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From YouTube: Regular City Council 03 Oct 2016
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B
A
E
A
A
F
A
If
council
will
indulge
me
before
we
move
on
to
agenda
item
six,
we
do
have
a
special
guest
in
our
audience.
Mr.
Jim
ruffle
from
JW
ruffle
metals
foundry
Inc
is
here
I
believe
this
evening
is
Jim
here
this
evening.
Excellent.
So
if
you'd
mind
coming
to
the
podium,
I
would
really
appreciate
that
and
any
other
your
son
or
any
other
representatives
I
did
want.
A
I
did
hear
from
the
community
that
there
was
an
incident
in
the
city
of
Inglewood
last
week
and
Jim
was
able
to
help
save
his
life
by
stopping
a
person
from
choking
and
I
did
want
to
present
this
certificate
to
Jim
and
I'll.
Read
it
here
for
the
record,
a
certificate
of
recognition
for
extraordinary
personal
action
presented
to
Jim
ruffle
as
mayor
of
the
city
of
Inglewood
I.
A
Do
certify
that
at
this
October
3rd
2016
meeting
of
the
Inglewood
City
Council
Jim
ruffle
is
hereby
presented
a
certificate
of
recognition
for
using
life-saving
skills
that
saved
a
human
life,
signed
Joe
Jefferson
mayor
of
the
city
of
Inglewood.
It's
really
an
honor
to
have
folks
like
that
in
our
community,
who
are
willing
to
help
up
and
step
up
and
help
their
neighbors
I
hear
so
often
from
folks
in
our
community
that
the
small
town,
value
and
vibe
of
our
community
and
willingness
to
help
each
other
out
is
what
separates
us
from
other
communities.
A
G
H
A
A
Thank
you
for
indulging
me.
Everyone
moving
onto
agenda
item
six
is
recognition
of
scheduled
public
comment.
Our
first
speaker,
Scott
Gorski
from
citizens
for
Englewood
schools,
will
address
Council
regarding
the
noir
2016
election
bond
issue.
Mr.
Gorsky
doesn't
look
like
he's
here
to
see
oh
geez
I
didn't
see
it
freak
you
snuck
up
on
me.
Welcome
back
mr.
Gorsky.
I
I
I
It
has
been
a
great
experience
for
myself
and
my
family
I'm
very
happy
to
say
that
currently
my
daughter,
who
is
four
and
a
half
years
old,
is
attending
Maddox
Early
Childhood,
Center
right
down
the
street
and
I
am
very
happy
to
see
some
of
the
fruits
of
my
labor,
as
I
did
spend
eight
years
on
the
board
of
education
within
the
city
of
Inglewood.
I
am
also
an
educator
for
the
last
15
plus
years.
I
My
work
has
brought
me
to
30-plus
schools
within
six
to
seven
districts
throughout
the
Denver
metro
area,
on
a
very
consistent
and
regular
basis.
The
reason
why
I'm
here
today
is
because
recently
I
was
able
to
facilitate
a
long
range
of
facilities,
planning
committee
that
consisted
of
approximately
28
community
members.
We
spent
over
22
hours
touring
facilities,
asking
questions
asking
for
further
information
and
really
trying
to
get
down
to
what
the
needs
of
our
students
currently
are,
and
I
must
say
that
I
did
bring.
I
I
J
I
J
I
Of
lunch,
it's
because
we
are
currently
unable
to
serve
our
students
appropriately
within
the
environment
and
given
the
current
facilities
that
we
do
have
next
thing
is,
is
that
are
our
gymnasiums
are
quite
small?
We
do
share
facilities,
we
do
share
those
facilities,
and
I
will
say
that
our
facilities
are
very
small.
We
have
to
have
many
specials,
so
many
rotations
of
gym
facilities
are
just
not
there
and,
most
importantly,
here
is
our
classrooms.
Our
classrooms
are
not
in
great
shape.
We
have
classrooms
that
make
a
lot
of
noise.
I
It
makes
it
very
non
conducive
for
our
students
to
learn,
and
then
last
but
not
least,
are
currently
utilizing
when
we
are
outside
regular
school
hours.
Okay,
I
basically
say
to
everyone
that
there's
a
lot
of
traffic
going
on
within
next-door.
A
lot
of
that
traffic
is
not
supported
by
facts
and
information.
I
would
invite
any
and
all
of
you
to
visit
the
County
Assessor's
Office.
You
can
see
what
property
taxes
you
are
currently
paying.
I
We
do
have
the
seamier
homestead
exemption
act,
which
basically
allows
for
seniors
to
write
off
the
first
$200,000
50%
of
that
amount.
If
there
is
financial
hardship,
the
other
thing
that
I
want
to
say
is
that
I
believe
that
when
I
was
board,
president
I
was
a
good
steward
of
the
money.
If
you
currently
look
at
our
tech
facility,
okay,
our
tech
campus
and
our
rebuilt
Colorado's
finest.
We
are
offering
many
21st
century
opportunities
for
our
students,
and
it
is
about
time
because
we
promised
the
taxpayers
in
the
community.
I
The
other
thing
that
I
would
just
like
to
say
is
that
there
has
been
a
lot
of
traffic
as
I
said
outside
of
meetings
outside
of
you
know,
just
a
general
area,
and
that
I
would
invite
each
and
every
one
of
you
council
members,
along
with
the
regular
community,
to
attend
either
on
October
6th
at
Charles
hay
world
school
at
6:00
p.m.
or
October
12th,
at
jerilyn,
at
6:00
p.m.
to
attend
a
community
forum
where
we
will
be
able
to
answer
any
questions
that
citizens
might
have
and
to
end
it
all.
I
It's
approximately
six
dollars
and
fifty
cents
per
assessed
value
of
a
hundred
thousand
dollars
and,
as
we
all
know
right
now,
the
assessed
value
for
what
our
homes
are
currently
selling
for
is
drastically
different
and
that
can
only
ratchet
up
every
two
years.
So
with
that.
I
would
just
welcome
the
opportunity
for
any
of
you
to
ask
any
questions
that
you
may
have
and
thank.
A
I
A
You
thank
you.
Our
next
speaker
is
Duane
Tucker
also
from
citizens
for
Englewood
schools
will
address
council
regarding
the
November
2016
election
bond
issue.
Mr.
Tucker,
here,
okay,
we'll
move
on
to
our
next
speaker
in
that
case,
which
is
Scott
Gilbert
englidh
resident,
will
address
council
regarding
council
meeting
start
time
good
evening.
Mr.
Gilbert.
K
Good
evening
mayor
members
of
council,
Scott
Gilbert
44
25,
South
Fox.
You
know
when
you
came
out
of
the
last
meeting
and
there
was
some
talk
about
starting
meetings
at
6:00.
I
did
so
much
great
math,
I
I
checked
the
start
times
of
46
council
meetings
in
the
seven-county
metro
area.
I
ran
the
demographics
of
different
cities
based
on
their
starting
times,
and
then
you
came
through
with
an
ordinance
that
starts
at
at
7:00,
and
so
you
gave
me
a
pretty
good
math
workout,
but
anyway,
I
think
that
starting
time
of
seven
would
work.
K
Okay
with
inkle
woods,
working
population
and
we
are
a
not
to
be
a
loaded
term,
but
largely
a
working
class
city.
We
have
a
significantly
lower
median
household
income
than
cities.
With
meetings
that
start
earlier.
People
in
this
city
work
long
hours
they
get
home.
If
they
want
to
come
here
and
take
part,
they
a
six
o'clock
start
just
really
wouldn't
work.
A
seven
o'clock
start
should
work
considerably
better
for
him.
K
Seven
o'clock
start
would
put
a
squarely
in
line
with
not
only
the
majority
of
cities
around
the
metro
area,
a
25
out
of
46,
but
it
would.
It
would
also
accommodate
our
citizens
and
I
guess
I'm,
not
using
up
my
five
minutes,
but
that's
about
it.
I
hope
you
go
with
the
seven
and
thanks
for
your
time.
Thank.
A
L
Council
Brian
Brock
housing,
48,
10,
South,
Fox,
I'm
gonna,
use
a
few
hypotheticals
tonight.
/,
you
bear
with
me
a
little
bit
miss
Martinez
my
question,
for
you
would
be.
How
would
you
feel
if
your
father,
who
has
bad
knees
one's
been
replaced?
The
other
one
needs
it
has
a
rapidly
deteriorated
and
hip
has
crushed
back.
He
can't
sleep
at
night
without
oxygen
because
he
has
heart
problems.
He
has
a
hole
in
his
lung.
At
times
he
can't
even
move
room
to
room
throughout
his
home
because
of
the
pain
he
has.
L
A
caretaker
who
loves
him
cares
for
him.
Is
there
all
the
time
we'll
stop
at
nothing
to
be
sure
his
needs
are
met
and
that
he's
comfortable
and
the
city
comes
along
and
tells
your
father.
We
don't
care
about
you.
We
don't
care
about
your
problems.
Your
caretaker
has
to
go
mr.
Yates,
your
mother
struggled
with
lifelong
obesity
because
of
results,
tough,
just
extreme
damage
to
her
bones
and
the
joints
in
her
body
as
diabetes,
neuropathy
and
her
feet
and
legs
at
times.
L
She
can
hardly
move
throughout
her
own
home
because
the
pain
is
so
great.
She
has
a
caretaker
who
loves
her
and
will
stop
at
nothing
to
be
sure
her
needs
are
met
and
that
she's
comfortable.
Yet
the
city
comes
along
and
says
we
don't
care
about
you
or
your
problems.
Your
caretaker
has
to
go
dr.
Olsen
say
you
have
a
brother,
he
has
a
kidney
disease,
his
body
mass
produces
stones.
L
The
only
thing
is
these
aren't
stones
at
all
they're
little
crystals
with
sharp
points,
the
serrated
edges
they
rip
and
tear,
and
lastly,
at
the
inside
of
his
body
as
it
passed
through,
you've
seen
him
past
stones
up
to
3/8
of
an
inch
in
diameter.
He's
had
dozens
of
surgeries
because
these
stones,
these
crystals,
grow
to
over
an
inch
in
diameter
and
they
block
his
kidneys.
His
yogurt,
yes,
caretakers
loves
him
will
stop
at
nothing.
To
be
sure
that
he's
taking
care
of
his
needs
are
met
at
times.
L
L
L
It
says
the
plaintiffs
are
wrongly
seeking
supplement
what
should
be
an
issue
for
legislation,
decision,
discussion
and
action
legislation.
You
are
our
legislation
and
by
tonight,
by
not
standing
against
this
horrible
piece
of
legislation
and
not
calling
to
repeal
it.
Mr.
chilly,
you
are
personally
telling
my
family
I.
Don't
care
about
you
I!
Don't
care
about
your
problems.
Your
caretaker
has
to
go
mrs.
Martinez.
You
are
personally
telling
my
family
I.
Don't
care
about
you.
We
don't
care
about
your
problems.
Your
caretaker
has
to
go
mr.
Yates.
You
are
personally
telling
my
family
I.
L
Don't
care
about
you
I!
Don't
care
about
your
problem
as
your
caretaker
has
to
go,
marry
Jefferson,
you're
personally
telling
my
family.
We
don't
care
about
you.
We
don't
care
about
your
problems.
Your
caretaker
has
to
go
dr.
Olsen.
You
two
are
personally
telling
my
family.
We
don't
care
about
you.
We
don't
care
about
your
problems.
Your
caretaker
has
to
go.
Miss
Barrentine,
your
telling
my
family
personally
that
I
don't
care
about
you
I!
Don't
care
about
your
problems!
Your
caretaker
has
to
go.
Miss
Russell!
You
are
personally
telling
my
family
I.
Don't
care
about!
L
You
I
don't
care
about
your
problems.
Your
caretaker
has
to
go
I'm
asking
this
council
tonight
to
please
take
a
stand
against
the
piece
that
is
bad.
Legislation
has
been
in
front
of
you
since
the
1st
of
August.
You
guys
have
seen
the
research
there's
not
been
one
person
on
the
residency
in
Inglewood
since
the
inception
that
has
acted
out
at
one
of
your
schools
parks,
a
swimming
pool,
not
one
we've
been
challenged.
Mr.
L
hellström
has
stood
here
and
said:
I
would
like
to
see
people
birth,
cattle,
supposedly,
there's
opposition
out
there,
people
who
would
stand
firmly
against
us,
but
we've
yet
to
see
anybody
I've
got
to
get
anything
out
of
my
community
out
of
the
supporters
other
than
support
your
constituents
are
out
here
tonight.
I
just
hope
that
as
they
come
up
and
listen
or
speak
that
we'll
listen,
I'll
have
some
ears
and
some
compassion,
please
I've
grown
in
empathy.
That's
why
I'm
here!
That's
why
I'm
strong?
Can
you
thank
you
thank.
A
You,
sir
see
if
you
have
any
questions
from
Council
for
you
seeing
none.
Oh
thank
you
for
coming
and
speaking
this
evening.
Our
next
speaker
is
John
Oden,
Meyer
bodenheimer.
Excuse
me.
I
still
may
have
butchered
that
I
leave
you
an
opportunity
to
correct
me
on
the
record,
but
we'll
address
council
regarding
residency
restrictions
for
sex
offenders
good
evening,
sir,
that.
M
Was
perfect
the
second
time
Maggie
good
evening?
My
name
is
John
Oden
Hamer
I
live
at
39,
73
East
castilla
Avenue
in
Centennial,
Colorado
I
was
here
on
August
15th,
so
I
won't
go
into
detail
tonight.
Regarding
my
background,
however,
as
a
reminder
I
want
to,
let
you
know,
I
would
remind
you
that
I
was
with
the
probation
department
in
the
18th
Judicial
District,
supervising
our
adult
sex
offender
supervision
unit
when
the
Inglewood
residency
restrictions
for
sex
offenders
were
born.
M
Tonight,
I
would
like
to
take
you
back
to
that
event.
In
2006
we
had
a
60
something-year-old
sex
offender
who
sexually
assaulted
his
step
grandson
and
during
the
pendency
of
the
investigation
he
intimidated
and
threatened
the
child's
parents.
Now
keeping
in
mind
that
the
child's
parents
were
his
stepdaughter
and
her
husband.
M
He
was
charged
in
two
felony
cases,
one
for
sexual
assault
on
a
child
by
a
person
in
position
of
trust
and
the
other
for
victim
witness
intimidation.
He
took
a
plea
in
both
cases
and
was
sentenced
to
two
or
three
years
in
prison
on
the
victim
intimidation
case
and
he
was
sentenced
to
ten
years
to
life
probation
on
the
child
sexual
assault
case.
M
Also
at
sentencing
he
was
designated
as
a
sexually
violent,
predator,
so,
prior
to
being
released
from
prison.
A
meeting
was
held
at
the
Inglewood
Police
Department
to
begin
the
planning
process
for
the
sexually
violent,
predator
community
notification
meeting
that
would
take
place
in
Inglewood
because
the
plan
was
for
this
offender
to
temporarily
reside
in
Inglewood,
while
being
supervised
by
both
probation
and
parole
on
a
GPS
ankle,
monitor
and
in
sex
offender
treatment.
M
Present
at
the
meeting
were
two
representatives
from
probation
from
parole.
The
sex
offender
management
board
the
treatment
program
he
would
be
attending
a
victim
representative,
the
Inglewood
police
chief,
as
well
as
various
other
personnel
from
the
police
department
and
city
manager,
Gary
Sears
at
the
meeting.
As
the
meeting
progressed,
mr.
Sears
was
noticeably
upset
at
one
point.
He
looked
at
me
and
said
my
switchboards
gonna
light
up
like
a
Christmas
tree
when
residents
find
out
this
sex
offenders
living
in
Inglewood.
M
Mr.
Sears
was
livid
as
it
turned
out.
The
offender
never
was
released
into
the
community
at
that
time
for
different
reasons,
and
the
community
notification
meeting
never
happened
regardless
very
soon.
After
the
ink
would
planning
meeting
mr.
Sears
initiated
actions
which
resulted
in
the
sex
offender
residency
restrictions
which
exist
in
the
city
of
Inglewood
today,
fear
and
anger.
M
M
These
are
not
standards
on
which
to
governor
there's,
no
research
to
show
that
any
community
is
safer
with
sex
offender,
residency
restrictions,
90
percent
of
child
sexual
abuse
is
perpetrated
by
family
members
or
others
known
to
the
child
or
his
or
her
family
and
the
tent
and
the
strangers
who
perpetrate
10
percent
of
the
child.
Sexual
abuse,
don't
do
it
in
their
own
communities.
M
Community
programs
aimed
at
enlightening
adults
and
children,
are
effective
in
teaching
all
of
us
how
to
keep
children
safe,
proactive
efforts
are
helpful.
Passive
passive
constraints
are
not
productive.
The
recidivism
rate
among
supervised
sex
offenders
and
treatment
and
post
treatment
is
very
small.
M
Residency
restrictions
make
no
one
safer.
They
do
nothing
to
make
sex
offenders
more
accountable
or
better
suited
to
really
reintegrate
safely
in
the
community.
The
best
way
to
achieve
accountability
and
community
safety
is
for
the
offender
to
be
engaged
in
supervision
and
treatment
and
to
register
in
the
community
in
which
he
lives.
Thank
you.
H
M
M
I
forget
which
facility
he
was
in
to
the
diagnostic
facility
in
Denver
and
that
parole
would
go
and
pick
him
up
from
the
diagnostic
facility
in
Denver
and
bring
him
to
the
parole
office
in
Inglewood
myself
and
the
probation
officer
who
was
going
to
be
supervising
him,
went
to
the
Inglewood
parole
office
to
meet
with
him
to
issue
his
terms
and
conditions
of
probation.
The
treatment
or
someone
from
treatment
also
went
to
that
office.
The
offender
was
still
in
denial.
He
was
in
denial
when
he
went
to
court.
