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From YouTube: Public Health and Safety Committee Meeting 09-05-23
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C
A
A
Our
first
item
is
approving
the
minutes
from
July
20th,
July,
11th
and
August
3rd
I
have
a
motion
by
a
commissioner
Nelson
support
all
in
favor,
say:
aye
aye
opposed
are
approved.
Then
next
item
is
approval
of
the
agenda.
I
have
a
motion
by
commissioner
gentle
support
from
commissioner
Gerson.
All
in
favor,
say:
aye
opposed
our
agenda.
A
We've
arrived
at
our
first
public
comment.
Generally,
it's
your
items
on
the
agenda
I'm,
going
to
make
an
exception
to
allow
a
guests
to
speak
at
this
time.
So
you
will
have
three
minutes
and
you
would
come
to
come
front
of
the
table
and
introduce
yourself
in
the
community.
You're
from
and
I
have
a
handy,
dandy
timer.
E
From
my
boss,
here
with
me
today,
great
to
be
with
you
all
this
morning,
thanks
for
the
opportunity
to
speak
with
you
about
gun
safety
here
in
Oakland
County,
my
father,
Chris
yaw,
I'm,
director
of
St
David's
Episcopal
churches
on
12,
Mile
and
Southfield,
and
we
are
a
congregation
that
is
interested
in
making
our
community
safer.
E
Specifically
when
it
comes
to
gun
safety
in
2022,
using
data
obtained
under
the
Freedom
of
Information
Act,
we
tabulated
123
firearm
deaths
in
Oakland
County
that
year,
35
were
homicides,
88
were
that's
over
70
percent
were
suicides.
Five
of
those
deaths
were
children.
In
October
of
that
year,
our
church
was
one
of
four
sites
chosen
to
host
a
gun
buyback
in
our
County
on
Saturday
October,
23
2022,
in
cooperation
with
Chief
Alvin
Barron
and
the
South
Hill
Police
Department,
and
the
Lathrop
Village
Police
Department.
E
Along
with
along
with
those
officers
we
collected,
117
guns,
more
than
half
were
handguns.
The
these
were
all
collected
in
the
first
hour
of
the
buyback
as
we
ran
out
of
our
five
thousand
dollars
in
gift
cards,
leaving
a
one
mile
lineup
of
cars
with
guns
in
front
of
our
church.
There
are
nearly
1.3
million
people
in
Oakland
County.
E
There
are
an
estimated
1.7
million
guns,
we
believe
that's
too
many
and
that
buying
gifts,
buying
guns
back
from
a
willing
public
is
one
of
the
minister
many
strategies
that
can
help
our
church
wants
to
continue
to
buy
back
guns
for
three
reasons:
one
to
decrease
suicides.
The
rate
of
suicide
by
gun
in
homes
that
have
a
firearm
present
is
eight
times
higher
for
men.
37
Times
Higher
for
women
to
the
leading
cause
of
death
in
children
today
is
firearms
and
three.
E
The
majority
of
crimes
committed
with
a
gun
in
the
U.S
is
with
a
stolen
weapon
data
regarding
the
efficacy
of
gun.
Buybacks
in
these
three
categories
is
far
from
comprehensive
or
conclusive,
but
some
Studies
have
suggested
potential
benefits
in
these
specific
areas,
such
as
firearm
suicides,
accidental
shootings
and
limiting
access
to
firearms
for
individuals
at
risk.
I
have
some
citations.
E
We
were
told
that
these
property
rooms
were
full
full
of
guns
and
unable
to
take
others
I'm
here
to
ask
for
a
solution.
Perhaps
more
funding
for
the
sheriff
to
specifically
expand
capacity
at
the
ballistics
lab
to
accommodate
guns.
The
public
freely
wants
to
relinquish
the
statistics
are
pretty
compelling
owning
a
gun
will
get
you
in
more
trouble
than
it
will
get
you
out
of.
So
we
want
to
continue
with
these
BuyBacks
and
encourage
people
to
take
guns
that
they're
not
using
to
a
police
station.
The
police
will
take
it.
E
A
A
A
A
Right,
thank
you.
Okay.
Thank
you
great.
Thank
you.
Anyone
else
for
public
discussion
all
right.
This
public
discussion
is
closed.
Should
we
move
on
to
Communications?
There
are
nine
items
under
Communications
for
our
reports
by
our
grant
applications.
The
grant
applications
are
from
our
housing,
counseling
victims,
rights,
narcotics
enforcement,
Children's
Village
nutrition
program
and
the
Friend
of
the
Court
Grant.
