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From YouTube: Kankakee County Board Meeting 4/10/2018
Description
Kankakee County Board Meeting 4/10/2018 9:00 AM
B
B
C
G
G
H
G
I
H
F
H
J
A
K
The
April
first
article
that
was
published
in
The
Daily
Journal
with
I,
am
assuming
the
cassette
of
the
chairman
of
the
board
andrew
wheeler
and
tim
Janka
as
a
joke
about
solar
farms
being
installed
in
our
County,
mocking
the
citizenry,
who
had
come
before
the
board
with
their
concerns
relative
to
the
installation
of
solar
farms.
Specifically,
the
one
on
Highland
Road
was
in
very
poor
taste.
K
A
A
K
My
other
comment
would
be
that
that
shows
a
resounding
lack
of
respect
for
the
citizenry
and
a
reason,
lack
of
objectivity,
because
you
chose
to
make
a
joke
out
of
our
concerns.
So
it
brings
into
question
your
ability
to
make
clear
and
objective
choices
relative
to
this
situation.
If
you
choose
to
make
a
joke
out
of
those
people
who
bring
a
sensitive
subject
to
you,
and
then
you
decide
to
make
a
public
issue
out
of
it.
A
A
L
Name
is
Jim
Wasser
I
live
in
Park,
Lane,
Manor
off
Highland
Road
at
five;
eight
nine
six
rows
circle
right
on
the
water
and
I'm,
not
too
far
from
the
new
suppose,
13
acre
farm
first
of
all,
not
to
get
in
a
discussion
of
the
match,
I
always
with
the
freedom
of
speech.
I,
always
respect
other
people's
concerns.
Personally
from
my
viewpoint
and
I'm
not
here
to
get
points
from
the
county
board
because
I've
been
here
before
and
I,
think
you
know
that
I
personally
did
not
see
that
as
an
insult
to
the
people.
L
That's
my
opinion.
It
was
just
an
April
Fool's
joke
as
far
as
I'm
concerned
like
years
ago,
and
they
had
a
shark
where
I
used
to
fish
down
by
the
kinky
dam.
So
that's
how
I
look
at
it,
but
how
other
people
perceive
it.
That's
certainly
there
right,
but
I
do
have
a
few
questions
and
hopefully
that
I
can
get
answered.
L
I
was
unavailable
to
make
the
meetings
because
I
deal
a
lot
with
veterans
and
those
came
first,
but
I
was
told
that
this
will
be
a
13
acre
site
I,
believe
they
call
it
a
community
solar
farm
and
from
what
I
understand
it
would
be
able
to
service
roughly
400
homes.
Now
Dave,
the
young
and
I
are
both
on
the
snake,
Creek,
drainage,
Commission
and
I
believe
he's
on
the
board
of
Appeals
or
something.
L
So
he
showed
me
a
picture
and
according
to
him,
certainly
they
put
a
fence
around
it
and
whether
they're
evergreens
or
whatever,
to
some
what
make
it
aesthetically
pretty,
which
is
kind
of
hard
to
put
something
out
in
the
middle
of
field
and
make
it
aesthetically
beautiful.
But
I'd
like
to
ask
for
one
how
many
times
are
they
going
to
maintain
that
a
year
according
today,
when
he
talked
to
me,
he
said
it
would
only
be
three
times
a
year.
L
That's
what
I
was
told
I
would
like
verification
of
that,
maybe
later
on,
when
they
get
to
a
discussion
or
some
time,
because
I
don't
believe.
That's
near
enough.
If
they're
asking
to
use
the
ground
I
think
they
should
do
it
more
than
three
times
and
I'm
sure
they're
gonna
need
a
small
road
in
and
also
is
there
anything
buried
in
the
ground
in
this
community
solar
farm
other
than
the
pipes
that
support
the
panel's
okay
and
later
on,
say
they
would
come
cuz.
L
L
So
that's
really
my
questions
and
I'm,
certainly
not
for
it,
but
you
know
that's
why
we
always
can
agree
to
disagree
on
something
but
I
think
to
be
a
lot
better
sites
there.
That
would
be
far
away
from
someone
that
would
not
really
cast
the
bad,
aesthetic
so
I'm,
especially
the
subdivision,
because
I
know
it's
not
too
far
off
of
but
a
Warren
Avenue
to
the
south.
So
thank
you
for
your
time.
Thank.
M
N
N
N
Detainees
are
assigned
a
risk
level
prior
to
arriving
and
Kankakee.
What
is
the
risk
level
makeup
of
current
inmates
and
detainees
and
what
policies
are
in
place
to
control
the
makeup
of
future
inmates
and
detainees
of
the
hundred
and
fifty
current
ice
detainees?
How
many
are
can't
Kankakee,
County
residents?
A
N
A
O
Right
what
I'm
here
to
do
today
is
to
inform
the
county
board
members
who
are
not
supposed
to
listen
to
their
constituents
about
what
actually
is
occurring
or
what
occurred.
Last
night,
the
Zoning
Board
meeting
I
know
after
I
spoke
last
time
and
it's
pretty
passionate
and
angry
I'm
calm
today
that
mr.
wheeler
up
there
told
you
all,
you
cannot
listen
to
us
or
you
can
listen
to
us.
You
can
listen
to
us,
but
you
can't
respond
and
you
cannot
engage
us
find
out
some
very
disturbing
stuff.
O
Last
night
after
we
left
the
Zoning
Board
meeting,
and
that
is
that
really
the
decision
was
on
the
Zoning
Board,
not
I
mean
you
guys
really
I
was
told
you
have
to
vote
on.
Only
those
only
that
packet
of
information
that
is
given
to
you
by
Cypress,
Creek
or
or
Mike
back
there
community
power
group.
That's
the
only
stuff.
You
can
look
at
it.
O
This
you
know,
I
keep
bringing
this
document
up
and
I,
don't
know
if
you
have
it,
but
it's
addressed
to
you,
solar
energy
development,
informational
report
to
the
County
Board
I
brought
this
with
last
night
and
it
is
written
by
Delbert,
skimmer
horn
and
I
asked
mr.
skimmer
Horne.
If
he
stood
by
the
statements
in
this
document,
he
said,
I
wrote
it
I
said:
okay,
so
then
I
opened
it
up.
Knowing
that
I
don't
hold
on
do
and
I
don't
know.
