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From YouTube: Evanston City Council Meeting 6-13-2022
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D
A
So
five
members
answered
the
call
of
the
role
in
person
together
with
me
that
gives
us
a
quorum
in
person.
Additionally,
two
further
members
are
participating
remotely,
and
so
we
have
our
quorum
here
and
are
prepared
to
do
our
work.
A
A
Well,
there
you
are
those
of
you
who
are
watching
you'll,
see
I'm
wearing
a
I
voted
sticker.
I
voted
this
afternoon
on
the
first
day
of
early
voting
at
the
civic
center
was
extremely
convenient
and
easy
and
recommend
that
everybody
make
sure
to
do
so
before
election
day,
which
is
coming
up
in
a
few
weeks.
You
can
either
vote
by
mail
vote
early
or,
of
course,
vote
in
person
on
election
day.
A
And
whereas
the
city
of
evanston
is
strengthened
by
the
rich
diversity
of
ethnic,
cultural,
racial,
gender
and
sexual
identities
of
its
residents,
all
of
which
contribute
to
the
vibrant
character
of
our
city.
And
whereas
nationwide
4
out
of
10
lgbtq
youth
say
the
community
in
which
they
live
is
not
accepting
of
lgbtq
people
and
lgbtq.
A
A
I
believe
camone
hendricks
is
here
to
receive
this
proclamation
so
as
miss
hendricks
makes
her
way
up
to
the
room
all
prepared
to
to
read
the
the
proclamation
which
is
in
regards
to
evanston's
real
independence,
freedom
day
juneteenth,
and
so,
whereas
president,
abraham
lincoln,
signed
the
emancipation
proclamation
on
january,
1st
1863
declaring
the
slaves
in
confederate
territory
free,
paving
the
way
for
the
passing
of
the
13th
amendment,
which
formally
abolished
slavery
in
the
united
states
of
america
and
whereas
word
about
the
signing
of
the
emancipation
proclamation,
was
delayed.
E
Thank
you
so
much
mayor
and
city
council
and
everyone.
I
would
of
course
like
to
invite
everyone
out
to
participate
in
the
parade.
There
is
power
in
a
parade,
there's
power
in
gathering
of
the
community,
shutting
down
the
streets
with
signs
and
really
advocating
for
the
black
community
and
uplifting
our
black
community.
A
F
F
As
you
all
know,
karen
is
retiring,
and
this
is
her
last
week
with
us
as
executive
director
of
the
evanston
public
library
and
karen
has
been
the
executive
director
for
the
last
10
years,
and
I
just
wanted
to
say
a
few
words
for
karen
to
celebrate
her
retirement
and
celebrate
all
that.
F
Karen
has
done
so
much
to
expand
services
and
has
really
brought
the
library
to
the
people.
She's
been
a
wonderful
resource
for
us
directors
at
the
city
and
we
will
miss
her
tremendously,
and
I
want
to
congratulate
karen
on
her
10
years
of
service
here
in
evanston.
I'd
like
to
present
a
plaque
to
karen
and
ask
maripus
to
present
it
to
her.
F
G
Thank
you.
Thank
you.
Thank
you.
It's
it's
been
my
honor
and
my
joy
to
work.
Alongside
of
all
of
you,
I'm
going
to
miss
you
so
much,
and
I
look
forward
to
celebrating
all
the
wonderful
things
that
you
accomplish.
G
G
I'm
proud
of
the
work
that
we've
done,
we're
no
longer
a
passive
library
waiting
for
you
to
come
and
join
us
in
the
library,
though
you're
welcome.
We
really
have
worked
consistently
and
intentionally
to
center,
our
community
members
and
our
community
voices,
so
our
staff
is
growing
internally
and
we're
sending
the
largest
group
of
non-librarians.
We
ever
have
to
our
national
conference,
our
american
library
association
conference.
G
So
I'm
happy
I'm
proud
of
this
library
we're
further
out
ahead
than
many
of
our
colleagues
and
that's
what
evanston
deserves.
I
mean
this
is
a
special
place
and
you
deserve
to
lead
the
work
of
the
library
and
lead
the
work
of
the
city,
but
I
wouldn't
be
doing
my
job
doing
this
last
week.
If
I
didn't
also
remind
you
that
an
investment
in
the
evanston
public
library
is
an
investment
in
our
residents
and
our
budget
has
been
held
flat.
G
G
So
we
are
here
to
help
the
evanston
public
library
is
here
to
help
you
and
I'm
so
proud
of
that,
and
I
think
we
do
a
pretty
good
job,
we're
not
always
perfect,
but
we're
always
trying
and
we're
here
to
work
with
you.
So
again,
it's
been
my
pleasure.
This
has
been
a
joy
for
me.
I
love
this
work.
I
love
this
library
and
I
leave
you
in
very
good
hands.
So
have
a
great
summer
and
thank
you.
H
Councilmember,
thank
you
very
much.
I
before
you
go.
I
definitely
want
to
make
get
a
picture
with
you
standing
with
your
directors.
I
think
it's
very
rare
that
we
see
them
all
in
the
same
place,
just
standing
with
the
staff,
and
so
I
want
to
make
sure
I
get
a
picture
for
you,
but
before
you
go,
I
just
want
to
personally.
Thank
you
on
behalf
of
the
war.
You
know
the
residents
of
the
second
wards.
You
did
an
amazing
job.
H
Expanding
services
beyond
the
traditional
boundaries,
you've
helped
to
bridge
the
gaps
in
the
communities,
particularly
with
courageous
conversations
around
the
branches.
That
definitely
should
be
mentioned
and
noted
as
part
of
your
career
accomplishments.
H
The
library
robert
crown
is
amazing
and
you
are
so
instrumental
in
bringing
that
there
and
and
being
a
part
of
that
I
can't
say
enough,
and
so
I
have
a
son
isaiah,
who
is
very
well
known
at
the
library
and
that
kid
started
there
as
a
very
young
child,
and
he
continues
to
read,
and
I
just
wanna.
I
owe
that
to
you
as
well
as
your
staff
and
then
the
last
thing.
H
F
Okay,
all
right,
I
think
I
think
they'll
they'll
keep
their
words
in
private.
Thank
you,
okay!
Thank
you.
Karen
moving
on
to
the
next
announcement,
we
have
our
fourth
of
july
association
here
for
a
brief
presentation.
I
Hi,
I
am
I'm
virtual.
We
can.
I
I
Let's
see
so
hi
my
name's
hillary
bean,
hopefully
my
video
will
kick
in
many
of
you
know
me
already.
I
I
I've
been
a
trustee
for
16
armor.
A
I
don't
know
if
the
connection
is
bad,
but
we
we
don't.
We
haven't
heard
you
for
the
last
few
seconds,
ms
bean.
A
We're
not
hearing
anything
at
this
time.
I
don't
know
it's.
Perhaps
you
can't
hear
me
either,
which
would
make
sense.
A
Got
it
so
we're
actually
going
to
call
a
little
bit
of
an
audible
at
this
time?
Anyhow,
because
with
the
length
of
the
previous
committees
and
the
tornado
interruption,
where
we're
taxed
people's
patients
rather
dramatically
already
this
evening,
I'd
like
to
entertain
a
motion
on
item
h1
and
as
someone's
decided
to
make
that
motion.
If
ms
avery
could
could
come
forward
so
moved.
D
A
H
Just
a
quick
acknowledgement
and
all
the
information
is
a
packet.
I've
had
an
opportunity
to
work
with
you
personally
very
early
in
my
life.
It's
probably
what
24
25
when
I
first
moved
back
from
college
and
just
from
the
point
that
I've
met,
you
you've
been
doing
amazing
work
in
the
community,
so
obviously
this
is
going
to
pass
unanimously,
but
I
just
want
to
say
thank
you
so
much
on
behalf
of
all
the
wonderful
young,
ladies
and
kids,
whose
lives
you've
touched
over
the
years.
H
J
Yeah,
I
just
want
to
add
my
voice
to
that.
You've
touched
the
lives
of
many
generations
of
black
folks
or
just
people,
but
particularly
folks,
in
our
black
community,
in
the
fifth
ward
for
for
decades,
and
so
thank
you
for
that
service.
