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From YouTube: City Council Work Session Meeting 02 21 2017
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A
A
A
Clean
okay,
so
did
I
call
the
meeting
to
order,
if
not
I
have
called
this
meeting
to
order,
and
we
are
going
to
jump
on
to
number
two
presentation
on
a
law
enforcement,
behavioral
deflection
program
for
Coddington
County,
Sarah
Peterson,
director,
the
Coddington
county
welfare
office,
along
with
sergeants
teary
Horse,
perfect
welcome,
folks,
I'll.
Let
you
just
take
it
on.
Thank.
C
C
C
Thank
you
for
your
time
tonight
and
I
know
that
you
guys
are
really
busy,
so
I'll
do
my
best
to
keep
it
short
and
sweet,
and
hopefully
painless
we're
here
to
talk
about
tonight
about
the
law
enforcement
behavioural
deflection
program,
but
to
start
with
kinda
to
do
a
little
bit
of
introduction
of
how
this
even
came
about
in
June
of
2015.
Coddington
counties
have
passed
a
resolution
to
sign
on
to
the
National
stepping
up
initiative,
and
this
is
a
national
initiative
to
reduce
the
number
of
people
with
mental
illness
in
our
county
jails.
C
The
problem
is
over.
1.1
million
people
with
mental
illnesses
are
arrested
each
year.
Persons
with
serious
mental
illnesses
are
over-represented
in
the
u.s.
jails
in
prison.
Our
council
state
government
in
2012
said
17%
72%
of
those
have
a
co-occurring,
comorbid
substance
use
problem.
Our
two
largest
psychiatric
facilities
in
the
country
are
the
LA
County
and
Cook
County
jails,
and
we
know
that
there's
a
problem
and
we
know
we
got
to
fix
how
we're
doing
things.
C
People
with
severe
mental
illness,
they
tend
to
spend
more
time
incarcerated,
pretrial,
they
serve
more
of
their
sentences
and
they
have
parole
revoked
for
technical
violations
more
often
than
individuals
without
a
severe
mental
illness
I'm.
So
with
that
the
stepping
up
initiative,
some
of
our
goals,
is
to
reduce
the
number
of
people
with
mental
illness
in
the
jail
rehabilitate
inmates
with
mental
illness
and
use
human
and
resources
effectively.
C
C
With
the
the
so
it
with
this
stepping
up
some
of
the
accomplishments
that
we've
we
started
and
made
is
we
formed
a
stepping
up
initiative
committee?
We
meet
monthly
on
a
regular
basis.
We
have
representatives
that
the
judge,
parole
city,
police
sheriff
probation
officers,
the
mental
health
agency.
We
have
an
outlying
group
that
includes
the
South
Dakota
Department
Social
Services
of
behavioral
health.
We
have
the
Department
of
Corrections,
State,
Department
and
department
of
parole,
who
else
am
I
missing?
C
Okay,
that
that
work
with
us
and
provide
us
some
advice:
we've
done
some
mental
illness.
Sorry,
a
tobacco
mint.
We
hired
a
mental
health
worker
in
the
jail.
That
was
our
first
stop
just
to
even
start
to
just
even
say.
If
we
can,
we
do
some
screenings
to
identify
how
many
people
in
our
jail
have
a
mental
illness,
along
with
that
he
does
assessments
and
case
management
with
diagnosis.
C
C
Oh,
is
it
not
going
to
do
this?
For
me,
that
screen
should
say
it
should
roll,
but
it's
not
out
of
that.
22.2
of
those
individuals
have
a
severe
mental
illness
and
44.4
have
what
we
identify
as
a
moderate.
What
that
equates
to
is
we
have
a
proximally
17
inmates
on
a
daily
average
in
our
Jail
with
some
sort
of
mental
illness.
So
we
know
we
can
have
an
impact.
C
So
then
our
next
step
is
this
is
kind
of
our
step.
It's
a
sequential
intercept
model
where
you
have
different
intercepts
to
have
impact
the
mental
health
worker
is
intercept
3.
We
have
some
things
and
work
for
the
intercept
5
at
getting
them
out
and
reducing
recidivism.
But
this
program
that
I'm
going
to
talk
about
is
working
on,
intercept
1.
We
know
that
if
an
individual
has
a
jail
stay
of
three
or
more
days,
they
have
an
increased
likelihood
of
to
recidivate
anywhere
from
forty
to
sixty
percent.
C
So
the
behavioral
defection
yeah,
that's
a
big
word,
behavioral
deflection
pilot
program
is
we're
looking
at.
We
still
need
ways
to
reduce
the
numbers
of
mentally.
You
know
in
the
jail
and
we're
looking
at
ways
that
we
can
identify
and
address
gaps
in
our
community,
and
this
is
an
area
where
we've
identified
that
and
it's
helped
reduce
redundant
interactions
with
law
enforcement
and
emergency
services
currently
how
it
stands.
C
If
a
law
enforcement
comes
into
contact
with
somebody
having
a
mental
health
situation
or
behavioral
health
situation,
they
have
three
options:
they
can
arrest,
they
can
do
an
a
voluntary
commitment
or
they
can
deescalate
and
leave
the
person,
as
is
now
if
they
deescalate,
which
means
calms
the
person
down
to
where
they're
not
a
threat
or
harm
to
themselves
or
somebody
else.
There
is
no
follow-up
at
this
time.
We
don't
do.
There's
nothing
in
the
community.
There's
no
funding
for
outreach
services
to
have
that
follow-up
contact.
