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From YouTube: TCC 2/24/22
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A
B
Morning,
we're
doing
the
accommodation
now,
no.
C
E
Clerk
miss
shelby
yes
good
morning,
mr
chairman
members
of
tampa
city
council,
martin
shelby
city
council
attorney
we're
here
on
thursday
september
february,
24th
of
2022,
at
old
city
hall,
315,
east
kennedy
boulevard
and
during
the
covet
19
state
of
emergency
meetings
and
workshops
of
the
tampa
city
council
are
being
conducted
with
a
live
in-person
quorum
with
city
council,
present
and
city
council
chambers.
However,
in
response
to
the
covet
19
restrictions,
members
of
the
public
are
encouraged
to
participate
virtually
through
video
teleconferencing
referred
to
by
florida
statutes
and
rules
of
communications,
media
technology
or
cmt.
E
Now
the
public
is
able
to
watch
this
meeting
on
spectrum
channel
640
frontier
channel
15
and
on
the
internet
at
tampa.gov
forward.
Slash
live
stream
now,
council.
I
am
going
to
ask
the
people
on
the
second
floor
that
to
please
remain
quiet,
please,
during
the
course
of
the
meeting,
to
allow
the
public
to
be
able
to
speak
freely
and
to
be
able
to
be
heard
during
the
course
of
the
meeting.
E
Now
all
written
comments
must
be
received
no
later
than
24
hours
prior
to
the
meeting
in
order
to
be
distributed,
timely
to
city
council
and
made
part
of
the
record,
and
that
has
been
done
council.
I
am
going
to
ask
for
just
a
few
variations
on
today's
workshop
agenda,
particularly
with
regard
to
public
comment.
So
this
is
for
the
benefit
of
the
people
on
the
second
floor.
This
is
for
the
benefit
of
the
people
who
are
online
and
registered
to
speak,
and
this
is
also
for
the
benefit
of
those
who
are
following
the
agenda
now.
E
E
I,
the
eight
individuals
who
have
been
registered,
take
those
comments
following
the
staff
presentations.
Now
this
is
different
than
the
way
we
have
done
it
from
the
time
we
began
virtual
meetings.
We've
always
taken
the
public
comment.
First,
in
this
case,
the
staff
has
made
the
request
and
the
recommendation
that
you
hear
and
the
public
have
the
opportunity
to
hear
the
staff's
full
reports
before
the
morning
public
comment.
So
then
what
will
happen
is
you'll.
E
Take
those
people
who
have
been
online
and
waiting
to
speak
virtually
and
then
you
will
take
the
people
on
the
second
floor,
at
which
time
you
will
break
for
the
afternoon
session
again,
the
afternoon
session
has
items
where
the
staff
would
like
to
make
their
presentations
first
and
then
give
the
public
the
opportunity
to
speak
after
staff
presentations.
I
hope
that
has
been
made
clear
to
the
public,
so
there
is
no
confusion.
E
I
have
reviewed
this
with
the
clerk
and
I
have
reviewed
this
with
the
chair
and
the
staff
and,
if
there's
any
questions,
we're
happy
to
do
that.
Have
those
answered
but
counsel,
based
on
all
of
that
I'd
like
you
to
waive
your
rules
and
adopt
the
rules
as
set
forth
today
to
conduct
this
workshop.
A
You,
sir,
all
right:
we
have
a
ceremonial
from
miss
carol
popes.
I
think
mr
carlson
is
downstairs
sir
good
morning.
B
I
met
carol
post
years
ago
when
we
were
working
together
at
usf
on
strategic
planning,
and
I
saw
her
brilliance
and
her
experience
then
she's
from
tampa
but
worked
in
new
york
under
mayor
bloomberg
and
has
lots
of
other
great
experience,
including
some
of
the
most
important
things
that
happened
at
usf
usf
loaned
her
to
the
mayor
to
be
the
chair
of
the
mayor's
transition
committee,
and
she
really
is-
is
probably
more
than
anybody
other
than
the
mayor,
the
architect.
For
all
the
positive
changes
that
have
happened
in
the
city.
B
In
the
last
three
years
she
put
together
committees
to
listen
to
the
public.
She
helped
find
the
great
talented
senior
management
we
have
and
worked
on
processes,
and
then
I
think
we
were
all
very
excited
a
year
or
so
ago
that
usf
decided
to
loan
her
to
us
to
help
build
rebuild
the
economic
development,
real
estate
portfolio,
which
she's
done
expertly,
and
it's
been
a
great
opportunity
working
with
her
and
I'm
sure
we're
all
going
to
enjoy
working
with
her
in
her
new
role
at
usf,
which
she
can
tell
you
about,
but
quickly.
B
I
just
wanted
to
read
this.
The
tampa
city
council
wishes
to
award
this
accommodation
to
carol
post
with
gratitude
for
her
service
to
the
city
of
tampa
in
her
role
as
administrator
for
development
and
economic
opportunity,
carol
joined
the
city
of
tampa
team
in
early
2020,
with
the
goal
of
modernizing
many
departmental
programs
processes
and
services.
Despite
many
unique
obstacles
facing
the
city
due
to
covet,
19
carroll
is
credited
with
implementing
key
initiatives
such
as
the
streamlining
of
the
permitting
process
which
serves
20
000
applicants
per
year.
B
Thanks
to
carol's
efforts,
the
city
has
the
new
city
planning
department
and
looks
forward
to
the
tampa
convention
center
expansion,
though
her
time
with
the
city
was
brief.
Carol's
impact
on
her
department
and
all
the
departments
really
of
the
city
of
tampa
will
be
appreciated
for
years
to
come.
So
thank
you
very
much
carol.
You
want
to
say
something.
F
Thank
you,
councilman,
carlson
and
chair
members
of
the
council
and
and
to
the
public,
and
certainly
to
my
team
behind
me.
I
am
I'm
humbled
by
this.
I
I've
had
such
a
unique
opportunity
to
join
the
city
to
serve
the
citizens
of
tampa
and
really
to
help
make
some
small
difference
in
the
progress
that
the
city
will
make.
F
F
F
A
small
representation
is
standing
behind
me,
but
this
is
a
group
of
incredible
talent
that
serves
the
city
every
day
in
extraordinary
ways,
so
I've
been
honored
to
be
a
small
part
of
it.
I
appreciate
this
opportunity.
I
appreciate
this
commendation
very,
very
much
and
look
forward
to
watching
from
the
sidelines
up
north
at
usf
and
watching
the
the
continued
progress
that
the
city
will
make.
I'm
very
very
proud
to
have
been
a
member
of
the
city
and
will
take
that.
F
C
Yes,
sir,
just
thank
you
for
all
of
your
hard
work,
and
you
know
I
you're,
certainly
a
person
who
I
admire
for
your
professionalism,
your
grace
under
pressure,
your
grace
under
fire,
so
to
speak,
and
I
think
you've
done
a
marvelous
job.
C
And
you
know
I've
communicated
my
sentiments
to
you
on
your
time
here
in
the
city
of
tampa
throughout
many
conversations,
which
I
hereby
incorporate
into
my
remarks
and
whatnot,
and
I
just
think
that
we're
very
very
fortunate
to
have
you
not
just
in
the
city
of
tampa
government,
but
just
in
the
tampa
area
and
and
you're
and
you're,
always
a
class
act.
C
I
remember
when
you
came
out
with
us
to
timber
falls
apartment
apartments
after
we
read
about
the
deplorable
conditions
out
there
in
the
tampa
bay
times,
and
you
were
talking
to
residents
and
you
you
displayed
just
what
I
saw
in
your
demeanor
and
in
your
words
and
in
your
actions,
really
an
outrage
of
what
you
saw,
but
also
such
just
humanitarian
compassion
that
that
is
so
consistent
with
your
public
service.
So
again,
just
thank
you
for
your
demeanor
and
and
just
your
general
way
about
yourself.
Thank
you.
G
You,
mr
chairman,
we
are
certainly
grateful
to
have
the
opportunity
to
work
with
you
these
past
few
years,
and
I
know
this
community
is
as
well.
We
were
very
lucky
that
you
joined
the
team
here
and
the
city
of
tampa
family
because,
as
councilman
carlson
already
mentioned
so
much
progress
was
made
and
the
impact
that
you
made
on
our
community
and
in
our
city
we
will
feel
those
we
will
reap
those
rewards
for
a
long
time
to
come.
G
So
we
thank
you
for
your
expertise,
your
knowledge,
your
wisdom
and
your
leadership,
and
good
luck
and
best
of
luck
on
whatever
you
do
now,
but
that
we
didn't
speak
before
the
meeting,
and
I
know
you
will
be
staying
local.
So
we
appreciate
that
you're
here
be
so
happy
here.
Thank
you
very
much.
H
H
I
You
chairman
carol,
I
just
want
to
say
thank
you
for
being
here
for
a
very
short
time
and
you've
done.
Yeoman's
work
like
you've
been
here,
10
15
20
years,
not
that
you've
gone
any
older,
but
the
work
that
you've
done
has
been
yeoman's
work
and
and
what
you've
done
in
a
short
period
of
time,
usually
takes
three
or
four
times
the
amount
of
time
for
someone
else
to
do.
We're
really
appreciative
of
everything.
You've
done.
Congratulations
and
you
only
be
not
too
far
up
north
and
we
know
how
to
reach
you.
A
Well,
miss
foster,
we
sad
to
see
you
lee,
but,
like
I
always
tell
people,
you
know,
don't
say
what
you
can
do,
what
you
can
do
you
did
that
multiple
times
this
counselor
asked
you
to
do
something
and
we
came
back
with
answers.
You
came
back
with
answers
to
be
able
to
help
us
foster
a
better
relationship
and
to
be
able
to
give
the
services
that
the
community's
been
asking
for.
So
all
we
can
say
is
thank
you.
Thank
you
thank
you
and
we
wish
you
best
wishes
on
your
new
endeavors,
mr
carlson.
B
G
Mr
chairman,
yes,
not
to
start
any
problems,
but
if
there
are
people
that
are
already
here
that
wanted
to
speak
on
items
that
are
going
to
be
taken
up
later
in
the
agenda-
and
I
know
a
lot
of
people
have
to
go
back
to
work
and
whatnot.
Can
we
just
let
them
speak?
I
don't.
I
don't
think
it's
a
huge
crowd.
It's
about
eight.
I
think
it's
about
eight
people
yeah.
E
B
D
A
B
Up
my
chestnut
gave
me
a
note,
and
several
folks
asked
me
for
us
to
reconsider
the
order
of
the
the
order
of
public
comment
today,
so
I
just
want
I
promised
I
would
pass
that
on.
I
wanted
to
do
that.
A
A
It's
about
eight,
I
think
eight
eight
about
eight
downstairs
in
this
post.
So
if
it's
about
eight
downstairs,
I
know
you
asked
what
we
got
eight
people
to
speak.
I
would
prefer
to
get
those
eight
out
of
the
way
and
we'll
move
on.
We.
E
We'll
go
ahead
and
make
to
make
some
amendments
to
these
business.
Okay,.
J
A
Quite
sure,
I
think
it's
we're
opposed
to
changing
the
public
comment
order
and
you
have
possibly
10
people
11
people
on
this
list
of
paper
here.
G
A
J
D
D
M
D
D
D
You
name
it
and
every
area
of
the
city.
D
Treated
as
variances
they're
on
a
secret
beltway
and
they're
underground
and
they
need
to
be
treated
as
variances.
So
would
you
please
look
into
this
and
see.
M
What
we
can
do
to
bring
these
design
exceptions
above
ground,
so
the
neighbor
and
neighborhoods
have.
M
D
D
M
Okay,
gentlemen,
my
name
is
sandy
sanchez
and
I'm
the
president
of
the
army
garden,
civic
association
association
and
secretary
chathan,
I
applied
to
speak
during
public
comment
on
a
number
of
items.
However,
I
realized
by
the
time
I
listed
these
items.
My
three
minutes
would
be
up
at
the
last
regular
city
council
meeting.
I
asked
you
as
a
team
to
review
the
negative
report
by
christine
glover
director
of
internal
audit,
transmitting
audit
report
development
coordination
planning
section
dated
december
twentieth,
twenty
twenty
one.
M
It
was
a
very
negative
report
and
the
report
suggested
standard
operating
procedures
be
established,
management's
answer,
they
would
have
procedures
in
place
by
september
2023,
20
months
away.
This
is
unacceptable.
This
department
is
called
the
dark
department
by
neighborhood
leaders.
This
department
makes
decisions
for
design
exceptions
that
need
to
be
brought
into
the
sunshine
and
neighborhoods
need
to
be
made
aware
of
these
design
exceptions
too.
Many
decisions
are
made
behind
closed
doors.
M
Please
don't
let
this
dark
department
continue
as
it
is.
I
ask
that
you
ask
the
variance
review
board.
You
take
these
issues
on
a
temporary
basis,
so
decisions
can
be
made
in
the
sunshine
for
all
to
see
and
by
the
way.
The
staff
report
for
today
has
a
couple
of
errors
in
the
report.
It
states
that
city
council
made
the
decision
for
de1
21-250
at
2507
west
north
b
street.
This
is
incorrect.
M
This
is
the
dark
department's
decision
where
twice
it
was
denied
and
the
third
time
it
mysteriously
was
approved.
This
decision
you
made
after
the
dark
department
group
denied
it
twice
because
it
was
not
compatible,
is
de1,
20-156,
1709,
west,
st
john.
This
is
the
file
you
overturned
after
the
recommendation
was
made
to
deny.
M
M
2423
westcast
is
the
correct
address
I
sent
in
the
correction
in
october,
yet
it
is
not
attached
to
this
file.
As
my
other
emails
are,
I
will
gladly
volunteer
for
any
committee
that
might
discuss
the
frustrations
of
the
neighborhood.
You
know
those
folks
that
vote
for
you.
I
ask
that
you
take
these
suggestions
into
consideration
and
allow
the
department
to
regroup
and
make
the
changes
needed
for
all
to
see.
Thank
you
thank.
D
M
Good
morning,
gentlemen,
good
morning,
can
you
hear
me?
Okay,
I'm
gonna
make
this
short
and
sweet.
You
guys
have
a
really
hefty
agenda
item
number
two
comprehensive
plan,
I'm
very
excited
because
I'm
sick
and
tired
of
people
saying
I
can't
defend
the
current
comprehensive
plan.
We
have
already
asked
our
folks
to
complete
the
surveys.
The
first
set
of
surveys,
local
groups,
number
three,
the
point
on
west
shore.
M
That's
all
I
need
to
say
I'll,
be
happy
to
send
this
to
you
in
writing,
because
I
don't
see
many
folks
writing
anything
down
honestly
number
five.
I
wish
that
we
had
the
ab
issues
in
sog.
That
would
mean
that
businesses
were
coming
down
here.
Number
eight,
I'm
so
glad
we're
getting
rid
of
pitas,
and
I
think
this
is
a
perfect
example.
The
I
support
the
the
three
amendment
stuffs
that's
been
done
by
mr
pedrica,
but
the
rest
of
it,
especially
that
downtown
stuff.
It
is
so
convoluted.
M
I
read
it
last
summer,
60
pages
long,
they've
reduced
it
to
49
pages.
I
I
don't
have
time
to
read
it
now
and
I'm
sure
you
guys
don't
either.
I
think
it
needs
to
be
tightened
up
to
no
more
than
five
pages
number
10.
The
west
tampa
overlay
is
a
product
of
the
neighborhood
committees,
the
cra,
not
my
beloved
sandy
sanchez.
M
She
didn't
do
it
solo.
I
am
sure
that
if
sandy
were
truly
the
queen,
that
folks
are
implying
that
she
is
by
hand
by
handing
her
out
her
phone
number.
The
west
tampa
would
be
a
much
better
place,
but,
alas
she's
not
everyone
agreed
to
the
plan,
so
stick
with
it,
please
the
design,
exceptions,
notifications.
M
I
have
some
thoughts
about
some
of
the
processes
that
sandy
brought
up
on
item
number
44
on
february,
the
3rd
from
the
internal
audit
department,
as
some
of
the
sops
are
going
to
obviously
need
to
be
designed
or
revised.
I
have
some
comments
as
a
end
user
and
I
think
that
would
make
everyone's
life
easier.
D
D
Yeah,
okay,
cool
thanks,
hello,
everyone,
my
name
is
radisha
floyd.
I
was
born
and
raised
in
tampa
and
I
just
wanted
to
call
attention
to
our
current
housing
crisis.
That's
occurring
right
now,
due
to
a
200
rent
increase.
A
few
months
ago,
I
was
forced
to
move
almost
outside
the
city
limits,
the
furthest
out.
I've
ever
lived
in
tampa.
D
I
could
not
afford
rent
anywhere
else
in
tampa,
not
in
the
usual
places
I
have
grown
up
in
and
that's
when
I
started
thinking
years
ago.
