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From YouTube: CRA 11-18-21
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A
B
B
C
C
F
F
Today,
to
have
the
privilege
of
introducing
our
chaplain
today
who's
going
to
say
the
morning
of
prayer,
we
have
the
privilege
of
introducing
tampa
police
department,
chaplain
dalia
coleman.
Today
she
has
been
a
chaplain
for
over
15
years.
She
moved
here
from
detroit
michigan
over
25
years
ago
and
has
been
an
ordained
minister
since
the
year
2000
chaplain
coleman
is
semi-retired
from
private
duty
caregiving.
She
is
currently
has
a
domestic
violence
ministry.
F
She
is,
if
you're
thinking
about
getting
married-
and
I
know
mr
chairman-
it
hasn't
crossed
your
mind
yet,
but
if
it
does,
chaplain
coleman
does
pre-medal
counseling
like
for
me
and
also
performs
wedding
ceremonies
and
when
she's
not
busy
with
all
those
things
she
has
enough
time
to
go
out,
make
t-shirts
and
custom
jewelry
and
she
loves
living
the
best
of
her
life.
It's
my
pleasure
to
introduce
today
chaplain
coleman.
If
everybody
could
please
rise.
A
Let
us
pray
heavenly
father.
We
come
this
morning,
look
into
the
hills
which
cometh
our
help
and
our
help
does
come
from
you.
We
come
with
humbleness
and
gratefulness
this
morning.
Thank
you
for
waking
us
up
this
morning
because
lord
we
know
that
with
you.
We
can
do
all
things,
but
without
you
we
can
do
nothing
and.
A
G
A
And
this
morning
we
also
come
praying
for
the
the
hurt,
the
lonely
this
morning,
the
people
that
are
in
pain
this
morning,
the
ones
that
have
lost
loved
ones.
It's
coming
a
time
of
the
year
where
we
have
a
lot
of
loved
ones
that
have
gone
on,
but
we
pray
for
comfort
today
and
we
pray
for
peace
in
our
nation
and
in
our
city
that
our
city
will
be
a
city
of
unity
in
love,
and
we
pray
lord,
that
your
will
be
done
on
earth
as
it
is
in
heaven
amen.
H
Good
morning,
cra
board
this
meeting
of
this
city
of
tampa
community
development
agency
is
being
conducted
with
the
live
in
person
quorum
of
the
cra
president
and
city
council
chambers.
However,
in
light
of
the
continuing
covet,
19
government
issued
health
standards
or
guidance
and
effect,
members
of
the
public
are
also
encouraged
and
allowed
and
allowed
to
participate
virtually
through
video
or
audio
teleconferencing
referred
to
by
florida
statutes
and
rules
as
communications,
media
technology
or
cmt.
H
H
Members
of
the
public
are
also
encouraged
to
participate
in
this
public
meeting
by
using
a
number
of
means,
including
sending
written
comments
by
internet
or
web
written
comments
by
email,
written
comments
by
u.s
mail
members.
The
public
may
also
speak
remotely
using
their
cmt
device
at
home
or
at
their
office,
or
they
may
participate
by
using
the
cmt
made
available
here
at
old
city
hall.
On
the
second
floor,
all
written
comments
for
ca
matters
that
were
distributed
or
received
within
24
hours
have
been
distributed
at
the
cra
board.
H
Those
are
the
generally
the
rules
of
procedure
for
the
public
comment.
Three
minutes
at
the
start
of
the
meeting.
I
would
ask
before
we
move
into
public,
will
you
wave
your
your
rules
and
then
agree
to
follow
the
the
procedures
I
just
outlined?
So
thank
you.
E
A
E
H
I
did
have
one
item
that
I
wanted
to
clarify
on
the
agenda
that
we
needed
to
correct
from
last
meeting.
There
was
a
motion
made
by
count
up
by
cra
member
goods
seconded
by
cra
member
miranda
regarding
requesting
a
report
from
the
clean
team
and
the
neighborhood
enhancement
team
regarding
trash
issues
in
east
tampa,
especially
on
east
lake
avenue.
That
motion
was
made,
but
there
was
never
a
vote
confirming
the
motion.
We
do
have
folks
ready
to
provide
that
information
to
you
all
under
the
director's
report.
E
Okay,
there
is
a
motion
made
by
councilman
good
seconded
by
councilman
miranda
vote.
Please.
C
Mr
councilman
dean
board
member
dean
fellows
a
officer
notifies
that
he
will
be
late,
but
he
will
be
here.
I
I
Thank
you,
sir.
I
have
at
12
15
today,
I'm
speaking
to
a
class
from
a
school.
That's
about
15
minutes
away.
I
said
it
during
lunch.
I
think
we
should
be
done
by
then.
Just
that
way.
C
F
E
A
Want
to
thank
you
all
for
the
opportunity
to
participate
in
the
public
comments.
My
name
is
keith
mccaskill,
the
president
of
the
center
for
economic
development,
and
I
am
have
a
non-profit
that
offers
assistance
with
seniors
and
disabled
persons
in
tampa
and
this
morning,
I'm
talking
about
particularly
the
east
tampa
area,
and
so
the
the
I'm
here
to
share
the
good
news.
The
east
tampa
cac,
agreed
or
wanted
to
partner
or
collaborate
with
the
center,
so
that
we
will
offer
the
services.
A
As
I
mentioned,
to
the
disabled
and
disabled
and
senior
homeowners
in
east
tampa,
we
offer
light
tree
trimming.
We
offer
lawn
maintenance,
we
offer
debris
removal.
We
also
offer
pressure
wash
we'll
do
installation
of
sod
and
or
flowers
where
it's
applicable.
So
that's
great
news
together,
we'll
be
able
to
increase
the
cac
membership
and
participation,
hopefully
attracting
the
the
right
volunteers
and
or
professionals
to
help
us
transform
this
community.
Unfortunately,
there
are
some
opportunities.
A
That's
available
in
these
tampa
I.e
the
owner-occupied
rehabilitation
program
when
it
becomes
available,
but
until
then
we
get
to
participate
with
starting
with
the
low-hanging
fruit
of
offering
these
services.
But
this
type
of
initiative
is
like
the
epitome
of
grassroot
marketing.
They
get
to
see
community
service
in
action.
So
that's
a
wonderful.
This
is
a
wonderful
opportunity
to
participate.
The
community
also
can
learn
more
about
the
public
safety
committee.
We
have
one,
they
can
learn
more
about
that.
You
know.
There's
a
there's.
A
A
committee,
that's
concerned
about
their
safety
in
east,
tampa
they'll,
learn
more
about
the
availability
of
down
payment
assistance
and
that
there
is
an
economic
development
plan
for
their
community
together,
we'll
help
mitigate
gentrification,
because
each
one
of
the
participants
receives
evaluations
for
their
home.
They
get
information
any
kind
of
educational
resource
that
might
be
available
for
them
and
their
heirs
or
their
children
or
whomever
will
inherit
their
homes.
A
Should
they
no
longer
be
here,
but
we
give
them
this
information
to
to
help
them
understand
the
value
of
their
home
and
their
community,
and
this
is
how
we
help
mitigate
gentrification.
So
this
morning,
I'm
asking
for
your
support
when
this
comes
before
you
for
your
review.
It's
a
great
opportunity,
and
I
hope
that
you
will
see
it
the
same.
Thank
you.
A
D
Good
morning
hope
everybody
is
well
hope,
everybody's
getting
ready
for
thanksgiving.
My
name
is
michael
randolph
and
I'm
with
the
west
temple
cdc.
I'm
here
today
to
talk
about
updates
on
the
rome
yard
project.
As
you
know,
there
was
a
big
meeting
a
couple
days
ago,
so
I
want
to
start
by
giving
a
shout
out
to
the
team.
The
two
lead
groups
is
the
related
group
and
tampa
housing
authority.
D
The
other
groups,
that's
related
to
the
workforce
and
wealth
building
strategies,
the
cdc
of
tampa
and
our
other
partner.
That's
doing
construction
work.
We
have,
we
have
been.
We
have
been
billing
to
identify,
I'm
sorry,
we
heavy
I'm
so
excited
we
have
a
building
now
that
has
been
identified
as
part
of
the
project,
what
we're
going
to
house
the
workforce
and
the
wealth
building
center.
Just
a
couple
highlights
for
the
video
that
was
shown
of
the
west,
hampton
city
sea
of
malfunctions.
D
So
I
want
to
give
a
couple
highlights
to
the
west
campus
cdc
technology,
wealth
building
and
job
curations
are
centered
anywhere
between
30
to
40,
new
community
resident
businesses
gonna
be
started
within
the
next
five
years.
I
want
to
emphasize
community
residencies
out
of
that
we're
talking
anywhere
between
90
and
100
new
job
creations.
As
a
result
of
that
particular
initiative,
our
tax
center,
which
is
going
to
change
the
narrative,
has
to
the
future.
D
In
addition
to
that,
we're
putting
together,
what's
known
as
the
first
community
friendly
tech
community,
in
which
residents
begin
to
understand
the
value
of
technology
and
how
it
can
change
the
nurses
in
their
life
related
to
the
production,
informant
arts
center,
we're
gonna
be
doing
video
tv
production.
A
lot
of
things
related
to
how
do
we
reduce
public
safety,
we're
happy
to
announce?
We
have
two
plates
from
hollywood.
D
That's
going
to
be
part
of
that
initiative,
one
from
miami
and
the
others
from
california
very
happy
about
that
initiative.
The
last
initiative,
the
wealth
building
initiative-
I'm
most
happy
about
this.
This
is
why
we
put
together
home-based
businesses
for
residents
in
west
tampa.
The
focus
of
this
is
on
e-commerce
and
social
media.
What's
important
about
this
is
focus
on
supplemental
income
for
senior
citizens
working
with
people
with
criminal
records,
low
income
and
disabled
in
order
to
give
them
the
that's
necessary
to
earn
those
dollars
necessary
to
stay
in
the
community.
D
E
J
Because
we,
as
african
people,
should
always
be
thinking
about
our
freedom
and
uhuru
means
freedom,
hey.
I
want
to
give
the
people
some
insight
on
something
that's
going
on
here.
This
is
a
order
from
judge
jared
smith
jared
e
smith.
It's
a
both.
The
documents
are
representative
of
the
type
of
frivolous,
derogatory,
irrelevant
and
scandalous
material,
the
court
and
other
officers
of
the
court
faced
in
the
last
two
years.
J
You
know
what
that
white
man's
talking
about.
You
know
what
that
white
judge
is
talking
about.
The
white
judge
is
talking
about
an
african
person,
doing
pushback
for
the
nasty
things
judge,
chief
judge
figarota
and
those
other
nasty
white
judges
are
doing
over
the
african
people
over
at
the
hillsborough
county
clerk
of
the
circuit
court
nasty.
J
It's
a
nasty
white
system
that
treat
black
people
nasty
and
when
you
do
any
pushback,
then
they
want
to
talk
nasty
and
ku.
Klux
klan
is
just
like
this.
You
understand
black
people
getting
out
of
prison,
serving
20
and
30
and
40
years
and
getting
out
and
being
told
that
they
have
to
pay
fines
and
fees
and
costs
and
car
costs
and
other
that
all
this
other
kind
of
stupidness
that's
the
stupidness.
They
want
to
do
to
us,
no
matter
where
they
see
black
people.
J
They
know
we
have
an
absence
of
black
power,
so
what
they
do,
they
treat
us
nasty.
They
treat
us
inhumane.
They
treat
us
with
their
superiority
complex
and
the
inferiority
complex
like
we're
inferior.
A
nasty
judge
judge
jared
smith
over
at
the
hillsborough
county
clerk
of
the
circuit
court.
Remember
his
name.
Judge
jared
e
smith
vote
for
him
when
that
time
come,
but,
like
I
tell
black
people,
don't
vote
at
all
period
and
when
we
vote,
we
have
to
start
voting
for
the
things
that
make
sense.
J
No,
we
need
to
talk
about
freeing
our
african
men,
women
and
children
from
all
these
prisons.
They're
political
prisoners,
but
they
tell
us
no
they're
criminals,
no
they're
political
prisoners,
black
people
in
jail
and
in
prison
for
like
five
dollars
worth
of
marijuana
driving
under
the
suspended
license,
and
all
this
other
nonsense
that
goes
with
it
and
that's
what
our
politicians
need
to
address.
J
621
years
they've
been
abusing
africa
and
african
people
and
nothing
of
it
and
politicians
can't
even
speak
of
that
most
black
politicians
so
ignorant
they
don't
even
know
what
the
word
reparations
mean.
They
don't
have
the
slightest
idea.
They
don't
know
what
the
city
of
tampa
o
is.
What
the
city
of
saint
petersburg
goes.
A
E
K
Good
morning,
chair
and
cra
board
members
and
happy
november,
everyone-
and
before
I
forget
at
the
end
of
the
meeting
when
you
all
get
out
of
here
quickly
for
your
meetings,
happy
thanksgiving
to
everyone
listening
for
next
week.
Our
first
item
on
the
agenda
is
mr
rashaan
nesbit.
Is
he
on
the
line.
E
G
Connie
burton-
and
let
me
just
start
off
by
saying
what,
a
year,
what
a
year
it
has
been
to
look
not
from
the
outside
but
squarely
in
the
face
of
an
organization,
principal
people,
leadership
that
the
community
is
always
an
expectation
that
would
do
right
by
them,
and
so
what
type
of
road
map
did
we
have
going
into
as
being
the
chairperson
of
the
east
tampa
board.
G
Unfortunately,
in
our
community,
the
passing
of
torch
is
so
difficult,
and
so
what
I
looked
at
primarily
was
the
mission
statement
of
the
cra,
and
what
it
laid
out
very
clearly
to
me
is
that
we
needed
to
concentrate
on
slum
blight,
poverty
and
hopelessness,
and
so
I
didn't
see
the
hopelessness
in
the
people,
because,
from
the
very
first
day
that
we
moved
into
that
position,
if
you
can
recall
a
previous
say,
past
years
of
cra
meetings,
a
lot
of
times,
we
couldn't
even
get
a
quorum,
but
I
can
guarantee
you
that
henceforth,
the
meetings
have
been
fully
participated
and
board
being
alert,
and
so
things
that
we
asked
for
was
not
out
of
the
ordinary.
G
G
I
want
to
piggyback
on
the
first
public
speaker
that
was
here
this
morning
and
what
they're
asking
for,
although
the
concept
in
itself
is
brilliant,
it's
beautiful,
but
it
comes
with
a
cost,
and
the
cost
that
I
believe
it
brings
out
is
the
division
that
continued
to
exist
in
the
community.
G
Instead
of
adopting
the
rehab
proposal
that
the
board
has
put
forth,
the
work
that
mrs
mccaskill
is
talking
about
is
just
doing
individual
houses
for
six
people
and
it's
at
a
cost
of
ten
thousand
dollars.
G
Whereas
if
you
would
pass
the
east
tampa
rehab
proposal,
the
exterior
that
we
have
proposed,
we
could
move
forward
in
doing
so
many
things
for
so
many
people
in
our
community,
because
what
would
make
those
six
persons
more
favor
than
other
seniors
in
our
community?
G
The
cry
of
rehab
in
east
tampa
has
been
so
great
that
the
county
has
even
extended
to
giving
1.3
million
dollars
exclusively
to
east
tampa,
along
with
the
city
of
tampa
rehab
proposal.
So
there's
a
lot
of
money
there.
We
just
have
to
find
the
political
will
to
do
it.
One
thing
that
we
do
note
that
did
happen
immediately
is
the
1.2
million
dollars
that
was
set
aside
for
fair
oats.
G
We
hear
that
there's
things
going
on
with
that
project,
also
the
300
000
plus
dollars
that
was
laid
out
for
the
strategic
plan.
We
await
that
final
report.
G
We
looked
at
the
leadership
academy
that
was
proposed
that
we
want
to
give
our
young
people
better
guidance.
I
think
that's
about
ready
for
to
be
approved
by
you
summer
job
program.