O
Okay,
if
you
can,
you
guys
need
to
see
if
you
have
this
and
I'll
be
honest
with
you,
I
don't
even
know
how
I
got
my
hands
on
it,
because
so
many
residents
are
handing
me
things,
but
a
big
issue
is
the
property
values
and
the
aesthetics
and
right
in
mr.
skipper,
horns
when
I
had
a
circled
page
eight
in
his
report,
mr.
skimmer
warned
States
that's
how
I
should
have
my
choosing
regarding
property
values
and
I
quote:
solar
farms
are
being
newly
introduced
into
the
state
of
Illinois.
O
Due
to
this
fact,
there
is
insufficient
data
which
exists
to
derive
any
meaningful
conclusion
pertaining
to
a
solar
farms.
Impact
on
the
market,
value
of
surrounding
or
nearby
properties,
those
are
mr.
skimmer
horns
words.
Now
mr.
Weil
will
tell
you
to
ignore
everything.
I
said,
but
I
know
you
can't
unhear
or
can't
unsee
something
apparently
mr.
skimmer
horn
and
the
Zoning
Board
are
good
at
that,
because
they
totally
ignored
this
information.
O
O
Preserve
the
county's,
distinctive
rural,
natural
and
cultural
resources.
Mr.
Skinner
horns
words:
he
ignored
those
as
well
and
so
did
everyone.
But
one
gentleman
on
the
end
and
I
wish
I
could
remember
his
name,
he
decentered
or
voted
no,
because
he
said
the
solar
panel
company
did
not
produce
enough
information.
That
would
show
that
our
property
values
would
not
be
affected.
O
O
Hold
on
I'm
nervous,
that's
not
out
by
us.
We
had
a
lot
of
people
stand
up
last
night.
A
lot
of
people
stand
up
last
night
and
we
haven't
initiated
our
call.
You
guys,
you
know
on
Sunday
night
and
6:00
a.m.
in
the
morning
or
lot
and
a
lot
of
your
phone
numbers.
Don't
work!
That's,
but
because
we
wanted
to
see
what
happened
last
night
and,
like
I
said
when
I
left
there
I
was
very
disturbed
to
find
out
that
people
came
out
to
me
and
said
it's
a
done
deal.
O
The
County
Board
has
to
vote
on.
Only
what
you
have
been.
You
can't
listen
to
anything
we
say,
and
you
can't
listen
to
your
constituents
and
I
think
that's
terrible,
because
the
solar
panel
people
are
going
to
leave
and
where
the
people
that
are
left
here
and
mr.
Kinzinger,
my
family,
we
went
out
and
we
tried
to
get
people
to
vote
for
your
brother,
Miss
Parker.
My
kids
go
to
school
with
you,
pat
poke
who's.
O
Not
here,
my
kids
did
a
lot
of
stuff
at
the
pageant
with
you
know,
a
lot
of
people
who
live
out
there
have
businesses
in
town
and
you're
gonna
see
us.
You're
gonna,
see
us
all
over
the
place.
They're
gonna
leave
and
we're
gonna
stay
here
and
I'm
asking
you
to
do
what
mr.
mr.
skimmer
horne
did
ignore.
What
I
got
ignore?
What
mr.
wheelers
telling
you,
because
mr.
O
skimmer
horne
ignored
his
own
words
and
listened
to
your
constituents
who
are
going
to
be
here
we're
not
against
solar
energy
and
anybody
else,
all
these
other
ones,
these
13
others
that
are
up
go
ahead
if
nobody's,
if
nobody's
upset
and
there's
no
property's
run,
go
ahead
and
and
let
them
in
no
I
was
gonna.
Put
solar
energy
on
my
house,
nobody's
against
it.
We're
asking
you
not
to
destroy
our
neighborhood
and
there
is
no
guarantee
that
more
of
them
won't
go
down.
O
So
they're
and
I
understand
you
need
money,
so
go
ahead
and
do
the
ones
that
nobody
cares
about,
but
we
had
a
gentleman
from
the
East
Coast
who
moved
out
here,
he's
an
engineer
at
CSL
Barry,
who
said
he
moved
out
there
because
of
the
beautiful
farm
fields
and
the
river
and
the
houses
and
the
neighborhood
and
driving
down
Highland
Road.
It's
not
an
industrial
area.
E
A
P
A
A
F
Now,
therefore,
be
it
proclaimed
by
the
kinky
County
Board.
That
April
is
declared
child
abuse
prevention
month
and
we
call
upon
all
citizens,
community
agencies,
faith
groups,
medical
facilities
and
businesses
to
increase
their
participation
in
our
efforts
to
support
families,
thereby
preventing
child
abuse
and
strengthening
the
communities
in
which
we
live.
Thank.
A
You
is
there
a
motion
to
approve
the
proclamation
first,
mr.
Collins.
Second,
mr.
Washington,
all
the
in
favor
those
opposed
motion
carries
the
next
I
have
a
proclamation
recognizing
Daniel
Bishop
for
the
creation
of
the
survey.
One
two
three
public
survey,
application.
That
was
something
that
was
around
the
floods
we
had
and
deserves
special
recognition.
So
if
I
could
I'd
like
to
get
that
read
in
the
record
as
well,
proc.
F
Proclamation
of
the
County
Board
of
Kankakee
County
Illinois,
recognizing
Daniel
Bishop
for
the
creation
of
the
survey.
One
two
three
public
survey
application,
whereas
Kankakee
County
suffered
tremendous
flooding
earlier
this
year
and
whereas
lieutenant
Chad
Gastner
and
his
team
at
the
Emergency
Management
Agency
reacted
to
the
crisis
with
expediency
and
unrivaled
professionalism
and
whereas
their
work
was
made
significantly
easier
by
the
efforts
of
Daniel
Bishop.
The
geographical
information
systems
coordinator
for
the
county
and
whereas
mr.
F
Now,
therefore,
be
it
proclaimed
by
the
Kinki
County
Board
that
it
greatly
appreciates
the
dedication
and
hard
work
of
both
Daniel
bishop
and
the
EMA
team
in
responding
to
the
2018
Kankakee
River
flood.
Be
it
further
proclaimed
that
Daniel
Bishop
save
countless
man-hours
by
the
creation
of
the
Kankakee
County
Flood
survey
and
the
Kinki
county
board
recognizes
mr.
Bishop
for
his
initiative
and
devotion
to
serving
the
citizens
of
Kankakee
County.
A
G
G
I
A
If
they're
gonna
leave
there's
a
lot
of
work
that
went
in
before
during
and
after
that,
if
you're
you
know,
they
just
don't
sit
on
social
media
and
talk
about
what
they're
doing
they
kinda
are
out
there
helping
people.
