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From YouTube: City Council Regular 17 Jul 2017
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G
J
I
F
Our
gracious
Heavenly
Father.
We
thank
you
for
bringing
us
together
to
meet
this
evening
to
discuss
the
business
of
the
city.
Lord
I
ask
that
you
would
give
us
your
wisdom
and
your
direction
as
we
make
decisions
tonight.
I.
Thank
you
for
those
who
are
here
for
the
staff
members
and
for
volunteers
that
help
this
city
Lord.
We
just
thank
you
for
all
you're
doing
in
Jesus,
name,
I,
pray,
amen,.
F
K
I
L
I
K
I
M
M
I
Thank
you
folks,
I'd
ask
you
to
stick
around
just
for
a
moment.
Maybe
we
had
some
counsel
comments
for
this,
but
I'd
like
to
hold
those
until
Council
response
to
public
comment
and
move
on
to
our
next
speaker,
which
is
6b,
Kathleen,
Baily
and
Inglewood
resident
to
address
Council
regarding
conduct,
mrs.
Bailey.
N
Kathleen
bailey
46
86
south
Jason
Street
last
City
Council
I,
pointed
out
that
integrals,
historically
high
rating
for
goal
reported
that
Engel,
it's
historically
high,
ready
new
clay
concentration,
sludge
emits
historically
low
millirem
per
year,
radiation
dose
risk
exposure.
Tonight
I
will
tell
you
how
they
did
that
instead
of
entering
the
real-time
Accpac
URIs
for
grams
sludge
analysis
data
directly
into
the
res
res.
N
So
the
milligram
per
year,
radiation
dose
exposure
reported
by
integral
was
based
not
was
based
on
these
pro
UCL
adjusted
or
average
values,
not
the
actual
real-time
pickers
program,
a
CZ
sludge
analysis
data
sets
the
whole
purpose
of
a
res
read
used
in
water
treatment.
Industry
is
specifically
to
identify
the
actual
radiation
dose
a
worker
or
nearby
resident
received
in
a
year
in
order
to
assess
the
actual
real-time
millirem
per
year.
N
Health
risk-
I
will
address
this
in
more
detail,
including
what
integral
did,
in
their
creative
calculations
concerning
the
additional
radiation
dose
exposure
emitting
from
the
three
years
of
stockpile
sludge,
2011,
12
and
13
during
next
city
council.
Tonight.
I
want
to
use
the
rest
of
my
time
to
call
out
councilman
Gillian
Yates
for
their
appalling
dismissive
comments
I
witnessed
and
make
to
our
fire
marshal
at
the
July
3rd
study
session.
Our
fire
marshal
has
significant
critical
responsibilities,
not
only
enforcing
but
reviewing
it
and
amending
our
fire
codes
every
three
years
to
ensure
Public
Safety.
N
It
was
amply
evident
at
the
July
3rd
study
session
that
our
fire
marshal
had
completed
a
professional
two-year
evaluation
of
needed
upgrades
to
our
2015
fire
codes.
The
fire
marshal
had
met
with
relevant
Inglewood
staff,
including
building
the
building
department
and
the
Community
Development
Department,
and
because
Inglewood
contracted
with
Denver
to
provide
our
fire
services.
Our
fire
marshal
also
met
with
Denver
staff
and
work
closely
with
Denver
fire.
Yet
both
Gillette
and
Yates
flatly
opposed
her
amendments
and
their
reasons
were
twofold.
For
most,
was
they
were
disturbed
by
her
joint
efforts
with
Denver
exclaiming?
N
You
didn't
if
they
did
not
want
in
going
to
quote,
lose
its
unique
identity
and
autonomy
from
Denver,
and
then
they
exclaimed
to
our
fire
marshal.
That
was
the
only
reason
we
kept
your
position.
In
the
first
place,
your
opposition
to
Denver
was
woven
into
your
only
other
objection
that
you
didn't
want
Englewood
to
be
over
regulated
like
Denver,
which
would
deter
developers
and
businesses
from
working
in
Englewood.
When
our
fire
marshal
responded
to
your
concerns
regarding
an
operational
permit
requirement,
she
fully
explained
that
it
was
additional
administrative
work.
N
She
and
her
team
were
taking
on
in
requiring
only
new
businesses,
including
new
businesses,
moving
into
an
existing
business
location
to
identify
all
hazardous
materials
they
will
have
at
their
locations
in
order
that
police
and
fire
will
all
have
immediate
access
to
real-time
hazardous
materials.
Information
when
responding
to
emergencies.
Your
response,
councilman
Yates,
was
the
equivalent
of
telling
her.
Isn't
that
your
job,
you
asked
her
quote:
don't
you
go
around
and
expect
these
properties?
Aren't
you
keeping
track
of
what
special
circumstances
you
find
that
these
properties?
N
Then
you
suggested
that
our
fire
marshal
wanted
this,
because
Denver
does
this
councilman
Jilla
you
had
the
audacity
to
outright
dismiss
her
entire
two
years
of
work,
updating
England's
fire
codes
by
saying
to
our
fire
marshal
quote,
it
looks
like
it
was
just
easy
to
do.
What
Denver
is
doing
rather
than
develop
our
own,
which
you
followed
later
with
your
standard
denial
format,
but
expressing
something
to
the
effect
of
don't
get
me
wrong.
N
I'm
not
intending
to
say
you
didn't,
do
the
work
and
and
just
took
the
easy
way
out
and
copy
Denver's
it
just
looked
like
you
did
outrageous,
councilman
Jill
it
at
the
very
end
of
the
meeting.
After
all,
you'd
admit,
dismissive
criticism
of
a
fire
marshal
and
her
work
failed
to
bring
any
other
councilmember
to
you
or
he
ate
side.
You
simply
jump
ship
and
declared
you
will
support
a
along
with
a
simple
town
hall
meeting
blast.
N
Not
only
was
your
treatment
of
a
fire
marshal
disturbing,
but
the
fact
that
you
both
place
citizen
safety
and
police
and
fire
safety.
Second,
to
your
concerns
for
developers
and
business
men's
wallets
for
the
cost
of
a
permit
or
the
time
needed
to
fill
out.
An
inventory
of
hazardous
materials
they
will
have
at
their
locations
is
alarming.
I
I
O
Good
evening
my
name
is
Cohen
Dickerson
28:35
South,
Pennsylvania
Street.
You
have
been
considering
lowering
the
speed
limit
on
Broadway
to
25
miles
per
hour
to
accommodate
the
old,
downtown
renovations
and
goals,
since
the
entire
city
has
a
speed
limit
of
30
miles
per
hour,
even
in
residential
zones,
except
as
otherwise
posted
for
school
zones
and
small
areas
of
25
miles
per
hour.
I
would
ask
you
to
reduce
the
residential
streets
that
are
not
snow
removal
streets
to
25
miles
per
hour,
as
it
appears
that
speed
limits
are
merely
advisory
to
most
drivers.
O
There
is
a
major
sentiment
expressed
on
next-door
to
lower
the
speed
limits
and
to
install
speed,
bumps
and
traffic
slowing
features
and
to
get
more
attention
on
the
matter
from
police
due
to
the
ever
increasing
traffic
and
reckless,
and
speeding
and
collisions
along
most
residential
streets.
The
chair
of
the
transportation
Advisory
Committee
has
weighed
in
on
this
and
said
it
would
be
a
good
topic
for
that
committee.
A
correlative
issue
is
bikes
versus
cars
and
road
use.
O
While
the
comp
plan
has
an
element
discouraging
autos
and
encouraging
wheely,
there
is
little
practical
ability
to
do
so
without
reducing
current
housing
stock
in
order
to
widen
streets
to
allow
for
bike
lanes
or
eliminating
autos,
which
the
comp
plan
seems
to
what
it
do.