We
want
to
double
down.
We
want
to
move
away
from
just
our
children,
picking
up
trash
and
debris,
but
connect
them
to
an
apprentice
type
of
mentorship
program
over
the
summer.
So
as
they
do
that
work,
they
can
also
be
introduced
into
the
business
community.
G
We
ask
for
available
lots
purchased
on
22nd
street.
The
prior
board
had
bought
a
building
at
36
23.
For
what
reason
we
don't
know,
but
when
we
explored
some
ideas
as
to
how
that
building
and
with
the
city's
staff
maintenance
people
going
in
there
to
look
at
the
bones
of
the
building
to
say
it
was
in
good
shape.
G
It
couldn't
go
anywhere
because
we
needed
to
submit
some
type
of
full
vision
board
to
councilman,
google
and
so
the
lots
adjacent
to
that
property.
I
guess
ms
van
loan,
mr
mccray,
would
give
you
an
update
if
it
was
purchased.
G
The
tree
trimming
grant
is
something
that
was
highly
supported
in
the
community.
The
board
that
is
now
in
under
the
new
chairman
has
approved
of
adding
more
money
into
the
tree
trimming
grant
and
it
has
almost
been
like
the
board.
G
Under
my
leadership
I
can
say
it
was
a
feeling
of
taxation
without
representation,
and
so
the
approval
of
what
we
had
asked
for
in
our
conversation
was
the
hiring
of
a
consultant
that
would
report
primarily
to
the
cra
board.
But
I
was
out
voted,
and
so
now
money's
coming
directly
out
of
the
cra
account
would
go
toward
hiring
an
additional
city
staff
person.
G
So
we
requested
additional
down
payment
assistance,
we're
finding
that
the
houses
in
east
tampa
residents
are
being
out
priced
because
of
wages
that
many
workers
earned
it's
almost
nearly
impossible
to
match
up
with
the
cost
of
houses,
some
of
them
going
as
high
as
449
thousand
dollars.
G
We
increased
our
down
payment
assistance.
We
asked
that
a
special
five
hundred
thousand
dollars
to
be
set
aside,
so
we
can
look
at
different
housing
options
and
I'm
just
gonna
end
it
there,
because
I
believe
that
if
the
board-
and
this
is
nothing
against
the
staff-
I
think
they
did
the
very
best
that
they
could
do.
G
But
if
there
is
political
will
to
transform
east
tampa,
east
temple
would
have
transformed.
By
now
east
tampa
sit
in
the
middle
of
district
5.
district
5
has
been
able.
You
know
to
do
tremendous
things.
I'm
saying
that
there's
going
to
be
a
hundred
million
dollar
project
on
henry,
the
building
has
been
knocked
down
on
henry
there's:
a
big
marijuana
production
center
down
there,
so
things
that
people
want
to
see
happen
in
east
tampa
is
happening.
G
G
Recently-
and
this
might
be
him
as
van
loan
report
as
well-
the
cdc
came
and
made
a
request
for
190
thousand
dollars.
The
cdc
is
a
prosperous
organization
has
been
around
since
1992
and
they
didn't
come
and
just
ask
for
a
loan.
They
said
they
needed
money
for
water
and
sewer
hookup
for
four
houses
that
they're
building
now.
This
is
not
a
grant
alone
that
that
they're
asking
the
board
to
give
them.
G
This
is
straight
out
money,
and
one
request
that
we
ask
is
that
if
you're
building
four
brand
new
homes
in
east
tampa,
could
one
of
those
houses
be
set
aside,
so
we
can
bring
one
resident
that
live
in
east
tampa
presently
toward
qualification
for
that
house?
What
could
we
do
to
ensure
that
residents
in
east
tampa
end
up
benefiting
from
some
of
these
tax
dollars?
G
It's
painful
to
have
to
come
down
here
to
talk
about
these
things.
This
should
have
been
a
simple
assignment
for
me.
Let
me
just
rattle
off
all
the
wonderful
things,
but
it
is
still
at
a
crawl.
It
is
still
at
a
crawl.
It
is
still
looking
at
the
playbook
of
the
past
trying
to
figure
out
how
we're
going
to
catch
up,
and
so,
while
miss
van
long
and
mr
mcrae
has
been
very
gracious.
G
E
F
L
L
But
I
know
that
we
heard
what
you
had
to
say
and
I
think
the
staff
heard
it
and
I
know
you'll
continue
advocating
and
we
look
forward
to
listening
to
you
with
your
your
smart
advice
and
your
you
know
your
experience
in
in
the
community
councilman.
E
C
C
C
I
can't
talk
legally
about
some
of
the
parkinson's,
because
there's
some
legal
things
going
on
you
know
the
tree
treatment.
Grant
I
mean
that's
a
wonderful
program.
Everyone
loves
that
program.
The
list
is
miles
long,
it's
a
valuable
program,
but
we
need
to
do
a
little
better
outsourcing
that
to
get
the
work
done,
because
it's
just
piling
on
piling
on
and
people
are
hungry.
C
C
I
didn't
know
that
I
mean
you
know
I
think
they're
asking
for
that,
and
you
know
we
should
ask
what
what
can
we
get
out
of
that
deal?
It's
in
each
tampon?
It's
the
taxpayers
money
in
these
tampa.
I
don't
know
what
the
ramifications
are
with
what
they,
what
on
their
side,
but
that's
the
question.
We
need
to
ask
what
what
can
we
do
if
we
give
you
that
kind
of
money?
C
Of
course
we
need
to
ask
you
know
we.
I've
talked
about
the
lots,
that's
why
I
had
the
housing
guy
come
here.
We
we
need
to
start
buying
property
with
our
dollars.
We
have
the
dollar.
We
can
do
that
to
so
we
can
control,
we
don't
need
an
urban
planner.
We
need
a
developer
on
that
cac
over
there
to
to
to
be
able,
when
that
strategic
action
plan
comes
to
be
ready
to
move
to
actually
get
the
work
done.
C
So
some
of
your
questions
are
are
valid
and
I've
posed
those
questions.
So
what
I
would
say
is
that
I'm
going
to
keep
stressing
the
staff
that
we
need
to
hire
and
we
need
to
outsource
this
work
to
get
it
done
because
you're
absolutely
right.
We
shouldn't
be
behind
with
the
rehab
program
at
all,
because
I
talk
about
that
all
the
time
and
thank
you
for
your
work.
F
Yes,
councilman
miranda.
Thank
you,
ms
burton,
thank
you
for
your
sincerity
and
your
speech
this
morning
of
fact,
and
I
appreciate
everything
you've
said
and
not
only
today,
you've
been
speaking
about
this
for
many
days
in
the
past.
This
is
not
not
new
from
you,
and
I
appreciate
that
and
I
will
say
that
I
will
meet
with
both
the
two
individuals,
the
director
and
the
east,
tampa
cra
manager
and
find
out
exactly
how
they
feel
and
what's
going
on,
am
I
directly
responsible?
F
Yes,
not
I
but
six
others
also,
so
I
want
to
make
sure
that
everything
that
we
do,
even
though
there
has
been
some
improvement,
I
don't
think
I
or
anyone
can
say
there's
not,
but
it
hasn't
been
as
needed,
improvement
and
a
quicker
mannerism.
F
So
I
want
to
find
out
first
before
I
continue
my
investigation
of
what's
going
on,
not
an
investigation,
really,
it's
just
a
fact-finding
fact
and
I'm
not
questioning
your
facts,
not
at
all
I'm
not
going
to
bring
up
your
name
or
your
facts
or
anything
else,
but
I
just
want
to
find
out
what
what
is
the
overall
plan.
F
One
house
at
a
time
get
something
done,
but
it's
got
to
be
done
in
a
mannerism
that
one
house
at
a
time
doesn't
mean
one
today,
one
next
year,
so
it's
got
to
be
done
in
a
mannerism
where
we
can
see
a
immediate
five
or
six
houses,
seven
houses,
ten
houses
going
up
in
one
spot,
and
I
agree
with
mr
googe
about
buying
property.
If
you
don't
have
the
property,
you
can't
build
a
house
and
the
problem
today
we
have
in
society.
F
All
of
us
is
that
the
cost
of
land
almost
exceeds
the
cost
of
the
house
and
there's
where
we're
at
and
not
only
now,
the
cost
of
the
house
and
the
shortage
that
we
have
now
when
the
two
by
four
costs.
199
is
nine
dollars
and
something
so
everything
is
going
up
immensely,
and
so,
let's
see
what
what
we
find
out
and
I
really
appreciate
what
you're
doing
and
next
year
meeting,
I
think
I'll
be
better
informed
of
what
what's
actually
the
facts
that
I'm
looking
for.
I
appreciate
you
being
here.
I
Councilman
vieira,
and
and
thank
you,
mr
chair,
you
know
it's
funny
something
that
councilman
miranda
said
kind
of
triggered.
Something
with
me,
which
is
that
you
know
we.
I
think
this
council
and
all
the
city
elected
officials,
including
the
mayor,
were
very
united
in
terms
of
wanting
to
improve
things
in
east
tampa
and
make
robust
improvements,
whether
it's
for
affordable
housing,
whether
it's
for
public
safety,
roads,
transportation,
basic
equity
issues,
etc,
etc,
and-
and
I
do
want
to
do
my
requisite
investigation
on
some
of
the
issues.
I
You've
talked
about
miss
burton
like
with
everyone.
I
I
thank
you
for
your
work
and
your
service
and
whatnot.
You
know
one
of
the
things
that
I
think
pains
us
all
is
that,
with
a
lot
of
the
investments
that
we're
making
in
areas
like
east
tampa
that
have
been
forgotten
for
far
too
long,
we've
dealt
with
in
the
last
year
and
a
half
with
economic
and
social
trends
that
have
just
been
devastating
to
so
many
people
within
the
city
of
tampa.
I
But
you
know
talking
about
covet
talking
about,
then
the
just
the
the
inflation
we're
taking
a
look
at
inflation's
right
now.
I
Six
percent
the
cost
of
housing,
where
the
median
cost
of
rent
rental
housing
in
tampa
bay
is
about
fourteen
hundred,
which
is
about
35
or
so
of
the
median
income
here
in
the
tampa
bay
area,
that's
totally
out
of
control,
and
it
threatens
to
overtake
so
many
of
the
great
gains
that
we've
done
it's
you
know
we
have
a
resolve
and
a
dedication
to
helping
a
forgotten
area,
but
yet
we
have
these
economic
indicators
which
threaten
to
eat
up
so
much
of
the
progress
that
we've
done,
which
is
so
very,
very
frustrating,
so
it
makes
those
issues
that
you
were
talking
about,
ma'am
even
more
compelling,
but
just
wanted
to
add
my
two
cents.
L
Just
one
more
quick
thing
that
I
know
as
burton
also
was
frustrated
with
when
we
all
took
over
a
couple
two
and
a
half
years
ago,
and
I
won't
remember
the
numbers
exactly,
but
there
was
something
like
three
million
dollars
in
the
bank
account
for
the
east
tampa
cra
and
that's
money
that
the
rest
of
the
city
is
entrusting
us
to
spend
to
help
east
tampa
and
we've
all
pushed.
I
know
ms
burton
pushed
especially
to
try
to
spend
the
money
in
an
effective
way.
L
I
don't
remember
the
number,
but
there's
still
a
large
amount
in
the
account
and
there's
an
urgency.
Mr
goods
talked
about
it.
Ms
burton
talked
about
there's
an
urgency
that
we
provide
solutions
and
we
shouldn't
have
large
amounts
sitting
in
those
accounts,
so
look
forward
to
working
with
you
in
the
future
to
make
sure
that
we
that
we
use
that
money
effectively
and
that
we
deploy
it
quickly
to
make
sure
we
solve
the
issues.
Thank
you.
K
I
I
E
E
G
E
K
E
E
M
Let's
see
there,
we
go
so
good
morning,
everyone
and
apologize,
I'm
sean
nesbitt,
I'm
the
chief
programs
officer
for
floyd
housing
coalition
and
I've
been
asked
to
speak
with
you
all
today
about
community
land,
trust
and
just
kind
of
explain
that
the
concept-
and
you
know
how
cras
and
share
an
example
of
how
cras
have
been
using
this
model
really
as
a
a
way
to
I
like
to
think
about
planning
for
the
success
of
your
work
in
the
investments
that
you're
making
in
communities
and
the
anticipated
increased
value
and
wanting
to
preserve
affordability
in
the
long
term.
M
So,
as
you
know,
cras
really
go
into
communities
and-
and
looking
at
you
know,
slim
and
blight-
and
you
know
that's
a
statutory
language
as
well.
But
you
know
that's
really.
One
of
the
primary
purposes
of
cras
is
going
into
communities
and
removal
of
slum
and
blight
and
a
lot
of
times
our
communities
start.
M
Looking
like
this,
and,
of
course,
when
we're
successful,
they
end
up
looking
completely
different,
completely
revitalized
on
the
next
slide.
M
And
so
we
go
from
that
to
to
this
concerns
about
gentrification,
and
I
like
to
separate
gentrification
from
displacement.
M
Gentrification,
the
bringing
in
or
the
attractiveness
of
a
variety
of
particularly
higher
incomes
into
communities
is
something
that
we
want
to
see
happen,
but
oftentimes
that
results
in
displacement
and
we
kind
of
put
those
two
together,
but
they're
really
two
separate
two
different
things,
and
so
looking
at.
M
How
can
we
prevent
displacement
within
our
communities
of
of
those
that
have
been
in
the
community
and
also
maintaining
a
option
that
community
has
an
option
for
those
that
would
like
to
live
in
the
community
that
may
have
lower
incomes
next
slide,
and
so
one
of
the
ways
that
we
can
do
that
and
be
proactive
about
it,
particularly
at
the
beginning
of
our
efforts
as
community
land
trust.
M
However,
you
choose
to
to
use
this
model
to
provide
permanent
affordability
and
it
captures
that
through
the
ground
lease
and
so
the
community
land
trust
is
also
the
non-profit
that
holds
title
to
the
land
and
conveys
the
the
home
or
the
the
building
on
top
of
the
land
to
a
new
owner
and
the
public
investment
is
captured
through
that
ground
lease
and
that
groundings
will
have
resale
restrictions.
M
In
the
the
early
days
when
we
first
started
to
see
community
landscapes
happening
in
florida
in
the
early
2000s,
a
lot
of
it
was
concentrated
in
high
cost
communities
down
in
southeast
florida
in
palm
beach
county,
particularly
broward,
and
down
into
the
keys.
M
But
since
that
time
the
cumulative
model
has
spread
across
the
state
of
florida
up
the
other
coast
here
in
the
tampa
bay
area,
the
oldest
being
bright
community
trust
over
that
started
in
pinellas
county,
which
is
also
partnering
with
other
communities
throughout
the
state.
M
M
It's
a
model
that
a
lot
of
communities
local
governments
are
looking
towards
in
order
to
preserve
the
subsidy
that
they
put
into
creating
housing,
affordability
next
slide,
and
so
clts
can
certainly
help
stabilize
formally
disinvested
neighborhoods,
and
it
can
do
that
at
this
time
we
talk
early
in
the
redevelopment
cycle,
there's
opportunities
for
low-cost
acquisitions,
and
sometimes
it
takes
quite
a
bit
to
to
acquire
to
produce
more
than
what
housing
might
be
worth.
M
But
that's
not
always
going
to
be
the
case,
and
so,
when
there
are
opportunities
for
those
low-cost
acquisitions
to
get
in
there
and
to
apply
property
to
develop
it,
but
also
put
the
resale
restrictions
in
place
so
that,
as
the
community
does
begin
to
to
grow
in
value
that
you
always
have
that
affordability.
M
Because
again
it's
not
always
going
to
be
what
you
see
today
and
if
we
do
our
work
right,
things
will
be
quite
the
opposite,
and
so
we
want
to
maintain
affordability
in
communities
going
forward
next
slide.
