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From YouTube: Special City Council Meeting 4-30-2020
Description
Special City Council Meeting 4-30-2020
C
C
We
want
to
thank
all
of
you
for
being
with
us
today
and
I
know
that
there
are
a
lot
of
people
who
are
watching
from
home.
So
thank
you
for
joining
us
and
we
will
try
to
make
this
as
informative
as
possible.
We
want
to
thank
dr.
pappi
for
being
here
with
us
today.
I
just
want
to
cover
some
housekeeping
here
a
little,
even
though
our
agenda
is
not
very
specific.
C
We
will
first
have
Howard
I,
believe
you
are
going
to
be
reading
the
citizen
comments
into
the
record
and
then,
after
that
we
all
have
dr.
Pepys
presentation
and
discussion
with
him.
We
really
appreciate
him
being
here
from
the
Florida
Department
of
Health,
and
then
we
will
have
ray
will
be
sharing
some
information
with
us
and
I
think
Howard
a
little
bit
there
as
well.
C
Melissa
is
going
to
give
us
an
update
on
the
on
the
website
and
and
then
we
will
get
into
a
discussion
of
where
we
want
to
go
based
on
the
governor's
executive
order.
Yesterday
was
a
very
informative
presentation.
He
gave
at
five
o'clock
yesterday
afternoon
and
we'll
discuss
the.
Where
do
we,
as
the
city
of
Punta
Gorda,
feel
we
need
to
be
at
this
point
in
time,
so
that
will
be
our
agenda
so
we'll
begin
Howard
if
you'd
like
to
before.
D
We
get
started
you'll
notice,
a
new
seating
arrangement
based
on
the
governor's
executive
order.
We
have
spaced
the
chairs
now
out
our
city
engineer,
mark
Goering,
went
and
actually
spaced
it
out.
It's
every
three
chairs
now
we're
allowing
an
open
seat,
which
means
we
could
have
I,
think
it's
17
17
people
in
the
room,
proper
social
distancing,
that's
the
most
we
could
have
based
on
where
we
are
today,
based
on
the
new
executive
order.
D
C
B
B
E
D
F
Mellisa
record
communications
manager,
Siwon
says
avoid
congregating
in
large
groups.
Local
jurisdictions
shall
ensure
that
groups
of
people
greater
than
ten
are
not
permitted
to
congregate
in
any
public
space
that
does
not
readily
allow
for
appropriate
physical
distancing
and
we
have
readily
allowed
for
appropriate
physical
distancing
in
this
building.
If
so,
if
it
were
my
office,
we
couldn't
have
more
than
ten
people
in
there,
but
based
on
the
size
of
the
room,
we
can.
D
That's
not
to
say,
we'll
have
more,
we'll
have
that
many,
but
okay.
So
what
I'd
like
to
do
is
read
into
the
record
the
public
comments
we
got
for
today's
meeting,
we'll
have
more
for
next
Wednesday's
meeting,
but
this
is
just
for
today,
I'll
go
an
order
of
when
they
were
received,
Ric
sarkeesian,
dear
council.
Today's
son
had
some
very
encouraging
news
about
the
virus
in
our
area.
The
important
points
were,
unfortunately,
113
cases
in
the
county
are
in
nursing
homes.
That
makes
the
remainder
of
cases
around
a
hundred
for
the
entire
county.
D
The
hundred
remaining
cases
are
clustered
at
offices,
businesses
or
in
single-family
homes.
Teams
of
local
health
staff
are
also
tracing
contacts
for
all
County
cases.
We
could
not
be
in
better
shape.
The
virus
is
not
going
away
soon.
In
the
past
few
weeks,
we
all
have
learned
the
importance
of
following
CDC
guidelines
and,
more
importantly,
that
learned
strategies
to
defend
ourselves.
It's
time
for
the
city
to
reopen
our
parks.
Thanks
for
your
consideration,.
D
Jack
Bryce
I,
for
one
would
like
to
assure
each
of
you
that
the
members
of
our
pickleball
community
are
and
will
continue
to
be
responsible
with
our
conduct,
both
on
and
off
the
court.
We
will
do
our
part
to
practice
safe
social
distancing,
especially
while
this
virus
may
still
be
a
potential
threat
to
everyone.
We
will
self
patrol
to
ensure
appropriate
measures
are
being
followed
by
everyone.
Please
move
forward
and
approve
the
reopening
of
our
pickleball
courts
as
soon
as
possible.
Thanks
for
your
consideration,.
D
D
G
G
I'd
like
to
share
with
you
a
presentation
that
I've
been
sharing
with
our
community
with
lots
of
data,
so
we
can
just
start
the
conversation.
I
I
firmly
believe
that
if
I
give
you
and
the
community
the
information
and
be
as
transparent
as
possible
that
our
businesses
and
our
community
will
be
very
responsible
in
helping
us
reopen
and
sharing
that
data
will
also
give
them
a
better
picture
of
the
risk
profile
for
our
county
and
for
our
state
and
so
I'd
like
to
dive
into
that,
and
please
feel
free
to
ask
questions
along
the
way.
G
So
don't
worry
about
if
you're
interrupting
me
or
anything,
we
surpassed
three
million
cases
globally
as
well
as
we
start
to
see
that
the
countries
that
were
initially
the
flash
points
of
where
kovat
began
have
begun
to
subside
and
that's
an
indication
of
kind
of
the
pattern
that
is
happening
across
the
globe.
Just
in
reverse
order.
As
far
as
recovery,
the
United
States
continues
to
see
a
daily
decline
in
a
number
of
new
cases.
Just
like
Florida
does,
and
we
are
very
much
thankful
for
that.
It
doesn't
mean
that
every
County
is
declining.
G
That
just
means
that
the
overall
total
number
of
cases
within
the
state
of
Florida
are
declining.
What
we
saw
are
just
like
there
was
a
lag
in
the
time
that
the
United
States
was
impacted
by
this
outbreak,
as
it
worked
its
way
across
Asia
and
Europe.
The
same
thing
is
happening
within
our
more
rural
communities,
so
that
the
larger
metropolitan
areas
were
first
impacted
and
then
it
kind
of
had
a
ripple
effect
throughout
the
state
and
the
nation
into
more
rural
communities.
G
The
challenges
in
the
more
rural
communities
is
that
their
infrastructure,
specifically
their
hospitals,
are
smaller
and
probably
less
capable
of
handling
a
significant
medical
surge.
As
you
all
know,
I
oversee
Henry
and
glades
County
as
well,
and
they've
done
great
job
at
the
hospital
in
Henry.
County
has
25
beds,
so
you
can
imagine
where
the
medical
surge
would
look
like
in
a
small
community
like
that
it
could
be
problematic,
so
we're
fortunate
that
in
Charlotte
County
we
are,
we
are
healthy
and
doing
well.
Our
hospitals
are
maintaining
about
a
50
to
60
percent
utilization
rate.
G
So
our
breakdown
for
the
state
is
is
50/50,
male/female
breakdown,
and
it's
as
we
projected
that
it
has
a
significant
impact
on
those
65
years
of
age
and
older.
The
hospitals
are
doing
an
amazing
job
in
working
with
those
individuals
and
getting
them
back
to
recovery
or
even
potentially
transferring
out
of
the
hospital
into
a
rehabilitation
center
for
their
full
recovery
and
those
rehabilitation.
G
Centers
have
done
a
great
job
in
developing
kovat
wings
or
units
and
isolating
those
individuals
and
isolating
that
staff
that
worked
with
those
individuals
to
make
sure
that
they're
putting
the
infection
controls
in
place
to
care
for
them.
This
is
Charlotte
County's
graph
of
chief
complaints.
Last
time
I
presented
before
you
were
statewide.
G
This
is
actually
county
level
data
and
you
can
see
it's
a
bit
staticky
as
far
as
the
lines
are
not
real,
smooth
because
of
the
deep
lotting
by
date,
but
as
you
can
see
that
the
chief
complaint
has
been
shortness
of
breath,
but
they
are
all
are
trending
in
the
downward
pattern
for
since
about
the
25th
of
March.
So
that's
also
a
good
sign.
Are
it's
an
indication
that
our
primary
care?
G
Physicians,
our
specialty
care,
physicians
as
well
as
and
the
nursing
homes,
are
doing
a
good
job
caring
for
those
individuals
and
so
that
they're
not
presenting
at
the
emergency
department
like
they
once
were?
And
then,
hopefully
it's
an
earlier
indication
as
well
that
we're
on
the
downward
trend
of
the
virus
as
far
as
its
present.
So,
in
short,
the
controls
that
we
put
into
place
worked
there
were
the
right
moves
to
do,
unfortunately,
they're
very
difficult
and
have
a
profound
impact
across
our
community,
but
iĆve
shared
with
you.
G
In
the
past
we
had
a
hepatitis
A
outbreak
as
well
as
influenza,
and
the
social
distancing
that
we
did
for
this
virus
also
helped
positively
impact
those
outbreaks
as
well.
We
have
a
surveillance
system
that
we're
using
that
we're
monitoring.
This
is
an
example
of
a
heat
map.
As
you
can
see,
there's
there
spots,
there's
not
a
widespread
transmission
as
well
as
some
of
the
the
red
spots
are
really
facilities
and
office
spaces.
Things
like
that
homes,
close
clusters.
What
the
gentleman
mentioned
on
the
public
comment,
63%
of
our
outbreaks
are,
our
cases
are
outbreak.
G
Associated
37
percent
are
considered
sporadic
the
the
sporadic
cases
are
where
we
do
not
have
an
epidemiological
link
of
their
origin.
When
we
look
at
the
fire,
EMS
calls
they're
all
trending
downward.
This
is
for
Charlotte
County,
specifically
as
well,
and
so
what
we're
seeing
is
that
our
residents,
as
well
as
our
EMS
teams,
are
our
firefighters,
are
doing
a
great
job
in
responding
and
reacting
to
this
transporting
when
appropriate
and
providing
proper
guidance
and
linkage
to
care.
So
the
system
itself
is
working.
I
wanted
to
share
with
you
influenza.
G
This
is
a
seasonal
report
for
influenza,
but
this
little
blip
right
there
on
week,
13
a
little
blue
bar
right
at
the
end
is
influenza,
B,
Victoria
lineage,
and
the
reason
why
I
share
that
with
you,
we
still
have
influenza
cases
circulating
in
our
community
and
that
sort
of
causes
some
concern
when
somebody
might
contract
influenza
and
thinking
it's
kovetz.
So
the
protocols
are
the
same
quite
honestly
for
both,
but
the
the
physicians
are
doing
a
great
job
in
kind
of
screening
and
working
through
all
of
that
together.
G
G
So
our
total
cases
right
now
are
two
hundred
and
ten,
it's
actually
a
little
bit
higher.
Now
we
have
one
non-resident
that
was
on
our
on
our
case
list.
Age
range
is
three
to
a
hundred.
We
had
some
little
ones
impacted
by
Cova.
They
are
doing
well,
but
just
they
they
did
contract
the
virus
and
test
positive.
The
median
age
is
67
and
in
Charlotte
we're
skewing
6040
female
to
male
and
it's
more
indicative
of
our
demographic
population.
I,
don't
think
it's
it's
targeting
any
specific
gender.
G
At
the
last
time
of
reporting,
we
have
five
people.
In
ICU
we
had
thirteen
kovat
patients
that
were
not
in
ICU
a
total
of
19
hospitalized
32
persons
under
investigation,
and
we
are
discharging
individuals,
so
they
are
getting
better
last
census
that
I
reported
out
was
359,
total
patients
and
our
hospitals
out
of
a
capacity
of
815.
