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From YouTube: TCC 12/1/22
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C
I
I
think
I
encourage
everybody
to
read
Justin
Garcia's
article
yesterday
on
Creative
loafing
and
the
follow-up
and
we've
seen
a
lot
of
information
coming
out
that,
although
it
may
be
technically
accurate,
it's
not
exactly
accurate
and
maybe
misleading
and
so
I
would
I
would
encourage
in
the
report.
That's
coming
back
that
that
we'd
be
transparent
and
accurate,
and
the
information
that's
given.
Thank
you.
Thank.
B
You
agenda
item
number
five,
keep
that.
Thank
you
very
much
agenda
item
number
six
I
have
spoken
with
Vic
bday,
head
of
the
mobility
department
and
I
have
had
my
questions
answered
is
any
other
member
board.
Member
excuse
me,
council.
Member,
want
to.
D
Have
a
situation
when
you
pass
a
zoning
and
you
have
to
have
those
whales,
I
guess
and
what
happens
is
in
good
faith,
the
individual,
who
has
that
doesn't
do
anything
he
complies,
but
he
sells
it
to
someone
else,
but
there's
no
Tracy
mechanism
as
to
how
that
goes
back
to
the
individual
who
bought
it
understand.
That's
what
we
have
to
fix.
B
Yes,
sir,
and
I
I
probably
will
make
a
motion
later
on
today
that
we
have
this
on
a
workshop,
where
we
can
actually
ask
mobility
and
legal
to
come
in
and
let's
see
what
can't
be
done.
If,
if
the
city
can
take
a
role
in
this,
yes,
because
it
won't
hurt
that.
A
A
If
you
are
going
to
propose
this
for
a
workshop
item,
I'm
absolutely
I
think
that's
a
much
better
time
so
that
we
don't
spend
time
today
on
it.
So
I'm
I'm,
yes,.
B
Okay,
when
does
when
does
the
workshop
right
after
the
first
of
the
year?
This
gives
60
days.
A
B
E
B
Will
entertain
a
motion
third
motion
made
by
councilman
Miranda
seconded
by
councilman
Maniscalco,
all
in
favor.
F
C
Like
to
I
sent
a
memo
on
this
I'd
like
to
continue
this
to
January
17
19,
two
two
reasons:
one
is
because
it
doesn't
mention
the
word
pure
and
people
are
surprised
about
it
and
then
yeah.
G
B
A
Yes,
I
know
that
we
have
actual
community
members
here
to
talk
about
this
today,
so
I.
The
other
issue
with
this
is
I
read
the
memo
and
it
does.
This
does
not
say
pure,
but
we
had
agreed
to
stop
calling
this
pure.
So
what
I
don't
disagree
that
we
need
to
have
some
type
of
wordings
that
the
public
knows?
Do
you
want
to
keep
the
pure
label
or
would
you
prefer
to
do
a
different
label?
I.
B
C
Don't
remember
changing
the
label
on
it,
but
this
one
is,
you
know
this
is
the
city's
excuse
for
doing
pure
so
and
I?
C
Think
the
public
knows
the
city
in
years
past
Lobby
to
get
this
passed
so
I
I
think
we
just
for
transparency,
reason
I,
think
we
should
call
it
pure
because
it's
related
to
Pure,
but
then
we
and
I'd
like
to
hear
from
the
public
today,
but
there
were
people
who,
who
last
night
contacted
me
and
said
we
would
like
to
talk
about
it,
but
now
we
we've
already
scheduled
other
things.
So
if
we
knew
that
it
was
pure,
we
would
have
flagged
it
and
talked
about
it.
A
C
Yeah
I
think
obviously
we're
going
to
end
up
into
into
deeper
discussions
about
pure
sometime
soon
and
I
would
just
encourage
my
colleagues
to
look
at
all
the
legal,
Avenues
and
and
lobbying
Avenues.
We
can
to
stop
it
because
I've
talked
to
people
around
the
state
and
there's
there's
no
reason
why
Tampa
should
be
doing
it,
but
this
seems
to
be
moving
forward
in
a
very
suspicious
way.
Thank
you.
Miss
Duncan,
I.
H
Guess
we
were
perfectly
interested
in
accommodating
the
council's
interests
and
requests.
I
would
just
say
on
the
labeling
of
pure.
It
was
made
very
clear
by
the
community
and
some
of
the
council
anyway,
that,
pure
as
it
was
presented
previously
in
terms
of
a
contract
with
certain
framework
and
parameters
and
time
frame,
was
no
longer
going
to
be
active
in
that
state.
What's
active
in
that
state
is
the
remainder
of
the
contract
dollars
to
address
the
Motions
that
were
made
by
this
body.
H
However,
we
are
still
as
responsible
experts
in
the
field
going
to
pursue
and
research
and
study
and
coordinate
with
other
agencies
and
all
those
other
due
diligence,
actions
of
making
sure
we
have
a
safe,
reliable
water
supply,
environmental
conditions
for
our
Water
Resource
and
all
those
related
aspects.
So
with
that,
we
would
suggest
that
pure
already
has
a
certain
connotation
and
a
certain
sense
of
understanding.
H
With
the
very
little
public
engagement
we
were
able
to
do
so,
we
would
recommend
just
something
a
little
more
generic
and
if
that
is
now
known
amongst
the
stakeholders
and
the
interesting
parties
that
that
label
is
representing
these
water
type
of
conversations.
That
might
be
a
better
way
to
go.
But
we're
willing
to
do
whatever
the
council
would
would
request.
I
Thank
you,
chairman
Mr
Duncan.
When
are
we
going
to
bring
this
to
a
close?
What
are
we
going
to
say
this
is
the
project.
This
is
what
we
believe
we've
heard
from
the
public.
These
are
the
choices.
What
does
council
want
to
do
when
is
that,
so
we
can
get
the
pure
name
whatever
we're
going
to
do
so
we
can
move
on
with
this
water
situation.
It's
been
living
forever,
I
want
to
know.
I
H
The
activity
that's
occurring
now
is
is
working
on
the
various
motions
that
came
out
in
September,
with
the
major
one
being
in
February,
a
workshop
on
the
work
that
our
consultant
is
doing
in
concert
with
the
city
and
other
agencies
to
respond
to
that
motion,
we
do
not
have
a
contract
opportunity
to
take
things
any
further,
because
Council
has
not
approved
anything
further
for
us.
So
that
is
the
landing
point
for
now
in
terms
of
a
public
discussion.
The
workshop
in
September.
D
D
Project-
and
the
point
is
that,
if
somebody
was
to
do
that,
it'd
be
drastically
impossible
to
understand
that
the
public
understand
what
that
individual,
he
or
she
did
in
a
higher
office
than
we
are
to
do
something
like
that.
That
would
be
inappropriately
at
any
time
number
one
number
two.
Is
it
related
not
related?
Well,
if
it's
water,
everything
is
related
but
pure
is
not
involved
in
this.
It's
like
everybody
in
my
family
had
the
last
name
of
Miranda.
They
don't
and
I
have
a
50-some
cousins
and
they
all
have
different
last
names.
D
That
doesn't
mean
they're
mean
that
means
they're
related
to
me.
The
same
thing
here
so
I
try
to
make
things
so
that
we
understand
what's
going
on
and
I'm
just
giving
a
classic
example,
if
it
doesn't
have
the
funding
for
Pure,
it
cannot
be
pure
because
you
cannot
transfer
money
from
something
that's
approved
to
something
that's
not
approved
by
this
Council
and
to
be
afraid
of
something
we're
going
to
be
stalemated
in
other
water
agencies.
They
think
about
15,
20
and
30
and
40
years
away.
D
The
plants
are
broke,
they
have
all
those
plantings
and
you
just
got
to
go.
Listen
to
them.
They
come
up
on
channels.
Three
I
know
that
everyone
doesn't
have
channel
3,
because
that's
a
non-area
lift
you
don't
need
the
Internet
or
dvg
or
whatever
it
is
that
they
get
on.
So
these
things
are
explained
in
those
meetings
very
carefully
and
very
thoughtfully,
and
they
understand
the
public
should
understand
exactly
what
it
is.
So
I'm
not
saying
to
vote
it
up
or
down
it's
up
to
each
individual's
council
members.
D
C
I
can
make
a
motion
at
the
end
to
come
up
with
a
different
label
and
maybe
the
public
what
I
would
call
it
toilet
tap,
but
maybe
somebody
else
will
have
a
different
label
that
they'll
suggest
the.
The
reason
why
this
is
tied
to
pure
is
that
over
the
last
three
and
a
half
years,
we've
disproven
every
argument.
The
water
department
made
for
this
project
and
the
only
one
left
is
that
their
quote
unquote:
forced
to
do
it
by
the
by
the
state.
C
When
I
contacted
the
state,
they
said,
that's
rubbish.
The
state
responded
now
negatively
in
what
I
believe
to
be
a
very
suspicious
way.
We
can
talk
about
that
in
January
and
and
so
what
we
need
to
do
is
is
figure
out
how
to
stop
this
project
from
another.
The
temp,
as
you
know,
Tampa
Bay
water
has
a
20-year
plan,
a
10-year
Supply
and
we're
a
part
of
that.
C
We're
not
going
to
need
50
MGD
for
100
years,
and
it
doesn't
make
sense
to
spend
the
money
today
for
something
we're
not
going
to
need
for
100
years.
So
we
can
talk
about
that
in
January,
but
it's
it's
tied
to
Pure
only
or
whatever
we
call
the
project
only
because
this
is
going
to
be
the
justification
that
we
have
to
move
forward
by
state
law.
But
we
have
a
legal
team.
C
We
have
a
lobbying
team,
although
the
lobbyists
of
the
city
have
been
working
in
favor
of
this
in
the
past,
we
as
city
council,
should
have
some
influence
to
either
stop
them
from
doing
that
or
ask
them
to
give
us
an
exception,
because
it's
it's
crazy
that
we
would
put
this
on
the
backs
of
ours
rate
payers.
Thank
you.
Miss
Duncan,.
H
I
would
just
like
to
say
that
we
have
worked
very
hard
to
be
as
transparent
as
we
can
consider.
We
don't
have
funding
for
a
public
engagement
plan
to
have
really
true
proper,
comprehensive
public
engagement.
Our
public
engagement
is
very
limited
to
a
few
people
that
take
their
precious
free
time
and
get
involved
with
these
topics,
and
we
appreciate
that,
but
as
that
is
not
representing
the
entire
city,
a
Viewpoint
of
things,
because
we
haven't
had
a
chance
to
have
that
public
engagement,
I
would
also
just
like
to
say
I
just
take
exception.
H
A
I'm
I'm
personally
fine
hearing
it
today,
I'm
also
if
council
member
Carlson
really
wants
it
in
January,
I'm
happy
to
do
January.
The
the
only
thing
I
asked
I
spoke
to
Ms
Duncan
last
night,
and
the
only
thing
I
asked
is
that
the
actual
literature,
that's
that
that
we
sent
to
the
the
state
and
that
the
state
sent
back
to
us
be
added
to
sire,
and
you
said
that
you
could
do
that
at
some
point
today.
Yeah.
H
So
that
is
definitely
physically
possible.
The
concern
I
had
after
we
spoke
last
night
is
that
this
is
really
a
verbal
administrative
update.
There
wasn't
any
protocol
or
process
that
this
type
of
thing
would
be
loaded
in
sire
and
because
we
had
personally
emailed
the
parties
that
were
interested
in
this
topic
that
this
just
didn't
really
even
come
into
the
thought
process
of
doing
that,
I
would
just
say
we
need
to
be
thoughtful
about
what
is
our.
H
Where
do
we
draw
that
line,
and
what
is
our
process
for
something
reaching
the
level
of
being
to
put
in
desire?
And
how
do
we
all
know
what
that
is,
so
that
we
don't
have
it?
One
interpretation
and
Council
has
another,
so
I
haven't
put
the
items
inside
or
just
because
I
wanted
to
have
that
opportunity
to
offer
that
thought
of
council
having
where
do
we
draw
that
line?
I
don't
mean
that
in
a
negative
way.
Just
where
is
that
point
of
decision
to
put
in
or
not.
A
A
D
B
B
K
Eight,
if
we
can
Mr
chairman
I'm
sorry
to
interrupt,
but
before
we
do
that
just
so,
the
public
is
clear.
This
being
a
staff
report
council's
protocol
is
for
that
to
be
heard
during
upfront
during
general
public
comments.
So
if
you
wish
to
speak
to
that
particular
item
the
time
to
do,
that
is
public
comment.
Thank
you,
sir.
C
Much
gospel
across
just
one
last
comment
that
the
primary
reason,
one
of
the
reasons
why
I
wanted
to
deferred
is
because
it
didn't
say
pure
and
we
can
resolve
the
naming
issue,
but
the
second
was
that
those
documents
were
not
attached
to
sire
and
if
there's
an
official
document,
that's
coming
from
dep,
where
some
some
board
or
group
is
going
to
officially
reject
our
application.
Then
we
should.
We
should
hold
this
until
that
comes
right.
Now
we
it's
already
circulating
a
public
record
that
we
got
a
couple
emails
from
a
person
and
really
that's
all.
C
A
It
is
coming
the
we
were
supposed
to
have
the
17
questions
from
the
friends
of
the
river
answer
today
and
that's
been
continued
to
January
19th,
which
is
why
I
know
you
wanted
to
continue
this
to
January
19th.
Can
we
add
that
as
well
to
January
19th?
So,
can
we
hear
the
report
and
then
be
able
to
talk
about
it
on
the
19th?
Is
that
a
compromise
we
could
do
I'll.
C
And
it's
a
written
report
number
eight
I
would
like
to
I
would
like
to
bring
this
back
on
April
16th
for
an
update.
F
B
A
B
A
B
O
I
With
all
due
respect,
we've
we've
kicked
this
item
down
the
road
on
numerous
occasions.
Somebody
just
I'm
overseeing
circumstances,
but
I'd
like
to
bring
this
hopefully
to
a
closure.
It
needs
to
be
brought
to
a
closure.
I
To
Shelby
mean
you
had
a
discussion
in
the
back,
sir,
with
the
discussion
we
had
I
want
to
make
sure
that
you
include
our
discussion.
Yes,
in
reference
to,
there
was
a
motion
put
on
the
floor
back
a
while
ago
and
I
know
you're
a
humble
guy,
but
sometimes
you
can
be
humble,
but
you
need
to
be
forthcoming
to
what
needs
to
be
done
so
I'm,
hoping
that
you'll
discuss
that
issue
that
was
put
before
with
us
before.
I
K
I
B
You
judge
item
number,
14
I,
believe
there
is
a
ask
for.
B
There
is
a
motion
to
agenda
on
the
16th
to
continue
until
January
19th,
so
moved
ocean
made
by
councilman.
Mascot
was
seconded
by
councilman
Miranda,
all
in
favor
and
then
for
agenda
item
number
17
a
request
until
February,
2nd.
I
I
Did
speak
with
Miss
Hills
and
reference
to
this
item,
because
I
was
going
to
want
to
talk
about
this
today,
but
after
getting
getting
her
explanation,
I'll
go
ahead
and
support
the
continuance
for
the
60
days.
Okay,.
B
F
B
Q
Good
morning,
good
morning
my
name
is
Justin:
tramble
I'm,
the
executive
director
of
Tampa
Bay
Water
keeper
were
a
non-profit
that
fights
for
clean
water
and
not
only
in
Hillsborough
County,
but
Pinellas
County.
We
represent
the
community's
right
to
clean
water
I'm
here
today
to
discuss
the
item
that
you
guys
were
just
talking
about.
There.
Q
Tampa
Bay
Water
keeper
appreciates
the
the
questions
regarding
the
the
discharge
project.
We
appreciate
the
strict
scrutiny
that
the
community
in
organizations
have
provided
you
all,
but
big
picture.
The
city
of
Tampa
currently
discharges
a
Piney
points
crisis
worth
of
nutrients
a
year
into
Hillsborough
Bay.
We
support
the
conversation
regarding
ways
to
largely
reduce
or
eliminate
the
average
of
50
million
gallons
of
treated
reclaimed
water
being
discharged
daily.
So
we
support
the
conversation
and
we
appreciate
the
conversation
eliminating
or
significantly
reducing.
Q
R
F
R
A
conservation
chair
for
the
Tampa
Bay,
Sierra
Club
and
member
of
the
pure
stakeholders
group
talking
item
seven
and
thank
you
Justin.
We
do
agree,
we
don't
we.
We
want
clean
water
going
into
the
bay.
Don't
disagree
with
that.
What
we
want
to
talk
about
today
is
the
state
mandate
that
mandates
us
to
take
all
of
our
waste
water
and
do
something
else
with
it.
