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From YouTube: TCC 8-16-21 Budget Workshop
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A
Good
evening,
gentlemen,
good
evening,
citizens
of
tampa
a
special
workshop
referenced,
the
budget
for
august
16
2021,
will
now
come
to
order
before
we
begin
with
our
roll
call.
I'd
like
to
have
a
brief
moment
of
silence
for
those
who
are
suffering
with
this
dreaded
covet.
19
disease
has
come
upon
us.
A
lot
of
our
children
at
our
schools
have
been
inflicted
with
this
treacherous
virus
and
disease
this
time
and,
of
course,
the
folks
in
haiti
who
who
are
suffering
this
time.
A
A
Goose
is
here
for
the
record.
Mr
miranda
did
submit
a
miranda
to
a
memo
to
my
office
that
he'd
be
absent
this
year.
C
C
Please
note
that
the
public
will
be
invited
to
comment
following
the
discussion
of
this
workshop
subject
to
the
time
limitation
set
by
city
council,
the
public
and
the
citizens
of
the
city
of
tampa
are
able
to
watch,
listen
and
view
this
meeting
on
spectrum
channel
640
frontier
channel
15
and
on
the
internet
at
tampa.gov
forward.
Slash
live
stream.
C
Now
the
members
of
the
public
have
had
the
opportunity
to
communicate
to
you
by
written
comments
by
on
the
internet
or
web
by
email
by
us
mail
and
all
of
that
information
is
available
on
the
city
council's
web
page
tampa.gov,
forward,
slash
city
council,
one
word
and
also
those
who
have
pre-registered
following
those
instructions
have
will
have
the
opportunity
to
participate
remotely
by
audio
tonight.
C
A
First,
mr
vieira
has
motioned
to
move
mr
shelby's
request.
Mr
maniscalco
has
seconded
it
all
in
favor.
Any
opposed
motions.
C
And
last,
mr
chairman,
you
will
note
that
council
member
carlson
is
participating
remotely
tonight
and
pursuant
to
council's
regular
rules
in
order
to
permit
him
to
do
so.
That
would
require
a
a
motion
and
vote
of
counsel.
A
Gentlemen,
as
you
might
have
known,
I
asked
mr
shelby.
I
had
not
put
out
a
memo,
but
I
did
ask
with
shelby
and
until
we
can
get
some
more
updates
on
the
virus,
because
I
was
looking
at
the
news
just
a
few
minutes
ago.
Well,
we
can't
decipher
from
a
common
cold
from
someone
who
may
have
a
cause
who
may
have
the
virus
so
just
for
abundance
of
caution
in
chambers.
Now
we'll
ask
that
you
kind
of
wear
your
mask
in
chambers
that
way
we
make
sure
we
keep
ourselves
safe.
A
E
Point
I
I
know
we
we
should
have
all
received
an
email
regarding
the
school
board,
calling
an
emergency.
C
E
F
Is
veer?
Oh
no,
no
objection
here!
I
just
wish
that
every
person
would
do
the
right
thing
and
get
their
coveted
vaccination.
If,
if
we
do
that,
we
we
move
forward
as
a
country.
So
it's
a
shelter.
A
A
Al
lopez
as
well,
so
don't
be
afraid,
go
do
what
you
have
to
do
to
make
sure
you're
safe
your
family,
saves,
co-workers
and
so
forth.
So
we
kind
of
beat
this
deadly
virus
and
again,
thank
you
for
your
cooperation,
gentlemen
and
the
public.
All
right,
we'll
go
in
to
get
into
item
generator
number
one.
The
maker
of
the
motion
is
not
here.
As
of
yet
do
we
have
anybody
on
the
second
floor
or
virtually
to
speak
this
evening
we
have
two
registered
all
right.
Well,
I'll,
go
with
the
two
registered
now,
mr
shelby.
C
F
I'll
just
I
mean
I
just
wanted
to
briefly
talk
about
some
of
the,
and
I
guess
the
the
purpose
of
this
meeting
is
to
what
discuss
the
the
budget
correct,
that's
correct
and
our
well,
I
mean
for
me
and
and
you
your
request,
I
want
to
make
darn
sure
you're
requesting
that
we
keep
our
masks
on
what
we
talk.
Correct.
C
C
E
C
Would
be
done
best
at
the
first
public
hearing
related
to
the
budget,
but
if
you
have
any
questions
that
cannot
be
answered,
you
can
ask
for
an
information
item
to
be
brought
back
at
the
first
public
hearing
or
maybe
another
date.
If
that's
what
council
prefers
and
also
if
there
are
any
things
that
council
believes,
might
be
a
decision
point
rather
than
taking
it
action
today
to
at
least
have
that
a
note
of
that
made.
C
F
Continue,
sir,
thank
you
very
much,
mr
chairman.
I
just
want
to
talk
about
some
of
my.
You
know,
budget
priorities
that
I
think
we
all
share
that
I
think
are
so
important
to
make
sure
that
we
have
in
this
budget.
You
know
one
of
the
things
that
the
administration
made
use
of
was
talking
about
a
public
safety
master
plan
for
our
city
of
tampa.
You
know
a
couple
years
ago
I
started
using
that
term
as
it
applies
to
public
safety.
F
There
were
talks
on
a
public
safety
or
strike
that
a
master
plan
for
parks
and
recreation.
That
is
taking
a
look
at
all
of
our
city
and
seeing
where
we
have
deficits
in
parks
and
recreation
and
then
coming
up
with
a
unified
approach,
and
my
thought
was
why
don't
we
do
that?
For
public
safety,
both
for
police
and
fire?
You
know
with
the
contemplation
that
public
safety
is
the
most
important
issue
that
we
have
here
in
the
budget.
F
I
think
we're
all
united
in
the
fact
that
we
have
major
challenges
right
now
with
tampa
fire
rescue.
So
you
know
seeing
the
the
adoption
of
a
a
public
safety
master
plan
idea,
I
think,
is
a
really
really
good
thing.
That
goes
without
saying
something
that
we've
been
talking
about
here
for
a
really
really
long
time.
You
know
one
of
the
things-
and
I
and
I
beat
this
drum
relentlessly-
is
fire
station
13,
which
you
know
that
station.
I
can't
emphasize
that
enough
is
just
in
a
constant
crisis.
F
Station
13
is
by
far
and
away
and
I'll
just
go
over
the
statistics
again,
because
I
think
they're
so
damning
in
their
stats
that
the
men
and
women
who
work
there
live
with
every
single
day.
I
did
a
work
day
with
them
a
couple
of
weeks
ago
to
see
it
up
close
they're,
the
busiest
fire
station
here
in
the
city
of
tampa
by
far
and
away
the
second
busiest
fire
station
is
11
and
there's
a
25
gap
in
calls
between
13
and
11.
F
So
it's
not
even
close,
and
even
though
station
13
is
one
out
of
23
stations.
They
take
up
about
one
its
region,
one
out
of
seven
callers
in
the
city
of
tampa
and
station.
13
is
not
only
the
busiest
station
in
the
city
of
tampa,
but
it's
also
the
13th
busiest
engine
and
the
54th
busiest
ladder
in
the
united
states
of
america.
So
you
know
this
is
something
that
that
really
needs
to
be
reflected
in
the
budget.
F
From
my
discussions
it
will
be
and
I'm
confident
that
that
it
will
be,
but
for
help
right
here
right
now
for
station
13,
we've
made
some
good
advancements
for
them
with
an
additional
rescue,
vehicle,
etc,
but
they
don't
need
incremental
changes.
They
don't
need
band-aids.
They
need
comprehensive
surgery
out
there
in
the
north
tampa
area.
You
know
looking
at
other
areas,
obviously
channel
side,
councilman
goods
has
fought
so
hard
for
additional
funding
and
assistance
for
channel
side.
F
F
You
know
need
a
plan
right
here
right
now
for
response
times
in
new
tampa
four
out
of
the
six
fire
stations
in
the
city
of
tampa
with
the
longest
response
times
come
from
new
tampa
because
of
all
the
growth
and
the
fact
that
we've
had
all
this
growth
and
we
haven't
had
corresponding
infrastructure,
buildups,
obviously,
east
tampa
councilman
goods
has
done
such
a
great
job
in
advocating
for
east.
