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From YouTube: Tampa City Council 05022019
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A
A
A
Think
first
of
many
many
mentors
as
part
of
a
veteran's
treatment
Court
that
has
been
honored
by
an
attorney
general
of
the
United
States
Eric
Holder
Jim
is
also
presently
the
president
of
Vietnam
Veterans
of
America
chapter
787
and
is
one
of
the
many
many
veterans
who
are
active
in
this
area,
improving
the
lives
of
his
fellow
veterans
and
many
people
throughout
this
great
state
and
community.
So
it's
our
pleasure
to
have
here
Colonel
Fletcher,
so
let
stand
for
the
prayer
and
please
continue
standing
for
the
pledge
which
Colonel
Fletcher
will
lead
Thank.
B
You,
mr.
chairman,
good
morning,
I'm
honored
to
be
here
today
to
give
the
invocation
at
the
first
regular
meeting
of
the
newly
elected
Tampa
Council.
May
we
pray
Heavenly
Father.
We
ask
your
blessings
on
this
meeting
in
these
men,
give
them
the
patience
of
Job,
the
faith
of
Moses
and
the
wisdom
of
Solomon
as
they
do
the
citizens
business.
B
C
A
E
Honorable
chairman,
kappa
city,
council,
honorable
membership
types,
contactus
city
council,
my
pleasure
this
morning
to
be
here
to
make
presentation
to
the
City
campus
water
department
on
two
issues.
One
is
the
presentation
of
the
fantastic
work,
that's
done
by
them
and
I'll
read
part
of
it:
the
recognition
of
the
Florida
water
reuse
week.
We
shall
be
celebrating
that
week
between
the
19th
of
May
and
25th
of
May
2019,
and
that
means
that
the
water
that
we're
using
that
we're
putting
in
the
bay
to
clean
up
the
bay
it's
effectively
working.
E
We
have
over
eight
hundred
thirteen
million
gallons
of
water
a
day
that
the
state
in
this
area,
sir,
not
the
city
of
Tampa
totally,
but
we
have
a
great
portion
of
that,
like
sixty
sixty
five
billion
gallons
a
day.
My
pleasure
to
represent
this
to
you
as
the
head
of
the
water
department
and
I,
know
you've
been
in
water
for
a
long
time.
You
were
hired
a
few
years
back
and
you
do
an
outstanding
job
and
you're
from
the
state
of
Kansas.
Yes,.
F
E
Sometimes
I've
been
calling
him
Kansas
for
four
years.
I'll
forget
his
name,
I'll,
be
very
honest
with
you
and
it's
just
I
I
call
people
by
their
nicknames
and
sometimes
I
get
caught
in
my
own
trap,
but
his
name
is
after
a
famous
Boulder.
What
is
it
well,
I
told
you
that's
a
congratulations
to
you
like
to
make
a
comment
on
what
it
is.
Thank
you
very
much.
B
Morning,
Council,
thank
you
for
taking
the
this
moment
to
recognize
how
important
water
is
in
our
lives.
So
many
times
we
wake
up
in
the
morning
and
never
give
a
second
thought
the
water,
but
we
use
it
all
day
long,
the
brush
our
teeth.
Take
our
showers.
Take
a
drink,
cool
water,
wash
the
dog
go
swimming,
wash
the
dishes.
B
We
use
water
all
day
long,
so
providing
this
precious
resources
in
a
central
city
service
and
an
important
part
of
moving
forward
with
providing
this
service
is
including
water,
reuse
and
our
plan
to
make
sure
that
for
generations
to
come,
we
have
an
ample
safe
water
supply.
So
thank
you
very
much.
Don't.
E
B
Yeah,
you
know
water,
reuse
so
far
has
been
really
focused
on
irrigation
and
that's
worked
well.
It
has
advantages
and
disadvantages,
one
of
the
other
ways
to
reuse
whether
they
put
potable
reuse
and
you
may
ask
why
you
need
to
do
potable
reuse
in
an
area
that
gets
plenty
of
rainfall
and
the
bottom
line
is
that
it
only
rains
for
a
little
while
during
a
year
most
of
the
months,
it's
very
dry,
and
it's
during
those
times
that
we
need
to
use
alternative
resources
like
potable
reuse
and.
E
Not
only
that
and
I
hate
to
think
that
my
time,
but
is
a
very
important
issue
coming
up
long
term,
the
same
water
that
we've
had
for
300
million
years,
it's
the
same
water,
we're
drinking
problem
is,
and
we,
the
humans,
keep
growing
in
population
and
the
grass
gets
greener
and
it's
applied.
Demand
gets
off
tilted
and
that's
why
you're
looking
at
this,
we
use
a
program
to
possibly
use
it
for
drinking
water
in
the
future.
Thank
you
very
much.
I
really
appreciated.
E
E
The
next
presentation,
through
the
city
of
Tampa
water
department,
for
the
drinking
water
site,
that
was
for
the
reuse
site,
and
this
is
from
May
5th
through
May
11th
of
2019,
and
it's
concerning
the
resource,
water
use
and
the
uses
of
water
and
why
we
have
the
water
department
and
it's
such
an
important
thing
that
we
need-
and
this
council
would
certainly
have
to
address
sometime
within
the
next
day
today,
starting
today
to
the
next
four
years,
when
our
term
expires.
What
does
it
mean?
E
Last
year
we
had
1201
water
breaks
in
the
city
of
town.
That
means
we
spend
resources,
water
that
was
already
treated
and
a
lot
of
resources,
capital
resources
to
replace,
not
replace,
sorry
to
repair
and
not
replace
the
system
and
we're
falling
short
of
that
and
since
I'm,
in
that
subject
matter,
we
had
over
nine
million
dollars
spent
last
year
and
just
replacing
true
sure,
every
treatment
lines.
E
So
this
council,
in
this
new
administration,
we're
gonna,
have
to
deal
with
something
in
excess
of
three
billion
dollars
repair
in
the
next
twenty
years,
and
with
that
thoughtful
nice
morning,
talk
I
appreciate
your
concern
and
I
want
to
thank
you
for
the
successful
story
of
Tampa
water.
I
know
your
main
source
of
the
Hillsborough
River,
but
what
you've
done,
and
the
city
of
Tampa
all
the
employees
in
the
city
from
the
administration
on
down
to
truck
drivers,
to
repairmen,
to
people
to
work
at
the
plant
from
people
that
test
the
water.
E
D
Anyway,
Chuck
right,
yes,
sir
okay,
I've
Chuck
so
years
back,
we
we
did
the
star
program,
obviously
before
you
were
here,
but
which
was
the
irrigation
system,
mainly
in
South,
Tampa
I
know
it
at
that
time.
Under
some
of
the
previous
administrations,
we
had
explored
star
2
as
the
next
phase
I'm
not
going
to
get
into
it
this
morning.
D
Obviously,
it's
off
agenda,
but
as
long
as
you're
here
I'd
like
to
request
that
you
perhaps
come
brief
us
in
a
workshop
on
the
feasibility
and
aspects
of
start
to
and
whether
or
not
that
would
fit
into
some
existing
workshop,
it's
fine
whenever
you
can
fit
it
in,
but
I
think
I
think
we
should
look
at
irrigation
as
a
possibility.
I
know
there
are
other
possibilities
that
the
administration
is
exploring
and
and
I'm
not
to
stop
making
any
decisions
on
any
of
that.
But
I'd
like
to
be
I.
D
A
Morning,
members
of
council,
it's
a
real
good
pleasure
to
see
you
this
morning.
I
have
a
commendation
that
I
will
give
to
a
nice
young
woman
by
the
name
of
Miss
Rachel
Carson
Olin
mark
Barcelona
come
up
here.
Rachel.
If
you
don't
mind
this
nice,
young
woman
is
really
one
of
the
most
impressive
people
have
ever
met.
My
entire
life.
Rachel
is
not
just
a
very
accomplished
model
and
literally
an
ambassador
for
our
country
for
people
with
special
needs,
but
rachel
is
also
on
the
spectrum
of
autism,
something
that
she's
very,
very
open
about.
A
If
you
look
at
her
many
many
achievements
that
she's
had
that
includes
Miss
South
East
international
competing
in
the
Miss
International
pageant
traveling
to
England
for
Autism
Speaks
in
Canada
for
the
global
autism
project,
walking
in
New
York
fashion,
serving
as
an
international
ambassador
for
the
unicorn
Children's
Foundation
being
a
board
member
of
USF
Center
for
autism,
related
disabilities.
I
see
miss
Rover
here
and
and
speaking
before,
the
United
Nations
is
the
key
speaker
at
the
UN
for
World
Autism
day.
A
A
I
missed
you
there.
She
was
diagnosed
with
autism
at
the
age
of
three
and
had
a
lot
of
other
challenges
that
come
up
naturally,
with
this
kind
of
challenge
in
life.
Things
like
dealing
with
bullying
in
school.
Imagine
of
the
the
social
awkwardness
that
we
all
have
going
through
school
and
then
imagine
going
through
that
with
a
condition
like
autism.
A
She
suffered
through
seizures
at
the
age
of
11
and
many
other
challenges
that
she's
been
so
very
open
with,
but
yet,
with
the
help
of
her
family,
her
faith
and
just
her
basic
ability
to
succeed,
she
has
managed
to
do
things
that
surely
very
few
of
us
in
this
room
can
do
so
for
that
and
so
much
more.
It
is
our
real
pleasure
and
honor
to
give
miss
Rachel
Barcelona
a
Tampa
City
Council
commendations.
If
you
want
to
say
some
orange
Rachel,
you
man.
H
It's
such
an
honor,
but
I
also
must
say
that
I've
been
to
the
Czech
Republic
for
the
global
autism
project
as
well,
and
that
is
very
much
my
passion
because
over
in
those
parts
of
the
world,
autism
is
not
known
at
all,
and
that
is
something
that
I
strive
to
help
with,
and
it's
also
an
honor
to
be
from
the
Tampa
Bay
area
and
now
champa
Bay
is
a
certified
autism,
friendly
City.
My
heart
beats
with
so
much
passion
for
that.
H
This
has
been
made
possible
by
including
individuals
with
autism
and
their
ongoing
efforts
to
increase
acceptance
in
the
community.
Most
importantly,
all
of
the
organizations
that
work
so
hard
to
understand
that
we
as
autistic
individuals
are
not
so
different
from
all
of
you
sitting
in
this
room
today
we
are
capable
of
anything
especially
standing
here
to
receive
Awards.
H
Well,
I
wanted
to
thank
you.
Everyone
who
was
newly
elected
I
think
that's
a
very,
very
big
accomplishment
and
I'm
very
proud
of
everybody.
Thank
you
to
Louise
here.
Oh
the
city
of
Tampa,
our
new
mayor,
Jane,
castor
who's.
Unfortunately,
not
here
today,
I'm
very
disappointed
because
I
love
her
so
much
and
Julie
ray
is
the
founder
of
diverse.
H
H
I
I'm
glad
that
chairman
Vieira
had
started
a
good
thing
out
of
new
Tama
with
the
autism
part
I
want
to
see
something
like
that
in
my
district
and
a
lot
of
people
don't
know
in
my
district,
we
lack
a
lot
of
things
and
I
want
to
see
your
coalition.
Some
groups
start
coming
to
the
east
side
of
town
and
helping
our
young
people,
which
need
it
and
I
look
forward
to
hopefully
working
with
you
in
the
future,
and
thank
you
again.
It
comes
from.
C
J
C
H
G
C
K
Morning,
Connie
Burton
Tampa.
First,
congratulations
to
all
of
you
and
in
the
prayer
this
morning,
in
the
mention
by
the
minister,
the
accomplishment
of
great
means
that
was
that
I
still
mentioned
you
know
through
Bible
verses.
What
it
inspired
me
is
that
each
man's
had
but
I
don't
see
up
there,
but
I'm,
not
frightened,
because
I
don't
see
it.
It's
a
woman,
a
woman
in
their
life,
a
mother,
hopefully
sisters
aunties,
and
so
their
inspiration
had
to
be
built
off.
They
had
to
do
goodbye
all
on
this
agenda
this
morning
and
I
know.
K
This
report
be
inclusive
of
all
of
that
that
we
are
seeing,
especially
in
East
Tampa
places
that
were
been
that
would
have
been
out
of
business.
Had
it
not
been
based
on
a
homeless
population
of
people
trying
to
scrape
up
day
by
day,
$60
$50
and
then
for
breakfast,
the
children
are
eaten
cookies,
and
so
there's
a
crisis
in
this
city
and
hopefully
I'm
hoping
that
this
group
here
with
trying
to
page
that
when
you're
dealing
with
developers,
you
make
them
accountable
real
quickly.
