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From YouTube: Tampa City Council 12052019
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B
Mr.
cherrick,
the
council
members
today
we
have
with
us
mr.
justin
LaRosa,
who
is
one
of
the
ministers
at
the
hyde
park,
united
methodist
church.
He
serves
as
director
of
the
portico
and
the
Minister
of
the
Sunday
evening.
Congregation
the
portico
provides
gathering
spaces
and
spiritual
opportunities
that
focus
on
conversation,
connection
and
community
change.
The
portico
cafe
is
on
site,
which
is
a
cafe.
That
is
not
only
providing
amazing
coffee,
food
and
space
for
group
events,
but
it's
entirely
staffed
by
people
who
were
formerly
homeless,
addicted
or
incarcerated.
B
Offering
people
opportunities
to
rebuild
their
lives
is
also
an
author
and
licensed
clinical
social
worker
with
part-time
private
practice.
His
greatest
joys
are
his
wife
and
his
two
teenage
daughters.
Mr.
la
Rosa,
would
you
please
give
us
the
invocation
and
if
anybody
can
please
rise
and
remain
standing
for
the
Pledge
of
Allegiance.
Thank.
C
Let's
pray
God
of
many
names,
we
gather
in
your
presence
this
morning,
centering
ourselves
on
your
goodness.
We
come
with
open
minds
and
grateful
hearts
offering
thanks
for
the
very
lives
that
you've
given
us,
this
city
and
the
opportunity
to
serve.
Thank
you
for
engaged
citizens.
Thank
you
for
the
City
Council,
their
aides
and
all
the
support
staff,
the
mayor
and
all
the
employees
who
work
behind
the
scenes
to
make
Tampa
function
and
thrive.
C
We
pray
for
downtown
residents
and
workers
and
those
citizens
who
advocate
and
invest
their
time
and
talent,
to
a
build,
a
more
inclusive
and
diverse
City
the
scripts.
The
Hebrew
Scripture
employs
us
to
seek
the
welfare
of
the
city
and
reminds
us
over
and
over
again,
not
to
forget
the
needs
of
the
poor.
C
Come
to
our
assistance
as
we
deal
with
the
struggle
of
adequate,
affordable
housing,
keep
us
mindful
of
the
people
and
families
who
are
spending
more
than
half
of
their
wages
on
housing
and
those
who
don't
have
a
place
to
lay
their
head
help
this
council
and
all
that
are
here,
construct
a
city
that
builds
on
our
many
strengths
and
takes
care
of
all
of
its
residents.
We
humbly
ask
that
you
provide
astute
discernment,
clarity,
din
direction
to
each
council
member
as
they
process.
C
A
D
A
You
thank
you,
sir.
Thank
you.
God
bless
you.
Next.
We
move
to
approval
of
the
agenda.
I
want
to
go
through
the
items
that
have
been
pulled
as
a
Councilman
Carlson.
You
have
one
correct,
yeah,
twelve,
okay,
12
and
then
councilman
dink
Felder.
You
had
24
through
27,
30
and
32.
Is
that
correct,
correct.
D
And
that's
not
a
hostile
pull
sure.
Actually,
a
very
and
I
also
would
ask
that
we
continue.
If,
yes,
if
you
would
like
there's
item
54,
which
is
sort
of
a
sustainability
report
and
I,
think
we
right
now
we
have
one
of
those
scheduled
for
February
6th.
So
why
don't
we
just
combine
it
all?
Hopefully,
maybe
we'll
have
a
sustainability
officer
by
then
and
we
sort
of
get
going
on
those
issues.
So
I'll
move
item
54
to
be
combined
with
the
same
item
on
February
6.
A
We
have
a
motion
by
Councilman
ding
felt
or
a
second
by
Councilman
Carlson,
all
in
favor
any
opposed
and
then
I
would
like
to
if
I
mix,
and
then
we
have
F
dot
here
on
time,
limited
basis,
452
the
bush
boulevard
to
be
moved
after
3:00.
If
I
may
just
some
motion
by
Councilman
Citra,
a
second
I
believe
by
Councilman
Goods,
all
in
favor.
Yes,
all.
E
A
E
A
I
do
wish
to
approve
the
agenda.
They
have
a
motion
to
that
effect.
Okay,
we
have
a
motion
by
Councilman
citrus
second
by
Councilman
escapo,
all
in
favor,
any
opposed
go
for
it,
sir
and
councilman.
Goodes
is
coming
up
for
our
city
of
Tampa
ATU
local,
one,
four,
six,
four
employee
of
the
month.
It's
something
that
was
recently
started
so
that
we
can
make
sure
that
all
of
our
city
of
Tampa
employees
are
are
being
honored
here
before
Council.
I
Good
morning,
gentlemen,
my
pleasure,
you
know
I
knew
we
had
this
coming
up
this
morning
and
you
read
some
of
my
stuff
and
I
didn't
realize
the
last
name
on
the
accommodation
didn't
realize
it
and
then
I
see
you
this
morning.
It
was
good
when
you
can
give
accommodation
or
a
good
cheer
to
someone.
You
actually
know
that
you
know
I've
been
doing
some
work.
It
hasn't
working
with
our
young
people,
especially
the
step
programs.
I
You've
been
doing
I,
don't
know
if
you're
still
a
park
or
not
but
I,
know
I
know
what
you've
been
doing
out
there
and
the
other
activity
I've
been
going
in
the
city.
So
it's
a
great
honor
and
pleasure
to
me
to
bestow
you
accommodate
from
Temple
City
Council
as
the
ATU
employee
of
the
month
and
again
this
with
great
honor,
not
Dugas,
demel
City,
Council
combination
into
Beverly,
hitting
them
80
local
1464,
Employee
of
the
Month
Tempe
City
Council
private
commands
Brearley
hidden
as
the
ATU
local
14
seats
were
Employee
of
the
Month.
I
She
is
a
sterling
example
of
high
quality
employee
employees
that
the
ATU
provides
to
keep
the
city
tempo
running.
That
is
true
because
real
hard
drive
what
I
gotta
keep
it
real.
Is
a
regulation
either
two
of
the
parks
records
department.
She
has
served
at
least
two
generations
of
youth
and
timber
to
participation
and
they're,
always
seeking
to
empower
young
people.
Let's
play
these
young
girls
and
children
with
special
needs.
I
Not
only
does
she
have
deep
compassion
for
certain
children
for
her
colleagues
also
support
that
she
is
a
go-getter
and
a
problem
solver
who
has
never
hesitates
to
pitch
in
a
smile
through
her
dedicated
work
rather
has
made
a
tremendous
impact
from
the
lives
of
countless
young
people
across
the
city
for
dedicated
outstanding
service
to
see
at
my
product
possessed
accommodation,
this
5th
day
of
December,
2019
and
again
I
can
truly
say
I
know
what
you've
done.
I
know
what
I
had
football.
C
Beverly
Hayden
has
been
employed
with
the
city
of
Tampa
Parks
and
Rec
Department
for
19
years.
She
has
worked
at
various
community
centers,
which
include
Highland
Pines,
Jackson
Heights,
and
she
is
currently
based
at
Oak
Park,
Community
Center.
During
her
tenure
with
the
Parks
and
Recreation
Department.
She
has
been
a
tremendous
inspiration
to
all
those
that
she
works
with,
as
well
as
those
in
the
community.
Beverly
has
touched.
C
G
J
K
I
You
know,
mr.
chairman,
as
you
can
see,
you
know
it
all
starts
in
our
communities
with
our
Recreation
Department.
You
know
mr.
Miranda
said
it
best.
You
know
the
joy
of
the
start
of
young
people.
It
starts
in
the
communities
with
our
Parks
and
Recreation
farm.
You
can
look
at
sewer
water,
but
it
starts
in
those
communities.
As
you
can
see,
the
seniors
are
here:
they're,
very
vocal,
our
communities
because
they've
gone
through
and
their
children
that
Greg
have
gone
through
the
Parks
and
Recreation
Department.
M
D
We
appreciate
you
know
four
years,
we
love
the
police,
love
the
fire
and
for
years,
I
always
wondered
why
we
didn't
honor
the
rest,
the
employees
and
I'm.
So
glad
that
that
you
know
you
guys
decided
to
do
this
and
and
and
your
I
think
our
third
honoree
and
when
well
deserved.
Now
the
question
is:
is
you
brought
all
these
folks
with
you
and
which
ones
are
you
going
to
take
to
the
dinner
here.
B
L
B
L
N
I
A
You
very
much
ma'am
for
all
your
hard
work
that
we
began
this
so
that
we
could
make
sure
that
all
of
our
city
of
Tampa
employees
are
honored
and
where
we
respect
work,
we
respect
the
time
that
goes
into
work.
We
respect
that
the
sacrifices
you
make
in
your
personal
life
and
with
your
family
for
your
work
and
and
we're
here
to
respect
you
today.
So
thank
you.
Ma'am
and
Merry
Christmas.
N
Yes,
honorable
chairman
honorable
members
to
temperate
accounts
was
my
pleasure
this
morning
to
make
a
presentation
to
something
that
started
back
in
2004.
In
fact,
the
first
event
that
this
fine
family
members
brought
together
attended
a
whole
whopping,
200
people
and
I
think
there's
a
video
that
is
on
the
record
to
be
played
and
if
they
could
put
it
on
our
appreciate
it.
N
This
is
about
homegirl,
the
anything
what
they
are,
who
they
are
going
as
I
said,
started
in
2004,
with
only
200,
after
that
it
has
grown
an
average
of
sixty
thousand
people.
A
tell
over
this
part,
and
the
best
price
about
it
is
the
price
is
very
reasonable,
extremely
readable
because
it
it's
free
and
when
they
get
together,
it's
not
about
all
the
people
you
see
here
is
not
a
pop
of
stage.
It's
not
about
just
a
music.
It's
about
the
art.
N
We
have
a
section
will
show
you
what
art
can
do
the
young
individual
minds
about
education,
whether
it
show
you
what
it
is
to
have
an
education,
it's
about
yourself
and
how
you
take
yourself
in
the
medical
area
when
you
go
in
and
find
out
all
you
need
to
know
about
your
personal
health
and
how
to
get
life,
incomplete
life
very
healthy
and
I'm
pleasure
to
have
aristocracy
and
Alex
Cota,
along
with
the
Cota
family.
Here,
mr.
Mitchell
coat
of
herpes
other
solid
partners
behind
the
whole
show
my
pleasure
watch.
N
F
N
If
you
look
at
that
beast
for
individual
specialties
to
a
Lakota
to
the
the
production
in
the
sound
and
fantastic
Alex
showed
up,
you
don't
know,
was
one
of
the
first
originators
of
work
that
the
Fountainbleu
hotel,
where
he
did
all
of
the
sound
production
for
that
fine
operation.
I
was
there
for
many
years
and
another
campaign,
Ian
Gabby
gabrielle
was
the
lead
singer
there.
They
bring
individuals
from
all
over
the
country
from
Panama
from
Dominica
from
Cuba
from
Venezuela
from
Costa
Rica
from
all
those
individuals
who
are
the
top
performers.
N
They
bring
four
or
five
groups
every
year
and
again
it's
free
and
they've
done
such
an
outstanding
job
that
when
you
look
at
it,
they
have
in
the
15
years
or
so
have
drawn
between
900
to
a
million
people
at
the
elbow
piece
part
for
free.
That's
something
that
I
don't
think
anyone
can
accomplish.
Anyone
can
ever
do.
It
is
the
largest
Hispanic
celebration
and
the
whole
Tampa
area
that
includes
st.
Pete
Clearwater
to
eat,
plant
city.
N
N
It's
just
the
luck
of
the
draw
well,
how
you
pick
up
your
dynamos
and
how
you
lay
them
down,
but
it's
my
pleasure
to
make
this
presentation
to
both
maritza
and
Alex
for
their
continued
going
back
for
the
answer,
which
I
said
is
a
wonderful
event
and
it's
for
free.
It's
a
family
operation,
it's
a
family
where
you
see,
families
with
kids,
grandparents,
aunts
and
uncles,
and
they
all
go
together.
The
group
something
that
sometimes
in
society
we
have
not
kept
up
with
we've,
become
loners
and
technicians
of
talking
on
your
cell
phone
to
yourself.
N
That's
how
bad
we've
got,
but,
as
my
pleasure.I
rich
sort
of
presents,
this
combination
to
you,
based
on
the
city
council,
to
you
and
Alex,
for
what
you've
done
for
the
last
16
years.
It's
amazing
which
you've
done
are
you
and
your
family?
Because
I
know
your
parents
have
helped
you
a
lot
and
it's
my
pleasure
again
to
say.
Congratulations
to
you
and
the
floor
is
yours.
F
So
Nilo,
myself
and
Alex
went
to
a
Lopez
park
as
Alex
chose
the
park
of
the
needle
said
it
had
to
be
in
park,
of
course,
because
it
was
parks
and
recs,
and
then
we
parked
chose
a
Lopez
Park
because
it
was
a
Lopez
named
after
a
Lopez
and
it
was
in
West
Tampa,
perfect
part.
We
all
talked
about
how
we're
gonna.
Do
it?
How
we're
gonna
raise
money?
Alex
insisted,
it
was
always
gonna
be
free
as
much
as
we
could,
because
it
was
to
be
able
to
bring
families
together
and
it
happened.
H
F
Oh,
my
goodness,
he
didn't
know
what
to
do,
but
he
you
know
instead
of
complaining
about
or
something
tpd
said.
Okay,
what
are
we
gonna
do
next
year
now,
in
order
to
put
that
together,
we
needed
support
and
we
needed
help.
He
went
to
the
Times
and
Donna
who's.
Now,
with
the
Parks
and
Rec
was
the
first
person
on
board
to
say:
hey
the
Tribune
excuse
me,
Tampa
Tribune
was
on
board
and
supports
us.
Then
we
went
to
bay
news,
9
and
Debbie
said
okay,
you
know
we're
on
it.
F
So,
but
these
support
of
all
these
people
we
were
able
to
put
this
together.
There
was
a
lot
of
people
are
our
family.
Of
course
our
parents
and
the
more
God
owes
randy
melissa
and
the
girls
Alexis
Ania,
now
asically
grew
up
in
there,
but
there
were
a
lot
of
people
that
came
together
to
do
this
and
I
wanted
to.
Let
you
know
that
that
this
event
is
is
a
City
event
as
well.
It
was
born
out
of
this.
It
was
born
for
a
purpose.
F
You
know
should
be
a
quality
event
for
the
family
and
it's
been
our
honor.
It's
not
really
what
our
business
is.
We
do
it
because
we
want
to
our
businesses
production
for
other
people.
It's
been
an
honor
to
do
this
and
if
it
weren't
for
people
like
the
mayor's
along
the
way,
the
support
we
get
from
the
a
Lopez
staff
and
Charlie
and
Mary,
you
know
you
know
it's
it's.
It's
been
a
love
and
it's
been
great
to
see.
F
People
enjoy
themselves
and
you
know
sometimes
we've
toppled
60,000
people,
you
know,
and
we
have
become
one
of
the
top
events
in
the
state
of
Florida.
It's
a
great
destination
event.
It's
now
expected
it's
part
of
tradition.
It's
been
going
on
16
years,
but
I'll
leave
with
a
little
known
fact:
Goga
caliente
celebrated
actually
its
17th
festival,
because
the
first
one
we
had
to
cancel
because
of
a
hurricane
within
less
than
24
hours
of
the
show.
F
Bomba
caliente
was
first
called
festival,
caliente
and
that
was
named
by
nila
Menendez
from
parks,
and
then
we
switched
it.
Cuz
Universal
Studio
decided
to
put
something
similar.
So
we
went,
we
called
gar
caliente,
and
so
those
are
little
tributes
and
thank
you
for
all
the
council
and
all
the
city,
people
who
have
supported
us
along
the
way-
and
it
is
a
joint
venture
and
we
work
on
it
together
and
we're
very
proud
and
there's
a
great
educational
piece.
F
E
N
G
N
N
O
M
N
Mucha
persona
so
Mucha
a
DVD
kill,
well,
okay,
drama
mucho,.
M
P
M
N
City
was
kids,
you
know
to
reach
your
family
and
have
a
nice
sign
and
enjoyed
life,
educational,
wife's
and
so
forth,
and
it
started
way
back
with
the
Dakotas
and
the
equities
us
and
the
government
of
city
of
Tampa,
especially
in
the
mayor's
office.
I,
think
it
started
marrow
real.
If
I
recall
right-
and
it's
been
a
wonderful
event
that
has
been
growing
is
my
grass.
It
keeps
on
moving.
If
you
don't
cut
it
and
it
hasn't
been
cut
in
16
years.
There's
what
I
have
the
attendance
that
they
have
wants
to?
N
He
didn't
say
this,
but
I'm
saying
this:
your
markers
better
get
deeper,
because
you're
gonna
need
more
resources
to
handle
the
crowd,
but
it's
been
their
pleasure
to
do
this
on
behalf
of
all
the
citizens
and
all
the
actors
who
in
and
do
it
for
the
city
of
Tampa
and
the
surrounding
areas
to
have
the
time
of
their
life
that
they
have
doing
this
time.
Thank.