The
reports
are
the
medical
marijuana
oversight
report
to
from
shelter
and
pet
adoption
reports
from
June
and
July,
and
one
from
Oakland
Community
Health
Network
Crisis
Intervention
training
pilot
program
quarterly.
A
A
For
seven
years,
all
right
Communications
has
been
approved.
Thank
you.
We
are
moving
on
to
our
Circuit
Court
recommendation
from
Friend
of
the
Court
and
I
will
say
that
our
agenda
looks
long,
but
most
are
Grant
accepted
since
from
this
point
on
so
from
Friend
of
the
Court
and
acceptance
for
the
Michigan
Department
of
Health
and
Human
Services
for
the
fiscal
year,
2024-2028
Cooperative
reimbursement
program.
The
motion
by
commissioner
credential
support
from
commissioner
Gerson,
and
we
have
here
Suzanne
hollier,
to
talk
about
this
item.
F
Thank
you.
This
is
our
main
funding
contract.
It
provides
funding
for
the
Friend
of
the
Court
operations.
It's
not
diff
different
than
it's
been
in
the
past.
It's
five,
it's
a
five-year
contract
and
they
often
will
extend
it
for
two
additional
years.
After
the
only
item
I
would
bring
to
your
attention,
mainly
just
for
your
knowledge
going
forward.
Is
the
state
has
a
big
program
that
manages
all
of
these
grants,
and
this
year
the
grant
came
out.
F
It
was
the
same
as
always:
I
put
it
into
review,
and
then
an
amendment
came
out
before
it
even
came
out
of
our
review
process
requiring
an
annual
security
audit
of
our
systems.
We
already
have,
in
this
contract
a
requirement
for
an
audit
at
once
every
three
years,
so
we
were
perplexed.
The
State
Office
of
Child
Support
was
perplexed.
F
We
initially
I
started
that
revision
through
the
review
process,
but
the
Friends
of
the
Court
Statewide
kind
of
banded
together
and
pushed
back
so
hard
that
we
got
a
third
contract.
That
does
not
have
the
annual
review.
However,
just
for
your
knowledge.
Apparently,
this
is
now
standard
language
in
contracts
with
the
state.
So
you
might
want
to
keep
an
eye
out
for
that
and
ask
departments
how
they're
going
to
manage
that.
F
Our
County
manages
our
once
every
three
year
audit
requirement
that
we've
had
for
now
going
at
about
five
years
very
well
and
in
the
last
round
of
it
the
state
actually
paid
for
the
Auditors
in
the
prior
iteration.
We
paid
for
the
Auditors
and
I
understand
that
the
once
every
year
requirement
the
DHHS
is
putting
in
its
boilerplate
now
is
to
be
paid
by
the
local
municipality.
F
So
I
just
bring
that
to
your
attention
because
you're
going
to
probably
be
getting
a
lot
of
these
grants
from
the
state
and
it's
going
to
be
an
expense
that
it
came
so
late
in
our
process.
We
wouldn't
have
had
budget
to
pay
for
an
annual
audit
because
we
just
were
notified
in
July
of
the
requirement.
So
it's
not
in
my
contract
I
just
thought.
It
would
be
something
interesting
that
you
might
want
to
have
on
your
radar
going
forward.
F
To
try
to
detect
any
vulnerabilities
and
often
what
they
find
is
some
machine
somewhere
missed
an
update
and
then
they'll
tell
us
this
machine
needs,
updates
and
they'll
review
our
protocols
so
that
we
can
be
sure
assured
that
that
number
happens
in
the
future,
so
I
find
it
a
very
useful
audit.
Actually
none
of
us
want
vulnerabilities,
you
know
so
yeah.
It's
been
helpful
in
the
past
two
iterations.
A
You,
our
next
item,
is
a
district
court
recommendation
from
the
52nd
district
courts
fiscal
year,
2024
contract,
Physicians
creation,
who
would
like
to
make
a
motion
I
have
a
motion
by
commissioner
Joliet
support
from
commissioner
Christensen
and
well.
We
have
Alexandra
black
here
to
talk
about
this
item.
Thank.
H
You
hi
thank
you.
Yes,
I'm
Alexander
black
I'm,
the
court
administrator
in
Novi,
and
this
is
Brett
Derry
court
administrator
in
Clarkston,
we're
here
to
request
the
creation
of
these
contract
positions.
During
the
budget
hearings
we
had
well,
we
had
requested
from
an
Administration
from
Administration
some
I.T
support
positions.
We
were
denied
that
request.
We
requested
it
because
we
have
the
implementation
of
e-filing
the
iPad
project.
