►
From YouTube: March 8, 2022 Intergovernmental Relations Committee
Description
Additional information at:
https://lims.minneapolismn.gov
B
I
will
also
note
that
the
city
will
be
recording
and
posting
this
meeting
to
the
city's
website
and
youtube
channel
as
a
means
of
increasing
public
access
and
transparency.
This
meeting
is
public
and
subject
to
the
minnesota
open
meeting
law
at
this
time.
I'll
ask
the
clerk
to
call
the
role
to
verify
the
presence
of
a
quorum.
E
President,
I
will
note
that
councilmember
goodman
is
in
settlement
hearings.
Today.
A
Councilmember
palmisano
present
vice
president
rainfall
president
president
johnson
or
excuse
me
chair
johnson
president.
A
We
have
eleven
president
ellison
is
here.
B
Well,
president,
let
the
record
reflect
that
we
have
a
quorum
and,
as
council
president
jenkins
noted,
councilmember
goodman
is
unable
to
attend
today's
meeting
as
she's
in
a
settlement
conference,
and
I
know
that
she
sends
her
regrets
for
not
being
able
to
be
here,
but
we
appreciate
her
stepping
up
to
represent
the
city.
In
that
capacity
we
have
two
items
on
today's
published
agenda.
I
will
also
note
that
I
have
two
items
to
add
to
today's
agenda
that
I
emailed
council
members
about
yesterday.
B
I
will
take
those
two
items
up
after
our
consent
agenda
and
before
our
legislative
update,
and
I
want
to
recognize
those
council
members
for
working
diligently
with
staff
and
myself
on
these
items.
B
They
were
working
extensively
on
these
and
that's
why
they
weren't
posted
to
the
agenda
beforehand
and
so
again,
my
appreciation
for
all
their
work
to
make
sure
that
these
were
is
in
is
in
as
good
of
shape
as
possible.
So
we'll
move
on
to
our
consent
item.
First,
there's
one
item
on
the
consent
agenda,
which
I
will
read
aloud
for
the
record.
It
is
a
resolution
recognizing
local
decision-making
authority
in
housing
and
development,
and
I
want
to
say
that
I
appreciate
council
member
rainville
vice
chair
of
this
committee
for
authoring
this
item.
G
H
I
F
H
H
H
B
D
Thank
you,
chair
johnson,
so
about
two
weeks
ago,
many
of
you
are
aware
that
I
announced
my
intentions
to
bring
forth
this
resolution
that
you
know
in
alignment
with
president
set
in
2004,
where
city
council
passed
a
resolution
in
support
of
the
atu
members
that
were
looking
to
strike
as
well
as
in
2018,
where
city
council
passed
a
resolution
in
support
of
workers.
We
decided
at
this
you
know
very
crucial
time
in
our
city
as
we're
talking
about
inclusive
recovery
or
economic
recovery.
In
the
light
of
the
pandemic.
D
How,
as
a
city,
can
we
show
that
we
support
not
only
workers
but
also
workers
being
able
to
exercise
their
legal
rights
to
organize?
And
today
many
of
you
I
see
the
picket
signs
in
the
office
know
that
our
educators
officially
began
their
strike
this
morning
and
we
wanted
to
show
again
you
know
as
a
city,
we
prioritize
frontline
workers,
especially
our
educators
and
then
also
as
I
shared
yesterday.
D
D
So
we're
really
excited
to
bring
forth
these
these
joint
resolutions,
they
weren't
able
to
come
together
through
some
procedural
mishaps,
but
we're
really
excited
to
get
support
from
the
council
on
moving
this
forward
and
encouraging,
of
course,
both
parties
to
continue
bargaining
in
good
faith
to
reach
demands
that
we
know
will
provide
the
safe
and
equitable
and
just
schools
that
I
think
all
of
our
students
and
families
and
community
members
deserve
and
need.
D
So
I
just
want
to
say
thank
you
also
to
chair
johnson
for
working
with
me
very
closely
throughout
the
weekend
and
sharpening
the
language
around
this
and
for
everyone
who,
provided
you,
know,
feedback
on
this,
and
I'm
really
excited
about
the
place
that
it's
in
and
hope
to
have
everyone's
support
in
moving
this
forward.
B
Thank
you,
council
member
wanzli
warloba.
You
have
moved
the
approval
of
this
item,
so
I
will
see
if
there
are
any
comments
or
questions
from
council
members.
F
Thank
you,
chair,
johnson
and
hello
everyone.
This
morning,
my
son,
the
ward,
11
staff
and
I
joined
the
picket
lines
to
support
minneapolis
federation
of
teachers
and
educational
support
professionals
on
strike
at
field
elementary
school
and
at
justice,
page
middle
school.
F
As
a
parent
of
students
at
justice,
page
middle
school
and
field
elementary
school,
I
have
seen
first
hand
their
strength
and
dedication,
but
it
doesn't
take
being
a
parent
of
minneapolis
students
to
see
how
hard
our
teachers
work
and
how
deserving
they
are
of
higher
wages,
affordable
health
care,
mental
health,
support
for
teachers
and
students,
better
recruitment
and
retention
of
educators
of
color
and
better
class
sizes.
I
am
beyond
grateful
for
the
teachers
and
staff
who
support
and
show
up
for
our
minneapolis
students
every
single
day.
E
You
know
I
will
be
supporting
this
resolution,
but
I
do
want
to
just
really
really
just
I
guess
give
a
personal
plea
to
the
mft,
as
well
as
the
minneapolis
public
schools,
to
reach
an
agreement
as
soon
as
possible.
E
Our
students
deserve
and
need
to
be
in
the
classroom.
That
has
to
be
the
utmost
concern
of
all
of
us
as
residents
of
minneapolis,
and
certainly
we
want
to
stand
in
solidarity
with
workers,
no
matter
what
industry
they
work
in
and
and
particularly
with
our
schools.
I
think
our
school
teachers
are
some
of
the
most
underpaid
members
of
our
society.
E
They
do
a
tremendous
job,
but
we
also
know
that
the
majority
of
students
in
minneapolis
public
schools
and
in
public
schools
all
across
the
nation
are
students
of
color
and
and
those
students
and
their
families
are
really
facing
tough
and
critical
times
when
those
students
are
not
able
to
be
in
the
classroom.
So
I
just
encourage
the
the
members
to
as
the
resolution
as
to
please
come
to
an
agreement
as
soon
as
possible.
B
Thank
you,
council
president.
I
also
know
that
council
member
chug
thai
is
interested
in
a
potential
amendment.
Councilmember
chuck
thai.
J
Hi,
thank
you,
mr
chair,
and
thank
you
council
member
wanzi
wurliba,
for
taking
on
the
work
of
of
pulling
this
resolution
together
and
making
our
position
as
a
city
known
that
we
have
our
students
back.
We
have
our
educators
back
and
we've
got
our
communities
back.
J
J
All
of
the
time
is,
you
know
when
they
when,
when,
when
they
ask
us
what
about
the
kids,
we
say
exactly
right
and
that
our
educators
don't
want
to
be
walking
out
of
the
classroom
when
our
kids
are
in
crisis
and
the
reason
they
are
walking
out
is
because
they
do
not
have
the
resources
to
support
our
kids,
who
are
in
crisis.
So
what
about
the
kids
exactly?