G
G
We've
got
Travis,
coy
from
the
State
Attorney's
Office,
representing
our
state
attorney
Andrew
Warren,
rocky
Brancato,
from
the
public
defender's
office
representing
public
defender,
Julian
Holt
and
together
we
are
successfully
diverting
youthful
offenders,
ensuring
less
interaction
with
our
much
more
punitive
juvenile
justice
system,
keeping
them
out
of
the
courthouse
and
I.
Think
the
key
to
that
success
is
that
collaborative
effort,
we're
very
fortunate
here
in
Hillsborough
County
we've
got
a
really
unique
relationship.
All
of
the
stakeholders
in
our
courthouse
work.
G
Well,
together,
the
state
attorney
and
public
defender
included
that
you
know
normally
an
adversarial
relationship.
They
come
together
and
work
on
key
issues
to
benefit
the
citizens
of
Hillsborough
County.
This
is
certainly
one
of
them.
Are
our
juveniles?
That's
what
we're
here
to
take
care
of.
Much
like
there
was
discussion
of
juveniles
being
involved
in
the
arts,
juveniles
being
involved
in
parks
and
recreation.
That's
where
we
want
our
children
to
be
not
in
the
court
house
facing
criminal
charges,
I'm
personally,
very
proud
of
our
juvenile
mental
health
court
which
I
preside
over.
G
It
is
the
only
juvenile
mental
health
court
in
the
state
of
Florida.
We
started
it
in
January
of
this
year.
We've
had
90
children
go
through
our
juvenile
mental
health
court.
They
find
their
way
to
that
Court
after
being
found,
incompetent
due
to
either
mental
illness,
intellectual
disability
or
age
and
immaturity.
The
collective
goal
of
our
juvenile
mental
health
court
is
to
an
able
youth
to
avoid
future
criminal
involvement
by
providing
services
and
support
to
the
youth
and
to
their
families.
G
Children
are
evaluated
for
needs,
given
referrals
to
our
community
partners
and
progress
is
monitored
through
the
court.
It's
a
very,
very
hands-on
court
I
tend
to
get
very
involved
with
with
the
children
and
their
families,
giving
them
the
support
they
need
giving
them
the
encouragement.
They
need
giving
them
a
little
more
sterner
treatment
when
they
need
that.
But
juvenile
mental
health
court
is
really
just
a
small
part
of
our
juvenile
diversion
efforts,
I'd
like
to
introduce
our
trial
court
Administrator
Gina
justice,
who
will
give
you
a
much
more
detailed
information.
H
Thank
you
for
having
us
here
today.
I'm
gonna
talk
a
little
bit
about
our
Hillsborough
County
Juvenile
Justice
Partnership.
As
the
chief
judge
already
referred.
We
have
a
long
history
of
collaboration
here
in
Hillsborough
County
we're
here
to
make
the
best
opportunities
for
our
youthful
offenders.
Today,
we'll
talk
a
little
bit
more
detailed
about
the
recent
history
of
our
juvenile
arrest
avoidance
program,
which
is
known
by
the
acronym
J
aap
or
jab.
Our
most
recent
JAF
interagency
agreement
became
revised
in
a
August
1
of
2017
just
before
the
2017
school
year.
H
H
The
data
from
2017
to
current
indicates
that
children
are
consistently
being
referred
to
our
youthful
juvenile
defender,
a
program
in
very
high
numbers.
In
2017
we
had
520
youth
who
avoided
arrest
and
came
to
juvenile
diversion
mid
in
2018.
It
jumped
up
35%
where
we
had
705
youth
who
avoided
arrest
and
went
to
a
juvenile
diversion
program
in
2019,
which
is
not
over
yet
I
project.
It
will
have
about
625
youth
who
are
diverted
to
juvenile
diversion,
which
is
a
slight
decrease
from
2018,
but
it's
still
significantly
higher
than
what
we
appreciated
in
2017.
H
Boatwright,
my
juvenile
diversion
program
manager
is
going
to
talk
a
little
bit
about
the
specific
components
are
very
juvenile
diversion
program
and
I
also
wanted
to
offer
that
I
did
bring
some
materials
in
case
you're
interested
in
meeting
with
more
detail
about
the
successes
of
our
program
and
the
requirements
of
participation,
because
I
brought
our
interagency
agreement.
I
brought
our
recent
addendum
in
2019
and
I
also
brought
the
statistics
of
participants
from
October
of
2019
in
case
you'd
like
to
see
something
more
granular.
J
Good
morning,
thank
you
for
allowing
us
to
speak
with
you
about
the
juvenile
diversion
program.
As
Miss
Justice
indicated,
our
program
receives
referrals
from
law
enforcement
officers
throughout
the
county.
That's
Hillsborough,
County,
Sheriff's,
Office,
Tampa,
Police,
Department,
Plant,
City,
Police,
Department,
Temple,
Terrace,
alcohol,
beverage
and
tobacco,
as
well
as
the
University
of
South
Florida.
We
also
receive
referrals
from
the
State
Attorney's
Office.
Once
those
referrals
come
to
us,
we,
the
juvenile
diversion
program,
review
the
criminal
report
affidavit.
Some
of
the
things
that
we
look
for
are
the
specifics
of
the
law
violation.
J
We
try
to
find
out
if
there
are
any
risk
factors
that
jump
out
at
us,
so
that
I
can
appropriately
assign
the
case
to
the
case
managers.
We
have
several
case
managers
who
have
levels
of
expertise,
handling
certain
types
of
law
violations.
For
example,
we
have
a
case
manager
that
is
well
versed
in
sexual
offenses.
We
had
those
that
are
more
inclined
to
work
with
youth
that
have
mental
health
concerns.
J
Once
the
criminal
report
affidavit
is
reviewed
and
the
assignment
is
made
to
the
appropriate
court
counselor,
we
immediately
get
in
contact
with
the
victim,
because
we
want
to
make
sure
that
there's
victim
accountability,
the
things
that
we
try
to
find
out
from
the
victim
are
things
such
as.
How
are
you
impacted?
We
want
to
find
out
if
there's
restitution,
so
we're
looking
for
documentation
so
that
we
can
assist
them
in
getting
repaid
for
any
damages
or
losses
that
they
may
have
suffered.
J
We
also
try
to
find
out
if
they
want
to
come
to
the
scheduled
appointment
so
that
they
can
actually
be
present
when
we
meet
with
the
youth
and
the
parent.
Afterwards,
we
reach
out
to
the
parent
and
coordinate
a
time,
that's
convenient
for
them.
We
take
into
consideration
that
we
have
working
since
so
we
have
case
managers
that
will
be
available
before
and
sometimes
even
after
hours.
We
don't
want
any
barriers
that
would
prevent
young
people
access
to
our
juvenile
diversion
program.
J
Once
the
appointment
takes
place,
there's
two
key
components:
the
interview
where
we
speak
with
a
young
person
and
try
to
find
out
from
their
perspective
what
happened?
We
allow
them
to
describe
the
event
and
then
there's
an
evidence-based
risk
assessment.
That's
also
conducted.
We
have
two
separate
risk
assessments,
but
both
of
them
are
looking
for
evidence
of
childhood
trauma.
Evidence
of
adverse
childhood
experiences.
Are
there
any
concerns
in
terms
of
suicide,
risk
factors,
depressive
symptoms,
anxiety
and
trauma?
We
want
to
find
out
if
the
young
person
has
any
substance
use
concerns.
J
J
But
the
point
that
I
was
trying
to
make
is
that
we
want
to
make
sure
that
when
young
people
come
into
our
office,
it's
a
meaningful
experience
once
the
assessment
and
the
interview
is
conducted,
then
what
we
try
to
figure
out
is
what
is
the
best
way
to
sanction
or
to
give
consequences
to
the
young
person?
Do
we
want
to
take
care
of
that
right
there
in
the
office,
or
is
this
case
more
appropriately
set
before
teen
court?
J
Some
of
the
things
that
help
us
to
determine
where
to
best
sanction
a
young
person
are:
are
there
any
social
anxieties
as
a
child?
Have
a
history
of
cutting
any
attempts
at
suicide?
We
don't
want
to
put
that
type
of
individual
in
the
presence
of
a
jury
of
their
peers,
because
we
don't
want
to
retry
my
ties
or
cause
any
triggers
for
the
young
person.
J
Teen
court
really
is
specifically
for
certain
types
of
charges,
so
petty
thefts,
batteries,
criminal
mischief,
disrupting
school
functions,
those
types
of
things.
It's
a
really
good
experience
for
young
people
on
both
sides.
The
young
people
that
are
serving
as
jurors
have
the
opportunity
to
build
their
skills
and
their
competencies,
and
the
young
person
that
is
sanctioned
through
teen
court
has
an
opportunity
to
see
that
not
all
young
people
are
glamour
rising
or
glorifying
antisocial
behaviors.
They
see
their
peers
doing
positive
things
and
we
hope
that
that
has
a
positive
impact
on
them.
J
One
of
the
things
that
I
also
would
like
to
point
out
is
that
when
we
have
young
people
and
their
parents
in
our
office,
what
we
try
to
do
if
they
qualify
for
services
and
services,
include
therapeutic
intervention,
substance
use
and
even
some
youth
development
on
programs
where
they
can
develop
their
competencies.
We
try
to
capitalize
on
that
moment
and
contact
the
service
provider
triage
the
case
and
see
if
we
can
go
ahead
and
set
up
that
next.
First
appointment,
we
do
that
for
a
couple
of
reasons.
J
We
want
to
make
sure
that
the
connection
is
made
and
that
the
youth
and
parent,
when
they
leave
there,
they
don't
have
yet
one
more
thing
to
do,
and
we
do
a
soft
pass
off
of
the
youth
and
the
parent
to
the
treatment
providers
that
we've
got
wonderful
relationships
with.
We
really
with
the
juvenile
diversion
program
like
to
focus
on
youth
competencies.
I
saw
Miss
Beverly,
given
an
award
because
of
the
good
work
that
she
does
in
the
community
and
we
often
refer
clients
to
those
types
of
resources
in
the
community.
J
We
refer
clients
to
the
rich
house,
which
is
supervised
by
law
enforcement,
but
they
do
to
tutorial
programs
and
really
spend
quality
with
the
young
people,
and
so
in
a
nutshell.
What
we
try
to
make
sure
happens
is
that
Public
Safety,
victim
accountability
and
the
development
of
youth
competencies
is
at
the
forefront
of
what
we
do
with
the
diversion
program.
Thank
you.
Thank.
A
I
You
mr.
chairman
I
attended
a
meeting
earlier
in
the
year.
I
made
a
phone
call
because
I
was
wondering
I
was
a
program
called
neighborhood
accountability,
work
now
and
it
went
away
and
I
was
concerned
about
that
and
I.
What
are
we
doing?
Because
that
board
had
the
stakeholders
in
the
communities
really
advocating
for
the
victim
and
the
young
juvenile
perpetrator,
but
it
also
gave
accountability
with
school.
I
The
community
and
in
the
child
and
I,
went
to
the
meeting
and
I
found
about
all
the
programs
that
the
the
system
was
advocating
for
our
young
people
and
thought
it
would
not
be
robbery.
They
not
come
and
share
that
with
us.
So
we
can
be.
We
can
know
what
is
going
on
with
our
state
attorney
and
I
program
in
the
in
our
outsourced
agencies.
So
we
give
me
knowledge,
because
people
call
us
about
everything
and
have
information
and
say
this
is
why
this
program
is
in
place.
This
is
we
need
to
call
this.
I
A
D
D
20
years
ago,
when
I
was
in
the
public
defender's
office,
you
know
I
thought
I
knew
what
was
going
on
in
our
community.
The
boy
you
you
you
go
to
the
I
would
fill
in
periodically
in
the
juvenile
group
in
front
of
Judge
little
who
did
a
great
job
and,
and
you
go
in
there
and
there's
at
any
given
day.
I
can't
remember
the
exact
numbers
fifty
or
a
hundred
kids
in
there.
You
know
in
handcuffs.
L
D
Of
them
as
young,
as
is
you
know,
what
eight
years
old,
nine
years
old,
that
sort
of
thing
and
they're
in
detention
for
twenty
one,
potentially
twenty
one
days,
it's
mind-blowing
people
don't
realize
that
and
that's
why
I'm
saying
it
right
now,
but
I'm
so
glad,
and
then
that
still
happens
to
a
certain
extent
for
the
kids
in
those
five
categories.
Who
you
know
might
need
a
little
bit
more,
but
I'm
so
glad.
We've
made
progress
on
looking
at
this
holistically
and
and
I.
D
Think
one
of
the
hardest
parts
of
government
is
for
government
agencies
to
collaborate
and
work
together,
and
you
are
such
a
leader
in
this
community
bringing
those
groups
together.
You
know
with
positive
ideas.
Recently
you
started
the
juvenile
mental
health
thing
and
you
got
to
know
that
through
so
many
of
these
kids
and
the
stresses
at
home
and
the
stresses
of
life
and
everything
else.
A
lot
of
it
is
mental
health
and
you've
realized
that
and
you,
then
you
sit
there
yourself
personally
to
to
look
over
the
juvenile
mental
health.
D
That's
my
recollection,
but
I
wanted
to
give
a
shout
out
to
you
and
to
every
department.
That's
here
represented
the
law
enforcement.
Obviously
state
attorney
public
defender
of
the
court
system,
DJJ
all
the
different
agencies
that
are
involved
in
working
together
to
help
those
kids
and
then
the
follow
up
that
that
MS
Justice
mentioned
miss
justice
and
her
her
partner
mentioned
I
think
is
so
critical
because
we
can
get
through
those
first
six
months
or
nine
months
and
get
them
through
that
diversion
program.
D
G
Think
we
concern
ourselves
with
public
safety.
We
concern
ourselves
with
accountability
for
these
youthful
offenders,
these
juveniles
and
if
we
can
have
them,
avoid
an
arrest
and
it's
hard
to
get
a
job
now
anywhere
and
if
you've
got
an
arrest
record
I
mean
it's
really
really
difficult.
So
believe
me
I,
invite
all
the
council
members
any
time
you'd
like
to
come
and
spend
the
day
at
the
courthouse
with
us.
Please
let
me
know:
I've
got
an
extra
road.
We
can
throw
on
you.
A
B
Honor
I
want
to
thank
you
councilor
ding,
Felder,
said
said
more
than
a
mouthful
and
it
was
all
accurate,
but
I
want
to
thank
you
for
intervening
in
a
young
person's
life.
One
stupid
mistake
should
not
mean
a
lifetime
of
hardship
as
an
adult
I.
Thank
you.
Everybody!
That's
working
with
you,
your
honor
thank.
A
You
very
much
and
thank
you
very
much
for
all
that
you
do
obviously
being
a
long
time
like
councilman
dink,
Felder
attorney
I'm,
well
aware
of
a
lot
of
the
things
that
we
do
here
in
the
13th
Judicial
Circuit
and-
and
we
should
all
be
very
proud
that
our
circuit,
not
just
with
things
that
happen
in
court,
but
our
bar
associations
that
we
really
do
good
work
here.
We
really
have
lawyers
who
not
just
do
well
but
do
good
to
the
community.
A
C
Mint
is
not
Tony
Daniel,
one
of
the
things
they
need
to
straighten
out
is
they
need
to
it's.
When
you
operate
with
the
bureaucracy,
you
see,
there's
a
degree
of
inefficiency
and
then
so
that
people
have
to
experience
some
week
after
week.
What
you
need
to
do
is
say.
Public
comment
is
a
certain
time.
We
don't
need
to
sit
here,
wondering
if
we're
gonna
speak.
C
If
we're
not
going
to
speak,
it's
disrespectful
and
it's
dishonorable
to
private
citizens
who
take
that
time
to
come
down
here
and
you
don't
know
if
you're
gonna
be
speaking
at
one
o'clock
or
at
ten
o'clock,
just
make
it
ten
o'clock
and
call
it
a
day
and
schedule
other
people
to
be
here
at
a
certain
time.
And
if
anybody
want
to
listen
to
whatsoever,
they
have
to
say
they
can
stay
and
do
so
that's
a
simple
solution.
Why
should
private
citizens?
C
Why
should
a
citizenry
who
elected
you
guys
want
to
come
down
here
and
voice
their
opinions
have
to
wait
like
puppets
on
a
string.
That's
unfair
really
need
to
restore
my
time
if
possible,
but
you
guys
really
need
to
get
that
straight.
It's
a
degree
of
incompetence.
If
that
can't
be
straighten
out,
the
city
is
hustling
backwards
and
that's
not
unusual,
because
society
is
hustling
backwards,
as
stated
previously
need
to
make
donations
in
all
appropriations
to
lory
park
zoo,
because
that's
where
every
African
is
gonna
be
the
Africans.
That's
left
in
this
city.
C
It
can
be
seen
it's
a
certain
kind
of
hatred
for
African
people
and
that
hatred
is
deep.
It's
600
years
deep
and
we
experience
it.
We
feel
it
and
we
live
it
and
week
after
week,
when
I'm
here,
but
when
you
see
any
African
person
out
there,
Fitz
Marcus
Garvey,
Malcolm
X
Martin,
Luther,
King,
Rosa,
Parks,
Fannie,
Lou,
Hamer,
Harriet,
Tubman
whosoever.
It
may
be
we're
not
begging.