H
We've
got
our
big
video
courtrooms
and
we're
going
to
go
to
a
document
management
system.
We
have
one,
it
liaison
person
who's
for
all
four
district
courts
and,
as
you
guys
know,
we're
in
the
four
corners
of
the
county,
so
one
person
for
the
four
corners
of
the
county
is
very
difficult
to
manage
all
the
all
of
our
EIT
needs
as
it
is,
but
then
adding
in
these
projects-
it's
he.
He
just
can't
do
it.
So
we
had
requested
three
more
positions,
so
we
had
one
in
each
district.
H
Court
administration
did
reach
back
out
to
us
actually
Kyle
gen
working
with
Kyle
Jenn.
He
suggested
that
we
request
these
contract
positions,
which
we're
here
to
request
now
the
total
with
the
equipment
that
we
need
for
them
shows
here,
I
think
371,
000,
sorry,
371,
862
dollars,
so
we're
requesting
these
positions,
these
contract
positions
be
created
for
one
year,
and
then
we
can
look
into
revisiting
this
a
year.
From
now,.
H
See
how
it
goes
the
one
time
we
were
advised
because
we
originally
submitted
the
Mr
asking
for
three
years:
e-filing
isn't
like
a
one
and
done
type
of
situation
right.
So
once
it's
implemented,
we're
supposed
to
go,
live
in
December,
but
you
know:
we've
got
10
district
court
judges
and
we've
got
I,
don't
know
how
many
magistrates,
but
we
have
one
operating
at
each
courthouse
every
every
day
and
then
all
of
our
Personnel
everybody
has
to
be
trained
on
it.
H
H
We
want
to
serve
the
public
much
more
efficiently,
so
we
asked
for
three
years
knowing
that
we
need
to
implement
it,
but
then
we
also
need
to
be
able
to
function
and-
and
additionally
I
mean
we
need
the
positions
anyway,
regardless
of
these
projects
right,
we've
been
using
more
and
more
technology
since
covid
hit,
obviously
to
try
to
service
the
public
and
do
things
remotely
when
we
can,
and
so
we
asked
for
the
three
years,
we
were
told
that
they
would
support
the
one
year
for
now
and
we're
prepared
to
see
how
it
goes
and
probably
I
would
be
shocked.
H
No,
in
fact,
we
we
are
in
constant
contact
with
other
district
courts
that
implemented
e-filing
and
since
it's
a
mandate,
we're
not
aware
of
any
grants
or
any
other
courts
that
have
gotten
grant
money
for
that,
they
will
keep
us
surprised.
Yes,
we
we
will,
you
know
we
will.
H
G
So
the
these
three
positions
are
for
implementing
the
e-filing
service
and
then,
after
the
e-filing
service
is
implemented
because
their
contract
they'll
go
away
after
a
year.
Well,
yeah.
G
But
then
the
goal
isn't
for
this
to
kind
of
bleed
into
just
having
four
it
people
for
the
52nd
Court
and
like
these
people's
rules
or
these
people's
line
items
will
change.
So,
if
there's
four,
I
t
people
I
think
is
that
kind
of
what
you're
trying
to
do
here.
H
That's
what
we're
trying
to
do
eventually
get
to
four
well,
we
have
one
full
time
so
three
more
full-time
positions,
so
there's
one
I
T
person
in
each
division,
because
right
now,
for
instance,
the
one
that
we
have
is
housed
in
Novi,
but
he
will
travel.
You
know
constantly
if
somebody's
got
an
issue,
but
the
problem
is
he
can't
magically
teleport
to
Troy
when
they're
having
an
issue
with
their
polycom,
which
happens
a
lot
or
the
iPads
at
the
jail?
H
Or
you
know
those
situations
where
we
can't
connect
he's
having
to
try
to
troubleshoot
with
a
court
administrator
or
a
lower
level
clerk
on
the
phone
to
try
to
fix
that
with
judges
that
are
pretty
frustrated
and
and
the
and
the
people
the
patrons
are
pretty
frustrated.
So
we
need
to
have
somebody
on
site
for
these
issues.
I
mean
there.
Isn't
a
department
here,
I
think
that
doesn't
have
a
19
person,
probably
when
you
guys
have
an
I.T
person
right,
so
that
you're
not
just
floundering,
trying
to
pretend
like
that's
your
expertise.
G
This,
so
how
long
does
it
do
you
think
it
will
actually
take
to
implement
the
e-filing?
If
you
have
one
year
of
funding.
H
So
our
goal
live
for
all
of
our
divisions
is
the
end
of
December
yep.