This
involves
people
pushing
strollers
in
the
street
as
well
and
pedestrians,
because
the
sidewalks
are
not
conducive
to
walking,
pushing
strollers
due
to
the
condition
of
them
and
the
regrettable
tendency
of
property
owners
to
not
cut
back
overgrowth
of
shrubs
that
hinder
the
use
of
sidewalks.
O
The
debate
between
muscle
powered
bike,
riders
and
drivers
of
cars
and
trucks
is
heated
and
the
similar
debate
about
speed
limits
and
traffic
slowing
features,
bring
about
a
lot
of
issues
about
regulations,
bike
lanes,
conditions,
code
enforcement
or
lack
thereof.
These
are
bumpy
issues
and
that
pun
was
intended
and
one
common
denominator
is
speed
and
lack
of
attention
by
the
drivers
of
cars
and
by
riders
of
bicycles.
One
place
to
start
is
education
of
children
and
bike
riding
rules
of
the
road
and
attention.
O
O
Perhaps
an
official
expansion
of
this
kind
of
training
would
be
an
order
or
some
school
resource
officers
escorting
children
on
foot
or
teaching
them.
You
should
consider
an
act
on
reducing
the
speed
limit
on
residential
roads.
Children
ride
bikes
to
schools
and
the
school
zones
are
not
sufficient
to
protect
them
on
route.
O
I
Thank
you,
mrs.
Dickerson.
Let
me
see
if
we
have
any
questions
for
you
this
evening,
seeing
Yael
thank
you
for
coming
and
for
your
comments
like
to
move
us
on
to
agenda
item
7.
This
is
recognition,
unscheduled
public
comment.
We
do
have
just
one
speaker
this
evening.
That
is
mr.
Doug
cone
here
to
speak
about
what
else,
but
history
welcome
mr.
cone.
P
Good
evening
Doug
cone
30:51
south
Merriam
Street,
whatever
you
got
over
to
that
general,
an
ironworks
village
grand
opening
celebration
last
week,
got
me
to
thinking
about
another
piece
of
history.
I
just
learned
about
that
amazing
factory
general
ironworks,
a
little
while
back
I'd
told
you
most
of
the
story
that
I
knew
in
the
early
1950s
General
Mills
came
to
General
ironin
and
said
we
have
this
vision
for
a
new
product.
P
P
Only
heard
about
it
about
a
month
ago,
on
a
little
bit
later,
General
Mills
came
back
to
them
and
said
we
have
this
vision
for
a
new
cereal.
We
want
to
make
it
out
of
Oaks
and
we
want
to
make
little
circles
and
we
want
to
call
them
Cheerios,
but
we
have
no
idea
how
to
make
Cheerios.
Can
you
guys
invent
the
process
and
the
factory
for
making
Cheerios
general
hair
works,
1952
I,
think
that's
kind
of
cool
and
one
other
thing.
P
I
haven't
checked
the
schedule
yet
to
see
whether
you
guys
are
having
a
study
session
on
the
31st
I
would
like
to
invite
the
audience
and
y'all
to
the
history
of
tiny
town.
It's
really
going
to
be
fun
as
at
2:30
in
the
afternoon
and
6:30
in
the
evening
over
at
the
bottom
2:30
here
at
the
library,
a
fellow
who's
going
to
speak,
there's
been
a
locomotive
engineer
up
there
for
12
years
and
you've
noticed
those
cool
grow,
grow
track,
suspenders
anywhere.
P
He
invented
them
with
anyway
July
the
31st
I
put
a
posters
on
the
boards
outside.
Thank
you,
Thank.
I
J
Yeah
I'd
like
to
thank
the
RAC
Center,
the
staff
they're
not
able
to
do
that
without
all
the
training,
without
all
the
emphasis
on
that
emergencies
happen
and
you
have
to
be
prepared
for
them
when
they
do,
and
this
is
not
the
first
time
that
I
have
sat
up
here
and
you
guys
have
been
responsible
for
saving
somebody's
life
and
I'm
sure
that
it
happens
a
lot
more
often
than
we
might
even
know.
So.
J
I
greatly
appreciate
your
dedication,
your
training,
and
that
you
understand
that
when
those
things
happen,
you
need
to
be
ready
to
respond
and
I.
Think
it's
under
the
culture
of
that.
The
way
that
our
employees
behave,
that
we
have
citizens,
then
who
can
go
ahead
and
step
up
to
the
plate
and
become
a
part
of
that
process
and
help
and
I
greatly
appreciate
that
that
culture
exists
there,
so
that
we
have
people
that
step
up
and
make
a
difference.
J
J
J
Cohen
I
think
that
it's
not
the
first
time
that
we've
discussed
potentially
doing
25
miles
an
hour
in
the
community
and
we'll
see
whether
one
of
the
boards
or
commissions
will
take
that
up
and
Doug.
Thank
you
for
again
reminding
us
that
the
world
would
be
a
different
place
if
it
wasn't
for
Englewood
existing
that
the
entrepreneurialship,
the
creativity,
the
inventiveness
that
this
community
is
shown
for
since
its
existence,
and
you
keep
reminding
us
in
big
in
small
ways
just
how
different
the
world
would
be
without
without
Englewood
existing
and
I
really
appreciate
it.
J
I
You
I
also
have
some
comments,
I'd
like
to
share
mr.
sac.
Thank
you
for
bringing
the
recent
medical
emergency
over
at
the
rec
center
to
our
attention.
You
know
we
deal
with
lots
of
issues
here
on
Monday
nights,
but
rarely
are
they
life
and
death
and
I
really
am
proud
to
live
in
a
community
where
neighbors
help
neighbors
and
city
staff
really
goes
above
and
beyond
to
help
a
community
member
in
need.
So
thank
you
all
for
your
quick
action
and
saving
a
neighbor
and
genuinely
appreciate
that
Kathleen
Bailey.
I
Thank
you
for
being
here
and
speaking.
You
know
here
we
deal
with
lots
of
difficult
issues
as
a
body
and
we
have
diversity
of
opinions,
and
you
know
I
do
value
that
you
know
I'm,
sorry,
that
the
Mayor
Pro
Tem
is
not
here
to
sort
of
discuss
your
comments,
but
you
know
I,
don't
think
that
he
had
any
mal-intent
and
in
what
you
were
describing
there
and
I
think
this
is.
You
know,
maybe
a
friendly
reminder
that
we
really
are
on
the
same
team.
I
We
really
do
represent
the
same
community
and
you
know
even
with
some
difficult
conversations
we
need
to
move
forward
in
the
best
interest
of
the
community
kollene
Dickerson.
Thank
you
so
much
for
being
here,
you
know
I
appreciate
the
idea
of
you
know
reducing
the
speed
limit
and
some
of
these
other
thoughts
that
you
had
regarding
code.
I
hope
that
some
of
those
might
be
advanced
through
the
code
enforcement
advisory
committee
to
come
forward
with
some
recommendations
on
those
issues
to
see.
If
you
guys
can
get
some
consensus
on
that.
You
know.
I
H
I
Fair
enough,
you
know
I'd
certainly
be
supportive
of
looking
at
some
reduction,
not
only
on
Broadway,
but
also
in
some
of
the
neighborhoods.
You
know,
I,
don't
know.
I
know
you
guys
are
a
little
bit
busy
with
some
of
your
items,
but
perhaps
when
the
agenda
clears
up
it
transportation
advisory
committee,
that
this
is
something
they
could
take
on
and
bring
a
recommendation
to
Council
working
with
our
own
transportation
staff.
I
Mr.
cone,
thank
you
again
for
being
here
and
making
sure
the
history
of
Englewood
lives
on
I
love,
hearing
about
our
unique
relationship
to
lots
of
historical
things
that
are
common,
that
everybody
knows
like
your
potato
chip
and
your
Cheerios.
So
thank
you
again
for
for
being
here
tonight
and
making
sure
again
that
histories
are
unique
and
wonderful.
History
stays
alive
here
in
Englewood.