K
K
I
saw
a
man
chasing
attempting
to
chase
some
children
with
a
hammer
because
of
not
being
sensitive
enough
of
knowing
that
children
do
through
awkward
things
and
need
punishment,
but
not
by
hammer
and
had
it
not
been
by
the
intervention
of
other
women
I
would
hate
to
see
what
the
headlines
would
have
been
this
morning,
and
so
we
are
just
right
now
inside
of
each
stamp,
because
that's
what
I
love
so
dearly.
We
are
seeing
a
tremendous
change,
but
we
don't
plan
on
going
anywhere.
K
C
C
I
Burton
I
know
you've
been
a
longtime
activist
in
our
community
what
we
call
the
soldier
at
times
and
I.
It's
ironic
things
just
happen
for
a
reason
when
you
talked
about
homelessness.
Just
now,
I
was
at
my
business
last
night
and
someone
call
said
meet
me
at
the
gyro
shop
for
some
dinner
and
I
went
there.
I
saw
a
young
lady
almost
about
25
years
ago,
had
a
carriage
with
a
baby,
no
more
than
maybe
a
year
old
and
another
taller,
maybe
three
years
old
and
as
I
said
eating
my
meal.
I
I
watched
this
young
lady,
but
her
children
isn't
senior
and
her
mind.
She
was
hoping
somebody
would
give
a
hand
out
to
help
her,
because
the
young
toddler
kept
looking
pointing
at
the
food
of
everyone
in
the
restaurant
me
being
a
person
dealing
with
children.
All
the
time.
I
knew
that
child's
hungry
I
know
that
person
was
homeless,
and
so
I
say
to
you.
That
is
one
of
my
fights
and
on
the
campaign
trail.
Most
of
all,
these
councilmen
here
talked
about
those
issues
and
I
hope
they
stay
true
to
the
commitment.
I
What
they
told
the
voters
in
dealing
with
those
issues,
but
what
I
would
like
you
to
do?
My
aid
is
next
door.
If
you
would
go
over
it
and
Senator
form
I
like
to
meet
with
you
and
talk
about
some
of
those
issues.
Talking
love,
you
would
please
and
thank
you
for
you
coming
here.
Thank
you
sure,
Thank.
D
You
Connie
miss
Burton
Hey
good
morning.
Thank
you
for
your
kind
words
about
our
our
beginning.
I
just
wanted
to
point
out
I
pulled
items
29
and
30
specifically
because
they
address
not
homelessness
per
se
but
affordable
housing
that
we
are
doing
in
the
city.
Obviously
we're
not
doing
enough.
Maybe
we
will
never
do
enough,
though,
but
I
wanted
to
pull
those
items,
so
we
can
start
having
discussion
on
that.
I
just
wanted
you
to
be
aware
that
we'll
have
a
little
bit
of
discussion
on
that
later
in
the
meeting.
K
L
L
The
young
lady
spoke
very
eloquently
and
was
very
representative
of
something
that
she's
passionate
about
and
that's
good.
It's
always
good
to
see
young
people
doing
something
progressive
and
it's
always
good
to
see
progress.
Seeing
seven
men
sit
and
representing
the
city.
That's
not
progress,
it's
not
I,
don't
know!
If
you
need
to
expand
it,
so
you
could
be
more
inclusive,
but
that's
not
progress.
Seeing
men
in
2019
we're
in
the
way
to
2020
having
women,
bring
them
drinks
and
coffee
and
notes
or
whatsoever
in
those
cups.
That's
offensive.
L
It's
offensive
to
see
someone
get
into
work
at
10
o'clock
a.m.
in
the
morning
or
at
9
o'clock
in
the
morning
and
at
9:01
or
902
or
903
or
9:15
or
10:15,
a
woman's
bringing
them
something
to
drink.
That's
so
throwback,
that's
something
you
need
to
discontinue
altogether.
It's
offensive.
It's
a
got.
Daughters
and
I've
got
a
mother
and
I've
got
aunties
and
I
come
from
a
slave
background,
and
it's
offensive
just
when
you
see
it.
It's
offensive
we're
26
senators
population
and
how
we're
treated
what's
allocated
for
us
on
this
budget.
L
L
L
These
are
the
things
that
need
to
be
addressed
year
after
year
decade
after
decade,
you
hear
the
same
thing:
eight
years
of
Nixon,
eight
years
of
Reagan,
eight
years
of
Bush,
eight
years
of
Clinton,
eight
years
of
Obama,
not
eight
years
of
Trump,
make
America
great
again
gentrification.
It
all
leads
to
the
same
path,
make
America
great
again
in
Venezuela,
trying
to
get
free
oil,
the
oil
baron's
trying
to
get
free.
You
all
make
the
city
of
Tampa
the
next
great
city
gentrification.
L
It's
all
the
same
thing,
a
certain
kind
of
hatred
for
poor
and
working-class
people,
a
certain
kind
of
hatred
for
African
people,
it's
a
certain
kind
of
hatred,
and
this
right
here
can
break
the
hatred.
The
mayor,
the
city
of
Tampa,
went
out
his
last
few
weeks
on
the
job
with
a
nasty
racist
offensive
tweeted,
he
was
tweeting
that
they
say
no,
it
was
hacked
no.
His
finger
pushed
the
wrong
button,
and
now
that
clown
is
out
of
here
and
his
protege
is
in
that
need
to
change
that
system
need
to
change.
Thank
you,
sir.
L
A
M
Good
morning,
council
members,
chairman
Vieira,
my
name
is
Mario
Nunez,
one
5:02
to
rocky
ledge
tampa
see
if
I
can
offer
a
little
bit
more
of
a
palate,
cleanser
going
forward
and
and
just
open
my
comments
by
saying.
Congratulations,
first
and
foremost
to
the
newly
seeded
members
salute
and
happy
days
on
behalf
of
everybody
who
is
involved
in
in
Tampa
business,
especially
those
that
watch
their
watch,
the
watch
the
Tampa
native,
show
and
participate
in
that
endeavor.
M
M
The
nation
I
recently
had
the
good
fortune
of
joining
the
Board
of
Directors
with
the
Sister
Cities
organization,
under
the
auspices
of
the
city
of
Tampa
and
I'm,
their
communications
director,
in
addition
to
being
the
host
and
creator
of
the
Tampa
native
show.
So
these
things
are
all
present
in
my
life
at
the
current
time.
Many
of
you
have
heard
me
spoke
speak
about
the
issue.
If
you
just
look
at
top,
my
head,
you'll
probably
get
the
point,
but
I'm
just
I'm
not
here,
to
call
anything
to
action.
M
M
I
probably
would
have
got
locked
out
into
the
overflow
room
because
it
was
standing
room
only
as
it
turns
out
the
people
that
were
in
the
over
room,
we're
watching
it
on
a
giant
TV
screen,
and
so
was
I
it
just
happened
to
me
in
my
bedroom,
watching
it
on
my
TV,
but
it
was
amazing.
I
was
uplifted.
I
can
tell
there
was
a
genuine
sense
of
positivity
of
what
might
be
coming
around
the
next
corner.
M
You
guys
are
in
charge
of
kind
of
hand
on
the
tail
guiding
us
through
those
waters,
right,
of
course,
with
with
our
mayor's
guidance
as
well-
and
you
know
that's
a
female,
so
I
guess
we
can.
We
can
look
to
you
know
we
can
kind
of
balance
the
tables
a
little
bit
there,
but
again
I'm
here
to
say.
Congratulations
and
I'm.
M
Also
here
to
say,
and
many
of
you
have
been
on
the
Tampa
native
show
many
of
you
most
of
you
only
a
couple
of
you
haven't
to
be
quite
honest:
I
want
to
offer
the
open
invitation
at
anytime
to
come
on
the
show.
You
know
80%
of
the
people
that
view
the
show
and
then
appraise
the
show
and
appreciate
the
show
and
love
the
show.
Are
your
constituents
they're,
arguably
the
tail
that
wags
the
dog
and
they're
80%
of
them
vote?
M
So
if
any
time
you
guys
have
an
issue,
you
want
to
connect
with
your
constituents
directly
feel
free
to
come
and
use
the
Tampa
native
show
as
an
opportunity
to
to
voice
your
concerns
or
our
call
to
action.
That
door
is
always
open
to
you
guys
so,
on
behalf
of
the
Tampa
native,
showing
all
her
fans,
salud
and
Happy
Days
great
job,
guys,
congratulations!
Thank
you,
sir,
and.
J
Think
one
quick
comment
about
affordable
housing,
affordable
housing
isn't
just
about
the
home
where
people
live,
it's
actually
about
creating
affordable
lifestyles
and
providing
people
access
to
mass
transit
that
is
effective
and
right
served
and
they
can
get
there
safely
by
walking
or
biking
without
being
fearful
of
being
hit
by
a
car.
And
unfortunately,
we
live
in
a
city
in
a
County.
That's
one
of
the
most
dangerous
places
in
the
country
for
for
walking
and
biking
and
I'm
here
to
bring
up
a
current
project
that
you
all
can
affect
today
and
that's
beta
bay-buh
levar.
J
The
project
has
been
going
on
for
a
long
time.
It's
probably
one
of
the
most
hotly
contested
projects
in
our
city.
There's
been
more
public
outcry
over
the
decisions
that
our
previous
mayor
made
on
that
road
than
any
other
project.
We
had
over
120
neighbors
community
members
walk
along
the
street
to
protest
the
mayor's
decision
to
leave
the
road,
as
is
as
a
four-lane
highway.
J
We
have
had
four
hundred
and
sixty
plus
petitioners
sign,
asking
the
mayor
to
rethink
his
decision
and
to
reconsider
the
project
and
allow
for
more
public
input
and
more
community
building
to
provide
the
right
things
and
bring
more
safety
features
and
bring
the
community
together
to
create
the
project
that
everyone
wants.
Beta
Bay
is
a
road
that
has
three
schools
on
either
side
of
it:
multiple
churches,
multiple
small
businesses.
J
It
is
a
road
that
compels
people
to
walk
and
bike
to
do
things
that
they
want
to
do
in
their
community
and
right
now,
our
business
owners
are
having
to
lock
the
door
on
a
long
beta
Bay,
because
it
is
so
unsafe.
The
road
has
been
repaved,
but
there
still
is
a
last
layer
of
asphalt
that
has
not
been
laid
and
all
we're
simply
asking
is
for
us
to
be
able
to
come
together
and
to
talk
about
the
striping
plan.
For
that
road.
We're
not
asking
to
change
anything.
The
sidewalks
have
been
improved.
That's
great.
J
The
road
has
been
repaved
everyone's
happy,
but
unfortunately
we're
seeing
a
lot
of
speeding.
There
have
been
multiple
accidents
and
crashes
along
the
corridor.
Families
are
walking
along
beta
Bay
more
than
ever
before,
because
there's
an
ice
cream
shop
and
there's
copies
and
there's
churches
and
there's
schools
and
people
have
to
walk
to
school.
People
want
to
walk
to
school,
but
this
road
is
a
danger
to
our
community.
Trucks
are
speeding
down
it.
J
Cars
are
speeding
down
it
and
we
need
help
I'm
asking
you
today,
too,
consider
asking
the
mayor
to
delay
the
project
or
just
allow
the
community
to
come
together,
one
more
time
to
understand
what
the
project
is,
because
it's
have
been
a
black
hole.
The
County
Commission
and
the
City
Council
voted
unanimously
to
ask
the
mayor:
do
that
on
February,
20th
and
February
21st
of
this
year.
Please
support
the
last
council
and
last
Commission's
request
and
let's
get
this
right.
Thank
you.
Thank.
A
You,
sir
anyone
else
here
for
public
comment:
okay,
any
requests
by
the
public
for
reconsideration
of
legislative
manners,
okay
being
none
apparent
here
we
go
on
to
committee
reports
and
consent
agenda
items.
I
will
we
will
be
assigning,
obviously,
committee
chairs,
etcetera,
so
what
I
will
do
right
now
is
just
begin.
Am
I
right
with
our
returning
veteran
councilman
ding
Felder?
If
you
could
or
strike
that,
actually
forget
it.
I'm
sorry
we're
going
to
an
ordinance.
Is
anyone
here
from
the
staff
on
an
ordinance
number
on
item
number
3.
N
Department
item
3
as
an
item
presenting
for
first
reading.
These
are
not
noticed.
Public
hearings
are
just
here
for
first
reading,
so
you
don't
typically
have
a
staff
report.
This
one
in
particular,
is
a
scriveners
error,
because
when
you
approve
the
previous
ad
valorem
for
a
tax
assumption
for
historic
property,
we
did
not
include
the
detailed
legal
description.
So
this
is
just
to
attach
the
legal
description
for
the
address
that
was
already
contained
in
the
original
ordinance.
Okay,.
A
D
Mr.
chairman
I'll
move
an
ordinance
amending
ordinance
number
2019
50
passed
an
ordained
by
the
City
Council,
the
city
of
Tampa,
on
April
4
2019,
correcting
a
scriveners
era
for
an
ad
valorem
property
located
at
1902,
North
Avenida
república
de
Cuba
by
intent.