F
Hampton
continues
to
help
our
friend,
councilman
miniscalco
fighting
for
west
tampa
continues
to
need,
help
we're
seeing
so
much
workforce
housing
there
and
who's
going
to
care
for
those
folks
when
it
comes
to
their
medical
emergencies
and
their
fire
emergencies,
south
tampa
continues
to
grow,
etc,
etc.
We
hear
so
much
about
south
of
gandhi
represented
by
councilman
carlson,
so
there's
a
lot
there.
That
needs
to
be
done.
Obviously,
whenever
it
comes
to
that,
we
continue
to
grow
as
a
city.
F
In
the
last
decade
we've
grown
by
20
percent,
and
my
issue
is:
are
we
having
the
public
safety,
accommodations
and
infrastructure
that
keep
up
with
that
rapid
growth?
Everybody
wants
to
move
here
to
tampa,
but
we
got
to
make
sure
that,
as
we
take
their
tax
money
and
they
move
here
to
tampa
to
places
like
new
tampa
to
places
like
south
of
gandhi
etc,
that
we
have
the
public
safety
infrastructure
for
them,
and
I
think
that's
certainly
something
that's
so
important.
F
One
of
the
reasons
I
stress
this
is
a
historic
budget
is
because
we're
getting
over
the
next
two
years
about
80
million
dollars
in
funds
from
the
federal
government
funds
that,
according
to
our
president,
we
can
use
in
part
for
public
safety.
The
budget
appears
to
do
that
again,
we're
going
to
take
a
deeper
dive,
but
this
also
allows
us
to
take
a
look
at
human
needs.
F
Things
like
repaving,
whether
it's
west
tampa
new
tampa
east
tampa,
whatever
it
may
be
south
tampa,
et
cetera,
et
cetera
repaving,
which
is
such
a
big
issue
that
you
know
the
repaving
budget
in
the
city
of
tampa's,
5
million
costs,
15
million
just
to
keep
up
with
repaving.
These
federal
dollars
can
potentially
help
us
some
with
that
and
then.
Lastly,
one
thing:
oh
in
very
short,
if
I
may,
I
forgot
about
that
rule.
F
One
thing
really
quick-
if
I
may-
that
also
want
to
see
in
this
budget-
is
disability
accommodations
for
parks.
I
believe
I
got
to
check
up
that.
I
made
a
motion
to
come
up
in
september
on
the
administration's
plans
for
disability,
accommodations
for
parks.
We're
building
all
abilities
park
in
east
tampa
we're
building
one
in
utamp,
but
we
want
to
make
sure
that
every
single
park
in
the
city
of
tampa
has
accessible
playground,
equipment
for
all
children,
regardless
of
disability,
autism,
etc,
etc.
Saved
by
the
bell.
Thank
you.
E
E
So
I've
been
here
about
a
little
over
six
years,
and
I
was
thinking
about
you
know
these
last
six
years
and
major
projects
that
were
voted
on
and
and
milestones
from
this
administration,
the
past
administration
and-
and
I
was
supportive
of
almost
everything-
everything
except
a
millage
increase
in
one
budget
year
and
when
I
say
everything,
one
of
the
first
real
big
votes
by
dollar
amount
was
the
251
million
dollars
to
address
our
storm
water
and
flooding.
That
was
something
that
I
voted
for.
I
know
the
previous
administration.
E
You
know
they
really
wanted
that
and
and
rightfully
so,
in
order
to
combat
the
flooding
and
the
aging
infrastructure
in
our
system
fast
forward.
With
that
same
administration,
julian
lane
park
36
million
dollars,
I
voted
to
support
that
that
had
the
support
of
many
in
west
tampa
many
in
the
community,
it's
a
beautiful
park,
a
wonderful
investment
along
our
riverfront
and
fast
forward
to
this
administration
with
the
pipes
program.
E
I
supported
that
in
the
billions
of
dollars,
which
is
historical
and
again
a
necessity,
so
I've
I've
been
very
supportive
of
very
important
projects
in
the
time
that
I've
been
here,
and
I'm
glad
that
I
took
those
votes
because
you
know
we
see
the
investment
and
we
see
the
rewards
from
those.
E
But
the
reason
I
say
that
is
you
know
I've
always
tried
to
vote
for
what
I
think
is
the
right
thing,
and
I
really
don't
ask
for
much
and
I
haven't
asked
for
much
in
the
past,
but
one
project-
that's
in
my
district
beyond
paving
the
roads
beyond
building
the
sidewalks
which
we
are
addressing
in
this
budget
is
vela
brothers
park
in
west
tampa
villa
brothers
park.
They
did
an
analysis
back
in
2018
it
was
2
million
dollars
for
the
entire
park
master
plan.
E
Up
until
now,
every
budget
has
had
a
little
bit
of
money.
I
believe
it's
just
under
half
a
million
dollars,
that's
been
allocated,
maybe
around
400
000,
but
I
would
like
to
see
perhaps
spread
over
this
budget
year
and
next
budget
year,
the
remaining
1.5
1.6
million
dollars
to
come
to
fruition
within
the
next
24
months,
or
so
so
this
budget
and
then
the
next
budget.
So
we
can
see
it
completed
and
the
reason
I
asked
for
I
don't
ask
for
it
all
at
once,
because
you
know
it's
a
big
ask.
E
But
you
know
five
of
the
seven
villa
brothers
have
passed
away.
This
park
was
initially
dedicated
in
2005
when
all
seven
of
the
villa
brothers
were
alive,
and
time
is
of
the
essence-
and
I
say
that,
because
you
know
five
of
the
seven
have
passed
away,
some
of
their
spouses
are
still
alive.
We
all
know,
mrs
hector
villa
martha.
E
Villa
two
of
the
brothers
are
alive,
but
I'd
like
to
see
this
park
be
completed,
while
those
that
are
still
with
us
are
still
with
us
and
can
witness
it
and
see
this
because
the
villa
brothers
are
very
special
to
the
city
of
tampa
seven
brothers
that
served
in
different
capacities.
E
In
the
armed
forces
in
the
in
the
military-
and
that's
you
know,
I
I
think
we
all
understand
the
importance.
I
know
we
have
many
parks
throughout
the
city
and
a
lot
of
them
have,
you
know,
received
that
and
that
those
you
know
notable
investments.
I
mentioned
julian
lane
because
I
was
here
for
that
vote
and
that
was
36
million
dollars.
I
a
couple
years
before
I
know
councilman
dingfalder
was
here,
was
for
curtis
hickson.
E
That
was
another
expensive
project
water
works
park
right
before
I
got
elected
so
asking
for
the
remainder
of
this
money,
which
I
calculate
1.5,
1.6
million
dollars
to
complete
this
within
the
next
this
year
and
and
next
year
I
think,
is
a
minor
ask
I'd
like
to
see
it
completed
again.
E
I
want
those
that
are
still
with
us
to
be
able
to
witness
that
and
to
enjoy
that
park.
So
I
know
we
have
federal
money
coming
in
between
this
year
and
next
year,
a
large
amount.
I
believe
that
money
can
be
allocated
towards
towards
this
endeavor.
It's
not
a
lot
of
money,
and
I
hope
that
once
we
get
to
the
september
budget
hearings,
if
we
need
to
amend
the
budget
or,
however
it
is
we
go
about
that,
that
we
include
that
you
know
those
funds
in
the
budget.
Thank
you
very
much.
A
I
have
questions
on
that
and
I
don't
know
if
we
have
anybody
from
staff
from
parks
and
rec
that
been
beyond,
because
I'm
confused.
I
know
we
keep
doing
the
work
on
villa
brothers,
I'm
just
confused
on.
Why
hasn't
that
been
put
in
one
bundle
to
see
what
that's
going
to
cost
at
one
spot.
So
I
think
we
just
did
the
bathrooms
out.
A
There
went
to
a
ground
break
in
our
first
year,
and
I
guess
you
know
the
dog
park
and
then
the
the
walk
around
trail
and
have
you
manuscalco
is
that
the
number
figure
they're
giving
you
1.5
to
complete
to
now
complete
all
the
projects
that
need
to
be
done
to
be
those
brothers.
