►
Description
Minneapolis Public Health, Environment, Civil Rights, and Engagement Committee Meeting
A
Good
afternoon
everyone,
my
name,
is
Philippe
Cunningham
and
I.
Am
the
chair
of
this
committee
I'm
going
to
call
to
order
this
meeting
of
the
public
health
environment,
civil
rights
and
engagement
committee
for
Monday
January,
7th
2019
with
me
at
the
Dyess,
our
councilmembers
Connell,
Schrader,
Gordon
and
council?
Vice
president
Jenkins,
please
let
the
record
reflect
that
we
have
a
quorum.
Welcome
back
everybody
2019
to
the
peace
committee.
I've
missed
you
all,
so
I'm
glad
to
be
able
to
get
back
to
work
with
you.
A
A
This
is
a
quasi-judicial
hearing
for
which
this
committee
is
limited
by
law,
to
hearing
arguments
from
the
parties
to
the
matter
consisting
of
the
Minneapolis,
Health
Department
and
will
winter
of
or
mr.
winters
representative.
This
committee
is
prohibited
from
receiving
any
new
evidence
or
testimony
the
parties
are
required
to
limit
their
comments
to
arguments.
Previous
are
specifically
addressed
the
record
created
before
the
administrative
law
judge,
who
previously
conducted
a
full
hearing
on
this
matter.
The
parties
may
not
offer
and
the
committee
shall
not
consider
any
new
or
additional
evidence.
A
B
Such
orders
under
the
state
food
court
code,
the
right
to
appeal
the
validity
of
those
orders
through
an
administrative
process
that
involves
an
appeal
being
heard
by
an
administrative
law
judge
commonly
referred
to
as
inhale
J
employed
by
the
Minnesota
Office
of
Administrative
Hearings,
and
so
in
this
matter
the
respondent
mister
will
winter
doing
business
as
uptown
local
or
did
exercise
his
right
to
appeal.
The
food
code
orders
that
were
issued
to
him
and
his
establishment
by
city
staff
in
May
of
which
is
not
now
last
year.
B
That
ALJ
recommendation
now
must
come
before
the
City
Council,
and
you
are
capable
of
hearing
brief
argument
from
both
parties
before
deciding
whether
to
accept
and
adopt
the
report
and
recommendation
of
the
Ald
ALJ,
which
is
the
requests
that
I
make
today
on
behalf
of
city
staff
or
whether
to
modify
the
report
or
recommendation.
You
are
not
empowered
to
hear
or
consider
any
consider
any
new
evidence
only
to
hear
brief
arguments
addressing
the
report
and
the
record
as
they
currently
exist.
Turning,
then,
very
briefly,
to
the
facts
in
this
matter.
B
I
submit
that
the
ALJ's
report
is
extremely
detailed
and
clear
and
that
its
reasoning
is
entirely
sound
and
appropriate,
and
that
should
be
adopted
and
in
its
entirety.
The
case
involved
city
staff
learning
that
uptown
locavore
was
operating
a
facility
at
31
37,
Hennepin,
Avenue
South,
that
was
an
unlicensed
food
establishment.
The
facility
promoted
itself
for
Hell
itself
out
as
being
a
private
buyers
club
for
farm-fresh
foods,
including
meats,
cheeses,
fish,
honey,
coffee
and
raw
milk.
Among
other
food
products.
B
Individuals
were
able
to
sign
up
for
a
membership
and
then
purchase
food
products
at
the
facility
or
have
them
delivered
to
their
homes.
However,
as
is
clearly
laid
out
in
the
ALJ's
reports,
such
an
operation
unequivocally
qualifies
as
a
food
establishment,
as
that
term
is
utilized
in
the
state
food
code.
Additionally,
the
sale
of
raw
milk
is
plainly
illegal
pursuant
to
Minnesota
law,
with
the
exception
of
small
quantities
purchased
for
personal
consumption
and
also
purchased
directly
at
the
farm
where
the
milk
is
actually
produced,
which
certainly
was
not
the
case
in
this
matter.