Any
other
comments
from
any
council
members,
seeing
none
I'd
like
to
move
us
on
to
agenda
item
8.
This
is
communications,
proclamations
and
appointments.
Tonight
we
do
have
Borden
Commission
recognition,
mayor.
Q
I
Seconded,
thank
you.
We
have
a
motion
and
a
second
any
comments
on
this
motion.
I
will
just
for
the
record
note
that
I
think
believe
this
was
a
bit
of
an
oversight
when
we
were
doing
our
rounds
of
appointments,
and
so
we
wanted
to
make
sure
and
clean
this
up,
because
that
this
is
code
enforcement
and
they
are
a
little
bit
short-handed
and
the.
I
I
C
I
C
I
C
I
B
I
F
I
F
I
I
Like
to
move
us
on
to
9b1,
this
is
council
bill
26.
This
is
amendment
City
Municipal,
Code
city
of
Englewood,
title
12,
chapter
2
staff
recommends
council,
approve
an
ordinance
to
amend
title
12
chapter
2
sections
one
through
five
of
the
Ingrid
Municipal
Code
2000
entitled
wastewater
utility,
our
staff
sources,
Englewood
Littleton
wastewater
treatment
plan,
environmental
compliance
manager,
dan
de
la
Lata
DeLaughter.
I
I
F
R
R
R
R
L
I
J
I
I
Like
to
move
us
on
to
9b3,
this
is
council
bill
41.
This
is
the
Inglewood
senior
living
center
35
35
55
South
Clarkson
Street,
the
vacation
of
the
easement
and
dedication
of
an
easement.
The
utility
staff
recommends
council
approve
an
ordinance
for
the
vacation
of
easement
and
dedication
of
sanitary,
sanitary
sewer,
easement
requested
by
krf
965
LLC
for
the
construction
of
the
Inglewood
Senior
Living
Center,
our
staff
sources
utilities
director
Tom
Brennan
good
evening,
director
Brennan
again,
with
this
being
a
council
consent.
I
E
J
J
Asked
for
some
additional
information
on
this
project
and
I
believe
I've
spoken
with
the
city
attorney.
She
provided
an
answer
on
that
I'd
like
her
to
just
give
a
quick
synopsis
of
the
answer
that
she
gave,
which
was
concerning
both
the
easement,
because
it's
the
same
developer,
that's
doing
both
and
my
request
that
it
not
go
into
a
property
that
was
tax
exempt,
but
she
did
answer
the
question
I'd
like
it
just
to
give
a
quick
synopsis
of
that,
so
that
we
can
all
catch
up.
City.
S
The
City
Councilmembers
no
I,
never
give
a
short
answer
so
I'm
I'm
picking
out
the
conclusion
to
to
my
memo
on
this.
So
you
don't
have
to
hear
me
restate
the
facts
that
basically,
that
the
question
is
just
this
standard
analysis
associated
with
the
council's
executive
power
and
when
you
make
a
decision
to
specifically
impact
one
property
differently
than
other
properties,
the
decision
should
bear
rational
basis
to
legitimate
governmental
objectives
such
as
health,
safety
or
welfare.
S
If
a
property
owner
suffers
harm
as
a
result
of
a
city's
arbitrary
and
capricious
use
of
that
executive
power,
they
could
challenge
the
city's
action
in
district
court.
If
a
property
owner
suffers
harm
from
the
inability
use,
the
5-foot
of
its
property,
which
is
not
needed
for
easement
purposes
by
the
city,
there
may
be
some
argument
of
taking
of
a
vested
development
right.
There
typically
is
not
a
tort
issue
under
the
governmental
immunities
claim
and.
S
J
Know
I
appreciate
that
I
still
have
a
concern
with
the
way
that
this,
the
piece
being
that
they're
required
that
we're
doing
this
to
reconfigure
the
property
for
the
most
advantageous
use
for
the
developer.
I'm,
not
sure
why
we
I
mean
it
just
seems
somewhat
arbitrary
to
just
take
it
if
most
of
the
easements
are
15
feet,
that
this
should
have
ever
been
20
and
just
want
to
make
sure
that
we
have
some
consistency
and
what
we're
doing
and
I
greatly
appreciate
that
the
city
attorney
answered
the
other
question
on
that
particular
issue.
J
I
You
any
further
comments
on
council
bill.
41
I
will
be
supporting
council
number
41.
You
know
it
is
nice
to
see
some
variety
I
suppose
in
the
housing
stock
that
is
particularly
dedicated
towards
our
senior
population.
I
know
these
are
market
rate.
We've
had
some
recent
affordable
housing
projects
that
were
also
age
and
income
restricted.
So
again
it
is
nice
to
see
a
nice,
healthy
mix
and
I
think
this
is
gonna,
be
a
great
location
for
this.
I
am
gonna,
be
supporting
this.
You
know
we
did
delay
this
a
couple
weeks
already:
council,
member
Russell.
F
L
K
I
You
thank
you
moving
us
on
to
9c
one.
This
is
a
contract
with
post
GMR
coordinator
staff
recommends
City
Council
approved
by
motion
one
contract
between
post
GMR
and
the
city
of
Englewood,
our
staff
sources,
deputy
police
chief
Sam
Watson
good
evening
chief
Watson
again,
since
this
is
consent
agenda
item
I
will
push
us
for
council
questions
for
staff.
At
this
time.
Any
members
have
any
questions.
Customer
roughly.
F
I
just
had
a
couple
of
questions
when
I
read
this,
who
will
be
the
training
region
coordinator
I
mean
when
I
read
it?
Apparently
it
cannot
be
a
city,
employee
and
so
I
just
wanted
to
know
who,
how
many
hours
this
is
going
to
take,
and
is
it
somebody
that
the
city
of
Englewood
is
going
to
hire
to
fill
this
position.
Or
could
you
just
tell
us
a
little
more
about
it?
Our.
Q
Relationship
on
this
is
through
post
and
as
the
fiscal
agent
for
post
we're
on
the
way.
This
is
structured
and
yeah.
You
approved
it
under
second
reading
for
us
to
either
fiscal
agent
tonight,
so
the
the
posts
board
governs
the
activities
of
the
employee,
but
because
we're
the
fiscal
agent
we're
responsible
for
further
for
their
funds
and
their
payments.
So
though,
the
money
will
come
from
Englewood,
although
it's
reimbursed
through
from
the
Post
board,
so
there's
a
negative
impact
on
the
city
of
Englewood.
Q
F
Q
Q
They're
monitored
by
the
post
board:
they
don't
they
don't.
The
only
activities
they'll
have
with
the
city
of
Englewood
is
when
we
have
an
interest
with
a
post
board.
If
we're
applying
for
a
scholarship
or
reimbursement
through
the
post
board,
we
may
have
to
have
a
conversation
with
the
coordinator
of
the
assistant
coordinator,
okay,.
I
I
Go
too
far
because
we
got
nine,
see
two
also
a
contract
with
post
GM,
our
assistant
coordinator.
This
is
a
contracts
with
the
city
of
Inglewood
as
the
fiscal
agent
for
post
GM.
Our
staff
recommends
that
council
approved
by
motion
the
conch
one
contract
between
post
GMR
and
the
city
of
Inglewood.
Again
our
staff
sources,
deputy
police,
chief,
Sam
Watson,
any
questions
for
chief
Watson.
That's
my
rustle
I.
F
E
This
is
for
the
design
of
the
actual
structure
that
will
divert
the
flows.
This
structure
be
located
in
big
Dry
Creek
last
meeting.
You
approve
the
pipeline,
which
will
carry
the
water
and
that
is
under
the
River
Run
project
that
is
currently
getting
built.
So
we
had
to
expedite
that
and
broke
it
up.
Okay,.
E
J
Questions
end
up
coming
up
because
I
mean
with
a
1.6
and
1.2
million
dollar
and
then
another
hundred
and
ninety
thousand
dollars
that
I'm
glad
to
see
this
coming
forward.
