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From YouTube: Governing Body 8/31/22
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B
C
Good
evening,
everybody
I
want
to
speak
personally
tonight,
take
some
time
to
acknowledge
some
challenges.
I
have
faced
over
the
past
few
months
and
just
the
impact
that
they've
had
on
me
how
vulnerable
overwhelmed
and
exhausted
I
have
felt
because
of
them.
But
then
I
wanted
to
share
how
I've
connected
with
individuals
around
me.
Acquaintances,
colleagues,
friends,
family
and
their
experiencing
similar
feelings.
C
I
came
to
the
conclusion
that
this
world
is
difficult
right
now
the
world
we
are
living
in
is
very
difficult.
As
an
elementary
school
principal
I
relied
heavily
on
a
book
that
I
kept
on
my
nightstand,
it's
titled
grit,
the
power
of
passion
and
perseverance
by
Angela.
Duckworth
I
picked
it
up
again
last
week
because
I
needed
inspiration,
as
we
often
all
do
and
found
a
quote
that
I
loved
it
reminded
me
that
hardships
are
part
of
life
and
over
the
last
few
years
we
all
have
felt
those
hardships.
C
Our
community
has
been
so
strained
and
it's
important.
We
acknowledge
that
I
know
that
we
are
all
still
feeling
those
pressures
and
have
those
hurdles
to
overcome,
as
we
continue
to
navigate
life
and
all
it
throws
at
us
every
single
day.
I
wanted
to
take
time
tonight
to
remind
myself
to
remind
my
colleagues
and
to
remind
our
community
members
here
today
and
watching
and
I,
encourage
you
to
remind
community
members
that
aren't
with
us
this
evening
of
the
power
of
grits.
C
It's
a
word.
We
often
don't
hear
enough.
We
often
need
reminding
that
it
exists
within
all
of
us.
We
have
it
and
we
have
it
more.
So
when
we
stand
United
as
a
community
taking
one
step
after
another
toward
a
common
goal
toward
a
common
passion,
the
quote
reads:
we
all
face
limits,
not
just
in
talent
but
in
opportunity,
but
more
often
than
we
think
our
limits
are
self-imposed.
We
try
fail
and
conclude.
We
bump
our
heads
against
the
filling
of
possibility,
or
maybe
after
taking
just
a
few
steps,
we
change
direction
in
either
case.
C
To
be
gritty
is
to
invest
day
after
week
after
year,
in
challenging
practice
to
be
gritty
is
to
fall
down
seven
times
and
Rise.
Eight
I
look
forward
to
venturing
as
far
as
we
can
Santa
Fe
and
the
challenging
practice
of
keeping
our
city
healthy,
beautiful
and
thriving
and
I
encourage
us
to
do
it
together,
as
that
is
when
we
will
reach
beyond
the
limits
we
have
unconsciously
and
unintentionally,
set
for
ourselves.
A
D
Why
didn't
anybody
tell
me
not
to
wear
mascara,
it
would
have
been
nice.
I
would
like
to
remember
the
life
of
my
grandmother
passed
on
Sunday.
My
grandmother
was
a
very.
She
was
a
complex
woman.
D
D
D
Years
and
then
eventually,
School
served
on
the
school
board,
and
this
was
a
really
important
tenant
within
my
family
that
that
dedication
to
public
service
that
dedication
to
community
that
dedication
to
doing
the
hard
things
they
were
both
World
Travelers
and
my
grandmother.
Even
after
my
grandfather,
passed,
continue
to
travel,
I,
remember
having
a
conversation
with
her
about
all
the
places
she's
been
and
will
she
ever
go
back?
D
I
would
love
to
go
back,
but
there
are
too
many
new
places
to
see
and
that
incredible
sense
of
adventure
of
wanting
to
see
what
else
is
out
there
of
it's
so
easy
to
sit
in
the
familiar
but
to
really
move
forward
and
to
look
for
something
new
and
for
new
experiences
and
new
insights.
And
how
does
this
change
your
view
of
the
world
and
she
did
that
beautifully
from
my
grandmother.
I
also
learned
that
it
is
hard
and
we
should
continually
seek
to
see
the
best
in
what
others
are
doing,
that.
D
So
I
will
be
thinking
about
her
tonight,
we'll
be
flying
out
to
join
my
family
tomorrow
to
honor
her
life
and.
A
G
Yeah
thanks
Mr.
A
G
Know
the
paper
did
a
good
job
of
talking
about
Steve
radius
and
his
political
career.
I
just
wanted
to
mention
him
in
a
in
a
different
way.
I
went
to
school
with
his
kids,
Steve
and
Kim
Arias,
and
his.
G
G
I
golfing
alone,
and
he
talked
about
his
family,
his
love
for
his
son
Steve
who's,
a
very
successful
baseball
coach
in
Texas,
his
daughter
came,
we
retired
from
the
state
his
son,
his
son-in-law
and
daughter-in-laws
grandkids
just
talked
about
them
all.
The
time
he's
a
great
family
man
talked
about
his
sisters,
growing
up
in
Santa
Fe
shared
with
me
that
they
used
to
own
the
El
Nido
restaurant
talked
about
his
many
political
Adventures,
I
would
say
in
Santa,
Fe
Pride
talked
to.
G
Lot
of
things
that
maybe
a
lot
of
people
didn't
know
about
I've
been
joked
with
him
that
he
should
write
a
book,
and
he
said
it
would
be
way
too
too
long
too.
Big
to
write
today
would
have
been
one
of
our
golf
days,
and
you
know
it's
probably
30
days
ago
that
we
golfed
with
him
last
and
he's
going
to
be
really
missed
and
I'm
proud
to
call
my
friend
thank
you.
Man.
A
G
G
A
A
A
Their
second
second,
okay,
let's
see
Madam
clerk
for
the
agenda.
E
A
Voice
vote,
all
of
all
in
favor,
say
aye
aye
opposed.
The
motion
carries
the
consent
agenda.
Madam
clerk
there's
some
things
that
have
been
taken
off.
Can
you
give
all
of
us
the
the
items
taken
off
of
consent?
Please.
K
K
I'm
sorry
counselor
item
K,
which
is
our
new
procedural
rules
that
was
removed
by
councilwoman,
Via,
Real
and
then
item
L.
Our
street
resolution
was
removed
by
councilor
Lindell
and
then
our
item
M,
the
resolution
supporting
legislation
for
abortion
was
removed
by
Council
Rivera
in
councilor
Lee
Garcia.
K
A
A
Thank
you
and
now
Madam
clerk.
If
you
could
bring
item
8A
forward
for
us,
please.
K
L
A
M
Thank
you,
Mr,
Mayor
and
I
believe
this
question
is
not
for
Mr
bejarano,
as
I've
been
told
to
defer
to
the
deputy
city
manager
or
the
acting
Finance
director,
and
this
is
in
reference
to
a
question
surrounding
the
contract
for
opinion
Ventures
that
have
consistently
asked
for
updates
on.
M
So
with
that
being
said,
we're
we've
been
two
months
since
this
contract
has
ended.
There
was
stipulations
outlined
in
the
contract
regarding
actions
to
be
taken
and
I
just
would
like
to
get
an
update
on
where
we
stand
with
that.
What
what
actions
have
been
done?
Has
this
contract
been
paid
out
in
full
because
I
mean
ultimately,
if
it's
been
paid
out
in
full
and
we
still
don't
have
the
deliverable
raises
some
concerns
for
me.
E
Believe
we
have
a
I
believe
we
have
finished
out
the
contract.
We
are
still
we've
received
a
draft
of
the
report.
We've
gone
through
it
with
the
Departments
to
get
answers
because
we
feel
as
though
there's
some
of
the
issues
have
been
addressed.
E
M
E
Yes,
I
would
say:
I
would
like
to
have
it
within
the
next
couple
weeks.
I
did
meet
with
some
of
the
Departments
to
just
go
over
some
of
the
questions
that
we
had
that
were
brought
up
from
the
report,
because
we
do
feel
as
a
lot
of
the
issues
have
been
addressed,
and
so
we
will.
Those
are
what.
E
E
M
And
I
I,
just
don't
want
us
to
be
in
a
position
where
it's
unusable
information
where
I
know.
We
now
have
a
new
Finance
director
on
board
that
can
change
the
whole
process
and
and
so
many
senses,
and
does
that
make
the
information
in
this
report
irrelevant
then,
and
and
that's
why
I
keep
pressuring
or
is
the
report
I
want
to
see
it?
That
way
we
can
see?
Did
we
get
what
we
asked
for
what
we
contracted
for?
E
Definitely
and
counselor
I'll,
let
you
know
that
a
lot
of
it
will
be
addressed
with
our
upgrade
for
the
munis,
and
that
was
a
lot
of
what
we
looked
at
when
we
were
looking
at
it.
We
were
I
met
with
our
I.T
director,
specifically
because
we
did
feel
as
though
the
munis
upgrade
would
address
a.
E
M
E
E
Would
be
a
sufficient
amount
of
time?
I
it's
hard,
I
I
do
think
so
we
do
have
to
our
next
steps
are
taking
the
feedback
that
we've
gotten
from
our
department
and
reaching
out
to
the
to
the
contractor,
and
so
I
think
that
that's
the
point
that
we're
at
right
now:
okay,.
E
M
H
M
I
think
I've
heard
in
the
past
we're
looking
at
maybe
submitting
them
both
in
December.
Is
that
still
the
current
timeline.
M
Thank
you,
Mr.
No
other
questions,
Mr
Murphy.
A
Thank
you,
counselor
councilor,
mayor
worth.
B
Thank
you,
mayor
I
just
wanted
to
be
clear
about
the
role
of
Clifton
Larson
Allen.
They
are
helping
us
internally.
Do
the
audit
prep
work,
and
can
you
just
confirm
that
I
think
it's
been
a
little
bit
confusing
because
they
were
our
auditor
they're?
Not
our
auditor
now
they're
coming
back
to
help.
Do
the
prep
the
inside
work
for
a
new
auditor.
L
Mayor
Weber
members
of
the
council,
that's
correct,
I!
Don't
know
that
I
could
add
a
lot
to
that
other
than
that
in
talking
to
the
evaluation
committee.
One
of
the
advantages
of
having
them
is
because
they
had
done
the
20
audit
and
they
could
pick
up
with
the
material
weaknesses
and
all
the
other
issues
that
the
FY
28
audit
had.
B
And
we
are
going
to
be
bringing
on
very
soon
bringing
on
to
get
started,
the
actual
auditor
for
the
work-
and
we
have
been
given
permission
to
pursue
both
FY
21
and
FY
22
together
and
as
councilor
Garcia
just
spoke
about.
L
Mayor
Weber,
members
of
the
council,
that's
correct.
The
company
is
car.
M
L
And
Ingram
referred
to
as
CRI
they've
been
approved
by
the
state
auditor.
We
also
received
permission
to
do
the
both
audits,
essentially
simultaneously,
so
that
the
audits
get
out
as
quickly
as
humanly
possible.
They
are
scheduled
to
start
October
3rd.
If
the
of
course
subject
to
the
approval
of
this
Council
this
evening,
it's
one
of
the
items
up
for
approval,
great.
B
And
I
I
just
wanted
to
walk
us
all
through
that,
and
it
has
been
a
little
bit
complicated
and
I
think
it's
important
that
people
understand
who's,
doing
what
and
and
when
we're
bringing
on
the
actual
auditor
and
who
that
auditor
is.
As
you
point
out,
we
have
that
contract
in
front
of
us
tonight
so
again
just
want
to
make
sure
the
public
understands
the
different
roles
where
we
are
in
the
process
and
how
we're
moving
forward.
So
thank
you
for
confirming
and
providing
that
information.
Thank.
L
You
Mr
mayor
council
members
I,
do
want
to
point
out
that
it's
actually
two
contracts
at
Oak
tonight,
one
for
the
fiscal
year,
21
audit
and
the
other
for
the
fiscal
year
22
audit
and
we
receive
special
permission
from
the
office
of
the
student
auditor,
which
is
up
quite
a
bit
in
allowing
us
to
move
as
quickly
as
possible.
At
this
point,
yeah.
B
K
That
is
correct.
The
item
8B
is
culture,
history,
art,
reconciliation
and
Truth.
Chart
final
quarterly
update,
as
required
by
resolution
2021-6
and
2021-56,
and
presentation
on
the
final
report.
Pauline
kamayama,
the
director
of
Santa
Fe
arts
and
culture
department
is
available
as
well
as
our
presenters
from
article
life.
E
Oh
thank
you
mayor,
Weber
counselors.
Thank
you
so
much
I'm
here
with
Artful
life
and
the
consultant
team
and
project
facilitators
who,
over
the
past
12
months,
have
led
Community
engagement
processes
consisting
of
art,
activations
listing
sessions,
dialogue,
culture,
history,
series
and
other
things
that
you'll
hear
about
tonight,
they're
here
to
present
their
final
quarterly
report,
which
will
cover
the
last
three
months
as
well
as
look
at
a
quick
overview
of
the
final
report
and
some
recommendations.
E
We
will
be
back
at
another
time
with
you
at
a
longer
session
with
Artful
life
and
to
answer
questions
for
that.
So
again,
this
will
be
a
presentation
only
and
with
this
I
want
to
thank
The
Artful
life
team
for
their
work
and
being
doing
their
best
to
reach
as
many
folks
to
get
input
across
the
broad
community
and
they're
here
to
present
their
final
report
and
introduce
their
team
so
I'll
hand
it
over
to
Denise.
N
F
N
Provided
us
with
lots
of
important
guidance,
my
name
is
Valerie
Martinez
and
I'm,
a
co-director
of
chart
I'm
here
with
my
other
co-director
Denise
Scarab
and
with
not
all
of
our
team,
but
the
members
of
our
team
that
could
be
present
tonight.
There
are
15
of
us
in
all
so
Alexis
Kaminski,
our
evaluator,
here's
Lee
Higgins,
our
administrative
coordinator,
Misha
mccayern,
facilitator,
Santiago,
Sanchez
de.
E
N
Facilitator
ER
non
Gomez,
Chavez,
Peter,
Nguyen
and
Kenny
Penn,
and
we
thank
them
in
the
report
and
we
thank
them
from
the
bottom
of
our
hearts,
as
well
as
the
other
team
members
who
have
worked
so
hard
over
the
last
12
months.
N
So
you're
familiar
with
this
pyramid,
which
we've
come
to
show
every
time
that
we
report
to
you,
and
so
we
are
at
the
top
of
the
pyramid.
We
had
a
final
event
on
July
17th
you'll
get
a
little
sense
of
that
when
we
play
a
short
video
in
a
bit
data
analysis,
Community,
Solutions
table
and
the
Drafting
and
the
writing,
and
the
revising,
and
mostly
revising
of
the
final
report.
N
N
Because
we
don't
ask
people
to
register,
but
as
far
as
we
can
tell
1
372
unique
participants
in
the
chart
project
we've
reached
out
and
that's
through
newsletters
emails,
e-blasts
37
199
times,
9911
engagements
are
repeat
engagements.
As
far
as
we
can
tell
people
who
have
attended
more
than
one
chart
event
or
activity.
N
We've
had
42
meetings
with
organizations
and
for
those
of
you
that
have
looked
at
the
report,
we
have
a
appendix
the
first
append
appendix
has
a
list
of
organizations
on
our
Outreach
list
and
we
were
able
to
meet
with
42
of
those
organizations
over
the
course
of
the
project.
We've
had
181
project
team
meetings,
sometimes
that's
the
full
project
team.
Sometimes
those
are
working
groups.
So,
for
example,
there
was
a
working
group
who
worked
with
Alexis
on
the
survey.
One
results
we
had
an
art
activation
working
group,
and
so
sometimes
we
were
working
in.
N
We
would
meet
with
our
high
school
interns
every
Wednesday
evening.
We
were
involved
with
Outreach
at
their
high
schools
and
otherwise,
and
we
loved
working
with
our
high
school
interns.
One
of
them
is
off
to
college.
Others
are
busy
with
their
high
school
activities,
but
I
think
those
were
some
of
the
most
fun
meetings
that
we
had
with
our
young
team
members.
N
So
these
are
the
activities
of
chart
and
I
won't
go
through
these.
They
are
in
the
report
and
you
can
see
them
up
on
the
screen
there
and
if
you
have
any
questions
about
those
we're
happy
to
take
them,
we
also
have
sections
in
the
report
that
talk
about
all
of
these
activities
so
you're
most
welcome
to
ask
us
anything
about
being.
P
Thank
you
so,
as
we
reported
in
the
past
on
some
of
the
activities,
this
is
our.
These
are
some
of
the
activities
in
the
fourth
quarter,
which
Valerie
mentioned.
Of
course,
we
were
very
focused
on
writing
the
report
and
kind
of
completing
a
lot
of
the
public
engagements.
We
did
complete
survey
number
two
during
that
period
and
we
both
collected
them
in
English
and
in
Spanish
at
the
Santa
Santa
Fe
Place
Mall.
We
attended
the
indigenous
waste
festival
and
Juneteenth
and
also
collected
surveys.
There
we
did.
P
We
did
do
two
art
activities,
one
at
Pete's,
Place
to
talk
to
our
homeless,
Santa
fans
and
also
our
family
day
on
July
17th.
Our
email
list
has
grown
we're
now
almost
600
people
we
send
out
regular,
sent
out
regular
newsletters,
eight
of
them
in
the
in
the
fourth
quarter,
letting
people
know
what's
going
on
and
we're
really
thankful.
For
Those
Who
provided
spaces
to
us
in
the
fourth
quarter.
For
for
doing
some
of
our
some
of
our
events
and
our
collection
of
surveys.
P
P
N
Began
its
work
by
asking
Santa
feings:
how
can
we
become
good
ancestors
to
our
children,
their
children
and
generations,
to
come
in
an
effort
to
keep
our
descendants
in
the
foremost
of
our
minds
as
we
try
to
build
a
better
future
for
the
City
and
County
of
Santa
Fe?
And
so
we
thought
it
fitting
that
our
final
public
event
would
celebrate.
Santa
fe's
families
on
July,
17
2022
chart
welcomed
children,
youth
adults
and
Elders
to
Via
Linda
park
for
free
food
and
drink
and
the
opportunity
to
relax
mingle
and
play.
N
These
are
the
faces
of
Santa
Fe.
Today,
Santa
Fe
and
the
Santa
Fe
of
the
future.
There
were
kids
games
for
all
ages
as
well
as
poetry
and
art,
making
the
Arts
the
important
a
in
the
acronym
of
chart
have
been
an
essential
part
of
the
project
from
the
beginning.
Art
is
Central
to
community
life
in
Santa
Fe,
and
it
encourages
us
to
express
who
we
are
and
what
we
imagine.
N
Mariachi
Euphoria,
lightning
boy,
hoop
dancers
and
wasawasa
drum
and
dance
engage
the
crowd
and
reminded
us
of
a
few
of
the
many
cultures
that
make
Santa
Fe
a
beautifully
Multicultural
community.
The
Santa
Fe
desert
Corral
lit
families
in
the
creation
of
a
collaborative
song
based
on
words,
called
from
chart
public
dialogues
on
monuments,
equity
and
belonging.
N
Chart
would
like
to
thank
the
residents
of
Santa
Fe,
who
have
participated
in
a
year-long
process
of
public
dialogue,
conversations,
meetings,
presentations,
interviews,
surveys
and
other
activities
that
have
generated
an
enormous
body
of
data
that
reflects
the
opinions,
perspectives
and
feelings
of
the
community
of
Santa
Fe.
These
are
the
basis
for
reports
with
recommendations
that
will
be
presented
by
chart
to
the
city
of
Santa
Fe
governing
body
at
the
end
of
August.
2022,
learn
more
about
the
chart,
culture,
history,
art,
reconciliation
and
Truth
project
at
our
website.
Www.Chartsantafe.Com.
P
One
of
the
things
we
certainly
recognize
as
part,
certainly
as
part
of
the
directive
to
do
a
cultural
history
series,
was
that
having
a
couple
of
talks
on
Santa
Fe
history
was
not
was
not
going
to
be
nearly
enough.
So,
though,
not
required
in
our
contract
we
launched
the
culture
blog
and
we
had
a
total
of
37
posts,
mostly
around
culture
or
history.
P
Everything
from
talking
about
the
Santa
Fe
Indian
School,
to
some
Elders
in
our
community
to
about
who
to
the
pope
cultural
center
and
also
history,
the
Palace
of
the
governors,
memories
of
LaFonda
Juneteenth
and
New
Mexico,
black
history
and
so
on.
That
is
still
up
on
our
website.
If
you'd
like
to
read
more,
we
also
published
books
that
have
been
suggested
to
us
or
we
had
read
during
the
during
the
process.
P
P
What
you're
seeing
here
are
the
three
most
popular
posts
During
the
period
we
didn't
do
a
huge
amount
of
posting
because
we
didn't
have
a
lot
of
public
activities
going
on,
but
we
are
post
reach
over
this
past
year
has
been,
is
28
515
people
we
had
1942
engagements,
which
meant
people
responded
back
to
us
in
some
way
by
either
sharing
the
posts
or
liking
the
post
or
commenting,
although
both
in
you
know,
Instagram
and
Facebook,
the
followers
don't
seem
very
impressive
in
a
certain
way.
The
reach
is
a
is
a
whole
lot
more.
P
We
do
still
have
the
YouTube
channel
up.
We
have
10
videos
up
there.
All
of
our
cultural
history
series
are
there
plus.
Some
of
these
videos,
like
the
one
you
just
saw,
are
10
videos.
I've
had
662
views
so
far,
so
those
will
stay
up
too.
So,
if
you
haven't
seen
them,
you
can
go
back
and
look
at
them.
P
We
had
seven
thousand
five
hundred
and
fifty
five
site
sessions
that
was
4759
unique
visitors,
so
this
is
in
addition
to
all
of
our
newsletters
and
any
other
way,
social
media
and
so
on.
Most
people,
of
course,
they're
going
to
our
home
page.
But
the
survey,
the
events
the
team
went
about
were
other
really
popular
pages
and,
of
course,
right
now.
N
So
the
final
report,
as
you
all
know-
and
hopefully
everybody
in
the
audience
know-
is
available
at
the
chart
website
and
it
was
shared
by
the
city
uploaded
last
Friday.
So
it's
available
to
all
of
you.
It
is
extensive
and
long.
So
we
are
not
going
to
go
over
everything
in
it
today,
but
we
just
want
to
give
you
a
sense
of
it
and
of
its
sections.
N
One
of
the
most
important
practices
of
the
chart
project
was
an
iterative
process
which
meant
that
we
learned
along
the
way
we
took
all
of
our
guidance
from
the
participation
of
Santa
fans.
So
our
first
survey
had
three
open-ended
questions.
It
was
a
a
qualitative
survey
which
produced
just
hundreds
of
pages
of
information.
The
that
first
survey
told
us
how
to
proceed,
and
so
that
developed
the
topics
for
the
dialogues
in
January,
February
and
March.
We
started
online
because
of
the
pandemic.
N
We
started
with
in-person
activities
in
March,
but
there's
a
whole
section
on
that
iterative
process
and
how
each
stage
of
the
for
each
stage
of
the
project
informed
the
subsequent
stage.
We
do
emphasize
small
group
dialogue
in
our
process
and
there's
a
whole
section
on
the
the
philosophy
behind
that,
as
well
as
the
methodology
and
that
informed
our
dialogue
sessions,
how
we
tracked
attendance
and
demographics
and
then
the
largest
part
of
the
report
are
the
results
with
recommendations.
N
The
artwork
that
you
see
in
the
report.
We
have
one
of
our
project
team
members,
Maureen
Burdock,
who
produced
five
beautiful,
beautiful
image,
images
that
were
based
on
the
results
of
survey
two.
So
they
are
the
in
the
introduction
page
to
each
of
the
sections:
culture,
history,
art,
reconciliation,
truth.
She
wasn't
able
to
join
us
tonight,
but
we
want
to
thank
her
for
the
beautiful
artwork
that
appears
in
the
report
and
that
helped
us
guide
the
other
design
elements.
N
So
just
some
stats
about
the
report
itself.
It
is
246
pages,
long,
138
pages
of
text
with
53
figures,
graphs
and
chart
108
pages
of
appendices.
The
documents
were
so
large
that
they're
into
two
different
documents
for
anybody
who
hasn't
had
a
chance
to
look
at
them.
You
do
need
to
access
two
large
documents.
N
There
are
52
recommendations
made
in
the
report
based
on
all
of
the
data
gathered
over
the
course
of
the
project,
and
so
the
52
recommendations
appear
in
the
different
sections
of
the
report,
so
they
sort
of
are
matched
with
the
discussion
sections.
We
really
encourage
people
to
read
the
discussions
before
the
recommendations,
because
each
explains
the
data.
L
P
So
the
way
the
report
is
structured,
as
you've
probably
already
figured
out,
is
the
chart
initials
as
there
were
acronyms.
So
the
first
section
of
the
report
is
on
culture,
and
you
can
see
above
those
sections
within
the
report,
but
I'm
going
to
just
read
a
little
bit
from
the
report.
Just
to
give
you
a
little
bit.
Taste
of
you
haven't
already
had
a
chance
to
read
some
of
the
The
Narrative.
All
of
these
topics
and
the
issue
of
Intercultural
sensitivity
came
up
consistently
over
the
course
of
the
chart.
P
P
P
For
the
second
section,
of
course,
is
history,
and
once
again
the
the
category,
the
sub
I,
don't
know
subtitles
underneath
or
at
the
above.
So
I'll
just
read
the
quote
here
from
the
report.
Chart
participants
spent
12
months
talking
about
the
history
of
Santa
Fe
and
their
views
are
as
varied
and
diverse
as
our
Multicultural
Community
itself.
P
What
is
clear
from
the
results
of
the
chart
project
that
there
is
a
great
desire
for
a
fuller
understanding
of
oga
poke,
Santa
fe's
history,
while
we
use
the
term
as
if
there
were
one
true
story,
it
is
clear
from
the
participants
that
the
history
of
this
place
is
manifold.
There
are
multiple,
parallel
and
contradictory
histories.
We
differ
in
our
views
as
to
the
importance
of
historical
events,
even
methods
of
collecting
and
legitimizing
history.
P
We
heard
some
refer
to
the
real
history
of
Santa
Fe
as
beginning
with
Spanish
Conquest,
confirmed
in
books
and
papers,
most
emphatically
disagree
and
embrace
a
history.
Thousands
of
years
before
the
consequence
told
by
sun
sky,
wind,
water,
land,
earth
and
its
creatures
and
carried
down
in
both
orator
and
literature.
N
N
Some
art,
particularly
in
the
form
of
monuments,
requires
new
and
considered
attention
and
assessment
that
includes
an
inclusive
public
process.
Controversies
about
monuments,
particularly
soldiers,
Monument
obelisks,
have
deeply
wounded.
The
Santa
Fe
Community,
while
also
encouraging
us
to
address
deeply
rooted
problems
and
the
Arts
have
a
unique
ability
to
promote
truth,
healing
and
Reconciliation.
N
And
lastly,
the
truth
section,
it
is
fitting
that
truth
serves
as
the
concluding
section
of
this
final
report,
though
it
may
appear
last
in
the
acronym
of
chart
and
last
in
this
document
we
understand
the
entire
as
a
cycle.
Truth,
culture,
history,
art,
reconciliation,
all
at
once,
circular
sequential
spiral
all
are
important,
Dynamic,
mutually
interdependent
and
all
came
up
in
relation
to
each
other
throughout
the
duration
of
the
project.
N
N
E
Q
E
B
I'm
I
gotta
I
have
a
question
about
process.
A
E
A
First
of
all,
thank
you
and
tell
you.
We
appreciate
your
completion
and
presentation.