So
our
hospitals
are
doing.
Okay.
G
So
when
we
look
at
our
incident
rate
and
testing,
there
was
some
guidance
by
Harvard
Public
Health
that
we
wanted
to
get
to
a
hundred
and
fifty
per
hundred
thousand
testing
and
I'm
pleased
to
report
that
in
Charlotte
County
we're
exceeding
that
expectation.
The
goal
is
to
maintain
that
testing
level
so
that
we
can
maintain
proper
surveillance.
G
So
we
are
doing
okay
right
now
we
received
an
additional
2400
test
kits
today,
so
we
will
continue
to
lean
forward
with
with
aggressive
testing.
Just
this
week
we
tested
pretty
much
everyone
in
the
Veterans,
Administration,
nursing,
home
I
think
was
160
tests
we
did,
and
in
two
days.
So
that
was
a
very
great
program
and
we
have
also
been
in
several
other
nursing
homes,
doing
the
same
thing,
doing
aggressive
testing
through
all
of
those
facilities.
G
So
we
still
continued
to
see
positive
cases.
I
think
our
positivity
rate
is
staying
around
10%,
which
was
the
guidance
that
Harvard
was
mentioning.
If
we
reach
that
testing
level,
that's
the
percentage
of
positivity
rate,
we
would
probably
see
it's
not
an
indication
of
10%
of
the
people
in
the
community
are
positive
with
kovat,
it's
just
an
example
of
of
how
effective
our
testing
is
in
those
target
areas
that
we
think
are
high-risk.
When
we
look
at
the
outbreak
models,
you
can
see
clearly
that
whatever
we
did
over
the
last
month
helped
flatten
a
curve.
G
This
is
the
u.s.
model
as
well
as
this
is
the
Florida
model,
and
you
can
clearly
see
that
the
number
of
cases
projected
even
from
week
to
week
has
come
down
dramatically
as
a
function
of
the
suppression
of
transmission
from
kovat,
19
and
other
viruses,
so
very
pleased
to
see
that
going
in
the
right
direction.
This
is
the
Charlotte
model
that
continues
to
show
med-surg
going
down
and-
and
you
can
see
clearly,
the
models
are
projecting
out
that
there's
a
long,
slow
decay
into
June,
and
we
hope
that
that
will
continue.
G
That's
why
it's
so
important
to
use
this
data
as
we
we
look
at
releasing
some
controls
and
allowing
our
community
to
return
to
the
new
normal.
We
continue
to
monitor
this
data
so
that
we
we
don't
have
an
outbreak
in
and
and
struggle
with
that
we
don't
want
to
overrun
our
medical
system
or
subject
our
community
to
risk.
There's
some
models
out
there
right
now.
G
But
you
know
it's
hard
to
tell
right
now,
so
we
know
that
kovat
has
a
significant
percentage
of
its
genetic
makeup
is
aligned
with
SARS.
What
we've
seen
in
Canada
and
other
places
so
we're
gaining
more
understanding
of
how
we
think
kovat
is
going
to
behave
and,
more
importantly,
how
immunity,
once
you've
been
exposed
to
Kovich
should
behave
more
like
SARS
rather
than
like
influenza.
G
We
pushed
out
a
significant
amount
of
supplies.
33,000
gloves,
12,000
mass
107,000
procedure
masks,
and
this
was
all
in
an
effort
to
not
only
protect
our
health
care
workers,
our
responders,
our
community
members,
wherever
we
felt
that
these
were
areas
to
suppress
the
spread
of
virus
and
then,
of
course,
these
are
all
the
executive
orders.
I
did
not
in
the
newest
one
that
you
just
went
over,
but
we
we
have
a
significant
amount
of
executive
orders
that
are
set
to
expire
as
well,
and
then
we
still
have
our
call
center
number.
G
I
H
H
The
whole
thing
about
gloves:
I've
seen
people
wearing
gloves
that
don't
have
a
clue
what
the
glove
is
there
to
protect.
You
know:
they're
touching
everything
they
can
with
the
same
glove
on
I
mean.
Are
we
gonna?
Are
we
gonna
doing
that?
Are
we
gonna
get
out
ahead
of
some
of
this,
so
that,
like
our
beauty,
salons
know
what
they're
going
to
have
to
do
to
prepare
to
open
so
that
it's
not
just
a
24
hour
turnaround
for
them?
These
are
all
things
that
I've
been
asked,
and
I
really
like
to
hear
your
answer.
Yes,.
G
G
Right
now,
with
a
a
I
went
I
call
it
a
covet.
Class
I
really
haven't
come
up
with
a
better
name
than
that,
but
a
a
online
webinar,
a
very
brief
type
class
that
we'll
be
putting
out
to
our
businesses
so
that
they
can
attend
and
we'll
do
them
during
the
day
time
in
it
and
after
hours.
So
this
way
it
doesn't
disrupt
their
business
and
then
we'll
be
able
to
give
them
a
certificate
and
and
show
them
so
that
they
can
visibly
show
their
patrons
that
hey,
listen,
we've
been
trained
on
kovat.
G
We
understand
that
there's
some
infection,
control
practices
and
here's
some
things
that
that
we've
learned
and
just
as
an
overt
way
of
letting
their
patrons
know
that
they've
been
trained
in
this
area.
It
may
not
be
the
best
solution,
but
at
least
they're
educated,
and
that
they
care
enough
about
their
patrons
safety.
So
that's
another
thing
that
we're
doing
as
well
so
that'll
be
coming
through
is
very
soon.
H
G
Goal
is
to
finish
them
up
this
week
and
then
start
those
classes
by
next
week.
The
challenge,
quite
honestly,
is
just
vetting
them
with
all
of
our
industry
partners
and
just
getting
people
good
enough
consensus
so
that
they
feel
comfortable.
We
already
have
about
I
want
to
say
about
eight
flyers
in
different
industries
already
developed.
Okay,.
G
G
Sir,
so
what
happened
was
you
saw
those
two
big
spikes
there?
What
we
think
these
were
datasets
that
came
in
there's
a
couple
of
reasons
why
it
happened.
One
is
this
significant
increase
in
testing,
but
the
other
part
is
is
that
we
had
a
significant
amount
of
tests
that
went
to
private
labs.
One
was
in
Virginia
in
which
that
batch
data
came
back
to
us
in
bulk
form,
so
it
had
to
be
put
into
our
system
to
reflect
the
information.
G
So
we
feel
that
that
spike
that
we
saw
a
few
days
ago,
really
is
part
of
the
EPI
curve
from
the
week
prior.
So
it
really
isn't
a
true
new
spike,
it's
more
included
in
the
previous
weeks,
because
if
you
can
see
there
was
sort
of
a
false
low
in
those
previous
weeks.
So
if
you
average
it
out,
that's
sort
of
where
that
came
out
we've
since
fixed
that
issue.
Some
of
the
challenges
in
emergency
response
everything
we
do
is
based
on
a
mission
number,
it's
a
request
number.
G
If
you
will,
and
a
big
part
of
that
is
for
reimbursement
and
tracking
for
FEMA,
and
things
like
that.
Well,
when
we
do
these
tests
there,
each
facility
that
we
go
into,
we
assign
a
mission
number
and
in
some
of
these
tests
that
we
did
initially,
it
was
a
learning
curve
to
put
the
mission
number
on
all
of
the
test,
requisitions
and
and
vials,
so
that
it'll
tie
back
to
that
module
that
we
build
in
our
monitoring
system.
So
we've
since
learned
and
fixed
that,
and
so
we
feel
moving
forward.
That
won't
happen
again.
G
Well,
give
you
an
example,
the
the
spike
that
you
saw
the
first
spike
there
in
the
middle
of
the
graph
that
was
4,000
tests
from
quest
dumped
in
two
days.
So
so
they
that's
kind
of
throws
the
data
off
a
little
bit.
So
that's
why
we
do
a
lot
of
education
on
this,
but
really,
like
you
said,
sir,
is
focusing
on
the
total
number
of
cases
and
then
she's
really
the
positivity
rate,
and
things
like
that.
G
So
if
we
can
continue
to
see
where
I'm
looking
to
see
in
our
future,
is
that
as
we
reopen
that
the
number
of
daily
cases
do
not
increase
or
they
stay
reasonably
stable
and
then
what
ideally
we'd
like
to
see
is
more
spacing
between
days
of
no
new
cases,
so
that
once
we
start
to
see
a
sporadic
break
like
that,
then
we
know
we're
starting
to
get
towards
the
tail
end
of
this
and
then
at
some
point.
The
spacing
will
continue
to
increase
and
the
amplitude
of
the
number
of
cases
will
decline.
So.
C
When
we're
looking
at
the
trend,
a
resident
emailed
me
concerned
that
if
we
were
looking
that
we
wanted
to
see
a
specific
every
day,
there
was
a
decrease
and
no
upward
spike.
And
then,
if
there
was
an
upward
spike,
we
would
start
all
over
again
and
I
said.
I
think
that
this
is
more
of
a
trend
and
not
looking
at
today
right.
G
And
so
what
I
tell
my
team,
because
we
haven't
had
a
day
off
since
February,
so
I
say
we're
in
the
marathon,
not
the
sprint?
Okay.
So
what
I?
What
I
would
say
is
if
you
look
at
the
graph
and
you
look
at
the
bar
graph
on
the
left.
That
is
the
total
cases
for
the
state
of
Florida,
and
so
you
can
clearly
see
if
you
kind
of
smooth
out
all
the
spike
enos.
G
You
can
see
that
there's
a
logarithmic
increase
on
the
front
end,
whereas
a
rapid
climb
and
then
it's
sort
of
rounded
off,
and
this
gradual,
slow
down
and
kind
of
decays
down
that
downward
trend
is
what
we're
looking
at.
So
three
days
does
not
consider
a
trend.
We're
looking
at
more
like
a
two-week
cycle
and
the
reason
why
we
look
at
two
weeks
is
because
that's
multiple
incubation
periods
for
kovat
19,
and
we
know
that
if
you
can
get
past
the
14
day,
mark
you're
reasonably
successfully
not
exposed.
E
G
Really
hard
and
I
tell
you
why
it's
hard,
because
what
we
did
worked,
and
so
the
curve
was
so
flat
in
Charlotte
County
that
it's
really
tough
to
figure
out
where
that
spike
was,
and
so
I
look
at
it
more
like
a
wave
rather
than
this
big
crash.
So
that's
a
good
thing,
and
so
as
long
as
we
can
keep
it
at
a
simmer,
then
we're
doing
what
we
need
to
be
doing
and
I
think
it's
really
going
to
come
down
to
I.
G
Think
our
businesses
and
our
community
members
are
are
so
ready
willing
and
able
to
support
these
efforts
because
they
want
to
get
back
to
some
semblance
of
normalcy.
That
I
think
they're
gonna
be
very
supportive
in
whatever
we
ask
them
to
do,
and
the
biggest
thing
is
really
the
stuff
that
we
started
to
put
into
place
as
we
before
the
big
lockdown
I
think
that's
kind
of
some
of
the
stuff.
That's
going
to
still
be
in
play
to
social
distancing,
the
hygiene,
not
touching
your
face
and
all
the
other
stuff
that
we
talked
about.
G
B
C
C
G
Absolutely
so
there's
a
couple
of
different
tests.
The
the
antibody
test
that
everybody's
been
hearing
about
has
has
not
been
clear
to
be
used
as
a
diagnostic
test
for
determining
kovat.
