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From YouTube: Redistricting Committee Meeting - Oct. 25, 2022
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A
It
possible
to
keep
voters
in
the
ward
that
they
are
currently
the
residents
of,
and
we
also
kind
of
developed
a
plan,
a
comprehensive
plan
for
Community
engagement
I'll
get
into
that
on
the
next
slide.
But
before
we
move
on
I
want
to
stress
that
we
have
not
formally
considered
a
new
map.
Our
intention
is
to
go
through
this
public
engagement
process.
First,
to
talk
about
criteria
that
we
should
be
considering
and
to
talk
about.
A
You
know
when
we
look
at
how
to
redraw
the
margins
redraw,
the
borders
for
the
Sixth
Ward
and
the
Seventh
Ward.
So
look
at
that
map
and
say
hey.
This
makes
sense
to
keep
this
block
over
here
this
block
over
there.
We
want
to
go
through
that
public
engagement
process
first
before
this
committee
would
would
put
pen
to
paper
and
draw
a
new
map.
A
Okay
next
slide,
so
we
kicked
this
process
off
with
some
community-wide
town
halls
in
July
won
an
English
one
in
Spanish
and
then
for
the
next
several
months.
This
will
take
us
through
January
of
next
year.
We
are
having
these
public
engagement
sessions
at
scheduled,
Community
meetings.
A
So
then,
early
next
year
after
we've
gone
through
this
public
engagement
process,
the
committee
will
draft
several
Maps,
maybe
one
map-
maybe
two
maybe
three
depends
on
where
the
community
engagement
takes
us
and
then
we
will
release
some
proposed
Maps
proposed
map,
or
maybe
several
Maps-
we're
scheduling
that
for
February
of
next
year
for
an.
A
Round
of
public
engagement,
public
comment
and
our
Target
is
to
have
this
committee
finally
recommend
a
new
map
at
our
April
meeting
and
then
present
that
to
the
city
council
for
approval
in
May
of
2023.,
and
that
is
almost
as
early
as
we
can
accomplish
this
goal.
A
We
want
those
that
that
election
to
take
place
with
the
current
map,
and
then
everyone
on
the
council
and
everyone
in
the
community
will
know
in
May
of
2023
what
the
next
election
will
look
like
with
awards
for
the
next
election
will
look
like
and
the
whole
Community
will
be
on
the
same
page.
Then
at
that
point.
A
So
that
is
the
overall
plan
and
if
we
can
move
on
to
the
next
slide,
it's
looking
at
our
public
engagement
schedule,
we're
here
in
October
for
award
six
and
seven,
and
you
know
by
the
end
of
January,
we
will
have
done
a
session
for
all
nine
Wards.
If
you're
here
tonight,
you're
aware
of
this,
please
spread
the
word
Nick
moving
on.
A
So
what
I
would
like
to
do
now
is
take
a
deeper
dive
and
look
at
the
Sixth
Ward
in
some
detail
and
how
we'll
we'll
take
a
look
at
the
demographics
of
the
Sixth
Ward,
and
then
we
will
kind
of
open
up
the
floor
for
discussion
so
kind
of
recapping.
What
we
saw
in
that
earlier
slide
in
focusing
on
the
Sixth
Ward.
Here
we
see
that
the
Sixth
Ward
is
oversized
by
282
voters,
3.3
percent
that
is
fairly
close
to
par.
A
So,
let's,
let's
be
thinking
about
that
as
we
move
forward
and
as
we
shift
population
here
from
war
to
Ward
in
an
effort
to
ideally
achieve
you
know
a
zero
deviation.
A
A
The
numbers
don't
line
up
for
this
to
be
quite
that
easy,
so
you
know
we
we
do
have
some
awards
that
may
be
fairly
close
to
par,
but
they
need
to
gain
some
territory
on
one
side
and
lose
some
territory
on
the
other
side.
In
order
for
us
to
get
where
we
need
to
go
with
all
nine
Awards
Sixth
Ward
is
unique
in
that
it
only
borders,
one
other
Ward,
so
the
Sixth
Ward
conversation
might
be
one
of
the
simplest
conversations
we
have.
A
If
we
look
at
the
Seventh
Ward
the
the
neighbor
of
the
Sixth
Ward
some
afford,
it
is
also
oversized
by
a
slightly
larger
amount.
So
it
might
end
up
being
the
case
that,
in
order
to
get
the
Sixth
Ward
closer
to
zero,
we
take
some
of
that
territory
and
move
it
to
the
Seventh
Ward,
but
then
means
more
of
the
Seventh
Ward
to
the
first
and
the
fifth
again.
A
We
are
not
jumping
to
conclusions
at
this
point,
but
want
to
take
some
public
input
and
see
what
residents
and
stakeholders
have
to
say.
If
we
move
on
to
the
next
slide,
taking
a
look
at
the
demographics
of
Ward
6,
the
population
overall
has
remained
fairly
constant.
Now,
we've
only
added
nine
people
to
the
Sixth
Ward
in
the
last
10
years,
at
least
according
to
the
Census
Data,
but
the
relative
size
has
changed.
10
years
ago,
the
Sixth
Ward
was
8.2
percent.
A
Above
average,
other
Wards
have
grown
in
size
more
significantly,
so
the
Sixth
Ward
is
now
only
3.3
percent.
Above
average,
it
continues
to
be
the
a
majority
white
Ward
less
so
than
it
was
10
years
ago,
with
the
decline
in
the
white
population
and
and
growth
in
minority
populations,
and
especially
the
Hispanic
and
Latino
populations,
and
the
census
category
of
individuals
identifying
as
two
or
more
races
is
up
across
the
board
as
well.
A
The
next
slide
there
and
then
again.
Looking
at
this,
this
is
the
same
graph
as
as
before,
but
presented
now
to
take
a
little
bit
closer
look
at
the
Sixth
Ward.
You
know
we
see
graphically
here
that
the
minority
population
of
the
Sixth
Ward
has
increased,
but
the
overall
population
has
remained
almost
identical
and
ideally
when
we,
when
we
rebalance
you
know
all
Wards
would
reach
exactly
to
that
to
that
red
line.
No
more.
No
less.
A
B
A
Bit
more
blue,
green
and
red
dots
there
than
there
used
to
be
10
years
ago,
then,
moving
on
to
the
next
page
nick.
This
is
the
the
meat
of
the
conversation
right
now.
