aimed
at
paralyzing
the
country
that
finally
paid,
but
while
protests
have
remained
relatively
peaceful,
some
experts
now
worry
about
the
political
stability
of
the
country.
In
the
wake
of
the
government's
resignation
in
the
lead-up
to
the
announcement,
a
mob
loyal
to
Shiite
groups,
Hezbollah
and
Amal
destroyed
a
protest
camp
in
central
Beirut.
This
came
after
Hezbollah
leader
Sayyed
Hassan
Nasrallah
criticized
protesters
last
week,
I.
B
H
C
Well,
hadiyyah-lah
many
who
leads
the
second-largest
bloc
in
Parliament
to
work
towards
triggering
snap
elections.
Pressure
is
growing
on
Iraq's
leaders
to
find
a
political
solution
that
will
stem
the
violence
in
the
shimrit
holy
city
of
Karbala
18
people
reportedly
killed
on
Monday
night,
but
officials
say
they
are
not
responsible
for
the
spiraling
death
toll.
We.
I
C
A
The
armies
of
Turkey
and
Syria
exchanged
deadly
fire
along
their
border
late
Tuesday,
it's
the
first
time
the
two
countries
have
clashed
since
Ankara
launched
their
anti
Kurdish
offensive
in
northern
Syria.
Earlier
this
month.
The
violence
complicates
the
situation
on
the
ground,
which
was
otherwise
calm.
Earlier
Tuesday,
the
Turkish
president
confirmed
that
Kurdish
forces
successfully
made
the
deadline
to
withdraw
from
a
designated
border
zone.
Turkish
and
Russian
forces
are
now
set
to
begin
joint
patrols
to
verify
the
Kurdish
withdrawal.
A
It's
not
the
gift,
many
in
the
UK
wanted
for
the
holidays,
but
the
country
is
heading
for
yet
another
general
election.
This
December
MPs
voted
in
favour
of
holding
an
early
election
after
deadlock
over
brexit
led
to
the
EU
extending
the
deadline
until
January
31st.
The
legislation
now
goes
for
a
vote
in
the
House
of
Lords.
Our
correspondent
benedict
fabio
has
more
from
London.
J
What
must
not
be
forgotten
in
the
context
is
that
Boris
Johnson,
the
Prime
Minister,
did
something
that
many
of
his
critics
did
not
think
that
he
could
do,
and
that
is
he
did
get
the
EU
to
reopen
the
withdrawal
agreement
they
had
said
repeatedly.
They
would
not
do
that
since
they
had
struck
a
deal
after
two
years
of
negotiations
with
the
previous
Prime
Minister
Theresa
May.
J
But
the
problem
was
but
three
times
of
asking
this
year
in
January
and
in
the
spring
she
got
turned
down
comprehensively
by
MPs,
so
she
was
replaced
at
the
end
of
July,
as
we
know
by
the
current
prime
minister,
Boris
Johnson
and
he's
been
trying
to
call
a
general
election
because
he
lost
the
small
majority
he
inherited
from
her.
And
finally,
today
the
aunt
passed
the
deadlock,
the
cul-de-sac
in
a
sense
and
the
paralysis.
Certainly
that
has.
G
AA
Just
one
I
do
have
seven
postcards
to
give
to
my
fellow
council
members
who
are
here.
They
were
printed
in
1993
I
got
them.
When
I
first
came
on
council
in
1995,
there
are
19
sent
postcards
and
back
then
we
hardly
had
email
so
I'm,
giving
each
one
of
my
fellow
council
members
a
postcard
to
remember
me
by
and
maybe
send
me
a
note
and.
D
AA
AB
U
Okay,
now
down
to
some
business,
because
this
is
a
special
council
meeting,
we
don't
have
public
comment,
we're
only
gonna
have
we
have
a
very
long
consent
agenda
that
it's
gonna
take
a
little
discussion,
but
then
we'll
have
one
public
hearing
and
that's
on
our
police
oversight
task
force
ordinance.
So
if
you
want
to
speak
to
that,
please
sign
up
over
there
and
with
that,
your.
AA
AA
AD
AD
U
AD
U
U
Yes
and
I
just
wanted
to
do
a
shout
out
to
that,
that
is
to
incentivize
more
affordable
housing
in
exchange
for
density,
and
that
was
a
lot
of
work
to
in
his
opportunity
zone
and
we've
been
getting
a
lot
of
email
about
that
and
I
think
we
want
to
clarify
for
everybody
exactly
what
that
is
and
what
it
isn't
and
I'm
gonna
put
Sam
on
the
spot.
Okay,.
AE
Well,
we
started
the
process
of
looking
at
the
opportunity.
Sound
we've
put
a
moratorium
and
I
think
in
December
up
2018,
and
the
intention
of
the
moratorium
had
to
one
was
to
change
and
review
all
of
the
use
tables
in
18m
districts
that
are
part
of
the
opportunity
zone
and
make
sure
that
what
we
would
be
getting
would
be
focused
on
neighborhood,
serving
retail
and
affordable
housing.
Those
changes
as
we
limited
office,
space
and
hotels
in
the
opportunity
zone,
and
then
we
further
stated
and
I
made
the
motion.
So
I
read
my
motion
language.
AE
We
further
stated
that
we
wanted
to
protect
all
of
the
market
rate,
affordable
housing
which
is
present
and
the
opportunity
zone,
and
we
did
that
with
an
overlay
district.
So
we
put
a
district
into
place
which
basically
prevents
demolitions
of
market
rate,
affordable
residential
housing,
and
so,
if
you
like,
we
set
out
to
do
this
process
to
make
sure
that
what
we
get
from
this
tax
benefit.
This
tax
credit
move
on
the
federal
government's
part
is
what
we're
looking
for.
AE
So
one
of
the
things
that
was
mentioned
when
Jane
put
in
for
this
opportunity
zone
was
diagonal
Plaza,
so
diagonal
Plaza
is
pretty
much
it's
owned
by
seven
different
owners
and
if
this
tool
can
be
used
to
get
us
good
outcomes
at
diagonal,
Plaza
I
think
we
will
have
done
our
job.
So
I
guess
that's
how
I
would
summarize
how
we
got
to
where
we
are.
The
other
thing
I
will
say
that
we
did
ask
staff
about
when
we
had
second
reading
on
this.
Is
we
asked
staff?
Could
they
please?
AE
AE
Furthermore,
even
if
we
were
able
to
find
out
where
the
funds
were
being
used
when
they
transfer,
so
it's
often
the
case
that
land
gets
bought,
the
project
gets
entitled
and
it
gets
sold
off
at
that
point
and
then
finding
if
people
who
bought
subsequently
had
oszi
funding
staff
just
told
us,
it
really
couldn't
be
done
under
the
set
of
laws
that
we
have
in
place.
Today
so
there's
a
summary
thank
Hey,
okay!
Well,
that's
Mary's
point
yeah
I
would
give
that.
AF
AG
So
one
of
the
things
that
occurred
to
me
was
that
and
right
towards
just
before
we
voted
was
that
I
recalled
that
we
have
the
height
ordinance
in
place
and
so
I
I
bought
it
in
favor
of
lifting
the
moratorium
on
the
hunch
that
the
height
ordinance
would
would
provide
some
protections
over
the
weekend.
I
had
an
exchange
with
a
member
of
the
public
over
email
and
and
I
said.
I
shared
this
with
this
person
and
they
wrote
back
and
said.
AG
Well,
then,
you've
done
all
the
studies
to
show
that
that
is
in
fact,
true
and
so
I
thought
to
myself.
Yeah
they're
right
so
I
proceeded
it
to
write
to
staff
and
ask
some
questions
and
and
I
want
to
ask
them
again
and
I
want
to
ask
them
publicly
so
that
you
all
hear
the
answers
that
I
have
heard
and.
AG
U
AI
Sure
Christmas
check
interim
planning,
director
assistant
city
manager
over
the
last
10
months,
since
this
councilmember
Weaver
described
when
the
moratorium
was
put
into
place
in
December
of
2018
council.
As
a
part
of
that
moratorium
outlined
a
series
of
efforts
that
we
as
staff,
should
go
through
to
ensure
that
if
there
is
any
development
that
occurs
in
these
areas,
how
do
we
make
sure
that
that
development
gets
to
the
outcomes
that
we
want
as
a
community?
AI
And
we
recognize
that
there
were
several
areas
where
what
our
vision,
the
Boulder
Valley
Comprehensive
Plan,
stated
for
those
areas.
Our
code
did
not
necessarily
achieve
those
same
outcomes,
and
so
we
did
a
whole
bunch
of
work
to
the
use
tables.
That's
what
is
up
for
third
reading
tonight
to
ensure
that
we're
getting
the
outcomes
that
we
want
so
restricting
office
in
certain
zone
districts
is
one
area.
The
amount
of
office
that
can
be
built
in
certain
zoning
districts
and
councilmember
Weaver
describes
some
of
the
others.
AI
The
other
is,
as
you've
said,
Mary
the
height
the
ordinance.
So
the
appendix
J
map,
that
is
in
the
land-use
code
right
now,
or
limits
the
areas
that
you
can
get
a
height
exception
and
go
up
to
55
feet
and
that's
very
limited
to
areas
where
we've
either
done
intentional
planning
or
the
zone
district
intends
for
that
level
of
intensity
and
so
the
height.
The
ordinance
really
is
your
one
of
your
strongest
tools
in
your
toolbox
to
ensure
that
you're
getting
the
outcomes
that
you
want.
AI
The
vast
majority
of
the
opportunity
zone
is
not
able
to
go
above
the
base
zoning
height
and
get
a
height
exception,
so
I
think
that
tool
is
in
the
in
the
toolbox
as
well.
The
last
that
I
would
say
is
the
decisions
that
counsel
made
related
to
the
commercial
linkage
fee.
The
next
phase
in
of
the
commercial
linkage
fee
occurs
in
January
on
January
1st
and
that's
the
tipping
point
that
we
have
heard
from
many
applicants
starts
to
actually
make
their
projects
economically
infeasible
as
well,
and
so
what
we're
seeing
in
terms
of
development
trends?
AI
Anecdotally,
I,
don't
have
the
data.
Yet
we
were
trying
to
pull
that
today.
As
things
are
slowing
down
a
little
bit
as
well
and
so
I
think
there
are
several
tools
in
your
toolbox
using
our
powers
of
Zoning
to
ensure
that
we're
getting
the
outcomes
that
we
want
in
the
area
that
is
located
in
the
opportunities
on.
AG
AI
I
think
if
we
go
back
to
2015
and
remember
what
was
kind
of
occurring
in
the
community
at
the
time,
there
was
a
lot
of
concern
about
the
types
of
development
and
the
scale
of
development
that
was
occurring
in
certain
parts
of
town,
especially
in
the
boulder
valley,
regional
center.
The
area
surrounding
29th,
Street
and
so
I
think
that,
along
with
some
of
the
conversations
about
projects
that
are
maybe
outside
of
the
areas
that
we
would
anticipate
more
intense
development
or
taller
buildings,
those
applications
were
coming
in
for
Heights
exceptions
and
so
I
think.
AI
The
concern
was
where
exactly
should
should
we
have
taller
buildings
within
the
community
and
so
in
in
reaction
to
that,
the
moratorium
was
put
into
place.
That
is
the
heighth
ordinance
that
we
have
today
and
as
part
of
what
is
still
in
place
with
the
appendix
J
map
that
we're
gonna
continue
to
talk
about
as
we
work
through
phase
2
of
community
benefits
and.