B
Based
on
these
observations
and
after
a
search
warrant
was
executed
at
the
establishment,
a
set
of
state
food
code
orders
were
issued
or
was
issued
to
up
down
local
more
as
further
detailed
in
the
ALJ's
report.
Before
you,
there
were
about
six
orders
at
issue.
They
range
from
the
unlicensed
food
establishment
operation
itself
to
the
raw
milk
and
also
orders
embargoing
the
food
products
on
site
based
on
their
improper
labeling
and
their
non-compliance
with
the
food
code.
B
The
ALJ
report,
analyzes
all
of
the
orders
appealed
from
and
rightly
concludes
that
they
are
all
legal
and
valid.
The
report
also
analyzes
several
constitutional
claims
asserted
by
the
establishment
and
rightly
concludes
that
the
orders
were
also
valid
and
proper
from
a
constitutional
perspective.
Based
on
these
clear
violations
identified
by
city
staff
and
based
on
the
reasoned
and
detailed
analysis
conducted
by
the
ALJ
in
this
matter,
upholding
all
of
the
orders
issued
by
staff.
B
A
C
C
With
this
case
from
the
beginning,
is
the
need
for
a
better
term
of
what
it
is
that's
going
on
here.
You
have
as
I
think
the
record
should
reflect
an
organization.
That's
been
involved
with
selling
products
from
small
Minnesota
farms
directly
to
consumers
for
more
than
15
years,
and
they
could
have
probably
gone
on
another
15
years
with
this
association
like
this,
if
they
hadn't
gotten,
really
smart
and
decided.
C
Well,
let's,
let's
do
a
web
page
and
it
got
noticed
and
unfortunately,
something
as
creative
and
as
and
I
would
argue
in
some
cases
as
necessary
as
this
is,
but
that
creative,
in
the
sense
that
you're
developing
direct
relationships
without
an
intermediary
to
consumers
doesn't
fit
into
any
boxes
that
normally
you
would
expect
it
to
fit
into
inside
the
food
preparation
and
the
food
purchasing
chain.
I
come
from
Minnesota
I
have
family
that
still
is
engaged
in
agriculture
and
as
a
direct
result
with
that.
C
I
have
that
I
have
the
benefit
of
people
who
have
a
hog
farm
and
I.
Get
bacon
and
I
got
all
kinds
of
things
from
these
folks
that
we
distribute
inside
the
family
and,
frankly,
friends
from
time
to
time,
knowing
full
well
where
it
came
from
and
all
the
rest
of
it
associated
have
the
fortune,
I
guess
I'd,
say
of
associating
with
somebody
that
does
have
still
this
kind
of
direct
link.
A
lot
of
people
don't
have
that
luxury.
C
A
lot
of
people,
for
whatever
reason,
are
seeking
a
direct
relationship
with
farmers
and
that's
what
this
is
about.
Really
you're
dealing
with
twenty
farmers
and
about
200
families
all
total.
It's
not
a
big
organization.
By
any
stretch
of
the
imagination,
this
is
not
a
grocery
store.
This
is
not
something
that's
available
to
the
public.
This
isn't
something
where
they'll
post,
something
on
a
wall
outside
say
come
on
in
we've
got
a
special
on
pork.
This
is
a
situation
where
people
describe
their
needs,
they
order
it
from
the
farmers
and
it
is
delivered.
C
That
is
true,
for
example,
of
raw
milk,
the
exception
that
was
just
stated
for
you,
the
purchase
the
the
purchase
is
made
directly
with
the
farmer.
The
farmer
has
the
receipt
of
the
purchase
and
then
the
farmer
ships
as
a
distribution
point
to
this
store,
and
there
are
people
and
I
call
it
a
store,
I
shouldn't,
but
for
want
of
a
better
term.
