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A
A
A
Let
the
record
reflect
that
we
have
a
quorum
with
that,
we'll
move
to
our
consent
agenda.
There
are
three
items
on
the
consent
agenda
which
I
will
read
for
the
record.
The
first
is
authorizing
the
submittal
of
an
application
for
the
2024
State
Park
Road
account
program
funding
solicitation
to
supplement
the
parkway
Paving
program.
A
The
second
is
authorizing
an
amendment
to
The
Cooperative
agreement
with
Hennepin
County
for
the
proposed
multimodal
improvements
along
Lake,
Street
and
Lagoon
Avenue,
and
the
third
is
approving
a
legislative
directive
related
to
an
analysis
of
a
new
program
to
provide
grants
for
water
and
sewer
line
failures.
Is
there
any
discussion
on
the
consent
agenda
or
are
there
any
items
that
anyone
would
like
to
pull
for
further
discussion?
A
Not
seeing
any
so
all
is
in
favor,
please
signify
by
saying
aye
aye
aye,
those
opposed,
say,
nay,
thies
have
it
in
the
consent.
Agenda
is
approved
next,
we'll
move
on
to
our
public
hearing,
and
we
have
a
public
hearing
to
consider.
Assessments
for
water
and
sewer
service
line
repairs.
Director,
Anderson
Keller
will
be
presenting
on
this
item.
Thank.
D
You
director
Mr
chair
members
of
the
committee
I'm
the
principal
professional
engineer,
who
oversees
the
Office
of
Public
Works
special
assessments,
as
well
as
the
office
of
utility
connections
permitting
and
inspections.
I'm,
Jeff,
handeland
city
ordinance
enables
procedures
for
the
city
to
repair
or
replace
private
service
lines
upon
request
from
the
property
owner
or
failure
of
the
property
owner
to
do
so,
such
that,
if
the
bill
for
the
work
is
not
paid,
the
cost
is
recovered
through
a
special
assessment
to
the
property
owners.
D
The
process
includes
an
administrative
hearing
or
a
hearing
officer,
considers
assessment
objections
and
makes
decisions
prior
to
the
public
hearing
at
your
committee
here
right
now
today,
the
administrative
hearing
was
held
the
morning
of
September
7th
to
Property
Owners
submitted
written
objections.
No
one
attended.
D
A
Thank
you
for
the
presentation,
I'm
going
to
proceed
to
open
the
public
hearing
and
turn
to
our
clerk
to
see.
If
anyone
signed
up
and
I've
seen
the
indication,
no
don't
want
to
sign
up
to
speak.
Is
there
anyone
here
that
wishes
to
speak
that
hasn't
signed
up
yet
anyone
anyone,
anyone
all
right,
I'm
gonna,
go
ahead
and
close
the
public
hearing
see
if
my
colleagues
have
any
comments
or
questions
on
this
item,
not
seeing
any
I
will
go
ahead
and
move
approval
of
this
item.
A
All
those
in
favor,
please
signify
by
saying
aye
aye,
those
opposed,
say,
nay,
eyes
have
it,
and
this
committee's
recommendation
will
be
forwarded
to
next
week's
council
meeting
for
final
action
and
our
next
item
of
business
is
receiving
and
filing
a
presentation
on
director.
Anderson
Keller's
trip
to
our
sister
city
in
Finland
director
I'm,
very
excited
about
this
item.
As
you
make
your
way
up
to
give
this
presentation.
I
I'm
just
really
happy
that
this
is
here
before
us
today.
A
This
sister
city
work
that
we
have
to
do
is
a
part
of
our
work
as
a
as
an
organization
as
a
government
body,
and
it's
something
that
there's
not
too
many
of
these
trips,
but
they
are
valuable
sources
of
ideas,
relations
and
a
lot
of
things
that
we
can
do
to
make
our
city
a
better
place
as
well,
and
so
I'm
really
excited
for
this,
and
so
please
the
floor
is
yours.
Well,.
C
Thank
you
Mr,
chair
and
committee
members,
and
thank
you
for
allowing
me
to
travel
on
this
trip.
I
actually
went
to
the
city
of
cuopio
Finland
10
years
ago,
and
my
role
when
I
was
at
the
Minnesota
high-tech
Association
now
Minnesota
Tech,
and
that
trip
was
much
more
focused
on
Business
Development
that
time
around
this
time
around,
we
focused
heavily
on
the
built
environment
on
Transportation,
Transit,
water,
housing
and
so
I'll.