AG
AI
AG
And
then
also
what
so,
that
date
is
important,
because
today
we
received
an
email
that
also
explained
a
couple
things
about
the
opportunity
zone
and
one
of
them
had
to
do
with
deadlines
for
investment
and,
as
I
understand
it,
there
is
one
coming
up:
December
31st
of
this
year
and
another
one
coming
up:
December
31st
of
2021.
Could
you
just
explain
a
little
bit
more
about
that,
because
that
that
is
something
that
I
just
learned
about
today?
Sure.
AI
Yeah
I
will
disclaimer
I'm,
not
a
financial
advisor
or
a
tax
attorney,
but
in
working
with
exactly
in
working
with
Evette
Bowden,
as
well
as
just
kind
of
monitoring
the
continued
regulations
of
the
IRS.
There
are
several
deadlines:
the
key
date
in
the
opportunity
zone,
regulations
and
the
legislation
is
December
31st
of
2026,
that's
a
key
date,
that's
in
the
legislation
and
you
work
backwards
off
of
that
date.
AI
So
if
you
want
to
receive
the
maximum
IRS
benefit
from
using
an
opportunity
fund,
that's
seven
years
back
from
December
31st
of
2026,
which
is
December
31st
of
2019.
So
if
you
want
to
realize
the
full
seven
year
benefit
of
a
15%
deferral
on
your
capital
gain,
you
need
to
make
that
investment
by
the
end
of
this
year,
then
the
next
deadline,
if
is
a
five
year
increment,
so
that
December
of
2021,
that
would
be
a
10%
deferral
on
that
capital
gain
and
then,
after
2026.
AI
If
you
continue
to
hold
that
investment
for
at
least
ten
years,
then
you
obtain
the
full
benefit
and
then
there's
a
period
of
time
that
you
can.
You
can
continue
to
hold
a
piece
of
property
or
a
business
investment
that
that
there's
some
complicated
and
technical
pieces
related
to
one
additional
benefit
that
you
can
receive.
But
the
key
date
is
that
2026
timeline
and
working
back
from
that.
So.
AG
That
by
pure
coincidence,
aligns
with
when
we
would
be
hoping
to
finish.
The
community
benefits
face
to
kind
of
Alliance
so
and
then
the
other
thing
too
was
the
industrial
zones
and
how
that
relates
to
the
opportunity
zone
and
how
that,
just
by
its
its
nature
of
the
industrial
zones,
how
those
also
kind
of
limit
what
can
happen.
That's.
AI
Developments
in
the
industrial
zones
based
on
other
requirements
such
as
open
space
or
parking,
they
actually
hit
a
limit,
and
they
can't
even
realize
that
4.6
FA
are
so
right
now
the
industrial
zones,
the
way
the
zoning
is
written,
is
it
really
does
lower
the
development
potential
in
that
area?
That
was
a
decision
that
was
made
as
a
part
of
the
1997
rezoning
in
starting
to
try
and
address
our
jobs,
housing,
imbalance
and
so
I
think
our
industrial
zones
right
now
based
on
their
zoning,
don't
allow
for
a
significant
amount
of
redevelopment.
U
AG
U
That
height
above
the
base
is
except
for
those
in
appendix
J,
which
are
areas
that
already
have
that
we
already
went
through
area
planning
for,
and
the
one
exception
to
that
is,
if
we're
going
to
get
40%,
affordable
housing,
which
we
have
agreed
as
a
community,
is
something
we
want.
So
on
the
off
chance.
Somebody
wants
to
give
us
40
percent,
affordable
units.
U
AA
Would
add
that
we
also
put
in
one
of
the
highest
commercial
linkage
fees
in
the
country,
and
so
that
is
helping
to
slow
or
defer
development
or
get
us
housing
in
the
opportunity
zone.
So
all
of
these
things
I
think
are
working
together
in
synergy
to
make
sure
that
whatever
we
get
is
something
that
we
want
in
terms
of
the
outcome.
So
we
want
housing,
we
don't
want
so
many
jobs.
We
want
to
get
a
little
more
balance
between
housing
and
jobs
in
this
community,
so
I.
AA
I
do
have
a
question
about
the
manufactured
homes,
communities
in
the
in
the
opportunity
zone,
and
we
have
two
of
them
two
significant
ones
and
my
concern.
If
you,
you
know,
read
about
mobile
home
communities
and
people
wanting
to
make
big
investments
in
these
and
that
they
actually
are
a
big
investor
item.
I
am
very
concerned
of
what
might
happen
if
some
investor
plans
to
come
in
and
offer
a
current
owner
of
a
manufactured
home
community,
a
price
that
he
wouldn't
say
no
to
and
what
that
would
do
to
that
community.
AA
When
we
put
this
moratorium
in
place,
we
wanted
to
make
sure
that
no
one
who
is
living
in
the
opportunity
zone
was
displaced
and
I'm
equally
committed
to
that
for
those
people
living
in
manufactured
housing,
communities
and
I'm.
My
only
concern
at
this
point
is
that
we
haven't
protected
those
communities
as
well
as
we
can
not
that
they
could
change
from
manufactured
housing
to
some
other
zone
or
designation,
but
that
somebody
might
come
in
and
say
hey.
This
is
the
next
Aspen
we
could
sell
you
a
really
nice
manufactured
home
for
a
million
dollars.
AA
AI
AI
You
then
need
to
make
an
improvement
to
that
property,
a
50%
improvement
to
the
property,
and
you
have
to
do
that
within
it's
a
30
month
period,
and
so,
if
someone
were
to
buy
it,
they
still
have
to
do
a
bunch
of
improvements
to
the
property
and
achieve
that
and
so
I'm
not
sure,
based
on
my
understanding
of
depending
on
how
much
they
pay
for
the
property.
How
much
the
improvements
they
would
need
to
make
whether
a
mobile
home
park
would
be
an
investment
as
someone
would
make
or
not.
I.
Don't
know
that
for
sure.
AI
But
if
you
think
of
what
are
the
improvements
in
a
mobile
home
park,
it's
really
just
the
infrastructure
mm-hmm
that
you
could
make
versus.
If
you
bought
a
building
that
you're
either
building
a
building
or
you're
doing
a
major
renovation
to
a
building.
You
have
a
building
as
the
major
asset
afterwards,
so
it's
a
little
bit
of
a
different
use,
and
so
that
would
be
some
thoughts
that
I
have
Curt
anything
to
add.
AG
And
I
just
have
one
more
question
about
manufactured
housing
and
the
the
way
that
people
would
be
displaced
would
be
through
an
increase
in
the
lot
rents
and
Kurt's
nodding
his
head
and
so
is
Adam,
but
so
that
that
is
something
that
I
think
the
the
mobile
home
park.
Act
enforcement
legislation
that
was
passed
last
year
is
trying
to
address
through
the
rulemaking
as
I
understand
it.
AG
I
don't
know
if
anybody
can
just
I've
read
through
the
role,
the
the
rule
making
rules
and,
and
they
are
trying
to
address
that
by
giving
people
the
ability
to
obtain
one
year
leases
as
opposed
to
a
month-to-month,
which
is
what
most
people
have
right
now.
So
that's
one
thing
and
I
mean
I
just
really
want
to
fully
discuss
this,
because
we've
gotten
so
much
email
on
it
and
and
I
think
that
well,
I
learned
a
lot
through
poking
around
on
on
with
questions.
AG
AI
I
can
address
it
at
a
very
high
level
and
then
we
can
follow
up
if
you
want
more
additional
information,
but
there
are
components
where
you
can.
You
can
invest
in
a
small
business,
maybe
for
equipment
upgrades
or
something
like
that.
So
I
have
heard
about
businesses
that
are
in
that
next
phase
of
development,
where
there
may
be
going
from
startup
to
an
initial
phase
of
maybe
production
where
they
need
to
do
some
equipment
upgrades
and
they
need
capital
for
that.
AJ
AK
Maybe
the
rest
of
you
have
all
had
this
available
to
you,
that
it
seems
to
me
that
if
we
could
go
through
some
of
these
things
more
slowly
with
the
moratorium
in
place
and
explain
it
so
that
the
wider
community
is
able
to
understand
what's
happening,
it
would
just
be
easier
for
everyone
involved
and
we
would
get
more
buy-in
that
way,
rather
than
seeming
like
we're
doing
just
pushing
something
on
and
the
mobile
homes
alone.
I
think
are
a
huge
piece
of
this
and
making
sure.
AK
AK
AL
I
know
we're
gonna
have
a
new
council
if
we
decide
to
do
this.
I
do
like
the
idea
of
more
buy-in,
because
clearly,
there's
upset
within
the
community
I
I
understand
what
was
set
up
here
today.
I
feel
comfortable.
However,
I
understand
that
the
wider
community
may
not
feel
comfortable
so
is
just
in
talking
through
it.
Is
there
a
way
of
pushing?
We
can
still
do
everything
that
we've
put
in
place,
because
I
think
it's
been
really
helpful.
AJ
You
know
and,
and
so
I
know,
if
multiple
folks,
who
had
very
modest,
not
opportunity
zone
funding,
related
plans
like,
for
example,
somebody
who
wants
to
put
together
a
clean
tech,
incubator
in
a
small
building
and
they've
been
stopped
dead
for
a
year.
So
I
think
the
the
harm
is
that
so,
if
we,
if
we
thought,
if
that
there
were
still
major
dangers
after
the
changes
we've
made,
then
you'd
say
well.
AJ
Okay,
maybe
we
continue
to
moratorium,
but
I
think
the
information
that
we've
gotten
from
staff
as
we've
learned
Thursday,
you
know
we
know,
residents
will
be
displaced.
Our
mobile
home
parks
are
safe
from
redevelopment
and
you
can't
build
a
taller
building
unless
you
do
affordable
housing
and
just
maybes.
You
stable
changes
to
make
sure
that
any
development
that
comes
forward
would
be
in
alignment
with
our
comprehensive
plan
goals,
so
I
mean,
given
all
that
I
think
you
do
cause
harm
to
perfectly
innocent.
You
know
small
businesses
and
property
owners
by
maintaining
a
moratorium.
AL
So
couldn't
we
do
something?
I'm,
sorry,
I,
don't
remember
what
project
this
was
that
we
did
design
before,
but
we're
some
issues
like
that.
You
know
they
come
forward.
Tell
us
and
we
say:
okay
yeah.
You
can
move
forward
on
a
kind
of
a
case-by-case
basis,
but
still
keep
it
in
place
for
three
months
too.
So
we
can
get
the
rest
of
the
community
buy-in,
but
don't
hold
up
important
again
I'm,
just
trying
to
think
of
some
ideas
here,
because,
yes,
we
can't
pass
it
tonight.
I
feel
comfortable
with
it.
AE
I'm
pretty
comfortable
that
we
have
put
all
the
protections
in
place
that
we
set
out
to
do
at
get-go
and
I.
Think
that
Aaron's
point
about
the
small
businesses
that
are
caught
up-
and
this
is
probably
what
I
see
is
the
biggest
risk
of
not
moving
forward-
is
because
I
know
of
a
couple
as
well,
but
I
think
we're
separate
from
the
ones
that
you're
talking
about.
So
we
got
a
note
from
a
person
who
is
trying
to
renovate
their
building
right
now
and
they've
had
to
wait
for
ten
months.
AE
Well,
they
wanted
to
make
a
small
renovation.
They
will
have
no
opportunity
zone
funding
to
do
this
work
and
so
I
feel
like
we
need
to
move
forward
with
this.
We
can
continue
to
ask
more
from
staff
about
other
risks
that
we
haven't
addressed
that
we
may
find
later,
but
I
when
Chris
was
talking
about
the
investment
that's
being
made
in
the
the
physical
plant
of
small
companies.
That's
definitely
something
I've
been
reading
about
as
well,
but
it's
treated
differently
than
the
development
of
land
and
buildings.
