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From YouTube: Oklahoma City City Council - Tuesday, June 20, 2017
Description
The regular meeting of the Oklahoma City City Council for
Tuesday, June 20, 2017.
The meeting starts at the 1:46 mark.
A
C
As
we
focus
our
thoughts
on
prayer,
just
these
words
do
all
the
good
you
can
by
all
the
means
you
can
and
all
the
ways
you
can
in
all
the
places
you
can
at
all
the
times
you
can
to
all
the
people
you
can
as
long
as
you
ever
can.
Let
us
pray
dear
God
of
all
of
us.
We
are
deeply
grateful
for
our
life
together
in
this
community
of
Oklahoma
City.
C
We
give
you
thanks
for
so
many
faithful
and
diligent
public
servants
who
work
every
day
to
make
our
lives
better,
stronger,
safer
feeling
each
day
with
innumerable
challenges
and
obstacles
to
keep
our
city
going.
So
much
that
happens
every
day
in
the
city
goes
unnoticed
and
often
unrewarded,
yet
only
happens
because
someone
has
been
willing
to
do
their
job
in
ensuring
this
community
functions
for
each
and
every
one.
We
give
you
thanks
for
tasks
faithfully
done
for
each
person,
honoring
you
and
their
diligence
of
their
work
done
to
the
best
of
their
ability.
D
B
One
of
the
areas
of
city
government
that
we
have
improved
on
a
great
deal
is
our
animal
welfare
department.
We
have
seen
our
our
production
numbers
go
way
down
and
with
public-private
partnerships,
Humane,
Society
and
other
relationships.
The
general
public
has
come
to
help
us
take
ownership
over
this
issue
and
we
are
coming
very,
very
close,
someday
becoming
a
no-kill
city,
and
we
were
one
of
the
worst
examples
in
the
country
15
years
ago.
B
So
I
think
all
of
us
in
this
era
of
Oklahoma
City's
progress
should
feel
good
about
how
far
we've
come,
and
we
have
another
partnership
to
announce
today.
That
I
think
is
significant
and
that's
been
going
on
for
a
while,
but
it's
an
example
of
how
Oklahoma
City
get
behind
a
project
that
that
tugs
at
our
hearts,
but
we
all
realize
has
to
be
done,
and
that
is
a
citation
for
the
Shawnee
milling
company
I'm
going
to
steal
forward
to
come
on
up.
B
You
know
what,
in
a
business
perspective,
you
have
your
fixed
cost
and
one
thing
when
you're
on
an
animal
shelter
you
got
to
feed
the
animals.
Well,
Joe
is
with
Shawnee
billing
company
and
they're,
making
a
large
donation
once
again
to
our
Animal
Welfare
Department,
to
help
us
feed
our
animals.
So
that's
a
direct
savings
for
the
citizens
and
we
have
a
citation
unless
the
clerk
to
read
it,
whereas.
E
Shawnee,
milling
company
has
been
a
fixture
in
Oklahoma,
since
its
opening
in
1906
braz
is
a
founding
member
of
the
made
in
oklahoma
coalition.
Shawnee
milling
has
partnered
with
other
Oklahoma
food
manufacturers
for
many
years
to
fill
the
shelves
of
food
banks
across
Oklahoma
to
help
those
in
need,
whereas,
besides
the
many
Shawnee
Mills
products,
we
serve
to
our
families
each
day.
The
company
also
produces
some
of
the
finest
animal
feed
and
pet
foods
in
2015.
E
Shawnee
milling
pledged
a
donation
to
the
city
of
Oklahoma
City's
animal
shelter
of
one
hundred
tons
of
pet
food
over
two
year
period.
This
donation
provides
to
shelter
animals
with
a
high
quality,
consistent
diet,
which
results
in
healthier
happier
adoptable
animals
grass
in
September
2015.
This
donation
has
benefited
over
30,000
cats
and
dogs
in
the
shelters
care.
The
city
of
Oklahoma,
City,
animal
welfare
staff
and
shelter
patrons
involve
tears
are
so
very
appreciative
of
this
donation
that
is
truly
life-changing
for
those
homeless
animals.
Let's.
F
B
F
B
G
G
We
are
relying
upon
individual
donations
and
there's
no
consistency
in
the
food
and
it
it
really
does
have
an
impact
on
the
animals.
So
we
we
truly
each
one
of
us
from
the
council
do
appreciate
all
the
work
mr.
Ford
has
done,
and
we
look
forward
to
a
long
and
happy
relationship
with
Shawnee
milling.
Thank.
B
You
it's
a
great
gift
for
us.
Yes,
all
right,
it's
Park
and
Recreation
month,
and
we
have
some
of
our
most
outstanding
Civic
volunteers,
who
helped
lead
of
our
Park
Commission's
and
different
types
of
activities
that
we
have.
Gentlemen.
All
come
up.
Doug
Cooper
is
here
with
Allen
Payne,
how
McKnight
Gary
Mars
Elliot,
Yaffe
and
Rick
Godfrey.
We
have
a
proclamation
about
parks
and
recreation
month
and
unless
the
clerk
to
read
it,
whereas.
E
July
is
National
Park
and
Recreation
month
and
Parks
and
Recreation
programs
or
vital
part
of
communities
across
America,
including
Oklahoma
City,
the
Oklahoma,
City,
Parks
and
Recreation
Department
provides
green
spaces
and
dynamic
facilities
and
programs.
So
citizens
can
obtain
a
high
quality
of
life,
contributing
to
the
overall
well-being
of
the
community,
its
economy
and
culture.
E
Protect
groundwater,
provide
vegetative
buffers
and
produce
sustainable
habitat
for
wildlife,
whereas
our
parks
and
recreation
areas
ensure
the
ecological
beauty
of
our
community,
allowing
children
and
adults
to
connect
with
nature
through
primitive
and
manicured
landscape,
whereas
Oklahoma
State
recognizes
the
invaluable
contributions
of
Parks
and
Recreation
Department
employees
and
volunteers
who
help
people
relax,
connect
with
others
and
enjoy
the
many
benefits
of
parks
and
recreation
programs
and
facilities.
Now,
therefore,
make
horn
ask
the
mayor
of
the
city
of
Oklahoma.
City
does
hereby
proclaim
the
month
of
July
as
parking
recreation
month
in
Oklahoma
City.
Let's.
B
H
We're
one
of
the
few
municipal
out
municipalities
that
have
their
own
Game
and
Fish
Commission
their
own
River
trust
that
that
guides
us
in
creating
new
activities
on
our
River
and,
of
course
our
golf
commission
helps
manage
low
cost
golf
for
our
citizens,
but
again
how
McKnight
is
guiding
us
through
the
trails
and
the
pathways
that
that
we
create
for
the
citizens
for
a
healthier
tomorrow
and,
of
course,
Allen
Payne,
our
our
chairman
of
the
board
of
park.
Commissioners.
He
is
the
he
helps,
guide
and
oversee
land
uses
and
our
policies
and
procedures.
H
B
H
Appreciate
that
we-
obviously
this
is
our
time
of
year
for
athletic
activities.
We've
got
chi
ball
going
on
youth
baseball.
We
just
ended
our
soccer
season,
we'll
be
going
into
the
fall
season
later
on
this
summer,
but
at
our
rec
centers
we
have
a
lot
of
new
dynamic
programming
going
on
out
there,
that
we
are
creating
a
safe
environment
for
our
kids
during
summer
break.
So
I
encourage
your
parents
and
grandparents
and
uncles
and
aunts
check
out
our
guide.
That's
online
right
now,
with
all
the
programs
that
are
offered.
H
We
also
are
partnering
with
the
steam
program,
so
we're
we're
getting
science
and
education
and
and
all
of
that
through
the
summer,
because
we
know
keeping
kids
interested
in
education
will
help
them
further
and
start
better
in
their
next
grades,
higher
and,
of
course
out
at
Martin
Park.
We
got
a
lot
of
dynamic
outdoor
programs
going
on
others.
H
So
a
lot
of
great
things
going
on
and
one
of
the
things
that
that
we
haven't
brought
forward
yet,
but
we
have
just
gotten
word
from
the
Oklahoma
Soccer
Association
that
the
Oklahoma
City,
Parks
and
Recreation
Department
will
be
afforded
a
membership
as
a
club
member
in
the
Oklahoma
Soccer
Association
for
the
work
that
we
do
out
of
window
Whisenhunt
Sports
Complex.
So
so
we
will
be
able
to
provide
the
inner-city
kids
the
opportunity
that
that
some
of
our
urban
partners
get
to
participate
in
they'll
be
able
to
go
to
tournaments
and
things.
B
And
it
is
home
ownership
month
we
have
some
people
here,
Department
of
Housing
and
Urban
Development
come
over
to
remind
us
and
one
of
the
messages
today
and
we
all
know
what
homeownership
is.
One
of
the
messages
is
financial
literacy
and
the
need
of
providing
financial
literacy
to
people
who
might
be
in
the
market
of
a
home
what
responsibilities
they
take
on.
We
have
a
proclamation
that
will
introduce
that
item
and
then
we'll
hear
more
about
that,
whereas.
E
The
city
of
Oklahoma
City
recognizes
that
home
ownership
instills
a
greater
sense
of
community
pride,
enhances
Public
Safety
builds
personal
financial
security
and
stabilizes
neighborhoods
braz.
Each
year,
national
homeownership
month
is
celebrated
in
the
United
States
to
promote
the
benefits
of
owning
and
investing
in
a
home.
E
B
Your
appreciation
to
the
Department
of
Housing
and
Urban,
although
and
I
you
know
I
guess
I
knew
individually.
You
did
all
these
things,
but
these
are
valuable
services,
homebuyer,
education,
foreclosure
prevention,
downpayment
assistant,
housing,
rehabilitation,
weatherization,
energy
efficiency,
handicap
accessibility,
affordable
housing,
construction
and
fair
housing
programs.
Those
are
all
necessary
to
having
a
nice
community.
So
thank
you
for
what
you're
doing
and
what
can
we
do
to
encourage
financial
literacy
in
this
area?
B
I
J
J
I
B
All
right
we're
on
item
three
of
the
council
agenda
series
of
appointments,
I'll,
look
for
a
motion.
All
right
cast
your
vote.
It
passes
unanimously
item
four:
is
the
Journal
of
council
proceedings
for
aides
to
receive
the
journal
for
June
13th
for
V
is
to
approve
the
journal
for
both
May
30th
and
June
6
comments
or
questions
on
the
Journal.
All
right,
two
votes
it
passes
unanimously
and
item
5
is
requests
for
uncontested,
continuances
mayor.
B
Right,
any
other
requests
move
on
to
item
6.
This
is
revocable
permits.
The
first
is
a
an
effort
from
the
Oklahoma
City
Riverfront
Redevelopment
Authority,
and
the
OKC
X
cycle
Club
and
hosting
the
Oklahoma
River
Trail
relay
this
would
be
August
13th.
Is
there
anyone
here
representing
this
event,
come
on
forward
good
morning,
we'll
need
your
name
and
address
names.
L
David
Redken
1,
0,
2,
5,
Cambridge,
Court
I
actually
live
in
Moore
Oklahoma,
but
the
OKC
X
cycle
club
is
based
out
of
celestial
cycles
up
on
Hefner
Road
and
we've
partnered
with
the
city
of
Oklahoma
City
and
the
Riverfront
Redevelopment
Authority
to
have
an
event
using
the
river
trail
system.
All
the
way
from
Overholser,
basically
down
to
the
boathouse
and
back
and
half
of
those
proceeds
will
go
to
the
river.
The
Redevelopment
Authority,
as
well
as
the
OKC
X
Cycling
Club,
wonderful.
B
Is
there
a
motion
cast
your
votes
passed
unanimously?
Thank
you.
Thanks
for
doing
that
item,
6
a
2
is
a
revocable
permit
with
that
same
organization.
But
it's
a
companion
item.
So
we'll
just
need
a
motion
to
confirm
it
cast
your
vote.
It
passed
unanimously
in
item
6b
is
a
request
from
Prodigal
to
hold
the
2017
downtown.
The
4th,
fest
and
billy
walton
is
here
good
morning.
Billy
we'll
need
your
name
and
address
for
the
record.
Billy
Weldon.
M
M
With
the
boathouse
foundation,
there
will
be
their
full
programming
and
that
they
will
actually
extend
on
into
the
night
to
where
people
can
watch
fireworks
on
kayaks
and
pontoon
boats
and
actually
in
the
the
river
sport
rapids
as
well.
Of
course,
the
main
event
will
be
the
fireworks
show
that
will
produce.
We
have
a
new
location
for
that
this
year
it
will
be
just
south
west
of
the
Oklahoma
right
to
the
west
of
Lincoln.
M
B
Well,
everybody
should
enjoy
the
river
at
least
one
that
every
summer
so
go
down,
July
4th
and
be
a
part
of
Protocol's
2017
downtown
4th
fest
thanks
for
coming
down
letting
us
know.