M
He
was
in
denial
when
he
went
to
prison
and
he
was
still
in
denial
when
he
went
from
the
diagnostic
facility
to
the
Inglewood
parole
office
on
that
morning,
parole
then
designated
him
to
be
in
violation
of
the
of
the
parole
agreement
and
and
they
violated
his
parole,
not
probation
but
his
parole,
and
he
went
back
to
prison
shortly
thereafter.
He
got
out
later
on
and
we
in
probation
had
made
the
decision
that,
because
I
mentioned
that
he
was
in
the
18th
district,
he
was
sentenced
out
of
the
18th
Judicial
District.
H
B
N
M
So
so
he
never
did
get
out
in
the
community
at
that
time.
But
it
was
immediately
after
the
meeting
that
mr.
Sears
initiated
whatever
he
initiated,
to
get
to
the
residency
restrictions
that
exist
today
when
he
ended
up
getting
released
a
year
or
so
after
that
he
went
into
into
a
facility
in
Castle
Rock,
because
he
was
actually
sentenced
out
of
Douglas
County.
And
it's.
H
Not
whose
case
I'm
interested
in
I'm
interested
in
considering
I
was
on
counsel
at
the
time
whether
I
was
lied
to
or
not,
and
for
the
information
that
we
were
given
at
the
time,
and
so
is
it
possible
for
you
to
provide
I've,
been
told
several
stories
about
what
happened
with
it,
but
exactly
at
the
time
when
we
did
that
emergency
ordinance,
whether
or
not
he
had
already
violated
his
probation
or
whether
he
was
still
possibly
coming
in,
because
it
seemed
to
all
happen.
Just
for
my
own
edification.
M
H
M
A
O
A
J
Dickerson
28
35,
South
Pennsylvania
here
in
Inglewood
and
good
evening,
communications
and
organization
and
actions
in
the
city
are
not
just
misleading
but
are
somewhat
out
of
control
and
not
working
to
the
benefit
of
and
trust
by,
the
citizens
when
a
political
consultant
can
take
over
city
publications,
which
is
not
part
of
his
contract,
spin,
the
facts
and
in
at
least
two
instances,
outright
lie
about
council's
actions
and
reasons
on
a
bond
issue,
presumably
to
gain
extra
fees.
That
is
very
wrong.
J
The
city
has
allowed
this
to
happen
and
failed
to
act
and
correct
the
initial
mistake
and
contract
and
with
mile
high
in
the
first
place.
I
am
afraid
that
the
newest
proposed
communications
consultant
cahoots,
which
has
a
negative
connotation
on
the
name
altogether,
will
prove
equally
out
of
control
of
anyone.
J
Transparency,
truth
and
valid
communication
will
take
a
backseat
to
lipstick,
makeup
and
spin.
In
addition,
the
recent
front
page
of
the
villager
calls
control
of
City
communications
into
question
and
raises
ethical
concerns
about
the
two
council
members
quoted
as
making
the
accusations,
but
the
most
troublesome
communications
actions
and
contradictions
and
advisory
costs
are
caused
by
legal
staff.
J
Specifically,
the
contradictory
words
of
and
avoidance
and
outright
refusal
to
execute
the
direction
of
council
by
dueling,
comer
I
recently
heard
him
say
in
council
that
he
would
refer
the
I
baked
license,
revocation
to
a
circe,
an
attorney
because
it
won't
cost
us
anything.
We
have
a
hefty
premium
for
this
service
and
a
hundred
and
fifty
thousand
dollar
deductible
per
claim.
So
it
is
not
free
in
any
way.
J
The
most
current
statements
that
call
comers
legal
competence
into
question
are
his
statements
and
actions
regarding
ordinance,
34
and
the
unnecessary,
four-year
royal
court
action
and
the
related,
but
quite
different,
brach
housing
case.
The
current
issue
is
brach
house
in
which
commerce
direction
to
police
brought
forward.
Comer
said
recently,
council
cannot
tell
police
watch
ordinances
they
can
enforce
in
which
they
can't
yet
Cobra
does
so
per
police
communications
and
his
own
actions
and
inactions
is
verified
by
documentation.
J
Comer
said
that
he
did
not
know
the
police
were
now
enforcing
ordinance
34,
yet
he
told
them
the
Colorado
Supreme
Court
told
them.
They
were
free
to
do
so
and
approved
the
wording
of
the
letter
evicting
over
50
persons
without
due
process
or
examination
of
the
facts.
This
is
also
verifiable
by
documentation
and
council
meetings.
Comer
said
long
after
the
Colorado
Supreme
Court
answered
the
certified
question
from
the
Tenth
Circuit
Court.
We
won
victory
for
home
rule.
That
is
a
spin
that
has
no
basis
in
reality
or
the
tenth
circuits
by
Circuit
final
decision.
J
What
the
Supreme
Court
said
in
paragraph
34
was
the
city
interpreted
home
rule
too,
broadly
that
just
because
the
city
has
regulated
does
not
mean
the
regulation
is
exempt
from
state
considerations.
The
civil
rights
violation
of
ordinance
34
were
not
addressed
in
any
way.
Ryles
complaint
only
asked
for
cessation
of
prosecution
for
continued
violations
of
ordinance
34,
to
which
the
city
agreed
after
we
spent
so
much
money
in
time.
The
city's
appeal
was
dismissed
on
moot
less
grounds.
J
The
only
reason
the
lawsuit
was
filed,
the
Brock
housing
lawsuit
was
filed
the
day
after
the
moratorium
failed
was
because
of
the
public
comments
of
comer
gelatin
Yates
the
previous
night.
Despite
comers
claim
that
the
city
cannot
take
action
on
question
on
the
questionable
ordinance
34
without
undermining
pending
litigation,
which
he
brought
about,
that
is
what
can
and
should
be
done
now
and
should
have
been
done
in
2012.
The
ordinance
is
overly
broad
violate.
Civil
rights
is
a
taking
of
property,
and
the
residency
requirements
pertain
only
to
the
perceived
danger
of
sexual
predators.
J
Are
pedophiles,
excuse
me,
but
that
concern
is
very
misplaced
in
general,
because
court
orders
take
care
of
that
possibility
case-by-case,
as
is
shown
in
the
recent
public
case
of
a
counselor
pastor,
who
touched
a
thirteen-year-old
inappropriately
and
now
cannot
have
contact
even
with
his
own
minor
children.
Settle
this
case
immediately
revise
the
ordinance
to
allow
the
now
law-abiding
citizens
under
close
supervision
to
remain
in
their
homes
in
stable
and
supportive
environments.
Don't
let
mr.
A
P
You
I'm
gonna,
try
to
stay
aware
of
this
clock
tonight.
I
think
last
time,
I
kind
of
lost
track
of
that
I
prepared
in
a
number
of
different
ways
and
I
think
what
I'm
going
to
do
is
just
tell
you
why
really?
Why
I'm
here,
besides
the
fact
that
I
would
love
to
see
Bryan
get
some
help
with
his
particular
issue:
I'm
the
mother
of
a
now
40
year
old
man
who
was
24
at
the
time
that
he
committed
a
sexual
assault.
He
was
raised
in
a
good
family,
a
church-going
family.
P
He
had
a
lot
of
gifts
and
talents
that
he
could
have
used
but
got
involved
in
drugs
when
he
was
in
high
school
and
got
started
in
a
bad
bad
direction,
with
some
bad
kids
and
ended
up
at
24
committing
a
sexual
assault.
We
have
now
been
in
the
system,
our
family
for
15
years,
and
my
son
started
out
in
work-release.
P
He
ended
up
going
after
work-release
to
probation
in
the
community
in
Jefferson
County
and
to
treatment,
and
he
failed
on
treatment
because
he
was
using
meth
and
a
number
of
other
substances
that
were
very
damaging
to
him.
He
did
not
really
he
never
really,
but
he
went
to
prison.
He
was
never
offered
drug
and
alcohol
treatment.
He
he
went
to
prison
and
he
was
sentenced
under
the
lifetime
sentence
here
in
Colorado
to
Fernet
four
years
to
life,
he
spent
five
and
a
half
years
in
prison.
P
He's
been
out
now
for
eight
on
parole,
one
of
the
few
people
that
was
getting
out
at
that
time
getting
out
of
do
see
on
the
Lifetime
Act,
which
only
came
into
being
in
1998,
and
he
has
just
done
a
fantastic
job
on
parole.
He
came
out
of
prison,
a
non-drinker,
a
non
smoker,
a
non
drug
er
and
with
lots
of
very
lofty
goals.
He
has
now
earned
a
bachelor's
degree
since
he's
been
out
in
biblical
studies,
he's
or
he's
working
on
a
master's
degree
and
has
his
own
prison
ministry
called
the
cell
church.
P
He
was
just
granted
completement
of
sex
offense
specific
treatment
two
years
early
before
he
can
ask
to
get
off
parole
for
just
ten
years,
their
tenure
parole
for
lifetime,
sex,
offense
conviction
and
a
20-year
parole.
My
son
has
a
10-year
pearl,
so
he's
been
out
for
eight
years
and
we
just
had
a
party
at
his
treatment
program
for
the
fact
that
he
was
able
to
kind
of
set
the
tone
and
hopefully
open
a
door
for
others
coming
to
be
able
to
also
get
off
of
treatment
early
before
their
parole
is
finished.
P
P
That's
so
essential
that
people
have
a
safe
place
to
go
where
they
have
someone
that
cares
about
them
some
kind
of
a
pro-social
situation,
but
when
he
wanted
to
be
on
his
own
and
he
was
able
to
get
that
town
home,
he
did
all
the
financing
himself.
I
was
scared
to
death.
I
was
absolutely
scared
to
death
that
he
move
out
of
his
dad's
house,
but
he
did
and
he
did
a
great
job.
He
got
a
hug
property.
It
was
not
in
good
shape.
He
has
incredible
skills
and
he
was
able
to
fix
it
up.
P
I
mean
it's
just
the
most
fantastic
wonderful
house
that
anybody
could
have
and
I'm
I'm
so
proud
of
him.
He
wants
to
go
on
and
get
a
doctorate
he's
now
teaching
himself
Greek
and
Hebrew
and
let's
see
German
he
has
to
in
order
to
get
a
doctorate.
Dr.
divinities
got
to
learn
German,
so
he's
now
teaching
himself
German
on
top
of
everything
else.
That
he's
doing
so.
P
P
H
P
A
Q
Good
evening
for
a
background
for
the
citizens
who
are
here
in
attendance,
there
was
a
series
of
cancer
diagnosis
at
the
Ottawa
Allen
water
treatment
plant
in
2012,
13
and
15.
Our
group
is
trying
to
assess
the
radiation
dose
risk
exposure
that
those
plant
workers
were
exposed
to
as
a
result
of
the
high
level
2009
2010
and
2011
sludge
and
the
stockpiling
on
the
at
the
plan,
I
started
requesting
data
to
find
out.
What's
going
on
back
in
June
of
30th
2016
and
July
5th
and
July
6
directly
to
the
plant.
Q
Speaking
with
Jason
Clark
Brennen,
the
department
head
stepped
in
and
requested
all
inquiries
go
through
him
and
then
professional
forthcoming
response
stopped.
It
was
over
a
month
from
my
first
request
before
Brennan
confirmed
an
eighth
on
August
5th
that
an
updated
risk
assessment
was
never
done
when
it
was
clear
that
Brennan
was
not
going
to
run.
One
I
submitted
a
request
for
the
data
for
2009
10
11,
so
our
group
can
run
one
independently.
Q
That
request
was
simply
ignored
by
Brennan
until
I
sent
my
August
29
2016
plea
to
the
City
Council
for
help,
then
that
same
day
I
received
2009
and
2011.
These
are
full
sludge
reports.
This
is
20
120
pages
for
2009
21
pages
for
2011,
but
magically
you
can't
run
the
regression
analysis,
which
a
res
read
is
to
determine
risk
assessment
on
skipped
years.
You
need
a
series,
so
the
center
here
that
the
state
pointed
to
as
the
reason
for
denying
eligibility
to
dispose
because
of
high
radiation
values
of
radium
is
magically
and
strategically
missing.
Q
They
have
in
a
September,
so
it
was
as
recently
as
September
6
an
email
between
Keck
and
Brennan
States.
We
have
requested
a
cz
and
it's
in
their
long-term
storage
and
that's
fine,
but
we
haven't
received
it
yet
and
an
email,
but
in
between
Keck
and
Robinson
and
mr.
Brennan
from
mr.
Brennan
states.
The
914
CDM
is
still
looking
for
this
report
again.
This
is
the
only
one
that
all
three
entities
can't
find.
Cdm
is
still
looking
for
this
report.
They
changed
their
computer
operating
systems
and
are
having
difficulty
opening
old
files.
Q
Q
Jason
Clark
said-
and
this
is
a
phone
conversation
that
he
does
not
have
Jason
has
been
very
helpful-
always
has
I've
called
him
on
all
kinds
of
things
for
years,
primarily
concerning
the
water
information,
the
data
that
we
get
from
our
potable
water.
This
is
unrelated
to
that.
He
said
he
said
he
looked
for
the
port,
but
it
was
not
there.
He
said
he
gave
Brennan
a
box
that
had
a
lot
of
test
results.
Q
He
would
go
over
to
the
city
center
and
look
through
that
box
and
to
try
to
locate
the
data
and
at
that
time
I
was
requesting.
I
didn't
realize
how
far
back
I
had
to
go
and
I
wasn't
only
requesting
2012
13
14,
so
I
asked
him
if
it
was
normal
protocol
to
keep
the
test
results
on-site
and
he
answered
yes,
I
told
him
that
that
is
for
me
cause
hurt
for
serious
concern
as
to
why
the
change
in
protocol
for
those
year
years
of
test
results
in
removing
them
from
the
plant.
Q
Q
Q
And
while
I
have
a
moment,
there
they're
trying
to
tell
me
that,
but
21
page
and
a
twenty
page,
that
I
should
be
able
to
use
a
single
page
of
2004
through
2011
data
on
one
page
and
five
lines
on
2010
and
run
a
regression
analysis.
So
that's
how
unaware
they
are
between
a
summary
report
by
they
I
mean
check
all
the
gentlemen
and
Brennan
and
actual
reports
and
all
of
you.
Okay,
thank.
A
R
Good
evening,
mr.
mayor
and
council,
I'm
gonna
go
a
little
bit
different
direction
tonight.
My
hobby
is
metal,
detecting
and
I
found
this
little
pin
three
years
ago,
I
said
anybody
but
Peabody
and
seemed
like
a
perfect
time
during
the
election
sequence.
Here,
to
tell
you
the
story
of
anybody,
but
Peabody
the
year
was
1904
and
the
Republican
incumbent,
Governor
James
Peabody,
was
losing
popularity
popularity.
R
R
In
June
1904,
a
union
miner
Harry
orchard
set
off
a
bomb
at
the
town
of
Independence,
killing
19
young
non-union
miners
and
people.
He
was
a
law
and
order
guy.
The
Democratic
Party
suggest
selected
Alva
Adams
to
be
their
candidate.
He'd
been
the
governor
twice
before
1887
to
89
and
1897
to
99
the
Democratic
slogan
was
anybody
would
Peabody
the
Democrats
contended
that
Peabody
had
mismanaged
the
mining
strikes
and
Adams
could
do
a
better
job,
as
he
had
proven.
R
Adams
believed
that
arbitration,
not
military
intervention
was
the
best
way
to
settle
it.
Adams
ran
what
would
become
the
most
corrupt
election
ever
to
haunt
the
Colorado
ballot
box.
During
the
election
of
1904,
the
Democratic
Party
Party
allegedly
committed
voting
fraud
in
Denver
and
surrounding
urban
areas.
The
Republican
Party
was
said
to
have
committed
voting
fraud
in
the
populous
mining
and
corporately
dominated
towns,
one
precinct
in
Denver
717,
Democratic,
valence
recast
with
only
100
legal
voters,
but
on
the
other
side,
the
mine
owners
ordered
thousands
of
the
workers
in
the
mines.
B
R
R
The
decision
was
appealed
to
the
legislature,
who
had
the
responsibility
to
resolve
these
kinds
of
disputes.
It
was
concluded
that
both
sides
had
committed
major
violations
of
the
election
law.
On
the
day
that
Adams
took
office,
March
17th
1905,
the
republican-controlled
legislature,
voted
to
remove
him
from
office
and
reinstall
Peabody
on
the
condition
that
Peabody
immediately
resign
and
he
did
and
a
day's
end.
Peabody
is
Lieutenant.
Governor
Jesse
MacDonald
occupied
the
governor's
mansion
in
Denver,
thus
making
Colorado
the
only
state
to
have
had
three
different
governor's
on
the
same
day.
R
S
S
A
T
Robert
elfstrom
48:20
South
Fox
Inglewood,
when
to
speak,
to
unite
it's
obviously
about
ordinance,
34
and
there's
some
concepts
of
the
morality
and
legality
that
exists
on
this.
Both
sides
of
this,
let
me
start
with
the
basic
concepts
of
a
morality
and
why
they're
important
to
us
here
tonight,
perhaps
the
most
widely
accepted
model
of
moral
development
espoused
by
Lawrence
Kohlberg,
discusses,
stick
six
stages
that
some
of
us
progressed
to
or
failed
to
progress
to
throughout
our
lives.
T
We
rely
on
elected
officials
to
have
an
understanding
of
the
greatest
good
and
rely
on
them
to
make
sound
decisions
that
far
transcend
their
personal
feelings,
such
that
they
may
promote
the
general
welfare
in
stage
one
as
children
were
driven
by
obedience
and
punishment.
We
focus
on
direct
consequences
of
our
behavior.
We
believe
that
the
worse
the
punishment
for
an
act
is
the
more
bad
the
other
person
must
have
been.
T
This
can
lead
to
inferences
that
even
innocent
victims
are
guilty
in
proportion
to
their
suffering.
One
council
member
here
made
a
stage
one
moral
inference
that
people
who
find
their
names
on
the
sex
offender
registry
must
be
extremely
bad
and
dangerous,
because
otherwise
it
would
not
have
been
punished
harshly.