AK
So
if
I
recall
it's
to
me
when
we
were
talking
about
some
other
development
there,
someone
else-
maybe
it
was
Macy's-
was
complaining
about
being
held
up
and
we
were
told
that
there
was
no
hold
up
there
in
terms
of
doing
interior
reconstruction.
Is
that
true,
Chris
or
is?
Are
those
all
stopped
as
well?
Are.
AK
AI
I
have
heard
examples
of
property
owners
or
tenants
that
are
looking
to
do
improvements,
I,
don't
know
who
all
else
is
out
there,
because
right
now
we
aren't
accepting
applications.
We
have
had
some
folks
that
just
they
don't
come
in
to
see
us
right
now,
because
they
know
they
can't
submit
an
application
and
they're
just
waiting
so
I've
heard
stories,
but
I
don't
have
a
quantifiable
number
for
you.
AB
I
want
to
thank
Mary
and
Sam
for
very
thoughtfully
walking
us
through
and
asking
some
really
really
good
questions,
and
that
was
a
good
education,
certainly
for
me,
and
probably
other
members
of
the
community.
One
thing
that
I
think
didn't
come
out,
maybe
clearly
enough
in
the
course
of
that
discussion
with
Chris
here
this
evening.
I
don't
want
to
lose
sight
of
the
fact
that
we
still
do
have
set
review
criteria
on
top
of
all
these
things.
AB
On
top
of
all
the
things
that
we
talked
about,
and
so
no
very
big
project,
and
we
can
talk
up
what
about
what
triggers
as
I
review,
most
big
projects
do
can
be
approved
unless
there's
an
application,
there's
a
process
with
the
city
planning
staff,
and
then
they
see
the
Planning
Board
and
then
ultimately
call
up
by
Council
and
so
on
top
of
all
the
various
things
that
Mary,
Ann
and
Sam
I
think
did
a
good
job
of
highlighting
we
have,
we
haven't
lost
our
regulatory
authority.
We
still
have
our
land
use
authority.
AB
AK
Just
say
one
thing
to
that,
which
is
that
we've
seen
lots
of
development
come
through
here
that
the
community
and
members
of
this
council
are
unhappy
with.
You
know,
starting
right
for
the
reason
that
the
moratorium
went
in
place
and
the
height
moratorium
went
in
place
in
the
first
place.
Okay,
well.
AG
AG
We
do
affordable
housing
so
we're
not
going
to
be
tearing
down
the
buildings
and
displacing
anybody
save
for
when
we
are
going
to
be
remodeling
the
apartments
we
may
temporarily
pay
for
alternative
lodging
for
the
people
that
are
whose
apartment
is
being
remodeled
so
just
wanted
to
tie
a
bow
on
it.
Just
with
all
of
the
concerns
that
people
raised
over
the
weekend
and
through
today,
Sam.
AJ
Can
I
to
that
thanks
for
that
mayor
for
bringing
that
up
and
just
that
we
got
some
additional
information
from
staff
through
them
to
say
that
they
understand
that,
because
of
their
low
income,
housing
tax,
credit
funding,
which
was
done
in
2007,
that
they
have
a
30-year
requirement
to
maintain
that
site
as
affordable
housing.
So
at
a
minimum
they
have
to
maintain
that
through
2037.
So
we
don't
necessarily
that
I
believe
the
the
those
folks
that
you
emailed
with,
but
we
also
don't
have
to
rely
upon
that.
They
do
have
a
legal
commitment
as
well.
AD
Speak
to
that
in
your
packet,
you
had
proposed
amendment
item.
Oh
relates
to
the
project
at
30th
and
Pearl,
as
we've
gotten
close
to
closing
on
the
financing
and
the
construction
in
a
couple
to
issues
arose.
The
one
that's
identified
in
your
packet
is
a
city
rule
that
says
that
the
city
is
not.
The
city
cannot
allow
any
construction
over
an
easement,
and
so
we
generally
do
revocable
permits
to
allow
constructions
over
an
easement
in
this
project.
AD
AD
So
the
ordinance
would
authorize
the
issuance
of
permits
to
allow
for
the
construction
of
these
Paseos
over
the
parking
garage
after
we
drafted
that
we
discovered
a
second
problem,
which
is
that
under
the
federal
tax
rules
that
the
project
is
being
financed
in
part
with
low-income
housing,
tax
credits
under
those
rules,
you
cannot
have
a
common
amenity
that
is
subject
to
being
paid
for
to
require
to
pay
paid
for
and
not
distribute
it
evenly.
This.
AD
As
you
know,
the
city's
code
embodies
what
we
call
the
some
principles
for
parking,
which
requires
separate
unbundled,
managed
paid
parking,
and
in
this
case
we
are
asking
for
the
the
proposed
order
to
would
you,
the
city
manager,
the
authority
to
waive
those
requirements
when
necessary
to
have
affordable
housing
like
this?
Not
this.
This
doesn't
come
up
all
the
time,
but
it
has
been
a
problem
in
other
projects,
so
we're
requesting
that
council
passed
these
two
proposed
ordinance
ordinances
on
emergency
in
202.
Make
these
two
changes
to
help
facilitate
the
construction
of
this
important
project.
AA
Had
brought
up
and
I
don't
want
to
do
anything
about
it
tonight,
but
with
regard
to
the
budget,
I
had
brought
up
a
question
about
the
CV
B
funding
and
not
so
much
the
funding,
but
the
rent
that
was
being
paid
to
the
Chamber
of
Commerce,
and
it
comes
to
something
like
seventy
one
hundred
dollars
a
month
and
I.
Don't
think
we
have
enough
information
to
drill
down
to
it.
AA
But
I
would
hope
that
the
next
council
will
look
into
this,
and
is
this
really
commiserate
with
what
other
people
pay
for
space
for
their
their
place?
And
is
it
comparable
to
what
we
have
like,
maybe
down
at
the
boulder
street
at
the
boulder
street
mall?
You
know
in
terms
of
what
your
square
footage
prices
is.
It
seems
a
little
bit
high
and
I
would
hope
we
are
getting
what
we
are
paying
for
in
return
and
that
it
needs
to
be.
AA
I
would
like
to
see
a
little
more
separation
between
our
putting
money
into
something
that
supports
the
city
and
our
revenue,
but
also
be
cautious
in
putting
money
into
the
Chamber
of
Commerce
and
making
sure
it's
not
being
more
than
it
needs
to
be
and
that
they
aren't
running
their
own
individual
campaigns
in
election
season
and
I'll.
Just
leave
it
at
that.
So.
AK
AK
So
it's
the
chamber
presentation
it's
from
the
CBB
saying
that
as
you
thank
you
bah
bah
bah,
as
you
requested.
This
is
the
presentation
the
chamber
public
policy
team
gave
and
it
had
to
do
with
the
Chamber's
candidate
forum
and
then
who
they
recommended-
and
this
is
all
posted
here
with
city
money
with
City.
Supposedly
it
looks
like
it's
a
condoning
because,
of
course
it
doesn't
give
the
other
groups
whomever
they
may
be,
what
their
scorecards
are,
and
so
this
because
this
is
all
city
tax
money.
AK
That's
doing
this
kind
of
thing,
I
find
it
really
a
mess
and
having
been
involved
in
campaign
finance
reform
for
such
a
long
time
and
having
such
an
interest
in
it.
This
is
the
very
kind
of
thing
that
we
are
trying
to
stop,
and
this
has
probably
gone
on
before
and
how
it
has
happened
that
we
support
the
chamber
in
such
a
big
way
with
the
tax
money
that
is
paid
to
rent
space
for
the
CVB,
and
then
the
CBB
is
touting
the
Chamber's
candidates
with
our
tax
money.
AK
AD
AK
AD
AD
U
AB
Want
to
come
back
to
Lisa's
point
I'm
I'm.
Currently
the
council
liaison
the
CVB
I,
don't
know
if
I'll
be
that
in
the
future,
but
but
what
I
will
do
Lisa
in
response
to
your
question
is:
is
ask
the
CVV
to
prepare
a
memo
for
council
kind
of
summarizing
in
greater
detail?
What
we
got
last
week
about
the
rant
and
doing
some
comparables
to
other
other
arrangements,
just
to
make
sure
that
it's
it's
market
rate,
no.
AB
AA
AK
I
just
wanted
to
point
out:
erinite
I
hear
what
you
say,
but
what
the
it's,
what
they
do
is
identify
all
of
the
candidates
positions
and
specifically
those
who
agree
with
the
Chamber's
position.
So
I
mean
I
look
at
this
and
there
are
a
lot
of
greens
on
there
and
there
for
Gannett
some
candidates,
and
then
there
are
a
lot
of
Reds
and
there's
some
Gold's,
which
is
apparently
not
applicable.
So
all
I'm
saying
is
that
this
again,
this
is
city
tax
money
that
this
is
appeared
to
the
wider
public
and
I.
AJ
AK
AK
U
Okay,
okay,
so
so
noted,
and
maybe
the
next
council
will
want
to
look
and
see
if
they
feel
like
this
is
something
that
needs
to
be
addressed
in
terms
of
campaign,
because
you
know
each
year,
new
stuff
crops
up
and
we
have
to
decide
whether
or
not
we
feel
like
it
feels
right,
given
our
campaign
finance
laws.
So
with
that
this
has
been
a
long
discussion
about
a
long
consent.
That's
got
a
lot
of
stuff
in
it.
So
with
that,
is
there
anything
more
to
be
said
on
any
of
these
items?
U
U
AF
AK
AF
U
Y
AM
All
right,
thank
you,
I'd,
like
to
start
by
thanking
everyone
for
being
here,
I'd
like
to
thank
all
of
my
wonderful
taskforce,
colleagues
for
the
many
hours
of
work
that
they
put
into
this
project.
I
would
like
to
thank
our
facilitator,
dr.
Carolyn
Love,
who
was
with
us
tonight,
and
all
the
city
staff
for
the
assistance
that
we've
given
us,
and
can
you
introduce
yourself
that
was
yeah.
U
AM
So
for
those
of
you
who
haven't
have
not
met
me
yet,
my
name
is
Todd
Conklin
I'm.
Currently
a
student
at
CU
I'm,
a
member
of
the
task
force
I,
have
been
asked
to
represent
the
task
force
as
you
move
forward
in
the
second
reading
of
the
ordinance
tonight.
In
hopes
of
final
adoption
of
this
ordinance.
AM
So,
as
a
reminder,
the
task
force
has
recommended
for
your
consideration.
An
auditor
monitor
oversight
model
combined
with
a
police
oversight
panel
made
up
of
11
diverse
community
members.
The
ordinance
before
you
outlines
the
following.
The
city
will
hire
an
auditor
monitor
to
accept
complaints
involving
police
employees,
monitor
internal
investigations
to
ensure
objective,
thorough
and
high-quality
investigations
and
develop
recommendations
to
improve
police
services
and
policies.
They
will
also
have
access
to
all
police
data.
AM
In
order
to
carry
out
these
functions,
the
initial
auditor
will
be
hired
and
held
accountable
to
the
city
manager
and
will
be
housed
physically
in
a
location
that
is
independent
of
the
police
department.
Additionally,
the
auditor
monitor
will
act
as
a
liaison
and
provide
staff
support
to
the
police
oversight
panel.
They
will
not
be
a
voting
member
of
the
police
oversight
panel
and
they
will
not
be
a
member.
They
will
strictly
be
a
liaison
to
that
panel.
They
will
also
work
to
build
relationships
with
the
community
and
the
police
department.
AM
So
the
second
part
of
this
model
is
the
police
oversight
panel.
