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From YouTube: Oklahoma City Council Meeting - May 9, 2023
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A
A
B
C
A
A
D
A
E
Thank
you.
Thank
you,
mayor
city
council,
for
considering
this
Proclamation.
My
name
is
Rick
wickenkamp
I'm,
the
director
of
development
services
department,
I,
have
with
me
this
morning,
Crystal
miles
who's
assistant,
director,
Mike
Miller
who's
over
the
construction
inspection,
section,
Scott
Weiss
he's
over
plan
review
on
Donna
McMurtry
who's,
our
development
center
liaison,
so
the
safety
of
people
and
animals
are
both
really
Central
to
the
core
mission
of
our
department
and
really
when
it
comes
to
building
safety.
It
really
starts
with
our
plan
review
section.
E
They
review
all
new
construction
remodel
plans
to
make
sure
they're
in
compliance
with
all
the
applicable
codes,
and
that
effort
really
culminates
with
our
construction
inspections
and
they
go
out
and
actually
look
at
the
construction
itself
and
they
review
it
for
the
applicable
building
codes,
Electrical,
Plumbing
mechanical,
they
also
inspect
elevators
and
escalators,
which
are
really
important.
So
it's
really
an
honor
for
us
to
provide
these
services
to
our
residents
and
our
visitors
on
behalf
of
the
city.
A
All
right,
we
definitely.
It
is
perhaps
even
more
obvious
that
we
depend
on
our
EMS
Professionals
for
our
safety
every
day,
and
so
we'd
like
to
hear
a
little
bit
more
about
EMS
week
and
so
I'd
ask
the
clerk
to
read
this
Proclamation.
D
A
Well,
thank
you
well,
I
think
that
captures
pretty
well
the
important
services
that
you
guys
provide.
We
would
love
to
hear
a
few
thoughts
and
we
have,
of
course,
some
members
of
our
em,
our
local
amsa
team
here,
and,
if
you
wouldn't
mind
introducing
yourself
and
share
a
few
thoughts
about
what
you
do.
F
Hello,
my
name
is
Michael
Parrish
I'm,
the
director
of
operations
with
MC
here
in
Oklahoma,
City
I,
have
with
me
Joelle
Carlisle.
She
is
a
paramedic.
That's
been
servicing
our
community
here
in
Oklahoma
City
for
over
13
years,
and
we
are
we'd
like
to
thank
the
council
and
mayor
for
this
opportunity
to
be
here
and
we
are
very
grateful
to
provide
services
to
our
community
over
the
last
30
years.
Thank
you
all.
A
D
Whereas
May
is
National
Bike
month,
promoted
by
the
league
of
American,
bicyclists
and
celebrated
in
communities
across
the
country
and
whereas
National
Bike,
To
Work
Day
is
Friday.
May
19th
and
the
City
of
Oklahoma
City
Association
of
Central,
Oklahoma
governments,
ACOG
and
Downtown
OKC
partnership
are
hosting
free
bike,
rides
to
downtown
and
encouraging
all
residents
to
attend,
and
whereas
the
annual
bike
fest
event
held
on
May
7th
is
a
family-friendly.
D
Festival
designed
to
celebrate
the
benefits
of
bicycling
for
fun,
fitness
and
transportation,
and
whereas
the
City
of
Oklahoma,
City,
ACOG,
Downtown,
OKC
partnership,
Embark
local
bicycling
organizations
and
bicycle
shops
throughout
Oklahoma
City
are
promoting
greater
public
awareness
of
bicycle
operation
and
safety,
education
in
an
effort
to
reduce
collisions
injuries
and
fatalities,
and
whereas
the
bicycle
is
a
healthy,
convenient,
economical,
enjoyable
and
environmentally
friendly
form
of
transportation
and
Recreation.
And
whereas
creating
bicycle-friendly
communities
has
been
shown
to
improve
residents.
A
G
Max
Harris
I'm
with
the
planning
department
with
the
city
every
year
we
kind
of
Cobble
together
events
and
we
have
a
lot
of
help
from
partner
agencies,
coordinating
community
events
and
just
celebrating
National
Bike
month
here
in
Oklahoma,
City
I
have
a
few
people
here
who
represent
some
of
those
organizations
and
are
also
just
citizen,
Advocates
I,
think,
and
it
really
does
take
a
village
to
really
make
Oklahoma
City
more
bike
friendly
and
we're
starting
to
see
it
with
some
of
our
programs
like
maps
and
the
bond
and
stuff.
G
So
just
want
to
express
appreciation
for
that.
I
want
to
plug
a
bike
to
work
day,
which
is
May
19th
Friday
right
outside
in
Bicentennial
Park
from
7
45
to
9
00
a.m.
There
will
be
free
coffee,
courtesy
of
Downtown,
OKC
partnership
and
all
your
recycling
friends
will
be
there
so
come
and
hang
out
and
celebrate
with
us.
They
thanks
so
much.
D
Whereas
the
American
Jewish
Community
has
played
a
significant
role
in
the
creation,
growth,
Freedom,
prosperity
and
strength
of
the
United
States
of
America
and
whereas
the
enduring
values
of
the
Jewish
faith
were
vital.
Sources
of
inspiration
for
the
founding
of
the
United
States.
The
Civil
Rights
Movement
America's,
Global
Leadership
in
the
cause
of
Freedom,
our
nation's
commitment
to
social
justice
and
many
of
our
country's
other
most
Central
tenants.
And
whereas
Jewish
citizens
of
Oklahoma
City.
D
Having
first
settled
here
in
the
1880s,
have
played
a
vital
role
in
the
development
of
our
city
through
their
professional
and
philanthropic
contributions,
as
well
as
service
to
our
nation
through
the
armed
forces
and
whereas
the
state
of
Israel
has
long
been
a
vital
part
of
the
Jewish
experience
and
is
currently
celebrating
the
75th
anniversary
of
its
modern
founding
and
its
emergence
as
a
beacon
of
freedom
and
prosperity.
And
whereas
every
U.S
president,
since
1980,
has
recognized
the
contributions
of
the
American
Jewish
Community
to
the
history
and
culture
of
the
United
States.
D
A
Thank
you
well,
I
could
hardly
say
it
any
better
than
I
guess.
I
just
said
it,
but
but
really
we're
so
grateful
for
the
presence
of
the
Jewish
Community
here
in
Oklahoma
City.
We've
done
a
lot
of
great
Partnerships
through
the
years
and
members
of
the
Jewish
Community
contribute
to
the
city
and
so
many
important
ways
from
an
entrepreneurial
perspective.
From
a
philanthropic
perspective
from
a
cultural
perspective,
you
name
it
and
we're
just
so
grateful
to
have
the
opportunity
this
morning
to
recognize
some
of
that
and
welcome
you
to
City,
Hall
and
I.
H
Thank
you
thank
you
mayor
and
thank
you
city
council.
For
this.
We
have
a
few
of
our
board
members
here,
my
board,
president
Adam
Brooks,
Helen,
Opera,
Sarah,
honiger
and
immediate
past
president
Michael
kornblitt.
Thank
you
all
for
being
here
too
hear
this.
For
us
this
means
a
lot
to
us
and,
as
he
said,
it
is
a
big
step
in
fighting
anti-Semitism
and
it
means
a
lot
to
us
not
only
as
Jews
but
as
Jewish
Americans
and
Jewish
Okies.
So
thank
you
so
much.
A
Okay,
now
I
think
we
can
proceed
to
our
resolutions,
and
so
why
don't
we
bring
Jessica
teacher
of
the
month.
A
All
right,
well,
I,
have
had
the
Good
Fortune
to
to
work
with
Jessica
a
couple
times
in
the
last
several
weeks
at
the
commemoration
of
the
Oklahoma
City
bombing
and
then
also
the
Oklahoma
City
Memorial
Marathon,
which
you
you
actually
kicked
off.
The
Kids,
Marathon
and
I.
A
I
always
think
everybody
noted
your
repeated
use
of
the
phrase
tiny
humans
which
we,
which
we
I
like
and
obviously
we're
here
today,
to
talk
about
your
work
with
tiny
humans
and
so
having
said
that,
we'd
like
to
hear
a
little
bit
more
and
so
I
would
ask
the
clerk
to
read
this
resolution.
D
And
whereas
Jessica
recognizes
that
students
are
Unique
Individuals
with
varying
strengths
and
interests
through
career
research
projects.
She
nurtures
their
individuality,
allowing
students
to
explore
freely
and
present
their
work
with
a
method
that
suits
them
best
and
whereas
Jessica
takes
initiative
to
build
connections
between
students
and
the
community.
Through
participation
in
the
Oklahoma
City
Memorial
kids
run.
A
Thank
you
now
before
we
hear
a
few
words
from
Jessica.
This
is
a
resolution
which
means
everybody's
actually
going
to
vote
on
it.
So
you
know,
the
vote
in
a
legislative
body
is
all
about
the
timing.
I
feel
like
the
timing
is
right
for
this
before
you
speak,
let's
not
mess
it
up.
I
think
we
yeah
the
let's,
let's
see
if
we
can
get
a
motion
in
a
second
for
this.
A
A
All
right
passes
unanimously,
actually,
including
people
who
aren't
even
here.
So
that's
really
impressive,
yeah
councilman
Stone
should
not
be
you
recorded,
is
voting
but
I.
No
doubt
he
would
have
supported
it
all
right.
Well,
congratulations
thank
you
for
what
you
do
for
our
kids
and
we
would
love
to
hear
a
few
words
from
you.
Jessica.
J
I
have
the
pleasure
of
working
with
tiny
humans
every
single
day
and
I
know
that
we
say
that
their
pleasures
and
tears
at
the
same
time,
but
they're,
fantastic
people
and
education
fell
into
my
lap.
This
wasn't
the
route
I
chose.
It
honestly
chose
me:
I
love
the
kids,
I
love,
what
I
stand
for
what
okcps
stands
for
and
if
we
could
just
give
the
children
autonomy
and
a
little
bit
of
space.
These
kids
are
going
to
be
all
right,
they're
going
to
change
the
world,
you
just
have
to
believe
them.
A
For
Jessica,
thank
you
that's
yours.
Thank
you.
D
The
eroded
areas
placed
riprap
along
the
shoreline
covered
the
area
with
straw,
matting
and
topsoil
and
cleaned
the
work
zones
and
whereas
Eric
Lee's
commitment
to
safety
productivity
and
his
strong
work
ethic
enabled
him
to
complete
the
project
several
days
ahead
of
schedule.
And
whereas
this
Council
desires
to
recognize
Eric
Lee
for
his
dedication,
professionalism
and
commitment
to
the
residents
of
the
City
of
Oklahoma
City.
A
A
K
Thank
you
like
mayor
Holt,
said
I,
essentially
just
play
with
dirt
at
the
lake,
so
it's
a
pretty
good
it.
It's
easy
to
come
into
work
every
day
and
I
have
great
supervisors
who
have
taught
me
a
lot
and
I
have
a
have
a
good
group
of
guys
I
work
with,
so
they
help
me
out
a
lot
too.
So
this
is
not
really
for
me.
It's
kind
of
our
whole
department
we're
so
small
in
general.
This
will
kind
of
give
us
all
light.
So
thank
you
absolutely.
A
By
the
way
we
did
have
representation
this
morning
from
the
South
Oklahoma
City,
Kiwanis,
Club
I,
don't
know
if
they're
still
here
in
the
room,
but
they
left,
but
we
certainly
I
had
not
met
anyone
from
come
here
yet
previously
from
the
club.
So
it
was
great
to
have
them
and
we
thank
them
for
sponsoring
this
recognition
every
month.
That
concludes
our
presentations.
I
will
make
my
way
back
to
my
seat.
A
Okay,
we're
still
in
office
of
the
mayor.
Now
we
have
some
appointments.
We
have
appointments.
This
is
item
C
through
G.
We
have
appointments
to
downtown
design,
historic
preservation,
Game
and
Fish
Commission
Redevelopment,
Authority
and
traffic
and
Transportation
Commission.
We
could
take
those
appointments
with
one
motion.
A
A
Four
items
from
Council
we
have
item
a
this,
is
a
ordinance
to
be
introduced
and
adopted
with
an
emergency
amending
ordinance
number
26451
to
extend
the
1085-day
moratorium
to
a
1265-day
moratorium
regarding
our
revised
sign
code
and
I.
Think
councilman
stonecipher,
who
is
the
author,
is
probably
best
positioned
to
explain.
Councilman
yeah.
L
A
Passes
unanimously
and
with
the
required
seven
affirmative
votes.
Okay.
Finally,
on
items
from
Council,
we
have
4B.
This
is
a
resolution
approving
travel
expenses
for
Council,
Members,
Bradley,
Carter,
Matt,
Hinkle
and
Mark
stonecipher
to
attend
the
greater
Oklahoma
City
Chamber
2023
D.C
visit
June
21st
through
the
22nd,
and
we
could
take
a
motion
on
this.
M
N
N
I
think
these
times
are
really
challenging
to
be
political
leaders
and
elected
leaders
and
I
want
to
thank
you
for
your
courage
and
tenacity
and
making
sure
that
OKC
Oklahoma
City
is
an
amazing
City
for
its
current
residents
and
future
residents,
and
in
fact
you
know
it's.
A
city
I've
been
enamored
with
for
about
the
last
10
years.
I've
studied
it
I've
really
been
fascinated
by
the
work
that
you
all
have
led
and
candidly.
That's
why
I'm
here
today.
So
thank
you
for
that.
For
that
leadership.
N
I
want
to
just
report
a
little
bit.
As
you
know,
your
key
partners
of
our
organization
and
I've
spent
the
first
four
months
here
on
the
ground,
really
getting
to
know
our
team
getting
to
know
our
board
members,
our
members
of
the
chamber
as
well,
and
now
we're
starting
to
get
out
a
little
bit
more
and
and
meet
more
leaders
in
the
community
and
really
make
that
connection
and,
as
you
know,
as
you're
about
to
look
at
the
CVB
report
Etc
here.
N
One
of
the
interesting
things
about
our
organization
is
the
depth
and
breadth
and
the
scope
of
our
our
organization.
So
from
the
economic
development
piece
from
the
visitor
development
piece
of
the
work
and
the
Chamber
work
all
being
meshed
into
one
really
enables
us
to
maximize
on
our
opportunities
and
address
challenges
at
the
same
time.
So
it's
a
unique
structure
that
I'm
really
enjoying
being
a
part
of
you
know.
N
As
you
know,
we
Advocate
very
strongly
at
the
State
House
for
tourism
support
for
economic
development
support
so
that
we
can
continue
to
grow
our
economy
here
and,
in
fact,
we're.
We
were
one
of
the
14
fastest
growing
large
cities
here
over
the
last
decade
and
it's
really
exciting
to
see
what
continues
to
happen
here.
N
One
of
the
things
that's
become
really
clear,
though,
is
is
how
might
we
continue
to
harness
some
of
our
positive
clusters
here
in
the
community
right?
So
you
think
about
bioscience
and
I
know.
You
all
are
very
familiar
with
our
work
in
this
space
and
our
partnership
there,
but
the
bioscience
cluster.
How
can
we
continue
to
think
innovatively
think
creatively
about?
How
might
we
bring
more
resources
here
to
our
community,
as
a
lot
of
reshoring
is
now
happening
in
that
space
in
the
post-covet
era?
N
So
that's
something
that
we
and
team
work
with
your
team
very
regularly
on
I
think
also.
An
exciting
opportunity
is
in
the
Aerospace
and
defense
sector
right
I've
spent
time
with
FAA
leadership
and
Tinker
leadership
here
recently,
and
we
just
need
to
continue
to
look
at
what
their
needs
are,
what
our
opportunities
are
and
how
we
can
really
laser
in
and
help
them
continue
to
grow,
Thrive
and
prosper
here
and
that's
an
exciting
area
for
us
and
I.
N
Think
one
recent
indication
is
the
Pratt
Whitney
205,
50
million
capital
investment
announcement
right
that
our
our
teams
work
collaboratively
on
and
again
none
of
this
work
happens
without
y'all
and
it's
just
integral
in
terms
of
how
we
partnered
together.
I
also
want
to
thank
you
for
your
support
of
the
film
industry.
Right
we've
gone
ahead
and
we've
hired
Jill
Simpson
she's
been
off
and
running
really
vigorously
trying
to
pull
together
the
film
ecosystem,
and
you
need
to
look
no
farther
than
Park
Avenue
today
right
and
what's
happening
there.
N
In
addition,
those
same
companies
announced
more
than
262
million
in
payroll
and
843
million
in
capital.
Investment
and
I
have
to
tell
you
you
know
when
you're
in
the
economic
development
space,
you
always
love
those
outside
announcements.
But
to
me
the
real
heart
of
economic
development
is
when
your
existing
companies
expand.
They
they
decide
to
reinvest
in
you
and
that's
to
me
the
best
kind
of
referral,
and
so
we're
excited
that
a
number
of
those
projects
have
been
just
that
and
our
Pipeline
and
projects
continue
to
grow.
N
And
it's
interesting
to
look
at
the
diversification
of
those
projects
and
I
have
to
tell
you
right
now
our
deal
flow
for
the
region
in
terms
of
prospects.
We
have
88
prospects,
looking
at
30
just
over
39
million
dollars
in
capital
investment
in
the
region,
just
under
48
000
jobs
and
985
million
dollars
in
payroll.
So
again
you
know
the
deal
flow
continues
to
be
strong
for
the
OKC
Market,
you
think
about
the
I-305
corridor
and
what
a
strong
Corridor
we're
a
part
of
right.
N
N
Several
of
you
have
been
on
our
inner
city
leadership
visits
in
the
past.
It's
a
great
way
to
enhance
the
relationship
within
our
existing
leadership
structure,
but
also
to
go
out
and
to
learn
really
firsthand
what
some
other
communities
are
facing
as
well.
Tampa
happens
to
be
a
city,
that's
actually
growing
faster
than
we
are
there.
N
Aren't
that
many
of
them
out
there,
but
they
are
one
and
so
we're
looking
forward
to
learning
a
few
key
things
there,
and
if
any
of
you
are
familiar
with
that
market,
you
want
to
make
sure
we
add
something
to
that
trip.
Please
do
let
us
know,
and
then
I'd
like
to
mention
too.
There
was
some
discussion
earlier
today
about
retail
development,
Right,
restaurant
retail
and
you
think
about
how
that
sector
of
our
economy
has
really
grown,
and
it
plays
into
obviously
our
visitor
experience
and
our
ability
to
recruit
and
retain
Talent.
N
L
You
know
now
that
we're
post
pandemic
we're
all
getting
back
out
to
homeowners
association
meetings
and
one
of
the
things
I
hand
out
at
the
homeowners
association
is
some
information
about.
You
know.
What's
going
on
in
the
ward
new
restaurants,
new
businesses
streets,
the
number
one
topic:
how
are
we
doing
with
our
streets?
L
But
the
third
thing
in
the
chamber
and
I
want
to
thank
you,
for
this
really
helps
me
out
by
showing
people
who
are
employing
and
looking
for
people
to
hire
and
when
you
look
at
Pratt
Whitney
and
you
look
at
the
B1
bomber
expansion
and
you
look
at
what
canoes
proposing
it
gets
a
buzz
at
those
HOA
meetings
and
it's
information
for
themselves.
It's
for
their
kids,
it's
for
their
grandkids
and
so
I.
Just
think
I
want
to
say
thank
you
for
providing
us
that
information.
Oh.
N
That's
great
to
hear
thank
you
yes,
Eric
long
and
team.
You
know
can
always
provide
you
any
kind
of
data
research
you
might
want.
Thank
you
councilman
stonecipher.
Yes,
we
all
ultimately
want
our
kids
and
grandkids
to
want
to
stay
here,
and
you
know
those
those
abundant
job
opportunities
are
critical
to
that.
So
thank
you
for
that.
M
Two
other
reports
that
we
have
on
that
we
have
in
information
on
one
is
on
the
interim
financial
report
and
that
just
looks
at
the
focuses
on
the
general
fund.
You
know
our
primary
operating
fund.
It
provides
information
regarding
our
revenues
and
expenditures.
M
Revenues
are
exceeding
expenditures
by
about
42
million
dollars
right
now,
so
in
really
good
position,
some
of
that's
being
addressed
with
the
budget
amendment
that's
on
for
today,
and
so
we'll
we'll
address
that
later
on,
but
still
overall,
the
finances
are
looking
good
hotel
tax
report,
nine
and
a
half
percent
growth
in
hotel
tax
through
this
point
in
the
year,
so
really
good
again
with
hotel
tax,
so
really
pleased
with
that,
and
then
we
just
have
claims
in
payroll
that
you
can
see
on
okc.gov
and
that's
all
that
I
have.
A
A
M
Item
11g:
this
is
Spud
1507.
The
request
is
to
defer
this
to
the
23rd
of
May
in
item
11j
ce1074
request
to
defer
this
to
the
23rd
of
may.
Also,
on
page
15
item
11k.
This
is
CE
108.9.
The
request
by
the
applicant
is
to
defer
this
indefinitely
on
page
17
item
11
T1.
All
of
these
items
will
be
stricken
from
the
agenda
starting
with
item
C
1225
North,
Rockwell
Avenue,
the
owner
is
secured
item
I
2927,
Northwest,
21st
Street.
The
owner
is
secured
item,
J
918,
Northwest,
23rd
Street
to
re-notify
for
additional
structures.
M
Item
M,
2900,
Northwest,
48th
Street,
the
owner
is
secured
item
n721,
Southwest,
49th
Street.
The
owner
has
secured
on
item
on
page
17,
also
item
11,
U1
abandoned
buildings.
All
of
these
items
items
will
be
stricken
from
the
agenda
item
age,
2927,
Northwest,
21st,
Street.
The
owner
is
secured
item,
I
918,
Northwest,
23rd,
Street
to
re-notify
for
additional
structures.
Item
L,
2900,
Southwest,
48th
Street,
the
owner
is
secured
in
item
m721
Southwest
49th
Street,
the
owner
is
secure.
That's
all
the
items
that
I
have.
A
O
Excited
to
bring
back
our
annual
downtown
Employee
Appreciation
event,
it
will
take
place
in
Kerr
Park
on
Wednesday
May
24th
from
11
A.M
to
2PM.
It
is
a
come
and
go
lunchtime,
event
that
features
food
trucks,
lawn
Games,
music,
free
treats
and
giveaways
and
pop-up
booths
by
various
downtown
services
and
organization.
O
These
include
organizations
like
Embark,
the
downtown
library
and
YMCA
and
other
services
that
employees
can
take
advantage
of
during
their
work
day.
We
expect
to
have
just
under
a
thousand
people
coming
through
the
park
and
will
provide
extra
seating
and
shade,
and
our
green
team
will
be
on
site
for
trash
and
Hospitality
services.
This
event
is
free
and
open
to
everyone,
and
it's
downtown
OKC's
way
of
saying
thank
you
for
being
a
part
of
our
downtown
community.
P
P
Back
always
always
fun
to
go
play
with
puppies
in
the
middle
of
the
day,
but
I
will
move
for
approval.
A
Passes
unanimously
all
right.
Thank
you.
Now
we
have
item
8B,
revocable
right-of-way
use
permit
with
the
Paseo
artists
Association
Inc
to
hold
the
Paseo
arts
Festival
May
27th
through
the
29th
Amanda
did
not
sign
up
to
speak
because
I
know
that
she
wants
to
speak
about
this.
So
we
visited
already
in
my
office
this
morning
and
Amanda
Blakely
here
to
speak
for.
S
R
As
a
reminder,
this
is
a
fundraiser
for
the
Paseo
Arts
Association,
it's
the
largest
fundraiser
that
we
have
for
the
year.
It's
a
three-day
Art
Festival,
where
we
not
only
have
artists
from
all
over
the
country,
but
we
also
have
a
53
music
and
entertainment
acts
on
two
stages
over
three
days.
So
I
hope
you
all
can
come
it's
it's
a
really
fun
annual
event
that
the
community
looks
forward
to
every
year.
U
V
V
Our
association
with
that
property
goes
back
to
around
2000
when
Michelle's
father
acquired
the
property,
and
we
have
been
working
the
festival
since
2017
with
him
and
then
when
he
passed,
we
began
running
it
ourselves
from
2018
forward.
So
today
we're
asking
you
to
approve
our
request
for
a
revocable
permit
to
close
28th
Street.
Why?
Well
we
plan
to
have
some
food
vendors
out
there
in
addition
to
our
80
plus
vendors
in
our
parking
lot
three-day
event
this
Memorial
Day,
and
we
expect
to
have
tens
of
thousands
of
Festival
goers.
V
So
we
have
a
site
plan
to
ensure
the
safety
of
Festival,
attendees
and
traffic
control
and
we're
so
thankful
for
the
assistance
we
get
from
Drew
Watson
with
the
special
events
group
here
at
the
city.
Drew
and
Barbara
make
it
really
enjoyable
for
us
to
do
this,
and
it
provides
an
opportunity
for
many
artists
and
and
Craftsmen
and
and
retailers
to
have
a
festival
to
to
sell
their
products.
So
we're
asking
you
for
your
consent
to
approve
our
permit.
T
Yes,
the
Sayer
rules
and
all
move
for
approval.
A
A
Passes
unanimously
now
we'll
adjourn
ocmfa
and
convenience,
the
Oklahoma
City
public
property
Authority.
We
have
item
a
claims
and
payroll
we'll
go
ahead
and
take
a
motion
on
that
just
to
be
safe.
A
A
A
Okay,
thank
you,
okay!
Well,
why
don't?
We
start
with
a
separate
vote
and
so
councilman
Hinkle
feel
free
to
step
out
for
a
moment.
A
X
X
One
I
wanted
to
bring
this
to
council's
attention,
because
this
is
something
I'm
very
excited
about,
and
this
has
been
some
time
in
the
works
and
the
the
late
Miss
Robbie
helped
me
to
start
and
spur
this
project
and
help
get
some
funding
for
it.
So
I'm
very
grateful
Beyond
grateful
for
her
work
that
she
did
until
she
couldn't
do
any
more,
but
so
grateful
that
we
still
have
Mr,
Randy
and
LeAndre
to
help
us
continue
and
carry
this
this
project.
Y
So
Captain
Pitts
will
be
further
honored
with
the
mural
that
will
be
installed
on
the
west
wall
of
the
recreation
center.
The
work
will
be
created
under
the
direction
of
the
Oklahoma
mural
Syndicate
and
with
love
with
love,
is
a
neural
organization
led
by
J.B
Williams
that
does
mural
projects
primarily
on
the
on
the
east
side,
and
we
have
a
presentation
here.
If
you
advance
on
to
the
second
one
there
mark.
Y
The
Oklahoma
mural
Syndicate
team,
along
with
with
with
love,
is
extremely
talented,
nationally
recognized
team,
the
members,
the
leadership
team
or
JB
Williams,
Jesse
Warren,
Dylan,
Bradway
and
Chris
corneli,
and
we
expect
that
the
mural
is
going
to
be
completed
in
mid-august
of
this
year
and
I'll
be
happy
to
answer
any
questions.
