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From YouTube: City Council Meeting 5/29/2018
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C
A
Thank
you
to
all
of
them
and
a
couple
hundred
people
that
were
at
Patriot,
Plaza
or
Patriot
park
less
yesterday
morning,
I'd
like
to
just
a
big
THANK
YOU,
because
it's
springtime
now
and
when
we're
approaching
summer,
all
of
the
people
in
this
community
that
volunteer
with
our
young
people.
It's
really
pretty
pretty
amazing.
From
soccer
to
lacrosse
baseball
softball,
you
name
it.
There
are
a
tremendous
number
of
volunteers.
I
get
to
see
some
of
those
folks
in
action.
There
was
a
big
softball
tournament
at
James
Park.
A
This
weekend
we
had
about
30
teams
that
were
there,
it
was
all
girls,
softball
and
so
a
big
thank
you
to
all
the
volunteers
there,
including
Kelly
Elwood
and
reporter
and
Steve
O'connor,
and
also
a
big
thank
you
to
our
Parks
and
Rec
staff,
particularly
Stephon
Walker
and
his
crew.
The
fields
if
you
haven't
been
to
James
Park
in
a
while
the
fields
looked
amazing.
So
thank
thank
you
also
for
the
girls.
I
did
wear
the
the
pin
you
gave
me.
So
thank
you
for
for
this
great
express,
pin
from
the
from
the
softball
team.
A
Two
final.
Two
final
announcements
gun
violence
prevention
day,
which
we
could
certainly
use
more
prevention
of
gun
violence
right
in
this
community
and
in
this
country
is
June
1st
and
wear
orange
day,
which
I
mentioned
the
proclamation.
I'll
read
a
proclamation
will
be
June,
2nd,
okay,
which
is
Saturday.
A
B
Very
quickly,
just
that
the
clerk's
office
will
be
hosting
two
events
in
the
near
future.
They're
small
fliers
outside
of
the
council
chamber,
one
is
with
a
recorder,
yarboro
property
after
death
workshop,
and
that
will
be
on
Thursday
June
14th
2018
from
6:00
p.m.
to
8:30
p.m.
here
at
the
Civic
Center.
We
may
change
the
location
at
the
levy,
Senior
Center
and
then
another
on
parliamentary
procedure
for
the
council.
B
So
how
to
adjourn
before
midnight
is
the
title
of
the
program
and
it's
learned
how
that
instant,
City
Council's
Rules
of
Order
learn
the
city
Evanston
City,
Council's
Rules
of
Order
and
how
it
influences
policy
will
have
parliamentarian,
Joan,
Bundy
and
myself
discussing
that
and
that
will
be
Tuesday
June
26
from
5:30
to
9:00
p.m.
they
are
small,
there's
a
limited
number
of
slots.
So
please
sign
up.
A
A
Okay,
we've
got
23
people
lined
up
for
set
up
for
public
comment
tonight,
so
I'm
gonna
go
ahead
and
give
a
minute
45
for
each
for
each
speaker
and
if
we
all
stick
to
our
time,
that
should
that
should
allow
us
to
to
wrap
to
wrap
up
one
comment,
as
always.
Let
me
just
say
you
know:
I
appreciate
people
being
respectful
and
civil,
it's
okay
to
have
disagreements.
Let's
just
do
it
in
a
in
a
professional
manner
and
I
appreciate
people
keeping
that
in
mind.
A
Also
there
been
a
couple
of
comments
in
the
past,
so
just
so
everybody
understands
I've
said
in
the
past.
You
can't
relieve
your
time
to
another
speaker
and
there's
no
rule
and
the
City
Council
rules
that
say
that
the
Rules
Committee
will
be
meeting
and
we
can
have
a
conversation
verse
a
ssin
about
that,
and
just
so
everybody
understands.
A
My
rationale
is,
you
know,
we
have
lots
of
different
issues
and
you
know
I
could
have
a
whole
group
of
10
people
say:
okay,
we're
all
gonna
sign
up
and
then
we're
all
gonna
give
our
time
to
just
one
speaker
and
thence,
and
then
public
comment
can
basically
be
overridden.
So
public
comments
for
people
to
get
up
and
make
the
comment
that
they
that
they
want
to
make.
So
with
that
we've
got
like
I,
said
23
speakers
well,
I'll
give
you
the
order.
A
The
first
couple
is
Gary,
Johnson
he'll
be
first
stop
Joan
Hickman
and
then
Lucia
Kelly.
It
looks
like
and
or
yeah
and
I
again,
I
always
apologize
if
I
mispronounce
your
names
or
can't
read
them
very
well,
or
mostly
it's
just
me.
Mispronouncing
your
names,
I
apologize
for
that
and
I'll
give
you
a
little
nod
if
we,
if
we
get
up
to
that
minute,
45
welcome
Gary.
Thank.
D
You
I
live
in
the
complex
Sienna
across
from
the
proposal
for
1727,
Oak,
Avenue,
I
and
I'm
sure
many
of
the
people
you
here
wholeheartedly
oppose
the
proposal.
What
I'd
like
you
to
focus
on
both
those
of
you
who
think
you're
in
favor
of
it
and
those
who
are
against
it,
is
to
live
with
the
consequences
of
two
decisions.
You've
already
made
number
one.
The
Siena
complex
was
built
a
number
of
years
ago
with
the
agreement
with
the
city
that
it
would
include
a
disability
community
living
in
our
complex.
D
That's
the
way
we
have
been
from
the
start.
My
wife
and
I
moved
in
five
years
ago
and
we're
proud
to
have
that
community
is
neighbors
they're
the
backbone
of
our
complex.
These
people
have
special
needs.
All
of
us
already
have
trouble
crossing
Oak
Avenue.
Those
with
special
needs
are
very
concerned
about,
what's
going
to
happen
with
the
congestion
and
the
traffic
that
this
proposal
will
bring.
Second
decision
is
the
one
that
you
have
made
to
approve
a
new
assisted
living
building
in
1815
Ridge.
D
That's
at
the
end
of
the
block
on
Oak,
where
our
building
has
its
ingress
and
egress
and
the
proposed
building
would
have
ingress
and
egress,
so
this
block
is
going
to
get
a
tremendous
amount
of
traffic.
So
those
of
you
who
think
there
must
be
a
building
here,
please
listen
to
the
community
and
do
not
approve
the
special
allowances
17-story
building
vs8,
which
is
the
relevant
comparison
for
discussion.
D
A
E
I'm
sorry,
I'm,
Bassel,
Clooney,
right
I'm
speaking
very
briefly,
in
support
of
the
Arts
in
Evanston
I,
understand
that
over
the
last
several
weeks
we
have
been
recipients
of
a
long
list
of
places
and
I
understand.
This
is
not
a
budget
meeting,
but
it
is
something
that
is
going
to
be
coming
up
soon
and
I
think
that
it's
not
inappropriate
to
to
ask
that
people
start
thinking
about
how
it
is
that
we
want
to
conserve
our
resources.
E
They
have
expanded
their
influence
under
the
leadership
of
Tim
rose
to
invite
in
involve
summertime
concert
series
three
plays
every
summer:
Martin
Luther
King,
Day,
Kwanzaa
celebrations.
They
involve
seniors
and
young
people
working
together
in
the
youth
and
senior
theater
ensemble,
and
they
also
collaborate
with
others.
E
Race
they've
also
worked
with
Second
Baptist
Church
Beth,
Emmett,
y-o-u,
Christ,
Temple,
Church,
so
again,
I'm
asking
that
in
all
of
the
arts
that
we
work
with
not
just
them
that
we
really
consider
what
kind
of
city
we
want
to
have
not
only
today
but
also
tomorrow.
Thank
you
for
your
time.
Terrific.
A
F
Thank
You
mayor
I,
too
I
am
Jerry
Sizemore
and
I
I'm
speaking
on
behalf
of
the
Fleetwood
Jourdain
theatre.
It
has
been
a
treasure
in
the
Evanston
community
for
more
than
38
years.
There
are
many
things
that
go
on
there
other
than
plays
as
mr.
Clooney
the
person
ahead
of
me.
He
spoke
to
the
fact
that
there
is
a
collaboration
in
the
community
with
y-o-u
Beth
Emmett,
the
poster
senior
Club.
There
was
a
program
that
was
started
approximately
eight
years
ago.
F
It's
called
wise
step
where
the
seniors
interact
with
the
youth
and
I
have
been
a
member
of
wise
step
since
its
its
inception.
Approximately
eight
years
ago
we
write
plays
together
and
we
act
out
place
together.
So
please
do
not
do
anything
to
cut
the
budget
for
free
with
your
name,
the
ADA,
because
it
is
a
treasure
in
the
Evanston
community
and
it
has
enhanced
the
lives
of
seniors
as
well
as
the
youth.
Thank
you
very.
G
Evening
mayor
members
of
the
council,
my
name
is
Alan
Bergman
and
I
own
a
unit
at
1720,
okay,
Avenue
sienna,
tower
611
I
sent
all
of
you
some
letters
this
morning.
I
hope
you
had
a
chance
to
maybe
look
at
them.
I
will
try
to
abide
by
the
one
in
3/4
minutes.
I
come
at
this
not
only
as
an
owner,
but
somebody
who
has
worked
for
50
years
across
this
country,
local,
national
and
state,
on
community
integration
for
people
with
disabilities
and
unfortunately,
you
live
in
the
48th
worst
state
in
the
country.
G
If
you
don't
know
it,
you
partnered
with
center
for
independent
future
ten
years
ago
to
create
what
is
a
rarity
in
this
state,
integrated
owned
or
rented
housing,
which
you've
heard
mr.
Johnson
described
where
my
daughter
lives
in
a
condo
comes
and
goes
as
she
pleases
and
has
a
real
life
as
a
member
of
a
community,
not
a
licensed
group
home.
That's
the
norm
in
Madison
Wisconsin.
G
It's
not
the
norm
in
Illinois
I
bought
in
four
years
ago,
because
she's
always
to
take
a
new
mortgage
out
at
72,
but
I
wanted
Dena
to
have
stability
in
her
life
and
the
security
of
CIF
and
I'm
now
greatly
worried
about
it.
With
the
decision
you
have
made
in
the
one
pending
tonight,
1815
you've
approved
18
2017
27
is
on
the
docket,
and
I
would
like
to
remind
you
that
the
people
who
are
going
to
be
living
there
will
have
multiple
disabilities
people
at
55,
60,
65,
70
and
75
aren't
going
to
be
running.