This
panel
will
be
made
up
of
11,
diverse
community
members
and
also
one
representative
from
the
police
department
that
will
act
as
a
liaison.
The
representative
from
the
police
department
will
also
not
be
a
member
and
they
will
be
not
voting
on
anything
related
to
the
police
oversight
panel.
This
panel
will
review,
completed
investigations
and
give
recommendations
based
on
the
disposition
of
the
investigation
and
the
level
of
discipline
that
should
be
carried
out.
AM
It
will
also
analyze
data,
in
collaboration
with
the
auditor,
monitor
to
make
policy
program
and
training
recommendations
to
the
Chief
of
Police.
It
will
also
provide
feedback
on
the
performance
of
the
auditor
monitor
it
will
provide
forums
to
hear
community
concerns
regarding
incident,
specific
police
actions,
broader
questions
regarding
policing
and
they
will
seek
to
foster
healthy
community
relations
between
the
police
and
the
community.
AM
We
will
continue
forward
as
a
task
force
with
an
implementation
committee
task
force.
Members
who
have
agreed
to
participate
through
the
phased
implementation
include
myself:
Sean
Ray,
Paz,
ilaqua,
Sofia
Pelecanos,
my
critique
John
Gifford,
Michele,
Denis,
Michelle,
Simpson,
Christian
Gardner
would
two
police
representatives
who
are
Carlene
Hoffman
and
Pam.
Gignac
is
also
anticipated
by
us
as
a
task
force.
The
staff
who
have
been
supporting
this
process
to
date
will
also
continue
their
involvement,
as
well
as
members
of
the
police
department
and
staff
Todd.
AM
AB
AM
It's
hard
to
say
how
long
it
will
take,
because
we
haven't
yet
started
the
implementation
process.
We're
gonna
get
up
and
running
on
that
at
about
the
next
two
weeks.
We
assume
and
then
once
we
have
that
we
can
probably
send
a
memo
to
Council
estimating
how
long
we
think
it
will
take
okay
and
then
what
was
your
second
question
and.
AF
AJ
U
AA
AG
AM
So
we
also
debated
that
letter
as
a
task
force
and
then,
in
conjunction
with
city
staff,
I,
believe
we
sent
a
response
to
that
letter
to
the
n-double-a-cp
off
the
top
of
my
head.
I,
don't
remember
all
of
the
specific
considerations
they
asked
for.
Do
you
have
any
specific
questions
regarding
that
mm-hmm.
AM
AG
AM
In
the
model
that
we
originally
proposed,
the
final
decision
was
going
to
be
left
with
the
police
chief
and
that
the
investigation
would
go
through
the
auditor
monitor
who
would
have
then
review
it,
and
it
also
go
to
the
police
oversight
panel,
who
would
review
the
disposition.
Give
a
recommendation
on
that
and
the
discipline
give
a
recommendation
on
that,
and
then
it
would
go
to
the
police
chief.
That
is
what
we
decided
as
a
task
force,
and
that
is
what
we
believe
is
the
best
option
and
we
are
comfortable
with
that
great
that's
hopeful.
So.
AG
That
raises
another
question
for
me,
so
one
of
the
objectives
of
this
panel
is
to
increase,
restore
a
better
trust
in
police,
and
so
it
seems
to
me
that
when
the
police
chief
is
is
left
with
the
final
decision,
there
is
some
element
of
of
of
not
being
of
not
being
able
to
carry
forth
on
that
objective.
So
could
you
just
comment
on
that?
Please
shorts.
AM
You
said
you
wanted
to
be
able
to
reach
out
to
the
community
and
have
a
good
relationship.
One
of
the
other
roles
we
have
defined
for
the
police
oversight
panel
is
that
they're
gonna
be
holding
community
forums.
They're
gonna
be
out
talking
to
people
educating
people
about
what
they're
doing
what
needs
to
be
done,
what
the
goals
are,
and
we
think
in
doing
that
that
we
will
create
a
healthy
relationship
between
the
police,
the
community
and
this
panel
as
well,
and.
AG
So
that
raises
another
question
about
the
I:
think,
that's
that's
great.
Maintaining
the
relationship
with
the
community
and
doing
the
outreach
I
think
that's
that's!
That
will
go
a
long
way,
but
ultimately,
what
you
want
is
to
be
able
to
somehow
measure
that
the
trust
has
been
bettered
and
how
have
you
had
any
discussion
about
that
or
any
ideas
on
how
to
do
that.
So.
AM
U
AM
AE
Was
there
any
discussion
of
doing
statistically
valid
surveys
above
the
community
as
a
whole,
but
then
potentially
underrepresented
groups
within
the
community
to
try
and
do
that
perception
these
that
Mary's
talking
about
so
there
could
be
a
baseline
established
and
then,
as
the
process
runs
over
the
course
of
many
years,
we
could
track
what
the
perceptions
are.
Are
they
changing
in
a
positive
way?
Are
they
going
the
other
way?
Did
you
guys
talk
about
any
of
the
details
around
that
so.
AM
AE
U
AH
Every
other
year
we
have
a
Community
Survey
and
we
do
get
that
information
and
the
police
department
usually
comes
out
very
positively.
I
think
that
this
kind
of
survey
that
you're
talking
about
would
need
to
go
deeper
than
that
I,
don't
want
to
say
that
our
survey
is
superficial,
but
it's
just
asking
sort
of
an
easy
question
and
I
don't
think
that
we
have
broken
it
down
based
on
demographics.
AH
AG
U
AN
Well,
counsel,
Officer
Mark,
Bailey
Union,
president
of
Boulder
Police
Department,
the
first
one
I
wish
those
who
are
leaving
before
us
happy
endeavors
on
your
new
chapter
in
your
life,
so
I
sincerely
wish
you
the
best.
I
wanted
to
speak
on
behalf
of
over
180
sworn
officers
at
the
Buller
Police
Department.
As
we
move
into
the
next
phase.
The
oversight
I
know
that
a
lot
of
work
has
gone
into
getting
to
where
we
are
today.
AN
AN
Myself
included
that
when
necessary,
as
one
of
the
persons
who
subject
matter,
asked
expert
those
kind
of
things
on
these
areas,
the
boulder
Police
Officers
Association
and
the
border
police
union
has
identified
several
areas
that
we
have
concerns
about
how
its
initially
put
together,
but
also
knowing
that
these
things
should
be
worked
out
in
time.
Those
details
that
will
allow
us
as
long
as
we
are
given
that
time
and
not
not
rush
to
any
kind
of
final
outcome
in
this.
AN
We
also
know
in
closing
that
this
is
a
collective
effort.
This
is
not
only
involving
police
task
force,
but
at
the
community
as
well
and
instilling
some
of
those
things
you
talked
about
on
the
survey,
but
as
also
for
our
officers
who
have
to
live
with
the
final
outcome
product
that
will,
as
in
this
last
oversight,
thing
was
in
place
for
over
a
couple
decades,
so
we
want.
We
know
it's
something
that
we
had
to
be
comfortable
in,
knowing
that
we
can
live
with
again
for
the
officers
and
for
the
community
as
a
whole.
AN
AO
High
Council
I
want
to
reiterate
what
Mark
shared
about
wishing
you
the
best
those
of
you
who
are
leaving
council
some
of
you
after
a
very
long
time.
Thank
you
for
your
service
and
I
also
want
to
thank
the
task
force.
Members,
Todd
and
dr.
love,
who
are
here
tonight
and
all
those
who
are
wisely
sitting
at
home,
probably
warm
I
hope
for
their
hard
work.
AO
We,
as
the
n-double-a-cp
did
send
some
concerns
with
the
ordinance
as
we
read
it
and
the
feedback
we
got
mainly
addressed
either
misunderstandings
or
clarified
things
that
personally
made
me
feel
better
about
it,
for
example,
that
the
final
police
oversight
panel
will
not
have
a
voting
member.
It
was
a
police
officer
or
the
auditor
monitor,
and
while
we
I
think
still
disagree
on
the
final
position
that
the
police
chief
should
make
final
decisions,
we
certainly
recognize
that
they
put
in
a
lot
of
work
and
come
to
that
decision.
AO
Quite
knowledgeable.
My
concern
and
personally
is
that
you
know
we
have
a
very
good
model
of
this
in
Denver,
it's
a
very
similar
oversight
model.
They
have
an
office
of
independent,
monitor
and
the
citizens
had
to
go
to
the
polls
and
and
change
the
law
there,
because
police
were
stymieing
his
efforts
to
to
do
his
job
now.
I,
don't
know
if
that
will
happen
here,
but
we
know
it's
happened.
We
know
that
in
Denver
he
has
put
out
recommendations
and
the
police
haven't
followed.
AO
There's
been
so
so
much
support
and
understanding
their
hard
work
that
that
I
really
appreciate
all
of
you
have
have
given
that
and
I
think
our
police,
ultimately
I,
just
don't
understand
how
they
can
be
scared
of
the
community.
They
serve
asking
them
to
treat
that
community
fairly.
That's
it.
Thank
you.
Just
have.
AE
A
quick
comment:
I
would
just
make
the
comment
of
the
observation.
It
changes,
often
scary,
and
so
it
may
be,
perhaps
not
a
fear
of
the
community.
So
much
as
a
fear
of
what
the
process
will
look
like
so
I
think
it'll
be
great
work
for
everyone
to
do
together
with
the
task
force
to
be
able
to
make
sure
that
we
get
an
outcome
that
really
is
serving
our
community
and
so
I
just
wanted
to
put
out
the
observation
that
could
be
a
sphere
of
change.
Thanks.
AP
Gotta
say
I
got
a
say
in
the
very
beginning.
That's
why
the
first
time
she
called
me
at
the
4th
I
appreciate
that,
because,
as
I've
said
before,
I'm,
not
my
father
I
know
my
father's
father
know
my
father's
father's
father
I
am
the
fourth.
So
that
being
said,
hello,
City,
Council
nice
to
see
everyone
today
got
a
jump
in
the
same
bandwagon
again
and
thank
everybody
that
has
been
a
part
of
this
task
force.
Thank
you.
Thank
you.
Miss
love
as
well
as
thank
you.
AP
It's
very
amazing,
to
see
the
work
that
has
been
done.
I
haven't
been
able
to
follow
all
the
way
because
timeframes,
change
and
with
that
disabilities
show
up
a
little
later
in
the
date,
so
not
really
a
good
idea
to
be
out
that
late.
That
being
said,
earliest
year,
the
people
of
the
city
cried
out
and
demanded
change.
A
shift
from
a
draconian
escapade
of
allotting
that
BPB
BPD
to
handle
investigating
its
own
is
aid.
A
Kansan,
Michelle,
Rodriguez,
Kelly,
Clark
and
I
are
all
examples
from
this
year
alone
of
their
failures.
AP
AP
In
response
to
this
decry
13
members
of
this
community,
coupled
with
the
assistance
from
officers,
an
amazing
facilitator
have
created
unto
us
these
models.
I
thank
everyone
involved
in
this
matter.
That
being
said,
we
go
from
an
April
to
October
to
the
recent
past
to
see
our
leaders
actually
audit
acquiescent,
as
PD
reps
emphasize
resistance
to
full
and
independent
oversight.
We
have
already
decided
as
a
community
that
our
PD
cannot
be
trusted
to
investigate
themselves,
nor
make
those
calls
we,
as
a
community
of
the
scars
to
back
our
stance.
AP
True
healing
starts
when
you
are
independent
of
the
things
hurting
you
so
stop
getting
in
the
way
of
our
healing
PD.
You
have
had
too
much
comfort
being
a
helicopter
parent
without
taking
the
time
to
listen,
your
community,
your
children,
the
people
you
protect,
you
serve
likewise,
two
members,
our
community.
