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From YouTube: TCC 4/28/22
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A
B
B
B
B
C
Good
morning,
everyone
I'd
like
to
call
this
tampa
city
council
workshop
meeting
to
order.
It
is
my
pleasure
this
morning
to
welcome
pastor
clarence
nathan,
who
is
with
us
in
the
front
row
just
a
brief
biography.
Clarence
nathan
was
pastor.
Nathan
was
raised
in
tampa
and
attended
segregated
schools
only
to
receive
his
first
white
teacher
during
his
senior
year
at
middleton
high
school
when
he
joined
the
tampa
police
department
in
february
1971,
he
was
unfamiliar
with
the
all-white
work
environment.
He
always
remembered
wise
advice.
C
He
received
from
one
of
tpd's
pioneering
black
officers
sergeant,
samuel
jones
senior,
who
told
him
you
have
to
be
twice
as
good,
just
to
be
average
as
a
black
officer.
He
took
this
advice
to
heart
because
failure
was
not
an
option,
says:
pastor
nathan,
although
he
did
not
experience
discrimination
directly,
he
watched
it
happen
to
other
black
officers
and
believed
if
one
suffered
we
all
suffered.
This
prompted
him
to
join
the
fearless
four
lawsuit.
Eventually,
pastor
nathan
was
promoted
to
the
rank
of
lieutenant
and
retired
in
march
of
1985..
C
He
was
always
fearless
in
the
face
of
adversity.
If
you
visit
the
tampa
police
building
here
on
franklin
street
and
you
walk
in,
there
is
a
mural
of
the
fearless
four
which
is
dedicated
not
too
long
ago.
So
you
can
read
about
the
story
of
these
amazing
individuals
that
stood
up
for
what
was
right
and,
in
my
opinion,
are
living
legends
today.
So
if
we
could,
please
stand
pastor
nathan
if
you
would
lead
us
in
the
invocation.
B
B
That
we
might
live
in
peace
and
father.
We
lift
up
the
members
of
this
this
city
council
this
morning,
as
that
you
would
lead
god
and
direct
him
father
god
as
they
discuss
the
people's
business
guide,
their
hearts
and
their
minds.
We
pray
for
peace,
world
peace,
father
god
in
in
our
whole,
this
entire
world
and
in
our
country.
As
that,
you
would
move
and
touch
the
hearts
and
the
minds
and
the
lives
of
the
people.
We
ask
father,
god
that
you
would
be
with
and
bless
those
who
are
less
fortunate.
B
Those
who
are
disenfranchised,
lord
god,
that
this
council
will
stand
together,
father
god,
to
make
sure
that
we
overcome
these
areas.
We
pray
father
god
for
the
victims,
the
survivals
of
gun,
violence.
We
ask
that
your
blessing
will
be
with
them,
guide
them
and
direct
them
care
for
them
and
keep
them.
We
pray
in
the
glorious
name
of
christ.
Our
savior
and
our
lord
amen,
amen.
C
B
B
And
on
the
internet
at
tampa,
dot,
gov
forward,
slash,
live
stream
and
again
pre-registration
is
required,
and,
mr
chairman,
I
believe
you
do
have
you
sent
out
a
memo
with
regard
to
public
comment.
We
could
discuss
that
now
or
at
the
time
when
it
comes
up,
would
you
like
to
discuss
it
or
I
can
well,
if
you
wish
to
why?
Don't
we
just
state
it.
F
After
we,
if
the
council
can
waive.
B
C
Thank
you
all
right,
just
in
regards
to
the
format
for
today's
meeting
regarding
the
workshop
and
how
it
works.
If
you
are
here
for
public
comment,
general
public
comment,
you
will
be
speaking
at
the
beginning,
but
you
cannot
speak
a
second
time.
C
If
you
want
to
speak
on
any
item
on
the
agenda
after
it
is
presented,
then
you
can
we'll
have
public
comment
after
each
item.
That's
how
we've
traditionally
done
it
before
we
went
to.
You
know
the
covet
format
that
we've
been
in
the
last
few
years,
but
this
is
going
back
to
original
rules.
C
So
if
you're
here
for
general
public
comment,
you
can
speak
freely
at
the
beginning,
but
you
won't
be
able
to
get
a
second
chance
after
each
workshop
item,
but
everyone
will
get
a
chance
to
speak
and
that's
it
and
just
a
reminder
that
there's
going
to
be
a
five
minute
timer
for
all
council
members
comments
not
including
questions
and
answers.
That's
another
rule
that
we've
passed
before,
but
just
to
keep
it
organized
so
sure.
Yes,
sir.
G
I
think
my
speakers
for
number
one
aren't
here
yet
is
it
possible
we
could
do
a
public
comment
and
then
come
back
to
number
one.
Oh,
you
are
okay,
yeah,
okay,
sorry
yeah.
C
I
missed
you,
okay
and
just
a
couple
of
things.
We
have
a
memo
from
councilwoman
hertag
due
to
a
prior
obligation.
She
wouldn't
be
unable
to
attend.
Today's
workshop
I'd
like
to
read
that
into
the
record
councilman
carlson.
I
know
you
have
a
prior
commitment
and
need
to
leave
by
12
p.m.
Would
you
like
to
explain
why
or
you
don't
have
to,
but.
G
You
all
may
know
I'm
a
fan
of
dean
mitchell
who's,
one
of
the
top
african-american
artists
in
the
country,
and
he
happens
to
be
located
here
in
tampa.
I
get
to
give
him
a
statewide
artist
of
the
year
award
tonight,
so
I
have
to
go
to
fort
lauderdale.
Thank
you.
C
H
C
Was
emotional
all
right,
we
have
a
motion
from
councilmember
vieira
to
continue
item
number
seven
to
a
date
that
will
be
a
future
day
that
will
be
determined
second
from
councilman
c
troll
in
favor
aye.
Any
opposed
all
right
staff
is
also
requesting
a
continuance
for
number
eight
that
it
be
continued.
This
is
a
memo
from
mr
rob.
Rosner
continue
that
item
to
june
23
2022..
I
C
From
councilmember
miranda
signing
for
councilman
goods
all
in
favor
aye-
and
I
believe
that
is
it-
we
will
go
to
item
number
one,
just
a
clarification
on
the
agenda.
It
is
the
tampa
bay
defense
alliance,
correct,
sir,
yes,
ma'am,
oh
number,
six,
we
are.
We
have
a
a
request
from
mr
brad
baird
that
we
continue
item
number
six
to
may.
C
G
Is
a
group
that
that
I
have
spent
some
time
talking
to
and
they've
been
around
base
realignments
the
brac
programs
which,
which
tampa
goes
through
like
every
10
or
15
years,
and
usually
the
chamber
and
other
groups
scramble
to
try
to
make
sure
that
we
protect
our
important
asset
that
is
made
deal.
G
I
don't
think
we're
at
risk
at
all
right
now,
but
as
we're
as
we're
making
land
use
choices
and
and
planning
in
around
macdill.
One
of
the
issues
in
the
past
was
encroachment.
I
think
that
might
have
changed,
and
so
I
thought
it
would
just
be
a
good
idea
to
get
it
get
feedback
from
you
all
and
what?
What
you're
hearing
from
the
from
dod
about
the
importance
of
of
the
city's
relationship
with
mcdill.
B
If
I
can,
mr
chairman,
I
just
want
to
be
able
to
clarify
the
the
name
on
the
the
name
of
the
organization
as
number
one,
I
believe
is
that
does
that
need
to
be
corrected.
Yeah.
K
C
Have
a
motion
from
councilmember
carlson
senator
councilmember
goods,
and
that
is
to
amend
the
the
agenda
to
reflect
item
number
one
is
the
tampa
bay
defense
alliance,
all
in
favor
aye,
any
opposed
all
right.
K
Members
of
council,
my
name
is
larry
martin,
I'm
a
retired
air
force
officer.
I
was
the
base
commander
at
mcdill
about
10
years
ago
retired
back
here.
A
few
years
ago,
councilman
carlson's
confusion
was
my
my
boss.
In
the
tampa
bay
defense
alliance,
ms
donna
honeycutt,
our
president,
sends
her
regrets
and
her
apologies.
She
came
in
positive
this
morning
with
kovid,
as
I
was
as
I
was
dr
as
I
was
driving
in
for
the
session
today,
so
so
I'll
be
solo.
K
Today,
oh,
but
not
completely,
stephen
benson
is
with
me
from
this:
the
city
planning
office,
working
for
the
mayor
and
I'll
reference
them
stephen
here
in
just
a
few
minutes
for
first
slide,
please.
K
We
are
a
second
slide.
Please
quickly,
where
the
tampa
bay
defense
alliance
group
formed
in
2012
to
get
after
exactly
the
issues
that
councilman
carlson
talked
about,
base
realignment
and
closure
is
a
is
a
continuing
issue
in
the
area,
as
well
as
the
continuing
support
of
service
members,
their
families
in
the
area
we
were
formed
in
2012,
we
have
interest
in
all
eight
counties.
K
I'll
refer
you
to
the
two
bolded
items
and
our
goals,
which
is
to
promote
and
preserve
the
military
missions
in
the
area
while
at
the
same
time,
looking
number
four,
which
is
to
promote
and
facilitate
compatible
community
development
in
the
area.
What
I'm
going
to
talk
to
you
about
today
is
a
quick
case
study
and
a
success
story
that
the
city
is
doing
right
now
that
we
with
a
model
that
we
should
emulate
as
we
continue
and
going
forward
next
slide.
K
Please
you're
familiar
in
the
area
we
with
the
base
down
here
in
the
south
and
I'll
blow
that
map
up
just
a
little
bit.
I
became
a
recently.
I
did
a
lot
of
looking
at
the
city's
website
and
asked
myself
if
I
was
a
developer
who
wanted
to
develop
in
south
tampa.
Could
I
get
the
information
that
I
needed
to
develop
down
here?
Macdill
air
force
base
easily.
It
was
struck
to
us
at
the
tampa
bay
defense
alliance.
K
We
linked
them
at
that
point
to
the
planners
and
the
civil
engineers
that
were
on
the
base-
and
there
was
a
great
dialogue
between
the
two
about
the
considerations
that
hotel
chain
might
have
to
have
if
they
want
to
develop
in
the
area
they
chose
not
to
not
because
the
base
was
there,
but
for
other
economic
reasons,
but
they
made
it.
They
made
a
a
wise
choice
because
they
had
much
better
information.
K
K
If
you're
in
the
area
down
here
down
south
down
south
of
gandhi,
in
the
light
green,
you
can
see
in
the
in
the
mid
right
and
the
lower
left
that
those
areas
down
around
bay
shore,
which
are
the
approach
zones
to
the
base
and
then
the
pink,
clear
zones
that
are
right
near
the
base.
There's
not
a
lot
of
information
when
you
look
at
city
planning
and
how
you
would
do
that.
So
we
approached
both
the
base
and
the
city
to
ask
if
there
was
an
easier
way
to
do
it.
K
We
used
as
our
example
similar
planning
materials
that
are
available
at
fairchild
air
force
base
in
spokane
washington
planning
guides
that
make
it
very
easy
for
someone
who
wants
to
develop
in
the
area
to
get
information
that
they
might
have,
so
they
can
make
a
wise
choice.
Now.
Let
me
be
clear:
we're
not
advocating
right
now
that
there
be
any
rezoning
of
property
or
that
there
be
any
changes
in
properly.
K
That
says
you
might
want
to
consider
this
you're
in
an
approach
zone
and
here's
where
you
get
the
information
for
that
as
you
go
forward.
What
we
would
recommend
in
the
tampa
bay
defense
alliance
is
that
efforts
like
this-
and
this
is
what
the
defense
alliance
tries
to
do-
is
to
bring
interested
parties
together.
So
they
can
talk
early
about
issues
like
this
and
work
out,
because
the
priority
we
support
the
priorities
of
the
base
and,
interestingly
enough,
the
base
is
not
the
base.
K
Leadership
is
not
against
development
in
south
tampa,
in
fact
they're,
quite
in
favor
of
it,
because
a
number
of
their
young
service
members
have
to
live
out
in
east
county
and
commute
a
long
ways
to
get
to
the
base.
So,
if
there's
better,
more
affordable
housing
or
apartment
developments
that
are
in
the
area
that
are
more
affordable
to
their
service
members,
they're
all
in
favor
of
that,
as
long
as
it
allows
continued
use
of
the
military
mission,
that's
at
the
base.
This
point
I'd
like
to
ask
stephen.
K
If
you
join
me,
stephen
is
highlighted
to
me
recently
some
planning
efforts
that
are
going
on
the
florida
defense
state
defense
task
force
has
funded
recently
to
the
tune
of
about
half
a
million
dollars,
a
re-look
at
what
was
known
as
the
jay
loose.
The
joint
land
use
study
that
was
done
in
2008,
with
a
new
compatible
use
addendum
with
the
metropolitan
planning
groups
that
are
going
on
right
now
to
the
tune
of
about
half
a
million
dollars.
K
To
look
at
that
again
to
continue
the
development
and
the
and
the
work
for
the
airports
in
the
area,
including
tampa
international
peter
knight
and
mcdill.
Stephen
and
his
group
have
been
doing
an
addition
of
working
with
us.
There's
been
some
interesting
work
going
on
on
the
on
the
on
the
shoreline
down
to
mcdill
stephen.
F
Thank
you
larry
just
wanted
to
add
that,
as
the
council
is
aware,
we've
recently
kicked
off
the
coastal
planning
contract,
which
includes
developing
community
plans
for
palmetto
beach
and
all
of
the
south
of
yankee,
neighborhoods,
and
so
looking
at
what
we
should
be
doing
in
terms
of
planning
and
and
getting
information
out
and
working
with
the
community
in
regards
to
what
happens
around
the
base
is
something
that
we
are
going
to
be
putting
forward
as
an
integral
part
of
that
project,
especially
with
the
extensive
public
outreach
that
that
will
be
taking
place.
F
K
That
we're
ready
for
any
questions
or
any
from
council
any.
H
I
I
wasn't
gonna
sure
thing
I
mean
I
don't
want
to
know
thank
councilman
carlson
for
bringing
this
forward,
and
thank
you
for
this
I
mean
we're.
You
know
to
say:
we're
lucky
to
have
mcdill
here
is,
is
quite
the
understatement
right,
it's
something
that
really
defines
our
area
so
much.
You
know
we
have
over
a
hundred
thousand
veterans
in
in
hillsborough
county,
and
you
know
we
we're
more
than
anything,
a
very,
very
patriotic
community,
and
that
is
one
of
the
great
foundations
for
us
as
a
community.
H
So
thank
you
for
councilman
carlson
for
bringing
this
forward.
It's
it's
so
important.
Remember
meeting
you,
sir,
if
I
recall
at
the
medal
of
honor
convention
or
when
you
came
here.
Yes,
sir,
with
travis
and
some
other
folks,
so
you
know
it's
it's
things
like
that
that
that
kind
of
flow
from
that
presence
and
that
we
can
just
celebrate
our
patriotism,
celebrate
the
the
the
valor
and
service
of
our
veterans
and
so
just
again
to
to
say
that
we're
lucky
to
have
mcdill
is
a
heck
of
an
understatement.
K
H
K
Councilman
and
councilman,
I
the
there,
is
no
finer
community
anywhere
in
the
united
states
for
supporting
the
military
in
tampa.
But
what
this
gets
to
is
this
we're
now
debating
how
we
use
the
wonderful
treasure,
that's
in
our
city
and
the
whether
it's
the
land,
the
space,
the
noise,
and
we
do
that
and
the
best
way
that
we
believe
to
do
that,
while
the
support
is
unparalleled
for
the
military
is
that
there
are
people
that
are
that
would
like
to
develop.
K
G
Can
I
just
throw
out
two
two
questions
real
fast,
one
is
just
you
and
steven
anything
that
you
all
would
recommend
that
we
look
at
to
consider
to
be
supportive
and
then
number
two
I've
heard
feedback
that,
because
there
are
multiple,
really
multiple
bases
on
mcdill.
If
if,
if
dod,
I
think
designated
as
multiple
bases
it,
we
might
treat
it
differently
or
they
might
treat
it
differently.
K
Announced
one
I
hadn't
heard
anything
about
treating
multiple
bases.
There
are
with
around
39
tenants
on
the
base
that
diversity
makes
mcdill
very
hard.
It's
a
it
makes
it
very
hard
to
try
to
get
rid
of.
K
Put
put
simply
the
main
concern
that
we
have
for
the
basis
in
the
area
has
to
do
with
the
fact
that
mcdill
is
number
eight
on
the
air
force's
list
of
the
most
threatened
bases
because
of
rising
water,
and
so
the
city
has
been
doing
a
a
good
number
of
work.
We've
worked
with
them
to
work,
to
get
grants
for
the
areas
to
try
to
mitigate
that,
so
that
as
it
as
as
the
rest
of
the
city,
the
entire
city
deals
with.
K
That
issue
is
one
of
the
critical
issues
that
would
threaten
the
mission
that
that's
in
the
area,
sir
councilman.
L
You
very
much,
mr
chair.
Yes,
I'm
with
the
tampa
bay,
regional
planning
and
we
have
a
major
plan
right
now
on
sea
level,
rise
and
and
protecting
the
coast
because,
let's
face
it,
the
airplanes
and
the
personnel
can
evacuate
during
a
hurricane.
L
M
K
Different
branches
and
and
and
councilman,
I
think,
there's
been
as
the
basis
when
the
department
of
defense
a
number
of
years
ago
went
to
joint,
basing
where
there
was
a
marine
corps,
a
navy,
an
air
force
base.
They
made
them
one
base
that
never
had
to
happen
on
mcdill,
because
the
way
it
was
organized
because.
K
Right
there's
many
many
different,
there's
39,
there's
39
different
organizations
on
mcdill
right
with
that
we've
been
lucky
from
this
whole
base,
commander's
perspective
to
continue
to
have
one
base
commander,
who
speaks
as
a
single
voice
for
maintaining
the
base
and
then
and
then
works
with
city
county
state
federal.
To
try
to
try
to
maintain
that.
I.
M
K
To
be
fair
to
we,
the
defense
alliance
also
works
with,
for
instance,
coast
guard
station
clearwater,
the
avon
range,
the
the
reserve
bases,
are
in
the
area,
the
the
army
detachments
that
are
in
brooksville
to
try
to
support
those
those
bases
too.
Our
primary
focus
is
macdill.
G
I
think
I
think
where,
where
it's
come
up
recently,
people
talk
to
me
about
it,
in
particular,
is
because
of
the
access
to
the
base
and
and
the
traffic
jams,
especially
at
certain
times,
and.
K
Councilman
you've
got
a
you've
got
a
bit.
You've
got
the
the
third
or
fourth
largest
employer
in
the
in
the
in
the
county,
with
three
access
points
that
come
down
that
come
down
major
roads
with
work
schedules
that
could
that
that
come
in
and
out,
that's
gonna.
That
will
continue
to
be
an
issue.
I
know
the
council
and
and
the
county
government
are
working
hard
for
things
like
the
ferry
and
other
for
access
for
that,
all
those
to
the
good.
K
Again,
as
we
maintain
the
the
exit,
the
access
to
to
the
base.
G
G
I
remember
the
way
people
were
tipped
off
in
town
that
it
was
starting
was
that
that
there
were
a
lot
of
pizza
deliveries
to
the
just
before,
but
but
what
I
observed
watchers
do
I
lived
on
dale
mabry
for
a
few
years
and
would
watch
the
traffic
and
their
obvious
traffic
patterns
at
certain
times
a
day
and
then
suddenly,
when
there
was
a
big
traffic
jam,
I
would
just
turn
on
the
news
and
I
would
see
that
something
was
happening
so
well.
As
my.
K
Spouse
watches
the
next
door
app
anytime,
there's
an
extra
fighter
plane
or
a
helicopter
that
comes
in
it
is
the
beginning
of
a
world
war,
three
or
four,
whichever
one
that
it
is
coming
out.
So
councilman
you're
right
with
that,
but
that's
the
nature
of
the
fact
that
we
have
a
base
that
is
in
a
in
a
very
dense
urban
environment,
for
the
ability
to
watch.
It.
L
To
to
that
point,
thank
you
councilman
carlson.
To
that
point.
What
would
it
take
to
convince
the
the
selma,
expressway
people
or
or
the
the
fdot,
to
provide
some
sort
of
reduced
fare
for
sunpass?
L
K
G
Met
with
the
news,
I'm
sorry,
I
met
with
the
new
head
of
spiritual
authority
the
other
day
and
dossier.
My
allegedly
will
correct
me
if
I'm
wrong,
but
I
think
he
said
that
they
figured
out
a
work
around
because.
G
A
reduced
a
current
reduced,
a
current
reduced
program
from
brandon
to
mcdill,
and
so
there
is
some
kind
of
program,
but
also,
I
know
that
the
expressive
authority
in
the
past
has
even
has
looked
at
building
an
extension
down,
dale
mabry,
and
that
would
be
controversial
with
the
neighborhoods,
so
I'm
not
pushing
for
it.
