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From YouTube: TCC 6/16/22
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A
A
A
A
D
Good
morning,
this
is
the
july
16
2022,
regular
meeting
of
the
city
of
tampa
city
council
meeting
held
in
city
council
chambers
on
the
third
floor
of
old
city
hall,
315
east
kennedy
boulevard
here
in
tampa
florida
at
9
00
a.m.
The
public
is
able
to
attend
this
meeting
in
person
or
view
it
by
cable,
television
on
spectrum,
channel
640
or
frontier
channel
15
or
by
the
internet
via
www.tampa.com.
D
D
Finally,
for
the
memorandum
for
the
chair,
the
order
of
business
for
city
council
meetings
is
is
changed
to
move
staff
reports
and
unfinished
business
to
take
place
immediately
after
request
by
the
public
for
reconsideration
of
legislative
items.
Could
I
have
a
motion
waiving
city
council
center
rules,
procedures,
lying
public
comment
by
cmt.
B
E
B
B
Okay,
all
in
favor,
say
aye
motion
made
by
councilman
scott
go
second
by
council
miranda,
all
in
favor,
say
aye
aye
any
opposed.
I
believe
27
is
being
asked
to
be
continued
to
july.
14Th.
D
B
Later
promotion
made
by
councilman
goode
seconded
by
councilman
miranda,
all
the
favor
saying.
F
B
F
F
F
D
Believe
that
you
have
a
memo
for
councilman
carlson
to
continue
item
63
and
64..
Let's.
B
G
Yes
63
mr
chair,
yes,
63
and
64..
I
would
like
to
move
to
october,
please
how
about
october
20th.
B
Let's
make
a
staff
reports,
please
okay,
motion
made
by
councilman
carl
goose
said:
sorry,
60
66.
You
also.
G
Wanted
to
move
kelsey
mcgraw.
Yes,
please
can
we
move
that
one
to
I
think
I
was
trying
to
move
it
to
august
august
25th.
Okay,
thank.
B
D
Do
we
we
a
couple
things
item
65?
Did
that
get
continued
as
well?
Yes,
okay,
the
other
thing,
one
correction.
I
think
we
continued
item
27
that
shouldn't
be
continued.
D
It
has
to
be
set
for
a
public
hearing
and
that
there
will
be.
F
D
G
And
I
apologize
I'm
a
couple
minutes
late
number
68.
I
assume
you
moved
already.
Yes,
I
just
wanted
to
say
it
sounds
like
our
attorney
is
coming
back
soon,
but
in
the
in
the
event,
we
need
a
policy
in
the
event
that
that
our
attorney
goes
out.
G
B
And
that's
understood
if
mr
shelby
would
have
gone
for
any
more
instead
of
time.
I
would
love
to
okay,
so
we're
waiting
until
the
what
is
it
the
14th.
I
Good
morning,
mr
chairman
and
members
of
council,
we
have
the
pleasure
this
morning
of
the
atu
employee,
of
the
mont
accommodation,
mr
antoine
williams,
and
mr
williams
is
out
of
the
automotive
equipment
operator.
So
I
guess
mr
steve
will
tell
us
a
little
bit
about
that
job
description.
So
we'll
know
what's
going
on
and
then
I'll
come
back
with
the
accommodation,
simon.
J
I'm
happy
to
be
here
today
to
introduce
you
to
mr
antoine
williams,
the
atu
employee
of
the
month
of
the
month.
Antoine
williams,
is
a
very
dedicated,
hard-working
employee.
He
began
his
career
with
the
city
of
tampa's,
neighborhood
enhancement,
division
as
part
of
the
east
tampa
cra
summer
youth
program
in
2017..
J
As
soon
as
he
was
eligible,
he
applied
and
was
hired
as
a
full-time
employee
in
the
department
as
a
service
attendant
through
hard
work
and
continued
dedication.
He
obtained
his
commercial
driver's
license
and
has
been
promoted
to
an
automotive
equipment
operator.
One
mr
williams
is
a
true
success
story
on
the
benefits
of
investing
in
our
youth
programs
and
providing
opportunities
for
growth
and
development.
J
He
is
a
great
example
for
others
and
always
has
a
positive
message
for
the
new
round
of
summer
youth
that
join
the
program.
He
is
a
great
asset
to
the
team
and
to
the
city
of
tampa,
and
now
I
would
like
to
introduce
neighborhood
and
community
affairs
administrator
oceanwind
to
say
a
few
words.
Please
good.
L
A
L
N
Good
morning,
council
keith
o'connor,
neighborhood
enhancement
manager.
I
just
wanted
to
reiterate
what
administrated
these
are
your
true
unsung
health
from
up,
and
I
appreciate
that.
J
I
Before
I
let
antoine
speak,
gentlemen,
you
know
mayor
castro
sent
the
letter,
but
no
one
could
be
more
prouder
than
the
person
who
represents
district
five
and
someone
who
had
an
opportunity
to
be
a
part
of
our
youth
program
in
this
temple.
I
That's
why
I
always
talk
about
that
program
is
so
viable
and
having
young
people
to
be
a
part
of
the
process
of
the
city
to
be
able
to
have
a
summer
job
work,
get
an
opportunity
to
see
what
goes
on
in
the
city
and
then
get
upward
mobility
to
get
a
job
within
the
city.
That's
what
makes
me
so
proud
to
say
that
you
did
it.
I
remember
sal,
told
me
the
first
time
we
did.
I
He
says
we
got
a
young
man
he's
going
to
be
elevated
and
that's
why
I'm
so
happy
that
we
have
these
type
of
programs
and
want
to
enhance
those
programs
for
opportunities
for
those
who
may
have
opportunity.
So,
on
behalf
of
tampa
city
council,
in
recognition
of
antoine
williams,
18
employee
of
the
month
for
your
hard
working
dedication
as
an
armored
equipment
operator
with
the
neighborhood
enhancement
division,
antoine
began
his
career
with
the
city
of
temple,
enhancement
division
as
a
part-time
work
in
east
tampa.
I
The
city
of
city
council
is
proud
to
present
this
accomplished
antoine,
who
exemplifies
the
type
of
employee
who
everyone
admires,
expects
and
cheers
to
success,
you're
a
great
asset
to
the
city
of
tampa
and
again.
Let
me
shake
your
hand
because,
for
me,
I'm
very
proud.
You
can
tell
my
voice
because
we
had
somebody
who
walked
walking
and
did
yes.
So
I
appreciate
you
appreciate
you
all
right.
I
I
M
D
How
you
doing
we're
in
council,
mike
mcarthur,
with
steph's
towing
service,
on
behalf
of
todd,
step
and
steph's,
towing,
service
and
and
everybody
on
our
team
we'd
like
to
present
you
with
a
50
gift
card
to
texas
roadhouse,
take
some
time
off,
go
to
dinner
and
appreciate
everything
you
do.
First
yep.
J
Good
morning,
how
are
you
good
you
work
for
sues?
Yes,
you
do
I've
known
her
for
a
while,
you
know,
and
if
she
says
that
she's
supporting
you,
that's
a
big
statement.
You
know,
on
behalf
of
a
couple
of
different
folks,
we'd
like
to
recognize
you
and
and
provide
you
with
some
gift
certificates,
so
you
can
enjoy
yourself
and
you
might
take
susie
with
you
on
behalf
of
the
chicho's
restaurant
group,
we're
providing
you
with
a
50
gift
certificate.
J
You
can
enjoy
yourself
at
one
of
their
restaurants
for
breakfast
lunch
or
dinner
on
behalf
of
the
ymca,
not
free,
you
don't
have
time
to
go
the
y,
but
but
I'm
going
to
give
you
one
anyway,
so
you
can
go
to
the
y
and
enjoy
yourself
over
there
and
on
behalf
of
yummy
house,
china
bistro,
you
can
enjoy
yourself
over
there
and
then
last
but
not
least,
bella
brava
is
providing
you
with
a
50
gift
certificate,
so
you
can
enjoy
yourself
over
there.
So
that's
a
lunch
or
dinner.
J
G
Thank
you
so
much
for
everything,
you've
done
and
and
and
thanks
for
all
you're
going
to
do
in
the
future.
We
appreciate
everything.
Thank
you.
Q
Yes,
sir,
and
I'd
like
to
echo
that
thank
you
for
everything
you've
done
what
you
do
is
very
honorable
work
and
you're
investing
in
in
young
people's
lives,
and
so
you
can,
you
know,
look
at
your
time
here
and
continuing
here
is
is
just
making
that
really
critical
investment
and
it's
been
recognized
by
your
peers
and
that's
a
big
deal
that
doesn't
come
easily.
So
congratulations
all
right.
F
R
I
want
to
say
thank
you
as
well,
and
I
think
it's
amazing
how
you
are
able
to
start
as
a
youth
and
then
choose
to
just
continue
the
path,
because
city
employment
has
a
lot
of
great
benefits
and
wonderful
things
and
I'm
proud
of
you
as
a
union
member
as
a
former
union
member.
So
I
think
it's
really
wonderful
and
continue
on
with
what
you're
doing
and
who
knows
you,
may
you
may
be
running
the
department
before
everything's
said
and
done.
So
congratulations.
H
H
Those
that
take
small
steps
are
the
ones
that
make
it
all
the
way
up
to
another
foot
level,
and
in
your
case
this
is
your
first
or
second
or
third
step.
But
I
can
see
in
you
that
your
determination,
your
ability
to
keep
going
forward
and
helping
people
is
what
it
takes
and
remember.
Local
1464
is
what
keeps
the
tampa
city
of
tampa
moving
and
clean
and
wonderful.
H
So
thank
you
very
much
for
all
the
work
that
all
you
do,
no
matter
where
you
work
at
in
the
city
or
4
000
employees
are
looking
you
say
now.
If
he
can
do
it,
so
can
I
so
you're
leading
you're,
giving
an
inspiration
to
people
who
might
just
think
of
coming
to
work?
You
know
eight
to
five
or
whatever,
but
you
had
separated
your
experience
and
doing
your
work
to
faster
your
ability
and
congratulations
getting
the
award.
B
I
But
he
feel
compelled
to
want
to
come
up
and
bless
you.
This
is
coach
what
I
call
pastor
william
addiction.
Okay,
he's
a
long-time
hero,
he's
tapping
his
community
he's
also
been
there
for
young
folks
to
make
sure
that
we
have
opportunities
in
our
communities
and
christopher
wants
to
bless
you
all
right.
How
you
doing.
J
Good
good
morning,
council
person,
I
am
the
reverend
villar
j
dixon,
the
founder
and
ceo
of
the
coach
foundation
and
the
former
school
teacher
and
at
the
age
of
90
years
old.
I
want
to
invest
in
our
youth,
so
I
know
they
say,
check
and
verify
it
may
not
be
any
good.
So
what
I
want
to
give
you
is
a
ceremony
on
this
saturday
at
one:
zero,
zero,
two
east,
dr
martin
luther
king,
I'll,
give
you
another
gift
card,
that's
good
to
go
to
the
heart!
Q
You,
sir,
it's
my
great
pleasure
here
today
to
give
the
officer
of
the
month
commendation
to
angelica
torres.
If
she
would,
how
are
you
ma'am?
It's
a
real
pleasure
to
meet
you.
Thank
you.
Yes,
ma'am.
How
are
you
doing
I?
I
did
some
research
on
this
wonderful,
wonderful,
individual
who
formerly
was
in
the
united
states
marine
corps
and
now
does
wonderful
work
here
in
the
city
of
tampa
on
mental
health,
in
the
community
and
for
our
officers,
and
I
would
like
to
invite
chief
bennett
if
you'd
like
to
come
up
ma'am.
Q
S
S
While
she
was
assigned
to
a
school,
she
would
regularly
meet
with
our
behavioral
health
unit
leadership
at
the
assigned
school
and
assist
with
the
development
of
the
unit.
Her
expertise
in
behavioral
health
was
evident.
She
took
a
very
proactive
role
in
helping
formulate
ideas
and
make
recommendations
that
would
be
used
in
the
program's
operational
success.
S
During
her
time
with
this
unit,
she
has
continued
to
develop
her
knowledge
of
the
mental
health
field.
Related
to
law
enforcement,
she
has
immersed
herself
in
studying
statutes
surrounding
baker,
acts
the
care
and
concern
that
she
demonstrates
on
a
daily
basis
for
the
individuals
she
has
in
her
caseload
are
evident
during
the
weekly
staffing
meetings.
S
She
vigorously
advocates
for
her
clients
ensuring
that
they
receive
the
services
they
so
need
and
deserve
recently
officer
torres
was
hand
selected
to
attend
the
international
association
of
chiefs
of
police
symposium
on
officer
safety
and
wellness
there.
She
developed
a
deeper
desire
to
bring
back
what
she
learned
from
the
symposium
to
help
create
an
internal
officer
wellness
program
at
tampa,
pd
she's,
currently
working
towards
establishing
an
on-call
procedure
for
the
chaplain
program
to
provide
better
access
for
officers
when
the
need
arises
to
speak
to
a
police
chaplain.
S
S
S
While
officer
torres
is
young
to
our
department,
she
carries
herself
and
demonstrates
the
knowledge
of
a
very
tenured
officer.
She
hasn't
been
an
invaluable
asset
to
our
behavioral
health
unit.
For
these
reasons,
officer
angelica
torres
has
been
selected
as
sampa
police
department's
officer
of
the
month
for
june
2022.
S
And
council,
I
just
like
to
say:
I
know
that
you
guys
have
heard
me
say
before
that
wellness
is
very
important.
Behavioral
health
is
very
important
to
our
community
and
our
department
and
officer
torres
is
leading
the
way
in
making
sure
that
this
very
important
initiative
gets
moved
forward.
So
I'm
especially
grateful
for
her
hard
work.
Q
Thank
you,
that's
what
I
get
for
taking
nyquil
last
night.
It
affects
me
significantly
well
in
before
we
begin
with
the
the
gifts
and
whatnot,
I
would
like
to
present
this
officer
of
the
month
commendation
to
tampa
police
officer,
angelica
torres
who
does
such
a
great
job.
We
appreciate
all
of
the
hard
work
that
you
do
and
we
appreciate
and
you've
been
in
tampa
for
how
long
again,
since.
C
T
Q
M
Good
morning
to
all
thank
you,
chief
and
staff,
thank
you
to
city
council
for
this
award.
I'm
definitely
humbled
by
this
experience.
M
Q
M
Good
morning,
city
council,
darla
portman
tampa
pba
president
brandon
barkley
vice
president
of
the
tampa
pba.
I
just
want
to
tell
you
I'm
super
proud
of
you.
You
embody
what
a
police
officer
is.
You
show
city
council
in
the
community
you
care
for
the
community,
but
you
also
care
for
the
police
officers
by
showing
how
you
take
mental
health
as
a
serious
issue,
that's
going
on
in
our
community,
but
also
in
our
department.
M
So
I
appreciate
everything
you
do,
and
I
also
am
very
proud
that
you're,
a
member
of
the
tampa
pba,
so
we
got
busch
gardens
tickets
before
pete
brady
couldn't
be
here
today
to
give
them
to
you.
So
we
have
those,
and
we
also
have
a
plaque
that
was
also
made
by
one
of
our
officers
that
works
here
very
much.
Thank
you.
Keep
doing
a
great
job,
good
job.
M
Donna
mcbride
stress
center
officer
twice
it's
my
pleasure
to
meet
you
and
thank
you
so
much
for
all
you're
doing
for
our
officers
and
the
community
and
and
it's
especially
humbling
to
know
that
in
this
day
and
time,
wellness
means
a
great
many
things
and
your
understanding
of
that
is
very
important
to
our
city.
M
D
B
It
once
again
thank
you
very
much.
G
D
O
You
for
everything
you
do
and
congratulations.
P
K
C
Thank
you
for
protecting
our
community
and
our
businesses
here
in
tampa.
B
J
Let
me
start
by
saying
that
you
are
joining
the
long
blue
line
that
started
with
these
various
commercial
enterprises
30
years
ago,
when
we
started
giving
officer
of
the
month
and
firefighter
the
quarter
gift
certificates,
and
it
grew
out
of
various
different
restaurants
and
commercial
enterprises
that
wanted
to
recognize
officers
who
who
did
outstanding
service
and
went
above
and
beyond
nominated
by
their
peers,
confirmed
by
the
chief
and
their
supervisors,
and
I
can't
say
anything
more,
but
you
you
you're
not
at
the
end
of
the
line,
hopefully
we'll
we'll
continue
doing.
J
This
is
for
as
long
as
it'll
allow
us,
and
we
want
to
recognize
you
from
the
chicho's
restaurant
group
again
you're
going
to
have
a
lot
of
places
to
go
and
eat
enjoy
yourself
over.
J
There
enjoy
yourself
at
the
meat
market
again
fifty
dollars
worth
gift
certificates
and
and
your
I
know,
you're
talking
about
health,
and
so
I'm
sure
you
believe
in
the
why
so
you
have
a
gift
certificate
to
go
to
the
y
and
the
yummy
house,
china,
bistro
and
the
bella
brava,
which
is
over
in
the
midtown
and
the
new
development
over
there.
So
here
are
your
gifts?
Tickets!
If
you
have
any
trouble
with
this
my
phone
number's
on
here
and
I
guarantee
them.
J
Q
We
have
our
friends
that
the
lightning
could
not
be
here
today,
so
they
asked
me
to
present
this
50
gift
certificate
from
the
lightning.
Are
you
going
with
him?
Thank
you,
and
so
council.
G
G
You
know
two
years
ago
we
heard
loud
and
clear
from
the
community
that
mental
health
was
an
important
issue
that
we
need
to
address,
and
city
council
has
pushed
hard
for
the
last
couple
years
to
make
sure
we
have
programs
and
funding
for
mental
health.
Thank
you
to
the
police,
chief
and
others
for
for
pushing
that
forward.
G
F
Thank
you
very
much
just
to
echo
what
councilman
carlson
said.
You
know.
Mental
health
is
so
important
and
that
we
invest
in
that
because,
although
they
say
health
is
wealth
and
they
think
it's,
you
know
what
you
eat
and
exercising
everything
starts.
A
lot
starts
here
and
what
starts
here
when
it's
not
properly
taken
care
of
or
addressed,
can
trigger
so
many
other
things.
You
know
for
anybody
in
general,
you're
with
the
police
department.
You
know
the
stress
of
the
job
and
everything
else.
Mental
health
is
everything.
So
we
appreciate
having
you
here.
F
R
I
want
to
echo
the
other
council
members
sentiments
on
the
importance
of
mental
health,
but
I
also
want
to
just
highlight
the
how
you
are
helping
to
reduce
the
the
mental
health
stigma
within
the
department
as
well.
