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From YouTube: Salt Lake City Council Formal Meeting - 6/5/2018
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A
Now
it
is
okay,
alright,
we'd
like
to
welcome
everyone
to
tonight's
formal
meeting
of
the
Salt
Lake
City
Council.
We've
got
a
lot
on
the
agenda
tonight.
You're
gonna
see
a
lot
of
different
hats.
You're
gonna
see
the
local
Building
Authority
you're
gonna,
see
the
RTA
and
you're
gonna,
see
the
City
Council
and
they're
never
going
to
change
seats,
we'll
stay
here
the
entire
time.
So
we
would
like
to
welcome
each
of
you
to
our
meeting
this
evening.
A
We
appreciate
that
you've
taken
time
out
of
your
day
to
attend,
participate
into
your
local
government
at
work.
I
would
like
to
highlight
that
we
have
business
tonight
that
I
discussed
with
the
local
Building
Authority,
the
RDA,
which
is
a
Redevelopment
Agency
Board,
and
the
City
Council
I
want
to
make
a
distinction
for
the
public's
understanding
and
to
ensure
that
we
have
a
clear
record
council
members,
don't
just
serve
on
the
City
Council
when
we're
elected
were
elected
to
also
serve
as
the
Redevelopment
Agency
board
and
the
local
Building
Authority.
A
Think
of
it
as
a
council
wearing
three
different
hats.
We
were
beginning
with
the
business
of
the
local
Building,
Authority
or
LBA,
then
we'll
move
on
to
the
RDA
and
RDA
business
and
then,
finally
to
city
council
business
to
start
the
meeting.
We
have
laid
out
some
guidelines
for
decorum
and
civility
to
make
sure
that
people
feel
comfortable
and
safe
to
participate.
When
giving
public
comment,
these
guidelines
apply
whether
we
are
acting
as
the
lva,
the
RDA
or
the
City
Council.
A
Please
be
respectful
during
other
people's
comments
avoid
cheering
during
because
it
could
cause
someone
to
feel
intimidated.
Please
also
to
help
take
care
of
this
historic
meeting.
Room
I
understand
that
you're
holding
signs
out
in
the
back
be
careful
of
the
painting
in
the
back
as
well
as
the
furniture.
It's
all
historic.
This
is
the
only
room
in
this
building.
That's
still
used
for
its
original
purpose,
so
we're
going
to
get
started
if
with
the
Pledge
of
Allegiance.
So
if
you'll
stand
and
and
we'll
go
over,
that.
A
B
A
A
A
E
E
A
A
Motion
by
council
a
board
member
Johnston
and
second
by
board
member
kitchen,
all
those
in
favor
hi
and
that
passes
we
are
on
to
Section
B,
the
public
hearings,
I'm
gonna
call
to
names
at
a
time.
Rules
of
decorum
still
apply,
I'll
call
the
first
name.
Second,
wouldn't
be
at
the
ready,
but
I
do
not
have
any
cards.
Is
there
anyone
wishing
to
speak
to
any
of
these
public
hearings,
b1.
A
F
A
F
The
650
North
Rd
a
proposal
for
track
station
effectively
you're
making
tracks
a
milk
run.
If
you
want
to
get
more
people
on
mass
transit,
you
can't
make
a
milk
run
out
of
the
tracks.
You
want
more
people
to
go
to
the
airport.
You
can't
put
another
station
at
6:50
south.
In
addition,
when
you're
doing
that,
I
mean
you're
trying
to
get
more
development
there,
but
it
makes
more
sense
to
spend
the
money
from
RDA
funds
for
homeless
services.
Ami
I
know
you
care
about
this.
F
You
care
about
a
downtown
park,
but
the
best
way
to
get
development
downtown
is
to
get
rid
of
the
homeless
walking
around
with
all
their
belongings
and
the
best
way
to
do
that
is
use
RDA
funds.
What
you're
authorized
to
do
to
provide
storage
for
the
homeless
to
provide
a
low
barrier
outside
camping
sites,
someplace
that
doesn't
bother
anybody
else.
So
people
don't
come
in
in
the
morning
at
the
courthouse
and
look
at
people
sleeping
on
the
ground.
F
Literally,
that's
what
happens
at
the
track
station
and
you
put
another
track
station
there
they're
going
to
do
the
same
thing
so
I'm
urging
you
not
to
spend
money
on
a
650
North
track
station
I'm
asking
you
to
spend
it
on
homeless,
services,
storage
and
a
camping
site
where
nobody's
going
to
be
worried
about
them.
Thanks
for
listening.
A
You
emotions
been
neighbor
made
by
board
member
Mendenhall
and
second
by
board
member
Luke,
all
those
in
favor
aye,
okay,
everybody's
surprised,
we're
now
the
Salt
Lake
City
Council.
We
are
now
on
our
agenda
for
city
council
business.
Our
first
item
under
the
council
business
is
item
a2,
we're
looking
to
approve
the
minutes
for
Tuesday
April
3rd
2018.
Mr.
A
A
We
are
looking
for
cards
here.
We
go.
I
have
one
card
for
public
hearings
this
evening,
we're
on
b1,
which
is
an
ordinance
for
Street
closure,
413
South
between
900
west
and
the
Jordan
River
George,
Chapman
and
I.
Don't
have
any
other
cards.
If
there's
anyone
that
would
like
to
speak
to
this,
please
raise
your
hand
and
we'll
have
staff
bring
a
card
to
you.
F
Ok
I
know
you're
trying
to
work
out
something
with
mr.
vu
and
I
have
a
problem
with
the
tow
yard
being
right
next
to
a
park.
The
park
you're
trying
to
develop
with
this.
The
problem
is
Salt,
Lake,
City
and
Utah,
and
other
municipalities
in
Utah
have
a
problem
with
them
in
a
domain
there's
an
adversarial
relationship,
that's
caused
by
them
in
a
domain.
That's
not
fair
for
small
businesses
like
mr.
vu
and
many
others.
Actually
you
have
the
same
thing
happen
with
the
streetcar
up
by
McClelland.
F
A
couple
of
property
owners
were
effectively
bullied
into
giving
up
their
property
without
just
compensation.
So
I'm
asking
you
to
work
with
the
legislature,
which
is
added
eminent
domain
issues
to
their
transportation
interim
agenda
and
work
with
them
on
some
way
to
provide
either
an
ombudsman
or
some
way
to
stop
the
fight.
That's
been
going
on
for
what
three
years
that's
happening.
F
I
know
a
case
in
Salt,
Lake
City,
that's
actually
going
on
for
ten
years,
ten
years
of
eminent
domain
trying
to
get
a
piece
of
property,
it
doesn't
make
sense
for
government
any
government
entity
to
do
that.
So
I'm
asking
you,
the
City
Council
to
work
with
the
legislature
to
try
and
find
a
better
way
to
work
the
system,
so
a
park
will
be
built
or
a
government
proposal
can
be
built
without
going
through
ten
years
of
legal
fighting.
Thanks
for
listening
thanks.
A
G
A
That
motion
passes
we're
on
to
item
b2,
which
is
an
airport
rezone
request.
I,
don't
have
any
cards
in
regards
to
this
motion.
I
mean
this
public
hearing.
Is
there
anyone
that
would
like
to
speak
mr.
Chapman
as
soon
as
you're
done
we'll?
Have
you
fill
out
a
card
for
this
I?
Don't
have
a
card
at
all.
F
Well:
okay,
thank
you,
Amy
and
the
others
for
trying
to
protect
off.
We
don't
have
enough
green
space.
We
have
no
green
space
around
the
airport.