I'm
just
saying
that
they
looked
at
taking
it
down
there
and
then
the
other
thing,
though,
is
they.
G
The
expressive
authority
several
years
ago,
also
offered
dod
to
pay
to
expand
the
gates
to
to
enable
it
to
move
faster,
and
I
think
that
that
was
turned
down.
But
anyway,
I
encourage
you
all
to
talk
to
them.
We
need
to
bring
the
new
executive
director
thea
in
here
too.
In
fact,
I
should
make
a
motion
on
that
later.
C
K
C
Before
we
go
to
public
comment,
I
feel
to
mention
two
things:
item
number
three
cannot
be
discussed.
Susan
johnson
velez
will
speak
and
explain
at
the
time
of
that
item
as
to
why,
and
also
yesterday
was
administrative
professionals
day
and
or
known
as
secretary's
day.
I
just
want
to
acknowledge
my
legislative,
aide,
lisa
and
all
the
legislative
aides
for
all
their
hard
work.
You
saw
dossier
who
was
it
was
with
councilmember
carlson's
office
and
everybody
else
that
works
behind
the
scenes
and
worked
very
very
hard.
C
H
Sir,
and
if
I
may,
I
believe
mr
weissman
is
here
with
andrew
warren's
office
and
I
believe
he
needs
to
leave
by
10
so
just
to
make
sure
just
in
case,
if
there's
a
traffic
jam
there
with
public
comment.
Okay,.
C
If
you're
here
to
speak
on
the
on
anything
in
general,
not
on
any
specific
workshop
item,
please
state
your
name
and
approach.
The
podium
you'll
have
three
minutes.
As
I
mentioned
earlier,
after
each
workshop
item,
you
will
be
able
to
speak
on
those
items.
So
if
you
want
any
general
comment,
go
ahead
now,
but
you
and
if
you
speak
on
anything
else,
you
can't
speak
a
second
time
so
go
ahead.
Sir.
B
B
C
B
B
J
My
name
is
andrew
curranza,
I'm
here
to
actually
speak
about
the
master
plan,
but
I
have
to
get
to
work,
so
I'm
just
going
to
stay
in
my
piece,
like
I
said,
my
name
is
andrew.
J
J
J
What
it
would
also
say
is
that
our
parks
and
rec
folks
are
great
they're
they're,
the
best
they're
great
ambassadors
for
our
city.
We
love
our
coaches
and
they
and
they
understand
the
system.
If
you
speak
to
a
coach,
they
understand
what's
wrong
and
how
to
fix
things
because
they
have
the
experience
they've
been
there
and
that's
something
that
we
should.
You
know
think
about
what
it's
all
what
I
hope
the
report
also
says
is
that
there
is
massive
inequality,
and
I
know
this
from
personal
experience.
J
My
son
goes
to
henry
nola
rec
center,
which
is
in
henry
nolan
park,
which,
as
you
know,
is
one
of
our
largest
parks
in
the
city.
It's
12
acres,
it's
of
all
the
rec
centers.
It
is
the
ninth
largest
piece
of
property,
but
what
it
houses
as
the
main
classroom
is
one
of
the
smallest
air
conditioned
trailers.
It's
not
even
a
building,
it's
a
trailer
and
it's
not
even
something
we
own.
We
rent
this
thing.
J
Okay
and
you
know
that
I've
been
fighting
to
get
a
bigger
building
there,
but
just
for
a
reference.
Kate
jacks
is
ten
thousand
square
feet.
Okay,
loretta
ingram
is
twenty
one
thousand
square
feet.
Even
four
desoto
gets
two
thousand
square
feet
all
right
and
we're
not
asking
for
something
this
large
having
such
a
small
space
means
we
that
we
can't
offer
programs.
We
can't
offer
spaces
and
after
school
and
summer
camp
to
seminole
heights,
which
is
a
huge
community
full
of
kids.
J
J
Some
of
you
may
recall
that
we
tried
so
we
we
talked
to
you.
We
had
meetings.
We
tried
to
come
up
with
a
solution,
a
stop
gap,
something
temporary
to
get
these
kids
back
to
their
park,
and
it
didn't
happen.
J
What
I'm
just
what
I'm
asking
for
is
that
is
that
we
address
this
inequality
and
I
hope
that
the
master
plan
does
that,
and
I
would
like
to
make
sure
that
that
master
plan
is
made
public,
considering
the
amount
of
money
and
civic
engagement
that
you
all
asked
for,
and
I'd
like
to.
Thank
you
for
your
time.
I'd
also
like
to
submit
this
a
gift
parks
and
recreation
system
planning
a
new
approach
for
creating
sustainable
resilient
communities.
H
Go
ahead,
counseling!
Thank
you.
No!
I
I
usually
speak
during
public
comment,
but
I
just
wanted
to
say
thank
you
for
coming
and
that
I
mean.
I
know
that
I
I
know
we
all
will.
If
it
comes
up
and
it
is
solicited-
support
improvements
over
ola,
I
mean
I've
had
I've
spoken
to
some
folks
about
that
in
the
past,
and
I
don't
directly
represent
that
area,
but
I'll
be
glad
to
support
anything.
That's
put
forward
on
it,
including
whether
it's
a
design
money
to
begin
and
then
construction
the
next
year,
whatever.
H
C
B
Melvin
hicks,
I
guess
I'm
at
large.
It
came
to
my
attention
yesterday
when
I
spoke
with
internal
affairs
captain
that
I
would
never
get
a
fair
shake.
B
B
B
Maybe
I
don't
know,
but
it
came
to
my
attention
that
this
administration
knows
me
that
all
they
always
want
to
be
very
prejudiced
to
me,
and
it
shows
the
pattern
has
been
shown
been
shown
already
to
the
may
25th
of
2020..
It
came
to
my
attention
that
they
got
the
dates.
Messed
up
didn't
happen
on
the
23rd.
It
happened
on
the
25th.
B
It
came
to
my
attention
that
the
city
council
legislated
branches,
acting
very
irregular
of
their
duties,
violation
of
their
duties
to
a
person
to
to
the
people,
but
I
am
the
people
too,
but
it
came
to
my
attention
that
y'all
fail
keep
on
failing
miserably
but
trying
to
do
stuff
to
look
good
polish
politics.
That's
what
we're
dealing
with
right
here
politics!
B
N
B
At
where
the
law
matters
at,
where
do
the
law
matters?
It
doesn't
matter
here,
because
the
process
never
get
done
right.
Y'all
fail
in
the
process
with
me,
y'all
fail
with
everything
from
step
a
b
c
and
d.
Y'all
failed,
failed
and
it's
been
proven,
but
y'all
trying
to
look
good,
john
bennett
trying
to
look
good.
B
So
we
already
know
this
is
criminally,
but
y'all
want
to
look
good,
but
it's
time
to
man
up
y'all
men
right
yeah,
I
got
families
right.
How
do
y'all
look
them
in
the
eyes
at
night?
How
do
y'all
explain
to
your
door
like
daddy
who's
that
right
there?
Why
is
that
happen
right
there?
How
do
y'all?
Do
it?
A
man
I'll
tell
the
truth,
but
no
one's
telling
the
truth.
F
Good
morning,
council,
my
name
is
gary
weissman,
I'm
the
chief
of
staff
and
assistant
state
attorney
at
the
state
attorney's
office
here
in
our
jurisdiction.
It's
a
pleasure
to
be
with
you
this
morning.
My
comments
we
addressed
to
item
five
of
the
agenda,
which
is
the
workshop
you're
doing
on
crime
victims
and
how
to
better
support
them
at
the
state
attorney's
office.
Of
course,
we
have
over
300
staff
members.
We
have
a
hundred
included
in
that
is
130
assistant
state
attorneys
dedicated
every
day
to
supporting
victims
of
crime.
It
is
important
work.
F
F
Of
course,
you
know
well
that
crime
victims
are
in
a
moment
of
vulnerability,
we're
seeing
them
at
their
worst
moments
and
that's
when
we
need
to
lift
people
up
and
that's
what
our
office
does
every
day.
The
important
work
that
you'll
undertake
this
morning
to
discuss
crime
victims
and
how
to
better
support
them
is
going
on
throughout
the
state
I
can
share
with
you
data
on
how
that
looks.
I
can
tell
you
that
the
marcie's
law
constitutional
amendment
that
elevated
victims
rights
passed
with
over
60
percent
or
nearly
60
percent
in
hillsborough
county.
F
I
could
tell
you
that
every
year
our
office
assists
over
40
000
victims.
I
can
tell
you
that
we
make
notification,
calls
talking
about
court
events
over
four
hundred
thousand
times
a
year,
but
that's
just
data
supporting
crime.
Victims
is
an
independent
evaluation
of
each
case,
and
every
victim
needs
something
different.
So
the
important
work
that
you'll
undertake
this
morning,
the
state
attorney
all
the
men
and
women
of
the
state
attorney's
office,
support
it.
F
I
want
you
to
know
that
we
believe
that
supporting
victims
and
having
this
discussion
this
morning
represents
that
which
is
best
about
government.
We
appreciate
it.
We
look
forward
to
hearing
the
discussion
and
listening
to
the
discussion
and
we
stand
ready
to
partner
with
you
in
any
way
shape
or
form
and
advocacy
of
crime
victims.
Thank
you.
I
My
name
is
nathan
hagan.
Thank
you
chairman
for
the
flexibility
comments
today.
I
I
wouldn't
be
able
to
attend
and
give
my
comments.
Otherwise,
so
there's
a
couple
issues
coming
up
today,
I
haven't
really
been
in
the
weeds
in
the
parks
and
rec
thing,
but
I
want
to
point
out.
You
know
I'm
up
here
talking
about
density,
a
lot
and
if,
if
we
aren't
building
parks,
if
we're
not
investing
those
resources,
that's
going
to
be
a
real
problem
with
people
in
the
community.
I
You
can't
have
you
know
a
lot
of
people
really
love
their
front
yards,
and
I
think
that
people
deserve
the
opportunity
to
experience
living
in
a
dense
community
with
really
good
access
to
parks.
I
think
it's
a
really
important
part
of
the
future
of
tampa.
On
a
more
personal
note,
you
know
I
played
soccer
my
whole
life
and
when
I
went
to
college
I
stopped
playing.
You
know
I
was
too
busy.
I
just
thought
you
know
I
wasn't
in
high
school
anymore
and
I
just
that
period
of
my
life
was
over.
I
This
was
in
gainesville
and
after
I
graduated
a
couple
years
went
by
and
I
was
like,
I
found
my
way
into
an
adult
soccer
league,
and
that
was
one
of
the
best
things
that
I've
ever
done.
In
my
you
know,
adult
life
and
in
terms
of
you
know,
personal,
fulfillment
and
and
being
part
of
a
community,
so
I
find
that
it's
kind
of
strange
that
there's
nowhere
in
anywhere
near
downtown
that
you
can
do
that.
I
You
have
to
go
all
the
way
out
to
courtney
campbell
to
to
play
soccer
with
other
people
in
any
kind
of
organized
way.
The
via
brothers
park
is
the
only
park
that
I'm
aware
of
that
I
have
access
to
is
somebody
who
doesn't
really
drive
to
play
soccer
even
on
a
you
know,
pickup
game
basis,
so
anyways.
I
think
that
we
need
to
be
investing
in
parks
downtown.
I
don't
you
know
julian
lane's
great,
it's
great
to
have
lawns
it's
great
to
have
public
spaces.
I
We
need
fields,
we
need,
you
know,
organized
sports
in
our
urban
core
and
we
need
to
make
sure
that
we're
doing
things
equitably.
I
think
that's
really
critical.
I
also
want
to
comment
about
parking
minimums.
I
know
it's
going
to
come
up
through
a
private
amendment
discussion
today.
You
know
this
has
been
done
to
death.
Parking
is
when
we
have
parking
minimums
that
are
out
of
line
with
what
people
actually
need.
We're
mandating
park,
housing
for
cars
over
housing,
for
people
we're
in
a
crisis
right
now.
I
That
is
a
huge
burden
on
our
community
in
terms
of
our
ability
to
build
more
housing
and
it
affects
the
cost
of
housing,
and
you
know
we
should
we
should,
I
think,
they're
asking
50
for
50.
I
you
know
I
would
love
for
them
to
ask
for
100,
but
that's
50
is
pretty
good.
I
know
there's
some
public
code
amendments
coming
up
as
well
the
greywater
bonus
density.
My
understanding
is
that's
a
requirement
at
the
state
level
that
we're
sort
of
implanting
here.
I
just
want
to
point
out.
I
We
have
a
lot
of
bonus
density
opportunities
that
are
not
affordable
housing
and
we
need
to
figure
out
how
we
can
prioritize
and
incentivize.
Affordable
housing,
bonus
density
over
the
other
ones,
and
you
know
every
project
that
takes
advantage
of
bonus
density
should
be
doing
affordable,
housing,
at
least
over.
You
know
a
certain
number
of
units
that
can
actually
support
it,
and
then
my
final
comment
is
you
know:
street
cafes
are
great:
let's
make
those
everywhere.
You
know
pocket
parks,
whatever
we
can
do.
Thank
you
thank.
N
Connie
burton
the
prayer
of
the
ministers
tend
to
reflect
what
I'm
gonna
say
and
when
he
talked
about
his
spirit
of
living
during
segregation.
N
N
What
bring
me
here
this
morning
is
when
we
are
talking
about
housing
and
the
ongoing
issues
that
we
see
right
now
in
the
city
of
tampa,
whether
it
is
silver
oaks
apartments
that
has
had
a
number
of
press
conferences
from
the
mayor's
office
and
others
that
see
the
issues.
But
the
community
is
now
crying
out
in
terms
of
how
will
the
resolution
come?
Not
only
civil
oaths
apartments,
but
a
lot
of
low-income
housing
where
people
are
being
expected
to
live
in
conditions
that
white
women
and
families
do
not
have
to
it's,
not
a
consideration.
N
Often
I
ask
myself:
where
do
poor
white
women
and
families
end
up
and
it's
not
silver
oats?
It's
not
jackson
heights
state.
It's
not
columbus
court
here
at
silver
oaks,
where
they're
receiving
a
ton
of
federal
dollars
right
here
in
this
city-
and
you
could
say
it's
not
within
your
arm
reach,
but
it
is
because
it
is
residents
and
voters
of
this
community
that
needs
your
assistance.
N
I'm
hoping
that
from
all
the
gathering
of
all
of
the
press
that
we
have
had
on
the
conditions
of
these
development,
even
with
marco
rubio
asking
that
hud
suspend
sending
these
people
funding
that
you
take
some
direct
action.
The
health
concerns
of
those
children
that
have
to
walk
through
deplorable
conditions
to
get
on
the
bus
not
being
able
to
rest
peacefully
at
night
in
terms
of
ongoing
health
crisis
is
calling
on
this
council
and
this
mayor
to
take
an
immediate
action.
So
we
can
say
that
all
lives
matter.
Thank
you.
Thank.
M
I'm
hopeful
that
I
see
miss
nguyen
back
there.
I'm
hopeful
that
a
lot
of
people
when
I
asked
in
reference
to
how
we
can
partner
with
the
state
and
maybe
our
code
enforcement,
can
be
involved
in
that.
So
I'm
hoping
they'll
come
back
till
we
get
some
type
of
mutual
aid
agreement,
so
we
can
go
in
there
and
can
regulate
some
of
the
apartments,
not
just
silver
oaks.
You
got
columbus
scorpions.
Of
course
it's
not
just
that
it's
plenty
of
them,
but
I
think
what
we
have
to
do.
M
If
the
state
doesn't
have
the
manpower,
then
maybe
we
get
some
of
their
dollars
to
get
some
more
manpower
to
assist
with
our
coding
force
to
go
in
and
actually
cite
these
people
as
far
as
senator
rubio.
Maybe
this
council
can
send
a
resolution
to
his
office
and
to
the
department
of
hud
secretary
to
look
at
stopping
funding
having
them
come
down
here.
To
really
do
some
work
to
see
what's
going
on,
so
I
think
I'll
probably
make
that
motion
toward
the
end
of
reference.
M
We
can
this
council
can
send
them
to
the
department
of
housing
and
urban
development.
Thank
you.
Thank
you.
O
Good
morning,
council,
my
name
is
barbara
van
earsdale.
I
was
here
last
week,
but
I
had
not
planned
on
speaking
and
I
kind
of
fell
apart,
I'm
here
today,
because
I
was
just
handed
my
new
lease
by
my
landlord
this
morning.
In
my
parking
lot,
it's
exactly
what
that
woman
is
saying.
I
am
being
extorted
for
money,
a
10
increase
in
my
rent
for
a
288
square
foot
dump
which
nobody
in
this
room
would
want
to
live
in
and
be
there
overnight.
O
Even
it
is
not
what
I
intended
at
71
to
live
all
over
the
country
to
pick
tampa
as
my
home,
to
retire
in
of
choice
and
to
end
up
here
in
this
state
is
more
overwhelming
than
I
can
imagine.
God
is
on
my
my
side
he's
guided
me.
My
whole
life,
I've
seen
so
much
corruption,
but
tampa
is
so
disappointing
in
ways
that
I
can't
even
explain.
O
I
applied
for
the
tampa
housing
authority.
Wait
list.
I
got
in
I'm
number
6033
this
week.
In
the
meantime,
I
got
a
place
on
curiosity,
creek
lane,
which
is
section
8
housing
where
everybody
living
around
me
gets
subsidized.
I
pay
my
rent.
My
rent
is
astronomical.
It's
about
70
percent
of
my
monthly
income.
O
I
couldn't
qualify
for
that
place
if
I
needed
to
pay
three
times
of
my
monthly
income,
because
I
don't
have
it.
I
live
on
about
fourteen
hundred
dollars
a
month
each
day,
I'm
alive.
I
live
worse
than
the
last
day,
because
the
cost
of
living
and
where
I'm
living
deteriorates
yesterday
morning,
I'm
in
bed
on
bed
rush
supposedly
from
an
accident
last
week
at
social
security.
O
Not
only
did
I
watch
drug
deals
go
down
in
my
parking
lot
within
feet
from
me.
I
watched
my
neighbor
go
out
to
a
car
undressed
with
just
under
not
even
underpants,
covering
his
butt
walking
to
a
car
in
the
trunk,
opening
up
boxes
and
dressing
in
my
parking
lot,
where
I'm
looking
now,
where
are
the
police
they're
there
all
the
time
during
the
day,
chasing
out
all
the
other
drug
people,
the
people
that
have
lost
their
homes
that
come
back
in
and
sleep
there
overnight,
and
this
crime
is
overwhelming.
Tampa
housing
is
overwhelming.
O
The
people
won't
meet
with
you.
I've
watched
the
mary
bethune
building.
I
watched
a
river
project.
I
go
down
there
and
drive.
I
know
vacancies
in
that
building
for
months
nobody's
getting
in
why
the
staff
disappears.
They
change
staff.
You
cannot
reach
somebody
in
person.
I've
tried
and
tried.
Now
I've
got
my
lease
on
sunday,
I'm
in
my
place
for
another
year.
O
I
don't
know
if
I'll
even
be
able
to
afford
the
rent
for
the
next
few
months,
I'm
living
on
a
credit
card
for
food
and
necessities.
My
car
blew
up
that.
I
want
to
move
here
with
and
I'm
alive
by
the
grace
of
god
and
I
don't
want
to
live
where
I'm
at,
but
it's
better
than
where
I
could
be.
I
pray
for
all
the
people
that
are
being
forced
out
like
I
was
thank
you
for
listening
me
to
to
me
today.
B
Good
morning
my
name
is
captain
frank,
william,
located
at
1112
east
scott
street
paradise
missionary
baptist
church.
You
know,
I
think,
I'm
going
to
read
some
scripture
to
y'all.
First
coming
from
the
book
of
mark,
let
me
see
what
you
mark
16th
chapter,
beginning
at
the
15th
verse
jesus
said,
go
to
jesus
said,
unto
them
go
ye
unto
all
the
world
and
preach
the
gospel
to
every
creature.
B
He
that
believeth
and
if
baptized,
shall
be
saved,
but
he
that
believeth
not
shall
be
down,
and
these
signs
shall
follow
them
that
believe
in
my
name,
a
cast
out
devil.
They
shall
speak
with
new
tongue,
they
shall
take
no
serpent
and
if
they
drink
of
in
a
deadly
thing,
it
shall
not
hurt
them.
They
shall
lay
their
hands
on
the
sick
and
they
shall
be
recovered.
B
That's
the
scripture
for
the
day!
Thank
you
jesus,
but
you
know
what
I
was
coming
out
here
and
I
and
I
passed
out
a
place
called
the
jackson
house
and
y'all
ought
to
see
that
junk
sitting
up
there
and
they've
been
there
for
a
long
time
nobody's
doing
nothing
about
it.
It's
been
sitting
there
for
years,
not
this
yesterday,
and
that
jack
of
hearts
need
to
come
down.
It
can't
be
renovated.
B
It
needs
to
come
down
completely
and
y'all
need
to
start
doing
something
about
the
condition
of
people.