J
And
so
I
just
wanted
to
hopefully
make
a
very
friendly
amendment
to
the
resolution
that
has
been
presented
today,
and
I
know
it
starts
with
you
know,
expressing
support
for
minneapolis
educational
support
professionals
and
strongly
urging
the
minneapolis
school
board
and
the
minneapolis
federation
of
teachers,
local
59,
to
continue
bargaining
in
good
faith.
I
just
I
was
wondering
if
we
could
sub
out
minneapolis
education
support
professionals
with
educators
in
the
minneapolis.
J
B
Thank
you,
council
member
chug
thai.
I
see
a
head
nodding
from
council
member
wangsley
gorlova
on
nassau
and
a
thumbs
up
so
she's
supportive
of
that
amendment.
B
Procedurally,
I
think
we
will
need
to
call
the
role
on
that
amendment
unless
there's
any
additional
discussion
on
that
amendment,
then
I
know
after
that
council
member
rainville
is
interested
in
speaking
on
the
underlying
motion.
So
I
will
just
ask
if
there
is
any
additional
discussion
on
that
amendment,
not
seeing
any
I'll
quick
ask
the
clerk
to
call
the
role.
I
Mr
chair,
can
I
get
some?
Can
we
get
some
clarity
from
either
the
author
or
councilmember
chuck
thai
who's,
making
the
motion
on
exactly
what
what
it
is
that's
being
amended
here?
Can.
B
J
B
We
appreciate
that
so
seeing
no
further
discussion
I'll
ask
the
clerk
to
call
the
role
on
that
amendment.
C
E
H
H
C
F
F
B
H
Thank
you,
chair
johnson,
say
I
have
a
question
for
the
city
attorney's
office.
My
wife
is
in
that
union.
So
am
I
at
conflict,
I'm
voting
on
this.
I
just
before
I
vote
I'd
like
to
have
that
answer,
and
maybe
I
should
abstain
now
and
and
wait
it
later
to
get
that
advice
or
how
is
there
someone
that
can
advise
me
from
the
attorney's
office.
G
The
attorney
thank
you,
chair
johnson,
vice
here
rainville.
It's
a
very
good
question.
Thank
you
for
bringing
that
up.
I,
I
think
the
best
course
of
action,
rather
than
make
a
a
quick
decision
on
the
fly,
would
be.
Why
don't
you
abstain
today
and
in
the
interim?
G
Let's
make
sure
that
you
have
a
conversation
with
chief
ethics
officer
assistant
to
the
attorney
trammell?
Okay,
so
that
we
make
sure
we
really
get
the
clearest
answer
for
you
before
tomorrow,
thursday's
council
meeting
correct
perfect.
Thank
you
very
much.
Okay,.
B
Thank
you.
Thank
you.
Vice
chair
rainville,
and
regardless
of
that
conversation,
we
appreciate
you
disclosing
that
publicly.
That's
wonderful!
I
see,
council
president
jenkins,
thank
you,
council
president.
E
Thank
you,
councilmember
johnson.
Similarly,
I'm
actually
a
member
of
local
284,
which
I
think
is
a
party
to
this.
Do
they
represent
the.
J
J
So
I
think
what
you're
referring
to
council
president
is
the
fact
that
a
ciu
local
284
took
a
strike
vote,
the
minneapolis,
the
food
service
workers
and
they
also
work
in
minneapolis
public
schools,
but
they
are
represented
by
an
entirely
separate
entity
and
the
two
unions,
so
mft
local,
59
and
seiu
local
284
are
moving
on
separate
like
conditions
and
it's
a
completely
separate
contract.
So
it
just
happens
to
overlap
in
the
same
workplace,
and
so
it
isn't.
E
Not
really
super
clear,
it
is
very
easy
to
be
confused
by
this.
I
so
alphabet
soup.
So
that's
why
I'm
just
trying
to
see
clarity
and
and
confirmation
to
ensure
that
I'm
not
violating
any
ethical
and
also
declaring
publicly
that
I
am
a
member
of
local
284.
G
Yes,
chair,
johnson
and
council
president
jenkins,
thanks
for
raising
that
question
we
can
cert.
I
I
think
I
think
it
is
clear,
although
I
don't
have
the
resolution
now
in
front
of
me,
but
if
I'm
not
mistaken,
there
is
no
reference
in
the
resolution
to
the
contract
negotiations
between
the
local.
You
are
a
member
of
and
the
minneapolis
public
schools,
but
I
think
under
those
circumstances
you
are
fine
today.
G
B
Appreciated
and
thank
you,
madam
president,
for
raising
this
and
the
interest
of
transparency,
and
what
I
think
you're
seeing
here
is
that
our
teachers
touch
a
lot
of
us
all
across
our
community
touch
everyone
across
our
community
in
different
ways,
whether
you're,
a
parent
or
whether
you
have
a
teacher
in
the
family
or
whether
you
know
you
are
our
neighbors
or
friends.
They
they
impact
the
whole
community.
Next,
thank
you.
We
have
council
member
wanzli,
warlova.
D
Thank
you,
chair
johnson
and,
madam
president,
for
for
your
comment.
I
think
our
city
attorney
router
definitely
clarified
and
I
just
wanted
to
state
also
for
the
the
record
that,
as
as
the
resolution
stands,
there
is
no
statement
in
included
that
that
pertains
to
the
strike
action
that
is
taken
up
by
seiu
local
284,
though
shout
out
to
y'all.
D
But
that
is
not
currently
in
this
resolution
and,
of
course,
would
love
to
you
know,
have
your
support
behind
it
and,
as
you
know,
councilmember
johnson
and
chair
johnson
mentioned
that
we
are
seeing
that
yes,
our
educators
touch
so
many
aspects
of
our
lives
and
our
communities
and
as
council
member
chuck's,
I
also
raised
you
know.
When
we
talk
about
the
kids.
That's
why
we
say
exactly.
We
want
to
see
efforts
like
this.
You
know
where
we're
encouraging.
D
You
know
all
elected
officials,
all
you
know
the
stakeholders
that
have
the
power
to
make
decisions
on
improving
conditions
in
our
schools,
for
the
best
interest
of
our
students
to
exercise
that
power
and
again
I'm
just
super
excited
that
we
all
can
get
to
this
point
where
we
get
to
vote
on
this
and
and
demonstrate
our
continued
support
behind
workers
across
all
industries,
but
specifically
our
educators.
Today,.
B
Not
seeing
any,
I
will
just
express
my
gratitude
for
your
leadership
on
this
resolution
council
member
ones
leewarlova,
and
for
my
colleagues
who
spoke
in
support
of
this,
I
have
a
number
of
teachers,
not
an
mft,
but
a
number
of
teachers
in
my
family,
and
I
really
greatly
appreciate
all
of
their
service
to
helping
raise
the
next
generation
and
make
sure
that
we
can
leave
the
promise
of
a
better
world
for
our
children
than
we
found
it
ourselves.
B
And
so
I
really
appreciate
all
the
teachers
that
are
out
there
fighting
for
that
vision
day
in
day
out
in
such
incredibly
difficult
circumstances
as
we've
seen
over
these
last
couple
of
years,
especially
so
seeing
no
further
comments
or
questions.
I
will
ask
the
clerk
to
call
the
role
on
this
resolution.
E
G
E
G
F
F
H
A
President
johnson,
chair
johnson,
we
have
11
eyes
and
one
abstain,
excellent.