J
I
think
the
first
time
I
got
to
interact
with
you
was
here
in
this
this
chamber
when
the
freedom
school
was
here,
and
there
were
a
bunch
of
young
folks
pretending
to
be
or
or
not
pretending
getting
ready
for
the
future
when
they're
up
here
themselves
to
be
council
members,
and
so
you
know,
and
if
I'm
not
mistaken,
I
believe
my
mom
was.
J
Yeah
my
mom
was
in
your
program
with
you
and
lonnie
and
folks,
and
so
again,
that's
what
I
mean.
You've
touched
the
lives
of
so
many
folks,
even
if
they
you
know,
even
if
it
was
before
they
were
born,
you
were
there
with
your
hands
on
their
lives.
So
thank
you
for
all
your
work
and
your
service
to
the
community.
It
means
a
lot
to
a
whole
lot
of
people.
L
I
was
just
going
to
say
that
it
was
great
to
learn
that
your
your
story
here
in
evanston
started
at
kendall
college,
and
then
you
went
to,
I
think,
while
you,
you
told
me,
and
you
were
a
free
agent.
This
is
the
way
I
think
about
it
and
alderman
holmes
and
her
wisdom
offered
offered
joanne
a
bit
more
money
to
get
her
over
to
family
focus
and
we're
thankful
for
that.
L
40
years
is
a
long
time
to
do
anything
and
and
to
wake
up
every
day
and
and
do
the
hard
work,
especially
in
the
area
that
you
work
in.
It's
tough
work,
it's
challenging
work
and,
and
you
did
it,
and
I
would
guarantee
that
so
many
generations
of
evanston
residents
consider
you
family
because
of
it.
L
I
wouldn't
be
shocked
if
you
got
a
dwelling
unit
somewhere
in
there
and
we'll
we'll
overlook
whether
or
not
it's
zoned
properly,
but
I'm
sure
you
got
a
couch
or
something
in
there
to
because
you
you're
not
watching
the
clock
you're
putting
in
the
serious
hours
to
get
the
job
done,
and
job
well
done
and
and
and
so
thankful.
That
is,
the
work
continues.
As
well,
we
still
have
joined
here
working
harder.
C
A
I
just
want
to
echo
those
thanks.
You
know
it's,
it's
not
easy
work,
but
it's
the
work
that
makes
the
community
what
it
is.
It's
the
work
that
ties
together
the
community
and
gives
us
the
strength
that
we
have
and-
and
this
is
a
very
small
way
of
saying,
thank
you,
but
I
hope
I
hope
it
means
something
and
I
hope
it
shows
the
community
what
we
value,
because
this
is
the
work
that
makes
us
who
we
want
to
be.
Thank
you
so
much
for
that.
A
Well,
the
clerk.
Please
call
the
roll.
J
A
With
seven
voting
in
favor
and
none
voting
against
the
motion
passes.
K
I
just
want
to
say
thank
you
so
much.
I
have
no
regrets
in
working
with
all
the
youth
and
their
families.
I
was
just
talking
to
someone
today
and
I
I
facilitated
a
grandparents
group
and
she
was
one
of
those
kids
in
my
chair
and
now
she's
in
my
grandparents
school.
So
you
write
generations
of
youth
and
I
would
do
it
all
all
over
again.
If
my
knees
would
let
me,
but
the
kids
keep
me
grow,
grounded
and
they
give
me
energy
and
they
energize
me
every
day,
so
I
can
keep
going
so.
M
I
just
came
here
to
accompany
miss
joanne
and
I
truly
speak
for
a
multitude
of
people
when
I
say
thank
you
to
the
city
council
for
finding
such
an
apt
way
to
honor
a
person
like
miss
joanne
avery,
you
cannot
walk
10
feet
down
the
street
in
evanston
without
finding
somebody
who
knows
her,
who
has
benefited
from
her
love
her
dedication,
her
compassion,
her
generosity,
her
texting,
her
her
efforts
are
continuous,
she's,
a
beacon
of
community
involvement
and
so
for
all
the
people
who
can't
be
here
to
say
this.
A
A
Nope,
this
brings
us
to
the
clerk's
announcements.
My
apologies,
you
know
when
we
follow
the
agenda
in
order,
I
often
make
it
all
the
way
through
without
any
catastrophic
mistakes,
but
as
soon
as
we
scramble
anything,
I
am
hopeless
clerk
mendoza.
My
apologies.
B
Yes,
I
just
wanted
to
take
some
time
to
let
everybody
know.
Early
voting
has
started
this
week
monday
through
friday.
It
will
be
open
for
early
voting.
9
am
to
5
pm
this
saturday.
9
a.m,
to
5
p.m
and
sunday
10
a.m
to
4
p.m.
B
B
I
do
not
did
not
meet
mr
man
until
today,
but
I
do
have
two
of
her
former
wonderful
students
in
my
office
from
msyp,
and
I
just
they
were
talking
about
miss
joanne
as
soon
as
they
came
into
my
office
and
I've
heard
about
her
and
just
to
see
her
two
students,
it's
just
the
amazing
work
and
how
she
has
inspired
them
to
to
go
on
and
do
more.
A
Thank
you,
clerk,
mendoza,
and
with
that
it
is
time
for
public
comment
which
will
begin
with
those
who
signed
up
to
speak
in
person
beginning
with
janine
hill.
Oh
and
every
speaker
this
evening
will
get
three
minutes.
N
Good
evening,
council
members,
mayor
biss
and
city
staff,
I'm
janine
hill,
I'm
speaking
as
a
ninth
ward
resident,
but
I'm
really
up
here
as
the
maga
ymca
board
of
directors,
chairperson-
and
I
appreciate
the
opportunity
to
be
here-
and
I'm
here
to
advocate
for
the
final
action
item,
which
is
funding
for
our
men's
residence
renovation
project.
N
N
A
Thank
you.
The
next
and
final
person
who
signed
up
to
speak
in
person
is
ryan
garton,
not
sure
if
mr
garton
is
still
here,
good,
okay
and.
C
A
All
right,
well,
perhaps
mr
basilico,
is
having
some
technical
difficulties.
Is
ms
price
available
to
speak.
O
What
what
a
great
night
to
celebrate
great
things,
the
people
involved
are
all
amazing,
many
of
which
many
of
whom
I
know
and
family
focus.
I
I
can't
say
enough
about
in
terms
of
just
being
a
great
place
to
help
everybody,
and
I
love
the
kids
there,
especially
so
getting
back
to.
My
public
comment
has
to
do
with
the
p
d
committee,
which
got
interrupted
by
a
thunderstorm
and
what
was
going
to
be
discussed
there.
O
That
means
inclusion
beyond
census,
tracts,
as
defined
by
arpa
and
conveyed
by
sarah
flax,
a
hybrid
town
hall
will
work
contrary
to
the
naysayers
that
I
heard
today,
because
things
didn't
work
before
doesn't
mean
they
were
they
weren't.
There
isn't
a
better
way
to
do
something
and
from
the
beginning,
you
hear
residents
saying
we
need
resident
participation
throughout
a
process
which
we've
seen
lumps
and
bumps
from
so
from
that
we
can
say
that.
Maybe
that
would
be
something
to
try
in
different
ways
and
just
improve
upon
it
in
some
way.
O
If
we
didn't
figure
it
out
by
now,
we
will
we
will
just
we'll
keep
going
on
it.
So
a
hybrid
town
hall
will
work
and
we
need
that
because
not
everyone
has
access
in
terms
of
your
physical
access
or
other
means
of
access,
and
when
you
want
to
have
successful
interactions,
you
can
have
it
with
a
hybrid
meeting
and
if
a
consultant
says
it
has
to
be
a
certain
way
question
it
first,
because
hybrid
meetings
are
done
all
the
time
and
the
city
of
evanston
does
a
good
job
of
it.
O
Even
though
we
get
these
technical
glitches,
you
still
get
residents
when
we're
allowed
or
given
the
time
or
invited
to
speak
in
ways
that
really
affects
the
whole
community.
In
terms
of
thinking
about
the
issues
from
your
own,
not
only
from
your
own
perspective
but
from
someone
in
the
community
other
than
yourself,
which
is
also
good,
and
then
we
suffered.
O
A
Thank
you.
My
understanding
is
that
neither
mr
garton
or
mr
vasilco
is
any
longer
able
to
join
us.
If
that
is
not
the
case,
you
all
should
make
ourselves
heard
shortly,
but
we
have
one
more
speaker
in
person
and
that
is
sue
calder.
