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From YouTube: Boulder City Council Meeting 9-1-22
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A
H
H
Bring
the
public
to
participate
both
virtually
and
in
person,
so
you
will
be
asked
to
indicate
on
the
open
comment
and
public
hearing
forms
if
you'll
be
speaking
virtually
or
in
person.
In-Person
speakers
will
speak
first
and
virtual
speakers
will
follow.
All
speakers
will
be
listed
in
the
order
in
which
they
signed
up,
and
all
speakers
will
have
the
option
to
change
their
location
preference
if
needed
by
contacting
the
city
clerk's
office
at
cityclerk's
office
at
bouldercolorado.gov.
H
Thanks
so
much
Alicia,
so
our
first
item,
you
may
be
wondering,
while
we're,
why
we're
all
wearing
these
antennae-
and
it
is
because
it
is
pollinator
appreciation
month
and
we
have
a
declaration
of
about
pollinator
appreciation
month
that
will
be
read.
Now
by
council
member
Tara
weiner
take
away
Tara.
L
Boulders
550
species
of
native
bees,
butterflies,
hummingbirds,
beetles
flies
and
other
pollinators
maintain
the
health
and
beauty
of
our
grasslands.
Forests,
Meadows
and
other
natural
areas
pollinators
are
indispensable,
Partners
in
the
production
of
our
food
supply
and
are
essential
for
the
diverse
and
thriving
ecosystems
that
support
all
life.
Insects,
including
critical
pollinators,
are
declining
precipitously
throughout
the
world
due
to
habitat
loss,
pesticide
use
and
climate
change.
This
is
placing
our
food
Security,
National,
natural
environment
and
human
well-being.
L
In
Peril,
we
honor
the
Legacy
from
those
who
came
before
us
to
protect
the
natural
world
and
outstanding
beauty
of
Boulder.
We
acknowledge
and
thank
Our
Community
Partners
and
residents
who
are
building
on
this
Legacy
by
joining
together
to
heal
our
land
and
strengthen
our
connection
with
each
other
by
creating
Innovative
and
Equitable
solutions
that
are
Transforming,
Our
Food
system
and
rewilding.
L
Our
community's
Landscaping,
as
our
community,
enjoys
the
Bountiful
Autumn
Harvest
and,
as
we
witness
the
Regeneration
of
our
natural
lands
from
the
tireless
work
of
pollinators,
the
city
council
of
the
city
of
Boulder
Colorado
declares
September
2022
pollinator
appreciation
month
and
commits
to
taking
action
in
partnership
with
our
community.
As
We
join
together
to
protect
pollinators
and
all
biodiversity
for
current
and
future
Generations.
N
D
P
Is
a
program
that
was
developed
in
conjunction
with
the
Horticultural
team
at
the
Butterfly
Pavilion
to
develop
a
program
that
brings
community
members
together
to
learn
about
how
to
build,
maintain
and
grow
these
beautiful,
pollinator
habitats,
habitats
that
support
all
of
our
native
insects
and
songbirds
it's
free.
You
can
join
us
anytime
during
the
next
session
that
will
be
starting
sometime
in
the
spring
or
early
summer.
P
It
seems
intimidating
at
first
and
a
lot
of
people
come
into
it
saying
I
have
no
idea
what
to
do,
even
though
I've
been
a
gardener
for
years,
but
after
weeks
of
being
together,
sharing
our
group,
Knowledge
Learning
and
studying
what
the
Horticultural
team
from
Butterfly
Pavilion
has
brought
to
us
and
what
we've
learned
on
our
own,
we
bring
it
together
and
synthesize
it
to
build
a
beautiful
program
of
people
working
together.
Achieving
this
goal
of
building
not
only
habitat
in
our
own
yards
but
in
our
broader
community.
G
Kind
of
the
first
exciting
you
know
bringing
more
expertise
into
the
community
so
that,
hopefully,
this
first
round
of
pollinator
Advocates
will,
you
know,
spread
and
multiply
the
the
knowledge
about
why
we
might
want
to
replace
some
of
our
ornamentals
with
natives
yeah
so
and
I'm
on
a
big
Journey
with
that
with
our
tiny
yard
and
then
also
with
my
kids,
school
and
yeah,
and
now,
like
everywhere,
I
go
I
just
see
like
oh,
you
can
have
so.
N
Many
lamps
right
there
in
my
love
affair,
with
native
plants
and
pollinators
of
Boulder
County
when
I
volunteered
at
the
Chautauqua
native
plant
garden
with
Dave
Sutherland
many
years
ago.
So
when
I
saw
that
this
program
was
available,
I
jumped
at
it
as
a
way
to
get
some
formal
training
and
something
I've
been
informally
dabbling
in
for
many
years
and
I'm
excited
to
spread.
The
word
in
my
neighborhood
I
live
in
an
HOA,
that's
very
close
to
open
space
and
I
would
love
to
be
able
to
turn
our
little
HOA
into
a
native
plant.
Q
And
I
really
didn't
know
anything
about
native
plants
before
I
took
this
class,
but
I'm
really
interested
in
how
to
improve
the
conditions
for
our
pollinators
and
to
improve
the
amount
of
biodiversity.
I'm
really
concerned
about
climate
change
and
that's
my
main
reason
for
being
in
the
class
and
I've
learned
a
tremendous
amount
and
I'm
very
grateful.
R
I
joined
the
pollinator
Advocate
training
to
help
step
into
what
I
believe
is
our
true
role
as
a
species
which
is
a
beneficial
keystone
species
and
we've
created
these
problems
of
habitat
loss
and
degradation,
and
we
can
be
the
solution.
So
this
is
an
incredibly
Rich
training
and
a
wonderful
opportunity
to
provide
some
healing
for
biodiversity
and
life
for
pollinators
here
in
the
city.
The.
S
D
Congratulations
to
Boulder's,
inaugural
class
of
pollinator
Advocates.
Thank
you
for
your
dedication
to
our
community
and
our
pollinators
join
us
at
the
bee.
Boulder
Festival
on
Saturday
September
24th
from
10
a.m,
to
2
p.m,
in
Central
Park
and
meet
co-builder
Partners
in
person,
and
learn
more
about
these
programs
and
share
your
ideas
with
us.
H
T
I
will
go.
My
name
is
Dr
David,
Gross
and
I
serve
on
the
Boulder
City
Council
audit
subcommittee.
My
PhD
is
in
financial
economics
and
I'm
an
associate
teaching
professor
of
Finance
at
CU
Boulder
separate
from
my
academic
activities.
I
have
done
this
type
of
accounting,
audit
and
financial
oversight
for
many
years
for
many
local
organizations.
This
is
my
fourth
year
on
the
city's
audit
committee.
T
The
audit
committee
consists
of
council,
council
members,
Joseph
Wallach
and
me,
and
it's
our
job,
to
assess
and
interpret
the
audit
of
the
city's
2021
fiscal
year
financial
statements-
it's
not
the
job
of
this
committee
to
in
any
way
assess
the
stability
or
health
of
the
city's
financial
position
or
to
assess
the
priorities
or
efficacy
of
exponential
activities.
That,
of
course,
is
the
job
of
the
council
and
really
all
Boulder
residents,
but
without
the
work
done
by
the
city's
Auditors
and
the
work
of
this
committee,
people
could
not
perform
these
assessments.
T
So
the
motion
on
the
consent
agenda
for
later
this
evening
is
to
approve
and
accept
the
city
of
Boulder
annual,
comprehensive
financial
report.
The
AK
firm
and
the
audit
of
the
akfer
and
I'll
give
a
brief
description
of
the
four-part
process
that
led
us
to
this
point.
So
first,
the
city
staff
records
all
of
the
thousands
of
financial
transactions.
T
Second,
the
staff
uses
this
information
to
prepare
financial
statements.
These
financial
statements
are
produced
for
each
of
the
city's
44
funds,
including
General,
and
open
space
and
transportation
and
Municipal
property,
and
they
produce
three
types
of
financial
statements
for
each
of
these
funds.
Like
a
p
l
or
income
statement,
the
city
produces
the
statement
of
Revenue
expenses
and
change
in
net
position.
All
revenue
transactions
are
summarized
and
categorized
by
Source.
All
expense
transactions
are
summarized
and
categorized
by
type
and
from
these,
the
staff
computes
the
resulting
net
change
in
fund
balance.
T
Like
a
balance
sheet,
the
city
also
produces
a
statement
of
net
position.
This
is
what
the
city
owns
its
assets.
What
the
city
owes
its
liabilities
and,
of
course,
the
resulting
net
position
and
If
This
Were
a
business
we'd
call
this
the
owner's
equity.
The
difference
in
this
year's
net
position
and
last
year's
net
position
is
the
change
in
that
position
from
the
p
l
statement
that
we
just
talked
about
and
then
finally,
the
city
produces
a
statement
of
cash
flows
and
this
documents
the
sources
and
uses
of
all
cash
over
the
years.
T
If
an
entity
has
a
lot
of
non-cash
revenues
or
non-cash
expenses,
I
mean
a
lot
of
transactions
on
credit,
then
an
entity
that
appears
healthy
could
run
out
of
money
waiting
to
get
paid.
This
is
not
the
case
with
the
city
of
Boulder.
The
city
does
not
have
many
non-cash
credit
transactions,
but
it
still
produces
these
documents.
These
financial
statements
are
public
and
they
can
be
used
by
anyone
to
understand
how
the
city
of
Boulder
operates
and
answer
questions
such
as
from
where
does
the
city
get
its
rep
its
funds?
T
Where
does
the
city
spend
its
funds
and
how
stable
and
sustainable
financially
is
the
city
of
Boulder?
But
these
and
other
questions
can
only
be
answered
if
the
city
is
accurately
recording
Financial
transactions
and
accurately
and
correctly
producing
financial
statements.
T
So
the
third
step
is
a
record
of
the
transactions
and
the
financial
statements
are
given
to
the
auditor
Clifton
Larson
and
Allen.
In
addition,
the
auditor
works
with
the
city
staff
to
gain
an
understanding
of
the
process
used
to
record
transactions
and
prepare
these
financial
statements,
and
the
auditor
ensures
that
the
recording
and
preparation
are
done
in
accordance
with
the
rules
set
by
the
government,
Accounting
Standards,
Board,
gasb
or
gasby.
So
the
result
of
the
audit,
the
Auditors
gave
the
city
a
clean
opinion.
T
This
is
the
best
possible
result
for
the
city
and
summarizing
the
opinion.
On
page
17
of
the
317
page
report,
the
auditor
wrote,
in
our
opinion,
the
statements
present
fairly
and
in
all
material
respects,
the
respective
financial
position
of
the
governmental
activities,
the
business
type
activities
each
major
fund
and
the
aggregate
remaining
fund
information
of
the
city.
Again,
this
is
the
best
possible
result
for
the
city.
Now
the
Auditors
look
for
three
things.
T
When
writing
their
opinion,
they
look
for
deficiencies,
significant
deficiencies
and
material
weaknesses
and
I'll
describe
those
very
briefly
and
we'll
see
that
there
actually
was
one
significant
deficiency
in
internal
control
over
compliance.
That
sounds
so
much
worse
than
it
actually
was,
and
I'll
talk
about
it
in
a
minute.
So
again,
a
deficiency
is
a
flaw
in
a
design
or
a
design
of
a
process
which
might
allow
for
errors.
T
It
doesn't
mean
there
actually
was
an
error,
but
there
have
been
zero
deficiencies
in
the
city
for
the
last
three
years,
so
zero
deficiencies
for
2019,
2020
and
2021..
T
A
significant
deficiency
is
a
large
deficiency
or
combination
of
smaller
ones,
less
severe
than
a
material
weakness,
but
important
enough
to
Merit
attention
and
again
there
was
one
significant
deficiency
that
I'll
talk
about
in
a
minute:
no
material
weaknesses.
This
is
a
large
deficiency
or
combination
such
there's,
a
reasonable
possibility
of
recording
errors,
and
there
were
none
so
the
significant
deficiency
it
has
nothing
to
do
with
money
or
a
misrecorded
transaction
or
an
improper
revenue
or
an
improper
payment.
T
The
city
is
required
to
ensure
that
all
vendors
receiving
over
twenty
five
thousand
dollars
of
Federal
grant
funds
do
not
appear
on
a
list
of
prohibited
vendors,
and
so
the
city
must
ensure
that
the
vendor
has
not
been
suspended
or
debarred
from
receiving
federal
funds,
and
the
city
must
produce
a
document
verifying
that
it
is
checked.
So
in
2021,
the
city
received
funds
from
the
American
Rescue
plan
act
arpa.
This,
of
course,
was
a
new
federal
program
requiring
new
vendors,
the
city
selected,
a
software
vendor
to
help
with
some
data
associated
with
vaccines.
T
My
understanding
is
this
is
the
same
vendor
that
was
used
by
Boulder
County
when
asked
by
the
auditor.
The
city
was
not
able
to
produce
the
documentation
to
demonstrate
that
it
had
checked
that
this
particular
vendor
did
not
appear
on
the
on
the
list,
this
Rises
to
the
level
of
a
significant
deficiency
and
was
therefore
reported
as
such,
but
again
this
in
no
way
LED
to
any
errors
in
the
financial
statements
or
any
payment
to
any
entity
that
should
not
have
been
engaged.
T
There
were
approximately
25
other
vendors
for
which
the
city
must
engage
in
this
process
and
appears.
This
is
the
only
vendor
for
which
the
record
was
not
kept,
and
the
auditor
concluded
that
the
city
actually
did
check
it.
Just
didn't
have
the
record
that
it
checked
so
again
this
Rises
to
the
level
of
a
significant
deficiency,
but
it
was
corrected
so
again,
overall,
clean
opinion.
This
is
32
years
in
a
row
and
39
years
total
the
city
received
sorry
I
apologize
that
sounded
wrong.
This
is
not
32
years
of
a
clean
opinion.
T
This
is
32
years
in
a
row
that
the
city
was
awarded
the
certificate
of
achievement
for
excellence
in
financial
reporting
by
the
government,
Finance
Officers
Association,
and
this
certifies
that
the
city
went
beyond
the
minimum
requirements
and
prepared
reports
that
evidence
the
spirit
of
transparency
and
full
disclosure.
So
the
city
has
won
this
award
39
years,
total
and
32
years
in
a
row.
T
Next,
the
audit
committee
considers
the
audit
findings
and
makes
a
recommendation
to
the
Council
on
whether
to
accept
the
annual
comprehensive
financial
report
and
the
audit
of
the
annual
comprehensive
financial
report,
and
it
is
the
unanimous
recommendation
of
the
audit
committee
that
the
city
council
approve
and
accept
this
report
and
the
audit
of
the
report.
Thank
you.
H
U
H
M
H
Now
we're
ready
for
open
comment,
so
who's
going
to
walk
us
through
the
participation
guidelines.
For
that.
V
Thank
you.
We
appreciate
members
of
the
public
who
are
here
this
evening.
This
is
Ryan
henchen,
your
City's
community
engagement
manager
and
I
want
to
share
that
the
city.
V
V
This
Vision
does
support
physical
and
emotional
safety
for
community
members
staff
and
Council,
as
well
as
democracy
for
people
of
all
ages.
Identities
lived
experience
and
political
perspectives
for
more
information
on
this
Vision.
Please
visit
the
following
website
and
next
slide.
Please,
the
following
are
examples
of
rules
of
decorum
found
in
the
boulder
of
is
code
and
other
guidelines
that
support
this
Vision.
These
will
be
upheld
during
this
meeting
all
remarks
and
testimony
shall
be
limited
to
matters
related
to
City
business.
V
H
W
Oh
yes,
thank
you
good
evening.
Council
cities,
free
of
Boulders
drug
induced
crime
have
no
camping
in
public
spaces
and
legal
consequences.
If
you
steal
a
downtown
day,
Center
spells
disaster
for
business,
residence
and
tourism.
Anyone
who
wants
to
get
off
of
the
streets
has
their
choice
of
60
to
70
services
in
Boulder,
don't
pick
on
downtown
and
don't
pick
on
a
neighborhood,
our
pro-development,
Council
majority
sites
housing
as
culprit
that
fits
their
build
baby,
build
narrative
but
ignores
the
causes
of
homelessness,
drug
addiction
and
mental
health
issues.
W
If
they
are
here
because
of
drugs
or
mental
health,
the
progressive
argument
has
no
impact,
but
if
they
blame
High
housing
prices
that
fits
the
narrative.
The
trouble
transients
by
the
creek
aren't
due
to
housing,
prices
and
housing,
doesn't
cure
mental
illness
or
addiction
Millions
now
and
huge
ongoing
expenses,
and
how
much
for
meth
decontamination
after
visits
to
the
day
Center
or
their
free
housing
I
support
the
hard-working
family,
whose
Sole
Provider
gets
ill.
Is
that
even
vaguely
comparable
to
the
person
who
decides
to
do
meth
and
not
work
anymore?
W
These
folks
did
not
come
to
Boulder
for
work
and
then
decide
a
dangerous.
Encampment
was
a
better
option.
It
cannot
be
a
low
barrier,
Country
Club
down
by
the
creek,
where
they
can
do
drugs
openly.
Let's
hope
it
does
better
than
the
0.8
percent
success
rate
of
the
Murphy
Center
in
Fort
Collins,
but
wait.
How
would
this
fare
in
an
actual
vote
of
the
people
with
an
impressive
lack
of
public
engagement?
This
needs
a
vote.
Feedback
sessions
are
framed
to
limit
feedback
to
location
in
services.
Not
whether
or
not
we
should
do
this.
Thank
you.
W
H
X
Hi,
can
you
hear
me?
Yes,
thank
you.
Council
first
I
just
want
to
applaud
those
of
you
who
have
taken
the
time
to
walk
our
public
spaces
to
see
for
yourself
the
drug
paraphernalia,
the
trash
that's
going
on
in
and
around
the
encampments.
X
It's
it's
urgent
that
we
keep
the
camping
pan,
it's
urgent,
that
we
move
people
along
from
that.
It's
absolutely
deterring
all
of
us
families,
kids
from
being
able
to
enjoy
these
public
spaces
addiction
is
the
number
one
thing:
mental
health.
Of
course
it's
an
issue,
but
it's
not
on
the
rise
like
addiction.
Addiction
is
massive
and
we
need
to
have
that
discussion.
X
I'd
love
to
see
as
far
as
the
budget
750
000
budgeted
for
the
day,
Center
I
would
so
love
to
see
all
of
that
money
put
towards
the
wonderful
wonderful
efforts
happening
at
the
bridge
house.
We
have
to
talk
about
that
first
and
foremost,
right
now,
in
Boulder
I
believe
there
are
44
beds,
people
commit
to
sobriety,
they
have
a
shelter.
They
have
two
meals
a
day.
Six
days
a
week,
they're
showing
responsibility
to
have
Community
Services
they're
huge,
like
resources
to
a
long-term.
X
You
know
success
in
as
after
there
are
12
it's
a
12
month,
commitment
that
they
have
there
74
success
after
they
leave
and
getting
jobs
and
finding
housing.
This
is
the
kind
of
thing
that
we
need
to
reward
and
support
I.
Thank
you
so
much
for
doing
that.
The
work
you're
doing-
and
please
please
please
do
not
allow
encampments
in
our
town.
Thank
you.
J
Hello,
can
you
hear
me
all
right?
Yes,
thank
you,
I'm,
going
to
take
my
two
full
minutes
to
grieve
and
prepare
the
community
for
the
potential
trauma
that
could
be
caused
by
the
development
of
the
land
colonized
by
the
University
known
as
the
property
called
CU
South.
We
risk
losing
our
rare
wetlands
and
destroying
our
South
Water
Creek
flood
plain
if
the
annexation
of
Cu
South
is
not
repealed.
As
such
every
night
I
walk
these
Trails
I
wish
I
could
say
that
I
enjoy
the
outdoors,
but
I
can't
all
I
can
think
about.
J
Is
this
cottonwood
tree
will
soon
be
a
light
pole.
This
Pond
will
soon
be
an
asphalt
parking
lot,
and
this
field
will
soon
be
porcelain,
toilets
and
bathtubs
flushing
away
our
most
precious
resource
water
Ebola
deserves
at
least
500
year.
Flood
protection
and
this
annexation
agreement
is
not
the
flood
protection
we
deserve.
J
But
we
can
prevent
the
aforementioned
trauma
by
voting
yes
to
repeals,
to
use
authent
annexation,
this
November,
8th
and
now
some
moments
of
silence
for
the
power
and
knowledge
of
nature.
If
I
am
cut
short
with
these
remaining
moments,
then
we'll
know
exactly
how
the
city
handles
the
rights
of
Nature
and
the
rights
of
citizens.
O
Hello
Council.
Thank
you
so
much
for
having
me
tonight,
I'm
here
to
request
that
you
not
create
a
day
Center
in
the
downtown
area.
It's
heartbreaking
to
see
people
struggling
with
drug
addiction
and
debilitating
mental
illnesses
living
on
the
streets.
My
heart
goes
out
to
them,
I'm
grateful.
We
live
in
a
city
that
focuses
on
bringing
people
into
the
city
into
the
system
and
getting
them
housed.
These
services
are
highly
successful.
Unfortunately,
the
challenges
faced
in
this
country
cannot
be
solved
by
Boulder
we're
a
small
City.
O
Yes,
we're
relatively
wealthy,
but
our
money
is
not
endless
and
we
have
many
local,
low-income
citizens
we
want
to
serve.
Our
small
City
cannot
take
on
a
huge
portion
of
the
nationally
unhoused
population,
I
recently
learned
through
the
hotline,
along
with
all
of
you,
that
45
of
the
unhoused
served
by
our
city
have
been
in
Boulder
a
month
or
less
of
those
38
are
not
from
Colorado.
This
confirms
my
suspicions
that,
having
lacks
enforcement
of
our
laws
attracts
people
far
and
wide.
O
If
you
build
even
better
services
like
showers
and
hair
salons
in
the
downtown
area,
you
will
attract
more
people.
Encouraging
people
to
congregate.
Downtown
makes
it
harder
for
our
businesses,
many
small
and
run
by
local
families,
to
thrive
for
high
school
students,
University
students,
children,
the
elderly
visitors
to
feel
safe
and
remember
that
tourists
help
fuel
our
tax
base,
which
in
turn
opens
doors
for
supporting
under-resourced
residents
and,
let's
be
clear,
Rising
crime
affects
everyone.
It's
not
just
going
to
affect
the
wealthy.
O
In
fact,
it's
harder
for
those
who
are
under-resourced
than
the
wealthy
who
can
weather
the
storm.
It's
a
deeply
challenging
issue.
We
know
it's
a
national
issue.
I
wish
Boulder
could
solve
it,
but
wishing
for
it
won't
make
it
a
reality.
Let's
be
pragmatic,
Let's
help
our
people
who
are
under
resourced
and
those
who
are
trying
to
get
off
the
streets,
maybe
you're,
repealing
their
aggressive
tax
on
groceries.
That's
a
policy
I
think
that
councils
should
consider.
Thank
you
so
much
for
your
time.
H
H
Y
I
can
barely
hear
you
okay
good
evening,
Council
I'm
here
to
talk
about
two
different
Charter
changes
on
the
proposed
ballot
for
this
fall.
The
first
one
is
a
repeal
of
Library,
commission
and
tax.
If
Library
District
created
I'd
like
to
strongly
suggest
that
you
rename
that
repeal
of
Library,
commission
and
appropriation,
if
Library
District
is
created
because
the
ballot
question
will
not
repeal
any
tax,
it
will
only
repeal
the
appropriation
to
the
library
fund
next
slide,
please.
Y
The
second
one
I'd
like
to
talk
about
is
Charter
clarification
of
candidate
issues
which
prohibits
candidates
from
running
for
more
than
one
office
at
an
election
next
slide.
Please,
here
you
can
see
seven
mayoral
elections
going
back
to
2009
and
I'll
talk
about
them
more.
But
what
I'd
like
to
point
out
right
now
are
the
names
that
are
in
brown,
bold.
Those
are
people
who
ran
for
Council
and
ran
for
mayor
in
the
same
election.
So
if
this
passes,
those
people
would
not
have
been
able
to
run
for
both
next
slide.
Y
Please
I
also
want
to
point
out
that
there
was
only
one
of
those
elections
that
had
more
than
two
candidates
running
which
would
trigger
under
the
new
method.
The
instant
runoff
and
also
the
mayoral
seat
is
a
two-year
term,
and
why
would
people
bother
with
the
time
and
money
of
a
campaign
to
run
for
a
contested
two-year
week
mayor's
term
if
they
can
run
for
a
four-year
Council
term?
Y
So,
in
conclusion,
even
if
Boulder
has
three
candidates
running
for
mayor
in
the
future,
we
probably
won't
have
enough
viable
candidates
to
trigger
the
instant
runoff,
and
then
we
might
as
well
be
back
at
plurality
by
limiting
people
to
run
for
only
one
municipal
office
were
artificially
depressing.
The
number
of
candidates
who
can
run
for
mayor
and
we
have
adopted
instant
runoff
ranked
voting,
but
we're
not
going
to
let
it
use
its
Amazing
Power
next
slide.
Please
I'm
asking
that
you
reject
this
proposed
Charter
change
to
limit
the
number
of.
Y
H
Recommend
you
email
that
to
us,
so
we
can
take
a
look
at
it.
Next
we
have
Caitlin
dacus,
Patrick,
Murphy
and
Nicole
Forster.
Z
Wonderful,
thank
you.
My
name
is
Caitlin
Davis
I
am
a
resident
here
in
Boulder,
and
a
law
student
at
the
University
of
Colorado
Boulder
I
am
presenting
today
about
minimum
wage
and
living
wage
next
slide.
Please,
a
minimum
wage
in
Colorado
is
currently
set
at
12.56
per
hour.
The
minimum
wage
in
Denver
is
set
at
15.87
effective
next
year
to
increase
the
17
29
an
hour
in
Boulder.
Z
Here,
our
minimum
wage
is
still
set
at
12.56
per
hour,
matching
that
of
the
state
of
Colorado,
but
not
matching
the
differences
in
cost
of
living.
Next
slide,
please,
the
minimum
wage
is
the
lowest
wage.
An
employer
is
supposed
to
pay
according
to
federal
or
local
law.
A
living
wage
by
contrast,
is
a
rate
that
allows
residents
to
meet
the
minimum
standards
of
living
where
they
are
at
next
slide,
please
so.
Z
A
living
wage
in
Boulder,
according
to
mit's
living
wage
calculator
for
one
adult
with
no
child,
is
sitting
at
twenty
one
dollars
and
seven
cents
an
hour.
If
you
are
a
single
parent
with
two
children
that
living
wage
increases
to
52
dollars
an
hour
and
97
cents,
you
can
visit
mit's
living
wage
calculator
to
see
more
data
and
more
examples
of
what
a
living
wage
in
Boulder
looks
like
next
slide.
Please
there
is
precedent
in
Boulder
for
the
concept
of
living
wage.
Z
The
city
council
has
very
conscientiously
thought
about
living
wage
for
the
employees
of
the
city
of
Boulder,
increasing
that
throughout
the
year
since
2003
next
slide.
Please,
the
positive
impact
of
wage
increases
on
our
community
could
be
very
beneficial.
Wage
increases,
Inc
increase
mental
health
and
physical
health
for
workers,
predominantly
low-wage
workers
are
those
who
will
benefit
and
be
able
to
give
back
to
the
economy
and
stimulate
the
economy
here
in
Boulder
next
slide.
Z
AA
The
no
plan
B
fallacy
letters
about
and
guest
opinion
by
Bob
Yates
regarding
the
CU
South
flood
mitigation
project
are
titled
no
plan
B,
that's
not
true,
and
the
kind
of
threat
to
dare
to
think
critically.
There
will
be
a
vote
on
the
100-year
flood
mitigation
plan
and
the
agreement
with
CU.
This
November
respect
to
the
long,
hard
effort
to
create
plan
a,
but
it's
the
fact
that
there
either
is
a
current
plan.
B
that's
been
rejected,
we're
not
fully
assessed
or
the
absence
of
wise
planning
for
the
inevitable
Plan
B
after
plan
a
fails.
