►
Description
No description was provided for this meeting.
If this is YOUR meeting, an easy way to fix this is to add a description to your video, wherever mtngs.io found it (probably YouTube).
A
Good
afternoon
everyone
and
welcome
to
the
san
bernardino
city
council
special
meeting
of
august,
the
3rd
2022.
May
I
please
have
wrote
council
member
hamilton
here.
C
A
Here,
thank
you
very
much.
Now
we'll
move
on
to
item
three
public
comments
for
items
not
on
the
agenda.
Individuals
will
have
up
to
three
minutes
to
speak
on
matters
that
are
not
on
tonight's
agenda.
It
is
council
policy,
refer
matters
raised
in
this
forum
to
staff
for
investigation
and
our
action
where
appropriate.
E
Sandra,
can
you
hear
us
I
can
hear
you?
Can
you
hear
me?
Yes,
whenever
you're
ready,
okay,
good
evening,
everyone,
I
took
a
a
drive
down
huntington
going
south
of
huntington
in
san
antonio
yesterday
I
hadn't
been
in
that
area
in
a
while,
and
I
noticed
the
once
again
along
the
rail
door
tracks
that
jumping
is
pretty
out
of
control.
E
I've
asked
quite
a
few
times
about
the
tree
in
florida
park.
The
heritage
tree
that
was
cut
down
a
couple
years
back
and
the
agreement
was
that
that
would
be
removed.
The
heritage
tree
would
be
removed,
but
only
under
the
condition
that
it
would
be
placed
with
a
mature
tree
that
is
native,
and
I
have
not
heard
back
from
any
office
in
the
city.
I
think
it's
really
important
that
we
get
that
tree
there.
C
All
right,
thank
you
good
afternoon,
mayor
and
city
council
members.
My
name
is
joel
toscano,
I'm
a
new
union
representative
at
the
carpenter's
local
217
in
san
diego
county.
C
Labor
standards
link
such
as
apprenticeship,
healthcare,
as
well
as
local
high.
I
mean,
I
think
that
apprenticeship
programs
are
one,
are
proven,
escalators
that
to
the
middle
class
training
in
california
redlands
every
year,
at
no
cost
of
taxpayers
money.
Also,
the
lack
of
stable
healthcare
is
one
of
the.
C
That
keeps
workers
away
from
the
industry
leading
to
labor
shortages
in
our
community.
Last
but
not
least,
a
local
hire
with
local
higher
policies
would
only
help
ensure
that
new
developers
in
the
future
will
benefit
members
of
this
community
by
reinvesting
the
local
money
back
in
our
city
and
will
create
a
work
and
life
balance.
C
A
Sorry,
thank
you.
Next,
we'll
move
on
to
consent
calendar.
We
have
three
items.
All
actions
on
the
consent
have
been
taken
prior
or
can
be
done
in
one
action.
Unless
someone
from
council
wishes
to
pull
an
item,
are
there
any
items
that
wish
to
be
pulled
for
a
separate
vote?
Separate
any
item,
I
think
item
b
for
council
member
medina?
A
Is
there
any
item
other
than
that
to
have
a
commenter
question
on
with
not
seen
any,
then
we
will
move
to
item
b,
adopt
resolution,
approving
agreement
between
the
city
of
san
bruno
and
the
mid-management
bargaining
unit
and
authorizing
execution
by
the
city
manager,
councilwoman
medina.
C
Yes,
thank
you,
mayor
mckean.
I
just
wanted
to
acknowledge
all
the
work
to
all
that
were
involved
in
coming
to
this
agreement.
It's
it's
not
easy
and
I
just
wanted
to
make
sure
everyone
was
aware
that
we're
appreciative
of
all
the
work.
So
thank
you.
A
A
E
Item
5a
adopt
resolution
authorizes
the
city
manager
to
amend
the
fiscal
year,
2022-23
stormwater
operating
contractual
services,
budget
for
storm
water
system,
spot
repair
services
with
c2r
engineering
in
the
amount
of
110
000
to
complete
storm
drain
and
sinkhole
repairs
at
2850
smith.
Lane
appropriating
a
hundred
and
ten
thousand
dollars
from
the
general
fund.
Capital
reserve
fund,
accepting
the
storm
drain,
easement
deed
from
the
property
owner
and
directing
the
execution
and
filing
of
a
certification
of
acceptance.
B
Medina
to
the
mayor,
members
of
the
city
council,
members
of
the
public,
javon
grove
city
manager,
I'll
just
do
a
quick
introduction,
5a
and
then
I
will
turn
it
over
to
deputy
director
of
the
public
works
department
dennis
bosch.
B
The
city
council
will
remember
that
I
sent
you
an
email
on
may
2nd
with
regard
to
a
sinkhole
that
was
developing
at
a
apartment,
complex
located
at
2850,
sneak
lane
that
sinkhole
was
developing
right
under
a
city,
storm
drain
city
staff
was
alerted
to
the
sinkhole
and
took
immediate
measures
to
stabilize
the
area
so
that
we
would
not
have
a
vehicle
or
other
incident
that
would
enlarge.
Sinkhole
and
staff
then
undertook
a
number
of
investigations
and
we
are
before
you
tonight,
because
the
preliminary
work
has
been
done.
B
A
C
Good
afternoon,
mayor
and
council,
I'm
dennis
bosch
your
deputy
director
of
public
works
and,
as
javon
has
stated
tonight,
I'm
presenting
a
request
for
funding
of
a
need
of
storm-drained
mainland
repair
at
2850
in
east
lane
that
our
department
was
made
aware
of
on
april
27th
of
this
year.
City
staff
responded
at
that
time
and
located
in
a
sinkhole
on
the
property
directly
over
a
storm
drain.
Mainline
a
pipe
inspection
of
the
mainline
found
it
to
be
failing
multiple
locations
and
needing
repair,
and
as
I
pull
up
the
slide
screen.
C
Such
a
quick
agenda,
background
location,
photos,
the
city
council's
action
and
then
questions
so
2850
smith.
Lane
property
contains
a
storm
drain
main
that
has
produced
a
sinkhole
to
the
deteriorated
pipe.
C
The
main
delivers
surface
water
from
fleetwood
drive
the
storm
water
from
fleetwood,
drive
traveled
through
the
property
and
out
to
smith's
lane
an
easement
search
found
that
there
were
city
easements
for
the
storm
drain
main
on
both
sides
of
the
property.
However,
there
is
no
city
easement
for
the
portion
of
the
main
on
the
property.
C
C
Now
can
I
talk.
This
is
inside
of
the
pipe
and
if
I
can
call
your
attention,
I
don't
know
if
you
see
my
cursor,
but
if
you
look
to
the
top,
which
is
almost
the
below
right
hand,
section
of
the
pipe
you
see
a
jagged
edge,
that's
where
metal
has
basically
eroded
away
and
there's
no
metal
left
on
the
bottom
of
the
pipe.
And
so
what
happens
is
as
water
comes
down
during
storms.
C
So
for
city
council
action
adopt
a
resolution
related
to
the
emergency
repair
at
2850
smith,
lane
again
to
authorize
the
city
manager
to
amend
the
operating
contractual
services
budget
for
c2r
engineering
in
the
amount
of
110
000,
appropriate
110
000
from
the
general
fund
capital
reserve
and
accept
the
storm
drain,
easement
deed
from
the
property
owner
and
directing
the
execution
and
filing
of
a
certification
of
compliance
with
that
I'll.
Take
any
questions,
and
I
do
have
services
manager,
ted
chapman
from
the
streets
of
storm
division
in
the
waiting
room
to
also
answer
questions
if
needed.
A
C
Yes,
thank
you
for
the
report
and
my
main
question
is
is
regarding
the
amount
of
video
that
we
have
taken
proactively
of
our
system,
so
that
we
can
have
a
better
gauge
of
where
we
are,
because
this
clearly
isn't
going
to
be
the
only
spot
right.
If
we're
not
actively
collecting
video,
then
we
will
be
responding
to
failures
and-
and
so
just
wanted
to
hear
you
know
what
are
we
doing
about?
What
have
we
done?
C
What
we're
planning
to
do,
especially
in
that
area,
it's
kind
of
vintage
of
the
years
it
was
installed,
and
I
think
up
in
that
area,
it's
probably
a
little
hotter
soil.
That's
a
little
more
corrosive.
I
think
we
have
some
water
issues
up
in
that
area
as
well.
So
just
wonder
if
we
can
get
a
little
bit
a
little
bit
more
information
on
that.
Thank
you.
C
So
it's
it's
yes,
much
like
the
crests.
More
canyon
incident
than
half
a
couple
years
ago
was
from
a
deteriorated
pipe,
not
just
in
this
neighborhood.
C
We
have
deteriorated
pipes
all
over
the
the
video
or
the
inside
screenshot
that
you've
seen
of
the
deteriorated
pipe
I
was
from
are
sewer
crew,
and
so
we
have
that
capability
now,
since
we
got
that
truck
years
ago,
and
we
have
a
systematic
and
programming
video
timing
system
of
what
we
do,
the
whole
sewer
system
as
of
right
now,
if
we
have
the
ability
to
we
respond
to
incidents
where
something
has
been
highlighted
or
brought
to
our
attention,
much
like
in
this
case
at
the
at
this
time,
we
haven't
had
the
resources
to
either
delineate
a
second
cctv
truck,
which
we
don't
have
to
to
just
video
storm
during
strong
game
lines.
C
You
asked:
how
much
have
we
done
to
this
point?
I
could
refer
not
to
services
manor
chapman,
if
he's
on,
he
might
have
a
better
idea
of
if
you
know
to
give
you
maybe
possibly
a
rough
estimate
on
on
on
total
feet.
C
Good
evening,
honorable
mayor
and
council
members,
ted
chapman
services
manager
for
street
storm
division
in
regards
to
the
amount
of
storm
drains,
that's
been
videoed
over
the
last
three
to
four
years.
It
would
probably
be
in
a
neighborhood
of
maybe
10
to
15
percent
when
we
do
have
the
ability
to
utilize
the
wastewater
video
crew.
C
They
have
been
starting
to
videoing,
starting
videoing,
the
entire
system,
up
top
in
the
spy
glass
area
and
working
their
way
down.
The
one
of
our
issues
is
every
time
they're
videoing
we
find
problems
and
due
to
limited
funding,
we
we're
noting
it
we're
keeping
track
of
it.
But
but
what
we're
seeing
is
almost
all
of
the
corrugated
metal
pipes
have
signs
of
corrosion
and
what
we've
seen
in
the
last
two
years,
two
to
three
years.
C
B
I
absolutely
did
thank
you
through
the
mayor.
Can
I
just
yes
please?
I
just
want
to
explain
just
a
little
bit
upon
responses,
because
it's
important
to
note
that
the
city
conducted
a
stormwater
master
plan
in
2014,
and
at
that
time
there
were
30
million
improvements
that
were
needed
capacity,
improvements
and
another
23
million
dollars,
with
condition
improvements
that
were
estimated.
B
It's
important
to
note
that
of
that
that
nearly
50
million
dollars
the
city
has
been
able
to
do
absolutely
zero
due
to
the
funding.
Our
stormwater
fees
have
not
been
increased
since
1994
and
the
public-
and
I
know
the
council
will
remember
that
the
city
undertook
a
effort
that
ultimately
was
unsuccessful
last
year
to
increase
stormwater
fees,
and
so
it
is
absolutely
true
that
we
have
corroded
pipe
and
we
are
responding
to
critical
issues.
B
It
is
absolutely
a
result
of
the
lack
of
capital
funding
that
is
available
to
the
city,
and
I
know
the
council
knows
well
that
your
stormwater
fund
is
projected
to
be
under
budget
by
more
than
a
million
dollars
at
the
end
of
this
fiscal
year,
and
we
will
talk
a
little
bit
more
about
that.
As
we
talk
about
other
items
tonight,
but
I
just
want
to
highlight
that
in
connection
with
this,
because
that.
A
E
C
Okay,
well,
it's
a
pleasure
to
speak
in
front
of
all
of
you
today.
I
am
in
the
process
of
getting
my
nomination
paperwork.
So
thank
you.
If
you
are
asking
me
about
that,
this
is
probably
the
most
serious
issue
facing
the
city,
and
you
know
I'm
I'm
really
running
on
a
campaign
where
I
see
pretty
big
picture
crisis
facing
the
american
people
planet
at
large.
A
C
A
C
My
specific
question
is
to
the
deputy
director
how
much
of
this
corrosion
would
have
been
prevented
if
storm
water
fees
were
raised,
perhaps
in
the
last
15
years?
Thank
you
so
much.
A
C
C
Yeah,
so
I
I
believe-
and
I
believe
the
question
was,
could
this:
would
this
have
been
prevented?
Had
we
been
keeping
pace
with
stormwater
fees
over
the
past?
I
believe
the
the
questionnaire
asked
15
years.
Thank
you.
A
City
manager,
sure
you
know
that's
a
detailed
question
that
I'll
toss
it
to
the
deputy
director
to
see
if
there's
a
more
nuanced
response
at
a
high
level.
I
think.
B
The
best
response
that
that
I
could
give
is
certainly
additional
funds
for
capital
improvement
projects,
especially
known
capital
improvement
projects
that
we
know
we
have
to
undertake
would
prevent
failures.
Whether
this
particular
line
would
have
been
insightful.
I
cannot
answer
that
question,
but
I'll
tell
you
without
having
the
funds.
We
don't
do
the
projects
without
doing
the
projects
they
only
get
more
expensive
and
and
we're
responding
to
failures,
but
deputy
director
bus
is
there
anything
that
you
can
add.
C
I
mean
it's
tough
to
tell
whether
that
pipe
specifically
would
have
been
repaired.
I
mean
materials
have
a
have
a
have
a
lifeband.
In
this
case
the
metal
pipe
has
gone
past
its
lifespan.
You
know
it
was
put
in
years
ago.
You
know
metal
pipes
aren't
usually
put
in
for
for
storm
water
anymore.
So
that's
that's
another
thing,
but
as
to
say
whether
it
would
have
been
specifically
done
it.
C
E
D
E
Consideration
resolution
of
the
city
council
of
the
city
of
san
bruno,
submitting
to
the
voters
at
the
november
8
2022
general
municipal
election,
a
measure
that
proposes
a
city
charter
be
adopted
to
change
the
city
of
bruno
from
a
general
lost
city
to
a
charter
city
and
to
authorize
a
real
property
transfer
tax
that
proposes
adoption
of
an
ordinance
authorizing
a
commercial
real
property
transfer
tax,
requesting
that
such
election
be
consolidated
with
the
statewide
general
election
held
on
that
date.
Making
a
determination
of
exemption
under
sequa
and
taking
certain
other
actions.
A
I
apologize
and
I
didn't
see
you
on
the
screen
it
just
I
just
clicked
on
that
screen.
I
apologize
very
much
city
manager,
no
worries
attorney.
Thank
you.
Absolutely.
B
Again
to
the
mayor
of
the
city
council,
members
of
the
public
at
home,
javon
grogan
city
manager,
I
will
give
tonight's
presentation
on
5b
with
my
colleague
our
intern
city
clerk
trisha
ortiz,
and
we
will.
We
will
tag
team,
this
presentation
and
our
we
have
the
long
reading
of
this
item.
B
So
we
have
a
presentation
and
discussion
prepared
for
the
city,
council
and
we'll
right
now
go
through
the
outline
of
that.
We'll
first
begin
with
going
through
public
meetings
and
the
public
engagement
that
we've
had
to
date
on
this
item,
we
will
provide
a
little
background,
and
so
the
background
will
discuss
the
the
city's
fiscal
condition
and
some
of
the
prior
efforts
that
the
city
council
have
directed
to
address
the
city's
fiscal
condition
and
the
city
council
and
some
members
of
the
public
that
have
followed
these
conversations
and
discussions.
B
We've
had
some
of
these
slides
will
look
new.
I
will
look
new
and
others
will
not
look
new
and
those
that
are
not
new.
It's
because
they
were
not
created
for
this
presentation.
They
are
in
fact
slides
from
conversations
that
we
have
been
having
with
community
over
several
years
to
address
the
city's
fiscal
condition.
B
We
will
then
provide
an
overview
of
the
draft
city
charter
and
the
commercial
property
transfer
tax
ordinance.
We
will
then
discuss
the
timeline,
have
a
period
for
council
questions
on
the
staff
report
in
the
presentation
item,
six
will
be
public
comment
and
then
seven
will
be
followed
by
city
council,
deliberation
and
again.
B
Finally,
action
on
whether
the
city
council
desires
to
put
the
question
before
voters,
and
so
first
we'll
do
a
quick
note
on
public
engagement
and
so,
in
our
conversation
with
regard
to
the
potential
city
charter
and
commercial
property
transfer
tax,
it's
important
to
note
that
this
meeting
will
be
six
public
meetings
that
the
city
council
has
held
on
the
on
the
topics
that
really
begun
in
october
of
21
through
today
august
3rd,
the
city
issued
a
city-wide
mailer
in
june,
and
that
was
in
response
to
the
city
council's
request
to
have
more
public
engagement
and
really
do
a
detailed
education
of
the
community,
and
you,
you
have
the
front
page
of
that
miller
in
the
top
right
hand
corner.
B
B
It's
our
normal
web
address
san
bruno.ca.gov
sitting
charter
and
that
website
includes
all
prior
staff
reports,
presentations
and
even
half
of
zoom
links
for
all
of
all
of
the
means
we
created
those
early
and
wanted
to
make
sure
that
those
were
up
there
and,
in
addition,
the
city
implemented
a
number
of
social
media
posts,
and
there
was
a
june
article
in
the
city,
manager's
e-newsletter
that
went
into
detail
about
the
topic
again
responding
directly
to
the
city
council.
B
B
It's
important
to
note
that
on
october
26
of
21,
the
city
council
discussed
several
potential
ballot
items
for
the
november
22
election
and
that's
the
upcoming
election
on
november
8th
and
you
directed
staff
to
research
and
provide
you
with
options
for
a
city
charter
and
a
commercial
property
transfer.
Tax
and
commercial
is
underlined.
B
There
purposely-
and
it's
really
underlined
to
make
it
clear
that
from
the
very
outset
the
city
council
was
in
fact
that
a
property
transfer
tax
be
structured
so
that
it
would
not
be
charged
on
single-family
homes
or
condominiums,
and
it's
also
important
to
note
that,
because
it
is
a
tax
on
property
owners
at
the
time
of
sale,
the
tax
would
not
be
paid
by
renters.
B
On
march
29th
of
the
this
year,
the
city
council
met,
and
we
had
a
special
meeting
where
the
city
council
discussed
the
topic
further
and
in
the
important
note,
if
you
directed
the
city
staff
at
that
time,
to
conduct
a
poll
likely
voters
further
narrowing
down
the
potential
ballot
items
that
you
would
consider
for
the
november
ballast.