I
think
it's
very
important
for
the
entire
community,
but
I
know
that
within
the
department
as
well,
you
just
everybody-
you
know,
do
the
best
they
can
and
get
help
when
they
need
it,
and
I
think
that's
the
wonderful
thing
with
the
community
and
the
department.
R
I
Well,
congratulations.
This
morning,
mental
health
illness
is
very
it's
a
very
chronic
thing
now
in
our
communities,
all
communities-
and
I
don't
know
if
it's
the
food,
what
they're
putting
in
the
food
or
what's
going
on,
but
it
seems
like
the
newer
generations,
are
experiencing
probably
different
mentality
than
when
I
grew
up,
but
I'm
glad
that
we
have
somebody
who's
taking
courses
classes
to
train
other
officers.
You
know
I
used
to
hate
to
hear
that
word
signal
20..
I
think
they
changed
that
now,
I'm
not
mistaken.
I
I
don't
know
what
it's
called
now,
but
you
know
you
hear
that
he's
like,
oh,
but
I'm
glad
that
we've
got
somebody
who's
working
hard
to
make
a
difference
and
make
a
difference
officer's
mind
as
well,
and
that
brings
on
a
lot
when
you're
dealing
with
people
in
our
communities,
because
you
just
don't
know
to
know
what
they're
going
through.
So
I'm
glad
you're
part
of
the
force
and
making
that
transition
with
the
department
to
do
better.
Thank
you.
Thank
you.
H
F
H
Wasn't
in
the
top
anywhere
it
was
known
about,
and
I
attribute
that
that
we
didn't
have
anything,
but
we
thought
we
had
everything
now
most
of
us
everything
and
they
don't
know
what
they
have
and
when
you
get
to
that
point
in
life,
and
you
have
the
pressures
that
we
in
america
have
to
succeed,
to
go
forward
to
be
the
best
you
can
be
and
so
forth
and
so
on,
and
you
hear
about
everything
that's
going
on
in
life
and
today,
every
time
you
turn
on
the
tv
somebody's
getting
shot
and
it's
both
on
both
sides
of
the
aisle
anywhere
in
america
and
and
that,
along
with
other
pressures
of
life
that
you
have
to
be
under
pressure
to
succeed,
you
have
to
do
better.
H
You
have
to
do
this.
You
have
to
do
that.
It's
recognized
one
of
the
leading
illnesses
in
america.
Now
is
mental
health,
and
I
want
to
thank
you
for
what
you've
done
yesterday,
what
you're
doing
today,
what
you're
going
to
do
tomorrow
and
what
you
and
this
department
will
do
forever
to
protect
everyone
in
excesses,
protect
yourself
by
curing
some
of
the
ills
that
you
have
with
mental
health.
B
B
B
L
L
Tomorrow
I
hope
I
will
become
the
chair
of
the
tampa
bay
chapter
of
the
red
cross.
This
is
eric
corliss,
who
is
our
executive
director
for
tampa
bay,
as
well
as
being
the
regional
ceo
across
all
of
central
florida
from
here
all
the
way
over
to
the
space
coast
and
I'm
looking
at
the
room,
and
I'm
just
saying:
oh,
isn't
this
nice,
so
many
people
dressed
in
red,
yeah.
O
Council,
members
and
and
the
city
thank
you
for
the
opportunity
to
talk
about
the
mission
of
the
red
cross,
and
what
we
want
to
go
through
briefly
is
how
we
serve
the
city,
but
also
around
the
world.
We
are
a
global
movement
and
we're
going
to
walk
through
that.
But
here's
our
mission-
I
don't
know
if
you
all-
can
see
it,
but
it's
to
read
it
for
those
that
can
is
to
alleviate
human
suffering
through
the
face
of
emergencies
by
mobilizing
the
power
of
volunteers
that
is
enabled
by
the
generosity
of
our
donors.
O
So
here
are
lines
of
service
and
we're
going
to
focus
in
on
something
that's
been
significant
in
the
last
couple
of
years,
and
that
is
the
frequency
and
intensity
of
disasters
that
have
affected
the
united
states
and
its
territories.
We've
been
fortunate
in
florida,
particularly
tampa
in
the
last
two
years
that
we
haven't
seen
what
are
in
the
others,
but
I'm
going
to
touch
base
on
this.
First,
our
service
armed
forces.
We
maintain
a
critical
community
communication
link
to
people
within
the
tampa
area
and
their
loved
ones.
O
We
also
brief
new
recruits
that
go
through
the
meps
station,
the
military
entrance
processing
center
in
tampa,
which
is
one
of
the
busiest
in
the
country
and
briefing
the
new
family
members.
Many
of
them
are
new
to
the
service
community,
about
the
the
stresses
and
the
challenges
and
on
the
theme
of
mental
health.
O
How
do
you
support
and
and
care
for
your
loved
one
who's
been
in
combat
who's,
been
in
conflict
zones
that
we
have
seen
in
the
last
couple
of
years
and
the
impact
that
it's
having
not
only
on
the
service
member
but
their
loved
ones
when
they
come
home
and
their
caregivers?
I
will
talk
about
disaster
services.
We
do
collect
40
of
the
nation's
blood
supply,
we're
the
largest
blood
bank
in
the
united
states
and
it's
territories,
and
then
we
do
cpr
and
first
aid,
training
and
international
services,
which
right
now
I'd
be
remiss.
O
If
I
didn't
reference,
the
red
cross
is
a
global
movement
and
we
have
red
crossers
that
are
around
ukraine
that
are
providing
humanitarian
assistance
to
those
who
have
fled
the
area.
The
red
cross
has
a
unique
role
through
the
icrc.
The
international
committee
of
red
cross
to
look
for
and
help
negotiate
safe
passage
of
non-combatants
out
of
conflict
zones
and
that's
a
role
that
the
red
cross
has
around
the
globe
because
of
the
geneva
conventions
and
it's
a
key
part
of
what
we
do
in
the
fulfillment
of
the
united
states.
O
Compliance
with
the
geneva
conventions,
here's
a
snapshot
of
the
region,
but
here's
what
I
wanted
to
come
to
and
talk
about
in
the
point
of
why
we're
here-
and
I
don't
know
about
you
all-
but
when
I
saw
hurricane
agatha
in
the
pacific,
come
across
central
america
and
they
come
in
the
gulf
and
become
tropical
storm
alex.
It
reinforces
what
we've
seen
over
the
last
two
years.
O
We
put
it
in
three
buckets:
health,
hunger
and
housing,
and
it's
that
ability
to
access,
affordable
housing
and
when
you
have
a
disaster
come
in
and
the
the
effects
that
it
has
on
the
community
is
significant.
So
the
need
for
us
to
work
together
and
get
the
preparedness
message
out.
There
is
more
critical
than
ever
and
that's
part
of
what
we
want
to
talk
to
to
move
people
forward
to
talk
about.
O
L
You
preparedness,
I'm
sure
everyone
here
is
well
aware
that
we
are
in
hurricane
season.
That
is
something
obviously
we
hope
everyone
is
taking
seriously,
especially
anyone
who's.
Listening
in
on
this
streaming,
please
make
sure
that
you
are
ready.
I
just
want
to
remind
you
to
get
a
kit,
make
a
plan
and
be
informed
one
that
that's
a
really
important
thing
to
have
that
kid
to
have
that
go
bag,
as
it
happens.
Last
week
my
mother's
apartment
building
had
a
fire
and
she
lives
in
a
senior
residence
and
150
seniors
streamed
out
of
the
building.
L
I
suggest
that
you
have
a
list,
you
put
it
together,
put
it
in
a
trunk
in
your
suitcase,
throw
it
in
your
closet
and
have
that
list
ready
so
that,
eventually,
if
you
have
to
leave
for
a
hurricane,
you
know
where
your
things
are.
You
know
what
you're
looking
for
in
a
fire,
you
don't
grab
anything
just
get
out
and
stay
out,
but
start
being
prepared
now
thinking
ahead,
where
your
things
are,
if
you
had
to
leave,
or
you
asked
a
firefighter
to
go
retrieve
it
for
you.
L
L
Regular
corporations,
mom-and-pop
shops,
as
we
learned
during
covet
a
whole
lot
of
them-
did
not
do
very
well
when
they
could
not
be
in
their
physical
locations.
Ready
rating
helps
you
walk
through
the
steps,
it's
a
very
quick,
five
minute
program
or
there's
a
longer
one
online
that
goes
through
twice
it's
either,
so
you
either
do
the
quick
five
minute
one
and
then
hopefully
you
get
sucked
in
and
do
the
long
one,
but
we
suggest
you
talk
to
all
of
your
constituents.
Everybody
in
tampa
north
south,
wherever
they
are
to
look
at
readyrating.org.
L
Even
every
homeowners
association
could
help
with
that
right
here.
Okay,
this
is
the
fun
part
that
I
get
to
do.
I
get
to
go
into
schools
and
we
talk
to
children
basically
kindergarten
through
grade
five.
We
have
two
different
programs,
obviously
they're
slightly
different
emotional
levels.
Last
year
we
had
the
incredible
privilege
of
being
able
to
stream
our
program
and
it
was
available
to
every
single
school
here
in
tampa,
as
well
as
all
of
hillsborough
county
talking
about
preparedness.
L
I
hope
one
day
this
becomes
part
of
their
curriculum.
I
think
this
is
a
really
important
piece,
because
every
child
in
florida
will
face
hurricanes.
If
there
are
schools
in
your
district
summer
programs,
boys,
girls,
clubs,
ymca
programs,
let
them
know
about
it.
We
go
in
and
we'll
talk
to
them
in
person
whenever
possible
and
it's
really
fun
hurricanes.
We
normally
talk
about
120
hour
timeline
right
now,
we're
actually
going
and
stretching
out
past
160
hours
and
that's
because
we
need
to
move
things
up
and
down
the
state
and
so
on.
L
However,
what
I
just
learned
is
when
we
were
hearing
from
the
head
of
the
national
hurricane
center
said
of
the
10
last
category
five
storms.
Nine
of
them
were
only
a
tropical
depression.
Three
days
out
of
hitting
land,
they
sped
up,
they
picked
up
more
water
and
then
they
slammed
into
land.
So,
although
we
try
to
work
on
the
long
time
frame
as
eric
said,
storms
are
getting
bigger,
faster
and
have
a
far
bigger
impact
than
they
did.
So.
Please
do
talk
to
your
constituents.
L
Talk
to
everybody
to
please
get
a
kit,
make
a
plan
and
be
informed
and
that's
why
here's
a
quick
picture
just
of
what
happens
during
the
storm,
although
in
actuality,
if
you
go
to
an
evacuation
center,
there
are
no
cots.
There
are
no
blankets,
you
get
the
floor.
This
is
what
you
would
have
the
floor.
That's
in
front
of
you!
That's
it
bring
your
own
pillow,
bring
your
own
blanket.
L
The
cots
come
in
afterwards
when
you're
helping
people
relocate,
but
that's
after
the
storm
during
the
storm,
it's
there
as
shelter,
and
we
do
provide
water
and
snacks
in
that
time
frame
after
the
storm.
Obviously
we
want
people
to
be
very
careful,
not
walk
into
flooded
waters,
and
this
is
what
we
are
always
happy
to
come
in
and
talk
to
people
about
that.
And
yes,
we're
always
looking
for
volunteers
as
well,
so
we
have
the
before
the.
During
and
after
the
more
we
can
prepare
the
better.
L
We
can
face
a
storm
and
obviously
then
the
recovery
gets
better
and
better
our
people
go
out
into
the
community
and
assess
it.
I
suggest
everyone
right
now
stop,
and
even
if
you're
in
this
room,
pull
out
your
phone
and
tell
yourself
you
will
download
the
red
cross
emergency
app
and
the
first
aid
app
they're
free
they're
available
on
any
of
the
phone
stores
but
emergency.
L
It
has
a
red,
exclamation
mark,
so
just
type
in
red
cross,
emergency
I'll,
get
it
to
you
and
you
can
then
put
in
and
you'll
get
the
warnings,
not
just
here,
but
you
can
put
in
your
family.
That's
anywhere
else
in
the
united
states,
and
it
will
let
you
know.
What's
going
on
in
their
areas.
My
children
are
scattered
around.
I
can
tell
when
something's
happening
they're
in
some
like
be
careful,
walking
home,
there's
a
tornado
in
your
area.
You
know
it's
that
kind
of
a
thing.
It's
a
really
great
idea
to
do
that.
L
Also
anytime
redcross.org
prepare
florida
puts
you
into
our
office,
and
it's
one
way
you
can
find
me
communication
again
we're
on
everywhere
and
all
around.
I
hope
to
meet
any
one
of
you
at
any
time.
Please
give
eric
and
I
a
call
we'd
be
happy
to
come
in
and
meet
with
you
more
of
a
one-on-one,
but
this
I
hope
everyone
out.
There
knows
we're
there
for
you.
We
are
sort
of
the
scene
behind
the
scene.
L
The
first
responders
are
out
there
dealing
with
buildings
and
crisis,
whether
it's
fires
or
hurricanes,
and
then
we're
there
to
help
with
the
people
that
have
been
affected.
We
always
need
volunteers
in
a
variety
of
roles.
A
lot
of
them
are
even
virtual.
You
can
be
at
home
on
a
computer
and
helping
us
feed
people
on
the
other
side
of
the
state.
Even
so
there's
varying
levels
in
here
you
can
see
on
it.
Where
we've
got
the
disaster
action
team,
the
person
would
go
out
in
a
vest
like
this,
which
I
hope
you
never
see.
L
I
saw
my
first
one
at
5am
in
the
morning
in
new
york,
when
I
walked
out
of
my
burning
building
and
there
was
someone
who
materialized
and
said
hi,
I'm
with
the
red
cross,
we're
here
to
provide
shelter
clothing.
Do
you
need
anything?
How
can
we
help
you
that
was
35
years
ago?
You
never
forget
that
moment.
So,
please.
I
hope
you
never
have
to
see
someone
in
this
in
your
hour
of
need,
but
please
remember
we
are
always
there
and
we
always
could
use
more
people
to
help
us
being
there.
L
I
mentioned
the
apps
that
we
have
available
the
ready
rating,
so
please
mark
readyrating.org.
We
also
have,
and
you
can
find
it
through
the
prepare
florida
website
on
second
and
fourth
thursdays.
We
do
a
webinar
on
hurricane
and
home
fire
preparedness.
Anyone
everyone
is
always
welcome
to
join
us
on
that
and
on
behalf
of
myself
and
dr
ken
who's
unavailable
today
and
eric,
I
say
thank
you
very
much
for
listening
to
this
message.
L
L
L
How
about
it?
Where
do
you
spend
more
time
home
school
work?
It's
always
at
home.
Please
do
a
fire
drill
at
home
think
about
two
exits
from
every
room
get
out
in
less
than
two
minutes
fire
spread
faster
than
you
can
possibly
imagine
and
check
those
alarms
every
single
month
and
do
that
fire
drill
twice
a
year.
L
So
it's
two
minutes
out
twice
a
year:
do
that
fire
drill
every
month
check
those
smoke,
alarms
and,
most
importantly,
have
a
safe
meeting
spot
away
from
your
home,
because
if
you
have
a
meeting
spot,
you
all
go
to
the
same
place
and
you're
not
running
around
looking
for
each
other.
The
most
tragic
is
when
we
hear
of
an
adult
going
back
into
a
building
or
a
child,
going
back
into
a
building.
L
H
These
are
not
normal
things.
These
are
things
that
we,
the
human
beings,
have
created
no
one
to
blame,
but
us
not
only
in
this
country
but
in
china,
another
industrious
country
all
over
europe
and
south
america.
You
cannot
continue
doing
what
we're
doing.
You
must
take
a
look
back,
a
step
back
and
understand
what,
if
we
had
all
those
things
back,
would
it
be
the
same?
Would
you
have
the
same
type
of
hurricanes?
Would
you
have
the
same
forest
fires
and
the
answer
more
likely
is
no.
H
G
Same
thing,
thank
you.
Thank
you.
So
much
for
everything
you
all
do
you
all
have
been
involved
in
the
world's
greatest
disasters
and
have
come
through
for
all
kinds
of
people
have
come
through
in
florida
during
terrible
disasters.
I
pray
every
day
and
hope
everyone
else
will
pray
that
we
never
get
a
direct
hit.
That
hits
us
like
katrina
or
andrew
or
one
of
those
other
hurricanes,
and
that
we
can
instead
be
donors
to
other
communities
that
to
help
them.
Thank
you
for
sharing
your
personal
story.
G
L
I
L
I
R
Thank
you
for
this.
I
most
most
times
I
have
seen
red
cross
work
has
been
international,
so
it's
nice
to
look
at
the
domestic
side
and
think
about,
of
course,
what
you
do
here,
which
is
a
wholly
different
role.
So
I
want
to
say
thank
you
for
coming
at
the
beginning
of
hurricane
season
to
remind
everyone.
R
I
did
not
know
about
the
app,
so
I'm
very
excited
and
I'm
going
to
echo
councilman
carlson's
request
to
please
just
send
it
to
us,
so
we
can
push
it
out
on
our
social
media
and
encourage
we
can
send
it
out
to
neighborhoods
things
like
that
when
we
go
talk
to
people
about
preparedness,
the
city
does
a
great
job
with
us,
but
we
also
we
need
to
share
that
with
with
our
constituents
and
with
the
community
everywhere.
So
thank
you
for
what
you're
doing.
We
really
appreciate
it.
L
B
J
Good
morning,
council,
I
have
been
make
your
name,
please
eddie
adams,
jr.
I
have
been
informed
that
this,
the
united
states
government
hillsborough
county,
have
recognized
and
have
official
juneteenth
day
celebrations
and
it's
a
holland.
J
There
are
democrats
and
it's
a
celebration
of
freedom
for
black
folks
and
that's
your
highest
biggest
constituent
for
voting
and
helping
you
guys
do
stuff
and
for
the
city
not
to
recognize
juneteenth
as
a
holiday,
you're
doing
a
significant
disservice
and
disrespect
to
a
community
that
that
highly
favors.
J
You
guys
I
mean
the
the
one
that's
here
about
15
years
ago
I
was
involved
with
the
sheriff
black
advisory
council
and
sheriff
david
g
decided
that
he
wanted
to
do
his
thing
on
the
same
day
that
we
used
to
celebrate
and
award
black
members
of
his
staff
and
jail
and
bailiffs,
and
all
that
stuff
you
know
so
so
they
decided
they
want
to
put
them
all
together.
So
they
took
that
day
from
us,
and
so
we
decided
we're
going
to
take
a
day
find
a
day
that
white
folks
can't
can't
take
from
us.