AA
A
100-year
flood
event
is
based
on
past
data
and
unless
you're
dead,
you've
noticed
that
climate
has
changed
and
all
those
old
data
are
to
be
thrown
out.
The
window
in
2013
Boulder
had
a
1
000
year
reign
event
and
a
100
year
flood
right
through
town
Texas,
just
had
a
1
000
year,
flood
event
and
floods
all
over
the
planet
provide
clear
evidence
at
times
of
change.
There's
always
a
plan
B
Because.
If
there
isn't,
then
that's
a
clear
example
of
poor
planning,
here's
the
thought
to
consider
what
happens
after
the
100
year.
AA
Flood
mitigation
has
been
installed
and
the
500
year
event
happens.
I
asked
Bob
about
this
and
he
said
quote:
that's
a
risk
we
all
took
when
we
bought
houses
at
the
base
of
a
mountain,
great
views,
but
some
degree
of
danger.
The
city
can't
protect
us
from
everything.
End
quote:
the
city
can't
protect
us
from
asteroids
or
fires
during
a
100
mile
per
hour
Windstorm.
But
when
that
500-year
event
happens,
will
the
city
say
too
bad?
So
sad,
of
course
not.
We
have
a
plan
B
that
supposedly
can't
doesn't
exist.
AA
AB
Hello,
my
name
is
Nicole
Forrester
and
I'm
speaking
tonight
in
support
of
the
decriminalization
of
plant.
Medicines
such
as
psilocybin
in
Boulder
and
I
also
want
to
voice
support
for
compassionate
Solutions
to
issues
of
drug
use
and
ending
the
Total
War
on
Drugs
and
urge
Boulder
to
take
action
in
these
matters.
As
a
teenager,
I
was
diagnosed
with
a
neurological
disorder
called
cluster
headaches
and
20
of
people
diagnosed
with
cluster
headaches
attempt
suicide
due
to
the
severity
of
pain
caused
by
the
disorder
and
the
lack
of
effective
pharmaceutical
treatments.
AB
It's
anecdotally
known
that
psychedelics
have
the
ability
to
cure
this
disorder
in
70
of
cases
at
age,
18
I
tried
psilocybin
for
the
first
time,
which
set
my
cluster
headaches
into
remission
for
the
next
three
years.
Plant
medicine,
heals
older,
should
be
on
the
Forefront
of
efforts
to
decriminalize
Nature.
At
this
time,
15
cities
Across
the
Nation,
have
made
the
decision
to
decriminalize
plant
medicines
and
a
majority
of
these
cities
have
achieved
this
by
the
action
of
their
city
council.
AB
At
this
point
in
time,
it
is
urgent
to
address
the
this
in
Boulder,
so
that
Boulder
remains
on
the
Forefront
of
this
change
in
Colorado.
There
is
currently
a
Statewide
effort
to
legalize
these
medicines,
and
that
initiative
is
coming
forward
with
a
lot
of
corporate
interest
and
interest
in
commercializing
this
space
I'm,
advocating
that
any
policy
change
regarding
psychedelics
and
plant
medicines
remains
in
the
hands
of
the
people
who
have
always
used
these
medicines
rather
than
the
rapidly
emerging
corporate
interest.
AB
I
worked
on
I-301
to
decriminalize
psilocybin
in
Denver
Colorado
back
in
2019,
and
they
have
shown
no
risks
to
public
health
and
safety
since
decriminalization
in
2020,
I
Incorporated,
the
group
decriminalized
nature
Boulder
County,
which
has
shown
up
to
advocate
for
the
decriminalization
of
plant
substances
at
the
last
several
City
Council
meetings
and
I
was
also
asked
to
draft
a
Statewide
initiative
to
decriminalize
these
substances
in
2022,
which
will
not
be
on
the
ballot.
We
urge
you
to
urgently
support
this
in
Boulder.
AC
They
lose
a
lot
of
economic
power
and
potential
when
corporations
come
in
and
monopolize
the
space
like
what
has
happened
with
the
legalization
of
cannabis
in
this
state
and
I'm
here
to
suggest
that
Boulder
actually
has
an
opportunity
here
to
be
a
leader
in
listening
to
indigenous
knowledge,
wisdom
and
history
and
allowing
there
to
be
a
decriminalization
of
these
medicines
before
there
is
regulation,
because
what
that
does
is
it
allows
people
to
organize
themselves?
AC
The
ones
who
are
in
Legacy
communities
to
take
part
in
whatever
may
happen,
with
commercial
space,
but
also
to
teach,
and
if
we
are
to
listen
to
the
wisdom,
we
really
will
have
a
longer
more
sustainable
relationship
with
these
medicines,
which,
as
Nicole
just
told
us
can
cure,
can
help
can
really
help
in
disease
situations
where
other
options,
other
West
Western
Medical
options
have
not
helped
I.
Thank
you
for
your
time
and
I.
Also,
thank
you
for
your
concern
about
the
bees.
AD
Good
evening,
council
members,
a
quick
shout
out
to
Bob
Yates,
your
Boulder
bulletin,
is
great:
read
every
month,
super
informative
and
very
concise,
so
love
it
speaking
to
you
tonight
in
support
of
the
new
Northern
ordinance
proposed
and
with
specifical
support
from
the
impact
we'll
hopefully
have
on
the
University
Hill
area.
My
name
is
Nigel.
Warbold
I
live
on
9th
Street
on
University
Hill,
with
my
family.
We
have
young
children,
we
have
dogs
and
we
have
elderly
Neighbors.
AD
We
like
to
be
a
part
of
this
neighborhood
and
like
to
help
our
neighbors,
both
young
and
old
students,
as
well
as
elderly
couples.
You
know,
we've
we've
lived
here
for
a
number
of
years
and
realized
that
it's
it's
better
to
be
proactive
with
students
in
our
neighborhood.
We
initially
go
over
and
moving
in
day
and
we
provide
them
with
a
little
bit
of
a
cheat
sheet
for
living
on
the
hill.
We
help
them
understand.
You
know,
there's
bears
in
the
neighborhood
how
you
handle
your
trash.
AD
We
also
give
them
ideas
on
how
they
can
work
with
us.
You
know
within
the
community
if
they
want
to
have
parties
how
they
can
keep
the
noise
down,
knowing
that
they
have
elderly
people
around,
and
maybe
they
could
help
shovel
their
driveways.
I
would
say.
I
would
like
to
say
that
this
is
a
positive
interaction
and
always
very
fruitful.
Sometimes
it's
like
it
meets
deaf
ears.
H
H
I'm
afraid
we'll
have
to
come
back
to
you.
So
let's
move
on
to
Glenn
Knott
and
valinda
Jones
and
Carter
Hilty.
AE
It's
Christine
Knott
and
we
live
at
3490
Catalpa
way.
Thank
you
for
your
time
in
reviewing
the
document
that
we
sent
earlier
today.
We
are
here
tonight
to
raise
concerns
with
you
regarding
the
lack
of
attention
really
by
the
city
of
Boulder
for
the
flooding
of
our
property
at
3490
Catalpa
way
over
the
past
eight
years,
and
we
hope
we
can
get
some
resolution
to
this
ongoing
and
frustrating
issue.
AE
The
flooding
was
due
to
the
rerouting
of
water
from
the
2014
Pine
View
Park
restoration
project
in
response
to
the
hundred
year,
flood
or
Thousand-Year
flood
that
occurred
on
September
15
2013.,
as
we
outlined
the
deck
we
said
earlier
today.
Every
time
we
experience
more
than
10
minutes
of
rain
in
front
of
our
property,
including
the
front
path,
the
driveway
Etc.
AE
This
all
fills
up
with
water,
which
is
damaging
the
front
steps
of
our
house,
eroding
the
landscape
and
making
it
impossible
to
walk
out
of
our
front
door
without
stepping
into
four
inches
of
standing
water
prior
to
2014.
We
did
not
experience
any
flooding
or
any
of
these
issues
on
our
property
and
we've
owned
our
property
since
August
of
2010..
Our
concern
has
been
raised
with
the
city
on
numerous
occasions.
On
each
occasion,
representatives
from
the
cities
acknowledge
the
issue.
AE
A
case
is
open,
but
only
to
have
it
quickly
closed
with
the
city,
denying
any
liability
and
refusing
to
assist
us
in
resolving
the
problem
in
the
most
interaction
with
the
city.
Last
month,
August
2022,
as
the
flooding
of
our
property,
had
become
made
worse
by
the
road
surfacing
that
was
done
on
Catalpa
way
and
Clover
Circle
that
was
completed
in
2021.
AE
We
noticed
that
when
we
returned
after
our
extended
stay
in
Australia
after
an
18-month
sabbatical,
we
noticed
that
the
road
surfacing
that
was
done
in
2021
by
the
city,
where
they
try
to
contain
the
water
with
a
burn
between
the
road
and
our
home,
only
caused
the
issue
to
worsen
and
now
every
time
it
rains
standing
water
remains
days
after
the
rain
event.
As
noted,
we
forwarded
a
PowerPoint
presentation
this
afternoon
outlining
the
details
requesting
the
city
of
Boulder
action
or
concerned.
H
H
Time
is
up,
I
I,
don't
think
I
received
anything
from
you
this
afternoon.
Did
anyone
on
Council,
so
I
would
request
that
you
resend
that
those
materials,
so
we
can
review
them
and
we'll
have
somebody
get
back
to
you.
H
F
Hi
Boulder
City,
Council
I
am
Belinda
and
it's
an
honor
to
speak
here
today
in
favor
of
decriminalizing
psychedelics.
My
background
is
in
research
and
development
and
chemistry
here
in
Boulder
and
I'm
I'm,
honestly
wouldn't
be
here
today.
F
If
it
wasn't
for
my
access
to
these
psychedelics
and
I'm,
proud
to
be
a
black
and
Asian
woman
in
stem
who
is
continuously
breaking
glass
ceilings
with
my
research,
insights
and
discoveries
in
the
name
of
Science
and
advocate
for
mental
health,
before
I
moved
to
Colorado
I
lived
in
Texas,
where
I
have
dealt
with
depression
anxiety
for
almost
23
years,
and
it
wasn't
until
I
was
introduced
to
a
few
psychedelic
substances
such
as
LSD
and
psilocybin.
That
allowed
me
to
shift
my
Consciousness
and
heal
myself
from
one
of
Team
belief
systems.
F
Not
only
did
this
help
help
with
my
depression,
but
I
have
not
been
depressed
for
over
four
years.
Four
years
now
and
has
allowed
me
to
be
more
creative
in
my
thought
process
when
it
came
to
my
research-
and
it
was
interesting
to
see
that
as
I
dive
into
the
research
that
had
so
much
Social
stigma
and
it
has
harmed
many
communities
of
color,
including
me,
the
Warren
drugs
have
harmful
and
they
successfully
attach
the
negative
stigma.
To
these
molecules.
F
Psychedelics
are
a
quiz
essential
example
of
what
happens
to
a
topic
when
it
becomes
so
politicized
and
it
can
no
longer
be
discussed
in
an
open
and
Fair
Way.
Despite
the
fact
that
in
the
1950s,
psychedelics
were
already
showing
incredible
promise
as
a
mental
health
treatment,
they
were
banned
from
science
for
decades
due
to
their
association
with
the
culture
of
radical
expression
that
threatened
the
status
queue
politician,
thought
there's
an
even
American
public
were
blinded
by
the
symbolism
of
these
drugs,
incapable
of
regarding
them
as
a
medicine.
F
If
we
don't
allow
the
community
here
to
be
on
the
Forefront
of
these
substance,
I
I
believe
that
Boulder
is
able
to,
and
you
guys
can
be,
the
Forefront
and
Pioneer
for
it.
The
mental
health
system
reaches
only
a
fraction
of
people
suffering
from
these
disorders,
most
of
whom
are
discouraged
from
seeking
treatment
by
its
cost
and
social
stigma.
F
If
you
take
into
account
of
the
community,
Boulder
County
can
lead
and
be
the
Forefront
on
taking
a
radical
approach
and
decriminalizing
nature
for
our
current
and
upcoming
Generations
by
listening
to
the
community
and
and
without
these
prejudices
built
into
our
current
drug
laws.
Thank.
B
Hi
Council,
my
name
is
Carter
Hilty
I
am
a
boulder
native
as
well
as
a
law
student
at
the
University
of
Colorado
Boulder.
Today,
I
wanted
to
talk
about
adverse
effects
that
your
city,
ordinances
and
policies
can
have
on
underrepresented
populations
and
people
of
color,
as
well
as
college
students.
B
As
an
example,
Municipal
Code,
section
985,
occupancy
of
dwelling
units
is
a
recently
passed
ordinance
that
has
been
very
contentious
in
the
public
opinion,
limiting
the
amount
of
family
members
and
people
who
can
reside
in
one
dwelling
at
one
time,
these
ordinances
as
an
issue
of
access
or
extremely
inaccessible,
particularly
to
communities
from
other
cultures
who
English
is
particularly
not
their
not
their
language
of
choice.
B
For
example,
the
most
accessible
information
on
this
ordinance
is
found
on
the
boulder
website,
where
it
is
listed
that
a
family,
as
defined
by
the
city's
Municipal
Code
plus
two
unrelated
people,
are
allowed
to
live
in.
The
dwelling
I
realize
that
if
you
click
the
link
to
find
where
in
the
municipal
code
family
is
defined,
there
is
actually
no
definition
of
family.
Rather,
there's
a
list
of
somewhat
complicated
factors
that
I
assume
the
city
would
use
to
determine
whether
a
dwelling
was
occupied
legally
or
illegally
in
an
enforcement
proceeding.
B
If
you
are
a
member
of
an
underrepresented
population,
a
person
of
low
socioeconomic
status
or
a
non-english
speaker,
this
is
an
extremely
difficult
thing
to
navigate,
particularly
when
these
ordinances
are
enforced
irregularly
by
the
city.
Beyond
that,
the
municipal
code
itself
is
there's
no
option
when
looking
at
it
to
translate
it
out
of
English
Boulder's,
two
largest
minority
populations
or
three
are
a
Hispanic
descent
population,
Asian
populations,
including
those
from
Nepal
and
African
Americans.
B
There's
no
option
to
translate
the
municipal
code
into
Spanish
or
Nepali
for
use
of
accessibility,
so
I
would
just
encourage
the
council
to
take
these
factors
into
account
when
making
policies
and
ensure
that
access
is
or
that
these
resources
are
freely
accessible
to
the
public.
Thank
you.
Thank
you.
Carter.
AF
AF
Safety
issues
that
are
impacting
residents,
businesses
and
even
tourists
in
our
community
I'm
finding
it
very
concerning
that
this
is
a
topic
that
seldom,
if
ever
discussed
in
City
Council
meetings,
I'd
like
to
share
just
a
few
comments
from
community
members
that
have
been
posted
on
social
media.
Just
within
the
past
week,
my
94
Honda
Accord
was
stolen.
Last
Wednesday
in
front
of
my
house
on
14th
Street
I
was
in
the
plaza
where
the
Walnut
Cafe
is
off
of
30th.
This
morning,
a
person
smashed
the
bus
stop
yelling
and
screaming.
AF
He
ran
down
the
alley
between
Christie's
and
the
plaza
banging
on
business
doors.
Several
businesses
on
the
Pearl
Street
Mall
had
their
Windows
smashed
last
night
for
one
of
them.
It's
the
fifth
time
in
the
past
few
months,
I
had
a
nice
morning
at
the
farmers
market,
our
daughters
loved
the
water.
So
we
walked
over
to
throw
a
stone
or
two
into
the
creek.
Where
we
found
a
needle
and
trash
floating
Downstream.
We
were
quickly
reminded
why
we
avoid
downtown.
AF
AG
Hi,
can
you
hear
me?
Yes,
we
need
to
talk
about
the
late
great
Gilbert
white,
one
of
only
five
CU
Boulder
winners
of
the
national
medal
of
science
ever
CU
also
has
five
Nobel
Prize
winners.
Ever
according
to
cu's
website
Gilbert
is
known
first
as
the
father
of
floodplain
planning,
and
that
is
the
heart
of
the
CU
South
debate.
AG
Sia's
website
says,
quote:
White's
Landmark
work,
beginning
with
his
1942
University
of
Chicago
doctoral,
dissertation
human
adjustment
to
floods,
challenges
the
notion
that
natural
hazards
are
best
addressed
by
engineering
Solutions.
Instead,
he
argued
that
the
Havoc
wrought
by
floods
and
other
natural
disasters
may
be
better
avoided
by
modifying
human
behavior
to
reduce
potential
harm.
White
won
that
debate
and
now
wise
communities
around
the
world
follow
his
advice,
except
here
now
in
Boulder,
where
he
founded
and
directed
The
Natural
hazards
Institute
at
CU.
AG
Here
now,
the
misleaders
of
morally
bankruptcu
still
invest
student
money
in
fossil
fuels
as
fire
flood
and
famine
overtake
the
Earth
and
are
planning
complicated,
untested
doubtful
engineering
solutions
for
a
hundred
year
flood,
while
white
told
the
city
three
decades
ago
to
plan
for
a
500-year
flood.
Since
climate
change
has
exploded
since
then
we
should
plan
for
even
worse.
Everyone
should
learn
about
this
wonderful
man,
my
friend
in
his
twenties.
He
was
a
close
advisor
to
FDR.
I.
AG
H
AH
All
right,
hello,
Boulder,
City,
Council,
it's
an
honor
to
speak
on
behalf
of
plant
medicine
and
psychedelic
substance.
Decriminalization
LSD
was
one
of
the
most
formative
experiences
of
my
life.
Yes,
those
10
hours
or
so
on.
A
camping
trip
in
the
desert
with
good
friends,
was
fun
and
Goofy,
but
the
real
changes
in
work
and
personal
transformation
happened
over
the
following
six
months
and
the
personal
growth
continues
to
this
day.
AH
They
say
you
only
need
to
do
psychedelics
once
to
see
a
major
benefit,
and
this
is
true
in
my
case
a
year
before
my
experience,
my
dad
passed
away.
Suddenly
my
serious
girlfriend
and
I
broke
up
in
my
career
in
social
media
advertising
exposed
itself
as
an
unfulfilling
jobs,
supporting
manipulative
addiction.
AH
All
three
happened
in
one
month,
so
my
role
model,
my
love
and
my
career
were
gone
throughout.
My
life
I
never
really
deviated
off
the
track.
That
was
laid
out
for
me
as
an
upper
middle
class,
well-socialized
white
male,
so
I
was
unprepared
for
this
Trifecta
of
trauma.
The
conservative
life
approach
was
failing
and
I
was
stuck.
AH
I
was
repressing
what
happened
and
avoiding
the
changes
I
needed
to
make
LSD
and
the
Psychedelic
experience
is
a
catalyst
for
personal
change.
Lst
gave
me
the
courage
to
quit
my
job
to
do
something
that
mattered.
That
was
helping
so
I
took
an
extreme
pay
cut
to
12.50
an
hour
at
the
king
supers
on
Arapahoe
in
the
meat
department.
Imagine
stocking
shelves
at
minimum
wage
mid
pandemic
after
making
80
grand
and
not
having
an
existential
crisis.
AH
I
later
manage
that
department
and
leveraged
that
experience
into
a
new
career.
That
I'm,
proud
of
LSD,
gave
me
the
empathy
to
understand
on
my
ex
needed
to
live
her
life
and
do
what
was
best
for
her
and,
most
importantly,
LSD
gave
me
the
courage
to
approach
the
death
of
my
father.
I
now
have
a
personal
philosophy
that
has
been
my
Center
rather
than
the
rather
than
following
the
path
that
culture
says
we
should.
My
question
for
you
is
if
LSD
is
a
catalyst
for
personal
change,
should
personal
change
be
illegal?
AH
H
AI
Great
thank
you
for
having
me
it's
a
pleasure
to
be
with
you
and
to
hear
all
the
thoughtful
comments
from
the
other
presenters.
My
name
is
Tyler
hollenbach
I'm,
a
C
I'm,
a
Colorado
Native
and
a
CU
law
student
I
first
want
to
commend
the
city
for
its
vision
and
work
in
sustainability
and
waste
management.
The
circular
Boulder
Vision,
including
the
research
and
strategic
plans,
in
particular
the
life
cycle,
analysis
of
differing
waste
streams
and
pain
points,
was
informative,
I
think
more
people
should
read
it.
AI
Zero
wastefuls
are
equally
inspiring
and
the
plans
to
achieve
them
seem
to
be
well
constructed,
I'm
hoping
they're
being
implemented
I'm
here
to
voice
my
support
for
continued
action
and
focus
on
composting,
Recycling
and
circular
economy
initiatives
in
Boulder
and
Beyond.
In
light
of
the
producer
responsibility
legislation
that
was
recently
passed
this
year
in
the
Colorado
legislature,
I
imagine
there
may
be
uncertainty
regarding
overlapping
or
conflicting
mechanisms
at
the
state
and
local
level.
AI
There
may
also
be
pressure
on
municipalities
and
yourselves
to
reduce
their
your
budgetary
allocations
for
similar
programs,
so
as
not
to
duplicate
work.
I
want
to
say
that,
while
the
producer
responsibility
act
takes
meaningful
steps
to
provide
a
common
standard
for
Statewide
recycling,
it
does
not
go
far
enough
to
encourage
Innovation
and
leaves
room
for
more
immediate
implementation
of
circular
economy.
AI
Concepts
on
a
local
level,
where
I
see
the
biggest
opportunity
for
continued
emphasis
is
in
two
areas:
education
and
facilitation
for
proper
use
of
existing
Recycling
and
composting
infrastructure
in
the
city
and
the
Banning
of
use
of
non-compostable
single
serving
items
in
certain
key
sectors
when
a
boulder
resident
goes
gets,
take
out
and
has
to
make
decisions
on
what
to
compost,
what
to
recycle
and
what
to
send
to
the
landfill.
There
is
a
high
likelihood
that
waste
will
end
up
in
the
wrong
place.
AI
I'd
like
to
ask
you
all
to
evaluate
the
low-hanging
fruit
and
strongly
push
for
local
ordinances,
mandating
that
all
retail
and
food
businesses
in
the
city
use
only
compostable
packaging
and
utensils
packaging
materials
already
exist.
To
make
this
a
reality,
an
incremental
cost
to
businesses
and
consumers
would
be
manageable.
In
addition,
the
additive
cost
would
maybe
serve
to
drive
businesses
away
from
their
unsustainable
practices.
Thank
you.
Thank.
AJ
I
have
a
story
about
food
of
an
international
student
from
Abu
Dhabi,
that
is
a
grad
student
in
Aeronautical
Engineering
at
CU
and
can't
eat
on
the
campus
Because.
The
CU.
The
center
for
Community
has
food,
but
big
long
lines
for
all
the
undergraduate
students
and
the
UMC
has
lousy
food
and
a
Subway.
So
he
orders
food
in
a
50
pound
box
once
a
week,
and
it
comes
with
these
gel
Frozen
gel
cubes
that
keep
the
food
preserved.
And
do
you
know
what
those
gel
cubes
are
they're
a
toxic
material?
AJ
They
have
to
go
in
the
landfill,
apparently
there's
unless
you
dry
them
out,
and
how
would
you
do
that
they
can
be
reused,
but
they
have
very
little
times.
You
can
reuse
them
when
you
open
them
up
and
drain
out
the
gel.
Who
knows
where
you
put
the
gel,
then
you
have
to
take
the
plastic,
because
it's
a
special
kind
of
plastic
to
the
Hazardous
Waste
Center
now
see
you
I
thought
is
world
class
in
the
atmospheric
sciences
and
in
climate
change,
and
this
is
what
they're
doing
to
their
grad
school
students.
AJ
The
grad
school
students
have
to
order.
This
toxic
material
for
their
food,
because
CU
cannot
provide
food
for
them
what's
wrong
with
this
picture
and
all
the
grad
students
at
CU
South,
what
about
them?
What
about
the
services
for
them
and
what
about
the
toxic
materials
coming
from
them?
He
happens
to
be
in
the
Aerospace
industry.
Well,
the
Aerospace
department
at
CU
can't
find
the
space
for
toxic
material
projects,
projects
that
require
toxic
materials
in
the
city
of
Boulder.
AJ
H
AK
Can
you
hear
me?
Yes,
all
right
thanks
for
sticking
with
me,
you'd
think
I
could
figure
out
a
zoom
meeting
by
this
time.
AK
I
am
calling
in
about
the
the
homeless
re
coordination
Center,
whatever
the
one
that
somebody
called
a
a
country
club
for
transients
I.
Think
that
in
in
many
many
places
this
could
be
a
good
idea,
places
that
don't
have
resources
places
that
don't
have
maybe
don't
have
coordinated
entry,
don't
have
shelter
options,
don't
have
people
out
there,
ambassadors
out
there
actually
going
to
where
these
people
in
need
of
assistance
are
and
trying
to
get
them
signed
up.
AK
I'm,
not
sure
what
we're
doing
with
it
here
in
Boulder
I
mean
for
the
people
that
that
are
kind
of
like
pushing
this.
Is
it?
Is
it
just
checking
a
box?
AK
Is
it
really
going
to
move
the
needle
as
it
were
it
doesn't?
It
doesn't
seem
to
me
that
this
is
filling
a
need
that
we
have
in
Boulder.
AK
There
are
other
examples
around
the
country
of
of
similar
kind
of
low
barrier
assistance
places
and
the
record
on
those
is
not
good
bad
in
most
cases
and
they're
they're
abandoned
and
shut
down
it.
Just
it
seems
to
me,
like
this,
is
not
a
a
wise
place
to
divorce,
devote
precious
resources,
I
think
Mental
Health
and
making
making
some
of
our
current
options
compulsory
is
where
our
efforts
are
needed.
Thank
you.
Thanks
Christian.
H
AL
No
responses
for
me
today
just
grateful
for
everyone
who
spoke
and
happy
to
answer
any
questions.
Great.
AM
H
Thanks
for
that
Bob
then
Mark
and
Nicole
Matt.
Sorry.
K
Just
a
question
for,
for
you,
Chris
I,
know
we'll
have
a
presentation
tonight
from
housing,
Human,
Services
I.
Imagine
we'll
probably
touch
for
for
a
few
minutes
during
that
presentation
on
the
day,
shelter
but
I
did
we
had
some
speakers
who
are
apparently
in
the
impression
that
the
decision
has
been
made
to
locate
a
day,
shelter
in
downtown,
and
could
you
maybe
clarify
that
or
correct
that
if
that's
not,
if
that's
not
accurate,.
AL
Yeah
I'd
be
happy
to
answer
that
question
and
a
location
for
the
day.
Center
has
not
been
selected
right
now.
We
are
in
the
process
of
exploring
what
services
a
day
Center
could
provide.
After
that
work
is
done,
then
there'll
be
an
entire
process
to
talk
about
potential
locations
for
a
day,
Center
and
I
know
Kurt
and
his
team
are
going
to
talk
a
little
bit
more
about
that
in
the
presentation
later
tonight.
But
you
are
correct.
I
Thanks
Aaron,
so
my
question
is
really
with
regard
to
some
of
the
testimony
we've
had
regarding
CU
South
in
the
annexation
and
so
I.
I
Don't
know
if
we
want
to
ask
our
res
one
of
our
Council
experts
here,
mayor,
Pro,
tem
friend,
or
if
we
have
someone
on
staff
dancer
but
really
was
addressing
two
questions
that
we've
heard
why
the
city
ended
up,
not
choosing
the
500-year
flood,
flood
protection
and
then
the
second
question
is
really
around
the
idea
that
doesn't
the
city
actually
gain
a
lot
of
open
space
as
a
result
of
annexation.
More
than
we.
I
AL
Sure
and
I
was
just
looking
to
see
if
anyone
from
our
utilities
team
was
here
as
well
and
I,
don't
think
they
are
logged
into
the
meeting,
but
I
do
know
both
of
those
are
common
questions
that
we've
received
and
there's
a
pretty
detailed
FAQ
on
the
city
website.
I.
T
AL
Don't
have
it
here
in
front
of
me,
but
I,
don't
wanna
I,
don't
want
to
guess
that
the
answer
is
until
I
pull
them
up.
