►
From YouTube: Community Redevelopment Agency 08082019
Description
No description was provided for this meeting.
If this is YOUR meeting, an easy way to fix this is to add a description to your video, wherever mtngs.io found it (probably YouTube).
B
Miranda
Thank
You
mr.
chairman,
but
Sherman
my
pleasure
this
morning
to
present
to
us
individuals
doing
the
invocation,
pastor,
Terry
Nancy,
married
to
a
wife
Amy
that
have
three
kids
Abigail
and
Andrew
and
knavery.
He
started
preaching
at
age
15
at
the
Christian
school
retreat,
graduated
from
the
Providence
Christian
School
in
1988
graduated
from
Trinity
Baptist
College
in
Jacksonville,
1992
received
a
BA
degree
in
pastoral
theology,
earned
a
master's
degree
from
Trinity,
Baptist,
College
and
2005.
B
C
C
C
We
just
ask
that
you'd
put
a
special
hedge
around
the
firemen
and
police
and
those
that
work
so
diligently
there
and
Father
I
do
pray
that
you
would
be
with
our
city
council
in
a
special
way
give
them
Lord
your
favor
Lord,
give
them
wisdom,
I,
know,
Lord,
there's
a
lot
of
work
and
hard
decisions
that
go
on
and
I
just
pray,
father
that
you
would
direct
them
and
father
continue
to
put
your
hand
upon
this
city
and
it's
in
Jesus
name.
We
pray,
amen.
A
A
E
Morning
so
I'm
here
to
give
the
report
for
the
East,
Tampa,
CRA
and
so
the
last
time
I
personally
spoke.
We
had
a
different
City,
Council
or
CRA
board.
So
they'll
get
a
little
bit
more.
A
history
I
suppose
so
we're
desperately
trying
to
grow,
but
we
need
we
face
a
mountain
of
an
obstacle
facing
and
overcoming
our
history.
East
Tampa
did
not
mysteriously
become
poverty
stricken
and
blighted.
E
Currently
we
have
a
population,
that's
about
seventy-five
percent,
black
11%,
Hispanic
or
Latino,
and
11
percent
white
I
personally
currently
live
in
North
I
board
and
was
told
that
years
ago.
It's
where
you're
successful
blacks
lived,
and
it
was
a
true
mixed
income,
community
boy,
stirring
doctors,
lawyers,
longshoremen
teachers,
city
workers
and
blue-collar
workers
alike,
and
then,
instead
of
desegregation
integration
occurred
and
those
with
the
means
to
move
into
white
America
did
so
leaving
the
families
without
the
means
behind
overnight
it
changed
from
a
mixed
income
community
to
a
low-income
community.
E
Businesses
soon
pulled
out
of
the
community,
as
the
school
grades
also
began
to
slip
and
code
issues
increased
with
no
solutions.
The
interstates
became
clear
boundary
lines
telling
others
where
to
and
where
not
to
go,
and
then
we
lost
vital
exits
from
the
interstate
once
again
suffocating
an
already
asthmatic
community.
With
the
boundary
lines
clearly
drawn
in
an
increase
in
poverty,
East
Tampa
became
the
place.
E
We
need
responses,
and
when
we
offer
our
suggestions
we
need
them
met,
we
need
them.
We
don't
need
them
that
with
sarcasm,
nor
with
a
condescending
tone
again.
East
Tampa
didn't
get
here
overnight
and
we
won't
get
out
overnight
when
downtown
was
blighted.
Growth
was
stunted.
We
created
a
plan
of
action
that
turning
around,
we
concentrated
at
large
sums
of
money
into
the
area,
and
we
actively
sought
out
developers
to
build.
We
had
a
micro
focus
on
downtown
to
make
it
in
to
make
it
what
it
is
today.
E
We
need
that
same
effort
in
East
Tampa.
We
didn't
get
here
by
ourselves
and
we
need
the
large
sums
of
money
dedicated
to
our
area.
We
need
the
city
to
actively
seek
out
developers
to
build
within
our
footprint
and
we
need
a
micro
focus
on
East
Campus
and
we
need
the
city's
buy-in
currently
within
the
CRA,
we're
working
on
cleaning
up
the
area
to
help
in
the
blight.
As
I
said.
E
The
last
time
we
came,
that
was
one
of
the
main
issues
with
developers
was
the
blight
so
we're
working
with
solid
waste
and
code
enforcement
to
try
to
change
that
around.
We
recently
just
voted
to
hire
five
part-time
youth
from
our
summer
youth
program
that
will
continue
on
throughout
the
year
and
hopefully
segue
them
into
permanent
city
positions.
We
voted
to
put
together
a
small
business
workshop
cohort
with
the
black
business
investment
Corp,
so
that
we
can
focus
on
economic
development.
E
We
are
currently
in
the
process
of
creating
our
downpayment
assistance
program
so
that
we
can
help
tackle,
affordable,
affordable
housing.
We
are
also
in
the
process
of
working
to
establish
our
rehab
Assistance
Program,
which
would
of
course
help
with
the
quality
of
life.
We
are
hoping
to
create
some
neighborhood
projects
with
the
neighborhood
associations
to
get
their
buy-in
and
actively
have
an
independence,
an
aesthetic
increase
in
our
community
and
as
well
as
art
projects.
So
this
is
where,
of
course,
we
still
need
your
help.
E
We
need
help
when
it
comes
to
our
legal
department,
but
turn
around
unfortunately
has
been
long
and
so
programs
that
we're
creating
it
takes
a
very
long
time
to
actually
get
them
started.
If
you
notice,
we
have
a
rollover
and
part
of
its
because
we
are
still
waiting
on
some
programs
to
come
back,
so
we
could
kind
of
help
close
the
gap
with
the
turnaround
with
creating
programs
for
our
community.
That
would
help
last
time.
E
I
came
I
spoke
about
the
environmental
pond
on
26
and
26
26
Avenue
26th,
Street
I've,
heard
differing
things,
I've
met
with
different
departments
and
whether
it
can
be
actually
built
upon
cultivated
used
for
the
community.
I,
keep
hearing
differing
reports
and
again
with
those
ideas.
If
we
can,
let's
move
forward,
if
we
can't-
let's
just
let's,
not
and
find
another
project,
of
course
we're
still
looking
for
a
grocery
store
again
the
blight
within
our
communities
holding
as
fat
and
we're
trying
to
work
on
that.
But,
of
course,
that's
not
all
within
within
us.
E
We
have
to
also
work
with
code.
We
have
to
work
with
solid
waste,
but
we
need
a
grocery
store
and
we
do
have
a
food
desert
again.
Usf
is
doing
a
study
on
that
now
and
so
having
the
city's
concerted
effort
in
trying
to
help
us
find
a
developer
that
will
be
willing
to
open
a
grocery
store
would
be
great
with
our
proposed
ideas,
we're
trying
to
actually
overcome
what
we
had
like
I
said:
the
mountain
of
obstacles,
so
we're
coming
up
with
ideas.
E
I'd
really
like
to
be
able
to
flesh
out
those
ideas
within
the
various
departments
within
the
city
and
I.
Think
if
we
can,
we
can
work
to
as
these
ideas
come
forward.
We
actually
sit
down
and
flesh
them
out,
and
can
we
do
it?
How
can
we
make
this
happen?
How
can
we
work
to
help
increase
East
Tampa?
That
would
be
great.
E
E
So
we've
been
asking
that
Triton
and
Albarn's
Park
has
not
been
developed
or
updated,
and
quite
some
time
we've
been
asking
to
try
to
get
something
there
so
that
we
can
alleviate
the
pressure
from
the
other
parks
and
also
create
a
dedicated
space
for
our
seniors
and
also
helping
to
attract
smaller
developers
on
commercial
product
projects.
Of
course,
we
can
always
get
the
larger
developers
to
come
in,
but
most
of
the
time
they
have
no
interest
in
coming
in
to
East
Tampa
and
the
ones
who
do
have
the
interest.
Are
there
smaller
ones?
E
So
if
we
could
work
to
try
to
help
those
individuals
or
those
developers
who
have
the
heart,
have
the
energy
and
have
the
desire
to
actually
develop
some
of
our
own
commercial,
thorough
ways
and
buildings
that
would
be
great
and
with
our
code
open
cases
we
have.
We
have
great
people
working
with
code
on
SAP
with
code
now
and
that's
great,
but
we
have
some
code
cases
that
have
been
out
for
five
years
four
years
three
years
and
it's
again
that's
a
very
that's
of
light.
We
have
the
last
time.
E
I
came,
we
had
a
couple
issues
and
those
issues
are
still
standing.
We
we
have
businesses
who
come
in
and
don't
mean
any
positive,
don't
provide
any
positive
change
to
our
community.
They
thrive
on
the
blight
and
they
get
cited
constantly
and
they
have
many
code
issues,
but
yet
they
continue,
they
continually
are
allowed
to
operate,
and
so
we
need
that
help,
because
that's
part
of
why,
when
we,
when
I
wrote
around
with
the
developers,
they
said
I
wouldn't
build
here,
one
of
their
jobs.
E
One
of
the
developers
said
if
you
built
the
building
and
gave
us
the
land
free,
we
still
wouldn't
build
a
grocery
store
here
because
of
how
it
looks.
So
we
need
your
help
in
changing
that
around
and
also
getting
our
solid
waste
and
code
enforcement
kind
of
on
the
same
page
as
well.
We've
been
working
and
try
to
make
that
happen,
but
changing
and
getting
rid
of
the
blight
is
almost
number
one
and
imperative.
So
make
no
mistake.
E
F
And
it's
gonna
go
to
legal
first.
Mr.
F
tell
me
what
is
the
process
of
procedure
when
CRA
is
continued?
Cse's
continue
to
not
have
a
quorum
ken
kennedy,
the
chair,
bring
information
to
this
bodies,
its
board,
to
make
decisions
or
to
try
to
foster
somebody
that
didn't
have
a
relationship
or
Avenue,
because
it
seems
to
me
that
things
can't
get
done
and
I
know
about
these
tamp
I
know
a
lot
of
fielders
who
just
can't
get
quorums
to
get
things
moving.
What
is
a
process
that
we
can
do
or
an
avenue
through.
C
The
legal
department,
the
issue
that
you're
gonna,
have
or
really
not
able
to
make
any
final
decisions.
The
members
of
the
President
as
we
have
today,
if
they
want
to
bring
to
you
issues
that
they're
concerned
with
anyone,
can
do
that.
They
can
do
that.
The
citizens
can
do
that
as
well
as,
but
without
a
quorum.
C
They
can't
give
you
a
consensus
of
what
the
neighborhood
is
looking
for,
because
their
role
as
that
organization
is
to
find
out
what
the
neighborhood
is
come
to
you
with
recommendations,
and
then
you
make
the
final
decision
to
how
to
make
that
forward.
But
anyone
is
going
to
special
e.
The
chairman
of
that
organization
could
come
here,
give
her
or
the
consensus
of
the
group
that's
there,
but
it's
not
a
formal
recommendation
by
the
entire
group
to
do
that.
C
You
have
to
have
a
quorum
now
if
they
have
a
shortage,
then
there's
a
structural
issue
that
you
need
to
get
more
members
on
there.
As
you
know,
these
Tampa
group
is
linked
different
than
some
of
the
others,
because
they
bring
their
membership
to
you
and
as
a
totality
rather
than
individually,
there's
an
issue
that
they
have
to
deal
with
an
you
have
to
deal
as
well.
C
F
F
F
I
understand
what
you
talk
about
roadblocks
and
browsers:
Webster
defines
roadblocks
as
any
obstacle
to
progress
or
advance
and
I've
been
an
employee
of
the
city
and
I
understand
certain
communities
and
I
understand
that,
because
I've
been
in
meetings
where
roadblocks
have
been
policed,
so
I
do
understand
about
road
rocks
and
I
know.
There's
some
challenges
in
these
temple
and
I
know
there
have
been
some
roadblocks,
so
we've
got
open
those
roads
up
for
you.
F
This
board
has
to
do
that
because
there
are
roadblocks
many
of
them,
and
we
have
to
make
sure
that
the
department's
legally
understand
that
we're
in
a
crisis
mode
now,
I
have
mostly
all
of
the
CR
ease.
Gentlemen,
all
except
one
few
folks
on
what
I
don't
have
and
that
concerns
me
that
I
have
one
CRA
and
I
know
that
we've
made
some
strides.
F
I
know
we
have,
but
it's
not
good
enough
for
the
for
the
the
length
of
time
that
we've
been
in
existence,
there
been
some
down
years
and
I
understand
that,
but
still
we
should
have
proper
planning
for
when
we
got
money
to
move
on,
we
have
over
3.8
million
dollars
to
me.
We
should
have
a
zero
balance
in
that
budget.
F
F
I
just
believe
that,
with
anything
time
changes
things
we're
a
new
era.
Now
people
are
understanding
and
eyes
are
openings,
but
I
have
to
ask
the
economic
development
director
in
reference
to
managers,
rotation
of
managers.
What
is
what
is
the
procedure?
What
how?
What
is
the
length
of
time
with?
Is
it
a
process
in
place
that
managers
state.
F
I
don't
want
to
single
anyone
out,
but
I
know.
Mr.
Johnson
has
done
a
great
job.
He's
been
there
a
long
time
and
I
hate
this
here
on
Saturday
mornings
that
citizens
that
are
ridiculing
him
saying
all
kind
of
things
about
him,
he's
a
friend
of
mine
and
it's
not
right
and
I.
Don't
like
those
type
of
things
because
he's
a
good
man.
He
has
a
good
heart
and
he's
been
there
a
long
time
trying
to
do
the
right
things,
but
on
another
note,
I
also
serve
the
citizens
of
the
district
and
they
have
concerns.
F
So
I
have
to
look
at
what
do
we
do
and
I'm
looking
at
and
I'm
really
thinking
hard
and
I'm,
probably
gonna
make
a
motion
later
on
I
believe
that
it's
time
that
we
rotate
the
managers
of
the
CRA
ideas
are
good
I
traveled
to
settle
all
the
cra-z
when
I
when
I
hear
what
they're
doing
what
they're
saying,
sometimes
I'm
like
whoa.
Why
are
we
not
doing
that
and
I've
brought
information
back
to
to
the
chair,
saying?
Maybe
you
look
at
this?
A
look
at
that?
F
Sometimes
you
know
we
get
stagnant
sometimes,
and
we
need
to
open
the
horizons
and
I
just
feel
bad
for
mr.
Johnson
that
he's
just
being
beaten
down
over
there
and
it's
not
fair
to
him.
But
I
think
that
we
need
to
look
at
possibly
a
rotation
of
your
managers
and
I'm,
probably
going
to
make
that
the
motion
to
make
a
motion
at
the
end.
