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From YouTube: Oklahoma City City Council - Tuesday, July 2, 2019
Description
The regular meeting of the Oklahoma City City Council for Tuesday, July 2, 2019.
A
Good
morning
and
welcome
to
City
Hall
we'll
get
started
here
momentarily
before
we
call
the
meeting
to
order,
if
you
happen
to
have
a
cell
phone
in
your
pocket
or
purse
or
wherever,
if
you
would
silence
it
at
this
time,
that
would
be
greatly
appreciated
if
you're
here
and
you
want
to
speak
to
any
item
on
the
agenda
outside,
there
are
sign-up
sheets.
If
you
would
go
out
there
and
give
us
that
information,
we
will
call
you
at
the
appropriate
time.
A
B
You
all
let
us
begin
in
a
word
of
Prayer
a
holy
and
gracious
God.
We
come
with
spirits
of
Thanksgiving
Thanksgiving
for
all
that
you
have
done
for
us
in
this
place,
Thanksgiving
for
what
we
celebrate
this
week.
Our
freedom
and
our
independence
help
us
to
be
in
that
same
spirit
of
healthy
debate
in
unity
as
we
come
together
and
make
decisions
and
plans
for
our
great
city.
We
thank
you
and
we
praise
you
for
all
that
you
do
in
our
lives,
amen.
B
A
C
Protect
groundwater
provide
vegetables'
and
produce
substantive
ITAT
for
wildlife,
whereas
parks
and
recreation
areas
ensure
the
ecological
beauty
of
our
communities,
allowing
children
and
adults
to
connect
with
nature
through
primitive
and
manicured
landscapes,
whereas
Oklahoma
City
also
recognizes
the
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,
David
hope.
The
mayor
of
the
city
of
Oklahoma
City
does
hereby
proclaim
the
month
of
July
as
Parks
and
Rec
a
month
in
Oklahoma
City.
Thank.
D
You
mr.
McCarty
I
appreciate
it.
I
want
to
thank
everybody
for
coming
today.
I
want
to
thank
the
council
for
recognizing
July
as
Parks
and
Recreation
month.
Nationwide
July
is
recognized
as
Parks
and
Recreation
month
and
I
couldn't
think
of
a
better
way
to
receive
this
Proclamation
didn't
they
have
these
young
men
stand
up
here
with
me
today.
Parks
and
Recreation
is
really
about
these
guys
that
are
up
here
and
the
girls
that
participate
in
our
programs,
the
youth
of
tomorrow.
These
guys
are
important.
D
For
the
first
time
in
the
history
of
Oklahoma
City,
we
have
a
championship
team
in
the
Presidents
Cup
in
soccer.
The
regional
champions
are
standing
here
with
me
today.
First
time
a
team
from
Oklahoma
City
has
ever
won
the
regional
championship
and
that
their
next
goal
next
week
they're
on
their
way
to
Nashville,
to
play
in
the
national
tournament
and
we're
going
to
have
them
back
here,
because
they're
gonna
win
that
right.
You
guys.
D
We
we
are
so
proud
of
the
fact
that
that
the
city
of
Oklahoma,
City,
Parks
and
Recreation
to
me
department,
it
has
one
of
the
few
competitive
organizations
in
the
country.
Usually
it's
it's
other
organizations
that
step
up
and
have
it.
We
saw
the
need
they
have
a
competitive
program
for
these
young
men,
their
brothers
and
sisters,
their
cousins,
there,
some
cases,
uncles
and
aunts
and
everybody
else
we
wanted
to
have
that
program.
D
The
program
is
housed
at
our
window:
Whisenhunt
Sports
Complex,
which
is
the
east
side
of
Woodson
Park,
it's
in
the
south-central
section
of
the
city.
These
guys
know
how
to
play
soccer.
We're
looking
forward
to
see
them
play
college
ball,
we're
looking
forward
to
them
playing
professional
ball
and
who
knows
their
sisters
may
be
playing
World
Cup
in
a
few
years
as
well.
So
right
so
again
we
want
to
thank
the
council.
We
want
to
thank
the
Mayor
Pro
Tem
for
recognizing
July
as
Parks
and
Recreation
month.
D
A
A
A
E
E
The
applicant
is
asked
to
withdraw
this
item.
Also,
on
page
30
item
92
councilman
dices
asked
that
we
defer
this
item
for
two
weeks,
so
that
would
move
it
to
July
2
16th
on
under
items.
100
lapidation
structures.
Item
under
this
is
on
page
32
item
number:
nine
H,
1,
D,
22,
20,
South,
West,
24th
Street,
we're
gonna
strike
the
side
of
all
the
items
that
I'll
list
here
will
be
stricken
and
I'll.
Give
you
the
reason
the
owner
is
repaired.
E
On
page
32
on
item
9
I,
one
item
a
the
owner
has
secured
that's
the
that's
16
14
College
Avenue,
the
owner
has
secured
item
B
26:15
fons
Hill
Avenue
is
to
read,
notify
the
owner
item
d,
2803
North,
Independence
Avenue,
the
owner
has
secured
item
e1
to
708
Parker
heights
Boulevard
the
owner
is
secured
item
G
1704,
Northwest,
10th,
Northwest,
10th
Street,
the
owner
is
secured
item
L
2244,
Northwest,
15th
Street
is
to
Reno
defy
the
owner
item.
M
3500,
North,
West,
26th
Street
is
three
notified.
E
A
F
Name
is
Billy
Walton
I'm
at
909,
Southwest,
40th,
Street
I'm,
here
to
pur
to
speak
on
behalf
of
downtown
4th
US.
This
is
our
seventh
year
to
do
downtown.
Fourth,
Fest,
it's
moved
around
locations.
This
is
the
third
year
that
we've
been
able
to
partnership
with
a
river
sport
adventures
in
the
boathouse
district
to
host
what
we
believe
is
Oklahoma,
City's
largest
fireworks
show
on
the
4th
of
July.
It's
going
to
be
a
lot
of
fun
for
the
for
the
city.
It's
a
completely
free
event.
F
Now
the
the
boathouse
and
the
river
support
adventures
district
will
actually
have
their
activities
open
for
folks
to
come
and
enjoy
with
the
rapids
and
ziplining
and
all
those
amazing
things
to
do.
But
it
is
a
free
event
and
will
have
a
gigantic
fireworks
show,
starting
at
9:45
that
night
on
4th
of
July
we're
wanting
to
use
the
parks
parking
lot
so
on
the
southwest
side
of
Lincoln
on
the
south
side
of
the
river
it's
used
to
actually
fire
from.
F
G
H
I
My
name
is
Wade
Farrar.
My
residential
address
is
47
82
Josie,
Lane
cash
and
Oklahoma
seven,
three
zero
one.
Six
I'm
here
to
represent
the
Oklahoma
Department
wildlife
and
the
Oklahoma
State
Game
one
Association,
both
coming
up
14th
through
the
20th
of
July.
We
were
hosting
the
North
American
wildlife,
Enforcement
Officers
Association,
that's
a
long
one
to
get
out
annual
conference
here
in
Oklahoma
City,
it's
the
first
time,
we've
ever
hosted
it
here.
That
Association
is
made
up
of
every
conservation
officer
in
North.
America
is
part
of
that.
I
Currently
we
have
302
game
wardens
that
have
registered.
That
will
be
here
for
the
conference.
The
permit
covers
a
fallen
officer.
Memorial
five-k,
specifically
honoring
a
Minnesota
game.
Warden
Eugene
win
the
stone
from
his
boat
at
April,
19th
or
April
of
2019,
responding
to
a
call
the
5k
is
to
honor
him
and
all
the
money
goes
to
the
game.
Warden
Museum
up
in
upstate,
New,
York,
so
and
then
a
the
permanent
also
covers
on
the
19th.
G
A
You
ma'am,
we
have
a
second
and
a
second
any
comments,
welcomed
Oklahoma
City
with
your
event,
and
we
hope
you
have
a
great
time.
Please
cast
your
votes
and
it
is
so
approved.
Thank
you.
Next
up
we
have
a
revocable
permit
for
Ram
racing
to
hold
I
love
the
90s
5k.
Is
there
a
you'd
come
forward
and
give
us
your
name
and
address
and
tell
us
about
your
event,
hello,.
J
My
name
is
Kerry
Ralston.
My
residential
address
is
one
seven:
nine
zero
one
briar
road
in
Nuala,
Oklahoma
I'm,
representing
Graham
racing
or
in
motive
Oklahoma.
We
are
working
with
a
race
director
who
is
doing
a
national
I
love
the
90s
run
and
has
added
oklahoma
city
to
their
stop.
So
this
course
will
be
featured
in
front
of
Fassler
hall
and
it's
celebrating
all
things.
90S
we've
got
a
one-of-a-kind
gang
boy,
finisher
metal
and
all
participants
will
receive
all
of
the
90s
tech
shirts.
J
K
A
E
L
Morning,
mayor
and
council,
I'm
Doug
dalla
the
budget
director
for
the
city
and
pleased
to
prepare
present
to
you,
the
Oklahoma
City
public
property
authority
for
FY,
2007
officier
of
the
authority
and,
as
such,
there's
also
an
item
under
the
consent
agenda
to
receive
the
OC
PPA
budget.
The
PPA
budget
totals
fifty
six
point:
seven
million
dollars
and
has
four
primary
revenue
sources.
Golfcourse
revenues,
transfers
from
the
general
fund,
transfers
from
the
hotel
tax
fund
and
then
fund
balance
of
the
remainder
in
the
fund
from
prior
years.
L
When
we
look
at
the
budget
by
function,
the
largest
areas
for
capital
at
the
fairgrounds
three
cents
of
the
five
and
a
half
cent
hotel
tax
rate
is
dedicated
to
supporting
capital
improvements
at
the
fairgrounds.
Using
the
dedicated
funding
revenue
bonds
have
been
sold
that
are
repaid
through
the
hotel
tax.
Those
bonds
were
sold
by
the
OC
PPA,
and
so
each
month
both
the
portion
dedicated
to
fairgrounds
capital
and
the
portion
for
tourism
promotion
are
transferred
to
the
PPA
and
the
trustee
bank.
L
L
We
anticipate
transferring
fourteen
point:
seven
million
dollars
from
the
hotel
tax
fund
to
the
PPA,
and
we
expect
about
six
point,
four
million
of
that
to
go
back
to
the
hotel
tax
fund,
but
that's
just
part
of
the
requirements
of
the
revenue
bonds
that
all
revenue
be
transferred
to
the
PPA,
so
they
can
take
out
what's
needed
and
the
remainder
goes
back
to
the
hotel
tax
fund,
and
so
that's
the
largest
area
of
the
PPA
budget,
the
next
largest
categories
for
maps
related
contracts
and
capital.
That
total
sixteen
point.
L
Seven
million
some
of
the
areas
that
are
funded
here
include
the
contract
for
SMG
to
manage
the
Cox
Convention,
Center
and
Chesapeake
arena.
There's
also
funding
for
pre-opening
activities
of
the
maps,
three
convention
center
and
other
maps
related
activities
included
in
the
PPA
include
the
lease
revenue
from
the
Bricktown
ballpark
funding
for
the
distributed
antenna
system
for
cell
service.
L
At
the
Chesapeake
arena,
naming
rights
for
the
Chesapeake
arena
and
dredging
on
the
Oklahoma
River,
the
third
largest
function
funded
through
the
PPA,
is
golf
courses
at
ten
and
a
half
million
dollars,
the
largest
source
of
revenues,
of
course,
green
fees
and
surcharges
paid
by
golfers
who
use
the
courses
that
those
total
four
and
a
half
million
dollars.
If
you
had
golf
cart
rentals,
that
brings
the
total
to
about
seven
million
dollars.
L
The
general
fund
transfers
in
about
nine
hundred
thousand
to
pay
for
water
at
the
courses
and
about
three
hundred
thousand
to
subsidize
operations
at
Stuart
golf
course.
The
city's
nine
hole
golf
course,
and
then
there
are
several
other
functions
supported
by
the
PPA,
such
as
our
third-party
natural
gas
program.
The
city's
support
for
the
Civic
Center
Foundation,
some
Business
Improvement
District
funding
and
some
sports
facilities
related
activity
and
those
functions
make
up
about
15%
of
the
total.
L
A
A
M
M
A
C
A
C
H
A
M
Taking
taking
taking
time
to
continue
to
improve
the
quality
of
life
for
the
neighborhood
surrounding
them
and
I
just
wanted
to
hear
a
little
bit
more
about
what
are
some
general
uses.
Each
one
of
these
districts
might
use
these
funds
for
that's
all
I,
just
the
reason.
Why
is
I
just
think
this
is
these
districts
have
become
kind
of
a
cultural
touchstone
for
the
city
and
its
really
rejuvenated
the
city,
the
inner
city
and
I
just
want
more
of
the
public
who
might
not.
M
N
Hello,
councilman
James
Cooper,
it's
2
Nguyen,
president
of
the
Asian
district
or
2
Association,
all
councilman
councilman.
Thank
you
so
much
first
and
foremost
representing
a
lot
of
our
districts
back
here.
Thank
you
so
much
for
this
economic
and
funding
for
all
of
our
districts
and
the
funds
that
we
do
receive.
We
plan
on
utilizing
for
beautification
projects
and
the
area
working
to
make
our
neighborhoods
more
walkable,
safe
and
better
environment
for
improving
quality
of
life.
So
thank
you
so
much.
Thank.
M
I
just
wanted
to
hear
a
little
bit
more
I'm
very
excited
about
this,
because
I
believe
this
fits
in
with
the
mayor's
task
force
for
homelessness
and
I.
Just
wanted
to
kind
of
have
a
little
provide
a
little
bit
of
an
update
on
this
particular
service
agreement.
That's
going
to
help
us
what
is
going
to
help
us
accomplish
so.
M
O
O
M
M
O
The
I-ight
amay
t1
is
a
contractor
newell
with
to
with
actually
one
of
our
consulting
laboratories
to
actually
assist
with
the
needs
of
the
city
from
time
to
time,
when
we
need
laboratory
testing
for
stormwater
analysis,
and
so
this
is
just
something
that
we
do
in-house
is
a
part
of
the
pub
quark
storm
water
quality
program.
We
don't
do
these
tests
in-house.
We
need
this
contract
to
actually
perform
those
and
provide
results
for
future
reports,
testing
and
needs
of
the
city.
Thank.
M
You
there's
be
a
have
to
do
with
you:
yeah
the
the
streetscape
improvements
along
Northwest
23rd
between
North
Blackwelder
and
North
Kentucky
and
North
West
25th
minute.
A
ba-ba
is
that
it's
a
word
to
project
I
noticed
and
there's
I'm,
just
here's
what
the
streetscape
improvement
knew.
We
had
done.
Some
arterial
resurfacing
there,
but
I
I
wasn't
so
clear
on
streetscape
and
so.
O
O
It
generally
was
a
widening
project
on
23rd
and
25th.
Excuse
me:
it's
it's
general
streetscaping,
so
ad
a
sidewalk
enhancements
those
types
of
improvements,
but
the
item
today
the
work
is
actually
already
complete
on
this
one
as
well
I
mean
this
is
really
just
a
reconciliation
of
some
AE
services
that
that
were
incorporated.
So
the
engineer
on
this
project
had
an
error
in
the
plants,
and
this
actually
reduces
the
amount
of
the
engineering
contract
by
fourteen
thousand
five
hundred
and
eleven
dollars
to
compensate
the
city
for
that
necessary
redesign
and
change.
M
M
E
E
M
D
Have
an
agreement
with
the
OKC,
beautiful,
mm-hmm
and
they've
been
managing
and
maintaining
those
medians
for
quite
a
few
years
now
and
that's
what
this
agreement
is
for
is
to
continue
that
every
July
1
we
have
to
re-up
these
type
of
agreements
and
that's
what
this
is
to
continue.
Our
relationship
and
the
great
work
that
OKC
beautiful
does,
especially
in
this
section
of
Classen.
Thank.
A
K
So
with
BJ
I
was
just
curious
if
we
could
have
a
staff
present
on
kind
of
what
this
is
about.
I
know:
we've
been
briefed
about
it
as
council,
and
this
is
sort
of
a
second
or
third
step
in
the
process
of
paying
these
funds
to
the
NCAA.
But
I
just
wanted
for
the
public's
kind
of
edification
to
know
what
what
the
funds
are
being
used
for
kind
of
the
history
of
the
issue.
Right.
E
The
convention
of
Visitors
Bureau
their
subcommittee,
their
promotion
subcommittee
reviewed
this
and
approved,
authorized
the
payment
to
make
sure
that
we
were
able
to
continue
support
for
this
event,
and
then
it
went
through
the
CVB
and
was
approved
and
I
was
coming
back
to
the
council.
What
this
item
does
today
is
actually
provides
the
contract
authority
and
the
budget
authority
to
be
able
to
do
this.
That's
why
it
said
it
306,000,
just
rounded
306,000.
E
The
actual
payment
has
been
made
by
the
convention
of
Visitors
Bureau
of
three
hundred
and
five
thousand
one
hundred
four
dollars
and
seventy
two
cents.
This
promotions
program
is
really
a
reimbursement
program.
The
CVB
process
is
that
they
work
through
the
promotion's,
do
a
review,
they
process
payment
and
then
they
submit
an
invoice
to
the
city
and
we
pay
from
the
promotion's
funds
to
reimburse
the
CVB,
and
so
there
will
be
a
reimbursement
for
the
exact
amount
of
that
payment.
I.
E
That's
correct
that
this
was
a
matter
of
valuing
the
NCAA
and
what
they
do
to
bring
this
event
to
Oklahoma
City
as
we
evaluated
it.
We
said
you
know
we're
determined
dead,
even
though
all
sports
wasn't
they
weren't
representing
the
city
ourselves,
and
we
didn't
have
a
legal
obligation
that
there
was
a
determination
at
that
point
that
we
would
go
ahead
and
make
that
hole
from
the
promotion's
fund
because
of
the
fact
of
the
money
that
was
owed
to
them
for
the
event,
I
think.
Q
E
E
There
were
questions
about
it.
Certainly
to
look
at
is
this
something
that
we
want
to
step
into?
Are
there
other
ways
that
we
could
pursue
this
and,
as
we
evaluated
all
the
options
that
were
there,
we
actually
had
a
auditors
come
in
and
look
at
all
sports
books
as
they
were
closing
their
doors
so
that
we
knew
what
amount
was
there?
E
K
K
The
argument
of
you
know
wanting
to
keep
a
good
relationship
with
them,
but
I
just
I
just
wanted
to
make
sure
the
public
knows
because
for
me
it
just
is
worrisome
that
we're
setting
a
precedent
for
other
folks
to
make
the
same
case,
whereas
this
money
might
have
been
used,
I
think
by
the
CBB
to
promote
other
events.
When
you
know
I,
think
everyone
knows
that
this
softball
tournament
happens
here.
It's
well
promoted,
so
that's
just
I
just
want
to
make
that
that
clear
to
the
public.
Thank
you
thank.
H
E
R
I'm
jerry
shade
of
the
Oklahoma
City
Planning
Department
Community
Development,
Division
I'm,
the
homeless
programs
planner
for
the
city
of
Oklahoma
City.