Thank
you.
Is
there
a
motion?
It's
in
Ward
7
jump
cast
your
votes.
It
passes
unanimously.
Thank
you
all
very
much
thanks,
Billy
or
assess
the
council
meeting
convene
is
the
Oklahoma
City
Municipal
facilities
authority.
There
are
six
items
here
all
right.
B
All
right,
we
have
a
motion
in
a
second
any
comments
or
questions
on
the
PPA.
All
right
cast
your
votes.
It
passes
unanimously.
Well,
it's
you're
in
the
OCP
PA
convene
at
the
Oklahoma
City
environmental
assistance
trust
all
right.
We
have
a
motion
and
a
second
comments
or
questions
on
the
EA
T.
All
right
cast
your
votes.
It
passes
unanimously,
we'll
adjourn
the
OCE,
80
and
reconvene
the
council
meeting
with
the
consent.
Docket
all
right.
Are
there
any
individual
considerations.
N
This
is
our
second
time
to
send
out
a
request
for
proposals
for
the
old
city
jail
which
is
located
at
200
North
Shore
tell
I
just
wanted
to
bring
attention
to
that
and
see
if
we
might
get
some
interesting
possibilities
received
by
the
office
and
I
did
just
want
to
ask
the
question.
I
visited
a
little
bit
with
a
manager
about
it.
Whether
or
not
this
location
might
be
a
possibility
for
our
family
justice
center.
We
are
in
the
process
of
looking
for
a
location
near
to
the
downtown
police
campus
and
that,
yes,
a
permanent.
B
N
D
N
A
thought
7x
I
see
a
number
of
our
friends
here
from
the
Kiwanis
Club
Steve
Lawson,
and
a
number
of
the
three
would
you
all
stand
up
if
you've
been
working
on
this
project,
ASA
Highsmith,
new
Ward,
six
planning
commissioners
been
doing
architectural
work
and
the
Kiwanis
are
working
on
a
have
been
for
many
many
years,
an
Early
Childhood
Center
associated
originally
with
Mark
Twain's
elementary
school.
It
goes
back
for
many
many
years
that
their
club
is
supported
this
and
with
our
health
through
a
Community
Development
Block
Grant,
Community
Development
Block
Grant
funds.
N
They
will
be
building
a
brand
new
facility
and
the
other
partners
involved
in
this
are
that
in
as
much
foundation,
Starkey
foundation,
miners
foundation,
Gaylord
foundation,
the
David
McLaughlin
trust.
It's
about
a
two
million
dollar
project
to
help
support
children
from
birth
through
kindergarten
and
I
wanted
to
recognize
that
their
hard
work
in
this
project
7ry
is
a
grant
for
our
moving
ahead
for
progress
in
the
21st
century,
grant
which
will
help
provide
alternative
transportation
projects
and
authorizing
some
matching
funds
on
north
13th,
Street
and
Sheridan
through
this
map-21
project
and
finally,
7
v.
N
B
B
B
They
any
individual
considerations,
all
right,
catch,
your
votes,
it
passes
unanimously
and
we're
on
to
item
9.
These
are
items
that
require
a
separate
vote,
we'll
start
with
a
series
of
zoning
cases.
The
first
is
an
ABC
issue
in
Ward
3,
the
address
is
1
to
3,
to
0
the
Northwest
10th
Street
Larry.
Thank.
O
P
Your
honor
I'm
Ellen's,
propolis,
3200,
North,
West,
20th,
Street,
Oklahoma,
City
and
I'm
counsel
for
the
applicant
HOA
restaurant
holder.
This
is
at
it
check,
call
Crossing
at
the
Oklahoma
City
Yukon
Line,
it's
part
of
a
large
commercial
development.
This
will
be
one
of
the
many
restaurants
that
will
be
out
there.
This
will
be
a
hooters
and
so
they're
seeking
ABC
to
overlay
in
order
to
develop
that
as
a
Hooters
concept.
Restaurant
thank.
O
B
Right,
we
have
a
motion
in
a
second
cast,
your
vote.
It
passed
unanimously
check
item
9a
to
is
a
zoning
case
in
Ward
1.
It's
at
one,
one,
six,
one,
one
royal
coach,
Drive!
It's
currently
are
four
general
residential
and
several
other
zoning
classifications.
It
would
be
faulted
into
a
new
PUD.
James
has.
Q
Anybody
signed
up
well,
okay.
Well,
this
is
a
down
zoning
from
mainly
R
4
and
C
3,
with
a
little
bit
of
r1
and
AAA
in
it
it's
the
base.
Zoning
is
r2.
It
allows
for
duplexes
in
three
or
four
family
homes,
but
I
think
for
the
plan
is
actually
it's
all
duplexes.
So
I
think
this
is
good
for
the
long
term
of
this
area,
because
it's
getting
rid
of
the
r4
and
the
c3
in
the
middle
of
a
VAE
mainly
are
one
area.
So
nobody
else
assigned
up
I'll
move
for
approval.
B
Q
R
You
counseling
mayor
members
of
the
council,
I'm
Eric
groves
I'm
attorney
for
the
applicant
Ken
Magee
a
little
bit
of
background
on
this.
If
you
look
on
the
screen,
you'll
see
that
to
the
immediate
South,
the
subject:
property's
PUD
8
1
3
back
in
2002,
Dennis
box
and
I
negotiated
that
PUD
and
it
has
been
in
place
ever
since
it
has
not
built
out.
It
is
owned
by
my
client
mr.
Magee
has
decided
to
in
effect,
extend
that
PUD
to
the
north.
R
So
if
you
see
the
subject,
property
you'll
see
that
there's
a
road
that
will
come
off
of
route
66
go
through
PUD,
8,
1,
3
and
access
the
new
PUD
PUD.
A
1/3
is
scheduled
for
a
mixed-use
development.
It
will
be
involved
commercial
and
some
offices.
My
client
will
build
his
new
office
there
and
the
subject.
Property
will
be
much
in
the
same
thing.
We
will
not
need
access
to
Northwest
50th
Street.
All
access
will
be
from
that
main
road
that
goes
down
to
66.
R
R
So
there
was
one
thing
about
this
that
the
councilman
referred
to
when
we
filed
this
PUD
staff
suggested
that
we
would
need
to
amend
the
comprehensive
plan
in
order
to
see
it
through
the
comprehensive
plan.
Our
new
plan
put
a
land-use
typology
of
agricultural
preserve
on
the
subject
property.
We
thought
this
was
ill-advised
and
we
moved
to
amend
to
plan
to
change
it.
The
Planning
Commission
heard
two
things:
they
heard
our
putt
application
and
they
heard
our
proposal
to
amend
the
plan.
R
Commission
unanimously
approved
the
application
to
amend
the
plan
and
unanimously
approved
the
PUD,
so
we're
here
to
answer
any
questions
you
might
have
about
it.
The
amendment
to
the
comprehensive
plan
appears
later
on
your
agenda
today
and
you
would
be
receiving
the
resolution
of
the
Planning
Commission
amending
the
plan.
In
fact,
there
may
be
several
of
those
I
know.
I.
Think
David
box
has
one
too.
R
In
any
event,
we
think
this
will
be
a
good
thing
for
the
city
and
will
capture
some
tax
revenues
from
folks
traveling
on
the
highway
that
might
otherwise
go
to
bethany
or
yukon.
So
we
ask
for
your
approval
and
my
client
developers
here.
Should
you
have
questions,
and
so
is
our
engineer,
Jason
questions,
questions.
Q
For
Eric
I
think
this
is
a
good
development
for
a
lot
of
reasons.
He
said
this
is
kind
of
one
of
the
areas
in
Ward
1
that
I've
thought.
Why
is
there
not
development
going
on
in
between
Yukon
and
Bethany,
because
you
Cana
Bethany
both
use
route
66
a
lot
more
than
we
do
there
and
on
that
section,
so
I
think
it's
a
good
development,
and
hopefully
you
get
a
lot
of
tenants
there
as.
B
S
B
All
right,
we
have
a
motion
in
a
second
we're
voting
on
item
9a
for
any
comments
or
questions
from
anyone.
All
right
cast
your
votes.
It
passes
unanimously
item
9
a5
is
a
zoning
case
in
Ward
2
at
1,
0
0,
9,
Northwest,
49th
Street.
It's
currently
our
one
single-family
and
it
would
become
a
new
spud
if
approved
Edie.
B
T
Sign
up
to
speak
well,
this
is
passed
the
Planning,
Commission
and
and
there's
no
protesters.
So
you
take
that
for
what
it's
worth.
We
heard
this
before
this
was
a
where
Chesapeake
came
in
tore
down
a
residential
house
applied
to
put
a
parking
lot
there.
Then
it
and
those
plans
went
away,
Chesapeake
sold
it
now.
You
have
a
new
developer,
also
wants
to
put
surface
parking
lot
where
a
house
once
stood
I
voted
against
it,
then
I
don't
see
how
I
could
vote
for
it
today.
T
U
U
When
we
sat
out
on
this,
you
know
we
had
a
lot
of
history
on
this
site
as
you
referenced,
so
one
of
the
first
things
we
advised
our
client
was,
we
got
to
go
talk
to
the
neighbors
one
of
the
reasons
that
it
failed.
Last
time
was,
we
didn't,
have
neighborhood
support,
they
were
against
it
and
they
had
a
lot
of
problems
with
it
and
you
know
time
has
passed,
and
so
we
went
and
sat
down
with
them.
U
There
was
some
initial
frustration
and
anger
I
think
once
they
realized
that
my
clients
were
not
Chesapeake
and
were
local
developers,
you
know
they
they
bought
the
entire
thing
from
Chesapeake
and
unfortunately,
this
this
little
piece
has
lagged
behind
it.
So
what
we
did
was
we've
had
out
to
try
to
show
them.
You
tell
us
how
you
want
this
to
look.
Obviously
the
person
most
impacted
is
residents
immediately
to
the
east.
So
what
we
showed
her
was
a
couple
options
of
where
to
put
the
fence
and
ultimately,
what
she
chose
was
she
wanted?
U
The
fence
and
it'll
be
an
8
foot,
solid
masonry
wall.
She
wanted
the
fence
closer
to
the
actual
end
of
pavement
so
that
we
could
landscape.
Essentially,
what
will
look
as
if
it
were
her
yard?
One
of
her
biggest
concerns
was
a
large
tree
right
here,
so
you
can
see
there's
a
little
bump
out
of
of
our
wall
that
will
allow
for
the
retention
of
that
tree.
Additionally,
we
have
included
a
space
for
some
public
art,
but
one
of
the
concerns
the
neighbors
had
was
you
know:
we've
got
hideaway
going
in
here.
U
You
know
a
potential,
restaurant
or
retail
here
and
an
office
building
here.
The
neighbors
certainly
want
this
to
be
successful.
They're
excited
about
hideaway,
but
one
of
the
things
they
want
to
make
sure
is
that
their
homes
are
not
flooded
with
cars
in
front
of
their
houses,
and
so
what
this
allows
us
to
do
is
to
bring
the
cars
into
the
parking
again.
My
clients
weren't
involved
in
the
teardown
had-had
we
started
over.
They
wouldn't
have
done
that,
but
we
are
where
we
are
and
I
think
the
neighbors
finally
acknowledged
that.
U
But
when
we
had
the
you
know,
the
staff
recommend
approval
in
part
because
it's
conforming
with
the
comprehensive
plan,
all
the
neighbors
signed
off
on
it,
Planning
Commission,
was
unanimous
in
their
approval.
Your
Commissioner
missed
ours
was
heavily
involved
in
the
meetings
she
made.
The
motion
to
approve
it
I'm
not
sure
what
legal
basis
would
exist
to
deny
this
again.
This
is
at
this
point
the
will
of
the
neighbors
Planning
Commission
was
unanimous.
T
Commend
you
for
reaching
out
to
the
neighbors
I
mean
I've
talked
to
them
as
well.
It
sounds
like
they
are
not
happy,
but
not
going
to
protest
either.
I
mean
the
same,
the
same
objections
and
we
look
at
it.
David
it's
it's
ugly.
It's
not
it's
a
it's!
So
much
surface
parking
lot
and
I
agree
with
you
and
I.
U
Sure
now
this
you,
the
only
piece
that
we're
talking
about
today,
is
right
here,
I
understand
and
this
we
actually
baked
into
the
the
PUD
the
ability
to
reduce
our
parking.
If
we
engage
in
that
commercial
scheme
and
it
will
be
heavily
landscape,
this
doesn't
reflect
all
the
landscaping
that
will
actually
be
here
because
that's
not
we're
talking
about,
but
my
client
understanding,
the
you
know.
U
My
clients
actually
are
the
developers
of
the
Shark
Tale
Plaza,
just
north
and
east
of
here,
so
they've
got
deep
local
roots
and
they're
doing
everything
they
can
to
get
past
or
have
some
of
the
errors
that
were
made
by
the
previous
landowner.
I
think
they
were
frankly
unaware
of
what
those
problems
were.