Try
to
weave
some
of
those
other
things
in
as
well
as
I
go
through
the
presentation.
C
There
are
some
notable
differences
in
how
they're
doing
business.
You
know
we
did
host
two
groups
of
Finnish
Public
Works
folks
in
the
last
year,
my
colleagues
in
Helsinki,
so
that
was
an
add-on
to
the
trip.
They
were
very
generous
with
their
time
and
I'll.
Show
you
a
few
things
from
Helsinki
as
well
and
then
point
out
some
of
the
things
I
I
think
we
maybe
can
bring
back
to
Minneapolis
and
utilize.
C
So,
first
of
all,
you're,
seeing
when
you're
looking
at
this,
the
lit
lit
up
sign-
and
maybe
this
is
something
Minneapolis
should
be
thinking
about,
but
their
branding
for
the
city
of
Helsinki
right
in
front
of
the
Helsinki
Cathedral.
The
Helsinki
Cathedral
is
a
Lutheran
Cathedral
I
said
most
Lutheran
churches
in
Minnesota.
Do
not
look
like
that
and
it's
you
know.
There
is
a
national
religion
in
Finland,
but
they
use
this
Plaza
as
a
Gathering,
Spot
and
I.
C
Think
it's
an
important
part
of
town,
it's
a
place
that
you
can
go
and
you
can
see
over
the
entire
Harbor
and
look
out
I'm,
showing
you
the
middle
picture
because
it
caught
our
attention
right
away.
This
is
a
use
of
green
infrastructure
to
actually
serve
both,
as
you
know,
somewhat
of
a
rain
Garden,
but
it
really
is
about
sound
in
downtown
house
sinky.
C
This
is
sitting
on
the
edge
of
the
Esplanade
that
goes
down
to
the
Waterfront,
and
the
idea
here
is
the
tram
lines
run
right
on
the
other
side
of
here
and
so
to
make
it
a
more
enjoyable
experience
to
be
able
to
sit
and
walk.
They
are
experimenting
with
these
sort
of
living,
sound
barriers
and
I.
Think
that's
something
that
could
be
interesting
here
as
we
are
contemplating
what
happens
on
Nicollet
Mall
next,
and
that
might
be
something
that
could
be
utilized
in
some
of
our
pedestrian
areas.
C
The
other
thing
that
our
friends
in
Finland,
both
in
Helsinki
and
kuopio,
are
very,
very
proud
of
is
actually
this
issue
of
clean
water,
and
so
this
sign
was
in
Helsinki
City
Hall
in
the
women's
restroom
right
on
right,
near
the
place
where
you'd
wash
your
hands
and
they
had
tap
area
where
you
could
fill
your
bottle
and
I
have
to
say.
It
makes
me
think
about
the
great
work
that
director
Bankston
and
her
group
do
here.
C
If
not
the
country,
and
so
one
of
the
things
I'd
really
like
to
see
us
do-
is
promote
more
even
in
this
building
the
ability
to
drink
the
water
right
from
the
tap,
because
it
helps
reduce
plastic
waste
and
it's
also
quite
a
source
of
Pride
for
our
city,
and
you
know
we
also
provide
water
services
to
many
many
other
jurisdictions.
We
sell
our
water
and
so
I
think
promoting
our
water
would
be
a
good
good
thing
to
do.
C
One
of
the
one
interesting
difference
about
Helsinki.
All
of
these
pictures
are
in
Helsinki.
There
is,
we
are
actually
underground
in
the
facility
you're,
seeing
they
have
two
of
their
maintenance
facilities
that
are
deep
underground.
This
was
done
about
20
years
ago.
They
look
at
a
hundred
year
timeline
because
I
said
how
in
the
world
did
you
cost
out
Going
Underground
versus
above
ground,
and
they
look
at
a
hundred
year
timeline
for
their
facilities
and
then
cost
out?
What's
going
to
be
most
effective
and
so,
of
course,
being
underground?
It's
very.
C
The
temperature
is
very:
even
the
equipment
is
stored
underground
and
it
also
has
a
secondary
purpose.
The
one
that
we
were
in
at
this
point
is
also
the
continuity
of
service
for
the
government
should
anything
happen
to
Helsinki
or
to
the
country
of
Finland.