R
Tampa's
reclaimed
Wastewater
provides
a
valuable,
fresh
water
flow
to
the
Tampa
Bay
estuary,
replacing
some
of
the
fresh
water
that
Tampa
and
Tampa
Bay
Water
withdraw
from
the
Hillsborough
River
and
Tampa
bypass
Canal
for
drinking
water.
However,
as
you'll
hear
today,
we
are
discussed
in
Sanibel
64,
which
requires
the
elimination
of
surface
water.
Discharges
has
a
big
gap
with
unintended
consequences.
R
R
R
R
S
City
staff
recently
submitted
a
request
to
the
Florida
Department
of
Environmental
Protection
to
determine
if
discharges
from
the
city's
Howard
F
current
Advanced
wastewater
treatment
plant
provide
ecological
benefits
to
Tampa
Bay.
With
that
request,
staff
submitted
a
20-page
technical
report,
I
prepared
on
that
subject
and
had
previously
submit
the
city
staff
for
their
review.
S
The
dep
denied
their
quest
to
recognize
the
ecological
benefits
of
discharge
from
the
city's
awt
plant
to
Tampa
Bay
in
a
short
email
response,
DPP,
replied
and
I
quote
the
ecological
benefit,
provision
and
Senate
Bill
64
addresses
water
quantity
through
implementation
of
minimum
flow
and
minimum
level
MFL
requirements.
Marine
discharges
do
not
have
an
MFL
classification.
S
This
finding
by
dep
reflects
a
major
shortcoming
in
the
natural
resource
protection
language
in
Senate
Bill
64.,
even
though
a
minimum
flow
rule
has
not
been
established
specifically
for
Tampa
Bay
freshwater
flow
is
critical
to
maintaining
the
water
quality
in
ecology
and
biological
productivity
of
the
Bay.
The
fact
that
the
city's
discharge
is
located
on
seven
Channel,
which
dep
categorizes
as
a
marine
water,
does
not
negate
the
importance
of
this
discharge
to
Tampa
Bay.
S
Accordingly,
we've
prepared
a
draft
document
and
recommended
language
that
can
be
added
to
the
statute.
To
allow
for
more
a
more
comprehensive
assessment
of
the
beneficial
effects
of
surface
discharges
to
water
bodies,
including
estuaries,
such
as
Tampa
Bay,
we
would
be
happy
to
share
our
document
with
you
and
discuss
the
straightforward
language
we
have
proposed
that
can
remedy
this
problem.
We
hope
that,
after
careful
consideration,
the
city
can
support
our
recommended
addition
to
this
statute
and
your
legislative
agenda
for
2023.
S
B
B
H
I
Make
sure
we
get
that
he
is
right.
The
legislative
session
is
coming
up
here
of
the
local
body
here
and,
as
you
review
that,
probably
before
the
workshop,
maybe
you
can
get
that
to
our
legislative
people
here
to
give
that
to
the
delegation
to
look
at
because
maybe
maybe
the
rule
is
there,
but
maybe
just
like
here.
Sometimes
we
pass
things.
C
I
I
want
to
say
thank
you.
First
of
all
for
all
the
hard
work
you
put
into
the
the
letter
that
was
sent
and
I.
Thank
you
also
to
Chuck
Weber
and
staff
for
submitting
your
letter
and
when
I
mentioned
the
word
suspicious
a
little
while
ago,
I
I
didn't
mean
to
infer
that
something
was
happening
at
the
water
department,
but
we
know
in
the
past
that
the
city,
lobbying
team
and
public
affairs
team
has
worked
in
favor
of
this
and
they've
told
me
out
right
that
they're
in
favor
of
and
not
against
it.
C
They
were
very
reluctant
to
allow
the
Water
Department
to
send
out
that
your
memo
and
so
I
think
we
we've
so
far
had
multiple
votes
of
city
council
against
this
project
and
by
now,
if
the
city
was
operating
as
one
entity,
the
lobbying
team
and
legal
team
would
have
been
looking
for
solutions
to
try
to
stop
this
and
and
they
haven't,
unfortunately,
neither
one
really
reports
to
city
council.
We
need
to
do
everything
we
can
to
stop
it.
C
What
about
cities
and
counties
that
don't
have
Rivers
it
is
it's
a
it
that
that's
language
that
looks
like
it
was
put
in
there
by
Tampa
lobbyists
years
ago
and
I
know
that
Tampa
lobbies
were
there,
because
I
have
lobbies
in
Tallahassee
that
talk
to
legislators
after
they
went
through
and
talked
to
them
and
I
can
get
my
lobbies
to
go
talk
to
dep
and
find
out
if
anybody
from
the
city
has
reached
out
to
them
in
the
last
month,
but
we
need
to
work
together
as
an
entity.
C
S
Rebuttal
not
a
rebuttal,
but
just
one
follow-up
point
that
I
didn't
have
time
in
my
three
minutes:
I
want
to
emphasize.
If
we
recognize
there
are
ecological
benefits
of
the
discharge
of
Tampa
Bay
that
does
not
preclude
pursuit
of
reclaimed.
Water
projects
reclaimed
water
projects
could
be
evaluated
for
the
Quan
that
you
need.
You
can
say,
that's
sort
of
being.
You
know
whatever
the
quantity
is,
but
it
means
where
the
discharge
is
occurring
now
is
actually
okay,
okay
and
it
can
still
pursue
reclaimed
water
projects
individually
on
a
case-by-case
basis.
S
Similarly,
if
the
Tampa
Bay
Estuary
program
says
we
need
to
do,
you
know
more
nutrient
reduction
that
could
be
pursued
amending
the
statute,
as
we
suggest
what
it
does
do.
It
gets
a
city
out
from
this
Hammer.
If
you
have
to
do
something
with
50
MGD
in
10
years,
it
allows
more
operational
flexibility
to
review
reclaimed
water
projects
on
a
case-by-case
basis.
Thank
you.
Thank.
A
D
Campbell
spoke
about
the
amount
of
nutrients
going
into
the
bay.
Can
you
tell
us
the
amount
of
tonnage
that
you're
an
expert?
What
goes
in
there
I
said
something.
Maybe
I
was
wrong
incorrect
when
I
said
it
and
I
just
want
some
clarity
in
what
I
said
how
many
tons
of
nutrients
go
into
the
bay
every
year.
S
I
do
not
know
that
precisely
I've
read
those
documents
and
I've
actually
report
I've
got
has
Graphics
of
nutrients
or
nitrogen
loaded
to
the
bay,
and
one
thing
we
should
all
be
very
happy
about.
Tampa
Bay,
Long
Term
has
been
improving
in
large
part
to
the
advanced
wastewater
treatment
at
the
Howard
F
current
plant.
So
amending
this
legislate
would
not
preclude
nutrient
reduction
strategies
either.
That
could
be
still
pursued
if
necessary.
In.
S
T
Good
morning,
good
morning,
I'm
Phil
Compton
With
Friends
of
the
Hillsborough
River,
but
today
I'm
sharing
with
you
some
comments
from
Sierra
clubs,
Vice
chair,
Gary,
Gibbons
who's,
also
the
chair
of
our
political
committee,
who's
unable
to
attend
today's
city
council
meeting
due
to
a
scheduled
conflict.
But
Gary
wants
me
to
tell
you
that
I
have
practiced
law
for
more
than
43
years
and
each
year
after
the
legislative
session
attorneys
need
to
review
the
session
laws
to
see
what
changes
have
been
made
to
existing
law.
T
T
Quite
frankly,
Senate
Bill
64
was
an
ambitious,
one-size-fits-all
attempt
to
deal
with
an
extremely
complex
issue
requiring
utilities
to
safely
repurpose
Wastewater
for
beneficial
uses
across
a
state
that
is
too
large
and
too
diverse
in
its
geology
and
its
topography
to
allow
a
one-size-fits-all
approach
in
our
in
one
of
our
many
stakeholder
meetings
with
City
staff.
Over
the
past
two
years,
former
City
Attorney
John
McLean
describes
Senate
Bill
64
as
a
solution.
Looking
for
a
problem,
well,
I
agree
with
jazz
characterization
of
Senate
Bill
64.
T
It
is
now
law
and
the
time
has
come
to
us
that
its
omissions
be
corrected,
be
fixed
by
corrective
legislation
that
will
revise
it
appropriately.
Sid
Flannery,
who
has
devoted
his
life's
work
as
a
scientist
at
Swift
Mud
and
who
is
a
renowned
expert
on
minimum
flows
on
the
Hillsborough
River
and
the
effect
of
those
flows
on
esterine
Waters
such
as
Tampa
Bay,
has
recognized
serious
shortcomings
in
the
language
Senate
Bill
64,
which
need
to
be
revised
through
new
legislation.
T
Senate
Bill
64
was
hurriedly
passed
in
2021
and,
as
we
all
have
to
deal
with
its
approaching
deadlines,
it
is
more
important
than
ever
to
quickly
address
the
omissions
in
the
current
law.
Mr
Flannery
has
not
only
identified
the
problems
with
Senate
Bill
64..
He
has
also
drafted
Curative
language
for
the
statute,
to
fix
a
glaring
omission
and
to
provide
much
needed
flexibility
for
the
City
of
Tampa
to
deal
with
his
his
own
site-specific
issues,
which
are
completely
different
than
those
being
dealt
with
in
Miami
or
the
Panhandle.
T
The
stakeholders
have
discussed
the
need
to
seek
revisions
of
Senate
Bill
64
with
City
staff.
On
many
occasions
today
we,
the
stakeholders,
ask
city
council
to
make
a
formal
request
to
the
mayor
to
have
these
revisions
to
Senate.
Bill
64
become
the
top
priority
for
the
city
of
Tampa's
lobbyists
to
seek
passage
of
the
language
proposed
by
Mr
Flannery
and
the
stakeholders,
which
we
see
as
a
win-win
for
everyone
in
the
city
of
Tampa.
T
U
T
You
very
much
and
my
my
ad
please
years
ago,
I
worked
with
Jan
McLean
for
fertilizer
ordinance
here,
which
has
been
extremely
successful,
and
that
was
part
of
the
Sierra
Club
Statewide
effort
to
get
fertilizer
ordinances
passed
in
over
a
hundred
cities
and
counties.
But
we
never
said
that
the
State
of
Florida
should
have
one
fertilizer
type
of
rule,
because
the
state
is
too
big
and
diverse,
and
in
some
places
it
wouldn't
make
sense
same
thing's
true
here.
Thank
you.
If.
T
T
J
Good
morning
my
name
is
Carol
camisa
I'm
here
as
a
member
of
the
stakeholders
group,
but
also
representing
the
League
of
Women
Voters
of
Hillsborough
County.
My
interest
is
in
in
engaging
the
public
in
issues
policy
and
and
so
on,
that
that
impact
people's
lives
to
do
that.
J
We
educate
people
we're
also
interested
and
I'm
and
I'm
very
pleased
that
this
body
reflects
an
interest
in
transparency,
accurately
accuracy
of
information
going
to
the
public
and
so
on
and
I
I'm
sorry,
I
kind
of
water
under
the
bridge,
bad
choice
of
words,
but
I
I
feel
it's
necessary
to
correct.
The
stakeholders.
Group
has
done
an
awful
lot
in
terms
of
public
education,
and
we
have
reached
out
to
a
lot
of
different
groups.
J
I
would
venture
to
say
that
before
the
the
September
city
council
meeting,
we
did
more
in
a
month's
time
with
no
money
reaching
out
to
community
groups
that
has
been
done
to
date
with
regard
to
this
project
and
I
have
yet
to
hear
any
accountability
in
terms
of
the
funding
that
was
was
given
to
the
water
department
for
two
specific
tasks
under
pure,
one
of
which
was
public
education.
So
I
I
just
feel
like
it's
important
to
correct
that
record.
J
J
So
we
are
pursuing
some
alternative
language
to
fix
that
as
you've
heard
from
my
my
colleagues.
So
the
current
law
under
Senate
Bill
64,
doesn't
really
address
environmental
issues
related
to
treated
Wastewater
discharges
into
the
bay,
and
that's
not
something-
that's
well
understood
by
City
residents,
they're
concerned
about
how
much
they're
going
to
pay
when
they
open
the
tap
that
it's
safe
but
I,
think
you
would
agree
that
it's
really
your
job
to
understand
those
kind
of
things
and
to
represent
Tampa's
best
interests.
J
So
we
talked
about
previous
comments
that
this
is
a
rather
blunt
instrument,
a
one-size-fits,
all
kind
of
approach
that
doesn't
really
meet
the
needs
of
Tampa.
We
need
more
flexibility.
We
need
to
be
able
to
adapt
to
specific
local
conditions
and
that
are
different
in
different
parts
of
the
state.
J
I
I
further
sort
of
object
that
that
this
is
kind
of
a
an
unfunded
mandate
out
of
Tallahassee.
That
tells
you
to
fix
something
and
there's
no
funding
involved.
So
the
legislative
proposal
for
which
we're
seeking
your
support
would
allow
Tampa
the
flexibility
to
meet
the
intent
of
SB
64,
while
allowing
for
necessary
flexibility
and
adaptability.
W
Hi,
my
name
is
Carol
Ann,
Bennett
I'm,
a
lifelong
resident
of
Tampa.
The
addition
to
Florida
Statutes
that
we
are
recommending
will
allow
recognition
of
the
benefits
of
our
discharges
to
Tampa
Bay
and
will
not
preclude
the
evaluation
of
other
reclaimed
water
projects.
Instead,
it
would
give
the
city
much
greater
flexibility
to
evaluate
these
projects
in
quantities
that
are
needed
that
are
cost
effective,
that
protect
the
Water
Resources
in
the
natural
environment
and
are
in
the
best
public
interest.
W
This
is
much
different
than
requiring
the
city
to
eliminate
and
reroute
50
million
gallons
of
discharge
a
day
in
the
next
10
years,
which
the
current
statute
does
our
additions
to
the
statute
will
remedy
this
dilemma.
We
are
asking
city
council
to
make
a
formal
request
to
the
mayor,
to
make
this
the
top
priority
for
the
city's
lobbyists
and
to
seek
passage
of
the
language
proposed
by
Mr
Flannery
and
the
stakeholders,
which
we
see
as
a
win-win
for
everyone
in
the
city
of
Tampa.
W
Let's
take
a
proactive
step
and
fix
this
statute,
so
the
city
will
have
the
flexibility
it
needs
to
explore
all
alternate
all
alternatives
for
the
safe
reuse
of
its
treated
Wastewater
and
I,
like
Carol,
take
exception
to
the
characterization
of
the
stakeholders
as
being
just
a
few
people.
We
all
represent
organizations
that
amount
to
tens
of
thousands
of
people.
We've
all
gone
through
the
processes
that
these
organizations
require
to
be
able
to
represent
them
in
front
of
you.
W
I
am
the
fan
representative
in
the
city's
pure
stakeholders,
group
fans,
members
and
all
Tampa
residents
are
very
very
concerned
about
the
safety
of
their
water
and
how
much
it
costs
there
was
a
recent
unanimous
fan
vote
to
that
effect.
You
all
also
received
many
emails
expressing
the
unanimous
concerns
of
the
citizens.
W
Charlie
probably
remembers
that
too
and
I
remember
looking
at
the
beautiful
houses
some
at
that
time
were
actually
abandoned,
but
the
beautiful
houses
that
were
on
Bayshore
Bay
on
Bayshore
Boulevard
and
wondering
how
do
they
live
with
this?
How
how
can
they
do
this,
and
maybe
that's
why
so
many
houses
were
abandoned,
so
we've
come
a
long
way
and
we
have
made
advances
in
our
ecological
benefits
to
the
Bay.
Thank
you.
W
M
It
refers
to
an
absence
of
real
or
perceived
influence
from
law
enforcement,
political
actors
and
other
special
interests
looking
to
affect
the
operations
of
the
civilian
oversight
agency.
In
order
to
maintain
legitimacy,
an
agency
must
be
able
to
demonstrate
the
extent
and
impact
of
its
independence
from
the
overseen
law
enforcement
agency,
especially
in
the
face
of
high
profile
issues
or
incidents,
and
so
with
that
I
want
to
address
the
specific
language
that
has
been
presented
to
you
by
the
city
attorney's
office,
for
this
proposed
ordinance
change
or
proposed
Charter
change.
M
The
first
modification
would
be
to
provide
that
the
citizens
review
board
is
the
body
that
has
sole
authority
to
hire
and
fire
its
own
attorney,
and
the
second
modification
is
to
delete
language
from
the
end
of
that
proposed
sentence
that
is
unnecessary
and
potentially
confusing
as
detailed
in
the
email.
The
language
is
off.
M
P
N
P
P
P
P
You
know
they
bet
they
gotta
retention,
they
call
it
retention.
Poem
I,
didn't
build
my
height
and
find
property
out
there,
which
they
took
from
black
folks
and
try
to
put
retention
pumps
I
want
to
know
something.
Why
don't
y'all
fill
in
those
retention
pumps
and
let
me
build
a
nice
Convention
Center
out
there.
