►
From YouTube: Tampa City Council 6-24-21
Description
No description was provided for this meeting.
If this is YOUR meeting, an easy way to fix this is to add a description to your video, wherever mtngs.io found it (probably YouTube).
A
C
D
C
C
E
E
A
A
F
Yes,
sir,
mr
chair
and
an
invocation
as
well
imam
inshira
abdel
excuse
me
is
a
muslim
leader
in
tampa
a
husband
for
41
great
years
and
a
father
of
five
wonderful
children.
He
provides
leadership,
classes
and
other
services
at
the
tmc,
which
is
the
muslim
connection.
Please
welcome
imam
ishra
abdel
jali
imam.
Would
you
please
lead
us
in
the
invocation
and
would
everyone
please
rise
or
remain
standing
for
the
pledge
of
allegiance.
G
Clerk
informs
me
that
the
imam
is
not
online
presently.
F
Okay,
may
we
start
with
the
place.
D
G
D
G
Shelby
good
morning,
thank
you,
mr
chairman,
members
of
city
council,
martin
shelby,
the
city
council
attorney.
Today's
workshop
is
being
conducted
with
a
live
in
person,
quorum
of
city
council
present
in
city,
council
chambers.
This
is
during
the
continuing
covet
19
state
of
emergency
in
response
to
the
covet
19
restrictions.
Members
of
the
public
are
encouraged
to
participate
virtually
through
video
teleconferencing
referred
to
by
florida
statutes
and
rules
as
communications,
media
technology
or
cmt.
G
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
web
at
www.tampa.gov
forward.
Slash
live
stream.
One
word:
the
public
has
had
the
opportunity
to
send
in
written
comments
by
internet
or
by
email
or
by
us
mail.
G
They
also
have
the
opportunity
to
speak
remotely
during
public
comment
through
the
use
of
cmt,
and
that
is
by
pre-registering
and
also
the
opportunity
to
participate
using
the
cmt
that's
available
at
old
city
hall.
On
the
second
floor,
those
people
who
do
not
have
access
to
it
are
invited
to
attend
the
second
floor
of
old
city
hall,
and
please
note
that
use
of
masks
and
social
distancing
inside
the
building
are
encouraged.
G
If
you
wish,
mr
chairman,
I
believe
there
are
two
items
that
are
requesting
a
a
continuance
items
number
two
and
number
three,
both
to
august
26,
2021.
J
D
I
G
And
before
we
get
into
the
regular
workshop
session
after
the
ceremonial,
I
have
requested
miss
zellman
to
join
me
to
talk
with
you
very
briefly
about
the
the
state
of
emergency
and
the
governor's
executive
order,
which
is
set
to
expire
on
saturday
and
it'll.
Just
take
a
few
minutes.
But
I'd
appreciate
that.
D
We'll
get
it
out
the
public
comment.
I
was
just
going
to
state
that
after
one
in
item
11,
we
would
do
it
at
the
public
comment.
Show
thank
you,
move
to
approve
the
agenda.
J
D
Any
opposed
motion
carry
general
before
we
do
get
started.
I
did
send
a
memo
to
all
council
members
reference
to
the
crb
signing
of
the
ordinance
with
myself
and
the
mayor
and
the
crb.
Please
govern
yourselves
accordingly.
If
you
can
pretend
please
attend
if
you
can
adjust
your
schedules,
I
just
ask
you,
as
part
of
the
chair
as
unified,
as
this
body
has
been
want
to
continue
to
continue
to
strive
to
have
unity,
I'm
on
this
board
and
also
with
the
mayor's
office.
So
thank
you
for
that.
K
K
D
My
understanding
from
what
I've
read
and
I
did
not
sign
the
order
last
week
when
I
was
waiting
for
the
mayor,
because
I
wanted
to
do
it
jointly
to
showcase
the
cohesiveness
with
the
administration
in
his
body,
so
I
did
not
sign
the
order
last
week
on
friday.
So
at
this
particular
point
what
I
saw
notice
everything
we
asked
for
what
was
voted
on
upon.
So
if
you
can
attend
130,
we
appreciate
you.
Thank
you.
Thank
you
all
right.
D
F
I
always
start
out
the
officer
of
the
month
by
saying
that
if
more
people
want
to
know
what
these
officers
go
through
each
and
every
day
in
their
line
of
work,
they
will
go
to
the
citizens
police
academy
for
the
city
of
tampa
and
as
soon
as
it
starts
back
up.
Believe
me,
I
will
let
everybody
know
that
it
started
again.
Today
we
have
the
pleasure
of
presenting
accommodation
for
officer
of
the
month
to
officer
james
m
d'amato,
good
italian
officer.
F
Thank
you
very
much
for
the
officer
of
the
month
in
2021,
you
see
his
lovely
family
behind
me.
His
wife
is
the
the
hero
of
the
family,
every
wife,
every
spouse,
every
mother
and
father
of
officers
watch
the
officer
go
off
to
work
and
pray
every
day
that
they
come
home.
So
thank
you
for
being
the
true
hero
of
the
family
chief.
Would
you
please
come
up
and
explain
the
reason
why
this
officer
is
officer
of
the
month,
sir.
L
Morning,
council
ruben
delgado,
the
assistant
chief,
thank
you
for
the
opportunity
to
come
here
and
present
officer
datomas
the
officer
of
the
month
and
as
well
as
the
community
partners
that
are
here
to
support
him
as
well
so
officer
datoma
has
been
here
about
seven
years,
almost
seven
years
here
and
he's
currently
working
in
district
three,
so
he
quickly
identified
an
area
in
district
three
that
we
were
having
some
narcotics
activity.
L
L
He
identified
the
location
he
alerted
officers
as
to
which
individuals
were
trespassed
from
those
locations.
He
provided
insight
on
which
criminal
behavior
he
was
witnessing
during
some
surveillance
time
in
his
patrol
time
to
include
what
cars
were
potentially
involved
in
selling
narcotics
in
and
around
the
store
and
which
suspects
were
known
to
carry
firearms
or
may
have
discarded
firearms
in
the
area.
He
also
used
our
street
smart
software
program.
It's
a
platform
that
we
use
to
kind
of
communicate
among
squads
to
track
the
progress
of
the
plan.
L
L
Due
to
his
efforts
in
the
operation
taken
back,
eight
firearms
were
seized,
two
which
that
were
reported
stolen
and
three
offenders
were
arrested
for
those
crimes.
Additionally,
there
was
multiple
narcotics
seizures.
Four
defendants
had
active
warrants
and
one
defendant
was
charged
with
fleeing
to
elude
so
in
recognition
to
his
initiative
and
his
leadership,
making
substantial
impact
in
the
violent
crime
fight.
That's
in
district
three
officer,
james
tatoma
has
been
selected
as
tampa
police
officers
officer
of
the
month.
F
F
You
were
chosen
by
your
peers
and
by
your
feather
officers
for
this
because
of
your
dedication
to
service
commitment
to
excellence
and
going
above
and
beyond
the
duty,
the
call
of
duty
you
have
been
chosen
for
this
mark
of
distinction
as
officer
of
the
month
by
tampa
city
council,
your
peers,
your
superiors,
recognize
you
for
the
outstanding
work
ethic
and
the
dedication
of
keeping
our
community
safe.
We
commend
you
for
your
initiative
and
leadership
in
operation.
F
F
Councilmember
we're
going
to
go
now
to
the
wonderful
people
that
come
and
present
their
appreciation
to
the
officer
of
the
month,
but
we're
going
to
first
start
out
with
with
the
police
benevolent
association.
Ms
portman.
M
Morning,
councilman
darla
portman,
president
of
the
tampa
police,
benevolent
association.
We
got
jimmy
over
here
jimmy
owens,
the
vice
president
good
morning
like
to
present
this
to
you,
james
you're,
doing
a
great
job.
The
pba
is
proud
of
you
union's
proud
of
you
and
we
love
officers
that
you
know
go
out
there
and
they
work
hard
and
they
and
they
represent
the
police
department
in
the
manner
that
you
do
in
the
community.
So
congratulations-
and
this
is
for
you
and
your
family.
L
Good
morning,
good
morning
officer,
congratulations
job
well
done
mike
mcarthur,
with
steph's
towing
service,
accompanied
today
by
christy
venette,
on
behalf
of
todd
step
and
steps
towing.
We
would
like
to
present
you
with
a
50
bass,
pro
gift
card
and
a
night
out
in
our
company,
limousine,
okay.
So
I'm
and
I'm
going
to
put
the
challenge
out
there
again.
I
haven't
done
in
a
while,
and
I
still
want
to
see
somebody
pull
up.
Two
bass
pro
in
the
limo,
take
a
picture
and
and-
and
I
think
that'll
be
the
coolest
thing
ever
so.
L
L
Good
morning,
council
pete
brady
busch
gardens.
First
of
all,
it's
good
to
be
back
and,
as
I
always
say,
it's
it's
an
honor
to
represent
busch
gardens,
and
I
want
to
thank
you
for
obviously
continuing
to
honor
the
men
and
women
of
law
enforcement
every
month.
L
Obviously,
it's
jimmy
I've
known
jimmy
for
a
while
and
he's
a
frequent
flyer
at
busch,
gardens
and
I'd
like
to,
and
I
always
say
that
we're
going
to
give
tickets
to
people
who
always
come
to
busch
gardens
anyway,
but
jimmy
on
behalf
of
busch
gardens
and
neil
thurman
park.
President.
L
A
You
theater
officer
on
behalf
of
tampa
theatre,
I'm
honored,
to
give
you
the
gift
of
a
membership.
N
To
the
theater,
it
includes
free
tickets
for
movies.
M
F
Where'd
it
go,
it
was
up
here
councilman.
There
are
other
community
partners
that
wish
they
could
have
been
here
tonight
from
zoo
tampa
from
the
casper
corporation
and
from
the
strata
center.
But
I'm
going
to
have
my
guest
speaker,
mr
steve
michelini
present
for
them.
O
Good
morning,
council,
I'm
I'm
very
happy
to
be
here
and
to
recognize
this.
This
fine
officer,
I
think
the
girls
need
to
come
up
here,
so
they
get
on
the
camera.
Those
blue
dresses
are
outstanding.
I'm
trying
to
figure
out
how
two
of
them
got
blue
dresses
and
one
of
them
didn't.
O
The
chicho
restaurant
group,
which
is
providing
you
with
your
choice,
breakfast
lunch
or
dinner
at
their
establishments
on
behalf
of
the
prestige,
portraits,
formerly
known
as
bren
allen
studios
are
providing
you
with
a
gift
certificate,
so
you
can
have
your
portraits
taken
and
the
girls
have
to
wear
the
blue
dresses
and,
on
behalf
of
the
yummy
house,
china
bistro
we're
providing
you
with
your
choice
of
lunch
or
dinner,
and
again
I'm
familiar
with
that
area
in
particular,
and
I
know
what
it
what
a
challenge
it
is
to
to
work
out
there.
O
F
H
Thank
you
very
much,
mr
chairman.
No
just
officer,
thank
you!
So
much
for
your
service.
I'm
glad
that
your
wonderful,
beautiful
family
is
there
you,
you
look
like
you're
a
very
blessed
person
in
your
life,
and
your
smile
reflects
that
and
your
wife's
smile
reflects
that
and
you
you
have
just
three
beautiful
daughters
and
you're
very,
very
blessed,
but
we're
also
blessed
to
have
you,
sir,
protecting
us.
You
know
a
a
lot
of.
H
H
I
guess
if
you
will
feelings
among
many
many
police
officers
and
first
responders
over
the
last
year,
you
all
have
had
a
tremendous
burden
over
the
last
year,
and
but
also
your
family
has
had
a
tremendous
burden
over
the
last
year
and
just
know
that
that
I
greatly
appreciate
to
to
the
best
that
I
can
what
what
you
have
gone
through,
what
your
family
has
gone
through
and
that
the
city
of
tampa
does
and
that
the
people
of
our
country
and
our
community
does,
and
that
means
everybody,
like,
I
always
say,
cubs
fans,
cardinals
fans,
left
hand
right
hand.
H
I
Sir,
for
your
service
and
congratulations
to
you
and
and
your
family
councilman
vieira
said
it
all.
We
appreciate
your
your
sacrifice
each
and
every
day
when
you
go
out
in
uniform
and
your
service
to
this
community.
Thank
you,
sir.
D
Madam
clerk,
we
recognize
dingfield,
that's
right,
say
it
for
the
record.
Please.
P
J
A
C
Q
Q
J
At
me,
I'm
not
telling
you
you
should
be
a
role
model,
but
you
are
a
role
model
on
what
you
do
in
the
police
department
because
of
the
work
that
you
do.
People
have
the
opportunity
to
live
a
little
safer
and
we
want
to
thank
you
for
your
diligence,
your
work
and
your
ability
to
have
the
continuation
of
a
beautiful
family
that
you
have.
God
bless
you
and
your
family.
Thank
you.
D
D
So
I
understand
the
work
you're
doing
over
there
and
congratulations
to
you
and
your
beautiful
family
and
continue
to
do
the
good
work
you're
doing
it
for
the
citizens
of
tampa.
So
god
bless
you,
sir
citroen
turn
it
back
to
you,
sir.
F
A
A
H
For
being
here
and
the
citizens
of
tampa
for
the
gifts.
D
Sir,
we
have
continued
items
number
two
and
three
on
the
agenda
this
morning.
We're
moving
item
number
11
to
up
to
the
number
two
spot
this
morning,
mr
vera
and
I'll
be
ready.
O
E
H
Thank
you
very
much,
sir.
It's
my
great
pleasure
to
be
here
today
and
introduce
my
friend
and
our
friend,
mr
james
keane,
who
is
the
development
division
director
for
metro,
inclusive
health.
I
invited
mr
keen
as
the
representative
of
metro
health
here
in
the
tampa
area
because
of
a
number
of
reasons.
Number
one
june
is
obviously
lgbtq
pride
month,
and
this
is
an
organization
that
does
such
tremendous
work
in
the
lgbtq
community.
H
I
I
wanted
james
to
come
and
talk
about
some
of
the
great
work
they
do
and
I'll
actually
be
making
a
motion
at
the
end
on
ways
in
which
the
city
of
tampa
can
better
partner
with
the
wonderful
mission
of
metro,
inclusive
health,
so
metro,
inclusive
health
began
in
1993,
and
since
this
time
it
has
provided
essential
health
and
wellness
services
to
our
tampa
bay
community,
regardless
of
such
issues
as
race,
gender,
religion,
sexual
orientation,
gender
identity,
etc,
etc.
H
As
some
of
you
all
know,
they
recently
outgrew
their
ybor
city
location,
which
speaks
to
the
real
needs
that
are
in
our
community.
On
this
issue,
I
was
reading
on
the
history
of
this
wonderful
organization.
It
appears
that
they
began
meeting
at
the
local
metropolitan
community
church.
I
believe
it
was
in
pinellas
county
if
I'm
correct,
and
that
made
me
think
of
something-
that's
so
pivotal
to
their
mission.
H
Well,
you
know
that
speaks
to
a
level
of
compassion
that
looks
for
the
least
of
these,
and
when
it
comes
to
our
especially
to
our
lgbtq
youth
in
the
tampa
area,
we
need
a
good
shepherd
to
continue
to
look
for
those
souls
and
help
them
out
as
much
as
we
can
so
I
introduce
to
you,
mr
keane.
I
leave
it
to
you,
sir.
Thank
you
councilman
go
ahead.
Thank
you,
sir.
R
Thank
you
councilman
and
council,
chair
and
members
of
council.
Thank
you
for
your
time
and
attention,
and
it's
my
pleasure
to
be
here
this
morning
and
share
with
you
an
update
on
the
organization
in
front
of
you.
This
morning,
we've
placed
our
2020
annual
report
and
I'd
like
to
just
bring
a
couple
highlights
to
to
the
to
the
front
throughout
the
pandemic,
which
was
challenging
obviously
for
everybody,
as
a
public
health
organization.
R
First
and
foremost,
is
public
health.
So,
throughout
the
pandemic,
in
2020
we
were
able
to
enroll
2400
new
patients
into
services
at
metro
and
within
that
2400.
When
you
dig
down
it's
almost
900
individuals,
new
to
us
receiving
behavioral
health,
counseling
services
and
another
340
receiving
psychiatric
care
that
they
weren't
previously
receiving.
R
We
had
820
primary
care
patients.
You
know
the
growth
has
really
been
an
extraordinary
thing
to
watch.