Oh,
it
is
a
place
where
this
group
does
then
collectively
engage
in
this.
This
isn't
a
situation
where
you're
dealing
with
folks
that
are
surreptitiously
bringing
in
bad
beef
or
anything
like
that.
C
C
They
make
more
money
in
that
direct
relationship
and
they
produce
better
fresher
food
for
these
particular
individuals
would
be
nice
if
everybody
could
have
that
kind
of
relationship
well
with
with
a
producer,
yeah
I
think
probably,
but
not
everybody
can.
This
is
a
small
group
of
people
that
has
done
that,
and
so
what
we're
asking
you
to
do
in
this
particular
case
is
to
take
a
leap
and
to
dismiss
this
these
assertions
and
these
allegations.
C
Certainly
you
could
expect
mr.
winter
and
others
to
actively
participate
in
any
kind
of
discussion.
The
city
would
want
to
have
in
regulating
these
kinds
of
enterprises.
This
is
not
I
can
assure
you
unique
people
want
to
have
those
kinds
of
direct
relationships
with
farmers
who,
in
turn,
are
looking
for
these
kinds
of
opportunities
and
if
the
city
of
Minneapolis
were
to
hold
itself
out
in
that
regard
as
an
entity
that
was
interested
and
assisting
in
these
kinds
of
things,
certainly,
you
would
have
mr.
C
C
Adamant,
employees
of
the
city
and
doing
right
by
public
health
and
making
sure
that
we
weren't
going
to
be
having
all
this
bad
milk
and
all
this
bad
meat
being
eaten
by
all
of
our
consumers
in
Minneapolis.
That's
not
what
this
is
about.
These
aren't
people
that
are
in
the
process
of
trying
to
sell
trying
to
get
away
with
anything.
It's
a
direct
relationship
between
farmers
and
citizens
of
Minneapolis,
although
some
have
come
I'm
told
from
as
far
away
as
a
hundred
miles
and
weren't
have
the
opportunity
to
to
be
a
part
of
this.
C
A
B
Mr.
chair
committee
members-
certainly
they
qualified
it.
There
was
the
determination
of
our
staff,
an
ALJ
that
they
qualify
as
a
food
establishment
which
does
require
licensure
I,
don't
believe
the
way
that
they
were
operating
would
have
been.
There
would
be
a
license
category
available.
For
that,
however,
I
don't
want
to
say,
I
mean
there.
There
could
be
some
sorts
of
transactions
if
they're
directly.
If
it
is
to
the
farmer
himself,
we
have
farmers
markets,
we
have
other
avenues,
but
I,
don't
know
if
there's
an
existing
rubric
that
would
fit
this.
D
Thank
you
I
appreciate
that,
and
it
seemed
a
little
bit
when
I
was
reading
it
that
no,
they
could
have
potentially
applied
for
that
license,
and
then
they
could
have
modified
their
business
plan
so
that
they
could
fit
in
and
continue
operating
somehow
within
those
parameters,
but
they
chose
not
to
and
they
apparently
didn't
want
to.
I
would.
B
Just
add
again:
I
wouldn't
speculate
as
to
what
they
could
have
modified
themselves
into
I'm,
just
speaking
that
the
operation
as
it
exists-
and
you
know-
does
not
fit
the
current
requirements.
But
certainly
you
know
I
don't
want
to
get
into
speculating
about
how
it
might
be
modified,
but
it's
there
are
other
options
and
avenues
that
could
be
explored.
I
don't
have
an
easy
fit,
however,
to
offer
at
this
point.
B
A
B
Yes,
I
think
the
the
operate,
the
way
they
were
operating
as
a
as
a
buyers
club
and
which
memberships
were
accepted,
that
would
qualify
as
a
food
establishment
and
they
would
need
a
license.
It's
kind
of
a
matter
of
economies
of
scale,
but
yeah
Costco
is
a
private
buyers
club
as
well.