J
So
that's
when
we
started
a
juneteenth
breakfast
that's
about
15
years
ago,
and
then
we
moved
on
to
a
juneteenth
luncheon
and
we've
been
having
the
luncheon
every
year
for
the
last
10
years,
except
for
the
covet
and
and
and
now
you
know
a
couple
of
years
ago,
the
the
national
leader
of
the
junior
team
coalition
was
going
to
be
our
guest
speaker
at
our
tampa
june,
18th
luncheon,
so
that
was
gonna
be
a
big
deal,
but
but
he
got
sick.
J
So
I
am
here
to
request
from
you
guys
and
the
young
ladies
left,
but
you
know
that
that
you
do
what
you
need
to
do
to
make
juneteenth
a
holiday
for
the
city
of
tampa,
but
because
you're
missing
the
opportunity
to
do
something
for
a
significant
part
of
your
community
and
this
event
is
going
to
get
bigger.
I
mean
when
I
first
started,
you
know
like
15
years
ago,
st
pete
had
already
been
doing
it
for
10
years.
J
You
know
so
we're
behind
behind
the
time
on
all
this
stuff,
but
I
want
it
to
be
so
that
the
month
of
june
we're
doing
stuff
all
month,
long
and
reverend
dixon
and
brother
dixon,
we
okay,
all
right.
Thank.
I
Mr
adams,
a
year
ago
I
made
that
requested
administration
in
motion.
I
was,
I
thought,
maybe
about
six
or
seven
months.
I
did
another
request
asking
for
an
update.
I
was
told
this
time
that
they're
in
negotiations,
because
we
have
a
union
over
here
so
they're
negotiations,
I'm
hoping
that
regardless
of
negotiation
or
not,
that
that
is
implemented
because
the
city
can
implement
regarding
negotiation
or
not,
they
can
implement
that.
So
I'm
hoping
that's
going
to
be
done
with
this
next
contract,
hopefully
sooner
rather
than
later,
when
it
comes
out.
I
I
know
I'll
be
looking
for
that
and
making
sure
that
we
we
have
that
implemented
so
and
again,
a
lot
of
my
colleagues
here.
I
know
that
they've
been
talking
about
as
well,
so
I'm
hoping
that
that's
going
to
be
implemented
in
the
upcoming
year.
So
thank
you,
sir.
J
Q
Morning,
council,
I
I
had
a
couple
of
pictures
I
wanted
to
display
please,
what's
that
your
name?
Oh,
my
name
is
andy
savitt,
I'm
here
to
discuss
or
mention
a
huge
flooding
issue
located
off
of
tampa
street
between
just
south
of
columbus,
between
amelia
and
francis,
and
it's
the
alleyway
that
goes
between
those
two.
So
I
have
a
few
pictures.
I
could
send
them
later
if
it's
a
hassle
to
connect
up.
If
not,
if
you
would.
Q
Okay,
you
got
your
three
minutes.
I
gotcha.
I
could
do
it
while
I'm
talking.
Basically,
this
has
been
ongoing
for
many
years.
The
storm
water
which
the
stormwater
folks
kind
of
blame
it
on
on
the
highway,
the
florida
department,
transportation
and
back
and
forth,
and
it's
a
lot
of
run
around
basically
when
it
rains
it
do.
I
just
show
the
screen
is
that
the
best
way
to
go
about
it?
Okay,
so
the
problem
is,
is
every
time
there's
rain?
Q
Q
B
Q
So,
basically,
as
you
can
see,
with
the
minute
and
eight
seconds
left,
the
water
is
just
huge.
It's
coming
from
the
alley,
and
it
just
accumulates
not
only
on
on
this
property,
but
also
it's
being
stubborn,
but
anyways
come
on.
So
what
happens
is
again
there's
about
six
houses
that
floods?
It
is
a
major
issue.
That's
been
addressed,
it's
being
neglected.
This
is
literally
a
pond.
F
Q
Yep
and
it
basically
just
intensified
the
problem,
there's
also,
I
believe
another
gentleman
that'll
be
following
soon.
Q
Q
104
west
amelia,
amelia,
amelia,
ame,
lia
street
and,
and
I
actually
have
a
picture
real
quick
and
this
may
be
a
little
bit
shy,
but
this
is
actually
so
it's
not
only
coming
from
the
alley.
This
is
the
front
of
the
property
that
it's
actually
coming
over
a
curve.
The
curbs
were
intentionally
built
about
a
foot
high
and
I'm
trying
to
escape,
but-
and
it's
still
coming
from
the
front
over
the
curb
into
the
the
property
also
in
the
alley.
Thank
you
very
much,
sir.
Thank
you
for
your
time.
Council
members.
N
Bonjourno,
my
name
is
angel.
I
took
another
day
off
work
to
be
here
with
you
all
great
joy
of
my
life,
so
the
last
time
we
were
here,
we
talked
extensively
about
some
items
that
we're
hoping
that
you're
going
to
leave
here
today
with
the
first
reading
of
the
ordinance
to
implement,
because
your
staff
is
going
to
be
doing
their
staff
report
good
news
for
them.
We
already
did
a
lot
of
that
research
for
them.
N
We
sent
it
to
you
several
times
it
got
sent
through
the
group
at
florida,
rising
through
the
people's
council,
so
you
have
so
much
research.
I
mean
so
much
going
in
your
favor
in
2021.
The
city
of
tampa
won
the
super
bowl
or
whatever,
and
we
were
tampa
bay
well
right
now,
the
city
of
miami
has
passed
what
we're
asking
for
so
they
already
beat
us
there.
N
City
of
orlando
is
actually
really
extensively
looking
in
rent
control,
so
they're
about
to
beat
us
at
this
rate,
liberty,
county
florida
is
going
to
have
rent
control
before
tampa.
Does
that
sound
like
champa
bay
to
you,
because
it
sounds
like
we're
losing
so
my
hope
today
is
that
we
leave
with
not
only
an
ordinance
to
implement
the
miami-dade
ordinance
as
well
as
a
housing,
emergency
and
rent
control,
but
we
do
that
with
a
unanimous
vote,
because
there
shouldn't
be
a
reason
why
that
doesn't
happen.
N
Now,
if
you're
not
aware,
your
voting
block
is
here
in
the
room
wearing
red
and
there's
a
lot
of
people
watching
at
home,
because
they
can't
take
the
time
away
from
work.
People
in
who
aren't
in
the
nine
to
five
scene.
Don't
have
the
privilege
to
come
here
and
and
speak
to
you
about
these
issues
or
sit
on
the
cmt
and
wait.
Y'all
took
the
voicemail
option
away,
so
they
can't
sit
by
the
screen
and
wait
because
they
have
jobs
that
face
the
public,
so
they're
not
able
to
do
that.
N
We
also
have
people
with
disabilities.
We
have
people
who
are
low-income
people
who
are
trans
insecure,
who
can't
be
here
and
we're
going
to
be
reaching
out
to
them
in
march
during
the
election
season
and
things
aren't
things
are
just
not
really
looking
good
for
this
city
council
we've
been
told
how
progressive
the
city
council
is.
We
got
60
days
notice
for
rent
we've
over
funded
the
police
department.
We
never
have
money
for
anything
else,
but
policing.
N
I
was
surprised.
The
officer
of
the
month
this
year
didn't
have
like
a
disciplinary
record
this
long,
because
the
one
a
couple
what
two
months
ago
or
whatever
was
like
fired
and
rehired
for
violations
like
I
would
love
to
be
able
to
have
that
kind
of
record.
In
the
employee
of
the
month.
I
get
like
threes
out
of
five
on
my
performance
review,
I'm
like
excited
because
it's
just
like
hey,
I
did,
and
I
have
not
ever
taken
a
life
or
wrongfully
taken
someone's
liberty,
and
all
I
get
is
threes.
I
would
like
to
be.
N
I'm
gonna
talk
to
my
boss
to
see
if
I
can
start
being
rated
on
those
metrics,
because
that
would
be
phenomenal,
but
at
the
end
of
the
day
the
metrics
we
grade
you
on
or
what
are
you
doing
for
us,
the
people
and
us
the
people
are
hurting.
N
C
Good
morning
my
name
is
keelah
mccaskill,
I
don't
have
one
red,
but
I
stayed
with
the
people's
council
and
florida
robin
lockett
over
at
florida
rising.
I
want
to
thank
councilman
vieira
and
councilman
goodes
for
this
past
weekend
for
acting
so
quickly
in
a
matter
where
some
residents
were
living
in
unsafe,
hazardous
housing
and
and
thank
you
for
actually
standing
up
and
actually
getting
her
temporary
housing
rather
quickly,
and
that
sends
a
message
when
you
all
do
that.
C
It
sends
a
message
that
slumlord
activity
is
not
acceptable
in
the
greater
tampa
bay
area.
I'm
not
here.
For
that,
though,
I
just
want
to
thank
you
a
while
back
you
all
voted
to
have
a
possibility
to
research,
a
probate
program
and
what
that
would
do
is
hopefully
provide
assistance
to
those
individuals
in
this
situation,
marginalized
communities,
a
low
income
or
middle
income
that
can't
afford
to
actually
navigate
through
the
probate
process.
C
I
came
by
to
share
some
information
because
on
two
days
ago,
I
hosted
a
probate
summit
and
what
we
found
from
the
hillsborough
county
property
appraiser
is
approximately
there's
about
1.1
billion
dollars
in
real
estate,
potentially
sitting
or
awaiting
to
go
through
the
probate
process,
which
is
an
indication
that
too
many
people
are
living
in
homes,
with
no
legal
right
pretty
much.
They
can't
do
anything
in
that
home,
except
for
occupy
it
for
as
long
as
the
house
will
withstand,
they
can't
apply
for
fema
assistance
in
the
event
of
a
hurricane.
C
They
can't
go
pay
the
delinquent
taxes.
I
don't
believe
if
it
goes
too
far.
They
can't
contact
the
bank
to
make
any
negotiations.
They
can't
even
participate
in
the
city
program
for
rehabilitation,
because
essentially
they
don't
own
the
home.
The
people
are
living
in
a
situation
almost
like
a
squatter,
because
all
they
can
do
is
occupy
it
and
it's
almost
unauthorized
until
it
goes
through
the
probate
process
and
as
a
individual
in
the
community.
C
That
has
a
very
small
nonprofit
organization,
I'm
not
an
elected
official,
but
I
feel
compelled
to
do
something
to
help
people
get
through
the
process
when
they're
living
in
a
home
as
almost
a
squadron.
When
I
saw
that
information
I
felt
compelled
to
do
even
more
than
we're
already
trying
to
do
so.
What
I'm
asking
for?
C
I'm
not
sure
if
they're
going
to
come
back
today
or
not
because
it
was
only,
I
believe,
was
scheduled
for
today,
but
I
want
to
ask
again
that
you
all
consider,
as
elected
officials,
your
the
constituents
should
be
your
primary
concern.
I'm
going
to
ask
that
you
would
approve
a
program
that
will
assist
with
identifying
a
program
that
could
help
because
doing
this
program
will
help
improve
conditions
of
neighborhoods
by
eliminating
blight
and
the
quality
of
life
in
the
neighborhoods.
Secondly,
a
home
in
many
families
is
the
largest
asset.
C
C
You
in
the
racial
estate
planning
gap,
65
percent
of
white
americans
have
estate
planning
and
23
of
black
or
hispanic
does
that's
a
great
gap,
and
this
I
want
to
ask
the
staff
in
closing,
if
they
would
just
factor
in
the
amount,
if
we
would
only
save
20
of
the
individuals
in
this
city
that
are
in
that
category,
in
the
probate
that
needs
to
go
through
the
process,
how
much
they
would
earn
on
just
inheritance
tax
and
how
much
they
were
earning
property
taxes.
I
believe
it's
over
a
couple.
C
I
I
I
did
have
a
conversation
with
her
yesterday
of
remaking
the
motion
that
I'm
going
to
restate
later
on
in
reference
to
how
we
can
get
with
the
other
entities,
just
look
at
some
type
of
policy
or
program
within
the
county,
so
we'll
be
restating
the
motion
with
that.
I
did
talk
to
her
yesterday.
That's
why
you
didn't
see
it.
I
remember
random
in
your
files
this
morning.
Thank
you.
P
And
I'm
here
to
encourage
you
to
vote
today
to
approve
the
bid
for
the
forest
hills
park.
L
C
J
Hills
my
whole
life
a
little
over
50
years,
and
I
just
would
like
to
encourage
you
guys
to
go
ahead
and
vote
for
this.
We've
been
looking
at
making
some.
Q
I
wanted
to
thank
chuck
and
kathy.
I
always
call
chuck
the
mayor
of
forest
hills
and
then
I
call
kathy
congresswoman
kathy
and
I've
known
them
for
a
number
of
years,
but
for
coming
in,
but
for
background
just
to
amplify
guess
what
they
were
talking
about.
This
is
a
project
that
was
passed
back
when
barack
obama
was
president,
and
here
we
are
two
presidents
later
and
it
still
hasn't
come
forward.
So
you
know
there
have
been
many
many
many
delays
and
hopefully
we
can
remedy
that
immediately.
Q
But
I
just
wanted
to
thank
you
all
for
coming
out.
It's
been
a
priority
of
of
mine,
certainly
and
again
it's
been
delayed,
for
so
many
reasons,
so
many
reasons,
but
god
willing
it'll,
be
it'll,
be
remedied
immediately.
So
just
wanted
to.
Thank
you
guys.
Thank
you.
Thank.
H
You
thank
you
and,
by
the
way
I
because
I
represented
where
you
folks
live
there's
the
first
friday
of
every
month.
There's
a
what
what
karaoke
I
heard.
One
of
the
council
members
been
there
and
he's
saying:
so-so,
that's
what
the
rumor
is,
but
thank
you
very
much
we'll
certainly
look
at
it
appreciate
everything
you've
done.
C
C
C
F
Q
Q
Pass
it
today,
the
office
attendant
advocacy,
the
landlord
registry,
some
form
of
rent
stabilization,
has
measured.
You've
heard
the
stories
you
heard,
the
anecdotes
I'll
add
another
two
members
of
my
family
had
to
leave
the
country
because
they
can't
live
off
of
their
retirement
so
that
that's
what's
happening.
N
F
T
E
I
want
to
wish
folks
here
a
happy
upcoming
juneteenth,
and
I
want
to
also
stand
in
support
of
just
to
talk
about
how
landlords
continue
to
price
gouge
property
taxes
keep
increasing
as
well
as
food
and
gas
and
every
other
expense.
Health
care
is
still
unaffordable.
Child
care
is
unaffordable
gentrification
in
the
displacement
of
the
working
class,
especially
black
and
brown
residents,
continues
in
every
city
and
town
in
this
country.
E
E
I
also
support
120
day
notice
for
tenants
when
receiving
a
rent
increase
and
declaring
housing
a
state
of
emergency.
I
was
homeless
for
11
months
everywhere.
Housing
houselessness
is
increasing.
Y'all
cannot,
I
know
y'all.
This
is
all
on
purpose
like
we
can
talk
about
policies.
Y'all
can
talk
about
immediacy,
we
don't.
We
know
this
is
on
purpose.
J
I
don't
whether
it's
red,
because
I'm
a
capital
or
because
of
florida
rising,
but
I
do
agree
with
florida
rising,
but
there
was
one
that
said
you
should
know
the
truth
and
the
truth
will
make
you
free
and
there's
only
three
people
in
here
right
now
that
could
understand
what
I'm
talking
about
attorney
morris,
massey,
councilman,
charlie
miranda.
J
J
So
therefore,
I
want
you
to
do
as
male
caster
said:
take
accountability
for
what
of
of
the
destruction
that
you
have
done
within
the
city
of
tampa,
and
I
want
you
to
know
that
district
5
not
only
have
one
council
member
but
have
three
votes
all
of
the
at
large
councilman
and
the
mayor
represent
district
5..
We
want
district
5
to
be
seamless
as
any
other
city
or
district.
J
So
therefore,
I've,
given
you
10,
10
things
that
I
want
you
to
consider
and
accept
now.
Here
I
have
the
united
states
constitution.
When
it
was
written
it
say
all
men
were
created
equal.
It
did
not
even
include
you
women.
We
got
our
rights
before
women.
So
what
I
want
you
to
do
read
it
accept
it
because
when
the
constitution
was
written,
it
was
10
years
later
when
they
came
back
with
the
10
amendments
to
the
bill
of
rights,
because
government
never
respect
the
people
unless
the
people
force
them
to
respect.
J
I'm
a
voter.
We've
got
many
voters
here.
The
election
is
coming
and
we're
going
to
remember-
and
one
thing
I
want
to
say
there
was
a
council
member
sitting
right
in
that
same
seat.
Somebody
said
this
want
to
cut
his
throat
because
he
was
telling
the
truth.
So
we
know
a
lot
of
things
happen
here
and
I
know
that
bell
sound
one
time.
There
was
a
lady
in
the
raid
up
here.
The
bell
sounds
four
times:
you
didn't
stop
her.
There
was
another
man
over
here.
The
bell
rang
four
times
and
he
didn't
stop.
J
C
C
C
Good
morning
my
name
is
vereta
andre,
I'm
on
over
here
on
behalf
of
madison
highland
apartments.
They
went
up
on
our
rent,
111
dollars
to
one
bedrooms.
They
went
up
on
93..
We
can't
afford
it
we're
all
senior
citizens
trying
to
do
the
best
we
can.
We
all
are
on
fixed
incomes.
We
need
your
help
and
we
can't
do
it
without
y'all.
We
also
know
god.
J
C
All
but
our
florida
and
r3
they
are
trying
to
help
us
also
get
the
rent
uncontrolled.
A
lot
of
them
gave
92
932
dollars.
They
tucked
it
and
sent
it
back
to
them
and
told
them
they
want
the
full
1043
dollars.
We
can't
afford
it
right
now.
Also
it's
things
happening
in
our
apartments,
where
we
can't
even
come
out
our
doors
because
we're
scared,
we
don't
have
no
security,
that's
not
right.
We
had
security
when
we
first
moved
there.
They
took
it
away
from
us,
so
we're
scared
to
go
outside.
C
They
sits
outside,
but
they
come
right
back
in
to
smoke
their
cigarettes
because
you're
so
scared
somebody's
gonna
hurt
them.
We
don't
have
one
that
got
robbed.
We
don't
have
cars
tucking
out
out
driveways
waiting
stolen,
our
cars
and
stuff.
We're
scared
to
even
leave
our
cars
and
not
put
our
alarm
on
make
sure
everything
is
going
on
right
over
that
way.
We
act.
C
C
And
I
specifically
would
like
to
say
like
over
in
one
of
the
apartments
I
used
to
stay
in
they're,
currently
having
an
issue
with
molds
and
serious
deplorable
conditions
that
most
people
wouldn't
live
in
and
shouldn't
have.
The
choice
to
shouldn't
have
the
ability
to
shouldn't
be
living
in
that
period
and
working
here
downtown.
