►
Description
CLIC Human Development Task Force Breakout Session
A
Okay,
so
so
we
have
but
a
few
minutes,
and
I
I
wanted
to
quickly
go
through
the
list
of
who
we
have
on
the
roster
for
human
development.
So
what
I'm
gonna
do
is
is
call
out
the
names
from
the
roster
and
and
see
who's
here
and
who's.
Not
currently
here,
if
that's,
okay
with
you
justin.
A
Yep
go
ahead:
okay,
okay,
I'm
gonna,
read
names,
ward,
one
dan
miller.
A
Okay,
so
justin,
you
got
that
okay,
beth.
A
Good
zechariah-
I
am
here
great
erica.
A
Great
william
gullickson.
A
Okay,
james
brown.
F
A
Okay,
I
see
your
hat,
let
me
see
and
then
we
get
down
to
willy
bridges.
A
Hey
luke
cunningham.
H
A
Hello,
richard
laro.
H
A
Here,
okay
and
jocelyn
beard-
oh
there
you
are
jocelyn
here.
Thank
you
all
for
for
staying
here
is.
Is
anyone
here
who
doesn't
belong
here?
We
we
can
get
you
into
the
other
room,
otherwise,.
I
A
And
thank
you
for
voting
for,
for
both
myself
and
and
for
jocelyn
by
way
of
background.
Jocelyn
just
lives,
a
few
blocks
for
me
and
we've
been
meaning
to
connect
up
for
a
while,
and
that's
something
that
you
know.
I
hope
we
will
be
able
to
do
even
under
the
terms
of
kovid
that
we'll
be
able
to
to
get
to
know
each
other
a
little
better.
A
We
have
some
huge
challenges
ahead
of
us
just
by
way
of
what
we
went
through
last
year,
some
of
the
issues
and-
and
they
were
very
interesting.
For
example,
the
the
the
question
about
the
replacement
of
of
the
third
precinct
came
up.
We
had
to
work
talk
about
the
rebuilding
of
the
first
precinct
about
the
movement
of
the
fourth
precinct,
so
those
those
I'm
sure
are
going
to
be
recurring.
A
They're
going
to
be
coming
back
up
again
for
further
discussions.
It's
going
to
be
an
interesting
year.
I
also
believe,
and
I'm
hoping
that
we'll
be
involved
in
some
of
this
new
infrastructure
money
that
that
might
be
coming
from
washington,
because
we're
not
talking
millions
we're
talking
billions
of
dollars
that
could
totally
totally
change
life
here
in
the
twin
cities
and
in
minneapolis
in
particular.
A
So
you
know,
let's
keep
that
in
our
minds
that
it's
it's
going
to
be
possibly
more
than
what
you're
going
to
see
as
proposals
coming
in
from
the
department
heads
as
for
the
schedule,
I
I
will
get
back
to
everyone
with
our
schedule.
They
may
not.
Our
schedule
may
not
correlate
directly
with
the
transportation
task
force,
we'll
try
our
best
to
to
synchronize
with
them,
but
it's
understandable
if
a
number
of
us
cannot
be
present
for
a
certain
time,
we'll
we'll
try
to
move
our
calendar
schedule
around.
A
Secondly,
there's
a
major
change
which
will
make
life
easier
for
most
of
us.
We've
asked
department
heads
to
video
their
presentation.
So
yes,
so
so
you'll
be
able
to
you'll,
have
a
much
more
flexible
schedule.
A
You'll
be
able
to
look
at
it
during
your
free
time
and
to
to
start
collecting
questions
and
we'll
discuss
the
questions
in
plenary
together
and,
if
necessary,
and
I
don't
believe
it's
going
to
be
necessary
in
all
cases,
but
there
will
be
cases
where
we'll
want
to
talk
with
some
of
the
department
heads
or
their
budget
officers
about
details
with
that.
I
I
don't
have
much
more
right
now.
First
jocelyn,
do
you
have
anything
you'd
like
to
add.