So
any
other
comments,
all
those
in
favor,
say
aye.
Those
opposed
motion
carries
if
you
del
do
you
have
Daniel
here
all
right.
Please
meet
me
up
over
here.
M
A
Wish
we
had
time
to
run
through
the
app
I
put
it
up
there,
but
it's
a
thing
of
beauty.
It
was
made
it
so
people
could
just
do
the
damage
reports
right
from
their
home
right
from
their
phone,
especially
when
the
power
was
out
the
homes
they
were
able
get
that
out
and
get
in
I'd
say
this
at
least
two
and
a
half
three
weeks
on
the
process,
which
maybe
worry
we'll
get
help
quicker.
So
moving
on
under
C
vacancies
under
certificate.
A
Excuse
me,
I
will
skip
one
very
important
part
of
this
one
of
the
things
that
I
wanted
to
make
sure
that
the
rest
of
the
board
members
have
seen
is
the
a
total
presentation
about
what
the
solar
projects
entail.
We've
seen
it
at
pza
and
since
the
board
is
going
to
be
going
through,
this
I
thought
it
was
important
that
we
at
least
go
through
what
the
process
is.
A
As
far
as
we
know
what
the
siting
process
as
far
as
the
the
build
outs
and
those
types
of
things
the
to
have
Cypress
Creek
here
to
talk
about
that
a
little
bit
I
thought
was
important.
So
we'd
like
to
welcome
them
up
to
the
front,
to
give
us
a
little
more
information
as
a
group
I
apologize,
sir
they're
done
in
situ
the
PGA
Committee
and
those
have
been
through
this,
but
we
thought
it
was
important
that
everybody
sees
this.
R
S
Perfect
thanks
mark
and
thanks
for
the
opportunity
here,
I
think
it's
always
helpful,
given
how
new
solar
is
to
the
state
of
Illinois
here,
some
kind
of
basic
information
and
what
sometimes
I
call
a
solar,
101
and
I
apologize
to
the
members
of
the
pza,
because
you're
gonna
hear
well
the
same
thing
that
you
heard
a
couple
of
weeks
ago.
I
will
try
to
move
through
a
little
bit
quicker,
just
in
the
interest
of
preserving
time.
S
First
things:
first,
I'm
Scott,
Novak
senior
developer
for
Cypress,
Creek,
renewables,
Cypress,
Creek
renewables
is
a
national
developer,
builder,
owner
and
operator
of
solar
farms.
We
were
formed
a
few
years
ago
in
2014,
but
by
a
few
folks
who
had
20
years
of
individual
experience,
developing
solar
in
different
markets,
and
they
came
together
with
the
idea
of
replicating
that
nationwide
and
that's
what
we've
been
doing.
We've
developed
2.2
gigawatts
of
solar
as
a
company,
which
is
a
great
accomplishment
that
we
had
at
the
end
of
2017.
S
We
operate
about
150
solar
power
plants
across
the
country
to
give
an
idea
of
where
we're
located.
The
yellow
states
are
where
we
have
active
solar
farms
that
have
been
developed
and
and
now
are
being
operated
by
us
and
the
blue.
The
shaded
blue
states
are
where
we
have
development
projects
undergoing
underway,
such
as
in
Illinois.
So
you
can
see
we're
really.
A
nationwide
company,
solar
in
general,
is
a
very
much
growing
industry,
something
impressive.
S
Last
year,
30
percent
of
all
new
electricity
that
came
online
or
new
generating
capacity,
I
should
say,
came
from
solar,
so
that's
second
only
to
natural
gas
is
a
form
of
electricity,
so
even
among
its
peers
in
power
generation.
It's
a
very
much
a
growing
industry.
A
lot
of
what's
fueling
growth
are
prices.
Prices
have
come
down
substantially
since
2010
over
70%
I'm,
not
talking
just
specifically
about
the
modules
or
about
the
transformers
or
inverters.
Really,
all
the
equipment
that
makes
up
a
solar
farm
has
all
experienced
this.
S
This
great
reduction
in
price,
and
that's
simply
because
there's
more
players
in
the
industry
now
and
the
technology's,
advancing
and
economies
of
scale
are
kicking
in
and
there's
some
really
nice
things
that
are
making
solar
make
sense
really
all
over
the
world.
Not
just
in
places
like
California
and
Nevada,
which
is
the
way
it
was
a
few
years
ago
in
terms
of
in
the
States,
the
Illinois
future
energy
Jobs
Act
is
something
that
you
guys
have
probably
heard
of,
and
our
familiar
with.
S
That's
fantastic
and
we've
actually
invested
in
the
program
we
announced
about
a
month
and
a
half
ago,
a
$10,000
scholarship
for
solar
job
training,
so
we'd
like
to
invest
in
workforce
development
in
different
markets,
and
and
we
thought
that
that
KCC
was
really
impressive.
I'm
really
really
excited
to
be
moving
forward
here
in
the
county,
I,
just
real,
quick
we're
not
talking
about
solar
thermal,
that's
simply
an
array
of
mirrors
that
redirect
sunlight
to
a
central
location
in
Illinois
and
really
the
majority
of
all.
S
They're
mounted
on
on
steel
posts,
so
there's
no
concrete,
underneath
the
modules
themselves,
the
only
concrete
on
the
site
houses,
the
inverter
transformer
equipment,
which
I'll
show
you
a
picture
of
in
a
second.
This
picture
also
gives
a
good
idea
of
the
scale,
so
this
guy's,
you
know
that
six
feet
tall
so
generally
to
the
top
of
these
modules
is
about
seven
to
eight
feet.
S
This
is
another
picture
that
shows
what
what
goes
on
underneath.
So
it's
a
good
image
of
there.
You
know
it's
it's
ground
cover,
underneath
the
modules
and
the
wiring
is
kind
of
neatly
tucked
up
under
the
modules,
and
then
this
is
a
picture
of
midday
solar
farm
that
has
the
tracking
system.
So
when
I've
said
flat
overhead,
that's
kind
of
what
I
met,
so
you
can
see
it's
kind
of
like
flat
like
a
table.
S
Another
just
kind
of
scaled
out
picture
shows
some
more
components
of
a
solar
farm,
including
the
fence
and
an
access
road.
This
is
the
equipment
I
referenced
earlier,
the
inverter
and
transformer
equipment.
This
equipments
also
the
only
equipment
that
really
makes
any
noise
to
speak
of.