So
right
now
we're
going
through
all
the
trainings,
all
the
trainings
you
can
go
through
without
it
actually
being
live
right
and
then
once
it
goes,
live
then
we're
going
to
deal
with
all
the
issues
of
the
I
mean
it's
new
to
even
our
our
patrons
right,
so
they're
they're
going
to
need
I.T
support.
We
need
IIT
support.
Our
judges
definitely
need
it.
H
Support
I
know
I
not
to
bash
my
three,
but
I
can
tell
you
right
now
that
they're
not
excited,
but
they
know
you
know
it's
a
necessary
evil.
I
mean
they're,
gonna
have
to
get
used
to
it,
so
that
takes
time.
Obviously
anytime,
you're
learning
a
new
software
system.
So
so
this
next
year
of
having
these
positions,
if
we
get
approved
here
and
through
Finance
tomorrow,
we
want
to
start
the
process
immediately
of
trying
to
get
those
positions
filled,
which
you
know,
as
you
know,
takes
time.
H
So
we're
running
against
the
clock
because,
let's
go
live
is
in
December.
These
contract
positions
are
not.
These
aren't
going
to
be
people
that
are
already
part
of
the
district
court
or
really
note
so
we're
going
to
teach
them
about
District,
Court
teach
them
about
civil
cases,
teach
them
about
catch
them
up
on
the
training
that
we've
done
so
we're
a
little
behind
we're
quite
behind,
but
we
were.
We
were
thinking
when
we
put
through
the
request
for
the
I.T
positions
back
in
I.
H
A
K
K
Yeah,
just
a
thought
for
you,
so,
in
my
opinion,
being
on
the
information
business,
what
I'm
here
in
the
administration
say
is
like
hey,
look
we're
not
going
to
put
ftes
in,
but
we
know
you
need
some
help
use
some
contractors
see
how
it
goes
and
we'll
make
a
call
from
there,
which
is
pretty
normal
and
a
lot
of
times
when
you
got
implementation.
K
It's
not
the
best,
but
the
one
thing
I
would
say
is
in
your
contract,
with
whatever
contract
house
you're
you're
using,
you
probably
should
make
sure
you've
got
the
ability
to
convert
those
contractors
without
penalty
or
anything
of
that
nature,
so
that
if
you
get
three
people
and
they
continue
on,
you
want
to
bring
them
on
as
an
FTE,
you
don't
get
charged
or
the
contract
house
doesn't
say
hey.
No.
You
can't
do
that
great.
H
L
Thank
you
good
morning,
ladies
and
gentlemen
of
the
committee.
My
name
is
Kelly
Collins
I'm,
the
chief
of
the
Juvenile
Justice
division
here
at
the
Oakland
County
prosecutor's
office,
along
with
me,
Betsy
Hague,
is
appearing.
Also
virtually.
We
appreciate
the
opportunity
to
come
before
you
for
those
of
you
who
may
not
be
familiar.
Juvenile
Justice
is
responsible
for
all
cases
involving
juveniles
under
the
age
of
18
and
for
purposes
of
today's
discussion.
L
That
includes
the
child
protection
matters
that
we
get
in
our
court
system
and
they
come
before
the
Family
Division
of
the
Circuit
Court
by
virtue
of
the
Michigan
Department
of
Health
and
Human
Services
Michigan
law
requires
that
the
prosecutor's
office
serve
as
legal
consultant
to
the
department
and
since
2009,
we've
contracted
with
the
state
under
this
reimbursement
contract,
so
that
we
serve
the
department
in
this
capacity
and
they
reimburse
the
county
for
that
legal
representation.
L
Our
current
contract
is
expiring
at
the
end
of
this
month,
September
30th,
and
we
have
before
us
a
new
proposed
contract
which
covers
the
same
actions
by
our
office
and
on
behalf
of
the
department
that
it
used
to
this
time
for
a
period
of
three
years
at
an
hourly
rate
for
the
assistant
prosecutors
of
175
dollars
per
hour.
L
This
proposed
contract
will
cover
the
same
types
of
work
that
we
have
been
doing
since
we've
begun
Contracting
with
the
state,
including
petition
review,
trainings
all
litigation
at
every
stage,
document
review,
cost
of
transcripts
things
like
that
on
average,
this
Arrangement
brings
in
approximately
250
000
per
year
to
our
County
for
our
work
I'm
asking
today
that
we
continue
this
relationship
with
the
approval
of
this
new
reimbursement
contract.
L
It
will
continue
that
same
financial
compensation
relationship
with
the
Department
until
September
30th
of
2026
for
a
total
of
nine
hundred
thousand
dollars.