Mr.
B
S
B
N
You
here
this
is
also
an
ordinance
on
final
hearing
where
there
were
no
protest.
The
applicant
is
City
care
and
this
is
an
opportunity
to
continue
to
build
out
their
campus.
If
you
will,
it
adds
three
duplexes
for
mothers
with
children.
We'll
have
some
commercial
mixed
use
in
part
space.
Is
there
anybody
here
that
find
out
this
resembles
no.
B
N
I
am
there.
This
is
in
the
plaza
district
and
we're
looking
at
two
things:
we're
men,
the
master
design
statement
that
eliminates
drinking
establishments,
so
it
it
can
be
a
restaurant
that
serves
alcohol,
but
it
cannot
be
a
bar,
and
it
also
then
recommends
approval
for
the
SPD
956.
Is
anybody
here
to
speak
on
the
item?
Sam
Gresham
I
think
is
a
developer.
N
N
B
All
right
cast
your
votes
on
nine
seat.
It
passes
unanimously
item
90
is
an
ordinance
up
today
that
was
recommended
for
denial.
Its
it
has
been
been
deferred
until
July
5th.
So
two
weeks
move
on
to
item
9
e.
This
request,
as
men
stricken
from
the
agenda
today,
is
that
correct,
oh
I,
missed
192
is
a
sign
issue
in
Ward
3
at
six
one
through
North,
Rockwell,
Thank,
You,
Larry
I
skipped
over
you.
Sorry
about
that.
Thank.
O
U
David
box
taught
you
to
caulk
or
drive
here
on
behalf
the
applicants
there
also
with
me
here
this
morning.
This
is
a
spud
application
to
allow
an
EMV
signed.
It
will
be
an
accessory
sign.
It's
not
a
billboard.
When
my
client
wouldn't
own
this
property,
they
agreed
to
some
technical
evaluations
that
they
were
unaware
of
the
consequences
of.
So,
if
you
look
at
what
I'm
handing
out
now,
what
we
did
was
take
a
survey
of
the
area
and
what
you
find
is
reader
board
signs
for
accessory
businesses
are
quite
common
in
the
area.
U
Additionally,
you'll
see
signs
that
greatly
exceed
what
we
request,
which
is
20
feet.
There
is
an
error
in
the
staff
report
that
I
need
to
correct.
It
says
that
we
are
requesting
two
signs.
This
is
just
for
one
sign,
so
what
would
it
would
allow
is
to
all
the
users
remain
intact,
but
allow
one
20-foot
sign
that
would
allow
an
EMV
reader
board
just
for
the
business
on
this
site.
Again,
it's
not
a
billboard
whatsoever.
It's
just
an
accessory
sign,
consistent
in
common
with
what
you
see
any
exhibits
that
I've
handed
out.
U
I'm
not
sure,
but,
as
you
may
or
may
not
know,
every
single
staff
report
that
goes
to
Planning
Commission,
no
matter
what
the
request
is,
has
a
boilerplate
teehee
that
requests
a
sign
to
be
8
foot
tall
and
so
I
have
found
several
instances
over
the
last
several
years
where
applicants
might
come
before
the
Planning
Commission,
not
really
understanding.
All
they
see
is
a
recommendation
for
approval
from
staff,
and
they
don't
understand
what
those
evaluations
below
me
here.
It
had
significant
consequences.
U
I've
got
another
one
on
214
shields,
where
we
had
a
50-foot
sign
that
they
erected
because
they
thought
they
had
the
right,
but
the
spud
had
that
that
eight-foot
language
and
so
that
that's
what
I'm
referring
to
I,
don't
know
that
they
understood
the
consequences
of.
Do
you
agree
with
staff
a
lot
of
times?
That's
the
question
we
have.
We
agree
with
staff
because
it
says
recommendation
for
approval.
It
may
not
agree
with
those
comments
that
are
subject
to
the
recommendation,
but
that's
where
the
key
so.
U
O
Any
further
questions
from
the
council
as
soon
as
anybody
sign
up
the
protest
there
were
no
protests
are
at
the
Planning
Commission
meeting.
The
Planning
Commission
did
vote
for
denial.
Okay
and
the
staff
recommendation
had
that
denial,
but
in
looking
at
the
layout
of
this
area
and
what
the
applicant
intends
to
do
with
it,
I'd
like
to
move
for
approval
so
which
to
what
do
I
need
to
do
bugs
Thank.
O
B
Q
U
O
B
Alright
item
9
e
had
to
do
with
hotel
taxes
and
that's
been
struck
from
the
agenda
move
on
to
item
9
F,
and
this
starts
the
part
of
the
meeting.
We
will
discuss
both
the
general
obligation
on
authorization
election
and
the
general
fund
sales
tax
elections,
we're
going
to
start
with
the
geo
bond
issue
on
item
9
F,
and
this
first
resolution
would
call
the
special
election
for
September
12th,
and
the
second
item
would
be
for
the
proclamation
and
the
actual
bond
itself.
Is
there
anyone
here
hoping
to
speak
on
the
bond
issue?
B
Today
we
had
the
public
hearing
last
time,
so
it
doesn't
surprise
me
that
no
one
is
is
here
today
to
speak
specifically
on
those
items.
Are
there
comments
from
counsel
before
I?
Look
for
a
motion
on
9f
all
right
cast
your
votes
item
9
f
passes
unanimously.
Is
there
a
motion
on
9
G
cast
your
vote?
It
passed
unanimously
all
right
item.
9
H
is
the
part
of
the
council
meeting
where
we
will
discuss
the
general
fund
sales
tax
election.
B
And
I
think
there
might
be
some
discussion
here
so
who
wants
to
get
that
started
from
the
council
perspective
or
do
want
to
hear
from
people
first?
Would
that
be
better
all
right?
Does
anyone
here
today
hoping
to
speak
on
item
9
H?
This
is
the
sales
tax
election
that
the
council
is
considering,
calling
for
September
all
right
looks
like
it's
up.
B
T
Very
disappointed,
very
ashamed
of
what
we're
putting
forth
today.
I,
look
I
was
very
excited
about
this
for
a
long
period
of
time.
I
think
we're
coming
up
very,
very
short:
I
love
the
prayer
this
morning
and
I
want
to
find
that
guy
and
find
that
because
he
started
out
with
do
all
the
good
that
you
can
for
as
many
people
as
you
can,
and
these
decisions
to
distribute
this
much
money
is
really
it.
T
T
So,
at
the
last
minute
we've
decided
to
add
another
quarter:
penny
25
million
dollars
a
year
with
no
public
process
whatsoever.
No
public
deliberation
by
an
outside
third-party
it
didn't
come
from
us,
didn't
come
from
the
mayor
or
council,
and
it
had
no
public
deliberation
at
all
and
it
was
done
at
the
last
minute.
So
there
are
three
problems
with
it
and
then
one
overarching
problem
number
one
is
it's
arbitrary.
We
have
had
two
workshops
and
we've
had
two
council
meetings,
and
this
is
our
third.
T
We
talked
for
months
about
a
hundred
and
eighty
million
dollars
for
streets
on
top
of
the
hundred
and
fifty
million
dollars
in
the
2007
bond
for
streets
that
have
not
yet
been
completed,
ten
years
later,
and
five
hundred
million
dollars
for
streets
in
the
September
election
on
the
bond.
So
that's
eight
hundred
and
thirty
million
dollars
for
streets.
T
Now
we're
saying
we
need
another,
sixty
million
or
eight
hundred
and
ninety
million
dollars
so
to
me
that
the
getting
the
the
morale
getting
the
greatest
good
for
the
greatest
number
of
people
for
that
extra,
sixty
million
has
to
be
considered
with
you
already
having
eight
hundred
and
thirty
million
dollars.
So
is
sixty
million
more
for
streets
when
you
already
have
eight
hundred
and
thirty
million
dollars
more
impact
on
society
again
for
putting
that
quarter
towards
schools
or
transit
or
parks
or
take
your
pick,
I
mean
I.
T
T
Second
thing
is
it's
uncommitted:
for
decades
the
voters
on
streets
have
had
every
street
listed
on
the
bond
and
they
know
what
the
City
Council
is
then
going
to
do,
and
the
City
Council
has
to
execute
that
plan
and
do
those
Street
projects
that
the
voters
voted
on
and
you
can't
vary
your
course.
You
have
some
unlisted
funds,
but
the
bulk
of
it
is
committed.
Now
you're
talking
about
a
two
hundred
and
forty
million
dollar
fund,
a
quarter
of
a
billion
dollars
that
is
uncommitted.
T
It's
not
going
to
go
through
the
maps
office
like
previous
maps.
It's
going
to
just
go
through
Public,
Works,
I,
guess
and
every
single
developer
will
be
cut,
will
be
pounding
on
the
door
of
public
words
to
get
a
piece
of
that
240
million
dollars.
I,
don't
understand
the
process
for
how
that
240
million
dollars
is
going
to
be
decided.
Is
it
going
to
be
per
ward?
Is
it
going
to
be
it's
just
it's
two
uncommitted
I
mean
there
has
to
be.
T
This
is
a
major
policy
departure
from
the
way
we've
done
it
for
decades
in
the
city
and
it's
just
too
big
of
a
pot
of
money
that
is
not
committed
to
specific
projects.
Third,
it's
a
tax
increase
and
we
people
were
adamant
in
the
workshops
adamant
that
we
could
not
increase
the
mill
levy
that
traditionally
streets
are
handled
with
property
tax.
We
know
that
Tulsa
is
running
their
mill,
eleven
twenty
four
twenty
four
and
we're
at
sixteen
they're
fifty
percent
higher
than
us,
but
everyone
seemed
to
have
consistence.
T
We
cannot
have
a
tax
increase,
and
yet
here
we
are
not
using
a
part,
an
increase
in
property
tax,
but
increasing
sales
tax,
which
we
need
because
of
this
unique
situation
that
we're
in
an
Oklahoma
were
dependent
on
sales
tax
for
operations.
So
we're
increasing
our
sales
tax
to
pay
for
something
that's
traditionally
been
paid
for
with
property
tax.
I
can't
understand
that.
T
But
here's
the
overarching
issue
and
I
think
that
the
the
focus
of
the
campaign
has
now
changed.
For
me.
For
me,
it
is
now
a
referendum
on
the
process
or
the
Chamber
of
Commerce
to
come
in
with
one
week
to
go
where
there's
no
wiggle
room,
there's
no,
you
only
have
a
week
and
to
say
we
want
this
to
increase
by
sixty
million
dollars.
T
We
want
a
sixty
million
dollar
tax
increase
and
only
give
us
and
the
public
seven
days
to
think
about
it
and
now
to
vote
on
it,
and
we
this
we
have
to
vote
on
it
today.
This
is
last
day
we
can
vote
on
it.
That
seems
by
design
to
make
it
for
the
last
minute.
I
can't
believe
that
this
just
was
thought
of.
In
the
in
the
last
week,
and
so
to
me
that
the
largest
issue-
and
this
extends
past
the
City
Council-
this
extends
to
the
county
to
the
school
districts
school
board.
T
If
anybody
wants
to
pass
any
tax
initiative
or
they
want
to
present
tax
initiative
to
the
people
of
Oklahoma
City,
you
must
go
to
the
Chamber
of
Commerce
to
run
the
campaign
to
do
the
TV
ads
and
the
polling,
the
polling,
that
only
they
get
to
see
the
public
doesn't
get
to
see
the
polling,
the
radio
ads,
the
the
whole
campaign.
What
that
does
is
it
gives
the
Chamber
of
Commerce
veto
power
over
everything
that
is
presented
to
the
people
of
Oakland
City.
T
Other
cities
in
America
do
not
do
it.
This
way,
others
sit.
Large
cities
in
America
are
not
completely
reliant
for
every
branch
of
government
to
go
through
the
Chamber
of
Commerce
to
run
their
campaigns.
It's
just
not
how
it's
done.
That's
a
unique
that's
unique
to
Oklahoma
City,
maybe
not
completely
unique,
but
it's
we're
an
outlier
and
I.
Don't
think!
That's
I,
don't
think
that's
acceptable!
Q
Q
One
question
is:
do
I
believe
that
we
need
to
raise
taxes
on
people
who
buy
things
in
Oklahoma
City
and
that's
a
if
that
is
a
yes
and
a
no
answer
for
maybe
I
the
yes
part
is
yes,
we
do
need
to
raise
the
permanent
tax,
so
we
can
properly
fund
police
fire
and
other
city
city
needs
on
a
continual
basis,
and
so
that's
where
the
quarter
cent
comes
in.
The
second
question
is:
do
we
need
to
raise
the
temporary
tax
or
do
we
need
to
leave
the
temporary
tax
at
a
full
penny?
Q
Like,
like
Ed
said,
it
is
an
arbitrary
number,
I,
don't
think,
there's
any
sort
of
magic
in
the
one
full
penny.