X
Wonderful
very
excited
again
about
this
project
and
and
I
will
say
this
idea
was
birthed
out
of
really,
quite
frankly,
the
George
Floyd
2020.
X
The
parks
director
at
the
time
asked
me
he
said
Nikki.
Do
you
want
to
put
a
black
lives
matter?
Mural
in
Northeast,
Oklahoma,
City
and
I
said
no,
but
what
I
would
like
to
do
is
honor
some
of
the
people
that
are
that
have
names
that
we
should
recognize
further
and
and
Captain.
Riley
Pitts
was
one
of
those
because,
as
you
heard
his
story,
he
went
to
Douglas
High
School.
X
He
went
to
Wichita
State
University
before
he
enlisted
in
the
military
as
a
commissioned
officer
and
for
him
to
lay
down
his
life
for
his
fellow
comrades
and
then
for
his
wife
to
go
to
the
to
to
Washington
DC
to
receive
his
his
award
by
President,
Lyndon,
B
Johnson,
and
also
for
his
picture
to
be
placed
at
the
Smithsonian
African-American
history
museum
in
Washington
D.C.
We
should
have
more
recognition
in
Oklahoma,
City
and
also
again.
X
One
thing
I
found
out
from
his
daughter
who
just
moved
here
most
recently,
is
that
there
is
a
room.
The
media
room
at
the
Pentagon
is
named
in
his
honor.
So
these
are
things
that
again
bring
all
of
this,
to
focus
and
for
us
to
now
be
able
to
not
only
honor
Captain
Pitts,
but
all
of
those
who
have
served
in
the
service
that
represent
parts
of
Northeast,
Oklahoma,
City
and
Oklahoma
City
as
a
whole.
Very
excited
about
this
project
and
it'll,
be
just
in
time
almost
close
for
us
to
honor
veterans
day.
X
T
Yes,
just
an
update
on
where
we
are
with
this
particular
streetscape
project
that
councilwoman,
nice
and
I
share.
Z
Thank
you,
councilman
cooker,
Eric,
Winger,
Public
Works,
director
on
the
item
before
he
is
actually
an
amendment
to
the
engineering
contract
to
add
a
traffic
analysis
to
the
Britain
Street
enhancement
project.
This
is
Britain
from
Western
to
chartel.
It's
part
of
a
better
Street
saver
City
sales
tax.
It's
also
a
2017
Bond
project
where
we're
going
to
be
going
in
and
resurfacing
the
streets
remaking
the
street
District
through
old
Britain,
and
it
will
include
on
street
parking
and
some
other
land
reconfigurations.
The
plans
are
still
underway.
Z
T
I
just
want
to
say
congrats
on
your
work
and
thank
you
for
your
work
and
for
word
two.
It
really
means
a
lot.
You
know,
because
in
the
paper
right
now
on,
the
Oklahoman
was
the
story.
How
Paseo
and
OKC
is
getting
updates,
while
preserving
its
Heritage,
so
our
southern
boundary
right-
and
you
already
heard
the
festival
but
our
Southern
boundaries
getting
a
streetscape,
as
you
very
well
know,
and
it's
really
nice
to
know
on
our
northern
border,
we're
going
to
have
this
streetscape
as
well.
M
Aubrey
McDermott
assistant
city
manager
is
going
to
give
us
an
update.
This
is
the
last
allocation.
I
say
it's
the
last.
There
may
be
other
projects,
this
last
allocation
that
we
have
on
arpa
funds,
but
the
potential
is
there
that
if
some
projects
come
in
under
budget
that
we
might
have
other
funds,
we
can
come
back
and
reallocate
at
a
later
date.
But
for
this
point
it
would
fully
allocate
the
funds
that
we
have
available
in
the
city's
allocation
of
our
funding.
AA
So
you've
seen
this
slide
before
this
is
the
the
three
buckets
that
city
council
approved
in
our
arpa
plan,
and
so
what
we're
talking
about
today
is
that
category
number
one,
which
is
our
Revenue
replacement
bucket
of
funds,
which
totals
78
million,
and
most
of
you
know,
but
maybe
some
don't
know
that
when
we
first
put
this
project
together,
we
had
to
have
a
way
to
prioritize
all
of
the
different
needs
across
the
city
and
these
different
types
of
Revenue
replacement
eligible
projects.
AA
So
we
had
a
list
of
77
projects
totaling
over
170
million
dollars
that
we
had
to
prioritize
based
on
a
list
of
multiple
criteria.
That
is
the
list
that
we
have
used
to
take
to
Council
in
batches.
So
far,
what
we
have
approved
is
this
list
of
projects
totaling
74
million,
and
what
that
leaves
us
with
is
about
4.2
million
dollars
remaining
in
that
in
that
budget.
AA
So
we've
gone
down
the
list
and
we've
identified
four
priority
projects
for
the
revenue,
replacement,
funding
and
I'll
go
through
each
of
these
really
quickly
and
give
you
an
overview.
So
the
first
one
is
Transit
facility
improvements.
This
is
primarily
for
the
South
May
Avenue
facility,
and
this
is
because
we
have
staff-
that's
relocating
to
this
facility,
so
renovations
to
that
existing
building
are
needed.
It's
about
a
three
million
dollar
funding
Gap
and
the
other
potential
source
of
funding
is
federal
grants
to
leverage
for
this.
AA
So
through
arpa
funds,
we
can
scale
that
allocation
and
appropriate
some
funds
to
help
move
that
project
forward.
So
the
scaled
allocation
we're
proposing
is
a
million
dollars.
The
next
category
is
traffic
signal
needs.
So
traffic
commission
has
approved
several
new
traffic
signals
across
the
city
and
normally
those
signals
are
funded
with
the
Geo
Bond.
AA
So,
as
you
know,
we're
kind
of
nearing
the
end
of
this
Geo
bond
issue
and
we
would
be
waiting
for
the
next
geobond
to
be
approved,
but
these
arpa
City
restoration
funds
can
be
leveraged
so
that
we
can
install
certain
new
signals
that
are
in
high
priority
areas
much
faster
than
waiting
for
the
next
Geo
Bond.
So
the
allocation
here
is
a
little
over
a
million
dollars
that
could
go
towards
installing
those
a
few
signals
in
the
high
priority
areas.
AA
Oops
I
meant
to
go.
Let
me
go
back
one
and
then
the
next
project
is
funding.
That's
needed
to
extend
a
water
line
from
Lake
Hefner
to
provide
non-potable
water
for
irrigation
of
the
Cameron
Park
facility,
the
soccer
facility,
and
what
this
investment
does
is
it
reduces
the
need
to
irrigate
the
entire
facility
with
treated
water
and,
of
course,
that
would
be
a
benefit
to
the
city.
Untreated
water
is
significantly
less
expensive
and
it's
better
for
the
grass.
AA
The
next
project
is
Bricktown
lighting,
staffs
identified
the
need
to
install
Better
lighting
along
the
canal.
This
would
be
primarily
in
the
southern
part
of
the
Bricktown
Canal
there's
about
1.4
million
dollars
of
lighting.
That's
been
identified,
that's
needed
there,
so
the
allocation
here
would
put
half
a
million
dollars
of
arpa
funding
and
it
can
be
paired
with
other
sources
of
funds
so
that
we
can
get.
We
can
phase
the
improvements
along
the
Bricktown
canal
and
improve
safety
in
the
corridor.
AA
T
I,
don't
have
questions,
but
just
some
Kudos
and
mayor
Holt
I
just
want
to
say
thank
you
for
your
Nationwide
advocacy
for
specifically
arpa
and
the
revenue
replacement.
I
I
really
mean
that
Aubry.
Thank
you
for
the
work
you're
doing
stewarding
this
and
all
the
staff
related
to
it,
and
so
it
just
kind
of
took
me
back
to
May
of
20
just
before
George
Floyd's
murder
and
we
were
so
focused
on
the
pandemic
and
I
just
want
to
thank
any
council
member
who
supported
my
resolution.
T
This
was
before
the
next
Administration
came
into
office
and
created
arpa
and
passed
it
with
the
the
Congress.
But
we
created
a
resolution
at
the
council
level
that
I
wrote
with
Municipal
council
at
the
time
requesting
Revenue
replacement
and
I
just
want
to
say
that
to
council
right
now,
I
know
sometimes
when
some
of
us,
as
members
of
council,
proposed
something
that
seemed
so
far
out
in
the
future.
It
might
seem
like
wow.
What
is
that?
T
What
is
this
Rebel
relevancy
to
something
going
on
right
now,
and
there
were
council
members
who
voted
against
it
that
day
they
said.
No,
that
Congress
knew
better.
T
Our
needs
and
I
made
a
strong
argument
and
Council
went
along
with
it
and
we
approved
it
saying
that
no
at
the
local
level,
we
best
understand
our
needs
and
it's
what
I
meant
like
we
understood
what
these
needs
were
that
we
needed
to
address
so
I
just
want
to
take
us
back
to
that
past
moment
and
say
thanks
to
everyone
who
supported
that
and
thanks
to
staff
for
stewarding
these
funds.
P
Sort
of
this
is
what
we
sort
of
project
some
of
those
would
cost
and
we're
going
to
do
that
later.
Yeah.
AA
The
traffic
commission
has
a
I
think,
a
pretty
significant
list
of
those
and
so
I
think
the
public
works
department
is
working
on
prioritizing
those
signals
based
on
safety
needs,
and
there
are
a
couple
of
that
had
kind
of
risen
to
the
top
of
the
list.
So
I
know
generally
I
can
let
you
know
what
those
are,
but
I
would
say
that,
subject
to
Public
Works
evaluation
and
looking
at
the
prioritization
of
it.
So
if
you
wouldn't
mind
I'd
like
to
get
you
that
information.
M
L
Okay,
I
guess
the
question
question
I
have
it's
my
understanding
we
have
about
15
in
in
Waiting
status,
some
dating
back
to
2017
or
2018.,
and
so
I'm
hopeful.
When
we
have
our
budget
discussions.
This
is
something
we
can
can
work
on,
contemplate,
think
about
and
maybe
come
up
with
the
solution
to
get
some
more
approved.
M
We're
also
setting
aside
some
additional
funding
for
the
budget
amendment
to
be
able
to
do
some
additional
projects,
there's
one
actually
that
goes
back
to
2015.
That
was
on
the
list.
When
we
did
the
last
bond
issue,
we
took
as
many
as
we
could
and
there
was
one
that
what
wasn't
funded
then,
and
so
we're
trying
to
evaluate
all
of
those
issues
and
there's
another
one.
I
know
that's
come
up
recently.
T
Thank
you
and
then
I'll
just
stay
on
that
note.
I'm
glad
you
all
paused
on
this,
because
my
traffic
commissioner
has
reached
out
expressing
concern
about
this
backlog
of
projects.
They've
approved
that
lack
that
funding,
so
I
would
not
just
put
that
on
our
radar
for
the
budget,
I'm
glad
to
hear
that,
but
our
next
Bond
I.
M
Know
we
have
a
lot
of
bond
needs
absolutely,
but
that's
the
first
thing
we
do
when
we're
looking
at
traffic
projects
as
we
go
to
look
at
those
that
have
been
approved.
You
know
on
bonds,
when
we're
planning
for
the
bonds,
we'll
look
at
those
that
have
been
approved
by
traffic
commission
and
prioritizing
those
first.
Thank
you.
The.
M
And
I
think
we
need
to
work
through
like
how
we
how
we
prioritize
those
you
know
how
we
identify
and
have
some
standard
that
we're
working
for
from
staff.
That's
really
what
we
want
to
do
with
that
budget.
Amendment
is
set
aside,
a
fund
that
deals
with
those
emergencies
as
they
arise
when
we
have
critical
issues
that
are
there,
and
so
that's
something
we're
definitely
looking
at
I.
AB
This
is
a
1.5
million
dollar
allocation
for
improvements
to
an
affordable
housing
project.
Mostly,
the
funds
will
mostly
be
used
for
some
much
needed
infrastructure
improvements
in
the
area.
One
Nuance
about
the
1.5
million
a
portion
of
that
about
250
000
is
a
pre-construction
loan
that
would
be
refunded
back
to
the
Tiff
fund
once
they
get
their
final
funding
in
place
and
I'll
have
Cassie
Malone
with
the
Oklahoma
City
Housing
Authority
come
up
and
give
you
the
details
about
the
project.
AC
Okay,
so
this
morning
I
have
Oak
Grove,
Redevelopment
and
the
Tiff
infrastructure
ask
so
Oak
Grove
was
built
in
1968,
it's
approximately
42
Acres.
It
has
288
units
and
it's
located
on
Southwest
15th,
Street
and
Grand
Boulevard
directly
across
from
delt
the
Dell
campus.
It
is
one
of
the
largest
affordable
family
communities
in
the
city.
It
serves
over
a
thousand
residents,
a
majority
of
those
being
children
under
the
age
of
18.
AC
AC
So
a
majority
of
the
units
consist
of
the
two-story
town
home
styles
on
the
top
picture
and
the
remaining
are
those
single
story:
duplexes
and
single-family
homes.
The
units
consist
of
one
bedroom
all
the
way
up
to
five
bedroom,
so
Oak
Grove
has
not
had
a
substantial
renovation
since
it
was
constructed
over
52
years
ago.
So
our
plan
is
utilizing
tax
credits
and
other
gap
funding.
We
plan
to
substantially
renovate
the
property.
It
will
not
only
upgrade
upgrade
the
units,
but
it
also
include
other
necessary
infrastructure
improvements.
AC
The
renovations
will
be
phased.
It
should
be
one
in
two
phases.
The
first
phase
will
be
the
main
piece
of
the
property,
the
288
units.
The
second
phase
will
be
to
the
South,
which
leads
us
to
our
temp.
Our
Tiff
infrastructure
ask
it
consists
of
four
main
projects:
the
first
being
a
Road
Extension
off
of
Southwest
15th
Street,
which
will
connect
directly
into
the
renovated
office
and
Community
Center.
Our
goal
is
to
connect
directly
in
with
the
existing
entrance
for
the
Dell
campus.
AC
The
second
is
the
storm
water,
Channel
improvements
and
the
center
of
the
property
outlined
in
blue
third
being
landscaping
and
beautification
along
Southwest,
15th,
Street
and
Southwest
7th
sorry
read
the
wrong
line
and
the
fourth
being
a
transfer
Frontage
along
the
Southwest
15th
Street
to
allow
for
the
creation
of
a
commercial
pad
along
the
northeast
portion
of
the
property
next.
AC
AC
We
would
sell
the
land
highlighted
in
red
with
three
structures
on
it:
a
totaling
18
units
and
in
return
the
proceeds
from
the
cell.
We
would
use
them
to
construct
new
units
on
the
south
west
portion
of
our
property.
AC
So
when
we
were
approached
by
On
Cue
for
the
potential
of
selling
our
property
and
transferring
the
land,
we
worked
with
them,
and
here
are
a
few
items
that
we
were,
that
we
were
able
to
add
to
that
agreement.
So
we
will
ensure
walkability
between
the
commercial
site
and
the
neighborhood
pedestrian
friendly
access
and
hope
to
deter
cars
from
driving
directly
through
the
neighborhood
in
an
effort
to
get
to
the
new
service
station
they'll,
install
bike,
racks
and
other
pedestrian
friendly
amenities,
they'll
host
a
job
fair
for
residents
at
Oak
Grove.
AC
Next,
the
storm
water
channel
is
improvements.
This
area
specifically,
is
known
to
be
quite
problematic
during
severe
weather
and
large
rain.
So
this
would
allow
for
us
to
improve
this
for
both
safety
and
also
to
improve
it
for
the
property
owners
to
the
South.
So
hopefully
the
water
is
able
to
easier
to
flow
easier
into
the
river
next.
This
is
the
new
Street
Extension.
This
essentially
will
create
a
brand
new
entrance
to
the
neighborhood.
AC
So,
as
you
can
see
there,
we
have
our
planned
preliminary
Renovations
for
our
community
center,
our
maintenance
office,
our
management
office
and
the
Head
Start
daycare
facility.
So
this
this
this
will
add
sidewalks
and
other
pedestrian
friendly
amenities
to
directly
tie
into
the
neighborhood
and
also
connect
to
the
existing
Trail.
AC
AC
So
the
entire
project
will
be
approximately
66
million
dollars.
We
are
requesting
1.5
million
in
Tiff
funding,
the
1.5
million
will
be
up
front
will
be
used
as
a
pre-development
loan,
with
the
approximately
250
being
repaid
upon
completion
of
construction
financing,
and
we
anticipate
the
infrastructure
improvements
to
cost
about
1.3
million
dollars.
AC
This
is
just
an
overview
of
the
entire
project,
both
phases
and
the
to
go
over
the
timing
and
scope
we
hope
to
within
one
year
of
the
app
of
this
submit
an
application
for
the
litec
funding
and
close
on
financing
due
to
the
size
of
the
project.
It
will
be
done
in
two
phases.
The
first
phase
will
take
approximately
24
months.
Our
goal
is
to
start
the
second
phase,
as
we
are
working
on
the
first
phase.
AC
In
the
second
phase,
you'll
see
about
50
units
of
public
housing,
what
we
call
scattered
sites,
those
are
single
family
homes,
so
we
will
convert
those
to
those
project-based
vouchers
and
then
they
will
be.
The
property
management
will
function
to
manage
all
208
288
units
plus
those
50
units
in
the
tan
color.
You
have
the
new
construction.
So
that's
where
those
new
18
units
will
go.
In
addition,
there'll
be
an
additional
about
that's
kind
of
funny.
AC
T
AD
T
Don't
know
how
I
feel
I'm
I
think
the
unit
renovation
work
sounds
promising.
I
I
want
to
be
careful
with
my
words
here.
T
I
always
find
it
baffling
when
I
see
online
news
of
like
an
I'm
gonna
hurt
some
feelings
I'm.
So
sorry,
when
I
see
news
online
about
like
a
new
On
Cue
is
coming
or
a
new
any
big
gas
station,
I
just
always
find
baffling
because
I
don't
know
that
just
doesn't
strike
me
as
the
sort
of
developments
we
should
be
continuing.
T
T
Just
worry
I
like
the
idea
of
a
commercial
pad
here,
A
whole
lot
and
I'm
I'm
appreciative
of
the
negotiating
work
that
you're
doing
in
terms
of
the
Fresh
Foods
and
these
sorts
of
things,
but
I
just
for
me,
I
I
man,
I,
don't
know
how
much
community
building
a
gas
station
really
promotes,
and
My
worry
is
that
no
matter
what
we
do
in
terms
of
beautification,
along
Southwest,
15th
Street,
ultimately,
and
for
those
of
you
who
are
struggling
right
now
to
follow
me
I
understand:
that's
fine!
T
It's
the
reason
that
struggle
is
happening
is
because,
for
the
last
70
years,
this
country
has
just
like
gas
station
gas
station
gas
station
and
it
went
away
from
the
old,
mom
and
pop
main
streets
that
my
parents
and
grandparents
grew
up
in
Texarkana
and
in
Idabel.
What
Paseo
is
what
Capital
Hill
is.
What
Stockyards
is
what
Britain
district
is?
T
That's
my
vision.
That's
my
love!
That's
what
I
love
I
love!
It
I
literally
wake
up
in
the
morning.
Thinking
about
that
work
and
I
I
think
I'm
not
kidding.
That
is
my
passion
that
in
teaching
and
I,
just
I'd
like
to
see,
do
have
they
even
submitted
designs,
because
my
worry
is
when
we
front
along
South
this
out.
Excuse
me
when
we
front
along
South,
East,
15th
Street
sea
of
filling
pumps,
who's
going
to
want
to
walk
alongside
that
ask
yourselves,
would
that
does
that
make
you
feel
good
walking
alongside
Filling
Station
pumps?
T
Does
it
put
you
in
a
good
mood?
Does
it
make
you
go
I
want
to
go
on
a
walk
and
get
a
breath
of
fresh
air.
Like
that's
I'm
good.
Some
of
you
come
along
for
the
ride
on
that
so
I
just
do
we
have
we
had
to
I'm.
This
is
not
about
you.
This
is
true,
you're
doing
good
work.
I'm
just
saying.
Do
we
have
an
opportunity
to
think
design
here
so
that
this
isn't?
AC
So
it's
going
through
zoning
right
now,
so
that's
when
you
you
do
have
the
ability
for
input
on
the
design
of
it
are
I
will
say
that
oncue
has
been
a
very
good
partner
in
this
they've,
been
very
receptive
to
all
of
the
requests
that
we
have
made.
AC
So
we
are
hopeful
that,
with
that
we
can,
we
can
get
back
to
what
you're
talking
about
of
integrating
them
into
the
community.
So
it's
not
just
pumps
they're
able
to
interact
with
our
community
center
they're
able
to
host
job
fairs,
have
potentially
Learning
Centers
there.
So
that's
our
goal.
T
Is
there
I
mean
I
understand
that
this
is
going
to
planning
I
just
feel
like,
since
this
is
coming
to
council
for
funding?
We
should
have
a
say
in
the
the
the
makeup
of
this
like
what
our
needs
are
and
what
our
needs
are
in.
My
estimate
here
is:
this:
is
I,
don't
want
us,
you
know
I'm
41..
When
was
this
68?
This
was
built
in
68..
So
if
I'm
lucky
I
got
another
40
50
years,
which
is
about
how
long
it's
been
since
this
has
been
renovated.
T
I
want
people
coming
after
I'm
dead
and
gone
looking
at
this
site
and
going
man.
They
really
missed
an
opportunity
to
build
public
housing
that
builds
Community
rather
than
makes
people
feel
detached
from
the
surrounding
neighborhoods
from
the
river.
That's
just
right
up
the
road
like
the
people
who
live
here
should
have
good
access
to
Fresh,
Air,
River
Trails,
all
of
that
sort
of
stuff
and
and
a
big
giant
gas
station
development
becomes
a
barrier
it
just
does,
and
that's
no
shade
on
oncue
and
and
I
so
I
guess.
T
W
Here,
councilman
Cooper
is
a
former
planning.
Commissioner
I
can
guarantee
you
that
the
mitigation
measures
the
Planning
Commission
will
take
between
that
on
cue,
which,
if
it
can't
go
at
a
corner
of
a
highway
and
a
major
street
across
from
a
huge,
an
economic
driver
in
our
neighborhood
with
Dell,
and
where
else
is
it
going
to
go
there
isn't
another
convenience
store
or
gas
station
for
these
people
to
come,
get
a
soda.
A
pop
hangout
sit
under
a
shade
tree.
W
I,
remember
going
to
7-Eleven
with
all
my
friends
and
getting
Icees
every
day
during
the
summer.
The
closest
gas
station
is
that
Portland
in
the
15th,
which
is
a
walk
through
a
highly
industrial
core
with
no
sidewalk,
so
not
arguing
with
you,
but
On.
Cue
is
a
great
corporate
partner
in
Oklahoma,
City
and
I
can
tell
you
that
the
measures
we
went
through
at
13th
and
Classen
for
the
one
that's
going
to
get
built.
There
eventually
were
two
meetings
worth
of
tree
planting
and
retaining
walls
and
oncue
is
very
receptive
to
all
that.
AE
Couple
additional
comments
so
I'm
familiar
with
this
development
to
begin
with,
and
one
of
the
things
I'm
really
excited
about,
and
what
they're
showing
today
is
the
additional
access.
So
you
will
we,
you
will
change
how
the
residents
use
the
access
getting
in
and
out
of
out
of
the
community,
which
is
going
to
increase
safety
for
the
walkability
of
the
community.
So
I'm
excited
about
that,
whereas
today
you've
got
some
folks
again
and
they'll
come
in
and
they'll
drive
all
the
way
back
through
here.
Sometimes
it
not.
AE
That's
being
added,
I
have
long
been
critical
of
Osha
and
the
projects
that
they're
doing,
but
after
a
recent
visit
with
having
the
opportunity
to
visit
with
the
Head
Start
teachers
and
kind
of
what
they're
being
able
to
do
in
the
facility
that
they
have
today
and
seeing
the
plans
for
the
facility
that
this
is
going
to
be
able
to
provide
for
the
children
that
live
right
within
that
Community
walking
distance
from
their
apartments
and
stuff.
I
am
excited
about
that
piece
of
it.
AE
The
little
bit
that
I
do
know
about
oncue
and
I
know
a
whole
lot
about
fueling
in
interstates.
Oh.
T
AE
It
with
different
experiences
and
and
ideas
right,
but
you
know
little
things
that
on
cue,
has
I've
seen
them
do
in
the
past.
Are
things
like
dog
parks
and
that
are
accessible
to
the
community
and-
and
you
know,
I
know
a
lot
of
the
residents
in
this
area-
have
pets
and
they
walk
and
they
they
do
all
different
kinds
of
things.
AE
It
provides
an
opportunity
for
walkable
jobs
from
the
complex,
and
we
hope
that
it's
as
many
as
our
willing
will
come-
and
you
know,
go
to
work
for
On
Cue
through
the
job
fair
that
they're
promising
I
hope
they
will
do
those
on
a
recurring
basis,
because
in
the
retail
industry,
recurring
replacement
of
positions
is
just
the
reality
of
the
world.
We
live
in.
So,
there's
a
lot
of
opportunities
for
that
incrementally
over
time
and
the
ability
to
now
build
new
units
not
lose
any
units
in
within
the
complex
I.
AE
Think
is
wonderful
and
you
know
if
you
look
at
this
projection.
That's
up
here.
You
see
all
of
these
housing
opportunities
that
OSHA
is
also
providing
services
for
through
this
complex
I.
Think
it's
got
more
good
than
it
does.
Bad
I
guess
is
how
I
would
say
that
I
think
there
is.
As
council
member
Cooper
said,
you
know
an
opportunity
to
continue
to
work
with
oncue
to
make
sure
that
that
walkability
and
access
from
this
community
and
from
neighboring
communities
is
available
in
any
way
that
we
can.
AE
Oh
and
I
forgot
the
changes
that
we're
making
to
the
storm
drain
out
there
after
recent
tragedies
that
have
happened
not
too
long
ago,
is
very
important.
I'm
very
concerned
about
the
safety
of
our
children
in
that
complex
I'm,
real
excited
to
be
able
to
make
some
progress
on
that
through
this
effort.
That's
all
I
got.
X
Well,
just
a
couple
comments
because,
as
you
know,
I'm
I'm
not
I
was
going
to
not
say
anything,
but
you
know
why
not
one
of
the
only
things
that
I
will
say
as
far
as
On
Cue
is
concerned,
it
is
a
safe
place.
So
that's
one
of
the
things
I
value
about
On
Cue
for
the
for
the
community
and
in
the
the
communities
that
they
surround
is
that
it
is
a
safe
place.
