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From YouTube: Equity and Empowerment Commission - Apr. 28, 2022
Description
The Equity and Empowerment Commission met to discuss the community survey, anti-gentrification measures, and the equity scorecard they are developing.
B
Great
I'll
just
do.
C
D
A
Jane
thanks
for
calling
in
on
your
way,
still
heading
home,
so
we
can
have
the
right
numbers.
Yeah.
A
All
good,
it's
all
good!
We
appreciate
you
being
here
so
we
we
can
keep
keep
the
meeting
rolling
forward.
So
all
right,
so
the
first
order
of
business
today
is
looking
at
the
minutes
from
march
31st.
A
C
Is
it
possible
for
for
someone's
screen
to
be
shared,
my
internet
in
my
house,
as
I
was
just
looking
at
it,
everything
cut
out,
and
so
I'm
on
my
phone.
So
I
can't
see
anything
right
now,
so
if
anyone
would
mind
sharing
their
screen
with
the
minutes,
I'd
appreciate
it.
Oh
mine,
thank
you.
A
C
A
All
right
so
can
I
have
matt
you'll
correct
me
if
I'm
wrong
a
motion
to
approve
the
minutes
from
march
31st.
A
A
There
we
go,
we
got
lots
of
seconds
all
in
favor.
A
I'm
gonna
open
up
the
flow
of
a
public
comment.
We
have
a
few
people
present
matt,
not
matt
orrin,
but
matt
simmond
or
all
the
person
kelly
or
trisha
or
jersey
or
carlos
anybody
care
to
anybody
here
for
public
comment.
F
Hi
trisha
conley.
Second
word:
I'm
just
here
to
support
the
anti
or
lessening
gentrification
proposal.
F
And,
interestingly
enough
this
week
I
actually
got
a
call
from
someone
who
said
they
were
calling
on
behalf
of
an
investor
about
possibly
my
interest
in
selling
my
home,
which
was
kind
of
shocking,
because
we've
only
lived
in
the
second
ward
since
the
end
of
september,
and
you
know
I
don't
know
what
this
was.
My
partner
tried
to
call
back
and
got
a
voicemail,
but
we
were
going
to
try
and
play
it
out
and
see
if
we
could
learn
more
about
who
these
people
were
how
they
worked.
F
But
you
know-
and
so
maybe
it's
about
that-
maybe
it's
just
somebody
doing
a
scam
trying
to
get
information,
but
either
way
it's
not.
Okay,
and
you
know
people
are
vulnerable
and
we
need
to
have
stronger
ordinances
to
help
people
and
help
evanstonians
stay
in
evanston.
So
thanks
for
your
work
around
this,
thank
you.
A
So
for
those
who
are
sitting
here
a
little
confused
and
not
sure
what
is
talking
about
darlene
butz
followed
some
work,
that's
being
done
presently
in
the
logan
square
area,
to
stem
gentrification
and
get
enough
to
speak
to
the
all
the
person
who
is
kind
of
leading
that
front
and
was
going
to
introduce
to
us
this
week.
Some
possibilities
given
that
they're
willing
to
share
all
the
information
supposed
to
discuss,
having
something
similar
here
with
the
clear
understanding
that
preventing
these
calls.
A
You
know
it
doesn't
itself
stem,
but
it's
part
of
a
bigger
program
and
that's
part
of
what
we'll
be
discussing
today.
So
thank
you
patricia
for
introducing
that
and
like
sharing
your
support
on
that
issue.
But
we
will
get
a
chance
to
sort
of
discuss
this
as
a
group
once
we
introduce
it
a
little
later
on
in
the
meeting
and
sort
of
give
a
little
more
detail.
A
Public
comic,
okay,
then,
let's
get
going
with
the
next
thing
on
our
so
I'm
trying
to
get
up
my
suddenly.
I
have
no
there.
We
go
okay.
So
the
things
on
the
item
for
discussion
today,
I
wanted
to
kind
of
talk
about
the
equity
community
survey
plan.
Everybody
should
have
might
have
seen
that
the
city
sent
out
the
survey
on
it's
another
press
release
like
on
the
19th,
and
then
the
survey
went
out
last
friday.
F
A
I'm
not
mistaken,
so
the
survey
is
officially
out
there
as
we
discussed.
We
are.
We
are
not
and
cannot
depend
on
emails
from
the
city
and
the
proportion
of
our
population
that
sits
on
their
emails
all
day
and
rely
on
responses
from
them.
Only
that
we're
going
to
have
to
do
significant
community
outreach.
We
now
have.
A
I
sat
and
cleaned
it
up
this
week
we
now
have
emails
on
all
70
of
the
assembly
plus
of
the
I'm
gonna
pause
for
a
second,
because
I'm
just
getting
started
and
I
see
a
hand
up,
and
I'm
wondering
if
that
hand
up
is
trying
to
get
public
comment.
H
You're
asking
for
a
comment
on
the
on
the
ordinance
proposed
by
chicago
alderman,
byron,
sicho
lopez.
Is
that
correct.
A
F
A
That
was
going
to
be
introduced
for
a
discussion
to
put
it
before
the
before
the
commission
to
move
forward
with
that,
and
so
I
mean
I'm
not
trying
to
push
back
on
it.
I
think
it's,
it's
a
very
good
idea,
an
opportunity
for
us
to
get
something
that
will
come
with.
You
know,
sort
of
a
template
and
a
a
path
to
follow.
I
just
don't
want
anybody
to
leave
here
thinking.
Some
ordinance
is
before
some
decision
today,
so
that
anybody
has
falsely.
H
I
I
misspoke
I
misspoke
all
right,
so
I
I'd
just
like
to
my
name
is
christopher
krueger.
I
live
at
2022
dodge
avenue.
I
am
an
attorney
licensed
in
the
states
of
wisconsin
and
illinois,
I'm
a
member
of
the
federal
trial
bar
and
I've
practiced
civil
rights
and
consumer
rights
law
for
the
past
15
years.
H
I
support
the
sicho
lopez
proposal.
I
propose.
I,
I
support
the
the
regulation
of
real
estate
sales.
I'd
like
to
point
out
that,
what's
very
different,
now
is
even
just
five
years
ago
or
10
years
ago,
is
that
up
to
10
percent
or
even
higher
up
to
20
of
the
sales
of
residential
homes
is
being
carried
out
by
large
investment
firms.
So
we
have
a
wall
street
investment
firms
that
are
that
are
out
there.
H
So
we
need
to
do
everything
we
can
to
preserve
home
ownership
and
especially
to
preserve
home
ownership
among
vulnerable
groups
like
historically
disadvantaged
groups
like
women
and
communities
of
color.
So
I
support
byron.
Joe
lopez
support
generally,
and
I
urge
the
commission
to
to
study
that
proposal
and
and
emulate
that
proposal.
So
I
just
wanted
to
say
that
thank
you
for
letting
me
speak.
A
Thank
you
very
much
and
again
we
will.
I
don't
want
to
like
let
those
comments
like
slide
by
thinking
that
we're
ignoring
them
but
much
of
the
board.
Sorry,
the
commission
needs
to
kind
of
be
caught
up
on
what
that
is,
since
this
is
the
first
day
it's
being
introduced,
and
so
I
want
to
make
sure
that
I
have
a
chance
to
do
that
and
then
and
if
those
people
who
spoke
on
that
one
or
kind
of
chime
back
in
at
that
time,
I
will
make
space
for
that
and
welcome
that.
A
Okay,
so
back
to
the
equity
community
survey,
you
know
thanks
for
your
note
there
jane.
Yes,
that
was
published
on
the
19th,
both
with
a
press,
con
press
release
and
then
going
out
in
the
newsletter
the
city
newsletter.
Matt,
do
you
have
any
numbers?
When
I
spoke
to
you
before,
we
were
like
165
or
something
like
that?
That
was
that
was
just
from
the
press
release.
Do
you
have
any
updated
numbers.
B
Yeah,
so
just
an
update
on
how
many
people
have
taken
it.
It's
been
about.
300
people
have
participated.
A
So
while
300
sounds
great
for
a
few
days,
remember
we're
a
town
of
70,
000
people
and
part
of
the
commitment
we
are
making
as
an
equity
committee
is
to
make
sure
that
we
are-
and
I
I
don't
have
any
goals
personally,
not
not
that
I
could
sit
and
we
can
come
up
with
different
goals
if
we
want,
but
I
don't
have
any
goals
so
much
around
like
we
have
to
hit
20,
though
we
have
to
hit
a
certain
number,
because
I
honestly
to
set
a
goal
like
that.
A
A
But
I
am
more
interested
in
making
sure
that
our
response
rate
represents
our
population
distribution
in
you
know
some
patterns
not
going
to
be
pit
for
pat,
but
that
we
kind
of
see
that
representation
happening,
and
so
we
are
going
to
you
know,
there's
a
commitment
to
kind
of
keep
this
open,
and
I
think
you
know
we
were
talking
about
this
too
close
to
last
summer
to
make
it
happen.