Positivity
reason.
Why
is
because
the
tests
are
so
new
that
there's
there's
a
high
degree
of
error,
a
negative
and
positive
on
those
tests?
So
we
really
don't
like
to
use
them
for
that.
G
We
we're
using
them
more
for
epidemiological
research
to
just
get
a
better
understanding
of
potential
exposure
and
spread,
and
so
we
have
tests
on
order
we're
just
waiting
for
them
to
come
in
we're
expecting
about
200
of
them,
and
then
the
state
is
also
doing
a
push
out
to
our
communities
as
well.
We
don't
know
when
that's
coming,
but
we
know
that
that'll
be
part
of
our
testing.
G
The
other
piece
of
it
is
the
the
2400
that
I
mentioned
are
are
the
swabs
that
are
just
like
we've
been
using
for
last
few
months
and
we've
been
continuously
expanding,
so
you
heard
the
governor
talked
about
pharmacies.
Opening
up
to
do
collections
so
I
know
that
the
pharmacies
are
having
those
conversations
on
how
they
can
open
up
testing
to
support
that
we
have
ramped
up
our
testing
as
well
as
I,
had
a
VA
strike.
G
Also
some
drive
up
testing,
so
we're
working
on
a
couple
of
different
platforms
to
help
and
and
more
importantly,
I
also
want
to
make
sure
that
we're
also
representative
across
the
entire
county,
so
that
north-south-east-west
County
is
equally
accessible
for
testing.
For
folks.
That
may
want
that
and
then
we've
even
talked
about.
Can
we
support
mobile
testing
so
that
we
have
sort
of
a
traveling
testing?
You
know
type
thing
so.
Well,
we'll
continue
to
work
through
those
really.
The
limiting
factors
is
staff
protective
equipment
and
then
the
test
collection
kits.
G
There's
a
couple
of
things
and
that's
a
great
question
one:
it's
always
better
to
go
to
your
health
care
provider
because
they
know
your
history.
The
challenges
is:
not
all
healthcare
providers
are
geared
up
and
ready
and
able
to
to
do
the
deflection
so
we're
helping
support
them
so
that
they
can
do
more
of
that
themselves.
The
other
piece
is
that
the
there's
several
clinics
that
are
also
doing
collections
and
sending
that
stuff
in
so
family,
health,
centers
millennium,
is
doing
collections
and
then,
hopefully,
we'll
hear
the
pharmacy
is
ramping
up
here.
G
The
soon
my
understanding
is
within
the
next
week
or
so
they're
gonna
be
ramping
up
to
start
doing
that
and
then
and
then
at
the
health
department.
We've
been
testing
pretty
much
all
of
the
infrastructure
first
responders
and
medical
providers
and
folks
to
kind
of
get
all
of
those
tests,
and
then
we
have
someone
that
we've
had
on
standby
daily.
G
That
literally
drives
those
collections
up
to
our
state
lab
so
that
we
can
get
those
results
quicker
and
so
I
think
the
shortest
time
frame
we
had
from
collection
to
lab
was
like
three
and
a
half
hours.
So
you
know
so
we're
trying
to
do
our
best
and
have
multiple
solutions.
I
think
the
answer,
quite
honestly,
is
the
more
we
enable
our
community
to
test
the
better
off
we'll
be
because
they'll
just
it'll
just
be
more
convenient
for
folks
and
then
and
then
we'll
continue
to
expand.
We
talked
about
drive-up
testing
at
the
health
department.
G
The
challenges
is
that
drive-up
testing
has
been
used
in
other
areas,
but
they
quickly
burn
through
their
supply
and
then
weren't
able
to
do
anymore.
So
we
want
to
make
sure
that
we
have
enough
for
sustain
testing
through
the
community.
It's
a
long
answer
to
your
question.
I
hope,
I
answered
it.
You.
C
I
C
E
C
G
That's
where
I
want
to
go
with
it
just
so,
we
can
get
a
better
understanding
of
the
onset
and
spread
I.
Think
the
the
CDC
and
and
several
other
agencies
want
the
same
information.
It's
I
think
once
we
can
get
through
and
and
test
test
the
test
to
make
sure
the
validity
and
accuracy
of
those
tests.
First
generation
test
sometimes
have
a
pretty
high
error
rate
and
they
may
test
positive
for
several
coronaviruses.
Remember
there
are
many
corona
viruses,
so
it
could.
G
It
could
possibly
flag
on
that
and
so
we're
that's
why
we're
not
using
it
for
a
diagnostic
purpose,
but
just
to
understand
that
you
have
antibodies
that
can
register
and
so,
as
those
get
better
we'll
continue
to
use
more
of
those
we've
had
similar
challenges
in
the
past,
as
well
with
with
hepatitis
C
screenings
as
well
as
HIV,
and
so
a
lot
of
those
early.
First
generation
tests
had
high
error
rates
and,
as
the
scientific
community
got
better
and
understood
it
more,
those
tests
became
more
and
more
accurate.
G
So
I
would
imagine
that
the
gold
standard
is
going
to
be
a
blood
draw
at
some
point
and
and
then
possibly
a
rapid
test
like
what
we
see
with
influenza
when
you
go
to
dr.
I,
would
imagine
that's
where
the
community
is
evolving
to
and
then
on.
A
positive
note
on
the
other
side
of
all
of
that
is
there's
been
some
really
good,
promising
reports
right
now
on
vaccine
development,
so
we're
hoping
they're
moving
at
light
speed
with
some
of
this
development,
so
that
that
gives
us
some
hope
as
well.
C
B
C
G
C
G
C
A
Yes,
this
one
I
asked:
how
does
this
look
for
timelines
in
terms
of
hospitals
and
clinics
being
able
to
do
more
of
the
elective
procedures?
They're.
G
G
C
G
D
J
All
right,
good
afternoon,
boy,
Jose
and
dr.
Jose,
a
tough
act
to
follow.
How
did
I
get
this
spot
so
personally
and
I
know
he's
leaving,
but
I
want
to
thank
him
and
his
team
for
all
that
they've
done
for
the
city
in
our
department.
Specifically,
we've
gone
through
a
lot
in
the
last
few
weeks
and
really
his
team
with
the
testing
and
supplies
PPE.
All
of
that
they've
taken
the
lead,
they've
been
the
lead
agency
from
the
beginning
and
really
they've
stepped
up
to
the
plate,
so
they
really
have
done
an
amazing
job.
J
So
Howard
asked
me
to
kind
of
give
a
little
brief.
How
are
we
doing
as
a
community?
So
we
continue
to
see
good
compliance
all
right
with
with
folks
adhering
to
a
lot
of
the
policies
and
the
executive
order,
there's
still
a
sense
of
fear
and
unknown
I
think
by
all
of
us
right.
So
conversations
like
we
just
had
helped
to
alleviate
some
of
that.
I
continue
to
be
encouraged
as
I.
Think.
All
of
us
that
participate
in
our
daily
conference
calls
many
folks
in
the
room
are
participating
in
them.
J
When
I
hear
things
like
dr.
Joe
just
went
over,
he
stole
some
of
my
thunder,
but
the
you
know
hospital
is
running
at
about
50%
senses
or
capacity.
That's
that's
encouraging
when
I
look
at
call
volumes
and
they
continue
to
there
again
we're
running
well
below
normal
kind
of
on
that
some
of
the
conversations
I've
had
with
Howard
and
in
staff
meetings
that,
while
our
call
volumes
are
running
a
little
below
normal,
what
we're
seeing
we
still
can
continue
to
see
the
acuity
or
the
illness
of
the
patient
is
is
more
severe.
J
So
what
that
tells
us,
as
folks,
are
avoiding
the
hospital
and
they're
waiting
longer
to
go,
and
so
by
the
time
we
see
them,
there
they're
just
more
sick
right,
so
they're
they're
much
they're
in
worse
shape
than
they
have
been
traditionally
so
I
guess
to
all
those
listening.
If
it
is
an
emergency,
and
yet
you
feel
like
you
need
to
be
seen,
certainly
call
don't
wait,
we're
seeing
some
results
that
are
truly
catastrophic
in
some
areas,
so
folks
need
to
seek
medical
attention
if
they
feel,
like
you
know
it's
an
emergency
for
sure.
J
So,
as
a
department,
again,
we
talked
about
call
volumes,
they
still
fluctuate.
Ppe
I
mentioned
that
a
little
earlier
I
think
I
speak
for
PD
as
well
through
both
Department
of
Health
and
then
Charlotte
County
EOC
we've
been
able
to
acquire
and
get
and
stay
really
on
top
of
it.
Our
PPE
remains
stable,
we're
doing
fine
and
I
think
Charlotte
County
Emergency
Management
for
that
as
well.
As
you
know,
we
made
the
news
recently:
it's
not
always
good
to
make
the
news.
Sometimes
it
is
alright.
J
So
we
had
a
couple
of
positive
case
cases
and
I
thought
I'd.
Give
you
a
brief
on
that
nice
to
take
the
lead,
sometimes
maybe
not
so
much
in
this
instance.
I
can
just
tell
you
that
our
folks
are
doing
great
they're.
Our
two
folks
are
probably
a
poster
child
or
poster
children
of
quarantine
done
right.
It
has.
It
has
gone
very
well
that
we
communicate
with
them
daily,
sometimes
multiple
times
daily,
and
they
are
doing
fantastic,
so
no
worries
what
it
did
for
us
as
a
city
and
also
specifically
as
a
department.
J
It
made
us
look
at
some
of
our
procedures
and
really
ramp
up
a
couple
of
things
that
that
we
were
doing
so.
Obviously,
the
building
all
of
our
stations
were
deconned
pretty
aggressively
after
that,
and
you
know
that
contact
tracing
and
all
of
that
in
it
and
it
worked-
we've
had
the
two
cases
that
we
can
identify
to
a
very
specific
contact.
J
Just
this
week
our
stations
were
all
fogged
with
a
pathogen
and
path
of
pathogen
killing
substance
that
has
worked
great
in
fact,
city
hall
and
and
the
annex
building
are
both
being
done
this
weekend,
so
we're
just
Sur
and
police
yeah,
so
police
department,
as
well,
so
we're
going
through
that
process,
which
has
really
been
great.
It
gives
not
only
does
it,
you
know,
kill
everything,
and
that's
that's
always
good,
but
it
also
treats
a
lot
of
our
employees.
J
J
In
addition,
several
of
the
folks
in
the
room,
we're
participating
in
a
recovery
work
group,
that's
through
conference
that
we,
the
first
one
was
yesterday,
and
so
it's
a
group
of
individuals
and
and
different
modalities
from
across
the
community
that
are
kind
of
working
to
set
priorities
and
develop
some
strategies,
for
you
know
kind
of
making
our
way
through
this
as
we
go
through
the
recovery
efforts.
So
I
look
forward
to
that
I
think
we've
got
some
good
ideas
in
play
and
obviously
everything
changes
as,
as
you
all
know,
almost
daily
right.
J
J
So
that's
a
tough,
as
you
know,
it's
kind
of
it's
owned
by
by
zip
code
and
all
of
that,
so
what
I
can
tell
you
is
that
I
don't
have
a
specific
number
for
you,
I,
really,
don't
it
kind
of
changes
it
ebbs
and
flows
as
people
drop
off
the
list
and
all
of
that,
but
man,
I
I,
see
the
numbers
that
come
through
the
resident.
You
know
the
addresses
and
the
ones
that
are
specific.