B
That
motion
carries
and
is
passed
also
just
note
that
I,
when
I
say
the
word
teacher
I
mean
so
very
broadly
and
inclusively,
and
that
includes
our
esps
as
well
and
all
of
their
service
in
our
schools.
F
Thank
you
tear
johnson.
A
month
ago,
at
our
intergovernmental
relations
committee
meeting,
I
announced
that
I
would
be
working
with
my
fellow
council
members
to
bring
forward
these
amendments
to
our
legislative
agenda.
I
think
you
can
see
that
they
are
up
right
now.
My
fellow
council
members
and
I
heard
the
community's
calls
for
further
transparency
and
for
further
restrictions
on
no
knock
warrants,
and
these
amendments
are
a
product
of
those
calls
as
I've
shared
in
the
past.
F
I
believe
we
are
all
accountable
council
members,
the
city
council,
the
mayor
to
act
on
our
individual
responsibilities
to
create
change
in
the
city
of
minneapolis,
and
with
these
three
amendments
to
our
legislative
agenda,
we
will
make
it
clear
that
the
city
of
minneapolis
supports
necessary
changes
to
state
law,
including
changes
that
will
allow
better
access
to
police
officer
records,
changes
that
will
allow
for
the
release
of
body
camera
data.
When
there's
an
active
investigation
and
changes
that
will
further
state
restrictions
on
the
use
of
no
knock
warrants.
F
It's
important
to
note
that
by
approving
these
amendments
to
our
legislative
agenda,
we
are
in
no
way
shape
or
form
saying
that
this
is
the
only
work
that
needs
to
be
done
to
create
change
in
the
city
of
minneapolis,
there's
still
work
that
needs
to
be
done
here
in
the
city
of
minneapolis.
However,
as
the
city
of
minneapolis
is
confined
by
state
statute,
these
changes
will
allow
for
us
to
further
the
scope
and
further
the
impact
of
the
changes
we
make
here.
F
I
want
to
thank
my
fellow
committee
member
council
member
elliot
payne
for
co-authoring
these
amendments
to
our
legislative
agenda.
I
also
want
to
thank
our
chair
johnson
and
then
also
city
staff,
that
worked
tirelessly
alongside
us
to
make
sure
that
we
would
be
able
to
bring
these
items
forward
to
the
meeting
today,
fatima
moore
and
steven
hooser.
So
thank
you
so
much.
I
appreciate
it.
B
Thank
you,
council
member,
and
I
did
want
to
take
a
moment
to
see
if
council
member
payne
is
interested
in
speaking
councilmember
payne.
C
Thank
you,
mr
chair,
and
thank
you
councilmember
koski.
I
really
appreciate
the
work
that
went
into
this.
C
It
was
a
very
heated
moment
as
we
were
getting
briefed
on
the
killing
of
amirlock
and
the
recognition
that
there
were
certain
restraints
on
how
we
could
proceed
as
a
city,
but
there
were
also
certain
opportunities
on
recognizing
the
ways
that
we
ought
to
be
moving
as
a
city-
and
this
is
this-
these
amendments
are
a
reflection
of
the
work
that
we
must
do
and
will
continue
doing
to
ensure
that
we
are
holding
our
institutions
accountable
for
keeping
everyone
safe,
and
I
I'm
very
grateful
for
the
work
that
led
up
to
this,
so
that
we
can
continue
to
keep
the
pressure
on
and
recognize
our
own
internal
responsibilities
and
roles
as
council
members
and
the
mayor,
but
also
recognizing
that
we
have
to
work
across
all
the
levels
of
government
to
ensure
that
we
create
the
type
of
transformation
that
the
city
deserves
when
it
comes
to
our
public
safety
institutions.
B
B
Not
seeing
any
other,
I
will
just
say
that
I
really
appreciate
the
leadership
from
my
two
colleagues
council
member
payne
councilmember
koski
on
this.
I
know
I
also
mentioned
councilmember
chug
thai
was
a
part
of
these
conversations
as
well,
and
they
worked
extensively
with
multiple
departments,
intergovernmental
relations,
civil
rights,
the
clerk's
office.
They
worked
in
a
conversation
with
the
mayor's
office
to
understand
these
problems.
B
There
were
conversations
with
legislators,
and
so
it
takes
a
lot
of
work
to
get
here
today
with
these
kind
of
amendments-
and
you
know
the
the
work
continues
after
this
in
working
to
get
these
changes
to
the
state
law,
and
I
know
that
my
colleagues
are
committed
to
that
work
and
just
really
am
grateful
for
their
leadership
on
these
issues
at
this
critical
moment
in
time,
it
will
have
a
benefit
for
all
of
minnesota.
B
If
we
can
get
these
laws
changed
and
so
not
seeing
any
further
discussion
or
questions,
I
will
ask
the
clerk
to
call
the
role.
E
K
G
E
F
F
B
We
have
12
eyes
excellent.
That
motion
carries
that
item
is
approved.
We
will
now
move
on
to
our
final
item
today,
which,
on
our
printed
agenda,
is
listed
as
item
number
two.
It
is
a
presentation
regarding
the
2022
state
legislative
session,
with
presentations
from
city
partners
in
the
homes
for
all
coalition,
who
we
are
very
excited
to
have
with
us
today.
I
will
turn
it
over
to
intergovernmental
relations
director,
but
tima
moore
to
begin
the
presentation
and
introduce
our
presenters
welcome
director
moore.
L
Great
thank
you
chair
johnson,
good
morning,
chair
johnson
and
committee
members,
as
terry
johnson
noted,
I'm
fatima
moore
the
director
of
intergovernmental
relations
with
the
city
of
minneapolis,
and
we
should
have
a
slide
presentation
as
well
that
we'll
be
utilizing
for
this.
I'm
not
able
to
see
it
on
my
screen.
Let
me
know
if
you
are
chair
johnson
and
we'll
move
ahead.
L
Got
it
great
and
I
I
will
also
be
able
to
note
when
I'm
ready
to
move
to
the
next
slide,
so
the
staff.
Thank
you
for
that
assistance
as
well
as
we
we
move
move
along
there
as
harry
johnson
noted.
L
This
is
an
update
since
the
last
igr
committee
meeting
and
quite
a
few
things
have
changed,
and
before
I
go
into
that,
I
will
note
as
well
that
we
have
several
partners
so
similar
to
the
last
idr
committee
meeting,
in
which
we
had
some
of
our
our
partners,
who
we
work
with
at
the
legislature,
who
represent
cities
on
a
multitude
of
issues.
We
also
have
a
coalition
that
we
are
an
active
member
of,
and
that
is
the
homes
for
all
coalition.
L
So
after
I
move
with
my
brief
presentation,
you
all
will
also
receive
a
presentation
from
representatives
of
the
homes
for
all
coalitions
policy
committee
and
annie
shapiro
from
the
minnesota
community
action
partnership,
also
known
as
midcap
and
michael
dahl
from
homeline.
They
are
also
co-chairs
of
the
homes
for
a
coalition
policy
committee.
L
L
Since
the
last
time
this
committee
met.
There
are
a
few
activities
that
are
further
beginning
to
shape
the
direction
at
the
legislature,
as
well
as
give
additional
clarity
to
what
legislators
will
be
doing
and
the
issues
they
will
be
further
prioritizing,
particularly
redistricting
has
happened
as
many
as
you
all
are
well
aware
of
at
the
legislature.
The
impact
of
that
is
such
that
there
are
currently
29
members
who
have
announced
their
retirement
as
it
relates
to
the
city
of
minneapolis.