C
C
I
don't
understand
how
you
guys
can
stand
seeing
it
every
day,
but
I
just
personally
like
to
ask
like
if
these
people
aren't
finding
any
places
to
go
if
housing
is
filling
up,
especially
affordable,
housing
supposedly
and
shelters
are
filling
up
where
exactly
are
y'all
taking
these
people
as
they're
disappearing
amongst
these
streets.
What's
exactly
happening
to
them?
Where
are
they
going
is?
C
Are
they
ending?
Is
anything
happening
to
them
like
exactly
that's
putting
them
in
a
better
housing
position,
a
better
position
in
general,
but
I
just
have
that
question
as
to
where
they're
going.
If
y'all
can
answer
that
for
me,
whether
it
be
today
tomorrow
or
whenever,
but
that's
all
I
had
to
say.
J
My
name
is
peter
frank,
william
located
1112
east
scott
street.
I
think
you
all
already
know
that
by
hard
now,
but
nobody
seen
the
company
want
to
solve
our
problem.
They
built
a
fence
all
around
the
church
to
keep
us
from
worshipping.
They
don't
want
people
to
park
over
there.
Everything
is
going
on
at
the
church
and
not
realizing
that
it
wasn't
for
the
church.
J
Temple
wouldn't
be
as
great
as
it
is,
but
we
got
to
understand
y'all
mistreat
black
folk.
Why
I
don't
know
and
who
killing
up
the
white
boat
is
a
white
boy
going
to
a
different
school
killing
up
little
children,
killing
up
all
grown
people,
don't
care
about
who
they
care,
but
we
try
to
be
peaceful
with
all
mankind,
but
y'all
don't
give
a
damn
about
us
whatsoever.
J
J
That
would
help
us
to
do
the
right
thing
and
we
got
a
black
man
sitting
up
down
on
the
podium.
He
came
to
the
church.
One
time
I
I
didn't
meet
him
there,
because
I
had
another
meeting
and
he
never
come
back,
but
you
know
what
we
will
prevail:
we're
going
to
prevail
because
god
is
on
our
side
and
if
we
got
jesus
we
got
it
all.
I
don't
care
whether
you
like
it
or
not.
It
don't
make
no
difference
we're
going
to
be
faithful
to
jesus
until
we
go
to
the
graveyard.
J
Another
thing
I
wanted
to
talk
about
before
y'all
ring
the
bell:
y'all
got
those
retention
pongs
and
I
found
out
the
retention
pond
ain't,
nothing
for
the,
but
for
the
camper
to
take
your
property
and
that's
exactly
what
they're
doing
they
got
retention
pond
all
all
over
in
belmont,
height
and
jackson
heights,
but
you
ain't
gonna,
see
no
retention
upon
downtown
and
that's
where
they
really
need
it.
If
you
talk
about
ozone
ozone,
what
are
those
on?
Nobody
here?
Don't
know.
J
J
We
got
to
understand,
treat
everybody
equal,
treat,
the
white
folk
blight
folk,
the
jews
and
the
mexicans
drizzle
all
equal.
You
know
what
we
can,
because
we
can
be
calling
on
african-american
a
black
america.
We
should
call
all
people
just
see
if
they're
citizens
of
america
call
them
america,
that's
all.
I
ain't
never
been
to
no
damn
africa.
J
I
ain't
never
come
out
of
north
africa.
I
don't
even
know
what
black
africa
looked
like,
but
I
know
one
thing:
I'm
here
in
tampa
florida,
my
brother
fought
into
world
war
ii
fought
for
this
nation
and
you
know
what
he
didn't
get
no
kind
of
respect.
They
can
give
less
than
a
damn
about
just
like
they
give
less
than
a
damn
about
me
and
the
rest
of
the
black
folks.
God
bless
you
that's
jim.
I
got
to
be
honest.
I
With
you
pastor,
william,
that's
way
before
you
go,
sir,
you
weren't
here
last
week,
sir,
but
last
week
I
asked
our
cra
director
of
the
central
e
central
district
to
contact
you
or
find
a
way
to
contact.
You
see
what
we
could
do
to
help
you
with
that
church
over
there
or
the
surrounding
properties
of
your
church.
Well,
I'm
here
this
week.
I
Well,
I
I
well-
and
he
said
if
they
say
patrick,
but
I
made
I
made
a
perfect
perfect
plan
to
ask
them
to
go
and
look
and
see
what
they
could
do
if
anything,
to
help
you
out
with
that
grasp,
whatever's
going
on
and
also
I'm
by
your
church-
and
I
made
mention
about
it
that
at
your
church
used
to
be
the
old
allen
temple,
I'm
not
I'm
not
mistaken,
yeah
yesterday.
So
so
I
know
all
about
the
history.
I
My
grandkids
go
to
school
right
next
to
saint
peter,
clever,
so
I'm
by
that
church
all
the
time-
and
it
upsets
me
to
see
that
church.
That
condition.
That's
why
I
made
that
suggestion
last
week.
So
god
bless
you,
sir,
and
I'll.
I'm
gonna
try
to
get
another
point
to
see
you
again,
so
I
can
go
inside
the
church.
If
I
can
like,
I
think
mr
maniscalco
did.
J
S
S
I
know
that
everything
in
the
world
has
changed
and
mental
illness
has
a
lot
to
do
with
it,
and
public
housing
was
something
I
I
never
thought
I'd
I'd
deal
with.
But
I'll
tell
you
when
I
came
to
the
point
where
I
really
needed
it,
I'm
finding
a
house
it
was.
It
was
a
almost
impossible.
S
I
was
just
about
to
be
homeless
out
of
a
hotel
when
madison
highland
gave
me
the
opportunity
to
live
there,
where
I
was
told
it
was
safe
and
that,
of
course
it
was
affordable
and,
like
one
of
my
neighbors,
was
saying
it
had
security.
S
I
was
there
for
five
weeks
before
my
car
was
vandalized
about
two
weeks
later
I
had
money
stolen
out
of
my
apartment.
S
S
It's
not
when
I,
when
I
applied
for
the
or
florida
and
all
this
other
stuff,
I
don't
know
how
to
use
a
computer.
You
would
I
mean
the
way
I
was
brought
up.
S
So
I
thank
you
for
letting
me
be
here
today
and
I
thank
you
for
listening
to
my
fellow
neighbors
and
I'm
I'm
just
sad
that
the
the
management
company
has
all
the
power
over
the
vulnerable
because
we
are
just
trying
to
live.
Thank
you
for
listening.
C
I
balance
more
and
I
tried
to
sit
still
and
not
say
anything.
Listening
to
everybody.
Looking
at
all
your
faces
is
so
solid.
When
the
man
spoke
about
june
teeth,
there
was
no
reaction.
You
should
be
really
really
upset.
Listening
to
the
people
crying
hurting
kent,
the
young
man
could
barely
talk
for
his
experience.
This
is
not
justice.
This
is
something
that
has
to
be
done.
It
has
not.
It's
really
been
a
slow
movement.
As
the
person
spoke
about
church,
everybody
sees
only
body
once
when
the
election
time.
C
None
of
you
come
back
in
the
neighborhoods.
Nobody
knows
exactly
what
it
looks
like
and
you're
sitting
here,
like
you
say,
okay,
this
is
my
job
today
you
know
that's
like
the
public
defender.
They
have
so
many
things
in
the
caseload
they
just
going
through.
They
don't
help
anybody
and
nobody
cares
whether
they
do
or
not.
So
the
people
go
to
jail
for
nothing.
These
people
are
suffering
all
of
us,
not
just
say
myself,
but
they
are
really
something
to
look
at
the
lady
that
stays
in
the
apartment.
C
So
she
was
talking
about
she's
going
to
be
speaking
in
a
few
moments.
Two
dollars
left
out
of
her
check.
She
has
two
more
weeks
for
before
her
next
check.
Come,
I
don't
know
if
it
comes
once
the
end
of
the
month
or
I
know
social
security
come
at
different
times.
These
people
are
suffering
your
faces
is
so
solemn.
It
looks
like
you
have
don't
even
care
you're,
just
listening
out
of
boredom
and
this
these
are
serious
problems.
The
homeless
is
nowhere
in
your
neighborhood.
C
You
wouldn't
allow
it,
but
you
have
them
downtown,
you
have
them
in
west
tampa
and
you
have
them
in
east.
Tampa
it's
very
unfair.
When
you
go
home,
you
don't
have
to
look
at
any
homeless.
You
don't
have
to
worry
about
anybody
being
put
out.
These
are
serious
problems,
people
and
they
are
listen,
ladies
say
on
the
street,
and
you
look
and
turn
your
nose
up.
You
already
know
that
the
federal
guideline
does
not
meet
any
of
these
people
needs.
The
man
was
talking
about
the
constitution.
C
The
constitution
was
not
written
for
black
folks
when
it
came
in,
we
were
not
even
considered.
This
is
after
the
fact,
and
was
only
for
the
europeans
white
folks
locations.
However,
you
want
to
put,
but
there
you
have
to
come
alive,
look
no
and
go
around
the
neighborhood.
The
lady
was
talking
about
summer
springs,
they've
been
fixing
supper
springs,
so
I
don't
know
how
long
and
nothing
has
happened.
Go
through.
Look
at
the
apartments.
Look
how
the
street
looks
please.
This
is
serious.
C
You
have
people
on
the
street,
you
go
to
palmisia,
you
go
all
over
base,
your
harbor
island
and
your
park.
Your
area
is
perfect,
come
and
look
at
the
real
people
come
and
look
at
the
people.
That's
hurting
in
tears,
and
you
see
people
all
the
time
standing
here
about
to
cry
it's
time
to
wake
up,
not
visit
churches
on
the
election
time
come
out
talk
to
the
public
and
see
more
what's
happening,
it's
ridiculous!
C
J
Last
week
they
put
a
notice
on
my
door
that
if
I
don't
pay
my
rent,
full
they're
going
to
throw
me
out
where
I'm
gonna
go.
I
don't
know
florida
housing
is
our
florida
is
going
to
help
me,
but
I
don't
know
when
they're
gonna
start
sending
the
money
anyway.
J
My
son
got
a
call
from
housing
because
my
son
lives,
where
I
live,
and
management
told
him
that
the
reason
that
we
are
getting
the
rent
increased
because
we
got
the
stimulus
check.
He
wasn't
living
there.
I
wasn't
living
there
and
these
people
was
not
living
there
either.
So
what?
In
heaven's
name,
they
have
to
take
us
a
little
bit
of
money
when
it
was,
we
were
told
it
was
tax.
Free,
isn't
it
tax
free,
sir?
J
B
I
H
J
H
H
Ask
you
guys,
I
understand
that
what
you're
coming
here
for,
but
what
I'm
saying
is
if
some
landlord
b,
which
is
where
you're
at
now
yes
and
you've,
got
your
stimulus,
checking
landlord
a
right,
correct,
but
they're
not
the
same
landlord
right
now.
So
how
in
the
world
can
the
guy
who
individual,
wherever.
J
H
H
J
H
D
M
I
I
I've
asked
staff
to
have
the
police
go
over
to
have
a
community
meeting
with
the
residents
or
represent
the
security
issues.
I've
asked
staff
to
to
get
with
the
management
company
reference
to
your
security
guard.
That
was
there
or,
what's
going
on
with
your
security
issues,
I've
asked
staff
to
go
over
there
for
folks
who
are
having
issues
with
their
housing
issues,
to
talk
to
those
folks
or
get
a
meeting
with
those
who
are
having
issues
me
as
a
district.
Five
counselor
I've
done
those
things,
I
don't
control
staff.
I
I
I
I
I
haven't,
had
a
report
on
that,
but
I'm
going
to
ask
that
they'll
get
a
report
from
the
police
department.
This
would
be
major
of
have
they
gone
over.
There
met
with
those
residents
or
their
concerns
about
the
crime.
Whatever
issue
is
going
on
and
I'm
gonna.
I
see
ms
felix
here
so
I
have
to
ask
her
because
I'm
sure
she's
writing
it
down,
because
I
want
to
know.
Have
we
gone
over
there
gotten
with
those
residents
who
need
assistance?
I
Who
may
not
have
computers
who
may
not
be
illiterate
to
go
over
and
see
who
we
can
help
and
who,
who
we
can't
and
where
we
can
send
them
to
get
some
help.
So
I'm
going
to
ask
that
one
more
time,
the
staff
I
know
they're
listening
I've
done
that
three
times
now.
I'm
gonna
ask
for
the
fourth
time
that
we
have
tim
police
department
go
over
there.
I've
asked
our
cra
manager
to
go
over
and
have
a
community
meeting
with
the
residents
to
find
out.
I
What's
going
on
to
see
if
we
can
address
those
issues,
I'm
going
to
personally
email
him
today
and
call
the
day
to
see
what
he's
going
to
facilitate
that
issue,
because
that
is
a
point
that
we
have
to
do
and
it
hurts
me
with
our
seniors.
So
I
want
to
make
that
clear
to
the
folks
that
in
a
senior
senior
center
that
I'm
gonna
do
that
for
the
fourth
time
again
and
ask
the
administration
to
please
get
back
to
me
or
when
they're
gonna
do
these
things.
I
So
you
don't
have
to
come
here
because
half
of
you
guys
get
here
to
find
parking
and
do
a
lot
of
things
because
a
lot
of
you
disabled
and
I
saw
the
lady
in
the
back,
but
she
was
trying
to
get
another
view
to
go
help
her.
That
hurts
me
that
we
have
to
have
this.
So
I'm
going
to
ask
for
a
fourth
time
in
administration,
get
those
things
done
and
report
back
to
me.
So
I
can
be
able
to
give
a
report
to
the
community.
Thank
you.
C
So
before
my
time
starts,
I
want
to
reply
to
councilman.
B
C
So
robin
lockett
florida
rising
councilman
goose.
I
have
been
in
contact
with
my
miss
travis
in
the
process
of
setting
up
services
for
madison
highland,
getting
those
pockets
together,
madison
highland.
We
also
have
met
with
the
police
chief
and
they
were
gonna.
They
were
supposed
to
send
increase
the
service
around
there.
So
some
of
that
stuff
is
in
in
in
the
process.
Good
information
councilman
miranda
in
regards
to
providing
that.
C
Maybe
it
is
this-
is
a
state
attorney's
issue,
because
their
price
gouging
they're
doing
things
that
doesn't
seem
right
and
so
forth.
So
that's
a
big
question.
C
This
is
a
civic
engagement
situation
right.
Some
of
these.
Some
of
these
people
have
not
been
down
to
city
council,
so
this
has
been
a
real,
interesting
journey
for
me
right.
They
knew
that
this
was.
There
was
nothing
going
to
be
done
with
the
the
request,
the
unanimous
vote
two
weeks
ago,
but
they
wanted
to
come
and
sit
and
listen
to
the
process
to
be
involved
to
see
what
the
findings
were.
C
So
this
is
a
real
civic
engagement.
I
don't
know
whether
you
guys
realize
that,
because
once
they
really
start
to
understand
how
things
work
and
that
this
council
chambers
is
for
them
they're
going
to
be
down
here,
a
lot
they're
going
to
be
down
here
a
lot
and
that's
what
you
should
want
in
regards
to
we're
dealing
with
a
lot
of
seniors.
C
There
is
an
issue
with
parking
here
can't
find
parking
spaces
now
when
they
go
to
the
meter,
they
can
pay,
they
don't
have
to
pay,
but
there's
no.
You
know
just
like
maybe
on
city
council
days,
when
there's
a
council
meeting,
that
those
things
are
outlined
some
kind
of
way
identified
as
of
course
for
a
disability
because
there's
nowhere
for
them
to
park
anywhere.
C
C
And
oh
shoot,
I
lost
my
train
of
thought
and
that's
easy
to
do.
I
want
to
thank
you
guys,
everybody
for
the
unanimous
vote.
I
do
recognize.
I
didn't
expect
anything
to
date,
but
I
look
forward
to
working
with
council
in
regards
to
getting
the
complaint
registry
passed
and
also
the
tenant
advisory
advocacy
office
office,
complete
and
among
other
things,
but
I
thank
you
for
looking
at
it
because
we
came
a
long
way
from
february.
B
Councilman
carlson,
no
we're
not.
We
still
have.
We
still
have
plenty,
and
I
just
saw
one
person
come
in
that
I
am
suspecting
he
wants
to
make
a
public
comment,
but
we
still
have
people
that
are
online.
Do
you
want?
Do
you
want
to
make
your
comment?
Okay,
brother
jarvis?
You
just
walked
in.
Am
I
assuming
you
want
to
make
a
public
comment.
J
J
Certain
demands-
and
you
know,
elections
have
consequences
and
politics
is
is
a
serious
matter,
but
it's
about
serving
it's
about
serving
about
listening
to
the
people
and
see.
Can
we
make
some
concrete
changes?
We
want
to
go
down
in
history,
saying
that
when
I
set
on
city
council,
I
can
look
back
and
say
these
are
the
positive
changes
that
I
did
and
supported
that
affected
our
community
in
a
positive
way.
J
B
Brother
jarvis
brother
jarvis,
most
of
us
know
you
and
most
people
know
you,
but
please
state
your
name
for
the
record.
Oh.
B
N
Good
morning,
council
members,
yes,
council,
attorney,
massey
and
madame
clerk,
my
name
is
camilo
soto.
I
am
a
neighbor
of
mr
savage,
who
spoke
earlier
today
regarding
the
flooding
issue.
That's
occurring
in
our
neighborhood
wanted
to
elaborate
a
little
bit
more
on
that
flooding
issue.
There
are
two
main
contributing
factors
that
are
occurring
that
are
causing,
I
think,
an
exacerbation
of
the
flooding
like
to
bring
them
to
your
attention.
In
case
they
they're
not
on
your
radar.
N
There
are
development
conditions
that
the
city
of
tampa
is
putting
on
new
development
that
require
asphalting
of
alleyways,
sometimes
the
whole
alleyway,
when
a
particular
new
build
is
accessing
a
city
of
tampa
right
away.
I
have
found
out
that
no
civil,
engineering
or
stormwater
engineering
engineering
is
required
in
the
analysis
of
the
asphalting.
N
N
N
I
have
not
been
able
to
get
a
response,
because
I've
been
bounced
around
enough
now
that
I
know
that
storm
water
engineering
needs
to
make
a
call.
They
need
to
evaluate
the
flooding
situation
over
in
our
neighborhood
and
do
the
right
thing
and
install
stormwater
infrastructure
into
the
alleyway
that
their
basically
making
folks
do
things
for,
but
the
city
has
not
done
anything
with.
I
think
it's
absolutely
irresponsible.
N
An
example
of
a
very
recent
rain
event
occurred
on
june,
2nd,
which
was
just
this
month
from
june
2nd
to
june
3rd
we
experienced
and
on
my
property
at
least
12
inch
rise
in
flood.