Sorry
about
that
Spanish
by
attaching
exhibit
a
legal
description
providing
for
severability
providing
an
effective
date.
We.
O
G
N
Curt
legal
apartment
item-
four
is
also
an
item
here
for
first
reading,
there's
also
not
a
public
hearing,
so
you
will
not
have
a
staff
report.
You
will
have
a
full
staff
report
at
your
second
reading.
This
is
actually
a
new
historic
preservation,
property
tax
exemption
application.
And
again
you
will
have
your
first
staff
report
at
the
public
hearing.
Okay,.
J
Being
an
historic
preservation,
property
tax
exemption
application
relative
to
the
restoration
renovation
or
rehabilitation
of
certain
property
owned
by
Ybor
Benedetto
LLC,
located
at
1915
North
Avenue
de
república
de
Cuba
Tampa
Florida
in
the
Ybor
City
National
Historic
Landmark
District,
based
on
certain
findings
providing
for
notice
to
the
property
appraiser
of
Hillsborough
County,
providing
for
severability
providing
for
repeal
of
all
ordinances
and
Conflict
providing
an
effective.
We.
A
A
A
A
E
E
E
A
E
I
I
I
I
A
A
A
J
A
We
have
a
motion
by
Councilman
Carlson,
a
second
by
council
Maniscalco,
all
in
favor
any
opposed
okay.
Next,
we
move
to
item
number
34
and
I'm
correct
here:
two
quasi
judicial
proceedings:
oh
okay,
so
it's
not
10:30
yet,
so
we
will
move
now
to
items
being
removed
from
the
consent
agenda.
If
any
and
we
have
716
18,
29
and
30.
Is
anyone
here
on
any
of
these
items
from
staff?
D
P
D
Morning,
lieutenant
thanks
for
joining
us,
sir.
So
this
this
item
just
on
its
face,
is
$600,000
and
change
item
for
a
new
camera
for
the
that
hang
on
the
bottom.
The
helicopter
correct,
that's
correct,
okay,
so
a
couple
of
things
and
I
apologize.
Typically,
if
given
more
time,
we
just
got
sworn
in
yesterday,
we've
given
more
time,
I
would
have
actually
had
this
conversation
and
advancement,
maybe
alleviated
the
need
for
you
to
can
come
here,
so
we'll
try
and
do
that
in
the
future.
D
I,
usually,
do
you
guys
pull
you,
you
awarded
the
item,
but
you
threw
out
the
first
bidder.
So,
let's
deal
with
that,
first,
okay,.
P
So
one
of
our
requirements
in
the
bid
was
that
the
facility
for
the
installation
be
within
30
nautical
mile
nautical
mile
radius
of
Tampa
International
Airport,
which
is
where
we
have
our
aviation
unit.
There
was
a
bitter
I
believe
they
were
three
thousand
dollars
cheaper,
but
they
are
120
nautical
miles
from
the
airport
on
the
east
coast
of
Florida
and
Melbourne.
So
the
issue
with
that
is
that
we
have
to
fly
our
helicopter
to
that
facility.
Our
helicopters
cost
about
$650
an
hour
operate,
so
we
would
have
to
fly
a
helicopter
there
to
drop
off.
P
P
So
if
we
keep
having
to
ferry
the
helicopter
back
and
forth
to
the
East
Coast,
it's
going
to
eventually
cost
the
city
a
lot
more
money
in
fuel
and
maintenance
expenses,
because
our
maintenance
and
everything
is
based
on
ours
and
if
we're
spending
all
these
hours
transporting
helicopters
to
the
East
Coast.
That
means
that
we're
not
going
to
be
available
to
answer
calls
for
service
within
the
city.
So.
D
When
I
read
that
it
made
perfect
sense,
since
what
I
was
curious
about,
was
him
and
maybe
theirs
something
else
here,
that's
not
in
the
paperwork.
It
appeared
that
the
successful
proposed,
successful
bidder
and
I
come
from
a
purchasing
background,
as
Gregg
knows,
but
the
successful
bidder
was
shows
a
Brooksville
address
and
when
I
googled
out
base,
we
all
do
Brooksville
my
dad
used
to
live
up
there.
D
It
showed
it
and
specifically
to
that
address
it
showed
it
as
approximately
42
miles
regular
miles
when
I
translated
that
into
nautical
miles
that
came
out
to
36
nautical
miles
know
mr.
Shelby
always
advises
us
to
avoid
litigation.
It
concerns
me
that,
even
though
it's
a
great
idea
to
be
within
30
miles
that
that
Brooksville
facility
is
actually
36,
multiple
models
was
there.
Am
I
missing
something
there?
My.
D
P
M
D
D
The
other
question
is
sort
of
a
maybe
a
bigger
picture
question
and
made
it
to
either
one
of
you
in
regard
to
the
sit-in,
the
city.
Sometimes
we
least
think
big-ticket
items
as
a
matter
of
fact
later
on
the
agenda,
we
talk
about
leasing,
a
streetsweeper
instead
of
buying
one,
and
my
wife
is
the
technical
person
in
our
household,
but
she
actually
asked
this
question
to
she
said
you
know
we
have
cameras
in
our
house.
P
And
I
think
that
if
we
were
actually
spending
city
money
for
this,
that
would
be
a
very
appropriate
thing
to
do.
However,
this
is
grant
funded
through
you
as
II
the
urban
area
security
initiative,
which
is
a
state
program
that
uses
federal,
Department,
Homeland
Security
money.
So
there's
no
expenditure
on
the
part
of
the
city
for
this
well.
Do.
P
P
F
Good
morning
cops
a
great
experiment,
director
purchasing
to
address
your
concern.
Councilman
Dean
felt
regarding
without
the
city
would
be
sued.
That
is
unlikely.
The
low
bidder
did
file
an
appeal.
The
city
did
respond
to
that
I'm.
Sorry,
protest
and
the
city
did
respond
to
the
protest,
but
the
bill
did
not
appeal.
So
in
all
practical
purposes,
there's
no
opportunity
yeah.
F
D
F
D
F
D
A
Let
me
ask
a
question
if
I
made
so
the
officer
sir,
if
I
may,
the
two
weeks
requested
will
that
in
any
way
endanger
any
of
our
public
safety
operations
or
in
any
way
cause
any
major
structural
inconvenience,
a
Tampa,
Police,
Department
and
no
councilman
goods
I
think
also
wanted
to
speak
or.
I
P
So
the
it
was
basically
the
same
product.
The
only
difference
is
the
distance
that
we're
gonna
have
to
travel
for
installation
and
repairs.
That
was
the
only
difference
between
the
two
bidders
so
that
three
thousand
dollar
difference
in
the
price.
It's
it's
going
to
be
recouped
with
with
our
expenses
to
have
to
fly
two
helicopters
back
and
forth
as
to
your
other
questions.
So
there
are
current
gyro
camera
systems.
They
were
purchased
in
1999,
so
they
have
1999
standard
definition.
Video.
P
These
are
state-of-the-art,
high-definition
cameras,
they
have
high-definition
thermal
imaging
as
well,
so
our
helicopters
can
actually
be
higher,
which
would
alleviate
a
lot
of
the
noise
for
the
residents
in
the
area
that
the
helicopters
flying
over.
In
addition,
the
cameras
are
much
better,
so
they
could
actually
see
whether
or
not
somebody
is
holding
a
firearm
in
their
hand.
Our
current
current
cameras
can't
do
that
because
their
standard
definition,
they
could
read
a
tag,
for
example,
for
looking
for
a
specific
vehicle.
That's
been
used
in
a
robbery.
P
At
this
point
we
can
just
look
and
see
based
on
color
or
vehicle
type.
Maybe
that's
the
vehicle
with
the
new
camera
system
will
actually
be
able
to
zoom
in
and
see
the
tag
of
that
vehicle.
So
it's
it's
a
much
more
advanced
system.
It's
much
more
modern
and
fortunately,
due
to
the
age
of
our
current
systems,
were
not
able
to
upgrade
them
to
high-definition.
P
Yeah,
it's
going
to
cause
a
delay.
It's
obviously
where
we,
you
know
the
letters
been
signed
and
we
we
can
begin
installation.
You
know,
as
soon
as
council
gives
the
approval
I
just
I
just
checked
on
my
on-air
nav,
which
is
the
system
that
we
use
to
use
straight
line
distances
between
airports,
and
it
is
30
miles
between
Brooksville
Tampa,
Bay,
Regional
and.
A
E
E
P
A
A
D
The
lieutenant
wants
to
specifically
and
expressly
say
that
he's
he
can
testify
that
it's
that
it's
30
nautical
miles
or
less
from
from
there
to
there,
then
I
could
accept
that.
But
I
don't
know
if
you're
in
a
position
to
say
that,
based
upon
your
quick
glance
at
it,
you
know-
and
so
you
know-
I
just
think
and
I'm
glad.
Our
city
attorney
is
here,
because
these
are
important
matters.
D
D
Ultimately,
if
let's
say
it's
35
nautical
miles
to
Brooksville
staff
would
probably
come
back
and
say
we're
gonna
wave
that
bid
condition
and
then
Council
would
say:
okay,
we'll
agree
with
that
and
then
we'd
wave
the
big
condition
and
then
we'd
move
on
and
award
it.
But
you
know
I
just
think
that,
like
I
say
the
city
and
the
people
and
all
the
vendors
tell
us
that
you
know
they
rely
on
us
to
do
things
according
to
to
the
bid
specs
and
okay.
G
I'll
trade,
a
legal
department,
he
checked
with
a
navigational
system.
As
you
know,
I
was
in
a
traffic
controller
at
one
time,
so
the
navigational
system
is
saying
30
miles,
30
nautical
miles,
that's
correct!
When
you
go
to
Google
you're
gonna
get
Street
miles
and
it's
gonna
be
a
little
bit
longer
there.
Obviously
cuz
you
have
turns
to
go.
So
if
you
use
the
navigational.
Excuse
me
if
I
follow
that.
D
G
D
City
tourneys
comfortable
with
it
I,
am
with
his
with
his
history
and
if
the
lieutenant
wants
to
confirm
that
I'm
comfortable
with
no
but
I
had
one
other
question.
Mr.
Chairman
I
appreciate
your
indulgence
again.
This
goes
back
to
my
purchasing
background
rag
and
I
have
many
conversations
about
these
sort
of
things.
The
when
I
read
through
the
specs
it
looked
clearly
look
like
the
department
was
specking,
a
specific
camera
because
there's
15
or
20
line
items
that
are
very
detailed
to
to
you
know
it.
D
It
looks
like
okay,
let's,
let's
look
at
the
specs
for
that
camera
and,
let's
put
it
into
our
bit
I
I'm,
not
necessarily
criticizing
you
or
the
department
on
on
doing
that,
I,
just
I'm,
just
wondering
and
Greg.
Maybe
you
want
to
answer
this
is
that
is
that
what
we're
doing
here?
If,
if
it
is,
why
didn't
we
just
sole-source
it?
You
know
and
say
we
want.
D
F
Experiment
person
director,
we
rely
upon
our
users
council
buildings-
they
built
in
this
case
the
police
department
that
really
tell
us
in
terms
of
what
is
best
to
meet
their
needs
now
and
this
particular
answers.
We
did
spectra
particular
camera,
but
we
knew
that
there
was
competition
available
on
it,
so,
rather
than
opening
up
to
a
very
broad
field
and
have
lots
of
things
that
will
come
in
that
would
not
meet
their
needs
and
have
to
disqualify
a
lot
of
companies.
F
P
And
one
of
the
other
issues
with
that
too
is
so.
This
was
purchased
with
the
this
is
going
to
be
purchased
with
uiz
funding,
so
in
2017
the
Hillsborough
County
Sheriff's
Office
obtained
the
same
camera
through
uiz
funding
as
well.
So
since
you
Aziz
a
regional
group,
there
is
a
possibility.
If
there
were
to
be
a
major
incident
or
something
we
could
borrow
the
sheriff's
office
cameras
and
installed
on
one
of
our
helicopters.
P
A
D
A
D
Thank
you.
Mr.
Weiss
and
my
questions
relate
to
item
16
and
18
and
again
mr.
Spearman
I'm
glad
you're
still
here,
item
16
is
it's
a
thirty
thousand
dollar
change,
but
I
think.
Ultimately
this
was
a
three
hundred
twenty
thousand
dollar
contract
for
concrete
work
and
at
one
of
the
pumping
stations,
concrete
repairs
and
that
sort
of
thing
it
appears
on
item
16
that
there
was
some
reference
to
MBE
or
SPE
small
minority,
business
or
small
business,
that
there
was
no
participation
on
item
16,
an
item
18
to
the
city's
complimenting
the
city.