J
You
know
to
our
city
and
on
an
on
an
average
I'd
say
we
probably
have
15
to
20
at
the
most.
That
would
come
through
the
city.
I
again,
I
see
that
even
as
a
I,
again
I'm
just
venturing
a
guess,
quite
honestly,
based
on
memory
and
what
we
see
comes
through,
but
we
I
will
tell
you
that
a
lot
of
the
experiences,
the
clusters
that
we've
seen
in
the
AL
F's
I've
been
really
encouraged.
J
When
I
we've
met
with
all
of
our
al
FS
and
our
skilled
nursing
units
and
all
of
that
and
they're
doing
a
great
job,
we
don't
see
those,
fortunately,
those
huge
clusters.
Those
big
numbers
haven't
come
out
of
our
area,
and
so
that's
encouraging
and
I
think
they're
really
doing
a
super
job,
but
I
know
I,
don't
have
a
specific
for
us.
I
apologize!
Okay!
Thank
you.
Anything
else.
I'd.
K
H
H
J
I
can
tell
you
probably
the
truth
lies
in
the
middle
right,
I
mean
that's,
that's
maybe
at
least
my
opinion
I
think
we
have
done
a
lot
of
things
right.
We
really
have
and
I
don't
I
don't
mean
us
specifically,
but
you
know,
just
as
a
community
right
in
a
state,
I
mean
again
so
I
saw
the
same
presentation
last
night.
Everybody
else
didn't
I
thought
there
was
a
lot
of
data
in
it.
J
That
was
very
interesting
and
and
I
watched
the
data,
but
so
I
think
the
truth
is
in
the
middle
somewhere
that
you
know
we
always
say
we
we
plan
for
the
worst
and
hope
for
the
best
is
maybe
is
maybe
that
kind
of
what
we
did
maybe
to
a
point,
but
I,
listen,
I,
think
we
we
need
to
look
at.
You
know
where
we
are
today
and
where
we
go
forward,
but
man
I
I'm,
not
sure
that
I
completely
have
an
answer
for
it,
but
I
think
whatever
we're
doing
we
can.
We
should
continue.
E
E
A
J
The
testing
is
still,
my
understanding,
is
they're
still
testing
that's
occurring
very
aggressively
and
anywhere,
where
you
have
that
communal
living
with
at-risk
folks
there's
really
an
aggressive
testing.
That's
that's
intended
for
their.
So
it's
that's.
My
understanding
that
it
has
I
can
tell
you
our
call
volume
to
to
those
places
has
been
fantastic
and
we
and
it's
when
we're
there.
J
It's
met
with
you
know
we're
completely
confident
with
the
staff.
That's
there,
I
mean
they've
really
done
a
great
job
and
the
stage
has
come
in
to
offer
PPE
and
to
help
with
best
practices
and
and
all
of
that
and
they've
been
very
receptive
to
that
so
kind
of
back
to
your
question.
Some
of
some
of
all
of
that
they've
done
a
great
job.
J
L
Davy's
punta
gorda
police
department,
so
tell
you
a
little
bit
about
our
procedures
of
how
we
kind
of
change
some
things
of
how
we
respond
to
calls
those
low
priority
type
calls
that
could
be
handled
over
the
phone
we're
doing
a
lot
of
over
the
phone
calls.
If
it
doesn't
require
followup
with
you,
know,
suspect,
information
or
collecting
evidence.
L
We
can
generally
handle
it
over
the
phone
if
it
does
require
something
in
person,
we've
been
asking
residents
if
they're
able
to
step
out
of
their
home
and
and
talk
to
us
in
a
nice,
open
air,
and
it's
worked,
there's
been
no
negative
feedback
that
I've
received
about
how
how
we're
handling
everything
and
so
I
think
our
procedures
are
doing
well.
In
that
case,
so
calls
for
service
pretty
steady.
You
guys
have
seen
some
of
the
watch
commanders
reports.
There
are
still
criminals
out
there.
L
Our
big
thing
that
we
see
generally
over
the
last
month
or
so
has
been
vehicle,
burglaries,
criminal
mischief,
type,
stuff
and
stolen
bicycles,
and,
if
you
think
about
that,
that's
generally,
probably
kids
that
might
be
out
of
school,
not
a
lot
to
do
so.
So
we've
been
trying
to
do
our
best
to
keep
a
good
eye
on
that
one
thing
we
are
still
doing
and
responding
to
a
lot
of
our
those
calls
in
the
parks
we're
getting
the
calls
of
people
that
are
still
kind
of
just
hanging
around
sitting
in
chairs,
or
things
like
that.
L
So
as
of
the
beginning
of
the
governor's
order,
we've
had
233
calls
in
our
parks,
some
of
those
were
very
self
generated,
and
particularly
in
the
beginning,
where
we're
trying
to
educate
people
so
but
people
have
been
pretty
good
about
it.
You
know
they
get
it
so
that
that's
been
the
majority
of.
What's
going
on
with
that
one
thing:
we
do
you
talk
about
treating
the
mind
chief
Briggs
was
talking
about
it.
We
provide
our
officers
and
all
of
our
staff
with
a
daily
briefing
report.
So
anything
that's
changed.
L
That's
new
on
a
daily
basis
gets
highlighted.
It's
also
a
nice
little
guide.
They
can
go
to
any
time
they
they
have
questions
about
something
in
here
we
talked
about
there.
Well,
we
put
out
General
Orders
as
well,
but
if
there's
any
inkling
that
there
might
be
a
Kovan
19
case
that
we're
responding
to
they
dawn
on
their
personal
protective
equipment,
our
supplies
are
pretty
good.
We
we
have
a
good
process
in
place
that
you
know
if
they
start
to
run
out
something
they
immediately
notifies.
We
get
it
right
to
them.
L
So
everything's
been
working
with
that
as
well
and
I
will
say:
I
agree,
100%,
dr.
pepe
and
the
health
department
staff,
fantastic
we've
we
were
on
that.
We
were
on
a
follow-up
call,
the
one
the
fire
department
had
where
they
ended
up
testing
positive.
Our
officers
knew
to
put
PP&E
equipment
on
because
it
was
a
follow-up
call
and
they
got
tested
right
away
and
we've
been
very
lucky.
We've
been
blessed
that
none
of
her
our
staff
has
tested
positive.
So
but,
like
I,
said,
everything's
been
been
doing
well,
I
think
morale
is
pretty
high.
L
We
have
a
biweekly
conference,
call
with
our
lieutenants
and
above
and
just
I
think
the
key
has
been
information
sharing
it.
It
helps
everywhere
and
we're
pushing
stuff
out
to
the
citizens
and
I.
Also,
my
business
advisory
council
and
the
Chiefs
Advisory
Council
I've
been
pretty
much
trying
to
send
something
out
weekly.
If
not
you
know
week
and
a
half
or
so
so,
keeping
them
informed
and
they
push
it
out
to
to
that.
You
know
the
communities
they
represent.
So
any
questions
for
me.
C
I
L
L
I
L
M
Mark
Gehring
public
works
we're
operating
pretty
much
as
normal
with
a
few
changes
in
our
protocols
of
what
we're
doing.
Unlike
Hurricane
Irma.
Our
recovery
was
eighteen
months
to
two
years,
getting
all
the
sea
walls
rebuilt.
This
is
kind
of
one
where
we
don't
have
to
do
a
whole
lot,
but
I'll
tell
you
what
we
are
doing
is
as
a
group
we're
getting
projects
done.
We
just
recently
finished
Madrid
sidewalk
and
the
grading
work
for
the
scales
still
going
on.
All
of
that
sort
of
thing.
M
We
have
lost
one
contractor
the
our
concrete
contractor
as
an
older
gentleman
who
felt
he
was
at
risk
and
he's
pulled
his
crews
off
temporarily
expecting
to
hear
from
him
soon
as
when
he's
coming
back,
we
had
a
little
trouble
bidding
a
project.
We
were
hoping
to
get
Sullivan
Street
riebeck
and
had
to
go
three
times
for
bids
and
only
got
one
bit
at
the
end
and
that
bid
is
high.
M
So
procurement
is
going
through
that
tried
to
figure
out
if,
but
it
looks
like,
we
may
have
to
push
that
off
to
fall
to
to
get
some
interest.
We
cannot
do
it
through
the
rainy
season,
so
we
don't
get
it
done
before
the
rainy
season
and
we
got
we're
pushing
that
off
to
the
fall
first
things
we
did
when
all
this
started
is
we
instituted
a
buddy
system
for
all
of
our
crews,
where
two
guys
at
most,
you
know
we
have
the
large
pickup
trucks.
We
can
fit
five
people
in
a
pickup
truck.
M
Well
now
it's
two
people
to
a
truck
and
that
team
is
pretty
much
stationary.
They
they
those
two
guys
work
together
on
all
their
projects,
so
that
they're
not
today,
I'm
he's
with
Jim
and
tomorrow,
he's
with
Bob
that
sort
of
things.
So
they
know
where
each
other
has
been.
They
can
get
a
level
of
comfort
as
to
what
their
exposure
is.
M
We
have
gone
to
four
10-hour
days
for
the
crews
and
staggered
their
work
at
start
times,
so
that
there's
no
congregating
at
the
ice
machine
or
the
coffeepot,
or
anything
like
that.
So
we
got
folks
coming
in
6:00,
6:30,
7:00,
7:30
8:00
spread
out
all
through
the
morning
and
then
there's
their
finished
time
is
staggered
as
well.
It
sure
is
odd.
No
I
used
to
at
the
end
of
the
day
the
office
was
the
last
to
close.
The
workers
were
all
gone
by
the
end
of
the
day.
M
Well,
now,
I
leave
at
the
end
of
the
day
and
there's
still
a
lot
of
folks
worked
in.
This
makes
me
feel
like
I'm
getting
out
of
there
earlier
and,
let's
see
in
the
offices,
we
have
locked
the
doors
like
all
the
other
city
buildings,
so
there's
only
four
of
us
in
the
Public
Works
office
on
a
regular
basis.
When
a
supervisor
has
dealings
with
their
crew,
they
go
to
that
particular
Bay
and
meet
with
their
crew.
M
M
So
you
know,
although
we
can't
completely
disappear
and
and
be
isolated
where
and
still
get
our
jobs
done,
we
wear
that
constant
group
gives
you
a
level
comfort
that
you're
properly
social,
distancing
and
I
think
that's
about
it.
For
public
works.
I'll.
Take
any
questions
if
you
have
them,
but
we'll
leave
this
to
the
fine
folks
in
uniform
that
take
care
of
all
this,
and
this
is
all
there's
not.
C
C
I
N
Afternoon,
Tom
Jackson
Utilities
Department,
a
lot
of
what
Mark
said
are
things
that
I
were
gonna,
say
so
I'll
start
out
utilities,
as
you
recall,
has
five
divisions
our
field
crews.
As
much
as
far
as
we
tried
wits
heart.
We
can't
fix
a
water
line
from
home
when
it
breaks,
so
we
have
to
have
some
crews
out
in
the
field.
We
also
have
staggered
where
we
could
doing
four
10-hour
days.
N
N
If
you
go
to
the
plants,
what
we've
done
with
the
plants
is:
we've
rotated,
some
of
the
maintenance
personnel
to
the
second
shift
and
the
third
shift,
and
given
them
very
specific
duties
and
instructions
to
do
our
productivity
is
still
up,
as
Mark
indicated,
we're
still
doing
projects
where
we're
putting
in
water
lines
we're
doing
sewer
line
projects.