M
M
M
It's
not
market
returns,
but
they
do
get
some
return
and
in
just
about
all
cases,
from
studies
that
we've
seen
folks
do
move
on
to
market
rate
housing
after
being
in
clt
home
ownership,
so
they're
able
to
move
on
to
feed
simple
on
the
market
and
then
they're
able
to
pay
it
forward.
So
that
house
is
available
to
another
household
that
wasn't
similarly
situated
as
they
were
when
they
first
moved
in
to
their
clt.
M
M
Clt
is
also
utilized
for
rental.
In
the
same
way,
the
clt
owns
the
land
and
the
developer,
or
the
owner
of
the
improvements
can
be
a
non-profit
or
a
for-profit
or
the
clt
themselves,
but
in
any
case
the
clt
maintains
ownership
of
the
land
and
the
housing
units
are
developed
on
top
of
that
just
across
the
bay
pinellas
county
utilizes.
M
This
model,
quite
often
with
all
of
his
rental
developments,
with
the
clt
having
ownership
of
the
land
and
the
developer,
is
able
to
build
on
the
improvements,
but
they
have
that
property
and
forever
will
be
used
for
affordable
housing,
and
so
this
is,
we
think
the
best
way
are
to
get
you
know:
permanent
affordability
versus
a
laura,
even,
for
example,
in
tax
credits,
there's
a
50-year
affordability,
but
that's
still
not
perpetuity.
M
It's
at
some
point
that
affordability
period
is
going
to
come
to
an
end,
and
so
this
is
a
way
to
get
permanent
affordability,
even
with
rental
development.
Next
slide.
M
And
so
thinking
about
you
know
if
you're
looking
to
get
started
with
the
cra.
These
are
some
things
you
want
to
think
about
for
a
clt.
Where
will
it
be
focused
from
a
geographic
standpoint?
M
Will
the
organization
be,
or
will
the
corporation
be
only
about
stewardship,
meaning
that
their
primary
role
will
be
just
to
manage
the
ground
leases
or
will
the
clt
also
be
an
active
developer
within
the
cra?
These
are
something
to
think
about.
M
You
know
where
will
it
be
housed
will
be
within
existing
511
c3
in
the
community,
for
example,
there
are
some
local
governments
that
have
gone
out
for
rfp
to
buy
the
501c3
to
operate
the
clt
program,
or
will
it
be
a
totally
new
clt?
It's
only
a
new
501c3,
or
will
it
be
a
program
simply
of
the
cra
or
the
local
government
that
meeting
the
cra
directly
continues
to
own
the
land
and
lease
it
and
then
how
will
it
be
governed?
M
There
is
a
traditional
tripartite
board
that
includes
public
representatives,
community
representatives
and
actual
residents
within
the
clt,
or
will
be
some
other
type
of
war
composition.
So
these
are
things
to
kind
of
think
about
at
the
very
beginning,
and
you
know
things
that
you
know
we
at
the
floor.
Housing
coalition
can
help
walk
through
these
decisions
even
before
you
get
started
with
the
actual
organization
next
slide.
M
M
It
was
going
to
be
very
attractive
and
they
wanted
to
be
proactive
and
kind
of
think
about
what
the
future
pressure
on
the
housing
crisis
would
be,
and
so
the
community,
the
cra
residents,
all
came
together
to
decide
that
the
clt
model
was
what
they
wanted
to
pursue
and
put
that
in
place
and
being
proactive
thinking
about
the
future
and
so
that
started
in
2006.
M
They
had
a
lot
of
support
directly
from
the
cra
from
the
city
from
the
housing
authority,
so
that
the
cra
gave
them
startup
funding.
It
continues
to
provide
some
annual
operational
funding
and
land
donations.
M
They
also
partner
with
the
clt
to
manage
cra,
I'm
sorry
to
manage
some
rental
properties
that
the
cra
owns.
So
they
still
have
a
very,
very
close
relationship
with
the
cra
and
they
have
100
units
within
the
c
within
the
clt,
and
I
think
that's
growing
as
we
speak-
includes
91
owner
occupied
and
six
rental
units
that
they
own
themselves
and
they
manage
again
rental
units
that
are
owned
by
the
cra
and
so
they've
continued
to
have
a
very
close
relationship
with
the
cra.
M
The
image
you
see
here
is
that
corey
isles,
which
is
their
new
development,
also
in
partnership
with
the
cra
that
they're
currently
developing
right
now
very
beautiful
homes
very
close
to
to
downtown.
So
it's
a
very
great
example
how
the
clt
and
the
cra
are
working
together
to
build
permanent
affordability
in
delray
beach.
M
M
The
cra
provides
operating
grant,
which
is
just
under
a
third
of
their
operating
annually
and
again.
F
M
Relates
to
the
development
that
they
do,
particularly
on
a
land
that
is
owned
by
the
cra
and
then
there's
also
the
rental
revenue.
M
That
they
get
through
the
cra-
and
you
can
see
that's
also
quite
a
bit
of
their.
M
So
thinking
about
home
ownership,
which
is
really
how
clts
are
typically
used
and
they're
there's
within
the
ground
least
there's
this
resale
formula
that
decides
how
much
the
home
can
be
sold
for
under
a
few
approaches
based
off
of
appraisal
or
some
fixed
rate
that
you
set
based
upon,
usually
how
incomes
are
tracking
and
so
movement,
but
all
all
in
all.
Thinking
about
that.
M
What
are
your
program
priorities?
Is
it
about
wealth
building?
Is
it
about
more
about
maintaining
affordability?
Are
you
really
trying
to
balance
wealth,
building
with
affordability,
and
those
are
some
key
questions?
M
Thinking
about
your
market
and
also
ease
of
administration
are
some
of
those
factors
next
slide,
and
so,
if
you
want
to
know
how
this
works,
this
is
just
a
one
example
of
how
the
resale
could
work.
I
mean
you
can
begin
how
it
preserves
affordability,
but
also
can
balance
out
with
some
some
wealth
building
for
the
homeowner.
M
So
in
this
example,
there's
total
development
costs
of
230.
If
you're,
looking
at
just
the
improvements,
the
phrase
value
of
180
some
some
subsidy
there,
so
the
house
was
actually
so
sold
for
165
with
some
additional
purchase
assistance
and
at
the
bottom
there.
That
149
is
what
we
call
the
base
price
and
that
will
be
used
to
determine
how
what
the
house
will
be
sold
for
in
the
future.
M
And
so
let's
say
this
homeowner
sells
in
year.
10
the
appraised
value
of
their
house
is
now
219.
M
So
the
new
price
is
the
158
855,
plus
the
value
of
their
assumable
purchase
assistants.
So
they
would
then
list
this
house
for
174
8.55
so
again,
and
that
comes
with
the
purchase
assistance,
that's
sustainable
to
each
following
homeowner.
So
you
can.
H
M
M
This
is
the
slide
that
shows
what
the
actual
homeowner
will
get
upon
resale
so
again
that
purchase
option
price
of
175
plus
a
prorated
ground
lease
fee
that
they
would
have
to
pay
minus
all
the
cost.
Closing
costs
payout
for
loan
balances.
M
M
And
so,
if
you
compare
the
clt
to
renting,
let's
say
this
is
a
three
three
bathroom
or
two,
even
a
two
being
able
to
compare
that
to
you
know:
1400
in
rent
versus
a
very
low
mortgage
payment
and
being
able
to
sell
it
and
walk
away
with
31
000
versus
zero
from
renting.
M
No,
it's
not
the
62
that
they
might
walk
away
with
a
fee
simple,
but
it
is
significantly
more
than
renting
and
again
you
get
the
savings
on
your
mortgage
payment
so
that
you
know
counts
as
well
as
well.
As
you
know,
any
other
life
choices.
Hopefully,
income
is
going
up,
so
this
really
is
a
a
viable
alternative
to
some
folks
that
are
currently
renting
to
get
into
home
ownership,
but
also,
at
the
same
time,
creates
the
community
asset
next
slide.
M
Time,
do
you
need
just
a
couple
of
minutes
here
so
thinking
about
the
pipeline?
There's
there's
tools
available
for
home
buyer
education,
and
this
is
just
one
and
recommending
that
you
know
work
with
your
counselors
and
educators
to
understand
and
really
be
able
to
teach
the
clt
approach
to
homeownership
next
slide.
M
And
there
are
lenders
out
there
that
do
clt.
I
know
that's
a
question
that
always
comes
up
and
freddie
mac
and
fannie
mae
have
made
it
very
easy
for
lenders
to
do
clt
loans.
Now,
but
again,
education
is
still
needed
at
the
market
level
and
that's
something
coalition
can
help
as
well.
M
Our
next
slide-
and
these
are
our
lenders
that
are
in
the
market
currently
that
are
doing
clt
loans
for
clt
homeowners
next
slide.
M
E
Yes,
sir,
thank
you
very
much
for
your
for
your
program
here,
I'm
going
to
start
off
to
my
left
with
councilman
miranda.
Yes,.
F
Sir,
I
appreciate
very
much
for
your
reporting
to
us
and
what
I'm
looking
at
is
that
so
many
moving
parts
that
the
general
public
doesn't
see
what
we're
looking
at
now.
So
I'm
going
to
ask
some
questions
here
or
some
comments
anyway,
regarding
what
I'd
see
and
maybe
the
public
can
understand,
because
I
don't
see
the
parts
here,
what
is
the
community
land
trust?
Is
that
a
government
or
is
that
individuals
or
what
is
it.
M
So
the
community
land
trust
as
it
would
exist,
would
be
a
501
c
3.
So
a
non-profit.
F
You
didn't
ask
a
question:
is
it
a
government
subsidies
or
is
it
individuals
that.
M
Part,
I
didn't
understand
yes,
so
the
community
land
trust
is
a
501c3,
but
is
I
guess
a
vehicle
would
be
a
vehicle
of
the
cra
to
to
to
to
bring
that
investment
into
the
community
and
also
retain
it.
M
Yeah,
the
cra
would
buy
the
land
or
it'll
be
land
that
see
the
cra
already
owns
and
as
it's
developed,
that
land
would
be.
F
He
buys
that
answer
that
leaves
out
the
that's,
not
an
individual,
that
are
making
an
investment
in
forming
a
company
and
then
holding
a
lease
on
the
land.
And
then
somebody
buys
the
house
for
200,
some
thousand
instead
of
350,
000
and
and
so
forth,
and
so
on.
Is
that
the
right
avenue
that
I'm
looking
at.
F
The
cra
buys
the
land,
which
is
not
a
part
of
individuals
somewhere
in
the
community
or
outside
the
state
that
owns
the
land,
is
owned
by
the
cra
themselves,
and
then
the
cra
holds
the
paper
on
the
land
they
buy
the
land.
So
I
assume
there's
no
mortgage
on
the
land.
Am
I
correct?
That's
that
is
correct.
F
The
builder
buys
the
land
and
where
I
got,
I
got
some
back
and
some
slides
to
see
the
the
developer
makes
a
payment
of
some
amount
of
money.
I
thought
it
was
18
000
or
something
towards.
I
forgot
what
it
was
because
the
slides
are
moving
there.
There's
too
many
moving
parts
at
one
time.
M
Yes,
sir,
so
what
that
slide
shows
is
the
subsidy,
so,
for
example,
on
the
developer
may
have
some
subsidy
source
that
comes
and
it
could
come
through
the
cra.
It
could
come
through
local
government,
but
they
bring
that
subsidy
in
that
goes
to
benefit
the
home
buyer.
M
You
know,
for
example,
if
they
applied
for
first
ship
dollars
for
development
from
the
city
of
tampa.
That
would
flow
to
the
to
the
homeowner
or
for
their
home
dollars,
but
that
would
be
a
a
direct
subsidy
from
the
developer
to
the
home
buyer
to
lower
the
the
purchase
price.
F
And
then
I
saw
something-
and
I
forget
again,
you
gotta,
allow
me
this,
because
I
I
didn't
memorize
it
all
quickly,
there's
so
much
left
and
then
the
land
rental
is
something
like
17
a
month
or
something
something
like
that
is
that's
what
I
saw.
M
Yes,
so
typically
there's
some
ground
lease
fee,
it's
usually
very
small,
25
30
bucks
a
month
that
will
be
paid
from
the
homeowner
to
the
to
the
clt,
and
it's
really
a
small
amount,
but
yeah
that
17
was
kind
of
affirmative.
Just
thinking
about
you
know
the
date
of
sale.
M
You
know
you
have
some
probably
around,
but
really
what
it
relates
to
is
the
brownies
fee
and
the
ground
leads
that
they
pay
to
the
the
clt,
and
it's
really
meant
to
be
very
small-
help
to
cover
some
of
the
clt's
costs,
but
mainly
to
to
keep
the
communication
relationship
with
the
homeowner
in
clt.
F
And
I'm
not
ready
to
say
that
I
like
it
or
don't
like
it,
but
I'm
looking
at
a
much
broader
picture
in
my
mind
that
the
individual
who
buys
that
house-
I
I'm
I'm
only
speaking
for
myself,
but
I'm
sure
that
this
is
a
I
like
to
see
somebody
that
buys
a
house
that
has
the
opportunity
to
have
an
upswing
in
valuation
of
that
property.
So
he
or
she
or
they
that
live
there
at
some
time
or
there
comes
out
of
the
shackles
of
not
being
able
to
own
the
property
in
total.
F
So
the
upswing
in
value,
and
usually
there
is
an
upswing
in
value
in
real
estate.
Although
there
are
downfalls
that
last
five
or
six
seven
years,
but
the
real
estate
always
usually
comes
back
and
if,
if
those
individuals
that
were
trying
to
help
at
the
time
of
resale,
I
saw
that
I
don't
know
how
many
years
they
were
in
that
house
how
many
years
they
were
paying,
but
their
return
to
investment.
F
F
That
was,
I
can't
tell
you
what
the
upswing
of
the
whole
item
would
be,
because
I
don't
know
the
amount
of
years
and
what
the
average
home
would
sell
for
on
the
upswing
from
the
200,
some
odd
thousand
in
retail,
of
the
purchase
price
minus
the
land
cost,
which
is
a
rental
of
18,
I
guess
a
month
or
a
year
or
whatever
it
was.
F
I
wasn't
prepared
to
catch
all
that
stuff,
so
the
general
public
hasn't
seen
what
you're
reporting,
although
they
they
might
have
seen
it
on
on
the
slide
real
quickly,
but
I
think
it
needs
some
more
time
in
my
mind,
for
any
for
one
guy
individual
in
any
way
to
find
out.
F
My
whole
purpose
is
to
help
that
homeowner
get
a
house
that,
at
the
end
somewhere
along
working
many
hours,
long
hours,
the
whole
family
supporting
to
live
there
at
the
end
of
that
house.
They
have
a
value
where
they
want
to
cash
out
or
they
want
to
get
a
loan
against
it.
They
can
and
do
other
things
with
it.
But
in
this
case
I
don't
know
there
might
be
some
some
stipulation
in
the
purchase
of
of
those
homes
that
there's
only
certain
things
that
they
can
do
with
the
upswing
of
value.
M
And
so
really
the
the
purpose
of
the
clt
is
to
kind
of
balance
the
need
for
affordability,
long
term
with
the
wealth
building.
So
you
know
yes,
they're
going
to
definitely
get
a
part
of
that
upswing,
so
it's
not
they're
not
getting
any
of
it.
They're
getting
some
part,
but
it's
also
the
the
value
to
the
community
at
large
that
you
know
this
home
is
going
to
always
be
affordable.
M
So
you
know
it's
the
issue
of
you
know:
do
you
have
one
family?
Do
you
have
many
families
and
so
you're
kind
of
really
balancing
the
wealth
building
of
individual
households
with
the
need
for
the
wider
need
for
affordability
in
the
community?
F
Well,
I
I'm
just
not
not
at
this
time-
I'm
not
I'm
not
saying
I
don't
appreciate
it
or
I
don't
like
it,
I'm
in
the
middle
of
it,
because
I
don't
the
rental
of
land.
The
word
rental
doesn't
mean
that
they're
going
to
own
much
at
all
at
the
end
of
the
term,
if
it's
a
30-year
mortgage
or
whatever
it
is.