E
The
prod
the
the
dollar
amount
that
I
received
in
2018
was
2
million
dollars
for
everything.
There
was
a
a
master
plan.
You
could
say
for
the
entire
villa
brothers
park
to
complete
it,
meaning
everything.
You
know
the
walking
trail
relocating
the
monument
the
restrooms.
Now
the
monuments
be
relocated,
the
restrooms
were
built.
E
We
have
some
playground
upgrades,
but
there's
still
a
long
ways
to
go.
It's
you
know
a
lot
of.
It
is
an
open
field.
It's
it's
fenced
in
and
whatnot,
but
if
you
look
at
how
that
neighborhood
has
changed
with
the
jcc
across
the
street
with
new
apartments
across
the
street,
you
have
new
restaurants
on
howard
avenue,
new
businesses
going
in
new
residents.
New
homes.
Villa
brothers
is
a
focal
point,
a
very,
very
important
part
of
that
neighborhood.
Because
again
you
know
we
have
a
lot
of
families.
E
We
have
a
lot
of
children
that
are
in
that
neighborhood.
Now
it's
all
accessible
by
walking
to
a
lot
of
those
neighbors,
but
again
the
importance
of
who
the
villa
brothers
were,
who
the
villa
brothers
are
to
the
city
of
tampa
and,
being
you
know,
right
there
in
west
tampa
right
there
in
a
central
part
of
the
city
on
a
busy
road
that
so
many
people
travel
and
pass.
E
I
think
it's
important,
not
everybody
goes
downtown
and
the
parks
that
I
mentioned
they're
there
along
the
river
and
whatnot
and
we
focused
a
lot
on
downtown.
But
you
know
this
is
in
within
the
neighborhoods
beyond
mcfarland
park,
which
is
another
great
park
in
my
district.
Vila
brothers
is
another
very,
very
important
parcel.
So
going
back
to
the
numbers,
two
million
dollars
was
the
total
amount.
I
think
the
restrooms
and
other
projects
that
have
already
been
completed.
The
restrooms
were
in
the
two
000
range
and
then
moving
the
monument.
E
A
Conversation
to
have
with
the
parks,
director
and
the
administration
to
see
how
that
can
be
kind
of
calculated
within
this
budget
to
to
finish
the
project
it
keeps
lingering
lingering.
We
need
to
finish
some
of
these
projects
and
not
keep
carrying
over.
So
maybe
it's
a
conversation
before
hearing
time
you
might
can
have
with
the
administration
to
see
how
we
can
tweak
that
to
get
that
park
done
for
the
villa
brothers
who
were
served
this
community
and
I
thought
the
park
myself
was
completed
but
come
to
find
out.
A
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
A
And
as
we
as
you
talked
about
fte,
I
met
with
kathy
caster
today
and
our
seniors,
and
you
know
I
told
him
that
the
city
has
been
doing
a
lot
with
less
but
we're
getting
people
here
every
day
and
the
city
is
growing
every
day
and
that
doing
more
with
less
is
starting
to
really
hurt
us
as
a
city
a
little
bit
and
I'm
looking
at
the
budget
here,
because
some
areas
they
talked
about
code
enforcement.
We.
B
A
And
that's
the
problem
we're
having
that's
kind
of
what
I'm
looking
at
this
budget
to
see
how
we're
going
to
increase
the
workers,
because
we
need
workers
to
be
able
to
get
things
done
in
the
city
and
that's
a
problem.
I
see
we've
done
a
great
job,
you
know
doing
more
with
less,
but
that
that
has
come
to
a
halt
a
little
bit
and
we've
got
to
be
able
to
get
the
money
and
do
fte.
A
G
So
I
I
don't
want
to
say
we're
having
to
squeeze
blood
from
iraq,
but
we're
having
to
be
very,
very
careful
on
what
we
spend
our
money
on.
Thank
you,
mr
chair,
mrs.
H
Thank
you,
mr
chairman,
and
I
appreciate
the
okay.
D
Great,
thank
you,
sir,
and
want
to
echo
what
my
colleagues
said.
Thank
you
to
the
administration
for
working
with
us
and
listening
to
us
around
last
week's
meeting,
the
administration
sent
an
email
to
all
of
us
summarizing
what
we
had
said.
We
thought
were
the
priorities
and,
and
they
got
it
right,
so
I
appreciate
it
just
to
reiterate
some
of
the
priorities
that
our
constituents
have
told
us
and
in
particular
in
south
tampa
roads
and
potholes.
D
We
were
hoping
that
all
for
transportation
would
cover
it,
but
it
didn't
come
through,
and
so
we
have
a
desperate
need
to
fix
roads.
There
are
roads
like
heinz
and
prospect
and
others
in
south
tampa
that
are
just
full
of
potholes,
and
people
are
complaining
that
their
cars
are
getting
rattled
and
broken.
And
it's
it's
it's
it's
like
some
of
the
worst
countries
I've
ever
been
to.
So
I
think
we
absolutely
have
to
focus
on
that.
Second
sidewalk.
D
We've
spent
a
lot
of
time
talking
about
that,
but
we
really
need
to
get
the
sidewalks
going
and
especially
to
and
from
schools,
and
at
least
the
ones
right
across
from
schools
flooding
which
we
have
money
for,
as
my
colleague
mentioned
earlier,
stormwater
flooding,
but
there
you
know
times
that
it
rains.
We
get
lots
and
lots
of
calls
and
we
desperately
need
task
forces
to
go
out
and
fix
some
of
these
key
areas
quickly.
Parks.
D
The
problem
with
vela
brothers
is
that
there
was
a
promise,
or
at
least
an
expectation
set
about
five
years
ago,
that
it
was
going
to
be
redone
and
it
has
never
been
redone.
And
so
I
would
echo
that
it's
important
to
get
that
one
done
just
because
of
the
promises
made
several
years
ago,
but
there
are
parks
throughout
south
tampa
and
the
rest
of
tampa.
But
south
tampa
is
like
the
rest
of
tim.
D
Everybody
thinks
that
their
park
is
the
only
one
that's
messed
up
and
their
road
is
the
only
one
that
floods
and
their
road
is
the
only
one
that
has
potholes.
But
the
truth
is
that
it's
all
over
the
city-
and
I
know
the
administration-
is
doing
a
transportation
study
and
they're
doing
park
study,
but
we
have
all
kinds
of
problems
with
the
parks
and,
as
people
are
spending
more
time
in
their
neighborhood,
they
want
sidewalks,
they
want
the
puddles
filled
and
they
want
the
parks
done.
D
Echoing
what
council
member
vieira
and-
and
I
think
madison
said,
I've
spent
a
lot
of
time
with
fire
rescue
in
the
last
few
months
and
the
information
I've
gotten
the
examples
I've
seen
are
really
frightening.
What
we
really
need
is
is
ambulance
vehicles
or
or
rescue
vehicles
at
every
station,
the
stations
I
spent
time
with
in
south
tampa.
They
have
huge
ladder
fire
trucks
because
they
don't
have
other
vehicles
they
have
to.
D
They
have
to
take
the
big
fire
truck
to
go
rescue
somebody
which
potentially
could
cause
traffic
problems
and,
and
that
causes
wear
and
tear
on
those
large
vehicles,
and
we
need
smaller
vehicles
they
can
take
out
quickly.
There
are
lots
of
health
issues
happening
in
south
tampa.
There
are
lots
of
people
that
have
heart
attacks,
there's
an
opioid
another
drug
epidemic.
D
Going
on
and
they
need
the
vehicles
to
be
able
to
get
to
folks
right
away,
also
the
the
station
south
of
gandhi
which,
which
is
serving
that
fast-growing
area
also
as
a
marine
unit,
so
they
have
to
when
there's
a
marine
problem.
They
have
to
drive
about
10
minutes
over
to
the
to
their
boat,
which
I
I
boarded,
and
then
they
have
to
go
out
into
the
water.
Well,
that
means
that
it's
another
several
minutes
for
anybody
to
make
it
south
of
candy,
and
so
we've
got
a
in
this
analysis.
D
That
atmosphere
asks
for.
We've
got
to
look
at
the
response
times
throughout
the
city.