A
Things
took
a
little
longer
and
we
will
be
flowing
into
the
this
summer
and
so
part
of
what
I
we
have
a
list
of
70
places
that
we
have
an
email
going
out
to
I'm
committing
to
get
that
out
by
tomorrow
of
all
the
churches.
All
the
senior
groups,
youth
groups,
places
that
work
with
homeless
populations,
non-profits.
A
And
then
just
prominent
people
in
some
of
our
different
racial
communities
with
an
ask
that
they
send
this
out
to
their
you
know
their
network.
The
main
reason
I'm
holding
on
that
email
now
is
because
I
want
to
find
out
what
we,
as
a
committee,
are
willing
to
offer
and
committee
city
so
matt.
A
This
is
partially
you
beyond
asking
these
folks
to
either
text
their
populations,
because
some
places
use
text
versus
email,
email,
their
populations,
but
I
also
want
to
be
able
to
ask
that,
if
they're
having
an
event,
if
a
church
is
having
a,
I
have
no
idea
what
churches
have
but
like
a
summer
bonanza
for
whatever
reason
and
they
they
are
going
to
have
masses
of
their
congregation.
Or
you
know,
people
who
go
to
whatever
that
specific
event
is:
if
it's
not
religious,
are
we
do?
A
We
have
people
who
are
willing
to
volunteer
to
show
up
if
we
send
out,
you
know,
hey,
we
have
people
who
are
we're
requesting
that
people
show
up
at
this
event.
This
event,
this
event
with,
like
I
think,
quarter
sheets
with
the
qr
code,
would
work
to
pass
it
out
to
folks
to
make
sure
that
you
know
to
pass
it
out
to
the
folks
at
the
event
and
ask
them
tell
them
about
the
survey
and
ask
them
to
fill
out
the
survey.
A
They
can
just
scan
it
on
their
phone
and
fill
out
the
survey
that
way,
and
is
the
city
willing
to
provide
like
printed
sheets
to
so
that
we
can
get
these
out
at
different
events.
So
those
are
sort
of
a
two
two
prong
question
and
then
the
third
piece
of
that
question
was
like.
Does
anybody
else
have
any
ideas
if
there
are
events,
how
to
get
sort
of
a
population
out
of
the
events.
B
A
Okay,
so
I
can
get
those
to
you.
Is
anybody
willing
to
like
and
again
you
don't
have
to
like
say
on
a
specific
date,
but
I
didn't
want
to
offer
that
we're
willing
to
have
people
come
circulate.
A
These
flyers
slash
qr
codes
whatever
without
first
speaking,
we
don't
have
a
staff
outside
of
this
group,
but
if
you
would
are
willing
to
be
on
the
list
of
a
group
of
people
who
you,
you
could
spend
an
hour
there,
but
if
you
show
up
at
some
of
these
summer
events
and
pass
out
and
try
to
talk
to
people
about
the
survey
to
get
them
to,
I
feel
that
that's
very
one
person-to-person
way
to
get
it
done
and
two
you
know
these.
A
This
is
an
opportunity
to
capture
target
populations
where
you
know
that
we
are
interested
in
hearing
from
because,
historically,
they
are
not
represented
in
many
of
the
surveys
that
the
city
did.
This
is
an
opportunity
for
us
to
sort
of
get
out,
get
out
there
and
do
some
outreach
to
these
populations.
I
I
think
outreach
is
a
better
word
than
target,
so
I'm
going
to
take
target
back.
C
Have
a
crew,
so
we
yeah
there
was
a.
There
was
a
comment
in
the
chat.
Also,
I'm
not
looks
like
jane,
says,
camera
and
outreach
yeah.
A
And
again,
I
would
definitely
reach
out
to
you
it's
not.
It
wouldn't
be
just
like
hey
by
the
way
you're
assigned.
You
need
to
be
here
this
time
on
that
you
know,
and
you
have
to
be
there
but
I'll
reach
out
with
you
know
a
couple
of
events
that
people
are
requesting-
and
you
know
you
will
kind
of.
Let
me
know
once
that
work
for
your
schedule.
A
C
Guess
it's
curious
to
know:
what's
the
are
there
public
places
in
evanston
where
we're
allowed
to
post?
In
addition
to,
I
know
that
it's
it's
it's
more,
probably
more
effective.
So
can
people
put
it
in
their
hands,
but
I
was
just
wondering
if
there
were
places
like
that
and
then
I
also
wanted
to
know
if
we
knew
what
the
makeup
of
the
300
people
were,
they
completed
it
already.
B
So
I
can't
answer
right
now
the
question
about
where
you
all
can
post
flyers,
but
I
think
that
there
are
several
places
that
would
be
willing
to
post
flyers
more
into
that
and
then,
as
far
as
the
makeup
of
the
300
people,
I
can
look
into
that
more,
but
I
think
it's
mostly
the
people
who
the
commission
has
anticipated
would
be
responding
to
emails
from
the
city.
B
C
B
C
So
sorry
I
missed
the
second
part
of
that.
I
don't
know
if
your
volume
is
down
or
if
it's
my
phone,
I'm
sorry.
I
missed
a
second.
B
It
could
be
me,
I
was
just
saying
that
the
population
that
has
responded-
I
don't
have
the
data
in
front
of
me
now,
but
I
have
looked
at
it
and
it's
pretty
consistent
with
what
the
commission
has
previously
sort
of
assumed
that
the
city
communication
from
the
city
would
get
so
as
chair
thomas
is
saying,
more
outreach
would
be
necessary.
A
I
don't,
I
did
not
see
or
hear
the
numbers
at
the
300
point,
but
I
did
chat
chat
with
matt
when
it
was
at
the
160
something
point
and
I'll
just
racialize
and
put
an
age
to
what
he's
saying
all
the
white
women
who
had
been
doing
the
majority
of
responses
at
that
time.
So
you
know
we
expect
that
and
we
expect
that
that's
what's
going
to
come
through
the
channel
of
emails.
A
So
that's
why
we're
putting
the
effort
forward
for
for
other
other
places.
But-
and
so
I
I
like
the
the
question
that
you
asked
lashana,
because
what
it's
going
to
force
me
to
do
now
is
add.
I'm
going
to
put
a
note
to
myself.
A
I
don't
have
the
part
districts
on
there
and
so
I'm
going
to
add
to
our
now
89
person
list
the
park
districts
because
I
had
included
places
like
like
the
levy
center
like
more
focused
on
seniors,
and
then
we
included
the
foster
foster
center
again
focused
on
trying
to
make
sure
we
have
outreach
to
youth,
slash
black
and
brown
population
as
well
as
the
seniors
in
there.
But
I
mean
ultimately,
we
should
have
this
posted
in
all
the
park
districts,
which
is
city.
You
know,
city
property.
A
We
should
get
permission
to.
You
know
easy
permission
to
do
that
there
and
then
I
was
going
to
add
the
library
and
making
sure
that
we
have
those
in
all
the
libraries
I
personally
love
to
put
one
on
each
one
of
those
bs.
No,
no
asking
for
money
signs
that
the
city
has
recently
put
up,
so
you
know,
but
that's
just
being
being
petty,
but
you
know
from
an
equity
lens
that
crap
needs
to
be
covered
up
with
something
worthwhile.
A
I
see
the
the
high
schools
student
organized,
an
anti-racism
group
could
help
distribute
to
students.
Is
that
sore
yeah
yeah?
So
ca?
Oh,
yes,
okay,
so
I
will
add
that
to
the
list.
A
We
are
looking
for
youth,
I
mean,
I
don't
suspect
that,
like
elementary
school,
kids
would
be
filling
it
out
right
like,
but
I
mean
I
think,
high
school.
A
A
A
Easy
enough,
but
you
know
that
might
go
at
a
different
subset
of
the
same
group,
so
I'm
gonna,
you
know
I
had
los
angeles.
I
have
jane
and
I'm
just
gonna
tell
everybody
else
that
when
we
have
events,
I'm
gonna
send
out
to
the
full
population,
hoping
that
we
get
some
other
volunteers
who
are
willing
to
go
out,
and
maybe
maybe
we
could
pair
you
with
an
event
you
might
have
gone
out
to
in
the
in
the
first
place.
A
If
there's
anything
that
comes
up
impromptu
over
the
summer,
please
reach
out
to
myself,
alessandra
and
say
hey.
You
know
I
happen
to
hear
about
this
event.
This
might
be
a
good
place
and
we'll
try
to
figure
out
how
to
get
volunteers
there
to
to
pass
out
the
you
know,
the
flyers
and
the
qr
codes.
A
So
that's
so
and
oh
and
in
addition
to
the
email
that
will
go
out
to
all
these
people
on
this
list,
you
guys
will
also
be
on
on
that
list.
