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From YouTube: Salt Lake City Council Formal Meeting 04/17/2018
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A
A
A
Thank
you
there's
for
those
of
you
looking
for
a
seat
if
you
come
in
the
next
set
of
doors,
there's
a
whole
bunch
of
seating
in
here
and
I'm
gonna
review
the
standards
of
conduct
that
we
do
at
the
beginning
of
every
one
of
our
meetings.
We
want
to
thank
you
again
for
being
here
and
welcome.
You
appreciate
you
taking
time
out
of
your
day
to
attend
your
City
Council
meeting,
to
participate
and
see
your
local
government
at
work
to
start
the
meeting.
A
We
have
some
guidelines
that
we
review
at
every
meeting
just
to
keep
the
decorum
and
civility
that
people
can
feel
comfortable
with
and
feel
safe
to
participate.
These
points
are,
please
be
respectful
during
other
people's
comments,
avoid
cheering
or
jeering
it
can
make
people
feel
intimidated.
Please
also
help
take
care
of
this
historic
meeting
room
by
not
standing
on
the
furniture
or
leaning
against
the
decorative
pieces,
like
the
giant
frame
in
the
back
of
the
room.
A
If
you
have
a
sign,
a
prop
or
other
piece
of
equipment,
video
equipment
or
otherwise,
please
make
sure
it
doesn't
cause
the
disruption
or
block
other
people's
views.
Signs
wider
than
your
chair
will
display
out
in
the
hallway,
and
please
don't
approach
the
Dyess
up
here.
If
you
are
going
to
make
a
comment,
you
have
something
you
want
to
pass
out
to
the
council,
just
let
us
know
and
a
staff
member
will
take
that
from
you
and
distribute
it
to
us.
A
It
also
helps
not
take
away
from
your
limited
two
minutes
of
time
to
talk
to
us
our
staffs
here
to
help
you
can
you
raise
your
hands
and
and
there's
usually
more
coming
in
and
out
of
the
rooms.
So
if
you
have
a
question,
if
you
need
a
comment
card
that
you
didn't
grab
yet,
if
you
have
need
anything,
raise
your
hand
and
a
staff
member
will
come
and
assist
you
at
any
point
in
the
meeting.
A
We
also
recognize
that
two
minutes
of
comment
time
is
may
not
be
long
enough
for
you
to
get
all
your
thoughts
outlined
tonight.
So
please
feel
free
to
visit
our
website
at
SLC.
Council
comm
that
has
contact
information
for
all
the
council
members
individually,
as
well
as
a
single
contact
that
reaches
all
of
us.
A
Also,
the
contact
information
sheets
that
are
next
to
the
speaker,
cards
out
in
the
hallway
have
other
ways
for
you
to
share
your
comments
with
the
council
of
by
email,
phone
or
otherwise.
So
our
first
item
of
business
is
an
approval
of
our
work
session
meeting
minutes
for
Tuesday
February
3rd
2018,
Tuesday,
February,
20th,
2018,
Tuesday,
March,
20th
2018,
the
special
work
session
meeting,
minutes
of
Friday
March,
9th
2018
and
the
formal
meeting
minutes
of
Tuesday
April
3rd
2018.
So.
A
This
Salt
Lake
City
Corporation
resolution
is
a
joint
resolution
advocating
for
fossil
fuel
divestment
and
ethical
banking
practices
to
further
our
climate,
positive
2040
commitment.
It
states,
whereas
Salt
Lake,
City
acknowledged
and
the
Climate
Change
joint
resolution,
its
responsibility
for
addressing
climate
change,
the
risk
of
expanding
fossil
fuel
infrastructure
and
the
importance
of
forging
a
path
forward
that
protects
our
economies,
societies
and
overall
well-being
and
whereas
Salt
Lake
City
has
written
investment
policy
under
article
eight
of
policy.
A
Now,
therefore,
be
it
resolved
that
the
Salt
Lake
City
Council
and
mayor
of
Salt
Lake
City,
you
firm
the
policy
of
Salt
Lake
City
to
not
directly
invest
in
the
fossil
fuel
industry,
be
it
further
resolved
that
the
Salt
Lake
City
Council
and
mayor
of
Salt
Lake
City,
agree
to
jointly
study
an
ethical
banking
policy
so
that
certain,
socially
and
environmentally
responsible
banking
practices
are
considered
as
bid
criteria
and
I.
Have
this
resolution
signed
by
our
entire
Council
and
Mayor
Jackie
bouzouki.
D
A
You
for
that
we're
gonna
move
on
to
item
six
under
a
six.
It's
the
council
in
Salt,
Lake,
City,
Fire
Department
want
to
recognize
dr.,
Jennifer
plumb
and
dr.
Sam
plumb,
from
Utah
naloxone
for
their
partnership
and
assistance
in
providing
the
community
with
life-saving,
lock.
Some
kits
and
I
want
to
turn
some
time
over
to
chief
Lee,
but
I'm,
assuming
you
have
something
to
say,
come
on
up
please
and
take
it
from
here.
E
Utah
is
essentially
in
a
war
with
opioids,
as
we
all
know,
there's
battles
being
waged
in
Ogden,
st.
George
Provo,
you
name
it
and,
of
course,
right
here
in
Salt,
Lake
City
as
well
in
the
country
where
the
rate
of
overdose
deaths
is
175
per
day.
Utah's
rate
of
overdoses
is
now
21st
in
the
nation
and
that's
down
from
a
high
of
4th
in
the
nation.
Just
for
four
years
ago,
over
600
utans
died
of
drug
overdoses.
Last
year
long.
E
But
there
are
people
who
want
to
change
these
numbers,
people
who
realize
we
must
take
an
active
role
and
start
advocating
for
ourselves
and
others:
dr.
Jennifer
plumb,
medical
director
of
the
Utah
and
alloxan
Association
and
assistant
pediatrics,
professor
at
the
University
of
Utah,
and
her
brother
Sam,
plum
program
manager
of
the
Utah
naloxone
Association.
