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From YouTube: Evanston City Council Meeting 2-8-2021
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B
D
F
B
F
D
All
right,
so
that
that
motion
passes
the
evanston
city
council
on
eight
to
zero
vote
and
that's
due
to
the
pandemic,
we're
meeting
via
via
zoom
with
everyone.
First
up,
as
always,
is
mayor
announcements.
D
I
have
a
few
announcements
today,
but
before
I
before
I
get
to
those,
I
want
to
introduce
our
cook
county
president
tony
precwinkle,
who
is
here
with
us
tonight
and
wanted
a
few
minutes
on
on
the
agenda
before
before.
I
turn
it
over
to
president
preckwinkle
I
do
want
to.
I
do
want
to
thank
the
county
on
behalf
of
the
city
for
several
items.
Recently,
one
is
during
the
the
pandemic.
The
county
received
the
coronavirus
relief
funds.
D
They
did
pass
along
some
of
those
to
municipalities,
of
which
evanston
got
632
000
in
corona
relief
funds,
which
was
needed
for
overtime
for
our
health
department,
officials
and
others
at
the
emergency
operations
center
who
have
been
battling
the
pandemics.
So
thank
you,
president
precwinkle,
for
that.
D
Second,
just
a
shout
out
to
bill
barnes
in
the
cook
county
emergency
management
office,
who
has
been
working
closely
with
our
staff
as
well
as
connections
for
the
homeless,
which
has
been
doing
yeoman's
work,
helping
our
homeless
during
this
pandemic,
particularly
with
getting
them
into
non-congregate
sheltering
which
literally
has
cost.
You
know
over
a
million
dollars
and
the
county
is
working
with
us
to
get
that
reimbursed
through
fema's
public
assistance
program.
So
thank
you
for
that
and
then.
D
Lastly,
we
are
very
excited
here
in
evanston
to
have
been
working
with
rich
minocchio
at
the
housing
authority
of
cook
county
and
we're
very
excited
to
have
the
first
mixed
income
development
project
that
cook
county
is
doing
and
that
you
chose
to
do
that
here
in
evanston,
in
a
great
location
right
at
emerson
and
sherman
right
next
to
your
perlman
property
that
you
have
here,
that
we
went
to
that
food
project
that
we
did
a
while
back
that
the
county
did
and
it's
going
to
be
168
residential
units
of
which
51
of
those
are
going
to
be
affordable.
D
34
at
the
60
to
80,
ami
and
17
at
the
80
to
120.
Ami,
so
sort
of
that
missing
middle
that
we
hear
a
lot
about.
So
thank
you
for
being
creative
and
innovative,
and
we're
really
very
pleased
with
the
assistance
that
we've
received
from
cook
county
on
a
lot
of
different
issues.
So
with
that
I'll
turn
it
over
to
you,
president.
G
Well,
thank
you
very
much
mayor
haggerty
and
members
of
the
city
council
alderman,
I'm
very
grateful
to
be
with
you
tonight.
I
wanted
to
share
a
couple
things.
First
of
all,
you
know
we
balanced
our
budget
this
year
without
increasing
taxes,
and
I
know
that
property
taxes
are
a
challenge
for
all
of
our
local
units
of
government.
So
I
wanted
to
share
that.
First
and
foremost,
we
also
in
as
we
balanced
our
budget
without
raising
taxes.
G
We
put
aside
100
million
dollars
into
an
equity
fund
to
help
support
public
transit
around
the
county,
to
help
support
our
department
of
public
health,
around
contact,
tracing
and
and
the
vaccine
programs
investments
in
in
our
bureau,
of
economic
development,
for
small
businesses
and
for
gig
workers
and
and
more
money
for
our
criminal
justice
reform
efforts.
So
we
balanced
the
budget,
we
didn't
raise
property
taxes.
Actually
we
didn't
raise
any
taxes
and
we
put
aside
money
to
to
address
racial
inequities
in
our
in
our
county.
G
G
Actually,
I
think
last
month
I
was
in
evanston
with
connections
for
the
homeless
and
and
joe
flanagan,
who
had
kind
of
bent
my
ear
about
a
plan
that
he
had
to
support
local
restaurants
and
provide
food
for
the
homeless
at
the
same
time,
and
it
was
part
of
our
strategy
for
supporting
small
businesses,
as
well
as
our
social
service
mission
that
we
were
able
to
participate
in
those
efforts.
G
So
I'm
grateful
to
joe
flanagan
and
connections
for
the
homeless
for
their
good
work,
and
you
know
when
I
was
alderman
of
the
city
of
chicago.
One
of
the
things
that
I
always
fought
for
was
mixed
income
development
and
we're
very
grateful
that
we've
gotten
the
cooperation
of
evanston
to
build
a
mixed
income,
senior
building
the
first
of
its
kind
for
us
in
cook
county
in
evanston.
G
G
Very
much
for
giving
me
a
moment
this
evening
to
express
my
appreciation.
D
All
right
a
couple
other
announcements
under
mayor
announcements,
the
first
up
is
covid
and
the
vaccinations
just
real
real
quick.
I
want
to
give
people
an
update
there
in
terms
of
the
numbers
and
the
data
on
covid
and
I'll
talk
about
vaccinations
in
a
second.
We
continue
to
do
really
well,
not
only
in
evanston
but
across
the
state
of
illinois.
Today
we
had
10
new
cases.
Our
total
cases
is
a
little
less
than
3
700
in
evanston,
our
positivity
rate
is
below
1
our
7
day.
D
Moving
average
is
a
little
less
than
10..
Sadly,
we
have
seen
our
deaths
increase
since
the
last
time
we
met.
We
now
have
108
evanstonians,
who
have
died
due
to
the
pandemic
and
our
state
positivity
rate
is
3.3
percent.
So
all
of
these
indicators
are
positive,
and
starting
next
week
on
the
16th
district
65,
which
is
k
through
eighth
grade,
is
going
to
start
to
have
some
of
their
kids
back
in
the
classroom.
Some
will
continue
to
be
remote.
Some
will
do
a
hybrid
model,
so
this
is.
D
This
is
positive
news
for
our
community
in
terms
of
vaccinations.
I'm
gonna
start
with
what
I
think
is
positive,
even
though
I
do
hear
from
people
saying
hey.
I
want
my
vaccine.
I
want
to
get
the
vaccination,
which
I
understand
everybody
here
in
evanston
understands.
We
continue
to
have
limited
limited
supply.
We
are
moving
those
supplies
quickly
through
our
public
health
department
and
the
points
of
distribution
that
we
are
setting
up
to
date.
D
We
have
given
first
doses
to
a
little
less
than
30
800
people
here
in
evanston
second
doses,
to
a
little
more
than
900
folks
here
in
evanston.
That
is
excluding
our
healthcare
folks,
who
are
all
in
that
phase
1a.
So
this
is
just
phase
1b.
We
are
not
sitting
with
a
huge
supply
of
vaccines.
We
are
scheduled
to
have
an
event
this
wednesday.
D
One
thing
I
want
to
make
clear
about
the
second
dose
is:
the
cdc
has
come
out
and
said
that
those
second
doses
could
be
administered
either
four
days
before
your
date.
So
remember.
If
you're
on
the
pfizer
vaccine,
that's
a
21
day
and
if
you're
on
moderna
that's
28
days,
some
people
very
much
say
hey.
I
want
to
have
it
exactly
at
21
days
or
exactly
at
28..
As
you
can
imagine,
this
is
a
huge
logistical
undertaking
we're
waiting
on
vaccines.
We
don't
know
how
many
we'll
get
everything
else.
D
Dr
fauci,
the
cdc
others
have
been
clear
that
we
can
administer
second
dose
vaccines,
either
four
days
before
your
date
or
up
to
six
weeks
after
that
date.
Okay,
so
if
you
are
on
moderna
and
that's
a
28
day
and
28
days
comes-
and
we
don't
have
that
second
vaccine-
we
have
an
additional
six
weeks
to
get
that
vaccine
in
you.
So
so
we
have
a
second
dose
clinic
and
then
we're
trying
to
schedule
another
event
this
week.
D
They
just
want
to
confirm
the
doses
that
we
have
from
this
from
the
state
on
that
where
we
are
in
terms
of
vaccinating
folks
is,
we
have
primarily
vaccinated
folks
that
are
77
years
old
and
older.
I
think
we
may
have
a
few
hundred
ike
ogbo
told
me.
Those
folks
will
be
called
into
the
next
event
and
then
we're
gonna
drop
the
age
down
to
74
and
above
and
so
as
we
have
the
vaccine
and
have
new
events,
we
will
be
putting
it
out
there.
D
Additionally,
there
have
been
some
senior
care
facilities
here
that,
for
some
reason,
were
not
included
in
the
idph
agreement
with
walgreens
in
cvs,
so
those
have
been
identified
here
and
our
public
health
department
is
working
to
schedule.
Those
facilities
where
we,
the
city,
will
go
out
and
conduct
those
sort
of
closed
vaccination
events
at
those
facilities.
D
D
D
D
The
reality
is
that
every
community
is
approaching
phase
1b
slightly
differently
and
in
evanston
we
are
prioritizing
those
who
are
most
at
risk
of
developing
severe
complications
if
they
were
to
get
coven
19
and
those
are
folks
that
are
older
and
so
we've
started
at
that
age
and
then
we're
moving
our
way
down.
If
again,
we
find
ourselves
getting
large
quantities
of
debris
of
vaccine.
D
We
may
use
and
do
parallel
vaccination
events,
so
we
can
start
to
hit
other
groups
within
that
phase
1b,
but
until
then
we're
still
working
our
way
down
from
the
oldest
down
on
phase
1b.
D
The
moratorium
that
is
on
that
now
has
been
extended
to
march
3rd
2021,
all
right.
So
that's
that's
really
valuable
to
renters
out
there
who
are
struggling.
D
Lastly,
there
was
a
vote
taken
last
week
in
washington
on
the
1.9
million
dollar
relief
package,
coronavirus
relief
package.
D
It
was
not
a
vote
on
the
bill
that
will
be
later
this
month,
but
it
was
positive
in
the
sense
that
it
moved
through
the
senate
with
a
vote
that
would
imply
that
if
it
passes
the
house
and
comes
to
the
senate,
that
that
could
actually
become
law
and
that
would
provide
additional
aid
to
our
struggling
businesses
to
our
struggling
families
and
if
the
local
aid
is
provided
in
there
also
aid
to
local
governments
across
the
country.
So
that
was
a
bit
of
positive
news
last
week.
So
we'll
see
where
that
goes.
D
J
H
Good
evening
and
thanks
for
the
opportunity
I'll
be
very
quick,
so
you
know
we
live
in
a
winter
city
and
personally
I
love
winter.
So
I
came
up
with
this
idea,
but
I'm
partnering
with
maine
dumpster
mile
and
the
central
street
businesses
on
a
series
of
challenges
to
get
people
outside,
and
you
know
it's
good
for
mental
health
and
physical
health
and
the
whole
game
is
called
evanston
winter
games
and
we
have
a
website
evanstonwintergames.com.
H
I
don't
know
if
I
can
share,
but
that's
okay.
I
know
you
have
a
lot
on
the
agenda,
so
go
to
evanstonwintergames.com
and
there's
a
bunch
of
invit
or
instructions
on
how
to
download
the
app
which
gives
you
the
challenges
that
you
can
play.
We
are.
H
We
have
a
weekly
prize,
hundreds
of
dollars
worth
of
gift
cards
to
gearhead,
which
is
a
store
in
downtown
evanston
that
bought
uncle
dan's
all
the
same
products,
just
a
new
name
and
we'll
have
a
finale
prizes
for
a
gold
winner,
a
silver
and
a
bronze.
You
can
guess
that
we
are
riffing
on
the
winter
olympics.
You
are
also
given
a
team.
H
Color
and
stores
throughout
evanston
are
also
assigned
to
team
color
and
they
have
lighted
led
lights
in
their
windows
and
qr
codes,
and
all
of
these
things
we're
trying
to
support
our
businesses
but
also
to
get
outside
and
enjoy
the
snow,
and
we
have
plenty
of
it
to
enjoy
so
again.
Evanston
winter
games,
you
get
information
on
the
on
the
app
and
how
to
download
and
how
to
play
and
win
lots
of
prizes.
Oh,
and
we
have
lots
of
events
throughout
this
as
well.
H
The
first
one
is
this
weekend:
it's
in
the
main
dumpster
mile,
we've
partnered
with
amita
health,
who
is
one
of
our
sponsors
and
we're
giving
out
bags
inside
the
bags.
Our
checklist
of
things
that
folks
in
need
need.
So
you
can
purchase
things,
fill
up
that
bag
and
then
you'll
be
returning
it
to
interfaith
action.
H
At
st
marks
we
have
another
event
at
temperance,
downtown
evanston
bought
a
series
of
seats,
apparently
essentially,
and
the
fire
pits
that
temperance
has,
and
you
were
suggesting
that
you
buy
their
new
beer
where
I'm
from
and
we
have
an
event
on
february,
20th
at
fountain
square
and
ice
carving
demonstration.
H
D
Right,
thank
you,
erica
city
clerk.
Do
we
have
any
announcements.
C
Yes,
there
are
a
few
announcements
today,
which
are
of
import
to
evanstonian.
Today
was
the
first
day
for
early
voting,
and
so
folks
can
early
vote
at
the
civic
center
in
room.
G300
early
voting
is
available
on
weekdays
from
nine
to
five
p.m
and
as
well
as
on
saturday
and
on
sunday,
from
10
to
4
p.m.
C
So
you
know
folks
can
early
vote
between
today
and
february
22nd.
So
please
get
out
and
vote
if
you
are,
if
you're
someone
who
has
requested
a
mail-in
ballot,
you
have
not
received
your
mail-in
ballot,
yet
the
county
should
be
sending
those
out
in
the
next
if
they
haven't
today
already
in
the
next
few
days,
those
should
be
going
out
and
so
yeah,
please,
you
know,
get
those
back
as
soon
as
possible.
You
can
also
once
you
receive
them,
drop
them
off
at
the
civic
center.
C
You
know-
and
you
know
just
also
make
sure
you
have
them
postmarked
by
election
day,
if
you
haven't
requested
a
mail-in
ballot.
I
am
getting
to
the
point
where
I
would
no
longer
recommend
fairly
soon
I
mean
we
haven't,
sent
him
out
yet
so
if
you're
gonna
request,
it
get
the
request
in
the
next
few
days.
C
But
you
know
after
the
next
few
days
I
would
recommend
not
requesting
a
mail-in
ballot
and
just
doing
in-person
early
voting
if
you're
not
available
on
election
day
or
voting
at
your
local
polling
place
today
for
the
numbers.
We
typically
do
this.
We
had
30
a
whopping
38
people
voted
the
evanston
civic
center
today,
so
the
clerk's
office
traditionally
does
text
messaging
and
other
outreach.
C
We
are
not
doing
that
in
this
election,
and
so
we
encourage
evanstonians
to
to
and
we're
not
doing
that
because
of
you
know,
potential
conflicts,
and
so
we
are
encouraging
estonians
to
encourage
their
neighbors
to
get
out
and
vote
in
this
election.
C
E
E
D
All
right,
thank
you.
Thank
you.
Clark
reed,
we're
now
going
to
move
to
our
next
item
on
the
agenda,
which
is
public
comment.
So,
as
everyone
knows,
we
set
aside
45
minutes
for
public
comment.
We
take
the
total
number
of
folks
that
have
signed
up
and
divided
by
our
time.
So
we
have
20
individuals
that
have
signed
up
for
public
comment
tonight,
so
that
means
each
person
will
get
two
minutes
and
15
seconds.
So
I
ask
if
you
just
be
respectful
and
keep
your
remarks
to
two
minutes
in
15
seconds.
D
If
you
hear
a
buzzer
goes
off,
it
means
we
got
to
your
time
and-
and
I
need
you
to
to
wrap
up
so
with
that
I'll
list
off
the
three
three
people
in
a
row.
So
everyone
knows
when
they're
coming
up
and
we
will
start
tonight
with
carla
thomas
then
lindsey
wade,
then
julie,
burkett,
so
welcome
carla.