Anyone
to
like
us
we're
not
begging
anyone
to
respect
us
and
this
message
isn't
for
you
guys.
This
message
is
for
the
other
guys
we
have
to
organize.
C
We
have
to
organize
and
demand
respect
demand.
Equal
treatment,
demand,
fair
housing
demand
justice.
All
these
things.
We
have
to
do
as
African
people
instead
of
coming
down
here
week
after
week,
a
bunch
of
em
effing
beggars.
Bagon,
Bagon
week
after
week
we
came
from
a
too
proud
of
ancestry
to
come
down
here,
begging
week
after
week.
Thank
you
very
much.
K
My
name
is
pepper:
Frank
Williams,
I'm,
coming
down
hit
constituted
dead
like
the
brothers
just
filed,
go
saving.
We
get
no
justice
regardless
now,
Bates
are
worried
about
everything
else.
I
think
y'all
can't
move
by
the
damn
dog.
Then
you
killed
by
black
people.
The
way
you're
treated
and
I
was
reading
the
Constitution,
the
other
night
and
I
find
out
the
Constitution
amendment
to
the
constitute
one
river
for
black
folks,
wouldn't
rid
up
for
black
votes
at
all.
We
were
slavers.
K
I
was
an
accessible
slavery
during
that
time,
and
the
only
thing
slavery
got
with
the
work
and
be
killed,
and
it's
that's
sad
and
you
still
cleaned
up
the
same
way.
They're
treating
us
work
sitting
through
the
damn
dog
and
that's
not
right,
and
we
got
black
your
folks
that
think
that
somebody
don't
wanna
come
down
here
because
they
think
they
better
than
everybody
else.
We
have
to
understand
and
try
to
tell
y'all
over
and
over
and
over
again
and
again,
I'm
a
preacher
I'm,
not
a
18.
K
An
atheist
come
against
me
real
hard,
but
it
don't
bother
me
I
got
to
preach
the
gospel
of
Jesus
Christ
ragazze.
The
way
I
am
and
I
thank
God
for
them.
Tile
too,
and
preachers
need
to
come
out
here,
big
time
and
stand
up
for
themselves
and
stand
up
for
their
people
said
nobody
hiding
behind
the
poop
report
of
them
and
sitting
in
their
condition
collecting
money-
that's
all
they're
doing,
but
they
need
to
come
down
and
practice
this
place
up.
Let
y'all
know
that
we
mean
business.
K
I
ain't
got
to
be
a
girl
for
nothing,
I
begged,
my
Heavenly
Father
for
everything
and
one
one
of
these
days.
Y'all
gonna,
see
just
as
y'all
can
see,
didn't
respect
on
this
young
man
here,
because
we
trying
to
stand
up
for
justice,
not
just
for
black
folk
but
black
folks
or
the
one
that's
suffering
the
consequences,
white
folks
getting
away
with
murder.
K
Let
me
tell
you
something
a
little
bit
about
history
before
you
rain
that
bill
on
me
back
doing
history
time.
You
know
what
they
slaughter.
Little
boy
fed
him
to
the
alligator
two
years
around
the
you
know
about,
and
you
ain't
too
far
from
that
now,
oh
yeah
mercy.
Why
don't
y'all
treat
us
son?
You
ain't
gonna!
Ask
us
no
question
we're
here.
Everybody
else
come
up
in
you,
gonna
ask
some
question.
Wait
a
minute.
Come
back,
tell
me
to
come
back
then
I
can
saw
your
question.
God
knows
I
need
to
answer
your
question.
K
We
standing
in
jeopardy
right
now
and
I
thought
that
church
over
there
on
the
street
and
they
treat
me
like
a
damn
dog.
And
it's
not
right
talk
about
me
and
now
we
got
a
male
here.
Lord,
have
mercy,
say
she's,
a
woman,
a
man's
body
with
all
that
crap
come
from
Jesus
Christ.
We
need
help.
Thank
you
for
letting
me
speak.
My
piece
I
got.
A
L
Good
morning,
City
Council,
my
name
is
Bernie
and
I
was
here
last
week
on
last
month.
Talking
about
the
poor
at
least
the
poor
black
people,
the
one
that's
so
poor.
We
can't
afford
the
oor
I
can
only
afford
the
letter.
P
and
they'll
come
consistent
with
this
affordable
housing.
Now
the
government
said
that
they're
providing
me
a
safe
and
secure
and
safe
housing
and
dignity.
L
I
stand
here
two
months,
somebody
lying
I,
don't
know
if
it's
the
government
or
the
city
of
Tampa
or
housing
or
Fortman
I,
don't
know
I'm,
not
sure
who
is
to
blame
for
this,
but
I
asked
you
to
come
out
to
my
apartment.
I
live
at
130,
first
Street
19:15,
East,
131st,
Street,
Tampa,
Florida,
Volunteers
of
America,
HUD,
Housing,
Federal,
Housing,
I,
don't
know
who's
responsible
for
all
of
this,
but
this
gentleman
is
smoking
dope.
It
comes
through
the
ventilation
pack.
L
Corrosion
drug
infested
am
I
being
rejected
or
my
other
people
being
rejected
because
we
saw
Poe.
We
can't
afford
affordable
housing.
We
can't
have
a
decent
place
to
stay.
I,
don't
smoke
dope,
I'm
tired
of
smoking,
it
double
your
infection.
Respiratory
infections
I'm
smelling
this
every
day
he
started
at
7:30
last
night.
He
quit
about
10:20
this
morning.
It's
55
degrees
outside
I'm,
sitting
outside
dressed,
like
this,
with
a
blanket
for
two
and
a
half
hours,
cuz
I'm.
L
Looking
for
fresh
air
again,
who
is
responsible
for
me
having
an
adequate
safe,
secure
with
dignity,
place
to
stay
City,
Council,
County,
Commission,
hood
housing,
affordable
housing,
Hillsborough,
County,
Tech,
whoo,
I'm
gonna,
keep
coming
down
here,
because
I
keep
getting
sick,
I'm
keep
getting
sick,
I'm,
taking
antibiotics.
Why.
L
I'm,
not
the
only
one
going
through
this,
the
other
poor
black
people
they're
going
through
it
all,
so
they
don't
come
down
here,
talk
so
I'm
back
other
voice
for
them.
Somebody
has
to
know
that
this
is
going
on.
I've
been
coming
down
here
for
quite
some
time
and
I've
been
speaking
about
this
same
issue
and
guess
what
they
do
nothing.
L
Somebody
is
listening.
Thank
you,
somebody's
listening,
somebody
is
talking,
but
nobody
is
doing
anything
I've
been
living
there
since
March
of
2019
I've
been
to
the
ER
I've
had
respiratory
infections
I've
never
dealt
with
any
of
this
until
I
came
to
Tampa,
Florida
and
I'm,
so
poor
that
I
cannot
have
a
decent
place.
Secure
place,
no
drug
infested
pad
corrosion
in
my
air
breathing
space.
Thank
you
very
much
and
enjoy
the
rest
of
your
day.
C
Generally
roundabouts
increased
a
number
of
I
students
by
approximately
up
to
30%
in
those
areas
where
ound
abouts
exists,
the
increased
number
of
I
students
wouldn't
increase,
auto
insurance
rates
for
people
living
in
that
general
area.
As
far
as
East
Tampa,
the
roundabouts
are
not
set
up
for
a
large
vehicle
travel,
there's
actually
a
fire
station
on
34th
Street,
which
that
would
inhibit
or
force
them
to
choose
a
different
path
in
order
to
exit
I
guess
there
are
five.
Your
station
area
I
also
observed
myself
that
pedestrians
generally
attempt
to
avoid
crossing
roundabouts
locations.
C
Necie
also,
as
far
as
how
to
address
roundabouts
is
still
an
uncertainty
for
engineers
installing
the
roundabouts
and
the
public
as
a
general
as
forest,
how
they
can
actually
travel
through
those
roundabout
locations.
The
travel
through
the
34th
roundabout
area,
I
guess,
people
traveling
through
those
areas
still
would
be
required
to
travel
through
intersections
with
traffic
lights.
So
the
the
number
of
roundabouts
is
in
comparison
to
the
intercessions
with
traffic
lights
would
be
very
minimal.
So
that's
not
even
a
I
guess.
A
relatively
increase
is
for
safety
goes.
C
C
A
F
Good
morning
driving
Rogers
Tunes,
my
purpose
is
to
continue
expressing
concerns
about
your
plan
to
install
roundabouts
on
34th
Street
in
East
temple
out
of
concern
for
the
residents
safety
roundabouts
would
be
installed
in
areas
with
a
high
concentration
of
children
when
roundabouts
are
known
to
have
a
high
incidence
of
traffic
accidents.
This
is
new
data
that
you
all
shouldn't
be
researching
the
Word
of
God
states.
We
should
walk
circumspectly,
evaluate
the
entire
situation.
I
surmise
that
this
has
not
happened.
F
I
feel
that
roundabouts
on
34th
Street
failed
to
take
into
consideration
the
endangerment
of
children,
pedestrians
and
bicyclists.
Your
imagine
2040
comprehensive
plan
states
when
there
is
a
question
about
roads
being
pedestrian
friendly,
the
Hillsborough
MPO
advisory
boys
should
be
consulted.
Has
that
happened?
You
all
need
to
answer
that
question.
In
my
opinion,
the
Transportation
Department
staff
failed
to
comply
with
the
city
of
temples,
2040
comprehensive
plan.
F
According
to
miss
Duncan's
presentation
on
the
34th
Street,
there
was
no
mention
of
whether
in
her
presentation
at
the
last
meeting,
there
was
no
mention
of
whether
public
hearings
were
held
are
the
dates.
The
public
hearings
were
scheduled.
Meetings
with
community
groups
is
no
substitution
for
public
hearing,
no
coordination
with
the
MPO
Advisory
Board.
That's
you
need
to
remember
that
that's
policy
number
mby
policy
for
one
full
point:
1.3,
which
ensures
bicycle
and
pedestrian
friendly
roads.
Potential
conflicts
between
pedestrian
and
motor
vehicles
should
be
minimized
according
to
policy
Lu.
F
Four
point
three
point:
two
and
any
policy
5.1.1
the
template,
City
Council,
November
21st
2019
meeting
transcript,
failed
to
identify
what
the
City
Council
approved
regarding
the
34th
Street
roundabout
project.
This
information
is
needed
to
file
an
appeal.
Perhaps
roundabouts
don't
go
far
enough
to
promote
pedestrian
safety.
Leah
Reeve
was
struck
and
killed
by
a
car
while
crossing
the
road
at
40th
Street
near
roundabout
location
in
May
of
2018
I
know.
All
of
you
remember
that
the
neighbors
said
that
they
are
afraid
to
cross
the
street
at
River
PI's
apartments.
F
The
public
should
be
concerned
about
the
city
of
tempest
transportations,
Transportation
Department
decisions
in
reference
to
roundabouts.
Recent
research
reflects
the
30%
increase
in
roundabouts
in
those
areas.
I
spoke
with
mr.
McKinney,
with
the
Florida
Department
of
Transportation,
an
engineer
who
concurred
that
I
have
a
legitimate
pedestrian
concern
about
the
safety
of
children.
Mr.
McKinney
stated
that
you
all
need
to
listen
and
the
other
point
I
may
need
to
make.
It
is
only
36.
A
F
K
A
N
A
E
That
is
being
there's
going
to
be
a
request
from
the
administration
to
have
that
taken
up
along
with
related
items
and
that's
going
to
be
continued
on
a
request
of
the
administration
to
February
6th
of
next
year
2020.
So
it'll
come
back,
so
it's
not
gonna
be
handled
today
and
comments
can
be
taken
on
the
along
with
whatever
the
related
cases
are
on
February
6.
All.
K
A
A
D
Just
a
quick,
quick
thing
on
the
roundabouts:
you
know
that
this
has
been
discussed
over
and
over
and
I
just
wanted
to
mention
something
for
everybody's
benefit:
the
Insurance
Institute
for
Highway
Safety
and
the
Federal
Highway
Administration
have
statistics
now
I'm,
not
a
traffic
engineer,
but
I'm
just
reading
their
statistics,
it
says:
roundabouts
have
a
37
percent
reduction
in
overall
collisions
a
75
percent
reduction
in
injury
collisions
a
90%
reduction
in
fatality
collisions.
This
is
all
across
the
whole
country,
a
40%
reduction
in
pedestrian
collisions.
D
It
says
some
of
the
benefits
include
lower
traveled
speeds,
no
light
to
beat
in
one-way
travel
around
the
circle.
So
anyway,
we're
not
doing
this
willy-nilly.
Our
department
traffic
departments
put
a
lot
of
time
and
effort
into
this,
and
it's
also
I
believe
proven
nationally
that
this
is
a
safety
abet.
A
safer
way
to
do
it.
I
know
change
is
not
easy,
but
this
is
a
change
for
the
better.
Thank
you.
Mister
thank.
K
A
A
K
A
To
say
too,
before
F
dot
begins.
Why
I
brought
this
item
forward?
We
have
here
and
we'll
be
hearing
from
him
in
a
little
bit
mr.
Mel
loan
from
Mel's
hot
dogs
who's.
Here
we
had
an
incident
at
Mel's,
hot
dogs,
as
everybody
knows
a
couple
weeks
ago
for
a
vehicle
literally
crashed
into
the
restaurant
and
thank
God.
According
to
the
best
of
my
knowledge,
nobody
into
restaurant
I
believe
was
hurt
and
that's
a
very
good
thing.
A
You
know
I,
never
miss
an
opportunity
to
try
to
talk
about
Busch,
Boulevard
and
just
how
important
of
a
corridor
that
is,
as
you
know,
obviously
ma'am
to
the
city
of
Tampa.
It's
a
potentially
a
corridor
to
a
tourist
destination.
Here
in
Tampa,
it's
potentially
a
corridor
to
such
a
vibrant
and
growing
area
when
you
include
a
specialty,
Fowler,
USF,
etc.
But,
right
now
it's
essentially
a
corridor
of
neglect.
A
Q
Q
Q
Basically,
it's
a
high
visibility
enforcement
grant,
which
which
even
though
they're
there
to
enforce
the
speed
their
primary
purpose
really
is
to
get
to
the
interface
with
road
users,
maybe
provide
bike
lights,
reflective
material
to
encourage
them
to
use
the
road
more
safe
bleach.
Now
it's
because
engineering,
we
do
have
short
term
midterm
and
long
term
projects.
In
the
short
term,
we
really
focus
on
West
Bush
Boulevard,
which
is
west
of
the
interstate
and
east
wishbone
of
the
east
of
indicate
as
separate
projects.
Now
for
West
Bush
Boulevard,
there
was
a
recent
resurfacing.
Q
We
are
very
happy
that
we
were
able
to
add
several
median
islands
and
traffic
separators
essentially
reduces
the
range
where
the
driver
has
to
pay
attention
to
when
driving,
and
then
it
also
provides
a
refuge
for
pedestrians
if,
in
fact
they
want
across
the
street,
we
have
several
smaller
projects,
more
spot
or
a
quarter
light,
and
then
I
have
listed
the
most
notable.
The
first
thing
is:
we've
worked
with
the
intersection
of
North
Boulevard,
where
we
had
schoolchildren
crossing
before
Mabel.
L
Q
You
so
I
have
listed
a
couple
of
the
a
couple
of
the
spot
corner.
What
enhancements
most
notable
is
we've
been
working
on
placing
speed
feedback
signs
along
the
corridor.
Essentially,
essentially,
this
reminds
drivers
of
the
speed
compliance
drivers
with
speed
and
gives
them
a
feedback.
Hey.
You
know
you're
driving
a
little
bit
too
fast.
Maybe
you
want
to
go
down
to
the
speed
limit.
We've
also
been
partnering
with
the
city
of
Tampa
to
incorporate
lighting
improvements
at
intersections
and
also
on
the
corridor.
Now
to
monitor
the
speed.
Q
We
have
a
several
ways
in
which
we're
collecting
data
from
the
speed
feedback
signs,
as
well
as
from
Bluetooth
devices,
and
we've
been
using
this
data
to
look
at
how
we
can
further
work,
how
we
can
further
take
actions
in
the
future
now
I'm
gonna,
move
on
to
midterm
actions.
So
that's
what
I'm
talking
about
was
the
West
Bush
Boulevard.
Now
for
an
East
Bush
Boulevard,
we
have
a
project
coming
spring
of
2020,
we're
very
excited
to
have
four
Hawks
at
the
locations.
Q
At
these,
as
the
locations
listed,
we
had
a
similar
project
on
Hillsborough
Avenue,
where
we've
seen
where
we
have
been
able
to
see
a
reduction
in
speed,
as
well
as
a
reduction
in
the
crashes
and
based
on
that
we
have.
We
are
looking
forward
to
a
speed
reduction
of
five
miles
an
hour
and
a
reduction
of
ashes
of
13
crashes
a
year.
Q
Q
E
A
Thank
you
ma'am
in
the
for
councilman
Goods
I
I
just
wanted
to
thank
you
guys
for
your
work,
but
I
also
mister
mister
Lowen
did
you
want
to
come
up
and
say
anything
sure
we
have
here
a
Mel
loan
from
Mel's
hot
dogs
who's
here
whose
business
was
impacted
by
this
crash,
and
now
we'll
give
you?
