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From YouTube: TCC 10/6/22
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A
A
A
A
A
A
B
B
C
C
I
know
I
was
just
trying
to
get
it
out
of
my
mind.
Who
has
the
invocation
today
is
that
councilman
Goods.
E
E
Well,
the
haze
is
a
member
of
brown
Memorial
Church
of
God
in
Christ.
She
is
currently
serving
as
a
Sunday
school
superintendent.
Remember
the
mother's
board,
an
evangelist
missionary
and
previously
served
as
the
president
of
the
home
and
foreign
mission
she's
been
appointed.
The
district
missionary
of
the
greatest
Suncoast
District
please
serve
as
a
Pinellas
district,
Sunday
school
field,
representative
Greater,
Love
district
Sunday,
school
field,
representative,
the
greater
South
Coast
District
Sunday
school
field
representative
and
was
also
appointed
the
jurisdiction,
southwestern
Florida
Sunday
school
field
representative.
E
B
Father,
we
love
you,
we
praise
you,
we
thank
you
right
now,
God.
We
thank
you
for
the
opportunity
to
stand
here
and
give
you
glory.
We
thank
you
for
every
councilman
and
woman
in
the
building.
We
thank
you
for
the
agenda
at
hand
that
you're
going
to
get
the
glory.
Oh
God.
We
thank
you
right
now
how
you've
kept
bodies
we
came
through
a
hurricane
and
we're
still
standing
we're
praying
for
the
bereaved
family
of
the
officer,
God
and
God.
B
B
F
G
H
Yes,
good
morning,
Mr
chairman
members
of
city
council,
Martin,
Shelby
city
council
attorney
today's
meeting
October
6th
of
2022
is
being
held
here
at
Tampa.
City
Council
live
with
a
full
Council
present.
Members
of
the
public
can
attend
in
person
here
in
city
council
chambers,
at
315,
East,
Kennedy,
Boulevard,
or
virtually
participate
in
this
meeting,
using
what
is
referred
to
by
Florida
Statutes
and
rules
as
Communications
media
technology.
H
Now
to
speak
remotely
during
public
comment
with
the
use
of
CMT.
The
public
should
know
that
CMT
requires
pre-registration
and
that
is
available
through
the
city's
website
at
www.tampa.gov
forward.
Slash
public
comment,
the
instructions
for
that
are
available
on
the
city
council's
webpage
and
also
in
the
agenda
and
the
notice
of
today's
meeting
a
reminder
Council
that
the
public
needs
to
use
equipment
that
has
video
and
audio
for
the
purposes
of
quasi-judicial
hearings
and
again
that
is
also
available
on
the
instructions.
H
C
H
C
C
We're
going
to
have
a
report
by
I
believe,
chief
of
staff
for
we'll
make
that
agenda
item
number
six.
That
is
going
to
be
the
a
report
from
our
hurricane
that
just
Quint
Pius
hurricane
Ian.
I
And
then
I'm
requesting
that
the
public
be
allowed
to
comment
on
item
nine
after
the
staff
reports.
Second,.
I
D
H
C
C
C
C
C
D
L
J
Sir
I
don't
for
number
11
with
McDonald
Clifford
McDonald
I.
M
C
K
Yeah
we've
we've
talked
about
this
before
but
as
I
understand
the
deadline
for
putting
things
on
the
agendas
I
think
Friday
the
week
before
and
last
night
at
10
o'clock,
we
still
had
items
like
number
51
that
did
not
have
backup
I
had
requested
some
backup
for
it.
That
still
was
not
sent
to
us.
It
was
not
put
online
and
for
a
seven
plus
million
dollar
item
I'm,
not
discussing
it
right
now,
but
I
think
we
need
backup
for
these
things
and
there
were.
K
L
Mr
Harrow
thank
you.
Council
Dennis,
Rod,
Chief,
Financial,
Officer
I
can
speak
specifically
to
item
51.
It
was
my
intention
to
present
those
items
as
part
of
the
presentation,
which
is
why
we
pulled
it
from
consent.
The
backup
request
was
made
following
the
item
and
during
the
weekly
briefings
for
City
Council
on
the
other
items
again,
I
would
just
remind
Council.
This
agenda
is
taking
place
following
a
major
emergency
event.
You're
about
to
get
briefed
on
that.
K
So
we're
this
week,
I
think
everybody
would
understand,
but
it
happens
every
week
and
the
public
is
constantly
contacting
me.
Probably
my
colleagues,
and
not
talking
about
just
your
area,
but
they're
they're,
constantly
things
that
are
missing
reports
that
are
sent.
We
have
a
hundred
items
typically
in
a
week
and
we
have
to
read
the
agenda
multiple
times
in
this
because
it
changes
constantly.
H
Actually,
we
do
it
I'm
looking
for
them.
One
of
the
rules
by
the
way
is
that
electronic
media
should
be
received
at
least
48
hours
in
advance,
and
the
electronic
media
must
be
delivered
to
cttv
at
least
48
hours
prior
to
Port
broadcast,
that's
rule
5D,
and
then
there
is
a
rule
and
I
believe
it's
actually.
K
There's
been
a
lot
of
discussion
about
transparency
and
accountability,
and
the
public
can't
have
transparency.
They
can't
see
the
documents
as
the
backup
because
they
don't
even
know
what
the
items
are
about.
Typically,
there's
a
cover
sheet
as
a
placeholder
and
I'm
not
talking
about
any
particular
Department
I'm
not
trying
to
hold
up
anything
today,
but
but
somehow
we
need
to
make
sure
that
the
public
has
plenty
of
time
to
look
at
the
backup
documents
before
and
we
have
time
to
look
at
them.
K
C
Were
you
finished
reading
the
the
the
rules
of
procedure.
H
Looking,
okay,
actually,
actually
here's
what
it
says.
This
is
Rule
7A
all
petitions,
Communications
staff
reports,
resolutions,
ordinances
and
other
matters
intended
for
the
consideration
of
the
city
council
shall
be
filed
by
the
office
of
the
city
clerk
honor
before
2
pm
on
the
Thursday
prior
to
the
meeting
of
city
council,
the
city
clerk
shall
assign
the
city
council
intern,
shall
assign
such
petitions
Communications
resolutions,
ordinances
and
other
matters
to
the
most
appropriate
placement
on
the
agenda.
H
Taking
into
consideration
the
request
made
at
the
time
of
placement
on
the
agenda,
ordinances
and
resolutions
related
to
fees
are
to
be
placed
under
staff
reports
and
Mr.
Chairman
I'll
also
remind
Council
that
a
with
regard
to
the
continuances
that
were
made
to
12,
13
and
15,
and
that's
going
to
be
discussed
next
week.
H
An
email
from
the
chief
of
staff
says
it's
going
to
be
part
of
a
comprehensive
process
about
how
these
sort
of
things
are
presented
to
council
and
that
might
be
an
appropriate
time
to
to
bring
it
up
as
well.
At
that
point,
certainly
the
issue
of
having
the
ability
for
you
to
be
able
to
see
the
material
in
advance
gives
you
the
time
to
be
able
to
formulate
questions
that
makes
your
time
with
staff
at
the
meeting
that
much
more
productive
to
you.
E
That
was
my
question.
I
want
him
to
make
sure
he
read
it
in
his
entirety.
I
think
the
issue
is
Mr.
Carl
said
we
do
get
it
late
and
we
have
a
lot
to
research
before
Thursday
morning.
Council
meeting
in
on
Wednesday
or
late
night
and
I
just
want
to
know
what
that
time
frame
was,
if
at
least
moved
back,
because
it's
more
time
he
doesn't
need
to
try
to
put
something
general
agenda.
E
If
we
know
it's
a
big
Hefty
app,
it
should
be
in
a
couple
weeks
right,
so
we
can
be
able
to
look
in
the
review
the
material.
So
that
might
be
something
during
that
period
that
we
need
to
look
at
if
the
time
needs
to
be
moved
back.
So
staff
can
have
adequate
time
to
prepare
for
this
Council
to
get
the
material,
so
we
can
understand
and
make
a
base
decision
for
the
citizens
of
Tampa.
If.
H
I
can
Mr
chairman
to
follow
up
on
that
also
the
things
about,
for
instance,
print
a
PowerPoint.
That's
going
to
be
presented
to
you
if
you
have
that
PowerPoint
in
advance
you'll
at
least
have
an
idea
of
what
kind
of
decision
points
you
will
be
asked
to
make,
rather
than
having
to
do
it.
Hearing
the
presentation
for
the
first
time
at
a
workshop
and
also
give
you
the
opportunity
to
ask
questions
of
Staff
prior
to
the
workshop
to
be
able
to
maybe
expedite
the
workshop
itself.
So
thank
you.
K
I
just
make
a
motion
for
to
see
if
we
could
get
agreement
on
a
general
statement
on
a
new
policy
I
I
would
I
would
just
like
to
make
a
motion
that
we
asked
staff
to
to
automatically
request
a
continuance
if,
if
they're
not
ready
to
upload
the
documents
by
the
deadline
on
that
was
just
that
is
cited
in
the
rules
on,
was
it
Thursday
or
Friday?.
K
Meeting
so
that
that
we
I
would
make
a
motion
that
we
we
make
a
general
statement.
That
staff
would
automatically
ask
for
continuance
if
they're
unable
to
upload
the
the
complete
documentation
by
by
Thursday
at
two
following
City
council's
Rules,
and
that
documents
would
be
added
as
an
exception,
with
consent
of
counsel
in
the
agenda.
Setting.
C
And
I,
don't
I
don't
mean
to
belabor
this
because
I
don't
want
to,
but
we
have
a
long
agenda
in
front
of
us
and
we're
having
this
discussion
now
at
the
beginning,
when
we
could
be
doing
that
later.
Do
you
have
a
second
on
your
motion
and
I'm
going
to
tell
you
I'm
going
to
I'm
going
to
vote
no
on
it,
because
there
are
certain
circumstances
where
it
can't
be
prepared
that
quickly
that
we
have
time
sensitive
things
need
to
be
done
immediately.
Do
you
have
a
second
on
on
councilman
Carlson's
motion?
I
I
That's
when
my
motion
for
the
budget
items
to
include
a
one-page
report
in
sire
and
like
tightening
things
up,
if
we
could
move
it
to
that
day,
to
discuss,
and
so
because
I
would
love
to
have
some
time
to
think
about
how
I,
because
I
think
Thursday
2
p.m
is
a
little
too
early.
But
I
would
I
would
agree
with
you
Monday
at
noon.
Mr,
chair,
councilman,.
C
K
Yeah
and
just
to
the
point
about
the
business
we
have
today,
the
problem
is
that
there's
a
presentation:
that's
going
to
go
on
about
seven
million
dollars,
I
haven't
seen
any
of
the
backup,
yet
the
public
hasn't
seen
the
backup.
That's
just
one
example
out
of
maybe
20
on
the
agenda
today,
and
so
we
to
be
able
to
do
the
work
we
need
to
do.
C
H
Yes,
thank
you
and
just
a
reminder,
council.
With
regard
to
things
that
are
time
sensitive.
Certainly,
the
administration
does
bring
to
your
attention
things
that
require
a
walk-on,
but
in
the
interests
of
public
having
the
opportunity
to
know
what
is
going
to
be
there
and
certainly
having
the
opportunity
of
council
knowing
in
advance.
So
it's
prepared
to
ask
questions,
transparency
being
the
case
and
the
Sunshine
Law
being
you
know
the
spirit
of
the
Sunshine
Law.
Just
so
you
know
absent
exigent
circumstances.
M
When
he
heard
the
word,
walk
on
I
guess,
you're
going
to
have
to
have
a
reason:
what's
the
emergency
so
because
you
might
have
one
one
day
and
none
for
two
or
three
weeks
you
might
have
ten
in
one
day.
So
therefore
who's
going
to
determine
what
is
the
walk-on
necessity
to
have
or
not
to
have
saying.
L
Rogero,
thank
you,
and
we
won't
solve
this
today,
but
something
Council
may
consider
is
some
of
these
backup
items
are
surfaced
after
the
agenda
is
submitted
during
our
individual
city
council
briefing,
so
you
may
want
to
consider
the
time
frames
associated
with
that.
The
agenda
item
itself
has
been
turned
in
on
time,
but
questions
surface
following
that
for
additional
information
and
items.
G
G
H
Thank
you
and
towards
that
end,
I
will
also
State
an
echo
that
Council
and
the
clerk
have
had
this
agreement
for
many
years,
for
as
long
as
I
can
remember
no
one-week
motions,
because
the
turnaround
time
Ms
Lucas,
you
would
agree
with
that,
but
the
turnaround
time
both
for
staff
and
the
clerk's
office
is
especially
difficult
and
also
in
defense
of
the
administration.
What
I
will
say
is
the
memos
that
you
are
getting
now
to
reduce
the
time
of
your
staff.
Reports
are
much
more
extensive
than
they
used
to
be
and
providing
more
information.
H
C
E
E
But
if
you
know
you
don't
have
all
the
materials,
it's
not
ready,
or
you
know
this
counselor
is
going
to
ask
a
mirage
of
questions.
Why
put
yourself
through
that
and
put
these
counts
through
that
just
do
the
right
thing
and
just
go
ahead
and
wait
till
it's
ready
to
go
or
put
your
continuous
and
say
we're
not
ready
to
go.
If
we
can
Mr
chairman.
H
C
I
have
found
we
tend
to
ask
staff
to
come
back
and
give
us
a
report
and
do
it
in
a
week
or
two
weeks.
E
J
Thank
you,
Mr,
chair,
I,
appreciate
it.
I
have
here
with
me
my
good
friend
Mr
Travis
Coy,
who
is
here
to
speak
on
Breast
Cancer,
Awareness
Month
because
of
his
late
wife,
Teresa,
Pierre,
Coy
and
Mr
Sullivan.
J
If
you
could
put
some
pictures
up
there
that
we
had
of
Theresa,
sir,
if
you
don't
mind
just
for
the
public
to
see
this
wonderful,
beautiful
woman
who
was
taken
from
us
too
soon
Travis,
who
will
be
speaking,
is
an
assistant
State
Attorney
here
in
Hillsborough
County,
who
was
admitted
to
the
Florida
bar
in
2003.
He
is
past
president
of
the
George
Edgecombe
Bar
Association,
as
well
as
Hillsboro
High,
School's,
First,
recipient
of
a
George
edgecombar
Association
scholarship.
J
He
went
to
FSU
and
then
Stetson
College
of
Law,
and
he
will
be
speaking
about
his
late
wife,
Teresa,
Pierre
Coy,
who
I
know
councilman
Goods
was
kind
enough
to
give
a
accommodation
for,
and
we
thank
you
for
that,
sir
very
much
so
Teresa
was
a
very
good
woman
who
I
new
and
and
in
fact,
I
I
thought
so
highly
of
her.
That
I
remember
some
time
ago.
I'd
ask
her
to
consider
joining
us
on
Tampa
City
Council,
so
I
found
out
that
she
didn't
live
in
this
city.
J
That's
how
much
I
loved
her
so
Travis
coming
up
buddy.
Thank
you.
O
Good
morning
Council
good
morning,
and
thank
you
for
this
opportunity,
I
want
to
say
a
special
thank
you
to
family
and
friends
that
are
present
with
us
physically,
and
also
that
are
watching
virtually
and
a
special
thank
you
to
councilman.
Goose
I
appreciate
the
accommodation
that
you
presented
much
earlier
this
year
and
also
a
special
thank
you
to
councilman
Vieira
for
allowing
me
this
opportunity
to
speak
to
you
all
as
it
relates
to
my
wife.
It
also
as
it
relates
to
breast
cancer
awareness.
O
O
O
O
So
when
you
ask
what
does
Breast
Cancer
Awareness
Month
mean
to
me
what
it
meant
to
Teresa?
The
answer
is
twofold:
first,
it
means
to
keep
fighting
and
then
to
fight
some
more
because
as
soon
as
you
stop
living
as
soon
as
you
stop
enjoying
life,
that's
when
this
horrible
disease
is
already
won
and
then
the
other
part
of
that
answer
is
quite
simple.
It's
a
call
to
action.
O
Don't
get
me
wrong,
there's
nothing
wrong
with
wearing
a
pink
ribbon,
but
there's
way
more
to
be
done.
Theresa
understood
that
and
made
it
a
point
to
educate
and
bring
awareness
to
this
terrible
disease
anytime.
She
had
a
chance
and,
as
councilman
Vieira
just
mentioned,
I
remember.
She
was
in
front
of
you
all
last
year
discussing
this
the
disparities
amongst
black
women
and
breast
cancer.
O
O
O
My
life's
goal
has
now
turned
to
help
prevent
people
from
suffering
from
such
a
loss.
As
we
have
that's.
Why
I've
dedicated
my
life
to
help
fund
and
promote
breast
cancer
research
given
to
breast
cancer
research
goes
beyond
finding
a
cure.
It
provides
support
to
the
caregivers
who
are
often
overlooked.
O
O
O
J
Thank
you
and,
and
if
I
may,
miss
mature
I
neglected
first
I
wanted
to
introduce
some
people
who
are
here
to
support
Travis
and
and
the
late
Teresa.
They
include
Susan
Johnson
Velez
acting
individually
kameria
Pettis
mackel.
We
also
have
viewing
telephone
or
via
the
Internet,
late
Teresa's,
father
or
Ernest
Gene
Pierre,
her
stepfather
Ernest
Thomas.
We
have
here
Mr,
Cornelius,
Demps,
Michael,
paparasta,
paparesta
and
Collette,
his
wife
Anya
K
Francis
and
Sonia
Hill,
who
are
here
I
just
wanted
to
mention
those
names.
Thank
you.
Thank
you.
E
E
My
bestie
my
best
friend
in
the
world,
her
last
sister
call
me
and
said
you
better
do
something:
there's
no
more
Sunday
dinner
for
you,
so
I
had
to
make
sure
miss
Deidra
understood
because
I
felt
her
pain
because
she
felt
a
pain
because
I
remember
the
late
nights
way
up
late
on
that
line.
Working
that's
a
big
line,
but
that
line
was
a
powerful
line
with
a
lot
of
powerful
individuals.
E
Princess
just
was
on
that
line
as
well.
I
think
she
was
number
33
or
34.
I,
think
so
yeah
so
I
know
the
folks
in
that
line.
I
know
what
they
went
through
and
I
know:
The
Sisterhood.
They
had
matter
of
fact.
Tuesday
just
had
their
anniversary
on
Tuesday
yeah
got
that
call
so
I
want
to
say
you
know
we're
with
you.
We
stand
with
you.
D
Thank
you
very
much,
sir,
for
being
here
and
for
honoring
her
memory
and
for
your
words
and
the
message
that
that
you've
shared
with
everyone
today
and
he
said
you
hope
that
your
son
one
day
lives
in
a
world
where
that
word.
Cancer
is
eradicated
and
I
mean
it
affects.
So
many
people
I
had
a
call.
D
The
other
day
from
a
friend
of
mine,
who's
spouse,
wanted
to
visit
me
and
say
goodbye
because
she's
in
her
last
days,
yesterday,
I
talked
to
my
friend
Joe,
whose
brother
has
two
months
to
live
and
he's
52
53
and
yesterday
I
saw
a
friend
of
mine
who's.
A
nurse
and
I
asked
her
how
she's
doing
I've
known
her
all
my
life,
literally
since
I
was
born,
and
she
said.
D
I've
had
a
rough
week
because
I
just
I
was
with
a
patient
who's
14
with
ovarian
cancer
that
has
metastasized
14
years
old,
and
it's
just
it's
exhausting
when
it
it's
one
after
another
after
another,
so
I
I
I
can't
follow
with
what
you
said
today,
because
the
words
were
so
powerful.
But
thank
you
for
being
here
and
we
will
always
honor
your
wife
and
remember
her.
Thank
you,
sir.
M
I
She
I
say
thank
you
for
coming
and
bringing
this
incredibly
important
issue
to
everyone's
attention
again
and
just
take
the
time
to
also
mention
that.
Not
only
can
we
help
monetarily
and
through
funds,
but
but
in
in
reminding
women
that
breast
self-exams
are
incredibly
important
and
if
you
do
not
know
how
to
do
one
on
just
Google,
it
there's
a
ton
of
of
things
online
and
just
to
make
sure
that
you
keep
your
mammogram
appointments.
They're
very
important.
They
are
not
fun.
I
I
can
tell
you
that,
but
they're
really
critical,
so
I
just
want
to
take
that
time
to
to
remind
those
in
the
audience
and
those
listening
to
just
another
way
to
help.
So
thank
you
so
much
for
bringing
this
today,
I'm
sorry
for
your
loss,
Joseph.