Look
at
the
implication
of
all
the
the
problems
are
happening,
but
we
need
to
make
sure
we're
saving
people's
lives.
This
is
not
just
about
money,
somebody's
having
a
heart
attack
or
they've,
been
cut
or
injured.
We
need
to
get
to
them
quickly
and
when
there's
a
fire
we
need
to
get
to
them
quickly.
There's
two
last
things
that
I
haven't
really
mentioned
before,
but
are
major
issues:
we've
got.
D
Hundreds
of
people
living
in
parks
in
south
tampa
and
chief
of
staff
has
been
working
with
neighborhood
leaders,
south
tampa
and
elsewhere,
to
find
solutions
for
temporary
housing
for
homeless
people,
and
then
we
know
we're
working
on
affordable
housing
and
other
more
permanent
measures
working
with
nonprofits
in
the
private
sector,
and
so
I
I
thank
them
for
those
efforts.
We
need
to
move
quickly.
D
What
happens
is
that
if
they
move
out
of
one
area,
they
move
into
another
area,
and
so
we
get
lots
of
calls
about
that
and
we
get
calls
from
people
who
don't
want
them
in
the
woods
behind
their
houses
and
we
get
calls
from
people
who
want
us
to
help,
take
care
of
them
and
find
permanent
solutions,
and
so
we
are
working
with
all
those
voices
to
solve
those
issues.
Lastly,
economic
development.
D
We
know
from
tampa
scorecard.com
that
tampa
failed
economically
in
the
last
10
years.
I'm
sure
there
were
things
that
went
well,
we
had
lots
of
condos
and
apartments
and
lots
of
buildings,
but
every
other
city
in
florida
did
also
in
every
other
city
that
we're
comparing
ourselves
to
also
did
we
can't.
We
can't
compare
ourselves
to
the
edifice
complex
anymore.
We've
got
to
compare
ourselves
to
the
real
numbers
that
other
cities
focus
on
and
in
doing
that,
one
of
the
things
we
need
to
do
is
bring
economic
development
into
house.
D
I
think
that
other
economic
development
groups
around
the
state
elsewhere
show
that
we
need
a
private
economic
development
unit,
but
we
don't
have
to
be
the
main
funder
if
we
can
bring
some
or
all
of
that
money
in-house
and
hire
a
robust
team.
We
know
that
carol,
post
and
her
team
know
how
to
move
forward
with
economic
development
planning
they
brought
planning
in-house
and
the
more
we
can
bring
in
house
the
more
effective
we
will
be
at
helping
to
build
a
robust
economy.
Thank
you.
H
Chairman
mr
shelby
you're-
probably
better
at
this
than
I
am
I'd
like
to
put
this
on
the
overhead.
If
it's
still
functioning.
H
Mr
chairman,
while
we're
doing
that,
let
me
start
off
by
by
saying
how
thrilled
I
am
that
council
is
doing
this
workshop.
I
think
it's
extremely
important
for
us
to
have
a
little
more
informal
discussion
of
these
super
important
issues
before
we
dive
into
the
the
more
formal
budget
hearings-
and
I'm
not
going
to
reiterate
what
everybody
has
already
said
in
regard
to
public
safety.
H
Villa
brothers,
I'm
totally
supportive
of
both
of
those
joe
sutro,
I'm
not
that
familiar
with
the
concept
of
satellite
stations,
but
if
it's
a
way
to
save
money
and
still
give
good
service,
then
I
then
I
can
see
myself
complete.
You
know
completely
supporting
that.
H
Mr
carlson
economic
development,
I
know,
is
one
of
your
fortes
and
and
I'm
going
to
rely
on
you
to
enlighten
us
on
how
we
can
do
a
better
job
on
that,
but
I
had
a
couple
of
a
couple
of
items
and
I'll
just
start
with
the
biggest
right
here.
This
this
page
is
came
out
of
our
budget
book,
and
this
is
the
the
arpa
money.
This
is
the
80
million
dollars.
H
Can
everybody
see
it?
Okay,
okay,.
H
You
and
and
marty,
I'm
not
sure
if
that's
showing
the
top
of
the
page.
B
H
So
I
I
think,
generally
speaking,
you
know
this
is
where
the
city
and
council
might
have
a
little
more
flexibility
than
than
we
do
in
other
parts
of
the
budget
and
and
and
mr
vera,
I'm
thrilled
to
see
that
that
the
new
tampa,
inclusive
playground,
which
you
have
pushed
hard
for
for
for
many
years,
hopefully
is
coming
to
fruition
with
the
help
of
that
federal
money.
H
Likewise,
mr
goods,
the
east,
hampton
rec
complex,
I
know
that's
not
going
to
pay
everything
all
of
it,
but
but
at
least
it's
a
nice
chunk
of
money
there.
So
that's
the
three
million
dollars
extra
parks
and
rec.
We
all
support
public
safety,
tpd,
3
million
dollars.
A
I
saw
mike
on
the
line
some
person
I
saw.
Is
there
anybody
dennis
on
there
just
mike.
H
Okay,
well,
we
won't
go
to
them
yet,
but
but
the
the
one
that
I
have
circled
there
is
solid
waste
and
the
reason
I
have
it
circled.
You
know
where
we
all
support
solid
waste.
H
Just
like
we
support
all
the
departments,
but
solid
waste
is
a
little
a
bit
of
an
unusual
animal,
mr
vera,
as
you
as
you
know
that
in
regard
to
the
fact
that,
like
water
and
waste
water,
that
this
is
an
enterprise
fund,
okay,
the
reason
I
can
support
parking
right
above
there
at
3.4
million
is
because
parking's
a
general
fund
and
parking
has
been
hurting
and
there's
no
other
place
for
parking
to
get
money
except
out
of
the
general
fund.
H
You
know
that
solid
waste
has
been
hurting
during
the
covid
and
that
their
their
their
funds
are
down
a
little
bit
and
and
even
though
it
says
something
to
the
contrary
on
this
page,
you
know
what
I've
been
told
is:
is
that
5
million
is
really
to
make
up
for
the
deficit
for
the
last
year
and
a
half,
but
I,
as
you
see
what
I've
circled
that
5.5
million
and
I
have
an
arrow
going
up
to
housing
and
community
development,
housing,
community
development
receiving
16
million
dollars.
That's
fantastic
again!
H
There's
you
know
we
never
have
money
for
affordable
housing
and
right
now
the
the
administration's
proposing
16
million,
which
is
not
a
it's,
not
a
quarter.
It's
about
20
percent
of
the
of
the
total
of
the
81.,
but
what
I'm
suggesting
is
is
let's
take
that
5
million
and
put
that
up
above
and
make
that
20.
H
You
know:
21.6
million,
with
the
the
need
for
affordable
housing
is
massive.
We
all
know
that,
and
every
single
project
takes.
You
know
three
five,
ten
million
dollars
somebody
switched
on
mike
and
I
shrunk
down
our
our
overhead,
but
anyway,
no
offense
mike
the,
but
the
bot.
Thank
you,
but
the
bottom
line
is
is
this
is
the
time
this
is
such
if
I
could
have
another
minute.
H
We
we
have
never
had
an
opportunity
like
this,
with
an
80
million
dollar
infusion,
that's
fairly
flexible
on
how
we
use
it-
and
I
say
I
say,
strike
while
the
iron's
hot:
let's
use
it
for
something
that
really
is
going
to
make
a
difference
because
solid
waste,
and
what
dennis
told
me
today
is
that
solid
waste
when
they
make
their
big
move
over
to
34th
street
they're,
going
to
be
doing
a
50
million
dollar
bond
issue.
Okay,
so
what's
the
difference
if
they
do
a
55
million
bond
issue,
it's
you
know.
H
At
the
end
of
the
day,
when
you
spread
it
over
30
years,
it
really
doesn't
make
that
big
a
difference.
But
if
we
take
this
five
million
dollars-
and
we
put
it
up
here
to
affordable
housing,
affordable
housing,
all
across
the
city,
we
can
really
really
make
a
difference.
So
that's
that's
my
biggest
issue.