X
So,
therefore,
if,
if
something
should
should
happen
to
anyone
that
they
have
a
place
a
safe
place
to
go
in
this
facility,
as
we
look
at
the
units,
that's
where
I've
always
had
a
concern
with
this
development
is
the
fact
that
I
believe
and
know
that,
with
with
the
people,
perceive
what
what
they
have
experienced
and
what
they
have
been
through,
and
especially
through
this
just
renaming
it
from
Kerr
Village,
doesn't
change
what
the
things
that
have
happened
and
taking
place
over
the
years.
X
Therefore,
just
replacing
18
units
does
not
again
speak
to
the
things
that
have
happened
or
the
ways
we
can
better
serve,
especially
from
a
Housing
Authority.
Our
residents
that
live
within
these
communities
I
know
many
family,
my
my
parents,
when
my
father
lived
on
the
south
side
right
across
the
highway
from
this
particular
area,
so
I'm
very
familiar
with
this
part
of
our
community
as
well,
and
and
known
a
lot
of
folks
that
lived
in
Kerr,
Village
and
people
that
called
it
home
and
it's,
in
my
opinion,
putting
lipstick
on
a
pig.
X
X
The
median
household
income
to
be
right
now
for
folks
to
be
able
to
to
have
housing
in
these
types
of
facilities.
So
I'm
I'm,
very
concerned
I've,
been
concerned
and
I
will
always
remain
concerned
about
those
things,
especially
because
of
the
fact
that
I
have
quite
a
few
of
those
other
facilities
that
are
maintained
by
the
Housing
Authority
within
my
community.
That
I
serve.
T
Do
we
have,
by
the
way,
I
really
appreciate
and
I,
can
see
what
you're
going
to
be
fun
as
a
with
your
Planning
Commission
experience?
Just
listening
to
all
three
of
you
really
kind
of
helped
me
think,
through
this
a
little
bit
more
I
guess
my
concern
is
I
and
I
have
a
couple
more
things
after
I
express
the
concern.
My
concern
is:
is
that
since
we
constructed
the
interstates
in
the
1950s
all
across
the
country,
we've
become
an
interstate
country,
we
don't
slow
down
enough
to.
T
It
was
really
nice.
Looking
at
Barbara.
Excuse
me
councilwoman
Young's
screen,
as
you
were,
describing
excuse
me.
It's
okay,
councilwoman
Pax
screen
as
she
was
describing
this,
because
when
we're
looking
at
the
screen
right
now,
one
can
get
a
sense
of
community.
One
can
get
a
sense
of
how
a
person
walks
bikes
moves
around
goes
to
job
trainings
Etc.
T
My
worry,
though,
is
we
have
for
so
long
become
this
interstate
driven
Society,
where
it's
about
kind
of
the
councilman
Hinkle's
point
it's
about
getting
to
the
next
gas
station
as
a
destination
rather
than
getting
to
the
next
neighborhood,
the
next
historic
commercial
District
slowing
down
spending
money
within
the
commercial
at
the
commercial
properties
around
the
the
neighborhood
right.
So,
like
literally
in
Paseo,
I
walk
out
of
my
front
door.
T
I
will
go,
buy
a
slice
of
pizza,
sauce
I'll,
go
grab
a
drink
at
Oso,
I'll
go
grab
coffee
at
Holy,
Rollers
that
is
putting
back
in
the
use
of
the
sales
tax
covers
that
our
city
manager
is
describing
that's
how
we
used
to
do
it
and
you
can
see
when
you
go
to
the
festivals
at
Paseo.
How
much
people
love
it?
You
can
see
when
we
did
H
and
8
20
years
ago.
How
much
people
wanted
to
get
back
to
that
and
My
worry
is
when
we
in
this
interstate
Society.
What
happens?
T
Is
we
lose
sight
of
the
people
who
councilwoman
Peck
is
describing
who
live
in
this
area?
Who
need
those
storm
drainage,
infrastructure
improvements
but
I?
It's
just
very
important
to
me
that
whatever
comes
from
this
project,
if
we're
going
to
approve
it,
that
the
people
who
live
here
have
safe
access
to
Southeast,
15th
Street
in
terms
of
walking
same
two
when
they
are
able
to
get
up
to
the
OKC
River,
does
this
project
connect
them
safely
to
the
trails
at
the
river?
For
instance,
that's.
AC
T
Think
that's
great
and
then
just
being
able
to
cross
I-44
safely,
I
don't
mean
walking
on
I-44,
of
course,
but
being
able
to
utilize
the
the
streets
that
connect
to
the
other
side,
east
of
I-44
I
think
is
very
important.
Have
we
thought
about
those
connectivities.
AC
P
Then
councilman
I
do
know
that
there
were
recently
it's
you
know,
kind
of
the
bare
minimum
so
not
obviously
our
desired
sort
of
safe
and
comfortable
walkability,
but
on
the
east
side
of
the
highway
I
know
some
newer
sidewalks
have
been
installed
in
that
area
in
the
last
few
years,
so
it
is
a
better
than
it
was,
but
definitely
as
far
as
like
lighting
treescape,
all
that
kind
of
stuff
there's
definitely
a
lot
more.
That
can
Canon
should
be
done.
That
should
be
on
a
radar.
Thank.
T
You
for
that
councilwoman!
Thank
you,
okay!
No!
It's
fine!
Thank
you
for
showing
me
that
is
there
an
opportunity
to
to
I'd
like
to,
if
possible,
I'd
like
to
chat
with
Anki
about
what
along
15th
Street
looks
like
and
I'd,
be
even
curious,
councilman
ankle
because
of
your
planning
background.
I'm,
just
curious
I've
been
thinking
about
it,
a
lot
not
just
with
this
project,
but
just
the
more
I
see
by
the
way
I
love
there's.
T
So
when
I
take
a
road
trip,
I
don't
want
y'all,
think
I'm,
anti-car
and
anti
the
American
drive
from
one
place
to
the
next
I
love
hopping
in
my
car
and
driving
to
visit
my
best
friend
in
Austin
and
I
have
my
favorite
gas
stations
as
well.
But
you
know
this
community
aspect
is
so
important
to
me
so
I'm
just
curious.
Is
there
an
opportunity
at
the
planning
to
talk
with
our
RQ
Partners
about
making
sure
that
15th
Street
and
their
contributions
to
it
make
it
a
you
know:
safe
walkable,
aesthetically,
pleasing
experience,
absolutely.
AC
A
AG
A
A
AH
So
I've
had
a
number
of
people
contact
our
office
about
this.
This
walking
bridge
over
North
Expressway
in
Wilshire,
because
of
course,
yes,
it
appears
to
be
a
completed.
I
know
it's
not
we're
waiting
on
some
different
items.
If
we
could
just
get
a
small
update,
real,
quick,
absolutely.
Z
Thank
you
again,
Eric
Wenger
Public
Works
director.
We
do
have
a
2007
and
2017
bomb
project.
That's
nearly
complete
Northwest
Expressway
pedestrian
bridge
over
near
Worcester
Wilshire.
It
appears
like
it's
complete,
there's.
Actually,
two
remaining
safety
features
that
have
not
been
received
by
the
contractor
that
have
been
installed.
There's
some
additional
hand
railing,
there's
some
Guard
railing,
that's
just
not
on
site.
Yet
we've
experienced
some
supply
chain
issues.
Z
We
are
expecting
to
have
that
hopefully
delivered
here
shortly
and
we're
looking
to
actually
schedule
a
a
formal
ribbon,
cutting
and
grand
opening
in
mid-june,
so
working
with
a
contractor
closely
to
get
it
opened
as
soon
as
we
can.
We
just
appreciate
the
patience
of
our
community
and
our
residents
as
we
wrap
up
the
project.
Thank.
AH
Give
me
just
a
second
Eric,
so
we
have
a
a
deal
with
annexations
and
de-annexations
a
lot
of
times
so
I
kind
of
wanted
to
give
an
explanation
is
why
we
put
an
annexation
on
the
on
the
docket.
For
this
as
horrible
as
Wiltshire
road
is
out
in
Canadian
County
heading
west,
we
have
actually
finally
come
to.
It
appears
in
agreement
with
the
City
of
Yukon
to
be
able
to
completely
redo
this
road
and
I
am
excited
to
see.
AH
We
have
had
quite
the
time
getting
this
done,
and
all
the
effort
from
your
office
I
want
to.
Thank
you
so
much
for
everything
that
you
guys
have
put
in,
and
the
City
of
Yukon
for
all
the
work
that
they're
doing
so.
If
we
could
just
have
a
little
explanation
and
kind
of
even
a
time
frame
is
when
we're
going
to
get
this
knocked
out.
Absolutely.
Z
And
to
kind
of
introduce
the
item
just
a
little
bit
further,
so
we're
talking
about
the
annexation
of
West
Wilshire,
and
this
is
going
to
be
generally
from
Cemetery
Road,
also
known
as
11th
Street
in
Yukon
I'm,
clear
back
to
Sarah
road.
So
it's
about
a
three
mile
length
and
it's
not
uncommon
in
Oklahoma
City,
where
we
find
a
shared
Road
where
the
center
line
actually
acts
as
the
dividing
line
between
the
two
cities.
Z
So
the
south
side
of
that
section
of
road
is
currently
in
the
City
of
Yukon
City
Limits,
the
North
side's
in
Oklahoma
City,
and
it's
created
a
real
maintenance
issue
on
resurfacing,
pothole
filling
Services.
You
know
related
to
the
roadway
so
for
your
consideration
today
is
the
introduction
of
the
dnxation
annexation
for
that
South
12th
feet
of
Wilshire
Road,
which
would
put
Wilshire
completely
within
the
city
limits
of
Oklahoma
City.
Z
It
will
correct
any
issues
with
pothole
reporting,
making
sure
that
the
City
of
Oklahoma
City
can
report
to
any
of
the
issues
that
occur
on
that
street.
We
also
have
a
companion
project
ready
to
go.
That's
actually
the
resurfacing
of
that
three-mile
section.
That's
been
in
disrepair
for
a
very
very
long
time,
so
we
do
have
some
companion
items
coming
to
Future
Council.
Z
Regarding
the
funding
for
that
that
section
we've
attempted
multiple
Partnerships,
but
with
this
annexation
de
annexation,
this
will
finally
put
it
in
a
place
where
Oklahoma
City
can
take
a
forward
step
and
provide
for
the
resurfacing
and
future
maintenance
for
Oklahoma
City
residents
along
that
entire
stretch
of
streets,
so
we're
only
taking
12
feet.
So
it's
only
the
South
12
feet,
we're
not
taking
additional
properties
south
of
that,
so
the
right-of-way
south
of
that
12
feet
will
remain
in
the
City
of
Yukon
and.
AH
Z
P
Yes,
so
I
know
when
we
got
a
presentation
on
this
item.
Some
months
ago
there
were
a
few
bus
stops
that
I
had
asked
about
that
were
specifically
Route
5,
that
overlap
with
where
the
new
brt
route
will
run
and
I.
P
It
goes
up
class
in
and
then
you
turn
you
to
go
up
to
Western.
So
essentially
all
of
the
brt
route
up
until
Expressway
is
route.
Five,
so
I
I
remember
when
we
first
accepted
the
the
list
of
I
think
it
was
like
a
preliminary
report
for
bus
stops
to
redo
through
Maps
four
for
the
phase
one
there
were
I
remember
seeing
a
handful
of
those
stops
along
Classen
that
my
understanding
is
that
would
no
longer
be
in
service,
essentially
because
the
brt
will
be
replacing
them.
U
P
That
okay,
that'd
be
great
and
I
did
I
kind
of
put
a
a
note
into
him
into
his
sort
of
inbox
to
to
get
a
report
on
that.
So
I
think
they're,
probably
working
on
it,
but
since
it
was
on
here
today,
I
thought
I
might
ask
just
in
case
you
had
something.
AI
T
A
A
A
We
have
a
motion
in
a
second
cast.
Your
votes
passes
unanimously,
we're
now
at
item
11.
items
requiring
separate
votes
item.
A
is
an
ordinance
on
Final
hearing
recommended
for
approval,
rezoning,
1106,
Northwest,
115th
Street
from
R1
to
R2
and
councilwoman
nice.
The
applicant
is
here,
but
does
not
need
to
speak
unless
there
are
questions.
X
Thank
you
from
application
here
all
right.
The
purpose
of
this
request
is
to
allow
a
two-family
residential
use,
and
oh
this
wrong.
One.
AJ
AC
X
One
yeah
two
family
used
residential
use
and
development.
One
of
the
things
that
I
did
ask
as
far
as
a
couple
things
was
as
far
as
this
land
is
concerned.
X
I
was
told
it
had
once
belonged
to
the
to
the
city
and
it
was
a
surplus
of
our
parks
department,
so
I
I
do
want
to
make
mention
because
of
that
that
I
feel
as
if,
when
we
have
these
types
of
of
situations
as
far
as
our
city
is
concerned
and
surplus
land
that
can
be
developed,
that
we
look
at
how
we
can
further
as
a
city
develop
and
maybe
partner
with
whoever
we
need
to
to
do
that.
X
But
I
do
I
want
to
thank
thank
the
developer
for
that
commitment
to
this
project.
So
would
that
be
something
we
needed
to
add
again?
I
didn't
think
so,
but
if
that's
something
that
needed
to
be
put
in
the
record,
okay,
okay,
I
didn't
think
so
all
right.
So
with
that
being
said,
through
all
that,
I
will
move
for
approval.
A
Passes
unanimously,
okay
item
11b
is
an
ordinance
on
Final
hearing
that
was
recommended
for
approval
by
the
Planning
Commission
rezoning,
10300
North
Sooner
Road
from
double
a
agricultural
District
to
PUD
1930
a
little
bit
of
housekeeping.
This
doesn't
always
come
up
very
often
so
Title
11,
section
43
105
of
the
Oklahoma
statutes
states.
A
In
this
case
on
this
application,
there
is
a
77
percent
protest,
obviously
in
excess
of
the
50
percent
requirement
in
state
law
and
also,
obviously
this
is
a
body
of
at
least
seven
members
in
his.
In
fact,
a
body
of
nine
and
so
three-fourths
of
a
body
of
nine
is
seven,
so
affirmative
approval
of
this
application
would
require
seven
affirmative
votes,
regardless
of
how
many
people
are
in
the
room.
Further.
A
L
A
Okay,
well,
then,
I
also
in
the
last
week,
the
applicant
communicated
to
me
that
they
feel
I
should
recuse
I,
don't
necessarily
agree,
but
I
am
not
motivated
in
any
way
shape
or
form
to
argue,
and
so
I
will
step
out
of
the
room
as
well,
and
so
I
will
turn
over
the
gavel
to
councilwoman
Hammond,
because
councilman
stone
is
the
current
vice
mayor,
but
is
not
here
today,
and
so
it
traditionally
falls
to
the
Past
vice
mayor.
I
would
also
add
before
I
leave.
A
A
That
is
about
four
hours
if
everyone
were
to
take
their
three
minutes
and-
and
so
I'm
used
to
saying
this,
and
so
I'm
saying
it
so
she
doesn't
necessarily
have
to
though
she
is
welcome
to
I
think
there
could
be
a
point
where
comments
are
redundant
and
you
might
consider
not
using
your
full
three
minutes,
but
I
am
certain
that
councilwoman
Hammond
and
the
clerk
will
probably
need
to
out
of
necessity,
enforce
the
three-minute
limit
on
speakers
with
that.
I
will
make
my
way
out
of
the
chamber.
P
Let
us
start
with:
we
have
the
applicant
Bert
berlanger
and
then
James
Roberts,
oh
David,
will
you
be
stepping
in
for
them?
Yes,
okay,
so
start
with
with
you,
then.
AK
I
know,
you've
all
been
inundated
with
emails
calls
perhaps
social
media
other
types
of
communication,
and
so
we're
going
to
do
our
best,
given
the
unique
nature
of
what
the
state
statutes
require
and
even
though
I'm
not
good
at
math
I
know
that
I
can't
count
to
seven
so
we're
going
to
try
to
be
as
concise
as
possible
just
to
build
our
record
to
be
able
to
go
on
to
the
next
step.
So
we
do
have
some
people
here,
though,
I
have
Zach
roach
and
Richard
McAllen
with
ideal
homes.
AK
This
is
the
second
time
that
this
particular
piece
of
property
has
been
subjected
to
a
rezoning
application.
I'm
not
sure
how
many
people
were
on
Council
the
last
time,
but
it
was
a
different
developer
at
the
time.
I
represented
the
landowner
and
we
sought
to
rezone
this
as
straight
R1.
There
was
no
PUD,
there
was
no
layout,
it
was
R1
and
it
allowed
people
to
just
use
their
imagination,
which
led
to
a
lot
of
concerns.
AK
It
was
ultimately
denied
by
city
council
and
at
the
time
we
were
told
by
not
only
Planning
Commission,
but
the
council
that
if
this
comes
back
it
needs
to
be
in
a
pod.
So
proper
controls
can
be
put
in
place
to
manage
the
concerns
that
were
raised
so
prior
to
even
filing
this
PUD.
We
had
a
neighborhood
meeting.
We
had
it
in
a
format
where
we
had
multiple
tables
set
up
so
that
there
was
an
engineering
piece,
a
zoning
piece
planning
a
comp
plan
piece.
AK
So
we
could
have
more
one-on-one
conversations.
The
three
main
concerns
that
came
from
that
were
School
density,
traffic,
trees,
drainage
and
aquifer.
So
we
started
by
going
back
to
the
drawing
board
and
reaching
out
to
the
school.
We
had
it
in
mind
originally
that
we
could
give
the
school
five
acres
to
to
build
a
school
site,
so
we
engaged
with
the
school.
We
learned
that
15
Acres
was
what
they
actually
needed
in
working
with
the
school.
AK
The
site
plan
that
you
see
on
the
screen
now
the
school
sent
us
contact
of
their
architect
and
the
architect
for
the
Oakdale
School
sent
us
the
site
plan
showing
what
their
prototype
looks
like
in
terms
of
the
ability
to
put
it
on
a
the
map
and
kind
of
see
where
it
fit.
So
we
moved
forward
towards
Planning
Commission
with
this
concept
with
the
school,
where
you
see
it
located
right
there.
Now,
in
addition
to
that,
we
have
three
different
development
types
in
here.
AK
You
have
two
that
are
similar:
they're
single
family
and
a
third
of
the
lots
are
a
senior
product.
So
it's
a
gated
community
for
empty
nesters
with
high
HOA
dues,
the
HOA
dues
go
to
cover
Landscaping
Maintenance,
all
those
things
they
have
12
different
projects
across
the
metro
and
84
percent
of
the
residents
in
those
projects
are
55
or
older
in
empty
nesters.
AK
The
Friday
before
Planning
Commission,
we
received
a
letter
from
the
school
district
saying
that
15
Acres
wasn't
enough
and
they
don't
like
the
location.
Now
Richard
McCowan
is
an
individual
that
is
designed
neighborhoods
for
many
years.
He
designed
it
in
this
way
so
that
all
the
kids
that
live
in
that
neighborhood
could
utilize
walking
trails
and
other
things
to
get
to
the
school.
Without
ever
having
to
touch
a
street.
The
school
said
we
don't
want
that.
We
want
it
on
the
hard
corner
and
we
also
need
20
acres.
AK
So
we
once
again
pivoted
and
were
able
to
over
that
weekend,
come
up
with
the
site
plan
that
you
see
before
you.
That
is
the
site
plan
that
went
to
Planning
Commission.
That
is
the
site
plan
that
staff
reviewed
in
your
staff
report.
You
will
see
the
staff
recommended
approval.
You'll
also
see
that
Planning
Commission
recommended
approval.
What
we've
done
is
carved
out:
20
acres
for
the
school
and
in
the
Pud
we
aren't
allowed
to
do
anything
but
a
School
site.
AK
The
question
was
raised:
what,
if
the
school
walks
away
and
doesn't
want
anything
to
do
with
this?
Well,
if
that's
the
case,
then
you'll
have
a
20-acre
open
space
at
the
Hard
corner
and
that's
the
will
of
the
school
so
be
it,
but
there'd
be
no
way
to
back
into
putting
houses
there
without
additional
approvals.
So
we
think
that
a
20-acre
school
site
allows
for
the
Oakdale
public
schools
to
have
some
strategic
planning
for
their
long-term
students.
AK
AK
What
that
tells
us
in
the
comp
plan
is
that
the
target
density
range
is
four
to
eight
dwelling
units
per
acre.
We
are
now
at
3.35
dwelling
units
per
acre,
so
we
are
below
the
Target
that
the
comprehensive
plan
has
stated
is
the
density
goal
for
this
area,
the
reason
being
we
have
access
to
water.
We
have
access
to
sewer
you're
going
to
hear
about
traffic,
and
so
what
Johnson
Associates
did
was
run
a
brief
traffic
analysis.
AK
AK
Then
we
heard
about
the
aquifer,
so
the
most
of
the
homes
out
there
are
developed
at
a
time
before
there
was
public
water
and
public
sewer.
So
most
of
them
are
on
well
water.
We
will
have
public
water,
so
we
won't
be
on
Aqua.
First,
we
won't
be
depleting
the
aquifer
and
in
fact,
in
a
moment,
I'm
going
to
have
Mr
Jim
Roberts
come
up
here.
What
he
is
going
to
testify
is
that
we
will
actually
increase
the
rate
of
recharge
to
the
aquifer,
the
reason
being
right.
AK
Now
you
have
an
undeveloped
site
and
at
a
big
rain
event,
the
water
will
sheet
flow
off.
Well,
we're
going
to
detain
it
and
by
detaining
it
it
works.
Just
like
a
lake
where
you
will
be
able
to
actually
increase
the
recharge
I
want
to
focus
real
briefly
before
I
turn
it
over
to
Zach
Rhodes.
So,
as
the
council
is
aware,
August
13,
2021
the
city
council,
at
a
cost
of
187
390
dollars,
commissioned
the
housing
affordability
study.
AK
That's
really
what
this
case
is
about.
Do
we
as
a
city
think
that
affordable
housing
and
providing
different
types
of
families,
the
ability
to
live
in
a
good
school
district,
is
important?
If
we
look
to
the
findings
in
the
language
in
this,
what
we,
what
it
says
is,
why
is
this
important?
It
says?
Affordable
housing
is
necessary
for
improving
Economic
Security
for
all.
Moving
on
under
the
resolving
the
housing
issues
will
require
indicated
integrated
strategies.
AK
It
says
an
increase
in
density
can
be
accomplished,
for
example,
by
building
more
homes
on
less
land
and
having
smaller
Lots.
These
are
tools
that
could
make
housing
more
affordable
for
people
in
our
community.
That's
exactly
what
this
application
seeks
to
do.
And
finally,
one
of
the
key
issues
identified
in
the
community
and
stakeholder
engagement
process
was
housing
type
diversity.
If
you
look
at
the
area
surrounding
this,
you
won't
see
housing
type
diversity,
it's
large,
Lots,
very
expensive
homes.
AK
What
we
believe
this
application
represents
is
an
opportunity
to
bring
a
diversity
and
housing
type
open
this
up
for
people
that
could
otherwise
not
afford
the
very
expensive
homes
that
exist
around
it
and
provide
the
Oakdale
Public
Schools
a
wonderful
opportunity
to
long-range
plan
with
a
20-acre
site.
So
with
that
I'm
going
to
have
Mr
roach
speak,
then
it'll
be
Jim,
Roberts
and
finally
Mr
Burt
Belanger.
So
if
there's
no
questions
to
me,
I'll
turn
it
over
to
Mr
Roach.
AL
AM
You
David
that's
allowed
my
exact
roach
1320
North
Porter
Norman
Oklahoma
today,
I
want
to
touch
on
just
some
of
the
philosophy
that
guides
Us
in
ideal
homes,
development
and
specifically
how
that
philosophy
applies
to
the
development
at
hand.
You
know
we
are
very
much
and
out
there
inside
out,
Builder
and
developer
by
that
I
mean
this.
We
focus
on
common
areas
on
drainage
ways
on
walking
trails
on
Parks,
playgrounds
and
amenities,
and
we
start
with
that
in
mind.
This
isn't
something
that's
an
annoyance.
This
is
an
opportunity
for
us.
AM
We
take
our
communities
and
we
literally
knit
the
housing
the
streets,
the
things
that
we
do
around
the
central
core
idea
of
amenities
and
creating
context
and
creating
community
in
space.
You
know
one
of
the
things
that
I'm
very
excited
about
on
this
particular
development
is
the
interconnected,
walking
trail
systems.
Home
homeowners
will
have
the
opportunity
to
walk
from
the
north
side,
get
on
a
set
of
walking
trails
all
the
way
down.
AM
The
South
Side
go
to
a
proposed
School
site,
and
this
is
a
very
important
part
of
this
community
because,
as
we
encourage
walking,
we
do
two
things.
One
we
can
reduce
traffic
with
inside
the
neighborhood,
but
also
we
can
encourage
Healthy
Lifestyles
within
the
neighborhood
as
well.
So
that's
something
that
we
hold
important.
That's
a
foundational
and
contextual
piece
of
what
we
try
and
strive
for
at
Idaho
homes
in
this
communities,
and
this
community
will
be
no
different
than
one
the
other
any
one
of
the
other
dozens
of
communities
we
have
around
the
state.
AM
You
know,
in
addition
to
having
intentional
walking
trails,
we're
also
mindful
of
how
we
place
those
amenities
we
abide
by
What's
called
the
quarter
mile
rule
of
development
at
ideal
homes.
What
that
says
is
generally
people
are
willing
to
walk
about
a
quarter
of
a
mile
away
from
where
they
live,
and
so,
if
we
can
be
intentional
about
how
we
place
those
Community
amenities,
Place,
those
Parks,
the
splash,
pads
the
pools
the
clubhouses
and
make
sure
that
people
can
access
them.
AM
We
can
encourage
those
people
to
walk
and
again
keep
that
traffic
off
the
streets
and
help
encourage
a
healthy
lifestyle.
But
it's
not
just
enough
to
be
intentional
about
the
placement,
those
amenities
we
also
want
to
be
very
thoughtful
and
mindful
of
how
we
place
those
walking
trails
and
how
we
knit
those
walking
trails
together
within
the
context
of
that
Community.
AM
AM
AM
Another
way
that
we're
going
to
have
a
commitment
to
Quality
Community
is
the
way
that
we
use
sight
lines
in
this
community
and
so
one
of
the
Hallmarks
of
an
ideal
homes.
Development
is
creating
safe
spaces
within
the
common
areas.
We
do
this
through
two
primary
layouts
and
you'll
see
this
on
the
proposal
we
brought
in
front
of
you.
We've
got
an
area
where
we've
got
homes,
backing
up
to
that
common
area.
AM
We
use
a
four
foot:
well,
we've
dubbed
a
social
fence
so
that
people
can
look
out
of
their
backyards
and
see
their
kids
playing,
and
we
also
have
areas
where
we've
got
just
good
sight
lines,
so
we're
making
sure
to
keep
those
sight
lines
clean
again.