A
A
A
I
also
want
to
announced
that
we
have
agreed
to
a
September
20th
working
session
for
the
governing
body
and
with
our
polite
participating
and
helping,
so
that
we'll
have
ample
time
as
a
governing
body
to
really
give
this
report.
The
time
it
deserves.
I
think
to
go
into
it
tonight
would
be
premature.
I
know
I'm
not
prepared
to
have
a
deep
discussion.
A
I
also
know:
we've
got
when
it
comes
time
for
petitions
from
the
floor,
a
significant
number
of
people
who
are
going
to
want
to
be
heard
and
that
we're
already
almost
at
the
six
o'clock
time
point
so
we're
essentially
an
hour
away
from
opening
the
floor
for
public
comment.
Petitions
from
the
floor
and
again
I've
been
advised
that
there
will
be
more
than
a
few
people
who
want
to
use
this
opportunity
to
speak
out
about
a
document.
A
So
please
mark
that
on
your
calendars
and
the
city,
clerk's
office
and
Community
engagement
team
will
be
making
arrangements
for
that
September
20th
working
session
devoted
only
to
the
Chart
final
report.
M
M
It's
been
unproductive,
we
spend
an
hour
getting
a
presentation
and
we
spend
an
hour
fighting
to
talk,
and
then
we
and
we
we
have
a
set
start
time
in
a
set
end
time.
So,
if
we're
going
to
follow
those
parameters-
and
we
need
to
not
have
an
end
time,
I
would
strongly
advocate
for
that.
I
would
strongly
Advocate
that
we
have
a
working
session
for
each
of
the
sections
of
this
report
and
with
that
being
said,
I
do
have
questions
for.
M
I
know
you
said
you
weren't
prepared,
but
I
am
prepared
to
ask
questions
at
first.
I
do
want
to
thank
the
chart
team.
The
facilitators,
the
the
time
and
effort
that
went
into
this
was
was
a
huge
undertaking
so
with
that
I
do
want
to
thank
Maureen,
Burdock,
Jenny,
Scarab,
Hernan,
Gomez,
Chavez,
kirstley,
Higgins
and
tawi
kind,
and.
M
Messed
this
up:
tinteli
Alexis,
Kaminsky,
Valerie
Martinez,
commissioner
McKennan
Peter,
Kwong,
Nguyen,
RT,
the
high
school
intern,
Kenneth
Penn,
Trace,
Rayburn,
AR,
the
high
school
intern,
the
late
Tomas
Romero
Santiago,
Sanchez
y
Lucero
Mo,
the
other
High
School
intern,
Mark
Westberg,
also
City
staff,
all
the
city
staff
that
put
in
their
time,
especially
director,
kamayama
the
presenters
and,
most
importantly,
all
of
the
community
members
that
showed
up.
M
With
that
being
said,
the
first
and
and
I
what
I'll
do
is
I'll
try
to
minimize
it,
given
that
we
do
will
have
future
questions
but
I
think
to
get
prepared
for
future
sessions.
There
are
many
questions.
I
have
that
I
need
answers
to
so
I
can
prepare
for
the
next
meetings,
and
so
the
first
question
is:
there
are
52
stated
recommendations
in
this
report.
M
N
Recommendations
come
from
the
community
of
Santa
Fe.
All
of
the
recommendations
are
based
on
the
data
that
we
collected
the
body
of
data.
Again,
those
include
all
of
the
dialogue
notes,
notes
from
interviews
every
bit
of
data
that
we
collected
every
activity,
the
two
surveys,
so
they
are
based
on
that
data.
The
community
Solutions
table
met
in
July
and
they
could
decide
on
which
recommendations
they
wanted
to
make
what
we
told
them
they
received.
N
The
community
Solutions
table
received
two
binders
330
pages
of
information
on
most
of
the
data
that
we
collected
up
to
July
and
they
were
required
to
review
all
of
that
data
and
come
to
their
meetings
prepared.
What
we
told
them
is
they
could
make
recommendations
they're
identified
in
the
report.
So
in
the
report
you
will
see
some
of
the
recommendations
say.
The
community
Solutions
table
wanted
to
take
up
this
recommendation
and
they
did
so.
N
What
we
told
them
is
that
if
they
ever
are
created
a
recommendation
that
we
didn't
think
was
based
on
the
data
that
we
had
collected.
We
would
make
that
clear
in
the
report,
because
Artful
life's
methodology
and
way
of
functioning
is
that
the
that
we
we
reflect
the
voice
of
the
people
it.
That
did
not
happen.
The
community
Solutions
table
was
very
diligent.
They
came
to
the
meeting
with
I,
don't
know
hundreds
of
Post-it
notes
and
index
cards.
They
were
very,
very
faithful.
N
They
received
an
honorarium,
but
the
work
that
they
needed
to
do
was
a
generous
contribution.
In
addition
to
that,
so
there
is
no
place
in
the
report
where
we
felt
that
the
recommendations
of
the
community
Solutions
table
were
not
based
on
the
data
that
we
had
collected,
but
the
community
Solutions
table
was
free
to
make
they
were
free
to
make
whichever
recommendations
they
wanted
to.
Okay,.
M
Thank
you
for
that
clarification
and,
with
that
being
said,
I
do
have
some
major
concerns
around
the
52
recommendations
and
how
they
were
developed.
I
think
that
question.
Let's
focus
on
the
next
meeting,
because
with
all
the
input
provided
throughout
this
entire
process
and
to
determine
how
we
selected
the
52
I'm
very
interested
in
that,
let's,
let's,
since
you
brought
up
the
community
Solutions
table
and
how
they
were
able
to
determine
what
they
focused
on
on.
M
I'm
very
disappointed
that
our
resolution
was
not
followed
in
a
sense
that,
in
the
chart
resolution,
it
stipulated
that
there
would
be
recommendations
provided
on
statues
and
monuments,
and
that
should
have
been
one
of
the
priorities
of
the
community
Solutions
table.
They
should
have
not
had
the
opportunity
to
opt
out
of
that
from
what
it
sounds
that
that
was
the
decision
they
did
they
just
they
decided
not
to
focus
on
that
and
that
shouldn't
have
been
a
choice.
That
is
what
this
whole
process
was
about.
A
Me
please:
we
don't
Who
We
Don't
Clap,
you
can
agree,
but
please
don't
demonstrate
it
really
isn't
how
we
conduct
the
business.
But
thank
you.
M
And
so
I'm,
sorry
thank
you,
Mr
Mayor
and
so
I
guess
my
my
my
next
question
revolves
around
the
process
and
in
the
chart
resolution
we
outlined
a
process
that
stipulated
we
would
have
conversations
led
by
rounds
round
one
we're
focused
on
personal
identities
and
stories
that
would
set
the
foundation
for
our
community
members
to
explain
and
tell
their
story,
so
we
can
learn
from
each
other.
We
can
learn
from
our
past.
We
can
learn
and
grow
towards
our
future.
P
Council
Rivera
I
would
certainly
I
would
certainly
ask
you
to
look
at
the
history
that
we
list
in
the
report
of
why
there
are
differences
between
the
original
resolution
and
the
contract
and
why
we
did
the
public
dialogues
the
way
we
did
and
why
there's
a
difference
between
what
Albuquerque
did,
which
is
I
know
what
the
original
resolution
was
based
upon
very,
very
different
process,
and
we
outlined
all
that
in
the
I
think
it
starts
as
page
six
Miss
Valerie
noted
as
to
why
things
changed
and
why
we
wanted
to
have,
and
you
wanted
to
have
a
very
diverse
voices
voices
of
the
community.
P
M
M
You've
got
to
remember
the
Albuquerque
process
did
not
move
forward
because
they
felt
like
it
was
not
enough
engagement,
so
I,
don't
I.
Think
that's
a
viewpoint.
The
second
thing,
the
reason
why
I
bring
up
the
process
of
the
rounds
is
again.
It
allows
us
to
begin
that
process
of
dialogue
to
Shared
our
past,
to
share
who
we
are
as
individual
community
members
and
when
we
deter
from
that
that
deters
from
the
process
that
we
as
a
governing
body,
unanimously
sponsored
and
unanimously
approved.
M
It
then
does
it
undermines
the
following
of
the
process
in
regards
to
the
community
Solutions
table
that
the
the
whole
intention
of
the
round
one
round
two
round
three.
Is
you
have
you
you
ensured
that
the
participants
in
the
community
Solutions
table
was
engaged
and
and
so
supportive
of
the
process
that
they
participated
in
one
round
one
round
two
round
three
and
then
they
were
eligible.
So
my
next
question
is:
how
were
the
participants
for
the
community
Solutions
table
selected,
given
it
is
my
understanding
that
were
nine
participants
in
the
community
Solutions
table
there
were.
M
N
A
site
there's
a
description
of
the
community
Solutions
table
how
each
of
the
members
were
chosen,
the
process
of
it,
their
panelist
agreement-
is
included
on
the
chart
website.
So
that's
the
answer
to
that
very
it's
very
detailed
and
that
description
I
turn
all
of
you
to.
We
can
bring
it
up
on
the
screen
if
you'd
like
it.
It's
been
on
our
website
for
months.
N
N
The
community
Solutions
table
reviewed
all
of
that
information,
and
they
didn't
disagree
with
any
of
the
recommendations
they
decided
to
highlight
the
ones
that
were
the
most
important
ones
to
them.
It
doesn't
mean
that
they
weren't
a
part
of
it.
In
fact,
those
Community
Solutions
tables
members
were
part
of
those
repeat
engagements.
One
of
the
requirements
was
that
they
consistently
engage
with
the
project,
and
so
they
were
there
for
many
of
the
dialogues
and
for
the
activities
and
the
surveys.
This
report
is
based
on
hundreds
of
people
sharing
their
stories
and
perspectives
and
opinions.
N
N
N
Hundreds
of
stories
and
voices
and
I
tell
you
counselor
Garcia
that
we
did
our
work
and
we
did
it
thoroughly
and
those
recommendations
are
based
on
that
information
and
I'm
passionate
with
you,
because
that's
really
important,
that's
the
most
important
part
of
this
process
is
that
all
of
those
voices
were
heard.
This
is
not
a
report
of
the
voices
of
the
pew
nor
the
loudest
voices
are
the
softest
voices
of
all
the
voices
and
they're
speaking
to
us
from
their
heart
and
they
didn't
always
agree.
N
M
By
no
means
was
anybody
trying
to
silence
voices
I,
think
the
question
resolved
around
given
all
the
information
as
I
mentioned
earlier,
how
did
we
land
on
the
52
recommendations
that
was
at
the
will
of
our
Full
Life
by
no
means
am
I
questioning
the
work
of
the
the
facilitators
again.
Thank
you.
Thank
you.
Facilitators
I
appreciate
the
work
you
did
you're
put
in
a
very
tough
position,
but
it
all
comes
back
to
process
and
structure
the
chart
resolution
that
we
passed.
M
That
gave
us
a
path
forward
and
it
states
be
it
further
resolved
that
a
community
Solutions
table
be
established
to
include
Representatives
who
have
participated
in
all
Community
dialogue
sessions.
The
community
Solutions
table
cell
suggest,
based
on
a
combination
of
recommendations
from
session
participants
at
the
end
of
each
committee
dialogue
session.
M
All
of
this
information
will,
and
we
we
did
outline
that
Artful
life
or
any
of
the
person
taking
on
this
work
would
determine
what
their
recommendations
were
based
off
of
the
feedback
from
the
community.
It
was
the
community
Solutions
table
that
was
going
to
provide
their
feedback
to
US
based
off
of
the
feedback
from
the
community
based
off
the
process
we
developed
based
off
the
process.
We
all
on
here
this
diocese
agreed
to
so
again,
that's
my
concern
is
we
outlined
the
process.
The
process
was
not
followed.
M
M
It's
been
the
decision
by
Artful
life
to
maintain
the
anonymity
of
these
nine
individuals.
Can
you
tell
me
why
we're
doing
that.
E
E
I
can
address
your
concerns
about
the
process
or
the
resolution
in
the
actual
implementation.
We
did
do
the
three
rounds
of
as
specified,
but
they
were
done
differently.
So
at
the
dialogue
sessions
you
did
have
an
opportunity
to
do
all
three
and
the
different
rounds
that
were
happening,
so
it
didn't
happen
just
one
two
and
three
and
done
throughout
the
dialogue
series.
There
was
that
opportunity
for
people
to
talk
and
to
listen
to
share
about
themselves
and
then
build
upon
that.
O
Remember
this
year,
I
think
earthquakes
can
answer
the
question
about
the
motives
for
for
not
producing
the
names
initially,
but
they
have
been
produced
via
an
emperor
recently.
P
Mayor
council
Garcia,
the
reason
is
that
in
the
beginning
that
we
didn't
publish
who
the
community
Solutions
table
was
because,
as
you
know,
this
whole
process
has
been
extremely
contentious.
Both
our
team
ourselves
and
members
of
the
community
Solutions
table
have
experienced
threats
and
verbal
abuse
and
and
even
more
job
loss,
all
as
being
part
of
the
chart
process.
So
as
Artful
life,
we
wanted
to
keep
that
that
information
out
of
the
hands
of
those
who
would
wish
to
harm
the
people
who
are
are
making
some
of
these
decisions.
P
As
I
said,
they're
they're
in
the
names
are
in
possession
of
legal
they're
awesome,
but
we've
handed
over
that
information
also
to
to
Pauline
without
their
contact
information,
because
we
were
asked
for
their
phone
numbers
to
publish
their
phone
numbers.
Their
email
addresses
their
physical
addresses
and
we
as
art
select,
could
not
do
that
because
we
were
concerned
for
their
safety
as
we've
been
concerned
for
many
of
our
team
members,
who've
had
the
same
thing
and
myself
and
Valerie
as
well.
So
that's
why
we
kept
those
under
wraps
understandable.
M
I
I
appreciate
that
and
sharing
Pi
is
unacceptable
and
threats
against
whether
it's
participants
or
the
facilitators
again
unacceptable
anybody
that
wants
to
partake
in
that
they
deserve
to
be
held
accountable.
You
mentioned
somebody
lost
their
job
because
they
participated
in
chart
well.
P
I
was
the
first
one
actually
last
August
and
another
one
happened
since
then
as
well.
Why.
M
For
that
particular
question,
there
were
outline
percentages
because
there
was
again
picking
picked
and
chosen
questions
that
we
that
were
displayed
responses
to.
For
that
particular
question.
M
The
responses
were
then
broken
into
percentages
and
those
percentages
didn't
equal
up
to
114..
So
me
doing
my
research
I
figured
well
I'll
just
go
to
the
survey
to
make
sure
there
wasn't
a
typo
and
it
wasn't
there.
So
two
questions:
why
isn't
the
full
survey
result
produced
in
the
appendices
and
two?
Why
is
there
that
discrepancy?
Why
are
we
at
more
than
a
hundred
percent
on
the
results
for
the
questions
surrounding?
How
do
we
move
forward
with
soldiers,
Monument.
N
N
Secondly,
the
people
could
choose
more
than
one
option,
so
they
may
answer
they
might
have
chosen
two
or
three
or
two
for
the
answer
to
Soldier's
Monument.
So
they
were
able
to
do
that
so,
but
the
results
are
in
the
materials
that
we
delivered
to
the
city
today
and
you
are
most
welcome
to
to
review
those
survey
results.
But
every
single
survey
question
is
in
the
final
report.
There
wasn't
not
one
was
left
out.
M
Can
you
point
me
to
the
pages
because
I
looked
through
this
appendices,
that's
110
Pages,
trying
to
find
the
responses
provided
by
the
and
usually
when
there's
a
survey,
the
way
I
get
the
information
back
typically,
is
you
have
the
question
and
then
you
have
the
breakdown
of
the
respondents
to
the
question.
I
didn't
see
that
in
the
appendices
and
if
it
is
there,
I
apologize
and
if
you
could
please
Point
me
towards
the
pages
where
that's
at
so.
N
The
survey
the
survey
results
are
not
of
the
appendices
they're
in
the
materials
that
we
delivered
to
the
city
today
with
all
of
the
chart
materials,
but
every
single
question
in
the
surveys
in
the
report,
but
for
obvious
reasons
it's
placed
in
context
of
the
discussion
because
survey
two
was
not
the
whole
project
survey.
2
is
in
addition
to
all
the
data
that
we
collected.
N
In
fact,
every
survey
2
question
was
based
on
the
data
that
we
collected
so,
for
example,
the
seven
options
as
answers
about
soldiers,
Monument
obelisks
came
from
the
data
that
was
collected
before
that
survey.
Two
is
just
a
small
part
of
all
the
data
that
was
collected
so
in
the
report.
Every
single
survey
question
appears
with
the
discussion
and
introduction
to
that
question
and
with
a
reflection
on
the
data
that
we
collected.
M
M
That's
why
we
set
up
the
process,
and
so
I
definitely
would
like
that
that
we
can
prepare
for
these
study
sessions
that
are
coming
up.
M
The
the
issues
our
city
has
faced-
and
this
goes
Way
Beyond
two
years
before
the
removal
of
the
devarga
statue
and
the
tearing
down
of
the
soldiers
Monument
this
this.
This
goes
back
long
long
long
before
that,
and
so
my
question
revolves
around
focusing
on
history
and
we
can't
have
an
honest
truth
without
a
holistic
view
of
our
history,
and
it
seemed
like
this
process
had
a
hyper
focus
on
the
Spanish
colonization
and
the
impacts
it's
had
on
our
community,
which
I
think
we
can
all
agree
are
tremendous.
M
M
E
P
Colonization,
it
also
included
later
Americans
white
Americans
coming
here,
so
we
did.
We
did
address
that.
We
also
everything
here
came
out
of
all
of
our
talks.
All
the
subjects
came
out
of
what
people
wanted
to
talk
about,
and
what
a
lot
of
came
up
was
what
we
see
there
in
the
culture
blog
or
or
you.
P
Of
history
that
we
actually
talk
about
or
what
people
wanted
to
discuss,
so
we
were
not
shying
away
from
later
colonizing
periods,
I
think,
even
in
the
talk
with
Valerie
Rangel
and
Rob
Martinez
I
myself
brought
up
to
the
fact
that
I
was
my
family.
One
side
of
my
family
came
to
this
continent
in
the
1600s
as
settlers
and
Colonials,
and
how
do
we
talk
about
that?
I
brought
that
up
as
a
white
person
and
they
obviously
have
different
backgrounds
than
I.
P
Do
so
took
it
up
in
different
ways
as
to
what
was
of
concern
to
them.
So
we
weren't
trying
to
force
anybody
to
talk
about
something
that
they
didn't
want
to.
I
know
that
Dr
sephalo
talked
about
the
plaza
in
terms
of
how
people
interact
and
how
it
responds
a
plaza,
responds
to
culture
and
history,
and
all
of
that
it
wasn't
specific
to
any
particular
peoples
or
cultures.
I
know
that
Hilario
Romero,
when
he
did
his
journey
down
the
Santa
Fe
River,
talked
about
all
the
cultures
along.
P
Also,
if
you
look
in
the
appendix
beyond
the
52
recommendations,
we
also
included
in
the
appendix
all
of
the
recommendations
directly
from
people
in
their
own
language,
with
their
own
typos
of
what
they
wanted
to
recommend
to
you
as
well,
so
really
there's
close
to
300
recommendations,
possibly
before
you,
you,
if
you
read
through
those
recommendations,
you'll
find
a
lot
of
talk
in
there
about
colonization
later
colonization,
the
layers
of
colonization
people.
You
know,
white
people
have
ruined
downtown
Santa
Fe,
there's
a
lot
in
there.
M
But
I
appreciate
that
and
I
know
that
we've
again
I've
got
a
lot
of
more
questions
in
due
to
time
I'm
going
to
end
here
in
a
minute,
but
director
kamehame
I've
got
two
I
guess
two
additional
items.
If
we
can
get
prepared
as
we
prepare
for
these
work
study
session,
one
is
I'd
like
to
differentiate
which
recommendations
were
made
by
the
community
Solutions
table
which
were
made
by
was
it
whether
it
was
Artful
life,
whoever
it
may
be.
M
The
second
is
there
in
the
report.
It
was
mentioned
that
there
was
engagement
with
42
organizations
on
the
on
the
list.
There's
way
more
than
42
organizations
listed.
So
I
would
like
to
know
who
are
the
42
organizations
that
were
engaged
with
and
then
that
way
I
can
have
a
better
understanding
in
those
regards.
M
I
do
want
to
thank
you.
This
was
a
huge
task.
In
almost
some
senses,
it
was
almost
unachievable,
but
I
think
the
biggest
part
of
this
task
was
not
achieved,
which
was
coming
to
Solutions
regarding
our
monuments
and
statues
and
our
community-
and
this
is
an
issue
I
brought
up
during
the
first
quarter
of
the
report-
that
if
we
ended
up
at
this
point
without
recommendations.
M
M
I
think
we
need
to
do
everything
we
can
to
instill
and
bring
back
that
trust,
and
that's
where
having
these
critical
discussions
during
these
upcoming
meetings
is
very
important.
As
I've
said
before,
our
ancestors
are
watching
us.
Future
Generations
are
waiting
on
us
to
make
these
decisions
and
they
need
us
to
do.
What
is
right,
I
ask
this
as
a
governing
body
as
a
community.
Let's
make
them
proud,
let's
come
together
and
figure
out
how
we
move
forward.
M
I
do
want
to
leave
us
with
a
quote
by
the
great
poet
Maya
Angelou,
who
said
history
despite
its
wrenching
pain
cannot
be
unlived,
but
if
faced
with,
courage
need
not
to
be
lived
again
and
that's
why
it's
important
we
tell
a
holistic
history
and
I
think,
unfortunately,
we're
not
doing
that
right
now.
Thank
you,
Mr
Mayor.
Yes,
sir.
A
Thank
you
and
I
I
I
appreciate
your
your
restraint,
because
I
know
you
have
more
issues
you
want
to
raise,
as
does
every
member
of
the
governing
body
I
think
if
we
each
I
went
through
our
list
of
questions
tonight,
we'd
have
a
very,
very
long
meeting,
which
is
exactly
why
the
meeting
on
the
20th
will
be
so
productive
and
may
not
be
the
only
meeting
to
your
earlier
Point
counselor
Piercy.
We
may
we
may
go
on
among
ourselves
depending
on
how
we're
able
to
to
prepare
but
you're.
A
A
G
Thank
you
mayor.
First
September
20th.
We
have
a
community
health
and
safety
task
force
meeting
that
starts
at
5,
30.
and
I
hope
we
don't
use
that
time
as
a
stop
time
for
discussion
on
this
I
think
it's
going
to
be
pretty
lengthy,
so
I
hope
we
allow
the
proper
amount
of
time
to
ask
our
questions
and
talk
about
it.
I
also
so
I
heard
that
the
contract
deviated
from
the
resolution
and
just
want
to
know
if
that
did
happen,
and
why
and
how
it
happened,
and
you
don't
have
to
answer
that
tonight.
G
O
Mayor
Weber,
Council
River,
the
contract
incorporates
the
resolution,
so
the
resolution
is
part
of
the
contract.
G
G
O
E
E
G
And
then
I
wanted
to
ask
the
City
attorney
about
transparency,
which
I
ask
that
our
our
last
meeting
and
still
hadn't
received
an
answer.
These
are
the
Public's
The
public's
money,
public
funds
that
went
to
hiring
Artful
life
and
I
asked
about
why
this
process
couldn't
be
transparent
and
I.
Think
a
lot
of
my
colleagues
questions
would
not
need
to
be
asked
if
the
process
was
transparent
from
the
beginning.
G
I
know
they
had
reasons
for
not
doing
it
just
similar
as
community
health
and
safety
task
force.
We
had
two
people
of
color
that
were
on
that
that
had
beers
about
things
that
may
happen
to
them
and
we
were
forced
to
be
transparent
and
just
wondering
why
this
process
and
clearly
it
should
have
been
a
transparent
process,
because
we've
released
the
information
as
part
of
ipra
so
just
or
for
an
April
request.
So
just
not
sure
why
we
didn't
allow
for
more
transparency
with
this
process.
G
O
Council
we've
got
it.
The
reason
I
asked
that
question,
because
I
think
the
main
debate
around
the
community
health
and
safety
task
force
was
whether
the
open
means
act
would
apply
because
all
of
our
advisory
committees
to
the
city
to
the
government
body
are
subject
to
the
open
means
act
generally,
except
when
we
created
some
exceptions
for
the
community
health
and
safety
task
force,
and
then
more
recently,
we
created
an
exception
for
100
virtual
meetings.
O
O
There
was
an
emperor
for
those
members
that
was
not
in
the
possession
of
the
city
at
the
time
the
emperor
was
made,
so
we
communicated
with
the
contractor
and
found
that
they
probably
were
subject
to
Oprah,
despite
them
being
the
possession
of
the
contractor
and
then
the
contractor
provided
them,
and
they
were
loaded
online.
G
All
right
and
then
I
think
I
asked
at
one
point
whether
the
Obelisk
was
a
federal
Monument,
a
state.
H
O
Mayor
of
our
counselor,
it
resides
in
the
city,
plaza
I'm,
not
sure
so,
some
of
the
terminology
or
terms
of
Art
and
in
terms
of
our
whether
it's
registered
as
a
Reserve
property
with
equal
state
or
national
registers,
and
is
that
it
you're
asking
about
the
plaza
or
the
obelisk.
O
G
O
O
G
H
A
Thank
you,
counselor.
That's
for
mayor
worth,
foreign.
R
Thank
you,
mayor
I.
First
just
want
to
start
off
by
thanking
the
team
members
and
the
facilitation
team.
This
was
not
an
easy
task.
I
felt
like
from
the
beginning.
It
was
trying
to
fit
a
square
peg
in
a
round
hole
because
you're
doing
the
work
work
of
community
and
trying
to
put
it
into
a
bureaucratic
process.
I
think
a
lot
of
us
on
the
council.
R
When
we
first
approved
this
chart
process
were
skeptical
about
pieces
of
it,
including
the
solutions
table
piece,
even
the
the
steps
that
my
colleague
was
talking
about
round
one
round
two
round
three,
because
China
paid
a
government
resolution
or
a
community
process
doesn't
work.
Sorry
to
say
it
doesn't
work
so
you're
trying
to
do
something
very
challenging
with
something
that
we
haven't
addressed
historically
in
Santa
Fe.
We
don't
address
things
in
Santa.
Fe
government
doesn't
do
a
good
job,
addressing
it.
R
I
mean
even
historically,
not
just
this
body,
but
I'm,
saying
like
these
are
things
that
are
deeply
entrenched
and
are
not
solved
by
a
one
single
process.
So
the
chart
process
to
me
was
a
glimpse
into
some
things
that
people
were
expressing
in
the
community.
I
guess
my
question:
to
try
to
figure
out
like
what
we're
going
to
be
doing
next,
because
there's
there
were
some
really
interesting
things
that
came
out
of
the
recommendations
that
some
stuff
that
I
agreed
with
some
stuff.
That
I
was
like
what
is
that
I?
R
Don't
understand
that
so
I
guess
what
I'm
trying
to
understand
is
the
application
of
the
results,
and
is
this
at
the
beginning
of
another
process.
R
Or
is
this
the
end
game
and
the
reason
why
I
say
that
is,
it
seems
like
the
recommendations
that
were
in
there
are
are
more
for
adult
dialogue
versus
policy
making
and
solutions
so
and
they're
not
they're,
not
bad.
There's
some
things
that
I
think
we
need
to
do
that
could
actually
develop
into
some
changes
with
like
structure
of
government,
new
or
implementation
of
like
a
diversity
and
Equity
office,
which
I
actually
have
always
talked
about
needing.
We
actually
had
one.
R
It
was
called
the
office
of
Multicultural
Affairs
back
in
the
days,
and
it
was
there
were
some
a
lot
of
good
things
that
came
out
of
that
so
I
I
guess
what
I'm
saying
is
I'm
trying
to
understand-
and
you
don't
need
to
answer
this
tonight,
but
when
we
go
through
these
processes,
I'm
trying
to
understand
how
the
recommendations
will
become
it
will
actually
develop
into
policy
making
and
how
this
information
will
be
used
to.