P
Good
evening
alder,
council
members,
I
want
to
speak
to
you
in
favor
of
hc1,
which
is
funding
for
the
renovation
of
the
ymca
residence
program.
To
give
you
a
little
background
about
myself,
I'm
a
fourth
ward
resident.
I
live
about
three
blocks
from
the
y.
I've
been
a
member
of
the
y
for
over
40
years.
I
use
it
about
three
times
a
week.
P
P
But
at
that
time
we
had
one
and
a
half
staff
people
on
the
residence
committee,
and
now
we
have
six
and
you've
heard
about
the
wonderful
job
that
they're
doing
providing
all
kinds
of
services.
For
the
gentlemen
that
stay
at
the
y,
the
residents
are
really
they're
members
of
the
y.
They
get
to
use
all
the
facilities
that
we
have.
Some
are
there
for
just
a
brief
stay
from
when
they're
going
from
one
place
to
another,
and
others
stay
for
20
to
30
years.
P
Some
put
put
the
ymca
in
their
wills,
in
fact
it
is
their
home
and
like
many
homes,
it's
been
repainted.
We
get
new
flooring
in
the
residence
areas,
they
fix
the
faucets,
but
now's
the
time
for
renovation.
It's
if
you
everybody
who
has
a
home
knows
that
sometime,
you
need
a
new
kitchen
it-
and
this
is
this-
is
the
time
for
us.
P
So
we
care
about
them
and
the
community
cares
about
them,
and
I
want
to
thank
the
members
of
the
city
staff
who
have
helped
the
y
work
through
this
process
of
getting
zoning
and
all
the
other
kinds
of
professional
things
that
that
they
do,
and
it
was
great
contribution
for
for
their
services
for
us.
So
in
closing,
please
pay
us
hc1.
P
D
A
C
A
Second,
council
member
braithwaite
moves
approval
of
the
amendment
to
the
rules
and
organization
of
city
council
described
an
item
sp1
council
member
read
seconds.
Is
there
any
discussion?
Councilmember
reid.
J
Yeah,
I
just
have
an
amendment
to
the
proposal.
J
That
I've
submitted
in
writing.
I'm
changing
two
words,
accepting
amendments
that
have
been
made
to
that.
So
this
would
require
that
unvaccinated
counsel
or
committee
members
shall
submit
to
the
health
director
a
negative
covet
19
test
result
taken
within
one
week
prior
to
attending
an
in-person
meeting
covered
by
the
the
oma
and
they'll
must
submit
that
you
know
at
most
24
hours
or
within
24
hours
prior
to
said
meeting.
A
Q
I
just
have
some
hesitation
on
one
portion
of
the
proposed
amendment
in
its
compliance
with
the
open
meetings
act.
The
new
version
of
the
open
meetings
act
requires
the
governor
to
have
a
disaster
declaration
for
one
and
then
the
head
of
the
public
body
to
have
to
determine
that
meeting
in
person
is
impracticable.
Q
In
order
for
those
meetings
to
to
certainly
be
virtual,
we
have,
in
evanston,
allowed
participation
remotely
for
the
public
in
order
to
be
a
little
more
to
allow
the
community
to
engage
with
the
with
the
city
and
its
public
bodies.
However,
there
are
certain
requirements
that
have
been
made
in
order
for
virtual
participation
under
state
law,
and
so
I
don't
know
specifically
if
that
will
jive
with
those
current
rules,
I'm
not
saying
it
doesn't.
I
just
haven't
had
the
opportunity
to
really
vet
that,
so
I
just
wanted
to
point
that
out
to
the
council.
J
Then
I'm
happy
to
amend
that
to
where
per
where
allowed,
by
we're
not
prohibited
by
state
law.
Q
It
it
may
and
the
reason
why
it
gets
tricky,
and
we
had
this
issue
earlier
today-
some
of
the
virtual
attendance
options.
If
it
doesn't
meet
the
criteria
of
the
governor's
disaster
declaration
and
the
mayor's
proclamation
of
impracticability,
there
has
to
be
a
majority.
It
has
to
be
a
quorum
present
at
the
meeting
location
in
order
for
other
people
to
participate
virtually
so,
for
example,
we're
here
at
city,
council.
J
I'm
happy
to
cut
it,
I'm
happy
to
just
remove
that
portion
of
it.
Okay,
so
if
the
folks
will
accept
a
friendly
amendment,
I
am
striking
that
language
right
now,
so
I'm
striking
that.
A
So
if
I
mean
on
my
for
the
public
who's
following
along
it's
hard
to
follow
along
because
there's
a
there's,
a
live
document
that
that
those
councils
see
the
last
sentence
has
just
been
deleted
from
that
document.
So
the
part
about
allowing
meetings,
all
meetings
to
provide
virtual
or
hybrid
attendance
is
now
gone.
So,
as
I
understand
it,
the
remaining
items
in
the
amendment
proposed
by
council
member
reed
is
to
extend
the
period
from
24
days,
24
hours
to
7
days.
A
I'm
not
sure
if
I'm
tracking
what's
happening
now
but
I'll
go
on
and
then
we'll
there's
some
more
editing
happening
here.
The
next
item
is
that
the
city
would
cover
the
cost
of
all
mandated
tests,
and
the
final
item
is
that
vaccinated
members
also
have
to
provide
a
negative
test
if
they've
been
exposed
to
covet
19
within
seven
days
of
the
meeting
in
question.
A
And
I
just
want
to
stress
that
the
another
word
was
just
changed
regarding
when
the
negative
test
has
to
be.
J
Yeah,
it
said
I
think,
one
of
your
edits
that
I
accepted
that
it
said
at
most
24
hours
prior
to
said
meeting
and.
C
R
Good
day,
members
of
the
city
council,
I
kobo
director
health
and
human
services
department
in
reference
to
the
city,
covering
that
the
tests
for
those
who
are
undergoing
testing,
I'm
wondering
how
that's
going
to
be
be
covered.
R
When
we
set
these
rules,
it
was
the
understanding
that
the
individuals
would
be
responsible
for
testing
and
that
this
wouldn't
come
out
of
the
pockets
of
the
city.
So
I
will
just
need
direction
if
that's
how
we're
going
to
fashion
this
plan
as
to
what
part
of
money
do
we
have
designated
for
this
purpose?.
J
Councilmember
reed:
do
we
currently
cover
test
cost
for
employees.
R
J
Okay,
well,
the
reason
I'm
suggesting
that
we
cover
mandated
test
call
cost
is
because
there's
an
illinois
statute
which
is
820
ilcs,
235
1
from
chapter
48,
paragraph
172
d,
section,
one
that
says
no
employer
shall
require
any
employee
or
applicant
for
employment
to
pay
the
cost
of
medical
examination
or
the
cost
of
furnishing
any
records
of
such
examination
required
by
the
employer
as
a
condition
of
employment
and
certainly
members
of
committees.
J
You
know
a
just
a
non-elected
member
of
the
public
is
not
an
employee
of
the
the
city,
but
it
making
folks
pay
or
having
the
city
pay
for
the
test
in
alignment
with
the
way
that
we
need
to
pay
for
a
test
with
staff.
I
think,
makes
sense.
A
A
D
Q
S
J
T
A
J
I
have
no
clue
why,
at
some
point,
we're
gonna
have
to
stop
saying
that
we're
a
city
that
follows
the
science
and
follows
the
data
and
follows
the
cdc,
because
the
the
proposal
that's
put
forward
here
is
not
I'll.
Ask
you
director
ogbo.
Would
you
recommend
that
a
one-week
testing
period
is
in
alignment
with
most
policies
across
our
nation,
employee
testing
policies.
R
R
It
still
follows
the
cdc
guidelines
where
it
is
advising
for
anyone
who
is
attending
an
indoor
event
meeting
to
test
prior
to
that
event,
and
what
the
24
hour
testing
does
is
to
capture
current
infections,
and
this
is,
as
we
know,
to
protect
those
who
are
the
most
vulnerable
to
covet
19.
Those
who
are
elderly.
J
J
At
the
moderate
transmission
and
so
for
a
moderate
transmission
community,
the
cdc
guidelines
actually
suggest
that
employers
facilitate
diagnostic
testing
and
not
screening,
testing
for
all
symptomatic
persons
and
all
close
contacts
of
cases
and
for
substantial
or
high
transmission
communities.