I've
been
fortunate
enough
to
be
with
the
organization
for
seven
years,
and
you
know
it
really,
knowing
that
we
reach
the
number
of
people
that
we
do
and
providing
over
100
services
and
programs
to
people,
regardless
of
their
ability
to
pay
whether
they
have
insurance
or
they
don't
have
insurance.
We
don't
turn
folks
away
one
of
the
ways
that
we're
able
to
do
that,
and
it's
a
really
important
piece
of
the
puzzle.
R
We
call
it
our
co-pay
it
forward
program.
We
accept
most
major
insurances
at
our
health
centers
and
when
you
make
your
co-payment
at
our
facilities,
that
co-payment
translates
into
free
medical
services
for
people
who
don't
have
insurance
or
perhaps
don't
have
enough
insurance
and
in
2020
those
co-payments
received
through
our
facilities
translated
to
485
thousand
dollars
in
free
medical
services
that
we
were
able
to
extend
to
members
of
our
communities.
R
Although
we
are
lgbtq
focused,
we
are
certainly
not
exclusive
of
anybody.
It's
in
our
name,
metro,
inclusive
health.
We
are
here
for
everybody,
one
of
the
important
facts
that
I've
got
to
share
with
you
all
today,
as
we
look
forward
in
what
2021
is
presenting
us.
Not
only
is
it
the
opportunity
of
our
expanded
footprint
at
the
german
american
club
that
will
more
than
double
our
capacity
as
councilman
vrs
spoke
of
our
current
facility
on
7th
avenue
is
just
over
13
000
square
feet,
we've
outgrown.
That
is
an
understatement.
R
R
You
know
florida,
sadly,
continues
to
lead
in
new
hiv
infections.
Hillsborough
county
is
identified
as
one
of
the
48
most
burdened
counties
in
the
united
states
of
america,
with
hiv
infections,
people
living
with
hiv.
That's
a
fact
by
the
cdc.
The
cdc
has
rolled
out
some
new
grant
money
to
end
the
epidemic.
It's
a
multi-year
grant,
we're
thrilled
to
be
receiving
some
money
to
continue
targeted
messaging
to
most
at-risk
individuals.
R
Hiv
we're
seeing
it
really
is
not
an
lgbtq
exclusive
disease.
It
is
a
virus
that
anybody
can
contract.
There
are
prevention
methods
that
we
offer
and
I
encourage
everybody
to
learn
more
about
hiv,
be
tested,
know
your
status
and
you
know
I
would
be
remiss
if
it
if
I
did
not
speak
of
our
new
facility
being
located
where
it
is.
33605
is
a
zip
code.
R
It's
a
primarily
communities
of
color
and
underserved
individuals
with
not
great
access
to
health
care,
so
we
are
so
thrilled
to
be
able
to
really
be
that
brick-and-mortar
location
where
people
can
come
and
receive
the
services
that
they
need.
I
spoke
of
over
100
services
and
programs.
What
we
do
know
is
that
ninety
percent
of
our
patients
receive
more
than
one
service
so
that
goal
of
wrap
around
care
and
all-inclusive
everything
you
need
in
one
place,
we're
striving
and
we're
really
close
to
achieving
that.
R
So,
in
closing,
I
will
share
with
you
all
that
these
things
are
all
possible
with
partnerships.
We
love
collaborations
we're
so
proud
to
partner
with
hillsborough
county
jail
and
the
health
department
here
in
tampa,
and
you
know,
schools
across
the
county
protecting
and
helping
support
trans
children
and
offer
support
to
lgbtq
youth.
Again,
that's
a
really
underserved
and
vulnerable
population
that
we
as
an
organization
cherish
we
elevate
and
we
really
really
strive
to
include
everybody,
and
you
know
health
is
very
important.
Healthy
people
are
what
make
up
healthy
communities.
R
So
thank
you
again
for
your
time.
One
last
issue.
As
I
look
down,
I
noticed
I
didn't
mention
meeting
people
where
they
are.
The
brick
and
mortar
is
wonderful,
but
we
do
have
mobile
health
units
and
we'll
you'll
see
us
more
in
the
community
as
we
continue
the
hiv
work,
but
it's
also
building
trust
and
it's
building
relationships
with
individuals,
so
they
do
feel
comfortable
coming
to
the
brick
and
mortar.
So
with
that,
thank
you
so
much
for
your
time
and
your
support.
Happy
pride.
P
K
Yeah,
just
the
echo
that
thank
you
for
your
service
and
and
all
the
all
the
people
you
help
and
lives
that
you
save
and
also
thank
you
for
saving
and
helping
to
save
a
really
important
historic
building.
I
saw
the
renderings
it's
beautiful.
I
can't
wait
to
take
a
tour
of
that
if
it's
possible.
I
I
was
there
when
we
had,
I
guess
the
groundbreaking
for
the
new
facility,
I'm
glad
to
see
that
the
historic
german
american
club
is
in
good
hands
and
being
restored
in
the
beautiful
addition
to
to
the
original
structure,
but
how
well
you've
focused
on
the
historical
aesthetics
of
the
building
and
it
just
really
fits
into
the
into
the
the
the
historic
nature
of
that
neighborhood,
because
it's
right
there
in
in
ebore,
but,
most
importantly,
just
like
your
name
says,
and
what
you
mentioned
earlier:
inclusive
it's
open
to
everyone
and
it's
an
asset
to
this
community
that
will
benefit
so
many
people
and
help
so
many
people.
I
F
Thank
you
very
much,
mr
chair.
I
too
wish
to
congratulate
you,
along
with
my
other
council
members
with
when
I
was
with
the
ycdc.
We
saw
the
little
metro
that
was
down
on
7th
avenue
and
it
has
now
matured
into
this
great
wonderful
organization
that
is
helping
so
many
people
again.
Thank
you
for
helping
save
that
wonderful,
historic
building
on
nebraska
avenue,
the
old
german
club,
which
used
to
be
a
masonic
temple
at
one
time
again.
F
J
J
We
did
was
the
government
took
over-
it's
not
so
kind,
but
it
was
now
they
call
it
the
lottery.
It
used
to
be
called
bolita,
which
was
illegal
because
the
government
wasn't
getting
the
money,
but
that's
how
it
is
in
life.
So
I'm
not
comparing
you
to
bolita
or
anything
like
that,
but
I'm
just
telling
you
thank
you
for
what
you're
doing,
and
I
understand
that
the
premise
of
this,
because
I
was
part
of
that
mutual
aid
society
as
one
of
the
recipients
of
full
care.
Thank
you,
sir.
Thank
you,
sir.
D
Thank
you,
gentlemen.
During
your
presentation
I
was
wondering
I
didn't
hear:
are
we
working
with
the
school
district
at
all.
D
R
Absolutely
we
work
with
the
gender
gsas
and
glsen
tampa
bay,
specifically
our
partners
within
the
schools.
D
D
D
All
right
we'll
do
the
public
comment,
how
many
we
have
on
the
second
floor,
you're
on
the
second
floor.
I
Odell
mingo,
okay,
sir.
Yes,
I'm
here
in
reference
to
the
liens,
that's
been
occurring
on
two
of
my
properties
and
I
was
trying
to
do
every
I
have
been
relating
to
shona
tim,
barbara
bell
and
marlene
regina
and
we've
been
going
back
and
forth
with
trying
to
get
this
resolved,
but
it
seemed
as
if
everyone
is,
I
want
to
say,
kicking
the
can
down
the
street,
and
I
just
need
some
resolutions
to
to
solve
this
problem.
I
have
two
properties
I
want
to
sell
to.
I
Fix
the
properties
does
have
liens,
but
no
one
seems
to
have
a
resolutions
to
how
can
I
get
this
result
and
the
reason
why
the
properties
are
under
the
fines
that's
been
occurring
for
the
last
over
two
and
a
half
years.
I
No
one
can
seem
to
I
went
to
court.
I
spoke
with
the
code
enforcers
in
the
area,
miss
angeline
johnson.
She
one
gave
me
the
fines
and
she
told
me
I
need
to
shut
them
down.
I
shut
them
down.
I
boarded
them
up,
I
I
did
go
to
court.
After
going
to
court,
I
secured
the
properties
upon
securing
the
properties.
I
still
occurred.
Fines
ongoing
for
the
last
two
and
a
half
years,
almost
three
years
now,
and
no
one
can
give
me
an
answer
on.
How
can
I
fix
the
problem?
I
I
don't
have
I'm
not
financially
able
to
fix
the
problems
that
they
asked
me
to
fix,
but
I
was
able
to
board
and
secure
the
properties
and
I
had
them
secured.
I
I
actually
had
like
10
families
go
back
to
the
street.
I
normally
house
people
unfortunately
or
homeless,
people
in
the
neighborhood,
and
that
would
come
to
me
for
a
place
to
stay,
but
I
couldn't
do
it
anymore
because
of
the
liens
that
occurred
on
these
two
properties.
I
All
of
my
mike
supports
a
little
help
to
see
help
to
lift
these
fines,
I'm
lifting
liens
temporarily.
So
I
can
sell
two
properties
to
fix
the
problem:
that's
old
off
23rd
and
29th
street
in
that
area,
and
I'm
just
asking
for
a
little
help.
I
don't
went
through
the
code
enforcement
angeline,
barbara
bell,
regina.
I
I
spoke
with
everybody
that
I
can
speak
to
and
that's
why
I'm
here
today.
Actually
please
look
at
this
situation
and
to
help
me
get
along
with
before
I
can
get
this
stuff
resolved.
D
Mr
mingle,
thank
you.
We
normally
don't
talk
during
public
comment,
but
I
know
my
office
has
received
information
from
you.
I
think
mr
shelby
has
given
all
council
members,
so
we
can
enter
this
to
the
record.
In
reference
to
mr
mingle's
concern.
My
office
did
say
something
to
legal
and
code
enforcement.
We
yet
have
heard
anything
about
this
either,
so
I'm
hoping
that
staff
is
on
line
now,
listening
to
the
concerns,
and
hopefully
we
can
get
this
resolved
with
you
sooner
rather
than
later.
So
thank
you
for
coming
this
morning,
sir.
Thank.
D
D
C
Ms
hart
welcome
good
morning
good
morning.
I
won't
take
up
a
lot
of
you.
All's
time
I
know
everybody's
busy
and
everybody
wants
to
be
heard,
but
I
just
want
to
say
good
mornings.
I
bring
you
greetings
from
the
florida
house
of
representatives,
but
today
I
stand
before
you
as
the
ceo
of
east
tampa
business
and
civic
association,
which
is
a
not-for-profit,
affordable,
housing
organization.
C
That's
doing
some
building
in
our
community,
but
I
got
a
letter
from
one
of
the
other
neighborhood
associations,
and
I
wanted
to
read
that
to
you
all.
First
then
I'll
talk
about
the
things
that
I
wanted
to
talk
about.
It's
from
miss
frankie
jones
who's,
president
of
the
rainbow
heights,
neighborhood
association
and
her
concern
is
that
at
the
corner
of
chelsea
and
cortland
is
a
nuisance
in
the
rainbow
heights
community.
As
the
president
of
the
community
association
she's
joined
with
the
cdc
and
the
city
of
tampa
to
get
stop
signs
put
in.
C
So
if
any
of
you
all
out
in
the
area,
you've
seen
the
stop
signs,
they
were
sorely
needed.
Traffic
sped
from
34th
to
40th,
with
no
stop
so
when
somebody
got
hit.
Typically,
it
was
fatal,
so
she
is
concerned
that
about
the
no
parking
signs
at
the
blue
store
and
she's
talking
about
how
people
are
parking
and
standing
on
the
immediate
property
playing
loud,
music,
drinking
gambling,
urinating
and
eventually
ending
with
verbal,
conflicting
issues.
C
C
Many
of
you
all
know
that
for
eva
I
have
been
working
with
lake
in
the
29th,
so
I
heard
the
officer
this
morning
when
he
got
his
accommodations
and
I'm
grateful
for
all
the
work
that
tampa
pd
does
out
in
our
community,
but
you
all
have
to
realize
that
we
still
have
a
lot
of
issues
and
lots
of
it
is
not
just
our
people,
but
it's
code
enforcement.
We
have
a
building
sitting
at
the
corner
of
22nd
and
dr
martin
luther
king.
C
I
have
tried
for
years
to
get
the
city
to
do
something
about
this
building.
It
looks
deplorable,
it
needs
repair
and
every
single
time
we
brought
it
to
council
somehow
they
managed
to
get
by
with
this
thing
and
I'm
not
sure
how
but
there's
so
much
of
this
happening
in
our
community.
We
talk
about
building
a
better
community.
The
way
to
build
a
better
community
is
for
to
have
a
better
looking
community.
C
I
know
we
have
a
clean
team
neat
team,
I'm
not
sure
what
we're
calling
our
team
now
from
the
cra.
We
have
a
seven
square
mile
and
for
some
ungodly
reason
it
looks
like
them
a
mess
along
many,
our
right
aways,
and
it
should
not
we're
paying
for
this
out
of
our
cra
dollars.
So
I
need
to
better
understand
I'm
home,
I'm
here
for
the
next
five
months.
C
So
there's
some
areas
that
we
need
to
take
a
look
at.
We
have
23rd
and
lake.
Listen.
We
can
talk
about
how
people
hang
out
on
the
corner,
how
people
sit
in
front
of
businesses,
but
we
couldn't
do
it
if
the
businesses
did
not
allow
it.
So
you
all
really.
We
need
to
be
cracking
down
on
our
businesses
that
are
not
doing
their
part.
We
like
for
people
to
move
into
east
tampa,
as
you
can
see,
houses
are
being
built
everywhere.
I
always
say
to
everybody.
C
I
won't
know
east
tampa
as
east
tampa
in
five
years
because
of
the
amount
of
growth
that
we're
getting
for
housing,
but
we
need
economic
development
moving
in
here
and
I
can
tell
you,
as
a
former
business
owner,
nobody
wants
to
move
in
your
community
if
they
don't
think
it
looks.
Good
looks,
are
important.
Beautification
is
critical.
I'd
like
you
all
to
take
a
look
at
what
tico
is
doing
to
our
trees
in
the
community.
I
reached
out
to
the
lobbyists
yesterday
for
tico.
C
It's
deplorable
they're
cutting
out
the
middle
of
all
of
our
trees,
to
clear
the
lines
but
they're
leaving
the
trees.
Looking
a
mess,
there's
so
many
issues
in
east
tampa,
but
I
I
get
it.
We
have
to
bite
them
off
the
elephant
right,
one
small
bite
at
a
time,
but
what
we've
got
to
do
is
ensure
that
the
people
who
are
responsible
for
this,
that
you
that
they
step
up
my
office,
sits
at
2814
north
22nd
directly
across
the
street
from
me.
There's
a
house
that
was
going
to
be
renovated.
C
I
did
get
an
opportunity
to
talk
to
somebody
about
it.
They
cannot
tell
me
that
when
code
enforcement
rides
around,
they
don't
see
what's
happening
in
our
community.
I
need
people
to
take
responsibility
for
their
roles
too,
just
as
we
expect
our
constituents
and
our
neighbors
and
our
loved
ones
who
live
in
this
community
to
do.
We
need
the
city
officials
when
they're
in
those
cars-
and
they
see
this
stuff,
they
need
to
report
it
and
take
care
of
it.
C
So
I
told
you
about
the
business
at
22nd
and
dr
martin
luther
king
40
years
we've
been
fighting
with
lincoln
20
lake
in
third
and
29th.
You
all
know
where
it
is.
We
all
know
come
on.
We've
got
to
do
something
to
spur
growth.
The
building
is
now
down,
I'm
hoping
that
you
all
will
continue
to
acquire
these
properties
so
that
we
can
get
something
going
on
in
our
community.
You
have
the
property
at
lake
and
22nd,
I'm
not
sure
what
you're
planning
to
do
with
it,
but
I
look
forward
to
you
all.
C
Let's
get
to
developing
some
of
our
vacant
properties
in
businesses.
Stop
our
stop
me,
I'm
a
developer.
We
don't
need
to
put
any
houses
on
our
main
thoroughfares.
We
need
commercial
on
these
properties,
so
I
I
beg
you
all.
Let's
stop
putting.
Let's
stop
people
from
putting
houses
everywhere
and
let's
create
a
business
district
inside
of
our
very
own
community.
C
Look
so
I
talked
about
the
sierra
a
little
bit
and
the
trees.
So
what
I
ask
you
all
to
do
is:
let's
unite
as
a
legislator,
I'm
here
to
help
you
any
way
I
can
from
tallahassee.