So
if
somebody
else
knows
them,
oh
there's
Joe
Walking,
In,
Yo,.
AN
AO
AO
Gonna
get
right
in
there
all
right
the
question
about
the
500
year
flood
and
why
we
didn't
select,
it
really
came
down
to
technical
issues.
We
were
not
able
to
match
the
existing
conditions
out
there,
which
is
important
to
get
the
approvals
that
we
need
from
regulating
agencies
like
FEMA,
so
it
had
a
lot
of
problems,
but
that
was
the
fundamental
one
that
kept
us
from
selecting
it.
I
Appreciate
that
Joe,
the
second
question
had
to
do
with.
Does
the
city
have
a
lot
to
gain
with
regards
to
open
space
as
a
result
of
the
annexation
agreement?.
AO
Yeah,
so
in
the
annexation
agreement.
Well,
the
the
flood
project
will
impact
about
five
acres
of
open
space
property
adjacent
to
us-36,
between
Boulder,
Creek
and
cu's
property,
and
in
the
annexation
agreement
there
is
119
Acres
that
is
designated
as
open
space
other
and
the
annexation
agreement
is
allowing
us
to
acquire
that
once
we
get
all
the
approvals
that
we
need
for
the
flood
project.
I
AN
You
can't
withhold
water
there,
and
then
there
was
also,
though,
a
much
higher
environmental
impact
on
protected
species
and
habitat
and
then
a
third
reason
was
it
was
going
to
be
some
30
to
40
million
dollars
more,
which
would
inhibit
us
from
doing
other
properties.
So,
given
that
100
years
sort
of
the
gold
standard
and
and
500
was
aspirational,
we
just
couldn't
get
there.
Even
if.
C
AP
AO
C
AO
I
Joe,
the
other
one
was
a
clarifying
with
we
had
a
resident
talk
about
sort
of
the
elections
in
one
of
our
Charter
Amendment
changes.
That's
coming
to
the
ballot
with
regards
to
whether
someone
can
run
for
multiple
offices
at
the
same
time
and
I
think
it's
just
worth
clarifying,
because
there
was
a
slide
that
talked
about
how
we've
had
multiple
mayoral
elections
over
the
past
few
years
and
I.
Think
it's
just
worth
clarifying.
I
We
haven't
had
a
mayoral
election
by
the
residents
in
over
100
years,
and
starting
next
year
will
be
the
first
election
of
a
mayor
and
so
I,
just
it's
worth
clarifying
for
anybody.
Listening
that
We've
upped
to
this
point
appointed
the
mayor
among
nine
people
on
Council,
but
this
will
be
the
first
election
next
year,
where
the
people
actually
have
a
say
in
who
our
mayor
is
so
just.
C
AQ
Thank
you,
and
thanks
Bob
for
asking
my
first
question
for
me,
my
next
question
and
this
this.
Maybe
we
can
come
back
to
this
during
the
homelessness
discussion.
Somebody
mentioned
Bridge
house,
which
is,
is
certainly
an
amazing
model
for
for
folks
who
are
kind
of
exiting
homelessness.
AQ
My
understanding,
though,
is
that
the
those
44
beds
that
bridge
house
has
there's
a
very
specific
criteria
on
who
is
able
to
be
in
those
beds
and
that
there
are
a
lot
of
contracts
with
the
Department
of
Corrections,
for
example,
that
govern
that,
and
a
lot
of
those
folks
are
actually
not
kind
of
Boulder's
population
of
people
experiencing
homelessness.
AQ
AL
Yeah
Nicole,
thank
you
for
the
question
and,
let's
see
if,
when
we
get
to
the
presentation
tonight,
if
somebody's
able
to
answer
that
question.
H
AQ
AQ
More
sorry,
this
was
somebody
mentioned
occupancy
and
I
know
that
that's
on
our
Council
work
plan,
because
we
decided
on
that
in
January.
But
what
I
couldn't
remember
is
when
it's
coming
up
for
an
update
on
our
Council
agenda
and
I
was
just
wondering
Chris.
If
you
could
fill
us
in
on
that,
so
the
community
can
stay
tuned
at
least
have
an
idea
of
when
that's
coming.
Let.
AL
Me
go
look
that
up
and
I
will
let
you
know
in
just
a
second.
AR
Thank
you,
Aaron
I
just
wanted
to
address
one
of
the
presentations
that
Caitlyn
made
around
minimum
wage.
So
right
now
we
are
working
through
the
Consortium
of
cities,
minimum
wage
working
group
to
look
at
a
regional,
a
regional
minimum
wage
with
representatives
from
Boulder
County,
the
county,
the
city
and
county
of
Broomfield
Longmont,
Lewisville,
Nederland
Erie
and
a
growing
list
of
communities
around
us
and
our
hope
is
to
bring
a
large
number
of
communities
together
in
this
effort
to
look
at
a
higher
Regional
minimum
wage
on
September
21st.
H
M
H
AL
Chris
and
to
answer
your
question
right
now,
the
council
priority
around
occupancy
is
scheduled
for
this
fall
as
the
first
initial
scoping
conversation
tentatively
October
November
right
now,.
H
Great
and
then
I
would
just
as
it
sounds
like
the
the
Glenn
and
not
and
and
his
wife,
whose
name
I'm
sorry
I
didn't
catch
where
it
had
sent
in
something
about
their
property.
Can
we
just
track
down?
If
maybe
somebody
received
that
yep.
AL
We
were
able
to
track
down
that
presentation
and
I
just
forwarded
it
to
all
of
the
council
members.
In
addition,
I've
connected
them
with
Joe
tatayuchi's
team
via
email,
so
that
they
can
take
a
further
look
as
well.
H
H
And
I'm
just
going
to
make
a
couple,
quick
comments
and
then
I'll
look
to
my
colleagues.
One
is
that
I
wanted
to
give
a
huge
congratulation
and
thank
you
to
the
city's
finance
department
for
yet
another
successful
audit
report,
as
Dr
Gross
mentioned
earlier,
so
I,
don't
think
they're
in
the
room
anymore,
but
phenomenal
work.
Everybody
in
the
finance
team
really
appreciate
all
that.
You
do
keep
the
city
on
track
financially
and
the
other
one
was
I
just
wanted
to
make
a
note
to
we've
been
getting
some
emails
from
folks
regarding
ordinance,
8534.
H
That's
about
the
ballot
measure,
question
of
whether
to
repeal
the
earlier
ordinance
8482
regarding
the
annexation
of
Cu
South,
and
there
have
been
some
requests
to
change
the
ballot
language
I
did
just
want
to
mention
that
we
had
advice
earlier
advice
from
our
city
attorney's
office
that
our
current
ballot,
language
that's
proposed
is
appropriate
and
legal,
and
just
note
that
we
did
consult
expert
outside
opinion,
a
legal
expert
in
the
area
of
Colorado
election
law
and
they
corroborated
our
city,
staff's
legal
opinion.
H
So
just
wanted
to
mention
that
before
we
pass
that
that
consent
agenda
item,
any
comments
or
questions
on
the
agenda,
I
got
Mark
and
then
Rachel.
AS
I
I
have
no
question
about
that
hour.
The
wording
of
the
ordinance
with
respect
to
the
repeal
of
Cu
South
is
legal,
but
I'm
not
sure
it's
the
best
way
to
go
and
again
I'm
saying
this
is
someone
who
does
not
favor
that
referendum
and
will
not
vote
for
that
referendum,
but
I
do
like
or
prefer
to
have
parties
have
a.
C
AS
Understanding
of
what
they
are
voting
for
or
against
and
I
think
some
of
that
language
would
have
been
usefully
exchange
for
what
the
the
petitioners
are
requesting.
I.
AT
AS
Not
the
will
of
counsel
and
I
know,
that's
not
the
will
of
counsel,
but
I
think
it
would
have
been
a
practical
thing
to
do.
That
would
not
have
impacted
the
vote
in
any
way,
but
would
have
simply
made
it
clearer
for
all
citizens
thanks
yep.
I
So
I
just
want
to
follow
up
with
your
point
there
mark
and
raises
a
question
for
Teresa
if,
if
all
things
were
equal-
and
this
is
purely
discretionary,
we'd
right-
we
could
change
the
language,
but
wasn't
there
some
a
concern
that
by
changing
the
language,
we
could
then
open
ourselves
up
to
some
legal
fuzziness,
more
or
less,
and
so
I
just
want
to
make
sure
that
it
isn't
just
a
game
of
wordsmithing.
There
are
actual
potential
consequences
of
actually
modifying
the
language
outside
of
just
what
words
to
choose
is
that
correct.
AM
Yes,
I'd
invite
Kathy
haddock
into
this
conversation
as
well
at
this
time,
Kathy's
joining
us
remotely
this
evening,
that's
right
and
and
I'll
remind
Council
that
we
did
use
the
language
on
the
petition
and
while
it
may
be
in
Artful,
you
know
we
are
doing
our
best
to
to
be
responsive
to
to
that
language
and
to
put
forward
a
referendum
that
people
approved
by
their
petition
and
signatures.
AU
Thank
you
and
also
I
apologize
for
not
being
there,
but
very
much
appreciate
being
able
to
keep
my
cold
germs
at
home.
So
thank
you
for
that
and
I
agree
with
everything
that
Teresa
said,
and
you
know
as
we
do
these,
we
did
do
several
different
ways
of
trying
to
write
the.
AU
The
and
and
then
you
know,
had
other
people
poke
holes
in
the
language
and
so
do
feel
that
this
is
the
best
thing
to
do.
A
lot
of
the
reason
for
what
Teresa
said
that
that
is
what
was
on
the
petition
and
that
this
is
too
complex
of
an
ordinance
to
try
to
start
summarizing
and
determining
which
items
are
important
and
which
are
not
so
that
this
is
the
best
that
we
can
do
in
view
of
trying
that
this
the
ballot
title
is
a
summary
of
something
that's
very
complex.
H
It's
very
helpful
thanks
for
that
Kathy,
and
we
appreciate
you
not
sharing
your
germs
with
us,
but
just
sharing
your
expert
opinion
yeah
I.
AM
I
do
I
just
wanted
to
add
you
know,
we
understand
the
need
for
understanding
and
really
want
voters
to
to
understand
what
they're
voting
on
and,
to
that
end,
our
city
clerk,
Alicia
Johnson,
is
going
to
be
linking
84.83
on
the
ballot
measure
page
so
that
people
can
easily
access
that
ordinance
and
and
see
an
entirety.
The
many
complex
pieces.
AS
Thank
you
for
for
doing
that.
I
think
that
helps
remedy
the
the
problem
and
I
made
my
comments
with
no
expectation
that
Council
was
going
to
change
its
mind,
but
I
thought
they
were
appropriate
to
make.
Thank
you
appreciate.
H
It
right
seeing
no
other
hands.
Oh
sorry,
good
Rachel,.
AN
Well,
I
want
to
say
thank
you
as
an
attorney
to
Matt
for
using
the
word
fuzziness
to
describe
a
legal
situation
that
that's
that's
dead
on
in
a
lot
of
situations
and
and
I
appreciate.
Mark
raising
the
point.
I
think
that,
for
the
reasons
that
City
attorneys
have
laid
out,
it
would
be
legally
risky
for
us
to
change
the
language.
AN
I
also,
don't
know
that
the
proposed
language
actually
makes
it
any
more
clear,
so
I'm,
very
comfortable
staying
with
the
language
as
it
is,
and
but
I
had
raised
my
hand
actually
just
to
thank
Mark
and
Juni
for
doing
that.
Audit
work
for
the
rest
of
us.
That
would
not
be
my
top
choice
of
a
committee.
So
thank
you
for
digging
deep
and
keeping
our
City's
finances
safe.
It.
A
M
M
AQ
K
Yes,
on
all
of
them,
except
for
item
J,
the
even
year
election
development
measure,
which
I
vote
no
one.
A
A
H
A
Right,
sir,
thank
you
tonight.
Item
5A
under
public
hearings
is
our
second
reading
and
consideration
of
emotion
to
adopt
by
emergency
measure,
ordinance
8531,
amending
sections,
5-9-6,
unreasonable
noise,
prohibited
between
the
hours
of
11
pm
through
7
A.M
and
5-3-11
nuisance
party,
prohibited
BRC
1981
to
prohibit
unreasonable,
Amplified
noise
during
the
daytime,
as
well
as
nighttime
hours
and
setting
forth
those
related
details.
AL
Thank
you
and
I'm
happy
to
introduce
several
folks
from
our
city
team,
as
well
as
our
partners
that
are
going
to
help
present
this
item.
Sander
yanis
from
the
city
attorney's
office
is
going
to
begin
as
well
as
Brenda
rittenauer
from
our
Communications
and
engagement
department
is
here
on
the
diocese
as
long
as
as
well
as
some
remote
members.
So
with
that
I
will
turn
it
over
to
Sandra
to
take
it
away.
AV
AM
AV
So
the
item
presented
tonight
is
part
of
council's
work
plan
to
address
quality
of
life
issues
in
residential
neighborhoods.
This
ordinance
is
one
piece
of
a
bigger
plan
intended
to
address
these.
These
issues,
as
you
may
recall,
from
the
recent
presentation
to
Council
in
July
noise
was
identified
as
one
of
the
top
issues
in
terms
of
negatively
impacting
quality
of
life.
Citywide
City
staff
have
been
working
collaboratively,
Sandra.
AS
AV
AX
AM
AV
Thank
you
all.
Thank
you
for
your
patience.
Why
don't
I
start
again
for
this
slide,
and
so
the
item
presented
tonight
is
part
of
council's
work
plan
to
address
quality
of
life
issues
in
residential
neighborhoods.
This
ordinance
is
one
piece
of
a
bigger
plan
intended
to
address
these
issues.
As
you
may
recall,
from
the
recent
presentation
to
Council
in
July,
noise
was
identified
as
one
of
the
top
issues
in
terms
of
negatively
impacting
quality
of
life.
Citywide.
AV
City
staff
have
been
working
collaboratively
with
the
hill
revitalization
working
group
to
look
for
ways
to
address
the
noise
issue.
The
hill
revitalization
working
group
is
made
up
of
representatives
from
the
University
Hill
neighborhood
association
bar
High,
which
is
Boulder
area
rental,
Housing,
Authority,
CU,
representatives
from
local
government
and
community
relations,
student
affairs,
student
conduct,
restorative
justice,
student
government,
off-campus
housing
and
neighborhood
relations,
fraternity
and
sorority
life,
CU
police
department
and
City
staff.
AV
AV
This
work
includes
the
efforts
of
many
different
city
departments
and
City
partners.
As
you
can
see
from
this
long
list,
we
have
a
lot
of
folks
that
were
involved
in
this
work.
We
have
wonderful
Representatives
here
tonight
who
are
available
to
answer
questions
you
might
have
at
the
conclusion
of
this
presentation.
AV
AV
Amplified
noise
is
defined
as
Noise
by
means
of
any
electronic
amplifier.
This
ordinance
is
meant
to
address
egregious
daytime
noise,
resulting
from
Amplified
sound
in
residential
neighborhoods
throughout
the
city.
The
Amplified
noise
must
be
heard
from
200
or
more
feet
beyond
the
property
line
of
the
property
upon
which
the
loudspeakers
are
located.
AV
AV
AV
So
why
are
we?
Why
did
we
choose
200
feet
so
unreasonable
noise
and
unreasonable
Amplified
noise
is
prohibited
at
night,
with
a
measurement
of
100
or
more
feet
beyond
the
property
line
of
the
property
upon
which
the
loudspeakers
are
located?
The
proposed
new
ordinance
prohibits
unreasonable,
Amplified
noise
during
the
day
with
a
measurement
of
200
or
more
feet
beyond
the
property
line.
AV
AV
An
average
city
block
is
between
250
and
300
feet
in
terms
of
measuring
from
the
property
line.
That
would
be
the
property
line
of
a
single
family
dwelling
in
the
case
of
an
apartment
complex,
the
property
line
would
not
be
from
the
apartment
where
the
noise
is
emanating,
but
rather
the
property
line
of
the
apartment
building.
AV
The
same
is
true
for
manufactured
home
parks.
The
property
line
is
at
the
edge
of
the
park
and
not
individual
manufactured
homes.
AV
So
let's
talk
about
the
proposed
ordinance
tonight
and
what
it
doesn't
do
it
does
not
apply
to.
AY
AV
Noise,
the
current
code
prohibits
unreasonable,
unamplified
noise
at
night.
The
standard
is
no
yelling
screaming
shouting
louder
than
that
which
is
reasonably
necessary
for
normal
conversational
speech
on
public
property.
There's
also
a
whole
chapter
on
noise
in
the
code
that
addresses
anything
from
leapflo.
Excuse
me
leaf
blowers
to
loud
mufflers
construction,
noise,
Etc,
the
proposed
ordinance
is
specific
to
Amplified
noise.
During
the
day,
we
took
the
approach
that
the
main
noise
disturbances
were
related
to
parties
which
would
usually
have
Amplified
music.
AV
It's
an
objective
way
to
enforce
a
noise
violation.
It's
measured
by
distance.
It
doesn't
require
a
decibel,
sound
meter
or
special
officer
training.
It
doesn't
require
a
complainant,
an
officer
can
observe
the
violation,
and,
lastly,
it
provides
another
tool
for
police
to
intervene
prior
to
11
pm
before
a
party
may
get
out
of
control
later
in
the
evening
next
slide.
AF
AV
AV
The
proposed
ordinance
tonight
is
by
emergency.
What
that
means
is
that
if
it's
adopted
and
passed
it's
effective
immediately,
there
will
not
be
a
30-day
waiting
period.
The
basis
for
the
Emergency
is
the
need
to
implement
the
new
law
at
the
beginning
of
the
university
school
year,
when
there
is
a
propensity
for
increased
noise,
impacting
public
health
and
safety
next
slide
and
I'm
going
to
hand
it
off
to
Brenda
rittenauer.
Thank
you.
AW
All
right,
thank
you.
Can
you
hear
me
and
I
can
be
loud,
so
let
me
know
if
you
can't
so
my
name
is
Brenda
rittenauer
I
am
the
neighborhood
engagement
and
services
manager
for
this
city
and
have
been
the
staff
liaison
for
the
hill
revitalization
working
group
for
some
time,
I
also
conducted
the
community
engagement
for
this
proposed
noise
ordinance
change
the.
As
we
mentioned,
this
change
has
been
recommended
and
endorsed
by
the
hill.
Revitalization
working
group
Sandra
already
read
the
long
list
of
Partners
who
participate
on
that
group,
including
student
leaders.
AW
We
also
gathered
feedback
on
be
heard,
Boulder,
which
is
our
engagement
platform,
and
we
reported
that
out
to
you
in
the
memo
through
August
16th
and
then
yesterday
on
hotline,
you
received
an
updated
report
through
yesterday,
so
that
you
could
see
each
and
every
response
that
was
provided
on
be
heard.
Boulder.
In
summary,
160
feedback
participants
102,
who
saw
no
negative
impacts,
37
participants
shared
concerns,
including
some
respondents
who
live
on
the
hill,
sorry
to
push
all
the
buttons
we
wanted
to
share
with
you.
AW
We
also
heard
negative
impacts
shared
both
by
our
community
connectors
and
residents
and
on
be
heard.
Boulder
I
also
are
consultant.
Amanda
Nagel,
with
unlocking
government
who
works
with
the
working
group,
had
a
conversation
with
a
student
leader
who
is
part
of
a
fraternity
that
lives
on
the
hill
and
he
shared
many
of
the
same
concerns
that
are
on
this
slide
as
well.
AW
They
include
potential
for
increased
calls
to
police
motivated
by
racial
bias,
increase
in
us
against
them
mentality
between
neighbors
and
students
on
the
hill,
as
well
as
between
neighbors
and
other
parts
of
town,
as
this
is
city-wide
an
increase
in
police
presence
in
neighborhoods,
where
that
can
be
stressful
to
community
members.
AW
It
limits
the
ability
to
gather
with
others
to
play,
live
music
or
enjoy
recorded
music.
It
could
be
overreaching
or
results
in
Boulder
becoming
creating
Nanny
State
legislation
and
it
compromises
the
spirit
of
Boulder.
As
a
college
town,
we
wanted
to
share
some
of
the
ways
that
we
got
the
word
out
also
with
property
managers
with
our
partners
at
the
boulder
Area
Rental
Housing
Association.
AW
They
did
proactive
Outreach
to
their
members
and
the
city,
realizing
that
not
every
property
manager
or
rental
licensee
is
a
member
of
barha
also
reached
out
with
notification
to
over
7
500
rental
license
holders
in
the
city.
Our
entire
current
list,
both
we
and
barha
are
committed
to
reaching
back
out
to
those
lists.
AW
AZ
BA
Thanks
Devin
good
evening,
I'm
Lori
call
assistant,
Vice
Chancellor
for
local
government
and
Community
engagement
at
the
University
of
Colorado
Boulder
I'm,
here
with
Devin
Kramer,
our
dean
of
students.
This
evening,
as
members
of
the
Hill
revitalization
working
group,
we
have
been
part
of
the
discussions
over
many
months
that
led
to
the
recommended
ordinance
you
will
discuss
this
evening.
We
believe
that
this
ordinance
will
be
an
important
investment
and
we
strongly
support
it.
This
was
also
supported
by
the
students
who
have
participated
in
the
hill
revitalization
working
group.
BA
We
recognize
that
we
all
have
a
role
in
addressing
quality
of
life
issues
for
the
community
and
we
are
taking
additional
steps
to
be
mindful
of
C's
impact.
As
CU
Chancellor
de
Stefano
recently
announced,
we
are
planning
for
a
modest
half
percent
enrollment
increase
in
the
coming
years.
Most
of
that
will
occur
through
increased
focus
on
the
retention
of
existing
students
in
increased
graduate
student
enrollment,
rather
than
the
enrollment
of
additional
first-year
students.
BA
We
will
also
increase
our
on-campus
housing
inventory
to
help
alleviate
housing
pressures
in
the
broader
community,
and
we
will
continue
working
with
our
partners
at
the
city
to
address
quality
of
life
and
public
safety
concerns
off
campus.
On
that
one
invite
Devin
to
share
more
information
about
the
steps
that
his
team
will
be
taking
to
help
our
students
understand
their
role
in
our
broader
Boulder
Community
and
to
help
educate
them
on
being
good
neighbors
Devin.
AZ
Thanks
Lori,
as
Lori
stated,
my
name
is
Devin
Kramer
and
I'm.
The
acting
dean
of
students
at
CU,
Boulder,
I,
appreciate
you
having
me
tonight.
One
of
the
primary
mechanisms
CU
has
to
address
the
concerns
on
the
hill
and
throughout
the
Boulder.
Community
is
our
student
conduct
process,
which
I'll
talk
about
briefly
before
I?
Do
that
I
do
want
to
acknowledge
that
the
vast
majority
of
our
students
are
exceptional
citizens
of
Boulder
that
help
shape
this
wonderful
Community
with
their
activism
and
support
for
the
local
economy?
AZ
Boulder
is
an
Innovative
Hub
of
knowledge
and
Technology
thanks
in
part
to
our
students,
impressive
and
unique
ideas.
Those
impacts
are
what
it
means
to
be
a
buff.
A
very
small
percentage
of
those
students
are
also
of
our
students
are
causing
some
of
the
harm
that
we're
talking
about
today,
and
we
recognize
that
harm
can
also
have
a
very
large
impact.
AZ
First
I
want
to
say
in
an
effort
to
be
more
transparent
with
the
community
on
August
15th.
We
posted
annual
off-campus
conduct
status
statistics
for
the
first
time,
which
can
be
found
on
the
CU
student
conduct
webpage,
and
this
covers
our
last
Academic
Year.
AZ
Our
partnership
with
Boulder,
Police
and
and
Boulder
PD
records
is
I
think
one
of
the
primary
strengths
that
I
want
to
highlight.
Thus
far
since
August
1st
of
this
year,
we've
received
58
citations
from
the
Boulder
Police
Department
43
of
those
are
minor
in
possession
and
15
public
consumption
of
alcohol.
Of
those
we've
already
been
able
to
contact
21
students
and
the
other
37
will
be
contacted
in
the
coming
days.
AZ
These
numbers
don't
include
our
off
our
on-campus
violations
and
so
we're
a
little
slower
in
the
very
beginning
of
the
year,
because
of
that
large
number
of
on-campus
incidents
as
well.
This
is
important
because,
through
our
student
conduct
process,
when
a
student
is
found
responsible
for
violating
a
university
policy,
including
the
municipal
code
that
we're
talking
about
today,
we're
able
to
strike
a
balance
between
education
and
accountability,
our
educational
practices
are
modeled
off
of
National
best
standards
and
are
in
alignment
with
what
the
boulder
Municipal
Court
is
doing
in
their
approach.
AZ
Our
interventions
are
effective
when
we
see
that
a
student
causes
harm
to
their
Community.
Our
interventions
help
them
not
only
repair
that
harm
but
reflect
in
a
responsible
manner
on
their
use
of
substances
such
as
alcohol
and
create
future
plans
to
minimize
or
eliminate
that
harm.
As
I've
said,
Boulder
police
are
a
wonderful
partner
and
we
also
know
their
work.
AZ
Must
Fall
within
the
law,
despite
BPD
records,
having
a
very
timely
process
for
sending
us
reports,
which
we
greatly
appreciate
an
issue
we
face,
is
simply
a
lack
of
referrals
compared
to
the
harm
that
we
know
is
being
caused.
This
Municipal
Code
change
could
increase
those
referrals,
thus
increasing
our
early,
the
interventions
and
changing
behavior
and
creating
a
more
cohesive
Hill
environment.
Finally,
I
want
to
share
that
as
the
university
we
are
prepared
to
educate
our
students.
If
this
is
passed,
we
are
set
to
quickly
disseminate
information
starting
tomorrow
through
numerous
channels,
including
social
media.
AZ
AV
Thank
you
Devin
and
Lori.
Thank
you
so
much
for
your
partnership
and
all
the
work
that
you
put
into
this
next
we're
going
to
talk
about
the
next
slide,
yep.
Okay,
great.
So,
if
Council
adopts
the
proposed
ordinance
tonight,
we
will
be
tracking
the
impacts
of
the
ordinance
in
various
ways.
One
of
the
concerns
we
heard
from
our
community
engagement
is
the
potential
for
increased
calls
to
at
least
motivated
by
racial
bias.
The
data
on
current
noise
enforcement
does
not
support
any
racial
bias.
AV
Secondly,
our
team
is
looking
into
measuring
success
in
terms
of
metrics
associated
with
the
proposed
ordinance.
The
data
evaluation
will
likely
include
analysis
related
to
location
frequency
of
complaints
and
tickets,
acknowledging
that
there
may
be
an
uptick
in
the
number
of
tickets
issued
if
the
ordinance
passes
and
then
hopefully,
more
compliance
and
less
tickets
as
time
goes
on.
Furthermore,
we
will
continue
to
engage
our
community
to
receive
anecdotal
feedback.
AV
H
U
AV
I'm
happy
to
answer
that.
Thank
you.
Councilman
Josephs,
I
I
believe
that
the
current
ordinance
does
allow
for
flexibility
and
it's
an
ability
to
enforce
easier.
So
the
current
noise
ordinance
is
based
on
decibel
readings
and
would
require
a
sound
meter
or,
and
our
officers
are
not
trained
on
that,
and
so
because
of
this
new
ordinance,
they
would
be
able
to
just
Pace
off
the
200
feet
in
order
to
determine
whether
there
was
a
violation
or
not.
AV
So
it
makes
it
very
simple,
and
in
addition
to
that,
because
it
is
now
regulating
daytime
it's
covering
that
time
that
normally
wouldn't
be
addressed
before
11
pm
and
a
lot
of
the
parties,
as
we've
seen
start
earlier,
and
then
they
grow
and
grow
and
unfortunately,
by
the
time
we're
allowed
to
enforce
at
11
they've
grown
to
a
size
that
it's
difficult
to
manage.
So
this
will
give
us
an
opportunity
to
to
address
them
earlier.