D
It
appeared
that
there
was
some
sheltered
market
participation
and
solicitation
I,
don't
think
item
18
is
actually
yours,
but
so
gentleman
on
item
16.
Why
would
we
have
done
$320,000
of
concrete
work,
which
seems
to
me
just
in
my
with
my
limited
knowledge
could
be
something
that
we
could
get
a
subcontractor
in
from
the
community,
perhaps
in
minority
business
community,
to
assist
with
that
type
of
work.
Yeah
on.
G
This
contract-
this
is
a
highly
specialized
concrete
work
and
coding
system
where
you
have
to
be
certified
from
the
manufacturer
because
of
the
highly
corrosive
atmosphere
and
a
pumping
station.
So
we
got
four
bidders
and
they
had
to
have
that
certification
to
be
qualified.
So
before
the
bid,
when
we
sat
down
with
the
MBE
office,
there
were
unfortunately
no
n
bees
that
had
that
certification
is.
D
G
Typically,
we
do,
but
it
was
so
highly
specialized
that
that
firm
did
it
all.
You
know
they
go
in
there.
They
have
the
expertise
to
chip
away
the
concrete,
evaluate
the
depth
of
it
and
then
decide
how
much
of
this
engineered
coating
product
you
put
on.
So
then
there
were
no
identified
wmb
used
to
do
that
or
break
up
any
of
that
work,
because
that
was
the
work
well.
D
Okay,
I'll
keep
asking
that
question
as
we
as
we
proceed
on
these
types
of
items
for
the
next
four
years.
So,
let's,
let's
see
see
we'll
see
if
there
is
a
greater
opportunity
to
include
subcontractors,
you
know
on
picking
up
just
the
periphery,
not
the
technical.
You
explained
that
very
well,
there's
a
highly
technical
component
to
this
that
we
obviously
don't
want
to
risk
or
jeopardize
that
we
can't
risk
or
jeopardize.
But
if
there's
peripheral
stuff
going
on,
maybe
the
subs
can
help
absolutely
thank
you.
G
D
A
D
F
D
You,
mr.
chairman,
yes
Greg,
so
this
is
this
is
the
flip
side
of
that
of
that
earlier
question.
It
appears
that
an
item
18
we
are
looking
to
go
out
and
we
have
look
to
go
out
into
the
community
with
a
SB
or
I.
Don't
know
if
it's
MBE,
but
it
appears
to
be
SB
and
sheltered
market.
Could
you
explain
a
little
bit
about
what
we've
done
and
why
we've
done
it
and
how
successful
that
is,
one.
F
Like
the
discussion
we
just
had,
this
particular
solicitation
did
one
two
three
four
five
potential
bidders,
and
so
this
was
sheltered
as
a
recommendation
about
a
minority
business
development
office
and,
of
course,
that
includes
the
five
County
area
that
we
look
at
in
terms
of
out
in
the
pool.
We
didn't
see
five
bids
and
RJ
of
advertising
Inc
doing
business.
The
PM
reports
was
successful.
F
J
Can
further
yes,
sir
I
just
want
to
say:
I
concur
with
Councilman
ding
Felder
about
the
participation
of
minority
businesses,
as
we
were
on
the
campaign
trail
over
and
over
and
over
again
there
were
communities
that
came
to
us
and
said
that
they
felt
that
they
were
not
included
and
I.
It
seems,
like
the
city,
does
a
good
job,
but
anything
that
we
can
do
to
do
even
more
and
also
to
communicate
what
we're
doing
with
me
very
helpful
and
you
know
working
with
the
community.
Thank
you.
Thank
you.
A
And
and
I
would
I
mean
for
new
council
members
have
may
have
any
interest
on
this
very
important
issue.
You
know
what
staff
meetings
can
occur
to
inquire,
why
these
issues
comes
with
a
filter.
You
know
obviously
about
this
more
certainly
the
night
Robertson
being
here
for
8
years,
but
for
our
new
council
members,
councilman
Goods
calling.
I
I
know
B&B
well,
I've
done
some
business
with
them
as
well,
and
we
have
a
lot
of
community
small
businesses.
Do
this
type
of
work?
Are
there
any
workshops
in
our
communities?
So
people
can
actually
know
the
process.
I
think
that's
a
challenge
sometimes
that
we
don't
know
to
note
and
I
like
to
see
somehow
that
the
operations
department
go
out
in
community,
so
people
can
know
and
have
workshops.
So
our
vendors
that
are
in
our
smaller
communities
know
what
the
processes
are
and
know
how
to
obtain
these
contracts.
I
feel.
F
Right
but
counsel
goods
we
are
actively
involved
in
outreach
to
the
community
and
the
community.
That's
really
on
auspices
of
Gregory
Hart.
As
the
minority
business
development
manager.
We
do
give
an
orientation
to
newly
certified
firms
that
come
to
the
city,
but
we
have
lots
of
information
on
the
city's
website
and
that
may
be
a
discussion
that
we
may
want
to
have
more,
not
with
minority
business
development
in
terms
of
additional
outreach
initiatives,
but
I
do
know
that
they
are
involved
in
those
I.
F
A
D
I'll
move
the
item.
I
did
one
at
second
what
mr.
mr.
Giggs
was
saying
that
we
did
here
in
the
community
during
during
not
the
flavor,
but
during
the
campaign
process,
that
the
city
could
be
more
proactive
out
in
the
community
to
help
train
people
and
and
get
them
involved
and
I
think
that
that
I
think
that's
important.
We
can't
we
can't
just
wait
here
and
and
in
the
ivory
tower
and
expect
people
to
know
how
to
do
it.
So
so
we
should
do
that.
I'll
be
glad
to
move
item
18,
okay,.
A
Q
I'm
here
for
items
29
and
30
and
I
brought
you
don't
go
to
a
gun
fight
without
your
hired
guns,
so
I
certainly
brought
mine.
Vanessa,
obey
I
will
explain
in
detail
any
questions
you
might
have,
but
generally
the
item
29
its
our
agreement
with
rebuilding
Together
Tampa
Bay
we've
been
partners
with
them
for
several
years.
They
build
over
20
25
houses
in
Sulphur
Springs.
Q
O
A
D
Morning,
thank
you
for
joining
us
and
thanks
for
the
work
you
do
so
on
items
29
and
30
and
mister
snowing
I.
Think
just
answered
part
of
my
question
on
29
in
regard
to
this
particular
vendor
is
constructed.
Constructing
20
to
25
homes
a
year.
Is
that
specifically
with
us
and
working
with
our
our
grants
and
that's
where
they?
Yes,.
O
In
2014,
we
signed
an
agreement
with
rebuild
together,
Tampa
Bay,
to
build
homes
in
the
Sulphur
Springs
area
and
he's
continuing
to
do
that.
We've
provided
a
million
dollars
and
about
16
Lots.
At
that
time
we
have,
as
we
acquire
additional
Lots.
We
provided.
Those
to
him
he's
also
picked
up
additional
Lots
as
we're
trying
to
revitalize
that
area
and.
D
R
O
Yes,
artis
is
when
we
first
started
building
in
that
neighborhood,
we
couldn't
get
the
homes
to
value
at
the
comp,
so
we
started
selling
the
homes
at
about
80,000
and
in
creasing
Lee
moved
it
up.
It
costs
us
150,000
to
build
the
home,
but
we
were
only
able
to
sell
it
for
80,000
because
it
was
such
a
depressed.
O
D
D
O
What
we
want
to
do
is
sell
homes
for
what
they
are
valued
at
and,
if
you
devalue
them,
selling
them
at
the
eighty
really
hurts
the
neighborhood
selling
them
at
140
and
then
giving
them
downpayment
assistance
to
bring
it
down
to
what
people
can
afford
is
how
we've
been
moving
forward,
because
what
we
want
to
do
is
have
all
of
our
neighborhoods
be
neighborhoods
of
choice.
What.
O
They
offer
what
we
do.
Is
we
layer
the
downpayment
assistance
so
suit
through
the
city
we
provide
the
map
program,
which
currently
is
providing
15,000
in
downpayment
assistance.
You
can
couple
that
with
the
state
program
that
provides
another
15,000
and
then
rebuild
together,
Tampa
Bay
was
putting
another
15,000
so
that
140
now
comes
down
to
about
a
hundred
thousand
in
terms
of
the
mortgage
that
someone
would
have
so
instead
of
looking
at
the
home
price,
we
should
look
at
the
mortgage
that
the
individual
is
getting
the.
D
Last
question:
mr.
chairman
and
I
appreciate
in
the
big
picture,
because
I
know
you
probably
have
a
various
programs
that
you're
working
with
different
federal
and
state
monies
as
well
as
our
local
monies.
Do
we
have
a
goal
in
terms
of
each
year
we're
trying
to
build
X
number
of
homes
of
last
year,
let's
say
2018
or
2019.
D
O
We
have
we're
trying
to
build
capacity
because
that's
been
our
issue
in
terms
of
meeting
our
goals.
One
of
the
things
that
we
have
been
really
focused
on
is
homeownership,
because
we
have
programs
that
provide
rental
assistance,
but
if
we're
providing
rental
assistance
at
fifteen
hundred
a
month
for
12
months,
that's
quite
a
bit
of
money.
It'd
be
better
to
give
a
person
that
in
downpayment
assistance,
move
them
into
a
home
where
they
can
stabilize
their
housing
car
as
well
as
stabilizing
the
neighborhoods.
So
our
real
goal
has
been
to
stabilize
neighborhoods
through
homeownership.
O
F
A
I
I
And
when
you
say
$140,000
now
and
I,
look
at
the
people
who
are
in
that
area.
That's
still
a
lot
of
money.
John
I
will
be
frank
with
you
and
that's
still
a
lot
of
money,
honey,
eight
thousand
one
hundred
four
hundred
eight
thousand
dollars
for
that
community.
That's
still
I
mean
that's
a
lot
for
that
community.
I
O
Of
that
cleanup
we
took
out
tons
and
tons
of
trash
out
of
that
community.
We're
continuing
to
clear
lots.
It
is
that
community
did
not
become
lighted
overnight
and
so
we're
not
gonna
revitalize
it
overnight,
but
we
are
working
diligently
with
through
rebuild
together,
Tampa,
Bay
and
them
building
homes.
We
have
additional
builders
that
have
gone
in
and
have
been
rehabbing
as
well
as
building
other
additional
single-family
homes
in
that
neighborhood.
O
So
we
are
starting
to
see
areas
of
that
neighborhood
turning
around
and
we
can
provide
you
with
the
addresses
of
where
those
homes
were
built.
We
can
provide
you
with
the
articles
and
the
newspaper
clippings
regarding
the
changes
that
have
happened.
We
have
changed
the
school
used
to
be
K
through
3
and
now
it's
K
through
8,
and
that
was
part
of
that
revitalization
effort.
O
I
Great
with
the
idea
of
getting
away
with
renting
and
people
have
ownership,
I
started
my
career
at
13th
and
waters
Avenue.
Where
was
a
7/11,
it
was
selfish,
Springs
Elementary,
and
they
have
done
some
things
that
school
is
still
a
failing
school,
because
the
area
is
still
transient.
We
have
looked
at
a
way
of
stop
the
transient,
I
think
with
getting
homeownership
that'll
stop
some
of
that.
But
I
still
contend.
A
Thank
You
counselor
anyone
else,
okay
and
I.
Thank
you
for
your
presentation,
I
think.
If
I
hear
something
from
this
council
today,
it's
that
we
want
to
invest
in
our
neighborhoods
on
issues
like
diversity
and
pluralism,
and
hiring
on
issues
like
housing,
etc.
I,
I,
second
councilman,
Goods
comments
with
regards
to
Sulphur,
Springs
I,
think
that's
an
area
that
is
prime
not
for
redevelopment,
that's
a
term
that
that
sometimes
has
negative
effects
on
lower-income
communities,
but
on
reinvestment,
there's
a
big
difference.
A
J
G
A
D
D
Six
hundred
a
month,
so
so
that's
and
I
think
that's
actually
a
good
analysis.
So
that's
your
goal
is
to
get
in
so
they
can
take
that
$1,500
rent
payment.
We
can
get
them
qualified,
they
have
to
take
classes.
I
assume
in
terms
of
you
know
their
their
life
skills
and
their
their
home
management
skills
and
that
sort
of
thing
I
think
that's
what
they
do
in
habitats,
yeah,
same
type
of
classes
and
programs
make
sure
that
they
can
pay
those
bills
and
then
and
then
we
get
them
in
there.
D
A
We
have
a
second,
we
have
a
motion
by
Councilman
ding
Felder,
a
second
by
councilman
Miranda,
all
in
favor
any
opposed,
okay.
Well,
yet
next
we're
gonna
go
to
item
number.
Thirty,
six
and
four
and
I
think
councilman,
dig
folder
said
something
very
wise
with
regards
to
items
on
the
consent
agenda.