However,
and
don't
shout
out
no
money
too,
and
we
got
to
understand
it,
give
me
a
citation
because
of
the
grass
is
growing
around
my
yard,
but
this
jackson
house
is
right
here
and
sitting
up
there
fought
getting
ready
to
fall
down
anytime
and
y'all
got
to
sit
in
there
and
watch
it
won't
do
nothing
about
it,
and
you
know
what
the
male
say.
B
She
say
that
she
was
going
to
put
millions
and
millions
of
dollars
in
the
black
neighborhood
where's
the
black
neighborhood.
I
ain't
seen
a
brown
penny
coming
in
the
black
neighborhood.
Of
course,
my
church
is
concerned.
It's
in
this
citation
on
my
job
at
my
church.
I
wouldn't
happen
to
go
over
there
one
day
and
I
want
y'all
to
get
a
copy
of
this.
The
guy
sent
it
up
to
put
it
up
there.
I
can't
hardly
read
with
that
neglect
his
name
billy
chaplin.
B
When
the
hell
is
billy
chapman,
he
need
to
get
things
straight.
That's
a
church
and
he's
gonna
start
taking
the
church
because
he
don't
want.
He
want
to
take
away
our
civil
rights.
Take
away
our
biblical
right.
Take
away
our
constitutional
right,
take
away
all
our
rights
of
the
human
being
treat
us
like
we're.
Animals
treat
us
like
we
dogs
and
another
thing.
They
need
to
get
rid
of
some
of
those
buildings
over
there
downtown
what
y'all
call
a
high
rise,
because
you
call
that
a
doghouse
cause.
B
They
ain't
got
nothing,
but
people
got
a
bunch
of
dog.
You
ain't
got
to
keep
running
on
me.
I
know
you
my
time,
ain't
up,
but
you
caught
cutting
the
show.
Thank
you
very
much.
Can
y'all
get
a
copy
of
this
here.
Yes,
sir,
and
search
it
and
give
me
give
me
my
copy
back,
because
I
got
to
see
what
all
this
got
to
say
about
me.
P
Then
tis
not
tampa
florida
fact
of
the
matter
is
the
city,
council
or
anyone
else.
They
can't
fix
anything.
They
couldn't
fix,
bayshore
boulevard
from
flooding.
They
can't
fix
henderson
and
dale
mabry
from
flooding.
They
can't
fix,
as
the
gentleman
say,
to
jackson
house,
which
is
an
embarrassment
to
african
people.
P
P
White
people
are
the
bullies
of
the
world
they're
11
percent
of
the
world's
population
and
uses
89
percent
of
the
world's
resources,
ultimately
controlling
100
of
the
world's
economy,
political
structures,
social
structures,
environment,
human
resources,
ingenuity,
space
exploration,
water,
mineral
resources
and
everything.
That's
important
about
life
and
death,
white
people
of
48
of
tampa's
population
and
control,
100
of
tampa's
wealth.
We,
as
africans
are
26
percent
of
tampa's
population
and
controls.
P
Zero
percent
of
the
tampa
city
budget,
we're
about
13
percent
of
florida's
population
and
control,
zero
percent
of
florida
budget,
zero
percent
of
tourism
and
tourism
budget.
That
gets
zero
percent,
nothing
from
the
city,
county,
state
or
federal
budget.
The
white
people
uses
us
as
pawns
as
census
numbers
in
order
to
get
financial
benefits,
financial
rewards
and
a
form
of
affirmative
action.
That
really
goes
to
them,
but
they
act
as
if
we
are
the
beneficiary
as
part
of
their
scams.
P
Take,
for
instance,
the
100
million
dollar
hannah
street
project,
nothing
for
the
africans.
White
people
are
such
bullies
that
they
don't
even
want
the
african
talking
about
the
1619
project.
They
don't
even
want
africans
talking
about
slavery,
past
and
justices,
current
injustices
reparations
or
how
wrong
we
africans
have
been
treated
for
the
past
622
years
internationally,
under
the
domination
of
colonialism
near
colonialism,
capitalism,
imperialism
and
other
forms
of
white
power.
P
O
O
B
Q
M
Mr
chairman,
yes,
sir
ma'am,
do
you
have
any
information
about
your
group
or
pamphlet
or
anything
about
your
group?
Yes,
could
you
leave
it
with?
Could
you
leave
it
with
miss
edwards
say
if
you
have
a
pamphlet.
R
O
O
O
O
How
would
I
say
a
permit
to
those
contractors?
I
wonder
if
you
guys
ever
go
back
and
see
what
kind
of
work
or
is
there
really
someone
looking
at
these
work?
That's
been
done
because
sometimes
one
minute
one
year
they
more
or
less
paint
the
road,
I
wouldn't
say,
fix
it,
because
it's
full
of
crack
and.
O
It
get
messed
up
again
so
by
keeping
on
putting
money
on
the
same
road
at
all
time.
You
never
fix
the
problem,
but
with
me
my
house
shake
all
my
kids
family
move,
I'm
still
there
because
personally,
I
cannot
afford
getting
another
place,
insurance
and
so
on
and
so
forth.
I
want
to
find
out
who
really
is
responsible
and
it's
not
the
department
of
transportation.
O
O
If
anything
happened
to
me,
the
city
will
be
responsible
and
that's
how
I
look
at
it
because
you
all
started
doing
work
and
damaged
my
property,
it's
hard
for
me
to
sleep
at
any
time,
any
road
and
especially
the
trucks,
and
when
you
take
columbus
drive
it
goes
so
all
the
way
to
the
other
side.
It's
like
an
exit.
O
I
wish
to
know
what
to
do.
I
cannot
live
like
that
anymore,
and
it
wouldn't
be
fair
to
none
of
you.
If
it
was
you,
I
mean
it
can't
be
giving
out.
How
would
I
say
a
permit
to
these
people
that
are
not
qualified
or
nobody
goes
behind
and
check
them
out.
M
M
I
I
I
know
we
sent
them
to
mr
marlow
and
ms
meyer's
office
I'll
continue
to
get
with
them
to
see
what
can
be
done,
but
I
really
don't
have
an
answer
for
you,
because
I
don't
know
where
all
the
issues
are.
My
people
tell
me
that
the
county
went
out.
There
didn't
work
underneath
that
that
your
pro
buy
your
property
so
right
now
I
don't
I
don't.
I
don't
know
what
liability
has
or
the
county.
I'm
still
looking
into
that
see.
O
I'm
sorry,
I
didn't
call
you
because
I
understand
your
assistant,
I
died
and
I
wanted
to
give
you
some
times.
You
know
and
the
new
person
to
move
in
you
know
take
a
spot,
but
that's
beside
the
point.
It's
been
18
years
and
honestly,
I
know
everybody
in
this.
Basically
I
have
their
card.
I
spoke
to
them.
They
give
me
the
run
around
and
you
can
see
when
you
cross
the
street,
where
they
answer
the
water
from
the
north
side
transfer
the
flex
tubing
into
the
into
the
ground.
O
Every
time
a
car
passed,
I'm
the
only
one
on
that
street
that
has
that
flex
tube
that
disturbing
not
only
disturbing
my
home
from
the
water
and
also
they've
done
some
work
where
there's
to
fire
hydrant
the
whole
alley
is
flooded.
They
did
some
work
for
the
sewer
line.
O
The
whole
alley
is
flooded
and
people
don't
recognize
that,
because
I'm
the
kind
of
person
who's
very,
more
or
less
observant,
and
I
always
ask.
M
In
the
sake
of
time,
I'm
gonna
say
good
time
what
I'm
gonna
do.
I'm
gonna
send
another
memo
out
to
our
people
and
I'm
gonna.
I'm
gonna
ask
them
to
go
out
there
with
me
to
see
what
issues
are
problems
out
there.
I
can
guarantee
you'll
see
my
face.
People
know
I'll
respond
to
their
homes
and
I'm
gonna
respond
to
your
home
and
see
what
you're
talking
about.
So
I
actually
visually
see
what
you're
talking
about
okay,
man,
okay,.
M
O
O
S
Poynter-
and
you
know,
technology
has
kicked
my
butt
this
morning,
so
my
speech
bye-bye.
Can
we
get
this
on
the
overhead?
Please
I
want
to
talk
today.
Your
charter
review
is
made
to
the
23rd.
This
really
isn't
about
this
city
council.
It's
not
about
anybody
who's
sitting
up
there
on
this
diocese.
Right
now.
S
S
City
council
needs
additional
legal
spa
staff.
They
should
be
in
charge
of
the
cra
manager
right
now
on
the
org
chart
she's
in
she
reports
to
the
mayor
and
the
chief
of
staff.
I
don't
believe
this
dilutes
her
power.
I
believe
that
it
gives
you
guys
more
power
to
get
things
done
with
the
cra
and
they
should
report
directly
to
you.
S
S
S
Now
you
think
you
guys
are
still
doing
business
and
driving
your
2000
toyota
camry,
and
it's
still
getting
along,
because
toyotas
are
awesome,
but
I
think
it's
time
to
trade
up
a
little
bit.
I
think
it's
time
for
city
council
to
be
given
more
legal
staff.
I
think
it's
time
for
city
council
to
have
the
you
guys
are
supposed
to
have
some
kind
of
economic
person
buy
charter.
It's
in
the
charter
that
you
guys
should
already
have
them,
but
you
only
have
eight
employees
now,
and
that
includes
your
seven
staff
members.
S
S
It's
time
to
trade
up,
and
I
would
I
would
ask
you
to
make
a
motion
today
to
see
what
the
to
have
somebody
study
the
feasibility
of
these
kind
of
expansions,
to
make
this
a
full-time
position.
I
want
my
city
councilman
to
be
able
to
pay
their
house
payment
while
they're
working
for
the
city
right
now,
every
single
person
up
there,
if
your
only
job
was
to
be
a
city
councilman
you
qualify
for
affordable
housing
if
you're
a
family
of
three,
that's
ridiculous.
S
It's
absolutely
absurd!
Every
one
of
you
work
more
than
20
hours
a
week.
We
spend
16
hours
here,
sometimes
on
thursdays.
It's
ridiculous
and
it's
time
to
look
at
this.
An
administration
needs
to
look
at
this,
not
just
city
council.
I
would
like
for
the
feasibility
study.
Can
I
have
30
seconds
please
all
right?
I
would
like
to
look
at
this.
I
want
you
to
look
at
this
powerpoint.
I
can
analyze
the
top
administrative
staff
members
in
this
city.
I
took
them
all
and
averaged
them
out.
They
make
on
average
149
000
a
year.
S
If
you
cut
that
in
half,
because
we're
just
talking
about
you
guys
are
currently
part-time,
you
should
be
paid
74
943
a
year,
so
the
bottom
line
is,
you
guys,
are
below
the
below
the
and
you
guys
are
working
your
butts
off
for
the
city
and
it
doesn't
take
away
from
anybody
anywhere
outside
of
this.
It
just
gives
us
a
solid
foundation
and
nobody
is
going
to
want
to
run
for
your
seats
if
they
can't
pay
their
house
payment,
while
they're
working
for
our
city
we've
got
to
come
to
reality.
S
C
Okay,
all
right,
we
will
begin
with
the
parks
and
recreation
master
plan
and
mr
chair,
if
I.
H
May
yes,
sir,
for
item
number
five,
I
know
we
have
some
people
who
are
here
who
are
speaking
etc.
I
just
want
to
make
sure
I
think
we
can
get
it
in
before
lunch
before
12
o'clock,
but
just
to
make
sure
if
at
all
possible,
because
we
have
a
lot
of
people
here.
I
see
mr
barton,
miss
brown,
mr
johnson,
among
others
here
just
to
make
sure
I
think
we
can
get
it
in,
but
I
think
so
yeah.
We
should
be
fine.
E
Good
morning,
council,
shareshare
hills,
director
parks
and
rec
here
to
present
joe
webb
with
aecom,
to
show
the
findings
to
date
of
our
master
plan.
I
think
we
had
a
lot
of
people
asking.
Is
this
the
final
product?
This
is
not.
This
is
their
findings
to
date.
So
I'll
turn
it
over
to
mr
joe
webb.
A
Thanks
risha
and
thank
you
council
members,
my
name
is
joe
webb,
I'm
with
company
aecom.
I'm
joined
here
today
with
david
crawley
from
our
company
also,
but
greatly
appreciate
your
time
today
to
talk
about
parks
and
recreation.
We
have
a
presentation.
If
you
could,
please
call
that
up
go
ahead
there.
It
is
there.
We
go
city,
council,
review,
parks
and
recreation
massachusetts,
certainly
something
we
are
very
passionate
about.
A
Teresa
and
her
staff
have
been
fantastic
partners
in
this
process,
but
myself
and
our
staff
I
run
a
studio
that
is
parks
the
director
of
parks
planning
and
been
my
life.
So
it's
a
passion.
Hopefully
you
share
so
but
next
slide.
Please.
A
Our
agenda,
very
simply,
I
know
it's
a
obligated
as
a
15-minute
meeting
I'll,
try
and
be
respectful
of
that,
but
just
a
brief
project
overview,
a
system
inventory
and
analysis.
Our
findings
from
that
community
needs
important
priorities
and
then
kind
of
summary
and
next
steps,
and
hopefully
questions
and
even
better
answers.
A
So
next
slide,
please
our
process,
our
project.
In
general,
we
break
it
down
real
simply
into
four
steps.
What
I
call
learning
exploring
envisioning
and
implementing
we've
really
completed
the
first
two
steps,
which
we
call
learning
and
exploring.
Let's
say
the
learning
part
is
really
us
doing
our
homework.
A
We've
done
research
and
analysis,
we've
visited
all
the
parks,
we've
done
the
level
of
service
and
all
of
that
kind
of
background
research
and
then
really
in
kind
of
the
most
important
part
of
this
process
is
an
extensive
public
outreach
process,
which
is
the
exploring
part
I'll
go
into
that
further.
But
really
here
today
to
check
in
with
all
of
you,
tell
us
what
we
what
we
learned,
what
we
saw,
what
we
heard
from
the
public
and
then
you
know
kind
of
a
the
next
steps
of
how
to
go
forward
next
slide.
A
Please
next
slide.
So
in
general,
we
go
out
and
we
visited
every
single
park
and
it
was
a
great
partnership
with
the
city
staff
of
working
together
to
go
to
everyone
and
evaluate
every
facility.
A
A
We
may
each
visit
some,
but
I
believe,
there's
181
parks,
it's
a
big
system,
design
and
construction
really
good
condition,
and
this
is
where
it
gets
a
little
harder
in
that
there's
a
lot
of
facilities
out
there,
they're
well
maintained,
and
let's
make
a
clear
distinction
that
you
know:
they're
moaned,
they're
taken
care
of,
but
they're
really,
the
the
built
facilities
are
starting
to
get
past
their
their
life
cycle.
We're
stretching
things
beyond
whether
it's
playgrounds
and
parking
lots
and
other
things
so
condition
effectiveness
again.
A
Much
that
we
saw
that
could
be
improved
in
access
and
linkages
to
the
park,
so
really
a
focus
to
connect
the
parks
to
the
neighborhoods
around
them
and
then
sustainability
and
resiliency,
which
is
always
something
very
important.
I
think
tampa
has
done
amazing
things
and
is
currently
doing
amazing
things
today,
but
when
many
of
the
parks
were
developed
30
years
ago,
it
really
wasn't
a
driving
force
in
the
design
process,
so
just
kind
of
an
overview
of
what
we
saw
in
the
park
system
next
slide.
Please.
A
The
parks
are
good,
you
know
some
are
much
better.
You
certainly
what
we
saw
also
was
kind
of
a
disparity
between
the
big
downtown
kind
of
high
profile
parks
and
maybe
a
less
or
so
in
the
neighborhood
in
the
natural
parks.
That's
not
a
big
surprise.
We
see
that
elsewhere,
where
you
know
from
the
2008
economic
downturn
and
others
where
money
was
cramped.
A
Of
course,
you
put
more
into
you,
know
kind
of
the
highest
visibility
areas,
but
the
neighborhood
parks
and
the
smaller
areas,
and
particularly
the
natural
areas,
probably
less
less
me
less
improvements
than
the
others.
Next,
please
again,
this
this
big
map,
you
see,
is
our
evaluation
of
a
10
minute,
walk
to
any
meaningful
parks
and
open
space,
and
if
you
kind
of
take
out
the
airport
and
the
air
force
base,
you
can
see
it's
it's
a
pretty
good
distribution.
A
You
know
that's
fortunate,
that's
extremely
fortunate,
because
making
that
up
can
be
a
really
hard
thing
to
do.
Our
the
acreage
for
the
city
is
very
comparable
or
probably
better
than
average
for
the
state
of
florida.
A
A
There
are
definitely
some
trends
going
on
the
the
department
does
an
excellent
job
in
programs,
so
that
really
has
turned
out
to
be.
You
know
a
very
positive
thing.
You'll
see
later
a
thousand
special
events
over
the
course
of
year.
That's
just
like
outrageous
in
our
in
our
industry
that
the
department
could
do
that
and
the
number
of
people
committed,
but
you
know
above
average
range
of
programs
next
slide.
Please
you
know
here
is
something
that's
even
more
encouraging
to
me
from
a
positive
standpoint.
A
A
You
know
there
are
still
some
things
where,
like
the
vehicles,
55
of
the
vehicles
are
kind
of
past
their
their
time
being,
stretched
out
that
just
compounds
problems
with
vehicle
breakdown
and
other
things,
so
it
lots
of
positive
things
that
we've
learned.
I
mean
these
are
some
of
the
structural
things
that
I
think
are
very
difficult
and
I'm
glad
I
don't
have
to
talk
about
because
that
can
be
uncomfortable,
but
very
we
would,
if
we
had
to
but
happy
today,
to
be
saying
that
there's
positives
in
that
regard
next
slide.
A
Please
now,
for
the
the
all-important
part,
community
needs
and
priorities
assessment
next
slide,
please,
you
know
our
whole
system
of
parks
and
recreation
parks.
Our
people
places
it's.
Our
our
planning
process
is
truly
driven
by
expressed
community
needs
wants
priorities.
A
We
take
a
great
deal
of
effort
into
trying
to
reach
out
and
really
include
everybody
equitably
in
the
process.
Our
brand
for
this
project
was
your
vision
for
our
tomorrow.
I
think
we
took
that
to
heart.
It
really
is
about
the
people
and
going
out
and
hearing
from
everyone.
A
A
It's
easy
to
express
a
lot
of
wants,
but
you
really
have
to
go
through
a
process
to
get
those
too.
What
would
you
do?
First?
What
is
the
most
important
I'll
go
on
with
that?
But
our?
Yes,
you
were
right
on
next
slide.
Please
you
know
one
of
the
things
we
did
during
the
covet
period
is
we
had
an
extensive
outreach
and
what
we
call
our
virtual
rooms
and
we
had
virtual
workshops.
These
were
amazingly
popular
when
you
see
36
000
people
participated
in
in
that
process.
A
A
You
know
it
it's
indicative
of
almost
a
of
a
a
very
clear
trend
in
parks
and
recreation.
If
you
don't
work
in
our
world
that
teresa
and
brad
and
I
live
every
day,
parks
are
changing
a
lot.
You
know
the
park
system
of
my
parents
generation,
my
generation,
my
children's
and
grandchildren's-
are
going
to
be
a
lot
different.
It's
we're
changing
as
an
american
lifestyle
as
american
people
and
how
we
recreate.
So
we
need
to
be.
You
know,
responsive
to
that
next
slide,
please.
A
So
we
did
a
series
of
focus
groups
all
of
these
different
groups.
Next
slide.
Please
and
again
we
started
to
hear
some
of
the
same
things:
prioritize
conservation,
resilient
design,
ensure
safety.
You
know
strengthen
park
connectivity.
I
won't
read
each
of
these
off
to
you,
but
you
know
trying
to
secure
more
funding,
creating
a
hybrid
of
in-person
in
virtual.
A
I
think
that
is
kind
of
a
trend
in
recreation,
both
public
and
private
right
now,
but
a
lot
of
very
positive
comments
and
I
think,
encouraging
things
next
slide.
Please
stakeholder
interviews
that
include
many
of
you
also
some
leaders
across
the
city
and
we
heard
again
improved
park
connectivity.
This
is
what
we
were
hearing
from.
Many
of
you
establish
cities,
identity
and
create
kind
of
a
cohesive
park
planning
system.
A
You
know
as
a
landscape,
architect,
planner
and
designer
you
know
you
have
some
julian
b
lane
some
beautiful
parks
that
are
out
there,
but
is
there
a
consistent
brand
and
consistent
quality
across
all?
Maybe
that
could
be
enhanced
a
little
in,
and
I
think
I
heard
clearly-
and
this
is
everywhere
almost
in
all
the
things
prioritize
fixing
what
you
have
before
really
building
a
lot
more
new
and
I
think
that's
a
clear
direction
for
us
next
slide.
A
Please
again
and
one
of
our
most
powerful
outreach
tools
really
is
this
statistically
valid
survey
and
I'll
spend
a
little
time
explaining
here
it
was
what
we
call
random
stratified,
meaning
that
the
we
we
do
it
in
a
fashion
in
which
the
cup
of
water
taken
from
the
pool
is
representative
of
the
entire
pool.
