►
From YouTube: Boulder City Council Meeting 8-4-22
Description
No description was provided for this meeting.
If this is YOUR meeting, an easy way to fix this is to add a description to your video, wherever mtngs.io found it (probably YouTube).
A
2022
meeting
of
the
boulder
city
council
we're
going
to
kick
it
off
with
a
couple
announcements:
those
up
on
the
screen.
Please
covet
19
testing
and
vaccinations
so
for
information
and
provider
locations
for
free
code,
19
testing,
please
go
to
www.boco.org
copic
testing.
The
boulder
site
is
at
2445
stasio
drive
open
seven
days
a
week
from
8am
to
6pm
for
vaccine
information
and
provider
locations
go
to
boco.org
vaccine.
A
This
collaborative
statewide
initiative
made
possible
by
colorado
senate
bill
22180
in
partnership
with
the
colorado
energy
office,
is
designed
to
reduce
ground
level
ozone
by
increasing
use
of
public
transit.
Current
rtd,
customers
were
also
benefited,
as
you
will
not
have
to
use
or
purchase
fair
products
from
august
1st
to
the
31st
during
colorado's
high
ozone
season.
A
So
by
taking
advantage
of
free
transit
in
august,
you
can
save
money
on
gas
and
parking
avoid
the
frustration
of
driving
traffic
help
improve
our
air
quality
by
reducing
single
occupancy
vehicle
traffic
and
use
your
commute
to
catch
up
on
work,
listen
to
music
or
read
a
book
so
for
more
info.
Please
visit
our
tv
site
at
www.
A
D
F
A
Motion
in
a
second
all
in
favor
do
a
quick
show
of
hands.
A
G
Thank
you
so
much
mayor
and
emily
is
pulling
up
those
slides
now.
Thank
you
emily.
So
we
know
that
some
of
you
have
heard
these
slides
many
times
and
we
appreciate
your
patience
as
we
share
them
for
those
who
may
be
joining
us
for
the
first
time
or
who
don't
join
us.
As
often
the
city
has
engaged,
with
community
members
to
co-create
a
vision
for
productive,
meaningful
and
inclusive
civic
conversation.
G
This
vision
is
designed
to
support
physical
and
emotional
safety
for
community
members,
for
staff
and
for
city
council,
as
well
as
supporting
democracy
for
people
of
all
ages.
All
identities
lived
experiences
and
political
perspectives
for
more
information
about
the
process
that
led
to
the
creation
of
this
vision.
Please
visit
our
website
boulder
colorado.gov.
G
H
Good
evening,
good
evening,
council
and
staff
jan
burton
11th
street,
on
the
hill
on
the
morning
of
july,
4th,
just
a
month
ago,
the
music
was
blaring
throughout
the
hill.
The
parties
had
already
started
commercial
grade.
Fireworks
were
exploding
throughout
the
neighborhood
all
day
long,
but
nipping
it
in
the
bud
is
nothing.
The
city
has
ever
excelled
at
by
the
end
of
the
night,
due
to
a
social
media
post,
one
party
had
blown
up
into
a
mini
riot
with
party
seekers
from
denver
and
other
cities
joining
in,
despite
police
attempts
to
shut
it
down.
H
Partiers
set
bushes
on
fire,
jumped
on
cars
and
set
off
fireworks
more
alarming.
Just
a
few
blocks
away.
More
than
80
bullets
were
fired
from
an
automatic
handgun
and
an
ar-15
style
long
gun.
This
was
right
in
the
middle
of
housing
and
only
a
few
blocks
from
a
church,
a
city
park
and
the
hill
commercial
district.
H
I
hope
each
of
you
agree
that
guns,
fireworks
and
fires
are
not
just
a
nuisance
to
be
suffered
by
hill
residents.
These
are
serious
public
safety
issues
for
the
entire
city.
Yet
most
of
these
violations
start
with
seemingly
innocent
house
parties
and
what
the
city
has
defined,
as
quote
unquote
nuisance.
H
Now,
almost
a
year
and
a
half
since
the
april
20
2021
riot,
you
finally
have
legislation
to
consider.
Please
pass
that
legislation
on
september
4th
on
emergency
basis,
to
begin
progress
towards
improving
safety
for
our
city,
but
don't
stop.
There
ask
your
city
manager
in
the
2023
budget
to
prioritize
head
count,
data
collection,
detailed
enforcement
procedures
and
a
new
chronic
nuisance,
ordinance
dealing
with
landlords
and
and
offending
properties.
H
A
Your
time
was
up,
but
thank
you
so
much
for
your
testimony.
Emily
reynolds,
allison
conte,
michelle
rodriguez.
I
Good
evening,
I'm
here
to
advocate
for
the
decriminalization
of
psilocybin
mushrooms
in
boulder
county
in
boulder
city,
I
come
to
you
as
a
homeowner,
a
professional
and
a
spiritual
guide.
I've
lived
in
boulder
for
10
years.
I
also
went
to
college
here
many
moons
ago
and
I
hold
a
master's
degree
from
case
western
weatherhead
school
of
management.
I
I
co-founded
a
non-profit
spiritual
organization
here
in
boulder
I've
spent
30
years
on
the
shamanic
path
and
I
have
studied
with
a
number
of
first
nations
wisdom
keepers.
I
currently
work
under
the
mentorship
of
an
indigenous
grandmother,
a
lineage
holder
and
I
recently
completed
a
year-long
training
within
a
native
american
lineage
tradition.
I
As
a
ceremonial
guide,
working
with
what
native
americans
call
plant
medicines
and
what
christians
call
sacraments
psilocybin
mushrooms
have
been
an
important
part
of
my
spiritual
life
for
10
years.
This
is
a
safe
and
sincere
form
of
prayer
and
it
has
generated
the
most
significant
experiences
of
my
spiritual
life.
I
I
have
witnessed
many
people
receive
spiritual
guidance
and
healing
from
this
practice.
I
consider
it
to
be
a
protected
form
of
prayer
under
the
religious
freedom.
Restoration
act,
so
I'm
here
today
with
all
of
my
training,
skills
and
responsibilities
as
a
spiritual
guide
to
ask
you
to
decriminalize
the
assignment
in
boulder
for
use
in
spiritual
ceremony.
A
G
Michelle,
I
see
you,
oh,
she
can't
see
the
timer
and
we
can't
hear
you
michelle.
You
may
need
to
press
the
mute
button.
A
Thanks
we'll
come
back
next,
we
have
celeste
landry,
then.
J
Good
evening,
council,
I'm
here
to
speak
to
the
proposal
to
move
to
council
elections
to
even
years
first,
I
wish
that
we
could
have
a
broader
community
discussion
before
the
ballot
text
is
determined
waiting
for
the
council's
official
public
hearing
seems
kind
of
late.
So
what
are
some
of
these
often
forgotten
details
that
need
to
be
discussed?
J
One
of
them
is
the
impact
of
moving
council.
Elections
to
even
years
will
probably
end
up
with
a
dramatic
increase
in
the
number
of
signatures
needed
for
citizens,
initiatives,
council
recalls
and
referenda
on
council
actions,
making
the
citizen
petition
process
much
more
difficult
by
all
accounts,
coloradans
highly
value,
the
citizen
petition
process.
Yet
I've
heard
barely
any
mention
of
this
issue,
so
please
consider
changing
the
signature
percentage
requirements
in
the
bowel
text
when
you
meet
at
the
next
meeting
and
not
kick
this
can
down
the
road
to
be
dealt
with
in
future
years.
J
A
second
point:
how
will
moving
to
even
year
elections,
possibly
impact
council
vacancies
that
arise?
That's
something
to
consider.
Currently,
a
single
council
seat
can
remain
empty
for
a
year.
How
many
council
members,
who
are
halfway
through
their
term
will
run
for
a
different
office
in
an
even
year
leading
to
a
special
election
in
the
following
odd
year
to
fill
the
vacancy?
J
And
finally,
please
don't
use
the
mayoral
contest
as
the
basis
for
the
number
of
petition
signatures
needed.
The
mayoral
contest
might
be
uncontested
or
I
might
have
several
candidates
vying.
The
multi-winner
counsel
contest
would
be
a
more
reliable
indicator
of
turnout
than
a
single
winner
contest.
J
K
My
name
is
patrick
murphy.
I've
lived
in
boulder
for
52
years.
Add
one
more
dumb
idea
to
the
boulder
energy
future
list,
so
boulder
wants
to
buy
all
the
light
poles
and
change
them
to
leds.
Why
is
that
dumb?
Everything
that
they
aren't
telling
us
that's?
What
every
town
around
us
has
had
led
street
lights
years
ago
and
excel
did
the
conversion.
That's
right
years
ago,
while
boulder
was
pursuing
the
mooney
boondoggle,
we
could
have
had
xl,
convert
all
our
street
lights
to
leds.
K
K
The
stated
reason
was
that
we
didn't
like
the
color
temperature
of
the
leds
that
was
based
on
the
idea
that
the
street
lights
would
keep
us
awake.
Interestingly,
there
has
been
no
lost
sleep
outcry
from
all
the
towns
around
us
that
did
the
conversion
years
ago.
The
unstated
reason
was
that
if
the
muni
happened,
it
would
cost
us
more
since
excel
would
have
to
get
reimbursed
for
the
conversion.
K
This
is
just
one
more
example
of
boulder
energy
leadership's
warped
logic.
One
justification
for
this
purchase
is
that
boulder
would
do
the
maintenance
and
it
would
be
so
much
better
than
excel
right
kind
of,
like
our
poor
library
funding
and
our
sky
high
water
bills.
It
followed
the
2013
floods
that
revealed
a
poorly
maintained
water
system
nope.
This
is
just
another
costly,
dumb
idea.
We
can
get
all
the
benefits
of
led
street
lights
by
saying
yes.
K
L
I
just
got
a
text
from
a
community
member
that
they
thought
that
it
was
seven
o'clock
where
we
were
going
to
be
doing
this.
Do
you
know
what
that
would
be.
B
I
can
answer
that:
tara
tara.
Apparently
we
missed
one
section,
which
was
the
calendar
that
had
the
meeting
starting
at
seven
o'clock
due
to
the
tuesday
and
the
late
night
out.
So
what
we
did
first
thing
this
morning
is
get
that
corrected
and
we've.
Let
several
community
members
know
that
it
was
corrected
so.
A
G
M
God
can
you
hear
me
now
we
can?
Can
you
hear
me
now?
Yes,
yes,
okay,
strap
in
we're
going
on
a
high
speed
romp
through
three
issues
on
issue
number
one
nod
versus
even
your
city,
council
voting
stays.
Of
course.
I
never
liked
the
answer,
because
that's
the
way
we've
always
done
it,
but
sometimes
there
are
good
reasons
for
keeping
things
the
way
they
are
number
one.
I
want
to
have
time
to
consider
my
choices
unencumbered
by
national
issues
and
candidates.
Number
two:
everyone
gets
the
mail
in
ballot.
No
one
is
being
disenfranchised
number
three.
M
If
it
ain't
broke,
don't
fix
it
issue
number
two:
affordable
housing
actions
have
long-term
consequences.
If
you
allow
a
new
building
with
25,
affordable
and
the
rest
are
luxury
units
to
offset
developers
lost.
Does
that
not
cause
the
average
income
in
boulder
to
go
up,
thereby
making
it
more
difficult
for
the
average
citizen
to
live
here?
And
this
says
nothing
about
the
added
greenhouse
gases
from
increased
traffic
and
and
spreading
our
diminished
water
supply
scent
issue
number
three
crime
want
affordable
housing.
M
If
crime
continues
unchecked
by
revolving
door
policies,
property
values
will
fall
and
boom
problem
solved,
affordable
housing,
undesirable,
perhaps
but
affordable.
I
quote
amid
rising
crime
and
scrutiny
of
cops.
There
is
an
exodus
of
police
chiefs
in
denver
suburbs
and
I
reference
denver
police
in
today's
daily
camera
or
the
denver
post
props
to
chief
harold
in
our
amazing
police
force.
We
know
you're
doing
the
best
you
can
to
recap.
Keep
odd
year.
M
A
D
So
much
good
evening,
everyone,
I
remember
when
boulder
was
welcoming,
inclusive
and
safe.
Sadly,
public
spaces
in
central
boulder
have
become
dangerous.
Boulder
creek
is
a
hazardous
and
unsafe
destination.
I'd
love
to
walk
my
dog
down
the
creek
bath,
but
I
don't
want
him
to
step
in
feces
or
on
a
used
syringe.
D
Nor
do
I
want
to
meet
armed
repeat
criminals
on
meth
and
fentanyl.
I
avoid
the
pearl
street
mall,
main
library,
bike
paths,
central
park
and
events
held
there
and
the
boulder
museum
of
contemporary
art
and
the
duchamp
tea
house
and
the
farmer's
market.
I
no
longer
feel
safe
in
these
areas
due
to
high
crime
and
lack
of
meaningful
city,
supported,
monitoring
or
safety
precautions.
D
Neighbors
and
friends
avoid
these
areas
too.
Out
of
town
visitors
are
shocked
when
they
see
the
deterioration
of
our
public
spaces
downtown.
I'm
not
alarmed
I'm
appalled.
I
appreciate
the
work.
Boulder
police
department
and
city
staff
do
to
eliminate
crime
and
the
chop
shop,
encampments,
cleaning
up,
400
campsites.
So
far
this
year
is
non-trivial.
D
These
efforts
demand
more
funding.
What
are
council
members
doing
to
support
policies
to
address
these
issues?
Unfortunately,
it
seems
that
the
majority
of
council
members
are
choosing
to
ignore
the
community
that
they
were
elected
to
represent
before
dashing
off
to
higher
elected
office.
Please
do
your
work
here.
Like
many
others,
I
urge
you
to
move
on
the
two
park
measures,
so
we
can
actually
enjoy
and
feel
safe
and
welcome
in
our
public
spaces
clean
up
our
parks.
Please
support
chief
harold
support
in
force,
I
should
say
the
camping
ban.
Thank
you
very
much.
N
Hi,
all
first
off
aaron
and
juni.
Congratulations
and
best
of
luck
on
upcoming
hd10
race
and
thanks
for
your
service
to
the
city
and
to
the
state,
and
thank
you
all.
My
name
is
aaron
gabriel
ag.
For
short,
I
am
a
eco-psychology
graduate
from
naropa
and
a
developer
relations
engineer
at
google
and
a
proud
boulder
resident.
N
I
want
to
speak
a
little
bit
to
what
place
I
think
boulder
can
hold
and
what
I
think
our
potential
is,
because
I
think
boulder
is
a
really
interesting
space.
We
have
two
amazing
educational
institutions
here,
and
we
also
have
a
lot
of
really
awesome,
like
tech
from
big
companies
and
startups
emerging,
and
there
are
many
who
compare
boulder
to
kind
of
like
a
new
silicon
valley
and
silicon
valley.
N
Is
this
hub
of
innovation,
but
also
we've
seen
a
lot
of
gentrification,
and
I
think
we
can
experience
where
some
of
that
is
happening
here
in
boulder
as
well,
that
there's
big
wealth
inequalities
and
a
lot
of
not
great
issues,
not
great
things.
That
we'd
like
to
see
probably
address
to
be
a
more
inclusive
and
progressive
city.
N
But
I
think
our
potential
is
great,
because
we
have
so
much
intelligence
here
with
our
educational
universities
and
with
the
innovative
tech
hub,
and
I
think
we
can
do
more
as
a
community
to
look
at
what
these
different
voices
are
and
look
at
how
we
can
include
these
different
voices
and
how
we
can
bring
more
voices
to
the
table
to
make
sure
that,
as
we
are
this
hub
of
innovation,
we
can
also
do
it
in
a
way.
That's
really
inclusive,
intelligent
and
well-meaning.
N
I
think
that
naropa,
for
example,
is
really
weaving
eastern
western
philosophies
and
bringing
a
more
integrated
worldview
together.
Cu
boulder,
also
awesome
cognitive
science
department,
neuroscience
amazing
environmental
studies,
department,
a
lot
of
really
beautiful
things,
and
I
think
we
can
do
a
better
job
of
honoring.
The
intelligence
that's
present
here
and
bringing
more
voice
to
the
table
to
move
things
forward,
so
that
boulder
can
continue
to
be
a
hub
for
a
really
beautiful
new
way
to
move
forward
as
humanity.
N
But
I
think
it
requires
us
to
be
very
honest
and
I'm
going
to
give
a
plus
one
to
everyone
advocating
for
decriminalizing
nature
and
psychedelics,
because
I
think
psychedelics
can
represent
a
really
important
point
in
terms
of
this
shifting
worldview.
So
thank
you
so
much
for
your
time
and
thank
you
all
for
your
service.
A
I
understand
joshua
harrison
is
available.
Now,
can
we
go
to
him.
O
Thank
you
to
the
council
for
your
time.
I
would
like
to
speak
briefly
about
personal
responsibility,
as
council
prepares
to
discuss
the
funding
of
various
programs,
I
would
like
you
all
to
consider
the
role
of
personal
responsibility,
the
personal
responsibility
of
working
boulder
rights
to
pay
their
fair
share,
the
personal
responsibility
of
council
members
to
thoughtfully
and
compassionately
allocate
the
resources
of
the
city
and
the
personal
responsibility
of
all
in
our
community
to
follow
the
law.
O
I
am
tired
of
the
way
some
council
members
and
organizations
dismiss
the
personal
responsibility
of
those
experiencing
homelessness
to
behave
according
to
community
standards,
to
be
clear
when
those
experiencing
homelessness
act
as
responsible
members
of
the
community,
there
are
abundant
ways
to
provide
help,
most
of
which
are
already
implemented
by
the
city
of
boulder.
However,
it
is
the
frequent
anti-social
behavior
of
unhoused
residents
that
necessitates
laws
like
the
camping
ban.
These
are
not
the
most
vulnerable
among
boulder's
community.
That
label
belongs
to
our
young
children,
who
are
unable
to
avoid
dirty
meals
or
human
waste.
O
There
are
roughly
300
unique
visitors
to
our
needle
exchange
program
each
month,
and
the
number
of
needles
returned
by
these
individuals
is
only
half
of
the
number
given
out.
While
this
commendable
program
reduces
the
risk
to
drug
users,
it
cannot
be
lauded
as
a
success
when
hundreds
of
these
used
needles
are
being
found
by
the
children's
park
near
the
main
library.
O
Our
public
spaces
are
often
not
safe.
All
of
this
dances
around
the
elephant
in
the
room,
we
are
not
dealing
with
a
homeless
problem.
We
are
dealing
with
a
drug
problem,
according
to
judge
cook.
80
percent
of
the
unhoused
defendants
that
end
up
in
her
courtroom
are
suffering
from
drug
addiction
and
while
drug
addiction
is
a
disease,
it
is
not
one.
It
is
one
that
cannot
be
treated
without
the
cooperation
of
those
affected,
and
that
requires
an
addict
to
take
personal
responsibility
for
the
consequences
of
his
behavior.
P
Yes,
thank
you
city
council,
for
the
opportunity
to
speak
today.
I'm
here
in
support
of
the
decriminalization
of
psychedelics
in
boulder.
I
have
a
degree
in
cognitive
neuroscience.
I
was
a
master's
in
engineering
from
cu
boulder
here.
I've
worked
for
much
of
my
career
in
the
development
and
commercialization
of
medical
devices
and
pharmaceuticals,
often
recruiting
internationally
known
physician,
thought
leaders
who
give
keynote
presentations
at
specialty
medical
conferences.
P
There's
tremendous
potential
for
these
psychedelic
medicines
substances
to
be
used
safely
and
responsibly,
especially
to
support
people
that
have
more
comfortable
and
humane
experiences
with
death
and
dying
september,
6th,
I'm
hosting
an
event
focused
on
psychedelics
for
death
and
dying.
We
already
have
overwhelming
interest
from
nurses,
physicians,
clinical
administrators,
our
entire
adult
population
can
benefit
from
the
decriminalization
of
psychedelics,
and
I
humbly
ask
you
to
keep
our
elderly
and
are
dying
in
your
hearts
and
minds
as
you
consider
this
topic.
A
Thank
you,
timothy
and
I
see
mayor
protem
franchise
right
on
that.
E
Thank
you
mayor
rocket.
I
just
wanted
to
apologize
for
having
my
camera
off,
especially
to
the
last
speaker.
I
turned
it
off
in
the
middle,
I'm
not
not
paying
attention.
My
computer
is
just
overheating,
so
I
apologize.
A
Actually,
I
turned
my
camera
off
for
30
seconds
because
my
dog
was
going
nuts,
so
I
also
apologize
for
that.
Coincidental,
okay,
also
michelle
rodriguez,
who
is,
I
think,
an
attendee
still
in
the
zoo
meeting.
If
you
could
call
in
via
phone,
I
believe
brenda
has
sent
you
that
number
in
the
chat.
So
maybe
we
can
get
you
audible.
That
way.
Please
now
we
have
a
peter
allen,
kathleen
hancock
and
holly
carlson.
Q
Hello,
thank
you
so
much
for
letting
me
speak
tonight.
Yes,
thank
you.
You
have
my
presentation.
Like
many
boulderites
one
of
my
favorite
pastimes
is
cycling.
I
usually
ride
with
a
group
of
women,
so
it's
both
exercise
and
social
time.
I
also
commute
to
appointments
and
shopping
I'd
say
I'm
on
the
bike
path
about
five
times
a
week.
Q
Second
slide
please,
this
summer.
For
the
first
time
I
find
myself
and
my
friends
almost
every
day,
dodging
trash
tents
and
people
sitting
in
the
bike
lanes,
sudden
swerving,
to
avoid
a
tent
person,
garbage
shopping,
cart,
etc,
can
result
in
the
cyclist
crashing
possibly
into
a
person,
those
behind
also
risk
crashing
when
cyclists
enter
a
dark,
underpass
they're,
often
blinded
for
a
split
second
as
their
eyes,
adjust
to
the
dark.
It's
very
hard
to
see
obstacles.
Q
Q
Q
Q
I
was
super
happy
this
morning,
though,
because,
as
I
rode
past,
these
usual
trashed
places
they
were
cleaned
and
lights
were
being
installed,
so
I
was
very
happy
to
see
that
I
just
want
to
really
encourage
you
to
continue
providing
funding,
so
we
can
maintain
safe
bike
paths.
Thank
you
very
much.
Thanks.
R
I'm
bringing
up
brocky
flats
and
I
understand
that
145
prairie
dogs
have
already
been
moved
to
rocky
flats
with
regarding
to
negotiations
of
avoiding
call
up
on
gun
barrel
development
of
200.
Some
housing
situations
there,
and
this
already
has
such
a
huge
impact
on
gun
barrel,
with
no
libraries,
no
re,
I
mean
they're,
putting
a
little
library
just
for
the
community,
but
libraries
rec
centers,
please
fire.
All
the
infrastructure
needed
for
growth
is
not
there.
R
It's
like
you,
build
it
first
and
then
the
the
infrastructure
is
an
after
thought,
and
this
is
not
okay,
but
it's
mostly
not
okay,
because
the
people
that
were
opposed
to
this
development
are
now
assuaged
with
the
the
prairie
dogs,
which
were
promised
to
be
preserved
a
home
there
and
have
now
it's
just
unspeakable
sent
to
rocky
flats.
This
is
seven
billion
dollar
cleanup
at
rocky
flats.
That
was
supposed
to
be
30
billion.
R
You
know
on
the
cheap
and
it's
a
cheap
cleanup,
and
these
prairie
dogs
dig
down
six
feet
and
my
mother
died
as
a
result
of
acute
mild,
acidic
leukemia
that
she
got.
I
believe-
and
I
can't
prove
in
1957
at
the
biggest
fire
downwind
of
where
we
lived
in
city
park
in
denver
and
she
died
in
1969
when
I
was
16,
my
brother
was
15
and
my
little
brother
was
five
and
that
was
the
year
of
the
mother's
day,
fire
the
second
biggest
fire
at
rocky
flats
get
those
prairie
dogs
out
of
rocky
flats.
R
S
Hi
city,
council
members,
thank
you
for
your
time
and
your
service
to
our
city.
I
watched
your
study
session
on
reimagining
policing
and
I
couldn't
help
but
wonder
if
we
can
just
go
back
to
having
any
form
of
policing
at
all.
I
think
the
kovad,
summons
or
ticket
approach
to
crime
has
failed
for
three
years
and
certainly
doesn't
stop
any
crime.
S
I
know
sheriff
kelly
has
served
this
community
long
and
well
for
decades
and
until
post
vaccine
covered,
I
admired
his
service,
but
that
was
before
our
national
homelessness
slash
addiction
crisis.
In
january.
I
hope
a
new
sheriff
will
open
our
jail
for
post-vaccine-covered
business.
Meanwhile,
every
single
day
we
have
our
belongings
stolen
out
of
our
cars
out
from
under
our
cars
out
of
our
garages
out
of
our
homes,
you
can
see
the
evidence
on
any
casual,
landsat
next
door,
social
media.
S
So
someone
yet
some
on
city
council
seem
to
think
the
answers
for
boulder
are
more
big
business,
more
density,
a
doubling
of
the
current
size
of
cu
via
building
cu.
South
in
the
last
wetlands
in
boulder-
and
I
don't
understand
how
all
this
growth
jives
with
a
growth
control
town
of
about
a
hundred
thousand
citizens.
S
Finally,
I'm
against
the
idea
of
gifting
our
city
assets
to
the
library
foundation,
with
an
increase
in
mill
levy
and
was
shocked
by
your
enthusiasm
for
that
idea,
or
maybe
it
was
enthusiasm
to
get
at
more
of
our
tax
monies.
I'm
grateful
to
those
who
voted
against
it
and
our
commissioners
for
stopping
it.