That
of
course
misses
a
number
of
important
points,
such
as
socio
socio-economic
drivers,
that
the
differential
representation
and
current
social
pressures
that
drive
punishment
stage.
Two
moral
reasoning
expresses
what's
in
it.
T
For
me,
you
show
some
interest
in
the
need
of
others,
but
only
to
deport
where
it
might
further
your
own
interest.
If
you
find
yourself
thinking
that
you
cannot
make
right
decisions
about
this
legislation
because
it
might
not
benefit
your
political
standing,
then
you
would
be
making
a
stage
to
moral
reasoning
decision
in
stage
3
we
just
kind
of
want
to
get
along
with
others.
T
Most
members
of
society
make
it
to
stage
4,
that's
where
they
remain.
Most
of
us
realize
that
laws
we
should
follow
them.
If
you
find
yourself
unduly
concerned
that
this
law
simply
should
exist
because
it's
a
law
and
someone
smarter
than
you
must
have
made
it
and
you
are
operating
from
a
stage
for
moral
base,
democratic
government
requires
you
to
at
least
make
it
to
stage
five.
However,
in
stage
5
moral
reasoning,
principles
include
such
things
as
basic
human
rights
like
life,
liberty
and
justice.
T
T
You
realize
that
people
are
mutually
respected.
Parts
of
the
community
laws
are
regarded
social
contracts.
Those
to
note
do
not
promote
the
general
where
welfare
should
be
changed
when
necessary
to
meet
the
greatest
good
for
the
greatest
number
of
people.
That
is
achieved
through
majority
decision
and
inevitably
compromise
democratic
government
is
necessarily
based
on
stage
5
reasoning,
moral
reasoning,
there's
a
stage
6
people
like
Gandhi
and
Martin
Luther
King
make
it
to
there
I'm,
not
asking
you
to
do
that.
That
brings
me
to
the
legality
side
of
this
discussion.
T
T
T
Judge
Moore
said
that
this
is
not
a
legal
issue
that
this
is
a
legislative
issue.
He
does
not
want
this
in
his
court.
He
asks
you
to
do
his
job
I.
Don't
think
that
your
attorney
told
you
that
I
don't
think
that
Tom
rice
has
suggested
to
you
how
much
he
agreed
with
judge
Moore
in
court
I'm,
not
asking
any
of
you
to
out
gandi
gandi
or
to
put
yourselves
at
the
Martin
Luther
King
level.
I
am
asking
you
to
take
a
vote
to
repeal
or
significantly
amend
ordinance.
T
S
T
S
T
T
S
T
T
A
You,
sir
appreciate
you
coming
and
speaking
this
evening,
our
X
beaker
is
Ronnie.
Newman
will
address
counsel
regarding
residency
restrictions.
Give
me
mr.
Newman,
oh
yeah,
you
know
what
I
was
notified
of
that
I
appreciate
that
moving
on
to
agenda
item
7,
that
is
recognition
of
unscheduled
public
comment.
A
first
speaker
is
Michelle
Jane
gang.
U
U
My
name
is
Michelle
King
I'm
staff
to
the
cover.
No
sex
offender
management
board.
I
am
employed
with
division
of
criminal
justice.
I
do
not
live
in
Englewood
I
am
here
really
I
emailed
some
research
and
I
brought
some
research.
I
understand
you
folks
are
having
another
meeting
in
November
I
just
want
to
let
you
know
we're
available.
We
have
staff
researchers.
If
we
can
answer
any
questions
or
assist
as
you
make
deliberations,
we
are
available
to
provide
you
any
information
we
can
and
I.
Think
most
of
you
have
my
email.
U
I
know:
councilman
councilwoman
Barrentine
has
my
email
and-
and
I
know
that
making
good
sound
public
policy
is
tough,
making
ethical
and
responsible
choices
with
regard
to
management
of
sex
offenders.
It's
not
always
popular
I
live
this
world
daily.
In
my
job,
willfully
I
live
this
daily,
so
I
know
it's
really
hard.
So
I
know
it's
important
to
have
good
information
I'm.
Clearly,
your
goal
is
to
increase
the
safety
for
the
folks
living
in
Englewood
by
banning
convicted
sex
offenders.
That's
how
I'm
seeing
this
ordinance,
but
they
will
still
be
here.
U
They
will
still
visit
family
here.
They
will
still
work
here.
They
may
even
shop
here.
They
probably
will
spend
the
night
on
the
couch
on
the
holidays
with
their
families.
They
may
even
couch
surf,
but
you
won't
know
they're
here,
because
your
law
says
you
don't
have
them
here
and
so
I
think
it's
very
important
to
note
that
you
don't
have
a
way
to
track
them.
U
U
I
also
just
wanted
to
remind
everybody
that
the
federal
laws
that
are
driving
public
policies,
such
as
the
Jacob
Wetterling
Act,
the
Megan's
Law
Adam
Walsh.
Those
are
the
result
of
tragic
horrific
crimes,
but
those
are
not
typical
sex
crimes
and
those
crimes
represent
less
than
1%
of
the
sex
assault
convictions
across
the
country.
That's
how
rare
it
is.
First,
a
stranger
abduction
to
occur
again.
You've
heard
this
sex
assaults
happened
within
family
environments,
they're
perpetrated
by
people.
We
know
within
relationships
or
to
coaches
teachers,
uncles,
boyfriends,
girlfriends,
so
you've
heard
all
that
before
I.
U
Just
wanted
to
remind
you
of
some
of
those
facts,
and
so
I
appreciate
you
letting
me
come
I
brought
some
of
the
research
reports.
I
can
hand
them
to
staff.
If
you'd
like
and
I
brought
my
business
cards
too
in
case
you
wanted
any
of
those
and
I
think
that's
it.
I
don't
want
to
waste
your
time
problem.
Thank.
H
U
H
You
want
me
to
approach
it
again:
I
I
got
from
the
information
that
you
were.
You
said,
I
think
that
CML
said
there
was
like
350
municipalities
or
local
governments,
and
the
information
you
provided
was
that
there's
six
communities
there's
only
six
communities
in
the
state
of
Colorado
that
have
any
residency
restrictions,
I
believe.
H
All
right
and
the
rest
of
the
390
or
whatever
it
is
community,
has
no
restrictions
at
all,
including
whether
they
live
next
to
a
school
or
anything.
They
have
no
residency
restrictions
whatsoever
and
there's
other
300
and
400
other
communities.
Only
six
in
the
state
have
them
that
is,
that
is
correct,
yeah!
That's
the
information
that
you're
providing
was
part
of
that
little
paragraph
that
you
had
given
for
that
study.
Yes,.
A
U
V
I
tell
you
that
just
broke
my
heart
and
I
just
couldn't
hardly
believe
it
and
then
I
turned
around
I
started
thinking
about
all
of
these
other
people
that
aren't
in
the
box
with
him.
What
about
the
people
that
have
done
arson?
What
about
the
thieves?
What
about
the
senior
abusers,
the
ones
that
steal
purses
from
elderly
at
the
grocery
store?
And
you
know
different
things
like
that?
Why
aren't
they
in
the
box
with
my
son,
because
he
can't
be
the
only
one?
That's
gonna
harm,
englewood
and
its
citizens.
V
You
know
there's
a
lot
of
stuff
out
there
that
could
harm
us.
I
wanted
to
tell
you
just
a
little
bit
about
my
son,
so
you
would
understand.
What's
going
on,
I
was
married
at
a
very
young
age,
I
had
two
children
from
my
previous
marriage
and
we
adopted
two
children.
My
husband
wasn't
happy
with
that
situation.
I
guess
and
he
decided
to
leave
us
when
my
children
were
very
young
and
he
disappeared
totally
out
of
my
life
and
their
life
forever.
V
I
felt
that
my
sons
needed
to
go
somewhere
to
get
some
people
to
help
them
learn
manly
things.
You
know
they
didn't
need
to
be
staying
around
mommy
all
the
time
and
doing
mommy
stuff
and
helping
so
I
decided
to
send
my
voice
to
Boys
Club,
which
was
the
worst
mistake.
I
ever
made
my
whole
entire
life,
because
that's
where
my
boys
were
sexually
abused
and
by
the
time
I
found
out
about
it.
It
was
too
late
for
Brian,
because
his
older
brother
sexually
abused
him
I
love.
V
My
kids
and
I
was
very,
very
angry
at
the
people
that
perpetrated
these
crimes
upon
my
children,
which
started
this
whole
vicious
circle.
But
you
know
what
I
read
this
book.
This
is
a
really
important
book
and
God
says
vengeance.
Is
mine?
Declares
the
Lord
and
I
learned
from
that
that
I
don't
have
to
be
the
one
to
make
all
these
choices
and
decision
and
decide.
You
know
who's
wrong
and
who's
right
and
then
I've
read
one
more
thing
that
was
so
important
and
God
said.
V
V
A
W
Name
is
matthew:
Triplett
I
live
at
48,
10
South
Fox,
Street,
I'm
honored
to
call
Brian
brach
housing.
My
younger
brother
I
wish
I
had
a
way
to
ensure
that
no
child
or
adult
for
that
matter
ever
had
to
be
subjected
to
sexual
abuse.
I
wish
I
could
make
it
so
that
my
brother
never
had
to
experience
sexual
abuse
as
a
six-year-old
child.
The
purpose
of
ordinance
34
is
supposed
to
do
just
that.
Protect
Inglewood
citizens.
Sadly
it
doesn't.
W
The
sex
offender
registry
in
Colorado
was
started
25
years
ago
in
1991.
In
my
research,
not
one
child
has
been
abused
in
Englewood
by
a
resident
of
Englewood
on
the
sex
offender
registry.
I
get
it
who
inherited
a
piece
of
legislation,
that's
broken
and
wrong
in
just
about
every
way
imaginable.
I
ask
you
to
do
the
job
you
were
elected
for
the
30,000
plus
residents
of
Englewood
rely
on
you
to
think
clearly
for
them
on
complex
legislative
issues.
They
rely
on
you
to
do
the
required
research
and
to
make
intelligent
decisions.
W
W
Instead,
I've
seen
a
parade
of
professionals
in
multiple
fields
and
everyday
inglewood,
citizens
who
have
taken
the
painstaking
time
to
present
to
council
reasons,
reports
and
evidence
as
to
why
this
is
terrible
legislation.
If
there
was
anyone
here
with
relevant
research
data
saying
that,
yes,
our
community
would
be
free
from
sexual
abuse
because
of
the
safety
that
ordinance
34
provides.
I
would
honestly
be
shocked.
I
can
guarantee,
however,
that
ordinance
34
is
causing
considerable
harm
to
its
citizens,
to
the
citizens
of
englidh.
My
family,
who
have
lived
in
Englewood
since
1988,
is
just
one.
W
W
W
A
X
I'm
RJ
Rhoads
4800
South
Fox
Street
in
Inglewood
I,
wanted
to
speak
to
you
about
Brian's
character.
I
am
his
neighbor,
been
we've
been
my
wife
and
I
have
lived
in
Inglewood
since
1988
and
I
raised
three
children
here
in
Inglewood
and
I've
always
enjoyed
this
community
as
a
I'm,
a
small-town
feel
and
a
neighbor
of
the
community.
X
So
I've
had
the
opportunity
to
not
only
see
prisoners
in
prison
and
see
you
know
how
everything's
stripped
away
and
they
get
to
decide.
Are
they
gonna
be
a
changed
person
or
their
or
are
they
going
to
just
continue
to
play
a
game
so
I've
seen
the
inside
and
obviously
live
here
on
the
outside?
Well,
my
point
is:
as
Bryan
returned,
I
I
was
anxious
to
see
you
know.
Is
he
a
changed
person
you
know,
and
what
I've
learned
from
Bryan
since
he's
been
back
is
that
the
neighborhood
is
a
completely
restored.
X
X
You
know
he's
doing
the
neighborly
thing
he
served
in
our
church,
my
church
for
and
served
as
the
sound
person
in
my
church.
Not
only
that
Brian
got
a
job
right
away
and
was
a
you
know,
a
member
of
society
that
was
productive.
He
didn't
wait
around.
He
actively
searched
out
to
be
a
contributing
member,
knowing
that
what
he
did
was
wrong
when
he
had
done
it,
and
now
he
spent
his
time
and
he's
back
in
the
community
being
a
productive
member
of
society.
X
I
don't
want
to
see
Englewood,
be
a
city
that
I
love
and
that
I
live
in
and
that
we've
been
here.
This
long
select
people
that
can't
be
here
and
can't
live
here
when
they
have
an
opportunity
to
come
and
be
supported
by
family
members
and
by
the
community
that
they
grew
up
in
that's
the
support
they
need
in
order
to
continue
on
the
right
path.
A
Y
Evening,
I'm
Melissa
Roberts
I'm,
the
director
of
the
division
of
adult
pearl
for
the
Department
of
Corrections
I'm
here
for
informational
purposes.
Only
and
I
have
all
kinds
of
notes,
like
everybody
else
about
what
I
was
gonna
say.
But
after
listening
to
the
other
speakers,
understanding
sex
offender
management
board
has
shared
research
offered
to
share
more
I'm
gonna
sort
of
stay
away
from
my
statistics
and
research
and
just
comment
on
the
fact
that
the
Department
of
Corrections
is
committed
to
successful
offender
re-entry
and
it
doesn't
matter
what
word
comes
before
offender.
Y
If
it's
sex
offender,
domestic
violence,
offender
we're
committed
to
making
sure
that
they
successfully
return
to
the
communities
in
which
they
came.
You've
heard
again
from
more
than
one
person
that
there's
no
evidence
to
show
that
residence
restrictions
work
I've
only
been
in
Colorado
a
little
over
a
year.
As
you
can
tell
from
my
funny
Midwestern
accent.
Y
Over
that
time,
I
had
a
really
distinct
opportunity,
which
I
think
puts
a
little
credence
to
this
conversation,
and
that's
that
I
got
to
know
patty
Wetterling
Patty's
son
Jacob
was
the
reason
is
the
reason
that
we
have
sex
offender
registration
laws
and
after
27
years
of
patty,
not
knowing
where
her
son
was
and
what
happened.
His
perpetrator
finally
came
to
justice
last
month.
I
say
that,
because
Patti
understood
the
utility
of
the
registry,
it's
to
share
information
to
help
people
feel
safer
and
be
safer,
so
they
can
see
where
individuals
live.
Y
Residents,
restrictions,
Drive,
sex
offenders,
underground
Iowa
saw
their
sex
offender
registry
compliance
rate.
Non-Compliance
rate.
Excuse
me
double
when
they
pass
their
residence
restriction
and
and
the
music
is
gonna
play
a
seam,
a
yellow
light.
I
think
the
other
reason
that
this
is
important
is
because,
for
all
of
the
Missing
and
Exploited
Children
advocacy
that
Patti
did
over
her
years.
She
also
spoke
nationally
all
the
way
to
Washington
DC,
about
the
fact
that
residents
restrictions
do
not
work.
A
O
Evening,
my
name
is
Rhonda
Poletti
I
live
at
48,
53,
South
Fox.
You
all
have
heard
the
street
Fox
come
up
a
lot
because
we
are
neighbors
and
we
have
a
community
on
our
street
and
Liz
and
I
my
partner.
We
bought
our
house
in
June
and
we're
the
newest
members
of
the
family
and
it's
the
sort
of
Street.
O
O
You
know
like
taking
a
look
at
how
I
felt
I
realized
that
it
wasn't
based
on
any
sort
sort
of
like
research
or
statistics
or
even
personal
experience.
It
was
really
just
an
opinion
that
I
sort
of
adopted
as
part
of
popular
culture
and
that's
the
truth,
so
I
think
what
I
want
you
to
do
this
evening
is
to
call
and
to
question
your
own
personal
biases
and
consider
the
I
think
largely
unfounded
biases
of
the
public
at
large
I
hope
that
you
will
repeal
ordinance
34.
Thank
you.
Z
It's
hard
to
follow
my
partner
because
we
have
the
same
things
in
common,
but
I
am
here
to
represent
and
support
Brian
Brock
I
was
in
my
new
neighbor
I
stand
in
front
of
you
as
a
third-generation
Colorado,
one
who
recently
my
lifelong
dream.
Buying
a
home
in
Colorado
came
true
and
I
chose
this
city
Englewood
and
now
I'm,
starting
to
wonder
and
really
hope,
I
didn't
choose
the
wrong
City.
Z
Speaking
tonight
about
the
gravity
about
ordinance,
34
is
challenging
for
me,
but
I
know
that
you
are
exactly
the
people.
I
need
to
be
speaking
to
directly,
especially
because
I'm
in
district
4
I,
so
greatly
appreciate
your
commitment
to
public
service
and
the
willingness
and
wanting
to
make
our
city
safe
for
all
of
its
citizens.
Z
Z
This
is
a
very
slippery
slope
for
the
city,
one
that
is
dangerously
encroaching
about
trampling
upon
civil
liberties
of
one
specific
group
is
council
members
I
appreciate
you
working
on
our
roads
charter
schools,
keeping
our
water
safe,
but
when
it
comes
to
ordinances
like
34
that
have
a
proven
track
record
of
failing
when
it
comes
to
its
intended
purpose,
you
have
even
a
greater
responsibility
to
repeal
it.
So
my
fear
and
my
question
that
I'm,
asking
myself
and
of
my
neighbors
is
what
is
next.
If
this
is
not
repealed
worse,
yet
what
group
is
next?
Z
You
may
not
see
the
comparison
as
an
accurate
one,
as
but
as
a
gay
woman
I
make
those
considerations
I
think
about
those
things
so
I
ask
you
kindly,
and
hopefully
you
will
make
a
decision
this
evening
on
repealing
this,
but
think
one
is
it
what
my
constituents
want,
what
are
the
wide
reaching
consequences
and
just
for
grins,
think
well
mind
that
brute
group
will
be
next
well.
My
son's
group
me
next
well,
my
daughter's
group
be
next
and
God
forbid.
It
be
an
ethnic
group.
So
I
just
ask
you
think
about
these
things.
Z
This
man
served
his
time
that
was
imposed
by
a
judge
and
you,
as
councilman
Olson
had
said.