So
a
great
deal
of
effort
goes
into
that
of
reaching
out
into
what
is
a
random
group
and
making
sure
we're
getting
clearly
demographically
representative
groups.
We
also
recognize,
like
most
great
cities.
A
A
Let's
say
the
you
know
the
more
specific
needs
and
priorities
of
the
south
versus
the
north,
the
east
versus
the
west,
or
to
selective
neighborhoods
in
each,
so
that
when
we
get
down
to
detailed
planning
and
design,
you
know
we
will
know
as
an
overall.
But
more
importantly,
what
did
the
people
actually
living
nearby?
We
can
actually
take
that
data
to
you
know,
people
that
live
within
one
mile,
people
that
live
within
a
quarter
mile.
A
So
a
great
deal
of
effort
in
trying
to
understand
not
just
you
know,
general
ideas,
but
very
specifically
the
people
that
we
would
serve
and
what
are
their
priorities
next
slide.
Please
part
of
that.
Statistical
survey
is
also
a
whole
series
of
questions
of
trying
to
tease
out
that
idea
that
it's
not
just
about
a
wish
list
of
wants.
You
know
the
wants
are
important,
but
what
we
we
try
and
ask
questions
that
are,
as
we
say,
importance
and
unmet
need.
What
would
you
do
if
you
only
could
do
one
thing?
A
A
So
that
is
how
we
try
to
prioritize
to
saying
it's
not
just
things,
but
it's
it's
things
that
people
have
really
identified
in
those
two
categories
and
you
look
at
trail,
sidewalks,
multi-use
paths,
small
neighborhood
parks,
natural
parks
and
preserves
you
know
again,
some
of
those
consistencies,
and
this
is
for
facilities
and
then
just
because
people
respond
differently.
We
also
did
it
next
slide,
please
as
activities,
and
you
can
see
again
it
does
kind
of
talk
to
what
this
is.
A
A
This
is
a
trend
that,
in
my
30
years
of
doing
this,
I've
seen
a
real
trend
towards
more
what
I
call
at
will
recreation.
So
this
is
what
we
heard
through
the
statistical
survey
next
slide,
please.
So
it's
kind
of
a
summary
of
the
things
in
both
facilities
and
activities
and
next
slide.
Please,
you
know
here's
the
good
news.
You
know
one
of
the
hardest
parts
when
we
go
through
all
this
energy
and
all
this
work
is
what
we're
looking
for
is
consistency.
A
It
proves
that
all
of
our
different
methods
are
kind
of
leading
to
what
is
you
know,
a
an
honest
answer
and
we
got
a
lot
of
convergence
at
the
top
of
what
we
heard
from
the
community.
What
we
saw
what
we
researched,
what
we
heard
in
focus
groups,
what
we
heard
in
community
meetings,
so
it
gives
us
a
clear
direction
or
clear
understanding
of
what
we're
being
told.
The
community
wants
not
just
city-wide
but
really
boiling
down
to
community
and
neighborhood
by
neighborhood.
A
So
next
slide,
please
kind
of
the
summary
of
all
of
this.
If
you
could
next
slide.
Thank
you.
You
know
the
city
is
changing
and,
as
I
alluded
to
not
only
is
the
city
changing
and
growing,
and
diversifying
and
densifying
urbanizing
american
lifestyles
are
changing.
Recreation
patterns
are
changing
so
understanding
that
dynamic,
so
that
when
we
are
looking
at
future
programs
and
especially
built
facilities
that
might
last
20
30
50
years,
we're
really
looking
out
to
the
future
to
make
sure
that
what
we're
doing
is
the
best.
A
You
know
mindset
for
how
to
you
know
best
utilize,
your
your
dollars
to
max
finance
benefit.
You
know
the
department,
you
know
I
think,
they're
great
you
know,
srishna
will
be
speaking
at
conferences
coming
up.
You
know
a
thousand
programs.
I
I
questioned
that
and
then
they
proved
it
to
me
and
it's
just
amazing.
A
You
know
gold
medal
award
winner,
the
best
park
system
in
the
country,
yeah,
wow
programs
and
operations
isn't
the
problem
and
it
seems
like
there's
a
pretty
good,
equitable
distribution
of
parks,
but
we
would
still
look
very
much
at
trying
to
target
into
those
gap
areas.
We
really
want.
You
know
equitable
everywhere,
but
some
of
the
parks
facilities
are
in
need
of
renovation.
I
I
think
I
spoke
with
many
of
you
in
in
our
discussions.
I
hope
that's
not
too
big
of
a
surprise,
but
there's
things
that
are
just
at
that
life
cycle.
A
This
isn't,
like
you
know
you
hired
in
a
consultant
from
the
outside
and
that
time,
oh
wow,
this
is
what's
wrong.
Oh
my
look
at
exactly
you
know.
This
is
this
is
something
that
has
evolved.
It's
just
kind
of
eroded.
It's
taken
time
of
where
things
are
and
in
the
meantime,
there's
this
shift
of
of
demand
and
of
need
and
of
types
of
facilities
that
are
currently
being
built
for
the
future,
and
so
it
is
just
time
where
there's
got
to
be
kind
of
a
comprehensive
approach
to
how
to
catch
things.
Up.
A
There's
also
16
parks
that
you
know
have
been
purchased
and
aren't
really
fully
developed.
That
you
know
probably
should
be
next.
What
we
see
and
what
we
heard.
What
I
hear
across
the
country
and
I
work
all
over
the
country
is
you
know
this
idea
of
more
at
will
recreation
that
you
know
people
really
want
to
go
out
on
their
own
volition.
A
If
you
think
of
you
know
specific
starting
times
and
ending
times
when
I
ask
people,
it's
walking,
biking,
continuing
kayaking,
you
know
you
might
go
out
on
saturday
morning
at
10
or
it
might
be
10
15
or
it
could
get
delayed.
It
could
be
10
30.,
you
know
it's.
These
strict
scheduled
times
is
not
really
meeting
our
lifestyles.
Everybody
is
too
programmed.
People
are
very
focused
on
health
and
wellness,
as
opposed
to
strict
competition.
A
It's
just
who
we
are,
and
I
think
there's
a
lot
about
nature
enjoyment,
there's
so
much
that
can
be
done
now,
because,
knowing
not
just
being
in
a
natural
area
but
being
able
to
understand
that
I
can
provide
the
information
virtually
you
know
it
can
be
on
an
app
and
you
can
now
not
only
be
in
a
beautiful
natural
area
but
understand
the
ecosystem.
A
Fixing
existing
facilities
first,
I
mean
we
will
in
ensuing
steps
here
in
our
implementation
and
we're
actually
starting
early.
You
know
going
every
single
part,
every
single
thing,
trying
to
make
sure
that
we're
on
contact
and,
lastly,
develop
the
park
system
in
the
future,
so
we
can't
just
think
about
what
it
was
or
what
it
is
today
we
have
to
be
really
thinking
about.
You
know
the
next
30
to
50
years,
so
I
think
that's
it.
I
I
hope
I'm
within
you
next
slide.
You.
M
Know
I
can
tell
that
some
work
has
been
put
into
this,
but
I
guess
I
was
looking
for
a
little
bit
more
for
me,
I'm
looking
for
to
identify
I'm
looking
to
identify
those
parks
that
need
to
be
renovated.
Those
parts
need
to
be
torn
down.
Those
parts
in
need
fully
accessible
activities
for
kids.
I'm
looking
to
find
out
what
the
community
wants
that
particular
typical
park,
because
I
know
at
times
I've
got
in
the
east
side.
M
I
had
a
park,
that's
full
of
a
community,
but
at
one
point
I
was
only
given
800
square
feet
for
a
park
which
is
unacceptable,
where
other
areas
got
way
way
more
square
footage.
So
I'm
looking
to
that's
what
I'm
looking
to
figure
out
what
what
are
the
real
needs?
Where
are
they
at?
What
are
the
community
saying?
M
So
that's
what
I'm
looking
to
see
and
want
to
see
in
your
report
and
again,
what
is
the
cost
factor
over
a
period
of
time
over
years?
How
do
we
get
that
money?
Where
do
we
get
it
from?
How
do
we
get
it
in
again
being
able
to
make
sure
that
it's
equitable
across
the
board
that
everyone's
getting
the
same
thing?
That's
what
I'm
looking
for.
A
A
Hopefully
you
know
in
response
to
what
people
have
said
to
us
and
then
developing
a
comprehensive
implementation
plan
that
would
be,
you
know,
down
to
a
bench,
a
playground
of
this
at
this
park
at
this
time,
scheduling
that
all
out
in
a
you
know
detailed
kind
of
program
of
reinvestment
that
I
think
we're
pretty
good
at
of
doing
a
clear
and
comprehensive
implementation
plan.
But
those
are
our
next
two
steps.
A
A
M
Interested
in
that
that
meat
and
potato
step
right
there
that's
going
to
be
the
key
of
everything
you
know
making
sure
that
we
have
communities
that
you
have
kids
that
have
down
syndrome.
They
have
all
kind
of
accessory
needs,
making
sure
every
community
has
those
type
of
programs.
I
mean,
I
think,
that's
that's
a
key
and
I
think
our
parks
and
records
I'm
moving
in
that
direction.
M
A
Yeah-
and
I
that
is
very,
very
on
point,
because
you
know
our
next
steps
here
and
I
think
we
do
a
very
as
a
company
we're
very
focused
on
implementation
and
big
programs
of
development,
and
you
know
it
might
take
10
years
and
there
might
be
some
things
that
still
are
beyond,
because
it
it
takes
land
acquisition
or
other
things.
But
if
you
really
schedule
it
on
you
look
at
all
the
different
funding
sources
and
include
grants
and
all
the
opportunities,
and
it's
really
in
it.
I
mean
we're
we're.
A
In
a
I
completed,
a
parks
master
plan
for
the
city
of
fort
lauderdale
and
today
we're
doing
a
program
of
reinvestment,
100
parks
over
the
next
five
years,
and
it's
targeted
down
to
every
single
thing
of
every
single
one
and
just
run
as
a
program.
And
it's
not
overwhelming
you
just
it's.
We
got
to
get
on
a
program
in
that
direction.
L
You
very
much,
mr
chairman.
I
thank
you
for
your
reports
very
interesting
and
I
try
around
and
look
around
at
the
different
parks
and
what
happens
to
them.
It's
like
a
merry-go-round,
I
believe-
and
what
do
I
mean
by
that
when
you
have
a
young
family
living
neighborhood
around
that
certain
park,
you're
going
to
have
more
participation
of
youth
than
you
are
somehow
I've
seen
parks
that
peak
where
they
had
enormous
participation
in
kids
and
through
the
years,
because
the
people
that
live
there
around
that
park,
the
good
citizens
are
not
of
childbearing
age.
L
That
park
has
a
lower
attendance
and
some
other
park
will
have
a
higher
attendance,
so
it
moves
around.
It
fluctuates
on
depending
on
the
age
factor
around
the
park
and
I'm
not
a
park
expert
by
no
means,
let
me
say
that
for
the
record,
but
I'm
not
just
using
the
park
that
I
played
in
for
a
long
time
was
cascading
park
for
many
years.
That
park
is
coming
back
now
with
a
lot
more
facilities
coming
in
and
kids
coming
to
the
park,
but
for
many
years
it
was
just
dormant.
In
fact,
there's
not
a
softball.
L
T
L
L
All
of
us
were
there
and-
and
it
creates
an
understanding
how
life
is
because
you
meet
individuals
that
are
different.
You
are
in
size
and
weight
and
color
and
everything
else,
and
you
have
a
better
tree
line
of
growing
up
and
facilitating
of
life
and
parks
are
more
than
just
a
play-in.
It
teaches
you
whether
you
know
it
or
not
how
to
get
along
with
others.
A
Yeah
you
stole
my
line
there,
but
I
I
I
greatly
agree
with
whatever
it
is
everything
you've
just
said,
because
you
know
they
are
more
than
just
places
to
play.
It's
it's
socialization.
It's
it's
congregation,
it's
many
of
the
things
that
are
at
the
heart
and
soul
of
neighborhoods
and
communities.
A
You
know
I
I'll
joke
again
because
they
have
similar
hairline
and
other
things,
but
you
know
I
I've
worked
long
enough
to
criticize
my
own
work.
What
we
really
learned
from
30
years
ago
is
be
more
flexible.
We
can
build
buildings
to
be
flexible
over
periods
of
time
and
adapt
don't
build
such
single
use
facilities.
A
We
can
adapt
even
play
fields
from
you
know
from
one
sport
to
another
relatively
rapidly,
if
we've
really
planned
and
designed
well
in
advance,
so
that
we
can
adjust
over
time
to
varying
needs,
but
some
things
like
better
walking
trails,
running
better
health
facilities,
better
access
to
simple
things.
You
know
those
we
know
are:
are
there
so
get
the
basics
right
and
build
in
what
we
call
multi-generational
multi-functional,
you
know,
multi-performance
is
the
key
it.
So
you
don't
get
yourself
in
a
box
that
I
built
three
community
centers
with
kiln
rooms.
A
You
know,
okay,
that
probably
wasn't
a
good
idea
and
now
we'll
renovate
it,
but
you
the
the
flexibility
in
buildings
now
with
movable
walls
with
adaptability
to
different
uses
where
they're
functional
for
after
school
to
evening
use
to
weekend
parties.
I
mean
they're,
almost
transformers
now
of
what
we're
building
even
the
fields.
You
know
they
can
be
synthetic
and
I
can
set
them
up
for
soccer
at
this
time.
It
could
be
u6
at
8
o'clock
in
the
morning.
A
B
C
L
Thank
you
very
much.
Thank
you
for
your
report.
I
I
want
to.
I
want
to
say
there
is
one
irony
in
your
report
and
that's
that
the
people
are
asking
for
public
swimming
pools.
B
L
The
irony
there
is
that
the
angus
goss
pool
that
people
have
been
asking
for
for
such
a
long
time
hasn't
done
it
and
the
balder
marrow
at
mcfarland
park
has
just
gotten
filled
in
and
knocked
down
there
there's
an
irony
there.
I
can't
sing
the
praises
more
of
sharisha
hill.
She
has
done
so
much
with
parks
and
recreation,
since
she
has
become
on
on
staff,
she's
done
wonderful
things,
miss
hills
and
and
miss
karen
kress
in
the
audience
there
is
under
used
spaces.
L
In
my
opinion
we
should
be
using,
and
that
is
under
our
interstate
or
expressway
systems.
I
drive
down
adamo
drive
and
I
see
space
underneath
the
crosstown
that
could
be
used
for
pickleball
courts
could
be
used
for
biking,
trails
could
be
used
for
walking.
Trails
could
be
used
for
half
size
soccer
fields
for
youth.
L
I'm
hoping
in
your
next
report
that
you're
going
to
report
something
to
the
effect
of
underneath
the
highways
275.,
I
believe
miss
crest
has
been
working
on
a
bike
park
there
and
again
adamo
drive.
That
is
in
areas
where,
in
my
opinion,
you
could
have
more
parks
in
the
in
the
ybor
city
area.
So
I'm
hoping
in
your
next
report
that
those
underused
spaces
can
be
used
more
efficiently
and
we
can
work
with
the
expressway
authority
on
that
yeah.
A
And
I'm
actively
involved
in
the
underline
in
miami
and
other
projects
that
have
gone
on,
I
mean
you.
It
takes
some
doing
to
kind
of
break
through
that
mindset
of
this
is
a
train.
This
is
for
a
rail
or
this
is
for
a
highway
and
you
can't
use
it
for
anything
else.
It's
got
to
be.
No!
No!
No
in
an
urban
area,
you've
got
to
look
at
every
single
space.
You
know
when
you
look
at
you
know
what
some
cities,
atlanta
and
new
york
and
others
are
doing
now
to
fully
utilize
every
available
inch.
A
I
mean
it
can
even
utility
areas.
Others
have
to
be
comprehensively
looked
at
to
maximize
the
public
benefit
for
open
space.
There
is
no
more
extra
land
right.
You
know,
they're,
not
growing
anymore,
so
sometimes
it
takes
an
intensive
look,
but
when
you
really
do
look
it's
surprising
that,
like
the
ones
you
said,
there's
skate
parks
on
it.
I
visited
the
one
in
vancouver
miami
just
built
one.
You
know
it's
right,
underneath
kids,
love
it
and
go
crazy.
You
know
to
me
all
play
is
good.
H
Thank
you
very
much
and
thank
you
for
your
report
and
all
your
work.
I
know
we
all
appreciate
that
100.
You
know
something
that
that
had
been
mentioned.
I
think
councilman
goodes
mentioned,
and
I
want
to
emphasize
that
again
is
the
issue
of
accessible
parks.
We've
talked
about
that
a
lot
in
the
city
council.
We
just
moved
in
our
in
our
cra
to
help
have
the
cra
fund
in
cra
areas.
Completion
of
that
big
disability
access
deficit
that
we
have
in
a
lot
of
our
parks
tampa
is
not
unique.
H
Obviously,
in
that
regard,
a
lot
of
areas
have
that
challenge,
but
that's
something
that
I
really
really
want
to
see
magnified
here,
because
whether
or
not
you
hear
from
those
families,
the
the
the
cry
is
out
there
110
any
family
with
a
child
who
has
autism
an
intellectual
disability,
cerebral
palsy,
whatever
it
may
be,
that's
a
cry
for
access.
So
that's
something
that's
very,
very
important.
We
thought
it's
so
important
that
we
want
to
put
cra
dollars
to
that
to
help
the
city
in
their
endeavor
to
do
that.
H
We're
we're
having
specifically
disability,
accessible
parks,
one
in
utamp.
I
know
one's
going
to
be
coming
in
east
camp
as
well,
but
I
want
to
see
all
of
our
parks
have
not
just
full
accessibility,
but
at
least
one
piece
of
playground
equipment
that
a
child
in
a
wheelchair
right
who
is
not
mobile,
etc.
Can
use.
That's
something.
That's
so
very
pivotal.
You
know,
parks
are
always
about
how
well
maintained
there
are
it's
about
respect
to
a
community
a
great
deal,
and
I
know
you
know
that
110.
H
So
you
know
upkeeping
and
maintenance
and
also
want
to
talk
about
values
I
think
exhibited
through
our
parks
through
things
like
memorials.
H
I
did
a
motion,
maybe
about
a
year
ago
to
try
to
see
to
it
that
we
had
a
veteran
memorial
at
each
one
of
our
four
districts
in
a
park,
and
my
idea
behind
that
was
that
I
think
when
people
go
to
public
spaces,
to
green
spaces
having
memorials
and
markers,
etc,
that
speak
to
the
value
of
a
community
heralding
somebody
who
was
saluting
somebody
who
was
there
before
who's
noteworthy
talking
about
her
heroes.
H
Talking
about
our
history
in
a
way
that
that
really
really
brings
us
together,
I
think,
is
so
important
in
our
parks.
That's
really
a
place
where
we
can
talk
about
our
great
tampa
heroes,
our
valdemar
lopez's,
you
know
so
our
robert
saunders,
so
many
different
people
in
that
regard
so
always
want
that
and-
and
obviously,
as
you
said,
paying
attention
to
the
areas
of
growth
in
our
city.
I
know
we're
seeing
a
lot
of
affordable
and
workforce
housing
come
up
in
in
west.
Tampa
west
shore
continues
to
grow.
H
We
hear
a
lot
from
south
of
gandhi.
K
bar
ranch
in
new
tampa,
continues
to
grow,
etc
and
there's
a
lot
of
needs
out
there.
So
I
think
continuing
to
look
at
that.
But
again
I
wanted
to
thank
you
for
your
report.
Just
highlight
those
particular
areas
just
for
your
consideration.
Whenever
the
update
comes.
A
Yeah
and
the
next
steps,
I
think
that
would
be
critical
in
our
visioning.
That's
all
wonderful
points.
You
know
that
connection
to
history
and
culture
is
really
the
what
makes
meaningful
spaces
a
mentor
of
mine
used
to
call
it
relevant.
You
know
the
number
one
word
in
our
industry:
it's
not
parks,
it's
not
play
it's
relevant.
Am
I
making
a
relevant
difference
in
the
communities
and
neighborhoods?
You
know
so
when
you
can
tie
it
back
to
history,
when
you
can
connect
it
to
people's
lives,
to
where
it's?
A
H
And
if
I
may-
and
thank
you
I
mean
if
I,
mr
chair,
you
know
the
perry
harvey
park
does
a
great
job
with
that
which
is
talking
about
the
local
history.
Having
memorials
there
a
lot
of
different.
You
know,
narratives
explained
there
on
history,
etc.
I'd
like
to
see
parts
of
that
in
all
of
our
parks,
so
that
when
folks
go
to
parks,
they
learn
about
our
heroes.
They
learn
about
prior
figures
who
came
before
us.
I
think
again,
values
in
in
public
spaces
is
so
important,
but
thank
you.
A
And
you,
you
said
another
one
respect.
You
know
it's
about
really
I'm
personally
connected
with
this:
the
disability
community.