L
Two
of
our
delegation.
Members
have
also
announced
that
they
will
be
retiring.
That's
senator
taurus
ray
who
represents
senate
district
63
and
representative
davny,
who
represents
senate
district
63
a
so
far.
That's
who
we
know
is
going
to
be
retiring.
Come
the
end
of
this
legislative
session.
Please
progress
to
the
next
slide.
Please.
L
Another
really
important
activity
that
happened
at
the
legislature
is
that
we
received
an
updated
budget
forecast
when
this
committee
met
again,
the
projected
budget
forecast
that
was
mentioned
was
a
little
over
seven
billion
dollars.
Since
then,
we've
received
the
february
updated
budget
forecast
and
we're
now
showing
an
even
higher
budget
projection.
We
are
showing
a
record
setting
budget
projection
of
9.253
billion
dollars
remaining
for
fiscal
year
2022
and
fiscal
year
2023..
L
Some
of
the
reasons
that
we
are
we
are
seeing
some
of
these
higher
than
than
higher
than
projected
numbers
are
due
to
several
things.
One
of
them
is
that
we
are
seeing
higher
consumer
spending,
so
there
are
some
people.
I
will
note
who
have
the
ability
to
spend
more
of
their
dollars
and
they're
spending
it
in
the
economy.
L
We
are
also
seeing
higher
higher
corporate
profits
as
a
result
and
then,
in
addition,
we're
seeing
we
are
seeing
a
reduction
in
spending
from
the
state
in
certain
certain
areas
like
health
and
human
services,
and
those
are
all
some
of
the
reasons
that
are
really
factoring
into.
Why
we're
seeing
such
a
high
projection?
I
will
pause.
As
I
see
we
may
have
a
few
questions.
E
Jenkins,
you
thank
you,
johnson
and
director
moore,
I'm
just
wanting
to
clarify
that.
That's
not
a
typo,
oh
billion,
with
a
b,
not
not
million.
L
Cheer,
johnson
president
jenkins,
you
are
correct,
we
are,
we
are
seeing
and
the
largest
budget
surplus.
L
Yes,
chair,
johnson
and
council
president,
that
is
certainly
part
of
the
discussion.
It
was
part
of
the
discussion
even
prior
to
this
projected
this
updated
budget
forecast.
L
There
are
certain
there
are
certain
strategies
and
ways
that
both
the
house
and
the
senate
are
attempting
to
prioritize
spending
these
funds
for
the
house
side
they're,
certainly
one
of
their
their
top
priorities,
continue
to
be
frontline.
Workers,
continue
to
be
educators
and
also
continue
to
be
making
sure
that
people
are
getting
money
put
back
into
their
pocketbooks
as
well,
and
that
looks
like
several
things
that
that
looks
like
the
front
line
worker
bill.
L
That
was
also
passed
off
the
house
floor,
which
is
noted
a
little
a
little
later
on
in
this
presentation,
and
it's
it's
also
noted
in
increasing
some
of
the
education
spending
in
chair
daphne's
committee
as
well
so
children,
families,
minnesotans
and
ensuring
that
they're
able
to
get
direct
access
to
these
budget
surplus
is
a
top
priority
for
the
house
members
on
the
senate
side.
It's
certainly
a
priority
there.
However,
their
strategy
looks
a
little
bit
different.
L
They
are
they're
looking
more
at
cutting
taxes,
one
one
clear
example,
which
has
been
a
priority
for
the
last
several
sessions,
is
eliminating
the
social
security
tax.
They
are
also
looking
at
increasing
vouchers
within
schools,
so
vouchers
for
charter
schools,
et
cetera,
so
there's
there's
some
parallel.
However,
strategy
looks
a
little
different
depending
on
if
you're
talking
about
the
house
or
the
senate,.
E
D
Thank
you,
chair
johnson,
thank
you,
director,
moore
for
being
here,
so
so
over
the
past
couple
of
weeks,
of
course,
with
the
passage
of
some
of
the
earlier
covet
emergency
regulations
that
we
passed,
you
know
we've
of
course
been
contacted
and
have
spoken
with
numerous
small
businesses,
especially
in
ward
two,
that
borders
highlight
that
you
know,
even
in
several
hours
we're
going
to
be
reading,
we're
getting
a
presentation
on
the
after
action
report,
and
many
of
those
businesses
were
hit
not
only
during
the
uprising,
but
also
you
know,
compounded
with
the
pandemic.
D
What
was
also
named
in
that
report
is
that
many
of
those
small
businesses
and
I've
heard
this
verbally,
like
confirmed
many
times,
that
the
resources
that
were
allocated
you
know,
following
the
the
uprising,
still
has
not
reached
many
of
the
small
businesses,
so
I
know
we're
having
lots
of
conversations
at
the
council
level.
I
also
know
this
is
a
priority
amongst
the
mayor's
office
of
growing
inclusive
economic.
You
know
recovery
and
you
know
I
want
to
make
sure
small
businesses
are
at
the
center
of
that.
D
Are
there
any
discussions
around
with
this
surplus?
How
we're
going
to
either
grow
or
expand
resources,
not
only
for
small
businesses,
that's
been
hit
by
you
know
both
covet
and
the
civil
unrest,
but
also
any
ways
or
pro
program
tweaks,
so
that
those
funds
are
actually
getting
into
the
hands
of
those
small
business
owners.
L
Yeah,
chair
chair
johnson,
a
council
member
onesie
warlab,
thank
you
for
the
question
and
absolutely
rebuilding
and
economic
vitality
in
the
city
of
minneapolis
continues
to
be
one
of
the
top
priorities
that
the
team
and
I
are
working
on
at
the
legislature.
L
You
are,
you
are
likely
referencing
a
program
that
the
legislature
passed
in
2021,
which
is
which
was
the
main
street
program.
It
was
one
mechanism
in
to
attempt
to
help
to
rebuild
in
the
city
of
minneapolis.
L
We
are
aware
that
there
are
some
tweaks
potentially
that
could
allow
that
that
program
to
reach
more
of
the
the
the
black
and
brown
businesses,
some
of
the
the
lower
resource
businesses
within
the
city
of
minneapolis
and
we've
been
in
discussions
with
who
is
one
of
our
delegation
members
as
well,
chair
noor
for
the
house,
jobs
committee,
as
well
as
a
chair
lee,
who
is
the
the
the
lead
in
the
capital
investment
com
committee?
L
So
both
both
of
them
are
actively
engaged,
we're
also
having
conversations
on
the
senate
side
so
that
an
understanding
of
exactly
what
the
tweaks
are
that
could
lead
to
more
people
accessing
these
dollars
in
the
city
of
minneapolis
could
be
achieved.
So,
in
addition
to
policy
changes
to
amend
the
existing
program,
we
do
have
a
budget
surplus
and
we
know
that
people
still
need
businesses.
Communities
as
well
still
need
access
to
additional
re
resources.
L
So
those
those
are
all
important
discussion,
points
that
are
are
still
we're
still
actively
in
involved
in
a
clear
path
forward,
has
not
been
reached
quite
yet,
and
I
and
I
now
that
we
have
an
updated
february
forecast
over
the
next
few
weeks,
we
should
begin
to
see
these
different
strategies
and
packages
come
together
a
bit
more
clear,
but
yes,
economic,
rebuilding,
recovery,
thinking
innovatively.