If
we
did
match-three
right
now
with
three
quarters
of
a
penny,
it
would
be
six
hundred
million
dollars
and
I
still
think
that
we
can
do
transformative
projects
with
that
three
quarters
of
a
penny,
and
so
for
me,
I.
W
W
In
my
opinion,
what
I'm
tasked
with
is
trying
to
present
the
best
plan
that
we
possibly
can
for
our
constituents
to
vote
on
and
I
trust.
My
constituents
trust
that
they're
going
to
look
into
whatever
it
is
the
final
proposition
today
and
I
think
they
will
do
the
right
thing
for
them
and
I
trust
that
they'll
make
a
wise
decision.
I.
Think
it's
a
good
plan.
Moving
forward,
I'm
going
to
support
it.
W
D
O
You,
your
honor,
just
a
few
brief
comments
as
they
pertain
to
Ward
3.
The
citizens
of
Ward
3
have
been
very
vehement
in
their
and
very
consistent
in
their
desire
for
two
things:
one
to
improve
the
road
conditions
in
Ward
3
and
a
considerable
number
of
miles
in
Ward
3
are
on
the
outlying
area
or
artillery
streets
arterial
streets,
except
we
need
either
widening
and
and
fixing
or
just
fixing
through
resurfacing.
O
The
second
thing
in
Ward
3
is
a
continuing
effort
to
a
desire
for
more
police
presence
throughout
the
area
and,
as
the
population
increases,
the
need
for
police
in
that
area
also
increase
and
the
quarter
cent
sales
tax
dedicated
to
expanding
police
capability
is
definitely
consistent
with
the
desires
of
Ward
3
residents
as
I
interpreted,
but
therefore
I'm
going
to
support
the
plan.
Also,
thank
you.
Your
honor.
G
Well,
first
of
all,
it's
it's
say
this
boat
that
we
as
a
council
take
will
provide
for
an
election
and
it's
an
election
that
will
be
decided
upon
the
voters
of
Oklahoma
City.
So
that's
all
that
we're
doing
is
presenting
an
opportunity
for
the
citizens
of
Oklahoma
City,
just
like
they
did
back
in
the
early
90s
to
assess
themselves
a
quarter
of
a
pick,
a
cent
tax
to
improve
the
city
services.
Now
they've
got
a
choice.
G
They
can
decide
yes
or
no,
but
all
we're
doing
is
providing
an
opportunity
for
them
to
make
that
decision
and
I
do
think
the
way
this
is
now
structured.
It
could
be
as
transformational
for
the
city
as
the
Maps
program
was
in
the
early
90s.
What
are
we
asking
for
from
the
citizens?
So
wouldn't
the
city
when
a
citizen
goes
out
and
purchases
$100
worth
of
groceries?
If
this
tax
passes,
they'll
pay,
$100,
plus
25
cents
a
quarter,
that's
the
amount
of
increase
that
we're
talking
about
for
every
hundred
dollars
of
expenditures.
G
G
I
think
the
level
of
dissatisfaction
that
is
growing
among
the
citizens
of
Oklahoma
City
towards
public
safety,
but
that's
usually
not
that
that
is
not
voiced
as
much
as
the
conditions
of
the
roads
and
I
asked
city
manager
couch
to
get
a
estimate
from
Director
of
Public
Services
on
what
the
cost
would
be
just
to
bring
the
arterial
streets
up
to
Jim
as
at
a
PCI.
Is
that
the
term
that
we
talked
about
to
like
an
80%
leveled
and
that
was
close
to
a
billion
dollars.
G
So
it's
not
science
Edie,
but
there's
justification
for
that
much
to
be
allocated
towards
streets
and
roads,
and
that
was
an
estimate
that
was
provided
a
year
ago.
I,
don't
think
that
number
has
gone
down.
I
would
suspect
it's
gone
up
since
that
time,
and
certainly,
as
we'll
see
councilman,
Stonecipher
and
McAtee
on
their
proposals
for
the
commitment
for
public
safety.
This
is
going
to
give
additional
assurance
to
the
public
that
their
additional
25
cents
for
every
hundred
dollars
of
expenditures
will
allow
us
to
put
additional
police
officers.
G
Additional
firefighters
increase
the
number
of
fire
stations
out
in
our
community,
and
it
is
something
they
want
so
final
statement,
unlike
we've
seen
the
past
couple
years
at
the
state
legislature,
where
the
public
has
voiced
support
for
additional
funding
for
education,
additional
funding
for
healthcare,
additional
funding
for
Public,
Safety
and
yet
they've
ignored
it
not
addressed
it.
We
are
at
least
addressing
it
and
putting
it
before
the
public
to
let
them
make
the
final
decision.
G
N
You
get
this
far
down
the
horse,
she
would
squirt
to
say
a
lot
of
new
things,
but
I
want
to
try,
because
I
I
concur
with
most
of
the
things
that
were
said
here
today
is
I,
might
talk
just
a
little
bit
about
process
and
we
do
have
a
process.
I
think
that
works
extremely
well
and
I
want
to
give
councilmen
former
councilman
Pat
Ryan
credit
for
it.
We
used
to
introduce
these
things
and
vote
on
in
the
same
day
ever
introduced,
and
we
don't
do
that
anymore.
N
We
introduce
something
at
the
following
meeting,
which
is
typically,
two
weeks
later.
We
have
a
public
hearing
which
we
had
last
week
and
then
or
two
weeks
ago
last
week
last
week,
and
then
today
you
know
we're
in
a
place
to
take
action
during
the
course
of
that
process.
We
listen
to
citizens
and
we
frequently
make
changes
to
what's
been
introduced
when
we
hear
additional
facts
or
when
additional
information
comes
to
light,
so
I
do
think.
We've
had
process
I
personally
have
had
many
citizens
over
the
course
of
this
discussion.
N
Talk
to
me
about
the
magic
of
maps
it
is,
it
has
been
the
single
star
that
has
been
transformational
in
this
community
over
the
last
25
years
and
part
of
if
magic
is
the
penny
and
part
of
the
magic
is
its
temporary
nature,
and
so
I
think
there
is
a
lot
of
validity
in
maintaining
that
penny
and
allowing
a
citizen
to
vote
on
a
regular
basis.
Whether
or
not
we
want
to
continue
that
penny
checks.
To
my
mind,
I've
tried
to
look
at
how
we
raise
revenue.
N
I
do
believe
our
world
has
changed
and
that
sales
tax
revenues
will
not
rise
back
to
the
level
that
they
were
in
the
past
and,
as
David
said
so
well,
the
state
has
ignored
raising
revenue.
Many
of
us
were
supportive
of
the
state
looking
at
different
ways
to
raise
revenue
and
and
I
came
to
the
realization
myself.
If
I
was
encouraging
the
state
to
do
that,
and
I
recognized
a
need
for
extra
police
and
fire.
We
probably
ought
to
be
courageous
enough
to
talk
about
raising
some
permanent
funding
for
police
and
fire
as
well.
N
So
that's
I
think
where
I
am
on
this
and
to
go
back
to
what
I
was
saying
earlier.
I
think
we
need
to
match
revenue
with
what
those
expenditures
represent.
We
can't
expect
to
fund
additional
police
and
fire
with
temporary
tax
I
believe
a
permanent
increase
in
the
number
of
personnel
needs
to
be
matched
with
permanent
revenue
sources
and
then
those
things
that
we
traditionally
have
funded
through
the
penny
we
identify
projects.
N
In
this
case
we've
identified
this
concept
of
Complete
Streets
as
our
main
focus
and
that's
a
27
month,
commitment
by
this
resolution
at
the
end
of
27
months,
our
citizens
may
say
we
don't
want
to
do
that
again.
They
may
say
here's
another
list
of
projects
that
we
think
would
be
transformational
for
our
community
and
they
have
the
opportunity
to
vote
for
that
again.
So
I
think
this
is
an
opportunity
to
match
revenue
with
expenditures
and
the
types
of
projects
fix
it
the
better.
A
Right
Thank
You
mr.
mayor
I
do
believe
this
is.
This
is
a
step
in
the
right
direction.
Streets
and
public
safety
are
the
major
issues
that
residents
of
Ward
7
are
concerned
about,
and
so
again
I
do
believe.
This
is
a
step
in
the
right
direction.
I
do
believe
we
need
to
somehow
figure
out.
How
can
we
get
to
that
magic
number
that
the
FOP
is
requesting?
I
do
believe
that
we
need
to
figure
out
a
way
how
to
get
to
that
magic
number
that
the
fire
department's
requesting
and
I
I
do.
A
We
have
to
I
do
believe
that
we
have
to
figure
something
out
long
term,
as
well
as
a
short
turn,
I
hope,
one
day
that
we
can
get
to
where
we
don't
have
to
take
rigs
out
of
service
and
I
believe
this
is
kind
of
the
moving
in
to
the
right
direction.
I
do
want
to
do
appreciate
dr.
Shadid,
bringing
up
the
simple
fact
of
education.
We
need
to
do
something
with
education.
A
Is
that
the
City
Council's
role
to
get
involved
in
education
there
I,
don't
know,
and
now
granted
we
did
napster
kids
and
maps
for
kids
was
supposed
to
transform
the
school
system.
It
was
for
us
to
transform
Oklahoma
City
Public
Schools,
but
unfortunately
we
built
nice
buildings,
but
the
needle
for
is
offering
quality
education.
A
Our
lease
in
northeast
Oklahoma
City
that
never
happened.
The
school
district
never
moved
the
needle
and
so
I
kind
of
have
mixed
views
for
sports
education.
I
do
believe
we
got
to
do
something
because
we
are
losing
teachers
after
teachers,
because
the
lack
of
pay,
but
is
it
the
the
city's
role
to
get
involved
in
that
you
know,
I
have
I,
have
mixed
emotions.
A
I
do
believe
that
is
a
responsibility
of
the
school
district
in
the
state
of
Oklahoma,
but
what
role
the
council,
the
city
we
should
play
and
that
I
just
you
know,
I
just
don't
know
I
do
believe
we
need,
are
more
discussions
as
it
relates
to
education,
but
again
I
do
believe.
This
is
the
step
in
the
right
direction.
S
I've
always
been
a
neighborhood
guy,
I
want
to
look
out
for
the
neighborhood
I
want
to
help
the
neighborhood
and
I
think
that's.
What
brought
me
here
in
the
first
place
was
I
was
the
president
of
the
homeowners
association
that
had
some
issues
and
and
dealt
with
bat
Ryan
on
the
City
Council
to
deal
with
the
problems?
S
They
have
a
community
pool,
we
met
outside
there,
we
all
sat
down,
and
we
started
talking
about
the
problem
that
they
were
having
and
trying
to
figure
out
how
to
deal
with
it,
but
it
all
went
back
to
as
it
always
does,
because
about
every
three
or
four
weeks
we're
all
in
HOA
meeting
it
went
back
to
the
same
thing.
What
are
you
gonna
do
about
our
roads?
What
are
you
going
to
do
about
the
police
and
what
are
you
going
to
do
about
fire?
S
And
when
we
have
articles
that
say
we
are
the
ten
one
of
the
one
of
the
top
10
worst
pothole
cities
in
America.
It's
time
we
do
something
and
the
one
thing
that
I've
learned
through
this
process.
It's
the
first
time,
I
went
through
a
geo
bond
process
is
that
we
have
to
do
that.
It's
it's
it's
necessary,
it's
mandatory,
but
it
so
slow.
It
takes
so
long
to
the
Geo
bond
process
to
get
things
done,
and
this
is
a
unique
opportunity.
S
It
is
a
wonderful
opportunity
for
us
to
give
something
back
to
our
our
residential,
neighborhoods
and
I've
heard
it
called
maps
for
neighborhoods
I've
heard
it
called
road
maps.
I've
heard
it
called
maps
for
roads,
immunity,
hand,
enhancement,
community,
revitalization,
I,
don't
care
what
you
call
it.
S
This
is
an
opportunity
to
let
our
voters
decide
on
if
they
want
to
keep
maps
moving
forward
if
they
want
a
new
renaissance
for
their
neighborhoods.
This
is
something
for
everybody.
Not
only
will
our
downtown
thrive
through
this,
but
our
neighborhoods
will
thrive
and
that's
why
I'm
supporting
it.
Thank
you
appreciate.
B
X
Harriet
order,
624,
North,
West,
19th
Street
I,
certainly
appreciate
the
comments
of
the
whole
council
today.
X
Five
or
six
I
believe
every
single
year
the
appropriations
for
education
have
fallen
and
I
think
we
in
the
city
are
now
at
a
crisis
point
that
is
new,
since
we
have
had
all
of
the
parks
and
roads
and
other
things
that
are
part
of
maps.
I
think
this
is
a
opportunity
to
jump
in
and
flood
the
dike
really
help
our
Oklahoma
City
Schools
survive.
I
personally
think
it
probably
would
be
better
not
in
the
permanent
quarter
percent,
but
in
the
three-year
maps
proposal.