The
entire
government
would
go
underground,
which
I
think
is
pretty
fascinating
and
I'm
going
to
talk
about
that
again.
So
the
sign
shop,
their
signs
are
all
wood.
They
have
a
lot
of
wood
in
Finland
and
so
I
ask
how
long
do
they
last?
C
C
The
item
in
the
middle
is
the
pothole
filling
machine
it
attaches
to
a
truck
and
it
can
both
deliver
and
I'm
I.
Don't
want
to
talk
about
too
much
because
I
have
another
slide
on
it,
but
it
can
deliver
the
cold
patch
and
they
also
use
hot
patch.
In
this
to
the
hole
it
gets
swept
out
with
the
brush
on
the
front,
the
material
is
posited.
It
is
tamped
down
with
a
very
heavy
duty,
basically
tamping
I
tamping.
C
What
do
we
call
those
tamper
tamper
and,
if
the
force
of
that,
what
they
told
me
is
this
is
developed
by
a
company
in
Northern
Finland,
there's
only
one
of
these
right
now
in
Finland,
it's
in
Helsinki,
and
they
found
that
after
filling
their
potholes,
they
had
this
year.
They
did
not
have
hardly
any
of
the
potholes
heave
back
up,
and
so
one
of
the
things
we're
going
to
be
meeting
with
this
company
in
the
next
couple
weeks
via
teams
and
talk
to
them
about
what
their
interest
is
in.
C
Having
one
of
these
come
to
the
U.S
to
a
northern
climate,
they
can
fill
potholes
in
about
two
to
three
minutes
with
this
machine.
So
that's
the
other
thing
it
and
it
it's
both
durability
issue,
as
well
as
a
safety
issue,
because
there
are
not
Crews
standing
out
on
the
street,
then.
So
it's
a
it's
an
interesting
idea:
I'm
showing
you
the
top
one,
the
they
also
run
the
their
park
system
and
Helsinki
like
most
Public
Works
entities
across
both
the
U.S
and
around
the
world.
C
That
is
a
heated
water
weed
killing
machine,
so
they
use
extremely
hot
temperatures
of
the
water
to
kill
the
weeds
instead
of
using
things
like
herbicides,
so
I
I
think
this
is
an
interesting
question.
Whether
this
is
something
we
might
want
to
do.
You
know
we
do
get
a
lot
of
complaints
about
how
the
medians
look
and
things
like
that.
The
final
picture
is
not
really
about
the
cruise
ship,
although
this
is
a
still
a
shipbuilding
area
and
a
lot
of
cruise
ships
do
come
in
from
the
rest
of
Europe
into
Helsinki.
C
The
point
out
in
front
of
the
cruise
ship
is
actually
their
snow
dump.
So
I
wanted
to
show
that
to
you,
because
we
have
been
having
discussions
about.
Where
do
we
put
our
snow,
that
we
do
haul
out
and,
of
course,
because
they
use
they
use
a
fairly
low
amount
of
salt?
They
are
therefore
able
to
directly
put
their
snow
into
the
ocean
and
they
have
a
system
with
a
boom
and
a
catch
that
catches
the
garbage
and
trash,
and
then
they
take
that
back
out
and
it
seems
to
work
very
well
for
them.
C
This
is
the
again
the
machine
I
was
talking
about.
It
gives
you
a
little
bit
more
detail.
You
can
see
the
Box
on
the
back
of
the
truck
with
the
auger
comes
down
the
side
deposits,
the
material
hole
gets
swept
out,
and
then
it
just
it
was
really
quite
amazing
to
see,
and
so
they
are
prototyping
this
right
now,
I'm
hopeful
that
maybe
we
could
get
one
of
these
and
become
a
demonstration
site
for
this
type
of
of
equipment
going
forward.
C
You're
gonna
see
a
couple
more,
so
you
kind
of
get
the
sense
of
the
underground
here
and
how
big
this
facility
is.
There's
like
I,
said:
there's
eight
maintenance
facilities
in
the
city
of
Helsinki
two
are
underground.
The
thing
on
the
I
have
to
think
about
where
you
are
the
thing
that
looks:
has
the
red
outline
probably
on
your
left
side?
Is
it
on
your
left
side
as
you're
looking
at
the
right
side
as
you're
looking
at
the
screen?