F
F
We've
done
it
and
just
like
it
was
when
I
was
growing
up
and
I'm
not
saying
that
this
can't
be
done
that
way,
but
I
got
to
know
a
lot
much
more
about
the
florida
housing
coalition
and
the
community
land
trusts
and
what
the
rentals
is
compared
to
what
and
it's
just
too
quick
for
me
to
to
make
a
judgment
at
this
time.
Thank
you
very
much.
I
appreciate
it.
Councilman
goose.
C
Well,
thank
you,
gentlemen,
and
thanks
for
joining
us.
You
know
I
sit
on
the
county
ahab
board
and
the
county
is
going
to
this
model
to
help
people.
The
model
is
not
built.
Mr
randa,
you
know
it's
built
to
catapult
people
to
the
next
level.
That's
what
this
is
about
and
when
I
looked
at
the
program
where
the
county
is
going
to
do
their
program,
I
saw
cra
how
other
areas
that
have
cras
are
helping
those
folks
catapult
themselves
with
the
rental
with
the
housing
market.
C
The
way
it
is,
you
know
when
I
first
came
this
council
I
talked
about
now
the
cities
you
saw
tampa
the
city
is
going
probably
going
to
a
clt
model,
but
I
looked
at
another
way
where
we
have
money
in
a
cra
that
the
cra
can
have
their
own
non-profit,
that's
how
it
works
their
own
non-profit
to
be
able
to
buy
these
lands.
Put
some
of
these
folks
in
homes
get
them
there
help
them.
C
C
I
went
to
charlotte
I've
seen
some
of
the
models.
I
did
go
down
to
delray
beach
and
look
what
they're
doing
and
that's
why
I
want
him
to
come
just
to
give
the
idea.
The
concept
to
the
board
can
just
hear
what's
happening.
You
know
already.
The
the
county
board
has
already
made
a
request
to
be
a
part
of
the
city's
board,
because
we're
part
of
their
board
and
a
lot
of
things
we're
doing
we're
not
talking
to
make
things
more
collaborative,
and
I
think
it
was
a
good
idea.
C
We
did
last
week
to
make
that
motion,
but
I
do
like
the
concept.
I
need
more
information,
of
course,
mr
miranda,
but
I
do
like
the
concept
because
I
think
in
some
of
these
cra,
especially
the
east
temple
cra.
This
could
be
a
model
to
get
some
of
that
housing
money
moved
to
a
non-profit
where
they
can
control
by
land,
get
people
in
at
an
affordable
rate
and
and
get
people
feeling
comfortable
that
they
have
accomplished
something
to
move
to
the
the
final
level.
C
O
You,
mr
chairman,
I'm
I'm
familiar
with
the
community
land,
trust
concept.
I
think
it's
a
good
one.
That's
obviously
been
successful,
not
only
all
over
the
state,
but
all
over
the
country
about
two
years
ago,
when
miss
post
started,
which
started
with
us,
the
city
and
mr
massey
is
here
to,
I
think,
confirm
this,
but
the
city
created
or
the
city
helped
create
a
non-profit,
a
501c3
and
specifically
geared
toward
being
a
community
land
trust.
O
I
know
ms
post
and
her
team
have
been
very
busy
doing
100
other
things
and
I'm
not
sure
we've
done
a
whole
lot
with
community
land
trust,
but
but
I'm
supportive
of
it.
I
think
it's
a
good,
a
good
idea,
a
good
concept,
I'm
almost
surprised
that
lenders
do
get
involved
with
it,
and
my
question
to
you,
sir,
is
if
a
lender
can't
foreclose
on
the
property,
because
the
land
trust
owns
the
dirt,
then
what's
the
guarantee
for
the
for
the
lender?
Is
it?
O
Is
it
a
direct
or
a
secondary
guarantee
from
the
community
land
trust
that
the
that
the
mortgage
will
be
paid?
And
before
you
answer
that
mr
massey
looks
like
he
wants
to
chime
in
on
on
the
clt
issue,
I.
H
Did
want
to
just
briefly
let
the
cra
board
know.
H
Relative
to
what
you
were
saying,
mr
ding
felder,
that
the
florida
housing
coalition
has
already
helped
provide
the
city
of
tampa
documentation
to
create
a
community
land
trust,
and
there
have
been
efforts
underway
to
do
that.
I
think
if
the
cra
is
interested
in
participating
in
that
it
may
make
sense
for
ms
post
and
maybe
miss
marley
wilkes,
who
have
been
heavily
involved
in
that
effort
to
come
and
talk
to
you
about
the
city's
efforts
in
working
with
the
florida
housing
coalition.
H
What
they
had
advised
us
is
that
really
they
advised
against
the
government
creating
being
the
sole
creator
of
the
commune
land
trust.
It
really
needs
to
be
a
community-based
effort.
And
so
a
lot
of
what
ms
post
and
ms
wilkes
efforts
have
been
to
date
has
been
trying
to
elicit
support
in
other
segments
of
the
community.
H
But
I
think
it
would
be
helpful
and
I
think
it
would
broaden
the
conversation
if
they
were,
if
you
all,
are
interested
in
moving
forward
with
this
concept,
for
them
to
come
forward
and
talk
to
you
and
talk
to
how
the
cra
might
be
able
to
participate
in
with
the
city.
In
that,
in
that,
in
a
combined
effort,
I
don't
think
having
separate
community
land.
H
Trust
makes
a
whole
lot
of
sense,
but
if
we
can
combine
our
efforts
and
our
resources
together,
I
think
that
would
make
that,
in
my
opinion,
would
make
a
lot
of
sense.
So
I
just
want
to
make
sure
you
are
aware
that
there
are
efforts
being
made
on
the
other
on
the
administrative
side
of
things
on
the
on
that
end.
Relative
and
mr
moran
is
right,
and
the
community
interests
concept
is
generally
that
the
not-for-profit
that's
created
and
it
may
involve.
The
government-
may
not
involve
the
government
but
the
not-for-profit
committee.
H
Land
trust
would
be
the
fee
owner
of
the
land
and
there
would
be
a
long-term
ground
lease
with
restrictions
in
it
to
assure
that
the
housing
that
was
built
there
remained
affordable,
but
would
provide
some
sharing
concept
once
the
property
sold,
so
that
there
would
be
some
sharing
of
the
increase
in
value,
hopefully
with
that
that
tenant.
That
was
there
for
a
period
of
time
for
one
of
a
better
word.
So
that's
the
general
concept
as
I
understand
it,
but
I
just
wanted
to
update
the
board.
M
Yes,
so
on
the
the
lending
side,
so
they
the
lender,
absolutely
can
foreclose
on
the
improvements
so
that
the
loan
will
be
secured
by
the
value
of
the
improvement
and
the
homeowners
lease
hold
interest
in
the
land.
M
So
a
foreclosure
could
happen,
but
the
really
the
the
good
thing
is,
the
clc
is
meant
to
prevent
foreclosures
from
happening
because
they
do
have
the
ability
to
cure
defaults
on
behalf
of
the
homeowner.
That's
part
of
the
ground
release
and
they
also
then
have
the
ability
to
purchase
the
house
have
the
first
write-up
repurchase.
So
if
something
does
happen,
the
clt
can't
has
the
first
round
of
repurchase,
so
the
community
can
maintain
that
house.
I
mean
it's
not
lost
to
the
market,
but
that's
how
the
lending
works.
O
So
you're,
I'm
sorry,
mr
chairman,
one
more
question
please
so
your
one
of
your
slides
spoke
to
the
fact
there
were
minimal
number
of
foreclosures
and
I
can
see
why,
based
upon
what
you
just
said,
that
the
the
clt
has
the
right
to
step
in
and
and
and
be
involved
in
in
the
cure.
O
M
I
don't
have
any
statistics,
but
I
can
speak
anecdotally
relatively
few
defaults
and
that's
really
a
testament
to
the
education
and
counseling
that
home
buyers
receive
up
front
to
really
prepare
them
for
for
homeownership
and
so
and
then
you
know
the
affordability
of
it.
So
there's
a
lot
that
goes
into
to
making
it
a
very
sustainable
home
ownership
experience.
So.
L
Thank
you-
and
I
assume
we'll
be
talking
about
this
again,
so
I'm
not
going
to
ask
you
questions
just
put
out
some
thoughts
quickly
for
us
to
think
about.
I
think
the
the
importance
is
in
the
details
of
all
of
this
and
how
we
how
we
define
exactly
what
it
is.
What's
in
the
the
agreements,
just
a
few
key
points,
you
talked
about
wealth,
building
or
or
building
equity
versus
affordability,
and
I
think
we
have
to
focus
on
both.
L
We
need
to
have
affordable
housing,
but
if
we
don't
help
people
build
equity
or
wealth,
especially
especially
intergenerational
wealth,
then
we
we
haven't
really
accomplished
very
much
in
long
term,
so
we
have
to
match
that
balance.
There
you
talked
about
buying
versus
renting.
I
think
that
this
should
be
used
exclusively
for
purchases,
not
for
renting.
There
are
other
programs
that
provide
affordable
housing
for
renting,
but
this
is
creating,
as
as
you
present
anyway,
single-family
homes,
and
we
going
back
to
your
first
premise
of
wealth,
building
and
affordability.
L
The
way
we
do
that
is
not
by
getting
people
into
renting,
but
by
helping
them
buy
and
build
equity.
I
think
the
leak
link
to
the
lease
is
important.
It
sounded
like
it's
month
to
month
or
year
to
year.
I
wasn't
exactly
sure
on
that.
I
mentioned
singapore
all
the
time
because
I
lived
there,
but
they
have
a
94
home
ownership.
Our
state
average
is
like
65
percent
and
tampa's
is
48,
which
is
well
below
average
of
most
cities.
St
pete's,
I
think,
is
58.
L
L
I
took
a
class
in
graduate
school
on
race
and
poverty
and
we
read
five
or
six
books
a
week
and
it
was
pounded
in
my
head
that
that
spatial
segregation
is
not
a
good
idea,
and
so
I
would
ask
that
we
not
buy
whole
blocks
of
land
that
we
buy
individual
partials
that
are
spaced
out
distributed
throughout
the
community.
So
there's
not
a
density
of
poverty
or
or
people
coming
out
of
poverty.
L
L
As
an
example,
city
of
tampa,
one
tampa,
which
was
a
program
in
the
city,
was
converted
to
a
non-profit,
and
we
only
found
out
because
I
looked
it
up
by
accident
and
we
had
a
presentation
a
couple
weeks
ago
on
the
non-profits
that
are
quote
unquote
controlled
by
the
city.
There
has
to
be
transparency
on
this.
It's
important
how
it's
governed
who's
involved
in
it.
L
We
need
to
make
sure,
there's
fairness
and
who's
governing
it,
and
we
need
to
make
sure
that
the
public
sees
that
there's
transparency,
although
it
may
be
a
51c3,
the
public
is
paying
for
it
through
the
city
or
through
the
cra,
and
we
need
to
make
sure,
there's
lots
of
transparency
and
that
it's
being
handled
equitably.
L
L
If
this
is
going
to
be
a
a
program
where
we're
trying
to
help
people
buy
homes,
it
seems
like
it
doesn't
make
sense
to
do
it
at
least
today,
on
land,
that's
worth
below
a
certain
amount.
Maybe
as
we
go
into
the
future,
it
will
make
sense
to
do
that.
But
if
we're
looking
at
this
as
a
as
a
way
to
subsidize
housing
immediately,
we
should
do
it
in
areas
where
the
land
is
above
some
some
minimal
threshold,
and
you
know
we
have.
L
We've
had
developers
coming
for
us
that
say
that
the
affordable
housing
that
they're
offering
is
somewhere
between
like
225
and
280.
I
forgot
what
the
what
the
minimum
number
is
now,
but
those
numbers
seem
high
to
the
public.
Well,
if
the
land
is
free
today
or
atlanta's,
ten
thousand
dollars,
there's
not
a
very
big
subsidy
there.
That
would
bring
the
price
down
to
help
people
afford
to
buy
it.
L
So
we
need
to
think
about
the
the
price
of
land
and
how
we
would
handle
that,
and
also
it
wasn't
clear
to
me
exactly
what
the
criteria
is
for
buyers
and
then
also
how
we
would
vet
buyers.
Or
would
we
have
any
role
in
vetting
buyers
in
the
resale
situation
and
then
the
last
thing,
which
I
think
is
super
important.
L
The
private
sector
tells
us
that
if
the
city
and
county
open
up
more
to
other
developers,
developing
and
getting
federal
and
other
grants
by
themselves
directly
without
having
to
go
through
another
third
party,
that
they
could
build
housing
at
a
much
faster
rate.
There's
been
criticism
mostly
about
the
past
administration,
about
how
rfps
were
handled,
and
we
just
need
to
make
sure
that
we
provide
fairness
so
that
the
nonprofits
and
for-profits
all
have
a
fair
chance
to
to
build
on
these
spots
and
that
we're
not
just
favoring
one
developer
or
non-profit
over
another.
Thank
you.
E
P
I
appreciate
the
comments
made
by
everyone,
as
I've
said
before
and
as
we
all
know
you
know,
home
ownership
is,
is
the
american
dream
and
as
we
look
at
rising
prices
in
real
estate,
rising
prices
and
rents,
you
know
this
is
a
a
a
step
in
in
the
direction
where
we're
allowing
people
to
get
out
of
that
cycle
of
what
it
seems
like
never-ending
rental
and
getting
into
that
home
ownership.
So
they
have
some
stability
and
they
have
that
pathway
to
the
american
dream.
You
know
everything
has
has
really
been
said.
P
I
Thank
you,
sir.
I
know
a
lot
a
lot
of
things
already
said.
I
mean
that
what
I
you
know,
this
really
appears
to
be
a
very
innovative
interventional
way
to
make
sure
that
we
get
quality
housing
available
to
people
who
would
otherwise
be
denied
it.
But
you
know
again,
like
I
said
before.
What
really
worries
me
is
how
much
we
are
to
quote
bob
seger
sailing
against
the
wind
here
just
greatly
with
rising
house
prices,
continued
inflation!
There's!
Really!
I
If
you
look
at
these
economic
trends,
they're
really
a
nightmare
for
the
american
middle
class
and
if
they're
a
nightmare
for
the
american
middle
class,
imagine
what
they
are
for
people
who
are
working
desperately
to
get
into
the
american
middle
class
to
working
class
folks,
lower
income,
folks,
etc.
You
know
there
there's
a
you,
know:
economic,
tidal
wave
that
continues
to
grow
for
so
many
people,
and
it's
just
troubling,
and
I
see
programs
like
this
and
I'm
glad
that
they
can
again,
you
know
race
against
the
wind
so
to
speak.
E
Thank
you,
mr
nesbitt.
Thank
you
very
much
for
this.
This
report.
You
are
working
with
the
administration
right
now
on
this
type
of
project.
Are
you
not
with
the
city?
Yes,.
E
Thank
you
and
you're
also
working
with
the
the
county
on
this
type
of
project.
Yes,
we.
M
E
The
county's
moving
forward,
and
with
with
the
city
and
the
county
and
the
cra,
I
don't
want
to
use
the
worst
conflict
of
interest,
but
doesn't
that
tend
to
limit
our
resources.
M
Not
necessarily-
and
I
would
say
the
the
county's
efforts
I
I
just
want
to
frame
them
a
little
bit
so,
of
course,
the
county
and
the
city
are
working
in
two
different
contexts,
and
you
know
this
is
a
large
community
geographically,
as
well
as
population,
and
so
the
county's
focus
was
a
little
bit
different
than
what
what
your
focus
will
be
with
the
cra
and
certainly
in
the
city,
so
I
would
say
not
necessarily
limiting
in
in
school,
but
you
know
resources
that
you
know
that's
the
internal
question
to
look
at.
M
You
know
the
resources
that
are
available.
Is
it
gonna
be
better
to
combine
your
resources
with
the
city,
particularly
if
you're
gonna
be
investing
in
the
same
areas
or
you
know
if
it's
better
to
to
do
something
separately.