E
Our
two
such
people,
Salt
Lake,
City,
Fire,
Department
and
Utah
naloxone
have
been
partnering
for
over
a
year
to
provide
at
no
cost
on
seeing
the
locks
on
kits
to
anyone
who
wishes
to
possess
one,
and
this
is
making
a
tangible
impact
on
over
800
individuals
and
families
who
have
received
them.
Thus
far.
We
have
people
calling
the
Public
Safety
Building
regarding
these
kits.
We
have
people
calling
the
fire
stations
and
frankly,
we
have
community
members,
stopping
our
crews
on
scene
to
ask
about
the
kids
this
antidote.
E
This
antidote
to
opioids
will
not
single-handedly
cure
our
addiction
epidemic,
but
will
give
many
people
a
second
chance
and
the
time
necessary
to
find
the
help
that
they
need
for
this.
The
Salt
Lake
City
Fire
Department,
wants
to
recognize
Jennifer
and
Sam
plum
with
the
citizen
medal
of
commendation
for
their
ongoing
collaboration
with
our
team
in
an
effort
to
make
a
difference
right
here
in
Salt,
Lake
City
I'd
like
to
ask
my
local
division,
Mike
Fox
chief,
who
has
nominated
the
plums
for
this
recognition
to
recite
the
details
of
their
awards.
Mike.
F
Members
of
the
Council
of
Madame
mayor,
if
I
could
just
add
to
the
Chiefs
words
that
it's
been
my
pleasure
to
work
with
both
Sam
and
Jennifer
over
the
last
couple
years.
It's
been
truly
humbling
to
see
the
professionalism,
integrity,
dedication
and
just
selflessness
that
they've
given
to
this
cause.
So
the
language
on
the
certificate
is
awarded
to
a
citizen
for
remarkable
action
through
a
display
of
courage
and
boldness
in
the
presence
of
a
difficult
challenge.
The
citizen
took
action
to
save
a
life
or
attempt
to
save
a
life.
Dr.
F
Jennifer
plumb
and
Sam
plumb,
developed
Utah
naloxone,
an
organization
dedicated
to
providing
life-saving
naloxone
kits
to
members
of
the
community.
They
have
spent
countless
hours,
educating
the
public
about
the
benefits
of
naloxone
and
were
instrumental
in
changing
state
laws
to
allow
access
to
naloxone
for
those
who
need
it.
In
January,
2017
Utah
naloxone
entered
into
an
agreement
with
Salt
Lake
City
Fire
Department
to
supply
leave
on
seam
locks
on
kids
throughout
the
community.
This
partnership
was
the
first
of
its
kind
and
has
been
recognized
nationally
for
its
life-saving
impact
within
Salt
Lake
City,
dr.
F
G
I
would
love
the
opportunity
to
say
a
few
words
boy:
I
I
was
trying
not
to
become
a
melty
mess
and
that
didn't
succeed.
I
am
so
grateful
to
what
Salt
Lake
City
Fire
Department
has
empowered
us
to
do
salmon
myself
when
we
got
into
this
realm.
It
was
an
area
where
there
was
a
lot
of
discomfort.
Shall
we
say
the
community
didn't
want
to
talk
about
it.
People
weren't
sure
this
was
okay
and
Salt
Lake
City
fire
from
day
one
was
there
to
open
doors
and
to
reassure
people
to
bring
law
enforcement
in
twofold.
G
They
really.
They
really
gave
us
the
vote
of
confidence
that
we
needed
and
I'm
so
grateful
that
they
and
the
city
have
allowed
us
to
proceed
forward,
because
this
has
never
been
about
us.
This
has
been
about
all
the
families
and
all
the
folks
that
are
struggling
and
20.
107
lives
have
been
saved
in
less
than
three
years
by
community
members
having
access
to
naloxone
kits
so
so
very
grateful.
This
partnership
has
been
priceless
and
precious
to
me.
So
thank
you,
but
thanks
really
is
from
me
to
you.
So
thank
you.
A
A
A
motion
to
approve
by
councillor
Rogers
a
second
by
councilmember
Johnston,
any
discussion
to
the
motion,
all
right,
all
those
in
favor
and
that
passes.
Thank
you
to
the
schedule
here
with
item
b1
and
to
our
public
hearings
and
our
first
public
hearing.
Our
only
public
hearing
is
around
aside
from
the
general
comment
funding
our
future
potential
sales
tax
increase
in
general
obligation,
bond
and
I
have
a
number
of
cards
we're
going
to
start
with
a
mere
Cornell
and
it
followed
by
Jotham,
come
on
up
a
mirror.
C
A
C
C
1St
I
would,
like
all
of
you,
take
your
time.
Go
to
each
district
of
yours
and
check
to
see
the
ad
you
gonna
feel
filled
with
the
requests.
You
know
the
people
did.
That's
all
I'm
asking
you
and
next
Saturday
is
gonna,
be
a
Salt
Lake
marathon.
If
you
even
just
come
to
my
neighborhood
27
South
28
East
I
would
like
you
just
see
the
neighborhood.
C
F
Greetings,
it
is
written,
listen
to
advice
and
accept
instruction
and,
in
the
end,
you'll
be
wise.
My
name
is
Josh
Hren,
Jotham
and
I
would
like
to
address
the
topic
of
funding
our
future
and
on
the
topic
of
tax
possible
tax
for
public
safety
to
provide
and
ensure
safety
and
prosperity
for
the
police.
The
public
in
the
greater
community,
a
Salt,
Lake
City
I
recommend
that
we
organize
classes
for
the
police
and
citizens
to
learn,
teach
and
discuss
the
following
three
to
four
items.
D
D
A
D
My
next
question
that
I
would
like
you
to
think
about,
and
I
hope
has
been
addressed,
is:
are
these
funds
if
they
are
not
used
for
the
appropriate
or
the
the
mentioned
items?