C
K
It
usually
after
someone
speaks,
we
all
jump
to
the
microphone
and
speak
quickly,
and
you
saw
us
all
hesitate,
because
we
all
felt
what
you
said
so
closely.
Your
words
were
so
perfect
and
it's
impossible
to
follow.
You
thank
you
for
honoring
Teresa
and
talking
about
this.
This
important
topic.
Please
make
sure
that
we
that
we
have
the
information
we
need
to
make
sure
we
broadcast
it.
We
all
have
social
media
channels
and
others
whatever
we
can
do
to
support
and
I.
K
Don't
think
your
son's
here
today,
but
if
it
now
now,
we
need
the
village
to
help
you
raise
him,
and
so
let
us
know
in
a
personally
and
and
as
a
group,
if
we
can
do
something
to
help,
you
know,
keep
his
mother's
name
alive
and
Inspire
him
to
do
great
things.
Thank
you.
D
D
Good
morning,
my
colleagues
on
the
temp
city
council,
this
is
my
friend
Robin
Bethune.
We
met
not
too
long
ago
because
we
were
contacted
to.
As
you
know,
City
Hall
will
light
up
in
different
colors
for
different
reasons
and
different
occasions,
and
this
was
to
have
City
Hall
lit
up
and
other
structures
for
metastatic.
D
So
it
is
Tampa
City
council's
honor
to
present
this
Commendation
to
Mrs
Robin,
the
Bethune
mother
to
the
late
Eric
Griffiths,
who
valiantly
fought
the
Battle
of
metastatic
breast
cancer
until
her
passing
on
May
7
2021
throughout
Erica's,
nearly
five-year
Journey,
her
devotion
and
advocacy
for
the
fight
against
this
horrific
disease
did
not
go
unnoticed.
She
was
highlighted
in
both
Visual
and
print
media
as
an
advocate
for
increased
funding
for
MBC
research,
as
well
as
being
an
avid
fundraiser.
Erica
was
and
is
an
inspiration
to
so
many.
D
She
was
forced
to
focus
prematurely
on
end-of-life
plans,
preparing
a
life
for
her
young
daughter
and
leaving
behind
her
devoted
husband
and
family.
We
thank
her
brave
mother
Robin
for
continuing
her
daughter's
legacy
in
this
courageous
and
necessary
fight
to
ensure
awareness
and
a
cure
for
metastatic
breast
cancer.
So
it
is
Tampa
City
council's
profound
privilege
to
present
this
Commendation
on
the
sixth
day
of
October
2022..
A
A
A
They
did
the
mammogram
and
the
ultrasound.
They
did
the
biopsies
they
found
out.
It
was
already
in
her
liver
and
her
bones.
She
fought
for
almost
five
years
different
treatments,
chemos
radiation,
it
spread
throughout
her
body
by
the
end
and
she
left
behind
a
six-year-old
little
girl.
P
A
P
A
Or
three
new
drugs
that
came
about
that
kept
her
alive
a
little
bit
longer
so
anyway,
thank
you
for
listening,
I'm
overwhelmed
and
very,
very
grateful
and
I
know.
My
daughter
is
watching
down
from
heaven
and
I
hope.
She's,
proud.
D
And
also
we
you
had
mentioned
it,
but
October
13th
we're
going
to
light
City
Hall
up.
We.
D
You
awareness
is
so
important
and
you
being
here
and
the
gentleman
before
you
to
let
the
public
know
you
know,
like
you
said
it's
not
just
about
pink
ribbons,
even
though
it's
good
to
show
the
support,
but
it's
the
lack
of
funding.
It's
the
lack
of
awareness,
it's
the
lack
of
people
going
to
get
tested
to
catch
these
catch
this
early,
if
possible,
and
and
increase
their
their
ratio
for
for
success
and
healing.
But
thank
you
thank
you
for
being
an
inspiration.
D
A
A
Good
morning,
chair
council,
with
D-Day
mobility
department,
I'd
like
to
introduce
Ed
Albritton
with
the
Florida
Department
of
Transportation
Ed's
friend,
former
colleague,
we
work
together
at
Hillsborough,
County
Ed's,
going
to
present
on
a
signalization
project
and
a
couple
of
other
initiatives
by
fdot,
specifically
at
22nd
and
the
Selman
Expressway.
This
is
a
hazard.
This
is
the
signalization
will
improve
safety
in
the
area.
It
will
also
improve
access
for
all
of
the
development
that
is
happening
within
the
Ybor
City
area,
from
a
safety
and
Mobility
standpoint.
N
This
is
a
aerial
photo
of
the
area
where
we've
highlighted
some
of
the
sort
of
trip
generation
areas
of
interest
that
we
feel
are
important.
How
to
make
this
project
important.
The
sources
to
the
south
of
the
project
is
support
of
Tampa.
We
had
some
joint
funding
from
our
freight
Partners
to
help
bring
this
civilization
to
utilization,
also
to
the
west
and
to
the
north,
both
in
downtown
Tampa
and
Ybor
City.
N
Both
of
those
both
retail
and
high-density
residential
Footprints
are
expanding,
so
we
feel
like
this
is
also
a
good
project
to
to
marry
with
some
of
that
development.
N
Here
we
have
a
look
at
the
Eastern
westbound
approaches,
as
they
currently
exist
about
stop
control
the
signal,
met
and
crash
history
warrant
for
installation,
and
these
approaches
gave
us
a
total
of
39
left
turn
crashes
22
with
possible
injuries,
and
one
fatality
here
is
the
current
Northbound
and
southbound
approaches,
and
they
had
a
total
of
23
left
during
crashes
and
13
possible
injuries.
The
study
years
by
the
way
were
2014
to
2019.
N
Some
of
the
project
details
and
and
items
where
we
feel
like
we're,
going
to
really
improve,
there's,
currently
a
shared
use,
path
on
the
east
side
of
22nd
Street,
which
we're
going
to
add
a
pedestrian
Crossing
to,
and
you
know,
join
into
that.
There's
a
after
8
CSX
rail,
Crossing,
just
to
the
South
could
be
interchange.
That's
obviously
going
to
be
integrated
with
the
signal.
That'll
give
us
much
more
efficient
traffic
movement
through
the
area
as
it
pertains
to
rail
crossings.
N
There's
some
different
types
of
median
treatments
through
this
segment,
we're
going
to
get
that
all
consistent
and
cleaned
up
and
hopefully
take
away
some
of
the
ambiguity
that's
currently
out
there.
Currently,
there
are
no
pedestrian
teachers
at
all
on
the
south
side
of
the
interchange
and
obviously
we're
going
to
change
that
with
this
design,
High
versus
crosswalk
sliding
all
those.
This
is
a
quick,
quick
and
dirty
rendition
of
what
the
design
is
going
to
look
like
shows.
The
master
arm
location
shows
the
special
emphasis
crosswalks,
the
lighting
will
be
upgraded.
N
It
does
show
the
accurate
Crossings
as
well
we'll
be
getting
the
protected
left
turns
on
to
the
across
town.
This
will
be
the
north
interchange
intersection.
You
can
see.
We
we've
designed
a
two-stage
pet
Crossing,
which
we
feel
you
know
really
improves
The
Pedestrian
safety
through
this
segment
invisibility
and
also
see
where
we
join
the
high
emphasis
or
special
emphasis
crosswalks
to
the
pedestrian
path
on
the
south
or
on
22nd
Street.
N
On
the
east
side,
the
counter
measures,
obviously
that
we're
going
to
do
we're
doing
the
protected
left,
turns
got
their
pedestrian
Crossings,
including
the
two-stage,
and
we
feel
like
the
modification
of
the
median
treatments.
That's
currently
out.
There
will,
like
I
said
it
will
take
away
some
of
that
ambiguity
and
hopefully
prevent
the
likelihood
of
problem
with
driving.
The
design
is
complete.
Already.
Construction
is
scheduled
to
start
in
the
first
quarter
of
2023,
and
that's
mostly
due
to
supply
chain
issues.
N
The
next
one
is
one
we
have
completed
already
it's
at
Highland.
In
Chelsea,
this
is
an
overview
of
the
area
itself,
just
to
give
you
an
idea
of
where
it's
at
a
little
closer
view
of
that
shows.
You
we'll
want
to
point
out.
Obviously
the
proximity
of
the
Middle
School,
which
is
you
know,
a
huge
driver
and
the
need
for
this
project
in
the
first
place.
N
This
is
the
design
that
we
we
installed
out
there
and
you
can
see.
We've
got
a
high
emphasis
of
special
emphasis,
crosswalks
we're
installing,
or
we
have
installed
a
button
activated
rectangular
rapid
flashing
beacons
to
get
across
Highland
we've
also
got
some
Advanced
devices
of
the
same
type,
just
ones
buttons
are
activated.
The
advanced
beacons
will
also
activate
as
well
to
give
those
Vehicles
Advanced
solidification
that
someone
intends
on
across
the
street
just
as
a
view
of
the
actual
finished
product.
N
N
I
I
want
to
say
thank
you
for
this.
First
of
all,
for
the
Chelsea
Crossing
is
great.
I've
noticed
the
improved
painting
and
signage.
It
has
been
a
really
nice
addition
to
the
neighborhood,
but
I
also
wanted
to
talk
to
you
about
the
Selman
ramp.
I.
Think
that's
a
that's!
A
great
project.
I
I
have
a
couple
of
concerns:
the
The
Pedestrian,
the
East
Side
pedestrian
walkway
that
basically
connects
Palmetto
Beach
to
the
rest
of
the
city.
That
is
pretty
much
the
only
way.
A
lot
of
those
residents
connect.
I
I
have
biked
that
myself
a
it's
really
hard
to
find
a
way
to
get
across
the
street,
even
at
Adamo,
it's
a
very
difficult
Crossing
and
then
once
you
get
there,
there
are
multiple
Crossings
to
get
on
and
off
the
Selman
that,
as
a
pedestrian
or
cyclist,
are
very
dangerous.
It
looks
like
you're
doing
you're
working
on
a
couple
of
those
intersections.
Are
you
actually
going
to
tackle
all
the
intersections?
I
N
N
The
other
ones,
I
believe
we're
covering
and
I
know
that
we
are
in
the
process
of
Designing
civilization,
for
the
Adamo
and
26
signal,
which
you
know,
if
you
put
20
seconds
up
and
over
it
would
give
you
another
another
Crossing
to
get
across
Adam,
though,
and
I'm
not
sure
of
the
overall
Trail
plans.
I
know,
there's
a
trail
on
the
north
side
of
Adam,
where
currently
there's
a
trail
that
comes
up.
22Nd
I
would
assume
that
there
are
some
people
plans
to
marry
those
up.
A
If
I
may
add
to
that
and
counsel
them
and
I
think
you
make
a
great
Point
generally,
the
Palmetto
area
is
not
as
well
connected
from
multimodal
standpoint
with
Ebor
or
the
channel
district
and
certainly
downtown.
A
These
are
conversations
that
we're
having
with
secretary
Gwen
and
stakeholders,
we're
aware
of
both
the
Ebor
and
Palmetto
Community,
having
made
requests
to
improve
the
conditions.
So
at
this
time,
I
don't
have
a
specific
update
and
certainly
relative
to
this
project
Edmund
art,
but
we
will
follow
up
on
the
same.
E
I
M
Thank
you,
Mr
Brent.
Thank
you
very
much
for
being
with
us
today
and
making
your
presentations
sometime
back.
There
was
talk
about
malfunction
junction
with
another
exit
going
to
Ybor
City
right
before
the
curb
is
that
still
on
I
haven't
heard
back.
Maybe
it's
there?
It's
not
there.
I,
don't
know
foreign.
M
C
Anyone
else
I
have
a
couple
quick
questions,
sir,
on
your
Kennedy
project,
stay
with
60.
I'm,
seeing
bicycle
and
pedestrian
improvements.
We
are
seeing
more
and
more
residential
being
built
along
that
Corridor.
Is
there
any
plans
for
a
divided
bike
lane
and
more
lighted
Crossings.
N
Once
again,
I'm
not
aware
of
anything
that,
encompassing
especially
on
on
Kennedy
but.
C
All
right,
I'll
put
you
on
the
spot,
but
I'm
just
going
to
say
this:
if
you're,
if
we're
going
to
have
bike
lanes
and
we're
going
to
have
more
pedestrians
and
more
residential
in
there,
that
speed
limit
is
going
to
have
to
drop
so
I'll
get
back
with
you.
Thank
you
very
much
any
of
the
comments
questions.
C
C
G
Good
morning,
Council
Shirley
Fox
and
oh
city
clerk
I'm
here
regarding
item
number
five
regarding
the
affordable
housing
advisory
committee,
Mr
Sean
Wilson
sent
us
a
email
saying
dear
city
council
good
morning,
and
thank
you
very
much
for
considering
reappointing
me
to
the
affordable
housing
advisory
committee.
I
was
called
out
of
out
of
my
hometown
on
business
and
I'm.
Not
able
to
be
present
with
you
today.
E
Ms
Fox
news
is
that
board
made
up
of
all
mayoral
appointments
or
or
any
Council
appointments
on
that
board.
It's.
G
A
combination
there
are
it's
probably
half
and
half,
he
was
all
city
council,
Mr,
Sean
Wilson
is
city
council
and
there
are
some
vacancies
on
the
board
with
mayor
council
or
city
council.
All.
E
H
I
believe
how
many
members
are
there
I
believe
it's
11
is
it
sixth
mayoral
and
five
council
did
I
understand
that
correctly,
eleven,
yes
they're
11.,
so,
interestingly
Council
the
ordinance
that
allows
that
board
to
exist
says
that
they
can
continue
to
serve
after
the
term
expires
until
somebody
else
is
reappointed.
So
there
are
people
who
have
their
terms
have
expired.
For
instance,
Mr
Wilson,
his
term
has
expired,
but
and
now
he
gets
to
be
reappointed.
The
other
thing
is,
it
only
allows
for
two
three-year
terms.
H
The
term
is
three
years
and
those
are,
and
I
talked
with
Mr
Massey
about
it
very
specific
categories
that
you
look
for
in
order
to
fill
those
those
seats.
So
you
have
to
be
very
specific
as
it
is,
but
what
I'm
going
to
do
is
I
I
believe
work
with
the
the
city
attorney's
office
to
be
able
to
address
some
of
those
concerns,
because
one
of
the
issues
that
I
have
is
how
much
time
has
elapsed
since
their
term
has
expired.
But
I'll
I'll
address
that
with
the
performance.
E
C
E
Year,
but
thank
you
for
that
and
when
you
we
talk
about
specific,
because
I
know,
some
of
these
boards
have
specific
folks
and
categories,
but
I
think
at
least
some
of
these
with
those
boards.
I
think
you
need
to
have
some
regular
late
citizens
on
some
of
these
boards
to
Give
opinions
as
well
and.
H
One
of
the
questions
that
comes
up,
though,
is
because
it's
so
specific
and
some
of
those
positions
may
be
hard
to
fill.
You
may
not
want
to
have
a
term
limitation
on
that,
or
you
may
not
want
to
have
certain
terms
of
three
years
so
short,
so
that
would
be
amending
the
ordinance,
but
that's
something
that
can
come
down
the
road,
but
with
the
support
of
the
Department.
Of
course,.
G
J
Councilman
Vera,
you
know
I
I
just
wanted
to
speak
on
Mr
Wilson
that
if
any
of
you
all
know
him
and
just
to
put
some
good
words
out
there,
you
know
he
is
a
good
dude.
He
is
an
amazing
guy
and
when
it
comes
to
affordable
housing
and
making
sure
that
that
you
know
we
build
housing
for
people
who
are
struggling
to
get
into
the
middle
class
and
people
who
are
struggling
to
stay
in
the
working
class.
You
know
Sean
Mr
Wilson
is
awesome.
I.
J
G
C
M
C
M
C
H
And
also
that
would
include
directing
the
city
council
attorney
to
prepare
a
resolution
consistent
with
council's
motion.
Thank
you
is
that
correct.
Thank
you.
Thank
you.
Council.
Q
Good
morning,
Council
Chief
trip
temp
fire
rescue,
of
course,
I'm,
not
Chief
of
Staff
but
I'm
going
to
fill
in
where
I
can
and
I
believe,
chief
of
CFO
going
to
fill
in
this
well
and
I.
Think
we
have
a
couple
of
sides
if
not
I
have
them
that
I
can
put
up.
C
H
Q
Okay,
all
right
good
morning,
once
again,
first
and
foremost,
I
want
to
give
my
prayers
out
to
the
community
in
South
Florida
that
was
actually
presented
with
hurricane
Ian.
That
caused
a
lot
of
Devastation.
So
just
know
that
the
city
of
Tampa
deployed
some
Personnel
to
go
down
and
assist
with
some
relief.
We
sent
41
law
enforcement
officers
and
we
have
15
sworn
personnel
as
well
as
one
mechanic
and
so
far
they
have
been
there
since
Saturday
morning,
they
have
done
over.
Q
A
thousand
911
calls
clear
out
their
queue,
that
was
on
bike,
log
and
I,
think
they've
rescued
and
assisted,
probably
over
a
thousand
families.
So
I
don't
have
that
last.
The
last
number
that
I
had,
which
was
two
which
was
like
900
so
first
of
all,
I
want
to
thank
TSA
for
hosting
the
public
safety
assets
when
we
had
to
evacuate
some
of
the
stations,
as
well
as
some
of
the
equipment,
helicopters
and
stuff
TSA
actually
opened
their
doors
to
us
to
assist
with
that.
Q
So
once
again,
like
I,
say,
Tampa
Bay,
basically
we're
fortunate
and
to
have
excellent
coordination
and
communication
with
the
state,
regional
and
local
and
federal
Partners.
We
started
this
communication,
probably
about
two
weeks
prior
to
this
event,
once
we
knew
the
storm
was
kind
of
headed
that
way,
and
as
we
put
on
the
screen,
we
have
the
national
preparedness,
Gold
Line,
the
core
capabilities
that
we
try
to
do.
Of
course,
we
try
to
do
everything
we
can
to
prevent.
You
know
we
can't
stop
mother
nature.
We
can
biggest
thing
we
can
do.
Q
Is
help
prepare
for
her.
So
when
we
look
at
how
we're
going
to
prevent
you
know,
of
course,
we
definitely
want
to
get
the
message
out
to
the
communities
as
soon
as
possible.
We
want
to
protect
as
much
as
we
can
as
far
as
some
of
the
threats
and
some
of
the
things
that
we
did
as
far
as
protecting
the
community
and
provide
different
Services
when
it
comes
to
sandbags
and
a
lot
and
I'll
give
you
a
little
bit
more
of
that
data.
Q
You
want
to
do
everything
we
can
to
kind
of
mitigate
any
kind
of
Hazards
potential
hazards
just
to
let
you
know
that
Tampa
Fire
Rescue
assistant,
with
evacuating
some
of
the
assisted
living
facilities
that
was
in
South
Tampa
to
Higher,
Grounds,
meaning
like
Kindred.
We
evacuated
41,
critical
patients
up
to
Kindred,
North
or
kentress
Kindred,
central,
I'm,
sorry
and
also
grand
Court.
We
assisted
with
31
senior
citizens
there.
Q
So
one
of
the
other
things
we
do
in
the
course
we
want
to
continue
to
respond
temple
Fire
Rescue
continue
responding
through
calls
until
it
was
unsafe
for
us
not
to
respond,
but
fortunately
we
didn't
have
anything
in
the
queue
that
allowed
us
not
to
respond.
So
we
definitely
want
to
respond
to
our
communities
as
well
as
help
prevent
and
help
provide
as
much
safety
as
we
can
when
they
are
in
need.
We
definitely
want
to
respond
and,
of
course,
it's
all
about
recovery.
Q
We
want
to
do
it
in
autonomy
fashion,
so
I'm
kind
of
going
to
go
over
a
timeline
of
some
events
that
took
place
so
once
we
Tampa
was
targeted.
As
far
as
in
the
cone,
we
started
with
communicating
with
local
and
Community
Partners.
We
started
having
press
conferences,
the
city
of
Tampa
ELC
went
to
a
level
two
on
Monday
and
activated
level,
one
on
Tuesday
morning
at
7
30
and
did
not
end
until
Thursday
evening,
20
hundred
hours,
eight
o'clock
P.M
and
went
back
to
level
three,
which
was
just
basically
monitoring.
Q
So
throughout
this
whole
time,
when
we
was
over
there,
we
had
press
conferences
twice
a
day
to
continue
to
inform
the
community.
What
was
going
on
prior
to
that
some
of
the
things
that
we
also
did
as
far
as
help
preventing
we
got
the
information
out
about
sandbags.