B
You
then
had
your
first
public
hearing
as
required
by
state
law.
Anytime,
a
city
is
considering
a
charter.
Public
hearings
on
the
contents
of
that
charter
are
required,
and
so
you
have
that
meeting
on
june
7th.
B
Additionally,
we
held
a
city
council
study
session
on
june
28,
where
you
discuss
the
matter
further,
provided
additional
direction
to
staff,
and
we
will
go
through
a
little
bit
of
that,
because
the
city
council
was
very
clear
that
you
would
like
a
charter
that
limits
the
city
council's
power,
and
our
city
attorney
will
talk
about
that.
B
Next
we
want
to
provide
a
little
background,
and
in
this
section
we
will
talk
about
san
bruno's
fiscal
sustainability
project.
We
will
highlight
some
of
the
city's
fiscal
challenge:
fiscal
challenges,
plural
and
discuss
prior
strategies,
important
to
note
we're
talking
at
a
high
level
we're
on
we're
on
the
balcony
in
maybe
ten
feet.
Certainly,
there
are
a
number
of
strategies
and
fiscal
challenges,
but
we
will
not
fit
into
them
all
tonight.
B
We
will
recap
a
process
that
you
under
took
to
evaluate
potential
measures
for
the
november
22
ballot.
We
will
in
particular,
pause
on
the
potential
capital
bond
that
the
city
council
investigated
that
was
included
in
the
likely
voter
poll,
as
well
as
the
commercial
property
transit
tax,
and
we
will,
at
a
high
level,
discuss
the
results
of
that
poll.
B
As
we
begin
to
talk
about
the
city's
fiscal
condition.
It
is
important
to
know-
and
I
know
that
this
chart
is
very
familiar
to
the
city
council,
but
for
those
residents
that
may
be
joining
the
process
for
the
first
time,
but
it
is
important
to
know
that
the
city
does
not
have
a
revenue
problem.
San
bruno
has
an
expenditure
problem.
B
The
chart
before
you
shows
our
per
capita
per
individual
resident
of
san
bruno,
the
revenue
that
goes
to
the
city's
general
fund,
our
general
checkbook,
compared
to
a
number
of
other
cities.
I
believe
there
is
six
comparison
cities
up
there
in
san
bruno's
per
capita
general
fund
revenue
is
just
under
1200
and
the
second
lowest
in
this
comparison.
B
Second,
only
to
daley
city,
important
to
know
daley
city
has
more
than
double
our
population,
and
so
we
talked
about
this
chart
before
we
talked
about
how
it
compares
to
san
bruno
and,
frankly,
how
it
impacts
our
ability
to
fund
the
ongoing
operations
and
capital
maintenance
needs
of
the
city.
B
A
little
bit
more
about
our
fiscal
sustainability,
important
to
note
that
in
2019
the
city
launched
a
comprehensive
fiscal
sustainability
project.
B
That
title
is
purposeful,
because,
while
the
city's
budget
has
been
stable,
it
has
not
been
sustainable
and
it
has
not
been
sustainable
because
we
know
that
we
have
known
operational
and
infrastructure
capital
building
needs
that
we
have
not
been
able
to
fund
for
several
years
this
through
this
project,
the
city
seeks
to
improve
its
fiscal
condition
so
that
there
are
sufficient
annual
and
long-term
funds
to
provide
the
high
quality
services
and
maintenance
of
our
infrastructure
that
we
know
residents
expect
and
deserve.
B
It's
important
to
note
that
the
project
remains
active.
It's
also
important
to
note
that
the
city
has
implemented
numerous
expenditure
controls
revenue,
enhancements,
cost
shifts,
meaning
moving
money
that
was
funded
by
the
general
fund.
That's
another
funding
source
and
on
page
207
of
the
staff
report,
there
lists
a
number
of
strategies
that
have
been
successfully
conducted,
and
so
some
of
those
are
the
city
as
we
know,
implemented,
and
put
the
question
of
a
measurement
sales
tax
before
voters
that
is
bringing
in
four
million
dollars
a
year.
B
Does
he
increase
the
hotel
room
tax
by
two
percent
during
covet
19,
the
city
reduced
its
budget
by
8.2
million
dollars,
and
many
of
those
positions
that
were
frozen
and
cut
have
not
come
back.
We
recently
had
discussions
about
a
dispatcher
position
that
has
not
yet
been
restored.
B
The
city
has
also
undertaken
a
number
of
economic
development
opportunities.
We
see
that
in
the
bay
hill
specific
plan
also
various
grants.
The
city
has
received
millions
of
dollars
in
a
grant
for
a
regional
stormwater
capture
project
I-280
the
city
through
the
city
council's
efforts.
The
city
recently
received
a
grant
from
the
county
for
measure
a
for
improvements
to
pulsey
park
and,
in
addition,
we
were
able
to
leverage
funds
from
pg
e
to
support
wildfire
mitigation.
B
But
what
is
true
is
that,
despite
all
of
these
successful
efforts,
this
there
remains
a
significant
financial
challenge,
and
this
is
true
with
respectable
the
annual
only
need
for
programs
and
services,
as
well
as
the
need
to
maintain
infrastructure
and
just
as
a
high
level.
I
want
to
touch
on
a
few
aspects
of
that.
B
This
slide
will
be
very
familiar
to
the
city
council
because
it
was
recently
presented
by
our
chief
of
police
and
it's
a
presentation
that
notes
that
since
1975,
the
city
actually
has
fewer
police
officers
than
it
had
in
1975..
B
In
1975,
with
a
city
population
of
36,
000
san
bruno
had
57
sworn
police
officers
and
all
were
funded
by
the
general
fund.
You
know
fast
forward
to
the
present
approximately
45
000
45
000
population.
B
The
city
has
16
percent,
less
police
officers
and
26
percent
less
funded
by
the
general
fund,
and,
what's
noted,
is
that
in
the
last
really
10
years,
the
city
has
been
very
successful
in
getting
at
this
point
a
total
of
six
positions
funded
by
grants.
B
One
is
the
cops
grant
three
positions
funded
by
or
two
positions
funded
by
cam
brandt,
as
well
as
oppositions,
funded
by
artichoke
jobs,
and
so
it
is
certainly
true
by
just
about
every
measure
and
our
police
chief
presented
on
this
san
bruno
does
not
have
cops
to
meet
the
the
standard
industry
thresholds
and,
as
it
shows,
has
certainly
more
population
and
interior
law
enforcement.
B
B
The
city
implemented
development
impact
fees,
and
in
doing
so
the
city
undertook
an
analysis
and
hired
an
outside
consultant
with
expertise
to
analyze
our
infrastructure,
and
what
that
showed
is
that
over
the
next
20
years,
the
city
has
a
total
infrastructure
need
in
various
categories:
utilities:
transportation,
public
safety
of
457
million
development
through
the
development
impact
fees.
New
development
is
estimated
to
pay
147
million.
We're
often
asked
the
question:
why
can't
new
development
pay
for
all
of
this?
B
It
is
actually
not
legal
for
development
impact
fees
to
charge
the
full
cost
of
the
city
of
infrastructure
to
new
development.
B
They
have
to
pay
the
fair
share
in
a
significant
amount,
but
many
of
our
infrastructure
needs
actually
need
to
be
born
and
fund
locally,
and
so
what
this
analysis
again
that
was
conducted
in
2019
showed
is
we
have
a
remaining
need,
310
million,
that
we
need
to
fund
over
the
next
20
years
and
and
and
those
are
sources
that
we
cannot
look
toward
development
impact
piece
for
the
next
just
touch
is,
I
think,
the
the
city
put
forward
an
effort
to
improve
roles
in
our
and
our
roadways
and
the
city.
B
B
If
we,
if
we
do
nothing,
we'll
decrease,
and
at
that
time
the
city
had
an
annual
need
to
spend
more
than
six
million
dollars
a
year
more
on
our
roadway,
and
so
I
I
won't
go
into
detail
on
this
slide
city
council
and
those
of
you
that
have
seen
it
before
know
that
roads
are
rated
in,
what's
called
a
pci,
a
pavement
condition
and
that's
an
index
that
goes
from
zero
to
100.
B
At
this
time
our
pci
was
61,
and
so
that
was
a
fair
category,
but
it
would
rapidly
decline
unless
there
was
additional
money
applied
to
our
road
network.
B
Happy
to
announce
that
we
did
look
at
the
numbers
today
are
pci
is
up
to
65,
but
that
is
still
very
much
in
fair
condition
and
what
was
true
when
the
city
put
measure
g
before
voters
and
what
is
still
true
today
is
that
the
city
needs
additional
money
to
improve
its
road
network
to
get
into
that
good
category
to
somewhere
have
a
pci
of
70
to
100.,
and
so
I
just
want
to
note,
because
it's
important
that
the
city
was
actually
able
to
measure
g
this
year
and
allocate
a
total
of
5.9
million
to
rule
projects
in
the
current
year's
budget.
B
Now
that
was
done,
measure
g,
you
may
remember,
is
only
bringing
in
about
four
million
dollars
a
year.
This
was
done
only
because
we
were
able
to
have
savings
from
the
prior
year,
and
so
there
could
be
an
infusion
of
cash
into
our
worldly
sun.
But
what
remains
true
is
that
we
need
to
be
spending
upwards
of
7.8
or
nearly
8
million
a
year
for
our
roles,
to
increase
to
that
70
pci
level,
really
to
have
an
appreciable
noticeable
difference
in
the
quality
of
our
robes.
B
Another
significant
infrastructure
need
of
city
is
our
street
light
network.
Remember
in
the
rollingwood
neighborhood
will
remember
that
we
had
a
significant
streetlight
outage
at
the
end
of
21
and
into
early
2022.,
and
so
just
to
highlight
about
this.
I
know
the
city
council
knows
us
well,
because
we've
discussed
it
and
we
just
this
slide,
is
actually
from
a
presentation.
B
From
february
of
this
year,
the
city
maintains
just
over
approximately
2100
street
lights.
Just
under
300
of
those
are
almost
caught
in
oral
circuit.
It
is
a
system
that
was
built
in
the
late
50s.
It
is
certainly
obsolete.
Pg
e
transferred
ownership
to
cities
in
the
middle
around
the
1980s
and
many
cities
around
us
not
all,
have
worked
and
funded
replacement
of
their
street
life.
B
Ours,
unfortunately,
has
not.
We
have
not
had
the
funds
to
replace
our
street
light,
our
oral
circuit
network,
and
we
have
had
over
14
outages
since
2013,
and
when
these
outages
happen
they
are
frequently
prolonged
and
the
solutions
are
not
inexpensive,
and
so
at
present
we
still
have
15
of
our
streetlight
network
on
an
rl
circuit.
I
know
the
council
and
the
community
knows
how
challenging
it
is
when
the
street
lights
are
out
for
months
at
a
time.
B
So,
in
february
of
this
year
we
brought
an
item
before
city
council
and
were
able
to
fund
500
000
towards
the
design
of
this
project,
but
we
knew
that
the
project
needed
to
be
done
in
2015,
and
at
that
time
the
cost
was
4
million,
but
the
city
did
not
have
the
funds,
and
so
we
know
that
the
cost
has
certainly
escalated
and
we
are
not
have
the
project
fund,
the
design
phase
partially
funded.
B
B
Another
infrastructure
note
it's
important
to
note
that
the
city
has
a
two
fire
station
town.
We
have
two
stations
station
51
and
station
52
are
the
five
year.
Fire
stations
are
more
than
60
years
old.
There
are
two
of
the
oldest
non-retrofitted
fire
stations
in
the
county,
and
one
of
them
sits
on
the
san
andreas
fault,
nearly
within
just
outside
100
feet
of
the
san
andreas
fault,
and
so
replacing
these
fire
stations
is
of
the
utmost
importance
again.
B
Unfortunately,
the
city
has
not
had
the
funds
to
do
so.
A
design
project
is
funded
for
fire
station
52
and
hopefully,
with
some
development
impact
funds.
The
city
will
be
able
to
retrofit
fire
station
52,
but
that
still
leaves
51
or
rebuilt
leave
the
investigation.
That's
going
on
now
another
infrastructure
challenge,
and
this
one
we
we
just
talked
about
and
it's
our
stormwater
system,
and
so
this
slide
comes
from
a
2021
presentation
where
we
really
highlighted
that
flooding
is
not
limited
to
the
the
lower
levels
of
san
bruno.
B
In
fact,
flooding
can
happen
anywhere
in
san
bruno
and
there
are
some
pictures
of
flooding
on
valleywood
drive
in
2014
and
flooding
on
san
bruno
avenue
in
2014
and
on
huntington,
as
well
as
a
picture
of
the
crestmoor
canyon
slide.
That
happened
in
2019
a
slide
that
cost
approximately
a
million
dollars
to
to
remedy,
and
as
we
we
talked
about
briefly
in
the
last
item,
was
actually
caused
by
a
storm.
B
Our
storm
system,
as
well
as
we
had
a
storm
water
cover
that
the
council
knows
well
in
2020
along
crystal
springs
road
not
far
from
jennifer
sarah
park,
and
so
we
know
that
our
storm
water
system,
the
funding,
is
inadequate.
As
I
said
in
the
entire
item,
the
fund
balance
in
that
fund
is
will
be
negative
more
than
a
million
dollars
by
the
end
of
this
year.
B
B
30
million
was
identified
in
2014,
but
the
city
did
not
have
the
funds
to
address
and
still
does
not
have
the
funds
to
address
and
the
the
last
picture
in
the
bottom
left-hand
corner
council
will
remember
that
during
our
stormwater
communications
and
conversations
with
the
community
just
happened
to
drive
by
a
business
that
it
was
not
rain,
but
they
keep
storm
sandbags
by
their
door,
because
we
know
that
our
storm
drain
system,
in
that
particular
location,
has
flooded
that
business
before.
So.
B
If
you
were
to
drive
by
there,
potentially
even
now
rain
rain
or
shine,
they
keep
storm
sandbags
by
the
door,
and
so
in
2021
the
the
city
council
directed
that
we
do
a
community
feedback
survey
and
over
400
residents
and
property
owners
responded
to
that
survey.
And
what
did
we
hear
right?
B
So
we
know
that
from
that
survey
and
then
the
community
will
remember
well,
we
undertook
a
prop
218
assessment
in
21,
and
that
was
an
assessment
to
increase
stormwater
fees
on
awesome
on
all
properties.
B
What's
shown
here
was
part
of
the
proposal
was
to
increase
fees
on
single
family
homes
by
nine
dollars
a
month,
approximately
a
hundred
and
fifty
dollars
a
year,
and
given
the
state
mandated
process
that
we
must
follow
for
a
prop
218
assessment,
all
property
owners
were
had
the
option
to
vote
and
the
effort
lost
by
64,
and
so
the
yeses
were
were
1833.
B
The
no's
were
13
10.,
and
so
these
efforts
and
all
of
the
known
infrastructure
challenges
that
we
have
and
the
failure
of
the
prop
218
process,
really
sets
the
foundation
for.
Why
we're
having
this
conversation
we're
having
tonight
and
so
after
the
failure
of
the
storm
water
initiative
and
knowing
our
infrastructure
challenges?
The
city
council
had
a
meeting
on
october
26
of
21,
where
they
discussed
a
wide
variety
of
strategic
initiatives,
but
in
particular
zoned
in
on
what
potential
revenue
measures
made.
B
The
city
council
decide
to
put
before
voters
for
the
november
22
election
and
and
that
really
launched
this
effort,
and
there
there
were.
There
were
a
number
of
items
that
were
noted:
a
potential
increase
in
the
gambling
club
tax
that
the
city
did
not
do,
but
those
of
you
that
have
read
the
local
article
in
the
in
the
journal
or
watched
our
council
meeting
know
that
the
city
recently
entered
into
an
agreement
with
artichoke
hills
for
additional
funds
each
year.
B
The
city
also
said:
let's
investigate
a
commercial
property
transfer
tax
and
a
city
charter,
and
we'll
talk
shortly
on
the
interface
between
those
two
and
so
really
fast
forwarding
to
may
of
of
this
current
year.
The
city
council
studied
it.
As
we
talked
about
before,
there
were
a
number
of
meeting,
then
the
city
established
a
subcommittee
of
two
council
members
to
work
with
city
staff
and
and
our
consultants
put
together
a
scientific
hold
of
likely
boulders,
and
that
poll
was
conducted
between
may
11th
and
may
18th.
B
It
was
approximately
25
minutes
in
length.
It
targeted,
likely
voters
in
the
november
22
election.
It
was
done
by
godly
research,
a
a
professional
pollster.
The
sample
size
was
just
under
450,
with
the
marginal
error
of
just
under
five
percent,
and
so
I
will
not
go
through.
The
entire
presentation
of
the
city
council
receive
this
entire
presentation
on
june
7th.
But
I
I
just
want
to
highlight
a
few
things.
I
want
to
highlight.
Question
12
and
question.
12
is
related
to
the
item.
B
That's
before
you
tonight,
it
asks.
Is
there
potentially
support
for
a
commercial,
real
estate,
property
transfer,
tax
and
total
support,
definite,
yes
and
probable?
Yes,
it
was
55.4,
and
this
item
needs
a
50
plus
one
50,
plus
one
threshold
at
the
ballot
box.
B
The
city
council
also
tested
a
potential
ballot
measure
and
if
the
the
ballot
question
is
shown
there,
I
will
not
read
it
in
its
entirety,
but
it
says:
shall
the
city
of
san
bruno
adopt
a
measure
that
would
upgrade
fire
stations,
modernize,
the
library,
improve
neighborhood
parks
and
ball
fields,
repair
to
peer,
a
deteriorating
infrastructure,
and
there
were
a
number
of
tests.
B
There
was
an
initial
test
and
and
four
subsequent
ones,
but
overall
the
percentage
was
59
initially
in
53.9
and
you
may
say:
well,
wow,
that's
better
than
the
you
know.
Overall,
that's
that's
good.
Well,
a
bond
requires
a
two-thirds
majority,
and
so
you
need
67
of
voters
to
be
in
favor
of
that,
and
so
the
conclusions
from
this
presentation
from
the
city's
poll,
consultants
and
ballot
consultant
are
up
above,
and
I
will
read
these.
It
says
the
bond
measure
as
tested.
B
The
bond
measure
does
not
appear
to
be
viable
this
year,
because
primarily,
the
two
thirds
approval
threshold
residents
are
price
sensitive.
As
regards
to
a
potential
future
bond
measure.
There
are
strong
majority
of
the
voters
that
do
prioritize
these
important
capital
improvements.