The
items
that
the
council
and
the
mayor
has
used
to
help
promote
this
to
the
public.
Are
these
funds
then
going
to
go
to
the
general
fund?
If,
at
some
point
the
council
decides,
maybe
transit
isn't
as
important
as
we
thought
it
was
a
while
ago?
D
Are
the
police
officers
not
as
important
as
are
the
streets
not
as
important,
and
if
that
is
the
case,
I
hope
you
will
spend
a
great
deal
more
time
going
over
this.
Getting
it
right.
I
would
hope
that
you
would
make
it
more
specific,
in
other
words,
we're
going
after
5%
for
a
variety
of
items.
Why
aren't
we
going
after
1%
for
police
1%
for
housing
1%
for
this
I
think
these,
if
you're
not
sure
time.
H
I
I
Okay,
very
good,
so
we
get
taxed
every
year.
We
sit
in
front
of
the
council,
the
board
and
we
go
through
our
tax
review.
Our
property
taxes
go
up
every
year.
Somebody
sits
back
and
says
your
property
has
gone
up
and
if
the
property
tax
doesn't
go
up,
you
raise
the
rate,
and
the
problem
has
been
is
that
we
have
no
relief
on
our
side.
We
sit
there,
it's
a
frivolous
meeting.
I,
don't
think
anybody
has
any
relief
from
it.
I
Taxes
continue
to
go
up
on
all
levels
and
that's
been
a
problem,
because
over
here
you've
got
city
police
going.
You
know,
crimes
going
up,
but
yet
this
time
last
year
we
had
the
City
Council
and
also
sorry
the
the
county
and
the
city
group
somehow
get
together
and
reduce
the
arrest
ability
of
misdemeanors
and
all
of
a
sudden
crime
has
gone
through
the
roof.
Three
days
ago,
a
guy
with
a
screwdriver
went
through
all
of
our
mailboxes.
It
happens
all
the
time
we're
all
connected.
I
We
see
this
happen
all
the
time
when
we
sit
in
our
city
council
meetings,
police
officers
say
there.
I
cannot
arrest
this
guy
of
breaking
into
a
car
because
it's
not
an
arrest
of
all
offense,
so
here's
the
county
and
the
city
saying
we're
gonna
lower
the
misdemeanor.
Now
we
cannot
arrest
them,
but
yet
now
we
need
more
police
officers
on
the
street.
I
So
it
sounds
like
a
racket
to
me
and
then
here
it
is
this:
twenty
million
dollar
bond
somebody
was
going
to
place
a
homeless,
shelter
in
the
middle
of
sugar
house
and
that
went
down
like
pitchforks
and
torches.
It
was
not
the
right
thing
to
do.
You
cannot
do
this
kind
of
thing.
The
city
and
the
council
and
making
decisions
like
that
behind
people's
backs
is
unacceptable,
and
then
we
have
this
crime
problem.
Why
don't
you
take
20
million
dollars
and
solve
the
crime
problem?
I
Put
the
police
officers
make
it
an
arrest,
able
offense
put
people
in
jail
for
making
crimes
instead
of
doing
these
other
frivolous
projects?
The
other
thing
we
can
fix
this
survey.
The
survey
you
guys
put
on
there
is
ridiculous.
There's
double
negatives:
people
don't
know
what
you're
talking
about
the
outcome
is
almost
predicted
for
what
outcomes
the
city
wants
to
see
and
time.
Ii
do
not
want
that.
So
no
taxes
thank.
J
I
work
for
crossroads
urban
center.
As
you
all
know,
we've
been
here
many
many
times
over
many
many
years.
We
think
this
is
the
very
best
opportunity
we've
had
for
affordable
housing
in
Salt
Lake,
going
back
to
the
time
35
years
ago,
maybe
longer
where
we
had
a
council
and
a
mayor
who
both
believed
that
you
have
to
do
something
about
making
housing
available
to
the
lowest
income
people
in
the
city.
You
know
the
breadth
of
the
problem
you
and
the
mayor
of
declared
a
crisis
in
the
city.
That's
an
understatement.
J
If
there
was
ever
a
statement,
it
should
be
broader.
It
should
be
deeper.
What
you're
doing
for
housing,
5
million
is
a
good
start.
10
would
be
better.
The
whole
tax
increase
would
be
better
for
housing.
You
can
bond
for
the
other
things
you
can
assign
housing,
10
million
dollars
and
not
hurt
anyone's
feelings.
We
think
this
is
a
great
opportunity
to
start
it
and
to
declare
it
permanent.
5
million
dollars
a
year
will
set
a
precedent.
J
Our
housing
trust
fund
has
been
in
existence
about
20
years
some
years,
there's
500,000
some
years,
there's
3
million,
but
it's
never
consistent.
What
we
need
is
consistency,
dedication,
positivity
on
the
fact
that
we
we
have
so
many
homeless
people.
We
have
so
many
people
who
need
transitional
housing.
J
We
have
housing,
needs
galore,
and
this
is
a
small,
humble
beginning,
we're
on
your
side,
charges
the
tax
and
charge
those
people
who
come
in
and
out
of
the
city,
the
tax
it's
about
time,
I
live
in
the
city
and
I've
seen
my
housing
value
go
up
four
times
in
23
years.
My
house
is
worth
four
times
what
it
was
23
years
ago
and
if
this
tax
had
been
there,
if
we
were
paying
more
property
tax,
where
we're
paying
more
sales
tax,
you
wouldn't
have
the
horrible
problem
you
have
with
housing.
C
K
Of
say,
I'm,
Jim,
Webster,
I
live
in
Yale
crest
area.
I
just
want
to
kind
of
say
that
the
emphasis
is
kind
of
on
the
wrong
syllable.
Here
where
we
live,
the
the
University
traffic
is
just
unbelievable.
Two
hundred
thousand
cars
a
day,
there's
been
very
little
willingness
on
the
part
of
the
city
to
address
that
directly
and
I
think
there's
mechanisms
and
ways
to
do
that.