X
The
some
health
have
some
of
that
money
be
designated
Oklahoma,
City
Schools
to
save
the
schools
right
this
minute.
While
we
have
three
more
years
to
go
back
to
the
legislature
and
say
you
guys
have
got
to
step
up
to
the
plate
and
do
something
different,
but
I
don't
quite
understand
all
of
how
the
financing
gets
arranged
in
one
of
its
permanent.
What
if
it's
not,
but
that
would
be
my
thought
to
do
something
temporary
right,
this
minute,
plug
the
dike
and
then
what
the
people
go
back
and
tell
their
state
legislators.
X
G
Well,
let
me
just
make
this
statement
so
any
funding
that
the
city
of
Oklahoma
City
provides
to
any
school
district,
Oklahoma
City
or
any
of
the
suburban
school
district
increases
local
funding,
which
is
going
to
lower
the
state
funding.
There's
no
ability
to
increase
net
funding
of
school
districts
unless
we
take
over
complete
funding
of
a
school
district
and
rely
on
no
money
from
the
state.
G
Surprisingly
or
maybe
not
when
you
think
about
the
amount
of
real
estate
in
the
surrounding
school
districts,
more
School
District
receives
more
Norman,
School
District
receives
more
state
funding,
Midwest,
City
and
I
think
it
goes
to
show
that
the
city
of
Oklahoma
City
in
the
Oklahoma
City
public
school
district
has
a
larger
amount
of
real
estate
within
it.
Even
though
the
assessment
ratio
is
pretty
low,
it's
generating
more
revenue
from
the
local
community
than
these
other
surrounding
school
districts
are
so
state
funding
is
greater
for
those
surrounding
school
districts.
G
Again,
if
we
come
in
with
any
funding
for
their
operations,
not
capital
budget,
like
maps
for
kids
was
but
operating
funds.
It's
just
going
to
drive
down
the
amount
of
funding
that
the
state
receives.
There's
about
30
school
districts,
the
state
of
Oklahoma
of
the
500
that
receive
almost
zero
state
aid.
G
Certainly,
none
of
the
districts
in
our
area
are
in
that
situation,
but
there
are
some
school
districts
that
do
not
receive
any
state
funds.
We're
not
going
to
be
able
to
increase
net
funding
to
any
school
district
that
falls
within
Oklahoma
City's,
City
Limits,
so
I
just
wanted
to
communicate
that
and
eliminate
that
discussion.
As
far
as
a
possibility
of
us
being
able
to
assist.
Thank
you.
Q
It's
not
about
streets
that
that
whole
idea
is
not
about
streets.
It's
about
the
next
idea.
If
we
were
wanting
it
to
just
be
about
streets
than
what
all
right.
The
amendment
to
our
the
original
idea
would
just
been
to
extend
it
12
months
to
39
months
instead
of
27,
so
it's
not
about
streets
on
keeping
the
penny
whole.
Those
are
two
separate
issues.
Q
Q
If
we
raise
it
0.25.
If
we
raise
our
sales
tax,
our
our
sales
tax
will
be
a
four
point.
One
to
five
I
looked
up
all
the
metro
area
yesterday,
the
only
metro
area
that
would
be
higher
than
us
at
that
point,
I
remember
right
was-
would
be
Piedmont
there
at
5%,
which
seems
like
they're
trying
to
price
themselves
out
of
ever
having
any
retail.
But
right
now
at
3.875
we
are
right
in
the
middle
were
higher
than
more,
but
we're
lower
than
you
Khanh
or
lower
than
edmund.
Q
T
We
ready
to
vote
can
I
can
I
respond
to
David,
I
sure
I
think
this
is
very
dangerous.
What
we're
doing
here
today
and
I've
said
this
for
months.
I
think
this
may
very
well
be
the
end
of
this
form
of
sales
tax
extension
because
we're
not
listening
to
the
people
and
we're
not
including
things
everybody
has
their
anecdotal
experience
right.
T
You
got
180
million,
you
wanted
four
roads
and
then
we
came
up
with
another
quarter
penny
and
we
still
couldn't
find
a
way
to
look
into
whether
what
you're
saying
David
is
right
and
look
at
education,
which
was
number
one
on
the
Chamber's
poll
is
number
one
on
the
poll
I
commissioned
I
mean
that's,
those
are
highly
likely
voters
in
September
and
that's
what's
showing
up
number
one.
Is
education
finding
a
way
to
help
the
crisis
in
Oklahoma,
City
schools
and
also
Public
Safety?
Probably
people
should
realize
that
this
is.
This
is
a
halfway
measure.
T
Chief
city
has
recommended
200
officers,
we're
getting
half
of
that,
and
if
we
were,
if
we
wanted
to
address
it,
we
should
have
just
done
a
dedicated
quarter
for
Public
Safety,
and
then
we
should
have
done
another
quarter
penny
for
operations.
What
the
city
needs
is
operations
dollars.
What
the
school
district
needs
is
operations
dollars.
We
have
ways
to
get
capital,
we
don't
have
ways
to
do
operations
David
every
day,
every
TIF
district
right.
T
We
have
money,
property
tax
that
we
collect,
and
then
we
give
to
Oklahoma
City
Schools
and
it
doesn't
count
against
their
funding
formula,
the
TIF
money
that
we
give
them
ten
millions
and
millions
and
millions
of
dollars
we're
giving
from
our
TIF
districts
Dhokla
City,
Public
Schools.
It
does
not
count
against
their
state,
I
mean
formula
and
funds
are
fungible.
As
you
know,
you
give
some
capital
and
then
that
frees
up
money
for
operations,
but
it's
not
affecting
their
their
funding
formula
in
any
way.
G
D
T
T
Literally,
that
is
very
sarcastic,
but
the
bits
of
the
money
from
tips
goes
to
Oakland,
City
Schools
and
is
separate
and
distinct
from
the
state
funding
formula.
The
state
gives
us
the
ability
to
give
money
to
schools
and
it
not
County
gift
to
state
funding
formula.
That's
part
of
the
TIF
statute
and.
S
I,
don't
think
the
law
is
clear
on
that,
because
I
looked
at
the
funding
formula,
I
looked
at
the
Grimes
case,
I
looked
at
the
Attorney
General's
case
and
and
I
heard
from
others.
That
said
that,
if
we
were
going
to
receive
more
that
school
districts
would
probably
get
in
litigation
with
us
over
it
and
so
I
don't
know.
I
I
want
to
help
the
teachers
I'm.
S
G
It's
quite
clear
on
local
funding.
This
would
be
considered
local
funding.
Any
kind
of
monies
that
the
city
raises
and
contributes
to
their
operating
funds
is
local
funding.
I,
don't
know
how
you
can
get
away
from
that
definition,
yeah
well
and
I'm,
not
supportive
of
it.
I
think
our
system
at
the
state
level
has
a
lot
of
flaws.
Here's
a
great
example
of
where
it
hurts
a
school
district
I'm.
Just
saying
these
are
the
rules
we
have
to
work
with
I
think.
B
B
Right
we're
voting
on
item
9
H.
We
have
a
motion.
Is
there
a
second
all
right
passes
unanimously
item
9
I
would
authorize
the
mayor
to
call
for
the
special
election
on
the
quarter.
Cent
tax
cast
your
votes.
It
passes
unanimously
item
9
Jay
would
call
for
the
special
election
to
be
held.
September
12
for
the
quarter
cent
sales
tax
cast
your
votes
passed
unanimously
and
item
9k
would
notify
the
county
election
board
of
the
September
12th
election
date
of
the
quarter.
Cent
sales
tax.
B
S
Your
honor
Matt
present
an
amendment
I
think
I
handed
this
out
to
everybody.
It's
a
proposed
amendment.
Last
time,
Larry
and
I
submitted
an
amendment
to
the
exhibit
a
we
were
trying
to
give
stronger
language
to
exhibit
a
to
make
sure
that
the
money
went
to
the
first
two
prongs:
first,
which
would
be
leasing
fire
instead
of
the
money
can
be
used.
It
shall
be
used.
S
There
was
some
concern
raised
on
the
horseshoe
about
this
language
and
the
timing
and
in
fact,
an
impact
it
would
have
on
on
the
funding
of
the
third
prong,
and
so
I
asked
Jim,
couch
and
I
asked
Kenny
Jordan
to
take
a
look
at
this,
and
as
a
result
of
that,
there
is
a
proposed
amendment.
That's
been
handed
out
to
you
and
what
it
intends
to
do
is
it
intends
to
make
our
police
our
fire
feel
comfortable
that
this
this
tax
is
going
to
be
devoted
to
them
as
a
priority.
S
Y
Thank
you
sure
we
worked
with
the
city
manager's
office
and
the
finance
director
to
put
this
together,
and
it
does
change,
shall
it
can
shall
so
this?
This
is
counsels
intent
on
how
this
money
shall
be
used,
and
it
probably
were
ties
'as
police
and
fire,
as
councilman
Stonecipher
said,
and
then
it
provides
that
after
the
funding
is
designated
for
items,
1
&
2,
which
is
police
and
fire
to
use
any
additional
revenues
to
also
fund
other
city
general
services
and
also
police
and
fire.
Y
So
when
you
get
into
3,
it
can
be
for
police
and
fire
services,
facilities
and
equipment,
and
also
general
municipal
services
to
address
the
needs
of
the
city.
Then
it
also
provides
a
new
number
for
that's
anticipated
that
the
implementation
of
the
projects
for
police
and
fire
will
take
approximately
three
years
and
that
the
city
is
going
to
develop
a
funding
plan
that
will
be
in
a
place
to
address
those
projects
for
police
and
fire
before
the
services
described
in
paragraph
3
would
be
proceed.
Y
S
Want
our
citizens
to
know
that
we
are
putting
a
great
emphasis
and
a
great
priority
on
police
and
fire
and
I
want
future
council
members
to
know
that
that
was
the
intent
of
what
we
were
doing
and
I
also
want
to
thank
Larry
for
his
suggestion
on
the
third
prong
to
allow
police
and
fire
services
and
facilities
and
equipment
be
included
in
that
3rd
Pronk.
Thank
you,
I
think.
N
N
To
remember
that
you
know
lots.
The
police
and
fire
also
depend
much
greatly
on
other
services
from
our
city.
It
that
you
know,
there's
lots
of
support
required
for
them
to
perform
their
jobs,
and
so
I
want
to
be
sure
through
this,
that
we
recognize
those
ancillary
services
and
that
were
able
to
provide
that
as
well
and.
T
I
think
it's
window
dressing
I
think
it's
I
think
you're
trying
to
give
the
public
the
impression
that
police
and
fire
are
comfortable
I,
don't
think
they
are
being
out
on
their
own.
Now
is
a
tax
increase
I?
Don't
think
that
it
meets
the
needs
that
our
police
chief
says
that
the
city
needs
in
terms
of
200
officers.
We
don't
have
enough
money
for
operations,
it's
kind
of
a
halfway
measure
on
Public
Safety,
and
then
it's
and
then
it
squeezes
the
rest
of
the
city,
but
we're
talking
about
litigation
right.
T
We
have
a
park,
a
downtown
park
coming
online
and
we
have
a
streetcar
coming
online
with
no
operations
dollars.
Sport
and
now
we're
now
we're
starting
to
see
the
realization
that
we've
been
talking
about.
Well,
we
want
to
run
the
streetcar
on
Sundays,
with
10-minute
frequencies
and
at
night
and
all
the
kind
of
things
that
we
don't
do
for
our
bus
system,
which
is
primarily
lower
income
riders.
You
want
to
talk
about
a
lawsuit
and
a
tenday,
that's
coming.
T
If
you
try
it,
if
you
try
and
do
that
for
relatively
wealthy
riders
of
the
streetcar-
and
you
don't
do
that
for
our
bus
system
right
yeah
now,
you
absolutely
will
have
a
lawsuit
on
that
and
you've
got
to
make
sure
that
you
have
a
way
to
pay
for
these
snaps
three
programs
and
and
the
rest
of
the
operation
fee
and
so
I.
That's
it
all
right.
S
B
S
I'm
sorry
I
moved
in
then
the
proposed
tax
rate
in
ordinance
number
25
7.51,
which
proposes
a
city
capital
improvement
sales
tax
for
27
months
from
3/4
percent
to
1
percent.
There
are
myriad
reasons
much
in
which
we've
discussed
here
today,
but
I
think,
first
and
foremost,
that
this
is
a
great
opportunity
for
us
to
improve
our
streets
or
sidewalks
or
trails
which
are
vitally
important
to
the
citizens
of
Oklahoma,
and
this
is
a
temporary
tax
that
will
help
the
city
catch
up
on
providing
more
complete
and
safer
Street
networks.
S
B
B
J
I
can
watch
it
2,900,
not
these
18th
Street
and
let
me
a
little
bit
to
unlock.
That's
had
to
fly
back
here
from
here
okoma
public
hearing
and
action
on
proposed
amendment
to
ordinance
ten
number,
twenty
five.