R
Is
it
going
to
be
used
for
policy
making,
or
is
it
actually
to
reform
cultural
institutions
that
we
all
live
under
and
then
the
other
thing
is
I'm.
Trying
to
figure
out
you
know
chart
is
not
really
going
to
do
the
work
of
government.
So
what
is
our
role
in
this?
How
do
we
dissect
certain
things
with
a
process
that
didn't
feel
you
know
in
some
or
some
people
that
didn't
feel
exactly
following
the
resolution?
But
even
when
we
talked
about
the
resolution,
a
lot
of
us
didn't
feel
like
it
was
like.
R
How
do
you
get
this
done?
I
mean
even
passing
the
resolution.
I
know
we
all
passed
it.
We
it
was
unanimously
passed,
but
some
of
us
I
think
we're
just
pondering
like
how
does
this
then
become
actionable
items
that
we
can
make
decisions
on
not
just
about
monuments,
but
just
about
how
do
we
deal
with
things
in
the
city
that
we
have
not
dealt
with,
and
it's
not
just
about
government
services?
R
It's
just
about
like
how
we
talk
about
history
and
understand
it
in
a
way
it's
not
simplified,
but
that
we're
acknowledging
all
aspects
that
have,
but
that's
where
we're
here,
where
we
are
today
and
I
guess
what's
hard
for
me,
is
the
one
recommendation
it
wasn't
hard
for
me.
I
was
actually
thinking
this
I
always
think
about
this.
The
way
we
describe
Santa
Fe
for
the
tourism
department
is
absolutely
flawed.
I
don't
know
if
anyone
has
read
that
it's
I'm,
sorry
to
say
it's
horrible,
it's
not
who
we
are.
It's
the
tri-cultural
myth.
R
It
doesn't
describe
any
way
our
history.
It
simplifies
us
to
the
most
common,
most
simplified
common
denial
or
simple
denominator,
so
that
it
it
makes
us
put.
It
puts
us
in
boxes
like
we're
not
related
to
each
other
that
you
spawn.
Those
are
not
related
to
Natives
and
and
anglos
are
not
related
to,
and
it's
just
it's
so
bad
and
I.
Just
think
that
that
one
thing
is
a
low-hanging
fruit.
We
can
change
right
away.
R
So
I
appreciate
that
recommendation
that
came
out
of
the
chart
process,
because
the
tech,
cultural
myth
we're
more
than
that
we're
not
just
one
or
the
other
we're
mestizos.
We
have
such
a
rich
and
complex
history,
and
we
never
really
talk
about
it
in
that
way,
so
I'm
hoping
that
that
will
change
the
way
we
describe
ourselves.
R
The
way
we've
been
promote
ourselves
as
a
city,
so
that
was
encouraging
for
me,
so
in
the
end,
I'm
just
really
wanting
to
understand
recommendations
and
how
they
then
become
actionable
items
for
us
to
to
make
policy
on
make
decisions
on
and
or
and
or
there's
some
other
long-term
process
that
we
need
to
establish.
R
That's
not
government-led,
because
I
don't
think
that
we
are
the
ones
that
need
to
do
this
I
think
it's
community-led
and
I
appreciate
everybody
that
was
part
of
this
or
that's
here
today
with
us,
because
I
know
it's
been
hard,
I've
been
in
rooms
where
I
feel
completely
uncomfortable
about
people
trying
to
tell
me
Well.
R
Community
processes,
especially
as
it
relates
to
culture,
are
really
hard
and
and
they're,
uncomfortable
and
I
just
wanted
to
acknowledge
that
all
of
you
that
were
part
of
those
processes
that
had
to
be
in
situations
where
you
felt
uncomfortable
and
you
didn't
agree
with
people.
You
know
having
conversations
with
people
that
you
you
don't
agree
with,
or
they
don't
agree
with
you,
it's
it's
challenging
and
it's
a
good
thing.
We'd
have
those
because
we
don't
have
them
enough.
We
really
don't
so
I
will
stop
there.
R
I
have
so
many
things
swirling
in
my
head
about
all
the
stuff
that
came
out
of
this.
You
know
some
things:
I
agreed
with
some
things:
I,
don't
and
ultimately
having
to
make
decisions
that
I
feel
like
our
community's
decisions,
not
elected
official
decisions,
but
I
guess
we'll
have
to
figure
that
out
when
we
get
there
and
then
I
also
want
to
say
that
I
want
to
be
part
of
the.
However,
this
working
session
is
going
to
be,
and
Council
Rivera
and
I
are
not
available
on
September
20th.
R
It's
the
official
meeting
that
we
have
with
the
the
community,
health
and
safety
task
force.
That's
already
been
established
and
we
have
a
presentation
of
people
coming
from
out
of
state,
so
I'd
rather
not
keep
that
date
or
maybe
there's
an
alternative
date
for
us.
So
thank
you
all.
Thank
you
all
for
your
work
and
everybody
that
showed
up
tonight
and
it's
list
that
is
listening
now
and
I
hope
you
continue
to
be
engaged.
This
is
not
one
time
thing.
R
This
is
not
a
one-time
deal
just
talking
about
our
culture
and
then
it
just
that's
it.
It's
over
I!
Think
there's
just
it's
there's
a
lot
to
dissect
and
heal
from
and
I
can
say
that
personally
I
feel
like
there's
a
lot
to
heal
from
in
this
just
growing
up
in
Santa
Fe
and
the
challenges
and
the
changes
and
the
things
that
we
don't
like
and
the
things
that
we
still
love.
So
thank
you
all
for
being
here.
A
Thanks
Council
Council,
the
city
clerk
will
figure
out
a
way
to
come
up
with
a
date
that
works
for
everybody,
I'm
glad
you
flagged
that
source.
So
we
don't
end
up
running
into
other
important
work,
so
very
important.
Councilwoman
remember.
B
I
want
to
Echo
the
thanks
that
have
been
directed
to
the
team,
the
Consultants
and,
in
particular,
the
community
for
their
time
and
their
energy,
in
having
difficult
and
courageous
conversations
and
for
listening
to
one
another
and
again
I
want
to
thank
those
of
you
who
are
standing
behind
the
podium
and
what
what
you've
taken
on
was
a
huge
task.
It
was
a
very
difficult
one
that
you
have
been
able
to
come
forward
with
this
report.
B
I
want
to
I
mean
I.
Think
what
you've
done
here
is
incredible.
I
encourage
the
community
to
take
time
to
read
this
report,
to
read
it
to
reread
it
to
contemplate
it,
to
read
the
appendices,
I
have
to
say
I've
thumbed
through
it
several
times,
I'm,
probably
two-thirds
of
the
way.
Reading
it
word
for
word
and
I,
find
myself
reading
it
and
then
I
get
to
a
point
and
I
go.
Oh
wait.
B
I
want
to
go
back
and
reread
something
that
I've
already
read,
because
something
that
I've
just
read
makes
me
think
about
that
thing.
That
I
already
read
differently.
I
I
really
have
to
say
that
there's
a
lot
to
digest
here.
I,
don't
I
I
think
you
know
you
all
spoke
about
the
number
of
recommendations,
the
number
of
pages,
but
when
you
get
when
you
get
into
it,
there
there's
an
awful
lot
here
that
you
have
given
us
to
work
with
and
so
I.
Thank
you
for
that.
B
I
thank
the
community
for
that
because,
honestly,
it's
like
it's
in
some
ways
more
than
one
could
imagine
my
initial
takeaway
and
again
I'm
still
reading
and
re-reading
and
digesting
and
I
think
councilwoman
be
a
real
said
this
as
well,
is
that
the
work
of
equity
and
inclusion
is
hard.
B
It
requires
consistent
and
ongoing
attention
and
I
think
some
of
your
recommendations
speak
to
that.
This
idea
of
an
office
of
equity
and
inclusion
to
me
resonated
because
one
process,
one
report,
one
effort,
isn't
going
to
fix
what
ails
us
and
I
you
know:
I
I
use
the
term
collaborative
reconciliation,
I
I
think
it
takes
time
and
I'm
grateful
and
thought
and
I'm
grateful
for
the
thoughtful
recommendations
as
to.
B
B
So
we
initially
thought
an
appointed
commission
would
be
the
correct
process
for
addressing
the
race,
racial
and
cultural
issues
in
our
community,
and
then
we
looked
more
deeply
and
we
found
a
process
for
community-based
engagement
and
methodologies
to
help
us
begin
to
build
and
understand
each
other
and
to
build
an
understanding
of
and
between
our
Multicultural
communities,
which
was
also
identified
earlier
tonight.
We
are
more
than
three
cultures
we
are.
We
are
an
incredible
blend
of
all
kinds
of
cultures
and
backgrounds,
and
so.
B
B
B
Some
of
these
things
that
to
councilwoman
vrl's
point
are
going
to
be
things
that
we
will
need
to
see
from
the
community
from
other
non-profits
from
other
community
organized
organizations
from
other
groups
that
are
in
in
positions
to
be
able
to
again
I
think
this
report
is
valuable
to
them
as
well
to
the
community
as
a
whole,
not
just
the
government.
B
I
look
forward
to
talking
about
it
more
I,
look
forward
to
taking
some
action
on
some
things
very
soon
and
again:
I
just
I
really
encourage
everybody,
let's
not
tear
it
down,
but
let's
look
at
the
gift
we've
been
given
and
try
to
work
with
it
to
really
help
move
us
forward.
Bring
us
together.
B
B
It
was
a
really
big
job,
even
under
the
best
of
circumstances,
and
you
didn't
always
have
that
so
I
just
again.
Thank
you
to
the
team.
Thank
you
to
our
Consultants.
Thank
you
to
the
community,
in
particular
for
everyone
who
participated,
whether
you
believed
in
the
process
or
not,
I
think
what
came
out
of
it
is
very
valuable
and
we
will
be
using
it
for
a
long
time.
Thank
you,
mayor.
D
Thank
you,
mayor,
I,
I
too,
just
want
to
start
by
expressing
my
gratitude
to
this
team
who
led
this
and
to
the
members
of
our
community,
who
really
took
the
opportunity
to
participate.
D
Councilman
veterans
discussed
mentioned
discussions
where
we
disagree
and
how
hard
those
are
and
I
think
that
as
a
society,
we've
gotten
worse
and
worse
at
that,
and
so
to
see
this
community
being
willing
to
come
together
to
disagree.
There's
a
lot
of
power
and
disagreement.
There
really
is,
if
you
can
do
it
productively,
there
is
incredible
power
in
disagreement
and
being
willing
to
put
yourself
out
there
into
a
place
that
is
uncomfortable.
D
It
speaks
to
a
lot
to
what
this
community
has
to
offer
and
what
we
can
really
build
upon
I.
My
colleagues
have
mentioned
a
lot
of
what
I
was
going
to
say
so,
given
the
time
I
will
not
be
labor
and
I
know
that
we
will
have
a
lot
more
conversation.
The
one
thing
that
I
would
really
like
to
emphasize
is
that
I
think
that
it
would
be
short-sighted
of
us
to
ever
believe
that
chart
has
a.
I
D
At
the
end
of
the
sentence,
this
is
an
ongoing
process
and
if
we
talk
about,
you
know
establishing
a
process,
regardless
of
decisions
that
are
made
around
current
monuments
that
we
are
discussing.
Regardless
of
discussions
around
establishing
you
know
different
processes
or
departments
within
the
city
or
different
Community
groups.
D
We
will
continue
as
a
community
to
grow
and
change,
and
so
how
do
we
start
to
lay
the
groundwork
for
making
Santa
Fe
a
place
that
we
have
the
ability
to
work
together
through
those
changes
and
honestly,
I
think
that
this
is
a
question
that
we
see
in
almost
every
single
decision
that
we
make
at
the
city,
I
mean
Midtown.
We
have
the
conversation
all
the
time.
How
do
we
both
honor?
What
Midtown
has
been
and
recognize
what
we
want
Midtown
to
become?
That
is.
That
is
a
complicated
question.
D
How
do
we
both
look
at
the
history
of
our
community
and
recognize
that
our
community
and
our
world
is
simply
changing,
and
and
how
do
we
change
as
a
community,
and
how
do
we
really
row
together,
because
that
is
what
really
makes
us
stronger?
How
do
we
recognize
and
honor
the
different
histories
I
mean,
that
is,
that
is
so
incredibly
accurate.
There
are.
D
There's
really
value
in
all
of
these
different
complex
stories
that
make
up
our
community
and
the
stories
that
we
still
have
not
written,
and
so
what
I
hope
that
we
see.
You
know,
as
we
really
dig
through
these
recommendations
and
I,
think
that
it's
important
that
we
remember
that
these
are
these
are
recommendations
and
in
terms
of
decisions,
there
will
be
some
decision
points
that
come
at
us
and
there
will
be
some
decision
points
that
really
come
to
the
community
of.
D
How
do
we
do
this
together
and
I
think
that
it'll
be
important
to
learn
the
lessons
of
of
the
chart
process
both
what
worked
and
what
didn't
I
mean
anytime.
You
finish
something
you
want
to
say:
okay,
what
did?
What
did
we
get
right
and
what
can
we
build
upon
and
what
are
some
areas
that
we
would
change,
because
this
is
not
over
and
so
I.
D
Think
of
taking
a
very
honest
and
councilor
Chavez
mentioned
vulnerability
and
she
always
does
such
a
wonderful
job
of
bringing
up
vulnerability
is
something
I
appreciate
so
much
of
her.
But
it
is
it's
a
vulnerable
place
that
we
have
to
look
and
say:
okay,
where
did
we
hit
the
mark?
Where
did
we
not
and
how
do
we
continue
to
grow
from
that
I
think
Council.
Garcia
is
right.
We
will
be
scheduling
a
work
study
session
and
that
will
not
be
the
end
either.
D
This
is
really
going
to
be
continuous
work
and
what
I
hope
that
we
can
see
is
not
just
some
Solutions.
Some
decisions
being
made
around
some
of
the
challenges
that
we've
seen.
That
really
are
symptoms
of
the
underlying
challenges
that
were
you
know
the
the
soldiers
Monument.
This
is
the
symptom
of
some
of
the
challenges
that
we're
seeing
in
our
community
and,
yes,
we
need
to
be
looking
at
these
symptoms,
but
also
what
is
the
underlying
I?
Don't
even
want
to
say
disease,
but
what
is
the
underlying
tension?
D
What
are
the
underlying
challenges
and
how
is
chart
going
to
set
us
up
as
a
community
to
lay
down
lay
down
a
process
that
we
can
continue
to
address
those
both
those
that
we
have
inherited
those
that
we
are
creating
today
and
those
that
you
know
our
children
will
continue
to
Grapple
with
and
I
think
that's
going
to
be
probably
a
harder
not
to
crack.
D
If
we're
really
honest
of
how
are
we
laying
down
the
line
that
that
allows
Santa
Fe
to
to
move
forward
in
a
way
that
I
have
a
lot
of
faith
in
this
community
to
do
that,
because
look
at
the
passion
that
has
shown
up
in
this
room
look
at
the
passion
that
has
shown
up
throughout
the
process
and
it's
not
easy
comfortable,
but
I
do
find
it
very
hopeful.
D
So
thank
you
for
this
report.
I
I've
been
digging
through
it
and
it
is,
as
councilmember
worth
said.
You
know
kind
of
one
of
those
that
you
want
to
go
back
and
forth.
I
will
I
will
say
that
it
is
while
the
content
is
challenging.
It's
it's
nice
to
read.
You
know.
Most
governmental
reports
are
like
kind
of
really
dry,
but
that
is
something
that
I
would
really
recommend
to
the
community
that
this
isn't
this
isn't
a
dry
read
it's
really.
D
It's
beautifully
written
and
I
think
written
in
a
way
that
really
starts
to
if
you're
willing
to
engage
with
the
material
that
will
make.
You
think
so
definitely
read
this
report.
I
would
encourage
every
member
of
our
community
to
read
this
report.
D
To
try
to
you
know,
take
off
your
blinders,
take
off
your
preconceived
notions
and
dive
in,
because
there's
there's
a
lot
here
and
I
think
that
there's
probably
some
things
that
can
really
lay
the
basis
for
how
our
community
continues
to
grow
continues
to
honor
all
of
the
many
individuals
that
make
this
make
this
such
an
incredible
City
that
we
are
all
so
incredibly
lucky
to
be
members
of
so
thank
you
all
again.
D
I
look
forward
to
more
dialogue,
more
conversation
both
with
the
team
as
well
as
with
the
community,
because
all
of
you
that
are
here,
everyone-
that's
listening!
Everyone,
that's
not
listening
to
this,
but
who
I'm
sure
we
will
talk
to
it's.
Probably
the
most
majority
of
the
city,
but
that
I
look
forward
to
speaking
with
in
the
future
about
these
important,
tough,
beautiful
challenges
of
our
community.
Thank
you.
Thank.
C
Thank
you,
mayor,
I,
do
wanted
to
express
my
gratitude.
I
also
want
to
thank
my
colleagues
for
the
words
that
they've
shared
the
issues
that
they've
raised
questions
they've
raised.
I
have
the
same.
My
comment
really
is
around
this
idea
of
disagreement
and
I.
C
There's
people
that
have
experienced
different
traumas
because
of
it
there's
realities
that
we
may
think.
We
know
that
we
don't
because
they
are
it's
just
that
such
an
individual
journey
and
because
of
that,
if
we
do
not,
as
a
community,
come
with
the
intent
to
be
respectful
with
the
intent
to
be
understanding,
we
will
silence
so
many
individuals
because
of
the
vulnerability
Factor
behind
their
culture,
their
history
and
what
they've
gone
through.
C
You
know
we
felt
tensions
tonight,
I
could
sense.
People
were
uncomfortable,
they
were
putting
an
uncomfortable
situations
which,
as
an
educator
and
someone
who
is
an
advocate
against
trauma,
disagrees
with
because
I
feel
like
we
can
approach
people
and
disagree
with
people
without
breaking
them
to
the
point
where
they
are
not
able
to
express
themselves.
C
And
if
we
attack
we
will
violence
our
community
members
and
we
will
not
get
anywhere,
and
that
worries
me.
It
worries
me
because
I
have
worked
with
children
that
are
silenced
because
they
are
they've
lived,
a
traumatic
path
and
they've
been
shut
down
because
they
have
not
been
welcome
and
we're
doing
that
we
can.
We
tend
to
sometimes
especially
on
touchy
subjects.
Do
that
with
each
other
as
adults
as
neighbors,
we
all
have
to
live
in
this
city.
We
have
to
respect
each
other.
C
We
have
to
know
that,
even
though
we're
both
you
know,
born
and
raised
in
Santa
Fe,
where
Chicanos
we
are
on
different
paths
and
we
have
different
understandings
and
we
have
different
beliefs.
I
will
educate
you
on
mine,
you
can
educate
me
on
yours.
I
will
listen
and
learn
so
that
we
are
not
corn
anymore
and
I.
Just
have
to
I
have
to
express
the
individual,
the
individualization
that
comes
with
every
path
we
walk
on
in
regards
to
our
history
in
regards
to
our
culture
and
I
beg
the
community
of
Santa
Fe.
C
When
we
disagree,
have
the
empathy
for
the
fact
that
the
person
standing
in
front
of
you
or
the
people
standing
in
front
of
you
may
not
have
walked
that
same
path
and
may
have
a
different
story
and
keep
that
keep
that
in
your
mind,
keep
that
in
your
heart.
Allow
yourself
to
be
open
to
it,
so
we
actually
get
somewhere,
because
if
we
do
that
as
a
community,
this
is
just
the
start
to
something
wonderful.
This
is
just
the
start
to
say:
look,
here's
some
possibility.
Okay,
great,
we
know
we're
different.
C
C
How
are
we
going
to
have
productive
conversations
that
first
allow
us
to
safely
be
proud
of
who
we
are
safely
Express,
who
we
are
and
Express
what
we
need
to
feel
welcome
in
our
town
right
and
be
okay
with
the
disagreement,
but
the
respect
I
just
have
to
see
the
respect,
because
I
felt
uncomfortable
tonight,
I
felt
more
I
felt
more
uncomfortable,
because
I
saw
others
put
in
uncomfortable
situations
and
I,
don't
think
that's
necessary
when
we're
trying
to
make
a
point
I,
don't
think
it's
necessary
when
I
know
my
son's
watching
at
home
and
asking
me
through
texts
why
people's
being
angry,
because
we
don't
have
to
get
to
that
point,
we
love
each
other.
C
I
could
see
any
of
you
in
the
community,
and
I
will
jump
if
you
are
in
need
without
knowing
who
you
are
without
judging
any
aspect
of
what
you
do
where
you
come
from,
what
race
you
define
yourself
within
what
culture
I
will
be
there.
So
I
ask
for
kindness
through
this
process.
Unfortunately,
I.
Don't
necessarily
think
it
was
a
great
start
this
evening,
but
I
know
we're
capable
of
that,
because
I
also
know
if
I
was
outside
in
need.
Probably
every
single
one
of
you
would
be
there.
C
J
Thank
you,
mayor
I.
First
off
I
I
see
through
a
communication
that
we
have.
There
was
some
concern
about
releasing
this
report
and
I,
think
that
might
be
directed
towards
city
manager
and
then
maybe
Artful
life,
but
the.
H
J
Of
this
and
and
coming
up
to
this
very
beautiful
cultural
celebration
that
we
have,
which
is
Fiesta
and
what
what
are
the
concerns
in
regards
to
the
releasing
the
report?
Community
safety,
wise
I,
guess
you
might.
Q
Mr
Mayor
councilor
Garcia.
Thank
you
for
that
question.
Q
I
think
we've
seen
tonight
already
that
there
can
be
some
hot
tempers
around
what's
in
the
report,
what
it
stands
for
where
it
goes,
and
so
we
got
some
interesting
part
in
sort
of
working
in
a
process
whereby
the
governing
body
could
have
been
given
a
copy
today,
and
we
could
have
tried
to
provide
another
opportunity
for
our
polite
to
come
back
at
a
different
time
and
present
and
have
that
Community
conversation.
Q
J
Thank
you
and
I
know
when
you're
talking
about
things
that
are
very,
it
can
be
controversial
and
and
people
are
passionate
about.
Obviously,
we've
you've
felt
it.
We've
heard
it
tonight
in
this
chamber.
J
You
know
from
questions
that
are
being
asked
by
my
colleagues
here,
as
well
as
people
who
are
answering
the
questions
or
giving
their
dialogue
from
the
presenters,
and
so
you
know,
I
do
have
also
concerns
about
certain
things
in
you
know
in
lieu
of
time,
I'm
not
going
to
go
into
them
completely,
but
I
would
be
remiss
in
not
stating
the
fact
that
you
know
we've-
and
my
hope
is-
is
that
we
didn't
go
through
a
process
that
obviously
cost
us
a
lot
of
money
which
I
always
look
at
the
financial
aspect
of
things,
but
the
amount
of
time
and
effort
that
it
took
for
all
of
you
to
go
through
this
process.
J
Sometimes,
when
you
control
the
dialogue,
you
also
control
the
outcome
and
I'm
not
going
to
discredit
the
report,
but
at
the
same
time
I
want
to
make
sure
that
we
all
get
the
data
that
we
are
requesting
and
I
I'm
very
happy
to
hear
that
we
will
go
forward
and
continue
to
talk
about
this,
because
it
is
something
that's
very,
very,
very
close
to
so
many
people
in
our
community
and
and
just
listening
to
to
the
passion.
That's
come
out
throughout
this
whole
dialogue,
even
from
the
get-go.
J
You
know,
I
think
we
can't
miss
the
mark
on
this.
There's
not
just
one
answer.
I've
always
said
in
in
my
lifetime.
That
change
is
not
an
optional
event
happens.
We
have
to
understand
that
things
change,
but
we
also
can't
remember.
We
cannot
forget
where
we
came
from
and
it's
and
it's
a
question
that
is
so
important
for
everyone
to
have
a
seat
at
the
table
to
come
up
to
the
to
the
best
resolution.
J
And-
and
those
are
my
comments,
and
so
you
know,
I
hope
and
I
pray
that
coming
forth
into
this
next
couple
of
weeks
that
we
don't
have
any
kind
of
incidents,
because
we
do
need
to
be
respectful
towards
others.
But
at
the
same
time
we
also
have
to
be
able
to
speak
our
mind
and
and
see
how
we
feel,
because
that's
how
we
get
things
out
and
we
do
talk
about
things.
J
I
I
also
hope
that
in
the
future
that,
as
a
governing
body,
we
are
able
to
work
together
on
on
resolutions
that
build
his
community.
And
those
are
my
comments.
So
thank.
A
You
thank
you,
counselor
I
Echo,
your
sentiment
about
the
upcoming
Fiesta
celebration
and
the
importance
to
our
community
and
the
importance
of
having
kind
of
respect
and
empathy
that
councilor
Chavez
also
called
for
not
only
during
Fiesta
but
throughout
the
process.
So
thank
you
for
raising
that
any
other
comments.
This
time
we
will
figure
out
the
calendar,
we'll
get
the
schedule
right,
we'll
make
sure
nobody
feels
or
is
inconvenienced
or
interrupted.
A
That's
important
we'll
also
make
sure
that
there's
ample
time
for
great
discussion
and
and
digging
into
the
this
document
thoroughly
and
thoughtfully
and
early
preparation.
If
there
are
specific
things
that
can
be
gotten
to
council
members
ahead
of
time,
a
reference
to
a
survey
or
a
questionnaire
or
a
piece
of
data,
please
get
that
request
in,
as
you
already
may
already,
as
you
may
already
have
formulated
them
and,
and
that
way
you'll
get
your
material
early
Pauline
did
you
want
to
say
something
at
the
end
here.
E
That's
mayor,
Weber
counselors.
Thank
you
so
much
if
you
do
have
any
other
questions,
though,
please
coordinate
it
through
from
the
city
clerk's
office
and
myself
and
I'll
make
sure
we
answer
that
and
invite
Valerie.
For
final
part,
it's
not
the
end,
but
we
will
see
you.
N
Back
mayor
over
counselors,
thank
you
very
much.
We
take
all
that
feedback
just
three
things.
We
are
in
conversation
with
the
public
library
so
that
they
will
receive
the
information
and
any
member
of
the
public
eventually,
once
they
archive
the
materials
we'll
be
able
to
look
at
all
of
the
information
and
the
data
from
the
project.
So
that's
the
first
thing.
The
second
is
that
we
stand
by
the
report.
N
And
finally,
we
encourage
people
to
read
the
reconciliation
part
of
that
report,
because
santaans
demonstrated
over
and
over
again
that
they
understand
how
difficult
this
is,
that
they
know
that
it's
a
challenge
and
that
they're
committed
to
it
and
that
section
of
the
report,
while
acknowledging
that
we're
still
in
the
truth-telling
part
of
this
Santa
Fe,
is
commit
themselves
to
a
long
process
of
Truth
healing
and
Reconciliation
they're,
not
naive
about
it.
They
say
as
a
result
of
a
survey
that
it
is
going
to
take
years
and
years
and
that
they're
dedicated
to
the
process.
N
So
while
we
recognize
the
challenges
and
what
we've
experienced
and
what
others
have
experienced,
we
also
want
you
to
know
that
that
part
of
the
report
tells
you
what
Santa
Fe
and
have
to
say
about
their
commitment
to
this
long-term
process
that
you're
all
talking
about
they're,
not
shy
about
it
and
they're
willing
to
do
the
work
and
that's
why
we
really
believe
in
this
report
and
we
stand
by
it.
Thank
you.
A
Concludes
this
presentation,
it's
7,
15.