You
all
can
do
it,
because
if
y'all
got
any
power
at
all,
y'all
can
do
everything
else.
Y'all
be
able
to
do
that.
P
And
you
know
I
just
have
so
much
to
say,
but
when
I
get
up
here,
I
forget
about
it,
but
you
know
what
we
got
to
learn
to
respect
one
another
and
don't
just
respect
certain
people
because
of
the
color.
They
came
respect
all
people
that
we'd
be
able
to
do
what
we
need
to
do
and
you
all
need
to
do
what
y'all
need
to
do
for
us.
I
know
y'all,
but
I'm.
Not
gonna.
P
Call
me
back
up
here,
because
y'all
don't
want
to
hear
what
I'm
saying
but
I
give
God
the
glory
for
everything.
That's
the
way.
I
am
and
God
has
been
mighty
good
to
all
of
us
and
I
just
want
to
praise
him
everywhere.
I
go.
We
have
a
you
know,
just
like
I
said:
I
want
to
talk
about
so
much
I
want
to
tell
y'all
to
bring
any
Bell
on
me.
I
mean
y'all,
don't
want
to
hear
what
I
got
to
say.
P
X
Morning,
Council
good
morning,
my
name
is
Gretchen
Catherine
I'm,
a
Tampa
native
I'm,
also
an
attorney
and
a
wrongful
conviction.
Specialist
I
am
here
to
speak
on
agenda
19,
the
independent
Council
for
the
citizens
review
board
the
citizens.
Review
Board
needs
a
council
that
is
not
associated
with
the
city
due
to
conflict
of
interest.
Even
if
wholeheartedly
the
City
attorney
assigned
to
the
citizens
review
board
stays
away
from
the
other
tasks
of
of
its
office.
X
It
still
gives
the
public
perception
of
the
city,
the
attorney,
who
is
working
for
the
citizens
review
board,
also
working
for
the
city.
It's
a
conflict
of
interest
to
have
the
same
office
on
both
sides
of
an
investigation
and
as
an
example.
The
city
attorney's
office
recently
settled
the
lawsuit
for
the
death
of
Arthur
Greene,
so
to
have
an
attorney
from
that
office.
X
Work
both
on
the
settlement
protecting
the
city's
interests
and
the
amount
of
money
that
the
city
is
going
to
pay
out
for
his
death
to
also
be
the
same
office
that
works
with
the
citizens
review
board,
which
is
tasked
on
investigating
whether
or
not
Tampa
Police
Department
acted
properly.
When
Arthur
Greene
died,
that's
a
complete
conflict
of
interest.
B
O
Good
morning
my
name
is
Lee
and
I'm
speaking
against
the
proposed
language
in
agenda
item
19.,
as
it
stands
right
now.
The
citizens
review
board's
attorney
also
represents
the
city
which
is
a
conflict
of
interest,
especially
given
our
ex-police
chief
mayor
and
it'll
hinder
there.
It
hinders
their
ability
to
properly
give
police
oversight,
and
the
proposed
language
makes
so
that
the
city
gets
to
choose
their
attorney
as
opposed
to
having
the
same
attorney,
which
doesn't
sound
independent
to
me
at
all.
O
I
think
it's
very
important
for
them
to
be
independent,
especially
if
you
know
they
are
going
to
be
looking
over
police
cases
and
giving
those
recommendations
we
want
to
have
them
be
able
to
be
transparent
and
able
to
carry
out
their
jobs.
So
we
can
have
some
sort
of
police,
transparency
and
accountability
in
the
city.
Thank
you.
Y
Good
morning,
I
have
a
visual
aid
on
the
Elmo.
If
we
could
switch
to
it.
My
name
is
James
Michael
Shaw
Jr
I'm,
with
the
local
ACLU
chapter
and
I
want
to
Echo
what
attorney
Catherine
and
attorney
clap
also
have
already
said
about
the
language
on
agenda
item
19
I,
don't
know
how
to
switch
to
the
Elmo.
Is
there
a
button.
Y
Y
It
can't
have
an
attorney
that's
assigned
to
it
by
somebody
else.
They
need
to
be
able
to
retain
their
own
attorney,
who
can
act
independently
and
and
I
would
ask
that
that
modification
be
made
to
the
language.
The
other
one
is
that
if
we
go
back
to
the
Elmo,
it
says
as
the
to
serve
as
the
legal
advisor
to
the
citizens
review
board
for
the
Tampa
Police
Department.
That
language
is
unnecessary.
Y
Surplusage
there's
only
one
citizens
review
board,
so
you
don't
have
to
specify
that
it's
the
one
for
the
police
department
and
it's
and
it's
confusing
too,
because
it
could
be
read
as
to
service
the
legal
advisor
for
the
Tampa
Police
Department
to
the
citizens
review
board.
If
that
language
doesn't
need
to
be
there
and
I
would
ask
that
somebody
moved
to
strike
it
other
than
that
I
just
want
to
say.
Y
I
was
struck
by
the
words
of
the
invocation
this
morning
when,
when
he
said
that
we,
you
should
be
guided
by
what's
best
for
the
citizens
and
not
what's
best
for
your
networks.
I
want
to
remind
you
and
we've
sent
this
Paul
to
you
several
times.
68
of
Tampa
voters
want
to
want
there
to
be
an
independent
attorney
for
the
crb
68
of
the
voters.
Please
don't
position
yourself
in
between
the
will
of
68
of
the
voters
and
their
right
to
vote
on
this
issue.
Y
I
noticed
that
today,
there's
not
a
Phalanx
of
paid
police
officers
behind
me
and
that
might
indicate
to
them
that
they're,
okay,
with
letting
the
Civil
Rights
activists
just
have
this
one.
It's
not
the
it.
It's
not
anything
radical.
It's
something
that
I've
showed
you
already
is
in
Miami,
Orange,
County
and
Key.
Y
So
even
people
who
are
against
this
favor
voting
on
it
favor
putting
it
to
a
vote,
they're
mature
enough
to
say
I
might
not
personally
be
in
favor
of
this,
but
if
everyone
else
is
I'm
not
going
to
stand
in
the
way
so
I
ask
you
to
be
like
those
voters
and
don't
stand
in
the
way.
I
have
to
go
back
to
work,
but
I'll
be
watching
the
voters
will
be
watching
and
will
notice.
If
you
don't
let
us
vote
on
this.
Thank
you.
Thank.
AA
Morning,
my
name
is
Bishop
Michelle
B,
Patty
I
stand
before
you
as
a
taxpayer.
I've
come
to
ask
this
city
council
to
make
a
motion
to
withhold
the
one
hundred
thousand
dollars
that
y'all
have
allotted
for
the
NAACP
reason
being
for
the
past
three
years.
There
has
not
been
an
audit
of
the
NAACP
president
event.
Lewis,
thereby
has
violated
the
bylaws
of
the
NAACP
they're
supposed
to
have
a
audit
every
year.
That
has
not
been
done
now
you.
AA
This
Council,
wants
to
give
away
a
hundred
thousand
dollars
to
an
organization
where
there
is
no
transparency.
There
is
no
accountability.
What
I
passed
out
to
you
was
a
letter
from
Tova.
Toba
is
a
Tampa
organization
on
black
Affair
business
Affairs.
They
have
been
a
part
of
political
process
with
the
naac
felt
many
years
and
if
you
can
see
from
their
letter
they
withdrew
their
sponsorship
of
this
organization,
because
there
was
no
transparency.
AA
AA
So
a
hundred
thousand
dollars
to
an
organization
that
feel
that
they're
Above,
the
Law
feel
that
they
do
not
have
to
adhere
to
accountability,
feel
like
they
don't
have
to
adhere
to
the
rules.
Then
no
money
should
be
given
until
you
all
can
see
what
has
transpired
with
monies
that
has
already
been
put
in
place.
There's
no
scholarships
given
to
any
children
as
of
late
there,
there's
no
businesses
that
they
can
point
to.
AA
So
all
this
would
come
out
in
an
audit,
and
the
audit
need
to
be
asked
by
this
Council,
because
we,
the
voters,
voted
for
you
to
ensure
that
our
funds
are
being
looked
after
and
not
just
squandered
away.
As
the
prayer
was
that
you
do
what's
in
the
best
interest
of
the
citizen
and
not
what
you're
thinking
is
going
to
help
Propel
you
into
your
next
Arena
as
a
political
figure,
so
I'm,
hoping
that
each
one
of
you
would
do
your
due
diligence
that
you
would
do.
AA
E
AB
Buffoon,
a
clown,
the
class
clown
a
straight
buffoon,
nothing
more,
nothing
less!
When
in
this
world,
do
you
hear
African
people
hating
on
African
people,
an
African
person,
Hayden
and
Chloe
Coney,
an
African
person
hating
on
Orlando
ghouls,
with
all
the
discrepancies,
an
African
person
Hayden
on
Tammy
schamberger,
when
they
can't
control
the
situation?
AB
A
buffoon,
nothing
more,
nothing
lasts,
not
representative
of
anything
and
to
tell
all
the
white
people
in
their
City.
If
you
go
on
Michelle's
Patty
show
on
that
Saturday
morning
that
clown
Central,
that's
what
it
is
with
Joe
Robinson
clown
Central,
always
talking
about
putting
the
FBI
and
the
police
and
people
a
black
person
and
in
a
negro
where
in
this
world,
do
you
ever
hear
Negroes
talking
about
calling
the
police
and
people.
AB
AB
AC
AB
We
don't
do
it
a
clown,
clown,
Central
and
y'all,
allowing
it
to
happen,
don't
go
in
her
show
anymore,
because
it's
representative
of
the
hatred
you
have
for
African
people,
none
more
nonetheless,
and
being
used
as
a
buffoon
and
a
clown
down
here,
the
oldest
civil
rights
organization
in
the
history
of
the
world,
trying
to
take
something
away
from
them.
This
city
owed
us
trillions
of
dollars
in
reparations,
and
we
ain't
got
that
and
a
clown
down
here,
a
female
clown
talking
about
a
hundred
thousand
dollars.
AB
AB
About
speed,
bumps
and
money
for
parks
and
money
for
Juneteenth,
and
it's
garbage-
that's
begging
now
you're
coming
down
here.
With
that
confusion,
bringing
that
confusion
off
your
radio
show
right
down
the
city
council.
It's
not
gonna
happen,
not
in
this
city,
not
in
this
city.
It's
not
gonna
happen.
Thank.
F
Z
Morning,
Council,
that's
a
lot
Robin
Lockett
here
to
talk
about
the
tender
Bill
of
Rights
I've
gotten
several
calls
from
different
Community
people
indicating
that
for
one
whole
department,
complex
well
a
lot
of
people
in
the
apartment
complex,
rather
that
this
apartment
complex,
is
no
longer
accepting
vouchers.
Section
8.
Z
got
another
call
from
several
people
stating
that
their
landlord
would
no
longer
accept
our
three
money,
our
three
program,
any
assistance.
They
want
the
tenants
to
pay
the
money
outright,
isn't
a
tenant
Bill
of
Rights
supposed
to
protect
them
from
that?
What's
the
enforcement
on
it?
How
do
you
enforce
it?
We
put
ordinances
in
place,
but
there's
no
enforcement
mechanism
and
that's
what's
needed,
so
we
can
put
a
lot
of
stuff
in
writing.
Saying,
hey
and-
and
the
biggest
conversation
today
has
been
getting
information
out
to
the
community.
Z
How
many
of
these
apartment
complexes
know
that
this
is
in?
This
is
in
in
fact
ordinance
something
that
they
should
be
abiding
by.
How
do
you
get
that
information
out.
Z
F
I
L
L
And
your
powers
are
limited
in
what
you
can
do
find
it's
complaint
driven
number
one.
So
people
have
to
file
a
complaint
code
enforcement
goes
out,
and
then
you
get
a
fine
and
the
most
that
we
can
find.
The
landlord
is
four
hundred
and
fifty
dollars.
What's
written
in
the
tenant.
Bill
of
Rights
is
honestly
the
most
that
you
can
do
as
a
local
municipality.
L
We
don't
have
the
power
we,
we
don't
have
the
authority
to
do
more
than
that,
but
it's
complaint
driven,
and
so
if
there
are
complaints
like
some
of
the
ones
that
Miss
Lockett
just
brought
up,
they
need
to
contact
code
enforcement
file.
The
complaint
and
we've
had
some
come
through.
It's
complaint
driven
and
then
we'll
follow
up
and
investigate,
but
to
think
that
the
tenant
Bill
of
Rights
is
going
to
solve
it.
Oh,
it's
not
all.
I
L
So
actually,
our
attorney
Rebecca
Johns
has
done
two
seminars
with
the
landlords
and
the
rental
associations
and
have
provided
information
to
them.
So
we
went
there
giving
them
the
information.
So,
yes,
we
have
provided
that
information.
So.
I
Right
so
yeah,
so
I
guess
the
two
parts
of
that.
So
is
it
possible
that
maybe
the
housing
department
or
can
create
some
type
of
Palm
caught
a
car
that
could
be
taken
to
with
code
enforcement
on
their
duties
whatever
can
stop
by
these
apartment,
because,
and
so
they
make
sure
these
apartment
complexes
I'm
sure
the
guy
out
on
the
one
issue
with
isn't
Mr
viera's
District,
but
even
calling
me
out
of
pebble
wood.
You
know
you
can
make
sure
they
know
what
the
rules
are
and
what
what
what
the
the
ordinances
are.
L
Something
like
that,
yes,
absolutely
is
I
mean
it's
always
possible
for
us
to
create
a
different
ways
to
get
the
information
out
to
the
public.
So
we
definitely
can
go
back
and
do
that
and
create
a
flyer.
We
do
have
a
flyer
with
information
as
far
as
resources,
but
we
could
also
create
some
kind
of
education
material
on
if
you
feel
like
you've
been
discriminated
against.
If
you
feel
like
your
apartment,
is
substandard
and
provide
that
in
a
different
literature,
we
could
work.
I
I
L
I
Or
or
just
just
you
know,
you're
not
gonna
be
a
complaint
just
that
on
their
regular
duties
and
they're
driving
around
and
they
have
an
apartment
or
even
the
police.
They
have
an
apartment
complex
in
their
area
to
be
able
to
hand
that
go
to
the
door.
We
can
probably
educate,
yeah
and
give
that
to
them.
So
they'll
know,
maybe
sometimes
you
these
apartment
people
are
out
of
state.
You
just
got
somebody
in
the
office
who's
running
it.
Z
It
thank
you
so
question,
so
the
code
enforcement
can
go
to
an
apartment
complex
more
than
four
units.
L
Yes,
yes,
they
can
go,
but
so
in
order
for
them
to
in,
in
order
for
code
enforcement
to
go
into
an
apartment,
someone
has
to
invite
them
into
the
apartment.
So
if
a
tenant
is
in
the
apartment
and
they
have
a
complaint
about
their
unit
being
substandard,
they
have
to
invite
code
enforcement
and
code
enforcement
will
document
it.
They
will.
They
will
provide
a
violation,
but
we
also
send
it
to
the
state.
So
so,
yes,.
F
I
Z
B
AD
AD
One
of
the
biggest
problems
that
I
want
to
speak
to
quickly
is
that
the
city
should
not
be
the
one
that
controlled
the
legal
counsel
of
an
independent
Council.
The
city
and
the
mayor
made
a
determination,
even
when
choosing
who
to
NAACP
would
send
to
represent
the
interests
of
the
community.
She
would
have
a
hand
in
that
as
well,
so
it's
no
Independence
around
the
board
in
this
community.
AD
Nothing
on
your
agenda
today
spoke
to
the
NAACP
issue.
I
would
have
respected
the
administration
that,
if
you
didn't
want
to
give
the
NAACP
any
money,
don't
give
it
to
them.
For
so
long,
the
NAACP
has
been
able
to
work
with
a
limited
budget,
and
so
now
what
we
see
happening
before
a
dam,
a
dollar
has
been
spent
again.
The
Administration
has
hired
outside
sources
to
do
their
work.
It's
awful!
It's
hypocritical!
AD
The
community
is
suffering
whether
it
is
around
the
issue
of
not
having
affordable
housing
in
East
Tampa.
All
we
see
now
in
East
Tampa
is
a
flurry
of
houses
that
we
will
never
be
able
to
purchase
300
450
000
next
to
houses
that
need
what
real
rehab
and
we
can't
get
that
done.
For
the
last
five
years,
we've
been
trying
to
push
a
rehab
bill.
That
is
almost
like
a
shell
game.
AD
AD
The
person
that
has
had
the
shortest
membership
of
the
NAACP
receive
a
suspension
from
the
national.
You
know
why,
because
that
National
is
not
going
to
allow
a
Michelle
Petty
to
control
NAACP,
that's
real!
So
hopefully
you
don't
get
caught
up
in
it
and
let
the
NAACP
and
its
legal
counsel
deal
with
the
Michelle
patties
of
this
world.