K
I'm
here
tonight
to
talk
about
a
comment
that
was
made
by
all
the
person
anna
rainey
last
week.
Anne
rainey
is
all
local
and
modern-day
carolyn.
Byron,
I'm
going
to
say
that
again,
anne
rainey
is
on
local
and
modern-day
carolyn,
byron,
who's,
carolyn
barrett!
K
Well,
because
it's
black
history
month
in
this
country-
and
we
can't
talk
about
black
history
without
speaking
of
the
role
of
white
supremacy.
Let's
do
a
lesson
in
who
carolyn
byron
was.
She
was
the
white
woman
who
weaponized
her
tears.
Her
position,
her
power,
her
whiteness,
to
turn
a
community
against
a
young
black
person
simply
because
one
she
harbored
irrational
racist
fears
and
two.
She
knew
this
absolute
power
of
a
white
woman's
cry
against
a
scary
black
man.
Even
when
that
scary,
black
man
is
a
boy,
a
boy
named
emil
tilt.
K
Last
week,
anne
rainey
pulled
a
modern-day
character
barrett
when
apropos
of
nothing
happening.
At
the
moment,
anne
rainey
was
asked
to
give
a
closing
statement
in
her
candidacy
panel
and
decided
to
use
her
whites
to
fly
her
white
supremacist
flag
and
simply
utter
that
the
eighth
ward
resident
should
vote
for
her
because
city
clerk
reed
was
a
scary
man,
because
when
other
racist
troops,
such
as
unintelligent
thug
or
criminal
fail,
despite
repeated
attempts
to
pay
a
city
clerk
as
such
white
supremacy
needs,
only
fall
back
on
the
simple
fact
that
he
is
black.
K
Therefore
he
is
scary.
In
a
way,
though,
anne
rainey
is
correct.
You
see
there
is
nothing
scary,
scarier
to
white
supremacy
than
a
black
person
who
is
wickedly
intelligent,
who
will
not
back
down
and
who
does
not
take
from
white
people
and
who,
despite
the
many
many
attempts
by
this
particular
city
leadership,
to
cut
him
down.
He
rises
again
because,
as
our
ancestor
said,
ancestors
said,
and
still
we
rise.
K
Nothing
is
more
scary
to
white
supremacy
than
a
black
person
who
refuses
to
take
the
place
and
the
bottom
rung
that
has
been
outlined
for
us
in
ann
rennie's
own
words,
a
black
person
who
refuses
to
be
sex
straight
is
a
scary,
black
person,
so
be
afraid
black
ann
rainey
be
very
afraid,
not
because
of
clerk
reed.
But
because
your
spell
on
the
eighth
ward,
your
decades
of
being
a
racist
mouse
piece
that
have
gone
unchecked
by
this
town
are
over.
K
We
will
vote
you
out
and
to
the
council
members
who
sat
by
and
let
anne
rainey
raim
down
her
racism
on
this
town
and
the
fact
that
not
one
of
you
spoke
out
in
a
statement
of
censure
for
the
racist
behavior.
Yet
you
were
quick
to
show
up
a
while
ago
to
censure
clerk
read
for
simply
taking
his
laptop
home.
Shame
on
you!
Shame
on
you!
Because
white
silence
is
violence
and
yes
peter.
K
We
know
you're
black,
but
I
will
close
my
borrowing
the
words
of
the
one
all
the
person
who
has
spoken
against
anne
rainey,
and
that
is
all
the
person
tom
suffered
in
and
rainey
everything
you
do
must
be
scrutinized
because
you
are
sketchy
as
deep.
D
Thank
you
next
speaker
is
julie.
Burkett
excuse
me
lindsay
wade,
then
julie,
burkett,
then
jacqueline,
lowe
and
again
you've
got
two
minutes
and
15
seconds
and
if
you
hear
the
timer
go
off,
your
time
is
up.
Thank
you.
D
B
B
But
honestly,
some
events
in
the
last
week
and
even
more,
are
even
more
forefront
in
my
mind.
Right
now.
This
past
week,
during
an
eighth
ward
candidate
forum,
alderman
ann
rainey
heard
hurled
some
racist
language
at
clerk
reed
and
even
chose
to
double
down
in
a
subsequent
in
a
subsequent
interview
with
the
daily
northwestern
I'd
love
to
think
that
she
already
apologized
to
him.
But
honestly,
an
apology
that
is
forced
is
just
not
meaningful.
B
I
would
instead
like
to
address
my
comments
to
clerk.
Read
I'm
proud
to
have
voted
for
you
for
clerk
and
I've
been
proud
of
the
way
you've
handled
your
tenure
as
clerk,
very
often
with
blatant
racism
and
disrespect
shown
to
you
on
the
diocese
by
the
mayor,
some
city
staff
and
some
current
older
people
I'll
even
be
prouder
to
vote
for
you.
As
my
next
eighth
ward
representative.
I
know
you
will
do
great
things
and
use
all
of
your
adversary
at
adversity,
adversity
to
fuel
you
thank
you.
D
I
Hello,
thank
you
city,
council
of
evanston.
Your
con
constituents
need
you
to
address
the
racist
and
dangerous
speech
of
your
members
and
the
people
who
use
the
speech
speech
must
be
held
accountable.
Alderman
rainey's
comments
on
the
league
of
women
voters,
forum
called
in
calling
clerk.
Reed
scary
was
the
invocation
of
a
very
old
racist
trope
that
has
been
used
to
justify
violence
against
black
men
for
centuries.
I
Silence
from
the
city
council
in
regards
to
this
will
be
judged
as
complicity
and
a
stamp
of
approval
on
alderman
rainey's,
only
most
recent
harmful
statement
among
many,
including
jokes,
about
protesters
being
shot
by
the
police
over
the
summer
in
front
of
a
group
of
young
protesters.
That's
where
she
said
it.
There
is
no
justification
for
her
words
and
there
is
no
non-racist
justification
for
the
city
council
to
remain
silent
in
regards
to
her
behavior.
D
Thank
you
jacqueline
next
up,
we've
got
mary
best
road
and
then
chip,
ratliff
and
then
mary
rozinski.
L
L
I'm
so
proud
that
dino
is
an
alum
of
leadership,
evanston
and,
in
fact,
was
honored
by
evanston
community
foundation
as
a
distinguished
alumni
in
2011
when
we
honored
him,
along
with
lori
osborne
and
susan
hope,
engel
other
alumni
for
having
made
evanston
history
live,
I'm
an
old
historian
myself
and
I
mean
old,
but
I
really
appreciate
how
important
it
is
for
a
community
to
truly
understand
its
history
and
evanston
truly
did
not
understand
its
history
without
before
dino
did
the
incredible
yeoman
work
he
has
done
of
discovering
our
past
and
making
sure
it
was
memorialized
and
kept
and
shared
with
all.
L
So
I
really
just
wanted
to
say
how
proud
I
am
to
know
him
and
how
proud
I
am
that
the
city
is
honoring
him.
Thank
you.
D
Great
thank
you,
mary
beth,
it's
nice
nice
to
see
you
and
just
so
everyone
knows
once
we
get
through
public
comment,
we're
gonna
move
up
the
h2,
which
is
the
naming
of
the
road
for
dino
robinson,
so
we're
going
to
put
that
at
the
top.
So
for
folks
that
I
know
there's
many
people
here
excited
about
that.
Let's
go
to
our
next
public
commenter,
which
is
chip
ratliff,
then
mary
rozinski,
then
mike
facilco.
N
I'm
here
you
wanted
to
say
how
unhappy
and
actually
upset
I
was
when
I
heard
the
end
of
the
eighth
ward
speech,
and
you
know,
alderman
clerk
is
far
from
scary.
He
is
an
outstanding,
hard-working
man,
who's
done
more
to
educate
the
people
in
this
town
about
foias
and
ethics
and
other
things,
and
I
do
not
understand
why
anyone
would
say
that
about
them
unless
they
were
intending
for
some
sort
of
racist
undertones
on
it,
and
I
was
really
sad
to
hear
that.
N
The
second
thing
I
wanted
to
bring
up
is
less
important,
but
it
is
about
the
change
in
the
parking
rules.
Last
week
we
had
the.
I
think
that
if
the
city
of
evanston
is
going
to
change
rules,
we
had
a
voluntary
snow
days
and
my
family
moved
their
cars
as
they
you
know
did
so
that
this
streets
could
be
plowed
and
then
sometime,
I
guess,
on
tuesday
or
wednesday
there
was
a
notice
sent
out
which
we
didn't
pay
attention
to,
because
it
wasn't
snowing
and
we
thought
they
were
just.
N
You
know
talking
about
more
volunteer
snow
days,
only
to
find
out
that
we
hadn't
heard
the
sirens
that
they
were
going
to
all
of
a
sudden
enforce
the
snow
removal
emergency
dates
on
four
days
after
it
had
snowed.
So,
needless
to
say,
the
people
upstairs
got
a
ticket.
Three
people
in
my
family
got
tickets
and
the
irony
of
it
is
that
the
streets
had
all
been
plowed
like
the
day
or
two
days
before
there
was
no,
and
I
talked
to
the
guy
outside
and
I'm
like.
What
are
you
doing?
N
So
I
don't
think
that
we
should
be
changing
rules
in
the
middle
and
not
giving
anybody
any
notice,
and
so
I'm
just
curious,
and
I
will
ask
the
police
department
or
whatever
how
many
who
I
asked,
how
many
people
got
tickets
that
day
that
didn't
know
and
I'm
hoping
that
the
city
will
consider
refunding
those
fees.
Since
there
was
no,
there
was
not
adequate
notice
on
that.
So
I
just
want
to
make
a
point
on
that.
Thank
you.
Thank.
D
You
mary
next
up,
we've
got
mike
fasilco,
then
dino
robinson,
then
tina
payton.
O
I've
got
three
things
I
hope
to
talk
about
the
first
just
quickly,
as
others
have
spoken
about
it.
I
would
add
my
voice
to
the
crowd.
That's
calling
for
ann
rainey
to
be
censored
for
her
comments
at
the
forum,
the
with
word
form.
O
It's
the
item,
where
you're
authorizing
a
consulting
contract
for
a
west
side
tip
a
tip
that
apparently
must
include
the
sale
of
the
civic
center
property
when
the
sale
of
the
civic
center
property
hasn't
been
discussed
with
any
of
the
evanston
citizens
has
not
been
in
any
public
discussions
with
the
city,
council
or
citizens
have
heard,
and
it's
not
been
agreed
to
by
the
community
at
large
to
sell
the
civic
center
or
what
it
would
be
used
for,
so
that
items
should
be
removed.
O
According
to
the
city
memo,
the
civic
center
must
be
included
in
order
to
make
this
chip
feasible.
So
it
goes
without
saying
you
can't
have
that
tip
without
having
a
civic
center
included,
and
you
shouldn't
be
authorizing
your
consultant
if
the
tip
doesn't
make
sense.
So
I
would
withdraw
that
item
request
that
you
withdraw
it.
D
P
Welcome
everyone,
just
I
could
pass
on
this.
This
was
in
reference
to
the
street,
naming
I
could
wait
until
that
segment.
Why.
D
Don't
we,
why
don't
we
do
that
and
when
we
get
to
this
that
segment,
we'll
let
you
say
a
few
words,
do
you
know
sound
good,
all
right,
no
problem,
all
right,
so
tina
peyton's
up
next,
then
carlos
sutton
and
priscilla
giles.
A
Good
evening,
everyone
calling
all
evanston
citizens
if
you
feel
that
you
are
not
being
represented
by
your
officials.
You
are
now
in
control.
By
voting,
many
of
our
representatives
are
building
not
building
the
city
that
all
people
can
afford
to
live
in.
It
is
now
gentrification
over
the
last
18
years,
77
units
out
of
2285
units
15
buildings.
Only
77
units
have
been
billed
for
affordable
housing,
only
50
percent
to
120
percent
ami
no
units
have
been
built
for
30
or
less,
which
is
hud
standard.
A
You
need
to
make
sure
that
your
voices
are
heard
and
that
you'll
find
people
and
vote
them
in
who
will
represent
our
beliefs
in
the
city
of
evanston
and
not
with
this
scams
of
buildings
and
pretending
that
we
have
affordable
housing
and
everybody
is
happy
and
everybody
can
live
here
and
and
justice
for
all.
That
is
not
true.
Please
carefully
vote
for
people
who
are
going
to
represent
you
and
your
views.
Thank
you
and
black
lives
matter.
D
Q
Q
Secondly,
I'm
also
very
concerned
about
the
comments
by
mrs
rainey.
The
parking
restrictions
with
people
for
handicapped
should
not
be
determined
by
the
color
of
the
sticker,
but
by
the
need
of
the
person
was
driving
and
third
and
more
important.
I
am
adamantly
opposed
to
this
proposal
for
development
of
a
tiff
in
the
fifth
ward
and
to
give
someone
sixty
one
thousand
dollars
to
oppose
a
plan
that
we
have
given
the
city
and
that
has
been
approved,
give
your
constituents
and
your
citizens
what
we
elected
you
to
do.
Q
D
Thank
you,
carlos
all,
right.
Next
up,
we've
got
priscilla
giles,
then
renee
payton,
then
trisha
conley.
Thank
you.
R
Thank
you.
It
seems
the
pandemic
has
given
the
city
council
an
opportunity
to
push
through
develop
developers,
projects
and
in
in
the
city
without
residents
input.
I
believe,
if
you
ask
the
residents
on
the
streets
of
dodge
daryl
and
church,
you
will
find
very
few
people
who
had
any
knowledge
of
the
developers
project.
R
The
daryl
in
church
project
is
another
lost
chance
for
the
residents
to
have
the
long
needed
request
to
have
a
building
that
would
teach
and
train
those
in
need
of
livable
wages
and
trades.
We
still
need
this
facility
and
housing
for
the
poor
and
who
cling
to
the
desire
to
stay
in
the
city
that
they
helped
build.
R
D
S
Hello,
I'm
renee
payton
of
the
second
ward,
and
I
am
I
agree
with
everything
that
carla
sutton
and
priscilla
giles
had
said,
I'm
speaking
about
the
preferential
treatment
and
separation
of
church
and
state.
S
If
you
look
at
the
memorandum
of
understanding
the
language
in
that
was
very
inappropriate,
it
says
mount
pisgah
has
received
the
vision
for
present
and
future
ministry.
God
has
instructed
them
to
build
a
building
that
will
reflect
his
glory
power
and
majesty
alone,
with
wisdom
and
direction
from
god
and
in
obedience
to
his
instruction.
Mount
pisgah
has
started
on
the
path
to
complete
the
vision
at
1811
and
1813-15
church
street.
S
Now
that
language
is
inappropriate,
it
definitely
violates
the
separation
of
church
and
state.
The
public-
and
my
question
is:
why
is
the
city
manager
negotiating
before
the
official
public
process
has
occurred?
People
haven't
gotten
notices,
there's
been
no
official
discussion
about
this.
S
The
memorandum
screams
of
the
preferential
treatment
and
all
this
needs
to
be
corrected
before
the
manager
city
manager
should
be
doing
any
kind
of
negotiating.
This
all
seems
like
as
back
room
stuff,
that
nobody
knows
anything
about
and
again
we're
not
being
represented.
We're
being
fooled
into
thinking
that
things
are
going
our
way
and
we're
getting
what
we
want
and
we're
just
getting
fooled.
D
Thank
you.
Renee
next
up
we've
got
trisha
conley,
then
jamie,
robin
collier,
then
ellie
harned.
T
T
T
T
I
would
invite
anyone
who
is
currently
running
for
office
in
evanston
to
seriously
consider
how
would
you
hold
a
colleague
accountable
for
racist
remarks,
while
in
the
public's
view,
if
we
have
serious
plans
to
up
in
systems
of
racial
harm
and
inequities
in
our
city,
we
need
to
hold
each
other
accountable,
especially
if
we
identify
as
white.
Thank
you.
M
M
So
if
there
is
a
cost-effective
plan
to
distribute
or
reconstruct
the
civic
center
functions
in
better
locations
generate
proceeds
from
the
sale
of
city
property,
it
could
be
used
to
reduce
unfunded
pension
liabilities,
save
capital
spending
and
add
property
to
the
tax
rolls
it
would
be.