I,
would
entertain
a
motion
to
go
now
to
the
the
petitions
from
the
floor,
because
people
have
been
waiting
for
their
chance
to
speak
and
then
we'll
come
back
to
the
regular
order
of
business.
After
that.
K
A
A
Thank
you,
I
would
ask
everyone
to
not
talk
in
them
in
the
in
the
room,
so
we
can
move
forward
with
our
agenda.
They'll
be
if
you
do
need
to
have
a
conversation
which
I
appreciate
just
please
take
it
to
the
outside
area.
So
now
we
will
go
to
petitions
from
the
floor.
A
These
we
do
have
a
public
hearing
later
tonight.
So
if
your
intent
is
to
testify
about
the
public
hearing,
wait
for
that
time
before
you
testify,
if
you
want
to
speak
to
any
issue,
not
just
chart,
but
anything
on
your
mind
about
what
you
believe
the
governing
body
needs
to
hear
about.
Please
take
a
place
line
up
with
a
chance
to
come
up
to
the
podium
and
provide
us
with
your
name
and
your
comment
and
every
individual
will
have
an
opportunity
to
speak,
and
there
is
a
standard
two-minute
allocated
time.
A
We
also
Madam
clerk
I
assume
we
have
people
on
the
zoom
as
well,
who
want
to
speak
as
petitions
from
the
floor
we'll
do
them
after
we
take
care
of
people
in
the
room.
A
L
And
could
I
ask
one
thing
based
on
the
last
time
I
spoke:
everybody
was
going
a
few
seconds
over
the
two
minutes
and
they
were
letting
him
talk
in
here,
but
it
got
cut
off
immediately
on
the
zoom.
So
people
on
the
zoom
who
were
watching
out
of
the
YouTube
were
saying
what
were
people
saying
because
they
cut
off
the
last
30
seconds
or
so.
If
you
could
just
not
cut
that
off,
but
you
know
I
can
understand
and
I'll
stop
at
two
minutes.
Okay,.
L
Good
job
for
anybody
with
too
much
happiness
in
their
life,
but
my
my
name
is
Bob
White
I'd
like
to
express
my
condolences,
counselor
Castle,
it's
a
very
tough
time.
I
I'm
gonna
try
and
be
as
precise
I'm
going
to
do.
I've
already
marked
up
the
document
and
I
plan
on
sharing
that
with
everybody
on
the
council.
L
I
also
want
to
meet
with
my
two
counselors
at
their
convenience,
because
I
have
some
concerns
more
related
to
my
personal
interactions,
with
the
article
life
people
that
I'm
not
going
to
go
into
today,
but
I,
don't
know
whether
it
was
in
the
drafting
of
the
resolution
or
the
contract.
But
if
you
go
out
in
the
community
today,
one
year
out
from
this,
and
you
ask
people
what
is
chart,
have
you
heard
about
chart?
L
If
they,
if
they
know
they
will
say,
isn't
that
the
thing
where
they're
going
to
resolve
what
happens
with
the
Obelisk
or
The
Monuments?
That's
going
to
be
your
general
reaction
here.
We
are
a
quarter
of
a
million
dollars
one
year
later
and
the
two
choices
that
we're
given
I
guess:
Artful
life
has
left,
but
the
two
choices
that
were
given
were
either
put
the
Obelisk
back
up
or
put
something
else.
L
There
I
think
that's
what
we
started
with
those
were
the
two
options
that
were
there,
the
the
other
thing
I
asked
chart
immediately
and
then
later
I
emailed
the
mayor
before
y'all
have
any
discussion
on
the
Obelisk.
We
need
to
know
if
it
can
go
back
up,
it
may
not
be
able
to
go
back
up
and
that's
study.
A
structural
stability
study
has
to
be
done,
I'm
talking
as
fast
as
I.
L
Can
they
made
a
lot
of
recommendations
that
everybody
in
city,
government
and
any
organization
should
already
know
should
be
working
on
diversity
issues.
They
made
a
lot
of
recommendations
for
education,
but
as
far
as
I
can
tell,
they
don't
seem
to
know
that
rochesterness,
which
brings
20
to
30
000
school
kids
every
year
to
try
and
give
them
a
diverse
look
at
New,
Mexico
history,
I,
don't
think
they
were
included
and
those
are
just
at
two
minutes.
L
That's
all
I
can
say,
but
I
do
hope
to
speak
to
my
counselors
I
personally
felt
I
was
shut.
A
L
I
have
to
read
this
because
I
I
can't
do
it
in
two
minutes
otherwise,
mayor
in
councils.
It
sends
me
to
inform
you
that
you
pay
19
000
1
900
per
page
for
this
chart.
Report.
I
fully
understand
that,
because
you
paid
over
a
quarter
million
dollars
for
this
chart
report
that
some
of
you
will
praise
it
to
its
fullest
extent
possible.
After
all,
some
don't
want.
The
taxpayers
know
that
you
squandered
the
people's
tax
money
as
the
participant
in
the
chart.
I
can
tell
you
I
am
not.
L
It
is
not
at
The
Cutting
Edge
report,
but
it
is
a
full
non-verified
bias.
Non-Truth
hearsay
comments.
That
is
basically
what
it
is,
but
again
I
know.
In
order
for
you
to
say
face
you,
some
of
you
will
haphazardly
praise
the
counselors
you
approval
of
this
chart
project
was
to
assist
in
deciding
the
fate
of
the
Soldier's
monument
and
the
devarga
statue.
You
are
now
no
closer
to
accomplices
than
the
fifth
than
before
you
allocated
and
wasted
a
quarter
million
dollars
over
a
two
year
period.
L
All
that
has
been
done
is
passed
the
buck
to
a
later
time
and
more
studies
and,
of
course,
additional
waste
of
taxpayers.
Money
you'll
probably
come
up
when
you
commission
or
a
new
office.
If,
if
you
vote
to
replace
the
monument
with
the
European
type
water
fountain,
then
you
will
be
this
dishonoring
the
soldiers
who
fought
and
gave
their
wives
to
stop
slavery
here
in
New
Mexico
and
the
entire
country.
A
L
If
you
do
remove
it,
what
are
you
going
to
do
with
a
time
capsule
that
is
embedded
in
the
in
the
in
the
pedestal?
I
have
over
2
000
signatures
from
individuals
that
want
the
monument
restored
and
I
can
provide
that
to
you.
Please
do
not
disregard
their
voices
and
only
concentrate
on
this
chart.
This
Focus
chart
committee
that
you
wasted
the
taxpayers
money
on
people
want
to
know
how
you
to
stand
up
on
this
historical
issue.
Now
mayor
and
an
attorney,
the
attorney
should
have
known
that
those
monuments
that
the
monument
downtown
it's.
A
Thank
you,
sir.
Your
time
is
up.
Thank
you,
sir.
Thank
you,
sir.
Could
you
provide
your
name
for
the
record?
Please.
L
F
Stuff
to
get
my
one
of
my
main
thoughts
out
in
the
beginning
here,
I
personally,
as
a
newcomer,
I
came
in
1966
I'm
interested
in
history.
F
So
you
know
what
do
I
know
except
I,
have
a
Viewpoint
and
I
care
about
this
city,
and
I
also
would
like
to
see
some
version
of
that
Monument
put
back
up
if
it's
in
crumbling
bits.
That
might
be
an
effective
part
of
it.
But
I
do
firmly
believe
personally
that
that's
an
important
issue.
F
However,
even
more
important
is
what
many
of
you
touched
on
the
importance
of
finding
a
way
to
get
along
with
each
other,
and
you
as
city,
council,
members
and
staff,
have
an
opportunity
to
role
model
that
for
us
and
I
I
think
there
are
some
heated
arguments
or
heated
emotional
reactions,
sometimes
and
pretty
hefty
questioning
directed
at
the
folks
here
who
were
lined
up,
unlike
some
of
you,
I
did
participate
and
actually
I'm
not
going
to
go
into
any
personal
details,
but
a
couple
of
people
who
I
had
really
strong
disagreements
with
have
become
friends
now:
I'm
kind
of
fun
and
I'm
willing
to
work
on
it
and
I'm.
F
L
F
Thank
you
good
evening,
mayor
and
counselors.
My
name
is
Dr
Pauline,
Anaya
and
I'm
here
as
a
participant
citizen
of
the
chart
process,
like
many
Santa
fans
here,
were
descendants
of
the
century-old
indigenous
Spanish
population
who
gave
life
and
treasure
here
to
establish
a
civil
society
for
a
human
prosperity.
F
You
received
our
Collective
written
critique
of
the
charge
experience
a
couple
of
days
ago.
It
was,
it
was
an
in.
It
was
a
process
called
it
estimate,
talk,
estimate,
technique
or
a
Delphi
technique
that
is
shaped
by
critical
race
Theory
and
is
used
widely.
Therefore,
chart
was
not
a
democratic
process,
as
claimed
or
was
our
experience.
F
F
The
Santa
Fe
art
institute,
chart
partner
States
on
their
website
and
I.
Don't
know
if
you
all
know
this,
but
they
are
so.
They
support
Revolution
that
supports
Dynamic
artistic
practices
that
engage
complex
social
issues
that
promote
sites
of
resistance,
instances
of
Engagement
and
solidarity,
with
transformational
movements,
of
which
this
same
language
and
the
Lexicon
used
is
shaped
and
developed
in
the
chart
framework.
F
Santa
Fe
yard
Institute,
as
stated
on
their
website,
is
committed
to
The
Liberation
movement
in
the
U.S
and
around
the
world
using
art
or
social
change,
framed
by
Marxist
and
Paulo
ideology.
Today,
in
2022,
the
Santa
Fe
yard
Institute
does
not
refer
to
students
as
such,
but
as
Revolution
residents
of
the
2022,
whose
aim
is
to
revolutionize
the
status
quo
and
is,
as
is
charts
mission,
the
2023
Santa
Fe
Arts
Institute
residents
will
be
the
climate
change
schematic
residency
to
promote
climate
change
ideology.
F
E
A
H
F
There
is
hearsay
quoted
in
the
report
that
says
that
somebody
said
that
the
real
they
heard
somebody
say
the
only
real
history
started
when
the
Spanish
came
in
I.
Don't
think
any
of
us
is
stupid
enough
to
believe
that
that's
real
history
I
think
that
we're
wanting
the
truth
about
what
history
is
whatever
that
may
be,
so
to
say
that
we
feel
that
history
only
needs
to
be
The.
F
The
other
thing
I'd
like
to
point
out
is
that,
on
page
86
of
the
report
and
quoted
in
the
new
Mexican
newspaper,
it
summarized
that
the
results
of
this
of
the
chart
were
that
31
percent
wanted
it
restored
and
33
wanted.
It
replaced
truthfully
on
page
85.
If
you
look
at
the
those
that
wanted
the
monument
restored,
it's
a
total
of
54.62
percent
and
that
question
councilman
Garcia
that
question
that
you
asked
it
was
actually
Mrs.
Martinez
was
contradicting
herself,
because
that
is
actually
something
that
is
in
the
report
itself.
F
F
Let
me
tell
you
our
fiestas:
we
celebrate
real
reconciliation,
300
years
of
reconciliation,
and
you
guys
need
to
remember
and
respect
that
yeah
I'm,
passionate
I'm,
sorry
I
feel
like
people
have
come
in
here
and
tried
rewriting
and
making
me
feel
like.
I
need
to
be
embarrassed
about
being
a
Hispanic
person.
A
S
L
S
S
What
we
saw
with
the
destruction
by
a
Mob,
Of,
The
Soldier's
Monument,
was
nothing
less
than
a
big
lie.
That
soldier's
Monument
was
dedicated
to
the
memories
of
the
hispanos,
the
Mexicans
by
that
time,
not
Spanish
Colonials,
but
the
Mexicans
who
fought
and
died
at
the
Battle
of
goyada
pass
considered.
Probably
the
third
most
important
battle
of
the
Civil
War.
S
It's
part
of
the
chart
process
was
Zinnia.
This
mentioned
was
any
of
that
truth
discussed
no,
and
why
is
that?
Why
has
the
soldiers
Monument
memory
been
hijacked
to
be
a
symbol
of
colonialism
and
white
supremacy
when
the
colonial
Spanish
Colonial
period
had
long
passed,
and
these
were
not
Spanish
conquistadors
who
fought
and
died?
These
are
Mexican
Americans.
S
So
there
is
no
truth
in
this
chart
process.
As
far
as
the
truth
of
the
Soldier's
Monument
is
concerned,
so
one
of
the
things
that
has
not
been
discussed
is
the
fact
that
there
is
a
black
legend
that
has
been
300
years
now
against
Spain
and
Spanish
history,
and
that's
come
to
Santa
Fe
now,
unfortunately,
so
I
ask
you
to
learn
about
the
Spanish
black
Legend
and
learn
about
hispaniophobia
in
your
discussions
going
forward.
Thank
you.
Thank
you,
sir.
J
Good
evening
mayor
and
counselors,
oh
it's
been
a
long
time
since
I
stood
here
which
I
used
to
do
a
lot.
My
name
is
David
rash
and
I've
lived
in
Santa
Fe.
Half
my
life
for
30
years
and
I
was
your
historic
preservation.
Planner
for
15
years,
I
was
I
retired
from
government
employment
at
the
end
of
2018.
But,
more
importantly,
I
want
to
tell
you
about
what
happened
when
I
started
in
2003
in
the
land
use
department
and.
J
I
J
I
want
to
really
draw
my
attention
because
the
first
one
was
about
the
bias
history
at
the
bottom
of
page
34..
That
entire
page
needs
to
be
trashed
but,
more
importantly,
I
want
to
tell
you
about
the
Santa
Fe
Plaza
report,
the
Senate
Santa
Fe
Plaza
study,
which
this
governing
body
accepted
around
the
Year
2006,
and
there
is
a
copy
in
the
land
use
Department.
J
Santa
Fe,
Plaza,
study
and
I
want
to
tell
you
because
councilor
Rivera
brought
it
up
I'm,
aware
of
the
legalities
of
who
has
Authority
on
the
Plaza.
This
body
has
no
Authority
whatsoever
in
order
to
give
them
that
Authority
you'd
have
to
take
legal
action
to
change
the
land
use
development
code.
Now
what
I
remember
from
the
2006
report?
I
could
be
wrong,
but
working
here
until
2018
I
know
of
no
legal
changes
and
I.
Don't
think
you
took
any
sense,
then
I'm
going
to
lay
it
out
quickly.
J
The
land
is
federally
listed
as
a
landmark.
The
city
owns
the
land.
That's
why
you
have
police
Authority,
that's
why
you
have
to
maintain
it.
The
state
owns
the
monument,
the
legal
jurisdiction
on
what
to
do
with
that
rests
with
the
state,
not
the
city,
the
cprc
and
the
only
legal
Authority
in
the
city
is
the
H
board
that
can
give
it
a
recommendation.
L
Well,
I
wasn't
planning
to
talk.
My
name's
Ori
Dominguez
I
gave
your
secretary.
My
card
I
also
have
a
website
nmhcpl.org
and
in
it
there
I
have
a
PDF
with
a
timeline
of
the
Vargas,
and
so,
if
you
want
to
put
the
Vargas
in
context,
you
have
that
timeline
to
do
it.
Also,
here
on
page
86
of
this
chart
report,
it
says
ReStore
in
the
monument
they
like
to
restore
the
monument
with
contextual
signage
that
will
promote,
should
truth
healing
and
Reconciliation
I
noticed.
L
A
F
Good
evening,
I'm,
Terry,
Rivera
and
I
have
I
am
a
lifelong
resident
of
Santa,
Fe
and
I.
Think
Carol
can
attest
to
this.
When
house
Serbia
Advanced
said
that
we
should
be
active,
I
have
been
active.
All
my
life
I
have
been
a
member
of
the
state
and
County
Central
Committee
of
the
democratic
party
for
over
six
years.
I
was
a
member
of
the
board
of
directors
and
president
of
the
board
of
directors
for.
F
F
I
want
you
to
remember
that
that
monument
that
I
think
this
has
come
about
it
because
of
the
monument
in
the
plaza.
You
have
to
remember
that
it
was
for
the
soldiers
that
bought
it
in
the
civil
war
against
the
South
to
preach
the
black
people,
our
brothers,
the
black
people.
If
you
are
in
favor
of
ending
slavery,
then
you
will
honor
that
not
the
replacement
but
bringing
back
our
monument
that
honors
the
soldiers
that
fought
so
hard
to
end
slavery
for
our
black
people.
F
N
E
F
K
E
F
Can
okay,
great
Stephanie,
benonato
I
just
want
to
say
something
more
personal
to
me.
I
have
asked
Mr
Blair
Mr
Food
to
meet
together
with
me
about
LAX
inspections
and
varying
methods
of
measuring
the
same
type
of
structures
that
are
adversely
affecting
my
property
and
just
as
a
point,
I
wondered
and
sort
of,
but
wonder
if
New
York
Deli
was
asking
to
dispense
cannabis
if
you
would
consider
a
waiver
as
opposed
to
them
serving
alcohol
I.
F
F
A
lot
of
them
are
pretty
General
and
again,
I
agree
with
a
lot
of
people
that
they
feel
the
trade
innocence,
that
the
Obelisk
and
other
specific
monuments
or
statutes
were
not
addressed,
and
really
what
I
heard
is
that
they
took
the
data.
T
F
Many
people
and
then
shifted
through
it
and
interpreted
it
for
the
community
table
and
then
they
and
the
in
our
polite
crafted
the
recommendations
and
asked
them
to
respond.
I
think
that's
a
little
bit
different
than
every
voice
being
heard,
and
also
my
biggest
concern
is
not
only
people
who
participated
but
read
about
people
who
didn't
participate.
You
heard
a
lot
about
how
unhappy
people
were.
How
are
you
going
to
bring
the
people
in
who
didn't
even
participate?
Thank
you.
K
F
D
F
The
gentleman
here
that
spoke
with
the
salmon
colored
shirt
about
land
use
I've
been
a
bullhorn
for
the
last
couple
of
years.
Talking
about
the
fact
that
the
city
did
not
does
not
have
jurisdiction
over
the
monument
I
was
a
participant
online
for
one
of
the
first
chart
interactions,
I.
E
E
F
Thank
you.
Thank
you.
This
is
already
impersonal
at
this
point.
Looping
I've
been
doing
a
lot
of
traveling
working
on
a
project,
lifting
New
Mexico
black
history,
so
I
just
happened
to
be
in
town
and
I.
Try
to
get
on
these
meetings
because
Santa
Fe
is
where
I
live,
but
I've
been
doing
a
lot
of
traveling
with
this
project.
F
Oh
boy,
I'm,
trying
not
to
get
emotional.
Let
me
tell
you
when
I
participated
in
January
I
was
in
Las
Cruces,
looking
at
a
museum
inspiration
by
artists
that
were
taking
the
intellectual
property
of
the
historian,
I
work
for
and
that's
just
the
beginning.
It
is
just
really
unfortunate
that
the
pandemic
allowed
a
place
for
people
to
instigate
division
in
our
city.
The
city
of
Santa
Fe
does
not
have
jurisdiction
over
that
legal
survey.
F
A
F
Okay,
so
and
I'm,
just
going
to
finish
up
with
Char
I,
had
a
horrible
experience.
There
were
four
people
that
were
employed
by
chart
and
they
were
not
going
to
introduce
themselves
and
I
had
to
remind
them
that
if
we
were
all
in
person
and
in
a
circle,
they
would
have
to
introduce
themselves
and
this
thing
about
trying
to
make
local
hispanos
the
bad
guys
right
now
in
our
city.
It's
just
it's
absurd.
It's
it's
absurd
and
I'm
really
really
disappointed.
F
A
A
A
I
think
that
is
the
petitions
from
the
floor.
We'll
go
back
to
our
original
agenda.
I
propose
we
take
a
10
minute
break
and
resume
at
eight
o'clock.
If
everybody's
amenable
to
that,
thank
you.
A
No,
let's
get
back
into
order.
It's
about
five
after
eight
As
We,
Begin,
Again
and
Madam
Clerk
I
think
we're
back
to
our
regular
order,
which
means
we're
taking
up
items
that
were
removed
from
the
consent
agenda
and
I
believe
that
we
start
with
item
k.
L
Yes,
sir,
thank
you
mayor,
so
this
has
been
through
a
few
committees.
We've
had
a
few
amendments
which.
Q
L
In
your
packet,
I'll
also
go
through
the
red
line,
so
that
I
know
I
know
in
the
amendment
form
it's
a
little
difficult
to
understand
and
see
how
it
integrates
into
the
actual
document
itself.
So
I'll
go
over
that.
L
L
L
The
main
focus
of
them
were
changes
to
how
the
agenda
is
presented,
so
first
off
we're
taking
approval
of
minutes
and
putting
it
under
the
consent
agenda,
which
is
the
same
as
what's
done
at
governing
body.
We're
also
adding
a
statement
about
what
else
goes
under
consent,
which
is
there
are
items
that
about
which
the
presiding
officer
does
not
anticipate
discussion.
L
We
move
down
the
discussion.
We
have
the
answer,
the
antonym
of
that
which
is
items
about
which
the
presiding
officer
anticipates
the
discussion,
so
that
could
be
something
that's
maybe
controversial,
something
that
they
just
want
to
talk
about,
or
that
there's
going
to
be
lots
of
discussion.
In
addition
to
that,
we
are
adding
in
items
for
which,
at
the
time
the
agenda
is
published,
a
written
amendment
has
been
included
in
the
packet
that
either
has
not
been
voted
on
during
a
previous
Council
committee
or
has
been
voted
against
during
all
previous
Council
committees.
L
Then
we
also
added
in
matters
from
staff
Matters
from
the
committee
and
Matters
from
chair,
which
are
all
existing
sections
or
committees.
We
move.
L
L
About
amendments,
so
if
an
amendment
is
added
to
a
packet
after
the
publication
of
the
agenda,
then
the
committee
will
move
that
item
from
the
consent
agenda
to
the
discussion
agenda
so
that
it
can
be
talked
about
and
I
believe
that
those
are
the
amendments
that
were
approved
at
previous
committees,
I
I'll.
We
can
discuss
that
and
then
we
can
counselor
has
some
amendments
as
well,
so
we
can
I
can
go
through
those
as
well.
Thank.
A
We
have
a
motion.
We
have
a
second
I.
We
have
in
addition
to
the
point
you
just
made
about
councilwoman
Burrell
having
amendments.
Let
me
just
give
the
floor
to
River
of
the
sponsors
want
to
begin
by
describing
the
the.
A
D
Okay,
thank
you.
Mr
Mayor,
I've,
apparently
drawn
the
Short
Straw
and
we'll
be
providing
the
context,
as
you
are
all
familiar.
Councilwoman
Romero
worth
counselor,
beta
and
I
had
started
the
process
of
taking
a
look
at
the
governing
body
procedures
and
how
we
conduct
our
meetings
and
some
of
the
processes
and
procedures
that
go
into
there.
The
natural
progression
was
then
to
start
looking
at
the
committee
meetings.
D
D
Some
of
these
changes
are
really
just
a
natural
progression
from
the
governing
body
changes
some
things
that
that
were
changing
those
procedural
rules,
a
necessitated
change
at
the
committee
level
as
well,
and
this
one's
actually
pretty
simple
and
this
one's
not
nearly
as
as
much
of
a
heavy
lift
and
that,
as
I
have
mentioned,
we
will
next
start
to
look
at
the
advisory
committees
and
and
the
rest
of
the
procedures
within
within
committees
in
our
city.
So
we'll
just
keep
trucking
along
here
did
I
miss
anything
all
right.
J
A
R
Yet
two
thank
you,
mayor,
no
I'm
just
lining
them
up,
I,
just
love
how
Prime
gov
works
so
easily
for
us
all
right.
So
these
aren't
new
amendments.
We
talked
about
them
in
committee
a
couple
times
and
I
think
it
was
just
trying
to
add
the
correct
language.
So
people
understand
what
I
was
trying
to
change.
One
of
them
was
the
time
frame
that
we
have
to
let
staff
and
the
chair
know
if
we're
going
to
pull
anything
off
of
the
off
of
the
agenda,
which
we
all
know
is
important.
R
What
I
did
want
to
change
is
instead
of
having
required
four
hours
like
we
do
now
with
the
governing
body
that
it's
less,
because
some
of
us
that
have
other
jobs
and
also
serve
on
multiple
committees
have
questions
that
we
want
to
get
from
staff,
and
sometimes
we
don't
get
them
all
the
time,
just
because
everybody's
busy,
and
also
some
of
us
have
to
transition
from
one
job
to
the
next.
R
So
I
requested
I
had
initially
wanted
to
say
two
hours
in
advance
and
I
came
to
a
middle
ground
with
my
colleagues
to
change
it
to
three
so
that
we
have.
We
have
to
let
the
chairs
know
or
the
chair
and
the
staff
person
know
that
we
will
be
pulling
an
item
at
least
three
hours
before
the
meeting
starts.
So
that
was
one
change.
R
The
other
change
was
just
about
making
sure
for
this
area
for
the
section
for
debate
and
recognizing
people
that
have
an
item
that
want
to
speak,
even
if
they're,
not
on
that
committee.
So
essentially
it's
allowing
for
Jesse
I
wish
I
had
the
red
line.
I
agree
with
counselor
Lindell.
It's
always
good
to
have
bread
lines.
Can
you
oh.
R
So
the
added
language
on
that
debate
section
is
if,
if
the
sponsor
is
not
a
member
of
the
council
committee,
the
sponsor
may
speak
first
on
the
item
and
then
the
other
one
that
I
added
that
didn't
I
didn't
get
get
it
right
in
committee,
but
we
tweaked
the
language
and
it's
committees
may
discuss
an
item
listed
on
the
agenda
before
making
main
motion
before
making
a
main
motion
regarding
the
disposition
of
the
item.
I
just
feel
like
when
we're
at
the
committee
level.
R
R
The
one
thing
I
didn't
see
in
there
that
we
talked
about
okay,
the
other
piece
that
we
were
we
were
contemplating,
but
we
never
came
up
with
the
Resolute
or
an
idea
of
if
this
was
a
needed
or
not.
It's
related
to
the
duties
and
powers
of
the
presiding
officer.
There's
there's
old
language
that
that
represents
that
the
presiding
officer
of
a
committee
will
represent
the
council
Committee
in
public
and
they
will
speak
and
act
on
behalf
of
the
council
committee.
R
I
never
have
had
an
I
couldn't
get
an
example
of
what
that
meant,
so
I
think
actually
representing
us,
a
presiding
officer
does
represent
us
and
I
think
it
only
really
needs
to
say.
Is
they
represent
the
council
Committee
in
public?
R
A
Is
there
a
discussion
about
the
Amendments
that
are
on
this
sheet,
that
we
have
yeah,
we'll
start
with
counselor
Lindell
and
then
we'll
go
to
you?
Counselor
Garcia.
H
Thank
you
mayor.
The
one
question
that
I
have
here
that
I'm
not
clear
about
is
what
is
the
purpose
of
inserting
the
committee
members
may
discuss
an
item
listed
on
the
agenda
before
making
a
main
motion
regarding
the
disposition
of
the
item.
That's
that's
seems
not
how
we
do
it
in
Council
now
we
start
with
emotion,
and
then
we
go
into
discussion.
R
Thanks
for
the
question,
we
actually
do
that
in
the
governing
body
meetings,
but
we
don't
do
that.
At
the
committee
level,
we
don't
put
down
motions
and
seconds
for
items
that
we're
first
hearing,
we
talk
about
them
and
then
people
make
motions.
But
the
reason
why
this
language
was
added
is
because
currently
Robert's
Rules.
R
B
I
think
you
know
the
way
we
do
it
here,
where
you
make
a
motion
before
and
then
have
discussion
and
the
way
Robert's
Rules
does
it
doesn't
necessarily
mean
the
motion
is
going
to
pass
right
so
I
understand
what
councilwoman
Villarreal
is
saying
is
that
she
she
would
rather
not
have.
