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From YouTube: City Council Meeting 01-02-19 Part 4
Description
Description
C
A
To
get
input
on
the
annual
budget,
we
have
relied
on
some
some
meetings
that
conversations
that
we
have
with
the
public.
We
have
twenty
of
three
one
year
we
got
down
to
two
and
then
one.
In
addition,
we
asked
for
input
throughout
the
year
that
comes
to
us
regarding
input
into
budget
priorities.
Some
communities
have
gone
and
done
a.
They
use.
A
national
survey
through.
A
City
managers,
association
or
the
not
the
Florida
League
of
Cities,
but
the
National
League
of
Cities,
there's
a
survey
that
you
can
hire
a
company
to
do
a
very
statistically
valid
survey
to
get
budget
priorities.
So
a
community
volunteer
has
met
with
us
and
has
come
up.
We've
come
up
with
some
some
three
options.
A
One
is
a
very
innovative
option
using
a
software
program
called
social
pinpoint,
which
is
very
intriguing
to
us,
because
it
would
provide
some
additional
input
into
budget
priorities,
but
it
also
provides
some
programming
that
enables
us
to
take
a
look
at
where
the
input
is
coming
from
in
our
community
and
it
can.
It
opens
the
door
for
a
lot
of
analysis
that
we
currently
don't
do
yes,
its
innovative
for
us
I
mean
it.
A
A
You
don't
know
where
the
necessarily
where
the
input
is
coming
from
it's
limited
in
its
function,
but
it
can
be
done
or
we
can
use
the
current
method,
which
is
continue,
as
is
status
quo,
doing
a
one
or
two
community
conversations
throughout
the
city
to
get
input
into
the
budget
and
primarily
we're
talking
about
the
general
fund.
The
other
funds
are
pretty
well
situated.
We
don't
anticipate
major
issues
and
the
other
funds.
A
A
A
B
Before
we
discuss
this,
when
an
Camille
Talley
suggested
this
and
as
we
were
discussing
it,
one
of
the
things
that
came
to
my
mind
was,
as
it
has
been
suggested,
the
tough
decisions
that
we
were
going
to
have
to
make
this
year.
Regarding
a
general
fund
expenses,
it
would
really
be
good
to
engage
the
community
in
that
discussion
so
that
it's
a
the
community
has
a
chance
to
weigh
in
on
on
various
items,
to
help
in
the
decision
making,
process
and
I.
Remember
when
we
did
a
survey
recently
and
we
used
SurveyMonkey
survey.
B
Survey
Monkey
allowed
anyone
to
participate
anybody
and
while
it
only
accepted
one
input
per
email
address
it
didn't
it
did
not
prohibit
you
from
going
in
and
entering
information
multiple
times,
even
though
it
might
not
have
accepted
it.
And
so
the
criticism
was
we
can't
even
control.
You
know
the
criticism
from
the
public
cause.
We
can't
even
control
how
many
people,
how
many
times
somebody
is
inputting.
So
it's
like
vote
vote
early
and
vote
often
so.
B
So
it
it
is
intriguing
that
social
pinpoint
would
allow
us
to
really
hone
in
on
the
the
addresses
that
people
are
responding
from,
so
that
we
know
that.
There's
city
people,
it's,
because
those
are
the
people
that
are
going
to
pay
the
general
fund
expenses,
and
it
gives
us
all
it's
kind
of
intriguing
it
as
well
and
that
it's
a
tool
that
would
allow
us
not
just
to
use
it
for
a
general
fund.
But
we
could
do
other
things
with
it
to
engage
the
community
on
various
topics
whatever
it
is.
So
it's.
A
B
A
E
F
I'm
not
sure
we
need
it,
I
think
we
think
we
would
get
the
same
benefit
out
of
having
a
community
workshop
geared
toward
budget
and
I.
Think
we
get.
We
get
a
fair
amount
of
support
from
people
in
the
community
when
we
have
meetings
of
that
type.
So
I
think
that
we
should
stay
with
that
format.
It's
it's
worked
up
to
this
point.
F
F
B
F
C
D
It's
a
one-time
expense
I
have
a
concern
with
it
but
I,
but
on
a
positive
note
for
something
like
this
and
that's
why,
if
it
was
a
software
package,
I
would
be
helpful.