So
when
you
look
at
what
the
people
that
and
have
wanted
to
have
the
recreational
opportunity
are
excited
about
it,
it's
really
a
big
part
of
their
lives,
my
father,
my
sister,
my
grandson,
that
they
are
excluded.
Because
of
you
know,
that's
not
right.
A
It's
a
respect
thing,
it's
a
matter
of
really
communicating
the
people's
values
into
that
space,
but
I
think
these
are
all
wonderful
comments
that,
as
we
move
forward
in
envisioning
and
as
we
come
back
to
you
with
a
comprehensive
full
plan,
including
the
implementation-
and
you
know,
I'm
not
hiding
anything
here,
I'm
going
to
be
coming
back
with
an
implementation
plan.
You
know
for
your
consideration
because
it's
you
know
we
got
to
move
it
forward.
A
H
G
Sorry
I
had
to
step
out
a
second.
I
apologize.
If
I
repeat
anything
anybody
else
said
people
are
constituents,
especially
during
covert
we're
spending
more
time
at
home,
in
their
neighborhoods
and
in
their
parks
and
they're
very
upset
about
the
status
of
parks.
They
they
like
the
parks,
people
and
parks
programs,
but
the
parks
and
neighborhoods
were
neglected,
and
you
said
that,
in
your
beginning
and
in
slide,
you
know
the
fact
that
last
mayor
spent
12
million
dollars
on
a
boathouse
for
rich
kids
from
the
northeast.
G
Instead
of
spending
it
to
fix
benches
and
other
things
in
other
parts
of
the
city,
which
is
just
something
that
people
are
really
upset
about
and
they're
upset
that
this
process
has
taken
so
long.
Bishop
patty
who's
sitting
behind
you
brought
to
our
attention
two
or
three
years
ago,
among
others,
that
one
of
the
parks,
fair
oaks
in
east
tampa,
had
rats
running
around
the
roof
of
it
and
and
when
we
went
there
we
found
out
there
was
fire
trap
and
it
didn't
have
other
amenities.
G
What
what
people?
What
what
I've
been
telling
people
and
if
I'm
wrong,
let
me
know,
but
what
I've
been
telling
people
is
that
this
is
a
way
of
objectively
looking
at
parks
where
park.
The
decisions
were
made
politically
or
by
the
whim
of
an
individual
before
and
we're
objectively
through
this
process,
looking
at
what
needs
to
be
done
in
each
park
and
that
we're
going
to
prioritize
the
funding,
because
we
don't
have
enough
funding
to
fix
all
the
parks.
G
But
obviously,
if
there
are
rats
in
the
ceiling
which
the
city
did
get
rid
of,
at
least
they
said
they
did,
we
they
will
prioritize
those
parks
that
have
the
most
immediate
needs
and
then
we'll
then
we'll
have
a
multi-year
schedule
with
funding
attached
to
it
all
the
public
input
and
all
that
stuff
is
great.
It's
great
to
have
a
vision,
figure
out
what
else
we
need
to
do,
but
the
basic
needs
of
parks
when,
when
people
are
sitting
on
benches,
that
break
or
they
see,
windows
broken
other
things
they
want
to.
G
They
want
to
get
those
things
fixed
too.
So
did
you
say
when
you're
answering
councilmember
good's
question?
You
are
going
to
have
a
priority
list
of
which
parks
and
how
much
money
we
should
spend.
We
can't
ins
and
is
the
strategy
going
to
be
fixed
everything
at
one
part
or
just
fix
the
basic
needs
across
all
the
parks
and
then
go
back
to
the
next
level
needs
the
next
level.
There's.
A
A
there's
a
balancing
there,
because
you
know,
of
course
it
is
more
efficient
to
do
things
once
you're
there,
but
I
I
wouldn't
say
it's
do
one
whole
part
do
one
whole
part.
We
usually
develop
criteria
mutually
agreed
upon.
You
know,
of
course,
health
and
safety
number
one.
Then
there
are
top
priority
needs
due
to
you
know,
the
deteriorating
condition
could
actually
lead
to
more
deterioration,
a
hole
in
the
roof,
so
we
have
criteria
that
we
try
to
apply.
That
is
again
objective
and
really
do
everything.
A
We
try
to
look
at
every
single
improvement,
that's
needed
and
whether
that
gets
scheduled
out
in
the
next
10
years
in
a
clear
five-year,
cip
or
one-year
action
plan,
and
even
if
then
it
nothing
goes
away,
but
it
may
end
up
in
a
10
plus
year
category
so
that
it's
still
kept
track
of
the
still
follow
up
on
it.
We
heard
that
pretty
clearly
too,
it
was
a
lot
about.
A
G
G
A
That's
a
hard
question:
you
know
I'll,
try
and
contemplate
what
we
could
do
now,
but
any
amount
of
help
towards
those
to
be
able
to
more
thoroughly
like
we
didn't
go
into
every
building
and
do
a
thorough
evaluation
of
every
building
that
wasn't
in
there.
But
we're
going
to
have
to
you
know.
Sometimes
getting
things
done
quickly
is
about
making
sure
they're
shovel
ready.
A
Do
I
have
architectural
plans
to
have
permits.
Can
I
move
them
ahead
and
then
sometimes
it's
easier
to
get
the
funding
right,
because
there
are
different
ways
to
fund
things.
So
there
were
parts
of
our
work
that
I
think
you
could
do
as
advancing
and
I
think
there's
some
lists.
We
could
work
with
sharisha
and
brad
on
developing
on
just
those
things
that
are
immediate.
G
G
Me
as
we
as
we
go
forward
in
budgeting
is,
is
to
have
a
that.
Word
is
objective
or
objectivity
that
we
have
an
objective
look
at
the
condition
of
these,
so
that
we
can
clearly
say
an
administration
can
clearly
say
we're
not
putting
money
in
certain
areas
for
political
reasons,
we're
only
we're
trying
to
provide
equitable
solutions
throughout
the
city
and
if
certain
parks
are
in
worse
condition,
we
at
least
want
to
bring
them
up
to
the
level
of
others.
Before
we
start
giving
new
parks,
12
million
boat
houses,
yeah.
A
M
Out
there
and
go
to
public
right,
and
I'm
glad
you
said
that
sir,
you
know
we
talk
about
transparency
now.
My
my
biggest
concern
is
that
a
lot
of
times
when
I
look
at
some
of
these
master
plans
or
that
that
we
approve
to
get
funded
for
to
to
bring
to
this
council
the
real
story.
M
Sometimes
we
don't
get
that
sometimes
so
I
want
to
make
sure
that
that
when
this
plan
comes
you're,
bringing
us
the
real
story,
not
with
somebody
craft
where
you
want
to
go
but
being
able
to
say
this
is
what
I
do.
This
is
what
our
company
sees
here.
It
is,
sir
we're
not
going
to
go
around
or
kind
of
change
or
cut
and
paste
anything
because
you
know
sometimes
we
when,
when
you're
getting
paid
you,
sometimes
you
go
by
what
the
what
what
the
payee
is
paying
you
to
do
so.
F
L
C
M
When
you
bring
it
to
us,
you
say
this:
is
you
know
because
you're
hearing
what
council
is
asking?
This
is
what
we
want
to
see
when
you
bring
it
to
us,
so
we
can
be
able
to
prove
funding
going
into
a
budget
year
or
so
forth
and
so
on.
But
I
just
want
to
make
sure
that,
like
mr
carlos
said,
you
we're
pinpointing
the
necessities
and
the
needs
making
sure
that
we're
able
to
do
what
we
need
to
do
for
for
these
different
communities.
A
You
know
it
certainly
does
have
to
be,
and
there
are
intangibles-
and
there
are
things
because
you're
not
standing
still
the
city's
doing
lots
of
other
stuff
at
the
same
time.
So
sometimes
it's
you
know.
How
does
this
work
with
the
tampa
moves
program
in
our
am
I
about
to
do
something
that
will
be
in
cooperation
or
do
I
need
to
wait
one
year
so
it
matches
up
with
the
sustainability
initiative
for
along
the
waterfront.
A
You
know,
sometimes
it's
you
got
to
key
them
to
make
sure
that
they're
working
with
with
the
40
other
initiatives
working
across
the
city-
we're
not
we're
not
in
a
vacuum
here.
So
we
try
to
be
as
strategic
as
possible,
maximize
the
benefit
of
the
dollars.
But
there's
no
question:
it's
just
a
big
need.
You
know,
and
it's
not
you
know.
Oh
wow,
you
need
a
big
shiny
object
over
here.
It's
there's
just
a
lot
of
stuff
in
a
lot
of
places.
C
Thank
you
very
much
all
right.
Do
we
have
anybody
registered
for
public
comment
on
this
item?
Danielle
we
do
not
do
we
have
anybody
in
the
public
that
wishes
to
speak
on
this
item.
Item
number
two.
Regarding
the
park
master
plan,
I
see
no
one.
Thank
you
very
much,
sir
yeah.
C
You
before
we
go
to
four
and
five.
I
know
that
quite
a
few
folks
need
to
be
out
by
12
o'clock.
Will
item
number
four
be
very
lengthy.
I
know
there
are
issues
that
you
know
they've
been
months
in
the
in
the
process,
and
we
have
people
from
the
public
here,
but
it
may
be,
it
may
be.
Okay
can.
E
C
O
C
C
H
We
we
had
some
and
thank
you,
sir.
We
we
had
some
speakers,
I
see
chief
burkha
here.
I
know
we
have
freddie
barton
who's
here
as
well
from
safe
and
sound
hillsborough
and
our
friends
from
rise
up
for
peace.
I
see
bishop
patty,
here's
jay
and
miss
brown
who's
here,
just
to
go
for
it,
if
that's
amenable
all
right
and
after
they're
done
I'd
like
to
speak,
but
obviously
yes
after
go
ahead.
Sir.
J
Good
morning,
council
assistant
chief
lee
burkha
here
on
behalf
of
chief
mary
o'connor,
to
discuss
our
programs
for
victims
of
crimes
and,
as
you
all
know,
victims
of
crimes
are
an
unsung
hero
and
that's
who
we're
here
to
serve
and
protect
it's
our
goal
to
actually
prevent
the
crime
from
occurring.
But
if
it
does
to
be
there
for
the
victims-
and
you
can
see
by
the
stakeholders
that
we
have
here
together
that
we're
in
this
together
and
it's
a
collaborative
effort.
J
J
And
in
that
aspect,
she's
already
started
a
comprehensive
development
phase
of
improving
our
crime
advocate
program,
and
that
consists
of
several
items,
and
one
of
that
is
assistance
with
the
crime,
victims,
compensation
fund
and
that's
through
the
florida
attorney
general's
office
and
that
money
is
there,
but
getting
assistance
to
get
that
money
for
victims
of
crimes,
whether
it's
helping
complete
a
form,
whether
it's
doing
paperwork
transportation.
That's
all
part
of
her
plan.
The
other
thing
is
crisis.
J
You
know,
and
that's
always
something
we
talk
about
as
behavioral
health
is
the
crisis
of
individuals
and
what
they
go
through
and
that's
something
that
we're
partnering
with
the
crisis
center
and
our
behavioral
health
unit
actually
has
a
mechanism
in
place
and
a
funding
that
can
assist
victims
of
crimes
in
crisis.
So
that's
already
something
that
we
have
budgeted
that's
available
for
us
transportation.
I
touched
on
that
before.
That's
something
that
we
do.
We
actually
do
it
really
well
and
we
provide
transportation
methods
beyond
just
riding
in
a
marked
police
car.
Something
that's
discreet.
J
So
currently
we
are
working
closely
with
the
state
attorney's
office.
We
are
working
closely
with
our
community.
You
see
rise
up
for
peace
here,
it's
the
victims
and
their
families
can
be
our
greatest
asset
and
rise
up
for
peace.
Bishop,
patty
and
safe
and
sound
are
definitely
our
greatest
assets
and
and
working
together
with
that.
So
I
think
that
would
be
a
good
transition
for
whoever
would
like
to
speak
next.
J
J
As
you
all
know,
in
the
city
of
tampa
in
hillsborough
county
in
general,
we
are
starting
to
see
an
uptick
in
violent
crime.
We
are
also
seeing
an
uptick
in
shootings
throughout
our
community
65
from
is
where
we
are,
which
includes
fatal
and
non-fatal.
J
J
When
we
look
at
restorative
justice,
we,
as
most
of
you
may
know,
we
operate
a
reporting
center
for
youth
and
juvenile
offenders.
Unfortunately,
we
stay
busy
because
every
day
we
have
youth
that
are
on
our
juvenile
detention
docket
and
we
see
that
we're
working
with
them
to
try
to
turn
them
around.
J
Something
that
we
are
working
with
with
youthful
offenders
on
weapons
charges
and
guns
is
that
we
need
to
take
we're
taking
them
over
to
funeral
homes,
we're
taking
them
to
the
emergency
room,
we're
taking
them
to
see
what
happens
when
these
things
happen.
When
you
do
something
and
you're
thinking
in
the
moment,
you
you
forget
completely
that
there
are
families
that
are
going
to
be
affected
by
this
for
the
rest
of
their
lives.
J
For
you
to
see
what
happens
in
a
trauma
center
for
you
to
see
what
happens
in
a
funeral
home
and
how
it
takes
when
mr
goose
and
his
his
group
starts
working
with
that
and
the
pain
that
lives
not
just
in
the
family
but
in
the
community,
you,
as
the
offender
need
to
see
that
so
that,
if
you
don't
get
it,
someone
else
along
the
way
will
and
we're
trying
to
put
that
component
together
to
give
support
for
the
victims
and
families
of
these
these
crimes
that
are
being
happening,
and
we
certainly,
we
are
so
grateful
for
the
support
that
we
have
with
tampa
police
department,
our
hillsborough
county
sheriff's
office.
J
N
However,
our
son,
when
our
sons
byron
patty
senior
when
he
turned
21
on
february
20th,
the
10th
april,
the
23rd
he
was
murdered
two
months
later,
leaving
a
eight-month-old
child
behind
a
son,
byron,
patty
jr,
here,
11
years
later,
that
child
our
grandson
was
murdered
and
in
the
first
instant
we
had
to
find
the
killer
ourselves.
I
went
out,
we
put
out
flyers,
we
went
everywhere
around
the
community
for
years
until
we
found
the
killer.
Now,
when
our
grandson
was
murdered,
things
was
a
little
different.
N
We
had
the
community
that
supported
me
called
me,
gave
me
the
person
name,
and
I'm
saying
all
this
to
say
that
things
have
not
changed.
It
actually
has
gotten
worse.
Now
children
are
not
living
to
even
become
13,
12
14
years
of
age,
they're
being
murdered
in
the
streets.
You
say:
how
can
we
prevent
this?
We
need
to
find
out
where
the
guns
are
coming
from.
The
children
in
robots
and
bauman
heights
at
the
state
are
not
bringing
the
guns
in
someone
is
bringing
those
guns
into
them
and
they're
also
bringing
drugs.
N
We
have
a
drug
issue
that
is
going
on
in
elementary
school,
the
effect
that
they
have
on
the
family.
As
I
stand
here
today,
I'm
just
still
reliving
the
events
of
watching
our
son
in
a
hotel
room
lying
down
on
the
floor
murdered.
My
husband
didn't
know
how
to
cope
with
it
because
he
was
told
men's,
don't
cry
men's,
don't
show
feeling.
But
years
later
I
had
to
seek
counseling
for
that
same
husband.
N
Our
other
son,
who
was
a
student
at
bethune-cookman
college,
refused
to
go
back
to
school
at
that
point,
but
I
thank
god
that
later
on,
he
did
attain
his
ba
degree,
a
grandson
that
I
just
raised
and
he
would
be
19
on
this
friday.
The
effect
of
his
cousin
still
bothered
him.
Today
he
was
a
young
tart
when
his
cousin
was
killed
and
he
carried
a
locket.
I
just
watched
it
last
night
on
his
neck,
so
you
know
the
pain
never
go
away.
N
N
I
just
engaged
him
about
what
he
was
doing
in
life
and
what
was
going
on
come
to
find
out
this
young
man
knew
my
grandson
and
this
young
man
when
he
got
to
he's
30
years
old
now,
and
I
thought
about
wow
when
my
grandson
had
had
a
child.
What
would
he
would
be
doing
at
that
time?
And
this
young
man
gave
me
the
biggest
hug
and
he
told
me
he'd,
say
we're
still
supporting
you
all
we're
still
praying
for
you.
You
know
that
that
just
give
us
the
strength
to
go
on.
N
I
would
like
to
say
something
about.
Chief
o'connor,
we
have
been
meeting
I'm
a
small
group
that
has
been
meeting
with
her
since
she's
been
appointed.
She
has
she's
at
the
forefront
of
trying
to
see
about
doing
some
things,
we're
very
grateful
to
her
this
group.
We
come
with
suggestions,
ideas
that
I'm
hoping
that
the
city
council,
the
sheriff
department,
will
implement
these
ideals.
N
So
we
say
thank
you
and
hats
off
to
her,
and
I
want
to
thank
the
mayor
because
the
mayor
is
seen
to
be
engaging
and
trying
to
see
what
we
can
do,
because
I
want
you
all
to
understand.
It
might
appear
to
be
a
blight
problem
now
in
a
black
community,
but
guns
are
being
fired
everywhere.
If
you
just
looked
at
the
lead,
these
kids
out
playing
baseball,
they're
hearing
gunfire
they're
ducking
this
should
not
be.
N
Children
should
be
able
to
go
to
those
parks
to
be
able
to
have
a
good
time,
not
worry
about.
Will
they
be
murdered
in
the
parking
lot
or
on
the
field?
So
we're
glad
that
you
all
are
bringing
this
forward,
but
there
is
things
that
we
can
do
if
we
really
want
to
and
if
we
really
want
to
put
the
monies
there,
but
also
like
the
caution
when
we
throw
money
out
here
that
we
be
transparent,
that
we
follow
up
on
where
the
dollars
are
being
spent.
N
We
be
transparent
and
follow
up
on
the
dollars
who's
getting
these
dollars
and
what
they're
actually
doing
with
the
dollars
because
rise
up
for
peace,
and
I'm
just
gonna,
say
this
about
jay
he's
a
humble
man
and
he'll
talk
about
his
story.
But
this
is
someone
that
has
been
on
the
ground.
He
and
miss
patricia
doing
the
job
that
they
should
be
compensated
for.
N
Nobody
is
giving
them
gas,
nobody
is
doing
anything,
but
I
would
like
to
see
dollars
put
in
the
hands
of
people
like
these
that
are
actually
out
here
and
has
the
respect
of
the
peers
that
are
doing
the
violent
crime.
And
I
there's
another
program
that
I
talked
to
the
mayor
chief
o'connell,
about
sheriff
about
implementing
that
kids
be
approached
before
they
get
in
trouble.
Everything.
No,
the
parents
can't
get
in
help
until
the
children
commit
a
crime.
N
C
Thank
you,
bishop
patty,
you
know
I,
I
can't
imagine
the
suffering
and
the
pain
that
your
family's
gone
through
with
what
everything
that
you've
described
and
you're,
not
the
only
person
I
mean,
there's
so
many
in
the
community,
and
I
just
I
never
understood,
gun
violence.
Why
people
resort
to
I
mean
murder
death
is,
is
it's
a
permanent
thing?
You
know
it's
not
like.
Oh
you
know
you
punched,
somebody
in
the
face.
You
broke
their
nose.
C
C
We
had
a
friend
named
judge,
vince
giglio,
who
was
a
local
judge
and
he
did
he
handled
the
juvenile
courts
and
when
I
was
maybe
12
or
13
years
old,
not
that
I
was
a
bad
kid,
but
he
took
me
to
his
courtroom
and
he
said
this
is
the
holding
cell.
This
is
the
bathroom
that
they
have
to
share
or
the
toilet
because
it
wasn't
a
bathroom.
This
is
what
happens
when
you
get
in
trouble.
C
This
is
what
and
it
and
it
I
don't
want
to
say,
scared
me
enough,
but
it
taught
me
enough
of
a
lesson
that
I
said
I
don't
want
to.
I
don't
want
to
be
in
that
situation,
but
it
was
preventative,
and
I
think
you
know
we
need
to
reach
out
to
these
young
people
early
on
and
influence
them
in
a
positive
way
so
again
to
prevent
anything
from.
N
N
They
have
a
gun,
they're
a
big
person,
so
they
just
shoot
it
so
you're,
absolutely
right,
but
that's
the
program
that
I
would
like
to
re
enter,
and
I
was
a
child
that
went
down
to
the
courthouse
and
watched
and
heard
the
of
course,
and
it
did
help
I
never
been
to
jail.
Thank
you
so
much
there.
You.
P
Good
morning,
good
morning,
jay
johnson
johnny
johnson,
I'm
here
standing
up
rise
up
for
peace.
My
experience
with
gun
violence.
My
son
was
murdered
first
murder
of
january
2017.,
following
that,
I
had
three
first
cousins
murdered
as
well,
so
me
being
in
my
application
for
the
census
gun.
Violence
is
personal.