Let's
get
real,
we
need
some
green
space
and
wing
point
is
the
green
space.
We
need
to
keep
it
open,
I'm,
asking
you
not
to
rezone
wing
point.
It
doesn't
make
sense
and
I
urge
you
again
like
Amy
mentioned
earlier.
Maintenance
is
not
just
maintaining
the
green,
it's
watering
and
that's
the
big
problem
with
golf
in
this
city.
We
overcharge
and
treat
golf
courses.
F
We
need
to
put
in
a
better
system
than
the
three-tier
system
that
actually
treats
parks.
Golf
courses
as
a
burden
that'll
be
the
solution.
Two
wing
point
and
I
also
want
to
point
out.
We
point
didn't
have
to
close
Becker
refused
to
to
have
the
help
of
the
Senate
senator
hatch
offered
to
stop
the
FAA
from
closing
it.
So
what
happened?
Becker
said:
no,
we
want
to
close
it.
So
that's
wrong.
Wink
point
is
a
green
space.
It
should
be
protected.
We
shouldn't
build
a
parking
lot
out
of
it
or
any
kind
of
ice.
F
A
H
Jen
Colby
district,
4
resident
and
I
wasn't
going
to
speak
to
this,
but
I
will
concur
with
George
that
I.
Don't
think
that
the
former
Wing
Point
Golf
Course
should
be
paved
over.
We
have
so
much
paving
out
at
the
airport
already
and
we're
about
to
get
paved
over
thanks
to
the
inland
port
that
apparently
nobody
can
figure
out
how
to
stop
there's
already
too
much
development
out
there,
and
this
is
the
wrong
way
to
go.
I,
don't
think
subsidizing.
The
wing
pick
Point
Airport
course
makes
any
sense
whatsoever.
That's
water!
Under
the
bridge.
H
D
I
A
D
A
J
Hi
Tiffany
price
I
just
wanted
to
speak
to
this
thinking.
It
was
such
a
great
idea
because
we've
lost
the
social
clubs.
We
have
some
places
in
our
neighborhoods.
It's
really
changed
the
dynamic
of
Salt
Lake
City
to
be
able
to
have
small
places
that
can
serve
alcohol
and
once
the
legislature
changed
to
a
social
club.
J
This
was
just
something
I
found
necessary
so
that
in
our
neighborhood
you
could
have
small
conditional
use
facilities
for
to
make
a
more
well
well-rounded
neighborhood
and
it
seems
like
I,
have
particularly
properties
that
have
been
now
zoned
community
neighborhood
and
there's
just
a
lot
of
interest
in
having
small
usable
play,
places
for
people
to
have
a
drink
or
some
food
in
a
drink.
Thanks.
Thank.
C
A
Motion
by
councilmember
kitchen
and
second
by
councilmember
Mendenhall
any
discussion
to
this.
Oh,
was
it
I'm?
Sorry,
a
motion
by
councilmember
kitchen
in
a
second
by
councilmember
Fowler,
any
discussion
to
this.
All
those
in
favor
aye
carries
on
to
a
four
which
is
a
budget
amendment
number
five
for
fiscal
year.
2017
and
18
and
I
have
two
cards
for
this.
I
have
mr.
grant
Sibley
followed
by
Elizabeth
Bowman.
K
D
D
L
L
It
in
a
short
position
here
so
I
received
notice
of
the
proposed
water
increase
the
day
after
the
first
hearing
last
year,
I
received
notice
of
the
4%,
at
least
after
some
of
those
went
through
that's
kind
of
sloppy.
This.
This
notice
I'm
holding
up
a
postcard
that
says
notice
a
proposed
water,
waste,
water,
sewer
and
stormwater
rate
adjustments
for
Salt
Lake,
City
residents,
water
rate
increase
of
4%
per
month.
Is
that
forty
eight
percent
a
year?
What's
it
mean?
What
does
that
mean?
Four
percent
a
month
can
I
get
any
information
yeah.
A
A
L
Percent
increase
I
looked
at
the
266
page
proposed
budget.
I
can't
follow
the
numbers
enough
to
know
exactly
what
this
means:
stormwater
10%.
Why,
when
you
look
at
the
notice
it's
to
include
improvements
in
sewer
water,
pipe
waste,
lot
wastewater
treatment
plant
last
year
you
raise
the
rates
and
I
read
in
the
paper.
You
all
look
pretty
bored
up
there.
L
Last
year,
I
read
the
rates
after
the
rates
went
through
that
it
was
not
used
for
water
and
sewer,
and
that's
really
upsetting
water
is
a
public
utility
I've
already
cut
out
showers,
I've
limited
washing
by
hand,
make
sure
the
dishwasher
is
full.
I
have
low
flow,
shower
low-flow
toilet
I'm,
careful
on
the
lawn.
It's
a
utility
there's
only
so
much
I
can
cut
and
other
people
are
on
fixed
incomes.
I
don't
want
this
to
be
the
city
of
the
1%
in
the
homeless,
but
that's
what
I'm
worried
about
so
I
looked.
L
What
are
some
other
ways
you
might
be
able
to
obtain
funds.
One
I've
contacted
Mike
representative,
mr.
Luke.
If
landlords
don't
return
clean
cleaning
fee
deposits,
I've
had
to
sue
over
this,
they
shouldn't
be
allowed
to
be
in
the
good
landlord
program
and
save
all
this
money
on
fees.
They
should
be
painting
everything.
The
city
tolls
me
tells
me:
oh
it's
a
toothless
ordinance.
We
can't
do
anything
about
it.
We
shouldn't
have
to
sue
and
every
landlord
should
have
a
registered
address
in
the
city.
L
A
D
G
A
D
H
D
C
A
D
D
You
know
10
years
ago
or
15
years
ago,
and
all
sudden
just
keep
adding
increasing,
increasing,
increasing
I
mean
you're,
making
it
so
that
it's
not
like
city's,
not
going
to
be
very
affordable,
I
mean
I,
was
driving
down
the
state
street
and
I
see
all
the
businesses,
and
you
know
empty
buildings,
so
I
just
I
mean
if
you
can't
budget
what
you
have.
Maybe
we
should
have
a
auditor
command,
an
independent
auditor
and
figure
out
where
we
can
come
up
with
the
money.
D
But
you
know
you
say
all
$20
79
more,
but
if
you
have
a
rental
unit
that
dollar
79,
no,
that's
not
going
to
be
what
it'll
be
it'll
be
actually
more,
and
you
know
you
raised
him
last
year
and
the
erase
it
this
year
and
I'm
sure
you're
gonna
raise
it
next
year
and
the
next
year
and
then
the
next
year.
Even
if
you
build
the
facility,
are
you
gonna
drop
the
prices
back
down.
D
A
I
District
I
am
pretty
pretty
frustrated
by
the
great
race.
I've
got
a
bill
from
2000
I've
lived
at
this
house
for
over
20
years,
and
it
was
$15
and
78
cents
and
that's
like
the
minimum
bill,
something
that
you
guys
don't
have
and
I've
got
today's
bill,
which
is
one
one
unit.
It's
the
absolute
least
amount
of
water
you
can
use,
and
it's
55
97.
I
That's
like
an
increase
of
almost
plus
an
increase
of
two
hundred
and
fifty
four
percent
in
less
than
twenty
years.
That's
18
years!
That's
fourteen
percent
a
year,
that's
nowhere
even
close
to
our
national
inflation
rate.
So,
like
you
know,
we've
we've
constantly
every
time
I
turn
around.
We
have
like
additional
fees.
Added
to
this
bill.