That's
where
the
cdc
recommends
explicitly
recommends
implementing
screening
testing.
So
I'm
it's.
What
you
just
said
seems
to
conflict
with
what
the
cdc
guide
lines
are.
R
J
And
going
into
the
summer
looking
at
trends
from
the
last
two
years
of
data
in
the
summer
months,
we
seem
to
see
an
extreme
dip
in
in
transmission
and
cases
and
positive
positivity
rates.
And
so
it
seems
like
the
period
that
we're
moving
into
for
the
next
couple
months
is
one
where
there's
low
transmission
even
lower
than
what
we're
seeing
now.
R
Well,
it's
not,
as
you
you're
stating
in
a
period
of
summer,
it
goes
up
and
down,
so
I
can't
categorically
say
that
we
had
a
little
transmission
do
it
during
the
summer,
depending
on
the
event
dependent
or
memorial
day
depending
on
july.
Fourth,
we
do
see
peaks
in
covert
transmission,
and
we
might
predict
that
it
will
go
in
that
fashion
this
year.
So
it
will
be
hard
for
me
to
ascertain
that
going
forward
that
there
will
be
a
low
transmission.
J
One
final
question:
how
do
you
imagine
this
rule
being
enforced
in
compliance
with
hipaa.
J
R
The
way
that
we
have
been
following
this
rule
is
that
I
myself,
who
is
the
public
health
official,
informs
the
person
who
is
not
in
compliance.
This
information
is
not
relayed
to
any
official
any
staff
member,
and
I
have
made
that
paramount
in
my
delivery,
where,
if
we
have
a
council
member
who
isn't
compliant,
that's
that
cancer
member
is
informed
and
that
information
is
not
passed
on
to
anyone.
J
Yeah
so
my
question-
and
I
guess
maybe
that
does
answer
my
question.
My
question
is:
how
can
the
penalties
if
we
will
be
enacted,
if
you
can't
share
who
the
person
is,
who
is
violating
the
policy.
R
It
makes
it
difficult
to
pass
out
those
penalties.
R
My
hope
is
that
the
individual
or
individuals
who
are
not
compliant
to
to
comply
with
the
protocol
with
staff
there
is
a
way
in
which
we
handle
those
who
have
not
complied,
and
it
is
my
hope
that
council
members
comply
with
this.
We
haven't
fully
discussed
what
those,
what
the,
what
the
repercussions
will
be
for
a
council
member
who
does
not
comply.
R
It
isn't
we're
hoping
that
the
individuals
will
see
the
value
in
this
rule
and
hopefully
comply
so
that
we
don't
have
to
go
through
calling
and
making
sure
that
the
person
complies.
J
J
Rates
of
vaccine
hesitancy,
and
if
a
you
know,
for
example,
a
member
of
the
reparations
committee
failed
to
submit
a
test
within
24
hours
or
24
hours
prior
to
the
meeting,
if
there's
no
way
to
publicly
admonish
that
person
or
really
to
admonish
that
person
at
all.
I
I
do
wonder
what
the
the
the
you
know,
the
benefit
of
of
you
know
having
those
those
steps
in
this
rule
is
that's.
It.
A
D
B
Councilmember
reed,
I
mean
burns
council
member
sufferden,
council
member,
oh
councilmember,
revell,
aye,
councilmember,
reed,.
J
A
I
Okay,
unmute!
Yes,
sorry
about
that.
It
took
this
long
for
me
to
get
my
computer
working
again.
I
don't
know
if
anybody
heard
anything
I
said
previously
and
sorry
about
the
lighting.
I
guess
it's
not
great.
Anyway,
we
are
live
again.
This
year,
registration
for
the
parade
closes
on
wednesday
june
15th.
I
We
encourage
any
and
everybody
to
register
and
pay
their
fee
for
being
in
the
parade
that
includes
city
council,
who
has
historically
been
in
the
parade
in
years
past.
I
And
we'd
encourage
you
to
be
in
the
parade
again
individually
or
as
a
group
I
know,
mayor
bis
will
be
in
the
will
be
walking
with
us
in
the
parade.
I
That
said,
I
will
be
bringing
some
posters
over
our
activities
of
the
day
are
back
in
full
with
the
games
playground
games
in
the
morning
and
the
fun
run
at
12
45.
There
is
a
registration
required
for
the
fundraise
fun
run
and
parade
starts
at
2
on
central
street,
ending
at
the
stadium
at
ashland.
I
The
live
concert,
band,
all-time
concert
band
will
be
returning
with
us
this
year
and
then
our
fireworks
show,
which
will
be
bigger
and
better
than
we've
been
assured
of
this
bigger
and
better
than
in
past
years,
will
begin
bit
after
dusk,
usually
around
9
30,
and
we
encourage
everyone
to
attend
and
register
if
you'd
like
to
be
in
the
parade.
I
And
if
anyone
has
any
questions,
I'm
open,
but
I
don't
know
how
much
you
heard
before
so
I'll.
Just
give
you
a
quick
synopsis.
There.
A
Thank
you
so
much
ms
bean.
This
I'm
sure
the
whole
community
is
looking
forward
to
an
in-person
july
4th
celebration
once
again.
This
concludes
the
city,
manager's
public
announcements
and
moves
us
back
to
the
consent
agenda,
about
which
I
have
a
lot
to
say
before.
Even
opening
it
up
so
items,
a9,
a8,
p3
and
h1
are
all
pulled
off
period,
the
first
three
of
which
a89
and
p3
did
not
make
it
out
of
committee
on
the
last
h1
has
already
passed.
A
I've
already
had
a
request
from
council
members
to
remove
items
a2,
a6
and
hc1
so
that
the
grand
total
so
far
is
a2,
a6,
a8,
a9,
p3,
h1
and
hc1
p1
so
p
I
was.
I
was
told
to
warn
folks
that
there
was
some
confusion
about
what's
p1
and
what's
p2.
A
A
A
Aye
with
seven
voting
in
favor
and
none
voting
against
the
consent
agenda
with
the
force
said
eight
removals
passes.
This
brings
us
to
item
a2
councilman.
Would
you
care
to
make
a
motion
on
item
a2?
Mr.
D
Mayor
I
move
item
a2
approval
of
the
harris
amazon
credit
card
activity
in
the
amount
of
ten
thousand
eight
forty,
four
and
89
cents.
A
R
J
A
H
C
A
J
J
So
I
was
told
that
by
resident
that
miss
biggs
on
a
sim
call
in
january
of
this
year
that
the
budget
includes
23
million
dollars
for
work
on
the
civic
center.
Is
that
correct.
V
J
Okay,
good
and
then
the
resident
further
wants
to
know
how
much
of
that
money.
What
is
what
is
the
money
for
and
then
how
much
of
it
has
been
spent
thus
far.
V
That
money
is
largely
unspent.
It
was
dedicated
for
future
years
in
the
cip,
as
we
have
been
waiting
for
studies
to
be
completed,
and
a
city
council
recommendation
for
the
long-term
disposition
of
what
to
do
with
this
building,
so
that
money
largely
remains.
The
city
has
spent
money
that
was
approved
for
the
aecom
study,
and
then
we
have
spent
roughly
two
to
three
hundred
thousand
dollars
on
emergency
repairs
in
the
past
year,
but
that
should
not.
Neither
of
those
numbers
would
affect
the
number
that
she's
looking
at
over.
J
Her
budget,
and
and
so
that,
could
that
23
million
that's
set
aside
could
come
into
play
here
with
the
somewhere
down
the
line,
depending
on
what
comes
out
of
this,
this
feasibility
study.
V
Yes,
so
actually,
we've
we've
done
a
lot
of
detailed
analysis
and
we
think
that
the
23
million
is
under
budgeting.
This
change
order
will
verify
what
the
consultant
will
verify,
what
they
think
the
costs
are
for
renovation
of
this
building,
but
unless
the
city
council
chooses
to
stay
in
this
building,
for
example,
we
wouldn't
necessarily
need
to
spend
that
money.
If
the
city
council
chooses
to
stay,
the
city
council
would
still
approve
any
individual
contract,
so
the
city
council
could
direct
to
do
those
projects
or
not
do
those
projects.
Thank.