That's
incredible!
That's
not
even
a
hurricane.
It
was
just
a
very
intense
short
rain
event.
So
my
ask
is
we
need
storm
water
infrastructure
and
I'd
love?
Mr
l
hole
to
respond
to
my
emails
and
indicate
what
needs
to
be
done
because
I've
corresponded
with
him
via
email.
Just
haven't
gotten
any
responses
corresponded
with
staff
been
bounced
around.
C
Good
morning
my
name
is
arlene
soto
and
I
reside
at
105
west,
francis
avenue
in
tampa
heights,
and
I'm
here
to
support
and
request
immediate
action
on
that
same
alleyway,
referenced
earlier
by
mr
soto
and
mr
savitt
from
104
west
amelia
avenue.
We
are
neighbors
and
our
properties
are
being
impacted.
With
the
same,
my
property
is
being
impacted
with
the
same
level
of
flooding
that
was
just
referenced
by
mr
soto.
S
M
Sir
sorry,
I
was
listening
to
the
tv
not
to
the
video
first
of
all
celine
happy
birthday.
We
think
you're
fabulous
number
67.
I
want
to
briefly
address
this
tenant
advocacy
program.
I
thought
that
this
was
discussed
when
the
rental
registration
was
put
to
bed
and
on
october,
the
28th
of
2021
item
number.
Five
on
that
workshop
agenda
said
that
this
that
would
be
put
in
place
at
that
point
in
time
approximately
10
30
a.m.
M
During
that
meeting,
there
was
a
discussion
about
a
reporting
system,
so
I'm
trying
to
figure
out.
Why
are
we
doing
this
again
or
why
wasn't
it
started
already
just
curious
number,
58
wow.
We
can
talk
about
cfi,
oh
my
gosh.
It's
amazing,
I'm
surprised,
because
I
don't
think
that
the
fludra
has
completely
has
had
second
hearing
yet,
but
hey
I'm
not
a
lawyer.
M
Nor
do
I
play
one
at
city
council
in
2005
there
was
a
study
done
for
south
of
gandhi
and
it
said
that
there
was
supposed
to
be
a
red
light
put
in
at
tyson
and
west
shore.
Here
we
are
17
years
later.
We
still
don't
have
it,
but
we
have
doubled
the
dwelling
units
in
our
community
while
we,
the
city,
needs
more
dwelling
units
when
we
started
on
this
tirade
about
the
housing
south
of
gandhi.
M
We
weren't
in
a
housing
crisis,
but
we
also
have
a
comprehensive
plan
that
says
that
we
are
not
supposed
to
have
more
housing
south
of
gandhi.
Why?
Well?
Because
it's
a
dead
end
anyway,
but
the
nice
part
is
that
southeastern
has
decided
to
purchase
the
land
for
cfi
and
they
would
like
to
get
some
help
from
the
city
to
get
our
get
us
a
public
park.
Now
I
have
pulled
the
fy
2022
budget.
There's
a
7
million
dollar
allocation
to
extend
tyson
from
west
shore
to
manhattan.
M
M
I'd
also
like
to
point
out
that
two
of
the
five
or
six
apartment
complexes
are
already
pulling
in
2.6
million
dollars
a
year
more
in
tax
money
than
they
were
pulling
in
before
the
apartment
complex
is
put
in
there.
So
why
not
reinvest
some
of
that
money?
I
think
I
recall
two
weeks
ago
being
up
here
talking
to
you
guys
about
how
we
are
going
to
have
all
this
school
money
come
in
and
it's
going
to
go
out
of
our
neighborhood.
We
just
want
a
little
bit
back.
M
You
know
we
don't
need
the
apartments
in
our
area
because
but
they're
coming
and
then
we've
got
folks
in
cras
who
can't
get
enough
housing
to
save
their
lives.
I
don't
get
it.
Why
don't
we
send
some
of
these
folks
to
the
areas
of
town
where
we
need
the
housing
and
where
there's
land
for
the
housing,
but
hey?
What
do?
I
know?
I'm
not
a
planner
over
4
000
units.
In
six
years
we
have
3
500
single-family
homes.
M
E
Yeah
I'm
here,
can
you
hear
me?
Okay,
yes,
hey!
This
is
robert
kilmartin,
thanks
for
having
me
on
here,
I'm
just
going
to
add
to
mr
and
mrs
soto
and
as
well
as
mr
savit.
I
live
over
at
106
amelia,
which
again
is
the
flooding
alley
issue.
E
I
just
want
to
touch
on
a
couple
of
things
that
were
brought
up
earlier
in
the
meeting
about
a
lot
of
danger
and
warnings
on
flooding,
and
we
have
to
prepare
ourselves
and
a
lot
of
talk
out
there
from
folks
who've
been
in
the
community
a
long
time
about
diversity.
The
neighborhood
is
very
diverse.
We
have
folks
that
have
lived
in
the
neighborhood
for
40
some
odd
years.
Majority
of
them
are
african-american.
E
This
is
an
alleyway
that
people
utilize
constantly
as
far
as
walking
through
as
as
a
you
know,
completely
legal
shortcut
and
at
times
again,
what's
camilo
soto
stated
just
a
heavy
rainport
that
we
had
about
a
week
or
two
ago
it
was
so
untenable.
It
was
even
a
vehicle
could
not
drive
through
the
water.
E
Therefore,
how
is
someone
who
is
walking
through
with
their
children
or
riding
their
bike
through
that
alley?
How
are
they
supposed
to
do
that
with
water?
That
would
be,
you
know,
almost
at
their
knee
level.
E
So
essentially,
what
I'm
asking
is
on
top
of
what
they're
asking
is
just
some
type
of
research
on
infrastructure
or
a
conversation
when
you
have
someone
like
mr
soto,
who
has
sent
countless
emails
and
is
being
bounced
around,
that's
not
acceptable.
This
is
something
again
that
is
an
infrastructure
issue.
It's
not
a
social
issue,
it's
not
a
political
issue,
it's
just
simply
infrastructure,
so
we
need
to
have
some
type
of
response
to
this
for
ourselves
and
for
other
people
in
this
neighborhood
again
that
need
to
travel
through.
This
is
a
serious
issue,
especially
with
hurricanes.
E
In
addition,
with
a
hurricane
coming,
it's
going
to
be
absolutely
catastrophic
for
those
folks.
In
addition,
there's
probably
six
to
seven
people
that
live
in
mr
sabbat's
complex
and
those
folks
can't
even
leave
their
back
of
their
house
or
their
driveway
to
even
walk
out
because
of
the
water
is
filling
up
so
heavy.
Mr
soto,
and
I
apologize-
I
don't
know
the
exact
amount
of
money
he
spent,
but
even
as
we
speak,
there's
a
crew
of
about
five
people
there
laying
down,
rocks
and
attempting
to
help
him
to
fix
it.
E
He's
already
purchased
a
sump
pump.
These
are
all
things
that
the
city
is
blowing
off
and
not
paying
attention
to
from
an
infrastructure
standpoint.
It
shouldn't
be
up
to
a
private
citizen,
especially
private
citizens,
in
that
area
that
are
underprivileged
or
don't
have
the
finances
to
sit
here
and
keep
piling
up,
gravel
and
everything
else
so
that
they
and
their
children
can
make
it
to
the
bus
stop
again.
This
is
robert
kilmartin
from
that
amelia
ave
tampa
ave
alley
area,
and
that's
all
I
have
to
say.
Thank
you
for
your
time.
Thank.
J
J
The
program
is
called.
They
call
health,
public
safety
and
community
development
connecting
the
dock
to
reducing
street
violence.
A
couple
things
that
we're
going
to
be
talking
about
the
first
is
safe
street.
In
baltimore,
over
120
people
have
been
killed
so
far,
yeah
an
area
where
they
had
the
safety
program
is
anywhere
from
zero
to
forty
percent
down
on
the
number
of
murders.
J
The
center
for
disease
control
is
using
this
as
a
best
practice
in
chicago
they
have.
This
group
called
ceasefall
in
which
they
actually
go
to
the
hospital
when
the
person
is
shot
because
they
know
for
the
first
24
hours,
retaliation
occurs,
so
they
go
to
the
hospitals
and
intervene
to
try
to
squash
to
be
11
years
old,
a
killer
in
chicago
they
have.
This
group
called
ex-con
for
society
in
which
inmates
have
gotten
together
to
come
back
and
take
them
to
take
the
streets
when
it
comes
to
killing
in
the
streets.
J
The
streets,
control
now
councilman,
goose,
the
mayor
and
the
chief
of
the
chief
of
police
will
tell
you
they
don't
control
the
streets,
the
streets
control,
the
streets,
they
just
maintain
it.
That's
why
we're
designing
a
program,
that's
designed
by
the
street,
developed
by
the
street
and
controlled
by
the
speech
the
summit's
coming
and
the
killings
are
going
to
go
up
as
much
as
you
see
those
people
crying
out
there
to
stop
killing.
It's
not
reaching
the
right
people
that
you
need
again.
J
C
G
It's
that
that's
city,
council
rules
and
sometimes
some
of
us
break
the
rules
because
we
feel
compelled.
I
think
we
would
all
like
to
respond
to
every
person
in
public
comment.
However,
I
want
to
let
everybody
know
that
we're
we're
available
all
the
time
to
meet
with
constituents
and-
and
I
my
office
has
met
with
several
you-
we
can't
meet
together
because
of
sunshine,
but
we
can
meet
with
you
individually.
G
Miss
lockett
set
up
a
meeting.
I
met
with
four
or
five
of
her
colleagues,
and
we
can.
We
can
meet
and
have
conversations
about
all
of
that.
So
please,
if
you
all
have
conversations,
please
please
talk
to
us.
The
other
thing
I
want
to,
let
you
know,
is
even
though
several
of
us
represent
different
parts
of
the
city
I
represent
south
tampa.
G
I've
spent
so
much
time
in
east
camp,
but
I've
been
criticized
for
being
at
east
tampa
too
much,
and
I
still
want
to
spend
time
then
the
reason
we
go
to
these
other
parts
of
the
city.
I
want
orlando
goods
to
come
to
south
tampa
because
we
vote
on
issues
throughout
the
city.
We
need
to
understand
it.
So
please
continue
to
to
talk
to
us
just
to
give
you
an
idea
of
how
powerful
the
public
is.
I
don't
know
if
angel
is
still
angelina.
G
Angelo
is
still
there,
but
about
five
years
ago
he
came
before
he
and
others
came
before
the
charter
review.
Commission.
If
you
include
morris
five
of
us
were
on
the
charter
review
commission
listing
the
public,
we
included,
we
expanded
the
the
the
categories
of
protection
in
the
community.
We
also,
among
other
things,
added
implicit
bias,
training
angel.
I
want
to
let
you
know.
G
A
month
ago,
I
sat
through
with
the
four
hours
of
implicit
drop
by
string,
so
the
pba
at
the
time
asked
us
not
to
single
them
out,
and
so
we
we
expanded
it
to
cover
everybody
in
the
city,
and
so
every
single
ploy,
including
us,
are
sitting
through
it.
And
it's
not
perfect,
but
it's
a
lot
better.
I
just
want
to
ask
you
all
and-
and
everybody
thank
you
all
for
your
activism
for
bringing
people
here
today.
G
I
want
to
ask
you,
please
include
the
mayor
in
your
act
discussions,
because
the
mayor
controls
the
staff
and
the
legal
department,
and
we
can't
get
anything
done
unless
we
can
have
collaboration
there.
The
same
thing
with
the
county,
the
county,
has
a
much
bigger
budget
than
a
city.
The
state
has
a
budget.
The
state
also
preempts
us
from
doing
certain
things.
The
federal
government
has
a
much
bigger
budget
and
please
don't
forget
the
tampa
housing
authority,
which
controls
a
lot
of
the
stock
of
the
of
the
affordable
housing.
G
You
may
as
you're
watching
that
if
you
watch
the
agenda
overall,
there's
not
a
lot
of
budget
that
we
have
wiggle
room
with,
but
there
are
things
that
are
going
through,
like
a
108
to
200
million
dollar
project
for
a
new
office
on
hannah
avenue
think
how
many
affordable
homes
could
have
been
built
with
that
money.
Had
we
been
able
to
stop
that
city
council
was
not
able
to
stop
that
project.
G
There's
a
project.
That's
going
through
the
water
department
called
toilet
tap
that
could
cost
anywhere
between
2
billion
and
6
billion
dollars.
It's
an
enterprise
fund,
so
we
can't
use
the
water
department
funds
for
affordable
housing,
but
if
the
city
staff
and
the
administration
spend
as
much
time
working
on
affordable
housing
as
they
have
toilet
tap,
we
would
have
solved
that
problem
by
now.
This
city
council,
listening
is
to
listen
to
the
public,
has
been
working
hard
for
three
years
on
affordable
housing,
inclusive
economic
development
and
other
issues
on
inclusive
economic
development.
G
We've
been
fought
by
the
community
that
wants
to
just
subsidize
big
companies
coming
to
the
area.
They
don't
want
to
work
on
inclusive
economic
development.
There's
a
lot
of
things
that
we
could
do
to
work
together.
There
are
cras
in
downtown
a
channel
district.
We
could
shift
up
to
10
or
15
20
million
dollars
a
year
from
these
areas
that
don't
have
slim
and
bite
or
poverty
and
move
them
to
the
areas
that
do.
But
we
need
your
support
to
do
that.
G
The
last
thing
I'll
say
is,
while
we've
been
trying
to
implement
all
these
new
policies
listing
you
all
for
the
last
few
years,
we
found
out
last
fall
that
that,
from
the
tampa
bay
times
that
there
was
a
program,
that's
been
called
now
renting,
while
black,
which
was
evicting
people
out
of
their
homes
without
due
process
and
and
the
and
the
tampa
housing
authority,
was
part
of
that.
G
This
city
council
worked
closely
with
the
interim
police
chief
reuben
delgado
to
end
that
program,
and
then
it
turns
out
a
month
ago,
or
so
we
found
out
that
the
united
states
justice
department,
at
the
request
of
the
aclu
and
naacp
came
into
the
city
of
tampa,
said
the
mayor,
a
letter
in
december
and
now
they're
doing
a
civil
rights
investigation
of
the
city.
But
we
city
council
only
found
out
six
months
later.
G
So
while
we
are
trying
to
push
these
policies
forward,
we
need
the
collaboration
cooperation
of
the
of
the
of
the
administration,
but
in
the
meantime,
the
administration's
being
investigated
by
the
united
states
justice
department.
So
please
we
need
your
help.
There's
a
lot
going
on
in
the
city.
There's
a
lot
of
multiple
government
agencies.
We
want
to
collaborate
with
you.
Please
set
up
meetings
with
us
individually,
we'd
love
to
meet
with
you.
Thank
you.
H
D
R
I
echo
with
what
councilman
carlson
said
specifically
that
one
of
the
things
when
I
got
this
position,
I
thought
great,
you
know
I
can
do
so
much
yeah
and
councilman
gage
just
laughed
because
what
we're?
What
I'm
finding
is
that
there's
just
it
takes
so
long
to
get
something
done,
because
we
don't
necessarily
have
all
the
power
the
state
has
gone
and
preempted
so
much
so
we're
sitting
up
here
and
it's
not
that
we
don't
care
it's
that
we
are
working
feverishly.
R
R
So
we
want
to
try
to
do
things
about
housing,
but
the
state
preempted
us
years
ago,
from
going
in
to
anything,
that's
any
apartment,
complex,
that's
five
or
more,
and
it's
the
the
frustration
is
certainly
felt
by
us,
and
I
want
you
to
understand
that
we
do
feel
that
frustration
and
we
are
we're
we're
doing
what
we
can
and
I
do
want
to.
Let
you
know
that
we're
not
going
to
stop
until
we
find
some
solution,
no
is
not
an
option,
so
we
are
working,
it's
unfortunately,
I'm
finding
and
it
just
takes
longer.
B
Councilwoman
hertek,
thank
you
for
articulating
the
point
that
I've
been
trying
to
make
for
at
least
the
last
three
years.
It's
not
our
hands
that
are
tied
at
your
hands
by
the
state
of
florida.
We
try
and
do
as
much
as
we
can,
but
when
we
are
preempted,
please
call
your
state
representatives.
Please
call
your
state
senators.
H
Councilman
miranda,
one
more
thing
and
I'm
not
trying
to
make
news,
but
when
you
look
back,
I'm
not
for
everything
and
I'm
not
against
anything.
I
got
to
listen
to
everything,
that's
done
and
when
you
look
back
and
you
see
one
entity
in
a
sports
arena
trying
to
play
your
city
against
another
city-
look
out
because
what
they
want
is
money
out
of
your
pocket
and
I'm
not
saying
that
I'm
against
anybody
moving
somebody
any
sports
you've
been
if
you
want
to
come
to
tampa,
come
but
pay
your
own.
Damn
weight.
H
Don't
ask
for
public
money
to
build
your
stadium.
Don't
ask
for
public
funds
that
every
time
we
have
an
event
cost
you
250
thousand
dollars.
Listen
to
what
I'm
saying!
Don't
ask
that
all
these
times
every
time
you
have
a
concert
and
the
sports
authority
the
moment
to
make
some
money,
so
they
can
continue
functioning
as
a
representative
of
the
people
for
the
first,
two
million
dollars
go
who
and
their
pockets
so
you're
getting
zero
for
the
first
two
million
and
half
of
that
after
that,
because
the
other
half
goes
to
them
again.
H
H
It
moves
and
shakes
and
rounds,
and
you
have
to
keep
track
of
what's
going
on
when
somebody
comes
and
tells
you
I
want
to
build
something,
but
I
need
your
support.
Raise
your
hand
if
you
pay
ad
volume
tax
at
the
end
of
the
year.
All
of
us.
Do
you
ask
tell
me
how
much
they
pay
I'll
tell
you
nada,
zero.
H
So
what
I'm
saying
open
your
eyes,
open
your
ears
and
understand?
What's
coming
in
96,
there
was
a
vote
cast
in
the
city
of
tampa
and
hillsborough
county
for
half,
penny
sales,
tax
for
work
for
the
roads
and
public
affairs
and
needs,
and
the
school
system
to
have
their
money
to
have
the
best
education
for
your
kids,
my
grandkids
and
everybody's
future,
and
that
failed
the
same
year.
They
had
the
same
tax
bill
on
for
september.
H
They
spent
484
thousand
dollars
against
the
public's
what
number
zero
and
it
passed
49
to
51..
Why?
Because
they
invented
the
two
things
to
say.
If
we
built
this,
we'll
get
the
tax
and
that's
what
happened.
I'm
not
anti
anything,
but
I
want
to
make
sure
that
when
it
happens
this
guy
paying
the
tax
is
not
going
to
be
under
hooked.