T
Thank
you,
council,
mayor
and
staff
for
the
opportunity
to
speak
tonight
about
a
health
crisis
in
our
community
lead
pollution
in
boulder
from
general
and
recreational
aviation.
I
sent
a
slide
deck
for
your
review,
which
is
up
and
I'll
touch
on
the
highlights
now,
but
there's
no
need
to
change
slides
for
this
talk.
We
are
in
a
public
health
crisis.
Over
70
percent
of
lead
pollution
in
colorado
comes
from
aviation
and
since
2020,
over
125
pounds
of
lead
have
been
released
into
boulder's
air
based
on
sales
of
leaded
fuel
out
of
boulder
airport.
T
Furthermore,
boulder
is
currently
selling
and
profiting
from
the
like
sales
of
leaded
fuel.
While
unleaded
alternatives
exist,
longmont
is
selling
unleaded
fuel.
There
is
no
safe
level
of
lead,
lead
stays
in
our
bodies
forever
and
is
devastating
for
children.
This
is
a
public
health
crisis
being
subsidized
by
boulder
taxpayers,
and
we
are
asking
for
city
council
to
take
a
stand.
Last
week
there
was
a
congressional
hearing
on
let
it
aviation
fuel
as
a
health
crisis,
and
the
responsibility
falls
to
us
to
take
action.
T
So
much
good
could
be
done
with
the
city-owned
land
that
currently
houses.
The
pollution
engine
of
the
airport,
in
this
case
truly
the
needs
of
the
many
outweigh
the
needs
of
the
privileged
few.
You
might
have
heard
the
argument
for
boulder
airport
as
an
economic
driver.
In
three
words,
it's
not
true.
Studies
of
similar-sized
airports
have
found
that
airports
like
ours
have
the
impact
of
a
strip
mall
and
are
heavily
subsidized
by
taxpayers.
T
Finally,
by
faa
regulations,
any
positive
economic
impact
from
the
airport
stays
with
the
import,
the
airport,
rather
than
going
back
to
the
city,
so
much
could
be
done
with
the
land
that
currently
houses
the
pollution
engine
of
the
airport,
affordable
housing,
student,
housing,
floodplain
protection,
and,
in
this
case
again
the
needs
of
the
many
outweigh
the
needs
of
the
privileged
few
city.
Council
has
a
strong
record
of
standing
up
for.
T
U
A
Thank
you,
elise.
Now
we
have
ryan
yasuo,
neil
rasmussen
and
schuler
bailey.
V
V
One
example
that
can
be
found
on
john
hopkins
website
as
a
press
release
is
titled
psilocybin
treatment
for
major
depression,
effective
for
up
to
a
year
for
most
patients
study
shows
in
america.
We
believe
in
freedom.
Yet
the
government
can
arrest
people
and
put
them
in
jail
based
on
what
substances
they
choose
to
put
in
their
own
bodies.
V
V
V
U
A
G
Allow
to
talk
is
not
available.
Oh
I'm
going
to
promote
you
to
panelist
neil,
so
you
will
leave
the
meeting
and
come
back
he's
using
an
older
machine
that
will
not
allow
the
enabled
mute
button.
W
Can
you
hear
me
now?
Yes,
yes,
good!
Thank
you
good
evening.
I
want
to
ask
why
some
key
city
services
have
very
nearly
ceased
to
exist,
specifically
I'm
referring
to
public
safety,
the
enjoyment
of
public
spaces
and
basic
transportation
infrastructure.
These
are
not
new
problems.
They've
been
growing
and
accumulating
for
years
growing
worse
year
after
year.
W
First,
why
doesn't
the
city
repair,
potholes,
anymore,
and
and
and
fix
the
roads
main
thoroughfares
like
canyon,
boulevard,
arapahoe,
road,
folsom,
road,
baseline
road
and
many
others
go
unrepaired
this
far
into
the
summer,
despite
being
reported
by
myself
and
others,
the
long-standing
policy
of
deferred
maintenance
can
only
go
on
so
long
before
we
start
looking
and
feeling
like
a
third
world
country,
and
I
think,
we're
halfway
there,
potholes
crumbling
sections
of
road
seem
to
be
everywhere.
W
There
are
streets
that
have
been
graded
as
substandard
for
over
a
decade
by
this
city's
own
transportation
department,
and
they
get
no
attention.
When
I
make
specific
suggestions
and
requests
of
the
city
transportation
department,
their
response
is
that
they
have
their
priorities
and
then
they
say
they
have
no
money
regarding
their
priorities.
In
my
opinion,
they're
out
of
whack
three
weeks
ago,
a
two
block
stretch
of
22nd
street
between
pearl
and
canyon
was
repaved.
This
road
didn't
have
a
blemish
and
bears
very
little
traffic,
yet
major
arteries
go
unattended.
W
There
are
just
so
many
examples
like
this
all
around
the
city
regarding
their
complaint
of
lack
of
money.
I
guess
maybe
that's
your
fault
city
council
or
since
this
has
been
going
on
for
over
a
decade.
I
can't
help
but
wonder
if
it's
intentional.
This
is
the
wealthiest
city
on
the
front
range.
Yet
it
has
perennially,
has
the
worst
quality
roads
on
the
front
range
boulder
does
not
lack
for
financial
resources,
not
to
mention
the
tens
of
millions
of
free
pandemic
money
that
was
delivered
to
this
city
by
the
federal
government.
X
Hello
council,
my
name
is
skylar
bailey.
Thank
you
for
the
opportunity
to
speak.
Can
you
hear
me?
Okay
thanks.
My
comments
are
concerned
with
the
safety
of
our
public
spaces,
or
lack
thereof.
I
moved
here
two
years
ago
with
my
husband
and
our
three
little
kids
to
start
a
new
life
in
a
beautiful
place.
X
There
they
are
cities
unto
themselves
with
no
rules,
little
oversight
and
great
risk
to
our
community.
I
have
never
taken
my
kids
to
these
places
by
myself,
because
I'm
afraid
of
getting
assaulted
or
finding
used
needles.
I
am
not
alone,
you've
heard
people
speak
tonight
and
I've
heard
many
stories
of
kids
finding
drug
paraphernalia
and
human
feces
in
our
parks
and
near
our
playgrounds.
X
This
is
unacceptable.
After
the
recent
assault
on
a
75
year
old
woman
on
the
bike
path
by
a
vagrant,
I
felt
compelled
to
speak
tonight.
My
kids
and
I
are
as
vulnerable
as
she
was
of
being
attacked
in
broad
daylight,
and
now
I
fear
for
when
my
parents
visit
boulder
has
been
through
enough,
especially
after
the
king
super
shooting.
We
cannot
stand
idly
by
and
let
our
community
continue
to
be
traumatized
by
violence.
X
A
Y
Hi,
thank
you
for
letting
me
speak
tonight.
I
live
in
boulder,
I'm
a
licensed,
psychotherapist
and
boulder.
Y
I
also
teach
at
the
graduate
school
of
psychology
at
naropa
and
I
hold
a
board
position
for
a
non-profit,
the
noak
society,
whose
mission
is
around
changing
the
dialogue
around
psychedelics,
bringing
community
engagement
in
to
allow
for
a
more
diverse
and
dynamic.
Y
So
I'm
sure
it's
not
a
surprise
to
you
that
I'm
here
tonight
to
speak
in
favor
of
the
decriminalization
of
psychedelics
within
boulder.
You
know
from
a
therapeutic
stance.
I
recognize
the
healing
potential
that
these
different
plant
medicines
hold.
Y
It
is
really
difficult
for
me
as
a
therapist,
to
read
the
research,
to
understand
the
impact
and
to
have
clients
come
in
with
some
pretty
profound
trauma
asking
about
this
and
having
no
way
of
allowing
them
the
autonomy
to
make
choices
in
how
they
heal
decriminalization,
of
course,
is
not
legalization,
but
it
lowers
the
the
potential
risk
of
arrest
for
for
an
individual
making
a
choice
for
themselves
and
when
I
say
individuals,
I'm
talking
about
individuals
and
who
are
professionals
who
are
elderly.
These
are
not
drug
seekers.
Y
A
Z
Well,
I'm
sorry
to
say,
but
my
son,
who
is
a
bvs
student,
got
to
witness
an
assault
here
a
week
and
a
half
ago,
along
with
a
cyclist
where
two
men
beat
each
other
with
another
to
another
one
with
rocks,
and
luckily
him
the
cyclist
were
able
to
interrupt
the
assault
and
call
the
police.
So
I'm
sorry
to
the
vice
president,
but
that
area
is
not
safe
as
much
as
you
wish
to
believe.
Z
A
safe
camping
area
has
to
be
designated
where
there
is
transparency
between
campers
and
people
in
charge
as
well
in
law
enforcement,
and
it
can
be
maintained.
I
believe
that,
in
order
to
improvise
any
type
of
safe
area,
you
also
need
to
be
able
to
know
who
exactly
you're
housing,
because
I
also
want
to
point
out
that
I
have
a
lot
of
the
campers
on
goose
creek
trail
who
have
lost
their
housing
vouchers
here
in
boulder
in
less
than
three
months
for
doing
illegal
activities
as
as
production
of
meth
and
the
sale
of
illegals.
A
G
Yes,
michelle
we're
trying
to
promote
you
as
a
panelist
to
see
if
that
will
help
your
mute
button.
Work
you'll
need
to
accept
the
little
pop-up
invitation
that
you'll
see
that
says,
promote
panelist
and
hopefully
you'll
be
able
to
see
that.
G
G
It
doesn't
michelle
did
send
us
I'll
turn
on
my
camera.
Michelle
did
send
in
a
message
that
she
requested
that
we
read,
so
I
will
read
that
if
that
is
all
right
with
you,
mr
mayor.
A
G
Tell
me
why
the
paramedic
confessed
that
he
chemically
sedated
me
at
officer
request
chief,
harold,
nuria,
rivera,
joey
lapari
all
claim
it's
okay,
my
two
minutes
for
the
ones
with
no
voice
in
silence.
Please
thank
you
and
mayor.
It
is
up
to
you
whether
those
two
minutes
constitute
a
delay
of
the
meeting.
A
I
it
seems
like
taking
her
written
testimony
makes
sense,
but
I
don't
know
about
following
instructions
for
stance
out
for
two
minutes:
I'll
look
to
teresa.
What
do
you
think.
AA
Mayor
there's
nothing
in
the
council
procedure
that
would
permit
two
minutes
of
silence.
Certainly,
you
know
we're
we're
glad
that
miss
rodriguez
was
able
to
submit
a
comment
and
that
that's
been
read
publicly
and
that
would
conclude
her
public
testimony.
A
AB
Council
just
quickly
I'll
say
that
I
a
lot
of
the
comments
today
have
to
do
with
our
public
spaces,
and
I
think
tonight's
presentation
we'll
address
some
of
those
questions
and
sort
of
share
out
with
the
community.
What
staff
has
been
doing
I'll
also
say-
and
I
just
wanted
to
mention
to
the
call
that
called
in
about
basic
core
services
and
potholes
and
so
forth.
AB
I
appreciate
that
the
I
appreciate
the
conversation
about
what
are
we
doing
to
make
sure
that
our
roadways
are
safe
and
I'll
say
that
I
don't
know
that
people
and
community
really
understand
the
impacts,
the
financial
impacts
and
the
staffing
impacts
the
pandemic
had
on
the
city.
Please
know
that
I'm
excited
that
you'll
see
some
of
this
in
budget,
that
staff
is
staffing
up
and
that
our
future
plans
will
certainly
be
putting
a
spotlight
on
some
of
those
cool
services
as
we
move
forward.
AB
AB
A
AC
I
guess
this
is
a
question
for
our
police
chief.
We've
heard
a
lot
of
commentary
today
and
in
past
meetings
about
the
decriminalization
of
psychedelics.
AC
As
a
practical
matter,
have
we
been
arresting
people
on
that
basis?
Is
that
been
a
a
major
area
of
concern
within
the
law
enforcement
considerations?
AB
AD
Is
sorry
my
computer
is
not
working
very
well.
I
had
to
switch
computers.
Council
member
are
you're
asking
about
the
legalization
or
decriminalization
of
mushrooms.
AC
Yeah
I
mean:
is
it
a
problem
that
we're
are
we
engaged
in
a
great
deal
of
active
enforcement
of
that
that
that
people
are
concerned
about,
or
they
simply
want,
the
imprimatur
of
the
city
of
boulder?
On
that
practice?.
AD
We
do
not
see
the
level
of
issues
with
the
psychedelics,
we
do
get
complaints
from
the
university
setting
and
we
do
have
issues
with
the
student
population,
but
as
far
as
the
vast
majority
of
drug
issues
that
I
see
are
with
methamphetamine
and
the
fentanyl
epidemic
that
colorado
is
experiencing.
AD
As
always,
unintended
consequences
of
these
decisions
are
very
long
lasting
and
I
would
just
caution.
A
lot
of
study
needs
to
be
done.
I
come
from
a
state
that
I've
always
supported
legalization
of
marijuana,
but
I
think
that
the
unintended
consequences
of
some
of
these
decisions
are
starting
to
be
seen
now
in
colorado.
So
I
think
it.
It
requires
a
lot
more
research
and
a
lot
more
study
to
understand
this.
L
I
wanted
to
thank
you
all
the
community
for
your
comments
today.
I
want
to
specifically
say
elise.
I
appreciated
your
conversation
about
leaded
fuel
and
know
that
we
will
be
discussing-
and
this
goes
to
this
is
also
for
the
other
people
in
the
airport
surrounding
community.
That
will
be
discussing
a
lot
of
this
at
our
airport
master
plan
discussion
and
in
the
next
six
months.
Would
you
say
that's
correct
nuria.
L
AB
AB
I
don't
know-
and
actually
I
was
just
gonna
say
I
don't
wanna-
I
don't
wanna
mislead
people
and
I'm
not
quite
sure
of
the
timing,
but
I
do
know
that
staff
has
asked
that
master
plan
to
come
forward
soon
because
it
triggers
some
funds
from
the
federal
government
and
certainly
can
circle
back
on
the
timing
of
that.
But
I
do
know
that
they
have
wanted
to
move
that
forward
in
the
original
work
plan
that
they
had
anticipated.
So
I'm
sure
I'm
happy
to
get
back
to
you,
council,
member.
AE
Thanks,
I
just
have
a
question
for
you:
nuria.
A
lot
of
the
folks
here
tonight
are
talking
about
how
we
can
basically
get
more
resources
to
address
areas
of
concern,
and
I
just
want
to
highlight
for
the
community
that
we
will
be
having
budget
discussions
coming
up.
I
think
in
starting
in
september
or
so,
and
I'm
just
wondering
how
folks
can
engage
with
that
discussion,
because
I
think
it
would
be
helpful
that
you
know
hear
some
feedback
from
staff
about
you
know.
AE
If
the
community
is
asking
for
more
resources
in
one
area.
Where
are
we
pulling
from?
What
are
we?
What
are
we
doing
to?
You
know
make
sure
that
we're
not
kind
of
overspending,
the
resources
that
we
have.
So
I
think
that
would
be
a
wonderful
place
for
people
to
come
to
us
with
some
ideas
about
where
we
can
put
money
to
address
some
of
the
concerns
where
we're
taking
it
from.
AB
I
appreciate
the
question
council
member
and
you
are
indeed
right,
that
we
will
have
a
study
session
three
hours
dedicated
to
our
budget
process
on
september
8th
and
subsequently
we
will
have
a
public
hearing
similar
to
what
we
do
with
with
budgets
all
year
and
I'll
say
I
don't
know
off
the
top
of
my
hand
and
don't
know
if
anybody
in
finance
and
and
no
need
to
find
them
if
they
are
not
with
us,
but
we
also
for
the
first
time,
are
actually
putting
out
our
online
budget
book
and
we
are
finalizing
some
of
that.
AB
AF
Thank
you.
I
had
a
question.
I
think
this
is
for
theresa
celeste
landry
brought
up
with
the
even
year
elections,
signature
requirements
for
citizen
initiatives.
AF
My
understanding
was
that
we
have
different
signature
requirements
already
for
even
in
odd
years,
based
on
sort
of
average.
Voter
turnout
is
that
meet
with
your
understanding
of
those
requirements.
You.
AA
Know
my
understanding,
council
member
is
that
the
the
signature
requirements
are
tied
to
participation
in
the
most
recent
municipal
elections,
and
so,
as
we
look
at
moving
forward
to
this
evenier
election
possibility,
we
have
introduced
language
that
would
tie
the
signature
requirement
only
to
the
mayoral
numbers,
so
analyzing,
those
I
did
hear
the
the
community
member
mentioned
that
perhaps
council
might
want
to
consider
not
tying
it
to
mayoral,
but
instead
tying
it
to
the
council
member
races.
AA
And
so
that's
certainly
something
council
can
consider
if
this,
as
this
item
comes
before
you
again,
but
currently
it's
it's
based
on
the
the
most
recent
municipal
elections.
Thank
you.
A
AA
Mayor
pro
tem,
as
I
recall,
there
was
some
new
language
that's
proposed.
That
was
in
front
of
the
council
on
first
reading,
with
respect
to
changing
that.
Given
given
the
concern
about
potentially
ratcheting
up
the
numbers
of
the
signatures
increased,
you
know.
That's
I
leave
that
to
council's
will
about
whether
council
wants
to
do
that
in
the
near
term,
or
whether
council
would
prefer
to
wait
until
later
to
do
that,
and
perhaps
do
some
study
on
voter
turnout.
AA
However,
I
I
agree
with
you
that
it's
a
matter
that
council
could
wait
and
look
at
I
and
again
I
I
hate
to
speak
out
of
turn,
but
I
think
it's
a
three-year
look
back
and-
and
I
see
that
council
manager,
member
benjamin,
oh
thank
you,
I
see
from
a
couple
of
you,
it's
a
two-year
look
back.
So
thank
you
for
that
assist.
AA
I
really
appreciate
it
and
so
you're
right
that
there
would
be
some
delay
in
thinking
about
what
are
the
what
are
the
voter
turnouts
and,
and
there
could
be
an
opportunity
for
some
analysis
of
that.
A
Yeah,
do
you
mind
I'm
just
sorry
to
interrupt,
but
we've
got
a
public
hearing
on
this
coming
up
in
a
week
and
where
I
think
everybody
will
be
prepared
to
answer
our
questions.
So
what
I
might
suggest
is
if
we
have
any
additional
questions
on
these
matters,
to
get
them
into
staff,
get
them
out
to
hotline
for
community
visibility
and
then
they
can
be
answered
at
the
the
public
hearing
next
week.
If
that's
writing
folks,.
A
All
right
rachel
vanished,
but
is
that
right
I'll
take
silence
as
this
end
all
right
there
we
go
very
good
right,
not
seeing
any
other
hands
alicia.
Can
you
take
us
to
our
consent
agenda?
Please.
B
Yes,
sir,
that
is
item
three
on
tonight's
agenda.
Our
consent
agenda
includes
items
a
through
e.
AB
Indeed,
and
I'll
ask
joey
lopari
to
introduce
himself
and
kick
us
off
on
that.
AG
Good
evening,
council
appreciate
your
time
good
evening,
members
of
the
public,
I'm
the
joe
lapari,
the
independent
police,
monitor
for
the
city
of
boulder,
I'm
here
tonight
with
our
two
co-chairs,
who
should
be
able
to
pop
up
pretty
soon
there.
They
are
daniel,
lindard
and
ariel
amaru,
our
co-chairs.
AG
AG
for
those
council
members
who
were
on
the
council
back
in
2020
when
we
passed
the
original
ordinance,
there
was
some
discussion.
The
original
ordinance
that
was
submitted
to
council
did
include
11
panel
members.
There
was
some
discussion
during
the
presentation
to
council
about
whether
that
was
the
right
number.
We
ultimately
went
down
to
nine
with
the
council's
sort
of
suggestion
that
hey
keep
an
eye
on
this
within
a
year
or
so.
AG
If
the
panel
feels
like
they
need
to
go
up
to
11,
bring
that
back
to
us
and
so
we're
now
about
a
year
and
a
half
into
the
panel's
work,
they
have
concluded
that
they
would
like
two
additional
panel
members,
so
we're
coming
to
you
with
that
request.
I
have
a
very
brief
one
slide
presentation
to
share
with
you
all
I
can
just
go
through
give
you
all
a
sense
of.
AG
AG
So
that's
each
panel
member
sitting
on
at
least
one
case
review
each
month,
they've
developed
they've,
created
committees,
they
have
three
committees:
the
legacy
review
committee,
the
governance
committee
and
the
community
outreach
and
engagement
committee.
AG
Those
committees
have
begun
active
work
and
are
meeting
at
least
once
a
month
now,
and
those
meetings
of
course
lead
to
you
know
more
time
commitments.
Then
we
also
have
trainings
regular
trainings
for
the
panel
members
with
the
police
department,
with
the
da's
office
with
other
entities
that
can
provide
insight
and
information
on
the
work
that
they're
doing
and
then
we're
also
wrapping
up
for
increased
public
engagement,
as
we
hopefully
are.
AG
Coming
to
the
end
of
covid
and
are
going
to
be
able
to
do
more
public
events,
so
that's
taking
up
quite
a
bit
of
time
of
the
panel
members
and
then
the
co-chairs,
on
top
of
all
that
they
have
an
additional
10
hours
or
so
that
they
are
devoting
each
month
with
their
additional
duties,
planning
and
chairing
the
meetings
responding
to
fairly
voluminous
internal
communications.
AG
Often
developing
public
statements,
responding
to
media
interviews
and
inquiries,
and
we
have
also
coming
up
whether
or
not
we
expand
the
number
of
panel
members
we'll
have
the
first
set
of
terms
four
terms
coming
to
an
end
at
the
end
of
this
year.
So
we'll
be
going
through
a
process
of
advertising
for
applicants
to
the
panel
reviewing
those
applications
interviewing
all
those
applicants
and
selecting
those
new
panel
members.
AG
So
that
will
be
another
huge
time
commitment.
So
for
the
regular
panel
members,
the
case
reviews
and
the
committee
work
currently,
I
think,
are
the
areas
where
they
would
really
benefit
from
having
additional
two
additional
panel
members.
That
would
it
could
allow
each
panel
member
to
serve
on
only
one
committee
instead
of
panel
members
serving
on
multiple
committees,
and
it
would
give
us
a
little
bit
of
breathing
room
in
our
case
review
schedule.
AG
If
someone
is
out
of
town
or
unavailable
for
to
do
a
review
that
month,
we
would
have
two
additional
people
that
could
always
we
could
be
more
confident
in
consistently
getting
three
cases
reviewed
each
month.
So
that's
our
request.
I'm
happy
to
take
any
questions
and
you
can
direct
your
questions
either
to
me
or
either
of
the
co-chairs
ariel
and
daniel.
A
A
AE
Just
had
a
question,
and
I
don't
know
if
this
is
a
question
for
for
joey
or
somebody
on
the
committee
or
just
sort
of
a
general
question
about
boards
and
commissions.
AE
How
does
the
workload
for
this
one
compare
to
the
other
boards
and
commissions
that
we
have,
because
it
does
seem
like
it's
a
lot
more
work
than
some
of
the
others,
and
I'm
just
wondering
if
somebody
could
speak
to
that.
AG
Yeah,
I'm
not
actually
sure
I
could
speak
to
that.
If
someone
else
could
I'm
not
involved
with
the
other
panels
and
and
boards,
I'm
happy
to.
AB
Well,
I'm
happy
to
jump
in
and
if
anybody
has
additional
information,
I
don't
know
that
we've
really
tracked
the
workload
of
all
our
other
boards
and
commissions.
But
I
will
say
that
this,
unlike
a
boarding
commission,
is
really
a
working
operational
panel.
They
are
doing
some
very
specific
work
to
review
cases.
They
they
serve
in
certainly
in
an
advisory
role,
but
in
a
very
different
role
for
the
magnitude
of
what
they
are
doing.
AB
AE
Thank
you
and
I
apologize
for
not
knowing
that
the
answer
to
this
question.
On
top
of
my
head,
do
we
pay
people
for
their
work
because
it
does
sound
like
it's
categorically
different
work,
and
I'm
just
wondering
if
that's
that's
another
issue
to
consider
is
whether
or
not
we're
paying
enough
for
the
work
that
is
involved
here.
So
I
imagine
it's
a
it's
quite
emotionally
taxing
as
well.
AG
It
is
counselor
absolutely
and
so,
from
the
beginning,
we've
had
a
100
stipend
per
month
for
the
panel
members
that
was
intended
to
cover
things
like
child
care
or
elder
elder
elder
care
or
other
costs
parking
that
would
be
associated
with
attending
meetings
in
our
upcoming
budget
for
for
fiscal
year
2023,
we
have
requested
to
increase
that
stipend
to
200
for
the
regular
panel
members
and
250
for
the
co-chairs.
AB
And
I'll
add
to
that
that
we
have
recently
agreed
to
have
a
contract
with
naropa
university
to
provide
some
support.
We
know
that
what
our
panel
members
are
seeing
and
watching
can
be
triggering
and
difficult
to
watch
the
many
hours
of
body
cam
videos,
and
we
want
to
make
sure
that
our
panel
has
the
support
that
they
need,
as
they
do
some
really
hard
work.
A
E
I'm
just
going
to
add
maybe
a
little
context
to
nicole's
question.
I
think.
Sometimes
there
are
boards
that
are
a
little
bit
more
amenable
to
tucson.
I
guess
where
you
can
spread
the
workload
out,
and
so
one
example
that
was
the
arts
commission,
where
they
review
grant
applications,
and
so
a
couple
years
ago
we
also
put
something
on
the
ballot
to
increase
their
numbers
like
for
the
same
reason
to
to
reduce
everyone's
workload
because
they
were
getting
overwhelmed.
