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From YouTube: Rules Committee Meeting 5/04/2015
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A
A
A
Okay,
you
ready,
okay,
all
right,
we
do
have
a
quorum
and
we
will
begin
with
citizens.
Comments.
I
will
give
you
the
first
five
names
I'll.
Just.
Let
me
encourage
you
that
if
someone
has
already
said
pretty
much
what
you're
going
to
say,
please
give
us
that
time
and
don't
repeat
it
and
everyone
will
have
approximately
three
minutes
and
we
will
be
timing.
You
because
we
do
have
a
real
full
agenda
tonight.
So
I
have
Reverend
at
me:
I'm
sorry,
ken
edwards,
mr.
A
B
Just
state
your
name,
my
name
is
ken
edwards
good
evening,
madam
mayor
aldermen,
congratulations,
new
alderman,
I
work
for
150,
the
Operating
Engineers
we
represent
about
23,000
members,
hundreds
of
whom
live
in
evanston
people
smarter
than
myself
will
get
up
here
and
speak
in
detail
about
this
turnaround
agenda
that
you
guys
have
on
the
agenda
tonight.
We
feel
that
this
is
nothing
more
than
pure
politics
and
pure
politics
belong
in
Springfield,
not
in
local
government.
That's
where
we'd
rather
have
it
stay.
B
We
would
ask
that
you
guys
either
put
it
up
and
put
it
down
or
somebody
don't
call
it
for
a
vote.
This
is
not
a
good
thing
for
the
working
class,
not
a
good
thing
for
the
citizens
of
the
state
of
Illinois.
Thank
you
for
your
time.
Thank.
C
Jeanette
risky
I
wasn't
I'm
going
to
talk
about
this
topic,
but
I
will
now
because
it's
something
I
see
a
small
parallel
in
my
issues
with
harley
Clark,
the
small
parallel
is:
there
was
one
bid
submitted
by
basically
a
large
hotel
family
that
owns
hotels
and
basically,
as
I,
understand
those
those
hotep
that
that
the
that
conglomerate
or
corporation
in
Chicago
didn't
allow
basically
was
fighting
with
the
unions
and
they
wanted.
Now
you
want
to
put
a
hotel
out
our
lake
front.
C
Of
course
that's
one
of
the
things
you're
up
to,
but
I
think
it's
very
interesting
how
things
somehow
tie
together
here.
I
am
troubled
by
the
Rules
Committee.
Many
items
that
come
to
this
committee
seem
to
be
say,
should
be
discussed
at
council
and
their
their
seeming
to
coming
here,
so
to
be
hidden
and
I
use
the
term
hidden
when
I
see
a
city
council
packet
with
400
pages
and
memos
that
don't
make
any
sense
to
add
up.
C
C
So
it's
your
suspension
of
the
rules,
I
think,
is
a
serious
problem.
You
continue
to
do
this,
so
you
can
push
things
through
quickly,
so
the
public
can't
have
time
to
look
at
them
even-
and
this
is
a
common
practice
of
this
council-
it's
not
like
this
is
an
emergency
to
do
half
of
these
things
and,
I
believe,
there's
some
serious
problems
here.
Thank
you.
Thank.
A
D
My
name
is
Monty
Adams
I'm,
a
evenson
resident
here.
I
just
want
to
tell
you
a
personal
story
because
I'm
very
Pro
Union
for
a
good
reason
by
the
way
I'm,
not
in
a
banker
a
biker
gang
I'm
going
through
chemo.
That's
why
I
got
the
bandana
here,
so
I
don't
want
to
frighten
anybody.
A
little
bit
of
background
I
served
in
the
Air
Force
I
worked
as
a
forensic
scientist
for
the
Chicago
and
Illinois
State
Police
Department's
I
also
worked
as
an
investigator
and
researcher
for
law
enforcement,
training,
company
and
then
I
decide.
D
I
want
to
go
into
teaching.
I
taught
at
eth
SI
taught
at
risk.
Students
and
mayor
Tunstall
was
a
great
supporter
for
the
program
nice
folk
that
I
taught
in
the
Academy
and
very
worthwhile.