We
got
the
information
about,
you
know,
making
sure
they
wash
their
weather
reports
and
stuff.
We
was
in
direct
communication
with
the
national
work
Weather
Service.
We
had
multiple
meetings
with
the
National
Weather
Service,
twice
a
day
to
get
information
and
form
the
communities
on.
Q
So
if
you
can
put
the
next
slide
up,
so
this
is
just
some
of
the
information
that
has
taken
place.
Basically,
I'll
give
you
some
more
numbers.
We
distributed
over
a
thousand
I'm,
sorry,
100,
000,
sandbags
or
a
three-day
period
once
we
realized
that
this
was
coming
and,
of
course,
sales
were
accounting
gave
the
the
closing
of
the
schools
and
stuff.
You
know
we
started
helping
families
seniors
and,
of
course,
our
vulnerable
population.
We
opened
up.
It
initially
opened
up
16
out
of
school
camps
to
help
parents.
Q
Q
With
that
we
had
shelters.
We
went
full
activation
with
the
shelters,
some
of
the
locations
where
militant
High
School
piso
Lockhart
and
Wharton
High
School.
So
those
were
the
ones
that
was
in
the
city
of
Tampa
and
was
actually
staff
by
city
of
Tampa
employees
Around
the
Clock.
We
had
over
1100
guests
throughout
those
shelters
and
of
course
we
want
to
give
a
thanks
to
put
this
one
side
up.
That's
not
up
there.
I
just
want
to
show
this
one.
If
I
could.
G
Q
Okay,
so
I
kind
of
wanted
to
show
that,
because
you
know
a
lot
of
times,
we
don't
get
the
call
takers
and
now,
if
we
have
a
call
take
ever
since
the
RNC,
the
city
of
Tampa,
actually
we
actually
established
a
call
center
to
have
humans
and
not
just
voice
auto.
So
these
individuals
take
calls
soon.
As
this
took
place,
we
actually
get
it
straight.
We
activated
the
call
center,
and
this
is
they
actually
received
over
almost
2500
calls
throughout
the
time
frame
that
they
was
there.
Q
Information
was
given
out
these
call.
Centers
representative,
also
assisted
with
the
county,
because
our
number
is
actually
publicized
throughout
the
county,
with
information
anywhere
from
downed
trees.
Traffic
like
it
shows
how
can
they
get
help?
How
can
they
get
the
special
needs?
Shelters.
These
call
center
takers
was
actually
was
wonderful
and
they
have
the
community
out
a
lot.
Q
So
we
also
as
far
as
code
enforcement,
we
visit
over
a
hundred
Alf
facilities
inspected,
their
generators
make
sure
there
was
operational
and
basically,
we
actually
reached
out
to
the
vulnerable
population,
Tampa
Holt
residents,
Parks
and
Rec
staff
transported
over
a
hundred
residents
to
one
of
the
shelters
of
Middleton
High
School
the
evening
up
until
the
area
got
to
the
point
where
we
was
unable
unsafe
for
Public
Safety
to
respond,
it
was
very
minimum.
Q
We
didn't
have
any
calls
in
a
queue,
but
overnight,
as
forest
fire,
we
had
21
calls
for
power
lines
down,
sits
down
tree
line
tree
limbs
and
one
house
fire
that
happened
to
have
a
tree
to
fall
on
that
one
Transformer
fire
and
basically,
once
the
storm
was
over
our
erc's.
The
emergency
response.
Q
Cruise
was
pushed
out.
We
have
foot
activations
on
Friday,
I'm,
sorry
full
activation
at
5
pm
on
Tuesday,
and
we
had
three
erc's
that
was
pushed
out.
We
had
a
Tampa
Bay
Boulevard
Elementary,
School,
Forest,
Hill
and
Oak
Park
erc1
had
16
push,
Crews
erc2
had
seven
push.
Crews
and
erc3
had
seven
push
Crews
as
well
as
far
as
Mobility.
We
had
about
716
signal
intersections
that
went,
dark
and
all
of
them
would
bike
up
running
by
1700
hours
on
Friday.
As
far
as
damages
to
parks
and
recs.
Q
We
had
about
59
parks
that
was
affected
with
tree
damage.
We
actually
as
far
as
debris
management.
We
have
the
Rome
yard
that
has
been
designated
for
City
debris
management,
so
both
the
debris
management
contractors
are
there.
It's
been
activated,
so
debris
has
collected,
started
Monday,
October
3rd
as
far
as
picking
it
up.
So,
if
you
have
any
questions,
that's
pretty
much
I'll
try
to
give
you
a
short,
simple
report
of.
E
Thank
the
city
staff
and
those
who
are
out
there
serving
and
working
I
want
to
say
thank
you
to
them,
because
it's
kind
of
difficult
to
be
away
from
your
own
family
when
things
are
going
on,
especially
what
we
are
a
potential
storm
we
had
I
did
go
out
visit
a
lot
of
the
shelters
in
Irwin.
I
went
through
the
second
floor,
great
job
of
some
of
the
fire,
guys
that
were
there
and
the
staff
that
was
there
working
with
our
elderly
and
also
our
folks
that
need
medical
needs.
E
That
was
very
critical
to
have.
That
open,
also
went
by
Middleton
a
lot
of
folks
there
at
Middleton
great
job,
the
staff
there
as
well,
but
I
did
notice
a
few
things
that
I
want
you
to
add
to
the
after
action
plan.
Unless
you
don't
know
the
after
action
plan.
Usually
when
you
have
an
incident
you
either
round
table,
and
you
write
up
the
things
that
worked
and
things
that
didn't
work
or
could
be
improved.
E
E
My
thing
is
this:
I've
talked
about
that
for
two
years
in
a
row
we
had
storms,
we
have
a
County
Jail
that
you
have
non-vital
offenders
over
there.
Sayings
can
be
taken
over
to
that
jail.
The
sheriff
and
those
sandbags
can
be
filled.
We
know
Storm
is
Coming,
they
can
be
prepared
and
ready
to
go.
Those
folks
can
be
in
that
line,
because
people
are
staying
two
and
three
hours
in
a
line
going
all
the
way
back.
E
Some
folks
who
are
very
low
income,
don't
have
gas
failure
to
stay
in
that
line
to
get
sandbags.
That's
a
problem
for
me,
so
I
think
we
can
kind
of
do
better.
On
the
sandbag
situation
we
know
something's
coming
have
prepared
bags
ready,
give
what
the
sheriff
have
those
guys
to
be
able
to
get
those
bags
being
ready
and
prepared.
Then
again,
maybe
some
of
our
workers
can
be
have
some
bags
on
some
trucks
to
go
to
some
of
these
communities
that
people,
some
of
our
seniors,
don't
have
cars.
They
can
get.
Doesn't
need
sandbags.
E
A
lot
of
that
happened.
I
took
some
sand
back
to
some
folks,
just
other
ways
of
trying
to
improve
it,
but
definitely
with
the
sandbag
situation.
That's
got
to
be
improved.
I
know
we
ran
out
of
sand.
That
happens
because
we
thought
it
was
coming.
So
of
course
that
could
happen.
E
No
problem
with
that,
but
I
think
a
better
efficiency
of
dealing
with
the
sandbag
is
to
you
know,
even
with
some
of
the
high
school
kids,
we
know
it's
coming
before,
then
we
could
have
probably
got
some
of
the
football
teams
in
the
middle
to
those
guys
to
come
out,
bring
pre-do
bags
and
have
that
ready
to
go
and
they
could
just
drove
double
men
and
keep
going
keep
the
line
moving,
but
two
three
hours
that's
a
long
time
to
be
in
the
line
again,
and
it
was
closed
because
my
brother
wouldn't
go
back.
E
He
was
there
at
five
o'clock,
thought
it
was
going
to
open
at
seven,
apparently
didn't
open
up
to
nine
people
were
waiting.
Second
thing
is
Tico.
One
probably
make
a
motion
later
on
in
River,
City,
rule
representative.
Coming
to
this
Council.
You
know
I
found
that
apparently
that
Tico
want
to
know
what
is
their
preparedness
as
it
relates
to
making
sure
those
lines
are
cleared
before
storm
or
during
the
year,
because
I'm
finding
out
with
the
power
outages,
is
that
they
won't
do
anything.
E
It's
going
to
Elijah
come
out
because
some
of
the
power
lines
have
gone
through
the
the
trees
in
in
it's
wet
and
they
can't
they
won't
work
on
it.
You
know
then
I
hear
some
people
say:
I
talked
to
Tico
employee
like
he
said.
Well,
some
people
come
out
and
some
of
the
residents
say
don't
cut
my
tree,
but
you're
hurting
other
people
in
the
area.
So
we
gotta.
If
that's
the
case,
we
got
to
figure
out
a
way
to
wear
it.
E
If
that's
a
hindrance,
we
got
to
fix
that,
so
the
power
outages
can
be
up
versus
being
down
for
so
many
amount
of
time.
So
what
is
the
maintenance
in
the
city
of
the
trees
got
to
know
that
when
we
talk
about
disabled
folks,
River
Pines
and
a
few
other
places,
I
don't
know
if
we
can
get
some
to
those
management
companies
to
make
sure
that
they're
prepared,
because
a
lot
of
those
folks
were
calling
especially
out
because
they
had
insulin,
no,
not
being
refrigerated
a
lot
of
issues
like
that.
E
We
talked
about
folks
on
dialysis
I.
Think
if
they're
on
dialysis,
they
go
into
a
place
every
day
we
should
be
able
to
I
know
we
contacted
the
Emergency
Management,
Mr,
Peas
I
believe
it
is,
but
they
couldn't
get
the
information
to
the
the
place
in
time.
That's,
okay!
It
was
a
rush
to
do
it,
but
I
think
in
the
future.
E
That's
what
I
was
finding
out
big
time
with
that
and,
lastly,
I
look
at
the
communication
with
this
Council
I've
never
been
over
to
the
EEOC
I
know
it's
located,
but
I
never
had
a
tour
of
it
doesn't
matter
how
it
really
operates
per
se
as
being
in
there
police
officers,
I
I,
the
other
concept,
but
I
think
it's
good
to
know,
because
to
me,
I
feel
that
this
Council
for
me,
I'm,
shut
out
when
you
have
emergency
sick
people
stay
up,
does
a
good
job
of
giving
you
some
limited
information.
E
But
all
my
information
I'm
getting
is
what
you're
sending
out
to
the
public
and
I'm
putting
what
you're
saying
out
to
the
public.
When
do
we
get
brief?
When
do
we
come
in
to
be
able
to
say?
Okay,
that's
that's
the
problem.
I
have
with
this
system
here
that
I'm
not
briefing
what's
going
on
I,
don't
know
what's
good,
but
people
are
constantly
calling
me
because
I'm,
an
elected
official
and
I
should
know
that
thing.
I
should
know
answers.
E
I
think
we
gotta
do
a
better
job
on
how
we
can
be
informed
to
be
a
part
of
the
process
to
understand.
What's
going
on,
to
get
the
information
to
our
constituents,
because
they're
calling
us
first
to
find
out
what's
going
on,
so
those
are
my
little
tidbits
to
looking
for
your
your
after
action.
If
you
can
get
back
with
me,
I
appreciate
it.
Thank
you.
So.
Q
I
can
go
more
in
details
when
it
comes
to
the
sandbags,
because
we
did
realize
that
that
were
long
lines
and
stuff
we
did
overcome
and
I
can
let
Miss
win,
give
a
little
bit
more
detail
about
that
if
you
care,
but
basically
we
started
bagging
some
of
the
bags
up
and
started
assisting
some
of
the
residents
with
the
bags
when
they
came
through,
so
it
wouldn't
be
much
of
a
long
line
we
actually,
we
did
have
three
sites
right.
B
So
say
when
administrative
neighborhood
and
Community
Affairs
so
as
Chief
mentioned
yes,
when
we
did
realize
that
there
we
were
challenged
with
long
lines
with
the
bags,
we
had
staff
to
come
in
and
start
pre-bagging
first
thing
in
the
morning.
What
you
saw
was
that
the
bags
were
already
given
out
by
the
time
you
got
there,
so
that
was
to
mitigate
those
long
lines
as
a
one
of
the
additional
things
that
we
were
doing.
Is
that
we're
looking
for
sites
so
that
we
can
set
up
a
fourth
sandbag
in
sight?
B
B
We
had
staff
on
right
on
on
the
scene,
making
those
on
the
spot
decisions
in
terms
of
okay.
Do
we
need
to
reroute
traffic,
particularly
over
near
McFarland
Park,
where
we
had?
We
knew
on
the
first
day
we
had
a
game
that
evening,
so
we
read
we
detoured
and
rerouted
traffic
so
that
there
would
not
be
a
conflict
with
the
visitors
or
participants
going
to
the
game,
so
we
are
looking
at
those
after
actions
to
identify
additional
sites.
Q
Welcome
and
to
let
you
know
about
this
Forest
Tico,
we
had
Tico
Sage
at
multiple
fire
stations
and
also
with
the
erc's
that
was
actually
assisting
with
a
lot
of
the
power
lines.
Like
I
said,
I
just
didn't
go
in
detail,
but
Tico
as
far
as
a
contractor
Powerline
dies,
they
was
cleared
by
1630.
So
of
course
they
had
to
get
that
in
order
to
get
the
power
bike
up.
Each
one
of
the
erc's
gave
a
detailed
report
which
I
have
that
and
we
will
put
in
there
after
action
that
talks
about
Tico.
Q
The
contractors
worked
with
the
push
Crews
did
assistant
with
cutting
the
trees
and
trying
to
get
the
power
up
as
quick
as
possible.
According
to
this,
approximately
90
requests
were
submitted
to
Tico.
This
was
in
erc3
and
708
incidents
or
tree
fairs
reported.
They
also
had
to
fill
out
almost
400
ERC
Phil
events
took
place,
and
basically
a
lot
of
this
was
cleared
up
as
much
as
possible.
We
have
a
t,
Co
representative
in
the
EOC
as
well
gave
us
constantly
update.
E
I
appreciate
you,
but
I
think
we
need
to
find
out
what
Tico's
maintenance
plan
is
because,
like
I
said,
a
lot
of
the
residents
complained
that
they
couldn't
get
their
power
because
these
lines
were
through
their
trees
or
what
have
you?
So
if
people
have
called
I
even
said,
I
could
tell
you
a
couple
of
streets
of
people.
Called
I
went
out
there
and
had
them.
It
takes
them
forever,
because
I
gotta
wait.
Q
D
Thank
you
very
much.
Councilmember
Goods
mentioned
every
almost
everything
that
I
wanted
to
talk
about.
So
I
appreciate
very,
very
good
topics,
especially
about
the
sandbags
I
know.
Almost
a
hundred
thousand
bags
were
distributed,
but
people
were
saying
you
know
why
is
there
not
another
location
and
whatnot
and
I
know
you're
going
to
be
addressing
that
and
I
appreciate
the
council
members
that
were
out
filling
those
sandbags
because
several
were
out
there,
which
is,
which
is
always
very
good,
but,
most
importantly,
I
wanted
to
say.
Thank
you.
I
know
that
what
was
it
like?
D
Port
Charlotte,
yes,
my
wife
moved
up
from
Northport
last
year,
so
I
don't
know
what
her
neighborhood
looks
like,
but
my
oldest
stepdaughter
lives
down
there
with
her
father
and
you
know:
they've
been
without
power.
They
have
they're
fine,
but
there
was
not
enough
time
for
them
to
evacuate
to
come
here
because,
as
the
storm
was
turning
quickly,
they're
okay,
but
they
have
they
had
significant
damage
to
his
house.
But
you
know
I
just
want
to
relay
on
their
behalf.
Thank
you
for
Tampa.
A
D
In
and
stepping
up
and
going
down
there
because
they've
seen
how
helpful
our
people
have
been
down
to
their
Community
and
we
appreciate
very
much
again
councilman
Goose,
just
to
keep
my
comments.
Brief
has
mentioned
everything
regarding
you
know,
going
to
the
EOC
I've
never
been
there.
Many
of
us
have
not
been
there
just
so
we
know,
but
also
an
appreciation
to
to
Chief
Bennett.
D
He
was
very
quick
with
with
information,
but
we
get
inundated
with
questions
and
as
city
council
Representatives
people
reach
out
to
us,
especially
with
power
loss.
D
I,
would
relay
everything
to
Mr
juice
over
at
Tico
by
email
for
people
that
War
without
power
for
several
days,
and
he
was
very,
very
responsive,
so
I
know
Tico's
very
good
with
that.
But
again
you
know
this
is
a
very
complicated
effort
when
we
have
such
an
unpredictable
storm,
but
I
appreciate
so
many
people
in
this
room
that
you
know
you
and
everybody
else
that
work
tirelessly.
You
know
on
standby
there
to
keep
this
community
safe.
Thank
you.
Council
Rivera,.
J
Mr,
chair
and
I,
you
know
echoed
the
part
on
on
appreciation.
I
I
was
I'll,
be
honest,
I
mean
I
was
floored
just
watching
what
our
city
of
Tampa
workers
did.
You
know
being
out
at
the
at
the
sandbag
location,
Miss,
Miss,
wins
group,
and
so
in
Parks
and
Recreation
I
was
floored.
I
mean
that's
really
hard
work.
A
lot
of
those
folks,
I,
I
and
I'm
out
of
shape.
J
Okay,
but
I
was
out
there
for
like
two
two
and
a
half
hours
with
my
wife
and
I
was
exhausted
and
folks
were
out
there
for
about
10
hours,
right
and,
and
so
I
I
was
floored,
but
just
by
by
all
the
Departments
Parks
and
Recreation
obviously
fired
police
Etc.
All
of
the
the
public
servants
who
are
here
the
city
attorneys
dealing
with
emergency
orders.
J
It
was
really
just
something
to
see
even
just
from
a
distance
you
know
and
and
the
only
things
that
I
would
say
and
I'll
probably
I'll
make
motions
on
this
at
the
end
is
number
one.
Councilman
Goods
mentioned
a
good
point
there.
With
regards
to
the
sandbags
issues.
You
know
that
we
probably
probably
need
more
bodies
there
and
I
think
that's.
J
Like
you
can
always
look
afterwards
and
go
Hey,
listen,
we
could
do
this
better
Etc
and
thank
God.
We
ultimately
didn't
get
the
the
hurricane
or
I
shouldn't,
say
thing,
I
think,
thank
goodness.
We
ultimately
didn't
get
the
hurricane
for
that.
But
you
know
I
would
like
to
see
there's
so
many
volunteer
groups
in
Tampa
who
could
be
a
mass
to
help
out
at
sandbag
locations,
I'm
thinking
of
rotary
clubs.
J
You
know
when
I
went
out
there.
I
was
looking
at
the
storm
that
we're
probably
going
to
potentially
get
hit,
but
I
was
in
a
location,
that's
very
elevated,
so
I
go
Hey.
Listen
I
want
to
help
out
my
fellow
campanios,
who
are
in
in
different
areas
who
are
potentially
going
to
get
flooded,
God
bless
them,
and
then
the
other
issue
and
I'll
make
a
motion
on
this
as
well
towards
the
end
is
also
shelters
that
are
with
animals
a
lot
of
our
constituents.
J
J
That's
something
that's
very
very
important
is,
and
you
know
a
thousand
times
better
than
I
do
but
working
with
our
friends
in
the
Humane
Society
and
in
different
organizations
to
start
three
or
four
months
before
hurricane
season,
a
some
sort
of
a
public
awareness
campaign
on
you
know
getting
up
to
date
with
your
shots
with
your
animals
Etc,
so
that
you
can
get
them
out
to
the
shelters.
Etc.
J
M
M
What,
if
that
hurricane,
wouldn't
go
that
way
and
came
this
way?
We
wouldn't
be
talking
about
sandbags.
We
wouldn't
be
talking
about
generators,
it
would
be
underwater.
The
generators
would
be
underwater
when
you
have
a
storm
of
that
size
that
comes
in
that
moves.
The
bay
and
each
gallon
of
water
weighs
about
8.33
pounds
and
they
take
a
trillion
for
some
billions
gallons
of
water
out.
M
M
It's
going
to
be
unbelievable
and
I
feel
so
sorry
for
the
people
who
lost
everything
and
some,
including
the
family
members
lives
and
the
heroics
of
the
people
who
were
out
there,
picking
them
up
and
trying
to
save
them,
all
of
them
from
the
military,
from
the
Coast
Guard
from
everyone
who
did
the
work.
Firefighters
stationed
fire
stationed
underwater
six,
seven
feet
of
water
in
them.
It's
it's.
A
tragedy
what's
happened
and
we
learned
by
what
happened
now
we
have
to
apply
what
we
learn
into
reality.