However,
obviously
the
dynamics
are
a
bit
different.
There.
No.
E
You
I
guess
my
my
statement
is
more
of
a
comment
than
necessarily
a
question,
but
you
know
I
I
would
be
really
concerned
and
it's
not
necessarily
well.
Yes,
they
were
operating
a
food
establishment
without
a
license,
but
it
also
seems
to
me
at
issue
is
what
they
were
selling
and
particularly
the
raw
milk,
which
is
prohibited
by
state
law
and
I
would
be
concerned
that
if
we
were
to
allow
an
establishment
to
operate,
what
would
stop
others
from
pursuing
this
kind
of
situation?
E
I
mean
it
seems
that
one
option
as
it
were
could
be
to
actually
go
to
the
bottom.
I
mean
they
have
these
relationships
with
the
farmers.
I,
don't
think
there
is
a
restriction
for
that
if
they
went
directly
to
the
farm
and
they
wanted
to
take
health
risk
of
drinking
raw
milk,
then
that
would
be
an
option
but
as
it
stands,
I
think
this
would
create
a
host
of
other
issues
that
we
are
not
prepared
to
deal
with.
Thank
You.
F
Yet
I
just
want
to
echo
what
the
council
vice-president
said
like
this
is
pretty
clearly
against
the
law.
I
really
think.
There's
a
lot
of
sympathy
for
the
business
model.
I
think
that
we
need
to
be
thinking
a
lot
more
about
how
our
food
systems
work
in
the
city.
How
we
have
all
communities
have
access
to
healthy
food,
so
I'd
love
to
sit
down
and
have
those
conversations
and
make
sure
that
some
of
these
businesses
could
fit
in.
A
A
Is
we
have
a
consent
item
accepting
a
grant
from
Hennepin
County
in
the
amount
of
15,000
for
Minneapolis
Health
Department
school-based
clinics
to
cover
non
insurance,
insured,
Minneapolis
adolescents
at
one
of
its
seven
school-based
clinics
and
passage
of
resolution,
approving
appropriations
of
those
funds
to
the
Health
Department?
Do
any
of
my
colleagues
have
any
comments
or
questions
on
this
item
council?
Vice
president
Jenkins
Thank.
E
You,
chair,
Cunningham
and
I'm
not
sure
if
this
is
an
appropriate
question
for
this
time,
but
I'm
just
curious.
If
this
music
ant
can
address
how
the
governmental
shutdown
may
impact
some
of
the
grant
funding
for
the
Health
Department,
and
if
this
is
not
appropriate
for
this.
This
is
this
is
a
perfect
time.
Okay,.
G
Good
afternoon,
Gretchen
music
ant,
commissioner
of
health
I'm
not
prepared
to
give
you
a
deep
answer
to
that.
Mr.
chair
Jenkins,
but
I
do
know
that
the
portion
of
the
government's
budget
that
is
subject
to
the
shutdown
does
not
include
most
of
the
health
areas,
because
there
was
a
budget
proposal
already
passed
that
funds
health
stuff.
Now
that's
a
general
overall
statement
and
there
will
be
ripple
effects
and,
and
you
know,
down
downward
spirals
and
subcontracting.
That
probably
will
be
impacted,
but
generally
we're
not
feeling
the
first
wave
of
impact.
G
A
Thank
you
so
much
any
other
comments
or
questions
all
right.
Seeing
none
I
move
approval
of
this
item.
All
those
in
favor,
please
signify
by
saying
aye
aye,
those
opposed
say
no,
the
eyes
have
it
and
that
item
carries
our
final
item
on
today's
agenda
is
a
discussion
item.
It
is
seating
and
filing
a
report
on
recommendations
from
the
northern
metals
Advisory
Committee,
and
will
we
have
commissioner
musekamp
to
give
us
a
presentation
of
that
the
floor
source?
Thank
you.
G
G
G
So
the
northern
metals
consent
decree
began.