Is
that
sometimes
council
members
will
hold
that
I
know.
Today
obvious
everybody
was
very
busy
with
the
first
day
of
council
and
all
that
stuff.
So
that's
why
I
know.
F
A
Q
What
I
handed
out
to
you
was
our
most
recent
point
in
time
count
one
of
the
first
things
in
it
and
that's
when
that
did
when
she
came
to
Tampa
many
communities
do
a
point-in-time
count
every
other
year,
because
we
wanted
to
give
a
much
more
accurate
breakdown
of
what
we
did
and
what
our
homelessness
impact
is
and
what
the
real
numbers
are.
We
were
able
to.
Q
We
got
permission
in
essence
to
do
the
point-in-time
count
every
year
generally,
as
you
can
see
when
we,
when
she
first
started
here
at
Fort
2014
through
some
of
her
programs
and
some
of
the
other
stuff
that
she
could
touch
on
in
a
second
generally,
we've
gone
down
over
that
five
year
period
about
15%,
which
is
a
significant
number
we
have
reached.
What
is
called
functional
zero,
which
means
the
homelessness
that
we
do
experience
we
work
very
hard
and
making
it
a
very
short
and
infrequent
experience
of
homelessness.
Q
I,
you
know
you're
not
ever
going
to
be
able
to
walk
outside
and
just
see
absolutely
nobody
on
the
streets,
because
that's
a
very
close
enough
impossibility
to
do,
but
what
we
can
do.
What
we
have
done
is
get
down
to
what
is
called
functional,
zero
by
keeping
homelessness
brief
short-lived
and
infrequent.
So
if
somebody
is
homeless,
they
experience
at
one
time
and
they
utilize
a
lot
of
the
programs
with
our
continuum
of
care
providers
that
help
keep
them
in
a
house.
Q
One
of
the
other
things
that
I've
talked
on
that
I'll
give
the
floor.
They
have
to
Annette,
sooner
or
later,
you're
going
to
hear
about
Trinity
café
if
you
haven't
already
so
what
we
have
done
all
with
Antoinette
and
Vanessa
myself
officer,
McDonald
and
randy
wittman
from
TPD,
some
folks
with
the
Sheriff's
Department
Tom
manse,
who
is
the
chair
CEO
for
feeding
Tampa
Bay?
They
have
taken
over
the
operation
of
that.
We
also
working
with
them
Hillsboro
County,
but
the
significance
in
that
is
paternity.
Cafe
previously
would
just
do
food
distribution.
Q
Q
That
is
to
kind
of
start
doing
some
interviews
of
the
folks
that
are
using
this
facility,
these
this
opportunity
to
have
some
food
and
interview
them
and
try
to
get
them
into
what
is
called
our
unity
system,
which
that
starts
to
identify
what
their
needs
are.
What
other
kind
of
services
can
help
address?
Why
why
they're
homeless
or
why
they
are
on
a
poverty
level?
Q
But
many
of
the
folks
that
go
into
Trinity
café
are
not
necessarily
homeless,
though
there
is
a
significant
population
of
homeless
people
that
take
advantage
of
what
Trinity
café
does,
but
now
that
we're
able
to
go
in
there
and
do
these
interviews
and
evaluate
what
kinds
of
services
we
can
best
bring
to
bear
to
get
to
the
functional
zero
status.
That
I
was
talking
about
is
a
significant
step,
because
previously
we
weren't
we,
we
did
not
cab
access,
but
with
Thomas
Nance
there
who
is
quits
and
Emily
on
the
tampa
hills.
Q
The
homeless
initiative
board
with
me.
So
he
is
very
much
in
tune
to
the
situation
that's
going
on
and
he
was
very
willing
to
allow
us
to
try
to
get
in
to
get
the
services
there.
The
other
thing
that
we're
trying
to
do
is
to
get
into
Trinity
café
because
it
is
a
it's
always.
Transportation
would
be
a
trip
generator,
but
it's
a
generator
for
people.
It's
an
attraction
that
people
in
there
right
other
types
of
services.
Q
You
know
maybe
once
there
any
different
kinds
of
screenings
and
things
like
that,
because,
as
some
of
the
other
folks
were
talking
about,
you
know
it's
it's
the
quality
of
life
that
you
try
to
create.
So
if
you
can
have
find
out,
what's
going
on
with
people
through
various
kinds
of
screenings,
29
more
seconds
and
I'm
done,
you
know
the
the
various
kinds
of
screenings
that
you
can
provide.
Q
Now
that
you
have
an
audience
that
you
have
access
to,
you
can
figure
out
what
those
needs
are,
so
we're
very
happy
and
very
excited
about
our
ability
to
work
with
Trinity
café
and
just
so
you
know.
Folks,
neighborhood
people
from
the
viene
Boer
area
sit
on
the
same
panel
every
month
with
us,
and
so
we
get
pretty
immediate
feedback
as
to
what's
working
or
what's
not
working.
A
S
Ahead
many
IMATS
when
I
hate's
triplet
the
CEO
for
the
hampton
hills
for
homeless
initiative,
and
typically
every
year
I
meet
with
each
of
the
council
members
one
on
one
to
talk
about
what
we're
doing
at
homelessness.
So
I
look
forward
to
setting
up
a
schedule
to
meet
with
you
all
again
this
year
the
tapping
heels
for
homelessness
initiative
is
designated
by
the
US
Department
of
Housing
and
Economic
US
Department
of
Housing
and
Urban
Development
hood
to
be
the
lead
entity
or
a
strategic
plan
on
homelessness.
S
We're
also
designated
by
state
government
and
local
government
to
be
the
lead
entity
for
the
strategic
plan
on
homelessness
on
a
monthly
basis.
We
meet
with
over
70
providers
within
our
community
to
strategize
on
homeless
issues.
Tapping
heels
for
a
homeless
initiative
focuses
on
six
strategic
priorities
to
make
homelessness.
Rare
brief
and
non-recurring
in
our
community
and
those
focus
groups
are
in
line
with
the
national
book
focus
groups,
so
ending
veteran,
making
veteran
chronically
homeless
homeless
among
unaccompanied
youth,
family
and
unsheltered
a
priority
in
our
community.
Also.
S
Our
organization
maintains
the
collaboration
we
develop
innovative
ideas
around
homelessness,
we
partner
with
other
agencies,
and
we
bring
in
resources
to
the
community
to
provide
services
for
those
experiencing
homelessness.
I've.
Given
you
a
list
of
some
of
the
pieces
to
the
puzzle
on
this
list
is
endless,
but
some
of
the
pieces
to
the
puzzle
are
prevention
and
diversion.
We
have
mobile
outreach
within
our
community,
we're
working
on
rapidly
rehousing
people.
That's
a
national
methodology,
we're
also
working
on
short
term
and
long
term.
Housing
vouchers
we're
wait.
S
The
continuum
of
care
has
several
signature,
events
and
collaboration
and
I'll
just
list
a
couple
of
them
here:
operation
revelry,
you
can
provide
homeless
homes
for
at
least
25
homeless
veterans.
Every
Veterans
Day
we've
been
doing
that
since
2014
last
year
we
did
the
first-ever
Hillsborough
County
expungement
clinic
where
over
about
a
hundred
and
fifty
people
that
had
criminal
records
were
able
to
get
those
records,
filled
and
expunged,
and
then
something
new
that
we've
started
over
the
last
two
year.
It's
called
a
cash
program.
It's
community-wide
affordable,
supportive
housing.
S
What
we
experienced,
those
that
have
housing
vouchers,
still
can't
get
into
housing,
the
housing
vouchers
provided
on
the
state
and
national
level
about
eight
hundred
dollars
in
housing
in
Tampa
and
Hillsborough
for
one-bedroom.
He
easily
get
two
to
three
thousand
dollars,
so
we
incentivize
the
landlord
or
property
owner
to
rent
to
those
that
have
rental
history,
financial
issues
or
criminal
background
issues.
So
the
last
pages
I'm
going
to
show
you
tom,
already
went
over
the
point
in
time.
Count
with
you
just
an
example
of
the
expungement
clinic
results.
We
partner
with
the
state's
attorney's
office.
S
1800
people
apply
for
the
expungement
clinic,
282
applications
were
approved,
143
people
were
processed
and
it
was
a
savings
to
our
citizens
of
over
three
hundred
and
fifty
thousand
dollars
based
on
the
pro
bono
work
and
the
waivers
fees
that
were
made
available.
That's
in
my
presentation,
I
look
forward
to
meeting
with
you
all
one-on-one
to
discuss
more
details
about
what
we
do
as
a
organization.
S
S
C
I
S
Me
disagree
with
you,
so
no
one
ever
wants
to
be
homeless.
People
have
not
may
not
have
the
aware
with
all
to
accept
the
services.
So
that's
maybe
just
the
semantics,
but
people
may
not
have
you
know
we're
dealing
with
people
that
might
have
think
like
a
three-year-old,
so
they
really
can't
consent
to
some
of
the
service
and
it
takes
years
and
years
to
build
up
that
relationship
that
may
have
bridges
that
have
been
burned
when
I'm
trying
to
access
services.
So
let.
I
Me
get
to
my
point
now
again:
I
know
the
different
types
of
homeless,
cuz
I've
dealt
with
them
for
many
many
years,
I
went
to
the
Tampa
Bay
feeding
America
coalition.
They
had
couple
weeks
ago
three
weeks
ago
and
I
think
it
was
a
good
round
table,
but
I
made
some
suggestions
at
that
time.
I
won't
make
them
to
you
as
well.
I
We
have
a
lot
of
families,
people
understand
a
lot
of
families
at
homelessness
and
we
have
to
look
at
when
people
have
past
indiscretions
they're
being
prevented
from
getting
a
place
and
no
everybody
wants
to
have
a
two-parent
home
and
a
lot
of
times.
One
of
those
parents
has
a
past
indiscretions
and
that
kills
the
whole
process.
We've
got
to
find
a
way
to
get
away
from
that
process
because
that's
what's
hurting
a
lot
of
our
families
from
getting
a
place
to
stay.
I
We
also
have
to
look
at
an
area
in
the
city
to
collaborate
with
the
county
and
state
to
find
the
area
that
we
can
have
a
place
where
I
call
a
center,
where
people
can
go
to
that's
away
from
communities
a
lot
of
times.
Communities
are
upset,
that's
Lee,
Trinity,
café
I've
dealt
with
them.
I
know
they're
issues
that
sometimes
people
who
are
sometimes
having
emotional
problems
or
no
prob.
They
don't
understand
about
communities
that
anymore
and
people
in
communities
get
upset
because
they
don't
understand
why
these
things
are
happening
in
their
community.
I
So
we
also
have
to
look
at
collaboration
with
those
certain
entities
to
find
an
area.
What
I
call
a
attractive
place,
where
we
tracking
those
who
those
families,
those
veterans
or
in
mental
illness,
and
get
them
as
services
their
needs.
So
I
like
those
these
efforts,
but
for
me
I
think
we
have
to
find
a
way
to
get
away
from
past
indiscretions
holding
people
that
to
me,
that's
the
biggest
thing
I
find
with
with
homelessness
people
can't
get
in
because
of
past
indiscretions
I.
S
Agree
completely
with
you
on
that's
one
reason:
we
did.
The
expungement
I
mean
that
people
can't
get
better
employment.
They
can't
get
housing,
they
can't
get
better
education
with
a
criminal
record.
In
many
cases,
this
the
people
that
apply
for
the
expungement
clinic
they
didn't
get
a
conviction.
No,
no
one
that
got
the
service
had
a
conviction,
but
there
were
difficulties.
So
we
have
on
our
website
where
people
that
exit
the
expunged
to
the
clinic
were
really
in
tears
because
they
have
hanging
overhead
for
10
15
20
years.
S
The
other
reason
why
we
started
the
cash
program
is
to
incentivize
those
landlords
to
take
those
people
that
have
past
indiscretions
that
we
talked
about,
and
so
we
locked
them
into
a
ten
year
or
15
year.
Commitment
on
those
particular
units
and
so
I
love
to
discuss
in
detail
with
you
about
those
and
hear
your
ideas
for
additional
ideas.
G
You
very
much
to
touch
on
councilman
gutes
point.
There
are
some
people
that
are
without
a
home,
yes
due
to
mental
illness,
because
they
simply
don't
have
the
medication
that
they
need.
Does
your
program
help
provide
or
help
assist
those
people
that
do
not
have
the
medication
or
cannot
afford
the
medication
to
balance
their
personalities
out?
Yes,.
S
We
work
really
closely
with
the
Hillsborough
County
Health
Department,
that
has
the
Hillsborough
County
health
care
plan
two
years
ago.
We
did
not
have
what
we
call
dedicated
soar,
specialists
and
soar
specialists,
help
people
that
have
mental
health
issues
or
any
type
of
social
security,
eligible
disability,
get
those
social
security
benefits
and
expedite
that
process.