She
would
rather
have
discussion
before
there's
any
motion
for
action,
but
even
if
you
were
to
leave
it
the
way
Robert's
Rules
does
it,
which
is
to
make
a
motion
and
then
have
discussion.
B
Even
if
the
motion
you
after
discussion,
you
later
decide,
you
don't
like,
you
can
always
withdraw
it
or
vote
it
down.
So
it's
not
I
think
this
idea
that
it's
somehow
locking
you
in
to
a
Direction
is
not
necessarily
true.
Now
I
mean
I.
Think
if
we
want
to
do
it
differently
at
the
committee
level,
then
we
do
it
here
at
governing
body
and
that's
what
the
group
wants
to
do.
B
I
think
it's
fine,
but
I,
don't
think
anybody
should
think
that
by
making
a
motion
first
and
then
having
discussion,
you
are
wed
to
that
motion
because
you
can
always
withdraw
it.
You
can
always
adjust
it,
you
can
always
vote
it
down
and
then
make
a
new
motion
based
on
what
the
conversation
has
been
about.
M
Thank
you,
Mr
Mayor.
My
question
was
not
on
the
topic,
but
all
respond
to
that,
because
I
do
believe
it
does
lock
you
in
for
an
example.
If
I
make
a
motion
on
something
in
councilwoman,
Bria
rail
makes
a
motion
and
then
after
discussion,
I,
say
you're
right,
I,
don't
like
that
motion.
After
all,
I
withdraw
my
motion.
O
Counselor
I
just
want
to
make
one
clarification.
We
do
have
a
practice
of
withdrawing
motions.
It's
actually
inconsistent
with
Robert's
roles.
We're
supposed
to
vote
it
down,
so
just
just
as
a
and
practices
are
fine
until
they're
challenged
right.
So
we've
talked
about
that
Customs,
but
just
just
I
don't
want
anyone
to
say.
You
never
told
us
that
we've
talked
about
this
I
just
want
to
just
alert
folks
that
that's
the
case.
O
We
absolutely
have
a
custom
of
doing
that
and
and
Customs
are
allowed
until
they're
challenged,
and
then
we
have
Tyler
Roberts
rules
unless
we
have
a
deviating
rule.
So
I
think
this
amendment
I
also
just
wanted
to
mention
it
doesn't
require
that
you
not.
O
M
A
couple
of
seconds
no
I
appreciate
that
and
I
think
that's
where
clarifying
these
rules
helps
us.
You
know
to
break
a
custom
and
well
we've
done
it
this
way,
but
so
thank
you
for
and
I
appreciate
that,
and
that
was
the
second
point
to
it.
If
it
doesn't
prohibit
us
from
immediately
making
a
motion
as
well
as
we
would
in
governing
body.
So
there's
that
my
question
is
more
so
and
or
councilwoman
Brio's
amendments
in
regards
to
pulling
from
consent.
M
I
know
that
for
governing
body,
if
we
don't
meet
the
mark,
the
four-hour
Mark
or
whatever
it
is
that
doesn't
prohibit
us
from
pulling
an
item.
It
just
means
that
the
staff
person
may
or
may
not
be
there.
Does
that
carry
true
in
this?
Okay
just
wanted
to
make
sure
just
because
for
as
you
noted,
there
are
going
to
be
instances
where
life
happens
and
we
don't
miss
it
that
four
minute
or
four
hour
or
three
hour.
M
A
G
Chair
of
a
couple
committees-
probably
Public
Works
in
the
largest
I,
would
prefer
to
follow
the
amendment
and
I
think
that's
what
we
had
talked
about
during
one
of
the
Committees.
Is
you
want
your
discussion
as
Council
Garcia
said
to
happen
at
the
committee
level
so
that
when.
I
G
I
B
B
You
can
always
vote
emotion
down
if
the
discussion
sends
you
in
a
direction
where
it's
you
know,
after
the
discussion
you're
like
oh,
we
don't
we
misunderstood
what
this
whatever
is,
and
we
don't
want
to
do
that.
But
we
have
the
motion
on
the
table
perhaps
and
if,
if
we
don't
all
agree,
then
we
vote
it
down
or
if
there's
a
split
the
majority
rules,
so
I,
don't
I,
don't
think
it
you
can
do
it
either
way.
I
guess
is
the
point,
so
I
don't
really
care
which
way
we
do
it.
S
J
I
think
that
the
amendment
does
make
sense
in
regards
to
once
you've
made
a
motion
you're
making
a
motion
to
approve,
and
then
you
have
to
take
an
extra
vote
and
then
it's
just
extra
stuff,
so
it
does
make
sense
and
so
I
I
would
support
you.
Man.
Thank
you.
Thank
you.
A
Any
other
takers,
nice,
licks,
I
I-
think
what
I
take
away.
Is
that
there's
both
in
the
points
made
by
counselor
Michael
Garcia
about
yes,
we'd
prefer
to
get
the
notification
sooner
rather
than
later,
but
we
don't
prohibit
you
from
doing
something
if
you're
you're
occupied
and
it
comes
to
you
too
lately
we
accept
that,
and
the
same
is
true
about
the
discussion.
Vis-A-Vis,
the
process
of
making
a
motion
or
not
I
I'm,
still
moved
by
counselor
Chavez's
speech
earlier
this
evening
about
how
we
treat
each
other
I
think.
A
C
A
D
A
It's
also
in
the
Golden
Rule,
which
comes
at
the
beginning
of
all
of
these
rules.
Any
other
discussion
before
we
vote
on
the
amendment.
K
A
A
K
Yes,
councilor
Lee
Garcia.
I
E
K
A
K
At
the
resolutions
sponsored
by
Council
councilwoman
Bia,
real
counselor,
Michael
Garcia
and
counselor
Chavez,
it's
a
resolution
advancing
complete
streets
as
a
proven
countermeasure
to
provide
safer
and
more
affordable,
Transportation
improvements
in
the
Santa
Fe
Metropolitan
planning
area,
while
reducing
the
impacts
of
climate
change
and
aragoni.
Our
transportation
planner
is
available
for
this
item.
A
A
A
L
L
In
where
we
are
today
and
where
this
is
coming
in
2007,
the
Santa
Fe,
mpo
or
Metropolitan
planning
organization,
which
is
a
transportation
planning
organization
that
provides
support
for
the
county,
the
city,
public
and
the
state
of
New
Mexico
adopted
a
complete
resolution
since
2007
the
evolution.
If
you
want
to
call
it
that
nationally
of
a
recognition
of
complete
streets
has
grown
considerably
now
in
the
resolution,
what
we
strategically
and
intended
to
do
is
really
reflect
on
the
beta
campus
facts
over
the
last
several
years.
L
To
add
a
little
bit
of
more
context
over
the
course
of
over
just
over
a
year
when
counselor
Passat
reached
out
to
us
at
the
mpo
to
consider
updating,
said
resolution,
we've
brought
this
to
the
bicycle
pedestrian
advisory
committee
for
their
deliberation
and
review
at
least
twice
coming
back
with
pretty
subsequent
comments
from
that
group.
We're
grateful
for
doing
that.
We
then
went
back
to
the
TCC,
which
is
the
mpo
technical,
Coordinating
Committee
for
their
technical
review,
as
well
as
the
policy
board
almost
twice
again
with
substitutive,
and
really
informed
thoughtful
comments.
L
A
H
Thank
you.
Thank
you.
So,
on
page
four
in
the
first
be
it
further
resolved
it
talks
about
and
other
instances
involving
a
potential
change
to
the
design
of
any
Street
shall
be
reviewed
for
compliance
with
the
complete
Street
design
standards.
H
Now
clearly
enough
in
Santa
Fe,
we
have
some
streets
that
are
little
more
than
I
was
going
to
say,
goat
paths,
maybe
cow
pass,
but
certainly
in
some
neighborhoods
near
me
I
think
that
if
those
streets
were
being
redone
in
order
for
them
to
comply
with
complete
streets,
it
would
add
infinite
amount
of
money
to
getting
that
project
done.
So
is
this
resolution
committing
us
that
when
we
do
redesign
or
work
on
streets
like
that
that
we
are
committed
to
using
the
complete
Street
design
standards.
H
L
Council
that
language
is
not
intended
to
provide
or
or
mandate
follow
everything
for
every
particular
Road.
When
it
talks
about
review
for
compliance,
could
you
speak
into
the
mic?
Please
well,
yeah,
sorry!
So
when
it
speaks
to
review
to.
L
This
better,
okay,
sorry,
so
the
the
intent
is
to
review
for
compliance
is
that
it's
not
and
I've
worked
through
discussions
with
Public
Works,
director,
wheeler
II
and
chair
of
you.
This
is
not
an
Unwritten
mandate
that
every
particular
roadway
or
street
is
going
to
be
subject
to
this.
But
the
review
will
look
at
the
opportunity
for
the
city
to
take
advantage
of
what
could
be
what
our
approving
countermeasures
is
from
dictated
and
articulated
by
codes
and
regulations
and
guidance.
So
I
hope
that
might
alleviate
that.
L
A
H
A
Like
I
appreciate
your
being
here
and
I'm,
a
big
fan
of
Transportation
as
a
significant
through
line
for
how
we
live
and
how
we
live
safer
and
better,
are
you
familiar
with
the
vision,
zero
program?
That's
in
cities
around
America
designed
to
commit
communities
to
pedestrian
safety.
A
Correct
I'm
wondering
if
you
have
any
I'm
a
big
fan
of
that
that
approach
to
thinking
strategically
about
achieving
zero
pedestrian
deaths
through
a
variety
of
approaches
designed
to
put
an
emphasis,
probably
in
a
complementary
way,
to
the
complete
streets.
Thinking
for
the
design
of
our
physical
infrastructure.
A
Could
you
take
this
opportunity,
while
we're
looking
at
this
item
to
just
spend
a
minute
on
the
vision,
zero
approach
to
pedestrian
safety?
Since
you
mentioned
in
your
opening
remarks,
just
how
fundamentally
bad
our
state
record
is
when
it
comes
to
this
issue.
F
L
And
review
of
Vision
zero
initiatives
and
policies
over
the
last
a
decade
or
so
is
that
there
ought
to
be
in
place
systemic
sort
of
understanding
of
the
contributions,
the
factors
of
the
complexity
of
crashes,
preventable
crashes,
one
of
them
being
roadway
design,
not
all
of
those
factors.
What
I
appreciate
about
Vision
zero
is
that
communities
that
have
adopted
it
really
have
selected
to
take
a
look
at
the
really
difficult
systemic.
L
L
So
I'm
a
big
fan
of
vision,
zero,
but
if
the
city
or
any
particular
Community
does
not
have
a
commitment
to
systemic
changes,
it
is
sort
of
the
whitewashing
of
transportation.
Planning.
To
be
honest,
I
would
not
want
to
do
that
to
this
community
is
commit
to
a
unreasonable
goal
when
we
have
a
lot
of
work
to
do.
A
Any
other
discussion
of
the
of
the
motion
on
the
floor.
K
Ing
down
yes,
councilwoman
Via
Real!
Yes,
those
are
cassette.
Yes,
I'm!
Sorry
Chavez!
Yes,
those
are
Lee
Garcia.
Yes,
that's
for
Michael
Garcia!
Yes,
mayor
Weber,.
A
A
Thank
you,
Madam
clerk
item.
M
was
taken
off
of
consent.
K
Oh
yes,
mayor
a
resolution,
Rivera
and
casilla.
This
resolution
is
sponsored
by
mayor
Weber,
councilor,
Lindell,
counselor,
cassette
councilwoman,
Villarreal,
counselor,
Chavez,
counselor,
Michael,
Garcia
and
Council
Romero
worth
the
resolution
supporting
legislation
in
the
United
States
of
America
and
the
state
of
New
Mexico
to
protect
the
right
to
a
safe
abortion
and
Andrea
Salazar.
Our
assistant,
City
attorney,
is
available
for
this
item.
Let.
A
The
motion
to
approve
and
there's
a
second
councilor-
you
want
to
give
us
a
quick
overview
about
what
this
says
before
I
turn
to
the
two
counselors
who
asked
to
have
it
taken
off
of
consent.
E
E
Mayor
counselors,
this
resolution
is
to
support
reproductive
Justice.
It.
E
A
Let
me
answer
Garcia
counselor
there
who
wants
to
take
that
counselor
Garcia.
You
want
to
go
first,
counselor,
Lee
Garcia!
Thank
you
mayor.
You
got
it.
J
So
when
reading
the
caption
and
then
understanding
the
position
you
know
taking
taking
this
under
the
recommendation
of
the
governing
body,
who
is
really
a
nonpartisan
group,
it
seems
to
be
very
somewhat
partisan
in
its
direction
and
so
I
I
felt.
That
is
not
something
that
I
could
support.
J
It's
something
that
is
out
of
sight
out
of
what
I
believe,
but
at
the
same
time
that
shouldn't
come
to
this
body.
So
that's
why
I
pulled
it.
I
wanted
it
to
be
off
of
consent,
so
I
can
actually
have
my
point
of
view
and
be
able
to
not
just
approve
it.
Q
G
Thank
you
I
also,
you
know,
respect
everyone's
opinion
on
this
board
and
or
on
this
Council
and
I
know.
Many
of
you
have
signed
on
as
a
co-sponsor
to
this,
but
in,
in
my
opinion,
I'm
not
really
sure
why
we're
doing
it
I
think
the
state
has
affirmed
their
position
on
this
matter,
which
was
in
the
paper
today
with
10
million
dollars
going
to
Dona
Ana
County
for
Reproductive
Services
down
there,
including
abortion,
so
not
real
sure
why
why
we're
looking
at
this?
A
You
counselor
others
on
on
the
governing
body.
Looking
for
hands,
you
have
before.
D
Thank
you
so
much
Mr,
Mayor
and
I
understand
the
Viewpoint
of
both
the
counselors
who
feel
that
this
is
not
in
the
purview
and
it
is
not
in
our
jurisdiction.
You
know
we
do
not
have
the
say
here,
but
I
do
want
to
speak
to
the
importance
of
of
this
resolution
and
of
this
statement.
D
I
think
the
overturning
of
row
shows
that
this
is
not
something
that
we
can
take
for
granted
that
the
access
to
this
important
Health
Care
for
Women
is
something
that
is
solidified
until
it
is
codified.
D
I
personally
believe
that
abortion
shows
up
maybe
three
times
on
my
medical
record
they're
under
the
terms
spontaneous
abortion,
which
is
a
fun
term
for
miscarriage,
there's
also
a
missed
abortion,
which
is
a
miscarriage
that
my
body
did
not
expel
in
October
of
2020.
D
I
did
have
to
take
medication
because
my
body
did
not
recognize
that
the
pregnancy
I
was
carrying
was
no
longer
viable.
There
was
no
longer
heartbeat
and,
while
I
waited
for
my
body
to
recognize
this
and
take
care
of
it,
it
did
not
I.
At
the
time,
New
Mexico
still
had
a
lot
on
the
books
that
abortion
was
not
legal
and
so
I
remember
sitting
there
while
you're.
You
know
it's
really
really
a
challenging
experience.
You're
monitoring,
you
know
how
much
am
I
bleeding
do.
I
need
to
go
to
the
hospital
am
I
hemorrhaging.
D
I
mean
it's
just
the
way
that
we
talk
about
reproduction
for
women
and
and
the
amount
of
emotions
and
the
misplaced
guilt,
and
shame
that
women
feel
around
reproduction.
D
It
I
it's
deep.
It
is
very
deep
and
it
is.
It
is
something
that
should
be
between
a
woman
and
her
medical
provider
and
so
making
sure
that
women
have
the
right
to
control
their
reproductive
Destiny
as
much
as
possible
to
me
is
extremely
crucial.
D
I
think.
The
other
piece
for
this
is
this
broader
concept
around
a
woman's
right
to
personhood,
and-
and
this
is
a
larger
conversation
and-
and
you
know,
abortion
for
me-
is-
is
the
beginning
or
not
not
the
beginning
and
end
of
this
conversation.
It
has
to
do
with
what
it
is
like
to
operate
in
the
world
as
a
woman,
and
that
it
is
not
the
same
and
the
fact
that
the
many
women
have
a
lot
of
fear
around.
D
I
really
feel
that
any
platform
that
we
can
use
to
elevate
both
this
discussion
and
so
much
that
surrounds
it,
and
this
just
scratches
the
surface.
These
few
words
that
I
have
sat
around
some
of
the
challenges
that
women
face.
D
We
could
have
discussions
for
hours
on
end
and
I
know
that
it
is
a
challenging
topic
for
for
many
people
and
I
appreciate
the
you
know
the
conversation
here,
but
that
is
why
I
signed
out
of
the
co-sponsor
and
we'll
be
emphatically
voting,
yes
and
in
favor
of
this
resolution.
Thank
you.
H
H
H
Her
poem,
eight
reasons
to
stand
up
today
against
abortion
bans
in
the
United
States
Norman
explained
number
one
when
the
penalty
for
rape
is
less
than
the
penalty
for
abortion
after
the
rape.
You
know
this
isn't
about
caring
for
women
and
girls.
It
about
controlling
them
number
two
through
forcing
them
into
motherhood
before
they're
ready.
These
bands
steadily
sustained
the
patriarchy,
but
also
trained
families
in
poverty
and
maintain
economic
inequality.
H
H
Number
five
fight
to
keep
Row
versus
Wade
Alive
by
the
term,
overturned
Roe
v
Wade.
The
main
concern
is
that
the
Supreme
Court
will
let
States
thwart
a
woman's
path
to
abortion
with
undue
burdens.
Number
six.
One
thing
is
true,
and
certain
these
predictions
aren't
a
distortion,
hypothetical
or
theoretical.
H
H
Despite
what
you
may
hear
this
right
here
isn't
only
about
women
and
girls.
This
fight
is
about
fundamental
civil
rights.
Women
are
a
big
part
of
it,
but
at
the
heart
of
it,
our
freedom
over
how
fast
our
families
grow
goes
farther
and
larger
than
any
one
of
us.
It's
about
every
single
one
of
us
number.
Eight.
H
E
B
Thank
you
mayor,
so
I
just
want
to
read
the
first
now,
therefore,
be
it
resolved
by
the
governing
body
of
the
city
of
Santa
Fe
that
the
governing
body
hereby
supports
legislation
that
would
codify
the
rate
the
right
to
Safe
abortion
into
law
and
urges
the
state
and
federal
governments
to
take
immediate
action
to
pass
legislation
to
this
effect.
So
what
we're
asking
for
is
for
the
State
Legislature
pass
a
law
that
says
there's
a
right
to
Safe
abortion
in
the
state
of
New
Mexico.
B
What
we're
asking
of
the
federal
government
is
that
Congress
being
the
U.S
House
of
Representatives
in
the
U.S
Senate,
do
the
same
that
they
pass
Federal
legislation
that
says
there's
a
right
to
Safe
abortion.
We
do
this
all
the
time.
As
a
city
council,
we
pass
resolutions
that
in
support
of
legislation,
we
ask
our
federal
delegation
and
our
state
delegation
to
pass
laws,
and
what
we're
doing
here
is
exactly
the
same
thing.
We
would
like
to
see
a
law
in
our
Statute
in
our
federal
laws
that
says,
there's
a
right
to
Safe
abortion.
R
Thank
you,
mayor
just
wanted
to
state
that
access
to
abortion
is
nonpartisan.
It
actually
applies
to
all
of
us
and
our
families
and
I
really
appreciate
that.
My
colleague
shares
a
personal
story
that
was
really
challenging
to
have
to
deal
with
at
the
moment
and
still
we
live
the
trauma
when
you
have
to
talk
about
it.
R
This
is
a
really
just
something
that
we've
always
stressed,
but
now
it's
just
even
more
prominent
because
of
the
Dobbs
decision.
So
I
think
that,
although
some
people
might
say
this
resolution
is
symbolic,
it
does
carry
weight
in
showing
that
we
do
support
that.
We
need
to
be
doing
something
at
a
level
that
does
affect
us
personally
and
the
members
of
the
city
of
Santa,
Fe
and
also
I,
want
to
say
this
is
not
just
a
woman's
issue.
I
was
just
overhearing,
my
colleague,
well
you're,
a
woman.
You
should
speak.
R
A
You
I
will
point
that
I
was
the
original
sponsor,
not
the
co-sponsor
any
other
voices
to
be
heard
at
the
moment.
Counselor
Michael
Garcia.
M
Mr
Marinette
the
urgent,
a
councilwoman
I
signed
on
because
I
believe
it's
not
a
man's
choice
for
a
woman
to
decide.
G
H
M
On
with
her
body,
I've
got
a
wife.
She
can
decide
what
goes
on
with
her
body.
I've
got
two
beautiful
daughters.
They
can
decide
what
goes
on
with
their
body
me.
It's
not
my
choice,
just
like
if
my
wife
said
well,
you're
gonna
do
this.
Well,
it's
my
body,
my
choice.
We
usually
don't
see
that
perspective
turned
around
and
I
think.
M
M
Human
anatomy
was
different
and
men
were
able
to
reproduce.
Would
this
conversation
be
different,
I
think
it
would
be
and
but
then
I
I
trust
a
woman
to
make
the
right
decision
for
what's
right
for
her
and
her
health
decisions
and
and
not
on
or
that
and
stand
behind
that
100
percent.
Thank
you.
Mr
Mayor.
C
Thank
you,
mayor,
I,
really
just
want
to
take
time
to
acknowledge
counselor
cassette
for
telling
her
story
I,
actually
think
that
it
captures
everything
so
beautifully,
and
the
fact
that
women's
needs
are
so
diverse
and
their
struggles
and
the
decisions
they
have
to
make
in
a
world
that
is
still
not
so
very
welcoming
of
them.
C
It's
just
it's
it's
so
difficult
and
to
share
your
story.
The
way
you
did
to
advocate
for
other
women
and
I
love
it
when
women
are
advocating
for
one
another
which
we
have
to
do
more
of,
because
the
challenges
we
Face
aren't
getting
becoming
less
they're
becoming
they're
becoming
greater
and
we're
not
going
to
get
through
those
challenges
unless
we
continue
advocating
so
I
really
just
wanted
to
take
a
moment
to
thank
counselor
casket
for
her
advocacy.
Thank
you
thank.
A
You
I
want
to
say
a
few
words
about
why
we're
doing
this
and
why
it's
relevant
and
why
the
city
council
governing
body
is
not
only
appropriate,
but
it
is
essential.
A
Let's
start
with
some
of
the
worst
Supreme
Court
decisions
in
American
history
in
1857,
the
Supreme
Court
in
the
Dred
Scott
Decision
held
that
African-Americans
could
not
be
considered
American
citizens,
70
years
later
in
Buck
versus
Bell.
They
upheld
the
force
sterilization
of
those
with
intellectual
disabilities
for
the
good
of
the
state
for
a
Matsu
versus
the
United
States
permitted
the
internment
of
Japanese
Americans
during
World
War
II
Bowers
versus
Hardwick
upheld
the
Georgia
law
that
criminalized
sexually
active
gay
and
lesbian
relationships,
and
now
Supreme
Court.
A
After
saying
in
the
course
of
hearings
of
justices
to
be
confirmed
that
Roe,
vs
Wade
was
decided,
law
has
overturned
it
if
we
were
gathered
as
a
governing
body
in
1857
or
70
years
later,
or
at
the
time
of
World
War
II
or
at
the
time
of
Bowers
versus
Hardwick.
Wouldn't
we
want
to
take
a
stand
on
behalf
of
people
who
are
in
every
case
and
every
one
of
those
cases,
people
who
are
the
most
vulnerable
women,
gays
and
lesbians,
people
with
disability
people
of
color.
A
It's
still
a
battle
that
goes
on
so
I
am
I
feel
as
though
it's
the
issue
of
whether
it's
appropriate
for
us
to
bring
this
matter
forward
is
settled.
It's
required.
It
is
Our
obligation
to
take
these
kinds
of
issues
up,
particularly
in
moments
when
the
rights
of
women
are
being
taken
away
from
them
systematically
and
by
the
highest
port
of
the
land.
A
Understand
people
can
disagree
and
I
respect.
The
disagreement
I
think
it's
fair
to
have
your
own
decision
on
these
issues.
But
for
me
the
question
about
whether
we
ought
or
ought
not
to
even
bring
this
matter
forward
is
that
that
is
part
of
what
we're
elected
to
do
so.
I
appreciate
the
opportunity
by
having
it
taken
off
of
consent
to
have
the
dialogue
about
the
issue.
I
think
it's
really
important.
A
K
It's
already
on
yes
mayor.
There
is
motion
on
the
floor.
Councilor
Rivera,
Ellsworth;
yes,
councilman;
yes,
I'm,
sorry,
Casa,
yes,
I'm,
sorry,
Chavez,
yes,
okay,
Garcia,
counselor,
Michael,
Garcia,
yes,
Mr
Lindell,
yes,
mayor
Weber,.
A
K
Yes,
we're
on
on
the
discussion
agenda.
The
next
item
is
10
a
it's
a
request
for
approval
of
a
Professional
Services
agreement
with
car
Riggs
Ingram
for
audit
services
for
fiscal
year
six
fiscal
year.
Ending.
Excuse
me
six
21
in
the
amount
of
269
454.42
cents,
including
applicable
gross
receipts,.
K
A
M
You
Mr
Mayor
just
got
a
quick
question
out
of
curiosity.
I
know
we
recently
approved
the
CLA
audit,
which
was
the
seven
figures,
and
this
one
is
roughly
what
I
mean
it's
at
least
a
million
dollars
less
potentially
than
what
we
had
projected
to
spend
so
I'm.
Just
asking
this
one's
a
lot
more
affordable
for
us.
Any
clarification
around
that
or
Mayo.
M
A
E
A
Have
a
motion-
and
we
have
a
second-
are
there
questions
counselor
Garcia?
Is
this
where
your
question
would
come
at
so.
M
M
L
M
Essentially,
okay,
thank
you
for
the
clarification,
Mr
Brandon.
Thank.
A
A
Thank
you.
Thank
you,
sir.
Thank
you.
Madam
clergy
I
believe
we're
now
at
item
C
on
this
portion
of
the
agenda.
K
A
resolution
adopting
the
2024
through
2028
senior
infrastructure,
Capital
Improvements
plan
icip
for
the
division
of
Senior
Services,
community
health
and
safety
department
and
I
believe
Mr
Rinaldi,
is
on
Zoom
join
us.
A
Thank
you.
Yes,
we
hear
you
loud
and
clear.
Thank
you.
Can
I
get
a
motion
for
this
item.
Please
would.
K
Also
can
I
just
clarify
Council
Chavez,
you
were
the
motion
on
this
and
I
did
not
get
the
second
counselor
test.
I'm
sorry
I
was
trying
to
find
Mr
Rinaldi
on
Zoom.
Yes,
you
are
in
here,
but
we're
on
to
vote
now.
So
counselor
cast
that
you're
up.
Yes,
okay,
perfect
counselor,
Chavez,
yes,
Professor
Lee
Garcia!
Yes,.
S
E
A
A
Thank
you,
sir
Madam
clerk
item
d,
as
in
David.
K
Yes,
the
next
item
consideration
over
resolution
sponsored
by
councilor
cassette,
mayor
Weber
and
councilman
Via
Real.
It's
a
resolution
supporting
the
Santa
Fe
Public
Schools
Board
of
educations
application
for
grant
funding
to
build
out
a
district-wide
community
schools
model
designed
to
reduce
chronic
absenteeism
decrease
after
school
time
caused
by
suspension,
increased
parental
involvement
and
improve
kindergarten,
Readiness
skills
and
Miss
Maria
Sanchez
Tucker
is
available
for
this
item.
C
Up,
yes,
I
will
recuse
myself
as
Sunday
Public
Schools,
as
my
employer.