H
I
have
a
couple
of
smaller
ones
that
I
don't
even
think
I'm
I'm
necessarily
going
to
mention
tonight,
although
I
was
a
little
disappointed
that
when
we
passed
the
pipes
program,
I
asked
staff
to
increase
the
ebo
staff
to
to
to
what
it
was
during
the
pre-recession
levels,
which
I
think
was
like
10
people
well,
that
ebo
staff
is
still
static
at
five
to
six
people.
So
that's
a
minor,
that's
a
minor
issue.
I
also
noticed
that
union
station
had
no
money
dedicated
and
I
think
bill
carlson.
H
You
were
the
biggest
supporter
of
union
station,
but
has
no
money
toward
capital
improvements
anyway.
My
big
focus
is
right
here
in
front
of
you
is
let's
try
and
work
with
the
administration
to
switz
to
shove
that
5.5
million
dollars
and
put
it
toward
affordable
housing,
which
will
now
have
21
million
dollars
more
than
a
quarter
of
the
entire
of
80
million?
And
then
we
can
say,
we've
really
done
something.
F
No,
you
know
in
in
that
list
of
federal
dollars.
I
didn't
see
anything
there
for
tampa
fire,
or
is
there
some
missing
portion
of
that
or.
F
H
F
Yeah
and
and
so
I'll
make
that
inquiry,
if
I
may
some
other
things
just
looking
at
notes
here,
obviously
for
villa
brothers
park,
thank
you
for
your
leadership.
There
councilman
maniscalco,
obviously
a
very
important
park.
I've
been
talking
to
the
administration
about
that
for
a
while.
I
always
I
always
say
that
you
know
I
I
never
like
to
like
what
is
it
stay
get
out
of
my
lane
so
to
speak,
but
thank
you
for
your
leadership
that
that's
that
is
so
badly
needed
in
in
terms
of
that
park.
F
It's
the
values,
I
think,
are
so
important
whenever
it
comes
to
city
endeavors
and
having
a
park
like
that,
that
pays
tribute
to
our
veterans
and
to
valor
and
and
to
use
federal
money
for
it,
I
think,
would
be
particularly
poignant.
I
think
that's
very,
very
important
where
values
and
recreation
can
come
together
and
to
teach
us
more
about
our
history,
including
the
villa
brothers.
I
I
think
that's
great.
I
I
would
ask
for
a
friendly
amendment
as
well.
If
there
isn't
any
to
put
disability
friendly
playground
equipment
there
as
well.
A
That's
it
if
you
have
page
34
for
the
opera,
it
talks
about
13.4
million
for
fire.
A
Right:
okay,
that's
five:
3.4
million
for
the
station
renovation;
5
million
for
vehicles
and
2
million
for
peak
unit
services.
H
F
But
that's
that's
that's
marvelous!
It
goes
without
saying
and
in
terms
of
you
know,
moving
those
funds
over
there
that
councilman
dingfield
talk
about
I'd
certainly
be
open
to
it.
I
like
to
look
at
the
consequences
of
that,
but
obviously
very
very
open
to
it.
You
know
adding
a
few
more
a
little
bit,
what
10
12
more
to
a
bond
so
that
we
can
take
care
of
a
crisis
right
here
right
now,
I
think,
is
a
reasonable
thing
to
do,
and
I
you
know
when
I
look
at
this
budget.
F
F
You
know
a
couple
of
day
weeks
ago
there
was
a
drowning
in
k
bar
ranch
where
a
three-year-old
was
drowning
in
a
pond,
and
I
believe
it
took
tampa
fire
about
13
minutes
to
get
there
right
because
again,
four
out
of
the
six
fire
stations
in
the
city
of
tampa,
where
the
longest
response
times
are
from
new
tampa.
Now,
there's
different
ways
that
we
can
fix
that
from
a
new
station
to
looking
at
it
cut
through
to
get
to
k
bar
range
from
morris
bridge
road,
but
that's
a
crisis.
F
You
talk
to
the
men
and
women
who
work
at
station
13.
They
are
constantly
constantly
in
crisis.
I
mean,
I
always
say
this.
Those
poor
folks
have
adopted
freddy
krueger
to
be
their
mascot
because
they
go.
If
you
work
here
right,
you're,
never
gonna,
sleep,
you're,
never
gonna
sleep
at
station
13
and
you
talk
to
the
men
and
women
there
and
they
go.
Listen.
We've
been
complaining
for
so
long
that
we
just
gave
up
hope.
F
I
want
this
to
be
the
budget
where
these
folks,
these
great
public
servants,
people
like
clayton
weeks,
the
tampa
fire
fighter,
who
has
done
nine
years
nine
years,
he's
done
at
13.,
most
people
they
do
their
tour
of
duty
in
vietnam
and
they
get
out
right.
Clayton
weeks
has
stayed
there
for
nine
years.
God
bless
them,
I'm
actually
going
there
on
thursday,
with
with
joe
greco
and
some
other
folks
to
talk
about
what
we're
doing
in
the
budget.
I
want
to
bring
them
good
news,
great
news,
because
they
deserve
it.
F
A
lot
of
the
folks
here
you
talk
to
them
they've,
given
up
hope.
They
don't
think
that
anyone's
going
to
go
out
there
and
and
fight
for
them
there's
so
many,
and
that
area
has
so
much
poverty.
You've
got
areas
like
the
university
area,
etc.
Where
two
and
three
kids
live
in
poverty
serviced
by
this
area,
it's
a
great
combination
of
a
gross
disrespect
for
first
responders
and
then
total
disregard
for
at-risk
vulnerable
populations
that
live
there.
We
can
get
this
done
in
this
budget,
so
thank
you
very
much.
E
I
appreciate
councilman
vieira's
words,
especially
regarding
villa
brothers
park,
and
you
know
what
what
more
poignant
endeavor
than
to
use
federal
funds
for
a
park
that
is
dedicated
to
our
military
and
armed
forces
and
those
that
sacrifice
for
this
country
but,
as
he
said,
regarding
station
13,
public
safety
issues
and
new
tampa
response
times.
You
know
when
folks
talk
about
speeding
when
we
get
complaints,
people
say
put
speed
bumps,
can't
you
put
a
speed
bump
and
I'll
say
one
of
two
things:
there's
no
money
for
it,
which,
I
don't
believe.
E
That's
true.
I
mean
it's
a
speed
bump,
but
second,
it's
you
know
when
you
know
seconds
count
when
it's
a
public
safety
issue
and
we
have
our
public
safety
vehicles,
an
ambulance
or
a
fire
truck
that
those
speed
tables
or
speed
bumps
hold
them
up.
So
you
know
seconds
matter,
but
when
councilman
vieira
said
13
minute
response
time
to
a
crisis
to
a
critical
issue,
there
that's
uncalled
for.
If
seconds
matter,
you
know,
13
minutes
is
death
or
possible
death.
E
So
you
know,
public
safety
is
first
and
foremost
in
what
we
invest
in,
because
it's
a
life
and
death
situation,
and
I'm
going
to
be
supportive
of
anything
like
that.
But
again,
I
appreciate
the
support
of
the
kind
words
regarding
bila
brothers
park
and
actually
councilman
dingfelder
in
you
know
that
five
million
dollars
being
moved
towards
housing.
E
I
mean
I've
seen
how
the
market
is.
I
saw
a
social
media
post
with
a
link
to
an
article
about
rising
rent
costs
and
how
we're
some
of
the
most
expensive
in
the
country
and
blaming
city
council
for
it.
I
I
you
know,
I'm
sorry.
It's
market
demand
it's
people
that
want
to
move
here.
It's
not
my
fault
that!
Well,
you
know
I
mean,
through
through
leadership,
through
a
variety
of
people.
You
know
the
city
of
tampa
has
come
back
strong.
I
mean
I
remember
how
it
was
with
the
great
recession.
E
I
remember
how
it
was
when
I
graduated
usf
at
the
end
of
07
how
people
were
leaving
friends
of
mine
were
leaving.
Now
is
the
complete
opposite
people
just
they're
coming
here
in
droves
and
in
that
it's
driving
prices
up,
and
somebody
asked
me
today:
why
is
everybody
coming
to
tampa
we're
a
great
place
to
live?
We're
a
great
balance?
Miami
to
some
is
overwhelming
and
too
big,
california
and
new
york
are
too
expensive.