A
big
win.
Unfortunately,
there's
nothing
on
the
city's
website
that
discusses
the
comparative
costs
of
retrofitting
or
replacing
the
civic
center.
M
However,
since
the
study
involves
gathering
public
input,
that
could
lead
the
new
council
to
decide
not
to
implement
the
61,
000,
consulting
fees
would
be
wasted.
This
is
a
real
concern.
Since
the
mayoral
candidates
have
stated
they
are
not
in
favor
of
selling
the
civic
center,
as
have
other
residents
rather
than
approve
this
expenditure
at
this
time.
I
would
urge
the
council
to
hold
this
item,
to
give
staff
time
to
one
develop
a
comparison
of
cost
benefits
of
retrofitting
versus
relocating
the
civic
center
and
two
old
public
meetings
regarding
the
future
of
the
civic
center.
D
Thank
you.
Next
up,
we've
got
allie
harned,
then
sebastian
knowles,
then
laurie
keenan.
D
Okay,
so
allie
horn
is
not
available.
How
about
sebastian
knolls
then.
U
Hi,
yes,
I'm
here
hold
on
one
second,
but
I
apologize
for
not
having
my
my
camera
up.
I've
been
out
in
the
snow
all
day
and
I
look
like
a
mess.
Oh,
so
is
that?
Okay,
if
I,
if
I
don't
that's.
U
I'm
calling
in
today
to
talk
about
the
proposed
west
side
tiff
that
would
include
the
selling
of
the
civic
center.
First,
I
want
to
talk
about
what
tax
increment,
financing
or
tip
actually
is.
For
those
that
don't
know,
tiffs
are
a
public
financing
method,
that's
used
as
a
subsidy
for
redevelopment
infrastructure
and
other
community
improvement
projects
that
usually
go
in
the
form
of
giving
money
to
private
developers
to
help
a
blighted
community.
U
The
problem
with
tiffs
arises
with
the
fact
that
the
funds
can
be
used
without
oversight
below
a
certain
amount
and
they
choke
the
tax
revenue
of
the
local
area.
The
tif
is
funded
by
allowing
the
city
to
solely
collect
tax
revenues
up
to
the
increment
that
was
collected
until
the
start
of
the
tif.
U
For
example,
if
we
collect
five
million
dollars
in
a
tax
area,
currently
any
increase
in
tax
revenue
over
five
million
dollars
would
go
towards
the
tiff
fund
and
can
only
be
used
by
the
tip
fund
and
tips,
usually
last
for
about
20
to
30
years,
which
would
prevent
collection
of
new
tax
revenue.
So
besides
me,
believing
tips
are
detrimental
to
the
already
burdened
revenue
stream
in
evanston,
the
idea
of
selling
the
civic
center
before
an
election
or
even
proposing.
This
idea
is,
quite
frankly,
absurd.
U
U
So
please
push
this
conversation
until
at
least
after
the
election,
so
the
public
can
be
further
educated
on
the
issue
and
as
well.
I
would
like
to
make
a
statement
condemning
the
actions
of
of
ann
rainey
during
the
forum
in
league
of
women
voters.
I
believe
those
those
comments
were
unnecessary
and,
quite
frankly,
racially
insensitive
and
that's
not
something
that
we
practice
here
in
evanston.
U
So
I
do
agree
with
all
of
the
comments
made
before
me
in
the
comments
after
me
as
well
that
we
need
to
continue
to
condemn
such
actions
in
order
to
push
evanston
into
a
more
equitable
future.
Thank
you.
So
much
for
your
time.
All.
D
Right,
thank
you
sebastian.
Next,
let's
see
allie
harness.
Are
you
ready
all
right
so
we'll
go
with
allie
harned,
then
laurie,
keenan
and
then
beth
stare.
V
Hi,
sorry,
it's
parent-teacher
conferences,
so
I'm
toggling
between
meetings.
I
am
going
to
read
a
statement.
That's
on
behalf
of
the
cabg,
which
is
the
community
alliance
for
better
government.
Cabg
is
a
grassroots
campaign
that
supports
racial
equity,
government
transparency
and
political
leadership
that
espouses
these
goals.
V
To
be
clear,
smear
campaigns
that
call
back
allegations
that
were
rooted
in
racism
from
the
beginning
and
disproven
in
the
end
are
violent
acts
of
racism,
smear
campaign
posts
that
then
encourage
horrific
racist
comments
and
threats
of
harm
are
violent
acts
of
racism,
sharing
racist
smear
campaigns
even
with
a
claim
of
trying
to
start
a
document.
Dialogue
is
an
act
of
violent
racism,
sharing
false
accusations
which
criminalize
a
black
man
or
calling
him
very
scary
is
a
violent
act
of
racism,
white
solidarity.
V
Standing
up
for
the
intentions
of
fellow
white
people
over
the
harm
that
was
done
to
a
vipoc
person
is
a
tool
of
white
supremacy
and
is
a
violent
act
of
racism.
We
are
deeply
disappointed
to
see
these
acts
by
community
leaders
and
hope
that
they
will
be
they
will
promptly
reflect,
learn
and
issue
retractions,
as
well
as
endeavor
to
repair
the
harm
with
clerk
reed.
We
look
forward
to
partnering
with
devon
reed
to
bring
our
vision
of
a
transparent,
just
and
equitable
evanston
to
life.
Thank
you.
Black
lives
matter.
W
Hi,
I
am
not
turning
my
video
on
also
I
I
am
here
tonight
to
speak
on
a
couple
of
different
issues
in
support
of
dino
robinson,
which
I
think
is
wonderful.
I've
had
the
opportunity
to
hear
you
know
speak
very
recently
a
few
times
and
his
work
is
commendable
and
and
should
be
celebrated
by
our
city.
I
am
also
here
to
speak
on
behalf
of
the
west
side
tiff
in
opposing
that
I
think
that
it
is
irresponsible
for
this
council
to
be
making
those
decisions.
W
I
know
that,
right
now
there
is
an
email
out
from
our
city
manager
to
other
organizations
to
try
to
partner
with
them
in
order
to
abandon
the
civic
center,
and
that
has
not
been
a
public
discussion,
and
I
I
like
to
say
that
you
know
decisions
are
being
made
before
public
meetings
are
had,
and
that
is
frankly
wrong
and
for
you
to
be
making
this
decision
sounds
a
lot
like
the
amy
cody
parent
decision.
W
Lastly,
I'd
like
to
speak
in
support
of
devon
reed,
as
I
have
often-
and
I
hope
that
this
is
the
last
time
that
I
will
have
to
speak,
opposing
anne
rainey's,
deplorable
behavior.
W
I
think
that
what
she
said
in
her
actions
were
awful
and
I
have
been
the
victim
of
it
myself,
not
racially
charged.
I
have
seen
her
vote
not
to
censure
herself
in
casting
a
tie-breaking
vote,
not
to
censure
herself,
and
I
think
that
this
city
council
and
this
mayor
finally
needs
to
take
action,
because
I
think
this
should
be
the
last
time
that
people
have
to
come
and
say
these
types
of
things.
Thank
you
so
much.
X
Hi,
this
is
beth
stair,
ninth
ward,
three
things:
one.
I've
had
to
come
to
city
council
before
to
talk
about
ann
rainey's,
racist
comments.
I
don't
have
to
do
that
anymore.
I
think
that
really
the
people
should
the
council
should
really
take
a
stand
and
really
support
the
resolution
that
was
passed
to
end
structural
racism
and
I
think
that
we
need
to.
We
can't
let
people
on
the
diocese
get
away
with
such
harmful
speech.
X
Okay
and
two,
I
think
it's
really
great
to
do.
The
renaming
of
the
street,
for
you
know,
morris
jumped.
X
And
for
for
dino
for
the
for
the
new
street
to
be
named
after
him,
he's
done
such
great
work
three.
I
think
it's
shameful
that
you
allowed
the
pass
on
the
minority
and
women-owned
businesses
for
robert
crown
construction
to
not
hold
them
accountable
for
that.
Thank
you.
D
Thank
you,
and
our
last
speaker
tonight
is
ray
friedman.
Welcome,
ray.
Y
Y
I
guess
it
just
proves
what
we've
been
asking
for
for
the
past
several
years.
We
need
some
serious
discussions
and
the
discussions
need
to
happen
before
your
votes
are
taken.
So
my
comment
is
at
last
city
council.
Two
weeks
ago
we
paid
14
million
dollars
for
principal
and
interest
in
general
obligation
bonds.
Tonight
we're
asking
to
borrow
14
million
more
from
general
obligation
bonds.
Y
Y
We've
asked
repeatedly
before
and
after
these
bonds
were
taken.
What's
the
plan
for
repayment
of
these
bonds,
you
also
voted
at
last
council
meeting
to
shore
up
the
reserves
to
16.6
percent,
we're
only
short
about
five
million.
What
is
the
plan
for
raising
that
money?
Y
In
order
to
borrow
more
money,
we
don't
need
to
borrow
more
money.
What
happened
to
the
idea
of
saving
money
until
we
have
enough
to
pay
for
the
projects
we
want
to
do,
and
why
is
it?
We
need
to
hire
a
landscaper
for
robber
crown
in
several
parks,
can't
any
of
our
800
employees
cut
the
grass,
and
why
are
ads
running
so
often
to
hire
new
employees?
Y
Don't
we
still
have
a
hiring
freeze
in
the
past
few
months,
I
see
there's
between
30
to
40
jobs
available
now
it
would
be
extremely
helpful
and
advisable
for
you
all
to
share
with
your
constituents
all
of
us.
What
the
plan
is
here
and
please
stop
spending
money.
We
don't
have
and
please
stop
borrowing
money
without
a
plan
for
repayment.
Y
D
Thank
you
ray,
and
we
do
have
one
last
speaker
who
wasn't
here
earlier
and
it's
with
us
and
I
think
it'll
be
a
good
way
to
end.
Let
me
just
make
sure:
do
we
have
lindsay
wade?
D
Z
Good
good
evening,
your
honor
good
evening,
council
members,
I'm
here
to
support
the
resolution
to
rename
portion
of
church
street
after
the
amazing
dino
morris,
dino
robinson
dino,
for
those
of
you
who
don't
know
dino
is
an
intelligent,
passionate,
hard-working
individual
who
25
years
created
an
organization
named
child
friend.
That
is
the
only
african
black
african-american
organization
on
chicago,
suburban
north
shore
that
collects
preserves
and
educates
about
chicago's
black
history,
chicago
suburban
north
shore.
Z
Z
Z
D
Thank
you.
Chip
stick
around
we're
going
to
move
that
to
the
top
of
the
agenda
right
after
we've
got
one
more
public
speaker
who
wasn't
here
earlier
that
I
understand
has
joined
us
and
that's
lindsey
wade
so
lindsay.
You
have
two
minutes
and
15
seconds.
If
you
need
all
that
time
tonight,
so
welcome.
AA
Hi,
I
just
wanted
to
say
that
I
don't
appreciate
anne
rainey's
comments
for
devon
reed
in
the
league
of
women
voters
forum
the
other
day,
and
I
think
that,
because
she,
because
her
comments
about
him
being
a
scary
man
were
based
in
racist
stereotypes.
I
don't
think
that
she
should
be
allowed
to
speak
publicly
anymore
on
any
of
our
community
forums.
AA
Her
behavior
from
the
league
of
women
voters
forum
was
racist
and
I
don't
think
that
any
can
any
political
candidate
or
any
political
figure
should
expect
to
be
racially
attacked
when
they
go
on
to
debate
or
speak
on.
You
know
any
kind
of
political
or
community
forum,
that's
just
completely
uncalled
for,
and
her
hate
has
nothing
to
do
with
with
politics
or
the
issues
that
either
of
them
care
about.
It's
just
the
fact
that
anne
rainey
is
a
hateful
person
and
she
shouldn't
be
allowed
to
talk
anymore.
D
AB
Yes,
thank
you,
mayor
hagerty
h2,
the
parks
and
recreation
board,
recommend
city
council,
adoption
of
resolution,
14
r21
designating
the
portion
of
church
street
between
hartree
avenue
and
gray
avenue,
with
the
honorary
street
name
signed
morris,
dino,
robinson
jr
way.
Three
street
signs
are
made
for
the
honoree.
One
sign
is
installed
at
the
end
of
each
street
of
the
designated
block
area
and
the
third
sign
is
given
to
the
honoree.
AB
The
approximate
total
cost
to
create
all
three
signs
is
200
and
funds
for
the
street
name
program
is
budgeted
in
our
public
works
agency,
and
I
move
this
for
action.
D
All
right
lots
lots
of
seconds
on
this.
So
now
it
is
open
up
for
for
conversation.
So
here's
what
I
was
thinking
we
do.
We
can
have
some
conversation,
do
a
vote
and
then
we
can
turn
it
over
to
dino.
If
you'd
like
to
make
some
remarks,
does.
D
That
make
sense.
Does
that
work?
Okay,
sure
all
right.
So,
let's,
let's
do
that.
So
just
show
me
an
indication
if
you
want
to
say
something:
let's
go
with
we'll
go
with
alderman
rue
simmons
first
and
then
alderman
braithwaite.
Thank
you.
AB
Thank
you.
I
just
want
to
thank
dino
and
everyone
else
dino.
You
have
waiting
for
you,
dozens
of
notes
of
support
that
will
be
in
the
record
forever.
They
are
being
sent
to
our
clerk's
office
so
that
you
can
have
them
and
you
can
build
your
own
archives
within
your
archives.
So
I
prepared
a
note
as
well,
and
I
am
going
to
read
it
to
you.
As
you
know,
it
is
a
special
honor
to
serve
the
residents
and
businesses
in
evanston.
AB
A
premier
history
museum
with
thousands
of
archival
documents,
350
linear
feet,
hundreds
of
digital
collateral,
published
books,
documentaries,
research
papers
and
more
dino
has
supported
us
in
documenting
our
history,
educating
our
families
and
defending
our
legislation.
Recently,
mr
robinson
supports
our
schools,
community
organizations,
city
staff,
city
council,
our
evanston
commissions
and
committee,
the
faith
community
families
and
individual
residents
with
the
knowledge
of
our
history
to
improve
our
future.
Mr
robinson,
investment
in
our
city
will
live
on
and
share
our
truth
for
generations
to
come
through
the
shore
front
legacy
center.
AB
AB
Please
join
me
in
this
gesture
of
appreciation
in
the
honorary
street
naming
of
mr
dino
robinson
and
because
we
are
in
the
middle
of
a
you,
know,
freeze
and
covet.
We
won't
have
any
immediate
ceremony,
but
I
wanted
to
make
this
as
official
as
possible
for
you,
because
you
are
so
deserving
dino.
I
have
seen
you
work
an
additional
full-time
job
for
the
city
of
evanston
recently
and
we
as
a
city
just
want
to
let
you
know
how
much
you
are
appreciated
and
valued.
So
thank
you.
AC
When,
when
I
heard
25
years
it
made
me
think
of
jesus,
I
think
that's
how
long
we've
known
each
other-
and
I
remember
when
you
first
started
alpha-
word
all
you're,
helping
teaching
me
like
the
basics
of
graphic
designing,
and
I
also
remember
when
you
first
started
short
front
and
a
little
anecdotal.
Sorry,
like
I
remember
like
who
is
this
guy
walking
around
with
this
magazine
at
such
a
young
age,
and
to
see
how
much
you
have
accomplished
my
brother.
I
continue
to
learn
from
you.
AC
We
thank
you
so
much
for
your
contribute
contributions
to
the
reparation
movement
here
in
town
and
I
couldn't
think
of
a
better
person
to
to
have
this
honor.
So
congratulations
to
you,
your
family
and
all
the
supporters
that
follow
the
work
that
you
do
on.
This
call
bless
you.
E
Thank
you
and
I'm
just
honored
to
be
in
a
position
to
support
this
resolution.
Mr
ratliff's
words
really
resonated
with
me
when
he
said
that
black
history
should
be
common
knowledge,
and
I
don't
think
anybody
in
the
history
of
evanston
has
done
more
towards
putting
us
in
that
direction.