I.
Guess
it's
important
to
note
that
without
the
contract,
our
statutory
obligation
would
be
to
continue
with
these
services
and
to
serve
the
the
state
and
the
children
of
the
state
in
these
same
capacities,
but
without
that
type
of
reimbursement.
So
this
approval
does
not
impact
the
previously
adopted
budgets
and
it
does
not
request
any
additional
Personnel
or
creation
of
positions
within
my
office.
L
So
I'm
asking
for
approval
for
that
reimbursement,
contract.
G
Hi
for
abuse
and
neglect
cases.
G
So
two
questions,
then
one
you
said
it
is
it
brings
in
this
contract.
That's
reimbursable
is
250k
a
year
but
you're
asking
for
300K
a
year.
Now
what
caused
that
increase
or
change.
L
Burst
the
county
I
just
thought
based
on
prior
years
and
how
the
the
cost
of
the
work
it
has
brought
in
approximately
250..
It
could
mean
more.
This
go
around
and
they've
allowed,
for
you
know
the
900
000
to
cover
that
three-year
period,
so
roughly
three
hundred
thousand
dollars
of
our
services
would
be
reimbursed
if
we
were
to
utilize
that
per
year.
G
And
my
second
question
is:
when
we
were
doing
budget
hearings,
the
we
had,
people
come
in
talking
about
abuse
and
neglect
defense,
so
I
understand
that's
the
other
side
of
the
table
from
you.
But
correct.
Can
you
just
talk
about
how
that
looks
and
how
that
feels
from
your
vantage
point,
because
they
were
talking
about,
for
example,
lawyers?
Getting
you
know
if
you
it's
technically
an
110
dollars
an
hour
for
their
work,
but
you
might
need
three
lawyers,
so
people
are
making
like
thirty
dollars
an
hour.
L
L
So,
while
I
may
not
be
able
to
speak
to
the
other
side
of
the
coin,
as
far
as
the
what
it
takes
for
that
representation,
they
are
considered
court
appointed
Council,
I,
don't
know
what
their
schedule
is
with
regard
to
how
much
they
get
paid
and
for
what
services.
I
can
tell
you
that,
from
my
perspective,
the
safety
of
these
children
and
the
protection
of
these
children
is
of
the
utmost
importance
and
when
it
comes
to
being
in
court
and
when
it
gets
to
the
stage
where
litigation
is
necessary.
L
Those
attorneys
do
have
to
work
very
hard
to
stay
abreast
of
what's
going
on
in
the
homes
what's
going
on,
for
the
children
if
they
are
placed
in
foster
care
or
a
separate
placement
outside
of
their
parental
home.
That
requires
travel
and
visits
on
a
regular
basis.
L
L
A
All
right
next
item
is
an
emergency
management
recommendation
from
emergency
management
management
and
Homeland
Security,
and
acceptance
from
the
state
of
Michigan
for
the
fiscal
year.
2022
Homeland
Security,
grant
program
of
a
motion
by
commissioner
gingel
support
from
commissioner
Nelson
and
Robert
Seeley
is
here
to
represent
good.
M
Morning,
Commissioners
I'm
here
with
Angie
Jans
from
my
office,
so
today
we
have
an
acceptance
of
the
annual
Homeland
Security
grant
program.
This
grant
program
started
in
2006
this
year.
The
total
amount
for
the
grant
is
791
232.
M
That
includes
four
Personnel,
two
that
work
out
of
my
office
and
two
that
work
at
the
Detroit
Southeastern
Michigan
intelligence
and
information
center
in
Southfield.
M
This
is
a
decrease
of
twenty
one
thousand
two
hundred
fifty
six
dollars
from
last
year
and
it's
steadily
being
decreased.
This
this
grant
comes
from
FEMA
passes
through
the
state
and
goes
to
the
urban
area
strategic
initiative,
which
is
seven
or
six
counties
in
the
city
of
Detroit.
Then
it
gets
divided,
Among
Us,
based
on
our
our
population
and
some
other
factors.
So
this
year
everybody
said
our
portion
of
791
232
dollars.
A
Thank
you
any
questions,
commissioner
gershenson.
So
the
decrease
is
that
based
on
population.
D
M
I
mean
it'll
it'll
continue
fluctuating.
It's
fluctuated
around
the
same
amount,
I
think
last
year
it
went
up
by
about
ten
thousand
dollars.
This
year
went
down
twenty
thousand
dollars
at
the
beginning.
In
2006,
this
grant
was
about
5
million,
so
it's
steadily
decreased
over
the
years.