That
goes
out.
The
email
that
goes
out
is
asking
everybody
on
this
list,
which
will
now
include
you
to
pass
it
on
to
your
network.
So
it
does
not
matter
for
this
commission
personally
whether
your
network
is
a
mix
of
all
sorts
of
different
people.
A
A
All
the
studies
show
that
if
there's
a
personal
ask
so
you're
stating
that
you're
on
the
equity
commission,
you
are
part
of
the
group
that
has
created
the
first
evanston
acqui.
You
would
really
appreciate
it
if
your
network,
if
the
ass
comes
from
a
personal
place,
as
opposed
to
like
joe,
the
mayor
dan,
the
mayor,
that
it
has
a
much
better
chance
of
having
that
that
ask
met.
So
you
will
be
included
in
that
ask
to
send
it
to
folks
in
your
network
who
either
live
or
work
in
evanston.
A
So
that
is
all
I
have
on
this
item.
Look
out
for
that
email
tomorrow,
saturday,
at
the
latest,
because
you
know
happens
any
other
question
on
that
topic
before
we
move
on.
A
All
right,
so
I'm
going
to
give
a
quick
introduction
to
the
gentrification
piece
that
has
that
you've
heard
a
couple
of
people
speak
to
and
then
I'm
sharing
something
in
the
chat
now.
So
you
can
kind
of
pop
that
open,
oopsy,
daisy.
A
Could
you
that
might
be
the
wrong
thing?
I
thought
I
put
the.
A
Yeah,
it's
not
coming
up
that
way.
For
me,
let
me
see
because
there's
it's
three
pages:
it
downloads,
you
know
what
never
mind,
I'm
an
idiot,
it
downloaded
a
file
and
I
wasn't
paying
attention
so
I
kept
looking
at
the
webpage
that
was
coming
up
first
and
seeing
fellowships
that
I
need
to
be
working
on
okay,
so
I'm
gonna
kind
of
give
a
brief
introduction.
I'm
gonna!
A
Let
darlene
speak
to
this
a
bit,
and
so
this
is
a
little
bit
putting
the
car
before
the
horse,
but
we
had
an
opportunity
because
we
had
an
older
person
from
chicago
who
was
willing
to
share
some
inviting
information
from
us
and
so
like
it's
an
opportunity
to
begin
the
discussion.
Nothing's
getting
you
know,
part
of
me
kind
of
pumping
the
brakes
a
little
early,
just
make
sure
we're
clear
about
the
language
here.
A
This
is
the
first
time
we're
even
discussing
this,
and
it's
because
you
know
an
opportunity
was
sort
of
made
open
to
us.
So
I
don't
know
if
anybody
else
has
heard
it.
I
personally
heard
it,
and
then
we
had
somebody
really
a
personal
story
here,
even
though
it
was
about
the
second
order,
not
the
fifth
word,
but
even
since
the
fifth
word
school
has
passed,
which
is
probably
I
don't
know
five
weeks
ago.
A
At
this
point,
the
number
of
calls
that
have
upticked
in
the
fifth
ward
of
people,
anticipating
values,
growing
going
up
and
so
trying
to
jump
on
the
wagon
of
buying
cheap
now
before
the
school
has
built
to
develop,
has
upticked.
And
if
any,
you
know,
if
you
know
folks
who
live
in
the
fifth
board,
it's
not
like
it's
a
new
phenomenon.
It
has
always
happened,
but
it
definitely
has
taken
an
uptick
since
then.
A
We
are
also
in
I'll
put
my
slight
real
estate
hat
on
here
for
a
second
we're
in
a
environment
where
inventory
is
extremely
extremely
low,
and
so
people
are,
you
know,
like
sitting
there
staring
at
the
zillow
or
the
multiple
listing
service
and
realizing
that
nothing's
coming
on.
So
you
know
to
be
fair,
most
people
I
mean
not
to
be
fair,
but
like
most
people,
don't
even
recognize
it
as
a
predatory
act.
They
think
they're
being
proactive,
because
you
know
we
train
people
to
be
go-getters.
A
We
pray
and
train
people
to
you
know
find
a
way
by
any
way
and
they
see
it
as
being
proactive.
They
do
not
see
the
predatory
element
to
it.
They
they
start
contacting
people.
In
fact,
you
know
I
had
a
person
this
week.
Tell
me
that's
how
they
got
their
new
place,
that
they're
they're
now
fully
gutting
and
rehabbing,
and
so.
A
The
I
the
piece
that
people
were
mentioning
is
a
piece
of
a
larger
initiative
within
this
particular
chicago
neighborhood,
to
try
to
stem
gentrification.
This
ordinance,
you
know
in
our
in
short,
puts
some
regulation
around
people
sort
of
aggressively
contacting
folks
trying
to
buy
their
their
property.
That
alone
is
not
going
to
stem
gentrification.
A
It
needs
to
be
part
of
a
larger
plan
and
one
of
the
things
and
I'll
darlene
speak
some
more
here,
but
one
of
the
things
we're
going
to
do
is
try
to
have
the
other
person
who
is
responsible
for
leading
this
kind
of
come
in
and
give
us
some
ideas
of
the
larger
plan.
A
I
would
feel
positive
about
rolling
something
like
this
out.
If
we,
we
could
say
that
it
was
step
one
of
like
larger
goals,
because
this
alone
does
not
fix
the
problem,
but
I
think
it
it
can.
It
can
at
least
stem
the
harassment,
and
at
least
the
reality
is
when
you
miss.
You
may
be
sitting
thinking
if
you
haven't
like
thought
about
this
idea
before
well,
what's
the
big
deal?
A
If
somebody
wants
to
pay
money
for
it,
and
somebody
wants
to
sell
why
not,
the
reality
is
most
individuals
who
have
owned
for
like
30
years,
who
are
just
starting
to
think
about.
A
It,
have
no
idea
what's
going
on
in
the
market
at
any
given
moment,
and
so
what
may
seem
like
a
good
number
for
them,
because
they
refinanced
three
years
ago,
a
resignance
40
years
ago,
isn't
what
their
actual
true
value
is
right
now
and
it's
predatory
because
often
the
folks
who
are
calling
have
an
exact
not
have
exact
knowledge
of
the
market
and
they
have
an
opportunity
to
sort
of
pull
one
over
on
the
folks
who
are
selling,
and
so
at
least
being
able
to
stop
that
predatory
type.
A
Behavior
is
one
way
of
trying
to
have
not
have
all
the
profit
land
in
the
pockets
of
developers,
so
darlene,
that's
kind
of
how
I
would
introduce
it.
If
you'd
like
to
speak
some
more
from
your
interactions.
D
Yes,
thank
you,
so
byron,
sico
lopez
he's
from
pilsen,
the
25th
ward,
and
you
know
he
passed
this
ordinance
and
and
the
ordinance
you
know
it
covers
the
entire
city
of
chicago
when
they
adopt
it,
and
you
know,
I
think
that
one
of
the
things
you
know
that
you
know
tonight,
you
know
we
okay.
D
D
Okay
tonight
we
talk
about
measures
that
we
can,
you
know
hopefully
do
as
a
commission
to
helpfully
prevent
the
displacement
of
working
class
and
low-income
families
in
evanston
and
and
prevent
you
know,
predatory,
developer
tactics.
D
You
know
the
ordinance
you
know
that
presented
is,
you
know,
was
inspired
by
byron,
byron,
cinco
lopez,
and
it's
just
one
of
a
series
of
ordinances
that
he
is
working
on
and
in
chicago
and
in
particular
pilsen
to
to
prevent
the
continued
genification
and
placement
of
people
of
color.
And
you
know
just
you
know
some.
D
To
me,
that's
large-
and
I
think,
like
some
of
the
things
that
I
gathered
from
the
ordinance
is
that
is
that
it
blocks
real
estate
developers
from
using
predatory
tactics
to
persuade
or
a
pressure
or
force
her
or
harass
other
coherence,
any
home
owner
to
sell
their
property.
The
measure
which
passed
by
the
city's
council
of
housing
and
real
estate
it
took
effect
immediately
under
the
ordinance
developers
and
realtors
investors
are
not
allowed
to
contact
a
property
owner
by
email
phone
or
in
person
or
written
letter
within
180
day
period.
D
After
a
homeowner
said
they
are
not
interested
in
selling
those
violating
the
rule
would
face
a
range,
a
fine
ranging
from
2
000
to
10
000.,
and
you
know
with
talking
with
byron
today.
You
know
he
some
things.
He
said
that
he
that
he
knows
now
that
he
wish
he
was
known.