However,
outside
of
a
hundred
and
fifty
feet
from
this,
you
really
can't
even
detect
the
noise
that
comes
from
it
and
and
this
equipments
always
kind
of
central
and
internal
to
the
site.
S
Nowhere
near
the
property
line,
nowhere
near
within
that
150
foot
border,
some
other
equipment
on
a
site,
I
mean
solar
farms
are
pretty
simple,
I
mean
you've
got
your
modules.
I
showed
you
pictures
of
earlier.
The
inverter
and
transformer
that's
too
right
and
by
the
way
that
equipment
is
basically
stepping
down
the
voltage
or
up
to
get
to
the
level
that
it
gets
inserted
into
the
grid
and
also
converting
it
from
DC
to
AC,
so
that
it's
grynn,
ready,
combiner
boxes
are
what
ties
all
the
modules
together
before
it
gets
fed
underground.
S
So
the
wires
and
conductor
cables
are
all
subsurface,
so
those
are
fed
from
that
those
rows
of
modules
that
I
showed
you
earlier
down
to
the
equipment
you
see
to
the
right
and
then
from
there.
It
goes
underground
to
the
point
of
interconnection
where
it
comes
above
ground
with
a
few
new
power
poles
that
then
get
connected
into
the
existing
power
lines
or
the
distribution
lines
that
are
at
the
site
and
that
I
talked
about
briefly
about
fencing
earlier
there'll
be
an
8-foot
chain-link
fence
all
around
the
site.
S
That's
part
of
National
Electric
Code,
and
it's
also
something
that
you
know
developers
or
owners
and
operators
of
solar
farms
just
want
to
protect
their
assets
and
keep
a
secure
site.
Some
pictures
of
the
construction
on
the
Left
we
have
driving
equipment.
So
that's
how
we
get
those
steel
posts
into
the
ground
a
lot
of
times
my
team
likes
to
compare
them
to
guardrails
post
that
support
guardrails
on
the
highway.
That's
the
type
of
thing
that
we're
talking
about
here
on
the
right
is
a
picture
of
all
the
posts
after
they've
been
inserted.
S
That
site
is
waiting
for
modules
to
be
installed.
Acura
cultural
impact,
big
topic
at
Illinois,
because
we're
a
great
farming
state-
and
we
have
wonderful
farm
ground
here.
So
we
knew
just
before
we
even
entered
the
state
that
we
were
gonna,
take
everything
related
to
agricultural
impact
very
seriously,
and
that
includes
both
the
ground.
We
like
to
limit
our
impact
on
above
surface,
so
we
don't
really
move
dirt.
We
don't
do
grading,
we
don't
bring
dirt,
we
don't
excavate
and
take
dirt
away.
S
Both
main
lines
and
then
to
the
best
that
we
can
the
lateral
feeder
lines
to
will
design
around
them,
and
we
you
know,
should
we
damage
or
break
one
during
the
construction
process
or
if
we
find
out
later
on,
we
will
fix
the
tiles
and
make
sure
that
the
drainage
is
flowing
as
it
was
before
we
were.
There
cover
cropping,
actually
helps
and
I
have
a
civil
engineer
with
us
as
well.
S
S
Just
over
the
border
in
Indiana,
now
it's
a
little
south
of
here
so
not
super
encourage
you
guys
to
take
a
look.
It's
around
the
Terre
Haute
region,
all
three
of
our
solar
farms
there,
and
this
is
about
a
little
more
than
double
the
scale
of
each
individual
project.
We're
talking
about
today.
This
is
a
five
megawatt
project
covers
about
45
acres.
S
So
today,
all
the
sites
that
are
on
your
agenda
are
two
megawatt
sites,
so
a
little
less
than
half,
but
this
gives
a
good
image
of
what
they
look
like
from
the
air
and
also
from
the
ground,
and
this
is
a
different
solar
farm,
same
scale
and
again
on
the
Left.
We
see
what
it
looks
like
above
and
then
from
the
ground
on
the
right
just
want
to
highlight:
there's
no
safety
risks.
S
Every
every
aspect
of
a
solar
farm
from
its
inception
from
the
design
process
to
the
construction
process
is
done
through
this
typical
standard,
permitting
processes
and
designed
and
by
certified
engineers.
That's
from
a
civil
standpoint
from
an
electrical
standpoint.
Of
course,
we
also
have
to
apply
for
stormwater
and
sediment
control
permits
and
then
we're
also
to
be
compliant
with
the
number
of
national
codes.
National
Building
Code
National
Electrical
Code.
From
a
safety
perspective
I
mentioned,
we
have
a
secure
fence
around
the
entire
solar
farm
and
then
we
also
maintain
the
vegetation
to
prevent
overgrowth.
S
So
we
don't
want
weeds
or
grasses
growing
up
through
our
panels,
so
we
spec
local
ground
cover.
That's
you
know
slow
and
low
growth,
so
like
maximum
height
24
inches
and
but
when
mowing
and
and
weed
control
is
needed.
That's
when
we
we
send
a
crew
in
to
take
care
of
that
a
few
times
a
year.
We
monitor
the
site's
remotely,
so
we
don't
have
anybody
sitting
there,
but
we
know
when
something's
wrong
electrically
with
a
site,
because
we
can
see
the
data.
S
So
at
that
point
we'll
send
an
electrical
engineer
out
to
inspect
and
repair
any
any
issues.
But
again
that's
estimated
less
than
a
handful.
You
know
less
than
four
or
five
times
a
year
on
the
maintenance
side
of
things
and
that's
done
locally.
So
that's
a
local
electrical
engineer
that
goes
out
same
with
the
vegetation
maintenance.
That's
local
as
well.
I
mentioned
sound
earlier.
S
These
are
extremely
quiet,
really,
the
only
noise
to
speak
of
comes
from
a
cooling
fan
from
an
inverter
we
talked
about
earlier
and
that
white
circle
there,
the
bigger
yellow
circle
and
the
bottom
right
of
the
screen
that
signifies
a
150-foot
radius.
So
outside
of
that
white
circle,
you
really
can't
detect
noise
from
that
equipment,
and
even
if
we
were
right
next
to
it,
it
sounds
like
a
fan.
I
mean
we
could
still
have
a
conversation,
but
it's
not
spilling
over
property
line
at
all.
S
Not
even
close
same
thing
applies
to
electromagnetic
fields,
which
sometimes
you
hear
about
just
in
general
I'm,
not
talking
about
specifically
to
a
solar
there's,
nothing
on
a
solar
farm
that
makes
this
at
any,
and
it
makes
EMF
in
any
kind
of
undue
on
safe
levels.