I
think
that's
needed.
I
believe
that
it
will
give
the
community
a
different
perspective,
a
different
feel,
and
it
will
give
a
different
light
on
your
manage
as
well.
F
We
don't
need
to
keep
people
there
for
so
long
ideas.
Changing
people
change,
we
do
it.
When
I
was
a
police
department,
the
Chiefs
come
in,
sometimes
they
rotate
the
majors
every
four
or
five
years.
They
come
in.
We're
gonna
get
a
new
a
new
sense
of
field,
but
I
also
want
to
talk
to
you
as
well,
because
I
want
to
know
it.
F
A
F
H
H
Just
it's
the
rotation
issue,
it's
something
I
would
love
to
hear
more
about
without
a
doubt,
I
think
that
that
reflects
the
the
zeal
to
the
board,
etc
and
and
I'd
like
to
hear
the
ramifications
of
that
I
think
that's
certainly
interesting,
innovative
ideas,
so
I'd
really
love
to
hear
the
ramifications
of
that
good
I
think
there
could
be
a
lot
of
good
and
and
I'd
love
to
hear
the
bad
if
there
are
but
miss
good
leader
to
get
to
your
remarks.
Thank
you
very
much
again
for
being
here
today.
H
You
know
when
I,
when
I
heard
your
remarks,
I
thought
about
the
same,
which
is
you
got
to
strike
while
the
iron's
hot,
so
to
speak
and
right
now,
for
me,
the
iron
is
hot
for
our
neighborhoods
East
Tampa
North
Tampa,
West
Ham.
All
of
our
neighborhoods
is
especially
at-risk
neighborhoods
that
have
been
historically
ignored,
we're
in
the
middle
of
what
appears
to
be
a
good,
a
good
economy.
We
have
unemployment
at
three
and
a
half
percent
nationally.
H
We
have
what
appears
to
be
record
roaring
growth,
but
we
all
know
that
these
things
don't
last
forever.
We
are
in
the
middle
of
one,
the
longest
historic
expansions
within
our
country
economically,
and
we
know
that
all
things
don't
last
forever
and
where
I
come
from,
when
the
economy
is
going
well
and
when
things
are
roaring,
you
take
a
look
at
neighborhoods
that
that
are
traditionally
ignored.
Why?
Because,
especially
for
local
governments,
you
know
that
when
that
recession
happens-
and
we
know
what's
gonna
happen-
we
know
that's
gonna
happen.
H
Your
remarks
on
the
historical
nature
of
East
Tampa
and
explaining.
Why
we're
here?
What
led
us
to
be
that
we're
here
is
not
just
a
history
lesson,
but
I
think
it
also
gives
rise
to
a
duty
of
duty
from
elected
officials
who
know
our
history
and
who
act
based
on
that
history
and
so
I
hope
that
we
strike
while
the
iron's
hot
on
that
issue.
So
thank
you.
I
Some
good
thoughts
this
morning
from
board
members
good
morning,
miss
Goodman,
so
I
was
wondering
one
of
the
things
that
has
council
members
and
cRIO
members.
We've
been
talking
about
quite
a
bit.
The
last
couple
of
months
is
affordable:
housing,
attainable
housing,
workforce
housing,
whatever
whatever
term
of
art
we
want
to
use-
and
you
mentioned
it
during
your
presentation
and
I'm,
just
wondering
if
you
can
tell
us
a
little
bit
more
about
the
direction
that
CAC
wants
to
head
and
what
sort
of
additional
help
you
could
use
from
us
to
to
help
with
that.
I
E
Not
a
thousand
percent
if
it's
in
with
legal
I
believe
it
is
for
our
housing
program.
But
what
we
decided
to
create
was
another
I
guess,
workshop
classes
that
you
can
attain
of
tend
to
obtain
extra
funding.
I,
don't
want
to
say
downpayment
assistance
because
you
can
use
it.
You
know
it's
just
you
could
use
it
for
downpayment
assistance,
but
it's
to
basically
pay
down
the
mortgage,
and
the
city
right
now
offers
fourteen
thousand
nine
hundred
ninety
nine.
E
So
we,
our
thought,
was
to
do
fifteen
thousand
so
that
we
could
bring
a
thirty
thousand
dollars
to
the
table,
especially
with
the
property
values
that
are
increasing.
But
of
course,
that's
the
purpose
of
the
CRA.
The
purpose
of
the
CRA
is
to
increase
property
values,
to
increase
the
area
to
get
rid
of
the
blight,
so
I
mean
we're
actually
doing
what
we're
supposed
to
be
doing.
E
But
in
the
meantime
we
understand
that
it
makes
it
a
little
harder
for
everyone
to
be
able
to
purchase
a
home
so
creating
a
downpayment
assistance
program
that
we
could
help
to
pay
down.
Those
mortgages
is
what
we
came
up
with,
but
also
within
our
program.
We
wanted
to
make
it
more
holistic
so
that
we're
actually
counseling
people
about
how
to
save
money,
how
to
get
in
the
home.
E
What
happens
once
you're
in
there
and
then
we
have
post
counseling
afterwards,
even
after
you
purchased
the
home,
because
some
of
the
pushback
that
we
heard
was
that
people
sitting
for
the
one
day
class
were
ended
up
in
foreclosure,
and
so
the
whole
idea
is
to
eliminate
as
many
people
as
possible,
who
are
actually
going
to
go
to
foreclosure.
So.
I
E
E
Us
get
it
from
legal
a
little
bit
quicker
so
that
we
can
move
on
to
the
next
program,
establish
and
and
just
continue
continually
put
different
programs
out.
I
know
we
haven't
gone
forward
with
trying
to
create
any
additional,
because
the
ones
that
we
have
started
we
haven't
really
received
back
yet.
So
if
we
could
just
have
a
quicker
turnaround,
we
could
start
pumping
out
programs
for
the
area
a
little
bit
faster.
Mister.
B
J
J
There
was
a
new
Walmart
built
and
opened
on
Hillsborough
a
couple
years
ago,
but,
as
you
mentioned,
a
grocery
store
won't
come
in
fresh
food
beyond
a
Walmart
or
a
sand.
Wall
is
not
available
to
this
community.
You
don't
have
middle
class
restaurants,
whereas
the
Applebee's,
the
Chili's,
whatever
it
is,
but
people
ignore
east
of
that
interstate
to
the
to
the
city
limit
everything
happens
in
West,
Hampton
district,
six,
West,
Shore
downtown
somebody
told
me
nine
years
ago
at
a
meeting
they
said:
what
did
they
tell
me?
J
They
said
you
know
all
the
money
goes
to
Ybor
City
when
it
goes
into
district
five.
All
the
Historic
Preservation
focused
on
Ybor
City,
but
there's
beautiful
neighborhoods
be
I
Drive
through
there
all
the
time
and
again
it's
the
land
that
time
forgot
it's
frozen
in
time
and
why,
54
years
after
my
grandfather
bought
that
house
has
nothing
really
changed,
you
go
down.
Hillsboro
you
go
down
to
Martin,
Luther
King
and
there's
so
much
that's
still
there
as
it
looked
like
50
years
ago.
J
I,
don't
know.
If
we've
had
a
mayor,
that's
ever
focused
on
that.
You
can
go
back
to
Nick
Nuccio.
You
can
go
back
to
race
relations
in
the
1960s
and
everything.
But
beyond
that,
what
has
local
government
done
for
the
african-american
community?
You
know
I
mean
apart
here
apart
there,
but
where's
the
real
economic
development
and
opportunity,
except
a
family
dollar
and
a
dollar
tree
people
deserve
more
people
deserve
better.
You
know
we're
in
this
together
as
a
community
and
as
a
family.
It's
not
just
all.
The
money
goes
to
South
Tampa.
J
All
the
money
goes
to
New,
Tampa
West
and
for
whatever
don't
forget
this
large
parcel
look
at
the
CRA
in
East
Tampa,
the
largest
in
the
state
I
believe.
Yet
it's
suffering
the
most.
Why,
with
the
amount
of
money
that
it
will
generate,
why
isn't
that
money
as
councilman
good
set,
that
balance
should
be
zero,
spend
that
money
invested
invested
in
the
community
offer
opportunities
for
kids
coming
out
of
high
school
to
have
some
kind
of
employment?
You
know,
learn
a
trade.
J
What
not
but
I
think
we
have
a
it's
a
new
council
and
a
sympathetic
board
and
an
understanding
board.
I
was
on
the
campaign
trail
with
everybody
and
I
heard
what
they
said
from
affordable
housing
to
job
creation,
to
youth
development.
Everything
was
said,
but
we
have
to
implement
it
and
we
have
to
implement
it
in
the
neighborhoods
that
need
it.
Whatever
it
takes,
I
mean
we
should
have
the
mayor
going
out
there
talking
to
corporations,
whether
it's
winn-dixie
or
Publix
or
whomever,
say
you
need
to
invest
in
this
area.
J
This
is
the
next
great
thing
mayor,
Buckhorn,
promoted
downtown
so
much
ten
years
ago.
Downtown
I'll
tell
you
that
after
five
o'clock,
I
had
nothing
to
do
now.
Everybody
wants
to
come
down,
buddy
goes
to
armatures
and
and
the
riverwalk
and
whatnot
focus
on
these
stamp.
If
we
don't
market
it,
I'm
talking
about
us
from
a
leadership
standpoint
and
say,
look
beautiful
historic,
neighborhood
Seminole
Heights
fifteen
years
ago,
was
not
Seminole
Heights
as
it
was
today.
Now
the
home
values,
the
property
values
are
unbelievable
and
everybody
wants
to
go
there.
J
They
call
it
the
new
hide
part.
The
new
South
Tampa,
but
east
antwa
deserves
that
you've
been
ignored
for
so
long.
Like
I
said
my
grandfather
bought
that
house
in
1965
and
what
has
changed
not
much
other
than
he
moved
out
in
1972
and
went
to
West
Tampa,
but
y'all.
You
all
deserve
more
and
you
deserve
more
from
us
as
a
as
a
board
and
the
administration,
and
we
really
need
to
promote
focus
market.
That
area,
as
you
know,
a
place
that
people
want
to
invest
in.
J
A
You
councilman,
Maniscalco
and
all
I
have
one
thing
too
that
medical
and
health
care
is
much
needed
in
East
Tampa,
for
a
woman
to
have
to
get
on
a
bus
to
take
her
children
elsewhere
to
get
medical
or
healthy.
There
is
unforeseen.
It's
inexcusable.
Excuse
me
there.
We
need
more
medical
and
health
facilities
in
East
Tampa
policy.
K
K
If
you
could
ask
the
Neighborhood
Association
put
us
on
their
email
as
two
out,
but
I'll
get
my
aide
to
put
them
on
my
calendar
and
I'll
try
to
attend
as
many
as
I
can
it's
not
my
district
but
I'm
interested
in
the
in
the
entire
city
and
just
to
echo
a
bit
of
what
one
of
my
colleagues
said.
We
we
have
an
interest
here
on
this
board
for
the
whole
city
and
in
particular,
Tampa
and
I
can
tell
you
throughout
the
city.
K
Every
place
except
downtown,
has
felt
ignored
for
the
last
eight
years,
but
I
know
the
last
eight
years
in
particular
had
been
really
difficult
for
East
Tampa
and
the
african-american
community,
of
which
there's
a
sizable
number
of
african-americans.
In
my
district
in
South,
Tampa
and
and
we
have
to,
we
had
the
change
that
you
talked
about
roadblocks.
Many
people
have
come
up
before
us
and
talked
about
how
they've
been
treated
with
disrespect,
how
they've
been
ignored
and
we're
trying
to
change
that
culture.
We
on
city
council
want
to
change
that.
K
The
new
mayor
wants
to
change
it,
she's
changing
staff
and
changing
culture
quickly.
It's
not
catching
up
with
the
reality
of
what
maybe
everybody
is
experiencing,
but
I
would
encourage
you
if,
if
we
don't
have
time
now
that
you
that
maybe
you
let
us
know
what
the
roadblocks
are
specifically
that
you're
facing
and
what
the
nature
of
them
are,
you
could
let
us
know
individually
or
send
us
a
memo
and
and
we'll
try
to
fix
them.
We'll
get
our
legislative
aides
that
work
through
staff
to
try
to
to
try
to
fix
those
things.
K
The
next
thing,
though,
more
importantly
I've
looked.
You
know,
I'm
new
only
here
a
couple
months,
but
I've
looked
through
as
many
documents
as
I've
been
given
I
think
on
CRA
s,
I
haven't
seen
a
plan
for
East
Tampa
and
what
I
mean
is
an
economic
plan
as
I
understand
it
from
the
I'm,
not
a
lawyer,
but
I
think
that
the
1969
enabling
law
for
CRA
s,
the
the
intent
was
that
they
would
try
to
alleviate
black
poverty
and
also
provide
housing,
but
that
has
to
be
integrated
into
an
economic
plan.
K
I
wonder
is
there
it
asked
this
question
later
for
the
other
series,
but
is
there
an
economic
and
integrated
economic
development
plan?
You
know
Tampa
for
ever
in
Florida
forever.
It
has
focus
on
real
estate
development
instead
of
economic
development
and
and
real
estate.
Development
is
only
a
small
part
of
economic
development.
Is
you
know,
is
there
an
economic
development
plan
or
what
can
we
do
to
create
one?
We.
E
E
K
F
F
They
had
several
questions
for
the
mayor,
but
the
bulk
of
their
questions
were
about
that
multicultural
center
and
I
urge
you
to
take
that
back
to
your
board.
I
think
your
board
needs
to
look
at
maybe
coming
up
or
hiring
an
outside
source
person
to
look
at
what
the
feasibility
of
that
a
building
that
structure
looking
at
the
neighborhood's
getting
input.
I
think
your
board
needs
to
look
at
that,
because
the
community
wants
that
that's
their
interests.
F
You
stepa
has
no
wow.
When
you
go
other
places,
people
could
say:
oh
wow,
there's
no,
while
in
each
tampa
also,
I
we
see
the
co
Assamese
Burton
here
in
the
audience.
I
received
a
call
from
her
I
think
I
think
she
attended
meeting
as
a
guest
or
whatever
and
talked
about
the
tree
lighting
in
East,
Tampa
and
I.
Want
you
to
know
that
a
lot
of
people
don't
like
going
to
the
police
station
and
I
know
years
past
when
the
Christmas
tree
was
was
enacted.
It's
on
the
south
side
of
the
police
department
building.
F
E
Well,
we've
heard
back
in
our
meeting
about
the
tree
and
that's
part
of
what
I
mentioned
without
the
sarcasm
or
the
condescending.