If
I
mean
the
Englewood
Herald,
has
it
that
the
big
Dry
Creek
project
that
will
help
mitigate
the
sludge
issue
seems
to
be
more
of
the
reasoning
for
it
than
kind
of
what
we
got
in
the
packet.
J
L
Primary
reason
why
we
went
into
this,
though,
was
for
the
hardness
of
the
water.
That's
what
the
settlement
with
Denver
was
all
about.
It
took
years
and
years
and
years-
and
this
is
the
final
piece
of
it,
and
now
we
have
some
funding
to
move
forward,
not
all
of
it,
but
five
hundred
thousand
right
six.
L
J
If
that's
the
case,
then
one
that
we
have
articles
like
this,
then
that's
very
disturbing,
because
if
we're
doing
this
to
protect
our
citizens
and
their
health
and
to
mitigate
something,
that's
a
very
serious
issue,
I'm
all
for
spending
that
kind
of
money
and
if
the
Inglewood
Herald
has
it
wrong,
and
it's
not
the
emphasis
on
that.
Then
I
want
to
make
sure
that
we're
getting
out
a
much
better
message
to
the
press.
J
J
But
if
it's
just
the
hardness,
then
that
doesn't
seem
to
add
credence
to
this
and
some
of
the
comments
that
were
made
by
staff
that
got
brought
to
me
after
that
last
budget
meeting
was
that
a
Charles
II
I
can't
remember
the
school
that
we
were
at
I'm,
not
sure
if
I'm
getting
the
emphasis
on
there,
because
I
have
a
lot
of
people
who
are
congratulating
us
saying.
Thank
you
for
taking
care
of
this
problem
in
mitigating
this,
which
is
a
little
bit
more.
J
I
Thank
you.
We
have
a
first
in
a
second
do.
We
have
any
further
comments
on
this
issue.
I
will
say
that
I'm
happy
to
support
this
I.
Do
you
think
this
has
been
a
long
time
coming
and
I
do
believe
that
the
primary
purpose
of
this
is
to
resolve
our
hardness
issue?
You
know
that
provides
build
up
and
some
home
appliances
around
town
and
causes
some
taste
issues
with
our
local
water
and
I
do
believe
it
does
provide
that
secondary
benefit
of
mitigating.
I
You
know
less
naturally
occurring
radioactive
residual
as
we're
going
through
the
process
of
purifying
that
water,
and
so
you
know
again
what
this
is
gonna
do
is
divert
big
Dry
Creek
a
little
bit
downstream
from
where
we're
actually
in
taking
our
water
source
and
again,
as
councilmember
Olson
pointed
out,
this
is
partially
being
funded
by
our
settlement
with
Denver
Water
for
six
hundred
thousand
to
the
tune
of
six
hundred
thousand.
So
again,
I'm
happy
to
see
this
come
true
and
I
know
a
lot
of
residents.
J
Appreciate
that
we're
taking
care
of
the
sludge
issue
along
with
us,
it's
important
to
the
citizens,
so
she's
been
going
on
for
a
year
and
a
half,
and
it's
important
that,
if
it's
addressing
it
that
we
own
that
and
celebrate
the
fact
that
we
care
about
their
citizens
safety
and
that
we're
doing
something
about
it.
And
if
there's
a
concern.
J
K
I
You
thank
you,
sir
I
can
move
us
on
to
agenda
item
10
public
hearing
item,
seeing
none
tonight,
I'll
move
us
on
to
agenda
item
11.
This
is
ordinance
resolutions
and
motions
under
11a
approval
of
ordinances.
On
first
reading
we
have
an
11
a
one.
This
is
council
bill
50.
This
is
amendments
to
the
International
Fire
Code
staff
recommends
the
City
Council,
adopt
a
bill
for
ordinance
amending
title.
A
chapter
2
Article
II
of
the
ink
would
municipal
code
2014
e2,
the
International
fire
code.
I
D
L
E
I
I
You
know
how
much
of
the
amendments
they
wanted
to
do
for
safety
of
the
firefighters,
especially
in
other
first
responders
and
while
trying
to
balance
what's
in
the
best
interests
of
Englewood
and
I,
know
that
this
is
sort
of
our
first
rodeo
and
attempt
to
do
that
and
appreciate
all
those
efforts
and
I
think
we're
gonna
end
up
in
a
good
spot
here.
Any
further
comments
on
this.
Seeing
none,
please
vote.
K
I
On
to
11,
moving
on
to
11
c1
VMware
software
licensing,
the
information
technology
department
recommends
council
approved
by
motion
the
purchase
of
VMware
EXI
version
6.5
for
$37,000
$37,000
and
90
cents
from
peak
resources.
Inc
this
purchase
will
upgrade
the
city's
virtual
computing
platform
to
the
latest
supported
version.
The
city
will
benefit
from
this
upgrade
with
added
stability,
security
and
versatile
versatility
that
the
enhancements
included
in
this
software
upgrade
provide
our
staff
sources
network
engineer,
Dan
secrecy,
Cypress
ty
was
missing,
I
see
Chris.
Thank
you.
Welcome.
T
J
F
G
So
actually,
council,
member
Russell
I
went
back
and
pulled
the
packet,
so
it
never
did
go
at
this
at
the
July
3rd
meeting.
It
was
a
mistake
made
on
the
minutes.
This
item
was
accidentally
exported
onto
the
minutes,
so
we
just
need
to.
We
need
to
amend
the
minutes
that
were
just
approved
because
that's
the
that's
where
the
correction
needs
to
be
made,
but
this
this
has
not
come
to
council
for
anything
previously.
So
I
apologize
for
that.
Okay.
F
J
I
J
G
J
I
Suggest
we
look
back
around
to
this
issue
here,
but
my
thought
is:
let's
take
care
of
some
of
these
staff
issues.
Let's
move
on
to
11
C
2.
This
is
resolution
for
2017
budget
supplemental
appropriation
for
citywide
document
management
solution
staff
recommends.
City
Council
approve
the
attached
resolution
for
a
supplemental
appropriation
of
a
citywide
document
management
solution,
our
staff
sources,
applications
manager,
Joe,
Eisenberg,.
U
U
Our
city
needs
a
document
management
system
to
manage
how
documents
are
stored,
maintained
and
release
and
throughout
the
course
of
the
of
the
document,
the
proposed
system
would
manage
the
entire
document
life
cycle,
including
creation,
or
ingesting
release
and
redaction
approval.
Where
applicable
and
retention
or
purging
of
those
documents.
We
considered
a
number
of
document
management
systems
when
we
were
making
this
decision,
a
couple
of
which
we
currently
home
the
city
currently
owns
trim
is
one
of
those
we
found.
U
U
U
More
importantly,
eye
compass
is
not
really
set
up
as
a
document
storage
solution
for
the
entire
organization.
It
is
a
very
costly
proposition.
We
currently
have
in
storage,
16
terabytes
of
data.
The
eye
compass
solution
only
offers
another
100
gigabytes
or
so
of
data
at
the
current
contract
gets
very
pricy
after
that.
So
we
we
believe,
that's
not
a
good
solution
for
us.
We
also
looked
at
the
tiler
content
management
solution.
This
is
an
enterprise
solution
offered
by
Tyler.
They
are
also
our
vendor
for
the
new
ERP
system.
U
They
do
satisfy
all
of
the
major
requirements
for
document
management
and
they
they
do
so
very
well.
Additionally,
they
provide
a
number
of
staff
resource
saving
measures
by
automatically
ingesting
documents.
Documents
created
within
new
world
are
automatically
classified
and
attached
to
the
records
that
they're
they're
intended
to
be
tat
attached
to.
They
also
provide
an
optical
character,
recognition
the
ability
to
populate
forms
through
that
optical
character,
recognition,
which
saves
us
time
in
researching
and
and
makes
that
document
that
much
more
alive
to
us
and
much
more
useful
to
us.