M
M
They
understood
the
emergency
was
there
and
you
can
prepare,
but
some
people,
even
when
you
tell
them
to
evacuate
that
you
have
to
evacuate,
do
not
leave,
and
that
happened
in
this
hurricane
and
a
lot
of
people
lost
their
life
because
of
that
I'm
not
saying
they
all
would
have.
But
it's
just.
We
have
to
understand
that
when
you
have
a
an
item
like
this,
we're
not
practicing
enough
on
this-
you
never
practice
what's
happening
like
this,
but
it's
something
that
you're
there
to
protect
your
belongings,
but
I.
M
Think
you
better
start
talking
about
protecting
your
life,
because
when
this
happens,
we
don't
realize
how
powerful
this
is,
that
it
can
devastate
miles
after
miles
and
just
leave
it
flat,
not
a
block
or
two
but
miles
and
miles
of
it
and
I
feel
so
sorry
for
those
people
and
I
wish.
We
could
do
something
to
help
them
out
and
it's
it's
I
think
we
have
to
donate
I.
Think
there's
a
lot
of
TV
station,
give
you
their
amount,
that's
sent
to
them.
M
E
Got
some
information
just
came
in
from
citizens?
I
want
to
make
sure
the
chief
has
it
where
my
ages
brought
me.
Several
citizens
are
calling
who
are
watching
are
saying:
why
have
we
invested
in
possibly
an
automated
sandbag
machines?
I,
don't
know,
I,
don't
know
if
they
have
that
technology,
but
people
are
calling
in
saying
we
should
be
investing
in
those
type
of
materials
to
help
out
with
the
situation.
I
just
want
to
put
that
out
there
that
citizens
are
watching
they're.
Paying
attention
see
three
calls
in
this,
so
so.
Q
Actually,
that
is
on
our
list.
That's
on
after
action
to
get
one
automated
and
just
to
let
you
know,
volunteers
too,
we
have
our
cert
program
that
we've
been
working.
We
had
a
lot
of
those
volunteers
out
there
to
help
as
well.
You
know
and
something
else,
I
didn't
talk
and
I'll.
Let
the
rest
of
you
finish,
but
law
enforcement,
Chief
O'connor
had
her
Personnel
out
there.
Q
All
the
evacuation
went
to
their
homes
multiple
times
and
I
think
they
did
like
over
close
to
100
000
people
residents
at
Forest,
telling
them
you're
in
the
evacuation.
Zone.
K
Thank
you
to
the
to
the
points
that
we
just
mentioned.
As
soon
as
we
saw
that
we
were
going
to
get
hit
in
some
way,
I
started
getting
emails
or
calls
saying.
Are
we
going
to
have
the
slow,
sandbag
distribution
again
this
year?
Are
we
going
to
have
the
machines?
People
said
that
they've
been
asking
every
time
for
several
times
to
get
the
machines
to
sandbag
and
people
were
very
frustrated.
I
mean
you
saw
the
the
news
of
the
lines
and
everything
the
I
want
to
say.
K
K
So
thanks
to
everybody
and
and
the
comments
I
have
are
not
going
to
be
directed
to
anybody
who
worked
on
there
or
to
you
cheap,
but
I
I
think
we
need
to
improve
communication
with
the
public.
Most
of
my
I
represent
South
Tampa.
Most
of
my
district
is
in
evacuation.
K
Zone,
a
my
house
is
an
evacuation
Zone,
a
I
found
out
about
evacuation
by
somebody
contacting
me
from
the
county,
and
it
was
only
three
or
four
hours
later
that
that
the
city
sent
out
anything
about
it
and
sure
the
city
can
only
send
things
out
when
it's
approved.
But
there
was
a
lack
of
communication
with
the
with
the
public
and
a
lack
of
communication
with
Council
I
track.
Social
media
accounts
for
several
cities
and
on
the
morning
after
the
the
event,
St
Petersburg
started
posting,
eight
or
nine
in
the
morning.
K
What
to
do
after
the
storm,
how
to
clean
up
when
your
trash
is
going
to
get.
It
was
only
about
three
or
four
hours
later
that
Tampa
started
to
push
some
things
out
and
it
wasn't
nearly
enough
I
started
asking
people
for
information
so
that
we
could
inform
the
public
through
our
own
social
media
accounts.
We
have
the
ability
to
reach
out
to
thousands
people
in
the
public,
but
also
we're
getting
calls
and
emails
and
sure
we
can
direct
them
to
a
hotline,
but
they
also
expect
us
to
know
the
answers
to
these
things.
K
So
now
that
we,
a
hurricane,
if
you,
if
you
live
in
Florida,
unfortunately,
is
a
reoccurring
issue,
we
know
the
timeline
of
what
happens
in
a
hurricane,
and
so
we
should
be
able
to
take
these
communication
assets
and
put
them
into
a
plan
so
that
we
say
48
hours
before
here's
the
the
asset
communication
assets.
We
send
out
10
hours
before
five
after
the
event:
here's
the
assets
we
send
out
right
now
the
question
people
have
and
I
just
looked
at
a
social
media
account
again.
K
I
can't
see
it
if
I
miss
it
I
apologize,
but
there's
there's
the
the
sanitation.
People
were
great
at
picking
up
garbage.
They
they
put
a
special
day.
They
went
through
and
communicated
that,
but
the
trash
that's
on
the
side
of
the
road
is
still
there
throughout
most
of
the
neighborhoods
I've
been
through,
and
people
don't
have
any
idea
when
it's
going
to
get
picked
up,
and
there
needs
to
be
better
communication
about
that.
K
They
know
what
to
do
with
it,
because
there
was
some
communication
on
that,
although
that
was
a
little
bit
slow,
but
they
don't
know
when
it's
going
to
get
picked
up
and
it's
providing
a
hazard,
because
cars
are
almost
hitting
each
other
driving
through
neighborhoods
pedestrians
are
trying
to
navigate
it.
K
The
other
thing,
the
other
thing
that
I
would
say
is
that
a
crisis
like
this,
especially
the
fact
that
we
might
have
had
a
Katrina
or
something
in
Tampa.
We
maybe
what
happened
to
Fort
Myers
could
have
happened
in
Tampa
and
and
in
my
district
it
it's
an
opportunity
for
us
to
set
politics
aside.
It
shouldn't
be
a
time
when
we
have
political
issues.
K
What
I
felt
like,
and
it
sounds
like
some
of
my
colleagues
felt
like
the
city
council
set
aside,
we
were
provided
almost
no
information
if
the
president
and
the
governor,
who
don't
like
each
other,
can
get
together
and
have
communication
how
come
and
it's
my
district
that
would
have
been
the
hardest
hit.
I
didn't
get
a
single
phone
call
from
anyone.
K
I
got
two
or
three
texts
from
the
chief
of
staff
with
very
little
information.
I
got
the
daily
updates.
Besides
that
I've
never
been
Emergency,
Management
Facility
either
never
been
invited,
I,
don't
care
about
going
there,
but
we
need
better
communication
because
we
are
half
the
government
just
because
we
go
into
emergency
order.
I'm
not
directing
this.
You
know
I'm
just
looking
that
way,
but
we
have
to.
We
have
to
have
a
protocol
that
just
because
we're
in
an
emergency
situation
doesn't
mean
that
city
council
doesn't
exist.
K
We
still
are
are
half
the
government
of
the
city
and
we
need
to
be
able
to
work
on
these
issues.
I
think
we
need
a
communication
plan.
K
If
we
can
do
videos
of
the
mayor
and
her
dog
on
Bayshore,
we
can
communicate
with
City
Council
and
I.
Would
like
it's
it's
a
completely
Fair
situation.
I
didn't
get
a
single
phone
call
from
anybody.
You
were
invited
to
the
Emergency
Management
Center.
None.
C
I
I
think
that
all
of
our
all
of
my
colleagues
have
made
incredible
points,
and
so
I'm,
not
gonna,
reiterate
the
points
except
to
say
thank
you
for
those
of
you
who
are
there
and
for
all
of
our
First
Responders,
who
did
an
amazing
job
from
everything
that
I
could
see.
I
I
Maybe
a
presentation,
the
Council
on
the
things
that
you
all
recognize
and
what
has
been
mentioned
today
and
how
how
we
see
we're
going
to
improve
that?
That's
what
I
would
love
the
other
thing.
I
know
that
we'll
probably
get
but
obviously
not
anytime
soon.
I
really
want
the
data
of
what
it
looks
like
when
it
hit
Fort
Myers,
because
it's
incredible
that
area
is
very
similar.
We
have
the
Bay.
We
have
the
rivers
going
up.
What
did
the
flood
look
like
like?
I
Where
did
it
actually
hit
the
Heights
and
how
deep
did
it
go
in
when
you
see
pictures
on
media?
It's
always
the
coast?
It's
always
like
the
most
damage
that
they
can
show
and
I
know
some
of
that
is
sensationalized,
but
also
just
to
show
what
absolutely
Havoc
people
who
live
on
the
coast.
But
majority
of
our
citizens
don't
live
on
the
coast
exactly
so.
What
did
what
did
the
storm?
I
What
did
the
flooding
look
like
there,
and
how
can
we
use
it
here
to
help
figure
out
what
that
kind
of
storm
would
have
looked
like
here?
I
know
we
have
the
technology
to
do
that.
So
that's
what
I
would
love
to
see
in
the
next.
You
know,
however
much
time
we
can
do
it
and
I'm
sure
that
folks
are
already
talking
about
it,
but
I
would
love
a
presentation
to
the
Council
on
just
you
know
what
how
we
can
take.
I
What
unfortunately
happened
in
the
Fort
Myers
area
and
what
we
can
learn
from
that
to
make
our
our
response
better
as
we
go
and
I
would
love
I.
Think
it's
a
great
idea.
I
If
all
of
us
got
a
tour
of
the
area
of
the
Emergency
Management
Center
just
so,
we
know
what
it
looks
like
and
what
we
could
do
in
the
future
and
how
we
can
maybe
like
a
quick
way
that
all
of
us
can
get
information,
so
we
can
send
it
out
because
we
did
get
a
lot
of
phone
calls
a
lot
of
emails.
All
that
was
social
media
was
huge.
I
tried,
I,
just
retweeted
and
re-shared
everything
the
city
put
out.
I
Just
that's
all
I
could
do,
but
what
else
could
we
do
and
I
didn't
want
to
bother
people
at
the
time?
So
information
like
that
I
think
would
be
wonderfully
helpful.
So
thank
you
again
for
everything.
You've
done
and
I
know.
You're
already
doing
this
I
know
you're
already
thinking.
How
can
we
improve,
but
if
we
could
know
that
too,
that
would
be
really
wonderful.
Thank
you.
So.
Q
I'm
going
to
send
an
invite
to
all
y'all
and
I'm
going
to
personally
escort
you
over
to
the
EOC
okay,
so
you
can
see
it
so
just
a
couple
of
things.
I
just
want
to
try
before
chair
comment.
So
when
we
talk
about
information
getting
out,
you
know,
honestly,
we
started
like
two
weeks
in
advance
now
I
know
people
will
call
and
people
will
send
texts
and
say:
I
didn't
know
about
this.
Q
I,
don't
know
what
else
we
can
do
and
like
I
said
when
it
comes
to
evacuation,
we
can't
force
no
one
to
leave.
You
know
we
we
have
been
knocking
on
doors
and
I
know
for
sure
that
we
had
meteor
coverage
from
Sunday
all
the
way
till
Thursday
I
mean
twice
a
day,
informing
the
community,
big
and
pleading
individuals.
So
please
please,
please
leave
now
I
know
there
are
lessons
learned
that
we
can
learn
from
this
and
the
devastation
down
there.
We
probably
would
never
know
exactly
the
full
details.
Q
We
can
then
go
by
pictures
and
stuff,
you
know,
but
the
biggest
thing
is
that
I
believe
the
communication
has
been
good
to
the
community.
We
can
do
more
and
as
far
as
communication
with
you
guys,
as
long
as
I'm
here,
I
guarantee
your
beginner
email,
a
phone
call
from
me
moving
forward.
Hopefully
we
don't
have
any
more,
but
just
to
let
you
know.
H
H
It's
up
to
you,
however,
you
do
it,
but
just
please
know
that
if
it
is
a
group,
then
it's
going
to
be
a
we
have
to.
We
have
to
work
with
the
sunshine
log
confines
and
the
fact
is,
it
may
be
a
space,
the
kind
of
space
that
you
may
not
want
to
necessarily
have
the
public
there.
So
we'll
have
to
talk
about
that.
But
what
I'm
asking
you,
though,
is
to
include
me
in
the
process
just
so
that
I'm
able
to
make
sure
everything
is
done
according
to
yes,.
Q
H
C
C
C
C
C
A
Manta
is
not
Tampa
Florida,
one
of
the
things
I
like
to
say:
I,
never
like
to
personalize
anything
but
I
want
to
say
growing
up.
My
father
wasn't
obnoxious
Pig.
My
father
was
an
obnoxious
Pig.
Why
is
that?
Because,
although
he
had
a
schedule,
we
had
a
schedule
of
when
we
can
have
sexual
relationships
with
our
mother,
he
used
to
break
the
schedule.
A
A
The
hurricane
white
people
have
made
a
profitable
business
talking
about
who
went
where
and
who
went
where
all
those
white
folks
getting
paid
major
pay.
You
heard
what
the
person
say:
15
of
the
breast
cancer
awareness
thing
goes
to
research,
the
other
85
percent.
Nobody
know
where
it
goes
white
folks
getting
paid.
Don't
nobody
care
about
that?
What
we
care
about
in
this
city,
what
we
care
about
as
African
people
and
what
we
have
to
care
about,
and
the
only
thing
we
care
about
is
reparations.
A
That's
the
only
thing
we
care
about.
We've
had
Perry
Harvey
we've
had
Gwen
Miller
we've
had
Kevin
White
Reverend
Thomas
Scott
Frank
Reddick.
Now
we
got
Orlando
Ghouls
and
not
one
word
of
these
black
clowns.
These
black
fools
have
ever
mentioned.
The
word
reparations
they
talk
about
Parks,
they
talk
about
Recreation,
they
talk
about,
say
no
to
drugs,
say
no
to
gun
violence,
but
white
folks
owe
us
for
400
years
of
free
labor
and
we're
going
to
stop
calling
it
free
labor,
because
it's
not
free
and
we
want
to
get
paid
for
it.
A
Obnoxious,
scary
cowards,
do
what
they
want
to
do:
no
respect
for
the
people
and
absolutely
positively
no
respect
for
African
people.
None
African
people
in
this
city,
where
26
percent
of
the
population
they're
trying
to
depopulate
us
giving
us
vouchers
to
go
in
living
places.
Black
people,
ain't
never
seen
doing
all
kind
of
ignorant,
stuff,
African
people
who
want
us
to
accept
that?
No,
we
don't
care
about
your
hurricane
or
you're,
saying
bad.
E
I
want
Mr
Shelby
to
read
the
rules
because
Council
council
members
did
talk
about
that.
So
please
read
the
rules
because
I
don't
want
the
public
think
that
we
just
just
we're
the
Chairman's,
the
chairman.
He
sets
the
face
of
the
council,
but
I'll
make
sure
we
eat
it.
Some
councilors
did
ask
the
rubbish
the
public
comment,
but
it
was.
L
C
E
N
I
live
over
in
Seminole
Heights.
What
was
the
name?
Sir
I'm?
Sorry
Ken
wise!
Thank
you,
sir,
and
you
had
the
person
talking
about
how
the
hurricane
went
and
all
that
and
all
there's
a
lot
on
sandbags.
He
even
mentioned
it
and
my
issue
is
trees.
I,
like
trees,
trees
are
good.
We
have
a
lot
of
them.
N
You
have
a
tree
hugging
department
and
you
have
a
head
tree:
hugger,
that's
a
arborist
and
if
the
trees
that
we
have
that
make
up,
the
canopy
in
this
town
were
being
run
by
a
private
company
to
harvest
the
lumber,
all
the
trees
of
long
past
their
harvest
date.
We
dodged
a
bullet
on
this
one.
We
dodged
a
bullet
five
years
ago.
We
might
not
be
that
lucky.
The
next
time.
If
we
get
a
hurricane,
come
right
up.
Tampa
with
150
mile
per
hour,
sustained
winds.
N
It's
going
to
look
like
a
tornado
went
through
an
Idaho
corn
field.
You
are
going
to
have
all
these
trees
going
over
houses,
power
lines,
it'll
be
like
Puerto,
Rico
being
out
for
months
without
power
in
all
the
houses,
people
aren't
going
to
be
worried
about
water.
Coming
underneath
the
door
jamb
when
their
whole
house
has
just
been
taken
out
by
a
tree
that
you
won't
let
them
cut
down.
N
I
suggest
what
you
do.
Is
you
get
with
the
tree?
Hugging
department
and
you
say:
hey:
these-
are
all
water
Oaks
that
are
way
past
their
due
date,
water
Oaks
only
good
for
about
70
hundred
years.
This
long
past
that
say
we
got
to
do
it.
We
can
to
encourage
people
not
to
keep
the
trees
up,
but
to
cut
them
down.
N
R
Hi,
my
name
is
Dave
Coleman
and
topics
on
traffic
and
and
hurricanes
Eco
side
and
climate
change
are
all
my
thing.
But
that's
not
what
I
came
here
to
talk
about,
but
I
have
to
thank
you
for
saying
preparation.
R
Disaster
resilience
is
one
thing
after
the
fact,
but
preparation.
What
you
were
asking
for
is
something.
Certainly
the
city
needs
to
do:
those
coal
ash,
piles
and
Mosaic
gypsum
Stacks.
If
they
collapsed
with
a
15-foot
surge,
it
would
have
inundated
Progress
Village.
It
would
have
been
absolutely
freaking
horrible.
What
I
came
to
talk
about
I,
don't
think
anybody's
organizing
around
the
Cahoots
program
that
I
would
like
to
see,
but
it's
a
social
right
along
the
social
worker
ride-along
program
that
is
up
for
discussion.
I
believe
today
is
that
right?
R
Yes,
so
it
seems
to
be
being
cut
in
half
I
wrote
a
thing
but
I'm
just
going
to
talk
about
it.
I've
been
attending
as
well
as
some
of
you
have
the
gun,
the
stop
gun,
violence
on
listening
sessions
that
were
started
by
Chief
Delgado
and
then
we're
continued
by
Mary
O'connor
at
her
first
one.
She
announced
that
that
the
increased
gun
violence
in
Tampa
was
due
to
trauma
the
trauma
of
two
years
of
covid
and
two
years
of
civil
unrest.
R
I,
don't
know
what
that
sentence
means,
but
that's
exactly
what
she
said,
but
obviously
those
would
be
social
issues,
not
a
litigating
and
Police
Issue.
R
I
asked
at
that
meeting
that
Chief
O'connor
came
to
at
her
first
meeting
I
said:
is
there
anything
like
a
Cahoots
thing
going
on
because
I
wasn't
even
aware,
but
apparently
it
had
been
going
on
for
six
months
and
she
deferred
to
an
assistant
chief
and
he
deferred
to
an
officer
who
praised
the
program
and
said
yes,
it's
working
and
I've
seen
some
really
good
results.
He
gave
some
antidotes
in
the
community.
It
seems
that
it
is
working,
but
subsequently
at
another
gun,
violence
event
I
asked.
R
So
how
is
it
going
and
he
said
not
we're
not
doing
much
we're
designing
our
own
program,
we're
not
copying
what
they're
doing
in
Saint
Pete
we're,
certainly
not
copying
what
they
did
in
Eugene,
which
actually
saves
police
departments,
hundreds
of
thousands
of
dollars
and
obviously
lives.
Also,
my
whole
idea
is
that
of
a
reason
for
for
being
here
is
that
you
know
social
social
justice
and
the
things
that
we
need
to
do
is
here's.
The
thing
O'connor
keeps
asking
for
the
community
to
trust
her
to
trust
the
police
department.
R
If
we
see
something
say
something
well,
she
needs
not
to
demand
trust
from
us,
but
maybe
turn
it
around
and
and
show
us
something.
What
about?
One
thing
has
been
suggested
to
give
the
civilian
review
board
a
lawyer.
One
thing
would
be
not
take
away
half
the
money
of
this
Cahoots
program,
but
increase
the
money
for
the
Cahoots
program.
Double
it
get
social
workers
out
there.
This
is
a
beginning
having
social
workers
ride
with
police
officers.
R
A
My
name
is
Frank
trayna
I'm,
a
current
resident
of
West
Tampa
and
I
come
from
a
long
line
of
West
Tampa
natives,
all
the
way
through
my
great
grandparents
I'm,
one
of
those
guys,
that's
very
proud
of
the
culture
and
the
character
and
the
traditions
of
West
Tampa,
one
of
those
long
time
Traditions
has
been
threatened
and
I'm
just
trying
to
figure
out.