Seventy
seven,
fifty
one
to
change
the
rate
of
the
proposed
city,
capital
improvement,
sales
tax
from
3%
to
1%,
council
members,
okay,
well
number
one
I
do
not
believe
that
this
amendment
should
be
made.
I
believe
that
again
holds
are
very
nice
parks
and
nice
cracks
and
the
rooms
are
nice.
J
But
again,
I
still
need
some
money
in
my
community.
For
my
kids
that
don't
have
a
proper
living
in
proper
education.
I
do
not
believe
that
this
sales
tax
is
necessary
to
1%,
because
what,
for
the
most
part,
I
left
I'll
take
that
back
and
let's
have
I
could
personally
manage
and
oversee
that
the
funds
to
be
used
to
distribute
it.
Then
maybe
we
can
do
that,
but
right
now,
I,
don't
think
it's
necessary
now.
J
This,
for
the
most
part,
is
a
design
ordinance
that
is
again
I,
believe
in
a
mark
we
say
for
streets
and
rolls
and
all
that
but
I
believe
it's
going
in
the
pockets
of
the
wealthy,
so
they
can
have
a
twenty
eight
million
dollar
Clubhouse.
You
know
our
quality
car
Charlie
call
whatever
you
want
to
call
it.
J
But
that's
not
a
matter
of
fact.
You
I
just
saw
a
couple
of
spots
of
close
while
live
where
the
streets
are.
Finally,
after
ten
years
being
touched
up
and
I
said
to
myself
wow,
let
me
take
a
picture.
They
put
it
on
Facebook,
because
is
this
live
as
this
Memorex?
Okay?
So
for
something?
How
taking
that
loan?
Well,
I
live
this
money
and
then
just
suddenly
be
spent
I'm
telling
you
that's
something
not
right
with
this
picture
and
until
it
does,
it
means
books,
food
it.
J
S
Z
I
B
AA
Q
B
Y
B
B
AB
AB
Eliminating
the
current
exception
will
result
in
more
Oklahoma
City
community
cats
being
sterilized.
Numerous
studies
have
found
that
managing
community
calf
populations
through
catch
and
kill
does
not
work.
Unsterilized
cats
reproduce
repopulate
the
area
taking
advantage
of
a
food
source
and
continue
to
reproduce
returning
sterilized
cats
to
their
area
prevents
other
cats
from
moving
in
and
ends
the
reproduction
nightmare.
That
is
often
the
cause
of
nuisance
situations.
Right
now.
Our
shelters
and
rescues
are
overrun
with
kitten
I
received
numerous
calls
I
got
to
this
morning
and
contacts
daily
asking
me
to
save
these
cats.
AB
All
the
rescues
and
shelters
are
full.
Citizens
are
desperate
for
help.
Studies
have
shown
that
community
cats
contribute
about
80%
of
the
kittens
born
each
year
and
are
the
most
significant
source
of
cat
overpopulation.
The
only
way
to
curb
what
is
known
as
kitten
season
and
reduce
the
number
of
cats
killed
each
year
at
the
shelter
is
through
spay
and
neuter.
Some
citizens
are
concerned
that
the
returned
cats
will
continue
to
be
a
nuisance,
but
we
know
neutering
drastically,
reduces
annoying
behaviors
like
yowling,
fighting
and
spraying,
because
testosterone
levels
are
no
longer
present.
AB
Others
are
concerned
about
the
cost.
The
communities
with
manage
programs.
Long-Term
costs
have
proven
to
be
less
than
the
repeated
cycle
of
Trap,
House,
euthanized
and
disposal.
Some
may
be
concerned
about
municipal
liability
but
TNR,
but
Etienne
our
program
is
reasonable.
Responsible
government
behavior
not
negligent
conduct
liability
stems
from
ownership,
but
no
one
owns
a
community
cat
like
no
one
owns
a
squirrel
that
causes
damage
additionally,
vaccinated
community
cats,
reduce
the
risk
of
rabies,
transmission
to
citizens
and
other
animals.
Lastly,
some
are
concerned
about
the
dumping
of
unwanted
unsterilized
cats
at
other
area
lakes.
AB
This
increase
has
never
been
documented
in
communities
with
active
TNR
programs,
and
it
is
unrealistic
to
think
that
less
cats
overall
would
result
in
more
cats
in
any
one
area,
properly
managed
DNR
programs
do
not
create
cat
overpopulation
because
the
cats
are
already
there.
This
program
will
control
and
over
time,
reduce
the
community
cat
population
of
Oklahoma
City,
seven
in
ten
pet
owners.
Believe
animal
shelters
should
be
allowed
to
euthanize
animals
only
when
they
are
too
sick
to
be
treated
or
too
aggressive
to
be
adopted,
not
as
a
population
control
measure.
B
AC
Comfortable
they
bill
safe,
they're,
fed,
sheltered
and
watered
as
different
of
has
their
humble
I
wrote
this
today,
because
I'm
not
very
good
good.
At
standing
in
front
of
people,
I
Claudia
Ayres
was
recruited
ten
years
ago
by
Christy
counts,
founder
of
Oklahoma
Humane
Society
herself,
due
to
a
crazy
lady
that
had
been
trapping
all
over
Oklahoma
City
and
bringing
the
cats
to
the
lake
Overholser
at
the
boathouse.
AC
The
area's
worse
way
out
of
control
of
cats,
I
went
to
a
meeting
at
the
Oklahoma
City
shelter
with
Katherine
English,
Chris
recounts
and
Samantha
Burnett
many
promises
were
made.
We
would
be
a
part
of
a
team
with
full
support,
help
with
food
trapping
many
other
volunteers
to
help,
and
they
would
take
all
the
adoptable
cats.
All
promises
were
short-lived.
I
see,
I
was
terminated
from
the
Oklahoma
Humane
Society.
After
a
disagreement
over
some
kittens
you
all
have
packets
and
that
story
in
detail
is
in
there
there's
a
picture
of
a
cat.
AC
AC
In
September,
2014
I
was
approved
for
my
own
501c3
nonprofit
status
to
try
to
get
help
with
food,
and
here
we
are
today.
I
do
not
know
I've
even
won
rescue.
That
was
aware
of
this
cat
ordinance
being
proposed
most
groups,
but
it
was
a
rumor
I
had
heard
I
called
the
mayor's
office.
They
gave
me
teeners
member
and
said,
and
he
confirmed
the
ordinance
was
for
real
I.
Do
not
appreciate
those
of
us
doing
this
work
for
free
and
out
of
our
own
pockets
and
not
were
not
consulted
for
our
infant.
AC
AC
B
AC
Speech
is
all
in
your
packets,
but
this
is
it
times
lever.
Okay,
then,
let
me
read
last
page
to
you
in
closing
I
plead
with
you
to
not
buy
into
this.
It's
great
for
oklahoma
city
campaign.
I'm,
going
to
give
you
a
quote
from
Helen
Keller
once
wrote
that
the
best
and
most
beautiful
things
in
the
world
cannot
be
seen
or
even
touched.
They
must
be
felt
with
the
heart.
I
speak
to
you
today
from
the
heart.
AC
AD
In
the
matter
of
time,
my
name
is
Miller.
Girardi
I
live
at
1809
Graham
circle,
which
is
about
two
blocks
directly
east
of
the
Overholt
sir.
Then
my
wife
and
I
lived
there
for
about
52
years
in
the
Bethany
and
Oklahoma
City
area.
Both
I
will
just
reiterate
what
these
two
ladies
have
said
previously,
and
not
take
their
time
that
this
seems
to
be
a
recurring
problem
every
spring,
because
people
seem
to
dump
their
animals
around
the
lakes
when
they
move
or
graduate
or
whatever,
and
they
become
a
real
problem
for
the
residences.
AD
AD
Multiple
palettes
of
cat
food
to
feed
these
cats,
and
she
takes
her
time
24/7
to
take
care
of
these
animals
and
I,
don't
think,
there's
anybody
that
has
more
compassion
for
these
animals
than
miss
Ayres
does
and
so
I.
Thank
you
for
your
time
and
I
hope
that
you
will
have
vote
to
not
return
these
animals
to
the
areas,
because
there
are
very
big
problem
for
residences.
Thank
you.
Thank
you.
Miller.
AC
J
B
G
Honor
may
ask
Bob
a
question
and
concerning
this,
I
had
a
letter
from
a
resident
of
Ward
5
and
she
has,
in
the
past,
collected
more
than
one
cat
that
was
loose
in
her
neighborhood
and
took
it
to
the
animal
shelter
and
they
said,
or
they
asked
her
if
she
wanted
the
cat
returned
after
they
sprayed
or
neutered
the
cat.
And
she
requested
that
it
not
if
an
individual.
G
Captures
a
cat
and
takes
it
to
the
animal
shelter.
Could
we
provide
a
provision
if
they
request
that
the
animal
not
be
returned
to
their
neighborhood?
Could
we
have
an
exclusion
to
this
process
in
those
cases,
not
that
they're,
not
volunteers,
they
just
have
an
animal,
that's
been
creating
a
problem
in
their
house
around
their
house
and
so
they've
captured
it
themselves,
taking
it
to
the
animal
shelter
and
they've
requested
that
the
animal
not
be
returned
to
the
neighborhood.
That's.
V
That's
how
the
ordinance
is
currently
yeah.
If
somebody
asks
it
and
not
be
returned,
we
don't
return
and
we
try
to
put
it
into
another,
a
barn
program
or
something
else
right.
So
this
amendment
is
trying
to
allow
us
and
there's
a
there's,
a
series
of
conditions
that
an
animal
cat
would
not
be
returned.
Okay,
but
what
we're
trying
to
do
in
this
ordinance
is
to
allow
us
to
return
them
to
the
area
in
origin,
which
would
be
within
a
mile
radius.
V
G
But
do
you
understand
the
distinction
in
this
case
it
was
just
a
homeowner
who
captured
the
animal
themselves
and
brought
it
to
the
animal
shelter.
Well,
let
me
ask
you
this,
and
could
you
when
you
returned
it
return
it
as
far
as
what,
as
far
away
from
that
particular
homeowner
as
possible
within
that
mile
radius?
Yes,.
V
B
V
Need
that
owner
to
tell
us
that
this
cats
at
risk
and
then
we
walk
on
it
back,
but
if
it's
just
a
community
cat,
sometimes
it's
already
is
an
owned
cat,
but
you
know
it's
it.
The
owner
doesn't
know,
what's
gone
yeah,
and
so,
if
we
spay
neuter
bring
it
back,
then
it'll
go
back
to
the
the
owner.
Now
thank.
Q
As
the
ordinance
says
right
now,
it
actually
has
two:
it
says
that
they
won't
be
returned.
If
the
citizen
complaining
about
the
cat
doesn't
want
it
returned
or
if
the
person
bringing
in
the
cat
doesn't
want
it
returned,
and
so
I've
asked
Kenny
to
make
an
amendment
to
leave
that
exception
in,
but
take
out
the
exception
of
just
the
citizen,
complaining
I
think
if
somebody's
just
calling
and
complaining
without
a
cat,
then
that's
probably
not
yeah,.
W
Q
D
AE
Good
morning,
Council
and
mayor,
we
actually
have
three
items
on
the
agenda
under
item
s
items
one
two
and
three
and
I'd
like
to
present
them
together.
If
I
may,
this
first
slide
shows
the
locations
of
all
of
these
comprehensive
plan
amendments.
These
would
be
changes
to
our
comprehensive
plan.
Maps
that
have
been
approved
by
Planning
Commission
I
would
like
to
walk
you
through
each
of
them.
So
item
number
one
is
worth
three:
it's
an
area
north
of
North,
West,
23rd
Street
between
North
Richland,
Road
and
North
Frisco
Road
areas.
AE
Two
on
the
map
is
in
Ward,
one,
its
southeast
of
Northwest
50th
and
the
Kilpatrick
Turnpike
and
area
for
item
three
is
Ward
4
Northwest
of
South
East,
74th
and
South
sooner
Road.
The
first
one
go
to
the
next
slide
is
here
in
Northwest
at
Northwest,
23rd,
Street
and
the
next
slide
shows
an
aerial
of
the
location.
You
might
recognize
this
location
as
being
an
area
that
we
previously
an
extra
portion
of
it
to
the
city
of
Yukon,
and
then
we
came
back
and
annexed
the
portion
to
the
north
of
I-40
back
into
Oklahoma
City.
AE
The
developer
owns
this
property
on
both
sides
of
the
interstate
and
wants
to
develop
a
small
regional
entertainment
district,
including
an
indoor
water
park
on
the
site,
so
the
city
re
annex,
what's
called
area
2
north
of
I-40
back
en,
so
where
there
are
two
actions
that
Planning
Commission
had
taken.
One
was
to
assign
a
land-use
typology
area
to
the
area
that
we
annexed
back
into
the
city
and
the
other
was
to
change
the
land
use
typology
in
the
area
south
of
I-40.