E
I
think
the
only
thing
that
I
would
add,
and
it's
something
that
will
that'll
happen
further
down
the
line
is
as
we're
as
we
start
to
do
our
rankings
and
start
to
work
on
comments
that
the
comp
that
comments
will
be.
Hopefully
I
will
say
if
you,
if
you
speak
about
it,
we
will
probably
elect
you
as
the
one.
E
That
is
writing
that
comment,
but
know
that
it
is
a
it's
a
team
effort
and
so
that,
if
you
need,
if
you
need
assistance
or
support
or
just
teamwork,
that
we
that
we
will
do
that,
but
just
wanted
to
say
that
on
at
the
beginning
that
that
that
we
will,
when
we
get
to
the
comments,
if
you
feel
strongly
about
something
say
that
if
you
feel
like
you
want
to
lead
the
writing
of
it
to
to
say
that,
but
that
if
this
is
a,
this
is
a
team
effort.
A
Yeah,
so
I'd
like
to
add
one
more
thing:
what
jocelyn
just
raised
is
something
I
would
park
in
the
back
of
my
head
throughout
this
process,
and
that
has
to
do
with
the
comments
and
comments
in
the
comments
section.
We
can
talk
about
matters
of
policy.
A
We
can
be
asking
policy
questions.
We
can
we
that
that
that
may
be
on.
That
may
be
beyond
the
particular
projects
that
get
funded.
For
example,
there
were
no
real
policy
questions
regarding
infrastructure
last
year,
but
we
did
ask
the
public
works
department
to
give
us
an
inventory
of
infrastructure
projects
so
that
we
can.
We
can
have
a
longer
view
of
what
are
the
investments
looking
like
over
the
next
20
30
years.
So
in
the
back
of
your
mind,
you
can
be
asking
those
questions.
A
You
know
what
what
it's
not
just
questions.
It's
also
perhaps
statements
that
we
have
about
how
to
think
about
infrastructure.
A
G
A
And
that's
a
really
important
point
because
in
the
end,
you'll
also
be
voting
for
those
who
have
done
this.
This
is
the
first
time
you'll
also
be
voting
and
scoring
the
transportation
projects.
So
we
we
can't
simply
think
about
the
human
development
projects.
We
also
keep
an
eye
on.
What's
going
on
in
transportation,
we'll
just
be
able
to
have
a
deeper
dive
into
some
of
the
human
development
projects.
H
A
Okay,
yeah,
I
so
so
I'm
gonna
try
this,
because
I
found
that
it's
easy
to
think
about
it
by
exclusion.
If
it
has
to
do
with
pavement
pavement,
we
don't
do
that
it
has
to
do
with
water.
We
don't
do
that.
What
else
is
there
bridges,
not
willy
bridges,
but
like
bridges
that
you
drive
across,
we
don't
do
bridges.
A
I
think
we
have
everything
we.
We
have
everything
else
in
terms
of
number
of
projects
we
have
to
review.
I
think
transportation
has
more
because
it's
every
little
strip
of
of
pavement
and
just
in
the
pavement
area,
they've
got
51
different
projects
that
they
have
to
review.
A
On
the
other
hand,
we
we've
got
all
the
variety
there.
There's
we
get
to
look
at
all
the
the
the
art,
the
the
public
art
we
get
to
look
at
fire
stations.
We.
A
Right
yeah,
so
I
I
I
personally
think
this
is
far
more
interesting
than
the
pavement
stuff
and
I
hope
you
find
it
as
interesting.
A
Well,
I
so
one
observation
is
that
what
we
get
as
submissions
do
not
necessarily
have
a
longer
term
vision
to
it
that
they're
asking
for
money
for
next
year.
So
if
you
see
something
that
goes
out
three
four
five
ten
twenty
years,
we
should
discuss
it.
You
should
bring
it
to
the
table.
You'll
find,
for
example,
that
there
will
be
some
slight
discussion
about
climate
change.