They
can
come
and
build
any
tax
by
how
they
want,
but
pay
for
the
damn
thing
don't
come
and
tell
me
about
creating
a
new
cra
cause.
H
H
What
that
means
that
if
this
paper
belongs
to
you,
the
taxpayers
and
it's
worth
a
dollar
for
the
next
30
years
or
whatever
the
value
is
that
goes
to
them,
what
a
country
so
they're
going
to
pay
you
their
50
back
of
the
stadium
with
your
own
money.
Thank
you
very
much,
mr
chairman.
Thank
you.
Thank
you.
Thank
you.
B
Q
Just
very
very
briefly,
I
want
to
echo
something
that
others
have
said
as
well,
which
is
that
we're
we
we
meet
individually.
I
believe
I'm
meeting
with
miss
lockett
this
coming
week
if
memories
first
be
right,
but
I'm
glad
to
go
out
to
the
community
and
and
whatnot
and
meet
with
residents.
Personally,
I
I
don't
directly
represent
that
area.
Councilman
goodes
works
very,
very
hard
for
that
community,
but
I,
if
folks
want
to
talk
in
person
I'd
be
you
know
more
than
happy
to
do
so.
Q
But
what
we
see
here
really
is
the
effect
of
what
I've
called
and
what
many
people
call
a
war
on
the
middle
class
and
those
working
so
hard
to
get
into
the
middle
class.
We
have
inflation
of
almost
10
percent
nationally
we
have
30
percent
increase
in
housing
costs
in
the
tampa
area.
We
have
five
dollar
gas,
it's
getting
tougher
and
tougher
and
tougher
and
the
middle
class.
Q
The
working
class
and
those
who
are
struggling,
struggling
to
live
paycheck
to
paycheck
every
week
are
taking
tremendous
hits
in
our
city
and
throughout
this
country,
and
that's
what
we're
seeing,
but
I
I
do
assure
you
all
that
we're
all
working
very,
very
hard
in
that
in
our
jobs
and
we're
one
of
many,
but
just
wanted
to
contribute
those
thoughts.
Thank
you,
mr
chairman.
B
All
right,
let's
move
on
with
our
staff
reports.
We
will
not
be
hearing
from
administrative
update,
but
if
we
could,
let's
start
with
item
agenda
12.,
thank
you
which.
A
A
Thank
you,
chairman
gene
duncan
administrator
for
infrastructure
mobility.
We
appreciate
you
pulling
this
item
this
morning.
We
wanted
to
shed
a
little
bit
more
light
on
it
being
that
there's
been
some
interest
expressed
by
the
neighborhood
of
sunset
park
and
with
good
reasons
and
frustrations
as
well.
This
particular
item
is
a
takeover
agreement
for
the
defaulted
situation
we
have
with
american
pipeline
who
started
this
water
main
replacement
project
in
the
sunset
park
area
and
defaulted
about
a
year
after
they
started.
A
A
We
will
also
make
sure
they
have
our
contact
information
for
any
concerns
they
have
about
any
situations
they're,
seeing
in
the
roadway
that
are
that
are
of
concern
or
a
safety
issue
that
we
need
to
go
out
and
further
button
up
to
make
sure
we're
keeping
things
safe
until
we
get
a
new
contractor,
the
main
interests
of
the
citizens
that
we've
heard
and
know
councilman
maniscalco
had
asked
that
we
take
a
look
at
this
is
the
condition
of
the
roads
with
the
unpaved
milled
roads
exposed
pipe
and
the
future
paving
condition.
A
A
We
have
an
old
list
with
a
map
showing
which
areas
will
get
improved
once
the
work
water
main
work
is
done,
and
so
we
just
wanted
to
share
those
extra
details
with
you
this
morning,
even
though
this
item
was
on
consent,
we
are
fully
aware
of
the
public's
concern
about
the
delay
that's
occurred,
which
is
very
unfortunate.
We
don't
have
too
many
defaulted
contractor
situations,
but
they
do
happen
on
occasion.
A
B
F
You
very
much
for
that.
You
and
you
answered
my
question.
I
know
you
saw
the
email,
I
sent
it
to
you
vic
and
chief
bennett.
I
know
you
don't
have
a
timeline,
but
you
will
be
addressing
it.
You
just.
I
know
time
is
of
the
essence
and
whatnot,
but
you
already
you
already
answered
my
questions.
You're
going
to
be
notifying
the
neighbors
I'll
respond
by
email
with
this
update
to
the
individual.
That
did
email
me.
So
that's
really
it.
I
appreciate
it.
Thank
you
very
much.
A
And
just
to
add
to
that
councilman,
once
we
do
have
the
new
contractor
on
board,
we
will
go
out
and
have
another
public
engagement
to
give
further
details
to
the
community
on
the
new
schedule
and
any
other
logistical
issues
related
to
the
construction.
A
Well,
let's
see,
I
have
a
timeline
here:
the
project
started
in,
let's
see
october
of
2021,
they
defaulted
in
january
of
2022..
They
also
the
same
company
that
defaulted
at
the
armenia
bush
intersection.
If
you
recall
that
situation
they're
out
of
miami,
nothing
against
miami
of
course,
so
I
don't
have
an
exact
date
on
how
long
it's
been
delayed,
but
it's
been
at
least
from
january
until
now,
six
months
of
a
delay-
and
we
expect
several
months
before
we
get
another
contractor
on
board.
So
six
months
plus
right
now,.
A
So
the
the
agreement
will
require
that
they
complete
the
work
within
the
remaining
funds.
However,
there
could
be
change
orders
that
are
legitimate
and
not
related
to
prior
work
that
we
could
approve.
It'll
just
depend
on
the
situation,
but
we
will
not
be
approving
any
additional
funds
or
any
change
orders
for
prior
work.
That
was
done
that
as
part
of
the
arrangement
with
the
insurance
company,
and
while
we
have
this
insurance
for
unforeseen
circumstances,
that
that
coverage
is
coming
on
their
side
and
not
our
side.
Thank
you.
H
H
H
Now
party
that
now
has
to
take
over
the
construction
services
because
they
put
it
now
in
their
lap.
They
were
reinsured
so
now
they're
the
ones
they're
going
to
have
to
take
over,
and
I
did
see
some
of
that
by
accident
a
few
months
back
on
the
west
side
of
I
believe
west
shore
in
the
euclid
area
back
in
there-
and
I
saw
some
of
the
pipes
still
open
and
they
were
never
covered
or
anything
of
that
nature.
They
tried
to
do
something,
but
they
never
completed
the
job.
They
did.
H
Completed
the
rest
of
it,
and
there
was
a
lot
of
red
flags
and
yellow
signs
and
all
that
stuff.
But
it's
it's
a
shame.
This
happens,
but
it
happens
once
in
a
short
period
of
time,
because
this
company
now
to
get
another
insurance
bond,
is
going
to
go
through
h,
e,
double
e
docking
sticks
and
and
to
get
the
insurance
done
for
their
for
their
company.
H
G
It
thanks
for
the
update
thanks
for
pulling
this.
I
also
have
gotten
because
we're
right
on
the
border
of
our
two
districts-
I've-
I've
gotten
emails
about
this
too.
I
afforded
them.
H
G
Vic's
always
very
responsive.
I
appreciate
you
all
pulling
this
in
your
letter
to
the
neighbors.
Can
you
please
in
a
sentence,
acknowledge
that
council
has
received
the
comments
from
the
community
and
then
passed
them
on
to
you
all,
and
then
we've
asked
you
all
to
you
know
to
work
quickly.
G
And
if
you
want
put,
you
know
our
the
email
for
all
of
us
to
be
emailed
to,
but
just
so
they
know
that
that
that
that
we're
all
connected
some
folks
get
upset
because
we
hand
off,
but
the
city
council
doesn't
have
control
over
staff.
So
all
we
can
do
is
hand
off
them,
but
we
we
need
to
show
that
that
we're
all
coordinating
on
it.
The
second
thing
is
that,
as
you
said,
the
only
thing
they
care
about
is
when
is
it
going
to
be
done?
G
And
so,
when
do
you
think
that,
is
it
possible
in
the
letter
to
put
a
date
to
say
on
this
date,
we'll
be
able
to
tell
you
when
it
will
be
done,
because
I
think
we
need
to
set
expectations
if
it's
going
to
be
six
months
before
we
know
the
date
of
when
it
will
be
done
in
those
next
six
months,
we're
going
to
get
a
whole
bunch
of
emails.
So
we
just.
We
need
to
set
expectations
about
how
long
it's
going
to
take.
A
G
Just
if
you
could
explain
that
process
and
anything
we
can
do
to
try
to
set
expectations
of
time
if
they
think
my
expectation,
if
I
was
a
neighbor,
is
that
okay
you're
going
to
get
a
contract
it'll
be
fixed
next
week,
but
if
it's
months
we
we
somehow
need
to
set
expectations.
The
last
thing
is
that
is
it
not
possible
on
an
emergency
basis,
to
get
somebody
to
go
in
and
pay
some
of
these
streets
just
to
make
it
a
little
bit
better
for
folks.
A
Well,
we
can't
pave
the
streets
until
the
work
is
done
and
the
work
is
unfinished.
So
that's
the
dilemma
and
brad
do
you
want
to
weigh
in
on
that?
Thank
you.
J
Of
infrastructure,
to
answer
your
question,
mr
crossland,
the
charity
will
be
working
to
bring
a
contractor
on
board
they've
already
been
doing
that
over
the
last
month
and
they've
been
unsuccessful,
thus
far,
they're
talking
to
two
contractors
currently
that
we
use
on
a
regular
basis.
We
expect,
over
the
next
couple
weeks
to
come
to
terms
with
one
of
those
contractors
and
then
at
that
point
about
two
weeks
from.
D
B
D
Couple
of
things-
real,
quick
and-
and
this
is
what
mr
barrett
has
alluded
to
in
miss
duncan
as
well-
we
like
all
public
projects
we
require
that
these
projects
be
bonded
by
a
surety
company
and
now
that
the
contractor's
gone
in
default,
the
surety
company
is
now
involved
in
getting
a
contractor
to
replace
the
defaulting
contractor.
To
finish
the
work,
that's
why
you
have
a
bond,
but
because
we
have
a
third
party
involved,
we
don't
have
entire
control
over
the
scheduling.
D
That
is
part
of
the
reason
for
the
delay,
and
so
we
have
to
work
with
the
surety
with
the
third
party
and
now
the
other
thing
is
this
takeover
agreement's
the
first
step
in
kind
of
making
sure
the
journey
does
what
it's
supposed
to
do
and
get
the
project
completed
as
quickly
as
possible,
and
you
do
need
to
take
a
vote
on
this
item
and
actually
approve
it.
So
I
just
wanted
to
remind
you
of
that
very
consent.
I
Gene
thank
you
for
the
updates.
I
did
get
that
email,
that's
why
when
we
had
staff,
I
addressed
it
with
brad
as
well,
but
I
did
want
council
to
know
that
on
yesterday
I
was
out
driving
around
my
district.
I
usually
do,
and
with
one
of
the
contracts
we
have
out
there,
we
had
a
big
minority
crew
out
there
working,
and
that
was
very
satisfying
to
see
that
having
in
that
community
having
somebody
actually
doing
the
work
living
there.
I
A
B
Miss
duncan
is
everyone
finished,
miss
duncan.
First,
I
want
to
send
a
shout
out
to
mr
b
day
this
same
company,
as
was
stated
at
armenia,
and
bush
defaulted
on
theirs
and
miss
sierra
was
at
my
place
of
work
and
she
was
voicing
her
complaint.
B
B
Councilman
miranda
said
that
this
type
of
thing
doesn't
happen
very
often,
but
now
we
have
two
in
front
of
us
from
the
same
contractor.
How
often
does
this
happen.
A
Very
rarely,
it
really
is
a
real
irregularity
and
you
see
it's
the
same
company.
So
it's
not
like.
We
have
this
with
different
companies
occurring
so,
but
we
are
fortunate
that
we
have
a
great
process
in
place
with
the
bond
and
the
insurance
that
we
have
recourse
to
get
the
job
done.
Although
we
do
have
to
endure
the
delay,
which
is
unfortunate.
B
A
D
We'd
have
to
look
at
the
contract,
there's
default
provisions,
I'm
sure
on
the
contract
and
we
could
potentially
go
after
them
on
a
claim.
Miss
hamilton
is
here
she
reviews
all
those
contracts
on
behalf
of
the
city.
If
marcie
have
anything
to
add
there.
C
H
H
B
A
Chair,
I
know
you're
gonna,
take
a
vote
on
this
item.
I
believe
we're.
A
And
if
I
could
add
the
memo
that
that
we
sent
in
a
request,
this
item
be
pulled.
We
also
asked
to
share
just
a
quick
feedback
to
you
on
francis
avenue.
I
wish
you
heard
some
comments
this
morning
from
the
public,
and
I
know
the
council
is
always
interested
in
having
some
remedy
or
response
to
the
public
comments
that
you
hear.
So
I
asked
mr
b
day
to
come
and
offer
a
few
comments
about
francis
avenue.
If
that's
okay,
that's.
K
Morning,
council
morning,
chair
big
b
day
mobility
department
here
to
address
the
issue
and
public
comments
that
you've
heard
from
the
community
on
francis
avenue.
This
is
an
unimproved
alley,
just
west
of
tampa
streets
in
the
tampa
heights
area.
I'd
like
to
start
off
by
saying
mr
killman,
who
called
in
earlier,
is
absolutely
right.
This
is
an
infrastructure
issue,
it's
a
little
more
complex,
but
I'd
like
to
give
a
background
on
the
same.
K
So
what
happens?
Is
there
are
sound
reasons
to
provide
access
to
developments
off
of
alleys?
It
does
take
pressure
off
of
the
streets
and
there
are
other
transportation
advantages
over
time.
Our
standards
for
buildings
have,
as
they
should
change
and
new
developments
are
now
built
higher
than
they
used
to
before,
and
so
what
happens
in
alleys
like
these,
you
have
older
developments
or
houses
or
other
properties
that
are
at
a
different
level
than
the
newer
developments.
K
The
newer
developments,
as
you
heard
from
another
homeowner
earlier
today,
are
required
to
mitigate
for
their
storm
water
impacts.
So
there
was
a
there's,
a
four
unit,
multi
family
development
on
108
amelia,
and
they
were
required
to
and
they
did
put
in
two
ponds
and
two
swales
on
property.
One
of
the
challenges
is
over
time.
How
well
these
things
are
maintained
and
do
they
work
and
that's
a
staffing
challenge
for
inspection
and
things
like
that.
K
That
creates
one
part
of
the
infrastructure
challenge
as
far
as
107
francis
the
pool,
I
think
mr
soto
mentioned
that,
and
he
is
right
that
you
know
currently
it
the
requirement
is
for
it
to
drain
onto
the
alley
which
creates
pressures
on
the
alley
as
well.
K
K
K
So
in
this
case
that
property
owner
for
108
amelia
had
an
obligation
to
pave
the
alley,
but
the
city,
and
rightly
so,
given
the
circumstances
and
current
policy
waived
that
requirement
to
pave
it
because
paving
it
without
storm
water
improvements
would
increase
impervious
surface
and
aggravate
the
flooding
issue.
So
this
is
an
infrastructure
issue.
K
This
is
a
policy
issue
where
we
need
to
update
this
sop
to
reflect
today's
conditions,
but
those
conditions
to
mitigate
for
storm
water,
especially
in
alleys
that
are
completely
unfunded,
currently,
would
require
significant
investment
by
property
owners
and
developers
to
mitigate
for
storm
water
issues.
So
that's
a
discussion
that
we
will
continue
to
have
with
our
partners
in
other
departments,
including
development,
growth
management,
legal
in
others.
K
So
what
I'm
trying
to
say
is
our
storm
intensities,
have
increased
and
they're
more
frequent
than
they
used
to
be
that
combined
with,
depending
on
where
you're
in
tampa,
whether
it's
tidal
effects
or
whether
it's
inadequate
storm
water
system,
as
in
this
case
there
is
an
inadequate
storm
water
system.
The
nearest
inlet
today
is
three
and
a
half
blocks
south
on
palm
avenue
and
we'll
address
what
we're
going
to
do
about
that
as
well.
But
this
is
putting
serious
pressure
on
the
city's
storm
water
systems
and
our
ability.
K
We
have
an
assessment,
an
improvement
assessment
that
was
approved
in
2010
and
that's
helped.
You
receive
quarterly
reports
that
show
what
projects
we're
working
on
the
southeast,
seminole
heights
project,
storm
water
project
will
add
capacity
that
will
benefit
this
area,
but
connections
have
to
be
made
to
it
to
move
the
water
from
one
place
to
another.
K
So
that's
the
overall
challenge.
In
the
short
term,
we
have
crews
out
there
right
now,
making
at
best
temporary
fixes
by
adding
milling
materials
and
things
like
that
to
improve
absorption
and
drainage
and
maybe
smooth
out
the
surface,
we're
doing
what
we
can
with
our
operations
crew,
the
long-term
capital
fix
for
this
alley
and
then
we'll
have
to
assess
or
understand.
Rather
what
other
needs
there
are
in
alleys.
Alleys
are
not
very
well
studied
or
inventoried,
because
there's
no
funding
for
them
they're
also
an
opportunity
for
various
reasons.
K
Different
item
there,
but
so
the
long-term
fix
for
francis
is
going
to
be
to
connect
the
storm
water
system
from
francis
to
tampa
street,
which
is
literally
about
four
or
five
properties
away.
That
will
happen
when,
as
part
of
the
raise
grant,
f,
dot
improves
the
storm
water
structures
and
storm
water
system
along
tampa
and
florida.
The
raise
grant
is
that
grant
that
we
recently
won,
or
rather
fdot
recently
won,
but
we
pushed
for
with
usdot
and
it
connects
downtown
to
north
of
the
interstate.
K
All
the
way
up
to
just
short
of
mlk,
provides,
walk
by
connections,
provides
better
transit
connections,
but
a
key
component
of
it
was
also
storm.
Water
and
fdot
stepped
up
and
added
17
million
dollars
to
their
project,
to
improve
stormwater
out
here
and
that's
going
to
benefit
tampa
heights.
K
Of
course,
that
will
take
several
years,
but
between
the
short
term
and
that
long
term
there
will
be
a
midterm
where
we're
going
to
have
to
manage
as
much
as
we
can
on
that
alley
and
I'll
I'll
commit
to
you
that
our
ops
teams
and
our
engineering
teams
will
continue
to
explore
other
options
that
I'm
not
aware
of
right
now.
But
we
won't
stop
until
we
find
some
sort
of
mitigation
out
here,
but
there's
a
long-term
fix
that
will
happen
and,
in
the
short
term,
we're
going
to
work
with
the
neighbors
councilman.