C
D
A
lot
of
times
what
happens
when
we
end
up
on
scene,
you
know
like,
like
she
said:
if
we
don't
have
enough,
where
we
say
they're
an
immediate
danger
to
themselves
or
others
when
we
take
them
into
custody
and
have
them
evaluated
or
if
they're
not
arrested
for
a
crime,
some
sort
then
they're
left
there
left
there
on
scene.
You
know
maybe
they're
not
a
danger
themselves
or
others,
but
we
can
still
tell
that
they.
That
would
benefit
from
some
sort
of
help
and
a
lot
of
times.
D
Those
individuals
sometimes
fall
through
the
cracks,
and
it's
it's
happen
in
different
instances
where
we'll
deal
with
those
same
people
on
an
ongoing
basis.
Again,
it's
not
enough
where
we're
going
to
take
them
into
custody
or
do
anything,
but
we
still
deal
with
them
and
and
eventually
sometimes
that
their
behavior
escalates
to
a
point
where
they
do
end
up
happening
in
contact
with
us,
where
they
end
up
in
jail
or
something
like
that.
D
So
the
goal
this
program
is
to
take
that
initial
contact
with
them
and
then
have
someone
get
them
in
touch
with
some
resources
to
make
sure
they
are.
You
know
if
there's,
whether
it's
medication
or
some
some
therapy
or
something
they
could
work
with
someone
on
to
hopefully
prevent
those
future
contacts
from
escalating
to
a
point
where
they
would
end
up
in
jail
or
something
like
that.
So
the
goal
is
to
get
them
help
before
it
becomes
a
bigger
issue
and.
C
We
anticipate
that'll
help
reduce
the
redundant
interactions
with
the
law
enforcement
emergency
services.
Often
times
I've
heard
the
law
enforcement
say.
We
know
the
direction
they're
going,
there's
nothing,
we
can
do
about
it
and
unless
no
service
is
there,
we
also
want
to
get
them
engaged
in
services
before
they
burn
bridges.
Sometimes
those
bridges
can
burn.
Is
your
family
support
those
peer
supports,
and
we,
if
we
can
the
earlier,
we
can
intervene
the
better
we
can
help
provide
some
support
to
even
the
family.
How
do
you
cope
with
that?
C
How
do
you
deal
and
get
them
that
help
as
well
to
help
increase
those
services
for
people
with
those
mental
health
situations
so
that
it
doesn't
lead
to
to
to
an
arrest?
Sometimes
you
might
have
a
situation
after
12
times,
maybe
that
individual
get
aggravated,
and
then
you
get
an
assault.
They
get
an
arrest
based
on
that
mental
health,
our
target
population
or
mental
health
context.
I
do
not
lead
to
arrest
there
in
the
that
are
cleared
on
scene
kind
of
like
what
Steve
said.
They
they
don't
fit
the
commitment
criteria.
C
They're,
not
you
know
that
high
enough
or
they
were
able
to
calm
them
down
and
I,
do
have
to
give
the
law
enforcement
both
the
sheriff
and
the
police
department,
just
a
positive
input
on
their
crisis
intervention
training.
They
do
an
excellent
job
in
our
community
at
de-escalating
no
situation.
So
I
shout
out
of
compliment
to
them.
What.
D
C
And
then
individuals
that
aren't
connected
to
services,
because
we
don't
want
to
duplicate
services
for
that
or
the
target.
Our
goals
and
benefits
for
their
program
is
to
improve
outcomes
for
the
mentally
ill,
see
cost
savings
due
to
lower
incarceration
rates,
improve
officer,
safety,
time
savings
throughout
the
criminal
justice
and
treatment
processes,
and
that's
just
an
office
of
the
the
program
and
later
on
tonight,
the
City
Council.
That's
where
we
have
the
request
for
the
Memorandum
of
Understanding.
So
any
question:
if
I'm
open
to
any
questions,
if
you
have
any
Steven.
D
Goal
eventually
is
to
get
every
single
officer
on
the
department
trained
to
that.
It's
a
it's
a
40-hour
class
that
we
do
typically
do
one
eight-hour
day
for
five
weeks
in
a
row.
They
actually
have
actors
that
come
in
and
act
as
authors,
doing
some
sort
of
mental
health
disorder
and
we
have
to
you
know,
work
with
them
and
figure
out.
What's
going.
E
D
B
D
I'm
not
sure
I
know
as
of
2012,
when
I've
done
training
and
the
numbers
haven't
changed
a
whole
lot,
but
I
figured
that
about
once
every
three
days
our
department
responds
to
either
a
completed
suicide,
a
suicide
threat
or
a
suicide
attempt
once
every
three
days,
and
so
those
are
just
those
things.
So
we
do
these
things.
D
You
know
quite
often
so
there's
a
strong
knee,
and
so
the
idea
behind
this,
too,
is
if
I,
clear,
someone
and
I
say
they're
okay
to
be
left,
then
what
we
would
do
is
we
get
them
in
contact
with
someone?
Even
though
they've
been
cleared,
we
still
want
to
put
them
in
contact
with
some
resources
that
are
available.
I,
don't.
B
F
Can't
even
imagine
being
at
the
lowest
point
of
your
life
and
then
taken
to
jail,
what
percentage
I'm
glad
that
you
guys
are
going
through
this
training
when
you
come
on
scene
to
be
able
to
clear
somebody,
either
through
clearing
and
carcere
a
timer,
take
them
out
to
serenity
Hills
how
percentage-wise?
How
accept
how
effective
is
that
becoming
because
I
know
some
of
you
have
been
trained
for
quite
some
time
now
and
I
would
assume
that
it's
getting
easier
and
easier
than
ever.
The
right
word
there's
the
percentage
of
successes
is,
is
increasing.
D
Say
so,
I
don't
have
the
exact
numbers,
but
I
know
myself.