Keep
in
mind
that
Ward
6
is
oversized
by
282
people.
A
Ward
5
is
the
only
war
that
actually
borders,
I'm,
sorry,
Ward
seven
is
the
only
war
that
that
borders
Ward
six
just
so.
We
have
the
numbers
in
front
of
us
since
this,
since
the
Fifth
Ward
is
close,
I
I
put
those
numbers
in
there
as
well.
So
we
can
keep
that
into
context,
but
what
I
would
like
to
do
now
and
actually
Nick
if
I
could
have
the
mouse.
C
A
Okay,
there
we
go
so
I
will
use
the
mouse
to
kind
of
point
where,
where
people
are
talking
about-
and
so
let's
open
it
up
for
public
comment
now,
Nick
I
guess
I
have
the
mouse.
So
I
need
to
do
that.
C
C
A
A
Tina
Priscilla
and
Carlos,
so
Tina
Let's.
Let's
start
I'll
pull
a
comment
with
Tina
Paden
and
again,
let's
try
and
focus
conversation
on
the
on
the
Sixth
Ward
and
what
we
might
want
to
consider
as
we
try
and
get
that
plus
282
number
down
to
as
close
to
zero
as
possible.
So
Tina.
D
Hi
good
evening,
everyone
so
I
was
mentioning
in
the
last
meeting
that
you
had
that,
since
the
Fifth
Ward
is
negative,
705
people
that
you
should
consider
taking
part
of
the
Seventh
Ward
in
Sixth
Ward
and
putting
it
towards
the
Fifth
Ward.
D
D
B
D
D
C
E
A
Right
so
you're
talking
about
the
portion
of
the
Sixth
Ward,
which
is
south
of
Simpson,
you
know
between
Simpson
and
Elgin,
Road
or
Golf
Road
to
make
that
to
move
that
into
Ward
five.
Perhaps
yes,.
B
D
A
All
right
any
other
before
we
move
on
from
Tina
Tina.
Do
you
have
any
other
suggestions
with
regards
to
Ward
six.
D
Well,
only
six
borders,
seven,
so
I
strongly.
If
we're
down
705
people
8.1,
that's
a
lot
and
you
have
3.3
Surplus,
don't
move
to
seven,
because
you
already
have
a
surplus
and
seven
move
part
of
six
and
part
of
seven
into
five.
D
It
only
is
it
you're
talking
about
Fair,
transparent,
you
don't
want
predominantly
white
which
six
and
seven
you
just
show
the
graph
like
3
000
times.
We
talked
about
this
last
time,
move
six
and
seven
into
five.
You
can
do
that
by
this
cutting
off
right
here,
some
lines.
So
so
it
wouldn't
be
that
six
is
jumping
over
to
five.
D
If
you
put
seven
into
five
at
this
where
they
meet,
and
then
you
couldn't
put
six
into
into
five,
because
that
part
of
seven
would
be
Fifth
Ward,
so
then
you
would
have
six
into
Fifth
Ward
as
well.
You
can
cut.
A
A
Thanks
Tina
thanks
Tina,
we
are
going
to
have
a
separate
discussion
on
Ward
seven,
which
is
a
little
bit.
You
know
more
complex
than
Ward
six,
and
so
there's
only
one
border
here.
So
let's
move
on
to
Ms
Giles.
If
you
want
to
talk
about
the
Sixth
Ward
here
and
then
Mr
Sutton.
F
Yes,
I
have
maybe
a
different
opinion
of
this,
but
I
feel
like
Sixth.
Ward
did
have
more
of
a
black
population
and
they
were
moved
to
the
Fifth
Ward.
That
was
intentional
so
that
there
was
a
so
that
was
mixed.
There
was
really
no
black
neighborhood
and
you're
trying
to
keep
from
having
an
all
black
or
an
all-white
neighborhood,
but
I
feel
like.
Oh.
F
First
of
all,
let
me
say
that
the
city
or
the
nine
or
the
people
behind
the
nine
on
the
dias
they're,
making
it
difficult
to
impossible
for
the
transparency
that
you
repute
to
have.
F
You
don't
really
want
people
to
comment,
because
there
are
only
three
people
commenting
today
today,
I,
don't
know
how
many
people
are
watching
the
zoom
link
and
the
computer
are
something
that
people
just
don't
have
in
order
to
contribute
to
this
discussion,
and
you
only
have
one
I
see
from
February
to
April
where
the
com,
the
community,
will
have
an
input,
and
it
seems,
like
you
already
have
decided.
F
We
should
not
have
to
download
anything
to
be
a
part
of
a
city
meeting
that
that
affects
all
the
residents
of
Evanston
people.
Don't
even
know
what
the
city
has
in
store
for
them.
We
do
not
need
redistricting,
although
it
seems
to
be,
it
seems
to
be
already
decided.
F
The
ward
should
reflect
its
residents,
not
politics.
This
is
not
the
senate
or
the
House
of
Representatives,
where
we
need
to
have
an
equal
number
of
representation
for
voting.
I
feel
like
people
should
again
I'm
going
to
say
that
that
the
rewards
should
reflect
its
residents,
not
politics.
Thank
you,
I.
When
you're
talking
about
six
and
Fifth
and
those
Awards
people
live
near
where
they
wanted
to
live
and
exclude
the
people,
they
don't
want.
B
A
Thank
you
for
your.
Do
you
have
anything
else.
F
I
just
feel
like
I
mean
the
the
Fifth
Ward
is
well.
Each
award
has
this
historical?
They
each
have
their
historical
basis,
and
this
is
destroying
it.
A
G
Good
evening,
I
would
like
to
just
follow
up
on
some
of
the
suggestions
made
by
Mrs
Payton
and
Mrs
Giles.
As
Mrs
Giles
mentioned,
our
family
started
in
the
Sixth
Ward
and
we
removed
from
there
in
the
1920s.
So
if
I'm
looking
at
the
boundaries
here,
it
seems
like
you
could
go
down,
Grant
Street,
all
the
way
to
Mac,
Daniel
or
possibly
all
the
way
over
to
Bennett
and
add
that
in
to
the
Fifth
Ward
at
the
time.
G
Right
now,
since
the
blacks
in
the
Fifth,
Ward
is
only
a
group
that
are
losing
population,
it
would
not
have
an
adverse
effect
on
the
voting
power
of
the
whites
and
those
now
existing
communities
other
than
six
and
seven
would
then
be
considered
part
of
five.