Those
are
all
considerations
as
we
look
at
how
to
bring
more
dollars
into
the
into
the
city
of
minneapolis.
L
Great,
I
believe,
we'll
move
on
to
the
next
slide
now,
which
should
be
noted
as
governor
walsh
and
lieutenant
governor
supplemental
budget
update
as
a
result
of
the
updated
budget
surplus.
L
The
the
governor,
walson
and
lieutenant
governor
flanagan
also
updated
some
of
their
priorities.
They
are
also
looking
at
in
replenishing
one-time
spending
because
we
do
have
one-time
dollars,
mostly
the
unemployment
insurance
fund.
They
are
also
looking
at
the
the
hero
bonus
checks.
True
frontline
workers
remember
I
noted
that
the
house
actually
passed
a
front
line
workers
bill
last
week
and
then,
as
a
part
of
the
the
governor's
supplemental
budget
request,
he's
increasing
the
stimulus
proposal
that
he
he
originally
announced
to
500
for
individuals
and
then
a
thousand
dollars
for
married
couples.
L
I
will
I
will
also
note
that,
while
these
are
the
governor's
priorities,
the
house
will
be
releasing
their
priorities
for
the
supplemental
budget
relatively
soon
and
then,
hopefully,
on
the
senate
side,
we'll
be
able
to
see
exactly
how
they
are
intending
on
with
more
details.
Spending
some,
if
not
all,
of
the
the
budget
surplus
through
their
supplemental
bills.
L
L
We'll
move
on
to
other
really
important
key
dates
that
are
going
to
determine
exactly
how
quickly
things
move
and
when
we
begin
to
see
packages
pull
together.
We
are
approaching
the
first
legislative
deadline
and
I
believe
this
was
noted
in
the
previous
committee
as
well.
That
deadline
is
march
25th
and
that
essentially
means
that
in
either
the
house
or
the
ch
or
the
or
the
senate,
a
piece
of
legislation.
A
bill
needs
to
have
a
favorable
action,
so
move
through
all
of
the
required
committees
through
either
the
house
or
the
senate.
L
That
means
over
the
next
two
weeks
we
will
begin
to
see
an
increase
in
committee
activities.
This
is
not
to
say
that
there
hasn't
been
a
lot
of
activity
already,
but
definitely
a
massive
increase
in
the
frequency
and
time
timing
that
that
committees
are
are
going
to
be
moving
through
bills
to
ensure
that
they
make
it
through
this
first
legislative
deadline,
we're
beginning
to
see
agency
bills
so
bills,
for
example,
from
the
the
governor's
supplemental
budget
priorities
as
it
relates
to
taxes,
as
it
relates
to
health
and
human
services,
etc.
L
L
I'll
briefly,
go
over
next,
just
a
few
activities
that
are
are
happening
at
the
at
the
legislature.
On
the
house
of
representatives
psy,
I
noted
the
frontline
worker
bonus
pay
that
that
was
a
one
billion
dollar
bill
that
was
passed
out
of
the
house,
so
it
actually
made
it
through
all
of
the
required
committees
onto
the
house
floor
and
was
voted
on
out
of
the
house
of
representative
also
note
that
there
was
a
a
an
audit
piece
of
legislation
that
was
cheered
in
the
house
side
by
representative
hornstein.
L
Also
chair
hornstein
of
the
transportation
committee.
There
was
a
southwest
light
rail
transit
audit
bill
that
bill
made
it
so
that
the
the
state
auditor
would
go
through
and
assess
some
of
the
gaps
within
the
existing
project
for
the
southwest
light
rail
and
understand
some
of
the
reasons
why
we've
seen
such
a
massive
increase
in
the
cost
and
delay,
and
then
there
will
be
a
report
that
is
then
made
to
the
legislature
about
those
those
those
changes.
L
L
And
another
really
important
piece
of
legislation
that
relates
to
housing
because
of
covid.
The
federal
government
allocated
through
two
bills:
emergency
rental
assistance
funds,
the
city
of
minneapolis,
obviously
also
appropriated,
fund
funding
to
help
residents
pay
for
their
their
housing
and
there's
a
realization
that
additional
emergency
rental
assistance
is
also
needed
going
forward.
And
with
that
there
is
a
bill.
That's
currently
still
moving
through
committee.
L
And
last
but
not
least,
on
the
house
side,
there
is
a
bill,
a
bill
that
was
heard
about
two
weeks
ago
regarding
no
knock
so
really
looking
at
severely
limiting
incest,
instances
in
which
no
knock
at
the
state
level
can
be
secured
and
executed.
We
are
expecting
a
second
hearing
of
this
bill.
L
Perhaps
this
week
is
what
we're
hearing
it's
not
currently
posted,
but
we
are
watching
it
very
very
closely,
as
this
bill
really
relates
to
one
of
the
amendments
that
was
made
to
our
alleged
agenda
just
earlier
in
this
meeting.
L
On
the
senate
side
there
is,
there
are
quite
a
few
things
happening
there,
but
as
it
relates
to
the
city
of
minneapolis
last
week
there
was
a
discussion
in
the
senate,
housing
committee
on
rent
control
and
we
had
katie
topinka
from
our
the
city's
community
planning
and
economic
development
cped
present
on
where
we
are
currently
in
relation
to
the
the
voter
approved
rent
stabilization
passage,
and
I
that
was,
I
think,
a
pretty
successful
hearing.
L
We
shared
the
details
noted
what
what
the
rental
landscape
looks
like
in
the
city
of
minneapolis
and
what
our
next
steps
are
are
going
to
be,
as
you
all
determine
how
exactly
to
approach
rents,
stabilizing
rent
in
this
rent
in
the
city
and
then
last
but
not
least,
discussions
are
continuing
in
the
senate
on
public
safety,
on
some
of
the
education
reimbursements
that
I
noted
earlier
they're,
also
in
relation
to
public
safety.
L
Looking
at
exactly
how
they
encourage
more
people
to
enter
the
public
safety
profession
through
things
like
education,
reimbursements
through
things
like
bonus,
pay
and
then
most
recently,
a
bill
that
passed
off
the
senate
floor
was
a
public,
a
one
million
dollar
public
relations
campaign
that
will
raise
awareness
as
well
as
reframe,
what
a
profession
public
safety
can
be
and
I'll
pause
there.
Chair
johnson,
as
I
see
there's
a
question.
E
Thank
you,
president
johnson.
I
mean
chair
johnson.
I
appreciate
that
director
moore,
I'm
curious.
Was
there
any
indication
of
any
sort
of
preemption
and
or
restrictions
related
to
minneapolis's.
L
Chair
johnson
council
president,
it
wasn't
the
preemption
discussion
did
not
take
place
in
the
committee
last
week.
Necessarily,
however,
because
we're
still
in
the
the
current
biennium,
but
there
was
legislation
introduced
last
year
and
we
were
tracking
it
then
as
well,
and
it
was
introduced
in
the
senate
that
would
preempt
locals
from
enacting
any
kind
of
rent
control,
rent
control
policies.
L
I
would
not
be
surprised
if
the
discussion
around
preemption
arises
again
in
the
senate.
I
think
this
is
potentially
a
framing
of
such
a
discussion.
So
it's
it's.
It's
likely
that
we
we
could
see
toward
the
end
of
session
when
the
senate
puts
together
their
individual
policy
packages,
a
provision
regarding
preemption
on
rent
control.