Personally,
I've
I've
cleared
people
where
they
have
been
able
to
go
about
their
daily
business
and
activities,
and
things
like
that
versus
you
know
going
to
jail
are
going
to
serenity
hills.
You
know
and
insights.
That's
a
success,
because
the
whole
goal
is
to
you
know,
keep
them
out
to
be
in
a
car,
sir.
Keep
them
out
of
those
and
just
get
them
in
touch
with
the
resources
and
and
and.
F
C
And
some
of
these
individuals
aren't
that
the
criteria
for
that
crisis
intervention-
some
of
these
individuals
may
not
be
at
that
level.
It
might
be
more
of
a
behavioral.
You
might
have
an
individual
that
their
tub
is
constantly
overflowing.
You
know
just
where
the
officers
are
constantly
getting
called
into.
Those
are
some
that
we're
lurking
at
to
to
see
if
we
can
get
them
connected
before
it
gets
to
a
bigger
incident.
When.
C
We're
being
told
that
the
services
are
adequate,
adequate,
the
the
issue
becomes
is
this:
is
there's
no
money
for
outreach,
so
basically
what
that
law
enforcement
can
do
right
now
is
say
here
you
can
call
human
service
agency
or
lutheran
social
services,
we're
wanting
to
take
more
of
a
aggressive
approach,
assertive
approach
and
reaching
out
to
them
and
kind
of
just
saying:
is
there
something
we
can
help
you
with?
You
know
you?
We
know
you
had
a
call
last
night.
C
Is
there
something
we
can
help
you
with
and
kind
of
what
we
do
is
called
some
of
that
motivational
interviewing
trying
to
identify,
maybe
areas
that
they
want
might
want
to
work
with,
because
one
of
the
issues
with
mental
illness
is
it's
one
of
those
illnesses
that
people
don't
actually
deny
that
they
have.
It's
be
like
having
cancer,
but
you
deny
that
you
have
it
and
it
can
progressively
get
worse.
C
That
can
be
the
case,
and
so
sometimes
you
have
to
kind
of
go
through
a
side
door
develop
some
some
of
the
meet
some
of
their
other
needs,
whether
it's
housing
or
food,
or
other
things
like
that
and
looking
at
their
incentives.
What
what
are
they
looking
to
get
to
get
out
of
that
to
move
forward
before
you
can
even
address
the
mental
illness?
H
G
C
The
letter
of
support
is
for
our
sequential
intercept
model
application
and
I
will
go
back
here,
a
couple
of
screens
what
that
we
have
an
opportunity
to
have
a
day
and
a
half
training
coming
to
our
community.
Last
year
we
made
our
application
there's
about
seventy
four
five
four
were
selected
and
we
tottered
between
four
and
five,
and
we
ended
that
landed
fifth.
C
I
First
off
I'd,
just
like
to
thank
you,
Sarah
for
kind
of
spearheading
this
whole
activity-
you
and
I-
have
had
discussions
about
this
outside
of
this
and
I
think
it's
Harbor,
the
city
or
the
county.
Can
that
throw
support
that
way?
I
think
it
is
great
I
think
it's
a
really
good
good
idea.
It's
a
good
program.
What
our
officers
are
doing
in
this
regard.
I
wasn't
aware:
we
were
doing
that
kind
of
training.
I
I
think
that's
very,
very,
very
good,
but
also
while
you're
here
I'm
going
to
use
this
platform,
because
I
think
people
that
do
a
lot
of
volunteer
work
need
a
little
bit
of
recognition
because
you,
your
husband,
your
kids,
consistently
come
that
banquet
and
that's
a
lot
of
work
and
I
just
want
to
say
thanks
in
public
for
your
efforts
in
that
regard.
So
thank
you.
A
F
A
F
Right,
thank
you.
One
last
comment.
Sorry
Steve.
It
would
be
interesting
to
know
as
we
go
along
what
the
impact
of
these
programs
are
in
terms
of
cost-effectiveness.
You
know,
because
if
we're
talking
about
resources
and
outreach
resources-
and
some
of
the
things
that
we
really
would
need
to
fill
in,
I
would
believe
that,
as
we
get
more
effective
at
this
you're
going
to
see
a
better
allocation
of
resources
for
these
services-
and
it
would
be
nice
to
see
a
year
from
now
or
two
years
from
now.
C
Is
collecting
that
data,
because
one
of
our
long-term
goals
is,
as
we
see
savings
in
one
area
to
put
it
into
another
area
that
needs
it
to
continue
to
grow
it,
and
you
know,
if
you
don't
track
it,
that
money
gets
it
gets
lost,
and
part
of
this
came
about
too
with
the
CIT.
That
was
our
question.
How
effective
are
we
and
just
improving,
consistently
improving
our
data
and
tracking
that,
so
we
can
show
us
what
is
working
and
also
what
is
not
working.
J
K
D
It's
hard
to
tell
until
you
actually
know
see
that
person
what
their
is
their
situation
is,
but
I
know
a
lot
of
times
too.
We
can
tell
them
to
go
and
call
this
number,
and
sometimes
it
takes
more
than
that
to
take
someone
to
actually
go,
and
you
know
here's
some
information,
you
know
and
give
them
those.
You
know,
have
you
thought
about
this
or
this
you
know
and
get
them
into
that
that
treatment
a
lot
of
times
too
the
first
time
they
maybe
go
on
to
treatment.
D
B
What
you're
doing
with
this
program
that
you
don't
do
now
is
now
you're
in
contact
with
somebody
you
give
them
the
information
in
the
people
to
contact
now
that
you're
just
turning
it
around
and
having
two
people
contact
them.