A
R
O
A
In
burial
has
seconded
it,
are
there
questions
or
discussion
about
this
resolution?
Yes,
counselor
cassett,
you
are
one
of
the
sponsors.
Would
you
like
to
speak
to
it.
D
More
of
a
a
comment:
I
I,
want
to
first
of
all
applaud
Santa
Fe
Public
Schools
for
really
looking
at
a
community
schools
model.
This
is
something
that,
when
I
had
worked
at
the
school
district
gosh
that
was
actually
a
long
time
ago
now
really
looking
at
how
to
address
trauma
and
how
we
can
really
make
sure
that
we
are
supporting
students
so
that
they
can
be
successful.
I
would
be
remissed
if
I
did
not
provide
recognition
to
counselor.
D
When
counselor
Chavez
was
a
principal
at
Cesar
Chavez,
she
was
instrumental
in
moving
forward
a
community
schools
model
and
I
know
that
it
had
a
profound
impact
on
the
students
and
the
families
of
that
school
and
I
am
really
pleased
to
see
that
Santa
Fe
Public
Schools
is
wanting
to
continue
that
work.
D
D
That
can
reverberate
throughout
the
lifespan.
So
I
look
forward
to
you
know
having
conversations
with
the
schools
and
how
the
city
can
be
a
proactive
member
of
this
initiative
and
you
know
moving
forward
with
their
brand
activities.
Thank
you.
A
K
Is
an
excuse?
I
hadn't
noted
this
year.
Sorry
about
that
counselor
B
Garcia,
yes,
counselor,
Michael,
Garcia,
yes,
I'm,
sorry,
Lindell,
yes,
councilor
Rivera,.
A
A
Thank
you,
Madam
clerk
item,
11.
Q
A
Q
Bless
Serena,
first
of
all,
a
quick
flag
for
the
governing
body
that
part
of
the
reason
that
we
moved
so
quickly
to
bring
the
audit
contract
to
tonight
skipping
sort
of
the
traditional
committee
process
as
part
of
our
continued
effort
to
move
as
quickly
as
we
can
to
get
this
work
done.
Recognizing
December
15th
is
right
around
the
corner.
Mr
behadana
and
others
have
been
moving
as
swiftly
as
they
can,
and
so
thank
you
for
helping
us
keep
that
going
tonight.
Q
Black
for
you
as
well,
that's
coming
Tuesday
is
will
be
the
first
day
for
our
new
Finance
director,
you've
likely
seen
I.
Think
I
sent
you
some
news
about
it
and
it
was
in
the
paper.
Emily
Oster
begins
on
Tuesday.
Q
They
really
did
a
great
job
in
helping
us
through
this
transition
and
stabilizing
what
we're
doing
so,
we're
grateful
for
that
want
to
fight
for
you
all
as
we
head
into
Fiesta's
Weekend
next
weekend.
Q
This
is
over
this
weekend
that
the
Santa
Fe
Police
Department
had
a
coordinating
initial
meeting
with
a
county
and
other
law
enforcement
who
will
be
helping
on
Friday
night
was
the
zobra
to
talk
about
all
the
operational
needs
of
what
needed
to
happen
across
the
city,
including
how
the
neighbors
who
live
in
the
neighborhood
around
the
ballpark
are
treated
and
making
sure
that
everyone
has
access
that
should
have
access
to
their
neighborhoods
they're,
going
to
be
having
another
briefing
on
Friday.
Q
Will
they
get
ready
for
the
day
of
training,
but
I
feel
like
Kiwanis,
has
really
been
a
great
deal
of
Outreach
with
the
neighborhood
this
year
to
make
sure
that
everyone
understands
if
they
live
in
the
neighborhood,
how
do
they
get
there?
How
do
they
get
out
what
they
can
do,
but
that
people
can
access
their
homes,
so
we're
pretty
excited
about
that
well
flag.
For
you,
we
had
a
very
productive
strategic
planning
session
on
Tuesday
morning
for
the
senior
staff
of
the
city
government.
It
was
the
beginning
of
a
year-long
process.
Q
We're
working
with
some
Consultants
out
of
our
organization
called
Delta
Consulting
in
Albuquerque.
The
initial
meeting
was
Tuesday,
the
next
step
for
them
in
terms
of
helping
us
prioritize.
What
are
really
the
focus
of
the
things
this
Administration
is
trying
to
get
done
is
going
to
be
to
reach
out
to
all
the
department,
directors
and
start
working
with
them
to
help
them
facilitate
what
are
the
goals
for
their
individual
departments,
and
this
will
be
a
really
year-long
process
that
we're
excited
to
be
a
part
of
I.
Q
Think
others
will
speak
to
this
as
well
tonight,
but
I.
Just
want
to
give
a
huge,
huge
congratulations
and
thank
you
to
our
city
clerk
and
to
our
community
health
and
safety
director
Kira
Ochoa,
for
the
really
extraordinary
event
that
we
had
last
night,
around
homeless,
homeless
issues
in
Santa
Fe
and
how
we
treat
these
people
in
Santa
Fe,
who
are
unhoused
from
the
idea
of
doing
the
event.
Q
The
question
working
with
Marisol
director
Ochoa
really
really
did
a
great
job
and
I
can't
say
enough
great
things
about
our
city
clerk
for
organizing
the
logistics
of
the
event,
getting
everybody
to
see
who
the
questions
that
everything
that
came
into
it
really
I'm,
very
proud
of
our
team.
For
all
that
did
to
make
that
happen.
I
want
to
fight
for
you
all
that
if
you
haven't
seen
or
weren't
paying
attention
coming
to
the
building,
there
are
signage
and
all
the
doors.
Now
that
direct
people
to
what
doors
are
open
or
not
open.
Q
We
have
removed
the
majority,
if
not
all,
of
the
awkwardly
laminated
and
taped
notices
that
were
on
the
doors
and
are
working
to
make
our
building
look
slightly
more
professional
here
in
the
21st
century.
So
that's
a
great
exciting
to
see
that
coming
forward
as
well
at
the
last
governing
body,
meeting
Council
Rivera
requested
and
we're
working
on
getting
punch
code
unlock
on
this
door
here
behind
the
governing
body,
so
that
we'll
have
a
code
that
we'll
share
with
the
governing
body
members
of
staff.
Q
Q
The
intersectionality
of
the
queer
movement
with
civil
rights
movements,
with
women's
choice-
you
can't
be
stressed
enough.
The
bravest
thing
I
ever
did
in
this
world
was
to
tell
the
world
that
I
was
getting
and
for
you
to
stand
up
and
speak.
Your
truth
is
going
to
save
lives.
So
thank
you
for
doing
that.
Q
I've
been
a
crier
this
week.
Sorry,
the
logic
used
in
the
Supreme
Court
case
to
attack
women's
rights
is
the
same
logic
that
they
identified
in
the
opinion
to
try
to
strike
down
the
right
to
interracial
marriage
that
was
identified
in
the
loving
opinion,
the
right,
the
contraception
that
was
identified
in
the
Griswold
opinion,
the
right
for
me
to
have
a
private,
consensual,
sexual
relationship.
Q
That
law
was
that
case
was
heard
in
2003..
That
was
almost
30..
Q
It's
the
same
law
or
this
Dobbs
opinion
is
the
same
law
that
was
just
write
down
the
obergefell
case,
which
allowed
me
to
get
married.
That
was
seven
years
ago.
I've
been
married
for
eight
years,
so
when
I
got
married,
it
was
not
legal
and
the
vast
majority
of
this
country
and
I
actually
didn't
get
married
into
Mexico,
because
it
wasn't
legal
here
at
the
time
at
the
time.
Q
So
for
me
to
stand
up
and
tell
people
I'm
queer
is
an
important
thing
and
it
is
incredibly
important
for
you
to
do
what
you
did
tonight.
So
thank
you
for
that.
Q
It
was
the
30th
New
Mexico
gay
Rodeo,
Station
Rodeo
Association
Zia
rodeos
their
Regional
Rodeo.
They
do
in
New
Mexico,
it's
the
only
one.
The
city
has
been
a
proud
supporter
for
a
number
of
years
and
they
were
truly
grateful
for
all
the
support.
The
the
governing
body
this
governing
body
in
previous
governing
bodies
have
provided,
and
so
I
thought.
That
would
be
a
lighter
way
to
end
so.
Q
We're
almost
there
and
and
so
I
think
you're
aware
around
the
time
that
we
had
our
last
governing
body
meeting
the
governor
had
put
up
an
initial
Banner.
At
the
time
we
had
reached
an
agreement
with
our
manufacturer
that
they
were
going
to
drop
ship,
the
first
107
bracket
kits
to
us
that
should
have
arrived
a
week
ago,
Monday
late
last
week.
They
sent
us
a
letter
acknowledging
it
was
their
error
by
the
time
they
got
our
Po
and
it
was
shipped
to
the
other
organization.
Q
They
had
gone
out
the
door
to
their
great
credit,
hapco
brought
in
a
weekend
crew
last
weekend,
and
they
have
now
shipped
us,
as
of
Saturday
all
of
the
bracket
kids
needed
to
hang
the
banners
and
we
are
expecting
them
to
arrive
at
our
asyler
or
serango
location
tomorrow,
which
is
great
news.
I
spoke
with
Carmela
Quintana
today,
who
is
the
president
of
the
American
Legion?
We
are
working
to
coordinate
how
to
get
the
brackets
from
here
they're
in
the
possession
of
the
American
Legion,
so
that
we
can
begin
to
pick
them
up
next
week.
Q
Banners
I'm,
sorry,
yes
or
banners,
not
back
we'll.
Both
I
guess
Brandon.
Most
importantly,
the
banners
had
a
great
conversation
with
the
pnm
as
well.
Today
they
are
honoring
their
commitment
to
make
sure
that
these
are
getting
hung.
I
do
believe
they're
using
a
contractor
and
they're
working
up
those
details
right
now,
but
we
are
expecting
early
next
week.
Q
They
will
begin
to
go
up
we're
going
to
check
in
with
counselors
Rivera
and
Garcia,
who
have
been
leading
the
resolution
to
get
these
banners
hung
up
but
I'm,
anticipating
that
we're
looking
at
starting
on
Guadalupe
Street,
where
the
first
Banner
was
hung
by
the
governor
to
fill
up
that
section
there
so
that
Banner's
not
hanging
by
itself.
Q
According
to
president
Quintana
from
the
legion
there
are
about
10
or
so
banners
of
particular
importance
that
we
want
to
make
sure
are
either
grouped
together
or
that
deserve
that
they
would
really
like
to
be
by
the
national
cemetery
and
then
I
think
I,
anticipate
that
what
we'll
do
is
work
down,
St
Francis
drive
to
I-25
and
then
work
the
remainder
out
to
Rios
throughout,
but
we're
hopeful
that
we
can
get
our
crew
or
two
doing
this,
and
so
that
the
vast
majority,
if
not
all
the
banners,
will
be
up
for
at
least
two
months
before
the
Veterans
Day
holiday.
Q
So
again
not
what
people
were
hoping
for
at
the
beginning
of
the
year,
but
we
really
do
feel
like
we
have
been
able
to
strike
the
balance
of
ensuring
the
public
safety,
knowing
we
can
hang
one
Banner
at
a
particular
height
with
a
particular
bracket
and
that
we're
still
able
to
honor
our
veterans
this
year.
So
thank
you
for
that.
O
The
mayor
members
of
the
governing
body,
I
did
hear
amazing
things
about
our
Grand
Marshal
of
the
gay
Rodeo.
This
weekend
it
was
one
of
my
staff's
new
favorite
events
in
Santa,
Fe
and
I
did
hear
a
couple
comments
that
I
would
I'm
not
sure
what
my
team
has
looked
into
in
terms
of
legality
of
local
controls
on
Reproductive
Rights.
We
could
look
into
things,
but
we.
O
That
question
and
it
could
be
a
state-by-state
analysis,
really
I'm,
not
sure
what
there's.
D
O
D
O
Issue
so
no
one's
interested.
On
that
note,
we
are
going
to
be
making
an
announcement
about
our
new
policy
analyst
very
soon,
so
that
stay
tuned
for
that
information
should
be
available
very
soon.
The
Santa
Fe
reporter
did
file
a
petition
for
cert
with
the
New
Mexico
Supreme
Court,
on
on
the
case
City
one
and
the
court
of
appeals
and
the
city
has
cross
petitioned.
O
I
did
want
to
also
say
that
the
airport
team
is
now
comfortable
taking
some
vacation,
which
is
really
nice.
So
I
appreciate
that
for
my
team
Cindy's
on
vacation
this
week
and
Greg
Goodale
recently
took
his
twins
to
college
and
took
out
some
time
and
I
think
that
would
have
been
really
stressful
for
them
previously
very
hard
to
leave,
but
having
three
people
on
the
team
has
been
very
helpful.
K
I
didn't
do
just
John
mentioned
a
few
items
that
I
was
going
to
follow
up
on
I
want
to
thank
everyone
that
participated
in
our
community,
the
town
hall
last
night,
and
also
our
staff
that
stepped
in
to
be
facilitators
at
all
of
the
tables.
I,
don't
know
if
you
know
this,
we
had
about
double
the
amount
of
people
that
we
originally
anticipated.
So
there
was
many
members
of
our
staff
that
stepped
in
to
help
facilitate
those,
and
we're
really
appreciative
of
that.
K
It's
an
event
we're
really
proud
of,
but
also
I
want
to
say.
Thank
you
specifically
to
Alexandria
for
my
stop.
She
really
did
an
excellent
job
around
the
details
of
the
event
and
everything
from
printing
the
name
tags
and
table
tens
to
just
making
sure
that
she
had
plenty
of
checklists
and
pens
on
site
for
everything,
as
well
as
our
communication
team.
K
That
worked
very
quickly
to
turn
around
some
really
great
handouts
from
last
night
that
we'll
be
mailing
out
all
of
the
participants
and,
of
course,
who
are
duplicating
team
for
getting
everything
printed.
So
I
really
just
want
to
thank
my
staff.
They've
put
in
a
lot
of
work
to
make
that
event
really
great,
so
I
also
want
to
note
that
Lauren
Lovato
has
retired
from
the
city
of
Santa
Fe.
He
most
recently
was
in
our
finance
department,
and
he
today
was
his
last
day,
but
I
would
like
to
wish
him
well
in
his
retirement.
K
He
has
been
with
the
city
obviously
for
several
years
and
is
off
to
continue
coaching
in
our
community.
He
has
young
children
and
really
I
just
want
to
note
that
I
also
will
follow
up
to
John's
quick
point
about
the
signs
on
the
doors
we
are
asking
them
to
refin
the
doors
as
the
tape
has
been
put
on
and
pulled
off,
so
hopefully
by
the
next
meeting.
We'll
have
that
in
place
as
well.
So,
but
that's
all
I
have
mayor.
Thank.
A
You
Communications
from
the
governing
body.
Let's
just
walk
down
the
line:
councilman
Villarreal.
You
have
the
floor.
R
R
So
I
think
that
was
also
very
helpful
to
add
that
element
into
it
and
I
think
people
appreciated
having
a
meal
so
that
they
can
actually
be
nourished
to
talk
about
things
that
are,
you
know,
challenges
for
the
city
and
I
I'm
sure
that
everyone
else
had
the
same
experience,
they're
just
really
good
dialogue,
people
with
lived
experiences
with
homelessness,
and
so
I
think
that
piece
gets
missed
when
we're
talking
about
Solutions
is
hearing
from
folks
that
are
actually
directly
impacted
that
have
lived
experiences
of
of
having
these
being
vicariously
housed
and
so
I
think
it
was
important
to
have
those
dialogues
and
I
want
to
be
able
to
follow
up
and
see
what
came
out
of
the
discussions,
and
hopefully
we
will.
R
There
will
be
a
summary
for
us
to
to
look
at
and
and
then
decide
what
we're
going
to
be
doing
for
next
steps
with
that
I
think
Marisol
Atkins
is
a
great
partner
for
us
and
I'm
really
happy
that
she's
part
of
the
team
to
and
it's
separate
from
the
city,
but
really
just
like
working
alongside
with
us
I
think
that's
important,
so
I
just
want
to
give
her
Kudos
and
just
wanted
to
say
I
hope
everybody
has
a
safe,
fiestas
and
also
zizobra.
R
Those
of
you
that
are
going
to
be
participating
in
we
will
be.
You
will
be
missed,
councilwoman
cassette,
especially
because
I'm
challenging
my
colleagues
to
see
if
we
can
all
actually
dress
up
for
the
90s
theme.
You
know.
R
K
M
Council
will
be
around
I'm
glad
to
accept
your
challenge.
My
daughter's
consistently
tell
me
that
my
tire
is
looks
like
the
90s.
So
it's
an
everyday
thing
for
me,
except
for
folding.
My
pants,
like
I,
did
when
I
was
a
kid
first,
just
want
to
again
as
well
give
a
shout
out
to
director
Ochoa
and
Madam
City
Clerk
for
your
team's
fantastic
job
last
night.
The
conversation
has
never
had
at
our
table.
M
I
know.
Last
night
we
talked
about
encampments
and
I.
Think
we
can
all
agree.
That's
not
a
One-Stop
solution.
There
are
many
other
Solutions
and
involving
providing
critical
services,
and
hopefully
we
can
continue
this
conversation
and
spoke
with
director
last
night
and
I
felt
like
that
was
a
great
first
step,
but
there's
many
steps
ahead
of
us
and
I
hope.
We
can
continue
that
conversation
in
a
public
dialogue.
M
I
do
want
to,
and
maybe
Madam
city
clerk
I
know
that
the
first
commenter
for
public
comments
brought
this
up
and
I
saw
it
consistently
happening
tonight
with
the
the
public
comment
portion,
whether
the
mic
was
cut
off
or
the
zoom
challenges
and
I
think
Zoom
challenges
I
understand
the
technology,
but
if
we
can
make
sure
that
the
mic
stays
on
for
folks,
it's
it's
I've
went
back
and
watched
meetings
where
the
mic
goes
off
and
you
can't
understand
what
folks
are
saying.
M
I
know
we
in
the
chamber
could
hear
it,
but
anybody
else
outside
of
this
room
can't
hear
it,
and
especially
for
a
record
keeping
and
just
for
politeness
it's
it's.
We
want
to
make
sure
we're
affording
the
public
every
opportunity
to
provide
their
feedback.
They
took
time
out
of
their
busy
day
and
I.
Think
if
it's
getting
aggressive,
that's
where
an
American
maybe
jump
in
and
say,
but
after
my
kids,
no
more
where.
E
I
M
Is
it
at
the
Apollo?
They
got
the
guys
that
rush
you
off
the
stage
do
something
similar,
but
I
think
most
most
of
the
time.
The
public
is
just
quickly
trying
to
get
their
thoughts
out
and
once
they
hit
that
two
minute
Mark
it's
it's
like
they
become
auctioneers,
they
just
speak
so
fast
and,
let's
let
them
finish
their
thought.
M
M
I
saw
Jesse,
put
up
some
new
handicap
signs
and
painted
the
curb
so
just
want
to
thank
her
I
know
that
this
summer,
she's
had
a
lot
of
help
and
a
lot
of
books
wanting
to
engage
in
and
helping
to
renovate
and
refurbish
our
parks
and
I
can
only
imagine
the
conducting
that
needs
to
go
on
her
end
to
figure
out
who's
doing
what,
when,
where
Etc
fiestas
as
well
and
zobra,
give
even
enough
yes
to
burn
him
I'm.
Looking
forward
to
seeing
what's
his
over
looks
like
on
Friday
I
saw
some
sneak.
M
Peek
pictures
I,
don't
know
if
he's
got
a
kid
in
play,
hairstyle
going
on,
but
I
know.
Last
year
he
was
in
the
Michael
Jackson
kind
of
Thriller
Zombie
thing,
so
I've
got
some
great
hope
in
Ray
and
his
team
that
they're
going
to
put
on
a
fantastic
show
for
us
this
weekend
and
and
then
that'll
lead
us
into
the
next
weekend.
Yesterday
festivities,
so
please
everybody
just
be
safe,
have
fun
and
enjoy
each
other's
company.
G
Thank
you,
mayor
just
wanted
to
thank
Kira
and
Maria
Tucker
and
Nicole
for
the
celebration
at
the
Southside
Library
15th
anniversary
great
event,
a
lot
of
people
out
there
so
important
and
I
think
several
of
you
are
out
there
as
well,
including
new
mayor.
So
thank
you
for
that
and
on
the
same
day,
was
the
South
Side
Community
event,
which
was
across
from
Cesar
Chavez
Elementary
and
that
was
well
attended
as
well.
G
So
again,
thank
thank
everybody.
I
think.
The
a
big
event
on
the
south
side
was
the
South
Side
Event,
which
is
at
the
fop
I.
G
Because
we
had
a
swama
meeting
that
night
so
but
when
I
went
early
there
were
cars
everywhere,
so
it
was
a
well-attended
event.
I
hope
it
continued.
That
way
throughout.
Thank.
G
Who
supported
that
and
and
who
made
it
out
there
and
then
just
also
wanted
to
wish
everybody
as
safe
as
Oprah
and
fiestas
it's
an
important
time.
I
worked
at
it
for
many
many
many
years
when
I
was
in
the
fire
department,
I
was
seeing
the
good
and
the
bad
of
the
whole
thing
and
I
hope
for
a
great
and
safe
event.
Welcome
them.
Thank.
C
Thank
you,
mayor,
I,
want
to
start
by
Dean
and
Kira
for
the
work
for
the
event
last
night
that
it
was
just
I,
came
from
an
exhausting
day
of
work,
and
so
I
wasn't
as
preparing
myself
for
multiple
possibilities
on
how
that
event
would
occur,
and
it
was
you
all
did
were
so
intentional
in
your
planning,
even
down
to
the
questioning
and
the
sequence
of
questioning
and
how
we
started
with
humanizing
all
of
our
community
members,
which
should
always
be
first.
C
That
should
be
our
number
one
focus
and
then
just
how
the
questions
occur.
Just
everything
about
it
was
inspiring
and
positive,
and
hopeful
and
I
wanted
to
thank
Andrea
for
being
our
facilitator.
She
is
wonderful,
very
professional,
making
sure
that
everyone
was
well
heard.
It's
just
that
the
efforts
of
the
city,
the
efforts
of
the
community,
all
of
us
coming
together
for
that
meaningful
conversation
was
a
highlight
of
my
week
for
sure
I,
also
so
something
that
I've
committed
to
being
new
I'm.
C
A
new
counselor
is
really
going
and
visiting
different
departments
and
learning
about
the
amazing
work
that
is
taking
place.
I've
gone
to
work
with
Gino
and
kind
of
see,
all
which
is
just
an
amazing
operation
and
I
highlighted
that
at
the
last
governing
body
a
few
weeks
ago,
I
met
with
Shannon
Jones
at
water
and
I
to
keep
a
more
amazed
each
time
because
we
have
staff
members.
C
We
have
these
operations
that
you
would
think
would
require
massive
amounts
of
staff
and
they're,
making
what
I
think
impossible
and
I'm
looking
around
at
the
numbers
like
what
you
do,
it's
impossible,
but
they're
making
it
possible,
and
so
they
have
amazing
things
going
on
from
you
having
water
running
in
your
home
to
building
to
the
just
the
financial
aspects
of
that
operation.
It's
it's
a
huge.
It's
huge,
it's
massive
and
he
speaks
so
calmly
about
it
and
confidently
the
staff
was
friendly.
C
It
was
just
it
was
great
to
visit,
so
I
just
wanted
to
highlight
a
few
things
they
have
going
on.
They
have
an
ADA
upgrade
at
San
Mateo
taking
place,
which
they're
very
excited
for
and
I
love
that
our
city
facilities
are
paying
attention
to
that
advanced
utility
bill
billing
software
upgrade
is
going
to
go,
live
in
March,
which
is
like
a
huge
lift
for
that
department,
amazing
job
by
the
utility
customer
service.
C
They
never
know
what
they're
going
to
get
on
that
other
end
of
the
call,
but
they
they
take
every
single
phone
call
with
positivity
and
great
effort
in
making
wrong
right
wrongs
right
on
the
city's
part,
and
they
continued
that
service
and
were
really
efficient
through
the
pandemic.
C
You
know
he
emphasized
there
wasn't
a
hiccup
in
individuals
receiving
their
utilities
for
covet
and
that's
something
that
we
don't
celebrate
enough
as
a
city.
It
was
a
huge.
C
It
was
a
huge
success
and
I
wanted
to
highlight
that
I
also
wanted
a
shout
out:
Dora
Marcus
who's,
the
Water
Project
administrator
for
her
work,
not
just
through
a
pandemic
but
unprecedented
construction
door.
Is
the
Frontline
person
for
individuals
trying
to
get
new
service
and
developer
building
larger
scale
projects
with
how
her
they
nor
us
could
be
successful
and
those
were
Shannon's
words
and
I
couldn't
agree
with
him?
More
Dora
has
about
23
years
experience
in
utility
building,
building
and
water
engineering,
so
I
wanted
to
highlight
our
water
department.
C
H
Thank
you,
mayor,
I
hope
that
everyone
goes
to
and
has
a
great
time
it's
a
zobra
thanks
to
oh
yeah.
This
is
from
2015..
H
We
all
Council
forgot
shirts
that
year
and
we
had
our
pictures
taken.
It
was
a
lot
of
fun.
H
So
this
is
Oprah
thanks
to
Ray
and
that
entire
crazy
crew
of
Kiwanis,
what
an
astounding
amount
of
work
they
do.
For
that
event,
it
you
know
I've
been
over
at
Fort,
Marcy,
Park
I,
don't
know
for
probably
the
last
three
or
four
Saturdays
watching
them
rehearse
the
dances
and
I
mean
it's.
It's
astounding
production
that
they
put
together
and
they
have
these
kids
from
ndi
Albuquerque
that
are
are
the
gloomies
this
year
and
they're
awesome.
So
it's
really
fun
to
watch
them.
H
Looking
forward
to
Fiesta,
thank
you
to
Mayor
Weber,
who
last
Saturday
night
was
willing
to
get
on
stage
with
me
and
get
Super
Silly
at
the
bark
and
ball.
We
got
237
thousand
dollars
raised,
which
was
pretty
good
money.
He
had
to
do
some
really
silly
things
to
make
that
happen.
H
We
really
threatened
them
that
if
they
didn't
give,
we
would
sing.
That's
that's
how
we
really
got
the
money,
that's
how
we
got
it
going
tomorrow.
Night
is
Chef
capabes
over
at
LaFonda
and
that's
supporting
Pete,
and
hopefully
we
can
raise
some
good
money
for
them.
H
Also,
astounding
amount
of
things
going
on
with
the
city
I
couldn't
begin
to
thank
people
individually,
but
feels
like
it's
been
a
really
really
busy
season
and
I'll
just
give
a
shout
out
no
birthday,
nothing
other
than
just
putting
one
foot
in
front
of
the
other
to
my
partner,
Maria.
B
Thank
you
mayor,
I,
too,
want
to
thank
our
city
clerk
and
Kira
Ochoa
for
the
event
last
night
was
very
well
done
and
I
I
think
intentional
was
a
good
way
to
say
it.
Everything
was
really
well
thought
out
and
also
well
executed,
so
thank
you.
B
I
thought
that
was
a
great
success.
I
also
just
want
to
wish
everybody,
Happy,
zazobra,
Happy,
fiestas
and
looking
forward
to
these
very
important
celebrations
in
the
community.
Thank
you
thank.
D
Thank
you,
Mr
Mayor
I
will
Echo
very
quickly
last
night,
I
think
it's
all
been
said.
It
was
a
really
wonderful
event.
Thank
you
Christine
and
Kira
Marisol.
It
was
really
wonderful.
Conversations
at
the
table.