J
You
one
last
question
and
this
one
is
from
me
so
the
23
million
again,
which
could
be
used
or
could
come
into
play
depending
on
what's
said
here:
the
23
million
dollars
that
set
aside.
We
that's
in
the
bank
when
we
have
23,
that's
an
estimate
of
what
we
will
need,
and
so
we
don't
have.
How
much
of
that
do?
We
actually
have
sitting
in
some
line
item
or
set
aside.
S
S
A
With
six
voting
in
favor
and
one
voting
against
item
a6
passes,
this
brings
us
now
to
item
p1
councilmember
burns.
Would
you
care
to
make
a
motion
on
item
p1.
L
S
A
Council
member
burns
moves
passage
of
ordinance,
34-0-22
councilmember
suffered
in
seconds.
Is
there
any
discussion
council
member
burns.
L
L
We
might
already
have
in
the
building
to
be
able
to
not
only
record
the
dabber
meetings,
maybe
not
all
as
we
discussed
and
to
provide
or
to
publish
those
meetings
on
the
city
website.
So
I
just
wanted
to
provide
further
direction.
Thank
you.
H
W
So
staff,
for
a
little
while
has
tried
to
figure
out
a
way
to
best
do
the
function
of
reviewing
projects
to
make
sure
they're
code
compliant
that
they've
met
this
the
various
applications
and
requirements
for
things
and
then
sort
of
concurrent
to
that
council
member
suffered
and
made
a
referral
to
eliminate
dapper.
W
So
we
presented
at
the,
I
think
was
the
first
may
meeting
ordinance
that
struck
every
every
line
out
of
the
design
and
project
review
section
of
the
code,
and
then
there
was
some
feeling
that
that
might
have
been
too
much
to
do
that.
There
was
this
sort
of
middle
ground
that
we
wanted
to
search
for
so
staff
and
council
member
wayne,
who
had
volunteered
would
go
back
and
look
at
ways
to
keep.
W
The
you
know
not
throw
the
baby
out
with
the
bathwater
is
to
keep
keep
some
of
that
in
in
play,
which
is
where
we've
we
are
now.
Staff
is
recommending
maintaining
a
process,
the
design
and
project
review
process
and
keep
all
the
standards
and
the
things
that
we
review,
but
removing
the
formal
committee
structure.
W
So
it's
it's
very
confusing,
because
dapper
was
not
supposed
to
be
a
public
meeting,
but
at
some
point
the
time
that
predates
me
as
the
as
your
community
development
director,
the
the
group
met,
they
put
an
agenda
in
in
a
public
place.
They
sent
out
a
note
meeting
notification
and
it
it
is
sort
of
supposed
to
function.
Like
the
special
events
committee,
a
group
of
staff
gets
together
no.
H
W
That
many
of
you
want
to
have
with
your
your
neighborhoods
in
your
communities
and
also
the
land
use
commission,
which
is
a
more
formal
body
which
collects
public
testimony.
So
dapper
has
found
itself
it's.
This
committee
of
staff
has
found
itself
in
a
in
a
very
uncomfortable
position,
so
we're
trying
to
create
a
space
where
we're
still
following
the
code
and
completing
the
the
review,
but-
and
I
think
staff
feels
that
this
is
where
we're
in.
In
terms
of
striking
sections
of
the
code
we've
met,
we've
met
that
that
goal.
H
Okay,
thank
you.
So
that's
the
first
part.
So
can
you
just?
It
was
a
long
conversation
and
it
was
in
between
the
tornadoes.
So
I
don't
want
to
try
to
regurgitate
everything
that
you
all
did
just
looking
for
a
truncated
version.
Are
we
voting
on
this
tonight
because
I
heard
somewhere
that
there's
going
to
be
continued
conversation.
I
just
want
to
get
a
gauge
before
I
say
anything.
W
So
correct
it
comes
back
for
action.
What
I'm?
What
I'm
understanding?
What
I
said
at
planning
and
development
is
that
you're
seeking
some
administrative
process
by
which
we're
still
engaging
in
transparency
and
I'm
my
thought
is:
it
probably
won't
be
salt
that
republican
have
to
work
to
get
to
that
point
and
whether
it's
recording
some
things
I
mean
the
idea
of
an
open
house
for
bigger
developments
going
to
the
staff
trouble
to
record
a
discussion
about
a
sidewalk
cafe
might
be
a
little
excessive
and
not
a
good
best
use
of
staff
time.
H
So
I
guess,
if
I
use
my
last
30
seconds,
I
my
apologies
for
not
being
a
part
of
the
conversation
when
I
read
it,
I
just
made
an
assumption
that
this
was.
This
was
not
going
to
move
forward
and
I
will
definitely
pay
attention
to
the
conversation
for
some
of
you,
newer
members
that
have
been
on,
like
I
can't
think
of
a
large
project.
That's
passed
since
what
was
the
last
one?
Was
it
albion?
H
I
could
be
wrong.
I
know
other
things,
but
if
you're
doing
a
large
development
in
your
award,
like
a
really
big
like
dapper,
is
that
opportunity
for
the
community
engagement
outside
of
your
ward
meeting.
It's
always
understood
you're,
going
to
invite
a
developer
to
your
ward
meeting,
but
dapper
is
like
the
technical
space
where
citizens
have
the
ability
to
engage.
So
I
will
hold
my
comments
for
the
next
conversation,
but
thank
you
and
I
would
encourage
like
this-
probably
is
sleeping.
H
H
Q
L
W
W
Handful
of
these
a
year,
so
this
is
not
the
norm,
but
they
are
very
upset
with
us,
as
as
staff
when,
when
things
move
forward
to
the
land
use
commission
they,
even
though
we
say
at
the
beginning
of
the
meetings
and
for
those
of
you
who
have
come
to
meetings,
I
say
this
is
an
open
staff
meeting.
We
are
just
a
stop
on
a
journey.
You
know
we
give
the
whole
the
whole
thing.
D
You,
mr
mayor,
I
I
want
to
reconcile
councilmember
byrne's
desire
to
provide
video
recordings
of
what
appears
to
no
longer
be
a
meeting
but
a
process,
and
so
I'm
not
sure
how
we
would
be
able
to
provide
video
recordings
of
a
process
that
would
occur
on
who
knows
what
schedule
in
individual
interactions
with
with
something
on
a
computer
screen
yeah.
So
I'm
not
sure
like
the
overall
objective
is
effective
transparency.
W
Right
and
I
think
council
members
braithwaites
comments
about
transparency
and
and
members
of
the
community,
getting
some
technical
information
on
this
is
is
one
well
taken.
I
I
think
residents
have
questions
that.
Maybe
the
person
from
the
fire
department
can
only
answer
the
person
from
the
from
water
and
sewer
division
can
only
answer,
I'm
thinking
of
dempster
pittner
when
we
went
through
and
we
walked
through
how
stormwater
would
be
managed
on
that
site.
W
That
was
an
important
conversation
for
those
neighbors
to
understand
that
it
wasn't
all
going
to
be
dumped
into
the
storm
storm
water
system,
but
there
has
to-
and
I
think
there's
another
way
to
do
that,
so
people
can
get
that
technical
expertise
and
that
experience,
but
it's
not
passively
listening
to
staff
talk,
that's
an
engagement
that
doesn't
necessarily
occur
at
dapper.
D
L
W
I
I
think
that
we
have
to
maybe
think
about
what
kind
of
developments
might
have
more
of
an
open
house
sort
of
experience
where
people
can
provide
information
and
we
can
hear
the
feedback
or
something.
I
think
this
has
to
be
workshopped
a
bit
more
and-
and
I
and
you
talk
to
my
colleagues
and
and
the
city
manager
about
this,
about
how
we
might
execute.
And
what
might
that
might
look
like
the
vast
majority
of
I
mean
you
all.
You
all
get
the
notifications
from
from
community
development
staff.
W
Most
of
them
are
pretty
mundane
basic
things
and
so
going
to
the
trouble
of
recording
and
it's
that
we're
not
going
to,
if
that's
probably
a
diminishing
return
on
staff
time,
but
there's
bigger
ones.
I
I
hear
you
there's
bigger
projects,
things
that
have
a
greater
neighborhood
impact
things
that
get
noticed
for
for
wide
for
long
distances
that
people
might
want
to
know
about.