Unfortunately,
with
budget
cuts,
I
lost
my
job
after
four
years
and
I
had
to
move
on
to
different
schools
and
finally,
I
ended
up
in
a
school
that
I
really
enjoy
it's
a
23-20
20
20th
and
California
in
Chicago.
Again
I
work
with
at-risk
students.
It's
an
alternative
school
during
the
interim
when
I
was
unemployed,
I
was
unemployed
for
one
year.
D
My
wife
was
unemployed
for
two
years.
We
struggled
to
pay
our
rent
in
to
put
food
on
the
table
and
during
the
first
four
years
that
I
taught
at
this
school,
we
did
not
have
a
union
contract.
We
were
fighting
for
a
union
contract
for
five
years
and
got
to
the
point
where
as
much
as
I
enjoyed
doing
that,
job
I
was
still
doing
three
other
part-time
jobs.
D
In
addition
of
my
full-time
teaching
now,
after
five
years
of
fighting
with
the
school,
we
have
a
contract
that
both
the
teachers
and
the
administration
is
very
happy
with
I'm
paid
a
lot
more
money.
I
have
two
masters
degrees,
I'm
still
not
getting.
What
I
think
I
might
be
worth
like
if
I
was
at
ETH
s
but
I'm
very
comfortable
and
happy
with
that.
Now.
D
The
good
thing
about
unions
is
that
they
help
ensure
that
working
people
are
able
to
take
care
of
their
families
and
their
children,
and
not
only
that,
but
they're
also
helped
to
make
sure
that
the
work
environment
is
safe.
I
think
if
we
do
anything
to
break
down
the
unions,
we're
harming
the
middle
last,
and
I
can
tell
you
I
don't
think
the
governor
knows
what
it's
like
to
be
unemployed
for
two
years
are
to
have
his
wife
unemployed,
I'm
done.
Thank
you.
Thank.
A
E
Good
evening,
jason
hayes
live
in
the
eighth
ward
member
of
Evanston
firefighters,
local
742
good
evening,
madam
mayor
aldermen
city
council,
and
welcome
mr.
Miller
and
good
luck,
and
thank
you
for
stepping
up
and
you
gotta
got
a
lot
of
work.
A
dia
on
the
docket
this
evening
is
a
resolution
to
address
governor
rounders
turnaround
agenda
and
I
can
only
hope
that
this
proposal
is
being
addressed
here
rather
than
at
a
regular
City
Council
meeting
as
an
indicator
that
the
governor's
wrongheaded
approach
will
be
met
with
all
the
scorn
and
citizen
that
it
deserves.
E
The
governor's
wasted.
Much
of
his
political
capital
in
war
against
labor
working
men
and
women
are
not
the
reason
that
this
state's
fiscal
house
is
in
disarray.
A
strong
middle
class
is
what
drives
our
economy
and
unions
are
the
tide
that
raises
all
boats,
not
some
misguided,
trickle-down
economic
theory
that
leaves
to
nothing
but
a
race
to
the
bottom.
E
The
governor
seems
to
cry
for
shared
sacrifice,
but
it
seems
like
it's
left
to
the
workers
to
do
the
heavy
lifting
now.
The
government
governor's
empowerment
zones
are
nothing
short
of
illegal
and
designed
to
do
nothing
more
than
to
give
working
men
and
women
the
right
to
work
for
less
less
wages,
less
representation,
less
safety,
less
protections
and
less
equity.
E
A
F
Name
is
Christopher
Kruger,
madam
mayor
alderman,
I'm
a
20-year
evanston
resident
and
a
61-year
Illinoisan
I
rise
in
opposition
to
the
governor's
agenda.
I.
Do
echo
most
of
the
comments
made
by
my
predecessor
so
I'm
going
to
go
off
my
remarks
and
I'm
going
to
say
this.
There's
been
a
supply-side
fallacy
in
our
country
for
40
years
and
there's
a
pendulum
shift
and
when
Mitt
Romney
was
most
famously
caught
being
videotaped
people
heard
what
people
heard
was
his
contempt
for
working,
Americans
and
contempt
for
poor
people,
but
what
they
missed.