H
K
F
H
F
H
One
flaw
in
the
way
we
do
things
and
let
me
explain
about
the
what
if
and
I'm
gonna
make
you
the
nice
guy-
I'm
not
going
to
be
the
nice
guy
in
this
comparison,
you're
a
nice
guy
and
you
built
your
house
according
to
every
room,
every
spec
of
the
city's
zoning
ability
for
mitigating
your
own
water
and
so
forth,
and
you
have
a
swell
on
both
sides
of
the
house.
Everything's
hunky-dory,
you
love
it.
H
However,
you
say
gee
I
got
transferred
and
I
got
to
leave
so
you
leave
with
your
family
and
I
buy
your
house
now
me
or
whatever
says
you
know
what
I
don't
like
this
wave.
I
don't
know
why
this
building
like
that.
So
what
do
they
do?
They
cover
the
soil
and
they
plant
trees
or
brushes
or
nice
plants.
H
But
what
happens
there?
No
one
knows
yes,
it's
in
your
document,
the
city,
but
the
problem
with
that
is
that
do
we
check
those
things
on
a
constant
basis?
I
would
doubt
it
because
there's
thousands
of
them.
That's
just
my
opinion.
I
may
be
wrong.
So
what
happens?
We're
exacerbating
the
problem
by
not
having
a
check
on
the
people
that,
on
the
plan
that
when
you
first
built
your
house,
it's
still
there
after
I
sold
the
house.
So
I
don't
know
how
to
solve
that
problem
other
than
if
there's
a
sale
of
a
house.
H
A
city
must
have
to
go
out
there
and
make
sure
when
that
cell
is
consummated,
that
they'd
be
called
in
just
like
an
inspector
on
a
roof
or
anything
else
make
sure
that
that
house
is
still
just
like
it
was
when
it
was
processed
and
got
the
building
permit.
That's
the
only
way
you
can
solve
that
problem,
and
I
hate
to
take
up
your
time.
You're
still
a
nice
guy
and
I'm
not.
H
K
H
I
Vic,
thank
you
for
responding,
madam
clerk.
Thank
you
for
handing
me
this.
As
you
know
earlier,
since
I
have
you
here,
you
got
a
lot
of
this
disabled
seniors
that
we're
here.
I'm
glad
you
sent
this
to
me
and
this
is
this
disabled
parking
inventory
within
the
city
and
I
guess
the
memories.
Disabled
parking
is
free
on
council
days.
So
real
quick,
you
explain
that
because
I
think
the
the
challenge
is
what
I'm
saying
about
how
far
they're
away
from
this
council
building.
K
And-
and
we
do
need
to
message
that
better
in
the
entire
downtown
area
in
the
entire
downtown
area,
if
you
have
a
disabled
decal
on
council
days,
you
will
not
get
charged
until
the
council
meeting
is
over.
I
think
there's
a
time
limit
on
that.
I
need
to
confirm
what
that
is,
but
that
that
has
been
the
case
is
that
on.
K
I
We
can
work
better
on
that,
but-
and
I
do
see
some
of
the
points,
because
some
of
the
things
you
saw
may
have
a
way
to
challenge
to
get
down.
So
I
don't
know
they
could
be
a.
We
could
look
at
past
in
the
future.
Disney
parking
lot
there's
an
area
to
where
we
can
actually
have
that
for
the
seniors,
because
people
are
starting
to
come
down
here
and
a
lot.
R
Just
to
add
a
little
bit
to
that
is,
is
there
a
way
that
we
could
add
that
to
the
intro
or
the
invite
on
the
agenda?
It
seems
that
seems
like
a
quick
fix.
K
Yes,
we'll
work
with
miss
knowles
in
her
office
on
the
same.
B
B
P
P
P
They
do
not
provide
legal
advice
or
legal
representation.
They
do
not
get
involved
in
the
issues
with
the
landlord.
Unless
it's
one
of
the
items
that's
within
their
purview,
which
is
the
tenant
rights.
Excuse
me
the
notice
of
tenants
rights
or
the
increase
in
the
rent.
So
basically,
what
they
do
is
those
three
people
then
send
the
caller
to
wherever
they
need
to
be
either
inside
or
outside
of
the
county.
They
have
budgeted
eight
hundred
thousand
dollars
this
year
for
that
office.
It's
not
part
of
their
housing
department.
P
They've
created
a
separate
office
within
the
county
and
in
the
past
month,
they've
handled
approximately
400
calls.
That
is
in
addition
to
the
emails
that
they
received
and
the
referrals
that
they
received
from
their
commission
members.
F
Thank
you
for
that
information.
I
did
similar
research,
I
mean
you,
you
know
the
the
details.
Are
there
I'd
like
to
create
something
like
that
here
for
city
of
tampa
in
miami-dade
county
is
much
bigger
than
the
municipality,
so
I
don't
know
if
we
need
three
people
or
two
people
per
our
population.
F
You
know
we've
heard
from
the
public
and
and
they
have
asked
for
something
like
this
or
they
you
know
we
we
have
everything
here,
as
miami
dade
has
done
it.
I
know
we
have
a
attendance
bill
of
rights.
We
can
include
that
there
I
mean,
that's
really
it.
I
mean
I'd
I'd
like
to
hear
from
other
council
members,
of
course,
but
you
know
make
a
motion.
D
F
So
as
we
go
into
you
know,
it
is
budget
season
now
and
the
mayor
will
be
presenting
in
august.
I
see
800
000
here
I
don't
know
what
we
would
need.
Would
we
need
three
people,
one
person,
two
people,
how
much
that
would
be.
Of
course,
this
would
be
within
the
the
city
limits,
not
a
county
department,
but
I'll
stop
there
and
I'll
wait
to
hear
what
other
council
members.
R
I
agree,
I
think
this
is,
I
know,
it'll
be
harder,
but
it
seems
very
simple.
I
appreciate
your
your
bulleted
points.
I
would
recommend
three
just
now
because
of
the
housing
crisis
that
we're
in
and
see
how
that
goes,
but
I'm
I
in
addition
to
that.
What
I
would
like
to
see
put
into
any
sort
of
budget
item
is
a
a
dedicated
amount
of
money
that
goes
toward
advertising
that
we
have
this.
R
H
Those
same
thoughts:
how
long
has
this
ordinance
been
in
miami
miami
dade,
tennessee
advocacy
office?
However,
I
want
to
know
the
results
of
what
they've
done.
In
other
words,
if
they
had,
you
said
400
cases
up
to
now
those
cases
that
they
not
the
whole
400,
because
some
of
them
more
likely
haven't
been
heard,
how
many
of
those
that
they
really
save.
I
want
to
know
if
the
program
really
works,
I
don't
want
to
spend
any
hundred
thousand
dollars
and
have
three
employees
and
we
can't
solve
something.
H
I
want
something
that's
solvable
if
miami-dade
has
something
that
we
don't
know
about
and
we're
finding
that
I'm
100
percent
with
it
that
they
can
save
somebody
from
getting
exhausted
that
is
already
exhausted
out
of
their
rental
unit
within
60
days
or
three
months
or
four
months.
What
has
this
ordinance
done
for
the
people
that
are
again,
the
ones
have
been
served
with
notices.
That's
what
I
want
to
know.
P
Well,
I
can
answer
a
little
bit
of
that.
They
did
tell
me
that
the
majority
of
their
calls
that
they
have
received
and
their
office
has
only
been
open
for
about
a
month.
The
majority
of
their
calls
has
been
for
rental
assistance,
so
then
they
refer
those
people
to
the
rental
assistance
program
in
their
housing
department,
but.
H
H
I
This
is
a
pass-through.
I
think
what
miami
has
done,
instead
of
really
creating
a
real
program,
it's
more
or
less.
I'm
calling
you
just
saying:
well,
the
county
is
not
responding.
Anything
we're
just
going
to
send
you
to
this
particular
service
over
here
and
what's
the
accountability
factor
saying,
what's
that
going
on,
is
it
working
or
not?
I
I
I
I
L
B
R
The
way
if
you
could
put
that
back
up
on
the
screen
see
the
way
I
look
at
this.
Yes,
it
is
a
clearinghouse,
however,
as
we
are
finding
out
and
as
I'm
finding
out
trying
to
solve
this
is
that
we
have
federal
agencies.
We
have
hud,
we
have
state
agencies
for
the
apartments
that
are
five
and
over.
We
have
a
local
code
enforcement
for
the
apartments
or
the
houses
that
are
four
and
under
to
me
as
a
as
a
renter
who
would
be
in
this
situation.
R
My
expectation
for
this
office
would
be
to
help
people
try
to
find
the
place
they
need
to
go
before
they
run
out
of
time.
Yes,
do
we
need
to
do
more?
Absolutely,
but
there's
right
now,
we,
I
know
we
are
trying
to
figure
out
how
we
I
know
that
we're
right
now
trying
to
figure
out
how
we
can
solve
some
of
the
issues
with
the
larger
apartment
complexes.
Well,
how,
by
working
with
the
state
and
the
county,
but
right
now
we
don't
have
those
answers.
R
R
I
don't
I
don't
disagree
that
they
need
to
have
some
type
of
solution,
but
if
you
don't
know
where
to
begin,
you're,
you're
really
stuck,
and
I
don't
want
people
to
be-
kicked
out
of
their
homes
because
they're
taking
too
much
time
to
try
to
reach
each
agency,
we
could
even
try
to
put
something-
I
don't
know
if
it's
legal
or
how
we
can
make
it
so
that
when
someone
is
served
with
an
eviction
notice
or
a
late
notice
that
they
get
information
about
this
program.
Well,.
P
P
I
I
realize
it
may
not
be
as
much
as
you
would
like
to
see,
but
we
might
be
able
to
expand
on
that.
I
have
also
pulled
from
the
florida
department
of
agriculture.
They
have
put
out
a
brochure
that
goes
into
a
little
bit
of
landlord
and
tenant
law
without
providing
legal
advice.
We
can
also
add
this
to
the
housing
and
community
development
website
so
that
those
resources
are
there
for
people
also.
R
Well,
we
were
listening
to
a
lady
earlier
this
morning
who,
who
doesn't
know
how
to
use
a
computer,
and
a
lot
of
our
seniors
are
in
that
space,
where
they
don't
know
how
to
use
a
computer.
Which
is
why
I
think
this
office
is
important
because
you
can
pick
up
a
phone.
But
what
you
just
showed
me
is
eight
different
agencies
and,
while
that's
good
information,
people
like
our
seniors
or
others
who
just
they
don't
know
which
one
to
call.
G
Thank
you
for
doing
this
research
council
member
maniscalco.
I
think
you
should
make
a
motion
to
ask
to
have
to
come
back
with
a
ordinance
in
july
and
then
have
first
reading
in
august.
I'm
happy
to
second
that.
But
could
you
please
put
that
other
slide
back
up
with
the
duties
in
miami.
G
So
of
the
four
responsibilities,
I
think
we
ought
to
take
the
fourth
one
out.
We,
we
city,
council
and
the
mayor
have
supported
adding
more
staff.
I
don't
remember
how
many
staff
are
in
affordable
housing
right
now,
but
there's
a
team
of
people
that
are
working
with
developers
and
others
to
try
to
build,
affordable
housing.
G
My
fear
is
that
if
we
include
that
in
the
in
the
responsibilities
that
person
is
going
to
get
sucked
into
working
on
those
programs
and
not
be
able
to
answer
questions
of
the
public-
and
I
think
the
most
important
part
of
this-
this
person
be
an
advocate
and
and
and
be
able
to
answer
questions
this.
All
this
all
is
very
complicated,
it's
hard
for
for
us
to
navigate
and
understand
all
the
plate
pieces.
G
I
know
they're
experts
in
the
audience
who
understand
a
lot
of
the
different
places
where
money
is
and
programs,
but
we
need
we
need
somebody
who
can
simplify
and
and
direct
people
in
the
in
the
right
place.
If
there
are
folks
who
are
missing
two
hundred
dollars
in
the
gap
that
month
and
there's
a
program
that
would
solve
that
problem,
and
they
don't
know
where
to
go,
hopefully
this
person
will
help
guide
them
to
it,
whether
it's
in
the
city
or
outside
how
we
talk
and
that's
and
that's
the
that's
a
big
thing.
G
The
the
other
thing
is
that,
and
some
of
the
audience
might
disagree,
but
I
I
would
recommend
that
we
start
with
one
person
the
first
year
and
here's
why
we
as
as
the
community
has
said
and
we've
said,
there's
a
housing
crisis
out
there
right
now
there
are
hundreds
and
thousands
of
people
being
put
out
because
their
rents
have
gone
up
so
much.
We
created
a
rental
assistance
program.
What
does
anybody
remember?
What
was
the
total
budget
4
million
or
something
like
that?
G
But
the
money
was
over
over
subscribe
and
and
we
have
way
more
people
that
want
that
assistance
money
than
than
we
have
money
to
fill.
R
Well,
I
appreciate
this.
The
sentiment
I'm
and-
and
we
do
need
to
put
money
toward
housing.
I
feel
like
this
actually
does
enable
residents
to
find
those
issues
faster.
So
if
you
have
somebody
who
can't
reach
who's
calling
and
can't
reach,
I
I
think
that
maybe
further
down
the
line
when,
when
we're
not
in
such
a
crisis,
we
could
we
could
pull
back
on
those
employees,
but
I
think
at
least
two
initially
to
be
able
to
respond
because
we're
going
to
get
overwhelmed.
Just
look.
What
happened
with
the
rmap
program.
R
People
are
immediately
going
to
call
and
use
this
service
and
we
want
them
to,
but
with
the
rmap
once
the
money
was
gone,
it
was
gone.
This
is
not
going
to
have
money,
that's
going
to
disappear,
it's
going
it's
a
service,
so
it's
going
to
continue
to
help.
People
go
to
the
places
that
solve
their
problem.
I
I
just
want
to
make
sure
that,
if
we're
going
to
have
a
program
that
the
people
that
we
have
are
knowledgeable
of
these
other
programs
and
be
able
to
give
them
some
sound
advice
or
and
be
able
to
get
them
to
the
right
people,
so
they
can
get
the
help
they
need.
I
just
don't
want
somebody
just
to
be
answering
the
phone
and
just
transfer
them
to
just
another
agency,
like
that,
I
I
have
a
problem
with
that.
F
Okay,
so
having
listened
to
the
the
comments
by
my
colleagues,
you
know
folks
just
don't
know
where
to
turn
for
help.
You
know
my
own
mother.
How
many
times
does
she
contact
me
help
me
with
the
help,
because
she
doesn't
know-
and
especially
you
know
when
it
comes
to
something
so
important
as
housing,
which
is
a
basic
human
right.
F
People
are
scared,
because
I
mean
we
see
that
we
see
what's
going
on,
rents
are
out
of
control
issues
with
housing
all
over
the
place.
I
think
this
is
a
good
thing
to
do.
My
motion
would
be
that
the
legal
department
come
back
with
a
draft
ordinance
draft,
so
we
have
time
to
read
it
and
look
at
it
august
4th.
F
I
know
we're
on
summer
break
there
in
july
august,
4th
under
staff
reports
watching
I'm
sorry
if,
if
it's
a
draft
ordinance
before
that
that
we
budget
and
I'm
saying
400
thousand
dollars
for
two
people
to
work
in
this
new
office,
I
don't
know
how
big
miami-dade
county
is.
I
know,
hillsborough
county
is
over
a
million
people.
F
City
of
tampa
is
right
at
400,
it's
under
it's
under
half
a
million
people,
so
I
think
with
four
hundred
thousand
two
employees
and
if
we
have
to
reduce
it
or
increase
it,
you
know
at
least
we
can
test
it
out
and
remove
everything
here
that
you
see
but
remove
bullet
point.
Four
that
says:
works
with
developers,
slash
agencies
to
develop
housing
opportunities,
as
councilman
carlson
mentioned,
and
leave
everything
else
like
that.
D
It's
fun
for
you
all
to
act
on
the
motion.
I
did
want
to
say
a
couple
of
things:
real
quick.
I
mean
we
can
certainly
work
on
a
draft
ordinance,
but
the
staffing
and
the
budget
of
that
is
going
to
take
some
cooperation
with
the
administration.
So
I
think
maybe
your
motion
ought
to
suggest
that
that
some
that
the
administration
appear
on
august
4th
and
and
talk
to
you
about
how
that
could
be,
how
that
might
be
accomplished
either
now
or
in
the
next
budget
cycle.
I
think
that's
kind
of
part
of
part
and
parcel.
F
I
would
also
ask
that
our
cfo
dennis
rojero,
of
course,
he
oversees
the
budget
and
also
bringing
chief
of
staff
john
bennett,
who
is
very
good
and
very
responsive,
and
I
know
he's
a
problem
solver
and
if
he
would
like
to
make
any
comments,
of
course,
be
included
in
the
discussion.
Whatever
his
thoughts
are
that
these
folks,
you
know,
look
at
it
in
the
meantime
and
come
back
august
4th
when
this
is
presented
to
us.
So
we
have
all
the
stakeholders
included
here.
H
I'm
going
to
support
it
the
way
it's
written,
even
though
in
67
I
seconded
mr
minuscalco's
motion
back
on
june.
The
second.
However,
I
understand
that
I
want
to
make
sure
that
everyone
here
understands
that
I
got
to
see
results
because
I
don't
want
to
give
anyone
who's
already
lost
hope.
Another
false
hope
that
I'm
going
to
solve
the
problem
and
that's
what
I'm
worried
about.
Thank.
B
I'm
sorry
any
further
discussion.
J
P
G
Folks,
in
the
audience
I
mentioned
earlier,
we
need
your
help
with
the
other
agencies.
Like
the
mayor's
office,
the
the
housing
authority,
the
state,
the
federal
government,
in
this
case,
they're,
going
to
come
that
we're
asking
we
voted
unanimously.
We
have
the
administration
coming
back
on
august
4th,
so
we
need
your
help,
making
sure
the
administration
comes
with
an
ordinance
we
can
pass
and
with
the
money
to
approve
this,
because
the
two
forms
of
government
have
to
work
together.
Thank
you.
P
The
second
part
of
this
item
was
us
looking
into
the
gainesville
rental
permit
program.
Do
you
want
me
to
discuss
that
at
this?
Would.
P
So
the
gainesville
rental
certificate
program
provides
that
a
landlord
prior
to
renting
a
unit
must
register
with
the
city.
They
must
submit
a
self-inspection
checklist,
so
they
do
the
inspection
themselves.
They
submit
a
certificate
stating
that
their
property
will
be
in
compliance
with
the
requirements
of
the
self-inspection
and
they
pay
pay
a
permit
fee.
The
city
of
gainesville
then
has
the
ability
to
go
out
and
inspect
a
property
and
issue
a
violation
if
they
determine
that
the
property
is
not
in
compliance
with
the
requirements.