Why
and
why.
A
Now
this
past
Sunday
before
the
Chiefs
game,
now
I
live
by
the
stadium
this
this
past
Sunday
before
the
Chiefs
game
representatives
from
the
parking
division
were
going
throughout
all
the
streets
and
they
were
giving
out
these
pre-printed
warnings
for
parking
in
a
city
right
away
and
I
was
told
that
four
cars
in
my
my
yard
in
my
house,
wouldn't
be
able
to
park
there
and
even
though
they're
clearly
in
my
driveway
four
feet
from
the
street
clearly
and
they're,
not
even
in
the
street
and
I,
was
told
to
imagine
that
there
was
a
sidewalk
there,
but
there's
no
sidewalks,
there's
no
sidewalks
anywhere
near
if
there
was
sidewalks
it'd
be
a
different
story.
A
I'd,
be
okay,
I'd,
abide,
no
problem
and
so
would
allow
the
other
residents
I'd
like
to
reference
a
an
article
in
the
Tampa
Bay
Times
from
2021.
It's
called
My
Tampa,
my
West
Tampa
yard
is
your
parking
space
and
in
this
article
she
says,
and
for
as
long
as
there
have
been
bucks
in
a
stadium
for
them
to
play
in
West,
Tampa
has
been
a
part
of
a
Grassroots
entrepreneur,
Enterprise,
but
less
Long
Ago
by
City
officials,
homes
in
West,
Tampa,
near
Raymond,
James
have
long
and
legally
sold
parking
spaces
for
Buccaneers
games.
A
I've
lived
on
Eileen
Street
for
the
last
seven
years
and
I've
enjoyed
this
parking
tradition
with
my
neighbors.
Most
of
them
have
been
been
here
since
the
beginning
since
the
60s
they've
been
here
since
the
Bucks
have
been
here
as
well.
They
live
for
this.
They
live
for
this.
They
put
their
vest
on.
They
make
their
signs
that
are
terrible,
but
they're
amazing
at
the
same
time,
and
they
make
they
go
out
there.
They
take
turns
waving
cards
in
and
they
make
their
money.
A
They
use
it
for
buying
Christmas
gifts,
giving
money
to
their
grandkids
medicine.
Whatever,
but
it's
a
nice
chunk
of
change
that
they're
going
to
lose
because
of
this
policy,
and
again
we've
been
doing
this
for
a
long
time
with
no
problems
and,
let's
also
not
forget
the
sacrifices
that
these
residents
make
by
living
across
from
the
stadium
with
trash
and
all
that
stuff
again,
we've
had
Super
Bowls
we've
had
big
events,
never
have
had
any
problems.
A
This
is
a
local
tradition
that
adds
to
the
character
of
West
Tampa,
and
it
adds
to
the
game
day.
Experience
walking
to
the
game.
I
have
my
friends
over
so
now,
I
have
to
tell
four
or
four
cars
to
park
somewhere
else
and
when
we're
done
at
my
house,
we
walk
to
the
game.
We
go
down
the
sidewalk
and
we
see
other
friends
that
we
know
along
the
way,
because
that's
what
West
Tampa
is
about-
and
those
friends
have
probably
been
in
that
same
spot
for
years
and
years
in
that
same
spot
tailgating.
A
M
Thank
you
so
much
for
for
being
here
and
thank
you
so
much
for
saying
the
facts.
Let
me
go
back
and
I'm
not
trying
to
go
back
a
million
years,
but
I'm
going
to
go
back
to
the
dick
record,
Administration
again
sure
when
all
this
started
getting
out
of
anybody
to
park
on
your
house
on
your
land,
and
we
looked
at
it
25
years
ago
sure,
and
at
that
time
we
said
what
happens.
M
These
are
the
people
that,
when
there's
an
event,
it
doesn't
have
to
be
a
football
game
when
there's
an
event,
no
matter
if
it's
a
concert
or
Monster
Roll
or
whatever.
However,
you
want
to
call
them
all
that
stuff
is
there,
so
we
came
up
that
you
could
park
in
your
land
Park
on
your
land,
what's
happening
now,
they're
saying
that
the
right-of-way
part
of
the
city,
not
the
street,
but
the
runaway,
which
usually
the
pope
on
your.
M
M
So
we
make
to
an
agreement
with
the
neighborhoods
and
and
I've
been
on
this
now
for
two
days,
people
are
calling
me
and
I
went
to
see
some
people
yesterday
at
Braddock,
3306
3305
and
talk
to
them
at
length
and
I
have
a
copy
of
that,
but
I
left
it
at
the
house
or
I
need
the
copy
of
that.
So
I.
M
Need
a
copy
of
that,
okay
and
what
it
is
I,
don't
know
who
sent
them
out
there,
but
they're
dead
wrong.
What
they
do
not
allow
you
to
do
is
park
on
the
street,
because
the
streets
are
so
narrow
that
then
a
fire
truck
or
an
ambulance
cannot
get
by
that.
I
understand
now
I
right
away
for
those
period
of
time,
because
all
of
you
that
live
there,
including
myself,
are
deprived
of
using
your
own
city
streets.
A
M
Can't
turn
them
Cargo
Road
I
can't
turn
on
Hines
because
they
don't.
Let
me
make
a
left-hand
turn
on
Heinz
and
MLK.
I
got
to
go
back
to
Dale.
Mabry
I
got
to
go
over
to
Spruce.
Go
all
the
way
around
come
back
back
there
to
get
to
my
house
or
I
got
to
go
all
the
way
to
Armenia
come
around
again.
You
have
been
taking
care
of
that
for
a
long
time.
It's
all
right
away,
and
now
they
don't
want
you
to
use
it.
That
was
done
to
eliminate
the.
R
M
That
the
people
are
because
every
time
there's
an
event
of
some
sort
that
draws
thousands
of
people
you're
the
ones
that
are
discriminated
across,
because
you
can't
get
to
your
own
house.
That's
why
we
did
that
and
I'm
sure
Greco
would
come
here
and
tell
us
that's
exactly
what
happened
so
I
don't
know
who
gave
that
order.
They
were
given
to
everybody.
I
want
to
find
out,
they
didn't
do
it
on
their.
A
It
was
a
non-resident
to
that
complained
quickly.
There
was
one
issue
last
year
of
all
the
time
I've
been
on
the
on
the
Block.
There
was
one
issue
where
a
car
was
parked
in
the
street
and
we
never
see
that
I
called
the
city
to
see
what
I
called
the
city,
because
it
was
that
one
car
was
impeding
walking
traffic
in
the
street
and
they
said
they
couldn't
do
nothing
about
it
and.
A
M
F
M
D
And
just
to
follow
up
with
what
councilmember
Miranda
said:
I
first
heard
about
this
through
Mr
Novo
who's
going
to
be
coming
up
to
speak.
Thank
you
very
much,
and
what
I
heard
was
that
the
individual
that
was
going
out
issuing
the
warning
several
weeks
ago
said:
oh
no
go!
This
is
your
city
councilman
that
did
this
I
didn't
do
this
and
I'm
I
do
pay
attention.
I
know
we
didn't
do
anything
up
here.
D
Gentleman's
name
was
Edgar
I
come
to
find
out,
so
I
did
talk
to
Vic
up
in
parking
and
it
was
her
what
he
said
was.
This
was
a
departmental
decision.
It
didn't
come
before
Council.
We
didn't
make
this
decision
to
change
anything,
so
they
took
it
upon
themselves
after
receiving
some
complaints,
but
councilman
Moran
has
been
in
that
neighborhood
60
years.
D
You
know,
nobody
knows
it
better
than
him.
You
know
people
are
just
trying
to
earn
a
little
extra
money
on
their
property.
As
he
said
on
Parcels
that
are
used
during
games
and
events.
It's
not
a
daily
occurrence
that
the
people
are
taking
care
of.
It's
not
the
city.
That's
coming
out
mowing
the
rights
of
way
and
whatnot
people
are
taking
care
of
that
and
they're
earning
a
little
bit
of
money
on
Saturdays
or
Sundays.
D
Whenever
the
games
are
out
whatever
the
the
event
is,
and
that's
it,
it
is
a
West
Tampa
tradition,
in
my
opinion.
As
far
as
I
know,
it's
always
been
like
that
on
those
few
days,
so
it
wasn't
a
city
council
decision,
I
called
for
clarity,
but
we've
been
getting
getting
in
on
Data
with
phone
calls
based
on
this,
because
people
are
losing
four
five:
six
cars,
ten
dollars
a
car,
twenty
I,
don't
know
what
the
price
is.
D
It's
a
lot
of
money
in
an
ad
zone,
so
I
know
councilman
Goods
was
had
asked
for
a
copy
of
that
citation
and
Miranda
as
well.
So
we'll
certainly
take
a
look
at
this
because
I
don't
think
it's
right.
Thank
you.
C
Hi,
my
name
is
Omar
Garcia
live
on
1041,
Royal,
Pass
and
I
just
wanted
to.
Let
you
know
of
a
situation
that
that
happened
to
us
during
the
disaster.
Recovery
I
happen
to
own
a
box
truck
and
we
really
started
recovery
efforts
on
Thursday
and
I
told
my
guys,
let's
make
sure
we're
in
line
early
at
McKay
Bay
on
Friday
at
six
o'clock
as
soon
as
they
open
up.
So
we
can
go
back
and
and
make
a
couple
runs.
That
day
we
found
out
that
the
the
the
the
the.
C
On
Friday
and
Saturday,
and
they
didn't
reopen
again
until
Monday.
Obviously
our
truck
was
full,
so
we
couldn't
continue
with
our
post
recovery
efforts,
so
just
I
just
want
to.
C
I
I
do
believe,
and
someone
from
staff
can
correct
me
if
I'm
wrong,
but
they
shut
down
McKay
Bay
because
it
is,
it
is
run
by
I,
don't
know
some
type
of
energy.
It's
I
mean
it's
a
waste
to
energy
plan,
so
I
know
they
shut
down
and
I
know
those
turbines
or
engines
take
time
to
start
up
again
so
I
know
part
of
it
was
that.
But
that
is
a
good
point.
I,
don't
think
anyone
here
can
speak
on
that,
but
but
I'm
I'm
making
a
note
of
that.
I
I
I
I
S
Right
good
morning,
Council,
my
name
is
Manuel
Novo,
a
long
time
resident
of
3414
West
Leroy
Street,
born
and
raised.
There
are
parking
cars.
My
whole
life
so
now
we're
part
of
selective
enforcement.
So
I
got
a
couple.
Pictures
I
put
some
pictures
up
for
you,
I
got
everybody
knows
arquuities
right
down.
Here
we
have
parking
every
single
day
on
sidewalks
and
easements
no
tickets.
They
let
them
do
it
every
single
day.
Here's
another
picture
of
our
guidi
same
thing:
selective
parking,
the
worst
West
Tampa
sandwich
shop.
S
Another
one
I
can't
see
when
I
come
out
of
the
out
of
Douglas
Street
to
make
a
right.
I
cannot
see
who's
coming
from
the
left.
Every
car
is
parked
on
the
easement
and
all
this
is
brought
up
on
our
neighborhood
association
meetings.
For
the
last
four
to
five
years,
we
speak
with
code
enforcement
and
we've
spoken
with
the
parking
Department.
Nothing
ever
happens.
I
got
another
picture
here:
oh
no
Glenn,
Glen,
Avenue,
hey,
let's
use
that
sidewalk.
S
Let's
dump
our
trash
use
that
sidewalk
to
park
our
cars,
Saint,
Conrad,
sorry,
I'll
turn
around
for
y'all
Saint
Connor
I
got
another
picture.
Saint
Conrad
between
Glenn
and
Lincoln,
my
family
lives
there.
My
daughter
cannot
ride
on
the
sidewalk
safely,
because
every
single
day
we
have
cars
parked
on
the
easement.
So
it's
okay
to
ticket
me
my
personal
vehicle.
S
Now
here's
a
picture
of
the
homes
I
called
parking
division.
They
told
me
park
my
car
behind
the
mailbox
you're.
Okay,
all
right,
then
they
told
me
parked
behind
the
new
parking
signs.
You're,
okay
I've
got
answers
from
everybody
different
now,
they're
telling
us.
We
need
to
keep
our
cars
behind
this
line
here,
no
cars
in
any
of
this
grass
that
we
maintain
take
care
of
it's
it's
unreal.
It's
unreal
literally,
my
personal
vehicle
got
it.
I
got
a
warning
on
my
personal
vehicle
in
my
driveway
I
parked
three
cars.
S
C
D
S
A
A
Good
morning
City
Council,
my
name
is
Albert
Pacheco
I've
lived
in
Tampa
Florida,
since
1969.
I'm,
a
graduate
at
Plant,
High,
School
and
all
I
wanted
to
say
was
talk
about
the
parking
issue
during
Raymond
James,
Stadium
events.
A
We
do
a
service
to
the
city
of
Tampa
by
parking
these
cars.
In
our
you
know,
in
our
houses
we
alleviate
traffic,
we
helped
the
Tampa
Police
Department.
We
keep
our
eyes
open
for
anything,
that's
going
on.
You
know
during
these
events
and
it's
these
Gentlemens
were
talking
about
the
a
parking
situation.
They
say
that
we
are
going
to
be
cited
if
we
park
cars
in
the
parking,
the
city,
whatever
they
call
that
area
15
feet
from
the
street.
A
I
just
wanted
to
know-
and
you
know
just
let
you
know
I
don't
know
anymore
I
mean
they
got.
They
had
this
sign.
That
says
we're
not
supposed
to
park
there
anymore
and
I
wanted.
E
To
see
if
that
was
correct,.
A
Because
that's
you
know.
E
Eliminating
five
car
spaces
talking
about
car.
A
M
C
J
M
M
You,
but
what
you're
saying
about
I
just
don't
know
how
this
happened.
I
got
a
name
but
I
just
can't
understand.
What's
called
CS
Common
Sense
some
some
people
or
some
government
have
lost
it.
This
and
I'm
not
saying
this
one
has
but
I'm
sure
that
the
administration
themselves
then
ordered
this.
This
was
done
to
compensate
what's
happening.
What
you
guys
have
lost
that
you,
your
anxiety
level
and
that's
not
only
the
games
of
sports,
the
all
sporting
events
that
are
there.
You
have
the
ability
to
part,
and
it's
really
not
about
the
money.
M
M
M
What
they
did
the
Greco
Administration
the
city
council
at
that
time
said
Park
on
your
street.
As
long
as
you
don't
park,
your
cars
on
the
pavement,
where
an
ambulance
or
a
fire
truck
that
needs
to
be
there
for
emergency
can
pass
and
that's
what
we
did.
It's
been
working
beautifully.
Instead,
Einstein
came
in
and
did
whatever
they
did.
I
don't
know
who
that
Einstein
is,
but
he
certainly
didn't
help
the
cause.
M
You
cannot
look
at
it
in
a
money-making
thing,
it's
an
even
thing
for
what
you
fellas
have
lost
and
getting
in
and
out
of
your
time
you
don't
have
a
normal
life
when
there's
an
event
at
the
state
and
the
people
tell
me
about
parking
problems
in
the
city.
I
tell
them
all
the
time
go
to
West
Stanford,
doing
an
event
and
I'll
show
you
a
parking
problem.
You
can't
get
nowhere,
they
don't
let
you
out
you're
captured
in
your
own
neighborhood
you're
in
jail
for
a
certain
amount
of
hours.
Thank
you
very
much.
A
Foreign
good
morning,
council
members,
I'm
Brian,
rosello
and
I'm,
representing
the
neighborhood's
south
of
Columbus
drive
and
one
block
east
of
Himes,
and
it's
about
this
parking
issue.
That's
going
on
through
the
games,
I'll
Survivor
sentence.
We've
been
parking
for
over
two
decades.
A
A
We
clean
up
the
trash,
as
well
as
maintain
the
trees
and
cut
the
grass
on
on
the
right
of
way.
A
lot
of
people
don't
have
front
yards.
We
have
fenced
in
front
yards
and
fenced-in
backyards
to
prevent
death
or
theft.
Excuse
me
and
the
residents
parked
themselves
in
the
right
away
in
front
of
their
own
homes
every
night
every
day.
A
Even
you
know,
even
during
events,
we
also
have
visitors
that
come
and
we
also
do
park
for
the
events
to
make
extra
money,
part
of
it,
pay,
homeowners,
insurance
and
ever
increasing
properties
of
the
property
taxes.
I
pay
I've
heard
from
elderly
people,
they
pay
their
property
taxes
with
it
and
partially
paying
their
ever
increasing
homeowners
insurance
heavily
citizens
I've
had
tell
me
about
this-
are
really
concerned,
especially
with
as
bad
as
the
economy
is.
A
The
warnings
and
violations
went
out
last
week
for
the
first
time
ever
we
I've
been
personally
parking
for
22.
This
is
my
23rd
year
parking
third
generation
campanian.
My
grandparents
used
to
tell
me
how
Dale
Mabry
was
a
one-way
road
coming
and
going
dirt
road.
A
That's
how
long
our
family's
been
here
all
that
I
ask
and
all
the
people
that
ask
is
that
this
coming
weekend
to
please
pulled
out
on
the
enforcement,
because
it
is
a
tradition
and
a
lot
of
people
on
fixed
incomes,
do
depend
on
this
money
and
they
do
do
the
right
thing.
98
of
all
these
people
that
are
parking,
Park
legal.
Why?
A
Because
they've
been
doing
it
for
years
and
they
want
the
tradition
to
keep
going,
and
you
have
a
few
bad
apples
that
do
park
on
the
street
half
in
the
street,
not
on
the
right
way.
The
right
away
should
be
able
to
be
parked
on
as
long
as
you're
three
and
a
half
foot
off
the
street
pulling
off
in
the
right
direction
of
traffic
away
from
a
stop
sign
away
from
a
telephone
pole.
A
These
are
the
rules
that
were
taught
to
me
by
a
traffic
zoning
enforcement
officer
about
eight
years
ago,
and
we
just
asked
that
this
weekend
to
please
hold
back
and
don't
issue
the
game.
Goers
and
homeowners.
Don't
need
to
be
going
through
this.
If,
if
you
see
somebody
parked
in
the
middle
of
the
street
not
properly
on
the
highway
and
they're
sticking
down
the
street,
you
know
I'll
give
them
a
ticket.
A
There's
no
problem
with
that,
because
you're
blocking
you
know
if
you're
you're
in
the,
if
you're
on
the
side,
if
your
wheels
are
on
the
side
of
the
street
yeah
you're
in
violation,
but
if
you're
in
the
right
of
way
parked
right
or
in
your
own
personal
property.
I
appreciate
your
time.
We
really
do.
Okay,
council
members.
Thank.
M
You
thank
you
and
another
thing
we
did,
and
it
wasn't
this
Administration
used
to
have
the
ditches
in
front
of
West
Tampa
that
there
were
you
and
guess
you
used
to
clean
them,
the
same
neighbors
cleaned
them.
We
got
so
smart
that
we
made
them
into
bees
and
now,
if
you
can,
you
can't
get
in
there
clean
you
can't
get
in
you
can't
get
out
so
now
the
city's
got
to
clean
them
and
they're
not
doing
a
very
good
job
of
it.
Thank
you
very
much.
F
Good
morning
Council,
my
name
is
Stephanie
Poynter
I'm,
a
resident
of
South
Tampa
I
live
in
evacuation
Zone,
a
I
have
four
more
houses
in
an
evacuation
Zone
a
so
we're
we're
really
a
special
bunch,
and
but
I
wanted
to
point
out
and
I
had
no
intention
of
talking
about
this.
But
I
wanted
to
point
out
that
this
is
one
of
my
friends
her
and
her
husband
are
both
disabled.
F
They
were
standing
at
the
Himes
complex
at
5
30
in
the
morning
with
about
50
other
people
and
I
did
contact
somebody
in
administration
and
they
did
respond
and
they
opened
it
up
early.
But
there
is
a
lot
to
be
considered
in
a
situation
where
we
have
this
many
people
standing
out
to
get
sandbags
in
one
of
the
hottest
places
in
the
country.
If
they
are
there
at
5
30
in
the
morning,
they're
not
standing
out
in
the
baking
sun,
they
are
not.
F
They
are
not
able
to
the
longer.
They
stand
there
in
line
the
less
they
can
do
secure
to
secure
their
homes.
So
if
those
lines
are
able
to
be
moving
5
36
o'clock
in
the
morning,
when
the
sun
comes
up,
then
they
can
be
boarding
up
their
homes.