So
the
idea
I
mean
whether
it's
a
great
idea
or
not
whether
it
works
or
not
we're
fleshing
out
ideas
and
that's
the
whole
idea.
That's
what
we
need.
We
need
to
get
some
ideas
out
here.
How
we
can
include
can
actually
grow
the
area
and
the
idea
was
to
put
to
light
a
tree
and
the
Robert
Cole
park
within
the
retention
pond.
But
you
know
we
didn't.
E
We
made
a
little
park
out
of
it
and
what
came
back
was
you
know,
of
course,
liability,
but
well
people
jump
in
the
water
trying
to
touch
the
tree
and
things
like
that
and
then
I
mean
I'm
from
a
small
town
in
South
Carolina,
40,000
people.
We
put
Christmas
trees
at
Swan
Lake
in
the
water
every
year,
and
if
40,000
people
can
figure
out
how
to
put
a
tree
in
a
pond,
then
how
in
the
world
can
this
city
not
do
the
same
thing?
E
I
mean
if
it's
not
feasible
and
just
it
cost
too
much
money
then
say
that,
but
to
come
back
and
say
you
know,
we're
gonna
be
stupid
enough
that
we're
gonna
jump
in
the
water.
Now
we're
gonna
try
to
swim
out
to
the
tree.
Do
we
gotta
put
barriers
around
the
park
now
to
keep
people
from
going
to
the
tree?
That's
very
condescending.
A
A
I
I
have
been
to
your
meetings
and,
and
they
are
great
and
both
during
the
campaign
and
after
I
was
elected
I've
seen
other
council
members
at
your
at
your
meetings
and
I've
seen
other
council
members
at
different
CRA
meetings.
We
you
had
talked
and
in
councilman
good
said
times,
are
changing
and
you
just
talked
briefly
about
your
strategic
action
plan.
E
A
Because
I
Joe
Robinson
is
out
there
giving
us
thumbs
up
and
I
know
that
West
Tampa
has
just
completed
there
it's
about
six
months
ago.
I
know
from
experience
that
somewhere
between
forty
fifty
thousand
dollars,
maybe
even
higher.
Can
you
briefly
sense?
Some
of
our
board
members
have
never
been
to
a
CRA
meeting.
Can
you
briefly
tell
us
how
an
idea
or
a
project
or
concept
comes
to
fruition?
I
and
and
I'll
lead
you
on
this,
even
though
it
shouldn't
you
have.
The
community
comes
in
right.
E
E
So
we
have
the
partnership
meeting
where
people
can
voice
any
concerns,
anything
that
they'd
like
to
see
within
the
community.
We
also
have
committees
that
meet
where
the
community
is
also
able
to
go
to
the
committee
meetings
where
they
also
can
address
and
voice
concerns.
We
then
take
that
information
at
the
sea
see
meeting
and
we
discuss
it
and
vote
on.
This
is
how
we're
gonna
proceed
with
implementing
correcting
whatever
we
need
to
do,
and
then
that's
when
it's
presented
to.
A
A
A
E
Open
to,
of
course,
spinning
of
money,
but
I
do
I,
do
want
to
put
it
out
here
that
we
do
not
want
to
spend
our
money
on
things
that
the
city
should
be
doing
for
East
Tampa.
So
we
should
use
our
money
to
supplement
what
the
city
is
already
doing,
and
so
I've
noticed
that
a
lot
of
times
we
are
spending
our
money
doing
things
that
the
city
should
be
doing
so
I
want
to
be
able
to
supplement
and
add
jobs
to
at
beautification
to
the
area.
E
E
G
E
E
E
But
many
again
many
of
the
businesses
that
we
have
thrive
on
blight,
so
they're
not
interested
in
correcting
the
blade
because
that's
what
they
thrive
on.
So
that's
what
we
have
to
work
on
as
far
as
solving
that
problem
and
those
same
businesses
have
code
issues.
They
have
everything
going
on,
but
again,
they're
still
operable
and
they're
still
making
money
and
they're
not
interested
in
making
it
look
better,
even
with
three
money's.
Even.
A
I
Thank
You
mr.
chairman,
good,
good
thoughts.
There
you've
jumped
on
something
that
bothered
me
over
the
years
and
I'm
glad
that
you
you
mentioned
it
and
I
think
we
need
to
be
very,
very
cognizant
of
it,
especially
our
last
budget.
I
Our
last
item
is
item
8
and
regard
to
budget,
but
since
you're
standing
here,
I
want
to
mention
it
now
in
regard
to
the
fact
that
the
CRA
money
should
just
be
supplementing
what
the
city
should
do
overall
and
you
gave
examples
of
trimming
limbs
paving
streets
recently,
we
pointed
out
some
of
those
items
to
staff
as
well.
So
when
we
go
into
the
budget
proposed
budget
for
next
year,
I
think
we
all
need
to
be
very
cognizant
of
that
and
sure
that
that
we
are
doing
exactly
what
you
said.
I
We're
supplementing
that
we're
improving
over
and
above
what
the
city
should
already
be
doing
and
keep
and
keep
very
aware
of
that
and
frankly,
I'm
gonna
ask
you
I,
assume
you're
gonna
keep
this
post
for
the
next
year.
I'm
gonna
ask
you
when
you
see
those
types
of
items
to
make
us
directly
aware
of
it?
Okay
and
to
point
that
out
so
hopefully
we
can.
We
can
do
something
about.
I
F
Mr.
Cooley,
as
a
relational
facade,
grant
I
know
we're
talking
about
free
money,
and
people
are
fine,
but
I
also
look
at
criteria
when
I
look
at
money.
Do
you
believe
the
criteria
is
too
strange
for
those
who
who
who
may
want
it,
but
but
what
can't
get
it
because
they
feel
they
won't
qualify
or
it
sort
of
guidelines
too
high.
Do
we
need
to
look
at
that
too?
Maybe
nope
I.
E
Don't
think
so,
there's
not
a
minimum.
So
if
you
had
a
project
that
was
$200,
you
could
put
in
400
and
you
pay
a
hundred,
but
you
have
to
have
a
proposed
project,
a
permanent
project
that
you've
already
started,
and
maybe
that's
the
issue
and
some
people
don't
have
permitted
projects,
but
it's
not
it
personally.
I,
don't
think
it's
too
strenuous,
but
I
just
think
many
are
not
interested
in
training
of
the
money,
because
they're
not
interested
in
actually
getting
rid
of
the
blight.
The
reason.
F
I
say
that
I've
heard
that
portion,
but
I
also
heard
this
side
of
the
coin,
to
saying
I,
don't
know
how
to
do
that
or
I.
Who
can
help
me
with
that?
So
I
don't
know
if
it's
something
that
we
can
look
in
the
future,
to
possibly
having
the
training
for
those
who
want
to
come
in
to
apply
making
sure
they
have
the
right
tools
to
be
able
to
get
this
money
a
lot
of
times.
People
get
real
fearful
of
information.
Sometimes
they
can't
understand
what
the
verbage
is
a
lot
of
times.
F
I
know
some
the
city
we
use
a
lot
of
acronyms
and
sometime
I
have
to
ask
them.
What
is
that?
What
does
that
mean?
So
we
have
to
look
at
that
as
well
and
to
mrs.
Dean
fields
pulling
about
the
city
funds.
As
you
know,
I
voted
down
the
proposal,
because
I
felt
the
city
should
be
doing
a
lot
of
that
and
I
voted
knowing
that
the
last
time
when
I
was
on
the
CC
boy,
so
I
understand
what
the
team
feels
going
with
them.
K
Councilman
Carlson
I'm,
sorry
to
reopen
all
this
so
I,
don't
know
if
your
board
has
a
as
a
official
opinion
on
this,
but
could
I
just
ask
you
as
a
as
an
individual
with
your
experience,
if
you
had
50,
if
you
could
decide
where
fifty
or
a
hundred
thousand
dollars
could
be
spent
in
East
Ham,
do
you
think
a
facade
grant
is
the
highest
and
best
use
of
that
money
or
you
think
there
are
more
important
things
that
could
be.
It
could
be
spent
on
I.
E
Would
I'd
say
six
in
one
hand
and
doesn't
half
a
dozen
in
the
other,
because
the
facade
grants
help
change
aesthetically,
how
the
area
looks,
which
is
what
we
ultimately
have
to
do
if
we're
going
to
bring
about
economic
development,
the
grocery
store
the
commercial
development.
So
it's
important
because
we
do
need
to
do
that,
but
at
the
same
time
there
are
other
pressing
issues
and
concerns
with
helping
small
businesses
get
going
help
them
develop,
so
it
kind
of
goes
hand
in
hand.
E
H
H
A
Any
last
questions
for
Miss
goodly
miss
goodly.
Again,
thank
you
for
your
hard
work.
Communicate
dedication
to
east
temp
I
must
point
out
that
these
facade
grants
are
matching
grants.
They
are
not
just
monies
given
away
and
the
project
has
to
be
approved.
All
the
monies
have
to
be
accounted
for.
So
it's
just
not
a
here.
Here's
money.
If.
E
I
could
add
to
it
now
that
I'm
thinking
it
can
be
I,
I,
suppose
a
road
block,
because
it
is
matching
funds,
and
so
you
do
have
to
have
those
funds
and
again
I
started
the
presentation
off
with
a
little
history,
and
we
know
that,
unfortunately,
it's
more
difficult
for
minorities
to
receive
loans
and
have
access
to
capital.
So
with
that
being
said,
it
might
be
dip
more
difficult
for
them
to
put
their
hands
on
the
funds
in
order
to
receive
the
facade
grant.
So
there's
possibly
some
ways
other
things
that
we
could
think
of.
E
We
do
have
the
funds
that
we
could
implement
to
try
to
to
try
to
try
to
close
the
gap.
Try
to
help
some
of
the
businesses
that
actually
want
help,
not
the
ones
thriving
of
light
for
the
ones
who
want
help
and
actually
what
likes
to
change
the
look
in
the
community.
So
we
could
possibly
look
into
doing
something
along
those
lines,
because
that
isn't
that
isn't
it
concerning
grant.
A
G
Good
morning
board
Bob
McDonough
I
had
sent
each
of
you
an
email
earlier
in
the
week,
er
I
guess
it
was
last
week
concerning
the
crossface
ferry.
The
city
of
st.
Petersburg
had
made
a
request
of
the
city
to
re-engage
with
them,
and
this
has
been
a
share
between
the
city
of
Tampa,
Hillsborough,
County,
the
city
of
st.
Petersburg
and
Pinellas
County,
and
so
they
have
come
forward
again
and
it
has
been
historically
funded
by
the
CRA
s.
G
It
historically
had
been
landing
in
the
Channel
District
it
was
being
by
the
aquarium,
and
so
it
was
the
channel
district
CRA
who
had
funded
it
they're
looking
right
now
and
potentially
landing
it
at
the
convention
center.
So
it
would
be
fun.
Data
funded
by
the
downtown
CRA,
the
CRA
manager,
Rob
Rosner,
has
presented
it
to
both
of
his
boards
and
both
of
those
boards
were
supportive,
they're
asking
for
one
hundred
and
fifty
thousand
dollars.
Last
year
it
handled
fifty-two
thousand
passengers.
It
runs
from
November
through
April.
F
F
I
have
other
issues
in
my
district
and
more
important
that
we
pull
them
over
to
Jenna
front
for
ferry
to
me,
I
think
it's
a
tourist
attraction
I,
don't
I,
don't
see
a
lot
of
people
in
certain
areas
using
that
offeri,
but
if
the
downtown
CRA
was
just
funded,
if
their
board
is
agreeable
to
that,
it's
their
money
in
their
tax
base
and
if
they
are
agreeable
to
that,
I
can
support
it.
But
if
they're
not
agreeable
to
that,
I
can't
support
that,
but
I
believe
they
agreed
to
it.
Last
time.
F
B
Thank
you,
I
apologize,
I,
haven't
been
speaking
at
all,
have
a
real
bachelor
throat.
However,
when
you
talk
about
fairy,
you
go
back
and
look
at
the
further
we
came
from
came
from
a
place
in
Salem
Massachusetts,
it's
the
same.
Fair
is
there
that
comes
here
during
the
off-season
for
them
they
don't
have
too
many
fairies
when
it's
snow
and
you
can't
go
up
and
down
transportation
from
Salem
to
Boston.
If
I
remember,
this
goes
back
to
2010.
B
B
The
reason
it
was
$17
for
the
city
guess
what
there
was
subsidizing
the
ferry
seven
hundred
thousand
dollars
a
year,
so
I
have
never
voted
for
the
serene,
no
offense.
Anyone
who
has,
but
it
went
from
ten
dollars
at
first
and
you
got
a
rebate
check
of
30,000
and
I
asked
the
city
what
an
investment
you
gave
up.
Three
hundred
fifty
thousand
you
got
back
thirty.
We're
really
gonna
make
money
and
I'm
just
now
throw
away
whether
it's
a
good
idea
or
a
bad
idea.
I
just
feel
that
at
first
it
was
ten
dollars.
B
Then
it
was
eight
dollars.
Why
the
difference
I'd
say
why
the
difference,
the
department
transportation
funded
the
other
portion
of
the
city,
that
the
city
did
what
a
fun
but
the
county's
involved,
so
they
they've
handed
their
way.
It's
a
to
me.
It
was
a
tourist
thing
or
if
somebody
wants
to
get
in
a
ferry,
go
from
interstate
feeding
back
for
ten
bucks
right
bucks.
You
know
it's
better
than
going
getting
a
half
dog
and
a
hamburger
or
somewhere
else.
Where
you
can
say
you
know
what
look
at
this
beautiful
thing.
B
B
Is
it
a
public
use
for
everybody?
Oh
they
gonna
tell
you,
it
is
camels,
say
not,
so
it's
tourists
when
the
tourists
are
here
and
III
admire,
merit,
freshmen
I,
don't
want
his
baseball
team.
I'm,
not
gonna,
build
the
stadium.
Well,
my
vote
is
not
the
pills
of
stadium
and
I've
been
consistent
since
September.
B
2006
2006
and
that
contractors
coming
back
on
the
other
big
stadium
and
I'm
not
going
to
Steve,
because
I'll
get
sick
again.
My
whole
body
gets
sick
now,
my
throat,
so
what
I'm
saying
is
just
not
III
can't
speak
for
the
others.
For
myself,
I
would
never
support
a
public
transportation
mode.
That
is
not
a
public
transportation
mode.
That's
not
public
transportation!
You
want
to
put
streetcars
in.
You
want
to
put
we're
ghosts
from
one
neighborhood
to
another,
to
move
conductivity
and
move
people
around
I
vote
for
it.