AV
AQ
I
just
have
a
few
questions
and
thanks
for
the
presentation
and
thank
you
to
everybody,
who's
been
serving
on
this
working
group.
AQ
Truly
an
amazing
amount
of
work,
that's
gone
on
over
the
last
year
and
a
half
one
of
the
questions
that
I
have
is
just
around
the
amount
of
time
that
it
takes
to
respond
to
noise
complaints
in
terms
of
our
staff
time
and
not
just
sort
of
showing
up
to
the
house
and
dealing
with
and
complaint,
but
I
need
paperwork
or
anything
that
kind
of
may
come
after
that,
and
I
was
just
wondering
if
somebody
could
speak
to
the
amount
of
time
it's
going
to
be
taking.
AQ
This
may
be
a
question
for
our
wonderful
place,
they're
sitting
in
the
audience
there,
but
I
I'm,
just
curious
about
that.
BB
Good
evening
Council
Steve
Redford
and
Deputy
Chief
of
Police,
so
it's
a
great
question.
Typically,
it's
not
going
to
be
an
extended
amount
of
time.
The
proposed
ordinance
will
not
change
the
actual
response
other
than
as
we
talked.
We
currently
don't
have
some
of
the
tools
that
we
need
under
the
current
ordinance
in
the
in
the
such
as
a
decimal
meter,
and
things
like
that.
BB
So
this
will
actually
make
it
potentially
quicker
for
officers
if
it
meets
the
criteria
under
the
new
ordinance
to
to
be
able
to
issue
that
citation
in
those
cases
where
it
is
excessive.
Really
all
it
is,
is
trying
to
figure
out
when
we
get
there
who
the
responsible
person
is
for
the
party
for
the
house
for
the
apartment.
BB
Doing
you
know
some
initial
just
checking
to
verify
who's,
who,
what's
what
issuing
that
ticket
doesn't
take
long,
it's
a
it's
a
small
piece
of
paperwork,
and
then
there
might
be
some
ancillary
things
that
we
may
have
to
address.
If
there's
underage
people
there
they're
intoxicated
getting
responsible
adults
all
of
those
things,
but
normally
when
we're
doing
these
things,
we're
looking
at
20
to
30
minutes
maximum.
One
of
the
things
that
the
new
ordinance
will
help
with
is
currently
before
11
o'clock.
BB
We
need
a
reporting
party
to
call
dispatch
and
say
they'd,
like
a
police
officer,
to
come
out
to
deal
with
this
noise.
Now
we
don't
need
that.
The
officers
can
see
this
on
their
own
measure
it
as
as
sander
described,
and
be
able
to
take
action
on
those
really
loud.
Excessive
noise
so
actually
might
make
it
a
little
quicker
when
we,
when
we
are
not
having
to
go
contact
that
person
that
and
and
they
need
to
sign
a
complaints.
AQ
And
do
you
have
a
sense
if
there's
going
to
be
a
need
for
other
work
to
not
happen
or
other
complaints
and
things
to
not
be
responded
to,
because
I
know
that
all
of
our
all
of
our
staff
are
really
kind
of
crunched
for
time
right
now,
so
I'm
just
wondering
if
there's
a
trade-off
involved
here.
Sure.
BB
So,
normally
as
tonight
being
back
to
school,
our
neighborhood
impact
team,
our
Hill
team,
is
up
on
the
hill
they're
in
the
neighborhood
they're
out
on
foot.
They've
had
decent
success
in
the
last
couple
weeks
with
dealing
with
some
firework
issues:
noise,
complaints,
all
of
those
things
so
normally
they're
up
on
the
hill
out
on
foot,
interacting
with
students
granted.
If
we
have
a
major
emergency
in
another
part
of
the
city,
they
would
get
pulled
off
for
that.
If
it's
a
big,
a
big
call.
BB
So
yes,
if
it's
a
very
busy
night
summer
night,
whatever
the
case
may
be,
where
we
have
emergencies
or
higher
priority
calls.
Where
there's
you
know
life
or
limb
threat,
these
noise
complaints
could
potentially
not
be
addressed
in
a
timely
manner.
Normally,
our
response
times
are
are
fairly
quick,
we're
talking
under
under
10
minutes
or
so,
and
it's
a
big
party,
because
we
tend
to
get
a
lot
of
call
on
the
same
party.
AQ
BB
BB
If
you
look
back
to
some
of
the
issues
with
some
civil
unrest
we
had
in
March
of
21,
some
of
those
parties
started
very
early
in
the
day
and
continued
as
described
just
prior,
so
that
will
allow
us,
during
the
day
to
be
able
to
get
up
there
early,
whether
it's
to
initially
give
a
warning
or
say:
hey
right.
You
know
we
can
now
cite
you
for
this
without
a
complaint,
and
it
just
gives
us
another
tool.
We
know
it's
not
going
to
solve
every
every
issue
daytime.
BB
Our
calls
for
service
are
fairly
steady
but
I
think
quite
frankly,
during
the
day,
we
don't
have
the
same
number
of
in-progress
calls
that
we
do
in
the
evening
so
I
we'd
have
have
to
get.
You
know
we
could
look
at
data
on
calls
for
service
and
we've
done
that
I.
Don't
think
it's
going
to
make
a
a
significant
difference:
okay,.
AQ
Great,
thank
you
and
then
I
think.
That's
all
the
questions
that
I
have
for
PD.
Thank
you.
Thank
you.
The
other
question
that
I
had
was
just
around
the
engagement.
It
really
seems
like
this
was
developed
a
lot
with
the
Hill
with
folks
in
and
around
the
hill
and
I
was
just
wondering
if
you
could
give
an
estimate
of
how
how
of
sort
of
the
the
universe
of
Engagement
that
we
did
on
this.
What
percentage
would
would
you
say
was
specific
to
the
hill
versus
other
areas.
AW
Yeah,
so
certainly
this
was
this
idea
was
generated
by
the
hill
working
group,
so
it
started
and
originated
on
the
hill
I
looked
to
the
Goss
Grove
neighborhood
association,
because
when
I
looked
at
a
map
of
existing
noise
calls,
that
was
our
next
most
populous
area,
our
our
next
hot
spot
on
the
heat
map,
and
we
know
that
it's
also
a
heavily
student
populated
neighborhood.
AW
So
I
wanted
to
check
in
with
those
folks
as
well.
I
did
go
to
the
community
connectors
and
residence
because
I
wanted
to
make
sure
to
get
both
the
equity
lens
and
more
of
a
whole
city
lens,
and
then
we
advertised
the
be
heard
Boulder
site.
We
ran
a
spot
on
Channel
8
news
last
week.
Previous
to
that,
we
had
run
a
couple
different
spots
on
Nextdoor
that
were
city-wide.
I
know
that
at
least
23
different
neighborhoods
that
were
not
the
hill
participated
on
be
her
Boulder.
That
was
from
the
August
16th
report.
AW
I
can
can't
say
how
many
added
I
forgot
to
look
up
that
before
I
came,
but
we
could
look
it
up
together,
so
we
did
hear
from
other
neighborhoods,
certainly
not
in
the
concentration
that
we
heard
from
the
hill.
The
vast
majority
even
on
be
her
Boulder
of
who
we
heard
back
from
was
on
the
hill
and
I.
Imagine
that's
because
it
is
more
of
a
relevant
issue
to
that
Community
than
to
other
parts
of
the
city.
AR
AR
AV
Thank
you
for
the
question,
so
there
were
some
similarities,
I'm
thinking
of
Fort,
Collins
and
so
the
distance,
and
there
were
several
factors
that
they
take
into
consideration:
distance
being
one
of
them.
AV
AR
Okay,
thank
you,
I
was,
and
this
might
not
be
something
that
you
have
the
answer
for,
but
I
was
also
wondering
how
this
curing
something
at
this
distance
might
compare
to
the
decibel
level
that
we
currently
look
to
like.
Is
it
50
decibels
at
the
property
line?
And
you
know
it
is
that
something
that
at
200
feet
is
about
the
same,
or
you
know
something
that
you
can
hear.
That's.
AV
A
great
question
too:
so
it's
55
in
a
residential
area
and
I.
Don't
we
have
not
done
that
analysis?
It's!
It
would
be
very
interesting
to
find
out
I
think
that
the
challenge
with
decibel
readings
a
lot
of
times,
is
that
there's
ambient
noise
and
it
makes
it
really
challenging
to
figure
out
where
the
noise
is
coming
from
and
so
I
I
think.
This
is
a
much
more
objective
way
of
determining
a
violation.
AN
Thanks
for
the
presentation
and
all
the
work
you
have
both
done
on
this
for
years,
really
I
just
wanted
to
know
what
impact,
if
any,
would
this
have
on
things
like
modified
cars
or
motorcycles
with
like
that,
exhaust
or
muffler,
or
whatever
makes
that
I'm
getting
a
nod
from
Theresa
there
ahead
and
or
leaf
blowers
or
and
and
if
it
doesn't
have
any
impacts?
Will
we
look
at
that
separately
thanks.
AV
For
the
question,
so
our
Focus
was
related
to
the
work
plan
that
was
presented
to
us
from
Council,
and
so
the
focus
was
really
related
to
the
to
the
parties
and
the
noise
generated
from
from
those
activities.
AV
The
proposed
ordinance
does
not
address
those
types
of
noises
that
you've
mentioned.
They
are
in
the
current
code,
so
we
do
regulate
that
if
that's
something
that
Council
would
like
us
to
take.
Another
look
at
that
could
certainly
be
another
work
plan
item,
but
the
proposed
ordinance
does
not
make
any
changes
to
that.
AN
I
Thanks
for
the
clear
presentation
and
the
many
years
of
work
that
have
led
to
where
we
are
today.
BC
I
Question
concerns
around
what
we
hear
a
lot
in
email
and
other
concerns
about
fireworks.
So
those
aren't
nuisance
parties,
that's
not
a
regular
sound.
You
can
track
it's
a
one-off
and
then
you
know
trying
to
track
it
down.
My
question
has
to
really
go
around
I
know.
We.
AT
I
Fireworks
at
at
any
level
here
in
the
city,
but
we
have
a
fireworks
tent
that
pops
up.
You
know
right
there
at
Eldorado,
Canyon
right
around
4th
of
July
and
other
sales,
and
so
how
is
the
city
reconciling
the
proximity
of
the
sale
of
what
is
otherwise
fully
illegal
in
this
city
right
along
the
boundary
of
our
senior,
and
is
there
efforts
to
sort
of
work
with
the
county
and
or
County
Sheriff
to
try
to
reconcile
some
of
those
differences,
because
the
Swiss
Cheese
model
then
sort
of
falls
apart
pretty
quickly?
C
AV
I
will
not
do
that.
Thank
you
for
the
question
and
it's
I'm
really
glad
you
asked
it
because
I
I
do
know
that
fireworks
is
a
big
issue
and
unfortunately
this
particular
ordinance
doesn't
address
it.
But
there
is
work
in
that
area.
We
have
abandoned
Nagel
who
is
available
can
provide
some
more
detail
about
the
work
that's
being
done
in
this
area,
but
I
also
want
to
mention
before
I
hand
it
off
to
her
is
that
the
city
attorney's
office
and
the
city
prosecutors
take
firework
cases
very
seriously.
AV
We
know
the
fire
danger
and
not
just
that,
but
the
fact
that
it's
it's
a
huge
issue
in
terms
of
quality
of
life
for
neighborhoods,
and
so
we
do
not
offer
plea
offers
on
those
types
of
charges,
and
you
know
I
think
the
court
is
also
very
much
aware
of
the
severity
of
the
violation
in
terms
of
the
potential
for
fire
and
those
sorts
of
health
and
safety
issues,
and
so
that's
the
approach
that
we're
taking
and
as
I
mentioned,
we
have
Amanda
available,
hopefully
she's
odd
she's,
a
virtual
who
can
provide
some
more
detail.
BD
Area
absolutely
thank
you.
Thank
you.
So
much
for
the
question.
We
are
working
as
a
subcommittee
of
the
Hill
revitalization
working
group,
Amanda.
BD
One
of
the
topics
that
we
have
worked
on
and
how
we
do
work
in
this
group
is
we
create
subcommittees
that
work
on
specific
issues
that
oftentimes
either
work
in
tandem
with
the
city,
on
their
projects
and
or
in
addition
to
those
projects.
The
fireworks
subcommittee
has
had
two
meetings
thus
far
and
really
is
still
in
the
storming
phase
of
identifying
what
their
agenda
will
be
and
how
they
will
do
it.
BD
We've
been
told
that
those
loopholes
have
been
filled
at
the
state
level.
We
are
going
to
be
meeting
on
the
19th
to
decide
if,
with
the
group
will
reach
out
to
incoming
Sheriff,
elect
Curtis
Johnson
to
talk
about
potentially
working
with
fireworks
underneath
the
fire
ban
proposal,
we'll
also
be
putting
in
front
of
that
subcommittee
decisions
about
perhaps
working
with
I
believe
it's
the
Symposium
of
cities.
BD
Correct
me
if
I'm
wrong
there
for
the
county,
Consortium
I'm,
sorry
Boulder,
County
Consortium
of
cities
to
determine
if
there's
an
opportunity
to
work
at
the
regional
level,
I
think
it's
safe
to
say
that
this
group
is
very
open
to
any
direction
or
any
additional
interest
from
the
community
or
Council
to
give
direction
on
how
this
group
might
best
support
your
efforts
in
trying
to
keep
the
community
safe
from
fireworks.
AQ
Sorry
last
question:
I
realized
I
forgot
one
on
my
list
and
I'm.
Just
this
is
going
back
to
kind
of
the
tracking
of
success.
One
of
the
things
that
I'm
wondering
about
is
what
can
residents
reasonably
expect
so
in
a
year
from
now
right
I
understand
there
may
be
a
little
bit
of
up
and
down
for
a
while,
but
in
a
year
you
know
what
can
they
expect?
I
mean?
Are
we
looking
at
like
a
10
reduction
in
noise
issues?
AQ
AV
Thank
you
for
your
question
and
what
I
can
tell
you
is
that
we're
still
developing
those
metrics
I
think
that
any
movement
would
be
great,
obviously
the
more
the
better,
and
so
while
I
can't
quantify
it
at
the
moment.
I
think
that
if
we're
seeing
Improvement
in
that
area,
I
think
that
that's
success
and
we
we
can
continue
down
that
road
and
continue
to
seek
more
success
and
we'll
we'll
just
do
our
best
to
make
sure
that
we
track
it.
H
Okay,
seeing
no
other
questions,
we
can
move
to
public
comments
and
I
think
we
we
read
our
guidelines
earlier
Ryan.
Is
that
good
enough
very
good?
So
we
have
enough
speakers
that
there
will
be
two
minutes
for
each
speaker
and
our
first
three
are
Lynn
Siegel
Lisa,
Nelson
and
Marion
Wilner.
AJ
I
suggest
the
highest
rigidity
of
this
High.
Stopping
these
kind
of
issues
on
the
hill.
This
university
has
we've
got
to
be
leveraging
with
them.
The
city
of
Boulder
does
to
reduce
their
population,
certainly
not
increase
it
with
CU
South,
certainly
not
increase
it,
and
for
a
100
year,
flood
plain
instead
of
a
500
and
Ted
and
Joe
tadiuchi
is
wrong
about
the
underflow
of
I-36.
He
is
wrong.
We
need
to
get
our
staff
doing
the
right
thing
and-
and
this
is
a
bribe
and
we
need
to
leverage
ourselves
now.
AJ
This
university
has
grown
way
out
of
proportion
with
undergrads
the
serious
grad
students
aren't
even
being
helped.
They
can't
even
get
food
on
the
campus
and
they're
not
going
to
get
food
on
the
south
campus
unless
those
all
those
service
workers
increase
the
jobs,
housing
imbalance,
and
that
is
the
direct
threat
that
we
have
to
Boulder.
AJ
So
everything
that
you
can
do
to
stop
anything
on
the
hill,
because
this
university
has
very
negative
impact
on
this
town.
My
dad
complained
when
it
was
25
000,
the
city
of
Boulder
population
in
the
early
50s.
So
do
something
do
a
lot.
AJ
This
is
ridiculous
that
we've
been
putting
up
with
all
this
all
these
years,
even
with
Andrew
Shoemaker
up
there
fighting
it
like
what
what's
that
about?
Why?
How?
Why
have
you
allowed
all
of
you
and
past
councils
allowed
the
kind
of
transgressions
up
on
the
hill?
That's
utterly
ridiculous.
AJ
It's
just
unacceptable.
It's
as
unacceptable
as
the
trash
from
the
homeless
in
this
town
and
the
and-
and
you
know,
I
can't
put
my
feet
in
the
creek,
because
it's
probably
E
coli
and
everything
else
also,
we
might
say,
with
leverage
at
the
University,
but
there
was
E
coli
coming
out
into
the
creek
from
the
campus
and
those
are
issues
for
our
community
and
for
Downstream.
It's
too
much
Demand
on
water.
It's
too
much
Demand
on
our
Resources
with
the
city.
It's
too
much
demand
for
maintenance
and
operations
with
open
space.
AJ
It's
we've
already
got
a
huge
30th.
It's
a
wall,
a
literal
wall
of
compartments
for
people
to
live
in,
you
think
they're
going
to
want
to
live
in
there.
They
want
to
go
West
to
the
open
space.
They
have
no
open
space
at
30th
and
Pearl
and
that's
the
same
thing
at
CU.
They
haven't
got
enough
food
at
CU,
good
food
for
their
grad
students.
AJ
H
BE
Let's
see,
can
you
hear
me
now?
Yes
just
wanted
to
let
you
know
we
were
told
we
had
three
minutes
when
we
received
the
communication
from
the
city
for
tonight,
so
I'll
try
to
go
really
fast
again.
My
name
is
Lisa
Nelson
I
serve
on
the
hill
reinvestment
working
group
representing
the
University
Hill
neighborhood
association
and
I'm
speaking
tonight,
to
ask
you
to
adopt
the
noise
ordinance.
I
have
a
story
to
help.
BE
You
understand
why
this
is
so
important
picture
a
beautiful
spring
day,
you're
at
home,
but
you
can't
sit
on
your
porch
or
be
in
your
yard,
because
it's
too
loud,
there's
music
blasting
from
a
block
away.
You
can't
have
your
friends
over
it's
too
loud
to
have
a
conversation
outside
you
can't
have
your
doors
or
windows
open.
In
fact,
your
windows
are
rattling
in
their
frames.
BE
You
decide
to
walk
down
and
talk
to
your
neighbors
about
it
and
ask
them
to
please
turn
their
music
down,
because
it's
so
loud
inside
your
house.
The
response
you
typically
get
is
a
Blank
Stare,
accompanied
by
the
statement
that
we
can
do
anything
we
want
until
11
pm,
there's
nothing
you
can
do
about
it.
Unfortunately,
under
existing
ordinances,
that's
essentially
correct
because
in
practice
the
city
rarely,
if
ever
uses
the
decimal
meters-
and
this
is
often
accompanied
by
a
statement
along
the
lines
of
if
you
don't
belong
here
anyway.
BE
BE
Hill
neighbors
get
a
bad
rap
in
saying
we're
anti-students,
but
honestly
I
would
tell
you
that
they
are
some
of
the
most
caring,
generous
and
resilient
people
who
care
a
lot
about
our
student
neighbors,
and
we
know
that
it's
a
very
unsafe
place
for
many
residents
and
the
excessive
noise
is
just
one
part
of
that.
BE
H
Thank
you
Lisa
and
I
apologize
for
the
confusion.
We
did
double
check.
It's
the
rules
are
two
minutes.
If
there
are
15
or
more
people
signed
up
and
we
do
have
19
minutes,
but
I
will
give
people
a
few
seconds
leeway
if,
if
you're
running
a
little
bit
over
because
of
the
confusion
all
right
now
we
have
Stuart
Walker,
Deanne,
Fuji
and.
AG
BF
BF
We
do
from
the
outset
that
we
weren't
moving
into
a
quiet
suburb.
In
fact,
the
vibrant
neighborhood
was
one
of
the
reasons
that
we
located
here.
We
enjoy
the
diversity
we
enjoy
the
students
and
we
enjoy
the
activity
that
said,
managing
the
balance
between
the
hill
lifestyle
and
peaceful
enjoyment
can
be
a
channel
challenge.
BF
BG
Hi,
can
you
hear
me
yes,
hi
good
evening
Council
and
Council
committee
members
I
have
been
a
resident
on
the
hill
since
1997
a
neighbor
of
Stu
Stuart
Walker,
who
just
spoke,
the
lack
of
consequences
for
noise
noise.
Ordinance
infractions
is
ongoing.
My
young
infants
were
once
Disturbed
and
woken
by.
The
noise
are
now
themselves
graduating
from
college.
BG
BG
Imagine
a
deafening
Rock
concert
every
evening,
starting
in
the
afternoon
that
you
aren't
able
to
mute.
My
first
call
to
the
non-emergent
line
for
this
location
on
Tuesday
August
23rd
resulted
in
even
higher
decibels
necessitating
another
call.
Our
police
force
has
more
important
things
to
do
than
police
students
who
have
no
respect
for
their
neighbors.
We
need
clear
and
concrete
consequences
for
violators
landlords
and
from
CU
for
student
offenders,
as
well
as
a
good
tracking
system
and
effective
fines.
BG
Giving
law
enforcement
the
ability
to
ticket
offenders
or
shut
down
parties
will
hopefully
decrease
the
waste
of
multiple
recurrent
visits
to
these
properties
and
send
a
direct
message
from
the
community.
I
do
have
a
question
about
what
are
the
proposed
fines
for
infractions
and
please
pass
this
ordinance.
Thank
you
for
your
work
and
time.
BH
Hi
there
can
you
guys
hear
me.
Yes,
sorry,
I
tried
a
few
times
all
right,
so
I'll
jump
right
into
it.
My
name
is
Daniel
harberger
I
formally
resided
at
848
10th
Street
in
Boulder,
but
after
four
years
of
dealing
with
constant
noise
pollution
in
my
neighborhood
I
actually
chose
to
move
out
of
this
city.
This
city,
where
I
was
born
this
city,
where
I
was
raised
this
city,
where
all
of
my
family
still
lives,
lives.
BH
Constant
noise
pollution
was
the
number
one
reason
for
me
to
me
and
my
spouse
to
leave
and
truthfully,
like
so
many
other
families.
The
severity
of
the
noise
made
us
feel
forced
to
move
out
of
our
home.
So
with
that
context,
I
want
to
submit
three
questions
for
your
consideration:
one.
What
was
the
context
around
Boulder's
original
noise
ordinance
and
doesn't
need
to
be
updated.
BH
BH
AY
My
name
is
Kel
Darnell
I'm,
a
hill
landlord
and
the
president
of
the
boulder
Area
Rental,
Housing,
Association
and
I
am
testifying
on
behalf
of
baraha,
which
represents
over
14
000
rental
housing
units
in
Boulder.
Barha
recognizes
the
need
for
the
proposed
noise
ordinance
to
expand
the
hours
of
unreasonable
noise
violations
to
daytime
hours.
Amplified
daytime
noise
has
been
the
number
one
complaint
from
the
hill
neighbors
for
years.
AY
It's
our
understanding
that
this
ordinance
will
allow
an
officer
to
issue
a
ticket
if
they
can
hear
daytime
Noise
Within
200
feet
and
does
not
require
a
neighbor
complaint,
which
I
think
is
a
great
upgrade.
This
will
make
it
easier
for
officers
to
ticket
offenders,
especially
on
the
hill,
which
will
help
housing
providers
curb
unwanted
tenant
Behavior.
This
is
a
good
first
step,
but
as
the
city
continues
to
look
at
curbing
nuisance
Behavior,
we
ask
that
you
prioritize
the
communication
dashboard
project
to
notify
housing
providers
of
calls
to
service.
AY
It's
imperative
that
a
communication
system
be
rolled
out
hand
in
hand
with
these
other
changes.
Currently
as
a
housing,
a
housing
provider
can
receive
a
weekly
email
from
the
courts.
Identifying
tickets
issued
if
the
landlord
has
signed
up
for
the
distribution
list.
This
imperfect
system
only
notifies
a
select
few
about
tickets
issued
on
properties
and
not
until
a
week
after
the
citation,
an
effective
communication
system
that
informs
the
rental
license
holder
and
both
calls
for
service
and
tickets
in
real
time
is
necessary.
AY
So
housing
providers
can
proactively
address
the
problems
earlier
or
ask
the
city
for
help.
As
a
member
of
the
Hill
revitalization
work,
group
barha
collaborates
with
CU
Boulder,
the
neighbors
and
other
Community
Partners
to
come
up
with
viable
solutions
for
all
parties
without
improved
communication
is
difficult
to
resolve
the
recurring
issues
that
we
all
face.
We
appreciate
being
a
part
of
this
process
and
thanks
staff
and
stakeholders
for
the
time
and
effort
that
has
been
put
into
this
proposal.
M
BI
Yeah,
so
you
know
there
are
two
three
points
I
would
like
to
make.
The
first
is
you
know
we
need
really
need
to
recognize
the
significance
of
our
neighborhoods
in
the
totality
of
the
lifestyle
in
Boulder.
You
know
we
have
businesses
which
are
very
Innovative,
we
have
the
open
space
and
we
have
our
neighborhoods
and
we
must
act
proactively
to
protect
them
and
have
them
flourish
in
the
future
for
future
Generations.
BI
Now,
second
point
I
want
to
make
is
that
you
know
there
is
an
unusual
convergence
of
opinion
on
this
issue
from
many
different
directions,
and
that
is
really
very
heartening
to
see
that,
and
you
know
we
have
laws,
but
the
the
effect
of
the
laws
depends
upon
how
it
is
perceived.
BI
Finally,
I
want
to
say
that
you
know-
and
we
had
this
presentation
in
July,
which
was
really
excellent
and
which
pointed
out
the
only
few
handful
of
properties
on
the
hill,
maybe
a
dozen
at
the
most,
maybe
10,
where
these
parties
nucleate
and
grow
out
of
control.
So
I
think
that
is
a
that
is
kind
of
a
fundamental
issue
that
we
need
to
address
that
people
who
own
these
properties
be
held
responsible
for
allowing
this
kind
of
egregious
Behavior
to
to
start
and
grow
that
you
know.
That
is
not
good
for
anybody.
H
BI
H
BI
Up
for
open
comment
through
the
open
comment
link
and
also
through
the
public
hearing
link,
so
I've
got
enrolled
twice:
okay,.
BJ
Good
evening,
everyone,
this
is
Joseph
Hughes
I
live
at
941,
Crescent
Drive,
which
is
in
the
Park
East
neighborhood
and
I've
lived
out
here
in
Boulder
for
over
37
years
and
23
years.
At
my
present,
address
and
I
also
have
some
relationship
as
a
board
member
with
a
property
on
the
hill,
that
is
about
20
feet
from
the
commercial
District
and
so
I'm,
going
to
speak
about
three
things
that
concern
me
about
the
proposal.
BJ
One
I
think
it
would
be
better
if
it
started
at
sundown.
Two
I
think
that
there
should
be
a
permanent
decibel
reader
at
each
property.
BJ
That's
located
anywhere
within
20
blocks
of
the
hill
and
I
also
think
that
any
property
that
is
located
within
one
block
of
the
commercial
District
probably
should
be
treated
Just
a
Touch
differently,
because
those
properties
already
are
having
to
deal
with
with
Noah's
at
all
times
of
of
and
that's
24
hours
a
day
and
therefore
are
are
somehow
or
other
bothered
themselves
all
the
time
and
consequently
ought
to
have
a
little
bit
more
treatment
like
all
the
commercial
buildings
in
that
area.
BJ
The
area
that
I
live
in
in
the
Park
East
neighborhood,
if
this
passes
I'm
60
years
old
if
this
passes
I,
would
have
been
able
to
call
on
my
neighbors
four
times
within
the
last
month,
because
there
was
a
wedding
party
in
the
backyard.
There
was
another
party
in
a
backyard,
and
these
are
all
within
they're
all
over
200
feet
away
from
my
property
and
I
could
hear
plenty
of
noise,
and
so
consequently,
I
I,
disagree.