They
can
be
doing
the
things
that
they
need
to
do
outside.
As
somebody
said
over
the
last
couple
days,
if
you
can
pick
it
up
put
it
up
and
those
people
were
standing
in
line
instead
of
putting
things
up
in
their
yards.
F
So
I
just
wanted
to
show
you
that
I
did
point
out
like
I
said:
I
contacted
Administration.
They
helped
her
get
her
car,
her
sandbags
loaded
and
get
her
in
her
car
within
about
30
minutes
after
that,
and
I
really
do
appreciate
that,
but
a
nine
o'clock
start
time
is
great
for
city
council,
but
it's
really
not
when
you're
in
a
state
of
emergency,
so
I
I,
don't
know
how
that
works
and
I
do
appreciate
our
city
staff
I
will
be
the
first
one.
F
I
went
out
and
tipped
my
garbage
can
or
my
garbage
man,
because
he
showed
up
the
day
before
the
hurricane.
We
had
a
lot
of
concerned
neighbors
that
we
weren't
going
to
have
garbage
pickup
and
that
guy
busted
through
my
neighborhood,
he
did
an
excellent
job
and
they
came
back
through
on
Friday
and
took
stuff
so
I'm
very,
very
happy,
but
sometimes
in
this
after
action
review.
We
need
to
look
at
things
like
when
okay
does
do.
We
really
need
to
wait
until
nine
o'clock
to
open
the
doors
this
isn't
buying
a
Nintendo
switch.
T
Hi,
my
name
is
Caroline
Bennett
lifelong
resident
of
South
Tampa
I
will,
since
Stephanie
said,
I
will
talk
about
the
trees.
A
little
bit,
I
want
to
say:
I
was
glued
to
the
TV
every
waking
hour
leading
up
to
Ian
and
one
of
the
things
that
the
people
said
was
that
the
bay
is
now
averaging
three
degrees
warmer
than
it
used
to
and
their
exact
words
were.
This
is
jet
fuel
to
hurricanes,
so
the
rise
in
temperature
has
a
lot
to
do
with
the
the
the
severity
of
the
storms.
T
And,
if
you
look
on
the
internet,
all
over
the
world,
one
of
the
biggest
best
Solutions
is
trees.
We
have
to
have
the
trees,
they
have
a
huge
impact
in
a
lot
of
ways.
They
save
the
city,
so
much
money,
people,
one
thing,
that's
that's
a
problem.
Is
people
can't
go
out
in
their
front
yard
and
say:
okay,
what
would
happen
if
that
tree
wasn't
there
and
they?
They
can't
do
that
so
A
lot
of
times
they
don't
visualize.
What
or
how
a
tree
helps
them.
T
If
they're,
if
the
tree
prevents
flooding
which
they
do,
they
can't
see
the
flooding
that
was
prevented.
They
can't
see
the
extra
oxygen.
They
can't
see
what
it's
done
to
the
urban
heat
island
effect.
One
of
the
problems
with
Tico
need
does
need
to
trim
the
trees
that
are
around
power
lines,
no
issue
with
that.
T
T
You
know
they're
a
big
part
of
the
solution
to
the
problem.
I,
consider
myself
an
expert.
My
family
has
been
in
the
tree
business
for
generations
and
I'm.
Sorry,
these
little
mitigation,
trees,
I
know
you
know
in
our
land,
when
we
cut
100
to
150
trees
on
an
acre
we're
now
going
to
have
flooding
on
that
land.
T
Even
though
we're
planting
back
600
trees
per
acre,
we're
still
going
to
have
flooding
on
that
land
for
years
that
we
didn't
have
prior
because
those
600
baby
trees
do
not
do
the
same
work
as
100,
mature
trees,
and
you
know
if
you
want
the
details.
I
can
tell
you,
but
I
am
an
expert
on
that.
The
other
thing
I
want
to
mention
real
quick
is
talking
about
the
evacuation.
I
think
a
lot
of
things
the
city
did
was
was
great.
I
was
very
happy
to
see
that
I'm
a
little
concerned.
T
It
seemed
like
a
lot
of
people
didn't
evacuate.
I
know
my
personal
experience
with
my
neighbors
I
live
in
B.
We
were
under
mandatory
evacuation,
Mia
culpa,
I
didn't
evacuate,
but
I
did
it.
Based
on
lot
of
information,
we
were
ready
to
evacuate,
but
I
saw
that
the
water
was
going
out
of
the
bay
I
had
a
place
to
go
that
wasn't
nearby.
It
was
a
very
informed
decision,
but
a
lot
of
people
who
evacuated
for
Irma
said
never
again
and
that's
an
issue.
T
People
need
to
understand
how
hard
it
is
to
evacuate
how
much
money
it
costs
them
in
hotels,
how
hard
it
is
to
find
a
place,
and
this
all
figures
into
the
evacuation.
Dale
Mabry
was
an
absolute
parking
lot
when
they
mandated
mcdill
evacuate
most
of
South
Tampa
is
in
a
and
b
and
there's
no
other
area
of
the
city
that
has
as
many
people
and
homes
in
a
and
b
as
South
Tampa.
Thank
you.
A
C
C
G
Hey
good
morning,
Council
Robin
Lockett,
so
we
can't
talk
about
agendaitis,
make
comments
about
agenda
items.
Now.
Oh,
yes,
you
can
I'm.
Sorry.
G
Oh
okay,
okay,
thank
you!
Okay,
so
Robin
Lockett,
first
I
want
to
make
a
comment:
a
lot
of
conversation
about
trees,
parking
and
so
forth.
The
city
don't
have
anything
more
to
do
in
regards
to.
G
G
I
would
really
like
to
know
in
regards
to
that
item
how
many
tenants
have
been
serviced,
what
the
outcomes
were
and
also
how
many
atten
tenants
were
applied
for
it.
That's
one
thing:
I've
been
getting
a
lot
of
phone
calls
in
regards
to
people
that
are
living
in
hotels
and
the
information
around
the
tenant.
Bill
of
Rights
tend
to
Bill
of
Rights
in
regards
to
the
enforcement
of
it.
G
When
a
when
a
landlord
says
that
they
are
not
accepting
Section
8,
they
are
not
accepting
vouchers,
they're
supposed
to
be
a
penalty
for
them
to
do
that,
for
one
I
guess.
Evidently,
landlords
don't
know
that
this
is
in
place
two.
When
I
looked
up
the
enforcement
75
150,
300
and
400
450
too
low
right,
because
I
would
pay
if
I'm
a
landlord
and
I
don't
want
to
accept
those
things.
G
The
penalty
I
would
pay
those
that
amount
to
keep
people
out
of
to
keep
people
out
and
what
happens
what's
the
process
if
it
happens
again
or
if
it
happens
again?
So
if
you
have
10
applicants
come
and
they
consistently
deny.
So
that's
another.
That's
two
things.
G
I
think
that
was
said
about
oh
hotels.
A
lot
of
people
can't
afford
there's
they're
living
in
hotels
and
they
can't
afford
to
get
an
apartment
or
rent.
So
in
regards
to
assistance
around
those
individuals.
What's
been
going.
What's
going
on,
I
had
a
couple
people
to
contact
me
because
they
need
help
with
paying
the
hotel
bill
because
they
can't
find
anywhere
to
live.
So
is
our
three:
is
the
R3
program
or
the
rmap
program
would?
Would
they
be
able
to
get
assistance
with
that?
Thank
you.
I
I
Yet
so
that
is
what
we're
approving
so
just
but
I
know
that
Miss
Travis
will
talk
to
you
about
the
other,
but
I
wanted
to.
Let
you
know
that
this
is
us
just
approving
the
fact
that
it's
going
to
start
so.
G
That's
a
good
good
morning:
Nicole
Travis,
administrator
of
development
and
Economic
Opportunity
we'll
be
providing
you
quarterly
updates
for
our
housing
stuff
and
we'll
be
happy
to
include.
We
would
be
reporting
on
that
stuff
anyway.
So
the
questions
that
masaka
was
just
asking
will
it
make
sure
that
that's
included
in
our
quarterly
reporting.
A
G
The
hotel
for
the
R3,
it's
a
recovery
response,
Kion,
is
going
to
text
me
because
I'm
messing
it
up
at
the
R3
program
that
does
provide
for
hotel
vouchers
for
people
that
are
experiencing
homelessness
until
we
could
find
them
to
permanent
housing.
But
if
they're
in
a
hotel
and
still
haven't,
found
permanent
housing,
you
need
to
call
our
office
to
connect
them
with
our
for
the.
G
C
L
Mr
Rogero,
thank
you,
chair
and
good
morning.
Council
Dennis
Rogero
Chief
Financial
Officer
of
a
very
brief
presentation
on
item
number
51.
To
recap.
This
item
moves
funding
from
various
funds
to
a
hurricane
Ian
FEMA
reimbursement
account.
So
we
can
pay
estimated
expenses
over
seven
million
dollars
associated
with
this
storm.
L
For
clarification
we
don't
have
anything
to
pay
outside
of
the
city
organization,
yet
the
the
event
was
only
a
week
ago
and
we
await
invoices
our
we're
concentrating
now
on
paying
thousands
of
city
employees
as
you've
heard,
who
worked
around
the
clock
to
to
prepare
and
respond
to
this
emergency
during
individual
briefings.
Council
has
asked
for
some
detail
that
we've
discussed
earlier
as
to
what
those
anticipated
expenses
will
be
and
I
have
that
here
have
the
Elmo
up.
Please.
L
This
information
is
taken
directly
from
our
preliminary
damage,
update,
which
we
provide
daily
to
the
county
as
a
requirement
for
FEMA
reimbursement.
You'll
see
the
expenses
are
primarily
first
personnel,
debris
removal
and
preparations
and
I'll
just
go
down
the
list
briefly:
salary
and
benefits.
That
is
the
overwhelming
majority
of
the
expense,
as
you
would
probably
guess
that
what's
wrong,
that
is
what
runs
our
organization
debris,
removal,
buildings
and
Equipment
utilities,
food
for
the
EOC
for
our
various
emergency
response,
centers
and
other
staging
areas.
Parks
and
Recreation.
L
Rentals
and
example
of
rentals
would
be
the
shower
and
restroom
facilities
that
are
brought
in
at
the
emergency
response.
Centers
and
roads
and
bridges.
You'll
also
see
or
notice
that
the
agenda
before
you
is
just
over
seven
million
dollars,
but
the
costs
have
already
been
revised
upwards
to
nearly
eight
million
dollars.
We
don't
need
to
worry
about
that
disparity
right
now,
because
again,
these
are
estimates.
L
The
clock
is
still
running.
We
will
continue
to
refine
this
at
these
estimates.
As
we
get
information
in
on
a
positive
note,
as
we've
shared
with
you,
we
anticipate
we'll
get
over
85
percent
of
this
reimbursed
from
FEMA
and
the
State
of
Florida.
At
this
point,
that's
over
six
and
a
half
million
dollars
also
during
individual
briefings.
Council
also
asked
for
details
regarding
our
contracts
and
who
we
anticipate
paying
for
from
this
funding.
I
also
have
that.
L
Of
course,
at
the
top
city
of
Tampa,
our
internal
customer
for
Preparation
and
Staffing
the
employees
moving
down
to
the
debris,
removal
that
Solid
Waste
is
undertaking
in
conjunction
with
these
two
vendors.
Not
only
do
we
have
to
have
a
vendor
haul
away
debris,
but
we
have
to
have
the
vendor
and
US
monitored
for
tracking
purposes
and
reimbursement
going
forward.
There's
the
showers
and
restrooms
I
talked
about
and
again
the
various
vendors
providing
food
to
the
various
location.
L
What
we
don't
know
yet
are
the
Myriad
of
companies
that
we
did
business
in
using
our
purchasing
cards
in
the
run-up
to
the
immediate
emergency.
We
have
purchasing
cards
throughout
the
organization
to
get
those
supplies
that
either
it
doesn't
make
logistical
or
economic
sense
to
hold
on
to
or
those
that
we
find
we
need
at
the
last
minute.
L
I
will
note
these
are
all
previously
approved
contracts
and
no
contracts
were
signed
or
increased
during
the
emergency
session.
That's
because,
as
part
of
our
Emergency
Management
protocol,
we
get
these
Council
approved
contracts
signed
ahead
of
time
and
we
hold
the
funding
that
we
may
need
in
advance.
That
is
our
hurricane
Reserve
fund.
That
we
ask
you
to
move
money
out
of
today.
L
Sorry,
it's
been
relatively
recent,
but
it's
been
a
little
bit
five
years
since
hurricane
Irma
and
you
can
see
here
a
comparison
of
how
hurricane
Irma
landed
and
where
we
are
today
just
about
five
years
on
the
dot
two
day.
Events
it
looks
like
hurricane
Ian
will
be
a
little
more
than
half
of
the
expense
associated
with
hurricane
Irma.
L
But
I'd
like
you
to
direct
your
attention
to
the
Irma
reimbursement
information
I've,
provided
there
you
can
see
it
took
over
a
year
to
get
a
mere
three
hundred
thousand
dollars
reimbursed
and
you'll
see
our
last
significant
reimbursement
occurred
almost
three
years
after
the
event.
So
it
is
not
a
quick
process
and
it's
not
a
quick
process,
because
it's
very
complicated
there's
the
assessing
of
the
damage.
There's
the
the
intake
of
information.
L
There's
the
analysis
of
information,
there's
discussion
with
the
reimbursement
agencies,
and
this
this
may
shock
you,
but
often,
for
example,
FEMA
Auditors
will
come
in
and
won't
agree
with
the
initial
actions
that
FEMA
indicated.
We
should
take
in
the
first
place
and
I'm,
not
picking
on
FEMA.
That's
just
part
of
the
process,
so
it
seems
very
likely
that
we
will
have
a
significant
amount
of
cash
tied
up
for
a
significant
amount
of
time.
L
That's
another
reason
why
we
want
this
funding
moved
from
the
hurricane
Reserve
fund.
Finally,
Council
I'd
like
to
clarify
some
statements
and
information
that
was
shared
earlier.
This
agenda,
as
you
may
know,
including
this
item
was
approved
Friday
evening
in
the
clerk
system.
We
briefed
each
of
you
individually,
as
you
know,
but
this
item
was
late.
L
The
agenda
was
late
for
the
reasons
that
we've
already
mentioned,
nearly
the
entire
city
working
around
the
clock
to
prepare
pardon
me
and
deal
with
an
emergency,
and
let
me
also
share
with
you
this
event
hasn't
ended
as
you're
seeing
right
here.
Not
only
do
we
respond
to
the
event
during,
but
Solid
Waste
is
out
there
doing
event
related
activities,
human
resources,
which
you
don't
see,
the
revenue
and
finance
shop,
trying
to
pay
thousands
of
employees
accurately
in
a
way
that
we
can
track
for
reimbursement
operationally.
L
We
are
still
in
an
emergency
and
we
briefed
each
of
you
as
I
said
and
Tuesday
a
council
member
asked
for
additional
information
associated
with
this
item
two
days
ago.
Okay.
Moreover,
the
council
member
asked
that
this
information
be
provided.
I
quote
when
this
is
presented.
That's
exactly
what
we've
done.
L
Council
I've
said
it
before
and
I'll
say
it
again.
You
are
my
customers.
It's
important
that
I
provide
good
service
to
my
customers,
I
think
with
the
information
we've
provided,
the
briefings
we've
held
and
the
additional
information
which
we've
provided
when
it
was
asked
for
is
providing
excellent
customer
service,
especially
given
the
time
frames
and
restrictions
associated
with
this
emergency
I
hope
that
answers
any
questions
you
have
and
I
can
answer
additional
questions.
R
K
R
K
You
know
each
of
us
is
elected
by
the
public
and
we
represent
our
constituents
in
the
public
and
I
would
appreciate
if
we
would
get
respect
from
the
administration.
My
question
is
the
documents
that
you've
just
shown.
I
asked
in
the
question
the
other
day,
I
even
asked
for
it.
Yesterday,
an
email
yesterday,
I
I,
submitted
by
email,
my
concern
to
you
and
chief
of
staff
that
this
was
not
disclosed
to
the
public,
because
I
feel
like
the
public
needs
to
be
needs
to
see
the
information.
K
It's
not
sufficient,
just
for
us
to
see
it
and
we're
talking
about
now.
Eight
million
dollars
and
we've
seen
that
this
Administration
plays
loose
with
numbers.
I
disagree
with
that
statement
in
in
the
Hannah
Avenue
project
tap
and
others.
We
I
won't
go
through
all
those
details
again,
but
just
because
you
get
a
legal
opinion
saying
something's,
okay,
it
doesn't
mean
it
is
the.
The
fact
is
that
we
need
to
respect
the
Public's
need
to
to
have
transparency,
and
you
said
that
these
documents
are
provided
every
day
to
the
county.
K
K
It's
not
just
what
I
asked
for
it's
that
we're
talking
about
eight
million,
almost
eight
million
dollars
now
and
the
public
deserve
I.
Don't
understand
why
the
administration
wouldn't
want
to
be
transparent
about
them.
The
mayor
had
a
press
conference
about
transparency
and
accountability.
It's
a
basic
question.
It's
like
going
back
to
Hannah
Avenue
I
asked
you
a
couple
days
before.
What's
the
rental
equivalency,
if
we
had
to
rent
space-
and
you
decided
not
to
do
it,
it's.
K
Sure
we
provided
that
it's
not
just
that
I
asked
the
question:
it's
that
it's
a
basic,
it's
a
basic
part
of
policy
analysis
that
anybody
would
do.
My
second
question
is
to
the
first
point:
I
would
just
appreciate
if
the
if
the
administration
would
be
transparent,
with
information
like
this,
especially
about
Big
Ticket
items
with
the
purchasing
cards.
K
K
L
That's
a
two-pronged
question:
the
first
question
I
believe
you
asked
was:
will
there
be
a
Reconciliation
in
a
county?
My
words
there
absolutely
will
there
has
to
be
for
federal
and
state
purposes
and
historically
we've
provided
that
to
City
Council
in
terms
of
additional
approvals
for
expenditures
associated
with
the
emergency
I.
Don't
know
the
particular
nuances
associated
with
that,
but
I
can
I
can
find
out
again.
You
have
the
pre-emergency,
you
have
the
Declaration
of
the
emergency
and
then
you
have
post-emergency
and
the
rules
and
restrictions
and
tracking
needs
change
between
those
three
periods.
K
And
I
have
to
just
for
the
Public's
sake.
I
have
to
ask
these
questions
because
by
Charter
we're
required
to
oversee
the
budget
and
the
and
and
contracts,
and
so
if
we
don't
ask
these
questions,
we're
not
doing
our
our
duty
to
protect
the
taxpayers
and
we've
fought
hard
to
find
a
few
million
dollars
for
affordable
housing.
K
Procurement,
can
you
please
send
a
memo
to
all
Council
if
you
have
any
any
answers
to
questions
that
that
we've
asked,
if
you
could
send
it
to
all
city
council
I,
don't
know
if
there's
a
way
to
make
it
public
for
the
public
and
then
the
last
question
is,
if
you're,
if
you
get
85
percent
of
it
back
from
the
federal
government,
what
happens
to
that
money?
Do
we
then
approve
where
that
goes,
or
is
that
in
a
slush
fund
that
somebody
can
spend.
L
It's
an
excellent
question
and
again,
as
I've
said
before,
I
I
find
the
term
slush
fund
misleading,
but
I'll
use
I'll
use
that
word.
If
you'd
like
me
to
and
I'll
give
an
example
following
hurricane
Irma,
we
actually
depleted
our
Hurricane
fund
and
it
took
us
I
believe
a
year
or
two
to
replenish
that.
So
an
answer
direct
answer
to
your
question.
When
that
funding
is
reimbursed,
we
will
place
it
back
into
the
hurricane
Reserve.
M
You
Mr
chairman,
this
is
a
three-way
Trifecta
between
the
federal
government,
the
State
of
Florida
and
the
City
of
Tampa
I.
Believe
the
item
on
the
agenda
today,
7.34
107.234
000,
or
something
like
that
of
which
one
party
is
coming
up
with
5.2
million,
which
is
the
feds
or
FEMA
that's
75,
and
the
other
25
percent
are
divided
by
12.5
percent
from
the
state
of
Florida
or
875
000
and
12,
and
a
half
percent
from
the
city
of
Tampa
for
825
000..
M
If
you
there's
some
to
the
total,
then
equals
7
million
234
000
or
something
to
that
degree.
Yes,
this
estimate
these
are
guest
estimates.
You
just
mentioned
that
from
what
we
got
here
to
your
agenda
went
up
about
eight
hundred
fifty
thousand
dollars.