So
I
hope
those
words
resonate
with
the
community.
E
I
hope
people
reach
out
and
experience
what
you've
put
together
and
you
can't
put
a
value
on
the
work
that
you've
done.
We're
very
grateful,
and
I'm
just
happy
that
we
can
make
this
small
gesture
to
to
reflect
our
community's
appreciation
for
your
work.
So
thank
you
for
all
of
it.
F
Thank
you,
mr
mayor.
I
want
to
echo
dino
everything
that
all
of
my
colleagues
have
said
so
eloquently
I,
but
also
in
particular.
F
I
want
to
thank
you
for
for
enlightening
us
all
about
our
history
here
in
evanston,
and
also
sharing
with
us
the
importance
of
history
even
on
and
on
particularly
on
an
individual
level
and
how
important
it
is
that
we
all
are
part
of
history
and
that
those
letters
and
photos
and
scrapbooks
are
really
critically
important
to
help
us
understand
where
we
came
from
and
and
help
us
chart
our
future.
I
I
still
treasure
my
short
front
magazines
in
per
in
paper.
You
know,
I'm
a
I'm
still
a
paper
person.
F
I
think
I
probably
still
have
a
file
of
them.
I
and
as
someone
who
studied
a
lot
of
history,
worked
on
oral
histories
in
college.
I
I
understand
how
hard
it
is
to
do
this,
but
nothing
like
what
you've
done,
but
how
important
it
is-
and
you
are,
you
are
a
treasure
in
our
community
and
I
and
we
are
really
indebted
to
you.
Every
single
evanstonian
is
indebted
to
you
for
all
of
the
work
that
you
have
done
so
thank
you.
D
Thank
you
elder
and
win.
Are
there
any
other
old
men
that
have
anything
alderman
fleming.
AD
I
do
and
clerk
reed
has
his
hand
up.
I
didn't
notice
what
that
was,
but
dino.
I
just
want
to
thank
you
for
your
love
of
the
black
community
here
in
evanston
and
that
you
took
this
on
for
no
money,
no,
no
glory.
Just
because
you
loved
you
know
black
people
wanted
their
history
to
be
kept.
So
thank
you
for
that.
Thank
you,
for,
I
think,
being
one
of
the
few
people
who
still
remember
sam
white.
AD
So
thank
you
for
for
that,
keeping
that
legacy
in
our
family
alive
and
all
the
ways
in
which
you've
you
know
archive
many
families,
but
you
know
person
and
of
my
family,
their
contributions.
So
so
thank
you
for
that,
and
this
is
the
least
that
we
can
do
as
a
city
for
all
that
you
have
done
for
so
many
people
here.
D
All
right,
thank
you.
Thank
you.
Alderman
fleming.
I
apologize
to
the
other
element
for
some
reason.
I
can't
see
everybody
on
one
page,
so
I've
toggled
and
see
lots
of
other
hands
up
here
so
we'll
go.
It
says
I
have
it
in
the
order:
alderman
ravel,
alderman
fisk,
then
alderman
rainey.
AE
Oh
well,
just
to
add
to
the
wonderful
and
well-deserved
comments
from
my
colleagues.
I
just
want
to
say
how
privileged
we
were
in
the
seventh
ward
and
the
sixth
ward
to
be
able
to
hear
from
dino
at
my
award
our
joint
board
meeting
a
couple
of
weeks
ago
about
evanston's
history,
and
I
I
had
so
many
emails
after
that
meeting
from
from
residents.
AE
Who'd
attended
that
meeting
saying
it
was
the
best
well
the
best
board
meeting,
but
certainly
just
the
best
meeting
that
they'd
attended
in
a
long
time
and
how
grateful
they
were
for
all
the
information
dino
that
you
provided
and
just
really
thank
you.
So
much
for
all
your
work
and
for
sharing
it
with
all
of
us.
AF
Dino,
well
thanks,
so
much
for
all
of
your
work.
You
know
25
years
is
incredible,
and
I
can
only
tell
my
colleagues
on
the
council
having
labored
in
the
fields
of
evanston
history,
how
really
difficult
it
is
to
find
information
on
marginalized
communities
within
evanston.
It
is
sometimes
an
impossible
task.
AF
Dino
has
persevered,
and
I
guess
what
I
would
say
is
that
he's
made
our
community
and
our
history
whole
and
that's
a
big
deal.
That's
a
really
big
deal
and
we
we
can't
know
who
we
are
and
where
we
live,
and
what's
special
about
this
community
when
part
of
our
community
is
not
represented.
AF
I
love
what
you've
done.
I'm
just
it's
so
important
to
me
that
this
be
part
of
not
only
who
we
are
but
going
forward.
No
one
can
take
this
away
from
us.
This
is
now
this
is
now
real
stuff
and
it's
real.
It's
really.
AF
I
don't
know
so
encouraging
to
me
that
we
were
here
not
only
to
honor
you,
but
also
to
thank
you
because
it's
not
it's
not
easy.
Sometimes
you
feel
like.
Oh
my
gosh,
you
know.
Where
is
this
going,
and
how
can
I
possibly
do
this
work
and
still
put
food
on
the
table
and
do
all
the
other
things,
but
that's
the
labor
of
love,
part
of
it,
and
that's
that's
really.
What
keeps
you
going?
I'm
just
so
happy
to
be
here
tonight
to
honor
you
and
thank
you
for
what
you've
done.
H
AF
Doing
it
and
but
we're
a
better
community
because
of
you
because
of
you-
and
I
I
want
you
to
know
that
so
thanks
thanks
so
much.
AG
And
dino,
I
want
to
thank
you
more
than
you'll
ever
know
for
introducing
me
to
spencer,
jordan
and
for
introducing
introducing
me
to
the
dream,
dancers
and
never
in
the
world.
Would
I
have
ever
thought
that
you
would
have
connected
me
to
my
ancestors
in
massachusetts
and
that's
what
you
and
spencer
did.
It
was
just
an
amazing
connection
and
it
just
one
of
my
favorite
all-time
things
about
evanston.
So
thank
you.
Thank
you.
D
C
All
right
yeah,
I
I
wanted
to
make
a
quick
comment
to
just
say
to
recognize
dino
and
all
of
the
work
that
he's
done.
You
know
I
I
owe
dino
a
great
deal
because
I
first
met
dino
a
few
years
ago,
and
I
don't
know
if
he
knows
that
I
met
him.
I
mean
I
met
him.
C
I
don't
know
if
he
met
me,
but
there's
a
northwestern
event
with
doria
johnson
who
who
has
passed
and
they
were
together
talking
about
the
the
great
migration
to
evanston
and
when
I
heard
that
story
I
connected
in
my
mind
that
my
family
had
come
from
that
general
area
of
the
carolinas
and
you
know
around
that
same
time
period.
So
I
did
some
digging
into
my
own
family
history
and
found
you
know
a
real
con.
C
You
know
I've
learned
about
my
own
family
history
through
the
work
that
dino's
done
and
it's
just
so
important
as
alderman
wynn
mentioned
and
alderman
fisk
and
others.
C
You
know
the
telling
of
personal
stories
and
the
the
the
keeping
and
the
retelling
of
those
personal
stories
because
it
informs
it
should
inform
the
way
we
do
things,
and
you
know
I
know
from
you
know
we
spent
some
time
the
clerk's
office
spent
some
time
down
in
a
short
front
with
you
when
we
were
doing
some
research
for
reparations,
and
what
I
think
I
know
about
you,
dino,
is
that
you
know
I'm
sure
this
is
a
great
honor,
but
I
think
the
greatest
way
to
honor
you-
and
I
think
you
might
agree
with
this-
is
to
learn
from
the
history
that
you
have
taught
us
and
that
you
have
brought
forward
from
us
and
to
take
that
history
and
use
it
to
inform
the
way
we
do
things
today,
understanding
you
know
the
outcomes
and
the
intentions
of
the
way
we've
done
things
in
the
past,
so
I
hope
that
you
know
I
I
pledge
to
continue
on
doing
that
work
and
I
believe
members
of
the
council
also
are
on
board
with
that
mission.
D
All
right,
thank
you.
Thank
you,
clerk
reed.
All
right,
I
think
everybody's
had
a
chance.
I
hope,
you're
feeling
the
love.
Do
you
know
there's
a
lot,
a
lot
of
love,
a
lot
of
love
here
I
will
just
add.
We
are
working
in
progress
right
as
individuals
as
a
community.
D
You
know
you
know
the
history,
you
see
the
work
in
progress
that
we
are
as
evanston
the
city,
but
you
made
a
big
difference
to
the
pride
that
everybody
feels
and
the
work
that
lies
ahead,
which
is
a
lot
and
you're
part
of
the
reparations
committee,
but
in
being
the
first
community
to
have
reparations-
and
you
know
I'll,
never
forget
you
know
that
red
line
exhibit
you
know
that
came
through
evanston
and
you
you
know.
I
think
it's
probably
you
I
was
gonna
say
you
and
your
staff
do.
D
You
know,
but
I'm
not
quite
sure
who
the
staff
is.
I've
never
met
the
staff
unless,
unless
steve
and
jeannie
count
or
something-
but
you
know
you
put,
you
know
an
evanston
specific
board
together
and
that
made
a
difference
and
when
people
see
in
writing,
you
know
the
redlining
and
the
other
actions
that
were
taken
in
this
community.
D
You
know
it
makes
a
big
difference,
so
you
know
this
is
well
deserved.
I'm
surprised
there
isn't
already
a
street
named
after
you,
so
let's,
let's
make
it,
let's
make
it
official.
So
the
motion,
the
motion
was
moved
and
it
was
seconded,
and
this
is
h2
resolution.
D
B
AE
C
Rainey,
I'm
sorry
yep,
but
I
think
I
see
you
said
yes,
I
can
see
all
the
screens
as
well:
alderman
rainey
alderman
fleming
hi
alderman
fisk,
hi,
alderman,
braithwaite,
aye
alderman
nguyen
I
and
alderman
wilson
hi.
D
Right
so,
on
a
9-0
vote,
a
unanimous
vote.
We
now
have
an
honorary
street
named
after
morris
dino
robinson
jr.
Congratulate
congratulations.
You
know
well
well
very
well
deserved,
as
I
promised
I'm
going
to
give
you
a
couple
minutes
for
the
floor.
Dino
if
you'd
like
it.
P
Thank
you
so
much
on
behalf
of
shorefront,
the
city
council.
I
really
enjoy
working
with
the
staff
there,
the
city
council
and
all
those
the
mayor
and
those
who
have
come
before
I
want
to
give
accolades
to
chip
ratliff.
He
spoke
on
our
behalf.
Chip
ratliff
is
our
current
board
president
of
shore
fronts,
and
I
also
see
that
my
parents
are
on
this
call,
as
well
as
my
brother,
coming
in
from
colorado.
So
thank
you
both
for
being
longtime
supporters
of
my
crazy
ways.
Growing
up
and
sticking
with
me.
P
I
really
owe
a
debt
of
gratitude
toward
the
city
of
evanston's
community,
especially
the
black
community.
You
helped
raise
me.
I've
been
here
since
1980
and
all
I
could
think
of
is
how
strong
this
community
is.
And
what
way
can
I
give
back
to
a
community
that
gives
so
much
and
I'm
sitting
here
right
now
at
shore
front,
I
decided
to
come
over
here
because
I
don't
know
if
the
general
public
has
ever
you
know.
All
of
them
have
been
in
shore
front,
but
this
is
a
labor
of
love.
P
P
D
Thank
you
dino,
and
congratulations,
and
we
all
look
forward
to
when
the
the
timing
is
right.
We're
not
in
the
midst
of
a
pandemic,
to
come
out
and
celebrate
this
this
good
occasion,
all
right
with
that
we're
now
going
to
move
to
our
special
orders
of
business
alderman
rainey.
Could
you
please
move
sb1?
Yes,.
AG
Sb1
is
farewell:
9
replacement,
project
status,
update
our
staff,
recommends
city
council
accept
and
place
on
file.
The
clearwell
9
replacement
private
status,
update.
I'm
assuming
there's
going
to
be
a
report
by
our
staff
on
this
very
interesting
98.
AG
D
All
right,
so
this
is
open
for
for
discussion,
city
manager,
storyline.
J
D
Eric
I'm
sorry,
you
froze
up
there.
So
if
you
just
want
to
start,
I
had
just
turned
it
over
to
you
and
then
you
froze
so
go
ahead
and
start
again.
J
Perfect
timing-
I
was
just
going
to
mention
that
this
project
has
been
going
on
for
a
couple
of
years
now
very
large
infrastructure
project.
That's
going
to
allow
us
the
opportunity
to
preserve
our
quality
drinking
water
for
our
community
and
for
the
communities
that
we
sell
to
so
at
this
point
I
will
hand
it
off
to
dave
stoneberg
from
the
public
works
agency.
AH
Good
evening,
mr
mayor
alderman
and
clerk
reed
city
manager
story,
I'd
like
to
introduce
paul
mayano
he's
the
senior
project
engineer
that
worked
on
this
project
and
oversaw
on
behalf
of
the
city
of
evanston
and
he'll,
lead
us
through
the
presentation.
AI
AI
Great
good
evening,
mr
mayor
city
manager,
storley
clerk,
reed
and
alderman,
my
name
is
paul
moyano,
I'm
a
senior
project
manager
in
the
public
works
agency.
Before
coming
to
the
city.
Almost
five
years
ago,
I
spent
20
years
as
a
civil
engineer
in
the
municipal
water
sector.
My
first
day
with
the
city,
the
clearwell
9
replacement
project
was
handed
to
me,
and
I've
been
asked
to
summarize
this
nine
year.
Effort
over
the
next
few
minutes
see
if
I
could
change
the
slide.
Great
things
are
working.
AI
The
city's
water
treatment
plant
includes
9.4
million
gallons
of
treated
water
storage
on
site,
including
five
million
gallons
of
storage
located
in
a
reservoir
or
clear
well
across
the
street
from
the
water
plant.
The
storage
is
part
of
the
treatment
process
and
also
provides
emergency
reserves
for
our
regional
water
supply.
AI
On
this
slide,
the
construction
of
the
nuclear
well
could
be
seen
in
a
couple
of
different
stages.
The
clearwater
was
originally
built
in
1934
for
less
than
one
hundred
thousand
dollars
in
an
easement
on
northwestern
university
property.
At
the
northwest
corner
of
lincoln
street
north
campus
drive
in
2012
an
inspection
concluded
that
the
roof
of
the
clearwell
had
severely
deteriorated,
and
the
parking
lot
on
top
of
the
reservoir
had
to
be
closed
during
winter
months.
AI
At
the
end
of
2018,
the
city
awarded
a
19.8
million
dollar
contract
with
them
and
construction
to
build
the
new
clearwell.
The
total
project
cost
shown
on
the
slide
also
includes
approximately
eight
hundred
thousand
dollars
for
sheep
wall
installed
and
paid
for
by
northwestern
university
between
the
clearwell
and
the
dorm
to
the
west,
northwestern
also
paid
for
temporarily
widening
north
campus
drive
during
construction
city
costs
for
the
project
were
primarily
funded
by
a
20.6
million
dollar
loan
from
the
illinois
environmental
protection
agency.
AI
AI
Primary
components
of
the
project
include
the
5
million
gallon
clear.
Well,
a
new
400
horsepower
pump
designed
to
deliver
10
million
gallons
of
water
per
day.
Construction
was
managed
to
keep
changes
to
approximately
2.5
percent
of
the
contract
amount.
The
clearwell
and
pump
are
now
in
service.
Construction
is
nearly
incomplete
and
only
punch
list
items
are
remaining
under
the
city's
contract.
Final
restoration
will
be
completed
by
northwestern
in
the
spring.
AI
The
nuclear
well
provides
a
number
of
improvements
over
the
previous
one,
not
to
mention
or
not,
the
least
of
which
is
the
new
structure
itself.
The
new
submersible
pump
installed
inside
of
the
clear
well
along
with
the
new
electrical
room
built
across
the
street
at
the
water
plant,
provides
improved
flexibility
and
efficiency
for
the
water
supply.