I
literally
have
blood
on
the
street
of
tampa,
and
I'm
really
out
here
trying
to
clean
it
up.
P
I'm
blessed
to
just
like
the
chief
police
have
a
second
chance
and
to
be
an
asset
to
my
community,
be
a
good
pillar,
be
cut,
be
a
good
continuity
rise
up
for
peace.
Can
I
just
read
you
all
our
vision
statement
and
our
mission
statement
rise
up
for
peace
vision
statement
is
to
build
bridges
of
compassion
by
embracing
peaceful
practices,
reintroducing
a
community
of
brotherly
and
social
love
as
a
sense
of
oneness.
P
This.
This
is
a
a
human
right
issue.
The
gun
violence,
that's
plaguing
our
community,
like
the
bishop
in
the
previous
person,
is
a
national
issue,
is
nowhere
safe
us
that
rise
up
for
peace
is.
This
is
literally
trying
to
be
when
my
son
was
murdered.
Just
like
the
founder,
I
founded
patricia
brown.
All
we
had
was
each
other.
We
didn't.
We
build
drug
facilities
for
drug
addicts.
We
feel
we
we
do.
P
P
Like
the
bishop
said,
it's
an
ongoing
every
day
is
a
struggle,
because
you
see
a
smile
because
you
see
us
laughing
for
us.
This
is
therapeutic
and
knowing
and
having
a
place
for
a
family
to
turn
to,
because
the
state
attorney's
office
is
only
open,
so
murders
and
shootings
happen
anytime
of
the
day
any
time
of
the
night
and
having
someone
that
you
can
call
on
and
not
know
what
you're
going
through,
but
have
an
understanding
to
have.
P
Empathy
for
a
person
is
vital
if
I'd
had
that
initially
it
would
have
done
a
lot
for
myself,
and
my
family,
of
course,
is
a
domino
effect.
I
have
other
kids,
so
they
dealing
with
trauma
and
mental
health
issues
with
losing
their
siblings
as
well.
So
we
definitely
work
close
with
the
police
department,
the
city
of
town
for
the
mayor's
office.
We
couldn't
do
it,
do
it
without
it,
but
it
takes
everyone
hands
on
deck.
P
I'd
like
to
thank
you,
councilman
lewis,
for
all
your
help
and
support
in
keeping
this
on
the
forefront,
because,
again
it's
hurting
families.
We
have
a
lot
of
cold
cases
and
that
can
bring
a
lot
of
change
to
atmosphere.
If
we
do
something
and
doing
something
is
better
than
doing
nothing
at
all.
So
thank
you
all
for
your
time.
We
look
forward
to
support
from
each
and
every
one,
and
I
would
like
to
give
you
the
definition
of
support
before
I
leave.
P
M
You
know
I
see
freddie
here,
hi
I've
talked
to
I've
talked
to
freddie
and
gave
freddie.
My
suggestions
talked
to
jail
numerous
times
and
so
working
with
young
people
ain't
something
new
to
me.
I
know
what
we
need
to
do.
We
just
gotta,
have
people
to
believe
and
to
get
it
done.
See.
There's
an
answer,
gentlemen,
but
you
you
got
to
want
to
do
it.
M
M
That's
what
I
got
to
find.
I
got
to
find
more
men
to
be
able
to
bring
that
infection
to
them,
and
once
I
can
do
that,
I'm
going
to
save
some.
I
may
not
get
all
right,
freddy.
I
may
not
get
all,
but
if
I
can
find
a
bunch
of
men
who
not
just
because
a
week
or
two,
I
need
them
for
a
while
six
months
to
a
year
to
be
a
part
of
that.
I
need
them
because
now
they'll
understand
what
success
is
that
they
don't
have
to
be
in
the
streets.
M
They
don't
do
this
thing
because
they're
around
someone
who
who
loves
them
who's
going
to
give
them
that
support
who's
going
to
say,
hey,
I'm
going
to
get
you
a
job,
I'm
going
to
check
on
you
every
day,
I'm
going
to
take
you
here
there,
so
you
can
see
those
other
experiences.
Other
people
are
seeing.
That's
all
they
want.
They
don't
want
to
want
to
be
out
there.
Secondly,
we
we
we
talked
ms
patty
talked
about
the
guns.
You
know
we
got.
M
I
told
the
the
former
chief
before
you
got
to
spend
money
when
crack
was
a
big
deal.
We
spent
money
to
find
the
crack
dealers
and
all
this
kind
of
stuff
to
get
the
slow
crack
down.
Let's
don't
do
we
we,
we,
we
need
to
have
buy
money
to
go
in
to
find
out
who's
selling
these
guns.
I
hear
all
the
time.
There's
a
big
you
all
truck
that
comes
into
the
community
every
week
and
they
go
in
and
buy
guns.
M
I've
heard
that
several
times,
so
we
got
to
be
able
to
spend
money
to
do
what
we
need
to
do
to
get
rid
of
some
of
these
guns
and
put
some
of
these
people
in
jail.
If
you
kill
people,
you
need
to
go
to
jail
period,
you
got
a
gun,
you,
you
need
to
suffer
the
consequences
and
I
believe
in
that
miss
patricia
jay
they're
out
there
hustling
every
week
trying
to
get
people
to
do
what
they
got
to
do
every
week
every
week
and
I
applaud
their
efforts.
I've
been
to
their
events.
M
You
know
we
need
the
whole
the
whole
community
at
their
rallies,
because
when
people
see
that
they'll
be
a
part
of
that,
I'm
with
jay
100
ms
patricia
anything,
they
know
I'm
there
for
them.
I
just
need
to
be
able
to
get
some
more
men
to
go
out
there
to
help
me
pull
some
of
these
young
men
in
to
give
them
another
opportunity.
That's
what
I
need
I
need.
I
need
that
kind
of
help.
Freddie.
Q
My
name
is
patricia
brown,
the
founder
of
riser
from
priests.
My
son,
devonte
brown,
was
murdered.
Two
years
ago
march,
the
20th
coming
home
from
work
got
caught
in
the
crossfire,
a
guy's
coming,
shooting
a
tap
apart
and
some
other
guys
he's
trying
to
run
out
of
weight
got
him.
His
back
heart
blew
out,
blew
his
heart
up
instantly
killed
instantly
son,
never
been
in
trouble.
Q
Q
Q
I've
been
working
with
the
tampa
police
department
from
day
one
when
they
called
me
and
asked
me
to
do
a
press
conference,
and
I
came
into
the
press
conference.
I
asked
them.
What
is
it
that
I
can
do?
I
don't
know
how
to
go
about
doing
it
is
to
get
an
organization,
or
some
kind
of
thing
I
can
do
to
for.
Like
I
said,
other
parents
have
to
go
through
what
I'm
going
through
that
hurt
not
going
through.
Q
This
is
something
that
you'll
never
get
over
with.
This
is
not
a
pain
or
a
headache
or
two
things.
Sometimes
you
just
take
up
something
up
or
leave
or
tylenol,
or
something
and
get
over
with
it's
something
that
you
have
to
go
pain
that
you
have
to
deal
with
every
single
day
of
your
life.
I
could
be
standing
here
talking
to
you
smiling
right
now.
I
could
turn
my
back
and
break
down
and
cry
because
of
the
pain
that
I
go
through.
It's
not
something
that
just
doing
it
just
to
be
doing
it.
P
Why
not
us?
Why
not
this
city
council
party?
Why
not
this
police
department?
Why
not
the
city
of
town?
But
why
not
us
make
the
difference
that
our
community
need
and
it's
all
it
is
just
a
little
understanding
that
it
affects
us
all.
Your
kids
go
to
school
when
someone
knows
someone
that
got
killed
in
effect,
look
at
the
councils
that
they
have
any
mass
shooting
at
any
school.
We
don't
have
that
in
our
neighborhood.
We,
our
own
counselors,
we're
our
own
support
team.
P
That's
why
we
have
rise
up
a
pizza
trying
to
build
that
have
a
facility,
so
a
parent.
If
it's
three
in
the
morning
two
in
the
afternoon
five
o'clock,
whenever
they
experience
what
we
have
experienced,
they
have
someone
they
can
reach
out
to
and
beat
up
for
them
and
we'd
be
there
by
the
lifeline
to
to
give
them.
Resources
have
resources
and
like
patricia
say,
just
sit
down
and
listen
you
don't
imagine
a
countless
times.
P
We
spent
on
the
phone
together
crying
to
each
other,
trying
to
get
through
today
to
come
up
with
something
to
keep
the
community
aware
of.
What's
up
on
the
phone
talking
breaking
down
with
each
other
trying
to
give
back,
because
we
know
what
the
hurt
feel
like.
Like
you
say,
we
can't
go
to
tampa
general.
We
can't
go
to
saint
joseph.
We
can't
go
to
advanced
health
and
get
no
painkiller
to
kill
the
pain
that
we
deal
with
each
and
every
day,
but
we
can
help
some
other
family.
P
M
C
M
Do
you
think
about
this?
Maybe
we
can
get
with
our
neighborhood
liaison,
and
maybe
those
groups
like
fan
or
whatever
and
maybe
get
a
coalition
like
you're
talking
about,
and
you
talk
about
everybody
in
the
city
and
have
those
organizations
to
have
that
outlet.
When
we
have
these
situations
that
they
can
come
to,
you
you've
got
miss
bell,
they
got
the
senior
groups
they
meet
three
times
a
week
over
there.
You
know
you
have
a
lot
of
other
community
groups
to
where
you
might
can
have
what
you're
talking
about.
M
J
Know
sometimes
we
the
boundaries
get
in
the
way
of
progress,
and
so
we
have
two
facilities
and
I
took
jay
to
one
of
them.
It's
close
enough
to
the
city,
because
it's
right
there
by
the
fairgrounds
and
the
casino
over
at
king's
forest
rec
center.
That's
where
we
have
our
youth
offenders
that
commit
these
offenses.
We
take
them
over
that
we
work
with
them.
We
will
keep
those
doors
open
for
families
for
victims
and
their
families.
J
If
we
want
to
create
a
schedule
and
we
bring
these
mothers
and
fathers
and
they
need
a
space
to
to
grieve,
to
talk
to
fellowship,
we
will
provide
that
for
them.
We
have
another
facility
in
town
and
country,
because
this
is
broader
than
the
city
of
tampa.
This
is
our
entire
area.
So
we
again
we
stand
at
the
ready.
We
will-
and
I'm
going
to
say
this
quietly
we
will
feed
them.
J
We
will
make
sure
that
we'll
make
sure
that
we
we
have
our
doors
open
and
all
we
need
is
the
support
from
both
city
and
county
to
say,
boundaries
be
damned
and
let
here's
here's
an
opportunity
to
serve
these
victims
and
their
families.
And
let's
do
it
together,
I'm
with
you.
We
need
men
standing
at
the
ready.
We
need
our
families,
we
need
support
the
crisis
center.
We
need
the
department
of
health,
we
need
our
hospitals,
we
have
our
law
enforcement
agencies
and
then
we
can
coordinate
all
that
together.
J
But
we
are
ready
right
here
right
now
over
at
our
two
facilities
to
provide
that
space
and-
and
we
don't
want
to
be
the
ones
to
do
it-
we
want
the
ones
who
are
feeling
that
pain
to
help
those
who
are
in
pain,
and
we
will
provide
that
connection
as
well.
N
With
all
due
respect-
and
I
can
appreciate
what
you
and
the
councilman
just
said-
but
we
need
to
be
talking
about
prevention,
not
a
whole
another
coalition
of
where
we
can
grieve
and
cry.
We
I'm
a
pastor
of
a
church.
We
have
a
lot
of
outlets
and
I
appreciate
what
you're
doing,
but
it
need
to
be
more
focuses
on
prevention
because
you
have
12
and
13
year
old
kids,
who
have
seen
their
loved
ones
murdered.
Nothing
has
been
done
about
it.
So
now
their
position
is
well.
N
I
better
get
that
one
before
they
get
me.
So
that's
what
we
really
need
to
concentrate
on.
Yes,
we
got
to
do
hand
in
hand,
but
I
don't
want
to
see
more
and
more
places
where
people
can
go
cry.
I
want
to
see
some
happy
days,
so
that's
well
and
good.
I
appreciate
it,
but
I
don't
want
it
to
be
lost
on
prevention
to
stop.
What's
going
on
and
the
guns
we
can
shut
it
down,
because
we
have
good
law
enforcement
that
can
find
out
and
infiltrate
how
these
guns
are
done.
N
We've
seen
a
big
drug
gun
back
out
in
brandon
or
at
the
mall.
They
can
do
undercover
and
find
out.
If
we
can
go,
I
always
say
we
can
go,
get
osama
bin
laden.
We
can
find
these
people
who
bring
these
guns
into
this
into
this
city
into
this
city.
Mr
patricia
wanted
to
say
something
else,
but
let's
not
lose
while
we're.
Here.
It's
about
prevention,.
Q
Right,
my
thing
is
to
not
only
did
I
say
I
want
to
have
parents
come
where
they
have
someone
to
talk.
My
thing
is
too
well,
like
I
talked
to
freddie
and
another.
I
spoke
to
you
about
that
too,
as
well.
Kids
reach
the
kids
now
when
they're
young
now
before
they
get
influenced
and
see
somebody,
they
think
young
kids.
Now
they
see
somebody
out
there
doing
something
they
feel
like
they're
gonna.
Do
it
too,
because
it
looked
good
to
them
and
then
that's
probably
turned
around.
Q
They
messed
their
whole
life
up
and
now
they're
in
prison
for
the
rest
of
their
life
or
their
parents
got
to
go
through
the
same
thing
that
I'm
going
through,
because
I
want
to
reach
the
kids
now
to
try
to
find
something
for
them
either
after
school
program
or
something
that
it
is
that
I
can
do
that.
We
could
that
we
can
do
as
a
community
and
help
to
reach
out
to
these
kids.
Q
I
know
it's
boys
and
girls,
clubs
and
wrecks
and
stuff
like
that,
as
well
as
to
do,
but
some
kids
need
some
things
to
do
to
go
like
on
field
trips
or
things
like
that
things
like
that,
and
this
is
what
I
want
to
do.
That's
why
I'm
trying
to
reach.
Like
I
said,
kids,
my
big
thing
is
kids.
Kids
can't
I
can't
keep
keep
saying
it
over
and
over
kids
is
what
I'm
trying
to
reach.
Q
So
another
parent
has
to
go
through
that
what
I'm
going
through
and
until
not
only
that
the
kids
will
see
like
friends
taking
the
kids
to
see
what's
going
on,
they
have
something
to
think
they
could
think
twice
about
what
they're
going
to
do
about
industry.
So,
whatever
let
me
get
myself
together
and
make
a
better
life
for
myself
or
whatever
it
is,
get
to
have
the
resources
for
them
to
have
go.
Q
If
there's
nothing
but
communicating,
I
mean
educational
skills
whatever
it
is,
that's
out
there
for
them
to
have
something
out
there
for
the
kids,
because
some
of
these
stuff
out
here
these
kids
don't
have
nothing
to
offer
them
they're
just
out
in
the
streets
and
cut
and
not
don't
go
to
the
parks.
I'm
not
saying
that
parks
is
bad
or
not,
but
they
don't
have
nothing
going
to
the
party,
nothing
for
them
to
play.
They
got
something
to
keep
them
busy,
keep
them
going
and
and
keep
them
make
them
successful.
Q
That's
what
I
want
for
the
kids.
You
know
what
I
said
to
keep
their
mind
occupied
so
when
they
grow
up.
I
don't
want
to
be
look
back
and
say
I
don't
want
to
be
like
johnny.
I
don't
want
to
be
like
joe
out
there
in
the
streets.
All
they
do
is
being
in
trouble
all
the
time
or
this
what
happened
to
them?
That's
what
they're
doing!
I
don't
want
to
be
like
that.
Thank
god,
my
kids.
Q
They
had
the
opportunity
to
go
up,
grow
up
in
the
boys,
girls
club,
and
they
had
programs
and
field
trips
even
on
the
weekends,
for
them
to
do
basketball
football
whatever,
because
I'm
not
saying
that
they
don't.
We
don't
have
it
now
and
the
parks
don't
have
it,
but
something
to
keep
them
going,
especially
on
the
weekends
parks,
are
closed
on
the
weekends.
Q
So
they'll
get
a
kid's
free
time,
school's
going
to
be
out
now
a
lot
of
kids
not
going
to
the
boys
and
girls
they're
not
going
to
the
parks
they're
going
to
be
roaming,
the
streets
free,
giving
them
something
different,
we're
able
to
go
to
him.
We
could
go
here
and
we'll
have
something
free
to
go
to.
This
is
what
I'm
saying.
That's
all.
I
have
to
say:
councilman
vera.
H
Thank
you,
mr
chairman.
I
I
wanted
to
thank
you
guys
for
coming.
You
know
freddie,
obviously,
and
in
chief
you
all
do
a
wonderful
job
and,
but
you
know,
bishop
patricia
and
jay.
I
I've
told
you
all
this
before
I'm
going
to
say
it
again
that
there's
so
much
to
be
said
about
going
public
with
something.
H
That's
such
a
big
hurt
that
kind
of
hurt
that
no
one
can
understand
unless,
if
you've
gone
through
it
in
a
public
forum-
and
I
I
appreciate
it
a
hundred
percent-
I
I
know
that
chief
o'connor
put
forth
a
memo
with
some
great
ideas
that
I
think
are
really
wonderful
to
have.
Our
city
support
actively
continue
to
support
actively
with
budgetary
monetary
investments,
victims
of
crime.
H
For
me,
this
is
a
very
ignored
issue.
We
don't
hear
a
lot
about
it.
Whenever
the
media
talks
about
crime,
they
talk
about
it
in
a
way
and
no
offense
to
the
media
who's
here
by
the
way,
I'm
not
doing
the
donald
trump
thing,
but
whenever,
whenever
the
media
often
talks
about
crime,
it's
often
about
the
scary
part
of
it.
The
neighborhood's
scared
this
and
that,
but
every
time
there's
a
rape
every
time,
there's
a
murder.
Every
time
there's
a
robbery.
H
You've
got
a
victim
who's
left
behind
and
who's
scared
and
whose
security
has
been
violated,
and
we
need
to
talk
about
that
all
the
time
and
I
always
say
it
doesn't
matter
where
you
live.
Violent
crime
is
your
issue.
It's
your
crisis.
H
I
got
a
gated
community,
it's
your
problem,
it's
all
of
our
problems,
no
matter
where
you
live,
and
that's
why
I
wanted
to
put
this
forth
because
y'all's
story,
your
tears,
everybody
has
got
to
see.
I
I
want
to
see
outrage
in
our
city,
not
just
in
the
affected
parts
throughout
all
of
our
our
city.
This
saturday,
we
have
a
rise
up
for
peace
rally.
I
want
to
see
people
come
out
to
that
outside
of
these
areas
from
tampa
palms
from
bayshore
from
all
over,
because
there's
got
to
be
just
some
outrage.
H
This
is
an
issue
of
values.
It's
an
issue
of
compassion.
It's
an
issue
of
family,
it's
an
issue
of
empathy,
but
but
it's
also
an
issue
of
social
justice,
social
justice
that,
just
because
you
live
somewhere,
doesn't
mean
that
you
ought
to
be
a
victim
of
crime
and
people
who
don't
live
in
those
areas
should
be
outraged
by
it
and
there's
something
that
always
see
a
lot
with
rise
up
for
peace,
which
is
y'all,
engage
the
police,
the
police.
H
Are
your
partners
in
this,
some
people
say
defund,
the
police,
y'all
say:
fund,
the
police
engage
the
police
support
the
police,
and
that,
for
me,
is-
and
I
know
for
all
of
us
by
the
way
up
here.
I
know
we
all
agree
with
that.
100
all
members
of
council
agree
with
that
in
supporting
our
local
law
enforcement
110.
H
So
I
I
I
I
see
some
very
good
ideas
that
are
put
forth,
that
I
like
a
lot.
I
like
the
engagement
with
the
the
franciscan
center.
I
know
sister
ann
dougherty,
who
is
a
wonderful
woman
who
makes
me
proud
to
be
catholic
she's,
just
a
wonderful
person.
The
part
that
I
like
a
lot
too
is
seeing
the
city
perspectively
involved
and
monetarily
supporting
victims
of
crime
jay.
You
talked
about
this
to
me
again.
H
I
want
to
see
our
city
to
supplement
those
programs
so
that
we
continue
to
have
stakeholder
status
in
this
and
and
and
I'm
appreciative
of
the
work,
the
tampa
police
department
does
a
assistant
chief
here.
You
know
this
is
something
that
you
all
live
a
hundred
and
ten
percent
every
single
day,
and
you
know
when,
when
you
go
to
a
crime
scene,
you
see
the
victims
of
crime
and
in
it,
and
I
can't
imagine
the
the
emotions
that
that
gives
rise
there,
so
I'll
I'll
be
making
some
motions
at
the
end.
H
H
We
really
need
to
see
that
and
again
is
that
going
to
do
anything
in
in
solving
crime
or
anything
absolutely
not,
but
but
I
think
it's
good
and
you
all
talked
about
in
briefly
for
me
for
30
seconds,
mr
chair,
you
all
talked
about
preventing
crime,
giving
people
hope.