I
was
at
and
recognition
to
Cassie
Salazar
who's,
the
executive
new
executive
assistant
for
the
mayor,
who
was
the
table
lead
and
she
did
a
wonderful
job
again,
just
moving
the
conversation
along
and
and
really
want
to
appreciate
her
work.
D
There,
a
couple
fun
events
last
Friday
I
went
to
did
not
play
in
before
kids
golf
tournament,
although
Brian
our
new
recreation
director
was
nice
enough
to
let
me
putt,
I,
missed
councilor.
Lindell
I
need
some
golfing
lessons.
H
D
Lessons
please
I,
really,
okay,
so
but
I
really
had
a
wonderful,
wonderful
time
there
and
Melissa
McDonald
took
me
around
on
the
golf
cart
and
and
showed
me
the
front
nine.
We
did
not
get
to
the
back.
Nine
and
I
learned
some
lingo
like
front
nine,
and
but
it
was
really
just
wonderful
to
see
the
golf
course
it
was
beautiful.
I
mean
it
was
I
understand
why
people
golf
it's
really
beautiful
out
there
and
the
team
at
the
MRC
and
the
staff.
D
There
were
just
wonderful,
all
very
excited
for
the
event
very
helpful,
just
just
what
a
great
resource
that
we
have
in
our
community,
so
I
wanted
to
do
some
recognition
there
and
then
later
that
day
again
with
Melissa
McDonald
I
went
to
Alvarado
Park
is
that
is
that
its
actual
name
or
just
what
I
call
it?
D
It's
a
hard
thing
with
parks
and
Santa
Fe
is
that
they
have
the
names
that
that
we
call
them
as
kids
and
then
you
learn,
they
have
real
names
and
so
there's
a
pollinator
Garden
there,
which
was
really
cool
and
there's
this
beef
statue,
that's
made
out
of
recycled
materials
and
there's
a
b
Hotel,
and
so
thank
you
to
keep
Santa
Fe
keep
Santa,
Fe,
beautiful
and
the
parks
team
for
for
that
work,
and
please
go
go
check
out
the
pollinator
garden
and
the
sculpture
and
the
bee
Hotel.
D
Everybody
have
a
wonderful,
zizobra.
I
will
absolutely
be
missing.
You
all
I,
I,
love,
zizobra,
I'm,
very
sad
to
be
missing.
It
obviously
very
important
for
me
to
miss
it
this
time
around
I
had
a
90s
costume,
all
ready
to
go,
although
admittedly
I
don't
think
I
was
going
to
be
able
to
top
my
80s
costume,
so
I
think
we're
you
know.
Maybe
I
saved
myself
there
and
then
I
look
forward
to
Fiestas
with
all
of
you
next
weekend
or
in
two
weekends
and
then
last
but
not
least,
my
mother.
D
D
J
Thank
you
come
here
and
I
think
you
said
one
time
it's
hard
to
go
last,
which
you
will
be
last,
but
you
know
reiterating
the
words
of
all
the
article
counselors
and
colleagues
here
kudos
to
the
team
that
put
together
last
night's
event.
A
lot
of
work
went
into
that
and
I'm
really
glad
to
see
the
conversation
from
multiple
directions:
I
mean
perspectives
and
I.
Think
that's
how
you
achieve
your
best
outcome.
J
J
I
want
to
go
back
to.
We
had
a
meeting
on
Monday
with
Public
Works
and
just
mention
you
taught
us
the
custodial
supervisor
who
was
recognized
at
that
meeting
as
well
as
Sean
Montoya
and
the
in
facilities,
and
they
were
faced
for
the
work
that
they're
doing
and
they're
doing
a
great
job.
So
I
just
wanted
to
be
not
on
the
record
tonight.
J
Going
back
to
a
few
things
that
happened
on
the
south
side,
which
was
I,
want
to
say
City
South.
Thank
you
for
forgetting
that
together,
because
there
was
a
lot
of
people
there
that
felt
a
sense
of
community
and
I.
J
Think
that
when
you
have
that
it,
it
brings
people
together
and
you
may
have
differences,
but
at
the
same
time
get
together
and
you
talk
about
them
and
you
hash
things
out
right,
and
so
the
South
Side
Library
as
well
Tucker
and
everyone
involved
with
that
takes
a
good
heater
to
put
things
on
and
the
Southwest
Santa
Fe
Advocates
for
their
South
Side
celebration,
Community
Day.
J
Lastly,
I
did
want
to
just
give
some
a
shout
out
and
kudos
to
my
son
Luke,
who
is
a
engineering
student
down
at
New
Mexico
state
and
they
spent
close
to
three
weeks
down
there.
Rebuilding
the
bridge
repurposing
a
bridge
for
a
community
that
really
needed
it
and.
J
Out
really
really
well
and
on
the
record,
I'm
very
proud
of
him
what
they
did.
So
thank
you
for
the
opportunity
and
happy
fiestas
happy
zobra.
It
comes
together
as
a
community
and
and
be
one.
So
thank
you.
A
Thank
you,
councilor.
Congratulations.
That
sounds
like
a
sweet
project
to
your
son,
all
the
good
stuff.
Almost
all
the
good
stuff's
been
talked
about,
but
I
can
proudly
say,
I
was
at
almost
every
single
one
of
those
events,
the
what
I
like
to
consider
the
keep
Santa
Fe
beautiful
event,
because
it
was
all
about
the
bees
to
four
kids,
which
was
also
a
pun.
That's
a
pun.
Come
on
for
kids
to
the
events
on
the
south
side,
which
were
a
blast
every
every
single
one
of
them
were.
H
A
Attended
and
and
and
heartfelt
the
one
event
that
I
maybe
enjoyed
the
most
last
weekend,
was
the
Santa
Fe
Soul
Festival,
where
the
African-American
Community
had
a
hadn't
had
one
since
2019,
because
of
covet
and
at
the
auditorium
there
was
a
gospel.
Why
are
a
gospel
performance?
A
I
got
to
read
a
proclamation
with
the
band
backing
me,
which
is
the
best
Proclamation
I,
think
I've
ever
read
with
a
backup
band
and
then
a
one
of
our
African-American
opera
singers
came
and
sang
some
absolutely
gorgeous
gospel,
music
and
the
whole
Auditorium
was
lifted
up
and
I
think
we
could
all
use
a
little
lifting
up
these
days
and
a
little
soul
and
a
little
music
and
gospel
fervor
and
Faith.
It
was
really
trans,
transformative
and,
and
the
spirit
was
in
the
room.
A
So
thank
you
to
the
soul,
Festival
organizers,
Madeline
right,
as
you
all
said
about
it
last
night's
event,
things
run
smoothly.
You
don't
see
what's
going
on
to
make
it
happen,
but
it's
all
of
that
volunteer
work
and
the
hard
effort
to
to
make
the
event
look
effortless.
It
takes
a
lot
of
work
to
make
it
look.
A
Effortless,
the
zobra
is
going
to
be
great
fun
safe
and
will
then
turn
the
corner
to
fiestas,
which
I'm
looking
forward
to
as
well
as
everybody
in
the
community
is
there's
ongoing
events
every
weekend
in
Santa
fazzling
at
my
calendar
for
this
weekend,
just
to
check
ahead
what
some
of
the
events
will
be.
A
There's
an
end
of
summer
Fiesta
for
big
brothers
and
big
sisters
at
the
Harley-Davidson
shop
Saturday
morning,
counselor
and
IMR
night
will
be
doing
our
taking
our
act
on
the
road
to
raise
money
for
the
interfaith
Community
shelter
so
come
and
attend.
I
promise
you
we'll
both
look
completely
foolish
for
a
good
cause,
thanks
everybody
for
sharing
what
a
great
testimony
to
the
heart
and
soul
of
Santa
Fe.
All
the
things
that
we
get
to
go
do
that
are
you
could
not
find
in
any
other
city?
It's
very
special!
A
R
Forward
can
I
just
say
something
about.
One
thing
to
add
is
Noel,
Korea
is
retiring
and
I,
don't
I
think
they
already
had
a
party.
So
if
you
could
I
just
want
to
acknowledge
his
work
with
the
parking
division
director,
it's
a
tough
job.
It's
people
are
never
happy
with
you
and
you
know
the
things
the
changes
he
made
with
parking.
Well,
there
were
some
that
I
didn't
agree
with.
R
We
had
to
do
what
we
had
to
do
and
so
I
just
appreciate
the
role
he
played
with
the
city,
and
you
know,
he's
probably
burnt
out
a
little
hard
job.
So
I
just
wanted
to
acknowledge
Him
because
I
don't
think
we'll
get
a
chance
to
really
say
goodbye
to
him.
I
think
he's
this
is
his
last
week
plus
potentially
so
just
wanted
to
see
if
you
could
extend
our
thanks
and
gratitude
for
Mr
Correa.
Thank
you.
Thank.
P
K
15A
is
consideration
of
a
bill
number
2022.
It's
sponsored
by
counselor
Michael
Garcia.
It's
an
ordinance
relating
to
electric
bicycles.
It's
amending
section,
12-1-6
of
the
uniform
traffic
ordinance,
also
known
as
uto,
to
include
electric
bicycles
in
the
definition
of
bicycle
amending
section,
12-1-40
of
the
uto
to
Delaney
electric
bicycles
for
Motor
Vehicles,
amending
section
12-1-88
of
the
uto
to
specify
that
an
electric
bicycle
is
not
a
vehicle
amending
section
12-8-1
of
the
uto
to
prohibit
anyone
under
the
age
of
16.
K
When
bicycles
are
required
to
use
the
sidewalker
street,
creating
a
new
section
12-8-18
of
the
uto
to
make
it
and
offense
to
enhance
the
speed
capabilities
of
an
electric
bike
and
amending
section
12-8-23
of
the
uto
to
raise
the
maximum
fine
or
violations
of
certain
Provisions
from
25
to
100
and
amending
sfcc
1987,
section
23-5.1
to
amend
the
definition
of
bicycle,
to
include
electric
bicycles
and
to
regulate
the
use
of
electric
bicycles
on
City
roads.
Councilor.
M
This
proposed
an
ordinance
changes.
The
efforts
of
nearly
two
years
of
work
from
the
bicycle,
pedestrian
and.
M
Committee
or
as
bpac
as
we
call
ourselves,
the
members
of
this
committee
felt
that
there
needed
to
be
some
regulations
and
policies
developed,
given
that
e-bikes
have
become
a
very
popular
mode
of
transportation
and
they're
not
going
away.
And
so
we
wanted
to
ensure
that
we
began
to
figure
out
how
the
city
was
going
to
address
this
new
mode
of
transportation.
M
E
M
So
then,
I
just
want
to
thank
all
the
members
of
bpac,
in
particular
the
vice
chair,
Carl
Spencer,
the
policy
and
loss
of
committee,
chair
Yolanda
eisenstein,
also,
our
staff
liaison
Romano
Gloria
samas,
our
city
attorney's
office,
the
legislative
team,
Lieutenant
Tapia,
who
overlooked
this
as
well.
M
This
has
been
a
long
effort,
but
hopefully,
with
the
inside
of
my
fellow
governing
body
members,
we
can
figure
out
how
to
propose
policies
and
regulations
around
this
new
Transportation.
Here.
K
E
C
K
E
G
Thank
you
mayor
when
I
was
elected
in
2012,
which
10
years
ago,
I
was
approached
by
a
street
off
Airport
Road
that
other
than
Valencia,
which
is
still
a
dirt
road
and
as
many
very
old
mobile
homes
on
it,
and
they
had
an
issue
with
a
sewage
running
down
the
street
at
times
when,
when
there
were
heavy
rainstorms,
so
this
has
been
a
long
time
coming
to
and
what
the
project
is
is
to
to
get
a
sewer
line
down
that
street
and
allow
people
to
to
tap
into
that
make
their
neighborhood
a
little
bit
safer.
M
Thank
you,
Mr
Mayor
in
2021,
the
bpac
prioritized
payment
Rehabilitation
of
Buckman
Road,
and
so
this
area
is,
as
folks
have
been
out
there.
It's
very
rural,
but
this
particular
Road
has
a
lot
of
bicycle
traffic
on
it,
and
so
that's
why
the
committee
felt
like
this
needed
to
be
priority
for
safety
issues.
This
project
is
roughly
about
1.3
miles
and
it's
going
to
go
from
Buckman
Road
and
all
the
way
to
Camino
De
Las
Cruces.
M
As
I
mentioned,
this
road
is
currently
not
pedestrian
friendly,
so
hopefully
that
helps
with
safety,
and
this
is
a
road
that
has
access
to
Major
other
major
Trails
such
as
La
Tierra,
Chili
line,
as
well
as
some
of
our
Parks,
the
Frank
of
Frank
Ortiz
Park,
the
Frank
Ortiz
dog
park,
the
Mike
hadimio
Park,
and
so
the
committee
felt
like
this
was
a
priority
that
we
needed
to
ensure
that
this
road
got
paved
and
thanks
to
staff
Miss
glorios
Hamas.
K
D
Mr
Mayor,
so
this
is
a
resolution.
D
Mayor,
Weber
and
I
have
been
working
on
with
commissioner
Hughes
and
thank
you
so
much
counselor
Chavez
for
signing
on
that
really
looks
at
a
strategy
for
how
the
city
and
the
county
can
be
working
together
to
solve.
The
issue
of
homelessness.
D
I
had
the
honor
of
speaking
to
the
board
of
County
Commissioners
yesterday,
as
they
passed
this
resolution
and
really
discussing
how
this
is
such
a
complex
issue.
That
requires
a
multi-faceted
and
coordinated
approach
and
I
am
really
grateful
for
the
county
for
being
willing
to
work
with
us
and
really
finding
how
we
can
be
addressing
this
issue
that
at
times
seems
almost
completely
intractable,
but
I
I
was
really
encouraged
to
see
the
the
team
of
Staff.
D
In
that
last
meeting
we
had
it
was
a
big
team,
so
this
will
be
making
its
way
through
the
committee.
The
county
has
already
passed
a
identical
resolution
and
I
look
forward
to
having
this
discussion
with
the
rest
of
the
governing
body.
R
Mr
Mayor
on
item
18,
which
was
my
legislation
related
to
the
cultural
events
on
the
Plaza
I,
was
hoping
that
the
City
attorney
could
explain
why
it's
postponed
just
to
explain
the
process
of
why
it
had
to
go
to
the
next
governing
body
meeting.
K
However,
comes
Council.
Royal
should
explain
that
my
office
is
required
to
notice
the
title
in
the
newspaper
and
because
of
the
change
in
the
title,
we
didn't
meet
the
deadline
before
this
meeting,
so
it
was
basically
due
to
noticing
requirements.
So
the
previous
title
was
noticed
and
would
have
been
on
its
agenda,
but
because
of
the
title
change
we
had
to
re-notice.
R
So,
when
you
say
title
change
the
original
sponsors
of
the
legislation
that
didn't
change,
there
was
an
amendment
to
make
adjustments
which
changed
the
Caps
caption.
So
doesn't
it
keep
the
original?
Even
though
we
have
an
amendment
alongside
it
mayor.
O
Robert
counciloriel
the
caption
can
change
as
long
as
the
if
it's
relatively
close
to
the
original
intent
of
the
of
the
resolution.
So
if
it
did
change
in
the
committee
process,
we
need
to
have
noticed
any
possible
version
that
will
be
adopted.
O
R
The
most
recently
amended
version
in
that
particular
committee,
because
it
was
one
only
one
committee
that
we
made
that
adjustment.
There
was
an
amendment
that
did
get
approved
in
that
committee,
so
yeah
I,
just
I,
want
to
clarify
that,
because
people
ask
me
and
I'm
like
well,
it's
hard
to
explain
it's
a
procedural
thing,
but
so
okay,
thank
you.
A
Okay,
can
we
turn
to
item
19a
then,
which
is
a
public
hearing.
E
K
To
me,
if
case
number
2022-5398,
it's
3007
South
St,
Francis,
drive-free
zoning
Jenkins
Gavin,
the
agent
for
Vincent's
Legacy
LLC
owner
requests
approval
of
a
rezoning
to
remove
the
parcel
from
the
south
central
Highway
Corridor,
protecting
overlay
District
in
order
to
allow
for
the
existing
density
of
35.5
dwellings
per
acre,
which
exceeds
the
allowable
density
of
21
billion
per
acre
in
the
South
Central
Highway
Corridor
overlay.
This
property
is
zoned
as
c-1
neighborhood,
Shopping
Center
District
and
is
within
South
Central
Highway
Corridor
overlay
District.
The
parcel
is
approximately
4.58
five.
K
Eight
Acres,
with
the
approximately
23
acre
shopping
center
I,
do
want
to
know
that
there's
consideration
of
Bill
number
2022-19
Keen
adoption
of
an
ordinance
that
is
an
ordinance
amending
the
official
zoning
map
of
the
city
of
Santa
Fe
to
exclude
two
Parcels
of
land
lying
ridiculous
with
the
Santa
Fe
corporate
limits
comprising
approximately
4.58
Acres,
more
or
less
located
within
section
2
t-16
dash
nr-9
dash
e
n
m
p
m
and
bordered
on
the
west
by
South
Saint
Francis
drive
from
the
boundaries
of
the
South
Central
Highway
Corridor
South
Central
Highway
Corridor
overlay
District,
also
known
as
the
3007
South
Saint
Francis
drive
rezoning
again.
A
You
let
me
quickly
go
over
the
procedure,
so
we
can.
We
haven't
done
this
for
a
while.
It's
worth
going
back
over
the
process,
we
use
when
we're
having
these
rezoning
hearings,
so
I'll
run
I'll
run
through
it
and
then
we'll
go
back
to
the
top,
because
we
are
here
in
a
different
capacity,
we'll
ask
for
everybody,
anyone
in
the
governing
body
to
disclose
any
pre-hearing
Communications
regarding
the
merits
of
the
application
and
to
recuse
yourself.
A
If
you
cannot
be
fair
and
impartial,
will
then
have
a
stack
report
by
Mr
Alvarado
applicant
represented
by
Jennifer
Jenkins
can
have
an
opening
statement
of
up
to
15
minutes.
Public
comment
will
be
permitted
after
that
sworn
comment
governing
body,
questions
of
Staff
parties,
Witnesses
and
the
public.
Anyone
testifying
to
facts
must
be
sworn
then
once
we're
done
with
the
public
hearing
piece,
we'll
close
it
we'll
go
on
to
a
motion
and
a
second
whether
to
Grant
or
deny
the
application
person
making.
A
O
Item
they
are
counselors
I'm
happy
to
or
if
Pat
wants
to
jump
up,
she's
still
sitting.
Okay,
okay,
we
haven't
done
this
in
a
while.
So
thanks
so
in
this
type
of
a
case,
the
council
does
sit
in
its
quasi-judicial
role,
which
means
you're,
applying
fat
laws
to
facts
that
are
presented
during
this
hearing.
So
it
anything
you
consider
needs
to
be
something
from
this
hearing
or
the
record,
which
includes
any
of
the
submissions
in
your
packet
and
the
record
Below
in
front
of
the
Planning
Commission.
O
So
you
can
consider
any
of
that
information
and
any
information.
That's
solicited
through
questions
during
this
hearing
to
make
your
decision
and
you
must
apply
the
law
to
the
facts
that
you
were
presented.
So
there
are
certain
factors
you
must
consider
and
staff
will
be
describing
those
this
evening.
Thank
you.
A
O
Oh,
no,
okay!
Yes
for
rezoning!
This
is
my
invaded
Voyage.
So
appreciate
you
welcome
me
here.
Thank
you,
mayor
Weber,
members
of
the
governing
body.
O
I,
don't
think
I
need
to
go
through
the
caption
again
but,
as
you
know,
this
is
case
number
2022-5398
public
hearing
for
a
rejoining
for
the
Santa
Fe
Suites
Santa
Fe
Suites
on
behalf
of
Vincent's
Legacy
LLC
represented
by
Jenkins
Gavin,
and
this
is
actually
kind
of
an
odd
one,
because
we're
retroactively
rezoning
this
property,
which
has
actually
been
operating
as
a
residential
facility
for
some
time,
because
they
were
granted
emergency
permission
to
to
transfer
from
a
hotel,
a
long-term
hotel
to
a
emergency
transitional
housing
facility,
which
I
think
the
applicants
will
go
into
so
that
does
kind
of
add
an
extra
layer
of
complexity
to
this
case.
O
O
The
the
Santa
Fe
Suites
operate
is
operating
currently
with
35.5
per
acre.
Therefore,
in
order
to
permanently
continue
operating
in
a
facility,
they'll
need
to
be
removed
from
this
overlay
District.
So
they
can
revert
down
to
the
underlying
zoning
District,
which
has
a
which
doesn't
have
a
density
requirement,
which
is
the
SC1
neighborhood
Shopping
Center
District.
O
The
applicants
have
already
been
approved
for
a
development
plan
Amendment,
which
would
amended
the
entire
development
plan
for
the
shopping
center
to
allow
for
this
different
use
that
was
approved
by
the
Planning
Commission.
So,
as
you
know,
you're
now
moving
forward
to
approve
the
rezoning
which
was
recommended
for
approval
by
the
Planning
Commission
I
will
just
go
quickly
through
this
I
will
note
that
the
conditions
approval
that
we
put
on
the
applicants
during
the
Planning
Commission
phase
have
been
met
or
rendered
moot
through
communication.
O
So
because
they
can't
do
you
can't
do
these
conditions
on
a
rezoning.
They
put
the
condition
on
the
development
plan.
It's
a
little
bit
odd,
but
it
works
to
basically
maintain
the
the
dimensional
standards
for
that
overlay.
District
I
think
that's
all
I'm
going
to
talk
about
I,
think
the
applicant
since
we're
going
to
go
through
the
entire
story
of
this.
This
Pro,
this
property,
so
I'll
stand
for
questions.
Thank
you.
A
Thank
you
we'll
hold
off
to
the
questions
for
later
on,
sir,
but
Miss
Jenkins.
If
you
want
to
step
up,
be
sworn
and
make
a
presentation
on
behalf
of
the
applicant.
T
Mayor
evening,
mayor
counselors,
I'm,
Jennifer
Jenkins
with
Jenkins
cavan
here
this
evening
on
behalf
of
Vincent's
Legacy
and
Santa
Fe
sweeps
I,
am
also
joined
by
Dave
Foster,
who
is
here
in
town
for
this
event,
I'm
from
New
York.
He
is
the
director
of
real
estate
development
for
Community
Solutions,
with
whom
the
city
of
Santa
Fe
partnered
for
the
acquisition
and
repurposing
of
the
Santa
Fe
Suites
for
long-term
permanent,
affordable
housing
for
our
community.
So.
T
I
Congratulate
you
on
on
your
leadership
on
the
efforts
that
you're
making
to
try
to
address
this.
This
issue,
including
your
wonderful
support
of
the
Santa
Fe
Suites
project,
I'll,
be
brief.
Tonight.
I
know
we're
late
into
the
evening
and
just
Again
Begin
by
thank
you
for
your
support
and
hopefully
for
your
support
of
this
of
the
legislation.
That's
in
front
of
you
here
tonight
the
Santa
Fe
Suites
project,
as
was
mentioned,
came
about
in
in
some
of
the
very
Darkest
Days
of
covid.
I
It
came
about
through
some
tremendously
difficult
challenges:
lawsuit
at
the
last
minute.
Challenges
in
getting
folks
moved
in
piecing
together
the
necessary
resources
to
make
this
happen
and
through
a
great
partnership
with
so
many
in
the
community.
So
many
at
the
city
at
the
state,
we
were
able
to
make
it
happen
and
the
results
have
been
great
up
to
this
point.
We
have
121
units
at
the
facility.
I
All
of
them
filled
the
waiting
list
longer
than
a
care
to
say
reflecting
the
depth
of
this
challenge
that,
as
it
goes
even
Beyond
this
project,
but
to
say
that
the
vast
majority
of
folks
who
are
in
this
property
today
are
individuals
who,
otherwise
would
be
homeless,
would
be
sleeping
in
a
Royal
would
be
on
the
street
and
again
this
is
just
one
small
piece
of
the
broader
effort.
That's
required,
but
thank
you
again
for
that
and
the
impact
that
the
project
has
had.
I
You
may
be
saying
why
are
we
here
tonight
in
approving
this,
when
we've
got
folks
moved
in
already
and
we're
doing
what
we
need
to
be
doing
at
the
property,
and
that
leads
to
the
last
point
I'd
like
to
make
and
then
I'll
I
love,
Miss
Jenkins,
to
carry
on
with
the
presentation
here
and
that
is
that
what's
happening
at
Santa,
Fe
Suites
today
is
good.
It's
great,
it's
inspirational,
but
it's
not
good
enough.
I
The
quality
of
the
property,
the
money
that
we
want
to
invest
in
this
property,
to
make
it
all
of
what
it
can
be
a
world-class
symbol
of
how
projects
like
this
should
run
and
operate.
We're
not
there.
Yet
this
legislation
allows
us
to
get
the
formal
designation
as
a
multi-family
housing
property
which
will
allow
us
to
go
to
HUD
and
secure
the
long-term
debt
financing
that
we
need
to
bring
those
resources
into
the
facility
to
continue
those
upgrades
so
again,
well
I'm,
very,
very
proud
of
the
work
that
has
been
done.
I
What
we
have
accomplished
the
lives
that
we
have
changed
there
is
still
more
to
come,
and
this
approval
tonight
is
a
huge
and,
in
fact
necessary,
step
to
getting
us
there
so
again,
I.
Thank
you
in
advance
for
your
support
of
this
and
I
congratulate
you
on
on
your
leadership
on
this
very,
very
difficult
issue.
Thank
you.
Thank
you,
sir.
A
T
Yes,
thank
you,
mayor,
I'm,
going
to
be
fairly
brief,
but
I'm
just
going
to
cover
kind
of
cover
the
high
points,
and
so,
as
you
mentioned
this,
it
was
December
of
2020
and
the
City
of
Santa
Fe
had
some
cares,
act
funding
that
needed
to
be
deployed
by
the
end
of
the
year,
and
this
was
the
opportunity
where
the
city
decided
to
deploy.
Two
million
dollars
of
cares
act
funds
to
make
this
project
a
reality.
T
That
was
the
emergent
that
was
part
of
the
emergency
situation
and
the
need
to
get
people
housed
as
quickly
as
possible
and
as
Community
Solutions
was
pursuing
their
HUD
financing.
They
reached
out
to
me
to
say:
Hey.
You
know
we
need.
We
need
a
zoning
verification
letter.
It's
a
standard
thing
that
Banks,
like
you,
reach
out
to
land
use,
I
called
Daniel.
T
My
Daniel
type
me
up
the
zoning
verification
letter
telling
me
you
know
what
the
building
is,
and
so
we
went
through
this
whole
thing
and
then
discovered
that
yeah
there
was
a
there's,
a
process
that
we
need
to
go
through
here.
So
we
did
an
analysis.
The
property
is
Zone
shopping
center
because
it's
in
a
shopping
center
and
within
the
South
Central
Highway,
Corridor
overlay
and
multi-families
permissible
use
in
the
shopping
center
zone,
no
issues
there
there's
no
maximum
density
in
the
shopping
center
zone,
so
no
issues
there.
T
The
one
issue
that
we
discovered
is
with
respect
to
the
South
Central
Highway
Corridor,
the
maximum
density
of
the
21
dwelling
units
per
acre.
We
were
exceeding
that
we're
not
adding
any
unit.
These
units
already
exist.
They
existed
as
Hotel
units,
then
they
were
converted
to
residential
units,
actually
a
few
less
residential
units
in
order
to
convert
some
of
the
spaces
for
the
wraparound
services
in
this
in
this
community,
so
I've
been
working
with
staff,
we're
like
well.
How
do
we
deal
with
this
fact
that
we
have
existing
units?
T
We
don't
want
to
demolish
any
units
and
evict
our
residents.