Thank
you.
AD
AC
AC
Mr
Robinson
I
have
the
documents.
First
of
all,
those
documents
received
and
file
in
the
public
records
by
the
city
council
whenever
y'all
accept
those
so
I
want
those
received
and
filed.
First
of
all,
I
want
to
say
that
I'm,
Joe,
Robinson
and
I'm
not
a
convicted
felon.
Do
not
let
convicted
felon
sit
here
and
tell
you
what
taxpayers
that
payday
taxes
won't
or
don't
want
I'm,
not
a
convicted
felon
I'm,
not
a
convicted
felon,
whom
the
guards
destroyed
they
first
make
angry.
AC
AC
AC
AC
And
if
you
look
at
the
page,
the
second
page
of
the
artist
request
in
yellow
and
yellow
and
yellow
and
yellow
it
says
quote:
we
were
not
engaged
to
and
did
not
conduct
an
audit
or
review
engagement,
the
objective
of
which
would
have
been
expressing
over
the
pin
occlusion.
So
there
was
no
audit
done.
B
I
I
didn't
want
to
say
anything
but
there's
some
issues
that
are
happening
over
there
and
it's
unfortunate
that
that's
the
longest
black
organization
that
stands
up
for
the
rights
of
people.
I
As
you
all
know,
all
people,
no
matter
what
I
did
receive,
Mercy,
that
the
the
national
office
will
be
in
town
I,
guess
all
the
bigwigs
are
coming
in
town
and
then
my
understanding
they're
going
to
have
an
open
invitation,
and
you
would
close
me
I'm
understanding
to
any
and
all
elected
officials
to
have
any
questions
about
anything
in
reference
to
the
NAACP
in
general.
So
I
don't
know
when
that
call
is
coming,
but
I
do
know
within
a
week
or
so
weeks.
I
They
will
be
here
in
Tampa
to
deal
with
any
issues
of
the
local
branch
or
any
questions
that
people
may
have
when
I
was
informed
of
that.
So.
I
I
understand
that
we're
reaching
out
to
elected
officials
who
want
to
come
in
want
to
ask
any
questions
or
whatever
so
that
time.
Maybe
we,
if
anyone
does
have
any
questions,
they
can
ask
the
national
of
I,
don't
know
which
officers
are
coming
I
just
know
the
national
office
is
coming,
I,
don't
know
if
the
president's
coming
or
whoever
but
I
was
informed
in
the
national
office
is
coming
to
Tampa
to
I,
guess,
talk
and
see.
What's
going
on.
K
Mr
Shelby,
yes,
thank
you
and
thank
you
for
bringing
that
to
council's
attention.
Councilman
Goods
I
would
just
ask
I'm,
based
on
just
what
I'm
hearing
I
just
like
to
be
kept
in
the
loop
with
regard
to
that
I.
Certainly
don't
want
any
have
any
Sunshine
issues.
This
is
certainly
something
that's
relevant
to
city
council
and
something
that's
public
business,
so
I
want
to
make
sure
that
everybody's
bases
are
covered,
so
I'd
appreciate
your
awareness
and
then
and
bring
it
to
my
attention.
Thank
you.
B
AE
Yes,
good
morning,
how's
everybody
today
I'm
here
for
a
follow-up
to
the
meeting
that
we
gave
on
October
31st
having
to
do
with
these
reducing
speed,
violence
and
National
approach,
help
Public
Safety
and
social
economic
development
connecting
the
dots,
we're
gonna,
do
a
follow-up
lead
on
December,
the
30th
at
6
PM.
We
got
a
lot
of
folks,
that's
in
the
community
that
couldn't
make
that
meeting,
but
they
wanted
us
to
do
an
evening
meeting.
So
we're
going
to
do
that
on
top
December
31st
at
6
PM.
AE
As
you
know,
the
level
of
violence
is
not
stopping.
Every
time
you
read
the
newspaper
it
increases.
Our
post
is
using
the
Hip
Hop
approach
that
attracts
excite,
educate
and
transform
to
hardcore
youth
on
the
corner.
I'm
asking
everybody
that
can
attend
that
particular
meeting
and
learn
about
what's
going
around
the
country
in
terms
of
reducing
the
level
around
us
I
do
want
the
person
to
thank
councilwoman
kotak
for
attending
that
meeting.
AE
V
Good
morning,
good
morning,
yeah,
my
name
is
James
jeremeyer
south
of
Gandy
for
31
years
Tampa
for
52
years.
V
I
am
calling,
let's
see,
I'm
just
going
to
go
over
the
agenda
a
little
bit,
but
I
was
really
shocked
about
number
seven
and
that
that
was
even
on
the
agenda
because
you
all
know
I
mean
I
proves
the
agenda
and
I
I
don't
have
time
to
go
into
each
and
every
item.
But
when
that
was
being
discussed
as
I
was
coming
back
from
walking,
my
dog
I
was
absolutely
shocked.
V
Y'all
see
the
email
that
I
sent
because
I
was
really
upset
about
that,
not
knowing
based
on
what
it
said
on
the
the
little
board
that
y'all
have
anyway.
So
please
make
those
more
clear.
I
appreciate
that
and
on
the
agenda.
Okay,
so
storm
water
update
I'm,
going
to
listen
to
that.
Unless
you
all
did
it
when
I
was
walking.
V
My
dog
we
have,
let's
see
and
Bloomberg
I,
am
dying
to
hear
that
one
number
11
tenant
advocacy
report,
I'm
listening
to
that,
and
but
all
these
number
13
and
the
other
one
that
are
requesting
attorneys
to
represent
them
by
our
tax
dollars.
I'm.
Just
not
okay
with
that
I,
don't
I!
Just
don't
think
you
know,
and
then
you
know
I
do
believe
the
city
council
should
be,
you
know,
have
their
attorneys.
You
know
separate
based
on
what
happened
to
councilman
dingfelder
I.
V
Think
not
all
these
unelected
groups
need
to
have
their
own
attorneys
paid
for
by
yours
truly
I.
Just
you
know:
I
want
y'all
to
pay
for
my
attorney
for
anything,
I
need
so
I.
Just
on.
Let's
see,
Hillsboro
River
I
spoke
with
a
guy
about
the
Hillsborough
River
and
he
used
to
work
for
Hillsborough,
County,
scientist
guy
and
he
says
the
the
spring.
Now
we
do
in
the
river
to
kill
whatever
is
really
bad
for
the
river.
He
suggested
that
other
cities
are
actually
removing
their
dams.
V
I
don't
know
as
far
as
the
minimum
flows
and
all
that
I
don't
know
if
that's
an
option
or
they're
doing
something
to
better
that,
but
apparently
there's
two
things
I.
It
was
brought
to
my
attention
recently.
One
is
that
we're
using
the
the
river
for
what's
heat?
What's
it
called
energy
that
is
heating
up
the
river
way
too
hot
for
the
Wildlife,
and
that
heat
is
somewhat
causing
these
algae
blooms
and
things
like
that.
V
But
then
so
there's
two
different
issues
that
I
spoke
with
with
two
different
people
about
the
water
and
I'd
like
that
looked
into
so
I
think
that's
kind
of
it
and
yeah.
Thank
you
have
a
great
day.
Thank.
B
G
Okay,
thank
you.
My
name
is
Mary
Max
and
I'm.
The
natives
and
my
educational
background
includes
the
Masters
of
Science
and
Industrial
hygiene
with
a
minor
in
environmental
sciences
and
I'm,
a
member
of
the
peer
stakeholder
group
and
a
member
of
the
Tampa
Bay
Sierra
Club
and
I'm
speaking
on
item
number.
Seven
I
support
the
recommendations
laid
out
by
Mr
Flannery
in
the
document
that
you
will
soon
receive,
and
that
is
supported
by
the
stakeholder
group.
I
ask
you
to
make
a
formal
request
to
support
legislation
that
includes
recommendations
in
your
2023
legislative
priorities.
G
G
G
Excuse
me
still
item
seven
six,
seven,
but
another
point
is
that
we
live
in
Florida
and
we
all
know
that
there
are
large
fluctuations
in
rainfall
throughout
the
year
creating
variations
in
our
hydrologic
conditions
as
well.
We
also
know
our
water
quality
fluctuates
depending
on
many
factors,
both
industrial
and
environmental,
with
a
fixed
amount
of
effluent
to
be
repurposed
conditions
such
as
summer
rains
plus
the
50
million
gallons
of
water
per
day,
might
overwhelm
a
surface
or
groundwater
system
that
accepts
that
extra
water.
N
F
L
Morning,
Council
Nicole
Travis,
administrator
of
development
and
Economic
Opportunity.
It
is
absolutely
my
pleasure
to
bring
Mr
David
Ingram
to
you
for
a
confirmation
and
requesting
a
residency
waiver.
As
our
new
executive
director
of
the
Tampa
Convention
Center
I,
ask
that
you
expeditiously
confirm
him
so
that
he
doesn't
run
away
after
sitting
here
this
morning
and
so
David
spent
most
of
his.
He
is
a
Tampa
native
went
to
high
school
and
Tampa
went
to
USF
globals
and
David
has
spent
most
of
his
Hospitality
career
over
at
the
Orlando
Convention
Center.
L
Acting
executive
director-
and
he
has
worked
his
way
up
to
do
great
things
in
Orlando-
we're
ecstatic
that
he's
here
his
first
day
was
on
Monday,
so
Council
I
appreciate
it.
Some
of
you
have
met
with
David
already
and
some
have
put
some
calendar
appointments
to
meet
with
him
in
the
future.
So
thank
you
for
your
Indulgence
and
David
and
Crow.
AF
First
and
foremost,
thank
you
so
much
for
this
confirmation.
It's
a
pleasure
being
back
in
Tampa,
I've,
been
surrounded
by
black
and
gold
for
the
last
20
years.
So
it's
good
to
be
back
in
the
green
and
gold
country.
I'd
also
like
to
thank
my
staff.
That's
actually
here
today
they
did
they've
done
a
great
job
of
welcoming
me.
AF
It's
been
such
a
great
experience
coming
in
I'm,
looking
forward
to
working
with
all
of
you
anything
that
you
need
feel
free
to
reach
out
to
me
once
I
get
my
cell
phone
and
everything
settled
I'll
be
more
than
happy
to
take
care
of
anything
that
you
need.
If
you
have
any
questions,
feel
free.
B
N
You
very
much
I
had
the
pleasure
of
meeting
with
you
the
other
day
and
you
have
a
very,
very
impressive
background
and
resume
I.
Think
and
I
I
know:
you'll
hit
the
ground
running
with
the
experience
that
you
have
the
people
that
you've
worked
with
and
four
and
in
the
different
communities.
So
we're
we're
glad
that
you're
here
and
we
wish
you
the
best
of
luck.
Thank.
A
Welcome
we're
really
thrilled
to
have
you
can't
wait.
We
know
we've
got
some
Renovations
going
on,
so
we're
already
excited
about.
What's
going
and
really
looking
forward
to
having
some
fresh
eyes
and
I
I'm
so
glad
your
team
was
able
to
come,
they
all
look
very
happy.
So
I'm,
congratulations
and
I
look
forward
to
meeting
with
you
and
talking
to
you
about
how
you're
going
to
make
our
wonderful
Convention
Center
even
better.
Thank.
AF
D
Congratulations:
you've
been
here
for
an
hour
and
45
minutes,
and
you
got
more
in
that
hour
and
45
minutes
than
anyone
here
could
ever.
D
And
I
know
you
come
from
a
convention
center,
it's
about
six
times
larger
than
ours,
over
a
million
dollars
at
about
220
000
square
feet.
I
can
tell
you
that
by
experience
you're
very
smart
because
you
didn't
mention
which
High
School.
D
Of
them
go
Falcons
no
I
understand
that
I'm.
Only
joking
with
you
I
come
from
je,
and
it's
not
just
you
figure
that
one
out
but
I
appreciate
it
very
much
your
sincerity
and
your
work
here,
I
know
20.
Some
years
ago
we
lost
one
of
our
second
in
command
at
the
convention
center
to
your
convention
center.
Now
that
Convention
Center
we're
getting
one
here
so
now
we're
even
congratulations
to
being
friendly
Tampa.
Thank
you.
Thank.
AF
You
actually
I
just
a
quick
story
for
Orange
County
I
actually
had
to
sit
through
a
three-hour
public
comment
before
they
went
to
consent
agenda.
So
this
is
this
was
pretty
easy.
Today,
oh
I.
I
You
come
highly
recommended:
Mr
Travis
is
excited
if
you're
coming
here
and
apparently
you've
already
hit
the
ground
running.
My
understanding
normally
I
like
to
meet
the
candidates
before
we
come
here,
but
miss
Travis
said
that
they
called
my
office,
but
I
didn't
get
a
chance
to
get
back
so
I
apologize
for
not
getting
a
chance
of
personal
meet
with
you,
because
I
like
to
meet
the
candidates
before
I
make
a
vote
but
I
trust,
Mrs,
Travis
recommendation,
and
apparently
you
know
when
I
look
at
the
Orlando
area.
I
I
always
say
that
you
know
Tampa's
going,
but
we're
still
kind
of
behind
the
times
with
Orlando
a
little
bit
so
the
things
they've
got
going
on,
but
we're
trying
to
catch
up
and
I
think
with
your
expertise
of
having
large
conventions
to
break
a
great
economic
impact
to
that
that
area.
I.
Think
with
your
your
knowledge
is
going
to
happen
here.
You
know
everyone
goes
to
Atlanta
for
conventions.
I
C
Have
to
spend
a
lot
of
time
in
the
Orlando
convention
center
and
impressive
property
run
very
well.
I
haven't
had
a
chance
to
meet.
You
I
think.
We've
got
something
on
the
calendar,
we're
trying
to
schedule
something
but
I
also
trust
Nicole's
judgment
on
it
and
I've.
Seen
your
background.
Information
looks
very
impressive.
My
only
request
is
that
you
help
us
bring
Star
Wars
celebration
over
or
put
us
in
rotation.
I
know
we're
too
small
for
it,
but
there
are
other.
There
are
other
venues
we
can
work
with
to
make
it
happen.
AF
B
B
About
congratulations.
What
a
time
to
prove
yourself!
You've
got
Renovations
and
remodelings
going
on.
You
got
the
holiday
seasons,
jump
jump
in
the
water.
It's
fine!
Welcome!
Welcome,
aboard
move!
41.!
You
want
a
great
movement,
now
sure
got
a
motion
made
by
councilman
Miranda
seconded
by
councilman,
Maniscalco,
all
in
favor,
say
aye
aye!
Is
there
any
opposed?
L
L
It's
not
locally
designated,
it's
not
in
a
historic
district
here,
but
because
of
that,
in
order
for
the
property
to
be
redeveloped,
there
has
to
be
a
noticing
period
for
30
days
that
the
demolition
of
the
historic
structure
is
going
to
take
place
and
that
the
Redevelopment
of
that
property
would
be
a
hundred,
affordable
housing
units.
This
came
to
you
back
in
2021
in
your
action
plan
and
recently
came
in
an
agreement
sometime
over
the
summer
for
you
to
for
that
funding
agreement
and
our
participation
in
this
affordable
housing
project
and
so
I.
L
We
don't
like
to
do
Walk-Ons
unless
they're
time,
sensitive
and
considering
that
this
is
affordable,
housing
project
and
the
week
of
Thanksgiving.
We
found
out
the
date
of
the
closing
in
January.
So,
in
order
for
us
to
keep
that
closing
date,
we're
respectfully
asking
for
your
approval
of
this
memorandum
of
agreement
so
that
we
could
continue
to
move
on
forward
with
this
Redevelopment
project.
N
N
Structures,
I've
even
photographed
it
and
put
it
on
social
media
of
all
the
churches
in
the
area
that
they
heavily
populated
area.
However
I
don't
know
you
know
how
the
you
know
the
story
of
the
church,
the
congregation,
how
long
it's
been
in
inoperable
whatever,
but
the
bright
side
is
again,
you
know
I'm
about
historic
preservation,
but
the
bride's
head
is
100,
even
though
we
need
10,
000
or
more
affordable
using
units.
N
This
moves
us
forward
towards
that
goal
of
providing
affordable
housing
in
a
in
an
area
that
is
very
desirable
in
a
good
part
of
town,
and
so
you.
N
The
trade-off
here
as
much
as
I
am
hesitant
and
I
hate
to
see
anything
demolished,
but
it's
for
a
good
public
purpose
and
of
you
know
severe
necessity
that
we,
we
obviously
need
with
affordable
houses.
Yeah.
L
And
and
to
your
point,
I'm
a
preservationist
at
heart,
and
so
the
memorandum
of
agreement
has
stipulations
in
it.
That
requires
before
Belmar
is
able
to
demolish
the
property
that
they
have
to
document
archive.