D
You
know
in
the
beginning
about
strengthening
it
is
that
you
know
the
complaints
about
the
harassment
goes
through
3-1-1,
but
you
know,
I
guess,
there's
a
trying
to
get
an
understanding
of
who
is
going
to
follow
through
and
investigate,
and
I
think
predatory
tactics
needs
to
be
clearly
defined
and
one
thing
that
you
know
he
said
also
is
that
reoccurring
offenses
that
they
should
lose
their
license?
And
you
know
that
I
need
to
try
to
understand.
D
Does
that
mean
like
they're
licensed
like
in
illinois
in
the
whole
usa
or
whatever,
and
we
have
to
there's
been
a
lot
of
reports
in
chicago
about
inspectors
colluding
with
developers?
So
if
developer
like
targets
a
particular
home
and
then
inspectors
targeting
them
by
continuously
finding
them?
So
then,
like
the
homeowner
is
kind
of
backed
up
into
a
wall,
you
know
and
yeah.
You
guys
have
the
ordinance,
and
you
know
what
I'd
like
to
see
us.
You
know.
Maybe
I'd
be
willing
to.
D
A
And
I
would
say
you
know
again:
one
of
the
key
things
to
me
is
to
see
that
this
be
one
spoke
in
a
wheel.
That's
right
focused
on
sort
of
safeguarding,
affordable
homes
and
keeping
affordable
homes
for
folks
of
color
and
for
working
class.
Folks
in
evanston-
and
this
is-
and
you
know
like
this-
is
not
something
that's
going
to
happen
quietly.
A
It
is
not
happening
quietly
across
all
of
the
us
right
now.
There
was
a
point
that
carlos
made
earlier
that
I
I
I
want
to
put
a
fine
point
on
it,
because
when
I
say
this
like,
I
want
to
make
sure
I
disclose
to
everybody.
I
am
a
real
estate
broker.
I
am
a
real
estate
investor
like
this
is
what
I've
done
for
years.
A
I've
had
to
take
a
look
at
my
own
practices
in
the
past
or
what
I
have
thought
it
was
okay
in
the
past
and
sort
of
do
my
own
little
come
to
jesus
on
that,
and
so
I
say
this,
but
this
morning
on
cnn
and
then
I
saw
another
clip
of
it
somewhere.
Rent
across
the
nation
is
up
by
in,
like
tamper.
They
give
the
example
by
58.
A
Imagine
getting
a
letter
that
your
rent
has
more.
You
know
gone
up
by
60
percent
and
that's
the
highest
in
the
nation,
but
many
especially
in
the
southern
areas,
many
of
the
towns,
it
has
gone
up
by
20
40
and
then
just
this
afternoon
I
saw
another
screenshot
from
like
a
tv
screen.
I
can't
remember,
I
kind
of
which,
which
somebody
screenshotted
and
shared
it,
that
in
new
york
it's
happening.
A
The
price
of
a
one
bedroom
is
now
above
four
thousand
about
six
thousand,
some
neighborhoods
with
increases
in
a
hundred
eleven
percent.
Eighty
nine
percent
in
one
and
sixty
seven
percent,
or
see
nine
percent
in
the
other
exact
number.
So
if,
if
you
own
your
home,
you
might
be
sitting
here,
not
knowing
what
is
going
on
in
the
country
and
across
the
country,
and
these
hikes
in
rent
are
driven
by
the
fact
that
more
and
more
corporations
and
in
equity
firms
are
buying
up
large-scale
buying
up
houses.
I
have
seen
it.
A
I've
walked
through
these
houses,
myself
little
dinky
houses.
When
I
say
I'm
not
trying
to
like
be
rate
anybody's
home,
but
for
the
price
that
they're
trying
to
charge
in
skokie
they're
trying
to
charge
four
thousand
dollars
for
a
three
bedroom,
one
and
a
half
bath
home
with
obvious
water
damage
in
the
basement
and
no
washer
dryer,
even
they
are
buying
up
these
homes.
They
are
managing
them
from
websites
with
large
management
companies
and
they
are
like
hiking
up
the
price
way
more
than
a
standard.
A
Like
a
you
know,
a
landlord
who
owns
one
or
two
properties
would
would
do,
and
the
fact
that
this
is
happening.
Our
mass
is
allowing
them
to
sort
of
like
just
raise,
raise.
They
target
certain
neighborhoods
and
raise
the
price
in
certain
neighborhoods,
and
so
these
sort
of
what
many
might
feel
like
it's
over
control
of
government
is
starting
to
become
way,
and
I
see
your
hands
I'll
get
in
a
second.
A
We
I
have
like,
like
blinked
at
some
news
feeds
I've
seen
recently
where
communities
are
atlanta
is
looking
at
cutting
down
putting
putting
on
airbnb
that's
another
thing.
That's
happening
as
somebody
who
also
does
cmb
but,
like
large
corporations,
are
buying
multiple,
like
you
know,
hundreds
of
airbnbs
in
a
community
and
so
that
there's
way
less
homes
available.
So
we're
not
talking
about
an
individual
doing
this
we're
talking
about
large
corporations,
doing
it
by
the
hundreds
and
fifties
and
then
that's
leaving
way
less
homes,
they're
hiking
up
the
price.
A
They
always
pay
cash
for
it
and
then
they're
being
used
as
airbnb
atlanta
is
looking
at
limiting
the
number
of
youth
ownership
of
airbnbs
to
two
in
the
city.
You
can't
own
one
in
atlanta
unless
you
live
there
so
again
that
cuts
out
the
you
know
the
guy
with
the
cash
somewhere
in
china
doing
this,
and
not
only
I'm,
not
blaming
china.
China
is
not
the
problem
for
our
housing,
but,
like
you
know,
just
from
a
distant
person
different
distant
place.
A
Other
other
communities
are
also
now
cutting
down
on
sort
of
the
number
of
properties
that
can
be
owned,
which
actually
exist
in
other
countries
as
well.
So
while
this
seems
like
coming
into
territory,
that
seems
very
relatively
controlling
to
way,
I
don't
know
a
liberal
and
not
liberalism,
liberal
versus
conservative,
but
liberal,
as
in
the
way
our
government
is
structured,
would
normally
have
their
level
of
government.
A
This
has
actually
been
happening
in
town
after
town
because
of
the
different-
and
I
think
the
important
word
here
is
predatory
type
and
aggressive
type.
Industrialization
of
housing
is
happening
across
the
country,
so
jane
go
ahead.
E
Thanks
carla,
I
think
I
saw
very
recently
it
might
have
been
a
6
60
minute
story
even
about
these
corporations
that
are
buying
up
the
mid-level
and
early
kind
of
first
home
buyers,
kind
of
level
housing
and
putting
them
out
of
reach
for
both
renters
and
those
buyers.
And
so
I
I
want
to
pick
up
what
something
that
darlene
said
earlier,
and
that
was
about
needing
data.
E
For
this
and
and
first
I
thought
that
this
would
be
getting
at
specific
geographies
in
evanston,
but
it
seems
as
if
it
sounds
as
if
it's
going
to
be
city-wide.
So
this
is
getting
to
the
behavior
of
the
actions
of
prospective
property
purchasers
not
to
focusing
on
certain
communities
and
neighborhoods
within
evanston.
So
it's
a
city-wide
thing,
not
a
folksy
geography,
because
I
was
thinking
first,
that
it
might
be
interesting
to
get
see
if
we
can
even
map
out.
E
A
Think
I
think
you
were
on
the
right
track,
originally
nobody's
targeting
the
dude,
with
a
1.6
million
dollar
house
on
the
lake
to
gentrify
his
ass
like
right,
like
it
just,
isn't
happening
right.
There
is
literally
an
into
the
point
of
the
phone
numbers
and,
like
I
think,
darlene
you
said
taking
away
licenses,
you
think
these
corporate
dudes
are
the
ones
doing
it.
They
literally
pay
these
guys.
A
They
call
bird
dogs
and
the
bird
dogs
drive
around
the
neighborhoods
and
look
for
the
houses
that
are
in
disrepair
for
their
eyes
and
they
try
to
contact
and
they
and
when
they
have,
then
they
call
that
guy
with
them.
So
like
the
guy
with
the
license
and
with
the
money
and
will
never
be,
you
know
found
because
you
know
he
would
say
he
didn't.
You
know
he
didn't
tell
him
to
knock
on
that
door.
A
He
didn't
tell
him
to
approach,
but
these
bird
dogs
drive
around
and
they
look
for
homes
and
they
target
the
homes
that
are
older
and
in
in
you
know
in
need
of
repair,
and
we
know
that
there
is
a
correlation,
so
I
think
it
I
mean.
We
definitely
know
the
partners,
that's
going
to
happen.
E
So
I've
because
I
had
to
obviously
rejoin
this
meeting
on
a
different
device.
I've
lost
the
chat
with
the
link
to
the
ordinance.
I'm
really
sorry,
if
you
don't
mind
reposting
does
the
chicago
ordinance
refers
specifically
to
gentrification,
or
is
it
really
about
the
predatory
nature
of
the
thank
you
carla
of
this
activity?