One
problem
is,
is
when
you,
when
you
coach
questions
to
get
certain
answers,
you
get
the
answer
sometimes
based
on
the
way
you
coach
your
question,
so
we
could
each
ask
the
same
question
five
different
ways
and
get
different
responses
there
and
that's
where
we
can't
get
it
quite
when
you
won't
necessarily
this
would
help
us
get
it
quantitatively.
D
So
that's
what
the
benefit
of
something
like
this
would
be,
but
and
I
agree
with
Lyn
I,
don't
want
to
be
spending
$2,000
every
time
we
want
to
have
a
question.
Okay,
if
it
was
a
software
package
and
we
purchased
a
surface
to
help
us
use.
A
software
package
in
addition
to
I
could
be
much
more
comfortable
with
that
type
of
arrangement,
but
on
a
$2,000
pop
I
could
just
see
lots
of
ways
I'd
like
to
see
it.
The
city
use
these
types
of
surveys
more
off.
D
So
at
this
point,
I'm
kind
of
negative
towards
it.
B
F
B
F
B
D
G
Was
all
gung-ho
on
the
digital
thing
until
I
found
out
it
was
just
a
one-time
thing:
I,
just
I,
don't
I
it's
hard
for
me
to
see
spending
that
kind
of
money.
I
think
we're
gonna
get
a
lot
of
budget
information
from
our
folks
from
our
master
plan
focus
groups.
They're
gonna
tell
us
a
lot
of
what
they
want
through
that
that.
B
F
A
Now
the
master
plan
is
more
land
use
and
future
oriented
things.
This
the
2020
budget
is
pretty
specific,
I
mean
very
specific.
Do
we
want
to
continue
a
drainage
program
or
not?
Do
we
want
to
continue
a
road
resurfacing
program
or
not,
if
you
want
to
add
a
Community
Engagement
Unit
in
our
Police
Department
or
not
those
types
of
very
specific
general
fund
expenses
that
we
need
to
know?
Do
you
support
a
military
increase
for
some
of
these
services
we
provide,
or
would
you
rather
see
us
go
towards
an
assessment
for
some
of
these
services?
A
A
A
This
is
definitely
much
less
money
than
the
national
survey
which
the
county
is
doing
right
now,
they're
doing
the
they
doing
that,
using
that
national
survey
to
get
their
priorities,
they've
also
put
it
on
their
website,
knowing
full,
well
that
what
they
get
out
of
the
website
is
not
going
to
be
statistically
as
valid
as
that
national
survey
that
the
company
does.
They
know
that,
but
it's
additional
input
form
and
as
staff
we
like
input,
so
this
could
eat
council.
B
B
F
H
Yes,
just
quickly
under
boards
of
committees,
some
vacancies
three-year
terms
and
alternate
on
the
Board
of
Zoning
Appeals,
an
unexpired
term
as
an
alternate
on
the
building
board,
an
unexpired
terms,
an
alternate
on
the
code
enforcement
board
and
a
three-year
term
on
the
burn
styles
canal:
Advisory
Committee.
That's
all
I
have
okay.
B
Under
policy
and
legislation,
I
just
want
to
remind
everybody
that
jet
January
7th
next
Monday,
if
you
haven't
registered
for
the
journey
to
the
Future,
it's
still
available
and
I
really
appreciate
everyone's
participation
in
this
event
and
I
want
to
thank
our
council
members
for
the
good
discussion
we
had
today
and
thank
all
the
community
members
on
the
input.
Oh,
we
will
we're
moving
in
the
right
direction
on
resolving
issues
and
together
we
will
develop
a
good
solution.
So,
council
member
comments,
jaha
Happy.
B
B
I
I
Could
we
use
these
instead
and
then
you
could
put
acoustic
fence
on
the
feet,
I
think
it
would
help
and
then
you'd
have
parking
here
which
would
help
the
parking
also
I'm
just
saying
trying
to
come
up
with
with
a
solution.
I
just
talked
to
a
gentleman
from
the
pickle
Plex
and
he
thought
that
might
be
a
temporary
solution.
F
D
I
A
B
J
B
F
I
Know
somebody
mentioned
before
to
collaborate
rather
than
confrontation
right
and
it
seems
like
the
pickle
Plex
people
are
more
willing
to
collaborate,
so
perhaps
in
the
future
and
another
suggestion
would
be
to
cut
the
hours
down.