At
the
rate
we're
going
now,
it's
going
to
be
very
difficult
to
balance
any
war
with
a
predominant
group
with
the
effect
of
gentrification
and
marginalization
that
has
occurred
over
the
years.
Traditionally,
it
was
redlined
now
I'm
asking
you
to
sense.
G
Our
ward
has
had
a
significant
decrease
in
population.
Add
that
particular
area
from
Grant,
possibly
over
to
Bennett
and
to
the
Fifth
Ward
and
for
two
other
reasons
at
think.
It
would
help
the
marginalization
of
the
fifth
Wards
and
ease
up
on
the
double
standards
that
we
have
been
victim
to
over
the
years
by
award,
Border,
Lines
and
also
I'm
looking
for
better
services,
and
also
the
voting
population
will
not
be
adversely
affected
by
adding
Those
portions
of
the
Seventh
Ward
and
the
Sixth
Ward
into
the
Fifth
Ward.
Thank
you.
A
Thank
you,
Mr
Sutton.
Is
there
anybody
else
who
wants
to
weigh
in
on
the
Sixth
Ward
redistricting
here.
H
Yeah
so
since
you
know
the
the
housing
stock
is
single-family
houses
largely
and
there's
no
plan
developments
that'll
lead
to
an
increase
in
population
that,
like
thing
that
may
make
the
most
sense
would
be
to
increase
the
like
pain,
noise
and
Grant
piece
of
the
Seventh
Ward.
H
If
you
did
that
along
with
Daniel
that
may
get
you
to
like
right
right
about
where
the
mouse
is
there
yeah
like
so,
and
then
you
know
to
Mr
Sutton's
point
from
there,
I
mean
that
would
get
the
sixth
board
balance
population
wide
and
then
from
there
we
could.
We
could
make
the
adjustments
or
consider
the
adjustments
that
that
he
brought
up
along
grants,
and
maybe
it
is
all
the
way
to
Bennett
I,
don't
know
what
the
population
numbers
would
be.
If
you
did
that.
H
The
one
thing
I
I
will
note
is
one
of
the
largest
population.
Centers
of
the
Sixth
Ward
is
three
crowns,
which
is
right
on
the
eastern
border
of
the
Sixth
Ward.
H
So
if
you're
going
to
do
anything,
that
would
include
that
you
may
be
overshooting
the
the
282
number
you're
looking
for,
but
beyond
that,
you
know
unless
we
want
to
be
very
creative
and
have
wards
that
have
tentacles
that
extend
you
know,
there's
not
much!
You
can
do
with
the
Sixth
Ward,
since
it's
it's
all
determined
by
the
city,
boundaries.
B
A
And
so
just
let
me
let
me
make
sure
I
understood
what
you
were
saying.
Council
member
software
is
that
if
we
did
need
to
take
some
blocks
away
from
the
Sixth
Ward
in
order
to
get
that
number
to
zero,
you're
suggesting
and
Nick,
can
you
show
that
the
mouse
here
between
grants
and
pain,
then
Pi
on
the
North
and
South
and
Pioneer
in
McDaniel
like
those
well.
H
It's
not
a
suggestion.
What
I'm
saying
is,
if,
if
the
intention
of
the
finished
product
is
to
bring
the
Fifth
Ward
further
west,
you
know
if
you
do
anything
on
the
North
End
by
Isabella.
That's
just
trading
between
six
and
seven
there's,
no
right
but
like
if
you
want.
If,
if
when
this
process
is
complete
and
we're
trying
to
balance
population,
you
know
the
the
place
where
you're
gonna
get
the
most
ability
to
make.
H
Adjustments
will
be
that
area
that
I
that
I
brought
up
right,
but
you
know
like
with
the
way
that
it's
set
up
with
this
Municipal
boundaries.
There's
not
a
lot
of
play
on
the
on
the
north
side,
yeah.
I
A
That
might
be
the
case
and
we're
going
to
have
it.
We
have
not
yet
had
our
Fifth
Ward
meeting
that
one
is
scheduled
for
January
to
look
at
Fifth
Ward
exclusively,
so
right
now
we're
just
talking
about
hypothetical
possibilities.
A
Let's
also
keep
in
mind
that
one
of
the
factors
that
would
seem
reasonable
to
continue
considering
as
we're
drawing
Ward
boundaries
is
the
the
the
geographic
boundary
represented
by
the
channel,
and
so
that
you
know
would
make
it
we
would
be
contravening
that
indication
if
we
extended
Wards.
You
know
across
the
channel
just
a
few
blocks
here,
a
few
blocks
there
yeah.
H
A
H
H
You
know
having
a
split
representation
on
one.
You
know
Eleanor
and
I
both
get
this,
sometimes
with
people
on
Pioneer
or
Payne
who
reach
out
to
one
or
the
other
of
us,
because
they
they
assume
that
they're
in
the
wrong
Ward.
If,
if
it
were
to
be,
you
know,
Grant
to
McDaniel
between
three
crowns
the
amount
of
land
that's
taken
up
by
Lakewood
school
and
the
Forest
Reserve,
you
would
minimize
that
you
know
people
on
one
side
of
the
street
are
represented.
H
There
are
in
one
Ward,
and
people
on
the
other
side
of
the
street
are
in
a
different,
Ward
Dynamic,
but
again
I
mean
like
the.
H
There's
not
I
just
thought:
I,
don't
know
that
there's
enough
play
with
the
way
that
the
maps
drawn
unless
we
want
to
and
I'm,
not
saying
that
we
shouldn't
be
more
radical
in
our
redistricting,
but
if,
if
we're
gonna
keep
similarly
similar
composition,
like
the
only
real
part,
that'll
get
you
more
options
later.
I
think
is
that
that
area
between
pain
and
grants,
along
with
Daniel.
H
A
E
H
Yeah
I
think
that's
I
mean
because
it's
your
point
about
the
canal.
You
know
I
mean,
like
I,
think
that
that's
the
only
place
that
there's
like.
A
Yeah
Tom,
that
if
you
go
north
a
little
bit
to
the
to
Harrison
and
that
you
know
where
it
Jets
off
on
an
angle.
A
The
line
if
a
line
came
down
Walnut
and
then
went
West
on
Central
down
to
Elm
and
gave
those
two
blocks
where
you
can
see
the
word
Harrison
and
those
two
blocks
went
to
the
Seventh
Ward.