F
Here's
what
people
missed
when
they
heard
Mitt
Romney's
comment
when
he
said
forty.
Seven
percent
of
the
people
can't
vote
for
me
because
why?
Because
the
anti-tax
message
see
we
have
to
tax
people
to
have
roads,
we
have
to
tax
people
to
have
lights.
We
have
to
tax
people
that
have
a
park
district
or
or
a
school,
and
to
do
that,
we
have
to
tax
people
with
money
and
because
of
the
anti-tax
message,
what
Romney
was
saying
is
forty
percent
of
the
people
are
so
poor
that
there's
no
one
left
to
tax
okay.
F
So
that's
what
was
missed
and
we've
gone
to
the
bottom.
We
are
at
the
bottom,
every
mall
that
you're
going
to
go
to
when
you
shop
this
weekend
used
to
be
a
manufacturing
plant
dodge
and
dempster
was
a
steel
mill.
Oak
tin
and
heart
rate
was
rust.
Oleum
plant,
Howard
and
heart
tree
was
zenith
bell,
&,
howell,
magnavox,
central
and
tui
was
a
teletype
corporation.
F
All
those
jobs
are
gone,
and
these
gentlemen
are
the
remnant
of
a
great
industrial
class
that
we
have,
that
we
d
industrialized
and
the
people
who
were
supposed
to
create
our
jobs.
They
did
create
jobs,
they
created
jobs
in
Mexico
and
China
in
Singapore.
They
created
jobs
everywhere,
except
here
and
now,
they're
attacking
the
very
last.
F
The
public
employees
are
the
last
ones
because
public
employment,
disproportionately
benefits
minorities
and
women
and
and
disadvantaged
people,
because
public
entities
actually
try
to
obey
the
law
and
I
know
a
couple
things
about
this
because
I
happen
to
be
an
attorney.
I
happened
to
be
an
attorney
with
the
labor
and
employment
background.
I
happen
to
be
a
former
employee
of
the
National
Labor
Relations
movement.
That's
neither
here
nor
there.
This
is
rock
bottom
and
we
can
look
to
Wisconsin
and
see
the
result.
F
We
can
look
to
Ohio,
we
can
look
to
Indiana
and
we
can
see
both
the
social
and
economic
results
of
this
agenda
and
we
should
condemn
it
and,
furthermore,
we
should
have
a
living
wage
in
evanston
and
I
applaud
this
body
for
the
fep
program
and
for
the
program
to
promote
legitimate
women's
business
enterprises
and
legitimate
minority
business
enterprises
and
evan
stone
ians,
and
that's
what
we
should
be
doing
and
my
my
little
bite
soundbite
here
is
instead
of
racing
to
the
bottom.
Let's
move
on
up,
let's
move
on
up
folks.
Thank
you.
A
G
Good
evening
my
name
is
Bridget
early.
I
reside
at
807
West
Cornelia
in
Chicago.
I
am
the
political
director
for
the
Chicago
Federation
of
Labor.
As
many
of
you
know,
the
Chicago
Federation
of
Labor
represents
over
500
unions
who
in
turn
represent
over
500,000
working
men
and
women
who
reside
within
Cook
County
several,
which
live
and
work
in
this
community.
G
This
evening
you
are
considering
a
res
ly
resolution
that
calls
for
Evanston
to
endorse
aspects
of
the
governor's
turnaround
agenda,
an
agenda
which
does
little
to
improve
the
lives
of
working
men
and
women
throughout
the
state.
As
you
are
aware,
the
Illinois
Municipal
League
is
endorsing
the
governor's
agenda
as
an
answer
to
the
financial
woes
that
plagued
Illinois
as
elected
officials,
it
is
imperative
that
you
understand
the
consequences
this
agenda
proposes
for
the
men
and
women
of
your
community.