I
remember
my
mom
saying
that
they're
moving
all
the
black
people
out
of
tampa,
and
only
now
now
do
I
see
firsthand
the
spoils
of
the
labor.
The
city
has
been
doing
for
the
past
years.
D
In
the
midst
of
this
heisen
crisis,
where
rent
has
increased
by
24,
where
people
spend
on
average
42
of
their
income
on
rent,
the
city
of
tampa
is
closing
down
housing
projects,
which
means
the
black
people
who
have
lived
there
for
years,
will
have
to
relocate
to
a
different
part
of
town
where
rent
has
certainly
increased
or
be
forced
outside
of
the
city
limits.
This
is
exactly
what
my
mom
all
those
years
ago,
spending
nearly
30
percent
of
my
income
on
rent
means.
D
I
and
other
members
of
my
community
struggle
to
meet
our
other
basic
needs.
Like
food
clothes,
don't
even
get
me
started
on
health
care
in
the
state
of
florida.
This
is
what
affordable
gets
you
affordable
is
not
enough.
Rezoning
is
not
enough.
Rental
assistance
is
not
enough.
This
is
a
housing
emergency.
D
D
A
I
M
A
G
D
O
D
All
right
all
right
now,
let's
go.
E
K
E
D
D
D
E
N
Morning,
my
name
is
kathleen
ribby.
This
will
be
very
brief.
There
is
a
housing
crisis
and
I
really
am
shouting
out
for
help.
I
lived
in
tampa
new
tampa
right
now
in
tampa
for
20
years
total,
I'm
in
new
tampa
it's
been
eight
years
and
I
live
here
at
the
park
at
cross
creek
for
eight
solid
years.
I
am
a
faithful
and
devoted
resident.
I've
never
paid
my
rent
late.
N
I
cooperate
with
the
noise
audience
and
this
is
what
I'm
paying
now
12
45
and
when
I
came
home
a
few
weeks
ago.
This
is
the
notice
from
the
park
at
cross
creek
the
renewal
to
up
over
500
when
I
came
home
that
day
after
a
hard
day
of
work,
seeing
that
my
rent
was
going
to
be
going
up
500
in
the
new
tampa
area,
I
enjoy
my
community.
I
enjoy
my
side
of
town,
but
I
have
nowhere
to
go
once
this
goes
up,
I'm
very
upset
about
it.
N
M
I
listened
to
the
transition
team
of
this
administration
that
understood
that
we
was
in
a
crisis,
and
so
what
we
have
seen
and
what
you
are
applauding
this
morning
is
that
tampa
now
has
this
over
blossomed,
unrealistic,
rent
that
normal
working-class
people
cannot
afford,
and
it
seemed
to
be
well,
it's
the
market
and
there's
nothing.
We
could
do
about
it.
Well,
there
is
something
you
could
do
about
it,
but
take
courage.
M
There
are
a
number
of
cities
that
have
taken
the
type
of
necessary
courage
that
would
allow
for
all
of
us
to
live
together.
We'll
watch
you
counsel,
persons
that
have
been
around
when
domain
homes
came
along
and
you
found
land
for
them
and
again
the
product
that
they
built
is
not
affordable.
For
working-class
people,
tampa
has
become
the
new
south
africa
of
the
state
of
florida,
the
removal
and
existing
of
black
people
through
your
shale
game
of
saying
that
we
can
still
see
you
is
not
enough.
M
We
are
putting
labor
in
this
city
and
we
are
demanding
that
you
focus
on
beyond
words
beyond
a
workshop,
but
with
direct
action
and
declaring
that
you're
going
to
provide
a
product
that
mrs
post
talked
about.
When
the
mayor
transitioned
into
the
office
of
the
mayor,
that
we
have
a
housing
product
that
working
class
people
can
afford
and
that
we
see
the
existence
of
black
people
remaining
in
the
city
of
tampa.
Q
Morning,
mantis
not
tampa
florida,
you
know
the
police
kill
black
people
in
camera
and
they
say:
hey
they've
got
on
body,
cams
they've
got
dash
cam
and
they
keep
doing
it.
Why
they
keep
doing
it.
They
should
know
better,
no
compassion.
Well,
they
keep
doing
it
because
it's
worth
it,
it's
worth
the
intimidation
that
it
showed
a
fear
that
it
puts
in
the
african
people
internationally,
not
just
in
that
city
internationally.
Q
So
what
happens?
Is
it's
the
same
thing
that
happens
right
in
the
city
council
week
after
week
and
the
city
attorney?
They
need
to
just
get
rid
of
him.
The
man
that's
sitting
up
there.
They
just
need
to
fire
him,
no
respect
for
the
people,
absolutely
positively,
no
respect
for
the
people,
and
week
after
week
now
they've
become
arrogant
about
pulling
the
nonsense
from
working-class
people,
some
homeless
people,
some
people
that
are
struggling.
That
takes
the
time
to
come
down
here
and
they
put
other
people
before
them.
Q
Q
But
the
fact
of
the
matter
is
people
are
trying
to
have
an
effect
on
the
rent
increase
you're
not
going
to
have
an
effect
on
the
rent
increase,
because
until
you're
willing
to
have
an
effect
on
capitalism
until
you're
willing
to
have
an
effect
on
capitalism
until
you
can
be
a
proud,
socialist
or
proud,
communist
or
proud,
anarchist
or
say,
hey,
I'm
down
with
black
lives
matter
or
antifa
or
whatsoever
until
you're
willing
to
stand
up
to
the
system.
You're,
not
gonna.
You
can't
stop
capitalism,
slavery
couldn't
stop
capitalism,
they
just
build
upon
it.
Q
Okay
and
right
now,
the
way
it
is
you,
the
people,
don't
you
can't
say
gay?
Okay,
that's
how
serious
they
getting
against
poor
working-class
people
against
people.
That's
marginalized!
It's
a
lot
of
things.
You
can't
say
you
can't
say
reparations!
You
can't
say
housing!
Commission,
you
can't
say
work
for
the
interests
of
the
poor
and
working
class
people.
It's
a
lot
of
things
that's
going
on,
but
the
fact
of
the
matter
is
people
are
being
disrespected
in
all
ways.
Q
If
it's
in
the
area
of
education,
housing,
the
environment
whatsoever,
it
is
poor
and
working
class.
People
are
being
disrespected,
and
you
see
it's
happening
right
here
in
this
city
council
week
after
week.
You
see
you
see
it
with
the
budgets
they
put
forth.
You
see
it
with
the
bicycle.
Stops
you
see
it
with
the
things
that
goes
on.
R
Hello,
my
name
is
simon
rowe
and
I'm
here
to
talk
about
the
housing
crisis
here
in
tampa.
I
have
not
lived
in
tampa
here
for
very
long,
but
I
have
lived
in
florida.
All
my
life
speak
for
my
personal
experience
very
recently
my
lease
ended
and
a
group
of
friends,
and
I
were
looking
for
housing
in
tampa
for
months.
R
After
many
rejections,
many
lost
application
fees,
rejections
based
on
credit,
despite
having
decent
credit
rejections
based
on
not
having
long
enough
credit
history.
Even
though
we
weren't
alive
long
enough
to
have
enough
credit
history,
we
eventually
managed
to
find
a
place
only
because
we
agreed
to
put
up
six
months
rent
in
advance.
R
We
were
very
lucky
to
be
able
to
scrounge
up
our
savings
to
afford
this,
but
this
story
is
the
lucky
story.
It
is
so
much
worse
for
so
many
more
people
here
in
tampa,
especially
those
in
black
communities.
Here
in
tampa,
like
robles
park
village
people
in
robles
park
village
are
going
to
be
moved
out
because
of
development
in
the
area,
and
they
need
to
have
some
place
to
go.
They
can't
just
be
forced
out
of
tampa
when
they've
lived
here
for
decades.
R
So
I'm
coming
here
to
talk
to
you
today
about
my
experiences,
but
it's
so
much
more
beyond
just
one
person
who
is
able
to
get
out
of
work.
There
are
many
people
here
today
who
could
not
who
were
lucky
like
me,
but
we
still
want
to
advocate
for
those
who
weren't
able
to
be
here
who
will
be
so
much
more
affected
because
I
might
have
been
homeless
for
two
weeks,
but
there
are
people
who
might
not
be
able
to
find
houses
again.
R
N
N
N
Shelter
along
with
food
and
water
is
a
basic
necessity
for
all
human
beings,
but
it
is
no
longer
possible
for
so
many
people
who
live
in
our
community
and
so
I'm
here,
because
something
needs
to
be
done
in
tampa
throughout
our
area
throughout
the
country
of
course,
as
well,
but
for
here
in
tampa,
it's
our
job.
It's
your
job
to
do
something
about
this.
A
Thank
you.
Let
me
say
something:
I
know
that
we
had
approximately
nine
speakers
that
were
already
down
there
this
morning
and
the
rent
stabilization.
We
had
multiple
calls
letting
the
public
know
that
the
rest
of
the
relationship
be
done
at
1
30..
We
have
a
huge
agenda
that
has
a
lot
of
growth
management
stuff
that
deals
with
a
lot
of
things
this
morning.
So
I
know
people
are
continuing
to
come
in
come
in,
but
at
some
point
I
have
to
cut
it
off
as
the
chairman.
A
So
I'm
going
to
ask
those
that
are
down
there,
how
many
they're
actually
down
there
now
and
I'm
about
to
cut
it
off
and
if
they're
here
about
rinse
stabilization
rinse
stabilization
is
at
1
30..
That's
we're
going
to
take
up
rent
stabilization,
that's
the
appropriate
time
to
handle
that
we
know
it
is
a
crisis
here.
This
council
is
aware
of
that.
A
We're
going
to
deal
with
those
issues
at
1
30.,
but
if
you're
here
to
speak
on
about
the
growth
management
issues,
we
refer
those
speakers
to
speak
now
and
we
can
deal
with
the
gross
management.
The
great
stimulation
this
afternoon,
but
those
who
are
already
here
first
about
rent
I'll,
hear
those
out,
but
the
rest
will
have
to
here
at
1
30.
and
I
apologize
but
we'll
give
everybody
an
opportunity
to
speak
later
this
afternoon.
N
N
It's
getting
worse,
not
better,
and
it's
increasingly
bad
to
watch
my
friends
go
through
and
try
to
figure
out
how
to
pay
up
to
fifty
percent
of
their
rent
of
their
household
income
going
straight
into
rent.
We
need
a
solution
to
this
if,
if
you're
not
willing
to-
and
you
don't
have
the
will
to
go
ahead
and
declare
what
this
is,
which
is
a
housing
crisis
and
it's
a
state
of
emergency
and
we
need
rent
control,
then
I
urge
you
this
isn't
a
possible
rent
stabilization,
as
lynn
before
me
said.
N
This
is
a
need
find
as
many
avenues
as
possible
to
deal
with
these
people's
problems.
It
is
scary
to
think
about
the
number
of
working
people
in
tampa
who
will
not
be
able
to
afford
a
roof
over
their
heads
and
who
already
can't
that's
not
fair.
Also,
please
go
ahead
and
get
rid
of
the
noise
ordnance
in
ebore.
I
would
really
encourage
that
for
later
on.
Thank
you.
A
Folks,
everyone,
the
phone,
is
going
already
just
for
the
public
eye.
We
know
the
the
camera
is
on
me
and
mr
miranda,
mr
vieira
is
here
and
also
mr
maniscalco
there
on
the
side
and
the
camera
doesn't
get
that
shot.
We
do
have
some
council
members
out,
but
they
will
be
back.
We
had
a
ceremony
with
mr
toakley
this
morning
at
our
port
of
the
crete.
A
We
wish
we
all
could
have
gone,
which
he
was
a
mentor
of
mine,
but
we
all
couldn't
go
because
this
is
very
important
to
these
items,
but
a
few
councilmembers
have
are
out
and
one
councillor
is
out
so
again
those
councilmen
will
be
coming
back,
probably
about
30
40
minutes,
but
we
do
have
a
quorum
for
the
public
to
know
yes,
ma'am
clerk.
A
A
A
D
D
I
don't
see
how
you
can
expect
anyone
to
be
able
to
afford
their
rent
and
also
use
the
goods
and
services
the
impact
this
would
have
on
the
local
economy
wouldn't
even
be
good.
I
can't
support
local
restaurants
or
go
to
music
festivals,
or
do
any
of
the
quote
fun
things
that
this
city
has
to
offer
and
enjoy.
If
I
can't
afford
my
rent
and
I
have
to
get
multiple
jobs
to
pay-
and
that's
where
we're
getting
at,
I
understand
you
all
have
this
agenda
and
you
have
other
things
to
do.
D
There
is
nothing
more
important
than
human
rights,
so
the
fact
that
you're
even
trying
to
push
us
out
to
130
we
have
working
jobs.
We
have
to
go
to
to
pay
for
this
rent
crisis.
You
need
to
put
in
rent
control.
Now
you
need
to
declare
a
housing
state
of
emergency
now
and
you
need
to
be
bold
and
courageous.
D
Do
the
right
thing?
Do
the
right
thing,
a
city's
leadership
that
does
not
stand
up
for
its
most
vulnerable
people
is
soulless,
and
I
don't
want
to
believe
that
you
are
all
soulless,
but
if
you
are
not
going
to
take
this
as
the
most
important
issue
of
your
time
of
your
service,
then
what
are
you
even
doing?
You
should
be
embarrassed
of
yourselves
if
you
do
not
take
swift
action
now,
when
you
have
the
power,
this
will
be
your
legacy
in
life
and
in
history
and
don't
disappoint
your
legacy.
D
Because,
honestly,
with
the
way
we
run
this
city
and
this
police
department,
it's
already
pretty
embarrassing.
So
don't
make
it
worse.
We
need
to
make
housing
a
priority.
We
need
to
defund
the
police
and
refund
the
community,
repel
the
noise
ordinance,
and
we
need
to
do
what's
right
for
the
people
of
tampa.
Also,
we
need
to
solve
the
murder
of
transgender
latina
jenny
de
leon
murdered
in
november
still
unsolved.
So
what
are
we
paying
the
police
department
for
if
they
can't
even
solve
a
murder
of
a
vulnerable
person?
Thank
you.
D
Thank
you.
My
name
is
joseph
nojava
members
of
the
city
council.
Thank
you
for
giving
me
the
opportunity
to
speak
on
this
rent
control,
rent
stabilization
ordinance,
I'm
sure
you're
well
aware
that
rents
have
skyrocketed
astronomically
in
the
past
few
years,
while
wages
have
remained
largely
stagnant,
creating
nothing
but
a
crisis
situation
for
working
class
folks.
D
You
may
hear
testimony
or
may
have
heard
testimony
about
how
astronomical
rent
increases
are
not
price.
Gouging.
That's
interesting!
That
rent
control
now
is
in
the
same
position
that
minimum
wage
used
to
be
right,
thought
of
as
a
simple
supply
and
demand
issue
that,
if
wages
go
up,
employment
would
go
down,
but
that's
obviously
not
true
right.
D
P
P
But
for
those
of
us
who
pay
attention,
we
know
it's
getting
worse
and
if
the
rents
continue
to
get
up
to
go
up,
there
will
only
be
more
unhoused
people
in
this
city.
The
tampa
hope
tent
city
will
need
to
expand
to
fit
the
growing
unhoused
populations,
while
homes
that
are
currently
selling
for
cash
at
astronomical
prices
will
be
turned
into
airbnbs
and
sit
empty
for
weeks
or
months.
P
At
a
time
when
you
sell
access
to
housing
to
the
highest
bidder,
you
make
it
clear
that
only
certain
people
deserve
to
survive
that
only
certain
people
are
allowed
to
have
housing.
Well,
I
challenge
that.
I
know
that
housing
is
a
human
right
and
I
know
that
the
housing
shortage
is
a
myth.
We
don't
need
more
luxury
apartment
buildings
or
more
new
homes,
not
until
every
home
or
apartment.
That's
currently
sitting
empty
gets
filled.
This
is
why
I'm
demanding
that
you
let
people
stay
in
their
homes.
P
O
O
O
They
violated
our
human
rights.
Some
of
these
human
rights
violations
include
the
violation
of
the
human
rights
of
housing,
food
transportation,
employment
among
others,
there's
a
contradiction
between
what
the
needs
of
the
people
are
and
what
the
desires
of
the
big
businesses,
big
landlords,
the
big
banks
and
the
government
from
the
city
to
the
federal.
O
E
O
O
M
O
Locals
to
devour
the
land
or
if
I
send
pestilence
among
my
people,
but
if
my
people,
which
are
called
by
my
name,
shall
humble
themselves
and
pray
and
turn
from
and
seek
my
faith
and
turn
from
their
wicked
way,
then
I
will
heal
from
heaven
and
will
heal
the
land.
I
thank
god
for
this
word.
Since
I'm
a
preacher.
O
I
try
to
preach
the
truth.
You
know
we
come
here
week
after
week
after
week
trying
to
get
something
done,
but
nobody
seemed
to
hear
us
and
I'm
trying
to
request
that
y'all
need
to
if
y'all
not
going
to
do
nothing
for
send
the
mail
down
here.