That's
actually
the
salt
Silo
that
they
have
in
these
underground
facilities.
C
C
I
did
go
over
to
the
city
of
espo
espos
to
the
west
of
Helsinki
and
I'm,
showing
you
the
latest,
both
Metro
and
also
how
it
interacts
with
The,
Pedestrian
and
bicycle
Network
I,
particularly
like
that
they
paint
both
a
small
person
and
a
large
person
on
their
walking
Lanes,
to
kind
of
give
the
alert
that
you
might
see
a
child
out
there
and
the
other
part
of
it
is
those
are
green,
light
rail
tracks,
so
that
is
at
the
University
in
espo,
and
that
is
quite
quite
an
idea
in
the
sense
that
you
know
cars
are
not
going
to
drive
down
that
light.
C
C
This
is
also
the
underground
Metro
System.
These
are
rather
new
cars,
the
300
cars,
but
giving
you
a
sense
of
what
one
of
the
underground
stations
looks
like
and
it
just
very
clean
all
electronic
ticketing
for
the
most
part,
using
an
app
and
super
easy
to
use.
C
We
are
going
to
switch
now,
so
Helsinki
is
going
to
end
here.
Oh,
but
I
should
point
out
that
espo
did
espo
has
a
little
brochure
about
public
works.
Department
and
I
certainly
am
happy
to
share
this
with
anyone
who
wants
to
look
I
think
it's
a
good
education
piece.
It's
not
it's
actually
at
a
higher
level
than
a
kid's
level
for
sure,
but
it
could,
you
know,
be
at
kind
of
a
junior
high,
high
school
level
and
just
general
education.
C
The
other
thing
you
have
is
a
little
takeaway
from
the
city
of
espo
at
your
seat,
and
these
are
all
over
Finland
and
I'll
talk
about
it.
Maybe
at
the
end,
after
the
slides
after
we
take
the
slides
down
a
little
bit
more
the
reflector,
so
then
we
went
off
to
cuopio
and
councilmember
Goodman
is
in
the
room.
She
has
been
to
cuopio
Finland
three
times
and
first
for
a
housing
Fair
years
ago,
then,
on
a
two
sister
City
trips,
people
love
it.
C
When
you
can
build
this
relationship,
that's
part
of
what
I
want
to
tell
you
is
that
and
I
think
Council
council
member
Johnson's,
chair
Johnson's
words
about
this
is
very
important
that
they
like
to
have
visitors
who
they
build
a
relationship
with
this
is
actually
their
water
distribution
facility.
It's
their
historic
building.
They
actually
do
nothing
in
this
building
anymore,
but
I
thought
such
a
beautiful
little
building
on
the
bottom.
That-
and
this
is
a
good
time
to
talk
about
how
they're
organized
almost
every
aspect
of
city
services
in
cuopio
or
Helsinki.
C
That
we
saw
is
in
a
company.
So
when
we
think
of
a
company
we
think
of
a
for-profit
company,
but
this
is
actually
a
company
for
the
public
good
that
is
founded.
So,
in
the
case
of
where
we
are
looking
at
the
Metro
being
built,
a
company
was
founded:
85
percent
espo,
the
city
of
espo
15
by
the
city
of
Helsinki.
That's
how
the
rail
line
breaks
down.
C
There's
a
governing
board
of
electeds
Who
oversee
that
work,
but
what
it
does
for
them
is
it
takes
out
of
the
day-to-day
business
of
the
city
council
and
the
mayor's
office
is
the
sort
of
ongoing
issues
that
happen
in
any
big
scale
project,
so
that
is
handled
through
a
separate
company.
That's
why
quobion
vesi,
which
is
water,
corpio
water?
Has
this
unique
branding
you
see
on
this
van?
They
have
their
own
water
company,
that
is
the
city
of
copio.
C
People
are
unionized
in
the
company
still,
but
it
does
sort
of
take
away
some
of
the
political
to
the
aspect
of
running
these.
What
they
call
separate
businesses,
so
they
have
that
for
housing
they
have
it
for
water,
they
have
it
for
Street,
Maintenance
Finland
is
also
a
place
of
Art,
and
so
this
artwork
was
done
with
the
employees
at
the
water
distribution
plant.