We
need
to
work
together.
I
know
this
is
difficult
right
now.
This
is
an
opportunity
for
us,
the
traumatized
community,
to
work
together
to
start
healing
I
believe
in
all
of
you
to
do
what's
right.
Thank
you
for
your
time
and
again,
thank
you.
AP
AC
One
single
538
doing
after
the
elk
experience
I
have
very
little
trust
of
the
police
in
Boulder.
It's
gonna
be
a
high
bar
because
I
tried
to
go
to
the
trial
and
I
was
thrown
out
of
the
trial
for
asking
the
air
conditioning
to
be
turned
down
and
I
happened
to
ask.
The
next
expert
was
witness:
who
was
the
PhD
in
exercise
physiology
or
something
Stan
Garnett
star,
witness
and
I
just
saw
him
as
an
authority,
figure
and
I
said:
do
you
think
they
could
turn
the
heat
down
in
here?
AC
You
know
it
was
or
no
the
air
conditioning
it
was
really
cool.
It
was
this
summer
and
I
can't
bring
all
my
warm
clothes
in
the
summertime
to
the
courtroom,
and
my
panniers
won't
fit
that
much
in
my
bike,
so
I
was
thrown
out
and
I
wanted
to
watch
that
trial
for
a
week
and
I'd
already
put
in
a
day
and
a
half
and
so
I'm
real
pissed
off.
AC
It
reminds
me
of
Stan,
Garnett
and
Jill
gray,
know
and
Jay,
Hebb
and
from
house
whole
thing
just
makes
me
real
upset
all
over
again
and
makes
me
think.
Wait:
two
left
for
dink:
Cindy
remembers
him,
probably
the
left
for
dink
that
you
know
ripped
off
the
city,
people,
the
Colorado,
Building
and
then
left
on
his
helicopter
and
escaping
with
his
girlfriend
to
be
picked
up
later
on
so
I
don't
have
a
lot
of
faith
in
this
community
for
justice,
then
I'm
from
the
coast
and
community,
policing
and
restorative
justice.
AC
I've
heard
talk
about
it
for
30
years,
and
it's
just
a
lot
of
talk
and
when
I
try
to
intervene
at
all
with
the
police,
I
get
really
treated
badly
and
I.
Don't
appreciate
it,
and
so
I
hope
that
your
police
oversight
thing
is
gonna
work
out
because,
as
it
stands,
I'm
not
gonna
call
the
police,
not
my
life
depended
on
it
in
this
town,
not
after
the
next
door
thing.
That's
some
Halloween
deal
a
minge
person
on
11
or
10,
and
you
know
there's
some
serious
people
around
this
town.
AC
AK
AK
Think
that
this
has
been
a
good
change,
a
good
move,
I'm
extremely
grateful
to
the
task
force.
I.
Think
they've
done
such
a
thorough
job
in
a
very
short
period
of
time.
I
do
trust
that
our
police
will
be
taking
up,
as
they
should
be
their
end
of
the
bargain
here
and
look
forward
to
seeing
the
positive
change
that
will
be
happening
in
the
community.
U
And
I
would
just
add,
I.
Think
we've
talked
in
the
past
bears
repeating
just
how
thankful
we
are
to
the
task
force
for
all
the
work
they
put
in
and
for
really
I
think
embodying
coming
together
of
the
community
and
really
working
through
the
issues
and
watching
you
last
I
guess
it
was.
A
study
was
a
study
session.
How
mindful
you
were
about
the
differences
of
opinions,
even
within
your
group
and
how
you
treated.
U
U
The
way
that
you
are
addressing
some
of
these
these
are
tricky
issues.
These
are
hard
issues
and
you're
doing
it
I
think
very
respectfully,
with
the
police
department
and
trying
to
have
a
craft,
something
that
will
work
for
them
as
well,
so
that
it
will
actually
be
embraced
and
lead
to
meaningful
evolution
of
racial
bias.
U
Racial
equity
in
our
community,
so
I
guess
I
just
salute
you
I
think
my
understanding
is,
as
you
guys,
figure
out
implementation
details
that
need
me.
The
next
council
will
probably
have
to
amend
the
ordinance
to
add
in
all
those
details
and
I
also
hope
that,
in
addition,
just
addressing
how
complaints
are
handled
that
the
panel
could
end
up
helping
to
further
community
engagement
and
development
or
the
relationship
between
the
community
and
the
police,
by
making
recommendations
of
how
that
might
be
done
beyond
just
the
complaint
process,
but
I'm
actually
enhancing
relationships.
AG
AG
Your
hard
work
was
exemplary
and
the
amount
of
time
in
which
you
did
it
was
just
mind-boggling
and
it
was
a
well
selected
group
of
people
and
a
well
selected
facilitator.
So
thank
you
very
much.
I
just
have
just
a
few
things
to
perhaps
have
you
think
about
as
you
go
through
the
implementation
process,
and
that
would
be
to
consider
a
you
know.
I
asked
about
the
the
final
decision
resting
with
the
police
chief
and
I,
was
trying
to
think
of
a
I.
AG
AG
So
just
really
have
a
look
at
that,
and
then
the
other
thing
that
might
be
helpful
would
be
to
run
the
Atkinson
case
through
the
process
and
see
where
it
would
end
up
giving
the
city
model
or
any
of
the
other
cases
to
see
how
how
it
works.
So
those
are
just
some
suggestions
and
thank
you
once
again.
AH
AE
I
just
want
us
to
go
back
to
the
weeks
after
March,
first
and
realize
at
that
time
there
was
so
much
deserved
community
anger
about
what
had
occurred,
and
you
know
sitting
here
in
these
chambers
on
the
18th
and
hearing
that
I'm
just
so
grateful
that
we've
gotten
to
this
place
so
far,
because
it's
a
huge
amount
of
progress.
It's
obviously
been
praised
for
your
work
and
I
agree
with
all
of
that.
AE
But
I
just
want
to
say
as
an
overall
community
and
not
just
the
task
force
I
feel
like
there
have
been
some
very
difficult
conversations
that
needed
to
be
had
and
they
have
been
not
completely
had
but
they've
been
started,
and
this
feels
like
a
really
good
place
to
have
arrived,
that
given
where
we
started
and
given
the
community
anger
and
frustration
and
unhappiness
and
now
we're
at
this
place,
where
you
have
done
a
whole
bunch
of
work.
That
has
got
us.
AE
This
great
work
product
now
and
I'm
hopeful
that
it
can
continue
on
as
thoroughly
and
positively,
because
I
really
do
feel
like
it's
moved.
The
community,
along
as
as
a
community
and
so
I,
know
that
the
conversations
will
still
be
tough,
but
that's
okay.
You
know
the
the
good
work
requires
tough
conversations
and
so
I
appreciate
you
engaging
in
them.
I,
look
forward
to
seeing
where
we're
gonna
go
and
thanks
for
all
your
work.
AJ
Yes,
so
I
don't
agree
with
everything
that
my
colleagues
have
said.
Sam
that
was
very
well
put
just
now.
I
also
wanted
to
think
the
end
wcp
for
their
contributions
to
this
process.
You
know
Mary
and
I,
sat
down
with
Darren
and
Jude
and
Annette
from
the
n-double
a-c-p
to
select
the
taskforce,
panelists
I
think,
and
it
was
a
very
productive
process.
AJ
All
the
challenging
sometimes
but
I
think
the
the
the
folks
on
the
task
force
have
done
an
extraordinary
job,
I'm
really
I,
hadn't
imagined
it
would
the
quality
the
work
would
be
is
so
high
and
so
look
very
much
forward
to
passing
this
tonight.
You
know
we
have
a
like
Sam
said:
we've
we've
come
a
couple
of
important
steps
down
a
road
towards
rebuilding
and
improving
trust
with
the
community,
particularly
folks
of
color
and
african-americans
in
the
community.
This
is
a
long
journey
and
this
is
one
step
that
we're
taking
tonight.
AJ
U
U
AG
AF
Y
AF
U
AF
AE
AH
Okay,
so
CAC
and
council
requested
that
we
end
our
amazing
two-year
council
session,
with
a
discussion
of
council
priorities,
update
and
future
priorities
discussion
so
turn
to
the
next
line.
So
as
a
result
of
our
conversations
in
the
first
retreat
that
we
did
in
2018
and
the
one
that
we
did
in
January
of
2019,
we
had
a
number
of
priorities.
We've
created
a
slide
that
shows
where
we
are
you've
completed.
AH
Most
of
them,
Karen
did
ask
me
to
talk
a
little
bit
about
the
vision,
0-1
we've
indicated
as
complete
and,
of
course,
the
truth
about
the
substance
of
vision.
Zero
was
that
we'll
never
be
complete,
we're
all
we'll
always
be
working
on
it,
but
we
large
it
as
complete,
because
we
wanted
to
finish
the
transportation
master
plan
and
the
safety
report
that
we
did
give
to
Council.
So
those
specific
things
that
we
had
indicated
in
the
council
retreats
early
on
have
been
completed,
but
we
will
always
be
working
on
vision,
zero.
AH
A
couple
of
the
items
are
in
progress
and
in
the
course
of
the
time
that
we
were
working
with
Council,
we
ended
up
breaking
up
the
community
benefit
and
the
youth
tables
into
two
different
phases.
But
the
first
phase
is
in
fact
complete
and
then
the
one
item
that
I
think
remains
on
hold
I
guess
I'll
say,
is
the
large
lot
homes
and
lots
which
was
actually
added
at
the
retreat
in
2019,
and
so
we
didn't
have
a
full
two
years
to
do
that.
AH
U
So
I
had
one
clarification,
which
was
I'm,
not
presuming
to
tell
the
next
council
what
their
priorities
are.
What
that
was
for
us
to
do
a
handoff
of
issues
that
you
will
inherit
and
you
will
do
with
them
what
you
will,
but
some
of
these
things
are
already
in
motion
and
I
wanted
to
just
have
a
little
bit
of
a
community
conversation
and
handoff,
because.
U
Yes,
they're
going
to
land
in
your
left
and
I,
some
of
them
are
really
important
and
they're
pending,
so
I
think
that's
more
what
I
wanted
to
make
sure
we
did
so
there's
a
well.
Let's
talk
about
the
body
of
work
that
we
that's
on
this
slide
and
then
maybe
we
can
talk
about
some
additional
things
that
we.
U
AB
To
make
it
more
of
an
observation
and
a
recommendation
to
the
next
council
I
think
these
were
great
goals
and
I
think
a
lot
of
what
was
accomplished
in
the
last
couple
of
years.
I
think
we
should
be
very
proud
of
what
we've
accomplished
a
couple
of
the
topics
and
Jean
called
it.
A
vision,
zero
and
I
can
think
of
some
of
the
things
that
maybe
climate
commitment
are
really
ongoing.
Things
and
I
would
recommend,
while
I
think
it's
important
to
keep
those
front
and
center
vision,
zero
and
climate
commitment.
Some
other
things.
AB
I
think
it'd
be
probably
helpful
for
the
next
council
to
have
distinct,
measurable,
achievable,
concrete
goals,
so
we
can
check
the
box,
so
I
mean
climate
commitment,
for
example.
That
will
be
on
I'm
sad
to
say
that
will
be
something
that
will
probably
be
on
councils
agenda
for
many
many
many
many
years
and
so
it'd
be
nice
to
break
that
down
into
achievable
actionable
items
so
that
we
can
look
back.
Whoever
looks
back
two
years
from
now
or
four
years,
four
nuns
there
right.
AB
These
are
the
five
things
we
wanted
to
get
done,
for
example,
on
Climate
commitment.
We
got
four
of
them
done
all
five
of
them
done.