I
believe
it's
going
to
stay
around
the
same
funding
level
for
the
next
several
years.
We're
still
waiting
to
see
what
FEMA
has
in
store
for
this
grant.
They
may
be
changing
it
after
the
2025
Grant
cycle.
A
Next,
two
items
are
public
services
recommendation
both
from
Children's
Village,
the
first
in
approval
of
the
Michigan
Department
of
Health
and
Human
Services
fiscal
year,
2024
Children's,
Village,
Shelter
care
and
the
second
acceptance
from
the
Michigan
Department
of
Education
for
the
2023
24
Children's
Village
Child
Nutrition
program
grant
program.
A
D
And
I
also
have
Lori
strong
here
with
me
today,
so
children,
Children's
Village
operates
Mandy's
place,
which
is
a
shelter
Foster,
Care
Program
for
abuse
and
neglected
youth,
also
known
as
an
emergency
shelter
or
an
shfc
program.
It's
the
only
program
on
our
campus
for
DHHS,
foster
care,
kids
and
the
state
of
Michigan
requires
agencies
to
have
a
contract
to
serve
that
population.
D
Children's
Village
has
had
an
shfc
contract
with
the
state
for
the
last
several
years
and
our
current
contract
is
set
to
expire
on
the
30th
of
this
month.
So
we
have
a
new
contract
for
you
today
with
no
noteworthy
changes.
Dhhs
currently
pays
Children's
Village
of
per
diem
of
853.72
cents
per
use
per
day.
That
will
continue.
D
We
are
required
to
maintain
event,
availability
for
10
contracted
beds,
and
the
state
also
provides
a
bed
guarantee
for
eight
beds,
meaning
if
the
census
drops
below
eight
we're
guaranteed
payment
for
that
number,
I'm
not
likely
to
happen
with
our
current
population,
but
a
nice
guarantee
to
have
in
the
event
that
it
does
take
place.
The
estimated
contract
value
is
10
million,
and
so
today,
I'm
asking
you
to
approve
a
new
three-year
shelter,
foster
care
contract
that
begins
on
10
1
2023,
with
the
option
to
extend
for
two
years
in
2026.
D
So
Children's
Village
has
applied
for
and
been
awarded
to,
USDA
Child
Nutrition
program
grants,
specifically
the
national
school
lunch
and
breakfast
program
and
the
child
and
adult
care
food
program.
Grant
we've
been
applying
for
these
grants
and
receiving
funding
from
mde
for
more
than
a
decade.
So
this
this
is
an
annual
request
for
us.
The
amount
of
this
year's
Grant
request
is
expected
to
be
approximately
218
thousand
dollars
and
I
say
approximately,
because
the
meal
counts
vary,
and
so
today,
I'm
asking
you
to
approve
acceptance
of
these
grants.
G
Just
kind
of
general
questions,
but
other
in
the
new
state
budget
there
will
be
Community
interventions,
Child,
Care,
fund,
75-25,
split,
right
and
you've
mentioned
this
to
us
before.
G
D
Absolutely
we're
still
trying
to
learn
more
about
what
that
means.
Right
now,
children
that
are
moved
from
home
and
placed
in
residential
facilities
like
ours,
there's
a
50
reimbursement
from
the
child
care
fund,
effective
on
10-1,
there's
going
to
be
a
75
reimbursement
for
what
is
known
as
either
in-home
or
community-based
programs,
and
so
the
whole
Focus
behind
that
is
to
incentivize
keeping
kids
in
the
home
and
in
the
community,
while
also
giving
them
the
support
and
the
services
that
they
need.
A
A
Right,
mosha
Kerry.
Thank
you.
Thank
you
very
much.
All
right
next
items
are
from
the
Sheriff's
office.
There
are
nine
items,
two
are
Grant
acceptances,
six
are
agreements
with
district
courts
and
one
is
an
agreement
with
Oakland
Community
Health
Health
Network
regarding
corresponder
program.
So
we
will
take
these
in
sections
or
in
groups.
A
So
the
first
two
are
Grant
acceptances
from
the
Stanton
foundation
for
the
Fallen
K-9
program
and
from
the
U.S
Department
of
Justice
for
the
fiscal
year,
2023
Burns
discretionary
Community
project,
a
motion
for
those
two
items
motion
by
commissioner
Nelson
support
from
commissioner
Joliet,
and
we
have
our
common
fixtures
here
under
sheriff
and
guy
up
here,
are
here
to
talk.
Okay,.