Because
you'll
saying
goes,
you
can
lead
a
horse
water,
you
can't
make
him
drink,
but
it
back
to
the
police
department.
Part
I,
remember
one
night
at
dinner:
right
along
with
the
police
department,
there
was
domestic
and
there
was
a
threat
of
suicide
and
the
individuals
ended
up
taken
to
the
serenity
Hills.
But
it
was
a.
B
G
M
Fixed
up
but
I
there,
the
document
is
actually
attached
to
your
agenda
for
the
and
I.
Don't
know
how
much
time
you
actually
got
to
spend
looking
at
it
and
managed
to
stay
awake
through,
but
there's
a
few
things
on
the
screen
here.
That
I
would
like
to
point
out
just
kind
of
one
comment:
this
is
a
report
that
we
submit
every
year.
We've
we've
submitted
this
every
year
that
I've
been
here
in
about
two
years,
we'll
see
the
results
of
it.
M
It
gets
compiled
at
the
federal
level,
but
just
right
here,
let's
look
register
borrowers.
We're
seeing
this
is
per
capita,
we're
seeing
point
four
per
capita.
The
state
average
is
0.5,
so
we're
a
little
bit
lower
their
library
visits
per
capita.
We're
seeing
five
point:
six
state
averages
five
point:
one:
let's
go
down
total
circulation
per
capita,
we're
at
ten
point.
Seven,
the
state
average
is
seven
point
six.
M
Then
the
last
one
down
there,
the
twelve
point:
four
six
percent
for
the
circulation
of
electronic
materials
as
a
percentage
of
total
circulation,
the
state
average
is
11
percent
just
to
kind
of
expand.
On
that
a
little
bit.
You
know
in
my
my
profession,
I
hear
a
lot
of
people
talking
about
well,
ebooks
are
taking
everything
over;
that's
really
not
the
case,
those,
but
that
12%
is
by
about
10%
of
our
registered
users.
M
Another
comment
that
I
hear
and
if
you
dig
back
there's
a
section
further
back
in
that
report
that
talks
about
the
different
types
of
circulations,
we
have
print
books,
electronic
things
like
that,
there's
a
section
in
there.
The
lists
databases
that
has
a
huge
number
of
you
ceej.
That
is
the
new
reference
collection.
M
M
K
M
M
G
A
That
was
I
like
the
report.
It
was
very
informative,
yeah
exactly
glad.
Well,
thanks
Mike,
you
guys
got
any
questions
for
him
on
this
perfect
thanks,
Mike,
short-timer,
Shh
I
give
them
a
bad
time.
We
have
our.
We
have
our
meeting
tomorrow
morning,
our
department
at
me
and
I.
Think
just
last
month,
I
said
you
have
five
left
after
tomorrow.
There
only
before
left
you
put
up
with
me
right,
no
comment:
okay,
well,
very
good
I
think
we're
gonna
move
on
thanks
again
Mike
for
that
report.
That
was
very
informative.
A
N
N
A
E
A
A
Well,
I
wanted
to
talk
to
you
guys
about
something:
that's
on
the
agenda
tonight
for
maintenance
on
the
mall
thoroughfare.
This
is
exactly
the
where
we're
talking
is
exactly
where
this
car
drove
through
both
ways
Shane,
if
I'm
not
mistaken,
between
eight
nine
hundred
feet.
Long
is
what
we're
looking
at
just
so
you
know
this
will
be
going
on
the
agendas
tonight
to
ask
you
permission
to.
A
Allow
me
to
have
Rob,
go
in
and
put
some
mister
pothole
to
fix
some
of
the
potholes
out
there
and
then
what
the
intent
is
is
is
when
it's
when
it's
time
we
can,
we
can
work
these
potholes,
keep
them
filled
in
and
then
Shane
will
have
a
crew
go
in
and
put
an
inch
and
a
half
two
inch
and
three-quarter
inch
pad
over
the
top
of
asphalt.
What
we're
hoping
for
is
that
we
will
get
a
two
to
three
year
possible
fix
on
this
before
2021.
A
Now
we're
not
going
to
be
discussing
the
long
term
fix
on
this
thoroughfare,
but
what
we
are
going
to
be
talking
about
is
something
that's
just
short-lived
two
to
three
years
is
not
a
long
time.
Any
more
on
anything!
So
what
we're
looking
at
for
this
evening
when
I
ask
your
permission
to
do
this.
It's
a
twenty
thousand
dollar
repair
is
what
we're
looking
at
out
of
that
twenty
thousand
dollars.
I'm
gonna
give
you
a
rundown
on
how
this
will
be
funded.
A
If
it
comes
in
less
well,
then
it
would
just
be
turned
back
to
the
the
stakeholders
that
are
out
there.
I
think
it's
a
good!
It's
a
good
plan!
Really,
our
involvement
would
only
be
the
initial
repair
of
the
potholes
and
then
Shane
being
the
engineer
that
he
is.
He
will
have
this.
This
mat
put
on
the
town,
so
I'm
opening
it
for
questions.
If
anybody
has
any
questions,
what
we're
trying
to
do
here.
H
G
Councilman
to
my
understanding,
there
wouldn't
be
any
sort
of
feet
held
to
fire
going
forward.
I
know
that
there
had
been
an
argument
or
an
assertion
that
had
been
made
here
a
few
months
back
about
how
you
know
there
may
have
been
a
promise
or
something
like
that,
but
those
that
that
is
not
something
that
the
City
Council
can
be
held
to
going
forward,
because
the
appropriative
Act
is
a
legislative
act.
It
is
not
something
that
necessarily
sets
precedent.