We
went
from
zero
to
seven
in
in
less
than
two
years,
so
the
Hillsborough
County
healthcare
plan
has
really
stepped
up
with
providing
additional
services.
S
As
you
may
know,
just
a
couple
of
months
ago,
they
removed
the
three
strikes
on
that,
and
so
we've
been
having
that
discussion
with
them
ongoing
for
the
last
couple
years
of
how
can
we
increase
the
services
to
those
that
are
experiencing
homelessness?
We're
also
working
with
the
Central
Florida
behavioral
health,
to
increase
the
number
of
services
and
redirect
or
reallocate
funds
that
they
can
take
care
of
them?
We
could
provide
more
housing
vouchers
and.
G
S
Q
That's
one
of
the
reasons
we're
kind
of
excited
about
our
access
to
Trinity
café,
because
you
can,
when
we
go
there,
you
will
be
identifying
exactly
the
kinds
of
folks
that
you
are.
You
know.
Why
is
this
person
here?
Is
it
medication
related?
Is
it
some
other
kind
of
emotional
problem
that
they're
having
that
preventing
them
from
moving
forward
or
trying
to
help
themselves?
S
Other
thing
that
we're
working
on
that
we're
really
excited
about
we're.
Having
discussions
about
those
that
we'll
never
be
able
to
pay
the
rent
on
their
own,
we'll
never
be
able
to
cook
food
on
their
own.
How
can
we
provide
housing,
secure
housing
for
those
persons
that
have
mental
health
issues
and
never
be
able
live
on
their
own,
so
we're
exploring
some
ideas
about
that
and
having
discussions
with
the
city,
the
county,
the
housing
authority
and
service
providers
itself
update
you
on
that
as
well.
Anyone.
D
You,
mr.
chairman,
thank
you.
Ma'am
this
past
year,
I
had
the
opportunity
to
as
a
public
defender
system,
public
defender
to
work
with
Miss
halt
on
specifically
I'm
in
mental
health
court
as
well
as
Veterans
Court
and,
like
mr.
Goods,
has
plenty
of
experience
in
this
area.
Working
with
these
folks,
there's
very
eye-opening
and
and
a
lot
of
these
folks
cross
over
the
veterans.
Are
you
know
the
veterans
they
might
minnow
may
be
mental,
have
mental
health
issues
and
it's
mr.
D
chairman
who's
worked
on
these
veteran
issues
as
well,
but
the
devil
here
at
very
eye-opening.
But
what
I
was
wondering
about
was
on
your
chart
under
sub
population
data
and
it
talks
about
mental
breaks
it
out
in
terms
of
quantity
quantities
or
numbers
substance,
substance,
use,
disorder,
hiv/aids
and
domestic
violence
are
those
and
I
do
remember
going
out
on
the
street
and
doing
these
take
taking
information
many
years
ago,
I
think
it's
actually
something
that
you
should
invite.
All
of
us.
D
You
know
to
spend
a
couple
hours
doing
that
and
talking
to
folks
one-on-one,
you
really
get
it
get
a
better
feel
for
what
we're
talking
about.
But
those
items
are
those
self-reported
so
really
they
they
might
actually
be
a
little
low,
because
if
you
walk
up
and
you
taking
things
and
say,
okay,
you
know
how's
your
mental
mental
health.
You
know
they
might
not
want
to
self-report
that
the.
S
D
Yeah
as
mister
Citra,
Sitra
indicated,
I
hope,
you'll
you'll
come
brief.
All
of
us
all
of
us,
newbies
individually
and
we've
got
a
lot
to
learn.
S
A
I
wanted
to
thank
you.
I
know
I
especially
see
here
the
decrease
in
veterans.
I
know
you
yourself
are
a
veteran
and
that's
a
cause
very
close
to
your
heart.
I
think
that's
a
wonderful
thing.
It
goes
without
saying,
I
think
something
that
councilman
Goodes
talked
about,
which
is
the
the
the
punitive
measures
that
we've
taken
against
people
who
have
made
mistakes.
It
go
outside
of
the
Justice
that
is
required
in
the
case.
A
I
think
it's
caught
up
with
us
as
a
society
we've
begun
to
take
steps,
whether
it's
things
like
the
three
strikes
rule
we
addressing
that,
whether
it's
the
steps,
the
historic
steps
that
our
state
took
or
attempted
to
take,
depending
on
what
happens
in
Tallahassee.
If
you
ask
me
with
amendment
for
we're
really
making
remedies
in
that
regard
and
I
think
it's
really
really
good
and
and
I
think
councilman
dink,
Felder
talked
about
us
doing
the
the
homeless
count
I
would
to
do
that.
A
A
You
know
why
are
you
doing
this
war
on
poverty,
poor
people,
don't
vote
and
President
Johnson
said
I,
don't
care
if
I
get
a
single
vote
out
of
this
so
long
as
by
the
end
of
our
program,
the
people
of
this
country
know
that
poor
people
exist
and
live
among
them,
and
that's
what
this
program
does
it
really
on
the
local
level,
builds
on
that
great
national
aspiration,
so
I?
Thank
you
all
for
that
anything
else
from
counsel.
A
G
N
You
counsel,
Rebecca
Curt
assistant
city
attorney
I'm,
here
on
item
34
Ivan.
Thirty-Four
is
an
appeal
of
a
zoning
administrator
decision
to
deny
a
special
use
request.
First,
a
special
use
request
is
a
request
for
a
use
that
is
allowed
in
a
specific
zoning
district,
but
it
has
to
meet
additional
criteria.
Some
of
those
come
directly
to
you
as
a
special
use
to
you
will
typically
see
those
as
alcohol
permits,
some
of
those
go
directly
to
staff
when
it
goes
directly
to
staff
for
a
review.
Those
are
called
from
sg1.
N
That's
what
this
is:
staff
reviews
the
special
use
requests
by
the
specific
criteria.
If
any
of
those
are
not
met,
staff
can
do
no
further
analysis
about
whether
or
not
waivers
should
be
granted.
They
have
to
deny
it,
and
then
it
goes
to
City
Council,
where
City
Council
does
have
the
ability
to
grant
waivers
to
the
specific
criteria.
So
that's
the
position.
N
You're
in
today,
you
have
a
special
use
request
that
did
not
meet
the
very
specific
criteria
in
your
code,
and
so
there
was
a
request
to
have
it
heard
by
City
Council
to
consider
a
waiver
to
those
criteria.
That's
completely
appropriate.
It's
not
a
variance.
It
doesn't
require
a
hardship.
What
the
waiver
criteria.
N
There
are
specific
waiver
criteria
that
you
apply
and
determining
whether
to
grant
the
waiver
and
those
are
in
your
staff
report.
There
are
the
general
standards
and
they
are
on
page
two
and
three,
your
staff
before
it.
So
when
you're
looking
to
see
whether
or
not
city
council
feels
it's
appropriate
to
grant
the
waiver,
those
are
the
criteria
that
you're
looking
at
staff
will
come
up
in
a
minute
and
explain
to
you
the
underlying
request.
N
N
I
am
also
going
to
pass
out
sample
motions
for
you,
there's
one
to
affirm
the
zoning
administrators
decision
and
one
to
reverse
it.
We
do
this
because
it
can
be
a
little
confusing
because
if
you
deny
it
you're
actually
affirming-
and
so
these
are
your
sample
motions
at
the
end
of
it.
You
have
the
ability
to
state
any
additional
facts
that
you
feel
are
relevant
to
your
decision,
but
this
contains
the
criteria
because
anytime,
that
City
Council
grants
or
anytime
City
Council
that
denies
a
development
order
on
state
statute.
N
D
Because
we
haven't
heard
any
evidence
yet
I,
don't
you
know,
I,
don't
know
what
the
specific
issues
are
other
than
what
I've
read
so
far,
but
it,
but
in
a
very
general
sense,
as
an
attorney
I'm
aware,
actually
participated
in
some
litigation
surrounding
special
uses
for
certain
categories
of
people
group
homes.
You
know
that
sort
of
thing
so
I'm
aware
that
that
litigation
is
out
there.
Often
it's
in
federal
court
I
mean
you
know
me
I'm,
not
afraid
of
a
litigation.
D
When
the
city
needs
to
make
a
decision,
we
need
to
make
a
decision
based
upon
law
and
the
evidence,
and
that
sort,
but
in
a
very
general
sense
with,
is
there
any
cautioned
cautionary
or
caution
that
you
would
give
counsel
as
related
to
group
homes
there
there.
You
know
how
the
federal
law
might
impact
that
and
in
terms
of
that
use
being
of
in
a
particular
neighborhood
a
lot
of
times.
Neighborhoods
get
scared
about
various
types
of
group
homes.
D
You
know
the
litigation
I
had
that
I
had
in
Pinellas
totally
unrelated
to
involve
like
a
alcohol
drug
rehab.
Ultimately,
the
city
lost
over
there
because
the
neighbors
didn't
want
it,
but
the
federal
law
protected
anyway.
You
get
my
question
any
any
broad.
You
know
cautionary
that
you'd
like
to
get.
N
I'm
not
sure
it's
a
cautionary,
but
I
will
provide
some
additional
background
information
based
upon
your
specific
question.
This
is
a
request
for
a
congregate
living
facility
and
staff
can
give
you
more
specifics
about
exactly
what
the
request
is.
That
does
not
automatically
trigger
a
DEA
protection,
but
it
could
an
ad
a
protection
is
American,
Disabilities
Act.
N
We
do
have
in
our
code
now,
which
I
believe
has
been
adopted
within
the
last
couple
of
years,
a
specific
provision
that,
if
somebody
is
requesting
a
reasonable
accommodation
for
a
disability
that
goes
through
a
separate
process,
we
feel
that
that
was
appropriate
because
there
are
certain
legal
standards
that
have
to
be
both
demonstrated
and
evaluated
by
the
city
when
they're
looking,
whether
or
not
you
need
to
make
a
reasonable
accommodation.
That's
an
administrative
process,
because
that
shouldn't
be
a
political
decision.
I
mean
that's
very
clear.
N
You
know
a
legal
standard
that
needs
to
be
met.
That
is
not
what's
before
you
today.
That
being
said,
I
certainly
would
caution
all
of
you,
not
that
you
would
do
it,
but
for
the
record
that
it
would
be
inappropriate
to
deny
any
request
based
upon
a
disability
either
real
or
a
perceived
disability.
So,
in
the
event
that
any
evidence
comes
up
that
people
are
concerned
that
somebody
has
a
disability.
That
is
not
a
legal
basis
to
deny
this.
That
being
said,
we
are
not
in
the
reasonable
accommodation
process.
N
That
is
an
avenue
that
is
available
to
the
applicant
in
this
case,
but
they
chose
to
go
forward
with
this
special
use
criteria.
So
as
long
as
you're
not
basing
your
denial
upon
either
a
disability
or
a
perceived
disability,
then
I
would
just
ask
you
to
apply
the
general
standards
to
consideration
of
the
waiver.
T
Good
morning
there
are
cottony
in
development
coordination
I'm
here
on
a
petition
for
review
for
su1
1905.
The
property
is
located
at
402,
West,
ACCA's
Street
and
the
applicants
name
is
lissandra.
Montague
no
go
play
it.
That
correctly,
the
request
is
the
the
property
zoned
residential
single-family
rs.60.
T
The
applicant
was
requesting
a
6
bed
congregate
care
home
license
by
the
by
a
DP,
which
is
the
agency
for
APD
I.
Guess
it's
a
agency
proportions
with
disabilities
when
it
goes
to
the
special
use
criteria.
As
Rebecca
was
mentioning.
There
are
criteria.
The
distance
separation
is
1,200
feet.
If,
when
the
person
applies
for
DIF,
they
cannot
meet
the
distance
separation.
Administrative
early
staff
has
to
deny
the
request
and
the
apogee
can
then
come
before
City,
Council
and
appeal
for
the
decision.
T
T
T
This
is
the
intersection
of
the
street
of
Ola
and
Sitka.
This
is
looking
straight
up,
say
it's
a
residential,
it's
a
residential
neighborhood,
and
then
this
is
the
property
directly
across
the
street,
which
is
a
single-family
home
and
a
property
adjacent
which
is
us
to
a
single-family
home.
The
again,
the
only
basis
for
the
denial
from
staff
is
the
fact
that
the
applicant
could
not
meet
the
criteria
set
forth
in
the
based
on
that
against
I,
fasted
and
other
requests.
D
T
R
R
Well,
good
morning,
City
Council,
my
name
is
Jane
Graham
I'm,
an
attorney
with
smoker
Bartlett
loeb,
ah--
Thompson
I
represent
happy
orchids,
home
services,
Andres
and
Ramon
who
them
today.
This
is
a
special.
This
is
a
petition
for
review.