I
looked
at
your
agenda.
You
had
sidewalks,
you
all
might
know.
I
had
it
in
the
budget
governor
took
it
out,
we'll
come
back
again
next
year,
but
I
want
you
to
know
that
I
am
here
for
you
to
fight
with
you
from
tallahassee
in
any
way
that
I
can.
C
I
look
forward
to
continuing
my
work
on
the
ground
as
long
as
I'm
home,
and
even
when
I'm
not
here,
you
can
always
reach
out
to
me.
That's
both
our
citizens
and
our
elected
officials.
I'm
always
here
to
do
my
part.
So,
thank
you
all
very
much
for
listening
to
me
this
morning,
but
let's
band
together
and
develop
east
tampa
as
the
other
surrounding
areas
are
being
developed.
We
seem
to
be
the
last
one
left.
It's
our
turn.
D
I
I
I
Looking
back
at
the
last
40
years,
look
at
hyde
park
40
years
ago,
hyde
park,
historic
hyde
park.
You
couldn't
get
a
loan
from
a
bank
to
buy
a
house,
it
was
redlined
or
whatever
they
call
it
now.
Look
at
hyde
park,
seminole
heights
tampa
heights
20
years
ago,
was
not
the
tampa
heights
and
seminole
heights
of
today.
I
What
did
it?
Take
people,
believing
in
the
community
investors
coming
together
and
lifting
that
community
up,
but
I
think
if
we
work
together
from
the
mayor's
office
to
the
state
representative
to
the
city
council,
even
to
the
county
commission
and
focus
on
east
tampa
as
a
whole,
it
is
a
it
is
the
largest
cra.
I
You
know
we've
got
that
out
of
the
way,
but
we
have
to
put
the
focus
on
and
and
put
a
vision
together
for
that
community
to
lift
it
up
not
to
not
to
push
people
out
but
to
lift
people
up
to
offer
them
a
better
quality
of
life
and
whether
it's
a
marketing
plan
from
a
commercial
perspective
to
bring
businesses
whether
they're,
mom
and
pop,
whether
they're
larger
corporations
to
invest
in
the
community
and
then
look
at
affordable
housing
and
everything
to
keep
people
in
the
community.
I
So
they're
not
priced
out,
but
it's
it's
an
area
that
is
always
forgotten.
You
know
the
focus
and
the
emphasis
has
always
been
on
other
parts
of
the
city
and
other
parts
of
the
city
flourish
and
east
tampa
is
always
behind
and
I'm
not
blaming
anybody,
but
I
think
we
just
need
to
make
that
effort
together
to
lift
that
community
up.
Thank
you.
D
F
Thank
you
very
much,
mr
chair
representative,
thank
you
for
bringing
this
to
to
our
attention.
Every
member
of
this
council
would
love
to
sit
down
and
speak
with
you.
Tim
has
already
talked
to
you,
my
legislative
aide.
Hopefully
we
can
set
something
up
for
next
week
and
address
all
all
the
issues
that
you
brought
for
forward
to
us
and
you
are
correct.
F
Without
businesses
being
in
the
community,
the
community
cannot
be
a
whole,
but
we
need
to
discuss
all
the
issues.
So
I
look
forward
to
meeting
with
you
hopefully
next
week.
Thank
you
for
having
sidewalks
on
your
agenda.
We
live
in
a
city
where
our
our
schools
don't
allow
busing
within
a
two
mile
radius,
which
means
children
have
to
walk
in
the
streets
to
get
to
school.
Thank
you
for
your
fight
on
that,
mr
chair.
Thank
you
very
much,
mr.
K
Yeah
and
I'll
echo
the
same
things:
we'd
love
to
meet
and
catch
up
sometime,
as
I
think
everybody
knows
not
not
only
was
east
tampa
ignored.
All
the
city
except
downtown
was
ignored
for
eight
years,
and
we've
been
trying
to
bring
budgets
and
plans
back
to
the
rest
of
the
city
and
bring
equity
to
the
rest
of
the
city,
but
in
particular,
we've
all
been
focusing
on
east
tampa.
K
I'm
accused
in
south
tampa
talking
too
much
about
east
tampa,
and
so
you
know,
with
the
leadership
of
chair
goods,
we've
been
working
on
solutions,
we've
all
been
talking
to
the
neighborhood
leaders
and
others.
Unfortunately,
there's
with
the
shrinking
of
the
media,
there's
not
enough
coverage
of
all
the
things
that
we've
been
doing,
and
so
I
think
with
us
having
discussions
with
you
and
and
the
community
folks
can
hear
more
about
the
things
that
we're
trying
to
do.
Some
of
the
things
that
you
mentioned.
K
Many
of
things
you
mentioned
are
under
the
mayor's
purview
and
I'm
sure
you're
speaking
with
her
as
well,
but
with
our
hats
as
city
council
members
and
also
the
cra
board,
we're
we're
trying
to
move
these
things
forward
as
as
quickly
as
possible.
One
thing,
and
I
could
talk
to
you
offline
one
thing
that
that
bugs
me
on
the
agenda
last
last
legislative
session
senate
president
pushed
a
bill.
It's
an
unfunded
mandate
to
force
cities
to
to
to
use
reclaimed
water,
to
convert
it
to
drinking
water
and
the
the
numbers
we
see.
K
It
could
cost
the
city
of
tampa
ratepayers
two
and
a
half
billion
to
six
billion
dollars,
and
there's
no
state
money
to
pay
for
it
and
and
tampa
doesn't
need
it.
We
have
a
supply
of
water
for
the
for
at
least
the
next
20
years,
and
so
I'm
hoping
that
in
the
next
legislative
session
I'll
talk
about
this
later,
but
I'm
hoping
that
we
can
either
repeal
it
or
extend
the
deadlines,
because
the
only
people
that
are
going
to
benefit
are
the
the
water
contractors
that
are
going
to
make
lots
of
money
off
that.
K
It's
a
it's.
A
complete
waste
of
money
it
could
could
double
or
more
the
water
bills
last
year
or
a
couple
years
ago,
with
the
pipes
program,
we
increased
water
rates
and
we
got
lots
of
complaints
from
families
that
were
living
month
to
month
and
week
to
week
and
couldn't
afford
the
raises,
but
imagine
another
huge
increase
in
water
rates,
because
somebody
in
tallahassee
thinks
we
should
drink
potty
water
and
spend
six
billion
dollars.
It's
a
complete
waste
of
money
and
and
hurts
all
the
communities
in
tampa.
H
Thank
you,
mr
chairman.
I
appreciate
it.
You
know
I
I
want
to
focus.
You
know
on
the
work
that
you
all
do
in
tallahassee
I
had
a
great
town
hall
with
our
friend
a
woman
like
you
that
I
think
so
highly
of
representative
fentress
driscoll.
She
gave
an
update
on
the
summary
of
what
all
have
been
doing
in
tallahassee
and
a
lot
of
what
y'all
have
been
doing
is
sailing
against
the
wind.
You
know
what
I'm
saying
sailing
against
the
wind.
H
A
lot
of
your
accomplishments
have
been
having
the
courage
to
vote
no
on
things,
bills
that
are
set
ups
bills
that
are
set
ups
and
whatnot,
but
you
vote
no
with
conviction
and
you
vote
yes
to
do
the
right
thing
with
conviction,
courage
and
strength,
and
I
just
thank
you
for
that.
So
many
of
our
state
representatives
learned
it
valdez
senator
cruz
among,
among
many
others,
obviously
represented
fiscal
yourself,
etc.
Just
for
what
y'all
do
in
tallahassee,
it's
not
easy.
H
It's
a
very,
very
difficult
fight,
and
I
just
hope
that
we
here
in
in
the
city
of
tampa,
are
seen
as
a
good
partner
for
you
in
in
what
you
do.
You
know
we're
very
lucky
to
have
chairman
gootz
with
us
his
first
year
you
talk
about
a
mark
maguire
rookie
year.
He
he
got
in
18
million
dollars
for
a
east
tampa
rec
center.
H
You
know
I
mean
talk
about
a
rookie
year
right,
that's
that's
just
marvelous,
and
so
we
salute
the
chairman
for
that
and
for
so
many
other
things,
but
you
know
we
just
hope
that
we're
here
as
a
as
a
good
partner
for
economic
mobility
and
for
turning
east
tampa
and
all
parts
of
our
city
that
are
disadvantaged
as
a
place
where
jobs
are
created,
where
businesses
can
come
and
flourish,
etc
and
where
people
see
east
tampa
as
a
place
to
invest
because
that's
where
they
can
make
money,
that's
where
they
can
have
profits
for
their
businesses.
H
You
know,
because
that's
that's
the
incentive
in
our
society,
and
the
message
is
that
east
tampa
is
open
for
business
and
that
it's
a
good
place
where
you
have
a
lot
of
folks
who
are
there
with
spending
power
who
can
spend
it
in
the
community
at
these
businesses
and
we're
here
to
to
support
that,
and
also
for
training
and
development.
H
You
know
one
of
the
things
that
you
all
fought
against
was
the
different
versions
of
an
apprenticeship,
a
preemption
bill,
a
version
of
it
passed,
we'll
see
what
happens
with
that,
but
we
passed
a
historic
apprenticeship
bill
to
create
a
better
pathway
to
the
middle
class
for
kids
in
east,
hampton
sulphur
springs
and
west
tampa
all
over
the
city
of
tampa
and
god
willing
that'll
stick.
But
again.
We
just
hope
that
we're
good
partners
for
you
and
we'll
certainly
do
our
best,
and
we
thank
you
for
your
work
and
that
of
chairman
goods.
P
Representative
hart,
thank
you
so
much
for
joining
us
here
today.
We've
known
each
other
a
long
time,
and-
and
I
appreciate
you
so
much-
I
was
so
happy
when
you,
when
you
got
elected
a
few
years
ago,
because
I
knew
you
were
going
to
be
go
up
there
and
and
be
a
fighter
just
like
arthenia
and
others
in
the
past.
P
Before
you
the
it's
interesting,
I
I
know
we're
not
going
to
get
into
it
today
because
because
it
looks
like
it's
being
set
for
a
public
hearing,
but
I
did
see
come
across
our
desk.
The
fact
that
in
the
next
couple
weeks
it
looks
like
we're
going
to
be
addressing
one
of
those
convenience
stores.
P
I
don't
know
exactly
which
one
it
is,
but
it's
obviously
one
that's
been
having
a
lot
of
problems
and
obviously
we
can't
prejudge
it
until
we
have
that
hearing,
but
but
I
think
that
it's
a
step
in
the
right
direction
and
and
and
if
we
have
to
send
a
message
out
there
to
those
convenience
stores
and
and
the
other
organizations
you
know
that
are
creating
nuisances
and
problems
in
the
community.
Then
that's
what
we
have
to
do.
Sometimes
it's
a
little
bit
of
tough
love
but
anyway,
but
but
diana.
J
Thank
you,
mr
red.
Thank
you
very
much
diane.
I
appreciate
you
being
here
and
first
of
all
thank
you
for
the
job
you're
doing
tallahassee.
I
know
that
you're
on
the
minority
side,
and
sometimes
it's
very
difficult
to
get
your
points
across,
but
it
makes
no
difference
to
me
if
you're,
a
republican
or
democrat
or
whatever,
but
when
you
look
at
the
suppression
of
someone
trying
to
suppress
individuals
who
have
been
voting
early
or
by
mail,
and
they
want
to
take
some
of
that
away.
J
That
tells
you
this
country
is
really
really
divided
and
I'll
be
calling
you
from
my
office
to
make
an
appointment
to
go,
see
you,
and
I
think
we
can
work
some
of
these
things
out.
Some
it
will
take
a
little
longer,
but
it's
all
there
and
by
the
way,
potty
poopy
water
is
rank
all
over
the
world.
Thank
you
very
much.
D
Well
again
to
citizens
of
tampa,
you
know
we.
We
were
blessed
to
have
miss
representative
hart
here
today,
so
we
don't
give
a
time
limit
on
her
public
comment
because
she
brings
a
message.
So
we
have
to
listen
to
her
message,
so
we
give
deference
to
that.
But
let
me
say
this
gentlemen:
miss
hart
is
right
about
a
lot
of
situations.
I
always
talk
about
empowerment.
D
D
Mr
randa
just
leaned
over
to
me
of
10
minutes
ago
and
said
wow.
Look
at
all
these
emails,
we're
getting
about
the
issues
in
east
tampa,
but
we've
always
had
issues,
but
now
we
have
people
who
are
now
standing
up
to
fight
the
issues.
Now
ms
frankie
calls
me
all
the
time.
If
she
don't
call
me
she'll
call
the
marriage.
She
can't
reach
the
mayor
she's
going
to
call
me.
We
have
some
issues,
gentlemen.
D
I
have
been
working
with
legal
on
some
of
the
issues.
They
have
a
strategy
that
we're
going
to
be
putting
forth.
Let
me
think
for
talked
about.
We
have
to
send
a
message
each
time
we
can't
know
what
would
be
the
dumping
grounds
I
don't
want
to
hear
about.
We
were
picky
on
any
black
people,
no
we're
not
picking
any
black,
because
the
black
people
who
are
living
there.
The
problems
are
tired.
D
Now
they're,
tired
of
the
shootings
they're,
tired
of
the
loud
music
they're,
congregating
it
and
somebody's
established,
which
too
late
late
at
night-
and
I
can't
blame
them.
We
talk
about
gentrification.
When
I
look
at
the
houses
that
are
being
built,
I
was
about
by
probably
about
95
of
the
houses
that
being
bit
now.
Black
people
are
living
in
them
they're
living
in,
but
we
need
an
economic
engine.
D
D
I've
said
this
to
staff.
I've
told
miss
van
long.
I
told
the
chief
of
staff:
there
needs
to
be
a
team,
an
aggressive,
separate
team
that
focuses
merely
on
east
tampa
as
they
deal
with
mortgages
as
far
as
far
as
loans,
as
it
departs
dilapidated
buildings
for
the
demolition,
housing
street
street
action
plan.
Sometimes
one
but
strategic
explain
is
coming,
but
with
that
being
said,
you
have
to
have
a
team
to
work
that
strategic
action
plan.
D
You
just
can't
have
it
and
sit
on
the
shelf
like
it's
been
done
many
many
years
when
it's
done,
you
have
to
have
that
team
ready
to
go
to
fight
all
of
those
issues
and
have
that
economic
engine
come
with
that
business
district.
Every
other
community
has
a
business
district.
Now
we
need
to
have
one
and
we
need
to
aggression
with
code
and
forth
change.
Our
motto:
change,
what
we're
doing
we're
not
taking
people's
homes,
but
we
need
to
have
a
program
like
I
said.
D
I've
said
from
day
one
you
guys
heard
me:
the
police
officer,
the
garbage
men.
These
folks
are
driving
the
city
vehicles
when
they
see
these
houses
that
have
any
issues
not
just
go
there
and
sight
them
up.
But
let's
have
a
brochure:
let's
knock
on
that
door,
knock
on
the
door
that
we
campaign
hey.
How
can
we
help
you?
You
don't
know
who
living
behind
that
door
in
their
circumstances,
we
have
a
money
now
that
can
deal
with
roofs
and
all
kind
of
stuff,
but
people
are
not
knowledgeable.
D
That's
why
I'm
hoping
that
director
of
communications
for
each
team
will
be
on
board
soon,
because
we
have
to
have
a
message
to
be
able
to
knock
on
these
doors,
how
these
officers
give
out
brochures
pamphlets
to
get
their
rules,
get
their
housing
player
until
you
fix
what
is
broken,
you're
going
to
have
the
same
problems.
People
are
visual,
and
I
say
this
all
the
time
when
I
should
take
lily
kids
to
other
areas
of
communities
when
they
come
to
my
community.
D
They
don't
ask
for
a
trash
can
at,
but
when
they
go
to
someone
else's
community
where's
the
trash
can
at
I
hate
to
use
that
analogy,
and
it's
bad
because
it's
a
psychiatrist
but
we're
visionary
people,
so
staff
is
working
on
some
issues.
Ms
hart,
we
need
to
do
more.
I
have
some
things
that
I'm
going
to
talk
about
when
we
get
to
the
housing
portion
as
well,
that
I've
researched
that
I
want
to
have
to
also
look
at
as
well
to
uplift
the
communities
of
east
tampa.
But
again
I
thank
you
for
coming.
D
Let
the
residents
know
I'm
working
every
day.
This
council
is
behind
me
to
work
to
get
these
problems
solved.