G
The
marathon
here
are
the
data
from
the
CDC
there.
In
my
letter
this
morning,
age,
65
to
74,
hearing
impairments,
30%
vision,
impairment,
14.1,
cognitive
impairment,
22.6
ambulatory,
sixty
3.6,
and
it
goes
on
independent
living
34.
Many
of
these
people
will
need
personal
care,
home
health,
aides,
homemakers,
etc,
which
will
generate
an
unbelievable
volume
of
traffic
parking.
Isn't
the
issue
here.
Safety
is
the
issue.
The
volume
of
traffic
that
is
becoming
through
that
neighborhood
will
be
unbelievable.
We
don't
even
know
what
it's
going
to
be
from
1815
I
would
suggest.
G
Let's
see
that
one
happened,
look
at
the
impact
talk
to
other
communities
about
what
buildings
proposed
like
1727,
are
doing
in
those
communities
in
terms
of
volume
of
traffic.
Caregivers
would
turnover
by
the
way
fifty
two
percent
a
year,
so
you're
gonna
have
people
coming
in
and
out
in
this
labor
force,
trying
to
help
people
who
want
to
stay
in
their
own
home.
You
want
it
I
want
it.
Aarp,
92
percent
of
us
want
to
live
in
our
own
place
and
age
in
place.
We
don't
want
assisted
living.
G
We
don't
want
nursing
homes
that
building
won't
be
able
to
accommodate
it.
Please
take
serious
consideration
of
the
potential
negative
human
impact
of
the
1727
o
proposal
and
I
leave
you
with
a
quote
from
Oprah
Winfrey
from
recent
commencement
address.
Don't
ever
confuse
with
what
is
legal
with
what
is
moral,
you're,
either
principled
or
not.
This
is
a
moral
issue.
Thank
you.
H
Once
again,
I
asked
the
council
to
start
the
process
to
replace
the
city
manager.
We
need
a
new
manager
simply
because
we
need
an
investigation
into
the
financial
condition
of
the
city.
I'm
I,
think
a
lot
of
people
are
becoming
troubled
that
they
had
to
pick
between
helping
children,
helping
parks
and
helping
other
things,
as
I
stated
before.
This
is
really
a
scam
to
pit
us
one
against
another
to
spend
all
the
time,
not
really
looking
at
the
real
problems
of
what's
happened
here.
H
You
know
we're
spending
almost
to
put
the
two
million
dollars
closed
on
a
dinner
theater
on
Howard
Street,
but
we're
going
to
close
a
black
community
theater,
possibly
on
a
list.
So
that's
what's
going
on
here,
dinner,
theater
for
a
private
interest
and
we're
closing
the
community
theater,
so
I
think
alderman
need
to
understand.
What's
going
on
a
lot
of
these
things,
an
alderman
I
wanted
to
recommend
selling
garages.
Well,
you
can't
sell
the
garages
because
there's
hope,
entangled
and
deals
that
have
made
them
sold
in
the
red,
it's
ridiculous
and
the
water
plant.
H
Why
don't
we
sell
that
whole
thing,
because
it's
such
a
profit?
Center,
well,
you
can't
sell
it
because
all
the
capitals
been
colluded
with
the
city
capital
and
nobody
wants
to
investigate
that,
because
it's
going
to
tell
you
something:
you're
not
going
to
want
to
hear
and
then
I've
been
told
by
several
community
members.
There's
a
staff
person
that
continually
makes
misrepresentations
and
I've
heard
this
from
quite
a
few
sources.
Now
some
council
members
have
been
informed
of
that.
H
Individual
I
think
that
you
should
have
a
discussion
on
executive
session
about
that
employee
and
the
problems.
I
won't
reveal
that
in
public
but
I
think
it's
time
to
city
clean
up
that
mess
too.
We
have
staff
here
that
wants
to
paint
a
bridge.
We
don't
even
known
for
$600,000.
We
don't
have
capital
for
anything
else.
It's
ridiculous,
really
ridiculous
and
then
I'm.
H
Recently,
two
weeks
ago
we
found
out
staff
did
not
follow
through
on
the
smiley
brothers
deal
and
put
the
property
back
on
the
tax
rolls
for
$75,000
and
then
of
course,
there's
plenty
of
things
and
I
know.
Mayor
harity
I
will
finish
up
and
we
can
talk
some
more
and
we'll
talk
more
about
your
office
renovation
at
some
future
meeting.
Thanks
all.
A
I
I'm
Susan
Johnson
I
live
at
17,
20,
all
grandmas
in
Ridge,
Avenue
and
I
here,
to
express
my
extreme
concern
about
the
buildings
that
are
being
built
at
1727
oak
and
1850
Ridge
1815
at
the
corner
of
Clark
and
bridge.
We
moved
into
our
condo
not
quite
five
years
ago,
and
the
neighborhood
the
street
was
a
little
busy.
It
wasn't
terrible
the
the
increase
in
the
traffic
that
we've
seen
in
the
last
five
years
has
been
substantial
people
coming
off
of
it.
I
It
took
them
a
long
time
to
untangle
that
new
intersection
and
they
finally
did
people
use
that
to
cut
through
and
understandably
to
get
over
to
church
without
when
you
know
avoid
a
stoplight,
but
that
increases
the
traffic.
The
fact
that
people
want
to
do
two
new
buildings.
At
the
same
time,
the
one
across
from
ours
is
going
to
be
16
or
17
stories.
I
I
know
they
keep
talking
about
increasing
parking
parking,
isn't
the
same
as
congestion
from
cars
driving
you're,
going
to
add
that
many
more
cars,
it's
not
the
same
as
putting
them
somewhere
they're
going
to
move
around
at
least
that's
what
I've
heard
and
the
access
into
the
18:15
building
is
going
to
dump
into
oak
right
at
the
top
of
oak
where
it
becomes
Clark.
And
you
know
all
of
these.
Things
need
to
be
taken
into
consideration,
but
the
most
important
thing
I,
think
that
some
others
haven't
mentioned
is
building
those
two
buildings
simultaneously.
I
J
J
A
K
Bill
and
I,
my
husband,
Phil
and
I,
are
pro
good
development,
definitely
and
have
supported
most
new
buildings
in
Evanston.
I've
listened
to
mr.
Carlson
and
his
team
present
four
times
and
can
say
without
a
doubt
that
all
the
paid
for
studies,
charts
and
graphs
can
never
accurately
depict
a
living.
Breathing.
Neighborhood
a600,
Davis
high
profile
project
was
recently
denied,
partly
over
concerned
for
pedestrian
safety
and
traffic
and
was
deemed
too
dense
at
318
units.
K
Both
served
entirely
by
a
small
section
of
oak,
a
narrow
street
with
diagonal
parking,
a
downhill
approach
to
a
sharp
90
degree
turn
which,
even
if
widened,
has
admitted
problems
for
trucks
and
semis
on
oak,
because
it's
the
major
truck
route
from
the
north
into
downtown
and
the
post
office.
A
street
already
serving
three
significant
parking
garages
with
a
heavily
used
crosswalk
mid
street
to
the
medical
and
office
building
across
there,
a
lot
going
on
visually
separated
by
a
lovely
Church,
but
actually
both
accessed
on
Oak.
K
The
two
building
entrances
are
only
a
few
car
lengths.
Apart
with
no
alleys.
The
street
must
support
these
332
units
with
garbage
pickup
food
services,
residents,
visitors,
staff,
movers,
ambulances,
which
there
will
be
and
caregivers.
How
can
this
not
be
too
dense
for
this
small
street
traffic
problems
already
documented,
have
received
weak
solutions
or
have
been
dismissed.
The
1727
oak
is
in
a
tiny
fraction
of
the
d3.
The
site
is
in
a
tiny
fraction
of
the
d3
zone,
but
it's
not
a
crown
jewel
of
Evanston
by
any
means
check.
K
Paragraph
here
it's
on
the
wrong
side
of
the
tracks,
step
down
in
status
from
Davis
downtown
for
zoning
purposes,
but
not
downtown
when
the
impact
and
priority
of
density
and
traffic
are
evaluated.
The
negative
effects
of
combined
332
units
and
increased
congestion
they
bring
on
Oak
should
not
be
evaluated
by
different
standards
than
the
300.
Davis
was
just
because
it's
not
a
premiere
location
property.
Why
don't?
K
L
We
are
here
tonight
to
offer
Evanston
a
gift
from
these
citizens.
An
opportunity
to
restore
the
natural
dunes,
Beach
and
parkland
is
part
of
a
new
public
space
with
the
iconic
Grosse
Pointe
lighthouse,
a
National
Historic
Landmark
as
its
centerpiece.
This
is
a
spot
with
astonishing
natural
beauty
and
great
historical
significance
and
predates
even
the
lighthouse
itself.
L
In
her
book
published
in
1928
Evanston,
the
book
was
Evanston.
Its
lands
and
beginnings
historian,
viola
crouch
reeling
described
how
father
Jacques,
Marquette
and
Louis
Joliet
disembarked
at
Lighthouse
landing.
She
wrote
never
getting
far
from
land
but
hugging
the
shore
of
this
Lake,
with
their
canoes
travelers.
L
The
travelers
no
doubt
gazed
with
admiration
on
the
lofty
oaks,
tamrac's
and
other
varieties
of
trees
that
dotted
the
length
of
Evanston's
holdings
today,
as
the
men
swung
their
canoes
around
the
point
where
the
lighthouse
stands.
The
artists,
soul
of
Joliet
and
Marquette
skein
I
must
have
delighted
in
the
beauty
of
that
point.
A
point
so
beautiful
that
it
gained
the
name
from
sailors
in
a
later
day
of
beauties,
eyebrow
she's
describing
the
Grosse
Pointe
lighthouse,
which
I
might
add,
is
right.
L
There
sight
of
the
city's
treasured
lakefront,
quite
an
image
to
reflect
on
today
in
the
Grosse
Pointe
lighthouse,
the
book
Grosse
Pointe
lighthouse
by
Donald
Terrace
in
1995
the
author,
the
author,
writes
Father
Marquette
paddled
paddled
south
along
the
western
shore
of
Lake
Michigan
in
his
second
voyage
to
shake
up
the
Chicago
region.
He
was
accompanied
by
fresh
French
companions
in
a
ban
of
Potawatomi
and
Illinois
Indians
on
December
3rd
Marquette
made
an
entry
in
his
diary
indicating
that
the
party
was
besieged
by
fog
and
was
compelled
to
make
a
point
and
land
at
Marquette's.