B
I've
said
it
here:
the
department
transportation,
why
have
we
failed
I?
Tell
you
why
we
failed,
because
every
time
you
have
an
expressway
and
you
have
it
pull
the
capacity
that
they
after
is
constructed.
You
had
another
lane.
So
if
it's
a
failure,
why
do
you
keep
increasing
the
lanes,
make
the
lines
longer
and
guess?
What?
Sooner
or
later
we're
gonna
have
a
train
or
rail
or
something?
But
you
can't
continue
doing
it
I'm
not
talking
to
you.
Mr.
McDonald,
please
don't
take
it
personally,
but
it's
just
these
ideas.
B
B
If
we
put,
we
have
put
this
city's
put
half
a
million
dollars
into
that
forever.
If
I
recall
twice
that
we
did
it
between
the
two
sobs
I
haven't
finished.
Yet,
sir,
between
what
we
gave
lifetime
was
150,000
my
correct
correct:
what
did
we
get?
The
first
time
150,000
only
150,000
crying
a
hundred
fifty
thousand
three
hundred
thousand.
You
could
have
built
two
houses
and
a
half
for
somebody
to
have
a
house
to
live
instead
of
having
people
having
joy
rights.
B
A
B
D
I
I
But
I
look
at
some
of
the
other
things
that
the
downtown
CRA
has
in
the
past
and
proposed
in
the
future
been
doing
and
supporting,
for
example,
the
streetcar
system
$150,000
to
the
streetcar
system.
Previously,
we've
demand
shuttle
project
to
the
tune
of
a
couple
hundred
thousand
dollars.
The
we've
done
a
master
infrastructure
for
millions
of
dollars
over
there
in
the
mr.
vinick's
project
over
there,
by
the
by
the
thing
prior
counsel
agreed
to
that.
I
This
next
budget
speaks
to
five
million
dollars
of
capital
improvement
and
four
million
dollars
of
bond
payments
to
the
convention
center.
So
anyway,
so
I
think
my
point
is
the
downtown
district
is
different
than
the
East
Tampa
district
or
the
West
Tampa
district
East
Tampa
West
Tampa
are
truly
blighted
in
areas.
I
Certain
parts
of
them
are
blighted
areas
and-
and
those
are
the
kind
of
areas
that
I
think
we
need
to
do
affordable
housing
and
we
need
to
do
workforce
training
and
you
know
those
types
of
things,
but
in
downtown
it's
a
different
animal
and
even
though
it
has
a
CRA
hat,
it
is
a
different
animal,
I
think
multi.
We
all
talk
about
multimodal
the
multimodal
is
important
to
this
community.
I
We
can't
just
continue
to
ride
in
cars,
for
a
variety
of
reasons
that
we've
got
to
develop
better
bus
system
that
we
have,
hopefully
we're
going
to
have
some
sort
of
train
system
and
we're
on
the
bay.
We
should
have
a
ferry
system,
I.
Think
we
all
like
history
and
I
just
finished
reading
a
book
on
the
Brooklyn
Bridge,
okay,
prior
to
the
building
of
the
Brooklyn
Bridge,
everybody
had
to
ride
the
ferry
across
the
East
River
to
get
from
Brooklyn
over
the
man/half.
I
Then
they
built
the
Brooklyn
Bridge
and
all
the
fairies
by
1942
went
out
of
business,
because
if
you
know
you
can
just
as
easily
get
in
a
streetcar
and
go
across
the
various
bridges
and
or
drive
your
car
guess
what?
Now?
Now?
It's
all
snarled
up
there
and
the
last
thing
you
want
to
do
is
get
in
a
car
and
try
and
drive
across
any
of
those
bridges.
So
guess
what
the
ferries
have
come
back.
I
So
we
government
is
also
looking
into
ferries
to
get
the
MacDill
folks
across
the
bay
in
in
like
18
minutes,
instead
of
the
60
or
90
drive
that
many
of
them
in
doing
and
they're
going
to
be
doing
that
on
ferries,
the
crew
you
know
sitting
across
the
bay
and
that's
good
for
everybody,
so
I
totally
support
the
ferry
subsidy
coming,
especially
as
mr.
Goodes
mentioned.
It's
not
coming
out
of
the
general
fund.
I
G
H
You
mr.
cherry
yes,
I
agree
with
many
of
my
colleagues
in
a
distinction
between
general
budget
funds
and
CRA
dollars.
I'll
tell
you
if
this
was
coming
up
in
the
general
city
of
Tampa
budget
I
would
not
support
it
because
I
don't
think
that,
as
as
presented
as
done
presently
that
this
is
something
that
is
really
for
the
use
presently
for
the
entire
city
of
Tampa,
as
presently
done,
however,
since
its
relegated
essentially
to
CRA
dollars
from
downtown
I,
think
that's
a
critical
distinction
that
would
lead
me
to
support
it.
H
I
do
believe
in
the
idea
that
we
do
need
multi-eyed,
diverse
modes
of
transportation
here
within
our
city
within
our
community.
This
can
be
one
of
them,
but
I
think
that,
with
this
level
of
investment
in
its
limited
duration,
this
doesn't
really
make
the
large
citywide
dent
that
I
would
like
to
see
what
these
kind
of
dollars
if
it
were
to
be
coming
from
the
general
budget
CRA.
You
know
for
the
board
to
support
it.
That's
a
very
reasonable
decision
on
their
end,
that's
well
within
their
discretion
and
I.
K
I've
spoken
of
mayor
Christman
in
others
also
about
this
and
the
way
I
understand.
This
is
a
the
third
year
beta
test
of
this
new
concept
for
new,
coming
back
concept
of
transportation
and
the
second
year
I
think
the
tenants
was
double
or
so
the
first
year
and
right
now
it
is
mostly
nighttime
or
entertainment
or
tourists
who
are
going
on
it.
But
the
idea
is
to
get
the
companies
interested
and
get
people
interested
in
taking
this
as
a
mode
of
transportation
and
then
for
it
to
work
the
way
we
all
want
it
to
work.
K
They
need
two
boats
that
would
go
at
at
least
one
hour
head
ways
back
and
forth,
because
there's
a
great
demand
from
people
who
want
to
commute
there
are
lots
of
people
who
live
in
st.
Pete
and
work
in
Tampa
and
people
who
live
in
Tampa
work
in
st.
Pete.
They
would
like
to
skip
the
bridges
and
take
the
ferries
back
and
forth,
but
but
we've
got
to
get
people
to
start
using
this
as
a
mode
of
transportation
in
some
form
first,
and
this
is
the
cheapest
way
to
get
to
beta-test
it.
I
G
I
You,
mr.
chairman,
in
the
future
Bob,
can
we
number
of
these
pages
so
that
way,
I
can
get
everybody
on
board
with
page
numbers,
but
anyway,
in
regard
to
the
in
the
garden.
In
regard
to
the
encore
Central
Park
CRA.
Yesterday
somebody
was
asking
me
the
other
day.
They
said
they
said,
there's
a
new
building
being
proposed
in
the
Central
Park
area.
Well,.
H
I
Great
they
asked
me
if
that
building,
if
the
rezoning
and
the
PD
for
that
building
would
be
come
into
council
and
I
said
I
wasn't
sure,
because
I
know
that
certain
certain
built
high-rises
in
the
central
business
district
now
gets
staff
reviewed,
but
don't
necessarily
come
to
council
and
and
I.
Just
wasn't.
I
wanted
some
clarification
on
that.
In
regard
to
the
Central
Park
area,
rezoning.
G
Has
always
come
back
to
council,
but
on
this
particular
building,
it's
a
residential
building,
that's
yeast
mix,
income,
residential
building
and
I
believe
that
in
the
PD
was
already
assumed
it's
in
the
it's
in
the
PD.
There
are
a
couple
other
Lots
that
they're
looking
at
different
uses.
That
would
require
rezoning
and
that
would
of
course,
come
back
to
council.
So.
I
G
I
Know
the
folks
I
was
talking
to
express
some
concern
that
the
new
building
in
the
Central
Park
area
and
I
know
we
have
limited
control
once
we
approve
a
PD,
but
it's
sort
of
monolithic
in
terms
of
just
being
residential
and
not
being
mixed-use,
not
taking
advantage
of
the
ground-floor
opportunities,
perhaps
over
toward
Nebraska.
That
sort
of
thing
do
we
have
any
input
on
that
they're.
I
I
G
I
G
Have
they
have
gotten
matching
money
from
the
tourist
development
tax
dollars
and
have
spent
money
on
improvements
in
the
Convention
Center?
If
you
recall,
the
original
intent
of
the
downtown
CRA
was
to
fund
the
Convention
Center.
That
was
the
whole
reason
it
was
brought
about
right,
and
so
they
have
retired
the
bonds.
The
building
is
almost
30
years
old,
and
so
the
CRA
has
stepped
in
to
do
some
of
the
improvements
for
that
building
again
with
matching
dollars
that
are
raised
by
the
hotels
with
the
tourist
development
tax.
I
G
Alone
for
improvements,
the
church,
development
tax
dollars
or
being
meted
out
at
two
million
dollars
a
year
in
order
to
do
a
large
capital
project,
the
CRA
went
out,
borrow
20
million
dollars
and
it's
a
five-year
loan.
At
one
point,
three:
eight
percent
and
the
county
pays
us
back:
1
million
dollars
every
six
months
with
first
development
tax
dollars
to
retire
that
loan
and.
I
G
F
F
Perry
hobby
park.
That's
come
up
several
times
returning
brother
first
city,
councilman
african-american.
Here
people
are
concerned
that
when
that
park
was
built
that
it
isn't
getting
the
traffic
it
should
get
because
the
amenities
aren't
there
in
the
park,
there
should
be
a
ban
shelf,
so
people
can
have
concerts.
People
can
do
different
things
in
the
park
and
it's
like
door
and
I.
Don't
know.
I
believe,
is
that
the
Central
Park
CRA
what's
Tampa,
that's.
F
F
I
need
that
message
to
be
taking
back
to
that
CC
board
that
the
community
has
been
stopped
me
in
my
car
they're
talking
about
those
issues,
and
we
look
at
that
Park
in
particular.
Now
as
it
relates
to
kid
Mason,
if
a
kid
Mason
is
in
the
downtown,
CRA
correct,
downtown
is
flourishing
in
downtown
there's
a
lot
of
money
and
kid
Mason
has
rats
in
the
building
staff
is
cleaning
up
cleaning
it
up
in
the
mornings.
F
The
building
is
still
affidavit,
it
needs
to
be
torn
down
rebuilt
or
need
some
serious,
serious,
rehab
and
I
need
to
downtown
CRA
to
do
CC
board
to
take
a
look
at
it
if
it's
in
there
CRA,
because
it
needs
some
work
I've
been
by
there.
It
is
one
of
the
oldest
sinners.
It
is
a
mind
mental
center
because
it
was
on
Central
Avenue,
and
we
need
to
look
at
that.
You.
G
Had
given
that
direction
and
Rob
Rosner's
reached
out
to
the
porch
Department
to
find
out
what
plans
they
had
to
make
sure
that
we
weren't
going
to
jump
in
the
middle
of
something
that
they
really
did
look,
we
can
coordinate
our
efforts,
so
thank
you
should
that
direction
was
listen
to
and
follow.
Thank
you.
A
G
Which
comes
up
later
in
the
agenda
and
again
it's
a
niebuhr
and
it's
the
Ritz
theater
and
bringing
back
the
Ritz
sign
again
historic
district
historic
touches.
I've
got
to
say
that
this
really
has
been
one
of
our
most
popular
projects.
The
facade
grant
program
and
I
think
that
if
you
drive
through
several
of
those
communities,
you
can
see
very
distinct
changes
that
have
been
wrought
by
that
program.
G
There
are
specific
rules.
We
have
a
third-party
vendor
that
helps
us
to
make
sure
that
the
budgets
are
accurate,
that
the
work
is
done.
There
is
a
lien,
that's
placed
on
the
property
for
five
years
to
make
sure
that
the
property
is
maintained.
There
have
been
questions
about.
Well,
you
know
what
somebody
wants
to
refinance
or
something
we
have
taken
second
positions
to
allow
people
to
refinance,
leaving
the
lien
in
place,
but
again
to
ensure
that
that
investment
is
protected
and
the
person
who's
done.
G
G
F
Know
some
of
these
establishments
in
the
massage
has
one
that's
a
nice
treat
it's
been
utilized
for
all
kind
of
things
and
the
way
it
is
now
it's
very,
very
low,
I
know
the
barber
shop
in
the
strip,
but
what
I
noticed
about
these
buildings?
These
are
people
who
who
can
afford
to
meet
the
demand
to
match
those
credits
to
be
work,
and
so
that's
what
my
concern
is
is
how
can
we
formulate
some
type
of
program
for
those
who
fall
below
threshold
to
help
them
with
their
building
to
revitalize
the
area?
So
what
I'm?
F
Looking
for
with
the
program
is
the
certain
district?
She
already
has
funny
to
look
at
a
way
to
help.
Those
in
need
I
think
that's
the
challenge,
sometimes
those
who
fall
below
those
thresholds
and
just
can't
meet
those
particular
guidelines
that
that
are
set.
So
we
have
to
look
to
help
everybody
and
have
tiers
that
we
can
be
able
to
assist
those
individual.
K
First
of
all,
intellectually
I
understand
the
idea
that
if
one
of
the
three
stated
purposes,
the
CRA
system
is
to
be
polite
and
having
a
facade
change
it
alleviates
plight
so
that
matches
that
historic
preservation,
I'm
also
very
in
favor
of
my
constituents-
are
very
in
favor
of
it.
That's
a
historic
building
and
it
helps
to
preserve
a
strip
in
historic
building
and
that's
I.
Think
relatively
easy
to
justify.
K
I
have
no
question
about
how
you
all
keep
track
of
the
numbers
and
all
that
it
seems
like
you,
do
a
very
good
job
of
finding
all
the
matching
money.
The
what
my
question
is
is
really
the
same
as
councilman,
Goods
and
I
wish.
We
could
do
it
across
all
CRS
I,
don't
know
how
we
can
set
an
overall
policy,
but
it
seems
like
at
looking
back
through
the
ones
I've
seen
over
the
last
few
years.
K
The
people
get
are
the
people
who
have
the
lawyers
or
consultants
that
understand
how
to
find
this,
and
they
know
how
to
apply
for
it
and
they're
people
or
companies
with
means
and
I.
Think
you
know
one
of
the
overall
guidelines
for
a
CRA
is.
If
this
money
was
in
the
general
fund,
would
you
spin
it
the
same
way
and
I?