G
L
O
Well,
I'm
doing
an
overlay
won't
correct
any
underlaying
or
drainage
issues,
but
the
goal
as
I
understand
it
is
to
hold
the
roadway
together
until
a
lot
more
long-term
fix
can
be
identified
and
pursued,
but
certainly
an
inch-and-a-half
overlay
is
not
going
to
create
a
substantial
amount
of
additional
drainage
issues
that,
with
regard
to
what's
currently
there
now
also
that
be
very
minimal
impacts.
If,
if
any
so.
I
A
B
Would
I
would
say
beam
I
was
with
you
the
other
day
when
you
were
making
some
of
those
phone
calls
that
the
way
the
people
jumped
in
and
we're
happy
to
help
out,
I
would
say
if
it
did
go
over
a
little
bit.
If
you
had
to
go
back
and
the
table
a
little
bit
and
ask
for
a
little
bit
more,
that
probably
wouldn't
be
an
issue
so
yeah.
K
O
Tickle
in
my
throat
apologize
certainly
the
idea
of
the
overlay
right
now
a
person
could
go
out
there
and
patch
potholes
on
an
annual
basis
and
pretty
much
what
happens.
Is
you
replace
the
previous
pothole
from
last
year
this
and
that's
just
an
ongoing
thing.
If
you
put
the
overlay
on
it,
hopefully
what
you've
done
is
you've
put
a
cap
over
the
top
of
that
and
it
holds
the
majority
of
the
potholes
in
will
there
still
be
a
few
to
fix
during
that
1
to
2
year
period?
P
O
So
ideally,
right
like
at
this
time
of
year,
for
instance,
we
put
cold
patches
in
which
are
sacrificial.
They
almost
immediately
come
up.
You
know
within
months,
so
the
idea
is
to
when
we
do
fill
these
potholes
is
to
wait.
Till
a
hot
mix
plant
is
open,
permanently
or
I
want
to
see
permanent
I
mean
it's
a
longer
fix
than
the
temporary
rate,
so
you
put
a
hot
mix
patch
in
there.
O
You
pack
that
in
as
tight
as
you
can
in
it
in
dry
conditions,
and
then
you
lay
this
overlay
on
top
of
it,
it's
kind
of
like
when
you
patch
a
sheetrock
wall.
You
know
you
get
your
initial
patch
that
you
put
in
and
then
you
try
to
spackle
or
something
over
the
top
of
it
and
hold
everything
together
and
that's
same
principle
here.
Just
different
materials,
I,
there's
no
guarantee
that
I
can
give
for
how
long
it's
gonna
last.
O
J
O
O
That's
the
idea,
you
know
it,
you
don't
want
to
get
too
much
more
than
that,
because
then
the
edges,
you
got
a
feather
the
edges
down
and,
of
course,
snowplows
and
things
don't
like
it.
When
you
have
a
inch
and
a
half
Ridge,
you
know
it's
kind
of
when
you
plow
your
driveway.
If
there's
a
little
half-inch
bump,
it
hurts
when
you
hit
it
with
your
plow,
so
that
we
don't
want
to
create
something
much
more
than
that.
B
Shane
or
Steve,
maybe
the
owner-
you
can
answer
this.
It
would
be
because
that's
that's
one
thing:
I
see
a
gonna
be
a
problem
is
next
winter,
when
they're
moving
snow
when
they
move
the
snow
and
plow
it
to
the
north
into
that
field.
Is
there
any
way
they
can
work
with
us
to
not
go
that
direction,
because
they're
going
to
basically
be
going
against
the
the
ridge
on
that
road?
That
way,
yeah.
B
A
E
A
This
is
a
project
that
they
could
really
write
down
with
this
with
all
the
dollars
that
are
there.
They
could
do
this
on
their
own,
so
there
really
isn't
anything
that
we
would
have
to
do.
It's
just
that
I
think
in
order
to
do
it
right,
I
believe
our
engineering
has
to
be
involved,
at
least
to
make
sure
that
we
get
the
potholes
patched
and
get
this
laid
down
mayor.
P
A
Not
because
you
know,
as
everyone
knows,
there's
a
longer
term
fix
that
needs
to
be
done
and
I
and
the
mall
will
be
coming
forward
to
the
City
Council
Mike.
You
sat
in
on
some
of
the
meetings
already
and
know
what
they're
expecting,
but
that
will
come
out
of
future
date
and
and
if
something
does
happen,
it
needs
to
be
probably
done
before
the
2021
fix
of
house.
Another.
B
O
O
P
Me
right
really
what
you've
done
here
is
you
broke
her
to
deal
somehow
to
come
up
with
this
from
with
the
current
landowners
and
I?
Just
a
comment:
we've
been
doing
this
for
years.
It
really
surprises
me
that
we're
that
we
have
to
take
the
lead
to
get
this
done
for
somebody
else's
property
and
I
I
do
commend
you
for
doing
it,
but
you've
got
the
mall
ownership
here
and
the
landowners
that
are
paying
for
this,
and
why
have
we
put
up
with
this
for
so
many
years?
I
think.
G
A
Dakota
Bank
and
high
V
and
and
and
Arby's
expressions
first
bank.
They
all
want
something
done.
They
know
that
it
needs
fixing
and
and
I
think
they
realize
that
they
have
they've
got
to
get
on
board
to
get
this
done
so,
like
I,
say
it's
20
grand
we
raised
20
grand,
hopefully
it
won't
go
over.
But
tonight
during
the
the
motion
we
may
need
to
have
something
that
allows
us
to
go
a
little
bit
above
and
beyond.
So
it
doesn't
have
to
come
to
you
any
other
questions.
L
A
L
Of
this
we're
just
kind
of
like
you
said,
broke
your
broker
and
the
deal
here
to
get
something
better
than
what
they
got
now.