L
Map
of
the
region
strongly
indicates
that
this
famous
welders
pioneer
camped
at
the
Grosse
Pointe
light
house
on
the
night
of
December
3rd
1974,
recognizing
the
century-old
significance
of
this
site.
We
realized
the
opportunity
to
make
it
come
alive
again
and
to
broaden
the
appeal
of
this
space
for
all
Evanston.
Thank.
M
Nicole
KU
stock,
our
vision
is
to
restore
the
dunes
to
their
natural
state,
to
deconstruct
the
house
and
coach
house
and
to
truly
utilize
the
two
recently
renovated
fog
houses
as
environmental
labs
and
classrooms
for
all
Evanston
children.
The
mansion
in
the
Coach
House
now
obstruct
both
the
lake
and
lighthouse
from
public
view.
We
envision
restoring
key
elements
of
the
Jemez
Jensen's,
historic,
1920s
garden
and
integrating
them
into
the
natural
landscape,
we're
clearing
and
expanding
the
parkland
and
Beach
for
the
enjoyment
of
all
members
of
our
city.
M
The
primary
goal
of
the
city's
lakefront
master
plan,
unanimously
approved
by
the
council
in
2008,
is
to
preserve
and
enhance
the
lakefront
natural
environment.
Our
plan
is
completely
consistent
with
the
community's
consensus
vision
for
Evanston
and
our
most
most
precious
natural
resource.
We
are
ready
to
move
forward.
Our
gift
has
been
secured
through
the
generous
contributions
of
numerous
residents.
No
additional
fundraising
is
required,
no
liability
issues
will
persist
and
no
prolonged
construction
period
will
be
needed.
We
are
eager
to
meet
with
all
of
you
to
finalize
details
so
that
we
can
move
ahead.
M
We
hope
you
share
in
our
vision
and
will
act
favorably
on
our
offer.
The
future
of
this
park
and
its
students
have
been
debated
for
over
seven
years.
We
feel
it's
time
for
a
new
vision.
We
look
forward
to
working
with
the
entire
city
and
our
garden
and
green
space
groups
on
what
we
think
would
be
a
wonderful
project
for
Evanston.
Thank
you
for
for
your
consideration.
We
have
here.
M
A
N
N
That
is
intentional,
and
that
is
something
that
I
should
not
be
subjected
to
also
wanted
to
say
well
I'm
sitting
here,
waiting
for
this
meeting,
Nick
comes
up
and
decides
he's
going
to
test
the
air
and
close
the
windows.
Obviously
people
wanted
the
windows
open.
They
were
open
before
I
got
here.
I
opened
this
one
window
over
here
where
I
was
standing,
he
decided
to
close
the
windows
when
I
said
something
about
it.
He
proceeded
to
keep
closing
the
windows
when
someone
else
said
something
about
it.
Who
happened
to
not
be
a
minority?
He
said.
N
N
A
O
Long:
okay,
hi,
my
family
owns
a
condo
at
C
on
a
court
across
the
street
from
the
proposed
development
at
1827
17:27
oak,
and
we
urge
you
to
reject
the
proposal
based
on
the
following
four
issues:
one
the
remains
an
open
legal
issue
regarding
the
plans
submitted,
the
plans
were
submitted
by
a
firm
unlicensed
at
the
time
of
submission.
The
plans
were
represented
and
explained
by
an
unlicensed
architect
and
material
decisions
were
made
by
planning
based
on
these
plans.
O
Given
the
numerous
notices
to
the
city
and
various
council
members
about
this
matter,
any
safety
failures
on
this
project
will,
with
certainty,
produce
a
liability
to
the
city.
Second,
the
community
members
have
spoken
clearly
about
the
negative
impacts.
This
massive
and
dense
project
will
create
on
their
lives.
The
parking
problem
alone
should
be
a
deal-breaker
not
to
mention
the
increased
traffic
through
the
short
stretch
of
Clarke
and
oak.
The
Planning
Commission
has
glossed
over
these
two
problems
by
characterizing
them
as
existing
problems.
O
Approval
of
the
project
by
the
Commission
will
only
make
the
current
problems
worse.
Third
trauma
CRO
states
that
is
providing
public
amenities.
It's
actually
offering
what's
required
by
law,
to
pay
property
tax
and
to
provide
a
percentage
of
square
footage
for
low-income
housing.
The
proposed
public
amenities
to
create
a
dog
park
on
a
very
small
and
otherwise
unusable
parcel
of
land
that
will
benefit
very
few
people
and
more
likely
be
a
nuisance
toddlers.
O
Caregivers
have
spoken
passionately
about
the
inability
to
find
adequate
parking
so
that
they
may
serve
their
clients
in
Siena.
Approving
this
project,
as
proposed
today,
welcoming
newcomers
at
the
expense
of
citizens
in
place
is
a
failure
to
serve
and
arguably
unjust,
we're
not
opposed
to
development.
While
we
suggest
is
a
more
modest
that
doesn't
overpower
the
neighborhood
further
over
squats
subscribe
the
current
resources,
the
best
planning,
would
be
a
remedy
to
the
current
problems.
Reasonable
planning
would
be
to
approve
a
project,
far
less
disruptive,
Thank,
You
freakazoid.
P
Hi
I'm
Kurt,
Shaffer
I
sat
down
and
reread
the
evidence,
inclusion,
Airy,
housing,
ordinance
last
night,
I'm,
not
a
lawyer,
but
it's
written
in
pretty
plain
language,
and
it's
also
plain
to
me
that
the
proposal
for
1727
oak
does
not
comply
with
it.
A
developer
can
build
affordable
units
that
comply
with
the
requirements
they
can
pay
a
fee
and
LU
they
can
buy,
can
operate
existing
units,
but
1727
does
none.
Of
these.
P
The
developer
of
1727
is
chosen
not
to
pay
the
fee
in
lieu
units
they're
providing
are
at
a
higher
percentage
of
income
than
the
of
median
income.
Then
the
ordinance
allows
and
the
units
also
have
a
bedroom
mix.
That's
not
an
equal
proportion
to
the
market
rate
units,
as
is
required
by
the
ordinance.
P
1720
includes
two
bedrooms
but
no
affordable,
two
bedrooms
law
aside
that
doesn't
seem
fair
or
inclusionary.
To
me.
We
want
to
protect
affordable
housing,
but
only
for
those
who
live
alone
or
in
a
smaller
family.
I,
don't
I
don't
understand,
but
as
the
council
considered,
that
applying
the
ordinance
in
this
inconsistent
fashion
may
violate
the
Equal
Protection
Clause
of
the
Fourteenth
Amendment,
the
United
States
Constitution.
The
ordinance
gives
the
developer
multiple
ways
to
comply,
and
this
developer
has
met
none
of
them.
P
We
cannot
simply
pick
and
choose
which
parts
of
the
ordinance
to
enforce
on
a
case-by-case
basis.
It's
a
clear
to
service
to
the
citizens
of
Evanston,
but
tonight
ask
you
to
consider:
is
it
lawful
or
does
it
open
the
city
to
a
challenge
under
that
supreme
law?
Our
Constitution?
Thank
you
for
your
time.
Q
My
name
is
Katherine
Chris
field,
it's
pronounced
Griff
field
again
and
I
live
at
1740,
Oak
Avenue
mayor.
What
I've
just
presented
you
with
is
over
a
hundred
signatures
of
residents
of
Siena
and
the
surrounding
community
who
have
signed
us
opposition
statement.
All
of
the
other
council
members.
You
have
also
been
provided
with
that
list
of
names.
A
lot
has
been
made
about
traffic
in
this
community.
Q
With
regards
to
this
development,
the
representative,
Trammell
crow
and
the
traffic
engineers
have
proposed
all
of
the
answers
and
risks
to
these
concerns
that
have
been
brought
to
your
attention.
However,
the
traffic
study
that
they
have
cited
on
numerous
occasions
is
first
built
not
on
current
data.
The
traffic
the
configuration
upon
which
the
building
was
has
now
changed.
They've
changed
their
loading
dock
situation.
The
speed
limit
on
bridge
has
been
reduced
from
30
to
25.
The
configuration
of
the
proposed
configuration
at
Oak
and
Clark
Street
by
1815
Ridge
has
also
been
modified.
Q
All
those
factors
were
different
when
the
Kol
Kol
a
traffic
study
was
conducted.
Their
study
was
also
conducted
based
on
one
day
of
data
and
their
pride.
Their
peak
hours
were
from
8
to
9,
and
4
deaths
are
from
and
5
to
6.
They
used
one
other
day
of
data
from
two
years
ago.
Three
years
ago,
in
2015,
there
is
no
mention
of
the
effect
on
the
large
intersection
net
Ridge,
Green,
Bay
and
Emerson.
Q
There
is
no
mention
of
any
data
regarding
the
emergency
vehicles
that
have
already
been
established
to
be
generated
by
1815,
Ridge
and
I.
Think,
most
importantly,
it's
not
a
safety
study.
The
scope
of
the
study
relates
to
the
infrastructure
and
its
ability
to
withstand
an
increasing
number
of
vehicles.
We've
all
established
that
the
of
the
safety
is
foremost
mayor.
I've
heard
you
say
that
Evanston
is
on
a
mission
to
create
the
most
livable
city
for
everyone
and
that
Evanston
for
Evanston
to
be
the
most
livable
community
for
all
residents.
Q
We
must
continue
to
advance
equitable,
sustainable
and
innovative
practices
to
improve
this
fulfills.
None
of
those
and
I
highly
recommend
you
to
wait
because
Evanston
is
an
awesome
place
to
live,
I've
been
a
resident,
my
entire
life,
something
awesome
and
something
better
can
be
put
on
this
site
that
we
can
all
really
really
benefit
from.
Thank
you.
Thank.
R
I
live
in
a
neighborhood
for
23
years
now,
I
just
had
a
60%
raise
in
my
property
tax
I
now
pay
ten
thousand
dollars
a
year.
I
do
not
want
to
deal
with
vacation
rental
people,
mostly
young
people,
I,
have
to
call
the
police
all
the
time.
I've
had
meetings
with
the
chief
and
the
neighborhood
is
changing.
This
during
more
residential
people
want
to
live
near
downtown
Evanston,
which
was
they
spent
40
I'm
a
life
lifetime
mothers
Evanston
again,
they
spent
41
million
dollars
to
develop
downtown
Evanston.
Our
neighborhood
is
the
last
neighborhood.