What
do
you
think
you
need
four
minutes?
Five
minutes
three
minutes
Thank.
G
G
G
Common
infrequent
I
I
had
the
opportunity
to
speak
with
the
gentleman
from
the
Florida
d-o-t
and
explain
to
me
that
the
average
speed
on
Busch
Boulevard
is
52
miles
an
hour.
The
average
speed
is
52
miles
an
hour.
I
believe
counsel
would
be
here
and
I
were
sitting
in
a
store
one
time
and
we
watch
somebody
go
by
summer,
70
or
80
miles
an
hour.
It's
just
not
uncommon.
G
We
have
a
street
that
passes
in
front
of
it.
That's
killing
people
go
to
Tampa,
go
to
Bush
fall
apart,
get
hit
by
a
car.
It's
quite
press
the
logic
behind,
not
lowering
the
speed
limit,
which
is
very
low
in
Temple
Terrace.
By
the
way
when
you
cross
56th
read,
it
goes
from
45
to
30
the
logic
behind
it
is.
While
we
do
studies
the
in
general,
we
do
studies,
stop
studying
change.
The
speed
limit,
make
the
streets
safe,
do
what's
ever
necessary,
save
lives,
who
it's
very
logical,
appreciate.
A
I
I
K
The
question
speed
management
is
a
hot
topic
in
Florida,
TLT,
I.
Think,
most
all
the
councilman's
you
walk
with
our
secretary
Wayne.
He
really
paid
this
attention
to
your
request:
he'll,
okay,
hundreds
on
our
district
fun
to
work
with
sheriff
it
had
TBD
to
enforce
through
the
speed
enforcement
for
three
corridor.
Busch
Boulevard
follow
Avenue
and
his
for
Avenue
and
later,
when
we
work
with
Cheryl,
often
TBD,
they
say
both
agency
have
interagency
agreement.
Tbd
can
help
share
off
its
share
office
can
help
TBD.
So
the
first
phrase
you'll
see.
K
The
statistic
is
the
one
just
ended
five
share
office.
They
address
Busch,
Boulevard
TBD
right
now
is
just
starting
the
same
program,
so
we
spread
the
money
to
have
a
six-month
campaign.
Doing
the
push-pull
of
our
four
Evony
and
Hillsborough
Avenue
doing
the
speed
management.
Try
to
tell
the
driver
you
need
to
slow
down.
This
is
a
short-term
action.
We
are
doing
I.
I
I
Unless
that
grant
for
Pacific
ended
in
the
great
state,
the
share
files
will
go
out
there
and
set
up
with
a
speed
trap
or
set
up.
Some
type
of
monitoring.
I
could
go
along
that,
but
if
you're
just
saying,
as
an
average
day
or
throughout
the
month
these
months
that
the
sheriff
I
was
just
out
there
giving
speeding
tickets
on
Hillsborough
Avenue
boys
of
our
father,
Avenue
like
that
I'm
just
so
with
my
experience,
I
just
don't
see
that
unless,
unless
I
could
see
some
actual
copy
with
some
deputies
things
on
tickets,
we.
O
Partly
a
d-o-t
point,
but
maybe
a
systemic
issue.
Yesterday
I
met
with
some
neighborhood
leaders
and
speeding
is
a
systemic
issue
throughout
the
city.
Apparently,
and
you
know,
I've
seen
it
myself,
I'm
sure
you
all
have
seen
it
but
I'm
getting
lots
of
complaints
about
people
racing
through
school
zones,
racing
through
neighborhoods
and
on
a
drive,
Busch
Boulevard
every
day
and
I
mean
not
push
it.
O
They
short
every
day
and
every
day,
I'm
Baker
I
have
at
least
one
person
passing
me
going
65
or
70
miles
an
hour,
and
so
we
have.
We
have
a
systemic
issue.
We
need
to
figure
out
address
and
maybe,
in
a
separate
conversation
we
could
try
to
get
chief
of
staff
since
he
was
kind
of
the
deputy
head
of
the
police
force,
but
we
need
to
figure
out
part
of
it
as
designed
and
and
in
addition,
the
landscaping
everything
part
of
it
is
is
maybe
enforcement,
but
we've
got
to
figure
out
a
solution
to
this.
O
There
I
be
interesting
to
see
the
data
going
backwards
to
see.
If
this
is
becoming
more
and
more
of
an
issue,
it
seems
that
people
are
angrier
and
in
more
of
a
hurry
and
then
the
opposite
part
of
that
as
people's
despite
the
new
rule,
they're
still
on
their
cell
phones,
they're
on
their
cell
phones
and
speeding
or
their
stop.
That
stoplights
are
not
moving,
so
people
get
angry
and
then
they
speed
around
them.
There's
all
kinds
of
dangerous
things
happening
and
we've
got
to
figure
out
how
to
resolve
that.
O
So
that's
one
idea,
the
other
one
is
that
you
know
I've
said
many
times,
I
think
bush
Boulevard
is
our
gateway
to
the
world.
We
think
that
that
downtown
is
our
front
door.
It's
actually
Bush
Boulevard.
A
lot
of
people
come
into
this
area
through
Tampa
Airport,
thankfully,
but
Orlando
has
70
million
tourists
a
year
and
a
lot
of
them
come
over
to
Busch
Gardens
and
when
they
see
Busch,
Boulevard
or
Fowler
Avenue,
they
that's
their
impression
of
Tampa
and,
as
I've
met
lots
of
CEOs
traveling
around
the
world.
O
A
Know
I
was
actually
going
to
speak
about
that
councilman
Carlson,
which
is
that
one
of
the
reasons
I
brought
this
forward
is
because
now,
with
the
discussions,
we're
having
we're
gonna
be
taking
a
look
at
at
MOU
for
the
US
effort.
I
think
it
is
on
the
19th
there's.
Discussions
on
Bush
Boulevard
potentially
be
included
within
that
vision,
which
is
a
really
really
good
thing,
but
I
see.
A
Discussions
like
this
is
part
and
parcel
of
what
we're
doing
with
whatever
you
want
to
call
it
a
taxing
district,
whatever
you
want
to
call
it
for
the
usf
Aryan
for
the
whole
corridor,
which
is
talking
about
not
only
economic
development
in
the
area
but
also
quality
of
life
enhancements,
which
this
is
certainly
what
this
is
about.
110
percent
so
dancer.
Your
question
yeah,
of
course,
that's
something,
that's
part
and
parcel
of
this,
which
is
why
this
was
being
brought
forward.
A
We
can't
take
a
look
at
economic
development
in
the
North
Tampa
USF
Busch
Boulevard
area,
without
taking
a
look
at
basic
quality
of
life
issues
such
as
speeding,
such
as
the
the
safety
of
pedestrians
of
bicyclists
of
folks
in
their
cars,
etc,
etc.
So
I
think
that
they
all
go
part
and
parcel
of
it
economic
development
without
taking
into
account
the
human
capital,
the
people
that
live
in
communities,
particularly
disadvantaged
communities,
in
areas
that
are
filled
with
working
families,
etc.
I
think
is
incomplete.
A
F
A
K
A
A
You
literally
had
a
vehicle
plow
through
one
of
well
most
well-known
restaurants
here
in
the
city
of
Tampa,
North,
Tampa,
Mel's,
hot
dogs,
so
I
think
people
want
action
right
here
right
now,
we've
seen
statistics
I
mean
I,
got
them
right
here
that
in
the
three
mile
stretch
along
Busch
Boulevard
from
Nebraska
to
50th
Street,
there
were
two
hundred
and
fifty-two
crashes
in
16
262
in
2017
208
in
the
2018
191
crashes.
You
know
that's
no
good!
A
I
I
I
I
F
I
Numbers
so
and
that's
what
I
want
to
challenge
with
those
numbers,
but
just
up
reading
a
long
time
off,
wasn't
person
knowing
Bush
full
of
hard-working
that
and
you
indicate
the
sheriff's
office
there.
That's
why
I
was
questioning
those
numbers.
So
if
you
could
go
back
and
give
me
an
update
on
that,
because
I.
I
A
You
thank
you,
sir
yeah.
Thank
you,
sir,
and
I
and
I
want
it
again.
Thank
my
colleagues
for
your
support
of
Bush
and
Fowler
in
that
corridor.
I
know
that
everybody
here
is
very
passionate
about
it.
It's
one
of
the
most
ignored
sidelined
areas
in
the
city
and
I
really
do
believe
that,
with
just
modest
investments,
you
can
have
robust
movements
forward
for
that
area.
So
I
wanted
to
thank
everybody
for
your
enthusiastic
support.
Okay,
next,
are
there
any
requests
by
the
public
reconsideration
of
legislative
matters
being
none?
S
A
F
D
Thank
You
Jan,
not
not
specifically
on
this,
but
as
related
to
the
War
Department.
It
came
to
my
attention
that
you
know
we
have
water
restrictions
and,
and
we
have
an
enforcement.
You
know
when
people
are
ordering
on
the
wrong
wrong
days
or
what-have-you,
and-
and
it
came
to
my
attention
from
a
constituent
that
we
don't
give
warnings
that
that
whatever
group
we
hired
to
do
that
enforcement-
which
I
think
is
a
private
group-
that
we
delegate
that
to
we
and
I
kind
of
met.
D
I
think
I
mentioned
this
to
Brad
as
well,
but
we
we
just
give
a
ticket
right
away
and
and
if
that's
true,
I,
think
it's
a
little
unfair,
because
a
lot
of
people
I
can
probably
ask
the
50
people
who
are
sitting
out
there.
You
know
what
day
of
the
week
they're
supposed
to
water
and
he'll
know,
there's
Brad
and
how
many
you
know.
You
know
the
details
of
water
restrictions
and
and
when
we're
not
in
a
severe
drought,
those
issues
kind
of
go
away
a
little
bit
but
anyway.
D
D
D
A
A
A
I
A
I
A
D
A
A
S
Q
S
D
And
I
will
vote
in
favor
of
all
these
I
just
wanted
to
and
I
had
a
little
chat
with
Jeanne
Duncan
yesterday.
This
speaks
to
some
improvements
on
West
Shore
item
38
and
in
that,
in
this
specific
area
is
kind
of
north
of
of
Kennedy
in
the
West
Shore
district.
What
I
asked
miss
Duncan
wasn't
I
said
we
have
some
huge
long-term
problems
on
West
Shore
from
Kennedy
to
Gandhi
and
then
even
now,
south
of
Gandhi
we
had
a
zoning
I
will
throw
in
too.
But
the
the
issue
came
up.
D
All
the
construction
south
of
Gandhi
and
I
asked
miss
Duncan
I
said:
what
are
we
doing
to
improve
what
Shore
other
than
the
West
Shore
/
Gandhi
intersection,
which
is
is
being
improved,
but
other
than
that
we
got
a
long
stretch
of
shore
that
I
think
has
has
basically
been
ignored
for
a
long
time.
So
you
will
hear
more
on
that
as
we
move
forward,
but
I
just
wanted
to
give
you
a
heads
up
on
that.
Thank
you,
mister.
Yes,
all.
A
O
I
just
had
two
quick
questions:
I
want
to
get
on
the
record.
I
talked
to
mr.
Barrett
earlier,
so
thank
you
for
coming
number
one
is
I
just
want
to
make
sure
in
looking
at
this
that
it's
that
it's
not
part
of
the
toilet
to
tap
project.
You
use
said
earlier.
That
is
part
of
another
project.
Could
you
just
say
that,
for
the
record.
G
Correct
Brad
bear
Public,
Works
administrator.
This
is
an
amendment
to
Carollo
agreement
with
a
master
plan
that
we
have
performed
earlier
for
pipes,
and
this
would
add
task
three,
which
is
an
engineering
report
associated
with
the
bond,
a
future
bond
issue.
So
it
is
not
associated
with
the
Tampa
hug
meditation
project.
Thank.
O
You
and
second
question
real
fast
in
the
scope
of
work
item
number
one
adders
assumptions
and
city
responsibilities.
That
says
the
engineer
assumes
that
the
data
and
information
supplied
by
the
city
without
the
independent
review
or
evaluation
is
accurate.
Is
there
someone
else
who
does
an
audit
of
the
this?
Is
this
is
a
as
I
understand
it
about
demand,
performance
and
water
supply?
Is
there
somebody
else
who
does
an
outside
audit
of
that
to
verify
the
city's
numbers,
since
that
what
they're
saying
is
they're
going
to
report
back
your
numbers
right?
We.
G
We
have
audits,
performed
on
a
regular
basis.
You
know,
with
obviously
with
our
revenue
and
Finance
Department,
both
externally
and
internally.
However,
that
language,
you
just
read
is
pretty
standard
language
for
an
engineering
report
that
they
would
rely
on
the
information
that
we
provide
to
them
and.
G
S
O
S
D
24
through
27
30
and
30
Truth,
which
all
relate
to
what
I
thought
looked
like
some
really
good,
affordable
housing
opportunities
that
the
city's
been
participating
in
so
I
I
asked
staff
at
come,
give
us
a
little
more
information,
and
here
they
are
on
those.
What
I
hope
are
very
positive.
You
know
positive
things
in
terms
of
trying
to
meet
our
affordable
housing
needs.
G
D
Just
for
those
of
us
who
just
returned
to
Council
or
new
to
Council,
you
know
we're
not
that
familiar
with
these
projects.
I
know
these
projects
have
been
going
on
for
probably
more
than
a
year,
but
just
to
tell
us
a
little
bit
more
about.
What's
going
on,
I
think
there's
two
different
projects
there,
the
city's
participating
the
Housing
Authority,
is
in
the
house
today
and
I
know
they're
part
of
this
as
well,
but
but
anyway,
just
a
little
update
on
what's
going
on
there.
Okay.
G
The
West
River
project,
which
was
part
of
the
envision
plan,
and
so
we
have
been
working
on
this
for
several
years.
The
city
has
provided
now
about
four
million
dollars
to
the
project
and
it's
getting
ready
to
start
coming
online,
so
Leroy
and
Brett
are
here
and
they
can
tell
you
the
status
of
where
the
projects
are,
but
if
you're
driving
on
275,
you
can
see
that
we're
starting
to
go
vertical.
Awesome.
P
Good
morning,
Council
I
have
Brett
green
with
related
with
me.
I'm
do
or
more
Tampa
Housing
Authority
and
just
want
to
give
you
a
view
of
the
overall
West
River
site
there.
It
has
highlighted
in
colors.
There
are
the
subject
of
the
development
activity
that
we
have
in
partnership
with
related,
as
well
as
Bank
of
America
CDC
I'm,
going
to
ask
Brett
to
actually
walk
you
through
each
of
the
four
that
are
funded
partially
with
some
City
dollars,
along
with
a
mix
of
other
dollars
from
throughout
the
state.
P
As
far
away
as
you
know,
the
Federal
Home
Loan
Bank,
a
variety
of
funding
that
we've
amassed
to
actually
be
able
to.
As
of
today,
how
six
buildings
already
fund
it
we're
actually
north
of
900
units
find
it
already
on
this
site.
Two
buildings,
as
you
can
visibly
see,
are
under
construction,
and
that
is
what's
denoted.
Here
is
t1
the
Renaissance
at
West
River,
which
is
the
image
that
was
up
when
vanessa
was
speaking
and
also
t2
a
which
is
the
existing
age
story
mayor,
but
throw
in
high-rise
that's
under
substantial
renovation.
P
That's
our
first
partnership
with
related
the
other
four
bills
are
denoted
as
this
t3
project
and
I'm
going
to
have
Brent
just
sort
of
walk
you
through
each
of
those
projects,
some
of
which
are
seeking
subordination
agreements
because
of
the
RAC
role.
Assistance
demonstration
funding
that
we
have
from
HUD
has
to
be
in
priority
position
and
some
of
which
are
seeking
funding
as
little
as
75,000
as
high
as
the
million
dollars
in
support
of
funding
from
the
city
of
Tampa.
Mr.
Moore,
before.
D
P
The
t1
building
is
160
unit,
a
new
construction
project,
the
Renaissance
at
West,
River,
100%,
affordable
all
seniors.
The
t2.
A
project
with
own
high-rise
is
an
eight
story,
150
unit
100%,
affordable
building
for
seniors,
and
then
we
start
with
our
mixed
income
sites.
All
of
our
family
buildings
are
mixed
income
mixed
income,
some
all
affordable
mixed
income,
meaning
some
of
them
will
be
public
housing,
section
8
and
tax
credit
housing,
but
we
have
a
mix
of
mixed
income
developments
here
from
the
ABC
and
D
building.
I
P
Yes,
love
to
talk
about
that
as
well.
Affordable
for
Housing
Authority
is
anything
below
80
percent
of
area
median
income.
These
are
all
rental
buildings,
so
these
are
not
for
sale
condos,
so
they
have
rents
at
affordable
to
persons
that
are
earning
below
80
percent
of
area
median
income,
80
percent
of
every
median
income
for
the
city
of
Tampa
I.
Think
it's
about
46,
47
thousand
dollars
for
a
family
of
four
public
housing
is
limited
to
people
earning
below
80
percent
of
area
median
income.
P
All
of
these
buildings,
however,
are
actually
when
we
mentioned
affordable,
we're
talking
about
below
sixty
percent
of
area
median
income.