C
It's
it's
a
plaster
mask
that
they
had
an
artist
come
in
and
work
with
them
on,
and
you
can
see
they
have
three
women
out
of
that
number
of
people
who
work
because
they
have
their
red
lipstick
on
I.
Think
that's
kind
of
unique,
but
I
also
thought.
It
was
quite
interesting
that
that
was
one
of
their
team.
Building
experiences
is
to
actually
create
this
art
and
then
display
the
art
in
the
building.
So
the
art
was
made
of
the
employees
and
then
it
displays
every
single
day.
They're
quite
prouder.
C
Their
water,
they're
drinking
water
source
and
copio
is
the
lake
that
they
all
live
on
and
it's
a
huge
Lake
it.
It
has
to
give
you
some
idea:
it's
like
about
seven
to
ten
miles
out
that
the
water
is
drawn
from
and
then
is
piped
underground
in
the
lake
to
this
facility,
where
it
goes
through
its
treatment
process
so
that
I
I
thought
was
well
worth
seen.
I
want
to
just
mention.
C
We
also
had
our
honorary
Council
General
Elaine
with
us,
and
she
and
I
went
and
did
a
business
segment
listening
to
some
of
the
companies
who
are
looking
for
matches
in
Minnesota
to
to
do
their
work
and
where
we
are
standing
here
in
the
in
this
building,
and
this
is
in
the
same
building.
These
two
pictures
is
a
building
that
10
years
ago,
didn't
exist.
10
years
ago,
when
we
went
to
cuopio,
they
had
a
vision
of
a
a
science
park
with
about
think
think.
C
University
of
Minnesota
buildings
over
that
are
to
the
east
of
you
of
the
Bank
Stadium,
where
the
U
is
building
out
these
science
buildings
think
of
destination
Medical
Center
in
Rochester.
Well,
there
was
one
building
10
years
ago.
There
are
now
seven
buildings
and
there's
a
plan
for
a
neighborhood
in
this
area
that
will
have
another
20
000
residents
in
cuopio
in
the
next
10
years,
and
so
showing
you
kind
of
some
of
the
facilities
that
we're
looking
at
by
far
one
of
the
most
fascinating
things
we
did
was
on.
C
The
schedule
was
to
go
to
what
is
essentially
a
topping
off
ceremony
of
a
building
like
you
would
have
here
when
the
building
got
to
its
highest
point.
The
difference
here
is,
we
are
actually
in
a
cave.
This
cave
has
a
dual
purpose
in
cuopio
and
you
might
notice
Alexi
standing
between
council
member
Goodman
and
I
Alexi
visited
us
here
from
cuopio.
C
He
is
a
deputy
mayor
and
the
only
person
who
is
actually
employed
by
the
city
as
Deputy
Mayor,
so
he's
like
an
administrator
but
he's
called
mayor,
Deputy
Mayor
and
that's
him
speaking
as
well.
But
to
give
you
a
sense
of
this,
this
was
an
old
Finnish
defense
cave
that
they
have
now
quarried
out.
It
will
have
the
dual
purpose
of
being
a
sports
center.
C
This
is
a
bomb
shelter
if
Russians
attack
Finland.
This
area
is
to
the
Russian
border
about
us
to
essentially
Duluth
and
their
airport
in
cuopio
is
now
becoming
a
NATO
Air
Base
as
well
I
would
say
that's
one
of
the
biggest
things.
That's
changed
in
10
years,
10
years
ago,
Finnish
people
were
very
proud.
They
weren't
part
of
NATO.
They
really
were
proud
of
trying
to
figure
out
the
relationship
with
an
open
Russia
and
that
it
no
longer
exists.
C
There
is
a
feeling
of
vulnerability
that
I
really
cannot
even
totally
Express
how
worried
they
are
about
the
actions
of
particularly
the
leader
of
Russia
and
what
could
happen
here
so
this
could
sustain
7
000
people
for
four
to
five
days
in
every
home.
That's
now
built
in
every
apartment.
Building
that's
built,
not
only
has
a
sauna
which
is
typical,
but
it
has
a
bomb,
shelter
too
and
so
I'm
happy
to
talk
more
about
that
offline.
C
If
you
want
to
or
I'm
sure
council
member
Goodman
has
some
thoughts
about
that,
I
wanted
to
show
you
the
historic
Market
Hall
in
the
plaza
in
equopeio
in
copio,
and
then
we
did
get
to
do
a
boat
ride
on
the
lake.