B
We
know
that
from
our
prior
study,
our
our
prior
community
surveys,
both
in
21
and
in
2019
san
bruno
residents,
prioritize
funding
for
streets,
roads,
fire
stations
from
storm
drains
parks,
libraries
in
that
order,
and
it
also
concluded
that
a
commercial
transfer
tax,
slash
city
charter
is
viable
for
22,
which
made
adjustments
that
the
consultant
recommended
to
the
ballot
language,
and
we
have
the
the
final
valid
language
later
on
in
this
presentation.
B
But
again
that
really
sets
the
precipice
and
the
history
of.
Why
we're
here
today,
and
so
the
next
section
is
we
want
to
provide
an
overview
of
the
draft
city
charter
and
talk
more
in
detail
about
the
action
that
is
for
the
city
council
tonight,
and
in
this
section
we
will
review
the
process
to
establish
a
city
charter.
We
will
review
the
definition
of
commercial
property,
not
always
intuitive.
B
B
So
why
are
we
talking
about
a
charter
if
we're,
if
we're
talking
about
a
revenue
and
a
potential
commercial
property
transfer
tax?
It's
important
to
know
that
in
the
state
of
california
there
are
two
types
of
cities:
not
just
not
not
big
and
small,
but
they're
general
law,
cities
and
they're
charter
cities,
and
there
are
differences
charter.
Cities
can
impose
a
real
property
transfer
tax
and
there
are
other
differences.
B
General
law
cities
cannot,
and
so,
if
the
city
is
to
consider
a
commercial
property
transfer
tax,
we
would
need
to
develop
a
city
chart.
The
council
can
draft
the
charter
and
the
council
elected
to
do
so.
It
requires
two
public
hearings
and
a
vote
of
the
people
at
a
statewide
general
election,
and
only
a
majority
vote
is
required.
B
So
fifty
percent
plus
one,
but
the
important
note
here-
is
at
a
statewide,
general
election,
and
so
should
the
city
council
provide
direction
tonight,
there's
sufficient
time
for
staff
to
do
the
necessary
work
to
submit
the
forms
to
have
that
on
the
november
ballot,
but
that
it
cannot
be
considered
in
23.
B
If
it
is
not
directed
for
the
22
budget,
it
would
have
to
be
considered
in
24..
So
it's
a
statewide
general
election,
even
years
22
or
24-
are
there
forward
and
on
march
29th
the
city
council,
as
we
discussed
before,
had
a
study
session
and
really
directed
staff
to
develop
and
quote
a
simple
charter
with
an
integrated
commercial
property
transfer
tax
and
we'll
talk
a
little
bit
more
about
that.
B
When
we
talk
about
the
powers
of
a
charter
city,
because
the
city
council
was
very
clear
that
they
did
not
want
a
raw
sweeping
charter,
they
wanted
a
charter
that
was
narrowly
tailored
to
a
commercial
property
transfer
tax,
a
little
details
about
commercial
property
and
the
commercial
property
transfer
tax.
It's
important
to
note
that
a
commercial
property
transfer
tax
is
paid
upon
sales,
so
it
is
not
a
tax
that
is
paid
every
month
every
or
every
year
it
is
paid
only
upon
a
transacted
sale.
B
It
can
be
negotiated.
Who
pays
that
between
the
buyer
and
the
seller
and
important?
I
want
to
pause
a
little
bit
to
talk
about
the
definition
of
commercial
property
that
we
use
and
that
is
commonly
used,
and
so
you
often
think
of
commercial
property
of
an
office,
building,
hotel
retail
structure
or
an
industrial
property
like
a
warehouse
of
manufacturing,
but
there's
another
division
of
commercial
property
and
in
fact
there
are
commercial.
B
There
are
residential
commercial
property,
grocery
and
so
merchant
residential
property
is
in
fact
commercial
property
and
for
the
definition
that
we
use
in
the
tax
ordinance,
it
is
commercial,
residential
properties
or
multi-family.
Housing
of
five
units
or
greater
commercial
property
also
includes
plan
unit
development
by
residential
developers
or
vacant
land.
B
So
it's
important
to
note
that
in
doing
the
due
diligence
to
provide
the
city
council
with
analysis,
the
city
did
conduct
a
simulation
analysis
of
potential
property
transfer
taxes.
We
pooled
rates
and
studied
21
bay
area
cities
that
have
a
transfer
tax,
and
then
we
estimated
the
revenue
to
san
bruno
based
on
five
prior
years,
and
we
should
talk
a
little
bit
about
why
we
did
that.
B
So
a
property
transfer
tax
by
its
very
nature,
is
charged
on
properties
that
sell
which,
by
their
very
nature,
will
fluctuate
with
the
economy.
In
a
depressed
economy,
fewer
commercial
properties
will
sell
in
a
more
robust
economy,
economy
or
a
year,
more
commercial
properties
will
likely
sell,
and
so
the
amount
fluctuates
and
so
in
order
to
project
and
provide
a
number
that
we
felt
could
be
reliable
and,
as
least
subjective
as
possible.
We
looked
at
every
commercial
property
that
was
sold
in
san
bruno
the
last
five
years.
B
We
were
able
to
acquire
the
information
from
the
county
and
ran
the
simulation
simulation
based
on
that
and
so,
depending
on
the
rate
and
we'll
talk
about
that,
the
average
annual
tax
revenue
would
have
ranged
from
61
000
to
2.7
million
annually
over
the
last
five
years.
Again,
it
will
fluctuate
because
it's
based
on
the
sales
that
happen
in
those
years,
but
had
we
had
a
commercial
property
transfer
tax
depending
on
the
rate
the
city
could
have
received
61,
000
or
2.7
million
annually.
B
Over
the
last
five
years
and
again,
we
survey
21
tax
rates,
21
cities
and
the
tax
rates
vary.
Some
cities
have
a
simple
percent:
other
cities
have
a
tiered
tier
rate
based
on
the
sales
price
and
the
the
symbol
range
from
0.055
to
1.3,
and
so
this
last
slide
I
will
not
touch
on
in
detail,
but
in
one
of
our
prior
study
sessions.
B
We
did
go
through
this
in
detail,
but
I
just
wanted
to
provide
that
again
here
tonight,
because
it's
been
several
months,
but
a
number
of
cities
have
rates
that
are
tiered,
so
the
more
the
property
sells
for
the
higher
the
rate
is,
and
so
you
can
see
here,
the
highest
tier
rate
is
properties
that
sell
over
10
million
dollars
is
potentially
three
percent
with
carrying
going
lower
depending
on
the
sale
price.
B
The
proposed
structure
in
san
bruno
is
a
simple
one
percent
rate
again.
That
structure
would
apply
to
only
residential
properties
that
are
five
plexes
or
more
meaning
all
single
family
homes,
condominiums
and
anything.
B
That's
a
four
plex
or
below
is
exact
commercial
properties
of
all
of
the
types
would
pay
the
one
percent
the
estimated
annual
revenue
importing
the
note
estimated
annual
revenue
at
the
one
percent
is
approximately
1.1
million
a
year
for
the
commercial
residential
just
under
three
hundred
thousand
dollars
and
for
all
of
the
commercial
types
of
seven
hundred
and
fifty
eight
thousand
again,
it
will
fluctuate
on
an
annual
basis.
B
E
The
charter
has
the
purpose
of
authorizing
the
city
to
implement
a
commercial
real
property
transfer
tax,
if
approved
by
the
voters,
but
the
details
of
the
order
of
the
tax
are
presented
to
the
voters
in
the
form
of
an
ordinance
and
that
ordinance
provides
that
commercial
property.
It
provides
all
the
details
of
how
the
tax
is
imposed
and
how
it's
collected
and
what
property
is
subject
to
the
tax
and
it
defines
commercial
property
as
all
property,
excluding
property
developed
with
residents
with
a
residential
structure
that
contains
less
than
five
dwelling
units.
E
So
what
does
it
mean
to
be
a
charter
city?
A
charter
city
has
the
power
to
regulate
all
municipal
affairs,
and
this
is
there's
not
a
set
definition
for
what
a
municipal
affair
is
it's
it's
determined
by
the
courts
on
a
case-by-case
basis.
However,
there's
some
well-selled
examples
of
what
is
deemed
in
municipal
fare.
Those
include
prevailing
wages
and
the
procedures
for
adopting
resolutions
and
ordinances.
E
E
The
second
and
and
here
at
a
highlight
that
the
city
council
has
provided
direction
to
prepare
a
draft
charter
that
specifies
that
the
city's
powers
under
the
charter
are
limited
only
to
the
powers
it
could
exercise
as
a
general
lawsuit
city,
with
the
one
exception
of
allowing
for
a
commercial,
real
property
transfer
tax.
E
E
So
the
constitute
the
california
constitutional
limits
on
charter
cities
is
relevant
to
the
city's
proposed
charter
because
of
the
integral
tax
measure.
The
california
constitution
limits
all
cities,
revenue
powers,
starting
back
with
proposition
13,
218
and
propositions
26,
and
what
all
of
these
constitutional
amendments
that
were
approved
by
the
voters?
E
E
Here's
a
brief
overview
of
the
timeline
that
got
us
to
this
point.
As
the
city
manager
discussed
earlier.
There
are
specific
procedures
prescribed
in
the
california
government
code
for
how
a
city
can
consider
becoming
a
charter
city
that
includes
two
hearings
with
at
least
30
days
between
the
two
hearings
and
then
following
the
second
hearing
at
least
21
days
must
pass
before
the
city
council
council
considers
whether
or
not
it
will
submit
the
charter
to
the
voters.
E
So
here
we
are
on
august
3rd,
the
last
hearing
being
on
july
12
and
presenting
you
a
resolution
that
provides
the
authorization
to
put
this
measure
on
the
ballot
and
we're
here
today,
because
the
deadline
for
submitting
all
ballot
measures
for
the
november
8th
election
is
march
12th.
So,
by
approving
the
resolution
today,
it
gives
the
city
clerk
time
to
submit
the
measure
to
the
county
elections
officer.
E
So
here's
what
the
next
steps
are
there'll,
be
questions
on
this
presentation,
an
opportunity
for
public
comment,
discussion
and
then
the
city
council
will
consider
the
resolution
to
submit
the
measure
to
the
voters
and
just
one
note,
because
the
measure
has
as
an
integral
part
of
it.
A
general
tax.
E
California
law
requires
that,
prior
to
submitting
a
general
tax
to
the
voters,
the
resolution
of
proving
that
the
measures
the
tax
measures
submitted
to
the
voters
must
be
approved
by
a
two-thirds
vote
of
the
city
council,
and
so
that
would
be
four
out
of
five.
A
A
Seeing
none
at
this
time
we
will
go
ahead
and
at
this
time
members
of
the
public
that
are
here,
I
would
ask
if
you
could
hold
on
councilmember
hamilton,
wrote
mu,
but
your
hand
is
up
now
I
I
apologize
mayor,
I
couldn't
get
my
no
no
worries.
A
As
your
cat
goes
by
pause
for
a
moment,
members
of
the
public,
if
you
could
raise
your
hand
virtual
hand
if
you
wish
to
speak-
and
this
would
be
the
opportunity
again
please
to
raise
your
hand
now,
and
we
can
get
you
in
the
queue
and
see
how
many
folks
that
we
may
be
having
this
evening
appreciate
it.
Council,
member
hamilton.
C
Thank
you,
oh,
so
I
have
just
a
few
clarifying
questions
based
on
concerns
that
were
expressed
to
me
via
direct
communication
and
that
I've
read
on
social
media.
I
just
have
a
few
clarifying
questions,
the
the
most
important
parts
about
about
the
the
presentation
that
we
that
we
that
we
just
heard
so
the
first
the
first
question.
I
guess
this
could
go
to
the
to
the
city
attorney.
I
guess
all
four
questions
can
go
to
the
city
attorney.
E
C
E
Real
property
transfer
tax,
which
would
affect
only
commercial
properties
and
residential
properties
of
five
units
or
more
mayor
medina
councilmember
hamilton.
E
The
charter
is
very
limiting
and
it
specifies
that
the
powers
the
city
could
exercise
as
a
charter
city
are
limited
only
to
those
powers
that
a
city,
a
general
lost
city
could
exercise,
with
the
exception
of
getting
the
power
to
impose
a
commercial,
real
property
transfer
tax,
regardless
whether
you're
a
charter
city
or
a
general
law
city.
In
no
case
can
any
city
or
any
governmental
agency
impose
or
increase
or
extend
a
tax
without
getting
voter
approval.
E
C
E
Already
have
is
a
general
lost
city,
so
we've
already
ruled
out
taxes,
but
if
there
are
there
any
other
powers,
we
would
we
would
be
granted
in
the
way
that
we
fund
the
charter.
The
way
that
mayor
medina
councilman
hamilton
the
way
that
the
current
charter
is
structured,
the
only
power
that
the
city
could
exercise
was
a
charter
city
would
be
the
power
to
impose
the
commercial
real
property
transfer
tax,
which
a
general
lost
city
could
not
do.
E
Thank
you
and
then
my
my
last
question
and
it's
it's
a
little
bit
deliberating,
but
this
was
the
the
number
one
concern
that
was
that
I've
heard
from
from
from
constituents.
E
If
the
proposed
measure
makes
it
onto
the
ballot
and
is
approved
by
the
voters,
could
this
or
a
future
city
council
extend
the
tax
to
affect
the
sales
of
single-family
homes
and
condos
or
would
sudden
move
require
this
entire
process
of
public
hearings,
placement
of
a
measure
on
the
ballot
and
approval
of
that
measure
by
majority
of
voters
before
it
could
ever
happen?
E
Mayor
medina,
councilmember
hamilton,
the
ordinance
that's
proposed
to
be
approved
by
the
voters,
provides
a
definition
of
real
property
that
is
subject
to
the
tax,
to
be
strictly
limited
to
land
property,
with
structures
with
excluding
all
property,
excluding
property
with
residential
structures
of
four
units
or
less
to
extend
that
to
any
other,
to
to
extend
or
to
eliminate
the
exclusion.
E
A
Thank
you
councilmember.
If
there
are
no
other
questions
on
the
presentation
from
colleagues,
we
have
quite
a
few
speakers
which
is
fine
and
great.
We
look
forward
to
hearing
from
you
you'll
each
have
up
to
three
minutes.
Please
be
mindful
of
that,
and
the
three
minutes
just
keep
us
going
because
we
have
about
16
or
so
speakers.
A
I
would
ask
if
a
prior
to
you
has
basically
said
everything.
Certainly
you're
welcome
to
come
in
and
just
say
I
concur
with
last
speaker,
but
certainly
the
time
is
yours
and
lupita.
If
you
could
assist
me
and
bring
in
members
of
the
public
base.
E
Montezon
jamie
hi,
whenever
you're
ready.
Yes,
I'm
ready,
mayor
medina
city,
council
and
staff.
Thank
you
for
for
listening
in
on
me
this
this
evening.
My
name
is
jamie
monazon
and
I'm
representing
myself
as
a
business
owner
as
a
30-year
resident
of
san
bruno
and
a
former
ceo
of
a
very
successful
chamber
of
commerce.
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
I
don't
normally
make
public
comments
at
council
meetings,
but
I
felt
compelled
to
do
so
tonight
as
a
native
san
bruno
resident,
who
has
watched,
neighboring
cities
grow
and
thrive
while
we
continue
to
live
with
dilapidated
roads,
fire
stations,
storm
drains
and
other
facilities
that
were
outlined
here
tonight
we
have
over
300
million
dollars
in
unfunded
needs
with
no
new
revenue
sources
in
sight.
We
need
to
be
exploring
any
and
all
options
in
order
to
start
addressing
critical
city
needs
that
impact
all
of
you
and
all
of
us.
E
The
city
charter
with
a
commercial
transfer
of
tax
will
help
fund
these
needs
and
it
will
not
impact
everyday
san
bruno
residents.
Despite
what
special
interests
will
have
you
believe
this
tax
does
not
impact
everyday
residents.
This
one
percent
tax
will
only
impact
commercial
property.
To
me
this
is
a
no-brainer,
but
you
are
not
even
deciding
on
that
tax
today.
The
only
thing
you
are
deciding
is
whether
to
allow
your
constituents
to
have
a
voice
and
decide
whether
commercial
interests
should
supersede
their
own.
E
C
I'm
ready,
you
may
begin
well
said
adriana.
What's
that
I
don't
know
how
the
council
can
question
this
topic,
just
like
adriana
said
when
you
have
300
million
dollars
of
unfunded
capital
improvement
projects
currently
before
you
leading
to
immediate
sinkholes
that
need
to
be
filled
and
the
dispersal
of
100
000
at
a
time.
C
Again,
we
have
300
million
dollars
of
unfunded
capital
improvement
projects
and
one
million
dollars
would
help.
I
have
the
2014
storm
drain
master
plan
in
front
of
me
and
I
see
about
13
different
priority
one
and
priority
two
projects.
Here.
C
Some
pipes
were
constructed
30
years
before
seabiscuit
was
born
pretty
interesting
and
to
follow
on
jovan's
comments.
We
have
a
significant.
E
E
The
three
million
dollars
of
unfunded
infrastructure
and
needs
from
the
from
the
city
is
quite
alarming.
I
thought
this
was
something
that
was
going
to
be
a
small
tax.
I
fail.
I
I
failed
to
see
how
a
council
could
take
a
crystal
ball,
not
knowing
how
much
this
would
bring
in
and
expect
that
they
could
put
something
into
a
general
fund.
To
take
care
of
this.
E
Why
wouldn't
you
want
to
hear
from
realtors
realtors
like
me,
who
live
and
work
here
and
our
clients
who
buy
homes
in
san
bruno?
Who
then
become
the
constituents
are
invested
in
this
community?
They
are
most
impacted,
another
component
that
a
council
member
said
is
that
they
should
not
leave
any
money
on
the
table.
May
I
remind
you,
council,
whose
money
is
this:
the
proposed
taxes
of
bringing
the
funding
general
city
services
on
a
narrow
segment
of
the
population,
including
housing
providers,
small
businesses
and
small
mom
and
pop
investors?
E
This
is
another
form
of
double
taxation,
property
owners
already
pay
into
the
general
fund
through
property
taxes
and
other
taxes
for
city
services,
including
police
and
fire.
Future
city
councils
could
pass
even
more
erroneous
taxes,
including
on
single
family,
homeowners
and
car
owners.
This
would
add
to
the
negative
impacts
on
housing
which
already
experiencing
we
are
experiencing
higher
interest
rates,
sky,
high
housing
costs
and
inflation.
E
C
Okay,
well
I'm
it's
interesting
to
listen
to
the
first
four
speakers,
but
I
definitely
sit
on
andreana
and
jeremy's
side,
because
what
we're
being
asked
to
do
tonight
is
not
make
a
decision.
That's
going
to
impact
anyone.
C
The
last
time
we
had
a
meeting
21
days
ago,
one
of
the
council
members
said
that
he
didn't
think
that
and
I'm
paraphrasing
now,
but
he
didn't
think
that
the
residents
of
san
bruno
would
be
able
to
would
be
able
to
vote
on
this
in
an
educated
way,
and
I
really
think
that
that's
what
we
need
to
be
talking
about.