G
Governor
rauner
is
recommended
policies
that
will
drive
down
wages,
increase
the
number
of
workplace
fatalities
and,
ultimately,
decrease
state
and
local
tax
revenues.
The
Illinois
Economic
Policy
Institute,
in
conjunction
with
the
University
of
Illinois
at
urbana-champaign
school
of
Labor
and
Employment
Relations,
recently
released
a
report
titled
the
impact
of
local
right
to
work
zones,
predicting
outcomes
for
workers,
the
economy
and
tax
revenues
in
Illinois.
The
report
investigates
the
economic
and
policy
impacts
of
adopting
local
right
to
work
zones
in
Illinois
testing
claims
made
by
proponents
of
the
ordinances.
G
The
report
finds
that
worker
incomes
are
lower
in
economy
with
right-to-work
laws
and
that
the
employment
effects
are
inconclusive.
For
instance,
average
worker
wages
are
two
dollars
and
ninety
cents
per
hour
higher
in
Illinois
than
in
right-to-work
Indiana.
At
the
same
time,
the
unemployment
rate
in
Eastern
Illinois
counties
was
lower
than
in
right-to-work
counties
across
the
Indiana
border
in
December
2014.
G
Ultimately,
economic
analysis
reveals
that
local
right-to-work
laws
would
reduce
worker
earnings
and
decrease
state
and
local
tax
revenues,
which
would
result
in
a
weaker
Illinois
economy.
A
January
2015
report
of
out
of
Moody's
Analytics
states.
Since
laws
that
hurt
Union
shift
the
balance
of
power
from
employees
to
owners,
they
tend
to
erode
wages
to
lead
to
a
more
uneven
distribution
of
the
gains
of
economic
growth.
Data
from
the
bureau
of
labor
statistics
shows
that
the
rate
of
workplace
deaths
is
almost
fifty
three
percent
higher
in
states
with
right-to-work
laws.
This
resolution.
G
Give
me
just
a
couple
more
minutes
make
a
few
key
points.
The
resolution
references
prevailing
wage
as
a
burden
subverting
prevailing
wage
laws
often
leads
to
shoddy
construction
and
substantial
cost
overruns.
Looking
for
more
exploitable
work
force,
rather
than
the
best-trained
best-equipped
crew
to
run
jobs,
it
also
deals
with
workers
comp
reform,
whereas
we
need
to
like
to
point
out
a
recent
report
that
from
the
National
Association
excuse
me,
Academy
of
Social
answer
insurance
that
workers
compensation
remains
the
second
most
profitable
line
of
insurance
after
auto
insurance.
G
What
Illinois
needs
is
more
oversight
and
regulation
of
the
insurance
industry
to
bring
about
true
change
to
the
workers.
Comp
insist,
'um,
injured
workers
should
not
be
forced
to
give
up
any
further
benefits
that
the
insurance
industry
can
profit.
So
to
close,
we
understand
that
the
governor's
call
for
fifty
percent
reduction
in
LG
DF
dollars
puts
an
unfair
burden
on
localities
to
provide
the
countless
service
to
their
residents
at
such
high
quality.
But
this
resolution
is
not
the
answer.
H
Good
evening,
mrs.
mayor
aldermen,
my
name
is
Scott
spangle,
I'm
a
proud
union
member
for
43
years
with
the
plumbers
Union
I'm,
a
business
representative
for
Chicago,
journeyman
plumbers,
Local,
1,
30
and
I'm
here
to
speak
out
against
governor
rauner's
turnaround
agenda.
There
are
many
points
are
brought
up
tonight.
It's
a
very
far-reaching
agenda.
One
of
the
points
that
started
to
get
covered
was
the
prevailing
wage
and
the
PLA
s.
I
mean
you
know
as
part
of
pla
s
most
time.
H
They
are
required
to
have
apprentices
on
the
job
that
are
covered
by
the
Department
of
Labor
Bureau
of
training.
There's
drug
testing
and
I
want
to
say
in
the
study
that
Bridget
early
mentioned
from
the
University
of
Illinois.