Maybe
just
maybe
she
will
hear
what
we
got
to
say,
but
even
if
she
don't
hear
what
you
got,
we
got
what
we
got
to
say
and
send
the
governor
down
here
and
maybe.
O
What
we
got
to
say,
but
we
got
to
be
heard,
one
way
or
another
we
come
down
here
week
after
week.
Nobody
seemed
to
hear
nobody
want
to
hear
and
seem
like.
Don't
nobody
give
them
about
us,
but
we
got
to
speak
up
regardless,
whether
they
want
to
hear
us
or
not,
and
let
them
know
how
we
feel
tell
the
truth
about
everything
and
don't
call
don't
just
look
at
the
color
of
people's
skin.
O
Try
to
help
all
all
people,
regardless
of
what
their
race
agenda
the
national
we
all
need,
help
we're
living
in
the
united
states
of
america.
We
don't
care
about
certain
people.
When
you
talk
about
a
for
affordable
house,
I
need
affordable
housing.
I
can't
afford
my
mortgage,
like
I
used
to
no
more
because
they
go
up
up
up
up
up
up,
keep
going
up
and
they
don't
care.
D
Hello,
my
name
is
rylan
estimolina,
that's
eston,
like
ashton,
but
with
an
e.
I
didn't
prepare
speech
for
this.
I
wanted
to
go
into
this
as
organically
as
possible
because
I'm
human,
just
like
everyone
else,
you
heard
today,
I
just
moved
out
about
a
year
ago.
D
D
D
D
I
walk
outside,
I
see
a
field
of
demolished
houses.
I
saw
a
giant
stuffed
animal.
D
A
Yo
man,
yo
man,
yo
man,
young
man,
young
man,
come
back
to
the
podium.
Yes,
sir,
you
are
a
person.
So
never
said
you
are
a
person.
It
took
you
a
lot
of
courage
to
come
down
and
get
in
front
of
that
mic
as
a
young
person.
So
you
are
a
person.
We
appreciate
you
coming
down.
Thank
you.
God
bless
you
all
right.
D
All
right,
good
morning,
city
council,
my
name
is
harrison
lundy.
I
am
a
resident
in
hillsborough
county
and
I
just
want
to
say
that
I
stand
before
this
body
as
upset
and
as
angry
as
all
the
people
that
we
talk
to
about
the
inhumanity
about.
D
What's
not
going
on
on
the
part
of
the
city
council,
you
know,
we've
been
on
the
ground
for
months,
we've
been
online
for
months,
trying
to
at
least
make
people
aware
of
what
is
happening
to
the
tenants
in
tampa,
but
I'm
also
kind
of
confused,
because
I
hear
a
lot
of
talk
about.
You
know
like
how
good
tampa
is
how
we're
like
the
best
city
in
florida,
but
I
just
like.
I
just
have
a
few
questions.
Why
does
the
best
city
in
florida
allow
its
tenants
to
lie
homeless
on
the
street?
D
D
Do
they
have
the
stomach
to
watch
our
lives
in
jeopardy
and
come
out
of
these
meetings
with
nothing?
These
are
things
we
hear
all
the
time
from
folks
that
we
talk
to
for
again
the
last
several
months.
We
hear
the
need
for
more
than
just
research
on
other
cities.
We
hear
the
need
for
an
eviction
moratorium.
D
We
see
how
people
struggle
financially
to
get
food
on
the
table
and
have
to
sacrifice
their
health
care
or
their
health
care
basic
human
rights,
food
schooling.
We
see
people
sacrifice
all
of
that
just
to
keep
a
roof
over
their
head
and
now
know
a
fact
that
everybody
on
this
council
would
hear
too
if
they
just
showed
up
to
the
meetings,
or
they
just
showed
up
to
these
places
where
they
can
hear
these
tenants
stories.
D
D
I
would
hate
for
our
time
to
be
wasted
again
by
hearing
nothing
but
lip
service,
because
we
need
this
held
down
and
under
control,
and
it
truly
does
show
that
nobody
on
this
council
truly
comes
to
the
meetings,
because
I
have
yet
to
see
it.
The
people
I
work
with
have
yet
to
see
it,
and
this
is
an
issue
that
cannot
wait
until
1.
30
cannot
wait
until
next
week
or
next
month.
This
needs
to
be
dealt
with
right
now.
Thank
you.
So
much.
L
Hello
city
council,
my
name
is
tatiana
morales.
I
am
a.
I
live
in
uptown
near
usf,
and
I
come
to
you
as
one
of
the
44
of
tampa
residents
that
are
renters.
I'm
here
supporting
a
rent
control
ordinance,
but
I'm
supporting
much
more
than
that
tampa,
as
is
now
what
considered
one
of
the
hottest
cities
in
the
country.
When
half-burst
communities
don't
have
sidewalks
when
there
are
homeless
people
begging
on
the
streets
for
basic
human
resources.
And
what
do
we
do?
We
ignore
them?
We
over
police
them.
We
harass
them.
L
L
I
know
I
spend
a
majority
of
my
income
paying
rent
every
single
month,
just
thinking,
maybe
one
day,
I'll
pay
off
my
student
loans,
maybe
one
day
I'll,
get
to
actually
own
a
home
in
this
community
that
I
love
and
live
in
and
when
you
say
there
aren't
solutions
and
when
the
city
council
presents
to
you
they're
22,
when
they
see
when
the
legal
team
presents
their
22-page
document,
saying
oh
no,
it's
too
hard
and
scary
to
actually
address
rent
control.
L
L
There
are
so
many
issues
in
the
city
of
tampa
that
we
need
to
address,
and
there
are
so
many
solutions
and
the
solutions
start
with
this
moment
right
now,
listening
to
the
constituents
that
are
telling
you
to
demand
more,
this
isn't
just
a
rent
control
situation.
This
is
a
housing
crisis
and
until
we
have
major
housing
reform,
the
crisis
will
only
get
worse.
As
every
single
person
adds
up
on
the
street
on
the
sidewalks,
the
community
will
be
more
agitated
because
they
are
seeing
people
begging
for
basic
human
rights.
We
need
to
do
more.
L
We
need
to
increase
the
amounts
for
the
vouchers
at
robles
park
or
guarantee
that
they
are
getting
housing
and
not
tear
down
400
units
of
valuable
housing.
For
for
residents
where
there
is
no
more
in
the
area,
we
have
to
do
more
and
we
have
to
do
better
for
the
citizens
of
this
community,
because
the
developers
and
the
management
companies
they
don't
define
a
city.
It's
the
people
that
define
a
city
and
when
you
kick
out
the
working
class,
the
poor
class,
the
black
and
brown
indigenous
folks
that
have
lived
here,
their
whole
lives.
L
L
D
Good
morning,
council,
my
comments
will
be
a
little
bit
brief.
Today,
cities
throughout
history
have
faced
moments
of
crisis
that
have
changed
them
forever.
Tampa
is
facing
one
of
those
moments
today,
your.
D
Sorry,
my
name
is
nathan
hagan
and
I
represent
tampa.
We
are
already
here.
Our
neighbors
are
already
in
crisis.
Our
city
has
already
changed.
What
is
the
choice
is
how
you
choose
to
deal
with
it.
Many
people
are
here
to
talk
about
the
solution
to
our
short-term
crisis.
We
are
in
an
emergency
and
we
should
declare
one
and
mobilize
to
address
it.
I
want
to
speak
also
to
the
rest
of
your
content
today,
which
is
focused
around
long-term
solutions.
D
P
Hi,
my
name
is
carla
correa
and
I'm
a
tenant
union
organizer
here
in
the
tampa
bay
area,
in
both
saint
pete
and
tampa,
I've
been
organizing
since
august
of
2020
and
in
that
time
I've
seen
all
types
of
people
slip
into
permanent
housing,
seemingly
permanent
housing,
instability
or
homelessness.
Due
to
these
rapidly
rising
rents.
Since
the
start
of
the
pandemic,
almost
24
000
evictions
have
been
filed
here
in
the
tampa
bay
area,
and
even
that
shocking
number
does
not
tell
the
entire
story.
P
That
number
doesn't
account
for
situations
like
hawley
court,
where
tenants
were
told
they
simply
had
to
leave
and
some
of
them
left
before
any
evictions
were
filed.
People
all
over
tampa
are
being
told
they
either
have
to
pay
an
additional
200,
300,
sometimes
500
or
more
or
get
out
and
paying
up
can
mean
foregoing.
You
know
food
like
necessities
like
food
and
toiletries,
which
should
be
guaranteed
to
all
as
human
rights,
and
some
people
are
just
self-evicting
and
being
pushed
into
areas
further
away
from
their
current
jobs.
P
Doctors,
kids,
schools,
it's
very
disruptive,
it's
very
violent
and
it's
time
for
tampa's
so-called
leaders
to
have
the
political
will
to
pass
a
housing
state
of
emergency
and
let
the
people
of
tampa
vote
on
rent
control.
What
we
need
now
is
a
stop
to
the
evictions,
a
stop
to
the
rent
increases
and
a
housing
guarantee
for
all
residents
in
tampa.
Maybe
a
state
of
emergency
is
risky
and
maybe
it
will
open
the
door
to
lawsuits,
but
that's
what
we
need.
That's
what
we
need
right
now.
P
We
can't
continue
down
the
path
of
you
know:
housing
solutions
that
only
serve
the
puck
to
to
line
the
pockets
of
landlords.
Investors
developers
it's
time
to
take
a
stand
for
the
people
of
tampa,
no
matter
what
risk
you
know
if
landlords
are
not
reined
in,
tampa,
residents
will
continue
to
to
go
homeless.
This.
This
is
violence
that
you,
the
tampa
city
council,
has
the
power
to
stop.
P
The
only
people
who
don't
support.
Rent
control
are
the
actors
that
I
just
mentioned:
realtors
landlords
developers
investors
it's
time
to
put
the
working
people
of
tampa.
First,
the
people
who
make
the
city
run
because
we're
the
real
people
who
have
the
power
in
the
city
and
we
could
shut
this
city
down
if
we
wanted
to,
if
you're
a
tampa
tenant
listening
and
you
want
to
join
the
fight.
Please
look
up
tampa
tenants
union
on
facebook,
instagram
or
twitter
get
involved
in
the
fight
for
housing
justice.
P
A
A
D
M
Hello
council,
thank
you
for
allowing
me
to
speak
to
you
today.
I
wanted
to
make
a
comment
from
our
neighborhood,
my
I'm
in
the
bowman
heights
neighborhood
and
you
guys
are
taking
up.
It's
item
number
eight,
it's
130
regarding
changes
to
the
existing.
Let
me
make
sure
I
get
this
right.
M
This
is
a
redefinition
of
the
commercial
of
the
definition
for
commercial
equipment,
and
our
neighborhood
has
had
has
been
plagued
by
an
ongoing
crisis
caused
by
a
local
business
that
thinks
that
they
can
fill
our
neighborhood
with
their
commercial
trucks
and
with
their
employees
and
can
take
advantage
and
overrun
the
entire
neighborhood
with
their
vehicles
and
and
staff,
and
it's
really
become
an
eyesore
for
our
neighborhood.
M
It's
unfair
that
the
hard-working
people
of
bowman
heights
have
to
put
up
with
this
and
and
while
we're
happy
that
the
the
commercial
business
is
successful,
we
don't
think
it's
right.
They
come
in
and
trounce
our
neighborhood
and
fill
it
full
of
commercial
vehicles.
M
M
Thank
you
again
for
your
time
today
and
please
support
the
the
changes
to
commercial
equipment
as
well
as
commercial
equipment
and
residential
districts.
F
Both
your
turn
good
morning,
chair
council
members,
appreciate
it.
I
know
we
have
a
very
full
agenda
for
the
balance
of
our
meeting.
I
just
wanted
to
lay
some
groundwork
out
to
kind
of
guide.
The
discussion
try
to
make
it
as
efficient
as
possible.
There's
13
items
on
today's
agenda.
F
In
each
matter,
we're
seeking
council's
direction
on
our
recommendations-
and
I
want
to
emphasize
that
particularly
to
the
members
of
the
public
who
are
very
engaged
in
these
initiatives.
This
is
a
workshop.
No
final
actions
will
occur,
but
we
are
staff
is
offering
recommendations
and
we
are
seeking
council's
input
and
direction
so
that
we
can
incorporate
that
in
to
our
engagement
with
the
public.
F
As
I
said,
the
agenda
is
an
aggregate
of
motions
that
have
been
made
over
the
past
10
to
12
months,
and
they
all
concern
growth,
development
and
land
use
matters
and
some
cases
we've
not
fully
fleshed
out
the
matters
with
community
groups.
Yet
we
seek
council
direction
and
it's
been
our
intention,
as
some
of
these
matters
have
been
continued
over
time,
to
seek
council
direction
first,
to
incorporate
your
guidance
and
your
input
and
then
bring
that
out
into
the
public
realm
as
we
seek
further
public
outreach.
F
We're
going
to
start
the
presentation
with
the
city
planning
department.
Take
the
long
lens
look
to
our
comprehensive
plan
that
governs
the
underpinning
of
our
land
use
then
we'll
turn
to
a
series
of
more
time
sensitive
or
current
state
growth
management
issues,
and
then
later
in
the
afternoon,
we'll
present
a
series
of
text
amendments.
I
do
have
one
request
before
we
start,
as
we've
discussed
we're
using
this
workshop
to
keep
like
items
and
related
items.
Together
we
have
a
singular
power.
F
Following
the
comprehensive
plan
presentation,
we
have
a
singular
powerpoint
that
will
tie
things
together
and
we
think
streamline
the
presentation
for
yourselves
as
well
as
those
following
along
and
probably
also
for
our
cctv
folks
to
not
have
to
boot
up
so
many
powerpoints
to
get
that
done,
though,
we'd
like
to
request-
and
I
know
we're
very
time
limited,
but
we're
going
to
try
to
compress
the
staff
related
matters
items
agenda
items
9
through
13,
which
are
the
staff
report
items
we'd
like
to
request
that
you
move
those
to
this
morning
agenda.
F
They
are
teed
up
in
that
full
presentation
and
would
enable
us
to
streamline
them
pretty
rapidly
and
to
do
that
would
leave
in
the
afternoon
item
seven
and
item
eight,
which
are
designated
to
start
at
1
30
in
the
afternoon.
So
we'd
appreciate
a
motion
to
move
items
9
through
13
to
the
morning
for
consideration
and
discussion.
F
Great
thank
you
very
much
note
also
that
when
we
reconvene
in
the
afternoon
your
new
administrator
for
development
and
economic
opportunity,
nicole
travis,
will
join
that
discussion.
I
think
she'll
bring
a
lot
of
value
to
it.
So
again,
I
appreciate
all
the
support
you've
given
me
through
the
years
and
we'll
go
ahead
and
kick
off
now,
I'm
going
to
start
with
steven
benson
from
our
city
planning
department
to
talk
about
the
comprehensive
plan.
Thank
you.
R
Good
morning,
council,
can
you
please
bring
up
our
presentation,
I'm
stephen
benson
with
the
city
planning
department
and
I'm
going
to
pass
it
over
to
jennifer
malone
with
the
planning
commission
to
kick
us
off
this
morning.
Thank
you,
sir.
Thank
you
good
morning,
council
jenner,
from
lone
here
with
your
planning
commission.
I
am
joined
this
morning
by
melissa
dickens
with
the
planning
commission
and,
as
you
know,
stephen
benson.
R
Your
planning
department
director
today
we're
going
to
provide
information
on
the
kickoff
to
the
city
of
tampa
comprehensive
plan
update
and
the
work
we
have
planned
for
creating
the
vision
in
2022
next
slide.
Please
so,
first,
a
little
introduction
we're
the
planning
commission
we're
an
independent,
consolidated
planning
agency
that
provides
long-range
planning
for
all
four
local
governments
in
hillsborough
county.
So
the
planning
commission
is
responsible
for
maintaining
and
updating
the
tampa
comprehensive
plan
and
providing
those
recommendations
to
the
city,
administration
and
city
council.
R
I
just
want
to
stress
that
the
plan
is
not
updated
in
the
silo.
We
work
very
closely
with
the
city
planning
department
and
other
cities
staff
and
then
I'll
turn
over
to
stephen
to
explain
the
city
planning
department.
Thank
you.
As
you
know,
the
city
planning
department
was
created
in
2020
to
foster
a
strategic
and
multidisciplinary
approach
to
guiding
growth,
development
and
redevelopment
throughout
the
city.
R
Next
slide,
please
so
right
now
the
plan
has
sixteen
hundred
goals,
objectives
and
policies,
and
it
was
last
updated
in
2016
which
focused
on
some
tweaks
and
quick
fixes.
So
right
now
we're
actually
gearing
up
for
us
substantive
content
changes
which
will
strengthen
the
policy
direction's
ability
to
address
challenges
and
opportunities.