R
That's
reasonably
priced,
that's
walking
distance
to
downtown
Edmundston
and
the
lake,
the
investors
who
are
asking
for
all
this
ESU's,
the
handwriting
on
the
wall
with
all
the
buildings
that
are
coming
that
are
targeting
the
college
people.
None
of
the
investors
live
in
Evanston.
They
don't
care
about
Evanston.
They
just
want
cash
cows.
Here
in
Evanston
I
raised
my
children
here,
I've
been
here
in
my
entire
life
and
for
them
to
want
to
just
squeeze
more
money
about
out
of
the
Evanston
area.
Targeting
the
college,
kids
is
I,
think
it's
uncalled
for.
C
Mike,
suspend
I,
live
at
1112,
foster
just
across
the
alley
from
1109
Garnett
place
and
I'm.
Also
asking
you
to
vote
against
granting
the
vacation
rental
license
to
the
property
at
11:09
Garnett
place.
This
is
another
case
of
non-resident
investor
coming
and
buying
the
property
at
the
time
when
we
are
looking
for
affordable
housing
in
the
area.
This
is
our
gain,
the
last
downtown
area
in
Evanston
that
is
still
affordable.
C
Many
of
these
properties
are
duplexes,
and
so
it
is
possible
for
less
wealthy
families
to
buy
them
and
then
rent
the
other
half
to
other
people
who
to
renters
so
you're
looking
for
more
affordable
housing.
These
are
perfect
properties
for
all
of
us.
We've
seen
families
coming
back
to
our
neighborhood
I
raised
my
children.
There
I've
lived
here
for
20
years.
You
can
hear
I
speak
with
an
accent,
but
the
first
time
we
came
with
my
wife
here
to
Evanston
as
graduate
students.
C
We
fell
in
love
with
this
city
and
we
stayed
and
we
raised
our
children
here.
There
are
families
living
just
across
the
street
from
that
property,
as
well
with
small
children.
We
do
not
want
a
hotel
right
property,
another
one
in
this
area,
you
approved
one
already
in
November
on
that
street.
This
will
be
the
second
one.
Thank
you
very
much.
Thank.
S
Molly,
oh
no
and
I'm
at
seventeen,
forty
oak
and
I,
don't
think
and
for
people
like
with
disabilities,
I,
don't
think
it's
a
good
idea
to
have
the
building
going
up
because
it
would
not
work.
Because
if
you
take
out
like
parking
meters,
then
it
would
be
bad
for
people
for
like
families
trying
Park
and
for
my
friend's
sister,
it's
like
hard
for
her
caretakers
to
find
this
spot.
So
I,
don't
think
it'll
be
a
good
idea
for
it
to
go
up.
T
T
It's
gonna,
be
it's
gonna,
create
a
traffic
hazard
for
somebody
like
myself.
If
I
have
to
walk
like
when
I
walk
around
I'm,
usually
walking,
it
takes
me
a
longer
time
to
walk
for
somebody
with
a
disability,
but,
as
you
can
tell
I
had
prior
I
has
had
surgery.
But
my
thing
is,
you
know
it's
gonna
be
a
complete,
chaotic
hassle
for
anybody.
That's
got
a
disability
wheelchair
you
know.
Basically,
it's
gonna
be
a
lot
of
fun.
T
A
Thank
you.
Thank
you,
Devon
all
right.
Well,
thank
you.
Thank
you.
Everybody
for
speaking
so
passionately
about
a
variety
of
issues
that
confront
the
city
and
the
City
Council
expect
we'll
have
a
thorough
conversation
of
these
different
different
items
this
evening,
we're
going
to
move
on
now
to
to
the
consent
agenda.
U
All
right
so
I've
moved
in
one
for
their
approval
of
minutes
of
the
regular
City
Council
meeting
dated
May
14
mm
18
also,
and
they
can
administration
and
public
works
committee.
We
approve
the
following
consent:
agenda
payroll
dated
April
30th
2018,
it's
on
May
13
2008
in
the
amount
of
three
million
forty
nine
thousand
two
hundred
fifty
four
dollars
and
forty
cents.
The
bills
list
dated
May
30th,
2018,
five
million
to
two
hundred
thirty
seven
thousand
five
hundred
ninety
three
dollars
and
seventy
six
cents.
U
The
credit
card
activity
not
including
Amazon
for
the
bank
of
America
card
with
the
period
ending
March
31st,
seventeen
thousand
five
hundred
sixty
five
dollars.
Ninety
three
cents
and
the
credit
card
not
including
Amazon
period,
ending
March,
26
2018
in
the
amount
of
one
hundred;
thirty
two
thousand
one
hundred
five
dollars
and
42
cents.
U
U
A
Okay,
consent
agenda
items,
m1
a1
a2,
one
past
the
City
Council
eight
to
zero
Thank
You
alderman
follow
me.
If
you
could
go
to
eight
excuse
me,
did
it
not
pass
eight
and
excuse
me
I?
Guess
it
passed
seven,
seven
to
zero.
Excuse
me:
we
didn't
have
all
the
men
break
through
right
here:
Thank
You,
Clark,
Reed,
okay,
all
right,
alderman
Flemmi!
If
you
do
a
2.2
and
then
we'll
have
to
do
a
vote
on
that
and
then
we'll
go
through
the
rest.
All.
U
Right,
a
2.2
s,
Amazon
credit
card
activity
for
the
bank
of
America
card
period,
ending
March,
31st
2018,
the
amount
of
one
thousand
four
hundred,
fifty
four
dollars
and
57
cents,
as
well
as
the
B
mo
credit
card
for
Amazon
period,
ending
March,
26
2018,
the
amount
of
twelve
thousand
sixty
one
dollars
and
thirty
cents.
This
is
for
action.
R
D
U
3.1,
we
approved
the
contract
with
a
sorry
Jay
Johnson,
paving
company
for
2018
motor
motor
fuel
tax
street
resurfacing
project,
that
is
in
the
amount
of
1
million
five
hundred
eight
dollars,
1
million
five
hundred
eight
thousand
six
hundred
seventy
eight
dollars,
and
that's
for
action.
Three
point:
two
is:
when
your
contract,
with
corrective
asphalt
materials
for
the
claimant,
pavement
reach
June
of
ik,
read
unification
program,
that
is
in
the
amount
not
to
exceed
$50,000.
U
U
3.5
is
the
contract
with
Co
villach
on
construction
company
incorporated
for
the
South
Street
Harbour
sarees
Church,
Street,
Harbour,
South
Pier
renovations
in
the
amount
of
$891,000
3.6
is
the
three-year
contract
with
Martin
VIN
company
for
vending
machine
services
at
the
city
of
Evanston
facilities
that
one
actually
cost
us
nothing
and
we
have
profit
shares
with
the
company.
3.7
is
renewal,
source
sole
source,
computer-aided
dispatch.
U
3.9
sidewalk
cafe
for
falcon
Eddy's
BBQ,
a
type
2
restaurant
at
8:25,
Church
Street
that
will
operate
from
11:00
a.m.
to
9
p.m.
three
point.
Nine
is
their
request?
Extend
hours
of
alcohol
service
at
Celtic
knot,
that's
for
a
limited
Celtic
knot
is
located
at
626,
Church
Street.
This
is
for
a
limited
time
of
June
14th
through
July
15th,
beginning
on
the
request.
Alcohol
sales
beginning
at
7
a.m.
a
4
has
been
held
in
committee,
a
5.
U
It's
for
introduction,
its
ordinate
63
OH
18
amending
the
city
code
to
remove
a
one-way
alley
restriction
between
Harrison,
Street
and
Colfax.
That
will
cost
the
city
$40
a
6,
as
for
also
for
introduction,
as
ordinance
35
OH
18
for
the
sale
of
surplus
property
fleet
vehicles,
there
was
no
cost
there,
and
that
is
our
consent.
Agenda.
A
V
V
V
P6
is
off
the
consent
agenda.
Its
resolution
22
hour
16
the
plant,
every
subdivision
for
1727
Hoke
p7,
is
off
the
consent
agenda.
It's
ordinance
59
ho
18.
The
special
use
permit
for
a
planned
development
at
17,
27
Hoke
p8,
is
on
the
consent
agenda,
its
ordinance,
6100
18.
It's
a
map
amendment
for
the
planned
development
and
special
use
for
an
open
sales
lot
at
128
to
132
Chicago
Avenue
I
move
approval.
W
H1
Ben
Beck
first
license
renewal
for
stone
part
stone
porch
by
the
lake.
Could
you
could
you
take
that
off?
Please,
okay,
at
300,
Church,
Street,
Human,
Services,
Committee
and
city
staff
recommend
approval
for
the
renewal
of
the
bed-and-breakfast
license
for
stone
porch
by
the
lake
bed
and
breakfast
located
300
Church,
Street,
okay,.
A
X
And
Community
Development
Act
committee
met
last
week
and
we
have
two
items
here.
One
is
resolution
3435
R
18,
which
we're
asking
you
to
approve
the
2018
action
plan
and
adopting
the
2018
Community
Development
Block
Grant,
home
investment
partnership
and
and
the
emergency
solutions
grant
program
budgets
for
2018.
X
A
Y
You
Development
Committee
also
met
last
week.
We
have
three
to
three
items
for
action
tonight.
First
is
oh-three
entrepreneurship,
support
program,
applications
for
eye-candy
salon
and
total
transformation
solutions.
The
committee
and
staff
are
recommending
a
moveable
financial
assistance
through
the
entrepreneurship
support
program,
totaling
$5,000
for
the
following
businesses.
I
canti
salon
for
2500
and
total
transformation
coaching
for
2500,
and
that
is
for
action.
Y
We
also
have
oh
for
part
of
our
storefront
modernization
program,
two
applications,
one
for
booked
and
one
for
Prairie
moon
staff
and
Economic
Development
Committee,
recommending
approval
of
financial
assistance
on
a
50:50
cost-sharing
basis
through
the
storefront
modernization
program
to
the
following.
Evanston
businesses
booked
at
506,
Main
Street
an
amount
in
an
amount
not
to
exceed
$4,748.14
for
new
signage
and
a
new
door
and
prairie
moon
at
Chicago
Avenue
and
a
man
in
an
amount
not
to
exceed
eight
thousand
thirty
seven
dollars
for
signage
and
storefront
improvements.
That
is
also
for
action.
Y
We
also
have
oh
five
as
part
of
our
Evanston
great
merchants.
Grant
in
West.