Let's
give
you
a
background
about
why
we're
doing
this?
Some
you
may
know
we
released
our
2019
annual
point-in-time
homeless
census
at
the
beginning
of
last
month.
Those
numbers
didn't
really
change
too
much
from
last
year.
They
came
up
a
little
bit,
but
last
year
is
those
numbers
last
year
of
kind
of
what
part
of
that
problem
is
our
unsheltered
count?
R
Last
year
it
came
up
about
50%
to
394,
that's
the
highest,
it's
been
in
several
years,
and
what
that
means
is
when
we
take
our
totals
that
can
the
it's
counting
people
coming
from
three
different
locations:
they're
people
who
are
staying
an
emergency
shelter
on
the
night
of
the
count.
Those
are
places
like
emergency.
It's
like
City
rescue
mission
and
Salvation
Army
transitional
housing,
which
is
2-year
housing
with
supports
lauding.
These
are
sobriety
based
programs
and
then
people
who
are
literally
living
outside
under
bridges
or
in
camps,
and
that's
the
number
that
came
up.
R
That's
the
most
visible
population
and
the
usually
the
people
who
had
the
most
problems
in
addition
to
that,
we've
also
continuously
had
trouble,
locating
youth
and
serving
couch
homeless
youth
and
coming
up
with
the
preventive
measures
to
keep
people
from
falling
into
homeless
in
the
first
place,
and
those
are
just
the
problems
we
know
of
and
our
last
ten
year
plan
wrapped
up
several
years
ago.
So
we
need
a
new
strategy
to
help
address
these
problems,
so
the
American
being
a
taskforce
on
homelessness.
R
First
meeting
was
back
in
April
and
we
announced
there
that
we
would
be
locating
a
consultant
to
carry
around
this
strategic
planning
process.
We
put
together
a
selection
committee
from
Task
Force
members
from
city
care,
the
homeless,
Alliance
and
as
much
foundation
on
all
foundation,
the
Housing
Authority
and
the
city
of
Oklahoma
City,
and
they
really
they
reviewed
several
proposals
based
on
an
RFP.
We
had
released
and
then
heard
several
interviews
and
they
unanimously
unanimously
selected
analytic
insight.
R
Ai
is
an
organization
out
of
Maine
they've
conducted
this
kind
of
study
several
times
for
other
organizations
throughout
the
nation
and
they
also
conduct
work.
Another
studies
Burton
needs
for
other
vulnerable
populations
like
senior
citizens
and
low-income
families,
provided
everything
goes
smoothly,
which,
right
now
it
is.
The
contract
should
come
before
you
for
approval
in
the
sixteenth
and
then
a
representative
from
AI
should
be
at
the
next
task
force
meeting
on
the
19th
that
is
Friday.
R
R
Is
they're
gonna,
do
a
complete
evaluation
of
our
homeless
service
assistant
to
determine
gaps
and
needs
initially,
and
then
they're
gonna
work
with
the
task
force
over
12
months
to
come
up
with
strategies
to
address
those
gaps
and
needs
and
help
us
reduce
our
numbers
even
further,
and
this
is
made
possible
by
a
generous
donation
by
the
inasmuch
Foundation
who
give
a
donation
of
$100,000
to
the
city
to
carry
out
this
process.
So
if
you
have
any
other
questions,
that's
pretty
much
where
we're
at
right
now.
Thank.
Q
R
That's
a
state,
that's
a
statewide
plan,
and
it's
actually
just
in
this
beginning
process.
It's
the
governor's,
interagency
Council
on
homelessness.
That
organization
was
started
under
Henry.
This
plan
is
now
started
under
us.
They
actually
did
a
ten
year
plan
and
what
started
under
Henry
as
well.
That
one
also
has
wrapped
up.
It
was
sort
of
a
federal
or
recommendation
that
community
to
do
ten-year
plan.
Q
R
Hard
to
say
yet
I
mean
a
will,
because
it's
a
statewide
study
I
would
think
it's
gonna
have
to
because
we
see
the
highest
numbers
between
us
and
Tulsa.
We
get
the
highest
numbers
and
people
come
for
services
because
there's
more
services
here
there
are
rural
areas.
So
it's
going
to
have
to
address
that
issue.
Okay,
so
it
would
be
I
think
impossible
for
it
not
to
address
it.
Thank
you.
Yeah.
E
E
O
Thank
You
Marion,
Council,
Eric
Winger
public
works
director
for
Oklahoma,
City
and
exciting
for
us
to
present.
Today
these
are
going
to
be
the
preliminary
and
initial
reports
for
the
traffic
impact
studies,
a
program
that
was
initiated
some
time
ago,
but
we're
finally
to
a
point
where
we're
able
to
present
today
and
talk
a
little
bit
about
some
of
that
coming
projects
that
are
being
recommended
for
reconsideration,
and
these
are
actually
four
items
in
your
agenda
packet.
So
this
is
7
au,
1,
2,
3,
&
4.
So
this
presentation
will
cover
each
of
those
items.
O
We
look
at
the
background
and
I
will
talk
a
little
bit
more
about
impact
fees.
There's
there's
also
a
Parks
component
to
the
impact
fees
that
I'm
not
presenting
on
today.
It's
a
separate
item,
that's
being
overlooked
and
managed
by
the
parks
department
with
duck
cover,
so
we're
specifically
talking
about
traffic
and
we'll
also
talk
a
little
bit
about
the
history,
the
overview,
the
initial
reports,
the
recommended
projects
and
then
some
next
steps.
O
So
we
look
back
at
the
history
and
you'll
see
that
this
timeline,
that
is
in
the
middle
of
this
page,
began
in
January
2016.
When
we
actually
introduced
the
concept
of
impact
fees
to
the
city
council.
There's
a
lot
of
discussion.
There
were
actually
some
changes
that
were
made
right
up
until
the
April
2016
adoption,
but
we
didn't
actually
start
collecting
those
fees
until
January
of
2017.
O
O
It
may
not
have
had
signalization
these
new
developments
caused
some
stress
on
our
traffic
network
and
so
with
a
collection
of
the
impact
fees
which
is
a
fee
collected
for
new
construction
does
not
apply
to
renovation,
but
it's
for
new
construction
and
it's
based
on
the
square
foot
of
the
new
facilities,
anything
from
a
7-eleven
to
an
Amazon
distribution
center.
Those
fees
are
collected,
put
into
city
accounts
and
retained
for
future
projects
related
to
traffic
improvements,
and
so
those
fees
went
into
effect
and
generate
2017.
O
So
if
you
were
collecting
fees
say
in
benefit
area
r1,
that's
in
the
top
left
hand
of
this
drawing
you
cannot
use
those
monies
down
in
r2,
so
the
money
stay
local
to
that
specific
benefit
area.
So
that
was
one
of
the
the
primary
items
that
was
discussed
with
developers
ensuring
that,
when
developments
occurred
in
each
of
those
individual
areas,
traffic
improvements
could
follow.
O
These
are
the
collections
for
each
of
those
14
different
benefit
areas
to
date.
You're
going
to
see
some
are
a
lot
more
than
obviously
there's
different
areas
of
growth.
Some
of
the
highest
areas
you'll
see
that
there
are
actually
five
different
benefit
areas,
not
exceeding
a
million
dollars
in
collection
of
traffic
impact
fees.
You're
gonna
see
there's
a
number
of
smaller
areas
too,
including
the
one
at
the
bottom
of
the
page.
Rural
four.
O
That's
only
collected
a
hundred
and
seventy
six
thousand
to
date,
so
we
do
have
some
disparity
between
the
different
benefit
areas,
but
that
was
expected
again
with
the
understanding
that,
as
we
collect
enough
money
in
those
areas,
we
can
recommend
certain
projects,
the
engineering
fees
for
the
contracts
that
are
being
done
to
do.
The
studies
are
also
being
pulled
from
these
different
benefit
areas
as
well,
but.
O
E
O
So
it
does
not
provide
for
maintenance
of
streets,
it
has
to
increase
the
capacity,
as
the
city
manager
noted
so
in
the
packet
today
and
in
in
pre.
Consideration
are
the
initial
engineering
reports
and
some
of
this,
the
the
information
that's
included.
Each
has
an
executive
summary,
but
the
engineers-
and
there
are
four
different
ones.
We
engaged
Walter
P,
more
Olsen,
Kim,
Lee
horn
and
Lee.
We
also
divided
up
those
different
impact
areas.
For
example,
Walter
P
Moore
did
four
of
them.
O
I
1,
I,
2,
&
6
are
for
Olsen,
did
three
of
them
and
four
and
five
and
are
three
Lee,
did
two
of
those
and
won
an
r1
and
Kim
Lee
horn
completed
the
balance,
C
1
I,
3,
n,
2,
n
3
and
R
2,
but
each
had
this
same
scope
of
work
that
you
see
on
this
screen
that
reviewed
the
existing
traffic
needs
in
each
of
those
independent
benefit
areas
making
a
report,
so
they
were
using
an
engineering
analysis.
They
were
using
portions
of
our
comprehensive
plan
plan.
Okay,
see
looking
at
future
development.
O
They
analyze
the
the
needs
in
each
of
the
areas
for
intersections
and
streets,
created
potential
candidate
projects
and
then
made
some
recommendations
in
this
initial
report.
There
is
a
final
report
pending,
but
one
of
the
things
that
we
noted
with
collections
being
received
today
and
several
of
the
benefit
areas
not
exceeding
a
million
dollars,
is
that
we
were
in
a
position
to
go
ahead
and
start
expending
funds
that
are
not
bond
and
not
sales
taxes.
O
The
project
types
really
fall
into
three
categories:
widening
reconfiguration
and
adding
traffic
control
devices.
So
here's
some
examples
of
what
some
of
those
will
look
like
one
of
the
projects
at
Reno
and
Mustang
includes
widening
and,
in
this
case,
we're
looking
at
adding
dedicated
right
turn
lanes,
which
will
increase
the
capacity
at
this
particular
intersection
so
through,
inter
through
the
engineering
analysis
through
the
use
of
traffic
counts
through
teacher
projections
and
plan
OKC.
O
This
is
one
of
the
recommended
projects
for
that
specific
benefit
area,
but
this
shows
where
again,
it's
not
resurfacing
and
it's
not
maintenance.
We
would
actually
add
the
additional
traffic
controls
and
improve
the
the
throughput
of
this
intersection
with
the
additional
lane
enhancements.
The
next
is
a
reconfiguration.
In
some
cases
we
find
that
maybe
the
existing
striping,
the
existing
layout
or
the
use
of
the
lanes
could
be
improved
and
in
this
case
MacArthur
and
interstate
40,
looking
at
restriping
for
additional
right
turn
lanes.
O
Then
the
last
example
is
when
we
actually
start
looking
at
installation
of
additional
traffic
control
devices,
so
at
Anderson
road
and
I-40
eastbound
off-ramp,
adding
a
traffic
signal
at
that
location
to
help
provide
for
better
enhanced
traffic
movement
in
increasing
that
capacity.
So
there's
four
reports
that
are
in
the
packet
as
I
mentioned.
Each
of
them
has
an
executive
summary.
Each
of
them
breaks
down
each
area
and
most
benefit
areas
recommend
two
to
three
projects.
In
these
initial
reports.
O
There
are
a
couple
of
the
benefit
areas
that
have
very
low
collections
to
date,
and
there
aren't
project
recommendations
made,
for
example,
to
install
a
new
signal
at
an
intersection
in
Oklahoma
City.
The
estimated
cost
is
about
three
hundred
thousand
dollars,
so
that
really
kind
of
sets
that
baseline
for
the
amount
of
monies
that
need
to
be
collected
to
do
a
simple
signal,
enhancement
project.
We
went
ahead
and
put
a
list
of
projects
on
the
screen
today.
This
show
was
high.
Priority
projects
are
by
each
of
the
wards
and
I've
listed.
Those
here
I.
O
Don't
think
that
most
of
these
will
be
a
surprise
for
those
that
travel
in
these
specific
areas.
Each
of
these
is
a
critical
location
that
is
needing
some
enhancement,
and
so
these
are
included
in
the
reports
and
upon
council
approval
of
the
reports
today.
We're
prepared
to
actually
advance
these
projects
forward
very
quickly.
The
engineering
contracts
that
provided
for
the
study
can
actually
provide
for
some
of
the
improvements,
but
we
also
have
additional
traffic
engineers
already
under
contract
for
the
city
to
do
the
designs.
O
So,
looking
at
next
steps
finalizing
the
design
on
the
recommended
projects,
constructing
those
recommended
initial
projects
will
then
finish.
The
final
reports
and
those
final
reports
are
anticipated
to
be
done
by
the
end
of
this
calendar
year.
They're
then
going
to
have
a
more
comprehensive
list
of
projects
in
each
of
the
benefit
areas,
not
just
the
two
or
three
that
are
recommended
today,
and
then
we
will
work
to
continually
update
the
reports
making
sure
that
his
new
developments
come
into
Oklahoma
City.
O
The
reports
reflect
those
new
developments
as
traffic
counts
and
traffic
movements
change
in
Oklahoma
City.
Those
engineers
will
keep
those
reports
updated
so
that
we
maintain
a
current
list
of
necessary
and
needed
traffic
impact
in
traffic
enhancement
projects
we'll
be
bringing
those
reports
back
to
the
City
Council
for
consideration
and
approval
as
we
bring
projects
forward.
O
It's
intended
that
we'll
be
bringing
those
forward
as
well,
so
with
that
final
engineering
reports,
we'll
compile
the
data
and
again
I
mentioned
the
periodic
updates,
and
with
that
I
can
answer
any
questions
you
have
about
either
traffic
impact
fees.
The
reports
that
are
in
the
packet
today
or
possibly
what
we're
looking
at,
is
next
steps
for
into
the
future
questions.
O
K
O
We
have
had
in
the
past
for
the
city
of
Oklahoma
City,
when
we
find
congestion
or
an
intersection,
that's
no
longer
functioning
properly,
we'll
say
a
four-way
stop
that
now
needs
signalization.
Those
have
traditionally
been
funded
by
bond
projects
and
we
have
a
number
of
bond
projects
that
are
part
of
those
seven
that
are
all
finished,
but
the
17
includes
those
that's
been
our
method
of
being
able
to
do
traffic
enhancements.
It's
the
bond
program,
which
we
only
plan
about
every
10
years
with
the
impact
fees.
O
The
idea
is,
of
course,
as
we
create
that
impact
they're
able
to
address
it
more
readily
and
more
quickly.
So
the
engineers
that
worked
on
these
looked
at
those
intersections
that
are
currently
being
impacted
that
require
an
improvement
they've
either
looked
at
the
traffic
count,
they've
been
in
the
field
and
studied
the
congestion
and
they've
come
up
with
this
recommended
solution.
Specific
to
alleviate
that
that
specific
item
I
just.
K
When
we
talk
about
adding
more
lanes
of
traffic
and
looking
at
some
of
these
areas,
it
looks
like
there's,
probably
not
even
sidewalks
so
I'm
sure
people
are
still
walking
there,
but
I
just
I'm
curious
about
how
we
go
forward,
making
sure
that
we're
taking
those
things
into
account
when
we
think
about
traffic
because
from
things
that
I
read
and
understand
the
data
is
that
when
you
build
more
lanes,
you
get
more
congestion.
The
idea
of
induced
demand
that
you
build
it
more
people
go
to
that
intersection.
K
O
One
of
the
things
that
we
do
in
the
bond
program
is,
we
do
start
making
projections
in
the
future
for
the
city,
where
we
believe
there's
going
to
be
some
sort
of
a
traffic
demand
or
traffic
potential,
also
using
plan
OKC
to
help
provide
for
that
future.
There
are
certain
widening
projects
that
we're
obviously
completing
in
advance
of
development.
O
For
example,
we
have
another,
a
number
of
widened
roads
around
the
Kilpatrick
expansion
in
west
and
southwest
Oklahoma
City,
knowing
that
once
they
complete
that
interstate
expansion
that
there
will
undoubtedly
be
some
induced
traffic,
and
so
we
do
have
some
widening
projects
on
several
streets,
their
traffic
impact
studies
aren't
really
doing
that.
So
I
would
tell
you
that
the
traffic
impact
studies
are
designed
to
there
is
a
development
that
goes
in
a
fee
is
collected
because
of
that
development.
O
The
traffic
just
analyzed
and
then,
if
needed,
enhancements,
are
added
to
the
system
after
the
fact
not
before
so
we're
trying
to
address
those
and
again
address
the
items
that
aren't
covered
in
either
our
bond
or
other
initiatives
of
the
city.
So
so
these
are
absolutely
needed.
I
think
that,
as
we
address
pedestrian
and
other
say
facilities
like
bicycle
facilities,
that's
something
that
we
obviously
will
work
very
closely
with
bike.
Walk
OKC,
making
sure
that
for
those
planned
areas
for
pedestrian
enhancements
and
bicycle
enhancements
that
we
incorporate
those
as
well.
O
G
O
Each
projects
really
vary
independent
of
each
other,
so
I
wouldn't
say
that
there's
one
figure
for
just
intersections
and
one
figure
just
for
right
turn,
lane
Editions
and
one
figure
for
other
enhancements.
So
in
the
report,
I
think
what
you'll
find
is
each
location
that
was
identified
of
having
a
traffic
impact
and
needing
a
update
or
an
upgrade.
Those
costs
are
very
specific
to
this
need
of
that
particular
intersection
or
that
particular
road,
so
I,
don't
have
a
really
of
one
size
fits
all
and.
G
I
guess
the
reason
I'm
asking
is
because
when
you
look
at
the
numbers
in
the
areas,
the
eye
ones
and
our
fours
and
our
threes
you're,
seeing
as
you,
we
saw
a
big
difference
in
the
amount
of
money
that
is
in
each
area
and
looking
in
a
lot
of
those
rural
areas.
There's
a
lot
of
need
more
need
than
some
of
those
other
areas.
So
that
I
guess
that's
kind
of
where
my
concern
and
my
question
is
so.
O
The
impact
fee
is
really
geared
towards
again
those
benefit
areas
making
sure
that
money's
collected
in
that
specific
area
stay
in
that
area.
That
was
how
the
program
was
designed
and
really
how
the
state
statutes
outlined
the
use
of
the
impact
fee.
So
with
that,
if
there's
just
a
lack
of
development
in
a
particular
benefit
area,
its
collections
are
gonna,
be
a
lot
lower
than
a
benefit
area.
That's
having
a
lot
of
development
activity,
so.
E
The
numbers
that
you
see
on
that
report
are
really
based
on
the
collections
from
development
in
that
area,
and
so
what
we
have
is
when
we
get
into
areas
where
there's
not
as
much
development
occurring,
but
we
have
a
need,
that's
where
we
have
to
use
geo
bonds
or
other
sources
to
be
able
to
cover
them.
The
difference.
A
Craig,
it
might
be
beneficial
to
consider
devoting
some
time
to
impact
fees.
We
have
three
new
council
members
on
who
may
not
be
up
to
speed
and
gone
through
the
analysis
that
we
went
through
to
come
up
with
these
impact
fees
and
to
recognize
that
they
were
highly
controversial.