I
was
on
Mayer,
Dolly,
Parton
or
dolly
dolly
plum
was.
K
There's
there's
got
to
be
a
way
of
finding
some
sort
of
equitable
position
between
the
university
impacts,
not
only
in
terms
of
traffic
and
deterioration
of
roads,
but
also
the
noise,
the
lights
and
all
the
other
factors
that
our
dealer
Tereus
to
the
community,
because
that
facility
has
just
grown
without
any
control,
certainly
because
the
city
has
does
not
have
the
ability
to
deal
with
that
I
command
Patrick.
For
his
willingness
to
deal
with
the
noise
impact
it
will
have.
K
Ii
will
be
having
this
next
coming
weekend
with
the
super
cross,
but
the
city
has
nothing
to
about
those
kinds
of
things
and
I
think
we
need
to
be
more
aggressive.
The
city
of
Orem,
for
instance,
apparently,
has
a
has
a
much
stronger
position
with
respect
to
the
universe.
Utah,
Valley,
University
and
I
would
hope.
We
could
look
at
that,
and
maybe
that's
some
kind
of
a
model
that
we
can
use
to
have
a
little
bit
stronger,
say
and
where
these,
where
these
impacts
can
be
resolved.
K
Certainly,
a
fee
attached
to
a
parking
pass
would
be
a
beginning
step,
make
it
even
less
friendly
in
terms
of
traffic
going
to
the
you
every
day
and
certainly
and
dedicate
that
money
to
roads.
There's
a
lot
of
ways,
I
think
we
could
we
could
explore
to
better
serve
the
community.
Thank
you
for
your
time.
Thank.
L
Alright,
so
my
name
is
crystal
ball.
You
all
know
me
I've,
been
here
several
times
already
regarding
this
issue
again,
I
feel
very
strongly
that
the
allocation
of
the
funds
of
the
four
toward
the
fifty
police
officers
is
a
terrible
error,
partly
done
last
year
by
this
City
Council
and
now
continuing
by
this
current
city
council.
L
As
we
know,
the
mayor's
office
only
127
police
officers,
but
you
all
will
quickly
to
approve
fifty
police
officers
to
continue
the
the
I
am
my
opinion
in
the
extreme
overburdening
on
our
citizens,
particularly
those
who
are
marginalized
and
and
lower
social
economic
thresholds.
So
I
go
to
school
full
time.
I
go
to
work
full
time.
I
do
other
extra
credit
if
--'tis
I
can't
keep
coming
every
Tuesday,
not
here,
it's
not
part
of
my
job,
but
I
want
to.
Let
you
all
know
that
these
things
are
affecting
our
communities.
L
L
Even
though
many
of
us
stand
against
people
carrying
guns
or
want
more
gun
control,
as
a
citizen
of
the
city,
I
feel
like
and
also
the
student
and
a
person
of
color,
a
queer
person
of
color
I
feel
that
regardless
my
regarding
my
personal
or
historical
anecdotes
of
people
like
me
facing
police
and
police
violence,
its
I
feel,
in
my
perspective,
the
city's
City,
Council
and
mayor's
office
is
continuing
harm
toward
us.
Why
don't?
I
still
don't
know?
I
still
haven't
received
an
answer
regarding
what
what
cultural
competency
looks
like
from
the
police
department.
L
I
asked
him
two
weeks
ago,
given
my
contact
info,
nothing
still,
I,
don't
know
how
what
the
escalation
tactics
are
used.
The
national
average
58
hours
are
spent
doing
gun,
gun
practice,
but
only
eight
hours
are
spent
in
de-escalation
training.
Also,
as
we
know,
many
police
officers
have
bias
in
their
training
and
toward
how
they
conduct
with
turning
people
and
certain
populations.
L
Hi
I
want
to
make
sure
that
you
are
listening.
That's
why
I
developed
that
handout
again
I'm
a
full
time
student
full
time
person
goes
to
work.
I,
don't
have
enough
time
to
go
and
do
this
I
know
it's
kind
of
cheesy,
but
I
really
want
to
understand
that
many
of
us
just
don't
have
time
to
come
into
privilege
for
me
to
come
here
and
I.
Need
you
to
understand.
So
that's
why
I
give
up
the
housing
so
that
handout
so
I
think
it's
a
very
much
for
your
time.
Thank
you.
A
M
M
Second,
we
need
even
more
dollar
put
into
the
improved
Street
conditions
since,
according
to
the
traffic
report
or
the
Department
of
Transportation,
by
putting
that
money
in,
we
will
only
improve
the
quality
of
our
streets
by
12%
and
that's
in
a
10-year
period
of
time,
with
the
funding
that
you're
proposing
it
needs
even
more
dollars.
Third,
the
improved
streets
should
get
all
of
the
money
proposed
for
the
greater
housing
opportunities
and
better
transit
systems,
sources
of
transit
services.
All
of
that
money
should
go
to
improve
streets.
M
I've
analyzed
the
growing
Salt
Lake
City
5-year
housing
plan
that
they
handed
out,
because
I
spoke
to
all
the
representatives
at
that
at
that
open
house,
the
numbers
that
are
in
this
plan
or
a
joke
with
the
objectives
they
have
identified,
they
will
never
be
able
to
meet
that
it
will
take
a
lot
more
funding.
Is
the
one
gentleman
from
the
Urban's
crossroad.
Center
said:
it'll,
take
a
lot
more
so
much
more.
That
I
think
they
need
to
go
back
to
the
drawing
board
and
relook
at
that
and
come
up
with
a
better
blueprint.
M
Finally,
I
think
we
need
to
avoid
the
bait
and
switch
that
was
done
by
Mayor
Becker's
administration
a
few
years
ago,
where
a
property
into
in
cropper
T
tax
increase
for
capital
improvements
was
proposed,
but
the
majority
of
the
money
went
to
salary
increases.
That
is
not
how
transparency
works,
and
hopefully
that
will
not
happen
again.