To
give
you
a
sense
of
scale,
this
is
a
huge
Lake,
but
gives
you
a
sense
of
scale,
and
we
had
this
wonderful
Skipper.
He
spoke
no
English,
but
we
had
a
great
interpreter
and
his
boat
was
named
for
his
late
wife
and
he
had
built
it
himself
on
a
logging
boat.
C
But
these
little
little
Cottages
cabins
on
the
islands
around
cuopio
are
quite
common.
Cuopio
invested
in
a
series
of
bridges
about
10
to
15
years
ago,
and
many
of
these
islands
are
now
connected
to
one
another
and
they
have
become
another
place
where
people
are
building
housing
and
it
it
has
its
tensions,
as
you
can
imagine,
with
gentrification
on
some
of
the
islands
as
well.
I
want
to
show
you
streetscape.
C
C
They
also
have
a
lot
of
Dual
Purpose
streets,
and
so
the
picture
of
the
guy
on
the
bench
I'm
sure
he
wasn't
necessarily
happy
I
was
taking
his
picture,
but
is
showing
you
that
one
of
the
ways
they
signal
to
people
that
this
is
a
pedestrian
street
is
by
actually
putting
the
seating
right
in
the
middle
with
the
lighting,
and
you
can
also
see
the
treatment
of
that
street
more
of
a
paver
treatment
that
they
have
going
on
and
they
use
the
pavers
in
different
ways
to
design
and
Signal
what's
happening
on
the
street.
C
This
gives
you
a
couple
more
pictures.
This
is
again
the
the
right
picture
is
looking
out
at
the
market
square,
and
then
these
other
pictures
are
looking
away
from
the
market
square
and
I
mean
people
p.
Honestly,
people
in
cars
were
pretty
much
coexisting
in
this
space
in
a
very
interesting
way,
and
they
also
in
the
summer
a
lot
of
times
we'll
just
shut
these
streets
down.
So
people
can
walk.
C
C
The
picture
on
the
right
is
standing
on
top
of
a
building
that
houses
one
public
sauna,
and
you
can
see
part
of
that
sauna
out
in
front
of
you
with
a
sea
pool.
But
what
you're?
Really,
if
you
look
beyond
that
to
the
right
is
City
Hall.
The
second
building
down
the
building
closest
to
us
in
the
picture
is
the
embassy
of
Sweden,
of
course,
Sweden
occupied
Finland
for
many
years,
so
everything's
dual
language
and
then
I
wanted
to
also
show
on
the
left
side,
some
of
their
pocket
parks
that
they
have
built.
C
C
The
plantings
on
the
Esplanade
were
particularly
beautiful
and
I
am
in
active
conversation
with
the
did
to
see
if
we
can
do
better
in
Downtown
Minneapolis
to
have
things
that
are
both
pleasing
and
frankly,
they
add
to
the
security
of
downtown,
because
people
more
people
want
to
be
in
this
area
walking
around
eating
just
sitting
just
observing
so
I
thought
it
was
quite
amazing
and
then,
before
I
take
the
slides
down.
We
did
happen
to
find
this
along
the
way
in
the
in
the
city
of
copio.
C
There
is
a
company
with
councilmember
rakoski's
last
name,
that's
a
fairy
line
and
I
thought
it
was
quite
fun
to
find
this
picture
and
I
did
send
it
to
her
and
said
we're
thinking
of
you.
So,
let's
see
can
we
I,
don't
know
if
it
goes
down
because
I've
never
done
a
presentation.
Do
you
take
the
slides
down
and
then
I
can
just
show
a
couple
other
things
so
I
wanted
to
talk
specifically
about
about
these
reflectors.
C
Everyone
has
these
reflectors
on
in
Finland.
Now
these
are
from
the
city
of
espo
and
I've.
Given
you
each
one
or
two
that
you
could
either
put
on
your
purse
or
backpack
or
bike
and
I,
think
the
important
part
of
this
is
it
can
reflect
up
to
300
feet.
So
it's
a
safety
feature
for
walking
or
biking
also
created
with
a
3M
product
which
is
kind
of
wild
and
they
are
everywhere
in
every
design.
You
could
imagine.
There
are
dogs,
there
are
cats,
there
are
flowers,
there
are
all
sorts
of
things.