L
Yes
and
with
that,
lastly,
but
not
least
again
looking
ahead,
if
we
move
to
the
next
slide,
we
are
approaching
that
first
deadline
increase
activities,
we'll
begin
to
see
the
supplemental
budget
bills
take
taking
shape
both
on
the
house
and
the
senate
and
see
how
they
align
with
what
the
the
governor
and
the
lieutenant
governor
have
proposed.
And
then
we
will
be
approaching
spring
recess.
L
That's
a
week
in
which
the
legislature
halt
its
work
and
begin
having
some
behind
the
scenes.
Conversations
with
with
policymakers
there
as
well.
B
M
M
I
want
to
point
out
that
the
tagline
for
homes,
for
all,
is
that
where
we
live,
impacts,
everything
and,
as
you
are
all
very
well
aware,
I'm
sure
that
housing
investments
are
wise
investments
because
they
help
not
only
secure
stable
places
for
people
to
live
and
affordable
places
for
people
to
live,
but
impact.
So
many
other
things
whether
it's
a
child's
education
or
brain
development
or
health
comes
of
people.
Many
at
many
different
ages.
K
Hi
everyone,
I'm
annie
shapiro
thanks
chair
johnson
and
council
members
for
having
us,
so
I'm
just
going
to
give
a
very
brief
overview
of
home
sprawl.
I
think
that
the
coalition
has
been
in
front
of
this
group
before,
but
some
of
you
are
new
and
also
things
have
changed
on
our
end
too.
So
just
a
little
brief
overview
of
home
sprawl.
K
So
we're
going
to
be
talking
as
we
go
through
our
agenda
about
some
of
the
pieces
that
make
up
this
continuum.
But
what
I
think
is
really
important-
and
I
really
want
to
emphasize
about
the
continuum-
is
that
our
goal
is
that
everyone
has
a
safe,
stable,
affordable
house
to
live
in,
but
that
we
have
a
long
way
to
go
before
we
get
there.
And
so
we
are
working
on
setting
up
the
pieces
to
get
achieve
that
goal,
but
that
we
have
more
immediate
emergency
needs.
K
K
Okay,
I'm
just
going
to
quickly
run
through
kind
of
what
the
buckets
are,
which
is
getting
into
what
I
was
just
talking
about
and
then
hand
it
over
to
michael
to
start
talking
about
some
of
the
pieces.
So
we
have
decided
this
year
to
arrange
our
legislative
agenda
into
buckets
and
the
reason
being
that
there
are
a
variety
of
pieces
of
housing
policy
and
funding
that
all
have
to
come
together
in
order
to
create
a
housing
system
that
is
actually
affordable.
That
is
actually
safe.
K
K
The
first
two
kind
of
go
together
which
are
equitable
access
and
fair
treatment
and
housing,
stability
and
anti-displacement,
and
those
pieces
are
really
about
making
sure
that
all
minnesotans
have
access
to
housing
that
once
they're
in
that
housing
they're
treated
fairly,
regardless
of
their
differing
abilities,
regardless
of
their
age,
regardless
of
other
factors
that
may
impact
how
they
can
access
or
not
access
housing,
and
that,
once
they
are
in
that
housing,
they
are
able
to
live
there
safely
without
being
evicted
without
being
foreclosed
upon
with
no
notice
that
they
are
able
to
live
in
their
housing
kind
of
regardless,
regardless
of
a
lot
of
the
the
pieces
that
we
often
hear
about,
which
is
really
rapid
evictions
that
they
have
access
to
stay
safely,
housed.
K
We
both
need
to
make
sure
we
have
rental
assistance
that
people
can
afford
to
live
in
the
housing
that
we
have
and
that
we
build
more
housing,
because
currently
a
report
came
out
in
the
star
tribune
a
few
months
ago,
highlighting
that
the
twin
cities
has
the
lowest
housing,
the
worst
housing
shortest
so
the
least
housing
stock
of
any
metro
area
in
the
nation.
So
we
are
desperately
in
need
of
both
building
more
preserving
the
housing
that
we
have
preserving
it
as
affordable
housing.
That's
a
big
challenge
too.
K
The
fourth
one
is
that
this
is
kind
of
the
the
in
some
ways,
the
gold
standard,
not
that
everyone
needs
to
be
a
homeowner.
I
am
not
I'm
a
renter
and
may
never
be
a
homeowner,
but
the
idea
that
people
should
be
able
to
access
home
ownership.
That's
how
you
build
wealth,
that's
how
you
build
intergenerational
wealth
and
again
minnesota
ranks
as
one
of
the
worst
states
in
terms
of
racial
disparities
in
homeownership
in
the
country.
K
So
we
have
a
long
way
to
go
and
that
feeds
into
racial
inequities
in
terms
of
wealth
and
intergenerational
poverty,
and
then
the
fifth
one
is
kind
of
that
emergency
piece
right.
So
I
would
say
that
some
of
the
above
ones
are
what
we
want
to
see
where
we
want
to
go
and
the
fifth
one
is
what
we
need
to
do
immediately
to
address
our
current
crisis,
which
is
we
have
a
lot
of
people
in
this
state
who
are
unhoused.
K
We
have
a
lot
of
people
in
this
state
who
live
in
shelter
and
we
don't
actually
have
enough
space
for
those
people,
so
those
are
kind
of
a
brief
overview
of
our
buckets
we're
going
to
get
into
those
more.
But
I
think
it's
a
good
framing
to
kind
of
think
about
why
these
pieces
exist
and
how
they
interplay
with
one
another
next
slide
and
then
I'll
pass
it
back
to
michael.
M
Okay,
the
first
bucket
was
equitable
access,
is
equitable
access
and
fair
treatment,
and
there
are
four
items
that
we
have
in
this.
This
category
that
I
want
to
touch
upon.
M
Excuse
me-
and
I
think,
if
you
were
to
take
a
look
at
craigslist
today,
at
rental
units
that
are
available,
a
wide
number
of
them
would
say
section
8
need
not
apply,
have
voucher,
please
don't
apply,
and
so
we're
seeing
lots
of
landlords
stating
up
front
that
there
are
vote,
that
they
will
not
accept
voucher
programs
and
that's
something
that
we
find
as
a
form
of
discrimination,
that
this
is
a
source
of
income
for
people
and
that
they
should
be
able
to
use
that
income
that
voucher
to
help
pay
for
their
housing,
because
there
aren't
enough
vouchers
out
there.
M
M
That
voucher
would
be
a
bridge
from
where
they
are
now
until
a
section
8
voucher
actually
became
available
to
them
and
because
sometimes
they're
for
sometimes
for
perceived
reasons
and
sometimes
in
reality,
there's
a
risk
that
landlords
take
on
renting
to
certain
populations,
and
this
may
be
one
of
them.
If
someone
is
is,
is
still
sort
of
in
need
of
mental
health
services,
and
so
a
landlord
mitigation
program
would
would
be
appropriate,
have
appropriated
funds
to
help
address.
The
problem.
M
Third,
is
that
we
want
to
expand
senior
housing
to
that
there
be
eligible
projects
for
people
with
that
are
not
age
related
dealing
with
intellectual
and
development
mental
disabilities,
and
that
up
to
20
of
the
units
available
would
be
for
this
pop
up
to
twenty
percent
be
allowed
for
this
population,
and
then
fourth
is
to
increase
inclusive
and
exceptions
units
for
new
housing
developments,
and
this
covers
both
physical
needs
as
well
as
sensory
needs.