So
it's
an
even
deeper
affordability
than
what
it
was
when
this
was
North
Boulevard.
When
this
was
not
Boulevard,
you
could
have
people
making
up
to
80
percent
air
median
income
under
West
River.
They
can
make
in
affordable
units
no
more
than
60%
of
area
median
income.
O
Ignore
just
a
quick
question:
the
number
the
people
who
were
displaced
from
this
area
before
it
was
a
thousand
twelve
hundred
families.
Something
like
that.
Have
we
built
since
that
time
a
couple
years
ago.
Have
we
built
that
number
of
units,
or
you
know
a
couple
weeks
ago
we
were
talking
about
that.
We
have
a
shortage
of
22
$50,000
50,000
homes,
but
just
in
this
project
that
the
people
who
are
displaced
I
know
they
all
move
somewhere
else,
but
have
we
have
we
built
that
many
units
somewhere
else,
since
that
happened,
nuts.
P
That
happen,
relocation
happened
in
the
last
two
years
and
we
actually
relocated
820
families,
total
families,
not
a
thousand
families,
so
there's
820
total
units
at
North
Boulevard
only
670
units
were
actually
demolished
so
of
the
670
units
that
we've
demolished.
We
have
fully
funded
or
under
construction
as
of
today
932
units
of
housing
on
this
site.
The
families
that
was
relocated
two
years
ago
moved
into
existing
housing
elsewhere.
Some
of
them
moved
into
our
own
core
development.
Some
of
them
moved
into
one
of
any
number
of
our
other
thirty
properties
throughout
the
city.
P
Some
of
them
received
a
section,
8
voucher
and
actually
relocated
on
to
the
private
market
with
a
voucher.
Thank
you.
So,
under
the
section
8
or
public
housing
program,
100%
of
those
families
when
they
relocate
all
unless
their
income
change,
their
rent
is
the
same
as
what
it
was
when
they
were
living
in
north
of
elevon,
even
though
they
may
now
be
living
at.
T
Brad
green
with
the
related
group.
Obviously
we
were
did
a
great
job
of
explaining
quite
a
bit
of
it.
You
know
we
have
great
momentum
going
on
at
this
site
right
now,
as
they
were
mentioned,
we
have
over
900
units
that
are
under
construction
or
in
planning.
What
you
see
here,
a
B
and
C
of
the
p3
block
will
start
construction
on
those
within
the
next
60
days
or
so
the
t3
block
we
designed
it
so
that
the
parking
would
be
in
the
middle
and
we've
done
our
best
to
keep
the
all
the
fabric.
T
You
know
the
neighborhood
with
all
the
trees.
We
came
before
the
council
a
couple
months
back
to
to
allow
us
to
do
some
certain
things
that
there
became
last
week
for
that
debris
plowed.
So
we
appreciate
the
ongoing
support
for
what
you're
approving
here
today,
buildings
a
and
B
you're
committing
a
million
dollars
of
city
funding
to
building
a
we
brought
over
20
million
dollars
of
other
public
funding.
T
Your
commitment
of
a
million
gave
us
a
special
priority
in
the
state's
competitive
funding,
so
your
million
went
a
long
way
to
allowing
these
projects
to
go
forward
and
in
this
building
a
is
119
units.
Building.
Beads
is
a
hundred
and
thirty
three
units
as
Louie,
where
I
mentioned,
also
mixed
income,
so
primarily
affordable
for
residents
below
sixty
percent
of
area
median
income,
but
also
we
have
a
piece
of
it.
T
That's
going
to
be
for
workforce
housing,
so
you
know
various
different
income
levels
without
helping
for
for
people
of
all
income
here
on
the
property
and-
and
that
was
an
important
piece
to
us.
You
know
making
sure
that
all
the
families
could
coincide
together
so
again.
Building
B
is
a
hundred
and
thirty
three
units
you're
committing
750
thousand
again
because
of
the
city's
commitment
to
the
project
that
allowed
us
to
get
over
twenty
three
million
of
of
public
funding
for
this
project
as
well.
D
D
Different
areas-
you're
doing
market
market
rate
apartments
right
over
here
across
the
river
I-
think
you
just
open
those
those
recently
I
think
you
got
a
lot
of
things
going
on
around
town
and
I.
Think
it's
great
in
addition
to
this
project,
what
I'm
wondering
about
is-
and
this
was
a
couple
I
think
well
on
these
a
and
B
I
think
adds
up
to
250
units
or
something
like
that-
it's
fantastic
still.
D
We
have
a
huge
need,
so
in
it
the
only
way
we
can
dig
out
of
this
is
with
public-private
partnership
and
that's
what
this
represents
in
its
best
form.
My
question
is
what
in
two
minutes
or
less,
what
can
we
do
as
a
city
to
help
inspire
the
private
sector,
including
your
company
and
others,
to
to
do
more
to
do
more
out
there
and
in
in
the
city
to
address
the
affordable
housing
needs
yeah.
T
It's
a
great
question
and
actually
I've
had
conversations
with
the
mayor's
office
and
I,
never
actually
councilman
grooves
about
this
little
while
ago,
there's
there's
certain
incentives
that
that
can
be
put
together
and
I
know
the
mayor
put
together
a
council
on
on
trying
to
create
ideas
for
for
how
to
you
know,
best
practices
and
so
forth.
There's
there's
some.
You
know
relaxations
and
zoning
parking
reductions.
T
You
know
streamline,
permitting
process
impact
fee
waivers.
You
know
these
all
go
directly
to
the
bottom
line
of
of
creating
affordable
housing
and
at
current
at
this
present
time
the
city
of
Tampa
doesn't
have
too
many
of
those
we
do.
A
substantial
amount
of
work
in
miami-dade,
County
and
and
I
will
set.
Your
permitting
process
here
is
is,
is
amazing
compared
to
what
we
do
down
there,
but
they
do
have
quite
a
few
incentives
that
you
know
increase
the
density.
T
So
you
know
if
you
can
normally
build
20
units
an
acre
if
you're
building
a
four
ball,
you
can
now
build
30
units,
an
acre
that
obviously
reduces
the
price
of
the
land
and
in
the
cost
of
parking
in
urban
areas,
is
you
know,
super
expensive,
20
or
$30,000
per
parking
space?
If
you
reduce
the
amount
of
parking,
that's
required
in
certain
urban
areas,
where
you
may
not
need
it,
you
can
have
other
forms
of
transit.
D
T
Some
you
know
advocates
throughout
the
state
trying
to
get
those
levels
reduced
we
certainly
and
in
housing
and
Leroy
or
or
not,
for
that
we
when
we
develop
affordable
housing.
You
know
we
never
take
them
out
of
the
program.
Mr.
parez,
the
chairman
of
our
company,
has
developments
that
he
built
when
he
first
started
in
the
development
business
back
in
the
seventies
that
that
remain
affordable
today,
so
we're
I
mean
it's
it's
a
big
part
of
our
business.
T
B
This
is
looking
like
a
wonderful
bright
opportunity
for
the
city
of
Tampa,
especially
with
the
four
core
housing
part
and
parcel
comes
employment
and
transportation
does.
Is
there
any
plans
for
employment
within
this
one,
two,
three,
four
five
square
block
area
and
where
is
the
transportation
hub?
If
not,
where
is
the
transportation
hub
going
to
be
to
get
the
people
that
are
living
here
that
need
employment?
B
T
You
know
go
ahead,
I
mean
certainly
obviously
there's
a
substantial
amount
of
construction
of
job
opportunities
here,
and
we've
made
a
commitment
to
set
aside
a
portion
of
those
jobs
for
the
local
community
through
the
section
three
program
where
we're
working
with
our
contractors-
suffolk,
construction,
they've
built
in
the
community
for
quite
some
time
and
and
we're
at
this
point-
we're
meeting
those
goals.
There
will
be
some
long
term
opportunities
here.
There
will
be
retail
in
each
one
of
these
buildings.
You
know
all
along
Main,
Street
they'll
be
retail.
T
We
have
several
pads
the
purple
area
here,
that
you
see
GS
and
our
one
mom
and
potentially
on
the
opposite
corner
on
the
corner
of
Main
Street
and
North
Boulevard,
where
there'll
be
some
retail
opportunities
and
I
will
tell
you
that
over
the
last
six
months,
we've
seen
a
very
large
pickup,
an
interest
in
the
area.
So
we're
we're
excited
about
what
what's
coming
here.
But
you
know
there
is
retail
opportunities
at
some
point
in
the
future.
Thank.
B
T
P
That's
certainly
outside
of
our
immediate
control,
but
we've
been
working
with
what
is
hard
or
BLT,
and
certainly
every
effort
that
the
city
and
the
county
comes
together.
You
know
to
look
at
more
modern
transportation
systems.
We
try
to
be
at
the
table
to
support
the
building,
the
densities
that
will
support
more
modern
mass
transit
linkages
so
that
when
we
eventually
do
get
to
that
point,
you
know
you've
got
a
much
bigger
population
here
that
can
take
advantage
of
that.
Thank.
I
My
name
was
mentioned:
I
believe
that
you
know
we
have
a
housing
crisis,
but
I
don't
believe
we're
dressing
it.
The
way
we
should
address
it.
We
have
assets
in
the
city,
but
we're
not
addressing
the
assets
we
have.
Rehab
is
a
key
asset
to
making
communities,
but,
unlike
the
prices,
we're
doing,
but
I
want
to
make
sure
that
the
project
that
we
are
doing
that
people
are
having
an
opportunity
to
make
sure
they
have
a
chance
to
get
in
to
these
opportunities.
I
Why
I
keep
talking
about
this
community
business
owners
is
a
very
key
component
to
the
to
what
we
talked
about
my
office
about
giving
and
I
like
to
give,
but
I
also
want
something
back
and
return,
and
I
want
to
make
sure
that
this
project
is
going
to
West
River,
because
people
say
all
kind
of
things.
Well,
what
we
will
do
will
be.
We
can't
do
you
know
we
can
do
what
we
want
to
do.
I
I
just
want
to
make
sure
that
people
can
actually
live
over
there
on
that
West
one,
because
it's
the
waterfront
property
and
we're
probably
mixed
income
and
we're
doing
a
great
job.
On
course,
people
are
happy
over
there.
Cuz
you've
got
a
mixing
in
it.
That's
true
to
a
storm
right
now
and
I'm,
hoping
that
this
price
on
West
River
will
be
true
to
some.
What
Concours
doing
so.
G
I
G
P
That's
what
we
do
for
all
of
our
redevelopments
is
no
different
and
we,
when
the
first
model
goes
into
Lisa
residents
who
qualify.
These
are
income
restricted,
the
first
two
buildings,
so
those
that
are
62
and
older
automatically
get
about
a
case
manager.
They
get
bugged
by
the
case
manager
for
several
months,
I'm
sure,
you're,
ready,
I'm
sure
you
don't
want
to
come
back.
You
know
this
is
the
opportunity
they
actually
bring
them
there
for
tours.
Trying
to
you
know,
let
them
see.
P
One
thing
that
we
always
point
out,
though,
is
that
you
know
our
relocation
process
is
a
very
unique
relocation
process.
You
know
when
you
look
at
nationwide
examples
of
multifamily
developments
like
this
site.
We
do
a
lot
of
training
and
orientation
and
opportunities
that
are
given
through
the
relocation
process
our
residents
choose
base,
but
based
on
purposes
of
purposeful
choice
for
them
when
they
relocate
off
site
because
they
may
want
to
stay
there
where
they
moved
to,
and
our
return
rate
is
about
15%
or
less
one.
P
These
massive
redevelopment,
as
beautifulness
as
uncoils,
less
than
15%,
choose
to
come
back
to
encore.
Why?
Because
they've
done,
you
know
great
due
diligence
on
the
front
end
in
terms
of
choosing
a
neighborhood
with
purpose
closer
to
families
closer
to
jobs
closer
to
schools
closer
to
church,
whatever
their
personal
needs
are,
they
are
given
that
opportunity
when
they
relocate
off
sites,
so
moving
back
is
not
essential
to
them.
P
It's
an
option
for
them
and
they
reserve
that
right
until
the
last
building
is
actually
placed
in
the
service
on
this
site,
everybody
who
was
relocated
how
the
first
guarantee
right
to
come
back
to
this
site
and
if
they
choose
to
come
back,
we
can't
a
relocation
cost
back
to
the
site.
So
it's
what
we've
done
for
20
years
in
this
community
and
it's
it's
no
different.
It's
actually
been
the
the
process
at
West.
River
is
benefited
from
20
years
of
perfecting
that
process
and
getting
it
right
and
improving
on
what
was
right
last
year.
P
I
Just
how
you're
telling
the
story
right
now
a
lot
of
people,
don't
know
that
I
know
the
history
of
the
story
and
that's
the
problem
that
a
lot
of
time
with
government
their
their
their
amenities
available.
They're,
probably,
but
we
don't
tell
the
story
so
people
can
get
at
to
get
the
necessary
product.
I
see
it
all
the
time
and
I
think
that's.
The
key
is
making
sure
people
know
about
the
product.
I
We
talked
about
developers
trying
to
find
a
way
to
help
the
developers,
especially
when
you
got
to
read
a
lot
of
these
lot
of
dilapidated
bills,
that
we
have
that
we
can
be
fixing
those
up
for
housing
as
well.
You
know
there
are
a
lot
of
things
we
can
do,
but
what
I
contend
is
saying:
I
tell
my
colleagues
a
lot
of
times
our
problem
I'm
getting
in
my
office
right
now
regard
to
our
own
rehab
program,
I'm,
getting
some
a
denial
letters
from
people.
I
Remember,
lady
Esther
he's
seven
years
old
who's
denied
because
she
ceded
the
house
or
another
lien
nosepass
discretion.
I,
don't
miss
you,
but
I've
got
a
list
of
my
office
right
now
about
our
own
housing
rehab
program,
then
I'm
gonna
be
bringing
up
to
address
because
we've
got
to
find
some
dogs
that
are
not
match
with
some
federal
dogs.
That's
the
case
that
I
pray
for
cluding
people
from
getting
housing.
So
we
gotta
look
at
these
road
blocks
as
well,
because
there
are
other
roadblocks
that
are
not
in
helping
us
help.
I
O
I'm
one
of
the
new
City
Council
members,
and
if
you
could
just
let
me
know
let
the
public
know,
at
least
in
addition
to
these
items
that
we
have
here,
what,
by
the
time,
you're
finished
with
all
this.
What
will
be
this
just
the
city's
participation,
not
the
Housing
Authority,
but
how
much
will
the
city
have
put
into
all
of
this.
G
O
G
T
We
just
received
a
local
government
contribution
for
an
application
that
we
are
submitting
for
funding
here
in
the
next
couple
of
weeks
for
the
t4
block,
and
that
would
be
to
build
107
units
and
the
city
will
potentially
be
contributing.
75
thousand
dollars
to
that
is
that
market
rate
or
no
that'll
be
that'll,
be
all
afford.
Opponent,
correct
and
we'd
also
have
some
funding
applications
that
are
currently
in
on
the
t4
block
to
build.
You
know,
100,
more
or
less
units
with
I'm
little
to
no
city
person.
G
It's
hard
to
say
because
they
would
have
to
go
through
a
process:
okay
and
so
it's
competitive
process.
In
this
last
process,
we
had
a
competitive
process
related
received
75,000
rather
than
the
750,000
that
they
requested,
because
the
other
developer
was
going
to
be
building
in
East
Tampa
had
the
winning
proposal.
B
D
Is
just
just
briefly
and
I:
don't
I'm
very
positive
about
all
this
I'm
thrilled
for
the
report.
I
just
want
to
clarify
one
thing,
because
I
don't
want
us
to
pat
ourselves
on
the
back
too
much
items
30
and
32
from
what
I
can
see
is
a
million
seven
hundred
fifty
thousand
dollars
of
federal
money
that
we're
graciously
passing
through
to
these
projects.
D
It's
great
I'm
glad,
but
we
don't
have
a
whole
lot
of
money
in
our
local
budget
to
do
these
things-
and
we've
been
talking
about
this
for
at
least
the
last
six
months
that
we
need
to.
We
need
to
figure
out
a
local
funding
source
to
enhance
these
programs
and
and
and
grow
these
programs
and
and
because,
like
I,
say
the
Lord
giveth,
the
Lord
taketh
away
the
Fed
that
federal
money
comes
and
goes
and
seems
to
get
smaller
and
smaller
and
smaller.
So
we
need
to
become
more
self-sufficient
in
that
regard.
D
J
D
A
D
A
A
S
R
A
R
R
The
percentage
of
difference
between
the
number
one
in
the
number
two
was
very,
very
close,
based
on
the
savings
that
United
Healthcare
could
bring
forward,
which
is
about
one
point:
two:
eight
million
over
the
three
year
agreement
and
some
concerns
we
had
with
the
formulary
that
Cigna
was
offering
and
some
concerns
that
we
had
about
CIGNA's
ability
to
to
work
with
our
wellness
centers
that
we
have
in
place.
The
decision
was
made
to
award
the
contract
to
United
Healthcare.
There
was
a
protest,
however.
Cigna
was
not
the
party
that
protested.
R
C
Good
morning
great
serum
purchasing
direct
as
Miss
Asin
will
say.