D
I
guess
maybe
I
have
a
fundamental
underlying
question
is
if
you,
if
we're
doing
away
with
this
as
it
currently
is
structured,
it
becomes
a
process
rather
than
a
meeting.
You
may
indeed
continue
to
keep
meeting
as
a
staff
and
get
all
the
people
in
the
same
room,
but
you
don't
necessarily
have
to
right
right,
and
so
it's
that,
if
a
proposal
under
consideration
doesn't
warrant
everybody
getting
in
the
same
room
at
the
same
time,
it's
impossible
to
videotape.
U
L
L
To
go
from
meetings
that
you
can
attend
in
person
to
to
text
like,
like,
I
said
in
the
last
meeting,
I
don't
think
people
understand
how
exhausting
it
is
when
you
try
to
manage
your
day-to-day
life
to
have
to
read
another
document,
it's
much
easier
for
me
as
an
elected
official,
but
also
a
community
member
to
just
watch
something
as
it's
unfolding
and
so
as
much
as
we.
You
know
it
may
be
easy
for
some
of
the
folks
up
here
to
read
another
to
review
another
document.
L
I
don't
think
that's
headed
in
the
right
direction,
and
so
again
I
would
I
wouldn't
mind
to
set
aside
for
larger
developments.
We
can
figure
out
how
to
classify
that,
but
I
think
for
me
what
I
would
like
when
we
come
back
is
just
what
that
cost
would
be
and
and
logistically
how
it
could
be
achieved.
Low
budget
again
had
a
conversation
with
anderson.
I
think
we
can
achieve
it
low
budget
and
in
a
way
where
someone
who's
already
in
the
meeting
can
easily
set
it
up
can
operate.
L
It
can
break
it
down
easily
and
it
could
be
automatically
uploaded
directly
to
the
website.
I
mean
we
can
work
with
luke
and
nit
to
figure
out
how
to
do
it,
but
I
just
want
to
be
clear
that
that's
that's
what
I
would
like
to
see.
It's
not
the
same
just
to
have
it
in
the
document
and
on
text.
I
think
all
that
is
great.
L
We
should
do
that,
and
people
who
feel
comfortable
interacting
in
that
way
should
do
it,
but
it
doesn't
replace
having
a
video
where
you
can
watch
staff
from
around
the
city
react
to
projects
that
is
invaluable
information
that
allows
community
members
to
follow
discussions
early
on
in
the
process
to
learn
about
developments
and
projects
and
how
they're
evaluated,
even
before
the
land
use
commission,
which
again
I
keep
repeating
this.
That's
something
that
came
up
too
often,
both
during
the
campaign,
but
just
grown
up
in
everson
that
people
feel
like
they
don't
they.
L
They
don't
know
about
projects
until
it's
already
decided
or
it's
in
the
later
stage
of
the
process,
so
to
completely
eliminate
in
some
ways
or
to
make
it
even
difficult
for
them
to
learn
about
projects,
especially
big
developments
in
the
in
the
neighborhood
as
early
as
possible.
I
just
wouldn't
couldn't
support
that
so
just
wanted
to
make
that
clear.
Thank
you.
Cheer.
F
Good
evening,
members
of
city
council,
kelly,
gandurski
interim
city
manager-
I
just
want
to
be
really
careful
here.
I
don't
want
to
promise
something
we
can't
deliver.
I
think
councilmember
newsman's
point
is
well
taken
that
if
there
are
times
where
the
staff-
if
this
is
turning
more
into
an
internal
all
right,
let
me
back
up
no
matter
what
happens.
Staff
has
to
review
these
projects
right
because
we
need
to
look
at
the
right-of-ways.
We
need
to
look
at
setbacks.
We
need
to
look
at
the
effects
on
the
neighborhood.
F
There
are
all
kinds
of
things
that
the
staff
have
to
review
each
project
for
period,
regardless
of
whether
it's
a
public
meeting
or
not.
That
has
to
happen
because
they
have
to
advise
a
developer
of
city
code
and
they
have
to
work
with
these
developers
to
make
sure
that
the
project
is
being
built
according
to
all
standards
and
that
they're
not
wasting
the
developers
time
or
the
public's
time
and
people
submit
permit
for
permits
or
they
submit
for
zoning.
Their
time
is
being
wasted.
F
F
So,
if,
if
recorded
meeting
is
what's
asked
for,
then
I'm
not
really
sure
what
we're
doing
here
today,
because
I
think
it's
one
of
those
things
either
we
do
it
or
we
don't
do
it
and
that's
where
I
think
the
staff
has
been
a
little
bit
confused
and
frustrated
with
this,
because
it's
either
get
rid
of
it.
The
process
all
together
and
people
can
take
their
chances
at
the
land.
Use
commission
with
staff
can
weigh
in
on
each
project
there
or
we
do
the
process.
F
L
Want
to
make
sure
everybody
has
agreed,
because
the
way
it's
been
described
until
now
is
that
the
meetings
would
still
happen.
In
fact,
what
would
make
it
difficult
to
do
is
meetings
that
I
that
sound
like
they
would
be
a
rare
occurrence.
I
think
the
what
the
those
will
be
exceptions,
what
I've
heard
in
both
the
committee
we
just
left,
but
even
now,
is
that
the
staff
still
plans
to
meet
in
person
together
in
a
group,
but.
F
A
So
obviously
everyone
is
free
to
just
speak.
I
would
I
mean
it
seems
to
me:
there's
been
a
lot
of
discussion
tonight,
both
at
p
d
and
here
there's
been
discussion
for
a
while.
This
is
not
final
action.
I
think
everybody
has
agreed
that
before
a
final
vote,
whether
that
occurs
in
two
weeks
or
some
other
time,
there
would
be
further
input
from
staff
either
regarding
how
this
would
be
implemented
or
perhaps
even
recommending
an
amendment
to
be
adopted
before
passage.
A
My
own
view
is:
there's
not
a
lot
more
to
be
accomplished.
Tonight
we
can
there's
a
motion
on
the
floor.
I
would
recommend
that
we
take
a
vote
on
the
motion
should
that
motion
pass,
then
this
will
be
back
in
two
weeks
with
clearly
some
further
input
from
staff
that
I
think
several
members
have
been
clear.
They
need
to
hear
before
taking
a
yes
vote
on
the
final
action.
A
Seeing
none
will
the
clerk?
Please
call
the
roll.
B
D
J
C
A
Five
voting
in
favor
and
two
voting
against
item
p1
passes
and
we'll
be
back
in
two
weeks
with
some
further
further
input
and
and
doubtless
some
further
robust
discussion.
This
brings
us
to
item
hc,
one
council,
member
ravel.
Would
you
care
to
make
a
motion.
U
A
J
So
I'm
in
support
of
this
I
got
to
tour
the
wa,
the
old.
Well
still,
I
guess
the
current
facility
a
few
years
ago.
I
think,
before
your
your
time.
While
I
was
clerk,
I
think
council
member
burns
was
my
deputy
clerk
at
the
time
and
we
went
in
to
do
that
together.
So
familiar
with
the
the
need
at
the
facility,
I
got
to
speak
with
miss
parsons
over
the
summer.
I
believe
and
had
a
conversation,
a
rundown
of
what's
going
on
here.
J
I
think
it's
a,
I
think,
it's
a
wonderful
project.
I
wish
that
you
know
there.
We
could
either
maintain
or
expand
the
number
of
units,
but
it's
the
world
we
live
in,
not
everything
is
possible,
and
so
what
is
being
done
is
positive
and
happy
to
support
it.
S
Thank
you.
I
have
a
question.
I
presume
it's
for
staff.
Where
did
the
three
million
dollar
number
come
from?
That's
a
very
heavy
ask
both
as
a
raw
dollar
and
as
a
percentage
of
the
total
project
cost.
How
do
we
arrive
at
three
million
dollars
and
what
else
is
in
the
queue?
Do
we
have
another
three
million
dollar
request
worth
coming
from
family
focus.
X
Sarah,
flax,
housing
grants
manager
the
macau
ymca
actually
made
the
request.
The
staff
didn't
come
up
with
it.
They
looked
at
their
other
sources
of
funding,
which
are
really
very
limited.
X
One
of
the
challenges
when
you
are
an
sro
is
you
aren't
eligible
for
a
lie
litec
at
least
not
in
illinois,
because
in
every
state
whoever
is
the
authority
creates
their
what
they
are
looking
for,
and
if
you
don't
fall
into
that
five
years
ago
we
tried
going
after
leitech
and
mayor
haggerty.