M
So
a
unit
may
be
accessible,
as
in
a
wheelchair
can
get
into
the
doors
and
doorways
within
an
apartment,
but
that
there's
not
a
bathtub
that
can
actually
use
a
wheelchair
to
wear
a
wheelchair
accessible,
and
so
that's
one
of
the
things
that
would
be
covered
under
this
piece
of
legislation.
There's
also
sensory.
M
M
M
A
group
beacon
that
the
city
of
minneapolis
has
often
funded
for
supportive
housing
is
playing
a
leadership
role,
but
there
are
a
number
of
organizations
that
are
part
of
the
bring
it
home
campaign
which
seeks
to
address
the
fact
that
only
one
and
a
quarter,
one
of
every
four
households
that
needs
a
section
eight
voucher,
actually
gets
one,
and
so
we
need
to
increase
our
vulture
capabilities,
and
a
state
program
would
be
in
place
to
fund
all
of
those
right
now.
M
There
are,
I
think,
550
000
households
that
are
below
50
of
the
area,
median
income
who
are
in
need
of
a
voucher,
and
this
would
help
provide
that
funding
for
the
for
that.
How
that
all
those
households,
eviction,
defense,
prefecture
notice
and
expungement
reforms?
This
is
a
a
bill
that
these
are
legislation
that
would
on
eviction
defense,
making
sure
that
that
individuals
who
need
assistance
in
a
defense
of
an
eviction
have
that
legal
protection
is
one
portion
of
this.
M
This
proposal,
second,
is
that
there
would
be
a
pre-eviction
notice
of
14
days
where
a
landlord
could
not
take
a
in
a
renter
household
to
court,
but
instead
provide
14
days
notice
beforehand,
saying
that
that's
where
lead,
if
rent
is
not
paid,
this
would
give
the
household
an
opportunity
to
apply
for
rental
assistance
programs
work
out
a
deal
with
their
landlord,
come
to
some
sort
of
settlement
or
agreement
or
move
if
they
need
to,
because
the
lease
is
simply
something
they
cannot
afford
anymore,
and
then
eviction
reforms
includes
a
number
of
things,
I'll
name
just
two
one
is
that,
and
probably
three
things
that
I
want
to
point
out
is
that
an
eviction
action
would
is
something
that
appears
on
someone's
record
immediately,
and
so,
if
a
landlord
has
simply
said
that
there's
a
problem,
it's
being
noted
as
an
eviction,
action
and
future
landlords
may
see
this
eviction
action.
M
Whether
it
was
a
mistake
or
not
up
here
on
their
record,
and
what
we
would
do
is
require
that
that
this
court
actually
make
a
decision
against
the
renter
before
it
appears
on
their
record
next
thing
we
do.
Is
we
say
that
after
three
years
an
eviction
no
longer
belongs
on
someone's
record
and
that
it
would
be
immediately
expunged
from
the
record
and
not
viewable
by
a
landlord?
There
are
multiple
items
more
items
to
this
evictions
reforms
that
I
can
answer.
M
If
there
are
questions,
there's
housing
assistance,
navigator
support,
which
I
have
to
admit
right
now.
I
might
need
to
phone
a
friend
if
there's
questions
about
this
one
from
annie
but
th.
This
is
a
segment
in
this
housing,
stability
and
anti-displacement
report
that
there's
currently
not
a
bill
drafted
for
and
but
is
one
that
is
on
the
homes
for
all
agenda
and
then,
lastly,
our
lead
safe
homes.
M
It's
an
appropriation
of
two
million
dollars
per
biennium
to
help
mitigate
lead
that
exists
in
homes
through
on
throughout
minnesota
and,
as
you
are
probably
very
all
well
aware,
can
lead
to
some
serious
brain
defects
for
children
that
follow
them
for
a
lifetime
and
the
cost
of
dealing
with
lead
poisoning
once
it's
already
happened
is
astronomical,
and
so
this
million
of
this
two
million
dollar
investment
would
be
money
well
spent
next
slide.
K
Okay,
so
I'm
going
to
touch
briefly
on
our
proposals
within
build
more
and
preserving
housing,
just
recognizing
I'm
going
to
go
through
them
really
quickly
so
happy
to
take
questions
at
the
end.
The
first
is
funding
to
support
naturally
occurring
affordable
housing,
which
you'll
often
or
here
referred
to
as
noaa.
K
The
second
is
two
pieces
that
gets
actually
also
to
what
director
moore
was
saying
about
representative
fully's
committee
in
capital
investment.
These
are
two
pieces
around
bonding.
We
have
two
pieces
that
are
related.
The
first
is
basically
general
obligation
bonds,
which
just
means
normal
state
bonds
for
public
housing
that
allows
public
housing
to
do
some
repair
and
renovation,
because
also
most
public
housing
in
the
state
is
over
35
years
old
and
is
in
need
of
repair.
K
But
but
hras
and
public
housing
often
runs
on
such
narrow
margins
that
they
don't
have
funds
to
do
those
needed
repairs
things
like
furnace,
upkeep
things
like
window
and
roof
repair
that
are
really
needed
for
safety
and
stability,
and
this
helps
them
make
some
headway
in
doing
those
repairs.
The
second
is:
what's
called
housing
infrastructure
bonds.
These
are
specific
housing
bonds
so
outside
the
usual
kind
of
bonding
discussion
that
you
may
hear
about
around
capital
investment
and
these
we're
asking
for
400
million,
and
these
can
go
to
permanent
supportive
housing.
K
So
there
are
a
variety
of
permanent
supportive
housing
units
within
minneapolis
that
have
used
this
funding.
It
can
go
towards
affordable
home
ownership,
senior
housing,
which
is
what
michael
was
touching
on
around
increasing
the
units
and
who
can
access
those
units,
and
then
it
is
often
mixed
use.
So
things
can
come
in
different
funding.
Streams
can
come
in
and
be
braided
for
those
those
pieces.
K
The
third
is
related.
We
want
to
really
emphasize
that
the
housing
infrastructure
bonds
are
focused
towards
people
with
the
lowest
incomes
and
also
people
who
may
not
need
that
permanent
supportive
housing
piece.
So
low-income
folks,
who
don't
need
supportive
housing
and
the
fourth
is
actually
very
related
to
to
work
that
you
already
doing,
which
is
just
getting
state
match
for
local
housing,
trust
funds,
and
that
has
been
on
our
agenda
for
a
while
next
slide.
Please
so
now
getting
into
the
home
ownership
and
wealth
building
which
again
is
is
like.
K
I
was
sharing
really
vital
in
terms
of
creating
intergenerational
wealth
and
reducing
disparities,
and
I'm
going
to
acknowledge
that
some
of
these
pieces
are
not
going
to
get
us
there,
and
I
can
talk
about
why
in
a
second
but
the
first
is
manufactured
home
park.
Basically,
residents
could
buy
the
home
by
the
park
if
it
was
up
for
sale
and
create
a
co-op
and
get
ownership
in
the
land.
Because
often
what
happens
is
manufactured
home
park
residents
own
their
their
home,
but
not
the
land
that
it
sits
on.
K
Weatherization
is
a
program
similar
to
what
I
was
talking
about
in
some
of
the
preservation
pieces
that
helps
to
keep
housing
safe
and
stable.