I
know
the
mayor
is
genuine
about
wanting
to
do
the
same
thing.
We
again
have
to
be
unified
and
go
out
there
and
send
a
message
and
get
the
message
it's
clear.
So
we
thank
you
for
coming
this
morning.
C
A
A
Good
morning
connie
burton
this
constant
attempt
to
divide
the
residents
of
east
tampa
as
to
those
who
are
home
owners,
apartment,
renters
developers,
people
that
might
live
with
grandmama.
We
want
to
stop
that.
We
love
all
residents
of
east
tampa.
We
want
to
see
the
entire
community
uplifted
east
tampa
has
been
in
existence,
belmont
high
jackson,
height
northview
hill,
a
community
that
is
almost
can
you
can
find
those
communities
almost
in
any
other
community
or
any
other
city?
A
A
A
D
B
B
I
ain't
talking
about
black
people
having
power,
you
understand
talking
about
garbage
the
white
people
that
are
sitting
up
there
and
allowing
them
to
pimp
african
people
with
the
same
nonsense
that
allow
perry,
harvey
and
other
individuals
to
sit
up
there
and
participate
in
that
nonsense.
Y'all
are
disingenuous
and
y'all
are
dishonest.
B
That's
what
y'all
are
a
garbage
man
upstairs
in
the
form
of
orlando
ghouls.
Talking
about
he
ain't
african,
then
what
is
he
if
he
ain't
african?
That's
like
a
gay
person
getting
represented
to
represent
the
homosexuality
and
homosexual
interest
and
then
they
come
out
in
public
and
say
they
ain't
they
they
don't
they
I'm
not
gay.
I
don't
represent
your
interest.
I
don't
represent
the
interests
of
africa.
B
B
After
week,
talking
nonsense,
garbage
rec,
centers
roundabouts,
garbage
nothing
more
but
garbage
our
kids
getting
kicked
out
of
school,
our
youth
get
put
in
the
police
hands
and
in
the
police,
state
and
y'all
talking
about
what
roundabouts
people
pissing
on
the
sidewalk
loud
music
y'all
are
ignorant,
ignorant
black
ugly
politicians.
That's
what
y'all
are
each
and
every
last
one
of
y'all
ugly,
and
you
show
it.
Q
Q
As
you
can
see,
your
blacks
and
whites
are
getting
more
frustrated,
so
you're
gonna
have
to
reveal
the
truth
about.
What's
really
going
on,
like
okay,
white
and
black
still
clashing,
I
don't
think
you
guys
understood.
The
whole
world
was
placed
under
babylonian
enslavement,
every
state,
every
country,
every
place.
Q
Q
All
of
these
houses
are
borrowed.
All
of
your
cars
are
borrowed,
including
your
money
and
this,
and
that
we
natives
aren't
gonna,
take
all
of
this
from
you,
but
we
do
need
you
to
get
along
and
start
healing
each
other
and
stop
hurting
each
other
and
stop
dragging
around
half
truths
and
finally
come
forward
with
full
truths
and
africans.
Q
Q
Our
households
are
here
to
help
raise
you
out
of
the
filth
and
darkness
that
you're
stuck
in.
We
don't
mean
no
harm
to
you,
even
though
y'all
running
around
scared
and
feared
thinking.
That's
what
the
deal
is
as
far
as
mayor
jane
joe
biden
and
all
of
them
go
they're
supposed
to
be
transitioning
y'all
from
lockdown
to
actual
freedom.
Q
D
Thank
you.
Everybody
registered
around
the
place.
A
M
My
name
is
kathy
ferzanigan,
a
resident
of
davis
islands.
I
appreciate
the
opportunity
to
speak
this
morning.
First,
I
want
to
thank
city
staff
for
hosting
a
session
recently
on
the
text.
Amendment
issue,
lashon
dock
and
abby
freely
in
particular,
have
been
so
helpful
in
answering
our
questions
and
providing
opportunities
to
express
our
concerns
for
those
of
us
who
are
active
in
our
neighborhood
associations.
M
It
allows
developers
to
bypass
the
existing
processes
related
to
land
use
code
and
to
receive
blanket
approval
to
increase
the
height
of
structures,
decrease
setbacks
between
buildings
and
before
the
provision
was
removed,
even
to
raise
the
height
of
pools
to
grade
meaning
your
neighbor's
new
pool
could
be
at
the
height
of
your
six
foot
fence.
The
session
city
staff
held
allowed
us
to
comment
on
these
issues
and
resulted
in
the
removal
of
some
of
these
items.
M
Our
ability
to
engage
in
the
process
is
critical
as
citizens.
The
only
rationale
for
the
text
amendment
seems
to
be
to
make
it
easier
for
developers
to
increase
the
mass
of
their
buildings
without
a
way
for
neighbors
to
express
their
in
concerns
and
interests.
It
seems
prudent,
especially
as
it
relates
to
height
and
mass,
to
wait
to
make
changes
until
the
results
of
the
massing
study
requested
by
council
member
ding,
felter
and
approved
by
city
council
has
been
completed.
A
M
My
name
is
carolyn
bennett.
I
just
want
to
say
I
agree
with
everything
the
previous
speaker
said.
I
couldn't
possibly
have
said
it
better
myself
in
addition
to
what
she
said,
I'm
asking
you
to
drop
the
administrative
lot,
splits
they're,
a
bad
idea.
It's
a
solution
without
a
problem,
more
than
five
percent
is
too
much
and,
as
abby
pointed
out,
five
percent
accomplishes
nothing.
M
M
You
might
hear
that
some
people
at
the
june
7
public
information
meeting
were
in
favor
of
this.
As
far
as
I
could
tell
all
those
people
were
builders,
all
the
neighborhoods
who
voiced
an
opinion
were
against
it.
Currently
neighbors
have
a
voice.
Please
don't
take
that
voice
away.
That
public
meeting
was
very
helpful.
It
convinced
me
of
two
things
one.
I
have
no
idea
of
the
true
effect
of
the
amendment
submitted
by
mr
lom
and
mr
nicolini,
even
though
I
sat
through
the
whole
thing.
M
M
Item
number
six
on
the
agenda
is
sidewalks
and
crosswalks
so
that
children
can
walk
to
school
safely.
It's
really
a
shame
that
we've
been
talking
about
this
and
it
wasn't
required
decades
ago.
Please
make
this
budget
priority
what
it
should
be
item
number
10.
This
interim
development
control
ordinance
is
past
its
cell.
By
date
there
is
no
time
left
for
temporary
measure,
so
just
let
it
go
when
the
time
comes.
Please
pass
the
permanent
measure.
The
current
claim
change.
It
actually
denies
builders,
nothing.
M
M
I
think
I'll
go
with
dorothy
gayle
from
kansas
lions
and
tires
and
bears
oh
mine.
I
will
say,
though,
if
the
macy's
property
is
allowed
to
use
bar,
there
will
be
a
riot
and
fog
item
number
nine
water.
There
is
good
growth
and
there's
bad
growth.
Many
developers
promote
the
hair
on
fire
approach
to
growth.
That
is
bad
growth.
It's
good
profits,
but
it's
bad
growth.
Thoughtful,
planned,
sustainable,
resilient
growth
that
does
not
outpace
the
infrastructure
that
does
not
the
current
residents
with
the
cost
of
growth.
That
does
not
require
us
to
drink
toilet
water.
M
Can
you
hear
me?
Yes,
we
can
okay
good
morning,
gentlemen.
This
is
a
huge
agenda
day,
so
I'm
gonna
go
down
the
list.
I
know
that
you
guys
have
postponed.
Mr
shelby's
number
two
item.
Please
give
mr
shelby
his
life
back
and
just
get
rid
of
the
number
four.
Please
vote.
No.
On
that
number
five
I
sent
you
a
video.
I
actually
sent
it
to
you
twice
at
the
presentation
from
six
from
the
sixth
or
the
seventh
of
june.
There
are
seven
items
that
impact
the
entire
city
of
all
those
items.
M
The
only
one
that
I
do
not
oppose
is
the
additional
parking
for
duplexes.
If
they
actually
have
two
card
driveways.
I
can't
speak
to
number
eight
and
number
nine,
because
I
don't
know
any
information
about
the
cras.
M
I
did
confirm
that
those
were
discussed
with
the
cras
and
they
thought
it
was
okay
number
six
vote.
Yes,
the
sidewalk
thing
west
shore
elementary
was
promised
years
ago
to
have
a
sidewalk
coming
from
england
so
that
the
kids
could
get
to
school
on
time.
M
It's
amazing
how
quickly
bayshore
can
get
sidewalks
for
that
that
community,
but
we
seem
to
not
be
able
to
find
any
money
to
do
these
others
number
seven
hud
has
no
definition
for
either
essential
or
workforce
housing,
but
it's
certainly
not
500
square
foot
apartments
at
1100
a
month,
number
nine,
the
water
thing
just
say
no
number
10.
M
I
think
I'm
telling
you
to
vote
no
we'd
love
to
have
the
idco
or
otherwise
known
as
a
moratorium
for
sog,
but
it's
not
going
to
happen,
but
I
also
think
to
have
a
transit
corridor
boundary
there's
a
reason
why
it
has
a
boundary.
Why
would
anybody
extend
that?
I
won't
speculate
on
it.
I
can
make
some
guesses
and
I
and
I'm
guessing-
is
some
people
with
some
pretty
deep
pockets,
but
it's
certainly
not
the
members
of
the
community.
M
I
we've
heard
repeatedly
that
sog
cannot
be
treated
differently,
but
yet
somebody
thought
it
was
a
great
idea
to
put
this
on
the
agenda
so
that
the
people
outside
the
transit
corridors
could
actually
be
treated
differently,
go
figure
and
last,
but
certainly
not
least,
fan.
I
wanted
to
give
you
a
little
update
on
them
and
for
those
of
you
who
don't
know,
is
the
tampa
homeowners
association
of
neighborhoods
they're
having
their
election
on
july,
14th
folks,
who
are
in
the
other
neighborhood
associations
and
listening
today,
please
reach
out
to
us.
M
S
Hello,
it's
a
big
agenda
for
this
workshop
morning.
So
hello,
everybody,
I'm
gene,
strohmeyer,
I'm
south
of
gandy
there's
several
items
here.
I
know
two
and
three
have
been
postponed.
We
need
to
get
rid
of
the
private
initiated
text
amendments.
We
call
them
pizzas
and
that's
used
as
another
thing
pain
enough.
Whatever
I'm
just
not
gonna
tell
you
that.
So,
let's
see
item
number
four.
S
Excuse
me
the
lot
splits
having
that
done
administratively
is.
We
think
that's
a
very
bad
idea.
If
somebody
next
door
to
me
were
to
want
to
split
a
lot,
I
should
have
something
to
say
about
it:
not
not
people
in
the
office
that
don't
know
the
neighborhood
and
do
not
know
you
know
just
don't
know
the
dynamics,
so
that
needs
to
be
kept
to
the
neighbors
and
city
council
and
zoning
number
seven.
S
Is
this
affordable
housing?
I
I
I
just
think
that
it
needs
to
be
done
in
a
smarter
way,
but
people
you
know
have
to
still
live
within
their
means,
and
I
don't
mean
that
in
a
condescending
way.
I
just
think
you
know
when
I
was
15.
I
lived
in
a
studio
and
it
was
400
a
month.
One
paycheck
went
to
the
electric
and
water
the
next
paycheck
went
to
rent
and
that
I
didn't
eat
out.
I
just
didn't:
have
any
benefits
number
eight
comparing
tampa
to
chicago?
S
I
just
really
that
just
burst
me
a
lot,
because
we
are
completely
different
than
chicago.
We
do
not
have
the
infrastructure
like
chicago,
so
we
need
to
build
our
models
on
what
we,
the
citizens
like,
and
what
we
need.
Number
nine
toilet
to
tap.
I've
said
it
a
hundred
times
it's
just
a
bad
idea
and
as
mr
dean
felder
said,
we
have
enough
water
for
20
years,
who's
gonna
benefit,
I
agree,
who's
going
to
benefit,
and
frankly,
in
20
years
we
don't
even
know
if
tampa
will
be
here.
S
Unfortunately,
we're
over
building
in
the
coastal
high
hazard
we're
over
building
in
the
peninsula,
so
our
population
will
probably
be
reduced
by
storm
surge
and
hurricane
decimation
and
people
getting
stuck
in
their
cars.
Trying
to
leave
the
peninsula
number
10
the
moratorium.
They
said
you
know
we
wanted
that
if
the
non-moratorium
moratorium
but
like
they
said
it's,
it's
had
its
heyday
and-
and
you
know
all
we
know
which
ones
voted
against
it,
and
we
will
keep
that
in
mind.
Yeah,
that's
about
the
full
agenda.
S
You
all
have
a
great
day
and
be
safe.
A
E
E
virginia
park,
would
like
to
echo
what
the
previous
speakers
all
said
and
asked
that
the
council
do
away
with
the
peta
the
privately
initiated
text.
Amendments
for
the
reasons
that
the
many
speakers
before
have
already
articulated
issues
should
be
brought
to
the
council
or
land
development,
so
that
they
may
initiate
an
amendment
if
needed,
properly
staffed
and
allow
the
residents
that
are
affected
and
stakeholders
to
have
a
say
at
the
public
hearings.
E
I'd
also
like
to
specifically
address
the
proposal
to
change
an
administrative
lot
split,
as
I
stated
in
a
letter
submitted
to
you
prior
to
this
virginia
park,
has
pulled
its
membership
and
we
are
strongly
against
this
proposal
to
allow
administrative
spots
lap
splits,
as
stated
on
your
agenda
and
as
very
well
articulated
by
the
previous
speakers.
I'd
like
to
thank
kathleen,
did
the
city
staff
and
you
for
the
work
you've
done
to
try
to
educate
us,
but
I
also
would
like
to
keep
the
video
meeting.
E
I
think
it
was
unproductive
in
one
respect
in
that
it
did
not
allow
a
true
give
and
take
between
the
stakeholders
and
the
presenters.
Once
again,
thank
you
for
your
time
and
all
the
good
work
and
efforts
you
do
for
the
city
good
day.
D
Thank
you,
madam
deputy
kirk.
I
believe
we
have
someone
else
for
public
comment
on
floor.
Two,
how
many
more
speakers
do
we
have
down
there?
Sir?
Mr
mclean?
Okay,.
O
O
O
The
tampa
police
department,
as
well
as
tampa
fire
rescue
and
the
transportation
department,
have
all
weighed
in
on
this,
indicating
to
you
in
written
reports
that
we've
provided
to
you
and
also.
I
believe
that
the
staff
has
provided
that
as
well,
indicating
that
there
are
no
issues
regarding
that
that
their
plans
are
sufficient
and
that
they
have
proven
to
be
well
well,
thought
out
and
well
planned
and
to
their
knowledge,
there's
been
no
issue
and
even
anticipated.
That
would
cause
individuals
not
to
be
able
to
evacuate
during
the
time
of
emergency.
O
There
has
been
no
precedent
established
that
there
is
some
urgency
to
adopt
this
and
assuming,
according
to
the
staff
report,
that
people
walk
a
quarter
of
a
mile,
I
can
tell
you
that
there
are
numerous
service
industries
with
more
than
a
quarter
mile
and
within
that
quarter,
mile,
that
people
drive
to
or
they
use,
scooters
or
other
mobility
transit
means
to
get
there.
So
the
the
study
on
on
the
face
of
it
does
not
really
address
the
issue.
O
I
think
that
the
empirical
data
that
has
been
submitted
from
those
agencies
tampa
fire
rescue
the
police
department,
as
well
as
the
transportation
department,
adequately
address
it.
There
is
no
need
to
to
move
further
with
it
with
a
moratorium
in
this
case
and
allow
the
process
to
work.
It
is
in
the
process
now
of
going
to
the
planning
commission
for
consideration
and
for
input
as
well
as
study.
O
We
would
prefer
that
you
allow
that
to
happen
instead
of
another
interim
measure.
That
would
further
confuse
the
process
and
it
would
also
send
the
wrong
message
out
to
the
community,
including
those
finance
individuals
who
are
trying
to
move
here,
invest
here
and
make
tampa
a
better
place
to
live
and
work.
So
I
appreciate
your
consideration
again.
You've
received
an
email
from
me
as
well
as
some
other
folks
outlining
those
issues
in
more
detail.
Thank
you
for
your
consideration.
D
No
more
speakers
at
this
time.
Thank
you,
sir
all
right,
gentlemen,
we'll
go
ahead.