Were
they
not
among
our
building
communities.
E
E
Just
to
talk
a
little
bit
more
about
the
information
on
the
background
of
it
and
Eric
did
a
good
job
of
going
through
the
history,
the
small
kind
of
the
timeline
of
what
we
went
through,
but
it
was
really
a
long
process
of
getting
to
the
place
where
we
got
agreement
on
having
the
impact
fees
and
the
way
we
saw
impact
fees
all
along
was.
It
was
a
way
to
enhance
our
ability
to
invest
in
infrastructure.
It's
not
going
to
be
a
standalone.
E
E
Got
that's
what
Eric
was
talking
about
with
the
benefit
areas
that
it's
and
we
drew
those
working
with
municipal
councillors
office
based
upon
the
state
law
that
it's
really
the
idea
that
development
that
happens
in
an
area
doesn't
mean
you're,
going
to
get
an
improvement
right
in
front
of
your
development.
But
it's
going
to
be
in
a
general
area
that
that
development
contributed
into
yeah.
Q
G
Think
that's
a
great
idea,
but
I
guess
even
to
add
to
that.
The
concern
is
the
fact
that
you
know
we
have
a
lot
of
a
lot
of
need
that
we've
been
talking
about
for
numerous
years
in
certain
parts
of
our
city
when
it
comes
to
traffic
and
traffic
study
and
traffic
improvements,
and
the
fact
that
we're
looking
at
how
the
Geo
bond
has
to
offset
those
costs
when
even
that
time
frame,
you
still
have
to
wait.
M
O
O
O
So,
as
I
say,
I
mean
so.
This
is
one
of
the
reports,
and
this
is
the
initial
report.
Right
so
I
mean
the
final
reports
obviously
have
a
little
more
detail
than
this
they're
looking
at
at
southbound
to
eastbound
enhancements
on
Western
onto
I-40,
for
so
the
southbound
western
as
it
crosses
interstate
44.
It's
been
noted
to
have
significant
congestion
in
delaying
cars
that
are
trying
to
go
eastbound
onto
I-40,
for
so
what's
being
recommended
is
to
reconfigure
possibly
some
of
the
lane
and
striping
on
that
bridge
deck.
O
That
is
there
possibly
some
signal
enhancements,
but
to
alleviate
that
specific
kind
of
interchange
area
for
probably
a
lot
of
that
car
traffic.
That
is,
is
at
that
location.
So
the
final
designs,
you
will
not
find
those
in
these
reports.
What
you're
going
to
find
is
the
study
and
the
recommendation.
What
comes
next
is
with
Council's
approval
of
each
of
these
reports.
We
then
have
an
engineer:
do
the
actual
design
actually
doing
the
engineering
drawings?
They
then
go
through
our
full
review
and
then
that
project
comes
back
through
either
the
Council
for
approval?
M
M
Think
when
I,
when
I
hear
words
like
Street
widening
to
solve
congestion
that
flies
in
the
face
of
what
I
heard
at
that
conference,
I
attended.
That
said,
the
more
more
we
widen
and
the
more
lanes
we
add
all
that
does-
is
induce
more
congestion
and
more
traffic.
So
when
we
have
this
discussion
about
impact
fees
in
the
summary
of
how
we
got
here,
I
I
would
like
for
us
to
address
that
again.
I
understand
there
might
be
other
parts
of
the
city.
M
We're
widening
streets
might
make
sense,
word
one
it's
not
at
all
what
Ward
2
would
like,
and
so
I
heard
you
say
earlier:
bike,
walk
and
kind
of
looking
at
some
of
those
areas
that
we've
identified
as
pedestrian
areas
really
gonna
need
your
help
and
take
doing
what
you
were
saying:
moving
away
from
that
widening
to
walkable
streets
and
walkable
sidewalks
and
bike
infrastructure.
So
I
was
glad
to
hear
you
say
that
I.
O
Think
you're
gonna,
find
I
mean
obviously
the
image
on
the
screen.
We
have
a
very
diverse
city
with
a
lot
of
different
opportunities:
you're
not
going
to
find
necessarily
a
traffic
impact
project
recommended
for
a
streetscape
that
was
recently
completed
by
Oklahoma
City,
but
again
just
a
mile
and
a
half
north
of
this
location.
S
S
Different
types
of
traffic
improvements,
so
yeah,
so
I
think
that
Western
is
certainly
different
than
say
Memorial.
You
know,
I
mean
that
they're
just
two
completely
different
streets,
but
Western
becomes
more
like
Memorial
when
it
gets
closer
to
Memorial.
So
you
know
it's
it's
just
one
of
those
well.
K
And
to
speak
specifically
to
that
intersection
at
Western
and
I-44
I
was
at
a
community
meeting
for
oh,
it
was
not.
A
community
was
a
refugee
resettlement
committee
that
were
the
former
now
former
principal
of
Horace
Mann
Elementary,
which
is
at
Western
and
fiftieth
yeah.
It's
a
little
bit
north
of
here
of
where
this
picture
was
taken.
But
he
was
talking
about
kids,
who
were
having
to
walk
across
I-40
of
the
over
I-44
down
Western,
to
get
to
school
and,
and
so
I
think.
K
My
concern
comes
where,
when
we
just
talked
about
traffic
as
getting
cars
onto
a
highway
faster
over
making
that
whole
intersection
easier
and
more
safer
for
kids
who
are,
or
parents
walking
their
kids
to
school,
so
that
they
don't
have
to
drive
half
a
mile
a
mile
down
across
western
to
get
their
kids
to
Horace,
Mann
and
I
understand
Horace
Mann.
It's
not
going
to
be
an
elementary
anymore,
but
I
still
believe
it's
going
to
be
used
by
the
public
school
system.
K
M
O
A
part
of
traffic
impact
fees-
the
answer
would
be
not
as
likely,
but
I
would
go
back
to
the
bike.
Walk
OKC
plan,
absolutely
so
as
a
part
of
bike
walk
we're
improving,
walkability
and
bikeability.
Those
would
be
project
concepts.
Those
would
be
locations
that
would
be
considered
as
a
part
of
bike
walk
that
we
would
then
use
whatever
city
resources
were
available,
whether
it
be
the
bond,
the
better
Street
saver
city,
tax,
other
potential
resources
with
grants
or
other
things
to
actually
accomplish
those
types
of
projects,
the
traffic
impacts.
O
These
is
just
one
of
the
many
many
city
programs
that
we
have
to
generate
revenue
for
infrastructure.
This
just
happens
to
be
more
for
traffic
enhancements,
whereas
the
bond
and
the
sales
tax
is
sometimes
the
grant
programs
focus
more
on
bike
impaired.
So
it's
just
it's
just
a
different
funding
source.
T
Morning,
everyone
I'm
Mary
Smith,
my
address
is
two
to
five
one:
North
West
55th
Street
James
Cooper's
Ward.
Thank
you,
hello,
so
I'm
here
today,
I
got
in
an
accident
like
two
blocks
over
from
my
house
on
May
14th,
when
an
Oklahoma
City
garbage
truck
I
was
with
my
two-year-old
daughter,
make
a
long
story
short
he
backed
into
my
car
and
it
what
he
was
at
fault,
and
it
did
show
that
on
the
police
report,
I'm
here
today,
just
to
say
kind
of
a
little
bit
of
a
complaint.
Again.
T
This
happened
on
May
14th,
today's
July
2nd.
It's
been
over
45
days
since
my
car
was,
you
know,
I
had
that
collision.
So
when
you
are
in
a
wreck,
what's
in
Oklahoma,
City
garbage
truck
and
you
file
with
a
claim
within
the
city
and
then
you're
contacted
by
one
of
the
lawyers,
so
I
had
Kate
Gough
and
she
was
nothing
but
nice
very
professional
went
through
the
claim.
They
denied
a
couple
things
on
it,
so
it
was
back
and
forth
for
just
a
little
bit.
But
then
it
came
to
another
lawyer.
T
I
spoke
with
her
I
think
she's,
the
supervisor,
Sherri
cats
and
she
was
nothing
but
rude
on
the
phone,
so
I
I'm
just
here
today,
you
know
I
settled
it
up
on
the
phone
said:
fine
I
approve
it
because
I
didn't
want
it
to
go
any
further.
You
know
I
just
they
said.
If
you
don't
agree
with
something,
then
you're
have
to
gonna
get
a
lawyer
and
I
was
like
I.
Don't
want
to
get
a
lawyer.
I
don't
want
to
go
any
further,
so
On
June,
11th
I,
said
over
the
phone.
T
T
I
I
am
able
to
speak
up
for
myself
and
a
lot
of
people
aren't
and
I
just
want
to
see
that
you
know
maybe
other
citizens
in
Oklahoma
who
this
happens
to
doesn't
happen
again,
because
when
I
got
off
the
phone
with
her,
it
just
felt
like
she
was
almost
bullying
me
and
to
the
fact
that
this
was
not
that
this
was
my
fault.
She
said
things
such
as
well,
I
mean
the
police
report
could
have
been
falsified.
T
A
K
H
V
A
C
P
Morning,
my
name
is
Lance
Wendel.
My
address
is
600
South
Washington
and
that's
down
in
Ardmore
just
a
little
bit
south
of
here
and
this
morning.
I
want
to
thank
you
for
your
time
and
your
attention
to
to
a
potential
rezoning
here
in
Oklahoma
City
I'm
here
to
request
a
rezoning
from
agricultural
land
to
our
one
on
a
track
that
is
pretty
pretty
close
to
the
northeast
corner
of
15th
Street
and
Morgan
Road.
P
It's
basically
due
south
of
the
big
Terrax
plant.
That's
right
there
on
I-40,
it's
a
forty
acre
tract
of
land
and
it
is
a
jacent
to
some
industrial
to
the
north.
A
little
bit
of
industrial
to
the
south
and
then
to
the
west.
Is
another
r1
residential
home
subdivision
kind
of
waiting
for
the
map
to
come
up.
That
I
can
point
it
out
to
you,
but
so
we've
been
through
Planning
and
Zoning
on
this
and
in
the
planning
zoning
profit.
P
There
we
go
okay,
so
so
you
know
we
have
that
map
and
again
that's
right
on
Southwest
15th
Street
a
little
bit
off
the
corner
of
South
Morgan,
Road,
directly
south
of
the
Terrax
plant
and
just
east
of
the
Sunnybrook
subdivision.
It's
a
forty
acre
tract.
That's
currently
found
agriculture
and
I'm,
asking
to
rezone
that
to
r1
similar
to
the
subdivision
to
its
west
in
the
planning
and
zoning
process
right
staff
looked
at
it
and
said:
r1
is
completely
in
line
with
the
city's
comprehensive
plan
to
what
this
should
be.
P
Rezone
to
matter
of
fact,
staff
thought
that
it
was
such
a
benign
request
at
the
time
that
they
put
it
on
the
consent
agenda
for
Planning
and
Zoning,
but
but
since
that
time
some
local
neighbors
have
come
in
and
they've
got
some
concerns
right
and
so
I've
had
to
public
comment
sessions
with
those
neighbors
to
try
to
understand.
You
know
what
their
concerns
are
see
if
we
can
address
them
or
at
least
try
to
educate
them
on
what
what
I'm
trying
to
do
so
I'll
share.
P
We
do
kind
of
what
we've
discussed
in
the
southeast
corner
of
the
property.
There
is
a
small
section
of
flood
plain
100-year,
flood
plain
and
and
the
neighbors
primarily
the
concerns
are
from
the
neighbors
of
the
Sunnybrook
subdivision,
which
is
a
subdivision
to
the
west.
The
neighbors
are
concerned
that,
right
now
it
looks
like
maybe
some
of
the
engineering
in
their
original
subdivision
wasn't
as
thorough
as
maybe
it
should
have
been
and
they're
having
some
flooding
problems
and
so
they're
concerned
that
construction
to
their
east
would
exacerbate
those
problems
and
caused
flooding.
P
You
know
back
up
onto
them
and
so
I
talked
to
them
about
it.
We
do
have
it's
not
shown
on
the
map,
but
Morgan
Creek
is
down
in
that
southeast
corner,
and
so
there
is
a
way
to
drain
that
field.
There
we
go,
you
can
you
can
see
the
creek
down
there,
there's
a
way
to
drain
that
field,
and
so
you
know
I've
kind
of
said.
P
Look
it's
not
the
land
that
I'm
purchasing
is
not
the
root
cause
of
the
drainage
problems
that
you
have
your
subdivision,
but
generally
what
I've
seen
is
engineering
comes
in
and
if
we
can
widen
the
drainage,
that's
going
through
that
field.
Hopefully
we
can
help
alleviate
the
problem,
but
at
worst
case
my
engineering
firm
is
going
to
have
to
do
engineering
to
the
piece
of
property
that
makes
sure
that
in
no
way
does
what
I
build
exacerbate
the
problem
to
the
west.
But
that's
not
allowed,
and
not
only
does
my
engineer
have
to
do
that.
P
But
the
city
engineer
has
to
review
that
and
make
sure
that
you
know
I'm
not
doing
anything.
That's
going
to
hurt
that
property
and
again
I
hope
that
what
I
do
by
opening
up
that
drainage
channel
is.
They
believe
that
water
out
of
there
faster
and
and
helps
alleviate
some
of
the
flooding
problems
that
they've
been
having
so
they're
they're
concerned
about
flooding.
I've
tried
to
address
that
and
let
them
know
that
there's
an
engineering
process
and
that
we'll
be
able
to
help
alleviate.
P
P
That
actually
dead-ends
into
my
40
acre
tract,
and
so
it's
kind
of
been
in
concrete,
if
you
will,
for
the
past
25
years
from
the
inception
of
their
subdivision,
that
there's
a
plan
for
the
road
to
continue
on
to
the
east
for
more
residential
housing.
That's
kind
of
how
it
was
originally
planned
a
long
time
ago,
and
you
can
kind
of
see
how
that
road
dead-ends
there.
But
the
neighbors
concern
the
concern
that
people
will
come
through
their
subdivision
to
get
out
onto
Morgan,
Road
and
then
I.
P
Some
of
them
were
concerned
that
I
would
increase
the
traffic
on
15th
Street,
but
again
I
think
that's,
that's
a
pretty
big
road
that
was
designed
for
that
kind
of
traffic
and
designed
for
further
expansion.
It
wasn't
put
in
that
long
ago,
so
I
tried
to
to
let
them
know
that
I
think
that
there's
ways
that
we
can
work
to
prevent
and
alleviate
the
traffic
congestion,
or
at
least
the
increased
traffic
congestion
from
my
construction.
P
They
also
don't
want
to
lose
to
big
open
space
that
it's,
a
beautiful
40
acres
behind
their
house
again.
I
understand
that
right,
it
is,
it
is
pretty.
They've
talked
about
wildlife
back
there
and-
and
you
know
not
not
wanting
to
lose
that
and
I've
informed
them-
that
in
the
planning
process
now
the
city
of
Oklahoma
City
may
be
a
little
bit
different
back
when
they
were
platted,
but
requires
that
I
leave
some
opens
providers
that
I
allow,
for
you
know
some
common
space
and
some
common
area.
P
The
density
that
I'm
going
to
propose
is
not
going
to
be
nearly
the
max
density
that
you
can
put
in
an
r1
all
right.
We're
going
to
try
to
try
to
keep
it
where
it's
nice
and
it's
a
in
common
space
and
open
space,
I'm
gonna.
Try
to
alleviate
that
concern.
They're
concerned
about
the
size
of
the
homes
that
I'm
going
to
build.
I
am
going
to
apply
right
now,
I've
been
honest
with
them
about
it,
I'm
going
to
apply
for
a
financing
stream
from
Oakland
Housing
Finance
Agency.
P
That
would
allow
these
homes
to
be
rental
for
the
first
15
years
before
they
would
convert
to
homeownership,
but
I
would
be
building
1,400
to
1,600
square
foot
homes,
3-bedroom
2bath,
2-car
garage,
brick
homes.
This
is
a
single-family
neighborhood,
but
they
were
concerned
about
that.
I
tried
to.
Let
them
know
that
you
know
that's.
Fourteen
to
sixteen
hundred
square
foot
is
is
pretty
much
in
line
there
are.
P
You
know
that
it's
similar
we're
a
similar
neighborhood
right
and
I've
also
addressed
that
if
we
do
get
the
financing
and
I
do
end
up
being.
You
know,
rental
for
the
first
15
years,
but
I
will
have
on-site
staff
that
will
work
there
right,
leasing,
staff
maintenance
staff
that
will
work
hard
to
make
sure
that
this,
my
neighborhood,
you
know-
remains
at
least
to
the
standard
that
it's
Sunnybrook
neighborhood
is
back
to
the
east
or
to
the
west
I'm,
not
not
here,
to
belittle
their
concerns.
P
They
have
valid
concerns
and
I
understand
that
you
know
from
the
neighbors
perspective,
but
if
we,
if
we
will
look
at
what
these
concerns,
are
their
concerns
that
we've
kind
of
heard
before
right,
it's
not
uncommon,
there's
a
catch
phrase
of
NIMBY
right.
Nobody,
nobody
wants
to.
Nobody
wants
to
lose
the
open
space.
Somebody
wants
to
lose
the
wildlife
in
their
backyard.
We
understand
and
I
understand
that
and
I'm
empathetic
to
that
I
am,
but
the
reality
is
city
of
Oklahoma.
City
is
desperate
for
good
workforce
housing.
P
Two
weeks
ago,
one
of
your
city
planners
Matt
Gabrielson,
had
a
consultant
come
in
and
ran
a
planning
conference.
You
know
kind
of
what
mayor
Holt
had
kind
of
asked
to
do
to
address
this
problem.
He
had
a
conference
and
to
try
to
resolve
it.
How
do
we
resolve
and
this
phony
in
this
housing
that
I'm
proposing
here
today?
It
goes
directly
to
the
root
of
the
problem
that
the
mayor's
talked
about
and
that
the
Planning
Commission
is
trying
to
address
city
of
Oklahoma.
City
is
booming
and,
and
that's
a
great
thing.
P
Economic
development
is
a
key
to
that
growth
and
your
economic
developers
will
tell
you
that
housing
is
a
key
to
them
being
able
to
continue
the
growth
in
Oklahoma
City,
so
we're
here
today.
You
know
with
an
opportunity
to
bring
good
quality,
affordable
housing
to
fill
the
city's
need
and
I
understand
that
some
residents
don't
want
that
next
to
them,
I
get
it,
but
the
reality
is
any
place.
We
look
in
the
city
of
Oklahoma
City
to
try
to
fill
this
need
in
the
neighbors
next
door
aren't
going
to
want
to
lose
that
field
anywhere.
P
P
Q
P
Q
P
P
H
G
P
Response
is
not
everyone
today
can
afford
to
buy
a
nice
1400
square
foot,
three-bedroom
two-bath,
home
and
in
Mustang
schools,
but
there
are
people
that
want
to
they
just
can't
afford
right
and
so
they're
working
on
that
and
they're
working
on
a
way
to
get
there,
and
this
is
not
a
long-term
rental.