U
It
also
provides
retention
and
purging
capabilities
so
that
we
can
get
rid
of
documents
on
the
back
end
when
they're
no
longer
relevant
or
no
longer
needed,
and
it
offers
complex,
redaction
capability.
So
when
we
release
a
document
that
is,
that
needs
to
be
redacted
before
it
can
be
released
to
the
public,
it
provides
enhanced
capabilities
so
that
much
less
time
is
needed
to
redact
that
document
and
when
you're
talking
about
pages
and
pages.
Sometimes
that
can
be
a
significant
staff
resource
issue.
U
U
I'm,
sorry,
it's
gonna
be
more
dependable
for
us
integration
into
other
other
document
management
systems
are
going
to
be
more
clunky.
They're
gonna
be
a
point
of
failure
for
us.
I,
don't
think!
That's
something
that
that
we
can
afford
in
our
in
our
current
staffing
to
have
downtime
waiting
for
those
types
of
break
fixes.
So
staff
recommends
approval
by
motion.
The
resolution
to
2017
budget
supplemental
appropriation
for
a
citywide
document
management
solution.
F
U
Really
came
up
because
we
realized
what
the
what
the
capabilities
of
I
compass
was.
We
in
researching
that
and
understanding
that
we
wanted
a
product
that
would
handle
all
of
our
documents.
Citywide.
We
went
into
the
eye
compass
agreement
and
realized
that
we
only
had
a
hundred
gigabytes
of
additional
data
storage.
The
the
data
storage
with
meetings
and
agendas
is
unlimited,
but
when
you
go
to
other
documents
outside
of
meetings
in
agendas
it
it's
subject
to
that
limitation,
an
additional
500
gigabytes
of
data
with
if
I
compass
is
$9,500
a
year.
I
I
J
J
80,000
9,500
is
less
right,
I
mean
I
was
just
trying
to
wrap
my
head
around
there,
but
I
appreciate
what
you
said:
clarification
on
there
who
will
be.
Are
you
working
with
our
legal
department
for
the
process?
They
are
policies
and
procedures
for
retention.
What
we
would
redact
in
our
document
classification,
or
are
they
doing
that
or
how
are
they?
How
are
they
getting
that
information
to
make
that
decision.
C
C
S
J
S
S
J
V
J
It
also
says
that
it's
reducing
its
reducing
money,
as
if
we've
spent
it
in
June,
is
what
this
reads
and
so
I
I
can't,
while
I'd
like
to
change
the
past,
sometimes
I
can't
I
can't
change
I
can't
vote
in
July
for
something
that
would
affect
to
June,
and
that
seemed
to
be
how
this
was
reading.
So
I
was
confused.
The.
V
J
J
B
You
for
bringing
this
forward
I'm
excited
to
see
it
come
forward.
I
know.
Document
management
is
a
really
important
thing
and
I'm
really
happy
to
see
that
we're
gonna,
hopefully
get
it
all
into
one
place.
So
it's
a
lot
easier,
particularly
liked
the
search
ability.
I,
don't
know
if
we
have
that
capability
now,
but
I
know
that's
probably
really
important
going
forward
and
then
just
so
I'm
clear,
the
redaction,
how
we
currently
do
it
now
we
have
to
print
it
out
line
through
it,
scan
it,
no
okay
in
enhanced
version.
Okay,
thank
you.
F
My
questions
go
a
little
bit
more
to
the
budget,
and
so
this
seven
hundred
and
fifty
three
thousand
492
was
the
balance
in
that
fund
at
the
end
of
June.
Okay,
so,
and
we're
going
to
take
eighty
thousand
dollars
out
of
it.
Does
that
mean
on
the
unappropriated
fund
balance
in
the
budget
under
the
public
improvement
fund?
The
is
five
hundred
eighty
seven
thousand
three
fourteen,
so
that
means
we
only
have
less
than
two
hundred
thousand
to
spend
between
now
in
the
end
of
the
year.
V
Is
where
we
plan
to
end
each
project?
I
mean
we're
halfway
through
the
year,
so
there
could
be
some
adjustments,
but
we're
not
anticipating
any.
At
this
point,
we
do
review
that
monthly
with
the
directors
to
make
sure
that
they're
on
track
that
they're
not
seeing
any
under
runs
or
overruns.
Otherwise
we
would
have
trying
to
harvest
a
on
the
runs
if
there
were
any,
but.
V
I
F
V
V
F
J
Is
already
coming
out
of
there,
then
you
only
have
say
one
hundred
and
sixty
thousand
dollars
left
to
spend.
Could
you
tell
I
would
like
to
know
what's
left
that
you
intended
to
spend
that
we
had
already
planned
on
that's
going
to
bring
us
to
that
same
reserve
of
the
five
hundred
thousand
dollars
five
hundred
three.
J
J
To
spend
that
we
had
budgeted
that
has
not
yet
been
spent,
it's
only
a
hundred
and
sixty
thousand
that's
not
very
much.
That's
not
very
much
money,
so
I'd
kind
of
like
to
is
this
bumping
something
else
in
order
to
do
this
is
important
or
whether
we
just
intend
to
continue
to
eat
into
that
five
hundred
thousand
dollars,
I'd
like
to
just
probably
something
the
city
manager
will
end
up
having
to
tell
us,
but
that's
it's
just
important,
so
we
can
keep
track
I.
V
I
J
F
Actually
I
just
I
just
wanted
to
say
that
at
the
end
of
2016,
the
actual
I
guess
it's
estimated
actual
fund
unappropriated
fund
balance
was
1.7
million
dollars
and
we
at
the
end
of
June
are
down
to
seven
hundred
and
fifty
thousand
dollars.
So
we've
spent
a
substantial
amount
already
of
that
1.7
million
so.
V
T
F
B
I
I
I
You
would
like
to
move
us
on
to
11
c3.
This
is
the
engi
with
Littleton
wastewater
treatment,
plant
nurture
flying
trickling,
filter
pump
and
motor
repair
and
rebuild
project.
The
Englewood
Littleton
wastewater
treatment
plant
recommends
that
council
approved
by
motion
a
purchase
order,
agreement
with
Brimhall
industrial
to
repair
and
rebuild
nitrifying,
trickling
filter
pump
and
motor
p500,
one
in
the
amount
of
70,000
$285,
our
staff
sources,
engineering
and
maintenance
manager
changwu
good
evening.
Mr.
vu.
W
Good
evening
mayor,
thank
you
good
evening,
City
Council
this
evening.
I
have
a
series
of
three
equipment:
repair
projects
for
your
approval,
the
first
being
denied
refining,
tripping
filter,
pump,
repair
project.
So
not
you
find
trickling.
Filters
are
used
in
a
tertiary
treatment
system
to
remove
ammonia
from
the
wastewater.
We
have
three
nitrifying
trickling
filter
tanks.
Each
is
above
ground
have
24
vertical
feet
and
105
diameter
feet
of
cross
flow
media.
We
have
a
set
of
5
pumps
which
are
used
to
distribute
the
secondary
effluent
over
this
cross
flow
media.
That's
what
the
treatment
occurs.
W
Pump,
zero,
zero
one
has
shown
diminished
where
and
diminished
performance,
and
it
will
recommend
a
refurbishment.
We
received
two
quotes
from
qualified
equipment,
vendors
and
we're
recommending
Brimhall
industrial
in
the
amount
of
70
thousand
two
hundred
eighty
five
dollars.
This
project
was
budgeted
as
part
of
our
2017
engineering,
maintenance
division
budget
and
the
cost
will
be
shared
by
each
of
the
cities
of
england
in
littleton.
Thank
you
all
has
to
entertain
any
questions.
Thank
you.
Questions.
I
L
I
M
I
J
I
I
Moving
on
to
11
see
for
this
is
the
Englewood
Littleton
wastewater
treatment,
plant,
dewatering,
centrifuge
repair
and
rebuild
project.