R
We
are
hearing
the
public
and
we
understand
that
one
of
those
challenges
is
housing,
choice
and
affordability,
and
that
is
one
of
the
things
that
we're
going
to
look
at
in
this
comprehensive
plan.
Update
is
how
the
plan
and
the
tools
in
the
plan
and
the
current
context
of
the
plan
can
can
help
with
that.
R
With
that
crisis,
we
would
we're
also
looking
at
ways
to
streamline,
update
and
consolidate
language
and
coordinate
policy
across
the
plan
and
last
but
not
least,
enhance
the
ease
of
use
for
citizens,
because
this
is
a
plan
for
all
the
citizens
of
the
city
of
tampa.
So
this
is
going
to
be
a
phased
approach
with
the
initial
focus
this
year
on
background
analysis
and
updating
the
vision
which
is
going
to
lay
the
groundwork
for
the
policy
changes
and
I'll
turn
it
over
to
melissa
dickens
and
ask
for
the
next
slide
next
slide.
R
Please
thank
you.
So
we're
not
going
to
reinvent
the
will
with
outreach.
We
all
have
been
hearing
from
the
community
about
the
changes
and
the
growth
that
have
been
occurring
and
so
we're
taking
a
variety
of
different
pieces
that
have
already
occurred.
Different
planning
opportunities,
different
studies,
different
workshops,
pulling
all
that
information
together
and
we're
going
to
use
that
as
the
public
input
to
update
the
vision.
Next
slide,
please.
R
So
some
of
these
related
initiatives
and
the
coordination
that's
occurred
include
the
citywide
mobility
plan
plans
that
we're
about
to
get
started
with,
such
as
the
south
of
guinea
neighborhood
plan,
the
palmetto
beach
neighborhood
plan,
as
well
as
planning
projects
that
have
recently
completed,
such
as
our
neighborhood
commercial
district
plans
and
the
urban
forest
management
plan.
Update
next
slide.
S
S
What
our
staff
has
done
as
an
initial
first
step
is
look
at
the
areas
of
commonality
across
those
different
planning
efforts.
So
what
are
we
consistently
hearing?
What
are
some
of
the
messages
that
we're
seeing
across
these
different
outreach
and
engagement
efforts,
housing,
affordability,
certainly
one
of
them.
That's
one
of
the
preliminary
themes
that
we've
identified
in
the
vision.
There
are
eight
total
areas
of
commonality
within
the
initial
vision.
The
initial
vision
themes
and
our
task
right
now
is
to
ask
the
public
for
their
thoughts
what
you
know.
S
What
else
needs
to
be
added
to
the
vision?
How
can
we
strengthen
it?
How
can
we
build
on
it
and
then,
after
the
the
public
engagement,
we're
gonna
be
coming
back
to
you
with
a
refined
and
expanded
vision.
That
vision
will
set
the
the
framework
for
the
overall
comprehensive
plan
update
so
setting
the
overall
guiding
principles
for
how
we
approach
the
goals,
objectives
and
policies
next
slide,
please,
and,
as
I
mentioned,
we're
currently
kicking
off
a
robust
public
engagement
effort
to
get
input
from
the
public
to
help
us
build
on
these
themes.
S
S
S
Next
slide,
please
thank
you,
and
so
we'll
close
out
with
the
initial
plan
update
work
program,
we'll
be
back
to
you
all
in
the
summertime,
with
an
updated
and
expanded
vision
that
we'll
be
asking
for
your
approval
of
via
resolution,
then
in
the
fall
we'll
be
coming
to
you
with
updates
to
the
water
related
sections
of
the
plan
in
the
winter.
S
We'll
have
the
initial
results
of
our
consultant
study
on
the
future
land
use
assessment,
we're
getting
an
outside
consultant
to
provide
us
some
guidance
on
ways
that
the
future
landing
section
can
be
strengthened
and
enhanced,
and
then,
in
the
spring
next
year,
we'll
be
bringing
the
mobility
section
for
forward.
S
Given
all
of
the
comments
today
and
all
of
the
interest
in
affordable
housing,
we're
also
planning
on
fast-tracking
the
housing
section
of
the
comprehensive
plan,
we
recognize
that
there's
a
a
need
for
that
and
we'll
be
also
moving
that
forward
as
well,
and
so
this
concludes
the
formal
portion
of
our
presentation.
We
are
available.
If
there
are
any
questions.
A
B
You
know
I
worked
with
a
lot
of
plans
over
the
years,
different
kinds
of
plans
and
a
lot
of
plans
end
up
on
the
show.
The
comprehensive
plan
seems
to
be
at
least
from
the
public's
point
of
view,
mostly
a
tool
just
to
be
used
for
land
use
issues,
and
I
was
talking
to
stephen
on
the
way
up.
B
You
know
historic
hyde
park
has
done
a
vision
plan
for
what
the
what
they
want,
the
textures
of
the
environment
to
be
like,
and
we've
worked
together
with
the
city
on
the
neighborhood
commercial
district
plans.
How
do
we,
how
do
we?
The
question
is:
how
do
we
bring
this
to
life
in
a
way
that
it's
not
just
a
land
use
qualifier?
How
do
we,
how
do
we
use
it
to
actually
improve
the
lives
of
citizens
and
make
it
real.
R
I,
I
think,
that's
a
great
question,
so
my
response
to
that
is
that
is
the
role
of
our
department
of
this
new
department
is
to
take
all
of
the
strategies
in
the
plan.
There's
a
lot
of
information
in
there,
as
was
mentioned
over
1600
different
policies.
It's
a
lot
to
go
through.
Many
of
those
have
not
been
acted
on.
Many
of
those
are
out
of
date.
R
F
Thank
you
guys,
chair
as
we
transition
to
the
next
part
of
the
presentation,
miss
abby
philly
will
run
through
the
balance
of
the
agenda
items
three
through
six
and
then
nine
through
13
and,
as
we
said,
we've
got
a
contiguous
if
you
will
powerpoint
that
should
be
able
to
streamline
that
and
kind
of
keep
it
on
track.
So,
if
folks
can
pull
that
growth
management
powerpoint
up
we'll
turn
over
to
miss
abby
feeling.
T
T
This
is
really
a
culmination
of
many
motions
that
have
been
out
for
several
months,
some
of
them
almost
a
year,
and
we
came
to
you
and
asked
to
have
a
coordinated
discussion
today.
So
our
first
item,
we're
going
to
be
discussing
is
the
access
to
local
roads
and
streets.
This,
I
believe,
came
up
for
you.
When
a
multi-family
project
went
into
a
commercial
piece
of
property,
it
did
not
have
access
on
an
arterial
collector.
T
T
So
when
do
projects
have
to
access
an
arterial
or
collector
street
when
are
they
required
or
allowed
to
access
a
local
street?
The
code
talks
about
it
in
two
ways:
the
first
is
under
our
special
use
criteria
and
the
second
is
in
the
general
parking
section
of
the
code
that
talks
about
non-residential
parking
lots
and
where
they
are
required
to
access.
T
The
code
sets
out
what
are
special
uses.
Special
uses
are
uses
that
are
deemed
permitted
if
they
meet
the
criteria
and
there's
two
sets
of
these
types
of
uses,
the
s-ones
that
are
processed
administratively
and
the
s2s
that
come
before
you
that
you
see
on
a
regular
rezoning
night.
The
s-1s
have
sets
of
criteria
that
go
with
them
and
if
the
applicant
does
not
meet
those
criteria,
they
must
appeal
to
city
council
for
the
waiver
of
that
criteria.
T
T
I'm
just
going
to
show
you
a
couple
of
these
real,
quick
and
these
are
from
throughout
the
city.
This
is
the
old
wholesome
bread
factory
that
is
now
residential
property.
On
horatio,
this
is
was
a
commercial
ci
piece
of
property
developed
with
residential.
It
has
three
access
points
on
local
streets.
T
This
is
the
warehouse
loss
on
florida.
Again
this
was
denied.
It
was
an
adaptive
reuse
of
an
existing
structure,
so
it
could
not
access
on
to
an
artillery
collector.
So
the
access
is
on.
The
local
street
is
on
grady
near
west
shore
right
next
to
met
west,
that's
boy
scout
boulevard
to
the
north
there.
This
came
in
as
a
special
use
for
residential
in
commercial
intensive.
This
was
the
without
walls
church.
You
may
remember
from
years
ago.
This
also.
T
T
T
The
special
use
was
initially
denied
as
it
didn't
meet
that
criteria,
but
the
legal
department
at
the
time
of
this
application
said
when
a
property
only
has
access
on
the
local
street
and
they
could
qualify
for
much
more
intensive
uses
than
what
is
this.
That
criteria
would
not
be
applicable,
so
this
application
went
through
the
project
was
constructed,
but
it
really
did
raise
the
question
of
how
did
this
all
come
about?
It's
a
special
use
criteria.
T
Our
city
was
very
different
back
then
our
development
patterns
were
different,
the
speeds
of
travel
were
different
and
the
protection
of
the
neighborhoods
was
still
very
much
the
same,
and
we
desire
to
continue
with
that
today.
So
the
other
thing
you
may
recall
is
a
few
weeks
ago.
Vic
b-day
did
a
presentation
for
you
that
talked
about
the
access
on
to
arterials
and
collectors,
the
speed
of
that
and
how
that
actually
causes
more
crashes
and
more
traffic
fatalities
and
and
injuries
than
if
they
were
placed
on
the
local
streets.
T
This
also,
in
keeping
with
our
vision,
zero
strategies
is
where
we
are
today.
So
I
know
I
covered
a
lot.
I
do
kind
of
want
to
show
you
real
quick.
I
pulled
the
used
table
if
I
could
have
the
elmo
for
just
a
moment,
please
what
I
refer
to
as
the
elmo,
the
wolf.
If
I
could
have
the
wolf.
What
you
see
here
is
in
the
commercial
general
zoning
districts,
all
of
those
s
ones,
s
ones,
s
ones.
That's
where
the
multi-family
and
single
family
attached
have
to
access.
A
T
T
T
So
I
think
the
question
really
before
council
today
in
relation
to
this
issue
is
how
would
we
like
to
proceed?
Do
we
want
to
make
an
adjustment
to
this
criteria
because
of
the
circumstances
we
initially
had
talked
about
removing
the
criteria
for
the
access
to
the
arterial
collector
that
runs
with
multi-family
or
making
multi-family
a
permitted
use
instead
of
a
special
use,
which
you
could
then
run
the
rm24
standards
with
so
the
recommendations
I
had
on
the
screen
are:
there
are
two
alternative
recommendations.
The
one
is
here.
T
What
I'm
showing
is
in
the
cg
and
also
in
the
next
category
in
the
ci
residential
multi-family
in
commercial,
is
a
special
use.
One.
The
two
criteria
are
that
it
must
access
an
arterial
or
collector
and
it
must
meet
the
rm
24
dimensional
standards,
for
this
is
also
the
same
for
townhome
for
the
three
other
types
of
residential
which
are
houses
detached
semi-detached,
which
is
the
duplex
or
a
two
family,
which
is
a
stack
a
unit
up
and
a
unit
down.
T
They
do
not
have
those
same
two
criteria,
they
have
a
different
criteria
and
it
is
not
related
to
the
access
on
the
street,
so
the
recommendations
for
consideration
today
would
either
be
to
make
the
multi-family
and
single-family
attached
nx,
which
would
make
them
permitted
in
the
commercial
districts.
It
would
open
up
other
lands.
It
would
separate
them
from
having
to
go
through
a
separate
process.
T
B
It
possible
to
narrow
it
down
to
areas
that
already
have
a
certain
density,
like
we
shouldn't
say
that
it's
allowed
in
one
part
of
city
and
not
other
part
of
the
city.
But
how
do
we
do
it
in
a
non-discriminatory
way
because
in
south
tampa
I
don't
think
this
would
be
popular
at
all,
but
there
are
areas
that
have
heavy
density
is.
Is
there
a
way
to
say
that
that
this
would
apply
only
there
or
does
it
have
to
be
city-wide.
A
T
Come
back
with
changes,
I
think
the
other
thing
you're
going
to
see
is
at
the
end
of
this
presentation,
I'm
going
to
ask
you
for
another
workshop
in
june,
so
that
we
can
have
a
target
for
when
we'll
have
many
of
the
discussions
that
keep
evolving
and
we're
not
always
on
so
many
agendas
coming
and
then
not
having
dedicated
time
to
have
these
discussions.
So.
B
Can
I
just
ask
a
process
question
the
old
rule
for
workshops
I
think
was
that
we
wouldn't
make
motions.
Is
that
applicable
today
or
are
we
going
to?
Are
we
going
to
make
motions
on
the
on
the
just
having
to
discuss.
A
T
To
quickly
just
revisit
the
definition
of
height
that
was
changed
from
grade
to
be
the
vertical
distance
between
the
required
finished
floor
to
the
highest
point
of
the
structure,
and
that
required
finished
floor
is
driven
by
the
fema
regulations.
T
In
some
instances,
this
can
vary
from
5
feet
to
12
feet
above
grade
and
council
did
express
their
concern
related
to
the
potential
of
monolithic
structures,
newly
constructed
next
to
traditional
homes
that
had
remained
in
the
area.
The
code
has
predominantly
two
building
heights,
our
city
code,
and
that
went
the
wrong
way.
Sorry.
T
We
have
the
35
feet,
and
I
know
that
you
all
are
familiar
with
this
from
the
recent
amendment
by
mr
michelini
that
sought
to
change
a
30
to
a
35,
but
in
our
traditional
zoning
districts,
all
of
our
res
single
family
districts
and
the
rm12
16
and
18,
as
well
as
the
ro
and
r01.
T
T
Lashawn
dock
our
senior
planning
coordinator
performed
research
on
other
jurisdictions.
The
city
of
saint
pete
does
have
a
step
back
approach
and
that's
shown
here
on
your
screen.
They
also
have
an
increase
in
yards
you'll,
see
at
the
bottom
there.
If
your
structure
is
above
24
feet
in
height,
you
increase
your
front
yard
from
25
feet
to
35
feet,
and
this
creates
those
opportunities
for
the
passage
of
air
and
light.
It
creates
those
opportunities
for
massing
relief
in
relation
to
the
structures.
T
In
relation
to
aesthetics,
we
found
that
predominantly
aesthetics
are
contained
in
special
districts
overlaid
districts,
but
outside
of
that
it
would
defer
to
the
florida
building
code,
which
requires
you
know
a
certain
number
of
openings
and
and
facade
treatments.
We
found
that
some
jurisdictions
struck
addressed
aesthetics
in
their
zoning
codes.
Bradenton
had
a
forum
based
code,
miami
has
a
city-wide
form
based
code
that
address
aesthetics.
T
I
just
want
to
show
you
naturally
kind
of
what
is
occurring
out
in
our
community
without
any
regulation
related
to
this
matter.
This
is
over
off
of
homer
street
you'll.
See
I
put
the
yellow
line
there.
That
kind
of
gives
you
where
that
finished
floor
requirement
is
and
shows
you.
The
fenestration
of
the
structure
these
are
elevated
here
is
this
is
on
davis
island.
This
is
a
new
structure
here
with
an
elevation
next
to
a
traditional
structure
that
has
been
in
place,
and
these
are
two
that
are
down
on
the
river.
T
You
can
see
that
most
of
these
structures
organically
incorporate
some
sort
of
treatment
at
the
ground
level
when
they
are
being
required
to
have
elevation,
so
it
without
the
code
requiring
an
aesthetic
or
a
number
of
windows
or
those
other
treatments.
It
appears
that
this
is
happening.
Naturally,
what
are
our
recommendations
in
relation
to
the
research
that
we
conducted
in
relation
to
height
and
mass?
S
T
As
I
said,
this
had
several
motions
related
with
it
and
we're
we're
going
to
talk
talk
through
those
now.
Just
to
give
you
some
background.
The
west
tampa
overlay
district
was
amended
it.
It
started
really
back
kind
of
in
2019
and
was
an
effort
of
the
west
campus
cra
with
covid
and
other
kind
of
delays.
It
was
finally
adopted
and
effective
on
february
9
2019
and
the
main
change
in
relation
to
the
topic.
T
There
were
several
changes
to
the
overlay,
but
in
relation
to
the
topic
we're
talking
about
today,
I've
provided
you
with
the
change
that
occurred
related
to
ally
access,
and
I
would
like
to
spend
a
minute
just
reading
this
and
going
over
it,
because
I
think
there
are
some
key
terms
in
this
provision
that
have
now
come
into
play
through
the
implementation
of
shall
versus
may.
T
T
So
I
want
to
take
a
moment
here
because
open
and
used
okay
if
an
alley
is
open
and
used,
and
then
that
you
shall
provide
that
as
the
primary
vehicular
access
now,
that's
the
primary
doesn't
mean
you
couldn't
also
have
a
secondary.