E
Okay,
thank
you
one,
one
more
quick
question.
I
I
had
heard
councilman
carlson
mention
the
word
generational
wealth
and
with
the
leasing
or
the
renting
of
the
dirt
or
the
property
itself,
are
people
going
to
actually
be
able
to
achieve
generational
wealth
and
what
I
mean
by
that?
M
So
they
they
still
have
feats,
they
have
to
be
simple
in
the
house.
So
yes
they
can.
The
answer
is
yes,
the
house
is
inheritable
to
to
heirs
according
to
the
ground
lease,
and
so
the
air
would
get
assumed
the
ground
lease
at
that
point
and
be
simple
in
the
house.
C
That
may
be
a
little
bit
different,
like
the
county
is
going
to
have
their
own
type
of
criteria.
What
they're
going
to
do
so,
I
would
say:
if
we,
if
we
could,
we
did
move
forward
to
make
sure
that
the
cra
has
their
leeway
versus
what
the
city
may
be
doing,
because
it
may
be
a
little
more
leeway
on
this
end
to
the
right
versus
the
left.
So
just
something
to
think
about.
Gentlemen.
Thank
you.
K
So
good
morning
again,
and
I
would
like
to
bring
up
kimberly
curtis
with
the
channel
district
cac.
Q
Absolutely
no
problem
good
morning,
chair
ncra
board,
so
before
we
get
into
a
very,
very
brief
presentation,
I'll
give
you
a
little
bit
of
history
and
context
and
background
on
what
I'm
going
to
be
showing
you
in
the
presentation
over
the
course
of
the
last
couple
years,
we
have
discussed
a
lot
of
new
initiatives
that
we
would
like
to.
You
know,
plan
on
doing
and
implementing
in
the
channel
district.
Q
You
know
in
the
in
the
near
future
and
you
know
a
little
bit
longer
term
and
we've
we've
come
up
with
some
really
good
ideas
and
and
programs.
But,
as
you
know,
the
cra
manager
and
staff
is,
you
know
they
have
a
lot
on
their
plate
with
the
multiple
cras
that
they
oversee.
So
we
tried
to
start
coming
up
with
a
way
to
not
continue
to
burden
them
with
more
ideas
and
initiatives
for
us
specifically.
Q
Q
So
this
is
something
that
collectively
over
the
last
I'd
say,
probably
18
months
or
so.
We've
we've
discussed,
we
sort
of
put
it
on
hold
last
year
with
coved,
obviously,
but
but
at
this
point
I
think
we
are
ready
to
move
forward.
Our
cac
has
voted
unanimously
to
program
funds
for
this,
so
we
have
already,
you
know,
set
those
aside
in
our
budget.
Q
You
know,
pending
any
any
approvals
that
we
may
need
or
questions
that
may
need
to
be
answered.
So
without
any
further
explanation
before
I
jump
into
this-
and
you
know
exactly
what
we're
talking
about
I'll
I'll
run
you
through
this
very
quickly
and
then
afterwards,
you
guys
are
free
to
ask
me
any
questions.
Q
Okay,
so
what
we
have
kind
of
come
up
with,
and-
and
this
isn't
an
official-
you
know
job
title
if
you
will,
but
it's
we're
kind
of
looking
to
cover
a
lot
of
bases
with
this
particular
person
that
we
would
like
to
engage
so
right
now
we're
kind
of
calling
it
our
marketing
and
communications,
slash
community
ambassador,
so
I'll
kind
of
get
into
the
goals
and
the
overview
of
what
we're
really
looking
for
this
person
would
not
be
a
city
employee.
Q
We
would
be
looking
for
them
to
provide
services
to
to
really
help
us
promote
economic
development
within
the
district,
and
you
know
and
really
be
that
that
person
to
help
us.
You
know,
coordinate
within
our
own
cac
and
to
get
out
into
the
community
and
really
provide
information
to
the
community
that
us
as
a
cac.
You
know
group
that
only
meets
once
a
month.
Really,
you
know
struggled
to
do,
and
so
we
would
be
asking
them
to.
Q
You
know,
located
in
the
channel
district
to
really
maintain
regular
contact
with
the
residents,
the
business
owners
and
and
also
regular,
ongoing
contact
with
all
of
the
cra
staff
and
administration
and
the
cac
committee,
so
we'd
be
ideally
whether
it's
in
the
beginning
or
a
little
bit
later
on,
ideally
we'd
like
for
them
to
be
in
an
actual
space
in
the
district
and
have
regular
office
hours
for
people
to
come
in
whether
it
be
residents,
visitors,
business
owners.
Q
You
know
other
neighborhood
organizations
to
come
in
and
and
be
able
to
coordinate
with
them
and
and
and
speak
to
them.
You
know
during
regular
hours
or
or
during
appointments.
Q
So
this
is
kind
of
a
list
of
some
of
the
the
things
that
we
ideally
would
like
to
take
off
the
plate
of
our
cra
staff
and
ask
this
person
to
to
handle.
So
we
would
be
doing
a
district
brand
and
marketing
strategy
and
that's
something
that
we've
started
working
on
just
ideally
a
little
bit
with
our
current
update
to
our
strategic
action
plan,
which
you
guys
will
be
seeing
very
soon.
So
we've
talked
about
creating
really
a
brand
and
an
image
for
the
district.
Q
So
we
would
have
this
person
kind
of
really
be
that
point
person
to
to
roll
that
out
for
us
and
and
the
focus
of
that
would
really
be
promoting
it
as
a
as
a
good
work-lift
play
community
to
to
really
pro
you
know,
reach
out
and
do
some
outreach
to
prospective
business
owners
to
come
in
to
fill
some
of
our
empty
retail
spaces
that
we
have
in
the
district
and
there's
also
new
ones.
That
will
be
coming
online
over
the
course
of
the
next
few
years
that
we'll
be
looking
to
fill.
Q
We
really
want
this
person
to
also
be
able
to
help
existing
businesses
navigate
things
such
as
our
grant
programs
give
them
information
on
that,
provide
them
with
assistance
in
resources.
You
know
how
to
really
help
them
know
the
right
people
to
contact
within
the
city
if
they
have
questions
or
they
need
assistance
with
business
issues.
Q
Q
A
big
part
of
this
role
would
be
social
media,
newsletters,
community
newsletters.
You
know
things
like
that,
reaching
out
to
the
community
to
help
promote.
You
know,
programs
that
maybe
the
cra
is
implementing
things
like
community
events.
We
really
like
this
person
to
to
be
able
to
reach
out
to
the
community
and
say
here's
an
event
we're
having.
If
you'd
like
to
volunteer
here's,
how
you
can
sign
up-
or
even
you
know,
reach
out
to
people
and
say
hey:
we
have
empty.
You
know
positions
coming
up
on
the
cac.
Q
If
you'd,
like
more
information,
you
know
here
it
is
or
here's
who
to
go
to
to
get
that
information
we'd
like
to
I
mean
this
is
something
we
have
discussed
with
parks
over
the
last
couple
of
years.
Q
We'd,
like
this
person
to
be
able
to
just
assist
the
parks
department
with
doing
programming
right
before
covid,
of
course,
as
we're
getting
ready
to
open
madison
street
park,
we
actually
sent
out
a
survey
into
the
community
to
ask
people
what
kind
of
programming
they
would
like
to
see
in
madison
street
park,
and
it
was
things
such
as
maybe
a
live
band
or
a
group
fitness
or
you
know
organized.
You
know,
group
team,
sport
activities
like
pickleball
and
things
like
that.
But
you
know,
as
you
know
too,
we
have
a
lot
of
park.
Q
You
know
per
quarter
or
per
year
in
those
parks
in
the
district,
and
we
feel
like
this
person
could
be
a
real
asset
to
assist
the
parks
department
with
maybe
locating
a
fitness
instructor
to
to
you
know
and
coordinating
those
times
and
then
reaching
out
to
the
community
and
saying
hey,
you
asked
for
it
now
we're
doing
it
and
here's
when
it
is,
and
here's
how
you
can
sign
up
this
person
would
be
really
just
a
central
information
hub
for
all
businesses
and
residents
and
visitors
in
the
district.
They
would
give
them.
Q
Q
We
might
develop
some
type
of
new
resident
packet
that
would
give
them
they
could
hand
that
out
to
new
residents
or
new
businesses,
just
to
give
them
the
resources
and
in
one
place
that
they
would
need
to
know
how
to
really
maximize
you
know,
being
a
new
resident,
you
know
or
a
new
business
in
the
district,
so
they
could
be
a
first
point
of
contact
for
our
grant
programs
that
we're
working
on
now.
They
could
help
them
with.
Q
Just
application
intakes
and
then
kind
of
just
just
to
be
a
point
of
contact
and
just
to
kind
of
assist
the
staff
with
kind
of
answering
general
questions,
and
things
like
that.
That
I
think
would
streamline
the
process
more
for
staff
and
obviously
they
would
refer
to
all
city
departments
as
required.
So
and
that's
that's
really
it
yeah.
Where
do
I
go
to
exit
this?
Oh
here
we
go
okay.
So
that's
really
it
that's
our
plan.
That's
everything!
Q
We've
kind
of
talked
about
over
time-
and
you
know,
would
like
to
to
have
this
person
do
so.
If
anybody
has
questions
happy
to
take
them.
L
K
We
have,
we
expect
the
draft
to
be
delivered
in
december
to
start
being
reviewed
by
the
cac
and
the
community
and
the
public.
I.
L
You
know
this
is
my
industry,
so
I'm
always
in
favor
of
marketing
and
communication,
but
I
think
it
has
to
be
a
part
of
the
strategic
action
plan
and
it
has
to
be
considered
with
that
after
the
kind
of
manufactured
controversy
about
the
strat
center
investment
a
few
weeks
ago
or
a
month
ago,
I
got
lots
of
calls
to
ask:
what's
the
status
of
either
shutting
down
or
putting
some
kind
of
cap
on
channel
district
in
downtown
cras,
because
there's
so
many
areas
of
the
city
that
would
love
to
have
marketing
help
and
branding
help
and
help
recruiting
a
publix
and
all
these
other
things
they'd
like
to
have
their
potholes
fixed.
L
L
Is
it
going
to
have
a
cap
of
dollars
at
some
point,
or
will
we
say
that
20
percent
of
the
money
will
stay
in
it
for
the
next
10
years,
but
the
rest
of
it
will
be
put
in
the
general
fund
allocated
to
a
parks
fund
or
something
there
calls
for
lots
of
different
things?
But
if
we,
if
we
voted
on
this
out
of
context,
I
think
we
would
get
a
lot
of
pushback
from
other
neighborhoods
throughout
the
city.
D
L
Others
don't,
but
if
we
look
at
the
context
of
the
study
action
plan
and
what
our
plans
are
with
the
cra,
then
it
would
then
we
could
figure
out
how
to
do
this.
Thank
you.
E
O
O
I
think
I
think
it
sounds
pretty
neat
the
especially
I
I
and
I
don't
know
you
know
everything
about
what's
going
on
down
there,
but
I
think,
especially
as
related
to
community
events.
So
so
maybe
maybe
it's
somebody
who
actually
can
help
you
know
plan,
I
don't
think
city
staffers
have
the
time
or
the
ability
or
direction
to
help
you
help
you
guys,
plan
events
activate
the
parks,
as
you
indicate
on
the
on
the
on
the
handout.
O
So
maybe
a
a
more
significant
part
of
their
time
would
be
related
to
that.
If
that's
the
the
the
cac's
desire,
you
know,
overall,
I
can
see
where
the
the
district
is
sort
of
maturing.
At
this
point,
a
lot
of
you
know
a
lot
of
the
actual
construction
projects
are
either
ongoing
or
wrapping
up,
and
now
I
can
see
where
we're
kind
of
maturing
to
the
next
level
kind
of
like
the
downtown
district.
O
You
know-
maybe
maybe
so
anyway,
you
know,
I
think,
if
we
can
sort
of
tiptoe
into
this,
you
know
and
and
maybe
a
one-year
pilot
project
try
not
to
invest
too
much
money
in
terms
of
lease.
You
know
leasing
space,
maybe
with
your
connections,
you
can
find
somebody
to
donate
some
space.
You
know
in
terms
of
the
desk
or
the
office
that
might
be
helpful
as
well.
Thank
you,
councilman.
C
C
I
look
at
the
fy
2020.
We
have
a
cra
communications
and
projects
coordinator
coming
on
board,
so
I'm
just
wondering
how
miss
van
loan-
maybe
you
can
ask
this
question
if
we
allow
the
challenges
to
get
this
other
person,
how
will
this?
How
will
our
person
intertwine
with
their
person,
because
I
I
I
was
of
the
concept
when
mr
carlson
kind
of
made
this
because
he's
the
marketing
guy
here-
that
this
person
here
for
for
20,
will
be
doing
these
type
of
things
for
all
of
the
districts?
K
Yes,
sorry,
yes,
you're
correct,
but
we
do
have
eight
cacs
and
you
have
just
to
give
you
an
example.
West
tampa
just
did
five
grant
programs
that
you
approved
over
the
summer
and
now
there's
going
to
be
that
rollout
and
going
out
downtown
now
would
like
to
focus
more.
They
adopted
the
facade
grant
program,
but
with
two
people
working
for
cras,
their
ability
to
go
door-to-door
and
do
that
outreach
to
let
the
businesses
know
that
we
have
these
programs
now
and
you
take
advantage
of
it.
K
K
C
That's
why
I
want
the
board
to
hear
that
miss
van
long,
your
plate
is
full,
your
plate
is
full
and
the
cras
are
no
longer
a
small,
slow
craze
where
you
start
they're
growing
now,
east
tampa
has
needs,
we
don't
have
enough
staff
and-
and-
and
I
see
the
need,
like
I
said-
to
outsource
some
of
this
stuff-
you
can't
handle
it
alone,
you
don't
you,
don't
have
your
assistant
director
yet
even
help
you
yet.
Nor
do
we
have
the
project
person
and-
and
I'm
just
gonna
suggest
we
look
at
that.
C
Take
a
strong
look
at
that
with
miss
van
long.
She
is
our.
She
is
our
employee
and
we
need
to
make
sure
that
we
give
her
the
go
ahead
to
go
ahead
and
be
able
to
hire
people
to
get
some
of
this
work
that
we
need
done.
C
We
have
a
lot
of
work
in
some
of
these
craze,
gentlemen.
That
has
to
get
done,
and
I
can't
keep
focusing
on
each
tamper,
but
they
are
the
worst
that
are
far
behind
that
need
to
get
moving
much
faster
and
she
needs
employees
to
get
some
of
this
work
done.
So
we
need
to
kind
of
look
and
evaluate
meet
with
her
evaluate
how
many
more
employees
that
she
may
need
to
hire
to
be
able
to
get
these
rfps
out,
get
these
projects
going
to
get
some
of
those
struggling
moving.
E
E
Miss
van
loan
with
every
cac
there
are
some
touchy
subjects
and
what
I
mean
by
that
is
sunshine
laws.
This
person
that
will
be
brought
in
will
they
be
the
admid?
Will
they
give
the
administration?
Will
they
give
the
final
approval
to
the
content,
or
will
your
office
be
giving
final
approval
to
this
content.
K
Oh,
no,
you
would
think
of
it
just
like
if
we
hired
a
consultant
like
we
have
now
with
valerian
who
does
our
newsletters,
they
develop
the
content,
we
brainstorm.
We
let
them
know
what
our
priorities
are
for
this
quarter.
We
give
them
what
some
of
the
talking
points
are
they
write
that
content?
We
talk
about
the
pictures,
they
give
us
the
drafts
and
then
the
drafts
are
reviewed.
K
Some
of
the
cacs
have
a
subcommittee
of
their
cac
that
reviews
the
drafts
and
in
others
it
is
a
cra
staff
that
does
that
final
review
of
the
newsletters.
But
everything
goes
to
our
staff
before
anything
is
finalized.