A
Okay,
well
seeing
other
questions
joey
thanks
again
and
ariel
and
daniel.
Thank
you
again
really
appreciate
the
important
work
that
you're
doing.
U
AC
I'm
sorry
I
was
having
a
computer
glitch.
I
just
had
a
question
relating
to
the
noise
ordinance.
One
of
the
standards
included
in
the
language
is
is
to
is
that
the
violation
is
based
on
a
person
of
normal
hearing
and
I'm
wondering
if
that
might
be
a
little
bit
vague,
I'm
not
quite
sure
how
we
would
defend
that
if
somebody
called
it
vague,
you
know
what
is
the
standard
for
a
person
of
normal
hearing?
Is
there
a
range?
AA
I'm
happy
to
address
that
there
are
kind
of
two
schools
of
thought
on
noise
ordinances.
You
know
one
is
where
you
come
out
with
a
a
decimal
reader
and
and
get
some
empirical
information.
There
are
some
them
some
drawbacks
to
that.
It's
not
uncommon
for
this
to
be
the
standard
for
it
to
be
a
reasonable
person
or
a
person
of
reasonable
hearing.
AA
I
haven't
done
case
research
to
see
whether
that
has
been
upheld
or
how
that's
been
defined,
but
it
is
pretty
common
among
municipalities
happy
to
look
into
that
further
before
second
reading.
If,
if,
if
council
would
like
that,
no.
AC
E
One
point
of
clarification
question
for
teresa:
maybe
because
we
got
an
email
about
this,
will
the
noise
ordinance
apply
just
to
the
hill
or
city-wide.
A
AB
E
AC
E
A
If
you,
if
it
as
a
do,
you
wanna
just
be
specific
about
the
amendment.
E
A
AI
B
AJ
AK
AF
F
A
B
AB
Our
hearts
go
out
to
this
employee's
family
and
we
hold
you
close
in
our
thoughts
during
this
difficult
moment.
We're
also
holding
close
to
teammates,
directly
impacted
and
recognized.
The
death
of
any
city.
Employee
hurts
us
all.
Teammates
across
the
city
are
wrapping
their
arms
around
our
parks
and
recreation.
Colleagues,
and
it's
appropriate
that
tonight
we
celebrate
their
role
in
promoting
our
community's
health
and
well-being,
and
with
that
I
will
introduce
our
amazing
director,
allie
rhodes,.
AL
Thank
you
for
that
nuria.
We
are
here
tonight
for
what
we
hope
is
your
last
touch
on
this
2022
parks
and
recreation,
master
plan
processing
and
the
first
step
on
some
really
exciting
master
plan.
Doing
tonight,
you'll
consider
a
motion
to
accept
our
2022
master
plan
and
first
we
have
a
brief
presentation
to
remind
members
of
city
council
and
our
community
members
of
the
path
that
has
brought
us
here
tonight
and
some
of
the
key
elements
of
this
master
plan
with
me
here
tonight
are
members
of
our
talented
and
incredible
core
project
team.
AL
Jackson
height
is
parks
and
recreation,
senior
manager
for
business
services
and
tina
briggs
is
a
senior
city
senior
planner
and
been
the
lead
on
the
community.
Engagement
for
this
project
becky
zimmerman
leads
the
design
workshop
team.
She
is
a
principal
and
the
ceo
of
the
firm
and
we're
so
honored
to
have
her
engaged
on
this
project.
Our
project
manager
from
design
workshop
and
here
tonight
also
is
eric
chrome,
gold.
AL
AL
The
crab's,
constructive
input
and
community
passion
helped
us
align
the
recommendations
with
community
goals
and
values
and,
of
course,
the
community's
input
every
step
along.
The
way
has
pointed
us
in
a
direction
that
will
deliver
a
system
that
aligns
with
their
priorities
our
prab
chair,
pam,
ugar
and
vice
chair.
Chuck.
Brock
are
here.
If
you
have
questions
of
the
board
later
during
your
questions
and
with
that,
I'm
honored
to
once
again
put
you
in
the
very
good
hands
of
our
project
manager,
regina
elsner,.
AM
So
we
have
been
working
on
this
plan
since
early
late
2020,
with
some
delays
due
to
the
onset
of
the
copa
19
pandemic.
Throughout
this
process
we
followed
the
city's
standard
approach
to
master
planning
and
the
information
that
we've
gathered,
the
deliverables
that
we've
presented
and
the
engagement
with
the
community.
AM
We've
talked
about.
We've
engaged
the
community
throughout
this
process,
highlighting
considerations
for
not
just
an
equitable
process,
but
equitable
outcomes
of
our
master
plan.
We've
engaged
with
community
connectors
we've
had
micro
engagements
with
specific
targeted
populations
within
our
community,
including
folks
with
low
incomes
and
housed
individuals,
as
well
as
hosting
bpr's.
First
ever
bilingual
community
open
house
we've
also
had
ongoing
collaboration
with
other
city
departments
throughout
this
process.
Through
our
master
plan
coordination
committee,
as
well
as
one-on-one
focus
groups
that
ensures
the
alignment
between
our
departments
and
all
the
work
we
do
for
our
community.
AM
AM
AM
The
lens
around
the
outside
represents
our
commitment
to
sustainability,
equity
and
resilience.
Throughout
this
process,
we've
engaged
our
community
to
ensure
the
voices
of
our
entire
community
are
being
heard.
We've
done
that
through
a
statistically
valid
survey,
micro
engagement
with
targeted
portions
of
our
population
and
our
first
ever
spanish
language,
open
house.
AL
AM
AM
During
the
pandemic,
our
community
found
comfort
in
the
outdoor
spaces
that
we
provide
and
those
facilities
and
spaces
are
still
highly
used.
Today.
We
also
provide
recreation
programs
along
with
many
community
partners.
Before
the
pandemic.
We
and
our
partners
provided
over
2
500
different
types
of
programs.
AM
We
also
learned
who
our
community
believes
should
benefit
from
our
services
and
how
those
services
should
be
paid
for
the
larger
the
community
benefit.
The
more
those
programs
should
be
funded
by
the
community
through
taxes
compared
to
the
larger
individual
benefit,
the
more
the
individual
should
pay
the
fee.
Our
research
also
showed
that
taking
care
of
our
robust
parks
and
recreation
system
costs
us
more
and
more
every
year
and
those
expenses
are
higher
than
our
income.
AM
AL
With
city
council's
acceptance
of
this
master
plan,
we
commit
to
the
work
it
outlines.
Our
master
plan
promises
that
we
use
this
plan
every
year
to
inform
our
decisions.
Our
work
and
our
investments,
sustainability
and
resilience
will
guide
everything
that
we
do
so
that
our
work
both
mitigates
against
and
prepares
for
the
impacts
of
climate
change,
we'll
consider
all
of
our
choices
with
an
equity
lens,
so
that
we
consider
who
benefits
and
who
is
impacted
by
the
work
that
we
do.
AL
AL
In
the
face
of
growing
demand
and
climate
change,
as
we
implement
this
master
plan,
that
dream
will
become
closer
to
reality,
we
can't
wait
to
work
with
you
as
we
promote
the
health
and
well-being
of
the
entire
community.
Through
our
incredible
system
of
parks,
facilities
and
services,
ally
you
ready
to
race.
Let's
go.
We
can't
wait
to
see
you
in
the
park.
AM
AM
Perhaps,
most
importantly,
we
will
support
a
workforce
challenged
by
reductions
in
staffing
capacity
and
funding
amidst
a
world
continuously
rocked
by
social
and
political
unrest.
Continuing
education,
team
building
skills
development
and
streamlining
internal
processes
are
opportunities
to
support
staff
growth
and
morale
and
to
foster
deeper
connections
with
each
other.
We
know
that
our
organizational
readiness
is
paramount
to
bpr's
continued
success
in
serving
the
boulder
community.
AM
The
master
plan
also
outlines
policies
to
help
us
address
our
financial
reality.
This
graphic
ties
together.
The
total
financial
picture
for
bpr
the
column
on
the
left
represents
bpr's
current
funding
levels,
as
determined
by
the
2016-2019
averages
of
our
funds.
2020
and
2021
were
intentionally
excluded
because
of
the
incredible
variance
we
experienced
in
funding
due
to
the
pandemic.
AM
In
april
of
this
year,
we
shared
with
city
council
an
80
draft
of
our
master
plan.
Since
that
time,
we've
made
some
changes
to
our
plan,
specifically,
we've
refined
the
plan
alternatives,
the
action,
the
fiscally
constrained,
action
and
vision,
plan,
alternatives,
we've
refined
graphics,
addressed
over
400
comments
and
included
language
about
equity
and
latinx.
AM
AL
Part
of
our
master
plan
promise
is
that
each
year,
we'll
report
annually
on
key
performance
indicators,
they're
all
outlined
here
and
they're,
just
a
sampling
of
the
data
we
collect
and
we've
really
focused
on
these
ones,
to
align
them
around
the
key
themes
and
what
we
heard
was
important
to
the
community.
So
financial
aid,
visitations
and
overall
facility
use
will
allow
us
to
make
sure
that
the
rec
centers
are
being
optimized
for
community
benefit.
AL
AL
I
want
to
note
that
these
are
our
department-specific
outcomes,
we'll
continue
to
contribute
to
citywide
metrics
as
appropriate,
to
contribute
to
citywide
goals,
for
example,
while
we
will
track
the
actions
in
our
work
to
contribute
to
understand
the
carbon
footprint
of
the
recreation
centers,
both
as
they're
programmed
and
as
they're
operated,
we'll
also
continue
to
work
with
climate
initiatives,
on
other
outcomes
related
to
sustainability
and,
of
course,
with
the
city
manager's
office.
On
making
real
our
commitment
to
addressing
racial
equity.
AL
With
the
acceptance
of
this
master
plan,
our
team
once
again
commits
to
fulfilling
our
mission
into
implementing
the
initiatives
and
the
fiscally
constrained
alternatives
through
an
annual
action
planning
process.
We
will
make
sure
that
this
plan
does
not
sit
on
a
shelf
and
that
we
ensure
that
this
plan
is
a
living
document,
views
to
improve
the
overall
system
and
achieves
the
goals
of
the
community
well
into
the
future.
A
Thanks
so
much
for
that
ali
and
regina,
and
I
want
to
say,
I'm
not
sure
what
the
oscar
equivalent
is
for
videos
in
municipal
government,
but
that
that
one
that
one
will
win,
I'm
sure-
and
I
I
believe
you
mentioned-
that
the
parks
and
rec
chair
emily
ugar
was
able
to
come
here
tonight.
Is
that
right.
AL
A
So
and
chuck,
I
just
invite
you
to
make
a
brief
comment,
thanks
for
being
here
tonight,.
AH
Well,
hi
everyone
yeah,
I'm
an
enthusiastic
supporter
of
this
master
plan.
I
think
it's
wonderful
tons
of
work
has
gone
into
it.
AH
A
really
excellent
community
outreach,
especially
reaching
out
to
some
of
our
more
underserved
communities
in
the
city,
I'd
like
to
call
your
attention
to
the
implementation
of
the
gis,
geographic
information
systems,
data
in
sort
of
mapping,
areas
where
we're
not
providing
equity
to
everyone
in
the
community
as
far
as
access
to
parks
and
recreation
facilities-
and
I
hope
that's
the
start
of
a
of
a
new
trend
in
doing
quantitative
analysis
using
these
mapping
tools
to
to
look
at
access
to
the
facilities
and
how
it
intersects
with
transportation
and
other
city
city
amenities.
AH
So
yeah,
that's
all.
I
have
I'm
happy
to
answer
any
questions
you
might
have
about
crab's
role
in
this.
In
this
master
plan
process,.
A
AC
Well,
first,
I
want
to
thank
everybody
for
the
work
on
this
and
a
very
heartfelt
thank
you
for
the
glossary
that
was
extremely
useful.
A
couple
of
things
on
on
late
in
the
report
on
page
77
you're
showing
actual
surpluses
between
2022
and
2025.,
I'm
having
trouble
reading
that
because
I'm
assuming
we're
we're
having
the
shortfall
that
you're
showing
us
and
I'm
assuming
further
that
in
that
case,
these
surpluses
would
be
reapplied
to
cut
down
on
the
on
the
shortfalls.
Am
I
reading
it
incorrectly
and
I'm
basically
taking
you
to?
AL
AL
AC
Okay
and
in
your
2026
projection,
you're,
showing
a
very
sharp
rise
in
capital
from
2.4
million
to
about
6.1
million.
What
does
that
represent?.
AI
Good
evening,
I'm
jackson
height,
you
are
absolutely
correct,
mark
and
ally
the
money
that
we
have
as
the
surplus
and
the
out
years
will
really
be
reprogrammed
back
into
what
some
of
the
funny
gap
is.
The
reality
is
over
the
course
of
the
pandemic.
The
sales
tax
numbers
have
fluctuated
off
and
on,
and
we
took
a
conservative
approach
based
on
the
numbers
that
we
had
in
late
2020's.
The
master
plan
was
being
developed,
so
that's
what
the
revenue
numbers
are
that
are
in
place
in
terms
of
2026.
AI
For
your
question,
I
believe
the
capital
funding
is
tied
to
valmont
phase
two,
but
what
you
see
with
our
all
of
our
cip
projects
is,
we
tend
to
have
spikes
as
we
are
focused
on
bigger
facilities
and
bigger
projects
throughout
different
timings,
so
we
will
have
increases
up
and
down
over
the
course
of
rca.
Okay,.
AC
Thank
you.
A
little
earlier
in
the
plan,
you've
got
2022
funding
sources.
This
is
page
71
and
you've
got
a
2.1
million
dollar
subsidy
showing
from
the
general
fund
and
then
in
a
later
category.
AI
We
have
two
different
sources
of
general
fund
funding.
The
first
one
is
for
our
general
fund
operations,
which
is
our
park
operations
and
maintenance
for
all
of
our
park
facilities,
as
well
as
some
of
our
urban
forestry
funding.
This
and
that's
the
four
point,
whatever
that
you're
seeing
the
2.1
is
one-time
subsidy
received
from
the
general
fund
for
the
ongoing
subsidy
of
our
recreation
programs
that
benefits
the
community
users
that
are
our
age
based
discounts,
as
well
as
equity-based
discounts.
Okay,
thank
you.
AC
Because
I'm
assuming
some
of
these
projects
that
you
may
not
be
able
to
afford
might
be
very
appropriate
for
the
for
the
infrastructure
tax.
So
please
keep
that
in
mind
all
right,
that's
those
are
my
questions
for
the
moment.
Thank
you.
AC
E
I
hate
to
follow
up
such
substantive
questions
with
the
one
that
I
have,
but
I
do
want
to
say
I'm
sorry
to
ally
and
all
of
the
parks
family
for
what
happened
today,
and
I
really
appreciate
you
still
being
here
tonight.
I
can't
imagine
that's
easy.
My
softball
question
is
just
there
were.
I
noticed
adam
swetlick
and
mirabinego
were
not
listed
as
previous
council
members
and
and
wanted
to
make
sure
they'd
be
there
listed
before
this
gets
printed.
AL
No,
I
really
appreciate
you
catching
that
rachel.
We
will
get
that
corrected
immediately.
The
other
thing
I
want
to
make
sure,
because
it's
come
to
my
attention-
that
not
all
council
members
are
aware
that
the
buildings
that
get
opened
while
you
are
serving
have
your
name
on
them
and
so,
in
addition
to
to
the
the
glorious
work
of
being
noted
on
master
plans.
AL
I
just
want
to
note
for
sitting
council
members
that
were
on
in
2021
when
we
formally
opened
the
scott
carpenter
pool
and
the
the
the
reservoir
main
building
that
your
names
are
on
that,
and
I
say
that
out
loud
because
we
all
know
that
sometimes
public
service
is
thankless
work,
but
your
contributions
are
memorialized
on
these
incredible
facilities
that
you
supported,
and
they
will
be
on
this
master
plan
as
well.
So
we'll
get
that
fixed.
E
Thanks
ellie,
I
actually
took
a
selfie
in
front
of
scott
carpenter
when
I
was
here
a
couple
weeks
ago.
It's
kind
of
kind
of
cool
thanks.
A
F
A
Well
said:
okay,
seeing
no
other
hands
think
we
can
go
to
the
public
hearing.
We've
got,
I
believe
it's
five
people
signed
up,
so
each
person
will
get
three
minutes
to
speak
and
I
think
generally
are
folks
who
have
testified
before
so.
Maybe
we
don't
need
to
go
back
through
the
public
conduct
rules.
R
Yeah,
if
you've
got
a
problem
with
money,
don't
take
the
taxpayers
money.
Take
the
developers
money
you
rubber
stamp;
everything
that
comes
across
your
face
from
planning
board
third
stories:
flood
plain
considerations
for
the
millennium
hotel
for
student
housing
for
over
300
bedrooms
that
we
need
hotel
facilities.
Instead,
we've
got
two
hotels,
one
from
cu
and
one
across
the
street
up
on
the
hill.
R
These
burdens
on
our
community,
causing
the
jobs,
housing
imbalance
to
increase,
are
very
costly
and
you
should
pay
for
it
through
the
developers,
4.3
million
dollars
that
you
have
for
parks
and
rec
that
you
need
don't
ask
me,
for
it,
don't
get
it
from
the
developers,
the
people
that
are
driving
the
costs
up.
It's
very
simple.
R
R
What
is
it,
what
is
it
that
you
have
to
come
begging
to
me,
the
taxpayer,
with
increasing
property
taxes
like
like
skyrocketing,
when
I
have
to
spend
every
two
years
months
getting
ready
to
fight
my
property
taxes?
Un
you
know
represented
because
I
haven't
got
money
for
a
lawyer.
69
years
old,
trying
to
stay
in,
my
house
deferred
maintenance
to
the
extent
that
my
windows
are
being
reclaimed
by
the
outdoors.
Basically
one
of
my
windows,
where
there
was
poor
drainage.
R
Why?
Why
are
you
asking
someone
like
me
to
pay
for
parks
and
recreation
which
I'd
be
glad
to
do
if
you
weren't
accepting
every
development
that
comes
across
your
plate?
It's
just
not!
Okay,
and
now
I
don't
even
have
an
art,
arts
and
crafts
gallery.
I
don't
even
have
meningers
up
on
the
hill.
I
don't
even
have
the
things
that
made
the
heart
and
soul
of
boulder
anymore,
because
you've
sold
them
out
to
every
developer.
R
Well,
let
the
developer
pay
for
the
parks
and
rec,
it's
very
simple.
If
they
want
to
come
to
our
town
and
cause
these
troubles,
you
know
that
constant
growth,
more
and
more
service
industry,
more
and
more
service
industry,
low
paid
workers,
it
doesn't
work,
let
the
developer
pay
just
do
it
just
think
about
that,
there's
plenty
of
money
they
can
take
care
of
it.
R
AN
Hi
everyone
I'm,
the
executive
director
of
studio
arts,
boulder,
we
manage
the
pottery
lab
up
on
uni
hill
and
our
partnership
with
parks
and
rec
is
perhaps
one
of
the
success
stories
since
the
last
2014
master
plan.
So
we
want
to
extend
our
thanks
to
parks
and
rec
for
their
ongoing
partnership.
As
we
look
to
the
future.
There
are
a
few
points
in
this
new
master
plan.
We
wanted
to
call
your
attention
to
and
how
they
play
out
at
the
pottery
lab.
AN
AN
Last
year
we
provided
over
60
000
program
hours
of
service,
and
this
year
will
be
even
more.
The
second
thing
we
want
to
highlight
is
affordability.
Since
2020
we've
been
replacing
our
scholarship
process
with
a
pay,
what
you
can
fee
structure
and
just
over
the
past
two
years,
600
students
have
taken
advantage
of
this
new
model.
That's
a
20-fold
increase
compared
to
scholarships
regarding
equity.
When
we
look
at
the
list
of
population
groups
on
page
45
of
the
plan,
those
are
the
same
folks
that
we
invest
resources
to
serving
at
the
pottery
lab.
AN
65
of
all
of
our
students
are
from
low-income
households.
40
are
children
and
teens.
22
percent
of
our
adults
are
over
age,
60.
17
percent
have
a
disability
and
32
percent
of
our
students
identify
as
a
person
of
color
regarding
finances.
When
studio
arts
folder
took
over
management
of
the
pottery
lab
in
2015,
we
were
able
to
eliminate
the
annual
operating
deficit
that
had
been
a
drag
on
the
department's
cost
recovery
efforts,
and
since
then
we
have
also
invested
significant
resources
to
take
care
of
the
facility
itself
built
in
1908.
AN
AN
The
studio
is
much
beloved
by
the
community
and
by
the
uni
hill
neighborhood
and
we're
honored
to
take
care
of
it.
I
could
say
so
much
more
about
how
we
tackle
climate
change
by
switching
to
lower
kiln
firing
temperatures
about
our
teen
mentorship
program.
I
could
also
spend
days
talking
to
you
about
the
physical,
mental
and
social
benefits
of
getting
your
own
hands
in
art.
AN
AO
AO
As
I
was
reading
through
the
master
plan,
I
thought
how
sad
that
the
master
plan
actually
first
refers
to
illegal
encampments
on
page
53.
It
states,
encampments
and
illegal
use
of
park.
Land
like
communities
across
the
country
boulder
has
seen
an
increase
of
encampments
and
illegal
use
of
parkland,
which
strains
limited
resources
and
impacts
uses
of
space.
AO
AO
AO
AO
AP
The
first
key
goal
of
the
master
plan
is
community
health
and
wellness.
Achieving
this
goal
requires
our
public
spaces
and
facilities
to
be
functional,
accessible,
comfortable
and
most
of
all,
safe.
Many
of
our
facilities
are
not
comfortable
and
not
entirely
functional,
sometimes,
and
our
parks
are
not
safe.
As
a
tennis
player,
our
courts
are
an
embarrassment
compared
to
those
in
surrounding
cities.
They're
crumbling
and
cracked
they're
filled
with
filled
with
and
surrounded
by
many
weed
forests.
They
are
unsafe,
but
their
disrepair
is
nothing
in
comparison
to
the
current
state
of
our
parks
and
waterways.
AP
Evangee,
fine,
the
kids,
fishing
pond,
the
library
playground
and
most
of
our
bike
paths
along
the
creeks
of
boulder
are
no
longer
usable.
They
have
been
seated
to
illegal
campers
and
their
trash,
including
needles,
has
also
impeded
the
bike
paths.
I
have
an
ever
evolving
map
in
my
mind,
of
the
places
that
I
avoid
when
we
have
visitors
and,
sadly
that
that
map
is
continually
shrinking.
AP
AP
AP
A
A
AC
Mark
yeah.
Colleagues,
forgive
me
I.
I
forgot
one
question
which
I'd
like
to
ask:
it's
a
short
one.
Before
I
comment
in
the
plan
this
the
civic
arena
is
under
the
financially
constrained
scenario.
The
goal
is
quote
activation
with
operational
or
operational
focus.
What
does
that
mean.
AL
Good
question
we'll
talk
more
about
that
in
our
later
discussion,
but
it
means
that
within
our
current
bungee
budget
there
is
a
civic
area,
master
plan
I'll
remind
members
of
council.
The
elements
that
we
can
implement
within
our
current
budget
all
relate
to
programming,
so
things
like
arts
in
the
park,
things
like
facilitating
community
events,
fostering
positive
activity,
community
connections,
anything
we
can
do
without
infrastructure
enhancements
to
achieve
the
goals
of
the
plan.
AC
Thank
you
with
respect
to
my
comments.
I
I
very
much
support
this
master
plan.
I
think
it's
it's
well
thought
out.
I
am
impressed
that
that
we
are
with
the
emphasis
on
the
fiscally
constrained
scenario.
You
don't
like
it.
We
don't
like
it,
but
that's
kind
of
where
we
are
at
the
moment,
and
I
appreciate
the
realism
in
in
dealing
with
that.
We
can
always
have
a
later
conversation
about
providing
additional
funding
for
parks.
AC
I
think
we
would
all
love
to
do
so,
but
under
current
circumstances
at
the
moment,
I
appreciate
the
fact
that
this
is
the
the
way
in
which
you
analyzed
your
needs
and
objectives.
I
think,
as
I
said,
I
think
it's
well
thought
out
and
I
wholeheartedly
support
it.
Thank
you.
E
L
A
All
right
we've
got
a
motion
in
a
second
from
our
two
former
parks
board
representatives.
Any
further
discussion.
E
Well,
matt,
do
you
want
to
go
first,
your
hand
was
up.
Then
we
took
him
down
so
you're
that
you're
there
first.
C
Oh,
I
I
thought
I
appreciate
it.
I
thought
you
had
some
other
comments
but
wanted
to
defer
to
tara
and
bob
online,
but
anyway
I
I
appreciate
that
mine's.
Just
brief,
I
think
you
know:
okay,
we
we
don't
often
get
a
chance
to
sort
of
gush.
We
find
those
opportunities
and
we
see
them.
This
is
one
of
them,
so
so
I
certainly
will
take
that
time
to
to
gush
on
parks
and
rec
staff
and
ali's
leadership.
C
This
plan,
I
think,
is
I
I
think
it's
exemplary
of
what
a
master
plan
should
be,
and
I
know
it
sounds
sort
of
cliche,
but
I
think
the
process
has
been
laid
out.
The
way
it's
been
operated
to
mark's
point
being
realistic,
with
the
financial
constraints
that
are
here
and
operating
in
that
sense.