I
urge
the
council
to
follow
Charley,
Luke's
suggestions
and
earmark
what
that
money
is
going
to
be
funded
for,
because
that's
critical
and
finally,
the
last
sentence
in
the
flyer
that
they
handed
out
says
if
the
general
okay
thank.
N
N
Obviously,
none
of
you,
so
why
should
you
be
in
charge
of
any
tax
increase
that
you
get
off
the
back
of
the
working
class
people?
I
I
would
like
to
know
what
happened
to
all
the
money
that
the
state
budget
has
given
to
you
guys
the
past
couple
years
for
road
maintenance.
Where
has
that
money
gone
because
the
cities
or
the
streets
I
Drive,
on
I
ride
the
bus
on
very
few
of
them
have
like
no
potholes
things
like
that.
So
where
did
that
money?
N
You
guys
need
to
stop
relying
on
the
on
the
backs
of
the
the
taxpayers,
and
you
know,
earn
some
fiscal
responsibility
on
how
to
better
manage
your
money.
I
have
no
one
I
can
tax
if
I
run
out
of
money.
What
entitles
you,
tyrants
to
rule
over
your
fiefdoms
and
just
decide.
This
is
the
way
it's
going
to
be.
We
can't
spend
money
in
a
responsible
way,
but
oh
look.
We
can
increase
the
taxes
on
the
taxpayers.
They'll
cover
our
flops
that
that
is
so
wrong.
N
On
so
many
levels,
I
highly
suspect
that
this
was
in
a
transparent
setting,
but
you
guys
have
probably
already
made
up
your
mind
just
like
the
the
homeless
shelter
that
was
going
to
be
put
on
Simpson.
It
wasn't
like
that
decision
was
made
behind
closed
doors.
No,
that's
not
it
I
always
suggest
you
quit
you
quit
using.
You
divert
from
the
Cloward
and
Piven
tactics
to
try
and
bankrupt
the
people
in
the
government
to
bring
in
your
progressive
utopia
speaking
of
progressive
utopia.
N
Can
anyone
explain
what
that
looks
like
the
steps
you
take
just
pushes
farther
there
I'm
a
big
believer
of
small
government
self-governance.
Even
there
was
a
white
man
called
Thomas
Jefferson,
and
he
stated
when
the
government
fears
the
people.
There
is
Liberty
when
people
fear
the
government,
there
is
tyranny,
he
also
time
tyranny.
The
time
is
four
minutes
to
eight.
A
A
O
City
Council
mayor
thanks
for
having
all
of
us
here,
I
am
Michele
McArdle.
Some
of
you
know
me
some
of
you
don't
care
to
know
me.
That's
that's
good
too.
As
far
as
housing
and
tax
increase
I'm,
actually
all
for
it,
I'll
double
it
personally,
I
am
middle-class.
So
if
anyone
says
or
working-class,
that's
me,
that's
my
family
issues.
I
have
with
this,
though,
are
one.
We
have
a
you
major
university
in
Salt,
Lake
City.
We
have
a
community
college
that
that
resides
at
the
south
campus,
which
is
partially
in
the
city.
O
We
have
three
incredible
public
high
schools
in
the
city:
let's
use
those
brains,
because
those
guys
are
a
lot
smarter
than
I
am
anymore.
And
let's
ask
these
kids
hey.
You
guys
need
an
internship
paper,
internship
credits.
What
can
you
guys
do
help
us
study?
What
can
we
do
to
increase
road
construction
at
a
cheaper
rate
instead
of
just
putting
out
another
RFA
getting
or
RFI
and
getting
the
the
cheapest
bid
so
that
we
run
into
more
potholes
two
years
down
the
road?
What
can
we
use?
Instead?
O
Why
aren't
we
actually
looking
at
different
types
of
solutions?
Rather
than
just
hey,
let's,
let's
fix
roads,
let's
use
some
brains
and
get
these
these
people
on
board.
It
gives
them
life
and,
as
far
as
as
police
officers,
do
we
need
more
police
officers.
I,
don't
know,
I
mean
I've
got
50
police
officers
that
drive
by
my
street
20
times
a
day.
I
know
most
of
them
by
name
not
because
I'm
a
bad
person
this
early,
but
because
they're
patrolling
the
streets
I
feel
like
they're
doing
their
job.
O
The
problem
is
they
can't
arrest
somebody
if
there's
nowhere
to
put
them
and
arresting
somebody
because
they
sold.
You
know
an
ounce
of
of
marijuana
big
deal.
They
take
them
to
jail,
they
get
out
tomorrow.
They
arrest
him
again.
They
take
them
to
jail,
they
get
out
these
people
get
bench
warrants
and
go
nowhere
and
it's
a
continuation
of
a
bad
cycle.
So
I'm.
P
Q
My
name
is
Mitch
Rankin
I
attended,
Massachusetts
Institute
of
Technology
getting
a
bachelor's
in
mechanical
engineering
life
events
forced
me
to
be
what's
called
a
health
nut.
Unfortunately,
my
stepdad
died
when
he
was
38.
Another
stepdad
died
when
he
was
62.
My
dad
died
when
he
was
57.
I
had
cancer
when
I
was
21,
I
spent
five
seven
hours
week,
reading
health
and
nutrition
articles.
Unfortunately,
there's
a
health
problem,
we've
overlooked
and
it's
something
a
city
should
address,
because
you
build
people
for
water.
Unfortunately,
their
we
buy.
Q
Our
water
violates
EPA
requirements
on
three
carcinogenic
elements
and
poisonous
arsenic,
hexavalent
chromium
and
other
radioactive
elements
and
I
think
you
know
considering
it's
one
of
the
primary
services
that
the
city
provides.
We
should
come
up
with
a
solution
and
that,
obviously
cost
is
part
of
it
and
I
think
just
bill
it
as
part
of
it
bill
it
as
part
of
the
monthly
water
bill.
I
should
also
mention
I
spent
eight
years
working
as
a
paralegal
for
lawyer
and
state
representative
district
43
Earl
Tanner
jr.