Village
has
an
application
and
staff
and
Economic
Development
Committee
are
recommending
a
boo
to
provide
us
a
assist
financial
assistance
through
the
great
merchants
grant
program
to
the
West
Village
business
association
for
the
remainder
of
the
funds
set
aside
for
them,
totaling
two
thousand
one
hundred
seventy
eight
dollars
and
seventy-five
cents,
and
that
is
for
action
we
have
some
appointments
tonight
proposed
first,
is
for
appointment
to
the
library
board,
Rachael
Heyman,
and
that
is
for
action.
U
Is
sole
source
contract
with
Otis
Elevator
Company
for
the
modernization
of
elevators
at
the
Lorraine
Wharton
Civic
Center,
the
staff
is
recommending
we
authorize
city
manager
to
execute
a
sole
source
contract
for
elevator
modernization
at
the
Civic
Center,
with
Otis
Elevator
Company.
In
the
amount
of
four
hundred
fifty
seven
thousand
seven
hundred
seventy
nine
dollars,
this
funding
will
come
from
capital
improvement,
2018
general
obligation,
bond
bonds.
Excuse
me
in
the
amount
of
four
hundred
fifty
seven
thousand
seven
hundred
seventy
nine
dollars.
This
is
for
action.
A
X
This
isn't
the
air
conditioner
where
we
can
open
the
windows.
This
is
an
elevator
where
people
we've
heard
a
lot
about
people
who
have
certain
disabilities.
We
have
an
elevator
here
that
is
not
working
and
somebody
gets
in
it.
We're
going
to
have
a
lot
more
people
with
issues
and
I
just
think.
It's
endangering
the
lives
of
people
who
work
in
this
building
all
day
who
come
and
visit
in
this
building,
and
it's
it
just
makes
absolutely
no
sense
not
to
fix
these
elevators
when
the
word
modernization
I
think,
has
gone
to
people's
heads
here.
Y
And
you
know,
we've
made
a
very,
very
substantial
commitment
and
investment
in
the
building
from
when
I
started.
To
now
you
know
it's
its
might
as
well
be
any
building.
Frankly,
so
I
yeah
I,
don't
think.
There's
any
I'm
not
aware
of
any
suggestion
on
moving
or
changing.
So
to
me,
it
falls
in
the
category
of
basic
maintenance.
That's
required
in
the
albumen,
Rainey
I
think
you're
right.
It's
not
a
fancy
high-tech
elevator,
it's
just
an
elevator
that
works,
so
I
think
that's
imperative
to
have
that
in
the
building.
All.
A
B
A
A
three
for
sole-source
contract
without
a
Sela
Vater
company
for
the
modernization
of
the
element,
the
elevators
at
the
Loreen
H
Morton
Civic
Center
passes
the
Evanston
City
Council
on
a
boat
of
seven
to
one
all
right,
alderman
fists.
Could
you
take
us
through
the
items
and
planning
development
that
were
pulled
off
starting
with
future
LP.
V
V
AA
Share
alderman
Fisk's
view
I
that
when
we
permit
a
vacation,
rental
and
I
know
that
we
have
had
this
discussion
and
we
need
to
move
forward
because
we're
going
to
be
getting
more
and
more
of
these,
but
I
believe
they
should
be
owned
or
occupied
to
promote
the
Evanston
community.
So
I
will
be
voting
now
as
well.
Alderman.
Y
Wilson
and
I
do
understand
the
concern
of
the
neighbors
in
the
neighborhood
I
understand
the
point
about
there's
a
difference
between
owner
occupy
did
not,
but
you,
but
it
at
this
time.
It's
not
the
policy,
so
I
just
don't
feel
I
can
be
supportive
of
something
that
deviates
from
our
current
policy.
If
we
need
to
change
it,
we
need
to
change
it,
but
I
think
we
have
to
be
consistent.
Thank
You,
alderman.
B
A
U
U
A
V
Ordinate
68
Oh
18
a
special
use
permit
to
expand
the
community
center
located
at
12:15,
Church,
Street
and
1726
to
1730
Ridge
Avenue,
the
Zoning
Board
of
Appeals
and
city
staff
recommended
option
for
the
special
use
for
the
expansion
of
the
YWCA
Evanston
North
Shore.
It's
in
the
are
four
general
residential
district.
The
applicant
has
complied
with
Ozona
requirements
and
meets
all
of
the
standards
for
a
special
use
for
this
district.
Alderman
Braithwaite
recommends
suspension
of
the
rules
for
introduction
and
action
at
tonight's
meeting.
Move
approval
for.
X
Mr.
mayor
and
members
of
the
council
I
ask
that
this
be
removed
from
the
consent
agenda
for
one
reason,
and
one
reason
only
I
am
fully
supportive.
The
YWCA
and
all
of
its
wonderful
work
I
couldn't
be
more
supportive
of
their
shelter
work
and
their
work
with
women.
However,
I
want
to
point
out
that
the
two
properties
they're
taking
off
the
tax
rolls
at
this
location
generate
a'practice
would
be
generating
in
this
next
tax
year.
X
A
A
V
V
V
B
V
A
V
7
is
ordinance
59
o-18,
granting
a
special
use
permit
for
a
planned
development
located
at
1727
Hoke
Avenue
in
the
d3
downtown
core
Development
District
Planning,
Commission
and
staff
recommend
adoption
of
this
ordinance
of
the
plan.
Development
is
for
a
17-story
age,
restricted,
multifamily,
rental
development,
with
169
units
and
136
parking
spaces
in
the
d3
downtown
core
development
district
for
site
development
allowances
are
requested
for
the
number
of
dwelling
units,
building
height
front
yard,
setback
and
number
of
loading
berths.
It's
on
for
action
tonight.
AA
Yes,
thank
you.
Mr.
mayor
I
will
I'll
be
brief.
I
am
opposing
this
development
and
I
believe
that
there
are
many
speakers
tonight
who
spoke
very
eloquently
but
I
think
in
particular
they
think
it
was
mr.
Courtney
long,
Kurt,
Schaffer
and
mr.
field
raised
important
points
that
I
think
have
not
been
overcome
with
this
plan.
I
think,
first
and
foremost,
is
that
there
the
safety
issue.
This
is
a
special
community
that
we
have
here
we're
going
to
be
adding
two
other
communities
that
have
their
own
special
needs
and
I
do
not
believe.
AA
We
have
a
good,
safe
plan
here
for
how
all
of
these
various
residents
are
going
to
be
able
to
work
and
live
safely.
There
I
also
have
concerns
about
the
inclusionary
housing
ordinance
issues.
I.
Think
mr.
Schaffer
raised
those
very,
very
well
and
I
think
mr.
Long's
issue
about
needing
to
serve
the
community
that
we
have
here
before
we
welcome
others.
AA
V
I
agree
with
everything
that
aldermen
wind
just
said
and
but
want
to
add
a
few
other
things
as
I
spoke
at
the
last
meeting.
This
is
a
very
difficult
site.
It's
on
a
truck
route.
It's
not
a
very
sharp
curve.
It
is
a
very
congested,
very
potentially
dangerous
location,
very
close
to
other
buildings.
The
site
development
allowances
I
believe
are
too
excessive
for
the
site
and
I
am
concerned
about
how
we're
bunching
some
of
these
buildings
together
in
such
a
such
a
difficult,
difficult
location,
so
I'll
before
No.
AB
So
if
you're,
not
in
support
of
the
you
know
development
or
the
project,
it's
it's
difficult
to
convince
people.
We've
seen
that
and
so
I
with
that
I
will
just
say
to
those
in
the
audience
that
I
will
just
have
to
respectfully
disagree,
but
I
am
prepared
to
speak
to
the
issues
and
I
think
it's
important
to
unpack
it
and
separate
it.
AB
Napier
who's
testified
during
the
Plan
Commission
meetings
to
that
fact
that
you
actually
slow
down
and
I.
Don't
recall,
reading
anywhere
in
our
staff
report
that
that
specific
area
has
a
high
number
of
traffic
accidents
or
or
calls
for
services
that
people
have
been
hit
in
that
area
and
I.
Think
that,
with
the
emotion
that's
in
the
room,
it's
almost
unfair
and
I've
said
this
before
in
the
second
Ward
we
have
have
dreams.
AB
We
have
another
organization,
Rimland
services
that
are
located
in
the
industrial
area
that
are
just
right
off
of
Main
Street
and
we've
never
had
any
high
occurrence
of
any
type
of
accidents.
So
you
cannot
convince
me
that
that
area
of
that,
where
we
plan
on
housing
seniors
our
most
fragile
and
delicate,
like
residents
not
to
be
disrespectful
but
just
seniors.
There
is
a
shared
commitment
from
the
developers
and
I
would
like
to
thank
the
city
staff
that
any
that
with
the
placement
of
that
project.
If
anything
else,
it's
going
to
be
a
very
safe
cord.
AB
That's
just
that's
just
my
opinion.
There
was
a
speaker
before
that
question.
The
the
benefits
and
I
just
want
to
remind
us
and
also
the
public.
So
we
have
a
number
of
council
goals
that
we
task
our
city
manager
with
focusing
on
and
when
I
looked
up
the
council
goals.
This
project
actually
touches
on
a
few
of
them
number
one.
It
provides
a
much
needed
inventory
for
senior
seniors
who,
like
to
age
well
in
this
community
and
I,
think
by
adding
additional
inventory
that
that
helps
to
stabilize
the
the
housing
for
our
seniors.
AB
In
addition
to
that,
and
maybe
I'll
ask
a
developer
just
to
touch
briefly
on
the
parking
if
I
can
have
Johnny
come
come
forward
just
to
give
a
quick
little
update,
because
I
know
that
you've
had
a
conversation
with
the
executive
director
from
the
Living
Centre
for
independent
futures
with
the
proposal
for
affordable
housing.
This
is
the
first
development
that
I've
seen
that
actually
is
complying
100%
with
the
with
our
affordable
housing
by
not
buying
out,
but
actually
making
sure
that
those
units
are
on
site.
So
that's
X,
that's
16
units
17.
AC
AB
You
17
units
that
are
gonna
range
based
on
the
projections
they
put
in
the
public
packet
anywhere
from
700
to
900,
with
the
average
number
being
somewhere
around
800.
Please,
you
can
fill
in
the
blanks
later
that
are
going
to
be
on-site
for
25
years,
so
it
checks
that
box
of
expanding,
affordable
housing
units,
the
other
thing
I
think
alderman
Rainey
raised
this
issue
with
one
of
our
previous
items
that
you
know.