BJ
I
do
not
believe
that
just
hearing
something
200
feet
away
is
the
same
as
a
decimal
reader
I
believe
a
decibel
reader
is
actually
the
objective
thing
where
it's
just
saying
that
you
can
hear
noise
200
feet
away,
is
subjective
and,
as
I
get
older.
Believe
me
I.
H
Know
my
hearings,
your
time
is
up.
I
clearly
forget
it,
but
thank
you
for
your
testimony.
Appreciate
it.
Okay,
we've
got
several
people,
not
president
David
radissoner,
Luke,
Krakowski
and
Jake
Borges.
If
they
come
back
we'll
get
to
them.
But
meanwhile
we
have
Hayden
Christopher,
Mitch,
Mitchell
and
Lawrence
Ferguson.
AT
Hey,
can
you
guys
hear
me?
Okay,
yes,
awesome.
My
name
is
Hayden
Christopher.
As
said
before,
thank
you
for
introducing
me
I'm,
the
undergraduate
student
here
at
the
University
of
Colorado
Boulder
I'm,
a
junior
majoring
in
finance
I
also
happen
to
be
the
president-elect
for
Phi
Capital
fraternity
on
the
hill
located
at
1150
College.
We
take
a
lot
of
responsibility
and
a
lot
of
effort
to
make
sure
that
we're
good
neighbors
to
everybody
else
on
the
hill.
We
do
a
lot
of
community
service
on
the
hill.
AT
We
do
Hill
cleanups
every
year
we
shovel
driveways
for
elderly
neighbors
and
just
do
a
lot
to
make
sure
that
we're
following
all
the
guidelines
set
forth
by
the
city,
we
register
all
of
our
events
with
the
local
police
department
and
have
good
relations
with
them
as
well
and
I
think
it
was
pointed
out
by
the
dean
of
student
acting
Dean
students
earlier
that
most
of
these
misconduct
charges
that
are
happening
especially
this
year.
None
of
them
have
been
related
to
noise
issues.
All
of
them
have
been.
AT
So
I
don't
really
see
the
need,
particularly
to
expand
the
current
noise
ordinance
where,
especially,
it
could
be
disproportionately
affecting
students
and
also
raising
the
concern
of
it
disproportionately
affecting
people
of
color
as
well
as
brought
it
up
earlier
in
this
interview,
yeah
I
think
that
there's
a
lot
of
good
things
about
the
current
noise
ordinance,
but
I
think
kind
of
expanding
it
to
a
term
or
to
a
place
where
you
know
it
allows
for
a
lot
more
leeway
in
terms
of
what
you
write
a
ticket
for
there's
no
warning
for
anyone
at
the
event
before
you
get
anything
a
citation
issue
towards
you,
so
there's
kind
of
a
lot
of
variables
that
are
applied
there
like
we,
don't
don't
necessarily
know
how
the
like
one
block
standard
is
going
to
be
enforced.
AT
The
quantifiableness
of
the
effectiveness
of
this
new
ordinance
has
not
been
demonstrated
so
far,
so
I
would
kind
of
urge
everyone
to
rethink
in
stating
a
new
ordinance
and
rather
look
at
the
one
we
have
now
and
I'd
also
like
to
bring
up
that.
It
seems
the
main
issue
tonight
with
noise
has
been
fireworks,
not
particularly
students.
So
thank
you
for
letting
me
speak.
Thank
you.
Hayden.
H
BK
How's
it
going,
can
you
guys
hear
me?
Okay?
Yes,
the
other
people
who
are
missing
are
all
with
me
currently
but
anyways
good
evening,
and
thank
you
guys
for
your
time.
My
name
is
Mitch
Christ
current
president
of
Phi
Gamma
Delta
at
CU
Boulder,
another
fraternity
on
the
hill.
We
currently
reside
in
two
properties
on
the
hill,
our
first
in
primary
location,
being
on
the
corner
of
12th
and
college,
which
sleeps
11
and
our
other
being
on
11th
and
University
sleeping
36..
BK
Our
property
at
12th
and
college
is
a
central
location
for
our
Brotherhood
and
has
been
for
the
past
five
years.
Our
property,
leased
by
four
star
and
privately
owned,
has
no
level
of
accessibility,
which
is
something
we
aim
to
improve.
Upon
this
semester,
we
reached
out
to
a
non-profit
the
home
builders
Foundation
to
help
install
an
accessibility
ramp
for
one
of
our
brothers
Jake
who
struggles
with
muscular
dystrophy
and
severe
Aspergers.
BK
We
were
recently
featured
on
the
Boulder,
Daily
Camera
Camera,
and
commended
for
our
efforts
to
improve
our
accessibility
on
the
hill.
Accessibility
for
Jake
is
still
minimal
in
the
house
itself,
and
he
can
only
gain
access
to
the
main
room
in
the
front
despite
us
having
had
a
ramp
built
for
him.
For
this
reason,
as
well
as
the
potential
fire
hazard
risk
of
having
our
events
indoors,
we
have
moved
our
large
social
Gatherings
to
our
backyard.
BK
When
our
Brotherhood
comes
together
to
bond
with
Jake,
it
is
important
to
him
that
we
are
able
to
be
outside
and
have
them
included
in
our
activities
due
to
the
fact
that
he
cannot
access
the
whole
house,
and
our
group
is
too
large
to
safely
congregate
in
our
main
rooms.
Not
being
able
to
have
our
events
outside
would
force
us
to
have
dangerous
gatherings
in
terms
of
fire
hazards
and
have
more
trouble
trying
to
include
our
brother
Jake
from
what
I
understand
from
serving
on
the
IFC
president's
board.
BK
BJ
BK
BL
Can
you
guys
hear
me?
Yes
all
right?
My
name
is
Jake
Borges
I'd
like
to
thank
you
guys
for
having
me
tonight,
I'm
the
president
of
Pi
capify,
here
at
the
University
of
Colorado
Boulder.
We
currently
reside
on
1441
Broadway
Street
in
between
the
blocks
of
Grandview
and
University,
and
our
house
sleeps
18
people.
BL
BL
We
used
to
have
1150
College
Avenue,
which
is
now
the
Phi
capital
for
fraternity
house,
and
our
chapter
is
a
large
one
of
the
larger
chapters
we've
made
up
of
165
members
and,
as
I
said,
before,
our
current
property
only
sleeps
18..
So
in
order
for
us
to
have
events
with
our
whole
brotherhood,
we
have
to
have
those
vents
outside
and
being
that
we
have
one
of
those
larger
chapters.
BL
We
are
not
able
to
do
that
with
this
new
new
noise
ordinance,
55
decibels
can
be
reached
merely
by
people
and
I
know
that
we're
discussing
Amplified
speakers,
but
we
could
reach
that
with
just
our
members,
and
this
is
a
Brotherhood
that
has
been
around
for
31
years
now.
It
is
shaped
over
1300
men's
college
careers
and
later
their
lives.
It's
something
that
people
respect
and
want
to
continue.
BM
Hello
good
afternoon
or
evening,
sorry,
my
name
is
Lawrence
Ferguson
and
I
am
the
President
of
Alpha
Tau
Omega
here
at
Boulder.
Currently,
our
colony
is
located
on
1122,
12th
Street
and
the
house
sleeps
13
individuals.
We
just
moved
into
the
property
in
this
last
month
and
we
do
love
it.
But
the
biggest
thing
we've
noticed
is
that
we
have
a
space
problem.
BM
The
house
is
laid
out
as
an
apartment
complex.
Essentially
it's
five
different
units,
each
with
its
own
private
kitchen,
bathroom
and
a
living
room,
but
the
living
rooms
only
are
about
14
by
14..
We
have
to
Outsource
where
our
chapters
are,
and
our
chapter
is
only
40
brothers,
because
we
don't
have
the
space
inside
the
house
to
hold
meetings.
Our
backyard
is
in
a
very
similar
situation.
It's
absolutely
tiny.
BM
A
group
of
20
people
back
there,
the
cons,
a
very
crowded
issue,
there's
some
garages
back
there
that,
unfortunately,
we
cannot
use
they've
been
in
service
for
a
while
and
while
we
would
like
to
inevitably
be
able
to
use
that
space,
it's
just
not
on
our
radar
right
now.
It's
not
something
that
we
with
our
Personnel
account.
Can
actually
achieve
this
leaves
the
only
space
that
we
can
use
being
the
front
yard.
BM
We
of
course
do
understand
curbside
appeal,
something
that
the
IFC
hearts
on
pretty
heavily
and
ATO
nationally
is
considered
both
the
leadership,
fraternity
and
the
gentleman
fraternity.
So
it's
something
that
our
brothers
really
aspire
to
continue
up,
that
curbside
appeal
and
we
do
ensure
that
our
property
is
looking
good
sounding
good,
but
ultimately
the
only
area
we
do
have
is
that
front
yard
area.
Thank
you
for
your
time.
M
BM
BO
BO
Right
sounds
good,
so
I'm
Evan,
Humphrey
I'm,
a
junior
at
the
University
of
Colorado
and
I'm
president
of
the
Pi
Kappa
Alpha
fraternity.
Our
chapter
has
been
here
since
1922
and
currently
resides
on
1010
12th
Street
in
March
of
2022.
We
welcome
the
fire
department
into
our
house
for
an
inspection
to
ensure
our
house
passed
fire
code.
Do
the
negligence
or
property
management
company?
The
house
failed
nearly
every
test
in
five
months.
BO
No
work
has
been
done
by
the
management
company
to
remedy
these
issues
and,
as
a
result,
our
basement
has
been
labeled
off
limits
by
fire
department.
Because
of
this
problem,
we
have
been
forced
to
hold
our
events
outside
our
front
yard
through
our
own
hard
work.
However,
we've
remained
free
of
any
noise
complaints
for
a
calendar
year.
BO
We
register
every
event
we
have
with
the
Boulder
Police
and
are
sure
to
shut
it
down
if
we
ever
receive
a
noise
complaint
in
20
minutes
or
less,
and
we
also
have
a
complete
liaison
that
we
work
with
through
the
ISD
that
I'm
in
constant
contact
with
for
every
event,
as
I
believe,
has
already
been
stated
by
others.
Today,
the
police
have
better
things
to
do
than
deal
with
noise
ordinances,
I
propose
we
are
able
to
handle
these
issues
by
ourselves
and
are
more
than
happy
to
listen
to
the
police
that
we
work
with.
BO
BK
BK
BP
I
can
tell
you
that
the
eye
of
the
on
the
hill
and
its
member
chapters
are
not
your
problem.
You
have
a
noise
ordinance
that
deals
with
daytime
noise
ordinance.
It
does
require
that
someone
call
in
and
complain,
but
the
police
have
better
things
to
do
than
derive
the
hill
with
their
noise
meters
outside
their
windows.
BP
The
hill
team
has
been
cut
back
from
12
cops
to
four
cops,
even
though
on
four
separate
weekends.
Last
year
we
had
gunshots
fired
at
fraternity
houses
when
people
were
turned
away
because
they
were
not
on
the
guest
list
and
they
were
not
CU
students.
We
had
this
same
issue
two
weeks
ago.
There
are
bigger
issues
in
Boulder
to
deal
with
than
the
fact
that
some
people
may
not
be
able
to
nap
during
the
daytime.
BP
I
realize
that
sounds
harsh,
but
I
have
2
300
kids,
who
are
extraordinary
citizens
of
the
city
who
work
closely
with
the
police
department
and
regard
your
police,
fire
and
Emergency
Services
people
as
their
best
friends.
We
have
not
had
a
death,
injury
or
insurance
claims.
Since
the
IFC
Hill
on
the
hill
was
formed,
we
were
not
consulted
even
though
we're
members
of
the
hill
hill
neighborhood
association
about
any
of
this.
None
of
our
students
participated.
BP
We
disagree
with
the
University's
position
that
their
educational
programs
and
support
programs
are
going
to
be
effective
and
we
don't
support
either
of
those
groups
positions.
We
believe
that
the
hill
is
a
problem,
but
the
hill
is
a
problem,
because
it's
an
outdated
zoning
concept.
The
hill
needs
to
be
looked
at
as
a
commercial
District,
a
student
housing
district
and
a
high-end
residential
district.
Until
we
can
look
at
that
that
way,
we're
not
going
to
accomplish
anything.
Thank
you.
H
So
I
will
bring
the
public
hearings
who
close
come
back
to
city
council.
We'll
start
any
follow-up
questions
Mr
Mayor,
yes,.
V
We
do
have
two
individuals
who
have
since
joined,
who
were
not
part
of
the
group,
call
number
13,
David
and
number
14
Luke.
BQ
E
Hello,
this
is
David
ratazziner.
Can
you
hear
me?
Yes,
okay,
great!
Thank
you!
Apologies
for
being
late
into
the
meeting
I'm
a
resident
at
765,
14th
Street,
with
my
wife,
24-year
resident.
E
We
have
seen
many
changes
on
the
hill
in
those
years.
E
I
was
also
a
member
of
a
fraternity
on
the
hill
at
11th
and
college
in
the
early
80s
and
I'm
very
familiar
with
with
that
whole
lifestyle
that,
by
the
way,
has
changed
dramatically
over
the
last
30
and
40
years,
we're
in
a
situation
on
the
hill,
where
we
we
have
a
very
difficult
time,
simply
living
a
a
regular
life
relative
to
noise,
fireworks,
loud,
music
and
so
forth.
E
This
ordinance
is
an
excellent
initial
step
in
bringing
the
hill
around
and
making
it
the
fabulous
neighborhood
that
it
can
be
it's
in
the
interest
of
the
city,
the
University
and
the
residents
and
the
majority
of
students
who
live
on
the
hill
to
pass.
This
ordinance
I
encourage
you
to
do
so.
BN
Hello,
can
you
hear
me
yes,
sorry
for
being
late
to
the
meeting.
I
was
just
getting
back
from
class,
but
I
am
the
vice
president
of
external
Affairs
for
the
IFC
on
the
hill,
so
I
thought
it
would
be
good
to
come
today
and
and
just
point
a
student's
perspective,
especially
as
an
executive
on
the
IFC
on
the
hill
I
just
wanted
to
start
by
saying
I
understand
all
of
the
concerns
of.
BQ
AT
BN
Know,
residents
on
the
hill
who
are
who
are
not
students?
We
we
obviously
understand
that
it's
a
unique
circumstance
I
just
wanted
to
lay
out
to,
for
you
guys,
some
of
the
judicial
processes
and
stuff
that
I'm
in
charge
of
on
the
IFC
on
the
hill.
We
take
noise
complaints
and
this
the
noise
ordinance
extremely
seriously.
BN
We
really
believe
that
for
this
community
as
a
whole
to
advance
forward,
it
has
to
be
a
give
and
take
on
both
sides,
and
that
is
something
that
I
since
I've
taken
over
I
was
also
a
president
of
a
chapter
on
14th
Street,
and
my
goal
was
to
make
sure
that
we
we
struck
that
balance,
so
the
processes
are
extremely
rigorous
and
if
there
is
a
violation
by
one
of
our
member
chapters,
we
make
sure
to
Nick
that
in
the
head
immediately
and
do
everything
we
can
to
make
sure
that
there
aren't
any
repeat
offenders
now.
BN
We
know
that
it's
not
a
perfect
science,
but
we
really
do
do
our
best
and
it's
my
belief
that
if
we
are
given
a
chance
to
prove
continually
that
this,
this
noise
ordinance
during
the
night
is
all
that
is
needed.
Then
we
would
be
really
grateful
to
be
able
to
prove
that
too
guys,
but
I
understand
and
I
am
empathetic
to
everyone's
Viewpoint.
So
I
just
want
to
thank
you
guys.
H
Great
thanks
to
everyone
for
their
testimony
tonight,
so
bring
it
back
to
council.
I
have
a
follow-up
question.
I
can
get
started
on
so
we've
heard
some
testimony
tonight
from
folks
who
are
concerned
that
they
would
not
be
able
to
have
outside
Gatherings
in
the
afternoon
say,
but,
as
I
understand
the
ordinance
that
so
long
as
any
accompanied
Amplified,
music
or
other
Amplified
sound
is
at
a
reasonable
enough
level
to
not
be
heard
a
block
away
that
they
can
still
have
a
gathering
and
socialize.
Is
that
correct
that.
H
Great
because
I'm
sympathetic
to
some
of
the
testimony
I've
heard
you
you
want
folks
to
be
able
to
hang
out
with
their
friends
in
an
afternoon
and
maybe
have
a
group
of
people
there.
It's
just
making
sure
that
the
noise
from
it
is
not
so
loud
as
to
really
disrupt
the
neighborhood
Lauren
and
then
Tara.
AR
Foreign
thanks
for
bringing
that
up,
Erin
I,
do
have
a
concern
just
with
the
way
noise
travels
it
doesn't
reduce.
It
follows
an
inverse
Square
law
for
the
reduction
of
noise
over
distance
and
it
doesn't
reduce
very
quickly
so
at
200
feet.
You're,
looking
at
a
16
decibel
reduction
in
noise,
which
is
like
rustling
leaves
so
just
from
the
amount
of
fall
off
that
you
would
have
from
the
point
source
to
where
you're
hearing
it
so
I
think
that
you
know
in
a
noisy
area
of
town
where
you're
a
ambient
noise
is
high.
AR
C
H
I
I
can't
say
yes
or
no
on
the
16
decibel
decrease,
but
my
understanding
is
that
decibels
do
work
logarithmically.
So
that's
not
that
it
would
be
the
the
volume
of
wrestling
leaves
that
would
decrease
it.
Would
it
would
be
a
I,
would
be
I,
don't
know
exactly
the
math,
but
I
think
that's
still
a
substantial
decibel.
Noise
fall
off
16
decibels
as
I
understand
it,
but
I
know
none
of
us
are
sound
Engineers
but
Tara
and
then
Mark
I.
AS
Just
wanted
to
call
a
queen,
oh,
go
ahead
and
get
that
comment.
I
I
suspect
this
is
going
to
be
kind
of
a
rule
of
Reason
ordinance
and
if
you're
can.
AS
Right
into
that,
if
you
walk
off
200
feet
and
you
hear
wrestling
leaves
I
suspect
that
the
police
will
let
it
go,
it's
going
to
be
a
function
of
what
you're
hearing
at
200
feet
and
how
aggressive
and
how
loud
the
the
Amplified
music
is.
So
I.
Don't
think
it's
necessarily
that
if
you
hear
every
anything
at
all
at
200
feet,
police
are
going
to
be
issuing
citations
again,
a
rule
of
reason.
M
L
I
make
my
comment:
I
do
live
close
to
the
hill,
and
sometimes
it's
so
loud
and
I
find
out
it's
five
blocks
away.
So
I
wish
that
it
was
a
stronger
ordinance
but
I
get
that
that's
what
you
want
to
do,
but
that's
not
my
question
so
I
see
that
police
chief
is
here
and
a
few
of
the
students.
I
said
the
police
have
better
things
to
do
than
deal
with
noise
and
I
was
just
wondering
if
you'd
like
to
comment
on
that.
How
do
you
feel
about
it?
Foreign.
BR
Council
mayor
Harold,
police,
chief,
well
I'll
tell
you
since
I've
been
here.
The
community
harm
that
is
caused
by
large
parties
and
loud
noise
is
real
and
I.
Don't
think,
to
be
honest
with
you,
there's
better
use
of
police
officers
time
to
ensure
that
the
community
is
not
harmed
by
what
I
see
is
excessive
part.
Large
parties
that
I
have
never
seen
before
Steve
and
I
just
walked
the
hill,
and
we've
been
doing
so
at
night
and
I'm
telling
you.
BR
This
is
a
serious,
serious
problem
on
the
hill,
Friday,
Saturday
and
Sunday
it.
It
gets
to
the
point
where
we
have
hundreds
and
hundreds
of
people
inside
of
a
house
that
should
not
have
50
people
in
it.
So
not
only
is
it
a
safety
concern
for
the
students,
but
the
community
harm
is
real
on
the
University
Hill
I
hope
that
answers
your
question.
U
Thank
you.
I
just
have
a
question
about
the
Community
engagement.
There
was
a
comment
made
earlier
about
not
lack
of
participation
from
some
Community
groups
and
I
wonder
what
happened.
Why
were
they
not
invited
or
were
they
invited
it's
just
the
process
is
very
different.
So
can
you
respond
to
that
a
little
bit?
Thank
you.
AW
Yeah
we
did
have
two
student
leaders
on
the
hill
revitalization
working
group
all
this
year,
who
were
members
of
fraternities
and
living
on
the
hill.
We
also
had
a
sorority
member
the
previous
year,
who
worked
with
the
group,
so
we
did
have
a
sense
that
we
that
we
understood
that
perspective.
AW
We
had
not
engaged
as
much
with
IFC
on
the
hill,
not
through
lack
of
trying
over
the
years
and
certainly
Amanda
and
I
had
lunch
with
Mike
Smith
a
couple
about
six
weeks
ago.
He
mentioned
that
he
was
upset
about
the
Norris
ordinance.
We
offered
follow-up
meetings
subsequently,
but
did
not
hear
back
from
him,
so
we
were
not
able
to
get
more
details
about
that
frustration.
AW
AQ
One
is
I
wonder
if
you
could
speak
a
little
bit
to
why
why
this
isn't
just
focused
on
the
hill,
because
what
I
heard
tonight
were
all
people
from
the
hill
and
I'm
just
curious
as
to
why
this
is
city-wide
versus
just
focused
on
the
hill,
especially
because
the
community
connectors
suggest
that,
as
well
as
kind
of
doing
a
pilot
on
the
hill
as
a
way
to
get
some
information
about
how
this
is
working
and
who
it's
impacting
before
we
move
forward
with
Citywide.
AV
Thank
you
for
the
question.
I
think
that,
based
on
the
data
that
we
had
received,
while
University
Hill
was
probably
the
most
impacted
area,
there
were
certainly
other
areas
within
the
city
that
were
impacted
as
well,
and
they
tended
to
be
more
student
populated
areas,
and
so
for
that
reason
we
decided
that
we
wanted
to
make
it
Citywide.
AQ
Thank
you
and
then
my
other
question.
This
is
just
around
the
some
of
the
comments
chief
that
you
made
about
just
what
you're,
seeing
at
night,
with
parties
being
so
large,
larger
than
you've
ever
seen
before,
and-
and
it's
not
clear
to
me
how
this
kind
of
noise
ordinance
and
moving
things
toward
the
day
is
going
to
help
with
that.
Is
it
that
they're,
starting
during
the
day
and
then
kind
of
exploding
getting
larger
at
night?
AQ
But
I
guess
that
that's
sort
of
one
question
is
how
that
how
they're
related
and
then
my
second
question
is:
what
are
the
kind
of
follow-up
steps
that
are
going
to
be
taking
because
I
think
what
I'm
hearing
here
is
that
this
is
not
going
to
single-handedly
solve
the
issue
that
we're
seeing,
and
so
what
are
some
of
the
other
kind
of
next
steps
that
that
the
community
might
look
to
as
we're
moving
forward.
Yeah.
BR
BR
But
if
we
go
back
a
little
over
a
year
when
we
had
the
riots
on
the
hill,
these
parties
start
during
the
day
and
we
have
another
big
one
that
we're
preparing
for
Halloween.
But
these
parties
start
during
early
morning
hours
and
they
escalate
through
social
media,
and
so
what
we
hope
is
that
this
gives
the
police
officers
a
fighting
chance
to
stop
some
of
these
parties
from
continuing
and
when
I
say
that,
there's
hundreds,
that's
no
exaggeration
I
mean
you
know.
BR
So
we
are
hoping
that
the
police
officers,
if
they
have
this
tool
and
it's
not
going
to
solve
everything,
but
at
least
it
gives
the
police
officers
a
fighting
chance
to
stop
some
of
this
behavior
before
it
gets
so
out
of
control
that
then
we're
calling
in
swat
Personnel
then
we're
calling
in
other
agencies
to
assist
and
that's
something
I
do
not
want
to
see,
because
other
agencies,
like
the
state
that
we've
had
to
rely
on
for
extra
resources,
do
not
police
the
way
that
Boulder
police
officers,
police
and
so
to
me,
if
we
have
a
chance
to
get
in
there
and
stop
this
behavior
before
it
escalates.
BR
That
is
what
I
would
prefer
to
do
before.
I
have
to
start
calling
different
agencies
into
our
community
and
that
never
is
a
good
thing
and
I'm
going
to
turn
it
over
to
Sandra,
to
address
I.
Think
next
steps
from
a
holistic,
city-wide
approach,
with,
hopefully
chronic
nuisance
and
so
forth.
Thank
you.
AW
Just
and
I
just
wanted
to
point
you
all
back
to
the
IP
and
the
presentation
that
you
received
several
weeks
ago
that
laid
out
sort
of
our
short-term
medium
term
and
long-term
plan.
So
this
is
really
step
one
of
that
full
plan.
We
certainly
will
continue
to
be
looking
at
nuisance
abatement
as
a
holistic
process
and
what
improvements
can
be
done
there.
AW
There
are
strategies
toward
landlord
education
that
are
being
worked
on
so
that
we
are
sure
that
our
landlords
are
being
the
best
Partners
they
can
to
us
in
the
community
and
we
are
being
the
best
Partners
we
can
to
them
and,
in
addition
to
a
number
of
other
things
that
you
saw
on
those
on
those
presentations,
foreign.
AS
Well,
I
want
to
speak
in
an
extremely
strong
support
for
this
ordinance.
We
we
haven't
been
asked
by
the
community
to
do
this.
We've
been
begged
by
the
hill
Community
to
try
to
address
conditions
that
are
simply
unbearable
or
normal
residential
citizens
and.
AS
We've
been
kicking
the
can
this
particular
can
down
the
road
for
far
longer
than
I've,
been
on
Council
and,
in
fact,
longer
than
I've
lived
in
the
city
of
Boulder
and
after
the
March
2021
Riot.
The
recent
near
Riot
on
July
4th.
It's
just
not
appropriate
for
us
not
to
address
this
and
to
find
a
way
to
help
residents
who
are
living
in
awful
awful
conditions,
and
so
I
am
very
supportive
of
this.
There
are
a
couple
of
points
I'd
want
to
make.
AS
The
first
is.
This
is
going
to
impact
a
very,
very
small
number
of
Cu
students,
most
of
whom
are
good,
neighbors,
good
people
and
don't
measure
their
enjoyment
by
how
many
firecrackers
they
can
set
off
in
the
in
the
middle
of
the
street.
This
is
a
small
minority
of
the
student
body
that
is
persistently
caused
difficulties
for
those
around
them
and
have
really
have
not
respected
the
the
concept
of
being
a
neighbor
we've
heard
from
some
of
the
fraternity
fraternity
members
tonight
that
they
are.
C
AS
Neighbors
and
I
accept
that,
but
others
are
not
and
and
they
are
creating
conditions
that
we
are
really
called
upon
to
address
and
and
it's
not
as
if
we
are
not
permitting
students
to
be
students,
we're
not
expecting
every
student
who
lives
on
the
hill
to
go
to
bed
at
8
30.
After
reading
a
couple
of
chapters
of
Chaucer
they're
students,
they
they
will
gather,
there
will
be
times
when
they
play
music.
AS
It
will
be
times
when
they
play
music
outside
we're,
simply
asking
them
to
respect
certain
limits
that
are
necessary
for
the
larger
community
and
finally,
I
want
to
say:
I've
been
very
impressed
with
the
work
of
the
Hill.
Revitalization
working
group,
mayor,
Pro,
tem
friend
and
I
have
participated
in
a
number
of
those
meetings.
They
have
been
careful,
they
have
been
deliberative
at
times
they
have
been
careful
and
deliberative
in
ways
that
that
left
me
frustrated,
because
I
wanted
to
get
it
done
immediately,
but
they
they
took
a
different
path.
AS
They
were,
they
were
much
more
judicious
than
I
would
have
been.
They
were
much
more
careful
and
I
think
they
have
come
up
with
an
ordinance
that
will
not
solve
every
problem,
but
it
hopefully
will
make
a
difference.