The
Englewood
Littleton
wastewater
treatment
plant
recommends
that
council
approved
by
motion
a
purchase
order
agreement
with
Sen
sent
Reese's
and
Teresa's.
Thank
you.
Centrifuge
systems
to
repair
and
rebuild
dewatering
centrifuge
C
and
0-6
505
in
the
amount
of
$52,000
our
staff
source.
Once
again
is
engineering
and
maintenance
manager
chongwu
again
mr.
vu.
Thank
you.
J
This
is
bang
had
come
up
before
and
it
hasn't
yet
been
corrected,
but
we
talked
to
John
about
this,
making
sure
that
the
money
as
it's
coming
out
of
that
budgeted
item
shows,
what's
already
been
taken
out
and
where
the
worthy,
what
other
similar
to
the
issue
that
happened
before
what's
already
been
spent
out
of
that
money
and
what
we
still
have
left
in
there,
but
I
appreciate
that
you're
still
working
on
that
system.
So
you
don't
have
it
available
to
you,
but
just
keep
it
in
mind.
Okay,.
W
W
So,
lastly,
the
secondary
treatment
process
is
used
to
remove
solids
from
the
wastewater.
We
have
eight
dedicated
returns
secondary
sludge
pumps,
which
pumps
solids
back
into
the
treatment
system.
This
is
actually
used
to
provide
additional
food
source
for
the
microorganisms
and
also
provides
mass
to
allow
the
coagulation
and
the
settling
of
the
solids.
So
the
solids
are
actually
settled
out
in
our
secondary
clarifiers
and
then
transported
to
our
solids
processing
system,
where
they're,
actually
a
process
for
the
dewatering
operations,
so
it
pumps
for
52
and
for
72
are
scheduled
for
rebuild
and
refurbishment.
W
B
J
Just
to
comment,
because
it
was
made
to
me
on
the
budget
piece
that
no
matter
how
much
money
we
spend,
we
always
have
seven
hundred
and
two
thousand
dollars.
So
if
we
could
just
have
that
kind
of
kept
up,
consent
of
our
city
manager
was
out
room
when
I
made
the
comment
before
so
I
just
wanted
to
put
it
on
the
record
again
that
we
can
get
that'll
be
a
little
bit
more
realistic
understanding
of
where
we're
at
and
as
the
year
progresses.
Thank
you
I.
I
You,
sir
speaking
on
211
c6
as
his
appointment
of
arbitrator
staff,
recommends
that
the
city
council
appoint
by
motion
an
arbitrator
from
the
list
of
three
qualified
arbitrators
contained
within
this
report.
The
council
shall
choose
one
of
the
three
arbitrators
at
the
meeting
for
approval.
Our
staff
source
is
our
city
manager,
Erik,
kack,
kack,
Thank,.
T
You
mayor
members
of
council,
it's
unfortunate
that
I
have
to
be
in
front
of
you
this
evening
on
this
particular
matter
this.
This
does
not
happen
that
often,
obviously
this
is
my
first
collective
bargaining
agreement
here
with
the
city
other
than
the
inglewood
police
benefits
administration,
our
association,
which
was
done
last
year,
but
this
year,
when
negotiations
began
as
enunciated
in
the
city's
Charter
section,
1
37.5
collective
bargaining
did
begin
in
May
went
through
the
paces.
T
It
appeared
as
if
everything
was
moving
well
to
come
to
a
conclusion
that
would
be
amenable
to
both
the
EEA,
the
Inglewood
Employees
Association,
as
well
as
the
city
and
then
the
last
moment.
As
the
Association
held
their
vote,
they
voted
against
the
proposal
that
their
leadership
had
voiced.
Approval
of
with
our
negotiating
team
ends
forth
they've
submitted
at
the
last
second
and
impact
prior
to
the
city
charters
requirement
of
July
1st
that
they
were
going
to
him
pass
because
they
couldn't
come
to
agreement
as
required
by
the
city
charter.
At
this
point
in
time.
T
Unfortunately,
negotiation
is
through,
but
it
does
require
that
the
City,
Council
recommend
or
select
a
arbitrator.
That's
been
recommended
by
both
the
EEA
and
the
city
and
a
joint
fashion,
and
that's
why
you
have
the
three
names
that
are
before
you
this
evening
for
you
to
select
we're
not
making
a
recommendation
as
to
which
one
of
those
to
select
as
to
honor
the
language
of
them
and
within
the
Charter
itself,
and
the
expectation
is
that
this
evening,
according
again
to
the
charters
provisions,
the
council
would
select
that
arbitrator.
T
Who
would
hear
both
the
city's
position,
as
well
as
the
EE
as
final
position
and
then
make
a
determination
as
to
which
one
of
those
particular
particular
positions
they
would
select
and
that
would
be
implemented
via
the
city's
charter.
Be
happy
to
answer
any
questions
again.
This
is
kind
of
new
territory
for
for
me,
and
perhaps
also
for
you
as
a
council.
Thank.
J
Basically,
just
a
statement
last
time
when
this
came
up
before
us,
we
asked
for
some
information
about
what
the
impasse
was
and
I
know.
We
can't
get
a
lot
of
that
information,
but
I
want
to
thank
you
and
the
Employees
Association
for
working
together
on
this.
It
seems
that
we
are
not
that
far
apart
so
and
that's
kudos
to
both
sides
on
that
and
including
you
and
I
want
to
thank
you
for
that
that
it
has
come
to.
J
C
J
I
J
T
L
T
T
That
we
provided
you
the
three
arbitrators
that
were
jointly
selected
by
the
mountain
states
and
employers
counsel
who's
our
outside
counsel,
as
well
as
the
Inglewood
employee
associations
outside
counsel.
They
got
together,
look
through
a
short
list,
I
believe
of
arbitrators,
who
are
qualified
to
hear
this
particular
matter,
and
those
three
names
have
been
put
forward
to
you.
Yeah.
I
I
I
I
suppose
I'll
go
head
and
make
this
motion,
so
they've
got
this
language
in
front
of
me.
That
I
think
could
help
us
move
forward.
I'd
like
to
move
to
go
into
executive
session
for
the
conference.
Actually,
it's
basically
exactly
what
I
said
for
our
conference
with
the
city
attorney
for
the
purpose
of
receiving
legal
advice
on
a
specific
legal
questions
under
CRS
section
24,
6
402
for
V
do
I
hear
a
second
on
that.
J
I
J
S
I
I
L
I
You
the
time
is
now
9:14
p.m.
in
the
executive
session
will
be
hereby
concluded
with
this
vote.
The
participants
in
the
executive
session
Laurel
members
of
council
present
this
evening,
including
council
members,
Martinez
Yates,
Olsen,
Barrentine,
Russell
and
myself,
as
well
as
city
manager,
Eric,
Keck
city
attorney,
Allison,
McKinney
Brown,
as
well
as
Tom
Rendon
for
the
record.
I
If
any
person
who
participated
in
the
executive
session
believes
in
any
substantial
discussion
of
any
matters
not
included
in
the
motion
to
go
into
the
executive
session
occurred
during
the
session
or
that
any
improper
action
occurred
during
the
session
in
violation
of
the
Open
Meetings
law.
I
would
ask
you
to
state
your
concerns
for
the
record.
Seeing
none
please
vote.
B
I
said
most
of
my
council
member
choice
in
study
session,
but
along
with
study
session
I,
want
to
just
make
a
request
that
if
we
have
a
very
short
agenda
item
like
in
the
last
study
session,
we
only
had
one
agenda
item
and
it
was
in
the
ten
minutes
if
we
can
maybe
fill
it
up
with
other
agenda
items.
I
see
on
the
next
study
session,
we
have
like
five
things
listed,
so
just
want
to
make
sure
we
use
our
time,
usually
Thank.
A
Last
week
I
attended
the
the
well
it's
not
christening,
but
the
ribbon-cutting
for
the
building
of
the
new
townhomes
over
the
general
iron
very
exciting
for
a
community
and
it's
going
to
bring
a
lot
of
new
families
and
it's
gonna
help
transform
that
area
and
handle
some
of
the
issues
that
we
have
over
there.