This
is
a
really
really
good
plan
and
I
just
I'm
really
happy
that
we've
gotten
to
this
place
and
we're
in
a
position
to
approve
it,
so
so
just
great
work
to
everyone
top
to
bottom.
C
I
just
and
as
a
reminder,
we're
celebrating
this
plan,
but
also
with
heavy
hearts,
because
we've
lost
one
of
our
own.
So
but
thank
you,
ali
appreciate
that.
E
Yeah
I
I
guess
I
just
wanted
to
comment
that
you
know
we
got
a
lot
of
negativity
during
the
public
comments
on
this
and
I
I
hear
the
community's
frustration
and
I'm
not
dismissing
any
of
it,
but
I
don't
want
that
to
tarnish
the
the
wonderful
parks
that
we
have
and-
and
you
know
I
use
them
frequently-
and
you
know
I
don't
know,
people
watching
from
afar
might
feel
like
you
know
it's
a
scene
out
of
escape
from
new
york
or
something-
and
it's
not
it's
not
like
that.
E
Our
parks
are
wonderful.
So
I
just
wanted
to
to
stand
up
for
the
excellent
work
that
our
staff
is
doing
there
again,
not
to
minimize
what
anyone
said
but-
and
I
know
why
the
frustrations
coming
in
tonight
and
as
it
is,
but
just
hoping
kind
of
separate
out
and
and
celebrate
our
awesome
parks.
Thanks.
A
But
then
just
huge
congratulations
on
this
master
plan.
It's
incredibly
well
done
we're
so
fortunate
to
have
an
extraordinary
park
system
like
we
do
in
our
city,
and
it
is
in
large
part
due
to
the
dedication
and
incredible
talent
and
hard
work
of
our
park
staff.
So
thanks
to
each
and
every
one
of
you
and
I'm
looking
forward
to
passing
this
master
plan
and
then
I
think
I'll
be
in
at
least
one
part
tomorrow
and
I'm
looking
forward
to
that
too.
A
F
F
AL
AL
So
I
don't
know
if
you
have
a
bulleted
summary
of
what
the
ask
is
and
how
to
facilitate
it.
If
it's
not
contingent
upon
council
approving
this
master
plan,
you
can
discuss
amongst
yourselves
and
figure
out.
If
you
think
modifying
it
is
appropriate.
I
will
I
said,
certainly
within
your
purview.
A
F
No
thank
you
aaron,
and
it
is
true
that
is
mentioned.
Equities
mentioned.
It
says
it's
from
crystal
gray,
and
it
mentioned
at
the
beginning
of
each
master
plan.
You
approve
should
be
a
reference
to
the
city's
equity
goals,
as
well
as
the
climate
initiative
goals.
Both
areas
are
referenced
in
the
documents,
but
I
I
would
like
to
see
them
emphasized,
maybe
even
an
introduction
letter
from
council
at
the
beginning
of
each
master
plan
to
emphasis
emphasize
these
two
areas,
and
these
emails
actually
came
from
community
members.
F
There
there's
there
were
a
bunch
of
them
in
anticipation
of
actually
this
meeting
today.
AL
Thank
you
that
does
help.
I
agree
with
you
junie
that
we
have
highlighted
that,
both
in
the
exact
the
letter
at
the
very
beginning,
where
we
talk
about
the
focus
on
climate
mitigation
and
impact
and
equity,
and
then
in
the
at
the
very
beginning
of
the
plan
and
in
the
executive
summary
I'll
point
to
you
to
a
few
graphics
in
the
video
and
in
our
presentation
today,
we've
showed
you
that
the
circle
graphic,
that
that
outlines
our
triangulation
approach
and
that
everything
we
do
is
through
a
lens
of
equity
and
resilience.
AL
And
another
thing
I'll
point
out
is
that
through
our
six
key
theme
strategies,
we
actually
didn't
we
with
council's
input.
I
think
it
was
one
of
our
very
first
questions
to
you.
When
we
talked
to
you
in
december
of
2020,
we
said
hey,
these
are
two
big
things
right
for
the
community
and
for
council.
Both
addressing
climate
change
and
addressing
equity
are
important.
AL
AL
The
other
thing
I
would
call
your
attention
to
pretty
early
on
and
I'm
not
going
to
get
to
the
page
quick
enough,
but
our
team
included
a
two-page
summary
of
what
climate
change
means
for
a
parks
and
recreation
system
and
I'll
call
I'll
just
appreciate
that
that
was
a
really
great
suggestion.
It's
nice
to
have
a
climate
scientist
on
your
advisory
board,
so
they
can
help
catch
the
things
where
you
can
do
a
better
job,
calling
calling
something
out.
So
a
gentleman
mr
brock.
We
we
appreciate
you.
AL
A
A
Was
sorry,
I
probably
said
your
name
too
so
quietly.
I
just
said.
I
thought
that
that
was
a
great
point
and
about
the
importance
of
raising
equity
and
climate.
And
just
I
wanted
to
see
what
you
thought
about
ali's
response
and
if
you
felt
like
there
was
a
particular
additional
change
that
you'd
be
looking.
F
For
yeah,
no,
I
actually,
I
appreciate
all
the
comments
that
she
made,
maybe
some
stronger
words
in
the
letter
from
the
director
and
my
understanding
is
that
something
that
we
usually
do.
We
usually
have
a
letter
from
council
as
part
of
our
master
plan,
and
this
one
just
doesn't
include
it.
AL
I
I
have
not
done
a
thorough
survey,
I
don't
know
if
any
of
my
colleagues
from
planning
are
here,
because
we
have
a
master
plan
coordination
committee,
I
I
believe
there
have
been
different
approaches.
I
know
the
open
space
master
plan
has
a
letter
from
the
director.
I
believe
the
library
master
plan
has
a
letter
from
the
board
of
trustees,
and
so
there
is
no
standard
approach.
F
F
If
that
is
something
that
would
be
useful,
I
mean
I
appreciate
the
comment
that
you
make
about
it
being
fully
re
weaved
into
the
entire
document,
but
having
it
as
the
basis,
meaning
that,
at
the
beginning
of
the
of
the
of
the
document
that
it
is
expressed
thoroughly
and
clearly,
I
think
that's
very
important
as
well,
for
the
entire
community.
A
So
I'll,
just
chime
in
and
I'll
call
rachel,
I
mean
a
a
a
well
written
letter
from
city
council
at
the
beginning
could
be
a
positive
addition
to
the
plan.
I
might
just
look
to
my
colleagues
if
we
did
if
we
wanted
to
do
that,
we
might
approve
the
the
master
plan
tonight
contingent
on
the
coming
edition
of
an
amendment
with
that,
so
that
they
could
move
forward
with
the
adopted
mastermind.
That
would
just
be
a
thought
on
on
a
possible
path
forward.
There
rachel.
E
I
mean,
given
that
we
did
give
previous
direction
to
staff,
to
go
this
way
and
and
we're
at
the
11th
hour
here
I
would
just
leave
it
as
is,
and
I
think
it's
great
and
I
think
that
I
wouldn't
really
want
to
center
it
on
us
anyways
by
putting
a
letter
in
the
front
like
it's,
not
it's
not
really
about
us,
so
I
would
just
have
it
be
more
about
the
plan
and
and
the
work.
So
I
think,
let's
I'm,
I
will
probably
be
ready
to
vote
on
it,
as
is
thanks.
E
AC
Nicole,
I
I
do
think
the
plan
is
quite
eloquent
on
these
subjects
and
does
not
require
you
know
additional
amendment.
It's
a
product
of
of
park
staff.
I
think
they've
done
a
great
job
and
they
have
not
ignored
these
these
subjects
at
all.
If
you,
you
know
going
through
the
the
full
130
pages
of
it,
there's
quite
a
bit
of
of
reference
to
these
subjects,
so
I'm
I'm
with
rachel
on
this
one.
I
think
it's
a
great
document
and
deserves
simply
to
be
approved.
AE
Yeah,
I
don't
have
a
strong
feeling
either
way
at
this
point.
I
do
see
value
in
thinking
about
this,
maybe
for
future
plans,
because
I
think
there
is
something
to
be
said
about
future
councils,
future
staff
future
folks
understanding
our
mindset,
what
it
is
we
liked
about
it,
why
we
were
excited
why
you
know
we
passed
it
and
moved
it
forward
and
just
highlighting
you
know
what
is
really
incredible
about
this
plan.
What
we're
looking
forward
to
seeing
come
out
of
it.
AE
It
just
feels
like
a
way
to
summarize
some
of
our
thinking
about
it
in
a
moment
of
time,
almost
like
a
little
time
capsule
for
the
future,
so
I
could
see
that
being
helpful,
but
I
I
don't
feel
super
strongly
about
delaying
anything
for
tonight
to
try
to
get
that
in.
For
this
one.
A
Good,
well
maybe
we
just
do
a
quick
straw
poll
on
whether
people
would
like
to
maybe
pass
it
tonight,
but
amend
it
later
with
an
introductory
letter
from
council
junie.
Would
that
be
an
okay
approach.
A
Okay,
so
just
a
quick
raise
your
hand
if
you,
if
you'd
like
to
add
in
a
letter
to
council
sometime
before
too
long,
just
keep
in
mind,
we'll
need
a
little
subcommittee
or
something
to
put
that
together.
But
any
anyone
who'd
like
to
add
that.
A
Proposed
approach:
yes,
okay,
okay!
So
raise
your
hand
if
you'd
like
to
get
that
letter
in
there
all
right.
Okay,
let's
see,
you've
got
okay,
oh
all,
right,
like
move,
we
got,
we
have
five,
okay,
so
and
then
the
the
subcommittee
probably
needs
to
be
among
the
five
of
us
who
said
that
was
a
good
idea
to
figure
this
out.
So
I
would
invite
a
motion
here
that
that
includes
the
approval
with
the
with
a
coming
expected
amendment
of
adding
a
letter
in
the
near.
L
AB
I
think
it
depends,
but
I
think
that
the
conversation
has
been
that
there
is
some
desire
by
council
to
see
this.
Some
representation
of
council
respond
to
it,
but
I
think
there's
more
conversation
to
be
had.
I
know
that
fsc
is
taking
a
look
at
our
master
plan
process
in
general,
and
that
might
be
a
good
place
to
take
that
conversation.
E
Yeah
I
just
I
just
wanted
to
reflect
that.
I
don't
know.
Maybe
two
years
ago
we
decided
to
write
a
letter
on
something
and
like
the
amount
of
hours
in
arguing
over
ofs
and
thus
and
like
I
don't
know
why
we
would
do
that
here.
I
understand
that
the
intent
and
appreciate
the
spirit
of
it,
but
I
I
would
be
pretty
uncomfortable
voting
to
put
for
this
master
plan,
we're
going
to
amend
it
and
we
haven't.
We
haven't
even
seen
a
draft
of
the
letter,
yet
like
I'm
not
comfortable
with
that
process.
A
AE
I
was
just
wondering
if
we
could
put,
can
I
move
this
to,
for
whenever
we
next
have
a
process
discussion.
If
maybe
we
could
have
a
deeper
conversation
about
it,
then,
so
we
don't
have
to
try
to
have
that
night
when
we
tonight
when
we
still
have
a
lot
to
talk
about.
A
C
No
okay,
I'm
not
sure
where
we're
at
at
this
point
to
be
honest
sort
of
bounced
around.
So
all
right,
I
based
on
tara's
rescinding,
I'm
not
sure
it
might
be
a
moot
point
if
it's
not
I'll,
just
I'll
just
point
out
that
yeah,
I
don't
like
the
idea
of
setting
a
precedent,
especially
if
we're
gonna
have
a
process
review
committee.
C
Looking
at
our
overall
master
planning
process
seems
like
we
might
be
jumping
the
gun
on
process
before
allowing
that
process
to
give
insight
as
to
what
we
should
be
modifying
overall.
So
I
think
we
kind
of
have
the
cart
before
the
horse
a
little
bit,
but
anyway,
I
think
we've
already
had
a
vote,
so
that
might
not
be
relevant.
A
So
yeah,
I
think
our
straw
poll
now
stands
at
four
votes
for
adding
a
letter,
which
means
there's
not
majority
support.
So
then
I
might.
Instead,
you
know
thanks
junior,
for
raising
the
the
issue
and
the
possibility
and
invite
a
motion
on
the
master
plan
in
front
of
us.
Oh.
A
Getting
lost
in
all
these
back
and
forth.
Of
course
we
do
by
our
two
parks
and
rec
former
board
members,
so
in
that
case
I
would
invite
a
vote
alicia.
How
are
we
doing
this.
B
F
AB
Yeah
mayor,
I'm
sorry
to
interrupt,
but
I
just
wanted
to
alert
folks
that
we
have
staff
is
responding
to
a
large
fire
up
at
chautauqua
and
you
may
be
receiving
notifications
so
that,
as
we
learn
more,
we
will
notify
you,
but
just
wanted
to
make
sure
that
was
on
your
radar
as
we
are
getting
some
information
about
that.
AE
AB
A
wildfire
and
as
soon
as
we
know
more
we'll,
perhaps
interrupt
and
let
you
know
or
unless
marist
you
have
more
information.
You
want
to
share
yeah.
AD
It's
a
large
house
located
on
fifth
street
we've
evacuated
houses
around
there's
pretty
much
a
lot
of
space
in
between
the
house,
so
we're
evacuating
as
we
speak
and
I'll
give
you
an
update.
If
I
get
anything
during
our
next
presentation.
A
Okay,
well,
on
that
sobering
note,
let's
move
on
to
our
next
item.
B
AB
Thanks
so
much
council,
this
presentation
comes
at
council's
request
and
is
tied
to
a
june
7
2022
memo
we
shared
earlier
this
summer
as
you'll
see
throughout
the
presentation.
This
work
is
truly
a
cross-departmental
effort
and
I'll
highlight
perhaps
some
colleagues,
you
may
not
see
speaking
tonight,
rit
department,
who
has
been
truly
useful
in
helping
us
think
through
the
appropriate
measures,
metrics
to
measure
our
work
and
our
colleagues
in
communications
and
our
city
attorney's
office,
who
have
also
helped
support
aspects
of
this
work.
AQ
Good
evening,
mayor
and
members
of
council,
thank
you
nuria,
I'm
joe
tadiucci.
I
am
the
director
of
our
utilities
department
and
I'm
talking
to
you
tonight
and
kicking
off
the
presentation,
because,
as
part
of
our
pilot,
we
established
a
cleanup
team
in
utilities
that
is
part
of
the
cross-departmental
team
that
maria
mentioned
and
before
I
I
really
get
into
the
slides.
I
want
to
acknowledge
that
we
have
a
heavy
subject
that
we're
tackling
tonight.
We
heard
about
it
in
open
comment.
AQ
We
know
there
are
diverse
and
sometimes
intense
perspectives
on
how
we
should
manage
our
public
spaces
and
and
camping,
and
there
are
no
easy
answers
and,
as
nuria
noted
it's
a
national
issue
for
myself
and
in
preparation
for
tonight.
I
spent
some
time
this
week
out
in
the
field
with
our
public
spaces
team.
AQ
I
just
I
do
that
from
time
to
time
and
just
wanted
to
make
sure
that
I
had
to
had
the
pulse
on
how
the
work
was
going,
and
I
was
really
struck
by
and
and
pleased
with,
the
grace
that
I
saw
from
our
team
in
the
way
they're
doing
this
work
and
the
way
they're
interacting
with
the
people
who
are
are
camping
and
at
the
same
time
they
have
a
job
to
do
and
they're
trying
to
clean
up
the
spaces.
AQ
And-
and
I
and
I
really
saw
a
dramatic
change
in
the
in
the
before
and
after
in
the
work
that
I
that
I
visited
with
this
week
when
I
was
out
there
present
with
the
team-
and
I
saw
the
same
thing
last
week,
even
though
I
wasn't
out
there
with
the
crew
in
the
area
that
they
targeted
and
cleaned
up.
AQ
Of
course,
the
encampments
do
reoccur
in
some
cases
and
that's
that's
part
of
the
process.
That's
that's
elusive
for
everyone,
but
anyway,
I'm
happy
to
share
more
about
the
the
visit
that
I
did
this
week
as
we
get
into
the
discussion
and
our
intent
tonight
is
to
provide
an
update
on
the
safe
and
managed
public
spaces
pilot.
AQ
AQ
There
we
go
and
and
just
to
build
on
the
comments
maria
made
in
her
introduction,
we'd
like
to
review
briefly
how
the
pilot
program
started
in
the
past
several
years,
staff
and
council
have
increasingly
heard
concerns
from
the
community.
We
heard
some
of
it
tonight
in
open
comment
and
during
the
the
public
comment
on
the
park's
master
plan
about
unsafe
conditions
in
public
spaces.
AQ
This
slide
lists
many
of
the
concerning
conditions
that
have
that
are
we
see
frequently
in
our
public
spaces
and
it's
what
we're
trying
to
address
with
our
program
and
back
in
january
of
2021.
That
was
really
the
start
of
the
conversation
and
the
impetus
for
the
pilot
program
city
staff
shared
with
city
council,
an
overview
of
the
various
challenges
and
associated
data
in
response
to
those
concerns,
and
if
we
can
go
to
the
next
slide,.
AQ
There
we
go
in
the
conversations
we
had
back
in
early
2021
councilx
asked
staff
to
return
with
some
options
to
address
the
challenges
associated
with
our
public
spaces.
AQ
If
the
program
was
successful
and
we'll
talk
about
those
metrics
more,
but
also
wanted
to
touch
on
some
of
the
themes
and
or
guiding
principles
that
we
use
to
establish
this
pilot
program
and
a
couple
of
things
on
that,
we
have
worked
very
intentionally
as
a
cross-departmental
team
to
assure
that
everything
we're
doing
is
done
legally
and
also
compassionately
in
a
way
that
aligns
with
our
city
values
and
that
that
goes
to
the
the
people
we're
looking
at
to
hire
to
do
this
work.
AQ
I
observed
some
of
the
results
of
that
and
just
what
I
saw
when
I
was
out
with
the
team
this
week
and
as
I
mentioned,
I
was
pleased
to
see
that,
and
so
we
now
have
the
programs
and
and
the
associated
policies
and
procedures
and
the
reporting
and
resident
communication
tools
in
place.
And
if
we
can
go
to
the
next
slide,
which
should
be
the
program
goals.
AQ
Thank
you,
and
so
our
program
goals
are
listed
on
on
this
slide,
a
big
part
of
our
focus
and
a
big
part
of
what
the
cleanup
team
that
resides
in
utilities
it
looks
at
is
keeping
people
from
residing
and
or
taking
up
residence
and
camping
in
our
drainage
ways
and
and
stormwater
infrastructure,
and
we
also
wanted
to
address
some
of
the
hazardous
conditions
and
materials
that
occur
in
our
public
parks
and
playgrounds,
while
also
having
elements
of
our
program
that
could
help
the
people
who
are
experiencing
homelessness,
to
find
solutions
and
and
have
touch
points
that
can
connect
them
to
city
services
in
a
way
that's
consistent
with
our
city
homeless
strategy.
AQ
AQ
And
while
the
the
public
spaces
program
is
is
not
in
and
of
itself
intended
to
end
homelessness,
it's
really
about
making
this
the
spaces
safe
for
everyone,
including
the
people
who
are
are
attempting
to
camp
in
them,
and
our
our
program
does
align
with
the
best
practices
that
are
put
forth
by
the
u.s
interagency
council
on
homelessness.
AQ
The
the
interagency
council's
sole
mission
is
focused
on
preventing
homelessness
nationally.
It
consists
of
19
different
federal
agencies
and
it
has
established
a
federal
strategic
plan
to
prevent
and
end
homelessness,
and
in
that
the
the
interagency
council
recommends
seven
pr
the
seven
principles
on
this
slide
for
addressing
encampments.
AQ
Our
approach
aligns
with
these
principles
and
some
of
the
highlights
on
the
on
the
first
bullet.
We
have
multiple
departments
who
work
together.
We
coordinate
with
outreach
and
engagement
entities.
There
are
other
city,
non-profit
partnership,
examples
like
our
downtown
ambassadors
and
be
there.
AQ
We
have
connections
to
resources
in
the
field
for
people
who
are
experiencing
homelessness,
including
the
coordinated
entry
and
diversion
program.
We
have
a
for
comprehensive
and
coordinated
outreach.
We
have
client
level
staffing
where
we
try
to
match
outreach
with
with
particular
individuals,
and
we
regularly
regularly
conduct
coordination
meetings
with
agencies
and
groups
involved
in
in
this
issue.
AQ
We
address
the
basic
needs
of
people
experiencing
homelessness
and
and
storage
of
of
their
the
stuff
that
they
have
with
them,
and
I'll
talk
talk
about
storage
later
in
the
presentation
and
in
terms
of
access
to
shelter
or
housing
and
developing
pathways
to
housing.
AQ
Around
creating
a
plan
sites
are
frequently
cleaned
and
remain
open,
activating
certain
sites
with
things
like
the
skateboard
park,
when
there
are
safety
concerns
and
when
there
are
safety
concerns,
the
operation
team
works
with
the
appropriate
department
to
mitigate
the
safety
issue.
AQ
As
I
acknowledged
just
when
I
was
getting
started,
we
do
know
that
the
camps
do
reoccur
and
that
that's
part
of
the
situation,
that's
been
elusive
and
we're
continuing
to
work
on,
and
I
believe,
the
next
couple
of
slides
or
in
ally's
area
and
checking
with
ally
to
see
if
she's
she's
ready
to
take
those.
Otherwise,
I
can
quickly
cover
those.
AL
I'm
here
joe
thank
you,
sir,
so
with
the
next
slide
and
going
back
to
the
timeline
in
january
of
2021
and
april.
When
we
were
talking
about
this
work,
we
shared
with
council
some
other
projects
that
were
planned
that
didn't
require
any
additional
funding
or
council
approval,
and
I
just
wanted
to
give
you
an
update
on
those
as
well
so
boulder
creek
management
is
still
on
our
work
plan,
similar
to
how
golden
has
done
with
clear,
creek
and
steamboat
has
done
with
the
yempa.
AL
We
know
a
plan
will
help
us
balance
recreation,
visitor
safety
in
the
riparian
corridor
due
to
staffing
transitions
that
has
been
deferred.
We
intend
to
kick
it
off.
In
2023,
we
have
worked
with
boulder
county
public
health
and
boulder
community
health
to
have
two
large
secured
sharps
containers
installed
behind
the
tape
building
and
on
a
plot
of
land
at
arapahoe
in
broadway,
just
west
of
boulder
high.
AL
One
of
the
programs,
if
you'll
move
to
the
next
slide
that
council
approved
and
funded
last
summer,
was
a
limited
commission
ambassador
or
I'm
sorry.
Oh
there's
a
note,
sorry
about
that.
A
limited
commission
urban
park
ranger
program,
so
these
folks
are
do
have
the
ability
to
cite
for
municipal,
va
violations
doing
this
right
has
taken
more
time
than
we
anticipated,
but
we
feel
really
good
about
the
program
that
we've
now
are
standing
up.
We
realized
last
fall.
AL
We
needed
an
additional
resource
to
set
this
program
up
for
success
and,
after
a
few
hiring
rounds,
we
have
hired
a
lead
ranger
with
great
experience
and
passion
for
this
work.
She
has
hired
several
temporary
rangers
and
they
are
on
the
ground
since
june.
At
various
sites
across
the
community
is
represented.
AL
On
this
screen,
they've
been
able
to
conduct
77
patrols
over
200
non-enforcement
contacts,
their
training
has
included,
but
is
not
limited
to
attending
ranger
excellence
school
that
folks,
from
across
the
state
attend
where
they
get
training
on
ranger
leadership,
virgil,
verbal
judo
and
other
de-escalation
tactics,
they're
trained
in
the
delivery
of
narcan
and
community
bike
patrol
tactics,
their
most
common
enforcement
contacts
are
related
to
prohibited
items
in
parks
and
dog
violations.
They
are
forming
relationships
with
the
appropriate
members
of
the
boulder
police
department,
including
the
hot
team
and
animal
control.
AL
This
weekend,
they'll
be
supporting
the
20th
iron
man
at
the
boulder
reservoir
and-
and
really
just
I
want
to
highlight.
There
are
opportunities
system-wide
to
improve
the
user
experience
and
protect
our
natural
resources.
Our
entire
team
and
parks
and
recreation
has
a
wish
list
for
the
urban
park.
Ranger
team
that
we're
having
to
prioritize
so
with
that,
I
will
pass
it
to
my
colleague
chris
jones.
AR
Thank
you
so
much
ali
good
evening,
city
council,
I'm
chris
jones,
the
interim
director
of
community
vitality,
and
I
have
had
the
pleasure
of
working
with
shep
and
the
downtown
boulder
partnership
on
standing
up
the
downtown
ambassador
program,
and
this
team
has
been
first
and
foremost,
able
to
provide
a
visible,
visible
presence
in
downtown
the
civic
area
and
the
university
hill
area.
AR
They
have
been
doing
a
ton
of
interactions
in
these
communities
that
they're
serving
one
of
the
things
that
they've
been
involved
in
is
encouraging
compliance
with
quality
of
life
issues
like
no
smoking
in
public
spaces.
Oh
sorry,
I
I
had
my
slide
in
front
of
me,
but
I
didn't.
I
realized
you
didn't
have
yours
to
slide
in
front
of
you.
So
no
smoking
in
public
places
no
dogs
in
the
mall,
no
bikes
on
the
mall
things
like
that.
Just
interactions
in
our
public
spaces.
AR
They
also
engage
quite
a
bit
with
the
business
community.
They're
they've
been
building
relationships
with
business
owners
in
the
areas
that
they've
been
serving
so
that
they
can
be
the
first
point
of
contact
when
there
might
be
some
stressful
situations
in
interactions
with
folks
who
might
be
experiencing
homelessness
so
that
the
police
department
doesn't
have
to
be
the
first
point
of
contact.