D
Thanks,
I
think
we'll
a
couple
of
things
I
I
I
mean
it
would
be
city-wide
but,
like
carlos
said,
the
areas
that
are
most
imp
impacted
are
two
five
and
eight.
I
grew
up
here
and
when
I
grew
up
here
it
was
there
was
the
population
of
black
people
was
26
now
we're
down
to
11,
and
so
I
think
that
you
know
if
we
could
put
some
sort
of
measure
in
there
to
you
know,
help
families,
because
you
know
we're
not.
D
You
know
we
as
a
city,
we
do
a
lot
of
talk
about
equity
and
inclusion
and
affordable
housing
and
everything
like
that.
But
yet
the
numbers
are
declining
and
the
numbers
are
declining
because
of
the
lack
of
affordability.
There's
the
harassment
that
happens
to
people
and
those
things
are
not
being
addressed.
D
While
you
know
we're
still
saying
that
we're
in
a
quotable
city,
so
I
mean,
I
think
that
you
know
if
we
put
some
measures
in
place
to
you,
know
kind
of
have
for
residents
who
might
be
at
the
point
where
you
know
they're
being
harassed,
they're
older
and
I
like-
I
don't
I
don't
know
if
you
know
anyone
is
colluding
with
them
or
not
to
you
know
kind
of
target
them.
D
But
you
know
as
if
this
something
like
this
would,
you
know,
be
another
level
of
another
layer
of
protection
for
residents
so
that
you
know
they
can
stay
here.
Whole
neighborhoods
and
communities
and
whole
neighborhoods
in
evanston,
which
used
to
be
predominantly
black,
are
no
longer
black.
We
can
go
into
fifth
ward,
we
can
talk
about
wesley.
We
can
talk
about
jacksonville,
combat
daryl.
We
can
talk
about
hoverland,
I
mean
all
of
those
areas
where
black
families
grew
up.
D
Generations
of
families
grew
up,
are
you
know
now
replaced
with
white
families,
and
you
know
everyone
you
know
obviously
deserves.
You
know
adequate
housing,
but
the
thing
is:
is
that
once
those
families
are
pushed
out,
they
can't
afford
to
come
back
to
evanston.
Housing
is
expensive
here
now.
So
you
know
if
this
is
a
measure,
something
we
could
kind
of
work
on,
it'd
be
something
you
know.
E
I
think
there
would
be
other
residents
too,
who
are
vulnerable
to
the
same
kind
of
predatory
activity
who
would
not
don't
necessarily
live,
necessarily
live
in
a
neighborhood
that
is
vulnerable
to
gentrification,
but
would
also
still
benefit
from
an
ordinance
like
this.
A
Yeah,
and
so
I
think
one
we
will
continue
to
kind
of-
I
mean
one
of
the
the
beauties
of
this
ordinance
is,
I
mean
again
in
all
strategy
right.
You
have
to
try
to
get
some
quick
wins,
even
though
they
may
not
be
the
most
impactful
thing
of
the
thing
that's
going
to
stop
at
while
we
work
on
the
stuff
that
is
literally
going
to
take
much
longer
to
get
in
place
as
well,
even
though
they
have
a
higher
impact
right,
so
we
have
to
work
with
ends.
A
You
know
seeing
this
in
effect
under
having
the
ability
to
talk
to
the
people
who
push
this
through
in
chicago
and
understand
the
pitfalls
understand
what
they
would
improve
if
they
can
go
back
and
do
it
could
allow
us
to
kind
of
move
something
of
this
type
along
in
a
you
know
in
a
swifter
manner.
You
know,
as
I
I'm
at
the
risk
of
repeating
myself
again.
A
I
want
this
to
be
part
of
a
larger
package,
because
this
alone,
you
know,
while
the
right
thing
to
do
this
is
not
stopping
any.
A
You
know
anything
right
like
so
now:
the
developer
buys
the
bird
dog
burner
phones
and
he
burns
the
phone
every
month,
and
now
we
have
no
idea
who
called
so
no
way
of
tracking
like
who
who
the
who's
the
person
who
was
targeting
right,
and
so
there
are
things
that
are
in
place
right
now
in
evanston
that
were
originally
put
towards
some
of
this
purpose,
but
also
some
of
just
keeping
that
the
the
image
or
the
historic
nature
of
evanston.
A
Presently
we
have
something
in
place
that
if
you
were
going
to
knock
down
a
house,
there's
a
ten
thousand
dollar
fee,
not
fine
per
se,
not
not
for
the
actual
demolition.
Just
for
the
for
the
pleasure
of
knocking
down
a
house,
this
is
to
dissuade
people
from
knocking
on
a
house
when
that
was
put
in
place.
A
Ten
thousand
dollars
might
have
been
something,
but
now
the
developers
can
you
know,
buy
a
place
for
300
000
and
sell
then
turn
around
build
a
house
on
it
and
sell
it
for
1.2
million
like
10
000
is
not
a
deterrent
anymore,
so
sort
of
revisiting
that
some
of
the
things
on
the
list
here
are-
and
we've
actually
talked
about
this
as
a
commission
before
putting
some
sort
of
deterrent
in
the
same
way
around
deterrent
or
stop
around
changing
two
flats
into
single
family
homes,
because
what
that
does
and
again
full
disclosure.
A
I
live
in
a
two
flat
that
I
I
live,
that
property
that
I
changed
into
to
found
a
single
family
home.
So
it
doesn't,
you
know
like
recognizing
these
things
now
doesn't
mean
I
can
go
back
10
years
from
now.
You
know
undo
what
I
did,
but
recognizing
now
that
like
in
my
community,
you
can't,
you
know
like
finding
affordable
rental
is
one
thing
being
a
rental
family
in
in
this
dewey.
Second
ward
area
is
hard.
A
There
just
aren't
any
rentals,
because
so
many
of
them
have
been
converted
so
whether
it's
putting
a
ban
on
future
ones,
incentivizing
people
who
have
done
it
to
maybe
turn
their
basements
or
something
into
additional
units
to
try
to
like
repair
some
of
the
the
damage
that
we
and
I
will
say
we
there
have
collectively
collectively
created
well.
What
I
want
this
to
be
is
like
a
kickoff
of
we
have
spoken
as
a
commission
before
that.
A
Affordable
housing
is
likely
to
be
again
we're
not
predicting
we're
not
telling
the
survey
what
to
say,
but
we
anticipate
that
affordable
housing
is
going
to
be
one
of
the
things
on
this
survey.
We
predicted
that,
before
the
housing
crisis
that
we
are
collectively
now
in,
like
the
us
is
in
a
housing
crisis
both
on
the
rental
and
the
purchase
side,
I
mean
not
for
the
very
rich,
but
for
the
rest
of
us,
the
us
is
in
a
housing
crisis.
So
this
is
before
that.
I
want
us
to
stop.
A
Bringing
things
to
the
table
like
darlene
has
done
here.
For
us
to
discuss
doesn't
mean
everyone
gets
fast,
doesn't
mean
everyone
gets,
but
what
we
want
to
do
is
put
together
something
comprehensive
that
is
attacking
this
problem
from
multiple
angles,
because
one
thing
is
not
going
to
so.
A
If
you
work
in
other
communities,
if
you
hear
something
like
in
the
last
month
in
particular,
particularly
targeting
investors,
I
have
heard
a
lot
I
in
the
news
and
and
like
I
belong
to
lots
of
real
estate
groups,
because
I
own
a
company
doing
that,
like
I,
I
it's
just
bubbling
up
a
lot.
That
is,
there's
policy
being
put
in
place
to
stem
this.
A
If
you
hear
of
something,
if
you
see
something
you
have
access
to
somebody,
who's
worked
on
it
in
a
different
community,
it
doesn't
have
to
be
in
chicago,
please
sort
of
bring
that
to
the
group,
so
we
could
start
looking
at
all
the
pieces
that
could
sort
of
help
make
up
a
more
comprehensive
approach
on
this
issue.
D
Thank
you.
One
thing
I
want
to
say
is
that
byron
is
willing
to
come
to
our
next
meeting
and
you
know
talk
to
us
answer
any
questions
that
we
might
have
and
tell
about.
You
know
the
ordinance
and
how
you
know
it's
been
successful
in
helping
you
know,
in
particular
in
his
ward,
but
I'm
sure
he
has
data
on.
You
know
the
city
as
how
it's
been
helpful
too.
So
that's
you
know
something
to
think
about.
As
you
know,
we
move
forward.
A
We
move-
and
I
think
darlene
I
think,
as
I
mentioned
to
you
before,
I
think
we'd
be
interested
in
having
him
chat
with
this.
This
particular
ordinance
is
is
very
short
like
reading
it
we
can
pretty
much
summarize
you
know.