P
This
is
very
similar
to
the
rental
certificate
program
that
the
city
of
tampa
currently
has
that
in
october.
I
believe
it
was
discussed
here
that
that
program
was
not
effective
and
should
be
dissolved,
and
I
talked
to
osiyawen,
and
she
is
coming
back
in
july
or
august
to
talk
about
a
new
replacement
program.
R
They
just
passed
a
new
one
that
hasn't
gone
into
effect.
Yet,
were
you
able
to
look
at
that
one
as
well.
R
Okay,
then
I
can.
I
can
talk
to
you
about
that
afterward,
but
the
the
big,
the
the
question
and
I've
I've
called
to
try
to
get
a
meeting
with
someone
up
there
too.
I
does
this
only
deal
with
the
properties
with
four
and
under
or
does
it
deal
with
the
properties
that
that
are
the
the
larger
complexes.
D
We're
we're
researching
that
issue
and
we're
coming
back
to
you,
I
believe,
on
july
14th,
to
talk
about
what
we
potentially
can
do.
I
think
that
the
legal
department
is
working
with
looking
at
what
other
cities
are
doing
at
this
point
in
time
to
see
how
we
can
effectively
do
more
than
what
we've
historically
done
because
of
the
preemption
issue
that
was
identified
so
we're
working
on
that
right
now
that
we'll
be
coming
back
to
you
on
july
14th.
Thank
you.
B
B
Like
I'm
sorry
as
as
we're
leaving,
can
we
do
that
very
quietly,
please.
Thank
you.
Go
ahead.
Yes,
I
would
like
to
thank
councilman
vieira.
The
parks
and
recreation.
J
Department,
the
contract
administration
department
has
been
a
lot
of
hard
work
to
bring
this
before
you
today,
and
I
appreciate
all
of
all
the
effort
on
that
and
with
that
I'll
open
it
up
for
questions
any.
J
J
B
P
P
T
Good
afternoon,
council
abbey
feely,
deputy
administrator
development
and
economic
opportunity
item
58
was
a
motion
to
provide
a
report
on
the
cfi,
the
elimination
of
the
public
risk
associated
with
the
chlorine
plant.
I
believe,
through
some
matters
over
the
past
few
weeks,
you've
come
become
aware
that
cfi
was
sold
at
the
end
of
december
2021.
T
I
believe
the
deed
was
recorded,
the
end
of
may,
and
also
that,
even
in
some
proceedings
that
you've
participated
in
that
the
one
fluger
proceeding
had
two
alternatives:
one
if
cfi
remained
one
of
cfi
was
removed
and
that
developer
in
fact
took
out
the
alternative.
If
cfi
remained
acknowledging
that
cfi
was
purchased
and
will
be
removed
and
that
development
will
not
be
constructed
unless
it
is
done.
So
so
there's
a
lease
right
now
that
I'm
aware
of
through
december
of
23,
and
at
that
time
it
is
intended
that
cfi
would
remove
operations
from
the
property.
T
I
believe
also
that
miss
batsell
a
few
weeks
ago
testified
that
some
operations
have
already
started
to
move
from
that
site.
So
at
this
time
I
do
not
believe
that
any
further
discussion
on
any
acquisition
related
to
that
would
be
necessary.
But
I'm
here
for
any
additional
questions
and
miss
wells
is
here
as
well.
H
Custom
and
miranda,
the
only
thing
I'm
going
to
ask
for
this
abby
is
whoever
the
buyer
is.
I
guess
it
came
up
to
some
mutual
agreement
on
some
price
with
cfi.
It
has
to
be,
but
then
you're
going
to
have
an
enormous
amount
of
money
spent
on
the
environmental
properties
of
cfi
microrecord
they're,
going
who's
going
to
resume
the
responsibility
for
that.
T
Me
too
sorry,
abby
philly
this.
This
was
the
report
to
research
of
creating
a
program
to
address
the
probate
issues.
I
did
speak
with
councilman
goodes
on
this
this
week
and
I
briefed
many
of
you
letting
you
know
that
you
know.
Probate
is
really
a
private
property
matter
when
somebody's
property
goes
in
to
probate.
It
goes
through
that
process
and
I
believe
there
is
some
additional
information
related
to
that
motion
that
councilman
goodes
may
wish
to
share.
T
T
I
had
mentioned
to
him
that
it
had
come
to
my
attention
related
to
the
estate
properties,
the
600
million
that
was
quoted,
so
he
clarified
for
me,
and
I
think
it
was
supposed
to
be
clarified
in
the
wfla
article
that
they
do
a
run
on
the
properties
within
the
city
that
contain
the
name,
estate
or
trust,
or
to
know
how
many
are
in
that
grouping
and
the
property
value
is
that
value.
Those
are
not
defunct.
F
T
Is
what
is
encompassed
within
our
overall
inventory
of
properties
within
the
city
of
tampa
proper,
so
we
were
going
to
have
some
further
discussions.
That
really
lies
in
mr
henriquez's
house.
I
told
him
we'd
love
to
work
with
him
and
coordinate
and
see
what
other
opportunities
there
are
for
ensuring
that
properties
are
maintained
or
that
if
there
are
dilapidated
properties
that
could
come
in.
You
know,
but
typically
the
city
receives
properties
that
go
through
these
treatment
process.
They
haven't
paid
taxes
and
then
they
are
eventually
turned
over
to
the
city.
T
The
other
thing
is:
there's
an
opportunity
to
purchase
a
tax
certificate
if
somebody
is
not
paying
their
taxes,
but
that
certificate
has
a
hold
of
three
years,
so
even
if
you're,
taking
that
on
as
a
property
that
property
owner
has
an
option
to
purchase
that
back
within
a
three-year
period,
so
that
I
don't
believe
is
going
to
result
in
anything
quickly
changing
in
terms
of
those
properties.
But
that's
where
we
are
today,
I'm
happy
to
hear,
if
there's
additional
direction
or
from
council
that
we
can
continue
to
work
on
this
with
mr.
B
D
Yeah
quickly
to
ms
feli's
point,
a
lot
of
property
owners
through
estate
planning
set
up
trust
and
they
do
put
their
homestead
and
their
houses
in
the
name
of
the
trust.
So
a
lot
of
the
value
that
you
may
be
hearing,
as
being
you
know,
owned
by
an
estate
or
a
trust,
are
not
properties
that
are
delinquent
or
dilapidated.
You
don't
even
have
a
living
individual
who's
there
and
that
that's
their
homestead,
so
that
I
did
that.
That
is
absolutely
correct.
The
other
other
issue
is
really.
D
Probate
is
a
private
matter,
primarily
so
the
city,
the
way
the
city
could
enter
that
is
is
is
difficult.
I
mean,
obviously,
if
properties
are
run
down
because
they
are
stuck
in
probate,
we
could
be
more
aggressive
about
code
enforcement.
That's
one
one
strategy
we
could
employ
and
and
as
mr
lee
stated,
if
there's
non-payment
of
taxes
over
a
period
of
time,
tax
deeds
will
be
issued.
D
It
used
to
be
that
the
city
would
get
a
fair
number
of
properties
through
the
tax
deduction
process,
because
property
owners
have
failed
to
pay
their
taxes
and
no
one
else
was
interested
in
bidding
on
or
redeeming
those
tax
certificates
in
this
environment.
I
think
that's
probably
less
so,
because
property
values
have
increased
in
tampa,
and
so
I
think
investors
are
picking
up
those
tax
certificates
more
often
than
not,
but
that
that's
more
of
a
private
investment
process
than
what
than
what
we
deal
with
so.
I
What
I
like
to
say,
I
like
to
see
a
conversation
with
bob
enriquez,
nancy
milan
and
maybe
the
county
administrator.
I
think
we
need
to
look
at.
You
have
a
lot
of
families,
especially
in
the
underserved
communities
that
don't
know
the
process,
don't
understand
probate.
They
know
nothing
and
being
a
funeral
business.
We
do.
We
see
that
all
the
time
and
then
again
that
property
sits
there
for
decades.
Definitely
because
maybe
johnny,
he
can't
afford
the
1500
to
go
down
there
to
file
he
doesn't
know.
I
So
I
think
it
needs
to
be
a
way
to
where
the
city
and
everyone
comes
together
to
where
people
can
know
a
call
or
set
up
a
fund
to
where
those
who
energy
who
who
can't
get
through
that
process,
be
able
to
get
in
that
process,
not
saying
that
you've
taken
the
legal
aspect
of
going
into
their
personal
but
being
able
to
have
somewhere
for
them
to
go
understanding
the
process
and
maybe
being
able
to
have
a
frontal
where
they
can
be
able
to
get
money
to
maybe
get
an
attorney
or
have
a
advocacy
group
or
a
private
third
party.
I
D
D
I
believe
they
do.
I
know
that
that
that
oftentimes
they're
they
ask
for
volunteer
assistance
in
the
legal
community
and
one
of
the
major
items
that
you
see
that
they
ask
for
volunteer
assistance
is
on
probate
matters,
and
you
know
maybe
we
could
work
with
them
to
help
help
them
if
they
need
help
being
getting
beefed
up
to
deal
with
that
issue.
Maybe
we
can
help
that,
but
that's
the
vehicle,
typically
for
folks
who
can't
afford
legal
services
to
work
through
to
get
that
that
help
and.
I
I
So
I
just
think
that
it
needs
to
be
a
body
coming
together
to
look
at
those
issues,
figure
it
out
and
maybe
with
some
of
the
taxable
whatever
it'd
be
a
fun
to
where
you
can
help
those
folks
who
can't
help
themselves
to
be
able
to
get
that
stock
back
in
to
be
able
to
live
in
that
home.
Do
we
need
to
do,
but
I
just
think
there's
there's
a
there's:
a
missing
gap.
There
want
to
see
how
we
can
fill
that
gap.
I
Okay.
So
if
you
can
just
bring
that
back,
you
know.
I
That's
fine!
That's
fine!
I'll
hit
you
with
that
about
nine
days.
That's
fine,
bring
it
back
and
tell
it
we'll
be
coming
away.
That
was
you'll,
get
the
time
to
meet
with
all
parties
and
so
forth
and
see
what
we
can
come
up
with
now,
what
we
can't
do,
but
what
we
can,
because
we
got
to
be
able
to
help
the
people
who
can't
help
themselves
sometimes.
B
Q
B
E
Good
afternoon,
chair
members
of
city,
council
and
members
of
the
public,
whit
ramer
sustainability
and
resilience
officer
for
the
city
appearing
today
at
the
request
of
council
to
provide
an
update,
marking
the
one-year
anniversary
of
the
release
of
the
city's
resilient
tampa
road
map.
E
I
submitted
a
memo
to
council
I'm
going
to
highlight
a
couple
of
the
programs
that
are
included
in
that
memo,
but
I'd
also
like
to
sprinkle
in
a
couple
of
anecdotes
based
on
public
comment
that
we
heard
today
to
show
that
the
city
is
and
continues
to
focus
on
many
of
the
issues
that
were
brought
before
council
today.
E
Some
highlights
and
a
brief
history
on
the
resilient
tampa
road
map.
If
you
will,
when
I
started
in
this
position,
just
over
two
years
ago,
the
mayor
had
entered
into
a
relationship
that
was
approved
by
city
council
to
work
with
the
resilient
cities,
catalyst
a
consultant
group
based
out
of
new
york
that
has
helped
produce
resilience
road
maps
for
cities
across
the
world.
E
E
The
definition
that
we
took
here
at
the
city
tampa
was
all-encompassing,
included
things
looking
at
housing,
transportation,
workforce
development
and,
of
course,
sustainability
of
our
built
environment,
yeah
jacksonville,
recently
hired
a
sustainability
and
resilience
officer
and
their
focus
is
solely
on
coastal
resilience,
that
is,
protection
from
storm
surge
and
and
heavy
rain
events.
So
every
city
handles
this
a
little
bit
differently.
E
Allow
me,
if
you
will
just
to
take
off
a
couple
of
the
58
examples,
58
initiatives
that
we're
working
on
based
on
what
we
heard
here
today:
accelerate
the
development
of
new,
affordable
housing,
complex
units
preserve
and
restore
more
affordable
housing
units
launch
a
climate
risk,
education
and
communication
campaign
address
and
fortify
critical
infrastructure,
storm
water
systems
for
a
changing
climate.
E
We
heard
from
mr
viday
that
we
experienced
a
one
in
a
hundred
year
storm
event
last
week.
I
think
that's
the
third
one
in
the
last
year
that
we've
experienced
these
storms
are
becoming
more
intense
and
more
frequent,
and
our
storm
water
department
continues
to
look
at
these
issues
in
the
face
of
resilience
and
climate
change
of
those
58
initiatives,
72
percent
are
on
track.
E
80
percent
of
the
climate
related
initiatives
are
on
track
and
the
remaining
initiatives
are
still
in
the
planning
phases.
This
is
a
big
deal
and
there's
a
lot
of
money
behind
this.
In
the
federal
infrastructure
bill
that
was
passed
last
year,
there's
47
billion
dollars
slated
for
climate
resilient
infrastructure.
E
This
this
state,
the
state
of
florida,
has
a
billion
dollars
in
the
resilient
florida
program.
As
funding
priorities
of
state
agencies
continue
to
shift
to
meet
changing
demands.
The
resilient
florida
program
is
going
to
become
one
of
the
top
funding
programs
for
storm
water
and
flood
mitigation.
That's
going
to
be
an
extremely
important
fund
for
our
storm
water
department,
our
mobility
department
and
sustainability,
and
resilience
department
to
seek.
E
I
can
go
through
a
number
of
the
statistics
that
we
use
to
track
these
58
initiatives.
We
use
a
proprietary
dashboard
that
was
developed
for
the
city
to
help
us
understand
exactly
where
these
initiatives
are,
who,
with
the
city,
is
helping
sponsor
them,
where
the
funding
is
coming
from,
how
much
funding
has
been
expended.
E
For
example,
we
have
over
113
million
dollars
catalyzed
for
the
brazilian
tampa
road
map,
so
far
much
of
that
comes
from
the
arpa
funds
and
affordable
housing,
but
I
can
tell
you
just
off
the
top
of
my
head.
I
worked
with
the
housing
department
to
get
a
two
and
a
half
million
dollar
hud
grant
to
focus
on
that
weatherization
and
owner
occupied
rehab
program.
E
You
heard
consistently
over
and
over
from
the
housing
advocates
the
need
one
of
the
cheapest
ways
we
can
provide
affordable
housing
is
to
keep
people
in
their
homes,
keep
them
safe
in
their
homes.
This
owner-occupied
rehab
program
is
an
extremely
effective
program,
but
I'm
proud
to
work
with
ms
feli's
department
to
bring
that
resilience.
Funding
that
weatherization
funding
to
bear.
E
We
can't
do
this
alone.
I
certainly
can't
do
this.
Only
you
just
heard
the
breadth
of
some
of
these
programs.
We
continue
to
utilize
partnerships,
45
public
and
private
partners
across
the
city
and
across
the
tampa
bay
area,
to
help
us
achieve
our
goals
and
we're
doing
all
this
on
a
daily
basis.
And
I
look
forward
to
answering
any
questions
from
how
much
questions.
G
Councilman
carlson
yeah
thanks.
I
I
said
this,
I
think,
to
you
and
and
chief
of
staff
last
year
I
don't
agree
with
the
all-encompassing
definition
of
resiliency.
That
includes
what
I
consider
economic
development
and
and
solving
problems
of
poverty
and
other
things.
I
understand.
I
understand
that
there's
an
academic
view
that
that
that
it
could
encompass
all
those
things
by
thinking
in
looking
at
them
through
that
lens.
It
gives
us
the
wrong
view
of
it.
G
So
I've
had
other
conversations
about
all
that,
but
but
the
number
one
question
I
get
in
south
tampa
is
when
it:
when
is
south,
tampa
going
to
be
underwater,
and
what
are
we
going
to
do
to
mitigate
that?
G
E
Thank
you
for
the
question.
Councilman
carlson,
so
you
know
messaging.
The
difference
between
sea
level
rise
and
storm
surge
is
something
that
we
continue
to
work
on.
That's
why
we
have
the
public
education
campaign
as
one
of
our
initiatives.
E
Storm
surge
is
a
a
certainly,
a
very
serious
issue
for
the
south
tampa
peninsula
and,
in
fact,
is
for
for
much
of
the
city
of
tampa.
We
worked
the
tampa
bay
regional
planning
council
on
that
type
of
emergency
preparation.
Thankfully
red
cross
was
here
this
morning
talking
about
preparation.
We
have
heard,
through
our
formation
of
the
climate
action
and
equity
plan,
that
preparedness
and
those
kits
that
that
red
cross
reference
are
just
a
critical
element.
E
Storm
surge
is
a
is
a
major
issue
and
we
have
maps
that
show
our
new
evacuation
zones
that
were
released.
I
believe
two
weeks
ago,
and
so
category
two
or
a
category
three
storm
would
significantly
impact
the
south
tampa
peninsula.
That's
different
than
sea
level
rise,
which
is
a
slower
gradually
occurring
rising
of
the
seas
and
the
data
that
we
have
to
date
on.
That
shows
that
in
about
30
years,
we'll
have
between
two
and
eight
feet
of
sea
level
rise
depending
on
our
climate
mitigation
actions.
E
Right
now
at
the
level
that
we're
we're
advancing,
we
tend
to
use
the
noaa
intermediate
high,
and
that
puts
us
around
two
and
a
half
to
four
feet
in
the
south
tampa
peninsula,
which
is
around
1250
properties
that
would
be
impacted
by
sea
level.
Rise
of
those
1250
properties
about
80
percent
of
them
are
publicly
owned
properties,
essentially
bay
shore
parks.
Things
like
that.
So
it's
difficult
to
message
that
actually,
we've
got
some
time
in
the
next
30
years.
These
would
be
sea
level
rise.
E
But
I
can
tell
you
that
our
infrastructure
department,
our
mobility
department,
the
work
that
I'm
doing
working
with
congresswoman
castro's
office
to
put
earmarks
in
for
for
better
sea
walls
and
protection,
we're
doing
everything
we
can
to
prepare
this
city
for
climate-ready
infrastructural,
raising
pumps,
we're
looking
at
evacuation
routes,
we're
making
sure
that
our
pipes
are
are
up
to
date
and
can
handle
that
type
of
inundation
and,
of
course,
encouraging
that
transition
to
a
clean
energy
economy
whereby
we're
not
burning
fossil
fuels
and
further
increasing
our
greenhouse
gas
emissions.
B
Excellent
good,
thank
you.
Okay,
then,
without
objection,
shall
we
recess
till
two
o'clock?
Yes,
sir,
let's
go
yes,
sir.
We
are.