E
Excellent
and
again
there
are
some
touchy
subjects
and-
and
I
just
want
to
make
sure
that
all
bases
are
covered.
E
L
Sorry,
mr
just
with
my
my
marketing
pr
hat
on
there's,
never
enough
money
or
people
in
any
government
agency
or
non-profit
and
most
companies
to
do
all
the
communication
that
we
need
to
do
or
want
to
do.
L
One
idea
back
up
a
second
before
I
got
on
council
with
through
my
firm.
I
did
a
lot
of
pro
bono
work
with
neighborhood
association,
creating
free
logos
for
them,
helping
them
with
their.
L
L
What
one
suggestion
would
be.
There
was
a
lot
in
this
position
that
was
talked
about.
Some
of
it
is
logistics,
not
marketing,
branding
communication,
and
so
one
idea
would
be
to
get
a
a
dedicated
marketing
branding
person
who
would
be
assigned
to
neighborhoods
in
the
city
that
would
maybe
report
to
adam
smith
with
a
dotted
line
to
neighborhood
relations,
and
that
person
would
help
build
capacity
for
communication
within
neighborhoods
and
help
them
separately
define
maybe
working
with
an
outside
agency.
L
But
then
the
cra
would
fund
some
part
of
that
through
each
of
the
cras
that
that
it
made
sense
to
do
that.
So
we
would
have
some
guaranteed
part
of
their
time
to
work
with
some
of
the
specific
districts
anyway.
Just
an
idea.
Thank
you.
O
Is
there
is
there
a
motion,
miss
van
loon,
that
would
help
move
this
along.
K
K
K
The
consultant
heard
a
lot
from
the
cac
members
and
at
the
workshops,
the
importance
of
marketing
channel
district
and
really
trying
to
help
build
that,
I
don't
say
brand
because
brands
are
wrong
word,
but
that
feeling
and
that
sense
of
community
when
you
have
a
sudden
influx
of
so
many
people
and
a
lot
of
renters
and
a
lot
of
young
people
and
really
looking
to
the
cra
to
say.
Okay,
this
is
our
community.
This
is
our
neighborhood,
which
is
encompassed
within
the
cra
fully,
and
how
do?
K
O
K
Q
And
real
quickly,
let
me
let
me
piggyback
on
that
for
just
a
second.
So
when
we
when
we
first
started
talking
about
this
position,
we
had
a
lot
of
ideas
and
then,
when
we
started
working
with
our
consultants
on
the
sap
update,
we
were
able,
through
the
community
workshops
that
we
did
and
I
actually
attended
every
one
that
we
had
through
the
sap
process
this
past
year.
I've
been
extremely
engaged
with
that's
an
me
myself
as
well
working
with
him
closely
through
this
whole
process
and
this
kind
of
final,
almost
semi-final.
Q
You
know,
description
of
this
position
has
really
we've
gotten
to
this
point.
Because
of
the
sap
update.
You
know,
I've
listened
to
what
the
community
has
had
to
say.
Sne
snme
has
listened.
You
know
the
draft
you're
going
to
see.
I
I've
seen
the
first
version
of
that
and
it's
it's
very
good.
It's
very
comprehensive.
It's
captured
what
the
community
has
said
that
they
want,
and
this
this
for
lack
of
a
better
term
position
or
contract
person.
Q
Will
those
descriptions
and
the
things
that
I've
put
in
this
presentation
really
do
align
with
everything
that
that
you
will
see
in
the
sap
and
that's
kind
of
how
we
got
to
this
sort
of
almost
final
version
of
this
description
was
was
from
the
that
process
of
the
sap
update.
H
Let
me
just
interrupt
quickly,
I
do
think
from
a
legal
perspective
if
we
can
tie
it
to
the
sap
update
and
what's
going
to
be
in
the
update
of
the
community
redevelopment
plan
legally,
that
makes
more
sense.
We're
tied.
The
legal
parameters
under
which
you
operate
is
that
we
need
to
be
consistent
with
163
and
with
the
community
redevelopment
plan.
So
if
these
types
of
efforts
are
recognized
in
that
update,
I
think
it
will
be
a
fairly
easy
thing
for
you
all
to
support.
Probably
in
the
january
it
sounds
time
frame,
but
that
that
that.
E
H
E
F
K
K
When
the
east
tampa
cra
was
first
created
and
we
had
our
original
crp,
we
had
29
chronic
illegal
dumping
sites,
chronic
meaning
that
they
were
continuously
basically
established
areas
that
were
being
utilized
by
people
who
didn't
want
to
pay
fees
and
were
trying
to
find
an
easy
way
out
to
dump
and
really
had
a
negative
impact
on
our
community,
and
one
of
the
very
first
initiatives
when
the
cra
was
established
was
to
have
the
environmental
detective
position.
It
was
the
first
one
in
our
state
and
it
may
still
be
the
only
one
in
our
state.
K
If
we're
not
we're
one
of
very
few,
and
in
the
past
18
months
we
have
been
so
blessed
to
have
detective
williams
as
our
environmental
detective.
He
has
taken
it
to
the
next
level
beyond
just
looking
at
again,
instead
of
addressing
just
the
aftermath
and
the
cleanup,
how
do
we
address
illegal
dumping
and
also
the
other
ills
that
come
with
it?
K
So
if
I
can
have
mr
d
cue
up,
we
have
a
two
minute
video
we'd
like
to
share
with
you
and
then
I'll
bring
up
detective
williams.
B
My
role
collectively
with
the
members
of
the
east
tampa
cra
was
to
develop
a
multifaceted
approach
to
blighted
related
issues,
but
we
also
took
on
a
public
education
approach
through
a
ban,
the
blight
campaign
to
educate
the
public
public
newsletters,
to
educate
them
on
laws
and
and
and
things
that
we
can
do
together
to
help.
E
Fight
the
blight
our
cac
and
cra
were
able
to
raise
funds
for
this
detective
to
help
stop
the
illegal
dumping
and
to
make
sure
that
the
homes
were
secure
in
the
neighborhood
without
a
doubt,
its
domino
effect.
If
we
can
take
one
neighborhood
if
we
can
take
one
home
if
we
can
take
one
property
and
make
sure
that
it
is
clean,
secure
and
without
junk
trash
and
debris,
it's
going
to
help
the
people
living
next
to
them
behind
them
and
on
the
next
block.
A
lot
of
my
targets.
B
Are
gathered
through
public
feedback
through
the
partnership
meetings,
so
I
begin
to
see
sometimes
not
even
by
questioning
but
just
listening
during
the
meetings,
what
the
public
expects
or
what
they
would
like
to
see
dealt
with.
There
was
a
particular
building
within
east
tampa
that
spans
an
entire
city
block
that
was
known
for
years
for
crime
and
the
community
wanted
something
done
about
it,
so
the
building
was
eventually
vacated
and
is
now
set
to
be
demolished
and
is
going
to
be
affordable.
Housing
is
going
to
go
in
in
place
of
that
problem
property.
E
C
B
B
This
is
a
relationship
program,
so
I
couldn't
have
done
it
without
the
help
of
east
tampa
community
code
enforcement,
the
fire
marshals
and
the
legal
department.
I
just
want
to
thank
everybody
for
coming
together
and
working
as
a
team
to
help
east
tampa.
E
E
I
Thank
you,
sir.
What
wonderful
video
there
and
sir
thank
you
detective
for
all
your
work,
and
we
know
that
you
know
blight
has
such
a
a
negative
spiral
effect
on
a
lot
of
communities
where
people
who
work
hard
and
play
by
the
rules
and,
and
you
know,
raising
their
families
right,
etc.
Are
the
victims
of
so
much
of
the
dumping
and
the
blight
that
you're
talking
about
and
and
not
just
does
that
hurt
communities
but
increases
crime?
It
increases
dysfunction.
I
It
has
a
real
again
a
spiral
effect,
and
you
and
your
work
show
that.
So
just
thank
you
for
all
your
work
and
it's
good
to
see
our
good
friend
mr
mccrae,
there
looking
sharp.
As
always
sir.
Thank
you
thank
you.
C
You
know
a
valuable
program.
I
said
that
from
day
one
it
works.
C
You
know
a
lot,
some
people,
the
community,
didn't
understand,
but,
as
you
see
detective
williams
out
there
actually
looking
at
some
being
proactive
in
some
of
the
problems
that
we
have
and
that's
the
key
being
proactive,
identifying
those
areas
and
again
looking
at
some
of
those
convenience
stores
that
that
are
a
problem
are
some
of
our
problem
issues
with
trash
and
litter
all
over
the
place.
So
I
just
thank
you
for
your
work,
you're
doing
and
congratulations
on
the
awards
you
received.
F
E
I
thank
you
very
much
for
the
hard
work,
the
hard
work
you
do
in
in
the
east
tampa
cra,
and
I
also
congratulate
you
on
this
state
award.
You
have
shown
the
shown
the
state
and
got
us
recognition.
When
I
say
us,
I
mean
the
cra
board
got
us
recognition
for
the
hard
work
that
you,
the
caac
and
the
rest
of
your
apartments
partners
have
done
to
help
clean
up
the
slum
and
blight
in
east
tampa.
I
thank
you
very
much.
My
friend.
K
N
They
are
spread
throughout
the
city
in
our
six
districts,
which
the
code
enforcement
and
the
enhancement
teams
work
together
collectively
to
improve
those
areas.
So
each
district
has
a
minimum
of
six
enhancement,
employees
and
the
cra,
as
you
know,
funds
four
full-time
employees
and
five
of
the
part-time
employees
for
their
specific
area.
So
they
are
basically
complaint
based
deployed
every
morning
with
their
route
sheets,
where
the
complaints
come
in
through
our
customer
service
center
and
complaints
that
also
come
directly
either
to
me
or
to
the
code
inspectors
or
even
from
your
constituents.
N
The
complaints
come
in
that
way,
so
they're
deployed
each
day
to
the
complaint
areas.
Now
over
time,
there
have
been
some
areas
that
are
habitually
and
chronically
plagued
with
litter
and
blight
issues.
A
good
example
would
be
the
nebraska
corridor,
where
we're
literally
out
there
every
day,
cleaning
up,
and
that,
like
I
said,
is
complaint
based
and
that's
why
they're
drawn
there.
I
understand
the
the
question
came
up
about
lake
avenue.
Lake
avenue
recently
has
been
a
challenging
area.
N
I've
been
in
direct
contact
with
major
calvin
johnson
and
captain
les
richardson
and,
of
course,
curtis
williams,
who
I'll
say
is
absolutely
doing
an
excellent
job
for
us,
but
the
area
along
lake,
particularly
from
15th
street
to
29th
street,
has
had
some
issues
and
we're
working
directly
with
them.
There's
areas
along
lake
where
people
are
congregating
and
once
the
congregation
happens,
that's
when
the
the
litter
and
debris
and
stuff
accumulates
as
far
as
the
individual
property
owners
or
businesses.
N
N
Typically,
we
give
them
a
notice
putting
on
notice
to
clean
the
property
they
get
21
days
to
clean
it,
and
we
check
on
that.
Normally
that
works
if
it
progresses,
they
can
go
before
the
magistrate
for
additional
sanctions
as
far
as
dumpsters
and
overflowing
dumpsters
on
some
properties.
We've
seen
a
lot
of
that.
Lately.
N
N
Additionally,
we
give
them
those
21
days
to
correct
the
problems
they
got
to
get
that
trash
back
in
the
in
the
bins,
because
the
trucks
will
not.
You
know,
they're
only
picking
up
the
bins,
they're
not
getting
out
and
picking
up
what's
what's
laying
around
there,
so
just
real
quick,
some
stats.
For
the
past,
the
last
fiscal
year
we've
removed
nearly
3
200
tons
of
debris
throughout
the
city
and
we've
processed
2154
work
orders,
like
I
said
in
the
beginning.
N
C
Well,
keith
thanks
for
joining
us
this
morning.
You
know,
of
course
you
know
I
get
tons
of
calls
for
my
district,
especially
in
the
middle
portion.
I
just
wanted
to
make
sure
that
people
talk
about
clean,
the
clean
team
enhancement
team
and
just
want
to
make
sure
that
they're
saying
we're
on
the
main
corridor,
but
they're
looking
at
some
of
these
side
streets
as
well.
So
I
didn't
know
if
the
cra
that
we
paid
for
has
has
a
policy
or
we're
just
on
the
main
quarters.
C
N
Yeah
we're
hitting
all
the
areas
but,
like
I
said
that
they're
complaint
based,
so
as
you
can
imagine,
we
do
get
more
complaints
on
the
main
corridors
because
there's
more
people
there,
but
we
can
work
with
the
cra
and-
and
we
do
if
there's
any
particular
areas
we
need
to
address
more.
We
can
always
move
the
resources
there
and
get
the
attention
that
it
needs.
I.
C
Know
you
guys,
you
know,
don't
don't
have
as
many
as
you
need
to
try
to
get
to
every
complaint
you
get
when
you
can,
but
I
I
I
know
the
council
is
looking
for
the
future.
The
tpd
is
going
to
bring
something
about
that
code
enforcement
board
and
I
think
this
might
be
able
to
help
your
group
with
some
of
these
complaints
and
make
some
of
these
people
start
cleaning
their
yards
up
and
cleaning
some
of
their
businesses
up.
C
I
think
that's
going
to
be
a
big
help
in
the
future,
so
hope
we
can
get
that
implemented
sooner
rather
than
later.
I
guess
the
last
thing
you
talked
about
the
dumpsters.
That
was
a
key
point,
so
your
group
is
working
with
solid
waste
and
reference
to
those
dumpsters
as
well
correct.
N
Exactly
we
a
lot
of
times,
we
get
the
initial
complaint,
we
go
out
there
and
then
the
referral
will
go
to
solid
waste,
they'll,
send
out
their
inspectors
and
address
the
problems
with
those
you
know,
whatever
they
need
to
do
to
fix
the
problem.
Okay,
I
don't.
O
You,
mr
chairman,
and
thanks
keith,
for
for
all
you
do
so
I
I
know
this
is
not
specifically
not
yet
specifically
a
cra
area.
I
hope
mr
massey
will
give
me
some
leeway
on
that.
But
tell
tell
me
what
what's
going
on
in
sulphur
springs?
I
I've
been,
you
know,
that's
part
of
the
city,
we
don't
we
don't
address
it
too
much.
O
But
it's
it's
really.
I
think
one
of
the
one
of
the
more
dif
most
difficult
parts
of
the
city
and
and
I'm
just
wondering
from
your
perspective
and
code
enforcement
and
and
trash
and
debris
and
and
that
sort
of
thing
is-
is
that
a
a
high.
N
Yeah,
sulphur
spring
is
definitely
a
very
high
priority
area.
I
do
get
a
lot
of
complaints
about
the
litter.
You
know
all
along
nebraska
up
that
way
and
in
addition
to
the
off
and
on
ramps
of
the
interstate
we
do
address
those
weekly.
I
get
weekly
reports
on
the
cleanups
on
on
the
ramps
and
stuff,
but
it
is
a
challenging
problem
as
well.
O
I
was,
I
was
more
specifically
thinking
about
the
neighborhood
itself
in
you
know,
in
sulphur
springs,
running
from
running
from
the
river
up
to
you
know
up
to
bush,
you
know:
do
we
get
the
the
mattresses
and
you
know
the
kind
of
things
we
that
we
talk
about
in
east
tampa
when
I
drive
through
sulphur
springs,
I
tend
to
see
a
fair
amount
of
that
as
well.
Yes,.
N
O
Are
we
or
could
we,
instead
of
just
being
reactive
in
that
neighborhood?
Are
we
all
so
proactive
in
that
neighborhood
and
the
reason
I
say
that
is
that
neighborhood
might
not
be
the
type
of
neighborhood
that
picks
up
the
phone
and
knows
who
to
call-
and
you
know,
has
computers
to
get
on,
and
you
know
or
spend
the
time
to
put
in
those
complaints,
but
therefore
it
might
need
a
little
more
pro
activity,
as
opposed
to
some
other
neighborhoods
that
you
know
where,
where
you
would
get
those
calls
and
emails.
