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From YouTube: Salt Lake City Formal Meeting 2/20/18
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A
B
A
B
A
A
To
start
the
meeting,
we've
laid
out
some
guidelines
for
decorum
and
civility
to
make
sure
people
feel
comfortable
and
safe
to
participate.
Please
be
sure
to
be
respectful
during
the
comments
of
other
people
avoid
cheering
jeering,
because
it
could
cause
someone
to
feel
intimidated.
Please
also
help
us
take
care
of
this
historic
meeting
room
by
not
standing
on
furniture
or
leaning,
leaning
against
the
decorative
pieces,
give
a
sign
or
a
prop
or
other
piece
of
equipment.
A
Please
make
sure
that
it
does
not
cause
disruption
or
block
other
people's
views,
and
please
do
not
approach
the
Dyess.
If
you
have
something
to
pass
out
to
the
council,
one
of
our
staff
members
will
be
glad
to
help
you
again.
Our
staff
is
here
to
help.
So
if
you
need
anything,
just
raise
your
hand
and
somebody
from
the
city
council
office
will
come
and
support
you
also.
We
recognize
that
two
minutes
is
not
a
lot
of
time.
A
So
we'd
like
to
remind
you
that
we
have
other
means
of
being
in
touch
with
your
representatives,
you
can
send
us
all
an
email.
You
can
find
our
phone
number
on
our
website,
SLC
Council
comm,
and
you
can
also
schedule
a
one-on-one
meeting
with
your
representative.
If
you
have
a
specific
issue
you'd
like
to
talk
about,
we
are
now
Adam
a4,
which
is
the
approval
of
it.
Is
there
a
motion
from
one
of
my
colleagues.
A
C
C
A
D
A
All
right,
we
are
now
onto
the
public
hearing
portion
of
our
meeting.
We
have
a
few
opportunities
for
public
comment
tonight
and
we
will
call
people
based
on
the
comment
cards
that
have
been
turned
in
I
would
call
individuals
two
at
a
time.
The
first
person
please
come
forward
and
the
second
person
please
be
in
the
queue.
As
a
reminder,
please
help
us
create
a
civil
and
respectful
meeting
by
not
standing
on
chair,
not
standing.
Cheering
yelling
booing
anything
like
that.
A
Our
first
public
hearing
this
evening
item
b1
is
an
ordinance
amending
Salt,
Lake,
City,
Code
relating
to
weeds
and
the
clearing
of
real
property
amending
chapter
9.16,
article
1
re
numbering
section,
nine
point
one
six
point:
one:
one:
zero
and
section
nine
point,
one
six
point:
one:
two:
zero
and
repealing
chapter
nine
point:
one:
six,
article
two
and
chapter:
twenty-one
8.20
enforcement,
I
don't
have
any
cards.
Is
there
anybody
in
the
audience?
Who
would
like
to
speak
to
this
item?.
A
Been
moved
by
councilmember,
Mendenhall
and
seconded
by
councilmember
luke,
all
those
in
favor
aye.
That
motion
carries
on
to
item
b2,
which
is
an
ordinance
amending
various
sections
of
title
21:
a
of
the
Salt
Lake
City
Code
pertaining
to
railroad
freight
terminal
facilities
and
manufacturing
zoning
districts.
Amending
section
21,
a
point:
28
point:
0
2,
0,
section,
21,
a
12
point;
28
point:
0,
3,
0,
section
21,
a
point:
33
point:
0,
4,
0
and
section
21,
a
0.622
point:
0
4
0.
At
first
we
have
Terry
Marasco,
followed
by
Dorothy
Pappas
Owen.
F
E
G
G
The
reason
I
am
here
today
is
because,
after
the
last
Planning
Commission
meeting
regarding
the
zoning
changes
in
the
northwest
quadrant,
a
number
of
us
were
there.
When
the
Planning
Commission
made
a
number
of
areas
that
they
wanted
to
have
the
City
Council
pursue,
and
we
felt
that
our
responsibility
as
citizens
was
to
take
those
areas
of
interest
and
get
together
as
community
people
and
discuss
them
and
come
back
with
some
thoughtful
recommendations
to
you.
G
That's
what
it's
all
supposed
to
be
about
is
having
community
people.
Organizations
get
together,
come
up
with
good
information
and
make
good.