So
that's.
L
Sorry
so
general
ironworks
I
wanted
to
say
that
that
was
really
fun
to
be
there
and
have
been
involved
for
so
long
with
that
property
to
see
this
come
to
some
again
beginning
of
the
last
stage
and
I
particularly
wanted
to
speak
to
the
the
part
of
it.
That
is
done.
The
phone
foundry,
which
is
really
accessible
housing
for
people
which
I
think
is
so
needed
in
this
environment,
and
what
I'm
really
getting
excited
about
is
seeing
developers
like
this
and
developments
like
this
that
helps
to
de
stratify.
L
G
L
The
judgment
call
that
you
made
that
it
would
be.
It
would
put
too
much
of
an
a
strain
on
you
to
go
further
on
some
things
and
that's
what
I
hope
all
of
our
staff
will
do
to
say.
You
know
what
this
one
goes
beyond
the
call
of
duty,
but
here's
what
we
can
do
it
was
excellent
and
I
thought
it
was
very
enlightening
for
me
to
see
that
we
had
about
a
hundred
90
95
requests
in
this
period
that
you
measured
almost
30%
of
them
from
one
particular
person.
L
I
think
that's
very
enlightening,
I'd
love
for
us
to
talk
as
a
council.
How
do
we
help
those
who
are
repeat
askers
find
ways
to
access
information
where
it
clearly-
and
maybe
it's
a
tutorial-
I,
don't
know
what,
but
we
have
such
open
government
stuff
now
that
I
would
hope
that
no
one
feels
like
they
can't
do
that
themselves
and
but
I
know
it's
not
always
easy.
L
So
in
that
mind
and
given
what
our
attorney
has
given
us
about,
we
can
add
youth
I
would
like
to
ask
that
we
look
to
add
youth
on
every
single
council.
We
have
as
our
every
single
yet
council
to
maybe
every
single
board
in
Commission,
and
so,
if
we
can,
if
we're
all
in
agreement
with
that,
to
find
a
way
to
move
that
forward,
maybe
we
have
to
quick
study
session
on
it,
but
I
think
I
hope
that
we
can
get
to
the
point
where
our
youth
are
very
active
in
each
of
ours.
L
T
L
J
I
really
would
like
to
see
whether
those
cities
that
they
came
back
on
your
council
request
for
that
information
mayor
Jefferson,
exactly
how
those
cities
integrate
that,
whether
they
have
youth
members
on
individual
boards
or
whether
they
just
have
that
Youth
Council
and
maybe
the
Youth
Council,
can
assign
some
of
their
members
to
attend
words.
I,
don't
know
how
that
would
look,
but
I
think
we
might
be
able
to
rain
that
in
a
little
bit.
J
C
J
J
J
The
2017
legislative
update
I
also
attended
the
healing
divisions
in
governing
body
and
also
had
an
opportunity.
It
was
at
the
same
time
to
talk
to
the
people
who
did
the
marijuana
in
Colorado
and
I'm,
hoping
there
is
a
huge
impact
and
the
black
market
increase
and
I'm
hoping
to
have
George
Brock
ler,
our
District
Attorney,
come
to
our
town-hall
meeting.
Rita
and
I
are
going
to
be
doing
another
joint
meeting
and
we
can
get
him
in
in
August
to
kind
of
talk
about
some
of
the
issues
that
have
been
going
on
in
Arapahoe
County.
J
Well,
he
does
a
five-county
area,
but
it
impacts
us
Aaron
and
information
was
really
really
pretty
important
and
then
some
mixed
use.
The
local
government
and
cyber
security
threats
was
amazing.
Presentation
and
I
had
the
opportunity
with,
along
with
mayor
Jefferson,
to
attend
the
attorneys
lunch
and
talking
about
land
use
over
the
last
hundred
years
and
they're
really
focused
on
a
lot
on
the
highlands
ranch
and
how
that
went
through
and
the
water
rights
that
went
with
that
land
and
how
that
developed.
It's
come
up
a
couple
of
times
about
having
a
plan
development.
J
If
you
go
to
the
Arapahoe
County
Clerk
recorders
office,
you
can
take
some
really
huge
books
and
look
at
how
englewood
heights
was
planned
as
a
subdivision
with
the
school
with
all
of
its.
These
were
planned
communities
when
we
put
them
in
how
we're
planning
them
for
the
future
might
be
a
little
bit
different
because
they
had
open
land
when
they
were
doing
it,
but
they
were
planned
communities
and
how
we're
dealing
with
that
moving
in
the
fort
of
future
and
how
we're
planning
that
is
is
as
important
to
but
I
really
I
really
enjoyed.
J
I
think
she
was
from
Yale
or
something
when
she
actually
brought
it
down
so
that
all
the
attorneys
in
the
room
could
understand
it,
and
even
I
got
a
little
bit
out
of
it
too.
So
I
enjoyed
the
conference
and
I
was
glad.
I
had
an
opportunity,
go
sometimes
just
sign
up
for
things,
and
then
you
find
out
other
things
are
just
a
little
more,
and
you
know
you
hear
good
stuff
about
them.
So
you
kind
of
ditch
yours
and
go
to
something
else.
J
The
Iron
Works
grand
opening
great,
like
everybody
else,
ditto
to
what
everybody
else
was
said
to
have
single-family
homes,
townhomes
and
condos.
That
is
not
the
only
project.
If
you
look
at
our
community
development,
that's
going
in
where
they're
building
at
townhomes
and
condos,
so
we're
very
fortunate
that
that
is
moving
into
our
area.
But
it
was
nice
to
go
to
that
groundbreaking.
I
thought
it
was
a
ribbon-cutting,
but
we
ribbon
cut
a
hole
in
the
ground,
so
it
was
the
pre-sales
and
stuff
that
they
were
doing
so
and
it
was
a
nice
event.
J
It
was
really
nice
talking
to
them
gets
me
into
the
urban
renewal
that
read
and
I
councilmember,
Russell
and
I
attended
on
Friday
for
the
urban
renewal,
training
and
I
know
she'll
go
into
that
more,
but
the
owner
of
that
property
and
the
developer
are
are
very
interested
in
getting
rid
of
that
urban
renewal
plan
area
there,
because
that
could
cause
them
some
problems
in
the
future,
and
it's
only
9
years
left
to
that.
But
I
know
she'll
go
into
that
training,
more
Denver.
The
way
they
handle
things
have
listened
I've
been
to
I.
J
Think
three
presentations
by
the
dura
Denver
urban
renewal,
Authority
executive,
director,
Tracy
Higgins
and
just
really
appreciate
the
way
that
she
handles.
What's
going
on
with
Denver
and
the
kind
of
strict
parameters
that
they
used
to
go
ahead
and
protect
the
public
money
and
also
make
a
good
utilization
of
urban
renewal
when
it's
appropriate.
If
it's
appropriate
I
had
an
opportunity
to.
J
Attend
the
Englewood
Housing
Authority
meeting
and
there
are
some
concern
in
the
way
that
the
executive
sessions
are
being
handled.
I
did
let
the
city
attorney
know
there
was
an
executive
session
in
June
and
all
the
executive
sessions
said
was
that
they
were
going
to
be
purchasing
some
land.
They
came
out
of
executive
session.
They
made
the
decision
to
purchase
land
without
identifying
the
land
or
the
amount
of
money.
That's
going
on.
What's
involved
with
this,
and
so
in
July.
J
The
behalf
of
constituent
I
did
notify
them
that
there
was
potential
for
a
protest
on
that
executive
session,
where
they
informed
me
that
they
did
not
record
the
executive
session.
They
had
no
attorney
present.