N
Right
it
it
it
does.
I
know
what
you're
saying
we
do
have
and
that's
why
that
they're
teamed
up
with
the
inspectors
who
are
out
there
and
the
inspectors
do
a
lot
of
the
complaints
themselves.
They'll
put
the
referrals
in
when
they're
out
and
and
see
the
mattresses
or
any
debris,
that's
on
the
right
away.
N
In
addition
to
a
lot
of
times,
if
the
debris
is
just
put
out
in
front
of
a
house
that
will
go
to
a
referral
to
solid
waste
because
then
when
they
pick
it
up,
they
have
the
ability
to
charge
the
homeowner
with
that
debris
that
they
put
out
without
calling
in
for
the
special
pickup.
Okay.
C
Miss
dingfield,
you
know
you
always,
you
know,
triggered
my
mom
and
I
missed
it,
and
I
was
going
to
talk
about
at
least
here,
but
I
don't
know
I
mentioned
before
the
solid
race
director
that
sometimes
we
drive
out
and
we
see
these
things,
but
we
don't
call
it
in
and
I'm
just
wondering
maybe
you
and
maybe
the
interim
director,
even
with
our
cra,
could
come
up
with
a
a
plan
or
some
dollars
to
look
at
it's
what
I
call
the
old
junk
man,
some
type
of
grant,
that
we
can
have
folks
and
put
them
to
work,
to
see
these
things
and
collect
some
of
this
breed.
C
C
But
I
think
you
know
we
got
to
be
a
little
proactive
ourselves
and
I'm
hoping
that,
maybe
you
know
we
get
our
minds
and
our
heads
together
maybe
find
a
grant
or
if
it's
just
east,
tampa
or
cra,
maybe
they
could
put
some
dollars
with
the
entertain
to
hire
some
other
people
to
go
out
and
be
able
to
help
partner
to
clean
up
some
of
the
debris.
So
that's
just
an
idea.
E
H
Massey
yeah
and
just
a
couple
things
you
know,
cra
dollars
have
to
be
spent
in
their
their
respective
areas.
Unfortunately,
the
other
thing
just
so
that
you're
aware,
when
we
contract
with
third
parties,
we
have
to
go
through
the
same
state
law,
mandates
that
the
cras
go
through
the
same
process
that
the
city
goes
through.
So
it's
not.
We
can't.
We
can't
just
hire
someone
right.
H
C
E
F
Councilman
miranda,
thank
you,
keith
everything
you
and
your
all.
The
employees
in
your
division
are
doing,
but
it's
like
a
habit
and
but
it's
not
you
know
it's
like
smoking
or
whatever,
and
it's
not
the
same.
People
are
dumping.
It's
that
people
see
a
place
where
they
dump
and
they
think
they
dump.
And
if
you
go
down
hines
right
there,
just
one
blocks
off
of
spruce.
You
know
that's
that
there's
a
dump
there
on
the
side
of
a
little
strip
center.
F
That's
got
a
gas
station,
I'm
not
going
to
mention
anymore,
but
every
time
I
drive
by
there's
a
new
visitor
that
drops
something
I'm
going
to
put
it
that
way
and-
and
it's
it's
it's
like
you
know
here
I
am
dump
on
me
and
it's
just
something
that
just
has
to
be
addressed
and
you're
doing
a
great
job
on
it,
you're
working
very
diligently,
but
it's
just
that
we
can
just
catch
somebody
dumping.
F
So
we
can
just
say
man.
This
is
the
end
of.
I
know
there
are
laws
and
there's
fines
on
it.
Maybe
we
can
clear
up
something
because
it's
just
a
habit,
the
location's,
a
habit
and
the
people
see
it.
They
become
habitual
and
they
think
that
it's
you
know
it's
common
sense
that
you
don't
do
it,
but
they
see
it
there.
Then
you
can
do
it.
I
guess.
K
K
So
we
have
our.
This
is
what
I
don't
know
why?
Oh
it
was
on
a
so.
This
is
what
our
adopted
budget
positions
look
like
for
fy22.
K
We
added,
as
we've
talked
about
the
extra
position
in
east,
tampa
the
communications
and
projects
person
and
then
to
have
an
aid
in
our
office
to
help
with
some
of
this
work.
We
have
been
in
the
process.
We
just
finished
the
first
round
of
interviews
for
the
ed
specialist
and
the
east
tampa
office,
and
we
ran
into
an
issue
that
is
very
good
to
have.
K
So
as
we
keep
talking-
and
actually
I
have
to
thank
councilman
goodes
for
this,
as
we
were
talking
the
other
day,
our
my
thoughts
kept
evolving,
and
so
what
I
would
like
to
do
is
just
going
to
sorry.
It's
timed
is
currently
we
have
an
ed
specialist
and
a
housing
counselor
in
our
east
tampa
office
as
far
as
positions,
and
we
have
these
two
outstanding
people,
and
one
of
them
has
all
the
housing
background.
If
we
hire
a
housing
counselor,
then
that
person
is
mostly
focused
only
on
the
housing
section.
K
If
we
have
two
ed
specialists
and
hire
someone
that
has
all
of
that
housing
background,
plus
the
management
of
the
third
party
contracts,
we
are
getting
a
higher
caliber
position
and
a
lot
more
skills
than
we
would
have
gotten
with
a
housing.
Counselor
hr
can
make
this
happen
for
us
and
they
have
a
process
for
it.
K
So
what
I
wanted
to
basically
get
your
blessing
to
move
forward
with
is
to,
and
we
can
make
this
happen
very
quickly
if
we
go,
this
route
is
cedric,
and
I
would
like
to
talk
to
hr
about
making
a
job
offer
to
these
two
candidates
and
we
could
have
them
on
board
within.
You
know,
amount
of
time
of
give
hr
a
week
or
so,
especially
with
thanksgiving
to
make
the
job
offer
get
that
worked
out.
They
give
their.
K
Hopefully
they
accept
they
give
them
notices
and
by
very
early
in
january
we
could
have
these
two
positions
filled
at
once
and
have
two
incredible
people
with
lots
of
experience
and
everything
that
the
east
tampa
community
has
been
asking
for
and
what
the
cra
board
has
been
asking
for
and
I'll
go
back
to
that
one
second,
and
then
I
just
wanted
to
update
you.
I
will
have
the
two
other
positions
filled
by
january.
K
We
are,
we
just
got
the
list
from
hr
for
the
downtown,
etc
manager,
and
we,
I
am
starting
to
set
up
interviews.
Hopefully,
even
if
we
can
start
getting
some
interviews
next
monday
and
tuesday
and
finish
the
wrestling
interviews
the
following
week,
so
that
we
can
get
that
narrowed
down
and
make
an
offer
before
christmas.
So
again
we
can
have
that
position
filled
very
quickly
when
we're
down
our
existing
positions.
That
does
then
mean
that
the
rest
of
staff
is
picking
up
more
of
that
work,
as
opposed
to
filling
the
new
positions.
K
First,
so
that's
been
our
approach
and
what
I
just
wanted
to
sort
of
piggyback
and
talk
real
quickly
about
the
discussions.
This
morning
when
councilman
carlson
first
came
on
and
you
all
came
on
in
2019.
K
One
of
the
comments
that
councilman
carlson,
made
regularly
at
cra
board
was
the
fact
that
the
craze
are
so
focused
on
real
estate
and
the
physical
improvements
and
streets
and
sidewalks,
and
it
was
very
much
we
were
organized
as
a
again.
The
physical
remediation
of
slum
and
blight
and
our
staff
specialties
have
all
been
focused
on
that
and
our
work
and
our
projects,
and,
as
I
mentioned
earlier,
we
have
not
been
a
department
that
has
been
a
large
grant
provider.
K
We
have
funded
those
that
provide
the
grants,
and
I
know
it
seems
like
a
long
drawn
drawn-out
process
for
those
watching,
but
we
are
now
having
two
shift
gears
and
create
a
an
east
tampa
office
that
and
west
tampa
will
be
working
in
the
same
direction.
That
now
has
to
have
the
housing
skills.
That
is
not
something
existing
staff
had,
and
you
can't
just
say.
Oh,
this
is
a
great
rfp.
You
have
to
have
staff.
K
That
knows
what
the
writing
and
what
they're
doing,
to
be
able
to
write
a
good
program
so
that
we
are
not
constantly
having
a
program
that
we
are
stumbling
over
and
fixing
every
few
months
and
that
still
isn't
working.
So
we
have
been
trying
to
get
it
done
right,
the
first
time
and
take
that
time
and
again
with
these
two
people
getting
them
on
board
very
quickly.
K
Those
rfps
that
have
been
started,
the
rfp
for
even
the
tree
trimming
grant
and
the
rfp
for
the
owner
occupied
for
east
tampa's,
owner
occupied
rehab,
and
all
of
these
other
grants
that
have
been
approved
in
the
past
six
or
seven
months
will
be
able
to
roll
them
out
quickly.
But
again,
I
know
it
looks
like
it
is
a
long
drawn-out
process
from
the
outside,
but
for
us
we
are
completely
having
to
shift
gears
and
the
nature
of
the
work
we
do
due
to
the
evolving
needs
of
our
community
and
our
city
and
our
cras.
E
C
We
can't
you
know,
you
know
we,
we,
we
have
a
person
who
who
answers
to
us
but
works
with
the
administration,
and
we
want
to
try
to
partner,
but
sometimes
we
we,
you
know
we
have
other
people's
money.
Now
you
know
we
got
to
move.
We
can't
wait
on
the
administration
at
this
point.
We
have
a
lot
of
projects
going
on
that
people
want
to
get
out,
and
it's
up
to
ms
van
long
to
get
the
people
in
in
place
to
move
them.
I
look
I
see,
mr
masking.
C
C
That's
why
some
of
this
stuff
is
slow
coming
back
folks,
because
you
have
to
reinvent
the
material
to
make
sure
you
got
the
right
stuff
in
there,
legally
and
so
forth
and
so
on,
and
you
need
to
have
people
with
the
expertise
to
do
the
job.
I
mean
this
is
a
no
brainer,
miss
van
long.
I
mean
you
got
to
get
the
people
in.
You
say
you
got
two
qualified
people,
you
can
match
them
up.
You
can
match
them
up,
let's
get
them
in
here:
let's
get
them
to
work
because
we
got
progress.
C
C
You
you
can't
do
it.
You
can't
be
up
to
three
four
o'clock
in
the
morning
trying
to
work
to
get
here.
Try
to
do
presentations.
You
know
you
got
to
be
able
to
sleep.
Sometimes
too,
you
know.
So
I'm
just
saying
you
need
to
do
what
you
need
to
do.
This
board
will
support
you.
However,
you
need
to
hire
outsource
what
you
got
to
outsource,
but
we
got
to
get
this
money
moving
got
to
get
it
moving.
L
Yeah,
I
agree
with
what
my
colleague
just
said.
I
want
to
thank
you,
ms
van
loan,
for
trying,
as
you
said,
diversify
the
the
the
the
offerings
of
of
what
the
cra
and
the
and
the
districts
are
doing
into
other
services
that
are
allowed
by
what
is
it
section,
163
and
and
then,
and
then
with
that
also
listening
to
our
request
to
focus
more
on
affordable
housing
throughout
all
the
districts.
So
thank
you
for
both
of
those,
and
it
shows
that
you're
actually
doing
that.
L
L
I
don't
remember
from
the
weekly
monthly
reports
if
it
says
how
many
trees
were
trimmed,
but
that
is
an
example
of
something
that's
being
done,
and
it's
a
service
that
I
I
guess
is
allowed
under
under
law,
and
it's
it's
worth
measuring
that
and
you
mention
grants
it
once
we
are
successful,
getting
grants
if
we
can
show
the
taxpayers
how
we
have
leveraged
this
40
million
dollars
into
getting
60
million
or
whatever
it
is,
that's
a
good
investment.
You
know.
L
I
always
talk
about
how
the
the
city,
the
taxpayers,
throughout
the
city,
are
subsidizing
these
cras
and
we
need
to
be
especially
good
custodians
of
how
we
use
the
money
and,
if
we're,
showing
that
we're
able
to
leverage
their
money
to
not
only
solve
problems
in
in
these
districts,
but
also
to
get
other
kinds
of
money
and
and
have
matching
money
that
would
be
really
valuable
to
the
public.
L
One
last
thing-
and
I
know
I
added
as
this
before
in
a
previous
meeting,
but
is
there
some
kind
of
benchmark
from
the
state,
association
or
or
other
groups?
That
would
just
tell
us
what
the
ratio
of
salary
cost
should
be
to
or
number
of
staff
should
be
to
the
total
amount.
So
if
we
have
40
million
total
and
you
can
distribute
that
across
the
districts,
what
should
be
our
staff
or
salary
expenses
as
a
percentage
of
that.
K
L
So
that
would
be
great
when
you're
doing
your
reports
at
least
annually.
For
me
anyway,
to
be
able
to
also
go
back
to
taxpayers
and
say:
look
we
we're
adding
staff
but
we're
keeping
the
percentages
very
low,
especially
compared
to
other
cities
and
and
with
that,
here's
what
we're
able
to
leverage
to
get
done.
Thank
you.
K
And
one
of
the
points
I
made
over
the
summer
is
even
with
three
positions:
our
budgets
and,
what's
being
asked
of
us
with
again
to
move
the
money
you
have
to
have
people
do
that
our
percentage
is
actually
a
lot
less
than
when
it
was
when
we
had
fewer
people,
because
those
dollars
are
growing
and
with
it
comes
the
expectations
that
they
will
be
delivered.
C
You
know,
I
believe,
in
saving
money
everyone
does,
but
sometimes
when
you've
got
to
get
the
work
done,
you
got
to
spend
money
to
make
money.
You
got
to
spend
money
to
make
money
and
right
now
we
have
money
that
we
got
to
spend
and
adding
these
people
we
can
do
grants.
The
mr
carlos
said
we'll
add
more
money
to
the
pot,
but
right.
L
C
Mr
long,
all
you
gonna
hear
from
me
is
you
need
to
spend
the
money
you
need
to
hire
people
or
outsource
this
stuff
to
spend
these
people's
money,
because
there
are
programs
that
we
got
to
get
done
to
show
that
we
do
care.
So
people
won't
say
there
you
go.
You
got
those
politicians
that
ain't
they
don't
care.
They
ain't
really
moving
our
money,
love
what
the
administration
is
doing,
what
the
mayor's
doing,
but
we
do
have
a
cra.
C
K
H
F
B
Good
morning,
jesus
nino,
the
west
tapa
and
drew
park
cra
manager
if
we
can
bring
up
the
presentation.
Thank
you,
I'm
always
pretty
quick
anyway
and
in
west
tampa.
We
have
a
lot
of
exciting
stuff
going
on
right
now.
One
is
that
we're
working
with
the
city's
parks
and
recreation
department
to
come
up
with
new
concept
designs
to
improve
all
the
parks,
what
not
other
parks
at
least
southcenas
and
ray
park
over
in
west
tampa,
and
we
hope
to
continue
to
work
with
the
city
to
make
those
parks
into
huge
assets
for
west
tampa.
B
In
addition,
we're
working
with
a
consultant
pond
company
to
do
a
parking
study
for
the
area
because
of
all
the
developments
occurring.
The
residents
are
kind
of
concerned
about
the
impacts
for
the
future
there
on
parking,
so
we're
working
with
that
consultant
to
come
up
with
a
studies
that
will
be
presented
to
you
once
it's
concluded.
B
In
addition,
we're
continuing
to
do
the
alley
cleanups,
the
next
few
days
will
be
we'll
come.
We
have
completed
close
to
50
alleys
and
some
of
those
alleys
actually
cross
multiple
streets.
So
if
you
kind
of
break
those
up,
then
it
would
be
over
60
alleys
that
are
being
cleaned
up.
I
think
code
enforcement
they're
helping
us
educate
the
public
out
there
on
their
responsibility
to
maintain
those
alleys
after
we're
done
cleaning
them
up.