AR
If
there's
not
really
a
life
safety
issue,
but
more,
maybe
some
sort
of
escalation
that
doesn't
necessarily
warrant
public
safety
interventions.
Yet
they
also
do
social
service
and
outreach
they're
building
relationships
with
people
who
are
experiencing
homeless
homelessness
in
the
areas
that
they're
serving
so
again
they
can.
They
can
be
part
of
that
de-escalation
and
and
part
of
providing
information
around
the
services
that
are
available
to
those
residents
and
also
they
are
interacting
with
all
of
the
visitors
and
anybody
who's
visiting
downtown.
AR
They
are
supporting
the
downtown
boulder
partnership
and
their
special
events,
programming
the
spaces
to
to
create
more
activation
in
the
pearl
street
mall
area
and
other
locations
and
they're
doing
a
great
job
of
collecting
data
and
we'll
share
a
little
bit
of
that
data
today.
But
they
have
a
huge
data
collection
platform
that
they
use
to
to
make
sure
they're
tracking.
AR
All
of
the
work
that
they're
doing
and
so
we'll
share
some
of
that
and,
of
course,
when
they're
out
and
about
they're,
doing
a
lot
of
custodial
beautification
and
maintenance
work
from
removing
graffiti
to
handbills
to
to
weeding
tree
tree
wells
and
just
trying
to
make
sure
that
our
spaces
are
looking
their
best
and
and
welcoming
and
safe.
If
we
go
to
the
next
slide.
AR
So
this
is
just
a
sample
of
some
of
the
data
that
the
ambassadors
are
collecting
and
these
are
the
actions
that
are
related,
that
we've
designated
related
to
public
safety
over
the
months
that
the
ambassadors
have
been
working.
A
majority
of
these
actions
have
been
related
to
cleaning
up
graffiti
and
hand
bills,
and
things
like
that,
but
just
an
indication
of
of
some
of
the
things
that
they're
keeping
track
of
some
of
these
statistics
are
not
necessarily
indicative
of
an
increase
in
graffiti
or
or
the
need
to
contact
emergency
services.
AR
Some
of
this
is
just
related
to
the
level
of
staffing
where
there
were.
We
did
have
less
ambassadors
over
the
winter
months,
there's
less
of
a
demand
for
that
type
of
of
work
in
the
winter,
so
the
activity
does
go
down.
Then
new
folks
were
hired
in
the
spring
and
more
graffiti
was
getting
cleaned
up
in
the
spring
months
as
we
as
general
activity
was
increasing
in
these
areas.
AD
Thanks
chris,
I'm
still
here
mayor's
harold
police
chief
next
slide.
Please,
yes,
so
council
approved
six
additional
police
officers
to
provide
safety
support
the
last
time
we
are
in
front
of
council.
We
are
currently
staffed
with
three
officers.
AD
We
anticipate
onboarding
for
a
fourth
officer
in
mid-september,
and
that
will
be
four
out
of
the
six
keep
in
mind
that
these
officers
receive
specific
training
and
legal
training.
The
icap
principles
use
of
force
principles
that
we've
discussed
recently.
AD
AD
Yeah
so
we've
been
collecting
different
data
sets.
Some
is
more
refined
than
others,
but
at
this
point
we
can
definitely
discuss
that.
From
september
21
till
now
the
boulder
police
department
has
issued
414
unsanctioned
camping
tickets,
either
for
prohibited
tents
or
camping.
This
is
approximately
37.
Per
month.
On
average,
there
has
been
46,
reported,
arsons
or
built
fires
on
public
property.
This
corresponds
to
approximately
four
incidents
per
month.
On
average.
AD
Furthermore-
and
we've
discussed
this
a
lot
too,
crime
is
more
concentrated
around
the
unsanctioned
camps
than
elsewhere
in
the
city.
Our
analysis
has
demonstrated
that
this
is
true
when
we
consider
unsanctioned
camps
reported
by
community
members
or
camping
tickets
by
the
boulder
police
department
and
calls
for
service
in
crime
reports.
AD
AD
The
victimization
rate
among
members
of
the
unhoused
community
is
approximately
three
times
greater
than
that
of
other
boulder
community
members.
Unfortunately,
we
do
know
through
research
that
the
victimization
rate
is
very
conservative
following
research.
That
proves
victimization
is
often
not
reported.
AD
These
results
are
consistent
with
other
research
about
crime,
around
unsanctioned
camps
and
among
unhoused
individuals.
So
when
we're
talking
about
violent
crime,
these
are
concentrated
in
areas
of
assault,
intimidation
and
sex
offenses
and
we're
talking
about
property
crime.
These
are
mostly
concentrated
around
theft,
reports,
vandalism
and
burglary,
and
I
do
believe
I
am
turning
this
over
now.
AS
Thank
you,
chief,
harold,
kurt
fernhardt,
director
of
housing
and
human
services.
You
can
go
on
to
the
next
slide.
Please
thank
you.
A
AS
AS
So
I'll
talk
a
bit
about
the
outreach,
but
before
I
go
in
to
be
there
sort
of
between
our
two
slides
I'll
mention
the
homeless
outreach
team,
which
is
a
team
from
under
maris's
department-
and
I
I
think
they've
been
around
for
about
six
or
seven
years
and
tremendously
effective
at
working
with
some
of
these
individuals,
some
who
are
camping
and
some
that
are
not,
but
those
that
are
living
on
who
who
are
unhoused
and
they
assist
greatly
with
services
and
getting
people
into
housing
solutions
in
the
the
so
the
outreach
and
engagement
the
be
there
team
was
set
up
actually
before
this
pilot.
AS
It
was
set
up
in
response
to
covid.
It
was
originally
funded.
Through
the
cares
act
and
initially
they
they
were
out
there
trying
to
engage
individuals
into
services
and
directing
them
towards
coordinated
entry,
but
they
were
also
doing
a
lot
of
covid
screening
when
this
program
first
initiated.
AS
This
has
changed
a
bit
over
time.
We
we
now
have
a
different
service
provider
for
this
and
over
the
last
few
months.
AS
It's
it's
been,
it's
become
significantly
more
comprehensive
in
its
approach,
and
so
now
the
the
be
there
team
actually
does
coordinated
entry
in
the
field
at
the
areas
where,
where
people
are
camping
as
they're
working
with
individuals,
this
this
data
here
is
a
snapshot
from
our
dashboard
over
the
last
six
weeks,
and
so
you
can
see
that
as
an
example
we're
working
with
the
be
there
team
is
working
with
individuals
for
identification
documents,
which
is
a
critical
step
in
moving
towards
a
housing
solution.
AS
Some
individuals
are
referred
to
to
medical
care
and
other
benefits
are
directed
to
individuals.
So
it's
become
much
more
of
a
of
a
service
than
simply
a
referral
program.
So
we're
we're
pretty
excited
about
that
transition.
AS
I'll
also
mention,
though,
however,
with
this
program
as
well
as
other
programs,
that
at
times
we've
had
challenges
with
staff
turnover
this
program
at
times
has
ebbed
and
flowed,
and
in
in
to
to
to
work
on
that
challenge.
We've
actually
done
training
with
other
members
of
this
interdepartmental
work,
so
joe's
team
that
does
the
cleanup
has
actually
received.
AS
You
know
training
on
what
services
are
available
for
individuals
and
they
also
participate
in
ensuring
that
people
are
given
the
information
they
need
to
help
direct
them
to
services.
So
it's
really
a
multi-prong
approach,
and
with
that
I
will
turn
the
presentation
back
over
to
joe
taduchi.
Thank
you.
AQ
Thanks
for
that
kurt
and
just
to
elaborate
on
what
you're
saying
the
the
what
I've
learned
in
working
with
the
team
just
this
past
week,
is
that
they've
they've
really
integrated
into
the
community
that
they're
working
with
and
have
established
relationships.
Part
of
their
process
is,
is
doing
wellness
checks
with
people.
AQ
They
know
a
lot
of
them
by
name
of
course,
some
people
move
on
and
some
people
stay
here
and
and
they
I've
I've
learned
the
list
of
training
that
they've
gone
through,
as
kurt
mentioned,
a
lot
of
it
having
to
do
with
just
recognizing
mental
health
issues,
and
it's
tough
work
for
them
as
well,
and
so
recognizing
it
in
themselves
and
in
the
people
that
they're
working
with
in
the
community.
AQ
So
moving
on
to
the
the
cleanup
work
that
we
do.
AQ
Next,
I'm
going
to
talk
about
that,
and
a
lot
has
been
done.
As
we've
talked
about
throughout
to
develop
reporting
tools
for
the
community,
we
have
a
pretty
good
dashboard
now.
I
think
that
people
can
see
the
numbers
and
the
metrics
and-
and
they
can
see
if
a
campsite
has
been
reported
and
we've
also
established
a
lot
of
procedures
as
we've
discussed
tonight.
If
we
can
go
to
the
next
slide.
AQ
So,
just
talking
about
the
work
that
our
internal
cleanup
team
does
by
the
numbers
here-
and
I
believe
this
goes
back
to
october-
of
2021-
we've
cleaned
up,
486
encampment
sites,
53
of
those
were
with
fire
rings
and
and
or
propane
tanks.
AQ
We've
collected
a
hundred
and
twelve
tons
of
debris
and
5100
needles
and
one
of
the
encampment
sites
that
when
I
was
visiting
with
the
team
this
week,
I
saw
a
full
dump
truck
load
of
stuff.
That
was
just
trash
and
debris.
AQ
The
primary
goal
of
the
work
is
to
create
safe
public
spaces
for
everyone,
removing
the
fire
rings
and
profanes
and
and
the
needles
accomplishes
that,
and
it
also
improves
the
safety
for
those
living
in
the
encampments,
and
I
know
for
me
personally
and
just
thinking
about
a
week,
I
believe
it
was
in
the
middle
of
the
week.
Last
week
we
had
a
rain
event
where
we
got
two
inches
of
rain
or
so
in
about
an
hour
and
over
the
years,
as
the
encampments
have
become
more
and
more
of
an
issue.
AQ
We
find
people
living
in
our
utilities,
infrastructure
inside
box,
culverts
and
inside
storm
water
pipes,
and
we
just
can't
that's
just
putting
their
their
life
at
risk.
And
that's
that's
why
I'm
personally
passionate
about
that
this
program?
We
can't
let
that
happen.
AQ
And
and
as
we've
noted,
the
the
encampment
cleanup
work
is
not
intended
to
end
homelessness,
although
I
think
the
way
that
we
perform
the
work,
including
the
notice
we
provide
and
the
touch
points
that
go
along
with
that,
it
does
create
an
opportunity
to
connect
people
experiences
experiencing
homelessness
with
services
that
can
help
them
next
slide.
AQ
I
know
one
thing
that
that
we
hear
frequently
is
is
questions
about.
How
are
we,
how
are
we
choosing
which
sites
to
clean
up
and
which
ones
do
we
do
first
and
it's
not
a
it's,
not
a
random
process.
We've
talked
with
other
communities
who
have
programs
like
this?
AQ
I
believe
portland
oregon
has
something
asked
how,
when
we
really
got
started
on
this
pilot,
asked
how
they
were
doing
it
and
looked
at
some
of
those
examples
and
then
thought
about
our
needs
here
in
boulder,
and
we
established
a
prioritization
formula
before
I
talk
about
that.
Just
talking
about
the
work
that
the
cleanup
team
does.
AQ
Each
week,
they
they're
currently
averaging
two
police
supported
cleanups
each
week
where
the
encampments
are
inhabited
and
those
are
the
ones
that
involve
the
72
hours
of
notice
in
accordance
with
our
procedures
on
days
when
the
police
support
is
not
available,
the
team
is
is
out
there,
surveying
the
multi-use
paths
and
drainage
ways
and
and
cleaning
up
trash
and
debris
that
is
left
behind
from
prior
encampments.
So
they're
really
out
there
five
days
a
week
doing
cleanup
and
in
terms
of
the
prioritization
we
have
factors
that
we
look
at.
AQ
So
there
can
be
smaller
ones
that
are
that
are
in
in
an
area
somewhere
that
don't
take
a
lot
of
those
boxes
and
and
and
they
can
stay
there
for
a
while
because
they
don't
they
don't
rise
to
the
level
on
our
prioritization
life.
Safety
and
proximity
of
schools
are
two
categories
that
carry
a
lot
of
weight
when
we're
applying
the
formula-
and
I
think
I
will
move
on
to
the
next
slide
and
talk
about
storage.
AQ
So
well,
as
mentioned
previously,
one
of
the
things
that
we've
established
is
a
process
and
location
for
storage
and
retrieval
of
personal
property.
We're
legally
required
to
store
personal
property,
and
that
is
that
is
not
trash.
AQ
We
have
a
formal
definition
of
what
constitutes
personal
property.
There
can
sometimes
be
issues
where
a
person's
wallet
or
identification
gets
left
behind.
We
have
procedures
to
make
sure
that
we're
taking
care
of
those
and
when
we
post
the
notice
that
we're
going
to
do
a
cleanup
72
hours
in
advance,
it
has
contact
information
for
retrieval
so
that
we
can
reconnect
people
with
their
personal
property
next
slide
and
and
we're
wrapping
up
here.
The
next
series
of
slides
captures
some
of
the
data
associated
with
the
encampments
and
cleanups
and
the
metrics.
AQ
This
is
one
of
the
things
that,
starting
from
scratch
to
establish
our
own
program
a
year
and
a
half
ago,
it
has
been
a
significant
undertaking
to
establish
the
metrics,
and
a
lot
of
credit
goes
to
our
I.t
team
and
there,
as
kurt
mentioned,
their
staff
staff
transition
and
changes
are,
are
part
of
what
we're
all
dealing
with
on
all
of
our
programs,
and
we
had
the
departure
of
a
key
staff
member
who
was
really
holding
up
the
initial
data
gathering
and
reporting,
and
so
we
had
to
adapt
in
that
I
would.
AQ
I
would-
and
I
think
the
team
would
characterize
the
data
that
we
have
to
date
as
a
work
in
progress.
It's
a
new
program.
The
data
collection
is
new,
we're
streamlining
and
refining
our
tools
and
data
collection
procedures.
So
it's
not
always
entirely
consistent
and-
and
so
I'm
not
sure
we
can
draw
any
absolute
conclusions
just
yet
and
so
I'll
walk
through
a
few
of
the
the
goals
and
metrics
slides.
AQ
You
will
see
that
many
things
are
trending
up
and
at
this
point
we
don't
know
if
that's
that's
a
seasonal
thing
that
will
go
back
down
once
the
weather,
cools
off
or
or
whether
we'll
see
after
a
period
of
time,
that
it's
a
trend,
that's
continuing
and
concerning.
AQ
Next
slide
and
I'll
just
touch
on
these
quickly.
This
this
one
shows
the
reports
of
camping
which,
as
as
I
mentioned,
the
trends,
it's
it's
trending
up
over
time
and
if
we
can
go
to
the
next
one,
one
of
our
goals,
being
the
waterways
being
free
of
of
contamination,
and
this
slide
shows
the
number
of
structures
or
campsites
that
are
next
to
our
waterways.
AQ
Again,
it's
been
trending
up
over
time,
of
course
we're
in
the
we're
in
the
peak
of
summer
and
it's
the
warmest
time
of
year.
So
again
we'll
see
if
that
goes
back
down
the
next
slide.
Chris
talked
about
our
ambassadors
program
and
contacts.
AQ
Half
of
the
screen
is
the
number
of
sites
that
have
access
issues
where
people
or
materials
might
be
encroaching
on
or
blocking
access
to
to,
the
multi-use
paths
or
the
parks
or
things
like
that,
and
then
the
the
right
side
of
the
slide
shows
the
number
of
bike
trips
and
if
the
the
lines
are
pointing
up,
that
means
there.
There
are
more
bike
trips
compared
to
the
same
month.
The
year
before
so
most
of
the
months
are
up,
but
january
of
2022
was
down
and
chances
are.
It
was
a
cold
january.
AQ
I
don't
want
to
get
in
front
of
the
budget
process,
but
as
part
of
our
budget
process,
we'll
be
bringing
forward
a
proposal
to
expand
the
utilities
cleanup
team
so
that
I
can
do
a
larger
geographic
area
of
the
city.
That
goes
beyond
some
of
the
multi-use
paths
and
drainage
ways,
and
that
would
allow
us
to
get
to
some
of
those
those
sites
that
I
mentioned
when
I
was
talking
about
prioritization
that
sometimes
are
lagging
in
in
getting
attention
and
if
we
can
go
to
our
our
next
slide.
AQ
That's
the
end
of
our
of
our
prepared
presentation
and
look
forward
to
quick
questions
and,
and
discussions
with
council.
A
Thanks
so
much
for
that
joe
and
everybody
else
who
presented
those
helpful
information,
I
appreciate
those
presentations
questions
for
staff.
We've
got
bob
and
matt
and
mark.
AJ
Thanks
aaron
aaron
I've
got
about
one
question
each
for
a
couple
of
the
presenters.
Do
you
want
me
to
do
those
all
at
once
or
do
you
want
me
to
ask
one
question
and
get
back
in
queue?
What
will
be
best.
A
AJ
Thanks
well
I'll
just
order
joe
since
jill
was
just
presenting
joe
thanks
for
that.
I'm
great
great
data,
great
initial
effort.
I
guess
I
kind
of
a
two-part
question
one
is
you
mentioned
that
you're
doing
some
some
walk-alongs
drive-alongs
with
your
crew
to
see
how
things
are
going?
Is
that
something
that
you're
going
to
be
extending
to?
Maybe
the
council
members?
AJ
I
know
that
there
can
be
some
dangerous
situations,
but
is
that
I
know
the
police
offer
and
the
fire
department
offer
right
alongs
for
for
council
members
and
it's
a
great
way
for
us
to
learn
what
our
staff
is
doing.
Is
that
something
that
you
would
feel
comfortable
having
us
join?
Join
you
on.
AQ
AJ
Great
thanks
joe
and
then
a
final
question
for
you
joe.
I
know
you
don't
want
to
get
ahead
of
the
budget
process
and
we'll
be
talking
about
the
budget
in
a
few
weeks.
But
can
you
just
at
least
give
us
an
order
of
magnitude?
Are
you
about
the
expansion
of
your
program,
which
I'd
be
very
much
in
sport
about
myself?
Are
you
talking
about
a
10
increase
of
50
increase
of
doubling?
AJ
I
mean
what
just
give
us
kind
of
maybe,
and
if
you
don't
want
to
answer
the
question,
that's
perfectly
fancy,
but
I
just
want
to
get
a
sense
because
it
sounds
like
a
program.
AJ
That's
been
pretty
impactful,
but
it
also
sounds
like
it's
it's
hard
to
keep
up,
and
I
understand
that
because
I
think
you
only
got
five
team
members
and
you
know
there's
a
lot
of
there's
a
lot
of
things
out
there
to
address
what
what's
the
order
of
magnitude
of
the
increase
you
might
be
seeking
in
a
few
weeks.
AQ
Yeah
for
the
the
cleanup
crew
that
I
was
just
talking
about
right
now
we
have
a
supervisor,
a
crew
lead
and
three
crew
members
and
and
the
the
trucks
and
equipment
that
they
used
to
do
the
cleanups.
We
would
be
looking
at
doubling
doubling
that
and
and
would
be
for
four
ftes
that
are
at
around
300
000
and
and
several
100
000
for
the
same
equipment
that
the
current
crew
has.
AJ
Great,
that's
just
that's
helpful
joe
and
we'll
obviously
talk
about
that
more
in
a
few
weeks.
My
next
question
is
is
kind
of
a
similar
question
for
chris
jones
chris
another
outstanding,
successful
program,
I
think,
of
the
ambassador
program.
That
was
also
done
on
a
pilot
and
we're
now
you
know
a
year
and
a
half
into
it.
I
know
that
several
members
of
council
are
involved
with
different
downtown
organizations.
AJ
I
think
matt
and
mark
are
currently
our
are
our
liaisons
onto
the
business
improvement,
the
downtown
business
improvement
district
and
then
tara
and
I
serve
on
the
board
of
the
non-profit,
downtown
boulder
community
initiative.
So
I
think
several
of
us
are
familiar
with
the
ambassador
program
and,
of
course,
those
of
us
who
go
downtown
a
lot
interact
with
the
ambassadors
are
really
really
great.
They've
had
just
literally
tens
of
thousands
of
interactions
with
community
members
with
with
business
owners
and
just
phenomenal
success.
AJ
I
hear
nothing,
but
compliments
about
the
ambassadors,
from
visitors
from
residents
from
businesses
and
and
so
just
I'm
going
to
ask
you
the
same
question
asked:
do
you
foreshadow
for
us?
Will
you
first
shadow
for
us
the
possibility
of
extending
this
pilot
program
or
maybe
making
this
program
quasi
permanent
as
we
go
into
the
2023
budget.
AR
Thank
you
bob
for
the
question.
Yes,
we
certainly
are
intending
and
are
proposing
an
extension
of
the
this
element
of
the
pilot
program
into
2023
and
certainly
will
want
to
monitor
the
ambassadors
and
their
their
effect
on
these
measures,
and
the
goals
of
the
coordinated
program
so
certainly
do
anticipate
and
will,
and
that
will
be
part
of
the
proposal
that
you're
going
to
be
seeing
through
the
budget
process
for
continuation
of
the
existing
level
of
ambassador
service.
AJ
Great
thanks
thanks
chris.
I
appreciate
that
again.
I
certainly
support
that.
I'm
gonna
shift
it's
a
scatter
shot
here,
a
little
bit
shift
to
the
chief.
If,
if
she's
still
on
chief
harold,
really
kind
of
two
questions,
I
know
the
last
time
you
checked
in
with
us.
AJ
You
gave
us
a
good
report
there
on
the
on
the
six
officers
that
are
focused
on
on
this
particular
subject,
and
I
know
you're
you're
up
you're
three
with
the
forthcoming
and
hopefully
the
last
two
will
come
soon
more
of
a
broad
picture
about
your
overall
staffing,
I
think.
Last
I
heard
you
were
down.
Maybe
26
27
28
officers
from
your
budget,
how
how's
it
going
and
and
what
what
plans
do
you
have
to
to
continue
to
try
to
build
your
your
staff
up
to
that
that
budgeted
number.
AD
AD
AD
I
am
hoping
that
we
continue
this
trend,
as
I
presented
before.
I
think
our
partnership
with
ceu.
If
we
can
get
in
a
police
academy
up
and
running
for
this
area,
I
think
it
will
be
a
game,
changer
and
we'll
really
be
able
to
control
our
destiny
as
far
as
far
as
recruiting
and
then
training
our
own
officers.
So
I
really
think
that
will
have
a
huge
impact
for
boulder
and
see
you.
AJ
That's
great
chief
and
chief,
I
I
think
you
mentioned
a
little
bit
or
you
referred
to
it
tonight
and
I
think
I've
heard
you
say
before
a
little
bit
of
frustration.
AJ
I
guess
I'll
say
among
some
of
your
officers
when
they
encounter
a
person
who
looks
like
they've,
maybe
committed
a
crime,
a
property
theft
or
something
like
that
as
far
as
what
prior
to
code
would
probably
result
in
an
arrest
and
some
detention
and-
and
I
realized
during
the
hot
times
of
kovid-
and
that
was
not
possible
because
the
jail
was
largely
closed
to
to
to
all,
but
not
very,
not
very
violent
offenders.
AJ
You
know,
as
the
coveted
situation
eases
are
are
are,
are
we
still
having
some
challenges
in
in
arresting
people
who
who
we
had
or
who
your
your
police
officers
had
arrested
prior
to
to
covet?
And
if
so,
what's
what's
the?
What's?
What's
the
solution
there.
AD
Well,
it's
it's
another
excellent
question
and
it's
obviously
it's
frustration
for
me
in
the
in
the
police
department.
The
jail
has
really
experienced
challenges
during
covet.
Those
challenges
continue.
Inmates
and
staff
alike
in
the
jail
system
for
boulder
county
continue
to
have
coveted
issues
and,
to
be
quite
frank,
with
everybody
here,
the
the
jail
is
pretty
much
full
right
now,
as
we
speak.
AD
The
other
issue
is
when
a
police
officer
issues
a
citation,
those
are
not
arrestable
offenses
and
it
actually
requires
before
we
can
actually
detain
someone
and
take
them
to
jail.
It
takes
actually
three
warrants
from
the
municipal
court
and
a
police
officer
will
transport
the
arrested
to
the
jail
system,
and
then
they
are
immediately
released
on
pr
bond
on
their
own
recognizance.
AD
So
this
is
obviously
a
cycle
that
is
frustrating
to
everyone
and
most
certainly
the
community
members
and
obviously
like
we
talk
about
crime,
is
concentrated.
It's
most
certainly
concentrated
with
repeat
offenders,
and
so
there's
a
lot
happening
after
the
police
officer
writes
the
citations
and
a
lot
of
that.
We
don't
control,
that's
either
the
court
system
or
the
jail
system,
and
so
there's
a
lot
that
takes
place
after
an
officer
issues
the
citation.
AD
AJ
It
is
and
probably
worthy
of
longer
discussion
which
we
won't
have
tonight,
but
I
appreciate
at
least
the
brief
summary
of
that
situation
and
aaron.
If
you,
if
you
indulge
me,
I
have
one
more
question
this
one
for
kurt
is
that
okay
sure
go
ahead.
Look
kurt!
I
know
that
earlier
in
the
year
council
asked
you
and
your
team
to
look
into.
AJ
I
think
we
we
call
it
a
day.