You
know
thoughtful
decisions
and
recommendations.
So
on
February
first,
and
you
have
mike
the
letter
that
was
sent
to
you
on
February
5th,
on
February.
First
19
people
from
all
about
12
different
organizations
came
together
at
zilla's,
family,
restaurant
and
lounge
great
food.
We
had
dinner
and
we
talked
development
and
our
neighborhoods
and
what
was
important.
G
G
So
you
want
to
just
read
the
letter
and
it'll
tell
you
what
to
do
and
why
it's
important
is
because
the
community
came
together.
You
made
two
very
specific
recommendations:
favorite
recommendations.
We
agreed
with
a
hunt,
all
of
us
a
concurred
on
it.
We
believe
the
prison
needs
to
have
a
one-mile
buffer
zone,
and
we
need
believes
that
all
the
new
developments
should
be
conditional.
Thank.
H
Terry
morasco
I
live
at
260,
South,
500,
east
Salt,
Lake,
City
and
I'd
just
like
to
address
the
prison
buffer
zone
for
a
second
and
raise
that
one
level
up.
We
were
out
there
I've
been
working
with
the
West
Point
community,
we're
out
Saturday
at
4
o'clock
driving
around
the
site,
and
at
that
moment
there
was
a
windstorm
which
blew
the
tailings
across
the
road
across
route,
80,
a
huge
storm
and
these
tailings
go
directly
to
the
prison.
So
the
prison
needs
a
lot
of
attention
in
this,
not
only
for
a
buffer
zone.
H
I
I
So
the
citizens
of
West,
Point,
Community
Council,
are
all
stakeholders
and
are
directly
affected
by
all
development
within
our
boundaries.
We
want
the
city
and
state
to
know
that
West
Point,
Community
Council
needs
to
be
involved
in
and
engaged
in
all
the
discussions
of
planning
efforts
and
development
of
the
North
West
bhadra
we're
asking
to
be
invited
to
participate
in
any
and
all
discussions
and
processes
starting
and
going
forward
throughout
the
complete
northwest
quadrant
development
process
like
Dorothy
and
Terry,
were
saying.
I
We
recommend
at
least
one
mile
buffer
between
the
State
Prison
sight
and
still
the
beach
tournament
port
location.
A
one-mile
buffer
will
offer
the
prisoners
and
prison
employees
the
same
health
of
safety
consideration
as
a
one
mile
residential
buffer.
We
also
recommend
that
any
grade,
shylo,
installments
or
railroad
car
engine
and
repair
facilities
be
considered
as
conditional
use
facilities.
I
I
H
Thank
you
for
the
opportunity
to
speak
with
you
I'm
John,
Burke
and
cheerio
10th
Oh,
and
since
the
last
public
hearing
on
this
topic,
we
we
did
spend
an
evening
at
zilla's,
fabulous
food,
I'll,
concur
on
that,
and
we
also
spent
an
afternoon
with
the
great
salt
lake
alliance.
Both
both
venues
were
very
hospitable
to
the
development
community
and
to
the
community
councils
and
the
environmental
folks
and
the
the
conclusion
from
all
this
is
that
the
process
that
we're
taking
part
of
this
evening
is
so
very
important
to
the
success
of
this.
H
This
venture
that
we're
talking
about
with
this
global
port,
the
conditional
use
is
something
that
we
think
is
really
an
appropriate
tool
for
ensuring
that
we
get
the
the
comments
and
we
hear
them
and
we
can
respond
to
them.
And
basically,
what
we
heard
from
the
community
is
is
what
Terry
and
Dorothy
have
told
us
is
that
there
is
some
some
concerns
about
being
too
close
to
the
prison.
We
understand
that
and
what
we'd
like
to
do
is,
as
we
near
a
conclusion
on
where
we
think
the
appropriate
location
would
be.
H
J
Chair
council
members,
Wade
budge
here
on
behalf
of
nwq
LLC,
the
other
major
owner
in
the
northwest
quadrant
property.
First
of
all,
I
want
to
start
by
complimenting
the
council
administration
and
staff
who
have
all
worked
very
hard
on
giving
us
input.
We
appreciate
the
time
that
the
Planning
Commission
spent
with
this
current
text
amendment
and
are
in
support
of
it.