As
I
said,
I've
got
three
children
and
one
of
the
struggles
that
I
have
as
a
dad
is
how
to
create
it.
How
to
be
intentional
about
letting
my
kids
be
independent.
AM
You
know,
I
want
them
to
grow
up,
I
want
them
to
get
out
of
the
house
someday
and
the
only
way
I
get
to
do.
That
is
by
making
sure
that
I'm
intentional,
with
my
giving
them
opportunity
to
function
on
their
own.
So
what
we
do
at
my
house
is
we
send
the
kids
out
the
backyard
and
we've
got
eyes
on
them.
We
can
see
them
in
those
common
areas.
In
my
backyard,
that
makes
me
feel
safe,
but
it's
not
just
my
self
looking
at
my
children,
it's
also
our
neighbors.
AM
Looking
at
those
kids,
we
believe
in
community
parenting,
and
so
when
I
have
any
one
of
my
kids
that
have
a
scraped
knee
or
a
bruised
elbow
I'll
get
a
text
from
one
of
my
neighbor
and
likewise
I
can
do
the
same
thing
for
my
neighbors
kids.
So
it's
really
a
community
parenting
aspect
that
brings
this
together
and
creates
those
safe
spaces
and
these
common
areas
for
kids
to
go.
You
know.
Another
aspect
of
this
is
David
touched
on
the
type
of
housing
product
that
we're
going
to
have.
This
is
really
exciting.
AM
For
me,
one
of
the
Hallmarks
of
Ideal
homes,
development
is
the
multi-generational
opportunities
that
we
have
within
those
developments.
I
actually
have
four
generations
of
my
family
living
in
my
idol
homes,
development
in
Norman,
which
is
really
cool,
and
we
see
this
all
over
and
the
primary
reason
we
see.
This
is
because
of
how
we
met
our
communities
together,
how
we
do
those
walking
trails,
and
so
we
expect
and
anticipate
given
the
different
levels
of
housing
product
that
will
be
in
this
community.
You'll.
Have
that
same
thing,
I
can
actually
send
my
kids
to
go.
AM
See
Grandma,
send
my
kids
to
go,
see
great
grandma
on
those
safe
walking
trails
and
feel
totally
comfortable
that
they're
going
to
get
there
safely
and
everything
is
going
to
be.
Okay,
so
touched
a
little
bit
about
the
you
know,
philosophical
ways
that
we
address
these
I
also
want
to
just
talk
about
the
personal
importance
that
this
community
represents
to
me.
You
know
this
is
an
intensely
personal
experience
for
me,
some
of
you
may
or
may
not
know,
I
actually
grew
up
in
Edmond
I
went
to
Edmond
Public
Schools.
AM
My
dad
Mike
was
a
science
teacher
at
Evan,
Memorial
High
School,
we
were
a
family
of
four
living
off.
A
teacher
salary
didn't
have
a
whole
lot
of
money,
but
we
had
two
things
going
for
us.
We
had
a
thousand
square
foot
house
that
was
a
very
affordable
house
in
the
heart
of
Edmond
and
I,
had
access
to
good
public
schools,
and
so
I
was
always.
AM
We
had
a
I
had
a
commitment
to
education
in
my
household
and
we
were
able
to
leverage
that
that
public
schools,
quality
schools
in
a
safe
neighborhood
and
a
safe
Community
to
provide
access
to
Quality
education
and
from
that
Foundation
of
Education.
Any
success
I've
had
whether
it
was
going
to
college
or
grad
school
or
even
appearing
for
you
today.
I
owe
a
lot
of
that
to
having
an
affordable
home
in
a
safe
community
in
a
great
school
system.
AM
We
think
this
project
represents
another
opportunity
to
bring
families
who
look
a
lot
like
my
family
into
that
same.
Have
that
same
shot
at
having
a
good,
affordable
home
in
a
safe
community,
in
a
great
school
system
and
in
a
great
area
of
the
city.
So
I'm
very
enthusiastic
about
this
opportunity
and
I
would
humbly
ask
for
your
vote.
W
X
I
do
have
one
I
know:
I
see
the
presentation
that
we
have
up
on
the
screen
and
I
know
after
this
was
passed
through
a
Planning
Commission.
We
had
continuous
conversations
about
the
flood
plain,
so
I
I,
just
I'm
I
guess.
My
question
is:
is
this
the
presentation
we're
using?
Are
we
going
with
the
one
that
was
last
presented
when
I
met
with
the
neighbors
and
the
and
you
all
or
where
are
we
as
far
as
what
what
plan
you
are
presenting
today.
AN
AN
Now,
as
far
as
recharge
to
this
area
of
the
aquifer,
the
whole
recharge
to
this
entire
area
comes
from
about
a
200
square
mile,
recharge
Basin
that
lies
to
the
South.
The
subject.
Property
we're
looking
at
is
about
200
acres
and
therefore
would
only
represent
0.2
percent
of
the
total
area
of
the
that
recharges.
This.
This
area
of
the
aquifer.
AN
As
far
as
like
I
said,
as
far
as
the
issues
related
to
groundwater
depletion
and
lowering
of
water
levels,
that's
a
function
of
the
wells
being
spaced
too
closely
together
in
the
aquifer
resulting
in
interference,
drawdown
and
localized
depletion.
So
what's
happening
in
that
case
is
the
rate
of
withdrawal
in
the
area
exceeds
the
rate
of
recharge.
That's,
why
you're
seeing
localized
depletion
in
the
local
neighborhoods
and
then
when
the
domestic
Wells.
AK
AO
AO
AO
In
the
last
few
years,
I've
watched
this
phenomena
gain
traction
here
in
Oklahoma
in
the
metro
area,
starting
along
I-35
near
the
City
of
Edmond,
where
the
tool
of
a
referendum
election
is
now,
in
my
mind,
bizarrely
used
to
defeat
nearly
every
apartment.
Zoning
proposal
in
that
City
now
those
that
oppose
the
develop
this
development
are
emboldened
to
bring
the
same
nimbyism
back
to
Oklahoma
City
after
2003
Oklahoma,
City's,
mayor
Mayors
since
then,
and
City
councils
since
then
have
understood
that
nimism
cannot
stand
or
Prevail
when
it
comes
to
housing
for
our
citizens.
AK
Real
briefly,
in
closing,
I
would
point
you
to
the
staff
report
again:
staff
analyzed
this
against
the
comp
plan
against
the
surrounding
neighborhoods.
They
recommended
three
Tes,
which
we
agreed
with
the
Planning
Commission
at
the
time
of
the
hearing,
asked
us
for
three
additional
Tes,
which
we
agreed
to
which
you'll
see
on
the
front
of
your
staff
report,
and
then
we
can
agree
to
an
additional
one
today,
as
it
relates
to
Lots
within
the
floodplain.
AK
AK
Frankly,
it's
one
of
the
least
dense
developments,
you've
seen
in
several
years
on
this
size
tract,
we
are
below
what
staff
and
the
comp
plan
tells
us
as
our
Target
density,
we're
at
3.35
units,
an
acre
we've
carved
out
land
for
a
school
I
believe
this
developer
has
done
everything
he
could
do
to
create
a
great
neighborhood
attract
people
that
can
provide
a
quality
education
for
their
kids.
With
that
we're
happy
to
answer
any
questions
and
we'd
ask
for
a
vote
of
approval.
AK
They
were
concerned
about
school-aged
children,
so
a
third
of
these
lots
are
going
to
be
senior
Lots.
Those
tend
to
be
higher
priced
homes.
So
all
of
the
restrictions
that
we've
placed
on
ourselves
is
what
has
driven
costs
upward.
If
any.
Thank
you.
P
P
AP
AP
As
you
all
are
well
aware,
there
is
significant
opposition
to
this
requested
rezoning
from
the
surrounding
residents
and
the
people
who
live
in
the
area.
As
has
already
been
mentioned,
the
legal
protest,
the
written
protest
that
has
been
submitted
from
Property
Owners
within
300
feet,
is
now
at
77
percent
and
protest
signatures
that
have
been
submitted
in
writing
now.
Total
737,
as
reported
in
the
memo
to
the
council
for
today's
meeting,
the
residents
of
the
Oakdale
area,
recognize
that
the
subject
property
is
going
to
be
developed
for
residential
use.
AP
This
proposed
PUD
with
overly
dense
Lots,
packed
into
the
buildable
area
outside
the
flood
plain,
is
incompatible
with
the
surrounding
neighborhoods
and
I
know
that
most
of
you
are
probably
familiar
already,
but
just
to
give
you
a
the
flavor
of
the
surrounding
residential
areas
to
the
north
is
Oakdale
Valley,
where
the
average
average
lot
size
is
11.
000
Square
to
12
000
square
feet
to
the
east
is
Autumn
Park,
which
is
currently
being
developed
with
new
homes
and
many
under
construction.
The
minimum
lot
sizes
there
are
thirty
thousand
square
feet.
AP
Autumn
Park
was
approved
as
a
PUD
in
2018
to
the
west
across
Sooner.
Road
is
the
white
fences
neighborhood,
which
is
characterized
by
five
acre
tracks.
Oakdale
Meadows
to
the
east
of
Oakdale
Valley
extending
to
Air
Depot,
is
comprised
of
one
acre
lots
Oakmont
along
Britain
Road
between
sooner
and
Coltrane
is
1.75,
acre
lots,
Casa
Bella
also
along
Britton.
Road
is
one
acre
lots.
This
proposed
PUD
PUD
1930
reduces
the
regulations
that
would
otherwise
apply
in
the
R1
District.
AP
The
applicant
has
been
has
been
mentioned,
although
it's
not
been
displayed
here
today
has
presented
a
conceptual
plan
showing
655
Lots.
Most
of
those
lots
are
substandard
and
Below.
Even
the
minimum
code
requirements
of
R1
499
of
the
655
lots
that
were
shown
on
the
conceptual
plan
that
was
presented
to
us
or
76
percent
or
below
the
6
000
square
foot,
R1
minimum,
as
I
mentioned.
The
only
requirement
under
the
terms
of
the
Pud
with
regard
to
lot
size
is
a
5500
square
foot
minimum.
AP
This
proposed
development
would
effectively
preclude
any
tree
preservation
outside
of
the
undevelopable
flood
plain
and
in
the
meetings
that
we've
had
with
the
applicant,
they
have
acknowledged
that
all
trees
would
be
cleared
on
every
lot,
every
one
of
the
proposed
Lots.
So
we're
on
that
plan
that
was
depicted
earlier
in
Mr
boxer's
presentation.
Wherever
you
see
a
lot
on
that
plan,
the
trees
would
be
cleared.
AP
This
proposed
development
would
be
a
radical
departure
from
the
surrounding
area.
As
you
will
hear
a
little
bit
more
about
later
from
Dr
Bert,
Fisher
and
geologist
Frank
Patterson
many
homes
in
the
area
depend
on
water
wells.
The
density
of
this
proposed
development
would
would
adversely
affect
the
recharge
of
the
underground
underground
aquifer.
AP
It
also
would
likely
increase
the
likelihood
of
flooding
in
the
area.
A
development
at
this
level
of
density
I
do
have
a
couple
of
exhibits.
That
I
would
like
to
present
to
you.
The
first
is,
which
is
exhibit
a
if
you
could
Mr
Martin.
This
is
a
just
an
aerial
image
of
the
Oakdale
area
and
there
at
the
South
West
corner
is
the
intersection
of
Britton
Road
and
Sooner
Road.
AP
So
then
you
see
the
you
can
see
the
pond
there
that
exists
on
the
200,
acre,
subject,
property
and
then
Oakdale
Valley
is
to
the
north
and
white
fences
to
the
west,
and
then
the
newer
Autumn
Park
is
running
along
Britton
Road
immediately
to
the
east
of
the
of
the
subject:
property
the
if
you
could
then
put
up,
exhibit
B
Mr
Martin.
This
is
a
this
is
a
the
Valencia
ideal
homes
development
that
that
they
directed
us
to
as
an
example
of
an
ideal
homes
project
here
in
Oklahoma
City.
AP
This
is
located
at
Northwest,
178th
Street
between
Pennsylvania
and
North
May
Avenue,
and
it
is
a
much
larger
development
that
in
that
extends
up
there.
You
see
Northwest
196th
at
the
north
end,
but
it
just
gives
you
a
flavor
of
the
level
of
density
that
is,
that
would
be
presented
with
this.
With
respect
to
the
proposed
development
at
the
subject,
property
of
PUD
1930.
AP
Mr
box
has
referenced
a
the
density,
the
gross
density
number
of
3.5,
but
you
have
to
understand
that
that
is
that
is
artificially
low
because
of
the
significant
amount
of
floodplain
area
that
is
undevelopable
so
on
their
preliminary
plant
that
was
filed
as
a
companion
item
with
this
application,
when
it
was
first
submitted,
they
showed
approximately
62
acres
of
floodplain
and
pipeline
easement.
That
is
undevelopable,
so
it
does
artificially,
in
our
view,
make
that
density
number
appear.
AP
Lower
the
the
developable
area
and
the
density
that
would
be
proposed
in
that
area
would
be
comparable
to
what
you
see.
We
believe
in
Valencia
on
this
exhibit
that's
before
you.
If
Mr
Martin,
if
you
could
please
put
up
Exhibit
C,
one
of
the
environmental
issues
that
is
mentioned
in
the
staff
report
is
that
there
is
a
significant
portion
of
this
property
that
is
covered
by
the
Upland
Forest.
This
is
an
exhibit
taken
from
the
comprehensive
plan
that
depicts
the
presence
of
the
Upland
forest.
In
the
light
green.
AP
There
is
a
red
star
there
where
the
subject
property
is
located.
So
you
can
see
most
of
the
Upland
Forest
that
exists
on
this
property
is
outside
of
the
floodplain
area.
We
had
Dr
Chad
King
who's.
An
associate
professor
at
University
of
Central
Oklahoma
prepare
a
report
about
the
subject
property
and
he
discusses
that
the
property
is
part
of
the
Cross
Timbers
echo
region
and
is
primarily
comprised
of
Oak
dominated
Forest.
AP
The
comprehensive
plan
addresses
these
issues
with
respect
to
the
environmentally
sensitive
areas
that
are
on
the
subject:
property
Mr
Box
referenced,
the
urban
low
recommended
or
designated
density
at
four
to
eight
dwelling
units
per
acre
for
single
family.
AP
Under
the
terms
of
the
plan
that
language
is
qualified
with
language
which
states
gross
density
may
be
allowed
to
decrease
to
one
dwelling
unit
per
acre.
If
a
project
is
adjacent
to
rural
densities
or
will
preserve
designated
environmentally
sensitive
areas
through
policies
included
in
the
comprehensive
plan
and
the
staff
report
notes,
the
staff
report
to
the
Planning
Commission
notes
the
several
environmental
sensitive
aspects
of
the
subject
property.
The
first,
of
course,
is
the
Deep
for
tributary
that
runs
through
the
site.
Staff
report
recommends
maintaining
a
100
foot
buffer
from
the
stream
Banks,
as
I
mentioned.
AP
The
these
in
the
staff
report
notes
that
a
significant
portion
of
the
property
is
covered
by
Upland
Forest,
which
is
designated
as
environmentally
sensitive.
The
comprehensive
plan
has
a
preservation
goal
of
80
percent
of
the
Upland
forests,
where
it
exists.
To
this
this
extent
on
a
particular
property.
AP
The
staff
report
also
addresses
the
underground
aquifer
and
states
that
it
is
considered
highly
vulnerable
to
depletion
in
this
area.
The
comprehensive
plan
recommends:
preserving
natural,
open
spaces
and
utilizing
low
impact
development
techniques
whenever
possible
in
order
to
maintain
water
quality
and
allow
for
infiltration
of
storm
water
on
site.
The
staff
report
States,
preserving
trees
on
site,
would
assist
with
on-site
infiltration
of
storm
water,
as
I
mentioned
in
this
PUD.
The
only
requirement
for
lot
sizes
is
that
they
must
be
a
minimum
of
5500
square
feet.
There
is
no
other
requirement.
AP
The
comprehensive
plan
encourages
a
gradual
transition
between
smaller
and
larger
residential
lots.
This
proposed
PUD
would
establish
a
very
abrupt
and
incompatible
transition
between
the
surrounding
neighborhoods,
which
are
significantly
less
dense.
The
proposed
PUD
is
overly
dense
and
incompatible
with
the
surrounding
areas.
It
fails
to
protect
or
even
minimize
the
impact
on
the
environmentally
sensitive
areas
that
exist
on
the
subject
property,
if
approved
and
developed
as
proposed,
it
would
dramatically
and
adversely
alter
the
character
of
the
area
to
the
detriment
of
the
natural
environment
and
the
surrounding
neighborhoods.
AP
AP
But
that's
what
was
represented
to
us
back
in
in
December
and
so
I
think
it's
questionable
to
to
for
the
applicant
to
characterize
this
proposed
development
as
as
being
a
supplier
of
affordable
housing
in
Oklahoma
City
at
those
price
points
and
I
will
just
leave
you
with
the
thought
that
that,
in
our
view,
this
is
an
opportunity
for
us
to
do
better
than
what
is
being
proposed
with
this
PUD
and
we
believe
that
it,
it
is
possible
for
there
to
be
a
development
that
is
done
of
this
property
for
residential
use.
AP
That
is
more
thoughtful.
That
is
more
sensitive
to
the
significant
environmental,
sensitive
areas
that
are
present
on
this
property
and
and
that
it
can
be
done
in
a
way
that
is
feasible
and
viable
and
and
and
still
affordable.
And
so
we
think
what
is
before
you
today
is
is
inappropriate.
It's
too
dense
and
we
would
request
that
you
deny
PUD
in
1930
and
Madame
vice
mayor.
With
your
permission
we
do
have
and
I
know
there
are
a
number
of
people
that
have
signed
up
to
speak.
AP
We
do
have
an
order
of
present
presentation.
So,
with
your
permission,
we
would
request
that
we
go
and
that
the
order-
and
this
is
going
to
sound
like
a
lot
but
we'll
try
to
be
as
concise
as
we
can.
The
order
that
I
have
is
Brody
Ward,
Teresa,
green
Frank,
Patterson,
Bert,
Fisher,
David,
Logan,
Sheridan,
Haynes,
Lauren,
toppins,
Natalie,
Shirley
and
Sean
Fulkerson,
so
I'm
happy
to
answer
any
questions
that
you
may
have
of
me,
either
now
or
later,
and
if
not
I'll
I'll
ask
the
next
speaker
to
come
forward.
Kelly.
W
AP
My
the
point
I
I
would
make
to
you
and
the
other
members
of
the
council
is
that
for
the
area
that
is
outside
of
the
flood
plain,
which
is
undevelopable,
that
the
density
is
going
to
be
essentially
the
same
as
what
you
see
in
ideal
homes,
Valencia
development,
for
example,
and
and
that
what
allows
that
to
happen
is
this:
both
the
reduction
in
the
lot
sizes
below
what
R1
would
require,
which
is
six
six
thousand
square
feet,
the
reduction
in
the
setbacks
from
the
front
side
and
rear
yards
and
the
maximum
lot
coverage,
which
is
allowed
to
increase
from
50
percent
to
65
percent.
AP
W
W
AP
I
I
I
would
disagree
with
that
last
point
because
there
was
a
lot
of
thought
and
consideration
given
to
that
alternate
proposed
plan
that
we
presented
and
I
think
if
something
like
that
were
presented
today,
I
don't
think
we
would
be
here
in
opposition.
We
recognize
that
it's
going
to
be
developed
and
really
the
question
in
our
view
is,
is
whether
it's
going
to
be
done
in
a
way
that
is
that
doesn't
have
that
level
of
coverage,
and
that
is
not
at
that
level
of
density.
So,
but
I
appreciate
your
question.
P
Kelly
can
I,
please
see
your
list
just
I
want
to
make
sure
just
for
the
sake
of
just
making
sure
we're
being
fair
to
everyone,
that
I
have
a
yellow
slip
for
everyone
that
you
mentioned
and
I
didn't
catch
everyone.
So
if
I
could
see
the
list,
pull
them
out
and
then
we'll
go
in
that
order
and
then
do
the
rest.
P
And
I
will
just
say
so,
for
both
the
legal
representatives
for
both
parties
I
did
allow
to
go
past,
that
three
minutes
to
provide
that.
But
this
is
where
we
will
start
that
three-minute
rule
so
at
30
seconds.
Just
so,
you're
not
surprised
the
city
clerk
will
give
you
a
reminder.
You
also
have
your
reminder
up
on
the
screen.
P
So
not
trying
to
be,
you
know,
cut
you
off
or
anything,
but
your
legal
Representatives
on
both
sides
did
get
to
present
over
that
three-minute
Mark,
and
we
just
want
to
make
sure
that
we
keep
this
moving
and
I'll
just
remind
you
if
you
can
set
your
name
your
address
and
then
keep
your
comments
to
those
three
minutes
really
appreciate
it.
Thank
you.
Yes,.
AQ
Understood
hi,
my
name
is
Brody
Ward
and
my
address
is
9200
North
Sooner
Road,
I'm
speaking
to
you
today
to
request
a
vote.
Of
Denial
on
PUD
1930..
First
I
would
like
to
touch
on
the
overwhelming
protests
of
this
PUD
from
community
members.
There
have
been
approximately
800
signatures
collected
in
opposition,
that
is,
from
a
community
of
roughly
1500,
addresses
every
HOA
president
as
opposed
to
this
PUD
and
has
collected
signatures
from
their
homeowners.
Our
legal
protest
currently
stands
at
77
percent
on
this
diagram.
AQ
AQ
When
considering
the
fact
that
all
three
environmentally
sensitive
areas
are
present
on
the
property
being
the
Upland
Forest
Cross
Timbers,
which
date
from
80
to
120
years
in
age,
the
Garber
Wellington
aquifer,
which
is
designated
as
highly
sensitive
and
prone
to
depletion
and
a
riparian
stream
of
the
deep
Fork
that
flows
into
Lake
Arcadia
the
comprehensive
plan.
Clearly,
states
that
when
any
one
of
these
environmentally
sensitive
areas
is
present,
the
Pud
should
look
to
protect
the
environmentally
sensitive
areas.
AQ
AQ
The
Pud
does
the
opposite
of
protecting
against
the
environmentally,
since
it
varies
even
when
compared
to
R1
zoning
that
has
already
been
denied,
while
the
only
logical
way
to
protect
the
Upland,
Forest
aquifer
and
riparian
area
is
to
increase
lot
size
and
decrease
lot
coverage.
As
Jeff
Butler
stated
at
planning.
This
PUD
does
the
opposite
by
calling
for
up
to
670
Lots,
which
is
what
it
allows
for.
It
allows
for
3.35
times,
200.
AQ
of
which
over
75
percent
would
not
meet
the
R1
minimum
lot
size
to
compound
the
issue
of
decreasing
lot
size.
The
Pud
request
to
increase
lock
coverage
from
r150
to
65
percent
Which
flies
directly
in
the
face
of
the
comprehensive
plan.
This
30
increase
in
lot
coverage
results
in
14,
more
Acres
of
the
developable
property
being
covered
by
rooftops
instead
of
yards
trees
and
other
penetrable
areas.
AQ
One
thing
I
also
would
like
to
address
is
on
the
concept
of
affordability.
Is
you
know,
by
increasing
the
the
lot
coverage
they're
actually
putting
larger
homes
on
those
lots?
So
the
statement
that
was
made
earlier
that
the
concessions
they've
made
are
making
the
the
homes
more
expensive
and
larger
is
actually
the
opposite
of.
What's
going
on
here,.
AQ
Would
also
like
to
address
the
claim
of
compromise
on
behalf
of
Ideal
homes
to
the
community.
If
we
take
the
fact
that
R1
was
denied
due
to
concerns
on
density
and
its
numerous
effects
and
consider
that
minimum
R1
lot
size
is
6000
feet,
then
a
logical
conclusion
is
that
allowing
a
minimum
lot
size
of
5500
square
feet,
as
opposed
in
the
p
as
proposed
in
the
PD,
is
worse
for
the
environmentally,
since
it
areas
compared
to
R1,
which
was
again
denied
in
2021..
AQ
AR
And
I
hope
you'll
start
my
clock
now
I'm
introducing
myself
now.
Can
we
start
it
at
three
minutes
now:
I
timed
it:
okay,
hi
I'm,
Theresa,
green
1065,
Timber,
Oak,
9917,
Hidden
Hollow
for
17
years
before
that
I'm
in
Oakdale
area
resident
for
over
20
years
now,
also
on
property,
in
the
plaza
area
of
Oklahoma,
City,
very
sensitive
to
community
and
the
sense
of
community.
When
we
decided
to
make
a
home
in
Oakdale,
we
did
our
homework.
First.
Both
zoning
and
long-range
Plans
by
the
city
indicated
an
area
that
would
remain
rural
in
nature.
AR
I
stood
here
in
September
21
expressing
concerns
I'm
here
again
speaking
about
a
proposal
that
is
just
as
bad.
In
my
opinion,
as
the
one
denied
back,
then
one
of
the
primary
concerns
remains
compatibility.
An
important
tenet
of
land
use
planning
more
specifically
concerns
over
density,
not
compatible
with
the
rural
nature
of
the
area.
I
have
eliminated
slides.
So,
let's
start
at
page
three
you'll
see
that
76
percent
of
the
Lots
proposed,
as
we
mentioned,
do
not
meet
the
R1
minimum
six
thousand
square
feet
of
land
per
dwelling
unit.
AR
In
addition,
most
of
the
homes
have
a
lot
size
of
0.13
of
an
acre
a
lot
size
smaller
than
the
smallest
slot
size
in
any
Oakdale
neighborhood,
one
that
equates
to
almost
eight
homes
per
acre.
The
next
two
pages
provide
aerial
views.
You've
seen
those
before
the
land
is
zoned
AA,
so
turn
to
page
seven
and
I
want
to
show
you
the
proposed
PUD
and
what
I
believe
is
its
latest
iteration.
There
have
been
several
please
notice
that
the
only
land
preserved
is
the
unbuildable
floodplain
page
eight
shows
you
an
ideal
homes.
AR
Neighborhood
I've,
driven
many
I,
have
driven
many.
This
is
Red
Canyon
Ranch
in
Norman,
which
developers
said
also
said,
was
comparable,
I
drove
it.
I
drove
it
two
years
ago,
I
continued
to
drive
it.
This
is
Google
Earth's
most
recent
view.
However,
today
these
sections
and
several
more
have
been
cleared
of
all
trees
and
replaced
with
a
sea
of
rooftops.
AR
Page
nine
shows
ideal
homes,
Greenleaf
Trails,
another
Norman
neighborhood
offered
by
them
as
similar
to
us
page
10
shows
you
this
sort
of
density
next
to
the
land
in
question,
but,
more
importantly,
on
page
11,
you
see
this
density
next
to
Oakdale
Valley
to
the
north
page
12
next
to
white
fences.