Shelter
for
for
shorthand
is
probably
more
of
a
navigation
center.
Can
you
give
us
a
quick
report
on
on
where
that
I
know
you've
been
working
on
it
during
the
course
of
this
year?
Can
you
give
us
a
quick
update
on
where
that
stands
and
what
you
see
the
the
timeline
for
that
might
be.
AS
AS
AS
You
know
what
would
the
what's
the
goal
of
the
of
the
navigation
center,
where,
where
should
it
be
possibly
located
where
shouldn't
it
be
located,
and
we
expect
to
be
bringing
some
of
that
community
feedback
to
council
on
september
1st,
when
we
do
the
annual
homeless
update
and
we
look
forward
to
having
a
a
more
comprehensive
conversation
with
council
at
that
time
about
the
direction
we're
going
and
to
ensure
that
we're
we're
on
the
right
track.
AJ
C
Thanks
aaron
and
I
appreciate
all
the
department
leads
coming
together
and
presenting
and
doing
a
nice
tag
team
on
that
that
worked
out
quite
well.
I
wanted
to
follow
up
on
one
of
bob's
questions
for
kurt,
since
it
was
the
sort
of
last
question
asked
is
in
that
september
first
update.
Will
we
also
be
getting
an
update
on
the
progress
for
our
version
of
the
star
program.
AS
You
we
we
can
give
a
brief
update
on
that.
That
wasn't
our
intention.
I
believe,
however,
if
I'm
correct
it's
in
october,
I
don't
know
the
date,
we're
we're
actually
planning
on
a
an
agenda
item
specifically
on
that
we
we
do
have
a
team.
That's
working
on
that.
That
was
a
separate
city
council
priority.
AS
C
Thanks
kurt
thanks
for
yeah,
just
knowing
that
it's
coming
down
the
line-
and
you
know
we're
you
know
just
on
where
those
council
priorities
are
so
I
appreciate
knowing
where
that
is
in
the
pipeline.
One
of
one
of
my
questions
is
kind
of
a
forest
for
the
trees
question,
and
I
don't
know
if
it's
towards
staff
or
just
towards
my
colleagues,
which
is
a
lot
of
what
we
discussed,
was
based
on
a
18-month
pilot
and
we're
at
month,
15,
and
so
I'm
kind
of
wondering
in
this
process
of
an
update.
C
Are
we
going
to
come
right
back
on
the
heels
of
this
and
then
evaluate
the
success
of
all
these
and
then
determine
the
fate
of
these
pilots
as
either
great
they
get
folded
into
a
permanent
structure
and
we
move
forward
or
no
that
wasn't
for
us
and
we
we
jettison
them
as
as
can
happen
with
pilots.
I'm
just
wondering
we're
so
close
to
the
exploration
of
of
these
pilots
shouldn't
we,
maybe
my
question
is:
are
we
going
to
have
yet
another
check-in
in
just
a
couple
months
on
that?
C
Is
that
part
of
the
budget
process,
or
should
we
maybe
take
a
little
bit
of
time
tonight
to
kind
of
maybe
narrow,
some
of
our
guidance
to
staff,
and
maybe
our
own
sense
as
council
as
to
what
we
want
to
do
with
some
of
those
pilots,
to
maybe
better
inform
that
budgetary
conversation
that
we're
going
to
have
here
in
just
a
little
over
a
month?
So
so
I
just
I
wanted
to
kind
of
know
where
this
is
really
headed
beyond
just
an
update,
because
those
things
are
gonna.
E
AB
It
is
not
currently,
I
think
what
you've
heard
staff
say
is
that
some
of
this
we're
actually
hoping
to
extend
the
pilot,
because
we
haven't
been
able
to
move
forward
as
extensively
as
we
would
like.
For
example,
the
park
rangers
program
continues
to
be
built,
and
I
really
appreciate
ali's
intentionality
about
what
that
looks
like.
AB
We
will
continue
to
expand
joe's
cleanup
team
and,
as
we
have
more
data,
we
want
to
come
back
to
you,
but
it
will
not
be
in
the
same
as
you
heard,
staff
say
it's
not
intended
to
be
in
that
same
window
of
the
18th
month,
because
we
didn't
start
for
a
variety
of
reasons.
At
that
time,.
A
AB
I
think
that's
fair
and,
as
we
learn
more
from
the
data,
we
certainly
plan
to
continue
to
update
council
on
where
we
are,
but
we
want
to
give
some
things
the
opportunity
to
move
forward.
We
want
to
give
some
things
the
opportunity
to
start
and
then
really
think
about
what
that
data
looks
like.
So
it
will
not
be
the
end
of
the
conversation
on
this.
C
It
does,
I
think
it
does
well.
I
mean
it
maybe
raises
some
other
questions
about
funding
and
what
the
original
proposal
was,
and
what
really
council
action
is
here
is
because
we
clearly,
I'm
not
previous
council,
clearly
was,
at
an
inflection
decision,
point
to
decide
whether
to
fund
these
pilots
or
not
to
go
forward,
and
I'm
not
sure
this
council's
being
necessarily
going
to
have
the
same
opportunity
to
make
that
evaluation.
C
At
this
point,
so
I
I'm
a
little
bit
confused
as
to
how
this
kind
of
maybe
just
sort
of
moves
forward
without
a
clear
decision
from
council
as
to
how
this
will
happen.
So
maybe
that's
another
discussion,
but
it
does
seems
a
little
strange
that
we
can
start
it,
but
not
really
be
in
that
decision
point
before
we
move
to
2023
budgeting.
C
I
may
circle
back
when
I
hear
from
my
colleagues
on
other
points
about
on
an
idea,
maybe
how
to
siphon
things
off
to
to
better
calibrate
what
we
might
see
is
focused
on
permanent
funding
versus
needing
to
maintain
its
sort
of
pilot
status
until
we
have
enough
to
evaluate
whether
or
not
it's
successful
or
not
programmed
but
I'll
circle
back,
but
I
think
there's
more
to
be
had
here
on
this
piece.
Thank
you.
AC
AC
It's
obviously
deeply
stressful
and
difficult,
and
you
need
to
know
that
that
our
community
really
appreciates
what
you're
doing
most
of
us
could
not
do
this,
and
you
know
I
certainly
want
to
express
my
appreciation
for
all
that
you
do.
With
respect
to
my
specific
questions.
My
first
is,
you
know
there
was
some
language
in
the
the
memo
that
was
sort
of
comparative
of
our
city
to
other
cities,
and
I
was
wondering
if
we've
gotten
any
more
granular
on
that.
Let's
look
at
cities,
100
000
to
125
000.
AC
How
do
we
compare
in
terms
of
the
types
extent
and
dollar
commitments
of
our
programs
and
then
on
the
flip
side?
How
do
we
compare
in
terms
of
the
severity
of
our
homeless
problem
and
I'm
not
going
I'm
not
making
a
point
that
the
programs
create
the
problem
which
some
people
suggest?
AC
AS
Mark
I
might
this
is
kurt
fernham
or
I
might
jump
in
and
others
may
as
well.
Some
some
of
the
questions
you've
asked
will
be
answered
on
september
1st,
where
we
continue
to
do
some
comparative
analysis.
This
tonight
isn't
really
about
this.
Isn't
our
annual
homeless
update,
but
obviously
these
issues
correlate
with
one
another.
AS
I
I
would
say
a
general
challenge
that
we
have
not
just
around
this
work
but
other
work,
and
we
certainly
experience
it
with
data
around
topics
of
homelessness.
AS
It's
something
that
we
really
work
on,
but
I
must
say
it's
challenging
and
many.
We
also
receive
a
lot
of
requests
from
other
cities
and
a
lot
of
that
information.
They
can
simply
go
on
our
dashboards
and
get,
but
it's
generally
it's
a
challenge
for
us.
In
a
lot
of
different
ways,
but
there
there
may
be
other
directors
with
other
points
of
view
and
other
data
points
as
well.
Well,.
AC
And
I
can
certainly
wait
until
september
1.
if
that's
more
convenient.
My
second
question
is:
last
year
we
we
passed
a
tent
and
propane
ordinance.
AC
AD
Councilman
councilmember
wally
I'll
take
a
a
stab
at
this
one.
I
do
think
that
it
is
working,
and
I
do
think
that
the
holistic
approach
that
we
are
using
as
a
city
is
being
impactful,
but
make
no
mistake.
It
is
very
challenging
work
and
the
police
department
tries
to
use
the
least
restrictive
means
as
possible
when
dealing
with
these
encampments
and
tents,
and
if
we
can
get
cooperation
for
them
to
take
the
tents
down
and
move
on.
AD
I
do
think
we're
making
an
impact,
and
I
just
wonder
if,
if
we
were
not
doing
this
work,
what
we
would
be
up
against
and
I
think
that's
what
the
community
sees
on
a
daily
basis,
and
I
do
think
that
we
are
making
progress
and
I'd.
Let
the
other
directors
that
are
intimately
involved
in
this
work
as
well
say
what
they
they
see
most.
Certainly
I
am
out
on
the
bike
pass
all
the
time,
and
I
know
the
other
department
directors
are
as
well
and
joe.
AQ
Yeah
for
sure
I
agree
with
everything
you
just
said:
maris
and
the
ordinances
are
an
important
component
of
allowing
the
cleanup
team
to
do
what
they
do,
and
I
think
I
mentioned
a
couple
of
times
in
my
prepared
remarks
that
the
the
the
encampments
do
reoccur.
That's
a
reality-
and
I
didn't
say
it
in
my
prepared
remarks,
but
my
personal
opinion
observing
this
work
for
15
months
or
so
now.
AC
Thank
you
on
that,
and
I
guess
my
last
question
is
is
really
just
one
for
my
personal
curiosity
when
we
clean
up
a
an
encampment
that
contains
a
chop
shop,
are
we
actually
storing
the
bicycle
parts
on
behalf
of
the
individual
running
the
chop
shop?
While
we
clean
up
the
tent
site.
AQ
We
we
do
store
everything,
that's
there,
that's
that,
as
I
mentioned
in
our
property
storage,
that
has
value-
and
I
I
part
of
the
visit
that
I
did
this
week-
I
saw
our
storage
facility
and
how
neatly
everything
is
is
contained.
AD
Yeah
joe's
absolutely
right,
the
police
officers
routinely
check
serial
numbers
at
the
encampments.
We
have
lists
either
through
bike
index,
which
is
our
software
that
we've
partnered
with
bike
shops
across
boulder
and
boulder
county
for
people
to
put
their
serial
numbers
on.
AD
Unfortunately,
a
lot
of
people
do
not
identify
their
bikes
either
by
a
serial
number
or
some
self-identification
number
on
bikes,
but
also
by
parts,
and
so
this
is
so
challenging
for
the
police
officers
that
are
investigating
what
appears
to
be
stolen
property
if
we
do
not
have
a
picture
of
the
owner
with
the
bike
or
a
serial
number
associated
with
it,
and
obviously
the
police
officer
needs
some
form
of
reasonable
suspicion
to
even
investigate
these
crimes
that
we
know
are
going
on
in
some
of
these
encampments,
and
so
I
I
will
willingly
put
a
plug
out
for
the
community
to
please
enter
your
serial
numbers
not
only
on
your
bike
but
expensive
bike
parts
that
you
have
and
then
take
a
picture
of
you
and
and
and
your
bike.
AD
So
the
police
officers
have
reasonable
suspicion
to
stop
people
that
they
think
have
your
stolen
property.
If
that's
helpful.
Mark.
Yes,.
AC
It
is
thank
you
and
that'll
be
all
for
me
for
that
at
the
moment.
Thank
you.
A
Thanks
mark
it
is
9
20,
so
I
just
wanted
to
do
a
time
check,
as
we've
agreed
to
do
when
it
gets
at
nine
o'clock
or
later
this.
This
is
our
one
major
agenda
item
remaining.
A
We
have
a
little
bit
a
small
one
after
that
is
everyone
comfortable
with
continuing
with
this
gen
diet,
until
it's
complete
all
right,
I'm
seeing
none
non-heads
all
right,
but
just
as
we
continue
forward,
keep
in
mind
that
we're
getting
later
into
the
evening,
but
this
is
an
important
discussion
right:
tara,
nicole
law
and
rachel
jimmy.
L
So
tonight
I
mostly
want
to
discuss
trash.
I
have
always
been
interested
in
trash
incredibly
saddened
by
the
way
we
treat
our
country
and
our
earth
just
throw
things
on
the
floor.
We've
been
sad
about.
I
actually
have
a
non-profit
that
I'm
involved
in
and
have
been
on
the
board
that
deals
with
trash
in
the
middle
east
so
which
there's
also
a
big
problem
there.
So
it's
this
is
a
the
subject.
That
is
really
you
know
my
heart.
It
really
is
so.
L
My
first
question
is
for
chris
chris
jones:
are
you
still
here?
You
are
I'm
thinking
about
west
pearl.
I
know
we're
not
talking
about
that
tonight,
but
there
is
a
specific
area
of
west
pearl,
namely
right
where
I
believe
not
far
from
bar
taco,
where
there
sits
a
very
large
pile
of
trash.
L
AR
Thank
you,
councilmember
winer,
for
the
question.
I
might
actually
end
up
deferring
to
chief
harold
on
this
question
because
the
trash
I
believe
that
you're
mentioning
in
this
particular
instance,
is
associated
with
a
particular
member
of
the
unhoused.
That's
been
chronic
and
we've
been
trying
very
hard
to
to
connect
this
person
with
the
services
that
are
available
to
them
and
they've
just
continued
to
be
uninterested
in
participating
in
those
services.
AR
So
maris,
I'm
wondering
I
imagine
this
all
sounds
familiar
to
you
and
you
know
what
we're
talking
about
your
thoughts
and
perspectives
on
this
particular
challenge
by
bar
taco.
AD
Yeah,
thank
you
chris
and
thanks
for
the
question.
This
really
is
the
sad
part
of
the
work
and
we
have
sent
every
available
resource
to
this
house
woman
and,
unfortunately,
she
refuses
help.
But,
more
importantly,
we
should
have
a
discussion
on
there
really
is
no
place
to
take
this
woman
and
all
of
her
belongings
on
the
street,
and
I
think
that
a
lot
of
the
issues
we
are
seeing
is
because
of
severe
drug
addiction
and
severe
mental
health
issues.
AD
AD
The
community
calls
about
this
woman,
probably
three
to
seven
times
a
day,
and
our
police
officers
are
constantly
trying
to
convince
this
woman
to
get
into
housing
and
she
has
a
lot
of
belongings
and
unfortunately
she's
in
front
of
a
business
that
is
not
occupied
right
now.
So
this
causes
further
legal
implications
for
the
police
officers
that
are
trying
to
help
her.
L
Yeah,
I
actually
was
referring
to
the
trash,
for
instance,
I
did
ask
that
woman.
Would
you
mind
if
I
clean
up
the
trash?
It
was
mostly
like
a
discarded
food
sitting
there,
and
so
I
was
concerned
about
rodents
and
cleanliness,
it's
right
by
restaurants
and
such,
but
I
guess
the
two
are
intertwined.
Then.
Yes,.
AD
They
are,
and
she
claims
that
as
her
property,
further
complicating
the
situation.
L
L
So
I
just
wanted
to
thank
who
was
it
that
gave
us
that
video
earlier
that
was
kathleen
hancock,
who
showed
us
that
video
of
what
the
underpasses
look
like
and
how
hard
it
is
to
bike
through
them
and
how
dark
it
is.
L
And
so
we
all
know
all
of
us
bikers
on
city
council,
that
when
the
bike,
when
the
lights
aren't
working
is
if
you're
in
daylight,
as
soon
as
you
hit
those
bike,
underpasses
that
have
barely
any
lights
or
no
lights,
you
know
most
of
them
are
out,
it's
really
hard
to
see
anything,
never
mind
debris
and
mattresses
and
furniture,
and
so
I'm
wondering
joe.
L
First
of
all,
I
wanted
to
thank
you
for
your
outstanding
work
and
I
mean
the
whole
cleanup
crew.
It's
been
outstanding
and
believe
me,
when
I
drive
on
the
foothills
and
arapahoe
underpass
it's
night
and
day
from
when
you
guys
do
clean
up.
The
problem
is,
is
between
the
days
you
do
clean
up,
because
you
only
have
so
much
staff
and
money,
then
that
problem
reoccurs
and
again
it
gets
pretty
unsafe
for
bikers.
I
know
for
me
when
I
first
went
on
the
campaign
trail,
so
to
speak.
L
We
had
we
met
with
the
we
had
these
all
these
different
different
forums
and
one
of
them
was
with
the
biking
community,
and
I
promised
you
know
you
promised
things,
and
I
said
I
want
boulder
to
be
the
best
biking
community
where
people
visit
you
know
from
out
of
town
and
we're
definitely
on
our
way
not
to
be
in
that
city.
L
I
guess
kathleen
said
that
there
was
some
lighting
fixed
in
that
underpass.
So
that's
great
news,
so
maybe
we
can
tell
the
community
how
that's
coming
with
the
lighting,
and
so
I
guess
my
question
is:
is
what
can
we
do
and
we
had
please
from
the
community
on
this
very
subject,
because
people
really
do
want
a
bike,
they
want
their
kids
to
be
able
to
bike
and
it's
getting
harder
and
harder.
L
Is
there
some
outside
of
the
box
thinking?
Can
we
increase
the
cleanups?
Can
we?
What
do
you
suggest.
E
U
E
Well,
I
was
wondering
you
know:
I'm
an
advocate
for
cycling
being
treated
on
par
with
driving,
and
so
it
seems
to
me
that
if
we
had-
and
this
is
nothing
to
do
with
how
I
feel
about
you-
know
encampments
or
where
people
are,
but
if
we
had
people,
you
know
laying
down
the
street
or
tents
in
the
street.
I
think
that
they'd
be
moved
pretty
quickly
and
and
the
bike
paths
don't
get
that
same.
You
know
treatment.
So
I
just
wonder
what
do
we
do
for
streets?
And
might
we
do
that?
E
Similarly
for
other
modes
of
transportation,
because
that-
and
I
think
it
does
cause
some
people
not
to
want
to
bike
and
again,
this
is
not
not
to
say
where
I
think
people
should
be,
but
I
think
that
bike
paths
are
a
place
that
I
think
should
be
treated
equally
to
cars,
and
it
doesn't
seem
to
be
so
just
wondering
how
you
handle
those
cleanups.
If
that
happens
joe
or
how
you
would
as
well.
AQ
I
think
that
would
help
part
of
what
I've
experienced
just
working
with
the
team
and
being
out
this
week
that
that
doesn't
show
in
any
of
the
data
and
the
numbers
is
that
the
team,
the
police
officers
that
that
are
involved,
the
whole
team-
that's
out
there
and
kurt
and
vicky's
group
just
connecting
with
people
developing
relationships,
working
with
them
to
encourage
people
to
get
plugged
into
services,
those
relationships
and
and
the
team
that's
working
on
and
they've
really
established.
Those
relationships.
U
AQ
And
move
out
on
their
own
before
we
before
we
show
up
at
the
scheduled
time
and
not
all
of
them,
but
a
number
of
those
we
give
them
trash
bags
and,
and
they
clean
up
their
their
own
stuff
and
leave
it
there
for
us,
or
in
some
cases
they
they
put
it
in
neat
little
piles.
So
the
numbers
don't
tell
that
story,
but
there
are
positive
things
that
are
happening
and
if
we
can
build
on
that
with
with
expansion,
I
think
you
know
there's
some
possibility
there
hard
to
say.
A
So
joe,
I
appreciate
that
answer
and
where
it
sounds
like
you're
talking
about
an
encampment
cleanup,
which
is
a
little
bit
different,
I
think,
maybe
from
what
rachel
was
talking
about,
which
is
about
making
sure
that
folks
aren't
in
the
right
of
way
right
and
that's
and
that's
this
is
often
not
about
a
tent.
It's
just
you
know
somebody
like
you
know
my
sometimes
I
say
this
every
once
in
a
while.
A
It
doesn't
happen
very
often,
but
somebody
may
be
sitting
in
the
middle
of
the
bike
path,
which
is
not
an
enchantment
situation,
but
just
excuse
me,
sir.
You
can't
be
in
the
middle
bike
path,
please.
You
know,
move
over
a
few
feet
so
that
nobody
hits
you
and
you're
safe
and-
and
nobody
get
you
know,
falls
off
their
bike,
so
got
on
a
much
lower
level
than
the
surf
situation.
You're
talking
about.
AQ
Yeah,
thank
you
for
reminding
me
of
that
and
rachel
I'm
sorry.
I
missed
that
part
of
the
question
riding
a
bike
is
my
preferred
mode
of
transportation
to
and
from
my
house
to
work
and
I
ride
on
the
loose
creek
path
a
lot.
I
know
exactly
what
you're
talking
about.
AQ
I
think
this
this
probably
is
outside
my
sphere
to
answer,
but
I'll
offer
a
few
thoughts.
I
think,
as
ali
talked
about
the
ranger
program
and
staffing,
that
up
in
the
boulder
creek
corridor
that
can
certainly
help
with
that
and
with
the
cleanup
crew
and
the
and
the
police
support
that
goes
with
that.
AQ
I
I
think
just
having
a
larger
presence
out.
There
can
help
with
some
of
those
issues,
but
if
we're
not
there
and-
and
somebody
holds
a
mattress
halfway
on
to
a
multi-use
path,
I
mean
that
there's
there's
not
really
a
lot.
We
can
do
about
it
when
we're
not
there,
but
just
having
more
more
people
working
on
this
and
more
of
the
resources
that
I
think
would
help.
But
I'll
offer
the
floor
to
the
other
directors
who
may
have
an
opinion
on
that.
AD
Yeah,
joel
I'll
answer
that,
obviously,
if
a
bike
path
is
being
obstructed
by
a
mattress
by
people
and
they're
causing
harm,
then
my
expectation
would
be
the
community
calls
the
police
and
we
respond
to
clear
the
obstruction
now.
Obviously,
if
this
is
a
tense
situation
that
we
have
seen
in
some
locations
around
central
park
and
especially
the
goose
creek
area,
when
they
erect
a
tent,
that
is
obstructing
a
bike
path,
we
do
send
officers
to
ask
for
voluntary
compliance.
AD
If
that
doesn't
happen,
then
we
usually
come
back
and
get
legal
advice
from
our
internal
and
external
legal
partners,
because
the
last
thing
we
do
is
we
don't
want
the
behavior
to
escalate
and
we're
in
a
use
of
force
situation
over
a
very
low
level.
Misdemeanor
crime,
which
I
think
teresa
could
agree
with
me.
AD
That
is
not
a
good
look
for
the
courts,
the
proportionality
of
use
of
force
compared
to
the
crime
being
committed,
so
those
situations
are
very
delicate,
but
my
expectation
would
be
the
police
would
go
out
and
clear
the
obstruction,
especially
for
those
situations
that
we've
seen
as
of
late,
where
actually
cyclists
are
getting
harmed
or
pushed
over
in
these
areas
downtown
and
near
goose
creek.
If
that's
helpful,.
A
That
that
is,
chief
feral
thanks
for
that,
because
yeah
that
distinguishes
it's,
it's
a
separate
issue
from
you
know
encampments
and
such
it's
really
about
making
sure
that
the
bike
paths
are
are
clear.
Just
like
we
would
expect
the
street
to
be
clear,
as
as
was
mentioned
before.
Thanks
does
that
get
rachel's,
colloquy
and
tara's
question.
L
Yes,
I
just
have
a
few
more
questions,
but
so
many
people
have
questions,
so
I'm
going
to
talk
really
really
fast,
and
my
next
question
is
actually
I
just
for
a
second
wondered:
whatever
happened
to
the,
if
somebody
pushes
you
down
on
when
you're
you're
riding
on
your
bike,
what
actually
happened
to
them?
Is
it
just
a
misdemeanor
teresa.
AA
Yes,
I
believe
it
would
qualify
as
assault
and
the
police
chief
knows
the
offenses,
probably
better
than
I,
but
and
certainly
would
depend
on
what
kind
of
injury
was
sustained.
L
That's
one
way
to
get
people
to
not
bike.
Have
that
happening,
especially
children,
but
I'm
going
to
move
on
from
there
because
I
have
to,
I
guess
I'll
just
do
one
more
and
that
is
the
needle.
So
I
was
surprised.
5
meals
is
a
lot
of
needles
to
discard.
Did
I
hear
correctly
that
wha
around
the
encampments?
We
do
have
an
opportunity
for
them
to
dispose
of
their
needles
now
and
they're,
just
not
doing
it.
Now
I've
been
stepping
over
a
lot
on
needles
lately
and
driving
past
a
lot
of
needles.
AQ
So
one
of
one
of
the
things
that
I
experienced
with
the
team
and
talking
to
the
supervisor
this
week,
they
do
provide
the
containers
when
they
do
the
cleanups
and
safe
disposal
of
the
needles,
and
I'm
not
sure
I
I
got
all
of
the
retained
all
of
the
information
of
what
he
told
me.
But
I
got
the
impression
from
his
remarks
that
he
felt
like
that
situation
was
improving
the
way
we're
collecting
them.
AK
And
vic
abner
hhs
senior
operations
manager
just
wanted
to
add
on
that
that,
as
joe
mentioned
in
the
presentation,
we
do
have
the
large
containers
that
are
getting
placed
in
the
parks.
AK
AK
All
the
things
that
go
with
that
and
how
to
dispose
of
your
noodles,
how
to
exchange
them,
and
so
the
there
are
some
efforts
that
are
around
a
lot
of
the
mitigation
efforts
there.
But
you
know
at
the
end
of
the
day,
there
are
still
needles
in
the
in
our
parks,
and
it
is
still
an
ongoing
issue
that
we
have.