B
B
We
just
had
a
grand
opening
for
the
boulevard,
the
type
of
housing
authority
and
the
related
group
had
there.
I
saw
a
few
of
you.
There
see
goods
there
in
the
slide
and
I
actually
had
a
good
friend
a
couple
friends
that
actually
moved
into
the
brand
new
apartments
and
they're
loving
their
apartment.
B
B
P
Just
real
quick
regarding
salcines
park,
I'm
glad
that
that
program
is
initiated
there-
I
drove
by
this
morning
and
of
course,
every
morning,
there's
always
litter
and
trash
in
that
area,
and
we
received
complaints
over
the
years
of
people
that
work
and
live
in
the
area
about
the
maintenance
of
the
park.
I
know
it
gets
cleaned
up,
but
and
it
is
a
struggle
and
a
challenge,
but
I'm
glad
to
see
that
you
have
what
you
call
the
hot
spot
program
going
out
there
and
and
talking
with
folks
and
and
whatnot.
B
For
drew
park,
two
of
the
exciting
things
we're
doing
there
is
we're
about
to
activate
the
tampa
bay
linear
park
and
make
it
into
an
active
park.
So
we're
working
with
parks
and
recreation.
B
We
may
have
to
hire
a
consultant,
but
if
we
do
that,
then
we'll
go
through
that
process
as
well,
also
we're
working
with
parks
and
rec
to
identify
properties
that
we
can
create
a
new
park
in
drew
park,
a
neighborhood
park,
then.
The
second
thing
is
that
I
want
to
mention.
Is
that
we're
about
to
revitalize
lois
avenue
and
grady?
I
know
a
few
years
back.
The
streetscape
improvements
were
done
out
there,
but
it's
time
to
go
out
there
and
kind
of
refresh
everything
the
landscaping,
the
palm
trees,
the
median
areas.
O
Thank
you
in
regard
to
drew
park,
I
know.
Last
year
we
were
having
trouble
with
quorums
and
and
attendance
and
that
sort
of
thing
with
your
cic
board.
How
are
we
doing
on
that?
Making
improvements.
B
Still
kind
of
a
struggle
with
quorums,
we
do
have
two
positions
open
that
mr
lisa
jackson
is
about
to
advertise
for
us
and
we're
about
to
start
speaking
to
some
of
the
cac
members
and
some
of
the
business
owners
and
see
if
they
know
anyone,
that's
interested
in
participating
on
the
cac,
an
individual
individuals
that
actually
want
to
show
up.
It's
still
a
struggle
thanks.
K
Okay,
we'll
move
to
the
downtown
cra
and
we're
very
excited.
We,
the
cra
board
and
city
council,
have
approved
this
new
gmp
to
go
out
for
this
great
new
expansion
of
the
tampa
convention
center.
Can
you
bring
up
the
powerpoint
I'm
looking
at
my
computer,
I'm
assuming
you're
singing
the
same
thing.
Thank
you.
So
we
will
have,
as
you
can
see
in
the
renderings
18
000
new
square
feet,
it's
going
to
be
over
two
stories
and
it
will
come
over
the
riverwalk.
K
K
We
hosted
the
international
downtown
association
and
it
was
great.
We
had
a
wonderful
turnout.
We
had
people
stopping
into
our
eboor
cra
office
and
talking
and
wanting
to
know
about
ebore,
and
we
were
getting
a
lot
of
great
feedback
about
our
amenities
and
downtown
and
our
riverwalk.
So
it
was
a
really
great
event
to
showcase
our
community,
our
downtown
and
what
we
have
to
offer.
And
lastly,
we
are
expecting
for
kid
mason
that
those
construction
drawings
will
be
completed
in
mid-november
and
then
go
through
the
process
to
go
out
for
bid
for
construction.
K
We
can
see
thanks
to
tico
on
the
right
hand,
side.
This
is
especially
for
councilman
miranda.
That
is
the
same
exact
picture
where
you
see
the
street
car.
So
you
can
see
what
water
street
looks
like
now,
as
opposed
to
just
a
few
years
ago,
with
all
of
that
development
and
that
same
picture
and
on
the
left
is
the
updated
renderings
of
the
aer
tower
over
in
front
of
the
straz,
and
it
will
be
31
stories.
K
Take
questions
at
the
end
and
we'll
just
get
through
these
four
real
quick
for
channel
side
drive
phase
one
again
if
anyone's
been
driving
by
the
landscaping,
they're
finishing
up
mostly
areas,
we're
98
complete
for
that
first
section
from
kd
to
washington,
we're
at
90
percent
completion
down
from
washington
to
whiting,
and
we
have
now
started
phase
three,
which
is
whiting
to
the
roundabout,
and
in
the
past
few
weeks
we
have
broken
ground
and
started
construction
on
the
easternmost
section
of
twigs.
K
That
is,
that
first
block
coming
off
of
channel
side
drive
and
on
the
right.
You
can
also
see
the
daniel
corp.
They
are
now
actually
from
the
one
side
we're
getting
much
more
of
a
building.
Look,
it's
been
coming
out
very
excited
we're
trying
to
time
that
twigs
project
with
their
construction,
so
that
neither
one
of
us
is
having
to
rebuild
anybody's
improvements
and
with
kovitt,
coming
to
a
more
handable
condition,
I'm
sorry
about
what
they
say,
an
endemic.
K
We
have
had
our
cruise
ships
now
sailing
out
of
port
tampa
bay
and
the
port
is
back
open
for
business
and
tampides
riverfront.
We
did
have
sprouts,
they
opened
our
employee
actually
got
chased
out.
They
didn't
want
us
taking
pictures,
they
got
nervous
when
we
were
taking
pictures,
but
we
did
get
a
few
snaps
in
before
we
were
kicked
out
of
the
building
and
we
are
moving
forward
with.
K
K
So
but
but
at
least
we
get
thrown
out
of
the
good
places
and
then
our
tax
amendment
that
we
have
to
add
the
cultural
assets
to
the
tamp
heights
riverfront
is
moving
forward
at
december
6th
that
will
be
at
the
planning
commission
and
once
they
come
forward
with
their
finding
that
it
is
in
conformance
with
the
comprehensive
plan.
It
will
come
back
for
final
adoption
to
city
council
and
those
public
hearings,
and
with
that
I
am
happy
to
take
any
questions
on
those
four
cras.
E
Comments,
questions
very
quickly:
miss
van
loan,
yes,
sir,
with
with
the
cruise
ship
starting
back
up
again
down
at
the
terminals
and
the
construction,
that's
finishing
up
on
channel
side
as
as
the
cruise
ship
starts
to
fill
up
will
that
construction
on
channel
side
drive
be
completed
soon.
Yes,
sir,.
K
We
have
to
get
through
that
northern
end,
but
by
the
time
they
are
truly
at
full
capacity.
Yes,
we
right
now,
that's
why
they're
starting
up
there
and
we
are
down
we'll
be
down
to
that
one
lane
in
each
direction,
but
by
the
time
they
are
geared
up.
Yes,
that
should
be,
and
mike
callahan
will
be
cursing
me
if
I'm
incorrect,
but
I'm
pretty
sure
they
told
me
that,
yes,
that
should
be
done
not
as
like.
I
said
the
gear
up
time,
but
by
the
time
they're,
full
capacity.
C
C
C
K
It's
in
the
2023
plan,
you
guys
were
gracious
enough
to
give
us
the
three
positions
for
2023
and
until
we
saw
the
sap
and
some
of
the
other
issues
were
settled,
we
do
know
we're
heading
into
central
park
will
be
a
lot
more
demanding
tampa
heights
with
the
development,
and
while
there
isn't
a
lot
of
development
that
we're
doing,
there
is
a
lot
of
paperwork
that
goes
with
those
agreements
and
arrangements
that
we
do
in
that
community
and
now
that
community
as
tampa
heights,
is
also
getting
its
own
money.
K
C
E
A
Courtney,
orr
eboard
development
manager.
The
first
bullet
that
I'm
going
to
point
out
in
the
direct
at
cra
activities
is
listed
here.
It
describes
how
staff
worked
with
the
community,
the
ebor
cra
economic
growth
and
mobility
subcommittee
and
the
city's
parking
division
to
install
no
parking
signs
along
third
avenue
to
address
public
safety
concerns
in
that
particular
area
of
the
neighborhood.
A
A
couple
of
additional
direct
activities
include
staff
and
our
cac
hosted
with
the
chair.
Vice
chair
and
immediate
past
chair,
a
new
member
orientation
we'll
continue
to
regularly
conduct
these
since
members
express
how
helpful
they
are
when
starting
out
as
a
new
member
staff
are
fortunate
to
be
able
to
attend
a
couple
of
conferences
for
learning
opportunities,
the
international
downtown
association
and
the
florida
redevelopment
association,
annual
conferences
and
a
special
congratulations
to
brenda
thrower
on
the
ebor
cra
staff,
who
was
elected
to
the
fra
board
of
directors
as
treasurer.
During
that
particular
conference.
A
A
E
Comments
your
questions,
miss
van
loan.
You
know
I
I
have
been
with
ycdc
and
the
cac
down
in
eber
city
for
years
and
the
things
that
have
been
happening,
the
great
things
that
have
been
happening,
such
as
the
pumpkin
patch,
such
as
the
tree
lighting.
E
E
R
R
We
have
some
folks
that
are
old,
some
folks
that
are
new
and
but
they're
really
engaged
and
hit
the
ground
running,
and
I'm
looking
forward
to
working
with
them
this
year.
R
We've
already
discussed
detective
curtis
williams
and
his
his
recognition
that
was
received
at
the
annual
fra
conference
in
fort
myers
last
month,
and
I
just
want
to
say
publicly.
It
has
been
a
pleasure
to
work
with
detective
williams.
He
and
I
have
definitely
hit
the
ground
running,
started
out
with
having
weekly
meetings
and
now
it's
probably
daily,
and
it's
all
about
what
we
can
do
to
troubleshoot
areas
of
east
tampa.
I
actually
spoke
to
a
resident
of
east
tampa
yesterday.
R
That
said,
she
saw
a
guy
in
a
tree
and
I
believe
detective
williams
was
doing
something
to
make
sure
that
he
was
able
to
catch
some
folks
that
were
illegal
dumping.
So.
R
And
last
but
not
least,
these
are
just
a
list
of
the
upcoming
meetings
subcommittee
meetings
that
we
will
have
in
east
tampa.
There
have
been
some
additional
changes
since
this
information
was
submitted
a
couple
of
weeks
ago,
but
some
of
the
subcommittees
have
seen
the
need
and
have
added
additional
dates
and
times
for
some
of
the
meetings.
But
if
the
public
has
any
questions,
they
can
feel
free
to
give
us
a
call
at
the
east
tampa
cre
office,
and
we
will
gladly
advise
them
any
questions.
C
I'm
glad
to
see
you
have
the
east
half
of
tree
lighting
on
that
calendar
general,
and
that
is
monday
the
6th.
As
you
know,
I
I
made
the
commitment
to
get
at
least
two
trees
in
each
tampa.
We're
going
to
put
the
second
one
up
on
34th
street
in
the
pond
there
it's
about
a
28,
29
foot
tree.
I've
seen
them
that's
constructed
already,
so
hopefully
you
all
can
attend
and
we're
going
to
light
that
one
up
this
this
year.
C
So
I'm
glad
that
people
are
already
calling
saying
they
see
it
and
commenting
already,
because
it's
bringing
a
different
cheer
to
the
community.
So
if
you
all
can
beat
it
I'll,
be
greatly
appreciated.
E
Can
you
please
come
over?
These
are
come
over
to
the
podium.
Please!
No
there's!
No!
Oh
here
you
guys
are
fine.
We
we
have
two
new
interns
and
I
just
wanted
them
to
introduce
themselves.
They
have
been
sitting
in
the
room
waiting
patiently
listening
to
our
conversations,
but
I
just
wanted
them
to
introduce
themselves
sure.
E
O
Always
and
I'm
interning,
with
councilman
john
dings,
holder
of
the
semester.
E
L
E
K
We
have
three
required
approvals
really
quickly.
The
first
one
item
number
five
is
a
vasa
grant.
This
is
for
dr
bundle
wright
at
2131
west
main
it's
a
fifty
thousand
dollar
facade
grant
she's,
taking
that
older,
dilapidated
building,
she's
completely
gutting
it
creating
tenant
spaces
and
completely
redoing
the
outside
all
new
windows,
all
new
doors,
and
she
will
be
coming
back,
probably
at
the
january
meeting
for
her
interior
grant.
So
this
is
for
the
facade
grants
for
west
tampa.
E
Motions
made
by
councilman
good
second
by
councilman,
mataskapco
roll
call,
though.
P
E
K
The
next
item
is
strictly
a
scrivener's
error.
When
we
brought
to
you
the
request
to
amend
the
tampa
heights
riverfront
community
redevelopment
plan
we
had
indicated
it
was
the
fourth
amendment,
and
it
is
actually
the
fifth
amendment.
So
this
rezo
just
corrects
that
to
the
correct
version
of
the
amendment.
E
A
K
E
I
have
a
motion
made
by
councilman
miranda
seconded
by
councilman.
Good
roll
call
vote
boots.
E
E
Mr
mcrae
miss
van
loan,
miss
orr
or
and
all
staff
that
may
be
downstairs.
We've
got
food
up
here
on
the
on
the
third
floor,
you're
more
than
welcome
to
dine
with
us.
E
Okay:
let's
go
for
information
and
reports
and
new
business,
starting
with
councilman.
I
Vieira,
just
something
really
fast.
If
I
may
I'd
like
to
see
the
visibility
of
the
cra,
the
the
city
staff
members
have
been
working
on
having
what's
called
a
civil
rights
trail
throughout
our
city,
with
a
lot
of
it
concentrated
within
the
cra
and
I'd
like
to
see
the
feasibility.
P
P
A
P
P
I
P
Real
quick,
miss
van
loan
for
the
the
cra
cac
appointment.
What
was
the
name
again.
P
L
Mr
chair,
thanks
for
letting
me
come
down
here
just
a
real
quick
item,
I
recently
had
lunch
with
gary
moremino
and
ray
arsenault,
two
great
historians,
along
with
e.j
celcinas
and
others,
although
I
didn't
meet
with
ej
at
that
particular
meeting,
but
also
you
all
may
know
that
the
tampa
union
station
friends
of
tampa
union
station
are
coming
before
us.
I
think
in
january,
to
talk
about
the
renovation
and
what
how
we
might
be
able
to
support
it.
L
So
this
is
a
picture
that
gary
pulled
from
newspaper
article
long
ago
of
of
someone
in
world
war
ii
well
being
greeted
by
his
child.
Here's
another
one
from
the
tampa
tribune
from
back
then
that
he
pulled
and
on
the
right.
It
shows
a
someone
being
greeted
by
a
spouse,
but
on
the
left,
the
the
the
line
underneath
says
their
daddy
didn't
come
home
and
it's
just
very
moving
pictures.
And
so
in
talking
to
gary.
L
I
would
like
to
make
a
motion
that
to
request
that
cra
staff
speak
with
the
cac
friends
of
tampa
union
station
city,
public
art
program
and
gary
mormino
to
discuss
the
possibility
of
creating
a
veteran
memorial
at
tampa
union
station
report.
Back
at
our
february
10
meeting.
C
E
Councilman
carlson,
if
you'll
take
the
gavel,
please
I'd
like
to
make
a
motion
to
have
city
staff
and
I'm
not
sure
who
that
person
would
be,
whether
it
be
miss
carol,
post
or
miss.
Marley
wilkes
come
before
the
cra
board
to
discuss
their
involvement
with
community
land
trust
as
far
as
on
the
city
side
and
how
it
may
work
with
the
cra
in
the
future
discussing
the
community
land
trust
that
may
come
before
us
or
not.
E
L
Fairway
tent
okay
motion
from
chair
citroe,
second
by
mr
maniscalco,
all
on
favorite
roll
call.