Next,
several
Pages
continue
to
show
this
density
next
to
the
neighborhoods
that
exist
in
the
Oakdale
area.
Oakdale
Meadows,
Apple
Valley,
the
Estates
of
Apple
Valley,
Lakeside,
River,
Oaks,
casabella
Oakmont.
My
question
to
you
is
this:
does
this
density
look
compatible?
AR
AR
Guide
which
shows
1930
the
average
lot
size,
and
we've
already
talked
about
this
so
I'm,
going
to
move
forward
just
showing
that
it's
not
compatible
to
adjacent
rural
densities.
You're
allowed
to
make
adjustments
based
on
those
adjacent
rural
densities
and
environmentally
sensitive
areas.
I
am
asking
you
to
deny
this
PUD,
because
it
is
just
as
incompatible
as
the
development
denied
in
21..
Please
protect
the
rural
nature
of
the
area.
AR
I
Good
morning,
I
want
to
introduce
you
to
the
community's
concerns
about
the
offer.
My
name
is
Frank
Patterson,
11301,
Countryside,
Court
I'm,
a
resident
of
Oakdale,
also
a
geologist
with
40
years
experience
as
you
look
at
the
area
of
Oakdale,
you
cross
I-35,
and
you
get
into
a
very
important
recharge
area
for
the
Garber
Wellington
aquifer
and
and
you're
all
aware
of
that
it
runs
all
the
way
from
North,
Oklahoma
City,
all
the
way
down
to
South
Oklahoma
City.
I
As
you
look
at
this
200
Acres,
it's
it's
very
important
to
the
Oakdale
community
in
that
we're
at
the
very
Northern
end
of
a
1726
acre
drainage
basin,
not
200,
000
or
2000,
or
whatever
was
stated
before
we're
in
a
small
drainage
basin.
All
the
water
flows
through
that
drainage
basin,
through
this
property.
A
lot
of
water
on
this
Pro
that
lands
on
this
property
is
is
infiltrated
into
the
reservoir
into
the
Governor
Wellington
and
that
that's
what
feeds
the
the
reservoir
and
and
the
aquifer
as
it
moves
to
the
Northeast.
I
The
water
flows
from
this
property
to
the
Northeast
towards
most
of
our
wells.
If
this
proposal
is
approved,
the
acreage
will
be
clear-cut.
The
in
the
surface
that
now
allows
water
to
filtrate
into
the
system
will
be
decimated
and
replaced
by
our
hard
surfaces
and
the
water
will
just
run
off
and
never
get
into
our
into
our
Reservoir.
I
Why
does
this
matter
the
reason
it
matters
in
within
a
one
and
a
half
mile
radius
of
this
area?
We
have
over
460
private
water
wells
that
rely
on
the
water
from
the
Garber
Wellington
for
home
home
use.
If
you
widen
that
just
a
little
bit
more
over
to
about
two
two
and
a
half
acre
or
two
and
two
and
a
half
miles,
you
get
to
600
private
Wells,
so
those
Wells,
as
as
was
stated
by
Kelly,
are
already
having
difficulties
where
the
aquifers
under
stress
people
are
having
to
think
about
redrilling
their
Wells.
I
We
have
no
other
options.
We
can
either
redrill,
which
will
be
very
expensive
and
we
don't
have
a
lot
of
offer
left
to
to
penetrate
and
that'll
be
discussed
momentarily
or
we
can
extend
existing
City
infrastructure
because
City
water
does
not
come
to
our
neighborhoods,
so
we
will
have
to
pay
for
that
extension
pay
for
that
development
within
our
neighborhoods.
I
It's
just
really
a
difficult
situation,
30
seconds,
please
thank
you,
so
we're
kind
of
in
a
bind
and
anything
that
will
damage
the
aquifer
is
a
big
deal
to
all
the
neighborhood
and
so
I'm
here
fighting
for
that
purpose.
If
this
is
approved,
it
sets
a
precedent
for
future
developments.
It'll
be
very
hard
to
decline.
Another
dense
development
in
the
area
and
the
whole
Aquifer
recharge
system
could
be
upended.
The
next
speaker
is
Dr
Burke
Fisher.
He
has
40
plus
years
of
experience
as
an
environmental
geologist
and
hydrologist
he's
Adjunct
professor
at
OSU,
since
2012.
I
AS
Try
not
to
be
duplicative
of
Mr
Patterson.
Just
to
give
you
an
idea
of
where
those
Wills
are.
With
respect
to
the
proposed
put
1930
they're
there
they're
437
domestic
Wills,
it
is,
it
is
a
pretty
high
density.
Okay,
this
is
an
area
we
can
pull
that
down
right.
This
is
an
area
that
is
important,
very
important
to
recharge
from
the
USGS
report
on
the
Garber
Wellington,
the
darker
colors
indicate
a
greater
rate
of
inch
recharge
and
there's
a
sub
groundwater.
AS
Okay,
the
the
wells
there
don't
penetrate
Beyond
about
300
feet
within
that
mile
and
a
half
area
and
there's
a
reason
for
that,
and
this
is
the
reason
is
that,
although
in
the
USGS
report,
you'll
see
a
map
of
base
of
fresh
water
and
it's
hundreds
of
feet
below
the
surface,
but
it's
actually
based
on
is
a
value
of
5
000
parts
per
million
total
dissolved
solids
that
would
be
brackish
water,
US,
EPA,
secondary
standard
for
drinking
water
is
500
parts
per
million.
AS
So
if
we
put
this
in
context
here
with
respect
to
salinity
when
depth,
what
it
really
says
is
we
have
really
really
can't
drill,
much
Beyond
300
feet
and
anticipate
that
anticipate
encountering
water
that
meets
EPA
standards
for
drinking
where
it's
too
salty,
okay,
one
thing
that
Miss
Patterson
indicated
is
this:
is
a
large
drainage
basin
that
necks
down
right
into
this
development
and
in
this
development
the
sides
the
slopes
are
fairly
steep
next
to
the
drainage
way.
AS
Okay
and
one
of
the
the
question
has
been
brought
up,
wouldn't
this
actually
increase
recharge?
Not
really.
The
development
here
will
increase
prompt
discharge
from
the
Pud
area
Itself
by
quite
a
bit
and
based
on
looking
at
stream
stats
computations,
which
are
USGS
publicly
available
method
of
looking
at
discharge
from
streams.
If
we
don't
change
the
depth
30
seconds,
please
the
water,
the
water,
the
the
retention
Basin,
you
can't
store
all
the
water,
so
water
is
going
to
be
going
Downstream
from
the
excess
discharge
one
and
would
build
up
Upstream
because
it
reaches
an
impoundment.
AT
AS
Yeah
sorry
yeah
that
one
so
in
fact
the
the
rate
of
infiltration
through
the
soils
here
is
fairly
low.
They're
they're,
seeing
the
loams
they're
high
recharge
things,
but
if
I
put
the
amount
of
stacks
just
the
excess
storm
water
in
place,
it
might
take
up
to
60
days
for
it
to
actually
fully
infiltrate
just
the
excess
storm
water.
AS
Okay.
So
if
we
have
excess
water
from
here,
we
make
no
provision
to
store
it.
It
will
increase
flooding,
Downstream
and
would
back
up
Upstream.
The
only
solution
would
be
to
greatly
deepen
the
retention
Basin
that
is
present
here.
There's
excess
water
that
needs
to
be
dealt
with,
and
thank
you
if
you
have
questions
I'm
ready
to
respond.
AU
Thank
you,
council
members,
I'm
Dave,
Logan,
6308
Northeast
104
place.
Nearly
all
the
land
in
the
proposed
development
is
within
the
Upland
forest
and
contains
hundreds
and
hundreds
of
mature
treaties.
It's
also
in
the
Cross
Timbers
ecoregion,
and
these
are
really
big
Beauties.
These
big
black
jacks
and
Post
Oaks
they're
gorgeous
trees.
Some
of
the
specimens
I
think
it
was
mentioned
that
a
biology,
Professor
Chad
King
at
UCO,
spoke
to
the
age
of
these
things,
they're
80
to
120
years
old.
AU
When
these
big
Oaks
and
even
the
cottonwoods
reach
that
age,
you
can
easily
expect
them
to
double
that
they'll
be
around
much
longer
than
we
are.
If
we
can
hang
on
to
them.
The
aerial
map
that
I
passed
out
is
kind
of
just
a
color
chart
of
tree
height.
It
only
goes
up
to
Red,
which
is
40
to
50
feet.
Some
of
them
are
that
plus
a
little
bit
more.
These
really
are
big
gorgeous
oxygen.
Creating
carbon
gulping
aquifer
enriching
trees,
their
their
first
growth,
they're
they're.
AU
Quite
the
specimens,
many
of
them
the
notion
of
clear-cutting
that,
but
you
have
to
as
it's
been
described,
you
pretty
much
have
to
clear
cut
all
of
that
to
make
this
development
that's
in
direct
conflict
with
the
sustain
OKC
in
the
green
OKC
elements
of
the
comp
plan,
they
verily
care
carefully
crafted
in
the
comp
plan,
ways
to
deal
with
it.
Environmentally
sensitive
areas
such
as
this,
the
the
pod
that's
been
submitted
address
is
really
almost
none
of
that.
AU
The
surrounding
neighborhoods
have
dealt
with
that
in
various
ways.
You've
seen
some
of
the
highlights
of
how
they
look
today.
This
probably
started
back
in
the
80s
with
careful
lot
placement
strategic
locations
for
common
areas
and
even
streets
to
some
degree,
that's
how
they
got
tree
retention,
less
density,
careful
placement
of
houses,
common
areas
and
streets.
This
can
be
done
again.
It
is
possible
and
it's
viable
we're
not
opposed
the
surrounding
neighborhoods
to
Housing
Development.
We
are
excuse
me
ready,
30,.
AU
New
neighbors
and
an
alternative
that
can
preserve
trees
and
address
respect
to
the
environment,
really
is
viable
and
possible.
It
deserves
a
careful,
thoughtful
putt,
clear,
cutting
120
Acres
of
Upland
Forest
should
be
Unthinkable
to
us.
AU
There
are
sensible
Alternatives
again,
they
are
excuse
me
they
are
viable
Alternatives.
So
we
ask
you
to
reject
this
bud
in
favor
of
one
that
addresses
this
environmentally
sensitive
area.
Thanks
for
your
time,.
AV
My
name
is
Sheridan
Haynes
I
live
at
11,
500,
Countryside
Court
and
a
member
of
the
Oakdale
community
I
want
to
talk
about
a
major
concern
to
us
to
the
residents,
and
that
is
traffic.
The
impact
the
proposed
development
would
have
on
the
infrastructure
of
our
rural
roads
is
dramatic.
The
roads
in
the
surrounding
area
are
two
lanes:
no
shoulders,
no
street
lights,
no
bike
lanes
and
obviously
no
public
transportation.
AV
They
are
rural
roads.
The
addition
of
this
neighborhood
would
severely
increase
the
traffic
past.
What
is
currently
safe,
contrary
to
what
was
stated
earlier,
that
there
is
no
traffic
traffic
studies
indicate
high
traffic
counts,
which
would
increase
dramatically
with
this
new
development,
and
no
improvements
to
these
roads
have
been
funded
or
even
planned
for
Britton
Road
West
of
sooner
ACOG
shows
4609
trips
per
day,
currently
east
of
sooner
on
Britain
ACOG
shows
4
323
trips
per
day.
AV
A
traffic
study
by
traffic
engineering
Consultants
showed
over
6
100
more
trips
per
day
with
the
proposed
number
of
homes
in
this
development.
This
is
on
top
of
the
projected
750
additional
trips
per
day
that
is
being
added
by
the
fairly
new
development
Autumn
Park,
that
is
just
to
the
east.
In
total,
you
are
looking
at
an
increase
of
approximately
9
700
trips
per
day
on
two-lane
rural
roads.
AV
AV
It
is
also
an
area
that
is
popular
for
bicyclists,
making
the
increased
traffic
that
much
more
of
a
concern.
In
addition
to
traffic
I,
think
it's
important
to
clarify.
It
was
stated
earlier
by
the
applicant
that
they're
building
homes
for
teachers
and
for
generations
for
kids
to
come
back
and
and
raise
their
kids
in
Oakdale.
That
already
exists.
AV
It's
important
for
you
to
note
that
approximately
35
percent
of
the
teachers
and
staff
at
Oakdale
already
live
in
the
district,
and
there
are
numerous
families
sitting
in
this
room
today
that
are
that
grew
up
in
Oakdale,
live
miles
from
their
parents
and
are
raising
their
kids
and
they're
all
sitting
in
this
room.
Today,
30.
AW
AV
AW
Lauren
toppins
one
two:
zero
zero
one,
slash
slash
Pine
Drive
I
want
to
thank
you
for
the
opportunity
to
speak
this
morning,
and
it
was
very
important
to
me
to
come
up
here
and
represent
the
neighborhood
as
or
not
the
neighborhood,
the
community,
as
well
as
I,
felt
that
some
of
the
stats
that
have
been
given
were
a
little
bit
misleading
as
well
as
I,
feel.
One
of
the
most
important
issues
that
are
being
addressed
here
is
affordable
housing.
It's
something
that
our
city
needs
our
state.
Our
government
I
mean
our
Nationwide.
AW
We
need,
but
some
of
this
affordable
housing
that
has
been
brought
up
the
price
point.
The
square
footage
that
has
been
proposed
already
currently
exists:
I'm
a
real
estate
professional
in
Oklahoma
City,
as
well
as
in
Edmond
and
other
surrounding
communities.
So
I
am
knowledgeable
with
this,
so
I
wouldn't
provide
you
some
additional
facts.
AW
In
the
last
90
days,
25
of
the
homes
transactions
were
under
three
hundred
thousand.
In
the
last
six
months,
52
percent
of
those
transactions
were
under
500,
000.
I
know
we
heard
a
number
earlier.
Today.
That's
talked
about
what
the
ideal
homes
or
the
proposed
PUD,
would
those
price
point
of
homes,
and
so
I
thought
it
was
important
for
you
to
understand
that
that
does
exist
in
so
in
the
last
90
days,
25
were
under
300
000.
in
the
last
six
months,
52
percent
were
under
500
000.
AW
and
if
you
look
back
it
says
in
the
last
six
months
the
average
homes
that
were
sold,
the
the
square
footage
was
under
300
or
we're
under
3
000
square
feet.
The
actual
square
footage
average
was
2982
square
feet.
The
median
price
was
under
500
000..
The
median
price
for
the
last
six
months
in
the
Oakdale
community
that
feeds
into
the
school
district
was
495.
AW
AX
Good
morning,
councilwoman
and
and
Men
My
name
is
Natalie
Shirley
and
I'm
appearing
in
opposition
to
PUD
1930.
I
live
at
5200
white
fences,
but
where
I
really
live
is
in
a
community
of
hard-working
involved
in
caring
residents
exercising
their
rights
to
be
heard.
Kids
in
our
neighborhood
play
in
the
streets
and
the
adults
gather
to
talk
and
fellowship
almost
nightly
in
the
last
ice
storms.
My
neighbors
came
over
and
covered
my
Wellhead
a
couple
of
the
neighbors
rescued
every
dog
that
is
dumped
out
there
and
find
homes
for
for
them
or
keep
them.
AX
My
neighbors
have
baked
banana
bread
and
another
set
of
neighbors
baked
us
dog
treats.
We
are
united
in
our
desire
for
further
development
out
there.
Just
not
this
development.
The
proposed
density
will
wreak
an
environmental
disaster.
Others
have
and
and
will
talk
about,
various
issues
and
problems,
but
I
want
to
bring
up
just
too
number
one
run
off
and
resultant
flooding.
Without
this
development
we
already
have
significant
runoff
in
flooding
anytime,
the
area
gets
significant
rain,
clear-cutting
the
land
and
then
hardscaping
a
large
part
will
create
runoff
of
possible
catastrophic
proportion
in
2010.
AX
Sooner
was
so
flooded
that
many
surrounding
neighbors
were
trapped
for
days.
Britton
Road
was
washed
out
and
just
two
years
ago,
in
2021
Britton,
Road
washed
out
again,
although
it
was
repaired
pretty
quickly,
this
new
development
will
exacerbate
the
runoff
and
flooding
in
disastrous
ways
for
residents
and,
ultimately,
the
city
number
two.
The
comprehensive
plan
calls
for
a
gradual
transition
between
laws
that
are
not
at
least
60
percent
of
the
adjacent
Lots.
AX
The
entirety
of
the
east
side
of
the
Pud
is
adjoined
by
Lots
nearly
600
percent
the
size
of
the
Lots
on
ideals
plan,
as
presented.
This
clearly
fails
to
comply
with
the
comprehensive
plan
which
we
as
a
city
believe
should
guide
us
in
the
name
of
prophet
there's
been,
there
needs
to
be
a
responsible
rebuttal.
Yes,
there
should
be
development
of
this
property,
but
not
one
that
rapes
the
land
and
leaves
the
current
nearby
residents
worse
off.
Thank
you.
P
Okay,
thank
you,
Brad
Holtz,
you
may
have
lost
him,
I'll
hold
on
to
it.
Just
in
case
he
does
show
back
up.
Trevor
Hayes
is
next
followed
by
Jim
green.
AY
Hi
Trevor
Hayes
9700
Misty
Hollow
Lane
I'm,
going
to
speak
kind
of
more
towards
the
financials
of
the
development.
The
city's
own
comprehensive
plan
states
that
this
specific
area
is
the
most
cost
intensive
area
to
develop,
and
not
only
will
it
use
tax
dollars
inefficiently
for
everybody's
District.
It
will
tax
emergency
services
and
utilities
they
mentioned.
Affordable
housing,
affordable
housing
goes
where
existing
infrastructure
already
exists.
AY
I'm
a
developer
in
my
everyday
life
and
I
understand
the
expense
that
it
takes
to
get
these
utilities
out
to
these
rural
areas,
so
very
Adept
at
understanding
that
this
isn't
the
way
to
create
affordable
housing,
as
I
said
they
have
done.
Excuse
me
a
little
bit
sick.
That's
all
I
have.
AZ
BA
My
concern
is
obviously
I
live
a
half
a
mile
from
here
to
the
South
hello,
I
lived
a
half
a
mile
from
here
to
the
South
and
I
have
been
flooded
times
over
the
last
15
years,
I've
had
to
muck
out
my
shop
building
muck
out
my
basement.
My
pool
was
flooded,
which
flooded
the
basement.
BA
I
know
that
I'm,
a
geologist
as
well
I've
had
some
hydrogeology.
If,
if
you
approve
this
and
we
do
have
problems,
my
question
is:
what
is
our
recourse?
What
am
I
going
to
do
all
my
neighbors?
If
we
don't
have
water,
it
would
take
a
lot
to
bring
City
water
to
us.
We,
if
we
can't
drill
deeper,
because
we're
going
to
hit
salt
water.
P
Okay,
going
once
twice
for
John:
okay,
we'll
move
on
James
effinger,
followed
by
Carl
Johnson.
AG
Good
day
my
name
is
James
effinger
and
I
live
on
8904
acreview
Drive.
My
my
wife
told
me
to
stay
on
task
here,
but
I'm
going
to
tell
you
a
little
bit
about
myself.
AG
AG
AG
AG
AG
AG
BC
Hello
and
thank
you,
my
name-
is
Carl
Johnson
600
Northwest,
4th
Street,
Oklahoma,
City
I'm,
also,
the
new
superintendent
to
Oakdale
I
emphasize
new,
very
new,
the
school's,
not
here
to
take
a
position
on
this.
We're
a
public
education,
Republican
education
and
want
to
accept
every
family
that
comes
into
the
school
I
would
never
want
a
family
coming
into
the
school
thinking
that
we
did
not
want
them
there.
However,
there
are
some
concerns
about
the
burden
with
growth
and
I've.
BC
Had
one
conversation
with
the
developer,
and
the
thing
I
would
like
to
see
is
the
15
Acres
that
are
proposed
to
sell
to
the
school.
They
would
not
give
me
a
price,
and
it
concerns
me
at
this
point
that
we
didn't
have
a
price
for
that.
That
is
an
issue
the
school's
going
to
need
to
take
care
of
and
start
planning
for
early
on.
We
don't
have
that
money
sitting
in
the
budget
right
now,
we're
going
to
need
to
make
plans
for
that.
So
I
think
the
residents
are
doing
a
much
better
job.
BD
Hello,
this
one
all
right.
My
name
is
Nick
Gray
address,
11717,
slash,
Pine
Drive
In,
the
Shadow
Ridge
Neighborhood
in
Oakdale,
School
District
I.
Don't
want
to
continue
to
talk
about
a
lot
of
the
things
that
have
been
talked
about,
but
I
did
have
a
couple
of
just
concerns
that
I
wanted
to
talk
about.
I
am
speaking
in.
Opposition
of
this
I
feel
like
I,
have
a
little
bit
of
a
unique
perspective
and
that
I
grew
up
in
this
school
district.
I've
lived
in
it
almost
my
entire
life.
There's
almost
nothing.
BD
That's
changed
about
city
services
in
the
last
40
years
in
the
area,
all
the
roads
are
still
two
lane
roads,
there's
not
even
a
stoplight
out
by
Oakdale.
So
there
are
a
lot
of
traffic
concerns,
I'm,
not
a
geologist
or
anything.
So
I
can't
speak
to
anything
at
that,
but
we
do
have
a
water
well
on
our
property
as
well,
so
I
know
a
lot
of
people
are
concerned
about
that.
We
just
we're
not
opposed
to
housing
districts
like
everybody
else
has
said.
BD
Q
Hi
I'm
Kelly,
McDonald
I,
live
at
11812
Gwendolyn
Lane
in
the
district
I
would
like
to
point
out
basically
that
you
can
say
affordable
housing,
but
you
know
when
my
husband
and
I
got
married.
Our
affordable
housing
was
a
20
year
old
house
that
hadn't
been
renovated
in
20
years,
only
bought
it
for
seventy
five
thousand
dollars.
Q
We
do
have
Autumn
Ridge
Oakdale,
Ridge,
Oakdale,
Gardens,
Woodland,
Hills,
Oakdale,
Park
and
even
Abe's
RV
park
that
offers
affordable
housing
and
you
might
think
that
an
RV
park
doesn't
count,
but
there
are
20
trailer
houses
to
the
back
end
of
it
that
are
full
of
Oakdale.
Kids.
Woodland
Hills
is
manufactured
homes,
so
there
is
an
alternative
to
jamming
in
houses
that
are
not
affordable.
BF
Please
protect
the
Upland
Forest,
please
protect
the
Garber
Wellington
Aquaphor
and
I
oppose
this.
Thank
you.
BG
BH
Good
morning,
Scott
gleaves
12001
Ecker
drive,
you
know
really
honestly.
Today,
conversation
happening
is
really
saddening.
To
me,
it's
not
starting
to
the
growth
of
this
great
City
that
spent
my
entire
40
years
in
it's
saddening
that
we're
lowering
our
standards.
That's
what's
really
being
presented
here
today,
Nick
said
it
great
we're
putting
a
square
bag
in
a
round
hole.
The
city's
the
square
peg.
This
development's
a
round
hole
they're,
asking
you
to
shave
every
corner
to
try
to
make
something
fit.
BH
You
know
really
councilman
Cooper.
Your
discussion
on
on
Oak
Grove
earlier
just
really
resonates,
I
think
with
this
entire
Community.
It's
it's
the
vision
of
what
Oakdale
has
been
what
it
is,
what
it
will
be
and
I.
We
really
just
hope
that
you
know
in
consideration
this
pod
and
our
opposition
against
it
against
it.
What
you
said
earlier
would,
just
you
know,
really
I
think
maybe
resonate
through
through
what's
being
said
here
today.
BH
BH
Affordable
housing
is
everywhere.
It's
already
again,
as
it's
been
said
in
the
adult
community.
I
think
that
that's
already
been
that's
already
been
laid
out,
so
I'm
not
going
to
spend
much
time,
but
I
just
want
to
reiterate
that.
But
the
last
thing
I
want
to
bring
up
that
has
not
been
presented.
Today
is
The
Witcher
sewage
treatment
facility.
It's
already
at
capacity.
BH
My
kindergarten
son
complains
about
it
on
a
daily
basis
that
he
is
smelling
on
the
skull.
There's
130
new
properties
already
being
developed
in
the
area
that
are
going
to
feed
this
facility,
600,
plus
more
that's
going
to
vastly
increase,
what's
being
presented
to
this
facility
and
again
a
kindergartner.
BH
BI
Hi
I'm
Kimberly
gleaves,
my
address
is
11713
Katie
Cove
Scott
just
spoke
of
pretty
much
all
of
our
points,
but
what
I
do
want
to
say
is
that
I
grew
up
in
Oakdale
I've
lived
out
there
since
the
80s,
and
so
my
Roots
Run
Deep,
and
it
is
very
saddening
and
so
I
would
ask
for
your
no
vote
on
this
beauty.
Thank
you.
BJ
I
appreciate
the
opportunity
to
speak,
but
on
behalf
of
respective
of
your
time
my
property
backs
directly
up
to
the
proposed
pod.
So
all
of
the
attention
that's
been
spent
on
the
flooding
is
true.
It
comes
to
my
backyard
and
I
sent
you
guys,
a
video
of
that
and
the
traffic
and
just
The
beautiful
landscape
that
will
be
destroyed.
It's
true,
it's
in
my
backyard,
so
I
just
appreciate
you
denying
the
Pod.
Thank
you.
AL
Good
morning,
Josh
remain
5200.
Carrington
Place
people
have
already
covered
most
of
my
points,
I'll
just
say:
I'm
a
new
Resident
Oakdale.
We
bought
our
house
a
couple
years
ago
and
nobody
was
standing
in
red
shirts
when
I
moved
in.
So
there's
plenty
of
opportunity
to
move
into
this
neighborhood
without
clear-cutting
every
tree
outside
my
backyard.
That's
all
I
have.
Y
BK
Britton
Road
down
by
about
a
mile
from
where
this
Hut
is
I,
have
most
of
the
points
have
been
made.
Much
better
than
I
can
be
making
them
myself,
but
I
would
say
that
you
know
looking
at
it
just
as
a
house
buyer
and
as
a
citizen
you
know
it
is
it's
just
it's
incongruent
I
mean
it's
been
said
legally
and
professionally,
but
it's
just
it's
not
one
against.
You
know
one
for
one.
BK
BL
Good
afternoon
my
name
is
Marianne.
Rollins
I
live
at
5501
white
fences.
I
live
directly
across
the
street
from
the
proposed
development.
We
are
not
opposed
to
this
land
being
developed.
We
are
opposed.
You
know
we
are
opposed
to
655
homes
that
is
500
more
homes
than
any
other
development
in
our
area.
BL
Oakdale
is
a
unique
corner
of
Oklahoma
City.