A
You
know,
they'll.
Some
of
these
proposals
will
come
in
with
a
a
a
sort
of
a
a
superficial
address
about
climate
change
issues
and
we're
in
the
position
where
we
can
ask
deeper
questions.
A
For
example,
we
did
last
year
having
to
do
with
the
having
to
do
with
splitting
the
electric
from
the
from
the
gasoline
filling
stations
and,
and
one
has
a
greater
impact
on
climate
change
than
the
other,
so
we
asked
them
to
split
them
up.
Hopefully,
they'll
submit
those
budgets
separately
this
year.
A
A
We're
talking
about
a
quarter
of
a
billion
dollar
project
that
sort
of
didn't
come
through
the
committee
right
now
until
it
was
already
spent.
Basically,
so
I
I
think
we
need
to
remain
vigilant.
A
The
city
justin.
You
can
close
your
ears
here
we
can.
We
can
keep
our
eye
on
the
city.
If
you
see
anything
in
the
newspaper
that
you're
you're
saying
that
really
is
a
capital
investment
project
that
we
as
a
as
a
click
human
development
committee
should
be
looking
task
force
should
be
looking
at.
We
can
certainly
raise
it.
We
can
raise
it
with
see
amelia's,
not
here,
but
we
can
raise
with
the
budget
office
yeah.
J
And
I
would
I
would
echo
that
eric.
I
think
that
you
know
it.
It
was
probably.
I
wasn't
here
for
the
new
public
service
building
project,
but
it
was
probably
a
little
bit
of
a
fraught
conversation
about
how
it
was
you
know,
included
in
the
capital
plan
and
all
those
things,
but
two,
two
or
three
years
later
staff
are
in
a
better
position
to
you
know,
have
conversations
about
what
a
capital
project
is
as
a
result
of
that,
because
it
was
painful
at
the
time
to
figure
out
oh
yeah.
J
This
is
you
know
this
was
a
big
project.
You
know
it
was
kind
of
it
kind
of
went
through
this
separate
process,
but
we
know
that
we
have
a
capital
improvement
program
that
these
kinds
of
projects
could
be
included
in
and
so
as
we
as
staff
kind
of
represent
some
of
that
process,
and
some
of
that
outreach
within
the
city
to
say
no
get
this
into
the
capital
improvement
process.
It
needs
to
not
be
a
separate
thing
this
year.
J
I'll
do
a
quick
double
check
as
I
speak,
but
we
included
some
fleet
projects
actually
and
those
are
covered
by
the
transportation
team,
but
like
their
fleet
improvements
at
our
fleet
facility
and
they're
there
to
support,
you
know
how
the
city
runs.
Its
thousand
plus
you
know:
snow,
plows
and
fire
trucks
and
various
excavation
equipment
and
mpd
vehicles
in
past
years.
Those
might
have
gone
outside
the
process,
but
because
we
had
had
conversations
around
this,
we
knew
that
those
are
capital
expenditures
and
they
needed
to
be
included
in
the
capital
planning
process.
J
As
a
concrete
example
of
something
that
happened,
because
we
knew
that
we
had
a
venue
that
these
needed
to
go
through
instead
of
saying
well,
it's
like
kind
of
an
operating
budget
thing
and
then
like
shoehorning
it
in
with
everything
else.
We
said
these
are
long-term
improvements,
they're
going
to
be
here
for
20
years.
We
need
to
include
them
in
a
correct
process.
A
So
something
robert
you
just
mentioned,
which
is
what's
happened.
If,
if
any
of
you
have
the
time
and
and
need
something
to
read,
I
would
go
back
to
the
2020.
A
It's
a
five-year
plan
this
year
we're
doing
a
six-year
plan
or
was
it
last
year
we
did
a
six-year
plan
right.
Please
go
back
and
and
look
at
what
we
we
agreed
to
last
year,
because
that's
a
good
starting
point
for
holding
holding
the
city
accountable
for
what
they
got
from
us
last
year
and
what
they're
going
to
be?