We
haven't
run
into
that
yet,
but
it
shall
be
used
as
the
primary
and
then
the
last
part
of
that
is
meets
minimum
standard,
and
I'm
going
to
show
you
some
pictures
of
what
comes
into
question
when
you're
trying
to
make
a
determination
if
something
meets
minimum
standards.
T
The
other
thing
is
this:
code
change
did
not
provide
any
exceptions,
it
didn't
say
if
there's
a
grand
tree
in
the
middle
of
the
alley,
and
you
cannot
access
because
you're
the
fifth
lot
in
and
you
would
have
to
tear
down
this
grand
tree.
It
did
not
say
if
the
alleys
are
less
than
14
feet,
which
is
not
safe,
maneuverability
in
an
alley
for
traffic
or
pulling
in
and
out
into
a
driveway
that
you
can
get
an
exception.
There
were
no
criteria
for
exceptions
and
there
were
no
criteria
defining
what
was
open
and
used.
T
So
what
has
happened
or
what?
I'm
going
to
start
to
talk
about
the
implementation
is
that
when
a
property
cannot
fulfill
this
requirement,
they
are
being
processed
through
the
design,
exception
process
and
we're
going
to
talk
about
that.
So
I
just
want
to
let
you
know
that
carlos
ramirez,
chair
of
the
west,
tampa
infrastructure
committee
is
here.
On
the
second
floor,
we
have
been
in
contact
with
him
eric
attended
their
meeting
last
month
and
we
have
opened
up
communication
on
this.
T
So
allies
are
addressed
in
our
code
under
27
283
12.
That's
the
transportation
section,
and
I
just
want
to
take
a
few
minutes
and
walk
through
this
as
well.
This
says
that
all
off
street
parking
spaces
may
utilize
public
alley
right-of-way
for
maneuvering
into
and
out
of
legally
sized
parking
spaces
providing
the
following
are
met.
T
So
what
meets
standards
now
there
are
code,
also
expresses
exemptions.
It
is
not
required
to
pave
the
unimproved
alley
provided
for
single
family,
I'm
sorry
for
single-family
detached
semi-detached
and
two
family.
So
we've
talked
about
this
regular
house.
Duplex
two
family
is
the
stack
a
unit
up
and
down.
They
are
not
required
to
pave
unimproved
alley,
provided
that
the
existing
alley
surface
meets
criteria
for
the
unpaved
alley.
So
again,
if
existing
ali's
surface
does
not
conform
to
mobility's
technical
standards,
then
it
must.
T
The
applicant
must
modify
the
ali
surface
to
the
nearest
intersection
if
the
alley
is
already
being
accessed
by
other
properties
on
the
block,
mobility
will
evaluate
the
alley
to
determine
if
its
existing
condition
will
support
the
additional
traffic.
Let
me
just
say
through
discussions
and
preparation
for
today,
that
is
not
just
pavement.
That's
pavement
and
storm
water
design
because
they
just
don't
let
you
pave
an
alley
and
flood
all
your
neighbors.
We
have
to
be
mindful
of
how
that
asphalt
is
then
impacting
all
the
other
properties
that
are
on
the
alley.
T
If
the
alley
is
required,
this
was
another
nuance.
If
the
alley
is
required
to
be
paved,
that
requires
a
right-of-way
use.
Permit
it's
a
separate
permitting
process.
It
requires
separate
review
by
mobility,
separate
design
plans
that
is
outside
the
typical
building
permit
pro
process.
T
So
if
you
come
into
us
for
a
bld
building
permit-
and
you
now
are
required
to
make
that
improvement
for
your
access,
you
are
also
then
required
to
do
an
row
and
have
those
two
processes
running
together
to
ensure
that,
prior
to
that
building
being
receiving
certificate
of
occupancy,
that
those
two
processes
are
completed.
T
T
When
that
appeal
came,
council
said
boy,
this
is
confusing.
This
is
the
only
house
on
the
block
that
doesn't
every
other
property
on
this
block
accesses
the
street
their
mid-block.
They
would
be
the
first
ones
that
have
to
access
the
alley,
and
that
made
me
think.
Let's
look
at
this.
Let's
see
when
were
these
structures
built,
how
many
of
them?
How
long
is
this
going
to
take
for
us
to
get
to
full
redevelopment
where
every
structure
on
a
block
is
going
to
have
alley
access
and
ultimately,
council
overturned.
T
T
T
T
Let's
take
a
look
at
the
alley.
The
eastern
end
of
the
alley
has
some
improvement.
T
I
do
not
believe
so
just
when,
and
I
think
some
of
the
impression
may
have
been
when
this
went
into
effect,
and
we
say:
okay,
let's
go
ahead
and
make
them
all
access
the
alley
that
they're
just
going
to
put
an
apron
from
the
back
of
their
house
onto
this
condition,
and
this
isn't
an
acceptable
condition
to
the
city.
So
then
they're
required
to
improve
it.
The
cost
of
that
improvement
and
engineering
is
then
transferred
on
to
the
cost
of
the
homes
which
I'm
going
backward
again.
Sorry
was.
I
That
case
was
heard
about
six
months
ago,
seven
months
ago,
eight
months
ago,
something
like
that
and
that
it
was
the
gentleman
that
his
whole
family
generations
of
the
family
had
lived
there
and
he
inherited
the
house
of
water
and
knocked
it
down
and
built
a
new
house
for
him
and
his
wife
and
kids.
If
I
remember
the
the
conversation,
what
I've
handed
out
to
the
council
members
is
the
map
of
west
tampa
and
it's
the
ones
with
green
on
it
all
the
ones
that
are
open.
T
Excellent,
thank
you
so,
at
the
western
end
of
the
alley,
I
just
wanted
to
take
a
look
and
show
you
again
and
you'll
see
in
this
picture.
There
are
some
fence
structures.
I
mean
we
face
that
a
lot
of
the
alleys
haven't
been
used
in
a
long
time
or
never
and
fences
arrive
in
them
or
offenses
are
erected
in
them.
Sometimes
the
city
will
go
out
and
ask
that
the
applicant,
you
know,
remove
those
fences,
so
I
just
wanted
to
kind
of
give
those
illustrations
for
you.
T
So
so,
since
this
was
passed,
one
other
item
I'd
like
to
talk
about
is
this
became
effective
the
day
it
was
passed
in
the
future.
We
have
learned
now
that,
when
you
are
making
these
code
changes,
we're
going
to
ask
that
you
give
us
90
days
to
an
effective
date
because
it
went
into
effect
the
day
it
was
passed
and
two
of
the
three
examples
that
ms
sanchez
would
like
an
explanation
on
were
simply
missed
because
they
were
processed
so
quickly
after
it
was
passed.
T
That
staff
did
not
have
time
to
have
adequate
training
to
know
they
went
into
the
building
department.
The
building
department
has
been
reviewing
them
for
years
under
a
certain
standard.
The
standards
now
changed,
it's
effective
immediately
and
we
just
didn't
catch
up
and
mistakes
happen,
and
so
on.
Two
of
those
that
is
what
happened.
T
T
So
what
I
have
here
for
you
is
a
quick
accounting
of
so
far
what's
been
processed
as
design
exceptions,
the
addresses
they've
been
processed
at
we've
had
13
so
far
since
this
past,
eight
of
them
were
disapproved
and
five
of
them
it
was
actually
four
of
them
that
was
approved.
The
asterisk
shows
the
overturned
decision
that
granted
approval
by
city
council.
T
T
We
are
in
concert
with
the
neighborhood
in
wanting
to
promote
walkability
into
wanting
to
promote
pedestrian
safety
in
preparation
for
this,
I
did
have
a
discussion
with
vic
beday
to
kind
of
talk
about
what
are
those
minimum
standards
for
alias,
which
would
make
them
safe
and
then
what
are
our
other
options?
Are
there
other
options
where
we
could
potentially
look
at
the
alley,
not
for
the
vehicular
access,
but
for
the
pedestrian
access?
T
Could
we
create
some
east-west
connections
there?
Where
we
make
the
alley
the
pedestrian
walk,
we
improve
it.
We
put
some
grass,
you
know
versus
we
try
to
shift
all
those
driveways
from
the
front
to
the
back,
because,
as
you'll
see,
that
redevelopment
is
going
to
take
probably
25
or
30
years
till
we
get
to
a
point
where
each
of
these
would
be
redeveloped.
I
don't
know
that
it
that
that's,
you
know,
probably
a
pretty
aggressive
estimate,
so
the
other
thing
is
alternatives
to
requiring
the
ali
access
or
criteria
for
the
exemptions.
T
Much
like
you
have
the
criteria
for
the
sidewalk
installation
exemptions.
This
code
provision
should
probably
have
some
minimum
criteria
for
an
exemption.
If
75
of
the
block
does
not
access
onto
the
alley-
or
there
is
not
a
single
access
on
to
the
alley,
perhaps
that
would
be
justification
for
an
exemption,
also
defining
what
is
open
and
used.
T
That
was
the
25.
T
09
west
north
b
street
that
application
came
in
for
a
building
permit.
The
alley
was
completely
overgrown,
building,
stopped
them
and
said
your
required
alley
access
the
applicant
called
eric
cotton.
They
reviewed
everything
looked
at
the
pictures
together,
it
was
overgrown.
There
was
no
access.
T
Mr
cotton
instructed
them
to
please
go
ahead
and
submit
for
the
design
exception
that
we
would
issue
it
and
keep
the
building
permit.
Moving
forward.
It
came
in
our
urban
design.
Coordinator
went
out
to
the
site
the
day
he
went
out
to
the
site.
The
alley
had
been
cleared,
so
he
denied
it
not
knowing
the
conversation
that
mr
cotton
had
had
and
not
knowing
that
the
conditions
of
the
alley
had
changed
that
morning.
T
So
the
applicant
comes
back
and
said
we
had
this
whole
discussion.
I
made
assumptions
and
went
forward
based
on
the
conditions
that
were
in
existence
and
what
we
did.
How
can
this
now
not
be,
and
I
said
well,
we
have
to
have
predictability
in
what
we're
doing.
We
did
send
them
down
that
path,
to
go
back
and
then
make
them
redo.
The
building
permits
redo
everything
you
know
it.
T
A
We're
appreciative
of
that
and
just
looking
at
the
mapping,
you
know
I'm
a
west
chamber
guy
myself,
but
you
know
mr
miranda's,
the
west
ham
for
mayor.
So
you
know
looking
at
looking
at
this
map
here
and
you
know
there
are
going
to
be
some
challenges
just
looking
at
the
alley.
So
that's
why
I'm
hoping
that
we
have
a
good
discussion
with
them
and.
T
Yeah,
so
the
varying
character
of
the
blocks,
an
existing
development
pattern
that
we
just
talked
about,
that.
I
showed
you
kind
of
how
some
blocks
have
no
properties
that
access
the
timing
of
redevelopment,
balancing
the
delivery
of
city
services,
as
we
talked
about
this,
if
that
alley
has
not
been
used
by
solid
waste
for
pickup,
if
it
has
not
been
used
in
certain
ways,
and
now
we
have
shifted
the
house
to
the
alley,
are
we
now
going
to
be
having
service
on
both
the
street
and
the
alley?
B
I
think
that
I
think
that
we
have
to
be
careful
with
that.
I
was
part
of
neighborhood
associate
in
hyde
park
when
we
pushed
to
keep
the
alley
service
and
the
city
had
to
make
special
accommodation
after
after
a
lot
of
protesting
and
they
got
rid
of
it
in
other
parts
of
the
city,
and
that
was
a
decision
by
solid
waste.
Not
a
decision
by
the
neighborhoods
and
and
I'll
make
my
longer
statement
about
ali's
in
a
minute.
A
I
hear
what
you
say,
mr
carlson,
but
the
problem
you
have
right
now
from
even
from
the
driver's
standpoint.
The
drivers
are
complaining
because
what's
happening
now
the
size
that
they're
building
of
these
trucks
now
exceed
and
then
a
lot
of
the
drivers
are
getting.
You
know.
I
forgot
the
code
now
they're
getting
disciplined
for
bumps
and
scratches
on
the
on
the
city
vehicles.
My.
B
Understanding
is
that
they
they
had
special
trucks.
I
don't
remember
all
the
details
that
we
can
bring
some
of
the
hyde
park.
People
in,
but
you
know
mr
miranda
always
says
we
need
to
treat
west
ham
and
other
areas
the
way
we
do
south
tampa
and
other
areas
and
in
in
south
tampa
there
were
accommodations
made
and
I'll
just
say
that
I
think
that
alleys
are
are
an
important
part
of
planning
for
quality
life.
B
Ali
access
is
very
important
in
south
tampa
they'll,
we'll
we'll
have
people
at
pitchforks
that
we,
if
we
propose
to
shut
down
alleys
or
take
away
garbage
service
in
west
hamp
and
the
rest
area,
I
think
in
in
10
or
20
years,
we're
going
to
regret
that
we're
shutting
down
these.
I
almost
always
vote
against
vacating
alleys,
and
I
think
it
should
be
the
city's
responsibility
clear
them
out.
The
fact
that
they're
overgrown
should
not
be
an
excuse
to
to
vacate
an
alley.
B
A
Agree
what
you're
saying
at
that
point,
mr
carlson,
because
you
look
at
the
east
side
of
town
and
you
go
try
these
alleys.
You
came
to
get
through
these
out,
so
I
guess
when
the
city
said,
we're
gonna
start
doing
garbage
service
in
the
front.
The
alley
just
became
an
obsolete
thing
to
clean
and
do
so.
I
see
what
you're
saying
and
I
guess
the
city's
now
told
homeowners.
The
alley
is
their
responsibility
to
keep
clean,
but
most
of
them
don't
keep
them
clean.
T
We,
when
this
matter
came
up
and
we
started
implementing
with
the
design
exceptions
and
trying
to
figure
out
what
some
of
these
things
meant
and
the
motion
was
made
by
council
to
report
back.
We
did
initiate
discussion
with
carlos
ramirez,
like
I
said
he
is
here
on
the
second
floor
this
morning
and
what
we
would
like
to
do
is
we
would
like
to
go
back
to
oh
there's,
an
error
in
my
presentation.
We
would
like
to
go
back
and
work
with
them.
We'd
like
to
figure
out.
T
We
would
like
to
start.
We
would
like
to
go
back.
Carlos
is
aware,
we'd
like
to
come
back
and
have
these
discussions
and
work
with
the
cac
and
then
what
I'd
like
to
do
is
provide
you
with
a
staff
report
of
our
progress
on
april
21st,
and
if
we
have
recommendations
at
that
time,
I
would
tee
up
those
recommendations
to
come
back
to
you
on
the
june
23rd
workshop
with
what
those
changes
would
be.
T
You
know
the
quickest
change
right
now
would
be
to
go
back
to
the
may
versus
the
shall,
which
is
what
it
was
up
until
last
year,
but
I
think
we
can
find
a
way
to
better
define
and
set
some
standards.
The
other
thing
that
we
have
received
is
jesus
nino
has
from
the
west.
Tampa
cra
has
an
inventory
of
the
alleys
you
know.
T
Maybe
it
is
setting
some
of
those
standards
that
this
would
not
be
applicable
to
allies
less
than
a
certain
width,
and
then
we
would
move
on
from
trying
to
find
a
balance
between
what
is
safe
and
what
is
achievable
and
and
how
we
take
this
forward.
But
I
think
right
now
the
impression
and
the
expectation
from
west
tampa
is
that
you
either
do
it
or
you
don't.
I
mean
there.
There
are
no
criteria
for
us
granting
the
exception,
which
has
kind
of
put
our
team
under
fire
as
to
well.
Why
did
you
do
that?
T
Why
did
you
you
know
we're
reviewing
this
on
a
case-by-case
basis?
Much
like
what
you
felt
when
it
came
to
you
to
say
everything
on
this
block.
Doesn't
access
we're
the
only
one
we'd
be
the
first
one
we're
going
to
have
to
improve
from
our
house
all
the
way
to
the
intersection?
This
means
this.
So
our
urban
designer
is
using
his
professional
judgment
in
making
those
decisions
and
those
decisions
are
being
rendered
in
order
to
keep
this
moving
forward.
If
that's,
not
the
desire
and
the
direction
of
counsel
is
deny
them
all.
T
B
B
T
B
If
we,
if
we
look
at
it,
the
problem
is,
if
we
look
at
it
on
a
tactical
basis,
project
by
project
little,
you
know,
individual
home
buy
at
home,
we'll
have
a
different
view
than
if
we're
looking
at
it
systemically
and
that's
the
whole
purpose
of
plans.
B
As
you
know,
we
need
to
figure
out
how
how
we
want
our
community
develop,
we're
urbanizing
our
area
and
and
if
you
look
back
the
alleys
were
there
originally
anyway,
and
we
should,
I
think
we
should
plan
to
to
continue
to
develop
them
and
improve
the
way
our
our
community
looks
and
and
how
people
interact
with
it,
and
we
shouldn't
use
the
alleys
being
overgrown
as
an
excuse
to
shut
them
down
and
vacate
them
and
and
turn
the
houses
around.