It
allows
country
living
right
next
to
the
city
right
next
to
the
highway
for
everyone
to
get
to
their
jobs,
it's
full
of
trees
and
Rolling
Hills,
which
is
rare
in
Oklahoma
City,
and
it's
sad
to
think
that
it
could
possibly
be
clear-cut
and
look
like
the
rest
of
Oklahoma
City
and
we
all
put
up
with
the
inconveniences
of
living
with
Wells
and
septic
tanks
and
the
occasional
snake,
and
we
do
it
because
we
love
nature,
and
we
appreciate
the
natural
beauty
that
this
area
has
to
offer.
BL
BM
The
white
fences
HOA
I,
also
represent
14
other
HOAs
that
are
all
in
opposition.
I
just
wanted
to
make
a
comment
relative
to
what
was
said
by
the
first
hydrologist
relating
to
well.
Some
of
these
Wells
are
so
close
together
that
there's
you
know
that
they're
feeding
off
of
one
another
and
that's
the
problem
with
the
wells.
Well
number
one.
We
don't
have
a
choice.
BM
All
we
have
is
a
well.
We
don't
have
another
possibility
for
getting
water.
Okay,
now
white
fences
we're
a
five
acre
development.
My
home
is
directly
adjacent
to
the
subject
property,
which
is
200
open,
Acres.
My
well
is
already
failing:
okay,
there's
multiple
Wells
and
white
fences
that
are
failing.
BM
These
Wells
are
thousands
of
feet
apart,
not
200
feet
apart
and
our
only
choice
we're
already
at
250
feet
if
you
go
below
300
feet
with
with
most
of
these
Wells
you're
into
salt
water
you're
into
undrinkable
water,
so
we
have
an
extremely
narrow
band
that
we
can
tap
into
of
fresh
water
and
we're
already
struggling
in
our
development
of
big
big
acreages
with
our
with
our
wells.
Currently.
So
that's
just
a
real
world
experience
as
opposed
to
you
know:
theoretical
hydrology!
That's!
AT
This
land
is
not
flat
like
the
Deer,
Creek
and
area
where
I
used
to
live
in
the
Northwest
part
of
the
city,
and
so
this
is
a
different
Topography
of
land
and
we
need
to
look
at
it
in
a
different
way.
I,
please
vote
no
for
the
Pud
1930..
Thank
you.
P
BN
BN
BN
BO
Yes
again,
we
thank
you
so
much
for
your
service
and
appreciate
the
time
that
you've
allowed
us
today.
I'm
Amy,
Reed
I
live
at
9501,
Forestdale,
Drive
and
so
I'm
about
a
mile
from
it
and
already
having
some
will
issues
as
well
as
well,
and
we
have
also
lived
there.
22
years,
Dana
was
one
of
the
first
people
we
met,
and
so
it's
been
lovely
to
have
that
community
and
when
we
looked
at
updating
our
home
considered,
did
we
move
away
and
just
we
can't
give
up
this
area.
BO
BP
My
name
is
Kelly
Ginsberg
I
live
at
10013,
Forest
Glade
Drive,
like
many
others,
a
lot
of
the
points
have
been
made.
What
I
would
like
to
do
is
just
once
again
ask
that,
not
only
when
we
welcome
new
residents,
but
we
also
protect
the
residents
that
we
currently
have.
Like
many
others.
My
my
assets
are
all
in
my
home
when
we
purchased
the
home.
We
live
in
Oakdale
area
for
19
years
we
were,
we
looked
at,
you
know
all
of
the
different
things.
BP
We've
never
owned
a
house
with
a
well
and
so
with
all
of
the
nature
and
everything
we
felt
very
protected.
The
city
had
permitted
everything
we
felt
like
the
city
was
fine
with
how
it
was
I,
don't
know
how
we
lose
our
water
and
our
homes
then,
would
become
invaluable
I,
don't
know
how
we
bring
in
water
I.
Don't
know
that,
there's
a
plan
for
water
to
be
brought
into
these
neighborhoods.
They
were
built
on
the
presence
of
of
Wells.
BP
P
P
BQ
BQ
BQ
I
just
have
one
simple
point:
I'd
like
to
make
they're
talking
about
a
retention
pond
on
the
area
that
it
will
somehow
recharge
our
aquifer.
Retention
Ponds
retain
water.
They
don't
allow
the
water
to
seep
through.
It
is
important
that
the
water
go
through
not
just
run
off
and
become
run
off
and
and
cause
flooding.
Thank
you.
BR
BS
BT
AV
BU
BV
My
name
is
Teresa
Castaneda
I
live
at
7008,
Northeast
104th
Street,
that's
in
Apple,
Valley
I've
been
there
25
years,
I
moved
out
to
Apple
Valley
when
I
was
still
in
the
military.
My
husband
and
I
have
a
combined
total
of
38
years
in
the
military,
and
we've
lived
in
areas
that
are
extremely
dense
and
that's
why
we
chose
the
Oakdale
area
to
move
when
we
were
getting
ready
for
to
retire.
BV
I've
seen
a
lot
of
development
in
the
Oakdale
area,
and
it's
not
all
exactly
what
Apple
Valley
is,
but
it's
consistent
with
what
Apple
Valley
is
and
so
I
just
ask
that
if
we're
going
to
develop
this
area
that
we
keep
it
consistent
with
the
rural
area
that
we're
in,
we
all
love
it
out
there
and
we
would
just
like
to
keep
it
the
same.
So
I
ask
that
you
vote
no
on
PUD
1930.
P
BW
U
BX
Like
to
apologize,
I
think
I'm,
an
individual
that
tried
to
set
the
Mood
by
dimming
the
lights,
I
apologize,
City,
Council
Members.
Thank
you
so
much
for
your
service.
You're,
certainly
tasked
with
difficult
decisions
to
provide
our
city
with
places
that
we
can
raise
families
in
places
where,
quite
frankly,
we
can
choose
to
live
here
from
any
other
place
in
the
country,
and
we
Cho
we
choose
Oklahoma
City.
So
thank
you
for
your
leadership.
BX
That
would
limit
the
impermeable
surfaces
that
would
reduce
the
storm
water
runoff
issues
would
provide
better
support
for
the
aquifer
limit,
the
impact
on
the
school
that
is
already
near
capacity
and
reduce
the
traffic
burden
and
provided
development
that
is
much
more
commensurate
with
OKC's
comprehensive
plan.
Basically,
through
your
leadership,
I
urge
you
to
consider
and
embrace
a
development
plan
that
would
preserve
rural
character
and
natural
resources
that
have
defined
the
Oakdale
area.
Thank
you
for
your
time.
BY
Afternoon
my
name
is
Paul
boner
I
live
at
10012
Prosper
Drive
I
am
the
treasurer
of
the
Willow
Oaks
estates,
HOA
and
representing
them
here
today
we
moved
out
into
that
area
about
four
years
ago.
We
love
that
air.
We
always
wanted
to
live
there.
I've
born
and
raised
here
in
Oklahoma
I
have
most
of
the
things
were
just
said
by
the
gentleman
right
before
me.
BZ
BY
Were
very
well
spoken,
I
think
some
of
the
things
that
concern
me
the
most
are
the
clear
cutting
of
the
land
and
the
lot
sizes
we
as
Willow
Oaks,
just
happen
to
border
the
Estates
of
Apple
Valley,
but
yet
we
are
only
a
less
than
two
miles
away
from
Oakdale.
Yet
we
don't
get
to
send
our
kids
to
Oakdale.
We
have
to
send
them
12
miles
away
to
Jones.
We
would
much
prefer
to
be
able
to
be
part
of
the
Hopedale
system,
but
at
this
point
in
time
we
are
not
we're
all
in
well
water.
BY
We
get
city
sewer,
we
do
get
other
city
services,
but
we're
a
small
little
HOA,
but
we
urge
the
council
to
think
of
the
area
that
we
all
that
that
area
encompasses
and
what
it
has
looked
like
and
what
it
has
been
for
many
years
and
although
change
is
evident
and
and
needs
to
come,
I
think
it
needs
to
become
that
something
more
melds
into
the
existing
Community.
Thank
you
very
much.
CA
Hello,
Nathan
Higgins,
10309,
Timber,
Valley,
Drive,
I,
actually
border
this
property
and
just
ask
you
all
to
vote
no
on
this
beauty.
Thank
you.
BY
CB
Old
River
Trail,
I
I'm,
an
attorney
and
I,
was
in
a
hearing
several
years
ago
an
opposing
Council
got
up
and
and
said
that
he
wasn't
sure
everything
I
had
said
was
wrong,
but
he
couldn't
think
of
anything.
I
said
that
was
right.
CB
CB
The
best
things
that
this
Council
has
done
have
been
things
that
are
either
respectful
of
the
existing
historical
uses
but
improve
upon
them
or
have
a
bold
New
Vision
for
an
area,
and
this
Council
has
done
both
the
proposal
by
ideal
is
neither
it
should
be
rejected
and
I
ask
you
to
vote
against
it.
Thank
you.
CC
Good
afternoon
I'm
John
Crosby
I
live
at
11
400
Old
River
Trail
in
Edmond
Oklahoma
I'm
here
today
to
enthusiastically
propose
that
you
vote
against
PUD
1930
and
the
development
project
in
this
case
due
to
the
serious
threat
it
poses
on
the
aquifer
in
the
area.
As
you're
aware,
the
aquifer
is
a
critical
resource
that
provides
water
to
the
surrounding
communities,
including
drinking
water
from
Lake
Arcadia,
one
of
only
three
Water
Resources
in
the
Edmond
community
and
its
loss
would
have
far-reaching
and
devastating
consequences.
CC
On
several
occasions
today,
I've
heard
speakers
not
related
to
1930
discussed
to
you,
council
members.
The
importance
of
water
I
have
seen
your
eye
contact
with
that
speaker.
I
have
seen
you
nod
in
confirmation
and
smiles
affirming
the
importance
of
the
Water
Resource
One
thing.
That's
not
been
considered
today
about
this
Water
Resource
is
what
they're
proposing
putting
in
over
600
homes
into
this
community.
CC
Where
that
water
is
going
to
go
is
coming
going
to
come
off
the
top
of
their
roofs
and
in
a
community
like
that,
it's
going
to
run
into
their
their
yards,
which
have
been
treated
with
pesticides
and
all
sorts
of
things.
This
is
going
to
go
into
Lake
Arcadia.
That
is
going
to
be
more
resources
that
the
that
the
community
is
going
to
have
to
pay
for
through
tax
dollars
in
order
to
be
able
to
feed
back
into
the
community
so
that
we
can
actually
consume
it.
CC
The
development
project
in
question
is
set
to
remove
all
of
the
trees,
a
significant
portion
of
the
grass
and
all
and
a
lot
of
the
above
ground
above
the
aquifer.
These
are
three
the
three
most
significant
resources
that
protect
the
aquifer
and
ensure
is
able
to
produce,
protect
and
preserve
the
aquifer.
The
loss
of
this
aquifer
would
result
in
a
significant
reduction
in
the
amount
of
water
available
to
the
local
consumers.
CC
CC
There
are
massive
implications
not
just
to
the
water,
but
to
the
overall
cost
of
this
community
and
the
taxpayer
dollars.
Furthermore,
the
loss
of
the
aquifer
would
also
have
a
negative
impact
on
the
local
ecologic
ecologic.
Ecology
excuse
me,
and
the
potential
loss
of
important
species
and
habitats,
not
to
mention
Financial
impacts,
which
I've
already
discussed
given
the
severity
and
the
risks
associated
with
this
development
I
strongly
urge
you
to
shut
down
PUD
19
1930
immediately.
There
are
alternative
locations.
Different
strategies
that
can
be
used,
I
am
certainly
for
growth.
CC
BZ
CD
Excuse
me
one:
zero,
seven,
zero,
nine
Green,
Valley
Road,
we're
in
the
we'll
see
in
the
Oakdale
district
and
I
just
like
to
raise
a
couple
points
again.
I
want
to
emphasize
the
importance
that,
and
also
like
to
cite
a
journal.
Article
I
actually
didn't
expect
to
speak
so,
but
I
did
a
quick
research
I'm,
a
public
health
professional
by
training
in
the
field
for
20
years.
CD
So
I
just
also
like
to
talk
about
these
variables
that
the
community
members
have
already
raised
and
also
raised
by
folks
who
are
being
paid
by
the
developers
that,
in
terms
of
the
environmental
impact,
the
100
depletion
of
the
tree,
canopy
is
very
well
cited.
CD
It's
a
recent
article
in
the
Journal
of
environmental
health
and
research
and
public
health,
showing
that
a
reduction
in
the
tree
canopy,
especially
now
that
I
learned
it's
100
depletion,
is
actually
going
to
have
a
significant
reduction
on
our
climate
resilience
which,
as
you
have
seen
in
the
news
that
that
oftentimes
cause
displacement
of
the
population.
So
I
like
to
really
emphasize
that
the
environmental
impact
is
so
significant
for
this.
With
this
number
of
housing
units
being
proposed,
that
I
I
believe
that
that's
that
and
it's
oftentimes
irreversible.
CD
So
that
is
something
that's
of
extreme
concern
to
us
and
number
two.
The
infrastructure
there's
going
to
be
the
the
the
the
fact
that
they
cited
that
there's
going
to
be
going
to
be
no
increase
in
traffic
is
a
little
difficult
to
believe,
but
that
stress
on
the
infrastructure.
Where
is
the
cost?
Gonna
who's
gonna
bear
the
cost
so
with
the
city,
conducting
economic
impact
analysis
on
that
and
and
or
what
the
residents
have
to
take
up
the
the
cost
that
you
know
whether
or
not
their
calculated
or
unanticipated.
CD
That's
also
a
question,
and
also
I'd
like
to
also
point
out
that
the
this
knot
in
my
backyard
accusation
I,
find
it
personally
offensive
and
it's
an
insult
to
our
community
It's,
a
Wonderful
Community.
We
welcome
new
neighbors,
just
not
this
type
of
high
density,
which
is
not
not
only
is
it
unfair
to
the
current
residents,
but
it's
also
unfair
to
those
who
will
be
purchasing
these
these
homes
and
the
argument
that
that
this
is
going
to
increase,
affordable
housing
is
also
not
well.
It's
a
little
disingenuous
to
be.
CD
CE
CD
CF
All
right,
thank
you
for
your
time
today
my
name
is
Justin.
Hitchcock
I
live
at
10709,
Saint
Michael
Circle
in
the
Oakdale
Valley
subdivision.
The
points
I
was
going
to
make
have
already
been
covered,
so
in
the
interest
of
time,
I
will
just
ask
you
to
please
vote
no
on
PUD
1930..
Thank
you.
CG
Thank
you
for
having
us
today.
My
name
is
Kara
Snyder
10209,
barrywood
Drive,
my
husband,
Charles
and
I
have
four
kids,
three
of
which
are
in
Oakdale
public
schools,
and
our
four-year-old
cannot
wait
to
become
an
Oakdale
rocket.
Many
of
our
concerns
have
already
been
addressed.
However,
if
you
have
not
and
I
believe
are
worth
voicing,
Oakdale
is
a
community
of
diverse
in
both
families
and
people.
Oakdale
encompasses
homes
found
in
trailer
parks
and
gated
communities.
There
are
rental
homes,
duplexes,
Town,
Homes,
hotels,
single-family
homes
and
luxury
homes.
CG
The
price
range
of
a
home
in
Oakdale
can
be
found
across
the
Spectrum.
There
are
currently
1400
to
1500
homes
in
the
Oakdale
School
District,
with
the
current
enrollment
of
around
730
students,
our
school
ranges
from
pre-k
through
8th
grade
Oakdale
Public
Schools
started
as
a
one-room
schoolhouse.
Over
a
hundred
years
ago.
Our
community
has
clearly
grown
and
we
in
red
have
all
benefited
from
growth
since
then,
but
it
has
taken
decades
and
decades.
It
has
also
taken
thoughtful
consideration
for
what
is
best
for
families
in
the
community.
CG
Oakdale's
growth
has
seen
study
and
gradual
oakdale's
growth
has
been
study
and
gradual,
allowing
the
school
and
Community
to
accommodate
growth,
putting
in
place
the
necessary
infrastructure,
acquire
land,
build
facilities,
update
and
maintain
playgrounds
and
football
fields,
build
parking,
lots,
hire
teachers
and
other
faculty
and
maintenance
staff.
Over
time.
The
proposed
neighborhood
by
ideal
homes
will
increase
our
community
by
43
to
46
percent.
In
a
matter
of
just
a
few
years,
we
are
living
in
Oakdale.
We
who
are
living
in
Oakdale
agree
that
that
is
not
is
what's
best
for
our
community.
CG
CG
My
concern
is,
at
the
time
it
it
will
take
to
plan
purchase
land
build
a
school
hire
faculty
will
take
much
longer
than
the
rate
of
growth.
The
proposed
neighborhood
will
add
to
the
community.
My
concern
and
the
concern
of
my
community
is
that
this
kind
of
growth
will
be
overwhelming
to
our
beloved
teachers,
faculty
and
facilities.
In
addition
to
the
traffic
concerns
already
mentioned,
I
would
also
like
to
point
out
that
each
one
of
us
able
to
be
present
here
today
represents
a
handful
of
our
neighbors,
who
could
not
be
here
30.
CG
CG
We
also
represent
the
most
precious
of
our
community,
whose
voice
is
not
heard
today.
Our
children
I
have
heard
it
said
that
if
you
have
something
to
say
at
the
city
council
meeting
do
not
talk
about
the
school
that
our
argument
will
be
stronger
if
we
focus
on
other
points
of
concern.
I
apologize
but
I
do
not
see
how
we
can
have
this
conversation
without
carefully
and
respectfully
talking
about
our
school
and
the
effects
that
it
will
have
on
our
classrooms
and,
ultimately,
our
children.
CG
In
addition
to
the
well
laid
out
points
of
concern,
PUD
1930,
will
have
on
the
surrounding
environment.
I
do
understand
that
this
neighborhood
has
its
benefits.
Overwhelmingly
to
me,
it
seems
like
those
who
will
benefit
are
just
a
tiny
handful
of
people
with
pricing
of
homes
between
270
000
to
nearly
half
a
million
dollars.
The
appeal
to
consider
affordable
housing
for
the
first
time
home
buyer
seems
Nolan
void.
CG
The
benefit
appears
primarily
to
be
a
financial
windfall
for
just
a
few
and
I'm
pleading
with
the
members
of
the
city
council
and
to
consider
the
Oakdale
Community.
We
are
not
against
growth.
Members
of
council.
Please
hear
us,
we
are
not
afraid
or
opposed
to
it.
Oakdale
is
the
most
welcoming
Community
I
have
ever
been
a
part
of.
Please
take
into
account
the
sincere
desire
for
our
community
to
be
able
to
accommodate
this
growth
over
time
and
do
not
allow
the
current
proposal
as
it
is
to
pass.
Thank
you
thank.
CH
CI
CJ
BP
AF
Thank
you
so
much
I
appreciate
you
hearing
us
today.
My
name
is
Renee.
Mcclanahan
I
live
at
11725,
Cardinal
Lane.
We
are
just
north
east
of
Oakdale
School
in
the
proposed
Community,
the
water
aquifer,
Etc
I'm,
not
a
geologist
I'm
married
to
petroleum
engineer,
and
when
we
could
barely
get
enough
water
to
turn
on
our
showers,
we
had
to
drill
a
second
will
this
January
and
it's
not
cheap,
and
we
were
told
at
that
point
that
if
we
have
to
drill
again,
we
can't
we
will
hit
salt
water.
AF
AF
CK
Hallway
I
appreciate
that,
yes,
we
are
navigating
nap
times
and
meal
times
to
be
here.
It's
very
important
when
I
first
moved
to
Oakdale
with
my
husband
seven
years
ago,
when
we
first
got
married
eight
years
ago,
I
was
the
country-loving
girl.
I
wanted
to
be
way
out
in
the
middle
of
nowhere,
but
my
husband
loved
the
city.
We
landed
in
Oakdale.
CK
What
we
didn't
count
on
is
the
Abundant
nature,
natural
resources,
the
beauty,
the
community.
We
have
fallen
in
love
with
the
area.
What
we
also
didn't
know
at
the
time
was
that
there
are
bald
eagles
on
Midwest,
Boulevard
and
Hefner,
and
we
have
some
Farmland
there,
but
these
bald
eagles
also
they
come
back
every
single
year.
CK
They
build
their
nest,
their
nests
and
their
Eagles
around
the
lake
Arcadia
area,
and
that
area,
including
Oakdale,
is
known
to
the
federal
government
as
being
a
natural
environment
for
bald
eagles
that
return
year
after
year,
decade
after
decade,
and
by
taking
down
the
homes
in
this
proposed
pun,
you
are
running
the
Eagles
off
you're,
eliminating
potential
areas
of
not
just
where
they
can
live,
but
where
they
can
also
find
their
food.
So
my
big
complaint
today
is
all
has
already
been
made
by
everybody
here.
CK
Ryan
is
making
his
own
complaints,
but
nobody
has
touched
yet
on
the
home
and
the
environment
of
the
bald
eagles.
They
are
vital
to
our
area
and
their
source
of
identity,
not
just
for
Oakdale
but
for
Oklahomans
and
for
Americans
in
general.
So
I
oppose
the
Pud
1930
I.
Ask
that
you
do
the
same
I.
Second,
everybody's
opinions
and
complaints
here.
Thank
you.
So
much
for
your
time.
CL
CL
Why
we're
one
of
the
few
areas
that
has
these
beautiful
trees
and
to
that
extent,
I'll
tell
you
that
in
our
neighborhood
association,
I'm
on
the
design,
Review
Committee
and
we
go
through
considerable
pains
on
the
lots
that
we
have
they're
one
acre
minimum
when
we
work
with
homeowners
that
are
going
to
build
in
there,
we
take
great
deal
of
concern
to
preserve
as
many
trees
as
we
can.
Even
on
those
one,
eight
one
acre
lots.
CL
That
means
not
having
the
house
may
be
directly
parallel
with
the
street
those
kinds
of
things.
Another
thing
that's
kind
of
interesting
about.
Our
addition
is
that
we've
tried
there's
been
several
attempts
to
have
street
lights
put
in
there
and
it's
been
voted
down
every
time,
because
people
like
that
rural
setting,
it's
dark
out
there.
You
can
actually
see
at
night
the
stars
at
night,
and
so
that's
really
what
Oak
deals
a
lot
about.
Is
that
sort
of
Lifestyle
and
also
I
want
to
talk
real
quickly
about
the
the
traffic
situation?
CL
That's
been
out
there
along
Hefner
Road,
which
is
a
mile
to
the
north.
It's
a
real
popular
bicyclist
destination
and
in
the
past,
there's
been
some
bicyclists
hit
and
injured
and
a
couple
even
killed
out
there.
We
appealed
to
the
city
to
reduce
the
speed
limit
in
there
and
we
succeeded.
We
got
it
reduced
from
50
miles
an
hour
on
this
two-lane
road
with
no
easements
down
to
45.,
and
you
know
we
we
just
haven't
had
a
whole
lot
of
luck,
really
dealing
with
traffic.
That's
come
along
there.
CL
So
this
addition,
where
this
many
homes
is
really
going
to
add
to
the
traffic
that
comes
in
there.
Oakdale
schools
is
a
is
a
real
Gem
and
that's
what
attracts
a
lot
of
young
families
to
the
area
and
in
my
addition,
I
I
see
people
driving
their
kids
to
school
all
the
time
school
buses
come
through
there
and
they
have
one
or
two
kids
on
there.
Nearly
everybody
drives
their
kid
to
the
school.
C
CL
Gets
in
there
there's
going
to
be
a
lot
of
kids
and
we
love
them.
I've
I've
had
kids
that
went
through
there
and
I
just
want
to
say
that
that
traffic,
when
that
happens,
is
really
going
to
impact
that
area
hard
I
mean
it's,
it's
almost
impossible
to
get
through
there
when
it's
time
to
pick
up
kids
Additionally
the
traffic
north
on
Sooner
Road
is
going
to
pick
up
dramatically
because
all
the
shopping
is
to
the
north.
You
have
to
go
up
to
Edmond,
so
we
have
no
traffic
lights
there.
CL
It's
the
nearest
ones,
a
mile
and
a
half
away
and
I
just
think
that
this
is
really
incompatible
and
it's
going
to
have
a
dramatic
impact
on
our
neighborhood
thanks
for
your
time.
We
appreciate
it.
Thank
you.
BF
BF
AX
BF
Our
beloved
Oakdale
Community,
if
that
were
to
take
place
and
I'm,
asking
you
to
consider
children
like
mine
in
families
like
ours,
when
you
look
at
the
repercussions
that
such
a
dense
development
would
have
on
such
a
small
community
I
currently
sit
on
the
board
of
our
school
foundation
and
we
have
an
annual
Memorial
Scholarship
that
is
awarded
to
former
Oakdale
students
who
are
currently
graduated
from
high
school.
This
year
there
was
a
line,
and
one
of
the
applicant's
essays
that
stood
out
to
be
to
convey
what
Oakdale
truly
embodies
they
stated.
BF
Oakdale
is
a
very
unique
culture.
When
I
talk
to
my
high
school
friends
that
attended
other
local,
elementary
or
high
schools,
it's
clear
that
what
I
experienced
at
Oakdale
was
special.
The
close-knit
community
and
the
small
class
sizes
create
an
environment
where
students
are
empowered
to
try
all
kinds
of
different
things
and
when
we
fail,
Oakdale
is
a
soft
place
to
land.
BF
Mr
roach
from
my
deal
of
homes,
gave
a
very
heartwarming
speech
about
his
childhood
and
his
gratefulness
of
receiving
an
Edmond
public
school
education
and
I
am
also
a
product
from
Evan
Public
Schools.
However,
my
story
looks
much
different.
I,
unfortunately
attended
school
during
a
time
of
a
significant
growth,
where
many
of
my
classes
were
overflowing
with
students
and
half
of
my
classrooms
were
in
Portable
Buildings.
BF
My
child,
if
the
proposed
PUD
before
you
was
not
passed
today,
that
does
not
mean
there
will
not
be
growth
in
the
Oakdale
area.
There
are
other
developers
and
the
land
will
be
developed.
There
will
meet
new
neighborhoods
and
there
will
be
more
rooftops,
but
it
doesn't
have
to
look
like,
what's
being
proposed
to
you
today,
I'm
asking
you
to
vote
no
today
and
allow
our
community
to
grow
and
expand
at
a
reasonable
rate
and
one
that
will
not
only
benefit
our
students
today,
but
will
also
benefit
the
students
that
will
be
here
tomorrow.
BE
Hi,
my
name
is
darcio
plotnik
and
I
live
at
10915
waterswelling
way
in
Lakeside
of
Oakdale,
and
my
husband
and
I
own,
the
16
acres
on
sooner
between
Britain
and
Hefner,
just
north
of
the
proposed
development,
as
already
discussed
by
Burton
Larry.
The
development
would
be
adding
a
large
amount
of
impermeable
structures
that
will
increase
the
amount
of
storm
water
runoff
that
will
go
directly
onto
our
property.