Yes,
sir,
and
these
are
estimates,
and
the
problem
is
when
you
have
an
emergency,
you
have
to
take
action.
You
can
either
get
criticized
in
the
beginning
or
criticize
for
not
doing
and
taking
the
emergency
either
way
you're
going
to
be
criticized
and
was
an
emergency.
L
M
M
Either
emergency
pass
it
or
not
to
pass
it
or
to
clean
the
streets
or
not
the
cleanest,
reach,
to
pay
what
we
already
used
and
paying
overtime,
pay
and
so
forth,
and
so
on
and
clean
up
debris
that
you've
done
the
food,
the
trucks,
the
energy
or
whatever
it
is
that
you're
putting
in
there-
and
this
is
not
an
uncommon
thing.
These
are
comments
with
any
City
or
any
County
we've
had
some
type
of
a
disaster
am
I,
correct,
correct.
L
L
C
Councilman
Carlson
hang
on
one.
Second,
please
councilman
Brandon.
This
is
your
one
of
your
agenda
items
under
Finance.
Do
you
want
to
wait
to
to
the
consent
or
do
you
want
to
go
ahead
and
pass.
M
C
M
Item
51
is
a
resolution
making
certain
changes
in
the
budget
of
the
city
of
Tampa
and
I'm,
going
to
read
it
for
physical
year,
ending
September,
30
2022,
providing
the
transfer
relocation
or
appropriation
of
7
million.
Thirty
four
thousand
three:
seven
million
thirty
four
thousand
dollars
in
the
general
fund,
Solid
Waste
operation
fund
and
FEMA
reimbursement
fund
to
provide
for
anticipated
expense
related
to
hurricane
and
providing
an
effective
date.
A.
K
K
I
I
have
concerns
about
where
the
rest
of
it
would
go
and
how
it
would
be
spent.
However,
staff
has
promised
to
provide
some
additional
transparency
and
send
us
additional
information.
So
with
great
hesitancy
and
worry,
I
will
go
ahead
and
vote
for
this,
because
I
don't
want
to
hold
up
staff
getting
paid,
but
I
would
just
appreciate
the
future
that
staff
would
provide
transparency
without
us
asking
and
also
would
be
collaborative
in
providing
transparency
will
request
it.
Thank
you.
Councilman.
C
L
C
Hair
I
just
need
to
ask
a
question:
I
think
I
already
know
the
answer.
One
of
the
councilman
said
that
half
of
it
was
going
to
staff.
Now
we
had
police
and
fire
working
24
hours.
Excuse
me
12
hours,
12
hours
off
12
hours
on
which
then
went
into
overtime.
So
can
we
safely
say
that
the
majority
of
that
went
to
overtime
pay
because
the
emergency
to
our
city
staff.
L
I,
just
don't
do
not
know
the
answer
to
that
question
at
this
time.
We
are
again
these
are
estimates
and,
in
fact,
I
believe
we
paid
people
today
as
we're
going
through
the
information
we
have
to
decide
what
was
paid
in
service
of
the
emergency
and
then
what
was
paid
during
day-to-day
operations.
The
city
just
doesn't
simply
stop
because
there
there's
an
emergency.
So
again,
that's
a
relatively
long-winded
answer
of
saying
I,
don't
know
well.
C
D
D
A
D
C
Spirit
you
you
look
like
you
want
to
run
up
to
that,
that
Podium.
A
I'm
here
to
answer
any
questions
on
item
seven,
which
is
Palma
seal
Wastewater
collection
system,
Rehabilitation
project
for
3.2
million
within
situ
form,
Technologies
and
I'll
answer
any
questions.
C
G
R
E
C
M
A
Item
number
eight
is
for
Forest
Hills
Wastewater
collection
system,
rehabilitation
in
the
amount
of
5.6
million
dollars
with
again
with
in
situform,
Technologies
and
I'll
answer.
Any
questions.
E
E
A
I'm
very
proud
of
that.
As
a
matter
of
fact,
ebo
participation
totals
20.9
percent
on
this
one,
which
is
I
believe
a
high
for
one
of
these
type
of
projects,
of
which
BBE
participation
is
4.6
and
hpe
is
16.3
percent
associated
with
manhole
Rehabilitation
and
cleaning
tubing
and
grouting
lines.
Joe.
E
C
C
P
Good
morning
and
thank
you,
Mr
chairman
for
the
record
I'm
Kate
Wells
with
the
legal
department
I'm
here
in
item
nine.
These
are
proposed
amendments
to
the
public
hearing
notice
requirements
in
chapter
27..
It's
also
been
referred
to
I
think
originally,
as
the
neighborhood
text
Amendment
proposal,
as
well
as
the
Good
Neighbor
notice
proposal
on
July
21st
Council
made
a
motion
directing
staff
to
provide
an
update
and
status
report
on
this
item
simply
stated,
there
has
been
no
further
action
subsequent
to
the
February
24th
city
council
Workshop.
P
When
the
concept
started
as
a
privately
initiated
text,
Amendment
the
city
understood,
the
purpose
of
the
proposed
amendment
was
to
provide
increased
awareness
of
public
hearings
and
I
did
file
a
memo
and
with
the
memo
there
is
attached
a
copy
of
the
original
proposal.
But
if
it
might
be
helpful,
I
just
made
this
summary,
which
is
on
the
overhead.
P
So,
as
submitted
the
proposal
requested
changes
that
would
require
notice
to
be
mailed
to
Property
Owners
at
the
physical
and
mailing
address
of
the
property
owners.
In
the
event,
the
two
are
different
notice
to
be
mailed
to
renters,
increasing
the
notice
area
for
all
applications
from
250
feet
to
500
feet
and
for
applications
requesting
multi-family,
residential
commercial
or
industrial
uses.
The
notice
area
would
be
increased
to
a
quarter
mile
and
a
community
meeting
would
be
required
30
days
prior
to
the
city
council
hearing.
P
P
These
require
an
ordinance
to
be
read
on
two
separate
days
and
notice
to
be
published
in
a
newspaper
10
days
prior
to
adoption
of
the
ordinance,
so
that
would
be
10
days
prior
to
Second.
Reading
on
the
application,
supplemental
notice
requirements
are
established
in
section
27-149
of
the
Land
Development
code.
These
require
mailing
notice
to
Property
Owners
within
250
feet
of
the
subject:
property
posting
notice
on
the
property
at
least
30
days
in
advance
of
the
hearing
and
then
filing
an
affidavit
with
the
city
clerk's
office,
confirming
compliance
with
these
notice
requirements.
P
Staff
researched
the
notice
requirements
of
other
jurisdictions.
In
a
summary
of
that,
research
is
attached
to
the
memorandum
filed
with
Council
you'll,
find
that
the
notice
areas
that
we
looked
at
range
generally
between
200
feet
and
500
feet,
Hillsborough
County,
recognizing
that
that
you've
got
an
urban
or
an
urban
service
area
where
there
is
more
density
than
an
act,
more
rural
area.
In
the
urban
service
area,
the
requirement
is
300
feet,
notice
and
elsewhere
in
the
county.
It's
500
feet.
P
With
respect
to
the
proposal,
there
has
not
been
any
discussion
and
I
think
it's
warranted
if
Council
wants
to
move
forward
with
this
to
discuss
the
basis
for
expanding
the
notice
area.
If
that
is
council's
desire,
in
addition
to
the
legal
issues
that
we
had
raised
previously
during
the
workshop
in
February,
there
were
practical
issues
that
were
discussed.
Section
27-149
establishes
the
notice
requirements
for
all
types
of
land
use
decisions,
not
just
rezoning,
so
it
deals
with
certificates
of
approach
of
appropriateness
with
the
BLC
and
the
arc.
It
deals
with
review
hearings
before
this
Council.
P
It
deals
with
variances
that
go
to
the
vrb.
So
in
the
event,
council
is
interested
in
changing
the
notice
requirements.
I
would
ask
that
they'd
be
limited
to
the
rezonings
in
the
land,
use
applications
that
come
before
you
and
not
impact
the
applications
that
go
before
the
other
boards.
But
again,
that's
certainly
subject
to
discussion.
P
I
want
to.
When
this
Administration
came
into
place.
There
was
a
development
services,
advisory
team
that
was
created
and
looked
at
many
issues,
including
the
Land
Development
code,
and
one
recommendation
that
came
out
of
that
team
was
to
have
predictability
and
uniformity
and
the
code
to
the
extent
possible
and
in
December
of
2020.
This
Council
approved
an
amendment
to
chapter
27,
where
we
had
uniform
notice
procedures
in
the
event
Council
wishes
to
revisit
that
we'll
be
moving
away
from
having
that
that
uniform
approach
to
notice
with
that
is
a
concern.
P
Will
there
be
an
increase
in
misnotices?
It's
one
thing:
when
everybody
knows
no
matter
what
type
of
application
the
notice
area
is
250
feet
once
you
start
changing
it.
There's
that
potential
other
concerns
that
were
raised
is
with
regard
to
including
renters
in
the
notice
area.
That's
been
a
big
topic
of
discussion
when
property
owners
are
required
to
be
noticed,
there
is
a
list
automatically
generated
by
the
Hillsborough
County
Property
Appraiser
that
will
identify
all
owners
of
property
within
that
radius.
P
That
similar
list
I'm
not
aware
that
it
exists
for
renters
and
that's
the
challenge
with
having
identifying
an
objective
way
to
identify
who
the
renters
or
the
tenants
are
within
the
notice
area,
and
there
was
one
application
that
Council
saw
recently
and
the
tenants
in
within
the
the
rezoned
area.
The
proposed
rezoned
area
expressed
concern
about
not
receiving
written
notice
and
when
I
went
back
and
looked
at
the
application,
you
had
certain
folio
numbers.
So
with
the
folio
number,
you
can
identify
the
owner
of
the
property.
P
What
we
don't
get
from
the
property
appraiser
are
the
tenants
within
that
folio
number
and
the
extent
to
which
the
addresses
differ
from
just
the
general
physical
address.
For
the
folio
number,
so
that's
just
an
objective
concern
that
that
has
been
expressed
if
we
were
include
renters
or
tenants,
as
required
for
for
the
notice.
P
The
original
proposal
requested
amending
the
definition
of
a
grief
person
to
include
Property
Owners
within
the
proposed
expanded
notice
area.
Carol
Ann
Bennett
reached
out
to
me
this
week
and
let
me
know
that
they
actually
they
agree
after
further
discussion.
There
is
agreement
and
support
for
the
proposed
definition
that
was
discussed
in
February
and
they're.
Removing
that
part
of
the
request.
P
They
Define
and
a
grief
person
as
a
person
who
will
suffer
a
negative
effect
to
a
protected
interest
as
a
result
of
the
quasi-judicial
actions
sought
by
the
applicant.
The
alleged
adversely
affected
interests
may
be
shared
in
common
with
other
members
of
the
community
at
large,
but
shall
exceed
eight
in
degree.
The
general
interests
in
community
Goods
shared
by
all
persons,
and
it
goes
on
to
clarify
that
an
association
shall
not
be
deemed
to
be
an
adversely
affected
person.
P
So
keeping
in
mind
with
the
initial
goal
was
in
with
the
proposed
amendments,
and
that
was
increasing
awareness
of
the
hearings
in
February.
What
was
recommended
to
council
is
that
we,
the
city,
keep
the
notice
requirements
as
currently
codified.
In
section
27-149,
we
amend
the
definition
of
a
grief
person
and
that
we
I'd,
like
the
idea
and
I
think
staff
likes
the
idea
of
requiring
a
community
meeting
for
for
the
rezonis
that
come
before
you
and
whether
that's
appropriate
for
euclidean
rezoning.
P
You
know
that's,
certainly
something
for
Council
to
discuss
is
to
to
the
extent
you're
interested
and
supportive
of
requiring
that
community
meeting.
Should
it
apply
to
all
reason,
rezonings
or
just
certain
types
of
rezonings
I
know
I
covered
a
lot
and
it's
very
condensed
from
February,
but
I
didn't
want
to
do
an
entire
presentation,
as
we
did
before.
Thank
you.
E
E
Need
to
change
ordinance
that
reference
the
size
and
it
pertains
to
this
particular
issue,
but
the
science
needs
to
change,
so
people
can
see
when
I
drive
anywhere
in
the
county
and
I
can
go
anywhere.
I
can
go
to,
for
example,
50th
and
Slide.
They
have
a
community
meeting
or
they
got
a
landing
issue.
You
see
this
big
old
sign
where
the
county
even
tell
you
the
date
time,
whatever.
Whatever
people
stop,
they
look,
they
see.
What's
going
on,
you
can't
see
this
little
sign.
E
We
got
in
the
city,
it's
ridiculous,
so
I
think
one
thing
you
need
to
add
in
there
is
maybe
the
signage
number
one
and
you
talk
about
the
notices,
maybe
300
feet.
E
But
if
a
noser
goes
to
the
least
the
property
itself
and
the
owner,
at
least
you
can
say
you
get
junk
mail
all
times
residents
current
residents,
current
resin
could
be
the
renter,
so
I
think
those
are
three
options
that
you
can
use.
You
have
the
agreed
statement.
You
have
that
Orlando
uses
I,
think
and
you
could
have
a
fix
there
and
see
how
that
works.
But
that
would
be
my
suggestion.
E
D
D
D
From
the
car
it
fades
in
the
Sun,
and
you
know,
there's
a
sign:
is
it
coming
accounts
or
is
it
going
to
another
board?
I,
don't
know
and
I'm
here
it's
very
hard
to
see
so
a
bigger
sign,
Thompson
Goods
is
Right
would
be
very
helpful
and
would
be
I.
Think
more
cost
effective
for
the
applicant
I
know,
mailing
is
not
a
fortune,
but
there's
a
lot
more
manpower
and
whatnot,
but
expanding
that
notice
from
250
to
300
I
think
is
reasonable.
D
500
feet
is
what
one
tenth
of
a
mile
give
or
take,
but
you
know
meeting
and
not
in
the
middle,
but
a
more
reason
watching
300
feet.
I
think
is
helpful,
but
this
the
signs
right
there,
the
you
know
we
campaign
we
put
out
campaign
signs.
We
want
people
to
see
it.
These
signs
that
we
that
we
use
the
white
signs
are
near
impossible
to
see
even
squinting
and
pulling
over
and
I
just
know.
D
That's
going
to
be
a
probably
going
to
be
a
big
hearing,
but
I
agree
with
what
council
member
good
says.
Thank
you.
Councilman.
J
Viera,
thank
you,
sir
yeah,
and
first
off.
Thank
you,
Miss
Wells,
for
your
presentation.
J
It
was
always
very
in-depth
and
professional,
and
obviously
you
put
a
lot
of
hard
work
into
that
I,
I
and
I
appreciate
that
we
all
appreciate
that
I
I
your
the
suggestion
and
only
rezonings,
that
was
a
concern
I
had
of
it
that
that
it's
the
way
that
I
see
this
and
I
agree
with
all
the
things
that
have
been
said
is
this
is
a
good
government
measure
or
we
want
people
to
know
what's
happening
in
their
local
government,
but
it's
got
to
be
done
in
a
reasonable
way
that
doesn't
result
in
something
being
overly
broad
or
burdensome
to
some
individual
who
can't
afford
an
attorney,
etc,
etc
and
I.
J
Think
by
going
to
rezonings
that
are
going
to
occur
in
in
Council,
for
example,
we
can
prevent
some
of
that.
So
I
think
that's
a
really
good
thing.
So,
but
again,
this
is
something
that
is
very
well
intentioned.
That
can
do
a
lot
of
good
things
and
I
think
as
presented
it
can.
It
can
have
some
positive
effect,
but
I
just
wanted
to
thank
you
because
you
obviously
put
a
lot
of
hard
work
into
it.
So
thank
you.
K
K
K
The
signs
I
agree
with
them,
also
that
we
that
we
can't
read
the
signs
and
also
they're
trashy
looking
they
look,
they
sometimes
are
end
up
being
trash
and
and
and
it's
hard
to
know
what
exactly
they
mean
and
what
they
say.
You
said
Community
meetings
and
sorry,
if
you
said
this,
but
did
you
did
you
say
to
include
specifically
notifying
neighborhood
associations.
P
Is
being
requested
through,
the
amendment
was
to
include
additional
contact
information
for
the
neighborhood
association
and
in
the
event
that
there's
a
property
that's
coming
before
you,
where
there's
not
a
registered
neighborhood
organization?
To
then
look
at
the
abutting
neighborhood
organizations
and
the
one
concern
I
recall
from
staff
is
the
way
our
registration
process
is.
It's
not
set
up
based
on
the
property
address.
It
it'll
pull
up
that
way,
but
the
list
of
of
neighborhood
organizations
that
are
then
required
to
be
notified.
P
It's
based
on
those
organizations
that
request
to
be
opted
in
for
that
area.
So
we
would.
We
would
want
to
look
at
how
how
the
manner
in
which
we're
capturing
the
the
organizations
in
our
database
how
that
would
translate
to
what
is
being
requested
if
there's
a
way
to
adjust
that.
P
I
believe
that
the
property
appraisers
here
May
generate
that
separate
list,
it's
just
not
by
tenants.
So
we
can.
We
can
I'd
like
to
look
at
that
to
see
exactly
what
can
be
generated
and
the
reason
we
rely
on
that
list.
That
is
then
the
list
that
the
post
office
goes
by
and
stamps
every
page
to
ensure
that
so
I
want
to
make
sure
that
we
have
an
objective
way
to
create
those
lists.
So
if
I
can
look
at
that,
I
think
that's
an
easy
addition
and.
P
Okay,
thank
you
so
much
and
it
if
I
make
just
one
one
comment:
the
discussion
about
300
feet.
If
that
is
where
Council
decides,
I
I
would
like
an
opportunity
to
talk
to
staff.
Would
that
300
foot
radius?
Would
we
then
be
supportive
of
perhaps
that
does
apply
to
all
applications?
It's
not
a
tremendous
increase
and
then
again
we
have
uniformity
in
our
code.
It
was
the
concern
initially
is
where
we
are
expanding
a
500
feet
and
then
possibly
a
quarter
mile.
M
H
M
Are
they
corrugated
vinyl
yeah?
Well,
they
should
they
should
stand
out
and
last
for
a
long
time,
I'm
just
playing
The
Devil's
Advocate
thinking
about.
If
you
do
this
for
signs,
what
are
you
going
to
do?
Does
this
mean
that
the
sign
coach
has
to
change
for
the
City
of
Tampa,
because
once
they
see
these
signs,
they're
going
to
say
if
the
city
can
do
it,
I
want
to
do
it.
M
P
M
I
I
I
That's
the
one
thing
that
when
you
drive
by-
and
you
see
our
current
signs,
you
can't
tell
just
visually
that
it's
that's
that
it's
the
city
of
Tampa
and
if
you
look
at
those
Hillsborough
County
signs
that
seal
is
the
first
thing
you
see
so
I
would
love
I
I
want
to
bring
this
back
in
we're
having
a
discussion
about
all
sorts
of
rezoning
housing
type
issues
at
the
workshop
at
the
end
of
this
month,
October
27th
and
you
and
I
had
talked
about
when
we
get
these
ideas,
and
we
hear
from
the
public
and
I
know
that
right
now
fan
is
trying
to
have
a
meeting
with
I
believe
the
Tampa
Bay
business
Builders
Association.
I
Is
that
yeah?
Yes,
no,
that's
well,
they'll
they'll,
let
they'll,
let
me
know,
but
anyway,
they're
working
on
meetings
with
with
applicants,
basically,
so
that
they
could
come
up
with
something
that
they
could
agree
on.
So
I
look
forward
to
so
that
will
be.
My
motion
at
the
end
of
this
discussion
is
to
bring
back
some
of
these
ideas
and
what
a
sign
would
look
like.
What
would
be
the
cost
if
we
made
signs
bigger,
would
we
have
to
do
a
cost
of
installing
the
sign?
I
I
mean
what
what
kinds
of
things
are
we
looking
at?
So
that's
the
kind
of
stuff
that
we
could
come
back
on
the
27th
with
just
a
little
more
information
but
I.
So
far,
I
appreciate
everybody's
comments
regarding
it
and
definitely
definitely
I
know
you
and
I
also
talked
about.
I
How
do
we
deal
with
the
tenants,
but
but
not
just
the
tenants
but
apartment
complexes
and
the
property
appraiser
knowing
the
address,
but
not
every
single
apartment
number
in
each
scenario?
So
so
what?
What
could
we
do
about
that?
So
those
are
issues
that
I
know.
We've
talked
about.
P
But
if
the
signs
are
much
larger
and
really
bring
attention
to
the
requests
that's
been
made.