Would
that
the.
C
H
The
way
that
the
boundary
is
with
archery
and
like
a
Pioneer
and
hard
to
come
together,
you
know
there's
the
two
ssas
along
Central
Street,
there's
two
business
districts
with
the
multi-family
residential
between
you
know,
between
hartree
and
like
Ewing.
It
starts
a
little
bit
before
reunion,
but
so
you
know,
I
I
would
be
careful
if
you're
playing
around
Central
Street,
because
those
are
multi-unit
buildings
and
again
like.
If
you
move
that
line
over
to
Elm,
you
may
log
off
substantially
more
than
about
282
you're.
Looking
for.
A
Got
it
got
it
and
you
mentioned
ssas
I,
think
that
is
another
factor
to
consider
when
we're
growing
Maps
like
a
legitimate,
you
know
kind
of
political
boundary
that
exists
and
in
an
Ideal
World
different
boundaries
line
up
in
our
contiguous.
H
Yeah,
for
all
those
reasons,
I
think
like
what
makes
the
most
sense
is
that
area
of
north,
but
I
mean
it.
If,
if
when
this
thing
is
done
or
you
know
as
it
becomes
more
complete,
if
there's
more
moving
pieces,
then
maybe
it
does
make
sense
to
take
a
look
at
things
on
the
Northern
end
yeah,
but
there's
just
not
a
lot
of
room
there.
A
H
Yeah
and
the
other
thing
just
there's
also
there's
a
small
park
that
doesn't
show
up
on
the
map
at
on
Harrison
between
Pioneer
and
hartree.
H
A
Great
all
right
anything
else:
Tom
no.
A
I
This
is
Carl.
Can
I
speak
right
now.
I
Okay,
so
I've
been
using
a
website
called
Dave's
redistricting.org.
It's
a
free
website
that
you
can
use
to
kind
of
figure
out.
You
know
the
using
the
demographics
to
figure
out
word
boundaries
and
I.
Don't
think
that
seeing
what
we
see
on
the
screen
now
is
very
helpful,
because
you
have
to
take
into
a
consideration
that
the
Sixth
and
Seventh
Ward
both
have
population
282
and
368,
but
both
the
Fifth
Ward
and
the
First
Ward
need
to
gain
population
so
yeah.
I
So
what
I
thought
is
that
I
know
we're
talking
about
the
Sixth
Ward
now
I
actually
got
by
drawing
a
map.
I
got
to
the
Sixth
Ward
population
to
zero
percent.
I
Like
you
know,
at
zero
like
it's
at
the
goal,
and
the
way
you
can
do,
that
is
that
you
can
actually
divide
the
Sixth
and
Seventh
Ward
along,
so
that
each
one
goes
east,
west
and
and
I
know
that
later
you
want
to
talk
about
the
Seventh
Ward,
but
I
think
that
keeping
most
of
Northwestern
University
in
one
Ward
would
be
a
good
thing
and
then
that
by
that,
by
doing
that,
you
gain
popular.
I
The
first
word
could
gain
population
by
gaining
part
of
the
the
northern
half
of
the
Northwestern
campus,
and
then
the
Sixth
Ward
could
go
up.
You
know
towards
Central
and
then
hook
around
and
then
pick
up.
You
know
kind
of
down
by
the
Civic
Center
and
that
way
all
of
the
central
streets.
Ssa
is
all
in
one
Ward.
I
That
could
be
seventh
word
on
the
top
part,
and
then
the
Sixth
Ward
could
be
the
southern
part
and
I
agree
that
having
Ward
boundaries
and
alleys
is
more
ideal
than
running
down
streets,
because
it's
not
a
good
thing
to
have
it's
confusing:
to
have
people
on
one
side
of
the
street
in
one
word
and
another
and
the
other
side.
J
If
you
wouldn't
mind,
I
think
also,
what
would
be
helpful
is
to
put
up
on
the
screen,
even
if,
for
a
moment,
the
goals
of
this
committee,
because
I've
heard
a
few
times
goals
that
I
don't
agree
are
a
part
of
what
we're
supposed
to
be
looking
at
when
we're
as
we're.
J
We
created
our,
we
had
another
list
that
was
for
us
some
of
that.
What
I
just
saw
on
that
list
was
on
our
list,
but
I
feel
like
we
created
a
list
for
this
to
guide
this
redistricting
committee.
As
we
work
with
the
community
to
to
Think
Through
like
I
know,
community
of
Interest
was
on
there
mineralization
of
voter
confusion,
I,
don't
know
what
this
might
be
it,
but
I
thought
there
were
some
other
things
that
we.
J
Is
close,
though
yeah
yeah,
yeah
and
so
I
just
wanted
to
point
out
that
this
idea
that
the
redistrative
thing
process
is
supposed
to
you
know:
change
Wards
from
majority
African-American,
the
majority
or
majority
white
and
majority
African-American
Awards.
Just
I,
don't
think
is
a
part
of
what
I
see
here
unless
I'm
mistaken
and
so
I
just
want
to
make
sure
that
we're
all
referring
to
the
same
guiding
criteria
as
we
have.
This
discussion
and
I
agree
with.
E
B
J
E
B
A
That's
why
I
want
to
make
sure
we
always
start
the
conversation
with
that,
but
as
we
focus
on
an
individual
award
since
we
have
decided
to
pursue
a
kind
of
an
incremental
approach,
we
need
to
kind
of
zoom
in
and
see
what
what
blocks
need
to
be
moved
from.
One
word
to
another
but
yeah
that
is
the
is
the
big
overall
picture
there,
and
so,
if
we're
gonna
get,
you
know
Ward
six
down
closer
to
zero.
A
Some
of
that
has
to
go
to
Ward
seven,
because
we
have
no
other
place
to
move
it,
which
makes
seven
even
bigger
and
some
more
of
seven
somewhere
else
would
have
to
go
to
the
First
Ward
and
the
Fifth
Ward
yeah.
So
you
know
that's
why
we
are
intending
to
kind
of
take
a
methodical
approach.
Look
at
these
Wards
as
they
border
each
other.
A
And
that's
kind
of
the
the
focus
of
these
public
engagement
sessions
and
then
once
we've
done
that
for
all
the
wards,
we'll
have
all
the
information
we
need
to
make
an
attempt
at
drawing
some
new
maps.
A
I.