We're
actually
mark
has
moved
to
project
up
that
we
hope
we
can
accommodate
helping
them
accommodate.
So
we're
still
very
productive
and
very
active.
The
plants
have
moved
maintenance
people
to
the
311
shift.
N
N
N
Manufacture,
we
had
issues
with
it
that
we're
having
resolved
a
tank
developed
a
leak
and
we
got
to
fix
it
and
do
some
other
things
like
that
and
last
but
not
least,
our
administration
division.
We've
furloughed
most
of
those
folks
to
work
from
home
and
that's
working
out
pretty
well
except
I'm
having
to
learn
how
to
fax
and
copy
and
do
things
and
I
never
had
to
do
a
lot
before,
because
I
had
smart
people
doing
that.
But
we're
we're
barring
any
questions
you
may
have.
Yes,
ma'am
Tom.
I
N
No
I
don't
I
because
as
sure
as
I
say,
it'll
be
June
15th
and
tomorrow,
I'll
get
a
call,
it's
gonna,
be
the
28th
or
yeah,
no
I,
don't
we're
still
targeting
June
and
we're
going
to
you
know
be
making
water.
The
membranes
are
loaded.
The
critical
thing
is
loading
the
membranes
in
the
machinery
itself
and
once
you
load
them,
you've
got
to
have
a
keep
them,
get
them
wet
in
about
five
days
and
keep
them
wet.
N
So
once
we
start
making
test
water,
we
won't
shut
the
plant
back
off
it's
when
we
start
blending
that
water
back
in
with
the
surface
water
and
we're
hoping
we
can
accomplish
that
in
May
and
have
the
majority
of
the
punch
list
stuff
done
in
May
and
June
for
a
complete,
complete.
Okay
thanks.
Yes,
yes.
N
With
you,
we
had
a
project
manager
sneeze
the
other
day
and
we
chastised
him
so
bad
and
maybe
away
from
everybody
else.
Well,
we're
all
doing
great,
thank
goodness
and
and
our
PD
and
Fire
Department
has
helped
I
think
keep
us
safe
with.
You
know,
making
sure
that
the
rules
are
followed
and
and
we're
great
shape,
we're
doing
very
well.
You've.
H
C
N
P
O
Shootie,
the
IT
manager
just
wanted
to
give
you
a
brief
update
of
where
we
stand
as
far
as
our
IT
support
and
everything
is
gone
as
as
most
of
the
others
have
said,
it's
it's
pretty
much
business
as
usual.
We
continue
to
support
about
forty
to
forty
two
people
working
from
home
and
that's
been
going
very
well.
We've
been
able
to
meet
the
needs,
I
think
of
the
workers
to
have
the
tools
that
they
need
to
be
able
to
get
their
job
done.
O
We've
been
able
to
continue
to
provide
support
through
by
linking
to
people's
computers,
so
we're
not
having
to
spend
a
lot
of
time
out
and
about
with
face
to
face.
We've
been
able
to
do
a
lot
of
our
work
computer
to
computer,
but
we're
necessary
we're
still
being
able
to
go
to
someone's
workstation
and
do
what
needs
to
be
done.
Our
projects
are
still
moving
forward.
O
Are
we've
wrapped
up
the
public
records
request
software
we're
in
the
process
of
doing
the
configuration
and
set
up
for
our
time,
electronic
timekeeping
software
and
just
started
our
project
to
upgrade
our
fire
department
software?
That
was
part
of
our
schedule
of
projects
for
this
year.
So
we
have
one
person
working
at
home,
full-time
and
then
one
person
out
on
paternity
leave
still,
but
the
workforce
that
we
have
is
we
have
a
nice
spread
out
workspace
and
we've
been
able
to
just
keep
things
moving.
C
P
You
good
afternoon
for
the
record
Gemma
bell
urban
design
and
as
the
other
departments,
we
are
status
quo.
We
are
moving
forward.
Our
work
has
shifted
to
other
projects,
we're
doing
more
scopes,
more
research,
more
development
projects,
getting
them
ready
for
bid
and
things
of
that
nature
code.
Compliance
is
out
there
there,
the
ice,
we
kind
of
have
them
not
only
looking
just
keeping
an
eye
on
the
area,
but
if
they
see
people
in
need,
they
are
you
know,
making
any
references
to
us
and
we're
getting
in
touch
with
other
people.
P
P
The
staff
just
continues
to
move
forward
on
everything.
Contact
with
the
residents
is
usually
through
our
emails
and
our
phone
calls.
We
have
all
learned
the
product
of
zoom
and
we
have
continuing
to
meet
with
our
developers
or
anybody
who
needs
to
meet
with
us.
A
lot
of
zoom
meetings
are
going
on
and
it's
been
a
little
tough
to
get
used
to
it,
but
everybody
seems
to
be
moving
forward
on
that.
P
Q
Christon
Simeone
finance,
so
in
our
finance
department
in
this
building,
we
have
all
pretty
much
stayed
working,
there's
only
two
per
office,
so
we've
been
able
to
do
the
social
distance.
We
had
one
person
working
from
home
and
that's
been
working
out
great
for
her.
She
does
come
in
as
needed
about
once
or
twice
a
week
for
certain
tasks
that
she
can't
really
do
from
home.
So
then
she
comes
in
and
does
that
procurement
was
working.
Q
A
lot
of
their
employees
were
working
from
home,
but
they
had
to
have
some
time
to
come
into
the
office,
pick
up
paperwork
and
things
like
that.
A
few
of
them
have
already
returned
to
work
and
working
at
the
office
again
billing
and
collections
again,
most
people
were
staying
working
in
the
office
spread
out.
They
have
cubicles,
they
did
try
some
alternate
schedules,
but
most
of
them
were
preferring
to
stay
with
the
eight
five
eight
hour
days
versus
trying
to
do
a
10-hour
day.
K
For
the
record,
Phil
Wickstrom
Howard
uses
of
Howard
and
Rhea
use
a
phrase
about
taking
care
of
the
minds
of
the
employees.
More
than
anything
else,
we
are
expecting,
as
we
begin
to
loosen
up,
that.
Many
of
our
employees
that
are
at
home
will
come
back,
come
back
with
a
great
deal
of
trepidation
and
that's
going
to
be
the
challenge
we
do
have.
We
got
ten
thermometers
and
sitting
in
my
office
right
now,
we're
gonna
be
working
out
that
process.
K
Do
we
test
just
the
employees?
Do
we
test
employees
and
customers?
Do
we
you
know,
so
it
just
is
going
to
be
quite
an
interesting
process,
bringing
people
back
to
work
that
have
been
off
for
a
while
one
of
the
things
that
we've
discovered
is
that
actually
some
people
could
just
stay
home
and
come
in
as
as
needed.
You
know
for
meetings
for
the
one
that
specifically
comes
to
mind
is
urban
design
when
they
do
the
design
studios
and
those
kind
of
things,
but
that's.
K
What's
going
on
Jeff
and
I
sat
in
on
a
very
long
teleconference
yesterday,
with
several
HR
committees
or
managers
in
the
state,
and
we've
done
really
well
I,
think
we've
maintained
a
good
balance
between
doing
the
right
thing
by
our
employees
without
slamming
their
heads
on
the
door.
It's
a
phrase
that
I'm
used
to
you
know
we
have
a
lot
of
people
to
make
decisions
as
to
whether
to
come
over.
K
You
know
to
stay
home
to
come
in
some
of
the
places
that
we
listen
to
our
had
just
been
brutal,
they've
laid
off
entire
divisions,
and
things
like
that.
We've
kept,
we've
stayed
working
and
the
only
people
that
have
really
not
been
able
to
work
on
those
that
have
been
quarantined
for
whatever
reason
we
have
the
two
firefighters
everybody
else
has
tested
negative
so
far,
and
but
you
know
the
in
listening
to
the
way
we've
approached
this
and
the
way
we've
done.
K
Some
things
has
been
with
real
eye-opening
for
us
and
I'm
and
I'm
really
I'm
really
glad
I
work
here,
not
at
those
places.
We've
I
think
with
like
rate
one
time
when
this
all
started
up.
He
and
I
were
taught
talking
in
my
office,
and
he
said
our
job
is
to
be
the
calm
in
the
storm
and
I
really
think
that
we've
been
able
to
offer
that
to
our
employees.
K
I
K
At
least
she
was
honest
enough
to
say
that,
but
yeah,
it's
it's
I,
think
all
of
us
have
learned
a
few
things
and
we'll
just
see
how
it
goes.
You
have
any
questions
for
me.
C
K
I
K
K
In
fact,
I
think
it's
tomorrow,
anyway,
we're
gonna
be
having
a
zoom
teleconference
with
the
our
health
insurance
provider.
Prm
and
yeah
zoom
has
worked
out
really
well.
I
I
had
some
real
serious
concerns
early
on
about
security,
but
evidently
my
concerns
were
mislaid.
Howard
says:
I
borrow
troubles,
that's
okay,
anything
else.
R
David
Levin
city
attorney
and
head
of
the
legal
department
I,
don't
know
that
Howard
was
expecting
me
to
say
anything,
but
I
thought
it
would
be
appropriate
to
kind
of
give
you
my
perspective.
I
think
our
office
has
approximately
40
attorneys
and
maybe
twice
as
many
staff
and
for
the
most
part,
our
three
offices,
including
our
saara
County
office,
has
shut
down
to
be
safer
at
home.
Talking.
S
R
As
the
city
attorney,
I
was
given
status
as
essential
personnel,
so
I've
been
working
principally
from
our
office
and
has
have
been
as
responsive,
if
not
possibly
more
so,
to
the
city's
needs.
During
that
period
of
time,
we've
been
working
diligently
on
the
draft
sign
code
and
in
fact,
we've
had
probably
a
little
over
six
hours
of
meetings
and
two
of
which
were
done
by
zoom
and
I.
Think
we're
well
on
track
to
have
a
draft
for
your
consideration,
not
adoption,
but
consideration
I.
R
Think
at
the
second
meeting
in
in
May
and
and
I
think
that
the
availability
of
our
time
gave
us
the
opportunity
to
make
sure
we
were
on
track
for
that
other
than
that
I'm
glad
everybody
is
healthy
and
I
think
looking
forward
to
being
able
to
spend
time
with
all
my
other
partners.
But
in
the
meantime,
it's
nice
having
a
quiet
office.
C
S
F
But
that's
just
about
anybody's
website.
It's
pretty
much.
The
easiest
thing
to
do
is
just
go
to
Google
to
get
the
correct
website
couple
of
probably
put
a
month
and
a
half
ago
when
we
first
started
into
this,
we
decided
to
create
one
place
that
we
could
get
all
give
and
get
all
the
information
about
kovin
19
for
the
community
and
to
be
included
in
this.
F
We
had
to
be
really
careful
that
we
were
just
using
sources
that
were
factual
and
that
they
weren't
someone's
opinion
or
something
you
know
something
that
would
benefit
a
certain
organization.
We
all
the
time
we
get
requests
to
add
links
to
our
website
from
groups
that
have
something
to
gain
from
having
that
information
on
there.
It
sometimes
comes
in,
like
it's
gonna,
be
just
factual,
but
usually
it's
it's
advertising
for
something,
so
the
ones
that
I
decided
to
go
with
CDC
gov.
F
This
is
really
any
large-scale
guidance
that
you
need
on
anything
having
to
do
with
komen
CDC
is
the
source
to
go
to
everything
from
how
to
figure
out
if
you're,
sick,
you're
so
guidance
on
Kovan.