The
equipment
that
is
the
inverter
and
transformer
pair
is
the
strongest
source,
but
again
outside
of
150
feet
from
that
equipment.
S
You
know
intact
and
and
and
yet
invest
in
it.
You
know
now
you
can.
You
can
subscribe
to
a
community
solar
farm,
and
you
can
you
can
you
can
feel
like
you're,
creating
renewable
energy,
but
at
no
cost
to
you.
In
fact,
the
benefit
is
reduced.
Electricity
costs,
they're,
quiet,
I
mentioned
that
virtually
self-sufficient
and
then,
of
course,
there's
an
economic
growth
perspective
of
this.
Both
you
know,
there's
not
a
whole
lot
of
permanent
jobs
when
you
look
at
them
on
an
individual
basis
by
the
native
the
function
that
they're
self-sufficient
I
mentioned
that
earlier.
S
You
know
there
is
maintenance,
there's
routine
vegetative
maintenance,
which
is
which
is
local
and
then
there's
kind
of
as
needed,
inspection
and
maintenance.
Those
are
kind
of
you
know
when
you
add
them
up
over
a
bunch
of
different
solar
farms
and
substantial
money,
that's
being
invested
each
year,
but
there's
a
big
construction
job
component
and
we
like
to
source
local
as
much
as
possible.
We
know
where
we
are,
as
far
as
you
know,
using
local
labor
and
that's
that's
a
huge
initiative
for
us
as
well.
S
Each
one
of
these
jobs
creates
about
each
one
of
these
solar
farms.
Two
megawatt
creates
about
25
construction
jobs
and
there's
also
a
tax
component,
though
right
now,
these
sites
are
all
assessed
as
AG
land
and
they're
kicking
off
very,
very
minimal
property
tax
revenue.
The
right
now
there's
a
discussion
about
what
the
taxes
are.
Gonna
look
like,
and
so
there's
not
a
clear
answer.
I
can't
stand
up
here
and
say:
it's
gonna
be
X
dollars,
I
can
say
on
a
low-end
estimate,
a
two
megawatt
site
in
year.
S
One
will
be
no
less
than
ten
thousand
dollars
in
this
part
of
the
state
per
year.
That
otherwise
is
a
magnitude
of
I
think
we
looked
at.
It
was
under
$1,000,
maybe
even
under
$600
per
site,
on
it
on
an
AG
level.
So
again,
when
you
compile
a
bunch
of
them,
they
start
to
add
up,
and
these
are
important
dollars
that
don't
come
with
any
costs.
That's
the
key
here.
So
this
is
money.
You
know,
there's
not
additional
county
services,
there's
not
additional
investment
into
roads
or
there's
no
utilities
needed.
S
There's
no
extra
students
that
come
to
this.
You
know
the
schools
see
the
bulk
of
this
and
they
just
get
the
revenue
without
any
cost
associated
with
it.
So
that's
a
wonderful
benefit,
and
also
this
is
you
know,
concerned
about
animals.
You
know
rightfully,
so
we
want
to
preserve
and
protect
the
environment,
both
the
land
and
nature,
the
solar
farms.
All
the
equipment
is
perfectly
safe
for
birds
and
wildlife.
S
So
when
you
compile
about
92
megawatt
sites,
you're
talking
about
around
2900
homes
worth
of
power,
I
want
to
highlight
again
solar
farms
don't
require
any
any
utilities,
whether
it
be
electricity,
water,
gas,
nothing
from
from
the
county
at
all,
we're
talking
about
a
total
investment
in
the
neighborhood
of
35
million
I.
Don't
think
we
corrected
that
number.
Actually,
we
have
a
slight
typo
on
that.
Let
me
skip
down
to
local
annual
spending,
which
is
about
two
hundred
fifty
thousand
and
again
that
covers
mowing
and
then
any
sort
of
electrical
engineering.
S
We
need
to
do
some
repairs
and
maintenance
of
the
solar
firms
themselves
and
then
twenty
five
times.
Nine
is
225
construction
jobs
throughout
the
construction
period
of
the
farm,
and
it's
about
12
to
16
weeks
of
construction
for
a
two
megawatt
solar
farm.
So
that's
kind
of
my
kind
of
big
picture.
Solar
101
intro,
hopefully
that
was
helpful
I-
do
want
to
turn
it
over
to
we're
going
to
drill
yeah.
H
R
S
P
P
P
R
Before
I
introduce
drew
from
Cohn
Reznick
one
of
the
things
that
I
think
you
should
be
aware
of
is
that
back
last
year.
So
when
the
report
was
done
by
your
staff,
at
your
request
about
solar
farms,
that
was
law
that
was
before
we
saw
the
current
growth
in
farms
in
Illinois,
because
the
Illinois
statute
that
was
passed
because
was
going
out
in
the
state
and
the
nice
advantage
of
being
here
today,
is
that
we
now
do
have
the
studies
that
have
since
that
time
gone
through
looked
at
those
values
etc.
T
There
we
go
that'll
do
hi
good
morning.
My
name
is
Andrew
lines:
I'm
a
real
estate,
appraiser
and
I
worked
for
an
audit
tax
and
advisory
firm,
called
Cohn
Reznick
we're
national
firm
3,500
employees
were
eight
on
the
list
of
national
audit
firms
and
we
have
a
local
office
here
in
Chicago,
where
I
live
and
and
go
to
work
every
day.
T
Petrushka
magar
is
my
direct
supervisor.
She's
the
national
director
evaluation
for
the
firm
and
she's
been
doing
this
for
about
30
years.
She's
done
a
lot
of
impact
studies
which
measure
differences
in
price
appreciation
and
home
values
next
to
sites
that
people
might
think
might
be
deleterious
and
caused
an
impact
to
residential
home
values.
Landfills,
Walmart's
quarries,
high
tension
power
lines
and
Cypress
Creek
came
to
us
about
a
year
ago
and
asked
if
we
would
prepare
an
impact
study
for
some
of
their
zoning
change
in
proposals.
Just
like
this.
T
One
I'll
note
that
this
past
year,
Governor
rauner
appointed
her
to
the
state
of
Illinois
Department
of
financial
regulations
and
the
real
estate
appraisal
board,
where
she
was
nominated
and
elected
as
the
vice-chair
I
work
with
Pat
magar
I'm.