K
Don't
think
we
would
spend
that
money
in
the
general
fund
mm-hmm
to
subsidize
a
company,
and
this
gets
back
to
part
of
my
overall
economic
politic
economic
development
policy
too,
but
I
don't
think
that
we
would
spend
the
money
to
subsidize
a
company
they
can
afford
to.
Otherwise
do
it
themselves
and
nothing
nothing
bad
about
anybody
who's
applied
for
it
before,
but
can
we
limit
it
across
the
board
before
for
either
historic
preservation
and
or
some
kind
of
need,
so
that
we're
so
that
we're
not
subsidizing
big
companies.
G
If
that's
the
direction
of
the
board,
that
is
something
I
can
look
at
I
can
tell
you
that
I
don't
know
if
we
would
have
the
same
kind
of
velocity
that
we've
had
in
the
past,
but
I
think
that
as
councilman
Goods
suggests
in
having
different
tiers
would
be
another
suggestion
of
doing
it
to
different
folks.
Get.
K
Back
to
what,
if
you
look
at
the
the
guidelines,
I'll
talk
about
this
more
in
a
minute.
That
kind
of
guidelines
for
CRA
is
one
of
the
things
one
of
the
primary
objectives
is:
is
affordable,
housing
and
so
in
the
last
month
we've
approved
250
thousand
dollar
facade
grants.
You
know,
based
on
what
I
know
we
could
buy
anywhere
from.
K
A
I
I
Conversely,
if
somebody
is
really
needy
I'm
not
saying
they
should
have
some
skin
in
the
game,
you
know,
but
maybe
it's
a
flips
flipside
of
that
and
we
give
80%
and
they
give
20.
So
you
know
maybe
more
of
a
floating
scale.
The
details
of
that
I'll
leave
up
to
you,
your
brilliance
and
and
your
team
we're
in
trouble
yeah.
I
K
A
B
Council,
you
do
ad
valorem
tax
reduction
to
individuals
who
want
to
spend
their
money
and
bringing
up
some
structure
that
more
likely
would
have
been
torn
down
ten
years
for
five
years
to
two
days
from
the
date
that
they
applied
for
and
because
of
that,
not
only
has
it
saved
a
building,
it's
revived
it
to
its
original
status
back
in
the
24,
the
30s
whenever
it
was
government
built.
So
that's
a
rob.
We're
gonna
go
I'm,
not
gonna
vote
for
it.
That's
all
I'm
gonna
say
thank
you.
B
H
You
mr.
chair,
you
know
I
think
there's
a
middle
route
here,
which
is
I,
think
there
is
support
for
and
I
and
I
think
unless,
if
I
was
reading
it
wrong,
that's
what
councilman
did
Felder
was
white
I
think
which
is
not
having
one
shoe
fits
all
policy
where
we
look
at
either
for
historical
nature
or
explicitly
on
need,
but
is
to
set
aside
certain
facade
grants
for
individuals
who
may
be
lower-income
when
I
think
about
facade
grants
and
entrepreneurs.
H
For
example,
I
think
about
a
helping
people
have
a
pathway
to
the
middle
class,
a
pathway
to
the
American
Dream,
and
we
have
a
lot
of
people
getting
those
facade
grants
who
already
got
into
the
middle
class,
maybe
even
got
into
the
upper
class,
etc
and
I
understand
some
hesitation
whenever
it
comes
to
having
off
to
sod
grants
available
to
people
along
all
in
economic
spheres.
But
I
think
that
a
better
middle
approach
would
be
to
a
staff
to
potentially
have
a.
H
Number,
where
you
know
the
applicant
maybe
pays
for
20%
10%,
maybe
even
0%
under
certain
circumstances,
for
certain
individuals,
as
opposed
to
more
of
a
one
shoe,
fits
all
rejection
of
the
current
policies
we
have
today.
I
I
personally
think
there's
more
of
a
middle
ground
to
be
held
here
which
I
could
support,
but
the
the
motion
as
set
I
think,
is
more
of
a
once.
She
fits
all
type
of
apology,
my
opinion
but
I
think
there's
a
good
middle
yeah
with.
K
D
J
D
J
At
the
the
complete
difference,
it's
like
brand-new
construction
at
the
same
time.
It's
it's,
not
here's
another
one!
You
know
it.
It
boosts
morale
and
boosts
the
I
think
it
boosts
property
values
because
there's
an
investment
on
one
property
and
mine
inspire
a
nearby
property.
You
drive,
theater
I
mean
I've
seen
so
many
from
Drew
Park
I
mean
Lowe's,
for
example,
south
of
Hillsboro
how'd.
You
go
there
all
the
time
to
get
used
tires
because
I
was
I,
don't
have
the
money
for
new
tires,
so
I
would
always
go
there
and
it
was
a
disaster.
J
Now
it's
a
completely
different
area,
it's
more
welcoming
and
it's
a
busy
corridor.
Here's
another
one
I
mean
something
like
this.
Historically,
this
a
building
like
this
in
the
1980s
we've,
probably
about
120,
150
thousand
dollars,
and
now
it's
worth.
Who
knows
what
north
of
a
million
dollars,
but
that
brickwork
that
you
couldn't
really
replicate.
Unless
you
spend
a
fortune
today,
I
mean.
G
J
How
it
completely
changes
and
preserves
that
for
decades
to
come?
You
know
the
facade
grant
program
shows
the
commitment
on
the
private
property
owner
because
they
have
to
put
down
so
much
do
they
have
to
pay
so
much
of
it
and
then
our
CRA
dollars
that
are
used.
You
know
within
those
boundaries
are
being
invested
where
they
should
be,
or
you
can
see
it
as
tangible
and.
D
I
I
A
Where
there
are
no
boundaries,
each
neighborhood
is
slightly
different
from
the
other.
Each
CRA
is
different
from
the
other.
Downtown
is
different
from
West
Ham
west
campus
different
from
East
Tampa
Drew
Park
is
different
from
Channelside
I
would
much
rather
have
each
CRA
come
to
us
and
say
this
is
how
we
would
like
to
do
the
facade
where
we
have
a
emotion
here.
I,
don't
think
I
can
support
it,
but
if
we
want
to
proceed
with
with
friendly
amendments,
that's
fine.
Also
legal
I
want
to
yield
to
you
on
this
again.
A
I
I
For
somebody
to
get
this
far
in
that
process
and
then
we
turn
them
down
on
a
case-by-case
basis,
I
think
it's
better
for
us
to.
You
know
perhaps
revisit
the
policy,
because
frankly,
there's
been
last
month
in
this
month
that
I
don't
feel
real
comfortable
about
voting
for
I'm
gonna
vote
for
it,
but
I
don't
feel
cared
about.
These
are
some
wealthy
folks
who
are
getting
CRA
money,
and
let
me
clarify
I,
like
this
facade
program.
I,
think
it's
bomb
I
think
it's
done
really
well
and
I
love
the
photographs
and.
I
I
This
is
just
a
function
of
how
do
we
spend
our
money
wisely
and
who
needs
are
not
really
needs
our
money
and
I
think
that
some
of
those
projects
probably
would
have
been
done
anyway.
There
folks,
listen,
I,
don't
their
business,
they
are
business
owners
and
they
say
hey.
We
got
a
half
million
dollar
project.
We
can
get
50
grand
from
the
from
the
CRA.
Let's
do
it
I,
don't
blame
them
for
asking
I
just
think
we
need
to
be
better.
I
N
A
A
A
O
This
is
our
current
funding
priorities,
so
we
have
the
Gateway
Expressway
currently
under
construction,
the
Howard
Franklin
Bridge,
which
will
be
awarded
in
October
Pinellas
County
corridor,
275
to
2024,
partially
funded
for
275
North,
that
down
to
interchange
and
the
West
Road
interchange
is
funded
right
away.
Nothing
has
changed
since
last
time.
I
spoke
to
you
about
that.
O
O
This
is
what
it
looks
like.
So
we
are
within
existing
right
away.
We
are
adding
six
feet
on
either
side
to
get
to
the
12th
of
things
as
well
as
15
foot
inside
shoulder
it's
important
to
us
so
to
let
you
let
you
know
that
we
took
away
Express
lanes
from
here
and
back
from
the
community.
So
this
is
what
we
keep
back
with,
and
the
SE
is
for
the
supplemental
environmental
impact
statement
or
currently
studying
it.
O
We
have
a
public
hearing
next
next
year,
early
next
year
we
had
a
workshop,
this
past
May,
so
we're
working
on
drafting
these
documents
for
the
downtown
area
change.
We
have
to
no
vote
option
and
the
four
options.
The
next
slide
will
show
you.
What
was
the
history
of
that.
So
we
had
the
big
footprint
from
Tampa
Bay
Express,
we
heard
back
from
the
community.
O
We
wanted
more
options
not
being
out
having
a
less
footprint
and
the
downtown
interchange,
so
we
came
back
with
three
build
alternatives:
B
C
and
D
hearing
back
from
it
we
came
up
with,
which
is
what
was
presented
in
this
the
past
appearing
of
operational
improvements.
What
we
can
do
immediately
or
a
short
term
to
address
safety
concerns
in
terms
of
congestion
issues
so
on
the
right,
you'll
see
the
parcel
impacts
so
of
the
rebuild
options.
Reconstruction
options
are
180
to
200,
most
of
which
is
already
currently
owned
by
the
beauty.
O
You
have
option
C
and
D,
which
is
a
lesser
footprint.
Octavia
viaduct
and
the
operational
improvements
are
around
less
than
10,
so
I'm
going
to
fly
through
the
operational
improvements.
So
we
have
a
crash
history
or
we
have
perhaps
the
problem
here.
It's
four
times
higher
than
the
state
average,
which
is
but
the
heat
map
is
showing
so
our
first
one
is
southbound
275
to
eastbound
I-4,
wonder
stand,
there's
a
choke
point
or
you
have
a
single
lane,
a
single
single
ramp.
Similarly,
in
ramp,
that's
flying
through
downtown
area
change
going
to
buy.
O
O
O
So
this
is
westbound
I-40
northbound
275,
where
we
have
a
direct
ramp
from
14th
Street,
going
to
to
San
five
northbound.
We
also
have
from
the
one
lane
ramp
going
to
I
from
I-4
westbound
to
275
northbound,
it's
going
to
Tulane,
so
you'll
have
three
lanes
going
to
75
northbound
as
well
as
you'll
have
be
able
to
stay
in
the
outside
lane
and
not
have
to
merge
over
right
currently
yeah.
Either
you
stay
in
that
lane.
Yet
good
and
okay
or
you
merge
into
traffic.
O
O
So
the
last
operational
improvement
that
we're
proposing
is
why
we
widened
the
ramp,
so
we
get
in
three
lanes
and
auxilary
Lane,
so
moving
the
downtown
interchange
to
the
downtown
exits
downstream.
So
you
don't
have
the
choice
between
275
northbound,
downtown
exit
or
to
75
southbound
from
I-4
you're
moving
we're
moving
it
down
getting
rid
of
the
extra
bridge.
O
That's
there,
and
so
the
downtown
exit
bridges,
it's
going
to
be
removed
and
then
widen
the
bridges
that
are
currently
there
we'll
get
full
its
full
depth
or
full
width
shoulders
on
that
which
is
a
safety
issue.
Currently,
people
don't
have
anywhere
to
go
if
there
becomes
a
disabled
vehicle
is
take
the
lane.
O
A
B
B
Sir
I
apologize
but
haven't
gotten
to
it
yet
the
exits
that
you're
closing
sir
and
the
ones
that
you
want
to
shift
to
another
location,
I.
Guess
it's
what
I
said,
but
once
the
21st
and
22nd
Street
that
you're
shifting
over
to
14th
Street
and
15th
Street,
that's
a
14-3
far
because
I
Vinita
have
already
got
a
cool
all
right,
sir
I'm.
B
B
Rachel's
personal,
you
got
that's
correctly:
14th
and
15th
Street,
except
all
you
have
this
school.
Yes,
they're
natural
for
deep
in
the
West
on
the
east
side
of
50
credit
across
the
street.
You
gotta
make
it
a
lot,
then
used
to
happen
used
to
be
the
Boys
and
Girls
Club
and
I
know
it
being
used
now
for
good
purposes,
an
activity
center
for
youth.
And,
yes,
is
that
part
of
the
view
or
not?
We.
B
A
O
O
O
F
My
question
still,
you
know
my
district
has
always
been
cut
off
the
blood,
so
he's
cut
continuously
continuously
cut,
it
doesn't
thrive.
We
closed
those
exits
and
now
we
stop
and
I
don't
think
anyone
takes
in
consideration
of
communities
we
just
as
police
officer
long
time.
Putting
more
lanes
will
not
help
with
the
more
layers
you
put
them.
What
people
are
gonna
get?
F
Okay,
what
anybody
says
when
we
continue
to
do
the
same
things
and
cut
neighborhoods.
You've
probably
already
made
your
decision
because
you've
got
your
plans,
but
I
can
tell
you.
I
have
to
only
reckon
that
the
community
know
that
I'm
against
flora
price
to
be
enclosed.
If
we've
got
engineers,
we
have
designers,
and
this
you
came
to
design
that
interstate
to
where
it's
not
closed,
because
when
you
does
that
we've
got
a
new
restaurant
at
the
corner
of
for
Alaska
and
the
interstate.
F
So
now
we
close
that
up,
they
stop
they
start
and
we're
not
taking
consideration.
We
just
think
it's
the
interstate
and
to
me,
will
you
build
interstates
bridges
you're
talking
about
high
dollar
people
we're
making
money?
This
is
just
beautiful
it
just
just
bill
lanes,
it
does
not
help.
People
get
off
the
interstate
we've
got
to
find
other
alternatives,
but
I
for
the
record
I
have
to
let
the
community
know
that
I'm,
not
in
favor
for
brats.
To
being
close,
it's
it's
a
it's
a
bad
idea.
I.
A
Goods,
thank
you.
I
feel
the
same
sentiment
than
this
councilman
good
says:
I
apologize
again,
you're
just
a
messenger,
but
of
course
we
have
to
voice
our
opinions
on
this.
Yes,
and,
in
my
opinion,
closing
for
Frasca
is
a
crime
to
the
community.
It's
a
crime
to
our
city
and
it
can
be
redesigned.
I
also
have
to
add
that
the
14th
15th,
in
my
opinion,
is
going
to
also
hurt
Eve
or
City.
Please
proceed.
O
A
D
B
Say
even
hate
to
think
of
this
idea
that
flashed
through
my
mind,
but
once
they
get
flashing,
this
one
shell,
brain
I
got
to
bring
it
out.
When
my
colleague
gear
to
my
right,
the
Chairman
talked
about
big
trucks
going
in
through
neutral
Parkway,
which
is
a
two-lane
on
both
sides
hitting
north
and
south.