To
me,
this
is
a
rental
until
its
ownership
time,
right
and
I
feel
like
that.
There
are
folks
in
Oklahoma
City
that
that
deserve
that
right.
They
are
on
the
right
track,
but
just
can't
can't
not
not.
P
Everyone
gets
to
be
a
homeowner
today
right,
but
that
doesn't
mean
that
they
don't
deserve
good,
decent
housing
with
a
yard
where
their
kids
can
play
right.
They
don't
have
to
be
relegated
to
apartments.
That's
not
I,
don't
I,
don't
feel
like
that's
the
requirement
and-
and
you
know,
there's
about
15
percent
of
the
sunnybrook
subdivision
right
now.
If
you
look
at
the
real
estate,
data
is
rental
right,
so
there's
already
rental
there
there's
rental
across
the
street.
P
Tell
you
this
is
my
first
venture
into
Oklahoma
City
I'm
from
Ardmore
I'm,
a
rural
guy
I
have
done
infill
I
have
done
the
same
type
of
financing
where
we
just
picked
a
lot
and
a
lot,
and
you
know
picked
up
45
or
50
Lots
and
urban
infill
and
oak
in
Ardmore.
Oklahoma
I've
done
it
in
durant.
I've
done
in
Chickasha.
I
I
think
it's
great,
but
I
also
think
kind
of
big.
You
know
I.
Think
subdivisions
are
good
too.
So
I'd
like
to
come
back
so
yes,
yes,
but
not
in
Oklahoma
City,
yet
I.
M
I
two
things
I'm
always
concerned:
whenever
I
hear
anybody
who's
against
multi-unit
rentals,
because
I
know
my
zoning
history
and
I
know
the
racial
discrimination
that
that
brought
for
the
better
part
of
the
20th
century.
However,
I'm
also
concerned
because
those
very
same
renters
are
probably
going
to
need
access
to
public
transportation
and
the
sidewalks
we
were
talking
about
earlier,
and
so
whenever
I
see
these
sorts
of
units
on
the
periphery,
where
there
aren't
necessarily
those
bus
stops
waiting
for
them.
I
get
a
little
concerned
about
that.
I'm
curious
sure.
P
And
that
is
the
concern.
I,
don't
want
people
to
be
very
clear
and
I
think
there's
something
I've
tried
to
try
to
educate
the
the
sunnybrook
you
know
subdivision
on.
This
is
not
a
section
8
subsidized
housing.
This
is
this,
is
tax
exempt
bond
financing
and
I
will
tell
you
that
when
you
look
at
the
incomes
for
the
folks
that
are
going
to
live
here,
you
know
it
ranges
from
a
single
person
as
making
like
$36,000
a
year
right
and
can't
make
less
than
about
$25,000
a
year.
They
can't
afford
their
rent.
P
Up
to
you
know
a
larger
family
of
you
know.
Five
or
six
can
be
up
in
the
mid
$50,000
a
year.
Oh
I'm
gonna
tell
you
that
95%
of
my
tenants
have
vehicles,
that's
just
that
is
that
is
normal.
You
know
these.
These
guys
are
making
eighteen
twenty
dollars
an
hour
working
at
Terrax
they're
the
janitors
at
the
school
right.
You
even
look
at
at
an
entry-level
policeman.
If
he's
got
a
big
family,
that's
what
he's!
That's?
What
he's
making
so
most
of
them
that
I
see
have
vehicles.
P
A
W
Hello,
my
name
is
Katherine
Davidson
and
I
live
at
96
and
one
Bluebonnet
place
in
Oklahoma,
City,
Oklahoma
and
I
apologize
because
I'm
very
nervous.
Thank
you
for
this
opportunity
to
speak
with
you
today.
I
stand
before
you
as
a
resident
of
Sunnybrook
with
229
other
residents,
figuratively
standing
behind
me,
as
you
can
note
from
the
petition
that
I
submitted
to
you.
Sunnybrook
is
a
small
quiet,
neighborhood
built
over
35
years
ago,
that
we
are
a
neighborhood
of
retirees
and
young
families.
W
The
majority
of
our
residents
walk
the
neighborhood
and
our
children
ride
their
bikes
and
play
basketball
on
the
streets.
There
are
not
many
neighborhoods
such
as
this.
In
the
current
modern
world,
we
understand
that
we
are
in
one
of
the
fastest
growing
counties
in
Oklahoma
and
what
that
means
change,
but
due
to
the
fact
that
Sunnybrook
was
designed
over
35
years
ago,
we
do
not
have
sidewalks
in
our
neighborhoods.
Our
streets
can
get
crowded
with
cars
parked
along
the
curb,
and
there
are
areas
in
the
streets
in
need
of
repair.
W
We
have
several
turns
and
a
four
that
160
plus
additional
cars
can
become
dangerous,
confusing
as
to
who
has
the
right-of-way
sorry
and
congested
by
allowing
access
to
use
Sunnybrook,
as
I
threw
away,
would
be
detrimental
to
the
safety
and
character
of
our
neighborhood,
because
more
than
35%
of
pedestrian
fatalities
occur
on
local
streets
and
we
don't
want
our
neighborhood
or
your
children
to
become
a
part
of
that
statistic.
With
the
concern
for
the
safety
of
our
neighbors.
We
also
are
concerned
for
the
people
who
might
live
in
the
field
that
mr.
W
wendal
wants
to
develop
into
homes.
Those
of
us
who
live
in
this
neighborhood
know
the
ins
and
outs
of
the
area.
This
field
is
a
flood
zone
and
if
you
look
at
it
and
look
at
not
just
the
hundred
year
flood
plain,
but
the
500
year
flood
plan,
almost
the
entire
field
is
a
flood
zone.
With
the
recent
rains,
we
watched
our
streets
turn
into
rivers
with
water
up
to
the
curves
and
then
drain
into
the
fields.
We
then
watch
this
field
flood
multiple
times
outside
the
designated
500
year.
W
W
Sunnybrook's
Tareq's
CERs
tea
are
all
designed
to
drain
into
this
field
and
then
flow
into
Mustang
Creek
water
lying
in
the
floodplain
seeps
into
the
aquifers
more
easily
than
water
and
streams
or
from
residential
streets.
We
need
this
500
year
flood
plan
to
help
our
aquifer
and
provide
a
buffer
of
space
between
Mustang
Creek
and
surrounding
neighborhoods
by
developing
this
area,
you're,
taking
away
that
buffer
and
a
natural
resource
to
help
our
aquifers
restore
itself.
W
We
hope
that
the
council's
votes
show
in
favour
of
communities
to
ensure
the
safety
of
our
neighborhood
and
that
the
protection
of
our
natural
resources
are
a
priority
to
them.
I
hope
and
pray
along
with
the
other
residents
that
the
City
Council
would
listen
to
our
request
and
vote
no
for
the
rezoning.
Thank
you
thank.
X
I'm
William
sharp
1432,
sunny,
Brook,
Lane,
I,
left
kind
of
on
the
west
side
of
our
Sunnybrook
condition.
There
I'm
a
62
years
old
I'm,
a
farmer
I've
lived
in
this
area,
my
whole
life
I,
still
farm
the
family
farm
of
110
years
at
Southwest,
29th
and
County
Line,
Road
I
used
to
farm,
or
you
see
the
southeast
corner
there
where
it
says
double-a
was
ill,
Bohannon
place,
I
used
to
farm
across
the
creek.
I
know
this
land
all
this
area.
X
My
main
three
reasons
for
saying
this
should
not
be
our
one
at
all,
should
be
some
kind
of
commercial
or
light
industry
or
thing
is
because
there
is
a
disposal
well,
where
you
see
all
well,
that's
not
in
oil.
Well,
that
is
a
disposal.
Well,
there's
truck
traffic
that
comes
in
and
out
of
there
365
days
a
year,
24
hours
a
day,
it's
an
ongoing
operation.
It's
an
oil
industry
thing
that
we
have
is
part
of
the
state
of
Oklahoma.
It's
what's
been
going
on.
X
X
You
can
smell
two
days
last
week.
I
could
smell
the
oil
and
the
disposal
of
water.
That
was
there.
Sorry
I
have
a
very
good
public
speaker
here.
I,
don't
think
that
anybody
is
going
to
want
to
stay
in
those
homes
if
there's
homes
built
there,
I
brought
this
up
at
art
at
the
Planning
Commission
meeting,
and
nobody
present
was
aware
of
any
of
these
situations,
because
I
don't
think
you
can
look
at
it
on
a
map.
The
map
tells
you
nothing.
X
You've
got
to
live
out
there,
I
go
up
and
down
that
road
to
my
farm
several
days,
II
several
times
a
day.
You
see,
you
know
that
trucks
are
coming
out
by
the
cloud
of
dust.
That's
coming
up.
Terrax
up.
There
has
installed
fans
this
last
winter.
Apparently,
they
have
a
paint
shop
on
the
south
side
of
their
building
with
big
exhaust
fans.
They
are
muffled
now
from
what
they
were
over
the
winter,
but
you
no
longer
hear
the
interstate
noise.
X
X
It's
you
know
if
you
did
it
on
the
right
win
and
everything
you're
just
going
to
come
up.
Fine
the
ground
to
the
east
was
owned
by
the
Swisher's,
who
were
CMI,
which
is
now
Terrax,
so
I
think
you're
going
to
wind
up
with
a
thumbprint
of
rental
houses
inside
of
a
industrial
district,
because
he
has
the
option
on
the
north
20
of
this
to
so
you
could
wind
up
with
houses
stuck
into
sight
of
this
industrial
district
with
all
these
noises
smells
whatever.
X
X
We
went
to
29th
and
Morgan
to
see
if
we
could
get
across,
because
they'd
built
the
new
bridge
across
Morgan
Road
nice
concrete
bridge.
Only
the
top
of
the
bridge
rail
was
sticking
out.
Mustang
Creek
was
a
half
mile
wide
on
Morgan
Road
between
29th
and
15th
Street.
This
area
were,
and
that's
three
times
in
my
lifetime
of
60
years.
That
I
can
tell
you
that
this
hundred
year,
flood
plain
has
flooded
so
to
those
of
us
have
been
out
there
a
long
time.
100-Year
things
are
a
joke.
X
They
probably
need
to
be
like
25
years,
a
large
area.
If
you
had
to
map
that
we
saw
earlier
at
another
meeting
of
a
500
year,
flood
plain
all
of
this
area
is
probably
what
should
be
the
hundred
year.
So
those
are
my
objections.
I.
Don't
think
this
needs
to
be
some
kind
of
warehouses
or
something
that
could
be
nice
next
to
us
that
you
have,
you
know
not
make
as
much
noise
or
something
but
I.
X
Don't
believe
this
is
appropriate
for
residential
for
those
reasons
and
I
also
don't
like
it
being
rental
houses
with
subpar
rent,
because
he
has
told
us
that
there's
gonna
be
like
eight
to
nine
hundred
dollar
rentals,
whereas
most
area
from
my
understanding
is
eleven
twelve
hundred
dollars.
So
you
come
in
there.
Thisd
and
you're
gonna
have
all
these
problems
I,
don't
think
he's
going
to
keep
these
rental
houses
full
and
we're
gonna
have
a
problem
on
our
hands:
Thank
You!
Mr.
H
Y
Y
Y
Disagree
that
we
wouldn't
like
to
live
there
I,
don't
think
that
a
commercial
unit
would
be
immune
to
flooding.
If
that's
going
to
be
a
problem,
I
believe
that
if
I
rent
a
house
over
there,
my
kids
and
I,
along
with
a
lot
of
people
that
can't
be
up
here
today
to
speak
for
themselves,
but
they
have
the
same
problems
that
I
do
we're.
Just
honest
people,
normal
I'm,
American,
citizen,
I,
pay.
My
taxes
I
keep
my
things
clean
and
we
are
not
subclass
people
I
think
we
deserve
a
place
to
live,
and
if
mr.
Y
window
is
here
and
he
can
build
houses,
there
are
1,600
square
feet.
400
square
feet.
Homes
for
$900
that
does
not
make
their
low
rent
doesn't
mean
that
the
people
are
going
to
move
there.
It's
gonna
be
awful
people
subclass
it
since
I.
Don't
think
that
that's
right
so
I
would
like
to
ask
you
guys
shall
prove
this,
because
there
is
not
a
lot
of
those
areas
in
town,
it's
very
hard
to
find
good
homes.
Y
Close
good
schools
must
get
Mustangs
a
good
school,
and
if
we
want
to
live
in
a
good
place,
we
have
to
be
an
apartment
and
apartment
you
can
buy
so
I
would
absolutely
love.
The
chance
should
live
in
a
place
like
that.
So
please
take
that
in
consideration.
I
apologize
that
they're
going
to
lose
the
back
yard,
but
people
like
me
near
the
pleasure,
live
Jim.
Thank
you.
Thank
you.
Z
Sorry
I
have
terrible
handwriting,
it's
Andrea,
Frey
Meier
I'm,
a
resident
of
Ward,
seven
one
zero,
five,
one,
seven
hi
Bea!
You
drive
I'm
here
to
speak
today
on
behalf
of
the
development
and
on
behalf
of
the
board
for
the
Oklahoma
Coalition
for
affordable
housing,
I'm,
a
founding
member
and
a
board
member
I
did
email
and
submit
a
formal
letter
in
writing
as
I
know
that
the
board
did
as
well
and
I
would
say
that
this
is
something
that
really
fits
with.
Z
The
Oklahoma
State
wide
housing
needs
assessment
that
was
performed
a
couple
of
years
ago,
where
Oklahoma
City
needs
almost
10,000
housing
units
by
2020,
a
portion
of
those
for
rental
and
for
homeownership,
and
it
really
aligns
well
with
what
is
already
in
the
district.
I
know
that
Lance
had
proposed
putting
road
to
roads
going
to
Southwest
15,
but
the
city
had
asked
him
to
connect
to
Sunnybrook
and
I.
Think
those
are
things
that
we
could
work
out
during
the
planning
phrase
and
in
regards
to
environmental
concerns.
Z
I
will
say
that
I
hope
to
be
a
part
of
Lance's
development
when
it
comes
to
fruition.
But
past
history,
with
Lance,
we
have
worked
on
environmental
issues.
Phase
ones
and
phase
twos
are
required
before
any
equity.
Money
is
advance,
it's
required
by
otha
and
it
would
have
to
be
addressed.
We've
also
addressed
hundred
year
flood
plain
issues
on
a
development
before
in
Ardmore,
so
I
hear
the
concerns
of
the
residents.
Z
However,
before
these
federal
dollars
are
given
and
before
that
equity
is
given
from
me,
Lance
has
to
jump
through
a
lot
of
Hoops,
so
we
don't
want
people
living
in
a
bad
place.
We
are
an
in
these
investments
for
over
15
years
and
if
Lance
does
anything
wrong,
he's
gone
and
I'm
in
so
which
he
would
never
do.
He
is
really
one
of
the
best
and
most
efficient,
affordable
housing
developers
across
the
state.
Z
What
we've
been
able
to
do
on
city
and
fill
Lots,
like
you
brought
up
in
Ardmore
in
Chickasha,
has
really
turned
around
those
towns
and
I
will
caution
you,
our
title
girl,
hates
those,
because
the
getting
those
titles
cleared
is
really
a
challenge
and
a
nightmare,
but
it
really
does
turn
around
the
community
and
I.
Don't
know
I'm
happy
to
answer
any
other
questions,
but
I
do
encourage
you
to
approve
this
and
really
think
about
who
would
be
living
in
these
units.
Z
AA
AA
AA
We,
the
issues
have
been
addressed
about
the
traffic
and
the
flooding.
From
what
I
understand
the
ninth
of
this
month,
we
received
of
some
information
from
maps
that
they're
seeking
ideas
for
additional
monies
to
be
spent
for
areas
ix
they're
going
to
be
discussing
parks
from
I-40
for
to
Garth
Brooks
Boulevard
from
highway
66
to
Mustang.
We
have
no
parks.
There
are
none
in
the
western
part
of
Oklahoma
City
none
maps
for
could
take
this
40
acre
piece
of
property
and
turn
it
into
an
amazing
park.
AA
There's
woods
up
in
the
north
end
that
you
don't
show
there
there's
about
probably
three
to
five
acres
of
woods
up
in
the
north
end
of
there
that
from
what
I
understand
from
the
city,
the
requirements
that
it
be
left
alone
because
they
are
large
trees.
This
would
be
a
great
nature
area.
Like
say
we
do
flood
I
just
would
like
for
it
to
be
a
park.
There's
no
reason
why
it
shouldn't
be
the
no.
They
said
the
price
of
the
property
is
for
single-family
homes.
We've
talked
about
the
single
family
homes.
AA
Everybody
knows
they're,
going
to
be
rent
to
own
that
people
have
to
stay
in
them
for
15
years
before
they
can
own
the
home.
So
at
$900
a
month
they're
going
to
pay
a
hundred
and
sixty
two
thousand
dollars
in
rent
before
they
have
the
ability
thing
to
them,
purchase
the
home.
So
then
they
pay
an
additional,
approximately
two
hundred
thousand
dollars.
So
this
eighty
five,
ninety
thousand
dollar
home,
was
going
to
wind
up
costing
them
about
four
hundred
and
fifty
thousand
dollars
after
they
rent
it
and
then
purchase
it.
AA
We
have
right
down
the
way.
There
is
a
housing
development
Homes
for
Sale.
They
got
a
big
sign
post
up
there,
seven
hundred
and
seventeen
dollars
a
month,
you
own
the
property.
So
with
taxes
and
insurance,
it's
going
to
be
around
nine,
fifty
eight.
So
for
the
same
price
that
he's
going
to
rent
his
homes,
you
can
own
a
home.
This
there's
a
fella,
that's
waiting
behind
us
here.
That's
got
a
big
platform
and
Sarah
gonna
be
a
huge
amount
of
homes
in
that
price
range.
AA
This
could
be
a
great
park
so
think
of
it
as
a
park,
but
I
want
to
say
one
last
thing:
I
was
an
abstract
er
and
a
title
examiner
for
a
number
of
years,
I've
gone
over
the
deeds
and
the
Trust's
of
this
property.
It's
a
mess,
I,
don't
know
how
mr.
wendal
could
speak
today
as
that,
because
there's
no
way
that
they
can
allow
him
to
speak,
because
nobody
knows
he
owns
the
property.
AA
Currently
I
had
a
if
you'll
go
through
your
packet
there
from
the
applicant,
even
the
abstract,
err
for
Canadian
County
says
she
doesn't
know
he
was
the
property.
I
had
took
it
to
a
trust
officer.
Yesterday
I
said,
without
all
the
Trust's,
that
in
this
land,
I
have
no
idea
who
owns
this
property.
So
I
suggest
that
a
lot
of
titles
be
quieted
before
any
decision
is
made.
Let
it
be
a
park,
then
I'd.
A
A
A
She's
worked
diligently
on
this
whole
process.
I
have
an
amendment
that
I'd
like
to
offer
and
I
hope.
You
always
just
accepted
on
the
council
I'd
like
to
move
that
we
take
this
application
back
to
the
Planning
Commission,
with
instructions
to
develop
a
PUD,
a
Planned,
Unit
development
as
a
way
of
introduction.