What
we
like
about
the
text
amendment
is
that
it's
very
careful
in
the
way
that
it
describes
how
a
rail
terminal
facility
would
be
sited.
J
It
recognizes,
as
Jon
just
indicated,
that
it
would
be
a
conditional
use
and
that
I
think
is
important
to
keep
in
mind,
because
the
text
amendment
tonight
does
not
locate
the
facility.
It
merely
establishes
the
parameters
and
the
ions
that
need
to
be
considered
as
this
discussion
continues
forward
and
what
it
also
does
is.
J
It
removes
what
what
was
a
relic,
if
you
will
from
the
prior
code,
which
had
a
five-mile
radius
barrier
which
served
didn't
serve
a
purpose
that
and
in
fact,
acted
as
an
impediment
to
our
efforts
here
to
try
to
bring
rail
into
this
area.
Let
me
just
emphasize
one
last
point
to
keep
in
mind.
One
of
the
reasons
there
has
been
a
discussion
on
rail
is,
as
we
look
at
air
quality
and
other
environmental
impacts.
J
A
K
My
name
is
Wayne
Martinson
I
live
at
549,
Cortez,
Street
and
I
used
to
work
for
National,
Audubon
Society,
but
I'm
representing
Great
Salt
Lake
Audubon.
Today
we
submitted
a
letter
dated
February
16th
on
behalf
of
National
Audubon
Great
Salt,
Lake
Audubon,
as
well
as
League
of
Women
Voters
of
Salt
Lake
and
Friends
of
Great
Salt
Lake.
K
Talking
about
the
February
1st
meeting
that
Dorothy
mentioned
mentioning
how
big
of
a
issue
this
is
how
we
want
to
be
involved
in
the
process
as
it
moves
forward,
but
also
emphasizing
the
two
items
that
were
agreed
upon
on
the
February
1st
meeting
that
Dorothy
mentioned
and
hoping
that
the
council
will
include
those
as
you
move
forward
with
the
zoning
amendments
and
the
first
one
you've
heard
about
is
the
1
mile
buffer
for
the
prison.
That
is
important
for
the
prisoners.
K
The
other
part
that
we're
hoping
that
you
put
in
place
is
this
conditional
use
for
grain
silos
and
repair
shops,
something
that
we
mentioned
in
the
me
the
letter
of
February
16th,
and
that
was
also
a
part
of
the
February
1st
discussion,
where
I
think
we
had
a
good
consensus.
Thank
you
for
the
time
to
come
in.
Thank.
A
L
Getting
this
right,
and
so
I
just
want
to
reiterate,
what's
been
said
that
we
remain
committed
to
making
rail
a
sustainable
solution
for
our
city
long
term,
but
at
the
same
time
we
want
to
address
these
overarching
principles
and
make
sure
that
we
can
think
about
this
in
a
thoughtful
way.
Addressing
the
concerns
of
the
community
and
making
sure
that
this
facility
can
become
what
we
think
it
can
become,
which
is
the
most
efficient
way
for
us
to
bring
goods
and
services
into
our
city
and
not
relying
on
truck
traffic.
L
D
A
D
A
A
Six,
yes
and
I
mean
yes
that
carries
unanimously
with
District
one
James
Rogers
absent.
We
are
on
to
our
next
public
hearing
this
evening.
Item
b3
is
an
ordinance
amending
Salt,
Lake,
City
Code
pertaining
to
regulations
for
temporary
uses
amending
chapter.
Twenty-One
8.42
I
have
no
cards
for
this.
Anybody
in
the
audience.
Would
you
wish
to
speak
to
this
item?
D
A
Motion
carries.
We
are
now
onto
item
b4,
a
public
hearing
regarding
a
resolution
authorizing
approval
of
an
interlocal
cooperation
agreement
between
Salt
Lake,
City,
Corporation
and
Salt
Lake
County
regarding
the
operation
of
the
Sorenson
Multicultural
Center
Sorenson
unity
center
and
Steiner
West
pool
located
at
855
West
California
Avenue
I
have
one
card
tonight.
It's
from
Michelle
McArdle.
If
you
could
please
join
us
at
the
dais.