Take
pictures
that
they,
the
historic
preservation,
the
state
historic
preservation
office,
have
strict
requirements
in
documenting
historical
structures.
I've
been
through
that
several
times
on
other
projects,
and
it
is
very
detailed.
You
have
to
have
a
specific
photography
type
of
camera
to
document
all
of
the
history
of
the
church
before
or
it's
ultimately
demolished.
AG
K
Yes,
sir,
if
this
is
going
to
be
something
that
the
council
is
going
to
be
voting
on,
that
is
a
walk-on.
Was
it
on
the
addendum?
Yes,.
F
AG
Well,
with
City
tree,
this
feels
like
it's
being
slipped
under
the
door.
A
little
bit
to
me.
I
am
not
aware
of
the
situation,
but
it
is.
It
is
a
historic
property,
I
assume
or
were
there,
may
be
trees
on
this
property
that
may
need
to
be
taken
into
consideration.
AG
There's
an
awful
lot
of
questions,
I
think
that
the
public
would
have
before
we
actually
just
press
ahead
and
saying
you
know
I
didn't,
like
the
looks
of
that.
So
let's
take
it
down.
So
if,
if
this
deems
to
be
important
enough
to
have
somebody
come
inside
and
archive
it
for
history,
perhaps
there
is
some
history
that
needs
to
be
preserved
by
keeping
this
building
or
or
considering
at
least
put
it
into
consideration,
so
that
we
we
can
actually
just
give
it
some
real
real
good
thought
and
some
public
scrutiny.
L
Yes,
Council.
Thank
you,
I'm
gonna,
put
on
the
Elmo
and
Ariel
of
the
property
just
for
council's
awareness,
the
development,
the
agreement
for
to
develop
this
property
has
already
been
approved
by
Council.
This
is
simply
the
memorandum
of
agreement
that
requires
the
developer
to
take
pictures
of
the
historic
structure
prior
to
the
demolition.
It
has
already
been
approved
as
a
development
agreement.
L
In
your
action
plan,
you've
approved
the
the
development
agreement
already.
This
is
just
a
procedural
of
the
documentations,
as
we
don't
want
to
just
the
state
is
asking
us
to
do
this
to
document
the
building.
Otherwise
the
building
will
be
demolished
without
any
photograph,
so
there's
no
slipping
anything
through.
B
D
L
B
L
I,
just
have
one
note
when
you
guys
approve
the
agenda.
Item
number
39
has
a
continuance
on
it
and
that's
related
to
the
CRA
that
we
didn't
take
care
of
and
so
39,
because
our
November.
AF
AH
Good
morning,
Council
Adrian
Colina,
director
of
logistics
and
asset
management,
I,
am
here
on
item
number
two
and
it
is
a
pretty
straightforward
request
of
you.
It
is
to
extend
the
contract
that
we
have
with
our
vendor
mancon,
who
is
our
parts
supplier
in
our
facility
in
our
Fleet
Maintenance
division
I've?
Provided
you
with
a
detailed
memo
of
our
request
and
I've,
also
spoken
with
you
each
individually,
but
I
certainly
wanted
to
make
myself
available
today
to
answer
any
questions,
you
may
have
simply
put
it's
extending
the
contract.
AH
It's
a
contract
that
originated
in
2014.
It
was
a
five-year
contract
with
five
allowable
one-year
extensions.
I
am
asking
today
for
you
to
approve
the
second
to
the
last
extension
I'm,
also
asking
for
an
allowable
8.5,
CPI
increase,
which
is
allowed
in
the
contract
and
right
sizing
it
to
add
one
custom
customer
service
person
in
our
Fleet
Maintenance
area
that
services,
our
fire
team.
B
AH
AI
Good
morning,
Council
Brad
Baird,
Deputy
Administrator
of
infrastructure
I'm
here
to
request
approval
for
four
contracts
associated
with
Citywide
meter,
hydrant
and
valve
installation,
and
replacement
to
the
tune
of
six
and
a
half
million
dollars
each
for
a
total
of
26
million
dollars.
AI
I
very
much
appreciate
councilman
goodes,
asking
me
this
speech
briefly
on
this
because,
as
you
know,
the
administration
has
put
a
focus
on
diversity,
equity
and
inclusion,
and
the
entire
Administration
has
worked
very
hard
on
increasing
ebo
participation,
and
this
contract
shows
the
fruits
of
our
labor.
We
have
as
much
as
26.1
participation
on
one
of
the
contracts
and
the
other
contracts
are
very
have
very
good
participation
as
well.
So
I
appreciate
your
support
on
it.
N
D
N
I'm
sorry
pipes:
okay,
not
the
the
2016
stormwater,
but
multi-billion
dollar
program,
there's
more
than
enough
money
to
go
around
to
help
benefit
minority
groups,
people
in
the
community-
and
this
is
a
perfect
example-
and
this
is
not
the
first,
because
you've
brought
up
contract
after
contract
with
increased
and
and
impressive
minority
participation
numbers.
So
we're
very
grateful
for
that.
So
thank
you
for
listening
to
us
because
I
know
this
was
brought
up
by
the
council
and
these
are
the
results
that
people
want
to
see.
So.
Thank
you,
sir.
A
We
have
four
different
entities,
so
I
think
that's
really
wonderful
I'm,
and
you
said
that
we've
worked
with
all
four
of
these
before
so
we
already
know
the
quality
of
the
work,
and
so
I
just
want
to
say
thank
you
for
for
not
only
including
or
getting
great
ebo
numbers,
but
also
just
including
more
organizations
in
this
I
think
that's
a
really
exciting
way
to
go
forward
and
I
just
want
to
say.
Congratulations.
Thank.
I
I
Don't
know
why
Hillsboro
wasn't
there,
but
Orange
County
came
here
some
of
their
elected
officials,
some
of
their
contractors,
their
ebo
Office,
Osceola
Pinellas
and
as
they
were
doing
their
schematic
and
talking
about
what
they're
doing
I
mean
we're
catching
up
to
them,
but
we're
still
a
bit
behind
but
I'm
glad
that
we're
moving,
but
I
can
tell
you
Orange
County.
They
have
the
best
plan.
I
ever
seen,
I've
got
to
be
honest
with
you
and
I
was
going
to
talk
to
you
see
about
that
I
mean
and
they
do
with
miss
her
attack.
I
It's
time
they
they
combine
a
lot
of
different
entities
to
get
it
done.
Yeah.
They
combine
a
lot
of
different
entities
to
get
it
done
and
get
those
numbers
and
they
don't
they
don't
and
then
almost
all
their
verbiages.
It's
not
that
good
faith.
It's
shall
it's
not
good
faith.
It's
shall
and
people
know
when
they
go
to
put
in
that
vid
they
they
make
sure
that
they
have
what
it
takes
to
do
it
and
what
I
like
about
they
have
trained
to
make
sure
folks,
like
I,
talked
about
it.
I
What
that
really
means,
but
the
biggest
thing
they
talked
about
and
I've
said
this
from
day,
one
that
sometimes
a
challenge
and
they've
been
working
on
that
and
a
few
other
counties
were
talking
about.
It
is
the
bond
issue,
because
the
small
guy
can't
get
the
nice
big
job
because
he
can't
get
the
bond,
he
doesn't
have
the
capital.
I
So
that's
something
that
I
I'm
still
going
to
preach
for
us
to
try
to
work
on.
How
can
we
find
a
program
and
I
almost
ran?
Haven't
worked
on
that,
but
we
to
deal
with
that
and
that
way
we
can
be
able
to
help
those
smaller
guys
and
get
a
multitude
of
those
folks
to
be
able
to
get
what
I
call
not
be
hungry
and
have
a
seat
at
the
table.
I
So
I'm
glad
that
we're
we're
putting
that
foot
forward,
we
got
a
little
ways
to
go,
but
I'm
glad
in
the
numbers
that
are
happening
now
and
I
know
the
community
be
happy
and
by
the
way
the
gentlemen
I
did
on
the
same
note,
I
did
go
by
was
invited
out
to
the
the
Hannah
project.
I
think.
I
Maybe
all
you
take
a
tour
out
there,
because
we
had
a
lot
of
controversy
and
I
know
some
things
you
know
wasn't
done
or
what
we,
what
this
board
think
it
should
have
been
done
and
that's
just
the
way
that
is
but
I
think
the
company
is
understanding
and
trying
to
get
there
to
what
this
Council
wants.
I
saw
a
lot
of
HBCU
graduates
out
there.
Working
on
this
project
and
major
positions
and
I
was
impressed
upon
I
was
impressed
I'm,
not
a
fan.
I
You
guy
I'm
a
cookman
man,
but
we
had
a
lot
of
hpu
workers
out
there.
Doing
really
I
call
work
that
I
I
can't
do
you
know
you
need
to
have
the
expertise
to
do
so.
I
was
happy
to
see
that
that
company
DPR
is
hearing
and
and
got
do
kind
of
some
of
those
guys
on
the
the
four
different
projects
out
there.
You
see
how
it's
being
developed
and
do
cons
getting
ready
to
start.
This
I
think
this
week
did
that
back
in
So
and
that's
a
whole
minority
for
her.
I
B
D
Thank
you,
chairman
I,
just
want
to
say
that
I
had
a
couple
of
calls
last
night
regarding
one
of
your
developers
at
that
we're
having
coffee
at
West
Tampa
sandwich
shop,
and
they
were
looking
at
the
work
that
was
being
done
and
to
their
surprise,
whoever
was
there
told
them,
come
here,
I'm
going
to
show
you
and
they
showed
them
the
whole
thing
how
the
pipe
goes
in
an
inch
at
a
time
through
the
other
pipe,
and
they
were
amazed
that
they
got
about
a
20,
30
minute
session
learning
and
seeing
how
they're
putting
a
pipe
inside
a
pipe,
and
they
were
just
at
all
that
this
thing
could
happen.
D
N
I
Didn't
get
too
much
in
that
I
know
that
they
they've
got
some
folks
out
there.
I
I
I
know
that
we
are
stuck
on
the
state,
certification,
apprenticeship
program
and
I'm
grateful
for
that.
But
when
I
see,
Guy
is
walking
down
the
street
and
they
need
guys
to
work
I
like
guys
to
be
able
to
come
in
the
plot
of
work,
get
them
on
the
site,
get
them
working
and
then
let
them
be
able
to
be
a
part
of
the
state,
certification
and
those
type
of
things.
But
I
don't
want
a
guy
who's
hungry.
I
If
we
got
some
people
that
need
to
work,
let
them
work,
get
them
into
apprenticeship
program
be
certified
that
way
they
can
feed
their
families,
but
I
was
impressed
that
they're
starting
to
get
folks
and
I,
told
them
and
I,
don't
know
if
the
city
of
portion,
but
I
told
them.
People
are
visual,
Learners,
sometimes
people
when
they
see
things,
they
believe
things
and
I
told
them
they
need
to.
I
They
need
to
film
the
project
film,
some
of
those
HBCU
guys
in
there
drawing
up
the
plans
and
drawing
this
stuff
I
mean
show
the
people
that
you
have
people
from
that
Community
a
couple
of
guys,
that's
just
strategist,
so
they
call
them
whatever
that
they're
actually
got
the
computers,
they're
working
they're,
actually
making
sure
that
that
part
is
supposed
to
fit
where
it's
supposed
to
go,
and
things
like
that.
I
was
amazed
at
what
I
saw
and
film
that
you
got
people
from
that
community
on
the
project
working
and
I'm
like.
I
Why
are
we
not
doing
that
to
show
what's
Happening,
even
though
we
had
a
lot
of
scuttle
buttons
going
on,
let's
begin
to
tell
the
story
of
the
Hannah
project
for
the
community
and
making
sure
you
got
again
those
faces,
so
people
can
recognize
and
say:
hey,
I
know
him
I
taught
him
at
school
or
he's
he
lived
out
of
streaming
he's
working
on
that
big
project.
He
helped
developed
this.
We
can't
be
afraid
to
show
those
type
of
things
and
we
need
to
have
our
CTV.
B
H
Gene
Duncan
administrator
for
sure
for
Mobility
I
believe
Vic
Beatty
is
on
the
line,
but
this
is
a
quarterly
report
that
we
submit.
That
generally
doesn't
have
discussion,
we're
happy
to
have
any
discussion,
but
it's
basically
a
summary
of
active
stormwater
projects,
they're
being
done
as
the
assessment
that
councilman
monoskeletal
mentioned
a
minute
ago,
it
was
approved
some
years
ago,
I
believe
it
was
2016.
F
AJ
V
AJ
About
that
I'm
here
to
address
any
questions
you
may
have
about
item
five.
A
memo
with
the
quarterly
report
was
submitted
to
council
for
review,
as
was
required
by
motion
a
few
years
back
councilman.
B
I
Good
morning,
Vic
the
only
problem
I
have
well
I
just
want
us
to
be
able
to
fix
a
problem
that
I
think
there
is
when
we
go
out
and
we
tear
up
these
roads
and
we
go
to
put
them
back.
I
Can
we
make
sure
the
road
is
drivable,
because
I
called
you
I
wanted
I
wanted
to
file
a
lawsuit
saying
you
tore
my
Cadillac
up,
because
I
rode
down
that
Florida
Avenue
Road,
that
was
redone
I,
almost
told
him
the
end
of
my
car
up
so
I,
don't
understand
and
I,
don't
know
what
the
process
is,
but
I
do
have
a
problem.
We
tear
up
a
road
and
we
don't
fix
the
road.
I
mean
we
just
threw
a
a
patch-up.
Job
of
our
road
I
have
a
problem
with
that.
I
So
I
don't
know
if
that
needs
to
be
incorporated
into
dollars
and
cents
to
make
sure
that
when
you
tear
up
a
road
that
the
road
is
drivable,
so
people
don't
tear
their
cars
up.
I
mean
it's:
it's
a
serious
problem
and
every
time
I
go
down
these
places
and
I
see
we've
gone
in
and
did
great
work
for
the
underground,
but
the
top
layer
I
have
a
problem
with
that.
I
think
we
got.
We
have
to
address
that.
I
AJ
Councilman
I
understand
and
I
I
remember
the
concern
he
had
cited
on
Florida
Avenue.
Regarding
that
the
the
challenge
there
was
that,
with
so
first
to
clarify
with
every
storm
water
project.
If
we
do
tear
up
a
road,
it
is
in
the
scope
to
put
it
back
and
resurface
it.
Usually,
the
road
is
opened
up
for
Lane,
pipe
and
so
on,
which
was
the
case
on
Florida.
AJ
Sometimes
what
happens
is
there's
additional
work.
That
needs
to
be
done,
and
so
we
don't
completely
repave
or
resurface
the
street
until
all
work
that
needs
to
be
done
on
the
pavement
is
done,
but
we
will
be
mindful
of
your
concern
and
I'll
make
sure
that
I
work
with
both
our
our
projects,
team
and
contract
Administration,
to
make
sure
that
the
roadway
surface,
even
if
it
is
interim,
is
safe
and
good
to
drive
even.
I
On
the
non-ont
Ontario's
I
mean
you
know,
I
mean
I
I,
just
think
you
know,
I
mean
to
me
that
creates
hazards
for
people
with
with
bumps
and
gouges
I
think
you
know
it
needs
to
be
properly
done
regardless.
If
you
got
to
come
back,
but
my
thing
is:
let's
make
sure
that
at
least
we
have
a
smooth
story
for
us.
You
may
not
get
all
your
layers,
but
so
people
can
actually
drive
on
the
car.
They
don't
have
an
action
it
because
I
can
tell
you.
Man
I
was
on
that
road.
I
B
N
You
very
much
councilmember
Goods.
We
are
in
receipt
of
of
the
complaint
of
the
road
you're.
J
N
Not
the
first
person
a
gentleman,
a
gentleman
named
Neil
sent
some
photos
a
couple
of
hours
ago
and
my
Aid
was
already
going
to
contact
the
contractor
and
reach
out
to
everybody.
I
know
exactly
what
we're
talking
about
you're
talking
about
right
right
in
front
of
the
bakery
yeah,
so
we're
working
on
it.
N
Our
office
is
reaching
out
to
the
contractor,
but
as
Mr
bday
has
has
said,
you
know
they
they
did
the
road
work,
they
paved,
how
they
paved
in
order
to
open
the
road,
but
once
it's
complete
it'll
be
fixed.
This
happened
on
Himes
and
the
interstate
near
the
Midtown
project.
Where
we,
the
city,
came
in
and
redid
Himes
beautifully
paved,
then
they
had
to
tear
up
parts
of
the
road
and
it
was
like
a
temporary
fixed.
N
C
Yep
one
other
thing:
I
talked
to
Vic
about
this
last
night,
but
as
we're
doing
these
projects
I
know
the
idea
of
putting
storm
water
and
transportation
under
Vic,
so
that
we
could
have
coordination
and
then
all
of
that
including
potable
water,
is
under
Gene.