The
pump
also
provides
greater
access
to
the
water
storage,
improving
resiliency
of
the
overall
water
supply
system.
AI
The
clearwell
was
also
designed
to
improve
water
quality
by
creating
a
more
defined
flow
path
through
the
water
out
for
the
water
through
the
reservoir.
The
new
green
space
on
top
of
the
reservoir,
will
increase
the
life
of
the
structure
and
better
protect
our
drinking
water.
Additionally,
the
rainfall
will
filter
through
the
landscaping,
attenuating
stormwater
flows
and
improving
runoff
water
quality.
AI
During
construction,
there
were
800,
concrete
truck
deliveries
arriving
on
site
every
six
minutes.
During
our
five
major
pours,
we
had
over
200
dump
truck
deliveries,
bringing
soil
just
to
cover
the
top
of
the
clearwell
there's
975
tons
of
reinforcement,
steel
embedded
into
the
structure.
There
were
98
weekly
meetings,
451
technical
submittals,
47
and
47
items
documented
in
my
construction
change
log.
So
with
that
I'd
be
happy
to
answer
any
questions
or
provide
more
information
later
on.
Thank
you.
D
Thank
you.
Thank
you
paul.
Could
you
take
the
so
I
can
see
the
whole
screen
of
everybody.
If
you
could
take
the
presentation
down.
M
D
About
that,
no
no
perf,
perfect
first
off,
let
me
just
say
paul.
The
regular
person
and
around
town
doesn't
necessarily
know
what
goes
into
you
know:
a
water,
a
bunch
of
infrastructure
around
evanston,
whether
it's
water
utilities
or
others,
as
you
mentioned
at
the
outset.
This
is
a
nine-year
effort
to
do
this
project.
I
just
want
to.
We
go
on
behalf
of
everybody
in
evanston.
D
You
know,
there's
nothing
more
important
than
having
you
know:
clean,
safe,
healthy
water,
every
single
day
whenever
we
want
it
it's
there,
and
I
just
want
to
thank
you
and
the
entire
team
and
dave
stoneback
and
daryl
king
and
everyone
for
this.
Because
again
it's
something
that's
underground.
We
don't
necessarily
all
see
it,
but
we
use
it
every
single
day.
So
so
thank
you
for
everything.
D
You've
done
to
oversee
this
project
successfully,
and
it's
incredible
I
mean
doing
it
all
with
you
know:
change
orders
less
than
two
and
a
half
percent
for
a
20
million
dollar
project.
Well
done.
AI
D
Done
ultimate.
AC
Bracelet,
just
a
quick,
I'm
I'm
looking
for
director
stone
beck
because
he
was
straight
in
front
of
my
screen
there
and
I
don't
think
I've.
Never
I've
ever
seen
more
prouder
smile
and
I
don't
know
dave
if
you
wanted
just
to
say
a
few
words.
It's
not
common,
but
I
haven't
seen
that
kind
of
look
on
your
face
in
quite
some
time.
AH
Well,
this
is
a
a
major
project
to
get
completed
and
it
has
been
something
we've
been
working
on
for
a
very
long
time
and
it
really
does
improve
the
efficiency
of
the
water
plant
just
regulating
the
flow
through
the
reservoir
rather
than
just
having
it
come
in
and
go
out
as
it
pleases,
plus
having
the
pump
in
that.
AH
So
we
had
five
million
gallons
of
storage,
but
with
the
old
reservoir
we
could
really
only
drain
it
down
and
leave
about
a
million
gallons
of
water
in
the
tank
we
couldn't
that
we
just
couldn't
get
through
so
putting
the
the
pump
in
the
reservoir
allows
us
to
use
that
full
5
million
gallons.
If
we
ever
really
need
to
get
to
that.
So
it's
a
great
project.
AF
Yeah
paul
is
the
pump
the
long.
The
long
tube
on
the
floor
is
that
the.
AI
That
long
tube
on
the
floor
is
one
of
the
outlet
pipes
where
the
water
exits
through.
Unfortunately,
I
didn't
have
room
to
put
a
picture
of
the
pump
on,
but
the
pump
is
about
the
size
or
bigger
than
a
person
lowered
through
the
roof
of
the
pump
or
through
the
roof
of
the
reservoir
down
to
the
bottom
of
the
floor.
AI
D
I'd
also
like
to
acknowledge
and
thank
northwestern
who
was
certainly
a
partner,
and
we
have
the
easements
on
their
property
and
everything
for
being
a
good
partner
on
this
project
as
well.
AH
To
support
or
thank
all
the
aldermen
and
for
their
support
in
allowing
this
project
to
move
forward,
I
I
know
there
were
some
residents
in
the
city
that
thought
this
was
a
waste
of
money
and
could
have
done
it
cheaper,
but
in
the
long
run
it's
definitely
my
opinion.
This
was
the
way
to
go
and
will
really
benefit
the
residents
of
evanston
for
a
long
time.
D
Thank
you
dave
along
along
those
lines.
You
know,
I
would
say
that
the
decisions
that
our
city
staff
have
made
you
know
going
back
generations
have
been
good.
You
know
often
times
you
know,
I'm
sure
there's
been
plenty
of
bad
ones,
but
you
know
on
some
of
these
big
infrastructure
kind
of
projects,
they've
been
good
decisions
and
you
know
in
the
midst
of
a
pandemic.
D
I
am
so
thankful
that
this
city
has
invested
for
a
long
long
time
in
a
public
health
department,
because
it's
making
a
big
difference
and
while
it's
underground,
I'm
thankful
that
we've
made
the
investment
into
this
facility
at
the
water
plant
alderman
wayne.
F
Yes,
I
I
do
want
to
say
thank
you
as
well.
I
think
our
public
works.
Our
infrastructure
is,
as
the
mayor
just
said,
is
one
of
those
silent,
unseen
aspects
of
our
city.
That
is,
ensures
our
quality
of
life
and
dave
and
paul,
and
also
laura
biggs.
I
want
to
make
sure
we
you
you
get
acknowledged,
because
this
is
one
of
those
things
that
without
it,
our
lives
would
be
very
different
and
with
it
we
barely
know
it's
there
and
that's
the
best
kind
of
infrastructure.
D
You're,
here
all
right,
so
seeing
no
more
questions
or
comments,
we
had
a
motion
to
accept
and
place
this
on
file
that
was
seconded
clerk
reed.
Could
you
please
take
the
role
on
sb1.
AE
L
AF
D
AG
Yes,
sp2:
our
staff
is
requesting
directions
on
the
led
service
line
replacement
plan
to
be
used
in
conjunction
with
the
2021
water
main
replacement
project.
This
is
for
discussion.
I
move
approval.
D
All
right,
so
this
has
now
been
moved
for
discussion.
I'm
going
to
turn
this
over
to
the
city
manager
storyli
to
begin
this
discussion.
J
Thank
you,
mr
mayor.
There's
a
lot
of
discussion
happening
throughout
the
country
about
lead
water
service
lines,
and
this
is
something
that
we've
been
talking
about
internally
as
a
staff
for
many
years.
There's
some
pending
legislation,
that's
come
about.
Nothing
has
passed
yet,
but
we
felt
it
important
to
bring
this
to
the
council
for
discussion
so
that
we
can
talk
about
what
a
plan
might
look
like
here
in
evanston.
AH
AH
So
the
events
that
occurred
in
flint
in
2014
really
brought
the
attention
of
lead
services
to
the
public
eye,
and,
just
in
december
this
past
year,
the
environmental
protection
agency
passed
a
new
leading
copper
rule
that
will
go
into
effect
in
2024..
AH
Lead
service
lines
are
inherently
not
good,
because
any
quantity
of
lead
could
lead
to
health
effects.
Evanson
actually
creates
lead,
partial
lead
service
lines
when
we
do
the
water
main
work,
and
so
one
of
the
options
would
be
is
to
stop
doing
water
main
work.
But
that's
not
what
staff
is
recommending
because,
as
the
next
slide
will
indicate,
we
have
an
issue
with
the
age
of
our
water
mains.
X
AG
AH
AH
So,
as
this
diagram
indicates,
over
55
percent
of
the
water
main
in
evanston
is
over
80
years
old.
AH
In
2010,
we
brought
a
similar
map
to
the
city
council,
recommending
that
we
replace
the
mile
and
a
half
water
main
a
year,
because
at
that
time,
over
59
of
the
water
main
was
over
80
years
old.
So
we
have
made
some
headway
on
this,
but
not
enough.
So
staff
recommends
that
we
continue
to
do
the
replacement
of
water
main
on
an
annual
basis,
replacing
one
percent
of
the
water
main
for
one
and
a
half
miles.
AH
The
next
slide
shows
how
we
wind
up.
Creating
these
partial
lead
service
lines,
and
that
is
because
the
city
is
responsible
for
the
water
service
line
from
the
water
main
to
the
shut
off
valve.
That's
in
the
parkway,
so
as
we
replace
the
water
main,
the
city
also
replaces
that
portion
of
the
water
service
up
to
the
shut
off
valve,
and
then
we
reconnect
to
the
existing
lead
service
line.
That
is
the
homeowner's
responsibility.
AH
So
the
dark
blue
is
the
homeowner's
responsibility.
Light
blue
is
the
city's
responsibility
and
we
replace
the
the
light.
Blue
portion
is
when
we
do
the
water
main
work.
This
diagram
is
also
good
for
another
issue.
AH
As
recent
data
indicates
that
when
you
make
these
partial
led
service
lines
because
you
disrupted
the
coating,
that's
on
the
inside
of
the
pipelines
that
we
had
as
part
of
the
water
treatment
you
potentially
can
cause
high
spikes
and
lead
levels,
and
so
that's
something
that
we
want
to
try
to
avoid
and
in
fact,
by
the
recently
adopted,
lead
and
copper
rule.
They'll
prohibit
partial
lead
service
lines
as
soon
as
2024.
AH
Recognizing
that
the
city
passed
an
ordinance
in
2017
and
if
you
could
go
to
the
next
light
ball.
AH
That
program
implies
a
50
application
fee.
It's
an
interest-free
loan.
We
lent
out
a
maximum
of
four
thousand
eight
hundred
dollars
to
any
one
property
owner,
and
then
the
property
owner
repaid
the
loan
as
a
hundred
dollars
a
month
over
four
years
on
a
utility
bill.
So
it
shows
up
on
because
the
utilities
bill
goes
out
every
two
months.
It
showed
up
as
a
200
fee
during
the
course
of
the
since
2018
through
2020.
AH
We
replaced
301
services
as
far
as
the
water
main
project,
but
only
21
properties
took
advantage
of
the
loan
indicating
that
we're
only
getting
about
seven
percent
participation
in
the
current
loan
program,
and
the
next
slide
indicates
the
water
mains
that
are
proposed
to
be
replaced
in
2021.
AH
Next
slide,
please
paul,
as
you
can
see,
the
water
mains
are
at
several
different
locations
throughout
town
and
and
knowing
that,
in
the
future,
the
leading,
copper
rule
will
not
allow
us
to
create
partial-led
services,
we're
direct
we're
seeking
direction
from
the
city
councils.
If
that
is
something
that
they
would
like
to
begin
implementing
in
2021
with
this
water
main
project,
there's
no
funding
to
specifically
allocate
that
would
help
improve
the
loan
program.
AH
So
staff
is
thinking
that
maybe
one
of
these
lines
of
water
means
that
we're
proposing
to
replace
this
year
would
be
deferred
to
a
later
year,
and
we
could
take
the
funding
that
was
allocated
for
that
water
main
installation
and
apply
it
towards
a
more
improved
loan
program
or
some
other
economic
means
of
trying
to
incentivize
property
owners
to
replace
their
portion
of
the
lead
service
line.
Could
you
go
to
the
next
slide?
AH
Please
call
so
maybe
in
the
future,
given
enough
time,
we
could
have
the
replacement
of
the
full
lead
service
line
as
part
of
the
water
main
project,
meaning
that
the
homeowners
would
have
to
allow
us
to
go
into
their
house
homes
to
replace
the
lead
service
line
for
2021.
We're
too
far
into
the
design,
and
we've
already
submitted
the
drawings
to
the
iepa
for
approval
that
it's
not
feasible
to
add
that
work
to
the
construction
project
in
2021.
AH
Instead,
it
will
be
a
burden
for
the
homeowner
to
try
to
do
this
work,
but
we
think
that
if
we
increase
the
incentive
for
them
to
do
that,
that
we
could
get
better
participation
and
we
had
staff
has
come
up
with
three
suggestions
as
to
how
we
might
be
able
to
do
that.
That's
indicated
on
this
slide
and
we'll
talk
about
them
as
we
move
forward
on
other
slides.
AH
The
first
one
is
to
just
modify
the
existing
interest-free
loan
program
that
we
have.
We
currently
limit
it
at
4
800,
although
the
average
cost
replacing
the
water
service
line,
is
six
thousand
dollars
and
based
on
the
21
projects
that
we
did
earlier.
AH
The
price
can
range
from
four
thousand
one
hundred
fifty
dollars
all
the
way
to
eight
thousand
six
hundred
dollars,
so
we
could
increase
the
loan
amount
to
the
full
plumbing
cost,
and
then
I
would
suggest
that
we
also
increase
the
term
of
repayment
so
that
the
repayment
schedule
is
continues
to
be
two
hundred
dollars
on
every
water
bill.
But
if
you
borrow
more
than
forty
eight
hundred
dollars,
it
would
take
longer
than
four
years
to
repay
it.
AH
Another
suggestion
is
to
define
several
different
economic
levels
and
then
we
could
use
a
combination
of
grants
or
loans
based
on
the
property
owner's
ability
to
afford
the
replacement
of
the
private
portion
of
the
water
service
line,
and
the
third
suggestion
is
to
use
census
data
census,
block
data
determined
if
grant
funding
should
be
utilized,
specifically
in
the
low
to
moderate
neighborhood,
where
incomes
do
not
exceed
80
percent
of
the
area
median
income.
AH
So
we
already
talked
about
first
suggestions
modifying
the
current
loan
program.
The
next
slide
indicates
what
the
average
median
income
is
based
on
the
number
of
people
in
the
family
and
then
what
that
percentage
of
the
area
medium
income
is
right.
Now
the
to
qualify
for
the
cpbg
housing
rehab
rehab
program
you
have
to
be
at
or
under
the
80
ami
and
then
for
the
cbvg
housing
rehab
program.
AH
So
the
aldermen
could
give
recommendations
that
if
they
wanted
to
provide
grants
for
property
owners
under
a
certain
level
of
the
mi
would
have
to
be
the
80
percent.
It
could
be
anything
that
children
think
is
appropriate.
You
might
want
to
establish
another
level
to
to
say
if
you're,
under
a
certain
level,
you're
economically.
AH
So
there's
lots
of
different
options
that
could
be
pursued
there
and
if
you
go
to
the
next
slide,
please
this
map
overlays
the
cvbg
areas
where
the
average
home
is
at
or
below
the
80
ami,
and
maybe
we
just
want
to
say
for
areas
where
we
place
water
main
within
these
areas
that
a
grant
is
provided.
AH
So
those
are
the
different
options
that
we
have.
There
is
one
more
slide
to
talk
about
future
considerations,
we'll
go
there
and
then
we
can
open
up
questions.
So
we
hope
that
by
2024
that
we'll
have
the
full
led
service
line,
replacement
included
as
part
of
the
annual
water
main
project,
we'll
also
have
to
deal
with
the
existing
partial-led
service
lines
that
exist.
There's
over
4
300
of
those.
AH
In
accordance
with
the
leading
copper
rule,
the
city
is
going
to
have
to
come
up
with
a
written
plan
for
lead
service
line
replacement,
and
then
I
think
it
will
be
important
to
monitor.
What's
going
on
that
state
legislation,
the
the
state
was
looking
at
passing
several
bills,
which
are
actually
more
stringent
than
the
lead
and
cockpit
rule.
AH
So
I
think
that
we'll
need
to
educate
our
state
legislators
and
make
sure
that
they're
aware
of
the
impact
that
this
will
have
on
us
and
then
we'll
have
to
talk
about
funding
about
how
we're
going
to
pay
for
doing
this
additional
work
that
we
currently
don't
plan
on
spending
funds
for
on
the
private
side
of
these
led
service
lines.