I
and
a
number
of
other
people
wrote
letters
of
support,
and
they
just
said
don't
make
them
full
units
or
we're
not
going
to
give
you
any
money.
X
Now
one
of
the
things
that
is
really
important
is
the
y
is
not
only
our
single
largest
number
of
units
in
one
building,
but
it
also
is
a
type
of
housing
that
has
been
zoned
out
of
existence
in
almost
all
other
places,
and
it
is
a
very
effective
kind
of
housing
and
it
is
a
it
has
served
evanston
very
well
for
for
years,
so
their
other
sources,
you
know,
really
are
going
to
be
their
fundraising
and
that's
going
to
be
a
major
part
of
the
rest
of
the
budget.
X
The
12
million
591
thousand
dollar
budget
includes
a
lot
of
different
things.
One
of
the
things
that
makes
the
cost
more
than
if
just
the
residence
facility
itself
were
being
rehabbed
is
the
addition
of
a
new
entrance
which
is
really
important
for
the
residents.
It
gives
them
greater
autonomy
and
privacy
right
now
they
come
in
the
front
entry
and
they
go
around
and
go
up
the
elevator.
X
They
don't
really
have
space
of
their
own
to
get
in
and
out
of
the
building.
It
is
something
that's
beneficial
for
them,
and
it
also
is
beneficial
for
the
functioning
of
the.
Why?
Because
the?
Why
that
the
residents
come
and
go
because
they
live
there,
the
rest
of
the
y
has
to
be
able
to
be
secured
and
and
maintained,
so
it
it
makes
it
actually
much
better
safer
for
both
the
the
residents
and
and
the
rest
of
the
facility.
X
X
When
I
went
to
school
and
lived
in
a
dormitory,
you
got
put
in
a
room
with
one
other
person,
you'd
never
met.
You
went
down
the
hall,
and
that
was
you
know
with
your
little.
You
know
tote
to
bathe
and
things
like
that,
but
nowadays
they've
changed
a
great
deal,
our
ideas
on
privacy
and
what
people
need
are
very
different
and
that's
part
of
what
the
y
is
building
in
here
in
for
this.
X
So
it
is
not
a
small
project
at
all,
but
it
is
a
large
number
of
units
and
we
are
also
getting
every
one
of
those
units
is
going
to
be
somebody
under
this.
These
are
all
going
to
be
very
low,
low
or
moderate
income
people,
which
is
a
huge
contribution
overall
right
now,
the
y
effectively
serves
very
much
that
population,
but
has
not
committed.
X
We
will
have
an
operating
agreement
with
them
that
this
is
what
they're
going
to
do
and
I
think
that's
critical
and
it
really
gives
us
when
we
look
at
the
cost
per
unit
or
cost
cost
per
housing.
You
know
household
or
individual
served.
X
X
This
is
something
that
is
required
of
all
federal
funding
whenever
you
are
doing
that,
you
have
to
relocate
and
make
sure
that
the
people
have
a
place
to
live,
and
so
that
is
a
little
over
a
million
two
as
a
part
of
that
budget.
So
I
hope
that
explains
the
budget.
Do
you
have
any
other
questions?
Yeah,
no.
X
Well,
we
do
have
family
focus,
that's
going
to
be
coming
soon.
We
also
have
the
one-stop
shop,
I'm.
X
Family
focus
is
asking
for
3
million
the
one-stop
shop
retrofit
is
a
million,
and
that
will
also
be
coming
forward
soon.
We
have
some
other
things
that
we're
working
on
right
now.
The
hodc
mount
pisca
project
got
tax
credits
and
paul
zelmazek,
and
I
are
meeting
with
richard
koenig
to
figure
out
the
soft
funding
that
they
need
to
make
that
project
work.
X
There
is
a
benefit
that
is
in
a
tiff
and
can
use
money
from
the
tiff.
The
mcgraw
ymca
is
not
eligible
for
anything
other
than
arpa,
with
the
exception
of
the
affordable
housing
fund
and,
quite
frankly,
the
affordable
housing
fund
gives
us
greater
flexibility
than
arpa.
This
really
meets
arpa
very
well.
It
is
responding
to
safety
and
security
for
people
that
the
mcguire
found
out
when
they
were
dealing
with
having
all
these
men
and
trying
to
keep
them
safe
during
covid,
and
they
didn't
have.
X
X
S
All
right
thanks,
sir,
I
appreciate
the
good
work
of
the
y.
Does
I
I
just
think
that
three
million
dollars
of
a
12
million
dollar
project
is
a
pretty
big
chunk,
that's
being
requested,
especially
when
we
have
more
requests
coming,
and
I
would
hope
that
my
colleagues
would
give
that
some
consideration
or
possibly
consider
approving
an
amended
lower
amount.
Thank
you.
H
Council,
member
pathway,
thank
you
very
much,
mr
mayor
and
first
I
just
want
to
acknowledge.
Since
councilmember
reid
said
it
monique
parsons
your
your
presence
here,
I
think
you're,
probably
one
of
the
only
people
in
town
that
have
made
community
service
and
giving
back
like
a
24-hour
around-the-clock
job.
And
so
thank
you.
H
I'm
going
to
remind
members
of
council
there
isn't
one
of
us
that
doesn't
believe
that
affordable
housing
or
haven't
heard
from
our
various
residents
is
probably
one
of
our
top
priorities,
and
in
here
we
have
an
organization
that
we've
heard
from
sarah,
and
I
think
many
of
us
is
an
opportunity
to
tour
the
building.
H
As
a
kid
I
remember
walking
through
the
halls.
I
think
it
is
just
absolutely
amazing
how
you
have
been
able
to
maintain
not
only
a
a
safe
environment
for
men,
but
also
for
kids
and
people
of
all
generations,
so
that
that
definitely
deserves
some
acknowledgement
as
as
well,
I
have
seen
men
there
residents
from
the
evanston
community.
U
U
The
housing
and
community
development
committee
did
do
a
very
thorough
rating
of
this
proposal,
using
the
criteria
and
rating
system
that
was
developed
by
staff
for
the
north
light
theater
and
the
ox
and
one
of
the
criteria
there
is
that
the
that
they
ask
be
less
than
25
of
the
total
budget,
and
this
does
does
meet
that
requirement
and
we
we
evaluated
all
the
other
criteria.
The
project
feasibility,
the
organizational
capacity.
The
budget
printing
is
very
small
here.
U
Let's
see
here
anyway
and
basically
overall,
the
committee
gave
it
a
really
high
score
of
a
a
total
of
95
95
percent
out
of
100.
U
So
we
really,
we
spent
a
lot
of
time
looking
at
the
project
and
considering
all
the
the
benefits
and
the
capacity
of
the
organization
to
deliver
and
I'm
really
very
enthusiastic
about
the
project.
So
I
encourage
a
yes
vote.
D
J
Thank
you.
I
don't
know
who's
best
suited
to
answer
this,
but
so
we've
received
the
second.
Just
at
this
point
we
should
have
received.
I
don't
know
I'm
looking
at
my
non-existent
watch,
but
that
for
a
calendar,
but
at
this
point
we
should
have
received
the
money.
The
second
disbursement
is
that
correct.
Yes,
we've
received
the
second
disbursement
so
how
much
money
after
we
spend
this
three
million
dollars?
F
Sarah
can
pull
up
the
exact
numbers,
but
I
think
what
we
would
have
left
is
a
little
less
than
half
of
the
43
million.
Is
that
right?
Sarah
yeah.
J
I
am
so
I
do
want
to
just
know
a
number
on
that
and
then
lastly,
I'm
happy
to
support
this.
As
I
said
before,
I
just
do
want
to
note
that
you
know
it's
I'm
going
to
acknowledge.
Really.
I
guess
that
you
know
council
members
suffered
and
concerns
about
the
price
tag
are
valid
and,
in
my
opinion,
in
that
this
is
obviously
a
large
amount
of
money.
J
J
X
We
have
before
we
without
adding
the
funding
for
the
yn.
We
have
allocated
19
million
nine
hundred
thousand
dollars
to
date,
and
so
with
the
y
added
in
that
would
be
22
900
and
leaving.