The
sort
of
the
story
begins
in
2016
when
the
Minnesota
Pollution
Control
Agency
discovered.
There
was
an
unpermitted
source
of
air
pollution
at
northern
metals
and
they
moved
to
revoke
their
operating
permit
for
violating
their
operating
conditions
and,
as
a
result,
northern
metals
plans
on
moving
its
shredding
facility
out
of
Minneapolis
at
the
end
of
2019.
G
The
consent
decree
gave
some
guidelines
as
to
how
that
money
should
be
expended,
and
the
city
agreed
with
those
guidelines
it's
to
be
used
solely
for
mitigation
projects
in
North
and
Northeast
Minneapolis,
and
they
shall
include
projects
in
the
impacted,
neighborhoods
and
there's
a
subsequent
action
by
the
council,
to
name
those
neighborhoods
to
do
four
things.
One
is:
identify
and
educate
at-risk
residents
on
asthma
triggers
second
enroll
families,
with
children
suffering
from
poorly
controlled
asthma
in
a
new
asthma,
trigger
mitigation
program,
3,
implement
community
and
block
by
block
blood,
lead
level.
G
The
council
then
took
action
to
create
a
community
advisory
committee,
the
northern
metals
Advisory
Committee,
and
that
was
in
September
of
2017,
and
the
group
was
to
provide
recommendations
to
myself
to
best
implement
the
four
project
projects
that
I
just
outlined
for
you
in
the
consent
decree
and
to
define
the
impacted
communities
and
how
to
identify
and
educate
at-risk
residents
and
how
to
identify
and
reach
the
families
of
children
with
asthma
and
how
to
conduct
lead.
Screening
events.
G
G
So
before
we
began,
we
knew
that
it
would
be
helpful
to
have
facilitation
and
without
we
did
not
spend
settlement
funding
on
this.
But
we
worked
with
the
Hennepin
County
cap
agency
and
leveraged
some
funding
to
identify
facilitation
services.
Those
facilitation
services
will
also
be
available
to
the
northern
Green
Zone.
So
it's
a
kind
of
a
win-win
for
us.
As
a
city
and
the
facilitator
is
mentioned
there,
public
policy
project,
I,
don't
know
if
anyone's
come
in
the
door
from
there.
G
No,
but
you
can
see
who
they
are,
and
the
committee
members
you
can
see
from
the
Hawthorne
McKinley
and
Sheridan
neighborhoods.
Anyone
here
from
the
Advisory
Committee
a
couple
members
of
our
advisory
committee.
There
were
no
applicants
for
Bottineau,
so
we
did
not
have
representation
from
that
community
and
then
the
Health
Department
appointed
three
additional
members
which
are
named
there
as
well.
G
We
had
originally
imagined
that
we
would
have
four
meetings
to
do
this
work
and
said
we
had
eight,
but
that
gave
us
a
chance
to
really
get
to
know
one
another
dig
into
the
issue
and
really
parse
out
the
stories
and
think
about
what
are
the
lessons
that
the
community
members
are
bringing
forward.
You'll
see
at
the
bottom
of
that
slide.
There
is
a
web
page
where
you
could
go
and
read
all
the
notes
from
the
minutes.
If
you'd
like
to
do
that.
G
G
The
green
areas
are
our
north
and
south
green
zones
and
then
the
dark
outline
area
are
the
four
neighborhoods
that
city
council
named
as
part
of
the
advisory
committee
creation
and
in
response
to
the
northern
metals
consent
decree,
and
then
you
can
see
there's
a
little
tiny
factory
in
red
in
the
middle
of
that
area.
That
shows
where
northern
metals
is
located.
G
So
the
committee
identified
three
main
guiding
principles
that
really
have
led
us
to
the
recommendations.