BE
Once
the
retention
Pond
fills
to
capacity
and
begins
to
overflow,
which
it
will,
the
landowner
proposal
will
be
very
expensive
to
develop
due
to
extreme
topography
and
flood
Plains.
All
Trees
will
have
to
go
and
virtually
every
home
will
have
a
retaining
wall.
This
guarantees
that
these
will
be
the
most
expensive,
affordable
homes
in
Oklahoma.
In
Oakdale
we
have
multi-generational
families
living
in
our
community,
we
care
for
one
another
and
we
will
care
for
those
yet
to
come.
We
are
all
for
developing
the
area,
but
it
should
be
smart.
BE
CE
Hello,
thank
you
so
much
for
the
opportunity
to
share
some
thoughts
with
you.
My
name
is
Stacy
howeth
I
live
at
9209
Paseo
Del
Vita,
which
is
in
casabella
the
neighborhood
on
Britain.
As
you
approach
the
area
of
discussion
today,
so
I
don't
want
to
belabor
any
of
the
points
that
have
already
been
made,
but
I
do
want
to
share
a
different
perspective.
I
grew
up
in
a
very
small
town
in
Northwest
Oklahoma,
so
small
I
grew
up
on
a
farm.
I
showed
sheep
and
I
graduated
with
only
20
people.
CE
Is
this
still
working?
Okay
for
several
years,
my
husband
and
my
family
lived
in
another
area
of
the
metro
and
we
so
so
much
yearned
for
that
small
community
area
that
we
both
knew
as
we
were
growing
up
after
many
years
of
planning
and
researching
and
visiting
different
areas,
we
were
elated
to
find
Oakdale.
We
were
so
excited
to
move
to
that
community.
CE
In
fact,
the
people
in
this
very
room
today
are
the
people
that
welcomed
us.
The
word
opposition
or
opposing
naturally
carries
a
negative
connotation,
but
I
would
suggest
that
today
is
the
very
opposite
thing
that
is
happening.
The
people
in
this
room
are
the
ones
that
welcomed
us.
My
son's
kindergarten
teacher
is
in
this
room.
We've
had
pool
parties
with
people
in
this
room.
What
we
are
vouching
for
today
is
the
opportunity
to
preserve
and
protect
the
right
to
support,
all
that
is
good,
the
environment,
the
natural
resources
and,
most
importantly,
the
people.
CE
P
AD
Thank
you
very
much.
My
name
is
Sean
Fulkerson
and
I'm
on
behalf
of
the
protest.
First
of
all,
I
want
to
start
off
by
saying
how
proud
I
am
to
be
here
today.
This
is
how
government
should
operate.
People
should
be
able
to
air
their
concerns.
You
folks
have
a
hard
job.
We
all
know
that,
but
on
behalf
of
all
these
people
they're
here
today,
I'm
going
to
implore
you
to
listen
to
them.
AD
This
is
important
to
them
and
when
I
got
involved
in
this
I
told
them,
I
said
we're
going
to
do
this
in
a
respectful
manner.
We're
going
to
work
through
this
Council
we're
going
to
work
through
this
Planning
Commission,
and
we
are
going
to
do
things
the
right
way
and
what
you
we've
done
today
is
we've.
Given
you
a
clear
road
map,
you've
heard
our
experts.
AD
AD
AD
This
Council
has
done
so
many
good
things,
and
today
denying
PUD
1930
is
the
right
thing
to
do.
You've
denied
it
before
this
one's
even
worse
than
the
one
that
was
denied
before
and
there's
no
question
about
it.
If
they
want
to
go
to
court,
they've
threatened
people
with
legal
action,
we're
going
to
go
and
we're
going
to
defend
this
thing
to
The
Bitter
End.
These
people
care
about
it,
they're
they're,
here
on
a
Tuesday
giving
it
all
they
have,
and
so
I
want
you
to
hear
them
and
I
implore
you
to
deny
1930..
P
X
X
This
has
been
a
task
as
far
as
us,
just
being
able
to
meet
being
able
to
talk
and
being
able
to
hear
each
other
and
and
not
a
lot
of
folks
can
do
that
and
I
do
know.
There
were
some
times
where
we
did
have
to
say
hold
on,
let's,
let's
breathe,
and
let's
come
back
to
that
conversation.
But
again,
those
folks
that
I
have
now
created
and
established
a
friendship
and
relationship
with
from
us
meeting.
X
I
say
thank
you,
I,
don't
want
you
all
to
feel
as
if
the
things
that
you
have
said
and
have
presented
have
not
gone
in
vain,
because
I
definitely
take
those
things
into
account.
So
I
appreciate
everyone's
willingness
to
at
least
come
to
the
table
and
all
of
us
to
speak
together
there.
There
were
a
couple
things
as
I:
go
through
just
some
notes
that
I
made
that
I
wanted
to
address
and
I'm
hoping
that
we
can
do
that.
X
One
was
the
the
price
for
the
school
and
I
did
receive
your
email
to
the
incoming
superintendent.
Thank
you.
I
did
reach
out
to
our
developers
yesterday
and
ask
them
if
this
has
not
been
addressed.
Please
address
that
for
me.
So
I
will
ask
you
all
to
do
that
open
and
publicly
in
just
a
second
and
while
you're
there.
X
If
there
were
some
other
things
that
we
needed
to
to
respond
to,
especially
the
one
last
thing
that
I
did
here
and
I
want
clarification
myself,
because
from
the
information
that
I
have
received
as
far
as
the
recusal,
it
did
not
come
from
the
developers,
so
I
just
want
to
make
certain.
If
that
is
true.
Okay,
if
it's
that's
not
what
I
understood
and
what
I
had
heard
from
the
from
my
my
city,
staff
and
I
also
want
to
speak
through
the
Witcher
Pump
Station.
You
know
to
the
glees
family.
Thank
you
for
that.
X
I
did
I
wanted.
I
knew
I
had
some
information
on
that,
so
I
asked
the
city
manager
to
help
me
get
an
update
on
that.
So
I
want
to.
Let
you
all
know
what
we
are
looking
at.
So
this
was
as
far
as
March
was
an
update
of
three
or
four
weeks
of
an
increase
of
that
odor,
but
the
rest
of
that
email
continued
to
speak
about
a
six-month
treatment
effort
in
order
to
find
correct,
dosing
and
timing
of
product
to
address
the
odor.
So
I
I
don't
want
you
to
think
we.
X
We
just
left
it
alone
and
you're
going
to
have
a
stinky
area.
You're,
not
we're
working
through
that
we're
going
to
continue
to
work
through
that
and
there's
a
five-year,
Capital
Improvement
plan
to
help
us
continue
to
address
that.
So
I
just
want
to
make
that
very
clear
today.
Just
if
there
are
other
concerns,
please
send
them
my
way,
so
we
can
start
having
additional
conversations.
If
there
have
some
are
some
that
have
been
missed
throughout
that
process.
Of
that
conversation.
X
As
far
as
our
traffic
infrastructure
I
know,
there
were
a
lot
of
concerns
about
our
traffic
infrastructure.
I
know,
and
we
can
speak
to
traffic
impact
fees
that
will
also,
if
any
development
that
we
have
through
our
city.
We
talk
through
what
those
traffic
impact
fees
can
bring
for
the
traffic
infrastructure
that
could
happen
for
for
our
residents
within
communities
for
that
same
development
or
potential
development.
X
So
I'll
start
in
with
that,
and
if
we
can
have
for
our
traffic
impact
fees,
I
may
ask
if
we
can
have
our
planning
director
out
speak
to
our
traffic
impact
fees.
If
you
don't
mind,
and
let
just
so,
we
all
have
an
understanding
of
what
that
means
when
we
have
developments
that
come
along
with
with
traffic
concerns.
CM
Certainly
Jeff
Butler
planning
director
we
do
charge
impact
fees,
so
each
each
home
that
is
built
would
have
to
pay
an
amount,
that's
based
on
their
square
footage
and
that
Public
Works
conducts
traffic
impact,
analyzes
or
traffic
studies
for
certain
areas
and
that
that
area
has
infrastructure
planned
already
and
it
has
updated.
Those
plans
are
updated
as
needed
every
few
years,
so
that's
kind
of
the
process.
CM
If,
if
the
development
were
to
happen
or
a
development
were
to
happen
there,
that
development
would
be
put
in
to
the
to
the
modeling
and
that
would
be
planned
for
future
say
an
intersection
Improvement
or
if,
if
we're,
widening
or
needed
at
some
point
down
the
road,
those
projects
could
be
built
either
by
impact
fees
or
through
a
future
Geo
Bond
project
happy
to
answer
any
other
questions
or.
X
CM
Answer
the
typical
timeline
for
it
takes:
it
depends
on
the
project,
so
first
the
project
would
have
to
be
identified
and
have
to
be
put
in
the
plan
and
the
plans
prioritized
depending
on
the
need.
So
it's
again
it's
highly
dependent
on
the
project
and
the
need
the
the
speed
of
development.
That's
happening.
X
Even
though
we
passed
that
in
2007
so
I'm
not
going
to
say
it's
a
fast
process,
because
it's
not,
we
are
starting
some
of
our
early
2017
projects
and
it's
2023.
So
just
be
mindful
of
of
that.
That's
the
unfortunate
part
of
of
how
this
process
works.
It's
not
as
fast
as
we
would
like
it
to
be,
and
that's
that's
very
unfortunate.
X
AK
Sure
so,
on
the
the
school
topic,
so
it's
a
20,
Acre
Site,
five
of
the
Acres
will
be
donated
as
a
gift.
The
other
15
will
be
sold
at
a
no
profit
made,
and
so
what
we
can
do
is
a
not
to
exceed
number
of
fifty
five
thousand
dollars
per
acre
and
if
there
are
cost
savings
and
the
development
costs
less,
those
savings
will
be
passed
on
on
those
15
Acres,
so
we're
not
to
exceed
55
000
on
the
15
and
a
gift
of
five.
AK
Well,
on
the
recusal
one
of
the
council,
members
recused
on
his
own
doing
I
had
nothing
to
do
with
it.
I
raised
I
couldn't
say
something.
AD
X
I
appreciate
that
I
just
want
to
make
sure
I
want
to
be
very
transparent,
as
we
continue
through
this
process
was
that
all
you
had.
AJ
X
What
you
heard
then,
in
comparison,
also
to
what
you've
heard
now
and
I
will
say,
while
we
weren't
able
to
get
it
to
fully
where
we
needed
to
one
of
my
concerns
was
removing
those
homes
from
the
floodplain
area,
because
perception
is
reality,
I
get
that,
and
that
was
a
grave
concern
for
a
lot
of
folks
to
say
these.
These
homes
are
heavily
in
the
flood
plain
area,
so
the
developer
did
agree
to
remove
those,
and
this
was
after
the
Planning
Commission
meeting.
So
I
do
want
to
make
sure
that
is.
X
W
I
have
a
question.
We
heard
drastically
different
opinions
on
the
aquifer
and
I'm
wondering
what
the
city's
version
of
the
story
on
the
aquifer
is.
Do
we
have
somebody
that
could
come
speak
to
us
on
the
aquifer,
because
the
Taps,
the
Taps
wide
open
the
tap
is
blown
closed
and
sorry
we
have
to
go
from
City
staff
reports.
I
mean
we
have
experts
here
on
two
different
experts
with
the
same
qualifications
and
I'm
not.
W
M
That's
not
something
that
we
have
studied
directly.
We
could
have
staff,
look
at
that,
but
I
think
really.
If
we
were
going
to
go
out
and
do
that
we
would.
We
would
hire
someone
an
expert
to
do
that.
I,
don't
know,
we've
got
someone
expert
on
staff.
That
would
do
it,
but
it's
something
that
we
could
explore.
If
you
need
that
Mr.
X
City,
but
let
me
say
this
I'm
sorry
before
you
speak-
that
that's
the
unfortunate
events
right
now
with
this
with
this
self,
because
our
our
plan
says
one
thing
and
we're
at
the
point
where
some
of
our
our
staff
says
another
piece,
and
we
have
conflicting
geologists,
saying
to
the
point
of
that
saying
something
else,
and
this
is
not
going
to
be
the
last
time.
This
conversation
happens,
especially
in
some
of
our
more
rural
parts
of
our
city,
that
rely
on
well
Waters
or
aquifers,
or
anything
of
the
such.
M
CM
Yes,
so
the
the
conference
of
plan
does,
you
know,
designate
this
awkward
aquifer
as
having
some
vulnerability
and
that's
that's
sourcing,
other
documents
from
the
state
and
so
forth.
So,
but
what
city
manager
Freeman
is
talking
about
is
absolutely
correct.
If,
when
we
get
into
a
PUD
of
this
nature
or
the
city
council,
Planning
Commission
does
have
the
ability
to
to
further
study
any
particular
issue
that
they
feel
is
necessary.
CM
So
we
certainly
could
go
into.
You
know,
hire
somebody
for
example,
and
get
the
level
of
expertise
needed.
For
example,
if
the
traffic
or
the
Planning
Commission
has
the
ability
and
and
has
in
the
past,
required
traffic
studies
for
you
know
when
when
needed.
So
we
certainly
have
that
ability.
The
conference
plan
is
city-wide.
CM
The
aquifer
that
this
area
covers
is
is
quite
large,
so
you
know
saying
that
it's
it's
it
has
vulnerability,
is
a
statement
that
covers
a
lot
of
ground,
quite
literally
so,
but
understanding
that
this
specific
area
has
its
own
specific
issues.
AE
I
have
a
question
regarding
this
real,
quick,
just
so
I
make
sure
I
understood
what
you
said,
combined
with
what
I
think
I
already
know,
and
that
that
the
both
the
state
and
the
federal
government
regulate
the
Waters
of
the
United
States
and
the
aquifer
systems,
and
that
the
city
relies
on
the
information
from
both
those
entities.
When
we
make
decisions
related
to
the
comprehensive
plan
question
mark,
we.
CM
Do
we
we
rely
on
information
regulations,
data
from
pulse
of
federal
and
state
authorities.
X
What
that
means
as
far
as
how
that
truly
impacts
this
area,
how
this
truly
impacts,
other
communities
that
have
similar
vulnerable
aquifers
in
comparison
to
this
type
of
development,
also
in
comparison
to
Bringing,
City,
Water
and
Sewer
to
these
same
places
or
developments
as
well
and-
and
that's
where
I
have
I've
learned
so
much
more
about
aquifers,
I
did
not
know,
I
could
and
I
think
I.
Think
I
can
we
can
all
say
that
this
that
was
one
word.
X
I
did
not
know
a
lot
about
until
this
came
along,
but
I'm
grateful
that
it
took
this
for
me
to
understand
it,
but
at
the
same
time
it's
still
conflicting
because
of
what
we're
dealing
with
as
far
as
this
development
is
concerned,
and
while
City,
Water
and
Sewer
definitely
complements
any
type
of
development
when
you're
paying
the
developer
is
bringing
that
in.
You
know
that
always
complements
a
development.
X
I
understand
the
concerns
of
of
all
of
the
things
that
we
have
heard
each
and
every
person
sign
up
to
speak
about,
so
that
that
I
I
would
hope
that
in
the
future,
when
we
have
staff
reports
that
come
to
us,
especially
that
say,
vulnerable
aquifers,
that
we
just
take
the
initiative
to
find
that
second
opinion,
as
far
as
us
as
the
city,
getting
a
consultant
to
speak
to
that,
instead
of
assuming
what
we
think
may
happen,
depending
on
that
that
said,
development
as
well,
because
that
leaves
everybody
in
a
bind.
X
If
that
makes
sense,
because
again,
we
have
the
developers
have
a
geologist
speaking
to
the
hydrogeologist.
Speaking
to
that
we
have
our
our
residents
and
our
community
that
have
specific
folks
and
geologists
speaking
to
that,
whereas
our
city
should
also
have
an
opinion,
quite
frankly
about
what
this
is
and
what
this
can
or
cannot
do
as
far
as
complementing
or
supporting
a
development,
so
that
that's
where
I
definitely
have
a
concern
overall.
X
AE
Melinda
piggyback,
on
top
of
that
too,
as
we
go
through
kind
of
that
fact,
finding
that
I
hear
you
describing
you
know
and
getting
more
information
and
in
the
future,
I
wonder
what
kind
of
impact
you
know
Recreational
Pools
have
to
that
aquifer
at
you
know
the
turn
of
the
water
in
private
pool
situations.
AE
You
know
not
just
for
the
existing
homeowners
who
have
a
lot
of
pools
and
compared
to
you
know,
are
we
going
to
allow
polls
to
be
developed
and
whatever
gets
developed
in
this
area
as
well,
and
how
that's
going
to
impact
both
the
city,
water
supply,
and
you
know
how
it
is
presently
potentially
impacting
the
aquifer.
So
there's
a
lot
of
questions
around
that
I'm
with
you
on
that
we
very
interesting.
AH
AH
Customers
of
mine
and
I
was
kind
of
curious
as
to
how
that
may
fit
in,
but
since
all
of
us
would
have
to
recuse
ourselves,
if
we
know
people
from
a
vote,
it
kind
of
fell
on
the
fact
that
I
know
I
can
judge
and
be.
You
know
impartial
to
this
to
this
vote
with
that
being
said,
you
know,
after
considering
the
staff
report
and
all
the
testimony
that
we've
had
presented
here
and
thank
you
for
the
ones
that
just
said
ditto
that
really
helps
speed.
AH
Things
up,
I
have
decided
to
vote
against
this
application
after
concerns
for
the
the
aquifer
after
concerns
for
our
school
systems
and
I'm
truly
concerned
about
the
the
use
of
the
affordable
housing
terminology
used
just
about
on
any
development.
Nowadays,
you
know
ideal
homes
does
a
great
job
for
this
city
and
for
our
state,
and
they
build
a
lot
of
great
communities.
AH
My
concern
is,
as
our
city
grows,
as
our
state
grows,
we
begin
to
lose
our
identity
and
a
lot
of
these
little
communities
like
this
are
the
identity
of
our
city
and
even
the
opposing
side
presented.
What
they
felt
like
would
be
work.
You
know
something
that
they
could
work
with
and
they
could
develop,
and
so
I
implore
ideal
homes
to
take
that
into
consideration.
If
it's
not
something
that
you
can
work
with,
I
mean
we've
got
a
number
of
builders
that
have
probably
listening
to
this
right
now.
AH
T
I'll
just
say:
well,
first
thanks
for
everyone
taking
time
to
talk
with
us
this
morning,
I
have
no
poker
face
so
I'm
sure
some
of
you
saw
that
there
there's
just
some
moments
where
I
get
get
a
little
tired.
It
was
finals
week
last
week,
so
I
had
a
lot
of
finals
to
grade
and
grades
to
submit
so
I
appreciate.
Everyone
sharing
their
perspectives
also
really
want
to
applaud
councilwoman
nice
for
weeks
and
weeks
and
weeks.
T
T
My
concern
is
more
I.
This
is
the
sort
of
neighborhood
I
grew
up
in.
This
is
old
hat.
If
you've
heard
me
before
and
I,
don't
know
how
many
more
times
this
is
gonna
keep
happening
where
I
mean
I
know
for
all
of
my
first
term.
T
T
And
now
you
know
there's
like
two
sequels
to
that
development
next
door
with
bigger
houses
and
the
natural
land
depleted
beside
it.
And
so
that's
why,
when
I
my
words
are
not
empty
when
I
say
I
applaud
councilwoman
nice
for
trying
to
figure
out
how
to
what
compromise
could
look
like
I
think
I'm,
ultimately
not
going
to
be
able.
T
If
there
is
an
inclination
to
repeat
the
Applause
that
you
did
for
councilman
Carter,
you
can
hold
it
you're,
not
saying
you're
going
to,
but
it's
it's
not
about
that.
It's
not
about
that,
because
I
can
already
I
can
sense.
Some
tension
in
the
crowd.
T
Yeah
I
mean
just
and
so
no
it's.
This
is
not
about
one
side
winning
or
losing,
so
please
I,
don't
do
that.
I
would
appreciate
that
Richard's,
a
friend
I,
like
Richard
I,
think
Richard's,
a
good
guy.
T
I
have
a
good
friend
who
lives
in
your
community
gem
Roth
and
he's
a
good
guy
and
I
I
will
not
some
of
the
aggression.
I
I
sense
it
and
I,
don't
like
it,
and
and
that's
not
good.
That's
not
healthy
for
our
community,
so
I
do
look
forward
to
continuing
to
find
ways
where
Richard
and
I
can
work
to
do
some
of
the
work
I.
T
Some
of
the
work
he's
done
to
address
homelessness
in
this
city
for
our
youth
I
applaud,
and
it
is
part
of
your
legacy
and
those
of
you
who,
in
your
remarks,
got
up
here,
and
you
said,
affordability
that
this
project
doesn't
meet.
That
then
I
would
implore.
You
beg
you
almost
though
I'm,
not
one
for
begging,
councilwoman.
Nice
is
right.
T
We
have
a
bond
coming
up
in
just
a
couple
years
and
you
will
have
an
opportunity,
as
we
work
together
to
put
on
that
Bond
incentives
for
mixed
use,
mixed
income
housing,
one
of
your
community
members
mentioned
the
median
income
for
Oklahoma.
City-Ins
is
forty
seven
thousand
dollars,
which
means
a
lot
of
us.
Aren't
no
offense.
T
We
don't
got
pools
in
our
backyards
and
those
of
you
who
Express
concerns
about
housing,
affordability,
I
would
strongly
encourage
you
for
your
consideration
going
into
that
next,
Bond
that
when
you
have
an
opportunity
to
vote
for
economic
development
that
involves
mixed
income,
mixed
use,
median
income
housing
because
we
have
a
housing
crisis
right
now,
vote
Yes.
Try
that,
like
advocate
for
that,
like
ask
your
council
members
to
do
those
sorts
of
things,
ask
for
it.
Don't
just
get
up
here
and
empty
platitude,
affordable
housing,
talk
that
does
nothing.
AK
X
So
I
guess
I
have
one
I
guess
from
the
legal
standpoint.
We've
heard
this,
but
there
is
there's
no
affirmative
vote
that
can
happen
because
we
don't
have
it
so
do
we
still
have
to
vote
on
it?
Okay,
well
I
I'm
gonna,
in
order
for
us
to
vote
for
it
I'm
going
to
move
it
forward
and
and
then
cast
my
vote
from
there
in
order
for
us
to
be
able
to
have
our
our
Voice
vote
on
this
matter.
X
Well,
I'm
I'm,
actually
going
to
motion
to
to
deny
to
deny
the
item
and
I
I
do
ask
that
our
council
members
vote
vote
their
conscience
and
and
vote
the
way
that
they
wish
to
again
I
thank
all
of
our
our
residents
and
our
neighbors
for
being
here,
because
this
has
been
a
long
process
from
the
beginning
and
I've
been
there
from
the
beginning
that
we
had
the
meeting
at
the
school.
So
I
don't
want
people
to
think
I
didn't
show
up
because
I
did.
You
saw
me
and
I
made
sure
I
was
there.
X
Even
for
those
who
came
to
see
me,
I
was
coming
from
from
class
driving
down
the
highway
after
class,
because
this
was
important
to
me
for
us
to
be
able
to
have
this
conversation
so
I
again
want
you
to
know.
I
have
I
have
put
everything
into
this.
That
I
have
have
thought
of
thought
can
be
possible.
X
I
am
again
hoping
that
from
the
outcome
of
this,
that
our
city
and
our
staff
helped
me
with
that
that
conversation
that
we
spoke
about
previously
when
it
comes
to
the
conversation
of
aquifers
that
vulnerable
aquifer
situation,
has
to
be
addressed
in
a
different
way
for
everybody
to
have
clarity
about
what
can
and
cannot
be.
That
is
that
is
the
problem
right
now.
Now
of
all
of
these
things
that
we're
discussing
is
that
there
is
no
confirmation
of
other
than
what
we
see
in
what
we
see.
X
Yes
is
in
print,
because
now
in
looking
at
the
U.S,
the
geological
study-
and
let
me
say
this
too,
if
you
want
some
good
homework,.
CN
The
ordinance
still
has
not
Pat,
it
has
not
been
affirmatively
defeated,
but
it
also
has
not
been
approved.
So
in
essence,
the
ordinance
has
been
defeated.
Okay,.
P
At
this
time,
while
you
all
I,
assume,
probably
went
to
exit
the
chambers
I'm
going
to
ask
for
a
10
minute
recess,
if
that
works
for
staff.
U
CO
CO
A
That's
a
good
idea.
Okay,
we
are
back
from
Recess.
Now
we
may
have
to
skip
around
a
little
bit,
because
this
very
first
case-
that's
next
on
the
agenda-
does
not
have
the
councilman
in
the
room,
but
I
have
every
reason
to
think
he
will
return
so
we're
going
to
skip
over
C
for
a
moment
and
go
to
item
11d.
This
is
an
ordinance
on
Final
hearing
recommended
for
approval,
rezoning,
14603,
North
MacArthur
from
R1
to
PUD
1938
councilman,
Stone
Cipher.
No
one
has
signed
up
to
speak.
Thank.
L
Your
honor,
this
was
approved
by
the
Planning
Commission.
There
are
no
protests,
and
so
this
time
I'd
move
for
its
approval.
Please.
A
AE
AK
22
Concord
Drive:
this
is
modifying
an
existing
PUD
to
add
some
additional
commercial
uses.
You
will
see
modified
technical
evaluations
that
were
added
to
add
some
additional
protections
for
the
Neighbors.
As
I
recall,
it
was
perhaps
then
Planning
Commission
member
Hinkle,
now
council,
member
Hinkle
that
requested
some
of
these.
So
the
staff
report
says
protests
I,
don't
recall
there
being
a
protest
and
I
see
nothing
in
the
file.
I.
A
Passes
unanimously,
all
right,
we'll
again
momentarily
skip
item
F
until
word
two
council
member
Reed
joins
us
item.
G
was
deferred
so
they
had
two
people
sign
up
for
that,
but
that
was
deferred
and
then
item
H,
which
is
an
ordinance
on
Final
hearing
recommended
for
approval,
rezoning,
1323,
West,
Park
Place
from
R3
to
SPD,
1510,
councilwoman,
Hammond.
CP
P
Yes,
it
is
pretty
straightforward,
there
was
no
protest
and
it
was
unanimously
approved
by
Planning
Commission.
So
I
will
move
for
approval.
A
Passes
unanimously
item
I
is
an
ordinance
on
Final
hearing.
It
was
recommended
for
approval
rezoning,
205
North
Douglas
from
R3
to
Spud
1511.
councilwoman
Hammond
known
as
Senator
to
speak.
A
P
Item
I,
yes,
can
you
explain
the
project
Fallon.
CP
P
U
P
No
nosers
and
it
was-
and
it
was
easily
approved
by
Planning,
Commission
or
recommended
for
approval,
so
I
will
all
move
for
approval.