You
know
last
week
I
think
it
was.
We
talked
about
the
returning
citizens
ordinance
and
making
sure
that
people
who
are
leaving
incarceration
got
hope
got
training.
We
did
the
apprenticeship
ordinance
a
lot
of
these
things
we
got
to
talk
about.
H
You
got
to
have
a
holistic
view
of
crime,
of
going
after
violent
crime
being
tough
on
violent
crime,
but
also
being
tough
on
the
causes
of
that
violent
crime.
But
today
is
about
the
victims
and
y'all's
story.
I
want
everyone
in
tampa
to
hear
your
story:
people
outside
of
the
area,
people
in
the
area
who
know
it
110.
H
I
think
that's
so
important
for
empathy.
Thank
you,
mr
chair,
and
thank
you
guys
and
god
bless
you.
J
Carlos
vacation,
the
rise
up
for
peace
event,
90
chance
of
rain
this
saturday,
so
we're
moving
it
to
the
21st,
which
we
actually
think
will
be
better
because
that's
the
week
before
school
gets
out.
So
we
think
we'll
get
more
youth,
yes,
councilman.
L
Thank
you,
mr
mr
chairman.
I
agree
with
most
of
the
things
that
councilman
vieira
said,
but
I
have
one
little
difference.
I
believe,
if
that
is
successful,
the
memorial
understanding,
who
has
passed
away
by
gun
violence,
that
people
have
a
perspective
when
you
see
it
on
tv,
it's
a
20
or
30
second
thing,
because
they
got
so
many
things
are
covered
on
the
radio
that
in
the
memory
it
sees
it
the
eyes
see
it
the
mind,
but
it
doesn't
remember
it
because
there's
so
many
things
that
are
coming
at
one
time
and
that's
a
fact.
L
I
believe.
However,
I
think
if
people
see
it,
they
will
understand
it
and
ain't
one
or
two
or
five
or
six
is
hundreds
of
them.
Thank
you
and
thousands
of
and
this
country's
got
an
epidemic.
Yes
and
the
problem
is,
you
can
cure
an
epidemic
with
a
vaccine?
You
can't
cure
gun
violence
with
a
vaccine
and
what
you
folks
have
done.
I
don't
think
I
had
the
courage
to
stand
up
here.
What
this
lady
had
to
say
about
her
family
and
yourself.
I
never
knew
that
what
you
said
miss
patty
about
your
family.
L
I
never
knew
that,
so
you
enhanced
me
today
on
something
that
I
didn't
know
and
the
gentleman
I
think
I've
talked
to
him
once
or
twice
casually
and
other
things,
and
I
didn't
know
that
either
about
your
family,
so
there's
so
many
stories
that
have
to
be
said
about
gun
violence
that
it's
it's
just.
There
are
no
boundaries,
no
street
address
that
is
immune
to
gun
violence,
and
it
happens
when
one
individual
many
years
ago
started
with
one
gun
and
some
little
park,
and
some
kids
that
are
eight
nine.
L
L
You
got
10
000
of
them,
not
to
say
that
this
is
the
what's
happening,
but
when
you
see
that
it
takes
the
energy
takes
the
family,
it
breaks
them
apart,
and
those
kids
are
hard
to
be
broken
because
they
see
that
money
and
they
see
the
gun,
and
they
put
it
together
that
I
could
be
driving
a
new
car.
I
could
be
doing
this.
I
don't
have
to
get
a
job.
G
Thank
you
for
sharing
your
stories.
I've
heard
some
of
them
before,
but
still
heartbreaking,
to
hear,
hear
your
stories.
Thank
you
so
much
for
sharing
them
and
I'm
glad
you
all
are
here
in
person,
so
we
can
hear
them
in
person
now,
instead
of
just
downstairs
on
tv.
Thank
you
all
for
your
advocacy
and
your
volunteer
work.
You
know
talking
about
solutions.
First
of
all,
I'm
happy
to
meet
with
you
all.
G
I've
met
with
some
of
you
individually,
I'm
happy
to
be
with
you
all
as
a
group
or
individually,
and
see
what
I
can
do
personally
and
through
the
through
the
counsel
to
be
supportive.
No
other
parent
should
have
to
go
through
what
you
all
went
through,
and
I
don't
think
any
parent
can
hear
your
story
without
feeling
heartbreak
for
each
of
the
last
three
years.
G
This
city
council
has
supported
all
the
requests
that
the
the
police
department
has
made
and
that
the
police
union
has
made
incl,
including
in
the
face
of
a
bunch
of
protesters.
We
agreed
to
a
increase
in
budget
for
the
police
department,
but
despite
that,
the
violent
crime
rate
in
tampa
went
up
every
year.
For
the
last
three
years-
and
it's
just
not
acceptable,
the
solution
from
the
administration
in
part
is
to
put
it
in
a
new
police
sheet
and
we've
all
met
with
her
and
she's
presented
to
us,
and
we've
asked
her
that
question.
G
How
do
she
presented
the
numbers
to
us?
That's
how
we
knew
about
it
and
and
so
she's
being
transparent.
That
and
she's
got
some
ideas
on
how
to
solve
it
and
we're
going
to
be
working
closely
with
her.
I
know
you
all
are
working
closely
with
her
and
please
let
us
know
the
feedback
you
get
and
if
we
need
to
tweak
it,
there's
a
fine
balance
between
preventing
crimes
and
and
harming
civil
rights.
G
So
we
want
to
make
sure
we
don't
cross
that
line,
but
we,
we
obviously
need
to
do
more,
and
it's
not
just
about
money.
Obviously,
either
it's
about
the
programs
and
policies
and
and
looking
at
the
data.
So
please
let
us
know
how
we
can
be
supportive.
We
we
definitely
want
to
help
you
in
your
mission.
Thank
you.
C
H
And
mr
chair,
may
I
make
a
quick
motion
on
this
sir,
I
mean
if
no
one's
here
to
speak.
Thank
you,
sir.
I
really
appreciate
it.
I
motion
for
a
couple
things
if
I
may,
before
and
with
a
tpd,
we
can
work
on
if
the
dates
don't
work
or
whatever,
where
I
I
really
love
this
plan
put
forward
by
by
chief
o'connor
on
so
many
levels.
H
The
the
one
thing
that
I
was
really
pushing
for
is
is
the
monetary
support,
and
she
you
know
just
built
on
that
in
such
a
holistic
way.
I'd
love
to
see
this
come
back,
maybe
in
six
months
or
so
in
the
first
week
of
october.
I
guess
is
that
august
you're
right!
Thank
you
for
august.
Yes,
sir.
H
Yes,
sir
you're,
right,
you're,
right,
we're
gonna,
miss
the
statue
of
limitations
there
and
thank
you
councilman
miranda,
so
I'm
gonna
ask
for
th
this
to
come
back
as
well
as
the
idea
of
some
sort
of
a
memorial
for
for
victims
of
crime
and
of
gun
violence
as
well.
L
E
Morning,
chairman
and
council
lashawn
doc
with
city
planning,
and
I
believe
I
have
a
presentation
great
yes,.
E
E
E
E
Request
just
talk
about
the
scheduling
and
the
next
steps
on
that
request,
and
then
what
we'll
do
is
we'll
hear
from
stephen
benson,
the
director
of
city
planning,
to
give
an
overview
of
the
parking
master
plan
and
how
this
request
ties
into
that
and
then
the
applicant
karen
kress
will
make
her
presentation
and
we
have
someone
on
the
line
also
as
a
part
of
her
team.
Joel
mann
is
online
and
then
what
we'll
do
is
open
it
up
for
questions.
E
I
will
then
take
a
brief
pause
and
ask
for
a
motion
from
council
to
direct
staff
to
transmit
the
request
to
the
planning
commission.
Although
we
are
presenting
to
you
today
privately
and
publicly
initiated
amendments,
they
are
two
separate
items,
so
we
just
want
to
make
sure
we
have
one
motion
for
the
private
and
then
another
one
for
the
public
and
then
eric
cotton
is
here
he's
going
to
take
over
and
present
to
you,
the
publicly
initiated
amendments
and
we'll
go
from
there
next
slide.
E
Please
next
slide,
please
so
the
applicant
for
this
request
is
karen
press.
She
is
representing
the
tampa
downtown
partnership.
This
request
was
submitted
as
a
part
of
the
january
2021
amendment
cycle,
and
it's
important
to
note
that,
from
the
time
that
this
request
was
submitted,
the
applicant
worked
with
staff,
and
that
includes
mobility,
staff,
transportation
staff,
the
zoning
administrator.
E
It
was
a
collaborative
effort
on
the
language
that
is
brought
before
you
today,
so
I
have
provided
for
you
in
the
package
the
original
language
submitted
by
the
applicant,
along
with
the
language
that
moves
forward.
It's
just
to
show
you
the
difference
in
the
two
submittals
the
applicant
was
responsive
to
any
of
the
staff's
requests
for
modifications
and
also
the
public
when
we
did
outreach
during
the
public
information
meeting
which
I'll
review
the
scheduling
with
you
shortly,
the
applicant
was
very
responsive
and
modified.
The
request,
the
amendment
request.
E
So
what
moves
forward
today
are
three
sections
of
the
code,
and
that
is
one
is
the
central
business
district.
The
downtown
district
change
is
proposed
to
that
language
and
the
parking
ratios
in
the
downtown
district
there's
a
small
modification
in
the
special
use
section
of
the
code
under
27
132
and
then
the
last
change
is
in
the
channel
district
regulations
for
parking
next
slide.
Please
so
first
is
the
cbd,
so
the
code
sections
have
been
listed
there
for
reference,
but
this
would
modify.
E
One
of
the
changes
is
the
table.
That's
provided
in
the
cbd
which
actually
provides
you
information
regarding
each
street
type.
So
the
cbd
is
one
of
your
special
districts.
There
are
street
types
identified
and
within
the
code
for
each
street
type,
there's
a
table
that
gives
you
those
standards.
So
what
we've
done
is
we've
modified
and
specified
the
vehicular
access
requirements
for
each
street
type.
E
The
next
thing
is
the
reduction
in
the
required
parking
so
for
the
uses
that
are
listed
in
the
cbd,
there's
a
reduction
of
the
parking
ratios
by
about
no
more
than
50
percent,
and
then
there's
the
addition
and
the
recognition
of
alternative
transportation
modes.
So
currently,
in
our
code
now
it's
important
to
mention
that
we
have
in
our
seminole
heights
special
district.
We
have
that
recognition
of
alternative
transportation
modes,
and
this
allows
for
parking
offsets
for
things
like
bicycle
parking.
E
This
recognizes
ride,
share
programs
and
things
of
that
sort
to
to
actually
serve
as
a
parking
offset
for
your
required
parking
next
slide.
Please,
the
next
area
of
a
change
is
in
the
individual
special
uses
section
so
currently
in
the
code
under
the
cbd
section
of
the
code,
it
lists
the
uses
for
the
bank
driving
window.
Specifically,
it
is
a
special
use
currently,
and
that
was
under
the
special
use
section
of
the
code
so
that
it's
been
consolidated
and
moved
into
the
cbd
section
of
the
code
for
uniformity.
E
Next
slide,
please,
the
last
area
of
change
is
in
the
channel
district.
So
what
has
been
done
is
when
the
applicant
initially
submitted
the
request.
All
of
the
language
was
provided
with
the
proposed
changes
in
the
channel
district
in
the
code.
Currently
there's
one
table
that
is
utilized
for
the
permitted
uses
in
the
channel
district
and
there's
another
table
for
the
parking
required.
So
we
asked
to
consolidate
the
table
so
that
it
is
similar
to
the
cbd,
so
that
was
done.
E
The
applicant
consolidated
the
table
and
then
the
next
change
that
was
made
in
the
channel
district
was
the
reduction
of
the
parking
ratios
for
those
uses
in
the
channel
district
next
slide.
Please
so
next
steps,
so
we
held
the
public
information
meeting
in
july
and
that
at
that
time,
based
upon
the
feedback
from
the
public,
is
when
the
applicant
amended
the
request
and
narrow
their
request
to
the
the
channel
district
and
the
central
business
district.
E
Then
we're
before
you
today
for
the
workshop.
The
next
step
would
be
the
planning
commission
briefing
in
may
and
then
the
public
hearing
for
the
planning
commission
in
june.
This
will
come
back
before
you
council
for
first
and
second
reading
and
we're
looking
at
an
estimated
time
frame
of
july
and
august
so
with
possible
final
adoption
by
august.
For
this
request.
C
E
F
Thank
you
very
much,
stephen
benson
with
city
planning
I
just
wanted
to
emphasize.
This
is
a
short
slide
to
summarize
the
information
that
they
presented
to
you
some
time
ago
or
on
march
31st,
and
want
to
highlight
that
these
code
amendments
were
generated
through
a
comprehensive
and
sound
planning
process.
There
was
public
engagement
and
it
was,
it
was
comprehensive,
so
actions
that
have
been
taken
by
the
city
to
date
include
enhancing
all
the
different
mobility
options
that
exist
downtown
so
that
you
can
park
once
and
not
have
to
keep.
F
You
know
getting
in
your
car
just
to
park
and
move
a
couple
blocks
around
downtown
pricing
adjustments,
as
well
as
technology
advancements
with
with
the
parking
programs
and
systems,
and
so
this
privately
initiated
amendment,
even
though
it
is
privately
initiated.
We
did
work
closely
with
the
applicant
on
what's
being
proposed
next
slide.
F
What
we
would
like
to
do
going
forward
is
to
take
that
same
model
that
was
used
for
downtown.
That
was
spearheaded
by
the
downtown
partnership
and
apply
it
citywide
in
terms
of
developing
a
citywide
parking
master
plan.
The
recommendations
will
not
be
the
same.
The
strategies
will
probably
not
be
the
same,
but
this
will
help
us
establish
what
that
vision
should
be.
We
know
parking
is
always
a
hot
topic
of
interest.
F
R
Still
morning,
good
morning,
joel
mann,
who
is
our
parking
consultant
with
stantec,
should
be
sharing
a
screen
to
give
you
the
presentation.
A
G
I
have
to
go
in
seven
minutes.
I
would
like
to
vote
on
this
and
I
apologize
you
could
vote
without
me,
but
I
would
like
to
be
supportive
of
this
if,
if
you
happen
to
get
done
in
time
for
us
today,
okay.
G
R
How's
that
okay,
I
think
that'll,
be
all
right.
Okay,
well,
sorry
about
wasting
two
of
the
precious
seven
minutes
there.
So,
basically,
every
meeting
that
we
had
at
the
partnership
people
complained
about
parking,
so
we
knew
we
had
to
do
something
about
it.
So
we
embarked
on
this
comprehensive,
downtown
parking
plan.
It's
been
a
couple
years
and
kind
of
the
last
leg
of
it.
Now
is
getting
around
to
the
parking
codes.
R
It
was
a
fun
project.
It
did
include
a
lot
of
stakeholder
outreach.
You
know
within
the
downtown
community
consensus
building
and
again
these
codes
were
submitted.
This
code
language
was
submitted
about
two
years
ago,
so
it
already
feels
maybe
a
little
bit
stale,
but
still
relevant
and
still
kind
of
the
baby
steps
in
the
right
direction.
R
R
We
had
a
map
done
that
shows
all
of
the
area
we
have
for
parking.
This
doesn't
even
include
the
streets,
so
I'm
not
necessarily
convinced
that
parking
is
our
highest
and
best
use
in
our
downtown.
Not
could
come
to
your
similar
conclusions,
possibly,
and
then
we
decided
we
needed
to
know
where
all
of
the
parking
is
in
our
downtown.
So
we
have,
you
know,
have
it
all
in
a
big
spreadsheet.
R
You
know
who
manages
it
who
owns
it?
What's
the
cost
of
it?
What's
the
availability
of
it,
you
know
that
that
sort
of
thing.
So
now
we
have
all
that
mapped
out,
and
then
we
did
the
fun
part.
We
got
our
steps
in.
We
went
and
we
counted
how
many
cars
were
in
all
of
these
parking
lots
and
garages.
We
went
to
different
times
of
day.
We
went
at
different
times
of
the
week
and
we
came
to
some
conclusions
that
include
much
to
everyone's
surprise.
R
R
R
R
Let
me
give
you
some
sample
walking
distances
in
our
downtown.
I
mean
you
all
feel
familiar
with
your
downtown,
but
you
know
you
can
you
can
walk
from?
You
know
some
parking
availability
to
the
core
of
downtown
and
in
10
minutes
you
know.
I
think
people
need
to
just
kind
of
keep
up
with
the
fact
that
tampa
really
is
a
big
city
now
and
we
have
to
kind
of
get
out
of
our
old
habits.
R
You
guys
know
all
of
this,
I'm
not
showing
you
anything
new,
it's
just
when
you
think
about
how
compact
our
downtown
is.
You
know,
I
think
it's
a
pretty
fair
request
to
you
know
to
park,
maybe
a
little
bit
on
what
the
perimeter
might
be
so,
but
customers
don't
really
have
any
incentive
to
ask
for
anything
different
now,
the
city
as
stephen
benson
just
mentioned,
the
city
has
made
a
bunch
of
moves.
Since
the
study
was
published
to
try
to
you
know,
try
to
just
kind
of
keep
up
with
the
times.
R
Looking
at
broadening
the
way
you
can
pay
for
parking,
hopefully
know
before
you
go,
so
you
have
better
parking
information
before
you
even
come
downtown
working
on
potentially
upgrading
the
technology
to
offer.
You
maybe
like
a
hybrid
parking
pass
now,
because
you
have
that
hybrid
remote
work
environment,
so
you
don't
necessarily
need
a
monthly
parking
space
anymore,
just
for
a
minute
about
a
topic
about
development
and
parking
affordability.
R
There's
some
surprising
facts
in
here.
Well,
you,
you
probably
know
this
you're
more
in
tune
than
most
people,
but
parking
has
a
huge
impact
on
housing.
That's
affordable,
a
very
strong
relation
intuitively.
You
know
the
construction
costs
go
way
up
to
build
parking.
Let's
also
remember
that
less
space
for
living
versus
storage
for
cars
is
likely
sacrifice.
R
I
have
a
a
good
visual
of
that
here
in
a
second
here's,
some
just
like
some
facts
and
figures
on
the
cost
of
parking.
You
know
what
if
it
was
unbundled,
meaning
what,
if
you
paid
for
your
rent,
separate
from
your
your
rent
for
living
versus
your
rent
for
your
car.
I
think
that
would
help
a
lot
of
people
with
affordability.
R
R
R
I
think
that
you
all
are
on
board
with
the
fact
that
now
it's
the
time
to
to
start
making
these
baby
steps
in
the
right
direction,
and
then
the
city
staff
can
kind
of
keep
that
going
with
a
more
city,
raw
city-wide
look
again.
We
involve
both
the
public
and
private
sector
in
both
coming
up
with
the
solutions
and
then
continuing
on
with
the
solutions.
R
This
talks
about
that
a
little
bit,
there's
a
role
for
all
of
us
in
this,
including
the
private
parking
operators
who
have
been
a
good
partner
so
far
on
this,
so
we're
here
in
this
step
the
administrative
changes
to
to
correct
the
market.
R
R
Basically
to
kind
of
summarize
it.
We
we
kind
of
cut
everything
in
half
we're,
not
necessarily
saying
parking
maximums,
so
the
developers
can
only
build
so
much
but
we're
at
least
saying
if
they
don't
want
to
build
as
much,
they
should
be
able
to
do
that
so
that
this
kind
of
goes
for
the
different
use
tables.
On
that
I
will
say
that,
you're
that
the
code
is
a
very
complicated
beast,
and
I
don't
envy
you
all
trying
to
to
understand.
All
of
that.
I
learned
a
lot.
R
We're
also
trying
to
make
parking
a
little
bit
more
flexible,
so,
for
instance,
for
one
instead
of
building
one
vehicle
space,
you
can
put
two
motorcycles
in
there.
You
could
put
you
know
four
or
more
bicycles
in
there,
so
just
giving
those
development
community
a
little
bit
more
flexibility
with
how
they
meet
the
parking
requirements.
R
Almost
done
so
you
know
kind
of
this
is
the
next
steps
for
what
we
need
to
be
doing.
Let
me
just
get
caught
up.
Let
me
go
to
the
next
slide,
because
it
starts
to
talk
more
specifics
too.
So
again,
the
development
community
is
not
capped
with
what
they
provide,
meaning
no
maximums,
but
that
is.
That
is
an
option
for
you
to
do.
Some
cities
have
done
that,
but
we
did.
R
Here's
a
couple
more
slides
with
kind
of
the
the
overall
flavor
of
what
we're
trying
to
do,
trying
to
add
alternative
methods
to
meet
the
park
requirements.
I
mentioned
the
motorcycles,
the
bike
parking
that
sort
of
thing
and
then,
if,
if
a
developer
wants
to
have
an
alternative
parking
study
to
show
that
they
don't
need
as
many
parking
spaces
there's
an
allowance
for
that
as
well.