AB
What
do
we
do
about
our
need
to
expand
the
tax
space
and
the
property
once
it's
built,
we'll
expand
our
tax
base,
approximately
1
million
dollars
sitting
with
69
percent
of
that
going
to
the
schools.
In
addition
to
that,
and
all
this
information
is
in
the
package,
I'll
just
move
very
quickly.
We
know
that
it's
going
to
create
jobs.
AB
We
have
a
commitment
from
the
developer
that
he
is
going
to
hire
Evanston
first,
where
possible,
and
in
addition
to
that
there
will
be
some
additional
retail
space
impossible
community
space
that
would
be
available
for
rental
again
the
things
that
I
can
work
on
in
into
the
community.
That's
still
here,
moving
forward
should
this
pass.
You
will
have
my
commitment
that
we
will
work
on
the
parking
issues.
I've
had
a
convert
very
brief
conversation
with
Kurt
and
I.
Also,
the
Krish
feels
I
also
mentioned
that
I
will
be
making
this
comment.
AB
AB
AB
AB
AC
AC
Problem,
Johnny,
Carlson,
wood,
Trammell,
crow,
I,
think
the
the
big
piece
of
this
was
we
heard
loud
and
clear
at
the
last
meeting
we
reached
out
early
on
to
the
neighbors
we
heard
caregivers
are
is
a
big
topic
for
all
of
us
for
parking
and
what
to
do
in
the
future
for
adding
people.
If
those
caregivers
aren't
able
to
park
there
and
service
their
occupants
next
door,
we're
firm
believers,
we
are
aligned.
AC
A
number
of
88
procedures
are
being
implemented
in
our
building
that
I've
outlined
at
previous
meetings,
but
we've
reached
out
to
our
seller
of
our
land,
who
owns
the
parking
across
the
street
in
a
covered
garage.
It's
adjacent
to
Siena.
We've
asked
them
to
work
with
us
to
create
five
stalls
for
caregivers.
AC
Change
is
hard.
We're
here
to
work
together,
we're
gonna
have
a
logistics
meeting
and
try
to
get
ahead
of
all
these
issues
in
our
minds.
Two
projects
going
at
once:
it's
better
to
get
it
out
of
the
way
working
together
versus
three
or
four
years
of
projects
starting
and
going
so
you
have
our
word
to
work
with
them
and
the
neighbors
for
the
parking
and
and
I
hope
that
satisfies
some
of
the
concerns,
and
thank
you
very
much
and
I'm
here
with
to
answer
any
questions.
Great.
U
You
so
I
just
want
to
address
a
couple
things
that
I
heard
in
the
audience:
I
appreciate
anyone
who
comes
out
to
speak
and
give
it
their
opinion,
because
we,
you
know,
we
we
do
work
for
you
and
III.
U
Your
opinion
I
have
in
my
ward,
which
is
further
south
I,
think
only
heard
from
a
few
of
the
speakers
who
were
here
this
evening
who
either
live
in
the
building
or
have
a
relative
in
the
building
in
terms
of
opposition,
and
that
is
far
different
than
when
I
first
sat
in
Council
and
we
were
going
over
the
Tommy
Nevins
building,
whatever
that
was
called,
which
I,
which
I
opposed
this
building
I
will
be
supporting.
I
am
sympathetic
to
the
population
that
lives
there.
U
However,
it
appears
to
me
from
from
what
I've
read
and
what
I've
learned
that
the
developer
is
going
to
work
to
make
some
cross
crosswalks
and
and
improve
some
of
our
pedestrian
signage,
which
is
much
needed
all
around
town,
so
I'm,
appreciative
of
that
I
think.
One
thing
that
concerns
me
as
I
sit
here
over
a
year
now
and
hear
about
developments,
is
I,
hear
a
little
bit
of
a
reoccurring
theme
from
different
populations
in
Evanston,
and
that
is,
you
know,
I'm
not
opposed
to
the
building,
but
it
just
shouldn't
go
here
and
I.
U
Think
one
thing
that
I
just
want
to
say
publicly
is
we're
not
a
large
city
right,
we're
like
seven
miles
long
I,
think
and
we
don't
unless
we
are
going
to
start
building
on
some
of
our
parkland,
which
I
think
everyone
would
oppose.
We
don't
have
a
ton
of
space
to
build
on
and
we
are
not
at
least
unless
I'm
out
of
the
loop
on
things.
We
are
not
out.
You
know
recruiting
developers.
People
come
here
because
it
is
a
great
city
to
live.
U
I
am
growing
more
concerned
that
if
we
oppose
everything
that
comes
to
us
and
say
well,
you
know
a
few
years
down
the
line,
we'll
get
something
better
or
let's,
let's
wait
and
see
what
happens
next
year.
You
know,
I,
don't
know
what
the
market
bears
and
I'm,
not
a
real
estate.
I
don't
know
what
next
year
holds
for
us
and
that's
not
to
say
I'm
gonna,
prove
everything
but
I
think
this
developed.
This
development
seems
to
be
thoughtful.
It
is
in
a
kind
of
an
odd
shape.
U
Street
it's
in
an
odd
shape
lot
and
it's
been
open.
I
would
imagine,
I
mean
I've
passed
by
my
whole
life,
and
it's
been
there.
Next
to
st.,
not
st.
Francis
was
Mount
Zion,
Church,
so
I.
You
know
I
hope
that
the
developer
is
going
to
work
with
you
for
some
parking.
I
live
on
a
residential
street
where
parking
is
not
an
issue,
but
I
do
see
a
huge
uptake
in
traffic
down
my
street
as
people
are
trying
to
avoid
main
thoroughfares
that
people
are
using
Waze
and
other
traffic.
Apps
and
I
am
more
concerned.
U
U
You
know,
I,
think
that's
part
of
what
makes
us
a
great
city
that
people
actually
want
to
move
here.
The
one
thing
I
will
say
for
the
developer
and
I
shared.
This
was
all
my
Braithwaite.
Excuse
me,
this
is
a
bigger
conversation
that
will
continue
to
have
on
Council
I'm,
not
really
that
excited
about
some
of
the
public
benefits.
U
So
there
is
the
contribution
for
the
pay
boxes.
I
mean
those
are
necessary,
but
not
really
that
exciting.
To
me,
the
transit
tracker
display
board
I
mentioned
this
in
another
development.
I
think
that's
more
of
a
benefit
to
the
residents
in
the
building,
not
necessarily
a
public
benefit
and
protected
bike
lanes.
I.
Imagine
that
you're
going
to
be
you
know,
you're
gonna
fit
says
you're,
gonna,
repaint
them
I.
U
Imagine
that
means
you're
gonna,
maybe
do
some
damage
to
them,
so
I
would
expect
you
to
repaint
them
and
then
there's
also
like
the
streetscape
improvements,
curved
extensions,
so
on
and
so
forth,
I
mean
those
things
again
are
nice,
but
I
guess
I
would
like
to
see
us
at
the
council
and
continue
our
conversation
about
public
benefits
and
really
kind
of
pushing
those
up.
A
notch.
U
I
think
that
someone
who's
going
to
landscape
in
front
of
their
building
was
going
to
do
that,
whether
we
gave
them
credit
or
not,
because
it's
going
to
make
their
building
look.
Nice
and
I
would
hope
that
they're
gonna
repair
things
that
they,
you
know,
have
the
damage
in
there
and
their
build
up
their
building.
So
I
would
like
to
push
a
little
bit
more
in
the
public
developments.
U
I
guess
I'm
willing
to
let
these
go
hearing
that
you're
going
to
work
to
provide
some
more
parking
for
the
residents
and
for
the
caregivers,
but
we
also
do
have
some
other
parking
in
the
downtown
area,
so
I'm
sure
that
alderman
breath
will
make
sure
that
we
we
have
some
care.
You
know
caregiver
parking
up
available,
but
I.
Don't
think
that
that's
something
that
is
guaranteed
I
have
people
in
my
community
who
are
wheelchairs
and
walkers
and
so
on
and
so
forth.
And
you
know
people
live
in
streets
where
there's
only
apartment
buildings.
U
U
So
I,
you
know,
I,
don't
want
us
to
kind
of
promote
this
idea
that
people
are
kind
of
guaranteed
parking
close
to
their
building
because
a
lot
of
our
residents
in
the
city,
you
know
circle
a
lot
of
times
and
I
have
a
lot
of
single
women
who
will
park
illegally
just
to
be
on
the
block
with
their
building,
because
they
work
later
so
forth.
And
you
know
that's
a
real
issue
for
them,
but
unless
they
move,
there's
really
nothing
I
could
do
to
make
our
streets
any.
You
know
more
parking
friendly
for
them.
W
Well,
I
certainly
appreciated
hearing
from
so
many
of
the
residents
in
the
sienna
building.
I
think
they've
really
made
a
very
powerful
case
for
their
importance
to
the
neighborhood
and
they've.
They
really
raised
our
awareness
of
a
problem
that
they've
been
dealing
with
for
years.
The
whole
caregiver
parking
issue,
whether
we
had
this
development
coming
to
us
or
not
that's
a
problem
that
we
should
have
been
aware
of
and
tried
to
work
on
already.
W
W
Alderman
Braithwaite
for
the
work
that
he's
outlined
that
he's
going
to
do
to
to
see
if
there
aren't
other
spaces
available
in
the
Siena
building
that
aren't
part
of
that
1007
Church
Street
allotment
that
the
Siena
building
was
built
way
back
when
we
had
much
more
rigorous
parking
requirements.
And
yet
people's
driving
habits
have
really
changed
a
lot
and
so
I
think
what
we're
finding
as
many
of
our
parking
structures
were
built
or
over
built
with
parking
spaces.
So
there
probably
are
spaces
in
the
Siena
building
that
nobody
is
really
using.
W
So
I
think
there's
a
real
opportunity
there
for
us
to
work
closely
to
provide
as
many
caregivers
case
spaces
as
we
can
I.
Think
that
would
because
I
as
I
understood
from
talking
with
various
people.
One
of
one
of
the
problems
in
terms
of
having
the
caregivers
is
the
there's,
a
huge,
really
rapid
turnover
with
caregivers
and
nothing
more
more
discouraging
to
a
caregiver
than
having
to
walk
blocks
and
blocks
in
a
cold
winter
day
to
try
to
find
a
place
to
park.
W
So
if
we
can
at
least
eliminate
that
problem,
that
caregivers
face
I,
think
that
would
really
be
helpful.