Also,
a
real
estate
appraiser
I'm,
licensed
here
in
the
state
of
Illinois
muscle
license
in
the
state
of
Indiana
Wisconsin
New,
York,
New,
Jersey,
Florida,
Georgia
Maryland
in
Arizona
and
I
do
appraisal
work
pretty
much
all
across
the
country.
T
I
manage
a
staff
about
35
individuals
and
we
help
do
a
lot
of
different
real
estate
appraisals,
fair
value
analyses
for
financial
reporting
and
impact
studies.
So
what
did
we
do
over
this?
Last
year,
when
Cyprus
came
to
us
as
an
independent,
appraiser
I'm
must
produce
my
reports
and
compliance
with
the
uniform
standards
of
professional
Appraisal,
Practice
or
use
pap,
so
I'm
an
independent
consultant
for
this
project.
So
the
first
thing
we
did
is
we
took
a
look
at
published
studies.
T
There
must
be
some
published
studies
out
there
that
indicate
whether
or
not
solar
farms
might
be
a
hazard
to
adjacent
real
estate
property
and
over
the
last
20
years
we
couldn't
find
any
such
document.
It
just
simply
doesn't
exist,
but
what
the
published
studies
did
tell
us
was
that
on
average
farmland
acquired
for
solar
farm
development,
typically
transfers
30
to
50
percent
higher
than
regular
AG
land.
T
They
felt
like
this
is
an
industrial
use
on,
but
when
you
actually
look
at
the
terminology
for
an
industrial
use
or
heavy
industrial
use,
that
typically
involves
some
kind
of
active
and
intense
use
of
the
site.
We
feel,
especially
as
a
Real
Estate
Appraisers,
that
this
is
a
very
passive
use
of
this
site.
You
know
hardly
any
trucks
coming
into
the
site.
You
don't
have
trucks
passing
by
all
the
adjacent
property
in
neighborhood
I'm,
trying
to
get
to
the
site
every
day,
and
it's
extremely
quiet
also
not
to
know.
If
really
categorizing
is
industrial.
T
Is
it's
fair?
So
we
took
a
look
at
all
of
the
available
solar
farms
that
have
actually
been
developed
here
in
the
state
of
Illinois
and
also
in
the
state
of
Indiana.
Just
you
know,
Indiana
has
had
about
three
to
four
times
more
solar
development
up
to
this
point
than
the
state
of
Illinois,
and
so
as
a
person
who
likes
data,
we
obviously
went
right
across
the
border
to
take
a
look
at
what
we
believe
is
fairly
similar
kind
of
land,
similar
topography
and
a
lot
very
much
similar
demographics.
T
We
saw
and
measured
and
so
how
many
of
those
actually
sold
and
what
were
their
price
points
and
how
long
did
they
take
to
sell
okay
and
then,
when
we
looked
at
the
median
of
those,
we
then
selected
sales
that
were
locationally
removed
from
those
sales
right
around
the
solar
farm,
but
in
the
same
general
area,
and
when
we
looked
at
the
median
values
for
those
we
compared
the
two
to
see
if
there
was
any
statistical
difference,
Randy
Bell
who's,
an
MA,
I
and
a
PhD
wrote
a
really
great
book
called
real
estate
damages.
T
And
for
someone
like
me,
who
does
impact
studies,
that's
generally
our
Bible
for
understanding
how
to
measure
these
discrepancies
in
order
to
see
whether
or
not
there's
actually
a
trend
and
some
kind
of
analysis
and
statistical
information.
That
shows
that
there
should
be
an
impact
on
adjacent
home
values.
So
let
me
show
you
some
of
our
results.
Here's
the
book
that
I
mentioned
again.
If
a
legitimate
detrimental
condition
exists,
there
will
likely
be
a
measurable
and
consistent
difference,
but
there
between
the
two
sets
of
market
data
and
again
that's
a
targeting
control
data.
T
T
We
found
that
the
house
that
was
right
next
to
the
solar
farm
actually
sold
for
a
higher
price
than
the
median
around
it.
So
to
us
that
suggested
that
it
wasn't
really
any
empirical
evidence
that
the
solar
farm
was
the
deal
it
serious
influence
on
the
adjacent
residential
property,
here's
another
one
in
Porter,
County
Indiana.
This
was
great
because
you
had
a
row
of
single-family
homes
that
were
immediately
adjacent
to
a
very
large
acreage
parcel.
T
T
Here's
the
third
one
in
Frankton
Indiana,
there's
a
smaller
farm
I
think
there's
only
been
a
one
and
a
half
megawatt,
so
a
little
bit
more
similar
to
what's
being
proposed
here
in
this
county.
Again
we
took
a
look
at
the
residential
property
that
was
directly
adjacent
to
the
solar
farm
and
we
couldn't
find
any
meaningful
data
or
any
specific
trends
that
would
indicate
that
there
was
an
issue
with
being
next
to
a
solar
farm.
T
T
This
is
a
summary
of
all
of
the
impact
studies
that
we
did
of
the
seven
solar
farms.
We
were
able
to
conduct
11
different,
compare
and
contrasts
when
you
look
at
all
of
them.
That
was
a
really
a
meaningful
difference.
It
says
3.9
percent,
in
favor
of
the
homes
around
the
solar
farm,
I'm,
not
suggesting
that
your
home
values
will
go
up
because
you're
next
to
a
solar
farm,
but
there
certainly
wasn't
any
empirical
evidence
to
suggest
that
they
would
go
down.
T
Lastly,
we
conducted
interviews
with
Assessors
local
Assessors
and
counties
and
townships
where
a
lot
of
these
solar
farms
were
were.
We
interviewed
8
different
people
with
regards
to
whether
or
not
they
saw
any
trends
that
indicated
that
in
their
own
townships,
that
they
were
seeing
any
kind
of
diminution
of
value
being
based
right
next
to
a
solar
farm.
Not
only
didn't,
none
of
the
Assessors
tell
us
that
they
saw
an
impact,
but
nobody
had
come
to
them
to
ask
for
a
tax
decrease
because
they
were
an
extra
solar
farm,
residential
and
small
residential
homes.
T
People
who
live
in
small,
you
know,
homes
that
are
adjacent
solar
farms.
You
think
if
anybody
would
be
upset
there
would
be
them
and
not
in
one
single
case,
has
anybody
stepped
forward
to
suggest
that
the
solar
farm
itself
was
playing
or
influencing
an
adverse
impact
to
their
residential
home
values?
And
finally,
I'd?