The
difference
was
they
were
a
miniscule
so
when
we
begun
to
pull
peel
back
the
onion
between
the
two
proposal
in
terms
of
the
additional
benefits
of
the
city,
as
massage
has
pointed
out,
the
recommendation
was
made
by
the
human
resource
department
what
United,
Healthcare,
I'm
sorry
I.
I
I
C
D
D
G
Keep
morning
City
Councilmembers,
we
have
a
contract
that
we
would
like
to
award
to
the
David
Nelson
construction
company,
it's
for
3.7
million
dollars
and
changed
for
the
34th
Street
corridor
improvement
project
that
we
are
planning
to
do
and
so
we're
here
to
get
your
approval
of
that
contract
and
I'm.
Here.
To
answer
any
questions
that
you
may
have
about.
The
award
of
that
contract.
I
G
Is
unfortunately,
probably
some
misinformation
that
that
she's
received
this
project
is
partially
funded
by
the
NPO
and
excuse
me
Department
of
Transportation,
and
so
the
Department
of
Transportation
and
the
city
of
Tampa.
We
don't
do
any
project
is
not
supported
by
the
long-range
transportation
plan.
The
long-range
transportation
plan
doesn't
get
into
the
details
of
what
others
are
round
about
or
not
at
an
intersection,
but
it
does
support
the
improvement
of
the
34th
Street
corridor
and
as
well.
G
The
funding
for
the
project
has
to
be
approved
by
the
NPO,
which
it
has
been
done
through
the
lap
product
process
that
we're
in
which
is
the
local
agency
program
process.
We
work
with
the
d-o-t,
so
the
MPO
has
approved
this
through
that
process.
The
do
has
approved
the
project's
through
that
process,
and
we've
been
working
diligently
for
many
years
to
try
to
make
this
court
or
safer
for
the
community.
G
I
G
K
I
Hear
that
but
I
want
to
make
sure
that
if
this
council
Awards
this
particular
contract,
20
point
six,
seven
you're
saying
I
want
to
make
sure
some
guarantee
that
we're
going
to
be
monitored
because
I
don't
want
to
hear
from
my
constituents
on
a
project
in
their
community
that
some
before
or
against,
and
then
they
look
out
on
that
roadway
and
they
don't
see
anybody
that
looked
like
them
from
their
community
working
on
that
project.
So
that
guarantee
you.
I
They
don't
see
anybody
out
there
working
I'm
gonna
get
a
ton
of
calls
that
we
got
around
about.
That
was
that
and
work
is
being
done,
but
we
don't
have
minorities
working,
so
I
need
to
know
that
we're
going
to
be
monitoring
this
contract,
not
just
saying
we're,
putting
a
contract
out
but
I
want
to
make
sure
that
we've
got
a
guarantee.
This
council
and
I'm
telling
my
colleague
you
know
how
important
this
is
about
this
very
4-3
project,
because
we're
going
to
hear
about
that.
D
D
And
women
and
minority-owned
business
total,
which
is
I,
think
a
great
that's
the
good
news
when
you
get
to
the
last
page
and
it
has
the
break
out
again.
I
don't
want
to
pat
ourselves
on
the
back
too
much
because,
even
though
this
is
an
East
Hampton
and
goes
right
through
the
heart
of
the
traditional
african-american
community,
the
breakout
shows
accompanied
by
company
that
it's
Hispanic
male
Hispanic
male
Caucasian
male
Caucasian
male.
These
are
the
ownerships
Caucasian
female
Caucasian
male
Caucasian
female
from
what
I
can
see
on
that
list
is
not
one
black
on
business.
D
K
D
And
and
I
agree
that
on
the
workforce,
that's
a
little
harder
to
get
into
that
nitty
gritty
detail,
but
the
way
we
build
up
our
community
is
also
to
get
that
black
out
of
business
and
I
know
working
hard
on
it.
I've
beat
up
on
you
every
every
week
or
two
on
it
and
let's
do
the
rest
of
us,
but
anyway
thank.
A
D
A
A
G
S
H
C
I
That's
good,
but
you
know
you
know
we're
deliberating
on
situations
the
public
needs
to
know
what
was
the
number
I
think
that's
critical
to
people
know
well
how
people
suppose
I
mean
we're
gonna
make
the
decision.
We
can't
say
it
was
middle
school.
We
keep.
You
know
if
I'm
gonna
raise
I
wonder
what
my
school
was
I'm
a
track
star.
Well,
no,
let's
go
every
tracks,
I
wasn't
on
what
the
schools
so
I
just
was
important
to
me
to
know
what
that's
cool.
Thank
you
and.
A
O
O
If
it's
so,
the
question
is
again:
I,
don't
know
as
much
as
you
all
about
this
I'm
just
asking
a
question:
if,
if
it's,
if
they've
already
got
in,
if
the
second
bidder
already
got
credit
for
the
items
that
you
mentioned,
it
sounds
like
we
gave
them
double
credit.
I
know
we're
only
one
point
apart,
but
it
isn't
it
if
it's
already
been
counted
once
why?
Why
would
we
know.
C
B
R
The
United
Healthcare
Agreement,
that's
a
three
year
agreement
will
offer
us
one
point:
two:
eight
million
in
savings,
in
addition
to
continuing
that
relationship
that
we
have
with
the
wellness
centers
United
Healthcare,
is
integrated
very
well
with
us
on
the
wellness
centers,
and
that
was
important
to
us.
Cigna
wasn't
able
to
display
with
any
confidence
that
they
would
be
able
to
pick
up
that
mantle
and
continue
that
relationship
with
the
wellness
centers.
N
I
Sir
councilman,
going
through
I,
got
a
little
confused,
so
I'm
in
this
race,
and
it's
three
of
us
in
this
race.
Randall
boots
health
care.
Okay,
it's
a
miniscule
point
but
I'm
a
number
three
person
and
I'm
able
to
come
in
and
talk
to
you
again
and
resubmit.
Something
said
I
can
I
can
give
a
better
number,
so
I
guess
I
would
get
the
big
number
three
guy
came
in
and
gave
you
some
more
benefits.
I
R
Final
candidates
all
had
the
opportunity
to
come
back
in
and
give
us
their
last
best
and
final
offer,
so
it
wasn't
exclusive
to
one
provider
over
the
other
and
I
think
it's
important
that
we
know
and
understand
that
the
the
RFP
process,
while
obviously
you
know
you
have
a
scoring
mechanism
that
you
use
to
determine
the
criteria.
Ultimately,
that
decision
lives
with
us
in
human
resources
to
select
the
plan,
that's
in
the
best
interest
of
the
city
of
Tampa
and
the
employees
and
it
essentially
it
was
a
statistical
dead
heat.
A
R
I
mean
I,
you
know
I
prefer
to
keep
that
broad.
You
know,
because
the
union
partners
aren't
here,
but
we
had
a
three
year
agreement
with
United
Healthcare,
with
the
option
for
two
extensions
which
we
had
done.
So
we
were
out
of
extension,
so
we
had
to
put
it
out
for
bid.
We
have
healthcare
obligations,
obviously
to
everybody
in
the
city
and
with
the
proposals
that
are
being
brought
forth
by
iff
and
PBA
their
proposals.
Should
it
go
to
fruition,
wouldn't
go
into
effect
until
2021,
regardless.
R
So
what
we
bargain
across
the
table
will
have
no
impact
on
what
we
needed
to
get
accomplished
here
and
vice
versa,
now,
potentially
based
on
where
we
end
with
negotiations
as
it
relates
to
the
desire
for
a
healthcare
trust,
United
could
come
back
to
us
and
say
wait
a
minute.
We
need
to
re-evaluate
your
plan
your
three-year
agreement,
because
now
your
population
is
different,
but
but
you
know
I
I
don't
want
to
speculate
on.
R
D
Mr.
Bennett
and
I
had
the
same
discussion
yesterday
and
I.
Guess:
I
just
want
to
make
sure
from
you
guys
and
perhaps
legal
who,
whichever
legal,
is
working
on
this
contract
that
there's
an
Express.
There
is
an
express
provision
in
the
United
agreement
that
allows
for
the
revisiting
of
this,
and
in
terms
of
that,
it
would
be
reopen
and
I
guess
I'm
confused
in
terms
of
how
how
it,
how
that
what
that
language
is
in
terms
of
you
know
how
they
reopen
it.
D
D
R
D
R
It's
a
big
deal.
It
is
a
very
big
deal.
Yes,
sir
I
mean,
as
far
as
the
bargaining
goes,
though,
whatever
actions
United
could
take
in
the
event
that
there
was
a
healthcare
trust
pardoned.
We
can't
not
bargain
it
so
I
mean
we
would
just
have
to
you
know
roll
with
the
punches
as
they
come.
If
that
was
to
be
something
that
came
to
fruition,
we
would
have
to
deal
with
that
and
reevaluate
with
the
smaller
population.
R
R
C
G
They
take
place
what
specifics
manager
of
Human
Resources
the
carrier's
as
part
of
the
RFP
process.
We
they,
they
propose
their
fees
based
upon
an
enrollment
count
that
we
give
them.
If
that
enrollment
count
changes
materially
in
the
RFP
response,
they
have
the
ability
that
that
would
trigger
a
recalculation
of
a
fee.
Now
what
the
fee
would
recalculate
to
would
would
really
be
based
upon
the
negotiation
between
the
carrier
and
the
city.
At
that
point
in
time,
the.
D
G
N
N
S
N
Was
one
of
the
originators
of
the
health
clinics
and
I
voted
against
my
own
idea,
because
one
of
them
Brandon
who
were
paying
seventy
five
hundred
dollars
a
month
yells
and
Tampa
we're
paying
70
hundred
seventy
five
hundred
dollars
a
month
that
fifteen
thousand
a
month
times
how
many
years
times,
how
many
months
we
lost
over
two
million
dollars?
The
city
of
Tampa
should
not
be
paying.
Rent
should
have
their
own
building.
I've
said
that
every
year
I've
been
in
offices
and
it
doesn't
happen,
I'm
not
blaming
you
I'm
blaming
us.
I
R
R
Part
of
that
delay,
a
councilman
would
have
been
due
to
the
fact
that
there
was
a
protest
and
there's
time
periods
associated
with
that.
So
when
there
was
a
protest
by
one
of
the
carriers
who
did
not
make
the
top
two
I
think
it
was
the
third
or
fourth
carrier
that
protest
there's
a
period
of
time
that
has
to
go
by
for
them
to
be
allowed
to
protest
for
the
city
to
respond
to
that
protest
and
determine
whether
or
not
they're
going
to
proceed.
A
S
C
Once
again,
good
morning,
council
members
s
Fernandez
architectural
review
and
historic
preservation
manager,
I've
been
participating
in
the
advisory
committee
related
to
the
Zion
cemetery
property.
We
were
with
the
Tampa
Housing
Authority,
and
the
archaeological
team
is
here.
I
think
they
are
better
suited
to
provide
you
with
the
broadest
depth
of
knowledge
on
us.
P
But
thank
you
guys
for
your
interest
in
wanting
to
get
an
update
on
the
role
of
Zion
cemetery
matter,
we've
passed
out
previously
to
you
a
three
page
handout
that
just
gives
you
a
little
bit
of
the
history,
how
we
came
to
be
aware
of
the
existence,
the
potential
existence
of
Zion
and
what
we,
the
Housing
Authority
gate.
Immediately
after
hearing
that
discovery
from
the
reporter,
this
whole
story
was
was
you
know
the
whole
rediscovery
of
Zion
was
due
to
just
incredible
journalism
locally
here,
and
you
know
when
we
first
heard
about
it.
P
Robust
Park
is
a
thirty
five
acre
site.
The
housing
authority
back
in
early
fourth
late
1940s
early
1950s
acquired
all
this
land
to
actually
develop
this
quadrant
33
unit
residential
community,
now
known
as
Robles
Park
Village
and
a
small
portion
of
that
that's
represented
within
the
yellow
box.
There
was
land
that
was
previously
thought
science
cemetery.
So
we
knew
now
that
we
had
confirmed
that.
P
If
cemetery
once
existed,
we
and
I
say
we
meaning
the
current
administration,
because
back
in
1951,
as
we've
discovered
through
through
the
investigative
journalism
as
well
as
our
phase
one
and
Phase
two
of
our
mental
processes,
the
housing
authority
actually
doing
the
construction
of
our
Robles
back
in
1951,
actually
dug
caskets
in
that
particular
area
and
confirmed
that
they
were
bodies
that
were
originally
interned
at
Zion.
What
happened
with
that?
P
That
that
caused
the
housing
authority
to
rethink
proceeding
with
the
development
of
these
five
buildings
in
particular
over
what
they
should
have
at
that
time,
known
as
Zion
no
one
alive
today?
That
could
actually
give
you
any
first-hand
knowledge
of
that.
But
you
know
those
decisions
that
was
made
by
generations.
Past
have
now
been
discovered
in
this
effort
and
we're
about
trying
to
do
the
right
thing.
P
The
most
honorable
thing
that
we
can
the
first
thing
we
did
when
we
discovered
the
buying
drugs
it
exists
under
a
portion
of
robos
Park
Village,
it's
not
under
all
of
Robles
Park.
It's
under
a
portion
of
all
this
part
was
that
we
identified
those
five
buildings
that
was
impacted.
We
met
with
the
families,
we
assembled
a
Zion
archeological
consultation
committee
that
consists
of
22
members
of
our
community
people
that
are
actively
involved
on
issues
like
this
and
I
want
to
get
to
the
right
and
responsible
solution.
P
We
knew
that
this
was
going
to
be
a
very
difficult,
very
emotional
at
time
discoveries
and
we
wanted
to
have
a
good,
solid
committee
that
actually
represented
a
whole,
the
whole
community,
both
people
who
currently
live
there.
Our
resident
council
leadership
is
part
of
the
committee
city
of
Tampa,
I,
think
there's
four
or
five
members
from
City
Tampa,
that's
part
of
the
committee.
We
also
have
a
community
activism
in
double-a-c-p
and
archaeological
professionals
USF
and
others
that
are
part
of
that
committee.
P
So
you
know
I
think
we,
you
know
one
of
the
best
things
we
did
was
assemble.
This
committee
of
real,
clear
voices
that
you
know
want
to
get
to
the
right
solution
and
they've
certainly
have
guided
us
to
where
we
are
today,
which
is
knowing
that
design
existed.
Secondly,
knowing
that,
unfortunately,
those
bodies
are
still
in
turn,
they're
the
ones
that
we've
discovered
to
date,
we
think
is
still
not
all
that
is
in
turn
there,
but
we
have
x-rayed
that
portion
of
the
ground
that's
easily
accessible.
P
P
We've
gone
through
the
same
kind
of
relocation
process,
which
is
a
real
patient,
very
thorough,
very
you,
know,
evolved
in
detail
relocation
process
that
we
would
go
through
when
we're
doing
a
redevelopment,
because
we
want
these
families
to
better
from
the
same
level
of
counseling
and
case
management.
So
all
the
families
actually
have
case
management
now
getting
assistance
we're
paying
for
all
the
relocation
costs
who
are
making
it
such
that
they
can
relocate
and
not
have
a
increase
in
cost
of
housing
and
and
they're
choosing
incredibly
good
communities
to
move
into.
P
O
Just
a
quick
question:
the
families
that
you
thank
you
for
handling
this
whole
effort
so
sensitively
and
and
proactively,
but
other
families
that
have
been
relocated.
We
did
any
of
them
want
to
stay
or
were
they
all
happy
to
get
out?
Yeah.
P
That
was
an
option
because
we
are
fortunate
33
units
at
Robles,
so
the
option
is
to
relocate
to
another
unit.
That's
not
over
signed
at
Robles,
not
one
of
the
families
wanted
to
stay
at
mobile,
so
it's
their
choice.
If
they
want
to
stay,
they
will
be
allowed
to
stay.
If
they
want
such
an
8,
you
could
have
either
in
their
hand,
and
the
system
was
getting
relocated
and
if
they
want
to
relocate
to
one
of
our
other
2930
properties,
they
get
first
right
or
any
vacancy
that
comes
up
there
and.
I
Know
at
times
I'm
always
out
in
the
community
and
people
have
questions
for
me
and
when
I
don't
have
a
definitive
answer.
I
don't
give
an
answer,
so
I
want
to
make
sure
I
get
it
on
record
that
it's
asked
this
question
and
that's
why
I
asked
for
the
history
of
that
property,
because
people
say
what
is
City
Council
doing.
That's
the
city,
land
state
property,
so
I
want
to
make
sure
I
get
down
a
regular
funder
that
is
Rose
Park.
I
P
There
are
certain
streets
that
run
through
and
around
they
long
standing
cooperation
between
the
housing
authority
and
city.
We
can't
do
anything
in
this
community
without
that
strong
partnership.
So
we
never
look
at
a
problem
like
this
as
being
the
Housing
Authority's,
independent
of
any
city
guidance
and
consultation
on
a
project
like
this.
That's
why
we've
included
five
members
of
the
mayor's
staff
on
this
committee
and
Thank
You
mr.
P
I
P
As
well
as
the
city
of
Tampa
has
been
very
involved,
the
mayor's
actually
attended
one
of
our
meetings
and
her
staff.