Why
that's
necessary
single
family
housing?
Zoning
cannot
have
criteria
put
on
it
like
a
PUD.
A
Can
many
of
the
items,
the
very
good
concerns
that
the
neighbors
have,
and
many
of
the
offers
that
the
developer
has
made
cannot
be
memorialized
unless
we
have
a
PUD.
So
therefore,
I
move
that
we
move
this
back
to
the
Planning
Commission
and
instruct
them
to
come
up
with
a
PUD
we're
motion
in
a
second
any
questions.
Q
K
P
Number
one
thought
is
that
I
am
very
gracious
to
councilman
Mac
T
for
trying
to
find
a
way
forward
right
and
I.
Do
appreciate
that.
I
know
that
this
is
the
contentious
issue.
I
know
that
we
have
folks
on
both
sides
with
very
valid
points
and,
and
he
and
I
have
talked
and-
and
it
can
be
argued
both
ways
and
I
completely
understand
that
and
and
if
that's
the
way
the
council
goes,
then
I
obviously
would
not
buck
the
council
and
say
you
know.
P
I
understand
in
my
heart,
I
feel
like
I
feel
like
there's
some
term
those
people
getting
used.
It
makes
me
uncomfortable
and
it's
hey.
You
know
we
need
to
put
some
extra
restrictions
on
this
so
that
we
can
make
sure
that
what
you're
building
is
good
enough
and
I
have
I
have
some
heartache
with
that
again
I'm
gonna
I'm
going
to
support
the
council,
and
if
that's
you
know
what
it
takes
to
get
there
I
appreciate
that
the
council's
working
with
us,
but
I
do
have
a
little
bit
of
heartache
with.
P
If
we're
gonna
have
those
kind
of
people,
we
need
to
make
sure
that
you're
gonna
do
this
and
make
sure
you
can
do
that
a
lot
of
times
when
you
have
you
know
like
like
they
talked
about
hey.
If
I
was
going
to
build
$300,000
homes,
you
know
for
people
that
make
a
hundred
and
fifty
thousand
dollars
a
year.
P
I,
don't
think
we'd
see
those
restrictions
so
I
little
a
little
bit
of
heartburn,
but
I
absolutely
appreciate
what
the
councilman's
doing
to
making
sure
we
get
across
the
finish
line
and
right
and
that's
really
where
I
am.
We
need
to
get
across
the
finish
line
so.
K
A
Never
an
effort
was
offered
for
fencing.
The
neighbors
wanted
fencing,
so
fencing
would
be
specified
in
okay.
There
are
only
certain
things
that
can
go
into
a
PUD
legally
and,
and
they
all
are-
and
has
nothing
to
do
with
your
concern,
which
is
a
valid
concern,
but
it's
just
a
way
to
memorialize
it,
so
that
should
something
happened
to
Mister.
When
there
we've
got
down
what
it
is
so.
K
P
Could
and
and
I
don't
yet
the
reality
is
I
intend
to
do
those
things
and
I.
Don't
I'll
put
my
name
on
it.
If
I
tell
you
I'm
gonna,
do
this
I'll
put
my
name
on
it,
not
have
a
problem
with
it.
It's
not
that
I'm
gonna
have
a
problem
with
the
things
that
we've
talked
about.
I.
Think
it's
a
little
bit
of
heartburn
about
every.
A
P
The
only
concern
from
the
current
owners
perspective
is
that
if
we,
if
we
agree,
you
know
into
that
I'm
in
the
process
of
purchasing
land,
we've
now
encumbered
the
land,
and
these
things
have
to
go
forward
right
than
that.
If
I
agree
to
do
tornado,
shelters
which
I'm
going
to
do
because
oh
cloud,
Housing
Finance
Agency
is
gonna-
require
me
to
I'm
happy
to
do
that,
but
now
Ivan
cumbered
the
land
for
the
next
guy.
That
he's
got
to
put
those
things
in.
He
can't
build
less
than
1400
square
foot.
P
M
Want
to
be
crystal
clear
on
my
perspective,
sir
I
too
share
concerns.
Whenever
I
hear
people
say,
phrases
like
those
people
right,
I
really
want
to
make
sure
that
to
the
young
woman
who
spoke
who's
wanting
to
raise
her
kiddos
in
a
good
school
I
get
that
my
concerns
are
very
specifically,
environmental.
The
preservation
of
actual
woodland,
grassland
drainage
concerns,
and
it
sounds
like
this
Peabody
will
allow
you
all
to
address
those.
M
A
H
AB
AB
Pete
white
137
33
southeast
134th
I.
This
is
just
a
straight
zoning
case
from
our
four
to
c3.
My
client
is
a
real
estate.
Commercial
leasing,
rental
mainly
used
car
lots
and
commercial
business.
It's
an
area
where
it's
totally
commercial,
no
protests
that
I
know
of.
Unless
there's
someone
signed
up
this
morning.
G
A
G
A
AC
A
AD
Morning,
Bradley
youth
craft
until
300-point,
Parkway,
Boulevard,
Zack
Roach,
with
ideal
homes,
is
here
with
me.
Today
we
have
a
PUD
for
a
residential
subdivision
at
59th
and
Sarah.
The
many
differences
for
the
PUD
is
there
was
a
small
change
in
the
law
size.
We
went
from
the
50
by
120
s
to
a
50
by
115.
This
allowed
for
this
large
common
area.
Four
and
a
half
acres
to
be
put
in
the
middle
here.
AD
The
other
thing
was
there
was
a
front
setback
change
to
14
feet
for
the
building,
but
a
20
foot
would
still
apply
for
the
garage
with
this
they
added
a
65%
brick
requirement
to
be
put
in
there.
This
area
was
an
area
that
was
held
for
urban
reserve
and
the
comprehensive
plan.
We're
gonna
extend
about
a
mile
and
a
half
a
sewer
down
we're
working
with
a
couple
other
developers
through
there,
and
so
this
was
taken
out
of
the
reserve
for
the
urban
reserve,
and
so
we're
ask
for
your
approval
on
this.
K
AE
A
long
time
yeah
did
that
it
was,
it
was
zoned
r1.
Historically,
it
was
Elizabeth
house,
the
Inc,
which
was
a
non-profit
that
was
kind
of
transition
house
for
various
people
and
then
Catholic
Charities
purchased
it
in
1992.
They
had
it
for
many
years:
PI
men,
let's
see
who
I
represent,
purchased
the
beginning
of
this
year,
part
of
that
transaction
to
check
Catholic,
Charities
and
PIME.
Was
we
bring
it
into
conformance?
It
was
zoned
r1,
it's
a
2
unit
or
Plex,
and
so
it
was
strictly
just
to
bring
it
into
conformance.
A
Q
A
AF
The
matter
this
is
a
charity
lane
nice,
100,
North
Broadway
for
the
applicant.
This
is
a
mining
permit
that
had
been
postponed.
A
couple
times
is,
and
city
staff
is
met
with
the
property
owner
in
this
area.
That
has
some
concerns,
but
there
were
not
related
to
this
application
and
those
have
all
been
addressed
as
I
understand
it,
and
so
we've
asked
that
this
be
approved.
Okay,.
AG
My
name
is
Kathy
Bogart
I
live
at
1:5
501.
South
McArthur
I
am
here
to
protest.
This
permit
again.
I
was
here
the
last
two
times
I
believe
they
were
told
not
to
mine
till
they
got
their
permit
on
June.
The
22nd
I
have
pictures
on
my
iPad,
where
they
were
hauling
sand
out.
Hauling
dirt
out.
I
have
pictures
of
the
loader
loading
it
out.
The
city
was
going
to
come
out
and
do
a
flood
damage
drainage
study.
AG
What
was
going
to
be
done?
Well,
they,
the
city,
people
or
maybe
Cleveland
counties,
went
on
the
road.
Crater
came
out,
they
dug
a
ditch,
so
it
would
drain
not
into
our
road
and
what
does
the
person
with
that
permit?
He
went
ahead
and
he
filled
it
up
with
gravel,
so
it
couldn't
drain
that
way,
so
his
trucks
could
go
over.
It.
I
have
a
real
problem.
With
this
permit,
till
everything
is
done
until
the
drainage
has
been
addressed
out
there.
The
floods,
the
fields
to
the
north
of
him
are
still
flooded.
AG
I
did
notice
that
he
took
a
pump.
One
day
tried
to
pump
some
of
the
water
out.
He
did
pump
some
of
it,
but
it
still
stand
in
water
and
this
man's
pasture,
mr.
Rowland.
If
mr.
Rowland
was
alive,
he
probably
would
be
they
would
be
having
a
fit
because
that's
farmland
and
it
is
rented
out
to
a
person
for
farm,
but
it's
under
water.
Now,
it's
still
under
water
because
of
the
road
that
he
put
in
there
with
no
drainage.
AG
AF
Council,
if
I
may
the
drainage
issues
for
the
property
across
the
street,
my
client,
now
there
was
some
dirt
move.
My
client
moved
some
dirt
which
city
staff
called
me
and
said:
hey.
They
can't
move
any
dirt
until
they
get
all
their
permits.
Put
a
stop
work
order,
they've
done
that
there
was
some
miscommunication,
but
that
issue
has
nothing
to
do
with
this
permit.
We
have
to
comply
with
all
the
technical
evaluations,
we'll
still
once
you
approve
this
today.
Do
we
don't
get
our
permit?
Will
you
start
mining
today?
AF
We've
got
to
go
through
the
rest
of
the
process,
and
this
has
been
deferred.
Miss
Bogart,
I've
talked
to
her
I
talked
to
Eric.
The
issues
that
this
that
she
has
are
with
a
different
property
owner.
I,
know
she's
unhappy
that
my
client
did
move
some
dirt.
That
was
miscommunication
I
made
it
clear.
They
can't
do
anything
until
they
get
the
proper
permits.
AF
They
have
a
right
to
move
once
they
get
to
the
floodplain
permits
and
other
things
to
move
dirt
out
there
that
they're,
not
mining,
saying
they
have
to
right
to
do
other
things
on
their
property
and
so,
but
they
do
have
to
because
of
the
areas
in
the
floodplain
they've
got
it.
It's
permits
and
they're
gonna
do
that
so
they've
been
after,
in
fact,
I
mean
if
she
said
previously.
She
sold
her
family
sold
this
property
to
my
client.
AF
The
complaints
with
the
road
and
and
I
think
staff
can
address
that
have
to
do
with
property
owner
cross
the
street,
so
I
would
respectfully
request.
We
not
defer
this
any
longer,
because
my
client
can't
move
forward
to
obtain
the
proper
permits
until
you
approve
this,
so
you're
just
putting
there
and
putting
them
in
the
deep
freeze
for
an
issue.
It's
unrelated
to
the
sand.
Mining
permit.
So.
O
Eric
Winger
public
works
director
for
Oklahoma
City,
so
the
application
it
is
before
use
force
a
mining
permit,
you'll
notice
on
the
drawing
that's
on
screen.
It
is
west
of
MacArthur
south
of
one
hundred
and
forty
ninth,
miss
Bogart
lives
to
the
south
of
the
area
that
is
highlighted,
and
there
are
some
concerns
that
they
were
brought
to
the
city's
attention
east
of
macarthur
south
of
a
hundred
and
forty
ninth,
the
city
staff
are
continuing
to
work
to
address.
O
Son
about
two-thirds
of
the
unauthorized
fill
to
date,
that
is
in
the
floodplain
and
the
flood
way.
But
again,
that
is
an
ongoing
project
that
the
city
staff
will
be
continuing
to
monitor
until
we
get
them
in
compliance,
and
so
as
it
relates
to
the
application.
That's
before
you
today
for
the
sand,
mining
permit
west
of
MacArthur
South
149
city
staff
do
not
have
concerns
with
the
application
as
presented
today.
Thank.
G
G
There's
still
a
lot
of
unknowns
of
what's
happening,
truly
happening
in
this
area,
and
I
would
like
for
us
to
really
consider
that,
as
far
as
let's
dig
deep
into
it
and
understand
the
concern
that
are
there
when
it
comes
to
just
the
sediment
and
everything
else
that
has
to
do
with
this
before
we
just
come
back
to
it
and
approve
it
I.
Just
that's
my
only
concern,
and
and
obviously
with
with
the
the
young
lady
coming
forward
and
talking
about
her
concerns
that
that's
quite
alarming.
In
some
aspects,
you
know
as
a
resident.
M
O
So
as
it
relates
to
the
property
owner
that
is
east
of
McArthur,
and
this
would
be
no
different
than
any
other
activity
in
the
city-
that's
brought
to
the
city's
attention.
You
know
we
investigate.
We
follow
it
with
staff
going
out
into
the
field,
taking
pictures
starting
to
do
the
analysis,
and
so
that
work
began
over
a
month
ago,
where
we
in
fact
did
determine
that
the
property
owner
again
east
of
McArthur
was
doing
some
unauthorized
activities
in
the
floodplain
in
the
floodway
we've
been
working
with
them
regularly.
The
flood
one
of
the
questions
is.
O
Is
there
are
some
berms
that
were
constructed
by
that
property
owner
on
the
east
side
of
McArthur
that
changed
the
drainage
pattern
or
the
portion
that's
east,
and
it
cost
some
of
the
issues
to
the
road
those
berms
abutting,
McArthur,
two
thirds
of
them
had
been
removed.
That
was
something
that
was
directed
by
the
city
and
Public
Works,
because
they
weren't
authorized
the
flood
study
that
the
property
owners
hoping
to
complete
here
in
the
next
several
weeks.
O
With
an
engineer,
it's
going
to
show
how
placement
of
some
of
those
berms
won't
impact
the
drainage
pattern,
but
that's
something
that's
going
to
take
several
more
weeks
and
it's
for
work.
That's
east
of
this
application
site.
So
there
isn't
anything
regarding
this
application
on
that.
This
applicant
is
needing
to
do
to
reconcile
the
concerns
in
the
issues
that
have
been
raised.
East
of
McArthur
I
mean
we
really
have
a
citizen
complaint
that
we're
following
up
on,
haven't
resolved
complete
in
this
application
is
separate
and
independent.
O
So
we
will
stay
committed
from
a
staff
and
a
Public
Works
perspective
to
make
sure
that
the
property
owner
east
of
McArthur
comes
into
compliance
with
all
the
city,
ordinances
and
regulations
regarding
the
drainage
ordinance
regarding
work
in
the
floodplain.
The
unauthorized
work
that
possibly
occurred
in
the
flood
way
until
that's
fully
resolved,
but
that
will
have
no
change
on
the
application.
That's
before
your
consideration,
but.
O
AH
O
The
mediate
Road
concerns
that
were
brought
to
our
attention
several
weeks
ago.
Those
have
been
resolved
at
this
time,
but
there
are
additional
road
improvements
that
are
also
being
planned.
In
addition
to
what
was
done
to
reconcile
the
immediate,
there
were
huge
potholes.
They
were
larger
than
potholes
that
has
been
reconciled
well,.
AG
AG
This
is
a
ditch
that
the
county
built
after
they
filled
in
our
holes,
correct
they
built
it,
so
the
water
could
drain
well
next
thing:
you
know
it's
full
of
gravel,
so
they
can
go
in
and
out
it
doesn't
drain
anything
now
it
drains
back
down
to
the
middle
of
the
road.
When
we
get
any
rain
whatsoever,
it's
not
that
I'm
protesting
the
permit
per
se.
It's
I'm
perfect.
We
have
enough
truck
traffic
out
there
as
it
is
149
of
the
last
week.
AG
AG
Oh
now
my
father
I'll
have
to
agree.
They
have
filled
in
the
hose.
It
is
better
than
it
was,
but
149
has
still
got
big
pot
holes.
It
has
frac
sand
stopped
on
the
sides
of
the
road
where
the
big
trucks
have
stopped,
yet
they
they're
not
hauling
frac
sand,
but
they
have
the
big
trucks
also
that'll
be
coming
in
and
out
on
that
road
I
would
just
like
to
see
and
in
under
their
permits.
It
said
in
the
recommendation
to
the
city:
I
have
a
copy
of
it.
AG
It
said
there
would
be
a
flood
and
drainage
done
before
the
permit
was
issued.
Now
with
what
mr.
Weiner
said,
I
don't
see
that
there's
been
a
it's
been.
A
flood
drainage
study
will
be
required
to
establish
finished
floor
evaluations.
Common
lot
areas
are
private,
dance,
drainage,
easements.
The
study
must
be
reviewed
and
approved
by
the
Public
Works
Department
I,
don't
know
if
that's
been
done
or
not.
I
haven't
seen
anything
of
it.
I
said:
I
pulled
this
right
off
in
the
City
Council
of
recommendation
things
on
the
side
for
the
meeting.
AG
So
that
is
my
problem.
The
problem
is
that
it's
causing
damage
the
road
that
he's
built
to
go
in
there.
It
is
blocked
all
the
water
that
used
to
come
down
through
there
and
now
it
goes
down
through
the
road
until
they
get
some
tiles
and
all
of
that
I
don't
think
we
need
that
kind
of
stuff
out
there
right
now,
I'm
just
I'm.
Just
at
my
wit's
end,
like
I
said
I'm,
just
one
person-
and
you
know
I
have
concerns.
AG
Hopefully,
one
day
my
granddaughter
will
live
out
there,
but
right
now
it's
a
mess
from
one
end
to
the
other
and
I'm
trying
to
work
with
the
city
I'm
getting
this
done,
but
it's
been
like
pulling
hair,
because
every
time
you
turn
around
somebody
else
is
out
there
doing
something:
you're
not
supposed
to
be
doing
and
I.
Just
think
that
we
need
the
city
needs
to
have
all
of
this
stuff
in
in
hand
before
a
permit
is
issued
for
it.
AG
AG
That's
the
only
thing
I
get
from
the
city,
so
you
know
it's
not
like
the
city
takes
care
of
us
out
there,
because
they
don't
and
I
realized
that
in
some
of
the
things
I
read
on
his
information
was
it's.
The
city
water
was
available.
Something
else
was
available
at
the
bullcrap
city,
water.
Don't
even
get
close
to
us,
we
have
our
own
well,
I
got
a
deal
from
the
city,
saying
if
you
don't
pay
your
trash
bill,
we're
going
to
clip
up
turn
your
water
off.
My
comment
was:
go
ahead.
Turn
my
water
off.
AG
O
Mean
again,
the
concerns
we're
getting
today
would
not
stop
the
staff
investigation
of
the
concerns.
I've
been
shared,
and
so
we're
still
active
to
make
sure
that
the
property
owner
that
is
east
of
McArthur's
and
compliance,
and
then
we
will
make
sure
that
as
plans
for
the
mining
are
submitted,
the
reports
are
submitted
upon
if
the
application
is
approved
that
they're
all
compliant
with
city
city
ordinances,
before
they're
approved.
Okay.
M
Really
the
the
one
arsal
that
I
heard
that's
an
action
item
from
you.
Is
that
what
you
read
right
and
and
that's
what
you're
saying
is
happening
right
now,
Eric!