My
bigger
interest
would
be
like
trying
to
understand
how
this
fits
into
the
larger
plan,
which
I
know
they
have
a
larger
plan
around
affordable
housing
and
gentrification.
A
G
Hey,
I
just
want
to
thank
you
all
and
and
thank
darlene
for
bringing
this
to
the
city
as
as
a
potential
ordnance.
I
I
just
hope
that
the
committee
moves
forward
to
consider
something
like
this.
Without
waiting
on
a
more
conclusive
or
larger
package,
I
think
it's
important
to
agree
on
something
and
then
present
it
to
the
city
as
soon
as
possible,
as
opposed
to
waiting
on
additional
ordinances
or
thinking
about
what
a
larger
anti-gentrification
package
might
look
like.
So
I
just
urge
the
committee
to
consider
that
okay.
F
A
Know-
and
I
I
want
to
make
sure
that
I
restate
or
clarify
I
mean
there-
is
the
point
there
about
quick
wins
versus
longer
stuff.
I
don't
want
to
hold
up
the
quick
wins
waiting
until
you
know
the
triple
layer
cake
is
ready
to
be
baked
right,
but
what
I
do
want
to
be
able
to
state
as
we
introduce
you
know.
The
quick
win
is
that
there
is
a
larger
plan,
and
so
the
plan
doesn't
have
to
be
fully
baked.
A
But,
like
you
know,
this
is
part
of
a
three-step
plan,
or
this
is
part
of
a
four-step
plan,
because
you
know
it
it
needs
to
sit.
I
feel
like
something
like
this
needs
to
sit
in
a
you
know
in
a
larger
scheme
of
things,
so
we
won't
wait
for
the
whole
thing
to
be
ready,
but
you
know
I'd
like
to
have
a
vision
of
where
we're
going
with
this,
so
that
we
can
sort
of
situate
it
as
we
present
it.
But
thank
you
for
that.
A
All
right,
I
am
realizing
that
the
version
of
going
on
to
the
next
nobody
else
has
anything
else.
I'm
somehow
doing
the
wrong
thing
here.
The
version
of
the
pdf
that
I
sent
flipped
pages,
the
page
with
the
with
the
with
the
actual
scorecard
so
pieces
of
it
are
cut
off.
So
I'm
going
to
see
if
I
can
send
like
my
document
from
my
computer
here,
give
me
one
second,
and
we
will
start
talking
about
the
scorecard
and
there
will
be
homework
from
the
scorecard
there.
We
go.
A
C
A
Just
checking
so
there
is
a
there
is
a
document
that
I
just
sent.
It
is
the
same
thing
as
what
you
have
it's
just
that
now
you
won't
see.
Oh,
I
thought
it
was
cut
up.
It's
not
cut
off
it's
fine!
I
just
couldn't
see
my
screen.
I
am
not
functioning
on
all
cylinders
today.
All
right
so
never
mind
you
can
use
the
one
you
had
before
or
mine
all
right,
so
darlene
lashonda
and
I
have
been
meeting
to
discuss
this
and
we
had
a
little
bit
of
a
come
to
jesus.
A
On
this
I
mean
there
are
two
ways
to
build
anything,
build
it
comprehensive.
A
So
that's
specific,
no
matter
what
type
of
project
plan
you
try
to
run
through
it
or
build
in
general,
and
sorry,
let's
just
in
that
first
one
where
you
build
it
very
robust,
so
they're
like
10
different
avenues,
you
can
choose
depending
on
what
type
of
project
what
size
of
project
you
know
like
who's
involved,
all
these
different
things,
and
that
makes
it
so
that
once
a
group,
a
project
gets
in
its
lane.
A
The
questions
in
that
realm
of
that
lane
of
the
scorecard
are
targeted
towards
them.
If
that
makes
sense
so
that
somebody
would
be
coming
with
a
finance
budget
type
project
versus
somebody
coming
with
a
housing
project
are
getting
vastly
different
questions
that
are
targeted
to
their
type,
and
so
that's
the
road
we
started
going
down.
A
That
is
a
slightly
better
road
to
dummy
proof
it
because
then
people
can't
dance
around
the
questions
you're
asking,
because
the
questions
are
quite
targeted
to
the
exact
thing
that
they're
doing,
but
we
sat
back
and
took
a
look
at
who
we
are
where
we
are
what's
going
on
in
the
city
of
evanston
right
now,
the
fact
that
we
are
already
creating
this
in
backseat
position
or
the
middle
seat
of
the
minivan.
A
Maybe
I
don't
know
how
to
put
it
where
these
call
cards
should
realized
by
the
departments
of
the
institution,
in
this
case
the
city
of
evanston,
that
is
doing
the
work
that
is
baking
the
cake
that
is
creating
the
project
that
is
pushing
forward
the
initiative
so
that
every
step
of
forming
the
initiative-
they
are.
A
You
know
they're
contemplating
these
questions,
we
don't
have
the
power
to
do
that
and
nobody
at
the
city
has
been
trained
in
the
basics.
Far
less
to
this
point,
so
we
have
decided
to
work
with
what
we
have
and
create
one
where
we,
as
the
equity
committee,
is
then
scoring
it
hopefully
before
it's
fully
baked,
but
knowing
that
we're
not
in
on
the
ground
floor,
and
so
given
that,
at
this
point
in
this
pilot
moment
in
this
beginning,
we
don't
want
it
always
to
be
like
this.
A
This
is
not
how
these
are
built
to
be
used.
The
people
doing
the
work
is
a
smaller
group
of
us,
meaning
answering
the
questions,
and
so
from
that
perspective,
if
we
assume
that
it's
a
smaller
group
to
train
us,
then
also
the
future.
Us
is
right
like
who
sit
in
this
chair,
but
a
group
of
less
than
10
people.
We
don't
have
to
worry
so
much
about
people,
avoiding
the
purposefully,
avoiding
the
questions.
A
Right
I
mean
like
this
is
a
self-test
and
if
you
want
to
get
your
project
to
the
next
step,
the
incentive
is
to
like
self-test
yourself.
Well
right,
like
bs
fluff,
you
know
add
more,
but
in
this
case
the
way
we
are
rolling
it
out.
A
It's
not
a
self-test,
it's
an
eec,
doing
an
evaluation
of
a
partially
baked
project
initiative
or
practice
put
followed
by
the
city,
and
so
we
worried
that
making
it
more
complicated
the
way
that
would
make
for
more
more
robust
card,
while
it
has
its
benefits,
really
wouldn't
lift
off
in
an
organization
that
is,
is
presently
you
know
floundering
at
in,
in
the
kindest
words
right,
and
so
we
decided
to
step
back
and
simplify,
and
so
what
you
see
is
what
we're
hoping
to
be.
A
We
have
so
let
me
just
get
to
the
table
of
co.
We'll
forget
the
table
of
cons,
we'll
go
through
the
project,
so
you
know
what
is
the
scorecard
explaining
what
the
scorecard
is
and
explaining?
How?
When
do
you
give
something,
a
zero?
When
do
you
give
something?
A
one
you
want
to
give
something:
a
three
five.
Whatever
on
the
next
page,
we
talk
about
what
types
of
projects
will
go
into
the
equity
scorecard
as
well
as
when
do
you
use
it
this?
When
do
you
use
it?
A
I
feel
like
especially
since
we're
piloting-
and
we
will
this
organization
will
be
making
a
decision
of
when
they
this
commission
will
make
a
decision
of
when
and
what
we
choose
that
list
of
when
we
use
the
scorecard
will
likely
grow
for
now.
I'm
looking
at
the
bottom
of
page,
four,
the
second
half
so
far,
we've
come
up
with
the
eec,
anticipates
a
disproportionate
if
effect
to
communities
of
color,
and
that
should
not
be
a
question
mark.
A
The
project
includes
housing
development
over
30
units.
So
we
are.
We
are
concerned
that
the
community
is
getting
new
housing
and
wanting
to
make
sure
we
secure,
affordable
housing
in
some
way.
The
right
number
may
or
may
not
be
30
moving
forward.
A
As
we
see
things
come
before
us,
we
have
received
the
request
and
again
we
are
called
the
equity
and
empowerment
commission,
and
so
we
are
supposed
to
be
somehow
responsible
for
outreach
and
engaging
the
public
et
cetera,
and
so
there's
no
way
that
this
this
path
to
evaluating
a
project
can
exist
without
an
opportunity
for
the
citizenry.
Sorry,
the
residents
to
have
input
in
some
way
as
to
what
needs
to
be
reviewed.
E
A
Yeah,
that
makes
sense,
and
so
we
may
decide
whether
at
five
it
comes
before
us
to
make
sure
it
reaches
reach,
meets
the
it
meets
the
other
criteria,
because
I
mean
you
know
like
leaf
blowers.
Just
keep
coming
to
mind.
You
can
get
50
goddamn
calls
about
leaf
blowers,
but
that's
not
the
city's
biggest
problem
right
like
so.