I
just
think
we
should
be
a
little
bit
more
actionable
or
the
next
council
should
be
a
little
bit
more
actionable.
I
think
these
are
these
are
great
things
and
and
I'm
really
happy
with
what
we
got
done.
U
Okay,
I'm
gonna
whack
a
little
bit
most
of
these
things
are
pretty
complicated,
had
been
on,
have
been
ideas
for
a
while
and
I
guess.
I
just
want
to
salute
the
work
that
went
into
crafting
them.
I'm
in
the
community
benefit
piece,
the
site,
review
criteria,
the
use
tables
I
mean
that's
hard,
slogging
the
sort
of
work
and
and
really
really
important
so
and
some
of
those
have
a
phase
two
that
I
think
is
really
important
and
I.
U
I
guess
I
would
urge
the
next
council
to
get
those
across
the
finish
line
because
they're
well
on
their
way.
I
am
sorry
that
we
didn't
get
to
large
homes
and
lots
I,
think
probably
that
probably
needs
to
be
reframed
in
a
way
with
bite,
size.
Pizzas,
pieces
pizzas,
if
you
wish
that
can
be
addressed,
but
I
still
think
that's
an
issue.
I
also
want
to
I
think
there's
certain
issues
that
we
should
also
make
sure
to
keep
the
public
engaged
on
and
updated
on
ones
that
are
spanning
multiple
years.
I.
U
Think
municipal
ization
is
one
of
those
it's
a
priority.
A
a
lot
of
work
is
going
into
it.
A
lot
of
money's
going
into
it
and
it's
very
important
and
I
think
the
next
year
and
a
half
I
wish
it
was
just
the
next
year,
but
the
next
couple
years
are
going
to
be
really
important
and
I.
Think
it's
it's
incumbent
upon
the
next
council
to
ensure
that
the
community
discussion
about
that
happened
in
a
very
public
way
in
a
very
inclusive
way.
AA
None
of
these
projects
get
done
by
just
turning
a
switch
on
and
that
they're
really
complex
and
that
you
have
multiple
players,
multiple
aspects
of
it
that
you
have
to
consider
before
you
can
go
to
the
next
step
so
anyway,
I'm
good
with
this
I
didn't
bring
up
anything
in
this
this
regard
and
not
to
sleep.
My
comments
until
later
I
did
bring
up
a
issue
of
indexing,
so
people
can
more
easily
and
I
didn't
mean
the
council
members
I
meant
this.
The
community
can
more
easily
follow
our
different
topics
and
follow
them
sequentially.
AG
So
I'll
confer
with
Suzanne's
assessment
and
hopefully
it'll
be
a
smooth
handoff,
but
I
agree
with
Lisa
to
a
lot
of
these
have
taken
a
long
long
time,
but
I
also
think
that
this
is
my
third
council,
and
this
is
probably
by
far
the
council
that
has
accomplished
the
most,
in
my
view,
and
also
in
less
than
50
meetings,
my
yeah,
my
first
council
we
had
so
we
had.
We
had
gone
over
50
meetings
in
September
and
I.
Remember,
staying
up
till
1:30
a
lot
and
and
I.
AG
Don't
remember
this
level
of
accomplishment
so
kudos
to
this
council
and
to
staff
who
supported
all
this
I
mean
you
guys
do
the
heavy
lifting
and
the
amount
of
creativity
in
the
time
frames
that
would
provide
it.
I
think
was
just
outstanding.
So
big
thanks
to
staff
and
I
also
want
to
say
you
know
to
also
to
Lisa's
point
about
turning
the
switch.
The
community
benefit
project
and
it's
only
the
phase
one,
but
that's
been
something
that
I've
been
advocating
for
for
12
years.
AE
So
I
just
want
to
thank
staff.
This
is
a
very
planning
heavy
set
of
accomplishments
that
we
got,
which
meant
that
our
planning
staff
had
to
really
prioritize
and
then
take
down
through
the
things
where
Mary
has
been
looking
for
community
benefit
and
putting
that
into
site
plan
review
I've
in
very
supportive
of
that,
but
I
have
been
wanting
to
see
the
use,
tables
and
standards
have
a
look
at
because
it's
been
20
years
since
that
has
last
happened
and
a
lot
changes
in
20
years
and
so
just
kudos
to
staff.
AE
For
that,
I'm
also
pleased
that
we
have
the
middle
income
down
payment
pilot
in
front
of
the
voters.
You
know
they
will
speak.
We
maybe
I
could
have
done
this
slightly
better
job
at
the
ballot
language.
Phrasing
I
didn't
catch,
an
error
I
could
have,
but
still
at
all,
it's
there
and
the
substance
is
there
and
we
will
see
if
the
community
is
willing
to.
Let
us
borrow
money
to
get
people
into
middle-income
housing.
I
just
want
to
call
out.
AE
You
know
the
South
Boulder
Creek
flood
mitigation
project
that
is
gonna
land
in
the
next
council
and
then
the
council
after
that
I
mean
realistically,
if
you
look
at
both
the
permitting
and
the
construction
time,
that's
gonna
push
this
out.
You
know
a
couple
councils,
and
so
the
next
council
will
have
to
look
at
that
project
as
something
that
we
need
to
move
forward
with
all
due
speed,
but
it's
a
design
and
engineering
project
and
it's
gonna
require
Army
Corps
of
Engineers
EPA,
the
state
dam
safety
engineer.
AE
You
know,
there's
a
lot
of
layers
to
what
is
going
to
happen
and
that's
helpful
to
Creek
flood
mitigation
project
and
there's
partners
that
we
don't
have
direct
control
of
in
C,
dot
and
Cu
and
so
on.
So
there
will
have
to
be
some
finesse
in
that
one,
but
I
think
overall,
staff
has
really
done
good.
This
council's
done
pretty
good
and
you
know
that's
a
long
list
of
stuff.
AJ
A
little
bit
yeah
and
I'll
just
just
quickly,
I'll
call
out
the
open
space
master
plan,
which
was
a
process
that
I
thought
went
extremely
well.
Mary
and
I,
of
course,
served
on
the
subcommittee
for
many
many
months
and
so
I
thought.
The
engagement
with
community
was
fantastic
on
that
I'm,
proud
that
we
all
got
that
done
and
just
just
I
think
the
one
that
we
have
made.
The
the
less
progress
that
I
would
like
to
particulars
that
self,
Motor,
Creek
flood
mitigation
and
so
I.
Think
it's
really.
AJ
Just
realized
the
one
that
we
haven't
mentioned
is
the
housing
advisory
board,
which
has
been
a
long
long
held
goal
and
I
see
actually
two
members
of
the
housing
advisory
board
out
in
the
audience.
How
you
all,
thanks
for
all
the
great
work
that
you've
been
doing
since
that
board,
was
formed.
Some
at
least
of
course,
there's
prior
to
your
views
are
very
long.
AA
U
Some
additional
topics
not
on
this
list,
that
the
new
council
will
inherit
that
I
just
wanted
to
hold
up,
in
addition
to
see
South,
which
of
course
has
an
asterisk
next
to
it
and
a
whole
annexation
issue
and
our
plain
balsam,
but
we
just
saw
a
piece
of
the
racial
equity
work,
we're
trying
to
do,
and
it
goes
deeper
than
that
and
I
hope.
The
new
council
can
somehow
get
immersed
in
that
and
because
I
think
that's
an
important
journey.
U
Ron
as
a
community
as
related,
but
different
part
of
that
is,
is
that
we're
in
formal
tribal
consultations
with
I
forget
how
many
tribes
a
whole
bunch
of
tribes
that
you,
thirteen
and
the
tribes
are
coming
back
here
in
the
spring
and
we'll
take
the
next
step
together.
That's
important!
It
will
involve
I.
Think
most
of
council
participated
in
the
last
meetings
and
it
was
pretty
profound
moving
stuff
but
I.
That's
something
that
I
think
is
important
and
it'll
be
on
the
work
plan.
U
We
also
found
Primus
promised
the
library
commission
that
we
would
have
a
robust
discussion
about
how
to
fund
the
library
long
term
and
whether
it
should
be
a
district
or
some
other
mechanism.
So
I
think
it's
important
that
we
honor
that
another
project.
That's
out
there
ready
for
attention,
regardless
of
how
you
feel
about
the
particulars,
but
University
Hill
still
needs
a
catalyst
project
to
help
move
the
commercial
district
forward
and
I
I
would
encourage
the
new
council
to
not
again
regardless
of
whether
you
like
the
one
on
the
table.
U
The
climate
mobilization
action
plan
is
off
to
a
really
great
start.
There
were
hundreds
of
people
that
came
to
the
kickoff
and
that
will
be
a
joyful
even
though
the
topic
is
serious.
I
think
there's
a
lot
of
energy
in
the
community
around
that
and
the
next
council
will
get
to
participate
and
adopt
that,
and
as
part
of
that,
one
of
the
hopeful
things
is
the
carbon
sequestration
and
peace
that
a
couple
more
one
that
I
think
could
fall
through
the
cracks.
AE
Get
things
sent
in
like
other
council
members
did,
but
there
are
a
few
things
one
of
the
ones
I
want
to
call
out.
You
just
make
sure
I
understand
what
it
is
less
says.
All
council
bike,
skateboard
areas,
rules,
I
assume
this
is
like,
where
we
can
bike
on
sidewalks
and
where
skateboards
can
be
and
I
would
throw
in
there
there's
the
related
thing
about
what
we're
gonna
do
with
these
scooters.
AE
So
each
scooters
we
have
a
moratorium
in
place,
but
we
don't
have
a
set
of
rules
developed
yet
for
them,
so
I
would
just
lump
all
of
those
alternative
transportation.
Things.
I
really
do
hope
that
the
next
council
addresses
making
the
rules
clear
for
where
bikes
can
be
an
multi-use
paths
or
lanes
or
on
sidewalks.
AE
So
that
was
one
thing
and
then
another
thing
that
is
still
hanging
out.
There
is
the
electronic
signature
gathering
so
that
the
RFP
has
been
done
and
I
expect.
The
IT
department
at
some
point
will
see
who
got
that
contract.
But
then
you
know
how
long
is
that
process
realistically
gonna
take
you
know
because
I
know
the
conversations
with
the
Secretary
of
State
have
been
started.
I
know
conversation
with
the
clerk
has
been
started
when
I've
spoken
with
those
two
folks.
They
have
a
pretty
high
level
of
concern
for
data
security
and
so
on.
AK
AF
AK
That
reminded
me
that
there
has
been
a
request
by
persons
who
were
on
the
first
task
force
on
the
voting
to
put
a
group
into
place,
a
public
group
such
as
that
one
to
be
involved
in
this
process
and
at
the
time
for
some
reason,
I
thought
there
were
quite
a
few
nods
up
here
that
we
would
go
forward
with
that
and
I
don't
see
any
harm.
Is
there?
Are
there
any
thoughts
about
doing
something
like
that,
so
that
it
it's
not
just
staff?
It's
not.
AE
AB
Been
if
you
need
to
tailor
kind
of
random
thoughts
over
the
last
several
months,
so
the
things
that
are
in
the
memo
are
not
things
that
have
dozen
things
that
I
suggested
are
not
things
that
I
feel
super
strongly
about
the
next
council
to
take
a
look
at
that
at
the
retreat.
But
the
one
thing
I
do
feel
pretty
strongly
about
which
is
not
on
my
list,
but
I.
Think
it's
on
Mary's,
I'm
sure
Mary
will
have
something
to
say
about
this
as
well
is
is
really
a
deep
dive
into
the
budget.
AB
You
know,
I'm
concerned
a
wide
think
we
did
a
lot
of
good
things
and
a
lot
of
things.
Well.