That's
that's
all
if
we
said
that
that
this
is
the
thing
that
needs
to
be
done,
then
I
just
need
to
know
that
that's
what
we're
going
to
do
and
what
the
timeline
is
and
I
I.
Don't
know
that
I,
don't
know,
I,
don't
think
that's
unreasonable
to
ask
so.
O
O
Of
McArthur,
this
application,
if
approved,
will
require
additional
permitting
will
require
an
additional
study
to
be
submitted
as
a
part
of
this
application,
we
have
not
yet
even
received,
but
if
approved
they,
the
applicant
will
be
required
to
submit
all
that
information
engineering,
information
for
review
and
approval,
so
that
is
subject
to
the
approval
today.
That
has
nothing
to
do
with
the
flood
and
the
other
information
I
mentioned
east
of
McArthur.
M
O
AF
Right
can't
remember
until
they
approve
this
permit.
We
have
to
do
many
of
these
technical
things,
but
they're
not
going
to
explain
the
time
and
injury
due
to
that
until
this
gets
approved.
Well,
we
still
have
to
jump
through
some
hoops
when
this
is
approved,
but
I
want
to
make
you
clear
when
we
left
that
first
meeting
this
was
deferred,
I,
call
the
city
staff
and
said
what
do
you?
What
does
my
client
need
to
do?
And
the
answer
was
nothing.
AF
M
AF
May
get
and
I
understand
that
as
I
said
the
city
when
I
called
city
staff,
it
was
there's
nothing
and
they
in
fact
I
waited
a
week
for
them
to
call
me
didn't,
hear
anything
and
I
called
us,
and
what
do
you
need
from
us?
Nothing?
The
issue
is
not
with
you
and
we're
deferring
this
and
my
client
can't
go
forward
to
do
the
other
technical
requirements
until
this
is
approved.
O
Probably
the
best
way
I
can
explain
this.
Is
it's
not
a
lot
different
than
when
we
have
a
subdivision
plat?
And
you
approve
a
plaid
at
the
council
level,
but
the
engineering
comes
sometimes
months
and
sometimes
years
later.
The
plat
is
that
first
step
in
the
engineering
follows
and
then
they
have
to
go
through
the
detailed
engineering
reviews.
This
permit
is
just
that
first
step.
Then
the
engineering
drawings
come
in
for
review
and
approval
before
they
can
actually
do
physical
construction
and
actually
operate.
So
this
is
one
of
step.
Several
and
I.
M
U
G
G
No
problem
what
I
will
do
is:
is
there
anyone
to
speak
on
this?
Okay,
while
we
did
have
a
protest
and
in
with
the
restrictions
of
the
FCC,
we
have
to
look
at
that
in
a
different
way.
I
will
ask
for
approval,
however.
I
do
want
to
make
sure
that
we
have
our
consultant
update
and
review
requirements
for
future
applications
of
cell
towers
in
our
city,
with
our
end
result
for
regulations
to
be
set
with
consistency
to
not
allow
these
special
considerations
in
the
future.
So
with
that
I
will
move
for
approval.
AC
G
AC
G
I'm
willing
to
meet
with
the
staff,
so
we
can
discuss
further,
but
after
our
council
meeting
when
I
deferred
a
couple
weeks
ago,
I
spoke
with
the
consultant
and
asked
for
the
pros
and
cons
of
what
we
were
dealing
with.
As
far
as
the
cell
tower
a
special
permit.
The
footage
in
the
percentage
and
therefore
out
of
that
discussion,
I,
would
like
for
us
to
have
our
consultant
that
we
have
to
review
an
update
or
future.
U
Just
to
clear
to
clarify
that
most
of
these
towers
are
what
they
call
conditional
use
permits.
They
meet
all
the
conditions,
then,
basically
an
augury
now
or
bob
tina
approves
it
and
when
they
don't
meet
one
of
the
conditions,
that's
when
it
comes
to
counsel.
So,
basically,
a
Councilwoman.
Nice
is
just
asking
for
the
consultant
to
review
our
ordinance
and
see
if
any
of
the
conditions
need
to
be
changed,
adjusted.
A
K
A
A
K
A
A
E
AI
Morning,
what
we're
doing
here
is
we're
changing
provisions
in
the
vehicle
for
hire
ordinance
to
allow
low-speed
vehicles
to
operate
as
vehicles
for
hire.
These
are
similar
to
a
golf
cart,
but
their
top
speed
is
25
miles
per
hour.
There's
a
vendor
who
wants
to
operate
in
the
Bricktown
area
and
shuttle
people
back
and
forth
from
hotels
to
venue
sites.
AI
Currently,
our
vehicle
for
higher
equipment
requirements
would
have
restricted
these
low-speed
vehicles
from
being
able
to
operate
as
vehicles
for
hire.
So
what
we've
done
is
we've
allowed
low-speed
vehicles
that
meet
the
federal
equipment
requirements
to
satisfy
the
city's
equipment
requirements.
We've
also
added
a
definition
for
the
low-speed
vehicle
and
we've
limited
their
use
to
city
streets
posted
no
greater
than
35
miles
per
hour.
Q
A
A
A
AJ
Chad
davidson
code
enforcement.
We
declare
a
property,
unsecured
city,
give
us
the
harpy
owner
an
opportunity
to
secure
that
building
and
then,
after
its
secured,
it'll,
remain
on
that
abandoned
and
that
abandoned
status
until
the
property
owner
petitions,
the
city
to
have
that
related,
dilapidated
building.
The
city
will
give
30
days
to
repair
or
remove
that
structure.
If
they
do
not,
city
will
hire
a
contractor
to
remove
destruction.
A
E
AK
This
is
a
routine
thing
that
we
do
and
we
issue
our
gold
bonds
for
Economic
Development
purposes
when
those
funds
are
received,
they
go
into
a
city
fund
and
then
this
is
just
a
resolution
authorizing
the
transfer,
those
funds
to
the
economic
development
trust
and
there,
where,
as
we
invest
those
funds
initially,
we
can
accrue
the
interest
and
that
will
benefit
go
into
that
same
pot.
We
can
use
that
for
the
creation
of
jobs
and
for
our
affordable
housing
program.
AK
This
authorizes
the
transfer
of
a
little
over
30
million
dollars
that
were
that
were
issued
earlier
this
year.
We
received
them
in
in
May
and
right
now
we
have
fourteen
million
dollars
in
our
fund.
So
with
the
added
30,
we'll
have
a
little
over
forty
three
million
dollars
or
forty
four
million
dollars
our
fun
after.
H
A
A
A
E
A
H
A
A
Know
a
motion
in
a
second,
please
cast
your
votes
and
it
is
so
moved
and
similarly
we
have
another
one
on
the
collective
bargaining
to
move
to
executive
session.
We
have
a
motion,
a
second
any
comments
or
questions.
Please
cast
your
votes
and
it
is
so
done.
Next,
we
have
claim
is
recommended
for
denial.
A
Q
Q
Q
At
the
same
time,
and
so
David
crafted
the
language
he
did
a
much
better
job
than
I
did
and
I
I
want
to
add
something.
I
think
that's
really
important
to
this
and
I'll.
Let
David
talk
a
little
bit
about
the
language
that
he
drafted,
but
on
Friday
the
United
States
Supreme
Court.
In
a
sharply
divided
decision.
Q
When
state
and
local
local
actions
effectively
deprived
the
land
owners
of
the
use
of
their
property-
and
in
this
case,
if
I
go
back
to
the
example
of
first
christian,
where
we
were
looking
at
four
and
a
half
acres
and
the
hpc
was
looking
at
doing
the
entire
31
acres,
we
had
conflicting
opinions
and
I
think
that's
problematic
for
us.
If
the
church
had
decided
that
they
wanted
to
take
legal
action
and
say
under
the
fifth
and
the
Fourteenth
Amendment
I'm
gonna
now
file
a
1983
action.
You
took
my
property.
Q
It
opens
us
up
to
tremendous
liability
and,
with
this
decision
by
the
United,
States
Supreme
Court,
last
Friday
I
think
we'll
be
seeing
more
and
more
of
these
efforts
by
landowners
who
are
resistant
to
state
and
local
actions
that
deprived
the
use
of
the
landowners
property,
the
use
of
their
own
property.
So
I
wanted
to
have
in
certain
limited
instances
where
we
would
exclusively
have
the
City
Council.
Look
at
this
landmark
designation
and
David
came
up
with
some
language,
which
is
I
want
to
say
this
correctly
more
than
50%.
Q
If
people,
if
a
community
took
the
time
to
look
at
designating
it
a
landmark
and
they
voted
by
51%,
we
would
we
would.
We
would
refer
that
to
the
HPC
and
it
would
take
its
normal
process.
But
if
it
was
an
example
like
First,
Christian
Church,
where
0%
wanted
it,
it
would
exclusively
come
to
the
City
Council
to
design
to
decide.
So
it
would
be
down
a
very,
very
limited
basis
and
if
I
didn't
state
that
correctly
David,
please
help.
AH
No
I
think
you
addressed
it
very
nicely
mark.
So
when
the
majority
of
the
property
owners
want
historic
designation,
they
can
make
the
request
the
HP
Commission
can
make
the
or
initiate
the
the
process
to
gain
historic
standard.
Nothing
changes
the
Planning
Commission
could
also
do
that
where
you
have
more
than
50%
of
the
ownership.
Wanting
historic
designation
I
accept
that
I.
AH
When,
then,
that
should
only
be
addressed
by
the
City
Council
who,
by
the
members
who
are
voted
by
the
public
and
our
accountant
have
a
responsibility
to
be
accountable
by
the
voters.
So,
and
one
point
that
mark
touched
on,
you
know
we
have
the
ability,
as
a
government,
to
take
property.
There's
two
concepts
to
that,
though,
taking
title
to
properties
what
we
do
and
what
we
refer
to
as
eminent
domain,
but
there's
another
way
of
taking
property
and
that's
removing
the
property
owners
right
to
enjoy
property.
AH
And
that's
what
that
one
most
recent
case
talks
about.
But
there
are
numerous
others
cases
and
and
mark
touches
on
two
very
important
concepts.
The
fifth
and
Fourteenth
Amendment
of
the
US
Constitution,
which
each
of
us
took
an
oath
to
uphold,
provides
for
property
rights
that
the
person
not
only
has
right
to
title
to
the
property
they've
acquired.
They
have
right
to
use
and
enjoyment
of
the
property
without
restrictions.
AH
Now
the
city
can
make
certain
types
of
limitations
when
it
comes
into
areas
such
as
nuisance,
like
if
they're
not
maintaining
the
property,
they've
allowed
weeds
to
grow
up
or
when
there's
a
safety
concern
like
that
needs
to
be
fenced
off
or
something
to
that
effect
outside
of
those
two
areas.
The
law
is
pretty
well
defined.
We
don't
have
the
ability
to
prevent
a
property
owner
from
having
full
access,
full
enjoyment,
the
ability
to
sell
the
property
if
they
so
choose
to
do
so.
So
those
are
the
points
I
wanted
to
bring
out
yeah.
Q
The
only
thing
I'd
add
to
that
is
I
think
through
the
process
of
what
I
learned
with
what
the
first
Christian
issue
people
came
to
the
table.
We
worked
on
a
solution.
If
the
landmark
designation
had
been
made,
we
wouldn't
have
another
Church
attempting
to
do
due
diligence
right
now
to
buy
first
Christian
and
so
I
think
when
the
landowner,
the
person
that
owns
the
property
that
doesn't
want
the
designation
and
wants
to
be
able
to
sell
their
property
I
think
that's
important
and
I
think
all
people
should
have
that
right.
AH
I'd
I
would
like
to
make
one
final
comment
to
you
know,
because
in
this
era
of
justice
reform
and
on
our
judicial
committee,
we're
saying
wait.
A
minute
doesn't
make
sense
to
force
people
who
don't
have
the
funds
to
pay
fines
and
then,
if
they
can't
pay
the
fines
placement
jail.
Well,
we
were
doing
the
same
thing
to
this
church
who
had
declining
revenues
and
yet
we
for
then
to
go
out
and
hire
an
attorney
and
go
through
the
process
of
having
that
attorney
represent
them
both
before
our
meetings
as
well
as
the
HP
committee.
AH
H
G
Just
have
a
couple
of
concerns
with
this
Inn
and
I.
Think
one
of
the
main
reasons
is
because
of
what
happened
with
the
Brockway
Center
and
as
we're
talking
about,
even
with
with
this
First
Christian
Church
in
it
and
correct
me
if
I'm
wrong
there,
the
main
reason
that
the
hpc
did.
That
was
because
of
the
application
itself,
stating
that
it
was
all
of
the
property
as
far
as
historic
recognition
is
that
I
am
I
wrong
for
saying
that
I'm
not
sure
who
I
need
to
speak
with
in
and
I'm
just.
V
G
Okay,
so
I
guess
my
concern
comes
into
play
when,
when
we're
holistically,
looking
at
the
application
of
landmark
designation,
so
how
are
we
going
to?
Or
how
can
we
better
come
together
for
that
conversation,
because
in
most
a
sin?
In
all
honesty,
the
hpc
was
doing
as
they
should
have
done
when
it
came
to
deeming
that
area,
because
that
is
technically
what
the
application
for
historic
recognition
was
already
stating
I.
Q
Think
what
I'd
say
to
that
is
that
I
am
concerned.
I'm
not
focused
on
that.
What
I'm
focused
on
is
three
different
groups,
having
the
ability
to
do
something
and
come
up
with
different
results
and
I
look
at
it
from
what
happens.
If,
if
there's
an
adverse
ruling
that
the
landowner
doesn't
doesn't
like
and
then
what
happens
is
is
that
the
landowner
files,
a
lawsuit
and
now,
based
upon
the
United,
States
Supreme
Court
speaking
last
Friday?
They
can
go
straight
to
federal
court.
Q
Q
But
what
I
am
saying
is
that
if
you
are
putting
on
evidence,
if
we
are
defending
a
lawsuit
and
we
are
putting
on
evidence
at
a
trial
and
and
and
we
have
to
defend,
two
different
agencies
are
doing
two
different
things
and
coming
up
with
two
different
clue
conclusions.
That's
not
good,
because
it
shows
that
we
are
trying
to
take
the
land
on
multiple
fronts.
I'm,
not
asking
that
in
all
instances
that
the
hpc
be
deprived
of
looking
at
this.
If
51%
of
the
people
say
we
want
it,
it
goes
to
HPC.
Q
U
Was
going
to
point
out
that
all
this
ordinance
deals
with
is
who
can
initiate
an
application
to
rezone
a
structure
or
site
as
a
historic
landmark?
That's
that's
all
it
does.
If,
at
the
end
of
the
day,
the
council
has
to
approve
the
rezoning,
if
there's
not
at
least
five
members
of
the
council,
who
are
interested
in
doing
the
rezoning
you're
really
just
making
by
having
these
other
bodies,
implement
the
application
or
initiate
it
you're
just
making
them
spend
a
lot
of
money
to
respond
to
it.
U
G
We
don't
have
that
many
that
have
been
been
deemed
historic
landmarks
and
there
are
so
many
more
that
need
to
be
done
that
obviously,
with
this
ordinance
I
guess
it
brings
forth
that
other
people
can
do
it.
But
I'm
concerned
with
that,
because
as
if
that's
what
the
his
HBC
is
for
to
in
most
aspects
to
bring
that
to
the
forefront
for
us
to
understand.
G
Q
Agree
with
everything
you
just
said:
okay,
but
I
also
agree
with
everything
that
Kenny
just
said
and
and
ultimately,
if
it
went
to
the
hpc
first,
it's
going
to
come
to
us
what
we're
trying
to
avoid
is
an
eight
month
delay
and
in
the
expense
of
that
eight
month,
delay
before
we
ultimately
vote
on
it.
This
makes
a
determination,
happen,
quicker
and
less
expensively
and.
M
You
not
concerned
that
the
City
Council
as
a
governing
body
could
still
end
us
up
in
that
same
sort
of
situation
that
you
see
I,
hear
your
concern:
I'm
listening,
I'm,
actually
reading
right
now
about
the
the
Supreme
Court
case
and
I'm.
Taking
all
these
opinions
in.
Are
you
not
concerned
due
to
the
idea
like.
M
AH
AH
We
take
that
every
time
we
claim
eminent
domain
on
property
and
warmly
maybe
I
shouldn't
say
this,
but
many
times
the
property
owner
will
say
will
contest
the
amount
that
we
deemed
is
the
value
that
property
and
we
go
to
I'm
not
going
to
try
to
explain
the
full
process,
but
eventually
a
third
party
comes
in
to
determine
whether
or
not
that
was
a
fair
price.
Many
times
they
rule
in
the
property
owners,
favor
and
not
ours
do.
Q
We
ever
do
anything
wrong,
I
would
I
mean
I
would
say
this
I
would
say
this
I
think
at
the
end
of
the
day,
we
make
mistakes.
Sometimes
we
don't
do
things
right,
but
we
are
the
elected
officials
that
are
to
be
held
accountable.
Number
one
to
the
people
that
voted
for
us
and
number
two
I
want
to
present
the
best
case
I
can
in
the
courthouse
to
win
and
when
you
have
different,
differing
different
governing
bodies
that
are
heading
in
different
directions.
M
Sharply
divided
decision
and
if
I
may
read
I
said
it
was
a
sharp
yeah,
yeah,
yeah,
no
yeah
and
just
to
read
briefly
from
this
article
justice,
Elena
Kagan
joined
by
the
courts.
Three
other
liberal
justices
dissented
in
furious
tones
Friday's
decision
she
said
quote,
rejects
far
more
than
a
single
decision
in
1985
and
that's
the
original
case
that
decision
Williamson,
County
Regional
Planning
Commission
versus
Hamilton
Bank
of
Johnson
City
quote,
was
rooted
in
an
understanding
of
the
Fifth
Amendment's
takings
clause.
M
Stretching
back
to
the
late
1800s
Kagan
wrote
on
that
view
a
government
could
take
property
so
long
as
it
provided
a
reliable
mechanism
to
pay
just
compensation.
Even
if
payment
came
after
the
fat
cake
and
said
adding
no
longer
so,
there's
a
concern
on
our
state's
our
excuse
me
on
our
country's
Supreme
Court,
that
this
is
going
to
set
up
a
precedent
where
there's
not
even
going
to
allow
for
that.
Just
compensation
in
the
event
that
that
was
there,
so
I
feel
a
little
quick
I
guess
what
I'm
saying
is.
M
Q
What
I
mean
and
I
differ
with
you
a
little
on
that
it
the
case
that
you're
talking
about
the
Williamson
County,
was
overruled
by
this
decision.
It's
gone.
There
is
new
precedent
set
by
the
Pennsylvania
case,
and
what
the
same
article
you're
reading
says
now
that
you
can
you
can
assert
a
1983
act
and
now
that
you
can
immediately
go
to
federal
court.
Q
Federal
courts
are
often
viewed
as
friendlier
than
state
courts
for
such
property
claims,
and
what
that
means
is
that
the
landowner
can
go
to
federal
court
and
have
a
better
chance
in
prevailing
than
in
the
state
court.
Action
and
I.