So
this
is
this
is
the
part?
That's
really
helpful,
so
you
can
look
at
community
schools
and
workplaces.
You
click
on
that
and
it
has
disinfecting
community
events,
businesses,
workplaces,
any
type
of
guidance
that
you
possibly
need
about.
F
Sanitization
for
for
businesses
is
here
now
what
the
Florida
Department
of
a
Department
of
Health
is
putting
out
there
on
they're,
actually
their
pictures,
their
diagrams
of
steps
that
you
should
be
taking.
It's
not
a
big,
it's
not
a
big
book
or
something
like
that.
It's
just
it's
a
it's!
A
pictogram
and
I
wanted
to
use
them
already.
Today
we
got
them
yesterday
and
I
said:
can
I
can
I
use
them
and
dr.
F
Pepe's
team
said
no
they're
just
trapped,
but
I
understand
that
our
businesses
need
guidance
and
so
I'll
get
those
out
just
as
soon
as
they
tell
me
that
I
can
there's
also
a
link
on
here
to
OSHA
through
CDC.
You
can
get
to
OSH's
guidance
as
well,
and
that
was
a
question
that
we
had
on
Facebook
today.
Somebody
wanted
to
know
where
you
can
get
more
information
about
this.
This
kind
of
stuff
and
CDC
website
takes
you
the
OSHA
website,
Florida
Department
of
Health.
F
F
F
Then
you
can
get
into
the
dashboard
from
there
and
many
of
those
screenshots
that
I've
used
through
the
course
of
the
virus
have
been
directly
from
this
dashboard
and
I.
Don't
try
and
interpret
what
the
dashboard
means
for
people
I
give
them.
The
information
and
I
tell
them
in
some
of
the
various
tools.
It'll
explain
it
has
definitions
and
I'll
show
people
where
to
go
for
those
definitions,
but
never
trying
to
sway
their
their
opinions
about
the
data
or
anything
like
that.
F
F
F
All
of
our
meeting,
cancellations,
closures,
information
about
the
Public
Safety
Building,
our
parks
and
amenities
events
and
festivals
being
closed.
Frequently
asked
questions
are
on
here.
The
complete
order
from
last
night
is
up
here
so
that
the
public
can
go
and
and
read
it
understand
what
it
means.
F
You
know-
and
we
we
spell
things
out
in
a
bunch
of
bullet
points,
exactly
what
what
safe
smart,
step-by-step
means.
What
Florida's
next
steps
are.
Some
of
that
are
archives
of
what
we've
done
throughout
the
course
of
the
virus
are
on
here
different
frequently
asked
questions
the
history
timeline
of
what
the
state
has
done
in
regards
to
the
corona
virus,
where
business
owners
can
go
for
help.
That's
on
here
as
well
in
it
it
links
to
other
organizations
that
have
those
resource
is
readily
available.
F
So
if
a
business
is
in
need
of
some
sort
of
service-
and
they
go
through
this-
the
portal-
that's
on
Charlotte
County
economic
development.
They
can
get
to
all
the
resources
that
businesses
could
possibly
be
looking
for
different
questions
that
have
come
up
on
Facebook
over
the
course
of
the
last
couple
weeks.
I'll
pull
those
onto
the
website
as
well
and
then
down
at
the
bottom
of
this
all
of
the
recent
Facebook
and
Twitter
posts
post
right
to
the
bottom.
F
This
we've
kind
of
had
a
know
over
the
course
of
the
last
couple
weeks.
If
you
put
a
Facebook
post
out
there,
that's
going
to
get
people's
attention,
you
have
to
be
ready
to
baby,
set
that
Facebook
post
24/7
and
be
able
to
answer
questions
dispel
rumors.
It's
been,
it's
been
really
interesting,
but
you
know
we're
fortunate
in
Florida
to
have
the
Department
of
Health
that
we
do
that.
We've
been
able
to
get
that
factual
information.
We
had
a
couple
times
early
on
where
we
were
putting
our
information
in
the
morning.
F
By
the
afternoon,
everyone's
opinions
had
changed.
And/Or,
the
governor
would
come
out
with
a
new
order,
or
we
I
mean
you
were
all
a
part
of
bringing
everyone
together
to
talk
about
how
we
were
gonna,
do
the
50%
restaurant
capacity
and
then
nope
can't
do
that
and
I
know.
Some
of
our
residents
think
that
we
get
a
heads-up
for
that
that
we
might
know
that
that
kind
of
stuff
is
coming
and
we
don't
we
we
find
out
the
same
way
as
everyone
else
does
so
I
hope
you,
you
have
the
information
that
you
need.
F
H
S
C
F
C
F
Do
you
sign
up
just
through
our
website,
there's
a
button
on
there
that
you
can
sign
up
for
newsletters?
It
has
a
comprehensive
list
of
people
that
have
signed
up
over
the
years.
Anyone
can
anyone
can
subscribe.
Anyone
can
unsubscribe
at
any
time
and
that,
with
the
Byrne
store
under
groaning,
that
was
I
just
had
a
lot
of
people
because
they
wanted
the
information
right
away.
F
I
just
asked
them
to
sign
up
then
for
that
newsletter
they
did
that
and
let
him
know
that
they
can
unsubscribe
at
any
time,
but
I
had
one
guy
call
me
back
and
say:
hey
I
kind
of
like
this,
though
it
was,
you
know
any
any
time,
encouragement
that
you
can
give
to
residents
to
subscribe
to
ours
as
well.
I
know
a
lot
of
you
have
your
own
newsletters,
which
is
fabulous
but
encouraging
them
to
subscribe
to.
The
main
one
allows
us
then,
to
have
that
direct
connection
as
well.
So
great.
D
C
D
D
J
Right
Briggs
fire
chief
for
the
record,
so
as
Howard
said,
the
retail
side
of
it
was
pretty
easy.
We
already
have
those
numbers.
Every
restaurant
in
the
city
already
has
an
occupational
load,
a
number
that's
and
that's
required
for
their
licensing,
so
a
retail
establishment
retail
store,
that's
not
required,
so
it's
it's
not
there.
So,
even
though
the
guidance
came
from
the
governor's
office
that
25%,
we
anticipated
there's
going
to
be
a
lot
of
questions
in
that,
because
a
typical
store
does
not
they're.
Not
given
that.
So
we
wanted
to
make
something
that
would
be.
J
J
So
what
we
did
so,
the
way
we're
going
to
calculate
it
is,
is
really
not
difficult,
and
so
we've
got
some
kind
of
a
draft
and
order
now
that
I've,
given
Melissa
we're
going
to
kind
of
work
through
and
hopefully
by
the
close
of
business
today
or
morning,
we'll
have
something
out
there
for
folks
that
can
help
them.
Essentially
they're
gonna
be
able
to
take
a
retail,
their
retail
space.
They
they
calculate
the
square
footage,
so
they
measure
their.
They
calculate
their
length
times.
J
Width
that'll
give
them
so
a
rough
example
would
be
if
I
had
20
foot
a
storefront
and
it's
50
foot
deep.
That
should
give
me
this
out
a
thousand
foot
of
square
footage.
They
can
then
divide
that
by
100
right
and
that
should
give
that
that'll
give
them
so
in
this
example,
10,
which
would
mean
they're
allowed
10
occupants
or
bodies
inside
the
building,
and
so
that
would
include
store
the
clerk
that
would
include
all
bodies
in
the
building,
and
so
the
next
question
is
where'd.
You
come
up
with
a
hundred.
J
Should
we
just
grab
that
what
we
didn't
sow
in
fire
code?
There
actually
is
a
table
that
addresses
occupants
and-
and
you
know
the
hazards
that
go
with
that,
and
so
we
took
a
in
fact
one
of
the
most
restrictive
formulas
is
a
hundred
square
feet
right
per
in
that
so
based
on
the
occupancy,
those
kind
of
change,
if
you
had
a
mercantile
versus
it,
can
get
complicated
here,
but
so
just
suffice
to
say
that
using
a
hundred
is
a
is
a
conservative
number
and
so
again,
using
that
example.
J
I
think
it's
going
to
be
pretty
easy
for
folks
to
understand
and
we
can
back
it
up
with
some
good
rationale.
So
the
idea
is
that
we
would
want
folks
to
be
able
to,
as
well
as
I'm
sure,
law
enforcement
they're
going
to
be
the
ones
that
are
tasked
with
some
enforcement.
So
we
wanted
to
be
able
to
back
it
up
with
something
that
made
sense
and
what
you'll
find
is.
J
This
is
not
unique
to
the
city
every
other
community
out
there
nope,
you
know
they're,
we
don't
know
of
one
that
does
occupancy
loads
for
a
retail.
You
know
scenario,
so
we're
not
unique
in
that
that's
the
same
across
the
state.
So,
as
we
mentioned
earlier,
things
change
daily,
this
is
one
of
those
changes,
so
any
questions
that
I
can
answer
on
it.
J
J
I
H
J
Again,
I
can
only
go
by
the
twenty
five
percent
rule
I.
You
know,
which
is
very
easy
to
to
calculate
so
that
we
give
them
an
occupancy,
whatever
their
occupancy
load
is
25
percent
of
that
and
that's
total
bodies
is
there
I
think
really
and
we've
seen
a
lot
of
it.
There
are
a
lot
of
businesses
and
I
mean
particularly
the
restaurants
that
have
thought
outside
the
box
a
little
bit
so
they're
setting
up
maybe
some
of
their
takeout.
J
You
know
outside
or
just
make
that
easy
I
think
I
speak
for
law
enforcement
a
little
bit
in
that
the
enforcement
side
of
this
is
somewhat
passive,
meaning
that
it's
you
know,
I,
don't
it's
not
anybody's
desire
to
stand
there
and
you
know
count
heads
as
people
come
in
and
all
of
that
I
think.
As
we
said
earlier,
the
community
is
doing
a
really
good
job
of
making
really
good
decisions.
They
have
been
so
far
and
I
anticipate.
J
L
Pam
Davis
appointed
police
department,
exact,
we're
gonna,
do
exactly
what
we
did
when
we
first
started
scaling
things
down
and
it's
the
education
portion
tool
is,
is
a
good
example.
I
would
I
would
say,
go
and
make
your
order
and
then
stand
outside
and
wait
for
your
order
if
you're
doing
a
takeout
I
just.
H
L
J
C
J
C
J
C
C
J
S
C
C
J
C
J
I
J
Again
confusing
you
bet
again,
we
were
kind
of
in
fact
it's
our
goal
to
make
this
a
easy
to
understand
and,
and
it's
a
challenging
task
right.
We
want
to
make
it
as
easy
for
law
enforcement
to
help
when
they
get
those
calls.
But,
more
importantly,
for
you
know,
the
business
owner
to
you
know
take
some
ownership
and
say
this
is
where
I'm
at
I
suspect
that
store
that
we're
talking
about,
and
you
know
wherever
that
has
ten.
If
they
get
ten
people
in
it
right
now,
they're
going
to
be
thrilled.
J
So
that's
the
idea
and
I
anticipate
that
not
all
communities
will
do
that.
They're
gonna,
maybe
do
a
buy
exception
and
say:
look
if
you
have
a
question
call
us.
We
want
to
give
this
information
out,
so
the
folks
can
be
part
of
that
decision-making.
I.
Think
there's
going
to
be
recommendation.
Also
like
we're.
C
J
We
we
don't
have
to
wait,
it's
already
happening,
we've
we've.