N
Hi
Michelle
McArdle
here
so
I
worked
for
Salt
Lake,
County,
Parks
and
Recreation
back
in
the
90s,
and
I
am
not
exact
on
the
year,
but
it
seems
like
it
was
roughly
1998
that
Salt
Lake
City
basically
handed
over
all
recreation
facilities
to
Salt
Lake
County
because
they
felt
like
from
a
tax
standpoint.
Taxpayers
were
paying
more.
N
There
were
a
lot
of
employees,
probably
more
employees
necessary
than
what
was
needed,
and
so
I'm
kind
of
confused
about
this,
because
I
feel
like
number
one
Salt
Lake
County
is
kind
of
the
expert
at
Parks
and
Recreation
type,
stuff
and
I
shouldn't,
say:
parks
because
that's
separate
recreation
and
the
Sorensen
campus
is
used
for
many
great
activities,
including
the
Unity
Center
Multicultural
Center
and
a
lot
of
activities
happen
there.
But
those
activities
also
happen
at
places
like
Northwest
recreation
center,
central
city
that
are
also
in
low-income
areas
and
pricing
is
about
the
same.
N
N
Why
are
we
only
looking
at
the
Sorensen
campus
and
not
the
Sports
Complex,
because,
as
far
as
I
know,
those
are
both
owned
by
Salt
Lake
City,
but
we're
only
looking
at
one
to
change,
prices
and
I
understand
it's
probably
to
go
lower
on
prices,
but
it
seems
like
you
would
be
spending
more
money
on
on
tax
dollars
negotiating
prices
through
the
county,
instead
of
just
letting
them
do
what
they
do
best.
That's
all
we
appreciated
thank.
A
You
for
your
comments
to
the
council
this
evening,
nicked
our
bat
from
the
city
council
office.
Will
you
raise
your
hand,
please
Michelle?
If
you'd
like
to
learn
more
about
this
I
would
recommend
connecting
with
Nick
from
the
council
office
and
he
can
answer
any
questions
for
you.
Is
there
anybody
else
who'd
like
to
speak
to
this
item?
D
D
I
know
I
talked
to
mr.
Tarr
bad
about
this
I'm.
Mindful
of
the
the
community
input
about
nervousness
about
changing
programming
at
Sorensen.
Under
this
agreement,
the
city
will
still
own
facilities
and
handle
facility
maintenance.
The
county
will
run
programming
out
of
it.
They
have
so
from
a
patron
perspective.
Nothing
will
change.
Pricing
should
stay
as
it
has
been
before.
Programs
will
stay
as
they
have
been
before,
and
the
plan
is
for
the
facilities
to
be
better
maintained
going
forward.
So
hopefully
it's
a
win-win
for
everybody
involved.
So
thank
you
all.
A
Those
in
favor
that
motion
carries
our
last
public
hearing
this
evening
includes
items
b5
through
P
10
regarding
six
grant
applications.
One
is
the
green
bike
program.
Extension
two
is
the
select
city,
transportation
management
organization.
Startup
three
is
the
assistance
to
firefighters
grant
for
prescription
drug
prevention,
community
enhancement,
grant
5
Fairmont
Park
spring,
and
pond
restoration
and
six
Utah
certified
local
government
2018-19
program,
historic
preservation
and
energy
efficiency.
Outreach
I
have
nobody
here
to
speak
to
that.
Anybody
in
the
audience
would
like
to
speak
to
these
grant
opportunities.
A
Been
moved
by
councilmember,
Wharton
and
seconded
by
councilmember
Fowler
any
discussion
on
this
item,
all
those
in
favor
aye
and
that
motion
carries.
We
are
now
at
section.
C
potential
act,
action
items.
Our
first
item,
c1
was
actually
adopted
during
our
February
6th,
formal
meetings.
So
we'll
move
on
to
item
c2,
which
is
a
resolution
to
provide
below-market
financing
to
violin
commons
LLC,
which
intends
to
purchase
the
northwest
pipeline
building
located
at
315
East
200
south.
This
is
our
former
police
headquarters.
E
A
E
A
A
Sorry,
all
right,
we
are
now
at
comments
to
the
City
Council.
So
this
is
our
general
comment.
Period
looks
like
we
have
a
few
folks
in
the
audience
who
are
here
to
speak
to
us.
I
will
call
just
like
our
public
hearings.
I
will
call
two
at
a
time
the
first
person
please
come
up.