If
I
may
suggest
that,
for
in
the
situation
a
couple
of
weeks
ago,
the
tenants
on
the
property
that
are
being
impacted
by
the
proposed
rezoning
I
think
that
would
be
a
really.
You
know
great
way
to
see
what's
happening
on
your
property
and
then,
of
course,
there's
always
contact
information.
If
you
need
more
information
but
yeah,
you
know
to
the
extent
that
we
can
identify
an
objective
methodology
to
identify
tenants
or
renters,
we'll
look
into
that.
H
Is
I
just
do
have
a
question
just
for
clarification
unless
we've
just
if
your
motion
is
going
to
be
bringing
it
back
on
the
27th
you
had
mentioned
rezonings
but
Council.
Some
Council
often
hears
other
things
other
than
rezoning.
For
instance,
the
alcoholic
beverage
or
special
uses
special
use,
applications
or
review
hearings
as
well
everything
everything.
E
All
right,
if
if
councilman
was
going
to
bring
a
contingent
back
on
the
27th
I,
don't
want
to
believe
it
long
down
the
road
after
the
27th,
because
people
have
been
waiting
and
waiting
waiting,
so
I
want
to
make
sure
we
come
back
on
the
27th.
If
we
can
always
already
have
some
of
council's
ideas
already,
you
know
laid
out.
E
You
know
if
we
can
come
back
and
it's
always
up
before
that
and
get
with
cows
moves
I
kind
of
have
their
plan
laid
out.
I
think
that'll
be
good,
so
you
know
we're
gonna,
wait
a
long
time,
people
in
the
public
and
immediately
come
back
and
let's
get
something
drawn
and
move
down
the
road.
This
has
been
drawn
a
long
time
long
enough.
H
P
I
would
recommend
that
this
be
included
in
the
January
cycle
with
any
other
amendments.
I
know
we're
also
looking
at
issues
with
regard
to
review
hearings
at
council's
requests,
so
it
might
be
appropriate
to
address
everything
together
and
it'll,
give
staff
time
to
to
work
through
the
amendment,
as
well
as
the
implications
on
the
cost
of
of
the
signs
and
how
we
would
address
that.
P
T
Hi,
my
name
is
Caroline
Bennett
lifelong
resident
of
Tampa
I
just
want
to
show
right
here
that
if
you
notice
here
you'll
see
that
Jacksonville
is
350
feet,
Miami
is
500
feet,
Broward
is
500
feet,
Tallahassee
is
a
thousand
feet
and
I
also
want
to
notice
that
they
do
have
some
other
distances
for
certain
uses,
for
instance
in
Broward
County.
If
you're
going
to
do
a
big
box
store
it's
four
miles,
an
Orlando
big
box
is
2
000
feet.
T
I
just
want
to
say
that
the
original
that
Ms
Wells
was
referring
to
her
presentation
was
extremely
accurate.
We
through
discussion
with
various
neighborhood
leaders
and
amongst
ourselves
we
have
changed
it
to
try
to
address
a
lot
of
the
concerns
that
came
up
and
we've.
We
like
the
staff
recommendations
as
to
the
aggrieved
person,
and
we
like
the
staff
recommendations
as
to
the
neighborhood
community
meetings,
we
withdrew
hours
and
substituted
theirs.
We've
also
tweaked
a
lot
of
the
other
things
based
on
feedback
that
we
got
about
concerns.
T
We
are
meeting
soon
with
three
different
land
use,
attorneys
to
discuss
with
them
and
see
what
we
can
come
to
agree
on.
We
plan
to
meet
with
again
with
City
staff
and
the
legal
department
and
and
try
to
to
work
out
some
of
these
issues.
I
want
to
say
that
the
renter
issue,
our
solution
to
the
objections,
was,
as
you
all
alluded,
to
go
to
the
property
address.
If
and
only
if
the
property
does,
the
mailing
address
are
different.
This
doesn't
happen
very
often
it
can
be
done.
T
I
have
a
man
who
lives
on
my
street.
Who's
lived
there
renting
for
seven
years
he's
a
part
of
the
community.
The
person
who
owns
the
property,
who
lives
in
Ohio
is
not
frankly,
and
the
other
renter
situation
that
we
were
trying
to
address
is
only
if
the
subject
property
is
multi-family,
because
we
recognize
the
difficulty
of
doing
it
more
than
that
half
of
the
citizens
citizenry
in
this
city
are
renters
and
right.
T
Now
none
of
them
have
the
right
to
any
notice
about
anything,
not
a
single
one,
and
so
we
can't
solve
the
entire
problem,
but
we
feel
like
if
the
subject
property,
where
someone's
home
they've
been
living
in
this
apartment,
complex,
their
kids,
are
in
school
there.
If
something,
if
their
home
is
going
to
be
destroyed,
at
least
the
courtesy
of
a
notice,
the
bigger
signs
are
excellent.
We're
all
in
favor
of
that
right
now
the
county
will
have
the
big
signs
within
the
city
sometimes
and
I've
never
heard
that
speaking
of
Miss
Miranda's
concern.
T
I
will
see
it
on
the
corner
of
Beta,
Bay
and
Dale
Mabry.
So
I,
don't
think
that's
an
issue.
We
love
the
bigger
signs
and
we
do
want
to
discuss
with
everybody.
We
would
like
bigger
than
300
feet,
and
we
would
like
to
explain
further
that
you
know
if
someone
is
asking
for
a
variance
for
the
shed
to
be
six
feet
from
the
property
line
instead
of
seven
feet.
That's
a
lot
different
than
a
1200
unit
apartment
complex
or
a
big
box
store,
and
so
we
want
to
address.
All
of
that.
Thank
you.
F
Good
morning
is
it
still
morning:
my
name
is
Stephanie
Poynter
and
this
little
PowerPoint
slide.
You
guys
saw
two
years
ago
on
my
birthday,
you
might
remember,
we
were
in
the
convention
center
and
Mr
Daniels
took
his
shirt
off
okay.
So
if
anybody
remembers
that
meeting
so
this
is
my
neighborhood,
this
is
a
development
of
216
units.
F
These
blue
spots
were
notified.
This
is
the
this
orange
line.
Is
the
only
entrance
to
my
neighborhood.
Okay.
We
will
be
meeting
those
folks
every
single
day
when
we
leave
my
neighborhood.
That
was
the
first
time
I
came
here.
I
want
to
show
you
another
example
and
Miss
Corbett's
here
this
was
her
baby.
F
Let's
look
at
this
for
just
a
second,
so
this
power
this
slide
here
and
I'm.
Sorry,
it's
my
pretty
coloring,
but
the
bottom
line
is
the
250
foot
line
is
right
there:
okay,
everybody
within
that
line,
Got
a
notification.
F
Now
this
is
205
Apartments.
This
is
a
secondary
street
right
here.
Okay,
and
if
you
go
out
to
this,
the
city
staff
created
a
different
drawing
that
goes
out
to
a
thousand
feet.
So
this
isn't
even
thirteen
twenty
I
personally
handed
out
a
flyer
to
every
single
person
who
lived
on
those
streets.
I,
believe
that's
the
time
we
blew
up
the
phone
lines
and
no
people
couldn't
call
anymore
if
I
remember
correctly,
but
all
those
other
people
who
were
impacted
by
this
every
single
day
had
no
notification.
F
That's
not
fair,
and
those
are
people
who
are
long
time.
Homeowners
and
I
also
want
to
show
you
for
that
exact
same
project.
Here's
what
it
costs
them
to
send
it
out:
12
47,
11,
18.,
okay,
so
that's
23,
it
roughly
costs
55
cents
for
a
stamp
or
56
cents
for
a
stamp,
so
double
that
it
costs
46
dollars.
That's
what
that
developer
had
to
send
out
for
notifications.
F
Is
it
going
to
make
that
big,
a
deal?
I'm?
Sorry,
you've
spent
millions
and
millions
of
dollars
building
an
apartment
complex,
and
this
is
not
going
to
put
a
burden
on
them.
Sorry
and
we've
learned
that
there's
a
lot
more
that
could
be
given
the
basis
for
notification.
The
reason
why
we
want
this
change
has
nothing
to
do
with
legal
standing.
It
really
doesn't.
It
makes
sure
that
the
people
who
live
there
know
what's
going
on.
F
We've
also
asked
for,
if
we're
not
if
the
neighborhood
association
has
not
stood
up,
that
they
contact
fan,
that
was
councilwoman,
her
tax
idea
and
I
think
it's
a
great
idea,
because
just
two
days
ago
we
got
a
call
about
something
on
the
agenda
tonight.
F
It's
the
second
reading,
but
the
thing
about
it
is:
we
didn't
know
about
it,
so
we
can't
help
those
folks,
so
bottom
line
is
we're
willing
to
take
on
some
of
that,
because
I
know
that
some
of
these
people
pick
up
the
phone
and
they
call
the
developer,
who
tells
them?
Oh
we're
not
going
to
do
anything,
and
that
happened
to
me
personally
before
I
ever
walked
through
the
doors
of
city
council.
Oh
we're,
not
changing
anything,
you
can't
do
anything
about
it.
Well,
that's
a
story,
and
everybody
knows
it.
E
F
F
E
F
And
that
was
back
when
Mary
Santiago
was
still
here,
because
I
asked
her.
I
was
like.
Where
is
this
for
other
ones?.
E
I'm
glad
I
saw
that
because
sometimes
seeing
a
visual
makes
a
difference,
that's
why
it's.
The
people
are
visual
Learners
at
times,
and
it's
kind
of
a
if
you're,
showing
that
design
right
there.
Maybe
that
needs
to
have
a
discussion
at
the
workshop,
because
now
I'm
looking
at
a
big,
a
bigger
picture
now
than
what
I
was
imagining
now
it's
you
know,
and
it's
a
different
schematic
here
with
a
different
concept,
but
thank
you
for
the
drawing.
I
Can
you
lose
that
up
and-
and
this
is
why
I
mean
the
number
300
sounds
good,
but
when
you
see
that
most
of
that
is
trees
and
Road.
E
I
Park
so
even
I
mean
I
know
that
the
the
foot
the
oh,
the
other
thing
I
I,
threw
out.
There
was
maybe
just
a
number
of
homes
but
I
think
that
becomes
confusing,
so
so
I
I
think
500.
So
so,
when
staff
comes
back
with
this,
if
they
could
have
a
schematic
for
us
that
shows
250
versus
500
versus
a
thousand
just
so
we
are
able
to
see
that
I'm,
sorry
mispointer,
you.
F
No
I
have
one
other
thing
that
I
would
really
like
to
show
you.
These
houses
are
at
the
are
right
away,
so
the
rest
of
this
property.
All
the
way
to
Interbay
belongs
to
the
city
of
Tampa.
It's
not,
it
does
not
belong
to
our
neighborhood.
We
are
HOA.
That
is
right
away.
That
belongs
to
the
city.
So,
who
are
you
notifying
you're,
notifying
the.
I
R
Good
morning,
Council
Steve
mccolini,
2407,
Sunset
Drive.
One
of
the
things
that
you
have
to
remember
is
that
you're
affecting
all
of
the
petitions
and
I
I
know
that
we
provided
you
with
a
demonstration
and
a
diagram
showing
you
the
impact
where
the
the
radius
being
increased,
tripled
or
quadrupled
the
cost.
It's
not
twenty
four
dollars
it.
You
have
to
add
the
staff
time
and
the
copies
and
the
whatever.
But
you
were
changing.
R
The
original
request
was
for
1350
feet
and
you're,
changing
the
cost
from
two
or
three
hundred
dollars
per
notice
to
something
like
900
to
a
thousand
dollars
for
the
notice,
and
that
didn't
include
time
and
labor
for
the
people
have
to
put
that
together,
but
I
generally
I
think
that
300
feet
increasing
it
is,
is
not
a
big
issue
and
I.
Don't
think
that
increasing
the
size
of
the
sign
is
a
big
issue,
add
fifty
dollars
or
whatever
to
the
petition
fee.
R
R
I
I
think
that
the
builders
association
should
be
included.
I
know
that
Caroline
Bennett
mentioned
she
was
meeting
with
three
land
use
attorneys,
which
they
did
not
mention.
The
Builders
Association,
which
I
think
is
important.
There
are
a
number
of
stakeholders
that
are
affected
here,
including
small
property
owners
that
apply
for
variances
and
all
kinds
of
different
things,
Arc
and
and
BLC
and
you're
you're.
Putting
those
people
into
the
same
category
as
as
some
of
the
larger
projects
and
I
know
that
Stephanie
Poynter
showed
you
a
map.
R
Those
are
unique
properties
where
you
have
you
know
in
the
South
candy
area,
where
you
have
large
tracts
of
land
where
you
don't
affect
many
people,
but
the
rest
of
the
city
has
not
developed
that
way.
It
is
a
very
intense
and
densely
populated
city,
and
when
you
increase
that
size,
you
also
have
to
show
that
those
people
are
impacted
in
some
way.
I
think
the
state
law
says
that
if
you
increase
the
notice
area,
you
have
to
show
how
they
are
impacted
in
one
way
or
another.
R
Those
individuals
are
showing
up
at
these
hearings
whether
they
got
the
notice
or
not.
They
can't
claim
it.
They
didn't
get
notice
when
they
show
up
and
say
they
have
problems
with
these.
These
petitions,
whether
they're,
renters
or
not,
and
it's
extremely
difficult
to
try
to
track
renters
I,
think
the
staff
has
told
you,
the
legal
department
has
told
you
there's
no
way
of
identifying
them,
but
you
know
responsible
development
people
that
come
in
try
to
make
sure
that
there's
an
adverse
impact.
We
always
respond
to
the
phone
calls.
R
F
Law,
firm
of
hillward,
Henderson,
101,
East,
Kennedy,
Boulevard,
Suite
3700,
since
that
was
my
baby
I
thought
I
would
tell
at
least
with
councilman
hertak,
who
was
not
here
for
that
rezoning
case,
that
that
property
is
an
anomaly.
It
has
the
railroad
tracks,
but
we've
met
with
the
neighborhood
before
we
filed
that
application.
We
actually
continued
that
case,
one
time
to
continue
to
meet
with
the
community.
Our
association
was
the
Port
of
Tampa
Bay.
We
hadn't
included
the
south
of
Gandy
people.
We
incorporated
them
in
so
through
these
applications.
F
As
there
is
neighborhood
concern,
we
most
applicants
do
meet
with
the
neighborhood
and
we
do
make
sure
that
people
are
informed,
definitely
support
the
larger
signs
and
any
efforts.
I
think
any
efforts
we
can
do
to
help
communication.
That's
great
I
do
have
concerns
about
a
large
notice
area
like
1320,
but
I
am
scheduled
or
trying
to
get
a
meeting
with
Stephanie
and
Carol
Ann,
and
hopefully
with
maybe
probably
Jake
Kramer
and
Elise
battle
from
Stern
sweeper
as
well,
and
helps
have
ongoing
dialogue.
So
hopefully,
when
it
comes
back
everybody's
all
in
agreement.
C
F
I
mean
I'm
fine
with
the
300
feet,
I
think
when
you
go
beyond
500
feet,
not
with
these
anomaly
properties,
but
within
the
urban
area
of
the
city
of
Tampa,
smaller
a
lot
smaller
Parcels
you
have,
you
run
the
risk
of
diluting
the
effectiveness
of
the
notice.
If
you
send
too
many
notices
to
the
neighborhood
they're
going
to
lose
track
of
you
know,
is
this
really
in
my
neighborhood?
F
Is
this
not
in
my
neighborhood
I've
told
this
story
to
some
before
I
have
a
friend
who
lives
in
a
unit
that
was
owned
by
a
neighborhood
president
neighborhood
association
president?
He
says
he
gets
so
many
notices.
He
doesn't
even
look
at
them
anymore,
so
you
do
dilute
the
effectiveness
and
that's
why
I
think
the
bit
larger
signs,
because
that's
when
you're
driving
around
your
neighborhood,
you
say
oh
something's
happening
on
that
property,
whereas
you
get
a
notice.
F
E
Race
area,
I,
probably
like
staff,
to
do
a
study
of
the
area
of
the
average
areas
that
are
being
built
and
look
and
see
what
that
would
be.
Be
it
three,
be
it
five
I
know
on
her:
they
had
a
thousand
and
a
five
is
the
medium.
Then,
let's
look
at
what
is
the
medium
area
to
bring
them
a
compromise
for
the
builders
and
developers
and
the
citizens
right
all
right.
Thank
you.
I
Oh
Miss
Corbett,
it's
a.
I
So
what
again
I
know
that
you
all
are
going
to
have
discussions
to
talk
about
the
possibilities
of
this,
but
would
your
recommendation
include
say
300
feet
for
a
a
regular
property,
but
would
act
to
Mr
Michelini's
Point
as
well,
when
you
have
these
larger,
more
anomalies?
That's
when
something
maybe
larger
could
go
into
effect,
maybe
500
feet.
I.
F
Think
that's
difficult
to
tell
and
I
think
it
would
be.
You
get
into
parsing
whether
you
know
what
any
number
you
pick
is
arbitrary.
So
if
you
say
it's,
two
acres,
it's
two
acres.
If
it's
three
acres,
three
like
what,
why
did
you
decide?
I
think
it's
better
to
just
have
the
uniformity,
okay
and
then
also
again
focus
on
the
larger
signs.
So
people
in
the
neighborhood
do
know
what's
going
on,
because
we
definitely
do
support
that.
I
Thank
you
and
for
staff.
Another
thing
that
Miss
Corbett
brought
up
that
is
is
very
relevant
because,
as
a
former
neighborhood
leader,
he
used
to
get
these,
they
aren't
very
clear,
I,
don't
know.
If
there's
any
way,
we
can
change
the
language
to
better
explain
what
is
actually
occurring
in
layperson's
terms.
I
I
know
that
legally,
we're
required
to
have
a
certain
definition,
but
if
there's
a
way
that
that
we
might
be
able
to
look
at
a
notice
that
that
a
layperson
might
understand-
and
it
looks
like
Miss
Travis-
might
be
coming
up
to
see
if
that's
yeah.
G
No
we're
we'll
bring
this
when
we
come
back
to
you
in
January.
We
have
something
that
we
could
look
at.
What
does
a
notice
look
like?
G
Can
we
highlight
something
higher
in
the
top
there's
a
legal
requirements
that
we
have
to
make
sure
is
included
in
the
notice,
but
we
could
take
a
look
at
it
that
sometimes,
when
people
see
the
same
thing
over
and
over,
so
maybe
just
changing
up
the
look,
the
color
something
may
help,
but
one
thing
to
remember
is
we
also
have
an
interactive
map
that
people
can
go
to
the
site.
If
you
go
put
in
your
address,
you
can
see
what
applications
are
around
your
property
so
I.
G
I
Also,
then,
that
you
know
maybe,
when
we're
thinking
about
the
letter
being
able
to
include
that
at
the
bottom
of
it.
Something
like
that
so
I
definitely
see
this.
As
being
part
of
you
know,
retooling
this
and
I
really
appreciate
that
I
think
that
will
be
perfect
for
the
January.
G
Yeah,
these
kinds
of
conversations
are
very
helpful.
You
know
some
sometimes
when
you're
doing
this
work
for
a
long
period
of
time.
You
know
it's
just
mundane,
but
when
you
have
engaged
citizens
that
are
bringing
things
to
awareness,
it's
time
to
look
at
a
refresh
and
make
sure
the
legal
requirements
are
there.
But
how
can
we
improve
so
yeah.
H
It's
just
a
clarification:
if
I
can
the
form
of
the
notice
is
not
really
set
out
in
the
code,
but
you
said
I
thought
I
heard
you
say
unless
it
is,
did
you
say
you're
going
to
be
bringing
it
for
the
for
the
January.
G
Winning
improvements
that
we've
made
that
are
not
dictated
by
code
I
would
still
let
this
board
I'll
still
let
the
council
know
what
that
look
and
change
may
look
would
be.
So
no
council
doesn't
have
it's
not
dictated
in
code.
What
it
looks
like
but
being
responsive
to
what
the
citizens
are
saying
and
so
that
they
understand
it
so
that
this
Council
understand
what
changes
we've
made.
D
Jackson
Street
I'm
not
going
to
repeat
what
some.
K
T
This
boundary,
for
all
the
reasons
that
are.
A
T
Before,
for
example,
I'm
here
for
two
items
today,
one
is
a
relatively
affecting
a
relatively
large
multi-felling
development.
M
M
M
Notification
to
the
to
the
neighborhood
associations,
you're
notifying.
I
Attack
then
I
would
like
to
make
a
motion
I'm,
not
sure
if
the
date
that
we
would
come
back
in
January,
do
we
have
a
date
for
that.
H
I
No
so
I
don't
know
what
date.