And
if
we
look
at
the
holistic
package
of
ordinances
that
we
ultimately
hope
to
pass
to
address
the
conditions
on
the
hill,
I
I
think
they
will
help.
AS
And
again
you
know,
the
work
of
that
committee
has
been
very
careful,
very
organized
and
very
thoughtful
and
I
want
to
commend
them
for
the
work
that
they've
done
even
when
they
have
frustrated
me,
because
I
wanted
to
get
it
done
tomorrow.
Their
path
was
the
better
path,
and
so
I
am
in
great
support
of
what
they
have
produced
and
I
I.
Think
it
I.
AS
Just
don't
think
we
can
go
back
to
that
community
and
say
sorry,
we're
not
going
to
help
you
even
with
step
one
we're
just
not
prepared
to
help
you.
So
thank
you,
sorry
to
be
long-winded.
AN
Yeah,
thanks
again
for
the
presentation
and
thanks
to
everyone
who
testified
like
Mark
I,
am
supportive
of
and
have
been
involved
with
this
hill
revitalization
work
group
since
I
got
on
Council
and
one
of
the
things
that
I
think
is
often
overlooked.
AN
That
was
sort
of
omnipresent
and
feedback
that
I
would
get
in
that
group
from
students
who
participated,
including
one
who
was
like
the
president
of
a
sorority
at
the
time
and
was
very
outspoken
and
doing
a
lot
of
Engagement
with
her
peers
was
that
the
the
people
who
suffer
most
from
sort
of
the
the
the
few
houses
that
refuse
to
manage
noise
during
the
daytime
and
that
bleed
into
the
evening
are
in
fact
the
other
students.
So
it's
not
something
that
we're
trying
to
not
get
students.
AN
It's
mostly
students
who
live
there
and
I
think
we
hear
more
from
long-term
residents,
but
the
the
primary
impact
is
felt
by
students
who
do
want
to
be
studying
and
are
there
for
a
serious
education.
So
just
want
to
make
that
point
point.
AN
So
slightly
disagree
with
Mark's
statement
that
few
students
would
be
impacted
because
I
think
there
will
be
a
lot
of
students
who
have
a
positive
impact
from
this
and
again
would
just
Echo
what
Mark
said
that
this
is
this
sort
of
came
into
sharper
Focus
after
we
had
a
riot
in
March
of
2021
and
Mark
and
I
met
and
toured
the
hill,
and
it
was
I,
don't
know
if
anyone
else
was
out
there,
but
it
was
scandalously
bad
situation.
The
next
morning
there
was
a
lot
of
broken
glass,
I.
AN
AN
You
just
can't
have
Amplified
noise
to
the
point
where
it
can
be
heard,
a
block
away,
so
I
I
think
it's
great
to
give
our
code
enforcement
a
a
tool
that
they
can
use
to,
hopefully
nip
some
of
these
parties
in
the
bud
and
help
our
community,
and
especially
the
people
who
are
living
nearby,
including
students
thanks
thanks
man.
I
Thanks
Aaron
to
Mark's
point,
this
is
certainly
long
overdue.
So
it's
great
to
see
this
in
here,
but
I
do
want
to
sort
of
mention
that
this
is
not
the
culmination
of
the
work.
It
is
rather
just
the
start
of
restoring
the
balance
for
everyone
to
have
the
enjoyment
and
safety
on
the
hill
for
students
and
residents
and
those
that
are
visiting
from
out
of
town
I
will
say.
I
I
This
is
early
phase,
make
sure
landlords
are
accountable
too,
and
so
I
want
to
make
sure
that
everyone
listening
that
this,
even
though
this
phase
sounds
like
it's
hard
on
students,
there's
balance
that's
going
to
come
subsequently,
as
we
do
landlord
education
and
really
to
be
frank,
all
it
takes
is
pulling
one
rental
license
from
a
landlord
and
everybody
else
is
going
to
fall
in
line
I
hope
we
don't
get
there,
but
I
think
that
we
have
an
opportunity
to
create
that
balance
and
restore
some
order,
and
so
I
just
want
to
make
sure
that
we
understand
that
there
is
more
to
this
than
than
just
this
ordinance.
I
That's
coming
down
the
line,
so
I
hope
that
everyone
sort
of
takes
that
and
that
this
is
the
start
of
many
things
and
also
keeping
in
mind
it's
easier
for
us
to
loosen
the
reins,
and
we
have
to
kind
of
come
down
and
really
tighten
it
up
now,
but
as
things
improve
and
the
conditions
get
better,
we
can
loosen
the
reins
and
make
sure
that
things
find
more
balance
later
on
as
things
adjust.
So
this
is
just
the
first
of
many
steps.
H
L
Really
appreciated
hearing
all
the
public
testimony
from
all
sides
tonight.
It
was
very
interesting
I.
Think
for
me,
when
I
hear
what
I
heard
tonight
was
in
the
past
two
or
three
years,
it
got
worse
and
I
feel
like,
according
to
the
police
chief,
that
the
game
changer
might
have
been
social
media
where
a
party
just
grows
exponentially
over
time,
starting
from
the
day
and
so
I
think
that
was
how
we
got
our
major
riots
or
should
I
say
large
parties
that
grew
out
of
control,
because
the
social
media
is
over.
L
H
AR
Thank
you
in
general,
I
appreciate
this
modification
to
the
way
we're
measuring
noise
and
noise
violations.
I
do
have
concerns
about
how
it
impacts
the
city
as
a
whole.
Noise
like
temperature
is
something
that
is
hard
to
get
two
people
to
agree
on
to
what
is
the
appropriate
level.
Clearly,
we
have
areas
of
town
where
it's
far
far
beyond
what
is
an
appropriate
level,
but
I
think
setting
a
universal
standard
is
difficult
and
I
would
like
to
have
a
check-in
in
a
year
to
see
how
something
like
this,
like.
AQ
Yeah
I,
like
the
idea
of
a
check-in
and
I,
also
just
kind
of
want
to
lift
up
again
the
community
connectors
suggestion
that
we
think
about
having
a
pilot
just
restricted
to
the
hill.
The
nice
thing
about
a
pilot
is
that
it's
a
test.
We
can
try
something
right.
We
could
just
say
it's
from
Baseline
to
Arapahoe
West
to
Broadway
and
see
how
how
that
ends
up
working
out
for
us,
I
kind
of
like
that
approach.
More
than
trying
something
city-wide.
AQ
So
I,
don't
you
know
as
I
say
this
I
don't
want
to
minimize
the
harm
that
is
being
done
to
folks
on
the
hill,
because,
as
some
of
my
colleagues
have
mentioned,
it
is
largely
students
who
are
suffering.
It
is
a
minority
of
students
who
are
engaging
in
these
harmful
behaviors
and
they
are
disrupting
their
peers
lives
as
well.
It
is
not
just
homeowners
who
who
are
dealing
with
this,
so
you
know
I
I,
don't
want
to
suggest
that
I'm,
not
supportive
of
solutions
to
address
this
issue.
AQ
I
would
like
to
see
this
as
a
pilot,
though,
rather
than
something
city-wide
and
the
other
thing
I
just
want
to
kind
of
get
at
while
I
have
the
mic
for
a
moment.
Is
that
you
know,
because
this
is
a
minority
of
students
who
are
causing
stress
and
harm
to
our
community
and
affecting
other
students.
AQ
In
a
way,
that's
respectful,
and
that
shows
their
relationship
to
community
and
I
know
that
the
university
is
working
on
this
I
know
that
folks
are
thinking
about
it.
What
I
would
encourage
is
for
us
to
think
about
working
with
some
of
the
Dei
leaders
on
campus
on
this
issue,
because
when
we
solve
some
of
the
disrespect
that
we're
seeing
on
campus
we'll
also
have
solved
the
disrespect
that
we're
seeing
off
campus.
AP
H
BQ
H
Like
that,
this
is
a
good
next
step
forward
in
terms
of
resolving
some
of
the
conflict
issues
that
we
see
in
our
community.
You
know
we
have
been
focused
on
student
problems
on
on
the
hill,
but
these
can
be
quality
of
life
issues
in
in
other
areas
and
and
with
other
people
as
well,
but
just
want
to
come
back
to
what
I
was
saying
earlier,
that
this
should
in
no
way
reduce
people's
ability
to
have
social
Gatherings
and
have
a
good
time
together.
H
You
know
the
it
base
it
if,
if
you've
got
the
the
music
turned
up
a
little
bit
too
loud
and
people
tell
you
that
if
you
turn
it
down
you're
no
longer
in
violation
of
this
ordinance,
so
it
gives
I
think
the
RM
enforcement
folks
a
tool
to
prevent
large
parties
from
getting
out
of
hand
but
fundamentally
I.
Think
it'll
it'll
stay
quite
easy
to
stay
within
the
parameters
of
the
rules
and
have
a
good
time
with
your
friends.
H
H
Of
the
the
one-year
check-in
that
Lauren
mentioned,
I
think
that
kind
of
thing
is
always
a
good
idea,
but
definitely
getting
a
report
on
what
the
results
of
this
change
have
been
would
be
really
helpful.
As
we
consider
you
know,
next
steps
that
we
take
in
dealing
with
these
issues
and
I
got.
Let
me
just
say:
did
you
okay,
so
Rachel.
AN
Two
things
wanted
to
mention
that
Bobby
Yates
did
Sub
in
for
me
on
that
work
group.
So,
thanks
to
him
as
well
and
also
wanted
to
check
in
with
Chris
Mess
check
to
see
if
we
could
sort
of
solidify
a
plan
for
a
year
from
now
and
maybe
with
Brenda,
could
we
also
do
ongoing
engagement
on
what
what
the
community's
experience
on
both
sides
is
with
this,
and
so,
when
we
come
back
in
a
year,
we
have
that
information
as
well.
Is
that
feasible.
AW
AN
AL
Happy
to
chime
in
Rachel
in
terms
of
especially
follow-up,
like
your
follow-up,
we
can
definitely
put
that
down
as
something
for
us
to
work
on
for
next
year.
AN
BQ
AN
I'm
looking
to
see,
if
I
have
the
language
in
front
of
me,
you
do
great.
I
would
like
to
make
a
motion
to
adopt,
by
emergency
measure,
ordinance
8531
amending
sections
5-9-6,
which
is
unreasonable
noise
prohibited
between
the
hours
of
11
pm
and
7
A.M
and
ordinance.
Our
section
5-3-11
nuisance
party
prohibited
BRC
1981
to
prohibit
unreasonable,
Amplified
noise
during
the
daytime,
as
well
as
nighttime
hours
and
setting
forth
related
details.
Second,.
A
AW
BC
H
Thanks
everyone
for
your
work
on
this
now
in
a
remote
meeting.
I
would
call
for
a
break,
but
I
feel
should
we
just
go
with
rolling
breaks
like
we've
been
doing
very
good,
so
I
won't
call
for
an
actual
break,
but
then
let
me
do
a
Time
check-in,
so
we're
about
20
30
minutes
behind
schedule,
but
we
have
one
remaining
item
about
our
homelessness
update
our
people
game
to
get
into
that.
AN
I
would
at
least
get
started.
We
have
staff
here.
We
are
ready
to
go
we're
all
here.
It's
not
11
yet
so
if
we
need
to
continue
at
some
point,
then
I
think
we
can
but
I
I
would
get
us
started
and
maybe
we
get
through
it.
Maybe
we
don't
fair.
AS
C
H
I'll
I'll
agree
with
that
and
let
me
just
say:
let's
keep
an
eye
on
it.
We
can.
We
could
continue
with
the
discussion
right.
So
if
we
feel
like
it's
getting
late,
we're
getting
tired,
but
there's
still
more
to
talk
about,
we
can
always
defer
the
remainder
of
the
discussion
to
another
date
right.
Okay,.
M
A
AL
Okay,
I
think
we
are
ready
and
set
up
so
I'll
go
ahead
and
quickly
introduce
our
first
presenter
for
today,
which
is
Kurt
fernhober,
our
director
of
Housing
and
Human
Services,
and
he
is
going
to
introduce
Megan
as
well.
So
Kurt
I'll
turn
it
over
to
you.
BS
Our
presentation
tonight
will
be
led
by
Megan
Newton
she's,
a
new
member
to
our
team,
but
not
new
to
the
city
or
homelessness.
We
are
also
joined
by
Vicki
Ebner,
who
continues
to
support
this
work.
Tonight
is
our
annual
update
to
city
council
and
our
community
on
the
programs
and
approaches
that
assist
individuals
out
of
homelessness.
This
is
likely
to
be
one
of
the
more
challenging
Council
conversations
in
your
first
year.
BS
BS
There
is
great
division
in
our
community
and
I'm,
looking
forward
to
a
healthy
dialogue
tonight,
centered
on
both
helping
people
out
of
homelessness,
while
not
forgetting
the
overall
wider
Community
needs
I'd
like
to
start
by
setting
the
stage.
For
this
conversation,
the
city
of
Boulder
and
Homeless
Solutions
for
Boulder
County
supports
some
amazing
capable
local
Partners,
who
have
had
significant
success
over
this
last
year
and
helping
a
high
number
of
individuals
out
of
homelessness.
BS
BS
Over
the
last
four
years.
Our
housing
first
approach
has
enabled
1630
individuals
out
of
homelessness
countywide
and
of
that
1
391
have
exited
homelessness
from
the
city
of
Boulder.
Some
individuals
have
exited
into
wrap
around
Services.
Some
have
exited
treatment
programs,
others
have
reunified
with
roommates
or
family.
Some
have
entered
the
ready
to
work
program
which
we.
BS
BS
Oh
sorry,
thank
you
this
this
three,
these
340
single
adults.
This
includes
individuals
staying
outside,
but
also
those
at
shelters
such
as
the
boulder
shelter,
the
lodge
and
together's
Youth
Shelter
in
the
city
of
Boulder.
We
assist
on
average
24
individuals
a
month
a
month
out
of
homelessness
and
into
Housing
Solutions.
BS
This
equates
to
the
city
solving
homelessness
every
14
months,
which
is
amazing.
However,
the
community
doesn't
witness
this
solving
of
homelessness
in
part,
because
over
the
last
four
and
a
half
years,
six
thousand
four
hundred
Unique
Individuals
have
gone
through
coordinated
entry
and
entered
our
system
at
some
points.
We
also
believe
that
roughly
15
to
20
percent
of
individuals
don't
go
through
coordinated
entry,
so
likely
seven
to
eight
thousand
individuals
have
experienced
homelessness
in
Boulder
in
the
last
four
and
a
half
years.
BS
This
challenge
shows
up
in
increased
emergency
service,
calls
to
affordable
housing
and
increased
conflict
with
residents.
As
we
continue
to
house
more
individuals
locally,
we
will
need
to
also
increase
Behavioral
Health
Services
substance
use,
disorder,
treatment,
counseling
and
other
Supportive
Services.
BS
In
light
of
these
challenges,
staff
staff
is
working
on
implementing
the
arpa
supported
building
home
program
to
help
address
the
loneliness
and
difficult
transition
for
individuals
entering
housing.
We
also
know
that
housing
first
only
works
with
intensive
Supportive
Services,
and
we
are
investing
further
in
these
programs
with
peer
navigation
and
housing.
Stability
with
a
housing
stability,
team
substance
use
among
the
unhoused
population
is
also
shown
to
be
extremely
challenging
and
has
likely
increased
over
the
last
two
years.
C
BS
BS
BS
BS
There
we
go
all
right
so
in
this
first
slide,
just
looking
at
the
national
landscape,
so
the
the
the
red
line
on
the
top
indicates
sheltered
individuals,
those
who
are
staying
in
shelters,
you'll
notice
that
that's
actually
been
relatively
flat
and
it's
actually
gone
down
a
bit
and
we
believe
that
that's
a
result
of
communities
across
the
country
really
investing
in
housing,
first
approaches
and
getting
people
into
housing
and
putting
their
investments
into
housing
instead
of
additional
shelters.
BS
But
we
also
see
that
it
seen
that
unsheltered
homelessness
is
steadily
Rising,
along
with
individuals
going
to
to
cities
with
services.
So
on.
The
left
are
some
of
the
challenges
which
I've
already
mentioned
in
my
opening,
but
I'll
also
just
lastly,
mention
a
lot
of
our
service
providers,
particularly
over
the
last
couple
of
years,
have
struggled
just
in
Staffing
the
programs
that
the
community
requires
and
with
that
I
will
hand
it
over
to
Megan.
AX
Hi
good
evening,
my
name
is
Megan
Newton
and
I'm.
The
policy
advisor
on
homelessness
for
housing
and
Human
Services
I'd
like
to
start
with
our
Outreach
efforts
so
be.
There
is
a
street
outreach
program
targeted
folks
experiencing
unsheltered
homelessness.
It
started
in
2020
as
a
response
to
covid
and
at
the
time
the
main
goals
was
education,
information
and
referral.
Earlier
this
year,
with
a
partnership
with
Boulder
shelter,
we
expanded
into
a
more
traditional
homeless,
Outreach
team
and
it's
able
to
provide
most
of
the
services
that
folks
get
inside
the
shelter
in
the
field.
AX
So,
as
you
can
see
on
the
screen,
those
are
some
of
the
different
things.
They've
been
able
to
do,
and
we
just
started
collecting
data
in
May.
So
that's
why
the
numbers
are
what
they
are,
but
they
can
do
coordinated
entry
screenings
in
the
field.
They
can
do
diversion
in
the
field.
They
can
do
VI
spadats,
which
is
the
tool
that
we
use
to
add
people
to
the
buy
name
list
to
match
folks
to
housing
resources.
They
can
help
people
apply
for
benefits,
oftentimes.
AX
Those
are
like
Snap
and
Medicaid
benefits
and
other
social
security
kind
of
depends
on
what
they
are
eligible
for.
They
can
also
help
folks
get
their
ID
documents
needed
for
both
employment
and
housing
and
then
connect
folks
to
Medical
resources
as
well
as
Behavioral
Health
Resources.
They
meet
weekly
with
other
providers
in
the
community
who
are
serving
the
same
population,
hot
Behavioral,
Health
assistance
program,
the
muni
court,
Navigators
Focus,
re-entry
they
meet
weekly
to
coordinate
services
and
make
sure
they're.
AT
AX
AX
We've
expanded
access
to
that
resource
in
the
last
year,
or
so
folks
can
now
access
it
via
phone.
They
can
go
on
site
in
person
at
the
age,
well,
Center
on
West
and
then
be
there
can
also
provide
the
services
in
the
field.
What
you
can
see
on
the
screen
is
that
the
that's,
the
folks
going
through
coordinated
entry-
and
it
goes
up
and
down
as
you
can
see,
but
over
time
has
remained
barely
stable.
AX
AX
These
are
our
exits
to
exits
from
homelessness
over
the
last
year,
so
there
were
245
and
what's
contained
in
the
housed
bar.
There
is
permanent
housing,
so,
like
I
said
that
housing,
Choice
vouchers
or
permanent
Supportive
Housing,
then
there's
also
some
transitional
housing
treatment
and
then
diversion
reunification
and
again
I
just
want
to
point
out
that
people
can
access
these
services
and
Access
housing
without
going
through
CE
and
without
going
to
the
shelter.
AX
So
this
graph
shows
the
the
green
on
the
top
shows
that
same
245,
folks
that
exited
homelessness,
but
then
the
blue
shows
the
the
945
that
we
screened
through
CE
over
the
same
period
of
time.
So
previous
to
this
position,
I
did
a
lot
of
direct
service
and
I
can
tell
you.
The
impact
on
individuals
is
a
great
you
know.
Seeing
somebody
go
from
the
street
into
their
apartment
is
why
I
do
this
work?
But
when
you
look
at
it
on
a
systems
level,
it's
harder
to
see.
AX
This
graph
is
showing
some
of
the
high
utilizers
of
the
overnight
shelter,
some
of
our
local
resources.
We've
targeted
this
population
and,
as
you
can
see
over
time,
I
don't
know
if
you
can
see
it
really
well,
but
the
bottom
goes
the
fiscal
year
starting
in
2018
and
then
through
2021,
and
it
shows
the
steady
reduction
of
the
long
stairs
in
the
shelter
down
to
14.
Currently
that
are
staying
300
plus
days
in
the
shelter
and
when
I
talk
to
the
shelter
about
those
14
individuals.
AX
AX
The
Housing
Authority
also
has
set
aside
vouchers,
which
is
20
of
their
vacancy,
will
be
targeted
to
folks
experiencing
homelessness,
and
in
this
last
Lottery
they
also
had
a
preference
for
folks
experiencing
homelessness
this
year.
This
one
time
was
the
emergency
housing
vouchers.
AX
Fuller
Community
got
69
of
those
vouchers
and
they
were
from
HUD
as
a
response
to
the
pandemic,
but
they
did
not
come
with
Supportive
Services,
so
we
chose
to
use
them
and
move
up
move
on
fashion
and
what
that
means
is
folks
who
are
already
in
permanent
Supportive,
Housing,
Programs
or
rapid
rehousing
programs
who
may
not
need
that
level
of
support,
but
do
need
the
housing
subsidy
we're
able
to
transition
in
place
and
their
their
rent
was
still
subsidized,
but
they
were
able
to
make
room
in
the
permanent
support
of
housing
or
rapid
rehousing
program
for
folks
who
needed
who
need
those
Support
Services.
AX
Well,
let
me
I
kind
of-
and
we
also
the
the
new
units
in
the
local,
the
affordable
housing
developments
also
include
permanent
Supportive
Housing,
and
these
are
some
of
those
projects
that
are
coming
online
in
the
next
couple
years.
AX
Boulder
shelters
purchasing
10
of
their
own
units
to
focus
on
folks
who
have
lengthy
criminal
histories,
who
we
haven't
been
able
to
house
due
to
that
Mount
Calvary
will
include
15
units
of
psh
for
elderly
folks.
There
are
two
Bluebird
properties
that
are
coming
online,
one
in
Boulder
and
one
in
Longmont,
but
they
will
both
serve
the
greater
older
area
and
those
are
similar
to
the
Lee
Hill
property,
where
they'll
all
be
psh
and
have
more
intensive
Services.
AX
Oops
sorry,
no
thanks,
Family
homeless
is
is
growing
in
nationally
and
locally,
and
it's
harder
to
see.
Typically,
families
don't
find
themselves
literally
on
the
streets.
They
oftentimes
are
doubled
up
with
family
or
using
reaching
out
and
using
the
prevention
resources
and
those
kinds
of
things.
But
we
have
seen
a
growing
number
of
literally
homeless
families
in
the
area,
but
we
don't
Focus
as
much
funding
towards
them
so
of
the
10.4
million
dollars
in
local
funding
that
we
dedicate
towards
homelessness.
700.
AT
AX
Currently,
Boulder
chooses
to
use
the
hoteling
option
as
an
intervention
in
an
effort
to
keep
children
out
of
Emergency
Shelters,
and
so
they
connect
effa
and
other
service
providers,
connect
folks
with
hotel
rooms
and
then
also
provide
the
case
management
and
navigation.
But
as
the
need
has
grown,
they
have
they're
needing
they're
trying
to
find
funding
to
increase
that
support
they're,
currently
trying
to
access
State
and
County
funds.
But
at
some
point
may
ask
the
city
for
some
additional
funding
towards
this
program.
AX
This
is
just
some
information
around
the
Sheltering
programs
and
some
of
the
changes
that
have
occurred
in
the
last
year.
The
covert
recovery,
coveted
Recovery
Center
closed
in
April
and
those
Boulder
County
Public
Health
took
over
those
working
with
those
folks
who
are
experiencing
covid
and
staying
in
the
shelter
or
not
staying
in
the
shelter.
AX
Boulder
shelter
has
returned
to
pre-covered
capacity
of
160
beds,
and
then
we've
also
been
able
to
get
data
from
some
of
the
other
shelters
that
we
previously
haven't
gotten
data
from
the
lodge
and
the
source
in
an
effort
to
get
a
more
a
full
picture
of
the
Sheltering
services
available
in
the
community.
This
is
just
over
the
past
summer
and
I
wanted
just
to
put
this
on
this
slide.
AX
To
highlight,
you'll
see
the
green
bar
in
June
and
July,
and
we
don't
have
August
numbers
yet,
but
you'll
see
the
increased
shelter
usage
over
the
summer.
That's
not
normal.
Normally,
in
the
winter,
the
shelter
stays
full,
but
in
the
summer
it
does
not.
This
summer
has
proved
to
be
different
and
there's
been
more
shelter
stays
over
this
summer.
AX
This
shows
the
shelter
usage
over
time
so
over
the
last
year
and
a
half,
so
each
of
those
bars
show
the
number
of
bed
nights.
The
shelters
have
been
utilization
and
then
the
line
that
you
see
going
across
is
turnaways
due
to
capacity
so
in
January
I
believe
there
was
close
to
50
500
bed
nights
and
I
believe
that
when
I
rolled
over
earlier
was
24
turnaways
due
to
capacity
that
month,.
AX
So
this
is
what
we
the
plan
for
the
winter
season,
so
you'll
see
in
the
First
Column.
That's
what
we
did
last
year.
The
shelter
was
not.
They
had
to
reduce
capacity
due
to
covid,
so
they
only
had
145
beds,
so
we
had
30
hotel
rooms
and
then
we
increased
that
to
40
hotel
rooms
on
critical
weather
nights.
So
throughout
the
season
we
had
170
about
five
beds,
but
on
critical
weather
nights
we
had
185
beds.
AX
AX
The
feedback
we
got
from
the
shelter
on
the
critical
weather
beds
was
in
the
hotels
was
that
it
was
very
challenging
to
move
people
quickly
back
and
forth,
and
so
they
would
prefer
that
if
we
were
going
to
do
hotel
rooms
that
we
maintain
the
hotel
rooms
throughout
the
season,
so
so
that
would
mean
this
season.
We
would
have
185
throughout
the
entire
season,
with
195
on
critical
weather
nights
at
the
boulder
shelter.
We
added
a
proposed
plan.
AX
This
is
not
currently
in
the
budget,
but
with
seeing
the
numbers
that
are
currently
happening
over
the
summer.
It's
hard
to
tell
if
that's
going
to
remain
or
if
that
will
go
down,
it's
somewhat
unpredictable,
but
we
thought
we
should
maybe
that
we
should
have
a
plan
in
place
and
so
again
160
beds
at
the
shelter
with
10
on
credit
overflow,
on
critical
weather
nights,
but
then
have
40
hotel
rooms
throughout
the
season.
So
that
would
make
200
beds
throughout
the
season
and
then
210
on
critical
weather
night.
AX
This
is
just
a
graphic
that
kind
of
shows
that
you'll
see
the
last
two
winter
seasons.
The
purple
lines
are
the
capacity
and
then
how
it
would
go
up
for
this
winter
and
the
green
being
the
usage
or
the
previous
two
Winters.
AX
That's
done
on
a
very
regular
basis
at
both
the
system
level
and
the
client
level
Partners
meet
twice
a
month
to
go
through
by
name
lists,
which
is
individuals
and
they
match
to
resources
right
off
off
of
that
list.
We
also
have
started
a
high
systems,
utilizer
group
again
to
focus
on
those
folks
who
are
using
Police,
Services
shelter,
Services,
Hospital,
Services,
all
emergency
services
at
a
high
level.
It's
it's
supposed.
AX
The
Outreach
group
meets
monthly
as
a
committee
to
do
coordination
of
the
work
and
then
also
the
same,
the
staffings,
where
you
know
they're
running
into
the
same
people,
so
in
an
effort
to
coordinate
the
work
and
Not
Duplicate
services
and
be
most
efficient
built
for
zero
I.
Think
most
of
you
have
heard
about,
but
it's
a
national
movement
that
uses
data
to
end
homelessness
and
recently
Boulder
was
the
first
in
the
metro
area
to
to
get
a
quality
by
name
or
quality
scorecard
on
the
data.
AX
AT
AX
AX
Boulder
Municipal
Court
has
their
Community
Court.
That's
what
I
previously
did
before
this
position
for
the
last
I
guess
three
years
that
and
the
code
Recovery
Center,
but
I
was
a
navigator
in
the
community
court
and
we
worked
with
a
lot
or
we
worked.