The
second
person
please
be
ready
in
the
queue
up.
First
I
have
Carl
Moore,
followed
by
Conlan
McCracken
and
Charlie
Erickson.
F
F
F
Their
commitment
on
coil
refinancing
is
weak
compared
to
other
banks,
and
it
is
also
unclear
whether
pipelines
are
included
in
their
enhanced
review
for
tar
sands
projects,
which
are
horrible,
and
what
we
are
asking
is
that
JPMorgan
Chase
stopped
trading
loopholes
around
their
Paris
climate
commitment
and
show
us
that
they
can
step
away
from
the
pipeline
pipeline
projects
for
good
I
I'm.
Just
I'm
excited
about
this
council
cuz.
You
guys
have
done.
F
You
all
have
done
a
very
good
job
at
doing
some
things
for
us
as
a
Native,
American
peoples,
and
this
is
something
that
is
on
our
forefront.
The
Standing
Rock
resolution
was
awesome.
Super
I
appreciate
you
for
for
doing
that,
also
for
the
indigenous
peoples
day.
The
Declaration
of
that
I
really
appreciate
that,
and
this
is
something
that
is
important
to
us.
Native
Americans,
this
divest
from
unethical
banking,
Chase,
Wells
Fargo.
You
know
these
are
banks
that
do
things
to
commit
racism,
environmental
racism,
racism
and
also
just
hurting
us
as
a
people,
so
I.
A
B
B
Q
Kevin
Lee,
castor
thanks
chair
council
and
C
mayor
I'm
here
to
speak
also
about
the
the
divest
all
like
coalition
efforts
to
disqualify
Chase,
Bank
and
and
other
banks
that
are
standing
in
the
way
and
of
us
moving
into
a
cleaner
energy
transition.
If
we
don't
burn,
fossil
fuels
will
have
clean
air
and
the
sooner
we
get
there.
The
better
and
and
we're
seeing
a
lot
of
movement
and
the
divestment
movement
is
making
impact
we're
getting
struck
back
at
activists
or
whatever,
and
when
Norway
moved
it.
Q
P
P
My
name
is
Ryan
moon,
I'm,
a
constituent
of
Aaron,
Mendenhall
and
I've
been
a
part
of
this
divest
Salt
Lake
coalition
for
the
last
year.
It's
representative
groups
of
pandas
peaceful
advocates
for
Native
dialogue
and
support
the
Utah
League
of
Native
American
voters,
350.org
Salt,
Lake,
City
and
also
Wasatch
rising
tide,
all
with
various
interests
in
human
rights
and
climate
justice.
P
And
the
talking
points
you
have
are
what
you
will
hear
from
several
people
and
also
every
one
of
you
got
an
email
from
your
constituents
except
for
councilman
Luke
and
that's
just
because
they
had
a
family
of
urgent
emergency.
It
wasn't
like
a
mass
call
to
have
everyone
in
the
city
email
you.
It
was
just
part
of
our
coalition
of
people
that
were
living
in
your
neighborhoods,
so
I
guess
I
just
wanted
to
say
that
the
timeline
that
we're
looking
at
is
between
now
and
March
13th.
P
That
means
that
whatever
choice
is
made
by
the
finance
department,
we
hope
that
over
the
next
five
years,
there's
studies
that
go
on
around
creating
a
public
bank
and
in
order
to
get
all
that
in
motion
we'd,
like
March
13th,
to
be
the
date
that
you
consider
a
resolution,
that's
kind
of
been
floating
around
for
the
last
year.
That
has
a
title
related
to
ethical,
banking
and
fossil
fuel
divestment
and
I.
Guess
just
to
close
there's.
P
O
Council
I'm
Alex
Johnson.
Thank
you
for.
Let
me
speak
today.
I
appreciate
it
I'm
also
here
with
the
Davis
Salt
Lake
coalition
to
divest
from
Chase
Bank
I
have
a
some
excellent
reasons.
Why,
on
Violation
track
on
good
jobs?
First
org,
it
shows
dozens
of
violations
from
2000
to
2017,
totaling,
twenty-nine
point
four
billion
dollars
on
banking,
consumer
protection,
false
claims,
environmental
wage
and
our
unfair
labor
practice;
health
safety,
employment
discrimination,
price-fixing,
bribery
and
other
cases
initiated
by
43
federal
regulatory
agencies
and
all
divisions
of
the
Justice
Department.