We
had
phone
calls
and
emails
well
when
I
got
in
the
office
this
morning,
so
so
yeah
we
have
we've
tested
it
through
a
few
folks
and
but
we'll
make
sure
we
want
again
it's
our
goal.
We're
all
in
this
together
is
that
as
a
community
that
we
can
work
through
it.
So
so.
L
I
L
J
J
C
D
C
C
D
I
E
E
L
D
That's
the
way
we
interpret
it
farmers
market.
We
got
a
proposal
today
from
the
farmers
market
to
do
more
than
just
the
drive-thru
we're
gonna
be
looking
at
that,
and
the
fact
that
restaurants
are
now
going
to
be
open
somewhat
retail
shops
are
gonna,
be
open
somewhat.
We
already
have
the
grocery
stores
and
everything
open
up.
We're
gonna
be
getting
together
with
the
chamber
and
the
folks
who
run
the
downtown
Farmers
Market
and
come
up
with
a
proposal
to
see
if
we
can
make
it
work.
I.
B
Have
a
question
about
that:
I've
noticed
on
their
site
plan
that
they
have
boozed
over
onto
Herald
Court,
again
I
thought
we
were
under
the
assumption
they
weren't
going
to
be
using
Herald
court
for
their
vendor
booths.
We
talked
about
that
extensively
at
one
of
our
council
meetings
a
few
months
back
if.
D
They
gave
us
a
site
plan,
they
had
an
unusually
large
number
of
vendor
sites,
you
know
and
it
looked
like
they
were
kind
of
close
together,
but
we
don't.
We
have
to
really
take
a
look
at
that.
We're
gonna,
try
and
sit
down
with
them
and
come
up
with
something
that
may
be
able
to
get
them
back
in
operation,
but
with
some
obviously
some
social
distancing,
because
there's
farmers
markets
that
are
open
all
around
us.
We
have
found
out.
C
B
We
talked
about
that
when
we,
when
we
discussed
when
we
were
talking
about
the
number
of
booth
spaces
they
needed
and
they
wanted
to
expand
on
eleven
Street
and
then
they
and
we
talked
about
the
fact
that
we
we
wanted
to
keep
Herald
court
free
of
both
setups
because
of
emergency
responder
space.
You're.
H
C
B
C
I
B
You
know
I'd
rather
see
them
go
back
to
using
Sullivan
Street,
which
is
what
they've
been
doing
and
there's
an
in
this
diagram.
There's
nothing
on
Sullivan,
Street
I
would
rather
see
them.
Do
that
and
leave
Harold
Court
completely
free
of
booth
spaces,
because
that
disallows
first
responder
vehicles
to
get
down
that
road
if
they
need
to,
and
that
concerns
me
a
great
deal.
P
D
H
D
D
D
If
we
decide
to
open
up
the
pickle
ball
at
Gilchrist
Park,
we
have
one
pickleball
place
in
the
city.
It's
going
to
get
crowded.
If
we
decide
to
open
up
the
playground,
we
have
two
playgrounds
essentially
in
the
city
with
Cooper
Street,
it's
not
as
crowded,
but
the
one
at
Gilchrist
Park,
the
one
at
Gilchrist
Park
is
packed
right
now,
it's
closed,
but
if
we
open
that
up,
it's
going
to
get
packed
tennis
that
doesn't
get
to
play
as
much
it
does
get
play,
not
as
much
basketball
I'm,
not
sure.
D
D
So
we
need
to
make
some
decisions
as
early
as
next
week,
because
that's
when
Charlotte
County
is
going
to
have
more
discussions,
they've
already
opened
up.
Well,
they
opened
up
their
fishing
piers.
Ours
have
been
open,
they
did.
They
opened
up
disc
golf.
Well
that
doesn't
matter
to
us,
because
we
don't
have
any
area
where
he
can
play
disc
golf.
D
They
had
a
very
interesting
discussion
two
days
ago
regarding
pickleball
and
tennis
and
playgrounds
playgrounds,
they're,
not
inclined
basketball,
they're,
not
inclined,
but
there
was
some
serious
consideration
and
it's
going
to
be
brought
up
again.
Tuesday
about
opening
up
pickleball
and
tennis
they've
already
opened
up
their
dog
park.
We
have
one
dog
park,
it
is
very
well
used
in
the
morning
crowd
and
the
evening
crowd.
D
C
C
Sitting
in
the
park
we've
been
not
allowing
people
to
sit
in
the
park.
You
know
I've
seen
like
a
single
person
sitting
under
a
palm
chair
and
just
looking
at
the
water
and
we'd
haven't
allowed
that.
Should
we
open
up
the
park
to
allow
them
to
sit
on
their
own,
not
not
on
our
picnic
tables
or
things
but
sit
and.
A
Yes,
especially
the
benefits
of
sunlight
by
the
media,
I
think
it's
a
positive
one
thing.
This
I
say:
yes,
one
thing
I
guess
what's
supposed
to
happen
today
at
3:30
that
call
with
the
county.
Are
they
discussing
some
of
this
I
only
ask
because
I'm
wondering
if
their
discussion,
if
they're
looking
at
how
not
to
have
Englewood
Beach
happen
again
with
these
new
openings
with
the
whole
world
coming
down,
because
that
was
when
they
first
opened
up.
Englewood
area
Tampa
all
came
down
and
their
beaches
are
really
crowded.
I.
C
Talked
to
Commissioner
to
say
oh
this
morning,
and
he
said
everything
is
fine.
He's
been
able,
I
know
to
the
beaches
numerous
times
and
the
beaches
are
good
social
distancing.
It's
been
no
problem
for
us,
the
problem.
He
said
it's
been
in
Sarasota
County,
that's
where
they
they
opened
the
beach
but
didn't
provide
any
parking.
Gotcha
yeah
other
thing,
so
he
said
and
they
are
opening
the
restrooms
as
soon
as
they're,
the
the
company
that
cleans
the
restrooms
can
start.
So
they
would
open
the
restrooms,
but
the
restrooms.
H
Know
it's
my
thought
that
most
of
the
people
who
are
sitting
in
the
park,
it's
it's
a
couple
who
take
their
chairs
from
home
and
sit
so
they're,
either
sitting
at
home
together
or
they're
sitting
out
in
the
park
together
and
for
mental
health
purposes.
You
know
we
probably
should
let
them
get
out
of
their
house.
H
Yeah
I!
Don't
get
this
whole
thing
with
the
beaches,
I
guess
and
I.
Just
I
shouldn't
I
live
in
the
wrong
part
of
the
state
or
something.
But
you
know
if
it's
our
little
beach
is
such
a
nothing
Beach
that
if
people
are
that
upset
about
not
being
able
to
go
to
Ponce
park
beach,
then
you
know
let
them
I,
think
really.
H
I
I
have
prop
what
I
have
problems
with
is
the
fact
that
we
have
had
two
hundred
and
thirty-some
people
who
couldn't
understand
that
they
couldn't
do
it
when
that
was
the
rule
and
how
many
are
we
gonna
have
when
we
say
well,
you
can
only
have
a
small
group.
You
know
now
they're
gonna.
Instead
of
being
two
people,
they're
running
off,
there's
gonna
be
this.
H
E
L
L
E
So
it
seems
like
we
want
to
do
it,
but
we
need
the
social
distancing.
Now
I
see
this
couple
that
goes
out
to
sit
under
the
with
their
own
chairs,
I
mean
they
live
with
each
other
and
I
don't
see
and
we
allow
people
to
be
the
clothes
in
their
own
home.
So
if
it's
a
couple
it
seems
like
you
can't
really
say
they
got
a
set
six
feet
apart
from
each
other.
B
You
know
as
much
as
I
would
love
to
be
able
to
see
people
get
out
and
about
our
ponts.
Beach
is
a
very,
very
compact
little
space
and
you
open
up
that
Beach
and
you're
going
to
have
a
hundred
and
fifty
people
out
there
watching
sunset
every
night
and
I
guarantee
you
I,
you
can
I
will
stake
my
life
on
it.
You
will
have
a
hundred
and
fifty
people
out
there
every
night
watching
sunset
and
the
same
thing
will
happen.
B
I,
don't
I,
think
our
you
know
where
our
numbers
are
low
right
now,
because
we
have
been
diligent-
and
we
have
really
you
know-
enforce
this
and
driven
at
home
with
the
presidents
and
for
the
most
part
people
are
listening.
But
there
are
some
people
out
there,
just
like
the
one
person
that
wanted
to
have
a
concert
in
her
front
yard
and
she
invited
everybody
on
next
door
to
go
and
sit
across
the
street
from
her
house
and
bring
their
chairs
and
watch
a
concert.
B
You
can't
do
that
and
that's
what
that's
the
kind
of
things
that's
going
to
happen.
The
guitar
army
is
another
one.
You
open
up,
go
Chris,
Park,
you're,
gonna,
have
the
guitar
army
and
any
a
number
of
other
groups
right
now,
I
think
it's
too
soon
and
I,
and
you
know
our
numbers
are
low
because
we
have
been
doing
the
right
thing
in
a
minute.
B
You
start
changing
that,
but
it's
just
a
little
too
soon
and
I
think
we
have
to
wait
until
we
get
to
at
least
a
two-week
plateau,
somehow
get
to
a
place
where
our
number
numbers
are
starting
to
level
off
they're.
Not
right
now,
even
though
even
though
statewide
the
numbers
are
staggering
down
in
a
downward
trend,
we're
still
not
we're
still
not
there
yet,
and
our
demographic
is
such
that
we
have
a
very
vulnerable
population
here
and
I
want
to
keep
our
numbers
low
and
keep
people
safe.
C
E
C
I
feel
very
strongly
that
we
have
a
dog
here
and
I
just
feel
that
that
I
understand
that
that
we
have
achieved
a
lot
by
the
restriction,
but
we
have
a
doll
and
we
have
to
let
our
community
demonstrate
that
they
can
be
adults,
and
this
is
not
a
nanny
state.
I
just
I
feel
it's.
We
need
to
I
feel
really
badly.
When
I
see
somebody
sitting
under
the
chair
and
they're
looking
I
don't
know
what's
causing
that
I
think.
F
C
And
so
I
feel
really
badly
for
that
person.
That's
sitting
out
of
the
palm
it
just
wants
to
enjoy
the
water
and
it's
like
they're
not
doing
anything
wrong,
and
it's
like
and
they're,
not
harming
anybody
or
a
couple
that
wants
to
sit
there.
It's
like
you
know,
do
we
know
that
they're,
you
know
living
the
same
house
and
no,
but
they
probably
are
I.
H
Kind
of
thought
the
governor
said
it
well
yesterday
when
he
said
you
know
where
we
want
to
live
our
lives,
but
we
want
to
protect
our
vulnerable
population,
so
we
have
told
those
who
are
vulnerable,
you're
safer
at
home.
Yes,
we're
not
telling
them
to
stay
home.
We're
saying
you
are
safer
at
home.
Yes,
now
I
happen
to
be
in
that
group
of
people
who
is
over
the
age
that
I
need
to
stay
safer
at
home,
am
I
gonna
go
to
the
park,
no
I
think
anybody
there
has
this.
H
Probably
not,
but
I
am
I,
am
the
vulnerable
population
and
to
protect
myself.
I'm
gonna
stay
home
and
I
will
do
the
same,
but
I
don't
think
we
need
to
say
to
our
entire
city's
population
that
we
are,
you
know,
I,
think
I'm
with
you,
I
think
we
need
to
start
loosening
up
because
things
are
starting
to
get
back
to
normal.