Don't
think
it
would
be
effective
use
of
community
time
if
we
attempted
to
draw
a
map
in
real
time
at
this
stage
in
the
in
the
process
and
as
we
look
at
this
map
Let's.
This
has
a
point
of
clarification:
the
Green
Boundary,
if
you
follow
the
channel
up
to
the
northern,
to
the
North
Boundary
of
Abington
that
shows
up
in
green,
that's
green
because
it's
parked
it's
not
green,
because
it's
Fifth
Ward
a
little
bit
confusing
there.
A
C
Okay,
comment
by
council
member
suffered
in
as
well
as
Miss,
Payton
and
Mr
Sutton
make
this
an
interesting
piece
of
conversation
to
determine
whether
this
is
considered
continuous
right.
B
E
B
E
C
Border,
however,.
F
A
The
zoom
Council
Cummings
is
going
to
do
some
research
into
case
law
and
look
into
the
extent
to
which
the
channel
and
or
McCormick
Boulevard
constitute
boundaries
that
would
impact
the
definition
of
contiguous
it's
so
Miss
Giles.
You
yes
wanted
to.
You
wanted
to
speak
again.
Please.
F
Yeah,
the
canal
and
and
McCormick
Boulevard
are
natural
boundaries.
You
know
for
the
city,
but
if
one
is
Ward,
one
is
losing,
population
has
lost
population,
it
just
looks
like
it
would
be
just
easy
to
move
Ward
one
over
to
the
con
over
to
seven,
oh
as
far
east
as
it
goes,
and
that
would
enlarge
Ward
one
and
decrease
the
amount
that
you
have
in
Ward
seven
and
if,
as
it
was
before,
Church
Street
was
part
of
Ward
five
to
the
I.
F
Guess
that's
the
the
railroad
track
from
that
was.
That
was
how
it
was
before
no
I'm,
not
talking
about
them.
Talking
about
farther
south
Church
Street
yeah.
F
Where
that's
not
church,
that's
Church
down
farther
south
yeah,
that's
Church
Street,
and
if-
and
that
was
Ward
five
before
and
if
it
just
went
back
all
the
way
over,
then
that
would
keep
as
you're
saying
you're
trying
to
on
one
of
these
slides
people.
F
This
is
for
the
demographics
of
this
map
for
the
city.
That
would
that
would
do
that.
Take
care
of
that
I.
Don't
think
that
you're
going
to
get
until
people
change
their
mind
about
living
with
other
races,
you're
not
going
to
get
zero
unless
you
change
the
minds
of
those
people,
I
just
feel
like
that
was
Ward
five
before
and
it
could
be.
I
was
in
war
two,
but
I
moved
in
the
same
place
where
I
live
now,
but
indeed
yes,
that's,
okay!
Well,.
A
B
A
Else,
because
anybody
else
who
wants
to
weigh
in
specifically
on
Ward
six
Now's
the
Time,
if
not
we're,
going
to
move
on
and
have
a
similar
discussion
about
Ward
7,
which
is
going
to
be
more
interesting
or
at
least
more
complicated.
A
Okay,
let's
move
on
to
Ward
seven,
and
here
we
go
so
Ward,
seven.
B
A
Oversized
by
4.2
percent
in
actual
numbers,
it's
oversized
by
368
people,
and
so
we
need
to
make
Ward
7
smaller.
We
also,
let's
also
note
that
Ward
7
is
kind
of
the
most
sprawled
out
War
as
well,
not
to
the
extent
that
it
would
be.
You
know
unacceptable,
but
if.
E
A
Know
in
our
desire
to
kind
of
clean
this
map
up
and
make
it
simpler.
If
there's
a
way,
we
can
make
Ward
7
more
compact,
less
an
ideal
outcome
of
this
process.
So
where
are
we
going
to
get
population
where,
where
is
Ward
seven
going
to
give
population
now,
obviously
Ward
Ward,
one
and
Ward
five?
There
might
need
to
be
some
trade-off
with
Ward
six.
A
To
get
Ward
six
where
it
needs
to
go,
but
obviously
you
know
we're
gonna
have
to
give
portions
of
Ward
7
to
the
first
word
and
the
Fifth
Ward
so
just
like
to
run
through
the
demographics
of
Ward
seven.
If
we
can
move
move
forward,
Ward
7
has
grown
by
a
total
of
345.
People
has
lost,
white
population
gained
non-white,
population.
A
And
there's
again
what
a
same
picture
as
before
we
see
an
increased
minority
population
is
and
an
increased
population
overall
and
we're
going
to
have
to
make
Ward
seven
smaller.
The
Hispanic
population
and
Ward
7
has
also
increased.
A
We
can
move
through
that
one,
and
so
now
let's
have
our
Ward
7
discussion
and
talk
about
what
we
might
want
to
consider
as
we
look
to
make
Ward
7
smaller
by
a
total
of
368
people.
Ideally.
A
Yeah
so
Council
Cummings
is
is
noting
that
the
Seventh
Ward
is
split
by
the
channel,
and
so
he
Council
Cummins
is
going
to
do
some
research
there
to
see
if
what
that
might
mean
for
this
process
moving
forward,
I
yeah,
my
operating
assumption
at
this
point
is
that
we're
totally
allowed
to
do
that.
E
C
A
I
think
my
understanding
is,
we
could
but
having
just
one
little
chunk
of
of
the
Seventh
Ward
west
of
the
channel,
be
part
of
Ward.
Five
doesn't
feel
right.
C
B
A
Six
seven
East
can.
I
I,
rather
than
I
respond
to
council
Cummings.
I
So
my
suggestion
now
that
we
can
see
the
more
of
the
context
was
the
southern
part
of
seven.
That's
pink.
That
includes
the
Lagoon.
Northwestern
campus
would
become
part
of
one
and
then
seven
would
then
go
east
west.
The
entire
northern
part
of
the
city
and
the
boundary
for
between
six
and
seven
would
be
the
alley
just
north
of
Lincoln
or
Harrison.
A
Hold
on
a
second
I'm,
taking
some
notes
here,
as
we're
going
through
so
Carl
is
saying,
the
southern
portion
of
Northwestern
campus
would
be
shifted
to
Ward
one
also
right,
Carl,
Edge,
I'm,
sure,
you're,
aware:
there's
not
much
population
represented
in
what
looks
like
a
fairly
big
chunk
of
territory.
There
actually.