N
N
Pass
away
on
duty
back
in
2021,
and
so
we've
been
working
with
the
foundation
to
replace
well,
we've
replaced
that
animal,
but
to
get
reimbursement
for
the
replacement.
For
that.
Thank
you.
So
it's
a
grand
acceptance,
there's
no
match
it's!
Twelve
thousand
five!
N
Thank
you.
The
next
one
is
actually
something
we've
been
working
on
since
2022,
it's
actually
from
representative
slotkin's
office,
so
we
had
submitted
a
proposal
like
I
said
back
in
2022.
This
gives
us
410
000
for
primarily
equipment
for
the
training
center.
So
it's
it's
there's
a
long
list
of
different
things
for
officer,
Wellness,
defensive
tactics
and
mat
training,
Firearms
scenario,
Based
training,
that
sort
of
thing
so
we're
very
excited
we
knew
it
was
coming.
G
The
in
the
documents
it
says
the
grant
period
is
till
December
22
to
December
23.
so
because
you're
just
receiving
the
money,
that'll
change,
your
timeline
or
you've
used
other
monies
to
implement
these
trainings.
No.
N
So
actually
we
did
purchase
the
mats,
but
we're
able
to
go
since
it
did.
It
was
retroactive
to
December
of
2022.
That's
the
only
thing
that
we've
done
so
we'll
do
a
full
court
press
and
take
the
list
of
items
that
have
been
approved
for
purchase
and
we
will
start
as
soon
as
the
new
fiscal
year
starts
and
purchasing
because
purchase
where
you're
in
right
now
so
purchasing
bidding
and
everything
is
closed.
So
as
soon
as
that
reopens
on
October
1st,
then
we'll
get
going
with
this
list.
N
A
780
news
motion
carries.
Thank
you.
Our
next
item
is
the
2024-2026
interlocal
agreement
with
Oakland
Community
Health
Network
for
the
co-responder
team
program,
so
we'll
take
that
I
have
a
motion
by
commissioner
gingel's
support
from
commissioner
Cabell,
so
we're
familiar
with
this
program,
but
anything
you
would
like.
N
To
add
about
it,
just
that
it,
the
pilot,
has
been
extremely
successful,
so
we
still
have
the
co-responder
that's
assigned
to
a
team
in
Pontiac
and
goes
out
on
calls.
So
I
think
you
recall:
we've
done
this,
commissioner
Cavallo
kind
of
facilitated
this
initiated
it
a
couple
years
ago,
so
we
did
a
pilot.
We
did
a
one-year
renewal
and
now
we're
moving
forward
with
a
three-year
agreement
with
ochs.
So
thank.
A
C
A
Motion
Carrie.
Thank
you.
Our
next
six
items
from
the
Sheriff's
Office
are
agreement
with
the
district
courts.
The
43rd
district
court
in
Ferndale,
the
43rd
district
court,
Hazel
Park
division,
Madison,
Heights
division,
46th
Court
in
Southfield,
47th,
Court,
Farmington,
Hills
and
48th
Court
in
Bloomfield
Hills
include
I
ever
marched
by
commissioner
ganja
support
from
commissioner
gershenson.
A
N
N
I
can
go
through
each
one
individually,
really
quick,
just
let
you
know
so
they're
all
continuing
the
positions
they
have
so
in
general,
there's
a
sergeant
position
that
oversees
all
of
our
district
court
operations
and
supervises
all
the
positions
and
then
each
one
of
these
agreements
pays
a
portion
of
that.
N
Salary
and
then
we
have
a
rate
for
all
of
the
part-timers,
so
this
is
the
Agreements
are
primarily
for
part-timers.
Ferndale
is
continuing
for
part-time
positions.
A
thousand
hours
each
Hazel
Park
is
continuing
three
part
time:
a
thousand
hours
and
one
part-time
440
hour
position.
Madison
Heights
has
two
PC
any
thousand
hours.
N
Southfield
have
four
PG
e
thousand
hour
positions.
Farmington
Hills
has
two
btne
thousand
hours
and
one
500
hour
position.
Bloomfield
Hills
has
three
ptne
a
thousand
hours
and
that's
it
so,
like
I
said,
they're
all
just
renewals
for
security
and
we
developed
rates
with
the
county
executive
team,
and
it
incorporates
all
of
the
items
that
we've
talked
about,
adding
to
the
rates
going.
A
Our
next
item
is
from
Health
and
Human
Services
acceptance
from
the
Michigan
Department
of
Health
and
Human
Services
for
the
20
23
Pontiac
integrated
Urgent
Care
agreement,
a
couple
of
likes
to
mix
motion
an
emotion
by
commissioner
Nelson
support
from
commissioner
Joliet.