Senator
Cruz
is
attended
to
several
of
our
meetings.
Her
staff
congresswoman
Kathy
Castor's
staff,
has
attended
pretty
much
all
of
our
archaeological
meetings,
so
we're
not
alone
at
all,
and
you
know
we're
appreciative.
Everybody's
involvement
and.
P
So
I
want
to
move
on
to
I,
want
to
introduce
Eric
Pendergast
as
well
as
Paul
Jones
with
Cardinal
there.
Our
archaeological
team,
eventually
partnered
with
F
pan
as
well
out
of
USF
and
they've,
been
the
ones
that
actually
been
confirming
this
discovery
for
us.
Creating
the
work
plan
and
helping
us
with
the
decisions
that
we've
gotta
made
so
I
want
them
to
come
up
and
actually
lead
you
through
a
more
formal
presentation.
M
Thank
You
councilmembers
I'm
Paul
Jones,
with
Cardno
and
Eric
Prendergast
we'd
like
to
make
a
presentation
to
today
with
parts
and
of
what
we've
presented
to
the
county
board
the
tha
board
over
the
last
several
months.
This
is
going
to
give
you
I
think
a
good
overview
of
what's
been
happening
and
we're
here
to
answer
specific
questions
for
you
as
well.
Just
a
quick
background.
I'm,
a
former
president
of
the
Florida
archeological
council
and
a
registered
professional
archaeologist
I'm.
Also
the
principal
in
charge
with
card
know
for
this
project.
M
Eric
is
the
principal
investigator
means
he's
the
on-site
director
and
he'll.
Be
writing
the
report
and
he'll
be
in
charge
of
that
all
the
technical
work
and
comprehensive
work
that
goes
on
in
a
project
like
this
Eric's
prepared
a
slide
show
for
us
today.
We're
going
to
do
that
if
we
can,
if
that's
all
right
with
the
committee
and
then
we'd
like
to
answer
questions
after
that,
and
just.
E
E
So
this
is
just
for
anyone
that
doesn't
know
where
Zion
is
giving
an
that
red
polygon
is
the
shape
of
the
cemetery.
We
know
it
is
that
shape,
because
this
is
the
1901
plat
that
was
filed,
one
of
the
first
african-american
cemeteries
in
Tampa,
there's
several
very
early
ones
and
as
Fred
Hearns
told
our
committee,
the
first
African
American
internment
were
actually
not
here.
They
were
at
Oak
Lawn,
but
in
any
case
this
was
important
to
the
community
of
Robles
pond
that
lives
in
the
area
and
gave
them
a
place
of
burial.
E
E
Here's,
unfortunately,
between
1900
and
1910,
the
seat
didn't
didn't,
have
death
certificates,
but
you'll,
see
from
this
graph
from
1910
on
were
even
able
to
tally
how
many
people
were
dying
each
year
and
our
demographic
information
goes
deeper
than
this
I'm
just
skimming
through
then
you'll
notice
in
1918
1919.
That's
when
Memorial
Cemetery
opens
up.
People
are
no
longer
being
buried
died
on,
but
during
this
period
there
could
have
been
up
to
1,000
people
buried
there
and,
like
I
said
we
know
for
sure
753.
E
E
E
This
is
what
those
results
look
like
in
a
sample
area
of
the
cemetery.
Those
red
polygons
show
reflections
from
beneath
the
ground
from
the
depth
that
a
coffin
would
be
expected
to
lie
oriented
east-west
the
correct
size
for
a
coffin,
and
these
are
all
over
the
areas
that
we've
tested
within
the
Tampa
housing
authorities,
section
Robles,
Park,
Village
that
overlies
the
former
location
of
Zion.
Here's
an
example
of
how
ground-penetrating
radar
works.
Those
are
that's
a
slice
on
the
right,
showing
reflections
bouncing
up
from
underground
and
being
received
by
an
antenna.
E
Each
of
those
parabolic
shapes
is
an
object,
and
then
those
correspond
on
the
left,
if
that
red
lines
showing
you
how
those
anomalies
can
be
looked
at
and
how
this
technology
can
realize,
show
us
where
but
buried
objects
are
without
disturbing
the
ground.
That's
what
we're
looking
at
right.
Now,
that's
a
hundred
and
seven
buried
coffins
and,
as
mr.
Moore's
said,
you
know
now
that
we
have
this
information,
those
gray
polygons.
Those
are
representing
the
buildings
from
which
people
are
being
moved
in
a
voluntary
process.
E
Right
now
and
once
that
can
be
completed,
then
we
can
move
forward
with
the
ultimate
goal
of
this
project,
which
is
to
create
a
memorial
Andreea
memorialize
this
space,
with,
hopefully
partnership
from
the
city
and
partnership
and
help
from
the
state
through
a
bill
state
Senate
bill,
2020,
that's
going
through
right
now
and
actually
go
to
committee
on
Monday,
which
would
maybe
move
the
ball
forward
on
these.
This
is
what
we've
expanded
in
the
last
three
weeks.
These
this
orange
area
is
what
we've
been
out
doing
more
of.
E
Moving
forward,
we
are
going
to
verify
our
finds
by
actually
in
the
ground
looking
for
soil
signatures
that
confirm
absolutely
that
what
we're
dealing
with
are
undisturbed
buried
coffins
so
that
in
the
future,
these
results
can
never
be
controverted
or
challenged
and,
like
I
said,
then
we
want
to
move
forward
and
with
partnership
with
other
groups
with
our
committee
and
our
current
team
worked
to
build
a
memorial
I
wanted
to
also
underscore
that
this
is
not
the
only
cemetery
that
has
lost
like
this
in
Tampa
as
well.
You
know
from
the
newspapers
lately.
E
This
is
happening
all
over
the
place
on
this
map.
I
have
College
Hill
I
have
rich
wood
up
there
at
cane
high
school,
Zion,
Cemetery,
of
course,
and
down
in
the
very
south
at
MacDill.
That
would
be
the
port
Tampa
Cemetery.
These
are
physical
manifestations
of
violent,
racist
past
that
are
on
the
landscape
of
our
city
and.
E
For
things
like
this
to
happen,
and
if
we
want
to
see
a
cemetery,
that's
being
lost
in
real
I,
look
at
Memorial
Park
on
22nd
Street,
the
grass
is
growing
and
soon
we'll
have
another
Zion,
and
when
someone
steps
forward
and
takes
responsibility
for
that-
and
we
are
really
grateful
for
all
everyone-
that's
come
together
and
helped
so
far
with
this
project
really
grateful
to
serve
on
it.
And
here
the
last
slide
didn't
work.
But
it
was
a
list
of
all
the
seven
hundred
and
forty
and
sixty
three
names
that
we
know
there.
M
So,
thank
you.
Let
me
add
a
couple
of
items
to
Eric's
comments.
You
notice
that
he
showed
you
the
two
different
machines
and
mentioned
the
importance
of
duplicating
our
results.
When
we
designed
our
work
plan,
one
of
the
things
we
felt
was
most
important
was
that
the
results
were
not
just
our
results,
but
that
we
would
have
independent
verification
of
everything
we
did
so
Cardinal
owns
a
very
high-tech
piece
of
ground-penetrating
radar.
M
It's
called
a
stream
sea
and
it's
got
32
antennas
that
record
things
at
different
levels
and
three-dimensional
slices
all
this
kind
of
stuff,
very
expensive
piece
of
machinery
generally
used
and
designed
for
finding
underground
utilities.
But
it's
an
excellent
piece
of
equipment
for
finding
cemeteries.
M
The
other
piece
of
equipment
was
from
the
University
of
South
Florida,
that's
their
ground-penetrating
radar
system,
it's
one
of
the
older
systems,
but
it's
not
a
bad
system.
It's
one
of
the
more
standard
pieces
of
technology,
that's
been
in
use
for
many
years,
and
it's
approved
and
understood
by
folks
at
the
State
Division
of
historical
resources,
there's
approvals
for
it.
So
we
wanted
to
use
both
of
those
and
overlay
the
results.
M
On
top
of
each
other
to
make
sure
that
we
are
both
finding
the
same
thing
in
the
same
place,
that
was
extremely
important
for
us.
One
of
the
other
things
that
I
think
is
important.
Is
you
guys
mentioned
you
appreciated,
Leroy
being
proactive.
He
really
has
been
a
absolute
model
of
what
should
go
on
when
we
find
these
sort
of
cemeteries
and
these
sort
of
lost
or
purposely
lost
things.
Taking
an
early,
proactive
approach.
M
Getting
the
descendant
communities
involved
very
early
in
the
process
means
that
everybody
views
this
in
a
much
more
positive
light
and
the
camp
housing
authorities
and
city
everybody
looks
much
better
when
they
proactively
approach
these
sort
of
things,
and
it
shows
in
the
newspaper
when,
when
the
responses
to
this
are
yes,
we
looked
at
this
early.
Yes,
we
immediately
found
this.
Yes,
we
relocated
people
voluntarily.
That
sort
of
thing
really
made
this
a
very
positive
event
of
the
many
many
cemetery
relocations
I've
worked
on.
So
just
my
personal
note
there
at
the
end.
A
Thank
you,
gentlemen,
and
before
I
go
to
Councilman.
Miss
Coco,
mrs.
ellman
I,
know
that
if
you
don't
mind
just
for
a
second
ma'am
I
know
that
Memorial
Cemetery
was
mentioned.
Do
you
have
an
instruction
for
us
on
that
to
not
discuss
that.
G
Litigation
yeah
first
to
be
clear:
Memorial
Cemetery
is
not
city-owned.
The
city,
however,
is
involved
in
litigation
presently
with
I,
believe
it's
a
trust
or
an
estate
that
has
the
property
rights
there,
and
so,
given
that
we're
we're
trying
to
steer
clear
of
talking
about
it
too
much
or
saying
anything
that
could
negatively
impact
on
that
litigation.
Thank.
A
You
I
I'd
say
that
I
know
councilman,
Goodes
and
I
were
out
there
for
a
work
day
about
a
month
ago,
so
I
just
wanted
to
make
that
clear.
I
think
I'll
speak
at
the
end,
but
thank
you
guys
for
your
presentation.
Y'all.
You
all
really
had
a
sense
of
urgency
and
and
I
used
this
term
in
a
good
way
of
righteousness.
I
mean
that
in
any
way,
counselor
Oh
enough.
Sorry,
mister,
no
III
didn't
see
it
go
ahead.
Min
good.
J
Morning,
councilman
Jenelle
McGregor,
community
partnership
manager
for
the
city
of
Tampa
I,
stand
before
you
just
to
ensure
you
that
mayor
caster
is
very
in
tune
with
what's
taking
place
here
at
Zion
back
on
September
28th,
she
attended
a
memorial
service
to
pay
respects
to
those
who
lay
to
rest
there
at
Zion
as
well
as
as
the
Leroy
mentioned,
she
attended
the
last
archaeological
taskforce
meeting.
This
is
in
addition
to
meeting
with
members
of
Robles
part
resident
council
association
as
well.
J
A
A
S
S
Some
were
moving
out,
I,
don't
want
to
say
they
were,
they
were
happy,
but
they
were
being
taken
care
of
and
in
a
respectful
manner
and
I
appreciate
Paul
guzo
with
the
times
work
and
bringing
this
forward,
because
this
is
a
huge
story,
of
course,
from
the
era
of
Jim
Crow,
where
blacks
were
treated
in
such
a
despicable
manner.
I
mean
this
is
this
is
beyond
the
pale
but
I'm
glad
that
you're
moving
swiftly
and
everybody's
working
together
to
find
a
a
good
solution
for
this
and
do
what's
right.
S
You
know
now
that
it's
going
to
be
deemed
historical
as
it
should
have
always
been,
and
can
you
know,
respect
those
that
that
have
passed
away
and
after
the
tour
I
spoke
with
my
mother,
and
she
told
me
that
in
1963
or
so,
her
and
my
grandparents
lived
at
Robles
part,
but
they
came
from
Cuba
and
moved
to
Tampa
before
going
out
to
48th
Street
and
he
stamp
and
buying
their
first
home.
But
you
know
she
has
memories
as
a
child.
S
There
and
I
mean
she
was
just
I,
don't
even
know
what
the
word
is,
but
knowing
that
you
know
they
could
they
could
have
been
staying
above.
You
know
great
so
at
least
we're
doing
the
right
thing,
and
hopefully
you
know
this
of
course
has
expanded
to
more
cemeteries
that
were
lost
and
have
now
been
found,
but
we're
doing
the
right
thing:
we're
correcting
the
wrongs
of
history
and
I'm,
glad
that
that
everybody's
in
unison
and
working
together
and
finding
a
solution.
Thank.
D
Mr.
Maniscalco
and
I
have
common
sentiments
in
addition
to
mr.
guzo
who's
done
a
great
job
of
reporting
on
this
issue.
I
wanted
to
give
a
shout
out
to
a
gentleman
I've
known
a
long
time
ray
Reed
because
he's
just
on
a
personal
level
has
has
done
huge
amount
of
research
and
pointed
mr.
guzo
and
in
the
community
to
other
areas,
including
Zion,
that
are
suspected
of
being
ignored
and
abused.
D
One
thing
that
I
think
we
all
have
in
common.
The
7
of
us
is
a
love
of
history
and
and
and
recently
I,
don't
know,
I,
don't
know
why
exactly
but
I
I
was
at
the
library
and
I
picked
up
a
book
called
slavery
in
Florida,
and
it's
a
great
book
written
by
a
family
professor,
but
I
had
no
idea.
I
mean
I
was
born
here
in
56,
and
you
know
I
always
thought
about
slavery
is
like.
Oh,
you
Alabama
people,
you
Georgia
people,
you're
bad.
D
I
The
dead
do
speak,
they
do
talk
and
I've
said
this
from
day
one
when
that
occurred
and
I
went
out
there
I
said
the
Dead
is
talking
it's
time.
You
know
history
revolves
and
it
changes
our
city's
changing.
Our
mindset
have
to
change
and
that's
why
I
asked
I
asked
the
tough
questions
to
make
sure
the
public
knows
what
we're
doing
when
I
ask
Council
to
go
out
to
voters
in
several
vote,
we
go,
but
we
have
some
some
some
legal
issues
that
try
to
get
everybody
together
to
get
there
in
the
Sunshine
Law.
I
So
my
colleague
did
eventually
contact
mr.
Moore
and
me
going
out
there
because
community
was
saying
where
was
counsel
and
I
had
to
let
the
community
know
that
counts
through
a
series
about
this
issue
and
that's
why
I
asked
the
questions
about
the
property
to
mr.
Moore,
so
people
can
know
and
we're
transparent
to
what
we're
doing
I'm
glad.
Mr.
I
McGregor
was
here
to
talk
about
what
the
mayor's
office
is
doing
so
we're
all
together
in
this
thing,
making
sure
that
we're
gonna
have
a
good
solution
with
a
final
product,
but
also
going
on
who
suffer
so
for
me
is
to
make
sure
that
we're
doing
the
right
things.
There's
transparency,
because
this
is
not
going
to
be
the
last
one.
I
We
be
fine,
but
we
have
to
be
prepared
and
ready
when
it
does
happen
that
our
boots
are
already
on,
and
we
know
what
to
do
already
and
we
get
it
done
and
we
get
it
done
very
quickly.
So
people
can
know
that
we
are
compassionate
City,
Council
and
County
Commission
and
school
board
and
I
must
say,
miss
Shamburger
the
school.
What
she
got
right
on
that
situation
is
King
high
school.
You
have
to
give
her
props
and
they're
all
night
attendant
they're
booked.
That
meeting
and
I
tell
you.
I
It
ran
smooth
and
they're
moving
and
I'm
glad
that
we
have
people
in
place
that
understand
the
significance
of
the
dead
and
understand.
Now
people
don't
believe
in
superstition
sometime,
but
most
black
people
may
believe
in
the
spiritual
dynamics
and
you're
talking
about
the
dead.
It
is
very
symbolic
things,
so
I
want
to
thank
those
who
involve
and
make
sure
that
we
do.
We
need
to
do
things.
Thank.
B
B
We
have
to
think
about
our
our
local
cemeteries,
there's
a
man
in
West
Tampa
who
has
taken
cemetery
there
and
is
flying
back
parcels
so
that
he
can
make
that
historic,
designation
I
would
like
to
see
the
mayor
council,
Hillsborough,
County,
Hillsborough,
County,
School,
Board,
state
of
Florida
all
joined
together
and
looked
at
neglected
as,
as
this
gentleman
mentioned
earlier,
neglected
cemeteries
and
see
what
we
can
do
to
make
them
historic.
So
this
type
of
thing
doesn't
happen,
but
we
have
to
start
today.
B
N
Chairman
just
want
to
thank
mr.
Moore
and
all
the
staff
of
Temple
Housing
Authority.
You
did
back
up
and
you
went
forward
as
soon
as
you
were
notified.
You
started
the
process
and
we're
very
grateful
for
that
and
the
product
that
you
turned
out
the
identification
with
yourself
a
cardinal
and
the
rest
of
you
are
to
be
commended.
It's
not
an
easy
thing
to
do.
A
O
A
And
thank
you
very
much.
I
meant
what
I
said
that
when
y'all
spoke
in
you
know
the
term
righteousness
is
sometimes
negative,
sometimes
positive.