We
need
to
be
talking
about
how
to
educate
the
public
about
what
they
will
be
voting
on
in
november.
C
B
C
I'm
sure
that
in
these
cities,
that
these
are
some
of
the
hottest
real
estate
cities
in
the
bay
alameda,
berkeley,
hayward,
san
mateo,
san
rafael,
san
ramon,
santa
clara
santa
cruz,
monterey
mountain
view,
palo.
C
B
C
That
two
of
you
are
somewhere
in
the
middle
in
terms
of
trying
to
decide
whether
or
not
the
voters
should
make
this
decision.
I
implore
that
all
of
you,
five
of
you
tonight,
send
this
to
the
ballot
so
that
your
constituents
can
make
the
decision
and
you
have
time
to
educate
them,
so
they
can
make
the
right
vote.
Thank
you
very
much.
A
Yes,
yes,
this
is
tina
wall
and
thank
you
very
much
for
the
opportunity
to
speak.
I
am
a
small
business
women
owned
in
san
bernardino.
In
since
year
2000.
we
will
witness
the
only
the
ups
and
downs
in
san
bruno
in
the
past
20
something
years.
Small
businesses
are
still
struggling
to
stay
open
from
due
to
pandemic.
Yet-
and
I
mean
with
this
increase
of
of
I
mean
for
imposing
this
transfer
tax,
I
mean
mostly
who.
A
Would
be
the
the
pianist
who
lives
in
five
years
and
up
apartments?
You
know
because
I'm
a
business
owner
I
have
to
pay
rent,
and
I
mean
I
wish
I
have
earned
a
property,
so
I
wouldn't
be
improved
of
such
an
increase.
I
mean
with
retail
and
commercial
property
we
as
a
small
business
owner,
actually
pay
for
the
property
tax,
any
increase
it
will
be
on
us.
Not
I
mean
so
it's
not
on
the
owners
because
just
can
be
transferred
to
the
tenants.
A
A
Or
the
impose
of
the
transfer
tax,
you
know
it's
not
a
big
huge
number
that
what
zambuno
needed
I
mean
citizen
bruno
should
be
considered
one
of
the
richest
city
in
the
whole
peninsula
and
there's
a
material
county
because
we
have
artichoke
joe's,
who
is
paying
seven
cents
per
dollar
on
the
tax.
You
know.
A
There's
so
much
like
short
for
on
on
the
expenses,
though
I
mean
on
the
income
and
where,
like
we
have
the
hotel?
Yes,
because
it's
being
impacted
by
the
pandemic,
okay,
you
probably
collect.
Maybe
there's
less
people
gambling.
I
guess
you
know
so
we
should
have
a
lot
of
money.
You
know
and
property
tax
is
not
the
cheapest
in
the
peninsula
either.
A
You
know
we're
paying
a
lot
of
high
water
bill
and
also
a
lot
of
actually
probably
taxes
not
compared
with
other
neighboring
cities,
which
is
considered
rather
expensive.
A
You
know,
and
so
please
oppose
to
this
mesh
this
proposal,
you
know,
don't
try
to
impose,
I
mean,
impose
another
tax
on
as
small
property
owners
or
small
business
owners
or
even
on
tenants.
I
really
really
appreciate
that
you
reconsider
that.
Thank
you
very
much.
Thank
you
for
your
comments.
Next
speaker,
please.
A
Hello,
council
members:
this
is
jimmy.
A
A
Taxes
and
on
the
wall,
I'm
sorry
can
we
pause
the
clock,
please
o'clock
and
and
I'm
sorry
we're
having
a
hard
time
hearing
you
consistently
it
kind
of
comes
in
and
then
it
fades
out
just
as
you
can
readjust.
A
If
you
did
vote
to
not
allow
the
residents
of
san
bruno
to
decide
if
this
transfer
tax
should
be
applied
and
we
transitioned
to
it
to
our
city,
a
list
of
community
projects
that
have
not
been
addressed
over
in
here,
essentially
that
barley's
always
told
us,
because
of
lack
of
funding
that
would
be
florida
park.
Central
park,
san
bruno
cable
replacements,
converting
seven
areas
through
the
city
of
san
bruno
to
the
series
circuit
street
lights
to
parallel
circuits,
downtown
renovation,
the
city
welcome
monument
silver
mountain
and
the
tre
at
the
train
station.
A
A
Money
from
this
every
year,
but
up
to
this
point
we
have
potentially
loss,
since
this
was
first
in
2019
as
much
as
four
million
dollars
that
have
been
handed
to
the
city
of
san
bernardin
transition.
A
E
A
Thank
you,
mayor
medina
and
members
of
the
city
council
good
evening.
My
name
is
fernando
pena.
I
am
the
government
affairs
director
for
the
san
mateo
county
association
of
realtors
sam
carr.
Thank
you
for
the
opportunity
to
voice
my
concern
regarding
the
proposed
general
to
charter
city,
designation
change
and
new
commercial
property
transfer
tax.
I
am
calling
in
in
strong
opposition
to
this
proposal
poll
numbers
show
it's
not
a
good
time
to
ask
the
voters
for
a
new
tax.
The
council
withdrew
a
bond
measure
that
would
have
generated
124
million
dollars.
A
A
The
tax
places
the
burden
of
funding,
just
city
services
on
a
narrow
segment
of
the
population
who
sell
or
buy
a
building,
including
small
mom
and
pop
investors.
Storm
drain
fees
and
other
measures
have
been
rejected.
That's
true
it
passed,
but
one
segment
of
the
population
should
not
be
pitted
against
one
another.
A
Historically,
proper
transfer
taxes
have
hurt
small
businesses
who
rent
space
in
mid-size
or
mixed-use
buildings.
Owners
of
these
buildings
in
many
cases,
are
not
large
corporations
and
do
not
have
the
capacity
to
or
or
tend
to
pass
on,
increased
taxes
in
the
form
of
increased
rents,
and
despite
your
insurances,
that
this
does
not
include
single-family
homes.
At
this
time,
future
city
councils
can
and
could
pass
even
more
onerous
taxes,
including
on
single-family,
homeowners
and
condo
owners.
A
They
will
have
the
authority
to
do
it
if
you
put
it
on
the
ballot
asking
the
two
questions.
The
november
ballot
asks
two
questions:
one
give
us
the
authority
and
two
impose
a
property
transfer
tax.
So
in
the
future,
a
future
city
council
will
only
have
to
ask
one
question:
a
new
property
tax
that
could
impose
on
single-family
homeowners
and
condo
owners
and,
according
to
staff
analysis
in
a
bad
year,
this
will
bring
only
20,
oh
only
sixty
thousand
dollars
per
year,
not
a
millionaire,
as
has
been
advertised.
A
C
Yes,
sorry,
it's
paul,
bowdrill
paul
leo
is
my
middle
name,
but
anyway,
thank
you
so
much
for
allowing
me
to
be
counsel.
I
am
a
real
estate
agent
and
I
was
asked
here
by
a
few
of
my
clients
who
are
residents
of
dan
bruno
and
other
clients
who
own
property
in
san
bruno
to
speak
on
their
behalf
and
express
their
opposition
to
oppose
the
proposed
city
charter
and
commercial
property
transfer
tax.
C
I
also
wanted
to
share
some
of
my
industry
knowledge
to
help
kind
of
explain
some
major
pitfalls
with
that
transfer
tax
in
general.
My
first,
I
think
we
have
to
make
clear.
Is
we
already
have
a
transfer
tax
in
the
form
of
their
county
transfer?
Tax
was
at
a
dollar
ten
per
thousand
and
cities
throughout
the
county.
Do
split
this
with
the
county,
50
50.
and
by
adopting
its
own
city
transfer
tax.
C
What's
important,
I
think
the
citizens
need
to
realize
is
that
the
city
then
forfeits
this
portion
of
the
the
tax
they're
receiving
and
so
local.
Thus,
local
residents
are
not
just
paying
more
for
a
city
government,
but
also
more
for
a
county
government,
but
more
importantly,
which
is
already
alluded
to
in
your
own
study,
is
that
the
transfer
taxes
are
an
extremely
volatile
and
unreliable
source
of
revenue.
I
think
by
our
own
city
staff
analysis
between
61
000
to
2.7
million
and
that's
a
quite
large
fluctuation.
C
Furthermore,
it
is
hard
to
forecast
commercial
properties
because
they
sell
a
lot
less
frequently
than
single
family
homes.
I
mean
case
in
point
in
the
tanforan.
I
think
one
reason
why
that
number
skewed
so
highly
is
that
the
tampering
shopping,
complex
sold
for
about
364
million
dollars.
Of
course,
that's
going
to
be
a
big
windfall,
but
how
often
do
property
properties
like
that
sell?
You
know
so
once
in
a
hundred
years.
C
Another
example
of
how
these
transfer
taxes
fluctuate
is
the
city
of
san
mateo,
which
is
one
of
only
two
cities
in
san
mateo
county
here
that
has
a
transfer
tax
and
in
2019
farming,
2018
and
19.
They
had
a
revenue
of
13.9
million
and
then
it
dropped
to
9.1
in
2019
and
20.,
even
though
real
estate
sales,
our
farming
values,
were
going
up.
C
This
dropped,
you
know
34
so
again,
regardless
what
the
economy
does
it's
extremely
hard
to
again
forecast
which
would
make
your
job
of
budgeting
some
of
these
and
funding
some
of
these
projects
even
more
difficult
now.
That
brings
me
to
what
my
clients
fear.
The
most
is
because
of
this
volatility,
ultimately,
that
this
transfer
tax
will
fail
and
then
just
like
all
the
other
cities
that
we've
given
examples
of
who
have
this
transfer
attack
san
francisco
oakland
berkeley.
C
They
all
have
transfer
taxes
on
single-family
homes,
so
that's
my
big
fear
for
my
clients
and
your
constituents.
So
I
understand
that
council
and
staff
have
an
extremely
difficult
job
to
balance
a
budget
provide
for
services,
but
I
simply
want
to
ask
and
respectfully
ask
that
the
same
you
do
not
move
forward
with
putting
the
transfer
tax
and
the
city
charter
on
the
ballot
this
coming
fall.
Thank
you
very
much.
E
E
Hello,
can
you
hear
me?
Yes,
we
can
hear
you,
you
may
be
okay.
Thank
you
as
a
true
believer
in
democracy.
I
believe
it's
critical
that
this
goes
to
a
vote
to
our
residents.
I
mean
we
elect
people,
trusting
that
they'll
do
the
best
but
make
some
of
the
best
decisions.
But
ultimately
we
need
to
be
voting
on
this.
E
I
think
it's
completely
under
democratic
to
otherwise,
especially
at
a
time
when,
from
a
national
level,
there's
so
many
attempts
to
take
our
voting
rights,
and
you
know
I-
I
really
find
it
questionable
that
sam
carr
really
has
the
interest
of
our
residents.
I
mean
that
is
just
so
questionable
or
that
some
of
the
largest
realtors
are
concerned
about
your
average
folks.
It
just
doesn't
ring
true
to
me,
so
I
really
believe
just
take
it
to
a
vote.
We
have
to
consider
our
community
as
a
whole.
E
Not
one
not
without
win
run
one,
not
one
realtor
one
business
owner,
it's
our
community
as
all
that
needs
to
improve,
and
I
just
think
if
we're
not
allowed
to
vote
people
are
not
going
to
really
trust
the
council
that
it
just
it
doesn't
make
sense
to
me.
You
know
let
us
do's,
that's
why
we
voted
you
in.
Thank
you.
E
Claudia
quinn,
yes
good
evening,
yes,
my
husband
and
I
we
live
in
san
bruno
and
we
vote
here.
We
strongly
support
the
creation
of
a
city
charter
and
the
transfer
tax
on
commercial
property
and
also
term
limits
too,
but
we
haven't
gotten
there
yet,
but
I
find
it
interesting
that
the
opposing
opinions,
I
wonder
how
many
of
these
people
actually
live
in
san
bruno.
E
I
wonder
if
some
of
these
people,
these
people
that
are
opposing
this
legislation
or
even
bringing
it
to
the
ballot,
are
people
who
live
in
21
cities
that
are
now
benefiting
from
the
fact
that
their
cities
have
transfer
taxes
and
they
have
probably
some
better
services
than
we
do.
Yes,
I
strongly
agree
with
stephen
seymour
and
sandra
that
say:
bring
it
to
the
voters.
E
We
voted
for
city
council,
you
need
to
let
us
speak
and
let
our
opinions
be
known
and-
and
I
think
it
would
be
so
such
an
obstacle-
if
you,
if
you
stop
it
now
and
don't
bring
it
to
the
voters
well,
that
would
be
something
we'll
have
to
think
about
when
it's
time
to
vote
people
in
again.
Thank
you.
C
Good
evening,
thank
you,
I'm
a
voter
me
and
my
wife
vote
here
and
we
like
to
see
improvement
in
san
bernardino.
We've
seen
some
happen.
It
happened
slow,
but
with
this
additional
revenue
from
the
transfer
tax
would
be
great.
It
would
help
us
with
a
lot
of
things
that
are
needed
in
our
city.
Past
administration,
you
know,
hasn't
been
great
and
hasn't
addressed
issues
that
that
we
need
so
yeah.
We
need.
C
C
So
yeah
I
mean
there
are
police,
we
need,
we
need
more
police
officers,
we
need
a
safer
san
andreano,
we
need
a
you
know.
We
need
people
to
be
comfortable
and
safe
and
and
feel
safe
and
lower
crime
and
other
things,
but
yeah.
We
need
revenue
for
everything
that
we
need
to
get
accomplished
in
the
san
bernardino
to
improve
our
sewers
water,
you
name
it
etc,
and
my
wife
rayna
would
like
to
make
a
few
comments
as
well.
Thank
you.
So
much
have
a
great
night.
Please
let
us
vote.
E
Hi
yeah,
thank
you
for
the
opportunity
to
to
speak
tonight.
I
totally
agree
with
previous
speakers
and
I
think
that
that
you
need
to
put
it
forward
for
the
voters
to
decide.
This
is
what
is
called
democracy,
not
a
group
of
people
who
saying
oh,
no,
it's
not
going
do
not
vote.
For
that.
We
want
to
see
it.
We
need
to
decide
the
voters
need
to
decide
whether
this
not
a
just
a
small
group
of
people.
Thank
you.
So
much
for
your
time.
C
Now
we
go
okay.
Thank
you
very
much
mayor
medina
and
city
council.
You
know
everyone's
saying
bring
it
to
the
voters,
but
it's
very
interesting.
I'm
a
property
owner
in
san
bruno
and
a
business
owner.
I
do
not
live
in
state
of
minnesota.
I
can't
vote,
but
every
all
the
voters
want
to
increase
my
cost
and
then
I'm
just
going
to
pass
it
on
to
the
tenants.
So
it
does
affect
your
people
without
even
realizing
it.
There
are
so
many
other
ways
to
get
money.
C
The
city
council
turned
down
a
lot
of
money
when
they
turned
down
whole
foods,
and
mills
plaza
project
that
would
have
helped
out
quite
a
bit.
Probably
more
than
this.
C
I
believe
your
million-dollar
estimate
is
way
inflated
of
what
it's
going
to
bring
in,
because
in
there
as
I've
mentioned,
you
have
the
tan,
france
and
the
google
sale.
Those
are
sales
that
happen
once
in
a
lifetime.
We
have
no
other
large
properties
in
san
diego,
that's
going
to
generate
that
money.
So
it's
going
to
be
closer
to
maybe
three
four
five
hundred
thousand
dollars
and
possibly
as
low
as
60
000.
You
stated
yourself.
So
I
don't
think
the
money
is
the
issue
and
you're
having
people
vote,
who
don't
are
not
paying
anything.
C
There
are
a
good
majority
of
the
small
property
owners
are
mom
and
pops
who
live
in
san
grenade
as
well
and
there's.
You
gave
a
great
presentation,
but
I
didn't
see
the
cost
of
drawing
up
a
charter
and
maintaining
the
data
in
any
of
your
statistics
here
so
between
the
cost
involved,
the
less
money
that's
really
coming
in,
as
paul
mentioned,
you
will
lose
the
county
transfer
tax,
your
chair
of
it.
C
E
E
Star
please:
oh
there
we
go
yeah
star
sticks
to
unmute
hi.
This
is
this
is
chris
perez.
I
live
in
san
bruno
and
I
just
called
on
behalf
of
myself
and
my
husband,
david
graham,
and
we
do
support
the
ballot
measure
going
on
on
the
ballot
this
november.
For
the
charter
city.
E
We
appreciate
the
time
and
the
energy
it
took
to
bring
this
to
the
other
public
meetings
and
to
think
about
this
to
think
about
being
in
charter
city
city
of
san
mateo
is
a
charter
city
they're
flourishing
they're,
one
of
the
biggest
cities
here
in
san
mateo
county,
and
they
have
huge
income.
It's
going
great
for
them.
We
need
that,
as
was
mentioned
earlier
by
the
city
manager.
There
are
significant
financial
challenges
facing
san
bruno
as
well
as
everything
and
we're
looking
for
ways
to
get
money
in
and
that's
going
to
come.
E
You
know
we
don't
want
all
our
eggs
in
one
basket
doesn't
come
in
many
baskets.
Someone
said
that
it
was
a
once
in
a
lifetime,
the
sale
over
here
with
youtube,
but
let's
not
miss
the
next
once
in
a
lifetime.
We
don't
know
what
that's
going
to
be,
so
my
other
concern
and
I'll
direct
it
to
sam
carr
and
to
fernando
pena
is
that
sam
carr
is
constantly
lobbying
in
this
county
for
for
their
own
for
their
own
good.
E
E
The
sam
carr
is
pushing
councils
to
make
choices
that
help
sam
carr's
bottom
line,
they're,
not
a
benevolent
organization
they're,
not
looking
for
solutions
for
the
city's
issues,
they're
a
lobby
that
supports
their
profit.
Only
the
one
percent
traffic
one
percent
transfer
tax
will
be
on
community
property
on
commercial
property.
Only
and
it'll
be
helpful
to
our
city.
Tom
hamilton
asked
those
questions
again
and
again,
it's
not
going
to
affect
homeowners.
We
need
to
just
same
car,
will
make
fear
dominate
the
way
people
vote
not
going
to
affect
homeowners.
E
Sam
carr
has
come
out
opposed
in
half
moon
bay
against
their
efforts
to
deal
with
climate
change.
They
do
things
that
don't
make
any
sense
for
the
greater
good
so
almost
without
fail.
My
best
interests
have
been
served
by
voting.
The
opposite
of
whatever
sam
carr
is
have
no
doubt
that
they
only
have
their
own
best
interest
in
mind,
and
I
think
that
was
it.