T
Like
to
show
you
the
big
solar
farm
development
in
Indianapolis
after
the
solar
farms
created,
somebody
decided
to
develop
a
$500,000
plus
estate
home
with
an
in-ground
pool
less
than
150
feet
from
the
solar
farm
and
to
us
that
suggested
that
it
was
pretty
much
impossible
for
the
solar
farm
to
be
adversely
impacting
residential
home
development.
If
someone
would
build
such
a
large
and
complete
a
state
home
with
a
nice
in-ground
pool
again
right
next
to
a
solar
farm.
U
I've
heard
from
both
sides
even
heard
from
a
teacher
in
high
school
in
opposition
to
this
and
I'm.
Looking
at
your
presentation
and
I
noticed
in
the
marketing
side
and
that
all
of
the
commentary
was
from
Indiana,
but
you
showed
something
in
Streeter.
They
had
a
farm
or
Webber
and
why
not
any
marketing
commentary
from
individuals
in
Illinois.
T
R
Just
you
know
the
reason
for
that
is
simply
that
Indiana.
Yes,
we
all
know
Illinois
passed
a
law
now
calling
for
solar
farms
providing
for
both
the
marketplace
for
how
those
would
be
developed.
Indiana
simply
was
a
little
bit
of
a
head,
so
their
farms
were
built
over
the
last
couple
of
years
and
that's
why
you're
now
seeing
groups
here?
R
If
you
look
at
the
numbers,
I
heard
someone
from
Springfield
I
apologize
cover.
What
her
governmental
title
was,
but
talk
about
the
fact
that
right
now
that
little
eyes
numbers
are
incredibly
low
on
solar
by
comparison
Indiana,
but
they're
expected
to
exceed
Indiana
soon
because
of
the
fact
that
they've
now
passed,
they've
now
packed
assess
law,
and
it's
simply
the
Indiana
farms
came
in
first.
R
U
T
I
R
One
and
then
all
of
a
sudden
Israel
around
there,
so
first
the
Illinois
Act,
which
is
being
working
right
now,
specifically
limits
the
size
of
the
community
solar
projects.
That's
why
we're
within
this,
but
more
importantly,
we
didn't
get
here
by
starting
yesterday
with
you
guys,
we
have
to
go
through
an
entire
special
use
process.
We
worked
for
extensive
period
of
time
with
your
staff,
with
community
residents,
with
our
with
our
farm
owners
and
location,
etc,
etc.
All
to
bring
forward
especially
use
through
your
zoning
process,
etc.
M
I
just
had
a
question
a
couple
of
them.
First
is
how
do
you
choose
a
site
and
then
the
second
one
is
when
I
looked
at
the
Indiana,
it
looked
like
there
was
minimal
residents
around
those
sites
and
also
it
looked
like.
Maybe
it
was
just
the
way
it
came
across
on
the
screen,
but
it
looked
like
there
was
a
lot
more
greenery
than
just
a
chain-link
fence
around
a
lot
of
them.
M
I
P
A
J
I
T
I
T
I
J
E
E
A
E
S
E
P
S
A
S
Right
and
the
reason
why
I
you
know
I'm
not
up
here,
saying
it'll
be
exactly
this
number
of
times
per
years,
because
we
want
to
see
how
the
grass
grows.
We
want
to
see
how
the
weeds
come
in
and
and
we
most
of
the
routine
maintenance
will
be
on
the
vegetative
side.
The
electrical
performance
maintenance
will
be
as
needed
and
very
infrequent.
You
know
by
the
way.
The
invocation
at
the
beginning
of
this
meeting
was
absolutely
wonderful
and
I
really
thank
you
really
enjoyed
that
as.
S
S
So
it's
a
great
question
and
if
you
looked
closely
at
some
of
the
pictures,
I
showed
you
probably
saw
a
barbed
wire
when
we
first
started
discussing
projects
in
Illinois,
we
were
hearing
feedback
that
folks
did
not
want
to
look
at
barbed
wire
and
got
the
more
of
the
feeling
that
we'd
be
hiding
a
prison
back
there
and
something
that
people
wouldn't
want
to
look
at.
So
immediately.
G
H
A
Moving
on
to
certificates
of
recognition
for
15
years
of
waiting
for
the
certificate
of
recognition,
no
I'm
just
kidding
our
courthouse
is
gone
completely
unmanned.
This
whole
time
no
I
like
to
congratulate
Toby
Fulford
for
15
years
and
Joseph
powers
for
15
years
with
the
Sheriff's
Department.
If
you
could
join
us
up
here,
the
microphone
the
sheriff
has
in
lieu
of
pay
there's
a
certificate
up.
There.
C
Okay,
we'll
do
this
seniority
wise,
since
both
our
15-year
employees
of
the
sheriff's
office,
first
officers
joke
powers,
Joe's
been
with
us
15
years
involved
in
the
community
involved
in
a
lot
of
things
with
our
department
and
does
a
great
job
with
dealing
with
the
public
and
we're
glad
to
have
him
as
a
deputy.
So
Joe.
H
C
A
Okay,
moving
on
minutes,
the
last
meeting
for
March
13th
I
need
a
motion
to
approve,
please
mister,
sir
I.
Second
mister
who's.
Next
I'm
sorry
I
saw
a
hand
back
there.
Mr.
Payton
I'm.
Sorry
all
those
in
favor
those
opposed
claims
committee
reports.
Reports
I,
need
a
motion
to
approve
the
claims,
miss
Evans.
Second,
mr.
Vickery
that'll
be
a
roll
call
vote.
Please,
oh
yeah,
you
want
you
reading
the
record,
make
it
official,
yeah
I,
don't
have
a
special
meeting
to
do
this
again.
Mr.
F
A
F
The
monthly
building
report
for
February
2018
total
permits,
16
and
fees
of
ten
thousand
nine
hundred.
Seventy
eight
dollars
total
extra
fees
of
$975
for
a
total
of
eleven
thousand
nine
hundred
fifty
three
dollars
monthly
resolution
list
for
April,
two
thousand
eighteen
total
county
of
sixteen
thousand
five
hundred
twenty
nine
dollars
and
eighty
four
cents
and
the
regional
superintendent
of
schools.
Quarterly
report
ending
February
2018,
is
on
file.
F
A
G
G
A
P
A
A
H
F
F
The
petitioner
is
home
star
bank
and
financial
services,
property
owner
and
applicant
resolution
authorizing
chairman
to
set
to
sign
transit
asset
management,
plan,
declaration
and
disposal
of
surplus
and
unwanted
equipment
for
the
management
information
services
department,
appointment
of
Troy
Kauffman
to
the
Joe
benna's
drainage
district
authorizing
the
County
Board
Chairman
to
sign
a
settlement
agreement
with
Enbridge
Energy
LP
and
release
the
surety
bonds
associated
with
a
road
use.