Don't
want
us
being
subjected
to
additional
lawsuits
where
we
have
two
governing
bodies
doing
two
different
things:
I
want
one
voice
to
speak,
to
say
to
the
state
court
or
the
federal
court.
This
is
what
we
did
and
why
we
did
it
and.
M
Q
AH
AH
Never
even
talked
about
compensating
and
First
Christian
Church
brought
it
up.
It
does
have
a
negative
impact
on
the
value
of
the
property.
Where
were
we
in
coming
up
with
monies
to
present
to
them
for
the
action
that
we
were
taking,
nobody
offered
any
money,
nobody
offered
to
reimburse
them
for
the
costs
they
incurred
by
going
through
that,
it
all
started
by
a
former
council
person
stoking
of
the
flames
of
fear
that
this
was
getting
ready
to
be
destroyed.
That
was
never
their
intent.
They
came
out
and
said
that
I
believe
him.
AH
Q
I
agree
with
that,
at
the
end
of
the
day,
this
church,
using
that
example,
was
down
to
40
members.
They
were
trying
to
all
their
property,
so
they
could
move
to
a
smaller
site,
so
the
church
could
thrive
and
continue
and
hopefully
grow
and
by
doing
the
what
what
the
HP
did.
You
have
now
an
eight
month
delay
you
have
them
hiring
tourney's,
as
David
said
and
and
they
may
have
to
shut
the
doors,
and
that
would
be
the
travesty,
as
if
the
doors
were
shut.
Q
M
I,
remember
correctly,
you
and
I
were
able
to
work
together
and
I
would
say
very
well
in
fact,
but
two
councilmen
Green
Wells
point
and
again
it
was
a
bit
of
a
blur
after
the
election
to
taking
office
when
Councilman
should
need
propose
what
he
did.
But
at
the
time
what
I
was
hearing
from
the
neighborhoods
behind
first
Christian
was
that
they
no
one
knew.
You
say
that
they
knew
that
this
was
going
to
be
protected
from
demolition.
M
No
one
knew
that
it
was
gonna,
be
protected
from
demolition
and
no
one
knew
what
was
going
to
go
there,
and
this
is
before
you
and
I
got
to
work
with
this
was
at
crossings.
You
said
I'm
saying
this
was
crossings
wasn't
in
that
picture.
Yet
this
was
a
completely
different,
unknown
entity
that
was
wanting
to
purchase
that
church
and
they
created
anxiety
in
Crown
Heights.
It
created
anxiety
in
word
too,
and
it
wasn't
just
councilmen
and
you
know,
I
ran
a
good
changes.
AH
No,
no,
no,
it's
a
zoning,
possibly
if
they
ever
wanted
to
change
the
use
of
it
and
that's
when
you
come
in,
as
well
as
the
Planning
Commission
on
future
use,
but
for
a
private
property
owner
to
want
to
sell
their
property
again
when
we
prevent
that
we're
taking
the
property
and
we're
usually
taking
it
without
compensating
the
property
owner.
The
other.
Q
Thing
I'd
add
to
that
the
crossings
have
been
looking
at
that
property.
It's
my
understanding
for
about
a
year.
Pricings
never
had
any
intentions
of
demolishing
it.
They
wanted
another
church,
they
want
another
branch
and
the
great
thing
I
think
that
you
and
I
were
able
to
accomplish.
We
were
able
to
get
people
in
a
room
and
we
went
from
rumor
to
facts
and
the
facts
were
nobody
wanted
to
demolish
it?
The
facts
were
Crossing's
wanted
to
buy
it.
Q
The
facts
were
The,
Crossings
wants
to
open
another
branch
to
have
the
church
live
and
the
facts
are.
A
contract
has
been
signed
and
now
we're
in
the
due
diligence
phase.
So
once
we
got
to
the
facts,
we
were
able
to
get
people
in
a
room
and
come
up
with
a
deal
that
was
good,
for
everyone
was
good
for
our
community
good
for
the
churches
and
good
for
the
neighborhood.
You.
M
And
I
were
able
to
do
that,
so
ii
was
crossing
in
the
first
christian
and
I
am
honored
to
have
been
a
part
of
that.
What
I'm
saying
is
there
was
an
organization
who
someone
we
don't
know
who
just
before
crossings
before
crossings.
That
was
in
that
negotiation
with
first
christian
and
that's
what
we
can
say,
it
was
councilman
Shadid
that
stoped
those
concerns,
I
am
Telling
You,
not
everyone
in
in
Crown
Heights
listens
to
councilman
to
deed.
M
They
are
they
heard
in
the
news
that
someone
unknown
to
them
was
going
to
purchase
that
and
they
didn't
know
what
was
going
to
happen
there.
Now
it's
way
before
crossings
enter
the
picture,
and
it's
way
before
you
and
I
enter
the
picture.
We
did
the
right
thing
crossing
to
first
Christian
did
the
right
thing.
I
am
saying
that
in
that
initial
moment
there
was
legitimate
concern
way
before
there
was
crossings,
and
you
and
I.
M
A
AL
At
Cato,
Lewis,
200,
Northwest,
22nd,
Street
I
am
speaking
on
behalf
of
preservation,
Oklahoma
and
the
state's
only
nonprofit,
with
the
mission
of
preserving
the
places
where
Oklahoma
History
lives.
We've
already
sent
in
a
letter
when
this
was
originally
before
when
this
was
originally
introduced
and
I'll,
just
kind
of
say
a
few
reasons
why
we
are
in
disagreement
with
this
agenda
item.
As
Councilwoman
I
said
earlier.
We
don't
have
that
many
historic
structures
and-
and
this
would
likely
result
in
fewer
historic
structures
and
arguments.
AL
We've
had
a
previous
council
meetings-
is
that
our
number
is
very
low
compared
to
other
cities,
comparable
cities
across
the
United
States,
and
this
is
a
tool
that
actually
adds
protection
and
review
to
historic
structures
across
across
our
state
across
our
city
versus
just
being
on
the
National
Register,
which
is
more
of
an
honor
system.
I
would
say
also
that
you
guys
do
a
lot
way
to
go.
AL
Thank
you
for
all
that
you
do
as
City
Council,
but
this
is
why
Commission's
like
the
Historic,
Preservation
Commission
exists
in
Planning
Commission,
and
they
are
knowledgeable
and
skilled
professionals
in
their
field
and
that's
why
they
are
appointed
to
be
on
these
Commission's
already
in
today's
meeting.
Items
have
been
deferred
to
different
Commission's
such
as
the
Planning
Commission,
because
they
are
the
most
adept
to
handle.
These
conversations.
AL
I
would
also
be
curious
about
knowing
that
the
HP
Commission
that's
what
they
do
there
preservationist
on
the
Commission,
what
the
training
might
be
for
city
councilors
for
this,
if
taken
away
additional
review
from
these
Commission's
I
also
will
say
that
the
HP
Commission
aids
in
the
process
and
helps
with
the
due
diligence
which
you
had
talked
about
before
for
the
property
owner,
helps
with
the
actual
process.
And
before
this
conversation
we
mentioned
that.
We
believe
that
this
action
is
likely
because
of
what
happened
with
First
Christian
Church
and
it's
clear
from
today's
meeting.
AL
AL
That's
what
preservation
Oklahoma
is
about,
and
that's
what
the
H
P
Commission
is
the
most
qualified
to
have
these
discussions
as
well.
So
we
urge
the
Oklahoma
City
City
Council
to
work
with
the
preservation
community
to
work
with
a
sort
Preservation
Commission
to
address
concerns
about
the
process
rather
than
eliminating
this
important
tool
altogether.
Let.
AL
Q
AL
Q
AH
AH
AH
Why
would
you
say
that
comment,
then
this
is
only
going
to
change
when
that
they
don't
have
a
majority
of
the
property
owners
requesting
historic
preservation.
That's
the
only
time
it'll
come
before
the
City
Council,
okay,.
A
AH
AM
Melissa
hunt
the
executive
director
for
the
American
Institute
of
Architects
1,300
North
Shore
Tell
Avenue.
My
question
is
I,
understand:
councilman,
Stone
ciphers
concern
about
the
the
differing
opinions
but
for
plan.
Let's
use
Planning
Commission
as
an
example
when
a
person
initiates
a
change,
an
ordinance
chain
or
a
zoning
change
at
Planning
Commission,
sometimes
Planning
Commission
recommends
approval,
I
assume,
there's
times
when
this
Bobby
denies
that
approval
and
for
whatever
reason
they
may
take
it
to
court
again,
there's
differing
and
decisions.
This
is
the
same
thing.
AM
M
Real
quick,
yes,
I
I,
want
to
be
very,
very
clear.
Councilman
green
Wells
earlier
concerns
about
big
initial
conversations
about
first
Christian.
Yes,
the
black
Meyer
reached
out
to
me.
I
was
not
even
on
council
yet
and
had
concerns
about
who
the
prospective
buyer
for
first
Christian
was
and
what
that
meant
terms
of
demolition.
M
That
was
a
new
story
that
I
had
to
then
respond
to
not
even
sitting
on
City
Council.
Yet
in
a
in
a
meeting
with
Crown
Heights
Abraham
I'm
saying
like
that
was
a
new
story.
They
heard
and
then
I
had
to
respond
to
it
and
then
thankfully
Crossing
steps
in
and
then
art,
Stonecipher
and
I
were
able
to
do.
Some
really
I
think
great
work
to
preserve
the
buildings
there
at
First.
Christian
just
wanted
to
make
sure
for
the
record
and.
Q
U
AI
A
I
just
inherited
so
I
just
point
that
out
as
a
potential
thing
to
look
out
for
as
we
determine
these
things,
our
country.
Unfortunately,
right
now
is
fractured
and
its
political
scheme
of
things,
and
that
slows
it's
our
ability
of
our
governments
to
act,
and
we
don't
have
that
going
on
here
and
I
hope
we
don't
with.
That
being
said,
we
have
a
motion
a
second,
let's.
K
Discuss
that
yeah
I'd
like
to
speak
to
that,
so
the
conference
in
question
I
would
just
I
guess.
I
would
be
curious
to
understand
what
about
the
conference
you
feel
is
I,
guess,
partisan
or
or
I
guess
controversial
in
some
way
that
that
doesn't
speak
to
City
issues
that
concern
that
people
that
live
in
Oklahoma,
City.
A
G
I
guess
the
concern
I
guess
forward-thinking
is
is,
is
a
concern
when
you
have
an
attend
something
that
just
has
the
title
of
of
local
progress
and
we're
looking
at
it's
the
Center
for
popular
democracy
and
the
concerns.
Obviously
that
are
within
a
conversation
and
I
did
hear
you
say
you
were
not
opposed
to
the
subject
matter
and
I.
Don't
think
that's
the
concern,
but
I
want
to
say
this.
G
This
has
nothing
to
do
with
politics
or
being
political
going
to
any
conference
to
experience
educational
pieces,
but
this
is
about
equity
and
understanding
how
we
can
use
different
areas
of
concentration
when
it
comes
to
the
subject
matter,
to
bring
to
our
own
communities
in
and
with
respect
to
forward.
Thinking
of
how
we,
as
a
city
in
Oklahoma
City,
can
use
methods
that
have
been
that
can
be
borrowed
from
other
major
cities
or
even
smaller
cities.
For
that
that
aspect,
because
I
know
one
of
the
subject.
A
As
I
read
the
only
thing
that
I
got
it
off
the
internet,
there
were
a
couple
of
words
that
just
gave
me
a
little
bit
of
hey
what
is
going
on
it.
Is
this
something
or
not,
and
by
the
fact
that
I
voted
for
it
I
think
you
should
see
that
I
came
away
with
a
conclusion
or
not,
but
here's
a
our
members
are
committed
to
reclaiming
the
power.
I.
Don't
see
us
in
our
group
here,
trying
to
quote
reclaim
power
that
just
set
off
a
little
flag.
In
my
mind,
okay,.
A
It's
advancing
a
shared
vision
of
shared
economic
prosperity.
Okay,
that
could
be
taken
to
ways
shared
economic
prosperity.
It
could
have
a
political
connotation
or
could
have
an
educational
come
a
component
and
all
I
was
saying
in
my
comments
were:
let's
keep
it
on
education,
I,
hope
focused
and
not
on
power
moves
or
taking
over
this,
or
that
and
in
that
kind
of
a
vein.
That's
that's
I
know!
A
If
that
you
don't
agree,
that's
fine,
but
that
was
just
a
warning
and
in
my
mind
and
I
went
through
a
similar
thing
like
this
a
couple
of
weeks
ago,
there
was
a
seminar
up
in
Colorado
for
conservative
leaders
and
I
figure
myself,
as
a
conservative.
I
did
not
purposely
ask
for
the
city
of
Oklahoma
City
to
spend
any
money
or
any
time
and
allowing
me
to
go
because
it
could
have
a
political
overtone
to
it,
and
so
that
was
just
on
my
mind
when
I,
when
I
was
going
through
my
analysis
last
night.
M
I'm,
sorry
Larry
when
you
go
to
your
neighborhood
association
meetings
and
you
meet
with
your
constituents
and
you
hear
their
voices
your
and
empower
your
empowering
them
and
I
think
that's
what
that
conference
is
going
to
be
helping
them.
But
you
see
what
I
mean:
that's
what
that
means.
How
do
you
empower
people
to
use
their
voices
at
a
nonpartisan,
City
government?
That's
how
I
heard
it
thanks
for
him!
I
didn't
know
what
the
conference
was
until
you
were
just
describing,
and
so
thanks
for
and.
M
And
count
or
a
comment
to
me:
yes,
I,
want
to
thank
lyric
theater
for
inviting
me
to
attend
singing
in
the
rain.
If
you
have
I
think
there
might
be,
a
couple
shows
left.
If
you
haven't
had
a
chance
yet
go
they
make
it
rain
on
stage
literally,
it's
impressive.
It
is
super
impressive
and
I
found
myself
and
I
sent
this
email
to
Jim
Reynolds
with
lyric
I,
really
I
found
myself
just
swept
up
in
this
idea
of
the
importance
of
art
to
a
renaissance
story
too.
M
M
You
don't
know
what
you,
what
like
you've
just
saved
by
walking
in
that
parade
with
us,
so
really
I'm,
not
being
overdramatic
I
am
telling
you
they're.
The
suicide
rates
are
high
because
of
the
way
too
many
in
our
society
treat
lesbian,
gay,
bisexual
and
transgender
people,
especially
of
color,
and
so
to
see
a
hundred
one
hundred
and
twenty
thousand
fellow
Oklahomans
out
there
saying
we
love
you
I
love,
you
back
I,.
AC
Just
wanted
to
say
thanks
to
the
Boys
and
Girls
Club
I
had
the
opportunity
to
go,
spend
some
time
down
at
their
Capitol
Hill
facility.
This
past
week
and
speaking
of
art,
I
saw
some
great
artwork,
with
some
octopus
hand,
puppets
or
shark
and
puppets,
and
it
looked
great
but
they're
doing
some
just
some
fantastic
work
down
there
in
Capitol
Hill
thanks
I.
G
Have
a
few
things
I
know
one
is
we
have
a
citation
from
the
mayor's
office
for
our
Bricktown
canal
and
officially
today
they
are
20
years
young,
as
of
July,
2nd
1999
and
they've
had
over
40,000
visitors
within
the
first
6
hours
that
they
were
in
operation.
So
our
mayor
has
commended
Bricktown
business
district
in
downtown
OKC
for
their
work,
maintaining
the
Bricktown
Canal
as
a
world-class
attraction
in
our
city
and
encouraging
all
of
our
citizens
celebrate
the
remarkable
Renaissance
of
brick
town
and
of
our
city
thanks
to
the
investments
of
map.
G
That
was
my
foot
my
first
time
on
a
water
taxi
and
I
must
say
that
was
one
of
the
best
experiences
I
have
had
to
understand:
downtown
brick
town
Oklahoma
City,
even
as
we're
talking
about
the
monuments
that
we
are
placing
down
in
that
area,
to
see
them
physically
up
front
through
that
water
taxi
experience,
it
was
unbelievable
in
our
water
taxi
guide,
Connor
was
the
best
and
they
tell
a
really
great
story
of
maps
how
it
evolved.
Just
that
downtown
area
the
attractions
and
in
just
the
history.
G
You
know,
I
think
that's
something
that
we
should
praise
when
it
comes
to
folks
that
are
meeting
tourists
or
meeting
people
that
come
into
our
city
and
we're
able
to
tell
a
great
story
of
how
that
part
of
our
city
developed
and
each
one
of
the
water
taxi
guides.
That's
a
story
that
they
tale.
So
they
tell
that
story
numerous
times
every
single
day
and
we
get
to
continuously
celebrating
that
victory
of
what
has
come
from
1993
and
especially
what
has
come
from
1999
in
celebrating
the
Bricktown
Canal
in
a
water
taxi.
G
G
G
They
asked
me
to
come
and
be
their
keynote
speaker
in
celebration
of
their
190
year
in
in
our
city
and
again
they
they
came
into
being
a
little
before
statehood,
but
as
far
as
Oklahoma
Federation
of
being
formed
in
1920
jimin's
hoops
Fest
is
going
to
be
every
Thursday,
except
for
this
Thursday.
So
if
you
have
time,
we
want
to
see
it.
It's
with
the
fact
program,
it's
on
Thursdays
and
it's
at
the
Northeast
Center,
and
also
want
to
thank
the
ok
n.
G
So
she
does
have
have
one
daughter
and
she
has
five
grandchildren
as
many
great
grandchildren
and
seven
great
great
grandchildren
and
there's
going
to
be
a
birthday
party
for
her.
This
Friday
and
I
would
love
to
see
all
of
those
that
can
come
and
help
celebrate
life
a
hundred
and
five
years
old
in
Oklahoma
City.
G
So
that's
going
to
be
6:30
to
8:30
117,
north
Kelly
Avenue,
and
if
you're
unable
I'll
give
you
the
peel
box,
605
62,
you
can
send
some
birthday
cards
there
I'm
sure
she
would
love
some
correspondence
but
again
I
think
it's
important
for
us
as
a
city
to
also
recognize
those
who
have
made
it
thus
far
within
our
city.
So
with
that
I'll
close
and
say,
thank
you.
Q
This
briefly,
Your
Honor
I,
wanted
to
report
back
on
our
new
amnesty
program
that
was
adopted
by
the
judiciary
committee
and
then
also
by
the
City
Council.
Yesterday
was
our
first
day.
This
is
kind
of
a
PSA
I
want
everyone
to
know
that
we
have
a
hundred
and
sixteen
thousand
warrants
out
there
and
we're
trying
to
rid
the
system
of
those
warrants
and
get
revenue
into
our
coffers,
and
if
yesterday
was
any
indication
of
the
future,
this
is
going
to
be
a
really
good
program.
Q
We
received
a
lot
of
calls
inquiring
about
coming
down
number
one
number
two
I
earlier
than
3
p.m.
in
the
afternoon.
We
had
already
had
10
cases
paying
in
$1,500
and
that
didn't
sound
like
a
lot
but
think
about
this.