I
I
There's
Elder
Hall
and
there
are
several
dorms
and
sorority
fraternities
on
the
northern
part
of
the
the
campus,
which
do
have
a
significant
population.
A
All
right
so
Carl
is
suggesting
moving
the
southern
half
of
the
Northwestern
campus
from
the
Seventh
Ward
to
the
First
Ward,
and
then
what
was
the
second
part
of
your
suggestion.
B
I
Don't
want
to
be
making
these
suggestions
I
think
we
should
be
making
a
concerted
effort
to
talk
to
Northwestern
students
to
see
if
they
want
to
be
in,
have
their
campus
split
into
or
if
they
want
to
have
it
in
one
Ward,
which
it
was
historically
before
I
think
we
they're
residents
of
the
city
and
we
should
honor
their
opinion
as
well.
So
I
don't
want
to
speak
on
their
behalf,
but
I'm
just
trying
to
think
of
how
we
can
make
the
population
work.
A
I
If
it,
if
it's
clear
I,
can
send
you
a
map,
a
link
for
to
the
map
that
I
did
on
Dave,
Dave's,
redistrict
and
I'll,
send
it
to
the
com,
the
committee,
so
that
you
can
see
it.
A
E
D
D
Ahead,
that's
correct
so
so
I
understand,
you
know
what
Carol
is
saying,
but
I
still
feel
and
and
kind
of
what
Mr
Sutton
is
saying.
D
I
still
feel
strongly
about
this
Simpson
and
pain
and
noise
in
six
and
seven
moving
to
five,
and
so
the
reason
here
we
say
and
I
think
to
answer
also
council,
member
Burns.
There
is
the
part
that
talks
about
having
nine
or
three
Wars
all
non-white.
D
D
So
I
believe
still
that
peace
should
go
into
there
and
then
you
can
take
the
piece,
because
what
you're
doing
if
you're
saying
move
six
to
seven
well,
you're
moving
white
people
to
white
people
right
and
that's
what
you
just
said
you
kind
of
didn't
want
to
do.
Once
again.
We
know
the
bottom
line
about
redistricting
comes
to
voting.
D
That's
the
bottom
line
of
the
whole
thing,
not,
but
but
you're
saying
we
want
to
make
equal,
Fair,
transparent
and
all
this
then
cut
it
off
and
set
down
here
next
to
Ward
five
and
put
the
people
from
Seven
down
there
and
put
the
people
from
six
and
make
that
whole
section
there.
Five
you
can
balance
it
off
and
Ward.
The
other
Wards
can
take
off
of
what
we
discussed
last
time
and
we
were
supposed
to
have
a
conversation
about
five,
the
last
meeting,
but
it
was
canceled.
B
D
A
A
I'm
gonna
I'm
gonna
recognize
Council
Cummings
here.
C
I
just
want
to
remind
the
committee
of
their
goals
of
communities
of
interest
in
traditional
evidence
and
neighborhoods
as
well,
and
so
as
you're
looking
at
this
larger
map.
If
you're
looking
at
supporters
it
may
it
may
make
more
sense
of
social
communities
and
interests
to
sorry,
the
last
commenter
just
that
we
need
to
recognize
Northwestern
Carl,
that's
a
community
of
Interest.
So
that
makes
that
one
that
suggestion
goes
with
the
committee.
C
So
some
of
the
other
suggestions-
maybe
maybe
good
ones,
but
you
have
to
understand
whether
those
communities
of
Interest
are
are
worth
it
and
I.
Think
looking
at
historical
Maps,
even
this
piece
of
seven
that's
cut
between
five
and
one
probably
would
also
be.
A
Is
there
anybody
else
who
wants
to
land
specifically
on
the
Seventh,
Ward
and
I'm?
Looking
at
council
member
Revell
here.
D
Excuse
me
before
you
I'm,
sorry,
councilmember
didn't
you
have
a
map
last
time
where
it
had
the
actual
numbers
of
the
areas.
D
So
you
had
the
I
thought
you
had
the
actual
numbers,
so
you
could
say:
okay,
Simpson
Street
has
300
people
in
this
part
or.
A
Level
of
that
level
of
data
does
we've
never
looked
at
that
in
committee.
Mr
Klein
referred
to
that
to
a
free
website
called
Dave's
redistricting,
dot
org,
and
if
you
go
into
that
website
and
zoom
in
you
can
see,
there
are
100
people
in
this
block
and
150
people
on
that
block.
If
that's
what
you're
asking
for,
we
have
not
looked
at
that
in
this
committee.
D
Maybe
next
time
that
would
be
helpful.
What
Carl
suggested
with
that,
because
then
you
could
know
how
many
people
you're
trying
to
move
and
bye.
A
We
are
100
for
sure
going
to
be
getting
there.
Eventually.
The
process
we
have
set
out
is
to
kind
of
get
some
qualitative
input
first
and
then,
once
all
that
input
is
received,
then
look
at
the
numerical
numbers
because
we
do
have
to
look
at
everything
as
a
whole,
but
we
obviously
will
need
to
be
looking
at
those
numbers
when
we
get
to
it
so
I'm
going
to
recognize
council
member
Revell
still
under.
If
you
want
to
join
us
closer
to
the
microphone.
L
So
two
general
observations
about
the
Seventh
Ward.
It
is
very,
very
spread
out
as
I
discovered
early
in
my
tenure.
Actually
before
I
was
actually
sworn
into.
The
city
council
I
I
walked.
L
It
took
two
different
trips,
but
you
know
to
walk
all
the
way
through
the
ward
over
to
the
McCormick
intersection.
Is
one
giant
walk
and
then
another
giant
walk
down
to
the
Clark
Street
beach?
Basically,
so
it's
it's
really
spread
out,
so
it
would.
It
would
make
sense
to
try
to
shrink
it
somehow
and
and
the
idea
of
Carl
Klein's
to
maybe
move
that
the
lakefront
Campus
of
Northwestern
into
the
First
Ward
would
be
one
way
to
do
to
deal
with
that.
And
then
the
other
General
observation
I
would
make.
L
Is
that
the
canal,
and
particularly
the
golf
course
area?
Is
it
doesn't
really
divide
the
the
two
neighborhoods
it
really
it's?
It's
kind
of
a
a
focus
of
common
interest,
and
particularly.
L
Course,
the
residents
on
both
sides
of
the
golf
course
do
a
lot
of
volunteering
and
so
they're.
It's
kind
of
a
joint.