B
I
mean
what
what
it
really
is,
as
I
said
before,
is
it's
building
suburban
homes
in
an
urban
area
and
the
the
urban
homes
that
are
there
and
those
homeowners
are
going
to
get
very
upset
that
we're
allowing
this
to
happen.
I
imagine.
T
I
I
would
only
say
I
can
only
speak
for
this
map
that
I
passed
out,
but
I
would
imagine
if
every
neighborhood
votes
on
it,
that
this
neighborhood
here
will
vote
to
close
west
ham.
I'm
talking
about
just
my
opinion,
because,
as
I
look
at
it
there's,
I
would
say
it's
a
60
40
that
already
closed,
and
I
don't
see
the
advantage
in
west
ham
anyway
of
having
an
open
alley.
I
It
causes
enormous
amount
of
cost
to
keep
paving
and
keep
cutting
and
keep
doing
what.
At
the
end
of
the
day
you
plant
whatever
you're
gonna
plant
there,
you
said,
and
it's
gonna
cost
more
upkeep
on
the
other
side,
there's
less
money
for
other
things
to
do
so,
where
is
the
balance?
And
how
do
you
do
things
or
where
do
you
address
your
resources
to
do?
I
H
Whenever
we
have
someone
come
before
this
council
for
vacating
of
alleys,
there's
always
two
things:
they
say:
illegal
dumping
and
and
and
homelessness,
drug
use,
so
they're
looking
to
help
maintain
their
own
property
or
bring
these
alleys
into
their
property,
so
they
can
feel
safer.
I
don't
know
if
you've
ever
heard,
that
or
not
but
again
when
people
stand
at
that
podium
or
they're
downstairs
standing
before
the
camera.
Those
are
the
things
that
are
always
brought
up:
illegal
dumping
that
they're
tired
of
cleaning
up
and
and
finding
syringes
and
crack
pipes.
H
A
I
think
it's
more
for
communities
now
to
take
back
those
community
in
that
cac,
but
you
know
I
know
I
know.
West
ham
is
doing
a
good
job
just
to
try
to
keep
them
clean.
Now,
with
the
program
hey
sue's
put
in
play,
so
they're
doing
a
heck
of
a
job
with
that
program.
Some
of
the
photos
we've
seen
so
we're
happy
that
they're
doing
that
doing.
T
T
The
west
tampa
cra,
the
west
tampa
cic
infrastructure
group.
He
is
on
the
second
floor.
N
G
Your
name
for
us
good
morning,
carlos
ramirez
2103,
west
carman,
I'm
with
the
west,
tampa
cra
cac.
I'm
the
current
chair.
G
Yes,
sir,
a
couple
of
things
just
a
little
bit
of
background,
the
cac
made
a
motion
back
in
june
of
2019
to
look
at
the
west
tampa
overlay
to
see
if
there
were
any
changes
that
we
could
do
to
help
our
area
can.
A
G
We
worked
for
about
a
year
with
city
staff,
making
sure
that
we
were
trying
to
cover
everything
all
the
different
departments
and
then,
in
july
of
2020,
we
brought
up
a
motion
back
to
the
cac
and
a
presentation
of
the
changes
that
we
wanted
to
make,
and
it
was
unanimously
passed
the
this
particular
issue.
The
alley
access
was
one
of
those.
There
were
three
things
that
we
wanted
to
accomplish
with
with
this
safety,
which
ms
feli
did
a
great
job,
talking
about
pedestrian
safety,
keeping
the
character
of
west
tampa
and
economic
redevelopment.
G
So
we've
talked
a
lot
about
walkability.
We
have
a
sidewalk
program
now,
so
that's
kind
of
that
was
a
big
incentive
with
the
big
new
houses
that
are
coming
into
west
tampa.
A
lot
of
them
have
double
car
garages,
which
means
extra
wide
driveways,
which
means
less
sidewalk,
because
now
the
sidewalk
is
cut
for
a
driveway,
and
now
our
you
know,
people
who
are
using
the
sidewalks
I
have
to
watch
out
for
cars
coming
in
and
out.
G
The
other
thing
is
a
lot
of
these.
Driveways
are
not
wide
enough
for
two
cars,
as
time
goes
on,
people
start
using
their
garages
for
storage,
so
they're
parking
outside
now,
two
cars
parked
in
front
of
the
garage
is
blocking
the
sidewalk
and
it's
pushing
pedestrians.
Sometimes
people
with
wheelchairs
elderly
kids
into
the
roadway
to
go
around
them.
G
Those
are
things
that
we
looked
at
as
far
as
pedestrian
safety,
keeping
the
character
of
west
tampa
with
these
double
car
garages
and
these
double
wide
driveways,
the
front
of
the
house
no
longer
has
a
porch
or
it
has
a
tiny
little
porch.
I
was
on
my
porch
this
morning
talked
to
my
neighbor,
who
was
on
his
porch
as
well.
So
it's
our
way
of
keeping
eyes
on
the
street.
Keep
making
sure
things
are
safe,
kids
are
playing
outside.
We
can
all
see
them
many
times.
G
I've
had
a
neighbor
saying:
hey,
your
son
is
getting
too
rowdy
or
whatever
it's
it's
community,
it's
being
out
there.
So
with
with
the
big
things,
there
are
no
front
porches
and
then
the
last
thing
is
economic
redevelopment.
As
you
know,
all
the
walkable
neighborhoods
I
mean
it's
even
a
score
on
zillow.
All
the
walkable
neighborhoods
in
tampa
are
doing
very
well
they're,
affluent
neighborhoods,
so
our
charge
in
the
west
tampa
cracac
is
to
bring
back
west
tampa
redevelop
it,
and
this
was
a
great
way
for
us
to
do
that
as
well.
G
G
I
understand
things
are
not
perfect,
but
we
are
looking
at
different
things
we
can
do.
I
don't
think
abandoning
the
alleys
is
what
we
need
to
do:
they're,
great
tools
that
we
have.
We
can
use
them
for
different
things.
I
know
abby
and
I
have
been
discussing
different
things
where
it
makes
sense
where
it
doesn't
make
sense.
Solid
waste
being
picked
up
from
the
alley
is
not
one
of
those
things
we
we're
okay
with
keeping
that
on
the
street.
G
G
I
know
we.
I
know
ms
sanchez
shared
it
with
her
neighborhood,
which
is
not
technically
in
the
cra,
but
it
is
west
tampa
and
it
is
in
the
west
tampa
overlay.
So
we've
had
a
lot
of
public
involvement
and
people,
and
you
know
opportunities
for
everybody
to
be
able
to
chime
in
including
developers
and
home
builders
who
came
to
our
infrastructure
subcommittee
meeting
as
we
were
discussing
these
things
and
gave
input
as
well.
A
Well,
thank
you
for
coming
this
morning.
Sorry.
I
got
said
earlier
looking
at
this
map
that
ms
feli
has
given
us
there,
there
are
going
to
probably
be
some
challenges,
I'm
going
to
be
honest
with
you
trying
to
go
from
one
stance
to
another,
so
I'm
hoping
that
we
have
some
good,
robust
discussions
and
come
up
with
some
criteria
and
to
bring
back
to
the
council.
We
can
make
some
good
decisions
of
moving
forward,
but
again,
thank
you
for
coming.
Anyone
else
have
any
questions
again.
Thank
you,
sir.
G
Looking
at
this
map
a
lot
of
it's
my
district,
you
know
each
neighborhood
is
different.
I
see
that
there's
a
lot
of
open,
there's
a
lot
of
vacated,
but
you
know
certain
areas
I
would
say
I
don't
know,
let's
go
like
along
the
river,
it's
hard.
You
need
that
alley
access,
because
it's
hard
to
get
how
the
houses
are
built.
The
properties
are
and
sidewalks
and
everything
it's
hard
to
get
the
you
know
the
trash
can
up
there
and
some
of
the
streets
are
narrow,
some
dead
end.
G
I
know
here
you
know
like
off
howard
avenue
closer
to
the
river.
You
have
a
lot
of
one-way
streets,
I'm
sorry
one-way
dead-end
streets.
G
You
know,
I
mean
it's,
you
gotta,
take
it
on
a
case-by-case
basis,
but
then
in
other
parts
of
west
tampa,
where
you
see
you
know
better
connectivity
like
all
times
off
cabana,
you
know
the
streets
will
connect
all
the
way
through
and
you
can
I
see
where
there's
more,
you
know
vacated
areas
where
I
mean
again.
It's
just
it's
it's
street
by
street
case
by
case,
because
each
neighborhood
is
is
different
depending
on
what
part
of
the
map
you're
looking
at
so.
T
Thank
you,
chairman
goods,
so
we're
gonna
wrap
up
now
with
item
five
in
this
deck
presentation.
We
have
about
30
minutes
to
the
noon
hour
and
then
we're
going
to
do
the
staff
reports,
which
would
be
item
11,
12,
13
and
6.,
and
we're
gonna
aim
to
be
expeditious
and
and
keep
you
on
track
all
right.
Thank
you.
J
Good
morning,
chairman
and
council
members,
it's
good
to
see
everyone
in
person.
Thank
you
so
much
for
your
time.
Lashawn
docks,
city
planning
and
again
this
is
item
number
five
on
the
agenda
and
I'm
going
to
bring
to
you
a
a
follow-up
on
alcoholic
beverage
sales.
This
would
include
a
discussion
of
hours
of
operation
and
distance
separation
and
follow-up
on
that
in
council.
You
may
remember
this
conversation
started
at
the
end
of
october.
In
2020.
J
there
were
a
series
of
motions
that
were
made
for
staff
to
come
before
council
and
discuss
the
hours
of
operation
and
distance
separation.
This
is
regarding
alcoholic
beverage.
Sales
permits
in
april
of
2021
council
made
a
motion
for
staff
to
come
and
have
that
discussion
and
staff
came
before
you.
We
discussed
the
hours
of
operation
regarding
the
alcohol
sales,
and
then
we
went
into
distance
separation,
especially
in
urban
villages,
in
the
creation
of
those
distant
separation
requirements.
J
J
And
then
the
last
item
was
to
discuss
whether
or
not
alcohol
would
run
with
the
land,
and
we
have
susan,
joseph
velez
here
with
the
legal
department.
So
when
we're
at
that
portion
of
the
presentation,
I'm
going
to
turn
it
over
to
susan
to
present
for
you,
so
after
each
one
I'll
just
stop
and
pause
for
a
second
in
case
there
are
questions.
First,
we
will
talk
about
the
hours
of
operation.
J
I
just
want
to
review
with
you
council
that
the
hours
of
operation
are
held
within
two
chapters
of
the
code,
they're
in
chapter
14
and
in
chapter
27.,
and
so
first
I
would
like
to
review
chapter
14.
the
chart
before
you
identifies
the
uses
on
the
left
broken
out
by
use
by
alcoholic
beverage
sales
type,
and
then
it
includes
the
business
operating
hours
as
well
as
the
alcoholic
beverage
sales
hours.
J
So
you
can
see
the
restaurant
establishments
are
there,
along
with
your
bar
lounge,
your
small
and
large
venue
uses,
and
next
we'll
go
to
the
hours
of
operation
in
chapter
27..
So
this
chart
is
broken
out
the
same
way
it
has
the
uses
listed
on
the
left,
and
then
there
are
two
categories
that
are
provided.
One
is
the
special
use,
one
category
which
is
our
administrative
review.
You
don't
see
those
come
before
you
they're
processed
by
staff
internally
and
then
there's
the
special
use
too.
The
special
use,
two
is
what
comes
before
council.
J
That's
the
public
hearing
process.
One
thing
that's
important
to
note:
when
we're
talking
about
the
hours
of
sale
for
alcoholic
beverages,
you'll
see
the
two
categories
for
restaurants
for
a
special
restaurant.
We
have
embedded
in
the
code
a
special
use,
one
process,
that
is,
that
administrative
process,
and
it
is
that
incentive
to
the
applicant
to
apply
for
a
special
use,
one
versus
a
special
use
two.
If
they
wanted
reduced
hours.
If
their
establishment
is
going
to
close
at
11
pm
during
the
week,
there's
no
need
to
apply
for
a
special
use
too.
J
J
And
so
council.
Lastly,
I
just
would
like
to
review
in
consideration
of
those
items.
Council
did
express
a
desire
to
consider
reducing
hours
of
operation
for
businesses.
We
just
want
to
just
make
sure
council
is
aware.
That
would
include
two
things.
The
amendment
of
chapter
14
and
the
amendment
of
chapter
27.
J
A
B
Thing
you
mentioned
is
in
the
beginning:
is
the
alcohol
license
going
with
the
owner
instead
of
the
property?
Is
that
something
that's.
J
Coming:
okay,
that's
coming
item
number
four:
yes,
okay,
council!
So
we'll
move
on
the
next
topic.
The
item
was
convenience
stores
and
there
was
a
concern
regarding
the
uses
surrounding
the
convenience
stores.
These
are
establishments
that,
in
many
cases,
have
already
had
alcoholic
beverage
sales
approvals.
These
approvals
are
older
approvals,
so
what
I
wanted
to
do
is
just
to
provide
for
you
one
just
how
the
convenience
store
use
is
defined
in
the
code
and
the
zoning
code,
and
also
to
review
that
the
use
of
a
convenience
store
for
alcoholic
beverage
sales.
J
J
J
A
A
You
know
a
convenience
store
versus
you,
it's
a
little
bit
different
than
having
these
liquor
stores
inside
of
communities,
and
I
can
tell
you
that
experience
like
when
I
used
to
go
to
work
at
five
in
the
morning.
People
are
waiting
for
it
to
open
those
small
stores
for
their
medicines.
We
call
it
back
in
their
medicine
and
that's
the
problem.
I
have
because
we
have
a
multiple
of
liquor
stores
inside
of
the
east
side
of
town
and
they're,
not
in
other
communities,
and
I'm
I'm
just
thinking
that
we
maybe
look.
A
J
Yes,
yes,
so
a
convenience
store
can
have
sales
of
beer
or
beer
and
wine,
and
that
is,
they
must
also
have
a
state
license.
The
state
license
must
be
a
one
aps,
which
is
for
beer
or
a
two
aps,
which
is
for
beer
and
wine,
that
is
their
state
license.
In
order
to
sell
alcohol
in
the
city
of
tampa,
you
must
have
a
city
license
and
a
state
license
so.
H
J
And
councilman
goes
to
your
to
your
suggestion
and
to
your
comments.
Staff
did
in
the
research
of
convenience
store
uses.
We
did
consider
that
council
could
consider
adding
a
requirement
that
new
establishments
have
a
distance
separation
requirement
from
residential.
If
that
is
council's
direction,.
A
J
I
One
of
the
things
that
you
look
at-
and
you
say
how
can
it
be
changed
very
difficult
because
it
runs
with
the
land
right.
It
is
forever,
let's
face
it,
so
you're
caught
in
your
own
world
of
trying
to
fix
something
and
you
can't
because
the
law
wasn't
our
law.
That
was
the
law
that
was
given
to
us
by
the
state
of.
If
I
recall
so,
I
don't
know
why
that
came
about.
I
C
A
C
All
the
way
here
in
my
corner
here-
and
I
wanted
to
echo
what
the
chairman
said,
because
if
you
talk
to
a
lot
of
residents
in
places
like
east
tampa,
sulphur
springs
and
other
places.
That
is
one
of
the
great
critical
issues,
which
is
the
many
number
of
liquor
stores
that
come
up
in
the
great
displeasure
of
many,
the
community
on
the
detrimental
effects
that
they
have
on
on
the
community.
C
In
so
very
many
ways,
and
I
wish
that
there
was
some
sort
of
a
way
you
know
legally,
in
which
we
could
look
at
certain
areas
that
that,
for
whatever
term
you
want
to
use
blight
whatever
it
may
be,
where
we
can
place
more
scrutiny
on
additional
liquor.
Only
establishments
there
on
in
deference
to
that
because
of
the
known
detrimental
effects
that
they
have
on
the
surrounding
areas.
I
I
I
I
would
love
to
see
that
something
to
that
effect.
C
If
we
could,
I
don't
know,
if
that's
so,
but
to
the
extent
that
we
could
I'd
I'd,
I'd,
love
to
see
that,
because
a
lot
of
times
these
plans,
these
rezoning
requests
etc.
Come
before
us
and
our
hands
are
tied
and
a
lot
of
folks
say
well
you're
putting
more
liquor
into
these
communities
and
and
our
and
our
hands
are
tied,
and
I
think,
there's
a
lot
of
displeasure
on
that
from
city
council.
So
I
wanted
to
echo
that
thank
you.
G
It
goes
with
the
land.
I
know
that
the
separate
discussion
from
the
convention,
but
mr
councilman
miranda
answered
what
I
was
going
to
ask,
and
that
was
you
know
it's
coming
down
from
the
state,
so
the
fourth
were
preempted
again,
because
somebody
was
asking
me:
what's
the
big
deal
with
a
a
alcoholic
beverage,
you
know
why
is
it
a
hearing
and
why
are
people
against
it
because
it
goes
with
the
land?