I
agree
with
alderman
Braithwaite
that
I
think
the
satisfaction
of
the
affordable
housing
requirement
is
really
really
positive.
To
have
17
units
on
site
I
know,
there's
a
discrepancy
in
terms
of
the
ami
ratio
there,
but
I
think
it's.
W
Y
You
I
think
much
of
what
I
was
gonna
say
was
was
pretty
well
stated
by
ottoman
fleming,
but
you
know
contrary
what,
if
he
picked
up
this
and
looked
at
social
media,
contrary
to
what
it
says,
we
don't
approve
every
every
development
I
think
we've
proved
to
the
last
four,
and
this
isn't
really
about
winning
or
losing.
This
is
about
collaborating
and
doing
what's
best
for
the
city
as
a
whole.
Y
So
it's
it's
important
for
us
to
hear
from
the
community
it's
important
for
us
to
hear
from
the
people
who
are
impacted,
because
that
facilitates
the
collaboration
and
it's
not
a
winning
or
losing
game.
Sometimes
it
feels
like
that,
but
it's
at
the
end,
it's
really
not
about
winning
or
losing
it's
about
building
a
strong
Evanston,
and
you
know
the
the
word
investments,
not
a
bad
word.
Investment
can
be
good
or
bad
and
I
think
when
it,
when
we're
talking
about
somebody
making
a
contribution
in
a
positive
way
to
the
community,
that's
to
be
valued.
Y
A
safety
and
access
are
always
at
the
highest
on
my
list
of
priorities
and
I
think
the
same
goes
for
everybody
up
here.
So
we
are
going
to
be
mindful
of
that
staff
and
braithwaite's
reached
out
to
me.
Also
one
of
the
things
I
want
to
make
a
commitment
to
doing.
Is
we
looking
at
this
truck
route
situation?
So
that's
not
in
front
of
us
today,
but
I.
Think
that
warrants
a
good
hard
look
because
I
don't
know
if
that
you
know
makes
make
sense
the
way
that's
operating
now,
but
I
think
you
all.
Y
This
is
it's
an
ongoing
collaboration.
It's
going
to
be
uncomfortable
to
have
a
construction
project
going
or
going
on.
There's
no
doubt
about
it.
There's
there's
been
construction
projects
in
the
4th
Ward
and
they
are
uncomfortable,
but
when
they're
done,
what
we
want
to
do
is
have
a
strong
community
and
a
strong
Evanston,
so
I'll
be
supporting
the
project
tonight.
Great.
X
I
think
this
is
going
to
work
out,
but
I
do
think
that
there
is
some
past
bad
blood
having
to
do
with
the
Rosic
project.
To
begin
with
and
I
think
many
of
us
who
are
around
at
the
time
can
remember
when
the
parking
deck
at
the
Siena
project
collapsed
and
caused
all
sorts
of
issues
and
I
believe
there
were
some
lawsuits
involving
the
lack
of
accessibility,
it's
a
Rosic
project
and
so
I
think
a
lot
of
I.
X
Think
a
lot
of
the
misgivings
have
to
do
with
not
trusting
the
original
developer
of
the
rosette
project.
I
mentioned
to
alderman
Braithwaite
the
other
day
that
I
felt
that
the
presentation
made
by
this
developer
was
probably
one
of
the
best
presentations
I've
heard
about
a
development
since
I've
been
here.
It
was
clear
and
concise
and
really
very
inclusive
and
very
understandable
and
very
clear
and
I
was
extremely
impressed
by
that
and
I.
X
Think
because
we've
had
a
bad
experience
from
one
developer
doesn't
mean
that
that
that
goes
for
all
of
them
and
I
will
never
forget
the
issues
that
we
had
with
rosette,
yeah
and
I'm.
Sure.
Some
of
you
remember
that,
or
at
least
your
families
remember
that
and
so
I
think
we
could
move
on
and
I
think
the
promises
that
have
been
made
here
and
the
commitment
Peter
has
made
I
think
I
think
we're
going
to
be
fine
and
we'll
all
work
together
on
this,
and
so
hopefully
we
can
conclude
here
and
take
a
vote.
A
U
A
W
V
R
A
Y
U
Hi
I'm
requested
this
be
taken
off
because
I
will
not
be
voting.
I
guess
they're
all
together,
but
I
oppose
the
library
board.
Reappointments
I
know
that
you
know
there's
been
some
struggles
with
the
library
board,
I'll,
say
and
I
was
hopeful
to
see
some
new
committee
members
to
left
it
there.
So
I
will
not
be
supporting
the
reappointment
of
these
current
board.
Members
I
will
support
the
Commission
person
Preservation
Commission,
but
I'm
someone
we
vote
in
both
all
together.
So.
V
X
A
Just
just
so,
everyone
knows
so
because
I
put
folks
it
up
for
reappointment
or
I
recommend
people
for
appointment
to
committees.
My
basic
rationale
for
appointments
is
that
if
someone
has
served
a
first
term
and
they've
done
a
good
job,
then
they're
entitled
to
serve
a
second
serve
a
second
term.
That
is,
that
is
the
situation
with
the
library
board
for
Shawn
aisles
and
Vaishali
Patel
I.
A
Do
believe
that
you
know
folks,
if
they're
willing
should
get
to
term
appointments
twice
to
a
board
I'm,
not
personally
keen
on
you
know
in
perpetuity
having
somebody
on
the
board.
I
think
it's
important
for
our
community
to
have
new
people
on
the
board
if
there
are
extenuating
circumstances.
In
my
opinion,
if
you
know
that
person
is
up
to
be,
you
know
the
president
of
the
board,
you
know
and
needs
a
seventh
year,
and
so
therefore
another
term
to
do
that.
Then
I
think
that
that's
appropriate
in
the
case
of
Margaret
Laurie.
A
She
has
been
on
the
board
two
terms.
This
would
be
her
third
term
and
my
rationale
for
reappointing
recommending
the
reappointment
of
Margaret
is
because
you
know
finances
are
so
important
right
now
to
the
city
and
to
the
library
she's
in
a
very
important
position
of
helping
with
their
fundraising.
So
for
that
reason,
I
think
Margaret
deserves
a
third
and
final
term
on
the
library
board.
X
A
A
I
understand
my
comment
really
was
I,
wanted
the
public
to
understand
why
I
am
recommending
for
reappointment
cuz,
alderman
Fleming
said
she's,
not
supporting
so
I
wanted
people
to
understand
my
rationale
for
why
I
put
them
forward.
That's
all:
okay,
seeing
no
more
lights!
We
are
going
to
divide
these,
so
can
I
have
a
motion
for
the
library
board
and
then
we'll
do
another
motion
on
them.
Second,.
AA
V
A
Two
to
oppose
the
library
board
passes
six
six
two
two
okay
can
I,
have
a
motion
on
the
Preservation
Commission
kenneth
idle.
Second,
second,
god
bless
you
all
in
favor,
any
of
us
all
right,
so
Kenneth,
Preservation,
Committee
I,
don't
lose
forward
on
a
vote
of
eight
to
zero.
Okay,
all
right!
We
are
now
going
to
go
to
call
of
the
awards
this
evening,
we'll
start
with
alderman
suffering.
W
I
guess
I'm
taking
a
point
of
personal
privilege.
I,
don't
quite
would
be
to
say
that
I
think
it's
premature
to
talk
about
deconstructing,
the
Harley
Clark
mansion
I.
Believe
we've
been
suggesting
informally
to
the
members
of
the
lake
house
and
Gardens
group
that,
if
they
can
in
the
next
year,
come
up
with
a
million
dollars
for
us,
we
will
want
to
talk
with
them
further
about
entering
into
a
lease
I.
Just
I
think
we
need
to
give
them
a
chance
to
test
the
waters
with
their
vision.
X
X
To
begin
the
that
will
result
in
the
city's
acceptance
of
their
generous
financial
support,
leading
to
the
immediate
restoration
of
the
dunes
to
their
natural
state,
to
the
removal
of
the
house
and
the
coach-house
being
Harley
Clark
and
the
restoring
of
the
key
elements
of
James,
Jensen's,
historic,
1920s
garden
and
integrating
them
into
the
natural
landscape.
While
clearing
and
expanding
the
parkland
and
Beach
for
the
enjoyment
of
all
members
of
our
city,
it's
time
to
move
forward,
and
this
offer
is
limited.
X
X
Outdoor
cafe
a
first
time
cafe
that
it
be
determined
between
our
staff
and
the
aldermen
of
the
ward
I.
Don't
know
why
it
needs
to
come
here.
It
seems
like
a
waste,
so
the
determination
could
be
made
by
the
staff
and
the
aldermen
of
the
ward,
but
we
can
discuss
that
at
the
rules.
Committee
and
I'd,
like
also
to
discuss
the
way
we
handle
the
Amazon
budget,
our
purchase
issues
at
the
rules
committee.
That's
all
all.
AB
X
AB
X
AB
X
A
A
U
I
would
like
to
make
a
referral
to
Public
Works
that
they
generate
a
report,
and
this
doesn't
have
to
be
like
a
very
extensive
report,
but
I
would
like
to
kind
of
know
the
top
ten
capital
improvement
projects
that
city-owned
facility,
so
this
can
be
tucked
in
based
on
you
know,
urgency.
So
we've
talked
tonight
about
the
boiler
and
the
AC,
and
all
that
I
just
would
like
to
have
a
better
idea
of
what
we're
looking
at
and
for
future
maintenance
projects
coming
up.
So
I
know
that
they
had
mentioned
doing
some
five-year
plan.
U
But
this
is
not
that
extensive.
Also
I
would
just
like
to
make
a
couple
congratulations,
so
we
have
device
bottles,
high
school
sports.
We
have
two
ETH
of
students
who
placed
first
in
track
and
field,
so
one
is
Jonathan
Wilburn
he
placed
first
in
the
triple
jump.
He's
a
senior
and
I
think
he
jumped
like
40
I,
don't
know
what
it
was,
but
anyhow
it
was
important
a.
U
Far
really,
but
this
is
the
first
time
the
et
HS
has
taken
first
in
that
that
competition
and
then
also
just
a
person
personal
pride,
my
little
cousin
gave
a
Michelin
plays
first
in
the
800
she's,
the
fastest
800
runner
in
the
state
and
also
in
the
US
track
and
field
Association.
So
we're
super
proud
of
her,
but
anyway,
I
thought.