AH
D
Hey
dave,
I
see
lots
of
hands
up
just
a
fundamental
basic
question
just
for
those
that
are
watching.
Can
you
just
talk
about
whether
there
is
a
health
hazard
right
now
to
people
and
most
of
us
have
lead
service
lines
leading
up
to
our
homes?
D
AH
No,
it's
not
a
danger
at
this
time
in
1992
is
when
the
first
lady
copper
rule
came
out
and
evans,
and
I
do
sampling
and
our
samples
were
above
limit
in
which
then
evanston
had
it
come
up
with
a
corrosion
and
even
control
program
which
we
started
in
1992
and
since
that
time
the
lead
levels
in
evanston
have
always
been
below
the
action
level.
15
parts
per
billion
generally
we're
in
the
range
of
like
seven
to
ten
parts
per
billion.
AH
The
new
leading
copper
rule
has
more
stringent
testing
and
different
type
of
testing
that
right
now
you
have
to
take
your
first
draw
after
overnight
letting
the
water
sit.
Now
it
will
be
like
the
fifth
liter
bottle,
which
is
where
the
lead
content
is
even
higher,
but
even
based
on
that,
based
on
our
current
sampling.
AH
D
E
Thank
you
and
thank
you
very
much
for
this
information
and
for
you
know,
giving
us
an
update
on
where
we're
at
with
this.
Obviously,
the
intention
in
2017,
when
we
passed
this
before,
was
to
try
to
get
this
infrastructure
out
of
the
ground
and
and
get
people's
you
know,
homes
updated
and
upgraded.
E
You
know,
certainly
if
we
can
utilize
cdbg
grants
or
grant
funding
for
a
certain
income
levels,
but
then
you
know
if
we
can
just
apply
the
menu
of
options.
Forgivable
loans,
like
you,
said,
with
those
improvement
loans,
maybe
bringing
the
ex
the
payment
plans
out
on
a
longer
period.
Possibly
if
we
set
some
eligibility
guidelines,
maybe
make
a
portion
of
that
payable
on
sale
of
the
home
things
of
that
nature.
Just
because
these
can
be.
You
know,
big
ticket
items
for
people
that
might
not
have
that
available.
E
Now.
That
said-
and
I
recognize
what
I'm
about
to
say,
isn't
something
we
can
do
this
year,
but
I
would
like
to
kind
of
put
this
on
the
table
for
some
further
discussion
for
next
year
elder
and
rainy-
and
I
actually
were
talking
about
this
over
the
weekend-
and
I
think
maybe
some
others
have
brought
this
up
when
people
have
problems
with
these
tie-ins
to
the
sewers,
it's
kind
of
the
same
kind
of
cost
problem
except
it's.
E
You
know,
typically,
even
more
than
that,
I'm
seeing
numbers
that
are,
you
know
easily
over
fifteen
thousand
approaching
twenty
20
plus
thousand
dollars
to
get
that
sewer
work
done
to
get
those
tie-ins
repaired
when
they
fail
and
I'd
like
to
look
at.
You
know
wrapping
this
model
into
a
way
to
help
people
finance
those
who
have
that
come
up
because
it's
just
it's
a
it's
a
huge
hit.
It's
it's
hard
for
a
lot
of
people
in
the
community
to
manage
that.
So
you
know
going
forward.
AH
I
agree
wholeheartedly.
I
think
that
if
the
city
council
can
come
up
with
a
standard
for
what's
economically
distressed
and
economically
disadvantaged,
and
then
we
can
set
up
funding
for
funding
for
that
setting
up
the
funding,
I
think
will
be
the
biggest
challenge
and
you
know
there's
not
money
now,
so
it
might
mean
rate
increases
and
I
wouldn't
want
to
suggest
any
rate
increases.
AH
Quite
at
this
time,
one
of
the
things
that
the
staff
has
been
working
on,
daryl,
king
and
and
others
at
the
water
plant
is
to
try
to
find
an
affordable
water
sewer
rate
and
actually
a
while
ago,
we
brought
a
suggestion
to
the
city
council,
which
was
rightfully
turned
down,
because
we
didn't
think
it
through
and
then
put
too
much
burden
on
condos
and
large
departments,
because
they
only
have
one
meter.
AH
But
since
that
time
we've
been
working
with
cmap
metropolitan
planning
and
elevate
energy
to
to
come
up
using
their
resources
to
try
to
find
out
what
is
an
affordable
water
rate.
We
have
a
meeting
scheduled
for
later
this
month.
I
think
the
19th
which
we're
hoping
to
get
some
final
results
on
on
their
recommendation
on
what
an
affordable
rate
would
be
based
on
that.
AF
Yeah
thanks
dave,
so
I've
got
a
couple
of
questions
in
the
older
part
of
town.
We've
had
some
interesting
problems
with
various
sewer
and
water
lines
running
under
people's
garages
and
and
just
you
know,
increased
costs
of
even
trying
to
find
where
some
of
these
lines
go.
How
so
I
think
the
4
800
sounds
low
and
how
do
we
help
homeowners
figure
out
what
an
estimate
to
replace
their
part
of
the
line
would
cost?
AF
Is
there
have
we
done
any
sort
of
historical
surveys
of
where
some
of
these
water
lines
run
and
then
a
question
too?
Is
that
do
you
know
approximately
what
year
builders
stopped
using
of
lead
pipes
and
went
to
copper,
or
I
would
guess
that
would
be
fairly
recent,
maybe
1950s
forward?
Or
do
you
have
any
idea
when,
when
that
might.
AH
Be
unfortunately,
lead
piping
was
still
used
until
the
1980s
wow,
so
it
wasn't
until
1980
that
they
more
or
less
prohibited
lead
piping
in
evanston
it
continued
to
be
used
in
chicago
even
much
longer.
AH
So,
but
yes,
we
have
the
rare
occasions
where
water
services
just
don't
go
straight
out
to
the
street,
but
the
vast
majority
of
them
do
go
out
to
the
street
and
it's
similar
to
what
the
sewer
lines
and
one
of
the
first
recommendations
I
would
give
to
anybody
when
they're
purchasing
a
home
is
to
make
sure
you
have
the
sewer
service
line
tv
inspected
for
damage.
But
it
also
will
give
you
a
sense
of
where
your
sewer
line
runs
because
they
they'll
they'll
trace
it
out.
AH
So
if
it
doesn't
go
straight
out
to
the
street,
you
know
it
might
go
to
the
street
and
take
a
bend
and
run
down
the
parkway
for
a
couple
hundred
feet
and
chances
are
your
water
service
does
as
well,
because
a
lot
of
homes
were
built
before
the
roads
were
developed,
or
you
know
the
father
owned
a
big
plot
and
built
a
house
for
their
child
and
ran
the
water
and
sewer
service
through
their
property,
which
then
they
sold
off
and
now
it's
you
know
the
water
and
service
lines
on
somebody
else's
property.
AF
Yeah,
it's
not
it's
not
a
good
surprise.
When
that
happens,
no,
it's
not
it's
inexpensive.
So
can
you
tell
me
when
so,
when
you
replace
a
lead
line,
is
it
is
it
copper
that
you
replace
it
with?
Is
that
the
recommended?
What
what
is
the
lid
and
copper
of
law
or
whatever,
what
you're,
referring
to
what?
What
part
does
copper
play
in
that?
Is
there
a
danger
with
copper.
AH
There
could
be
a
danger
with
copper
if
it
exceeded
the
level
again,
it's
still
a
heavy
metal,
but
it
copper
doesn't
leach
out
into
the
water
as
readily
as
the
lead
does.
So
it's
not
as
big
as
concern,
but
there
is
no
other
known
product
to
be
used.
So
copper
is
the
material
that
is
being
used
to
replace
water
services
with.
AF
Okay
and
then
my
final,
the
final
part
of
my
question
is
so
the
recommendation
would
be
for
a
homeowner
before
they
enter
into.
I
don't
know,
decide
whether
or
not
they
want
to
do.
This
is
to
do
some.
Some
line.
Camera
investigation
is
that
what.
AH
AH
We
know
where
all
those
are
where
evanson
doesn't
own
any
portion
of
sewer
service
and
not
generally,
they
were
placed
in
the
same
trench,
but
not
in
all
cases.
So
a
lot
of
times
we're
not
even
sure
where
the
sewer
service
is
located,
if
it's
not
right
in
the
same
trench
with
the
water
service,
but
the
water
department
has
this
information
residents
are
more
than
willing
to
call
us
and
check
it
out.
We
actually
have
an
interactive
map
on
our
website
that
you
go
to
you.
AH
AH
That
might
be
copper
because
we
replace
the
water
main,
but
then
we
also
say
that
from
the
parkway
into
your
home
would
be
led.
If,
if
that's
the
case
so.
H
AJ
D
AK
AH
I
I
think,
at
this
point
in
time,
staff
would
recommend
that
ewing,
the
water
main
on
ewing,
be
the
one
that
gets
deferred
a
year
because
it
has
the
three
breaks
compared
to
two
of
those
streets
have
five
breaks.
Another
one
has
four
and
then
there's
two
more
that
have
three
or
two
or
three.
I
guess
and
garrison
were
kind
of.
We
already
city
council
approved
an
mou
to
replace
the
water
main
up
there
and
resurface
the
street
in
conjunction
with
wilmette.
AH
So
ewing
is
the
the
street
that
we
right
now
staff
is
looking
at
and
then
it
has
370
000
allocated
from
the
water
fund
to
put
in
the
new
water
main,
and
then
that
would
be
the
money
along
with
our
existing
funds
that
we
have
in
the
water
fund
for
the
loan
program
that
we
would
use
to.
If
we
got
more
residents
interested
in
taking
us
up
on
the
loan
or
grants,
then
that
would
be
our
money
source
for
this
year.
AH
AK
You
know
we
saw
with-
and
I
know,
sewer
side
but
with
francine
allen
when
she
came
with
her
situation
with
her
connection
being
under
elgin
road.
These
could
be
really
substantial
costs
that
are
people
aren't
expecting
and
then
with,
particularly
when
it's
you're
trying
to
coordinate
it
with
the
replacement
of
your
service
line
and
the
water
main.
It
happens
at
a
time
where
you
may
not
have
plan
for
it
as
a
homeowner,
and
so
anything
we
can
do
to
make
the
actual
the
loan
program
match
up
with
the
potential
actual
cost
would
be
great.
AK
So
I
appreciate
the
work
that
you
guys
have
done
on
it
and
if
you
have,
if
you
know
any
state
legislators
to
talk
to
you
about
this,
I
think
that
that
would
be
a
good
opportunity.
Thanks.
A
lot
dave
sure.
AH
So
what
I'll
propose
then,
are
some
modifications
to
the
city
code
modifying
what
our
current
loan
amount
is.
I
guess
we'll
make
recommendations
about
economically
disadvantaged
and
economically
distressed
and
talk
about
where
we
might
apply
grants
who
would
qualify
for
grants
and
then
who
would
qualify
for
the
loans
and
then
we'll
bring
back
that
back
to
the
city
council
in
the
very
near
future.
AH
So
we
can
try
to
get
this
funding
worked
out
for
the
2021
water
main
project,
I'm
gonna,
say
about
six
months
down
we'll
probably
come
back
to
city
council
and
try
to
talk
about
what
our
plan
would
be
for
ongoing
years,
and
definitely
we
have
to
have
a
plan
by
2024.
So
I'd
rather
get
that
established
as
soon
as
possible
and
start
working
in
the
right
direction
for
residents
of
edmonton
as
soon
as
possible.
D
All
right,
thank
you,
thank
you
dave
and
if
you
can
also
give
us
a
sense
when
you
come
back
to
what
the
funding
sources
may
be
or
how
we'd
have
to
look
at
that
for
for
grants
that
we
may
give
to
help
lower
income
families
right.
AH
So
for
2021
it
would
be
from
the
water
fund
and
we'll
defer
the
construction
of
a
water
main
this
particular
year
in
future
years.
I
believe
it
will
have
to
be
some
kind
of
water
sewer
rate
increase,
but
again
until
we
have
decided
what
an
affordable
rate
is
and
then
find
out
what
the
overall
cost
would
be
that
that
all
plays
into
the
right
structure,
then
okay,.
D
Thank
you
all
right,
so
that
was
just
for
discussion,
so
we
don't
have
to
vote
on
that.
Thank
you
erica
for
bringing
that
forward.
We're
now
going
to
move
to
the
consent
agenda.
I
know
there
was
an
apw
meeting
tonight.
I
know
there's
not
much
on
the
on
the
pnd
just
two
items
for
action.
So
if
council
members
could
just
take
a
minute
look
at
the
agenda
and
let
me
know
what
you'd
like
us
to
pull
off
the
agenda
tonight,
that
would
be
helpful.
E
D
C
E
So
I'm
moving,
we
suspend
the
rules
as
to
a13
to
allow
for
introduction
in
action.
At
the
same
meeting
on
february
8th
today,.
D
Is
that
the
only
is
that
the
only
item
that
had
a
I
thought
so
yeah.
D
Of
alderman,
it's
way
I'll
embrace.
D
Okay,
all
right.
AD
AB
Looking
for
the
west
end,
tiff,
that's
e1!
Thank
you.
AB
D
AA
AH
AK
D
F
D
AJ
Sure
remove
the
consent,
agenda
item
a1,
approval
of
the
city
of
edison,
payroll,
business
and
credit
card
activity.
Staff
recommends
because
approval
city
governments
in
payroll
for
the
period
of
january
4th
2020
through
january
17
2021
in
the
amount
of
three
million
ten
thousand
one
hundred
seventy
five
dollars
and
two
cents
bill's
list
for
february
2021,
physically
here
quantity
21,
I
think,
there's
a
typo
there.
AJ
Yes,
is
that
correct
yeah
in
the
amount
of
two
million
nine
hundred
fifty
eight
thousand
four
hundred
two
dollars
and
twenty
one
cents
in
february,
2021
physically
here
2021
in
the
amount
of
1
million
875
thousand
seven
hundred
and
twelve
dollars
and
thirty
four
cents.
In
your
credit
productivity
for
the
period
ending
december
26
2020
in
the
amount
of
158
300
1.95
is
for
action
item
a2.
D
Hey
hey
tom
hi
tom,
because
you
guys
had
a
p
and
w
this
morning
you
could.
You
could
just
move
the
whole
consent
agenda
last.
You
know
a2
a4,
p2
and
e1.
All.
AJ
Right,
you
have
to
do
that
too.
I
moved
the
entire
consent
agenda.
Mine
is
a2,
a4,
p2
and
e1
just
for
a.
D
W
D
All
right,
city
clerk,
could
you
please
take
the
role
of
consent,
agenda.
F
D
L
AJ
A4
is
approval
of
a
contract
renewal
award
with
kingsley
chicago
nlc
for
park,
promoting
services
staff
recommended
city
council,
authorize
the
city
manager
to
execute
a
contract
for
google
award
to
clean
slate
chicago
lcc
for
the
2021
park
community
services,
with
the
amount
of
26,
180
and
28
cents.
Funding
for
this
project
is
included
in
the
general
fund.
Public
works
greenways
account,
which
is,
has
a
total
allocation,
162
thousand
dollars
and
no
expenditures.
Yes,.
AK
AC
AC
Awards
like
this,
where
we
definitely
have
the
capacity
within
our
town
for
someone
to
provide
this
service
in
between
the
meetings,
I
did
have
an
opportunity
to
look
up
green
slate
chicago,
and
they
just
so
happens
to
be
one
of
those
business
with
a
very
special
mission
statement,
and-
and
so
in
this
case
you
know,
I'm
going
to
reconsider
holding
it,
but
I
do
think
it's
important
as
we
move
forward-
and
I
say
this
to
our
city
manager
and
staff
flight.
AC
We
have
landscapers
in
town
and
I
only
saw
one
evanston
business
representative
and
if
it's
like
pulling
teeth,
I
want
to
just
make
sure
that
we're
giving
our
businesses,
particularly
those
that
pay
taxes
in
town
and
some
of
us,
even
in
some
of
the
businesses,
the
residents
live
in
town,
an
opportunity
to
to
get
the
award.