L
AE
Thanks
everyone,
and
thanks
to
staff
for
staying
late,
to
answer
all
of
our
questions
and
things
I
wanted
to
start
just
with
a
comment
on
the
memo
itself
and
just
something
that
I
found,
I'm
just
a
little
curious
and
wanted
to
ask
about.
So
I,
like
a
common
joke
that
I
hear
among
people
in
boulder,
is
when
you
meet
somebody
who's
actually
from
boulder
or
even
boulder
county.
AE
It's
sort
of
surprising
right,
they're
kind
of
like
a
unicorn.
We
don't
see
that
very
often,
I
think
of
every
all
nine
of
us
on
council,
not
a
single
one
of
us
was
is
from
boulder
county
and
so
in
the
memo
it
was
just
a
little
concerning
to
kind
of
see
that
called
out
about
the
unhoused
community
that
so
many
people
are
coming
from
outside
of
boulder
county.
AE
When
I
think
a
lot
of
our
house
residents
also
come
from
boulder
county,
and
so
I'm
just
curious
about
you
know
if
we
know
how
many
house
residents
come
to
boulder
from
outside
a
lot
of
the
folks
that
I
talk
to
who
don't
have
homes
here,
they
came
because
they
had
a
job
opportunity.
AE
They
have
friends
or
family
nearby;
they
think
it's
beautiful.
They
lost
their
housing
after
moving
here,
but
they
haven't
quite
been
here
long
enough
to
have
a
support
network,
and
it
just
feels
like
separating
those
of
us
who
are
housed
from
those
of
us
who
are
unhoused
and
our
motivations
for
being
here
doesn't
really
help
us
find
solutions
to
homelessness.
AE
Nor
should
it
be
so
that's
just
a
general
comment,
something
that
I
would
appreciate.
Seeing
in
future
reports
is
that
recognition
that
we're
not
different.
That
way.
AE
So
on
to
some
of
the
questions
that
I
have,
I
think
some
of
these
first
questions
may
be
for
kurt,
and
I
am
recognizing
that
the
problem
we're
trying
to
solve
the
thing
that
we're
talking
about
tonight
is
trash,
and
I
I
will.
These
questions
are
kind
of
getting
to
a
point
that
I
would
like
to
get
to
which
is
kind
of
the.
As
as
we're
doing
these
cleanups.
AE
Are
we
really
having
an
impact
in
getting
people
to
a
place
where
we
won't
have
to
keep
doing
this,
or
is
this
just
a
problem?
That's
going
to
kind
of
keep
going,
so
one
of
the
questions
is:
are
we
in
service
providers
seeing
need
for
services
for
people
experiencing
homelessness,
increasing
or
higher
than
usual?
At
this
point
of
year,.
AS
Yeah,
so
I
I
I
will
defer
some
of
that
to
september
1st.
However,
we
have
seen
an
increase
year
over
year,
particularly
this
year
in
the
number
of
individuals
who
are
staying
at
the
boulder
shelter.
AS
AS
August,
compared
to
a
year
ago,
we
have
approximately
30
percent
a
high,
a
30
higher
number
of
individuals
who
are
staying
at
the
boulder
shelter
predominantly
and
there's
sort
of
two
main
categories:
those
who
are
engaged
in
services
and
those
who
are
not-
and
that's
those
who
are
engaged
in
services
are
connected
to
a
reserve
bed
program.
AS
AS
So
that's
only
one
data
point,
and
so
it's
hard
to
draw
conclusions
to
that,
and,
quite
frankly,
that's
something
that
we've
been
talking
about.
We
don't
know
why
that
increase
is
occurring
this
year,
it's
very
different
than
other
years
year
over
year.
AS
AE
And
and
kurt
I'm
sorry,
I
you
don't
have
to
go
into
the
september
presentation
now.
I
think
I'm
just
looking
for
just
you're
welcome
to
just
kind
of
give
give
some
brief
answers.
AE
I
know
you-
and
I
talked
about
this
a
little
bit
last
week
and
I
just
kind
of
wanted
to
bring
that
conversation
out
into
the
open
for
my
other
colleagues
who
were
not
kind
of
present
at
that
meeting,
but
I
think
you
know,
one
of
the
things
we
had
we
had
mentioned
was
that
folks
do
seem
to
be
seeing
more
more
people
experiencing
homelessness.
AE
I
think
we're
the
community
is
certainly
telling
us
that
they
are
seeing
more
as
well
right,
and
I,
as
I
understood
from
our
conversation,
you
know
part
of
the.
The
issue
is
that
we
don't
have
enough
services
in
our
region
to
meet
the
needs
that
we
have
now.
We
don't
have
enough
places
to
kind
of
help.
People
get
somewhere,
that's
not
on
the
paths
or
on
in
the
parks
or
something
like
that
is
that
is
that
still
correct.
AS
Yeah
again,
we
can
talk
about
this
on
the
first
of
september,
but
I
would
I
would
say
that
we
are
housing,
an
extraordinarily
high
number
of
individuals
compared
to
other
communities,
absolutely.
AE
Yeah-
and
I
don't
I
don't
mean
to
deny
that
just
just
trying
to
trying
to
get
to
the
sense
that
I
think
you
and
I
talked
about
that-
we
don't
have
enough
services
for
folks
to
to
be
able
to
to
kind
of
move
people,
and
to
kind
of
I
mean,
is
that
right
I
mean
we
don't
have
enough
places
for
anyway.
AS
Well,
that's
a
very
hard
question
to
answer
and
I
and
I
would
just
like
to
make
one
comment
about-
measuring
how
long
people
have
been
in
the
community.
AS
I
certainly
agree
that
we
shouldn't
be
judging
people
according
to
that
or
providing
services
according
to
that.
But
if,
if
50
of
the
people
who
lived
in
boulder
who
were
housed
had
arrived
in
the
last
six
months,
I
think
that
would
be
very
different
than
what
it
when
it
actually
is,
and
so
it
doesn't.
It
does
actually
impact
our
ability
to
provide
services
and
just
getting
people
engaged
in
services.
AS
So
I
I
still
think
it's
a
very
worthy
data
point
that's
important,
but
I
also
agree
that
we
shouldn't
be
judging
people
according
to
that.
So
thank
you
for
that.
E
Nicole,
do
you
mind
if
I
call
it
quite
just
on
that
one
before
you
move
on,
which
is,
I
have
a
couple
data
questions
too,
but
on.
I
think
this
one
links
to
this.
We
do
our
point
in
time
our
pit
surveys,
as
I
understand
it
in
january,
and
I
wonder,
could
we
look
at
doing
one
additionally
or
maybe
instead,
probably
additionally,
because
you
have
to
do
it
nationally
right
for
january?
E
E
Nail
down-
I
don't
know
yet
this
summer
past
july,
what
do
we
do
in
september,
or
at
least
start
next
year.
AS
Yeah,
that's
a
that's
a
great
question
rachel.
Thank
you.
So
a
slight
bit
of
background,
so
you're
correct
it's
done
in
in
january
each
year
it's
actually
a
requirement
of
hud
and
if
you
want
to
receive
hud
funding
through
the
cocs,
you
have
to
do
the
point
in
time
count
and
we
we
obviously
want
to
participate
that
with
with
that-
and
we
do
that
fully.
AS
Sure
yeah
sure
yeah,
so
I
so
doing
an
additional
one
in
july.
I
I
think,
that's
a
great
great
question
and
I
think
we
should
maybe
consider
that
I
think
that
would
be
helpful
for
us.
I
think
it
would
be
helpful
for
the
community
as
well
as
how
we
think
about
services
and
and
how
that
changes.
You
know
seasonally.
AS
I
would
if
we
did
look
at
that,
I
would
probably
want
to
consider
maybe
doing
it
on
a
county-wide
basis
versus
a
city-wide
basis,
because
that's
how
the
point
in
time
count
occurs
in
our
community
and
it
would
be
nice
to
do
it
in
a
way
which
is
very
consistent
with
the
exact
approach
that
happens
in
january.
Just
so,
you
know,
as
we
collect
that
a
consistency
is
very
important,
so
I
would
want
to
explore
also
with
the
county
to
see
if
they
would
want
to
participate
and
we
could
bring
back.
E
AS
E
You
know
they
were
talking
about
built
for
zero
and,
like
a
linchpin
of
that
was
you
know,
you
know
every
individual
who's
unhoused
in
your
community.
You
know
kind
of
the
name
and
where
they're
living
and
what
they,
what
resources
they
need,
and
it
seems
like
that,
would
require
so
much
more
than
you
know
a
july
count.
So
I
guess
I'm
confused.
If,
if
regionally
that's
our
goal,
is
the
bill
for
zero
and
we're
denver's
doing
it
and
other
cities.
E
AK
If
I
might
add
some
in
there,
what
you're
talking
about
is
very
different
from
a
point
in
time,
count
point
in
time.
Count
is
fairly
anonymous
and
it's
a
cross
between
observations
and
actual
surveys,
but
again
very
anonymous.
AK
AK
Boulder
county
was
the
very
first
organization
within
the
front
range
area
to
get
100
on
their
built
for
zero
scorecard.
So
we
are
participating
with
that.
AK
But
to
your
point
about
getting
knowing
who's
on
our
streets
is
incredibly
important,
and
that
is
one
of
the
charges
that
we
gave
to
our
partners
and-
and
our
partners
were
very
insistent
that
they
wanted,
that
to
be
their
role
when
we
were
re-formulating,
be
there
that
that
could
be
a
way
to
start
getting
a
better,
broader
understanding
of
who's
on
the
who
who's
living
unsheltered
in
our
community
and
then
really
targeting
our
resources.
AK
E
Okay,
well,
I
appreciate
that
and
it's
hard
for
us,
as
you
know
like
we
have
a
pilot
here
and-
and
we
did
ask-
and
this
isn't
a
knock
at
anybody,
but
I
think
I
I
recall
a
couple
of
us
asking
to
make
sure
that
we
got
you
know
sort
of
baseline
data
on
numbers
and
things
and
it's
hard
to
evaluate
some
of
the
successes
and
I'll
hold
the
rest.
A
lot
after
I'm
not
eating
into
nicole's
time
but
appreciate
it.
AE
Back
to
you,
nicole,
that's
fine
rachel,
I'm
just
you're
gonna
make
me
cut
to
the
chase.
So
you
know
the
issue
that
we're
talking
about
tonight.
Right
is
really
focused
on
trash
and
encampments.
We'll
talk
about
homelessness
strategy
in
another
month
or
so
into
that
point.
My
concern
is
really
that,
despite
picking
up
so
much
trash
and
doing
so
many
cleanups
we're
kind
of
just
trying
to
plug
holes
in
a
dam
that
seems
to
have
more
cracks
every
day
so
rather
than
just
clean
up.
AE
I've
heard
some
really
really
good
ideas
from
people
in
our
community
who
have
lived
experience
and
homelessness
on
how
we
could
mitigate
the
issues
that
people
are
experiencing
so
incentivizing
folks
who
are
living
in
our
community
without
shelter
to
do
their
own
trash
pickup
to
kind
of
give
them
some
autonomy
and
control.
AE
In
that
regard,
I'm
really
excited
to
hear
that
there's
some
safe
needle
disposals
coming
putting
in
bathrooms
and
things-
and
I
know
that
we've
tried
it
in
the
past
and
had
some
issues,
but
can
we
can
we
find
some
new
new
things
that
we
could
try,
so
that
people
aren't
defecating
in
doorways
in
science?
AE
You
don't
really
give
up
on
something.
If
you
try
it
once
and
it
doesn't
work,
you
figure
out
why
it
didn't
work.
You
make
some
changes
and
you
try
again.
So
I
would
really
love
to
see
us
work
towards
solving
this
problem
of
trash
of
inaccessibility
and
of
kind
of
public
defecating,
and
things
like
that
really
by
by
coming
with
some
solutions
on
those
issues,
because
I
don't
think
they're
going
to
go
away,
I
think
they
may
just
get
worse.
AE
I
think
that's
something
we
can
do
that
would
promote
the
dignity
and
safety
of
all
of
our
residents,
no
matter
what
no
matter
where
they
would.
They
live,
and
I'm
not
really
all
that
enthusiastic
about
committing
more
money
to
programs
that
aren't
achieving
those
kind
of
goals
when
we
know
that
this
is
a
problem,
that's
just
growing,
so
that
is
all
I
don't
think
there
were
questions
in
there.
But
that's
that's
all
my
comments.
A
That's
that's
right,
I
think
we're
doing
one
round
through
council
with
questions
or
comments,
but
lord
is
giving
a
big
open
mouth
here,
lauren
because
you're
next,
why
do
you
open
up.
AF
I
appreciate
that
this
is
a
really
difficult
situation
and
you
know
I
think
that
the
city
is
trying
to
make
strides
towards
sort
of
harm
reduction
for
all,
and
you
know,
I
hope
that
we
continue
to
evaluate
these
programs
and
look
for
how
we
can
improve
them
with
really
that
being,
you
know
our
primary
goal.
AF
So
some
of
the
questions
I
have
oh-
and
also
I
just
wanted
to
mention
on
the
sharps
containers-
I
really
do
appreci
one
of
those
is
on
my
bike
path
and
I
do
think
it's
making
a
difference,
and
I
appreciate
that
the
city
has
installed
a
couple
of
those
as
the
pilot
part
and
the
part
of
their
pilot
project.
For
that.
AF
So
one
of
the
things
joe
that
you
brought
up,
which
is
something
that
concerns
me
as
well,
is
you
know,
people
sleeping
in.
AF
In
areas
that
are
in
really
high
risk
of
flood,
and
things
like
that,
and
but
one
of
the
things
that
I
worry
about-
and
I
was
hoping-
maybe
you
could
explain
your
thinking
on
this-
just
you
know
from
to
help
me
is
that,
as
we
you
know
in
a
program
that
is
largely
you
know,
people
calling
in
to
report
these
things.
AF
AQ
Yeah,
it's
a
good
point.
I
think.
Since
we
have
established
this
program,
we
do
see
people
just
move
to
different
locations
of
the
city.
I
haven't
heard
from
our
our
maintenance
team
or
our
cleanup
crew
that
that
type
of
thing
is
occurring
a
lot
of
the
a
lot
of
the
infrastructure
that
you
see
in
the
city
that
has
water
running
in
it
is
actually
irrigation,
ditches
and
they're
and
they're
running
a
lot
of
the
time
in
the
summer,
and
so
it's
really
limited
where
people
go.
AF
I
appreciate
that.
Thank
you.
I
also
really
appreciated
the
information
you
brought
forward
on
the
storage
of
personal
belongings.
That
wasn't
a
program
I
was
aware
of,
and
I
just
had
two
questions
related
to
that.
Where,
like,
where
do
people
go
to
to
recover
their
items?
I
guess
I'm
sort
of
wondering
about
transportation
connections
and
like
how
able
people
are
to
actually
request
their
items
back
and
go
get
them
and
then
also
what
percentage
of
belongings
do
we
typically
see
like
re-collected.
AQ
Both
good
questions
that
there's
on
the
notice
that
we
give
out
on
the
notification
day,
there's
a
phone
number
that
people
call
it's
a
different
look
and,
and
so
they
can
make
arrangements
to
meet
with
a
staff,
member
and
and
a
police
officer
and.
AQ
I
I
think
they
do
make
accommodations
for
for
transportation
and
help
them.
I'm
seeing
a
note
coming
to
me
right
now
to
help
me
answer
this
question
and
what
was
the
other
part
of
your
question?
Oh.
AF
AQ
AF
AF
One
of
the
ones
I
have
concerns
about
was
water
contamination,
and
I
was
kind
of
expecting
to
see
numbers
around
like
you
know,
water
testing
and
what
our
contamination
levels
look
like
on
boulder
creek
and
I
couldn't
I
didn't
see
any
of
that
information
in
the
report,
and
I
also
struggled
to
find
anything
after
like
2019
on
our
website-
and
I
was
just
wondering-
are
we
going
to
have
data
like
that
that
we're
collecting
as
part
of
this.
AQ
We
we
do
have
a
program
in
utilities
in
our
water
quality
group
that
are
sampling
routinely
along
boulder
creek
and
it's
part
of
our
water
quality
reports.
We
can
certainly
get
you
that
information
in
those
links
and
it's
continuous
and
it's
and
it's
up
to
date-
and
it
is.
It
is
a
fair
point
that
the
trash
and
and
the
human
waste
that
goes
with
the
the
camping
is
a
source
of
contamination
for
the
creek,
and
we
worry
about
that.
AQ
The
the
difficulty
for
the
water
quality
team-
that's
doing
the
sampling
is
a
drop
of
water,
comes
down
the
creek
and
it
moves
by
and
it's
it's
very
transient
and
they
they
do
the
sampling.
They
do
take
it
to
the
lab
they
see
what's
in
the
water
and
whether
it
is
a
concern
or
not.
But
it's
difficult
to
know
what
to
attribute
that
to
we.
AQ
AF
Yeah,
I
appreciate
that,
and
you
know
I
don't
it's
just
one
piece
of
many
pieces
that
I
think
we
should
be
looking
at.
You
know
I
work
very
close
to
the
creek.
You
know
and
I
think
it
would
be
great
if
we
had
more
public
restrooms
closer
to
you
know
the
farmers
market
and
that
kind
of
south
of
where
we
currently
have
them
or
sorry,
east.
AF
I
was
also
you
know,
along
that
line
of
data
collection,
wondering
how
we're
tracking,
if
public
space
is
safe
and
welcoming,
is
that
just
since
that's
one
of
the
goals
and
we're
talking
about
what
kind
of
data
collection
and
things
we're
doing,
is
there
plans
to
do
polling
around
that
or
what?
What
kind
or
is
there
any
data
collection
that
we
are
looking
at
to
try
and
determine
if
we're
succeeding
at
that
goal?.
AQ
I
think
part
of
that
is
answered
by
the
collection
of
of
the
data
that
we're
tracking
and
we
showed
some
of
it
some
of
the
highlights
in
our
presentation
tonight.
So
it's
it's.
The
cumulative
effect
of
that.
I
do
know
that
there
are
a
couple
elements
where
surveys
are
part
of
the
data
and
the
metrics,
and
I'm
looking
back
through
the
slides
to
see
if
I
can
put
my
eyes
on
that
really
quickly,
but
it
is
a
part
of
it.
I'd
invite
vicki
or
curt
or
others
to
add
to
it.
AF
And
I
think
sort
of
more
specifically,
I
know
we're
collecting
you
know
data
around
crime,
reporting
and
various
things
of
like
feeling
unsafe
clearly,
but
that's
not
necessarily
the
same
thing
right
as
feeling
safe,
because
I
you
know
a
reduction
in
crime
reports
could
just
mean
people
have
given
up
on
reporting
it
like
that.
It's
not
always
you
know
correlated
necessarily.
AL
Lauren
I
hear
you
and
joe
I
can
chime
in
here
not
to
correct
anything,
because
I
think
you
answered
that
really
well,
but
I'll.
Add
that
there
that
one
of
the
goals
is
that
users
of
public
space
report
feeling
safe
and
welcome
and
there's
a
couple
of
of
surveys
that
we
have
as
baselines
that
have
been
conducted
in
the
past,
both
by
the
city
and
downtown
boulder
partnership.
AL
And
the
intention
would
be
to
use
those-
and
I
would
just
highlight
that
is
a
data
point
that
we
would
want
to
consider
with
others
right
and
and
just
it's
a
perception
of
feeling
of
safe
feeling
of
welcome.
We've
done
that
work
in
in
tandem
with
other
city
efforts
about
feeling,
welcome
and
inclusive
in
spaces,
and
it's
also
relates
to
our
equity
goals.
AL
The
other
thing
that
I'll
highlight
that
I
think
aligns
with
this
conversation
is
some
of
the
work
that
connects
to
my
earlier
conversation
with
you
tonight
about
the
boulder
parks,
recreation
master
plan.
Some
of
our
engagement
was
with
members
of
our
unhoused
community
and
we
asked
questions
specifically
about
values
in
public
spaces
and
learned
that
members
of
our
community
from
various
demographics,
including
our
community,
have
the
same
values
for
our
public
spaces.
AL
We
intend
to
continue
that
conversation
by
having
at
some
point
that
is
not
planned
or
in
our
work
plan,
but
in
2023
we
would.
We
would
continue
this
using
these
tools
and
have
a
conversation
about
behaviors
and
across
the
community
and
in
public
spaces,
start
talking
about
our
shared
shared
expectations
for
for
public
spaces,
so
that
was
a
whole
lot
of
words.
It's
late
and
I'm
rambling,
but
lauren.
I
hear
you
and
we
are.
AF
I
appreciate
that,
thank
you
so
much
ali
and
I
have
another
one
for
you
specifically.
So
you
mentioned
the
urban
park
rangers
have
been
citing
people
for
things
and
you
kind
of
mentioned
what
some
of
those
citations
are.
Are
we
gonna
get
any
data
around
sort
of
what
citations
are?
Okay,
that
would
be
great.
AL
Absolutely
we're
six
weeks
in
and
and
working
on
that
so
just
to
be
clear.
One
of
the
things
that
we
have
been
incredibly
intentional
about
is
that
the
way
we
collect
data
is
the
same
way.
Other
people
are
collecting
data.
So
it's
not
parsed
and
you're,
not
looking
you're
seeing
one
city,
one
one
data
when
you
look
at
it
right,
but
as
far
as
is
parsing
it
out
and
seeing
what
exactly
the
actions
of
the
urban
park
rangers,
I
think
it
would
be
really
appropriate
to
report
out
on
that.
AF
That
would
be
great,
thank
you
and
then
maris.
AF
I
had
one
question
for
you:
you
mentioned
that
we
have
the
team
of
three
people,
that's
helping
with
this
work,
and
then
I
think
it
was
mentioned
that
you
know
the
cleanups
that
involve
police
are
happening
about
twice
a
week,
and
so
I
was
just
wondering
you
know:
is
this
team
of
three
doing
other
kinds
of
work
related
to
this
throughout
the
rest
of
the
week
or
are,
or
are
you
kind
of
like
shuffling
them
in
with
other
teams
doing
other
work
throughout
the
city?
AF
I
was
just
trying
to
understand
how
that.
AD
That's
a
great
question,
so
the
majority
of
their
time
is
spent
on
on
these
issues.
We
have
to
post
the
encampments
they're
engaged
in
service
delivery,
as
well
as
the
hot
team,
and
obviously
they
go
out
with
the
whole
team
as
well
and
they
clean.
So
I
would
say
the
majority
of
their
time
is
spent
on
these
issues.
U
A
That's
it:
okay,
let's
see
we
got
rachel
and
then
genie,
and
then
I'm
gonna
call
on
myself.
E
All
right
I'll,
try
and
be
quick,
but
I
am
I
make
no
promises.
Nuria
did
we
ever
get
a
fire
update.
AD
I'm
going
to
call
upon
steve,
if
he's
still
with
us,
because
he's
got
his
radio
and
I've
turned
mine
off,
so
I
could
listen.
The
last
I
heard
is
that
we
had
it
contained,
but
they
were
still
working
on
it.
It's
a
large
house
and
they
they
have
not
got
the
whole
thing
under
control.
Yet.
AT
AT
Yes,
good
evening,
steve
bradford,
deputy
police
chief,
I
did
speak
to
our
police
commander.
That
was
on
scene
a
short
time
ago
and
it's
quite
a
large
single
family
home.
They
are
calling
it
under
control
at
this
time,
but
it's
a
I
guess.
It's
maybe
four
stories,
so
it
took
some
time
to
get
under
control,
there's
about
six
homes
without
power
in
the
area
due
to
its
power
issues
that
came
up
and
we
stopped
some
roads
closed.
AT
But
at
this
point,
they're
kind
of
in
what
they're
calling
overall
the
fire
department's
telling
us.
So
a
positive
note
is
the
residents
we're
all
able
to
get
out
of
there
safely
and
at
this
point
we're
not
reporting
it.
There
were
any
injuries,
so
I
know
our
fire
partners
are
probably
going
to
be
there
well
into
the
night
working
on
what
I'm
being
told.
E
Thanks
so
much
for
that,
that
was,
I
think,
distracting
probably
a
lot
of
us,
so
it's
great
to
hear
that
everybody
made
it
out
safe
and
thanks
to
the
fire
department
after
watching
nuria,
while
I'm
still
with
you
here,
just
wanted
to
verify
that.
Maybe
we
could
plan
at
the
end
of
this
discussion
to
have
like
a
list
of
commitments
like
you
know,
I've
talked
about
the
a
new
point
in
time
number
I
think
matt
was
getting
at
a
you
know,
maybe
an
end
date
for
at
least
portions
of
the
pilot.
E
So
I
just
want
to
kind
of
prepare
in
advance,
for
maybe
a
some
closure
with
some
dates:
attached,
okay
and
then
maris.
Well,
maybe,
while
you're
still
there
and
I'd
like
to
preface
all
my
questions
with,
I
do
not
intend
any
of
these
to.
I
hope
they
don't
make
anyone
defensive,
I'm
just
trying
to
get
information
and
understand
and
to
do
my
job
best.
So
I
hope
everything
is
received
in
a
wonderful
spirit
and
when
you
talked
about
that
crime
rates,
you
know
sometimes
in
in
criminal
justice.
E
You
know
if
you're
policing
something
more
you're
going
to
find
more
crime,
it's
like
if
they
take
an
x-ray
of
your
lung
they're,
going
to
find
all
the
spots
that
you
didn't
even
you
weren't
even
worried
about
yet
so
I
just
want
to
know:
do
you
control
for
that
data
at
all?