So
how
do
we
what's
the
solution
here
and
unfortunately,
this
the
city
code
does
not
allow
a
variance
for
density,
because
that
was
why
can't
we
just
get
a
variance,
because
you
know
the
unit's
already
there.
Well,
if
there's
it's
specifically
prohibited
and
you
can
get
a
variance
for
setbacks,
you
can
get
a
variance
for
height.
T
So
and
also
as
Daniel
mentioned
in
July,
the
Planning
Commission
did
approve
an
amendment
to
the
development
plan
for
the
shopping
center,
that
just
documents
the
change
of
use
and
they
also
recommended
approval
of
the
reso
request.
So,
as
you
can
see
here,
the
property
is
kind
of
on
the
south
side
of
the
shopping
center.
So
this
is
right
at
the
southeast
corner
of
ZN
St
Francis.
T
You
know
where
the
Albertsons
is
I,
think
everybody's
familiar
with
where
this
is
and-
and
you
can
see
just
on
the
South
Side-
the
aurorio
was
going
through
there,
which
really
creates
there's
a
lot
of
mature
vegetation,
it's
actually
quite
lovely
back
there
and
and
so,
but
it-
and
so
this
is
the
subject
property
that
we
are
proposing
to
be
excluded
from
the
corridor.
So
you
can
see
the
the
pink
is
the
shopping
center
zoning
district
and
surrounded?
T
Going
down
St,
Francis,
Drive
and
then
zooming
in
you
can
see
the
eight
buildings
there
again
we're
not
looking
to
add
any
any
gross
floor
area.
Add
any
new
improvements,
except
for
just
doing
some
upgrades
to
the
site
and
the
units
themselves
and
there's
the
development
plan
that
was
originally
approved
for
the
shopping
center
that
we
amended
and
so
I'm
just
going
to
jump
to
this.
T
So
here's
the
good
news
we
actually
do
comply
with
the
vast
majority
of
the
South
Central
Highway
Corridor
design
standards
where
we
complied
with
the
maximum
height
of
25
feet.
There's
a
minimum
50
foot
setback
for
Saint
Francis
Drive,
we're
actually
120
feet,
set
back
from
Saint
Francis
Drive.
There's
a
50
open
space
requirement.
We
have
exactly
54.
T
So
these
are
the
standards,
as
Daniel
mentioned,
that
a
condition
of
approval
was
added
by
the
Planning
Commission
on
our
development
plan.
It
states
that
we
must
comply
even
if
we're
outside
the
corridor.
We
still
this
property
will
be
subject
to
these
standards:
the
maximum
height,
the
open
space
and
the
setback.
T
The
only
the
only
element
that
is
at
issue
is
the
density,
so
under
the
South
Central
Highway
Corridor,
it's
a
maximum
of
21
dwellings
per
acre,
as
you
may
recall,
there's
a
15
density
bonus
for
affordable
housing
in
the
city,
so
that
would
translate
to
little
over
24
units
per
acre.
T
So
again,
this
just
goes
into
you
know.
We
are
fully
complained,
comply
height,
the
setbacks
and
the
open
space,
and
this
will
be
memorialized
on
the
development
plan.
The
development
plan
is
a
recorded
document
that
is
it's
filed
here
with
the
city
it
is
recorded
with
the
county
and
that
development
plan,
as
an
entitlement
has
to
be
submitted
to
the
city
along
with
any
permit
building
permit
applications.
So
it
really
is
a
protection
that
is
memorialized.
T
So
if
something
happened
and
God
forbid,
you
know
there
was
a
fire
and
some
buildings
had
to
be
replaced
or
something
of
that
nature.
We
couldn't
exceed
the
25
feet.
We
would
have
to
ensure
we're
preserving
the
open
space.
We
couldn't
encroach
into
that
setback,
because
that
development
plan
is
an
entitlement
that
runs
with
the
land.
Even
if
the
property
was
sold,
it
would
still
be
applicable.
T
So
that's
just
a
very,
very
important
point
and
as
as
Dave
mentioned,
what
really
brought
all
of
this
to
the
fore
was
the
pursuit
of
permanent
HUD
financing,
obviously
very
favorable
terms
for
a
100,
affordable
housing
community
and
which
will
generate
funding
for
Capital,
Improvements
and
also
Santa
between
over.
D
T
000
to
Grant
from
the
city's
affordable
housing
Trust,
so
they
are
really
committed
to
investing
in
this
property
to
make
site
improvements
to
improve
the
unit
and
the
built
facilities
themselves.
So,
as
they
said,
this
really
is
a
very
high
quality
residential
community
and
that
completes
my
presentation.
I'd
be
happy
to
answer
any
questions.
Thank.
A
E
I
do
thank
you,
mayor
Weber,
City
councilors
again,
my
name
is
Edward.
Archuleta
I
know
most
of
you
and
you
know
me
probably,
as
the
executive
director
of
Saint
Elizabeth,
shelters
and
Supportive
Housing.
We
are
the
management
company
who
does
the
Supportive
Services
for
the
Suites.
We
have
two
program
managers.
We
have
a
licensed
therapist.
We
have.
E
E
K
K
E
A
Good.
Thank
you.
Anyone
else
who
wishes
to
speak
from
the
public
on
this
item
not
I,
will
turn
to
the
governing
body
for
questions
of
either
our
staff
or
the
applicant
or
any.
A
D
Thank
you
so
much
Mr,
Mayor
I
just
have
a
question
about
this
is
probably
for
for
staff,
but
just
a
better
understanding
of
how
this
project
was
able
to
move
forward
previously
without
a
rezone.
You
know
in
this
instance
I'm
feeling,
okay
about
it,
but
never
know,
what's
going
to
happen
in
the
future,
so
I
I
really
just
want
to
understand
that
and
if
they're
you
know
making
sure
there
hasn't
been
a
precedent
set
for
other
projects
moving
forward.
So
if
I
could
get
some
information
there,
I
would
greatly
appreciate
it.
O
A
H
Mayor
councilman
council
members,
yeah.
A
Me
can
I
take
a
shot
and
see
if
I
get
my
law.
My
law
degree
this
night
this
evening,
but
I
understand
correctly.
It
meets
the
zoning
requirement.
It
has
always
met
the
zoning
requirement.
The
issue
that's
being
brought
To
Us
by
Community
Solutions
is
in
order
to
get
favorable
HUD
consideration
for
a
financing.
A
zone
change
will
be
advantageous
if
they
didn't
want
the.
If
we
didn't
if
the
operator
owner
didn't
seek
that,
we
could
continue
with
the
current
zoning.
A
T
A
Thank
you.
Anybody
else,
any
other
fingers
up
hands:
Miss
counselor,
Lee
Garcia.
You
were
the
fastest
on
the
draw.
J
J
T
Thank
you,
mayor,
council,
Garcia
and
counselors.
I
am
not
personally
aware
of
any
density.
You
know
issues
you
know,
there's
a
lot
of
multi-family
in
the
corridor
and
and
those
are
existing
projects,
and
so
there
could
be
some
projects
that
were
built,
I,
think
probably
like
The
Enclave
or
which
is
now
part
of
viscaya
I,
believe
that
was
built
prior
to
the
corridor.
T
Maybe
around
the
same
time
if
the
corridor
was
adopted,
but
I'm
not
personally
aware
the
this,
the
zeistation
property
that
is
across
the
street
on
the
other
side
of
Zia
that
was
removed
from
the
corridor,
but
not
because
of
density
because
it
actually
complied
with
with
the
density.
It
was
other
reasons
around
some
of
the
design
standards,
but
density
was
just
was
not
one
of
them.
B
I
Thank
you
counselor,
so
when
we
attempted
to
close
on
the
property
during
the
initial
acquisition
of
it,
so
this
is
back
going
back
to
2020.
I
We
we
came
headlong
into
this
Challenge
and
the
husband
answering
is
one
part
of
it,
but
it's
really
no
bank
will
lend
on
it
as
a
residential
facility,
and
so
we've
had
to
kind
of
Scotch
tape
together
different
temporary
funding
sources.
To
get
us
to
this
point
and
really.
L
I
B
And
no
en
was
required
for
in
this
process,
or
was
there
you
did?
When?
Can
you
tell
me
a
little
I
was
looking
through
the
packet
and
I?
Didn't
it
didn't
jump
out
at
me
when
was
that
and
who
attended.
T
We
had
about,
there
were
March
31st.
We
conducted
an
early
neighborhood
notification
meeting
absolutely
so.
The
development
plan
Amendment
as
well
as
the
rezone,
would
required
that
and
that
was
held
virtually
and
we
had
there
were
probably
about
30
attendees
34
attendees.
Thank
you,
I'm.
Looking
right
now,
thank
you
Daniel
34
attendees,
so
we
had
obviously
our
our
team
and
we
had
some
case
managers
from
the
facility
in
the
management
from
the
facility
itself
there
to
ask
questions,
and
then
we
had
people
from
the
neighborhood
and
actually
the
meeting
was
great.
T
I
mean
there
were
they
had
questions
and
they
had
concerns
and
I
think
that
there
was
a
lot
of
misconception
about
what
Santa
Fe
Suites
was
and
that
this
was
not
a
homeless
shelter.
This
was
permanent,
Supportive,
Housing
and
about
half
the
residents
are
just
our
local
Workforce
who
don't
actually
require
Supportive
Services,
and
then
you
know
the
other
half
of
the
residents
require
those
those
supportive
wraparound
services.
T
So
it
really
wasn't
like
an
education
opportunity
and
as
and
so
there
were
concerns
there
were
you
know
there
had
been
some
encampment
activity
in
the
Arroyo
there
and
I
think
that
is
still
somewhat
ongoing,
but
that
is
those
aren't
our
residents.
You
know
that
are
doing
that
and
but
they're
you
know.
So
there
was
a.
It
was
actually
a
really
good,
a
really
good
dialogue
and
at
the
end
of
the
meeting
there
was
a
lot
of
support
for
for
the
project.
Yeah.
B
Thank
you
and
I
see
that
now
on
page
12
of
this
memo,
so
just
going
back
sorry
I'm
hopping
around
a
little
bit
here
going
back
to
when
we
discovered
we
would
need
to
go
through
this
process
was,
after
the
governing
body,
approved
the
the
money
for
this.
Yes,
okay
and
the
reason
I
ask
is
one
this
is
in
District
Two.
B
At
the
time
there
was
a
lot
of
neighborhood
concern
and
I
think
neighborhood
confusion
about
what
we
were
building,
what
it
was
going
to
do
and
at
the
time
I
was
told
and
I
was
looking
back
to
meet
emails
to
kind
of
isolate
this
that
you
know
there
was
no
need
for
an
En.
There
was
no
land
use
issue.
There
was
no
rezoning.
Therefore
this
was
just
a
private
transaction,
and
you
know
because
of
our
my
constituents,
our
constituents,
you
know
we're
asking
why.
B
Why
is
there
no
process
for
this
Santa
Fe
Suites
project
and
also
I
think
trying
to
understand
what
it
was
so
just
wanted
to
have
a
better
sense
of
when
we
knew
what
and
how
this
came
about
and
again
I
think
you
know
in
terms
of
precedent
and
future
how
we
operate.
I
just
want
to
make
sure
we're
getting
the
best
information
out.
D
2020,
when
we
were
told
we
had
to
have
all
of
this
money
spent
by
December
30th,
so
we
were
it
and
that
goes
to
there
was
definitely
we
were
moving
things
because
of
the
emergency
in
terms
of
our
process
for
sure.
But
at
the
time
also,
we
knew,
like
you,
wouldn't
in
a
perfect
world
design,
this
transaction
this
way,
but
we
knew
that
we
could
get
short-term
financing
to
get
the
property.
P
D
B
K
That
it
was
completely
allowable
to
immediately
put
the
property
to
use,
so
it
we
did
not.
You
know
that
that
wasn't.
Oh.
B
And
I
think
that's
helpful
and
just
wanted
to
better
understand
that,
because
I
I
do
think
I
did
find
emails
where
you
know
I,
said
and
I
believe
I
wouldn't
have
said
this.
B
Unless
somebody
told
me
this
to
be
true
that
you
know
there,
an
En
was
not
required
and
you
know
there
was
no
rezoning
required
and
there
wasn't
any
land
use
process
that
had
to
be
pursued
at
that
time
and
so
and
and
that's
to
what
you're
saying
is
true,
because
you
had
another
track,
but
now
that
you're
trying
to
do
something
slightly
different
you've
had
to
go
back
and
and
and
and
and
do
this
other
thing
so
I
get
that
I
just
wanted
to
kind
of
clarify
how
it
came
about
and
how
it's
evolving.
M
You
Mr
Mayor
one
couple,
quick
questions
and
in
the
memo
there's
131
parking
spaces,
but
there's
154
required
of
my
understanding
that
correctly.
T
Thank
you,
mayor,
councilor,
Garcia
and
counselors.
So
as
part
of
the
development
plan
Amendment,
we
did
a
parking
demand
study.
We
had
a
transportation
planning
consultant
because
the
parking
requirement
for
a
hotel
is
a
little
bit
less
than
it
is
for
multi-family,
but
we
had
the
existing
supply
of
parking
that
we
had,
and
so
as
part
of
the
development
plan.
Amendment,
the
Planning
Commission
approved
a
parking
reduction,
and
that
was
based
on
a
lot
of
factors.
There's
great
access
to
Transit.
We
have
you
know
we
have
the
trail
system.
T
We
have
the
rail
runner
train
across
the
street.
We
have
Santa
Fe
Trails
bus,
stop
right
on
Zia,
so
great
access
to
Transit
and
the
property
had
already
been
operating
successfully
with
the
amount
of
parking
we
had
on
site
with
no
issues
and
so
and
also
with
low-income
housing.
There
tends
to
be
a
lower
percentage
of
automobile
ownership.
There
was
a
lot
of
factors
that
played
in
that
it
seemed
that
the
amount
of
parking
Supply
that
is
on
the
site
is
is
more
than
adequate
and.
M
S
T
T
There's
I
mean
we're
in
we're
in
a
sea
of
parking
over
there
in
terms
of
kind
of
overflow
opportunities,
but
with
respect
to
the
50
open
space
requirement
in
the
South
Central
Highway
Corridor
that
we
are
agreeing
to
forever
I
mean
there's
probably
a
few
little
side,
improvements
that
could
be
made
to
increase
efficiencies,
and
you
could
probably
find
a
handful
of
spaces.
You
know
you
could
add,
but
we're
really
not
anticipating.
You
know
any
issues
in
the
long
term.
M
T
In
a
formal
way,
but
this
is
a
shopping
center,
so
there's
a
lot
of
there's
sort
of
this
overall
sort
of
cross-use
easement
shared
parking
plan,
it's
kind
of
like
like
the
Santa
Fe,
Place
Mall,
for
example.
You
know,
there's
all
these
separate
parcels
and
separate
users,
but
the
parking
is
kind
of
a
shared
facility
and
so
so,
which
kind
of
governs.
How
that's
how
shopping
centers
typically
operate
is
that
you
know
you
have
parking,
that's
proximate
to
particular
business,
which
typically
is
used,
but
the
overall,
the
parking
is,
is
a
shared
facility.
T
M
It
was
mentioned
that
there's
not
going
to
be
any
additional
building
being
done,
any
construction
just
upgrades.
Can
you
clarify
what
the
upgrades
are
going.
T
To
be
no
site
improvements
and
there's
some
work
in
the
parking
lot
that
needs
to
be
done.
Some
Landscaping
improvements,
some
of
the
you
know,
just
improves
outdoor
areas
and
improvements
to
the
the
public
spaces
and
the
units
themselves.
So
it's
really
pretty
it's
pretty
comprehensive
and
not
all
of
it's
happening.
We're
also
doing
some
work
on
some
drainage
facility
improvements
out
there,
but
some
deficiencies
and
maintenance
issues
were
identified,
and
so
there
there's
a
myriad
of
things,
but
it
really
is
is
hitting
all
those
areas.
Okay,.
M
And
my
last
question
revolves
around
a
couple
of
my
colleagues
touched
on
it,
which
was
an
imprecedent
and
so
I
took
a
quick
look
at
the
math
in
regards
to
what
other
properties
might
fall
into
this
category
and
from
my
understanding,
it's
because
this
is
a
hotel
space
moving
to
full-time
residential.
What
would
fall
into
that
category?
M
T
Residents
in
Marriott
actually
has
already
been,
has
a
special
use
permit
for
a
hotel
for
a
residential
conversion
that
was
already
approved
a
few
years
ago
and,
and
that
is
has
just
been
on
hold
until
the
residents
then
found
a
new
location
in
Santa
Fe,
which
has
been
identified,
I'm
actually
working
on
that
project
that
I'll
be
bringing
to
the
Planning
Commission
and
so
that
that
residential
conversion
is
is
forthcoming.
So
that's
already.
T
Do
not
need
to
be
pulled
out
of
the
corridor
and
I
could
go
into
those
details
actually
was
just
reading
about
it
today.
Interestingly,
but
I
I
don't
know.
T
M
Okay,
I
appreciate
that
and
the
other
property
that
immediately
jumped
up
to
me
was
the
peckless
trail
in
don't
know
what
the
future
holds
for
that.
But.
M
I
think
again
that
we're
talking
precedent
here
sure
of
course,
so
Becca's
Trail
land
could
come
before
us
and
I
think
that
was
some
of
the
concerns
Bradford.
But
if
my
colleagues
was
yeah
are
we
then
now
allowing
the
door
open
for
Pecos
Trail
and
to
say
look
at
this
hair
we're
going
to
do
it
here
so
I?
Don't.
M
A
G
Yeah
I
think
you
have
two
questions:
Miss
Jenkins
in
past
the
land
use
cases.
When
there
were
enns,
we
typically
had
a
sign-in
sheet
and
I
know
this
was
on
Zoom,
but
so
a
list
of
attendees
at
least
and
then
comments
that
were
made.
So
we
could
see
what
some
of
the
concerns
were.
I
don't
see
that
in
in
this
packet,
so.
T
We
we
submitted
in
our
in
our
application
kind
of
just
some
kind
of
meeting
notes
and
we
didn't
have
a
list
of
the
individual
people
that
were
there,
but
we
did
have
a
count
and
were
able
to
characterize.
You
know
we
had
neighbors,
we
had.
You
know
some
of
our
local
Partners
who
could
answer
questions
about
the
programming
for
the
facility,
but
we
didn't
have
the
traditional,
as
you
point
out,
the
sign-in
sheet,
with
the
with
the
virtual
yeah.
G
So
future
land
cases
that
come
up
I
know
you're
in
front
of
us
quite
a
bit.
So
will
you
make
sure
to
include
those
sure
and
then
I
think
for
staff
in
past
land
use
cases
as
well?
We've
had
the
minutes
from
the
Planning
Commission,
specifically
to
this
case
that
we
were
able
to
reference
some
of
the
questions
and
concerns
they
had
sure
like
if
they
had
questions
about
parking
just
to
make
sure
that
that
they
were
addressed
sufficiently
in
the
City
attorney
would
be
kind
of
weird
when
I
brought.
Q
O
Council
Council
Rivera,
of
course,
yeah
we'll.
We
will
accommodate
that
request
and,
as
in
regards
to
Ian
in
documentation,
I,
don't
think
there's
a
Code
requirement
that
we
provide
a
list
per
se
of
people
coming
and
I've
only
ever
done.
The
virtual
Union
so
don't
know
what
happened
in
the
before
times,
but
we
can
I
think
that's
a
good
recommendation.
B
S
O
Mr
Mayor
councilman
I
believe
yes,
it
does
to
a
certain
extent.
I'd
have
to
look
at
the
map
just
to
really
think
about
the
exact
boundaries.
You
know.
T
Hospital
you
get
down
Old
Pecos
Trail,
then
you
go
back
down.
So
it's
like
that
big
loop,
so
I-25
St,
Francis,
St,
Mike's,
Old,
Pecos
Trail.
So
it's
that
whole
area
right
there
it
doesn't
go.
It
does
not
extend
north
of
St
Michael's.
A
Thank
you
other
other
questions
from
the
governing
body,
any
other
questions
from
the
governing
body.
If
there
are
no
other
questions,
I
will
then
close
the
public
hearing.
A
If
anyone
were
to
come
up
with
a
subsequent
question,
we'd
have
to
reopen
it.
So
just
be
aware
of
that,
and
I
will
now
entertain
a
motion
and
on
the
item
in
front
of
us
whether
to
Grant
or
deny
the
application.
A
There's
a
motion
and
there's
a
second:
is
there
any?
It
says
in
my
notes
that
it's
always
helpful.
If
we
have
some
comments
about
the
reasoning
or
the
basis
for
this
approval,
some
of
it
is
in
the
staff
report.
G
G
O
However,
Council
I
think
we
intend
to
bring
you
findings
of
fact,
inclusion
of
law.
They
usually
go
in
the
consent
agenda,
yes,
usually
at
the
following
meeting.
If
we're
able
to
get
them
prepared
by
then,
if
there's
anything
in
the
findings
effect
inclusions
a
lot
from
Plenty
commission
that
you
do
not
agree
with
and
want
to
apply.
That
would
be
helpful
for
us
in
our
preparations.
O
That's
the
type
of
thing,
I
think
the
mayor's
suggesting.
That
would
be
the
type
thing
we
need
to
know
now.
So
we
can
make
sure
that
the
version
we
present
for
your
approval
reflects
the
basis.
A
Any
other
comments,
questions
I,
think
the
staff
report
does
a
good
job,
laying
out
the
the
reasoning
for
the
approval
and
the
also
the
reasoning
behind
the
application
and
how
it
benefits
the
community
benefits
the
city
and
will
having
had
conversations
early
in
the
evening
about
our
efforts
to
address
homelessness.
How
this
really
does
speak
directly
to
that
agenda
that
we're
all
moving
forward
on
collaboratively,
so
this
is
quite
appropriate
for
what
we've
been
doing
over
the
last
few
years
and
months
and
days
to
say
this
is
a
priority,
any
other
comments
or
questions.
M
K
H
A
Thank
you.
Thank
you.
Everybody
Dave,
thank
you
for
coming
all
the
way
out
and
I
I
think
there's
somebody
named
Roseanne
Hagerty
you're
familiar
with.
If
you
would
send
her
our
regards,
we
recently
had
your
CFO
visiting
here
in
Santa
Fe,
we're
beginning
to
feel
like
we're,
a
very
well
favored
City
from
Community
Solutions
and
hoping
that
there
will
be
additional
visits
in
the
future.
K
A
S
K
Weber,
yes,
motion
has
been
approved.
K
Yes,
these
are
appointments
for
Santa
Fe
Civic,
Housing,
Authority,
We,
Have,
Allison
fabara,
with
an
appointment
term
ending
in
March
of
2024
John
Wheeler,
with
a
reappointment
term
expiring
in
March
of
2023
Lynn
canning,
she's,
a
reappointment
with
the
term
ending
in
March
of
2025
Teresa
abetha,
with
a
reappointment
term
ending
in
March
of
2026
and
Michael
Gonzalez,
with
a
reappointment
from
expiring
in
March
of
2027..
P
A
R
R
You
mayor
I,
had
a
stop
to
clarify
some
things:
I
never
got
a
response
to
so.
If
someone
could
just
tell
me
how
the
Civic
Housing
Authority,
how
the
structure
works
and
why
we
are
part
of
the
re
or
appointments
of
these
members,
and
then
there
was
a
missing
resume
for
Teresa
Abita.
R
R
Stuff
before
I
asked
on
Monday
and
I
was
just
wanting
Clarity
on
how
that
how
it
works
just
so,
we
know,
instead
of
just
you
know,
proving
an
appointment.
Most
of
these
actually
have
descriptions
like
the
veterans.
Advisory
board
says
what
their
goal
is.
The
Arts
commission
gave
a
little
description
and
we
didn't
have
any
description
about
this
appointment
for
these
appointments.
K
Sorry,
mayor,
Weber,
councilwoman
woman
can
quickly
pull
up
information
that
I
have
on
file
on
my
laptop,
but
our
appointments
are
identified
through
resolution
1989-61
for
the
Santa
Fe
Civic
housing.
It
was
also
so
there
are
five
members
appointed
by
the
mayor
and
the
appointee
serve
in
terms
of
one
two,
three
four
and
five
years
and
then
five-year
appointments
as
well.
K
So
I
can
get
you
additional
information.
If
you
would
like
this
is
just
what
I
have
at
Quick
Glance
for
that
and
I
apologize.
R
E
A
We'll
get
that
resume
for
you,
I
think
Ed
was
going
to
provide
them
and
maybe
didn't
get
it
done.
We
talked
about
it
with
him
earlier
late
last
week
and
we'll
get
we'll
get
you
the
resume.
That's
missing
and
I
think
it's
a
very
good
and
very
timely
question
to
get
an
update
on
the
Housing.
Authority
I
have
had
several
meetings
with
executive
director
taking
a
tour
of
their
properties.
A
As
we
talked
again,
one
of
the
themes
for
tonight
is
having
to
do
with
affordable
housing
and
homelessness.
They
are
a
key
player
in
our
ability
to
address
all
of
that.
They're
one
of
the
largest
landlords
in
this
community
and
Ed
does
an
amazing
job
of
addressing
the
issue
with
the
resources
available,
but
maybe.
C
A
R
A
K
A
K
A
G
K
Foreign
I
do
not
Colleen
submitted
the
memo
after
our
deadline,
so
I
apologize.
I
did
a
review
on
a
different
memo,
but
I'm
happy
to
look
into
that
I
believe
we
had
a
term
expiring
I'm
trying
to
pull
the
hold
of
them
all.
A
K
A
Vacancies
but
I
when
we
went
through
the
list
they
had
proposed
exactly
this
configuration
of
three
plus
two
alternates.
That
was
what
came
forward
from
the
staff
at
the
Arts
commission,
so
I'm
I,
don't
know
if
the
the
memo
is
inaccurate
in
saying
two,
but
every
step
of
the
way.
What
we've
gotten
from
staff
has
been
three
three
appointments
and
two
alternatives.
K
No
mayor
I
apologize
I'm
looking
through
the
previous
memos,
but
our
office
is.
F
A
Know
the
the
we
have
informed
them
that
we
wanted
to
move
forward
on
this.
The
staff
at
Arts
commission
was
eager
to
get
it
done
and
we
wanted
to
comply
with
their
requests.
But
if
there's
a
confusion
about
Arts
commission
appointments
that
is
included
in
the
memo,
we
ought
to
clarify
that
unless
the
clerk
has
an
earlier
version
that
takes
care
of
the
problem.
K
Apologize
I'm
looking
for
other
version
versions
of
the
memo,
but
it
was
my
understanding
that
one
of
the
terms
was
expiring,
actually,
two
of
them
in
October
of
2022,
but
I'm,
not
sure.
If
that's
why
there
was
two
appointments
for
that
term,
and
then
one
for
the
term
expiring
in
2023
and
I
did
not
work
with
Miss
kamiyama
on
this,
so
I
would
I
need
additional
information
or
I
need
to
reach
out
to
the
individual
that
was
working
on
this.
K
Oh
mayor
I
did
find
a
note,
commissioner,
Jennifer
Leah
rendered
her
resignation
due
to
time
constraints,
and
so
the
art
committee
respectfully
recommended
that
three
vacancies
be
appointed
I
apologize.
There
was
probably
seven
memos
well
that
was
a
few
days
ago
and
I
think
that
was
that
information
was
omitted
on
one
of
them.
But
that
is
a
note
that
I
found
on
a
different
I'm.
A
K
Different
memo
that
she
submitted,
that
did
say
that
we
originally
were
requesting
to
fill
two
vacancies.
However,
because
of
this
process,
please
note
that,
commissioner,
by
Jennifer,
say:
Ella
sorry
rendered
her
resignation,
so
they
would
be
requesting
the
appointment
of
an
additional
member
I
do
apologize.
That
was
left
out
of
this
memo.