But
do
we
have
any
wherewithal
to
put
some
kind
of
deadline
and
something
in
the
future,
because
three
years
from
now,
I'm
not
gonna
be
on
the
council,
but
I
might
be
sitting
out
there
complaining
so
right.
A
Now
I
would
say
bill
that
it's
gonna
be
happening
here.
Is
that
as
soon
as
this
here
gets
done,
Rob
will
be
out
there
as
guys
will
start
feeling
almost
whole
tomorrow.
Even
though
there
are
some
wet
holes
on
you,
you
like
to
blow
em
out
dry
them
out
whatever
you
do,
but
we're
going
to
start
we'll
put
that
group
together
again
mark
who
was
all
in
that
a
Randy
Mike
someone
else
bill.
A
Were
you
in
that
meeting
with
the
mall,
so
I
know
we'll
get
that
group
together
and
maybe
throw
it
an
extra
person
or
two
and
see
what
see
what
comes
out
of
it,
and
he
may
be
here
tonight
at
7
o'clock
that
he
can
can
discuss
it.
So
that's
kind
of
what
I
wanted
to
run
by
on
that
particular
on
the
mall.
Unless
somebody
has
another
question
I'm
going
to
move
on
Kenny,
you
want
to
come
forward
here.
A
Good,
okay,
we're
gonna
turn
peach.
One
turn
that
music
on
no
all
right.
Thanks
man,
we
got
that
on
video,
for
you,
so
anyhow,
Kenny
wanted.
We
had
we've
had
we've
had
businesses
uptown
that
are
looking
at
street
dancers,
and
rather
than
have
them
come
directly
to
us
all
the
time
we
need
to
make
sure
how
many,
how
many
we
want
to
have
up
there,
and
this
is
just
the
discussion
on
what
we've
seen
last
year.
A
Q
Just
give
a
short
history,
you
know
right
now.
Somebody
wants
the
street
dance.
They'll
come
and
bring
a
proposal
to
me.
Generally,
it's
got
a
place
where
the
site
is
the
date
the
hours
they
want
to
do
it
then
I'll
forward
that
over
to
the
police
department,
they'll
look
at
and
give
us
any
comments
back
and
then
we'll
take
it
back
up
to
our
little
peeny
group
and
every
Tuesday
morning
and
say
yes,
no
we're
maybe
in
in
a
sprinkle
and
pretty
smooth.
So
far
this.
Q
Basically
our
street
dance
is
really
started
in
about
August
2013.
Now
shooter's
has
been
the
most
primary
person
for
doing
this.
You
can
see
they
did
one
in
13.
They
did
two
and
14
in
the
last
two
years,
consecutively
they've
done
three
each
year
and
they
now
have
a
proposal
again
before
us
for
another
three
for
this
year.
Of
course,
the
gaas
also
has
their
said.
Thursday
Night,
Live
scenario
that
runs
through
the
summer
and
they've
also
worked
with
Worth
and
mid
comm.
Do
a
special
dying
dance
for
them
too.
Q
We've
had
a
couple
expressions
from
Docs.
As
wishing
to
do
a
street
dance
and
from
Walraven
possibly
do
a
street
dance
so
again,
so
we're
just
looking
for
some
input.
How
many
of
these
do
we
want
to
have
location
I
actually
have
another
little
map
when
we
get
to
that
point
to
say
where
that's
at
and
do
we
want
to
limit
to
three?
We
won't
be
doing
this
every
every
other
week
or
once
a
month,
and
if
we
do
limit
it,
how
are
we
going
to
control?
H
That
big
cross,
so
let's
assume
they
made
probably
very
lucrative
to
run
and
once
that
happens
it
was
I
was
anticipating.
Think
we
all
were,
that
we'd
see
more
people
and
more
requests
for
these.
At
the
same
time,
we're
getting
calls
from
people
saying
we
don't
like
these
because
they're
too
loud,
so
that
I
think
the
intent
was
to
limit
them.
Is
that
accurate?
Well
initially.
H
N
Last
year
there
was
five
total
Street
dances,
the
first
one
we
had
two
complaints
and
the
second
one
was
kind
of
a
smaller
dance.
We
didn't
have
any
complaints,
the
third
one
we
end
up
with
three.
These
are
all
call
into
9-1-1
center,
the
fourth
dance.
We
had
two
complaints.
No,
the
last
one
was
hairball,
which
is
a
louder
band.
We
had
thirteen
complaints
on
that
one
and
a
lot
of
the
complaints.
Probably
half
are
basically
there's
a
loud
noise
in
my
neighborhood
neighbors
are
having
a
party
or
something's
going
on
in
my
neighborhood.
N
We
go
there.
We
can
hear
it's,
the
band
come
from
downtown.
Let
them
know
that
and
some
of
them
are
okay
with
it.
Others
are
mad,
as
heck
they're
gonna
call
the
councilmen
tomorrow,
they're
gonna
be
at
City
Hall
in
the
morning.
Whatever
the
case
may
be,
a
few
of
them
have
hung
up
on
our
dispatchers
after
saying
a
few
profane
words,
those
type
of
calls.
So
that's
the
type
of
atmosphere
we
have
out
there.
What.
Q
N
P
Say
that's
a
little
late,
I
think
it's
way
too
late,
quite
honestly
and
then
and
I
agree
with
Don
that
I've
had
people
that
have
talked
to
me
about
this.
You
get
both
sides
of
this
it's
great,
but
then
the
other
side
that
people
go
come
on
it's
just
too
much
and
they
aren't
people
that
are
calling
in
oh
yeah.
N
P
A
A
A
On
maple,
it
would
really
struggle
with
closing
all
of
camp
and
closing
all
of
maple.