E
C
Yes,
hi.
Thank
you
mayor
medina
and
san
bernardino
city
council.
I
want
to
speak
out
against
this
proposal
and
ask
you
to
vote.
No,
I
won't
say
repeat
things
that
have
already
been
said,
but
I
do
want
to
focus
on
a
couple
points
if
I
was
seeing
incorrectly
the
budget
deficit
in
san
bruno
somewhere
around
300
million.
C
In
the
best
case
scenario,
this
will
bring
two
million
dollars
in
revenue
to
the
city
annually.
Now
it
just
follows
logic
that
fulfill
the
rest
of
that.
Once
you
put
a
commercial
tax
on
real
estate
transfers,
you
will
seek
to
put
a
residential
transfer
tax
because
when
you
have
a
deficit
of
300
million,
it
only
makes
sense.
Now.
One
thing
that
I
don't
like
about
how
it's
currently
set
up
this
proposal
is
that
it's
being
tied
to
commercial
real
estate
transfer,
but
when
it's
put
on
the
ballot.
C
C
C
C
D
E
Good
evening,
mayor
medina
and
city
council,
I'm
robin
antonio
with
the
california
apartment
association,
a
trade
organization
representing
local
rental,
housing
providers
and
operators.
On
behalf
of
our
members,
we
caution
the
city
of
san
bruno
in
supporting
any
policies
or
ballot
measures
that
would
increase
the
cost
of
housing.
A
real
property
tax
does
increase
the
cost
housing,
since
the
additional
tax
will
add
to
the
total
cost
to
acquire
housing.
E
Housing
costs
in
the
bay
area
is
already
high.
Please
do
not
add
another
expense.
The
other
concern
we
have
is
the
lack
of
transparency
in
this
valid
proposal,
despite
being
labeled
as
a
commercial
property
tax.
The
measure
is
beyond
that.
This
proposed
tax
does
include
residential
buildings.
It
does
not
matter
whether
the
property
is
5
units,
10
units
or
20
units.
This
is
a
tax
on
homes,
for
full
transparency
reasons.
E
Please
consider
the
current
economic
climate
we
are
in
and
reconsider
any
permanent
taxes,
especially
ones
without
a
sunset
like
this
being
proposed.
This
is
not
a
time
to
pass
new
taxes
when
we
are
also
recovering
from
the
pandemic,
and
the
fiscal
conditions
are
exacerbated
by
the
current
high
inflation.
Thank
you
for
the
opportunity
to
speak
tonight.
E
E
We
have
had
the
most
transparency
in
our
city
council
over
the
last
couple
years
than
more
than
decades
before
and
they're
looking
out
for
our
city's
best
interest,
we're
not
going
to
be
experiencing
any
single
family,
home
tax
or
restaurant
tax
or
condo
tax
or
any
of
the
stuff
that
sam
cars,
fear-mongering
people
are
are
putting
forth
to
the
city
right.
So
we've
got,
we've
got
people
worried
that
they're
going
to
be
taxed
the
next
time
they
sell
their
house
or
their
condo
or
their
restaurant.
No,
that's
not
gonna
happen.
E
We've
been
losing
millions
because
we
haven't
taxed
places
like
youtube,
walmart
and
sales,
like
that.
No
we
have,
we
haven't,
gained
an
ascent
from
them
in
transfer
taxes,
but
now
now
we
have
the
opportunity
right.
What
is
the
expression?
The
rich
get
richer
and
the
poor
get
poorer
right
and
that's
what's
happening
in
san
bruno
who's
getting
poorer.
E
Yes,
the
residents
are,
and
the
only
way
for
us
to
get
some
improvements
in
the
city
is
to
have
this
chartered
and
put
it
to
the
people
to
vote
on
that
fear-mongering
from
sam
carr
and
carr
through
this
stuff
that
they're
doing
that's
not
helping
us,
I'm
a
resident
of
san
bruno
and
a
business
owner
and
a
real
estate
agent,
but
I
don't
want
them
speaking
for
me,
I'm
hot
about
this.
I
am
hot,
so
think
about
putting
this
on
the
ballot.
So
the
people
can
vote
I'm
out.
C
Hello,
everyone
mitch
spiegel
here,
I'm
a
realtor.
I
wanted
to
call
in
today
to
oppose
this
proposal.
C
The
number
one
thing
that
I
think
that
I've
heard
time
and
time
again
from
some
of
the
other
speakers
in
the
council
is
that
this
is
the
way
to
you
know,
manage
and
to
make
up
a
budget
deficit,
and
I
think
that
when
we
can
look
at
the
stats-
and
we
look
at
you-
know
how
this
taxes
can
be
laid
out-
it's
not
the
way
to
do
it
right.
It's
irresponsible
to
plan
out
a
city's
worth
of
budget
on
a
tax
that
may
be
high,
maybe
low,
maybe
60
grand,
maybe
one
million.
C
It's
irresponsible
to
plan
that
way,
and
I
think,
when
the
tax
of
people
saying
that
oh
it's
print
to
democracy
and
put
it
to
the
voters,
what
we're
talking
about
today
is
the
way
that
san
bruno
governed
itself
and
also
the
way
they
planned
things
out
now.
I've
heard
many
of
you
have
heard
the
same
saying
right,
don't
count
your
chickens
before
they
hatch.
C
There
are
two
types
of
people:
people
who
are
going
to
count
those
chickens
and
say:
oh
yeah.
Well,
this
this
tax
will
make
100
million
a
year
and
there's
people
who
say
you
know
what
we
need
to
figure
out
a
more
sustainable
way
to
propose
a
tax.
That's
going
to
be
again
a
sales
tax
or
bond
measure
that
can
actually
measurably
increase
and
you
know,
increase
the
tax
base,
but
also
decrease
our
budget
deficit.
C
So
I
would
ask
the
council,
in
in
the
simple
simple
terms,
is
that
we
know
that
these
taxes,
when
a
property
sells
that
tax
passes
down
to
our
lower
echelon
of
our
socioeconomic
status.
That's
our
renters,
a
five
unit,
building
that
sells
san
bruno
and
has
to
pay
a
transfer
tax
that
goes
to
renters,
who
are
going
to
be
living
at
that
apartment.
They
pay
that
tax.
C
If
there's
a
budget
deficit-
and
this
is
one
that
needs
to
be
made
up-
let's
do
it
in
a
sustainable
way.
Let's
do
it
a
real
way,
let's
put
a
bond
measure
on
the
ballot,
let's
put
a
sales
tax
on
the
ballot,
but,
let's
not
put
you
know
our
eggs
in
this
basket
of
something
that
may
or
may
not
in
60
grand
on
a
deficit
like
this.
Well,
let's
go
back
to
the
drawing
board
a
little
bit.
C
A
Thank
you
for
your
comments.
Are
there
any
other
folks
that
wish
to
speak
this
evening,
because
once
we
you
only
get
to
speak
once
if
you've
already
spoken,
you
can't
speak
again,
but
is
there
any
folks
that
have
not
spoke
that
would
like
this
opportunity,
because
once
we
bring
it
back
to
the
council,
that
will
be
it
for
public
comment.
Last
call
for
any
speakers
at
the
time.
C
Okay,
first
I'd
just
like
to
say
I'd
like
to
echo
stephen
seymour
andrasche
and
sandra's
comments,
the
suggestions
that
it's
not
enough
to
close
the
gap.
That's
obviously
true.
There
have
already
been
attempts
to
do
bond
measures.
First
of
all,
bond
measures
for
capital
projects
make
sense
for
revenue.
Gaps
that
are
consistent,
doesn't
make
sense.
C
C
I
wouldn't
mind
if
real
estate
commissions
were
diminished
a
bit
by
this.
The
idea
that
oh
this
will
just
be
passed
on
to
the
renters,
that
is
an
individual
moral
choice
of
every
property
owner,
so
I'll
just
leave
it
there.
I
start
sending
this
to
the
voters
and
I
support
anything
that
we
can
do
to
support
our
community
to
make
a
maintainable
infrastructure
to
share
the
burden
of
living
together.
A
C
C
I
represent
owner
and
build
burlingame
of
multi-unit
property.
I'm
asking,
or
I'm
speaking
this
evening
to
express
my
strong
opposition
to
the
proposed
city
charter
and
commercial,
real
property
transfer
tax,
as
a
small
investor,
I'm
concerned
about
how
giving
the
authority
to
the
city
council
to
tax
its
residents
will
hurt
my
business
and
my
family.
C
Your
proposed
real
property
transfer
tax
will
have
a
direct
impact
on
my
life
savings,
rental
income
and
the
inheritance
of
my
children,
and
what,
if
I
need
to
sell
my
property
to
take
care
of
any
health-related
family
or
spouse
expenses,
the
inclusion
of
multi-family
residential
housing
in
your
tax
is
especially
hurtful
because
of
its
impact
on
tenants.
Costs
would
be
passed
on
to
renters.
C
A
A
All
are
okay
and,
first
and
foremost,
thank
you
to
all
of
the
speakers
for
being
here
this
evening
waiting
and
giving
your
comments
and
thoughts.
Thank
you
and
now
we'll
bring
it
back
to
city
council
for
additional
questions,
comments
and
deliberations.
A
Councilmember
hamilton
thank.
C
You
mamadina
so,
and
thank
you
to
all
of
our
all
of
our
speakers
who
dialed
in
to
voice
their
opinions
on
this
issue.
There
have
been
there's
been
quite
a
bit
of
communication
going
around
in
the
past
couple
of
weeks.
Regarding
this
issue,
I
received
communications
from
representatives
from
our
local
commercial,
real
estate
community
and
even
all
the
way
to
anonymous
letters
put
it
put
in
my
mailbox.
C
Many
of
the
communications
make
liberal
use
of
fear-mongering
trying
to
convince
residents
that
this
is
a
move
to
eventually
tax
single-family
homes
when
it
absolutely
is
not
in
order
for
the
tax
to
be
extended
to
single-family
homes
or,
in
fact,
to
be
changed
in
any
way
at
all,
council
would
first
need
to
direct
staff
to
prepare
or
revise
charter.
I
would
oppose
that
by
the
way
that
charter
would
need
to
go
through
this
same
process.
C
Public
hearings
that
this
charter
has
gone
through
all
summer,
then
it
would
need
to
be
placed
on
the
ballot
by
a
majority
of
council.
I
would
oppose
that
too.
By
the
way,
it
would
then
need
to
be
approved
by
a
majority
of
voters
during
the
election.
I,
as
a
resident
would
vote
no
on
that.
C
C
The
same
these
same
communications
I
received
over
the
past
couple
of
weeks
are
a
bit
odd
in
that
they
often
first
use
the
argument
that
now
is
not
the
time
to
tax
san
bruno
residents.
On
this
point
I
agree,
which
is
why
this
proposed
one
percent
one-time
tax
just
on
sales,
would
affect
commercial,
real,
real
property
sales
and
sales
of
residential
properties
of
five
units
or
more
meaning
that
the
overwhelming
majority
of
san
bernardino
residents
would
never
see
this
tax.
C
But
then
those
same
communications
go
on
to
say
that
we
should
be
discussing
other
revenue
generating
measures
like
a
bond
or
another
sales
tax.
But
those
types
of
moves
would
indeed
impact
all
san
bruno
residents,
but
conveniently
would
not
affect
commercial
real
estate
sales
at
all.
So
it's
important
for
folks
to
think
about
exactly
whose
interests
are
being
championed
in
these
types
of
communications.
C
C
In
fact,
the
transfer
tax
has
been
so
successful
that
they
are
considering
increasing
it
this
year,
but
of
course,
in
order
to
do
so,
they
need
to
go
through
public
hearings.
Put
the
change
on
the
ballot
for
their
bush
to
decide
because
becoming
a
charter
city,
in
fact,
did
not
give
their
city
council
the
power
to
you
know
unilaterally,
impose
taxes,
despite
what
some
may
argue,
including
some
of
our
speakers
tonight.
C
C
C
Despite
the
claims
from
some
of
our
speakers
tonight,
no
one's
claiming
that
this
proposal
alone
will
solve
all
of
our
revenue
problems
we,
but
we
must
continue
to
chip
away
at
these
issues
using
a
wide
variety
of
measures
at
our
disposal.
Many
recent
efforts
were
also
detailed
in
the
staff
report
tonight,
as
this
is
the
only
way
to
responsibly
address
our
ongoing.
B
C
Taking
instead
taking
on
the
problem
head-on
and
my
advocacy
for
becoming
a
charter
city
and
implementing
the
commercial
real
property
transfer,
tax
is
just
one
of
many
ways.
I'm
doing
my
best
to
make
good
on
the
promise.
I
encourage
my
colleagues
to
vote
yes
to
put
this
measure
before
the
voters
in
november
and
to
let
the
people.
A
Sorry
I
was
having
a
problem
with
the
mute
button,
other
questions
or
comments
from
colleagues.
D
D
Your
efforts
to
mobilize
for
tonight's
meeting
were
quick
and
impactful
and
makes
me
hope
that
you
will
all
take
council
member
marty
medina
up
on
his
consistent
request
for
assistance
at
the
food
bank
on
thursdays,
where
volunteers
are
desperately
needed
and
the
impact
is
great
and
your
mobilization
efforts
would
be
very
greatly
appreciated
for
those
in
the
public
who
may
not
be
aware
of
what
I'm
referring
to
earlier.
This
week,
there
was
a
mass
communication
to
sam
carr
members
and
potentially
beyond.
D
I
went
ahead
and
took
a
moment
to
review
samcar's
mission
and
profile
page
on
their
website.
What
it
said
was
this:
sam
carr,
the
san
mateo
county
association
of
realtors,
is
a
trade
association
organized
to
ensure
professionalism,
protect
property
rights
and
promote
the
owner
of
real
property.
We
seek
to
serve
and
be
responsive
to
our
members,
underlined
and
bolded
for
emphasis
by
continuously
developing
implementing
and
promoting
programs
and
services
to
help
the
individual
realtor
be
successful.
D
A
constructive
force
in
the
improvement
of
life
within
the
community.
Their
mission
statement
is
samcarr.
Is
a
trade
association
organized
to
ensure
professionalism,
protect
property
rights,
promote
the
ownership
of
real
property
and
help
members
achieve
success,
and
their
vision
statement
is
that
the
voice
for
real
is
that
they're
the
voice
for
real
estate
professionals
and
property
owners
in
san
mateo
county?
D
While
I
can
appreciate
sam
car's
position
as
an
advocate
and
a
voice
to
real
estate
professionals
and
property
owners,
it
is
this
council's
responsibility
to
represent
the
individuals
who
live
in
san
bruno
also
referred
to
as
our
constituents,
while
not
required.
It
is
important
to
note
that
the
majority
of
those
who
spoke
in
favor
of
letting
the
voters
decide
were
residents
of
san
bruno.
The
majority
of
those
who
spoke
against
it
did
not
even
mention
where
they
resided.
D
D
D
D
I
wanted
to
address
a
few
comments
raised
tonight,
some
of
which
have
already
been
addressed
by
council
member
hamilton,
future
taxes.
Future
city
council
members
cannot
single-handedly
approve
taxes.
This
will
also
need
to
go
back
to
voters
as
we
are
requesting
it
to
be
done
today.
It's
worth
noting
that
this
was
one
of
the
great
concerns
of
council
member
salazar.
D
I
thank
him
for
bringing
this
to
our
attention.
It
was
addressed
to
ensure
that
any
future
taxes
would
have
to
go
back
to
the
voters
and
could
not
single-handedly
be
made
a
decision
be
made
by
the
council
small
business
owner
renters
impacts.
We
have
heard
about
the
small
business
owners
being
impacted
by
this
tax,
but
here
we
are
council
members
in
the
community
where
one
of
the
greatest
complaints
we
receive
are
vacant
storefronts,
and
that
is
without
a
commercial
tax
in
speaking
with
building
owners
over
the
years.
D
D
I
also
wanted
to
take
a
moment
to
thank
the
council
members
for
their
thoughtful
conversation
over
the
period
of
this
conversation
leading
up
to
tonight.
As
we
have
moved
forward.
Every
topic
raised
by
every
council
member
has
been
directly
addressed
to
ensure
that
any
additional
cause
or
action
would
need
to
go
back
to
the
voters.
D
The
council
could
be
suggesting
tonight
a
ballot
measure
with
additional
both
an
additional
and
broader
range
of
freedoms,
but
we
chose
not
to
do
that
unanimously.
I
might
add.
We
agreed
to
limit
our
authority
in
the
future
to
be
as
restrictive
as
possible
towards
ourselves
and
place
the
issue
of
the
creation
of
the
city
charter
and
the
commercial
transfer
tax
on
the
ballot.
Wait
for
it
for
you,
the
residents
of
san
bruno,
to
decide.
D
This
is
our
opportunity
to
allow
those
who
represent
to
voice
their
opinion
on
this
measure
and
echoing
our
past
city
attorney,
he
would
often
ask
what
is
the
problem
we
are
trying
to
solve
here.
We
are
trying
to
solve
over
400
million
dollars
of
cattle
needs
in
our
city.
We
are
trying
to
solve
for
a
desperately
needed
station
52
that
leaks
every
year.
We
are
trying
to
solve
for
the
officer
position
that
was
recently
unfrozen
for
just
eight
months.
What
are
we
going
to
do
after
that?
D
We
are
trying
to
solve
for
a
library
that
is
in
desperate
need
of
space
and
funds
for
quality
programming.
We
are
trying
to
solve
for
staffing
needs,
who
are
under
the
pay
scale,
leaving
us
with
a
great
need
for
staffing
without
the
most
competitive
salaries.
To
get
that
staffing
we
are
trying
to
solve
for
medians
that
need
to
be
cleaned
up
and
cleared
out.
D
D
We
are
trying
to
solve
for
the
broken
streets
up
and
down
the
city
we
are
trying
to
solve
for
the
upkeep
and
maintenance
of
our
parks
that
need
everything
from
grass
to
new
scoreboards
to
new
soccer
fields.
We
are
trying
to
solve
for
the
rolling
wood
emergency
where
a
piece
of
our
own
community
was
left
without
lights
for
over
a
month,
and
we
don't
have
the
funds
to
address
this
emergency
long
term.
D
D
While
there
have
been
many
successful
efforts
made
these
efforts
overall
are
just
pieces
and
unless
combined
we're,
still
looking
at
not
enough
money
to
address
all
the
needs
that
we
have
in
our
city,
a
hundred
thousand
here,
five
hundred
thousand
there
a
million
here-
five
million
there.
They
are
not
all
coming
at
one
time
and
neither
are
our
needs.
D
D
C
Thank
you
so
I
want
to.
I
want
to
thank
my
colleagues
here
on
the
council,
because
this
this
has
been
a
very
it's,
been
a
long
process
and
we've
been
through
a
lot
of
iterations
and
a
lot
of
concerns
have
been
addressed.