The
specific
recommendations
today,
one
is
that
50%
of
the
settlement
be
spent
on
providing
services
so
paying
for
professionals
who
have
information
to
share
or
outreach
workers
or
people
who
want
to
follow
up
and
come
in
to
the
homes
and
make
sure
people
know
how
to
use
the
supplies
and
50%
of
the
settlement
shall
be
used
on
participant
incentives
and
benefits
to
families.
G
They
also
recommended
that
two-thirds
of
the
funding
be
spent
to
address
asthma,
because
there
are
fewer
programming
approaches
that
are
going
on
in
the
community
around
asthma
and
more
activity
around
leads
so
that
the
settlement
dollars
only
a
third
of
them
will
be
spent
on
lead.
They
also
did
not
want
the
settlement
dollars
to
be
spent
to
offset
or
pay
for
city
staff
time.
G
So
here
are
the
recommendations.
The
first
four
bullets
really
correspond
to
those
four
areas
in
the
consent,
decree,
asthma,
outreach
and
education,
and
you
can
see
the
amount,
ninety
two
thousand
and
then
underneath
that
how
it's
broken
out
between
participant
dollars
that
are
shared
with
participants
and
dollars
that
are
used
for
professional
information
and
outreach.
G
So
the
first
area
is
asthma
outreach
and
we
plan
to
do
80,
small
group
education
events
estimated
about
five
families
prevent
so
serving
400
families
and
just
a
reminder.
This
is
to
be
spent
over
essentially
a
three
year
period.
The
attendees
will
be
recruited
through
schools,
clinics,
emergency
rooms,
hospitals
and
urgent
care.
Centers
and
I
will
receive
an
incentive
for
participating
in
the
education
asthma
mitigation.
G
So
we
estimate
that
we
will
be
able
to
help
three
hundred
and
sixty
families,
and
there
will
be
an
in-home
consultation
with
a
professional
who
can
look
for
what
are
some
of
the
triggers
that
are
available
here.
What
are
some
of
the
modifiable
aspects
of
the
home
that
will
be
followed
with
one
or
two
visits
from
a
community
health
worker
to
help
people
really
think
about
how
to
use
some
of
the
resources
that
are
made
available.
G
G
The
let
education
we
expect
to
reach
out
to
300
families
and
would
have
a
gift
card
to
go
for
families
who
welcomed
into
their
home
a
community
health
worker
to
provide
some
in-home
lead,
poisoning
education.
We
heard
repeatedly
that
it's
not
that
easy
to
say
yes
to
someone
coming
into
your
home,
and
there
are
concerns
about
what
else
is
is
going
to
transpire.
We
certainly
need
to
build
trust,
but
also
taking
taking
into
account
that
people's
time
is
worth
something
and
exchanging
something
of
value
for
that
visit
was
recommended
and
then
finally
blood
lead
testing.
G
So
we
plan
to
have
21
testing
events,
which
will
include
having
mobile
a
mobile
laboratory,
doing
some
capillary
testing
right
on-site,
possibly
doing
venous
blood
sampling
right
there
as
well
doing
outreach
before
each
of
these
events.
So
we're
really
gonna
focus
in
on
the
community
and
try
and
pull
people
in
in
a
in
a
small
catchment
area
and
then
for
every
child.
That's
under
six
lives
within
the
designated
area
and
is
due
for
a
LED
test.
We
would
not
only
do
the
lead
testing
but
provide
an
incentive
as
well.
G
So
the
next
steps
are
capitalizing
on
some
to
master
contracts
that
the
health
department
has
to
expedite
of
implementation.
Of
these
recommendations
will
be
working
through
the
neighborhood
hub
and
sustainable
resource
centers,
and
they
in
turn
could
do
it
or
subcontract
with
others.
We
will
also
we
had
because
of
all
these
meetings
and
I
think
just
the
design
of
a
discussion
of
this
size.