We've
already
continued
items,
number
two
and
three
we'll
go
to
outer
number
four.
You
recognize
michelle.
Ms
zellman
is
here.
Yes,
sir.
A
Good
morning,
andrea
zellman,
deputy
city
attorney,
mr
xiaomi
asked
that
I
be
here
just
to
remind
you
all
back
in
april,
when
governor
desantis
issued
executive
order,
number
2194,
which
extended
the
statewide
coveted
state
of
emergency
that
began
march
9th
of
2020
that
order
2194
extended
the
statewide
state
of
emergency
for
an
additional
60
days,
which
will
expire
at
midnight
this
friday,
and
at
that
time
the
governor
included
language
in
the
order
suggesting
that
it
would
be
his
last
extension.
He
said
the
state
should
prepare
to
resume
non-emergency
operations.
A
He
has
made
other
comments
in
public
indicating
that
he
will
not
extend
the
statewide
state
of
emergency
after
this
weekend.
Of
course,
we
won't
know
until
we
know,
but
we've
asked
marley
and
marley
wilkes
and
others
to
contact
folks
in
tallahassee
and
so
far
the
word
seems
to
be
that.
Yes,
he
fully
intends
to
let
the
statewide
state
of
emergency
expire.
A
The
significance
of
that
is
that
a
lot
of
other
things
that
we
do
locally
derive
from
or
flow
down
from
there
being
a
statewide
state
of
emergency,
in
effect.
So
again,
just
wanted
to
remind
you
that
it
is
very
much
expected
that
this
friday
night,
the
statewide
state
of
emergency
will
expire
and
with
that
I'll
let
mr
shelby
follow.
G
Up
you
miss
ellman,
martin
shelby
city
council
attorney.
Just
a
reminder,
council,
pursuant
to
your
resolution,
number
2021-241
that
the
emergency
rules
of
procedure
for
the
conduct
of
meetings
with
the
use
of
communications,
media
technology
or
cmt
terminate
automatically
when
the
governor's
declaration
of
a
state
of
emergency
relating
to
the
coven
19
pandemic
expires.
D
D
Let's
go
ahead
and
open
for
discussion
now.
Anyone
have
any
anything,
they
want
to
say
or
add
this
particular
point,
because
when
it
expires,
I'm
going
to
tell
the
shelby
to
stealth
staff
to
go
back
to
business
unit.
Question
we'll
go,
mr
carl,
so
that's
the
miss
manuscal,
but
mr
ding
fellow
you'll.
D
P
We've
had
some
some
interesting
developments
in
terms
of
our
process
and
procedure
that
have
come
out
of
this.
You
know
otherwise
tragic
emergency
that
we've
we've
all
been
involved
in
for
a
year
and
a
half
specifically
in
terms
of
public
comment.
The
you
know
in
the
past.
P
P
They
are
able
to
come
in
through
the
video
or
zoom
process,
and
I
think
that
we
should
have
some
discussions
with
the
community
about
that
before
we
just
say:
let's
go
back
to
where
we
were,
because
in
this
age
of
of
technology,
you
know
that
that
provides
the
community
a
lot
more
opportunity
to
be
able
to
give
us
input
whether
or
not
it's
legislative
or
administrative
matters
or
or
like
I
said,
with
rezonings.
P
So
you
know,
I
don't
know,
mr
chairman
I'll,
leave
that
up
to
you
when
and
how
you
might
want
to
address
that
and
mr
shelby
procedurally,
you
know
I
don't
know
if
we
need
to
modify
our
rules
to
address.
You
know
that
or
we
if
we
already
did
and
those
rules
are
already
codified
and
permanent.
I
don't
know.
P
Okay,
so
that's
my
point
is,
is
I
think,
some
of
those
rules
that
we
had
adopted
as
an
interim
in
a
temporary
measure
that
do
encourage
and
facilitated
you
know.
Additional
public
comment
should
be
kept
in
force
as
we
move
forward,
and
I
think
that's
a
a
very
healthy
discussion
for
the
community
and
for
this
council
to
have.
D
So,
mr
thankful,
how
would
you
like
to
proceed?
Sir,
I
mean
I
discussion
is
good.
I
don't
have
a
problem
with
that.
My
thing
was
when
the
order
expires.
It
means
we're
back
to
business.
Now.
If
you
want
to
look
at
some
of
the
things
that
we
implemented,
that
it
could
be
of
value
to
the
community,
I
don't
have
a
problem
that
letting
the
council
talk
or
discuss
it
because
shelby.
G
For
instance,
the
tni
department
has
exerted
a
lot
of
effort
to
be
able
to
keep
this
up
and
running,
and
it's
certainly
worthy
of
discussion,
but
it
also
it
comes
with
some
cost.
In
addition,
there
was
a
discussion
recently
about
the
length
of
your
meetings
and
the
length
of
your
rezonings
and
just
to
keep
in
mind
that
the
use
of
cmt
we've
learned
adds
time
physical
length
of
time
to
the
conduct
of
your
meetings,
which
impacts
your
ability
to
work
through
the
cases.
G
So
that
being
said,
I'm
not
taking
a
position
one
way
or
the
other
just
to
bring
to
your
attention
today
that
when
the
state
of
emergency
expires,
so
do
your
rules
of
procedure
governing
the
use
of
cmt
and
again.
Today's
meeting
is
the
last
meeting
before
council
resumes
on
july
15th,
so
we
just
have
to
govern
ourselves
accordingly,
unless
council
wishes
to
take
specific
direction
today,.
P
H
Very
recognized,
thank
you
very
much,
sir.
I
overheard
some
of
it.
I
had
to
take
a
call
in
a
constituent
matter,
and
I
was
overhearing
this
you
know
one
and-
and
I
probably
shouldn't
speak
because
I
haven't
heard
the
full
discussion,
but
just
knowing
the
topic,
I
don't
know
where
counsel
the
majority
of
us
is
inclined
to
go
on
this
on.
But
mr
shelby's
point
on
time
and
and
whatnot
is
certainly
something
that
could
be
well
taken.
Councilman
ding,
felder's
points
are
well
taken.
You
know
something
that
we
may
consider.
H
I
just
put
this
out
there
is.
Is
that
if
you
appear
virtually
is
for
less
time
just
so
that
we
don't
just
to
address
the
the
time
issue
so
that
people
can
still
have
access
right
for
some
more
time
in
the
future.
Just
something
I
thought
of
without
listening
to
the
full
conversation,
which
is
never
a
smart
thing
to
do,
but
that's
fine.
G
And
this
is
I
certainly.
This
is
supposed
to
be
a
brief
conversation
council,
and
maybe
we
should
take
it
up
at
a
future
time.
But
I've
been
working
and
miss
wells
is
very
familiar
with
this.
That
the
use
of
cmt
also
raises
a
lot
of
due
process
issues
and
and
issues
that
we
had
not
confronted
relative
to
quasi-judicial
matters
that
we
have
to
work
through.
If
we,
in
fact
do
continue
that,
because
there
are
issues
that
have
revealed
themselves
that
need
to
be
addressed.
P
P
J
P
P
Okay,
if
anything,
we
should
be
here
to
convenience
our
constituents.
It's
clearly
been
shown
that
it
is
the
convenience
of
the
constituents
in
many
many
occasions
to
stay
home
and
use
cmt.
Now,
frankly,
I
will.
I
will
be
the
first
one
to
tell
those
constituents
that
if
they
want
to
be
more
effective,
they
should
actually
come
down
to
city
hall,
because
standing
at
that
podium,
okay,
is
much
more
effective
advocacy
than
staying
at
home.
But
that's
neither
here
nor
there,
that's
just
my
opinion,
okay,
but
the
reality.
The
reality
is
is
in
my
opi.
P
They
we've
clearly
seen
that
many
many
people
will
get
involved
and
give
us
their
opinions.
If
given
the
cmt
option-
and
I
think
that's
important-
that's
what
that's,
what
the
entire
public
process
and
notice
and
everything
else
is
about.
It's
not
just
feel
good.
It's
not
just
because
the
statute
says
we
need
to
notice
these
people
in
a
certain
surrounding
area.
P
It's
because
we
need
that
kind
of
feedback
in
order
to
do
our
job
and-
and
I
I
feel
I
feel
strongly
about
it-
you
know
that
cat
is
out
of
the
bag
and
and
people
feel
comfortable
with
it,
and
I
think
to
take
it
away.
P
D
So
we
don't
have
a
huge
discussion
to
bring
this
back.
That
way,
it's
narrowed
down
and
tailored
down.
I
always
like
to
hear
everyone's
opinion,
but
mr
dinkville
does
have
a
point.
A
lot
of
people
don't
have
cars.
D
I
hear
that
sometimes
I
can't
get
down
there
and
unfortunately
covet
did
give
folks
an
option
to
speak
to
council,
so
I'm
open,
but
let's
just
see
how
we
can
tailor
it
with
the
administration
and
then
get
with
the
council
members
and
then
we'll
bring
it
back
for
a
brief
discussion
and
then
we'll
take
it
up
from
there.
I
don't
want.
We
need
to
move
on
for
this
point.
D
G
D
If
it
hits
on
saturday
we're
back
to
business
as
usual,
yes
and
in
the
meantime,
in
the
meantime,
in
the
meantime
again,
if
it
ends
we're
back
to
prison,
one
of
the
councilmembers
have
raised
a
question
for
discussion.
So
I'd
like
to
instruct
you
to
give
the
administration
give
the
council
members
bring
that
back
for
a
brief
discussion.
If
we
need
to
change
how
we
do
business
in
this
house
or
change
our
resolution
or
change
our
ordinance
as
rules
procedures,
we'll
do
that
at
that
particular
time
soon.
P
I'm
going
to
respectfully
propose
that
we
leave
the
status
quo-
okay,
which
is
that
and
by
motion
I'm
going
to
make
the
motion
right
now
that
we
that
we
modify
our
rules,
at
least
on
a
temporary
basis,
to
leave
the
status
quo
to
leave
the
cmt
in
place.
Until
we
can
have
that
discussion,
at
which
point
we
would
either
modify
them,
leave
them
in
place
eliminate
them.
P
What
have
you,
but
by
motion
today,
I'd
like
us
to
to
on
a
temporary
basis,
leave
our
rules
in
place,
except
we
would
strike
the
word
the
you
know,
emergence
during
the
state
of
emergency
okay,
because,
obviously,
if
the
emergency
is
going
to
be
going
away,
then
I
think
at
least
on
a
temporary
basis.
We
have
given
no
notice
to
the
community
whatsoever.
I
just
got
a
text
from
from
somebody
in
the
community
saying
this
wasn't
even
on
the
agenda.
P
G
H
If
I
may,
that
motion,
I
think,
that's
well
taken,
because
it
is
correct
that
a
lot
of
folks
don't
know
that
this
is
being
taken
away
and
to
merely
extend
that
right
until
we
address
the
issue
either.
If
we
address
the
issue
by
taking
away
doing
a
compromise
or
keeping
it
as
is,
there
ought
to
be
some
some
better
notice
to
folks
that
are
are
reasonably
relying
upon
that
and
we,
but
we
should
promptly
have
that
discussion
in
the
meanwhile.
D
Michelle,
what
we're
gonna
do
we're
not
gonna
we're
not
gonna
turn
this
over
till
tonight.
If
that
is
the
pleasure
of
this
council,
we'll
make
this
decision
now,
so
we
can
move
on
with
the
agenda
if
that
is
the
pleasure
of
this
council.
So,
mr
danesville,
if
you
want
to
put
that
motion
on
the
floor,
you're
welcome
to
put
that
motion
on
the
floor
now
and
then
we'll
take
the
vote
and
we'll
go
from
this.
We
can
move
on.
P
D
J
Because
I
came
in
between
the
discussions
here,
we're
talking
about
number
four
on
the
five
percent
and
ten
percent.
No,
no.
P
K
F
This
in
jest,
and
it's
an
old
saying
from
some
of
my
brothers
that
say
if
you
want
to
get
something
done,
telephone
telegraph
tell
us
all.
Lady.
F
A
F
F
K
If
cmt
is
a
proxy
for
being
here
in
person
that
it
should
look
like
as
if
it
should
be
the
same
as
if
somebody's
here
in
person,
which
is
audience
video.
Thank
you.
P
Mr
chairman,
I
think
I
probably
can
cut
this
short
for
everybody's
benefit,
since
it
was
my
motion
and
and
and
if
mr
miranda
differs,
I'm
sure
we'll
hear.
P
I
thought
this
might
be
a
good
idea.
Staff
has
responded
to
us
and
said
that
it
won't
it
wouldn't
really
change
it.
Much
of
anything,
especially
at
the
5
level.
P
You
know
rezonings
and
lot
splits
and
that
sort
of
thing
they
told
us
that
they
like
they
like
the
way
it
is
they
like
to
be
able
to
come
to
council
and
tell
us
why
they
like
or
don't
like
the
particular
lot
splits.
So
with
that,
I'm
I'm
not
I'm
no
longer
in
support
of
of
item
four
and
and
would
just
move
to
strike
it.
But
obviously,
if
there
are
folks
to
speak
to
it,
that's
fine
too.
T
T
We
did
receive
several
comments,
and
I
did
just
want
to
briefly
report
on
that.
So
if
I
could
possibly
share
my
screen,
I
have
two
quick
slides.
I
just
wanted
to
share
with
you.
We
had.
T
Wonderful
okay,
so
I
just
wanted
to
report
back
on
the
public
information
session.
Briefly,
we
did
have
31
registrants
and
we've
had
29
attendees.
We
were
asked
to
take
the
temperature
and
kind
of
gauge
the
barometer
on
where
people
were.
T
We
did
have
five
attendees
directly
comet
when
we
brought
this
item
up
and
you
can
see
those
comments
there.
5
is
a
slippery
slope
using
the
rs-60
example.
This
would
allow
for
54
feet
and
then
one
in
support
of
the
5,
no
direct
comment,
and
then
we
did
have
two
participants
that
indicated
they
were
in
support
of
the
10.
T
So
I
just
wanted
to
briefly
report
to
you
on
that
and
then.
Secondly,
at
the
workshop
we
had
presented
to
you
that
there
were
22
cases
in
the
last
two
years.
12
of
those
were
euclidean
and
went
from
an
rs-60
to
an
rx
50..
10
of
them
were
planned
developments,
so
just
of
the
12
euclideans.
All
of
them
would
have
been
within
the
10
that
were
granted
by
council
and
then
in
relation
to
the
planned
developments.
T
One
was
within
five
percent
of
the
lot
with
two
were
within
10
percent
of
the
lot,
with
five
were
within
five
percent
of
the
lot
area,
so
that
is
like
a
50
by
98
lot,
where
they
don't
have
the
depth,
but
they
have
the
area
and
two
were
within
10
percent.
So
I
think
at
our
workshop,
councilman
dingfelder
had
asked
if
we
could
report
back
on
the
22,
so
I
did
want
to
give
you
a
breakdown
on
that
as
well.
P
I'm
I'm
satisfied
I'll
just
appreciate
the
report
and
the
hard
work
that
abby
you
and
your
team
put
in
and
I'll
just
move
to
receive
and
follow
that
for
item
four
and
and
move
on
to
the
next
house.
Miranda.
D
J
Just
want
to
bring
up
some
items
here
when
you're
looking
at
what
mazambia
spoke
about
under
planned
development,
one
within
five
percent
of
lot
width.
You
have
a
seven
foot
setback
right,
assuming
that's
what
it
is
correct.
J
When
you
look
at
the
10
percent
lot,
width
that
would
be
10
percent
of
what
of
84
inches,
which
would
be
8.4
inches.
So
we
talked
about
inches
here
and
sometimes
a
half
an
inch
or
four
tenth
of
an
inch
when
you're
looking
at
five
percent
of
the
total
lot
width
and
every
I
believe
a
buildable
lot
is
five
thousand
square
feet.
Am
I
correct
in
some
areas?
J
So
it
depends
on
what
the
size
of
the
areas
are
in
different
areas,
so
you're
looking
at
five
percent
of
something,
so
that
would
be
five
five
hundred
square
feet
of
it,
ten
percent
and
that
five
percent
would
be
250
square
feet
for
that
lot.
In
some
areas
you
have
a
lot
that
are
not
to
size.
We
just
mentioned,
I
heard
98
feet
deep
and
that
happens
in
a
lot
of
areas
or
something
like
that
in
west
tampa
and
other
parts
of
the
city.