You
had
asked
a
question:
here's
the
decision
of
the
seven
of
you.
Should
you
be
making
this
decision,
or
should
you
be
seeking
the
counsel
of
the
citizens
you
represent
us?
You
are
sitting
in
these
chairs
because
you
were
selected
by
people
like
me.
Z
A
N
N
Arvada
is
one
of
those
cities
that
does
not
have
a
residency
restriction
and
for
that
I
am
extremely
grateful,
because
I
think
that
when
you
have
a
child,
an
adult
child
who
has
committed
this
offense
and
serves
his
time
and
is
in
treatment
and
is
under
supervision
by
parole,
lotta
restrictions
very
very
tight
restrictions,
but
he
gets
to
come
home
and
he
is
able
to
get
the
support
of
his
family
to
find
a
job
and
to
struggle
with
kind
of
the
PTSD
syndrome
coming
out
of
prison.
After
ten
years
he
needs
that
support.
N
He
needs
to
be
able
to
find
suitable
work.
He
needs
to
be
able
to
find
a
place
to
live
on
his
own
and
so
we're
kind
of
giving
him
kind
of
get
started
approach.
The
neighborhood
has
been
wonderful.
He
grew
up
in
that
neighborhood
and
maybe
that's
part
of
it,
because
once
you
know
the
person,
then
it's
it's.
N
A
AA
AA
I,
don't
know
why
the
report
for
was
removed
from
the
Allen
plant
and
it's
suspicious
I.
Don't
know
why?
Maybe
you
don't
know
why,
but
we
need
the
report.
I
mean
what
often
gets
overlooked
in
this
and
which
I'm
glad
Kathleen
Bailey
brought
tonight
is
people
are
sick?
People
have
died
and
saying
that?
Well
we
don't
have
the
right
software
to
open
it
or
we
don't
know
where
it's
at
or
someone
took
it
home
on
their
personal
computer,
which
was
used
a
couple
weeks
ago.
That's
not
good
enough
excuses,
aren't
good
enough.
AA
We
need
that
data
and
then
second
I
was
really
amazed
to
learn
that
mayor,
Jefferson,
councilmember,
Yates
and
mayor
pro-tem
Jowett
are
all
on
the
water
and
super
board
in
this
city
and
when
I
first
started
learning
about
this
issue
and
I
heard
some
of
you
say:
well
we're
not
scientific
experts.
We
don't
understand,
what's
going
on,
we
have
to
defer
to
the
experts.
Well
that
sounds
reasonable,
but
now
and
I
realize
almost
half
of
you
are
in
the
water
and
sewer
board.
AA
That
means
that
you
don't
have
expertise
in
what
you're
managing,
if
you
don't
know,
what's
going
on
with
the
water
and
sewer
treatment
and
why
people
are
dying
from
cancer
from
the
sludge,
then
who
does?
If
you
aren't
experts
in
the
field
that
you
specifically
manage
in
this
city,
then
I
say
you're,
incompetent
and
I
would
want
to
know
why
you
are
incompetent
and
why
you
have
not
taken
the
time
to
figure
out.
What's
going
on
with
the
sludge.
Those
were
the
end
of
my
comments.
Thank.
A
AB
We
got
about
three
left
good
evening.
My
name's
Luke
young,
ever
one
was
shelling
Goa
having
you
first
of
all,
thank
you
guys,
thank
you.
City
Council
and
city
staff
for
his
service
and
dedication
to
the
city
and
the
community,
and
tonight
hear
me
to
follow
up
on
our
request.
You
know
we
talked
about
this
David
and
those
Kathleen
dear,
and
also
in
the
previous
meeting
about
the
data
we
just
want
to
know
where
it
is,
and
so
just
need
to
follow
up
on
that.
So
that's
it.
A
AC
AC
AC
A
AD
Carolyn
Turner
and
I'm
chairman
of
advocates
for
change,
I
live
in
Parker,
but
I
want
to
bring
up
the
subject
about
residency
restrictions,
because
what
you
do
will
have
a
ripple
effect
throughout
our
state
and
throughout
our
nation.
So
I
think
you
need
to
be
very
wise
about
what
you
do
and
what
you
decide.
I
think
it's
important
for
you
to
pay
attention
to
the
empirical
evidence,
all
of
which
says
residency
restrictions,
do
nothing
to
keep
people
safe.
AD
Somebody
asked
well:
are
the
people
just
free
to
go,
then
no
they're
under
parole,
they're
under
probation
they're
on
ankle
bracelets
there.
Every
movement
movement
is
kept
track
of
so
no
they're
not
just
free
to
go
but
residency
restrictions
are
a
bad
idea.
As
elected
officials,
you're
asked
to
use
wisdom
and
justice
in
your
decisions.
AD
I'll
go
to
Isaiah
10,
woe
to
those
who
decree
nicholas
decrees
and
writers
who
keep
writing
oppression.
So
I
think
you
need
to
just
you
know
you
can
be
the
forerunner
of
communities
that
use
the
wisdom
and
the
evidence
to
get
rid
of
bad
policy
and
I
hope
that
you
will
do
that.
You've
gotten
a
ton
of
evidence
from
judges,
DA's,
the
sex
offender
management
board,
parole
officers,
probation
officers,
they
all
say
this
is
a
really
bad
yeah.
Don't
do
it
there's
other
there's
other
ways
to
do
things.
AD
AD
A
H
A
You
ma'am,
we
do
have
one
additional
speaker,
I
apologize,
yeah
I
feel
provide
that
to
the
city,
clerk
will
be
it'll,
be
disseminated
to
Council
I
do
apologize.
We
do
have
one
additional
speaker
that
looked
to
be
crossed
out
on
the
roster
here,
but
does
still
apparently
what
like
to
speak,
and
that
is
Dale
Harris.
Do
we
have
any
mr.
Harris
kidding
me
here
to
speak
about
section,
seven
and
sludge.
AE
Thank
you,
I've
attended
council
meetings,
probably
for
about
a
year.
I've
heard
a
lot
about
this
ordinance
34
and
the
sludge.
This
summer
today,
I
tried
to
look
up
ordinance
34
on
the
web.
Page
I
couldn't
find
it,
but
I
did
find
the
title.
Seven.
Is
that
the
same
thing
well
I
read
through
title
seven
and
I
guess
I
want
to
say
I
fully
support.
AE
What's
written,
I
guess
I'm,
the
one
citizen
that
nobody
has
ever
spoke
up
for
it
I
think
it's
a
good
ordinance
I,
fully
support
what
is
written
there
I
think
we
need
things
like
that
and
I'm
glad
it's
there
I
believe
the
ordinance
should
prevent
the
error.
I
believe
our
ordinance
should
prevent
the
Pape
should
protect
our
population
and
I.
Believe
that's
what
this
warden
says.
So
that's
my
my
speech
on
organs.
34,
title,
seven
I!
Have
it
printed
here
and
I?
AE
Read
it
on
the
sledge
and
water
treatment
issue,
a
lot
of
talk
this
last
few
meetings,
I
attended,
I
viewed
the
last
one
on
the
online
video
I
just
want
to
say,
I,
fully
believe
that
the
city
has
done
what
it
had
to
do
over
the
years
for
state
regulations
and
for
testing
and
approval
I
assume
that
we
passed
all
those
tests.
I,
don't
know
if
this
res
rad
thing
is
part
of
that
testing.
If
so,
I
don't
know
why
those
results
were
mentioned.
AE
I
do
not
believe
for
a
minute
that
anybody
on
this
council
or
mister
crack
or
the
water
board
or
any
official
is
trying
to
cover
up
anything
or
hide
documents,
or
any
of
that
I
mean
I've
heard
a
lot
of
talk
and
I've
heard
a
lot
of
harsh
words.
I've
heard
a
lot
of
accusations
being
thrown
at
the
council,
mr.
crack
and,
quite
frankly,
I
think
the
people
are
doing
that.
It's
very
shameful
that
they
do
that.
We
don't
need
that
in
our
city,
I
heard
a
discussion.
AE
A
couple
of
meetings
go
about
getting
an
outside,
tester
I
believe
miss
Bailey
requested
an
outside
testing
facility.
It
kind
of
sounded
like
we
were
just
going
to
open
up
our
coffers
and
let
her
pick
a
facility
and
she
was
going
to
spend
our
money
doing
the
testing
I
would
advise
against
that.
If
that's
the
direction,
we're
going
I,
don't
think
we're
ever
gonna
get
a
an
answer
that
would
satisfy
that
group.
I
think
we
would
do
testing
after
testing.
AE
A
E
Okay,
when
I
first
got
onto
council
three
years
ago,
there's
a
lot
of
things
that
I
wanted
to
happen
and
I
wanted
to
happen.
Now.
One
thing
I've
learned
in
the
past
three
years
that
moving
fast
doesn't
always
produce
the
results
that
needs
to
happen.
I
found
that
when
we
move
a
little
bit
slower
that
allows
the
emotions
to
die
down,
and
it
allows
me
to
look
at
the
facts
and
to
make
a
decision
based
on
facts.
E
So
one
of
the
guiding
principles
that
I
tend
to
use
is
the
fact
that
we
are
in
a
republic
and
not
a
democracy,
and
that
simply
means
that
the
individuals
rights
are
not
trumped
by
the
rights
of
the
masses.
Just
because
you
have
a
51%
vote
for
something
doesn't
necessarily
mean
that
it.
It
is
the
right
thing
to
do
so
as
I
work
through
these
decisions,
I
tend
to
look
at
the
individuals
rights
and
does
it
fall
in?
You
know
to
the
grounds
of
well.
B
E
E
Is
this
being
fairly
distributed
among
our
laws
within
our
community,
and
you
know,
is
the
ordinance
a
reaction
of
a
knee-jerk
reaction,
or
is
it
based
upon
facts,
or
was
it
based
upon
feelings
or
emotions?
So
there's
quite
a
bit
that
we
have
to
go
through
on
this
and
we're
going
to
have
a
meeting
on
that
to
discuss
it.
E
The
way
I
understand
it.
No
one's
going
to
be
asked
to
move
until
we
actually
come
to
some
decisions
either
the
court
case
ends
or
Council
chooses
to
modify
or
eliminate
or
let
it
stand
right
now
we're
at
a
situation
where
we
just
simply
have
to
look
at
all
of
the
facts
and
determine
what
we're
going
to
do
when
it
comes
to
the
water
situation.
It
also
applies
in
to
the
need
your
knee-jerk
reaction.
E
E
You
know
have
to
understand
every
single
report:
that's
why
you
hire
staff
to
do
that.
One
of
the
reasons
that
we
hired
our
city
manager
is
that
we
felt
that
he
would
have
the
necessary
skills
to
start
documenting,
making
sure
that
all
of
the
documents
are
in
the
proper
place,
because
we
did
have
a
long
term
department
head
that.
E
Unfortunately,
all
those
things
takes
time
and,
unfortunately,
you
know
Eric's
having
to
deal
with
a
lot
of
the
stuff
that
was
done
before
he
ever
got
there.
But
I
do
want
to
emphasize
as
counsel
we're
listening,
and
we
want
to
do
what's
right
and
we
want
to
make
sure
that
we
do
it
the
right
way,
instead
of
just
reacting,
because
we've
got
everybody
yelling
at
us
and
telling
us
that
we're
just
the
scum
of
the
earth.
That's
not
the
case.
E
Every
one
of
us
ran
in
this
election
in
our
elections,
because
we
truly
care
about
our
community.
I
can
honestly
say:
I
love
the
people
of
Inglewood,
you
know
and
we
are
given
tough
decisions
to
deal
with
and
unfortunately
not
always
well
I.
We
please
everyone.
In
fact,
it's
it's
impossible.
So
I
do
appreciate
that
everybody
came
forward
this
evening.
E
A
Sir
I
would
also
like
to
add
some
response
to
public
comment.
Mr.
Gorsky,
thank
you
for
your
service
to
the
citizens
of
the
city
of
Inglewood
and
thank
you
for
the
information
this
evening.
Mr.
Gilbert
thank
her
for
your
research
regarding
a
7:00
o'clock
start
time.
It
convinced
me
that
six
probably
was
a
bit
too
early,
so
we'll
see
what
we
take.
Some
action
on
that
to
everyone
who
came
and
spoke
about
title
7
or
ordinance
34.
Do
you
appreciate
your
comments
and
respect
what
you
all
are
trying
to
do?
A
I
just
respectfully
ask
that
you
understand
my
decision
not
to
comment
at
this
time
with
pending
litigation
as
far
as
the
specifics
of
anybody's
case
or
our
policy
generally,
until
we
have
an
actionable
item
or
a
study
session,
that
the
council
can
mutually
agree
upon.
I
feel
that
as
my
duty
as
the
mayor
I
do
want
to
support
the
decisions
of
the
majority
of
this
body
and
I
believe
that
that
is
my
duty.
A
So
I
hope
that
you
all
can
understand
that
at
this
time
to
the
folks
who
came
and
spoke
about
the
sludge
and
residual
issue,
I
would
ask
manager
Keck,
perhaps
for
an
update
regarding
the
RFP
process
and
where
we're
at
on
that
and
getting
to
the
point
of
providing
additional
information
to
the
public
and
perhaps
a
meetings.
Thank.
AF
You
mayor,
the
city
did
receive
three
proposals
from
firms
in
Colorado
that
range
anywhere
from
twenty
four
thousand
dollars,
two
hundred
and
thirty
thousand
dollars,
one
of
the
things
that
I
know
that
the
citizens
asked
for
was
the
ability
to
kind
of
choose
which
company
that
is
frankly
I
appreciate
the
fact
they
want
to
do
that.
But
it
sounds
like
some
do
and
some
don't
the
logistics
of
doing
so,
really
quite
difficult,
as
well
as
trying
to
get
our
citizenry
up
to
speed
on
our
purchases
and
purchasing
and
procurement
policies
and
procedures.
AF
The
public,
health
and
safety
of
not
only
our
employees,
but
our
residents
is
a
paramount
concern.
We
do
take
that
very
seriously
so
again
week
after
week,
when
we
hear
that
we're
doing
something
sleight-of-hand
or
hiding
something,
that's
couldn't
be
anything
further
from
the
truth.
What
we'd
have
ascertained
is
fact
matter
is
that
report
is
missing
for
2010,
that
was
at
the
plan.
It's
been
missing
for
quite
some
time.
Apparently,
ACC
laboratories
no
longer
has
that
report
on
their
on
their
systems.
Cdm
Smith,
our
current
engineering
firm,
does
have
it.
AF
We
actually
found
they
have
the
hard
drive
on
an
old
computer.
The
hard
drive
was
damaged.
We
as
a
city
are
actually
paying
to
have
that
hard
drive
repaired,
the
heads
on
it,
so
they
can
actually
read
the
data
and
get
that
report
off.
It's
a
not
a
simple
process
and
again
I
think
mr.
Yates
said
something
very
cogent,
and
that
is
we
need
to
go
slow
in
order
to
go
fast,
so
we're
taking
the
time
to
make
sure
that
we
do
this
correctly.
AF
A
Thank
you
for
that
update
and
to
mr.
Kosinski
Jasinski
in
his
comments.
I
didn't
want
to
kind
of
follow
up
with
mr.
Yates.
You
know,
as
the
mayor
I
am
appointed
to
the
water
and
sewer
board
by
charter
and
I
do
think
that
that
is
in
the
best
interest
of
the
citizenry
employees
and
experts
are
not
always
as
accountable
to
the
public.
In
my
opinion,
as
elected
officials
are
and
I
believe
that
that
truly
is
our
role
on
that
on
that
board
and
Commission
councilman
Barrentine
I.
H
Available
so
whatever
it's
costing
us
to
go
ahead
and
do
that
we
need
to
have
that
information.
It
was
a
decision
for
financial
reasons
to
not
remove
the
sludge,
we
violated
certain
procedures
and
the
law,
and
we
should
have
had
it
covered.
We
should
have
had
it
removed
in
a
timely
manner
and
that
has
quite
honestly
never
been
disputed.
We
need
to
make
sure
that
we
have
the
oversight
whether
we
have
people
on
council
or
people
in
this
community
that
understand
what
point.
A
A
H
Don't
think
it's
ever
been
disputed
that
the
law
says
we
were
supposed
to
cover
this
ledge
and
that
we
were
supposed
to
remove
it
on
an
annual
basis,
and
we've
agreed
that
we
will
go
ahead
and
make
sure
that
we
change
those
procedures
to
come
into
compliance
with
the
state
law.
I
think
Kathleen
Bailey
and
the
people
who
have
presented
have
presented
over
and
over
again
to
the
point
where
we
already
agreed
that
we
knew
that
that
procedure
had
to
be
changed.
H
A
You
I
will
allow
that
you
know
it
does
seem.
You
know,
although
we
do
not
have
any
official
sort
of
opinion
on
whether
or
not
a
law
has
been
violated,
I
do
respect
councilmember,
Barron,
Tynes
opinion
on
that
issue
and
I
believe
that
she's
free
to
voice
that
and
so
I
believe
I'll
settle
that
point
of
order
and
in
allowing
a
council
member
in
time
to
continue.
H
A
AG
F
D
A
A
B
I
G
A
G
AG
D
G
D
S
AG
I
do
Audra
Kirk
with
Community
Development
good
evening,
mayor
Jefferson
members
of
council
tonight
before
he
was
a
resolution
to
conditionally
approved
the
Iron
Works
Village
metropolitan
district
plan.
This
was
to
come
to
you
last
week
at
study
session,
but
that
meeting
was
cancelled,
so
you
you
will
be
seeing
this
for
the
first
time
tonight
and
I'm
actually
just
going
to
turn
this
over
right
now
to
employ
the
developer
and
his
attorney
Sean
and
Meghan,
so
that
they
can
explain
this
entire
process
and
have
questions
with
them.
You
can.
They
can
answer
that,
for
you.
AH
Again,
Shawn
Allen
on
behalf
of
the
applicant.
We
are
district
counsel
for
metropolitan
districts.