I
think
that
would
help
the
residents
to
maybe
do
an
eight-hour
day.
8
for
perhaps
certainly
would
at
least
alleviate
it
for
the
residents
as
well.
Thank.
K
I
just
wanted
to
clarify
a
little
bit
because
there
were
sorry
I
wanted
to
clarify
just
a
little
bit,
because
there
were
comments
made
about
decibel
levels
and
we
we
have
never.
We've
always
conceded
that
issue
as
far
as
decibel
levels
go.
This
is
our
problem
is
more
with
the
quality
of
the
sound
and
I
know.
In
the
past,
I've
used
the
gunshot
analogy
and
I
don't
mean
to
suggest
that
that
pickleball
is
by
any
means
its
loudest.
Gunshots.
K
I
was
suggesting
that
the
Pops
of
the
pickleball
play
are
the
kinds
of
sounds
that
claim
your
attention
and
and
because
it's
played
so
long.
It
claims
your
attention
repeatedly
and
it's
also
because
of
the
monotony
of
the
sound
you
have
to
imagine
it.
It's
more
comparison
of
a
small
dog
next
door
that
may
not
have
a
particularly
loud
bark,
but
is
maybe
barking
for
hours
and
hours.
K
C
Good
morning,
Gary
skillet
corn,
first
I'd,
like
to
praise
the
council,
in
the
enlightening
session
today
very
very
pleased
with
the
cooperative,
problem-solving
I'm
sure
you're
not
going
to
make
everybody
happy
all
the
time,
but
you
should
congratulate
each
other
today,
I
think
a
fabulous
job.
Secondly,
I'd
like
to
thank
professor
wine
in
suggesting
the
diamond-in-the-rough
is
an
opportunity.
I
think
there
was
a
reason
why
that
property
was
saved.
I.
C
L
Hi
I'm
Bob
Talley,
my
wife
and
I
own
378
Monaco.
We
live
here
we
vote
here.
We
pay
taxes
here.
What
percentage
of
the
people
playing
pickleball
on
here
and
pay
taxes
here,
5%,
10%,
yeah
I,
mean
I,
think
that's
something
we
should
look
into
and
if
there's
only
10
or
15%
of
the
people
playing
pickleball
live
here.
Why
are
we
worried
about
that's
it?
Thank.
B
J
Want
to
make
clear
that
it's
not
a
ban
on
parking,
it's
just
time
that
the
city
enforced
the
parking.
If
we
had
them
parking
in
their
parking
spaces,
not
on
the
grass
but
down
the
streets,
I,
don't
think
it
would
be
near.
Is
that
true
said,
as
it
does
seem
right
now
and
I
do
feel
for
those
people
that
live
there
and
yes,
I
almost
bought
that
house.
M
M
My
idea
is:
take
it
away
from
the
playground,
bring
it
to
the
other
tennis
courts,
because
once
it's
set
to
the
culture
area
of
the
harbor
it'll
be
closer
to
the
playground
and
we
are
sensitive
to
that
noise,
so
I
recommend
bringing
it
over
to
the
other
courts
away
from
the
playground.
Thank
you
thank
you
for
your
commitment
and
hard
work.
Thank.
G
N
The
historical
advisory
god
on
these
boards,
the
HOA
historical
district.
First
of
all,
thank
you
for
your
discussion
today.
I
think
you,
you
show
that
you
are
empathetic
with
our
residents
who
live
in
the
district
and
I
really
appreciate
that.
I
would
like
to
just
make
a
comment
about
what
Marty
said
about
moving
it
over.
You
know,
no
matter
how
much
money
it
takes.
N
N
Moving
into
the
tennis
courts
would
give
our
neighbors
and
residents
some
relief
right
now.
Also
I
cannot
leave
here
without
saying
this
invite
all
of
you
January
19th,
eight
to
ten
thirty
to
the
dr.
Martin
Luther
King
breakfast.
That's
when
our
beloved
community
gets
together,
Eunice
who's,
president
of
our
HOA,
a
longtime
educator
and
her
husband
will
be
honored
as
well
as
Laura
Steinem
from
the
tourist
development
and
our
historian
renowned
historian
author,
who
did
the
piece
the
book
about
the
Peace
River
frontier
talking
about
us
camper
Brown
will
be
our
speaker
and
he's
wonderful.