J
So
when
you
look
at
those,
you
might
have
a
hundred
foot
width
with
only
98
foot
depth
and
they
were
zoned
that
way
years
back
and
sometimes
there's
a
house
or
two
sometimes
there's
only
one
house
in
the
middle
of
the
lot.
So
there's
a
lot
of
things
you
can
look
at
and
I'm
not
opposed
to
saying
I
give
up,
but
I
don't
give
up
it
doesn't
matter
not
about
giving
up
it's
about.
T
Therefore,
in
relation
to
the
creation
of
an
administrative
law
creation
process,
we
would
not
be
bringing
anything
back
to
you
and
that
that
matter
would
be
closed
at
this
time.
Is
that
correct.
A
A
And
john
lum
this
request,
since
it
is
a
privately
initiated
text,
amendment
council,
the
applicant
will
provide
you
with
the
background
regarding
this
request
and
they
will
also
make
the
presentation
today.
I'm
also
counsel,
I
am
on
the
line
I
am
available.
If
there
are
questions
for
staff
with
that,
I
will
turn
it
over
to
steve
michelini.
He
is
in
person
and
I
believe
he
is
on
the
second
floor.
He
is
ready
to
start
his
presentation
and
council.
I
thank
you.
O
Good
morning,
council,
steve
miccellini
these,
and
these
text
amendments
started
off
a
little
over
four
years
ago
and
they
came
about
from
a
series
of
meetings
with
the
city
staff.
P
Excuse
me
one
second
steve
and
I
apologize
as
I
look
around
at
my
my
desk
in
front
of
me,
mr
sietra.
Mr
mr
chairman,
mr
well,
I
don't
know
about
mr
miranda.
Mr
miranda
looks
like
he
has
it.
I
don't
have
the
document
that
we're
that
we're
talking
about
in
in
front
of
me
in
terms
of
the
changes
that
you're
proposing
and
I
apologize.
P
D
That'd
be
fine,
we
don't
have
it
in
front
of
us
and
nobody
was
discussing
something.
We
don't
have
he's
trying
to
explain
something
to
us.
Mr
wiggling,
can
you
stick
around
a
few?
Maybe
we'll
get
staff
to
give
us
a
copy
of
what
you
have,
because
we
don't
have
it.
N
Morning,
chair
morning,
council
vic
feed
a
director
mobility
department,
I.t.
N
Sure
thing,
thank
you,
so
I'm
here
for
item
number
six
motion
made
by
councilman,
carlson
and
sitro
regarding
a
request
to
the
mobility
department
is
study
the
possibility
of
installing
crosswalks,
particularly
around
schools.
N
N
N
Thank
you
so
again,
thank
you
for
bringing
this
up.
This
is
an
important
topic,
certainly,
as
we
heard
from
representative
hart
earlier
today.
She
mentioned
the
importance
of
partnerships
and
what
aspect
of
our
program
we
can
improve
through
better
partnerships
and
I'm
happy
to
announce
one
several
initiatives
through
our
partners.
N
The
first
one
is
with
the
mpo
and
through
the
unified
planning
work
program,
the
mpo
board,
and
some
of
you
as
well
voted
to
have
the
mpos
study,
school
safety
and
the
need
for
sidewalks,
which
is
building
upon
an
effort
that
it
already
started,
and
so
we
will
be
initiating
that
with
the
mpo.
So
the
timing
of
this
motion
is
great.
N
Also,
we've
heard
through
the
community
like
sidewalk
stompers,
that
we
should
work
with
the
school
board
a
little
bit
better
and
have
partnership
with
them
to
share
data.
I'm
happy
to
report
that
that
has
already
been
an
effort
underway
alana.
Our
vision,
zero
coordinator,
is
working
with
the
school
board
and
we're
working
towards
an
mou
that
will
allow
us
to
share
data
with
schools
better
to
understand
traffic
patterns
to
understand
needs
by
individual
schools
rather
than
having
a
one-size-fits-all
approach.
N
We're
also
working
with
our
partners
at
the
county
and
coordinating
safe
routes
to
school
programs
and
other
sidewalk
implementations
as
well.
And
of
course,
we
continue
to
work
with
fdot
district
7,
recently
appointed
a
safety
ambassador
whose
sole
focus
is
elevating.
Safety
needs
particularly
walk
by
needs
up
to
the
district
secretary
level
and
create
projects
from
it.
N
Having
said
that,
I'm
going
to
walk
through
various
initiatives
that
we
have
been
undertaking
to
deploy.
Sidewalks
particularly
around
schools
and-
and
these
have
been
products
of
study
consideration
over
the
years
that
we
continue
to
build
upon
through
the
initiatives
that
I
just
mentioned
so
really
from
a
guidance
perspective.
It
starts
with
the
mutcd
the
manual
and
uniform
traffic
control
devices
that
sets
recommendations
for
treatments
for
school
routes,
particularly
walk
routes.
N
So
this
is
just
to
give
you
an
idea
that
we
have
a
broad
set
of
guidance
that
we
follow,
we're
actually
working
through
with
the
national
association
of
city
transportation
officials
to
see
if
we
can
get
better
guidance
and
better
a
better
document
from
the
mutcd
that
focuses
more
on
bike
and
walk
issues.
So
we're
part
of
this
movement,
along
with
over
100
cities
across
the
country,
in
requesting
the
federal
government
to
reconsider
the
manual.
N
So
some
of
our
key
initiatives
that
bring
safety,
particularly
two
school
areas,
are
listed
here
and
we'll
walk
through
all
of
them.
Please
know
that
through
all
of
our
all
of
our
prioritization,
particularly
through
the
move
program,
school
routes
are
at
the
highest
level
of
priorities:
school
routes,
access
we
have
peers
and
tier
one
is
school
and
access.
N
So,
let's
look
at
the
always
stops
program.
This
has
been
really
successful.
We've
done
over
80
intersections
in
about
a
year.
This
is
what
we
did
through
the
pandemic,
while
traffic
was
lower.
The
goal
of
this
program
is
to
to
calm
traffic,
improve
safety,
particularly
in
our
neighborhoods
and
in
some
cases
our
collector
roads
as
well.
We
prioritize
proximity
to
schools.
We
look
at
crashes,
proximity
to
parks
also
places
where
children
frequent
and,
of
course,
we
look
at
operational
improvements
that
augment
just
the
four-way
stop
installation.
N
We
heard
an
example
of
that
as
well.
This
program
has
been
received
pretty
well
by
the
community
at
large,
and
we
look
forward
to
continuing
to
support
this
through
our
quick
build
program.
N
We
have
the
crosswalks
program
where
we
have
a
running
list
of
crosswalk
locations
where
we
improve
walkability
and
also
awareness
of
motorists
and
other
modes
of
transportation
of
pedestrians
within
the
walkway
through
signage,
through
appropriate
placement
of
the
crosswalk.
And
again
we
prioritize
schools.
N
Recent
improvements
that
we've
made
near
schools,
alexander
elementary
and
shaw.
Elementary
again,
everything
from
new
crosswalks,
better
programs
access,
and
we
continue
to
work
on
these
initiatives
also,
we
have
as
you're
aware
our
crosswalks
the
classrooms
program.
This
is
very
popular.
We
get
requests
from
many
schools
to
have
this
instituted
in
their
school
and
we
look
forward
to
covering
every
school
in
the
city.
Frankly,
should
the
funding
allow
that
this
raises
awareness,
this
increases
participation
by
people
that
use
the
crosswalk
the
most?
That's
our
students,
that's
our
children
and
it
also
improves
access.
N
We've
also
developed
the
two-tier
criteria,
as
I
said,
and
the
highest
fear
in
that
criteria
is
around
access
in
school.
Here
are
some
of
the
other
criteria
items
as
well,
we're
still
working
through
the
move
program,
listening
to
the
community,
adding
engineering
and
other
layers,
on
top
of
it
of
knowledge
to
really
prioritize
based
on
the
vulnerable
first
and
schools
certainly
match
that
criteria
our
sidewalk
program.
It
will
also
move
from
more
of
a
reactive
to
a
proactive
approach.
N
Funding
notwithstanding
on
that,
and
primarily
it's
because
we've
historically
reacted
to
complaints,
and
so
what
happens
is
almost
asymmetrically
we
hear
from
certain
neighborhoods
most
of
the
work
is
done
in
those
neighborhoods
and
the
neighborhoods
that
we
haven't
heard
from
in
the
past
did
not
get
as
much
work
like
you
can
see
in
the
bottom
left.
Here.
N
We
have
school
zone,
flasher,
upgrade
programs
and
again,
we've
been
chipping
away
at
this.
This
is
a
state
requirement
that,
within
a
couple
of
years
by
2023,
all
schools
need
to
have
certain
types
of
signage
markings
and
flasher
assemblies
to
meet
state
state
standards.
So
we've
been
chipping
away
at
this
program
as
well
with
our
partners.
N
I
mentioned
safe
routes
to
school.
Our
our
first
big
project
next
fiscal
year
is
going
to
be
salt
for
spring.
This
was
identified
in
the
previous
version
of
the
npo
school
safety
study,
we're
now
updating
that
study
to
today's
realities
and
new
information
and
means
and
methods
that
we
have.
That
was
the
unified
planning
work
program
study
that
I
mentioned
earlier
in
the
presentation.
N
Again
we
partner
with
state
where
we
can
and
maximize
the
dollars
our
limited
dollars
that
we
get
and
finally,
in
closing,
I
just
want
to
make
some
staff
recommendations
towards
this
motion,
and
that
would
be
to
continue
a
majority
of
our
programs.
These
programs
are
well
researched,
they're,
well
coordinated
across
different
jurisdictions
and
partners
as
well,
and
they
will
yield
benefits
as
we
go
along
in
terms
of
funding,
we're
always
in
need
of
funding.
N
K
Thanks
thanks
vic
for
the
thorough
analysis
and
and
also
all
the
work
you
do.
I
know
this
is
something
that
is
important
to
you.
Is
there
a
way
that
we
can
allocate
the
money
faster?
The
community
is
demanding
that
we
do
this
right
away.
They
think
it's
unsafe
to
walk
to
and
from
schools
and
and
and
then
and
then
part
of
part
of
this
remember
what
was
this
or
a
different
motion,
but
part
of
it
also
was
that
there
are
houses
across
from
schools
that
that
were
apparent.
K
N
So
that's
a
great
question,
thank
you,
councilman
and,
and
we
are
looking
at
creative
ways
to
reallocate
existing
funding,
but
also
create
new
opportunities
to
increase
the
number
of
sidewalks
or
at
least
walking
space
through
creative,
tactical
urbanism,
and
things
like
that.
So
there
are
two
things
that
we've
done
specifically.
The
first
is
with
our
own
budget
for
fy22.
N
Again,
we've
worked
with
our
vision,
zero
coordinator
and
our
traffic
transportation
engineering
department
to
identify
a
quick
build
program,
and
what
this
quick
build
program
does
is
uses
temporary
materials
which
are
still
conspicuous,
which
are
still
standard
materials,
but
that
allow
us
to
do
more
deployments
of
active
transportation
as
compared
to
a
grey
infrastructure,
which
is
mainly
concrete
steel.
All
of
that,
and
with
that,
our
focus
is
going
to
be
our
high
injury
network
and
schools.
N
But
it's
later
in
the
year
we
will
have
our
final
set
of
recommendations
which
will
also
move
the
ball
forward
on
getting
more
sidewalks
out
there,
we're
working
with
our
partners
there
as
well
both
community
partners
as
well
as
institutional
partners.
H
Thank
you
very
much,
mr
chairman,
and
you
know
it's
funny
whenever
I
hear
reports
like
this
I'll
be
honest
number
one
vic
two
emotions.
I
always
have
just
a
thankfulness
for
your
work,
your
your!
I
think
you
know
what
I
think
about
you,
you're,
a
good
guy
and
you're,
a
professional
and
and
whatnot,
but
I
get
angry.
I
get
frustrated
because
you
know
in
november
of
2018
almost
three
and
five
voters
in
hillsborough
county
supported
raising
their
own
taxes.
H
The
suburbs
voted
almost
two
to
one
for
all
for
transportation.
They
voted
for
things
like
this
and
when
we
take
a
look
at
the
the
vast
deficit
that
we
have
in
our
city
and
our
community
in
the
county,
etc
on
issues
of
just
basic
dignity
and
safety,
it
it
blows
your
mind.
H
Much
of
that
now
is
being
cruelly
taken
away
from
us,
and
now
we
have
to
wait
to
potentially
november
of
2022
to
take
a
look
at
remedy
remedying
this,
but
seeing
this
in
light
of
the
public's
bipartisan-
and
I
say
bipartisan
because
we
know
many
republicans
and
democrats
and
independents
who
came
together
for
this,
the
the
public's
bipartisan
support
for
using
more
of
their
own
money,
our
own
money,
the
people's
money
collectively
to
take
care
of
these
issues
and
these
challenges
and
crises,
because,
if
you're,
a
parent
with
a
you,
know
kid
walking
to
school
and
having
an
unsafe
access,
it's
a
crisis.
H
You
know
so
many
different
situations,
kids
going
to
school
and
not
having
proper,
crosswalks
or
sidewalks.
If
you're
a
person
with
a
disability,
you
got
to
get
to
work
at
publix
or
wherever
it
may
be.
You
don't
have
access
to
that
transportation.
Just
yesterday
evening
I
was
doing
a
town
hall
over
at
copeland
park
and
talking
to
different
folks
who
were
talking
about
you,
know
folks,
working
at
mcdonald's
for
for
nine
ten
eleven
dollars
an
hour
having
problems
getting
access
to
to
transit,
to
get
to
their
jobs.
H
Talking
to
folks
who
run
a
housing
program
for
veterans
going
through
transitions
and
lives,
mostly
young
veterans,
coming
back
with
ptsd
and
other
challenges,
saying
that
they
don't
have
proper
access
to
heart
lines,
etc
for
their
journeys
that
they
have
to
take
in
life.
So
you
know
we're
going
to
do
what
we
have
to
do
here
in
the
city
of
tampa.
But
again
you
take
a
look
at
the
budget
that
we
have.
You
know
budget
for
repaving
of
five
million
dollars
when
it's
16
million
dollars
just
to
get
dignity.
H
B
H
850,
and
and
by
golly,
all
for
transportation
would
have
taken
us
to
four
or
five
million
dollars.
So
you
know
I
think,
of
I'm
quoting
the
bible
all
day
today.
I
think
of
the
book
of
exodus.
You
can't
make
bricks
without
straw
and
the
voters
wanted
us
to
get
straw
to
make
those
breaks
and
the
straw
got
taken
away
from
us,
but
we're
going
to
get
that
straw
back
in
2022..
F
Thank
you
very
much,
mr
chair
vic.
You
always
know
that
you're,
my
go-to
guy
when
it
comes
to
mobility,
and
I
thank
you
for
all
the
work
you've
done
and
I
thank
you
for
the
all
the
help
you've.
Given
my
office,
we
are
looking
at
something
that
has
happened
over
the
years
and
has
just
piled
itself
on
top
of
one
another
started
with
a
with
a
sidewalk
fund
and
and
how
the
sidewalks
were
built
in
this
city.
F
It
started
with
the
hillsborough
county
school
system,
saying
that
if
you
lived
outside
within
two
miles
of
a
school
your
children
had
to
walk
to
school.
I
liked
the
the
the
slides
that
you
showed
us.
I
loved
your
presentation.
F
However,
we
still
have
to
look
at
that
outside
of
the
school
itself.
Kids
are
still
having
excuse
me.
Children
are
still
having
to
walk
within
two
miles.
Vic
again,
thank
you
for
your
help
and
I'm
sure
that
the
next
time
you
report
to
us
that
there's
going
to
be
a
heck
of
a
lot
of
overlapping
as
schools
are
within
two
miles
of
one
another.
So
we've
got
a
lot
of
work
ahead
of
ourselves.
Keep
us
posted.
Thank
you
very
much
vic.
Thank
you,
mr
chair.
Anyone.
J
You
vic,
I
appreciate
all
the
information
you
gave
us.
Is
there
any
way
possible
that
this
council
could
receive
the
information
of
the
schools
that
we
have
in
the
city
of
tampa
and
how
many
of
them
have
the
sidewalks?
How
many
don't?
How
many
have
partial
sidewalks
and
give
us
an
update
with
what
the
cost
is
for
each
school
and
then.
J
N
J
D
Mr
certainly,
you
have
another
question:
I've
got.