You
know,
drinking
water
is
a
human
right.
We
we
can
go
without
lightbulbs.
We
can
go
without
recycling.
I
I
What's
going
on
and
you
you
are
starting
to
price
people
out
that
have
lived
here
for
20
years
and
you
know
maybe
I
don't
have
the
incomes
of
my
neighbors
that
have
moved
in
that
have
bought
in
a
brand
new
house,
but
that
doesn't
mean
that
I
have
to
sell
my
house
and
move
because
I
can't
afford
you
your
guys.
It's
new
ideology,
a
new
vision
of
what
Salt,
Lake
City
should
look
like.
I
O
A
H
Jenn
Colby
district
4
I
changed
the
subject
a
little
bit
here.
I
quote
mr.
Palermo
presented
the
audit
accomplished
by
his
firm,
a
discussion
followed
mr.
Palermo.
In
closing
said
he
had
not
placed
in
the
report
how
to
obtain
the
money
needed
to
meet
the
needs
of
the
golf
courses.
He
said
he
concluded
after
submitting
the
report
that
to
continue
as
an
enterprise
fund
would
probably
cause
the
city
a
problem
in
the
future.
He
said
the
city
was
barely
making
enough
money
to
cover
the
minimal
essentials.
H
He
said
there
was
no
extra
money
for
doing
things
that
needed
to
be
done
and
quote.
This
is
from
the
1995
audit
summary
23
years
ago
the
golf
enterprise
fund
budget
crisis
has
been
building
for
decades.
Lack
of
action
by
various
administrations
and
councils,
combined
with
national
trans
and
Gulf
and
local
overbuilding,
have
led
us
here.
Enterprise
funds
are
different
legal
entities
from
departments
and
should
not
be
subsidized,
but
golf
has
gotten
millions
since
2014
and
the
projections
are
much
worse.
The
status
quo
is
not
working.
H
Golf
lands,
our
assets
and
vital
spaces
for
all
city
residents,
not
just
immediate
neighbors,
just
as
our
national
parks
belong
to
all
Americans
I
live
in
the
district
with
the
least
parkland,
and
the
Jordan
River
corridor
is
vital
to
my
well-being.
Moreover,
recent
zip
code,
analysis
of
golfers
at
the
courses
shows
76%
of
players
are
from
outside
of
Salt
Lake
City.
Most
players
come
from
the
wealthier
East
bench.
Very
few
were
from
the
West
Side
Golf
has
also
incredibly
land
inefficient
in
human
psychology.
H
Perceived
losses
often
count
more
than
gains
I
sympathize
with
those
who
love
golf
courses
as
they
are,
but
that
doesn't
make
good
public
policy
deferred.
Maintenance
backlogs
are
harming
horses
in
the
golf
experience.
It's
time
for
change.
I.
Ask
that
you
keep
golf
operations
under
strict
city
management.
Outsourcing,
won't
help
the
situation
and
you'll
lose
control,
reject
the
use
of
capital
improvement.
Subsidies
to
cover
operating
costs
raise
golf
fees
to
cover
operating
costs
with
a
surcharge
for
non
city
residents,
audit
a
secondary
water
ESCO.
What
happened?
H
There
start
a
planning
process
to
convert
Rose
Park
to
a
general
city
park
after
the
session,
with
green
infrastructure
strategies
for
rest,
raishin
and
increased
funding
for
all
city
parks.
Using
your
tax
increase
and
the
upcoming
bond
I
think
Palermo
is
right.
The
golf
enterprise
fund
ultimately
must
be
dissolved,
and
this
needs
to
be
integrated
into
the
parks.
Then
at
least
extra
funds
won't
be
called
subsidies.
I
do
have
additional
comments
and
I
will
send
those
in
I'll
also
comment
on
the
water
separately.
Thank
you.
Thank.
J
No
Polly,
Hart
and
I
am
here
to
give
a
plug
for
the
parks
department,
which
is
so
underfunded.
Year
after
year,
I
came
with
a
list
of
things
that
I
wanted
you
to
focus
on,
but
really
there
are
two
major
things
with
the
Parks
Department,
the
one-time
funding
for
the
homeless
cleanup
in
the
parks.
This
year
the
mayor
recommended
slightly
more
than
half
of
what
the
amount
was
last
year.
I
can
tell
you
as
a
park
user,
that
last
year
they
barely
had
enough
money
to
clean
up
the
homeless
camps.
J
So
please
consider
matching
what
the
one-time
fund
was
last
year
and
try
to
find
an
annual
funding
for
this.
The
second
is
tree
maintenance,
I'm
sure
you
have
heard
this
over
and
over
again,
but
the
city's
trees
are
in
trouble
and
we
desperately
need
more
maintenance,
more
water,
more
fertilizer,
more
pruning,
so
I
want
to
urge
you
to
fund
the
parks
department
all
of
their
wishes.
J
Please
please
and
thank
you
and
I'm,
probably
gonna
piss
off
a
lot
of
people
here,
but
we
have
some
of
the
cheapest
water
in
the
country
and
I'm,
okay
with
paying
for
water.
My
house
is
worth
almost
the
same
as
my
sister's
in
suburban
Chicago
and
my
real
estate.
Taxes
are
less
than
a
quarter.
We
get
what
we
pay
for
and
I'm
okay
with
paying
for
it,
so
you
guys
know
how
to
squeeze
out
of
a
dime,
and
you
all
do
a
wonderful
job
and
thank
you
thank.
D
We
need
some
diversity
up
there
right,
still
white.
We
would
ask
that
you
not
fund
50,
more
additional
police
officers
unless
you
show
us
why
we
need
them
because
they
definitely
don't
reduce
crime.
Derek
and
Charlie
I
want
Jackie
I
want
to
say
thank
you
to
Jackie
for
proposing
half
the
amount
of
police
officers
and
and
when
you
were
on
the
radio
kind
of
bashing
her
wondering
why
she
only
wanted
half
it's,
because
the
people
asked
for
it.
The
people
who
voted
her
in
and
who
voted
you
in
and
who
can
vote
you
right
out.
D
D
A
C
Epperson
volumn
great,
you
know
50
police
officers
necessary
for
Salt
Lake
City,
because
people
don't
want
that.
The
people
are
out
here
and
they're
saying
that
we
do
not
need,
because
there
is
no
reason
for
them.
They
do
not
protect
people,
they
do
not
protect
communities,
they
protect
the
rights
of
money,
the
rights
of
rich
people
on
the
east
side,
who
all
want
the
police
officers.
They
do
not
protect
everybody
they
and
it's
really
disheartening-
to
see
that
50
more
police
officers
is
on
the
table.
E
E
If
we
had
a
community
board
in
place
to
hold
these
officers
accountable,
they
would
be
alive
here
today,
or
at
least
there
cops
would
be
behind
bars,
Patrick
Harmon.
What
happened
to
his
murder
cop?
What
happened
to
him?
We
have
no
idea.
This
is
like
the
perfect
crime.
I
don't
understand!
Why
is
he
unaccounted
for?
It's
disgusting,
I,
I'm,
hearing
people
talk
about
utility
rights
and
and
rights
against
the
rights
for
their
property
and
against
the
landlord.
E
It
sounds
like
there's
a
lot
more
funding
you
could
that
could
be
better
used
towards
the
people
towards
resources
towards
mental
health
resources
like
DeLorean
could
have
used
on.
That
call.
Did
any
of
you
watch
the
footage
this
keeps
me
up
at
night.
Keeps
all
of
us
up
at
night.
Should
keep
you
up
at
night
cuz!
It's
your
job!
It's
your
job!