What
does
that
mean?
It's
married
to
the
property.
G
G
We
already
dealt
with
the
process
and
you're
ready
to
go
so
again.
It's
it's
about
money.
Just
like
a
later
discussion
about
rent
stabilization,
it's
about
money
and
again
our
hands
are
tied
because
of
what
the
state
tells
us.
We
can
and
cannot
do
so.
Thank
you.
N
Susan
johnsonville,
as
legal
department
I
did
I
just
did
want
to
address
you-
know
the
city
used
to
process
alcoholic
beverage
approvals
through
their
wet
zoning
process
and
some
of
the
old
ones
that
you
see
that
date
back
some
of
the
ones
that
you
might
be
talking
about.
Council,
mr
chair
in
east
tampa
and
other
neighborhoods
that
that
date
back,
you
know
decades
that
are
wet
zonings.
We
now
process
them
as
a
special
use.
N
H
H
I
I
can.
I
can
understand.
Yes,
we
have
our
own
products,
yes,
we're
selling
growlers.
Yes,
we
make
our
own
wine.
Yes,
we
may
distill
our
own
look.
I
understand
that,
but
going
back
again
with
the
land,
a
restaurant
says
we
want
to
be
a
package
store.
We
want
to
sell
food
six
eight.
Ten
months
later,
they
close
down,
guess
what
the
next
owner
gets
to
open
a
back
store.
H
J
Well,
councilman
citro
on
lashawn
doc
city
planning,
keeping
in
mind
that
the
alcoholic
beverage
sales
is
tied
to
the
use.
So
let's
say
you
have
a
restaurant
establishment.
It
is
for
consumption
on
premise.
Only.
H
H
I
may
have
spoke
prematurely
and
I
apologize
for
that,
but
we've
been
hearing
things
about
mixed
use
and
you
put
in
500
square
feet
in
a
30
000
square
foot
building.
They
call
that
mixed
use.
You
go
into
a
now
an
establishment
that
has
closed
down
that
used
to
be
a
restaurant.
You
sold
back
potato
chips.
Does
that
still
make
you
a
restaurant.
H
J
The
other
is
just
to
put
on
the
record
when
a
use
is
approved.
It's
a
special
use
for
alcoholic
beverage
cells,
so
the
one
way
that
that
use
would
cease
is
if
that
use
is
under
violation
or
let's
say
the
use
can
voluntarily
for
special
use.
If
it
is
not
active
for
180
days,
then
it
would,
it
would
cease.
So
it
can
go
dry,
a
location
can
go
dry
or
a
location
can
maintain
their
alcohol
repeat.
J
J
J
A
location
can
voluntarily
extend
their
ability
to
sell
alcohol,
they
can
go
under
a
180-day
extension,
and
that
gives
them
time
to
find
someone
else
to
lease
the
location
to
re-establish
the
sales.
If
they
do
not,
they
can
go
dry.
We
also
have
tenants
that
come
to
us
and
say
they
want
to
go
drive
just
because
their
next
tenant
is
not
going
to
sell
alcohol.
N
Okay,
so
I'm
sorry,
just
a
susan
johnson
legal
department
just
just
to
follow
up
on
councilman
situa
to
respond
in
part,
the
very
things
that
you
talked
about.
You
know
the
next
establishment
that
comes
along.
They
can
do
something
different
than
what
the
potential
applicant
that
may
be
before
you
for
seeking
a
special
use
permit
for
alcohol
beverage
sales.
So
this
is
why,
when
you
do
consider
these
applications,
you
need
to
consider
every
possible
iteration
of
use
that
could
happen
at
that
location.
J
All
right,
okay,
thanks
so
much
council
and
so
we'll
move
on.
The
next
item
for
discussion
is
the
distance
separation
and
this
is
within
urban
villages.
J
J
J
J
We
had
a
total
of
19
applications
for
the
year
and
of
those
19
applications,
15
of
those
requested,
a
waiver,
some
sort
of
distance
separation
waiver,
and
then
it's
broken
out
to
tell
you
the
type
of
waiver
granted
and
for
2019
there
were
a
total
of
21
applications
and
20
of
those
requested
distance
separation
of
some
sort.
J
A
Code
as
it
is
certainly
what
I
call
your
entertainment
district,
you
know,
you
know
we
have
the
board's
booming
out,
everyone
wants
to
have
an
establishment,
and
that
and
those
distances
aren't
250..
I
mean
250..
That's
it's
not.
It's
not
realistic
at
this
particular
point,
but
we've
been
granted
and
I
would
assume
most
of
those
you've
been
granted
have
probably
been
for
ibo
or
probably.
A
J
G
And
I
I'm
not
I'm
not
good
with
math,
but
I
we
we
approve
these
waivers
at
almost
80
percent.
You
know
so
there's
high
probabilities
that
when
applications
come
before
us,
you
know
they
have
a
good
chance
of
getting
approved.
So
we
just
keep
it
on
a
case-by-case
basis.
Instead
of
you
know,
making
a
blanket
change
like
you
had
already
mentioned,.
J
J
So,
council,
this
was
the
request
and
I
think
we've
had
this
discussion
earlier
regarding
the
wet
zoning
running
with
the
land
versus
it
running
with
the
operator
and
we're
available.
If
you
have
any
questions
on
it
any
questions.
Gentlemen,
all
right,
okay,
thanks
so
much
and
I'll
turn
it
back
over
to
abby.
T
Thank
you,
lashon.
Thank
you,
council,
abby,
philly,
director
of
development
and
growth
management,
just
to
wrap
up.
We
have
four
items
that
were
under
staff
reports
on
your
agenda
this
morning.
The
first
one
is
the
design
exceptions,
and
that
is
item
number
11.
That
was
on
your
agenda.
I
did
provide
a
memorandum
discussing
design
exceptions
and
the
public
notice
that
goes
with
them.
T
Let
me
just
take
that
down,
because
it's
confusing
okay-
and
I
don't
have
anything
there-
I
think
we're
done
with
there.
There
you
go.
Thank
you
so
design
exceptions.
I
talked
about
special
uses
this
morning.
Ones
and
twos
design
exceptions
also
have
ones
and
twos
design
exceptions
actually
came
about
in
2009.
T
They
were
a
memorialization
of
what
used
to
be
the
administrative
variance
process
and
the
two
classifications,
de1's
design
exception
ones,
do
not
have
public
notice.
De2S
do
have
public
notice.
In
my
memo
I
talk
to
you
about
what
is
encompassed
in
each
of
those,
predominantly
the
design
exception.
Twos,
which
provide
the
notice
are
reductions
to
setbacks
that
are
throughout
the
city,
not
in
a
special
district.
Okay.
So
if
you're
on
davis
island,
you
are
on
south
dale
mabery,
you
are
and
you
are
seeking
a
setback
reduction.
T
That
is
a
de2
if
you
were
in
the
overlay
districts.
West
tampa
east
tampa
seminole
heights
that
comes
in
as
a
de1
that
de1
does
not
have
notice.
So
I'm
going
to
go
through
what
those
are:
those
special
districts,
overlay
districts,
supplemental
regulations,
so
parking
waivers,
the
ability
for
your
town
homes
to
face
an
interior
court
not
face
the
street
wetland
reduction.
Wetlands
setback
reductions,
fences-
this
includes
reverse
framing
offenses,
so
fences
are
required
to
have
the
nice
side
facing
your
neighbor.
T
Changes
to
buffers
is
also
a
de1,
and
so
those
do
not
have
public
notice
right
now
and
I
think
you've
received
some
comments
and
things
about
this
is
being
done
in
the
dark.
This
is
how
this
this
is
what
the
code
says.
These
processes
are
codified.
We
are
in
the
process
of
addressing
the
standard
operating
procedures,
but
de1s
re-zonings
variances
their
process
for
processing
the
application
requirements.
T
The
time
frames
the
reviews
where
they
go,
that
is
in
the
code,
so
we
are
in
formalizing
what
is
currently
in
the
code
and
putting
that
into
standard
operating
procedures,
but
those
are
in
the
code.
So
what
is
the
difference
in
the
de1s?
Not
having
notice?
You
know
I
provided
you
how
many
de1s
and
how
many
de2s
that
we
processed
in
2021-
and
it
was
roughly
over
close
to
350,
that
the
team
did
there
were
14
denials
and
two
of
those
denials
were
came
on
appeal.
T
One
of
them,
council
upheld
the
zoning
administrator
in
their
determination
and
the
other
one.
The
applicant
changed
and
modified
the
request,
and
it
was
able
to
be
approved
administratively
and
the
peel
did
not
come.
So.
If
what
happens
when
you
provide
that
public
notice
is
you
provide
a
standing
for
a
third
party
appeal
and
the
way
we
look
at
this
is
we
can
provide,
make
design
exception?
Ones
require
public
notice.
That
would
be
an
additional
300
applications
that
may
come
to
city
council
on
appeal.
T
When
the
design
exception
went
into
place
and
the
code
was
changed,
council
agreed
that
those
would
be
the
items
that
would
be
reviewed
administratively
and
gave
that
administrative
authority
to
the
zoning
administrator,
which
is
eric
he's
here
today,
and
that
is
how
they're
processed
and
there's
a
set
of
criteria
in
2760
that
go
with
the
des.
T
So
the
question
was:
why
aren't
they
noticed?
What
is
the
possibility
of
noticing
them?
This
memo
addresses
that
and
then
secondly,
it
makes
a
recommendation
to
you
that
for
the
setbacks
in
the
special
districts,
which
is
currently
a
de1
with
no
notice,
we
would
like
to
unify
that
and
make
that
a
de2
like
the
rest
of
the
city
so
that
it
does
get
notice.
But
in
relation
to
the
other
things
I
mentioned,
the
fencing,
the
buffering
the
wetland
setbacks.
T
K
K
This
started
as
a
privately
initiated
text
amendment
and
on
june,
24th
of
2021
city
council
made
the
motion
directing
staff
to
appear
and
discuss
the
proposal
in
response
to
council's
motion
and
in
order
to
better
understand
the
purpose
of
the
proposal.
Lashawn
dock
spoke
with
stephanie
poynter
and
carol
ann
bennett
on
september
21st
of
2021.
K
That
was
followed
by
another
meeting
on
october
19th
with
city
representatives
and
stephanie
poyner,
carol,
ann
bennett,
kelly,
scharf,
coley,
denault
and
jane
stromeyer,
as
was
shared
with
the
city.
The
purpose
of
the
proposed
amendments
before
you
is
to
provide
increased
awareness
of
public
hearings,
so
I
want
to
take
a
moment
to
talk
about
notice.
I
don't
know
if
I've
got
access
to
the
wolf
there.
It
is
excellent
statutory
notice
requirements
for
rezonings
and
other
land
use.
Decisions
are
set
out
in
section
166
041
of
the
florida
statutes.
K
These
require
an
ordinance
to
be
read
on
two
separate
days
and
for
notice
to
be
published
in
a
newspaper
10
days
prior
to
adoption
of
the
ordinance
supplemental
notice.
Requirements
are
set
out
in
section
727-149
of
the
city's
land
development
code,
and
these
require
mailing
notice
to
property
owners
within
250
feet
of
the
subject
property,
as
well
as
to
register
registered
participating
organizations,
as
well
as
posting
notice
on
or
near
the
front
of
the
property.
K
So,
in
addition
to
the
existing
requirement
to
mail
notice
to
property
owners
at
their
mailing
address,
the
proposal
would
also
require
notice
to
be
mailed
to
the
physical
address.
Notice
would
also
be
mailed
to
renters
within
the
notice
area
and
for
applications
requesting.
Oh
one
thing,
the
notice
area
would
be
increased
for
all
applications
from
200
feet
to
500
feet
and
for
those
applications
requesting
multi-family,
residential
commercial
or
industrial
uses,
the
notice
area
would
be
increased
to
a
quarter
mile
and
a
community
meeting
would
be
required.
K
In
addition
to
the
existing
requirement
to
mail
notice
to
all
participating
organizations
registered
within
the
neighborhood
area,
they
would
want
that
all
registered
organizations
within
the
budding
area
as
well
receive
notice
and
then
include
a
full-size
copy
of
the
most
recently
filed
site
plan
for
those
types
of
applications
that
are
site
plan,
controlled
staff
researched.
The
notice
requirements
of
other
jurisdiction,
a
summary
of
the
research,
is
attached
to
the
memorandum,
and
you
will
find
that
the
notice
areas
range
between
200
feet
and
500
feet
and
again,
the
city's
current
requirement
is
250
feet.
K
Staff
found
that,
while
the
notice
areas
may
not
be
consistent
across
local
governments,
the
notice
areas
are
consistent
within
each
local
government
and
do
not
differ
based
upon
the
requested
use.
The
proposal
before
you
also
request
amending
the
definition
of
a
grieved
person
in
our
code.
It's
currently
defined
as
an
applicant
or
any
owner
of
property
within
the
250-foot
notice
area
of
the
subject
property.
K
So,
given
the
proposed
changes
to
the
notice
area
and
to
the
definition
of
a
grief
person,
I
want
to
take
a
moment
to
talk
about
standing
to
challenge
land
use
decisions
in
general
persons
adversely
affected
by
the
action
of
zoning
agencies,
heavy
status
as
parties
sufficient
to
entitle
them
to
petition
court
for
relief.
The
party
bringing
the
action
must
show
that
the
zoning
action
adversely
affects
its
legally
recognizable
interests
under
common
law.
Unlike
the
city's
definition
of
a
grief
person,
receipt
of
notice
does
not
automatically
confer
standing.
K
K
K
So,
in
addition
to
the
legal
issues
raised
by
the
proposed
amendment,
there
are
practical
issues
that
must
be
considered
section.
27-149
establishes
the
notice
requirements
for
all
types
of
land
use
decisions,
including
rezoning
special
use,
variances
certificates
of
authority
issued
by
the
arc
and
the
blc
and
the
review
hearings
and
at
the
direction
of
the
development
services
advisory
team
and
in
an
effort
to
establish
uniformity
and
predictability
within
the
code.
This
section
was
amended
by
council
in
december
of
2020
to
create
a
uniform
standard
of
notice
for
all
applications.
K
K
List
of
participating
organizations
maintained
by
the
city
is
not
established
by
the
location
of
the
subject,
property
and
instead
is
based
upon
organizations
that
have
elected
to
opt
in
and
request
to
receive
notice
within
certain
areas.
The
proposal
will
also
likely
increase
the
clerk's
time
in
reviewing
affidavits
of
compliance
and
increase
the
probability
of
a
missed
notice.
K
K
One
last
overhead,
given
the
state
of
purpose
of
the
proposal,
which
is
to
increase
awareness
of
public
hearings,
the
city
recommends
that
we
keep
the
notice
requirements
as
currently
codified
in
section
27-149,
that
we
amend
the
definition
of
a
brief
person
to
align
with
the
common
law
definition
and
not
base
it
solely
upon
inclusion
within
a
notice
area,
and
that
we
amend
chapter
27
to
require
all
applicants
for
rezoning
and
special
use
applications
to
hold
a
community
meeting
either
before
the
application
is
filed
with
the
city
or
prior
to
the
city
council.
Hearing.
K
If
council
is
supportive
of
those
recommendations,
the
amendments
could
be
processed
in
the
july
2022
cycle
staff
with
the
department
of
development
and
growth
management
is
also
recommending
alternative
forms
of
increase
in
awareness
of
public
hearings,
which
do
not
require
a
code
amendment.
The
department
is
launching
it's
called
the
development
coordination,
current
application
map,
which
will
provide
real-time
information
on
pending
applications
and
starting
in
may
staff,
anticipates
having
a
video
which
will
highlight
the
interactive
map
and
how
to
transition
from
the
map
to
the
current
record
in
in
excela.
K
In
addition
to
that,
the
department
is
also
in
the
process
of
reestablishing
the
homeowners
night
sessions
for
continued
public
education
of
the
services
provided
by
the
department
and
they're,
also
looking
into
holding
regular
training
sessions
with
neighborhood
organization
leaders
and
the
general
public,
with
instructions
on
how
to
access
property
and
case
information
in
excela.
So
I
know
I've
covered
a
lot
of
information
and
certainly
didn't
go
into
the
detail
that
is
covered
in
the
memorandum.
B
I
wonder
I'm
happy
to
make
a
motion
to
move
forward
on
the
recommendations,
but
should
we
wait
till
everybody
else
speaks.
C
C
There
you
go,
I
I
know
that
world
no,
but
you
know,
and
one
thing
I'd
like
to
look
at
and
and
I'm
not
going
to
ask
this
is
a
question
because
lord
knows
you've
done
enough.
Work
is
to
see
what
other
cities
require
and
if
we're
above
or
below
that
you
know
with
regards
to
what
the
motion
dealt
with,
I
think
there's
a
lot
of
good
things
there
that
we
can
look
at.