It
was
stated
that
if
you
took
all
the
training
programs
for
all
the
unions
in
the
United
States,
it
would
equal
the
sixth
largest
university
in
the
United
States.
That's
how
much
training
is
done
by
the
unions
and
that
all
of
that
training
is
done
by
the
private
sector.
H
A
Decided:
okay,
nilmar,
okay,
our
friend,
is
it
p
you
save
not
to
sign
up
okay,
Connor,
Joyce
kind
of
Joyce
jack
move
in
move.
I
J
Good
evening,
madam
mayor
members
of
the
City
Council,
congratulations,
mr.
Miller,
my
name
is
Patrick
Keenan
Devlin.
I
live
in
the
third
ward,
at
61,
16
min
avenue,
apartment
3a
also
have
a
cute
baby.
I
in
opposition
to
resolution.
46
are
15
when
I
first
heard
the
phrase
right
to
work.
I
have
to
say
my
gut
reaction
was:
who
wants
the
right
to
work?
I
mean
I,
want
the
right
to
go
on.
Vacation
I
want
the
right
to
sick
days.
I
want
the
right
to
childcare.
For
my
little
girl.
That's
what
I
want.
J
It's,
obviously
not
what
governor
rauner
wants.
He
wants
us
to
work
for
less.
He
wants
to
gut
the
middle
class
and
we
here
in
evanston
our
progressive
community
that
stand
for
the
middle
class
and
stand
with
the
middle
class.
So
I
asked
the
rules
committee
tonight
to
send
a
message
to
Springfield
that
we
oppose
gutting
workers
comp
that
we
stand
with
our
labor
brothers
and
sisters
so
vote.
No
thanks!
So
much.
K
Good
evening,
thank
you
for
having
us
city
of
Evanston,
everyone
representing
it.
Thank
you.
My
name
is
Benito
Rivera
I'm
from
laborers
local
one.
We've
current
we've
recently
merged.
We
used
to
be
laborers
local
118,
a
long-standing
local
that
actually
started
in
your
prestigious
city.
We
used
to
be
located
right
here
in
Evanston,
so
this
is
an
honor
and
I
I
felt
the
urge
to
speak
on
our
behalf,
though
the
middle
class
is
wounded,
as
everyone
knows,
in
America
and
pretty
much.
K
The
unions
are
one
of
the
last
crutches
that
the
wounded
middle
class
is
leaning
on
this.
Is
my
son
I'm
a
single
dad
who's.
Please
take
your
son,
your
head
off
son
out
of
respect,
I
apologize,
I'm,
a
single
dad
and
I'm
able
to
take
care
of
this
young
man
because
of
the
benefits
negotiated
on
my
behalf
by
my
unions
representing
me.
K
My
son
recently
came
down
with
diabetes
about
a
year
and
a
half
ago
and
the
medications
that
that
I
have
to
get
for
him
pretty
much
they're
almost
like
paying
another
house
note
if
I
were
to
have
to
come
out
of
my
own
pocket
with
them.
If
I
were
to
have
to
do
that
without
the
benefits
I
currently
enjoy,
I
might
I
might
be
a
little
bit
more
detrimental
to
society
than
I
am
right
now
and
I
might
just
have
to
go
on
some
sort
of
public
assistance.
K
I'm,
not
the
only
person
in
issues
again
I'm
able
to
be
contribute
to
my
society
in
part
because
the
benefits
I
enjoy
and
all
of
you
seemed
educated
and
well
to
do
you
know.
I
know
your
public
workers,
so
maybe
not
as
well
to
do
is,
but
we
appreciate
we
appreciate
what
you
do
as
well.
You
know
you
represent
the
people.
Thank
you
for
that.
All
I
have
to
say:
is
you
never
know
what
you're
going
to
get
as
far
as
children
or
grandchildren
I
just
urge
you
guys
to
to
think
moving
forward.
K
Unions
are
good
thing.
They
they
negotiate
on
behalf
of
the
worker.
Without
the
negotiating
power,
some
companies
take
advantage
of
people.
There
is
very
rare
to
find
a
good
company
with
a
good-hearted
person
that
will
actually
pay
a
worker.