As
the
vice
mayor
indicated,
we've
had
some
really
good
conversations
and
I
feel
like
we.
C
We
have
made
a
very,
very
collaborative
effort
to
move
this
forward
and
modify
language
so
that
it's
more
palatable
and
offers
more
securities,
but
I
still
have
concerns
about
what
we're
proposing
to
do
and
fundamentally
for
me,
relying
on
the
business
community
to
support
things
that
we
can't
get
our
residents
that
we
as
taxpayers,
refuse
to
support.
C
I
was
in
favor
of
moving
forward
with
the
bond
measure
and
and
the
bond
offers
not
only
significantly
more
revenue,
but
it
guarantees
that
all
the
issues
that
we've
outlined
here
tonight
are
actually
going
to
be
addressed,
because
if
we
pass
a
bond
to
fixed
fire
stations,
those
dollars
will
go
to
the
fire
station.
C
C
You
know
the
fact
that
that
we
may
be
undemocratic
in
saying
that
we
don't
support
putting
this
on
a
ballot,
but
it's
my
feeling
that
our
job
and
and
I
think
the
the
state
rules
support
the
fact
that
we
have
to
be
unified
in
saying
considering
that
this
is
really
what's
best
to
put
on
a
ballot
right.
Four
of
the
five
of
us
have
to
agree
that
it
should
move
forward
and
you
know
so.
C
It
is
our
responsibility
to
decide
whether
we
put
this
out
there,
and
I
am
not
confident
in
suggesting
to
the
public
that
I
approve
of
this
and
ask
them
to
ratify
it,
because
that's
really
what
it
is.
It's
not
a
simple
vote
of
the
public
that
does
this.
This
would
be
an
action
by
the
council
saying.
Yes,
we
agree
that
this
is
the
way
to
move
over
and
we
want
the
people
to
ratify
it
and
I'm
just
not
comfortable
in
putting
that
out
there
at
this
time.
C
You
know
we
heard
about
fear
mongering
and
I
agree
playing
on
people's
emotions
is
not
the
right
approach
to
this,
and
I
try
not
to
be
emotional
about
the
decisions
I
make,
but
I
feel
that
there
was
a
good
amount
of
fear-mongering
propos
put
in
the
city's
presentation
tonight,
spending
more
than
half
of
tonight's
presentation.
C
Talking
about
these
unmet
needs
and
then
saying
you
have
to
do
this
when
ballot
language
says
to
preserve
city
services
as
a
rationale
for
doing
this,
I
feel
that's
biased
and
I
don't
feel
that
it's
that
it's
completely
transparent,
even
you
know
we're
putting
forward
this
this
rate
and
we're
offering
a
million
dollar
estimated
revenue,
which
I
mentioned
before,
and
a
few
of
the
speakers
also
mentioned-
is
an
inflated
number.
If
you
take
that
single
year
with
which
was
very
obviously
an
anomaly.
C
If
you
look
at
the
numbers,
it's
nowhere
near
as
in
as
impressive
the
number
and
but
that's
not
what
we're
stating
in
in
what
we
put
out
to
the
voters,
and
so
if
we
can't
trust
ourselves
to
paint
a
clear
and
honest
picture,
then
we
wouldn't
be
surprised
that
others
might
also
exaggerate
the
truth
to
to
swing
people
the
other
in
the
other
direction,
the
the
even
the
the
percentage
that
we're
proposing
the
one
percent.
C
If
we
look
at
the
only
other
two
cities
in
san
mateo
county
that
have
a
transfer
tax,
ours
is
20
20
times
what
redwood
city
does
and
twice
what
san
mateo
does.
So
our
number
is
big
and
we
have
to
push
that
number
that
big
to
make
the
numbers
even
look
convincing
and
and
again
why?
Why
would
we
want
to
have
the
highest
number
out
of
all
of
the
cities
in
the
county?
And
you
know
we
heard
that
these
other
cities
are
thriving
because
they
have
a
transfer
tax.
C
I
would
argue
that
you
know
that
they're
they
got
to
the
they.
They
didn't
get
to
be
a
big
city
because
they
had
a
charter.
They
imposed
charters
because
they
became
big
cities
and,
and
the
only
two
are
dramatically
bigger
than
us
when
one
of
the
cities
has
a
population
of
80
000,
which
is
twice
our
population,
the
other
one
over
a
hundred
thousand.
And
so
these
are
not.
C
C
So
I
I
think
I'll
I'll
stop
there.
I
I
still
have
concerns
over
this.
I
won't
be
supporting
putting
this
on
the
ballot.
I
I
do
apologize
to
the
people
that
feel
that
they
are
not
being
well
represented,
because
I
am
not
endorsing
this
ballot
and
allowing
them
a
chance
to
vote.
A
And
I'm
sorry
for
my
voice.
Any
other
council
comments
vice
mayor
mason,
just.
D
A
quick
comment
because
I
actually
meant
to
say
something
about
the
bond
measure
for
members
of
the
public
who
might
be
watching
the
consultant,
the
city
hired
shared
that
a
bond
measure
was
not
likely
to
pass
in
this
election
period,
so
I
did
mean
to
mention
it
because
it
was
in
the
mass
communication
that
was
distributed
through
sam
carr.
It
is
something
that
we
looked
at.
D
D
So
it
was
an
interesting
comment
that
that
was
made,
but
in
this
particular
case
again
you're
looking
at
five
units
and
more
commercial
and
and
just
wanted
to
be
clear
that
we
did,
we
did
entertain
a
bond
measure
and
the
polling
found
that
it
would
likely
not
pass
in
this
election.
Thank
you.
C
So
just
one
quick
thing,
thank
you.
Councilman
marcel
is
our
free
comments
regarding
I,
I
understand
your
position
about
not
wanting
to
do
this
to
us,
putting
it
on
the
ballot
appearing
as
an
endorsement
by
council
of
putting
it
on
the
ballot
and
I'll
remind
you
that
that
item
5d
to
be
considered
tonight
will
is
a
is
to
consider
resolutions
setting
priorities
for
filing
written
arguments
for
city
measures
approved
by
the
city
council
to
be
submitted
in
the
election
and
which
means
that
you
know
we're
basically
going
to
be
asked.
C
C
We
we
we
need
to
look
at
every
opportunity,
I'm
in
favor,
of
looking
at
those
opportunities
that
impact
the
least
amount
of
our
residents,
and
it's
not
true
to
say
that
this
valid
measure
would
put
the
burden
on
a
small
segment
of
the
population
or
or
property
owners
that
amount
that
one
percent
that
is
going
to
be
charged
when
the
prop
only
when
the
property
sales,
so
the
only
one
time
isn't
isn't
going
to
make
up
the
and
it's
not
proper,
to
say
deficit,
because
we,
the
city,
operates
and
and
on
a
yearly
budget
where,
where
we
are
required
to
to
balance
the
budget,
this
300
300
million
dollars
that
we
still
need
it
has
to
come
from
somewhere.
C
We're
gonna
we're
gonna,
definitely
wind
up
with
more
we're
gonna
we're
gonna
wind
up
with
at
least
one
a
year
now
so
we
have
to.
We
have
to
try
to
find
all
options
now
this
valve
measure
of
this
charter
city
this
this
will
impact
the
least
amount
of
people
and
those
that
it
does
affect
it's
going
to
be
a
1
transfer
tax.
C
So
I
wanted
to
address
councilman
salazar's
question
of
the
transparency
I
I
think
we're
as
transparent
as
ever
on
this.
I
think
I
think
this
council
has,
and
staff
have
moved
forward,
to
providing
more
information
to
have
more
meetings
to
get
more
input
on
on
many
things
that
we're
working
on.
C
Levels
that
are
below
standard
metrics
in
a
in
a
pretty
then
it's
hard
to
say,
but
in
in
in
a
high
crime
area
and
and
we
we've
we've
heard
that
it's
not
even
our
residents
that
are
doing
the
majority
of
the
crime,
it's
where
we're
located
with
with
bart
with
being
in
the
middle
of
three
different
highways
or
interstate.
C
That
is
location.
So
I
I
thought
we
had
addressed
all
of
the
concerns
that
that
are
set.
My
colleagues
have
brought
up
a
very
narrow,
strictly
limited
charter
tax,
a
charter
city
empowerment.
C
C
C
If
a
council
member
here
does
not
believe
in
this,
then
they
have
the
right
to
write
the
opposing
ballot,
language
right
and
and
and
the
rebuttal
to
the
to
the
other
side.
So
we
need.
We
need
one
one!
C
More
council
member
to
to
allow
the
people
to
vote
and
to
recognize
that,
although
this
isn't
by
by
any
stretch
of
the
imagination,
the
silver
bullet
that's
going
to
solve
the
problem,
but
it
is
as
it
is,
a
step
that
we
we
need
to
take
that
that
it
is
a
large
burden
for
those
that
own
those
property
to
contribute
a
one
percent,
and
maybe
maybe
it
could
be
buyer
or
seller.
So
it
could
be
split.
C
I
can
say
that
I
marty
medina
received-
probably
six
six,
I
believe
emails
and
I
didn't
speak
or
take
any
contributions
from
any
sam
carr
organization,
or
that
I
didn't
even
bother
to
apply
to
receive
any
endorsement
from
them
from
the
last
time.
It
was
pretty
obvious
to
me
that
it
was.
It
was
nothing
that
I
wanted
to
accept,
so
I
wanted
to
share
that
with
true
transparency
that
I
I
know
I
have
not
taken
will
not
take
on
that
type
of
money.
A
Okay,
thank
you
all
and
so
appreciate
everybody's
comments
and
I'm
sorry
again
for
the
voice,
but
hopefully
everybody
can
hear
me
adequately.
A
A
A
Small
properties
or
mom
and
pop
businesses
right
so
they're,
making
it
very
clear
as
to
the
larger
one,
and
so
that
to
me
is
more
amenable.
I
can
understand
that
this
is
not
a
guarantee
of
exactly
the
dollar
amounts
again.
There's
that
talk
about
61
000
to
1.2
million
based
on
five
years,
but
there's
a
question
about
the
2019.
A
What
I
do
know
what
we
need
is:
we
need
to
really
sit
down
and
have
a
plan
and
a
process
of
trying
to
get
what
we
need
and
how
are
we
going
to
get
there?
We're
we're
going
at
things
succinctly,
and
I
appreciate
that
and
we're
looking
for
avenues,
but
basically
for
us
to
be
charter
city
is
why
we're
putting
that
before
folks?
A
Why?
Why
we're
talking
about?
It
is
because
that's
the
only
way
you
can
offer
this
tax
if
it
was
just
about
the
tax
alone.
Okay,
it
does
have
people
concerned,
it
doesn't
open
the
floodgates.
I
would
admit
that
it
was
very
good
with
the
dialogue
and
people
saying:
okay,
let's
modify
it,
let's
curtail
it
because
through
the
process,
that
became
a
large
concern.
A
But
you
know
this
does
affect
affect
the
business
community
folks.
That
means
it
affects
I'm
so
sorry,
people
so
and
I
could
go
on,
but
my
voice
is
not
getting
there,
so
I
will
come
out
later
with
more,
but
at
this
time
the
way
it
is
written
today
and
at
this
time
I
don't
think
it's
the
best
and
right
approach.
D
Yeah
so
mayor
mcdena,
I
was
hoping
to
get
a
little
more
clarity,
because
this
was
actually
brought
up
in
2019,
and
you
know
this
was
kicked
down.
The
road
back
then,
and,
as
a
reminder,
tan
friend
has
been
sold,
properties
for
youtube
have
been
sold,
amazon's
been
sold
over
400
million
dollars
of
commercial
properties
have
been
sold.
D
D
The
reasoning
was,
you
know
there
was
that
staff
wasn't
available
because
we
had
so
many
priorities.
Staff
did
make
it
a
priority
this
year.
We've
been
actually
talking
about
this
for
months,
and
this
is
the
first
time
I'm
hearing
that
we
need
a
different
plan
and
process.
D
A
D
So
I
would
just
say
for
the
record
that
if
that
was
needed,
we
do
have
initiatives
every
year
that
hasn't
been
brought
up
in
the
three
years.
I've
been
counsel,
so
I
just
would
love
to
hear
some
more
details
on
that.
One.
C
Sorry,
I
lost
my
connection,
I'm
now
on
my
phone,
as
you
can
see
from
the
jerkiness
as
I'm
holding
it.
So
I
apologize
for
that.
So
after
during
your
comments,
mayor
bedina,
I
would
put
to
you
the
same
comment
that
I
that
I
put
to
council
member
salazar,
which
is,
if
you
have
reservations
about
this
tax,
about
this
move
to
charter
city
and
putting
on
this
tax
and
again
I'll,
remind
everyone
that
no
one
is
claiming
that
this
tax
is
going
to
solve
all
of
our
problems.
C
You
think
you
you,
both
you
and
council
member
salazar
would
have
the
opportunity
to
write
the
opposing
argument
on
the
ballot
and
what
we
are
voting
on
tonight
is.
Should
this
go
on
the
ballot
we're
not
voting
on?
Should
we
become
a
charter
city,
despite
what
what
what
others
may
say
that
it
it's
if
you
were,
if
you
and
councilmember
salazar
were
to
collaborate
on
the
argument
against
it
on
the
valley
that
would
show
a
clear
that
would
be
a.
C
It
would
be
very,
very
clear
that
you
did
not
endorse
and
the,
but
we
would
still
be
able
to
allow
the
citizens
of
san
bruno
the
voters
of
san
bruno
to
make
this
critical
decision
and
not
take
that
power
out
of
the
voters
hands.
I
I
strongly
strongly
believe
that
the
voters
should
be
making
this
decision
and
that
if
this
should
not
be
a
decision,
that's
being
influenced
by
any
other
entities
and
that
including
the
city
council,.
A
A
To
maintain
critical,
you
know
and
that's
the
way
it
was
posed
in
this
survey
or
in
the
in
the
questionnaire
as
was
shown
to
us,
and
that
is
that
also
is
a
is
it
doesn't
have.
It
doesn't
have
the
impact
that
it
should
or
needs,
and
that
to
me,
if
that's
the
only
reason
to
be
a
charter
city
is
to
tax
people
and
that
that's
what
comes
from
and
I'm
sorry.
A
D
Yeah,
I
just
want
to
clarify
that
those
questions
are
actually
not
being
asked
of
us
they're
being
asked
of
the
voters,
and
all
we're
saying
is
that
we
think
the
voters
should
decide,
and
so
I
also
just
wanted
to
say
for
the
record
that
I
have
not
accepted
any
funds
from
sam
carr
or
have
I
with
the
output
of
endorsement.
Thank
you.
C
Just
to
go
on
the
record,
I
also
have
not
received
any
money
nor
endorsement
from
sam
carr,
and
I
believe
tonight
I
don't
believe
I'll
be
they'll,
be
offering
me
any
endorsements.
Thank
you.
C
I
actually
have
a
question
for
for
our
city
manager
that
we
we
had
a.
We
had
a
plan,
you
know
of
financial
sustainability
and
this
this.
This
is
one
of
the
things
that
we
talked
about
and
there's
very
few
things
we
can
do
other
than
we're
running
out
of
options
here.
So
we
we
look
at
the
bond
and
the
people
in
that
were
pulled,
and
then
the
staff
report
expert
of
polls
told
us
now
not
close.
C
However,
the
charter
city
was
a
favorable
thing
right.
So,
oh
I'm
saying
I'm
sorry,
I'm
jumping
myself,
so
I
I
think
that.
C
C
This
this
was
part
of
the
plan
and
again
I
I
appreciate
councilman
councilman
hamilton
that
if
somebody
on
the
council
doesn't
like
it,
they
can
still
let
the
people
vote
and
write
the
opposition,
and
I
would
totally
respect
that.
But
I'm
I'm
sensing
that
not
allowing
our
residents
to
vote
on.
It
is
really
disappointing
and
it's
it's.
C
It's
almost
amazing
that
it's
it
might
happen.
So
I'm
I'll
wait
for
our
city,
not
sure
I
see
he's
there.
B
Thank
you
to
the
mayor
in
response
to
council
member
martin
medina's
question
javon,
grogan
city
manager.
I
think
the
best
answer
is
absolutely
the
city
launched
a
comprehensive
fiscal
sustainability
project
back
in
2019,
there
have
been
a
number
of
initiatives.
Many
of
them
are
recapped.
On
page
two
of
seven
in
the
stafford
work,
we
went
through
a
number
in
the
presentation.
I
I
think
we've
said
for
several
years
now
that
there
is
no
silver
bullet
solution.
B
There
is
no
one
strategy
that
will
solve
the
city's
fiscal
or
infrastructure
challenges.
In
fact,
the
city
will
need
a
very
multi-prompt
approach.
I
I
do
think
it's
important
to
know
that,
should
the
city
proceed
with
a
commercial
property
transfer
tax.
At
any
point,
I
would
expect
sam
luna
to
do
what
many
cities
do.
Is
you
recognize
that
the
revenue
will
fluctuate
and
you
oftentimes
look
at
that
as
one
time
revenue,
and
so
you
do
not
project
ongoing
expenses
on
those
funds
you
use
them
for
typically
one-time
things,
capital.
B
That
said,
I
know
all
five
of
you.
Well,
I
know
that
none
of
you
want
to
be
talking
about
new
taxes
to
residents
or
new
taxes
to
businesses
or
new
taxes
to
commercial
property
owners,
and
I
recognize
that
these
are
exceedingly
difficult
conversations.
B
B
There
are
many
strategies
that
are
still
to
be
considered
whether
the
city
wants
to
have
a
successful
commercial
property
tax
measure
or
not,
but
it
again
is
only
one
of
many
solutions
that
are
up
for
discussion
and
is
energy.
The
elected
representatives
of
the
city
of
kim
bruno
that
decide
what
strategies
are
implored
and
what
strategies.
D
Yeah,
this
is
for
either
the
city
manager
or
the
city
attorney.
There
was
a
comment
tonight
about
for
about
the
city
forfeiting
other
venues.
It
sounded
like
some
kind
of
a
county
revenue
by
implementing
this
tax,
if
it
would
be
passed
by
voters.
Is
that
accurate.
E
D
Okay,
so
we
would,
if
the
voters
passed
it,
we
would
be
receiving
what
we're
already
receiving
once
more
right,
okay
and
then
I
just
wanted
to
get
an
estimate.
Thank
you
for
that.
I
want
to
get
an
estimate
from
the
city
manager
from
the
commencement
of
this
process
to
today.
If
you
can
estimate
about
how
many
staff
hours
have
been
used
to
get
to
where
we
are
today,.
B
Mayor
mason
off
the
top,
I
do
not
want
to
provide
a
precise
number.