E
Orlando
is
very
touristy.
It's
it's
very
congested
and
tampa's
that
balance,
so
it
we
are
a
victim
of
success,
which
is
good,
especially
you
know,
with
everything
we
had
to
go
through
budget
wise
10
years
ago
and
whatnot.
E
You
know,
we've
come
back
very,
very
strong,
but
again
going
back
to
councilman,
ding
folger's
point
about
housing.
You
know
if
they're
going
to
bond
out
50
million
dollars,
what's
an
extra
5
million
dollars-
and
this
is
not
a
response-
an
irresponsible
thing
to
say
over
30
years,
5
million
dollars
in
a
worthwhile
endeavor
beyond
public
safety,
which
is
critical,
but
something
else
that
is
absolutely
necessary.
You
break
things
down
in
life
between,
wants
and
needs.
These
are
absolute
needs.
E
These
are
absolute
necessities,
so
I'm
glad
councilman
dean
father
brought
that
up,
and
I
would
certainly
support
that
because
I
I
I've,
seen
it
firsthand
how
critical
that
is.
Thank
you.
H
I
don't
think
I
have
anything
to
add
right
now.
I
look
forward
to
hearing
some
staff
responses
to
the
to
the
excellent
comments
so
that
we've
made
tonight
skulls.
D
Thank
you,
sir.
I
said
everything
I
wanted
to
say
earlier.
I
just
look
forward
to
hearing
what
the
public
says
and
also
cheers
to
martha
beela.
A
All
right,
gentlemen,
me
and
my
colleague
to
the
right:
we
did
attend
the
florida
league
of
cities
this
past
week,
and
I
tell
you
a
lot
of
good
sessions,
but
the
session
that
everybody
was
at
was
the
american
rescue
plan
act.
The
arpa
and
I've
got
those
numbers
of
those
fine.
Ladies
and
gentlemen,
who
are
there
who
are
administering
the
program
who
actually
know
what's
going
on
and
and
what
happens
is
they're
they're?
A
The
treasury
department
handles
those
larger
and
medium
class
cities
and
because
the
emergency
management
officer
handles
those
smaller
cities
and
they
made
sure
that
the
government
gave
it
to
the
the
cities
to
run
it
versus
the
states
to
make
sure
we
got
that
money.
Do
we
need
to
do,
and
I'm
gonna
tell
you
the
number
one
focal
point.
The
number
one
focal
point
for
everybody
in
the
room
was
housing.
A
That
is
hindering
losses.
We
know
housing
is
a
big
big
issue
again
with
solid
waste.
You
know,
they've
had
some
big
big
budgets
last
couple
years.
When
you
look
at
now
everyone's
right,
why
would
you
give
them
more
money?
A
You're
gonna
do
a
bond
that
doesn't
make
any
sense,
so
I
I
would
be
in
favor
of
scratching
that
and
maybe
adding
at
the
housing
and
probably
somewhere
in
it,
giving
the
rest
to
maybe
so
that
villa
brothers
park,
you
know
to
kind
of
balance
that
out
fires
getting
their
needs.
All
in
all,
I
can
say
the
the
administration
did
try
to
work
around.
All
the
council
members
needs-
and
you
know
these
table-
my
big
needs
right
now
is
economic
development
housing?
A
I
guess
you
got
a
gentleman
today
talking
about
lockers
having
some
locks
because
some
of
the
homeless
shelters
don't
have
lockers,
so
they
have
to
try
to
store
their
stuff
on
the
trees
versus
some
place
that
they
can
make
have
an
area
where
they
can
go
put
stuff
in
a
locker
and
lock
that
person
up
because
that's
their
house,
that's
that's
their
personal
belongings.
Sometimes
they
don't
have
a
place,
so
they
may
go
somewhere
to
try
to
get
a
shower
somewhere,
but
they
can't
leave
their
stuff
any
anyplace.
A
They
get
outside
the
box,
some
ideas
that
can
help
everybody
and
I
totally
generally
thought
that
was
a
good
idea,
maybe
there's
somewhere
areas
or
different
places
in
the
city
where
they
could
have
a
locker
to
lock
some
of
their
items
up
or
or
some
kind
of
warehouse,
or
something
like
that.
I
know
other
cities
do
have
a
place
in
some
of
the
industrial
areas
where
they
have
it
for
the
homes
and
go
and
be
able
to
store
some
of
their
their
stuff.
A
A
So
adding
that
and
hearing
all
this,
I
don't
want
to
be
hearing
about.
Well
we're
going
to
make
all
of
this
red
tape
for
people
and
then
this
money's
sitting
here,
mrs
david,
I'm
just
being
honest,
we
got
to
have
many
grants
that
miss
jones
who
may
need
45
to
get
her
ac
unit,
and
you
know
she's
on
a
fixed
income.
Why
does
she
have
to
bring
all
these
documents
a
caving
in
house
with
a
blue
tarp
on
it?
A
A
We
have
to
push
this
money
out
to
the
people
they're
asking
about
it.
They
know
about
it,
so
you
know
I'm
I'm
appreciative
to
the
administration
that
they've
they've
heard
my
my
cry
the
last
couple
years
about
some
of
the
projects.
I
think
that
we
need
there's
no
exception
this
time.
They
heard
our
cry
about
this,
this
opera
money
about
housing
and
they
did
a
great
effort,
but
I
think
we
can
do
a
little
bit
more,
because
that
is
the
need
right
now.
That
is
the
crisis
right
now,.
H
H
H
A
I
I
know
that
the
mr
shelby,
I
think
the
finance
committee
for
the
council
has
asked
to
come
before
us
on
september
2nd.
I
believe.
A
So
we'll
be
making
that
motion
on
thursday
night
and
roughly
student
coming
instead
of
the
september
13th
hearing
date,
ms
dinkle
is
right
and
I
guess
they
heard
it
hit
our
car.
They
should
come
before
before
the
hearing
to
hear
what
they
have
to
say
about
the
city's
finances
and
what
they've
been
doing.
Apparently,
the
reason
they
could
not
do
it
at
that
time,
because
they
were
still
getting
information
from
the
different
departments
to
put
everything
and
analyze
it
together.
A
So
with
that
being
said,
we've
had
our
discussion,
we'll
open
up
the
public
comment.
We
have
anybody
downstairs
with
shelby.
C
B
Good
evening,
can
you
hear
me
good
evening,
gentlemen?
I
I
you
know.
I
have
this
new
role
I
have
to
be
careful
of
who
I'm
speaking
for,
but
I
just
wanted
to.
B
I
cannot
speak
knowledgeably
about
this
new
budget
because
I
didn't
get
the
whole
thing
posted
online
until
this
afternoon,
I'm
speaking
as
a
concerned
citizen
I
may
hit
on
the
entire
city
items,
but
I'm
just
learning
about
the
areas
outside
of
my
community,
so
I
can't
speak
for
stan
yet,
but
it's
summer,
when
I
recite
received
the
link
to
the
entire
budget
this
afternoon,
I
send
it
out
to
the
people
of
sand.
I
am
sure
that
those
active
in
our
communities
will
have
the
opportunity
to
read
all
950
981
pages.
B
My
a
couple
of
questions
that
I
had
about
the
budget
that
I
have
looked
at
today,
like
I
said
I
didn't
have-
I
didn't-
have
until
this
afternoon-
entirely
capital
expenditures.
I
noticed
that
on
the
heart
items
on
page
778
quoted
as
funded
by
impact
fees,
but
yet
I
look
at
other
areas
of
the
budget
that
should
be
funded,
at
least
in
part,
by
impact
fees.
B
There's
no
comment
about
that,
and
I
know
that
we
and
sog
specifically
have
seen
through
a
2007
report
that
there
were
funds
allocated
for
many
of
the
upgrades
in
our
infrastructure
and
they're
still
not
done
page
805
in
the
budget.
B
We
would
like
to
see
where
those
funds
are
going
and
and
where
they
went
capital
expenditures
for
both
brics
and
repairs
and
replacement
and
traffic
calming
devices.
344
thousand
dollars
seems
like
a
pittance.
I
know
that
traffic
tables
in
my
particular
neighborhood
were
about
fifteen
hundred
dollars
that
that
puts
aside
83
of
them
for
the
entire
city
sidewalks.