The
last
year
I
I
am
concerned
about
a
few
things
on
our
budget.
One
is
I,
I,
don't
think
that
we're
quite
holistic
enough
in
our
approach
to
our
needs.
Things
come
along
and
we
want
to
do
them
and
that's
great,
but
we,
you
know,
look
at
things
across
the
board.
The
way
we
should
I
also
worry
that
we
have
pressure
on
revenues.
AB
We've
already
started
to
see
that
with
our
sales
and
use
tax,
which
of
course
is
our
number
one
source
of
funding
and
I-
think
it's
only
gonna
get
worse.
You
know
all
the
all
the
reports
we
hear
out
there
is
there's
gonna,
be
some
macro
headwinds
as
well,
and
so
I
think
we
may
just
be
seeing
the
tip
of
the
iceberg.
So
I
think
that
we
need
to
number
one
prepare
for
a
revenue
downturn.
AB
Secondly,
regardless
of
whether
our
revenue
it
takes
a
dip
I
think
we
need
to
set
the
groundwork
for
not
only
the
next
council
but
the
future
councils
in
looking
at
our
expenses
in
our
priorities
holistically
rather
than
in
in
silos
and
and
so
I
would
very
much
like
to
see
that
priority
for
the
next
council.
Maybe
it's
a
other
Blue
Ribbon
Commission,
maybe
it's
simply
council
rolling
up
its
sleeves
and
looking
at
things
across
the
board,
but
I
think
that's
probably
one
of
my
would
be
my
number
one
priority
for
the
next
council.
AF
AG
And
I
will
agree
with
that.
Bob
and
I
think
that
deep
dive
into
the
budget
could
also
encompass
several
other
things
that
others
have
talked
about
here
tonight,
which
one
was
taking
a
look
at
the
library
finances.
It
could
encompass
that
as
well
as
encompassing
the
gare
work
that
government
alliance
and
racial
equity
work
that
is
going
on
in
the
city.
AG
There's
no
better
way
to
begin
to
address
equity
than
to
do
it
through
the
way
the
city
spends
its
money
and
then
thirdly,
the
EMS
emergency
medical
services
and
bringing
them
into
the
fold
of
the
city,
and
so
those
are
things
that
I
think
could
be
looked
at
as
part
of
the
deep
dive
but
I
agree.
I.
Think
it's
critical
that
we
begin
to
make
decisions,
especially
when
we
approve
master
plans
that
we
see
all
the
levers
all
at
once,
so
that
we're
not
drawn
to
the
latest
shiny
object
and
then.
AG
AG
Voting,
oh
I've
been
very
concerned
with
this
year
being
the
second
time
that
the
appearance
of
the
slate
phenomenon
happens
and
I
I
fear
that
what
it
does
is
it
pulls
us
sideways
instead
of
forwards
and
and
I
would
like
to
take
a
look
at
this
prank
choice
voting
as
perhaps
a
way
to
help
us
move
forward
a
little
better
than
being
pulled
sideways
every
other
year.
So
that's
all
I
have
so.
AL
AL
But
I
do
think
that
our
police
force
is
something
that
needs
to
stay
robust
and
we
need
well-trained,
well
informed
officers
to
help
keep
the
public
safe,
intact.
I
think
that's
one
of
our
highest.
You
know
priorities
here,
so
I
just
want
to
make
sure
that
we
have
enough
money
to
be
able
to
provide
what
what
they're
gonna
request
when
that
master
plan
comes
out.
AL
So,
oh
and
then
the
other
thing
I'd
like
to
look
and
I'll
bring
it
up
during
the
retreat
is
that
you
know
we
do
tend
to
get
these
shiny
objects,
as
Mary
said
every
once
in
a
while
that
tend
to
kind
of
throw
off
our
schedule.
So
maybe
we
can
look
into
building
every
quarter
like
leaving
a
hold
space
for
any
surprises,
like
the
vaping
issue
that
was
really
important
to
address,
but
came
out
of.
AL
AJ
A
couple
more
thoughts,
just
I
know
we
talked
about
with
transportation
vision.
Zero
is
an
ongoing
project.
Right
now,
we've
got
our
transportation
master
plan
which
we
accomplished,
which
is
great
and
we've
started.
We've
done
a
lot
of
great
work
on
vision,
zero,
but
I
just
want
to
make
sure
that
we
continue
to
stay
focused
on
those
important
transportation
and
transportation
safety
issues,
as
well
as
on
the
regional
transportation.
Things
which
sins
could
talk
about
a
little
more
here
in
a
minute,
and
so
those
those
are
those
are
critical
it.
AJ
So
a
lot
of
the
planning
work
that
we've
done
this
year
has
been
focused
on,
you
know,
say
making
sure
we
we
don't
get
things
that
we're
concerned
about,
but
I
just
I
hope
that
the
new
council
will
also
take
a
look
at
how
we
might
tweak
our
policies
so
that
we
get
so
we
get
some
of
the
additional
sort
of
housing
in
places
like
diagonal
Plaza,
like
Suzanne
mentioned.
You
know,
then
kind
of
walkable,
mixed-use
kind
of
neighborhoods,
because
I
think
we
do
have
a
critical
need
for
housing,
with
an
emphasis
on
affordability.
AJ
So
I'd
love
to
see
us
undertake
some
things
that
would
help
us
get
some
more.
That
critically
need
things,
a
lot
of
important
initiatives,
but
I
like
what
you
said
about
the
holding
place
for
things
that
come
up
because
I
think
sometimes
we
can
with
our
ambitions.
We
can
take
on
too
large
a
list
of
priorities
and
we
end
up
exhausting
staff,
exhausting
ourselves
and
exhausting
the
community.
AA
I
appreciate
the
reserve
for
the
little
quarterly
hold,
but
a
couple
years
ago,
Bob
and
I.
We
did
the
retreat
committee
and
trying
to
for
two
years
in
a
row
and
in
each
one
of
those
we
tried
to
schedule
extra
time
for
bright
shiny
objects.
But
what
happens
is
that
our
schedule
gets
completely
full,
and
so
you
will
have
to
be
very
disciplined
and
not
take
on
so
much
at
the
beginning
in
order
to
keep
that
reserve
with
regard
to
diagonal,
Plaza
I
would
love
to
see
that
done
and
again.
AA
AA
So
for
us
to
kind
of
push
it
would
require
a
condemnation
and
in
all
my
years
and
being
on
council
I
only
know
of
one
condemnation,
and
that
was
for
somebody
building
a
house
on
open
space,
and
so
there
it's
not
such
an
easy
thing
to
do.
But
I
do
bid
you
well
in
trying
to
get
that
done,
and
I
will
just
remind
everyone
that
the
Rocky
Mountain
Greenway
is
still
idea.
AE
And
I'm
afraid
is
right.
So
all
the
more
reason
to
do
it
then
I
guess
I
would
say:
I
thought
this
council
started
out
doing
pretty
darn
good
with
our
scheduling.
We
were
finishing
meetings
at
10:30
and
you
know,
and
it
seemed
to
be
that
we
were
getting
our
work
done.
But,
as
you
can
see
with
the
ambition
a
lot
of
this
stuff
took
longer
than
we
were
hoping
it
would,
and
so
it
all
stacked
up
at
the
end
and
then
at
the
end,
our
meetings
weren't,
you
know
as
efficient.
AE
AE
It's
well
worth
trying
again,
because
I
thought
it
started
out
well
a
year
ago,
but
we
ended
up
partly
because
of
things
which
came
up
I
think
we
ended
up,
slowed
down
a
little
more,
but
I
do
agree
on.
We
should
put
the
budget
like
near
the
top
of
the
list
enough
people
of
the
name
bit
that
it.
You
know
the
new
council
I
expect
that
will
come
up
near
the
top
and
store
the
other
things
underneath
I.
AK
Would
just
like
to
say
one
thing
about
the
budget
and
that's
that
you
look
at
subsidies
wherever
they
may
exist
throughout,
because
there
are
lots
of
them
in
there.
There's
lots
of
duplication
in
different
areas,
and
so
there
are
ways
I
think
there's
a
lot
in
there
that
can
be
saved
and
can
be
used,
as
things
may
may
flatten
in
the
future.
U
U
Council
has
a
lot
to
do
and
that's
before
they
bring
their
own
priorities.
I
would
like
to
if
we
were
kind
of
done
with
that
I
would
I
would
like
to
turn
everybody's
attention
to
something
I
put
on
hot
line
right
before
the
meeting,
which
I
also
print
it
out
for
all
of
you
and
it
just
it's,
the
regional
transportation
work
and
as
a
mayor,
unless
you
change
it-
and
you
may
very
well
want
to
do
that.
U
The
mayor
ends
up
serving
on
several
regional
bodies
and
so
handing
that
off
these
bodies
are
doing
really
important.
Work
and
I
just
want
to
make
sure
everybody's
aware
of
them.
So
when
you
figure
out
who
picks
up
the
slack
or
not
slack,
but
who
takes
the
baton
that
everybody
knows
what's
involved
and
a
couple
of
these,
they
meet
monthly,
some
of
them
and
they
will
meet
before
the
next
council
decides
who
serves
so
just
real
quickly.
There's
us
36
mayor's
in
commissioners
coalition.
U
It
is
kind
of
our
go-to,
that's
all
of
the
mayors
and
commissioners
around
the
Northwest
region,
and
this
is
where
we
do
the
primary
work
of
fighting
for
dollars.
At
the
federal
level,
at
the
state
level
and
working
on
state
legislation-
and
this
is
a
group
that
got
us-
the
us-
36
managed
lanes,
so
they
do
meet
regionally,
I'm,
sorry,
monthly,
I'm,
going
to
one
more
meeting
on
the
seventh,
but
and
if
anybody
wants
to
come
with
me
just
to
get
a
sense,
that
would
be
great,
but
then
there's
I've
listed
them
here.
U
The
next
meetings
coming
up.
This
group
also
meets
quarterly
with
RTD
and
there's
a
lot
of
business
with
our
TV.
You
know
that
cutting
service
because
they
can't
get
labor
it's
it's
sort
of
an
ongoing
struggle
with
them
and
but
maintaining
really
strong
relationships
and
communications
is
key,
so
I
guess
I
hope
somebody
can
step
into
that
before
you
make
assignments,
there's
also
two
roads,
specific
coalition's,
one
of
them's
highway,
seven
coalition
and
the
other
one's
highway.
Knight
119.
Those
are
two
other
major
arterial
priorities,
we're
working
very
closely
so
on
highway
7.
U
That
goes
all
the
way
to
Brighton.
That
involves
multiple
counties
and
the
work
there
is
to
get
that
to
get
that
arterial
recognized
at
the
state
level
and
then
to
get
funding
for
it,
and
so
that
only
meets
quarterly
so
that
one's
not
gonna
meet
again
till
the
end
of
January,
but
the
other
big
one.
The
119
is
the
rapist
and
the
kind
of
the
next
priority
and
that's
a
smaller
coalition
and
it's
mostly
Boulder
Longmont
in
Boulder
County,
and
that
one's
meeting
monthly
and
the
next
one
is
on
the
25th.
U
We
are
that
project
is
been
studied.
It's
been
it's
ready
to
be
implemented
and
it
can
be
implemented
in
segments.
So
right
now
we're
talking
with
the
cidade
about
getting
some
of
the
money
that
used
to
be
on
the
books
from
them
as
seed
money
to
leverage
additional
funding.
So
that's
a
foot
on
extra
next
to
that
one,
and
it
may
be
that
Aaron,
since
you
have
been
busy
fighting
for
that
money
at
doctor
called
that
may
be
not
to
suggest.
But
maybe
you
wanted
to
step
right
into
that
like.