We
also
have
district
counsel,
counsel
for
developers
and
builders
who
are
attempting
to
form
a
district,
and
that
process
is
what
we're
here
for
tonight
is
to
seek
approval
of
a
service
plan
for
the
formation
of
the
ironworks
village
metropolitan
district.
AH
So
we
have
your
organism,
organizers.
You
have
the
Blvd
full
of
builders
LLC.
This
is
Aaron
Foy
we
have
a
financial
advisor
Stifel
they'd
ran
our
financing
plan,
exhibit
that's
in
the
service
plan
about
what
sort
of
debt
capacity
the
district
would
have
and
again
we
are
the
attorneys
for
the
applicant.
AH
We're
gonna
give
you
an
overview
of
what
a
special
district
is.
We
know
that
we
had
one
before
you
many
years
ago,
Kent
place
and
our
understanding
is.
There
hasn't
been
one
since
we'll
give
you
an
overview
what
the
district
is
and
then
specifically
what
we're
asking
for
for
this
particular
service
plan,
so
special
districts
in
Colorado.
Basically,
there
are
a
form
of
local
government,
quasi
municipal
government
governed
by
the
special
district
act,
that
is
title
32
of
the
Statutes
for
Colorado,
essentially
provide
a
form
of
tax-exempt
financing
and
it's
tax-exempt.
AH
It's
the
income
is
tax-exempt,
double
tax-exempt,
state
and
federal
for
a
bondholder
who
is
paid
and
interest
rate
for
lending
the
district
dollars,
and
in
addition
to
that,
it's
we
also
can
district
can
also
own
operate
and
maintain
public
improvements,
as
typically
those
improvements
that
the
city
doesn't
take,
and
so,
in
this
case
it's
all
of
the
public
improvements.
The
city
is
not
taking
those
for
ownership
and
operation
maintenance.
This
metro
district
will
take
those
on
own
them
operate
and
maintain
them
as
well
benefits
of
use.
AH
Essentially,
it
is
that
tax-exempt
financing,
that's
what
we're
able
to
do.
That's
a
lower
cost
of
borrowing
when
it
is
tax
exempt.
The
interest
rate
is
lower.
If
it's
a
taxable
financing
interest
rates
are
higher
because
your
investors
are
saying
I
have
to
pay
tax.
On
my
interest
rate,
I'm
gonna
charge
you
a
higher
higher
rate,
so
tax
exempt
offers
the
ability
to
finance
those
improvements,
any
lower
rate,
a
lower
cost
of
borrowing,
because
it's
local,
it
is
those
properties
within
the
boundaries
of
the
district
they
would
they're.
AH
Essentially,
they
are
paying
their
own
way,
they're
paying
for
their
own
benefit,
as
opposed
to
citywide
financing
improvements
that
are
benefiting
a
more
particular
area
within
the
city
itself,
I'm
special
districts
in
Colorado.
What
can
we
do?
Basically,
your
top
five
are
your
main
ones:
it's
your
streets,
your
safety
protection
improvements,
those
are
your
traffic
signals
and
signage,
and
so
forth.
Park
and
Recreation
open
space
trails
parks,
water
improvements
that
main
water
lines
sewer
lines,
drainage.
Those
are
your
top
five
that
go
there.
AH
The
district
does
give
additional
powers
if,
but
it
can
be
project
specific
if
they
need
to
utilize
those
on
mosquito
control.
Perhaps
if
you
have
a
large
detention
pond,
it
needs
some
treatment
there
you
can
have
districts
can
provide
that
sort
of
service
to
mitigate
those-
our
top
five
here,
the
ones
looking
at
for
this
particular
district
powers.
AH
How
we
do
it
is
the
districts
what
they
do
is
name
through
their
formation.
They
have
debt
authorization,
ability
and
taxing
property
tax
in
position
and
has,
through
those
property
taxes
that
they
pay
for
their
services,
either
in
the
operational
and
maintenance
side
or
on
the
debt
side
and
repaying
the
debt
that
has
been
issued
to
the
district
to
finance.
The
infrastructure
districts
also
have
the
statutory
power
to
impose
fees
for
services,
and
it
has
to
be
Forest
Service.
It
cannot
be
a
fee
to
just
pay
its
general
fund.
AH
It
has
to
be
if
you're,
providing
a
service.
You
can
finance
that
through
property
taxes,
as
well
as
through
a
fee
for
services,
I'm
think
of
it
like
a
park
and
recreation
fee,
you're
giving
us
service,
but
you
can
impose
a
fee
for
that
type
of
service
as
well.
Districts
can
enter
into
agreements.
Private
and
public
public
would
be
an
IG
and
in
our
government
agreement
with
the
city,
for
example,
or
with
other
districts
and
private,
they
can
enter
into
agreements
with
the
developer.
AH
In
terms
of
financing,
they
can
introduce
increments
for
the
bond
investor
so
that,
on
the
private
side,
we
can
do
that
as
well,
and
districts
can
operate
and
maintain
public
improvements,
and
in
this
case,
for
this
district
we
have
lots
of
the
improvements
are
not
being
dedicated
to
the
city.
The
city
has
determined
through
their
approval
process,
on
the
development
side
that
keep
that
with
the
project,
and
this
would
be
a
vehicle
to
help
fund
those
improvements
that
maybe
operate
and
maintain
throughout
the
life
of
that
project
procedures
for
forming
a
district.
AH
This
is
the
first
first
step
as
a
service
plan
hearing
public
hearing
where
we
asked
the
jurisdiction
to
approve
the
service
plan,
and
if
we
get
that
approval
is
by
a
resolution,
we
take
that
resolution
attach
it
to
a
petition
to
the
district
court.
We
say
court,
we
have
the
necessary
resolution
of
approval.
May
we
have
a
formation
election
for
grants
that
election
you,
then
you
hold
that
election
and
you
certify
the
results
to
the
court,
and
then
the
court
gives
a
decree
in
order
to
decree
forming
the
district.
AH
You
record
that
now
you
might
state
law,
you
are
a
district,
so
that's
the
process
of
this
is
step
one,
but
it's
in
a
shorter
time
frame
from
tonight
the
election
in
November
to
the
formation
recording
and
so
forth.
So
that's
be
the
process.
We
would
go
through
governing
body,
so
it
district
under
Colorado
law.
You
need
to
have
five
seats
or
seven
seats.
We're
gonna
have
five
seats
in
this
district.
There's
no
need
for
seven.
It's
not
a
extremely
large
master
plan
community.
AH
So
there's
five
is
sufficient
for
the
representation
initially
will
be
elected
and
it'd
be
an
eligible
elected.
You
must
be
one
called
a
registered
voter
and
two.
You
have
to
be
a
property
owner
either
a
property
owner
because
you
live
there,
a
property
owner
in
this
case
because
there
are
no
homes.
Yet
it
is
you
own
taxable
property
and
it
can't
be
a
company.
It
has
to
be
an
actual
person
as
the
voter,
so
companies
cannot
vote
and
electors
directors
are
every
even
year.
May
of
sixteen
may
have
twenty
eighteen.
AH
AH
So
they
are
former
local
government.
We
do
meet
on
a
regular
basis.
That's
one
of
the
things
that
we
have
to
do
have
to
meet
on
the
regular
basis
so,
and
we
give
notice
of
when
those
are
we
set,
what
our
regular
meetings
will
be
third
Thursday
of
every
third,
not
that
you
know
something
of
that
nature.
That's
noticed
it's
posted
within
the
boundaries
of
the
district.
We
can
give
the
city
also
a
copy
of
this
regular
meeting
notice,
and
so
we
have
our
regular
regular
meetings
and
we
also
have
to
have
minutes.
AH
We
have
to
have
budgets,
have
to
have
audits,
so
there's
accountability
for
a
district.
So
once
you
approve
these,
they
don't
just
go
out
into
the
world
and
operate
without
some
constraints
on
them
and
both
by
the
service
plan
that
we're
asking
has
constraints
and
by
the
statutory
regulations
we
have
constraints
and
what
we
must
do
as
a
district
in
Colorado
and
districts.
Often
they
engage
professional
management,
management
teams,
accountants,
engineers,
attorneys
and
so
forth
to
help
them
stay
in
compliance
with
the
laws
and
meet
their
needs.
AH
Covered
all
open
meetings
minutes
we
have
to
keep
budgets
audits
so
now
that's
kind
of
a
big
idea
of
what
is
a
metro
district
and
now.
Why
are
we
here
tonight
because
we're
asking
for
a
specific
metropolitan
district
to
serve
the
particular
development
that
mr.
Foy
has
done
before
you
so
Aaron?
If
you'd
like
to
give
the
council
some
idea?
Why
you're
here
tonight,
why
you're
asking
for
a
district?
Why
it's
important
to
your
project
sure
and.
AH
AJ
Ago,
the
public
hearing
for
the
approval
of
our
PUD
common
in
site
plan.
Some
of
this
is
repeated
from
what
I
presented
that
night,
but
but
the
this
information
to
kind
of
draw
your
attention
to
is
the
what's
maintained
by
this
metropolitan
district
it'll
be
green
space.
We
will
have
a
sound
wall
along
the
railroad
track.
AJ
There
will
be
fencing,
there'll
be
a
retaining
wall
along
there
loss
of
roads.
We
may
have
an
entry
monument
down
here
along
Fox
Street
or
up
here
on
Amherst,
as
well
as
the
district's
going
to
own
and
maintain
these
detention
areas
here
and,
as
I've
mentioned
before,
the
site
has
buried
contamination.
AJ
In
our
discussions
with
CD
phe,
they
prefer
the
idea
of
a
metropolitan
district.
They
see
a
quasi-governmental
entity
as
being
better
able
to
to
handle
the
the
covenants
that
we're
gonna
have
on
the
site
and
better
able
to
enforce
that
as
opposed
to
an
HOA
with
with
dues
that
may
or
may
not
get
paid
that
you
know,
they
need
to
sue
to
collect
things
like
that.
AJ
Something
that's
set
up,
has
the
ability
to
tax
and
has
the
ability
to
kind
of
maintain
and
and
be
a
permanent
existing
entity,
the
other
issues
that
we
have
and
why
we're
asking
for
the
district.
Obviously,
first
the
financing
of
some
of
the
infrastructure
that
we
will
be
installing,
but
also
the
the
city
staff
has
recommended
that
we
not
seek
dedication
of
the
streets
and-
and
there
were
a
variety
of
reasons
for
that-
some
of
it
had
to
do
with
the
contamination
concerns
about
the
city
taking
ownership
of
those
areas,
but
also
there
were
concerns.
AH
AJ
Than
our
typical
in
the
city
of
Inglewood
and
and
that
raised
some
questions
as
well,
when
it
seemed
easier
to
just
not
dedicate
the
streets
and
have
them
be
something
that's
owned
and
maintained
by
a
metro
district
and
again,
the
last
bullet
point
kind
of
repeating
what
I
said
earlier.
It'll
be
landscape
areas,
water
detention,
retention,
streets,
sidewalks,
curbs
that
will
all
be
constructed
on
behalf
of
the
metro
district,
but
then
ultimate
maintain.
AH
So
our
service
plan,
we
have
we're
asking
that
we
have
all
the
powers
within
that
Title
32
has
so
it's
not
actually
for
any
exclusion
in
case
any
of
those
come
up
down
the
road
if
we
would
need
to
utilize
them
they're
there,
but
your
main,
your
top
five,
that
you
see
there
and
some
financial
information
summary.
The
probable
cost
estimate,
as
of
today
is
about
3.2
million
in
infrastructure,
cost
we're
asking
for
a
debt
limit
within
the
service
plan
that
we
cannot
exceed
4.5
million.
AH
AH
So
we
do
need
to
have,
and
then
you
know
higher
than
than
what
the
cost
estimate
is
and
if
those
costs
go
up
over,
you
know
if
we
have
additional
things
that
we
need
to
finance
the
city,
ask
for
additional
improvements
or
whatever,
but
if
the
costs
just
go
higher
than
the
estimate.
So
you,
after
your
crystal
ball,
be
a
little
bit
bigger,
so
you
can
account
for
the
4.5
million.
That's
a
service
plan
limit.
If,
in
the
future,
the
those
on
the
board
of
directors
say
we
know
we
need
more
than
4.5.
AH
We
are
back
here
in
front
of
City
Council,
saying
it's
a
service
plan
amendment.
May
we
increase
that
so
you're
giving
a
box
today
and
to
go
outside
that
box?
We've
got
to
come
back
to
the
city
on
the
debt
service
mill
levy
capped
at
50
mils,
that's
50,
mils
impose
on
the
debt,
so
we
issue
debt
looking
size
it
based
on
the
pledge
of
50
mils.
AH
AH
Assessed
values
need
to
improve,
but
until
that
threshold
is
passed,
there
is
a
50
mil
limit
on
debt,
and
that
is
the
same
as
I
can't
place
that
you,
a
city
council,
approved
us
back
in
2007
fees,
are
permitted
statute,
allows
for
fees,
we're
not
excluding
that
as
a
power
right
now.
We
don't
have
any
in
our
financing
that
will
have
any
fees
in
place
or
projected
that
they
would
be
permitted
under
state
law,
and
we
have
not
excluded
that.
We're
asking
to
that
power
be
retained
in
case
in
the
future.
AH
AH
So
the
next
steps
would
be
more
about
what
we
would
do
after
tonight,
the
formation
process
of
which
I
kind
of
alluded
to
earlier,
but
before
we
go
into
that
or
if
you
want
to
reiterate
that,
maybe
any
questions
that
you
may
have
about
what
are
some
of
the
other
limitations,
the
service
plan
or
any
questions
you
may
have,
as
you
write
your
review
of
the
packet
and
they
say
good
spot,
maybe
to
ask
questions.
Mayor.
F
You
so
much
for
your
presentation.
I
have
a
couple
questions,
sir
I'm
familiar
with
a
lot
of
communities,
who've
and
a
community
h
away
much
larger
than
this,
and
they
did
go
with
the
HOA
route
because
it
keeps
the
ownership
of
the
fees
to
the
residents
versus
the
municipality,
and
you,
you
spoke
of
something
that
most
of
these
residents
have.
A
concern
of
being
in
a
district
is
that
fees
can
be
out
again
at
any
time
where
it's
hard
to
budget
for
fees
and
it's
hard
to
budget
for
those
things.
F
AH
For
the,
as
you
mentioned,
the
fees
there
will
be
a
district
disclosure,
it's
required
under
the
service
plan,
and
it's
going
to
talk
about
that.
There
is
a
debt
limit
that
there
are
millions
and
that
there
are
fee
powers,
so
there
will
be
that
disclosure
that
notice
to
the
first
buyers
in
and
that
disclosure
we
recorded
so
the
subsequent
buyers,
so
they'll
get
they'll,
have
knowledge
about
the
there's.
A
fee
power
districts
meet
in
public
meetings,
so
they're
not
if
the
district
imposes
a
fee.
AH
It's
done
at
a
public
meeting
passage
of
a
resolution
by
the
board
of
directors
and
so
there's
opportunity
for
any
member
of
the
public
to
attend
that
public
meeting
voice.
Their
concerns
understand
what
it
is
they'll
be
reflected
in
the
budget.
So
it's
not
ad
hoc
imposition
of
a
fee.
There
is
the
governmental
process
for,
but
there
also
is
the
resident
representation.
Much
like
it
through
an
HOA
on
the
board.
AH
Residents
will
have
the
opportunity
to
be
appointed
to
vacancies
and
run
every
even
year
for
director
through
the
election
process,
so
they
have
the
same
ability
to
be
on
the
board.
So
it's
similar
in
that
process
for
representation
by
the
residents
themselves
and
then
your
final
question
was
about.
F
AH
Per
month
and
I
anticipated
that
so
I
gave
us
an
idea,
let's
assume
a
$300,000
place
right
now.
The
assessed
ratio
is
seven
point:
nine,
six
percent
for
a
residential
property.
That
would
give
you
an
assessed
value.
You
multiply
that
assessed
value
times.
The
mill
levy
rate
for
the
district,
let's
assume
45
mils
at
45,
mils
you're.
Looking
at
about
a
thousand
seventy-five
dollars
to
the
district.
AH
Now
there
are
other
overlaying
governmental
entities
that
tax
that,
but
the
district,
Metro
District
Line
in
them
on
the
property
tax
bill
for
forty
five
mils
and
on
three
hundred
thousand
other
place
just
about
eleven
hundred
dollars
and
then,
as
you,
just
the
mill
levy
up
and
down
from
that,
it
would
go
up
or
down
based
upon
that.
That
would
give
you
about
an
average
look
and
that's
for
the
Metro
district
line
item
like
the
property
tax
bill
and.
AH
AH
If
you
still
have
debt,
then
there
would
be
conditions
where
the
military
would
stay
in
place
and
the
only
existence
of
the
district
would
be
to
annually
impose
that
mill
levy
just
to
pay
down
the
debt,
but
this
district
is
looking
to
take
on
operations
and
maintenance,
so
it
would
have
to
absolve
themselves
of
that
operation
and
maintenance
responsibilities
and
the
HOA
could
sit
there
and
say
we're
not
gonna.
Take
this
on
so
then
this
there
would
be
a
petition
go
to
election.
AH
H
And
the
problems
that
have
happened
in
the
past
have
been
the
timing
for
the
build-out
so
that
you
have
just
a
couple
of
places
built
then
all
of
a
sudden
all
of
that
debt,
especially
for
streets
and
that
that
might
incur
upfront
is
being
borne
by
just
a
couple
properties
which
turned
them
upside
down
and
caused
problems.
So
I
just
wanted
to
know.
I
mean
I,
know
it's
a
smaller
project.
H
AH
Directly
answer:
my
question
is
the
reason
there
is
the
mill
levy
cap.
That's
in
the
district
is
its
if
it's
50
mils,
which
is
the
cap
or
seeking,
is
whether
you
have
one
home
or
all
136,
it's
50
mils,
that's
it
so.
The
investor,
the
mutual
investor
who
says
you
know
I,
want
to
buy
some
musical
bonds.