B
Now
after
I
wrote
this,
I
I
found
a
little
bit
more
money
that
was
set
aside
for
sidewalks.
I'm
still
trying
to
figure
out
how
the
inner
bay
area
got
a
hundred
like
a
million
dollars
worth,
but
I
I'm
still
looking
and
I'll
follow
up
with
an
email
and
I
apologize
for
being
unprepared,
because
I
started
looking
for
the
entire
budget
on
friday
morning
about
7
30
a.m,
and
I
did
not
get
it
until
this
afternoon,
so
you
guys
have
a
great
evening,
and
I
look
forward
to
the
discussion.
B
I
Hello,
everybody.
Can
you
hear
me
we
can
hear
you
thanks
yeah.
We
always
need
to
know
that
you
can
hear
us
okay,
so
I've
just
been
listening
and
I
was
not
privy
to
the
budget
because
we
did
not
receive
it.
We
all
were
bouncing
around
all
weekend,
looking
for
it
everywhere
on
every
website,
but
it
was
not
available
to
us,
so
I'm
just
going
to
have
to
go
based
on
what
y'all
have
to
talk
about
tonight
or
today.
So
you
all
mentioned
about
city
workers.
I
You
need
to
expand
city
workers,
in
other
words,
expand
the
government
footprint.
I'm
not
sure
you
know.
Yes,
we
do
more.
You
want
to
do
more
with
less
blah
blah,
but
you
know:
we've
all
suffered
the
consequences
of
covet
and
the
financial
burden
of
it
you
know,
and
for
the
city
to
be
able
to
expand
and
not
everybody
else
and
all
private
businesses
that
wouldn't
be
kind
of
fair
to
some
people.
The
city
did
add
15
an
hour
on
last
year
or
whatever
to
the
employees
as
a
minimum.
I
You
know
that's
a
lot
of
money
for
small
businesses
to
pay,
so
you
know
to
just
think
about
that
when
you
start
expanding
employees,
roads,
you're,
right
rhodes,
heinz,
like
councilman
carlson,
said
heinz-
is
a
mess
all
these
other
roads.
The
flooding
and
my
footprint
is
not
so
bad,
there's
a
few
streets,
but
they
have
35
million
dollars,
they're
going
to
be
working
on
that
with
the
elap
project
in
the
lower
stormwater
peninsula.
That
has
a
lot
of
money
and
that's
not
going
to
help
any
flooding
in
iceland.
I
Just
so
y'all
know
that
gaston
park
it
it
there
used
to
be
a
beautiful
swing
set
in
a
park
there
and
they
removed
it.
That
was
near
the
bathrooms
that
swing
set
has
been
removed
and
they
put
one
of
them:
crappy
little
wood
things,
that's
dilapidated
and
falling
apart,
so
our
people
would
like
to
have
a
playground
just
a
playground.
I
So
let's
see
the
sidewalk
fun
for
south
of
gandhi.
There
was
158
000
that
that
stephanie
just
mentioned,
and
I
don't
think
we
got
any
of
it,
because
our
understanding
of
the
sidewalk
fund
just
goes
to
anywhere
in
the
city
where
y'all
want
it,
but
not
where
the
impact
be
that
it
impacts
us,
but
we
don't
get
the
money,
that's
not
right.
I
don't
know
about
increasing.
Oh
first
of
all,
I
need
somebody
to
please
identify
what
affordable
housing
is.
I
I
Let's
see
moving
funds,
I'm
not
sure
what
councilman
and
dean
felder
was
talking
about.
Moving
these
funds,
I
haven't
had
a
chance
to
even
look
at
the
budget,
so
it
sounds
good
in
theory,
but
of
course
the
consequences
need
to
be
run
by
we,
the
people,
because
we're
pretty
good
at
at
attacking
what
you
guys
might
find
to
be
good
and
we
find
out
it's
not
crisis.
The
evictions
yeah-
I
I
do
that
for
a
living.
I
I
That
have
houses
are
losing
them
too.
One
more
thing
can
I
can
I
okay
one
more
thing.
I
thought
a
great
idea
on
the
homeless.
Lockers,
like
amazon,
has
lockers
outside
the
7-11
and
stuff,
like
that.
That's
actually
a
pretty
good
idea.
I
think
we
need
to
look
into
that
and
that's
all
I
have
thank
you
and
have
a
wonderful
day.
A
Thank
you,
madam
clerk.
Miss
matos
all
right.
Gentlemen.
We
talked
we
discussed.
We
heard
from
the
few
folks
that
did
call
in
I'm
sure,
we'll
have
a
big
crowd
at
hearing
time.
Of
course,
we
have
staff
on
the
line.
E
B
Evening,
mr
chair
mike
perry,
budget
officer,
we
appreciate
all
your
comments
and
we'll
take
it
back
to
the
administration
and
provide
answers
back
to.
H
Yeah,
I
think
we,
I
think
what
we
don't
want
to
do
is
is
get
you
know,
get
caught
in
that
corner
and
and
you've
seen
it
happen
year
in
and
year
out,
and
then
there's
a
lot
of
frustration.
You
know
with
council
and
the
administration
and
everybody's
scrambling
at
the
last
minute.
So
if,
if
we
could
have
some
responses,
you
know
within
the
next
next
week
or
so
that
would
be
wonderful.
A
I
think
that
a
lot
of
things
that
we've
asked
for
talked
about
tonight
are
unreasonable.
At
this
point
we
have
some
extra
dollars
now
that
you
can
play
with
now.
Those
dollars
can
be
used
in
no
restrictions
on
those
dollars.
A
I
was
at
the
meeting
I
heard
from
the
people
who
were
actually
going
to
be
handing
out
the
money
and
explain
how,
in
theory,
it's
supposed
to
work,
so
I
don't
think,
there's
anything
unreasonable
that
we
really
talked
about
tonight.
That's
real
real
far-fetched,
so
I
don't
think
it
should
be
a
big
cry
to
try
to
make
some
of
these
things
happen.
A
I
do
like
the
idea
that
the
I
want
to
thank
mr
bennett.
It
was
a
great
idea,
the
last
couple
years
to
come
to
us
beforehand
and
asked
some
of
the
pressing
issues
of
this
council
with
council
members
in
the
district.
I
think
he's
done
a
good
job
of
listening
and
trying
to
make
some
things
work
and
again
thank
mr
dean
for
having
this
workshop
tonight,
because
I
kind
of
brought
some
things
out
to
to
kind
of.
Let
us
talk
a
little
bit
today
this
evening.
A
Rather
and
again,
I
think
it
was
a
great
idea-
and
I'm
sure
we'll
probably
continue
this
again
next
year,
because
I
thought
it
was
very
valuable
and
again
we'll
have
the
finance
on
the
second
of
september,
mr
vera.
Anything
in
closing,
sir.
F
Yeah,
just
you
know,
one
thing
I
wanted
to,
you
know
stress
at
least
my
view
of
what
those
federal
dollars
are
for.
You
know
for
me,
those
are
federal
dollars
that
that
the
federal
government
put
in
you
know
there.
There's
that
idea
that
when
people
are
are
cutting
back,
that
government
should
come
cut
back.
You
know
I
I
actually
don't
always
believe
that
to
be
so.
I
think
that
when
the
economy
is
hurting,
that
means
that
government
needs
to
invest
in
people
who
are
hurting.
F
That's
right
and
that's
what
this
money
was
for
is
to
invest
in
people
who
are
hurting.
I
see
two
big
priorities
with
this
money
outside
of
repaying.
You
know
covert
related
expenses,
which
is
affordable,
workforce
housing,
the
idea
that,
if
you've
got
somebody
who's,
an
lpn,
a
nurse,
a
teacher's
aide,
a
teacher,
a
a
new
firefighter,
a
new
police
officer,
you
know
earning
50,
000
a
year,
etc.
They're
priced
out
of
the
tampa
market,
that's
meeting
human
needs,
that's
what
affordable
and
workforce
housing
is
all
about
and
then
taking
care
of
public
safety
issues.
F
Those
are
meeting
human
needs.