We
do
have
some
exhibits,
I'd
like
to
hand
them
to
the
city.
Thank
you.
R
R
City
attorney
mentions
there
are
certain
criteria
that
you
have
to
look
to
today
in
your
approval
of
this
waiver.
So
why
approve
happy
orchids
special
use,
one
permit
with
a
waiver
of
the
twelve
thousand
twelve
hundred
foot
distant
separation?
Well,
a
number
of
reasons.
First,
it
clearly
meets
the
criteria
for
the
special
use
permits
under
27.
129
well
works
through
those
criteria
in
this
presentation.
On
top
of
that,
reasonable
accommodation
is
necessary,
reasonable
and
legally
required
for
persons
with
disabilities.
R
It
will
not
result
in
a
fundamental
alteration
of
the
city's
zoning
scheme
as
you'll
see,
and
we
have
a
a
number
of
people
here
today
to
testify
this
type
of
so
this
type
of
facility
is
a
home.
It
polluted
no
threat
to
the
community
and
it
meets
the
present
need
of
the
state
of
Florida
to
provide
family-based
care.
R
So
this
is
a
standard
residential
habilitation,
it's
regulated
and
monitored
by
the
Florida
agency
for
persons
with
disabilities.
The
residents
are
there
because
they
have
a
developmental
disability,
and
so
what
does
that
mean?
There's
a
disorder
or
syndrome,
some
type
of
intellectual
disability,
cerebral
palsy,
Down
syndrome,
other
types
of
disabilities
that
reasonably
expected
to
continue
into
definitely
they
do
fall
under
the
Florida.
The
the
federal
Americans
with
Disabilities
Act
ends
under
the
definition
of
handicap,
of
the
federal,
fair.
R
This
is
more
than
a
facility
when
you
think
of
a
facility
as
far
as
some
kind
of
institution
happy
orchids
is
a
home
and,
as
you
can
see
in
these
photos-
and
you
can
see
me
me-
the
this
type
of
residential
family
setting
is
for
providing
health
in
persons
achieving
their
goals,
social
inclusion,
preserving
rights,
dignity
and
respect.
They
prepare
kids
facility
provides
help
with
daily
living
skills,
medication,
personal
care,
also
activities,
balanced
nutrition
and
celebration.
I
won't
go.
I
won't
spend
a
lot
of
time
on
the
background.
R
Attorney
Kurt
already
went
through
it
as
far
as
what
happened
there
is
an
application
for
a
special
use,
one
permit
it
was
received
and
denied,
based
solely
on
the
1200
foot.
Distance
separations
and
I
would
like
to
say
through
the
record
and
will
provide
an
updated
site
plan
related
to
the
the
driveway,
so
that
you'll
see
that
we
are
in
compliance
with
that
so
27
132.
R
This
is
the
one
issue
that
no
the
1200
foot
separation,
that
with
the
specific
criteria,
and
now
you
have
the
ability,
through
27
129,
in
looking
at
general
standards,
to
assess
from
a
broader
perspective.
How
and
whether
you
should
make
a
waiver
for
this
criteria
so
now
I'm
going
to
go
through
all
the
criteria.
R
Okay,
the
use
will
ensure
the
public
health
safety
and
general
general
welfare
it's
located
and
proposed
according
to
plan.
The
first
thing
you
should
know
is
that
this
type
of
group
home
is
heavily
licensed,
regulated
and
monitored
by
the
agency
of
persons
with
disabilities
pursuant
to
Florida
Statutes
and
Florida
Administrative
Code.
R
There
are
inspections,
annual
inspections,
as
well
as
inspections
that
happen
unannounced.
Just
this
week,
Nina
Giordano
from
the
from
the
agency
inspected,
happy
orchids
other
facility
and
as
one
of
you
as
exhibit
II
you'll,
see
that
she
wrote
an
email
just
back
saying
you
did
an
amazing
job.
Thank
you
for
all
your
hard
work
and
dedication.
This
is
a
very
professional
committed
staff,
they're
good
at
what
they
do
they
care
about
the
people.
They
helped.
There's
no
threat
so
number
two
that
it
complies
with
required
regulations
and
standards.
R
R
The
use
is
compatible
and
and
contiguous
with
surrounding
property
or
the
uses
of
public
necessity.
It
is
both
its
first.
It
is
a
residential
single-family
neighborhood
and
the
way
that
this,
the
happy
or
kids
home
is
it
is
a
residence
and
it's
it's
for
people
just
to
live
in
a
normal
neighborhood.
The
Florida
Statutes
actually
say
that
homes
of
six
or
fewer
residents,
the
otherwise
meet
the
definition
of
a
community
residential
home
shall
be
deemed
a
single
family
unit
and
non
commercial
residential
use
for
the
purpose
of
local
laws
and
ordinances.
R
We
are
not
going
to
see
clustering
of
similar
uses.
The
owner
from
the
assisted
living
facility
nearby
has
submitted
a
letter
in
support
and
they
are
slightly
they're
different
uses,
because
this
is
for
an
agency
of
persons
for
disabilities,
residential
habilitation
versus
an
assisted
living
facility.
You'll
also
see
in
your
exhibits.
There
are
letters
of
support
from
the
neighbor.
R
Next,
the
use
is
in
conformity
with
the
Tampa
comprehensive
plans,
they're
numerous
sections,
I've
included
excerpts
of
the
Tampa
comprehensive
plan
that
explain,
for
example,
congregate
living
facilities
may
be
considered
in
any
language
planned
category
that
permits
residential
uses.
It
speaks
to
the
need
to
adaptation
of
existing
homes
to
improve
the
accessibility
of
people
with
disability.
R
Number
five
of
the
criteria,
the
use,
will
not
establish
a
precedent
or
encourage
more
intensive
or
incompatible
uses.
This
is
the
photo
that
you'll
see
is
the
inside
of
the
other
happy
or
kids
home
and,
as
you
can
see,
it's
a
regular
home.
The
only
difference
is
that
there
are
certain
requirements
for
disabilities,
like
the
shower
has
a
requirement,
and
it's
luxurious
other
than
that.
It's
just
it's.
It's
a
regular
house,
nothing
out
of
the
ordinary.
R
I'm,
looking
at
27
129
B
I
wanted
to
go
through
all
of
these
really
quickly.
There's
this
speaks
to
ingress/egress
parkings
lighting
utilities
refuse
drainage,
control
of
potentially
adverse
effects
generally,
as
you
can
see
there,
this
is
just
a
regular
home.
There's
nothing
unusual
about
it.
You're
not
going
to
have
a
lot
of
traffic
coming
in
and
out.
The
residents
will
go
to
adult
daycare
facilities
during
the
days.
So
it's
basically
the
same
traffic.
If
someone
who
works
during
the
day.
R
Okay,
so
now
we've
gone
through
the
criteria
for
when
427
129,
and
so
your
decision
today
is
based
on
that
criteria
in
making
this
decision
I
want
you
to
consider
and
think,
as
attorney
Kurt
had
mentioned,
that
reasonable
accommodation
is
something
that
is
governed
by
federal
law.
It's
necessary,
reasonable
and
legally
required
for
persons
with
disabilities
covered
by
both
the
Americans
with
Disabilities
Act,
Fair,
Housing
Act
and,
as
mentioned
the
city
of
Tampa
code.
R
I,
do
want
to
mention
that
so
in
October
2018,
the
city
did
pass
an
ordinance
related
to
reasonable
accommodation
at
the
time
that
my
client
applied
for
this
special
use
permit.
She
was
not
aware,
nor
advised
of
the
applying
under
this
process.
At
this
point
we
have
to
cover
all
bases
have
applied
under
that
process,
but
ultimately,
what
we
want
is
a
decision
to
have
a
waiver
for
the
1200
foot
distance
requirement.
So
it's
you
know
it's
something
that
has
been
applied,
but
really.
This
is
what
we
want.
R
R
The
facility
poses
no
threat
to
the
community.
The
gentleman
in
the
photo
is
is
Danny
and
the
little
girl
is
actually
my
clients
daughter
and,
as
you
can
see,
she
and
she'll
speak
to
you
a
little
bit
more,
that
this
is
a
family
type
residence.
This
is,
you
know,
there's
no
risk
something
that
is
important
for
you
to
see,
as
a
distinction
is
that
under
the
apd
there's
a
standard
residential
habilitation,
which
is
for
individuals
such
as
this
who
have
disabilities
there's
also
behavioral
residential
habilitation,
which
is
specific
for
for
people
who
have
behavioral
issues.
R
R
It
meets
the
present
need
of
the
state
of
Florida
to
provide
family
based
care
for
persons
with
disabilities,
something
that
you
should
know.
As
of
September
2018
over
21,000
people
are
actually
on
the
waiting
list
in
Florida
to
receive
these
types
of
services
as
far
as
having
a
provider
like
happy
orchid.
So
every
every
facility,
like
happy
orchids,
helps
meet
this
critical
need.
S
My
name
is
Lisa
Maryland,
Yahoo
and
I'm,
the
founder
and
owner
of
happier
kids
home
services.
Our
mission
is
to
provide
individuals
with
developmental
disabilities
with
help
in
their
achievement
of
personal
goals,
social
inclusion
choices,
meaningful
relationships,
rights,
dignity
and
respect.
Today,
I'm
asking
you
to
please
wait
the
distance
requirement
and
the
special
use
1
permit
for
happier
kids
home
services
so
that
we
can
continue
to
work
with
individuals
with
developmental
disabilities
to
have
the
opportunity
to
live
their
dreams.
I
would
like
to
talk
about
the
role
of
family
of
happy
or
gives
home
services.
S
This
is
a
family
business
and
residents
our
extended
family
on
Christmas
they
receive
presents,
we
celebrate
birthdays
and
we
take
care
of
them.
This
is
a
home.
My
young
daughter
regularly
interacts
and
has
build
friendships
with
our
residents.
I
would
never
put
her
or
I'm
pregnant
to
them,
or
anyone
in
harm
a
group
like
the
one,
a
proposed
process
no
threat
to
the
community.
A
standard
residential
habilitation
facilities
are
monitor,
monthly
by
apt
inspector
to
ensure
health
and
safety
of
the
individuals
with
disabilities,
while
at
home
and
in
the
community.
S
They
require
the
operators
to
provide
implementation
plans
that
work
on
individuals
with
disabilities
goals,
daily
living
activities
and
life
skills
to
ensure
quality
of
life.
There
will
be
no
threat
or
changes
in
the
community.
There
will
be
no
exterior
signs
which
will
label
the
residents
or
functions
of
the
facility
by
indicating
that
the
facility
serves
individuals
with
disabilities,
parking
traffic
lighting
and
garbage
are
all
the
same
as
in
any
other
home.
There
will
be
no
adverse
impact
from
happy
orchids
in
the
community.
S
There
will
be
no
threat
to
the
community,
because
the
individuals
with
the
disabilities
that
the
facility
will
sir
will
not
I
repeat,
will
not
be
sex
offenders,
drug
addicts
convicts
or
have
any
behavioral
problems.
I'm
aware
that
there
is
an
assisted
living
facility
close
by.
However,
both
facilities
will
be
Lifeson
on
two
different
state
agencies
and
will
provide
care
and
services
to
different
types.
S
Individuals,
as
many
of
us
may
know,
there
is
a
need
to
embrace
diversity
and
inclusion
of
people
with
disabilities
to
our
communities
by
encouraging
awareness
of
achievements
of
thousands
of
individuals
with
developmental
disabilities
who
contribute
daily
to
our
communities.
Our
state
and
federal
government
are
fully
committed
to
supporting
individuals
with
developmental
disabilities.
There
are
state
and
federal
laws
and
regulations
that
have
been
developed
to
support
and
maximize
the
independence
of
people
with
developmental
disabilities
to
create
a
more
inclusive
society.
S
The
Florida
agency
for
persons
with
disabilities
worked
with
local
communities
and
private
providers
just
like
happy
or
get
some
services
to
support
people
who
have
developmental
disabilities
and
their
family
in
leaving
learning
and
working
in
their
communities.
Additionally,
providing
assistance
in
identifying
the
needs
of
people
with
developmental
disabilities
for
supports
and
services
and
educating
the
public
on
disability
issues,
happier
at
home,
sir
services
respectfully
and
humbly
request
a
waiver
of
the
distance
requirement
of
our
standard
residential
visitations
with
home
in
this
community.
A
A
You
have
any
question:
okay
before
we
get
it.
Mr.
Shelby
had
asked
councilmen
that
before
we
get
to
comment
with
questions
that
we
should
hear
from
the
public
okay,
so
let's
we're
gonna
go
to
public
comment.
Now,
if
we
may
okay,
anyone
who
wishes
to
speak
on
this
please
come
forward
and
make
your
case.
A
A
B
B
Just
my
name
is
Harry
M
Morales
and
I'm,
representing
my
sister
Carmen
Morales.