What
they're
worth
we
need
unions,
so
please
I
implore
you
think
of
future
generations.
K
You
never
know
if
it's
going
to
be
one
of
your
descendants,
they
might
actually
need
these
benefits.
So
please,
on
behalf
of
laborers
local
one
and
the
rest
of
the
union's
public
and
private
I
implore.
You
please
think
about
the
thing.
The
decisions
you
make
and
please
do
not
adopt
this
agenda
moving
forward.
Thank
you.
Thank
you.
A
L
L
D
L
L
L
A
O
O
I
A
A
Been
moved
in
second,
all
in
favor
aye,
any
opposed
all
right.
The
next
item
is
revised
automatic
committee
member
chair
schedule
for
2013
through
2017.
D
A
O
O
L
L
N
N
Just
that
I
do
believe
at
the
time
of
producing
this
document,
not
the
actual
memo
we
did
not
know
who
would
be
on
the
Rules
Committee.
So
this
is
the
most
previous
action.
Therefore,
you
see
alderman
burrows
listed
in
every
situation,
so
the
purpose
tonight
is
to
discuss
and
that's
how
I
think
we
did
it
two
years
ago
was
to
take
a
look
at
this,
and
is
there
any
requests
for
changes
or
any
discussion
on
the
part
of
the
Rules
Committee
about
who
is
going
to
be
in
which
position
for
all
of
the
other
committees?
N
A
Haven't
we
always
I
mean
usually
the
oh
I'm,
sorry
I
see
lots
of
lights,
but
I
thought
the
procedure
was
to
substitute
whoever
came
on
for
the
committee's
that
were
already
there.
Otherwise,
it's
not
the
way
we
did
it
before.
I
see
alderman
and
I'm
not
sure
how
they
went
on,
but
I
see
Ottoman,
Grover
I
believe
it
is
I'm.
P
O
L
In
terms
of
seniority,
I
mean
that
that
would
be
the
first
thing
we
should
do.
I
would
think
to
correct
this
in
terms
of
seniority,
so
alderman
Miller
is
new.
He
cannot
take
the
place
of
aldermen
Burris
in
terms
of
the
the
tenure
of
the
the
list
is
in
tenure
order,
so
he
can't
take
her
place
because
he's
the
new
alderman.
So
he
has
to
go
to
the
bottom
of
the
list
and
that's
not
a
negative
thing.
It's
just
yeah.
L
Newest
person
on
board
is
at
the
end
of
the
list,
so
that
would
be
the
first
thing
we
would
have
to
do
and
then
discuss
whether
or
not
in
the
past
newly
seeded
alderman
did
simply
replace
the
all
of
the
appointed
alderman
has
replaced
in
all
ways
that
the
alderman
they
report,
they're,
replacing
and
I.
Don't
think
that's
been
the
case,
but
the
thing
I
want
to
clarify
is
the
order
of
seniority
and
that
supposed
to
the
bottom.
So
we
have
to
do
that.
First,
one.
A
Yeah
I
think
we
need
to
discuss
singularity
and
an
F
bet
florida,
because
some
of
us
end
up
sharing
committees
many
many
times
and
others
haven't
so
I
I
have
some
issues
with
that,
but
go
ahead.
I'll
I,
don't
think
we
have
an
answer
yet
for
you,
I
ultimen
rainy,
we'll
have
to
discuss
that,
but
Alma
Grover
I'm.
P
P
Is
you
look
at
it
by
seniority,
but,
more
importantly
and
I
don't
know
if,
if
all
of
in
Miller's
had
an
opportunity
to
speak
to
the
mayor
about
the
various
positions
in
the
chairs,
that
was
a
lengthy
discussion
that
we
had
in,
depending
on
what
your
passions
are
and
in
the
amount
of
time
that
you
have
to
allocate
I
think
they
should
probably
have
that
conversation,
and
we
should
hold
it
over
until
our
next
committee
meeting
once
they've
looked
at
that
and
then
can
reshuffle
the
deck
from
there
may
be.
My
recommendation.