That
was
great
that
we
had
to
and
all
of
our
other
sports
teams
did
very
well
and
also
we
have
a
graduation
coming
so
I'm,
very
proud
of
all
of
their
Wildcats.
V
You
mr.
mayor
so
first
board
meeting
June
5th
Tuesday
79
at
the
library.
You
should
have
gotten
your
postcards
in
the
mail,
we'll
be
sending
out
an
email
notice
as
well.
Please
come
and
join
us
we're
going
to
be
looking
at
to
development
issues,
1900
Sherman
and
1621
Chicago
Avenue,
as
well
as
our
usual
staff.
Please
reports,
questions
and
answers.
Other
good
stuff
I've
got
two
issues
tonight
that
I
want
to
raise.
The
city
sent
out
a
letter
to
residents.
V
I
got
one,
but
in
the
area
surrounding
Northwestern
University,
the
fireman's
Park
neighborhood
in
the
fifth
Ward
and
my
neighborhood
in
the
first
ward,
absolutely
went
ballistic
this
weekend
because
with
the
announcement
that
Northwestern
University
cannot
can,
according
to
the
letter,
can
no
longer
financially
support
the
dumpster
program
in
the
neighborhood
that
was
put
that
was
put
in
years
ago
for
move
in
move
out
and
it
was
I
think
then
just
reduced
to
move
out.
But
this
is
really
important.
V
V
Don't
know
I'm
trying
to
talk
to
people
about
what
they
can
do
to
help
keep
it
clean,
but
it
means
that
the
neighborhood
really
has
to
add
another
thing
to
their
lists
to
supervise,
and
it's
a
lot
to
ask
ask
folks
to
do
so.
I
would
love
to
have
the
dumpsters
there,
even
if
it's
only
5
or
6,
get
them
out
there
on
the
street
so
that
the
students
can
throw
away
their
their
discarded
furniture
and
whatever
else
they
have
and
keep
the
neighborhood
as
clean
and
picked
up
as
possible.
V
V
As
a
result
of
that
meeting,
the
university's
expansion
cannot
go
any
further
than
the
landfill
that
they
were
authorized
to
add
carve
out
from
Lake
Michigan,
and
that
means
that
the
northwestern,
what
was
the
former
Northwestern
Beach,
is
now
owned
by
the
state
of
Illinois
and
I
would
like
to
refer
to
our
city
staff,
to
see
if
the
city
of
Evanston
can
actually
annex
that
property
for
public
use
and
report
back
to
us
at
the
Planning
and
Development
Committee,
where,
where
I
think
the
minute
the
matter
should
be.
So.
AB
What
did
you
call
it
yeah,
so
what
I
would
offer
without
making
any
promises
to
maybe
work
with
Advanced
Disposal
I've
had
some
very
preliminary
conversations
about
doing
spring
clean
ups
for
the
neighbors
that
are
in
close
proximity,
and
maybe
it
may
be
a
good
opportunity
with
the
help
of
our
city
staff,
to
see
if
we
can
get
a
couple
of
dumpsters
in
there
I
mean
I've
been
down
there
during
move
out,
and
it's
it's
just
I
think
a
reality
that
we
have
to
grapple
with.
It
I'm
sure
it
exists
with
every
college
town.
AB
So
if
we
can
find
a
way
to
get
it
done
without
you
know
any
burden
to
the
taxpayers.
Taking
away
from
that
good
neighbor
fund
I
hope
that
we
would
have
the
latitude
to
explore
that
with
advance
as
possible,
because
I
would
agree.
It's
needed.
I
know
that
for
a
fact,
so,
in
terms
of
my
calls
was
poured.
Thank
you
very
much.
AB
Altman
Fleming
I
also
want
to
congratulate
the
Evanston
Township
class
of
2018
and
just
take
a
little
personal
privilege
to
congratulate
my
son,
Isaiah
Braithwaite
who's
going
to
be
graduating
this
year,
really
proud
of
his
accomplishments.
If
you
ever
met
him,
I
mean
he's
a
very
I
mean
he's
a
very
studious
and
in
serious
young
man
and
I
just
want
to
say
to
you
publicly
just
how
proud
I
am
of
you.
AB
That
applauses
for
Isaiah,
hopefully
he's
what
time
is
it
hey,
maybe
asleep?
The
the
other
and
I
made
these
this
I
wasn't
sure
if
it
was
a
quest,
but
I
did
make
the
statement.
My
concern
about
the
about
our
budgeting
process
and
and
throughout
we're
starting
to
see
more
residents
come
forward,
and
so
I
know,
city
manager,
we're
going
to
have
a
discussion.
I
can't
remember
if
it's
our
next
council
meeting,
but
one
of
the
things
that
I
would
like
to
request
and
that
we
have.
AB
The
number
of
residents
that
have
come
forward
and
that
I've
heard
the
concern
regarding
the
youth
outreach
team,
as
well
as
the
mayor,
Summer,
Youth,
Employment,
Program
I,
know,
there's
gonna
be
a
long
list
of
issues
that
we're
going
to
grapple
with,
but
I
just
think
just
given
the
fact
that
it's
now
the
summer-
and
we
understand
over
the
last
couple
of
years
that
we've
done
a
relatively
really
good
job,
based
on
the
resources
that
we've
had
to
maintain
a
level
of
safety.
We've
already
had
a
number
of
shootings.
AB
Already
this
season
and
I
I
know
from
my
conversation
with
our
city
manager
that
effective
June
1st
our
outreach
staff
is
actually
going
to
be
switching
their
hours
and
spending
more
time
as
well
around
town,
but
in
the
downtown
area
that
it's
just
the
wrong
time
to
have
our
neighbors
or
our
residents.
Anxious
about
that,
and
so
my
request
is
again
that
our
first
opportunity
that
I
hope
that
when
we
discuss
it,
we
can
just
vote
to
remove
that
off
the
list.
AB
I
mean
the
work
that
they
do
is
essential
to
the
safety
of
our
town.
I
mean
I
would
even
say,
and
even
the
economic
development
based
on
some
of
the
youth
activities
downtown
and
I
just
want
to
make
sure
that
we
can
vote
that
off
the
list,
as
well
as
the
mayor's
Summer
Youth
in
program,
we're
not
going
to
take
those
away.
AB
AA
A
AD
AD
Ok,
so
we
will
have
ahead
rules
at
6
p.m.
have
Human
Services
follow
at
7
p.m.
the
following
Monday,
the
11th
of
June
would
be
a
regular
City
Council
meeting.
We
have
little
to
no
items
currently
scheduled
for
the
11th.
There
was
an
item
Alvin
Rainey
just
referenced
this
evening
for
a
next
council
meeting.
We
could
have
that
of
course
available.
There
was
one
item
tonight:
the
condominium
of
regulations
that
was
was
introduced.
AD
There
are
no
other
pending
matters,
so
we
also
had
been
planning
on
coming
back
to
you
on
the
third
Monday,
the
18th,
to
talk
budget
and
also
we
have
a
presentation
on
some
3-1-1
research
that
we've
done.
So
if
we
were
to
not
have
the
meeting
on
the
11th
but
go
ahead
and
have
the
meeting
on
the
18th
to
talk
about
the
budget,
would
that
be
acceptable
for
the
council?
AD
Just
have
one
meeting
on
the
18
I.
You
know
this.
The
survey
deadline
is
the
7th
I.
Don't
we
would
not
have
a
final
report
to
you
ready
for
the
11th
of
the
we'd
move
everything
to
the
11th.
But
if
that's
all
right
with
you,
then
we
would
just
have
a
meeting
on
June
the
18th
and
then
a
regular
meeting
on
June
25th
I
would
also
like
and
not
this
evening,
but
over
the
next
several
days
to
pull
the
council
on
your
plans
for
July.
AD
We
would
have
currently
scheduled
meetings
for
the
9th
and
23rd
the
council.
A
few
months
ago
indicated
they
would
meet
again
on
July
30th
to
talk
about,
affordable
housing
just
want
to
confirm
those
dates
with
you.
So
we'll
do
that.
But
unless
something
changes
significantly
in
the
next
couple
of
days,
we'll
go
ahead
and
not
have
a
meeting
on
the
11th
instead
have
a
meeting
on
the
18th,
which
would
include
the
budget
of
the
three
one,
one
presentation
and
a
couple
of
items
from
tonight.
AD
Sure
the
third,
the
third
Monday
under
your
rules
is
a
regular
meeting.
So,
but
we
would
put
those
the
items
on
from
this
evening,
so
the
the
condominium
and
the
resolution
regarding
Carly
Clark
would
be
on
them
for
the
18th.
If
that's
acceptable.
Mr.
mayor
members
of
council
will
do
that
if
something
changes
for
the
11th,
while
blushing
it
right
away
but
we'll
shoot
that
a
stent
just
for
the
thank.
AD
And
we
will
have
that
on,
for
the
18th
I
mean
we're
going
to
be
asking
the
council
we're
going
to
come
back
with
recommendations
for
those
things
to
move
those
things
to
continue.
Studying
and
quite
honestly,
we're
gonna
have
to
add
things,
and
so,
where
we'll
have
we've
been
working
with
both
the
police,
chief
and
fire
chief
for
reductions
at
police
and
fire.
So
we'll
be
talking
actually
next
Monday
to
the
4th
about
proposed
reductions
for
the
police
department
and
then
we'll
have
some
preliminary
proposals
for
reductions
at
the
fire
department
on
June
18th.
AD
So
in
order
to
make
the
dollar
amounts
were
making,
especially
given
the
way
for
the
community
feedback,
we're
getting
to
take
things
off.
We,
the
staff
working
on
proposals
and
including
police
and
fire.
So
again,
we'll
we'll
have
details
of
the
of
the
police
programs
on
June
4th
and
we'll
have
more
details
on
the
reductions
proposed
for
fire
on
June
18th.
Y
The
executive
session
and
yeah
one
thing
I
will
mention,
though
we
do
have
the
housing
finance
workshop
panel
presentation
tomorrow,
6:30
that
our
staff
has
wonderfully
put
together.
Unfortunately,
I'll
be
watching
it
on
video
later
because
of
a
personal
conflict,
but
anybody
who
has
the
opportunity
to
either
watch
that
or
attend
I
think
it
will
be
a
very
informative
for
our
inclusionary
housing
and
affordable
housing
issues.
Now,
pursuant
to
v,
Illinois
compiled
statutes,
ILCs
120,
/,
2a
I
move
that
the
City
Council
convene
into
executive
session
to
discuss
agenda
items
regarding
personnel
and
litigation.