R
Second
to
last
slide
and
then,
as
lashawn
mentioned
just
kind
of
trying
to
streamline
some
of
it,
there
was
a
lot
of
tables
and
language
and
everything
else,
so
I'm
just
trying
to
make
it
a
little
bit
easier
to
read
and
follow,
and
then
just
this
last
slide
is
just
some
some
future
steps
for
you
to
consider
again
this.
This
information
that
we
submitted
feels
a
little
bit
rusty
to
me
and
you
might
even
want
to
take
it
further
than
we
suggested
that
we
go.
We
were
just
trying
to
keep
moving
that
needle.
R
So
you
know
there's
lots
of
other
suggestions
on
here.
You
could
you
know,
could
you
could
potentially
just
even
remove
all
of
the
parking
requirements
and
let
the
development
community
decide
what
they
want
to
do.
So
I
don't
want
to
lecture
you.
I
know
you're
all
up
to
speed
on
all
of
this
all
of
these
things,
but
I
did
want
to
have
the
opportunity
to
come
and
talk
about
what
we
suggested
as
the
next
step.
C
I
agree
with,
I
think
everything
that
you've
you've
presented.
You
know
the
elimination
of
parking,
minimums
or
reduction
of
parking
minimums
by
50
in
this
case
will
help
move
our
city
or
at
least
our
central
business
district
forward
to
where
it
needs
to
be,
because
not
everybody's
going
to
own
a
car.
C
We
want
to
promote
walkability,
we
want
to
promote
use
of
bicycles,
you
know
and,
as
you
describe
downtown
I
was
here
sunday
I
went
to
church,
I
parked
near
sacred
heart
and
I
just
decided
to
walk
downtown
all
the
way
to
the
public's
in
the
channel
district
to
union
station.
I
just
went
and
took
pictures
the
jackson
house,
whatever
it's,
it's
not
a
bad
walk,
and
you
know
it
was
hot
and
it
wasn't
miserable
it's
doable
and
we
need
to
promote
that,
and
I
think
this
is
great
councilman
carlson.
G
Yeah
excellent
presentation:
can
we
vote
to
transmit
or
he's
going
to
make
the
motion
yeah?
My
question
was
whether
we
can
vote
now
like.
C
L
Thank
you
man
briefly,
I
miss
crush.
Thank
you
for
your
hard
work.
You
and
I
have
been
talking
about
this
for
years,
and
it's
finally
coming
to
fruition
mr
b
day,
mr
benson,
everybody.
Thank
you
for
your
help.
In
this.
This
is
going
to
make
living
downtown
more
affordable,
more
convenient.
I
am
going
to
say
this,
though
the
linchpin
in
this
is
going
to
be.
Hopefully,
when
the
all
the
transportation
goes
through,
we
can
have
circulators
running
through
our
downtown,
so
those
people
that
say
well,
I
don't
want
to
park
five
blocks
away.
L
They
can
say
okay
I'll
park,
that
five
blocks
away
and
I'll
jump
on
the
circuit
leader
to
get
to
where
I
need
to
go
again.
Thank
you
very
much
for
your
hard
work.
Councilman
miranda.
Thank
you,
mr
chairman.
I'm
glad
you
went
to
church
here
on
sunday.
However,
I
want
to
make
sure
that
those
that
go
to
church
on
sunday
can
still
get
free
parking.
We
had
that
arrangement
made
some
time
back
and
I
want
to
make
sure
that
it
has
nothing
to
do
with
changing
that.
No.
L
C
C
E
Yes
and
if
lashonda
city
planning,
if
I
can
have
the
presentation,
the
staff
presentation
back
up
and
then
eric
will
go
ahead
and
present
to
you
the
publicly
initiated
amendments
and
then
we'll
wrap
it
up
with
the
scheduling.
Thank
you.
T
T
So
this
is
a
these
are
privately
or
publicly
initiated
text
amendments
primarily
from
staff.
Some
are
related
to
changes
in
florida's
statute
that
we're
trying
to
catch
up
with
others
are
initiated
by
staff
in
an
effort
to
make
our
code
read
better
and
flow.
Better
next
slide,
please
so,
as
it
says,
five
are
initiated
by
as
a
result
of
changes
to
florida
statute
and
five
are
initiated
by
staff
itself
next
next
slide.
T
This
is
just
a
list
of
the
things
that
are
changing
in
the
code,
so
these
are
all
different
sections
that
are
going
to
be
touched
by
their
changes
next
slide.
So
the
first
changes
to
commercial
vehicles
in
residential
districts.
This
is
not
part
of
the
slide
presentation.
I
believe
I
just
want
to
just
switch
this
real,
quick,
then
I'll
go
back
to
the
presentation.
T
You
know
some
people
drive
large
pickup
trucks
that
might
trigger
almost
being
a
commercial
vehicle,
and
then
we
have
commercial
equipment
and
residential
areas
that
would
allow
right
now,
if
you're,
to
clarify
one.
If
you're
dropping
something
off
at
somebody's
house
loads
of
delivering
you
a
dishwasher
or
a
washing
machine,
they
can
be
parked
there
for
the
hour,
they're,
unloading
equipment
and
installing
it
and
also,
if
you
are,
if
you're
driving,
you
drive
a
commercial
vehicle,
that's
no
greater
than
nine
by
twenty
two.
T
L
T
C
T
Did
I
lose
the
presentation?
Oh
I'm
back.
Thank
you
guys
in
the
back.
Next
is
food
trucks.
Food
trucks
are
also.
This
is
a
change
based
on
florida
statute.
The
state
preempted
us
from
regulating
food
trucks.
Previously
they
were
a
special
use
on
our
code
and
you
had
to
go
through
the
special
use
process.
We
also
did
not
define
food
trucks.
We
are
adding
a
definition
which
is
just
mimicking
the
definition
of
the
state
of
florida.
T
So
it's
a
mobile
food
dispensing
vehicle,
which
is
any
vehicle
that
is
licensed
at
a
public
suit,
public
service,
food
establishment,
that's
self-propelled
or
otherwise
movable
and
it's
supposed
to
maintain
all
its
own
utilities,
so
water
power
for
the
like
power
for
the
for
the
cooking
and
all
that
kind
of
supposed
to
be
in
the
vehicle,
no,
no
more,
where
you're
not
supposed
to
plug
it
in
you're,
not
supposed
to
bring
an
extra
generator
to
be
placed
on
the
property.
None
of
that
supposed
to
take
place.
Councilman
c.
T
L
Thank
you
chairman.
I
hate
to
bring
this
up,
but
now
we
have
remembered
now
you
have
a
boat,
it's
going
to
be
behind
the
house.
The
front
of
the
house
champion
from
your
yard
forward
can
be
from
the
point
of
the
20
foot
back.
You
cannot
park
a
boat
on
the
city
street
or
in
front
of
your
house.
You
have
to
have
the
boat
even
with
a
wall
at
the
front.
Now
we're
saying
that
you
can
have
a
food
truck
in
the
front,
no,
the
future
extremely
commercial
properties,
but
the
food
truck
and
parking
you're.
L
T
T
L
T
The
next
change
is
to
alcoholic
beverage
enforcement
right
now.
The
code
requires
us
to
give
somebody
30
day
notice
that
will
shorten
it
down
to
15
days
in
the
event
as
a
health
safety
issue,
the
bonus
provisions
for
gray
water.
This
again
is
a
result
of
state
statute.
Changing
this
is
to
address
bonus
densities.
If
you're
providing
100
percent
or
60
75
percent
of
gray
water.
To
your
to
the
proposed
development
25,
you
can
get
a
bonus
intensity
of
bend
density
of
25.
T
If
you're
100
service
through
gray
water,
you
can
get
a
30
bump
in
your
density.
Explain
what
great
water
is
to
the
place?
Yes,
sir,
so
gray
water
for
those
who
are
not
familiar
with
the
term
is
basically
recycled
water.
The
city
has
it
in
some
areas,
the
county
has
it
in
some
areas,
it's
water,
that's
been
treated
and
is
usually
primarily
for
for
landscaping.
Is
that
using
potable
water
next
slide,
please
so
home-based
businesses?
This
again
is
a
result
of
the
state
preempting
local
governments.
T
Some
of
the
changes
in
that
just
so
council
will
be
aware,
is
the
state
now
currently
the
city
does
not
allow
for
outside
individuals
working
at
a
house.
They
don't
live
at
the
state
preempted
and
allows
up
to
two
individuals
who
do
not
live
at
the
residence
to
be
there.
T
L
T
L
T
L
Do
we
because
what
I've
seen
is
some
the
complaints
that
I've
received
at
the
office,
sometimes
most
of
the
time
they
tell
me
it's
not
seven
days,
it's
two
or
three
days
and
it
keeps
changing.
So
how
do
we
go?
How
are
we
going
to
keep
track
and
how
is
the
person
now
going
to
be
able
to
keep
up
with
all
the
demand
on
checking
all
these
things.
T
Well,
councilman
code
enforcement
is
very
active
and
regulated,
I'm
not
saying
they're
not,
but
and
what
our
policy
is
that
we
we
convey
to
people
who
want
to
operate
on
airbnb
type
of
use,
because
our
code
says
it
has
to
be
on
a
weekly
basis
if
you
rent
it
on
monday,
tuesday
you're
not
allowed
to
you're,
not
supposed
to
be
renting
it
or
advertising
it
for
rent
until
the
following
monday
or
tuesday.
So
you
have
to
have
you
know
if
you're
only
running
it
for
two
days.
T
You
have
to
wait
another
five
days
after
that
last
person
moves
out
to
move
in
from
what
I
understand
is
codenverpin
actively
looks
at
the
webpage
and
they
will
contact
individuals
when
they're
advertising
faster
than
that
plus.
Believe
me,
we
get
plenty
of
phone
calls
in
the
zoning
office
too,
for
people
that
do
complain
about
the
neighborhoods
again,
that
was
a
preemption
from
the
state,
so
we're
sort
of
whatever
we
had
on
the
books
when
they,
when
they
preempted
us,
is
what
we
can
regulate.
So
that's
not
changing
the.
T
T
Next
slide,
I
believe,
is
number
six.
This
is
again
a
result
of
a
state
preemption.
The
state
of
florida
in
the
florida
building
code
passed
a
preemption
that
would
prohibit
state,
prohibit
local
governments
from
regulating
design
standards,
except
in
historic
districts
and
within
cras.
Accepting
cases
where
the
city
has
a
development
review
committee
we're
so
what
we're
doing
we're
changing
our
drc,
which
is
development,
review
compliance,
we're
changing
some
language
in
that
to
have
language
that
will
make
it
where
citywide.
T
T
This
is
it's
a
code
section
for
transfer
of
development
rights,
which
is
when
somebody
can
take.
They
have
excess
square
footage
on
a
piece
of
property
and
they
can
sell
it
to
move
to
somewhere
else.
The
code
did
not
specify
the
process
for
that.
So
that's
where
this
language
is
coming
in
to
make
a
formal
decision
required
and
we're
flipping
two
sentences.
T
When
the
code
was
amended
a
few
years
ago,
they
just
the
section
just
added
a
sentence,
removing
the
section
that
says
no
waivers
to
this.
These
requirements
under
as
the
last
sentence,
so
people
can't
get
waivers
to
allow
things
to
be
in
certain
areas.
So
just
to
clean
up
on
that
section,
number
eight
is
street
cafes.
T
T
T
This
is
for
formal
decisions.
I
want
to
use
this
as
an
example,
mr
sitra,
from
your
time
on
the
vrb,
we'll
probably
recognize
some
of
these
things.
Let
me
go
back
to
doc
cam.
T
So
this
is
a
typical
on
this.
This
is
the
southern
lot
of
a
lot
split.
This
is
the
northern
portion.
The
existing
house
is
needs
to
be
seven
feet
from
that
property
line,
and
this
in
this
example,
I
believe
it's
like
two
or
three
feet
away.
Instead
of
making
that
person
come
before
the
vrb
and
ask
for
a
variance
to
establish
hardship,
this
would
allow
the
zoning
administrator
through
the
formal
decision
process
to
recognize
that
reduced
setback,
enabling
this
lot
to
be
developed.
T
What
happens
with
the
variance
is
once
the
board
says.
Yes,
you
can
have
that
reduction
from
seven
down
to
two.
If
somebody
in
the
future
knocks
this
house
down,
they
can
build
to
that
same
footprint.
That's
on
this
now,
which
would
enable
them
to
keep
that
that
reduced
setback
instead
of
having
meeting
meeting
the
requirement
of
the
seven
foot
side
yard.
T
C
L
One
thing
and
another
thing
is:
when
you
see
neighborhoods,
that
are
splitting
houses
and
having
more
and
more
people
live
in
the
house,
and
I
see
cars
parked
all
over
the
lawn.
Is
there
any
prohibition
against
that.
L
Find
you
won't
be
able
to
retire
in
your
lifetime,
you're
going
to
need
10
lives
to
finish
that
one,
but
I
mean
that
the
cars
that
are
parked
on
the
right-of-ways
or
on
the.
In
other
words,
we
see
all
these
no
parking
signs.
F
L
R
Karen
kress
tampa
downtown
partnership.
What
they're
calling
street
cafes
we
refer
to
as
parklets
and
during
lift
up
local.
We
were
given
the
opportunity
to
we
put
four
of
them
in
our
downtown
and
they
have
been
very
successful,
so
I'm
here
just
to
speak
in
support
of
keeping
the
street
cafe
program
going.
Thank
you.
Thank.
D
My
name
is
andrew
moore,
1901,
west
aleene
street,
I'm
here
today
before
you
because
of
ambiguity.
D
D
I
have
some
issues
with
one
of
the
the
changes
that
have
been
presented
for
the
public
text
amendments
and
I
wanted
to
show
that
and
explain
that
to
you
today.
D
D
D
D
D
D
Our
neighborhood
never
asked
along
this
for
a
definition
of
commercial
vehicles.
This
has
been
something
thrown
in
either
by
staff
or
county
or
city
attorney.
I
want
the
ambiguity
taken
out
of
this.
I
want
to
make
it
so
that
these
vehicles
that
are
on
residential
property,
that
are
clearly
commercial
vehicles,
cannot
park
there.
D
We've
been
here
before
the
council,
my
neighborhood's
been
here
many
times.
We've
asked
for
help
with
this.
I
don't
understand
why
it's
always
an
issue
and
why
ambiguity
always
finds
its
way
to
work
in,
and
then
code
enforcement
or
whoever
cannot
handle
the
problem,
and
I've
asked
you
today
when
you
do
these
text
amendments
that
you
make
sure
that
you're
very
clear
in
what
these
are
and
what
we're
asking
for.
D
D
M
Sometimes
you
know,
you
don't
know
things
until
people
point
things
out
and
the
gentleman
just
pointed
at
pointing
something
out.
Can
you
elaborate
on
what
he
talked
about
because
he
makes
it
not
a
point.
In
my
opinion,
though,.
T
Yes,
sir,
eric
cotton
development
coordination
just
going
back
to
the
definition
of
commercial
vehicle,
the
vehicles
that
he
should
act,
mr
moore
showed
in
the
in
the
photos.
Those
would
be
commercial
equipment
because
they're
vehicles
owned
used
or
designed
or
intended
for
commercial
purposes.
That
is
the
clear
definition.
Those
vehicles
are
owned
by
a
commercial
entity,
they're
not
parked
in
the.
T
If
you
look
through
the
they're
designed
they're
owned
by
a
commercial
business,
they're
used
for
commercial
purposes,
and
if
you
look
at
the
when
we
allow
the
commercial
equipment
in
residential
districts
in
in
none
of
these
none
of
these
cases,
it's
like
they're,
not
delivering
goods
to
assert
to
a
consumer,
because
they're
just
parked
there
in
the
morning
and
then
this
second
part
wouldn't
fall
into
place
because
the
pers,
the
far
as
I
know,
none
of
the
people
who
work
for
that
business
specifically
live
there.
They
all
live
elsewhere.
T
They
take
their
vehicles
home
whatever
they
do
with
them
at
night.
So
in
that
specific
case
it
doesn't
it's
not
going
to
get
triggered.
It's
not
they're,
not
those
are
not
considered
personal
vehicles.
Mr
moore
and
I
spoke
during
one
of
the
other
presentations
and
I
can
go
back.
The
simone
who
was
working
on
this
with
me
is
out
on
maternity
leave
she's
back
june
july
june.
T
If
council
wishes,
we
can
pull
this
and
move
it
forward
in
the
next
cycle,
which
will
be
the
june
cycle
coming
up
or
july
cycle,
or
we
can
move
forward.
How
much
time
would
we
have
to
make
a
change?
I
don't
know
we
can
make
the
change
before
transmittal
yeah
yeah,
so
we
can
make.
We
can
keep
this
on
track.
I
could
talk
to
this
moment.
She
comes
back
and
make
this
change,
and
the
next
language
of
something
council
would
want
to
remove.
The
main
include
portion.
C
J
C
G
C
T
T
E
I'm
yes
lashawn
doc
with
city
planning
and
if
I
can
have
the
next
slide,
please
so
next
we'll
talk
about
the
processes
and
the
next
steps.
So
what
we
will
do
is
schedule
a
public
information
meeting
and
we
will
hold
that
meeting
with
the
public.
Yes
thank
you
and
then
we
would
go
to
planning
commission
for
briefing
and
then
from
there
in
may,
and
then
we
have
the
planning
commission,
public
hearing
and
the
changes
that
we
spoke
about
that
could
possibly
be
made
on
this
last
amendment.
E
We
can
certainly
incorporate
it,
bring
it
to
council
by
first
reading
and
if
additional
changes
are
needed
at
that
point
we
can
still
make
the
changes
and
then
it
would
just
delay
second
reading
if
needed,
but
there's
still
time
and
then
the
second
reading
would
be
around
august
or
september
with
final
adoption
on
these
set
of
publicly
initiated
amendments.
E
So
I
would
ask
council
if
you
could
please
make
a
motion
to
for
staff
to
transmit
the
publicly
initiated
amendments
to
the
planning
commission.
C
T
Before
sean
walks
away,
we
have
been
sending
out
memos
when
we
had
new
and
aircon
development
coordination.
We
had
we've
been
hiring
new
employees,
so
you
all
would
recognize
their
faces
when
they
come
up.
Lashawn,
you
all
know
for
forever,
so
to
speak.
Lashon
is
was
working
for
stephen
in
city
planning,
she's.
T
T
C
You
you
go
above
and
beyond,
and
we
certainly
appreciate
all
your
hard
work.
So
I'm
glad
that
you're
here.
L
Don't
come
back,
don't.
B
M
Q
C
C
B
C
C
Councilman
miranda,
councilman
siegel
in
favor
aye
any
opposed
we
apologize,
but
we
appreciate
your
patience.
Thank
you,
mr
speaker,
information
reports
in
your
business.
L
An
accommodation
to
miss
freya,
gardner
human
resource
management
system
manager
will
be
retired
from
city
tampa
june
3rd
2022.
After
22
years
of
service
of
the
city
of
tampa.
She
was
instrumental
in
elimination
of
paper
cards
and
bringing
in
color
line
all
the
computer
system
and
she
was
continue
being
her
pay
employee,
she's,
the
one
that
makes
the
payroll
checks
to
make
sure
everybody
gets
paid
and
so
forth.
But
I'd
like
to
make
it
off-site.
C
L
I
would
like
to
make
a
motion
to
present
a
combination
to
ms
una
garvey,
our
convention
center
director,
who
will
be
retired
from
the
city
of
tampa,
may
27
2022
after
40
years
of
search
of
city.
Tap
I'd
like
to
make
this
presentation
here
at
may,
19
2022..
I
wanted
to
make
that
motion,
so
mine
is
done
just
a
second.
I'm
sorry
motion.
L
Opposed
one
more
going
back
to
the
original
maker
that
I
was,
I
move
to
be
removed,
may
5th
2022
agenda
a
request.
A
report
from
chief,
barbara
tripp
of
the
police
fire
department
tampa
fire
rescue
pertaining
to
the
progress
of
secure
locations
that
are
needed
for
the
tampa.
Fire
department
have
been
assured
by
the
administration
that
this
item
will
be
discussed
during
the
fiscal
year
and
is
in
the
process
of
getting
the
consultants
report
finding
in
coordination
with
both.
C
M
Mrs
carol
gorman
sent
the
letter
out
second
letter
out
and
I
got
some
other
calls
from
some
other
community
leaders
and
remnants
to
accommodate
for
chris
freeman.
I
did
send
something
to
the
atu,
but
I
found
out
that
they
have
some
rules
as
pertaining
to
being
a
member,
but
I'd
like
to
go
and
make
a
combination
for
mr
chris
freeman
code,
enforcer
officer
to
be
set
forth
for
the
next
accommodation
date
for
counseling
goods.
C
M
All
right
and
the
last
one
is
I
talked
about
this
morning.
If
mr
shelby
can
help
me
get
up
a
letter
drafted
for
the
hud
secretary
or
under
secretary
in
reference
to
the
civil
oaks
situation
here
in
tampa.