The
way
y'all
spoke
I
could
just
sense
a
real
passion
in
that
I.
Anybody
who
knows
me
knows
I
have
a
real
passion
for
United
States
history.
Every
year,
my
son
and
I,
we
always
visit
Arlington
Cemetery
and
we
go
to
various
places.
One
of
the
places
we
go
is
section
27,
which
has
slaves
a
bunch
of
unmarked
graves,
no
names,
many
of
them
just
say
citizen.
A
You
know
the
this
summer,
it's
it's
it's
funny.
Councilman
dick
Felder
was
talking
about
our
history
here
in
Florida,
here
in
Tampa
and
and
there's
you
know
for
folks
who
are
in
looking
for
history
on
injustice.
You
can
look
right
here,
you
can
look
in,
Florida
can
look
in
Tampa
and
that's
a
sad
fact.
This
summer,
I
took
a
couple
of
trips.
I
went
to
a
Marianna
Florida
to
see
the
area
where
a
quad
kneel
was
lynched
y'all
in
quad
kneel.
Oh,
my
son
and
I
took
a
trip.
A
I
take
him
on
a
lot
of
serious
trips.
We
went
to
Mississippi,
we
went
to
ruble
to
see
Fannie
Lou
Hamer
money,
Mississippi
for
Emmett
Till,
Jackson
Mississippi
for
Medgar
Evers.
We
went
down
to
Mississippi
Delta.
We
saw
the
old
parchment
prison,
then
a
little
bit
after
that
we
went
to
Alabama
for
Montgomery,
for
the
equal
justice
initiative
and
in
Selma.
But
if
there's
tons
of
that
here,
like
councilman
Dan
Fowler
said
you
know,
growing
up
temple
terrorists
and
a
Hispanic
family
growing
up
before
I
was
10.
A
A
We
were
right
in
the
thick
of
it
and
I'll
tell
you
all
what
to
see
just
how
in
the
thick
of
it,
we
were
look
at
1867
and
what
we
did
when
we
wrote
in
our
Constitution
voting
restrictions
that
voters
just
got
rid
of
last
year
through
amendment
four,
when
what
our
state
was
one
of
the
states
that
refused
to
support
the
13th,
the
14th
and
the
15th
amendments
and
Congress
said:
look
ya'll
want
to
get
back
in
the
Union.
You
guys
got
to
let
folks
vote
well.
A
Florida
said
sure,
we'll
let
folks
vote
we're
gonna
put
things
in
there
like
poll
taxes,
literacy
tests
and
felony
restrictions,
something
that
we
just
got
rid
of
allegedly
a
year
ago.
That's
our
history.
We
have
to
know
our
history.
We
gotta
face
up
to
our
history.
We
got
to
know
how
we
got
here
today
and
we
can't
be
afraid
to
look
at
it
and
to
look
at
the
ugly
things
and
I
do
mean
ugly,
because
when
I
look
at
these
names
here,
that's
ugly
s-so
I
fail.
A
That's
all
I
just
said
that's
ugly
in
Spanish,
because
my
eye
gets
passionate.
Sometimes
I
speak
Spanish,
but
that's
ugly,
that's
about
as
ugly
as
you
get
and
I
think
we're
all
here,
United
to
honor
these
folks
and
to
honor
them
and
to
make
sure
that
that
our
young
people
learn
all
of
our
history
so
that
we
know
where
we
came
from.
We
know
how
we
got
here.
We
know
the
many
good
things
about
our
country
and
God
knows:
there's
a
ton
of
good
things
about
our
country.
My
parents
were
refugees.
A
We
came
here
a
lot
of
good
things
about
our
country,
but
there's
a
lot
of
bad
things
about
our
country,
but,
like
I,
think
it
was
I
think
it
was
President
Clinton.
That
said
this,
which
is
the
things
that
are
right
about
America,
can
heal
the
things
that
are
wrong
about
America
and
and
I.
I
really
do
believe
that.
So
thank
you
very
much.
Okay.
Next
we
move
to
item
number
55.
It
would
appear.
A
I'm
sorry
I
apologize
for
interrupting
you,
four
council
members.
We
have
this
and
then
second
readings
which
we
should
be
able
to
get
through
for
purposes
of
the
public
who's
here
for
second
readings
here
today,
do
you
want
to
go
ahead
and
do
second
readings
right
now?
A
A
K
Again,
I'm
here
on
item
55,
an
update
on
the
small
business
participation
for
the
San
Carlos
punch
station
rehab.
One
thing
I
would
like
to
make
clear
is
that
the
agenda
item
and
there
appears
to
be
a
scriveners
error.
It
refers
to
this
project
being
managed
by
Woodruff.
This
project
was
awarded
to
garni
construction
company.
That
being
said,
we
are
in
the
early
stages
of
construction,
we're
basically
in
the
mobile
immobilization
stage,
so
it's
very
premature
to
provide
you
with
any
substantive
utilization
report,
there's
just
nothing
occurring
at
this
moment.
It's
set
for
mobilization.
K
D
D
D
D
A
K
K
A
Okay,
thank
you
very
much,
sir.
We
appreciate
it.
Okay.
Now
we
circle
back
item
number.
Forty
may
I
have
a
motion
to
open
telemark
I'm
starting
a
motion
by
Councilman
I
think
it
was
the
Maniscalco
second
I
think
by
councilman
Miranda,
all
in
favor
any.
B
A
G
C
Good
afternoon,
council
members,
Dennis
Fernandez
architectural
review
and
historic
preservation
manager
here
on
item
number
40.
We
do
typically
give
it
full
a
more
extensive
presentation
as
second
reading,
but
just
to
introduce
the
property.
This
is
a
recommendation
by
the
Historic
Preservation
Commission
for
the
local
landmark
designation
of
the
Tjuta
homestead
and
farm
which
is
located
in
the
eastern
part
anymore
city
within
the
boundaries
of
the
Ybor
City
historic
district.
This
is
an
aerial
showing
the
boundaries
of
the
farm.
C
This
farm
was
originally
the
homestead
for
Victoria
and
Salvatore
Giunta,
who
emigrated
from
Sicily
in
the
early
1900s
and
began
to
serve
as
laborers
in
Ybor
City,
very
typical
to
many
of
the
stories
that
we
hear.
However,
this
story
becomes
very
unique
in
that
they
worked
the
farms
of
East
Ybor
City
and
created
a
homestead
that
still
exists
today
and
still
exists
as
a
working
farm.
As
far
as
I
know
what
would
be
the
last
Sicilian
immigrant
farm
in
the
city,
the
Historic
Preservation
Commission
did
find
that
the
property
doesn't
meet.
C
The
designation,
recruit
criteria
within
the
code
does
satisfy
the
National
Register
criteria
for
agricultural,
ethnic
heritage
architecture,
Community,
Planning
and
Development,
and
also
it's
anticipated
that
there
could
be
some
archaeological
of
discoveries
in
the
farm
portion.
The
owners
are
the
great-grandchildren
of
Victoria
and
Salvatore
are
here
today.
C
O
I,
just
it's
appropriate
I,
just
want
to
thank
the
Judah
sisters
for
being
so
persistent.
They
gave
me
a
tour
a
couple
years
ago
and
it's
it's.
It
tells
a
story
of
Ybor
that
we
need
to
preserve
it
and
it's
a
it's.
A
different
kind
of
story,
and
the
thing
I
was
most
impressed
about
is
that
you
said
was
that
your
grandfather
brought
seeds
and
you're
still
growing
the
same
products
and
a
lot
of
them
aren't
even
available
United
States
right
now.
So
it's
a
really
interesting
story.
Thank
you.
In.
D
Think
I
mentioned
to
you
that
my
my
dad's
father,
my
grandfather
based
out
of
Plant
City
at
the
time
used
to
be
a
celery,
buyer
and
and
he
would
buy
the
celery
and
ship
it
to
New
York,
where
celery
apparently
was
king
back
then
as
a
real
delicacy,
but
anyway,
I
hope
that
our
families
perhaps
met
back
then
and
and
are
meeting
again
now.
So
congratulations
and
best
of
luck
on
them.
Thank.
A
You,
sir,
any
other
questions.
Councilman
Citroen.
Do
you
want
to
take
this
one
now
open
the
floor?
Oh
yeah,
I'm.
Sorry,
public
comment
is
anybody
here
to
publicly
common
9
number
40?
If
so,
please
come
forward
motion
to
close
by
council
memorandum.
Second,
by
councilman,
ominous
calcio,
all
in
favor
any
opposed.
E
A
B
For
keeping
their
families
history
alive
and
still
for
working
to
lab,
thank
you
to
both
juices
sisters.
I
have
a
substitute
in
ordinance
being
considered
for
the
first
reading.
Excuse
me
in
final
number,
a
2
0
1
9
want
to
have
a
substitute
ordinance
being
considered
for
reading
an
ordinance
of
the
city
of
Tampa
Florida
desk.
Omitting,
the
junta,
homestead
and
farm
located.
B
N
Q
A
A
C
A
A
S
You
very
much
mr.
chairman
I
have
an
ordinance
being
presented
for
second
reading
and
adoption
and
ordinance
amending
the
Imagine
2040
tab,
comprehensive
plan
capital
improvement
section
by
replacing
the
capital
improvement
schedule
of
projects
with
the
capital
improvement
schedule
of
projects
for
fiscal
year
2020
through
fiscal
year,
2024
providing
for
repeal
of
all
ordinances
and
conflict
providing
for
severability
providing
an.
A
G
E
T
E
S
N
T
S
S
Q
Q
S
N
I
Follow
our
easy
1972
orders
being
presented
for
second
reading
and
adoption
and
on
its
rezoning
properly
the
general
vicinity
of
3704
west.
You
cook
evident
in
the
city
of
Tampa
Florida
and
more
particularly
described
in
section
one
from
the
zoning
district
classification,
ro
sworn
residential
office,
PD
plan
development,
medical
office,
business,
a
professional
office
Club
space
of
religious
assembly,
Bank
catering
shop
pharmacy.
So.
G
S
S
Q
N
A
A
A
D
N
A
D
All
right,
I'll
move,
would
fallen
ordinance
for
second
reading
and
adoption
regarding
file
number
re
z,
1987,
an
ordinance
resenting
property
in
the
general
vicinity
of
2301
West
Kentucky
Avenue
in
the
city
of
Ebla
Florida,
more
particularly
described
in
section
one
from
zoning
district
classifications,
rs.50
residential
single-family
PD,
planned
development.
Residential
single-family
detached
to
provide
an
effective
date
provide
an
effective
day.
A
G
A
Any
questions,
okay
and
thank
you
for
your
patience
for
waiting
this
point.
We
appreciate
it
anybody
here
in
the
public
here
two
comments
and
item
number
45.
N
Take
the
Chairman
file
number
are
easy:
19
95
item
45
moving
orders
presented
for
second
arena;
adoption
known
as
rezoning
property
gentlemen,
send
84001
North,
Myrtle,
Avenue
city
of
Tampa,
Florida,
more
particularly
square
having
sexual
one
from
zoning
districts;
classification,
PD
plan
development,
business
professional
office
to
SG
SH,
see
G,
Seminole,
Heights
commercial
general,
providing
an
effective
date.
Second,.
P
A
Don't
think
so
and
we
think
senior
and
junior
for
your
patients
today
any
questions
for
senior
junior,
okay.
Anybody
here
from
the
public
here
to
comment
on
item
number
46.
B
N
A
A
A
A
By
Councilman,
Scott
go
second
by
I'll,
just
give
it
to
Jeff's
intro
senpai
Jim,
Citro,
councilman
Citro,
all
in
favor
aye
any
opposed
okay
and
then
before
we
move
on
that
of
continuous.
Does
anybody
here
to
speak
on
the
continuous
solely
fried
M
number
47
item
47,
and
this
is
sir
solely
on
the
continuance,
but.
G
A
G
G
E
They
excuse
me
I'm.
Sorry,
sir,
you
may
not
have
a
minute.
You
may
not
have
been
here
or
you
may
have
missed
it,
but
we
had
mentioned
that
early
on
that
this
item
was
going
to
be
continued,
and
actually
somebody
did
did
speak
to
it
about
the
fact
that
they
recognized
they
were
going
to
have
to
come
back
on
February
6.
G
E
G
E
B
E
I
Jim
and
I
would
like
to
make
a
motion
to
give
a
combination
to
dr.
Samuel
Wright
scene,
founder
of
the
Tempe
by
Heritage
Festival
in
the
Tempe
Commission
and
Bureau
Visitors
Bureau
as
a
major
contributor.
He
had
a
vision
to
rise
or
where
it
raised
awareness
of
the
african-american
heritage
in
the
Tampa
Bay
area
and
surrounding
community
I
present.
This
commendation
dr.
Wright,
at
the
regular
session
of
City
Council
in
January
night
between
their
motion.
A
D
A
A
In
DC,
probably
eight
nine
times,
but
that
is
just
through
the
roof
it
is.
It
is
amazing,
so
my
hat
is
off
the
same.
Pin
for
that.
That
is
amazing,
but
we
have
a
motion
by
Councilman
ding
Felder,
a
second
which
I
think
councilman
Miranda,
all
in
favor
any
opposed
anything
else,
sir,
not
today.
Thank
you.
A
Okay,
I
got
a
couple
of
things
if
I
may
I'm
the
guy
with
many
today
on
a
motion
for
a
representative
from
the
fines
and
fees,
Justice
Center
to
come
present
before
City
Council
regular
session
on
December
19th,
to
discuss
the
state's
driver's
license
suspension
program
and
how
it
is
kind
of
productive
in
and
disproportionately
punishes,
poor
people.
The
center
is
working
on
legislation
in
Tallahassee,
including
with
representatives
here
in
Tampa,
to
address
this
injustice
and
I
would
like
to
have
City
Council.
To
be
aware
of
these
efforts.
A
A
Thank
you
and
a
couple
other
things
briefly.
I
motion
for
parks
and
recreation
to
appear
and
discuss
a
report
on
the
status
of
the
improvement
scheduled
for
Forest
Hills
Recreation
Center
at
the
January
23rd
2020
meeting.
That
is
something
that
has
embedded
time
and
including
this
year.
Time
and
time
again,
the
people
of
Forest
Hills
at
the
Rec
Center
have
been
waiting
for
those
improvements
for
I,
think
five
or
six
years
after
it
was
originally
budgeted
and
there
continued
to
be
stormwater
challenges.
E
A
Sir,
and
then
this
is
for
no
appearance,
its
y'all
know
that
the
next
door
app,
you
know
next
door.
That
is
a
great
way
to
communicate
to
our
constituents
and
I
know.
The
city
of
Tampa
has
a
profile
on
all
the
different
sites.
I
can
only
access
the
one
in
hundreds
green.
I
motion
for
a
report
with
no
appearance
necessary
by
the
administration
on
how
each
city
councilmember
can
get
their
own
if
we
wish
next
door
profile
in
whatever
neighborhoods
we
want
within
our
districts
from
within
the
city.
If.
E
A
E
Actually,
actually,
I
just
want
to
thank
mr.
chairman
for
raising
the
issue,
because
the
concept
of
social
media
and
the
concept
of
apps,
such
as
that
there
are
municipalities
that
do
have
ability
to
archive
and
retrieve
and
comply
with
Florida
law
within
the
city
servers.
So
that
would
be
a
worthy
of
discussion.
I'm.
S
N
S
A
Very
briefly,
sorry,
gentlemen,
two
more
I
motion
for
chief
Niklas
Cicero
to
appear
in
report
to
Council
at
the
regular
session
on
January
3rd,
to
discuss
efforts
to
make
improvements
to
response
times
and
I
motion
for
the
systems
with
fire
station
13,
as
well
as
these
Tampa.
If
y'all
remember
during
the
the
budget
that
the
administration
was
going
to
be
speaking
with
75
for
the
Union
about
these
improvements,
and
they
were
supposed
to
report
back
to
us
within
a
hundred
days,
so
I'm
saying
hey
here's
a
hundred
days.
Let's
talk
about
it,
so
we
have.
S
A
Lastly,
I
motion
for
a
presenter
for
public
works
department
to
report
to
Council
on
parts
of
the
university
area
that
remain,
and
this
is
remarkable
in
the
year
2019
on
well
water.
As
mentioned
during
the
you,
a
CDC
presentation
by
Miss,
Sarah,
combs
and
I
on
a
motion
today.
Report
on
this
at
our
March
26
workshop.
S
S
E
A
E
A
N
D
The
net
just
reminded
me
one
other
motion.
This
relates
to
our
discussion
earlier
about
affordable
housing
and
potential
incentives.
I
would
ask
that
that
staff,
including
Carol
our
new
economic
development
person
and
Vanessa
and
legal
and
anybody
else
appropriate,
come
back
for
a
workshop
March
19th
at
9:30
March.
E
D
A
We
have
a
motion
by
Councilman,
dick
felt
or
a
second
by
whom
calcio
all
in
favor
any
opposed.
Okay,
anything
else,
sir.
No
thank
you.
Okay
motion
to
receive
and
file
well
sure
receive
them
followed
by
Councilman
is
Capitol
second
by
Councilman
sitter,
all
in
favor.
Any
opposed,
ok
council
is
adjourned.
Thank
you.