U
Then
the
last
thing
I'll
just
mention
is
the
metro:
mayors
caucus
love.
Obviously
only
the
mayor
gets
to
go
to
that
it
is
the
40
mayors
in
the
whole
metro
region.
Transportation
is
a
key
issue.
That's
discussed
there
regularly
as
its
housing
and
homelessness
that
one
is
less
focused
on
our
issues,
but
it's
kind
of
our
way
of
interacting
with
the
larger
metro
region
out
there
and
there
are
important
relationships.
So
whoever
ends
up
being
mayor
I
if
we
want
to
have
a
larger
influence.
U
This
is
one
of
the
ways
to
do
that
and
I
ended
up
serving
on
the
ExComm.
That's
another
way
to
do
that
to
of
whoever
serves
next
so
I'm,
just
gonna
highlight
this
I
think
we
get
one
of
the
reasons
we
punch
above
our
weight
is
because
we
are
out
there
with
relationships
making
stuff
happen.
We
have
a
delegation,
that's
leading
the
state
legislature.
We
have
a
governor
that
comes
from
Boulder.
U
This
is
a
really
good
time
for
us
to
help
move
climate
action
forward,
multimodal
transportation
for
all
those
things,
but
a
lot
of
it
happens
based
on
relationships
that
span
a
number
of
years.
So
I
guess,
if
you
guys
want
to
break
some
of
this
work
up
I
think
that's
great,
but
there's
a
lot
of
strategy
that
happens
in
between
meetings
with
staff
and
with
the
county
and
with
other
municipalities
that
are
our
allies.
So
any
I,
just
it's
a
whole
body
of
work
and
over
the
arc
of
a
council
or
a
couple
councils.
U
A
lot
can
be
done
if,
if
we
maintain
those
relationships,
so
that's
my
spiel
I
would
urge
I,
don't
know
I
guess,
since
I
think
people
should
sign
up
to
take
some
of
these
meetings
on
before
the
next
council,
and
maybe
you
guys
can
do
that.
November
19th
when
you
all
read
up
but
I,
wouldn't
just
let
these
fall
through
the
cracks
and
you've
probably
heard
that
Kathleen
rocky
is,
you
know
even
the
city
to
go
to
the
county.
U
AJ
U
AH
So
the
ice
hat
program
is
the
program
that
VI
runs
under
contract
with
the
Department
of
Homeland
Security,
and
this
is
a
program
that
was
that
began
probably
officially
in
2004,
but
the
ideas
for
it
began
in
the
late
90s
when,
when
it
was
learned
in
the
late
90s
that
people
that
were
in
the
community
and
we're
supposed
to
show
up
for
court
were
doing
it
at
a
rate
of
only
11%
and
they
wanted
to
improve
that
percentage.
And
so
over
time.
AH
AH
The
Department
of
Homeland
Security
is
the
authorizing
I.
Guess
I'll
say
for
this
program
and
they
direct
what
it
will
look
like,
including
the
kind
of
training
that
they
want.
The
people
that
do
on
on
the
ground
hands
on
work
to
have
be
I
is
the
sole
contractor.
Currently
for
the
ISAT
program,
there
are
54
facilities
throughout
the
United
States,
where
persons
receive
the
GPS
monitoring.
AH
All
of
the
employees
who
deliver
that
service
are
trained
at
be
I
here
in
Boulder
they
go
through
a
two-week
training
program.
They
are
qualified
in
that
96%
of
them
are
bilingual,
they
all
a
bachelor's
degree.
Many
of
them
have
a
master's
degree,
many
of
them,
in
fact,
most
of
them
are
have
two
years
of
experience
as
case
managers
in
probationary
type
programs.
They
come
to
VI
for
two
weeks
of
training,
on
the
equipment
and
on
the
procedures
and
on
humane
treatment
of
people.
AH
So,
taking
a
look
at
the
12
issues
that
our
community
activists
raised
with
the
August,
there
are
several
of
them
that
are
not
within
the
control
of
bi,
and
so
those
are
in
the
control
of
ice
or
other
management.
Some
of
them
are
issues
like
these
ankle
monitors
that
are
too
tight.
Tight,
beeping,
ankle
monitors,
low
battery
alerts,
ice
app
officers
who
are
bullies
ice
app
officers
who
treat
transgender
people
inappropriately
and
the
grievance
process
does
not
protect
people
from
Italian.
In
my
conversations
with
mr.
AH
The
complaints
about
I
SAP
officers
who
are
bullies
he
believes,
are
one-offs
and
that
they
are
very
well
trained
to
be
great
case.
Managers
in
fact,
there's
a
program
in
which
therapeutic
wraparound
services
are
being
provided
to
some
members
of
the
community
that
are
being
monitored,
the
transgender
situation.
They
have
added
LGBTQ
training
to
their
training
manual
and
they
got
approval
from
the
Department
of
Homeland
Security.
To
do
that,
and
and
in
order
to
change
anything
in
their
training
program,
they
have
to
get
approval
of
the
Department
of
Homeland
Security.
AH
So
my
sense
of
it
is
that
they
are
trying
very
hard
and
that
there
are
always
because
people
are
involved.
There
are
always
situations
in
which
some
people
do
not
act
well,
and
they
seem
to
me
to
say
that
they
are
supervising
that
and
trying
to
stop
that
at
the
end
of
the
conversation,
I
asked
mr.
Waldo
if
he
would
nevertheless
agree
to
meet
with
two
members
of
our
community
two
members
of
council
and
their
folks,
and
he
said
that
he
needs
to
ask
his
next
level
of
management.
AH
AK
AK
AH
AH
Waldo
says
and
I
think
it's
true
is
that
the
Department
of
Homeland
Security
has
rules
that
must
be
followed,
and
while
we
all
may
disagree
with
those
rules
and
with
the
policies
that
these
corporations
are
not
in
a
position
to
change
those
policies,
our
representatives
at
the
federal
level
are
the
ones
that
we
would
need
to
appeal
to
to
change.
The
policies
of
the
Department
of
Homeland
Security.
AK
So
I
was
saw
last
Thursday
night
show
on
PBS
I,
think
it's
John
fruga
who's.
One
of
the
station
managers
who
reported
on
the
detention
center
in
Denver
and
I,
have
to
say
it
was
pretty
horrific.
It
was
really
horrific
and
anything
that
the
City
Council
can
do
in
terms
of
talking
to
our
federal
persons.
AK
AJ
Thank
you
for
that.
Cindy
Jane
I
appreciate
you
taking
the
time
and
talking
to
mr.
Walden.
So
it's
good
to
get
some
additional
information.
I
think
we
should
continue
to
press
for
the
the
meeting
aside.
I
know
that
it
sounds
like
they're
working
to
address
some
of
these
issues,
but
I
know
that
the
citizen
activists
have
some
real
specific
items
in
there
and
perhaps
with
some
kind
of
facilitations
and
council
members.
AJ
U
AE
Much
the
same
I,
you
know,
I
read
know
we
got
back
from
the
attorney
and
as
well
the
stuff
that
we've
heard
from
activists-
and
it
seems
to
me
like
there's
room
for
exchange
in
here
I've
been
reading
quite
a
bit
about
the
detention
facilities
as
well
and
I.
Don't
know
exactly
how
I
Sepp
relates
to
the
bigger
picture
of
detention
facilities,
but
they're
pretty
pretty
unpleasant,
and
so
it's
worth
the
conversation
to
continue
I.
If
they
choose
not
to
Tom
I
had
a
question
for
you,
you
know:
are
we
allowed
to
do
a
resolution?
AE
AD
AE
AH
So
one
thing
I
do
want
to
clarify
is
that
my
understanding
is
that
bi
is
not
related
to
the
defended
tension
facilities.
The
program
that
they
operate.
This
I
set
program
is
for
persons
who
are
not
detained,
persons
who
are
in
the
community
and
they're
provided
with
ankle
monitors,
or
they
also
have
a
smartphone
app
that
and
LU
of
that,
so
that
they
will
get
messages
to
show
up
at
court
and
stuff
like
that.
So
so
what
happens
at
the
Detention
Facility
I
think
is
distinct
from
this
particular
program
run
by
the
boulder
company.
AB
AG
So
I
think
that
if
we
can
get
that
meeting,
it
would
be
helpful
to
better
understand
things
like
one
of
the
things
that
you
mentioned.
Jane
was
that
when,
when
were
the
issues
that
were
brought
up
by
the
community
was
that
there's
beeping
or
the
ankle
monitors
are
too
tight,
and
you
said
they're
always
welcome
to
go
to
their
case
managers,
and
it
seems
to
me
that,
if
that
happens
in
the
evening,
you
probably
couldn't
get
there
until
the
next.
AC
AG
That's
that's
pretty
harsh,
so
I
don't
know
if
it
would
be
within
there.
That
would
be
a
question
to
ask:
is
it
in
your
purview
to
change
that
policy
to
be
able
to
get
attention
to
that
situation
immediately
so
that
somebody
doesn't
have
to
go
through
the
night
with
that?
So
so
those
are
the
things
that
may
be
within
their
capacity
to
change,
so
it
would
be
worthwhile
to
sit
down
with
them
and
just
have
a
conversation
and
ask
more
questions
and,
and
just
be
so
helpful
about
it
right.
AH
So
so
I
know
that
mr.
Walden
would
gladly
meet
with
any
of
you
and
I
think
you
could
get
your
questions
answered
there
I
mean
Karl
and
I.
Try
to
ask
every
question
that
we
could
think
of
and
yeah.
We
didn't
think
of
that
one.
We
were
asking
questions
more
about
the
training
manual
and
stuff.
So
I,
don't
know
if
you
want
to
do
that
or
not,
but
I
would
suggest
that,
rather
than
me
being
a
go-between
and
not
thinking
of
every
question,
you
wouldn't
want
to
ask.
AG
No,
that's
right
and
I
think
I
think
that
the
ultimate
situation
would
be
to
have
council
members
and
community
members
there,
and
so
that
I
think
that
would
be
the
best
case
and
will
hold
out
for
that
at
least
I
would
like
to
hold
out
for
that
and
see
if
we
can
get
there.
If
not,
then
we
take
our
next
steps.
Does
this
counsel.
U
AB
A
suggestion
the
next
council
meeting
is
the
19th
of
November
I
would
think
that
that
would
be
an
adequate
amount
of
time
for
mr.
woll
to
get
back
to
Jane
about
the.
But
the
meeting
so
I
might
suggest
that
CAC
put
this
on
as
a
discussion
point
again
on
the
19th
of
November
and
we'll
even
have
a
yes
or
no,
and
you
know
I
guess
would
interpret
silence
as
it.
No
so.
U
AB
To
the
new
council,
respect
to
the
new
council,
and
it
wouldn't
necessarily
be
a
resolution,
it
would
just
be
getting.
You
know,
general.
Obviously,
let
us
know
as
soon
as
she
hears
and
there
may
be
some
activity
before
them,
but
if
there
hasn't
been
any
activity
before
then
I
think
maybe
the
new
council
can
take
that
up
and
say
geez
we
haven't
heard
back,
or
we
heard
Beca
disappointing
answer
and
to
Mary's
point.
AB
AB
AJ
U
U
AE
AF
AG
AJ
AG
AJ
AL
Oh
and
I'll
just
say,
is
this
being
my
first
Council
and
the
way
that
everyone
spoke
about
this
kind
of
being.
My
favorite
council
I'm
a
little
scared
I'm
having
some
previous
councils
as
well,
just
from
a
citizen,
standpoint,
I
think
I
was
very
young
spoiled
and
so
I
do
hope.
The
new
council
can
take
this
council's
lead
and
have
the
respect
and
courtesy.