You
took
the
job
and
we
did
the
hard
work
for
you.
We
did
the
hard
work
SLC
PAC.
E
E
Does
anyone
else
on
this
board?
Think
it's
absurd
that
police
are
placing
themselves?
How
does
that
make
any
sense?
What
will
I
don't
understand?
Like
I
mean
if
we
want
people
power?
If
we
want
democracy,
we
should
have
a
say
who's
walking
around
with
guns.
They
shouldn't
know
more
about
the
law.
They
should
be
more
accountable
to
that
law.
These
are
state
paid
employees.
They
should
be
accountable,
50,
more
cops,
50,
more
they're
in
front
of
my
house
every
single
day
harassing
the
homeless.
E
I
live
across
in
the
Odyssey
home
they're
out
there,
single-day
bothering
and
slamming
skinny
young
woman
into
the
streets,
I'm
I'm,
so
sick
of
it,
and
it's
only
going
to
get
worse
and
we
have
a
president
that
empowers
them
into
your
job.
It's
your
job
and
if
anyone
else
is
shot
down
by
police,
that's
that's
something
you
should
consider
it
thanks.
Q
Hi,
my
name
is
Cecilia
Berman
I
just
want
to
implore
you
to
consider
all
the
people
here
in
this
room
who
are
brave
young
people
coming
up
here
to
speak
about
issues
that
are
affecting
them
and
probably
not
affecting
you
because
of
racial
differences
which
are
uncomfortable
to
talk
about,
but
even
the
assumptions
that
were
made
about
us
potentially
hurting
these
paintings.
Those
kind
of
assumptions
are
the
things
that
are
dangerous
when
they're
being
made
by
people
who
have
guns
and
who
have
power
to
arrest
and
harass
people
on
the
streets.
Q
So
I
just
want
you
to
consider
that
when
you're
thinking
about
employing
50,
more
police
officers,
when
that
money
could
be
spent
better
training,
the
people
you
have
so
that
they
are
not
harassing
people
who
are
mentally
ill,
who
have
been
abused,
who
are
already
marginalized
by
society.
I
know
that
you
don't
want
to
think
about
this
because
it
doesn't
impact
you
the
same
way.
Q
It
impacts
us,
but
we're
here,
and
we
are
talking
to
you
and
a
lot
of
us,
don't
want
to
talk
in
public
and
don't
want
to
speak
to
you,
and
this
is
super
uncomfortable,
and
we
know
that
a
lot
of
you
don't
want
to
listen
to
us,
but
we're
here,
because
this
is
so
important
to
us,
because
it's
not
just
an
issue
of
water
or
utility
bills.
This
is
an
issue
of
life
and
death
for
us.
Q
So
please
consider
that
when
you're
talking
about
spending
money
on
50,
more
police
officers,
because
it's
50
more
people
who
might
kill
someone
and
put
that
on
the
news
and
make
Utah
look
like
another
state
that
is
just
killing
people,
black
and
brown
people.
Do
you
want
to
be
a
state
that
is
good
for
everybody
or
just
good
for
white
people.
G
Thank
you
for
giving
me
the
opportunity
to
speak
a
little
reluctant
about
getting
the
notice
for
in
May,
15th
and
I
got
that
on
May
17th,
so
I'm
here
tonight
on
the
water
rate
increase
they
they
mentioned
infrastructure.
First
of
all,
I
want
to
address
that
real,
quick
I
put
in
my
own
water
line
to
the
house
I'm
fully
responsible.
For
that,
that's
my
cost
of
anything.
It
goes
wrong
with
it
also
lat.
G
Last
year
the
county
came
in
and
paved
the
road
I
had
to
make
the
change
to
the
valves
to
to
accommodate.
For
that.
So
that's
no
expense,
and
that
was
one
of
the
excuses,
was
infrastructure
I'm
on
a
fixed
income,
social
security
and
to
me
raising
the
rates.
For
me,
it
is
a
utility
that
we're
we
have
the
right
to
it's
to
me.
It's
a
tax
and
it's
a
tax
for
growth
and
get
making
Salt
Lake
City
a
sanctuary
city
status.
We
should
be
taking
care
of
the
people
here.
G
G
We
need
to
get
out
of
this.
This
whole
paradigm
of
growth,
growth
and
more
growth.
We
need
a
good
quality
of
life
and
we
shouldn't
we
shouldn't
sacrifice
our
quality
of
life,
but
we
we
do
need
to
take
care
of
those
people
that
are
on
a
fixed
income
and
on
a
budget
and
by
the
way,
I
feel
my
pictures
with
any
gray
water
and
I.
Take
it
out
and
feed
the
plants.
I've
done
everything
I
can
to
keep
my
water
bill
down.
C
You
must
not
think
from
what
I
say
that
I
am
opposed
to
slavery.
No,
the
Negro
was
damned
and
is
to
serve
his
master,
that
man
in
that
painting
right.
There
said
that
my
name
is
Trevor
Mortimer
and
I
served
in
the
19th
Special
Forces
Group
right
here
in
Utah.
Did
you
guys
know
that
the
in
the
army,
you
can't
shoot
unarmed
civilians
at
all?
You.
C
Can
only
return
fire
when
you
were
fired
upon,
so
why
did
the
police
not
have
to
obey
the
international
laws
of
war?
Why
can
the
police
do
to
Dylan
Taylor?
What
I
could
not
do
to
a
member
of
the
Taliban
with
an
ak-47
in
his
hands?
You
guys
want
to
build
a
new
jail
with
more
cops
or
you
can
have
black
and
Latino
inmates
work
for
no
money
or
half
a
cent
an
hour.
That
sounds
an
awful
lot
like
slavery
to
me.
No
sir!
No
ma'am!
We
do
not
want
anyone
call.
I
Christian
hearthstone
I'm
here
with
all
these
people
back
here,
I
just
want
to
say
that
we
need
to
and
when,
when
there's
police
that
are
shooting
people
and
they're
not
being
accountable
for
it
that's
occupation
and
we
need
to
end
occupation
at
home
and
occupation
abroad.
We
need
to
see
how,
like
our
communities,
are
affected
by
these
problems
and
I
feel
like
there's.
I
A
lot
of
ignorance
up
here
like,
for
example,
I
live
in
sugarhouse,
where
we
don't
get
as
much
harassment,
but
I
have
friends
that
I
have
people
I
talked
to
and
they
do,
and
you
need
to
realize
that
and
understand
that
I
feel
like
yeah
like,
like
said
there's
just
a
lot
of
you
know
a
lot
of
privilege
up
here
and
I.
Think
you
need
to
step
out
of
yourselves
and
see
that
getting
more
cops,
more
present,
more
jails
and
prisons
isn't
a
solution.
N
Just
some
light
reading
all
right,
good,
even
council
and
mayor
these
past
two
weeks
have
been
difficult
for
me.
Separation
of
many
black
brown
indigenous
families
at
the
border,
the
incarceration
of
families
and
detention
centers,
have
resulted
in
children
sleeping
without
their
mothers
and
fathers.
The
describing
of
people
as
animals,
people
that
have
given
life
to
me
have
been
a
lot
on
my
mind.
How
did
we
get
ice
being
a
rogue
agency
maximizing
the
inhumanity
instilled
in
laws
and
with
militarized
capabilities?
N
We
start
with
police
departments
like
Salt,
Lake,
City,
Police,
Department
being
armed
and
giving
a
blank
check
to
do
what
they
wish.