That's
the
vicinity
of
what
the
land
that
was
being
talked
about
about
building
a
baseball
stadium.
In
my
correct
that.
B
B
B
I
may
be
wrong
that
if,
if
you
haven't
way
to
get
home
but
way
to
find
a
way
to
for
businesses
to
start
up
and
you're
not
going
to
exit
on
21st,
Street
or
22nd
Street,
which
we
ever
you're
coming
east
or
west
and
you're
going
to
move
that
to
14th
Street
and
15th
Street,
how
they
going
to
prosper
about
and
a
half
away
and
again
I'm.
Not
talking
to
you,
though,.
O
B
Gonna
be,
like
my
appreciate,
keep
sending
you
bro,
you
won't
be
bald,
and
so
what
I'm
trying
to
say
is
the
distance
between
14th
and
21st
is
six
or
seven
blocks?
Yes,
I,
don't
see
the
advantageous
and
I'm,
not
a
road
engineer.
I,
just
don't
see
it
unless
there's
something
happening
that
we
don't
know
about
further.
E
O
Plan
to
move
to
1415
has
been
around
for
decades.
So
I'm
not
saying
no,
yes,
sir,
and
the
14/15
move
is
to
get
rid
of
there's
a
we've
condition
where
you
have
traffic
coming
off
the
275
wanting
to
get
to
I-4
and
having
to
either
people
coming
then
wanting
to
get
to
the
X
F
21st
22nd.
So
we
have
a
we've
condition
that
we're
trying
to
alleviate
that
that
by
isolating
ramp
traffic
but
I
I,
understand
and
I
hear.
B
And
I
agree
with
you,
because
if
the
problem
is
on
that
area,
where
you
got
to
go
around
the
middle
you're
gonna
get
that
route,
it's
backed
up
to
sly
Avenue,
sometimes
yes,
sir
and
then
I
understand,
and
then
us.
You
know,
earth
people
on
the
earth.
The
earth
is
not
crazy.
It's
a
people
on
the
earth
that
are
crazy
and
when
you
see
that
expressway
backed
up
you
see,
people
go
through
the
other
lane
to
the
left
of
it,
and
then
they
bottle
that
because
they
want
to
get
back
in
where
they
came
from.
B
O
O
K
Glad
to
see
all
excited
about
this
an
issue
also
not
just
me,
are
you
all
gonna
propose
resolutions
at
some
point,
I.
I
So
I'm
looking
at
the
program
schedule-
and
it
speaks
to
the
I
for
to
saudi
club,
interchange
funding.
It
says
right
away
on
the
funded
construction
unfunded
and
that
shows
24
FY
24.
All
the
way
to
FY
33,
yes,
is
that
has
that
changed
at
all
I
mean
I
mean
we
seem
to
be
having
a
lot
of
discussions
about
the
interchange
we.
I
O
Is
no
current
funding
there's?
No
pretty
the
priority
is
to
get
funding
for
the
West
Shore
interchange,
which
is
a
billion
dollars
in
funding.
Our
annual
budget
is
eleven
billion
dollars.
So
that's
a
little
less
than
a
tenth
of
what
our
annual
budget
is.
So
with
the
budget
and
priority
going
towards
West
Shore.
We
we
don't
have
the
money
to
address
the
West
Shore
interchange,
which
is
why
we
introduced
these
short-term
and
operational
improvements,
realizing
that
we
do
have
a
safety
concern
that
we
need
to
address
so.
O
O
It
easy
it's
more
palatable
when
you're
talking
about
50
to
100
million
dollars,
then
ask
them
for
nine
under
lying
there
million
to
1.6
billion
right.
So
that's
why
we
were
proposing
to
do
something
initiative
to
do
something
for
safety,
so
not
to
ignore
west
or
inspire
and
the
downtown
area
change
in
spite
of
West
Shore
and.
I
I
O
You
some
funding.
It
would
be
consensus
of
support
either
for
the
downtown
area,
change
or
operational
improvement.
We
didn't
know
what
the
city
of
Tampa
and
what
the
CRA
is
is
is
warning
as
a
priority.
We've
heard
out
overwhelmingly
that
West
Shore
is
the
priority
for
the
region.
So
what
and
lose
that?
What
is
the
stance?
G
A
To
let
you
continue
by
this
moment
maker,
one
more
steeply
I've
been
seeing
these
changes.
I
saw
the
last
changes
that
we're
done,
and
it
just
seems
to
me
that
somewhere,
someone
doesn't
think
for
the
future
and
when
this
was
already
thought
up
constructed,
it
was
obsolete
and
now
you're
asking
for
a
change
to
changes
at
the
downtown
interchange
which
are
gonna
affect
neighborhoods,
closing
a
for
Brosco
and
opening
up
fifteen
fourteen
fifteen
Street
and
closing
a
21st
22nd
again.
A
A
O
But
we
also
add
a
lien
if
someone
from
East
Tampa
and
are
in
that
neighborhood
in
that
area
wants
to
go
to
275,
they
can
hop
on
a
ramp
dedicated
ramp,
going
northbound.
They
don't
have
to
mix
in
traffic,
so
we're
adding
the
elbow
if
you
want
to
say
we're
having
three
lengths
so
two
lanes
to
the
exit
from
on
one
single
lane
ramp
to
now
to
three
lanes
because
of
this
as
well,
and
that's
from
Ybor,
you
can
take
the
same
ramp
and
get
on
to
it.
I
Just
procedurally,
it
appears
to
miss
monthly
on
made
a
motion
a
while
back
for
you
guys
to
come
visit
us
orderly,
yes,
sir,
so
as
a
furtherance
to
what
I
said
before
I'm
gonna
study
this
and
listen
to
the
community.
You
know
on
all
these
issues
yesterday,
frankly,
I'm
not
sure
why
sure
is
my
priority
as
compared
to
the
downtown
interchange.
N
I
F
N
N
We
are
trying
real
hard
to
work
with
the
community,
all
the
communities
we
have
in
when
I
first
came
into
position
right
after
the
Tampa
Bay
express
program
was
reset.
We
were
looking
at
200
persons.
We
were
looking
at
a
footprint
that
was
going
to
take
big
swaths
of
Tampa
heights
of
Ybor
City
of
part
parts
that
you
know.
N
We
were
just
hitting
a
big
footprint
and
we
heard
message
loud
and
clear
that
right
now
is
not
the
right
time
to
take
that
big,
huge
footprint,
and
so
what
we
did
is
we
look
at
options
as
we
continue
to
look
for
options.
We
started
to
hear
more
and
more
that
the
the
problem
early
was
some
of
the
safety
concerns
that
we
really
needed
to
address.
When
you
look
at
1500
crashes
a
year
within
the
interchange
for
day.
That's
a
lot
of
your
congestion
right
there.
N
You
get
a
crash,
you
kind
of
cause
more
congestion,
I,
understand
the
induced
demand
argument,
but
I'll
also
say
that
you're
not
going
to
get
rid
of
congestion.
We
understand
that,
even
if
you
have
a
good
transit
system,
you
look
at
any
place
got
a
good
transit
system.
They
have
horrible
congestion,
it's
gonna
come
we're.
Gonna
have
worse
congestion,
but
if
we
build
things
within
our
existing
right
away,
we
can
move
more
people.
We
may
still
have
the
same
type
of
congestion,
but
we
might
be
able
to
move
35
percent
more
people
through
that
congested.
N
We
continue
to
have
a
city,
that's
going
to
grow
and
be
vibrant.
When
we
look
at
the
floor,
braska
exit
einar's,
we
are
looking
at
every
way
we
can
try
to
put
not
not
close,
that
and
we'll
continue
to
that
exit
should
have
never
been
put
there
to
be
honest
from
from
a
safety
and
geometric
standpoint.
It
wouldn't
be
put
there
today.
It
wouldn't
be
something
that
we
would
look
at.
We
were
hoping
by
adding
access
at
14
to
50
we're
not
taking
any
access
away
from
21st
22nd.
N
These
ramps
will
connect
all
of
that
together.
You
will
actually
be
having
additional
access
at
14th
and
15th,
although
I
do
admit
the
fourth
floor,
Brassica
would
have
to
be
closed,
but
that's
the
only
way
we
really
can
get
those
that
that
that
movement
from
both
the
southbound
to
eastbound
movement
and
the
westbound
and
the
work
that
move
it
to
work,
because
you
throw
those
ramps
in
the
middle
and
it
really
messes
everything
up.
We
can
do
all
of
that
within
our
existing
right
away.
N
The
only
place
where
we
need
a
few
parcels
and
it's
what
it
is,
is
there
certain
block.
We
might
own
eight
of
the
the
nine
properties
and
there's
one
that
we
didn't
purchase.
We
never
condemned
any
property
for
any
of
this
stuff
in
the
downtown
was
all
willing
sellers
there's
a
few
properties
that
we'd
have
to
pick
up
that
were
always
in
a
footprint
of
any
option
that
we
showed.
N
But
what
I
need
to
do
at
this
point
is
we
need
to
get
through
the
record
of
decision,
which
is
what
the
federal
highway
administration
will
give
us
when
we
get
it
into
this
study.
Hopefully,
next
year,
then
I
can
go
to
Tallahassee
and
I
can
compete
for
the
money.
That's
going
to
go
somewhere
in
the
state.
50%
of
our
work
program
is
competitive.
We
we
compete
with
Miami,
we
compete
with
Orlando,
we
compete
with
Jacksonville.
N
We
lost
about
five
hundred
million
dollars
to
Orlando
three
years
ago,
when
we
more
or
less
couldn't
come
to
to
an
agreement
on
what
to
do
on
on
the
Tampa
Bay
Express.
We
want
to
get
some
of
that
back,
and
some
of
it
would
go
to
something
like
that,
so
we're
showing
what's
there
now,
but
I
certainly
am
gonna.
Try
it
to
get
those
safety
improvements
and
operational
previous
funding,
much
quicker.
What's.
B
N
F
Yes,
for
the
record,
I
had
met
with
secretary
Gwynn,
and
now
we
discuss
some
possibilities,
and
hopefully
we
get
some
fun
and
different
things
with
those
under
patches.
Yes,
beautification,
the
Spruce
of
our
communities
as
well,
instead
of
you
seeing
a
bunch
of
painted
areas,
but
it's
all
covered
with
dirt,
or
you
know
you
know
disgustful.
Hopefully
you
can
continue
that
conversation
with
your
TV
to
get
some
funny
to
do
something
with
those
area.
Yeah.
N
We
will
it
actually
sent
you
some
information.
You
may
not
have
a
chance
to
look
at
it
yet
on
a
bunch
of
improvements,
and
we
have
several
several
million
dollars
coming
up
soon
on
projects
in
East
Tampa
that
we've
added
just
recently
a
lot
of
it's
highway
lighting.
A
lot
of
its
we
put
in
a
signal
at
26th
and
ok
that'll
go
in,
hopefully
toward
the
end
of
this
year.
We're
going
to
be
putting
signal
wraps
around
our
cabinets,
their
artwork
done
by
local
high
schools
that
we
use.
N
You
know
now
you
got
the
old
silver
cabinet
out.
There
doesn't
look
so
great.
You
wrap
them
with
these
wraps
that
are
artwork
done
by
local
high
schools,
and
it
just
brings
a
lot
of,
but
those
types
of
things
will
look
to
those
and
we're
going
to
look
to
see
what
we
can
do
on
inside
as
well.
I
actually
drove
through
all
the
interchanges
in
East
and
West
Tampa
yesterday
and
called
our
Maness
contractor,
and
we
got
to
do
a
better
job
on
that
and
so
we're
looking
at
it
hard.
A
A
We
can
get
a
third
of
those
people
off
the
roads,
but
public
or
mass
transportation,
something
to
me
says:
FDOT
Department
of
Transportation
rail,
rubber
wheel,
whatever
we'd
get
a
third
of
those
people
off
it's.
In
my
opinion,
it's
not
the
citizens
of
tab
with
your
costs
of
traffic
reduction
on
our
interstates.
It's
the
people
coming
into
the
downtown
for
mister
I.
Thank
you
and
your
staff
for
being
here
today,
giving
us
I.
N
Will
say,
though,
we
fund
transit
over
historically
more
than
any
other
agency
in
Tampa
Bay.
We
have
put
a
lot
of
funding
in
the
transit.
What's
been
lacking
in
the
past
has
been
the
local
match
because
we
match
funds.
We
don't
just
have
a
transit
operator,
we're
gonna,
we
are
so
we
are
funding
the
streetcar
expansion.
N
We
are
putting
money
into
a
number
of
other
projects
that
are
in
the
infancy
phases
that
hopefully
we'll
get
and
we're
committed
to
providing
you
transit
matching
funds,
so
we
can
go
after
federal
funds,
so
we're
not
just
Department
of
roads,
and
now
that
we
have
a
funding
partner
that
actually
has
a
dedicated
revenue
stream
that
can
be
used
for
that
we
hope
to
be
a
bigger
partner.
So
we're
not
just
rose.
A
D
A
L
Hey
good
morning,
then
tis
night,
its
government
from
top
down
and
it's
politics
from
top
down
and
what
you
have
is
just
like
Department
of
Transportation,
just
like
you
have
with
the
mayor.
It's
called
garbage
politics.
It's
not
full
of
people.
It's
straight
up,
garbage
politics,
nothing
more,
nothing!
Less!
For
so
many
years,
African
people
been
right
here
being
promised
what
we
going
to
get.
We
don't
get
anything
out
of
it.
First
white
people
use
bullying
with
the
Ku
Klux
Klan.
Then
they
use
trickery.
L
They
try
to
bully
us
with
the
Ku
Klux
Klan.
Then
they
try
to
trick
us
with
Perry
Harvey
up
there.
Gwyn
Miller
of
their
reference
got
up
there,
the
other
guy
up
there
and
what
have
we
gotten
out
of
it?
Nothing
we
come
down
here
week
after
week,
begging
like
paupers,
came
from
a
proud
ancestry
of
individuals
into
slavery
and
in
the
begging
like
paupers
time
after
time,
people
die.
L
I
know
when
the
man
came
down
here
to
spoke
about
last
week,
some
MF
and
artwork,
and
some
canopy
and
a
Barnes
Park
and
painting
the
mural
and
doing
some
other
night
basketball
of
African
kids.
Like
if
that's
the
aspiration
for
African
people,
it's
not
absolutely
positively,
not
as
dictatorial
politics
in
a
capitalistic
society
in
a
greedy
white
imperialistic,
no-good
society,
nothing
more,
nothing
less
and
white
folks
like
to
bully
you
like
somebody
came
right
here
and
tell
me
I
talk
too
loud.
I
might
not
smell
good.