Q
after
serving
there
unfortunately
had
friction
with
a
landlord.
This
is
a
second
item.
I'm
changing
topics.
I
had
friction
with
a
landlord,
they
broke
state
law,
they
changed
the
locks
on
me.
Even
though
rent
was
fully
paid.
They
stole
my
car.
They
ordered
a
tow
truck
to
steal
my
car
I'm
aced
I
caught
the
tow
truck
driver
at
1:30
in
the
morning
and
maced
him
I
didn't
know
which
spot
was
appropriately
mine
in
this
condo,
complex
and
I
was
charged
with
assault.
I
saw
12
constitutional
rights
broken
as
I
went
through
this
process.
Q
H
A
R
R
There
is
going
to
be
a
lawsuit
against
the
city.
I
speak
one
language
and
that's
law.
So
at
this
point
a
lot
of
the
ideas
are
not
gonna
work,
I'm,
actually
coming
from
Seattle
I've
only
been
here
12
days.
Your
homeless
plan
is
not
gonna.
Work,
I'm,
currently
homeless,
I'm
a
photographer,
it's
absolutely
not
gonna
work.
Seattle
has
done
the
same
thing.
It's
felt
miserably!
That's
why
I'm
here
so
you're
gonna
go
through
gentrification.
The
mayor
is
fully
aware
of
the
city
is
not
going
to
be
affordable
for
anyone
in
about
four
years.
R
No
one's
going
to
be
able
to
afford
it
to
live
here.
It's
already
happening
now.
Seattle
has
actually
done
the
same
thing,
and
this
is
why
I'm
here
there's
video
I
am
going
to
release
dealing
with
issue
that
happened
to
me.
I,
don't
think
this
forum
is
correct.
I
think
I'm
going
to
be
speaking
after
this,
but
just
know,
sales
increase
is
not
going
to
work.
I've
actually
met
with
the
chief
of
police,
Mike
Brown
I
just
met
with
the
assistant
fire
chief.
You
guys
have
it
all
wrong.
R
A
P
Hi,
my
name
is
Chris
Robinson.
You
should
know
me
very
well
by
face
and
I've
campaigned
for
both
of
you,
my
husband,
Gary
Gary
and
I
live
at
1:1
3
East
Wilson
Avenue.
We
have
lived
there
since
June
of
1986.
We
live
just
to
the
east
of
the
Capitol
Motel
homeless.
Shelter
opened
one
week
ago
with
little
fanfare
and
no
notice
to
nearby
residents.
P
When
we
contacted
people
here
at
the
city,
we
were
told
it
wasn't
time
for
us
to
know
anything
about
these
plans.
I
say
it's
too
late.
When
we
voted,
we
thought
we
voted
for
open
government.
Apparently
we
were
wrong.
Our
neighbors,
unless
we
have
spoken
with
them,
do
not
know
anything
about
this.
This
is
wrong.
E
Thank
you,
I'm
gonna,
be
brief.
I
live
in
district
4
and
I
just
wanted
to
share
my
thoughts
that
somehow
the
City
Council
and
the
mayor's
office
believe
that
we
need
50,
more
police
officers.
We
already
per
capita
one
of
the
most
police
cities
in
the
United
States,
and
actually,
if
you
include
small
towns,
Bountiful,
is
the
most
policed
per
capita
place
in
the
United
States.
E
There's
also
no
proof
in
any
studies
that
more
police
make
streets
safer
or
even
cleaner
and
in
a
city
concerned
about
gun
control
and
getting
more
guns
off
the
streets.
You
want
to
put
50
more
on
the
streets.
If
you've
been
paying
attention,
there
have
been
two
palete
people
killed
by
police
in
the
last
two
weeks.
I
know
they
were
both
West
Valley,
but
if
you
add
50,
more
police
officers,
Salt
Lake,
City,
you're
gonna
start
seeing
something
like
Baltimore
or
Sacramento.
E
A
D
There
I
wasn't
planning
on
speaking
today,
but
never
done
so,
but
I
thought
it
was
a
pretty
interesting
topic
and
so
I,
and
that
would
affect
me,
sir
I
live
downtown
and
have
to
use
the
bike
lanes
and
public
transport
and
so
I
appreciate
where
these
funds,
the
tax
increase,
will
go.
I
do
agree
with
some
of
the
other
people
that
have
been
speaking
that
and
it's
good
to
be
transparent
about
where
that
funding
will
go.
D
My
only
concern
with
just
a
blanket
taxi
crease
is
that
it
does
affect
people
of
lower
SES
or
with
fixed
incomes,
and
so
that's
just
something
to
consider
and
then
something
you
know:
I'm
not
Utah
native
but
I'm
at
my
home
state
in
Texas,
there's
a
thing
called
tax
holidays,
I,
don't
know
if
that's
something
you
guys
have
ever
considered.
It
usually
happens
one
weekend
of
the
year
and
usually
around
the
start
of
a
new
school
year.
So
it
really
helps
people
with
clothing
purchases.
D
S
A
B
A
A
count
motion
by
councilmember
kitchen,
a
second
by
a
councilmember
Rogers.
Was
it
any
discussion
to
this
motion
if
I
may
take
a
moment
for
the
discussions
sake
to
let
you
all
know
that
the
council
had
a
pretty
extended
discussion
earlier
today
at
our
work
session
about
some
of
the
specifics
a
lot.
Some
people
spoke
about
specifics
tonight.
A
We
will
continue
that
discussion
with
an
intention
to
tie
up
those
decisions
and
take
a
vote
on
May,
1st
and
I
will
say
that
for
for
me
personally
and
I
think
for
many
of
us
that
binding
that
money
in
as
much
as
we
can
bind
future
councils
and
administrations
is
a
priority
for
us
and
we've
all
heard
and
share
in
the
commitment
to
address
the
needs
that
we're
talking
about
addressing
and
to
do
that
into
the
future.