Last
week,
chief
Brown
said
during
the
work
session,
referring
to
the
combining
of
airport
police
in
Sauk
City
police
department,
a
lot
of
activity,
a
lot
of
terrorist
attacks
demonstrations
things
have
occurred
at
the
airport,
that's
why
we
need
a
combination
of
police
departments
because
of
demonstrations.
N
N
Also
during
that
session,
it
was
mentioned
that
the
bike
police,
like
the
Westside,
are
a
lot
less
than
the
Eastside
bias.
Much
thirtysomething
cops
will
be
on
patrol
by
late
August
once
it
graduate,
but
y'all
still
want
twenty
seven.
Fifty
five
years
from
now
another
15
10
years
from
now
another
50,
because
more
black
Brown
indigenous
bodies
move
into
the
city
more
cops.
When
will
it
be
enough?
Never,
let's
be
innovative.
Let's
look
at
things
differently.
Look
at
the
situation
through
the
eyes
of
the
marginalized
want
more
cops,
raise
the
required
education
level.
N
It
take
a
high
school
degree
to
criminalise
yeah.
It
takes
a
bachelor's
degree
to
decriminalise.
We
need
to
pay
them
or
give
them
Coulter,
confident
training.
We
must
do
something
that
just
place
bodies
with
guns
on
our
streets.
We
are
mobilizing
and
we
will
shut
down
the
streets
if
necessary.
Thank
you.
Thank.
O
Good
evening,
I'm,
actually
in
district
5
and
I
purchased,
my
home
in
1995
and
I,
am
here
to
address
the
proposed
water
and
sewer
storm
water
rates,
I'm
sort
of
a
figures
person,
so
I've
done
some
research
and
I
admit
it's
not
totally
and
fully
inclusive.
But
I
just
wanted
to
mention
some
of
the
facts
that
I
found
the
years
2001
to
2006.
There
was
a
total
of
a
55
and
a
half
increase
in
sewer
rates
from
2010
to
11.
There
was
a
total
of
14.5
increase.
This
includes
wastewater
and
stormwater
16
to
17.
O
There
was
a
16%
increase
fiscal
year.
17
to
18
was
a
35%
increase
and
your
proposal
this
year
will
add
up
to
a
total
of
a
29%
increase.
If
you
were
to
take
all
the
percentages
with
water,
sewer
and
stormwater.
If
you
look
closer
at
your
bill
as
you
all
get
the
bills,
these
rates
are
a
little
bit
misleading
when
you
quote
them
on
the
card
about
percentages
and
dollar
amounts
because
there's
blocks,
there's
rates
and
there's
units
and
every
block
rate
and
unit
has
a
different
rate.
So
it's
not
just
a
flat
fee.
O
O
If
any
of
this
money
from
the
franchise
fees
goes
to
what
they
say,
it
will
be
going
to
park
streets,
fire
police,
but
I
have
yet
to
see
that
I
have
over
the
last
20
years,
have
never
seen
fifth
east
from
17th
south
to
21st
south
fully
paved
made
whole
a
beautiful
road,
21st
south
from
State
Street's,
a
13th
east,
fully
paved
road
I
mean
we're
talking
about.
If
this
is
where
the
money
goes
time.
G
O
F
In
answer
to
several
previous
speakers,
the
best
way
to
discourage
crime
is
more
visible
cops.
In
addition,
despite
some
claims
I
know,
all
of
you
are
involved
in
this
everyday
and
you
care
about
you.
In
fact,
one
of
you
up.
There
is
involved
in
it
every
single
day,
eight
hours
a
day
you
care,
I,
know
you
care
and
the
people
that
are
saying
you
don't
care,
don't
understand
what
you
have
to
go
through.
The
cops
on
the
street
are
trying
to
do
their
job.
They
are
sometimes
ordered
to
do
things.
F
They
don't
want
to
do
like
quality
of
life
enforcement.
That's
happened
several
times
and
it's
not
their
fault.
It's
the
fault
of
the
elected
leaders
and
that's
who
the
speakers
should
be
talking
to
I,
don't
believe.
Well,
we're
going
to
get
250
cops.
You've
heard
over
the
last
couple
of
weeks
from
the
chief
that
you
can't
get
him.
He
has
more
bicycles
than
cops.
He
wants
more
cops,
you
mean
he
wants
more
personnel,
he's
not
getting
him
because
you
don't
pay
him
enough.
F
You
have
a
two
million
dollar
tax
increase
going
for
cops,
but
two
million
other
other
funding.
Is
also
going
to
something
else,
besides
salaries,
I
think
you're
going
to
have
to
increase
the
cop
salaries
if
you
really
want
to
hire
more
cops,
you're
losing
two
of
the
three
a
month
and
recently
you
had
interviews
for
twenty
cops.
Only
three
showed
up
three
and
you're
going
to
get
12
in
the
next
Academy
class
and
you're
losing
two
to
three
a
month.
You're
not
going
to
have
any
extra
cops.
F
You
won't
make
it
so
you're
gonna
have
to
increase
salaries,
someone
or
another
you're
increasing
401k
contribution
6%,
but
UPD
is
increasing
at
16%.
Your
other
issues
you
need
to
put
in
the
budget
you
need
to
budget
realistically
for
water.
You
also
need
cop
camps,
Aaron
you
care
about
trafficking,
but
prostitution
goes
on
every
day.
All
the
time
in
your
area
and
the
best
way
to
discourage
it
is
more
cop
cams.
We
only
have
one
operating
copy
time.
We
need
more,
also
restrooms
thanks
for
listening
thanks.
R
I'm
a
14
year
old
that
has
to
suffer
every
day
by
licking
onto
the
streets
and
not
seeing
the
cop
there
I
have
to
look
through
a
window
and
wonder
who's
the
enemy,
the
homeless
or
the
officers.
I'm
sick
and
tired
of
only
seeing
an
officer
standing
outside
my
window
wandering
around
doing
nothing
about
it.
R
R
Have
to
look
outside
of
my
house
me
and
her
Madison
are
sisters.
I
have
to
protect
my
sisters
and
I
wonder
if
either
the
cops
or
the
homeless
are
the
real
enemies,
but
mostly
I,
think
the
police
are
the
enemies,
because
I
see
people
that
look
like
they
cause
trouble
either
get
beaten,
be
made
fun
of
or
killed
and
I.
Think
that's
a
lot
of
bull
crap.
I
really
don't
want
to
see
50
more
cops
on
the
streets
just
because
you
guys
think
it's
right.
R
R
E
Thank
you
for
what
you
do
just
yet
to
object
to
the
29
percent
overall
increase
in
our
public
utilities
bills
I'm
speaking
for
the
people
on
my
street
as
well,
many
of
whom
are
on
fixed
incomes,
not
to
mention
most
people's
salaries
in
or
income
in
Salt
Lake
City
have
not
increased
according
to
our
custom.
Living
I
want
to
know
where
the
transparency
is
on
the
bids
for
these
so-called
projects.
E
J
I'm
Nancy
Carlson,
God's
I'm,
a
resident
of
Mill
Creek
and
I've
got
the
notice
as
well
of
a
proposed
to
Salt
Lake
County
residents
proposal
in
a
rate
increase
in
my
water
and
I
guess:
I
had
a
couple
of
things,
I'm
also
well.
First,
let
me
say
I'm
so
proud
of
these
young
people
coming
here
and
talk,
because
I
saw
YouTube
video
today
of
a
man
being
beaten.
J
It
was
it's
disgusting,
so
I
emphasize
with
him,
but
to
continue
on
my
topic
on
I'm,
also
on
a
fixed
income.
I
understand
the
need
for
infrastructure
and
fixing
and
repairing
the
water.