So
this
this
particular
business,
they
they
hire
ex-felons.
So
I
think
that
that
isn't
a
very
important
mission
statement
doesn't
matter
where
you
come
from,
but
I
will
be
paying
attention
as
we
move
forward.
D
N
F
P2
p2
ordinance
5021
granting
a
special
use
permit
for
a
planned
development
located
at
718
through
732
main
street
in
the
b2
business
district
and
the
overlay,
a
dempster
main
overlay
district.
The
planned
commission
and
staff
recon
recommend
adoption
of
this
ordinance
approving
a
special
use
for
planned
development
in
the
b2
business
business
district
to
construct
a
five-story
mixed-use
building
with
commercial
real
estate
space
120
dwelling
units
47
parking
spaces.
AG
E
Thank
you
thanks
everybody.
I
wanted
to
take
this
off
the
agenda
because
a
few
you
know
concerns
and
questions
came
up
over
the
past
the
past
couple
of
weeks
as
well,
as
I
think,
we've
negotiated
an
additional
benefit
for
the
neighborhood
thanks
to
some
of
the
input
from
some
of
the
neighbors.
I
want
to
verify,
mr
that
mr
denson's
with
us
here,
the
developer,
just
it
was.
E
So
he's
here-
okay,
just
so,
I
know
that
he's
heard
what
I'm
saying,
but
I'm
going
to
run
through
a
few
things
here
to
make
sure
that
we're
all
on
the
same
page.
One
thing
that
came
up
in
some
conversations
that
I
do
want
to
point
out
that
the
building
is
going
to
be
ada
compliant.
Of
course
it
has
to
be
illegally,
but
some
people
have
raised
some
concerns
about
that.
E
There
was
some
conversation
from
the
staff
about,
maybe
some
other
things
or
amenities
in
the
building,
but
it
will
be,
it
will
be
fully
ada
compliant.
Snow
removal
is
of
concern
to
the
neighbors.
I
know
that
the
developer
had
looked
into
the
possibility
of
retaining
somebody
to
remove
more
than
just
the
snow
on
their
property,
but
was
not
able
to
identify
a
contractor
willing
to
work
on
other
people's
property.
So
what
I
do
just
want
to
point
out
is
that
snow
removal
has
been
kind
of
an
ongoing
problem
for
the
neighbors.
E
It's
a
a
significant
concern
so
just
to
make
sure
that
you're
whoever's
on
site
for
the
property
after
it's
completed
makes
certain
that
the
snow's
removed
in
an
appropriate
way.
It's
not
pushed
up
against
garage
doors.
All
that
kind
of
stuff
I
just
want
to.
You
know
make
sure
that
I'm
totally
clear
on
that
the
it's
the
the
town
homes
to
the
to
the
southwest.
We
all
understand
that
there
is
fencing.
The
fences
are
gonna,
be
replaced
with
the
gates.
E
The
I
just
wanna
make
sure
that
there's
a
clear
understanding
that
you
will
work
with
them.
You're
not
just
going
to
have
the
contractor
coming
to
put
a
fence,
you'll
work
with
them
to
make
sure
the
gate,
placement
and
the
fence
placement
is
appropriate,
for
you
know,
for
the
you
know,
remove
you
know,
moving
the
trash
carts
out
to
where
they
need
to
go
so
you'll
just
work
with
them.
On
the
you
know,
exact
installation
on
that
fencing
and
the
gates
correct.
E
Yes,
we
yeah
yeah.
Thank
you,
the
is
it
also
correct
that
you're
willing
to
do
a
thousand
dollars
a
year
for
10
years
for
tree
tree
work
and
tree
maintenance
or
replacement
over
the
next
10
years.
Is
that
do
I
understand
that
right
or
was
it
five
five?
I
I
I
had
a
note
here.
E
AH
Was
we
had
agreed
to
five
years.
D
E
E
Let's
see
purchase
of
five
years
trees,
all
right
so
just
tell
me
how
much
money
is
it
going
to
be?
I've
got
like
a
bunch
of
notes
here
and
it's
turned
into
a
bunch
of
scripts.
So.
B
We
were
willing
to
do
an
additional
public
benefit
because
it's
in
the
neighborhood
of.
E
Okay,
okay,
so
I'll
make
a
motion
at
the
end
of
the
conversation
to
add
that
into
the
what
we're
agreeing
to
here,
and
so
with
regards
to
the
dog
run.
I
know
that
I,
after
the
feedback,
after
some
feedback
from
some
neighbors,
that.
E
That
you
put
that
in
you
know
I
just
kind
of
want
to
be
clear
to
the
neighbors.
This
isn't
for
people
to
walk
their
dogs.
People
are
still
gonna
walk
their
dogs,
but
I
think
sort
of
the
idea
here
is
it's
for
that.
You
know
quick
run
outside,
so
that
people
aren't
just
doing
the
quick
run
outside
to
the
you
know
to
the
house
right
next
door.
You
know,
you
know
all
the
dogs,
you
know
peeing
in
the
same
spot
every
night,
so
it's
more
to
kind
of
cover.
E
You
know
that
sort
of
need
not
replacing
the
walks
and
so
we're
clear
on
that
right.
E
E
When
you
put
the
fencing
in
around
the
dog,
the
dog
area,
if
you
can
just
kind
of
you
know,
be
in
touch
with
the
neighbors
behind
the
other
garages
to
ensure
that
that's
not
going
to
obstruct
you
know
getting
in
and
out
of
those
garages
or
your
own
or
their
snow
removal.
So
you
know
I
understand
that
has
to
be
fenced
in
some
way.
So
just
you
know
again,
you
know
reach
out
to
them.
Work
with
them,
ensure
that
that
effort
wasn't
wasn't
a
problem
and
I'm
just
gonna.
E
All
right,
sorry,
everybody,
okay!
So
what
I'd
like
to
do
is
make
a
motion
to
add
that
the
developer
will
pay
a
thousand
dollars
a
year
for
the
next
five
years
to
help
pay
for
tree
replacements
during
tree
work
within
a
0.25
mile
radius.
F
C
Yes,
all
we're
going
to
reveal
aye
alderman
ray
hi,
alderman
fleming
hi
alderman
fisk,
hi,
alderman,
braithwaite,
hi,
alderman
nguyen.
E
All
right,
so
I
move
that
we
proceed
as
amended.
AD
So
you
know
looked
at
the
material
and
I
think
it's
a
fine
project.
I
was
initially
some
residents
were
concerned
about
parking,
but
it
seems
like
that.
Maybe
is
at
least
for
some
residents
in
my
ward.
Some
changes
have
happened
that
they,
you
know,
understand
and
feel
better
about
that.
I
think
the
overall
concern
and
not
not
anything,
personal
paul
thanks
for
coming,
but
is
to
the
point
of
affordable
housing
right.
AD
So
I
know
you
have
over
the
10
and
I
don't
think
this
is
the
right
paper,
but
you
have
over
the
10.
However,
they
are
smaller
units
and,
as
I
you
know,
as
I
think
about
the
units
that
we've
been
putting
online
recently,
a
lot
of
them
are
smaller,
which
I
guess
is
what
developments
teams
seem
to
be
building.
Now,
is
you
know,
micro
units
or
one
bedroom
units,
but
I
really
wish
and
hope
as
a
city
we
we
do
more.
AD
For
you
know
our
families,
or
even
you
know,
single
parents
who
have
two
kids
who
need
a
you
know
two
bedroom.
So
I
do
appreciate
you
putting,
I
think,
one
two
bedroom
in
there
and
I'm
sorry
I'm
looking
at
the
wrong
paper,
but
I
just
wish
it
was
more.
So
I
think
I
had
a
principle
in
solidarity
with
the
call
that
we've
been
having
from
many
residents
for
the
four
years
that
I've
been
here
about.
D
N
C
D
All
right,
thank
you
clerk,
so,
on
an
eight
to
one
vote.
P2
passes
the
evanston
city
council,
so
congratulations,
paul
and
good
luck
with
the
project
we're
looking
forward
to
it.
Thank
you.
Everybody
appreciate
it
all
right.
We're
now
going
to
move
to
our
last
item
that
was
removed,
which
was
e1
all
the
alderwoman
rory
simmons.
Could
you
move
that
motion.
AB
E1
the
economic
development
committee
and
staff
recommend
city
council
adoption
of
resolution,
19
r21
authorizing
city
manager
to
negotiate
an.
AB
Contract
with
kane
mckenna
and
associates
incorporated
to
study
the
creation
of
a
new
tif
district
funding
will
be
from
the
west
evans
and
tiff
consulting
services.
The
fund
would
be
reimbursed
from
the
new
west
evanson
tiff
upon
generating
increment.
I
move
approval
second.
AB
Thank
you
and
I'm
hoping
that
we
have
paul
zomnizak
or
some
other
staff
here
to
speak
to
this.
But
there
were
some
comments
and
community
discussion
relating
to
this
item
and
the
tip-
and
this
is
not
the
proposal
of
a
new
development.
It
is
an
opportunity
to
create
a
financial
tool
or
expand
a
financial
tool
that
could
help
us
pursue
and
implement
the
vision
that
we
have
for
the
west
end
area.
AB
It
could
include
support
with
expanding,
affordable
housing,
other
support
for
housing
and
residents
in
the
ward
and
the
future
of
the
civic
center
seems
to
be
likely
better
serving
the
city,
not
as
our
municipal
building
and
any
increment.
There
could
help
support
the
ward.
AB
This
new
proposal
could
include
the
family,
the
family,
focus,
building
or
the
foster
school
building
and
other
areas,
including
the
business
district,
around
simpson
and
ashland,
and
these
areas
that
are,
unfortunately
outside
of
the
current
tip
boundaries
would
be
included
and
would
be
available
to
enjoy
the
tif
increment
and
help
us
realize
the
vision.
AB
So
it
is
the
opposite
of
of
what
has
been
shared
in
some
cases,
and
it
is
a
a
very
useful
tool
that
has
been
used
on
other
places
in
our
city
and
one
that
I
hope
we
can
use
here
in
the
west
end.
It
is
a
goal
over
the
last
few
years,
actually
that
we
could
get
to
this
place
of
of
re-tiffing
this
area
so
that
we
could
have
more
economic
opportunity
and
paul.
If
you
could
speak
to
oh,
I'm
sorry
out,
there
were
other
hands
from
the
council.
I'm
sorry
paul.
D
All
right,
thank
you.
We
do
have.
We
do
have
paul
lots
of
hands
up,
let's
go
with
alderman
fleming,
then
alderman
wilson.
AD
Paul
you
might
be
able
to
answer
this
question.
I
think
audrey
simmons
mentioned
it,
but
I
also
would
like
the
city
manager
to
address
it,
because
part
of
the
comments
that
I
wanted
us
to
clarify
is
the
memo
talks
about
the
you
know:
future
use
the
possible
uses
of
where
the
civic
center
is
currently
located,
and
I
know
last
year,
when
you
came
paul
with
the
estimate
on
our
property
values.
You
know
we
we
all
kind
of
made
a
commitment.
AD
We
all
made
a
commitment
that
civic
center
nothing
would
happen
without
a
lot
of
public
input.
So
I
think
maybe
some
of
the
language
in
the
memo
causes
people
to
think
that
we're
down
the
road
of
selling
the
civic
center.
Are
we
developing
it
without
public
comment?
So
if
you
or
if
it
can
just
kind
of
speak
to
to
that
issue
a
little
bit
so
people
don't
feel
like
we're.
Putting
the
cart
before
the
horse.
There.
J
Figures
that
out,
I
will
speak
to
that
issue.
So
as
it
stands
now,
the
civic
center
is
included
in
this
tif
study
area
and
we
want
to
gather
as
much
information
as
possible
so
that,
if
the
point
at
which,
if
the
point
comes
in
the
future,
where
the
city
council
wants
to
decide
what
to
do
with
the
future
of
this
property,
then
the
city
council
will
have
all
the
information
at
its
disposal
with
which
to
make
the
decision.
J
So
this
is
a
long-range
planning
tool,
as
well
as
a
tool
for
us
to
understand
what
the
value
is
and
what
could
possibly
be
leveraged
with
the
property.
So
there's
no
plan
on
the
table
right
now
to
sell
anything.
We
are
just
in
the
information
gathering
stage
so
that
when
the
time
comes
for
us
to
get
to
the
point
where
we're
going
to
start
making
some
decisions,
we
have
all
the
information
and
tools
available
to
us
with
that
I'll
see
if
paul
has
fixed
his
sound
issue.
AL
All
right,
okay,
I'm
back
mr
mayor,
welcome
paul
all
right.
Yes,
I!
This
is
the
second
time
this
has
happened
with
my
city-issued
laptop,
so
I
will
be
speaking
with
itd
tomorrow
about
that.
But
thank
you
for
the
opportunity
I
I
won.
I
did
want
to
support
what
eric
had
just
said
and
also
to
pick
up
on
alderman
fleming's
lead
the
the
particular
study
area
that
we've
proposed
and
that
the
our
tif
consultant
has
verified,
as
tif
eligible
really
is
designed
to
help
support.
AL
What
we
think
would
be
redevelopment
opportunities
west
of
green
bay,
road
or
kind
of
west
of
the
metro
tracks,
and
that
traditionally
has
been
the
area
of
evanston's
kind
of
historic,
black
community
and
the
business
districts
that
our
black
community
had
started,
and
that
is
where
the
investment
is
needed.
So
when
you
go
east
of
the
tracks,
it's
a
very
different
feel
very
different
eav.
AL
Those
types
of
projects
would
really
benefit
from
having
some
public
investment
and
that
that
could
come
from
the
civic
center
if
it
were
to
be
sold
at
some
point.
So
if
we
believe,
as
a
community
that
over
the
next
20,
let's
call
it
15
to
20
years
that
that
civic
center
becomes
something
else
and
maybe
becomes
privately
held
and
generates
taxes,
maybe
we
should
maybe
we
could
benefit
from
that
in
in
what
I
say
is
like
funnel
the
money
under
the
tracks
along
simpson
into
that
west,
end
of
the
fifth
ward.
AL
To
really
get
those
projects
done
that
we
all
talk
about
as
a
community.
The
the
this
particular
study
area
wasn't
formed
to
create
a
tiff
to
create
increment
for
the
redevelopment
of
the
civic
center.
AL
Really,
the
idea
is,
we
need
an
economic
engine
if
we
and
that
engine
would
be
the
sale
of
the
civic
center
someday
and
guess
what,
if
it
doesn't
happen,
the
tif
could
still
work
it
just
wouldn't
be
as
robust.
It's
just
an
idea.
We
are
this.
This
is
literally
the
beginning.
We
talk
about
carp
before
the
horse
or
chicken
or
the
egg.
We
we
have
to
start
somewhere
and
so
we're
coming
to
you
today
to
get
permission
to
issue
this
consulting
contract,
which
will
then
open
up
a
very
long,
robust
public
process.
AL
This
will
take
a
minimum
of
six
months
to
get
through
our
process
and
implement
it,
so
literally
will
be
it'll
be
post-election
before
any
decisions
are
made.
So
I'll
stop
there
and
see
if
there
are
any
questions
from
what
I
just
said,.
D
All
right
all
the
men,
let's
go
alderman
wilson,
braithwaite
and
then
revell.
E
Thank
you
and
I'll
start
by
saying,
I
don't
think
I've
ever
voted
for
a
new
staff,
even
though
we've
had
them
on
the
table,
as
some
of
my
colleagues
are
quick
to
remember
from
time
to
time.
However,
as
we've
added
this
in
the
economic
development
committee,
I
do
think
that
this
one
makes
makes
sense.
So
I
am
going
to
support
this.
E
I
think
most
of
the
points
that
I
was
concerned,
the
community
would
be
worried
about
were
covered,
but
I
just
want
to
point
out
that
this
is
not
some
kind
of
tool
for
for
gentrification
of
this
neighborhood.
This
is
to
support
the
community
and
to
support
the
neighborhood.
I
fully
recognize
the
tiffs
in
other
communities
and
other
places
have
been
used
for
that
kind
of
purpose.