L
L
You
scare
us
when
you
speak,
how
many
African
people
have
got
murdered
because
what
they
thought
we
had
a
weapon
in
a
nice,
little
tranquil
environment,
where
you
got
three
minutes
to
speak
and
then
they
try
to
bully
you
I
should
call
it
sexual
harassment,
that's
what
I
should
call
it.
It's
nothing
more,
nothing
less!
And
it's
garbage
politics,
600,000
bicycles,
starting
garbage
politics,
nothing
more!
Nothing!
Less!
Y'all
treat
us
so
bad
and
not
a
token
talking
talking
black
people,
ain't,
getting
none!
Nothing!
L
Out
of
this
talk
about
grants
and
this
and
that
when
black
people
used
to
make
flowers
and
do
our
own
in
certain
parts
of
West
Hampton
Main
Street,
we
did
for
ourselves,
we
need
a
white
folks,
money,
y'all
busted,
that
up
it's
garbage
politics
and
what
we
need
to
talk
about
is
reparations
than
genocide,
nothing
more,
nothing
less!
Oh,
the
bagging
is
over
with
pay
it's.
What
y'all
owe
us
MS.
M
M
The
community
said
no,
but
it's
clear
to
me
that
they
wasted
my
time
the
community
time,
because
they
already
decided
they're,
closing
flora,
bright
stars
and
all
of
that
they're
gonna
do
an
EVO
I
said
once
again
closing
off
our
communities
when
we've,
let
them
know
those
rogues
are
utilized
by
the
community.
We
live
in
the
inner
city,
they're,
not
considering
the
residents.
M
I
certainly
hope
that
you
all
do
not
support
any
funding
for
that
at
all,
because
I
use
flora,
Brassica
I
like
to
go
to
e
boy,
but
if
they
utilize
that
those
two
lanes
coming
downtown
that
people
only
used
in
one
lane,
if
they
utilize
that
Lane
on
the
left-hand
side
and
take
it
on
way,
I
really
want
to
go
because
I
don't
want
to
just
be
pushed
the
Evo
and
I
don't
want
to
be
pushed
to
sour
stamp.
I
don't
want
to
be
pushed
to
st.
M
P
My
name
is
mano
judge
and
I'm.
A
resident,
a
business
owner
in
East,
Tampa
and
I
also
do
not
want
floor
basket
clothes.
They
have
already
closed.
34Th
Street,
40th,
Street,
I
own,
a
business
on
40th
Street,
my
mother
lives
off
40th
Street
I,
either
I'm
coming
into
the
city.
I
have
to
get
off
on
50th
to
get
to
our
house
or
my
business.
Our
22nd
floor
basket
is
used.
I
used
it
for
four
years
straight,
taking
my
daughter
to
school.
What
do
they
want
us
to
do?
Where
are
we
going
to
get
out?
P
How
are
we
going
to
get
into
the
East
Campus?
And
my
second
thing
is
the
facade
grant
in
East
Tampa
we've
been
a
business
in
78
I
just
found
out
about
it
last
year
from
Connie
Burton,
so
I
have
applied
for
it
and
hopefully
at
Johnson
I
met
with
him
last
Monday
I
think
so
I
will
be
submitting
application.
Thank
you.
Thank
you.
E
Natacha
good
lead
to
7:05
East
24th
Avenue.
This
is
in
response
to
TV
X,
of
course,
as
of
April
2019,
one
person
is
hit
every
day,
while
walking
are
cycling
on
the
roads
in
Hillsborough
and
Pinellas
counties.
Hillsborough
County
ranks
fourth
in
the
state
for
pedestrian
deaths,
an
F
dot
created
a
safety
campaign
that
was
implemented
in
2011
and
deaths
have
continued
to
rise,
even
after
the
nine
million
dollars
was
spent
on
the
campaign.
Yet
we
have
poor,
are
non-existent
biking
lanes,
sporadic,
sidewalks
and
non-existent
crosswalks
for
our
children
in
East
Tampa.
E
However,
our
focus
is
on
closing
vital
exits
within
East
Tampa
to
alleviate
low
impact
crashes
that
almost
never
result
in
deaths.
Within
the
last
two
week
we
can
have
within
the
East
Tampa
cra-cra.
We
have
seen
two
pedestrian
deaths.
Just
in
the
past
week
we
lost
40th,
Street
exit,
34th,
Street
exit
and
now
floor,
abrasca
and
21st.
When
will
we
stop
boxing
East
Tampa
in
but
expecting
areas
to
prosper
when
we
actually
listen
to
the
people?
If
safety
is
our
concern,
then
let's
actually
address
pedestrian
deaths.
E
Let's
be
proactive,
instead
of
only
adding
cross
works
that
serve
as
memorials
to
the
many
people
killed
crossing
our
streets.
We
can
expand
the
streetcar
to
East
Tampa,
complete
sidewalks
throughout
our
footprint
utilize.
The
CSX
tracks
upgrade
our
bus
system
work
with
rideshare
companies
to
bring
about
the
carpooling
features
that
other
cities
enjoy
and
increase
lighting
within
our
community.
How
about
we
do
these
things?
First,
before
we
continue
to
suffocate
an
asthmatic
community.
P
Good
morning,
I'm
Carol
Jonas
marshal
1904
six
boots
without
Boulevard
I
fought
years
ago,
with
Mayor
Greco
FDOT
about
cutting
off
East
Tampa
I
lost
to
this
cutoff.
Please
listen
to
the
community.
We
are
asking
please
listen
now
about
the
East
Tampa
partnership.
I
came
here
this
morning
after
looking
at
the
agenda,
East
Tampa
partnership
is
different
from
all
the
other
CRS.
P
When
we
created
this
partnership
and
I
was
there
at
the
inception.
We
wanted
something
different.
We
wanted
the
community
to
direct
how
things
work.
We
planned
it
Chloe
Moscone
she
can
vouch
for
that.
We
fought
day
after
day.
We
did
our
planning.
We
did
everything
we
we
work.
We
were
called
all
kinds
of
names
because
what
we
were
doing
some
people
didn't
like,
but
we
stopped
and
we
got
the
neighborhood
involved
to
tell
us
what
they
wanted
for
East
Tampa.
We
have
a
committee
that
works
mainly
with
the
community.
P
That
committee
tell
comes
in
listen
to
the
manager,
Direction.
Listening
to
the
guidance
we
get
guidance
from
the
Lord.
Apart
from
south,
we
get
guidance
from
everybody,
every
department
to
make
sure
we
implement
things
right.
We
started
a
facade
program
in
East
Tampa.
It
was
too
many
paperwork.
The
community
didn't
want
to
do
it.
Some.
P
Probably
the
owners-
and
they
did
not
trust
people
in
the
city.
We
went
out
as
a
group.
We
met
with
different
people.
We
brought
them
in.
We
changed
everything
to
a
one-page
format,
so
it
would
be
easy.
There
is
a
whole
lot
that
we
put
into
this
every
time
a
new
person
come
in.
We
can't
just
throw
things
out.
We
need
to
enhance
what
we
have
work
on.
Our
plan
enhance
our
plan,
but
don't
throw
it
out.
I
did
a
small
business
symposium
since
2013
last
year
worked
with
the
Hillsborough
County
work
with
the
city.
P
Q
Good
morning,
Johnny
Johnson,
the
first
thing
I
must
ask
you
guys
cause
none
of
you
up
there
blind,
look
who
always
up
here
at
public
speaking
minorities
each
temple,
that's
the
other
part
of
the
city.
It's
okay.
You
all
said
it.
So
it's
not
a
fight,
go
what
could
be
done,
it's
what
need
to
be
done
and
address
because
we
all
agreed.
That
is
the
issue.
The
first
thing
in
correcting
anything
is
a
mitten.
That
is
an
issue.
We
all
agree
that
we
are
has
an
issue
in
each
temple.
The
problem
is
we'll.
Q
Let
you
guys
to
do
a
job
and
work
on
our
behalf,
which
is
not
being
done.
The
sound
bites
are
beautiful.
All
you
guys
say
the
wonderful
thing
that
get
you
over
the
hump
enough
talking
implement.
Do
action,
it's
not
about
what
color
distanced
about
political
Renaud's
about
correctness.
Do
what
need
to
be
done?
Cuz
that
inner
day
were
all
taxpaying.
Citizen,
Florida
Department
that
out
got
our
parents
said
he
upset
it
because
he
loves
500
million,
told
lendo
it's
about
people
over
money.
You
know
I'm
saying
we
count.
Q
We
are
somebody
I
live
on
Elmore
for
20
years.
That's
the
East!
As
soon
as
you
cross,
Florida
brats
go
off
each
temple
close
that
where
do
you
get
off
to
go
out
21st
to
get
into
any
street?
That's
going
eastbound
if
you
close
down
Florida
braska.
None
of
these
people
concerned
about
for
the
bus
being
closed
down,
cause
guys
what
they
don't
live
in
the
area.
So
it
really
don't
releve
affect
them,
but
trust
me
when
you
start
infringing
on
them,
they'll
be
up
there
standing.
Q
Unfortunately,
we
don't
only
people
being
trampled
on
and
been
infringed
on.
So
that's
why
you
always
when
it
come
to
public
speaking.
We
the
only
ones
up
here,
standing
for
and
it's
a
sad
that
we
have
to
ask
because
we
pay
our
just
due
to
have
what
we
want,
because
we
pay
taxes,
then
we
elect
y'all
if
it.
If
then,
if
there's
a
strong
mayor,
we
hope
we
ask
you
guys
to
do
your
job
and
hold
a
mayor
accountable
way.
You
can
and
that's
gonna
need
budgets.
D
people
down
here,
y'all
subsidizing
the
wrong
people.
Q
We
getting
the
short
end
of
the
stick.
Every
which
way,
no
matter
what
the
topic
of
discussion
is,
it's
a
problem
because
again
the
people
that's
gonna,
come
before
this
podium
are
the
same
in
one
area.
We
share
the
same
skin
complexion.
Do
you
understand
that
all
you
guys
are
challenging
enough
to
know?
What's
right
and
what's
wrong,
we
pay
our
taxes
again.
I
was
down
here
a
month
ago
about
the
bike
lanes
up
and
down
40th.
Q
All
the
debris
is
still
there
or
if,
if
a
crash
happy
you
got
to
dissect
yourself
through
glass,
debris,
sticks
and
stuff.
So
when
you
come
the
hill
and
we
paid
taxes,
man
it
just
it's
just
fiberglassing
that
you
guys
sit
up
there
again
in
my
opinion,
especially
you
with
no
concern
for
others,
man
and
that's
sad
man,
but
when
again
just
look
at
the
people,
that's
gonna
come
before
you.
R
Good
morning,
council,
my
name
is
Bishop
Michelle
be
patty.
I
would
like
to
start
off
by
thanking
you,
council
Magoo's,
for
putting
the
auto-pay
in
a
paper
I'll
concerning
this
meeting
this
morning.
With
that
being
said,
I
was
really
hopeful.
I
was
feeling
really
good
when
I
was
hearing
all
the
fine
things
that
you
all
were
saying
about
each
sample
and
how
we
need
to
change
cigars
and
how
we
need
to
do
things
different,
so
we
can
get
a
better
result.
Then
we
come
to
closing
our
floor
bracket
floor
abrasca
and
Councilman
Dean
Felder.
R
You
did
some
great
things
when
you
say
about
the
sliding
scale
I
like
that
to
help
each
sample.
But
how
can
you
in
good
conscience,
anybody
vote
when
you
don't
know
what's
out
there
for
you
to
ask
the
pun?
Your
question
is
that
being
utilized
that
spot
that
thought
in
my
mind,
you
haven't
used
it.
You
cannot
vote
on
something
if
you
do
not
know
how
affect
the
community
I
get
off
on
that
exit.
Many
time
on
my
way
to
Brandon,
because
the
traffic
is
backed
up
but
I
also
get
off
on
it.
R
I
want
to
go
over
to
Nebraska
if
I
want
to
go
down
over
there
to
21st
to
the
floor
to
something
bulletin.
If
I
want
to
go
to
West
ample,
that
exit
is
a
very
viable
exit.
You
cannot
dictate
human
behavior
a
lot
of
time.
The
traffic
is
backed
up
because
there's
the
accident
on
the
other
side
of
the
street
and
people
are
stopped,
and
they're
rubbernecking
and
they're
trying
to
see
has
nothing
to
do
with
that
lane,
not
where
I
do
have
a
problem
with
the
interstate
when
they
put
the
Brandon
exit.
R
Far
to
the
left,
I'm
coming
from
the
right,
I
put
my
life
in
danger.
Trying
to
get
over
so
I,
don't
miss
the
exit
and
people
not
allowing
you
to
get
in
to
the
CRA
s.
People
need
to
know
about
what's
out
there,
how
are
the
CRA
s
marketing
to
the
community?
The
community
there's
still
the
same.
The
circle
same
pot
of
people
who
gets
the
benefit
of
the
CRA
s,
get
the
benefit
of
the
money,
because
the
vast
community
is
not
aware
of.
R
What's
going
on
and
for
you
to
say
you
have
to
almost
four
million
dollars
as
a
carryover,
and
you
see
the
community
in
the
blighted
status
in
that's
a
problem.
You
cannot
tell
me
people
don't
want
to
utilize.
The
money,
don't
need
the
money,
but
if
they're
not
of
the
where
the
money
and
you
keep
moving
the
goalposts,
then
they
can't
get
to
the
money.
So
this
council
I'm
very
hopeful
man
that
you
all
are
listening
that
you
are
into
that.
We
need
to
change
until
Charlie,
Miranda
I
like
to
say
thank
you.
R
You've
always
stood
firm,
whether
you
one
vote
standing
alone
on.
What's
right,
you?
What's
not,
you
know,
the
dots
are
dotting
up
for
people
to
get
to
the
grades.
The
raise
is
not
dead,
it
is
still
alive,
they
are
still
trying
to
get
an
intent
and
that's
why
they
wanted
shifter
traffic
downtown.
So
thank
you
so
much.
Oh.
D
I
In
admitting
and
acknowledging
that
I
didn't
use
that
exit,
yes
and
and
that's
you
know
and
and
I,
don't
I,
don't
know
if
you
meant
to
be
critical
about
that,
but
I
was
just
telling
it
like
it.
Is
you
guys,
responded
and
said?
Y'all
use
it
and
that's
why
we
have
this
give-and-take,
so
what
I
can
get
better
inform
now?
My
dad
recently
was
moved
over
there
to
Palm,
Avenue,
okay,
so
one
of
the
reason
I'm
actually
moving
up
central
heights.