They
look
at
it
and
be,
like
I
sure
hope
they
build
all
136,
because
it's
going
to
take
a
136
to
pay
me
the
investor.
AH
If
they
only
build
one
I'm
not
going
to
get
paid
and
that's
not
a
default
under
the
bonding,
it
is
investor.
You
took
that
risk
now,
they're
not
going
to
make
that
risk
happen
until
they
believe
that
Aaron's
going
to
MIT,
it'll
all
136
units,
so
that
are
gonna,
look
at
history
of
his
company
and
success
in
building
and
so
forth.
But
if
that
all
fails,
a
homeowner
I
bought
into
this
I
hadn't
disclosure,
that
it
was
50,
mils
I'm
still
at
50
meals,
even
if
I'm
the
only
home
in
there.
H
AJ
AJ
But
my
understanding
of
just
the
financial
market
and
the
the
market
for
these
bonds,
as
Sean
was
alluding
to
from
our
financial
consultant
is
that
is
that
we're
going
to
need
to
build
a
substantial
portion
of
these
homes
before
we
can
even
find
someone
to
buy
the
bonds
that
that
and
and
I
think
it.
It
goes
back
to
exactly
what
you're
talking
about
I
know
in
2009-2010,
I
was
a
commercial
real
estate
broker
and
I
dealt
with
there
were
there
were
commercial
properties
they
weren't
residential,
but
land
deals,
development
of
retail
or
something
like
that.
J
AJ
Bondholders
had
issued
30
million,
you
know
paid
thirty
million
dollars
for
bonds
that
were
worth
10
million
and
I
think
the
problem
and
they
aren't
taking
that
risk
on
themselves
or
they're.
Making
us
prove
up
the
project.
So
what
we
will
be,
having
is
a
construction
loan
that
we'll
be
paying
for
these
costs,
as
we
incur
them
and
after
we've
got
homes
built
after
we're.
At
a
point
where
someone
who
is
willing
to
take
the
risk
on
the
bonds,
there
will
be
a
reimbursement
which
will
really
go
to
pay
down
that
construction.
Okay,.
A
Thank
you
any
further
questions
from
Council,
seeing
none
I
would
seek
a
motion
to
conclude
the
public
hearing.
Unless
we
have
further
testimony
I
didn't
see
anyone
signed
up,
I,
don't
believe
from
the
public
for
testimony
this
evening.
So
I
did
have
a
motion
from
Mayor
Pro
Tom
Jilla
deserve
second.
A
We
move
on
to
our
next
agenda
item
11
I
did
want
to
bring
up
bring
up
an
issue
with
the
applicants.
Resolution
recall
last
week
that
our
study
session
was
cut
short
or
we
didn't
have
a
study
session
in
order
to
be
able
to
study
this
issue,
and
the
applicants
I
believe
hope
was
that
we
would
be
approving
a
resolution
this
evening
conditionally
approving
the
service
plan
for
Iron
Works
Village
metropolitan
district.
A
AD
A
Yes,
thank
you,
and
so
you
know
we
would
I
am
asking
I
am
sympathetic
to
the
applicant.
Given
their
time
constraints.
They
have
told
us
that
they
are
running
up
against
some
deadlines
here
and
I.
Think
this
is
a
staff
oversight
just
to
not
simply
schedule
this
as
a
separate
agenda
item
I
would
ask
a
council
member
to
consider
motioning
to
add
them
under
agenda
item
11
c2
moved.
Thank
you
any
second.
Second.
H
AI
H
A
AK
Evening
this
is
to
approve
a
bill
for
establishing
the
2016
mill
levy.
That'll
be
collected
in
2017,
you've
heard
the
presentations
on
budget
for
August
22nd
and
the
29th
study
sessions,
and
we
have
a
public
hearing
to
gather
citizen
input
on
2017
budget
on
September
19th.
This
will
ask
for
a
mill
of
seven
point:
seven,
nine,
nine.
In
total,
it's
made
up
of
two
pieces.
AK
The
first
one
is
five
point:
eight
eight
which
collects
the
property
tax,
that's
in
our
general
fund
and
the
second
is
for
the
debt
service
on
the
general
obligation
bond,
which
is
one
point,
nine
nine.
Now
this
is
a
little
bit
less
the
1.91
9
than
we
had
last
year
last
year.
It
was
one
point
nine
to
four.
The
reason
for
that
is
that
we
had
gained
a
little
bit
in
fund
balance
that
we
want
to
draw
down,
so
we
were
asking
for
a
little
bit
less
there.
AK
AK
C
F
A
On
to
11
a
three
Council
bill,
33
staff
recommends
council
approve
a
proposed
bill
for
an
ordinance
appropriating
funds
for
the
little
Englewood
Littleton
wastewater
treatment
plan
for
the
fiscal
year.
2017
our
staff
source
again
is
finance
and
administrative
services
director
Kathleen
wrinkle.
Thank.
AK
You
if
I
may
address
eleven
a
two
and
three
at
the
same
time,
eleven
a
two
is
adopting
the
budget
for
the
Littleton
Engel
Englewood
wastewater
treatment,
plant
and
11.
A
three
is
appropriating
the
funds.
For
the
same,
this
two
was
say
a
recommendation
to
adopt
the
water
treatment
plant
budget
and
and
the
appropriation
the
the
budget
was
provided
to
the
Littleton
Englewood
wastewater
treatment,
plant
supervisor
committee
on
the
18th
and
Council
reputed
on
the
22nd.
AK
At
a
study
session
and
again
at
the
29th
public
hearing
was
gathered
for
the
input
on
the
2017
budget
on
the
19th
of
September
and
the
total
appropriation
and
budget
is
19
million
155
to
42.
It
is
structurally
balanced.
It
is
shared
one-half,
funded
by
the
Englewood
sewer
fund
and
1/2
by
Littleton
sewer
fund.
Thank.
A
B
A
AK
AK
I'd
like
to
again
address
11a,
four
and
1185.
At
the
same
time,
it
is
again
adopting
the
budget
and
the
appropriation
of
the
funds.
This
is
for
our
regular
budget
and
we're
recommending
approval
for
these
ordinances.
It
was
discussed
at
the
council
on
the
22nd
study
session
of
August
and
the
29th
of
August
study
session,
and
a
public
hearing
was
gathered
to
regard
to
get
any
input
for
the
2017
proposed
budget
on
the
19th
of
September.
We
have
to
slight
changes
from
the
proposed
budget
that
you
saw.
AK
The
first
is
a
reduction
of
the
City
Attorney
budget
by
sixty
three
point:
six
thousand
dollars.
This
reflects
a
correction
of
both
the
city
attorney,
the
deputy
city
attorney
and
the
relief
prosecuting
attorney
salary
and
benefits.
Once
the
council
raised
some
questions,
we
went
back
and
corrected
the
the
anomalies
we
had.
The
second
item
is
the
correction
of
the
reserved
for
the
service
center
fund
to
reflect
advancement
of
the
fuel
tank
replacement
from
the
reserve
to
the
actual
spend
in
2017.
AK
A
C
I
do
have
a
question
down
on
the
financial
impact
where
it
talks
about
the
total
sources
of
funds
being
91
million
six
hundred
one
thousand
six.
Ninety
eight
and
then
the
uses
of
funds,
98
million
718
882
I
mean
two
questions.
How
could
that
be
structurally
balanced
if
we
are
using
more
money
than
we're
bringing
in
bringing.
AK
In
it's
because
there's
planned
spending
out
of
the
reserve
for
a
lot
of
the
funds
such
as
the
donors
fund,
the
Mallee
trust
fund,
so
those
are
all
included.
This
is
not
just
general
fund.
This
is
all
the
funds
together,
so
they've
reserve
money
and
built
up
the
balance
so
that
they
can
spend
it
that's
pending
as
planned.
So.
C
AK
Under
98
million
718
882,
you
were
looking
at
a
preliminary
budget
and
we've
adjusted
some
the
only
yes
I
would
have
to
go
back
for
the
details.
The
only
one
once
I
was
aware
of
was
the
the
service
center
fund.
That
would
have
made
such
a
huge
difference.
The
1
million
599
that
we
pulled
forward
out
of
reserves
and
into
spending
it
was
planned,
and
we
just
didn't
have
it
in
the
preliminary
budget
in
the
correct
spot.
H
With
your
answer
to
her
about
the
you
plan
to
spend
the
reserve,
then
it's
not
reserve
if
I
plan
to
spend
my
savings.
It's
not
savings!
So
when
we
put
this
out
there
and
we're
trying
to
tell
people
that
we've
got
a
structurally
balanced
budget
and
in
bold
print,
we've
got
a
seven
million
dollar
difference
here,
give
or
take
a
hundred
couple
hundred
thousand
here
there
that's
kind
of
a
hard
sell
to
tell
the
public
that
we've
got
a
structurally
balanced
budget.
A
AK
The
general
fund
we
we
do
operate
and
we
have
a
general
fund
balance
policy
that
one
we
actually
have
a
little
more
in
what
we're
receiving
in
revenue
than
we
do
and
what
we
expended
totally
structurally
balanced
there
and
the
other
funds.
We're
allowed
to
collect
and
grow
a
reserve
balance
and
then
spend
it
for
like
larger
purchases
such
as
property.
You
can't
get
that
all
in
one
year
in
a
lot
of
cases,
so
that's
an
example
not
probably
pertinent
to
what
they're
doing
this
year,
but
those
are
still
structurally
balanced.
H
Of
those
24
funds
and
I
know
that
they
were
more
before
and
you've
got
the
general
fund
in
all
of
the
other
funds.
But
if
you
pile
all
the
funds
together
and
you're
spending
more
than
you're
taking
in
then
that's
still.
What
I'm
saying
is
that
it's
a
difficult
sell
to
the
public
to
say
that
that's
structurally
balanced,
then.
A
AF
The
general
fund,
as
mr.
wrinkle
mentioned,
is
structurally
balanced.
It
is
the
planned
expenses
within
those
other
funds,
so,
for
example,
Parks
and
Recreation
has
a
number
of
capital
projects
that
will
be
constructed
next
year
that
have
drawn
upon
the
reserves
that
come
from
such
things
as
the
Conservation
Trust
Fund,
that's
lottery,
monies
that
have
come
in
they'll
be
replacing
several
Park
Park
equipment
next
year
as
well.
Some
Park
shelters,
that's
critical
infrastructure.
We
also
have
a
fiber
dam
down
here
at
the
Costa
Vita
restaurant
down
here
off
of
Hamden,
that's
gonna
be
replaced.
AF
That's
about
to
use
a
quarter
of
a
million
dollars
replacement,
that's
going
to
transpire.
So
there
are
some.
Those
are
some
of
the
larger
projects
and
those
other
funds
outside
the
general
fund.
That
will
be
capital
in
nature
that
bill
that
will
be
replaced.
We
also
have
in
the
road
in
bridge
fund
Dartmouth
bridge.
The
bridge
deck
will
be
replacing
the
roadway
actually
expanded
to
accommodate
pedestrians
this
next
year
and
that's
like
1.8
million
dollars.
So
those
are
some
of
the
projects
that
we've
been
setting
monies
aside.
For
that
then
plan
to
be
expended
if.
A
C
AK
AF
Just
as
a
point
of
clarification
to
it's
very
true
that,
like
a
general
fund
reserve
is,
is
the
area
that
we
need
to
be
most
concerned
with,
because
that's
what
we've
been
drawing
money
from,
whether
it's
one-time
money
or
ongoing
monies
to
actually
to
balance
to
balance
the
budget
that
way
to
day
operation
day-to-day
operational
budget,
Thank
You
mayor.
However,
the
other
funds
that
we
have
like
Malley
or
at
the
CTF
or
parks,
no
parks
trust
fund.
AF
Those
do
grow
by
nature
of
the
fact
that
they
have
a
revenue
stream
that
comes
in
either
from
the
state
or
from
private
donations
that
make
them
make
them
run.
But
the
general
fund
reserve
is
the
one
that
we
have
to
keep
the
most
keep
our
eye
on
the
ball
the
most
with.
Otherwise,
we
will
run
out
of
run
into
trouble.
That's
when
we
have
shown
you
the
priority,
based
budgeting
fiscal
health
and
wellness
tool
that
shows
2019
as
being
cataclysmic.
AF
If
we
take
no
action
whatsoever,
I
referenced
in
the
study
session
tonight,
the
necessity
for
us
to
come
up
with
a
revenue
and
funding
model
that
addresses
that,
if
we
don't
put
the
brakes
on
or
address
it
status
quo,
is
not
going
to
help
us
in
the
general
fund.
The
other
funds
should
be
self-sustaining
and
should
be
fine,
but
it's
just
a
general
fund.
That's
going
to
be
problematic.
C
Another
question,
and-
and
it
has
to
do
with
the
priority
based
budgeting
piece,
because
when
I
asked,
when
we
had
the
study
session-
and
we
were
only
looking
really
at
the
expenditures-
if
that
list
of
things
were
in
priority,
but
they're
all
kind
of
mixed
together
based
on
what
people
wanted,
not
necessarily
based
on
what
the
city
would
need
it
will
that
always
be
that
way.
I
mean
here's
my
concern.
There
are
things
that
we
do
not
need
to
exist
as
a
city,
we
don't
have
to
have
parks.
C
AF
AF
Then,
to
look
at
those
programs
and
services
that
we
provide
as
well
as
enunciate
and
ask
the
question.
You
know
what
what
should
we
be
in
the
business
of
providing
what
should
be
the
top
priority?
Should
we
be
providing
you'll
be
able
to
give
us
look
at
that?
It's
gonna
be
a
painful
process,
but
one
that
we
have
to
undertake
I
greatly.
C
Appreciate
that
and
part
of
my
struggle
in
making
this
decision
is
because
I
feel
like
we
haven't,
had
that
information
and
I
kind
of
feel
like
at
our
study
session,
we
were
only
given
half
of
the
picture
rather
than
both
even
at
that
time.
So
I
would
really
appreciate
talking
about
it
a
lot
next
year,
because
I
do
think.
This
is
huge.
S
Want
to
say
that
I,
first
of
all,
I
support
this
I
think
that
it's
it's
in
line.
It
makes
sense
to
me
I'm
a
little
problem.
It's
a
little
bit
of
a
problem
for
me
manager,
Keck
when
you
say
that
we
didn't
have
enough
time
to
do
this
last
year.
So
it
helped
explain
that
a
little
bit
because
we
have
a
full
year
before
that
we
even
knew
we
were
shifting
to
priority-based
budgeting.
And
what
will?
How
will
it
look?
S
Different,
I
think
that
the
question
that
councilor
Russell
is
asking
is
a
good
one,
I'm
I'm,
very
comfortable
with
where
we
are
because
I've
seen
it
done
another
way,
I
feel
confident
so
I'm,
not
questioning
that
for
you
I'm
just
like
I
when
I
hear
that
I'm
just
surprised
like
we
had
a
whole
year.
So
what
did
we
do
wrong
and
not
meeting
your
expectations
this
last
year
and
addressing
it?
It's.
AF
Not
what
council
was
done
wrong
nobody's
done
anything
wrong.
This
isn't
an
ordinary
large
task.
One
has
to
understand
that
we've
been
we've.
Basically
looked
at
every
single
service,
every
single
program,
every
single
position
and
put
numbers
to
it.
We
asked
five
simple
questions.
Is
this
a
mandate
you
know?
Are
we
required
to
do
this?
You
know.
Is
there
another
service
provider,
whether
it's
public,
private
or
special
districts
that
can
do
this
particular
work?
Then
we
had
to
put
a
cost
to
it.
Then
we
had
to
put
staffing
numbers
to
it.
AF
AF
S
AF
AF
AF
AF
You
know,
keep
the
Mallee
Center
and
the
rec
center
open
seven
days
a
week
and
we're
looking
at
though
I
just
use
those
as
a
lustres
of
examples.
Nobody,
panic,
that's
change!
Those
are
the
kinds
of
you're
gonna.
Have
to
get
down
to
that
granular
level
of
attention
and
give
us
guidance
so
that
we
can
actually
work
on
work
on
those
things
to
make
sure
that
we
are
sustainable
moving
forward.
So.
S
S
Going
through
that,
right
now
in
the
in
their
strategic
plan,
where
those
we
got
that
presentation
a
few
weeks
ago
of
these
analysis,
will
we
do
that,
then,
in
every
area
like
that,
because
we
were
seeing
what
the
return
is,
whether
or
not
we
should
be
offering
that
service
for
the
cost
that
it
is
and
will
more
boards
and
commissions
get
involved
in
this
or
will
be
more
on
your
level
in
us.
That's.
AF
Gonna
have
to
be
more
from
a
policy
level.
I
think
it
will
be
a
little
unwieldy
and
I.
Don't
say
that
with
any
malice
towards
those
persons
that
serve
in
a
voluntary
capacity,
but
you're
gonna
have
to
come
and
help
make
those
prescriptions
as
to
what
level
of
service
we're
gonna
provide
in
all
of
those
eight
categories,
from
good
governance,
all
the
way
down
to
the
other
seven
result
areas
and
tell
us
what
you
as
council
are
willing
to
pay
for.
AF
S
AF
S
A
Thank
you.
I
too,
would
like
to
comment.
You
know
I
will
be
supporting
this
year's
budget.
I.
Think
staff
has
heard
fairly
clearly
that
council
is
anxious
to
kind
of
dig
down
into
the
weeds
and
and
evaluate
programs.
I
think
you
know
as
a
as
an
organization.
We
were
hopeful
that
that
might
come
forward,
but
I
think
that
what
mr.
A
Keck
outlaid
and
as
our
efforts
and-
and
you
know,
rationale
for
why
we
didn't
quite
get
there
this
year
is
understandable
to
councilmember
Olsen's
point
I
generally
agree
with
her
as
well
that
I,
you
know,
having
done
this
a
while
and
feeling
very
comfortable
with
this
budget,
I
will
be
voting
YES.
Any
further
comments.
C
Actually,
because
I'm
kind
of
the
new
kid
on
the
block
and
mm-hmm
I
don't
necessarily
understand
all
of
this
I
will
be
voting.