C
Last
night
we
had
a
another
kind
of
Carmageddon
south
of
Gandhi,
where
three
roads
I
think
were
closed
at
the
same
time,
and
maybe
two
of
them
by
the
city
and
one
by
another
party.
But
the
only
thing
without
getting
the
specifics
of
this
I
got
a
lot
of
emails
and
calls
and
anything
we
can
do
to
try
to
help
plan
with
other
agencies.
C
The
impact
on
the
the
residents,
especially
if,
if
during
rush
hour
and
and
if
multiple
roads
are
being
taken
out
and
I
know,
Vic
is
working
hard
to
correct
this
specific
problem.
But
just
anything
we
can
do
to
avoid
that,
because
traffic
is
already
bad
enough
and
I
think
we
just
we
figured
out
a
couple
years
ago.
The
whole
city
of
Tampa
is
in
a
transportation,
concurrency
exception
area,
and
so
we're
we're
at
risk
everywhere.
If
we
start
shutting
down
roads,
think.
B
AJ
B
AJ
You
councilman
chair
if
I
may
address
that.
Yes,.
F
AJ
Quick
and
councilman,
thank
you
again
for
your
support
on
that.
We
are
ensuring
that
you
know
that
will
not
happen
again.
Today,
yesterday's
currents
was
regretful.
We
had
permitted
the
construction
to
be
completed
before
rush
hour,
I'd
like
to
clarify
that,
so
we
did
anticipate.
You
know
the
need
for
traffic
flow
during
rush
hour.
It's
likely
that
because
of
the
weather
last
evening,
some
of
that
work
might
have
been
delayed,
but
going
forward.
AJ
We
are
cognizant
that
at
any
given
time
we
have
400
work
zones
within
the
city
and
so
we're
investing
in
a
more
advanced
platform
to
manage
work
zones
that
will
basically
be
two-way
information,
so
we
can,
in
real
time,
manage
what's
going
on
in
the
street
rather
than
having
to
depend
on
a
whole
lot
of
technicians
driving
around
the
city.
Having
said
that,
we're
also
increasing
the
number
of
technicians.
So
we're
aware
of
this
challenge.
We're
growing
rapidly
and
and.
U
Good
morning
Council
chair,
Chuck,
Weber
water
department,
director
I,
think
Brad
bear
just
handed
out
the
documentation
that
was
requested
earlier.
It's
just
one
page
front
and
back
communication
I'd
like
to
start
by
addressing
some
of
the
comments
that
were
made
earlier
just
to
point
out
some
clarifications.
The
city
is
not
proposing
a
six
billion
dollar
project.
U
In
fact,
as
it
stands
today,
there
is
no
project
to
vote
no
on
or
yes
so,
there's
no
proposed
two
to
three
times
percent
rate
increase
that
that's
not
what
we're
addressing
so
I
think
some
of
the
comments
about
public
Outreach
I
need
to
respond
to.
We
haven't
addressed
those
17
questions
yet
and
though
I
appreciate
the
the
community
outreach
that
has
been
done
regarding
the
project,
the
the
facts
have
not
been
from
those
17.
Questions
have
not
been
delivered
to
the
public
and
we
need
to
do
that.
U
That's
an
important
part
of
the
project.
Those
questions
surround
safety
and
costs
of
the
project
and
we
need
to
get
out
and
give
that
information.
The
reason
we
haven't
given
that
information
so
far
is
that,
when
the
current
scope
of
Engagement
with
the
consultant
was
approved
in
February,
that
scope
that
was
brought
to
the
February
board
was
to
evaluate
two
Alternatives
Council
when
they
approved
that
asked
us
to
evaluate
all
the
Alternatives
from
the
jewturner
report,
which
was
more
like
five.
U
So
when
we
went
back
to
redo
the
scope
so
that
we
could
address
five
of
those
options
instead
of
two,
we
came
back
in
July
and
that's
when
Council
continued
to
September
and
then
ultimately
declined
to
approve
that
scope.
That's
why
public
Outreach
has
not
been
done
at
the
level
that
it
really
needs
to
do.
U
U
What's
the
life
cycle
cost,
we
won't
be
able
to
nail
that
down
until
we
do
some
engineering
work
and
in
order
to
do
that,
we're
going
to
need
funding,
but
when
we
do
the
workshops
in
January
we're
going
to
focus
on
here's
the
need
for
the
project,
so
the
one
need
that
we've
been
talking
about
today.
A
lot
is
the
you
know:
the
the
need
to
comply
with
Senate
bill
64.
U
and
I
really
appreciate
the
work
that
Sid
Flannery
did
and
working
with
them.
For
the
past
two
to
three
months
on
this
and
the
engagement
with
the
stakeholders,
I
thought
we
had
some
really
good
conversations
about
how
to
best
use
water
and
water
in
in
the
city
of
Tampa
is
a
very
complex
thing.
It's
not
an
easy.
U
You
can't
make
a
one
narrow,
focused
decision
regarding
Wastewater
and
not
affecting
potable
water
or
storm
water
and
not
affecting
something
else.
So
we
need
to
look
at
water
as
a
water
resources
holistic,
and
so,
as
we
move
forward
with
these
conversations,
I'm
hopeful
that
we'll
be
able
to
do
that
so
that
we
don't
make
a
narrow-minded
focused
decision
that
ends
up
costing
us
in
one
area
or
more
in
another,
because
we
haven't
considered
the
overall
effect.
So
with
that
in
mind,
there
are
two
other
drivers
for
the
project.
U
One
of
them
is
Sulfur,
Springs
is
becoming
saltier
and
we
use
that
as
a
source
of
minimum
flows
for
the
lower
Hillsborough
River
and
the
indication
we're
getting
from
the
southwest
Florida
Water
Management
District
is
that
we
may
need
to
replace
that
and
it
is
the
major
source.
So
if
we
replace
that
source
of
water
in
in
any
other
way,
there'll
be
a
cost
associated
with
it,
but
it
will
also
affect
other
areas
of
water
management
within
the
city.
So
we
do
need
to
address
that
issue.
There's
also
the
issue
of
drought.
U
When
we
hit
a
really
severe
drought,
we
can
purchase
water
from
Tampa,
Bay
water,
and
that
has
been
successful
in
the
past.
That
is
an
option
to
rely
on
it.
Moving
in
the
future,
we
need
to
look
at
cost
of
continued
Reliance
on
that.
So
I
didn't
want
to
go
too
deep
into
those
issues
today,
because
I'm
really
excited
about
discussing
them
in
detail
in
January
and
February
at
the
workshop.
I
Is
that
there's
no
solution
but
I'm
hearing
from
a
30-year
expert
and
I
always
say
experiences.
Is
your
best
teacher
he's
a
scientist
and
I.
Look
at
the
those
are
the
facts
that
data
you
can
secure
data.
You
can
make
data
work
off
stats
okay
day
long
boy
we
asked
about
who
knows
the
actual
subject
matter.
It
makes
a
difference
and
to
want
to
for
me
to
hear
that
when
we
make
rules
on
this
diocese,
sometimes
the
ordinance
just
doesn't
fit.
Sometimes
we
have
to
go
back
and
kind
of
tweak
it.
I
So
what
I'm
hearing
is
that
the
state
statute
needs
to
be
tweaked
and
maybe,
when
those
legislators
did
it,
they
did
a
blanket
whatever,
but
that
doesn't
fit
everybody
now.
So
my
thing
is:
why
why
we
don't
just
pump
the
brakes
right
now,
let's
get
our
lobbyists
or
hire
our
lobbyists
to
go
to
Tallahassee,
to
be
able
to
find
out
in
lobby
to
say
this
needs
to
be
tweaked
or
whatever
it
seems
so.
There's
some
ambiguities
here.
I
U
I
I
understand
what
you're
saying
councilman,
but
I
would
stress
that
Senate
Bill
64
is
is
an
issue
that
certainly
can
be
addressed
that
way,
but
the
other
two
issues
need
to
be
addressed
as
well,
and
we
have
time
for
that
and
that's
why
I'm
looking
forward
to
discussing
why?
U
Why
do
we
need
to
do
this
at
the
workshop
in
January
and
February
I
think
it
would
be
good
discussion
engaging
with
the
stakeholders,
and
you
know
there
are
very
many
experts
in
this
field-
people
with
30
years
of
of
experience
and
more
that
we're
going
to
bring
to
the
workshop.
I
I
I
I've
got
Charter
amendments
here
that
some
of
our
interpretations
are
wrong
and
we
have
to
fix
to
make
them
right,
so
people
can
understand
what
the
exact
verbs
should
be
or
what
the
order
should
be
to
be
carried
out.
So
I'm
going
to
be
asking
that
we
look
at
making
sure
that
the
legislative
body
takes
us
to
Tallahassee
to
say,
look
at
your
law.
We
need
to
do
that
as
a
city,
because,
again
one
one
size
doesn't
fit
all.
I
U
Looking
for
I
understand,
councilman
time
time
is,
is
important
with
Senate
Bill
64,
squeezing
a
project
in
that
we
haven't
decided
on
yet
in
10
years
is
going
to
be
tough.
I
mean
that's
the
time
driver
for
that.
The
time
driver
for
the
minimum
flows
is
actually
quite
a
bit
closer.
Even
in
two
weeks.
I
Time
again,
no
issue
with
that
Joe
I,
don't
have
a
problem
with
that
you're
still
going
to
work
on
that
I
have
no
problem.
The
problem
I
have,
is
you
still
have
to
address
the
bigger
issue?
You
still
could
have
people
come
and
complain.
This
is
until
we
can
address
this.
We
can
still
work
and
talk
and
meet
and
give
ideas
whatever.
I
A
I
I
agree.
We
we
definitely
need
to
do
both
and
I'm
going
to
encourage
all
of
my
colleagues
to
reach
out
to
those
representatives
in
both
the
House
and
Senate
up
in
Tallahassee
to
see
what
else
we
can
do
regarding
that,
because
I
think
that's
very
critical
and
we
need
to
create
some
Partnerships
there.
In
addition
to
getting
our
own
lobbying
team
working
on
that
and
so
I.
A
We
we
continued
the
item
about
the
17
questions
until
the
19th
and
from
what
I'm
hearing
we
may
not
have
complete
answers
to
every
question
and
I
just
want
to
say
that
I
understand
that
and
that
I
know
you
are
going
to
be
talking
to
the
stakeholders
somewhat
before
we
bring
that
forward
too,
and
just
to
make
sure
that
we
all
understand
that
we
can
have
as
much
of
the
answers
as
we
can
possibly
do
without
spending
extra
money.
A
So
I
want
to
say
thank
you
for
that
and
I
look
forward
to
that
session
and
I'm
going
to
encourage
my
fellow
my
colleagues
that
right
now
that
session
January
19th
only
has
three
staff
reports
that
I
see
on
it
and
I
would
really
appreciate
if
we
could
limit
the
additional
staff
reports
we
put
on
that
day,
because
I
have
a
feeling,
that's
going
to
be
a
long
discussion,
so
I
just
want
to
say
that
yeah.
Thank
you
for
for
everything.
Thank
you
for
for
the
documentation
as
well.
C
I
I
just
want
to
say
Chuck.
Thank
you
for
your
candor
and
reliability
of
information.
It's
really
different
than
the
conversations
a
few
years
ago
and
I
appreciate
the
offline
conversations
you
all
have
been
good
at
proactively,
working
with
me,
but
also
with
the
stakeholders
and
the
fact
that
you
all
sent
that
letter
and
let
see
our
club
and
others
participate.
So
much
I
think
is
a
good
sign
of
objectivity.
C
It
is
obvious,
though,
in
folks
in
around
the
mayor,
have
said
they
absolutely
want
this
project
and
so,
no
matter
how
objective
the
the
water
department
has
become.
The
mayor's
office
wants
this
project.
Just
like
the
last
mayor
wanted
this
project
and
it's
an
irrational
decision.
It's
not
based
on
science.
It's
that
they
want
this
project
and
and
so
I
I
think
that's
the
concern
the
public
has
is
there's
no
rational
basis
for
it.
C
There
are
a
lot
of
reasons
that
have
been
put
forward,
but
there's
no
rational
basis,
and
there
there's
some
evidence
at
least
that
at
least
the
prior
Administration
used
lobbyists
to
lobby
for
it
and
when
I
asked
Administration
this
round,
if
we
could
use
a
lobbyist
against
it,
they
said
no
so
and
by
the
way,
I
don't
know
if
you
all
have
seen,
but
every
time
I
make
a
comment
now
that
somebody
from
the
administration
sends
a
correction
and
just
like
the
report
that
was
supposed
to
be
given
this
morning
by
the
police
department,
the
corrections
may
be
factual
but
they're
using
their
own
set
of
facts
that
don't
exactly
meet
what
the
standard
criteria
for
what
should
be
used.
C
The
example
here
that
Chuck
you
gave
it.
It
is
true
that
there
is
no
project
right
now,
but
based
on
the
votes
of
what
we
did
before.
However,
if
if
we,
if
we
don't
change
this
law,
I
could
ask
you
a
whole
bunch
of
questions.
But
if
we
don't
change
this
law
and
and
we
adhere
to
the
law,
then
we
will
move
forward
with
some
kind
of
project,
and-
and
so
that's
why
I
think
that
things
are
related.
We
don't
know
how
much
the
new
project
will
cost,
because
we
don't
know
what
it
is.
C
The
only
information
we
have
is
the
information
that
was
created
two
or
three
years
ago,
which
said
I,
don't
remember
the
exact
number
2.1
to
6.3
billion
somewhere
in
that
range.
Looking
at
the
options,
we
don't
have
any
other
updated
information.
When
I
started
using
that
number,
then
I
got
a
a
long,
scathing
email
from
Ms
Duncan,
which
I
don't
believe
she
wrote
because
she's
a
nice
person,
but
it
said
you
understand,
we've
educated,
you
I'm,
paraphrasing
that
that
that
is
centered
in
the
industry
to
only
use
Capital
costs,
not
total
cost
for
30
years.
C
C
We
know
from
the
pipes
program
that
it
was
three
billion
dollars,
two
point:
nine
billion
and
we
increased,
we
doubled
the
water
rate,
and
so
that
went
from
like
forty
dollars
to
eighty
dollars,
something
like
that
average
and
so,
if
we
increased
it
to
six
billion
worst
case,
it
might
add
another
eighty
dollars
a
month.
Maybe
that's
not
exactly
right,
but
we
we
don't
have
any
other
information
right
now.
C
But
the
point
is
that
if
we
move
forward-
and
we
abide
by
this
law-
it's
if,
if
we
don't
start
fighting
the
law
and
fighting
the
project,
now
we're
going
to
end
up
in
a
place,
we're
going
to
have
to
spend
money
and
eventually
we're
going
to
have
to
raise
rates
and
that's
what
the
public
wants
us
to
do.
They
also
want
us
to
protect
the
environment.
The
Sulfur
Springs
thing
I've
said
this
before
it's
like
11
or
12
MGD
The,
Simple
Solution
in
the
short
run,
is,
is
to
stop
pumping.
C
If
Swift
comes
back
and
says
we
can
only
have
80
MGD
instead
of
82
MGD,
then
we
have
to
buy
whatever
the
rest
is
from
Tampa
Bay
water,
so
minimum
flows
is
important.
Getting
our
permit
is
important,
but
it
doesn't
mean
that
our
water
supply
is
going
to
be
shut
off.
There
are
a
lot
of
Chuck
did
not
do
this,
but
some
people,
the
administration,
have
been
using
Scare
Tactics,
saying
water
is
scarce
in
the
future.
Water
is
our
most
important
resource.
That's
right!
C
That's
why
Tampa
Bay
water
in
our
region
is
the
one
of
the
best
in
in
Miss
Miranda's
on
the
board
is
one
of
the
best
examples
of
regional
cooperation,
Regional
planning
in
the
world,
and-
and
so
we
should
work
with
them
on
that
and
not
kill
it.
What
what's
happened
in
the
past
is
that
the
lobbyists
of
the
city,
because
they
report
to
the
mayor,
the
last
two
Mayors-
have
used
them
to
Lobby
in
favor
of
this.
C
It
appears
I
if
we
pass
a
resolution
today
asking
the
mayor
to
to
get
the
lobbyists
to
work
against
it,
I'm,
not
confident
that
that
will
happen.
Based
on
what
the
staff
have
told
me
in
the
past,
I
would
I
would
like
to
find
out
how
we
can
get
the
mayor
to
cooperate
with
us
in
in
in
stopping
this
legislation.
At
the
very
least,
as
the
people
in
the
public
said,
it
gives
us
more
time
to
look
at
the
options.
Why
should
we
be
forced
into
spending
potentially
billions
of
dollars?