But
what
I?
What
I
would
like
to
see
is
more
transparency
and
what
how
that
money
is
being
spent
I'm.
Unfortunately,
the
legislation
didn't
pass
where
they
tried
to
ask
that
we
could
be
more
transparent
and
how
the
money
is
being
spent
and
being
in
Mill
Creek.
J
I
understand
I
pay
more
because
I'm,
not
in
Salt
Lake,
City,
proper,
so
I'm
a
contract
city,
whatever
you
want
to
call
it
so
I
pay
more
additionally
anyway,
and
what
I'd
like
to
know
is
I'd
like
to
find
out
how
that
money
is
being
spent.
How
I
can
see
when,
if
you're
saying
you're
going
to
be
repairing
the
pipes,
the
system,
the
infrastructure
I'd
like
to
be
able
to
find
out
what
that
is,
how
do
I
get
that
information,
so
I
think
that's
all
I
have
so.
Thank
you
and
I'd
be
curious.
B
That
is,
that
is
just
looking
to
looking
for
easy
answers
to
one
day:
they're,
homeless
and
and
everybody
you
don't
want
to
look
at.
Is
there
the
next
day,
they're,
not
but
they're,
filling
up
or
prisons
and
we're
paying
a
lot
of
money
to
have
them
live
live
over
there?
Just
because
we
don't
want
to
deal
with
real
issues
like
mental
health
and
drug
drug
rehab
centers?
Why
are
there
any
drug,
rehab,
centers
or
mental
health
centers
on
the
west
side,
in
Rose
Park
and
in
Glendale?
B
B
A
college
student
I
know
of
a
lot
of
parties
and
a
lot
of
drug
use
that
goes
on
on
the
east
side
and
there's
never
cops
so
when
we,
when
we
were
doing
that
right,
cuz
I,
go
to
college
I
know
what
it's
like
up
there
on
the
east
side
hanging
out
with
the
East
Side
boys,
they
get
just
as
crazy
as
us
on
the
west
side.
Okay,
but
they're,
not
getting
patrolled
like
we
are
on
the
west
side.
Here.
This
is
an
issue
and
we
need
to
not
look
for
more
cops
as
the
solution.
B
C
Yeah
good
good
evening,
I'm
Antonio
Fiero
represent
the
Rose
Park
Brown
Berets,
and
you
know
we
don't
need
more
cops
on
the
streets.
You
know,
as
you
guys
could
see
from
our
youth.
You
know
what
I
mean
they're
from
Rose
Park
as
well.
You
know
and
just
like
this
last
week
you
know
there
was
a
guy
just
got
harassed
by
the
police.
You
know
just
outside
of
Rancho
Market.
You
know
what
I
mean
it
looked
like.
It
was
a
stop-and-frisk
that
was
going
on
and
we
know
when
I
went
over
there.
C
You
know
the
Compston
started,
cussing
me
out
and
stuff.
You
know
what
I
mean,
but
I
was
I.
Think
called
I've
been
called
this
big.
You
know
as
a
child,
you
know,
and
you
know
it's
easy
just
to
have
just
to
add
more
police.
You
know
that's
just
a
band-aid,
you
guys
gotta
go
to
the
court.
The
reason
why
people
are
committing
crimes
is
because
we
have
less
access
to
resources.
We
don't
have
mental
health
facilities.
Rehabs
you
walk
away,
I
could
walk
through
the
Eastside
I,
see
a
lot
like
every
corner.
C
I
see
all
these
RTC
houses.
You
know-
and
you
know
and
and
the
police
you
know
you
know
they
they
be
the
true
gangsters
of
the
streets.
You
see,
Elijah
Smith,
you
know
recently
passed
away.
You
know
what
I
mean
when
police
become
brittle
and
be
harassing
people
they're,
no
longer
police
they're,
not
the
rights
came,
so
they
should
be
held
accountable
and
we
don't
need
more
police
in
the
West
Side.
You
know
the
West
Side.
We
people
couldn't
make
the
majority.
C
You
know
how
come
they're,
not
patrolling
on
the
east
side,
where
people
were
there
are
doing
drugs
just
as
much
as
people
on
the
west
side.
You
know
the
why,
because
they're
white
right
most
Park
in
Glendale,
West
Valley,
we
make
those
Latinos,
blacks,
indigenous
Polynesians,
and
this
whole
system
just
go
on
racism
and
just
adding
more
cops.
It's
not
the
solution.
You
got
to
go
to
the
core
of
the
problem.
Thank
you.
S
Hey
y'all
doing
my
name
is
Shirley
Reyes
and
I'm
here
to
talk
about
the
police
as
well.
More
does
not
equal
better,
especially
when
the
city
can't
even
get
a
handle
on
the
cops
that
are
already
out
there.
I
don't
know
if
any
of
you
live
on
the
west
side
or
even
taking
a
second
to
listen
to
the
cops.
Well,
the
things
that
they
say
and
do
is
repulsive
and
the
only
time
that
y'all
get
to
see
it
is
recording
click
on
videos
on
YouTube.
S
But
this
stuff
is
happening
every
day
and
you're,
probably
also
wondering
or
thinking
that
a
lot
of
things
that
we're
saying
is
probably
exaggerated
or
untrue.
But
you
got
to
listen
up
and
you
got
to
believe
it
because
it
is
true
and
you'll
never
understand
because
of
the
color
of
your
skin
or
your
socio-economic
standing.
S
So
it's
your
duty
to
believe
us
and
to
stand
by
us
and
you
gotta
do
something
better
for
all
the
people
rather
than
just
the
privileged
people
and
instead
of
looking
down
sometimes
that
y'all
say
y'all
seen
y'all
doing
look
at
the
kids
in
their
eyes
and
believe
it.
What
they're
saying
they
deserve
the
same
amount
amount
of
respect
that
you
give
an
adult
as
well
and
same
thing
for
the
east
side
versus
west
side.
I
live
on
the
east
side
and
I
come
down
on
the
west
side.
S
I
can
see
the
stark
difference
between
the
two
sides.
It's
there
and
I
hate
to
say
it,
but
there
are
dealers
up
on
the
east
side
that
are
even
like
they're
displaying
the
amount
of
power
they
have
on
the
cops
that
counter
are
friendly
with
them
and
saying
I'm
safe,
because
I
am
here,
I'm
making
money
up
here
me
and
the
cops
were
ok.
It's
all
true.
So
take
a
deeper
look
at.
What's
going
on
before
you
start,
adding
more
cops,
Thank
You.
B
Thanks
for
taking
public
comment
on
this,
we've,
probably
all
heard
or
seen,
a
sign
that
says,
banned
the
police.
The
first
time
I
saw
that
I
kind
of
scoffed
and
laughed,
and
you
know
I,
think
that
it
definitely
needs
to
undergo
some
PR
sort
of
revolve
Minh.
It
seems
absurd
on
its
face,
but
let
me
shed
a
little
bit
of
light,
perhaps
or
a
perspective
on
that,
which
is
the
idea.
Is
that
not
we're
gonna?
Let
crime
go
on
or
whatever
like
that.
What
we
need
to
do
is
not
get
crisis.
B
Counseling,
not
get
more
police
training.
What
we
need
to
do
is
prevent
the
crime
from
happening
in
the
first
place
and
I
think
everybody
can
agree
with
that.
What
we
could
do
is
we
could
take
this
money
and
then
pay
it
forward
to
their
future
towards
a
possibility,
we're
banning
the
police
or
really
just
making
it.