No,
not
I
am
looking
forward
to
what's
going
on
next
year.
I
have
been
really
concerned
because
I
kept
waiting
for
talking
about
priority-based
budgeting
and
we
never
got
there
and
so
I
appreciate
that
that's
moving
forward,
but
I
will
be
voting
no
also.
Thank
you.
Thank.
A
AK
A
You
moving
on
to
11
a
six
council
bill.
36Th
africa
men's
council
approve
a
budget
for
an
ordinance
approving
charge,
changes
to
a
charter
article
7,
section
52
G,
to
combine
Parks
and
Recreation
and
the
library
department
and
to
create
a
communications
department,
our
staff
source,
the
city
manager,
Eric
Eric,
mr.
K
yeah.
AF
Thank
You
mayor
members
of
council,
this
particular
item
is
being
brought
forward
in
order
to
be
conformed
conformance
with
the
Charter.
So,
as
we've
been
looking
at
doing,
some
consolidations
of
departments
and
specifically
creating
a
communications
department,
has
been
greatly
discussed
by
this
particular
council.
We
learned
that
again,
an
ordinance
would
need
to
be
brought
forward
to
do
so.
So
this
ordinance
is
really
quite
simple.
It
would
authorize
the
consolidation
of
parks,
recreation,
golf
and
library
and
then
also
create
the
communications
department.
It's
that
simple
I
happy
to
answer
any
questions
you
might
have
questions.
S
AF
So
what
we
actually
have
started
already,
we've
had
several
focus
groups
to
actually
obtain
kind
of
concerns.
Stakeholder
integration,
if
you
will,
for
those
people
that
are
involved
in
this
particular
merger
of
departments,
that
focus
data
focus
study
data
will
be
utilized
to
also
create
a
strategic
plan
around
those
concerns.
AF
But
it's
interesting
that
the
concerns
has
been
raised
are
all
quite
similar,
and
that
is
people
want
again
to
be
able
to
be
have
their
voices
heard
and
and
have
some
ideas
for
efficiency
and
elimination
of
redundancy
so
actually
see
that
the
process
that
the
Parks,
Recreation,
Golf
and
library
is
going
to
be
undertaking
to
actually
create
a
departmental
strategy
will
help
to
overcome
many
of
those
issues
that
you
just
enunciated.
Thanks.
AF
AF
Counselor
doesn't
change
it
at
all.
They've
already
provided
us
with
a
blueprint
on
how
to
move
forward
and
that
particular
blueprint
denta
fide
the
areas
in
which
we
as
a
city
do
not
have
the
expertise.
Nor
would
we
want
to
actually
take
on
the
overhead
to
actually
have
that.
So
as
a
result
and
I
happy
to
talk
about
this
a
little
bit
later
as
well
as
I've,
talked
to
many
of
you
on
the
telephone.
AF
We
are
and
have
actually
prepared
an
RFP
to
go
out
for
communication
services
that
surrounding
those
areas
of
the
blueprint
that
kahoots
created
for
us
that
hopefully,
the
open
market
will
be
able
to
help
us
with
specifically
the
Inglewood
Magazine
and
Inglewood
presents
events
that
those
events
include
2q2
events
and
a
third
yet-to-be-named,
as
well
as
the
state
of
the
city
event
that
would
be
done
in
2017.
We're
also
looking
at
obtaining
some
assistance
with
a
marketing
campaign
that
would
be
centered
around
any
Inglewood
centric.
AF
That
would
help
us
in
any
of
a
number
of
areas,
including
our
economic
development
department
division.
I
mean
we're
looking
for
assistance
with
those
facets
again
that
we
don't
have
in-house
capacity
for
and-
and
those
are
the
things
that
we
should
be
looking
to
the
private
sector
to
do,
because
why
replicate
what
they're
already
very
well
capable
of
doing?
And
so
that
doesn't
really
change
our
plan
by
the
fact
that
one
firm
said
they're
unable
to
unable
now
to
fulfill
the
scope
of
work.
AF
S
S
B
AG
A
Thank
you.
Moving
on
to
11
a
seven
council
bill,
38
staff
recommends
council
approve
a
bill
for
an
ordinance
amending
the
Englewood
Municipal
Code
mm
and
the
rules
of
order
and
procedure
for
the
Inglewood
City
Council
to
change
the
start.
Time
of
regular
council
meetings
to
7:00
p.m.
effective
November,
7th
2016,
our
staff
sources,
city
manager,
Eric
Keck,
Thank,.
AF
You
mayor
members
of
council,
this
is
comes
on
the
heels
of
the
council's
consensus
to
look
at
changing
the
way
in
which
meetings
are
conducted.
So
right
now,
title
1,
chapter
5
of
our
city
ordinances,
stipulates
when
regular
city
council
meetings
shall
be
held
first
and
third
Mondays
of
the
month
unless
there's
a
holiday
and
then
it
would
be
preceding
Tuesday.
AF
E
A
S
AF
Think
that
a
council
with
no
offense
to
the
City,
Council
or
even
staff
for
that
matter,
I
think
that
we
spend
a
lot
of
time
talking
about
administrative
matters
in
greater
depth
and
then
we
need
to
I
think
what
we
need
to
do
is
bring
those
matters
forward,
fully
fully
studied
within
a
memorandum
to
the
councilor
council
communication
that
an
unseats
to
you
what
we're
actually
seeking
to
do.
This
is
a
perfect
example.
Why
do
we
need
to
have
a
study
session
to
talk
about
changing
the
business
there?
AF
Changing
a
meeting
time
or
coming
up
here
shortly
are
some
proposed
changes
have
ordinances
such
as
the
panhandling
ordinance?
Why
have
a
study
session
on
panhandling
when
this
has
fully
been
studied?
And
you
know
perhaps,
like
other
things
out
there,
we
just
bring
forward
changes
that
are
that,
are
you
know
vetted
in
the
in
the
in
the
legal
world
that
we
know
that
would
make
sense,
so
the
council
could
just
make
those
changes
rather
than
study
something
to
death.
AF
S
O
AF
But
it's
also
very
stressful
for
staff,
as
it
is
right
now
to
have
a
study
session
each
week
to
be
able
to
turn
around
and
produce
documents
and
council
requests
that
ad
nauseam.
It's
very
difficult
for
staff
to
make
that
change.
This
would
allow
a
Lisa
breathing
room
to
actually
allow
us
to
slow
down
and
to
think
things
through,
so
that
you
do
get
a
better
quality
product,
hopefully
I
believe
again
having
a
study
session
each
week
also
creates
other
issues
for
council,
including
council
dynamics.
H
To
reiterate
what
councilman
Burroughs
was
talking
about
is
that
we've
had
the
addition
of
material
on
Thursday
after
the
packet
is
done
and
on
Friday
and
and
something
as
important
as
the
operational
plan
to
not
have
that
included.
So
you
think
that
that's
going
to
give
you
the
opportunity
to
do
more
of
that,
because
I
do
think
we
could
eliminate
some
of
that
if
we
had
that
material
yeah.
B
AL
AF
Just
bring
that
to
you
as
a
piece
of
information
that
shouldn't
have
even
been
brought
forward
to
the
City
Council
in
a
study
session.
Quite
frankly,
it
should
have
been
something
that
was
in
a
packet
or
your
council
packet
for
you
to
look
at.
If
you
had
a
problem,
you
could
say:
listen
I,
disagree
with
you
manager,
Keck
here
on
this
particular
administrative
matter.
AF
What
I
do
want
to
do,
though,
is
say
this
because
of
of
last
week
and
because
we've
been
juggling
council
meetings
around,
that's
why
they,
the
issue
for
tonight
with
the
not
having
the
PowerPoint
in
your
packet
occurred.
That
was
actually
supposed
to
occur.
Two
weeks
from
now,
not
not
tonight,
I
only.
H
To
like
out
there
but
I'm
that
specific,
but
it
just
happened
tonight,
but
there's
been
things
being
pushed
on
too,
like
Friday
that
aren't
being
put
into
that
package
which
doesn't
give
us
necessarily
or
the
public
an
opportunity.
I
mean
similar
to
the
council
requests.
The
vast
majority
of
my
council
requests
are
prompted
by
my
bosses.
The
citizens
haven't,
need
some
information
or
have
something.
So
we
certainly
want
to
make
sure
that
my
boss
has
a
chance
to
get
their
information
answered
and
do
that
too.
So,
if
you
think
that's
going
to
help
I.
AF
Really
do
think
it's
gonna
help
and
I.
You
know
I
appreciate
that
and
I
think
it
would
be
I'd,
be
hard-pressed
to
to
hear
your
comment
from
anybody
that
says
that
we're
not
diligent
and
trying
to
get
council
requests
turned
around.
We
really
do
spend
time
on
that.
Really
what
separates?
What
the
work
that
we
do
from
the
business
world
is
that
we
work
on
three
levels.
I
mean
we
have
the
business
of
the
city
they'll
deal
with.
H
AF
I
really
think
it's
gonna
help
from
the
standpoint
again.
It's
really
tough
to
try
to
turn
around
study
session
from
week
to
week
from
one
study
session
to
the
next
okay.
It
sounds
like
it's
not,
but
it
gives
us
very
little
time
so,
for
example,
since
we're
still
living
under
this
prescription
until
we
reached
November
all
I
have
to
to
digest
what
transpired
tonight.
At
our
study
session.
AF
A
qualitative
review
of
walking
through
staffs
powerpoints
I've
had
to
add
additional
meetings
to
make
sure
that
I
go
through
powerpoints
now,
so
that
we
don't
miss
something
that
you
get
accurate
information
and
a
timely
and
from
time
to
time
and
I
apologize
that
we
do
send
out
information
on
Friday
after
a
Thursday
thinking
that
many
of
you
probably
wouldn't
look
at
the
information
until
Friday
anyway
or
the
weekend.
But
still
we
have
a
fiduciary
we've
done
stated.
AF
The
goal
for
ourselves
to
say
Thursday
night
is
when
you're
going
to
get
your
packet
materials
and
I.
Think
that
not
having
a
study
session
each
week
will
afford
us,
maybe
some
additional
time
to
plan
better.
You
more
be
more
intentional
about
our
focus
on
getting
things
out
in
a
in
a
better
way
and
better
qualitatively
as
well
time
will.
H
Tell
I
mean
to
honor
Scott's,
diligent
work
on
all
of
those
municipalities
that
I
did
I
did
check
on
quite
a
few,
and
they
don't
do
study
sessions
every
time.
So
there
must
be
some
kind
of
process
that
you're
I
assume
that
you're
looking
at
this
going
to
kind
of
help
that
help
that
along.
So,
if
there's
anything
from
there,
it's
not
unusual
and
it
is
actually
very
unusual.
The
way
we
do
it
currently
to
have
this
many
meetings,
so
I
agree
with
you
I'm
glad
it's
gonna
work
for
you.
Thank.
AF
C
C
A
You
council,
discussion
council
member
Yates:
did
you
have
a
comment
there
I'll
pass
over
this?
Okay?
Thank
you.
You
know
I'd
like
to
float
the
conversation
of
moving
to
6:30.
You
know
if
we
are,
you
know
going
to
eliminate
study
sessions.
I
do
think
that
might
impact
the
regular
sessions
and
load
us
up
with
more
and
so
just
by
moving
it
back
a
half
hour.
I'm
not
sure,
is
going
to
accomplish
the
goal
that
we're
really
trying
to
accomplish
here
with
this
so
I'm
actually
advocating
for
a
6:30
start
council
member
Olson,
aye.
S
I
guess
what
I'm
concerned
about
is
that
we're
talking
about
slowing
things
down
right,
I
think
that's
what
this
is
and
it's,
and
as
long
as
we
have
I,
don't
a
conversation
about
how
we
do
our
meetings
to
me
is
something
we
should
do
a
study
session
on
I
mean
we
should
have
a
conversation,
but
it's
not
something.
Someone
should
just
bring
up
here
and
decide.
We're
gonna
do
this.
It's
because
it
affects
us
on
how
we
operate.
I'm
I
would
love
to
not
a
study
session
every
week
and
so
I'm
fine
with
that.
S
As
long
as
we
realize
we're
gonna
slow
down
some
decision-making,
that's
what
it
will
do
and
are
we
okay
with
that?
That's
the
that's
one
of
the
consequences
we
will
have
and
I
think,
particularly
perhaps
this
dynamics
of
this
council.
That's
probably
what
will
happen
because
we'll
be
all
asking
for
more
and
and
if
we
don't
get
all
the
information
straight
up,
which
then
puts
a
lot
of
pressure
on
you
to
have
everything
in
line
and
it
could
really
slow
things
down.
S
I'm
an
example
of
all
of
that
already,
as
the
ordinance
34
I
thought,
we
had
made
a
pretty
clear
agreement
that
we
were
going
to
do
that
quite
a
few
weeks
ago,
and
now
it's
in
November
and
it's
not
a
night
that
we
can't
even
do
it
on
which
we'll
talk
about
in
a
minute.
But
I'm
really
concerned
that
it'll
get
slowed
down
so
much
that
our
citizens
are
going
to
be
bothered
by
how
slow
it
is.
Maybe
we
can
do
it
I'm
willing
to
give
it
a
try.
S
C
A
And
if
I
could
just
add
some
thoughts
as
well,
you
know
I
will
point
out
that
we
can't
be
making
legislative
decisions
in
study
session
anyway.
So
we
would
still
remain
with
the
same
two
actionable
meetings
per
month
that
we
have
currently
as
far
as
administrative
direction,
and
that's
why
I
think
I'm
advocating
for
a
6:30.
A
There
may
be
additional
issues
that
the
city
manager's
office
may
have
to
bring
forward
in
a
formal
meeting
rather
than
a
study
session
type
of
setting,
and
so
that's
why
I
do
think
that
extra
half-hour
would
be
helpful
but
I
think
if
executed
properly,
we
still
have
the
same
number
of
action
item
or
same
number
of
action
nights,
I
guess
I
should
say,
and
it
shouldn't
be
slowing
us
down
I.
Think
if
we
find
that
it
does
slow
us
down,
then
we
need
to
go
back
council
memory,
AIDS.
E
The
other
part
of
it
is
if
we're
concerned
that
our
council
meetings
are
going
to
go
longer
because
we're
not
having
as
many
study
sessions
I
would
probably
make
the
recommendation
that
we
follow
the
rules
that
we
already
have
because
that's
been
kind
of
the
problem
we
kind
of
have
a
when
we're
up.
Here
we
tend
to
have
kind
of
a
free-for-all.
E
You
know,
there's
a
comment
a
while
back
about
you
know.
If
somebody
comes
to
council,
they
should
be
able
to
make
their
statement
within
three
to
five
minutes
or
something
along
those
lines.
You
know
if
you
go
past,
that
a
lot
of
times
it
kind
of
meander
down
a
lot
of
different
roads.
I
think
that
same
rule
can
basically
apply
to
council.
E
Then,
if
we
want
to
have
a
rebuttal
over
it,
then
we
need
to
look
at
a
time.
Well,
we
need
to
first
look:
are
we
going
to
allow
a
rebuttal
and
if
we
are,
how
much
time
does
that
particular
council
member
have
but
I
would
be
very
much
willing
to
follow
the
law
or
it's
not
law?
It's
the
rule.
We
talk
all
the
time
about
legislative
bodies,
passing
new
laws
to
take
care
of
a
problem
when
we
already
have
laws
that
could
here.
A
I
appreciate
those
comments
about
that.
I
do
think,
that's
something
this
council
really
needs
to
consider.
We
do
have
policies
and
procedures
of
future
meetings
on
the
agenda,
I,
believe
and
so
that
conversation
will
be
coming
up.
This
counsel
I
will
refocus
us,
though,
on
the
question
tonight,
which
is
more
of
the
scheduling
rather
than
procedure
within
the
meeting.
But
I
do
agree
that
that's
something
we
can
consider
councillor
Olson.
You
have.
S
A
question
for
you
about
why
you're
suggesting
6:30
and
then
a
comment
to
say
if
the
meetings
continue
to
go,
this
late
I
am
not
willing
to
just
because
we
took
away
study
sessions
not
to
add
more
nights
to
the
week
at
any
point.
Just
because
we're
behind
I
would
prefer
that
we
then
had
the
meeting
before
the
regular
meeting
to
get
stuff
done,
because
it
just
does
not
does
not
work
and
we
decide
any
night
of
the
week.
S
A
Just
think
if
the
goal
is
to
end
these
meetings
in
an
earlier
time,
and
if
we
eliminate
a
study
session,
that's
gonna
allow
a
little
bit
more
of
agenda
items
or
discussion
items
onto
our
onto
our
agenda,
and
so,
if
we
wanted
to
change
it,
I
think
that
6:30
would
be
more
beneficial.
I
hear
the
concerns
about
our
working
folks
in
our
community
being
able
to
make
these
meetings,
and
so
that's
why
I
would
not
be
supportive
of
6:00
o'clock,
but
I
do
think.
A
S
S
A
B
A
H
Agree
but
I
agree
with
you:
I'll
stay
here
till
midnight.
If
that's
what
it
takes
to
get
the
business
done,
but
this
is
the
people's
night
and
I
think
that
we
need
to
stay
and
let
them
have
their
say
they
only
get
it
three
in
five
minutes
at
a
time
for
every
two
weeks
and
kind
of
us
say:
I
think
6:30
s
too
early
I
mean
I,
wish
it
weren't
I
mean
I.
H
Would
I
would
go
with
that,
but
I
saw
what
happened
when
they
switched
it
over
in
Littleton,
and
that's
happened
to
agree
with
Scott's
research
that
probably
seven
would
be
the
best.
Maybe
even
seven.
Thirty
might
be
a
little
too
late.
So
you
know
maybe
it's
been
a
little
too
late,
but
6:30
starts
to
be
a
little
too
early
for
people
to
get
home
have
a
little
supper
and
come
here.