A
Yep,
you
could
probably
go
back
20
years
if
you're
really
bored,
but
I
would
just
say:
go
back
a
year
or
two
and
and
that'll
get
you
into
the
right
space.
You'll
understand
what
all
these
projects
are.
A
Okay:
let's
go
to
questions
thoughts.
H
F
To
clarification
on
what's
online
and
what's
available,
do
we
have
a
best
launch
point
for
looking
for
information?
So
if
I'm
looking
for
anything
at
all,
is
there
one
place
I
can
go
where
I
can
at
least
start
the
search
and
see
where
it
leads
me.
A
Yeah
so
justin,
would
you
send
the
link
please
to
where
all
the
the
click
reports
are
located?
I
don't
have
everyone's
mailing
address,
so
if
you,
if
you
could
yep.
C
Absolutely
I
can
include
links
to
those
in
the
recap
of
the
meeting
today.
No
problem.
F
Right,
so
what
I'm
asking
is:
is
there
actually
an
online
page,
that's
the
equivalent
of
a
wiki
that
says,
welcome
to
click,
here's,
here's,
a
here's,
a
list
of
our
resources
and
things
that
we
can
sort
of
bookmark
all
of
these
things
and
put
them
there,
rather
than
relying
on
going
through
old
emails
every
time,
there's
something
new.
We
want
to
share.
C
J
Yeah
and
that
I
think
that
speaks
to
it,
you
know
we
have
a
couple
of
different
places
where
a
lot
of
this
information
gets
published
online
we
end
up
with
you
know.
The
limbs
website
has
a
bunch
of
capital
improvement,
program-related
documents
that
we
see
within
click,
but
I
I
just
wanted
to
confirm
and
mandy
may
be
able
to
speak
to
this
too,
but
in
the
past,
we've
also
had
a
sharepoint
site
that
we
kept
a
lot
of
this
information.
J
F
Yeah
yeah,
it's
better,
probably
not
to
make
copies
of
the
documents
themselves,
but
just
one
page
we
can
go
to
that
says.
Here's
where
you
find
all
of
the
stuff
go
there
and
find.
B
E
I
would
I
would
say
that
the
sharepoint
would
be
the
would
be
the
best
place,
because
I
wasn't
able
to
make
last
week's
meeting,
but
then
I
could.
I
went
into
the
sharepoint
to
be
able
to
see
the
agenda
in
the
in
the
documents
that
were
that
were
given.
So
that
would
be
what
I
would
suggest.
E
I
will
say
just
with
everything
that
was
going
on
last
year,
that
it
took
me
a
minute
to
really
figure
out
sharepoint,
because
I
don't
live
in
a
team's
world
but
one,
but
once
I
figured
it
out,
it
was
like.
Oh
all
of
this
stuff
has
been
here
all
season.
H
F
C
That's
great
to
hear
jocelyn
that
you
were
attempting
to
access
that,
because
I
have
been
working
with
mandy
and
I'll
work
with
robert
as
well
to
see.
If
we
can
get
documents
on
the
sharepoint,
you
can
access
it
through
teams
going
to
files
in
our
team's
channel
or
we
can
send
you
the
link
to
the
sharepoint.
But
we
are
going
to
try
to
use
that
to
your
point,
though
rich,
that
is
born
to
hold
documents
like
the
2021
click.
C
That
aren't
going
to
change,
whereas
if
we
actually
want
like
links
to
different
sites
that
are
going
to
get
updated,
that's
not
going
to
be
the
best
place
for
those.
So
our
hope
is
to
have
any
attachments,
any
documents
that
are
discussed
in
the
meeting
to
be
either
emailed
out
prior
to
and
or
after
the
meeting
and
then
also
to
upload
those
to
the
sharepoint
so
that
they're
accessible
there.
So
that's
kind
of
going
to
be
our
go-to
spot
for
documents.