C
And
the
last
point
is
it
doesn't
make
sense
for
the
City
of
Tampa
to
do
this
anyway,
if
we
and
I'm
talking
about
the
project
down
the
road,
if
we
have
to
do
one,
if,
if
we
have
to
have
some
kind
of
project,
why
should
the
city
of
Tampa
rate
payers
have
to
own
this?
Why
should
they
have
hundreds
of
millions
or
billions
of
dollars
in
debt
and
increase
water
rates?
They
shouldn't
we're
part
of
a
regional
Cooperative.
C
We
should
let
that
burden
go
to
the
other
member
governments
and
we
should
be
a
partner
in
it.
We
shouldn't
go
this
alone
and
try
to
control
our
own
resources.
Every
other
member
of
Tampa
Bay
Water
sold
their
resources
into
into
the
Cooperative
back
in
around
1998
Tampa
arbitrarily
was
left
out,
and
now
that's
become
the
excuse
that
we
should
always
go
our
own
that
that
that
shouldn't
be.
We
have
people
that
live
in
Tampa
work
in
Pinellas
and
vice
versa.
People
are
crossing
the
bay
all
the
time
we
need
to
work
as
a
region.
C
I
Know
I
went
in
the
back.
It
was
processing
a
few
things,
I'm,
probably
going
to
make
a
motion.
Mr
Carlson
a
little
bit
later,
a
new
business
to
ask
the
floral
League
of
cities
to
also
look
into
this.
They.
F
B
D
No
matter!
If
you
think
you
know
it
all,
you
cannot
control
one
thing
and
that's
nature
back
in
the
old
curriculum
Administration
somewhere
between
95
and
2003.
We
were
what
a
couple
of
days
I,
think
Mr
Perry
was
here
at
that
time
from
having
enough
water
to
service
the
system
that
we
have.
No
one,
including
Tampa,
Bay
Water,
had
enough
water
at
that
time.
U
D
D
It
includes
the
cost
of
water,
it
includes
the
car
to
garbage
pickup,
and
it
includes
something
that
I
wanted
to
do
25
years
ago.
So
at
that
time
was
two
dollars
a
month,
because
it
was
never
cause
for
replacement
of
what
water
pipes
Underground
and
the
pipes
going
through
the
highway
current
to
assure
retreatment
right
that
were
never
there.
D
D
That
is
because
water
is
the
most
precious
resources
on
Earth
along
with
the
air.
If
you
don't
have
clean
water
and
clean
air,
you
can't
live
I,
don't
care
who
you
are
I,
don't
care,
how
much
money
you
have
I,
don't
care
what
your
status
is
in
society.
You
cannot
live
period,
am
I,
correct,
that's
correct!
D
U
Okay,
when
the
city
has
purchased
water
from
others
in
the
past,
and
it
has
been
different
water
quality
than
the
water
quality
we
produce.
Yes,
there
have
been
numerous
tastes
in
order.
If.
D
D
So
let
me
understand:
I'm
not
going
to
mention
name
but
I
said
something
where
all
in
October
I
think
it
was,
and
it
was
a
bond
issue
for
30
years
and
I
saw
two
years
of
which
we're
only
going
to
pay
interest.
I,
didn't
say
too
much.
I
want
to
see
what
happened.
I!
Guess
what
happened
the
following
month,
that
by
the
way
that
went
from
point
A
to
point
B
to
the
year
2058,
if
I
remember
that
30-year
bond
for
130
million
dollars?
D
D
There
was
only
one
vote
against
and
you're
looking
at
them,
not
the
experience
that
I
got
there.
The
experience
that
I
got
here
when
you
pay
interest
for
the
first
16
years
at
six
million
dollars
for
96
million
dollars
for
those
first
16
years,
some
poor
individual
and
the
end
of
those
14
years
instead
of
30
years
you're
going
to
have
to
pay
the
whole
cost
of
the
interest
again.
D
D
D
D
They
had
to
do
it
because
they
have
a
water
supply,
the
other
time
that
war
was
going
on
way
back
up
there
on
the
other
side
of
the
racetrack,
about
five
miles
when
some
county,
commissioner
of
the
Hillsborough
County
back
before
before
Alexander
set
foot
and
the
wars
million
years
ago,
was
sold
that
piece
of
property
that
had
the
wells
to
Pinellas
County.
If
I
remember
correctly,
that's
what
started
the
war
City
Tampa
was
never
in
the
water
wars.
B
F
D
As
long
as
it's
one
we're
the
best
kind
of
operation
and
by
the
way,
how
do
you
feel
if
you
lived
in
New
Orleans
and
you
drank
the
water
from
the
Mississippi
River
and
it
come
from
where
Minnesota
it's
got
to
be
a
thousand
miles.
I
would
assume
we're
close
to
it.
How
many
cities
down
the
Mississippi
throw
the
dump
a
tutu
water,
whatever
you
want
to
call
it
toilet,
catap
or
pest
water
whatever
you
want
to
call
it
into
the
Mississippi
River?
D
The
Mississippi
or
they're
going
to
have
green
grass
for
the
rest
of
their
life.
I,
don't
know.
What's
going
on,
we
get
a
water,
mostly
from
where
the
green
swamp.
If
I
remember
the
followers
into
the
Hillsborough
ribbon
comes
on
down
I
wonder
if
any
other
cities
up
north
of
us
or
east
of
us
somewhere
is
dumping
into
that
area
that
goes
into
the
green
swamp
that
goes
down
to
Hillsboro
River.
D
AF
D
You
already
have
seven
billion
people
living
on
Earth
and
eight
billion
and
just
around
the
corner,
so
we
better
understand
what
we're
talking
about
and
realize
what
we
have
and
be
able
to
supply
yourself
with
that
water.
We
did
so
many
things
during
the
growth.
The
city
of
Tampa
is
one
of
the
first
in
Florida
to
have
a
water,
and
it
still
has
that
if
I
remember
correctly,
we
still
have
somebody
going
to
run
on
watering
days
and
I'm,
not
here
to
embarrass
anybody.
D
I'm
going
to
stop
giving
a
lecture
because
I'm
not
trying
to
lecture
anyone,
I'm
trying
to
open
your
eyes
that
you
have
to
take
care
of
yourself.
First,
the
citizens
of
the
city
have
always
gotten
the
best
water,
the
best
Waterway
and
again
I'm
going
to
say
anybody
wants
to
put
a
gamble
with
me.
Come
on
I'll,
take
you
off
on
the
price
of
water
versus
the
quality
of
water
versus
the
District
of
anyone
that
they
want
end
of
story.
Thank
you
very
much.
Mr
chairman
amen.
B
U
I
appreciate
it
I
just
wanted
in
the
in
the
spirit
of
transparency,
I
I
need
to
just
clarify
a
couple
things.
First,
the
last
two
times
we
have
purchased
water
from
Tampa
Bay
Water.
They
have
provided
us
water
quality
that
has
similar
in
quality
and
we
have
had
zero
complaints.
So
it
is
possible
right
now
to
purchase
that
water,
Tampa
Bay
water
will
not
guarantee
that
water,
the
only
water
quality
they
can
guarantee,
is,
what's
called
an
exhibit
or
sorry
exhibit
D,
which
is
part
of
the
agreement.
U
However,
Tampa
Bay
water
has
been
working
to
address
water
quality
concerns
of
the
member
governments
for
the
last
three
to
four
years,
and
they
are
embarking
or
considering
a
500
million
dollar
Capital
project
to
you
know
enhance
their
water
quality
so
that
it
will
be
similar
to
the
water
quality
we
produce
and
I
just
wanted
to
make
sure
that
it
was
clear
that
didn't
come
out
in
the
discussion
and
the
one
other
thing
I
wanted
to
clarify
is
that
you
know
councilman
Carlson
to
address
your
comments
about
the
administration.
D
B
I'll,
be
very
quick
with
this
I
agree
with
my
colleagues
that
we
need
to
look
to
our
state
representatives.
First
question
is:
how
can
this
have
happened?
How
could
you
have
done
this
I've
been
living
in
Tampa
since
1974
I
have
not
seen
this
Bay
cleaner
than
it's
ever
been
to
this
day.
B
We
want
to
take
this
water
stakeholders
want
to
take
this
water
and
purify
it's
the
best.
It
can
be
while
I
guarantee
well,
while
I
agree,
Pharmaceuticals
heavy
metals
and
nitrates,
but
if
we
take
it
that
far,
why
don't
we
just
use
it
for
drinking
water
as
I
see
an
angler
out
here,
which
I
am
we
know
that
the
estuaries
need
to
be
fed
with
fresh
water?
B
AK
Good
morning
Rebecca
John's
legal
department,
we
were
asked
to
look
at
the
feasibility
of
an
ordinance
that
would
protect
a
tenant
from
eviction
for
rent
that
was
passed
due
for
more
than
six
months.
Evictions
are
governed
by
Florida
Statutes
chapter
83
chapter
83
allows
a
landlord
to
evict
a
tenant
for
a
breach
of
Elise,
which
would
include
any
failure
to
pay
rent
due
under
the
lease
rent
is
defined
under
the
statute
as
any
payment
due
to
the
landlord.
Pursuant
to
the
lease,
there
is
no
limiting
language
as
to
a
time
period.
AK
If
we
were
to
enact
an
ordinance
limiting
that
we
wouldn't
have
the
authority
to
do
it
because
we
would
be
limiting
landlords
rights
under
the
statute,
however,
be
aware
that,
prior
to
an
eviction
proceeding
a
landlord
has
to
provide
written
notice
to
a
tenant,
letting
them
know
how
much
rent
the
landlord
claims
is
back
to
if
the
tenant
is
disputing
that
amount
of
rent.
That's
the
exact
case
that
we
have
the
Bay
Area
Legal
contract
in
place.
AK
AL
Thank
you,
sir,
and
thank
you
very
much
for
your
work
and
research
on
this.
You
know
with
this
was
necessitated
because
of
the
terrible
things
happening
out
at
timber
falls
on
113th
Street
I
was
actually
just
talking
to
their
property
manager.
Yesterday,
I
always
try
to
keep
up
to
date
on.
What's
Happening
Etc
I'm
glad
to
hear
that
at
Timber
Falls
we
have
a
little
under
two
dozen
code
cases,
which
is
really
good,
so
the
city
is,
is
trying
to
hold
accountability
there.
You
know
what
happened
on
this
instance.
AL
Was
you
had
a
lot
of
residents
who
heard
out
of
nowhere
that
they
were
up
to
seven,
eight,
nine,
ten
thousand
dollars
in
back
rent
with
assorted
fees,
etc,
etc,
and
a
lot
of
it
was
due
to
confusion
and
many
of
those
cases,
thank
goodness,
have
been
sorted
out,
which
is
good.
AL
You
know
the
the
and
I
and
I
obviously
understand
the
some
of
the
issues
you
talked
about
there
and
if
you
have
a
contract
and
it's
enforceable,
it's
just
that,
there's
a
right
way
to
do
it
and
that's
where
the
bully
pulpit
comes
in
with
lot
of
these
property
owners
and
making
sure
that
they
do
things
the
right
way
and
I.
Think
Timber.
AL
A
I
remember
when
we
were
talking
about
putting
that
office
attendance
advocacy
together,
that
we
talked
about
adding
this
the
phone
number
that
that
the
city's
number
for
the
tenant,
Advocacy
Office,
possibly
to
the
eviction
notices
I,
know,
because
if
I
remember
correctly,
there
are
there
are
like
six
different
phone
numbers
and
folks
don't
know
who
to
call
because
they
don't
know
which
pertains
to
them.
And
our
thought
was
hey.
A
Just
put
this
one
number
and
if
you
have
a
problem,
we,
the
tenant,
Advocacy
Office,
can
help
direct
you
to
the
correct
person,
whether
it
be
Bay,
Area,
Legal
or
the
apartment.
Complex
I
mean
depending
on.
If
it's
state,
money
or
federal
money
or
whatever
do
we
have
any
ability
to
I
mean
how
how
do
those
other
numbers
get
on
there?
And
how
can
we
get
our
number
on
there
too?
Well.
AK
I
want
to
clarify
which
eviction
notice
you're
talking
about
so
there
is
a
written
notice
that
a
landlord
sends
to
the
tenant
prior
to
eviction
proceedings
that
states
you
owe
650
in
rent.
You
must
pay
that
within
three
business
days
or
you
must
turn
over
possession
of
the
property
that
notice
is
governed
by
the
statute.
The
statute
actually
includes
the
language
to
go
in
that
notice.
So
then,
if
the
tenant
doesn't
pay,
then
the
landlord
can
pursue
eviction
proceedings.
AK
Those
eviction
forms
are
governed
by
the
state
courts,
and
so
that
form
is
what
governs
what
goes
so
that
notice
that
actually
gets
filed
with
the
court
and
served
on
the
tenant.
That
is
a
form
that's
governed
by
the
state
courts.
So
I
don't
know
that
we
would
in
either
of
those
instances,
because
they
are
governed
by
the
state,
be
able
to
add
or
require
that
City
of
Tampa
language
be
put
on
those
notices.
A
I
would
I
would
love
to
look
into
that
and
see
if
that's
something
we
can
do
so
I'll
make
a
motion
later
today
to
do
that,
just
just
to
cover
all
of
our
bases
and
then
I
know.
We
just
had
Miss
Travis
up
earlier
to
talk
about
passing
out
the
information
to
different
apartment
complexes,
and
maybe
we
can
somehow
add
that
in
because
we
need
to
start
a
component
not
only
for
the
apartments
but
for
the
tenants
now.
AK
F
A
AK
A
Absolutely
and
if,
if
I
need
to
make
a
motion
for
that,
I
will
absolutely
do
that.
If
you
talk
to
I
can
talk
to
you
or
I
can.
If
Kelly
will
come
out,
my
wonderful
aide
Kelly
will
come
out.
A
You
all
can
talk
about
how
you
want
that
language,
but
I
will
absolutely
make
that
motion
and
thank
you
so
much
because
that's
what
I
was
thinking
of
just
some
way,
any
more
way
that
we
can
get
that
information
out
to
the
people
who
need
it
and
get
them
to
know
about
it
ahead
of
time
or
if
they
don't
know
about
it.
A
neighbor
knows
about
it,
the
more
the
the
more
we
we
get
that
number
out
the
more.
We
can
actually
help
more
people
with
this.
AK
L
Good
morning
again,
Council
Nicole,
Travis,
administrator
of
development
and
Economic
Opportunity
I
was
asked
to
to
provide
a
presentation
on
the
Bloomberg
contract
and
where
we
are,
including
how
many
consultants
and
departments
and
so
I
have
a
slide
deck.
Thank
you
you're,
just
asking
it
appears.
L
So
what
I'm
going
to
go
through
in
this
live
just
identify
all
the
different
Bloomberg
teams
and
the
number
of
Consultants
we
have
over
15
active
projects
since
March
of
2020
and
Bloomberg
and
Associates,
which
is
their
philanthropic
arm,
has
donated
more
than
3
500
hours
with
our
teams.
L
The
one
thing
that
you
should
understand
about
the
Bloomberg
contract
is
that
I
am
the
administrator
that
oversees
all
of
the
projects
and
interfaces
with
Bloomberg
on
which
projects
are
a
goal
and
which
ones
were
are
not
in
alignment
with
what
we're
trying
to
achieve,
and
so
I
work
with
the
mayor
on
that,
just
to
make
sure
that
we're
not
off
doing
random
things.
So
I
oversee
this,
this
contract
in
whole,
and
let
me
know
you
can
stop
me
at
any
point.
L
If
you
have
questions
so
we
have
a
couple
projects
with
the
communications
team.
Specifically,
working
on
their
best
practices
on
media
engagement,
increasing
impact
on
engagement
and
social
media
and
how
to
improve
story
pitching
there
are
eight
Bloomberg
experts.
L
The
other
project
that
we
have
is
with
the
soul,
walk.
So
this
is
a
cultural
assets,
management
team.
There
are
three
Bloomberg
experts
and
you
can
see
their
areas
of
exspeces
on
expertise.
It's
on
cultural
promotions,
public
art,
Investments
and
securing
grants
and
other
funding
strategies
to
support
the
Arts.
L
L
They're
areas
of
expertise
are
are
really
on
economic
strategy,
startup
and
small
business
support,
commercial
regeneration
projects,
Workforce
Development
and
Industry
clusters,
and
so
there
are
four
experts
on
the
economic
development
team.
The
one
thing
that
you
should
know
about
the
Bloomberg
team
is
that
their
team.
It
includes
former
senior
leaders
at
city
and
state
Economic,
Development
departments.
They
are
focused
on
implementation
and
how
do
we
get
things
from
concept
to
implementation?
Their
commitment
is
towards
helping
ensure
that
all
residents,
particularly
those
from
disadvantaged
groups,
have
access
to
Economic
Opportunity.