A
A
On
to
eleven
eight
council
bill,
39
staff
recommends
council
approve
a
bill
for
an
ordinance
approving
an
intergovernmental
agreement
with
south
suburban
Parks
and
Recreation
District
for
the
construction
of
a
bike
trail
on
the
east
side
of
the
South
Platte
River
at
West,
Union
Avenue
and
West
Oxford
Avenue,
our
staff
sources
utilities
director
Tom
Brennan
good
evening.
Mr.
Brennan
mayor.
AL
The
project
necessitated
the
project
necessitated
modifications
to
to
city
facilities.
The
first
here
this
is
the
Union
Avenue
water
intake
to
your
right.
You
can
see
the
open
area
with
the
tree.
This
the
photo
to
write
is
looking
back
the
other
way
at
it.
In
order
to
build
this
trail,
they
needed
to
put
it
with
a
retaining
wall
in
there.
So
what
they're
gonna
do.
H
AL
I
was
going
to
show
you
was:
it
extends
the
intake,
it's
about
a
hundred
and
ten
feet
of
structure
and
additionally,
the
path
is
going
to
be
concrete
right.
Now
we
just
drive
on
that
slope.
There
grass
slope
right
there,
so
we
have
to
wait
for
fairly
decent
weather.
With
that
concrete
path,
that'll
be
reinforced,
that'll
improve
our
access
for
maintenance,
the
the
second
modification
to
city
facilities.
This
is
the
92
inch
out
fall
at
Oxford
Avenue.
AL
The
trail
is
going
to
go
in
front
of
that,
so
in
order
for
them
to
construct
the
trail
they're
going
to
remove
approximately
fourteen
feet
of
that
92
inch,
corrugated,
metal,
pipe
and
they're
going
to
replace
it
with
a
94
inch
by
ninety
four
inch
box,
drop
it
down
three
feet
and
extended
an
additional
20
feet.
The
bike
path
will
be
on
top
of
that,
and
then
this
that
drop
right
there's
about
12
feet.
AL
This
new
path
will
eliminate
that
with
hand
railings
on
both
sides.
The
Union
Avenue
modifications
were
priced
out
at
five
hundred
and
thirty
four
thousand
dollars.
All
that
cost
is
covered
by
the
project.
The
modifications
to
this
outfall
right
here,
it's
two
hundred
and
twenty
five
thousand
dollars
and
again
the
project's
going
to
cover
the
cost.
C
AL
B
AF
A
clarification
mayor
and
council
I've
sit
on
the
South
Platte
working
group
with
councilmember
Olson.
This
is
a
improvement
that
has
been
in
their
master
plan,
South
Suburbans
master
plan
for
years,
I
just
haven't
had
the
funding
vehicle,
and
now
that
they've
been
successful
with
the
great
outdoors
Colorado
grant
process,
they
will
be
able
to
finalize
this
section
of
trail
as
part
of
their
master
plan.
Okay,.
S
F
Are
we
missing
this
part
for
those
who
ride
that
trail
and
I
know?
Mr.
Keck
has
on
a
Saturday
morning.
It
is
like
interstate,
so
that
side
will
help
alleviate
the
traffic
if
you've
ever
taken
that
little
roundabout
on
your
bicycle
and
have
other
people
coming
at
you
at
50
miles
an
hour.
This
will
be
a
much
safer
route
to
put
people
through
and
in
fact,
we've
had
some
accidents.
F
There
I
think
we
had
someone
that
was
there
I
believe
it
was
there,
but
right
at
where
the
Mary
Carter
you
go
down
and
connect
with
the
Mary
Carter,
so
that
will
help
eliminate
it
would
be
more
safer,
especially
if
you
have
like
we
took.
We
made
the
mistake
of
taking
our
grandson
when
he
was
learning
and
took
him.
F
B
A
AM
Evening,
mayor
and
city
council,
during
the
months
of
May
and
June
of
2016,
the
city
entered
into
successful
contract
negotiations
with
the
Englewood
police
benefit,
Association,
otherwise
known
as
EDTA
I'll.
Summarize.
Some
of
the
significant
changes
to
the
contract,
similar
to
past
contracts
officers
will
receive
a
market
adjustment
to
their
base
wage,
effective,
2017
and
2018.
Based
upon
a
salary
survey
that
is
conducted
during
the
fourth
quarter
of
the
previous
year.
AM
Added
to
the
contract
states
that
if
an
officer
is
killed
during
the
line
of
duty
that
the
city
will
pay
for
the
cost
of
a
funeral
up
to
the
maximum
of
$10,000,
this
amount
shall
be
offset
by
any
other
payments
provided
by
worker
or
Colorado
workers,
compensation
or
any
other
insurance
agency
or
organization.
The
financial
impact
for
these
revisions
for
2017
is
150
7106
and
160
1819
for
2018.
AM
S
A
F
S
B
B
AN
AN
D
A
E
I
just
have
one
thing:
I
would
like
to
state
that
I
still
stand
behind
my
objection
this
evening.
It
was
not
an
issue
of
being
illegal
in
what
we
did.
It
was
he.
It
was
an
issue
that
had
to
deal
with
he
and
now
a
blank
on
the
word
guidance
issue,
and
there
is
a
lot
of
information
that
is
behind
that
whole
thing.
It
makes
it
more
of
a
guidance
issue
than
a
legal
or
we
broke
the
law
issue,
because
I
still
do
not
believe
that
we
actually
broke
the
law.
E
S
That
did
not
happen
because
it
got
derailed
through
a
lawsuit
and
the
number
of
ways
in
which
that
I
got
interpreted,
I'm
really
uncomfortable
with
how
far
out
we
have
pushed
this
and
I'd
like
to
see
us
yeah,
I,
guess.
My
question
tonight
is:
what's
the
plan
for
moving
it
from
the
night
that
we
just
decided
on
for
the
team-building
or
team,
whatever
we'll.
A
S
S
H
It's
been
some
time
previously
downtown
and
had
brought
up
about
some
of
the
lights,
especially
in
the
3400
block.
There
were
more
than
three
of
them
out,
but
well,
three
plus
the
Excel
and
I
believe
when
I
was
coming
home,
the
other
night
that
they
look
like
they
have
been
fixed,
they
weren't
dim
they
were
actually
out,
I
had
to
go
back
and
and
what
the
business
owners
resolve
the
issue
between
dim
and
out,
but
we
all
agreed
they
were
out
and
now
all
of
a
sudden,
they're
working,
so
I
wanted
to
Dave
Henderson.
H
We
sneeze
that
out
some
days
we
have
a
few
places
that
we
could
recoup
some
of
that
I
think
but
and
to
recoup
ten
thousand
of
that
for
the
permanent.
That
would
only
bring
that
at
forty
thousand
and
to
go
ahead
and
start
utilizing.
The
hundred
and
fifty
spaces
that
are
on
the
east
side
of
the
street
and
make
it
safe,
because
I
spent
some
time
down
there
and
there's
there's
a
lot
of
pedestrians
that
are
walking
across
there
where
somebody's
going
to
get
hurt.
H
H
They
have
huge
investments
down
there
and
would
really
like
to
see
some
support
and
I.
Think
just
a
50,000
well
40,000
through
you
know
that
we
might
not
be
able
to
recoup
might
be
a
real
good
weight
plus
they
came
up
with
that.
If
we've
got
flashy
lights
and
construction
cones
and
stuff,
that's
almost
like
appetizing
slowing
them
down,
they'll
know
something
news
going
on
and
that
we've
got
some
some
activity
going
on
down
there
and
they'll.
H
Maybe
stop
not
want
to
be
in
traffic
and
go
to
Bob's
and
have
a
beer
and
enjoy
themselves
so,
but
I'd
really
like
to
find
out
next
week
or
pretty
soon
what
what
all
came
out
of
all
of
that,
so
that
we
move
forward
and
again
congratulations
to
our
business
owner
over
there
on
T
hone
for
saving
another
Inglewood
life
and
I
ever
am
in
a
restaurant,
a
particular
maybe
Asian
restaurant.
That
I
would
go
ahead
and
make
sure
I
had
a
retired
firefighter
around
me.
That
was
pretty
cool,
that
they
did,
that.
H
C
Actually
councilmember
Barrentine
reminded
me:
I
have
two
home
pages
of
notes
from
that
meeting
down
there
and
no
I'm
not
going
to
go
over
all
of
it,
but
just
to
say
this
and
I
talked
to
a
few
of
the
business
owners
after
after
the
meeting
and
some
of
them
said
and
and
I
kind
of
get
this.
That
government
does
not
think
outside
the
box
and
they
some
of
those
businesses.
C
I,
do
believe
this
that,
if
we
don't
do
something
soon,
they
will
close
their
doors
and,
like
Paul
said
he's
been
in
business
three
years
he
can
weather
the
storm
a
little
bit
but
like
palenko
cannot
and-
and
so
they
really
need
that
temporary
crosswalk
and
he
his
idea
is
put
up
a
few
cones
and
some
flashing
lights
and
you
don't
I
mean
do
we
really
have
to
make
it
a
DA
compliant
immediately.
If
that
is
in
the
plans.
AF
No,
we
don't
have
to
I
think
it
was
you
when
you
have
engineers
design,
something
they
their
engineers
and
they
decided
to
meet
the
law.
I
think
the
concern
was
if
we
go
ahead
and
put
a
crossing
in
there
and
someone
were
to
not
be
able
to
use
a
ramp
and
then
hurt
themselves,
they
would
see
the
city.
So,
having
said
that,
I
just
met
with
Dave
Henderson
today
we're
pushing
forward
to
do
across
a
light
version
of
the
crossing.
That's
going
to
have
asphalt.
We
have
asphalt
crews,
they
can
do
the
work
right
here.
AF
So
I'll
have
a
schedule
for
one.
This
is
going
to
be
done.
Dave
promised
to
have
it
to
me
this
week
soon
as
I
get
that
I'll
get
it
to
you
as
counsel,
but
just
understand
to
get
to
the
point
where
we
are
today.
It's
amazing
so
to
say
that
we're
not
able
to
move
quickly
as
I
get
it.
You
know
the
old
six
guys
in
the
shovel
and
one
guy
work
in
analogy,
but
you
know
we're
working
as
best.
We
can
to
make
sure
that
we
get
this
put
in
and
it'll
it'll
happen.
C
I
appreciate
that
and
and
the
truth
is
they
weren't,
they
weren't
necessarily
complaining,
but
the
message
that
they
got
that
day
was
it'll,
be
the
first
of
the
year
and
that
you
know
when
you're
losing
money
so
and
the
interesting
thing
is
a
lot
of
those
businesses
are
very
excited
about
the
high
density.
That's
coming
down
there,
and
so
anyway,
it
was
a
very
good
meeting
and
I
do
have
another
question
these
interviews
tomorrow
with
the
Urban
Land
Institute
thing.
Why
are
we
doing
them
individually
because
we
all
govern
as
a
body?
AF
Because
we're
running
out
of
time
for
study
sessions,
no
I
I
think
this
was.
This
was
a
design.
This
is
a
model
that
the
Urban
Land
Institute
has
utilized
before,
for
this
particular
technical
assistance
program
and
I
think
that
they
they
do
want
to
get
one-on-one
perspective
than
group
groups
Inc
on
a
project
we
just
talked
about
government
and
groupthink,
but
I
think
that
it's
their
desire
to
have
individual
interviews
just
to
pick
your
brain
and
see
what
your
thoughts
are.
AF
Obviously,
there
will
be
opportunities
for
them
to
share
their
findings
in
the
report
which
we
will
have
videography
by
the
way
Thanks
councilmember
Barrentine
asked
to
do
it.
We're
happy
to
do
that
to
share
with
the
community
in
the
public,
but
that's
just
what
their
model
was
when
they
asked
us,
they
thought
that
would
be
more
efficient
use
of
time,
as
well
as
didn't
try
to
schedule
another
meeting
of
the
council
as
a
group.
AF
H
A
On
to
Mayor
report,
I
really
proud
to
say
that
last
Thursday
morning,
I
was
able
to
deliver
an
opening
statements
to
what
I
hope
is
going
to
be
a
first
of
our
annual
job
fairs.
I
thought
it
was
really
a
resounding
success.
We
had
over
I
started.
We
had
32
local
businesses
represented
most
of
our
largest
employers
were
represented.
They
had
over
500
jobs
available
that
day.
It's
a
wonderful
opportunity
to
provide
recruitment
opportunities
for
our
local
businesses,
as
well
as
job
opportunities
for
our
local
residences.
A
Our
local
residents,
I,
should
say
and
I
think
it
helps
us
attract
both
residents
and
workers
and
helps
match
our
residents
and
our
workers,
our
workers
with
our
local
businesses
and
vice
versa,
so
really
proud
to
see
that
come
to
fruition.
I
really
think
that
we
should
really
be
proud
of
this
and
celebrate
this
and
hopefully
help
advertise
it
a
little
bit
more
next
year.
Do
we
have
a
total
number
of
attendees?
Perhaps
mister?
A
You
know
I
know
that
they
only
had
I
want
to
say
about
a
hundred
pre-registered,
but
I'm
hopeful
that,
throughout
the
day,
I
did
stick
around
most
of
the
morning
there
and
saw
lots
of
folks
just
kind
of
coming
in
and
out
so
I'm
hopeful
that
you
know
we
got
close
to
500
but
I'm,
not
so
sure
we
met
that
threshold.
So
I
think
that
you
know
we
need
to
do
probably
a
little
better
job.
We
did
a
great
job
of
outreach
into
our
businesses,
get
their
participation.
A
You
know,
councilmember
Yates
I,
appreciate
your
comments
regarding
the
point
of
order
issue
you
raised
earlier.
I
do
agree
that
you
know
we
haven't
done
anything
illegal,
I
guess.
My
only
point
was:
is
that
I
believe
councilmember
Barrentine
is
has
a
right
to
her
opinion
about
whether
or
not
our
activities
were
legal
or
illegal
without
the
guiding
opinion
of
a
binding,
Court
opinion.
A
Moving
on
to
councilmember
Russell's
comments
regarding
our
local
businesses,
I
believe
that
a
healthy
skepticism
of
government
is
generally
a
good
thing,
so
you
know
keeping
us
all
on
our
toes,
isn't,
isn't
it
isn't
necessarily
the
worst
thing
in
the
world?
So
thank
you
again.
They'll
conclude
mayor's
choice.
I'm
sorry,
I
do
have
memorandum.
A
A
Scheduled
tomorrow
and
I'm
gonna
try
to
get
it
sooner
rather
than
later,
based
on
the
feedback
I
got
this
evening.
So
if
we
can
get
a
next
week
guy,
you
know
I
can't
promise
that
yet,
but
we'll
work
on
getting
as
soon
as
possible
was
what
I've
heard
fairly
loudly
and
clearly
this
evening
you
know
there
was
a
memorandum
on
calling
the
questions.
I
believe
that
was
disseminating
our
packet.
You
know
there
was
some
discussion
about.
A
You
know
calling
of
questions
and
right
now
our
council
policy
says
that
once
somebody
calls
the
question,
the
question
should
be
called
it's
silent
on
the
issue
of
whether
or
not
council
members
should
be
able
to
weigh
in
you
know,
checking
out
Robert's
Rules.
There
is
a
suggestion
there
that
2/3
are
required
to
close
the
discussion,
so
I
feel
like
I'm
having
to
kind
of
make
a
subjective
call
and
whether
or
not
to
exclude
council
members
without
the
guidance
of
our
policy.
So
I
guess
I'm,
asking
Council
to
consider
this
at
a
future
date.
A
Perhaps
a
retreat
or
some
other
areas
when
we
were
discussing
policies
and
procedures
of
our
future
meetings
that
this
is.
You
know
something
that
I
think
we
should
give
some
guidance
on
not
just
to
me
but
to
future
councils
as
well,
rather
than
remaining
silent
on
that
issue.
Any
feedback
on
that
at
all
I
think.
AF
Thank
You
mayor
just
quickly
I
as
a
result
of
hearing
from
cahoots
last
week
that
they're
going
to
be
unable
to
fulfill
our
scope
of
work
that
we
prepared
staff
when
I
see
staff
I
mean
myself,
Allison,
Carney
and
Murphy
Robinson
sat
down
and
looked
at
the
blueprint
that
they
had
given
us
and
figured.
What
is
it
that
we
can
do
in
the
scope
versus
what
you
know?
We
have
capacity
for
versus
what
we
would
need
somebody
else
from
the
private
sector
to
help
us
with.
AF
We
came
down
to
basically
four
areas
so
number
one
is.
We
need
help
produce
an
England
magazine
as
well
as
the
Inglewood
present
presents
events.
So
that's
one
major
category
number
two.
We
wanted
to
have
some
assistance,
obviously,
in
creating
and
launching
a
Inglewood
focused
marketing
campaign
that
utilizes
the
existing
brand
and
formalizes.
You
know
an
annual
sponsorship
package
to
make
sure
that
that
happens.
Number
three.
AF
We
wanted
to
have
some
specific
and
intensive
support
of
the
parks,
recreation,
library
and
services
department
in
their
communications
and
marketing,
because
again,
that
has
a
specific
return
on
investment
with
the
number
of
people
that
sign
up
for
classes
and
utilize,
their
facilities,
whether
that
be
the
recreation
center,
the
Mallee
center
or
aquatics,
and
then.
Lastly,
again
we
were
looking
for
some
assistance
to
you
know
have
some
help
for
some
targeted,
targeted
creation
of
product
that
we
don't
have
in-house
creative
design
work.
AF
As
I've
stated
internally,
we've
made
some
changes,
I'm
pleased
and
proud
of
Allyson
Kearney,
who
applied
and
went
through
a
process
to
receive
the
communications
project,
managers,
role
and
so
that's
exciting,
but
at
the
same
time
I
think,
there's
some
other
things
that
we
can
do
internally.
Knowing
that
we
have
a
little
bit
of
a
capacity
that
kahoots
was
recommending,
they
were
going
to
do
I
think
we
can
do
that
ourselves
and
reduce
the
amount
of
monies
that
we
have
to
expend
externally
and
do
the
work
internally.