They
work
with
a
lot
of
folks
that
have
high
barriers
to
housing
to
services
and
see.
This
is
a
lot
of
the
work
they
do.
Is
that
how
to
do
a
lot
of
that
pre-housing
work
and
then
follow
up
with
them
once
they're
in
housing.
So
that
is.
AX
This
is
a
just
a
culmination
of
all
the
tasks
that
they
help
folks
with
and
then
you'll
see
in
the
bottom
right,
they've
had
42
of
their
clients,
matched
or
housed
and
16
matched
to
housing,
which
is
pretty
impressive.
Considering
some
of
the
barriers
that
folks
have
that
are
working
with
the
muni
court.
AX
I
sat
with
some
providers
that
are
providing
both
Behavioral
Health
and
Medical
Health
Services.
This
is
MHP
bch
in
Clinica,
and
these
four
things
were
identified
by
all
of
three
of
those
Partners
as
gaps
in
the
system.
Not
enough
treatment
beds,
insufficient
clinical
Outreach
Services,
which
basically
saying
that
folks
who
are
experiencing
homelessness,
have
a
hard
time
navigating
outpatient
systems
and
so
things
they
typically
fall
through
the
cracks,
and
so
services
that
are
able
to
come
to
them
would
be
much
needed.
Also.
Last
lack
of
respite
care.
AX
Folks,
who
are
ready
to
be
discharged
from
the
hospital
but
need
a
place
to
rest
and
recover
is,
is
deeply
needed
and
then
housing.
That
was
the
bottom
line
on
all
of
them,
where
they
need
more
housing.
Resources,
bch
and
Boulder.
Shelter
have
had
a
partnership
for
the
past
year,
where
bch
refers
their
idealizers
of
their
emergency
department
and
their
hospital
in
General
to
Boulder
shelter,
to
work
with
the
case
manager
towards
housing
and
just
the
other
day.
AX
They
they
were
able
to
provide
some
statistics
from
that
from
that
partnership
and
so
they've
housed
13
high
utilizers
of
the
emergency
department
in
the
last
year.
In
those
High
utilizers
accounted
for
35
percent
of
homeless
emergency
department
visits
and
11
of
homeless
inpatient
hospitalizations
in
the
last
year
and
then
following
those
folks
being
housed,
they
had
a
83
percent
decrease
in
the
emergency
department
utilization
and
a
70
decrease
in
the
inpatient.
Encounters.
AT
C
BS
Back
to
2015
and
you'll
you'll
see
on
the
left.
Our
the
lines
are,
various
millions
of
dollars
on
the
right
are
the
year
or
the
bottom
are
the
years
you'll
see
that
in
2016
and
2017
in
2017
city
council
actually
approved
the
homeless
strategy,
and
so
through
that
strategy
there
was
more
significant
investments
in
this
work
and
you
can
see
how
that
occurred
in
2017
I
think
we
were
in
2016
I
think
we
were
spending
about
160
000
a
year
on
supporting
services
for
the
homeless.
BS
You'll,
see
significant
increases
in
2021
into
2022
you'll,
see
a
very
significant
increase
up
to
about
I.
Think
it's
about
8.4
8.3
million
dollars
in
this
year,
and
the
significant
investment
in
that
is
really
housing,
which
is
that
green
bar
and
as
Megan
mentioned
earlier,
some
of
it
is
projects
that
are
being
developed
and
investing
in
those
projects.
BS
The
the
bluebird
project
on
30th
and
Mapleton
is
probably
the
biggest
portion
of
that,
but
some
of
the
other
projects
as
well
the
city
of
Boulder
I'm,
quite
proud
of
that-
has
its
own
local
voucher
program
to
really
sort
of
fill
in
the
gaps
where
other
federal
and
state
regulations
around
those
vouchers
can
can
create
barriers.
So
our
our
vouchers
would
be
in.
AT
BS
And
we,
we
also
heard
a
question
the
last
couple
weeks
of
the
investments
from
Boulder
County,
so
they're
spending
about
11
million
dollars
this
year
and
you'll
notice.
The
two
biggest
categories
to
that
are
also
housing:
the
rental
assistance,
which
is
essentially
vouchers
and
property
acquisition,
which
is
investment.
AT
BS
And
then
the
the
racial
Equity
approach
and
look
at
this
is
something
that
we
do
with
with
all
the
initiatives
in
Boulder,
and
so
we
wanted
to
reflect
on
this
as
well.
So
in
the
table
in
front
of
you,
the
the
first
column
is
the
the
County's
overall
population,
Broken
Out
by
self-reported
race
and
I'll.
Just
give
an
example.
BS
BS
If
you
look
at
the
African-American
population,
it's
just
over
one
percent
in
Boulder
County
for
the
diversion
Services,
that's
12
for
navigation,
it's
nine
percent
and
for
housing,
Focus
shelter,
it's
13
percent-
and
this
data
represents
this
year
from
January
through
the
first
six
months
of
2022..
BS
BS
BS
So
project
recovery
is
the
one
that
I
mentioned
with
with
tribe,
and
we've
spent
some
time
with
them
down
in
Denver,
looking
at
their
programs
there
and
we're
very
excited
with
the
experience
that
they
bring
in
this
work
and
their
their
staff
predominantly
have
lived
experience
in
these
challenges
as
well,
and
we
also
are
excited
that
they're
going
to
have
day
services
for
this
starting
fairly
soon.
So
individuals
who
are
challenged
with
meth
and
other
similar
substances
will
have
a
place
to
go
as
an
entry
point
into
their
residential
program.
BS
Bulge
shelter
for
the
homeless
Megan
mentioned
our
purchasing
units
where
they're,
both
the
landlord
and
the
service
provider,
which
really
is
sort
of
a
key
for
individuals
with
lengthy
criminal
records.
Finding
landlords
for
those
individuals
has
been
very
challenging,
but
we
know
they're
going
to
be
more
successfully
as
housed.
Three
of
those
units
have
already
been
been
purchased.
BS
The
building
home
program,
if
you
can
remember
back
to
your
arpa
presentation,
we
described
that
program
that
has
two
components.
One
is
programming
for
housing
retention.
It's
a
team
of
individuals
that
will
help
individuals
who
sometimes
lose
their
housing
because
of
lease
violations
and
then
peer
support,
something
that
we
a
program
that
we
don't
currently
have
where
individuals
who
have
been
successful
in
housing
can
be
hired
to
to
be
peers
or
others
that
are
going
through
the
housing
process
or
recently
been
housed.
BS
So
that
first
program
we
just
completed
the
RFP
process
and
are
awarding
that
currently,
the
first,
the
housing
retention
is
being
awarded
the
boulder
shelter
and
the
peer
support
is
being
awarded
to
focus
re-entry
with
a
partnership
of
feet
forward
the
day
service
center
city
council,
priority
from
January
I,
think
you've
heard
that
we've
started
the
community
engagement
on
that.
BS
So
we're
listening
to
what
the
community
has
to
say,
as
well
as
the
service
providers,
we're
really
targeting
those
who
will
be
providing
or
could
be
providing
some
of
those
services
in
this
Center
to
understand
what
services
will
be
helpful.
What
are
the
goals
of
such
a
center
and
also
input
about
when
citing
such
a
a
center?
What
are
things
that
we
should
look
for
things
that
we
shouldn't
look
for
and
just
criteria
that
would
help
us
understand
where
that
should
be
best
placed
in
the
community
and,
lastly,
we're.
BS
We've
also
started
Outreach
to
individuals
with
lived
experience
and
before
we
leave
the
slide.
There's
one
thing:
that's
not
on
here:
that's
hot
off
the
press
is
Bulger
shelter
for
the
homeless.
Over
the
last
few
months
has
acquired
two
properties
in
South
Boulder,
where
they
will,
they
will
be.
They
will
be
able
to
house
somewhere
between
12
and
24
individuals
who
have
a
lot
of
challenges
that
we've
described,
but
also
who
are
more,
who
are
60
years
older
or
older,
and.
AP
BS
Know
that
I
I
spoke
with
their
CEO
and
I
know
that
the
board
is
excited
to
move
forward.
With
this
new
initiative,
this
fall
and
I
think
they'll
be
asking
you,
as
council
members
to
empty
your
pockets
to
help
them
fund
this
as
well,
but
that's
also
just
sort
of
a
general
statement
that
I'll
make
to
really
support
our
organizations.
BS
Foreign
that
ends
the
presentation
and
I'd
like
to
give
a
round
of
applause
to
Megan.
For
finishing
your
first
presentation.
H
U
BS
So
it
will
primarily
be
individuals
who
are
experiencing
homelessness,
who
have
had
challenges
with
methamphetamines
but
often
there's
other
Associated
drugs
that
are
that
are
occurring
with
those
individuals.
BS
So
this
is
a
an
organization
that
has
10
homes
in
Denver
and
Aurora,
where
they're
currently
running
these
programs
very
structured
and
methamphetamines
are
one
of
the
most
challenging
substances
to
treat
and
I'm.
Really
intensive
approaches
are
required
and-
and
this
organization
is
really
shown.
U
U
AN
Hope,
you're
enjoying
your
first
night
back
in
in
Real
Life
Council
too
I
as
I,
have
been
doing
recently,
I'm,
gonna,
sort
of
hammer,
the
county
expenses
and
expenditures
and
and
hope
that
you
can
dig
in
and
I,
really
appreciate
you
having
this
information
in
the
slide.
But
it
looks
like
the
county
is
spending,
not
quite
11
million,
and
we
are
spending
almost
9
million.
Is
that
right
did
I,
read
that
and
then
sorry
I'll,
ask
one
at
a
time.
Is
that
is
that
about
right?.
BS
So
we're
we're
spending
about
I,
think
it's
8.3
or
8.4.
However,
if
you
also
include
the
Sam's
work,
that's
what
brings
it
up
to
about
10.
AN
Okay,
yeah
and
it's
like
a
part,
A
Part,
three
question:
there:
you're
jumping
ahead.
So
if
we
add
in
Sam's
work
so
you're
talking
about
like
policing
and
parks
and
library
and
cleanups
and
the
other
sort
of
attendant
expenditures
around
homelessness,
we
are
paying
less
than
a
million
less
than
the
county.
Is
that
about
accurate.
AN
Okay
is
the
county.
I
was
looking
at
the
the
slide,
and
the
information
in
the
packet
I
see
that
they're
at
like
1.5
on
operations
and
administration.
So
that's
not
directly
Services
related
and
then
Supportive
Services
is
a
couple
million
and
then
rental
assistance
and
property
acquisition
is
the
bulk
of
their
expenditures
is
any
of
their
money
going
towards
people
who
are
currently
unhoused.
What
what?
Where
does
that
fall?
Within,
so
people
who
don't
don't
get
housing,
don't
get
rental
assistance,
people
who
are
still
living
outside
and
unsheltered?
BS
So
I'm
going
to
start
off
by
saying
I
don't
know-
and
this
is
the
information
that
we
we
got
from
the
county
and
I
might
be
able
to
give
some
educated
answers
as
more
of
a
guess.
But
I'd
prefer
that
maybe
we
could
document
your
questions
and
ask
the
ask
the
county
to
reply
on
that.
AN
You
know
we
often
hear
that,
like
our
property
taxes
have
gone
up
and
and
why
aren't
we
doing
more
to
with
services
and
to
help
people
and
most
of
our
property
taxes
go
to
the
county,
not
the
city,
so
the
funding
you
know
HHS
tends
to
be
a
county
umbrella
and
it's
frustrating
to
me
that
I'm
glad
that
we're
spending
what
we
are.
But
it's
frustrating
to
me
that
the
county
doesn't
appear
to
be
spending
much
on
unsheltered
people
who
I
think
are
in
the
most
Harm's
Way
and
I.
AN
AN
So
I
don't
know
if
that
that
sounds
like
that's
a
TBD,
okay,
so
I
think
I
will
I
know
that
a
lot
of
people
will
probably
have
questions,
so
I
will
stop
there
for
now.
Thank
you.
I
I
just
wanted
to
call
the
Queen
on
Rachel's
point
about
the
county
for
one
I
agree:
we
need
the.
We
need
to
definitely
talk
with
the
county
in
Greater
detail.
I
would
like
to
ask
that
we
try
to
schedule
a
joint
meeting
between
ourselves
and
the
county
specifically
on
the
topic
of
homelessness.
I
think
we
need
to
just
get
in
the
same
room
and
start
to
really
hash
this
out
meaningfully.
If
we're
really
going
to
get
some
Regional
solutions
that
work
for
everybody,
including
our
sister
cities,.
C
I
I
hope
staff
can
start
to
work
on
that
and
I
hope.
Hopefully,
that's
something
that's
agreeable
with
my
Council
colleagues,
but
you
know
when
you
think
about
just
proportionality.
You
know
the
county
has
a
population
of
about
330,
000
people
or
a
third
of
that,
and
so,
if
you
want
to
think
about
proportional
investment
to
meet
the
needs
of
the
most
vulnerable
in
our
communities,
it
means
the
county
should
be
spending
nearly
30
million
dollars
compared
to
roughly
10
million.
Or
if
you
go
the
other
direction,
we
should
cut
our
budget
down
to
3
million.
AS
I
half
of
the
money
that
they're
spending
on
at
the
county
level
is
going
towards
people
who
are
actually
still
housed
it's
rental
assistance
and
that's
important.
But
it's
not
exactly
the
same
thing
as
spending
money
on
those
who
are
unhoused.
So
their
actual
contribution
seems
to
be
paltry
and
so
I
agree
with
Matt's
suggestion.
BS
Ahead
can
I
just
respond
to
that.
So
I
think
that
you'll
find
that
our
numbers
are
somewhat
similar
to
that
as
well.
So,
with
a
with
a
homeless
first
approach,
we
need
to
get
people
into
housing
and
those
are
they're
almost
like
their
investments
in
perpetuity
for
those
individuals.
That's
why
it's
called
permanent
Supportive
Housing
and
that's
why
there's
that
rental
assistance
is,
is
so
critical
to
that
strategy.
BS
BS
You
know
a
portion
of
which
supports
those
who
are
homeless
as
far
as
the
interacting
with
the
county
or
having
a
collective
meeting.
What
might
be
helpful
for
us
is
to
understand
what
that
meeting
might
look
like
and
what
and
who
it
might
include
as
far
as
including
the
Commissioners
or
County
staff,
or
if
you
could
give
us
Direction
on
that.
That
would
also
be
helpful.
H
So
I'll
follow
up
on
that.
If
you
don't
mind,
is
I
think
that
suggestion
has
a
lot
of
Merit
and
so
maybe
Elisha
if
we
could
kind
of
treat
this
idea
of
meeting
with
the
county
as
a
CAC
request.
So
if
we
could
add
that
to
our
agenda
to
start
talking
about
how
we
might
look
into
getting
something
like
that
scheduled
if
I'll
just
kind
of
look
I've
seen
a
lot
of
nodding,
heads
I'm
doing
like
a
lot
of
council
seems
to
be
interested
in
this.
So
I'll.
AN
You
and
chairman
Celeste
follow-up
to
something
that
Kurt
said
on
housing.
First
in
the
philosophy
and
I'm,
not
digging
that
as
a
philosophy.
It's
just
that
a
lot
of
people
don't
get
the
vouchers
and
we
don't
have
enough
housing.
So
there
are
a
lot
of
people
who
are
unsheltered
and,
and
so
I
just
think
it's
a
missing
piece
and
it
is
again
within
the
County's
bailiwick
I
believe
more
than
ours
and
funding
mechanisms.
AN
So
that's
the
piece
I'm
not
saying
we
shouldn't
focus
on
housing
first,
but
that
I
want
the
county
to
step
up
its
supports
and
services
for
people
who
are
unhoused
in
our
community
and
when
we're
looking
at
things
like
the
day,
shelter
I
think
the
county
should
be
funding
it.
We're
looking
at
things
like
sanctioned
encampments
I
would
like
the
county
to
have
them
I
understand
that
we
don't
have
the
Staffing
and
resources
to
look
Beyond
a
day,
shelter
for
this.
You
know
current
cycle,
but
I
think
the
county
should
be
thanks.
H
Other
yeah
I'll
go
ahead
and
call
in
myself
soon
see
in
any
other
hands
right.
This
second,
so
I
wanted
to
to
go
to
talk
about
the
the
number
of
beds
that
we've
got
coming
up
for
this
next
season
and
I
just
clicked
away
from
it.
Here
we
go
so
I
was
encouraged
to
see
a
significant
increase
in
the
number
of
beds
that
we're
planning
for
this
coming
season.
H
So
if
I
read
it
correctly,
like
the
last
year's
winter
number
at
the
base,
shelter
capacity
was
140
and
then
there
were
30
hotel
rooms
and
then
10
critical
weather,
hotel
rooms
right
because
it
says
145,
but
that
was
only
after
April
April
right
so
and
so
then
so
we're
going
to
a
base
capacity
of
160
plus
40
hotel
rooms.
So
that's
that's
going
from
like
170
to
200,
which
is
a
good
15
increase,
which
is
it's
great
to
see.
H
I'm
I'm
encouraged
to
see
that
I
also
want
to
I
appreciate
you,
including
in
these
totals
the
the
source
and
the
lodge.
These
are
critical
local
Partners.
You
know
the
source
from
together
in
the
lodge
from
the
mother
house
and.
H
Work
in
the
community,
so
I
appreciate
you,
including
their
totals
as
they're
doing
they're
doing
great
work
in
helping
to
support
people
experiencing
homelessness
in
our
community.
So
we've
got
more
numbers,
that's
fantastic!
So
the
question
I'm
going
to
ask
I:
ask
this
pretty
much
every
year
card,
which
is
so,
let's
see,
let's
say
that
we
see
a
surge
in
demand
at
a
time
when
we
have
really
horrible
weather
coming
in.
So
what?
H
If,
for
whatever
reason,
we've
got
a
few
more
people
that
need
some
assistance
and
that's
the
week
when
the
big
blizzard
hits
and
it's
zero
degrees
and
such
like
that?
How
do
we
set
up
some
kind
of
you
know
backup
contingency
plan
for
kind
of
if
there's
The,
Perfect
Storm
the
worst
storm
literal
storm
with
some
additional
needs.
BS
So
the
we
don't,
first
of
all,
we
don't
have
City
staff
to
set
up
that
that
type
of
service,
particularly
in
an
emergency
basis,
the
the
only
approach
that
I
can
think
of
would
be
through
the
EOC,
the
Emergency
Operations
Center.
You
know
defining
an
emergency
that
would
get
other
agencies
involved
like
the
Red
Cross
and
would
open
up
a
facility
like
like
one.
BS
Those
are
often
used
during
an
EOC
event
with
that
said,
I
haven't
seen
that
occur,
but
you
know
possibly.
We
could
explore
that
I'm,
not
sure
how
that
fix,
fits
in
the
definition
as
they've
defined
for
emergencies.
H
Yeah
I
appreciate
you
bringing
that
up,
because
we
do
sometimes
get
questions
from
community
members
who
see
like
the
extraordinary
response
that
you
get
to
an
event
like
the
Marshall
fire,
which
everyone
is
very
supportive
of
and
impressed
by
and
then
I
had
some
community
members
say
like
well.
Why
couldn't
we
do
something
like
that?
You
know
when
there's
an
emergency
of
kind
of
a
less
extraordinary
one,
but
where
we
have
unsheltered
people
and
the
conditions
are
really
bad,
so
I
wonder
maybe
this
is
I'm
going
to
turn
to
Chris
here.
H
Maybe
this
is
something
that
we
as
a
city
could
investigate
with
our
Emergency
Management
Partners.
To
see
like
is
there
the
potential?
For
you
know
some
in
an
extreme
weather
event
tapping
those
kinds
of
emergency
resources
to
keep
people
from
freezing
to
death
on
an
in
a
really
terrible
weather
situation.
H
H
That,
okay,
that's
great,
to
hear!
Thank
you
thanks
for
mentioning
that
crew.
This
is
a
good
idea
that
that's
what
I
got
you.
The
presentation
in
the
memo
were
very
detailed
and
yeah
I
guess
just
while
I
have
the
floor.
I'll
just
say
some
of
these
other
newer
initiatives
like
finding
individual
housing
units
for
people
with
criminal
records
right
who
otherwise
can't
easily
get
housed.
It's
an
impressive
thing
that
I
think
most
communities
aren't
looking
at
but
can
help
with
some
of
our
deepest
need.
H
Folks,
who
are
high
utilizers
and
the
addiction
recovery
facilities
that
you're
looking
at
setting
up.
There's
such
a
deep
need
for
that,
and
so
I'm
really
glad
to
see
that
we're
we're
adding
those
capacities
and
good
to
see
that
we're
partnering
with
the
county
on
those
as
well.
So
looking
forward
to
some
really
good
new
work
that
you
all
are
standing
up.
I
I
The
reason
I
ask
is
when
I
was
out
with
the
notice
team
and
cleanup
team,
I
I
interacted
with
an
individual
who
had
only
been
unhoused
for
about
maybe
three
four
weeks
and,
by
all
intents
and
purposes,
shoes
ready
to
go
to
to
get
something,
but
nothing
was
available
to
her
and
that's
sort
of
what
I
had
heard
from
the
team,
and
so
she
was
sort
of
left
out
of
the
system
more
or
less
not
from
a
lack
effort.
But
there
just
wasn't.
BT
Hi
Vicki
of
nurse
senior
operations
manager
for
HHS
rapid
re-housing
is
pretty
targeted.
We
work
through
the
one
home
system.
This
is
primarily
funded
through
the
county
and
we
go
through
the
same
kind
of
matching
and
prioritization,
but
just
obviously
at
different
prioritization
levels.
So
the
idea
is,
of
course,
to
track
and
you're
absolutely
right.
BT
The
other
thing
to
mention
is
that
there
are
also
programs,
in
addition
to
Rapid
rehousing,
that
can
be
beneficial,
such
as
the
ready
to
work
program.
I
can't
speak
to
anecdotal
I,
don't
know
who
the
person
was.
You
are
right
that
those
resources
are
somewhat
limited.
BT
P
BT
And
I
would
say:
that's
where
we
get.
We
try
to
be
a
little
bit
more
creative,
and
so
when
we're
talking
about,
for
example,
there
was
a
request
for
the
hotels
for
the
family
homelessness.
That
is
another
workaround
that
if
they
can
get
a
family
for
a
week
into
a
hotel,
get
them
stabilized
work
with
case
manager
and
then
move
to
some
sort
of
short-term
programming.
Then
they
can
accomplish
that
goal.
BT
I
will
also
say
that
typically,
a
lot
of
our
people
who
are
living,
unhoused
and
unsheltered,
tend
to
have
way
more
barriers
than
you
would
expect
to
be
successful.
In
a
limited
term
program
rapidly,
housing
runs
for
two
years
Maxwell.
BT
What
we
have
instituted
Megan
refer
to
the
move
up
and
move
on
program.
There
are
cases
where
people
get
into
rapid
re-housing.
They
actually
are
more,
have
a
more
acute
need
and
can
then
transfer
into
a
emergency
housing
voucher
or
something
like
that
to
give
them
more
of
a
longer
term.
We're
seeing
this
a
lot
with
people
who
are
experiencing
who
are
newer
to
homelessness
but
happen
to
be
of
a
certain
age
and
since
I'm.
BT
Now,
in
that
demographic,
so
that
they're
they're
not
going
to
be
likely
to
increase
in
income
and
be
able
to
self-stabilize,
and
so
they
do
need
that
resource.
But
they
may
not
need
the
Intensive
case
management,
I.
I
Appreciate
that,
thank
you,
the
only
other
question
I
had
was
with
regards
to
maybe
and
I,
don't
think
I
saw
it
in
there
and
if
I
missed
it,
my
apologies
was
maybe
I
know
that
we
had
maybe
missed
a
point
in
time,
a
redo
of
a
point
in
time
count
because
of
covid.
So
is
there
another
one
planned
on
the
books
and
infos
in
there?
My
apologies
I
just
wanted.
So
sorry,
if
I
didn't
catch
that.
AX
Wait
so
in
2021
we
were
only
able
to
do
a
sheltered
count
and
not
an
unsheltered
account.
So
it's
like
a
partial
number,
but
we
did
do
it
in
January
2022,
but
it's
done
at
a
regional
level
and
so
we're
waiting
for
those
numbers
to
come
back.
K
BS
AT
BS
AT
BS
A
county
level,
so
that's
a
discussion
we're
having
now.
BS
AN
Rachel
Quaid
at
least
semi-related,
which
is
in
the
memo
it
talks
about
coordinating,
work
and
that
there's
a
group
that
meets
to
discuss
by
name
lists,
which
I
know
isn't
quite
the
same,
but
it
sort
of
gets
at
the
same
information
right
so
just
as
trying
to
figure
out
how
how
much
that's
happening.
How
how
concrete
that
list
and
data
is
for
the
city,
Boulder.
AX
So
the
meetings
that
we
have
on
the
by
name
list
are
twice
a
month
and
they're
they're
broken
up
into
single
adults.
Have
one
meeting
families
have
another
youth,
have
another
and
Veterans
have
a
fourth
meeting,
but
all
of
them
happen
twice
a
month,
and
so
we
are
looking
at
client
level
information
and
matching
them
to
resources
on
a
very
regular
basis.
The
point
in
time
that's
more
of
a
trend
analysis
that
would
be
the
difference.
AN
AX
Only
I
guess
my
only
caveat
I
would
give
to
that.
Is
that
it's
hard
to
do
everyone
involved
in
a
by
name
list,
if
they're
not
well,
if
they're
not
wanting
us
to
engage
with
them
on
a
buy
nameless
level,
whereas
when
we're
counting
it's
very
low,
it's
like
you're
there
we're
counting
you,
whereas
the
by
name
list
they
have
to
actually
Express
that
they
want
us
to
help
house
them.
AN
AX
AN
BQ
BQ
AX
BS
Did
I'll
just
add
one
other
thing
just
because
they're
on
the
unnamed
list
doesn't
mean
they're
actually
in
the
city,
and
so
people
come
and
go
and
it's
the
point
in
time
is
to
say:
okay
who's,
all
in
the
city
today,
because
that
that
num,
those
that
name
list
is
very
fluid,
and
so
it
makes
it
very
challenging
to
actually
understand
who's
in
the
city
at
any
particular
point.
So
they
are
sort
of
two
different
things,
but.
AQ
Thanks
for
the
presentation
and
thank
you
so
much
for
answering
all
of
my
questions
that
I
sent
in
advance,
it
definitely
shrunk.
My
list
a
little
bit
and
I
still
have
some
kind
of
follow-up
questions
that
I
wanted
to
ask,
and
the
first
one
actually
is
more
of
just
a
comment
rather
than
a
question.
AQ
I.
Think
in
you
know
in
in
talking
about
the
successes
that
we're
having
in
the
community
with
getting
people
housed,
especially
with
programs
like
Community
Court,
that
are
getting
their
successes
by
using
spaces
that
providers
are
creating
I.
Think
that's
really
important
for
our
community
to
hear
I
know.
We
had
a
few
folks
in
open
comment
tonight
who
were
raising
some
concerns
about
the
navigation
Center,
and
you
know
whether
there's
actually
data
that
navigation,
centers
and
places
that
collect
people
actually
lead
to
housing
outcomes
and
I.
AQ
Think
programs
like
Community
Court,
are
really
showing
that
they
do
because
Community
Court
is,
you
know,
showing
up
out
in
the
community
at
feet
forward
at
Deacon's
closet
at
these
spaces,
where
providers
have
created
trust
among
the
unsheltered
unhoused
community
and
I.
Just
I
just
wanted
to
to
note
that
that
it's
that
having
spaces
in
the
community
where
people
can
make
connections
and
build
trust,
that's
part
of
how
we
get
people
housed
and
connected
to
services.
AQ
So
I
think
it's
just
a
good
thing
for
our
community
to
hear,
because
that's
really
the
goal
of
the
navigation
Center
is
to
create
that
space,
where
we
can
connect
people
to
services
and
I.
Think
we've
seen
tonight
in
the
community
data
that
it
works
right.