O
E
My
name
is
Murray
Jamison
and
I
am
new.
To
this
whole
experience.
I
just
wanted
to
go
ahead
and
express
my
my
time
for
here,
I
guess
the
similar
to
JPMorgan
Chase
climate
statements.
They
have
also
said
positive
things
about
their
commitment
to
human
rights.
They
are
signatories
to
the
Equator
Principles,
the
United
Nation
principles
for
responsible,
investing
and
knowledge.
E
Tea
specifically
oppose
Kinder
Morgan's
trans
mountain
expansion
project,
which
also
currently
the
subject
of
eleven
legal
challenges
from
First
Nations,
a
lying
infringement
of
their
rights,
which
is
all
the
more
reason
JP
Morgan
Chase
shouldn't
be
anywhere
near
the
pipeline
companies
or
the
proposed
pipeline
in
fractured
finances.
I
am
actually
Native
American
from
Canada
and
I
am
I
got
involved
with
the
Standing
Rock
project
and
I
have
a
big
heart
for
for
this
kind
of
stuff.
So
I
appreciate
your
time.
Thank.
N
A
R
R
R
R
Yeah
he
was
just
rude
from
the
beginning:
I
asked
him
why
he
was
being
rude
and
he
got
extremely
mad
at
me
yeah,
so
those
I
shouldn't
be
afraid
to
call
police
and
I
was
afraid.
So
the
you
know.
After
a
conversation,
we
were
able
to
come
to
a
resolution
and
he,
you
know
informed
me
on
more
of
the
process.
Like
you
know.
Who
are
you?
What
is
your
relationship
to
the
house?
I
thought
he
meant.
You
know.
I'm
I
said
I'm
the
neighbor
and
he's
like
well.
Are
you
the
owner?
R
R
A
You
for
your
comments
to
the
City
Council
Jessica.
If
you
would
like
to
engage
with
the
City
Council
staff
Nick
carpet
right,
they're
raising
his
hand,
we
can
do
a
little
bit
of
follow-up
with
administrative
staff
and
see
if
we
can't
get
this
resolved
for
you
and
we're
sorry
for
your
negative
experience.
S
Good
evening,
America
scoopski
and
members
of
the
council,
affordable
housing
density,
infill
established
neighborhoods,
community
engagement,
so
I'm
here
to
talk
about
six.
Twenty
East
1800
South
in
Salt
Lake
City
in
the
Liberty
Wells
community
council
area
in
February
of
2017
I
approached
I
went
to
planning
because
there
was
construction
going
on
and
I
was.
The
chair
of
the
committee
for
the
BRE
wells
on
construction
and
and
and
such
in
the
council
and
I
was
told
that
the
development
met
zoning
requirements
and
community
council
input
was
not
required
and
not
needed.
S
There
is
now
a
three-story
white
stucco
cube
in
the
neighborhood.
Everything
around
it
is
brick.
Even
the
two-story
apartment
building
right
next
door
is
brick
and
I
know
the
council
at
least
I've
read
in
the
papers
that
the
council
has
been
trying
to
reduce
the
amount
of
stucco
and
all
these
big
apartment
buildings
going
in
all
over
the
city.
S
S
This
was
even
approved
and
again
that,
even
though
I
approached
the
council
I
approached
the
planning
planning
department
that
there
was
no
attempt
or
even
a
desire
to
get
input
from
the
community
and
as
we
keep
building
and
more
density
in
our
established
neighborhoods.
This
is
going
to
come
up
more
and
more,
and
this
just
can't
happen
again
drive
by
it.
Look
at
it
I
time.
R
A
You
thank
you
very
much,
mr.
Baer,
for
your
comments
to
the
City
Council
this
evening.
I
have
no
additional
cards.
If
somebody
in
the
audience
would
like
to
speak,
speak
now
or
forever
hold
your
peace
or
at
least
until
our
next
meeting,
and
that
will
no
no
motion.
Okay,
we
are
now
on
to
new
business,
which
we
have
none.
So
we
will
move
right
on
to
the
consent.
Agenda
and
I
will
look
for
a
motion
from
my
peers.