Given
that
we
know
we
get
a
lot
of
calls
about
homeless,
encampments
and
you're
going
out
there
a
lot
and
then
the
crime
rate's
up?
I'm
not
saying
it's,
not
it's
not
actually
up,
but
how
do
we
control
that
data.
AD
I'm
going
to
let
dr
reinhardt,
who
is
crunching
these
numbers
and
looking
at
these
trends
constantly
way
in
here,
dr
reinhart.
AU
Yeah
yeah,
so
my
name
is
dr
reinhart.
I
work
for
the
boulder
police
department
yeah.
So
the
way
that
I
controlled
for
that
is,
I
looked
at
two
different
ways
of
identifying
in
canvas
unsanctioned
camping.
The
first
was
all
the
locations
where
officers
issued
tickets,
and
so
I
think
that
could
experience
the
kind
of
issue
you're
describing
the
second
kind
of
unsanctioned
camping.
I
used
as
sort
of
like
a
baseline
was
all
of
the
citizen
reported
encampments.
AU
So
the
citizen
reporting
encampments
they're
not
conveyed
to
the
police
department
like
they're,
not
conveyed
to
officers,
they're
conveyed
to
the
public
space
reclamation
team,
and
so
that
to
me
represents
a
data
point
that
the
officers,
because
they're
unaware
of
it
seems
like
that
might
be
more
free
from
that
kind
of
bias.
AU
And
so
what
we
found
was
that
crime
was
concentrated
around
the
encampments,
that
officers
aren't
told
about,
and
the
ones
that
officers
ticketed
and
that's
sort
of
consistent
with
some
research
that
I
saw
that
came
out
of
portland
oregon.
So
that's
sort
of
how
we
we
did
that.
E
So
in
the
second
category,
you're
saying
officers,
I
guess
there's
still
crime
happening
there,
so
somehow
officers
are
ending
up
there,
but
it's
not
in
relation
to
somebody
reporting
it
you're
saying
it's
not
because
the
officers
went
out
there
that
they
find
a
crime.
They
people
are
out
there
and
know
about
him
and
then
separately,
something's
called
in
the
person
who's
living
at
the
camp
calls
for
help
or
something
kind.
AU
Yeah,
so
so,
more
or
less
so,
not
necessarily
at
the
encampments.
But
what
we
did
is
we
looked
at
concentric
circles
from
them,
and
so
we
looked
at.
We
used
350-foot
buffers
because
that
is
kind
of
what
other
studies
have
done
and
it's
kind
of
consistent
with,
like
one
city
block
in
some
places,
and
so
we
looked
at
crime
sort
of
around
that
area,
so
within
one
city,
block
of
them
and
then
two
city
blocks
and
three
city
blocks,
and
we
found
that
crime
was
dispersing
further
from
both
of
those
sets
of
encampments.
E
Now
that
that
clarifies
okay
thanks,
I
I
would
be
interested
in
maybe
getting
some
more
information
on
that
emailed
to
us
the
the
two
different
types
and
how
you
can
kind
of
really
confirm
your
validity
yeah.
So
thanks
for
that,
I
just
want
to
say
it's
a
general
thing
and
I
brought
this
up
last
year
too.
E
I
do
not
like
separating
the
discussions
where
we
talk
about
homelessness
one
month
and
we
talk
about
kind
of
outdoor
spaces
a
different
month,
because
these
are
so
tied
together
and
it's
really
hard
to
say
what
you
want
to
do
on
subject
a
without
being
able
to
say,
but
I'm
going
to
need.
You
know
this
assurance
on
some.
You
know
on
the
second
part,
so
you
know
we're
going
to
do
you
know
it
feels
like
we're
sort
of
being
asked
to.
E
I
know
we're
not
voting
on
anything
tonight,
but
generally
you
know
kind
of
moving
towards
we're
going
to
need
more
funding
for
this
or
that
but
like
especially
for
for
those
of
us
who
who
really
want
to
see
more
services,
like
that's
part
of
the
discussion
and
and
hard
to
tease
them
apart.
So,
if
there's
a
way
for
future
years
to
have
a
longer
meeting
on
both
subjects
together,
that
would
really
be
appreciated.
E
My
next
question
are
over
here.
Bear
with
me,
okay,
so
there's
a
part
in
the
background
of
the
memo
it
says
most
communities
of
50,
000
people
or
less
have
no
resources
for
homelessness
assistance,
most
communities
under
200
000
in
population
of
minimal
resources
dedicated
to
the
issue,
but
consistent
with
our
homelessness
strategy
and
the
county
working
together,
county-wide
partnership
test
with
policy
decisions
related
to
single
adult
homeless
homelessness.
E
We've
been
able
to
leverage
resources
to
house
approximately
one
person
per
day
in
all
four
and
a
half
years
of
our
existence,
and
that
this
is
significantly
better
than
typically
provided
in
a
county
the
size
of
boulder
county.
So
my
question
is:
is
really
I've
I
keep
coming
back
to.
E
It
seems
like
sort
of
the
county,
gets
the
money
and
and
is
really
tasked
with
health
and
human
services,
and
that's
a
lot
of
what
we're
talking
about
when
we
get
into
resources
and
and
then
we're
trying
to
do
both
that
and
what
we're
talking
about
tonight-
and
I
guess
is:
are
we
really
better
off
by
leveraging
you
know
having
these
separate
teams
working
on
it?
You
know,
I
think
I
could
make
a
pitch
for
the
county
doing
more
on
us
doing
less.
E
So
I
I
never
get
good
data
on
what
the
county,
like
what
money
is
going
into
the
county
for
serving
people
who
are
currently
unhoused
and
where
they're
putting
that
money.
I
know
a
lot
goes
into
housing
first,
but
I
would
love,
for
our
september
conversation
to
really
have
good
numbers
on
that.
If
that's
possible
to
get
what
is
the
county
paying
not
for
housing,
you
know
not
for
the
people
who
are
getting
housing,
but
for
those
who
remain
unhoused,
because
that's
that's
largely
what
what
we're
talking
about
sort
of
trying
to
make.
E
AS
Thank
you
rachel,
and
I
know
you
posed
that
question
to
me
the
other
day
as
well,
so
I
will
say
that
that's
something
we're
we're
working
on,
not
just
in
comparison
to
or
not
not
just
information
from
the
county,
but
comparisons
to
other
cities
along
the
front
range
as
well.
AS
AS
I
don't
know
how
complete
we're
going
to
be
able
to
answer
it,
but
it's
our
intention
to
just
to
satisfy
that
as
much
as
we
can
and
if
we
can't
answer
it
by
september
1st
we
may
need
more
time,
but
I
I
think
it's
a
valid.
It's
certainly
a
valid
question
and-
and
as
I
mentioned
earlier
in
the
presentation
tonight,
other
cities
are
even
much
more
difficult
to
to
get
that
information.
E
Yeah,
I
appreciate
that,
and
you
know,
there's
like
we
often
get
compared
to
denver
denver's
doing
this
and
you
know
denver's
a
city
in
a
county
together
and-
and
you
know
you
really
have
to-
I
think
kind
of
tease
out
which
who's
in
you
know,
which
lane
is
ours
and
which
lane
is
theirs
and
make
sure
that
the
lane
they're
getting
funded
to
fund.
Is
that
they're
doing
that
so
like
if
they're
not
providing
enough
housing
and
shelter
and
maybe
a
sanctioned
encampment
for
their
community
members,
we
should
be
pushing
for
that.
E
Okay
for
our
community
members,
but
monetarily
theirs.
I'm
saying
okay,
looking
at,
let's
see
so
adam
swetlick
had
really
pressed
for
the
intended
goals
and
outcomes,
and
I
think
that's
what
probably
translated
into
the
program
goals
slide
that
was
presented
by
joe.
So
thank
you
for
that,
and
you
know
it.
It
seemed
like
that
was
in
keeping
with
what
I
understood
the
majority
to
be
voting
for
last
year.
E
I
think
that
the
the
notion
was
that
we
would
have
kind
of
less
trash
and
fewer
campers
if
we
did
all
these
steps
and
committed
the
three
million
dollars
and
it
it
really
does
not.
Look
to
me
like
the
data
is
favorable
at
this
point.
When
I
read
the
program
goals,
no
camping
in
public
spaces
connected
to
coordinate
coordinated
entry
for
people
who
need
it,
access
to
public
space,
not
impeded
reduction
in
crime,
visitors
have
access
to
knowledgeable.
E
Resources
sounds
like
we're
doing,
maybe
well
on
that
one
and
then
joe,
your
crews
being
able
to
safely
access
the
critical
infrastructure
and
free
the
waterways
of
contamination.
So
you
know,
I
think
we.
What
we're
hearing
tonight
is
we're
not
we're
not
necessarily
making
those
goals,
and
I
know
we're
not
making
decisions
tonight.
But
again,
I
think
it
comes
back
to
some
of
the
data
that
we're
asking
about
so
that
when
we
come
back
and
do
make
a
decision
on
this
pilot,
we
really
have
the
information
that
we
need.
E
So
if
the
goal
is
a
reduction
in
the
average
number
of
new
encampments
a
day
or
a
week,
I'm
not
sure
I
can
tell
looking
at
what
I've
I've.
Seen
like
that.
We
have
the
drill
down
information
and
the
the
weekly
data
that
we
need
to
know
like
what
you
know.
I
know
we
know
what
we're
kind
of
clearing
and
seeing,
but
you
know
we
talked
about
that
built
for
zero
data
and
the
real
granular
data.
E
I
don't
know
how
we
how
we
can
make
good
decisions
without
having
something
close
to
that,
and
I
think
that
you
know
a
summer
pit
count
would
be
great,
but
I
think
we
also
need
you
know
for
if
the
goal
is
to
know
like,
are
we
reducing
x,
y
and
z?
E
It
just
doesn't
seem
like
we
quite
have
the
level
of
detail
that
we
need
and
given
that
it
was
asked
for
last
year,
I
understand
staffing
shortages
have
have
made
it
difficult,
but
you
know
that
definition
of
insanity
is
doing
the
same
thing
over
and
over
and
expecting
a
different
result
like.
E
AB
Thank
you.
I
appreciate
that
I
really
do
rachel
and
I
I
say
that
that's
I
think
why
the
team
is
is
moving
forward
on
extending
this
work
right,
because
we
don't
have
the
data
that
that
we
think
is
reliable.
That
right
now
really
shows
a
period
that
we
can
land
on.
I
I
don't
know
that
I
was
that
clear.
When
matt
was
asking
the
question
about
the
the
extension
of
the
pilot,
I
mean
our
proposal
is
to
extend
it
and
that's
what
you
will
see
in
the
budget.
AB
So
I
guess
the
budget
approval
or
not
is
part
of
that
discussion
in
that
inflection
point
there,
but
I
think
it's
too
early
yet,
and
it's
too
soon
we're
seeing
more.
You
know
we're
seeing
increases
in
in
need
and
we're
seeing
some
really
good
outreach,
but
I
don't
know
that
we
have
correlation
data.
AB
Yet,
as
we
think
about
what
that
looks
like
with
the
encampment
cleanup
team,
we
don't
yet
have
a
full
year's
data
on
the
ambassadors,
and
certainly
we
know
anecdotally
that
they
have
been
a
huge
success
and
really
supportive
and
community
seems
to
like
them,
but
we're
still
collecting
some
of
that
data.
So
that
is
one
of
the
reasons
as
we
continue
to
look
at
some
of
the
work
that's
moving
forward
is
that
we
really
want
to
be
crystal
clear
about
being
making
data
informed
decisions.
AB
So
we
don't
know
that
yet,
but
I
do
think
that
that's
a
conversation
to
be
had
and
we'll
see
that
in
the
budget,
if
you
you
know
there
will
be
decisions,
it's
about
750
000,
to
fund
the
additional
cleanup
crew
in
joe's
shop.
That's
a
decision
point
to
be
made.
If
we're
going
to
do
those
efforts
and
double
down
on
additional
cleaning,
it
could
be
that
there
are
additional
ideas
that
moves
forward.
But
that's
a
those
are
some
policy
considerations
that
will
be
matched
with
budget
that
we
hope
to
hear
from.
E
Okay,
you
may
just
made
me
think
of
one
last
question:
what
what
became
of
the
like?
We
weren't
able
to
hire
the
police
officers
and
there
was
a
million
dollars
left
in
that
budget.
Where
is
that
going
like
we?
We
really
dedicated
that
in
in
the
budget
a
year
ago,
to
help
with
this
issue.
Do
we
have
a
million
dollars
to
to
do
something
with,
I
feel
like
we
could
do
something
great
with
a
million
dollars
and.
AB
E
That
means
we're
hired
like
they
were
authorized
a
year
ago
as
a
yeah.
We
didn't
spend
that
money
in
the
last
year
and-
and
I
think
that
was
true
of
some-
maybe
a
range
or
two,
so
I
guess
I
would
maybe
I
don't
know-
maybe
that's
on
the
list
like.
Where
is
that
if
that
money
was
set
aside
and
and
we
intentionally
were
like
we're
going
to
go
with
this,
you
know
this
bucket
of
of
ideas
to
help.
You
know
resolve
this
situation.
E
AB
AB
So
we'll
certainly
have
those
conversations
in
the
budget
in
the
budget
meetings,
and
I
just
wanted
to
mention
to
your
other
question
that
you
asked
about
the
pit
count,
my
understanding
and
sorry
and
I'm
getting
a
note
from
finance
that
unspent
some
unspent
funds
are
available
for
one-time
uses
and
they
revert
back
to
fund
balance
after
reserves.
But
again
a
bigger
conversation
to
have
with
our
budget
team.
AB
For
p,
for
the
point
in
count,
my
as
I'm
hearing
it
and
kurt,
please
correct
me:
if
I'm
wrong,
I
think
there
is
interest
in
thinking
about
doing
something
at
a
different
point.
In
addition,
I
think
we
need
to
go
back
and
think
about
what
does
that
look
like
in
terms
of
timing
in
terms
of
our
partners
in
terms
of
resources,
because
that
is
not
something
that
we
have
perhaps
have
accounted
for.
But
I
understand
that
kurt
seems
supportive
of
the
idea
and
I
think
we
just
need
some
time
to
explore.
AB
Perhaps
we
can
bring
that
back
at
the
september
first
meeting
and
if
not
he'll,
certainly
let
us
know,
but
I
I
think
there
seems
to
be
some
support
to
moving
forward
in
that
direction.
Kurt
am
I
speaking
out
of
school,
for
you.
AS
A
We
are
almost
at
the
10
30
threshold,
which
requires
a
motion
to
extend
the
meeting.
So
I
wonder
if
I
could
have
such
a
motion
from
someone
who
moved.
AB
AB
A
Hands
I
got
it,
I
a
bare
majority,
but
only
barely,
but
let's
try
we'll
we'll
push
through
a
secret.
E
Okay,
just
one
one
more
piece
of
information
to
share
somebody
watching
this
emailed
that
there
is
a
summer
pit
count
going
underway
in
denver
and
doug
coe,
and
one
was
done
two
years
ago
in
jeffco,
so
I
don't
know
if
we
can
maybe
piggyback
on
the
ones
that
are
happening
right
now.
That
would
be
great,
maybe
maybe
it
could
be
done
before
september.
F
I
welcome
the
comment
made
by
nicole
earlier
and
when
I
was
reading
the
memo,
I
had
the
same
question
and
concern
about
who
are
the
unhoused
community
and
because
of
the
way
it
was
mentioned
in
the
background,
and
I
wanted
to
know
at
least
from
staff
and
my
question
is
those
people
who
come
to
boulder?
F
AS
F
AS
AS
Yes,
I
don't
know
what
information
we
have
on
that
we'll
have
to
look
at
that
to
know
whether
or
not
we
can
answer
it,
but
at
least
you'll
do
your
best.
F
It's
I
think
lauren
mentioned
earlier
that
she's
seen
the
signs
actually
for
the
for
the
disposables
or
since
she's
seen
the
disposable
for
the
needles.
I
have
not
seen
them
and
I
have
walked
the
trail.
So
I'm
wondering
if
there's
any
signage
for
that.
AL
I'll
chime
in
I
don't
know
the
answer
off
the
top
of
your
head.
What
signage
there
is.
My
understanding
is
that
we
were
waiting
for
a
supply
contractor
for
these
to
actually
be
in
place
in
the
park,
and
so
I
I
believe
one
is
installed
but
not
available,
but
certainly
our
intention
is
that
they're,
visible
and
known
and
would
be
not
only
visible
but
communicated
through
the
various
connections
we
have
so.
F
Okay,
thank
you.
Thank
you
very
much,
and
also
I
just
wanted
to
make
the
comment
curt.
I
find
the
way
you
respond
to
me
extremely
disrespectful.
I've
been
a
council
member
for
about
three.
Almost
three
years
now
and
I've
shown
you
as
much
grace
as
I
can
in
the
work
that
I
do,
and
at
many
many
occasions
you've
talked
to
me
in
the
way
that
you
responded
and
I
find
that
absolutely
disrespectful.
AS
I
I'd
be
glad
to
respond.
I'm
sorry
if
it.
If
I
came
off
that
way,
it
wasn't
my
intention.
I
I
wasn't
aware
of
that.
Previously.
A
I
I
wonder,
maybe,
if
kurt
you
and
jimmy
could
connect
tomorrow,
if
that's
inappropriate,
let
me
know,
but
maybe
the
two
of
you
could
talk,
because
I
think
we
do
not
want
council
members
getting
that
feeling
in
meetings.
AS
Yeah
yeah
I'd
be
glad
to
connect
next
week.
AB
Well,
I
appreciate
that
mayor
and
I
know
that
certainly
we
can
connect
and
kurt.
I
appreciate
that
and
and
not
an
excuse,
but
I
also
just
wonder
as
we
get
into
this
lateness
of
the
hour,
we
tend
to
be
a
little
curt,
no
pun
intended
kurt
and
just
want
to
be
thoughtful
about
these
exchanges
that
we
have
with
each
other
and
how
to
how
to
continue
to
have
a
positive
dialogue
as
we
move
forward.
A
That
is,
that
is
an
important
call.
Okay,
junie
apologies.
He
took
that
turn.
Do
you
have
anything
else,
you'd
like
to
add.
F
A
Okay,
I
I
think
the
only
one
who
hasn't
said
anything
and
then
I'll
try
to
wrap
this
up
here.
I
won't
talk
for
too
long.
I
all
of
my
questions
got
answered,
so
I
don't
have
any
follow-ups.
I'm
just
gonna
offer
a
few
quick
thoughts,
so
one
is
one.
Is
that
the
I'm,
a
big
fan
of
the
downtown
ambassadors,
so
they're
doing
a
great
job,
I'm
downtown
all
the
time
I
think
they're
awesome.
So
thanks
for
that
program
and
sorry,
I'm
tired,
so
I'm
not
the
most
articulate
right
now.
A
I
will
say
that
that
we
do
have
some
options
coming
online
at
the
state
level
that
may
help
out
with
some
of
these
issues.
You
know
hundreds
of
millions
of
dollars
are
being
devoted
to
behavioral
health
issues
and
housing.
So
hopefully
we'll
we'll
be
due
with
some
some
assistance
here
before
too
long.
I
was
glad
to
hear
we're
going
to
get
an
update
on
the
star
program
soon,
because
I
think
that
equivalent-
because
I
think
when
it
does
come
online,
it
can
help
with
our
resources
and
provide
some
additional
solutions
for
folks.
A
I
appreciate
the
answers
about
how
we
can
ask
and
require
people
to
move
out
of
bike
paths
for
safety
and
mobility,
reasons,
glad
to
hear
about
the
sharps
containers,
and
then
I
wanted
to
to
echo
as
well
what
nicole
was
talking
about
in
terms
of
some
some
kind
of
relatively
simple
things
that
could
help
you
know
and
other
options
for
helping
with
this
like
providing
additional
trash
containers.
A
You
know
that
and
that
can
be
used
that
can
be
emptied
fairly
frequently,
and
you
know
we
added
some
additional
restrooms
in
the
creek
path
a
few
years
ago.
That
was
great.
I
think
more
restrooms
are
good
for
everybody.
You
know,
families
with
kids
need
a
restroom.
Sometimes
people
who
don't
have
a
home
need
a
restaurant
sometimes
so
do
all
of
us.
So
you
know
I,
I
think
those
are
always
helpful
to
have
online.
A
So
I'd
love
to
see
some
more
of
that,
and
then
this
is
more
of
a
september
first
thing,
but
I
just
you
know:
denver
has
had
some
great
luck
with
their
safe
outdoor
spaces
and
providing
alternatives
to
encampments
so
where
they
had
one.
These
are
essentially
sanctioned
encampments.
They
had
one
that
they
stood
up
a
couple
years
ago,
where
they
essentially
had
a
substantial
unsanctioned
encampment
and
were
able
to
move
like
two-thirds
of
those
folks
into
a
safe
and
managed
place
to
live,
that
that
had
more
options
for
them
anyway.
A
L
Okay,
but
that's
not
what
I
wanted
to
say.
I
do
want
to
say
that
I
I
really
hope
that
we
can
look
outside
the
box
for
some
of
these
cleanup
answers
and
I
know
a
lot
of
community
members.
Thank
you
for
all
the
community
members
who
wrote
to
us
with
ideas,
and
some
of
them
were
pretty
good.
So,
in
the
back
of
my
mind
I
was
wondering
cleanup
wise.
L
Is
there
a
possibility
for
a
very
specific
working
group
that
maybe
because
I
I've
been
a
part
of
city
working
groups
and
they're
fantastic
when
we
have
a
very
specific
subject,
and
then
we
get
some
input
on
how
we
can
solve
it?
So
I'm
wondering
about
that-
and
I
do
want
to
thank
all
the
community
members
that
wrote
with
their
ideas.
Just
so
you
know
I
almost
read
all
of
them.
L
I
haven't
had
a
chance
to
read:
there
was
quite
a
few
of
them,
and
so
that
was
my
latest
thought
that
I
don't
need
an
answer
to
now,
but
I
would
sure
love
to
go
into
solutions
now
that
we've
established
the
and
any
out
of
box
solutions
that
we
can
think
of
that
normally
are
not
thought
of
because
it's
you
know
it's
unusual
times,
and
you
never
know
sometimes
out
of
the
box
solutions
can
work.
A
Excellent
tara,
okay,
good
enough
for
this
one,
all
right!
This
is
among
the
most
complicated
and
challenging
topics
that
we
work
on
as
a
city.
I'm
deeply
grateful
to
all
the
staff
members
who've
worked
with
us
on
this
topic
tonight
who
do
the
work
day
by
day
and
to
my
council
colleagues
for
the
discretion
tonight.
So
thank
you
very
much.
Everyone.
A
All
right
so
we're
after
10
30,
which,
which
means
it
requires
a
vote
to
take
up
a
new
matter,
but
I'm
going
to
propose
something.
We
have
the
the
covid
what
we
do
next
we're
exhausted.
I
wonder
nary
if
we
could
maybe
just
get
an
a
a
short
email
update
on
this
and
and
talk
about
it
at
the
very
beginning
of
our
special
meeting
next
week.
AB
I'm
sure
we
can
and
I'll
ask
pam
to
do
that.
Pam
has
been
leading
sort
of
our
recovery
efforts
as
we
move
forward
and
appreciate
her
staying
up
late,
but
we
can
certainly
do
that
and
mostly
what
we
want
to
know
from
council
is:
when
do
you
think
you
want
to
come
back?
And
so,
if
you
have
that
ques
that
question
in
your
mind,
you
can
let
us
know,
because
then
we
can
start
preparing.
AB
Council
chambers
and
notifications
to
the
public
staff
will
be
back
on
the
22nd
in
its
full
hybrid
capacity,
as
we
have
now
reached
yellow.
So
we
will
send
you
that
information
and
we
will
figure
out
how
to
get
that
input
from
you.
AE
Yeah,
I
am,
and-
and
I
just
really
want
to
apologize
to
pam
and
folks
who
stayed
up
late
with
us
for
that.
So
I
truly
sorry
thank
you
for
being
here
and
I
hope
we
can
try
to
not
not
let
that
happen
in
the
future.
A
A
100
echo
that
and
that,
and
we
would
get
you
on
at
the
beginning
of
the
next
meeting,
subject
to
cec
approval.
C
Finally,
my
question
is:
does
delaying
it
to
next
week
delay
staffs
runway
they
need
in
order
for
us
to
actually
go
back
in
person
in
some
form,
so
I'm
only
worried.
My
only
concern
is
are
we?
Are
we
delaying
a
whole
bunch
of
process
by
kicking
the
can
till
next
week,
in
which
case
that
worries
me,
because
if
we
can
just
knock
that
decision
out,
then
we're
not
holding
staff
up
for
decision
we
need
to
ultimately
like
do.
C
AB
AV
Yeah,
no
I'll
keep
it
brief.
I
think
the
one
decision
that
maybe
we'd
like
to
clear
with
you
if
we
delayed
it
next
week,
can
we
take
august
18th
off
the
table
as
the
first
day
back.
The
biggest
thing
I
think
of
is
the
the
sort
of
no
penalty
adjustments
to
the
food
orders,
and
things
like
that
that
we
do.
It
would
be
nice
to
be
able
to
give
those
vendors
notice
and
let
them
know
so
happy
related
next
week.
AV
A
I
I
think
no
on
august
18th
is
a
pretty
safe
bet.
So,
okay,
everybody,
yeah,
okay,
okay,
thanks
for
that
matt,
and
thanks
for
that
pam
and
again,
apologies
all
right.
That
then
brings
us
to
the
end
of
our
meeting.
Thanks
again,
everyone
for
your
time
and
attention
tonight
and
take
care
and
have
a
good
night
I'll
gather.
Let's
go
at
10
37,
take
care.