So
I
think
that
you
know
that
this
is
money
that
came
to
us
to
meet
human
needs,
and
I
think
that
we,
you
know,
are
making
a
real
good
aspiration
to
do
that.
That's
what
I
want
that
money
for-
and
I
think
we
all
agree
there
and
again.
I
do
want
to
stress,
though,
to
the
administration,
disability,
friendly
parks.
F
We
have
to
cut
that
deficit
every
single
year
in
the
budget,
if
you're
a
parent-
and
you
take
your
kid
with
cerebral
palsy
or
autism
or
you're
in
a
wheelchair,
and
you
go
to
a
park
and
there's
not
a
disability
friendly
piece
of
equipment
there,
whether
it's
east
tampa
copeland
park,
wherever
it
may
be
right,
that's
an
insult,
and
we
have
to
cut
that
back
hundred
and
ten
percent.
Thank
you
very
much.
A
E
Maniscalco,
you
know,
I
don't
want
to
be
that
rich
grandfather
that
grandkids
only
come
to
see
when
they
won
something,
but
that's
how
I
felt
these
last
several
years.
I've
been
very
generous.
You
know
the
julian
lane
the
storm
water
stuff,
the
pipes
program.
You
know
I've
always
said
yes
to
whoever
the
mayor
is.
I've
always
supported
those
ideas.
So
all
I'm
asking
for
is,
you
know
a
little
bit
of
love
and
in
that
sense,
is
the
villa
brothers
park.
E
I
would
like
to
see
it
completed
because
time
is
of
the
essence,
and
I've
already
said
why
and
it's
not
a
lot
to
ask
for
and
it's
a
very
valuable
investment
and
worthy
investment
in
this
community.
Thank
you.
A
G
Again
I'll
go
I'll,
go
back
to
what
I
said
earlier,
but
if
we're
gonna
see
things
completed,
we
have
radio
problems
with
with
tpd
and
and
fire
and
they
were
supposed
to
be
taken
care
of
and
and
they
haven't
been
so
far
so,
let's,
let's
hold
the
administration
to
what
they
say
that
we're
going
to
do
again.
Parks
all
over
this
pandemic
has
put
us
close
to
home
and
where's.
G
D
F
E
F
D
Everything
earlier,
but
I
just
add
some
something
that
you
mentioned
a
little
while
ago.
Anybody
watching
this,
especially
if
you're
watching
it
after
tonight
monday
night,
please
email
us.
My
email
is
bill.carlson
tampa.gov
and
I
think
you
can
email
all
of
us
at
what
is
it
tampa
city
council
at
tampa.gov
and
call
our
offices
set
up
phone
calls
with
us,
we're
we'd
love
to
hear
ideas
from
folks,
especially
accountants
and
others
who
know
how
to
dig
deeply
into
the
budget.
D
We
have
a
budget
advisory
committee,
but
we
always
welcome
ideas
from
the
community.
So
thank
you.
H
A
couple
of
things
popped
up
from
the
from
the
in
response
to
the
community
input
and
I
hope
we
get
more
input
as
we
progress
toward
budget,
but,
mr
maniscalco,
I
am
so
thrilled
that
that
you
brought
up
the
villa
brothers
park,
the
I
remember,
and
I
think
it
was
back
in
2005
when
I
was
here
last
time.
H
Mr
shelby
might
remember
as
well
that
when
mr
and
mrs,
via
and
some
of
the
other
family
members
came
in
and
asked
them
and
asked
council
to
name
that
park
after
their
heroic
family
and
council
was
more
than
happy
to
do
so,
but
that
definitely
isn't
the
end
of
it.
It's
just
the
beginning
and
guido.
I
I
agree.
I
think
that
council
bends
over
backwards
to
try
and
get
along
with
the
administration
and
agree
with
the
administration
as
much
as
we
can.
H
But
I
think
that
if
we
have
a
commitment
this
year
and
next
year
for
that
to
finish
the
the
improvements
that
have
already
been
slated
for
via
brothers
park,
then
I
think
that
this
council
will
be
very,
very
happy
gene
if
you're
still
listening,
I'm
going
to
add
to
the
administration's
list
to
look
into
that
gadsden
playground.
H
We
shouldn't
be
taking
out
something
and
not,
and
not
even
making
it
better
so
mike
if
you're
listening,
add
that
gadsden
playground
and
then
finally
gene
in
regard
to
affordable
housing,
we
could
spend
an
hour
trying
to
define
it
and
what
what
it
means.
But
an
answer
and
partial
answer
to
your
question.
H
Affordable
housing
is
not
limited
to
renters.
It's
not
limited
to
purchasers.
It's
not
limited
to
trailer
parks
or
duplexes
or
high
rises.
Affordable
housing
is
across
the
board,
at
least
in
this
community.
H
So
you
know
if
we
can
come
up
with
this
20
million
dollars
for
affordable
housing
and
I
serve
on
the
affordable
housing
advisory
committee
because
you
guys
put
me
there,
but
if
we
can,
if
we
can
come
up
with
that
additional
20
million
dollars,
it's
going
to
be
not
enough
money,
but
at
least
something
really
significant
and
we're
going
to
use
it
across
the
board
to
help
as
many
people
as
we
can.
Thank
you
miss
chairman.
A
Well,
gentlemen,
you
know
again,
housing
is
our
our
big
crisis.
You
know,
I
never
liked
the
word
affordable
housing
because
it
doesn't
fit
all.
I
never
liked
the
word
workforce
housing.
You
know,
I
know
what
a
police
officer
makes.
Most
police
officers
have
a
spouse,
so
I
know
what
that
income
is.
I
know
what
a
nurse
makes,
but
then
you
have
some
who
who
are
single
as
well.
A
A
That's
why
I
said
before
we
go
talk
about
the
city,
but
let's
make
sure
we
look
at
those
areas
that
we
know
people
are
really
hurting
and
suffering
and
making
sure
we
can
make
a
real
positive
dent
in
those
lives
and
in
the
city.
So
I
want
to
make
sure
again
we
have
these
some
of
these
programs
that
we
can
utilize
this
money
to
make
a
fast,
quick
impact,
because
I
tell
you,
when
I
put
a
new
house
on
a
block-
and
I
look
at
the
block
I'm
like
well.
A
A
We've
got
to
have
some
type
of
special
outsource
program,
because
our
housing
department
can't
deal
with
every
situation
that
comes
in
the
city.
That's
our
problem,
gentlemen.
Every
city
it
should
be
a
house
should
be
a
separate
department
in
itself.
It
should
not
be
conjoined
with
everybody
else,
it
should
be
housing
and
the
rest
of
that
other
stuff
should
be
underlined.
Someplace
else,
housing
should
be
a
focal
point
just
dealing
with
housing
and
not
all
these
other
special
needs
and
that's
what
happens:
they're
dealing
with
more
projects
and
less
people,
more
projects
and
less
people.
A
That
way
you
can
identify,
like,
I
said,
every
police
officer,
every
firefighter
code
enforcement,
any
city,
employee,
who's,
driving
your
car
down
a
city,
road,
our
solid
race
workers
who
empty
the
trash
every
day
for
citizens.
They
see
the
houses
that
are
bad
automatically,
should
have
a
pamphlet
brochure
to
get
out
of
that
car.
Put
on
that
house
contact
this
number
or
have
a
log
in
their
car
in
that
truck
or
write
down
the
house
that
never
be
able
to
submit
that
to
housing.
A
Take
a
photo
of
that
house
submit
it.
That
is
how
we're
going
to
be
able
to
clean
up
these
marginalized
communities.
Some
of
these
coming
to
make
them
look
better
to
identify
them.
You've
talked
walk.
Throughs,
you
see
what
I'm
talking
about.
Citroen
you've
been
out
there.
You
you
walk
around
in
the
communities.
A
A
A
C
No
sir,
thank
you
just
a
reminder.
Again.
We
have
the
meeting.
We
have
the
two
meetings
on
this
coming
thursday,
the
cra
and
in
the
evening
we
have
an
evening
meeting
at
five
o'clock.
Mr
ding
felder.
Did
you
want
that
piece
of
paper
back
and
I
will
give
it
back
to
you
and
I
don't
think,
there's
anything
to
receive
and
file.
I
believe.