AE
So
this
is
about
210,
undeveloped,
acres
and
there's
an
accompanying
ud
document
that
creates
a
regional
entertainment
district
to
do
commercial,
retail,
hotels,
music.
The
next
slide
shows
the
comprehensive
plan
map
and
those
two
areas,
and
the
map
shows
the
polka
dotted
hatch
in
over
area,
one
that
is
called
urban
reserve
in
the
Comprehensive
Plan,
and
what
urban
reserve
means
is
that
that
area
does
not
have
full
city
services
at
this
time
affected,
eventually
to
gain
those
services.
AE
So
this
is
parts
of
Oklahoma
City
that
received
city,
water,
sewer,
police,
fire
services
through
an
arrangement
with
the
city
of
Yukon,
the
city
of
Yukon
is
agreed
to
provide
those
services
to
these
parcels
of
land,
so
it
kind
of
creates
an
isolated
node
of
regional
entertainment,
serviceable
land,
because
this
area
is
eventually
going
to
have
an
interchange
from
I-40
and
Frisco
Road.
That
is
an
odd,
odd
fate
year
plan.
The
next
slide
explains
what
Planning
Commission
considers
when
changing
an
area
to
urban
low
intensity.
AE
So
you
see
the
range
of
services,
water,
sewer,
fire
and
then
I
have
a
little
stoplight
map.
That
shows
whether
or
not
they
pass
the
test
on
this
thing.
So
you
can
see
the
green
light
on
water
and
sewer
through
the
agreement
with
the
city
of
Yukon.
Fire
Service
is
in
the
yellow
range,
meaning
that
it's
longer
response
times
then
preferred,
but
there
could
be
an
enhanced
agreements
with
the
city
of
Yukon
to
increase
the
fire
response
to
this
area.
AE
Compatibility
is
another
consideration
looking
at
whether
or
not
that
area
is
consistent
with
or
connected
to
other
places
in
Oklahoma
City
that
are
considered
urban
and
that
passes
the
test
for
a
highway
corridor,
with
a
highway
interchange
being
urbanized
the
transportation
network
getting
to
and
from
this
site
the
roads
that
access
this
may
need
improvements.
We
see.
AE
This
is
something
that
happens
long
down
the
road
after
that
interchanges
in
place
and
then
whether
or
not
it's
contiguous
to
other
areas
and,
as
we
said
before,
this
kind
of
creates
a
new
note
that
is
not
inconsistent
with
the
Comprehensive
Plan
along
the
major
highway
corridor,
with
a
major
intersection,
so
Planning
Commission
felt
this
was
appropriate
to
designate
as
urban
low
intensity
the
next
one
on
your
agenda
item
number
2
is
at
Northwest,
50th
and
Kilpatrick.
You
just
reviewed
the
system
joining
the
PD
and
the
next
slide
shows
the
aerial
of
the
location.
AE
So
you
can
see
that
this
is
a
34
acre
site,
PUD
1641,
which
was
presented
this
morning,
and
this
is
to
develop
some
commercial
uses
just
north
of
an
existing
or
a
planned
commercial
development
along
that
corridor
at
Kilpatrick.
So
the
land
use
designation
in
the
next
slide
shows
that
this
area
is
designated
as
what
is
called
agricultural
preserve
and
the
slide
after
that.
We'll
show
you
that
agricultural
preserve
is
originally
designated
because
we
have
large
areas
of
land
in
Oklahoma
City
that
are
primarily
agricultural.
The
zoning
of
this
land
was
Double
A.
AE
Many
of
these
agricultural
preserve
areas
are
really
conducive
to
agricultural
uses
because
they're
in
a
floodplain,
as
was
this
site,
this
site
was
also
designated
as
rural
low
intensity
and
had
not
previously
been
flatted
and
used
for
large.
It
was
a
very
large,
undivided
parcel.
However,
the
development
pattern
in
this
area
along
tilt,
Patrick
Turnpike,
is
commercial
in
nature,
and
this
site
would
be
required
to
connect
to
City,
Water
and
Sewer,
because
it's
within
a
quarter
mile
of
those
services.
AE
So
the
next
slide
shows
the
checklist
of
things
that
Planning
Commission,
considers
water
and
sewer
are
available
and
will
be
connected.
Fire
was
another
one
of
those
longer
response
time
than
preferred
the
applicant
when
they
presented
to
Planning
Commission,
said
that
the
fire
response
they
drove
was
within
the
preferred
response,
time
and
compatibility.
This
is
something
that
has
to
be
weighed
in
terms
of
the
benefit
of
the
development
to
the
intent
of
the
comprehensive
plan.
The
intent
of
the
comprehensive
plan
is
not
to
develop
within
the
floodplain.
AE
However,
this
entire
site
is
within
the
floodplain,
so
the
portion
of
it
that
fronts,
Kilpatrick
Turnpike,
will
be
designed
to
meet.
The
drainage
code
will
be
designed
to
continue
the
commercial
development
on
the
edge
of
that
parcel
next
to
the
Turnpike
transportation
system
as
well.
This
is
another
one
of
those
considerations
where
road
improvements
may
be
necessary
to
be
surrounding
streets.
AE
The
applicant
presented
a
a
transportation
arrangement
to
where
they
would
not
need
to
take
access
from
some
of
the
unimproved
roads
to
be
able
to
get
to
this
development,
and
it
is
contained
contiguous
with
other
urban
areas
and
then
the
final
comprehensive
plan
amendment
is
on
the
south
side.
This
will
be
in
Ford
four
and
it's
at
South
East,
17th,
Street
and
Senate
Road.
The
aerial
map
next
shows
this
is
an
80
acre
undeveloped
site.
This
is
also
coming
to
the
city
with
an
accompanying
Planned
Unit
development.
AE
Pud
1643,
the
intent
about,
is
to
rezone
an
eye
to
industrial
area
in
order
to
develop
multi-family
residential.
So
the
Comprehensive
Plan
map
to
go
to
the
next
slide
shows
that
this
area
is
in
the
middle
of
what's
designated
as
a
heavy
industrial
in
the
Comprehensive
Plan,
and
the
next
slide
will
show
you
that
the
heavy
industrial
areas
designated
as
such,
because
it
concentrates
intense
industrial
uses
together
that
may
pose
negative
impacts
to
adjacent
lower
intensity
types
of
development.
It
tries
to
preserve
land
that
has
attributes
such
as
the
proximity
to
highway
corridors.
AE
Rail
access
the
applicant
came
in
with
a
proposal
to
develop
multi-family
here,
and
the
services
are
available.
Both
urban
low
intensity
will
accommodate
multifamily
in
this
area.
One
of
the
considerations
was
this:
parcel
has
never
been
developed
for
industrial
uses
because
it
requires
a
long
bridge
over
a
creek
that
is
very
cost
prohibitive
for
the
type
of
industrial
development
that
they
think
the
site
could
accommodate.
The
next
slide
shows
you
the
checklist
of
considerations
and
that
it
meets
almost
all
of
the
conditions
for
urban
low
intensity.
One
of
the
issues
that
was
raised
with
compatibility.
AE
What
happens
when
you
allow
multi-family
development
next
to
heavy
industrial
development?
The
proposed
PUD
outlines
different
types
of
mitigation
measures
through
design
to
try
to
soften
that
impact
between
residential
and
industrial
uses
and
then
on
the
matter
of
it
being
contiguous
to
the
other
urban
low
planned
Commission
felt
that
in
a
subsequent
application
that
we
should
come
back
and
expand
the
urban
low
area
to
the
east
and
to
the
south
so
that
we
make
it
clean
cut
between
urban
low
and
industrial.
So
that
will
be
a
second
plan
amendment
that
will
come
later
days.
AE
N
AE
N
B
All
right,
thanks
Aubrey,
we
have
three
items
that
follow:
Audrey's
presentation,
number
two
and
three
have
presentations
coming
with
them,
but
I,
don't
believe
number
one
does
so.
Is
there
a
motion
on
item
9
s1
there,
a
second
all
right
castro
bez
it
passes,
8
to
1
and
item
9
s2
eric
rose
is
asked
to
speak
Harry.
B
AD
U
To
Colcord
right
a
great
question,
and
that
was
a
question
raised
by
Planning
Commission.
If
you
look
at
our
site,
it's
this
80
acre
tract
that's
undeveloped
here,
and
so
what
we
have
is
some
significant
limitations,
although
it's
80
acres,
30
of
it
or
more
or
in
the
floodway,
and
so
my
client
mr.
Tannenbaum,
in
an
effort
to
stay
out
of
that
is
only
developing
the
portion
that
is
west
of
that
Creek
and
floodway.
What
that
means
is
we
have
a
significant
cost
to
get
to
the
developmental
portion.
So
that's
a
bridge.
U
That
is
one
of
the
reasons
why
it
didn't
lend
itself
to
industrial,
but
to
your
specific
question
on
how
to
address
mitigation
measures,
what
we
have
done
in
the
in
the
PUD
is:
we
have
setbacks
firms
and
we
have
some
natural
tree
cover
that
will
continue
to
exist.
It
was
an
item
that
we
discussed
for
quite
some
time
and
also
we
was
unanimously
approved
by
the
planning
because
they
felt
after
we
got
done
that
there
just
wasn't
long-term
viability
for
this
to
ever
be
developed
as
industrial.
B
K
B
AF
That's
real
close
to
my
house
that
toppled
over
and
hit
the
back
of
my
house
that
caused
some
damage
and
I
feel
like
the
city
should
should
pay
for
the
damage,
because
that
the
tree
was
so
large
and
it
was
leaning
towards
my
house,
and
it
probably
should
have
been
taken
care
of
before
the
tree
toppled.
Over
and.
D
AF
AG
Yes,
sir,
the
the
tree
fell
over
in
a
rather
large
storm,
so
there
was
the
act
of
God
kind
of
a
overlaid
to
this,
but
probably
one
of
the
things
that
led
most
directly
to
our
recommending
denial
was
the
fact
that
the
parks
department
just
did
a
huge
survey
of
all
trees
and
all
our
property.
This
tree
was
also
talked
about
in
that
C.
AG
D
B
AG
B
B
Claim
because
of
what
she
just
mentioned:
Brian,
okay,
all
right!
Well,
Shawn
I
wish
we
had
better
news
for
you.
It
sounds
like
we
would
violate
state
law
if
we,
if
we
paid
the
claims,
so
we're
stuck
by
that
you
can
go
across
the
street
to
district
court
and
file
your
claim
there
and
some
have
done
that
and
some
have
turned
out
better.
But
I
really
appreciate
you
coming
all
the
way
down
here
and
I'm.
Sorry,
we
don't
have
better
news
and
the
ability
to
pay
and
hug.
The
house
is
in
better
check,
appreciate.
B
Let
this
well
alright
and
we
have
claims
recommended
for
approval
their
motion.
All
right!
Guess
you
both
passed
unanimously
and
the
clerk
has
informed
me
that
on
the
previous
item
we
neglected
to
add
the
emergency.
So
item
9f
needs
the
emergency
clause
and
we
it's
on
the
Geo
bonds.
Yeah
all
right
cast
your
votes.
It
passes
unanimously
all
right
items
from
Council
and
Councilman
Stonecipher
councilman,
McAtee
and
councilman
Pettis
have
introduced
an
ordinance
in
today's
opportunity
for
a
public
hearing.
S
AH
Carlisle
1101,
seven
chance
report
and
I
just
think
that
any
move
forward,
the
ordinance,
possibly
homeowners
insurance
increases
depending
on
how
the
interest
and
menacing
these
dogs
are
anything
is
better
than
what
we
have
right
now.
I
know
that
distance
shouldn't
have
happened
the
day.
It
did
happen
as
I
waited
to
get
to
my.
AH
J
AH
AE
J
D
AI
D
AH
J
AJ
Malinda
Clontz
60
508,
South,
Sycamore,
Avenue,
Broken,
Arrow,
Oklahoma
and
I'm
to
field
other
daughter,
and
we
never
intended
to
get
the
knowledge
we've
gotten
through
this
kind
of
a
situation.
This
tragedy
happens
and
we
stopped
and
did
not
know
where
to
turn
and
I
I
know
you
are
citizens
as
well
as
public
servants
and
I
want
to
take
the
moment
to
say
thank
you
because
we
didn't
know
how
to
get
from
Step
a
to
step.
AJ
B
and
Councilman
Stonecipher
impetus
and
McAtee
actually
took
steps
that
we
weren't
even
aware
as
to
try
to
mitigate
this
situation
for
future
residents.
So
I
want
to
ask
you
to
support
this.
This
ordinance
I
think
it
goes
in
the
right
direction
and,
as
my
sister
voiced
and
as
you
all
have
been
talking,
I've
been
educated
on
the
processes.
AJ
AJ
First,
steps
in
the
right
direction
that
there
needs
to
be
even
stronger,
impetuses
put
it
in
place
to
keep
these
owners
that
are
not
responsible,
make
them
toe
the
line,
make
it
hurt
them
financially
make
it
hurt
them
in
other
ways
so
that
they
think
twice
about
letting
animals
that
they
know
are
menacing,
that
they
know
are
a
danger
to
citizens
in
their
community,
make
it
hurt
them
enough
that
they
do
not
keep
those
animals
in
community
areas.