A
L
Yeah
so
so
I
yeah
I
guess
my
simplistic
idea
would
be
to
have
some
of
the
some
of
the
most
eastern
blocks
of
the
Sixth
Ward
become
part
of
the
Seventh
Ward.
In
order
to
take,
you
know,
take
some
population
from
this
from
the
Sixth
Ward,
but
then
give
a
big
chunk,
perhaps
of
the
Northwestern
campus.
If
we
gave
that
to
the
First
Ward
that
would
presumably
take
you
know,
take
quite
a
few
quite
a
few
residents
out
of
the.
A
K
L
Well,
I
think
when
he's
talking
about
dorms
I
mean
because
there
are
some
east
east
of
east
of
Sheridan,
there,
too
I'm
not
sure
they're
heavily
represented
on
voting
day
in
election,
but
I
guess
in
terms
of
redistricting
that
that
we
don't
we're
not
looking
at
voting
population.
We're
looking
at
residential
population
right.
A
I
have
a
question
for
Council
Cummings
with
regards
to
the
students
and
where
the
census
counts
them
compared
to
where
they're
registered
to
vote.
C
A
I
Of
Carl
I
think
that
the
United
States
government,
when
it
requests
people
to
fill
out
the
census,
it
was
asking
where
people
were
living
as
of
April
1st
2020.
I,
think
that
was
the
date
April
1st
and
and
due
to
covid,
most
people
on
Northwestern
campus
returned
home
and
we're
we're
going
virtually
attending
classes
virtually.
So
there
was
some
debate
over
were
they
on?
Were
there
res?
Was
there
residency
technically
in
Evanston
or
wherever
it
was?
They
were
when
they
got
the
census
mailed
to
them.
B
I
A
Which,
but
even
if
they
were
living
in
on
campus,
they
may
still
be
registered
to
vote
back
in
Maryland
or
wherever.
B
A
K
A
C
A
C
I
mean,
incidentally,
to
your
point:
the
census
does
count
where
you
live.
It
doesn't,
but
it
does
impact
voting,
even
though
it
doesn't
take
into
account
where
you
are
registered
to
vote.
C
Thing
about
college
students
even
me
as
a
transplant
to
the
Chicagoland
area
register
to
vote
in
Chicago,
because
I've
spent
most
of
my
voting
time
in
Chicago.
My
permanent
residence
was
not
living
in
a
dorm,
so
you
know
how
the
sentence
would
count
that
is
completely
different.
Unfortunately,
we
are
setting
people
up
to
vote
in
a
municipal
election
based
upon
where
they
live
right.
A
K
K
The
first
word
is
down
591
and
many
of
those
that
might
be
because
of.
E
E
L
L
A
C
B
C
The
federal
case
is
probably
talking
about
the
House
Representatives
but
clearly
walking
the
Seventh
Ward.
You
would
have
to
cross
potentially
through.
B
L
E
B
A
L
L
A
L
Civic
Center
neighborhood,
right
I,
mean
noise
street
is
is
actually
quite
a
Division
I
think
and
the
and
the
and
the
blocks
that
are
north
of
noise
are
are
once
again
part
of
that
Golf
Course
community.
L
Grant
even
yeah
that
may
not
hold
a
little
highlights.
L
B
L
E
L
A
Okay
and
what
about
on
the
north
side
of.
E
L
A
B
K
L
E
K
B
C
E
B
A
B
K
K
K
Three
and
but
that
certainly
you
can
take
another
look
at
that.
L
L
E
C
L
K
L
A
All
right
a
little
bit
of
History
deep
dive
history.
This
is
back
in
1924.
D
Excuse
me
I,
don't
I'd
like
to
also
mention
Alderman
that
remember
prior
prior
to
1993,
there
were
two
aldermen
per
award
as
well.
A
Yeah,
so
in
1945
there
were
only
eight
wards:
1980,
we
are
at
full
nine
Awards,
it's
starting
to
look
fairly
close
to
what
we
are
yeah.
What
we
have
today,
second
and
fourth-
Wards-
go
east
west
rather
than
you
know,
to.
E
C
A
These
maps
are
available
online,
like
if
you
go
to
that
town
hall
presentation,
that's
what
I'm
looking
at
now.
These
maps
are
posted
on
the
on
the
committee's
web
page.
D
Well,
I
just
met
when
we're
talking,
I
I'm,
not
saying
that
you
know
I'm
just
saying
for
you
you're
recording
this
and
you
want
to
talk
about
what
was
a
lot
of
things
obviously
have
changed
in
the
last
30
years.
D
You
know
you
have
a
lot
more
top
taller
buildings
and
you
have
Northwestern
has
made
a
lot
of
new
dorms,
so
you
have
a
whole
new
thing,
I'm,
just
saying
when
we're
discussing
things,
maybe
you
can
see
what
was
and
what
is
right
next
to
each
other
and
and
when
you're
when
you're
talking
about
a
particular
Ward,
so
you
can
say
well,
maybe
you
want
to
change
something
back
to
what
it
used
to
be
or
might
be
helpful.
B
A
Back
to
tonight's
meeting.
A
And
our
award
seven
discussion.
Is
there
any
more
we
want
to
talk
about?
With
regards
to
the
Seventh
Ward,
we
talked
about
moving
some
of
Ward
7
into
Ward,
one.
A
A
B
A
In
the
context
of
Ward,
seven
moving
six
to
seven
so
that
we
seven
will
have
some
people
to
give
to
the
first
and
fifth.
K
K
E
E
K
A
L
Yeah
but
they
are
all
they're.
Also
the
noise
Street
shopping
area.
E
L
L
A
B
L
So
what
so?
Just
thinking
about
you
know,
residents
who
are
sitting
there
blithefully
at
home,
not
knowing
that
we're
having
this
meeting
tonight
talking
about
them
so,
but
so
at
some
point
they
so
proposed
maps
are
revealed
and
they
say.
Oh
my
gosh
I
mean
what.
B
A
For
them,
although
we're
not
limiting
public
input
to
whatever
Ward
is
on
the
agenda,
you
know
someone
come
all,
but
the
intent
is
with
Tina
just
a
second
please.
The
intend
is
for
this
committee
after
the
January
meeting
we'll
take
our
February
meeting
to
put
our
pens
to
paper
or
put
our
Mouse
to
Dave's
redistricting.org.
E
E
E
A
A
K
A
Right
we
want
to
keep
this
as
simple
as
possible,
which
we
have
all
agreed.