It
can
do
things
like
window
repair
and
expansion
that
we're
working
on
roof,
repair,
asbestos
abatement,
so
making
sure
that
once
people
have
a
house
that
it's
safe
and
stable-
and
this
is
aimed
at
people
with
low
incomes
who
may
not
be
able
to
afford
or
get
loans
for
those
provisions,
like
other
homeowners.
Would
the
third
is
related
to
what
we
were
just
talking
about.
K
It's
home
ownership,
counseling
and
training,
and
it
basically
helps
folks
get
ready
for
homeownership
financial
training,
foreclosure
prevention,
balancing
budgets,
kind
of
those
kinds
of
financial
literacy
pieces
that
all
wrap
around
to
help
people
stay
in
their
homes
once
they
can
buy
them
next
slide.
Please
now!
This
piece
is
the
piece,
that's
kind
of
the
emergency
piece
that,
I
think,
is
what
we
need
right
now,
but
isn't
necessarily
where
we
want
to
go
it's
more,
just
recognizing
that
we're
in
a
crisis.
K
At
this
exact
moment,
we
need
more
emergency
shelter,
space
desperately
across
the
state,
both
in
the
metro
and
in
the
cities
and
also
in
greater
minnesota.
There
often
aren't
shelter
beds
at
all,
and
so
we
need
a
variety
of
different
funding
streams
to
address
this
issue
and
recognize
that
not
everyone
wants
to
be
in
a
shelter
who's
unhoused,
so
the
first
is
actually
giving
additional
funding
to
build
more
shelters.
That's
what
shelter
capital
means
building
more
beds
across
the
state,
while
the
third
emergency
services
program.
K
This
is
a
very
broad
program
that
allows
flexibility
in
terms
of
how
we
serve
people.
So,
for
instance,
I
work
with
some
agencies
in
thief.
River
falls
in
the
northwest
part
of
the
state.
They
use
this
funding
to
safely
house
people
in
hotels
and
motels,
because
there
aren't
any
shelters.
So
that's
how
they
use
the
funding
instead
of
things
like
shelter,
capital,
emergency
services
program
esp
also
can
help
people
get
into
rapid
rehousing.
K
That
funding
can
be
used
for
rapid
rehousing
and
getting
people
out
of
shelters
out
of
being
unhoused
into
some
sort
of
more
permanent
housing
situation,
and
then
recognizing
that
in
shelter,
shelters
are
congregate,
living
spaces
and
people
who
live
in
encampments
or
other
in-house
unhoused
spaces
are
also
in
target
living
spaces,
and
people
who
are
unhoused
or
experiencing
homelessness
are
deeply
at
risk
of
infectious
disease,
including
covid19,
and
so
just
making
sure
that
we're
continuing
to
to
find
ways
to
respond
to
covid
within
our
populations
experiencing
homelessness
and
that
we
have
the
the
needed
equipment
and
vaccines
and
masks
and
everything
that's
needed
to
keep
people
safe
and
then
to
get
treated
if
they
do
get
coping
next
slide.
K
K
B
Yeah,
you
know
maybe
we'll
stop
and
see
if
there
are
any
questions
and
then
I
know
that
we
have
a
very
lengthy
committee
meeting
coming
up
today
as
well,
and
so
this
might
be
a
good
spot
for
any
last
thoughts
that
you
wanted
to
share,
but
otherwise
we'll
probably
wrap
up
from
there.
M
I
my
closing
thoughts
are
thank
you,
it's
great
to
have
so
much
support
from
the
city
of
minneapolis
in
for
the
homes
for
all
agenda
and
for
particular
items
that
are
on
it
and
that
leadership
role
on
housing,
whether
or
not
it's
rental
or
home
ownership
is,
is
greatly
appreciated
and
at
times
where
it's
appropriate
for
communities
to
for
for
minneapolis
to
have
a
key
discussion
with
the
legislator,
who's
very
supportive
of
our
agenda
that
we
appreciate
that
and
sometimes
not
just
is
it
something
they
support,
but
that
is
it
a
priority
and
there
are
times
where
we
need
to
know
that
housing
is
a
priority
and
and
having
those
conversations
is
very
important
as
well
annie.
B
Annie,
do
you
have
any
any
additional
thoughts
to
share?
I'm
I'm
seeing
a
headache
shake.
Maybe
I'll
ask
the
clerk
to
just
advance
to
the
next
slide,
just
so
that's
available
as
well
for
the
public
to
see
all
these
great
items
on
your
endorsing
agenda,
and
I
will
see
if
committee
members
have
any
questions.
B
Otherwise,
I
do
want
to
really
express
my
gratitude
for
all
the
work
that
you
and
the
coalition
members
are
doing.
This
is
really
critical
not
just
to
the
people
of
minneapolis
but
to
people
all
across
the
state
of
minnesota,
and
we
greatly
appreciate
your
leadership
on
ensuring
that
we
have
safe,
affordable
homes
for
all
and
also
wanted
to
say
thank
you
for
taking
the
time
today
to
present
before
our
committee.
B
This
is
really
helpful
information,
especially
to
get
partners
in
here
talking
about
the
great
work
that
we
get
to
do
together,
and
so
we
really
appreciate
having
you
both
here.
M
Chair
johnson,
if
I
can
just
really
quickly
thank
fatima
for
inviting
us
as
well
and
for
giving
us
the
for
extending
the
time
and
sort
of
helping
us
structure.
What
was
helpful
for
the
committee
very
thankful
to
her
as
well
excellent.
B
Well,
thank
you
so
much
to
both
of
you
with
that.
I
know
our
presentation
is
wrapped
up,
but
I'm
not
seeing
any
further
discussion
so
I'll
direct
the
clerk
to
file
that
report.
Thank
you
to
director
moore
for
these
updates
and
to
the
whole
igr
team
for
all
the
work
that
you're
doing
during
this
legislative
session.
It's
a
ton
of
work.
I
know
you're
working
non-stop
and
we
really
appreciate
all
your
service
on
behalf
of
the
people
of
minneapolis.
B
B
We
know
it's
a
big
ass
to
step
away
from
all
the
work
going
on
here
as
well,
but
the
national
league
of
cities
is
an
important
partner,
a
coalition
of
cities,
as
we
continue
to
work
at
a
national
level
for
laws
and
for
the
resources
to
be
as
successful
and
prosperous
of
cities
as
possible.
It's
always
great
national
legacies
being
able
to
come
back
with
ideas
and
important
relevant
expertise
and
information
and
to
help
build
those
relationships
as
well
for
the
city
of
minneapolis.
B
So
seeing
no
further
business
before
our
committee
today
and
hearing
no
objection,
I
will
declare
this
meeting
adjourned.
Thank
you.
Everyone
well.
E
Thank
you,
chair
johnson,
and
I
just
wanted
to
know,
and,
and
I
know
we
will
be
bringing
a
resolution
later
this
week
and
probably
having
a
brief
remarks
from
the
the
women's
group
employee
resource
group.
E
That
is
called
women,
but
just
wanted
to
make
a
brief
acknowledgement
today
and
say
happy
international
women's
day
so
proud
to
be
on
a
majority
women's
city
council
and
just
know
that
women
are
are
leading
in
so
many
areas
in
our
communities
and
really
just
wanted
to
lift
up
and
highlight
that
today
is
international
women's
day
and
say
happy
international
women's
day
to
all
the
women
out
there
listening
into
this
meeting
and
and
doing
the
work
in
our
communities
and
our
homes
and
our
families
that
continue
to
move
our
society
forward.