So
May
first
feel
free
to
come
back
that
pub
that
work
session
discussion
is
I'm,
always
live
on.
A
B
A
R
A
A
Social,
we
should
take
action
and
just
defer
it
or
we
can
table
it
great.
Let's
just
move
on
we're
as
I
said,
deferring
that
discussion
told
me
first
item
c2,
which
is
a
resolution
regarding
the
interlocal
agreement,
amendment
4
located
in
the
Salt
Lake
City
prosecutor's
office
in
the
Salt
Lake
County
District
Attorney's
Office
I'll,
look
for
a
motion.
B
A
M
Chair
I
move
the
council
adopt
an
ordinance
amending
the
final
budget
for
south
of
Salt
Lake
City
for
fiscal
year,
2017
2018,
as
proposed
by
the
administration,
except
for
one
adjusting
item:
a3
1300
East
reconstruction
to
use;
239
thousand
seven
hundred
ninety
seven
dollars
in
streets
impact
fees,
378
thousand
two
hundred
and
seventy
dollars
and
repurpose
state
funds
and
1.5
million
in
Class
C
funds,
and
to
release
the
contingent
appropriation
of
four
hundred
and
sixty
nine
thousand
five
hundred.
Ninety
eight
dollars
in
the
existing
IMS
budget.
Second
I
have.
A
M
R
B
A
M
A
B
A
M
B
A
A
Okay,
then
we
have
section
D
2
or
we
get
to
receive
comments
from
anybody
in
the
audience
to
the
City
Council.
As
with
all
the
other
public
hearings,
you
get
two
minutes
to
speak
and
we
shall
hear
from
Jeshurun
jotham
again
and
then
Cristobal
Vegas
after
that,
but
it
looks
like
mr.
Jotham
may
have
met
left,
okay.
Well,
if
he
comes
back,
we
can
reorient
him.
L
L
L
R
This
is
the
real
reason
why
I'm
here
this
is
actually
the
first
time
I've
come
to
a
council
meeting.
I've
actually
come
to
set
up
a
meeting
with
the
mayor
and
I
was
informed
to
do
that
through
Simone
Butler,
but
Simone
Butler
will
not
answer
her
cell
phone
and
she
hasn't
returned
my
texts.
So
there's
some
video
footage
that
I'm
actually
getting
ready
to
release
with
my
counterpart
believe
his
name
is
Taylor
W
Anderson.
R
He
is
with
the
Salt
Lake
Tribune
I
was
discriminated
against
right
here
at
the
downtown
City
Library,
basically,
I
needed
to
do
number
two
I
was
kicked
out
of
the
library
and
it's
all
on
video
I
was
kicked
out
of
the
downtown,
a
Salt
Lake
City
library,
for
trying
to
use
the
bathroom.
This
is
the
most
ridiculous
thing
that
I've
ever
recorded
in
my
life.
I'm
furious
at
this
under
title.
R
Actually,
under
42
USC
1983,
a
lawsuit
will
be
brought
against
the
city
for
human
rights
violations,
constitutional
rights
violations
and,
if
you
guys
choose
to
ignore
it,
I
am
the
lawyer.
I
don't
need
a
lawyer,
I'm
gonna
sue
the
city
for
this.
It's
total
humiliation
and
it's
several
issues
dealing
with
discrimination
and
the
city
and
I
came
by
accident.
To
this
meeting
sure
enough
I
was
trying
to
get
a
meeting
with
you,
and
here
you
are
mayor,
I'm
actually
trying
to
set
up
this
meeting
with
you.
R
I
would
be
glad
to
stay
to
discuss
and
show
you,
the
video.
The
videos
are
in
my
phone,
and
this
is
a
very
serious
situation
and
I
shouldn't
have
been
treated
like
this
and
there's
also
signs
posted
in
the
library
saying.
Please
limit
your
bathroom
use
to
five
minutes.
This
is
unconstitutional.
I'm
pissed
off
I've
only
been
here
for
12
days
in
your
city
and
in
your
state,
and
that's
what
I
want
to
say.
It's
a
legal
action
from
here
on
out
bottom
line.
T
Hi,
my
name
is
Dave
Ellis
I'm
from
Salt
Lake
City
and
from
cycling.
Utah
I
came
to
speak
on
the
bike.
License
overhaul
that
you're
gonna
be
voting
on
potentially
voting
on
shortly
notice
that
you
did
not
have
a
public
hearing
on
this
I
think
the
ordinance
is
generally
good.
It's
a
well
needed
change,
it's
something
that
might
improve
licensing.
Our
current
system
is
completely
and
utterly
broken
and
it
is
so
overhauling.
It
is
a
good
thing.
There
are
a
number
of
potential
problems.
T
However,
in
the
past,
when
I
was
chair
of
the
mayor's
Bicycle
Advisory
Committee,
we
would
get
reports
of
the
requirement
for
licenses
being
used
to
confiscate
bikes
and
mass
at
the
homeless,
shelter.
So
we'd
get
reports
that
50
bikes
were
confiscated
and
rounded
up
and
taken
off
to
the
police
department
because
they
did
not
have
licenses
some
are
taken
off,
even
if
they
did
have
licenses.
This
has
been
a
good
eight
to
ten
years
since
this
has
occurred,
but
it's
something
to
be
wary
of
in
the
future.
T
Additionally,
the
system
that's
being
proposed
to
for
the
Electronic
Registration
my
contacts,
who
do
this
for
a
living
that
run
a
non-profit
website
called
bike
index,
do
not
think
very
much
of
the
system
that
the
police
department
is
going
to
is
proposing
to
use
the
system
that
puts
it
gets
put
into
place.
Won't
address
ebikes
because
there's
a
conflict
in
state
law
about
that
ebikes
are
rising.
There
is
the
need
to
have
the
system
fit
in
regionally
and
nationally,
and
also
to
have
public
information
available
so
that
the
public
can
help
to
recover
bikes.