D
D
A
I
think
one
of
the
things
is
not
the
difference
between
the
chair
and
being
on
the
committee,
because
there
are
certain
committees
that
have
to
be
full
with
what
with
the
ottoman
and
then
the
chairmanship
is
a
whole
different
thing
and
I
think
that's
what
Oliver
Rainey
is
referring
to
is
a
chairmanship
in
terms
of
seniority.
I
might
not
correct.
Well,.
A
That's
what
I
thought
I'm
sorry
all.
L
L
Life-Circle
I
think
the
way
it's
always
been
done
and
even
before
you
got
on
and
after
that
I
we
discuss
it
in
the
Rules
Committee.
That's
one
of
the
great
reasons
for
the
Rules
Committee
to
exist
is
so
the
aldermen
on
the
Rules
Committee,
who
are
all
of
us,
can
vote
to
place
alderman
on
committees
that
they
want
to
be
on
if
there's
an
availability
and
there's
availability
on
several
committees
right
now,
because
of
all
the
members
is
leaving
us
so.
P
Again,
I'll
only
speak
to
my
experience.
I
had
an
opportunity
not
having
a
full
understanding
of
all
the
committee's
to
have
a
conversation
with
the
mayor
and
then
choose
which
ones
and
also
get
educated
at
the
same
time.
So
I
don't
know
if
they've
had
that
discussion,
I'm
no
idea
and
I'm
hoping
we'll
hear
from
Oliver
Miller.
In
a
moment
there.
L
O
M
Terms
of
the
question
of
seniority
for
the
chairmanships
I
agree
that
you
know,
according
the
work,
the
rules
of
organization
and
procedure
that
it
is
based
on
seniority,
so
that
definitely
has
to
be
revised
and
more
than
willing
to
serve
on
any
and
all
committees
for
the
council
committees.
As
far
as
special
committees
I'd
like
to
discuss
that
further
in
as
far
as
human
services,
I
was
hoping.
M
N
A
A
Q
Q
A
A
Long
as
we're
fair
and
everybody
has
a
fair
share
of
them,
because
there
are
a
lot
of
committees.
Besides
the
standing
committees,
there
are
the
other
committees
that
have
to
be
filled
as
well.
So
just
let's
all
keep
that
in
mind.
If
economic
development
there's
parking
there's
everything,
so
we
all
have
to
think
about
that
in
terms
of
our
time
and
we
all
have
other
lives
besides,
council
believe
it
or
not.
A
It's
been
moved
in.
Second,
all
in
favor
aye,
any
opposed.
Okay,
all
right,
we
do
need
to
add.
We
do
need
an
additional
member
on
the
parking
and
the
Transportation
Committee,
because
I
think
we
decided
to
add
one
more
element
to
that
committee.
Is
that
correct,
because
some
of
the
communities
have
a
minimum
of
above
five
and
then
some
are
seven
or
more?
So
no
six
or
more,
I
should
say
so.
A
J
Q
A
Great
and
I
want
to
just
explain
to
people
because
I
know
I'm
bouncing
back
and
forth,
but
it's
only
because
I'm
looking
at
the
light,
so
I
can
see
who
wants
to
speak
so
I
feel
like
I'm
playing
volleyball
or
something
up
here.
I
should
have
probably
moved
on
okay,
well,
aliment
indem
has
volunteered
and
based
upon
seniority.
He
would
he
would
be.
The
person
then
assigned
to
our
transportation
parking
is
that
okay,
the
additional
person
for
the
fourth
alderman
on
that
committee?
A
A
A
Accept
the
memo
and
file,
it's
been
moved
in
a
second
that
we
will
accept
the
memo
and
file
all
in
favor
or
any
opposed
all
right.
The
next
is
the
resolution.
23
dash
R
dash
15,
requesting
the
President
and
Congress
to
memorialize
Carl
Sandburg
national
historic
trail
in
Illinois
move
approval.
It's.
P
A
Moved
in
second
signal
lights,
all
in
favor
aye,
any
opposed.
Is
there
any
new
business.