C
You
know
some
of
the
some
of
the
issues
with
regards
to
community
meetings
etc
in
part
can
be
dealt
with
by
the
community
benefits
ordinance
in
part.
In
part,
some
of
the
spirit
of
that
you
know
kind
of
what
bothers
me
in
terms
of
putting
more
regulations
on
developers
at
this
time
and
and
the
staff
recommendations.
I
don't
think
do
that,
but
is
the
serious
backlog
that
we
have
in
cases
and
then
putting
on
more
more
ways
in
which
you
can
potentially
screw
up.
C
I
I
again
something
that's
very,
very
well
meaning,
but
I
would
worry
about
for
the
full
scope
of
the
request
of
the
motion
unintended
consequences,
particularly
whenever
it
comes
to
small
property
owners,
etc.
You
know
something
is,
as
I
think,
councilman
carlson
is
going
to
motion
for
that's
consistent
with
what
staff
was
recommending.
I
I
I
from
what
I
hear
I'd
be
a
minimal
to
that.
C
What
I
worry
about
is
expanding
rights
and
the
number
of
ways
in
which
either
an
applicant
or
the
city
staff
can
inadvertently
screw
up
and
thereby
leading
to
more
litigation,
which
is
certain,
but
you
know
more
openness
and
more
transparency
and
getting
the
word
out
to
local
neighborhoods
and
communities
on
what's
going
on,
I'm
110
for
that
compelling
developers
and
folks
who
want
to
build
in
in
communities
to
be
open
about
it
and
meet
with
community
neighborhoods
and
talk
about
ways
in
which
they're
going
to
be
investing
in
the
neighborhoods.
C
Again,
that's
separate.
That's
the
community
benefits
ordinance,
I'm
110
for
that,
but
making
more
ways
in
which
somebody
can
stumble,
particularly
when
we
have
such
a
big
backlog.
That's
a
narrowly
tailored
part
of
the
of
the
motion
that
I
would
be
just
you
know,
skeptical
of
again,
not
necessarily
against
it.
I'd
be
open
to
talking
about
it,
but
something
that
we
should
approach
with
some
level
of
skepticism
and
scrutiny,
but
that's
it.
Thank
you
very
much
and
again
miss
wells.
Thank
you
for
that,
because
I
know
that
took
a
lot
of
time.
I
When
you
look
at
250
feet
or
500
feet
or
1320
feet,
it
may
be
to
someone's
advantage
or
someone's
disadvantage
if
you're
looking
at
something
within
some
distance
to
what
I'm
just
going
to
use
an
example
to
split
a
lot
and
you
look
at
it
within
250
feet,
it
may
or
may
not
be
acceptable,
but
when
you
want
500
feet
and
you're
looking
at
that
same
location,
where
you
say
well,
it's
not
acceptable
within
200,
but
you
look
at
500
feet
and
guess
what
now
you
got?
Multi
lots
on
some
blocks
that
were
100
split.
I
H
Questions
to
the
owner
and
the
renter
getting
noticed
and
if
there
is
any
input
from
both
owner
and
renter,
is
that
two
votes,
yay
or
nay,
I'm
I'm
interested
in
extending
extending.
H
K
You
know
if
we're
talking
about
extending
the
notice
area,
but
beyond
the
250
foot
notice
area,
there
needs
to
be
a
discussion
to
show
that
those
included
within
the
notice
area
have
rights
that
could
be
adversely
affected
by
the
proposed
rezoning.
So
when
you
and
attached
to
the
the
memo
was
some
of
the
research
that
we
had
done,
the
city
of
jacksonville
has
a
350-foot
notice
area.
K
K
That
could
be
impacted,
adversely
impacted
by
by
the
proposed
use?
And
that
was
where
we
were
just
talking
about
doubling
the
notice
area
throughout
the
city
and
going
to
a
quarter
mile
for
certain
uses.
There's
been
no
discussion
that
would
substantiate
the
need
to
expand
the
notice
area
so
that
would
have
to
occur.
K
K
So
I
I
when,
when
we
start
talking
about
expanding
the
notice
area
it
it
does
relate
to
standing
for
folks
to
then
challenge
your
decisions.
So
that
needs
to
be
a
carefully
crafted
solution
and
based
on
evidence
before
this
council
that
folks,
within
the
notice
area,
are
somehow
potentially
adversely
effective
or
could
be
by
the
proposed
rezoning.
K
K
Q
Q
And
I'm
and
I'm
signed
up
to
speak
on
that.
Let
me
just
say
a
couple
things
here
regarding
the
notice
area,
when
you
increase
that
from
250
feet
to
500
feet.
Q
I
know
that's
a
number
in
your
in
your
minds,
but
it
exponentially
increases
the
number
of
properties
that
have
to
be
noticed
and
currently
for
a
typical
notice,
you're
you're,
sending
out
60
to
75
letters
which
is
about
300
to
375
dollars.
They
cost
the
postage
on
that
is
five
dollars
per
envelope
that
doesn't
include
the
labor
or
the
copies
or
anything
else
involved
in
that
when
you,
when
you
take
it
to
500
feet,
you
have
been
now
increased
the
postage
to
one
thousand
to
twelve
hundred
and
fifty
dollars.
Q
That's
plus
your
all
of
the
other
labor
issues
that
I've
already
spoken
about
and,
as
the
staff
has
pointed
out,
there
is,
has
been
no
discussion
whatsoever
regarding
why
this
should
be
increased.
The
notice
hasn't
been
perfected
and
one
out
of
probably
four
of
your
petitions
end
up
being
misnoticed
as
they
are
now.
Q
You
already
required
to
notify
the
homeowner
association
as
part
of
the
noticing
requirements.
It
goes
out
on
a
newsletter
that
also
is
is
sent
to
all
of
the
registered
no
homeowner
associations
and
the
the
science
are
all
posted
on
the
property
that
identify
this
property
as
being
subject
to
to
a
consideration
by
the
city
council
or
the
variance
board
or
the
you
know,
the
the
barrio
or
the
arc
and
the
instructions
on
that.
Q
Q
You've
in
some
cases,
you're
sending
out
notices
to
over
600
people
and
it
gets
cost
prohibitive,
and
not
all
of
these
projects
are
for
major
developers.
Some
of
these
are
mom
and
pops
and
if,
as
councilman
vieira
pointed
out,
if
you
want
to
have
a
requirement
for
a
note
for
a
homeowner
association
meeting,
perhaps
you
you
create
a
threshold
between
small
projects
and
large
projects
and
cut
it
off
at
an
acre,
as
opposed
to
just
across
the
board
and
make
all
of
them
be
required
to
have
a
homeowner
association
meeting.
Q
But
anyway
it
is
cost
prohibitive.
There's
been
no
precedent.
No
information
presented
that
somehow
somebody
didn't
know
about
a
meeting
or
know
about
a
change
and
as
councilman
miranda
pointed
out,
this
may
be
a
positive
matter.
It
may
be
a
negative
matter
depending
on
how
far
you
go
out
and
what
the
nature
of
the
request
is.
So
with
the
with
those
exceptions.
We'd
support
the
the
staff
presentation
as
as
presented.
Thank
you.
Thank
you.
Thank
you,
sir.
T
Thank
you,
council.
I
I
will
wrap
up,
I
think
about
seven,
eight
minutes.
We
can
finish
the
last
two
items
for
you
and
I
do
have
one
last
slide
as
well.
The
next
staff
report
on
your
agenda
was
the
form-based
zoning
opportunities.
T
T
The
city
did
not
complete
that
those
efforts,
some
like
I
said
preliminary
work-
was
done
at
this
time.
What
I'd
like
to
do
is
go
back
out
to
40th
street
and
to
tampa
heights,
to
have
a
discussion
and
see
what
they
were.
Understanding
was
the
objective
of
those
codes
and
what
was
going
to
be
achieved,
and
we
would
look
at
perhaps
some
corridor
overlays
or
some
other
mechanisms
that
may
work
in
concert
with
their
desires
for
those
areas.
The
city
planning
team,
land
development.
T
We
we're
not
in
the
forum
based
code
business
anymore,
so
to
speak.
I
mean
that
just
is
a
strategy
from
10
15
years
ago.
You
know
that
just
is
not
where
we're
headed
today.
So
I've
read
mr
seale's
email
about
promises
and
other
things.
We
would
like
to
make
that
promise
to
have
that
discussion
with
the
neighborhood
and
see
what
we
could
do
at
this
time
to
move
their
objectives
forward.
O
T
Right,
let
me
just
pop
back
on.
If
you
can
see,
maybe
I
asked.
T
That's:
okay!
Yes,
so
they
are
posted
after
30
days
of
non-sales
and
then
they
have
30
days
to
resume
sales.
If
they
don't,
then
they
are
issued
that
that
they
would
approach
the
dry
if
they
choose
to
do
it
voluntarily.
Sometimes
a
business
loses
a
tenant
and
they're
like
oh,
I
know
I
have
to
sell.
T
They
will
put
the
city
on
notice
that
they
have
now
lost
their
tenant
or
they're
in
process
of
remodeling
and
sales
will
not
be
taking
place
and
then
when
they
are
ready
to
initiate
sales
again
they
come
back
and
let
us
know,
but
if
sales
cease,
any
special
use
ceases
operation
for
a
period
of
180
days.
They
lose
that
special
use.
I
just
wanted.
T
So
the
last
item-
and
I
said
I
was
going
to
ask
this
at
the
beginning-
is
I
want
to
say
thank
you
for
today.
I
think
it
was
a
really
good
opportunity
to
have
a
very
focused
discussion
on
many
items
that
you
have
had
out
there
and
give
us
a
chance
not
to
come
in
at
four
o'clock
and
kind
of
have
to
speed,
along
with
with
what
we
need
to
say,
because
these
matters
are
before
you
all
the
time
several
nights
a
month,
and
I
think
it
was
really
important.
T
But
I
would
like
to
ask
that
we
could
possibly
have
june
23rd
as
the
next
growth
management
and
planning
workshop
to
bring
back
to
you
other
items
that
are
still
out
there,
that
didn't
get
bundled
in
today
and
they're
on
the
screen,
for
you
are
a
couple
of
those
items,
the
workshop
items
so
two
weeks
ago,
I
believe
councilman
dingbelter
made
a
motion
about
the
a
hack
recommendations
that
we
were
before
you
in
early
december,
on
with
the
housing
and
community
development
team
and
members
of
the
ahac
were
here,
and
we
talked
about
those,
we
are
packaging,
those
in
a
potential
code,
amendments
for
housing,
code,
modifications
and
that
would
encompass
those
items.
T
So
that's
at
the
top
of
the
list
for
what
we'd
like
to
bring
back
to
you
june
23rd.
That
was
item
number
six
on
your
agenda
today.
The
second
is
the
bonus
density
that
has
been
talked
about.
Looking
at
the
formula,
that's
currently
in
the
code,
looking
at
whether
or
not
we
should
just
go
back
to
all
affordable
housing,
the
electric
vehicle.
That
was
a
motion
made
by
councilman
sitro
just
a
few
weeks
ago,
and
then
we
do
have
some
text
amendments
that
are
in
process
the
downtown
development
review
process.
T
If
it's
the
pleasure
of
council
to
go
ahead
and
set
that
june
23rd
workshop
dedicated
to
planning
items
again,
we
would
love
that
opportunity
to
bring
those
matters
back
to
you.
Mr.
H
May
I
ask
miss
postmaster
you're
there
and
miss
johnson,
velez
or
ms
wells
should
be.
There
are
also
here
great
report
today,
wonderful
information,
but
just
to
keep
it
from
being
informational.
H
Is
there
any
recommendations
that
this
council
make
any
type
of
motions
to
make
sure
that
this
keeps
moving
forward
as
opposed
to
after
they
just
disappearing?.
F
So
carol,
post
administrator
for
development
and
economic
opportunity,
thank
you
appreciate
that,
as
we
stay
stated
at
the
outset,
in
the
workshop
capacity,
the
idea
is
to
get
input
to
get
feedback
to.
Have
you
give
us
further
direction?
That
is
usually
then
incorporated
into
further
future
steps.
So,
in
fact
we
we
don't
necessarily
need
any
emotions
per
se
if
anyone's
interested
in
making
emotion.
Certainly
that
is
your
prerogative.
The
one
exception
might
be
to
the
presentation
that
ms
wells
made
that
one
now
this
is
sort
of
its
last
workshop.
F
It's
been
before
you
on
a
few
occasions.
We
have
some
definitive
recommendations
and
input
and
feedback
from
the
community
groups
already,
so
that
one
may
be
if
there
was
an
inclination
to
support
our
recommendations,
there
would
allow
us
to
to
push
that
forward
in
the
time
frames
that
she
presented.
Otherwise,
I
think
abby
has
clear
direction
on
the
wide
range
of
matters
that
she
brought
before
you.
H
If
I
may
one
more
question,
I
I'm
going
to
assume
that
we
are
going
to
get
a
large
amount
of
calls
and
emails
about
the
discussion
we
had
today
after
we've
heard
from
our
constituents.
Would
it
be
advisable
to
just
revisit
shortly
revisit
with
their
concerns
on
some
of
the
things
that
we've
heard
today.
F
Absolutely
again,
that's
the
point
of
a
workshop
is
to
allow
us
allow
staff
to
share
what
it's,
what
its
positions
are.
What
its
findings
are
to
bring
some
analysis
to
the
to
the
discussion
and
also
to
bring,
as
I
stated
at
the
outset,
some
of
the
compliance
and
regulatory
obligations
that
we're
subject
to
and
then
have
that
be
open
for
discussion
amongst
council
and
absolutely
amongst
the
public.
T
I
I
wanted
to
say
abby
philly,
we're
we're
not
not
available
to
you
before
june,
we're
available
to
you
every
week
I
mean,
I
know
sometimes
you're
like
abby
philly.
Are
you
out
there
I'm
always
out
there?
T
So
if
you
hear
things-
and
you
would
like
at
one
of
your
upcoming
meetings
to
report
back
or
provide
other
direction
or
synthesize
those
thoughts
with
what
you
heard
here
today
from
us
and
provide
other
recommendations
or
motions
we're
available
for
that
absolutely
the
other
thing
I
wanted
to
say
is
that
map
I
put
up
that
is
available
today.
T
It
is
open,
live
and
active
anybody
out
there
who
wants
to
know
anything
that
the
development
coordination
office
is
processing,
can
click
on
that
map
and
see
it
live
and
in
person,
because
we
want
to
provide
that
information
and
and
show
what
is
being
processed.
H
My
next
question
then,
mr
sheriff,
I
could
miss
feely
and
miss
po.
This
post,
you
mean
to
me
he
may
not
be
here
so
miss
feely.
Can
we
can
you
include
some
of
this?
What
we
talked
about
in
case
we
have
any
constituents
concerned
in
in
the
meeting
in
june,
which
you
already
asked
for
that's
my.
That
is
my
motion.
Okay,.
F
F
On
public
input,
what
we
attempted
to
do
this
morning
and
if
it
so
suits
my
successor
and
the
the
path
that
they
may
take
in
the
future,
was
to
push
the
public
comments
to
after
the
staff
presentations
or
perhaps
even
align
them,
so
that
you're
hearing
them
sort
of
synchronized
with
the
discussion,
as
you
saw
with
the
subsequent
a
couple
of
individuals
that
wanted
to
comment
on
a
particular
topic
to
sync
those
up.
So
that
may
be
also
a
way
programmatically
that
you
could
approach
the
june
workshop.
T
I
will
post
today's
presentation
on
our
website
so
that
if
anybody
wants
to
go
back
and
see
that
I
know
it'll
be
available
through
council,
but
we
can
post
it
on
development
coordination
as
well.
B
Just
quickly,
you
know,
based
on
the
feedback
we
got
from
the
public
this
morning,
if
we're
gonna
prefer
or
allow
feedback
after
each
section,
we
ought
to
just
clearly
notice
it
to
everyone,
so
the
public
knows.
Thank
you.
E
Mr
mr
show,
yes,
and
if
I
could
follow
up
counsel
on
that,
what
you've
been
doing
since
the
pandemic
as
a
result
of
the
pandemic
is
different
than
the
way
it
used
to
be,
which
is
what
we
had
in
the
past.
So
my
hope
is
that
council
is
going
to
need
to
address
this
one
way
or
the
other.
Whether
we
have
people
come
back
into
chambers
where
we
go
back
to
normal
and
how
we're
going
to
if
we're
going
to
continue
with
cnt.
J
Yes,
councilman
cetra
made
a
motion
if
he
could
possibly
repeat
it,
that
one
kind
of.
D
And
who
was
the
second.
F
No,
I
just
wanted
to
thank
you
again
appreciate
it.
Wish
you
all
good
good
luck
with
everything
moving
forward
I'll
and
please
stay
in
touch.
I
appreciate
it.
We
stand
in
recess
to
1
30.