C
People
personalize
these,
so
we
are
actually
already
personalizing
the
as
you
go
campaign
and
we
are
ordering
these
to
have
the
characters
with
the
Minneapolis
branding
logo
on
them,
because
I
think
they
are
kind
of
a
magical,
little
device
that
can
help
people
be
a
lot
safer
out
walking
and
especially
as
we
go
into
this,
you
know
darker
period
of
time.
It
was.
It
was
pretty
pretty
amazing
in
cuopio.
They
also
do
they
do
a
lot
of
branding
and
communication
out.
You
know
we
do
this
with
solid
waste
and
recycling.
C
The
guide
that
comes
out
every
year
that
people
wait
for
and
talk
about
on,
I
guess,
we'd,
say
x
today,
formerly
Twitter,
but
they
had
a
quarterly
magazine
they
produce
for
the
water
department,
and
that
goes
out
with
the
water
Department's
branding
as
well
as
then,
profiles
of
water
department,
employees
and
then
also
kind
of
you
know,
showing
the
underground
and
what's
happening.
I,
don't
know
if
we
can
pull
this
off,
but
I
think
it
would
be.
C
You
know
it
would
be
good
if
we
could
do
more
education
for
the
public
about
what
is
happening
in
our
system.
So
I'm
happy
to
take
questions,
I'm
happy
to
talk
more
about
what's
different
and
what's
similar,
but
I
do
think
this
idea
that
particularly
being
able
to
visit
a
winter
climate,
a
climate
that
is
dark
part
of
the
year,
was
important
to
to
think
about
what
we
could
bring
here.
A
Well,
thank
you.
I
love,
the
presentation.
I
thought
this
was
fantastic.
Do
we
have
any
comments
or
questions
from
committee
members
that
scene
I'll,
note
I'll
also
recognize
councilmember
Goodman
is
joining
the
committee
as
well.
I,
don't
know
if
you
want
to
say
a
few
words
about
the
trip.
No,
okay,
that's
fair!
Well,
I.
Just
think
this
is
really
fantastic
and
it's
amazing
to
see
all
the
different
ideas
that
you
brought
back
and
things
are
already
taking
action
on
as
a
result
and
a
lot
of
other
inspiration
as
well.
A
So
thank
you
for
sharing
this
and
I
think
these
are
wonderful
relationships
to
promote,
and
hopefully,
we'll
have
even
more
opportunities
in
the
future
to
bring
back
great
ideas.
Thank
you.
Mr.
A
And
seeing
no
other
discussion
on
that
I'll
direct,
a
clerk
to
receive
and
file
that
reports
Vice
chair.
B
Well,
I
just
wanted
to
note.
Thank
you,
Mr,
chair
that
this
is
a
moment.
I
think
that
we
need
to
pause
and
just
reflect
our
gratitude.
But
this
is
your
last
Public
Works
committee
meeting
and
just
wanted
to
say
thank
you
so
much.
A
A
You
know
all
sorts
of
things
that
you
have
to
be
versatile
and
adaptable
to
deal
with
and
resilient,
and
especially
public
works,
as
role
is
continuing
to
grow
in
the
face
of
the
climates
threats
that
we
are
all
under
and
so
having
to
also
build
a
plane
while
you're
flying
it
in
terms
of
responding
to
that.
But
through
and
through.
A
This
team
is
just
doing
remarkable
work
every
single
day
out
there
non-stop,
whether
it's
out
on
the
streets
or
even
below
ground
working
on
our
storm
water
system,
which
is
a
great
tour
to
be
able
to
go
on
to
and
to
see
all
the
thought
that
goes
into
that.
And
so
it's
been
really
an
honor
and
a
privilege
to
be
part
of
it.
And
it's
been
six
years
for
me
with
this
particular
committee
and
so
I'm
sad
to
be
wrapping
up
my
time
with
this
committee.
A
Thank
you
so
much
for
all
of
your
partnership
over
this
time
and
to
our
city
clerks
as
well,
and
our
city
attorneys,
who
have
been
a
part
of
this
team
as
well,
has
been
just
really
great,
so
I'm
still
going
to
be
around
at
the
full
Council
meetings
for
a
while,
but
it
this
probably
will
be
my
last
meeting
that
I
chair.
So
thank
you.
Yeah.