L
This
is
something
we've
been
working
really
close
and
when
I
show
you
some
of
the
projects
that
we've
been
working
on,
primarily
in
East,
Tampa,
you'll,
see
and
a
lot
of
the
work
that
we're
doing
is
data
driven,
so
oftentimes
Bloomberg
staff
will
assist
us
in
looking
at
the
best
practices
or
even
talking
through
what
type
of
metrics
will
help
us.
Councilman
Carlson
has
had
has
talked
about
the
metrics
and
how
we
measure
our
economic
success
and
not
necessarily
doing
that
at
an
MSA
level.
L
But
how
is
the
city
of
Tampa
performing
on
these
on
these
particular
metrics
and
it's
beyond
just
the
poverty
and
education
metrics
like
what
one
of
the
things
that
I
want
to
I'm
going
to
go
off
on
a
tangent
now,
but
one
of
the
things
that
I
want
to
ensure
is
that
when
we
provide
resources
and
funding
for
different
projects
or
partner
with
agencies,
we
really
should
be
figuring
out.
What
is
a
return
on
the
investment?
What
is
it,
what
are
the
citizens
getting
from
that?
L
Are
we
really
improving
Economic
Opportunity
for
our
most
disadvantaged
citizens,
and
how
do
we
measure
that,
and
so
those
are
things
that
just
kind
of
working
through
that
is
with
Bloomberg,
and
the
last
thing
I'll
say
about
the
team-
is
that
the
long-term
commitment
helps
us
to
see
this
over
time
and
to
put
strategies
in
place
that
we
can
measure
the
success.
So
the
projects
that
that
we're
working
on
is
on
developing
a
short-term
economic
roadmap.
The
mayor's
Workforce
Council
executive
committee
you'll
see
that
they
just
had
a
work.
L
A
Workforce
Summit
with
Brandon
McKinney
McKenzie
that
working
through
the
different
strategies.
For
how
are
we
ensuring
that
our
Workforce,
that
we
are
capturing
and
training
the
workforce?
That's
working
with
higher
institutions
to
make
sure
that
we're
training
our
students
and
going
even
further
into
the
middle
school
high
school
levels,
to
make
sure
that
we're
training
our
students
to
stay
within
our
community
and
what
the
Workforce
Development
looks
like.
L
East
Tampa
22nd
and
Lake
development,
we're
looking
for
catalytic
projects
in
East,
Tampa,
really
to
a
jump,
start
the
development,
so
we're
in
my
Redevelopment
hap
for
for
a
minute.
Private
investment
follows
public
dollars.
They
follow
public
investment,
and
so
really
we
want
to
jump
start
East
Tampa
needs
a
catalytic
project.
East
Tampa
needs
a
big
win
to
show
Private
investors
that
they
shouldn't
be
afraid
of
investing
into
the
East
Tampa
area,
and
so
that's
what
we're
working
through
with
Bloomberg.
L
There's
an
internal
management
team,
this
team,
their
expertise,
is
really
an
internal
operations
and
Reporting
project
management.
We
have
four
Bloomberg
experts
on
this.
That's
working
with
OC
Owens
group.
This
is
around
the
project
of
customer-centric
performance
systems.
They
recently
had
some
Department
interviews.
My
different
departments
within
my
portfolio
were
interviewed,
trying
to
figure
out
not
only
external
customer
interface
but
internal
customer
interface.
And
how
do
we
measure
our
performance
and
responsiveness.
L
So
we
have
the
expertise
to
write
scope
but
they've
provided
us
with
best
practices
in
other
major
cities
that
have
done
needs
assessment
and
what
information
was
helpful,
then
for
them
to
accelerate
certain
multi-family
development
and
we
included
those
things
in
our
RFP:
the
transportation
team,
Road,
Safety,
pedestrian
infrastructure
improvements,
Bike
Share
and
Mike
Bike,
Share
and
cycling
infrastructure
they're
for
Bloomberg
experts
on
this
they
work
with
Vic
directly
on
these
projects.
We're
looking
at
quilt
builds
projects
that
are
traffic
calming
and
pedestrian
safety
projects
in
four
different
areas.
L
The
Bloomberg
urban
planning
team
has
three
experts.
They
do
a
lot
of
the
long-range
planning,
zoning
neighborhood,
Improvement
districts,
water,
revitalization
and
access.
They
have
three
experts
on
that
team.
Again,
this
is
in
my
portfolio.
They
work
very
closely
with
Stephen
Benson,
one
of
the
things
I've
talked
to
some
of
you
about
it
is
the
Land
Development
code,
you've
heard
it
from
developers.
L
You
feel
it
at
your
evening
meetings
and
we
have
a
30-year
Land
Development
code
that
has
been
added
to
and
fixed
to,
and
one
of
the
things
that
not
just
for
the
development
Community,
but
for
the
residents
and
citizens
to
understand
what
the
Land
Development
code
is,
how
to
use
it,
how
to
follow
it.
We
really
need
to
update
Our
Land
Development
code.
It
hasn't
been
touched
in
30
years.
L
I,
see
why
but
I
you
know
one
of
the
things
I
shared
I'm,
going
to
share
this
with
some
of
you
before
taking
this
position,
someone
that
used
to
work
here
called
me
and
said:
you're
very
ambitious,
but
don't
try
and
save
the
world
leave
the
Land
Development
code
alone.
It's
a
beast,
don't
take
it
on,
and
my
response
is
hold.
My
beer
watch
me.
L
Do
it
right
so
I
I
just
know
that
the
Land
Development
code
is
supposed
to
work
not
just
for
developers
but
for
the
citizens
in
the
community
and
what
they
want
to
see
with
the
future.
What
they
want
to
look
like.
So
our
challenge,
the
the
Bloomberg
team
to
number
one
go
in
and
do
a
forensic
audit
of
our
code.
Where
are
their
inefficiencies
in
the
code?
L
Are
we
bringing
things
to
council
that
they're
automatically
approving
and
it's
they
we're
just
bringing
it
because
the
code
is
not
efficient
and
so
they're
going
through
and
doing
a
forensic
audit,
and
that's
one
of
the
first
things
that
we're
doing
they
also
started
phase
one
of
the
Public
Public,
but
stakeholder
interviews,
people
that
use
the
code
a
lot
to
hear
any
recommendations.
How
do
they
feel
about
the
code
and
so
that
we
could
use
that
information
to
guide
us
in
next
steps
on?
How
do
we
approach
rehauling
the
length,
the
Land
Development
code?
L
I
completely
went
off
on
a
tangent
on
that
Municipal
integrity
is
one
of
the
other
teams.
There's
a
group
of
three
Bloomberg
experts
on
there.
They
are
specializing
contract
transparency,
procurement
process,
optimization
internal
operations
and
Reporting.
This
is
sorry.
This
is
where
we
talk
about
the
Land
Development
code,
forensic
audit.
This
is
where
they're
going
through
rezoning
waivers
that
were
submitted
between
2021
to
find
those
efficiencies.
So
the
things
that
I
just
spoke
to
you
about
it's
really,
the
municipal
Integrity
team.
L
That's
doing
that
piece
while
we're
doing
the
stakeholder
interviews
for
the
all
of
this
is
in
an
effort
to
make
our
code
easier
for
the
citizens
and
for
you
and
your
long
evening,
meetings
and
then.
Lastly,
the
last
team
that
we're
working
with
is
the
real
estate
team.
Those
are
two
Bloomberg
experts
on
that
and
again
this
is
in
my
portfolio.
L
If
we
need
right
away
a
lot
of
those
transactional
things,
they
do
day
to
day,
but
we
also
need
to
be
very
strategic
in
our
land
acquisition
and
disposition
and
how
we
manage
all
of
those
assets
and
so
we're
moving
forward
with
looking
at
Best,
Practices
and
also
systems,
that's
in
place
to
manage
our
assets
and
not
an
Excel
spreadsheet
right.
So
this
is
just
a
brief
overview.
These
are
the
projects
that
we're
working
on
that
staff
would
otherwise
not
have
time
to
work
on
these
types
of
initiatives.
L
A
I
I
can't
speak
for
my
colleagues
but
I'm
going
to
request
that
they
come
interview
me
about
code.
Possibility
changes
because
I
think
that
I
think
that
speaking.
F
L
They're
going
at
us
so
I
I'm
there
it's
on
the
it's,
it's
you're
going
to
be
interviewed
for
this.
That
was
just
phase
one
that
they
were
because
we
needed
to
understand
how
people
felt
about
the
codes
to
shape
the
questions
on
for
the
people
that
are
implementing
the
code
and
then
for
the
residents
interview
residents
to
see
how
they
feel
about
the
code,
figuring
it
out
and
stuff.
So
you're
up
great
thank.
V
I
Thank
you
for
that
councilman,
her
Tech,
when
you
look
at
the
economic
team,
I
think
we
kind
of
spoke
about
a
little
bit
and
I'm
glad
to
look
at
some
pointers
in
there.
But
again,
I
was
at
that
Gala
last
night
reception
and
was
very
intrigued.
What
they
were
talking
about
and
I'm
I'm
kind
of
puzzled.
Now
and
I've
been
saying
this
for
a
while.
In
my
mind,
our
ebo
department
should
not
be
under
Miss
Winn's
portfolio.
I
It
should
be
under
the
economic
development
office
portfolio
and
and
the
reason
I
say
that
not
that
she
came
within
that
I
just
believe
that
Economic
Development
and
small
businesses-
that's
part
of
ebo,
and
that
should
be
close
to
your
office
and,
if
I'm
interviewing
I'm
going
to
say
that,
because
when
I
again,
when
I
looked
at
some
of
the
other
counties,
who
were
a
little
bit
more
Progressive,
that's
we're
trying
to
move
they
their
department.
Heads
can
do
RFP
or
qrfi,
but
it
doesn't
go
out.
I
F
I
To
me,
that's
Economic,
Development
and
I
believe
that
works
hand
in
hand
with
what
you're
trying
to
do
in
our
small
businesses,
so
that
that
would
be
my
suggestion
going
forward
and
again
hoping
we
can
make
those
changes,
because
I
believe
if
we
look
at
oh
what
other
people
are
doing
and
I'm
going
to
suggest
that
maybe
they're
off
of
your
office
I,
don't
make
a
motion
but
I
I
know
they're
listening
they
go
and
look
and
see
what
the
Orange
County
public
school
system
is
doing
and
how
they're
operating
in
how
Orange
County
is
operating
with
their
their
system
and
I.
I
You
know
I,
everybody
in
the
room
was
applauding
saying
that
they
they
are
they're
like
the
number
one
people
out,
beating
Miami,
of
how
they're
getting
their
small
businesses
involved
the
money
process
and
the
training
that
they're
doing
and
again
it's
to
me,
I
always
like
to
go
to
trains,
because
you
always
can
learn
something
new,
and
when
you
hear
that
another
idea
is
working
and
everyone
in
this
room
is
saying
wow
and
they
can
be
able
to
demonstrate
how
it's
working
and
that's
just
something
I
think
we
I
always
look
at
and
I
think
we
should
look
at
as
well.
I
C
Statement
and
two
questions
one.
Thank
you
for
doing
this.
A
lot
of
my
constituents
had
concerns
about
this
contract
and
and
their
relationship
of
Bloomberg
embedded
in
in
in
departments,
and
this
has
given
us
some
insights
into
it.
I'm
sure
they
will
want
more
details
before
I
comment
on
any
of
it.
I
want
to
get
feedback
from
constituents,
so
anybody
watching
please
let
me
know
your
thoughts
on
this,
but
thank
you,
Ms
Travis,
for
going
through
that.
C
So
two
questions,
one
can
I
assume
that
all
the
communication
with
them
and
all
their
work
product
is
being
preserved
in
public
record.
Oh.
L
Yeah
yeah
anything
and
in
fact,
there's
someone
that
regularly
emails
me
that
asks
for
work
for,
like
any
final
documents
and
I,
send
them
to
them.
Yeah.
C
Okay
and
then
the
second
thing
is
we've
seen
in
the
they've
been
working
with
us
18
months
or
two
years.
C
C
This
year,
so
I
have
to
ask
this
question
and
it
touches
a
couple
of
permits
you
mentioned
during
that
time.
This,
the
the
attacks
by
the
mayor's
office
against
City
Council
Members,
has
escalated
rapidly
and
there
are
City
Rules
and
state
laws
that
prohibit
staff
from
being
involved.
In
that
we
have
seen
evidence
from
several
sources
that
staff
have
been
involved
and,
and
so
I'm
asking
legal
about
that.
C
But
the
the
question
is:
is
there
anything
in
the
contract
with
Bloomberg
that
prohibits
them
from
participating
in
politics,
while
they're
not
getting
paid,
and
so
part
of
the
prohibition
with
the
with
the
employees?
Is
that
if
they're
working
on
City
hours
and
getting
paid
by
the
city,
they
shouldn't
be
posting
on
social
media
or
sending
texts
or
writing
for
a
political
purpose?
But
is
there
anything
in
the
contract
that
prohibits
Bloomberg
people
from
participating?
L
C
L
A
I
I
forgot
to
mention
this
earlier.
Thank
you
for
this.
Can
we
get
a
copy
of
it?
Of
course
awesome.
Thank
you.
AL
Thank
you
very
much
and
I'm
glad
councilman
Carlson
made
this
motion
because
I
I
was
getting
a
few
questions
and
I
discussed
this
with
you
yesterday,
and
this
provides
a
lot
of
clarification
for
me,
a
real
dispositive
issue
here
is
when
you
say
this
helps
me.
Do
my
job
and
I
think
that's
really
important
you're
very
overworked
you're,
very
valued
here
Etc.
If
this
helps
you
do
your
job,
that's
great
I
do
think.
AL
However,
given
the
number
of
questions
like
I
said
yesterday
that
that
are
presented
on
this,
it
would
be
good
to
have
this
come
back
periodically,
maybe
once
a
year
whatever
for
updates
on
what
Bloomberg
is
doing.
Given
those
questions
Etc,
you
know
it's
funny
when,
when,
when
this
this
past
six
to
one
you
know
in
retrospect,
I
wish
that
I
can
only
speak
for
myself.
AL
That
more
scrutiny
would
have
been
applied
to
this,
so
we
could
have
maybe
prevented
some
of
those
questions
and
dealt
with
it
as
you've
done
in
your
very
comprehensive
report.
So
if
something
does
come
up
to,
maybe
have
this
come
up
for
review
once
a
year,
whatever
it
may
be,
I
would
be
very
supportive
of
that,
but
again
I
I
thank
the
motion
maker
and
I.
Thank
you
for
your
presentation.
Thank
you.
L
My
pleasure
and
if
anyone
that's
watching
because
I
know,
Mr
Meyer
said
that
she's
watching.
If
she
has
questions
I'm
more
than
happy
to
to
speak
with
her
and
answer
any
other
questions
that
anyone
may
have.
I
L
I
Know
you
handle
business.
You
took
Lakeland
to
the
Stars,
you
have
no
business,
but
they
use
a
lot
of
the
new
tax
credits
to
do
a
lot
of
the
programs,
housing
and
things
like
that
in
that
area
with
the
bbif
or
some
of
these
other
organizations
who
are
trying
to
come
here
to
Tampa
to
start
moving
things
here.
So
they
know
about
you,
so
they
want
to
come
here
because
they
know
about
you.
So
that's
you
say:
you're
a
superstar,
I
tell
you,
you
know
people
want
to
work
around
you.
I
So
that's
that's
a
good
thing.
You
know
and
I'm
happy
to
be.
You
know,
be
a
part
of
that
with
you.
So
I
just
want
to
make
mention
that
that
that
that
new
tax
credit
is
and
a
person
told
me
why
isn't
Tampa?
Taking
advantage
of
that?
Why
are
we
not
taking
advantage,
but
you
have
it
here
so
I
know
you,
you
you're
the
guru
you're
already
looking
at
that,
so
we
could
be
able
to
take
advantage
of
these
new
tax
credits
to
be
able
to
leverage
our
dollars
to
get
more
things
going.
B
Council
we
have
Miss
Jennifer
Cohen
here
and
she
has
been
sitting
patiently
here,
but
now
before
you
get
up
Miss
Cohen
I'm,
going
to
make
a
a
question
statement
here.
She
is
with
the
attorney
firm
of
the
legal,
firmer
Brian,
Miller
and
Olive,
and
she
is
here
to
address
and
present
items
19
through
23.
N
Mr
chairman
I've,
been
thinking
about
this
and
I
think
we
should
break
for
lunch
until
1
30.
start
up
with
18
go
right
into
1920.
You
know
for
the
the
attorney
that
is
here
and
then
after
that,
it's
the
consent
agenda,
which
is
quick,
and
then
we
have
one
one
review
hearing
or
yeah
one
yeah
one
review
hearing
for
that
starts
at
1
30
anyway,
but
I
think
you
know.
N
If
we
take
lunch
now
we
can
knock
out
the
the
charter
stuff
and
item
number
18
and
it'll
be
smooth
sailing
motion
to
going
to
recess
for
lunch
until
1
30.