D
We
can
cut
those
calls
and
then
get
to
give
these
some
of
these
young
men
and
women
an
opportunity
to
learn
a
skill
and
be
able
to
now
work
and
partner
with
us
to
cut
these
costs
down,
because
they're
we've
got
to
think
outside
the
box.
But
my
biggest
thing
is
this:
we
we
have
us,
we
have
cras
and
most
of
these
cras
have
money
in
for
sidewalks.
D
That
money
doesn't
go
into
the
general
furnace
for
those
communities,
so
those
communities
need
sidewalks.
Your
office
needs
to
be
getting
with
ms
van
long
to
see
who
has
money
first
sidewalks,
because
many
times
we
get
calls
for
sidewalks.
We
send
it
over
to
you
whatever
it
needs
to
be
a
system
to
where
sidewalks
come
in
and
if
you
don't
have
some
money
and
the
cra
has
money
for
star
wars
in
that
district
or
that
zone
at
the
cra
area,
then
we'd
be
looking
to
get
those
sidewalks
done.
So
that
could
be
another
avenue.
D
We
need
to
work
to
do
those
because,
again
that
money
is
taxpayer
dollars.
That's
for
that
community
that
they're
reinvesting
in.
So
we
need
to
look
at
that
option
as
well,
but
I'm
going
to
say
it
again
vic.
We
need
to
look
at
a
program,
be
it
with
the
sheriff's
office
d.o.t
department
of
corrections,
because
I
see
them
have
guys
out
doing
sidewalks
all
the
time.
D
So
we
as
a
city
need
to
start
looking
at
how
we
can
help
some
of
those
folks
when
they
get
out
or
partnering
with
some
of
these
other
facilities,
correctional
facilities
to
get
them
out
to
help
us
do
some
of
this
work
and
cut
our
costs
back
down
to
get
more
work
done
and
get
more
things
done
for
the
city.
So
I'm
going
to
ask
that
again,
I'm
not
going
to
make
a
motion
today,
but
we
need
to
get
some
answers
to
that
because
it
is
it's
vital.
You've
got
the
sheriff
office
out
there.
D
You've
got
a
pro
programs
out
there.
That
might
be
an
extra
program.
They
can
add.
It
doesn't
take
much
to
learn
how
to
pull
mud.
I,
when
I
was
got
out
of
high
school
and
went
off
to
college.
As
soon
as
I
came
back
in
the
summer,
I
had
to
go
with
michael
joe
brown's
construction
company.
That's
you
got
to
go
to
work
and
I
poured
mud
so
it
ain't
hard
to
do
it's
not!
Mr
sutra,
you
had
something
to
say,
sir.
You
recognized.
F
Yes,
I
do,
I
haven't
heard
cement
called
mud
in
a
long
time.
Yes,
sir,
I
know
exactly
what
you're
talking
about
vic
last
time
that
we
had
spoken
on
this
I'd
ask
about
alternative
products,
especially
especially
permeable
permeable
alternative
products.
Please,
if
we
can
look
into
that
cut
the
cost
there
I
I
may
be
speaking
out
of
turn,
but
I'm
going
to
say
it.
Anyways
nasa
is
looking
at
some
really
great
recycled
products
that
are
just
as
tough
just
as
strong
as
concrete.
We
also
need
to
look
in
that
avenue.
D
Anyone
else
all
right,
vic.
Well,
we
we
appreciate
it.
I
know
you're,
a
guy
that
always
gets
back
with
us.
We
can
say
that
about
you,
you're
very.
We
call
you
you
get
it
done
and
I
can.
I
can
honestly
say
that
every
time
I've
called
your
mom's
calls
you've
gotten
it
done
and
believe
me,
council
appreciates
that
kind
of
work
and
we
appreciate
all
staff
members,
but
we
know
when
we
call
you
it
gets
done
right
away.
D
N
Thank
you
chair,
and
I
assure
you
we're
looking
at
both
the
in-house,
as
well
as
innovative
materials,
to
address
some
of
our
challenges.
Thank
you.
D
D
I
really
have
some
questions
because
I
keep
seeing
all
these
private
text
amendments
up
all
the
time
so
yeah.
This
is
a
good
discussion,
mr
mclean,
I
think
mr
dean
phil
yeah,
mr
myself
and
dean
for
the
talk.
Ladies
six
minutes
go
ahead.
Sir
item
number
five.
O
If
you
look
at
your
at
the
overhead
this,
the
list
was
much
longer.
There
were
probably
over
50
different
items
that
were
that
were
being
discussed
and
the
city
staff
itself
took
some
of
those
amendments
on
themselves
and
what
we're
presenting
here
today
are
the
ones
that
they
requested
that
we
initiate
as
a
private
petition.
O
And
explain
very
I
mean
I'll
go
through
each
one
of
these
individually,
but
the
first
one
is
the
yards
between
residential
buildings
that,
in
that
involves
interior
setbacks
between
multi-family
structures.
It
does
not
involve
anything
on
the
exterior
setbacks
or
any
adjacent
property.
O
We've
deleted
the
side
yard
setback
request,
which
we
found
that
there
was
a
conflict
in
the
code
and
it
has
since
been
clarified
with
staff,
and
that
was
just
identified
and
corrected
yesterday,
allowing
open
storage
in
cg.
This
was
supposed
to
be
for
allowing
walk-in,
coolers
and
things
like
that
for
existing
restaurants
that
had
no
place
on
the
interior
for
walk-in
coolers.
We've
removed
that
as
well.
O
The
issue
regarding
swimming
pools
was
just
was
too
difficult
to
try
to
explain
to
lay
people
and
it
had
to
do
with
the
technical
standard
that
appears
in
the
building
code
and
that's
no
longer
being
considered.
We've
removed
that
the
item
number
five
is
the
official
schedule
of
of
district
regulations.
O
O
This
has
to
do
with
the
size
of
the
lots
and
the
the
issue
relates
to
the
parking
garages
that
you
have,
which
are
required
for
two
two
parking
spaces
and
two
spaces
in
the
driveway
and
requiring
an
additional
space
for
visitor
parking
seemed
to
be
an
unusual
and
heavy
burden
to
meet
so
again
with
staff
discussions.
O
The
item
number
eight
has
to
do
with
the
east.
Tampa
overlay
and
item
number
nine
west
hamp
overlay
has
to
do
with
the
front
yard
setback,
and
the
code
indicates
that
you
have
to
have
a
block
averaging,
but
if
there's
no
other
properties
on
that
block
or
if
you
have
an
extraordinarily
deep
lot,
the
the
setbacks
were
ending
up
being
60
or
70
or
80
feet
from
the
from
the
front
right
away
and
the
front
property
line
which
didn't
make
a
lot
of
sense.
So
again,
these
issues
were
worked
out
with
the
staff.
O
O
This
is
the
the
current
code
when
a
property
contains
more
than
one
building.
The
required
structural
setback
was
based
on
a
calculation
that
involved
length
times
width
times
height.
This
does
not
affect
massing.
This
affects
a
standard
setting
a
standard
of
15
feet
between
between
buildings,
which
was
reviewed
and
supported
by
the
fire
marshal's
office.
O
This
again
does
not
affect
the
the
size
of
the
development.
It
only
affects
where
you
place
the
buildings,
and
we
had
four
different
engineers,
as
well
as
the
city
staff,
try
to
calculate
the
what
the
setback
would
be
between
buildings
and
we
came
up
with
four
different
answers,
and
so
a
lot
of
these
were
ending
up
having
to
either
be
re,
go
to
a
rezoning,
or
they
would
have
to
go
to
our
variants
to
try
to
establish
with
the
minimum
setback
between
buildings
on
the
interior
of
a
lot
again.
D
O
O
O
The
visitor
parking
for
for
duplexes
with
.25
it
ended
up
with
two
units,
was
a
half
a
parking
space
which
you
had
to
round
up
to
one,
and
considering
that
a
duplex
is
on
a
relatively
smaller
lot,
it
was
tying
up
a
lot
of
extra
space.
It
was
forcing
these
duplexes
to
seek
waivers
for
landscaping,
and
then
it
was.
It
was
triggering
rezoning
when
it
was
not
really
necessary
for
it.
For
a
small
development
like
that.
O
Number
seven
has
to
do
with
the
allowing
the
courtyards
as
long
as
in
the
front
entrances
facing
the
courtyards.
They
would
have
a
main
entrance
that
would
face
the
right-of-way
which
would
have
the
address
on
it,
and
it
would
have
the
unit
numbers
and
then
the
fire
marshal
would
obviously
have
to
prove
the
signage
and
the
addressing.
O
This
is
the
last
one.
Here
is
the
item
eight
and
nine,
which
was
the
front
yards
determined
by
block
averaging,
and
it
would
establish
a
standard
of
20
feet
which
is
consistent
with
the
overlay
districts
or,
if
you
have,
for
example,
in
east
hamp,
in
west
ham
and
some
of
the
older
neighborhoods,
you
have
houses
that
are
that
are
fairly
close
to
the
sidewalk.
It
would
allow
you
to
go
up
to
the
sidewalk
if
there
was
a
block
averaging,
but
when
there
is
no
block
averaging,
it
would
set
that
minimum
at
20
feet.
O
This
has
been
discussed,
as
I
said,
for
this
is
not
a
new
proposal.
That's
been
out
there
for
quite
a
while.
It
was
routed
through
all
the
city
for
departmental
review.
We've
had
probably
no
less
than
a
dozen
discussions
and
meetings
with
city
staff
to
review
this.
We
had
a
public
information
meeting
and
because
these
the
nature
of
some
of
these
are
are
technical
in
nature.
I
think
that
some
of
the
people
that
made
quotes
about
or
provided
you
with
quotes
and
emails
didn't
understand
what
that's
what
this
had
to
do
with
the
entire
city.
O
O
P
A
Yes,
yes,
councilman
federer.
I
am
here.
P
Okay,
so
what
I,
what
I
think
is
a
healthy
way
to
do
this
is,
is
to
walk
through
these
each
one
of
these
and
and
for
you
to
either
confirm
or
deny
or
or
what
have
you
everything
that's
been
said
on
each
one
and
let
me
and
let
me-
and
I
did
have
a
few
specific
questions
so
in
regard
to
27
162
yards
between
residential
buildings.
A
Yes,
that
is
correct.
Councilman
dean,
felder
lashonda
development
wrote
the
management
the
yes,
we
are
in
support
of
this
request.
This
was
the
request,
as
steve
mentioned,
regarding
the
yards
between
the
residential
buildings.
It's
removing
that
required
calculation
which
exists
in
the
code
currently
and
putting
it
at
a
standard.
So.
P
A
As
standard
residential
zoning
districts
required
at
seven
foot
setback,
that
would
be
that
combination
of
the
two.
D
A
P
A
P
Okay,
what
if
these
were
really
tall
buildings?
You
know
I
mean
I
can
see
doing
this
for
single
family,
detached
single
family
attached,
single-family
semi-detached,
because
most
of
those
I
think,
are
35
feet,
but
hotels
and
motels-
I
guess
arguably,
could
be
very.
Very
very
large.
Buildings
with
large
masses
is
15
feet
adequate
from
a
mass
perspective.
O
P
T
Ahead:
evie
thanks
abby
feely,
director
of
development
and
growth
management.
This
building
separation
is
when,
for
example,
you
have
three
sets
of
townhomes
on
a
single
parcel.
So
let's
say
you
have
three
buildings
of
four
town
homes,
a
piece.
T
Typically,
you
take
the
width
of
those
four
townhomes
the
depth
of
that
structure,
and
you
do
the
calculation
for
how
the
buildings
have
to
be
separated
on
a
unified
piece
of
property.
This
is
going
to
take
out
that
width
and
depth
calculation
and
standardize
it
at
15
foot.
This
wouldn't
be
in
a
hotel
situation
and
commercial
commercial
would
still
have.
Although
if
there
were
two
buildings
to
the
hotel,
then
then
they
would
have
to
have
a
separation.
P
Right,
and
so,
but
that
goes
to
my
question-
is
under
the
document
that
that
we
were
all
given
proposed
modification
says
it
includes
hotels
and
motels.
So
my
question
is:
if
you
have
a
60-foot
motel
building
and
a
60-foot
motel
building
on
the
same
property,
the
same
pd,
it's
15
feet
enough
separation
in
in
regard
to
the
you
know,
the
massing
of
those
buildings
I
can
see
15
feet
is
fine.
P
If
it's
a
35
foot,
you
know
town,
home
or
or
even
a
little
small
motel,
but
when
you
get
up
to
60
feet
or
something
like
that,
it
is
from
a
planning
perspective
from
a
mass
perspective.
P
P
Okay,
so
maybe
maybe
what
maybe,
what?
Oh
I'm
sorry
abby,
maybe
what
we
should
do
is
just
strike
hotels
and
motels
or
strike
anything.
You
know.
Maybe
we
should
just
say
for
35
foot
tall
buildings,
I'm
perfectly
fine
with
the
standardized
15
feet
and
I
hope
council
is
because
yeah
you
know
we
have
everything
in
the
city.
Now
is
basically
35
foot
height
limit
for
most
of
what
we're
building
on
a
neighborhood
level
and
it's
appropriate
to
have
15
foot
separation
because
that's
typical,
as
mr
miranda
pointed
out
this
morning,
you
know.
P
Typically
it's
seven
foot
setback,
but
but
I
do
have
a
little
bit
of
heartburn
when
it
comes
to
larger
structures
that
might
be
40
50.
You
know
60
feet
tall.
O
Okay,
I
think
that
one
of
the
one
of
the
points
that
abby
made
was
this
is
interior
to
a
lot.
This
is
not
an
exterior
issue
and
it
would
still
have
to
meet.
What's
in
the
building
code
is
table
600,
which
is
building
separation
for
fire
protection.
J
O
Apartment
building
or
something
like
that,
but
but
the
intention
here
was
not
to
to
to
create
more
massing.
It
was
simply
to
establish
a
standard
that
was
very
difficult
to
determine
based
upon
the
previous
calculations.
Well,.
P
I
I
I'm
okay
with
the
concept
like
I
said,
steve
with
the
35
foot
or
less
okay,
I'm
not
comfortable
with
it.
I
think
massing
is
an
issue
when
you're
talking
about
larger
structures-
and
you
can
say
it's
interior
to
the
project,
but
it's
not
really
because
if
I'm
standing
on
the
street-
and
I
look
at
these
two
60-foot
buildings-
they're
going
to
be
very
visible
to
me-
and
sometimes
they
need
more
room
to
breathe
between
them
and
I'm
not
talking
about
the
fire
code.
I'm
talking
about
the
visual
aspects
of
these
things.
P
P
We're
in
the
process
of
doing
these
massing
studies
and
the
community
says.
Why
are
you
even
addressing
this
issue,
which
is
a
massing
issue?
I'm
re,
I'm
okay
with
compromising
and
say,
let's
move
forward
with
this
proposal,
which
makes
sense
to
me,
but
it
only
makes
sense
for
35
feet
or
less.
Are
you,
mr
carlson?
Did
you.
T
May
I
interject
a
clarification
quickly:
abby
feely,
you
know
the
the
way
the
code
states,
it
does
say.
Yards
between
buildings
shall
be
provided
for
single
family
detached.
So
this
would
be
applicable
if
you
had
more
than
one
home
on
a
single
lot,
which
wouldn't
be.
It
would
defer
to
the
standard,
seven
and
seven
single
family
attached,
which
is
town
homes,
single
family,
semi,
detached
which
is
duplex.
T
Then
it
goes
to
two
family
and
multi-family,
and
then
the
hotel
and
motel
seems
like
what
I'm
hearing
is
that
maintaining
the
calculation
as
it
currently
stands
for
hotels
and
motels
would
be
applicable
and
then
a
potential
of
setting
a
standard
of
a
15
foot
separation
where
there
are
more
than
one
building
on
a
single
lot
for
those
that
are
35
feet
or
less,
which
would
be
your
standard,
rm
and
rs
districts,
because
that
those
with
the
exception
of
the
rm24,
which
goes
up
to
the
60p.
T
P
O
Could
I
mention
one
more
thing
our
our
we
didn't
initially
want.
We
didn't
we
weren't,
including
hotels
in
motels,
so
if
they
want
to
keep
that
calculation,
I
think,
as
abby
pointed
out,
that's
a
reasonable
compromise.
P
Okay,
thank
you
in
regard
to
27
156
official
schedule
of
district
regulations
and
I'm
on
number
five
footnote
2
removes
30
foot
height
threshold
and
replaced
with
35
for
each
building
height
required
before
required.
Yards
shall
be
increased
by
one
foot
on
the
rm24.