She
is
currently
66
years
old
and
ever
since
she's
been
8
years
old,
she's
had
mental
issues,
physical
disabilities
and
all
an
entire
life
she's
been
in
institutions
where
they
provided
some
type
of
mental
care
and
physical
disability
care.
But
up
until
we
enrolled
into
eight
ADP
ADP
program,
my
sister
has
been
extremely
well
taken
care
of,
especially
when
we
met
lasondra
and
happy
or
Treat.
B
When
we
sat
down
and
had
our
meeting
I
was
relieved
that
my
brother
and
I,
who
was
also
a
retired
Air,
Force,
colonel
I'm,
retired
sergeant
first
class
from
the
Army.
We
were
able
to
find
a
home
who
understands
the
basic
necessities
and
the
needs
of
someone,
like
my
sister,
that
no
fault
she
just
happened
to
unfortunately
grow
to
be
a
disabled
person,
but
and
I.
Thank
God
that
we
finally
found
happy
world
sure
did
I
already
mentioned
that.
B
My
mom
passed
away
two
years
ago
and
in
her
will
she
specifically
appointed
me
to
be
her
legal
guardian
and
I've
had
to
bring
her
from
Puerto
Rico
when
she
passed
away,
and
we
were
fortunate
enough
to
find
this
program
and
ever
since
it's
been
almost
two
years
now
close
to
three,
she
has
been
provided
with
the
best
care
ever
and
I
hope
you
consider
the
presentation
today
and
grant
this
waiver.
Thank
you.
Thank.
B
S
A
C
First,
thank
you
very
much
for
being
here.
I'm.
Sorry,
you
have
to
go
through
this
process,
but
we
do
have
our
code
and
our
rules
or
regulations
I
see
that
the
only
thing
that's
holding
this
back
is
this
distant
separation
because
there
isn't
living
or
for
elderly
retired
430
feet
away.
If
not,
there
wouldn't
be
all
of
this,
but
you
know
I
think
you
provide
a
a
necessary
and
very
good
service
to
the
community.
C
Of
course
it's
in
demand,
because
you
have
so
many
people
that
are
on
waiting
lists-
I
mean
you're,
approved
from
the
state
level,
all
the
way
down
you're
in
compliance
I
know
there
was
an
issue
or
discussion
about
a
driveway,
but
the
issue
here
is
this
waiver.
That's
being
requested
for
the
for
the
distance
separation.
I
have
no
issue.
You
have
support
from
neighbors.
C
You
don't
have
an
angry
mob
of
people
here
say
they
don't
want
you
in
the
neighborhood
I've
been
here
for
four
years,
so
I
witnessed
several
different
cases.
I
know
we
still
have
to
go
to
other
discussions
to
council
members
but
I'm
happy
to
support,
reversing
the
decision
and
approving
the
permit.
But
of
course
we
have
to
so
have
the
discussion.
Thank.
I
You
know
it
always
makes
me
feel
very
emotional
when
I
see
others
helping
others,
you
have
to
have
a
certain
level
of
compassion
to
help.
People
and
I
see
you
have
that
I
see
your
organization.
Has
that
being
a
person
who
served
a
public
and
I've
been
to
many
places
what
people
don't
take
care
of
people
with
abilities,
they
mistreat
them
just
to
take
money
and
just
to
do
things
that
you
shouldn't
do
but
I
see
that
you
have
a
a
loving
heart.
I
A
E
A
G
S
G
R
And
actually,
when
you,
when
you
read
the
letters
of
opposition,
it's
interesting,
because
the
concern
is
that
this
would
be
some
kind
of
facility
that
would
have
posed
a
violent
risk
to
the
community
and,
as
you've
heard
today,
this
type
of
home
does
not
pose
that
type
of
risk.
They
think
that
the
letters
might
arise
from
some
type
of
misconception
about
what
happier
kids
does
as.
G
T
T
T
D
You
Eric
don't
go
far
from
a
historical
perspective
and
perhaps
miss
Kirk
could
help
us
as
well,
and
maybe
this
is
something
we
not
specific
to
this
request,
but
but
in
a
bigger
sense
at
a
later
date.
What
is
the
history
on
the
separation?
I
mean
I,
understand
the
separation
in
the
zoning
code
as
related
to
bars,
and
you
know
other
types
of
uses
like
that.
But
what
is
do
you
know
the
history
on
this
type
of
separation?
The.
T
Separation
standards,
the
original
one
is
actually
in
the
state
state
light
is
under
state
statute,
basically,
a
congregate
living
facilities,
whether
they
be
licensed
by
akka
or
my
agency
for
persons
with
disabilities
or
children
and
family
services.
There's
a
state
statute
that
says
you're
exempt
from
local
zoning
with
up
to
six
residents,
if
you're
with,
if
you're
there's
not
another
one
within
a
thousand
feet.
Okay,
our
code
reference
is
1,200,
I,
don't
know
if
at
one
point
the
state
was
1,200
and
we
mimicked
the
state
or
why
ours
is
a
little
bit
more.
T
That
I
don't
know,
but
that's
the
basis
for
it.
So
what
happens
when
somebody
comes
in
and
applies
for
this
land
development
or
zoning
office
signs
off
on
the
applications?
So
we
look
at
if
there's
another
one
within
a
thousand
feet,
we
tell
them
they
have.
We
deny
the
request
until
they
have
to
go
to
the
special
use
process.
T
D
Just
as
long
as
we're
discussing
I
think
it's
something
we
should
revisit
and
review
whether
or
not
we
even
need
that
separation
requirement
to
put
folks.
You
know
groups
like
this
through
this,
but
something
we
can
talk
about
at
a
later
date.
But
let's,
let's
talk
about
it:
okay,
okay,
thank
you.
Anyone.
A
C
You
very
much
mr.
chairman
I
moved
to
reverse
the
zoning
administrator's
denial
of
special
use.
Permit
application
su
1-19
density
of
five,
because
the
petitioner
has
demonstrated
that
the
petition,
if
the
waiver
is
granted,
is
consistent
with
the
applicable
general
standards
set
forth
in
section
27,
one
to
nine.
At
the
time
of
permitting
the
site
plan,
let's
meet
on
applicable
code
and
technical
standards,
see
section
27,
61,
V
and
27
s,
127
B.
The
waiver
should
be
granted
for
the
petition
because
it's
me
it
hasn't
met
the
general
standards
contained
in
section
27,
129,
okay,.
A
We
have
a
motion
by
councilman
Scott
go
a
second
by
Councilman
Dean
Felder,
all
in
favor
any
opposed.
Okay,
thank
you
and
now
that
the
hearing
is
done,
I
wanted
to
say,
if
I
may,
you
know
thank
you.
I
I
didn't
say
this
thing
during
a
hearing,
some
wouldn't
be
appropriate,
but
I
actually
have
an
older
brother,
Juan
who's
developmentally
disabled.
A
A
D
Just
just
as
a
follow
up
at
some
point
and
at
a
later
date
like
and
I'll,
let
them
schedule
it
I'd,
like
legal
staff,
to
address
the
sake
of
this
issue
and
any
possible
amendments
to
our
toward
certain
code
to
perhaps
take
the
burden
off
of
these
types
of
homes
and
coming
coming
through
this
probably
expensive
process.
Second,.
B
G
Gives
up
south
surrey
tow
legal
department?
I
have
a
recommendation
to
it.
You
you're
stuck
apparently
what
I
heard
here
to
the
1,000
feet,
irrespective
of
what
you
say.
It
might
have
helped
and
I'm
not
sure
what
the
staff
would
have
said,
but
when
I
was
doing
this
years
ago,
as
a
hearing
officer,
we
would
have
these
kinds
of
issues
come
up
before
us,
where
the
staff
had
no
authority,
but
they
would
give
us
a
recommendation
that
they
were
in
favor
of
moving
forward
and
that
would
have
saved
a
lot
of
time
today.
G
They
may
not
have
taken
that
position
which
of
they're
in
a
position
right
now
if
they
think
this
is
something
that
you
should
be
hearing
only
because
they
can't
make
that
decision
that
you
can.
It
may
be
something
you
can
put
in
the
code
that
they
should
be
making
a
recommendation
and
would
cut
through
a
lot
of
this.
This
this
long
discussion,
yeah
and
we'll
look
at
that
as
well,
and
they
may
not
want
to
do
that.
But
that's
something
that
I'm
suggesting
right.
It's
well.
D
N
You
Rebecca
Curt
legal
department.
I
would
ask
that
you
set
this
for
a
staff
report,
sometime,
maybe
probably
30
days,
to
make
changes
to
chop.
You
27,
which
this
is.
You
can
do
twice
a
year,
so
we
would
need
to
have
whatever
amendments
were
proposing
settled
by
July
and
I.
Think
you
may
want
some
discussion
rather
than
just
put
it
into
July
cycle,
because
then
you're
not
going
to
see
it
for
several
months
after
that,
so
you
may
want
to
have
some.
B
G
D
B
J
A
minute
yeah
you
you,
you
colluded
to
looking
at
more
than
just
this
specific
issue
on
group
homes,
I,
don't
know
if
it's
appropriate
to
do
it
in
exactly
in
the
same
conversation
or
adjacent
to
it,
but
it
seems
like
if
you're
gonna
go
in
and
look
at.
We
could
look
at
all
the
the
rules
regarding
this
and
see
if
anything
is
out
of
date,
not
in
line
with
statutes.
D
A
D
D
It
come
up
periodically
and
right
now
that
our
zoning
code
allows
front
porch
front
porches
to
be
added
almost
as
a
matter
of
right
in
the
RS
50,
but
in
the
RS
60,
it's
administrative
in
RS
75
in
RS
100,
it's
not
not
allowed
per
se
I.
Think
many
people
in
our
community
over
the
last
eight
or
ten
years
have
been
using
this
front.
Porch
ordinance
to
add
front
porches
or
to
include
front
porches
in
their
new
construction,
which
is
I.
Think
is
a
wonderful
thing
and
we
can
go
into
at
a
later
date.
D
I
would
like
to
us
to
explore
the
possibility
of
taking
the
front
porch
ordinance
and
expanding
it
to
all
zoning
districts,
where
appropriate,
perhaps
not
in
the
in
the
High
Park
District
or
the
other
historic
districts,
because
they
have
their
own
issues
and
regulations.
But
in
terms
of
the
collision
zonings
of
our
60
75
100,
what
have
you
to
expand
it
so
I'd
like
I'd
like
to
add
that
30
days
from
now
to
that
same
date,
mr.
Shelby,
if.
N
I
may,
if
you're,
anticipating
the
staff
reports,
are
very
short,
five
minutes
of
discussion,
which
the
original
motion
on
the
previous
one
seemed
pretty
short
and
straightforward.
So
I
thought
it
was
appropriate
for
either
a
staff
report
or
workshop,
but
this
sounds
like
it
may
warrant
a
little
bit
more
discussion.
So
you
may
want
to
schedule
that
for
a
workshop.
B
G
N
D
B
N
N
B
N
O
A
G
C
E
Scheduled
meeting
for
May
the
16th
for
the
revenue
finance
report
for
mid-year,
maybe
Mark
May
16th
2019
this
disk
up
two
weeks
from
now
the
purposes
for
the
mid-range
report,
so
that
the
council
could
be
updated
until
where
we
had
of
the
budget
between
two
started
in
the
middle
of
this
year.
So
we
all
afraid
of
the
fact-
and
this
process
is
a
done
every
year.
Midterm.
Thank.
I
I
And
when
I
heard
from
the
council
sitting
here
today,
we're
compassionate
about
our
neighborhoods
compassionate
about
the
people,
the
city
of
Tampa
and
that's
a
good
sign,
I
think
the
citizens
should
be
very
proud
today
that
there
a
lot
of
make
sure
you
make
things
happen
for
our
residents.
God
bless
you.
Thank
you.
A
Sir,
and
if
I
may,
I
have
two
motions:
I'm
going
to
move
the
gavel
over
to
Council
Maniscalco.
First
I
request
that
council
prepare
a
commendation
for
delta,
sigma
theta
for
their
annual
delta
day
at
city
hall.
Further
that
a
commendation
be
presented
before
council
on
May
16
2019
under
ceremonial
tivities.
C
A
Then
second,
if
I
may,
a
motion
have
a
representative
from
us,
so
comm
make
a
presentation
on
May
16th
on
the
Warrior
Games
at
the
regular
City
Council
meeting
at
9:00
a.m.
under
Sir
mo
nativities.
The
warrior
games
will
be
coming
to
the
city
of
Tampa
on
June,
21st
and
30th,
which
is
gonna,
be
a
tremendous
tremendous
asset
and
fine
for
our
city
about
300,
wounded
and
disabled
veterans
are
gonna,
be
playing
in
Olympic
sports
and
John.
Stuart
who's
already
been
here
at
a
Tampa.