I.
Thank
you
so
much
your
time
and
I.
Thank
you
for
all
this
bond.
AK
AK
AK
AK
If
there
was
a
rigid
tree
with
pictures
and
some
other
way
of
identifying
them,
people
could
be
more
aware.
The
other
thing
that
I
would
like
to
see
is
a
bond
or
insurance
for
registered
event
was
dog
that
would
I
think
slow
down
the
number
of
people
who
have
no
hesitation
that
adopting
Dom,
who
only
should
not
be
adopted
or
breeding
them.
Who
should
as
well
the
other
thing
that
I
would
like
to
see.
The
payment
of
penalties
should
be
more
very
substantial
to
discourage
irresponsible
owners
of
dog
I.
AK
Found
that
a
lot
of
dangerous
dog,
our
own,
not
only
by
homeowners
but
also
landlord,
tenant
and
I,
found
that
quite
a
lot
of
her
landlords
do
not
care
what
kind
of
dogs
come
into
their
property.
I
do
not
know
how
that
can
be
avoided,
but
that
is
the
big
problem.
Is
the
neighborhood
where
I
am
I
am
an
Android
myself?
AK
I
am
very
careful
as
to
what
five
what
dog
the
tenant
can
have,
and
somehow
the
landlord
should
also
be
held
responsible
in
some
kind
of
way
if
they
accept
dog
that
are
on
the
wedge
registry.
That
I
would
like
to
see
and
do
not
maintain
their
property,
and
especially
the
yard,
in
such
a
way
that
if
the
dogs
are
outside
in
the
yard,
they
will
get
out
of
it.
AK
AL
We
moved
to
that
house
in
1981.
At
that
time
the
backyard
fence
was
already
old
and
failing.
We
had
a
lot
surveyed
by
Amy
hill
and
in
1992
installed
entirely
with
our
within
our
boundaries,
our
property,
a
cedar
fence
extending
from
the
gate
on
the
west
side
around
the
backyard
to
the
gate
on
that
fence
still
stands,
but
as
we
can
debate
the
neighbors
to
the
north
east,
half
of
the
lot
I'm
87th
Street
keep
large
dogs
that
appeared
to
be
pitbull.
AL
The
dogs
are
at
times
aggressive,
barking
and
growling.
We
contacted
the
neighbor
and
asked
if
he
would
walk
the
dogs
around
the
blacks,
bring
them
to
our
backyards
and
let
the
dogs
get
to
know
us
that
was
rejected.
Last
year
we
discovered
five
dogs
in
our
backyard.
One
looked
like
a
coyote
mixed
and
the
others
were
large.
My
husband
was
able
to
taste
them
back
under
our
fence
and
he
blocked.
He
then
blacked
the
hole
that
was
dug.
AL
This
was
themed
slacks
and
screen
this
year,
the
new
neighbors
to
the
northwest
half
a
lot
moved
in
with
at
least
three
dogs.
One
of
those
dogs
was
distressed,
howling
and
crying
to
the
night.
For
several
things.
We
made
no
complaint
to
the
new
neighbor
and
smooth
in
the
dog
settle
down
after
week
or
10
days,
extending
a
greeting
over
the
back
fence.
We
were
told
that
there
were
three
dogs,
a
rescue
dog
and
two
pitbulls,
of
which
one
was
a
trained
attack
dog.
AL
AL
Later
we
tried
to
arrange
it
meeting
to
arrange
for
repairs
to
our
fence
having
the
dogs
confined,
so
the
worker
does
not
get
mauled.
We
were
told
that
they
had
to
work
and
had
no
time
to
discuss
this
with
us.
Those
dogs
young
broke
through
the
fence
romping
around
our
backyard,
exploring
the
property
they're
kidding
their
waste
mark,
marking
their
domain
and
breaking
out
into
the
property
of
the
neighbor
to
the
east.
AL
We
were
trapped
in
our
own
home.
We
called
the
Animal
Control.
No
response
asked
to
speak
with
a
supervisor
who
called
back
later
and
indicated.
Stored
staffing
would
delay
a
response
when
the
animal
control
officer
did
appear.
The
dogs
had
gone
home,
we
had
photos
taken
with
a
digital
camera.
The
dog
owning
neighbors
have
each
suggested
that
not
only
is
the
cost
of
repairing
the
fence
entirely
our
burden,
but
it
is
our
fault
for
not
building
a
fence,
efficiency,
they're
dogs.
We
had
never
owned
any
pet
since
living
in
Oklahoma
City.
AL
As
for
calling
animal
control,
we
were
told
by
the
responding
officers
that
they
were,
that
we
were
one
of
four
calls
for
guiding
these
dogs.
In
this
instance,
the
dogs,
apparently
getting
out
through
Larsen's
side
of
the
fence
or
separately
through
the
fence
of
the
neighbor
to
the
left
citations
were
issued.
Both
dog,
owning
neighbors
have
expressed
their
view
that
we
are
obliged
to
replace
our
speaker,
privacy
fence,
with
a
chain-link
fence
to
contain
their
dogs.
AL
This
hearing
is
about
effective
remedy.
The
ordinance
might
be
amended
to
require
owners
of
a
dog
that
is
aggressive
towards
human
beings.
We
find
that
they
have
failed
to
install
and
maintain
others
or
containment
structures
on
their
own
property,
from
which
the
animal
has
escaped
the
entire
risks
to
beyond
those
who
chose
to
maintain
a
potential
menace.
Their
responsibility
is
not
met
by
a
fence
designed
and
maintained
by
someone
else.
AL
Cecilia
Celia
short
was
authority,
sister
of
mine,
with
whom
I
had
contact
on
April
3rd.
She
was
literally
loved
on
April
6
I
am
shocked
and
dismayed
by
her
face
and
in
fear
for
my
own
today.
I
also
fear
for
the
children
attending
Hefner
middle
school
or
any
school
who
might
turn
and
run
becoming
prey.
I
trust
that
you
share
my
concern.
I
read
the
yarn
I
sleep
support
it.
Thank
you
for
your
attention.
AI
It's
a
terribly
difficult
problem
from
a
political
point
of
view.
The
only
tool
you
have
is
importance.
The
ordinance
speaks
after
the
fact
of
violation.
You
can't
go
in
make
everybody
do
everything
beforehand,
but
the
idea
that
somebody
can
have
a
dog
and
have
no
responsibility
for
it.
Give
it
no
care,
leave
it
outside
all
day
long
and
rely
on
other
people's
fences
to
keep
the
dog
from
running
wild
is
ludicrous.
AI
AI
I'm
trying
to
get
at
it,
the
price
of
letting
your
dog
run
loose
should
be
not
less
than
the
cost
of
paying
somebody.
That
knows
how
to
do
it
to
build
an
enclosure
or
to
establish
a
tether
system.
That's
why
this
ordinance
is
important
and
the
other
thought
that
I'd
like
to
be
with
you
is
this
big
dogs,
little
dogs.
We
have
sidewalks
down
some
parts
of
the
city
that
sometimes
are
quite
close
to
the
curved
I'm
walking
along
McArthur
I,
almost
get
hit
by
a
car.
AI
It's
dodging
a
little
dog,
it's
running
out
in
the
street.
The
car
didn't
hit
me
or
the
dog,
the
dog
dog
got
away.
The
point
is
that
dogs
who
are
left
outside
by
their
owners
all
day
long
are
not
loved
by
the
owners.
That's
not
good
care
for
your
own
animals.
I!
Don't
have
animals
because
I'm
not
willing
to
give
them
the
kind
of
care
that
is
required.
Is
that
a
moral
basically
I've
said
all
I
know
here:
I
appreciate
your
pieces.
All.
J
Michael
wants
2,900,
North,
East,
18th
Street.
First
of
all,
I
want
to
express
my
sincere
heartfelt
condolences
to
the
family
of
this.
Lady
was
viciously
mauled
by
these
animals
and
I
hope
from
and
pray
that
they
will
have
some
kind
of
pleasure
in
that
you
can
reorganize
this
ordinance.
That
is
to
be
submitted
by
these
three
gentlemen
ones.
Thank
you
all
for
that
as
well.
This
lady
legally
walking
the
street
with
her
own
dog,
legally
a
dog
to
have
in
a
residential
neighborhood.
She
wasn't
expecting
to
be
mauled
to
death.
J
She
wasn't
expected
for
some
vicious
dogs
that
come
running
at
her
and
her
life
is
over
with
I
would
have
been
very
fighting
myself
that
that
happened
to
me
and
I
have
in
fact
seen
where
families
have
been
mauled
by
vicious
uncontained,
uncontrolled
dogs,
as
a
matter
of
fact,
if
I
could
suggest,
I
would
like
for
this
order
to
be
renamed.
Mr.
silly
short
in
that
recognition
for
this
horrible
thing,
that
happened
as
a
reminder
to
her
family
that
this
is
something
that
will
help
their
memory
live.
J
April
6
was
a
day
that
I
was
with
my
grandbabies
in
the
house,
watching
television
and
when
this
tragic
situation
came
over
there,
my
heart
was
stopped
and
I
said
to
myself:
oh
my
god,
just
walking
in
the
down
the
street
and
here's
a
big
mean
vicious
dog
mauling.
This
precious
lady
to
death,
now
she's
no
longer
with
the
children.
Children
can
no
longer
sit
with
a
sleeper,
you
know,
eat
with
them
and
you
better
believe
I'm
in
support.
J
It's
August
and
I
was
one
of
the
Raptors
up
by
saying
whatever
I
can
do
to
get
this
thing
passed.
I
knows
not
much,
but
that's
want
the
family
to
know
that
in
Michael
Washington
you
do
have
a
friend
if
I
can
help
you
in
some
kind
of
way
and
I
don't
know
you,
but
thank
you
very
much
this
opportunity.
Thank
you
all
for
it.
S
N
So
many
cities
have
adopted
policies
whether
it's
through
I,
don't
know
what
some
kind
of
subsidy
you're
just
encouraging
private
property
owners
to
use
neon
are
used,
colored,
LED
lights,
to
light
up
their
downtown
falsus
done
a
really
good
job
with
that
and
I
just
want
to
mention
it
as
an
option.
You
know
all
the
urban
planning
things
I've
been
to
they
talk
about
different
sources
of
lighting
and
how
ambient
lighting
can
really
change
the
way
people
feel
and
I.
Just
I
thought
it
was
a
great
idea.
I
wanted
to
mention
it.
D
W
O
Just
like
to
welcome
see
the
children
and
I
know,
if
you
remember,
or
not,
we
used
to
fellowship
with
your
mom
and
dad
their
dad
is
one
of
the
greatest
athletes
ever
to
come
out
of
the
state
of
Oklahoma.
Arnold
short,
a
fine
gentleman,
his
wife
also
wasn't.
Hopefully
we'll
get
some
positive
and
all
this.
Thank
you.
B
T
So
obviously,
things
didn't
turn
out
the
way
I
wanted,
but
I
just
want
to
say
I
thought
we
had
good
discussion
and
I
really
want
to.
Thank
you
for
facilitating
dissent.
I
know
that
some
things
we
I
say
may
give
you
heartburn
a
bit,
and
you
could
say
that
you
have
the
vote,
but
I
think
in
talking
to
several
people
with
decades
of
institutional
memory,
not
all
mayor's,
even
when
they
had
all
the
votes
allowed
assent.
K
Your
packet
is
the
June
sales
use
tax
collection
and
it's
one
of
the
better
month
we've
had
lately.
It
was.
It
was
a
4.3
percent
over
projections.
So
it's
hopefully
now
one
month
doesn't
the
trends
start,
but
if
you're
going
to
have
a
trend
start
it's
got
to
start
somewhere
so
hope.
Hopefully
this
is
it.
AM
Good
morning
and
thank
you-
my
name
is
Russell
Fox
I
live
at
1514
Northwest
17th
Street
in
Oklahoma,
City
and
I've
really
appreciated
watching
the
quality
of
the
deliberations
today
and
appreciate
all
the
great
things
that
your
honor
mayor
and
council
would
have
done
and
do
do
for
this
city.
I
am
here
today
to
and
I'm,
not
representing
only
myself
as
a
private
citizen,
not
any
organization,
but
it
was
brought
to
my
attention
and
I
want
to
bring
to
your
attention
the
existence
of
the
mayor's
national
climate
action
agenda.
AM
When
I'm
passing
around
is
a
proposed
sample
initiative
for
Council
to
consider
arm
in
support
as
a
city
of
the
Paris
agreement
and
your
honor
I
am
in
great
appreciation
of
the
great
directions
that
your
leadership
has
taken.
This
city
and
I
am
here
today
to
express
the
hope
that
you
will
consider
adding
your
voice,
especially
in
your
leadership
of
the
American
Council
of
Mayors.