Agreement
general
interfund,
borrowing,
authorization
until
November,
30th,
2018.
F
A
First
I
need
a
motion
to
approve,
and
both
mr.
Ritter
and
mr.
trip
for
the
sake
of
clarification,
I'll
have
mark
explain
how
the
state
works
as
far
as
their
pay
recommendations
or
at
least
the
way
that
they
scale
those
things.
Do
you
have
a
moment
because
he
we've
gone
through
this
I
want
to
make
sure
I
get
this
down,
because
one
or
two
percent
looks
a
little
different
than
what
it
actually
is.
X
Good
morning,
the
Department
of
Transportation
every
year
recommends
a
salary
for
each
county
engineer
in
the
state
of
Illinois.
The
resolution
before
you
is
recommending
that
the
county
pay
me
a
hundred
and
two
percent
of
that
recommended
salary.
That
salary
for
the
last
few
years
last
year
was
a
zero
percent
increase
the
year
before
was
a
1
percent
to
here
before
that
was
one
and
a
half
percent,
so
it
does
vary
the
increase.
So
this
is
just
taking
me
to
102
percent
of
whatever
the
state
recommends
each
year.
Basically,.
A
Yeah,
which
is
that,
which
is
what
we
were
doing-
we've
got
all
the
agreements
with
our
labor
units
and
that's
what
we're
doing
for
nine
labor,
so
we're
trying
to
at
least
be
similar
along
those
lines.
It's
what
I
intend
to
bring
back
as
far
as
when
we
establish
elected
officers
pay
as
well.
So
any
other
questions
regarding
this
okay,
the
motion
in
a
second:
let's
do
a
roll
call,
even
though
we're
not
spending
it
yet
we're
authorizing.
So
let's
do
that.
Mr.
F
H
F
A
G
A
Q
J
A
J
A
V
A
U
Reason
that
I
looked
at
55
to
64
on
the
nd
as
to
taking
my
focus
in
agenda
is
I
think
we
need
the
clarification.
What
is
what
and
what
is
it
that
people
are
in
opposition
to
it's?
My
understanding
now
that
those
that
were
in
our
position,
I
guess
two
spoke
today-
deals
with
the
highland
area,
and
then
these
individuals
here
has
went
through
the
process
and
and
the
hearings,
and
you
don't
have
a
substantial
amount
of
objections
against
them.
Well,.
A
You
can
go
through
each
one.
Those
are
noted
in
your
packet
as
far
as
any
questions
that
came
up
with
the
the
earrings,
which
is
what
Z,
ba
or
PZ
a
has
to
use
as
evidence.
So
that's
what
that
committee
used
as
evidence?
It's
not
you
know.
Maybe
what
you
heard
earlier,
it's
we
have
to
only
use
evidence
presented
it
at
the
CBA
case
or
if
we
ask
questions
of
a
particular
of
the
solar
farm
companies
at
the
time,
so
there
was
I
can't
think
of
any
more
than
you.
H
D
G
Q
It's
the
Zoning
Board
of
Appeals
job,
to
accept
all
information,
testimony
and
evidence
and
then
derive
a
decision
based
on
that
or
so
that
no
decision
to
our
recommendation.
Excuse
me:
County
Board
does
the
decision
and
for
whatever
reason,
through
their
deliberations,
they
did
not
feel
that
the
evidence
supported
a
denial
and
they
voted
unanimously
to
approve
all
of
these.
Q
A
Guess
there
was
one
comment
that
was
in
the
pack
and
I'll.
Just
give
you
an
example:
there
aren't
that
ties,
people
speak
for
it
as
well.
So
it's
not
just
all
opposed
one
comment
and
it's
in
your
packet.
It
says:
hey
concerns
about
the
loss
of
farmland,
the
hiding
of
the
facility
behind
trees,
which
some
people
actually
want
to
have
happen.
So
it's
it's
a
little
bit
different
and
then
the
attraction
of
large
rodents
to
the
site,
which
I
don't
know
anything
about
that.
A
U
I
come
off
a
farm,
sixty
acres
of
farm,
so
I
am
very
cognitive,
the
fact
of
farm
land
and
I
preserved
farm
land
at
all
cost
before
I
try
to
take
it
out
of
commission
whether
it's
a
wind
farm,
solar
farm,
anything,
that's
contrary
to
the
productivity
of
food
or
the
natural
resources
that
we
have
from
the
farm.
Okay,
thank
you
and
I.
A
A
I
do
have
one
coming
because
I'm
not
going
to
comment
on
these
beyond
that,
and
it
was
my
opportunity
to
say
this:
the
farmer
makes
their
own
decisions.
This
is
the
United
States
of
America,
they're,
being
highly
compensated
more
than
the
farm
ground
is
going
to
be,
would
be
for
production,
or
else
they
wouldn't
be
doing
this.
So
it's
not
the
County
Board.
You
said
we
are
taking
farmland
out
of
production.
That
is
not
the
case.
A
The
farmer
is
taking
his
own
land
out
of
production
and
making
more
revenue
than
they
would
have
on
than
they
would,
as
a
farmer,
so
I
believe
that
it's
their
choice
as
long
as
it
does
not
physically
harm
other
people,
that's
what
the
process
is.
So
that's
just
my
own
opinion.
You
can
have
your
own
I'm,
not
telling
you
not
to,
but
that's
just
mine
and
I'm,
not
gonna,
keep
doing
this
for
each
one
of
these,
but
I
don't
want
the
misconception
that
the
county
or
anybody
else
is
forcing
the
hand
of
anybody.
A
A
G
Q
Q
Q
Q
A
F
A
A
A
A
A
A
F
A
A
F
A
A
Remember
that
heading
any
board
member
can
come
to
PZ
a
to
hear
these
first
person
or
at
your
leisure,
on
your
phone
or
on
the
videotape,
because
this
is
all
public.
So
you
know
this
is
not
a
bad
thing
to
have
this
discussion
now,
but
we
can
as
we
go
forward.
That's
why
I
asked
Cypress
Creek
to
come
and
do
a
little
explanation,
so
we
don't
have
to
revisit
this
each
time
as
far
as
the
in-depth
discussions,
if
there's
anything
ever
for
a
particular
site,
obviously
believe
please
come
and
voice
it
highways
and
buildings.