Thank
you.
We
have
Leanne
Stafford
and
a
team.
P
P
So
two
years
ago
we
went
to
the
state
about
a
very
unique
opportunity
to
introduce
what
we're
going
to
call
an
Urgent
Care
integrated,
urgent
care
that
includes
both
primary
care
and
Behavioral
Health
Under
One
Roof,
and
even
going
to
take
it
a
step
further
that,
once
that
individual
comes
in,
is
triaged
and
maybe
cared
for
whether
it's
Behavioral,
Health
and
primary
care
right,
each
person
will
be
looked
at
with
both
we'll
also
be
linking
them
to
services
and
resources
and,
following
back
up
so
a
lot
of
times
at
an
urgent
care
right,
they
come
in.
P
You
treat
them
and
they're,
basically
off
on
the
street.
To
do
whatever
happens
this
we're
hoping
will
have
that
extra
link
around
it.
That
will
also
follow
up
to
ensure
that
they
receive
the
services
that
they
needed.
Our
goal
is
to
connect.
You
know,
add
some
kind
of
triage
for
what
they're
there
for
but
connect
them
to
do.
They
need
a
PCP
right.
Do
they
need
more
intensive
Behavioral,
Health
Services
and
maybe
they're
connected
right
at
the
point?
P
So
our
goal
here
is
to
add
that
additional
piece
that
they
don't
get
in
a
traditional
Urgent
Care.
This
is
a
five
million
dollar
grant
that
was
actually
sent
or
provide
HHS.
We
are
still
in
the
operational
mode
right,
so
we
know
we're
receiving
them
the
money
I'm
going
to
let
them
introduce
themselves.
P
Looking
at
the
behavioral
health
side,
we
still
have
are
looking
for
a
location
we
are
going
to
be
in
Pontiac,
but
we're
looking
at
two
to
three
different
opportunities
right
now,
so
we'll
be
able
to
provide
that
back
to
you
all
once
we
have
those
those
answers
and
still
what
that
kickoff
date
would
be,
our
goal
would
be
fall
of
next
year
that
we'd
be
able
to
open.
We
can
open
sooner
than
that,
that's
great,
but
that
would
be
our
goal
right
now.
So
I
should
let
everyone
probably
introduce
themselves
really
quick.
O
How
do
you
all
get
to
see
many
of
you
that
I
may
know,
but
Scott
Stewart
again
from
honor
Community,
Health
director
of
strategic
initiatives
and
been
with
the
organization
for
about
eight
years?
So
I
have
seen
you
all
in
various
capacities
but
good
to
see
you
all
weekend.
B
Good
morning,
Dana
lassenby
from
Oakland
Community
Health
Network.
Thank
you
for
all
your
work.
This
is
this
is
the
only
way
it
happens
and
just
to
add
on
to
what
Leanne
said.
This
is
a
very
unique
concept.
There
are
not
many
in
the
state
nor
across
the
country,
so
this
is
innovative
and
new
for
us
and
we're
excited.
So
thank
you.
P
A
J
Commissioner
Nelson.
Thank
you,
madam
chair.
This
is
exciting.
As
a
behavioral
health
care
provider
myself,
it
is
so
credible
that
we
continue
to
work
toward
improving
that
access
to
not
just
even
primary
care,
but
your
mental
Behavioral,
Health
Services,
so
I'm
really
excited
to
see
where
this
transpires
and
goes.
G
Will
this
be
coming
to
finance
tomorrow?
Yes,
okay,
so
maybe
that's
a
better
place
to
ask
but
again
right
super
happy
for
y'all,
but
understanding
what
the
ongoing
costs
might
be,
how
that
would
be
split
and
if
there's
been
any
leverage
funding
or
what
funding
could
be
leveraged
in
the
future,
be
good
to
hear
tomorrow.
P
In
case,
you
all
want
to
know
we're
still
looking
sustainability
right,
so
we
know
we
have
this
grant.
We
think
that
this
will
get
us,
obviously
the
first
two
three
years
right
and
then
looking
at
samsa
Grants
right.
This
is
very
unique.
We
feel
like
once
we
get
this
operational.
The
opportunities
for
Grants
will
be
there.
We
are
looking.
We
don't
know
what
the
payer
mix
is
right.
P
I
I
just
want
to
say
this
is
really
going
to
be
a
help
to
our
community.
That's
the
bottom
line
with
all
that
we're
here
around
the
table
to
do
I
just
want
to
make
a
comment
about
Leanne
I
mean
losing
some
of
that
southern.