It
was
not
for
legal
advice
and
so
we're
going
to
try
and
I
guess
make
sure
that
all
of
our
boards
and
commissions
are
on
the
same
page
as
far
as
open
meetings
going
into
executive
session
record
retention,
and
hopefully
we
can
go
ahead
and
get
them
in
line.
C
J
Then
we
had
a
really
good
chamber
event.
The
second
Friday
coffee
was
at
Integrative
pediatric
health
care,
which
is
around
Gerrard
place
where
the
old
blockbuster
used
to
be
it's
a
beautiful
building,
and
it
turns
out
that
the
people
that
a
mother
and
daughter
who
are
doing
this
business,
no
all
of
the
doctors
and
nurses
that
I
dealt
with
for
the
last
21
years.
From
the
time
my
son
was
born
and
they
had
worked
at
Children's
Hospital
and
the
special
care
clinics.
J
J
Disciplines
in
order
to
make
sure
that
people
are
getting
that
help,
whether
it's
occupational
therapy,
physical
therapy,
respiratory
therapy,
making
sure
that
there's
a
whole
a
holistic
approach
to
care
and
just
beautiful
facility
in
the
way
that
they've
designed
this
and
I
wish
them
all.
The
best
of
luck
and
I'm
really
grateful
the
chamber
is
doing
doing
these
coffee's.
J
It's
been
really
eye-opening
to
see
the
variety
of
businesses
that
we
have
in
our
community
and
then
our
Town
Hall
was
this
last
Thursday
comes
remember:
Russell
and
I
had
Arapahoe
County,
Sheriff
Dave
Walter
come
and
we
we
had
pretty
good
attendance.
He
hit
on
a
wide
variety
of
issues
and
I
think
he
handled
himself
very
well
answered
a
lot
of
questions
stayed
afterwards.
People
really
enjoyed
the
opportunity
to
see
the
other
levels
of
service
and
his
elected
official
in
Arapahoe
County.
J
You
know
because
a
lot
of
what's
going
on
in
Centennial
and
other
areas
affect
us,
but
he
is
the
Arapahoe
County
Sheriff
and
he
does
have
jurisdiction
in
Englewood
as
well.
So
what
his
role
is
here,
how
he
works
in
Arapahoe
County?
What
the
other
jobs
he
does
and
what
he's
seeing
and
it
was
it
was
just
really
interesting.
F
Actually,
I'm
going
to
forgo
on
a
couple
of
them
because
councilmember
Barrentine
covered
it
very
well.
The
town
hall
meeting
did
go
very
well
and
I
was
a
very
thankful
that
Reid
McGrath
came
and
just
really
thankful
for
the
police
support
here.
Also-
and
so
thank
you
for
that.
I
also
went
to
the
Urban
Renewal
training
by
downtown
Colorado
Inc,
and
there
were
two
parts
of
the
I
mean.
F
There
was
a
lot
of
information
that
I
learned,
but
the
two
parts
to
me
that
we're
really
informative
was
Tracy
Higgins
from
Denver
urban
renewal
Authority
and
she
had
four
points
that
they
base.
Everything
on
and
and
key
number
one
was
Sound
City
planning
in
planning.
Your
city
number
two
respect
your
mandate
and
the
mandate.
Their
mandates
are
two
things.
F
The
factors
of
slum
and
blight
must
be
present
and
number
two
blight
is
prohibiting
development
in
the
area
I
mean
an
area
may
be
blighted,
but
if
it's
not
prohibiting
development,
because
there
are
blighted
areas
where
development
will
come
in,
then
they
don't
take
it
number
three
is
always
limit.
The
public
risk
and
I
thought
this
was
very
important
on
the
she
said
that
the
city
should
always
be
the
last
entity
to
put
dollars
in,
and
the
developer
needs
to
be
at
risk,
not
the
city.
F
They
need
to
their
to
invest
their
dollars.
First,
to
minimize
the
risk
to
the
public
and
then
number
four
is
value.
Your
partners,
and
one
thing
that
I
believe
she
talked
about,
was
getting
for
House
bill
38,
going
ahead
and
moving
forward
by
getting
a
county
commissioner
on
the
board,
also
to
represent
their
interest
and
also
school
districts
or
any
special
Metro
districts,
so
that
they're
represented
on
the
Urban
Renewal
Authority.
So
I
don't
know
if
that's
something
that
we
might
need
to
address.
F
The
other
thing
I
did
go
to.
Oh
one
other
thing
at
the
downtown
Colorado
Inc.
The
other
thing
that
was
very
interesting
is
Adams.
County,
Commissioners
came
and
presented
in
and
their
interest
in
how
they
work
with
the
different
communities
in
their
County.
But
the
one
thing
that
they
talked
about
was
oh,
that
smelting
building,
that
is
it
a
rat,
Arak
Arco
or
something
like
that
where
they
used
to
smelt
things
and
they
they
could
not
clean
it
up.
F
The
county
could
not
clean
it
up
by
themselves,
so
they
went
to
Denver
and
partnered
with
Denver,
because
that
was
a
pretty
huge
plan.
So
it
was.
It
was
a
worthwhile
training
and
just
thank
you
for
the
opportunity
to
attend
that
the
other
thing
I
did
go
to
coffee
with
the
chamber
and
I
have
met
a
lot
of
amazing
people
who
have
businesses
in
Englewood
and
and
I
always
enjoy
it.
So,
thank
you
very
much.
You.
I
You
know
just
wanted
to
respond
to
a
couple
of
the
member
choice
here
tonight.
You
know
I
appreciate
the
comment
regarding
the
study
session
agenda.
I
wanted
to
assure
council
that
you
know
the
city
manager
as
well
as
the
Mayor
Pro,
Tem
and
I
are
meeting
on
a
regular
basis
on
it.
You
know
at
least
weekly
to
make
sure
we're
as
effective
as
we
can
be.
I
I
did
want
to
just
share
with
Council,
for
your
benefit
that
we
did
have
an
item
removed
that
tonight's
agenda
that
was
scheduled
in
I
believe
that
was
a
small
cell
issue.
My
understanding
is
that
staff
just
wasn't
quite
for
you
know
ready
for
that
conversation,
given
that
we
had
had
some
conversation
with
some
service
providers
and
we
realized
we
had
a
little
more
time
than
we
thought
and
so
in
order
in
effort
to
be
as
diligent
as
possible,
I
believe
the
City
Attorney's
Office
was
asking
for
some
additional
time.
I
We
certainly
identified
that
we
had
an
hour
to
fill
and
mr.
Keck
beat
the
bushes
as
much
as
possible
during
his
staff
meetings
to
try
to
figure
out
some
agenda
items
to
bring
forward.
So
you
know
I
just
want
to
assure
everyone.
We
are
trying
to
be
as
effective
as
possible
in
that
regard.
I
appreciated
the
comments
regarding
the
Youth,
Commission
and
ideas
about
you
know,
potentially
adding
them
to
all
or
potentially
having
an
individual
Youth
Commission
in
and
of
itself
that
might
branch
out.
I
You
know
I'll
suggest
that
we
should
probably
have
a
study
session
on
this
topic.
You
know
you
know,
probably
in
September,
we're
probably
into
about
September
now
on.
You
know
some
of
these
issues.
You
know
I
also
want
to
do
a
short
council
that
a
study
session
on
our
only
urban
renewal
area
is
already
penciled
in
and
on
the
general
iron
site.
So
we
should
see
that
coming
forward
relatively
soon
city
manager's
report,
yeah.
T
T
L
T
And
now
that
Stephanie's
back,
we
need
to
embarrass
her,
not
embarrass
her.
We
want
to
congratulate
her
talking
about
you.
While
you
were
gone,
you
know
it's
interesting,
I'm
I
am
glad.
I
got
to
go
because
you
learn
interesting
things
about
your
employees
and
we
we
heard
that
she
is
an
accomplished
dancer
and
I
would
have
known
this
if
we
wouldn't
have
gone
to
this
event.
So
sometimes
she'll
have
to
show
her
craft.