There
have
been
there's
an
interdepartmental
team
that
is
working
on
this
effort:
staff
from
the
city,
manager's
office,
the
city
attorney's
office,
the
finance
department,
as
well
as
consultants.
Both
we
have
a
ballot
consultant.
D
D
B
Earlier
a
city
charter
can
be
considered
at
a
statewide
general
election,
so
every
two
years
even
years.
Certainly
if
the
city
council
decides
to
consider
a
charter
and
or
a
commercial
property
transfer
tax,
you
have
to
undertake
the
required
two
public
hearings.
I
I
would
bet
110
and
we
would
do
significant
public
engagement
as
well
as
a
number
of
the
analysis
and
infrastructure
needs,
etc
would
need
to
be
updated.
So
absolutely
there
would
be
another
effort.
B
Would
there
be
lessons
learned
and
potentially
utilizing
materials
that
have
already
been
developed
absolutely,
but
it
would
still
be
a
very
significant
effort
and
we
would
have
to
undertake
all.
D
Of
the
robust
public
engagement
communication
and
state
mandated
processes,
thank
you
for
that,
so
I
would
just
say
I
think
in
closing
for
myself
that
I
would
we
haven't
taken
a
vote
yet
I
would
really
encourage
our
council
members,
who
have
stated
that
they
wouldn't
support
this
initiative
to
really
reconsider
in
19
staff.
Didn't
have
the
time
we
didn't
have
capacity.
D
We
followed
the
rules.
We
created
a
process
on
how
to
prioritize
this.
We
agreed
to
that
process.
We
agreed
that
this
would
be
an
initiative.
We
agreed
that
the
council
would
work
together.
We
all
directed
staff
to
work
on
this
and,
as
you
heard,
city
manager
grogan
it's
over
100
hours
of
staff.
Time
already,
and
we
all
know
how
lean
our
staff
is
and
if
you
know
I
think,
council
member
cells
are
made
a
comment
about
elections.
D
If
you're
concerned
about
being
associated
with
this
with
this
particular
measure,
you
can
revet
it
publicly
and
put
your
name
next
to
it.
So
I
would
just
encourage
you
to
let
the
residents
decide,
because
this
is
part
of
a
plan.
This
is
part
of
discussions
that
have
been
going
on
for
not
months
but
years
and
we've
all
followed
the
process
to
get
here.
Thank
you.
C
Thank
you.
So
I
I
agree,
it's
been
discussed
and
we
are
following
the
process,
so
I
appreciate
those
comments,
but
I
I
don't
feel
I
can
get
a
stronger
statement
against
doing
this
then
saying
that
I
don't
support
even
putting
it
on
a
ballot
and
so
I'll
I'll.
Stick
to
my
events,
I
I
did
want
to
ask
a
follow-up
question
to
the
vice
mayors.
C
I
think
the
response
that
we
got
back
was
that
it
would
be
in
addition
to
any
of
our
own
existing
taxes,
but
I
believe
the
question
that
was
raised
and
the
question
that
the
vice
mayor
reiterated
was:
will
this
replace
the
county's
tax
which
the
county
does
have
its
own
property
transfer
tax,
and
so
would
us
placing
this
this
tax?
Would
it
then
not
not?
C
And
on
that
point,
I
would
reiterate
that
the
person
who
who
used
to
use
the
argument
that
we
would
be
forfeiting
the
the
county
tax
there
were
a
couple
of
folks
who
did
that
both
purported
to
be
experts,
some
gender
experts
in
this
area.
So-
and
I
actually
do
believe
that
those
folks
are
subject
matter.
Experts
in
this
area
and
probably
knew
were
well
aware
that
we
would
not
actually
be
forfeiting
the
the
county,
the
county
transfer
tax
money,
and
this
would
be
an
addition.
C
C
I'm
disappointed
to
hear
both
council
member
salazar
and
mayor
medina,
bringing
up
new
concerns
tonight
that
we're
hearing
for
the
first
time,
council
member
salazar,
saying
that
the
number's
too
high
and
mayor
medina
is
saying
that
we
should
that
this
should
be
part
of
a
more
comprehensive
program.
C
C
I
reiterate
that
both
of
you
have
the
ability
to
write
the
rebuttal
argument
and
put
your
names
to
it,
and
it
would
be
right
on
the
ballot
and
the
or
in
the
ballot
workbook
and
make
your
position
very,
very
clear.
C
So
I
again,
I
reiterate
my
position
here
that
this
is
that
this
is
an
important
decision,
then
each
that
needs
to
be
made
by
the
voters
and
that
we
should
allow
the
voters
to
make
that
decision
and
that
we
should
let
the
people
vote
and
allow
the
people
of
san
bruno
to
make
this
decision
free
from
the
free
from
influence
from
special
interests.
C
And
I
I
just
wanted
to
clarify
that
the
issue
of
that
number
being
inflated
is
not
a
new
concern
for
me
and
I
did
state
it
previously
in
meetings,
and
so
it's
I've
not
didn't
just
come
up
with
it.
It
has
been
brought
up
before
and
you
can
shake
your
head.
No,
but
it's
true.
You
can
go
back
and
watch
the
meeting.
D
Okay,
vice
mayor
mason
yeah,
I
know
so
has
been
my
closing
comment,
but
I
thought
I'd
also
thank
the
consultants
who
we
have
also
paid
for
to
get
to
this
point,
because
we've
asked
a
lot
of
questions.
Maybe
some
novice
questions
and
they've
been
actually
incredibly
patient
with
us
and
very
sincerely.
I
wanted
to
make
sure
we
thank
them
because
you
know
the
information
they
gave
us
was
largely
how
a
lot
of
the
decisions
were
made
on
this
council,
not
just
for
tonight,
but
other
decisions
that
we've
made
previously
now.
A
Been
very
helpful
in
this
process.
Thank
you.
I
think
thank
you
for
reminding
and
saying
that
vice
mayor
and
they
didn't
do
just
this.
They
did
a
survey
for
many
questions.
I
know
we
talk
about,
you
know
having
the
people
vote
and
there's
nothing
wrong
with.
Ever
of
that
and
again
you
talk
about
you
know.
A
majority
of
the
council
want
the
rotational
mayor
to
be
on
the
ballot,
that's
not
being
placed
before
the
people,
but
because
it
did
whole
well.
A
It
was
decided,
maybe
not
put
that
bond
because
of
the
the
cost
for
the
the
initiative,
and
you
know-
and
when
I
say
yes,
the
process
there's
been
a
process
followed.
That's
not
the
question.
What
I'm
saying
is:
there's
it's
310
million!
That's
what
I
mean
we
have
this
big
need,
that's
what
I'm
talking
about.
We
have
to
have
that
plan
and
to
go
to
the
folks,
because
we
may
have
one
opportunity
only
to
do
that
and
I
think
there
is.
It
is
hard
times
with
small
businesses.
A
It
is
a
challenging
time
in
our
economy,
and
so
I
think,
as
many
places
right,
the
county
is
saying:
hey
we're
not
going
to
put
up
a
tax,
others
for
business
license
they're
pulling
it
back,
because
it's
just
a
challenging
time
as
well,
but
anyway,
I
know,
we've
all
had
opportunities
to
speak,
but
I
just
wanted
to
add
that
too.
But
thank
you
to
the
vice
mayor
for
mentioning
the
others
that
would
have
on
work
as
well
with
that
back
to
council.
It
is
an
action
item.
There
is
a
motion.
C
I
would
like
to
make
a
motion
that
we
adopt
the
resolution
to
submit
to
the
voters
for
the
november
8th
2022
election
general
municipal
election,
a
measure
for
the
city
charter
and
and
authorizing
a
real
property
transfer
tax.
A
Motion
hamilton,
second
and
mason
roll
call.
Please.
A
A
We'll
turn
into
the
city
attorney
that
other
font
was
perfect
and
please
go
ahead.
E
E
Here's
an
outline
of
the
the
presentation
I'm
going
to
give
I'll
pre
briefly
discuss
the
background
of
elective
terms,
I'll
review
the
ballot
draft
ballot,
question
ordinance,
we'll
take
council
member
questions,
you'll
provide
for
public
comment
and
then
the
city
council
will
consider
whether
to
approve
a
resolution
to
submit
the
measure
to
the
voters.
E
So
then
the
city
repealed
the
term
limit
ordinance
and,
as
we
were
talking
about
before,
typically
city
council
can't
change
an
ordinance
that
is
adopted
by
the
voters.
However,
because
the
courts
had
invalidated
term
limits,
what
the
city
did
was
bring
a
validation
action
to
have
the
courts
determine
that
it
was
appropriate
for
the
city
council
to
eliminate
the
term
limits
inside
of
the
court
cases
filing
them
to
be
invalid,
and
at
that
time
the
current
provision
in
the
municipal
code
was
established,
which
allowed
for
unlimited
terms
in
1995.
E
The
california
legislature
amended
the
code
to
clearly
authorize
establishing
term
limits,
and
that
has
to
be
done
by
a
vote
of
the
people
currently
in
san
mateo
county.
There
are
term
limits
in
a
number
of
these
cities.
Foster
city
has
two
consecutive
four-year
terms.
Millbrae
has
two
consecutive
four-year
terms.
San
mateo
has
three
consecutive
four-year
terms.
E
Redwood
city
has
four
consecutive
four-year
terms.
Pacifica
has
two
four-year
terms
in
total,
whether
consecutive
or
not,
and
then
san
mateo
county,
the
board
of
supervisors
has
a
term
limit
for
three
consecutive
four-year
terms.
The
remaining
cities
in
san
mateo
county
do
not
have
term
limits,
so
here's
a
timeline
on
your
activities
to
date.
On
this
matter.
E
In
march
of
this
year,
the
city,
the
city
staff,
presented
options
for
direction
on
what
the
term,
what
whether
our
term
limit
measure
should
be
included,
and
then,
in
june
the
city
council
received
the
results
of
the
po
poll
that
was
authorized
in
march
and
then
provided
staff
direction
to
prepare
a
measure
to
submit
to
the
voters
and
what
that
measure
should
say
and
then
again.
On
july
26th,
the
city
council
held
a
study
session
to
discuss
the
potential
term
limit
balancer.
E
So
here's
a
background
about
the
current
elected
terms.
As
you
know,
city
of
san
bruno
has
a
five-person
body,
one
elected
mayor
and
four
elected
council
members,
and
in
november
of
this
year
the
city
council
will
have
its
first
by
district
11,
where
two
of
the
districts
will
hold
an
election.
They
are
districts,
one
and
four
and
mayor
will
continue
to
be
elected
at
large
every
two
years
and
at
large
means
on
a
c-wide
basis,
not
by
district.
E
E
That's
what
there
would
be
a
ballot
question
and
part
of
the
ballot
materials
would
be
the
actual
ordinance
that
provides
that
amendment.
What
that
ordinance
says
is
effectively
that
a
council
member
is
elected
to
serve
12
consecutive
years.
E
A
mayor
may
not
serve
more
than
six
consecutive
terms
and
a
city
council
member
may
not
serve
more
than
three
consecutive
four-year
terms,
and
this
computation
of
when
the
terms
are
limited,
begins
with
elections
and
terms.
That
begin
after
december,
1
2022.
E
In
order
to
put
that
measure
on
the
ballot,
you
would
have
to
adopt
a
resolution
that
specifies
that
that
ballot
question
should
be
placed
on
the
november
8th,
2022
general
municipal
election
ballot,
and
that
would
be
consolidated
with
the
state
gen
statewide
general
election.
It
takes
certain
other
certain
other
actions.
A
If
we
could
stop
sharing
the
screen,
please
I'm
not
seeing
any
at
this
time.
So
let's
move
to
the
public
and
if
there's
any
members
of
the
public
that
would
like
to
speak.
If
you
could,
please
raise
your
hand
and
then
I
would
ask
peter
if
you
could
assist.
E
Why
I
mean
in
no
depth
did
he
say
why
he
was
against
it
and
he
never
answered
if
he
took
sam
carr
money
and
neither
did
michael
the
other
three
did.
I
think
it's
very
important
that
we
have
complete
clarity
and
another
reason
I
have
term
limits
is
for
fresh
ideas.
I
mean
if
we
have
the
same
people
in
office,
we
see
what
happens.
We
have
a
town
that
continues
on
the
same
path,
the
streets
falling
apart
and
without
someone
in
the
lead,
saying
hey.
E
You
know
I
traveled
here
or
I
studied
that
I
have
an
id.
This
worked
somewhere
else,
let's
bring
it
here.
I
don't
see
that
coming
from
people
who
stay
on
council,
former
councils
were
like
that,
the
same
people
24
years,
some
of
them
not
bringing
anything
fresh
or
new
or
energetic,
or
maybe
just
waiting
to
the
last
minute.
During
voting
to
wait
out
what
everybody
else
is
going
to
say
and
run
to
a
safe
zone,
I
think
we
need
people
who
are
new,
who
are
not
beholden
to
any
of
our
old
interests.
E
Former
mayors,
the
big
money
realtors
and
what
it
just
something
really
is
is
not
right
when
the
mayor
isn't
articulating
what
he
stands
for
and
doesn't
believe,
possibly
in
true
democracy.
For
my
hurt
from
what
I
heard
tonight
and
a
mayor,
I
think
I'll
leave
at
that.
We
believe
in
democracy
and
that's
not
what
we're
seeing
so.
E
C
Thank
you
again.
Yes,
I
agree
with
sandra
perez
vargas
what
she
said.
Yes,
we
need.
We
need
term
limits.
We
need
fresh
new
ideas.
We
need
strong,
very
strong
leadership
and
to
guide
us
to
lead
us
to
improve
san
bruno.
C
We're
we're
like
in
stag
we're
stagnant,
we're
progressing,
very
slow
at
a
slow
pace,
and
we
need
to
get
there
now
or
or
more
like
yesterday,
because
things
are
you
know
with
our
revenue
streaming.
Is
you
know
this
ridiculous?
C
E
Yeah
good
evening,
I'm
very
disappointed,
I'm
very
sad.
He
seemed
like
a
democracy
locally
is
so
so
deep
I
mean
going
down.
I
feel
so
so
sad
to
live
in
san
bernardino,
because,
basically
you
listen
to
people
who
have
money.
Another
people
they're
actually
residents
of
san
bruno-
and
this
is
basically
not
even
I'm,
not
even
angry
but
sad,
sad.
They.
Basically
the
old
guard
is
still
controlled
city
council.
How
can
that
be
okay,
so
you
need
to
put
turn
limits.
E
E
Hi,
I
just
had
to
say
something
because
it
certainly
feels
like
some
of
the
residents
have
taken
some
information
and
twisted
it
up
into
some
sort
of
monster
of
of
big
wealthy
people.
E
E
Know
I
want
to,
I
would
like
to
make
it
perfectly
clear:
I
apologize
for
making
it
emotional,
but
some
of
my
peers,
people
and
friends,
I've
known
for
many
many
years,
25
years
or
more.
I
was
ashamed
at
the
behavior
I
heard,
and
I
want
to
say
that
I
think
the
vote
went
the
way
it
should.
I
don't
believe
that
it
is
structured.
The
way
we
need
to,
and
I
apologize
term
limits.
I
agree
with
thank
you
for
your
listening.
E
Next
speaker
is
virginia
yankee
virginia
whenever
you're
ready
you
may
begin.
Can
you
hear
me?
Yes,
we
can
hear
you.
I
just
my
opinion
is
yes
term
limits
might
might
work.
However,
I
don't
think
it
does
anyone
any
good
to
put
down
the
mayor.
The
mayor
has
done
an
exemplary
job.
He
knows
sam
bruno
better
than
anybody
on
that
council
he's
been
here
longer
than
any
one
of
you
and
I
don't
think
it's
very
kind
of
callers
in
to
beat
him
up
he's
been
a
great
mayor
and
he
has
my
vote.
Thank
you.
A
Thank
you
if
we
could
bring
it
back
to
council.
Thank
you.
Thank
again.
Everybody
who's
stayed
through
meeting
and
offered
their
comments.
I
see
a
hand
went
up,
so
this
will
be
the
last
opportunity
for
the
public
if
you
do
wish
to
speak.
This
is
your
last
opportunity.
Please
raise
your
hand
and
then
you'll
be
brought
in.
We
have
our
final
speaker.
Please.
A
Yes,
thank
you
very
much.
I
appreciate
for
the
opportunity
to
speak
again
thank
you
for
being
medina
for
doing
such
a
wonderful
job
and
every
consulma
whether
they
fall
yes
or
no
tonight
they've
done
a
great
job
term
limit
is
always
needed,
but
at
the
same
time
it
really
takes
time
for
one
term
of
councilman
to
work
on
a
project
or
even
to
like
to
add
on
the
plan
for
the
next
four
or
five
years.
A
So
the
term
limit
it
should
not
be
a
year
and
should
not
be
two
or
three
or
even
four.
I
mean
even
for
the
president
in
the
united
states,
like
four
years
when
it
turns
over.
You
know,
and
it's
still
another
four
years
now.
It
really
takes
that
long
to
try
to
help
out
the
city
or
county
or
even
us,
so,
but
it's
just
not
too
too
way
too
long
and
on
on
the
seat
of
course,
but
it
does
really
take
some
time
to
to
address
issues
and
also
carry
on
tasks.
A
A
Thank
you
for
your
comments,
any
other
speakers
there.
I
know
their
hands
embraced.
Thank
you
very
much,
we'll
bring
it
back
to
council
and
I'll
go
ahead
and
start
for
for
this.
A
One
of
the
things
is
in
1977,
as
was
reported
it.
It
was
brought
to
the
vote
of
the
folks
or
was
sufficient
and
it
was
approved,
and
then
it
was
by
a
court.
It
was
rescinded
and
I
remember
the
story
was
there
were
two
council
members
that
were
in
office
at
the
time
and
one
and
one
said
you
know
what
I'm
gonna
honor
the
the
eight
years
and
I'm
done
and
another
one
said:
no,
I'm
gonna
continue
and
can
and
and
ran
for
24.
A
It
was
on
the
council
for
24
years
so
and
he
made
that
choice.
So
it
was
very
interesting
how
that
changed.
The
the
thing
is
too
just
to
be
clear.
If
you
have
a
council
member
three
four
year
terms
that
you
can
be
mayor,
so
in
essence
it
gives
someone
technically
24
years
technically
if
or
they
take
a
break
and
come
back.
So
you
know
in
in
my
mind
and
again
this
goes
forward.
It
doesn't
count
years
past.
A
Is
that
because
the
the
people
did
vote
in
1977
and
they
did
ask
for
that
to
happen
and
it
and
a
judge
or
court
threw
it
out.
I
think
this
is
something
that
I
will
support
to
put
on
the
ballot
to.
Let
the
folks
have
that
opportunity
to
address
that
that
was
kind
of
taken
away
from
them
in
1978.