If
you
can
go
to
a
store-
and
you
know
try
on
clothes,
you
can
probably
sit
at
the
park.
That's.
E
E
I
E
D
A
The
mental
health
aspect,
as
well
as
just
people
getting
just
walking
I
think
it's
necessary
for
to
maintain
health.
I
mean
this
is
not
the
only
health
problem
think
we
have
to
make
sure
that
our
population
also
I
think
this
is
an
important
component
to
maintaining
their
health.
A
L
And
I
agree
that
we've
been
out
there
a
lot
and
having
it
probably
would
be
easier
for
us
to
deal
with
people
spaced
out
and
and
reminding
them
to
social
distance
than
it
is
to
constantly
have
to
tell
them
to
pick
up
their
chairs
and
move
so
as
from
enforcement
perspective
vice-mayor.
That
might
be
actually
easier.
If
that
helps
you
with
your
decision-making,
let.
L
Of
metal,
it's
as
long
as
they're
on
a
group
of
10
or
less
they
don't
necessarily
have
to
be
six
feet.
They
have
to
be
succeed
away
from
somebody
else,
because
I
guess
like
like
you
said
it's
an
assumption
that
the
10
that
and
I
I
don't
know
that.
We'll
see
you
10
people
out
there,
but
this
assumption
that
you're,
a
family
or
you.
I
B
L
B
C
H
H
C
C
D
D
C
E
E
H
D
B
D
C
E
D
D
A
C
B
Pretty
sure
the
governor's
yeah,
the
governor's
thing
says
any
components
of
museums
or
libraries
that
have
interactive
functions
or
exhibits,
including
child
play
areas
remain
closed.
So
you
know,
that's
to
me,
means
playgrounds
and
interactive
fountain.
It
would
be
the
same
as
that
kind
of
a
classification
interacting.
That's.
C
Has
made
a
request
to
Florida
southwestern
that
they
can
consider
opening
the
pickle
Plex
in
this
their
initial
statement?
The
fsw
statement
was
that
they're
not
going
to
be
opening
the
college
until
the
July
and
the
pickle
place
was
like
no
wait
a
minute.
We
don't
want
to
wait
until
July.
They
have
come
back
with
a
list
of
things
like
all
of
the
picnic
tables
will
be
closed.
Anyone
can
bring
their
own
chair,
but
you
can
sit.
You
have
to
be
social
distanced.
C
The
balls
must
be
washed
after
each
each
game.
No,
it's
a
customary
that
you
touch
paddles
like
after
you
score
something
no
touching
paddles.
So
they
came
up
a
whole
long
list
of
things
and
have
submitted
that
to
the
college
and
the
college
is
gonna,
be
meeting
next
week
to
consider
their
request.
It's
not
saying
that
it's
going
to
happen
and
I
believe
the
county
is
looking
at
up
and
after
their
pickleball
next.
Are
they
gonna
talk
about
it
next
week?
I
C
C
Don't
mean
to
be
insensitive
to
that
and
another
was
a
letter
that
was
written
from
my
G
Wilson
expressing
mm-hmm,
something
that
is
not
Gary
Wilson.
Who
was
on
the
pickleball
the
board?
He
specifically
called
me
and
said:
would
you
please
make
sure
everyone
knows
that
did
not
come
from
me
and
that
there's
another
G
Wilson
who's
an
active
pickleball
player
here
in
the
community,
so
the
information
so.
D
D
B
D
B
Huge,
it's
a
really
really
really
big
open
space,
it's
fenced
in
and
everything,
but
it's
a
huge
open
space
and
there's
a
lot
more
room
for
animals
to
go
out
and
play
this.
This
our
space
is
about
a
third
of
that
it's
much
smaller,
much
more
compact
and
densely.
You
know
organized
I
think
we
wait
on
that
one,
my
opinion.
Oh,
so
we
wait
on
that
one.
It's.
B
C
B
C
S
C
C
H
D
H
I
D
We
definitely
call
it
I,
don't
know
why
we
call
it
that,
but
we
call
it
that
I
mean
it's.
It's
know
you
can
sit
in
the
grass
area
under
the
trees,
but
we
don't
want
people
congregating
on
that
very
small
sand
area
and
we're
gonna
get
calls
on
that.
If
we
haven't
already
we're
gonna
get
calls
on
that.
We're
gonna
get
calls
on
all
this
stuff.
If
I
tell
you.
C
B
Important
thing
is:
we
have
to
keep
people
safe
as
much
as
we
can
take
that
responsibility
on
and
and
we
have
to
be
responsible
and-
and
it
also
puts
liability
on
us
when
we
agree
to
allow
some
of
these
things
to
be
open,
and
so
you
know
that's
a
concern
I
just
you
know,
I'm
always
trying
to
err
on
the
side
of
caution
with
stuff.
Like
this
we've
been
consistent,
we
have
and
that's
why
our
numbers
are
so
low.
I
mean
that's,
that's
really
a
critical
thing
with
with
the
population
that
we
have.
B
C
But
we
can't
there's
just
some
things:
we
cannot
mandate
and
I've.
You
know
people,
some
people
go
to
the
shop
at
Publix
and
wear
masks
and
some
don't
mm-hmm
and
you
know:
I
haven't
been
to
Publix,
my
husband
has
been
doing
the
shopping,
but
he's
been
wearing
a
mask
and
he
said
he
came
back
and
said:
oh
so-and-so
said
to
say
hi
and
he
said
they
weren't
wearing
masks,
and
so
it
was-
and
these
were
people
that
should
be
because
they're
of
the
age,
the
what
we
called
the
age,
the
vulnerable,
the
vulnerable
population.
C
E
B
H
B
C
H
Would
just
like
to
say
one
thing
if
I
can
and
that
is
that
I
have
received
some
criticisms,
that
our
city
isn't
doing
anything
about
this?
That
we're
not
you
know
we're
not
doing
anything.
They're
not
seeing
us.
I
I
talked
to
Howard
about
this.
You
know
it's
like
how
do
you
have
a
press
conference
and
say:
okay
today,
everything's
gonna
stay
the
same,
you
know
and
we
are
all
working.
We
are
all
I
mean
I'm
sure
this
bothers
me:
I
go
to
sleep
at
night
and
I.
H
Try
to
think
how
can
we
get
money
to
the
businesses
that
have
been
denied
their
business
loans?
How
you
know
what
can
we
do
to
help
what
what's
out
there?
But
it's
not
that
we're
not
doing
anything.
It's
that
we're
so
far
down
the
totem
pole
in
government.
You
know
we
have
to
wait
for
the
governor
and
then
we
have
to
wait
for
the
county
and
then
then
it's
us
and
it's
not
that
we
don't
want
to
be
community
leaders.
It's
that
we're
doing
the
best
we
can
with
the
range
that
we're
given
and
I.
I
C
Really
appreciate
it,
thank
you
for
all
the
communication
as
well.
So
it's
you
know
you're
right,
some
people,
you,
okay,
I,
appreciate
appreciate
what
we're
doing
and
others
you
know
may
feel
like
we're
not
doing
enough.
We
are
not
a
municipality
where
you
know
that
we
all
hear
that
the
mayor
made
this.
C
Happened
whatever
it's
like,
you
know,
we
don't
have
that
kind
of
a
form
of
government
here,
I,
don't
have
any
more
control
over
anything
than
any
of
you.
So
we
are
a
group
of
five
and
we're
a
team,
and
so-
and
we
don't
have
some
we're
choosing
to
put
in
place
things
that
we
feel
our
team
can
enforce
and
and
asking
our
community
to
participate
and
be
a
part
of
the
solution
and
for
the
most
part,
I
think
we're
getting
that.
B
B
C
So
I
just
appreciate
everything
that
everyone
is
doing
to
try
to
help
our
community
in
whatever
way
it
is
whether
it's
making
masks
or
it's
donating
to
a
cause.
There
are
lots
of.
You
know
whether
it's
a
food
bank
or
I've
had
some
people
ask
me:
well
what
can
we
do
if
we
feel
that
we
feel
like
we're
at
home
and
we're
not
doing
anything
I
said,
then
you
know
donate
if
you,
if
you
can
possibly
find
it
a
way
to
do
it.
I
donate
the
giving
challenge.
C
Because
people
I
think
feel
that
they
need
to
help
these
nonprofits.
That
really
need
help,
and
there
are
a
lot
of
causes
that
you
know
the
co
ad.
That's
trying
to
help
people
and
listening
to
Ashley
Mar
talk
about
it.
If
you
the
co
ad,
with
the
help
of
the
community
foundation,
it's
extremely
well
vetted
and
it's
show
the
money
goes
to
Charlotte
County
residents
only
and
the
money
goes
to
the
specific
purpose.
C
The
resident
does
not
get
the
money,
so
if
somebody
needs
help
with
a
rent
payment
or
a
more
car
payment
or
whatever
the
money
goes
directly
to
that
company
and
not
to
the
recipient,
so
the
recipient
can't
take
the
money
and
go
do
something
else
with
it.
So
it's
it's
there.
There
are
lots
of
things
that
people
can
do
to
help
our
community
so
cost.
C
B
There's
a
guy
that
called
me
two
weeks
a
week
ago,
Saturday
and
I
emailed
Howard.
He
actually
wasn't
on
Saturday.
He
wanted
to
deliver
food
on
Saturday.
He
was
going
down
to
one
of
the
farms
in
Homestead
where
he
was
originally
from
and
he
was
going
to
talk
going
to
meet
with
his
farmer
friends
who
were
having
to
till
the
ground
because
there's
so
much
stuff
falling
off
the
the
plants
and
they
can't
sell
it
fast
enough.
So
he
was
going
down.
B
He
brought
an
entire
pickup
truck
full
of
produce
back
up
here
and
wanted
to
know
where
he
could
donate
it.
So
I
hooked
him
up
with
with
a
couple
of
the
food
banks
and
then
I
talked
to
Joe,
Sabatino,
Sabatino,
I,
know
Sabatini's
and
savety
knows
and
fun
to
course,
Joe
1708
Auk
to
him
and
now
because
of
co-ed
they
have
a
guy
who's,
facilitating
that
for
all
the
food
banks
around
here.
B
C
Residents
here
the
retirees
they
haven't
had
the
privilege
of
being
able
to
hear
some
of
the
information
that
United
Way
did
the
study,
where
all
the
residents
that
so
many
of
the
residents
in
Charlotte
County
were
one
paycheck
away
from
a
disaster.
And-
and
so
you
know,
the
disaster
has
occurred
and
these
people
are
really
struggling,
and
these
are
people
that
were
working
and
had
two
or
three
jobs.
I
mean
they
and
they
want
to
work.
So
it's
whatever
you
know
we're
all
pouring
our
hearts
out
to
these
people
and.
A
C
C
C
They
have
permission
from
the
owner
of
the
property
to
put
the
canopy
up
so
put
on
your
mask
and
bring
some
food
over
and
and
the
they've.
You
know
we
I
know
we
went
out
and
bought
food,
but
you
know
it's
like
if
you
have
things
in
your
pantry
that
you're
not
using
and
clean
it
out
and
bring
it
over
all.
I
E
C
C
B
And
shout
out
to
Carmelo's
and
Hasani
and
Bella
Napoli,
who
all
worked
together
for
the
past
several
weeks
and
they're,
giving
free
meals
away
to
hospitai
and
restaurant
workers
who
have
been
out
of
jobs
and
and
they
continue
to
do
that.
So
that's
a
really
good
thing,
too.
They've,
given
away
hundreds
of
meals.