We
discussed.
A
Justin
follow-up
question
there:
the
the
videos
that
are
being
produced
by
the
department
are
those
going
to
be
public.
Are
those
going
to
be
publicly
available
or
is
that
the
plan.
C
I
see
robert
nothing.
I
know
our
plan
is
to
have
them
on
one
central
web
page
that
you
can
access
all
of
them.
They're
going
to
be,
I
believe,
upload
to
youtube.
Robert.
Do
you
know
if
we're
using
our
is
our
internal
page?
That
june
will
be
adding
them
to
or
which
web
page
we're
going
to
actually
be
listing
them
on.
J
Yeah
last
year
we
did
post
them
publicly.
Last
year
was
an
interesting
year.
Of
course,
I'm
I'm
not
aware
of
any
additional
guidance
or
guidelines
that
would
prohibit
us
from
doing
that.
In
the
past,
we've
had
these
all-day
presentation
sessions
where
everybody
would
come
in
and
then
we'd
have
these
questions
and
those
were
technically
open
to
the
public,
and
you
know
people
could
come
in
and
attend
those
sessions
if
they
wanted
to
this
year.
Those
materials
would
be
posted
online.
J
If
we
do
it
the
same
way
last
year
and
members
of
the
public
would
also
be
able
to
see
those
pages
as
well.
We've
got
some
additional
work
to
do
on.
You
know
just
what
public
outreach
means
in
the
context
of
the
capital
long-range
improvement
committee,
which
is
in
and
of
itself,
you
know
a
form
of
engaging
residents,
visitors
and
businesses
in
the
city
with
the
capital
improvement
program.
J
So
I'll
just
you
know,
throw
that
out
there
as
a
you
know,
I'm
not
sure
how
much
the
capital
long-range
improvement
committee
wants
to
push
information
out
versus
you
know
kind
of
lead.
The
information-
I
don't
know
review
process
at
this
point,
but
I
mean
the
short
answer
is
yes,
they
would,
they
would
be
published
in
an
online
format,
and
the
public
would
be
able
to
to
view
them.
J
I'm
not
sure
that
they
would
necessarily
go
to
the
front
of
the
city
of
minneapolis's
page
and
get
pushed
out
for
everybody,
because
their
intent
is
really
for
click
in
particular,
to
review
them
and
and
answer
questions
or
ask
questions
that
could
be
answered
by
departments.
A
Okay,
a
couple
years
ago,
before
covid
one
one
of
the
one
of
the
projects
we're
discussing
was
taking
click
members
on
tours
of
some
of
these
facilities.
A
H
A
I
think
for
members
here
who
might
be
interested
in
touring
some
of
the
the
projects
that
we
are
to
consider
for
funding
and
you're
available,
and
you
have
the
time
to
do
it.
It
would
be
great
if
we
could
see
a
few
of
these
these
projects
that
were
in
the
process
of
funding.
A
J
J
A
Yeah,
I
think
it
would
be
more
useful
to
people
in
this
task
force
if
it
were
done
up
front,
and
perhaps
it
could
be
something
offered
by
the
by
the
department
of
heads
yeah.
That's.
J
E
J
They
were
very
open
to
it.
We'd
have
to
pick
up
that
work
and
probably
just
work
within
folks
schedules
this
year.
If
click
members
were
interested.
A
Yeah,
our
click
members,
those
who
I
see
your
face
is
just
not
up
and
down
if
you're
interested
in
some
of
these
public
tours
of
what
well,
I
okay,
I
see
all
nods
here,
except
for
willy.
D
D
J
E
A
Okay,
so
robert,
if
we
could
work
on
that,
I
think
we've
done
all
unless
there
are
any
other
questions.
I
think
we
can
conclude
this
meeting.
A
Great,
I
don't
see
any
questions,
so
thank
you.
Everyone
thank
you.
Justin
and
robert
you're
big,
helped
and
welcome.