So
the
police
aren't
even
really
that
necessary
to
a
large
degree
right,
not
like
in
every
way-
let's
not
be
obscene
or
silly
about
it,
but
that's
what
we
need
to
do.
B
We
need
to
take
this
money
because
the
more
cops
aren't
going
to
prevent
more
crime
operation.
Rio
Grande
has
proven
that,
although
you
can't
put
water
on
an
oil
fire,
but
what
we
should
do
is
we
should
pay
forward
not
towards
crisis.
Before
the
crisis
happens,
we
need
more
schooling,
we
need
more
housing.
We
need
that
money
to
go
towards
programs.
We
need
to
pay
for
it
to
the
future
and
make
it
the
future
that
we
want
not
some
weird
dystopian
Robocop
future
thanks.
T
T
And
basically
I
know.
One
thing:
is
you
guys
have
this
two
minute
thing
and
there
are
people
with
disabilities
that
don't
always
have
the
ability
of
speaking
what
they
want
within
two
minutes
and
the
way
that
you
have
everything
out
here
in
the
hall
there's,
no
one
out
there
to
help
people
fill
out
information
or
even
let
people
know
what's
on
the
docket,
because
not
everyone
has
full
access
and
there's
a
lot
of
improvement
that
the
city
needs
to
make.
Plus
people
have
been
killed
by
police.
T
You
know:
death
by
cop
is
not
death
by
dignity
and
Mayor
muskie
after
the
last
meeting
said
to
me
when
I
asked
her,
do
you
believe
when
the
death
by
dignity,
Act-
and
she
said
yes,
she
does,
but
if
she
did
believe
in
the
death
by
dignity,
Act
there's
two
things
that
are
part
of
that
one.
The
person
has
to
be
terminally
ill
and
two.
They
have
to
have
been
signed
off
by
two
doctors
to
medical
doctors
and
the
person
that
was
shot
by
police
in
sugarhouse
never
had
that
opportunity.
K
Thank
you
for
this
opportunity
to
speak
to
you
again,
I
like
to
make
a
statement
on
the
rebuilding
process.
You
got
here
very
beautiful,
but
also
we
need
to
talk
about
these
cops
I
have
been
affected
by
them
for
quite
some
time,
I've
been
coming
here
10
years,
January
I
will
be
here
for
the
anniversary
date
of
111,
but
I
also
like
to
say
that
I,
don't
know
if
you
guys
are
just
not
understanding
what's
going
on.
This
is
a
national
problem.
It's
just
not
just
here
in
Salt
Lake
City.
K
Well,
we
do
have
the
epic
center
here,
The
Smoking
Gun,
the
mushroom
cloud
or,
however,
you
want
to
say
it.
We
have
victimhood
in
this
city
and
it's
not
getting
any
better
I
think
we
need
to
take
a
close
look
at
what
has
been
done
and
maybe
pass
some
legislation
that
can
make
this
go
away.
I
feel
that
the
people
that
have
spoke
here
he
was
about
the
victimhood
of
us
black
males,
not
only
the
black
males,
but
the
Chicano
males
that
had
been
affected
by
this
police
brutality
in
this
city.
K
I
think
that
you
really
need
to
give
it
a
scrutiny,
so
we
could
curtail
it
and
be
a
better
City,
because
right
now,
Salt
Lake
City
is
known
as
a
racist
City
and
you
need
to
understand
and
each
one
of
you
sitting
behind
their
because
they
have
two
killings
here
and
the
media
has
not
focused
on
that.
You
go
to
Baltimore
they're.
Still
talking
about
Freddie
gray,
you
go
to
you,
go
to
you
go
to
st.
Louis,
they
still
talking
about
Mike
Brown,
but
we
don't
have.
K
M
A
You
that
is
the
last
card.
I
have
four
items
b5
through
B
14,
and
this
concludes
the
public
hearings
for
the
mayor's
recommended
budget
for
Salt
Lake
City,
including
the
library
fund
for
fiscal
year.
2018
and
19.
All
ordinances
will
be
heard
as
one
public
hearing
that
we've
done
may
15th
June
5th,
and
we're
looking
for
a
motion
to
hear
them
for
June
12th
as
well.
N
C
A
That
motion
carries
we're
on
to.
We
don't
have
any
potential
items.
Action
items
on
C
were
onto
comments,
item
D
questions
to
the
mayor
from
the
City
Council.
She
is
not
here
this
evening,
but
we
have
the
chief
of
staff
mr.
Patrick
Leary.
Are
there
any
questions
for
mr.
Patrick
Leary
council
members
thanks
for
being
here
Patrick,
it's
always
appreciated
comments
to
the
City
Council
same
thing:
don't
jeer,
don't
cheer
be
respectful,
I'll
call
two
names
forward
and
then
we
will
you'll
have
two
minutes
to
comment
and
give
us
your
opinions.
G
Thank
you
I.
This
should
have
gone
on
to
the
last
group
because
I'm
here
to
talk
about
the
water
just
my
first
time
here
and
thank
you
appreciate
the
open
forum.
I
am
also
a
resident
of
Mill
Creek
and
Mill
Creek
gets
its
water.
Of
course
it
used
to
be
the
county
and
I've
lived
in
the
county
they're
just
out
over
the
city
south
of
the
Brickyard
area.
For
about
30
years,
and
of
course
the
Bills
have
gone
up.
We
expect
that,
but
we
don't
notice
that
there
are
improvements
in
the
delivery
of
water.
F
Okay,
let's
reinforce
eyes
cop
cams,
because
if
you
want
to
stop
human
trafficking
Erin,
you
need
to
catch
the
pimps
and
the
only
way
to
catch.
The
pimps
are
with
cop
cams,
because
they're
not
going
to
be
around
with
cops
around
please
fund
more
cop
cams
in
the
budget.
Please
fund
more
water
for
open
space,
so
we
don't
go
through
like
last
year,
where
you
cried
over
the
wilting
gardens
of
Salt
Lake
City.
F
We
also
need
more
restrooms
in
the
canyon.
If
we
really
care
about
the
watershed
boy,
do
we
need
more
restrooms?
Also
on
the
trails
like
you
talked
about
today,
Amy,
you
went
through
the
CIP
funding
list
last
night,
but
you
may
have
noticed
that
there's
no
discussion
items
or
no
community
support
a
lot
of
the
items
on
the
CIP
list
and
that's
wrong.
For
instance,
in
Aaron's
area,
the
17th
south
reconfiguration,
Road
diet
doesn't
have
community
support
because
there
isn't
any
community
support
for
that.
F
It's
a
good
discussion
to
have
it's
a
good
study
to
have,
but
why,
funded
now
before
the
community
council
has
had
a
chance
to
look
at
it
thoroughly
and
the
same
with
the
11th
east
post
office
in
and
out
in
sugarhouse
that
doesn't
have
any
community's
support
either.
Why
are
we
providing
these
projects
without
going
to
the
community
councils
and
saying
do
we
want
this?
Do
you
want
this
so
I'm
asking
you
to
go
to
the
community
councils
before
you
fund
CIP,
that's
coming
up
in
the
next
few
months.
F
You
still
need
RDA,
storage
and
I
still
think
you
need
to
have
go
to
the
community
councils
for
discussion
on
what
routes
do
you
really
want
to
increase
with
the
sales
tax
increase
if
it's
going
to
take
five
years
nobody's
going
to
really
be
looking
forward
to
that?
But
if
you
say
one
or
two
of
these
routes
are
going
to
one
or
two
hours
later
at
night,
they
are
going
to
look
at
that
and
thank
you
for
it.
So
consider
that,
thanks
for
listening.