A
I'm
trying
to
balance
that
as
well,
and
so
maybe
I
mean
not
that
leaf
blows
as
an
equity
issue,
although
I
wouldn't
pass
it,
somebody
try
to
frame
it
that
way,
but
like
there
are
times
when
we
can
get
calls
on
something
because
people
are
annoyed
by
it,
but
it
is
still
not
the
right
thing
for
us
to
utilize
our
timeline
based
on
the
actual
effect
you
know
impact,
so
maybe
it
is
five
and
that
gets
changed
to
five
and
but
the
next
step
there
is
that
we
then
evaluate
across
the
other
criteria
to
make
sure,
because,
even
though
we
put
criteria
somewhere,
people
are
going
to
get
angry
or
interested
or
right
and
again,
anger
is
never
a
bad
thing.
A
It
was
never
just
a
bad
thing
for
me,
so
I'm
not
putting
that
in
a
bad
light,
but
people
are
motivated
to
speak
up
on
something
and
they
do,
but
it
may
not
meet
all
our
criteria.
They
miss
minutes
that
and
then
there's
a
request
coming
directly
from
the
city
or
the
city
council,
which
is
really
to
me
when
we
know
we're
making
a
difference
right
now.
A
We
are
putting
something
forward
and
hoping
they
pick
it
up
when
they
start
requesting
that
we
score
them,
then
that's
a
signal
to
me
that
they're
ready
to
hear
the
consequence
they're
ready
to
start
look.
You
know
like
taking
a
deep
look
at
themselves
and
the
work
that
is
being
done
in
whatever
department
and
so
to
me
that
number
four
is
like
you
know,
goal
for
the
pilot
and
then
the
real
goal
is
to
get
them
to
do
themselves.
A
I'm
not
gonna
go
through
the
steps
so
much
the
steps
are
just
outlining.
What
comes
next
so
the
first
page.
So
one
of
the
first
steps
is
that
two
people
from
the
eec
are
assigned
to
this
project
and
again
the
number
two
is
so
that
we
could
have.
You
know
at
least
some
perspectives
we're
not
supposed
to
meet
more
than
three,
but
the
hope
is
here
that
nobody
is
overburdened.
You
know
too
many
times
in
a
given
year
to
do
this
outside
work.
You
know
this
is
just
gathering
information.
A
What's
the
name
of
the
project,
who
are
the
key
people
on
the
project,
you
know,
what's
the
contact
information,
what
does
the
project
look
like,
so
this
is
kind
of
gathering
it
like
letting
us
know
what
the
project
is
about,
and
then
it
is
responsibility
of
I've
moved
to
page
nine,
the
formatting
on
this
shifted
again,
I
don't
know
why.
So
we
have
those
blank
pages.
A
It
is
responsible
for
those
two
members
of
the
eec
to
sit
on
the
phone
with
talk
with
both
the
cons,
the
people
that
this
affects,
as
well
as
the
person
in
charge
of
the
project
or
the
initiative
or
the
practice
at
the
city.
To
answer
these
questions
so
now
we
will
have
just
one
scorecard,
regardless
of
what
type
we
understand
that
this
as
a
draft
is
where
we're
going
to
start.
A
I
think
if
we
get
to
a
point
where
we
do
get
the
city
to
start
scoring
themselves-
and
I
say
the
city
now
instead
of
the
council,
because
the
council
will
still
have
a
gazillion
different
rather
than
us
even
sitting
here
and
thinking
wow
if
a
project
was
going
through
the
zoning
board,
what
kind
of
questions
did
they
have
like
if
we
get
to
the
point
where
the
zoning
board
is
ready
to
score
themselves
and
score
every
project
that
comes
their
way
or
the
finance
committee
or
whatever
it
is,
then
they
have
the
better.
A
Like
they're
gonna
know
the
questions
they
should
be
asking
right
more
than
us
who,
like
finance,
is
not
necessarily
my
thing
so
in
this
there
are
eight
questions
going
down
the
left
hand
side.
You
will
you
know
the
per
essentially
these
you'll
see
that
a
piece
is
bolded.
A
The
bolded
piece
is
sort
of
the
added
on
piece
right.
So
in
this
first
one
zero
to
one
and
the
quest
question
here
is
where
stakeholders
engaged,
and
so,
if
you
get
a
zero
to
one
of
the
stakeholders
from
different
racial
groups,
especially
ones
that
are
adversely
affected,
were
informed
of
this
proposal.
You
let
them
know
you
had
a
meeting
you
let
them
know
this
is
coming.
A
You
get
a
two
to
three
if
they
were
formed,
but
meaningfully
involved
in
the
development
of
the
proposal,
and
then
you
get
a
four
to
five
if
they
were
meaningfully
involved,
but
there
was
authentic
representation
within
the
development
of
the
program
and
supposed
to
be
a
piece
in
there
about
like
changes
were
made
to
lessen
the
impact,
so
each
one
of
these
is
sort
of
growing
on
it
and
so
from
what
you
find
out
from
both
the
stakeholders
and
the
pers,
the
group
pushing
forward
the
initiative
or
working
on
the
initiative
you're
supposed
to
not
only
give
it
a
score
on
there
but
sort
of
fill
out
like
these.
A
You
know
the
instructions
here
in
zero
to
one
two
three
essentially
won't
remain
there.
You
will
write
a
little
note
that
says
you
know.
I
spoke
to
many
of
the
folks
in
the
fifth
ward.
Multiple
meetings
were
had.
They
felt
that
they
were
given
a
chance
to
hear
what
was
happening,
but
they
didn't
feel
like
they
had
a
voice
or
were
listened
to,
if
so
like
kind
of
explaining.
Why
you're
scoring
it
in
that
two
to
three
range
versus
another
range.
A
This
is
essentially,
I
mean,
there's
eight
questions
in
there
and
then
there's
a
last
page
where
we
are
making
recommendations
for
changing
the
actual
proposal
itself,
but
then
recommendations
to
the
or
for
to
the
city
around
the
ordinance
of
the
rules.
There
are
often
times
where
something's,
not
equitable,
but
it's
legal.
I
mean
it's,
not
oftentimes.
It's
america
right,
it's
not
equitable,
it's,
but
it's
legal.
A
So
if
something
is
happening,
if
development
is
coming
through
and
they
put
three
studios
in
their
affordable
housing
and
they're
like
look,
we
met
the
requirements.
Technically,
they
met
the
law
right.
We
may
not
be
able
to
push
back
the
zoning
board
or
whatever
may
not
be
able
to
shoot
this
down,
because
it
met
the
requirement,
but
then
there's
a
there's,
a
recommendation
that
something
should
be
done
about
the
loopholes
that
are
letting
these
things
go
through.
A
So
there's
recommendation
to
the
project
itself
and
the
people
running
the
project
or
the
initiative
or
the
policy
or
whatever
it
is,
and
then
there's
recommendations
to.
You
know
the
folks
who
control
the
loopholes,
which
may
just
be
a
different
department
of
the
city.
A
I'm
gonna
open
it
up
for
questions
and
comments,
but
say
to
you
that,
like
this
is
a
lot
to
just
you
know,
people
haven't
read
all
the
things
my
goal
with
this
next
week,
not
next
week.
Next
time
we
meet
is
to
bring
to
bring
a
a
night
a
policy,
a
practice
of
something
to
the
table
and
analyze
this
as
a
group,
we
got
to
use
it
to
break
it
right.
A
This
is
not
going
to
be
perfect,
and
so,
if
we
take
either
a
policy
that
was
a
big
ticket
item
or
big,
like
you
know,
resident
opera
item
or
we
take
a
future
one,
that's
coming
down
the
table,
we
may
not
have
all
the
facts
from
you
know
the
point,
but
like
it's,
the
discussion
and
the
type
of
thinking
and
the
analysis
that's
going
on
or
the
type
of
questions
we
would
want
to
ask
the
older
person
who
led
this
if
that
person
were
in
the
room.
A
That
is
what
we're
trying
to
to
kind
of
take
through,
and
I
promise
I've
done
this
not
only
with
this
form
but
like
with
several
other
things.
We
gotta
put
something
through
the
system
to
figure
out
where
the
system
breaks
down
and
so
open
to
ideas,
not
only
now
or
later
on,
on
what
we
will
run
through
here,
but
also
just
opening
up
the
table
down
to
questions
comments,
suggestions,
things
like
that.
C
I
was
looking
at
after
our
last
meeting
to
work
on
it.
I
started
playing
around
with
because
we
talked
you.