E
But
that's
not
what
we're
doing
here
and,
as
mr
zombie
just
said,
this
is
a
starting
point.
This
community
has
a
lot
of
great
ideas,
but
we
need
to
you
know,
funnel
those
ideas
into
something
that's
going
to
be
tangible
and
really
support
this
community.
So
I
am
going
to
be
supportive
of
this
moving
forward.
AC
Thank
you,
mr
mayor,
and,
and
yes,
solomon
wilson.
I
do
recall
you
voting
no
on
a
few
tips
projects
and
it's
good
to
see
you
supporting
this.
I'm
also
going
to
support
this
and
and
just
want
to
applaud
the
efforts
of
alderman
simmons.
AC
I
think
when
we
look
back
for
if
we
want
you
know
years
from
now,
similar
to
what
was
created
in
the
eighth
ward,
the
hartree
tiff,
the
washington
national
tiff,
when,
when
you
generate
enough
income
in
the
opportunities
for
affordable
housing,
particularly
on
the
west
end,
when
you
look
at
our
combined
wards,
it's
just
really
nice
to
know
that
future
council
will
have
the
tools
necessary
to
help
stabilize
our
community
through
this
tool,
so
definitely
looking
forward
to
support
it.
Thank
you.
D
Thank
you
all
to
me.
Alderman
revell
and
alderman
win.
AE
So
I
just
have
a
couple
of
questions
because
I
mean
I
do
think
this
is
a
a
good,
a
good
step
for
us
to
take,
but
so
I'm
just
wondering
this
we're
talking
about
a
tif
conservation
area
and
that's
that's
different
from
the
other
tips
that
we
have
in
the
community,
and
I
I
think,
and
is
it
does
it?
Is
there
a
real
difference
in
terms
of
what
that
allows
us
to
do
or
or
is
it
just
a
way
of
meeting
the
eligibility
requirements?
Is
one
question.
AL
Okay,
can
I
can
I
answer
that,
mr
mayor?
Yes,
paul,
please
thank
you.
So
it's
a
good
question
ultimate
revel
the
there's
two
ways
to
qualify
a
tif
one
way
is
it's
considered
a
blighted
area
and
the
other
is
conservation
area
conservation
area
is
a
little
more
challenging
and
it
it
reflects
the
fact
that
there
are
portions
of
that
district
that
could
slip
into
blighted
status
if
active
economic
development
has
been
happening.
AL
So
that's
where
that
classification
comes
from
and
some
of
the
the
terms
for
for
classifying
it
as
a
conservation,
tiff
are
kind
of
spelled
out.
I
think
it's
in
my
staff
report
and,
if
not
I
can,
I
could
try
to
clarify
that
separately.
But
it's
it's
it's
just
the
way.
It's
it's
the
way
that
you
classify
the
the
tiff
in
terms
of
the
state
statute.
AG
AL
The
consultant's
not
saying
that
this
is
a
blighted
area.
It's
an
opportunity
to
conserve
it
from
potential
future
blight.
AL
That
that's
an
important
aspect
of
this
particular
tif
district,
because
there
are
quite
a
few
residential
properties
within
the
the
proposed
study
area
boundary.
AL
So
the
state
requires
that
we
do
a
housing
impact
study
in
that
case
and
the
the
the
reason
we
do
that
is
to
to
make
really
announced.
In
the
reason
it's
going
to
be
is
because
we're
going
to
make
a
commitment
that
we're
not
going
to
be
buying
residential
housing
and
raising
it
for
commercial
development.
AL
What
we're
going
to
commit
to,
I
think
I
think
that's
and
that's
one
of
the
reasons
we're
proposing
this
tip
is
that
we're
going
to
actually
use
tiff
increment
to
help
build
new,
affordable
housing,
because
50
percent
of
the
cost
developing
new,
affordable
housing
can
be
paid
for
with
tiff
and
then.
Secondly,
we
can
use
stiff
to
help
repair
housing
that
that
isn't,
that's
that's
an
eligible
expense
in
a
tif
district.
AL
F
Yes,
I
wanted
to
say
I
am
going
to
support
this,
and
I
do
want
to
bring
up
a
point
that,
unfortunately,
the
tif
gets
a
bad
name,
because
the
city
of
chicago
does
such
a
terrible
job
with
their
tips,
and
nothing
could
be
more
different
than
the
way
the
city
of
evanston
handles
our
tips.
I
mean
they
have
always
proved
to
be
very
successful.
We
take
great
care
and
and
drawing
the
lines,
to
make
sure
that
they're
that
they
are
productive
and
they're
they're
precise.
F
So
I
I
think,
unfortunately,
if
people
understand
tips
from
a
chicago
standpoint
that
that's
a
terrible
example
of,
or
a
very
good
example
of
how
not
to
do
it.
But
our
history
of
tips
here
in
evanston
is
excellent,
and
if
someone
you
know
that
we
have
that
on
our
website
in
terms
of
what
what
the
value
that's
been
generated
has
been
over
the
years.
Just
as
an
example,
the
main
chicago
tip
is
a
conservative
and
the,
and
particularly
that
that
was
labeled.
F
That
way,
because
the
especially
the
buildings
west
of
the
viaduct
on
main
street
are
a
certain
age
and
were
in
a
certain
condition
and
hadn't
had
a
certain
amount
of
repair
over
a
long
enough
period
of
time
that
there
was
concern
enough
concern
that
they
would
not
become
dilapidated
immediately,
but
they
would
require
it
a
lot
of
help
and
that
main
chicago
tiff
is
now
generating
enough
income
or
will
generate
enough
income
for
us
to
do
significant
water,
main
repairs
on
main
street
and
an
area
that
the
water
mains
are.
F
So
that's
an
example
of
where
we
have
a
tip
that
is
working
for
us
in
ways
that
we
would
not
be
able
to
do
immediately
ourselves
from
our
own
budget.
So
when
we
use
tips
as
carefully
as
we
do,
we
have
been
very
successful.
So
I
want
to
make
sure
people
understand
how
how
careful
we
are
and
how
the
types
of
projects
that
we
have
been
able
to
do
with
our
all
kinds
of
our
tips.
AL
Thank
you,
mr
mayor.
I
wanted
I
I
wanted
to
say
one
more
really
quick
comment
to
what
alderman
win
just
said
on
the
project
that
the
city
council
just
approved
on
the
vogue
property
is
within
that
tif
district
and
the
developer
didn't
ask
for
tiff
money
to
do
that
project,
but
that
project's
going
to
generate
significant
increment.
AL
That
will
further
help
us
with
additional
improvements
in
the
area.
It's
early
enough
in
the
tiff.
I
think,
there's
another
15
years
left
where
that
vogue
project
will
generate
a
good
chunk
of
money
for
the
tif
district.
So
just
math
fyi.
C
Mayor
mayor
haggerty,
I
have
one
one
question
for
paul:
it's
not
I'm
not
going
to
get
into
the
tiff
issue,
it's
not
a
roller's
clerk,
but
it's
relating
to
records
keeping
with
tiff,
particularly
you
know.
The
clerk
even
has
a
few
roles
relating
to
tiff.
May
I
ask
the
question
mr
mayor.
C
C
It
seems
as
though
there
is
a
place
where
we
list
where
we
had
traditionally
list
listed
all
expenditures
over
ten
thousand
dollars,
and
it
seems
that
on
all
of
the
tiff
reports
moving
from
you
know
the
start
of
this
term
2017
forward
we've
decided
to
no
longer
list
the
tiff
expenditures
and
those
tiff
expenditures
don't
seem
to
be
on
the
books
anywhere
else.
AL
Yeah
I
I
would,
I
would
need
to
take
a
look
at
those,
but
I'm
going
to
guess
the
reason.
Why
is
because
there
weren't
there
weren't
any?
It
just
depends
on
what
section
you're
talking
about
we
haven't.
We
haven't
really
used
tiff
a
lot
in
recent
years.
One
of
the
reasons.
Why
is
because
it
really
hasn't
been
any
increment
in
most
of
the
tips,
so
we
can
follow
up
with
you
on
that
answer.
I
can
work
with
tesh
desai
to
get
a
formal
answer
to
you
on
that.
C
Yeah,
I'm
particularly
thinking
about
the
howard
ridge
tiff,
where
there's
a
few
million
dollars.
That
was,
I
think
there
was
some
expenditure
there
and,
and
it's
just
not
listed
on
any
of
the
reports.
Thank
you
all
right,
alderman
wilson.
E
I
just
you
kind
of
mentioned
something
in
passing
about
the
developer,
not
asking
for
tiff
money.
I
just
want
to
be
100
clear.
They
also
did
not
get
any
for
that
project,
so
they
didn't
ask
for
it
and-
and
they
did
not
get
it
and-
and
I
would
not
have
offered
it
so.
Thank
you.
D
Thank
you,
alderman,
wilson,
all
right,
seeing
no
more
further
questions
or
comments
of
paul.
This
item,
e1,
which
is
moved
in
seconded
it's
resolution,
19-r-21
authorizing
the
city
manager
and
negotiate
and
execute
a
consulting
contract
with
kane
mckenna
and
associates
inc
to
study.
The
creation
of
a
new
tif
district
has
been
moved
and
seconded
so
city
clerk.
Could
you
please
take
the
roll
on
e1.
C
My
apologies,
my
phone
started
ringing.
At
the
same
time.
You
cut
me
out
of
here:
alderman
ravel,
aye,
alderman,
rainey,.
C
Now,
okay,
I
can
see
that
I
can
say
that
you're
saying
yes:
okay,
alderman
fleming
hi
alderman
fisk
hi,
alderman
braithwaite.
I
alderman
nguyen
hi
alderman
wilson.
D
All
right
e1
passes
the
evanston
city
council
on
a
9-0
vote.
We're
now
going
to
move
to
call
of
the
wards
we'll
start
with
alderman
ravel
tonight.
AE
AG
We're
having
a
clyde
kellen
meeting
on
thursday
evening.
D
Thursday
excellent,
thank
you
ultimate
flying.
AD
Yeah,
I
just
want
to
thank
edgar,
cannell
and
his
staff.
I
know
they
get
a
lot
of
flack
with
the
snow
removal,
but
they
were
really
out.
Working
hector
was
really
great
to
respond
to
some
neighbors
I
have
who
were
elderly
or
disabled
and
could
not
get
out
of
their
curb
cuts,
because
there
were
the
snow
plans
and
he
had
people
out
there.
Shoveling
shoveling
bus
stops.
So
thank
you
so
much
edgar.
Also.
I
wanted
to
thank
ike
and
his
team
had.
AD
Obviously
we
get
lots
of
emails
about
people's
frustration
with
the
vaccine,
but
I
had
a
few
emails
and
I
actually
had
the
chance
to
go
over
and
watch
the
operation
and
people
who
were
able
to
get
a
vaccine
were
very
complimentary
to
the
staff
and
expediency
and
everything
else.
So
two
areas
which
people
are
getting
hammered
over
the
head
with
the
snow
in
the
public
health.
I
wanted
to
publicly
thank
them
for
their
work.
D
Thank
you
all
the
woman
alderman
fisk.
AF
AF
First
of
all,
I
want
to
thank
the
city
of
mayor
and
and
ike
for
the
response
to
the
coved
vaccinations.
That's
that's
going!
That's
going
really
well.
I
really
appreciate
that,
and
I
know
the
public
is
very
appreciative
of
of
your
efforts.
So
thank
you
so
much
next
tuesday,
the
16th.
We
have
an
new
city
committee
meeting
and
then
on
wednesday
the
17th.
There
is
a
new
community
meeting
where
we're
going
to
talk
about
off-campus
issues
and
then
on
tuesday
march.
2Nd
is
our
regular,
quarterly
ward
meeting.
AC
Thank
you,
mr
mayor.
First,
I
want
to
announce
that
this
thursday,
it's
either
six
or
seven
and
you'll
all
second
word
residents.
You
would
receive
the
mailer
and
also
the
our
newsletter
for
the
link
for
our
ward
meeting.
We
plan
on
hosting
director
oboe
to
give
an
update
on
the
vaccine
distribution.
AC
We
also
have
a
new
business,
that's
looking
to
start
up
in
the
ward
and
then
we
will
be
discussing
two
developments
as
well,
so
please
stay
tuned
to
the
newsletter.
Thank
you.
D
Thank
you,
aldermen
win.
F
All
right,
yes,
thank
you.
Thank
you,
mr
mayor.
I've
just
been,
it's
just
been
verified
that
that
water
main
is
from
1907
to
me.
So
I
want
to
thank
edgar,
cano
and
his
whole
team
for
all
of
their
help.
F
They
have
helped
a
number
of
residents
in
the
third
ward,
who
were
stuck
and
helped
us
solve
a
number
of
problems
of
too
much
snow
and
where
to
put
it,
and
then
I
also
want
to
thank
ike,
ogbo
and
greg
olsen
and
their
team,
and
also
do
a
shout
out
to
say
if
you
are
a
medical
or
healthcare
professional
and
have
time
on
your
hands,
you
can
become
part
of
the
vaccination
team
and
medical
reserve
core.
F
I
have
a
good
friend
who
just
had
one
probably
the
best
day
of
the
whole
covid
pandemic,
because
she
got
to
inoculate
people
for
an
afternoon,
and
so
I
I
urge
any
of
the
rest
of
us
who
are
out
there
who
have
those
health
care
skills
to
join.
And
finally,
I
want
to
thank
I
I,
the
owner
of
a
new
business,
a
relatively
new
business
here
and
the
on
the
main
dempster
mile
journey.
F
Suddenly,
at
noir
da
noir
de
ben
at
1309,
chicago
avenue,
which
is
an
amazing,
place,
a
place
of
chocolate
and
pastries
and
all
kinds
of
other
delicious
food,
we
had
a
zoom
fundraiser
for
district
foundation,
65
in
which
everyone
went
and
picked
up
a
sampling
of
chocolates
from
from
norade
ben,
and
then
we
were
all
instructed
as
we
tasted
and
it
was
heavenly
it's
the
best
fundraiser
I've
been
to
in
a
number
of
years.
I
highly
recommend
it.
F
F
It's
journey
sudden
and.
F
D
E
I
want
to
thank
all
the
residents
and
people
in
the
neighborhood
and
businesses
around
the
vogue
property,
for
you
know
attending
the
award
meeting
for
participating
in
conversations
and
calling
me
taking
my
calls.
I
it
was
a
lot
of
really
great
feedback.
I
think
we
got
a
much
better
project
in
the
end
and
I
really
appreciate
getting
that
feedback
and
input
and
that
collaborative
process
in
conjunction
with
that,
I
also
want
to
make
a
reference
to
get
that
process
rolling
for
reinstating
the
permanent
parking.
E
D
You
alderman
alderwoman
who's
sentence.
AB
D
Thank
you,
alderman
suffering,.
AK
Sure
I
would
like
to
thank
lucas,
tortara
and
mike
cooper
because
david
thank
you
and
also
congratulate
and
welcome
senator
mike
simmons,
who
represents
part
of
evanston.
D
Great,
thank
you
and
I
think
that's
our
round.
That's
our
roundup
for
tonight
on
call
call
of
awards.
Alderman
wilson.
Would
you
read
us
into
executive
session.
E
Yes,
pursuant
to
five
illinois
compiled
statutes,
ilcs
120,
slash
2a.
I
move
that
the
city
council
convened
into
executive
session
to
discuss
agenda
items
regarding
personnel
litigation
and
minutes.
These
agenda
items
are
permitted
subjects
to
be
considered
in
executive
session
and
are
enumerated
exceptions
under
the
open
meetings
act.
These
exceptions
are
5
ilcs,
120,
2a,
c1,
c11
and
c21
for
a
second.
F
D
D
All
right
so
on
a
9-0
vote,
we
are
going
to
recess
into
executive
session.
I
want
to
thank
everybody
for
coming
out
to
the
city
council
meeting
tonight.
Our
next
meeting
will
be
in
two
weeks
on
february
22nd
and
we'll
be
talking
about
a
variety
of
items,
including
the
climate
action,
resiliency
plan
and
equity.
So
we'll
see
you
all
on
the
22nd
and
we're
going
to
now
move
into
executive
session.