We
wanted
to.
B
E
A
The
public,
we
will
then
have
another
few
months
to
contemplate
them
and
give
us
some
final
feedback
right.
Do
we
then
make
some
more
tweaks?
Do
we
reserve
that
right,
yeah.
A
Go
ahead,
councilmember,
Burns
and
then
and
then
Tina
wanted
to
make
another
comment
as.
M
Well,
I
was
just
going
to
say
that
the
fifth
floor,
redistrative
meeting,
is
close
enough
to
the
war
meeting
I,
wouldn't
mind
doing
a
joint
meeting,
because
I
would
like
to
get
make
sure
that
we
have.
You
know
good
turnout
and
so
I'll
talk
to
you
more
about
that
offline,
but
I
wouldn't
mind.
Okay,
that's.
B
A
B
A
That
works
for
you,
I've
made
that
offer
to
all
the
other
council
members.
I'd
have
I'm
happy
to
appear
at
at
award
meeting
to
explain
this
process.
M
M
But
yeah
that
makes
that
works
so
we'll
have
we'll
just
we
can
have
the
conversation.
I
don't
know
if
it
makes
sense
to
have
it
twice,
because
it's
literally
a
few
days
away
from
we
might
we'll
we'll
figure
it
out.
I'll
talk
to
you
more
about
it:
offline,
okay,.
A
M
B
A
Right
Burns
anything
else;
no,
that's
it
for
now,
all
right
and
Tina!
You
want
it
to
weigh
in
as
well
yeah.
D
So
I
have
a
comment
that
may
be
important,
I'm,
not
sure
about
the
seventh
and
sixth
wards
regarding
their
tips,
but
the
as
we
know
the
there's,
a
five-fifth
tip
and
the
Fifth
Ward,
and
if
you're
talking
about
you
know
putting
more
money,
is
based
on
the
taxes,
blah
blah
blah
blah.
D
So
to
me,
some
of
the
residents
may
not
understand
Tiff
or
whatever
and
I
think
we're
all
kind
of
sketchy
about
it
as
well,
but
the
more
expensive
the
property
or
the
worst
of
the
area,
and
you
putting
that
into
six
and
seven
into
five.
Then
you're
gonna
have
more
money.
Coming
to
that
Tiff
I,
don't
know
what
tips
are
open.
Alderman
would
reveal
would
have
to
say
I,
don't
know
about
that.
Yeah.
A
I
could
address
that
point.
I.
Think
you've
made
a
very
good
point
about
Tiff
boundaries
might
be
something
we
want
to
consider
as
we're
looking
at
Ward
boundaries,
however,
tip
boundaries
are
different,
are,
are,
are
totally
separately
defined
and
we
will
not
be
changing
tip
boundaries
through
this
redistricting
process.
Tip
boundaries
will
remain.
A
M
D
A
Got
it
but
no
I
think
you
mentioned
shift
boundaries
and
like
we
could
consider
Cliff
a
community
of
Interest.
Perhaps.
E
B
D
You're
saying
you
know
you
I
know
you
have
a
goal
here.
You
know
trying
to
do
the
numbers.
You
know,
but
you're
also
saying
you
want
everything
to
be
fair
and
all
of
this.
Well,
if
you're
trying
to
pump
up
the
Fifth
Ward
yeah
and
make
it
equal
to
the
other
Ward,
then
six
and
seven
makes
sense.
M
It
goes
much
further
than
that:
cultural
religion,
the
language
characteristics,
communication
and
transportation
networks,
school
districts,
income
levels,
educational
backgrounds,
I
mean
on
and
on
policy
issues
and,
and
so
I
think,
there's
a
lot
of
reasons.
Why,
as
as
I
think
Ms
Priscilla,
Priscilla
Giles,
said
and
I
think
councilman
Revell
may
have
mentioned
to
look
at
moving
south
in
the
fifth
War,
but
but
at
the
very
least,
we
could
talk
about
that
more.
M
The
next
meeting,
I
just
want
people
to
truly
understand
what
goals
we've
outlined
and
again
it
does
not
include
trying
to
address
segregated
areas.
I
would
argue,
you
know,
that's
probably
a
better
conversation
for
a
housing
policy
than
than
than
how
we
redistrict
so
I
just
wanted
to
make
sure
we
we
reference
the
goals
that
we've
already
established
for
this
process.
A
D
But
you
also
did
say
you
wanted
to
make
sure
that
you
had
three
make
sure
that
you
have
three
non-white.
D
Of
the
people,
black
people
are
in
Ward
five,
and
so
every
a
lot
of
awards
are
surrounding
Ward,
five,
which
you're
not
going
to
have
the
conversation
until
the
the
very
last,
which
is
probably
inappropriate
because
it
was
supposed
to
be
talked
about
the
last
meeting,
but
you
canceled
it,
and
that
is
rapidly
moving.
Smaller
black
population
throughout
the
community,
but
it
is
surrounded.
Ward
5
is
surrounded
by
seven
one
and
two,
which
is
very
important.
Also
yeah.
D
So
I'm
discussing
what
Carlos
mentioned
earlier,
which
is
regardless
what
you
may
say,
I've
been
living
here,
a
long
time
and
and
and
I
also
have
places
and
different,
Wards
and
I
know
certain
Wars
get
more
benefits
than
other
Wards.
And
you
can.
D
You
can
argue
that
whatever
I
I,
Know
It,
there's
different
policies
in
each
Ward
and
and
I
can
say,
because
I
have
places
in
at
least
the
the
second
fourth
fifth
and
eighth
I
have
four
Awards
and
I
know
that
policy
is
different
in
each
War.
So
that's
why
I
suggest
six
and
seven
go
into
five
and
become
more
equal,
not
just
by
the
number,
but
you
say
you
want
in
there
and
you
do
have
it
in
writing.
A
Tina
we've
we've
we've
noted
your
your
input
and
you
know
as
you're
well
aware
we're
going
to
be
having
a
series
of
meetings
to
talk
about
the
other
Awards
too,
so
you're
definitely
invited
to
those
meetings.
Unless
there
is
somebody
else
who
wants
to
weigh
in
specifically
on
Ward
7.
I
will
look
to
adjourn
this
meeting.
If
is
there
anybody
else
who
wants
to
weigh
in
on
the
Seventh
Ward
all
right
there
being
no
further
business
to
come
before
this
committee?