I
R
F
R
P
R
My
concern
has
been
with
CRA
because
it
has
operated
in
a
ways
in
which
I
believe
a
little
dick
toriel
ship,
that
a
few
people
got
the
knowledge.
Few
people
want
to
have
the
power,
and
so
we
don't
have
to
go
on
the
radio
to
expose
a
whole
bunch
of
people
and
if
we
get
have
to
get
more
radical
than
that,
we
will,
because
each
temple
belongs
to
all
of
us,
not
to
a
few
of
us
not
to
people
that's
trying
to
hold
on
to
their
jobs.
R
That's
there
not
for
the
people
that
help
our
community
out
as
they
go
about
this
community
expressing
their
love
for
the
community,
but
they
make
sure
all
the
money
said
to
talk
for
them
that
we
need
to
say,
have
full
prosperity
and
we're
not
getting
it
to
have
1.6
million
dollars
laid
at
the
table.
When
the
community
is
blighted.
When
we
are
talking
about
affordable
housing,
we
don't
need
the
city
to
dictate
the
direction
in
which
we
need
to
go
in,
and
that's.
R
R
R
25
years
experience,
that's
being
paid
out
the
East
Tampa
budget,
his
car
$5,000
for
the
upkeep
of
the
vehicle,
134
thousand
dollars,
but
his
salary.
We
got
enough
police
in
our
community.
We
got
code
enforcement
in
our
community.
We
got
everybody
in
our
community
that
could
do
this
job
so
I'm
favor,
and
for
some
of
you
all
that
do
not
think
that
we
should
be
rotating
that,
if
each
sample
in
the
15
years
that
we
had
ed
Johnson
that
if
that
community
was
violent
being
led
correctly,
you
know
what
we
wouldn't
even
be
down
there.
R
Talking
about
these
samples,
we
would
say
we
would
have
a
skip
alone
to
a
new
administration
and
we
will
be
prospered.
We're
still
working
from
the
2009
strategic
plan,
we
cannot
predict
this
to
our
children,
we
are
adults,
we
are
making
a
demand,
you've
been
in
office
for
five
months,
you
got
43
left
and
we
are
watching
we're
wanting
change.
Now.
The
mayor
can't
come
and
give
us
no
training
program.
We
don't
need
no
more
damn
certificates,
we
need
jobs,
we
need
growth
and
that's
what
our
demand
is.
Thank
you.
R
R
R
These
nonprofit
organizations
I,
don't
know
about
them.
I
need
to
knit
the
city
that
counts,
maybe
I
need
to
check
into
them
find
out
what
are
they
doing,
because
the
condition
of
the
apartment
I'm
living
in
currently
I
leave
every
day
because
of
the
smells
growing
people
the
sewer
pipes.
So
this
is
budget
that
is
due
in
October
and
has
to
be
spent
or
make
a
decision.
I'm
gonna
find
out
anybody
sent
to
myself
or
to
everyday
people.
Well,
we
begin
any
of
this
money.
Would
it
be
a
caveat?
P
Good
morning,
I
am
Sally
me
and
I'm
here
to
speak.
It's
embarrassing
and
a
slap
in
the
face
to
pay
people
to
move
into
our
black
community
and
they're
better
than
we
do.
It
is
really
a
sin
and
a
shame
that
we
have
to
go
through
this
and
then
there's
nothing
left
for
us
where's.
The
Equality
highs
the
money
being
divided
for
startups
and
small
business,
because
we
don't
see
no
visibility
of
this
happening
in
our
community
and
we
feel
like
it
is
unfair
and
unequal
judgment.
P
The
way
things
are
being
going
and
we
having
to
come
down
here
and
beg
and
plead
for
money
and
to
be
considered
for
anything
in
our
community
as
if
we're
invisible
and
we
don't
count
and
God-
is
watching
us
he's
not
happy
with
it,
see
the
size,
the
beaches
and
everything
corrode
it.
And
all
of
that,
because
God
is
not
pleased
with.
What's
going
on.
P
So,
the
sooner
that
we
realize
that
we're
bringing
forth
the
trouble
in
the
land
and
everything
because
of
the
way
that
we
treat
African
American
people
God,
is
not
pleased
at
the
way
things
are
going
and
money
being
distributed,
and
the
lies
that's
being
told-
and
this
is
the
word
for
you
all
and
you
won't
have
to
just
change
things
and
do
better
and
live
by
right
and
righteousness.
Thank
you.
M
My
name
is
Irma
Celestine
and
I
live
at
812
West
Columbus
Drive
for
the
past
14
15
years,
I've
been
trying
to
find
out
who
is
in
charge
of
this
place
here
the
city
because
I
try
to
see
the
mayor
and
I've
seen
every
department
whomever
is
in
charge.
There
no
answer
at
all
when
I
say:
I
live
at
812,
West,
Columbus
Drive
out
of
nowhere
just
the
city,
they
all
just
the
same
working
on
the
road
and
they
dig
a
hole.
M
They
have
fixed
that
certain
area
that
location
at
least
maybe
six
or
seven
times
and
I
guarantee
they
spent
over
a
million
dollar
back
and
forth
and
I
come
to
realize
that
there
is
a
conflict
of
interest
because
nobody
wants
to
hear
what
I
have
to
say
or
they're,
not
doing
anything.
I
speak
to
this
person.
Okay,
they
keep
on
calling
me.
They
never
really
give
me
a
concrete
answer.
So
I
don't
even
know
now.
I
got
so
tired
of
it,
and
I
got
sick
for
a
while
and
I
need
to
find
out.
M
Who
is
in
my
district
for
them
to
come
out
and
see
my
problem
right
now
in
Columbus
Drive,
where
I
live?
There
is
one
point:
three
million
dollars
home,
that's
been
billed
and
I
have
a
two
Lots
I
think
something
was
delayed
quickly
done
to
my
home,
but
I'm
not
leaving
until
I
get
a
concrete
answer,
and
not
only
that
I
from
the
beginning,
I
told
them
I'm,
not
after
money.
I
just
want
them
to
fix.
The
word
fix
my
home.
What.
M
I'm
on
the
west
side
of
North,
Boulevard,
okay
and
I
need
I,
don't
know
who's
in.
Are
you
from
ok?
Because
something
has
to
be
done
and,
as
I
said
before,
it's
a
conflict
of
interest.
I
noticed
it
right
away
and
I
remember
when
I
first
started,
I
think
mr.
John
at
one
point,
what
got
me
upset
over
the
years?
One
council
member
told
me
that
it's
better
to
deal
with
the
devil.
M
Then
it's
better
to
deal
with
the
devil
that
you
know
than
the
one
you
don't
know
and
I've
been
catching
hell
ever
since
this
time
this
time,
I'm
gonna
release
the
almighty.
The
creator
behind
whomever
did
me
wrong.
My
mother
wanted
to
live
with
me,
she's
88,
for
the
past
10
years
she
said,
I'm
gonna
live
with
you,
I
want
to
live
with
you,
I
can't
because
my
house
constantly
vibrating
shaking
and
it's
I
live
I
mean
I,
put
a
bed
right
next
to
the
window
with
a
sledgehammer
in
case.
M
M
Where
am
I
gonna
find
something
like
that?
I'm
a
single
person,
my
husband
died
several
years
ago
more
than
30
years
in
Vietnam,
veteran
I
didn't
get
anything
not
that
I'm.
Looking
for
anything,
no
someone
has
to
do
something
with
my
home
I,
don't
know
how
much
money
I
didn't
spend
on
cutting
trees.
I
went
to
all
kind
of
department,
it
seems
like
they
know
me.
This
is
if
she
comes
so,
nothing
has
been
done.
A
L
L
L
L
L
L
If
the
name
of
the
judge
and
that's
the
first
courthouse
name
in
the
south
after
a
black
man
is
alive
and
what
makes
it
even
worse
than
that,
there's
a
statue
there
of
Lady
Justice,
it's
just
us
that
don't
get
just
I
have
heard
no
justice
in
here,
though
there
it
is
right
there.
It
simply
says
my
uncle
was
George
Urban,
it's
them
jr..
L
L
The
judges,
grandfather
well,
I
said
you
know
what
I
think
about
it,
but
I'm
getting
ready
to
expose
this
to
the
press,
because
until
we
stop
lying
about
that
courthouse
and
the
person
who
name
is
on
that
courthouse
and
there's
Lady
Justice
right
there
in
front.
Well
guess
what
the
judges
aren't
named.
My
mother
Justine
Lavinia,
it's
them!
The
word
Justine
comes
from
the
word
justice.
My
mother
died
in
Tampa,
Negro,
Hospital,
June,
13th
and
hug
nephew
became
named
on
the
13th
Circuit
Court.
Well,
that's
313!
L
That's
a
heck
of
a
number
I'm
only
beginning
because
they
told
me
downtown
there
where
they
got
the
building
about
Tampa.
They
called
me
back
and
when
I
handed
in
this
F,
they
say
mr.
Darren,
you
absolutely
right.
That's
not
a
judge's
name!
Thank
you!
Letting
me
share,
but
this
is
just
a
beginning
from
its
it's
something
that
needs
to
come
to
an
end,
and
then
we
can
get
something
done
in
here.
Thanks.
I
You
I'm
not
gonna,
get
into
the
family
feud,
but
I
will
say
that,
to
the
best
of
my
knowledge,
judge,
Edgecumbe
was
a
great
man.
The
Lord
took
him
way
too
young.
His
wife
went
on
to
do
wonderful
things
at
the
school
board.
It
appears
from
the
best
of
my
knowledge
that
they're,
a
wonderful
family
and
I'm
glad
that
we
honored
them
with
a
courthouse.
I
A
L
Man
give
me
some
generous
time.
Let's
look
you've
heard
a
testimony
here
today
of
mismanagement
and
that
CR
days
of
being
mismanaged.
That's
what
all
those
people
are
crying
about
now.
I
know
that
we're
not
playing
that
in
West,
Tampa,
I,
hope.
The
mayor
does
not
report
this
economic
opportunity
director
and
you
know
who
he
is
because
he's
distance
he's
just
respectful
case
in
point.
L
Okay,
let's
just
go
down
list
here
when
they
tried
to
sell
18
acres,
the
I
repeat:
didn't
even
come
to
the
CRA
CAC
Committee
disrespectful
render
like
some
spending
money,
don't
put
the
name
CRA
on
that
RFP.
That's
why
we're
asking
for
that
property
to
be
land
banked
and
let
the
CRA
buy
it
and
the
CRA
can
control
it
because,
right
now
the
city
owns
it.
This
issue
of
the
city
in
CRA
has
been
miss
miss
done
by
the
city
for
years
for
decades.
As
long
as
I
know,
sir
raised
existed,
that's
your
problem!
L
You
have
an
inherent
historical
flaw.
You
have
management,
they
want
to
do
it
the
hell
they
want
to
do
not
what
the
citizens
want
to
do.
We
accidentally
get
a
historical
sign
going
it
taking
a
5-10
year
three
years.
They
have
a
conversation
with
dr.
Mann
sitting
right.
There
I
can
put
a
sign
up
there
quicker
than
that.
That's
discrimination,
Joe.
A
A
L
I
got
more
than
that
before
you
get
down
hello,
y'all
click
at
the
top,
but
let
me
go
on
share
and
that's
a
problem
when
you
consider
Evo's
is
because
we're
a
black
area
period.
That's
what
I
want
to
sign
up
there.
You
can
put
double-sided
don't
come
in
with
all
the
staff
who
are
lazy.
Staff
is
supposed
to
get
information
to
F
dot
been
done,
a
damn
thing.
Okay,
that's
one
of
the
prime.
What
we
need
to
do
is
land
bank
them
18
acres
to
the
sorry,
buy
it
from
them.
L
We've
got
over
five
million
dollars
in
the
West
Campus
CRE
right
now,
and
none
of
this
has
been
committed
to
anything
because
we
have
not
even
won
over
budget
or
what
we're
gonna
do
it.
We
got
subcommittees
coming
up
with
that.
That's
because
you
got
managers
over
it
and
we
don't
walk
there
Johnson
in
Westham.
We
don't
want
to
rotate
bad
news
of
what
we
got.
We
won't
Mack
in
town.
We
appreciate
Malcolm,
we
don't
want
any
Johnson,
you
know
rotate
no
garbage
over
that
part
of
town.
You
will
really
have
a
problem.
L
Let
me
move
on
here.
Man,
look.
We
need
the
city,
the
city,
the
city
needs
to
make
sure
and
renegotiate
the
contract
with
the
city
of
Tampa
that
Rick
that
manages
the
cra-z,
because
the
city
of
teloth
a
they
run,
errands
make
they
making
use
of
money
from
a
CRA
to
get
a
ferry.
They
can
use
the
money
to
everything
the
city
based
taxes
should
be
doing
and
they're
not
doing
that.
That's
what
it's
learning
blighted
when
it
has
CDBG
they
get
the
same
thing.
That's.
L
Why
probably
FBI
in
here
I'd
ready
to
bring
the
FBI
back
I'm
gonna
get
rid
of
me
finish.
Now.
We
are
tired
of
being
disrespected
by
CRA
staffers.
We
are
tired
of
being
more
disrespected
by
the
CRA
Economic
Opportunity
director.
The
man
need
to
go
marry
if
you
listen
and
get
rid
of
him
because
he's
gonna
catch
hell
with
him.
He
got
one
year
to
get
out
of
here.
L
I'm
telling
you
in
this
disrespect
got
to
stop
and
then
they
finally
and
finally,
to
calm
down
here,
cuz
I,
don't
heard
enough
nonsense,
we
were
so
disrespected.
They
tried
to
get
rid
of
me.
His
chair,
where
in
the
hell
is
the
policy
attorney
that
she's
supposed
to
have
an
agenda
today,
because
they
left
West
camper
I
thought
a
new
partisan,
all
y'all
approved.
They
brought
a
time
meeting,
West
embers
not
even
listed
in
it.
L
What
the
hell
is
that
we're
supposed
to
be
here
today
to
have
that
policy
updated
because
the
skin
down
it,
because
it
does
not
include
West
stamp
in
it
whatsoever.
That
was
a
mistake.
My
staff,
your
attorney
and
everybody
looked
at
it
not
caught
it
in
ten
seconds,
and
it
was
correct.
It
has
not
been
reissued.
This
board
is
not
voted
on.
That
was.
A
L
R
A
I
That
we
defer
defer
the
that
item,
I
guess
I,
don't
know
what
which
one
it
was,
but
it
was
about
the
you
know:
the
city
versus
the
private
entity
running
this
here
we
can
defer
that
and
from
my
perspective,
for
you
know
for
a
couple
months
but
I
think
most
importantly,
we
should
get
to
the
budget
work
through
the
budget
and
then
take
lunch.
That
would
be
my.