X
J
Included
in
that,
how
much
so
we
have
so
we're
at
about
20
after
tonight,
after
this
vote
in
a
few
minutes,
I'm
probably
human,
it
will
be
around
22
million
right
that
we've
spent
and
and
then
how
much
do
we
have
in
block
hits
that
are
pretty
like
pb
is
a
clearly
defined
bucket.
Yes,
the
money's
not
being
moved
out
of
pb
to
be
spent
on
something
else.
There
are,
for
example,
I
know
we
have
500
000
that
is
being
discussed,
for
we
were
just
on
the
committee
meeting,
I'm
on.
X
Right
two
premium
pay
for
child
care.
J
Yeah
for
child
care,
counseling
yeah
for
child
care
providers,
so
how
many
of
those
things
that
are
kind
of
clearly
defined
that
are
kind
of
working
up?
Do
we
not
how
many?
What
is
the
dollar
amount?
Maybe
of
those
items?
Is
that
something
you
have.
X
L
X
Hang
on,
we
have
those
are
the
bulk
of
the
specific
projects.
We
have
additional
money
that
is
not
allocated
in
our,
so
our
with
those
allocations
in
the
category
of
disproportionately
impacted
communities,
which
was
a
little
over
eight
million
dollars,
we
will
have
about
a
little
over
half
a
million
left.
We
have
a
significant
amount
unallocated
in
negative
economic
impacts.
J
This
is
helpful,
so
thank
thank
you
very
much
for
that
data,
so
I
just
wanted
to
level
set
one
more
time
and
that,
after
we
make
this
expenditure
again
fully
supportive
of
this
just
to
keep
in
our
minds
that
with
money
that
is
moving
down
the
pike-
and
you
know
kind
of
allocated,
including
pb,
including
family
focus,
and
we
could
reject
any
of
those
projects
right.
We
still
maintain
that
right,
but
it
seems
like
they're
moving
forward.
We
will
have
spent
when
you
add
all
of
those
together.
J
Silver
bullet
smoothie
maker,
to
make
it
a
non-violent
metaphor,
but
I
I
don't
feel
happy
yet
looking
at
how
we've
spent
our
arpa
money
to
say
that
we
have
made
really
thoughtful
wise
decisions
that
are
going
to
pay
dividends
in
the
future,
and
particularly,
I
do
not
feel
yet,
like
we've
really
spent
money
on
people
and
entities
that
were
directly
impacted
by
kovitz,
specifically
for
their
covet
impact.
J
We've
done
a
lot
of
nice
projects,
northlight
and
other
things,
but
I
I
don't
feel
like
we've
gotten
to
the
heart
of
it
yet
and
I'd
just
love
us
to
keep
that
in
mind,
particularly
as
we're
spending
the
last
you
know,
12
or
13,.
L
I
mean
I
recall
earlier
discussions
where
we
were
going
to
try
to
stay
away
from
providing
a
benefit
to
individuals,
because
then
the
money
will
go
even
further
and
then
we
have
to
fix
or
even
faster,
then
we'd
have
to
figure
out.
You
know
where
to
where
to
draw
the
line,
and
so
I
recall
the
discussion
about
making
investments
that
that
had
a
much
larger
impact
than
the
individual
level.
I
understand
that
we
did
do
the.
L
I
don't
know
if
it
was
a
universal
basic
incoming
graduate,
whatever
what
we
call
the
guaranteed
income
program,
which
is,
which
is
has
been
the
exception.
But
again
I
recall
our
discussions.
We
want
to
make
investments
that
broader
community
members
would
all
benefit
from,
and
I
think
we
stayed
in
line
with
that.
L
I
think
what
this
body
came
together
to
do
was
to
create
a
plan
or
a
rubric
and
the
scoring
system
so
that
we
could
evaluate
proposals
as
they
you
know,
as
they
came
forward
and
also
we
identified
the
committees
that
would
would
evaluate
those
projects.
L
I
had
a
similar
concern,
but
there's
you
know
and
ymca
got
made
this
request
early
in
the
process
as
early
as
the
aux
and
other
projects,
but
there's
not
a
lot
of
projects
behind
this.
Like
again,
I'm
talking
to
staff
all
the
time
and
this
idea
that
we're
waiting
for
something
to
happen
is
not
happening.
It's
not
occurring,
and
so,
if
you
have
some
ideas
as
I
do
around
housing
and
we'll
discuss
that
at
future
meetings,
you
know
get
in
touch
with
sarah
and
make
it
happen.
But
but
this
is
our
process.
L
I
think
we
followed
it
and
and
and
happy
to
support
this.
A
S
I
appreciate
it.
Thank
you
yeah,
you
know
I
just
what
I
want
us
all
to
be.
S
Mindful
of
is
just
that,
as
the
amounts
get
bigger,
the
remainder
gets
smaller
and
you
know,
like
the
city,
will
be
the
largest
funder
of
this
project
of
all
the
funding
sources,
and
if
everyone
is
comfortable
with
that,
then
then,
let's
vote
and
that's
that's
support
this,
but
we're
going
to
run
out
of
money
fast
and
that's
really
what
it
comes
down
to
and
is
the
question:
is
this
three
million
dollars
the
absolute
best
way
we
could
spend
this
three
million
dollars
or
you
know,
with
two
million
dollars
get
it
done
and
we
have
another
million
dollars
or
something
else
worthy
and
that's
you
know
our
obligation
is
to
make
sure
that
we're
spending
this
money
in
the
highest
use
of
everyone.
S
Who's
gonna
vote.
Yes,
is
confident
that
this
three
million
dollars
this
is
the
absolute
best
way
to
spend
it,
and
you
know
I
support
your
your
votes,
but
I'm
concerned
that
we
didn't
really
analyze
it.
We
just
took
the
number
they
gave
us
and
we
went
with
it,
and
so
you
know
I'm
happy
to
vote
no,
and
I
presume
many
of
you
will
guess-
and
I
wish
a
lot
of
great
success,
but
I
think
we
really
need
to
be
very
careful
with
how
we're
spending
public
money
at
the
rate
that
was
done
here.
S
T
A
D
D
U
U
This
area,
they've
transformed
it
into
a
really
rich
habitat
for
plants
and
wildlife
and
they've
engaged
lots
and
lots
of
community
members
in
planting
and
protecting
and
learning
about
the
wildlife
they've
been
been
just
really
amazing
stewards
and
they
leave
a
wonderful
legacy
for
the
whole
community.
So
I
just
want
to
express
my
great
appreciation
for
their
seven
years
of
hard,
hard
work
and
dedication
and
we're
hoping
for
new
stewards
to
step
up
and
take
their
place.
You're.
D
A
Council,
member
reid.
J
Yes,
my
only
report
is
that
there
is
a
eighth
ward
ward
meeting,
as
always
on
the
left,
as
almost
always
the
last
thursday
of
the
month
at
6
pm.
This
will
be
our
first
in-person
ward
meeting
at
the
mulford
viaduct
and
so
looking
forward
to
meeting
with
residents
then
having
a
discussion
about
a
multitude
of
issues
in
our
city
as
well
as
discussing
that
project.
So
thank
you.
T
A
With
that,
councilmember
newsman
is
recognized
to
make
a
motion.
D
Pursuant
to
five
illinois
compiled
statutes
120-2a,
I
move
that
the
city
council
convene
into
executive
session
to
discuss
agenda
items
regarding
personnel
and
litigation
and
to
do
the
purchase
or
use
of
real
property.
These
agenda
items
are
permitted
subjects
to
be
considered
an
executive
session
and
our
enumerated
exceptions
under
the
open
meetings
act
as
set
forth
in
5
ilcs
120,
2a
sections,
c1,
c5,
c11
and
c12.
D
A
Council
member
newsman
moves
the
city
council
resolve
the
subject
executive
session
council
member
reed
seconds.
There
are
discussions
seeing
none
we'll
call
the
role
council,
member
braithwaite,
councilmember,
newsman,
aye
councilmember
burns
aye
councillor,
seferton
hi.
A
What's
one
more
than
six?
Oh,
I
know
councilmember
revel,
aye,
councilmember,
reed,
aye,
councilwoman
pettis,
with
seven
voting
in
favor,
and
none
voting
against
at
10
06
pm.
The
city
council
resolved
itself
in
an
executive
session
to
begin
immediately
in
the
council
member
library.