A
M
I'm
back
here
to
say,
don't
allocate
six
million
to
fund
hiring
more
officers.
Hiring
more
cops
does
not
lead
to
less
crime.
What
does
cause
less
crime
as
community
resources
when
people
have
hoped
for
a
future
job
opportunities,
affordable
housing,
reasonable
living
conditions?
That's
when
we
see
a
decrease
in
crime,
we
need
to
fund
education,
drug
treatment,
centers
mental
health
resources.
What
we
don't
need
to
do
is
throw
more
money.
At
a
system
built
to
enforce
white
supremacy,
officers
are
taught
to
profile,
they
profile,
people
of
color
and
poor
people.
They
profile
marginalized
groups.
M
They
add
to
the
problem,
and
you
may
say
they
protect
our
communities,
keep
potential
victims
safer,
but
I've
been
the
victim
of
violent
crimes
before
one
time,
I
called
the
cops
because
after
attacking
me
in
my
own
home,
my
stalker
said
he
was
going
to
my
girlfriend's
house
next,
so
I
was
desperate.
You
know
what
the
officer
asked
when
they
came
to
my
house.
After
this
attack,
they
asked
if
he
was
Mexican.
They
wasted
precious
time
following
their
racist
training,
while
more
people
were
in
danger.
M
This
confirmed
what
I
already
knew
cops
are
not
here
to
protect
us.
They
are
here,
for
they
came
from
slave
catchers
and
they
stay
true
to
their
roots.
Cops
are
taught
to
choose
who
to
kill
based
on
race
and
class.
We
can't
call
them
when
we're
in
danger
the
next
time
a
white
man
attacks
me.
The
system
is
going
to
continue
to
target
people
of
color.
They
are
not
protectors
of
the
people,
they
are
killers
of
the
marginalized.
So
please
fund
resources
that
give
the
people
hope
that
lifts
us
up
give
us
all
opportunity.
T
I
will
say:
one
thing
is
when
I
left
pride
the
other
day
on
Sunday
someone
said:
oh,
oh,
black,
lights
and
disabled
lives.
Don't
matter
all
lives
matter?
Well,
if
all
lives
mattered,
then
there
wouldn't
be
any
killings
from
cops,
because
it
would
be
the
same
amount
of
people
that
were
killed
withers
and
at
the
same
time
you
know
this
issue
continues
to
be
put
on
the
back
burner.
T
Every
time,
there's
been
a
quite
a
few
meetings
and
you
guys
continue
and
continue
to
not
even
you
know
you
say:
okay
well,
we'll
just
put
this
on
it.
We'll
just
talk
about
it.
The
next
meeting,
the
next
meeting
you
guys,
aren't
able
to
actually
make
a
decision
and
say:
okay,
you
know
what
the
people
spoke,
and
this
needs
to
not
be
put
on
the
backburner
anymore.
A
N
I
think
it
was
interesting
regarding
this
this
month
in
Pride
Month
as
well,
that
were
going
to
be
pride.
You
know,
LGBT,
it
was
a.
The
movement
was
started
by
two
black
transgendered
women
in
the
face
of
police,
brutality
of
police
violence
right
and
now,
what
being
one
of
the
most
gay
cities
in
the
in
this
in
the
in
the
nation
which
isn't
I,
love
it's
at
the
same
time,
we're
gonna,
get
27,
more
cops
or
50
more
cops.
K
N
Something
that
a
long
time
ago,
many
many
people
who
were
queer
like
myself,
we
stood
up
against
look
at
the
look
at
the
steep
sea,
violence
and
say
no
more,
but
because
of
the
shift
of
power
and
shift
of
people
and
the
shift
of
divisions
and
populations,
we
feel
like
it's.
Okay,
I
know
a
lot
of
you
do
really
great
things.
I
I
do
follow
lots
of
you
and
I
do
appreciate,
but
the
public
perception
is
that
the
City
Council
with
the
city
mayor
with
the
mayor's
office
aren't
paying
enough
attention
to
the
grievances.
N
The
people
I
seriously
teared
up
when
I
hear
I
want
to
heard
those
two
youth,
indigenous
people
sharing
their
the
stories
about
looking
outside
a
window.
I,
don't
know
about
you,
it
touched
me
and
I
can't
stand
anymore
and
I
really
do
hope,
because,
if
not
we're
gonna
have
to
get
a
lot
more
people
to
run
for
office
in
a
few
years
and
I
really
don't
want.
I
really
do
appreciate
you
all.
So.
Thank
you
very
much.
A
P
So
I
think
we
need
to
stop
engaging
in
magical
thinking
on
this
police
issue
and
it
is
magical
thinking
to
pretend
that
police
stop
crime
or
prevent
crime,
I
believe
in
evidence,
I,
don't
believe
in
myths,
and
let's
be
clear,
it's
a
myth
that
police
prevent
crime
or
stop
crime
and,
more
especially,
it's
a
white
myth.
It's
a
white
myth
that
comes
from
the
racist
history
of
policing.
P
If
you
look
at
the
statistics,
there's
an
exact
correlation,
a
concomitant
relationship
between
an
increase
in
income
and
increase
in
living
standards
and
a
decrease
in
crime,
there's:
zero
correlation
between
an
increase
in
police
officers
and
a
decrease
in
crime.
In
fact,
depending
on
how
you
count
the
statistics,
there's
an
increase
in
crime
when
you
hire
new
police
officers
precisely
because
they're
arresting
more
people,
not
because
more
crimes
are
being
committed,
there's
just
more
cops
to
arrest
and
harass
people
for
minor
crimes
and
for
behaviors
that
we
have
decided
or
criminal
without
any
evidence
whatsoever.
P
So
what
I
say
is:
let's
stop
engaging
in
this
magical
thinking
this
myth
making
it
isn't
true,
let's
look
at
the
evidence.
Let's
look
at
the
reality.
More
police
does
not
equal
more
safety.
What
equals
more
safety
is
program
for
jobs,
increasing
our
living
standards,
increasing
our
access
to
health
care
and
our
access
to
other
resources.
That's
what's
going
to
help
I'm
gonna
yield
the
rest
of
my
time
to
Patrick
Harmon
into
DeLorean,
pic
of
it,
who
aren't
here
to
speak
for
themselves.
So
I'll
just
stand
silently
until
this
thing,
beeps.
I
We
have
a
problem
hotel
on
on
north
temple.
That's
that
causes
a
lot
of
problems
and
I.
Think
like
a
targeted
like
Rio
Grande
is
actually
ask
a
local
person
that
lives
nearby.
They
are
thankful
for,
what's
happened,
and,
but
that's
not
to
say
the
excessive
force
to
the
police.
I
mean
there's
a
lot
of
things
that
that
the
BLM
movement
actually
has
going
for
him.
There
is
a
lot
of
excessive
force
and
I
mean
I,
do
have
some
sympathies,
but
as
far
as
the
Rio
Grande
I
feel
like
we
we've
gone
back.
I
A
A
C
C
B
A
A
By
councilmember
kitchen,
second,
by
councilmember
luke
any
discussion,
all
those
in
favor,
the
consent
agenda
is
approved,
and
that
is
all
for
tonight's
formal
meeting.
We
appreciate
you
all
coming
out
just
a
moment
of
personal
privilege.
I
just
want
to
say
all
the
comments
that
are
spoken
here
this
evening.
We
take
them
seriously
whether
they're,
brief
or
long
or
whatever
they
might
be.
It
is
a
serious
thing
for
all
of
us
here
and
I
want
you
all
to
understand
that
we
don't
take
it
lightly.
So
thank
you
for
coming.
Mr.