It's
not
a
good
thing
for
us
and
when
they
have
the
the
Thursday
Night
Live.
Maybe
we
bring
that
down
to
the
to
the
south
there,
which
is
right
right
in
front
of
Kemp
Avenue
and
closed
maple
down.
So
all
the
noise
basically
is
going
to
your
house
Brad.
A
Yeah
yeah,
you
were
just
kind
of,
but
all
the
noise
goes
your
way,
but
that's
really
where
you
know
when
we
have
it
going
to
the
to
the
north.
We
get
a
lot
more
complaints
than
when
the
noise
is
going
to
the
south
and
I
think
through
here.
The
the
buildings
do
take
some
of
that
noise
away,
so
it
was
just
a
thought
that
we've
had
and
now
we
want
to.
Let
you
guys
know
that
there
are
people
wanting
to
have
these
these
dances
and.
L
A
B
N
B
N
A
R
Q
F
P
N
N
B
I
think
you'll
find
it
in
most
of
those
cases.
They
may
turn
it
down
for
a
little
bit,
but
somebody's
reaching
over
there.
Turning
tobacco
and
I
did
discuss
this
with
mr.
bolt
from
from
shooters
last
year
for
a
little
bit
and
it's
you
know
just
voiced
my
opinion
that
you
know
if
we're
gonna
continue
allowing
to
have
them
and
yes,
we
want
to
have
them.
I,
don't
think,
there's
anybody,
here's!
B
J
N
A
thing
we
talked
to
him
about
cutting
it
back.
If
I
remember
eight
the
first
year
they
were
looking
for
like
1:30.
We
wanted
to
do
like
12:30.
We
compromised
at
1:00
they're,
saying
that
most
of
the
people
that
come
out
to
those
dances
come
later
in
the
evening,
10:30
11:00
and
that's
where
they
need
to
make
their
money
in
tell
Juan
well.
P
A
At
the
community
trying
to
find
a
line,
those
things
will
be
discussed
shortly
when
we,
when
we
start
having
them,
come
forward,
but
I
would
like
to
kind
of
focus
back
in
on
numbers.
That's
really
what
we're
after
tonight
is
numbers
of
them.
They
will
go
by
whatever
we
tell
them
for
four
times.
One.
B
Q
L
B
L
B
Thursday
Night
Live
isn't
just
the
gaah,
so
I
mean
yeah
they're,
the
ones
that
hosts
it
but
I,
don't
think
that's
where
it
originated
from
and
they've
just
been
gracious
enough,
though,
he's
hosted
it's
it's
kind
of
an
uptown.
Now.
Excuse
me
downtown
yeah,
stand
politically
correct.
It's
an
event
for
downtown
put
it
that
way
so,
but.
P
To
me,
the
number
depends
on
what
the
rules
are.
If
there's,
if
it's
gonna
go
till
1:00
1:30
2
o'clock
in
the
morning,
and
my
allowable
number
of
my
brain
is
less
than
it
is,
if
we're
say
we're
gonna
get
them
out
of
there
at
midnight.
You
know
so
this
really
comes
down
because
I
wouldn't
sit
here
and
have
any
anything
to
say
negatively
about
the
Thursday
night
life,
because
it's
not
as
loud
starts
earlier
and
ends
earlier.
You
know
so
these
things
if
it
was
along
those
lines,
I
would
a
to.
A
I
I'm
just
gonna
add
two
I
think
if
we,
if
we
set
a
number,
we
say:
here's
the
maximum
number.
These
were
gonna
do
in
a
in
a
season.
Besides
Thursday
Night
Live
weekend
street
dance
type
thing,
then
we
got
to
find
an
equitable
way
to
allow
different
businesses
to
utilize
that
you
know.
You
say
that
shooters
already
with
two
or
three
requests.
I
A
B
A
R
P
I
A
A
A
O
This
what
I
have
on
the
screen
is
a
representation
of
our
review
of
on
the
signage
and
along
the
route.
This
is
3rd,
Street,
West,
continuing
to
the
east,
and
then
it
cuts
splits.
The
screen,
so
I
could
show
more
on
one
one
example,
but
for
instance,
we
identified
where
the
stop
signs
are
where
anyone
waste
signs
are,
and
then
these
emergency
snow
routes,
most
of
these
emergency
snow
routes
are
actually
on
those
poles,
but
they
are
facing
view
from
one
direction
and
we
would
propose
to
turn
them
around
or
as
needed.
O
For
you
know
the
alternate
direction
of
traffic.
We
would
eliminate
one-way
signs
so
with
that
we've
been
working
with
the
street
department
as
well
to
kind
of
identify
what
we
think
it
would
take
to
modify
signage
as
well,
and
the
street
Department
indicated
that
would
take
about
$750
for
signs
and
materials
along
that
route.
So.
O
O
Just
walk
through
it
I
mean,
and
then
the
discussion
really
comes
into
the
intersection
of
Broadway
and
1st.
That's
a
light
is
currently
a
signaled
intersection.
Is
that
something
that
we
want
to
go
to?
Do
we
want
to
maintain
the
signal
or
do
we
want
to
modify
it
to
just
be
four-way
stops
I
personally,
like
the
four-way
stop
idea,
because
there's
always
maintenance
to
the
lights,
but
so
that's
one
of
the
things
that
we're
weighing
in
on
just
a
demo
out.
The
existing
light
system
was
about
22
to
$2,500.
I.
Think
something
like
that.
O
But
you
know
that's
a
one-time
cost.
Then
you
put
your
stop
signs
up
and
away
you
go.
So
that's
kind
of
what
we've
been
weighing
on
in
you
can
see
on
the
bottom
panel.