C
You
know
we
had
talked
about
different
format,
yeah
different
format
and
and
just
kind
of
usability,
so
I
started
playing
around
with
a
different
format
for
us
to
be
able
to
kind
of
do
more
of
a
clicking
type
of
you
know,
process
to
it,
and
so
I
can
share
that
with
you
guys,
but
I
I
did
kind
of
I
don't
know
if
it's
one
page,
because
it's
on
a
sheet,
I
don't
know
how
many
pages
it
ends
up,
it
would
be,
it
would
be
more
than
it
would
still
have
the
same
elements
as
far
as
explanation.
C
C
It
would
hopefully
speed
up
the
speed
of
the
process
and
so
yeah
that
I
mean
I
just
wanted
to
bring
that
to
the
table
just
to
let
you
know
that
I
I
can
should
I
I
don't
have
to
share
that
here
in
this
meeting,
but
I
can
share
that
with
unless
that's
the
case,
but
I
can
share
that
with
you,
so
we
can
look
at
it
before
our
next
meeting.
A
Yeah
and
just
to
kind
of
clarify
that
a
little
bit
you
know
on
pages
well
page
13
of
the
document
itself,
page
nine
at
the
very
top
of
the
you
know
the
actual
scorecards.
What
we
would
love
is
that,
like
in
each
of
those
boxes,
the
box
is
clear,
so
you
can
type
in
there.
But
when
you
hover
over
it,
it
tells
you
if
the
stakeholders
were.
A
If
the
stakeholders
were
contacted,
you
know
and
the
policy
shared
with
them,
then
you
would
give
it
as
this
and
then
you
hover
over
the
other
one,
and
so
it's
giving
you
guidance
when
you
hover
over
it.
But
the
the
field
is
clear
for
you
to
then
type
in
what
you
learned
so
we're
trying
to
figure
out
how
to
make
this
a
little
more
user-friendly,
because
right
now,
this
text
in
the
box,
which
again
this
is
us
just
trying
to
come
up
with
the
content
right
this
text
in
the
box.
C
Okay,
but
yeah.
F
A
Right
so
go
ahead.
F
E
Really
like
your
idea,
carla
of
stress
testing
this
using
a
policy
and-
and
I
don't
know
if
it
makes
sense
to
do
one-
that's
already
already
happening
like
the
beach
token
policy
or
something
simple,
just
to
kind
of
put
it
through
the
ringer,
this
ringer
or
something
more
complicated.
E
I
can
see
that,
if
we're,
if,
if
we're
going
to
be
using
the
scorecard,
but
things
are
more
complicated,
like
a
zoning
ordinance
update
that
gets
really
technical
and
would
be
more
involved
and
requires
some
more
time
for
whoever
is
going
to
be
doing
the
evaluation
for
the
scorecard.
A
A
You
are
able
to
do
fine,
you
know
the
financial
nitty-gritty
unless
you
understand
zoning
and
how
that
would
effect.
I
don't
know
that
we
can
expect
this
committee
as
a
whole,
not
saying
anybody
here
is
not
smart
or
knowledgeable
or
anything
like
that,
but,
like
those
things
require
instead
of
skill
sets
that
you
know
the
average
person
on
the
street
may
be
able
to
do
open
heart
surgery,
but
they
can't.
You
know
like
that.
They
don't
know
anything
about
that
right,
like
so.
A
I
yeah,
so
I
don't
know
that
we
in
in
our
first
piloting
of
this,
not
the
first
first
one
but
as
we
pilot
and
roll
this
out,
I
don't
know
we're
gonna
be
able
to
take
on
the
complicated
things
like
a
whole
zombie
hall,
but
don't
know
the
beach
token.
Two
I've
been
trying
to
think
too,
because
I
thought
about
each
token.
It
seems
harmless
enough.
A
It's
it's
passed
in
a
positive
way,
so
people
have
probably
you
know
and
there's
not
too
much
animosity
around
that
first
to
discuss
it
and
I
thought
well,
it
might
be
too
easy.
I
don't
want
to
do
something
too
complicated.
I
couldn't
think
of
anything
else.
E
A
Thought
all
right
so
yeah
so
coming
into
next
meeting,
I
see
we
see
we
one,
I'm
asking
people
to
you
know
anything
around
affordable
housing.
It
like
at
this
point
we're
just
trying
to
you
know
we
will
keep
working
with
the
the
information
we
have
from
darlene
and
the
connection
to
that
person,
but
it
doesn't
mean
that
everything
else
will
be.
But
I'd
like
us
to
just
look
at.
We
expect
affordable
housing
to
come
up
on
that
survey.
A
We
know
that
there's
even
bigger
of
a
crisis
than
you
know
a
year
ago
when
we
started
talking
about
this.
Let's
start,
let's
not
wait
for
people
to
tell
us
the
problem.
Let's
start
looking
at
the
range
of
solutions,
we're
not
reinventing
the
wheel.
None
of
us
are
affordable
housing.
Geniuses
like
let's
see
what
the
people
who
know
what
they're
doing
are
doing
in
different
communities
and
let's
see
if
we
could
bring
that
to
the
table.
So
by
the
time
we
get
back
to
surveillance,
we
we're
kind
of
already.
A
You
know
starting
to
figure
out
what
could
work
for
evanston
and
what
is
you
know
not
ideal
for
here
and
what
fits
together
etc,
which
doesn't
mean
slowing
down
the
first
thing
that
has
been
brought
to
us,
but
especially
since
it's
you
know,
hopefully
a
quicker
win
katie
I
wanted
to
mention.
I
was
hoping
that
the
bond
was
here,
because
I
recognized
that
I
did
not
pull
together
a
meeting
with
him
and
you
to
talk
about
the
ordinance
that
would
go
along
with
the
scorecard
to
sort
of
kind
of
force.
A
The
hand
of
use
on
on
that,
and
so
that
is
just
going
to
have
to
be
my
homework
again
this
month
to
kind
of
pull
that
together
sounds
good.
D
And
all
right
anything
else,
yep,
I
just
want
to
say
yeah.
I
think
that
we
know
when
we
get
the
survey
data
back
it
will.
D
You
know
all
roads
will
lead
back
to
a
housing
crisis,
and
I
think
that
you
know
one
of
the
biggest
things
when
I
luna
was
really
studying
housing
during
the
campaign-
and
you
know
just
looking
at
it
right
now
is
one
of
the
biggest
things
is
our
our
iho,
our
inclusionary
housing
ordinance
and
it's
actually
discriminatory
against
people
who
are
on
section
a
or
tebra
a
pro
any
program
in
which
people
are
at
30,
ami
and
30
ami
area
medium
income.
D
Right
now
we
we
start
off
at
50,
and
so
you
know
by
cutting
off
30,
we
cut
out
a
lot
of
people
and
other
communities
like,
for
example,
northbrook
has
a
stronger
iho
than
we
do,
and
but
I
mean
we
don't
hear
them
pride
in
themselves.
About
being
you
know,
diverse
and
equitable,
and
everything
like
that,
but
they
haven't.
A
That's
a
good,
that's
another
good
one
to
bring
to
the
table
so
yeah.
Those
are
the
things
I
think
we
need
to
create
a
home
for
and
start
compiling,
because
again
these
aren't
things
we're
going
to
start
working
on
immediately,
our
goals
are,
to,
you
know,
make
sure
we're
getting
the
right
kind
of
com,
not
compliance.
Why
am
I
using
words
like
compliance,
but
the
like
kind
of
turn
out
in
response
to
the
survey
from
our
population
and
get
this
scorecard
lifted
and
in
place?
A
Because
you
know
before
we
know
it
even
when
we
started
building
this
thing,
the
whole
tiff
thing
came
down
and
you
know
we
felt
like
we
wanted
to
use
it,
and
you
know
just
wasn't
the
place.
A
We
could
so
I'd
like
to
get
this
wrapped
up
so
even
again,
especially
if
we
keep
calling
it
pilot
if
we
realize
that
even
if
we
have
our
first
project
real
project,
not
not
the
demo
kind
of
thing
next
week
or
next
month,
but
if
we
have
our
first
few
real
projects
going
through
it,
we
will
be
open
to
tweaking
and
changing
it
right
like
it
has
to
work
for
us.
We
don't
have
to
set
it
in
stone,
and
so
I
want
to
make
sure
it's
in
a
usable
space.
G
A
F
D
Did
you
want
me
to
invite
byron
to
the
next
meeting?
Yes,.
A
Okay
and
so
matt,
that
would
be
something
coming
up
on
the
agenda
as
well
as
doing
the
mock
mock.
I
don't
know
what
to
call
it,
but
the
mock
use
of
this
form.
A
That's
a
special
kind
of
skill.
I
don't
normally
have
all
right.
Thank
you
for
showing
up
everybody
jane
thanks
for
making
the
extra
effort
to
call
in
while
still
making
your
way
home.
Oh.
C
C
A
Have
a
good
month,
everyone,
I
hope,
the
weather
catches
up
with
the
fact
that
it's
spring
soon-
and
I
hope
everybody
has
a
little
more
vitamin
d
next
time
we
see
each
other
all
right.