D
Yeah,
I
just
appreciate
the
comment
tonight
and
I
just
wanted
to
ask
staff
if
they
could
clarify
the
issue
that
one
of
the
commenters
brought
up
around
the
term
limits
just
so
that
it's
coming
directly
from
staff.
What
is
it
exactly
that
is
being
proposed
as
far
as
how
many
years
within
a
term
and
then
how
many
terms
one
can
have,
and
then
I
have
one
one
more.
A
E
I'm
mayor
medina
and
a
city
council
member
may
send
so.
The
term
limit
measure
would
limit
the
terms
of
office
to
12
years,
and
that
would
be
six
terms
of
two
years
for
the
mayor
for
office
of
mayor
and
three
terms
of
four
years
for
city
council
members,
and
it
would
be
prospect
only.
D
Thank
you
for
that
clarification,
and
then
I
did
just
want
to
say
that
we've
talked
about
this
as
well
for
months
and
there
you
know,
there's
been
comments.
I
think,
from
both
sides
of
this
council
around
what
you
know.
What
does
it
mean?
Does
it
bring
up
opportunities-
and
I
think
a
great
example
is
the
district,
our
new
district,
around
rolling
wood
that
you
know
doesn't
have
anybody
running
right
now
and
within.
D
I
want
to
say
two
days:
had
three
candidates
running
excited
to
run
for
that
location,
so
I
think
the
ability
to
run
is
you
know
very,
very,
very
important.
It's
an
incredible
responsibility
and
I
think
oftentimes
based
on
statistics.
People
don't
run
because
they're
intimidated
or
they
don't
want
to
run
against
incumbents.
D
Now
that
we're
districted
likely
don't
want
to
run
against
neighbors
or
friends,
and
so
I
think
the
importance
of
term
limits
are
very
high
up
there
to
encourage
new
ideas,
new
thoughts,
but
also
to
really
just
give
other
people
a
chance
to
represent
the
community
that
they
live
so
I'll
obviously
be
supporting
this.
I've
been
supportive
since
I
initiated
and
just
wanted
to
comment
on
that
and
on
the
current
status
of
our
elections
in
that
district.
Thank
you.
C
I'm
also
supportive
of
this.
I
think
that
the
what
we
settle
on
regarding
the
the
12
years,
the
three
terms
for
council
six
terms
for
mayor,
strikes
a
good
balance
between
the
concerns
of
folks
that
candidates
wouldn't
have
enough
time
to
get
there
to
get
their
their
initiatives
through
and
get
the
work
done
that
they
that
they
that
they
really
are
passionate
about
and
want
and
want
the
the
change
to
make
the
change
that
they
want
to
see
in
the
city.
C
I
think
12
years
is
enough
time
to
do
that,
and-
and
you
know,
and
and
anyone
who
would
get
to
get
to
that
point-
would
be
able
to
run
for
the
other
one
of
the
other
positions
that
they
wanted
to,
or
take
a
break
and
come
back
and
start
the
clock
all
over
again
and
do
12
more
years.
So
I
think
this
is
a
good
balance
between
those
two
opposing
sides.
I
do.
C
C
Pryor
didn't
get
the
support,
but
it
it
is
something
that
it's
about
the
I
think
I
it's
not
too
short,
not
too
long
kind
of,
like
the
glory
stops
just
right.
You
know
12
years,
is
it's
a
good
amount
of
time
and
you
can
take
a
break
and
and
come
back
and
run
for
mayor
or
you
know,
give
somebody
else
an
opportunity.
I
I
think
I
think
it's
a
good
idea
if
hold
well,
and
I
will
be
spinning.
C
Just
you
know,
I
was
really
on
the
fence
on
this
one
because,
as
the
vice
mayor
said
earlier,
what
are
we
trying
to
fix?
And
you
know
I
heard
some
people
comment
that
you
know
we
need
new
ideas
and
yeah
different
opinions
are
definitely.
You
know
it's
important
to
to
look
at
things
from
different
perspectives,
but
you
know
I
also
see
this
as
sort
of
a
volunteer
position.
None
of
us
are
career
politicians.
C
None
of
us
are
making
enough
money
to
live
off
this,
so
we
do
it
because
we
care
about
our
city,
and
you
know
I.
I
certainly
don't
want
to
send
people
the
wrong
message
when
they,
when
they
agree
to
volunteer
that
you
know
their
service
is
valuable,
but
only
to
a
point,
and
then
you
know
we'll
put
them
out
to
pasture.
You
know
you
got
to
go
away
for
a
while
and
give
somebody
else
a
chance.
We
don't
do
that
with
our
committees
or
commissions.
C
We
certainly
don't
do
it
with
any
of
our
other
volunteer
opportunities
that
have
across
the
city
and
and
we're
fortunate
in
that
in
san
bruno.
We
have
people
that
dedicate
decades
of
their
lives
to
things
that
they're
passionate
about
in
the
community
and
to
some
people
in
the
past.
C
That's
been
city
council
and
you
know
I
would
really
hate
to
send
a
message
that
you
know
that,
just
because
you've
been
on
too
long,
you're
no
longer
valuable,
you're,
no
longer
providing
value,
but
it
does
seem
like
this
passed
before
and
there's
probably
interest
in
doing
it.
Sadly,
it'll
prob
probably
be
a
good
amount
of
voter
backlash
over
things
that
are
not
even
in
the
city
of
san
bruno
and
people
will
say.
C
Yes,
we
need
to
limit
it,
get
rid
of
the
you
know
drain
the
swamp,
and
you
know
we
need
different
people,
and
so,
but
you
know
that'll
be
that.
I
think
that
is
something
that
the
people
should
have
an
opportunity
to
vote
on
and
if
that's,
what
they
choose
to
do
then
so
be
it.
I
think
I
do
agree
that
12
years
is
a
generous
term.
C
I
think
non-consecutively
at
the
end
of
my
term,
I
would
have
been
13
years
and
I
gotta
say
it
flew
by
and
I
like
to
think
I
still
add
some
value,
but
maybe
after
the
last
vote,
other
people
are
thinking
that
it's
time
for
me
to
go
so
we'll
we'll
see.
But
I
I
think
I
will
also
support
this
one,
not
because
I
think
it's
necessary,
but
because
I
think
that
there
is
interest-
and
I
I
do
want
to
give
the
people
an
opportunity
to
state
how
they
feel
about.
A
D
Nice
mayor,
thank
you
I
just
want
to
just
for
the
purpose
of
the
public.
D
I
just
want
to
make
sure
that
everybody's
clear
that
we
are
not
voting
on
the
term
limits
we're
voting
to
place
the
item
on
the
ballot,
so
in
case
anybody's
watching
so
it
just
motion
to
under
the
conduct
of
business,
to
move
item
5c
onto
the
ballot
consideration
of
resolution
of
the
city
council
of
the
city
of
san
bruno,
submitting
to
the
voters
at
the
november
8
2022
general
municipal
election,
a
measure
that
proposes
adoption
of
an
ordinance
to
establish
term
limits,
requesting
that
such
election
be
consolidated
with
the
statewide
general
election
held
on
that
date
and
taking
certain
other
actions.
E
E
We'll
start
with
the
background.
Oh
yeah,
the
overview
here,
we'll
start
with
the
background.
There
will
be
only
one
resolution
since
you've
only
voted
to
put
my
measure
on
the
ballot
and
then
they'll
be
consideration
of
that
resolution.
I'll
first
describe
the
resolution
and
then
you
will
consider
the
resolution.
E
As
you
know,
tonight
you've
been
discussing
two
potential
ballot
measures,
the
term
limit
measure
and
the
charter
tax
measure
by
the
past.
The
previous
two
votes.
You
authorize
only
the
term
limit
measure
to
move
forward.
E
And
for
a
measure
that
is
going
to
be
placed
on
the
ballot,
it's
the
city
council
needs
to
determine
whether
it
wants
to
arc
to
authorize
arguments
in
favor
or
against
the
measure
and
whether
it
wants
to
authorize
rebuttal
arguments
so
who
can
submit
an
argument,
city,
council
members
registered
voters
or
votified
associations
of
citizens
and
who
can
submit
a
rebuttal
if
there
is
an
argument
in
favor
of
a
measure
and
an
argument
against
the
measure.
E
E
E
E
So
what
happens?
If
multiple
arguments
are
submitted?
I
noted
who
are
who
is
authorized
to
submit
measures
only
one
argument
in
favor,
and
only
one
argument
against
a
measure
may
be
included
in
the
ballot
in
the
voter
information
guide.
So
if
more
than
one
argument
is
submitted,
the
elections
code
provides
a
priority
for
which
our
argument
is
selected.
E
The
first
priority
goes
to
the
city
council.
If
the
city
is
off
to
any
member
of
the
city
council
or
the
city
council
as
a
whole,
provided
that
that
argument
is
authorized
by
the
city
council
and
then
next,
our
bonafide,
sponsor
or
proponent
of
the
measure,
a
bona
fide
association
of
association
of
citizens
and
individual
voters
who
are
eligible
to
vote
on
the
measure.
E
E
So
the
resolution
here
is
authorizes
city
councils
to
city
council
members
to
offer
arguments
in
favor
of
the
ballot
measure
or
against
the
ballot
measure.
E
It
also
provides
that
if
three
or
more
council
members
volunteer
to
author
an
argument
that
the
that
the
the
argument
must
be
approved
at
a
public
city
council
member,
a
city
council
meeting-
if
if
there
are
no
volunteers
among
the
city
council,
members
to
author
an
argument
than
to
sit-
and
you
don't
fill
in
the
blanks
of
the
proposed
resolution,
then
the
city
council
will
not
have
authorized
an
author.
E
And
then
you
follow
the.
And
if
other
arguments
are
submitted
in
favor
or
against
the
ballot
measure,
you
would
follow
the
priority
of
the
elections
code,
which
means
the
next
in
line,
would
be
if
there
is
a
bona
fide
sponsor
or
proponent.
If
there
was
a
bona
fide
association
of
citizens
and
then
finally
individual
voters.
E
One
thing
note
is
that
the
city
council
members
again
don't
vote
to
authorize
any
city
council
members
to
author,
an
argument
that
doesn't
prevent
a
city
council
member
from
later
deciding
to
author,
an
argument
in
capacity
as
an
individual
voter
and
also
showing
that
they
are
a
city
council
member.
It's
just
that
that
argument
has
not
been
authorized
by
the
council
and
therefore
doesn't
get
the
priority
as
if
the
city
council
had
authorized
the
argument,
then
next
a
rebuttal
argument
may
only
rebuttal
arguments
are
only
permitted.
E
If
the
city
council
adopts
a
resolution
to
authorize
rebuttals
and
what
the
election
code
says
is.
The
city
council
must
adopt
election
code,
section
9285a
and
if
so,
the
the
proposed
resolution
takes
the
provisions
from
section
92
85a
to
allow
for
rebuttal
arguments.
E
If
the
city
council
does
not
want
to
permit
rebuttal
arguments,
it
would
and
does
want
to
author
authorize
authors
a
vote
to
strike
our
section
two
of
the
resolution
or
if
they
don't
want
to
authorize
arguments,
and
it
doesn't
want
to
authorize
rebuttal
arguments,
it's
the
city
council
simply
would
not
adopt
the
resolution.
E
So
the
resolution
there's
a
revolution,
as
I
mentioned,
for
term
limits
and
a
resolution
for
taxes.
The
tax
measure,
since
the
tax
measure
is
not
going
forward,
I'll
only
address
the
term.
The
resolution
for
term
limits.
E
The
way
the
resolution
is
set
up
is
there
are
blanks
where
it
allows
city
council
members
to
volunteer
to
author
an
argument
favor
or
against.
If
there's
no
volunteers,
you
leave
it
blank
and
there's
no
authorized
city.
Council,
authors
and
the
order
of
priority
follows
the
election
code
and
again,
if
you
don't
want
any
rebuttal,
arguments
simply
propose
to
strike
section
2
of
the
resolution.
A
Thank
you
and
don't
leave
the
podium.
I
think
there
might
be
a
couple
and
and
for
myself
personally
that
was
you
know
we
kept
talking
on
the
be
as
far
as
offer
rebuttal.
A
The
first
would
have
to
be
approved
by
the
council
that
prefer
rebuttals,
as
was
stated
under
92
85a,
but
at
the
same
time
too,
what
it
also
does,
if
you
want
to
do
an
argument
and
you're
on
the
council,
you
become
up,
you
become
prioritized,
you
go
to
the
front
of
the
line,
so
I
personally
will
not
be
volunteering
for
any
of
that
personally.
A
So
with
that,
I
think
the
questions
to
us
is
there's
that
kind
of
two
items:
the
authorization
if
we
wish
for
rebuttals,
but
also
if
there
are
volunteers
on
the
council
that
wish
to
write
the
arguments
and
questions
to
the
city
attorney.
Colleagues,.
C
Thank
you,
mr
mayor.
I
don't
have
any
questions
I
was
gonna
offer
to
to
write
in.
A
Favor,
if
you
were
taking
that
now
volunteers,
I
apologize
if
you're
not
and
and
and
just
it's
okay
and
and
please
understand
nobody
has
to
do
it-
it's
just
a
choice,
so
I
don't
want
people
to
feel
they
have
to
step
up
like
a
committee
or
something,
but
I
also
want
to
while
we're
here.
If
you
can
pause
and
let
me
go
to
the
public,
see
if
I'm
sorry,
no,
no!
No!
No!
No!
You
were
perfect.
That
was
perfect,
because
that's
what
I'm
asking
that
question.
A
If
there's
any
members
of
the
public
that
we
should
speak
on
this
item,
what
it
is
it
is
resolutions
for
assigning
the
prioritization
of
the
argument
before
the
term
limits
and
then
to
see
if
we
adopt
a
rebuttal
unauthorized.
So
any
members
of
the
public
wishes
speak
on
that.
If
you
could,
please
raise
your
hand
now.
A
Thank
you
very
much,
we'll
bring
it
back
to
the
council.
We
heard
from
councilmember
medina
that
he
wishes
to
be
an
authorized
argument
in
favor
like
I
said
that
right
any
other
questions
or
comments
from
colleagues,
council,
member
hamilton.
C
I
would
support
having
councilmember
getting
to
write
the
argument
in
favor
and
considering
that
all
five
of
us
were
in
favor
of
putting
on
the
ballot
I
think
there
might.
It
might
be
hard
press
to
find
one
of
us
to
volunteer
for
the
against.
So.
A
C
A
And
you
don't
have
to,
but
I
would
not
recommend
three,
but
you
could
do
three,
but
then
we're
gonna
because
of
the
brown
acts
it's
gonna
have
to
come
back
to
us
for
that
approval
to
obviously
stay
within
the
parameters
of
the
brown
act.
So
there's
council,
member
medina,
so
city
attorney
right
now.
A
We
have
a
reason
that
we
would
fill
in
the
blank
that
marty
medina
wishes
to
be
prioritized
and
be
on
for
the
argument
can
the
do
the
resolutions
have
to
be
taken
separately,
or
can
they
be
taken
in
in
one
action?
If
somebody
motions
to
also
authorize
the
rebuttals
if
they
choose.
E
Mayor
medina,
the
resolution
set
up
that
you
would
just
approve
the
one
resolution.
You'd
write
a
council
member
medina's
name
in
the
blank,
and
it
also
provides
for
ballot
argument
rebuttals.
E
C
Before
we
go
to
a
resolution,
I
completely
agree
that
having
three
of
us
write,
one
is
a
terrible
idea,
but
I
want
to
ask
councilmember
medina:
would
you
prefer
to
have
help
or
were
you
were
you
fishing
for
fishing
for
a
second?
C
It's
always
good
to
have
a
second
set
of
eyes
right.
Just
like
my
point
of
view.
So
if
if
anyone
was
willing
to
join
me,
I'd
be
happy
to
to
welcome
you
anyone.
So
the
mayor
said
he's
he's
out
I'll
offer
to
to
to
michael
and
linda
first
either
of
you
interested.
If,
if
not
I'll,
do
it.
A
And
it's
not
out
because
it's,
mr
medina,
it
is
out
just
because
it
prioritizes
me
and
I
just
feel
that
you
you
made
your
you
made
sure
you're
clear
so
vice
mayor
mason,
oh
your
hand
came
in
what.
D
No,
no,
I
was
just
gonna
say
I
would
but
I
think,
given
the
the
additional
responsibility
we
took
on
recently.
I
think
it's
too
much,
but
I
I
would
ask
the
city
attorney
if
there's
anything
wrong
with
reviewing
like
once
it's
done.
Is
that
something
that
can
go
to
the
council?
It
really
does
have
to
be
limited
to
those
who
volunteer
tonight.
E
City
attorney,
so
I
think
mayor
medina
mason,
I
think
there's
nothing
wrong
with
you
know,
bringing
the
argument
back.
I
think
you
probably
have
timing
constraints
because
of
the
deadlines
and
the
meetings
between
now
and
the
deadline.
So
if
you
know
you,
you
may
not
want
to
do
that,
you
may
not
want
to
have
that
be
a
condition
of
submitting
the
argument
because
it
may
be
an
obstacle
to
getting
it
filed.
A
Okay,
see
no
other
hands
up
and
there
this
is
an
action
item.
So
if
anybody
wants
to
introduce
resolution.
C
C
A
Motion
hamilton,
marty,
medina
and
city
attorney-
if
that
means
okay
with
everything,
then
we'll
go
ahead
and
get
a
roll
call.
Please.
D
A
Aye
resolution
passes
5-0
that
will
conclude
the
agenda.
I
do
want
to
thank
the
public
that
offered
their
comments
and
again
always
I
appreciate
everybody
trying
to
be
respectful
and
mindful
of
our
comments,
and
sometimes
I
know
it
gets
passionate
but
again
we're
all
here
for
the
community.
A
I
appreciate
my
colleagues
for
their
time
and
their
comments
and
staff
as
well,
but
what
I
want
to
do,
maybe
not
normal
in
the
special
meeting,
but
I
do
want
to
adjourn
in
a
moment
of
silence
and
in
remembrance
of
retired
vice
mayor
gonzalez
of
the
town
of
coma
who
passed
away
yesterday,
and
so
he
will
absolutely
who
very
much
felt
she's
made
a
difference
and
gave
to
her
community
this
employee
as
a
resident
and
as
an
elected.
A
A
Thank
you,
colleagues,
and
for
everybody's
information.
I've
already
reached
out
to
the
mayor
of
coma
to
offer
our
city's
condolences
to
their
colleagues,
our
colleagues
and
then
to
the
community
with
that.
We
will
go
ahead
and
adjourn
this
meeting
to
the
next
regular
city
council
meeting,
which
will
be
held
on
august
23rd
2022
at
7
pm.
Thank
you,
everybody
and
please
be
safe
and
enjoy
the
rest
of
your
evening.