Here
is:
where
I
we
started
looking
at
how
we
would
stripe
the
diagonal
parking
on
their
end
and
then,
of
course,
we
identify
where
the
handicap
spots
are,
and
we
may
wanna
as
we
do
this
project.
O
We
may
want
to
move
those
handicap
spots
to
an
end
of
the
block,
one
one
end
or
the
other,
because
it's
a
little
bit
more
logistically
friendly
for
the
individuals
that
use
them.
In
other
words,
we
know
we're
going
to
have
handicap
ped
ramps
at
the
intersection.
We
may
or
may
not
have
a
handicap
accessible
ramp
right
here
by
the
alley.
So
those
kind
of
things
we've
been
talking
about
whoops
too
many
things
open.
Sorry.
O
But
we
did
that
all
the
way
throughout
the
whole
length
of
the
project.
Another
estimate
that
I'll
throw
at
you
is
about
a
thousand
dollars
for
restriping
the
five
block
area,
which
is
our
primary
thing,
and
that's
really
so.
Those
are
low-cost
things
we
have
talked
about.
How
do
we
get
rid
of
the
old
stripes
and
I?
O
You
know
down
on
the
road,
but
so
those
are
the
kinds
of
things
that
the
street
department
and
the
engineering
department
are
weighing
on.
We
can
do
a
combination
of
seal
coats
to
cover
up
striping
or,
like
you
said,
milling
overlay,
and
we
do
have
budgets
for
both
of
those
type
of
construction
issues.
So
it's
just
a
matter
of
if
we're
going
to
do
this,
how
and
what
budget
we're
gonna
use.
S
S
You
guys
that
I
got
on
I
got
a
quote
from
Engels
steps
to
do
some
of
the
the
work
on
this
at
the
intersection
of
highway
81,
we
were
quoted
twenty
five
hundred
and
fifty
dollars
to
modify
the
current
signal
lights
for
a
for
an
intersection
for
a
two-way
street.
The
only
thing
is
that
was
not
quoted
with
a
left
turn
arrow.
Now,
if
we
want
to
the.
S
S
Cabinet,
but
if
there's
no
problems,
we'd
be
able
to
use
that
as
far
as
Broadway
and
First
Avenue.
If
we
decide
to
completely
eliminate
that
intersection,
we'd
be
at
twenty
five
hundred
and
twenty-five
dollars
to
demo
the
lights
basically
and
take
care
all
the
wiring.
That
type
of
thing,
okay
and
I
think
Shane
had
mentioned
about
the
750
bucks
for
the
sign
materials
and
to
convert
to
a
two-way
and
about
a
thousand
dollars
for
the
five
blocks
for
all
the
striping.
So.
F
O
Yeah,
it's
it's
less
than
10,000
I'll
Ronald
it
off
to
a
simple
figure,
but
you
know
not,
obviously
the
the
the
more
difficult
semantics
is.
What
angle
do
you
have
your
angle
parking
and
we
did
choose
a
little
bit
more
extreme
of
an
angle
to
give
us
a
couple
more
inches
or
a
foot.
You
know
of
space
between
the
moving
traffic
and
the
park
traffic,
so
we've
kind
of
anticipated
what
we
would
get
for
feedback
from
the
public
yeah.
E
O
O
My
personal
opinion
is
that
you
would
leave
it
at
25
and
the
traffic
calming
we
call
it
is
when
you
perceive
that
the
roadway
is
narrow
and
you're
gonna
be
cautious,
because
you
think
somebody's
gonna
inch
out
in
front
of
you
backing
up
that
you're
gonna
drive,
slower
you're,
gonna
drive
with
more
caution
and
more
awareness,
and-
and
you
do
that,
just
by
making
those
physical
changes
rather
than
then
changing
the
laws.
So.
F
One
of
the
things
to
also
keep
in
mind
as
you're
looking
at
striping
and
some
of
the
handicapped,
accessible
areas,
one
of
the
biggest
problems
or
complaints
that
I
get
about
downtown
parking
is
that
somebody
pulls
in
a
suburban
right
on
the
corner
and
nobody
can
see
around
it.
So
what
I've
been
looking
at
in
other
communities?
Is
they
take
those
corners
and
they
either
say
motorcycle
parking?
F
Only
compact
car
parking
only
and
they
limit
the
size
of
the
vehicles
that
go
right
up
to
the
30
feet
in
you
know
that
hit
in
those
corner
areas
yeah,
so
that
you
have
a
sight
triangle
with
the
smaller
vehicles
who
Falls
those
that
you
know
they're
in
it
works.
You
know
it
makes
it
so
that
you
know
somebody
doesn't
try
to
pull
a
big
ole
right.
B
O
A
Not
something
that
we're
looking
at
is
a
big
expense
just
to
go
to
lay
on
those
you're,
also
going
to
do
striking
out
at
next
summer,
any
home
alright,
so
that
shouldn't
be
really
included
just
because
we're
gonna
do
that.
It's
included
in
this
expansion.
I,
don't
think
it's
a
big
expense
and
I
think
what
we're
going
to
do
is
Shane
and
Rob
are
going
to
move
forward
to
get
this
accomplished
this
summer
and
get
this
road
going
to
two
ways.
A
So
we
wanted
to
bring
this
in
front
of
you
guys,
so
you
knew
what
was
happening
and
we
would
like
some
input,
probably
not
tonight.
I'm
gonna,
I'm
gonna
close
this
up
here,
no
just
real
shortly,
but
we
just
wanna.
Let
you
know
the
goal
that
we're
having
on
First
Avenue
I
think
it's
important
that
we
all
at
least
understand
what
the
direction
is.
We're
moving
with
this,
the.