T
N
Comus,
ours
there's
a
saying:
I,
don't
know
if
it
actually
holds
any
legal
weight,
but
it's
called
taxation
without
representation.
Mr.
Luke
ooh
I
haven't
had
been
able
to
catch.
You
no
I
know
who
he
represents
the
comp,
the
interaction
he
had
with
Goldman
Sachs.
He
came
away
and
I
swear.
There
was
brown
stuff
on
his
nose.
That's
who
he
represents,
he
doesn't
represent
me
I
asked
for
help.
Where
is
he
nowhere
to
be
seen
this
gentleman,
the
district
1
commissar?
N
He
was
nice
enough
to
help
me,
but
it
was
a
wild,
goose
chase
which
got
me
nowhere.
I'm
just
saying
this
is
taxation
without
representation,
because
I
don't
know
who
you
guys
represent,
but
it's
not.
We
the
people
that
our
backs
are
breaking
because
you
just
feel
willy-nilly
to
place
more
burdens
on
us
and
taxes
right.
All
these
apartment,
buildings
and
stuff
are
going
up
all
over
the
city.
Hardly
any
of
them
were
filled.
Who's
gonna
live
there.
Oh
wait!
The
mayor's
grand
plan
to
bankrupt
everyone.
This
sounds
like
progressive,
slash,
socialist
program
here.
N
It
makes
sense.
Now
you
guys
want
to
save
money,
stop
putting
fluoride
in
the
water
CNN
had
an
article
about
fluoride
in
pregnant
women,
and
it
makes
them
the
The
Young
and
in
there
have
lower
IQs
I
handed
you
guys
all
well,
not
you,
because
you
weren't
there
when
I
handed
it
out
the
study
from
Harvard,
not
not
okie-doke
middle
school,
but
Harvard
that
says
fluoride,
messes
up
people's
head.
You
want
to
stay
out,
save
money,
stop
buying
the
chemicals,
stop
paying
for
protection,
168
thousand
dollars
for
another
bodyguard
and
a
chauffeur
that
that's
ridiculous.
N
Know
what
you
have
not
provided
me
evidence
that
your
powers
can
supersede
that
of
God.
We
all
have
god-given
rights
in
the
Declaration
of
Independence.
I
am
NOT
here
from
some
other
country.
Our
time
here,
I'm
an
American
citizen,
I,
have
the
freedom
of
speech.
You
have
no
authority
to
dictate
what
my
speech
is.
Mr.
Berenson,
you
know
your
time's
up,
yeah
I
know
because
I
allow
you
to
take
it
from
me.
Thank
you.
I'm
Sylvia,
nice
snack.
As
far
as
the
police
go
I
applaud
them.
N
G
N
N
B
A
S
S
Thank
you,
hello.
My
name
is
Silvia
nibbly
I'm,
a
resident
of
Salt
Lake
City
and
the
founder
of
the
Warm
Springs
Alliance.
We
are
a
non-profit
forum
to
protect
the
Warm
Springs
landmark
site
and
hot
springs,
preserve
the
Wasatch
plunge
building
at
840,
North
Beck
Street,
and
re-establish
its
role
as
a
public
gathering
place
that
serves
the
whole
community.
S
As
you
may
already
know,
the
city's
consideration
of
the
proposal
for
residential
development
at
Warm
Springs
ended
last
week
and
on
behalf
of
the
thousands
who
strongly
oppose
that
direction,
I
want
to
thank
the
members
of
city
government
who
included
the
Alliance
in
that
conversation
and
for
hearing
the
desires
of
the
community.
We'd
also
like
to
thank
the
mayor
for
opposing
that
development
and
the
members
of
the
council,
who
have
been
supportive
of
our
efforts
to
protect
Warm
Springs.
S
Now
that
the
RFP
process
is
complete,
we
joined
the
city
and
looking
forward
to
starting
fresh
and
sharing
what
we've
learned
about
viable
alternatives.
For
this
singular
landmark.
We
especially
thank
Chris
Wharton
for
his
support
and
Aaron
and
Aaron
Mendenhall
for
suggesting
that
the
city
consider
including
some
funds
in
the
budget
to
assess
the
condition
of
several
historic
vacant,
city-owned
properties
with
potential
to
serve
the
community.
S
So
the
list
compiled
by
the
Warm
Springs
Alliance
in
collaboration
with
preservation
Utah,
includes
the
Wasatch
plunge
the
Utah
theater
Salt
Lake
City
29th,
Ward
10th,
the
Senior
Center
and
possibly
the
Fisher
mansion.
A
minimal
investment
will
provide
the
information
needed
to
utilize
these
properties
as
community
assets.
So
the
Alliance
and
many
citizens
stand
ready
to
support
these
assessments
and
we
look
forward
to
positive
collaboration
and
problem
solving
for
many
years
to
come
thanks.
So
much
for
listening.
Thank.
A
A
L
B
A
E
B
A
M
J
A
J
H
Utah
2018
spring
breakfast.
The
topic
is:
what
makes
a
global
trade
center
successful.
There's
a
few
council
members
that
excepted
and
the
cost
to
purchase
the
table
is
$600.
If
ten
people
want
to
go
so
periodically,
we
check
in
with
the
council
to
see
if
you
would
rather
purchase
a
table
or
just
individual
tickets
for
the
event.
So
is.
H
Pull
a
mic
up,
Patrick
will
check
in
with
the
mayor's
office
and
get
back
to
you
guys.
Okay,
since
we
have
a
few
weeks
to
figure
it
out.
Okay,
then.
The
next
item
is
for
the
mosquito
abatement
board.
There
are
four
sorry
there
are
three
vacant
vacancies
and
four
eligible
applicants
to
fill
those
vacancies.
In
the
past,
the
council
has
had
a
subcommittee
to
vet
the
interested
applicants
and
make
a
recommendation
to
the
council.
The
materials
on
these
applicants
were
provided
to
you
in
your
confidential
session
materials.
So
how
would
the
council
like
to
proceed?