A
For
the
rm24
you
can
have
a
building
height
of
60
feet,
and
then
you
can
request.
Okay,.
P
A
A
T
So
all
our
other
residential
districts,
the
buildings
may
go
up
to
35
and
there
is
no
step
in.
So
what
they're
trying
to
ask
for
here
is
that
this
be
allowed
that
the
step
in
now
start
at
35
instead
of
30,
because
they
couldn't
even
build.
Let's
say
they
were
building
standard
35
feet
in
the
arm,
24
at
30
feet.
T
P
Okay,
all
right,
I
think
that
seems
to
be
fair.
The
next
page
is
item
six.
P
Yes,
so
the
the
visitor
parking-
and
maybe
we
should
have
vic
back
on
on
the
screen,
but
the
visitor
parking
relates
to
neighborhood
protection.
P
You've
got
these
quads
that
that
were
replaced
the
single
homes
and
and
and
it
created
quite
the
parking
problem,
so
much
so
that
we
had
to
create
a
parking
permit
program
not
only
in
soho
but
also,
I
think,
in
ybor
city,
so
so
visitors
visitors
are
an
issue
and-
and
I
don't
see
a
whole
lot
of
justification,
especially
from
a
neighborhood
perspective
on
why
we
should
be
waiving
that
visitor
requirement.
Ms
feli,
do
you
have
any
policy
perspectives
on
this.
T
So
typically,
when
you
have
the
two
units
that
share
a
common
wall
in
the
middle
and
you
have
a
two-car
garage
and
a
two-car
parking
pad-
or
in
some
cases
you
have
a
single
car
garage
with
a
single
space
behind
it
now
you're
asking
for
a
fourth
space,
I
mean
a
fifth
space
to
have
to
be
created
somewhere
on
the
property
and
it
becomes
a
bit
of
a
challenge.
T
So,
on
a
regular
standard
home
there
is
no
visitor.
Then
you
go
to
the
next
step
of
our
type
of
development,
which
would
be
the
duplex
so
on
a
duplex.
T
T
So
it
when
you
have
those
two
units
and
typically
they're
for
sale
products,
let's
say,
for
instance,
councilman
dinkbelter,
you
own
one
unit
and
I
own
the
other
unit
and
by
code
we
owe
a
guess
space.
Where
is
the
guest
phase
going
so
a
lot
of
times?
You
see
it
either
come
before
you
as
a
pure
waiver
of
the
space
or
it's
being
kind
of
dog-legged
in
on
the
side,
and
then
there
now
they
have
a
buffer
reduction
and
they
have
something
else
just
to
accommodate
this
one
additional
space.
T
So
when
you
go
to
town
home,
which
is
then
three
or
more
units-
and
you
have
to
start
to
accommodate
that
visitor-
which
I
really
think
historically
was
the
impetus
behind
what
you
just
referred
to
with
the
quads
and
in
courier
city,
oscar
wanna
and
those
other
areas,
they
really
do
need
visitor.
So
in
those
cases
when
you
have
this
is
another
oddity,
you
know
a
two-car
garage
and
a
two-car
pad.
Then
you
still
owe
a
space,
even
though
in
theory
you're
having
four
spaces
per
unit.
P
Let
me
just
let
me
just
clarify
abby
the
miss
feely
that
the
when
you
talk
about
duplex.
It
makes
it
sound
like
it's
just
a
little
duplex,
but
the
reality
is
a
double
town,
home,
2
000
square
feet.
Each
okay
is
still
in
our
code,
a
duplex,
so
we're
you
know.
P
So
so
you
know
so
somebody
so
now,
instead
of
a
single
family
house
with
two
cars
on
that
same
lot,
very
often
we're
putting
if
the
code
allows
it
or
if
council
allows
it
we're,
putting
two
homes
and
typically
they
are
2,
000
square
feet
or
more
and
and
they
have
to
have
two
spaces
for
themselves,
each
which
would
be
four
spaces
and
and
then
any
visitors
the
minute
they
have
a
party
that
all
flows
out
into
the
neighborhood
and
and
and-
and
we
often
find
that's.
P
T
T
I
I
find
that
if
you
it's
odd,
because
if
you
do
have
a
two-car
garage
and
a
two-car
pad
to
me,
that
is
four
spaces
and
the
guest
is
ultimately
being
accomplished
on
these
on
these
two
units.
If
they
do
have
that
situation,
so
I
I
would
really
defer
to
mr
michelini.
He
is
putting
forth
this
modification
at
your
request.
P
Okay,
well,
he
can,
he
can
speak
to
it
at
the
end.
I
guess
after
I
get
through
my
questions.
The
the
next
item
is
item.
Seven,
I
don't
understand
it.
Ms
doc
or
miss
miss
feely.
I
I
don't.
I
don't
understand
it.
T
I
would
so
right
now
our
code
requires
that
all
front
entrances
face
a
street
or
a
right-of-way,
that
they
don't
face
side
yards
and
they
do
not
face
alleys
and
then
what
you
can
do
is
you
can
come
through
a
design
exception
to
request
that
they
be
able
to
face
a
courtyard
it's
at
at
the
zoning
administrator's
discretion,
and
that
comes
in
as
a
design
exception.
I
believe
what
mr
michellini
is
requesting
here
is
that
if
they
face
a
courtyard,
they
not
have
to
go
through
the
design
exception.
Is
that
correct?
O
It's
it's
really
just
if
you
want
me
to
start
this
discussion,
it's
really
a
design
opportunity
and
it's
it's
historic
in
nature.
If
you
look
at
some
of
the
older
neighborhoods,
where
you
had
a
walk-up
front
door,
and
then
the
units
broke
off
to
the
sides
of
them
when
the
code
was
adopted,
when
the
modification
was
adopted
to
stop
units
from
facing
the
alleys,
I
I
don't
think
it
was
intended
to
stop
courtyard
facing
units.
So
you
would
have
an
interior
courtyard
with
an
address
on
the
outside
that
faced
the
right-of-way.
O
We
reviewed
this
with
the
with
the
fire
marshal's
office,
because
there
seemed
to
be
a
concern
about
how
did
you
identify
the
units
and
they
were
fine
with
that,
and
they
were
also
fine
with
the
access
it.
Just
it's
just
another
design
option
which
is,
as
I
said,
is
historic
in
nature:
it's
not
a
new
concept
and
we
were
trying
to
eliminate
having
to
continue
to
file
design
exceptions
for
for
something
which
we
thought
should
be
allowed
by
wright.
J
D
J
J
And
we're
looking
about
the
new
concept
now,
when
you
have
houses
that
are
joined
by
a
common
wall
I
might
say.
J
So
it
it's
incumbent-
and
I
know
miscalculating
this
in
district
six,
a
lot
of
it
and
I'm
sure
there's
some
in
district
five
all
over.
So
you
have
a
house,
and
I
can
show
you
some
anytime,
you
all
want
it's.
A
new
house
is
built
with
a
car
double
car
garage,
there's
two
cars
in
it.
There's
two
cars
in
the
driveway
and
then
there's
two
cars
behind
them,
which
half
of
it
is
blocking
the
sidewalk.
J
That's
true
and
that's
how
it
is
so,
I'm
not
trying
to
be
a
magician
and
the
facts
are
there
and
we
have
to
look
at
the
facts.
It
meets
a
code
at
the
time
they
buy
the
house,
but
as
soon
as
the
house
is
built
can't
park
in
the
street
they're
narrow-
and
you
have
a
problem
that
we
that
we
didn't
create,
but
we
now
have
to
fix
because
it
met
all
the
requirements
of
the
zoning.
J
P
Mr
chairman,
I
think
I've
only
got
one
one
or
two
more
items:
eight
and
nine,
which
is
the
front
yard
setback
allowed
front
or
it's
at
20
feet
or
block
average.
Whichever
is
less
I'm,
I
think
I'm
okay
with
it,
but
I
just
want
to
get
confirmation
from
his
doc
that
this
went
to
the
east.
Tampa
the
east.
You
know
the
I
don't
know
who
in
east
tampa
would
go
to
that.
P
Maybe
maybe
the
cac
or
I
don't
know
what
other
group
and
also
in
regard
to
west,
tampa
that
that
those
groups
specifically
reviewed
it,
understood
it
and
and
accepted
it
and
and
miss
miss
docker.
Miss
feely
just
give
me
comfort
on
that.
One.
A
Yes,
councilman
dean
felder,
the
request
was
sent
to
both
the
east
tampa
and
west
tampa
cra
for
review
and
comment.
We
didn't
receive
any
concerns
or
any
comments
from
either
cra.
A
I
did
advise
mr
miccolini
to
reach
out
directly
to
the
west
tampa
cra,
because
the
west
temple
overlay
code
had
just
come
through
and
you
may
remember,
we
just
had
the
revisions
to
the
west
temple
overlay
just.
Q
A
A
O
I
talked
to
brenda
thrower
who
had
just
taken
over
that
portion
of
the
cra
and
they
didn't.
They
had
no
objection
as
a
matter
of
fact,
they
had
experienced
the
same
thing
west
tampa
had
when
you
have
very
large,
deep
lots
and-
and
you
had
no
no
other
buildings
on
the
on
the
property,
they
were
happy
with
that.
All
it's
doing
is
establishing
a
standard
front
for
whatever.
D
Machine
you
know,
east
town
has
a
certain
overlay.
Ms
thrower
is
new
there
and
I
don't
recall
hearing
anything
about
anybody
going
to
diane
hart
who
who
originated
those
folks.
They
set
the
east
temple
overlay.
I
don't
recall
any
mean
that
you
or
any
group
went
and
said
before
the
cc
to
explain
to
them
what
you're
doing
and
what
I
see,
gentlemen,
with
all
these
text,
amendments
that
are
coming
before
us
to
change
this
and
that
no
one's
talking
to
these
neighborhoods,
no
one's
really
explaining
what
these
texts
mean.
D
I'm
new
to
really
understand
what
this
probably
initially
texted
me
stuff,
really
is
and
we're
sitting
up
here.
You
know
to
me:
this
is
a
development
concept,
a
developer
concept.
This
is
not
a
community
driven
idea
or
concept,
and
for
me
that,
if
we're
going
to
be
doing
these
we've
got
to
have
some
kind
of
standard
of
policy
within
the
city
as
it
relates
to
these
text
amendments.
These
probably
text
amendments,
because
people
feel
that
people
are
getting
forced
out.
D
D
We
get
all
this
jargon
thrown
at
us
in
that
community
and
they
don't
really
understand
what
they're
buying
into
and
in
the
ninth
hour
like
we
didn't
know,
it
meant
that,
and
I
have
a
problem
with
that.
We
don't
educate
the
public
well
enough
to
understand
what
we
want
them
to
know.
We
just
tell
them
what
we
want
you
to
do,
so,
I'm
just
I'm
just
saying
that
yeah
I
I'm
just
letting
staff
know.
D
Councilman
ghouls
have
a
problem
with
all
these
initiated
tax
amendments
and
communities
not
being
knowledgeable
of
what
is
really
happening
in
their
community
or
any
type
of
forum.
When
I
look
at
the
county
at
times
right
now,
miss
quinmeyer
she's
got
signs
all
over
the
east
side
of
town
that
she's
having
a
town
hall
meeting
about
certain
stuff.
We've
talked
about
that
several
times
her
photos
on
there.
It
gives
a
date
and
the
time
we
do.
None
of
that
here
and
people
don't
know
when
the
meetings
are.
D
They
don't
know
what
we're
even
doing
half
the
time
and
that
needs
to
change.
We
need
to
follow
some
of
the
county's
protocol,
as
as
it
relates
to
these
town
halls,
or
some
of
these
me,
so
people
are
properly
noticed,
and
that
is
a
problem
for
me.
Miss
dingfield
I'll
yield
back
to
you,
sir,
but
that's
my
issue
with
these
probably
texas.
I
I.
P
Appreciate
your
passion
and-
and
I
agree
with
a
lot
of
what
you
said,
mr
chairman.
Unfortunately
I
think
in
regard
to
this
particular
batch
of
of
privately
initiated
text
amendments.
P
P
So
I'm
comfortable
with
with
marching
through
these
on
a
on
an
item
by
item
basis,
one
through
nine,
and
I
don't
since
nobody's
appearing
remotely.
We
can
probably
just
do
it
by
a
quick
vote
instead
of
a
roll
call
vote.
I
think,
but
but
anyway,
just
marching
through
these
one,
one
through
nine
and
then
just
see,
see
where
that
takes
us.
P
But
I
I
hear
what
you're
saying-
and
I
agree
with
you
completely,
mr
chairman,
oh
and
also
in
regard
to
the
public
meeting
that
was
on,
I
guess
june
7th
or
something
we've
all
got
emails
about
that
and
everybody
who
attended
said
it
was
quite
a
disaster
and
turn
and
no
no
fault
of
staff,
but
they
just
said
it
was
a
disaster
in
terms
of
you
know,
really
trying
to
get
get
a
clear
understanding
of
what
what
these,
what
these
things
are
about.
So.
O
All
right
anyone
else
may
be
recognized,
mr
chairman,
yes,
sir,
the
west
tampa
and
the
east
tampa
overlay
districts,
those
those
were
requested
by
the
staff
for
us
to
include
in
our
in
our
presentation
and
and
quite
honestly,
there
was
no
specific
development.
That
was
that
was
pushing
that
or
any
particular
builder.
That
was
pushing
that
it
was
designed
to
straighten
out
the
code
and
establish
what
the
front
yard
setbacks
would
be
to
help
people
not
to
hurt
them.
O
Statement
she
wasn't
involved,
then
she
wasn't
back
with
the
city
at
that
point.
Well
so
who?
Who
asked
you
to
include
those
kathy
coyle
gloria
moreta
this?
This
goes
back.
I'm
telling
these
these
are
four
years
old,
okay,
all
right!
So
I
mean
I
don't.
I
don't
want
to
put
abby
on
the
spot,
but
she
inherited
this
as
she
was
just
coming
back
into
the
city.
P
O
Well,
when,
when
the
west
tampa
overlay
came
through,
it
was
too
late
to
include
this
provision
and
their
and
their
request.
So
the
timing
was
off.
I
mean
we
I
did
personally
talk
to.
I
was
on
a
a
zoom
meeting
with
the
west
tampa
cac.
I
reviewed
this
in
detail
with
them.
They
not
only
had
no
problem
with
it.
They
applauded
it
because
it
solved
a
lot
of
their
problems.
P
D
I
really
wasn't
looking
at
taking
a
motion
of
voter
needs
today,
this
workshop,
because
I
want
to
make
sure
we
had
questions
making
sure
that
the
cras
and
stuff
are
notified
properly
and
making
sure
they
understand.
What's
going
on,
so
I'm
not
inclined
to
take
motions
on
this
today.
I
rather
wait
to
make
sure
we've
had
all
parties
understand
and
also,
I
believe
we
have
discussion
about
text
amendments,
how
we're
going
to
go
forth
on
that
in
the
future.
Correct.
J
K
K
The
re
reconstituted
fan,
because
you
know
ideally
the
neighborhoods-
would
understand
what
the
impact
would
be
to
them
and
we'd
be
able
to
hear
that.
P
All
right,
so
my
motion
is
to
defer
item
what
is
it
item
five
to
august
26,
to
coincide
with
our
the
rest
of
our
pita
discussion.
D
What's
most
about
mr
dingfield,
the
second
by
mr
miranda,
all
in
favor
all
right.
J
D
D
And
break
for
lunch
now
and
get
those
folks
on
the
back
end
when
we
get
back
here
or
we
like
to
take
those
three
or
four
people
now.
D
Yeah
chairman,
yes,
sir,
you
recognized.
G
D
Be
two
o'clock
I
mean
the
rest
of
our
general
items
shouldn't
be
too
too
long.
Seven
and
eight
got
a
few
questions
for
us,
so
those
shouldn't
take
very
very
long,
so
we
should
get
to
get
our
evening
meeting
of
time.
So.
D
My
understanding
mary,
mr
miranda's
aide,
said
that
those
folks
wouldn't
have
a
problem
with
coming
back
that
correct
two.
A
Thank
you
chairman.
Yes,
we
were
just
inquiring
about
your.
S
Speak
on
item
number
nine:
we
do
have
one
lady
who
will
be
catching
a
plane
at
three
o'clock,
but
we
want
to
accommodate
your
schedule
and
and
your
other
items
that
you
have
so
we're
just
just
wanting
to
get
the
latest
on
the
schedule.
So
we
can
sort
of.