A
D
D
Oh
maybe
city
hall,
could
make
this
decision
because
we
kind
of
have
a
good
idea
about
how
we
could
help
folks,
you
know
and
our
usual
kind
of
memo,
but
we
stopped
and
we
waited,
and
we
listened
and
I
think
that
we,
it
was
right
of
us
to
create
this
Advisory,
Group
and
I
know
it
was
a
big
expectation
to
put
on
staff
and
also
on
community
volunteers,
to
get
together
and
do
that.
Work.
D
I
was
also
really
grateful
to
the
cap
agency
for
being
willing
to
help
support
and
bring
some
resources
to
the
table
as
well.
I
think
that
helped
a
lot
and
apparently
you
all
had
to
double
the
number
of
meetings.
You
went
to
to
kind
of
work
all
this
out,
but
I
really
am
impressed
with
the
recommendations
too,
and
it
makes
sense,
I
think
it
kind
of
some
creative
and
innovative
ideas.
It
probably
pushed
us
to
do
a
lot
more
outreach.
D
A
lot
more
engagement
than
we
would
have
otherwise
this
idea
also
of
kind
of
incentivizing
we
gift
cards,
I,
think
it
makes
a
lot
of
sense
and
exactly
the
right
thing
to
be
doing
in
this
way.
So
I
really
appreciate
I'm,
seeing
those
and
I
actually
think
we
should
approve
the
recommendations
as
well
as
receive
and
file.
I
know
I
mean
agenda,
it
says
receive
and
file,
but
this
is
a
court
matter.
This
is
expending
our
city,
money
and
I.
D
A
H
A
D
You
like
to
make
that
motion
sure
I
moved
to
I'm
gonna
still
move
to
receive
a
file
at
this
report
and
approve
the
recommendations
from
the
advisory
group.
All.
A
Right
we
have
a
motion
on
the
table
for
passing,
receiving
and
filing,
as
well
as
approving
of
the
recommendations
of
the
northern
metals
advisory
committee.
Do
any
of
my
colleagues
have
any
other
questions
or
comments
well
before
we
vote
on
the
the
motion.
I
want
to
make
sure
I
take
a
moment
to
also
say
thank
you
to
city
staff
for
your
work
on
this,
as
well
as
community.
I've
had
a
lot
of
northsiders
come
and
talk
to
me
about
the
work
and
really
being
able
to
be
a
part
of
the
city
process.
A
It
is
a
growing
pain
when
there's
been
such
a
breakdown
between
entrust
between
the
community
and
the
institution
that
we
represent,
and
so
when
we
go
out
into
the
community
and
do
the
work,
and
so
there
are
opportunities
like
this.
Where
we
have
the
app,
we
can
have
the
chance
to
be
able
to
actually
begin
to
repair
some
of
that
harm,
because
we,
as
the
intervener
are
saying
we
care
we're
going
to
be
stepping
into
this,
and
also
where
we
are
able
to.
Within
the
law.
A
The
growing
are
good,
that's
how
we
learn
and
that's
how
we
do
better
for
the
next
time
and
the
next
time.
I
think
the
work
that's
been
done
here
has
been
really
really
solid.
So
thank
you
to
everybody.
Who's
helped
organize
it
to
help
keep
it
on
track,
even
though
it
can
be
tough.
North
siders
were
a
tough
bunch,
sometimes
and
so
being
able
to
keep
us
all
together.
Keep
us
moving
is,
is
a
town
in
and
of
itself.
So
thank
you.
A
Thank
you
very
much
folks
for
all
that
and
thank
you
to
the
community
for
their
time,
their
flexibility
and
their
passion
for
the
work
and,
on
that
note,
see
no
further
comments
or
questions
all
those
in
favor
of
the
motion.
Please
signify
by
saying
aye
aye,
those
opposed,
say,
nay,
the
eyes
have
it,
and
that
motion
carries.
Thank
you
so
much
and
before
we
adjourn
I,
just
want
to
remind
everybody
to
check
out
limbs
out
IMS.
This
is
for
the
riveted
viewers
at
home.