If
you
have
$1,500
come
in
every
day
and
we're
open
for
business
222
days
out
of
the
month-
and
you
multiply
that
by
nine
months,
which
is
the
the
amnesty
program
we'll
bring
in
three
hundred
thousand
dollars,
we
double
that
six
hundred
thousand
dollars,
and
so
this
is
a
program,
I
think
that's
going
to
work.
Q
We
just
need
to
keep
getting
the
message
out.
If
yesterday
was
any
indication
we
had
a
good
day,
I
hope
it
gets
better
and
better
and
better
with
that.
The
one
other
thing
I'd
like
to
ask
with
mayor
Holt
being
out
of
town
or
out
of
the
state,
are
you
officially
the
mayor
or
vice
mayor
today,
all
right,
Thank
You,
vice
mayor.
H
AN
Cathy
O'connor
I'm,
the
president
of
the
Alliance
for
economic
development,
and
we
have
a
presentation
this
morning
that
outlines
some
changes
that
we
will
be
taking
through
the
approval
process
for
amendments
to
the
Northeast
Renaissance
TIF
district.
This
is
TIF
number
nine.
It
was
approved
several
years
ago
and,
like
I
said
we're
just
at
the
beginning
of
the
process.
This
is
really
just
to
inform
you
of
what
we're
thinking
about
doing.
It
still
has
several
months
of
process
to
go
through
so
to
get
started.
AN
Tip
number
nine
was
adopted
in
2015.
It
will
expire
in
2041
the
traditional
25
year
time
period
for
a
tax
increment
financing
district.
It
primarily
covers
the
commercial
corridors
in
northeast
Oklahoma
City.
It's
focused
along
northeast
23rd,
Street,
Kelly,
Martin,
Luther,
King
Boulevard,
and
over
to
I-35.
AN
The
increment
was
designed
to
come
from
both
ad
valorem
taxes
or
property
taxes
and
from
sales
taxes.
So
the
the
budget,
the
total
budget
for
the
TIF
district,
is
around
62
million
dollars
over
the
entire
25
year
period.
So
in
a
TIF
district,
we
have
two
different
types
of
areas
that
the
project
plan
designates
the
first
one
is
the
the
project
area
or
the
area
where
we
can
spend
money,
and
this
is
a
map
of
those
areas.
It
really
is
a
map
of
the
Northeast
Renaissance
and
the
JFK
urban
renewal
areas
combined
together.
AN
AN
So
several
months
ago
we
had
an
approval
of
an
item
to
allocate
TIF
funding
to
a
project
that
came
to
council,
and
several
of
you
had
concerns
because
it
was
a
project
that
was
located
at
Northeast,
23rd
and
Coltrane,
and
that
are
we
encouraging
sprawl
or
encouraging
expenditures
way
far
outside
the
the
traditional
core
of
northeast
Oklahoma
City.
So
some
of
the
changes
that
we're
proposing
today
are
to
address
that
concern
and
others
are
to
provide
an
ability
to
fund
projects
that
are
more
within
the
core,
but
we're
left
out
of
the
increment
area.
AN
So,
just
as
a
brief
overview,
the
plan
objectives
were
to
assist
with
the
implementation
of
the
JFK
urban
renewal
plan
and
the
Northeast
Renaissance
urban
renewal
plan.
Obviously
it
was
to
revitalize
the
area
promote
economic
development,
create
and
retain
new
jobs,
stimulate
new
investment,
both
public
and
private
in
the
area
and
the
and
the
project
plan
does
provide
funding
for
the
other
taxing
jurisdictions
within
the
to
undertake
projects
in
their
areas.
AN
So
the
objectives
of
these
changes
are
to
establish
a
separate
increment
area,
east
of
Bryant
Avenue
for
future
projects
to
address
that
concern
about
encouraging
sprawl
and
then
to
establish
additional
increment
areas
to
support
development
that
are
these,
and
these
are
more
located
within
the
core.
This
is
a
map
of
what
our
proposed
changes
are,
as
you
can
see,
what
we're
we're
going
to
designate
most
of
the
existing
increment
area
as
increment
a,
and
it
includes
the
project
that
you
include
that
you
already
approved
at
23rd
and
23rd
and
coltrane.
AN
It
carves
out
a
new
increment
area
C
that
would
have
a
separate
25
year
time
horizon.
So
the
increment
on
that
area
would
not
start
until
the
City
Council
approves
a
resolution.
Doing
so,
and
you
have
up
to
10
years
from
the
initial
adoption
date
of
the
TIF
district,
so
10
years
from
2015
to
approve
the
beginning
of
the
increment
accumulation
for
Area
C.
Now,
if
we
never
have
any
more
projects
in
that
area,
we
won't
start
that
clock.
AN
So
it
really
gives
us
a
lot
of
flexibility
as
far
as
timing
of
projects
and
and
the
and
the
generation
of
increment.
The
other
areas
are
shown
as
in
red,
and
these
are
several
new
areas
and
we'll
walk
through
those
one
by
one.
So
the
first
one
is
Creston
Hills
school.
This
is
an
old
Oklahoma,
City
public
school,
that's
located
in
a
city
park.
AN
The
school
district
has
actually
given
this
school
back
to
Oklahoma
City.
So
you
all
now
own
it
we're
in
the
process
of
working
through
some
title
issues
to
see.
If
you
can
transfer
it
to
the
urban
renewal
Authority.
We
would
then
undertake
a
process
to
redevelop
the
school
into
some
other
use,
so
the
school
was
built
in
the
1920s
and
it
it's
in
need
of
rehabilitation
so
that
it
doesn't
have
a
negative
impact
on
this
neighborhood.
The
way
that
it
is
right
now,
the
next
one
is
Marcus
Garvey
school
again.
AN
This
is
a
former
Oklahoma
City
public
school.
It
has
already
been
transferred
to
the
urban
renewal
Authority
and
we
have
a
redevelop
er,
who
has
assigned
redevelopment
agreement
to
renovate
this
school
into
senior
housing
and
to
build
some
new
senior
housing
units
that
are
designed
for
grand
families
or
families
raising
their
grandchildren.
AN
AN
The
next
piece
of
property
is
a
sliver
again
immediately
adjacent
to
the
current
TIF
boundary
that
would
be
for
some
commercial
development
near
a
Oklahoma
City
Housing
Authority
project,
where
they
are
redoing
all
of
the
units
in
this
location,
building
some
mixed
income
development.
So
it
would
support
some
commercial
development
to
go
along
with
that
additional
residential
development.
AN
And
then
this
area
is
near
I,
235
and
northeast
23rd
Street.
It
is
the
area
of
the
former
armory
there's
an
O
dot
parcel
on
the
south
side
of
the
street.
All
of
these
properties
are
currently
owned
by
the
state
of
Oklahoma,
but
there
is
a
developer
who's
interested
in
redeveloping
this
property
into
a
boutique
hotel
office,
residential,
several
different
uses,
and
then
there's
also
some
properties
on
the
north
side
of
23rd
Street
that
we
believe
have
the
potential
for
redevelopment
as
we
move
forward
with
with
other
projects
in
the
area.
AN
So
again
what
this?
What
these
changes
will
do
will
establish
a
separate
increment
area,
east
of
Bryant
Avenue
for
future
projects
and
add
additional
areas
to
support
the
revitalization
of
northeast
Oklahoma
City.
The
plan
will
retain
and
create
new
jobs
by
stimulating
new
investment
in
Oklahoma
City,
and
we
hope
that
it
will
preserve
and
enhance
the
tax
base
by
providing
development
opportunities
for
other
taxing
jurisdictions
in
the
increment.
AN
So
again,
like
I
said,
this
is
just
really
an
informational
presentation
to
let
you
know
that
we
are
beginning
the
process.
The
next
steps
in
the
process
will
be
that
that
these
changes
will
have
to
be
presented
to
the
TIF
review
committee.
They
will
make
recommendations
back
to
City
Council,
but
before
that
it
also
has
to
go
to
the
Planning
Commission
for
its
where
they
will
make
a
recommendation
about
whether
or
not
the
changes
can
conform
with
the
Oklahoma
City
Comprehensive
Plan,
and
then
it
goes
back
to
City,
Council
and
I.
AN
G
AN
Have
approved
three
projects:
one
for
the
Northeast
shopping
center,
one
for
the
revitalization
at
17,
1700,
northeast
23rd
or
23rd,
and
Rhode
Island,
where
Centennial
Health
has
their
new
clinic
and
then
there's
a
retail
and
restaurant
development.
That's
a
part
of
that
and
then
finally,
the
project
at
23rd
and
Coltrane,
and
we're
working
to
finalize
the
redevelopment
agreement
with
that
property
owner
right
now.
H
G
Have
a
lot
of
work
to
do
when
it
comes
to
revitalizing
our
area
of
Northeast,
Oklahoma,
City
and
being
able
to
grab
that
increment
to
use
it
for
those
project
areas
which
is
obviously
what
we
want
when
it
comes
to
the
retaining
the
jobs
and
obviously
creating
more
job
opportunities
within
the
northeast
quadrant
and
obviously
the
purpose
of
this
is
for
new
investment
and
we
want
continuous
investment
back
into
the
community.
So
with
that
I
know,
we've
had
plenty
of
conversations
about
what
TIF
is
for
the
community.
AN
Yeah
and
the
opportunity
zone
program
fits
really
well
with
with
local
incentive
programs
like
tax
increment
financing,
and
it
also
pairs
well
with
new
markets,
tax
credits
and
historic
tax
credits
and
some
of
the
other
programs
that
are
available.
So
the
importance
is
to
be
able
to
layer
some
of
those
different
kinds
of
programs
to
make
projects
happen
in
areas,
and
we
we've
had
a
lot
of
experience
with
that
through
the
years.
E
The
only
other
thing
we
have
one
on
city
manager
reports
here,
besides
the
claims
in
payroll
is
the
development
impact
fee
adjustment,
and
this
is
just
one
that
it's
a
report
item
that
comes
back
to
the
council.
There's
no
action,
that's
required
on
it
within
the
impact
fiord
and
ordinance.
It
has
an
automatic
escalator,
that's
based
upon
the
construction
cost
index,
and
this
is
just
to
inform
and
provide
the
information.
It
was
about
a
1.8
percent
increase
based
upon
the
calculation
for
this
past
year.
AO
Also
Sunday
I
had
the
honor
of
hearing
former
senator
Angela
Monson's
saying
it
was
music
to
my
ears
when
she
came
to
me
and
said
thanks
for
doing
what
I'm
doing
by
a
community
pastor
Tony
wise
I
called
him
and
asked
him
look
at
the
City
Council
for
June
18th.
Look
at
that
meeting
that
was
on
the
Saturday.
He
called
me
about
five
o'clock
that
afternoon.
So
mr.
Kirk
come
on
into
my
church.
Was
the
praise
church
once
appraise
Baptist
Church
I
spoke
to
this.
AO
AO
I
was
here
Tuesday
they
reached
out
to
me
Wednesday
at
11
o'clock,
and
they
said
what
can
we
do
to
help
you
for
the
coming
event
for
July
to
self
I
said:
I
want
the
parents
to
be
responsible
for
July
to
self,
but
I
want
y'all
to
help
me
for
what
I'm,
proposing
today
and
18
months
now
for
be
completed.
I
like
for
the
city
to
give
these
job
to
the
kids
that
fifteen
years
old,
where
they
get
work,
permit
to
work
after
school
during
the
school
cause.
AO
AO
The
seventh
grade,
I
quit
school
before
I
even
started
the
seventh
grade,
but
you
see
where
I'm
standing
today
so
that
far
I'm,
just
beating,
not
just
speaking
for
the
kids
on
the
northeast
side
of
town,
just
the
because
we
thirteen
and
fourteen
years
old
I
think
for
the
white
kids
from
be
13
or
14
years
old,
I'm
fixing
speaking
for
the
Mexican
kids
they're
gonna
be
the
same
ages.
They
don't
want
that
kids
Jones.
What
we
had
to
do
to
make
it
yet
sell
drugs
wrong
with
the
wrong
crowd.
AO
AO
They
can
come
down
and
get
better
jobs
from
the
city,
but
I
like
the
y'all,
the
rent
out
to
these
kids
and
give
them
some
house
the
cool
jobs
at
when
they
become
agent
old
enough
to
go
to
the
you
get
this
school
permit
work
from
it,
so
they
won't
have
to
steal
and
Rob
and
take
from
the
neighbors
and
take
for
the
people
that
they
live
with
to
in
order
to
survive.
If
you
don't,
if
they
let
them
do
what
we
doing
without
trying
to
help
that's
all,
they
got
to
do
to
live.
AO
They're
gonna,
try
to
feed
egg
here,
they're
gonna
try
to
help
take
care
of
their
parents.
They're
gonna
try
to
keep
get
this
nice
little
shoes,
but
they
ain't
got
no
job,
they
gonna
get
it
they're
gonna
get
all
these
guns
and
stuff.
They
don't
need
it
all.
You
had
to
us
help
them
give
me
one
ounce
of
school
jobs.
Let
them
come
down
and
make
some
money
all
the
development
going
on,
and
so
that's
how
we're
gonna
break
the
cycle
faster.
While
they
were
so
grateful
that
I
spoke
to
the
congregation
they
said.
AO
Listen
to
me
then
tell
them
the
same
thing:
I'm
telling
you
all
the
day.
They
don't
have
to
steal
normal.
They
can.
We
can
break
the
cycle
together.
These
kids,
if
they
ain't,
got
nothing
to
do
all
they
gonna
do,
is
rob
and
steal
and
take
stuff
to
survive,
but
that's
what
they
think
us
do
as
wrong
people
go.
We
won't
help,
give
them
the
job
that
they
need.
You
got
all
the
belt.
They
can
pick
up
trash
for
$7
an
hour.
Anybody
ever
give
up
a
bus
pass
long.
AO
AO
This
is
from
a
volunteer
teacher.
I
got
500
130
my
I'm,
a
girl
off
I'm
falling
for
a
grant
I'm,
also
using
my
place
for
Calero
so
in
18
months,
and
let
math
forth
complete
I
plan
to
have
the
school
built
one
way
or
the
other,
for
we
undo
it
by
the
time
that
4
is
completed,
and
these
are
my
teachers
and
instructors,
they're
retired
people's.
They
a
good
job
work
for
the
city,
working
for
a
construction
company,
Thomas
Wells
and
there's
many
more.
Thank
you.
AO
A
AP
Know
if
it's
still
morning
or
afternoon
yet
my
phone
is
off.
My
name
is
Merle.
Sango
I
live
at
11,
I
14,
oh,
my
god,
12:40
Ivory's
court
Edmond.
It's
a
privilege
for
me
to
speak
with
you
all
today.
How
are
y'all
today,
I'm
proud
that
he
would
I
am
honored
that
he
would
ask
me
to
volunteer
my
services
with
his
program
that
he's
planning
in
his
vision.
AP
AP
A
AQ
Good
afternoon
my
name
is
Freddie
Edwards
and
I'm,
a
retiree
also
a
member
of
the
American
Legion
Post
157,
and
also
local
union
916
I
spent
eight
years
in
Marine,
Corps
and
I
spent
34
years.
I
did
take
air
force
base
17
of
those
years
up.
I
was
a
federal
auctioneering
even
louder,
and
I
was
the
first
black
auctioneer
west
of
the
Mississippi.
So
when
I
retired.
AQ
In
my
sister-
time
to
give
back
and
I'm
gonna
give
you
one
example
that
we
did
make
it
very
short
that
if
you
all
ever
heard
of
that
pres
halls
apartment
building
on
telly,
they
had
a
notaries.
AQ
You
know
reputation
of
everyone
over
our
one
season
and
we
got
some
space
from
the
you
know:
department,
managers
and
we
contracted
with
winning
contract.
Wouldn't
we
would
put
the
bag
on
McDonald's
and
we
and
family
dollars
in
a
few
more
places,
and
we've
created
a
safe
spot
for
those
flat
ski
type
of
kids.
When
it
got
out
of
school,
they
didn't
have
anywhere
to
go,
I
mean
you
know
they
couldn't
get
in
their
own
house
and
mother
will
not
work,
and
so
we
creates
their
spot
and
we
stayed
in
there.
AQ
Back
to
years,
then
we
had
to
were
ordained
ministers
or
REM
wise
and
in
the
rubble
new
van
most
people
know
on
that
side
of
town.
So
it
wasn't
like
a
daycare
of
senators
more
likely
and
what
like
a
boot
camp,
but
we
let
the
kids
mind
developing
the.
What
do
they
think
about?
Well?
What's
on
their
mind,
if
it's
music,
his
name's
at
school,
we're
gonna,
do
it
we're
gonna,
do
the
homework
long
and
it
worked.
AQ
AQ
He
calls
the
same
thing,
but
some
attention
and
a
little
time,
but
they
knew
that
they
had
out
to
wild.
We
saw
people
dropping
their
kids
off
down
the
street,
so
they
can
run
over
that
and
did
they
any
living
it
apartment
complex,
but
they
knew
that
was
a
safe
spot
and
we
thought
about
it
to
our
men's
association.
AQ
Let's
create
that
again.
If
we
could
do
it,
but
we
don't
have
the
space
in
the
spaces
that
we
were
offered
where
we're
odd.
Oh,
no,
we're
sharp
well
evolved.
It
wasn't
in
a
city
where
we
could
go
bad.
So
it's
counter
to
the
way.
Sad.
But
that's
that's
the
thought
of
the
things
that
you
that
could
be
done,
don't
cost
nothing,
but
a
little
bit
of
time.
A
AO
It
was
look
upon
northeast,
South,
town
there's.
A
area
today
has
a
sign
that
they
not
these
Canadian
Riverfront
recreation
area.
It's
gonna
be
a
hundred
degrees
outside
in
the
next
three
or
four
days.
We
went
there
for
several
years
had
no
problem,
but
today
that
sign
that
the
sign
is
still
there,
not
these
Canadian
riverfront
recreation
areas
and
we
could
get
that
just
some
graphic
stones
removed.
We
could
have
kids
down
there
in
two
days
for
the
holiday,
for
these
hot
sees
the
signs
are
there
today.
AO
I
have
pizza
time,
they've
all
been
development,
folks
like
Ashanti,
but
it's
just
fancy
Northeast
Canadian
River
recreation
area,
but
we
can't
use
it
Kohi
can't
get
into
it.
It's
blocked
off
weary
shoppers
will
didn't
come
back
on
the
agenda,
so
some
I
can
tell
us
why
the
stones
can't
be
removed.
We'll
come
back,
but
it's
gonna
be
a
hundred
degrees
of
kids.
Ain't
got
nowhere
to
go.
We
care
about
we're.
Protecting,
will
feed
will
give
them
a
place
to
go
we're
cleaning
up
we'll
take
care
thing
in
there.
AO
We'll
take
care
of
thing,
I'll
be
bright,
but
please
give
these
kids
someplace
to
go.
We'll
do
the
rest,
we're
clean
enough
we'll
take
care.
We
did
it
for
20
years
together
all
the
both
locations,
which
was
on
city
properties
for
years
on
the
North,
Canadian
River.
So
y'all,
please
think
about
that.
Let's
open
an
area
for
the
kids
we
got,
people
help
take
care
of
we'll
give
them
water
food.