We
got
what
was
it
42
people
I
think
housed
and
another
16
or
so
on
the
way.
AQ
So
so
this
really
does
make
a
difference
right
here
in
our
community
to
have
these
spaces
and
then
I'll
move
into
a
question
which
is
you
mentioned
that
there
were
245
exits
from
homelessness,
and
my
understanding
is
that
single
adult
unsheltered
folks
that
doesn't
include
families
is
that
right.
There's.
AQ
AX
AQ
Okay,
great
thank
you
and
I
just
wanted
to
follow
up
a
little
bit
on
the
success
rate
of
kind
of
retaining
people
in
housing
as
they're
housed.
It
sounds
like
we
had
about
an
80
success
rate
for
folks
who
are
housed,
which
means
that
about
out
of
that
245,
maybe
50
or
so
people
were
re-entering
homelessness
and
I
was
just
wondering
if
this
differs
by
the
type
of
program
that
you
know,
they're
sort
of
going
into
housing
with
does.
Does
that
make
sense
like
I?
AQ
AX
So
it's
kind
of
not
necessarily
a
fair
comparison,
because
they're
all
getting
a
pretty
long-term
subsidy
I
think
the
the
permanent
Supportive
Housing
comes
with
more
resources,
but
it
also
targets
folks
who
have
a
lot
of
barriers.
AQ
Okay,
thank
you
and
I
was
just
wondering:
do
we
have
any
information
on
how
how
our
sort
of
churn
rate
compares
to
other
communities
and
programs
I
mean?
Where
do
we
sit?
Are
we
like
in
the
middle?
Are
we
high
are.
AX
AX
Granular,
so
I
couldn't
get
it
from
a
lot
of
other
communities,
but
in
typical
the
the
permanent
Supportive
Housing
intervention
is
about
it's
we're,
probably
right
there
with
it.
Okay-
and
it
even
varies
in
the
community
right
that
there
are
some
programs
that
have
a
higher
that's
pretty
much
the
average.
There
are
some
programs
that
are
a
little
bit
higher
and
typically
have
lower
case
loads,
whereas
others
in
the
in
the
community
might
be
a
little
bit
lower,
lower
success
rate
but
have
larger
case
loads.
AQ
AQ
I,
did
you
have
a
color
clear,
oh
okay,
oh
okay,
I'm
not
quite
done
yet
Mark,
but
I'm.
Getting
there
and
I
I
just
wanted
to
say.
I
really
appreciate
the
focus
on
the
building
home
program
and
I
think
that's
this
really
needed
service
to
provide
people
with
support.
That's
a
big
transition,
especially
since
a
lot
of
times
the
folks
for
housing
are
the
highest
need.
People
in
the
community
who
have
a
lot
of
Criminal
Justice
interactions
and
mental
health
needs,
and
things
like
that.
AQ
So
I
just
really
want
to
say,
I
appreciate
those
programs
very
much
and
I'm
glad
we're
trying
that
to
see
if
we
can
get
our
maybe
get
our
rate
higher
than
other
communities.
AQ
Let's
see
the
okay
one
thing
that
I'm
a
little
bit
concerned
about,
though,
is
that
I've
heard
some.
Some
folks
are
because
of
some
of
the
eviction
prevention
that
we
put
in
place.
Landlords
may
be
using
non-renewals
of
leases
in
order
to
kind
of
evict
people
without
evicting,
and
so
do
you
expect
that
rate
of
people
re-entering
homelessness
to
go
up
a
bit
as
we
get
to
the
end
of
sort
of
eviction,
covet
eviction,
projections
and
things
like
that.
BS
So,
to
answer
that
more
correctly
I'm
going
to
ask
Karen
Armstrong
who
isn't
on
the
call
tonight
who
runs
the
empress
program
for
us,
I'll,
I'll
document
that
question
and
have
her
to
respond
to
you
on
hotline.
Okay,.
AQ
Thank
you
I
appreciate
that
and
then
another
one
thing
that
I
just
wanted
to
follow
up
on,
and
this
kind
of
relates
to
some
of
my
comments
a
couple
weeks
ago,
so
I.
So
you
said
that
about
46
percent
of
the
people
who
are
going
through
coordinated
entry,
which
are
really
our
single
adult
and
sheltered
homelessness
right.
AQ
AQ
Do
we
have
information
on
how
long
they're
staying
in
our
community
and
the
reason
I
ask,
is
because
when
when
I
so
I
mean
you
all
know,
I'm
at
feed
forward
every
Tuesday
afternoon
working
working
with
folks
in
the
community
doing
Street
Outreach
and
a
lot
of
the
folks
there
that
we
see
who
are
coming
in?
Who
are
new
to
the
community
they're
only
there
for
that
one
one
week
and
then
they're
gone
right,
they've
moved
on
and
and
I
asked
Dan
livoba
to
the
executive
director.
AQ
If
she
has
some
data
on
that,
she
suggested
that
that
was
also
the
case
that
a
lot
of
the
folks
who
are
coming
from
outside
really
are
not
here
very
long.
So
I'm
just
wondering.
Do
we
have
data
on
how
long
people
are
staying,
who
are
kind
of
based
in
our
community
versus
coming
in
from
outside
of
our
community.
BS
So
that's
that's
a
really
good
question
that
we've
had
for
a
while
that
we
haven't
been
able
to
answer
and
the
problem
is,
is
we
don't
survey
people
as
they're
leaving
the
city
and
the
the
other
thing
that
I'll
just
mention?
Is
we
also
know
that
well,
the
biggest
number
of
individuals
actually
come
from
Denver,
but
we
also
know
that
people
come
from
somewhere
else
to
Denver.
BS
So
it's
hard
to
track
a
lot
of
that
and
we
don't
ask
we
ask
the
question
of:
were
you
where
you
were
most
recently
Houser
unhoused?
We
don't
ask
you
know
where
you
first
started
experiencing
homelessness.
That
would
help
answer
sort
of
the
first
part
of
that
question,
but
we
don't
actually
know
how
to
collect
the
data.
AQ
Yeah,
thank
you
and
yeah
I'm
I
think
the
main,
the
main
reason
I
think
it
becomes
useful,
is
if
it
has
an
impact
on
outcomes
or
something
like
that
right,
but
I
think
you
know
it's
just
important
for
us
to
understand
that
most
people
are
like
across
the
country.
They
are
falling
into
homelessness
in
the
communities
where
they
are
right
and
we
do
have
some
movement
along
the
Front
Range,
which
is
why
I
really
love
the
idea
of
talking
to.
C
AQ
County
so
finally,
I
just
I
just
have
it's
mostly
a
comment
and
then
sort
of
a
question
that
I'm
not
sure
any
of
us
can
answer
here
tonight.
AQ
I
I'm
sort
of
at
a
moment
of
panic
when
I
think
about
homelessness
in
our
community,
and
the
reason
is
because
all
signs
point
to
homelessness,
rising
and
quickly
in
our
community
right
now
and
I
know
that
we're
doing
a
lot
and
it
doesn't
feel
like
we're
going
to
get
to
a
place
where
we
can
prevent
everybody
who's
about
to
fall
into
homelessness,
from
falling
into
homelessness
as
well
as
help
all
the
folks
who
are
out
there
right
now.
AQ
The
shelter
is
that
capacity
has
been
at
capacity
City
a
few
nights
this
summer,
which
you
know
you
informed
us
on
hotline.
That's
not
happened
before
in
the
summer.
It's
typically
a
lower
use
time.
I.
Can
you
know
report
down
a
feed
forward,
we're
seeing
record
numbers
of
people
every
week
around
150,
it's
been
growing
for
the
last
couple
of
months.
AQ
We've
got
effa
and
span
who
are
seeing
increases
and
families
needing
temporary
housing
due
to
economic
needs
or
domestic
violence,
and
a
lot
of
the
family
homelessness
prevention
funding
is
running
out
at
the
end
of
December,
so
we
don't
seem
to
have
enough
resources
to
prevent
the
folks
from
entering
homelessness
in
the
coming
year.
AQ
We
don't
seem
to
have
enough
resources
to
meet
the
needs
that
are
out
there
right
now
and
it
sort
of
feels
like
we're
on
a
cliff
and
I'm
wondering
what
are
we
gonna
do,
because
this
is
causing
a
lot
of
harm
in
our
community
in
many
different
ways.
BS
I'm
not
sure
how
to
answer
that,
what
I,
what
I
feel
strongly
about,
though,
is
as
a
nation
we've
fallen
behind
on
this
with
with
mental
health
as
a
priority
with
not
having
a
health
system
for
everyone
in
our
country.
Those
are
two
big
factors:
communities
are
not
investing
in
affordable
housing
I
feel
strongly
that
people
need
to
as
best
they
can
have
solved
their
theirs
their
their
challenges
and
and
issues
in
the
community
where
they're
most
closely
connected
and
because
of
the
inequities
between
communities.
BS
We're
we're
seeing
people
in
in
our
cities,
and
it's
not
that
we're
providing
too
many
services.
It's
that
other
communities
are
not
providing
any
services
and
I
I.
Think
I've,
mentioned
to
a
couple
of
you.
I
picked
up
a
gentleman
a
few
months
ago
from
the
hospital
to
drive
him
to
the
CRC
and
he
had
just
derived
from
Ohio
because
he
heard
about
you
know
the
housing
in
Boulder.
BS
AQ
Yeah,
yeah
and
I,
you
know
I
as
we're
heading
into
our
budget
discussions
and
things
for
this
year
too.
I
would
just
like
us
to
really
think
about
this,
because
all
signs
are
pointing
to
this
being
a
rising
problem
and
and
I
think
we
really
do
need
to
figure
out
how
we
can
reduce
the
harm
that's
coming
to
our
community
and
we
talk
about
single
adult
homelessness,
a
lot
right,
but
there's
a
lot
of
families
in
our
community
that
are
in
some
really
dire
situations.
Right
now,.
AS
First
I
want
to
apologize,
Nicole
I
didn't
mean
to
interrupt
you.
That
was
a
great
presentation.
Thank
you.
You
admonish
me
to
be
brief,
and
so
I
will
I
just
have
a
couple
of
quick
questions.
First
of
the
count
of
the
estimate
of
how
many.
BC
AS
C
AX
Number
that
are
not
I
can
speak
from
my
like
personal
experience
and
that
sometimes
we
don't
have
the
resource
they
want,
and
so
that
can
be
a
challenge
right
is,
is
I've
experienced
where
you
know
my
entire
career
that
phenomenon
where
it's
like
I
have
an
apartment.
Why
don't
you
want
it?
It's.
AX
Right
so
I
don't
have
a
number
to
put
to
that
though,
but
there
it's
not
a
huge
percentage,
I.
Think
typically,
when
you
ask
people
if
they
want
housing,
the
answer
is
most
mostly
yes,
but
we
run
into
barriers
on
getting
there.
Sometimes.
BS
That's
correct:
there
are
some
changes
at
the
state
level
where
I
think
they'll
be
addressing
that
and
we're
very
hopeful
about
that
and
I
think
the
the
advocacy
from
Council
and
Carl
Castillo's
work
has
been
helpful
in
supporting
that
as
well
and.
H
If
I
could
just
call
out
our
representative
Judy
immoblay,
who
has
been
a
great
Champion
for
increased
mental
and
Behavioral
Health
funding
and
services
and
the
the
state
is
devoting
hundreds
of
millions
of
dollars
in
this
area
from
arpa
funding
and
general
fund
funding,
so
they're
getting
better.
AS
AS
Very
last
question
I'm
very
happy
to
see
project
recovery.
What
is
the,
what
is
the
effectiveness
of
of
programs
to
treat
meth
addiction?
What
percentage
of
people
actually.
BC
Emerge
from
those
programs
without
relapsing
immediately
or
in
the
short
term,.
BS
So
in
in
spending
time
down
in
Denver
and
talking
to
Tomas
who
who
leads
that
program,
I'll
answer
that
with
a
few
caveats,
so
he
indicated
that
he
believed
it
was
somewhere
between
65
and
70
percent.
BS
However,
there
are
relapses
in
that
65
or
70
percent,
and
he
also
indicated
that
for
those
who
aren't
committed
to
being
in
the
program,
it's
a
into
getting
off
meth
the
numbers
are
closer
to
zero
and
so
that
that
commitment
is
really
needed
up
front
and
so
individuals
who
don't
have
that
commitment.
They
won't
be
in
the
program
and
so
obviously
I'm
really
excited
about
this
program
and
it's
going
to
impact
a
number
of
people.
But
it's
it's
not
going
to
change
significantly.
AN
Okay,
I'll
try
and
be
quick.
We
talked
about
being
out
by
11
right.
So,
following
up
on
a
point,
I
think
Aaron
just
made
I
think
that
the
state
of
Colorado
designated
some
650
million
dollars
in
in
new
money
through
I
want
to
say
maybe
HB
21
1329
and
HP
22
1304.
AN
BT
I'm
not
sure
I
have
actual
numbers
for
you,
but
I
will
tell
you
that
the
county
is
working
through
a
pretty
significant
mental
and
Behavioral
Health
mapping
and
and
determining
what
are
what
our
best
needs
are.
And
so
the
idea
would
be
that's
a
combination
of
their
arpa
funding,
opioid
recovery,
restitution,
money
and
potential
resources
like
these
new
bills
that
have
come
out.
BT
The
city
is
working
in
partnership
with
the
county
and
one
thing
that
kind
of
gets
lost
in
those
charts
of
who
spends.
What
is
how
we
sort
of
divide
and
conquer
on
certain
topics,
and
so
that
really
does
primarily
fall
on
the
county
around
mental
health
and
Behavioral
Health.
BT
That
being
said,
I
know
that
our
department
is
working
through
what
our
proposals
are
for
tranche
3
of
our
Opera
funding
and
that's
led
to
other
conversations
about
what
are
other
Revenue
sources
where
the
city
has
an
actual
Lane
in
that,
and
where
does
that
make
sense?
So
the
shorter
answer
is
we're
working
on
it.
AN
Thank
you,
I
mean
I,
assume
that
that
that
money's
gone
when
it's
gone
and
if
we
don't
apply
for
it,
other
counties
and
cities
are
going
to
get
it
so
I
think
it's
been
available
for
a
bit
and
I
would
love
to
see
us,
and
especially
the
county,
going
after
it
and
again
that
the
needs
are
big
and
getting
bigger,
so
I
I,
don't
I,
don't
know
if
there's
a
specific
ass
there,
but
it
seems
like
with
650
million,
possibly
sitting
out
there
and
us
not
having
resources
and
I.
AN
Don't
know
if
that's
something
that
we
can
call
on
Partners
at
dollar
or
elsewhere
to
help
us
come
up
with
the
applications.
I
know
we
have
limited
Staffing
and
resources
and
the
county,
maybe
in
some
of
that
situation
too,
but
hope
we
are
maximizing
that
my
next
question
is
I
I
believe,
according
to
a
State
website,
you
can
call
2-1-1
in
a
lot
of
places
and
and
get
a
human
on
the
phone
who
can
help
you
find
shelter
and
food
and
resources.
AN
And
do
they
know
our
like?
Can
they
tell
us
whether
severe
weather
shelter
is
full
on
a
given
night
here
in
Boulder,
probably.
AN
It
seems
like
that
may
be
something
that
we
could
Shore
up.
I,
don't
know
how
we
would
do
that,
but
it
would
be
great
if,
on
a
given
night,
somebody
who
needs
resources,
especially
given
that
we
have
people
who
are
moving
through
City,
pretty
quickly,
can
call
the
same
number
Statewide
and
get
older
resources.
AN
AX
AN
Like
in
real
and
and
again
in
that
they're
here
for
a
short
time
and
I
would
imagine
a
lot
of
it
is
you
know,
sort
of
emergency
Sheltering
needs
it's
going
to
be
crucial
to
know.
AN
Is
there
a
Bed
there
tonight
and
what
time
do
I
need
to
be
there
and
like
the
specific,
real-time
data,
so
our
information
so
I,
don't
know
how
big
of
a
lift
that
is,
but
that
would
be
great
and
then
I
think
we
talked
about
this
when
we
were
on
stamps
recently
and
I
know
I'm
I'm
crossing
my
streams
and
wire
here,
but
you
know
Joe
Tattoo's
been
sitting
there
all
night.
AN
Let's
give
them
something
right,
I
wanted
to
just
remember
if
we
are
looking
at
additional
like
restrooms
or
hygiene
stations
or
trash
cans
or
anything
if
you
think
that
would
be
helpful,
I
know
that
we
get
a
lot
of
people
writing
in
about
trash
along
the
creek
and
things
like
that
is
that.
Are
we
looking
at
any
more
resources
there.
AO
Thanks
for
giving
me
another
shot
at
this
microphone
so
yeah,
we
had
the
August
4th
meeting
on
Sams
and
we
heard
quite
a
few
things
there
from
the
council
members
and
we
have
an
executive
team
of
the
directors
involved
that
gets
together
monthly,
we're
also
doing
tours
and
ride-alongs
with
the
council
members
and
getting
your
feedback
there.
So
we're
taking
that
back
and
and
looking
at
things
like
the
restroom
suggestion,
I
think
there
was
another
one
around
Lighting
in
the
underpasses
and
processing.
All
of
that.
AO
AO
So
sounds
like
a
good
discussion
for
CAC
Maybe.
AN
AR
So
I
had
a
question
that
was
based
on
a
comment
we
received
from
the
community
around
demographics
of
the
various
programs
that
are
offered
sort
of
the
difference
between
diversion
and
then
more
housing,
focused
programs
and
how
we
see
a
higher
percentage
of
people
in
minority
populations
being
served
by
the
diversion
program
as
opposed
to
buy
housing,
focused
programs.
And
so
I
was
wondering
if
you
could
maybe
respond
to
why.
You
believe
that
we
might
be
seeing
that
and
what,
if
anything,
we're
doing
to
try
and
address
that.
BS
So
I'm
going
to
try
to
address
that
Vicky
might
have
something
to
to
add
in
on
this
as
well,
so
this
this
this
data
that
you're
referring
to
in
which
I
showed
comes
out
of
the
the
county
system,
that's
something
that
I
think
was
added
about
a
year
ago
in
collecting
that
data,
so
I'm
very
thankful
that
we
are
able
to
look
at
that
and
kind
of
see.
What's
going
on,
so
the
one
of
the
things.
That's
that's
changed
over
the
last
year
as
well.
BS
Previously
those
Services
were
more
Standalone
services,
and
so
you
know
if
you
go
through
coordinated
entry
and
it
makes
sense
to
go
to
Diversion,
you
were
sent
to
someone
who
did
diversion
and
now
it's
it's
more
meeting
with
that
individual
and
figuring
out
what
their
needs
are
and
and
having
someone
who
can
support
them
in
any
one
of
those
various
directions.
So
we're
trying
to
take
an
approach-
that's
not
so
sort
of
ring
fence
between
Services
I
think
that
will
that
could
have
some
impact
on
that
individuals.
BS
Number
of
individuals
who
are
experiencing
homelessness
come
into
our
community
they're.
All
they're,
going
to
almost
by
definition,
be
a
lot
more
diverse
than
what
our
current
Community
is,
and
we
also
know
that
individuals
of
color
have
other
barriers
and
homelessness
is
like
the
last
thing,
and
so
a
lot
of
inequities
within
our
society
generally
lead
to
more
homelessness
for
individuals
of
color
and
I.
BS
Think
in
the
past
and
people
who
have
come
from
from
out
of
town
or
haven't
been
here
for
a
long
period,
sometimes
they
have
different
solutions
and
diversions
sometimes
is
the
best
solution
for
someone
who's
here
for
a
shorter
period
of
time,
I
was
I'm
somewhat.
Anticipating
this
question
and
one
of
the
things
I
I
looked
at
the
other
day
was
our
housing
data
that
we
have
for
the
city
of
Boulder
I
wish
I
would
have
pulled
that
up.
BS
But
if
you
go
on
the
dashboard,
you
can
actually
see
that
so
I
think
it's
about
five
percent
well
for
African,
Americans,
I,
think
about
five
percent
of
those
who
live
in
our
affordable
housing
throughout
the
city
are
African-Americans,
and
so
it's
sort
of
five
times
the
rate
of
of
what
we
see
in
the
county
for
the
Latino
population.
It's
also
much
higher
in
our
affordable
housing.
So
I
think
what
we
can
see
generally
as
well
as
in
those
the
population
of
those
experiencing
homelessness.
BT
I
would
just
give
a
couple
little
caveats
on
that.
As
Kurt
mentioned,
diversion
is
a
kind
of
a
separate
thing
and
it's
a
and
I
think.
BT
Maybe
the
person
who
provided
that
information
may
have
been
looking
at
old
data
because,
as
you
can
see
from
the
chart,
housing
focused
shelter
for
people
of
color
referrals
is
not
three
times
less
than
diversion,
but
one
thing,
I
will
add,
is
that
diversion
is
open
to
everyone,
and
so
that
is
a
little
bit
different
from
the
way
the
referrals
are
made
in
that
at
that
first
time
that
we're
working
with
somebody,
they
get
the
opportunity
to
divert
no
matter
what
their,
what
their
particular
need
is
if
they
actually
have
the
need
where
they
can
be
helped
with
a
car
repair
or
a
reunification
with
a
support
system,
then
that's
what
happens
and
the
rest
of
them
are
based
on
screening
criteria
as
to
what
program
that
they
are
referred
to.
BT
One
of
the
things
we
also
have
to
consider
is
really
sort
of
what
Kurt
was
talking
about,
and
that
is
that
usually,
homelessness
is
sort
of
a
symptom
of
Upstream
issues
that
create
somebody's
homelessness
and
so
a
lot
of
the
inequities
and
the
reason
homelessness
in
itself
is
not
necessarily
racist
or
or
inequitable
I.
I.
BT
Imagine
there
are
some
Services
somewhere
that
are,
but
it's
all
of
those
safety
nets
and
all
of
those
are
wrap
around
services
that
happen
before
somebody
and
life
experiences
that
happen
before
somebody
becomes
unhoused
that
lead
to
those
inequities.
BT
The
other
thing
that
I
would
add,
too,
is
that
when
we
are
looking
at
that,
what
we
are
looking
for
is
making
sure
that
our
programs
are
providing
people
with
what
they
need
to
that
end.
When
we
talked
a
lot
about
the
binomialist
and
how
people
are
prioritized,
we
actually
hide
that
information.
So
we
don't
look
at
somebody's
gender.
We
don't
look
at
their
sexual
orientation.
We
don't
look
at
their
race
for
their
ethnicity.
BT
AR
H
L
One
of
the
programs
that
you
talked
about.
First
of
all,
thank
you
for
all
these
new
programs.
They
sent
wonderful,
really
great
Megan.
You
were
awesome
and
plus
your
smiling
face,
really
great
talk
to
I.
Think
community
members
might
be
interested
to
hear
about
those
people
that
have
are
hard
to
house
because
of
criminal
history,
and
then
you
mentioned
that
you're
having
they
have
success
when
they
get
into
housing.
AX
I
think
the
criminal
history
I
don't
have
the
data
we'd
have
to
look
at
that
exactly,
but
generally
you
know,
landlords
do
background
checks,
BHP
does
background
checks,
and
so,
if
you
have
certain
extensive
a
lot
of
little
crimes
that
you've
got
a
lot
of
that's
a
big
ding
against
you
and
then
other
crimes
are
absolute
no-go's,
and
so
some
of
the
folks
that
we're
working
with
this
is
a
true
situation,
and
so
it
it
may
not
even
be
recent.
AX
That's
the
other
piece
of
it
right
is
that
some
of
that
criminal
background
can
be
in
their
history
and
at
this
point,
they've
made
a
change,
but
they
can't
move
forward
because
they
can't
get
into
housing.
AX
We
saw
that
as
a
big
gap
for
our
high
utilizers
is
that
even
if
we
were
they
were
willing
to
work
with
us
ready
to
take
that
step.
We
had
nowhere
to
help
them
to
take
it,
so
that
was
the
the
driving
force
on
having
the
shelter
the
shelter
brought
it
to
us.
A
plan
to
purchase
these
units
and
it's
supported
by
both
us
and
the
county
and
I,
will
say
one
of
the
gentlemen.
AX
That
was
one
of
the
first
ones
known
him
well
and
for
a
long
time
and
it's
a
significant
change
since
he's
been
housed.
That
was
I.
Think
last
Christmas.
L
BS
Yeah,
that's
that's
a
great
question.
I
I
think
I
think
the
start
of
it
is
is.
AT
BS
Megan
mentioned
earlier,
but
we
we
see
single,
adult
homelessness
in
our
community,
where
we
don't
see
it
for
families,
so
there's
a
lot
more
emphasis
on
it,
as
as
a
community
and
as
previous
city
councils,
and
we
don't
really
have
dedicated
sources
for
family
homelessness
like
we
like.
We
have
for
single
adults
and
I
I
would
say:
we've
got
some
great
organizations
throughout
the
county
that
support
a
lot
of
this
work.
BS
So
it's
it's
competing
with
a
lot
of
other
community
needs,
and
so
that's
sort
of
the
you
know
the
bucket
that
it
would
come
from
and
but
what
we
have
seen
and
what
we
didn't
talk
about
tonight
is
and
Vicki
has
sat
on
these
family
homelessness
committees,
where
this
work
is
coordinated
as
well,
and
so
we
have
seen
recently
that
in
like
Rachel
mentioned
some
of
this,
some
of
these
federal
dollars
will
be
potentially
depleting
at
times
as
well,
and
so
we
do
see
this
as
a
potential
need
that
that
needs
to
be
filled
over
the
next
year.
BS
L
Mean
I'm
pretty
sure,
I
read
it.
That
course
I'm
not
the
most
well
read
in
this
subject,
but
isn't
it
true
that
when
you're
young
and
you're
experiencing
homeless
that
you
just
it,
can
it
just
stays
with
you?
So
to
me
it
would
seem
like
family
homelessness
is
one
of
the
most
important
things
to
solve.
For
that
reason,
absolutely.
BS
I
mean
a
lot
of
homelessness,
comes
from
children
who
have
been
homeless,
and
so
if
we
can
prevent
that
through
supporting
families,
you
know
that
has
a
lifelong
effect.
So.
L
BT
The
short
answer
is
no:
they
work
with
a
complex
network
of
state,
federal
funding,
County
funding,
city
funding,
their
own
donations
and
private
fundraising,
the
need,
as
we
mentioned
earlier,
is
increasing
tenfold
and
anytime.
We
have
any
kind
of
natural
disaster
that
also
puts
a
crimp
into
the
system,
and
data
shows
I
believe
it
was
in
the
memo
that
those
are
also
on
the
rise,
and
so
one
thing
I
will
say,
is
historically.
BT
So
we
have
this
huge
need
for
prevention
and
a
quick
stabilization,
but
we
are
also
starting
to
see
families
that
have
some
really
entrenched
need,
and
that,
of
course,
is
a
very
expensive
intervention,
and
so
that's
really
why
the
Family
Resource,
Network
and
then
subsequently
the
almost
a
subcommittee
for
families
is
really
trying
to
set
up
a
system
that
is
coordinated,
is
getting
the
voice
of
their
clients.
I'm.
BT
H
BT
H
AQ
BT
I
think
you
might
be
thinking
of
some
of
the
county
resources.
Okay,.
AQ
BT
AQ
H
So
it's
10
52
we're
getting
close
to
needing
a
motion
to
continue,
but
are
there
other
questions
or
comments
that
people
want
to
make
I
am
not
seeing
any
so
Kurt
and
Megan
and
Vicki.
Thank
you.
So
much
for
all
of
your
efforts
for
the
presentation
for
the
continuing
work
that
you
do
to
support
the
folks
most
in
need
in
our
community
I
appreciate
so
much
everything
that
you
do
and
as
well
as
the
other
folks.
You
know
Joe
from
utilities
and
our
Police
Department
folks,
who
are
here
as
well.
H
A
it's
a
team
effort,
of
course
the
need
is
far
greater-
will
continue
to
do
everything
that
we
can
locally
to
deal
with
these
massive
societal
problems
so
appreciate
all
the
insightful
questions
and
comments
from
my
colleagues
here
tonight.