A
CG
A
AK
AK
David
box
522
call
Court
Drive,
so
this
is
a
former
Elementary
School
is
the
Mayfair
Elementary
School.
It
has
been
many
years
since
it
was
actually
operational
as
a
school
at
the
at
the
present
time.
It's
designed
to
be
an
adult
day
care
facility,
but
I,
don't
believe
that
use
has
actually
been
operational
for
quite
some
time.
My
client
acquired
it
and
all
that
we're
seeking
to
do
is
to
allow
additional
office
uses.
AK
Councilman
Cooper
did
put
me
in
touch
with
a
neighbor
the
questions
that
they
had
were
hoping
that
we
were
demolishing
the
building.
At
the
moment.
We're
not
I
mean
the
plan
is
not
to
demolished.
The
plan
is
to
be
able
to
keep
that
kind
of
central
piece
of
that
neighborhood.
There
so
and
simply
add
some
office
uses,
which
I
believe
satisfied.
The
the
individual
I
spoke
to.
T
No,
it's
great
I,
really
appreciate
you
taking
time
to
talk
with
with
Karen
she's,
their
neighborhood
association
president,
there
at
Mayfair
West,
and
this
has
been
a
space
where
their
neighbors
have
met.
You
know
as
Association
as.
AK
T
T
Well,
that's
great,
thank
you
David
and
with
that
I'd
move
for
approval.
T
And
yet
there
are
folk
here
and
I'd
like
for
them.
If
they
wouldn't
mind
just
kind
of
telling
us
a
little
bit
about
this,
this
project
would
that
be
okay,
who's,
which
one's
up
there.
CQ
AX
CQ
Wasn't
aware,
I
dropped
the
ball
and
didn't
realize
that
this
was
gonna,
be
her
today.
So
I
haven't
had
a
chance
to
talk
to
anyone
individually
on
this
project,
but
I'm
actually
still
working
on
a
few
things
with
staff.
So
I'll
just
present
real
quick,
but
we
probably
needed
it
for
two
weeks
to
work
out
a
couple
small
items,
but
so
this
was
heard
a
few
weeks
ago.
CQ
Planning
Commission
Our
intention
is
to
develop
a
corner
lot
initially
want
to
do
four
smaller
homes,
but
in
speaking
with
a
utilities
department
and
there's
very
little
right-of-way,
we
realized
it
would
make
more
sense
to
do
three
houses
instead
of
four
houses
so
that
all
happened,
kind
of
after
Planning
Commission,
where
we
kind
of
Dove
more
into
it
realize,
makes
sense
to
do
three
houses.
So
in
changing
from
four
to
three,
there
are
a
few
things
that
work
out,
drive,
drive,
cuts
and
or
driver
widths.
CQ
Things
like
that,
so
we're
working
with
that
with
staff.
So
hopefully
I
think
here
in
a
couple
weeks,
we
can
come
back
and
have
update
exhibits
that
kind
of
thing.
But
otherwise
you
know
we
didn't
have
any
concerns
for
many
neighbors.
We've
worked
through
any
kind
of
utility
concerns,
so
I
think
as
far
as
that's
all
concerned,
we're
in
pretty
good
shape,
but
I'd
love
to
hear.
CQ
BW
T
Purchase
yep.
Okay,
can
we
go
back
to
the?
What?
What
do
you
call
that
the
this
one?
Thank
you.
What
do
you
call
this
page?
What
do
we
call
this?
BZ
T
Man,
city
manager,
just
knock
them
out
of
the
park.
I
mean
I
know.
This
is
what
the
applic,
what
residents
in
the
300
feet?
Zoning
I
know
that's
what
they
receive.
I
just
I,
don't
know
what
you
call
this
page,
but
for
now
we're
going
to
call
it
a
bit
of
a
guide.
Is
it
my
understanding
that
this
is
ultimately
going
to
be
part
of
where
you
all
were
also
looking
at
from
Pennsylvania
up
to
Kentucky
and
then,
ultimately,
even
connecting
to
this.
CQ
There
is,
they
did
a
spa
that
you
can
kind
of
see
it
on
here
Spud.
What
is
that
1177
just
the
South?
They
they
did
a
similar
decline
for
Meg
investment.
They
did
a
similar
spot
a
few
years
back
and
developed
it
into
three
really
pretty
large
homes,
so
actually
what
we?
What
we
realized
on
that
one
is
that
really
from
the
markets
perspective
once
you
get
to
a
larger
size
home,
it's
just
more
difficult
to
sell
it's
on
the
market.
CQ
Longer
and
frankly,
the
market
is
for
smaller,
more
you
know,
houses
with
a
lower
all-in
price
up
front.
So
the
intention
for
this
North
one
was
to
do
four
smaller
houses
that
would
have
a
lower
price,
and
but
we
would
have
to
replant
it
at
four.
Whereas
if
you
do
it
three
house
slot
split,
you
can
do
it
administratively
and
there's
very
little
right-of-way
on
Indiana,
so
we're
giving
up
we're
actually
giving
up
some
of
the
lot
for
a
city
easement
to
kind
of
create,
basically
some
right-of-way
so
yeah
for
this.
CQ
For
this
slot
it
just
made
sense
to
D3
instead
of
four
houses,
but
it
is
a
little
bit
of
a
con
continuation
of
the
Spud
that
was
filed
for
years
ago,
just
directly
south
to
it,
but
that
was
on
39th
and
Indiana.
So
you
can
kind
of
see
that
I
mean
if
you
zoom
in
you
can
kind
of
see
the
three
houses
right.
T
CQ
CQ
It
is
a
little
bit
so
yeah
they're
doing
the
ones
along
Indiana
there
and
then
you've
got
the
that
stretch.
That's
highlighted
right
there
and
then
there's
a
little
bit
of
a
a
corner
to
the
on
the
Block
to
the
east
north
of
that
church.
Right
there.
It
has
a
that
old
utility
easement.
Basically
that
is
kind
of
left
over
land,
so
yeah
that
we're
working
on
that
as
well.
That's
kind
of
slow
going
at
the
moment,
but
yeah,
that's
still
in
development
as
well.
I.
CQ
BR
CQ
Almost
like
you
know,
it's
like
they
took
a
residential
lot
or
something
turned
into
a
street.
It's
really
narrow
there.
So
we
for
the
loss
of
the
South.
We
granted
the
City
eight
feet
of
easement.
That
kind
of
gave
us
room
for
sidewalks
some
utilities
and
we're
actually
proposing
this.
CQ
But
it's
eight
foot,
but
since
we've
worked
with
Studio
bit,
we're
gonna
actually
Grant
10
feet
and
that
allow
us
to
avoid
having
to
do
a
water
line
extension
and
we
can
do
water
line
like
domestic,
normal
water
lines
in
that
easement,
so
yeah
and
and
for
a
sidewalk.
So
we'll
have
a
sidewalk
about
wraps
around
the
site.
T
Cool
well
I
think
just
heading
into
two
weeks
from
now.
My
kind
of
ask
would
be
that
both
on
the
north
side
of
the
property
and
on
this
on
Indiana
that
we
think
about
connectivity,
particularly
to
39th
Street
right,
so
that
folk
can
better
connect
to
the
39th
Street
District
to
the
west
and
then
I
think
similarly
40th
Street
any
sort
of
connectivity.
We
can
do
on
that
street.
Really.
CQ
And
to
your
point:
what's
nice
about
this?
Is
you
know
they
did
kind
of
the
first
half
of
this
and
they
actually
did
that
one
before
they
had
acquired
the
property
to
the
north,
and
we
have
that
sidewalk
that
goes
north
at
Indiana
and
39.
But
then
it
just
dead
ends
and.
AZ
CA
CQ
T
That's
great
cool
well
I'll
make
a
motion
to
defer
for
two
weeks:
okay,.
A
Passes
unanimously
item
is
deferred
for
two
weeks.
All
right,
I
appreciate
it
yeah
all
right
before
we
started
skipping
around
I
think
we
had
just
finished
item
I,
and
so
that
brings
us
to
J
J,
which
is
actually
deferred.
K
is
also
deferred
and
so
we're
at
item
L.
This
is
an
ordinance
on
Final
hearing
to
close
125
foot
radial
utility
easement
in
Lot
19
Etc
of
the.
AN
A
Northwest
159th
Terrace
councilman
stonecipher
thank.
L
You
honor
Planning
Commission
approved.
There
are
no
protests,
so
I
will
move
for
approval.
X
Has
anyone
signed
up
to
speak?
We
have
not
okay.
Thank
you.
I
know
this
is
a
continuation
of
a
previous
application,
so
my
concern
Still
Remains
from
the
approval
of
the
previous
application.
As
far
as
this
closing
this
easement
is,
it
does
a
but
a
residential
neighborhood
in
some
aspects
to
the
north,
so
I
I
will
ask
that
we
continue
to
respect
that
Resident
and
in
the
residential
area
that
it
surrounds
for
this,
but
other
than
that.
A
Passage
unanimously
item
in
was
previously
deferred,
which
brings
us
to
item
o.
This
is
an
ordinance
on
Final
hearing.
This
is
the
second
of
two
meetings
on
this.
This
amends
ordinance
number
25
326
relating
to
the
quarter,
Shore
reinvestment
area
project
plan
dated
February
23
of
2016
and
amending
certain
sections.
This
was
previously
presented
on,
and
so
today
is
just
a
final
consideration.
If
the
council
so
chooses.
A
A
Okay
item
11p1,
first
of
all,
at
public
hearing
regarding
a
joint
resolution
of
the
Oklahoma
City
Economic
Development
trust
approving
an
allocation
not
to
exceed
21.5
million
dollars
from
increment
District
number
G's
assistance
and
development
financing
budget
category
Amy
has
anyone
signed
up
to
speak?
They
have
John
Pettis.
CR
Good
afternoon
Mr
Mayor,
ladies
and
gentlemen
of
the
council,
John
Pettis
1208
Northeast,
55th,
Street,
Oklahoma,
City,
Oklahoma,
7311,
Mr,
Mayor,
I'm,
speaker
on
behalf
of
this
project,
I
also
serve
on
the
board
of
the
Oklahoma
County
Home
Finance
Authority
we've
been
working
with
Mr
Suttle
regarding
this
project
and
we
look
forward
to
helping
with
the
financing
of
it
to
make
this
project
come
to
fruition.
CR
As
you
know,
cause
continues
to
go
up
and
I
think
that
we
need
to
go
ahead
and
have
this
thing
off
of
dead
center
and
ask
you
know
for
your
support
in
this
project.
A
So
does
this
require
an
it's
just
a
resolution,
so
it's
just
a
simple
majority
right.
Actually
we're.
Thank
you
know
what
to
do
with
you.
You
wish
to
vote
on
this
item.
You
do
okay,
okay,
I
hadn't
really
called
it
yet.
Can
we
allow
councilman
Carter
to
cast
a
vote.
A
Kind
of
walked
in
the
middle
of
it.
How
do
you
wish
to
vote
on
this
item?
Aye,
okay?
Well,
that
resolves
that
other
problem
too,.
A
AA
So
the
history
of
this
is
that
I
think
it
was.
Last
year
a
group
of
commercial
developers
approached
several
council
members
about
development
impact
fees
wanting
the
city
to
take
a
look
at
it
in
comparison
to
other
cities.
At
that
time,
council
members,
Carter,
Stone
and
stone
Cipher
requested
that
this
temporary
moratorium
be
put
into
place.
AA
We've
been
working
on
that
at
this
point
we're
ready
to
move
forward
with
some
next
steps
based
on
the
recommendations,
and
so
what
we're
asking
to
do
is
to
extend
this
moratorium
to
cover
that
period
of
time
between
when
it
expired
and
to
catch
back
up
to
the
annual
cycle
that
those
automatic
fee
increases
go
into
effect.
So
this
would
extend
the
moratorium
to
June
30th
and
then
it
would
pick
back
up
on
July
1st,
as
it
normally
does
so.
M
BG
A
A
A
BK
CS
Terrell
I'm
in
18308
bodegon
Road
in
Edmond.
CS
Two
weeks
ago,
when
we
were
here,
we
were
asked
to,
we
may
mention
that
we
they
did
not
get
the
notices
because
they
didn't
receive
the
mail.
We
checked
with
them
to
make
sure
that
they
make
sure
that
their
address
was
forwarded,
so
they
can
get
those
notices
and
then
they
were
getting
quotes
to
get
the
buildings
demolished
or
taken
away,
because
at
the
time
I
guess
the
statute
says
that
they
they
are
both
dilapidated
and
abandoned.
CS
However,
they
couple
those
together,
I
guess
on
this
notice
and
then
the
building
is
dilapidated,
is
not
have
been
abandoned
because
in
the
first
quarter
of
this
year
they
have
removed
at
least
700
vehicles
from
that
property
and
got
those
off,
and
then
they
are
still
continuing
to
check
on
the
property
make
sure
that
the
fences
stay
up,
even
though
sometimes
they
do
blow
down
and
then
they're
moving
towards
getting
these
torn
down.
So
they
can
do
it
on
their
dime
versus
it
being
on
the
city's
dime
as
well.
CS
They
have
three
quotes
in
hand
to
do
those
things.
They
just
make
a
decision
on
what
those
quotes
are
going
to
do
and
which
ones
they
decide
to
move
forward
with.
So
they
can
get
this.
The
structures
torn
down.
X
Okay,
I'm
just
curious
as
far
as
the
process
and
Mr
Chad.
Maybe
you
can
help
me
with
this
there.
You
are
what
what
constitute
I
know.
We
we
visited
this
a
couple
weeks
ago.
As
far
as
the
have
we
had
conversation,
have
you
all
had
a
conversation
with
him.
CS
BB
When,
whenever
we,
when
the
council
declares
a
property,
dilapidated
or
unsecured,
they
also
have
the
ability
to
to
declare
it
abandon,
I'm,
not
exactly
sure
I,
don't
have
the
exact
date
when
the
council
passed
that
resolution,
but
it
gives
the
the
city
the
opportunity
to
not
necessarily
offer
the
opportunity,
but
it
gives
them
the
ability
to
charge
for
any
emergency
services
that
might
happen
on
the
property
post
that
declaration.
BB
X
Well,
I
guess
my
my
question
is
for
this
particular
structure:
what
constituted
it
to
be
declared
abandoned
from
what
he
just
said
in
relation
to
how
our
code
enforcement
defines
and
looked
at
this
particular
property
to
deem
it
abandoned
and
continued
to
keep
it
on
our
abandoned
list?
Does
that
make
sense.
X
It
I
know
what
I'm
asking,
but
right
it's
hard
for
me
to
I
guess
from
when
we
last
visited
for
you
all
to
have
visited
on
on
this
conversation.
It
sounds
to
me
clearly
that,
if
it's
still
on
our
abandoned
list,
something
was
not
rectified.
So
what
is
that
that
needs
to
be
done
in
order
for
it
not
to
be
on
the
abandoned
list?
Well,.
BB
CS
The
fence
Still
Remains,
a
portion
of
it-
was
open
this
morning
when
I
drove
by,
because
there
are
some
semi-trailers
that
have
been
on
the
property
that
they
had
mentioned
that
were
open,
that
people
could
be
getting
into
and
they
have
those
now
for
sale.
So
they're
trying
to
get
some
of
those
off
and
I
think
what
someone
was
getting
their
some
of
those
off
there
and
then
their
plan
is
to
then
demolish
the
buildings
and
then
also
if
they
can't
sell
those
trucks
or
those
trailers.
CS
X
Okay
from
the
pictures
that
I'm
looking
at
I
hope,
you
understand
why
this
needs
to
be
taken
care
of
as
soon
as
possible.
So
I
know
we're
looking
at
quotes,
but
is
there
something
other
than
removing
the
trailers
immediately
that
we
can
can
get
done,
because
this
is
is
pretty
hazardous?
If,
if
we're
looking,
if
you
know,
if
we're
all
looking
at
the
same
things-
and
this
still
looks
like
this
today-
yes.
CS
And
I
fully
understand
in
the
time
when
we
met
that
was
our
first
notice
or
anyone's
notice,
which
was
a
week
before
this
Mount.
This
was
two
weeks
ago
so
three
weeks
ago,
was
the
first
time
that
we
knew
about
it,
though
they
had
said
they'd
send
out
a
notice.
What
we
were
arguing
at
the
time
or
trying
to
make
notice
of
was
that
they
didn't
receive
the
letter
and
they
weren't
aware
of
it.
CS
We
were
aware
of
it,
I
think
when
code
enforcement
kind
of
made
us
aware
so
then
we
kind
of
stepped
in
and
we're
hoping
to
make
action.
We
came
here
two
weeks
ago
to
chat
with
you
all
and
then
so
we
didn't
have
it
on
the
city's
Diamond.
They
could
do
it
on
their
own
because
it
would
be
a
lot
more
costly
for
them,
because
the
city
is
going
to
scrape
it
all
the
way
down
and
take
the
concrete
with
it,
which
then
would
be
a
lot
more
cost
for
them
to
haul
that
off.
CS
So
we've
gone
with
them.
We
told
them
to
make
sure
their
address
is
updated,
so
they
have
afforded
they've
done
so
they
did
so
as
of
January
23rd,
with
the
county
assessor
and
with
the
postal
service,
but
I
guess
they
were
missing
one
with
the
County
Treasurer,
possibly
that
that
wasn't
there
so
they've
got
the
quotes
and
then
I
spoke
with
them
yesterday
and
they
plan
to
make
a
decision.
They
just
wanted
to
know.
CS
You
know
when
we
spoke
with
you
all
if
they
would
get
a
little
more
time
without
having
the
city
make
a
declaration
that
it
was
going
to
maybe
possibly
go
in
for
demolish
at
this
meeting.
Okay.
X
AJ
K
X
That's
all
that
that
does
as
far
as
the
city's
saying
that
and
correct
me
if
I'm
wrong,
okay,
I,
think
I've
been
through
a
couple
of
these
I
know
a
little
bit
and
so
therefore
I'm
only
I'm
going
to
ask
that
we
keep
it
on
here,
because
you
are
still
moving
forward
with
that
and
and
therefore
please
stay
in
contact
with
with
Mr
Davidson.
So
we
can
ensure
that
you
all
have
that
plan
of
action.
X
BZ
X
X
A
Okay,
that's
the
only
person
who
signed
up
to
speak.
This
item
will
appear
again.
I
think
right
yeah,
but
you
want
to
keep
it
on.
Is
that
correct,
councilwoman
all
right,
so
we'll
close
the
public
hearing
and
move
on
to
S2
the
resolution
declaring
that
the
structures
are
dilapidated.
A
A
A
Passage
unanimously
item
11w
is
a
public
hearing
regarding
the
resolution:
improving
the
fiscal
year,
2023
2024,
fourth
action
year
plan
and
maybe
we'll
return
to
that
after
we
have
a
presentation
on
this.
Yes,.
M
Chris
Varga
with
the
planning
department,
Chris,
manages
these
projects,
and
this
is
something
we
do
every
year
just
recently,
maybe
two
years
ago,
HUD
changed
the
rules
where
we
have
to
have
a
public
hearing
on
this.
Is
that
right,
no.
U
CT
I'm
sure
you
were
there,
this
is
our
our
fourth
year
of
the
action
plan
of
the
five-year
Consolidated
plan
and
again
this
plan
is
what
we
submit
every
year
to
HUD
as
an
application
for
our
entitlement
funds,
our
entitlement
Grant
funds
to
come
to
Oklahoma
City.
So,
basically
those
funds
are
the
cdbg
funds.
At
4.9
million
I
haven't
changed
much.
CT
This
year's
allocation
was
very
similar
to
last
year's,
so
we
got
from
for
Community
Development
block
grant
4.9
million
our
home
investment
Partnerships
program
grants
which
is
about
affordable
housing,
2.6
million
our
emergency
solution,
grants
which
is
addresses
those
at
risk
of
homelessness,
433
000
and
our
Housing
Opportunity
for
persons
with
AIDS
grants.
That
is
an
amount
of
1.3
million.
CT
So
every
year
this
plan
has
to
be
developed
or
the
budget
is
developed
and
discussed
in
citizen
Forum.
Take
public
comments.
We
had
two
public
meetings
in
January,
an
opportunity
for
public
comments
for
30
days,
a
review
of
it
at
citizens
committee
for
Community
Development,
who
recommended
approval
of
it,
and
now
it
comes
for
this
public
hearing
is
a
last
step
before
submission
to
HUD
the
home,
the
cdbg
funds.
Just
very
briefly
will
continue
to
find
there's
nothing
new
proposed
this
year,
our
housing,
rehab
programs.
CT
Our
home
funds
basically
go
to
down
payment
assistance,
programs
for
home
buyers,
housing,
rehab
programs
that
are
performed
in-house
by
the
city
in
our
non-profit
community
housing
development
organizations
are
chotos
who
build
a
limited
amount
of
for
sale,
homes
and
affordable
housing
development
in
general.
When
we
have
extra
funds,
we
do
it
open
solicitation
for
for
affordable
housing
projects
and
Staffing.
CT
A
A
CF
A
Passes
unanimously,
11x1
is
a
joint
resolution
with
the
Oklahoma
City
Municipal
facilities.
Authority
approving
settlement
of
the
subrogation
claim
related
to
payment
of
medical
bills,
pay
a
few
workers
compensation
against
the
proceeds
recovered
on
behalf
of
Daniel
herring.
Etc
executive
session
is
not
requested.
A
AE
Three,
don't
hate
me:
I
have
a
few
things,
not
my
fault,
but
it's
important
stuff,
so
number
one
Mother's
Day
is
this
weekend.
Don't
forget
your
mom's
for
those
of
us
who
moms
who've,
moved
on
I.
Take
the
opportunity
to
recognize
my
daughter
as
a
mother,
who's
she's
about
to
be
a
mom
again
literally
any
minute
so
yay
Alexis
love,
you
curbside,
does
Mother's
Day
flowers
and
supports
our
homeless
population
with
jobs.
So
please
support
curbside
Chronicles
and
the
curbside
flowers
program.
AE
According
to
palomar's
website,
Oklahoma
City
is
number
three
in
domestic
violence
in
the
state.
Oklahoma
is
number
three
in
domestic
violence
victims
in
the
country,
and
there
are
lots
of
good
things
happening
to
help
protect
victims,
both
at
our
state
level
and
our
federal
level.
Right
now,
so
I
just
want
to
give
a
little
shout
out
to
our
state
representatives
who
and
our
governor
who
passed
where'd.
It
go
one
second.
AE
Congresswoman
Bice
also
reintroduced
the
safe
leave
act
today,
house
resolution
2996
at
the
federal
level
we're
hoping
for
a
bipartisan
support
of
that
which
allows
domestic
violence
victims
to
utilize
the
FMLA
in
order
to
receive
assistance
and
to
get
a
good
footing
and
to
get
back
on
their
feet.
All
of
this
is
very
important
to
me.
I
am
a
domestic
violence.
Survivor
I
have
suffered
all
of
the
things
that
I
have
that
these
things
would
support,
and
it
was
not
available
for
me
at
the
time
that
I
got
out
of
those
situations.
AE
Many
of
the
domestic
violence
situations
are
not
only
against
mothers,
there
also
against
fathers,
but
primarily
the
thing
that
probably
bothers
me
even
more
than
all
of
those
things
which
are
pretty
big
is
that
it
often
includes
the
children
that
are
involved
in
those
situations.
So
we
have
a
responsibility
to
provide
all
of
the
services
that
we
could
potentially
imagine
up
to
be
able
to
help
this
situation
and
get
us
out
of
the
number
three
spot.
X
Yes,
I'll,
be
brief.
I
want
to
thank
half
of
Ward
7
for
being
here
today,
but
I
know
that
was
not
an
easy
easy
few
hours
for
the
members
of
our
Council
who
sit
here
so
I
appreciate
you
all,
and
your
patience
for
hearing
the
passion
and
the
concerns
of
everyone
and
also
the
the
wants
and
needs
of
our
developers
as
well
as
far
as
this
development
is
concerned,.
X
Unfortunately,
and
fortunately,
it
went
the
way
that
it
did
so
there's
not
more
much.
That
can
be
said
about
that.
I've
expressed
my
concerns
and
what
I
hope
in
the
future.
As
far
as
our
city
and
our
staff,
what
we
can
do,
speaking
to
certain
pieces
of
what
is
presented
in
our
staff
report
in
the
future
I
do
want
to
just
give
a
couple.
X
So
all
three
of
them
walked
the
stage
on
Saturday
but
she's,
the
youngest,
and
so
she
has
an
Associates
in
consumer
science
and
Associates
in
diverse
studies,
and
now
she
has
her
Bachelor's
in
family
and
consumer
sciences,
and
she
has
already
completed
courses
for
her
master's
program
at
15
years
old
in
north,
in
representing
Oklahoma
City,
so
kudos
to
to
her
parents
and
her
family
for
being
that
support,
especially
I'm
sure
she
I'm
wondering
if
she
had
to
tutor
her
brother
and
her
sister
through
college
and
some
of
those
classes,
but
congratulations
to
them
and
Elijah
and
Roche
her
sister
and
brother
in
the
history
that
was
made
for
them.
X
The
Muhammad
family.
On
this
past
weekend,
I'm
into
all
the
other
graduates
who
are
first-time
graduates,
you
know
first
generation
and
those
who
make
history
as
well
go
in
to
wherever
their
their
next
destination
may
become.
I
also
wanted
to
shout
out
one
of
our
our
teachers
from
Moon
Middle
School,
Felix
Linden.
He
was
the
okcps
teacher
of
the
year,
so
I
am
so
excited
to
shout
him
out
and
and
to
speak
of
the
good
thing,
things
that
he's
doing
at
FT
Moon
middle
school.
X
So
they
could
ask
me
questions
and
ask
about
their
concerns
about
what
this
potential
program
could
or
could
not
do
as
far
as
benefiting
them
being
in
Bricktown
after
a
certain
hour
of
the
evening,
and
last
I
just
want
to
shout
out
Congressman
Joe
Kennedy,
he
is
in
Oklahoma
he's
in
Oklahoma,
City
and
he's
making
his
way
around
around
our
state
got
to
say
hello
to
him
on
last
evening
and
he
had
a
pit
stop
at
Kindred
Spirits
and
was
able
to
see
Northeast
Oklahoma
City
and
get
a
taste
of
of
East
Side
Pizza
House.
X
So
he
looks
just
like
his
pictures.
So
it's
always
interesting
and
you
know
you
kind
of
get
happy
when
you
see
a
Kennedy.
You
know
just
because
of
the
history
of
the
family,
so
I'm
very
grateful
for
his
presence
and
our
our
state
and
that
I
know
he's
here
to
help
with
some
supportive
work
for
some
of
our
non-profits,
so
grateful
for
that.
I
just
wanted
to
mention
that
and
and
again
happy
Mother's
Day,
especially
to
my
mom
I
love,
her
dearly
to
the
Moon
and
back
in
other
moms
in
ward
7-2.